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                  <text>Wednllldlly, December 5, 1990

Ohio .Lottery ·.

.

STORE HOURS
Mon•y thru. Sunday
· I AM-10 PM

'

CHICKEN
LEG 1/4

'•.

Vol.41, No.160

lQ LB. PKG.

Deliberations end. in
hung jury for Yotlng

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10 LB. PKG.
Chuck Roast •.•••••• 1
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HOMEMADE · .
.
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U.S.D.A. CHOICE BONELESS BEEF LB

LB.

Pork Sausage •••.••

T~ORN APPLE VALLEY-5-7 LB. AVG.

$

l

ROUND
BEEF

Boneless Ham .•• !B•• 219

$1390

7
·
9&lt;
.
Sliced
Bacon
•••••••••
29
Chicken Breast ••r:. S1
LB.

·GROUND
CHUCK

.

GRADE A __, 12-22 LB. AVG.

Flavorite Turkeys·••~·. 6.9 ~
M~RIAH •SMOKED
..
.
$ . ]9
LB.

P1cn1c Hams •••••••••
SUGARDALE 1# ASSORTED

.

Lunch Meats ••••• ~B

$

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10 LB: PKG ..

3 LB. BAG

Yellow Onions •••

$l
21

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EY
DRUMSTICKS

'2°/o Milk •••••••••••••• $1 89
PLASTIC GALLON .

$ 69
.Orange Juice · ::.o~~ •• 1
MINUTE MAID

SLICED

B.ACON

KEMPS

(rackers •••. ~ ..••••• ll,..

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5 QUART PAIL

Paper Towels ••••·••••

$299

)

I
I
1117·12·088

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99(

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.,.. .1••

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save on
Maxwell House~
INSTANT COFFEE

ICE CREAM

BOUNTY LARGE ROLL

GIF'l' ~OM THE IJEART· A special gift

fr001 the heart . for needy Meigs CollDtians
durmg this holiday season was made by the
· employees ot Pomeroy Branch of Bank One to
the Meigs County United Methodist Coope111tlve
Parish. The employeeS made seve111l gravevine
trees whitb they decorated and displayed in the
. bank lobby. Patrons were invited to place a pur·
. chase bid on the trees. This week the trees went
!' to the highest bidder and
.. . tbe proceeds amounted

.t . ,

{

t1

1 -- \
c,;

Maxwell

• PUREX DETERGENT

12oz~jar
Plus save an additional uoo
with the attached coupon

House
. . -. I

1360Z.$399
BOX

FINAL COST

CIHd at Powlll's Supor Valu
GOIII Dtc. 2 tllru Dtc. a; 1990

$339
~-----------------------------·

•

.
to $365. A check lor tbat amilu•t was pres~ted

to the Rev. Roger G111ce, parish director, by
· Diana Lawson, bjlnk employee, on beball of the
Pomeroy group. Pictured with the two are others
wbo were Involved In the pi'Qiect, from the left,
MarUyu Wolfe, MarUyu RobinsOn, Millie Midkill', l)ezl Jeffers, and Doris Snowden, and front,
Maryln WUcox, a9d Gerrl Walton. Tbe money
wiD go into the various bollday projects of the
Cooperative Parish which maintainS a clothing
bank and food pantry.
.

·
By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Staff
Following almost seven hours of
deliberation, the 12-member jury in
the case of John L. Young became a
"hung jury", placing disposition of
the case on.the back bWl!er until a
P,1ea bargain agreement can be
reached, or until another jury can
be seated and the case re-tried.
• Y6uilg had faced the jury and
Meigs . County Common · Pleas
Court Judge Fred W. Crow since
Monday afternoon. He is charged
with kidnapping, an aggravated
felony of the first degree.
He is accused of uansporting his
17-year:ald niece from her home !JI
Middleport 10 a remote spot m
Mason County, W.Va. in August of
this year. According to testimony
presented !hi$ week, Young raped
his' niece at least twice and then
returned her home 10 Middleport.
Law · enf.:&gt;rcement and · inves,tigawry agents from both Ohio and
West Virginia, medical experts and
friends and relatives of both the alleged victim and the defendant testified in the trial, which ended with
closing arguments on Wednesday
morning.
Much of the state's case centered
, .on genetic testing of semen found·
on gannents entered as evidence in

men and live w~en, reiUmed to
bl&lt;IOO · testing of the courtroom at 8:30 p.m. on
Young and the victim's boyfriend, Wednesday, only to report that they
Jefr Kauff, it was. deu:nnined that had not come up with the unanithe semen found on clothing could mous verdict required tor either
be traced to Young but not to Kauff. conviction or acquittal.
"She's a victim and John Young
is a victimizer," Meigs County
"I believe this reRects the inProsecuJQr Su:ven Story !Old the sufficiency of the evidence ai!llinst
jury ·in closing arguments. "He John Young," Knight said in · a
knew exactly how 10 get her alone prepilred statement on ·Th.ursday.
and he did iL"
,
"While I have the greatest symStory refers to an alleged plot pathy for victims of sexual assault,
used by Young 10 persuade the vic- I believe that no one should be
tim 10 go 10 Mason Cowny with convicted on uncorroborated teS·
him.
timony."
Aecording to testimony offered
In the meantime, Young is
during the trial, Young told the vic- scheduled 10 appear before Mason
tim that her estranged sister was County Circuit Court Judge James
visiting relatives in Mason County Holliday to answer 10 15 charges
and offered to take the victim there related to the August incident.
to visit with her sister.
Young's trial there is set for
Meigs County. Public Defendc;r ~onday ·morning, Assistant .Meigs
Cllarles Knight, who represented County Prosecutor Linda Warner
Young in coun, tried to persuade stated. Warner tried the. case along
the jury that the state had not of- · with Story on behalf of the state.
fered enough evidence to prove that However, she anticipates Young
· being held in Meigs County and the
John Young was the offender.
"Without any physical evidence, Mason Coilnty case being conseveral jurors correctly were of the tinued until the case here is comopinion that the state failed 10 pleted.
Warner was unable to say how
prove the guilt of John Young
beyond a reasonable doubt," she expected the case to end.
Ho\Yeyer she did say, "I am ready
Knight said after the trial.
The jury, consisting of seven to go to trial again."
the case.

Fo~owing

Saddam wants negotiation of Palestine ·issue
.By GAYLE YOUNG
invasion of Kuwait.
ous source,. reported Tuesday
United Press International
President Bush, in Argentina that Saddam offered to witdraw
Iraq and three Arab allies have during a six-day swing through his troops from Kuwait to avoid
agreed that the Palestinian Latin America, ruled out making war provided he is allowed to
cause should be on the bargain- any concessions aimed at allow- keep the oU field. which straddles
Ing table in talks with the United ing Saddam to make a gracious the Ira9-Kuwait border and was
States but denied reports It was exit from Kuwait.
captured during the invasion.
•'When naked aggression takes
willing to withdraw from Kuwait
Baker, appea~lng before the
in exchange for a captured oil place, It Is not a question of Senate Foreign Relations Com·
field.
.
saving face for' the aggressor,;' mittee, said his mission to
· Meanwhile, the first of some Bush told reporters at a news Baghdad "will be an attempt to
3,300 Soviet nationals held in Iraq conference.
explain to Saddam the choice he
beganleavtngthecountry,and43
Saddam 'has agreed to meet faces: Comply with the objecmore hostages from Australia with Baker In Baghdad later this tives of the (U.N.) Security
and Japan were to be released month and, wlll' send Iraqi For- Council or risk disaster for
Thursday, according to officials eign Minister Tariq AZiz to Iraq."
and news reports in those Washington for talks with Bush
He lnsls!ed the United States
countries.
'
·
in an effort to avoid a mllltary would settle for nothing less than
Iraqi President Saddam Hus· confrontation after the U.N.
fulfillment of U.N. resolutions
Sein met ih Baghdad Wednesday draline of Jan. 15 for Iraq to calling for the unconditional
with Jordan's King · Hussein, wi.thdraw from Kuwait.
.
withdrawal of Iraq from Kuwait,
.Palestine Liberation Organjza Cable News Network, quoting the release of all hostages and
lion Chairman Yasser Ararat a high Iraqi official who re- · restoration of Kuwait's legit!·
and the vice president of Yemen. quested · anonymity, reported mate government. .
Jordan's Amman Radii&gt; re- Wednes(lay that Saddam was
"Nor is this the beginning of
· ported all four Arab leaders . · feeling t'he pressure of the forces
negotiations on subjects which
~oncluded that Saddam should· . .arrayed against him and the Jan.
are unrelated to Iraq 's brutal
pres,s to niake the Paies.tinian- . ·,:15 deadline, and that during his o~cupation of Kuwait," Baker
Israeli · conflict a negotiating .;:·&gt;meeting with Baker, "all Issues said. "I will not be negotiating
point in ·the hlgh-levellraqf·U:S.' · · are on the table - everything."
the Palestinian question or the ·
talks planned for later ·tlils ·. • However, Iraq rejected Wed·
civil war in Lebanon . . Saddam
month.
rtesday as "absolute nonsense" a
Hussein did not Invade Kuwait to
' However, Secretary of State British Independent television
help the Palestinians; he did It
James Baker rejected the notion report saying Saddam was wil·
r o· r h 1 s o w n s e I f ·
of a negotiated settlement to the ling to withdraw from Kuwait In
aggrandizement.' '
Persian Gulf crisis altogether,
exch11nge for keeping the RuAmman Radio also reported
and specifically reiterated U.S. malla oil field . ,
Wednesday King Hussein would
Opposition to linking the Palest!· · The Sky Television News sate!·
try to meet Saudi King Fahd and
nlan Issue with Iraq's Aug. 2 lite network, quoting an anonymthe exiled emir of Kuwait In an
.

effort to arrange a meeting
between Saddam and Fahd In

Algeria. Saudi officials said any
such meeting would give Saddam

even more time to consolidate his
position In Kuwait.

OVERTURNED • A logl!lng truck overturned
when it went off the side iifSrate Route 681 West
about 8:21 a.m. Tllursday mornine. The driver,
Martin Bailey, Athens, was take• to Veterans
Memorl!ll Hospital by the Pomeroy Emergeacy

Squad ror treatment or injuries received in the
accident. Tbe Pomeroy Fire Department was
also on the scene. The accident is under Investigation by the Gallia·Meigs Post of the State
HIRIIwaY Patrol•

MONEY DONATED · .The BusiDess Prol'essloaals of America Club at Meigs High School
recutly llpODIOred I walk-a·tholl to beueflt the
Carleton Special Olympia Program. This Wlllk
was done u i service prvject Air the JI'O!P ud
Is held each year to nile llmds for Melp County
athletes to pay expe- to compete with other
Special Olympics students at the rqi01 and ltate
'I

levelS. l'lle Buslnea Protealouls fJI Alllerlea
Club. is a vocatiODII dub open 1o atudeall enral~
led In the bUIIHsa program~ llld Is llcllve Ia
community projects IIICII u Special OIJDipkll.
Shown bere prt~e~~tlnt ..e cheCk In the amount
of $"2 to Bette Hollbuaa, rlpt, ot Carletoa
Sebool, are dub otllcers, l~r, n.- Deem, Kba
Os.borne,'!M
I andle Harris ancl Sprln1 ~eed.

.

·Collecting. ~elinquent taxes
:topic of cotnmissioners
.

Burrito ..•••.•••• ;.o:•••••

ZEST A

BAG

$490
10 LB. PKG.

PATIO

.5LI.

10 LB. PKG.

I

.FLAVORITE

I

10 LB. PKG.

RED OWL BRAND

2 Sections. 16 Pages . 25 Cents
A Multimedil Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, December 6, 1990

Copyrighted 1990

Mostly clear Thursda
night, wltl,l a low In the ml
20s. MosTly sunny Friday

•

r

298 SECOND ST.
PO.M_EROY. OH . .
PRICES GOOD SUN., DEC.2, THRU 'SAT., DEC. II, 1 YYU

Pick 3: 770
Pick 4: 0727
Canis: 4-H;
J-C;4-D;9-S
Lotto: 10, 23,
39~ 43, 44, 50
Kicker: 707273

19 days
until
Christmas

.

By BRIAN J. RF;I!:D . : · :
arter a ~el with delinquent taxes
A joint letter writing campaign
..
Sentinel News Staff .·
is published, the Prosecuting AtiOr· of the County Treasurer and
• How the county can collect over ney must wait one year before that Prosecutor resulted in the collection
.,\lalf a million dollars in delinquent pro~rty can be foreclosed upon.
of approximately $80,000 in delin·
{"optll} taxes was the topic of dis·
• At least two thirds or more" of quencies this year, but S10ry reports
·'cussion at Wednesday's regular tho properties published recently that the focus wiD tum 10
'lneetiD$ of the Meigs County are now.able 10 be f&lt;eelosed upon foreclosures instead of letters in
J:ommiSSioners.
for failure 10 pay, according 10 Col· 1991.
• · Acconling to Meigs County !ins. · Commissioner Richard ' "I · can assure you that Meigs
Treasurer George CoUins, who was Jones pointed · out . that ap- County is going to see a substantial
(ll'*nt at yesterday's meeting, proximately 70 percent of the 10ta1 increase in the number of
~767 .000 in property Wles COUnty· delinquency in question, if · paid, foreclosures next year," Story said.
, jyide are now delinquent, and would in tum be paid out to local
Before entering executive sesMeigs County Auditor Bill Wiele- school systems.
sion, the commissioners also apline estimates the parcels involved
"We as county officiols need 10 proved an inteldepartmental bUd~
.10 !'Cat least 1,700.
.
let those delinquent Wlpaycn know tranSfer of 51,546.18 for the Me~gs
'Our propeny WI collectiOn ~te that we·~ let this 110 as far as County Departniellt, of Liaer Coil·
~about 92 ~ 93 ~1. wh•ch we're going 10 let 11 go," Jones trol, and approved a transfer of
·~ t . !DC:! bad, Collins Jold the said. "We need 10 say that we are ssoo from the Meigs Countv
comiiUSSioners
yesterday. going 10 get serious about this and Probate Court's "other ,expenseS~
'1Jowever, ':"hen you add interest · that f&lt;eelosure actions will be aecountto its "mileage" accounL
aild pena!ues 10 those delin- .filed."
Present at the meeting, besides
q~ICS, the!' you're IOQking at a
Acc:ording 10 Story, some pf the Collins, Wickline, Story aild Jones,
161 of monoy.
.
property WI delinquencies date
were· Clerk Mary Hobsrcaer,
. ProllertY taxes must be delin- back ~ far as 30 years, and 10 at Commission President MinDing
q.uentl~!f i fn!l year before lhey can least four previous prosecutiilg at· Roush llld ·County CommisSioner
be puhllshOO.. m the newspaper, and 10111eys in the county.
II
David Kob1entz. ~
I

�Thursday, December'• . 6, 1990

l

111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

WASHINGTON - Forty-nine
Americans soldiers have already
died In Operation Deser~Shield
tn training accidents \'nd routine
operations; The Pentagon says
that Is .to be expected. But our
study of one training accident
last summer on U.S. soli convinces us that maybe the Pentagon
expects too little of itself.
An Army Black Hawk helicopter, like those sent to the Persian
G'ulf, crashed on a hlllside in
Arkansas last July27 . It took tour
llours tor help to arrive. By that
time, five Green Berets were
dead and another had lapsed Into
a coma.
The four-hour delay might be ·
excusable if the helicopter went
down in some remote corner of.
the world. But this crash occurred right onthe grounds of Ft.
Chaffee; an Army post in western
Arkansas.
Our associate Jim Lynch has
learned that there was no me·
devac helicopter to rush to the
crash. Ft. Chaffee officials now
claim that they could not have
landed a medevac helicopter in
the dense forest near the crash,

DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MElGS'MASON AREA
;1~

~m~

.

.

r:T"'\--L--r•

~v

~=·~ .

ROBERTL. WINGETT
Publisher

CHARLENE HOEFLICH

General Manager

PAT WRJTEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller
A MEMBER of The Unlted ·Press International, Inland Dally Press
Ass9Ciatlon and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should J&gt;e less than 300
words long. All letters are subject to editing and mus! be sl~ned with
name, address and ·telephone number. No unsigned letters wlll be pub-

lished. Letters snould bE&gt; In gOod tl!Ste, addressing lssuE&gt;s, not _personal!· .
ties.

Noriega-CNN: Just
the ·news ma'am
Once again, we afE&gt; getting a
first-hand lesson on the verity of
Ben Franklin's aphorism that
nothing is cE&gt;rtaln except death .
and taxes and the government's
unceasing campaign to dismember our God-given rights of
free speech and press.
Actually, I added that part
about speech and press, but I am
certain Franklin would be in my
corner on this matter. Govern·
ment officials never stop trying
to whittle away our fundamental
right to know how they are
managing our affairs.
The most recent demonstration of, this c~lloils regard for
tbese hallowed privileges is the
government'S sorry perfor·
· · inance In the Cab)e News Net· .
work / Manuel Noriega affair.
For those who have not followed
it, these are the essential facts:
CNN stupidly· notlflfld Norie·
ga's lawyers of Its scoop, and the
attorneys straining order from a
federal judge. CNN was told to
cease Its broadcasts and sur·
render the tapes so the court
could determine whether they
jeopardized Noriega 's Sixth
Amendment right to a fair trial.
A number of points are scream·
lng to be !Dade:
.
• 1. In First Amendment law, tl\e
lower court's injunction is called
a ·=prior restraint." It violates
the almost sacred principle that
the press must be allowed to
publish what it sees fit, even
though it may be punished after
the tact. Fifty-nine years ago, the

By Joe Spear
Supreme Court said prior res traints are the "essence of
censorship." Fourteen years
ago, it held that prior restraints
are the "most serious and least
tolerable infringement on First
Amendment rights." So why did
"our" Justice Department argue
that a prior restraint in the
Noriega case is OK• Proceed to
point two.
2. Aside from resisting the
injunction (a separate issue), the
only thing CNN is guilty of is
publishing the news - which is
the fact that the U.S. government
was eavesdropping on Noriega's
conversations with his lawyers.
It was the Bureau of Prisons that
threw Noriega's atto'rney-cllent ·
privilege to the ground and
stomped It to death. CNN came
along and chucked the corpse
under the chin. All that, of
course, assumes thaI his fair
trial rights were not slain by the
president of the United States
himself. How so, you say?
Proceed to point three.
3. What sober person could
argue with a straight. face that
Manuel Noriega's Sixth Amendment rights were not already
beaten to a bloody pulp by the
time he was dragged kicking and
screaming to Florida? George
Bush publicly and ·repeatedly
described him as a "thug" and a
" narco-terrorlst" and conducted
a televised Invasion of a sovereign nation to bring him here.

seem· to be when they say "Mall
Call" . Sometimes you get lucky
and they call your name, but If
not there's always another day.
We all are sad to be away from
our !a mUles and friends this time
of the year, but we all will be
home soon. To my wife Lynn, my
family and friends in Racine. I
wish you all a Merry Christmas .
Keep up the support for America
troops. We all will be home soon.
·PFC Curtis Jones
HHB 2·18F A. 212th BOG
Operation Desert Shield
APO N.Y., N.Y. 09218·0006

"Slob" hunters

who

..

.._

By Uulted Press International .
As Larry Bird showed the
r.tm-and-gun De.nver Nuggets,
·Winning basketball games has
nothlngtodowithyouthorspeed.
On Wednesday night, Denver
tried to outrun the Celtlcs at
Boston Garden. Instead, Bird,
who ·turns 34 on Friday, scored 43
pomts, handed out 13 assists and
grabbed eight rebOunds as Boston rallied lor a 148-140 Victory. ·
"It's really a lot of fun ,
especially when you win," said .
.Bird, who felt It was his team's
fault for letting the Nuggets set
the game's pace. "We 's tood
around a lot tonight on the
defensive end and didn't box out.
We let them play the type of
game they wanted. "
· The veteran forward hlt14o!26
from the floor , Including three of
stx frorn three-point territory.
His 43 points were the most-ever
by · a Celtic. player against
Denver .
:'
"Larry Bird was vintage to·
night," said Nuggets head coach
Paul Westhead.
"On nights like this, you're
happy to get a win," said Boston
head coach Chris Ford, whose
team is now 14-3. "If you're going
to be a good team, you can't let
other teams dictate the pace and
take control. Theyhadusptaylng
thelrkind.ofballandtheyalmost
'i
beat us."
Almo~t is right. For the second
consecu live night, Denver frittered away a · fourth -quarter ·
lead. On Tuesday night in Cleveland, Denver held a 20-polnt lead
in the fourth quarter then lostthe
game 121·117. Denver is winless

the prlvat~ landowner.
Every deer season large deer
drive$ occur that encompass
several .farms often with complete disregard to fences, signs , .
and property lines. When the
shooting starts lt sounds like a
mllltary exercise. When hunters
blast away at fleeing deer on the
next ridge over it IS.JIDderstanda·
ble how real sportsmen get a bad
rap.
I urge the real sportmen to get
Involved and pollee lhemseaves
by actively condemning the
lllegal ~nd unethical bebavior of
the "slob" hunter minority.
I also urge landowners to not
feelliltimldated by the actions of
lrrespon~lble hunters who Ignore
landowners rights. Collect information including names, hunting
license numbers, and . vehicle
license n11mbers. Then call your
local state game protector or
sheriff's oftice. Falling to do so
only sends a message to "slob"
hunters that they can tramp
across anybody's and everybody's land without fear of
prosecution.
Jeff and Janet Latta
Rt. 2, 2950 Deep Hollow Rd.
Coolville, OH 45723

__

'A tllought tor the day: Poet Joyce Kilmer wrote ttiat ·'I think that r
shall'liever see.f poem lovely as a tree." .
.

even if they had one to land, But
the post has one now, standing by
for all Special Operations
training.
There was no backup helicop,-.
ter following the Black Hawk
through its .training exercise
because of lack of available
aircraft.
Ft. Chaffee officials didn't
even know the Black Hawk was
training i n their airspace until
two hours after It crashed. And
the Green Berets were flying
their mission without batteries
for all of their radios and
night-vision goggles.
'I'he Army's super-secret Special Operation Command may
have simply been too secretive
for Its own good In this case. A
spokesman for the elite com·
mand said that isn't true, but he
had no explanation for why Ft.
Chaffee wasn't told when to
expect the training mission. The
mandatory call - to Inform the
Ft. Chaffee range officer !hat the
helicopter had entered the military airspace - was never
made. The officer didn't know
the helicopter was there, let

• • •

I

By
Jack
Anderson and Dale VanAtta .
.
.

,.alone missing.
On ThanksgiVing day , Mrs.
Afewhoursmayhavemadeall Earnest went to the hospital
19e difference for Sgt. Charles B. cafeteria for a cup of coffee. Ten
Earnest. He survived the cra$h, minutes later when she got back,
but has been in . a coma ever her' purse had been stolen right .
since. Head injury experts call !rom under the nose of her
the first hour after an accident comatose son.
.
the . "Golden Hour, " because . A civilian neurologist recom· .:
after it passes, each succeeding mended that Sgt. Earnest be ·.
hour without medical care more treated with a high-tech coma· .
than doubles the extent of the stimuli rehabllltation program . .
brain damage.
But the Army .tiureaucracy says
Earnest, 28, was a talented ' its too expensive and
young soldier, fluent in lwo " unproven."
.
foreign ·languages, trained in
Dr. James. Wasco, the mealcal · .
computerprogrammlng,skydlv· director of the New · Medical
lng and scuba diVing. Now he lies Head Injury System, a national
in a bed .In Walter Reed· Army network of rehabllltation &lt;;llnics,
Medical Center in Washington,
told us . that . therapy re~om·
D.C, hooked to an oxygen rnamended for Earnest Is so widely ,
chine and 'fed through a tube in accepted that most Insurance
hls stomach. His closed eyelids
companies will cover it without
flicker as his eyes move from
hesitation.
side to side.
There are signs that Sgt.
His mother, Minna Earnest,
Earnest isn't a hopeless case. He ,
sleeps on a trundle bed next to
once stuck his tongue out when . ;
his mother asked him to , and he
her son. She fears the·hospital is
not staffed to give him the
squeezed the hand of his gooattention he needs , so she moni·
mother when she said goodbye.
tors his oxygen and food t1,1bes .
Mrs. EarnestsaystheArmymay
have given up , but her son hasn't.
OTHER I'ROBLEMS - PreS!·
dent Bush has to take time out
!rom the Persian Gulf crisis to
. deal with another problem that
won't go away - the sluggish
economy. He Is consulting with
his economiC advisers. Out o!the
discussions will come a strategy
for revitalizing the economy. The \
president has told his advisers
that he will be defeated in 1992 if
the economy is still in the
doldrums.
.,
MINI·EDITORIAL- The cur· ·
rent younger generation has had •
the ~dvantage of being raised in a
society,'where smoking was not
"cool :" The older genera lion got ,
hooked in ·the name of fashion ,
but are unhooking th.-nselves in
numbers large enough to panic
the topacco industry . That adds
up to a new marketing strategy
for the industry that consumers
will see emerging in the next few· i
months- a creative campaign to ;,
when they're awake, I know woo young people, now that the
older generation is wising up.

.

Kaff-kaff! .

· .

dies. GeorgeChaump, Navy's mentor,
is making his first ·start against the
·
Cadets.
These two service academies
. haven't exa~tly sparkled this fall:
They have identical 5-5 records.
Against common foes, they also bave
identical records: Boston College beat
Army, 41·20, and Navy, 28-17. Winning
the Commander's Trophy, Air Force
defeated Army, 15-3, and Navy, 24-7.
However, as in aU traditional rivalries statistics and past records count
for ~aught when Army and ~avy hit

young men and w.omen who
chose to join the mllltary of their
own free wlll and volition either ,:
because they want to make the · '
service a career or because they
view such service and training as ' }
a means to another end. They did .:
not Join under duress; they did "
not Join because they had an
obligation to join; they Jo!ned
because they wanted. to join.
.·
Personally, while I can appre· ,
elate and:understand·many of the 1
criticisms · being voiced with I
regard to the size of the troop
build-up in the Middle East, I
cannot accept the tactics some
are using to buDd a consensus
against our presence in ·the
Persian Gulf. Painting the pros·
pect of war In the Middle East In
the emotional terms of a "class"
contllct serves no one's Interest.
Saying that our fighting force is
socially and economically unbalanced Is a little like saying our
favorite professional football
team doesn't have enough. nuclear physicists In its ranks.
H

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By Vincent Carroll

humdrum rhetqrlc. Had Lincoln
on their own. Nor are quasi·
literate luminaries the oniy·ones
employed a speechwrlter before bUt neither are they pirates in a
who cheat the reading public.
hiS' trip to Gettysburg, the scribe cultural sea of surpassing purity.
Even a few well-known journal·
would never have risked Ills
The head of the National
lsts, presumably llterate to the
career by composing an oration Academy of Recording Arts artd
person, employ assistants who
so concise, so direct. so wonderSciences declared himself "apsometimes ghost-write for them. ' fully limpid. Instead,. he would
palled" at their transgressions,
· An acquaintance of mine, who
have plied on modifiers and
as if everywhere he looks he sees
has since moved on to more Iotty
hyperbole uritu no one but a
rock-ribbed integrity. Somehow ,
pursuits, once researched art!·
professional historian would
he managed to miss the long line
cles for a writer who appears
have bothered to review his of manipulators and frauds who · ,
today on cable TV talk shows.
bloated effort today. ·
blight the landscape. Most of :
Usually, my acquaintance reRobandFabofMUUVanUllare
them , of course, are still taking , •
ports, the celebrity pundit would
hardly role models for our times,
bows.
i
review any columns written by
his assistants before sending
them out under his name. But not
always . Sometimes he'd only
listen to a description 9f them
Today is Thursday, Dec. 6, the 340th day of 1990 with 25 to follow .
before nodding approval.
The moon Is waning, moVing toward its last quarter.
,
The morning star is Jupiter.
:
Then there ar~ the frauds In
politics. Have you ever noticed
The evening stars are Mercury, Venus, Mars and Saturn.
•
those earnest aides who sit
Those born on this date are under the sign of Sagittarius .. They "';
behind coneressmen durlne teleinclude England's King Henry VI in 1421; French chemist Joseph
Vised hearings? They don't just
Gay- Lussac In 1778; Western film star 'WilliamS. Hartin 1870; poet
1
research the Issues and write the · Joyce Kllmet In 1886; lyricist Ira Gershwin in 1896; actress Agnes
,!
questions for tbelr muters.
Moorehead In 1906; comedian Wally Cox In 1924, and Jazz pianist Dave
Brubeck In 1920 (age 70).
Otten they Jump In and quietly
brief their befuddled boases
I
when the witness Inconveniently
On this date in history:
'I
changes the subJect or otrers an
In 1917, more 1.600 people died In an explosion when a Belgian relief
unexpected reply.
ship and a French munitions vessel coUided in the harbor at Halifax,
1
The Idea, meanwhile, that busy
• ,
Nova Scotia.
·'
leaders today would write lhe'lr
In 1922, the Irish Free Stat~; forerubner of the modern Republic of
own apeeches Is simply beyond
Ireland, was offlctally proclaimed;
.
the pale.
a thai'• one
In 1933, Americans crowded Into liquor stores, bars and cafes to buy.
rea100 10
a
ever mint
their first legal alcoholic beverages In 13 years after the repeal ·or ·
a memorable line or
abOve
Prohlblt.lon.
·
.

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'ftl:

• CALiFORNIA BOWL: S., Jtllll!
St. (B·~·l) vs. CeJJtraiii!Jctlge (B·l-1),
FretuJD, ClUJ., , S.t•rda,., ~- I, I

p.m. EST, Sportl CI/UJIIeJ. TV.

The Big West champ, !!an J~
State, had a good season that was only
a whisker away from' being a ~real
season.
·
•
The Spartans opened with a 10-10
tie against the Fiesta · Bowl-bound
Louisville Cardinals. The next week
they dropped a narrow 20-17 decision
to Pac-10 champ and Rose Bowl rep
Washington. fn midseason, San Jose
State lilst. a 35-34 heart-stopper to

'copper Bowl-bound California. . .
Jove! What a difference six .pomts
can make!
.·
Offense is the namef.f.tlle gam.e !or
San Jose Stste. In 11 games, they ve
averaged 35 points per. The Spartans
are led by QB Ralph Martini.
.
Central Mlcbi1an stresses def~nse.
Jed by FS David Johnson. It bas limit·
ed II foes to an average of nine points
per con~!. Along the way. the Cblppewas earned the rip! to represent
the Mid-American Conference in this
bowl by edging co-champ Toledo 1312
.
·
' '.
The pick? Make it: San Jose State
28, Central Michigan 17.
• INDEPENDENCE BOlti.: Lt111i·
siRmJ n.cb (8' 3) vs. Mu1lod (i-5).
Sbreveport, ...
•- , .,..
~-t••_,_
n..-.....
.. 8
....,., --.·
p.m. EST, MIIIOJI· TV.
Tbe independent Louisiana Tech
Bulldogs lost a 16-14 squeuker to SEC
power Auburn and nipped Freedom
Bo'll(l·bound Colorado State, 31-30.
For the Bulldop; RB Michael Rich- ·
ardson (112 yards per game) and receiver Bobby Slaughter (78 receptions) lead a strong offense.
Maryland's Terps, arr ACC team,
have bad an up and down year. They
opened with wins over strong Virginia
Teeb and West Virginia; and ended
with a come-from-behind surge to upset Sugar Bowl participant Virginia.
Here the call is Louisiana Tech, 3318.

Washington posts·3~1
win over Pittsburgh
By United Press International
One of the Washington Capi·
tals' favorite songs probably is
"Why Don' t We DO It In the
Road?" by the Beatles.
The Capitals aren't doing it in
the road, but lately they have
been doing It on the road.
In Pittsburgh, .Michal Pivonka
scored one goal and assisted on
another Wednesday night to lead
the Capitals to a 3-1 victory ov~r
the Penguins. The victory was
Washington's third straight on
the road and gave the Capitals a
6-2-0 record in their last eight
games.
"Sometimes at hom~ you try to
do way toQ much," said Capitals
head coach Terry Murray. "You.
know you have to play solid on the
road ~ all 20 guys. You play a
little more smart and a little
more cautious."
Washington took a 1-0 lead at
4:36 of the first period on
Plvol)ka's goal. He tuck the puck
over the blue line and beat
screened goaltender Wendell
Young with a slap shot along the
lee.

points, was held to a season-low
13.

s

Holiday

Army-Navy battle,.bowl games
on Saturday's gridiron_slate

Now, here's a look at two early
On th~ coaching front. Army's J!m
Young holds a 4-3 edge over the M1d- · bowl games:

Milli Vanilli has a ·Jot of company
Pardon me, but could someone
remind us again why the nowdisgraced Mill! Vanllll committed some great cultural crime?
Surely the full story hasn't been
told. Was this hapless duo really
shorn of a Grammy jUst because
they never simg a word on their
own r,ecords?
And fans actually felt betrayed
to discover their heroes were
frauds?
Touchy, touchy. Since when
did we get so upset about being
conned? Last time I looked,
about half of the most heavily
promoted books In this country
were counterfeit. Ronald Reagan
no more wrote his autobiography
than MUll Vanllll's Rob and Fab
-even the names seem to btnt at ·
the underlying hoax- com poled
or sang their songs. At least the
pathetic "singing" duo had to
memorize the lyrics before mouthing them on stage. Reagan
probably couldn't dlstlngu~h the
contents of Chapter 4 In his book
from, say, Chapter 8- assuming
he's read the finished product.
.But let's not pick on Reagan,
fat as that target might be.
Ghostwriters, literary agents
and publishing houses have been
passlilg ott m{ltketlng concoctions for years .under the names
of celebrities .w)lo couldn't atrine
together five coher!!nl sentences

game since May 1989, scored 24
Just six poiDts in the first 10 Rlchmond~ s 21 points. Teampoints.
minutes of the final period. mate Chris Mullin, averaging 27
Pacers 126, Suns 121
Detroit was paced by lslah
At Indianapolis, Reggie Mlller
Thomas's 21 points.
scored 27 points, Delle!
Cllppen 13, Maverlcu 89
SPRING VALlEY CINEMA
Schremp! added a season-high 23
At Los Angeles, Charles Smith
and each contributed 11 points in
scored eight of his 24 points ln the
446 4524
. ... ~...
the fourth quarter to spark the
final three minutes to help the
Pacers. KeVin Johnson scored 39
Los Angeles Clippers win their
to pace Phoenix, which led by 16 third in a row and eighth in .t heir
points late in the first half.
last 11. The Mavericks lost their
Trail Blazers ~19, Magic 110
third straight and have eight
At Orlando, Fla.. Clyde
losses In their IastlOgames since
Drexler pumped in 27 points and
knee lnJu.rles took Roy ·Tarpley
Portland Improved its leagueand Fat Lever out of the lineup.
leading record to 16-1. The Trail
For the Clippers, Benoit BenBlazers are undefeated . in six · jamin registered 16 points and a
. road games. Kevin Duckworth
game-high 17 rebounds. Alex
added 18 points and Portland had
English led Dallas with 18 points.
six players with atieastl4 points.
Bullets 10~. Wanton 98
For the Magic, now4-14, guard
At Oakland, Bernard King ·
Scott Skiles scored a team-high
scored 25 of his ~lpolnts in the
27.
second half and the I'lullets won
Hawks 110, Spun 108
. for the second time In 10 road
· At San Antonio, Glenn · 'D&lt;ic"
games this season. Washington's
Rivers scored 25 points, lncludHarvey Grant added a career·
ing a 20-foot jumper with three
high 27 points. Golden Staie,
seconds left, as the Hawks won
which had a three-game winning
for the second time in twp nights
streak snapped, was led by Mitch
after a nine-game losing streak. .•
The Spurs, who suffered their
first loss in seven homes games
this season, were paced by Terry
Cummings' 30 points and Sean
Elliot's 20.
.Jazz 106, Pistons 85
At Salt Lake City, Jeff Malone
scored 11 of his 27 points In the
final period and Detroit lost its
third straight game. For the
Jazz, Karl Malone added .23
pplnts and John Stockton had 18
assists. The NBA defending
PUTA
champion Pistons trailed 73-70
STIHL
after three quarters then scored

the field.
·
Anny's offense is 11eared to its running game: QB Bryan McWilliams is a
good
option runner. Senior Mike
Egad, friends! In one of the tip test
Mayweather
avera~es 159 yards-ll!!r-;and most traditional - rivalries in
cOllege football, Army and Navy are game as an · all-pur~ back. He's
among the top 12 in the country in
r!!ady to do battle again/
.
.
.
. .
Their 91st encounter, on Saturday .. that category.
On
defense,
CB
J1mm1
ShiM
shmes
in Philadelphia, will be featured on
CIJS.TV. It's the last big game of the for the Cadets.
Navy's attack is spearheaded by
1990 regular ileason.
QB
Alton Gizzard, a big-time
In their previous meetings, the tally stands: Navy, 42 victories; Army, performer.
Anchoring the Middle defense are a
41 victories; and five ties. Of the last
pair
of stalwarts: DT Robert Ku"
10 games, the Midshipmen have won
berski
and LB Anthony Domino.
five, the Cadets four - the other was
In
a
typica_l nail-biter, the Hoople
a 3-3 standoff. Jove! How close can
System
calls If for Army, 27-18..
you get?

By Clarence Miller . .

was eligible for conscription into
As one of our recent Preslden ts Persian Gulf in "class" terms. I
the armed forces. There were,
was apt to say, "Here we go get more than a little annoyed by
however,
conditions In place that
again." How many Urnes during the efforts of some critics of our
made
one's
ellglblllty subject to
the VIetnam conflict did we hear Per.s lan · Gulf policy to give
deferment,
and it was these
that that unpopular war was support to their criticism by
being fought for the advantage of putting forth du blous facts and ' particular colldltlons that helped
shape the perception of that war
the rich at the expense ·of the figures suggesting that we as a
as a war !ought for the haves by
poor? How many times were we country are unfairly asking our
the have nots. The most common
told that it was the underprivi- less fortunate citizens to pay a
form of deferlJient was the
leged and undereducated Ameri- price that our mqre affluent
college educational deferment, a
cans that were forced to the front citizens will not be asked to pay.
deferment that many felt led to a
lines of that war while their more For me, this situation has be·
disproportionate number of less
educated and affluent counter' come somewhat more personal
privileged Americans 'being In
parts found ways to dodge their as r ·have a grandson who Is
the ranks of those lleing sent to
obllgatlons? Increasingly, we ·presently serving on a ship
Southeast
Asia.
are hearing similar refrains with stationed in the Persian Gulf. He,
Since
that
unpopular war, and
respect to present troop deploy. like any other young man his age,
in part as an acknowledgment of
ments to the Persian Gulf. We is not eager to see this confrontathe inadvertent results stemare once again beginning to read tion escalate Into armed conflict,
ming from such deferments with
in our papers and hear on our but, at the same time, he realizes
respect to force composition In
airwaves statistics to suggest that Just like a fireman or a pollee
VIetnam and In the military
that once more our government officer, he, as a member ot the
services in general, we as a
is prepared to leave the dirty · mllltary, has a Job to do.
nation have abandoned the draft
duty ot war to the blue collar
As one may recall, at the time
and gone · to an all-volunteer
segment of our society, to those of the Vietnam War the draft was
·
Army.
Today's Army is much
from the inner city, to those from
still an integral part of our
better
paid,
. much better motithe hollows of Appalachia.
country 's national security movated,
and
from
all indications
Personally, 1 get more than a
b!liza lion policies. Health permuch
better
educated
. lt is made
mitting, every American male
little disturbed by such efforts to
up
entirely
of
volunteers,
of
cast ·our troop presence in th"

In eight road games. .
Robert Parish and Reggie
Lewis added 25 points each ·for
tile Celtlcs, who have won 10 of
their last 11. KeVin McHale had
19 and Brian Shaw 18 for Boston.
Parish grabbed 14 rebounds. .
Michael Adams scored 31
PQlills and Orlando Woolridge
had 29 points. including his
lO,OOOth career point. ·Denver is
0-8 away from home this season
arid 3-14 overall. Adams, who was
one for nine on three-pointers.
had 17 assists.
"The last couple of nights we
have been playing well tor three
quarters," said Adams .. who did
· not score in the flnal10 minutes.
''We were right there for three
and a half quarters, but when we
wanted the shots at the end they
weren't there." .
In other NBA games , Mllwaukee oul'lasted Cleveland 113-109
in overtime; Indiana dO\Vlled
Phoenix i26-121; Portland de,
feated Orlando 119-110; Atlanta
surprised San Antoplo 110-108;
Ulah blasted Detroit 106-85; the
Los Angeles Clippers out-played
Dallas 93-89 and Washington
triumphed over Golden State
104-98.
.
Bucks 113, Cavaliers 109 (OT)
At Milwaukee, Alvin Robertson scored eight of his seasonhigh 31 points In overtime ~nd
added 11 rebounds as the Bucks
remained undefeated in nine
home .games. Jack ·Sikma con·
trlbuted 18 points as Milwaukee
improved its nome mark to 9-0.
For Cleveland, Darnell Valen·
tine, playing in his second NBA

By Maj. Amos B Hoople
Premier Predictor

·Unwarranted· cnt•e•sm _______~_____.,

Hello from Saudi Arabia

Dear Edltor:lt seems that the week of deer
gun season brings out the worst
In some people, eSpecially "slob''
hunters. On Tuesday, Noyember
· 27th. while camped on our 95 acrE!
farm In northern Meigs county,
five deer hunters came right
through our camp. Upon stop·
ping them and asking them for
their names and hunting license
numbers they were very belligerent and told me where to go. The
second time they came back I
· snapped their picture and was ·
then threatened and nearly assaulted by their ring leader.
This group of deplorable slobs
koew they were not welcome on
our farm. Theysawseveralofthe
d signs I posted just two days
earlier, but chose to Ignore the
Jaimowner's rights. Although·
thiS group is probably in the
. minority, the majority of hunters
are- paying the price for such
blalant ljilsportsmanllke con·
duct: The Image of all hunters is
tarnished and more !arid Is closed
to hllhtlng each year. Slnce96% of
the land In Ohio Is under private
ownership, the future ot hunting
In :0111o Is at the mercy of those
oontrol access to that land- .

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio
Thursday. December 6. 1990

'I see them when they're sleeping, I know
when they've been bad or good .. .'

Letters to the editor
Dear Editor:
Hello from Saudi Arabia.
Things here aren't bad but yet'
they aren't good either! The
thoughts of war are on our mind,
but the memories of home are in
our hearts. All of us want to come
Mme. but we know we must
complete our mission no matter
what it is It must be done. The
days are hot and hard, because of
tlie jobs we know must be done.
The nights cold and lonely. When
oilr jobs are completed we have
time to write home. Idle time just
to slt and think about our !am lUes
back home. The peak of our days

Bird keys Boston ·•· rally in Celts' 148-140 Win over ·Denver

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel

Special Ops too secret for its own good?
,

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

In the NBA Wednesday,

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

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�'-11• 4 The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, December 6, 1990

Poinerov-Middleport. Ohio

North Gallia-Hannan Trace contest -highlights SVAC slate
'

By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
OVP !Mall Wrller

• Hannan Trace will host North Gallla In the first of-a two-part series
. ;of cheetahs vs, clippers beginning Friday night In Mercerville.
The Wildcats. who created havoc with their pressure defense and
.cashed In constantly with their fast-break offense In their road
;victories over Southern (70-52) and Southwestern 184-41\ , wtll face a
-team that Is a little taller In the backcourt, fairly equal in stze on the
__frontline and also believes In pressure-cooker defense.
-- Three seniors - center Craig Ran(&lt;tn , guard/forward Jason Slack.
'

Jn the NHL ....
lead to _2-0 on a power-play goal

'bY Kevin Hatcher at 7: 16 of the
ftnt period. Pivonka carried the
puck down the right-wing boards
and passed Into the slot to
H!ltcher, ~ho scored on a wrist
shot.
"Everybody's playing a llltle
bit simpler on the road," said
Pivonka. "It's always easter on
:ihe road. We're - playing pretty
·well. Everybody's getting Into a
ltood habit."
Pittsburgh cut the lead to2-1 at
fl: 13 of the !lrst period on Randy
·Gtlhen's rebound of his own shot
'past goaltender Don Beaupre,
who had 23 saves.
!. "We seem to play well on the
road," said Beaupre. " In this
iltvtston (Patrick) you can move
!JP In the standings quickly ,
especially when you win on the
road."
The Capitals raised their iead
,to 3-1 with a short-handed goal by
;Kelly MtUer at 6: 21 of the third
jleriod. Miller's shot from about
~ feel In the slot was headed
).vide of the net until it was tipped
.,n by Penguin John Cullen.
• The Penguins, wlio are 0-5-lln
their ljlst six home games, were
coming off a-9-4 road victory over
the New York Rangers Monday
night.
"Maybe we should go back on
tlie road," said Johnson. "We
seem to have better conceritrat!on on the road."
In other NHL games, New
.]ersey thumped Vancouver 9-4,
Montreal nipped Hartford · 4-3,
Minnesota edged Toronto 3-2,
Edmonton gassed Quebec 3·2,
.Calgary burned the N.Y .
;Rangers 4-1 and the Winnipeg
-Jets lied Los Angeles 3-3.
DevOs 9, Canucks 4
.At East Rutherford, N.J ..
Claude Lemieux scored three
goals and added an assist' and
Patrik Sundstrom had two goals
a)ld two assists to lead the New
J_e rsey Devils to a 9-4 rout of the
yancouver Canucks. The win

*'year co•nct.

San Francleco -Traded plklher
S&amp;en
to Mlnaesata for
pitcher dlolmay Ani and a p-,er to
be named.
.

ae......

Wednesday, Dtt:. 5
Toledo 71, Dolnlk 1f
ler 17. Lo,ol, (Md.) lfi
Wel&amp;er• Kellf:ucky to, Bowllna:
.G re• n
Wrti(IIUIIOiolts, SIJo1tph (Ind.)
11
. Capllal7~ HoldelhersM
Gr..., .CIIf (Po. ) II, Hiram &amp;I

x..

. o\alllud Ill, Ollerllo U
W•aMer It Ollla Waleyan '70
fil11411AJ I!, Central State 8'7

Transactions
Bueball
Ailu&amp;a -r- Slped free-a1eat flni
IIMemu Sltl Bream te 3-)'r.,.

e. . raet.

Cldcqt tNL) - (MUI.!d mlllor
••alblrd baeman Mike Grace
tr..
c.mplete
Malltll!'al to

an

.........e.

If.,...

Qlld-( - Slptd lree-&amp;11111
balemaa Bill Doraa to
J..JI!.,. colltract. phil I·year option

(orlpM.

Slptd lree-&amp;J(IIll

..aeld• Tony Bernuard to 1-,ear.
re~~t ..d: waived ,-ch'er Mike
lellwahe ••r the ,..,. . of rlvlnK.

him 1111 wacoadltknaal release .

MUwauket - Slped lre~a1111t
_..,,. l'rankUo 8lobllo lo 1.,ear ccultract.
N"" Yarl&lt; (NL) -lllpod ,....
I

extended New Jersey.'s unbe~ten
streak to six games (3-0-3) . ,
Canaclleu 4, Whalen 3 1
At Hartford, Conn., Stephane
Richer scored with 4: 23 remainIng a11d rookie goaltender JeanClaude Bergeron stopped 22
slidts, leading the !'lfontreai Canadjens to a 4-3 victory over the
Whalers. Richer snapped a 3-3
deadlock when he drove to the
slot and converted Brian Skrud'
land's centering pass. The win
Increased Montreal's lead over
third-place Hartford to five
points.
Norlb Stars 3, Maple Leafs 2
AI Toronto, Mark Ttnordl
scored unassisted with 4:23 re-maining In the third period to
snap a tie game and lift the
Minnesota North Stars to a 3-2
victory over the Maple Leafs.
Toronto, mired In last place In
the Norris Division, Is seven
· points behind Minnesota.
Oilers 3, Nordlques 2
AI Edmonton, Alberta, Esa
Tlkkanen scored the winning
goal In the first period and goalie
Karl Takko blocked 23 shots for
the Oilers. Tlkkanen drilled a low
shot in the short side to give
Edmonton a 3-0 lead. Quebec
fought back to make the game
close on JoeSaklc's 16th and 17th
goals or the season.
Flames 4, Rangers 1
· At Calgary, Alberta, Theoren
Fleury scored hls first NHL' hat
trick to lead the Flames. Bernie
Nicholls scored the lone New
York goal as the . Rangers suffered their fourth loss In their last
five games. Mike Vernon slopped
30 shots, Including all -12 In the
final period to win his 12th game
of the season.
Jets 3, Kings ·3
At Inglewood, Calif., rookie
Danton Cole poked in a rebound
of hls own shot with 3:06
remaining in the third period to
give the Jets a 3-3 tle with the
Kings. Both teams remained
winless In their last five games
with Identical 0-2·3 records.
·

qeDt oulflelder Vlace Coleman to

Ohio oollege
basketball results

Det ... l -

(ContlnuedfrornPage3)

Toroneo - Tradal slloi'UI.op
Toay Fernandez and llrtt·huenran
FrH MeGrlff to San Dteco for
.econd hMemu Robtrto Ahmlll'
and o•dlelder loe Carter; allRed
free-ac•t •tllltymu Pal Tabler te
2-,ear contract aad mtnor-learut
plkht'l' RaveloManzanllotoTrlple
A. contrad.
Buk8boll
. Beat. - ~eued pard Jim
Pax- aad Chartes Smith.
L.A. Cllppera- Walwd lo......,.rd
Cedric Ball; adlvllied lorwartl Ken
Nonnaa fram lDJuft!d lllt.
Mloml - Aellvaled ruard Kellll
A•kiDI; waived ruard Mill
Wqaer.
_ Phoealx:-Piaca:lcenterAndrew
Lui oa lnjurrd Jilt; a&lt;:tivated
forward Tim Perl')' frCJn Injured
lliol.
.

Cole&amp;f'

Abilene Chrl&amp;dan - Named
Ronale Peacock football coach.

•wllnr Green - Named Gary

Blackney foalball coadl.
Ore1en Sta&amp;. - Named Jerr:v
Pettll•• faathllll eeach.
·
Fo,.ball
llarcelo111 (World Le-) Aliaeucecl lo.ep Flperu acq•lred owaerlhl• rl&amp;'htt: &amp;eam
alebame will he Dracou.

and forward Riehle Cornell ·- have been the prime movers In the
Wildcats' offense, but they aren't running away fr.o m the rest of their
teammates, as Todd Boothe, a 5-11 senior forward, has increased his
offensive production while policing the paint and clearlilg the way .
Senior point guard J.J. ~van's offense Is showing improvement, as
once again Trace's offense shows no overly dominant scorers.
The welln the Pirates' offense is, as II was last year, senior guards
Chris Tackett and Brian Stout. The pair has the size to go Inside and
help frontmen Shane and Darin Smith (the only non-senior starter)
and Brandon Tw)?Tlan out on the boards, the speed to run the fast
break anci the radar to connect for three-pointers.
Trace shares first place In the SVAC -with Symmes Valley right
now, and Mike Jen(&lt;lns' troops will need to be a little faster than Ron
Twyman's sailors to set up a meeting J1extThursdaywtth the Vikings.
Ellstern vs. Symmes Valley - One thing seems for certain. This
edition of Eastern basketball has little trouble knocking off sub-.500
teams such as Kyger Creek and Southwestern, but has problems wllh
teams that believe In t)lemselves such as Southern.
·
To be lair, Larry Bunger's Eagles had the misfortune of having to ·
play the.Tornadoes Tuesday night after the Caldwell crew was beaten
by 18last Friday by archrlval Hannan Trace, and one game does not a
season make- or break. But In light of the Tornadoes' 94-68 win over
the Eagles, thiS Is one habit Bunger must persuade the Eagles to
break, because conference co-leader Symmes Valley believes In
Itself and Its new paint god - Carl Robinson, a 6-foot-3, 230-pound
_. seJ110r center .who has scored 48 points In Valley's last two games.
In "Mr. Robinson's Neighborhood," Eagle frontmen Randy Moore
and Matt Flnlaw will draw the unenviable task of trying to put
Robinson In check. Even if ihat remote possibility works out, the solid
outside shooting of junior guard A!JdY Lester, who drilled 17 In
Tuesday night's 64-51 win over Oak Hilt, may combine wtth the
expected resurrection of the offense of senior forward Chad Renfroe,
whose scoring production has dropped drastically from the 13 points
he had In the season opener against Southwestern, to push the
Norsemen to victory and at least a chance to keep pace wllh Hannan
Trace.
The Eagles aren 't without their share of offense, as junior guards
Jeff Durst and Tim Bissell, who have combined for 51.2% of Eastern's
scoring this season, demonstrate.- But one thing Valley may be
planning to do to Eastern Is the one thing Southern did to the Eagles
that no one else did In the first four games - hold one of the Eagles'
backcourt tandem to single digits. Against the Tornadoes Bissell
scol'ed 18 points, but Durst was held to nine. Bissell and Durst scored
In double figures In the first four games . ·
·
· '
· Sou_tbern vs. Southwestern- Remember what Hannan Trace did to
Southwestern Tuesday night?
The Highlanders will need to slow down Southern, use their bulk In
the post, concentrated In 6-1, 230-pound center John Sites, 6-2,
180-pound forward Richard Haney and 6-2, 175-pound forward Chris
Metzger to control the boards (Trace edged Southwestern39-35 pff the
glass) and let sophomore guard Aaron McCarty use his quickness and
Improving ablllty to get the ball to the beef brothers In the paint.
If the Highlanders have trouble doing these _thlngs, Southern wlll
follow Hannan Trace's example and let senior guards Andy Baer and
Todd Grindstaff key the fast break, with forward Roy Lee Balley (G-1,
165, Jr. ), center / forward Jeremy Rose 16-1, at least 210; sr.) and
center Michael Russell (6-4, 180, sr.) playing receiver on the wings .
Kyger Creek v's. Oak Hill- "There's no place lll(e home. "
That timeless expression may mean different things to different
people, and for the Oaks, who return to their home court after a

season-opening three-game road swing that has seen them come
away empty-handed after each game, coming home and having the
Bobcats as their first guests of the season should be a welcome event.
True, the Hill has 'dropped Us Jastfour games (counting last year's
sectional tournament Joss to Dl"lslon . Ill district semi-flnaltst
Chesapeake) , but KC, who fell86-73 to North GaiUa Tuesday night to
go 0-for-thelr season-opeening home stand, has ~ losing streak that
will balloon to 18 games If more Bobcats don't equal or surpass the
deeds of senior .forward Shane Swisher (20 points. vs. the Pirates).sophomore forward Bryan Hall. -whose 17 points Included the first
three-pointer of hls varsity career, and senior guard Sean Denney,
who chipped In with 12 markers.
,
,
The Bobcats will need to continue what Symmes Valley did to junior
g'uard/(orward Bill Potter (10 points! and sophomore center Chris
Simpson (seven) In Tuesday night's affair, which won 't be easy, as .
Potter Is deadly outsidE' as he Is Inside, and senior Jamie Bush, KC's .
6-1 center, gives away five'inches and at least30 pounds to Simpson . .
It was their night - Congratulations are In order to North Gallla 's .
Chris Tackett and Eastern's Tim Bissell for being the first players In
the SVAC to reach the century mark In scoring Tuesday nighL
Tackett pumped In a game-high 227 points against Kyger Creek to
boost hls total to 105 after four games, while Bissell canned 18 against
Southern to give him 101 on the season after five games . .

(".,

'

..,
1

Montreal signs Martinez
:- to three-year contract .
· CHICAGO (UPI) - Pitcher
Dennis Marttnez decided to byJ!UI the lucrative free agent
market, signing a three-year
JUB·r anteed contract Monday reportedly worlh $9.25 million with
,l he Montreal Expos.
Martinez, 35, was expected to
JP'an ted second-look free
, a,ency and Expos general man1 •11er Dave Dombrowllkl uld he
f had received a lot of Interest by
; teams In the right-handed
; pitcher.
- - "Trying to compete, win the
dlvlaton crown ... we dld not feel
we could loae our No.1 pitcher,"
Dombr-skt said.
Tenns of the contract were not
dllciNed, hut Dombrowski said
speculation on S3 million a year
':is an accurate ruess for anyone
In the tree arent market."
.
: Dombrowllklutd II was tmpo)rlant to 11111 Martinez to start the
)¥Inter meetings In a positive
:way.

:be

··:4

"We felt Dennis wu the horse
of our iltaff and that It wu very
lmportaDt to 1lp btrn," Mont-

nil Manager Buck Rodrers
-I

Mary Cooke

Two accidentS have been invesligated by the Meigs County Sherif·

Medical Center.
She was born Feb. 3, 1915, In
Allee, Ohio, daughter of the late
John . Harry and Lola May
·
McCarley.
.
She was preceded In death by
her first husband, ·Elwyn D .
Patterson, and three brothers,
Lowell, Clair and Joe McCarley·.
She married Dwitt Roberts on
Nov. 22, 1947, at Pomeroy, and he
survives along with two daughters, Sheryl Lynn Roberts of
Pickerington and Mrs. Lewis'
(Sharon Ann) Bush of Gallipolis; ..
and a son, Gregory B. Roberts of
Ewington.
Also surviving are a brother, ·
Walter McCarley of Vinton;
three sisters, Mrs. Leonard
(Phyllis) Hash of Bidwell, Mrs.
Charles (Fern) Maore of Logan
and Mrs. Sam (Dorothy) Oller of
Clarksburg, Ohio; .four grandchildren; and several nieces and
nephews .
Services will be 11 a.m. Fr·l day
in the McCoy-Moore Funeral .
Home, VInton. with Rev. C.J.
Lemley offtclatlng. Burial wtll be
in Vinton Memorial Park.
Friends may call at the funeral
home from 3 to 5 p .m. and 7 to 9
p.m. tOday.
Pallbearers will be: · David,
Bob, Bill and Josh McCarley,
Brian Anthony and Jeff Hash. ·
Honorary pallbearers will be
the granddaughters, Amy and
Becky Bush, and Jessica and
Ashly Roberts.

Mary J: Cooke, 73, of Newark

Ohio, fonnerly of New Haven, died
Tuesday, Dec. 4, 1990, in Newarlt.
Born Nov. 10, 1917, in New
Haven, she was a daughter of the
• late Edgar and Marte (Rickard)
Layne. She was also preceded in
death by her husband, Robert M.
Cooke, w!lo died in 1986.
Surviving are a son and
daughter-in-law, Phil L. and
Claudia K. Cooke of Newarlt; and
one grandson, Brandon K. Cooke. .
The service will be held at the
New Haven United Methodist
C!lurch, of which she was a member, Friday, I :30 p.m., with the Rev
Cliffo~ N . West and Rev.~
A. Beruford_. Jr. officiating. .
Bunal . Will be m the Orilham
Cemetery. The body will lie in state
at the church one hour prior to serVICes. Foglesong Funeral Home is
in charge of arrangements.

Delmas D. Mink, 77, of Route 2,
iNorthup community). died
Thursday, Dec. 6, 1990 at Hoizer
Medical Center. He was born
Nov. 24, 1913.
Funeral arrangments will be
·announced later by the Willis
Funeral Home.

Mildred Roberts
Mildred Roberts, 75, or 522
Ewlnglon Rd., Ewington died
Tuesday, Dec. 4, 1990 In Holzer

f 's:";.=='!'"y evenin•o It 8:30
p.m., Richard A. Blackwood of
Milton, W.VL, was traveling ncn1t
in a 1984 Freightlincr semi tractor
and trailer when he came upon a
southbound vehicle siuing m the
northbound laDe due to the snow on
the roadway. Blackwood applied
his brakes and, due to the icy conditims (If pavement. his rig jack·
nifed off the roadWay. .
~ Blackwood was gelling _his
vehicle off the roadway, Brenda
Manuel ofBashan Road pulled into
the tum lane, applied lier brakes
and skidded on the pavement, S1rilc·
ing the tmiler.
Light damage was sustained to
tile trailer and Manuel's Pontiac.
The second accident took place
at 10 p.m. on l'l!esday night.
Patrick David Williams of' Wolf
Pen Road was northbound on State
Route 143 neaJ; Homer HilL
Heavy damage was listed to WdIiams' 1983 Chevrolet pickup IIIICk.
No injuries or citations wen: n:por·
ted.
Steve Tolliver of Greenup, .Ky.,

bucket was stolen from 10111e equi·
pmeDl~~ had )lllked It the
Letan au...... up.Garsp.
·
Elbtl Williams of larJ&amp;svillc told
the dq:wllocnt on Tuelday enveing
thai someone had cut the . cllain
which sccwecl a motorcycle on his
and stole his 1988
Kawuaki.
Accolding to the n:port, that OC·
c..-ed sometime after Monday
· evening ItS p.m.
1he depai-tment received a n:eon
that someone removed a .22 calibre
bandgun from the vehicle of Billy
J . Tliompson of Q)lumbus. The
vehicle, according 111 the . report,
was padced on the street near th1l
Middleport Lunchroom.
SteUa Alley of Racine told
deputies that sometime between
5:30 p.m. and 7:30 p.m., screens
were removed from three windows
on her jrailcr. The glass was broken
in one of the windows. Sbe was not
sure thai _the u:ailer had been en- ·
tered and nothing .was taken. She
reported thai at the other two win·
dows, there wen: storm window
panes in place.
Investigation is continuing.
carport

Woman injured in accident
Jean

Gillllore of Middleport, in·
jured in an accident early Thcsday
evening remains a patient at
~~~~ _YaiJey Hospital where sbe
IS recetvmg treat~nent for chest and
other internal injuries. .
·
She was moved from the intensive care unit Wednesday afternoon
and is now iit Room 122. Her hus_band, Bob, also injwecl in the acciChief Sid Little, police olficers dent was treated fer contusions and
wen: Joined in the search by emer· abrasions at the hospital and then
gency squad members and lin:men.
Middlepon squad members and fin:
·deparunent personnel wen: on the
scene about an hour.

Bomb threat ends without incident
No bomb w~ foun~ in ~ '
search of Me1gs Jumor High
~chool Th~y morning followmg a tltn:aJ whJCh was called to the
schoolat ~ut 9:4~ a.m.
According to Middlepon Police

reported thai It 36 inch backhoe

releaSed The tw~Kar accident oc·
clll1Cd on icy Route 2 near West
Columbia about 7:30p.m.
Vice Adm. Samuel L. Gravely Jr.
became the first black u.s.admiral in
1971.

Robert Rime, Pomeroy, was Dally stock prices
1lned on tme charges when heap- (As of 10:31 a.m.)

pean:d in the court of Pomeroy Bryce and Mark Smith
~yor Richard Seyler Tuesday qf Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loe!wl
night.
Am Electric Power ....... ...... 29)\
For giving false information be" Ashland 011 ................ :.... ...29'!i
was fined $163 and costs, for peuy . AT&amp;T ..... .... ........................ 30~
theft .at Super America, $212 and Bob Evans ..... ....... : ......... .... l4~
costs: and for ~g under Charming Shoppes :.......... ... 10*
s~ion, 563.an costs.
City Holding Co ................ .. 15~
ers fined in tile court were Federal Mogul. ...... ·............. 131-8
~e~ Armstrong, Pomeroy, assault Goodyear T&amp;R ................... 16%
I
and costs; Richard Ellis, Key Centurion .................... 11%
Pomeory, $50 and costs, failure to Lands ' End ......... .. .... :......... 13%
have his motor vehicle under con- Limited Inc ... : .. .......: ........ ... 18
tnol; Brian Nitz, Middleport, $375 Multimedia Inc ........ ......... ..62%
and costs, DWl; WilUalri McClure, Rax ResQJurants.. ...... ......... '!4
Pomeo~ 563 and costs, speeding;
Robbins &amp; Myers .. .............. . 18.
Robert ibert, Gallipolis, 563 and Shoney's rnc .... ......... .. ........ 10~
. costs, consuming alcohol under thc Star Bank ........ ... .... ......... ...17'!i
age of 21; and Barbara Stroud, Gal· Wendy's rnt'L ........ ...... ....... 6~
lipolis, 563 and costs, no opciator's Worthington !nd .......... .. ...... 21%
license. . •
DL
D
Eleven forfeited bonds in the r r.ame r e OWS lp .
court. They were Fred Miller, Jr., meeting
Cambridge, $63, open flask; Diana
Davis, New Haven, $46, speeding;
The speaker for ·Flame FellowRosetta Redovian, Pomeroy, $46, ship Chapter meeting will be Flaot!e
speeding; Shirley Wells, Long Bot· Fellowship's
Intemllionll
iom $48; speeding; Teresa MitcheU, Representative, Mary Diamonil.
Letart, W. Va., $20, no seat belt; She will speak on lhursday It 7
Mad. Swartz, Charleston, W. V11., · p.m. at the Senior Citizens Center
563, expired registration.
m POIIIeroy. Refreshments will lie
Other forfeiting bonds were .. served between 5:30 and 7 p.m. and
Josephine Browning, Pomeroy, the public is invited.
$46,
speeding;
. Thomas
~choonover, Jr., Rutland, $52,
speeding; Richard Eblin, Pomcoiy,
$163, reckless Operation; Leese
Murphey, Pomeroy, $46, speeding;
Melanie Weese, l!.acine, $49,
~g; Raymond Cox, Gallipolis, $375 and costs, DWI.

ll h •
planned

P.OINSETTIAS.

$299
VIDEO

Hospital news

Vetenns Memorial Hospital
The average wind speed in MilwauWEDNESDAY
ADMISSIONS •
kee is 11.8 mph. The higbest ever reNone.
·
~rded in the city wu 54 mph.
WEDNESDAY DISCHARGES •

Middleport &amp; Pomeroy

None.

Bridges freeze before l'oadway
. In light_ of recent slick roads, Sheriff James M; Soulsby is advis·
mg.motonsts ~ remember that bridges freeze before pavement and
dunng t!Jese wmter months, you should exercise good J'udgement
·
·
and caution.

· F1RST DEER - Jerr Rankin, 1\appen Plains, shot his 6rst.deer, a
14-point huck, on 1\olonday . at 7:30 a.m. The deer weighed 150
pounds and was sllot In Athens CouJ!Iy. Rankin in the son or Johu
and Connie Rankin, 1\appers Plains.
.

.sgc~"*-=

Sunoco
10W30, 10W40

or5W30
.Motor
......, Oil

159 .
[)etalled .
oeslgn Deluxe
Scraper/Snow
erush ·
""--~""

ggt

Sf

Me&lt;SOAlr

pmPenn
starting
Fluid

CA·60

Cold snap ·in south -

Ch;ittmes
Greeting Edition
Mondav,
Decemher 24

(Reserves)
(SVAC only)
TEAM
W L PF PA
Eastern ............... 3 0 168 122
Oak Hlll .... .......... 2 1 176 174.
North Callia .. .. .... · 2 I 174 139
Southern .............. 2 1 132 150
Hannan Trace ..... 1 2 144 131
Symmes Valley ... 1 2 132 147
Kyger Creek ........ 1 2 128 149
Southwestern ...... . 0 3 103 145
TOTALS ........... . 12 12 1137 1157

.89 sale price
- .30mfr'srebate

- - 99'

~f'IIPI" .. " ,, " ...... .

· By Unlted·-Press.Internatlonal
- Freeie warnings were In effect
Temperatures dipped to near for northern Florida and southwfreezing across the South Wed- est-Georgia where lows reached
nesday as strong winds buffeted
the lower 30s and upper 20s.
Southern California and -snow . sending homeless Into shelters
dusted the nor theast and upper and others to stores In search 6(
Midwest.
warmth.

g9s

999

USA

Repatr
Manuals

ToWRope
W\thHoOkS

Hayn~s

11101 I 13

Weather
. Extended forecast : A chance
of snow Saturday, with · fair
weather Sunday and Monday.
fllghs will be ·in the 30s Saturday.
In the 40s Sunday , and ranging
from the 40s to the low 50s
Monday. Overnight lows will be
in the 20s Saturday and Sunday
mornings, and ranging from the
mld 20s to the low 30s early
Monday ,
South Central Ohio: Mostly
Clear Thursday night, with a low
In the mld 20s. Mostly sunny
Friday, with highs In the lower

Friday's slate
North GaiUa at Hannan Trace
Kyger Creek at Oak Hlll
Southern at Southwestern
Eastern at Symmes Valley
Saturday's schedule
Southern vs. Green Local atOU's
Convocation Center, 10:30 a.m.
Oak Hlll at South Webste r .
Chesapeake at North Gallla
Raceland (Ky.) at Symmes Valley

FRUTH PHARMACY
MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

SUNDAY, DECEMBER 9
2 P.M. TIL 4 P.M.
BRING YOUR CAMERA

.\

With wreaths of holly and mistletoe, stockings hung
.
by the fire and scenes blanketed with snow
.
'
Christmas encompasses warmth and good ·cheer as we
cherish the blessings ,we've shared this past year.
For us it means saying "thanks" to you, our many .
friends, old and new, whose kind support we'll always
treasure. Doing business with you is our
greatest pleasure!

40s.

''Tb!!y are buying jackets, long
coats, electric blankets, regular
blankets, gloves, caps," said
Frank Orlando, manager or the
Kmart store In Stone Mountain.
''Anytime weather changes drastically and gets pretty cold,
business picks up."
Wind advisories were posted
for the the mountains and valleys
of Southern California.
Snowshowers were scattered
over central New England, New
York ~tate, northern Minnesota
and northern Idaho. Syracuse,
N.Y., tallled 6 lllches of ·SD?W.

1599 - .

4.49saleprice

- l .O!!ltJt-~retJale

2~!

interdynamiC!i
Defroster/
Defogger

Zerexor

'"'"

Peak
Antifreeze

"""

349
Ralli-X
d~)G13

799
pylon
washer
Pumps
u5101

699
carol Cable
12'' aooster

CableS
.ac:et21G

Wish all your customers and
friends a very Merry Christmas in
· our Christmas Greeting Edition on
December 24th.

FACTORY AUTHORIZED SERVICE
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TOUCH

.----Local news briefs---.

Seven calls for assisJance were answered by units· of Meigs
County Emergency Medical Services on Wednesday and Thursday.
At 2:30 p.m., Pomeroy squad went to Mulbeny Avenue for Carl
. Roach, Roach was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital. At 3:24
p.m., Pomeroy squad to Condor Street for Tabitha Watson who was
taken to Holzer Medical Center. At 4:12 p.m., Pomeroy ~uad was
·called to East Main Street for Georgia Swagger, who was transported to Holzer Medical, Center. At 7:09 p.m., Pomeroy squad was
transported to West Main Street for Brenda Graham. Graham went
to Veterans Memorial Hospitai.At 813 p.m., Middleport squad went
to Soutb Second Avenue for Homer Moodispaugh. Moodispaugh .
was treated but not transponed. At 8:58 p.m.. Tuppers Plains squad
went to State Route 7 for Randy Shields. He was taken to Caniden
·
.
Clark· Memorial.
At 2:09 ~-1!1· on Thursday, Pomeroy squad went to Lincoln HiD
for L1sa Whnmg, who was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital.

(Overall)
TEAM
W L PF PA ·
Hannan Trace .... . 3 0 234 138
Symmes Valley ... 3 0 171 141
Southern ..... ... .. .... 2 1 227 201
Eastern ............... 3 2 , 367 404
North Callta ...... .. 2 2 320 341
Oak Hlll .............. 0 3 179 235
Southwestern.·...... O 3 153 - 209
Kyger Creek ........ O 4 217 252
(Conference)
Hannan Trace ..... 3 0 234 138
Symmes Valley ... 3 0 171 141
North Gallla ........ 2 1 240 237
Southern . .-............ 2 1 227 201
Eastern ............... 2 1 203 215
Oak Hill .... .. ........ 0 3 179 235
Kyger Creek .... .... 0 3 172 203
Southwestern ....... 0 3 153 209
TOTALS ............ 12 .12 1579 1579

NOTICE ia hereby given that on Saturday, .December 8. 1990, at 1 0:0() a.m., a public sale will
be held at 106 Union Avenue. Pomeroy, Ohio. to
Hll for cash the following collateral:
1987 Plymouth Turismo S#
1P3BM44C4HD278817
(bodyman'a apecial)
1986 Chevy K6 Blazer
S# 1G8EK18H4FF113286
(#4 rod bearing out of motor)
Tha Farmers Bank and Savinga Company. Pomeroy. Ohio, r... rvH the right to bid at thiaaale.
and to withdraw the above collateral prior to aale.
Further. Tha Farmers Bank and Savings Company
reHrvea the right to reject any or all bids aubmitted.
Further. the above collateral will be sold in the
condition it ia in with no expreaaed or -implied
_
warrenties given.
'

Stocks

EMS runs reported

PUBLIC NOTIC'E

"

The Daily Sentinel

----'--Sheriff's report----- Pomeroy court

SVAC standings

&lt;\ · r--S~A~NT~A-W..I-LL-B""E_A_T__-

said. "He was our ace. He was
the guy who put the !Mings and
the wins on the board."

Pomeeoy-MiddiBPOrt. Ohio

--Area deaths--

Delmas D. Mink

'

f

Thursday. December 6, 1990

'

T

II

,.

·J

'";!

,.

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�.,
Page

8-The Deily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Thursday, December 6, 1990

~----~~------------------~~~~~~~~--------------~==~~~~~ ~

Support These
Fine Area
Businesses!

Football '90!
Catch All The
Excitement!!

·YourBank(rYt/.il}...

992-6669

-

@
.....

Member F.O.I.C.
211 W•st seco nd Slree t
~. 0. lox 626

· MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Qoute 7

Pom81oy, OH 45769

P 0 . Box.339
Tuppers PI01tlS, OH 45783

61oll992·2136

Ot4.007·3161

For AD Your Prescription and
Sundry Seeds See Us"

·.· ''I/lnrtli•
UJ~I''

FOR SUNDAY, DECEMBER 9
**ATLANTA ..........·.......... 27 -PHO'E NIX. ~ ..

'
Ill ••• I

• • • -• • • • I

I

I ·• • •

20

In Phoenix laat season, Cards took advantage of traveling Falcone, RB
Earl Ferr.ell runing for three TDs to lead Cards to big 34·30 win . .; .We
think Falcons will return favor.
·

992-2057
698 WEST MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO

BUFFAL0 ........................ 30 "*INDIANAPOLIS ............ 13
In saaaon opener in Buffalo, Bill defense, helped by four FGs, whipped
Colts 26·1 0 ... QB Jim Kelly completed 28 of 37 pa..es while rookie
Colt QB Jeff George completed 13 of 24.

"*GREEN BAY ...... ,......... 20 SEAnLE ........................ 17
Packera lead series 3-2. Sea hawks winning lasttwo meetinga ... real toss-up, offenaive, defensive totals almost identical ... Seattle in trouble
staying close in AFC Wast race.

DOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER
INSURANCE
111 East Second Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
992-2342

**HOUSTON ................... 27 CLEVELAND ................... 13
Oiler QB Warren Moon put on aparkiing run-and-shoot show in recent
match'up with Browns. passing for 322 yards. flvaTDs, Houston bombing Cleveland 36·23 ... same atory, 2nd verse. ,
**KANSAS CITY ...... ~ ......... 20 DENVER ......................... 13
In earlier Monday nightthriller vs. Chiefs, down 23-21, Bronco OBJohn
ELway completed 4th down 49-yard peas leading to David Treadwell' a
last second FG, Denve~ winning 24-23.
.
.

**MIAMI ......................... 23 PHILADELPHIA ................ 21
Another brief series, Dolphins winning last two meetings, lead 4·2 ...
Miami's outstanding defenseleada AFC .•. Randall Cunningham's Eagle
offense one· of top three in NFC.

MINNESOTA .................. 20

WHY

Queen

Mllff ~ . .

**PITTSBURGH ............... 24 NEW ENGLAND .............. 10

NORTH SECOND AVE
. •.
MIDDLEPOn, OHIO

VALLEY LUMBER

Steel era put Patriots away easily in last year's meeting •.. Pitt led 14-3 in
halft!me, 21-3 in 3rd quarter. going. on to 28-10 win; R8 Tim Worley
runn1ng for 104 total yard a. ·

SAN FRANCISCO ........... 28 **CINCINNATI ................ 17
49ers have dominated Bengal a both during regular season and post-sea·
son ... S.F. ha.s won 8 of 7 including 26-21 win in Super Bowl XVI, 2016 victory in S.B. XXIII ... 49ers again. .

555 PARI ST. ·
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
992-6611

MONDAY,· DECEMBER 10

L. A. RAIDERS ................ 23 **DETROIT ........... ;......... 1 0
Lions'. run-and-shoot offense offset by porous defenae, giving up aim oat
26 pomts per game... Raidera won last two match-ups, lead series 4-2 ...
. Lions in trouble at home.
·

C·OLLEGE FOOTBALL BOWLS

CHESTEI, OHIO
985-3301 or 985-3303

Peoples

Bank
MEMBER FDIC

Sth STRUT

Pt. Pltosont, W. Ya.NoW

Ridenour
Supply
CIIISTR, OHIO
915-3301

SATURDAY, DEC. 8

MONDAY, DEC. 31

CAUFORNIA BOWL At Fresno

JOHN 'HANCOCK BOWL At El Paso

Central Michigan va.
Sen Jose State. 4:00P.M .

Southern California VI. Michigan State,
2:30P.M.

SATURDAY, DEC. 15

COPPER BOWL At Tucson, Ariz.
California vs. Wyo111ing, 6 P.M.

INDEPENDENCE BOWL At Shreveport, La.
Louisiana Tech vs.
Maryland, 8 P.M.

NEW YEAR'S· DAY;
TUES., JAN. 1

CHRISTMAS, TUES., DEC. 25

.WARNER
HEATING
AND
COOUNG

SALES o SERVICE
INSTALLATION

,.........

Air COtNit .....,

......

tilth lfflii.Ky

( . .ty ~·int

........

.

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

Ha••· W.

112-2136

ALOHA BOWL At Honolulu

Michigan vs. Ml11laaippi
11:30 A.M.

Syracuae Vs. Arizona, 3:30 P.M.

THURSDAY, DEC. 27

HALL OF FAME BOWL at Tampa

UBERTY BOWL At Memphis

r--------.COUPON--------,

I OIL CHANGf SPECIAL I
I1 lncludea
To&amp;·
$1695 1I
Querta of Dll.
GM Cera Only.
_,
·
I
Expire• 12/30/90 I
"---------"2-2174
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Up

POMEIOY, OliO

CROWS
Family Restaurant
992-5432 .

PO.ROY, OliO

-TUESDAY NIOHT SPECIAL
ALL THE KENTUCKY FRIED .
CHICKEN YOU CAN EAT

ADOLPH'S
DAIRY··
VALLEY
SOFT DRINKS • FRIES • SANDWICHES

Weekly Special• .
At The End !If the P.omeroy-Mason Bridge

992-2556

Poma;oy, .Ohio

PAl HILL
-FORD
461 S. Thirci

CITRUS.BOWL .at Orlando
· Georgia Tech vs. Nebreska. 1:30 P.M.

ALL AMERICAN BOWL At Birmingham

Texas VI. Miami, Florida. 1:30 P.M.

COlTON BOWL At Dallas

North Caroline State Vi .
Southern Miuluippi, 8 P.M.

FIESTA BOWL At Tempt, Ariz.

BLOCICBUSTER BOWL At Miami

Pann State VI: Florida State, 8 P.M.

LouiiVille vs. Alabama
4:30P.M.

SATURDAY, DEC. 29

Welhington va. Iowa, I P.M.

Middleport, Ohio

992-2196

Clemaon vs. lllinoia, 1 P.M.

FIIDAY, DEC. 28

399 S. Third

Middleport, Oho

OiANGE BOWL At Miami .

Indiana vs. Auburn.
12:30 P.M.

'

Or~M
VIrginia va. Tenn11ee

SUGAR IOWL At New

Oregon va. Colorado State, 4 P.M.

8:30P.M~

. HOUDAY BOWL At Son Diego
Brigha111 Young .VI.
Texaa A .• M, 8 P.M.

•
'·

.

K~ds
.

Dlelj, an economist at Northern
Ttust Co. In Chicago(
''If we keep the inventory ratio
on even keel that means we will
avoid · the standard business
contraction problem of Inventory
build ups."
Unfilled orders were up 0.6
percent - or $3.2 billion - to
$522.5 billion. Excluding alrcrafl
and parts orders, there was·a 0.5
percent decline in October.
Manufacturers" Inventories 'increased 0.1 percent - or $300
m Ulion to $377.3 billion.
Although small, the rise marked
the fourth consecutive Increase,
the government said.
New orders for durable goods
increased 3.9 percent - or $4.8
billion- to $129.8 billion, revised
upward from lhe previously
reported 3.6 percent galn.
Much of this gain came from a
14.8 percent - or $4.9 billion rlse in orders from the aircraft
and motor vehicle Industries.
Cynlhla Latta, an economist at
DRIMcGraw Hill, In Lexington,
Mass., said the orders report
offers little In the way of positive
news.
''The aircraft will be delivered
In 1993 and 1994:' she said . "That
says this isn't a great number
overall."
"What we're getting is ,confirmation that things are still weak
despite the increases," she said.
"Everything else we know about
the economy tells us (October)
was a down month."
The L~bor Department, meanwhile. reported a revised 0.2
percent increase in productivity
during the third ·quarter. The
figure was revised downward
from a previously estimated
Increase of 1.6 percent f~r the

quarter, the government said.
The department's Bureau of
Labor Statistics said that In the
overall bUsiness sector, produc·
tivlty rose a revised 0.4 percent,
whlle gaining 0.2 percent In the
non-farm business sector, 5.1
percent in manufacturing; 7.4
percent In durable goods manufacturing and 1.6 percent In
non - durable goods
manufacturing.
Economists tended to discoUnt
the productivity numbers .
"Productivity in this kinds of
environment is not a very relia·
ble statistic," Dleli said . ·
"Around (economic) peaks or
troughs, the statistic Is not
entirely trustworthy ."
·
Productivity rose more slowly
in the business and non-farm
business sectors during the quar·
ter . In manufacturing. unit labor
costs fell, reflecting In part faster
productivity growth In the third
.q uarter than In the preylous
period, the government said:·
Among non-financial corpora·
!Ions, productivity declined at an
annual rate of 1 percent In the
third quarter and output declined
0.8 percent. Despite the reduced
output, the hours worked at
non-financial corporations in·
creased 0.2 percent..
_
Business productivity In·
creased at an 0.4 percent annual
rate In the thil:d quarter, while
output rose slightly at 0.1 percent
and hours worked fell 0.4
percent.
The decline In hours worked
marked the first decline since the
recession of 1982, the govern·
ment said.
Hourly compenstation In·
creased at a 4.5 percent annual
rate during the · quarter, com·
pared with a 5.4 percent increaSE'

In the SE'cond quarter. Real In lhe third quarter while output
hourly compensation, whlch ac~ was unc hanged and hours
counts for Inflation, fell 1.8 worl\ed fell 0.2 percent, the first
percent in the quarter after decline since 1986.
increasing 1.6 percent In the
Hourly compensation in the
second quarter.
' non·farm business sector rose 4.6
Productivity in the ·non-farm percent during the quarter while
business sector rose 0.2 percent real hourly compensation felll.S

786 N. 2ND AVE.

•DDI.EPOIT, OliiO .
992·6491

percent.
· Manufacturing productivity in·
creased by an annual rate of 5.1 :·
percent during the quarter. the
largest Increase since 1987. •
Hourly compens;~tlon Increased •
by 3.8 percent but feil2.4 percent
due to Inflation.

...
.. -,·
..
.,

1st Anniversary Sale at ·.
HOOD FAMILY SHOES

20%
OFF STOREWIDE
IN APPRECIATION TO OUR VALUED CUSTOMERS
FOR MAKING OUR 1ST YEAR A SUCCESS.

•
•

l,.l. Gear
(OIIYerSI

langar.Os
1o11ln\
Jullh•
West•"'

r. 1

I ·l t1; 1117

I r II

Florshaim

die sniffing fuel,. solvents

.
BOSTON (UPI) - A deadly . which has.as its goal educatlo.n of titer correction fluid, he said.
The boy was pronounced dead ·
e pidemic apparently has parents and chlldren about the
emerged of teenagers . sniffing hazards of solvent sni!flng; Fitz- shortly after he arrived ·at a
nearby hospital. Laboratory
butane, propane and olher suD, gerald said.
Susan.-Reading, who leads the tests detected butane in his blood
stances to get high. health care
1
group Parenls for Education on and lung tissue.
workers reported. .
Six
weeks
later,
Siegel
~aid a
Inhalant
Abuse
in
Cincinnati,
The practice has claimed the
15-year-old
boy
dled
after
ne
and
said
talking
with
schoolchildren
lives of at least 20 youngsters In
three
companions
look
propane
In
that
city
and
its
suburbs
the Cincinnati area alone, includ·
ing two earlier this year lnvolv· indicates inhalation of solvents from a backyard barbecue grill, ..
ing boys ages 11 and 15. said Earl and fu el Is widespread · and put it in a plastic bag and Inhaled
Siegel of Chlidren's Hospital extends to children as young as the {umes. The .teenagers also
the third-grade level.
·· "engaged in 'torch breathing' Medical Center jn ClnclnnatL
"I·go to sc hools and talk to kids exhaling t!le gas and Igniting it,"
Research "leads us to believe
tltat · abuse of these readily and they say they see It In ev-ery he said.
The victim collapsed after
available Inhalants has reached school:' she said. "The kids
epidemic proportions, Indicating know these inhalants are cheap Inhaling lhe gas when one of his
an urgent need for preventive and easily available and they say companions lit a match, igniting
efforts directed at teenagers and it's the best high they've ever the fumes and causing a flash
fire. The boy died on the way to .
their parents," Siegel and col· had.
·'One boy told me he was the hospital and tests found
l~ague Dr. Suman Wason said in
a: letter to The New England . inhaling between .eight and 10 · propane· in his blood and lungs,
Journal of Medicine that was cans of butane every day. Siegel said.
Because "we can' t legislate
Another boy lold me that he could
published Wednesday.
·
these
products out of existence,"
I The dimensions of Ihe problem go out to my car and just by
IJatlonwlde are not knowri ·be· sniffing, tell how much octane Re&lt;J.ding said the besl way to deal
cause no central reporllng sys· the gasoline had. That's how with the problem is· through
fum exists to document cases of much gasoline sniffing he'd educl!tional programs Involving
children, parents, teachers, po·
aeaths or injury from inhalant done," Reading said.
lice
and health care workers.
In
March
of
this
year;
an
abuse, he said. But Siegel said his
The
15-year-old boy who died
11-year-old
boy
collapsed
in
a
experience in Clnclnnali indi·
''had
sore
throats and nausea for
Cincinnati
movie
theater
after
cates that known deaths across
months
before
he died, but even
lhe counlry "are just the very tip apparently inhaling butane. Siedoctors
weren't
aware that II was
gel said. A container of butane
&lt;If the Iceberg."
from
lnpalant
abuse.
His mother
• Charles Sharp of the National · clgarette·llghter fuel was found
Institute of Drug Abuse said that at the scene along with a plastic had him tested for drugs and he
1p Great . Britain, where re· bag and several bottles of typew· came up clean," she said.
searchers have tried to systemat·
lcally track sudden sniffing
4eaths ''theY,.record well over 100
a year.
.
· "There's no way we've been
able to track It, although we·know
of a number of deaths." he said,
adding the scope of the practice
appearS. to vary by region. " In
some regions, no one's heard of lt
and In others, they've run Into big
problems. But .certainly, communities need to be alerted to lhe
situation," he said .
Inhaling the fuels butane and
propane. as well as gasoline,
certain solvents and other sub·
stances, can cause a phena.
menan called "sudden sniffing
death.'' In which the heart starts
beating with wild Irregularity.
causing death within minutes,
Siegel s;~id . ·
· ·Among along list of substances
teenag~rs 'and pre-teens have ·
been inhaling to get high Is
typewriter correcllon flujd con·
talning the solvents trichlorc&gt;e·
thane and trlchloroethylene.
Gillette Co. of Boslon, which
makes one brand of the producl,
•Large Fries
•Shakos
became· so concerned about the
•Buttered Tater ,
· •Sundae
pTactlce it added mustard oil 'to
the fluid as a deterrent.
•Tater Wedges
•Salad
' "We put In the mustard oil to
•Double Cheeseburger
•Jr. Bacon
create' a more disagreeable
(Mustlld·Kotc11up·
Picktell
.
Cheeseburger
smell " said Gillette spokeswoman joan Fitzgerald. But while .
SENIORS SPECIAL
.
this might turn away a flrst·tin\e
Chicken,
1
Pc.
Broasted
user·, "for a chronic abuser you
Mashed Potato 8&amp; Gravy
really have to educate them
aboul what a very, very danger· ·
.(with Breasudd. •1.001
ous activity this Is."
Gillelte participated In the
crea11on of the Washington·
based Sl&gt;lvent Abuse Foundation
for Education - or SAFE - .
'

Our Holido,y hours beginning Monday,· Da,, 1Oth

•

I
=\
I~

:~

Mon.-Sat. 9. A.M.·8 P.M.; Sunday 12 til 5 P.M.
We will be here to help you with your holiday
shoooina aiving you friendly, cpurtaous IIIVice
.-John. Crystal, Batty. Sharon and Robby

.

!()\i• '

FAMI~Y

HOOD
210 EAST MAIN

SHOES
POMEROY
•'

LIVE

CHRISTMAS .TREES!
'

Beautiful White Pines and Fraizer Firs
5 ,T.

'tO

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The Fraizer Fir. Is The .. EUte"
In Christmas Trees
. - All Beaut(ficlly Sheared
With Excellent Needle Retention -

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SELECTION IS STILL GOOD!

VALUE MENU

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,,'

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•

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~;
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-'·•
•!

'•

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99¢

Colol'lldo VI. ~otre Dame, 8 P.M.
1

.

PAT HILL A~ CHRYSLER .
CHRYSLER · · lfii.Iii..'iJ ·MOTORS
PLYMOUTH-DODGE .,Mt,J .

ROSE BOWL ·At Pasocltna

PEACH BOWL At Atlanta
FREEDOM BOWL At Analieim

· Hut Pump .
XL 1200
Super Efficiency

SMITHNELSON
MOTORS, INC.

500 EAST MAIN

WASHINGTO)'I (UP!) - Despite rislng factory orders and
continued, bul slowing, gains in
productivity; economisls said
there Is lillie In recent govern·
ment statistics to Indicate eco·
nomic recovery . .
The Commerce· Department
We!inesday reported a 2.8 percent Increase In factory orders in
O¢tober. The Increase, which
was · greater than many econo·
mjsts had expected, was the'
13rgest boost since a 4 percenl
gain in March .. .
:New orders for manufactured
goods Increased $6.8 bi!I'lon in
oCtober to $250.7 bllllon. Durable
gOods orders gained 3.9 percent
with most of the increase in
transportation equipment.
;Orders for non-durable goods
rose 1.6 percent with most of the
gain coming from petroleum
refining.
·Shipments of manufactured
goods increased 1.7 percent- or
$4.2 billion - In October to $247.5
billion. Shipments for durable
goods rose 1.8 percent, with
transportation equipment shipments accounting for most of the
gatn.
.
Non-durable goods shipments
rose 1.6 percent, mostly from
Increased petroleum refining .
Inventories at manufacturers
of durable goods, those Items
intended_ to last three or more
years, . slipped 0.1 percent lo
$246.7 billion. while Inventories
for makers of non-durable goods
111creased 0.4 percent to · $500
mil.llon.
The ratio of Inventories to
shipments was 1.52, down from
i.55 in September.
"The fact that the inventory-tosales ratio.is still in good shape Is
a positive sign" said Hobert

8&gt;

GATOR BOWL At Jacksonville

Air Force va. Ohio State. 8 P.M.

I CONVINIENT LOCATIONS

675-1121

PoiHroy, Ohio

992-3671

ONLY$349

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773-5514

tn

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P~

**WASHINGTON ............. 21 CHICAGO ....................... 20
Redskins hope to repeat last year's 31-14 wipe-out of Bears •.. Redskin
OB Mark Rypien threw for 401 yards, four TDs, Washington scoring 24
unanswered points in second half.

Baum
L·umber

We hawe tht

**NEW YORK GIANTS .... 19

Rams hold big 28·14 lead in series, teama splitting in '89 match-ups ...
Saints destroyed Rams in L. A. 40-21, QB Bobby Hebert throwing three
TO paases.. ,L.A. won second 20-17. '

.

.

PEOPLE SAY,

NEW ORLEANS .............. 24 **l. A. RAMS ................. 23

992-3322

iiCCIND STREET JACKSON A\1£.

t&gt;

Vikings lead series 8-3... in meeting in '89, Giants trailed Nlinnesota 7-0
at halftime, rallied for 24 points in 2nd half, N.Y. beatingVikes24-14 ...
defense recorded aix sacka.
·

Oairll

'.

253 NORTH SECOND

L£ICIIIII

The Daily Sentit•ei-Page-7

Pomwoy-Middleport, Ohio

Orders up in October, quarterly productivity improves

Prescription
Shop

FB f~~m~!~a~ank

Thuraday, December 6, 1990

CII!Nna's.Ubnry

,698

Tbe tint ~·a lllnry ID
America wu tile Blttlham Llltnry
lor Youth ID· Salllbury, CoeD. Tbt U·
lni'J apiold In 1101 with 110 boob
for lddl qed t to II, aate1 Tbe.Kldl'
World AhnfNl'.

West

Jackson
Ave.
'&amp; 24 tit.

Pt.

Pleasant

~

-·.

"•

.,•
~

· . Rt. 7, Upper RM!r Road ·
Ga-11, Ol'llo.
(114)-1711

'&lt;

..

:l
...
...

..
w

~

•

�••
.• "•

'

The Daily Sentinel_;

, ·By The Bend

Several donations were made 81
tbe recent meeting of tbe Aqaerican
Legion Drew Websler Post 39
Auxiliary. Jennifer Taylor, who at·
tended Buckeye Girl's State, spoke
on hu stay there.
Loretta Tieme~er opened tbe
meeting In rituahstic fll'lll. Mary
Martin gave die invocation.
Catherine Welsh, membership
chairman, reported !hat 97 dues bad
been paid but that I07 are needed
for the unit 10 reach ils membership
goal. The group voted to pay two
members' dues who. are in nursing
homes. Three new appUcants are
pending awaiting further infonnation. ·
Ullanya Hanks, children and
youth chairman, reported that tbe
group will adopt a cottage fll' eight
boys at Xenia Soldiers and Sailors
Children's Heme. They will be
remembered with Qlriwnas cards,
birthday cai'ds and funds for
parties.
Veda Davis annotmced \hat the
Christmas p;u-ty for veJerl!f!S 81 ~
Athens Mental Health Center w1U
be cooduc1ed by the Wilkesville
unit.
Mildred Hudson, community
service chairman. was given $50 10
purchase gifts for the patients at the
center who are from Meigs County.

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I

• ••

Aul1una

cloWn.

Autumn Ll the tlme,

whn we rake the leaves.
There•a red. areen and brown,
Ie.ves, falllq on the around.
Autumn Ia the leiiDn,

wb8. we have Thaaklgtvtng.
We'd like to th&amp;nlltlle Lord,

tor our grateful Uvln.r.

JennUer Hendricks
Sth IP'ade
Racine Elementary
'Die llerl')' Bear

Thel'e' ts a bear,

Named Berey Bear.

He' 1 tht bear of the bears
He can l,.p ~tgh trees
And count to !5~003
·
He can pld the hl&amp;he~~t berries
And wont be contrary ·
·
No matter what you do
So hooray to you know who.
Nikki Robinson

5th IJ'Ide

Racine Elemeritilry
leanf •an! Be .... !

Bear~ they are every place

Bears can even be made out of lace

Toystores have lots of bears

Some children have bears wlth tears
Some people think bears have hearts, too
Llke me and yoo!

Stacy Warden
5th grade
Rac:tne Elementary

are r ..ou•
auxiliary member and
member.

·

;;

•

.,

By WILLIAM

Tile SID)o Bear

TherP was a bear that lived In cave,
he took a bath, but did not &amp;;have. ·
He liked to eat rlsh,
but not out of a dlth,
He wu very hairy
but also scary.
Ht&gt; tried to drive a car to town ,

....

OLD PALS IN· LONDON: : ,
Reagan may have a few . ·
. Racine Elementary
lips on re!lrement to share with
his friend Mariaret Thatcher,
November
who recently was forced out as ..
Novembfr Is a treasure
British prime minister.
So g!Mmlne
Reagan, who has filled his
And IP tree
The leaves are turning brown
post-presidential
years with bigAIMI falling ollhe treeo
money
speaking
engagements
It Is tun jumpln&amp; Jn the leaves
When they befln to fall
and writing memoirs, and his
They look pretty and so small
\VI!e, Nancy, are In London with
The wiDd blows and tums ttle leaves as
they freeze
·
~
plans to 'visit Thatcher, Prince
We look at the leaves soflly blowing In the
Charles and Princess Diana and
breeze.
Misty Hysell
Queen Elizabeth and her mother,
5th lf•de
the queen mum. Reagan's .scheRacine Elementary
dule also . Includes a speech to
Cambridge U11iverslty's CamSllol'tYThaniiiii•IDI
bridge Union Society, a d'.nner
Shorty, Shorty, Shorty.
Thanksatvlna II riear.
talk at the Atlantic Richfield oil
If You want a party,
company and an · appearance
come here.
We are having turkey.
before a British charity fundWe are having pumpkin pie
raising
club before returning to
with a spot oflemon ~ rye.
CaU!ornla
Saturday.
We are having ducks.
We are having clam
Sir Ronald, as he can be
wtth a dish of baked ham.
addressed In Brita In since reTrlsh Holman
5th .......
ceiving an honorary knighthood
Ractne Elementary
from the queen In 1989, also was •
on a television talk show Tuesday
night and satd the biggest accomplishment of hi~ admintstraBy United Press International
Jton had been restoring U ,S.
.
pride. ''I just got the government
President Bush, tn~sting· that . out of tile way and the people did
Iraq withdraw Its ·occupa!lon
the rest," he said.
forces from Kuwait. without
CONNALLY IN IRAQ :
condition.
Former politiCo John Connally Is
"When there is naked aggres- In Baghdad with hopes of persion, It Is not a question of saving
suading Iraq to free oil industry
race for the aggressor."
workers being held hostage
Tyson Evans

' Sth lf&amp;de

you mtrht see some doves·.

day.
member;
Mary Alice Bise,

c. TROTT
United Press Jnteruath1nal

...

but aU tlle other bears called him a

AUtumn Ia the seaion,
thai ....-y kid loves. .
When YOU look In a pond,

1990 OUTSTANDING MEMBERS • The
Olive Towusblp . Volunteer .Fire l)epartme~t
hooorecl outstaudaug Diem ben tor 1990 at the~r
Chrlsllaas diuoer at Riverview School ou Satur-

I

Poe.t's comer

~nald

.,'
•

CITJZENSIDP ASS~MBLY • Debbie Breanoa, tar ri&amp;ht front,
Meigs Junior High School priocipal, was tbe guest speaker at
1\aesday's CitlzeasbiJI Assembly held at Pomeroy Elementary.
Students presented c1tizeusbip certificates are, l·r, frout, Matthew
Smith, Jonathan. Runyon, Alicia Pickens, Heather Baxter, Kim-

I

Community Calendar Items
·appear two days berore io· event
and the day or that neat. Items
must be received iD advance to
'i·nsure publication iD the eaten·
'dar.

HASKINS-TANNER'S SPECTACULAR

36 HOUR SALEf! &lt;t..:s:
!..z,lv

RACINE - The Racine American
Legion Post 602 will meet
Thursday at 7:30p.m. Plans wiU be
finalized for giving fruit 10 heal!h
. care centers. RefreshmeniS will fol·
. low the meeting.

STARTS FRIDAY, DECEMBER 7 - 8":00 AM-.8:00 PM
~
SATURDAY, DEC. 8 &amp; MONDAY, DEC. 10 - 8:00AM-8:00PM

,

"

Alice Bise. B~ck row, left to ri&amp;bt, are Dorotba
~Iebel, Jla WestraU, Martha Dunt.·- Frances
Reed, Emma Dunt, DOlly Reed . and Thelma
Smith. (See additioual photos ioslde.)

&lt;

ATIO~S
"Z-.
' ..
. v

HAGGAR ~RESS SlACKS

BOOT CUT or REGULAR CUT
Regular S22.99

S3S.99 Value .

LEVI'S PRE-WASHED
STRAIGHT LEG JEANS
· Regular S2 S.99

NOW $22 77

LONGTIME MEMBERS • 25 year members
Olive Towusbip Volunteer Fire Department received service awards ou Saturday uigbt
at tbe departmeot's Christmas diuner. Pictured,
rraot row,l-r, are Emie Barrioger,.Jack Westrall,
Soony "'rri&amp;, and Dale Smith. Back row, 1-r, are

BUI i&gt;unt, Grot Smith, Cbarles Humphrey,
Fraok Bise and Jobo Riebel, accepting for his
father, tl!e late Dorsel Riebel Nnt pictured Is
Brlao Reed, wbo accepted tor his rather, the late
Maurice Reed.

GROUP MEN'S REG. S22.50
WESTERN SNAP FRONT

SPORT SHIRTS
NOW$1700

.GROUP MEN'S

. LEVI .DENIM

SPORT JEANS

UNliNED .JACKETS

Village church tour
slated for Dec. 16

·NOW $27 77
GROUP DRESS SHOES

The Middlqxwt Arts C0181Cil is
sponsoring "A Christmas CeJein.
lion", !he fint amua) village I;IIID'th
!OW'(» Sunday, Dec~ 16, flom I 10
4p.m. ·
· AD of !he Middkport ehurclies
have been invired' to parlicipa~t by
opening !heir facilities. 10 die
public. Plans call for die Art
Council 10 paqJiie a cour ptOJian
10 be disuibulcd through 111e churches with a map designaling tbe
location of tbe participacing cbur·
ches.
II has been suggrsred dill each
clvc:h provide ~len 10 welcome
visilors, !hat e1ther taped or li\le
miiSic be presen!fd, !lw deconral
ICCliCS be ligh!fd and that live
Dalivilies, living trees, or ocher special displays be in place.
Tbe Arts Council suggests !lw
or tbe churches may also
Wllll10 IUVe refreshments.
Tow visitors will enjoy tbe
litt(bn or visiting tbe churclles on
a ~ve schedule during
tbe time fnune of tbe lOur. There is,
of coune. no cllarge.

Values tt S65.00

NOW $3777

•

19" COLOR TV

,r

I.

Lance, Jessica
Laura Pollard.
Taylor,
Vickers, Jonathan
all A's; _
Rebekah Frans, B honor roll.
Fourth grade - Stephen Roberts,
Dani Jenks, Amanda Kohlhoff, all
with straight A's; Jessica Walker,
Becky Bilchfield, Naralie Pyles,
Lacy Hamm, Alan Haley; Daniel
Sizemore, Jessica McCoy, all A's;
Lisa Bow!l1811, Danny Medford,
Rachel Lusher,/ Andrew WiUiams,
B honorroU.
Fifth grade · Vandana Agrawal, '
llllaight A's; Donovan Davis,
Deanna Martin, Bo Pollard, Lisa
VoUbom, Brandy Bahr, all A's;
Cbris Bryan, Suzanne Clark,
Michael Oianechini, B honor roll.
Sixth grade ·Melissa Brown, Joy
Chaksupa, Micah Lanier, all with
straight A's; Nathan Smith, Leisa
Walters, all A's; Mau Holley, hilly
Miller, Shatm 1late, Tim White, B
honor roll.
Seventh grade- Jill Mock, Amy
Pollard, straight A's; Anesa Van
~Ire, Nan WiUiamsqn, all A's;

'

NOW $37 77'

· 2.. Prize
PANASONI(
MICROWAVE

WRANGLER PRE-WASHED

JEANS Reg; $30.00
$ 77

MEN'S

DRESS
SOCKS
111•

•us

3 FOR $699
·6 FOI $13 91
QUILT UNED

FLANNEL SHIRTS
IIEG. 121.00 NOW S1J77
VALUES TO 1140.00

MEN'S
TOP COATS &amp;
ALL WEATHER COATS

NOW S97°0

Now You Know

GROUP MIN'S REG. '30.00

KNIT SHIRTS
NOW S1777
.

ARROW DRESS SHIRTS

77
NOW $9-

·

I

2 FOR
S18

·36

HOUR

. GROUP MEN'S
Val- to $12.00

SALE! ·
3 DAYSI
·FIIDAY
SATUIDAY
MONDAY
8 AM· I PM

' The C)1esler 'lbwnshi · Trustees
will meet Tuesday at 7:~ p.m. at
the ~~ hall.

Soviet UBion.
I .

....

i'

POit4SEniA BASKETS
HOLLY TREES
FOLIAGE BASKETS
LIVE &amp; CUT TREES

.

For The Loved One's Grave:
Blonkets, Vases and Sprays

.

·HUBBARD'S
GREENHOUSE
SYRACUSE, OH.
992-5776

End IR remote'clut·
ter! IM5·t903 ·

Auto-level tor best

recordings. N14·1041
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With 20MB Drive

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LOW AI 115 Ptr Momh t

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For appointments call

(304) 875-4107

VHS Camcorder
With 12x Zoom

lave 100
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sagg .::\o
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lkl PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPO'AL
• .,.. The family 01 ptol.ulonoll

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tii'IO Hdaet

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are arre~ted for public dru.nkennen each day, compared with
17,808 aucb arrests dally In the

2985 :9'15

E. Neal Orteza, M.D.

9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday .

In TDelday's edition of The
Daily Senlinel, tbe Me' Local
School District honor ~ should .
bave listed JOe HiD, not John Hill,
· as mating lbe hooor roll in tbe
six'dl grade at Pomeroy Elemenlary.

Chrl•t••• Sau.. l
OPEN DAIL V 9-5
SUNDAY 1·5

Save•2o

The Winding Trials Garden Club
will sponsor a Christmas Decoration and Lighting Contest in Middleport on Dec. 2I.
Chairmen for the conteSt are
Ruth Moore, 992-2029, and Addalou Lewis, 992·2924.
Three ca~egories for judging are
·available: overall, . religiOUs, and
door, window or entrance. ·
In case of bad .weather the judging will be held on Dec. 22.
. More infonnation may be obtained by calling Mrs. Moore or
Mrs. Lewis.
Winners will be annotmced in
.The Daily Sentinel.

Emy Olivare~·Ortez~, :M:.D.

.

t----------t
Now Ope• For

Most Stores Open Late
Nights 'Til Christmas

251Vo Off

Club to sponsor
lighting contest

&amp;

.

Easy-to-Program
8-ln-1 Remote

REEDSVILLE - The FeUowship
Church of the N!IZiiene in

Seeine patients .

Trustees to meet
,,

County PubUc Library on Saturday
at 2 p.m.

-

An average of 2.243 Americans

'

POMEROY - "Star Trek-Space

Jennifer Taylor was presen!fd
$25 from the unit for her auendance 81 Buckeye Girls Slate.
Jeannie Taylor spoke on tbe
Teenage Institute on Drugs and Alcoho!. The auxiliary presen!fd her a
check for $50 to · be used where
needed.
Silent prayer closed tbe meeting
and the prize was won by Mildred .
Hudson who dona!fd it back 10 tbe
uniJ.

IDEAS

r:=~--'-~============~===!i!

Correction

BJ Ualted PreM ildernatlonal

'

TUPPERS PLAINS • There Will
be a rotmd and square dance at tbe
Tuppers Plains VFW Post on
Friday from' 8-11:30 p.m. featuring
True Country Ramblers. Ronnie
·Wood will be tbe caller. Cost is
$2.50 for adulls and $1 for childen
under 12. PubUc invited.

Seed" will be shown at tbe Meigs

Rachel Cochran, Kristen Dassylva,
Tony Hughes, Nathan Lusher, B
honor roll. ·
Eighth grade - Abigail Hel!l'Y.
straight A's; Jenny Hager, Robin
Rice, all A's;, Cara Bahr, Melissa
Morgan; B honor roll.
· Ninth g~ • Jason Chen,,
straight A"s; Dan Chaksupa, Jodie
Hager, Anna Hamrick, Andrea
Lewis, Amy Wood, Elizabeth
Wooten, all A's; Jeremiah Brown,
Sarah MiUer, B honor roll.
Tenth grade · • Sandra Adams,
Meredith PoUard, sttaight A's;
Chris!y Moek, Brian Rice, Nikki
Saunders, all A's; Lora Tucker, B
honor roll.
Eleventh grade • Beth Blevins,
· straight A's; Home Bartel, Jenny
Hughes. Darin Peck, Cindy Sheets,
all A's; Pam Holl~y. B honor roU.
Twelveth grade • Amy Brumfield, all A's; Mike McCleese, Greg
Wray, B honor roU.

The honor roll for the Ohio Valley Christian School has been annotmced.
: Farst grade • Amit Agrawal,
David Baker, Hannah Beaver,
Dawn Chamberlain, Chad Dailey,
Deidra Hall, Michael Jenks, Matthew Price, all with sttaight A's;
Lawen Browning, Ginny Miller,
Rachel Tucker, all A's; Joe Morgan,
B honor roll.
• Second grade - TQillmy Dayton,
Kent Haley, Nicholas Mulholand,
Jordan Shaffer, Nathan WiUiams,
~ wi!h straight A's; Brad Bowman,
Erica Mass_ie, Carl Medford. Jason
Pell)l, Andrea . Sims, Joe Whie,
Amanda Wilcox, all A's; Donnavan
~hworth, Jessica Barker, Se!h
· BasiOn, Brian Gordon, B honor roll.
Third grade - Meredilh Pollard,
Courtney Gooch, Erin Walker, Eli
Wilson, Christine ZiriUe, all with
strai,hJ A's; April Agustin, Amanda
Brown, TJ. · Frasher, Victoria

REGISTER TO
WIN HASKINS
·TANNER'S
CHRISTMAS
Gln·A·RAMA

Regular S4S.SO

Regular S4 5.00

ENTERPRISE • The Enterprise
United Methodist Chairch will have .
a Cbrisunas bazaar and bake sale
on Fr:iday from 8 am. 10 9 p.m. at
112 W. Main St in Pomeroy, formally Corky's Classics.

OVC honor roll announced

ht Prize

or tbe

.
Reedsville
will
have
a
bazaar
on
FRIDAY .
Saturday
at
the
ch~h.
Call
.
378MIDDJ..El'ORT • The Evan· geline Chapter No. 172 Order of 6422 or 378-6371 for 1nformauon.
tbe Eastern Star, Middleport. will
meet Friday fll' installalion of
officers. Installing officer will be
Mary P&lt;Xter, past grand matron.
Refreshments will be served.
Members bring sandwiches and
relish bays.

t,

77
NOW ~25
•

NOW $19 77 ·

.

:te

POMEROY • The Salisbury
Township TrusJecS will meet
Thursday at 7 p.m. at the home of
the clerk, .Sarah Gibbs, Ball Run
Road, Pomeroy. ·

GRg~f~E~·~

.

PO.MEROY - The Pomeroy
SATURDAY
Group. of A.A. _and At-Anon wiU
POMEROY
• The Benes and
meet Thursday 81 7 p.m. at tbe ·
Beaus
Western
Square
Dance Club
Sacred Heart CathoUc Church. CaU
will
sponsor
an
open
dance on
1-800-333-5051 for infonnation.
Saturday from 8-11 p.m. at tbe
TUPPERS PLAINS • The Tup- ~nior citizens center m ·Pomeroy.
pers Plains VFW Post 9053 Caller will be Sonny Bess, HunAuxiliary will meet Thursday 81 tingiOn, W.Va ·
7:30 p.m. Each member is 10 bring
BURLINGHAM • The Burlin·
a candy or Christmas treat
gham Modem Woodsmen wiU have
STIVERSVR.LE • ,Pavid Car- iiS Chrisunas pany oo Sa~y at
pen1er, Bei.Iville, W.Va, will con· · . 6co:3v0e, ._g.mdi
...: , ~
B~~C:.
duel revival at the Stiversvllle
''"'
·
f .. Church
c
Meats an&lt;! beverages will be fur.
Word 0 · ~th
on ounty nished. Meals will be delivered 10
Road 31 TliUISday !hrough Sunday
at 7:30 p.m. nightly. Pastor Gary tbe elderly and shut-ins before the
Holter inviles the public.
party.
·

VINTON - The Pine Grove
Holiness Chapel, Route 235, VintOn, five miles from Roule 124
Rowlesville Road, will have revival
Thursday through Dec. 16 81 7:30
p:m. nightly. Rev. and Mrs. David
•I,igh~ evangelists. PubliC 'invited. ~

~

I
LEVI'S 14-0Z. JEANS. ,,, .

MIDDLEPORT - The Evangeline Chapler, No. 172, Mid·
dlepon, OES, will meet Thursday.
There will be a $5 gift exchange.
Officers wear street dresses.

LOTIRIDGE • The Lotaidge
THURSDAY
Communi!}' Center will have a pol·
MIDDLEPOIIT • Revival 81 the luck dinner Thursday at 6 p.m. fol·
Old Bethel Freewill Baptist . lowed by a meeting at 7 p.m.
·c;hurth, south of Middleport, will Officers will be elec!fd. The public
be held !hrough Saturday at 7:30 is invi!ed:
·p.m. Rev. . Miles Trout will be the
. evangelist. Special singing nightly. . · POMEROY .- Orders for tbe
1991 Meigs Maurader Yearbook
RACINE · The Southern Local will be taken at the high school on
Chap!er of !he National · H&amp;no~ Thursday and Friday. Cost is $20.
Society will sponsor a toy drive Name engraving as $2. Plastic
through Dec. 14. New or good used covers ar $1.
'toys may be conuibu!ed. Toys may
be taken to Southern High School
RU1LAND - The Rudand
:during the liours of 9 a.m . .10 3 p.m. TownshiP Trustees will meet in
·Ail toys will be given to the Meigs regular session on Thursday at 6:30
County lOy bank. For more infor- p.m. at tbe Rutland Fire Station.
mation call Kim Phillips, 949-2611. The public is invited to a~d.
.

.

ALTER-

berly Bash, Jessica .Hysell, Nlchoias Dettwlller, Krlstopher Jenkins,
Jeremy Roush and Courtney Salrberry. Back, Charlie Neal, Steveo
Grueser, Jouatlaan Wyatt, Shawn KIDJ• Cheryl Jewel~ Jessica McElroy, Candice MOler, Wendy Shrimp liD and Andrew Kitchen. .

Calendar

Quote of the Day

.,
.'

Sentinel-

Drew Webster Auxiliary meets

Thursday, December 6, 1990. •

r-;:==============::;--pp;:::eo::p~le:;,:in~r;i;h;e-;:n;:ew::-s

Da~y

The

CD Sound for Home
Or On-the-Go

~~~

15991

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Reg.

99.95. 142·5017

HMdpllOIIII extra

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ag. $219.95. 142-5015

Check Your Phone llaak For Tht Raclo Sheck Stan Or Dtat.r Ntarwst You

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1

;;.m;..;;;;;,;,.,--~-.,.;;ror11011Y ...,w.-.-.....- ...,~. -.
PRICES APPLY AT PARTICIPATING STORES
AND DEALERS

Canll Welc1111

.

'

�' Thursday, December 6, 1990
Page-10-The Daily Sentinel

Ponwoy-Middleport. Ohio

Hospital's
volunteers
honored

SERVICE AWARDS • These members of tbe
Women's Auxiliary of Veterans Memorial
flospital were presented service awards at the
group's annual Christmas party Tuesday even·
ing. From the lei) are Hospital .Administrator

SPECIAL AWARD • Mrs. Edna Triplett
received a special award at tbe mnual Women's
Auxiliary Christmas party held Tuesday night at
Veterans Memorial Hospital. Hospital Ad·
iaillistrator Scott Lucas presents Mrs. Triplett
wilh a special tribute plaque tommendiag Mrs. ·

Scott Lucas makiag the presentations; Rachel
Keasler, 50-boar pate•; Abbie Strattoa, SO-hour
patch and 100 hour service pin; Libby Fisller,
Marcie Wells, Mildred WeD, and Jaunita Rousb,
aU 1,000 hour service pins.

Triplett · for her work with the hospital's
AuxDiary and expressing appreciation for her
financial support recently when the Auxiliary
purchased a wide-screen television for the
hospital's Skilled Nursing Facility.
•

· ..You do a
job in aU direc·
lions. I just ~ know what we
would do wilbout you."
These were among the com·
pllinentary comments made. by
VeleBRS Memorial Hospilal Ad·
ministraiDt Scott Lucas Tuesday
night w~ he.spotc 10 members of
the Women's Auxiliary • the
h05Vital's volunte« service orplllZ4lioo ·during the group's annual Cbrislmas party.
Preceding a dinlll2' held in the
hospital cafeteria, Lucas presenll:d
Auxiliary Member EdRa Triplett
with an inscribed plaque in tribute
not only 10 Mrs. Triplett's worli: as·
an Auxiliary llleUlber but. in 1 appreciation for her financial support
recently when the AUXiliary purchased a wide-screen television set
for residents of the hospilal's SkUled Nursing Facility. Mrs. Triplett
. was also presenred a SOO hour pin
for Auxiliary work. Prayl:l' preced·
ing dinner was by Mary Folmer,
immediate ~l_presidenl '
Other servJCe awards were
presented following dinner and
receiving those were Racllel
Hensler, a SO-hour patch; Abbie
SlnlttOD, a SO-hour patch and a
100-hour pin; Libby Fisher, Marcia
Wells, Mildred Well, and Juanita
ROIJSh, all I ,000 hoUr pins. A 2,000
hour pin will be given laler 10 BonnieConde.
bp behalf of the Auxiliary, Libby
Fisher presented gifts 10 Ad·
ministrator Lucas, Assistant Administrator Margaret . Holm; Bob
Hoeflich, Public Relalions Director,
and will laler present a gift 10
Rhonda Dailey, RN, BSN, Direcror
of Nursing, who was unable 10 be
presenL
.
Poinsettias were presented 10 Dr.
Mark Brown, Doris . lhle, administrative 8ssistant, and Jackie
Starcher, nutrition department su·
pervisor. Mrs. Folmer presented a
gift from Auxiliary meml)ers ID
Jessie White, president, who was
given a round of applause in recognition of her leadership.
A reading dealing with the writ·
ing of the well-known ..A
Christmas Carol" by Dickens was
given by Carrie Kennedy with Mrs.
White fiving.a reading on by-gone
days o the old fashioned pump organ. Tying in with Mrs. White's
reading was the singing of
Christmas carols with Eloise Matson providing the 8CCOIIlpaniment
on an old-tinie pump 01p11 'moved
iniD the cafeteria for the party.

lhl!rsday, December 6 . 1990

Cheney seeks Gulf help from NATO allies

--...;'Around Town---

BRUSSELS, Belgium (UP!) - NATO defense
ministers gathered Thursday to hear an appeal ·
from Defense Secretary Dick Cheney for
. additional naval and alrlllt supporlforU.S. forces
In the Persian Gulf.
Cheney also planned to request other military
assiStance, ranging from chemical-warfare pro·
tectlon suits to electrical transformers. a senior
U.S. official. at NATO said.
.
The defense ministers convened a two-day joint
meeting of NATO's Nuclear Planning Group and
Defense Planning Committee, undertaking the
task of charting European defense strategy for
post"Cold War era.
Altliough the Persian·Gulf crisis was not on the
official agenda, It was s urely the focus of
attention.
·

•

In conjunction with Pomeroy's
SesquiceniCIInial, the ISOth anniversary of the incorporation of
the village, Bank One in Pomeroy
is sponsoring this photo identification series. The photos feature architeclllllll details of buildings
within the rown.
. ·
The pictures were taken around
town and an: fealtlred in Wednesday editions of The I&gt;aiiy Sentinel.
Answen, by mail or drop-otT, must

be received at The Daily Sentinel
office by the foDowing Monday
and winners will be listed in
Tuesday editiODs of the paper.
Wmners will receive a landmark
Christmas orilament from Bank
One and when the series concludes
aU people who identified the pictures correctly will have the chance
ID win a savings bond from Bank

WASHINGTON (UPI)
lngly constricted by the highly
There is no guarantee that
effective sanctions, but said the
economic sanctions will fo rce
mUitary side of the economy
Saddam Hussein to get out of
could hold out longer.
. Kuwait or cause enoUgh domes"Saddam apparently believes
tic unrest to topple his dictator·
that he can outlast International
ship, CIA Director WiiUamWebsresolve lo maintain sanctions.
ter told a House panel
We see no Indication that Sad·
Wednesday.
dam Is concerned. at this. point,
. And Webster told the House
that domestic discontent Is grow·
Armed Services Committee that
lng to levels !hill mai threaten
without any conflicl, Iraqi
his regime or that problems from
ground troops can nearly main·
the sancllons are causing him to
lain their current levels of
rethink )lis policy on Kuwait.
readiness for as long as nine
"The Iraqi people have expemonths, and the air forces can
rienced considerable deprlval!on
keep up current levels of readiIn the past Given the brutal
ness for three to six months.
nature · of the Iraqi security
While Webster testified on the
services,. the pOpulation Is not
House side of Capl!ol . Hill,
llkety·to oppose Saddam open )y ,''
Secretary State James Baker
said Webster.
outlined the admln.istratlon pol''Our {udgmeilt has ·b een and
Icy before the Senate Foreign
continues to be that there ·Is no
Relations Committee, emphasizassurance or guarantee that
ing he would go to Baghdad not to
e~onomic hardships will compel
negotiate with Saddam, but to
Saddam to change his policies or
Insist that Iraq unconditionally , lead to Internal unrest that would
get out of Kuwait .
threaten his regime."
The testimony came amid
in terms of specifics, Webster
growing calls, chiefly from Desaid a nwnber of light Industries
mocrats, to go slow and see If
In Iraq been sharply curtailed or
·economic sanclions can do the
have closed entirely, Including
job without resorting to war. And
the country 's only tire·members of Congress hilve been
manufacturing plant
insisting that the question of
· But refining and power prod~c·
using force . be put before
tlon operations continue. Iraq
Congress. '
has been largelY cut off from .
WebSter painted a picture of an · foreign exchange, he said, and It ·
Iraqi civilian economy lncreaswill ·probably exhaust its reserves by next spring.
·

One.

Administration moving
away from sanctions
WASHINGTON (UPh- The
Bush admi11istratlon has aban·
doned Its reliance on economic
sanctions and moved toward· the
possible use of Ioree as the main
tOOl to force Iraq's Saddam
Hussein to withdraw his forces
from Kuwait.
Secretary of Stale James
Baker told the ,llenate Foreign
. Relalions Committee on Wednest!ay that Saddam shows no signs
of changing his behavior as a
result of U.N.-Imposed economic
sanclions which are almost
airtight.
·
· "We have to face the fact that.
four months into this conflict,
none of our efforts have yer
produced any sign of change In
Saddam Hussein," said Baker,
who will testify on the Persian
Gulf crisis on ThurSct!W before
the House Fore!!!( Affairs
··::
Committee.
''He shows no signs Of complyIng with any of the United
Nations Security COUf.CII resolutions," said Baker J)f the 12
resolutions that demand Iraq
withdraw lis · troop~.. release
foreign ,hostages and restore the
exiled Kuwaiti government. The
final. resolution, passed last
week, authorizes the use of force
11 Iraqi troops are not out of
Kuwait by Jan. 15.
•.•No one wants war,., said
Baker, but argued that relying on
sanctions alone merely encourages Saddam to try to break the
International coalllion aligned
agalnsi him.
The debate In the Senate
committee broke on party lines.
with Democrats demanding the
admlqlstratlon glv,e sancllons
more time and Republicans
saying that the public is squarely
behind Bush.
"Eventually, the Congress will
catch up with the American

A baby shower, hosred by Beclcy
Coursen, Ymmgslbwn, was. held
recently for JeneD Barlcer.
A Chrislmas theine was carried
out and cake, punch, coffee,
candies and nuts were served.
Prizes were rresenled 1D Ann
. Baily, mother o oldest child, and
Lori Herron, mother of youngest

child.

Wolf Pen
notes

••••••
HURRY/
Charbroiled
Chopped Steak Dinner
lr&gt;dud. Cl._a Slwalc will! polofu, ~ 1oas1
and roo.a..oro'sA/1-YocrCan·Eat Gmnd BuRet~

.99
'

Mr.. and Mrs. Doyle Knapp,
Langsville, were Thanksgiving
DiMer __guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Kev'in Knajip. Michelle, Amy and
Ashley.
Mr. and Mrs. Charley Smith,
spent a few days with Mr. and Mrs.
Daniel Worley, Daniel and Stacy,
Daniels, W.Va. Mr. and Mrs. Doyle
Knapp were Thanksgiving night
visitors also.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Knapp
were Thanksgiving guests of her
gtlllldmolher, Mrs. Peletson, New

people," said ~n. Richard
Lugar, R~ Ind . Lugar cited opinIon polls showing 6~ ·percent of
those Americans surveyed favor
a military solljlion If Irf!q does
not withdraw.
Sen. Joseph Blden told Baker
that the administration ''appears
to be shlttlng to a new policy
based on the .Premise lha t sanctions · will not work and that an
early resort •to· offensive action
may be necessary."
Baker did not dispute that
assessment, but in an earlier
statement to the committee said:
, "As we walt, Saddam will
continue tort11rlng Kuwait and
con tin~ I!IIUng It as a nation. As
we walt he will continue manlp~­
latlng hostages ,attempting to
bre;~k the coal ilion. As we wall he
will conllnue to fortify Kuwait, he
wllr' ("tDtlnue to build chemical
ana biological weapons and will
conllnue his efforts to acquire a
nuclear weapons capab!Uty."
· Following Baker's testimony,
the State Department announced
that Iraq had formally ·accepted
President Bush's . proposal for
direct talks.
1
Under the proposal, Iraqi For·
eign Mln~ter Tariq Azlz will
meet with Bush In .Washington
after Dec. 15 and Baker will meet
with Saddam In Baghdad sometime after that, but before Jan.

WASHINGTON (UPI) -Iraq
has formally accepted a proposal
by President Bush to hold loplevel talks as an opportunlly to
end the Persian Gulf crisis
without armed conflict, the State
Department said.
Joseph Wilson, U.S. acting
· ambassador In Baghdad, was
told that Iraq bad accepted the
proposal for meetings between .
Bush and I~aql Foreign Minister
Tariq Azlz In Washington and
Secretary of States James Baker
and Iraqi President Saddllm
Hussein in Baghdad, the State
Department said Wednesday.
Under the proposal unveiled on
Nov. 30, Azlz and Bush would
meet sometime after Dec. 15
while Baker and Saddam would
talk sometime before Jan. 15, the
U.N.-Imposed deadline for Iraqi
troops to withdraw from Kuwait.
The State Department said
that discussions between the two
countries are continuing on the
dates and arran~ements for the
meetings , which will not Involve
represenlallves !rom any other
nations.
In testimony before the Senate
Foreign Relations Committee on
Wednesday, Baker refused to
disclose what be will say to
Saddam, but he made It clear
that he will not negotiate or
"walk back from the U.N.
Security Council resolutions."
Baker said he will Insist that
iraq observe the U.N. resolu!Ions, which demand the complete and unconditional withdrawl of Iraqi troops, the release
of all foreign hostages and the
restoration of the exiled Kuwaiti
government.
In Buenos Aires, Bush said he
was "not optimiStic" about chan-

Food stocks, he said, are
adequate for the next several
months but black market prices
ate shooting up. He noted thatfor
the second time civilian rallons
have beim cut an!! rations for
military personnel and their
families has been raised.
But he said that by spring most
Iraqis will face major changes In
their diets and unless there is
humanitarian food aid Items like
sugar and edible oUs will be .In
short supply. He also said lraq
does not have the capability to
become self-sufficient in food by
next year.
By spring, he said, It is likely
that only energy-related and
some military Industries will still
be fully operating, and ''this will
·almost certainly be the case by
next summer.''
"Although sanctions are hurt·
lng Iraq's civilian economy, they
are affec\)ng the Iraqi military
only at the margins . Iraq's fairly
static defensive posture will
reduce wear and tear on military
equipment and, as a result,
extend the life of Its Inventory of
spare parts and· maintenance
Items," Webster said.
"Under non-combat condi·
!Ions, Iraqi ground and atr.forces
can probably m aintain nearcurrent levels of readiness for as
long as nine months," he said.
But the rnost sophisticated
aircraft, he said, should stay In
peak condition for three to six
months, largely because of their
greater complexity and Iraq's
reliance on foreign equipment
and technicians.

.....

SPIOlUI
49c SU.AI IAI WITH PUICHISE OF lilY EWIIB.

llWPOUS
u.,... llwer ld.

lacreu froM tilt Airport)

r

'))

'•

ces for a withdrawal of occupation forces from the oil kingdom.
"I have no feeling whatsoever
that Saddam Hussein will do now
what he has not done five months
ago." Bush said In answer to a
qilestion as to whether he felt
Iraq was "softening" its position
and seeking a face-saving compromise that will enable It to
retreat from Kuwait.
Iraq has lpdirectly sought to
link its exit
!rom
Kuwait to lhe
.
I
withdraw! of Israel !rom the
West Bank and Gaza Strip, a
formula rejected by the White
House.
Bush said on Wednesday that

when he meets with Azlz, " I want
to make clear to him the bes 1~
thing Is to go through with the_
U.N. resolutions."
The president has lndl~ated ·
that there would be no negotiated
settlement that shortchanges de:
mands for total withdraw!, say'
lng he hopes Saddam "gets tile:
message" aboutlast week's U.N.•
resolution authorizing the use ot:
force t~ bounce Iraq from Kuwait
If troops are not out by the
mjd-January deadline.
•
Bush recently ordered 200,000
additional American troops to '
the gulf to bolster the U .S.·Ied .
multinational force assembled In
the region against Iraq .

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15.
Baker promised that he would
not negotiate, particularly on the
s.ubject. of Israeli occupallon of
the West Bank and Gilza Strip, an
Issue Iraq has hinted as a key to
any negotiated settlement.
· "This is not the beginning of a
negotiation on subjects unrelated
to Iraq's brutal occupation of
Kuwait, " said Baller. "I will not
be neogtlallng the Palestinian
question or the civil war· in
Lebanon."

NEWARK, N.J . (UP!) - A shortage, Carella said.
Northwest Airlines jet made an
Carella said the pilot 'did not
emergency landing at Newark believe the plane had enough fuel
International ·. Airport Wednes- to make II to LaGuardia.
day, just twodaysafter twoo!the
"T~e Port Authorl(y ,rolled all
airline's jets crashed on the Its crash trucks out on to the
ground at Detroll Metropolitan runway, just In case, " he said.
Alrpotl. kllllilg eight passengers. "BUt fortunately tlie . plane
No one was Injured. In the 9: 46 landed safely · and without
p.m. emergency Iandini of the Incident,
• Northwest Boeing 757, said Sgt.
A Northwest Airlines spokes- ·.
Joseph Carella. a spokesman lor man said Flight 090orlglnated In
the Port Authority pollee at the Fargo, N.D.,.thenmadeastopln
Newark ~lrport.
MlnneapoUs before beginning Its
Northwest Flight 090, which
approach to LaGuardia.
.
origlnlated earlier Wednesday
On Monday two Northwest
Airlines planes collided on a
North Dakota, was scheduled to
fog-shrouded runway at Detroit
have landed at I:aGuardla Airport In New York City, but was · Metropolitan Airport. The ace!·
diverted to the Newark runway
dent killed eight passengers and
because of an apparent fuel
injuf!!d dozens more. ·.

,'

A crucial part of NATO's plans Is the
replacement o! layered divisions of military
forces from single nations wllh highly mobile
multinational units, requiring a new command ; ·
structure.
NATO also Is overhauling Its obsolete nuclear :
strategy, which was based for decades on the doctrines of "forward defense" and ·'flexible. :
response,'' calling for the use of nuclear weapons · .:
if necessary to repel an ove·rwhelmlng co nven-·
tional attack. At the London summit: NATO said
nuclear weapoils would only be used as a ''last :
resort ...
""

Iraq accepts talks with·U.S.

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Northwest jet makes emergency
landing at Newark airport

•V

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Lima Road.
Mrs. Leslie Frank and Ma~.
Texas Road, were Wednesday
visitol's of Mr. and Mrs. Eugene
Haning and Ronald.

Uttk things
art Worth A lot
in
tht ClAssified Section!

·or East-West tension.
"The budgetary pressures are extremely
strong," said the senior U.S. official at NATO,
who expects the alliance's review to be completed
by the middle o! next year.
"To take much longer than that will not respond
either to the slluallon we lind on the ground In
Europe, which has changed. or tQ the !lscal
pressures from many capitals," be said.
With events .In Europe changing so fast, the
strl\leglc review puts NATO "In the difficult
situation of tryl~g to paint a moving train," said a
senior alliance official. ·

The gulf lies outside.the realm of NATO military
action under the alliance's 1949 charter, but U.S.
officials have used NATO meetings to request
other help In the region.
Several NATO allies have already provided sea
transportation and airlift help for the massive
U.S. military buildup In the gulf following the Aug.
2 Iraq I Invasion of Kuwait.
The defense ministers were slated to end their
meetings at midday on Friday.
AI their landmark London summit last July,
NATO leaders called for a strategic overhaul of
the alliance, Including reduction In the size and
readiness of standing forces In Europe.
Many NATO countries . are anxious to reap a
"peace dividend" from the ending offourdecades

Webster: sanctions. may not work

Barker baby
s~ower held

Wmners of games were Connie
Gillcey, Katie . Peyll)n and Julia
Vaughan.
Cheryl
Auending 1 were
Lighlfritz, Lutz, Fla.; Tonia Ash,
Dayron; Janet Kohls, Bucyrus;
Sheila HCKty, Lori Herron, Rushville; Ginny Barrett, Connie Gilkey,
Rita Simmons, Julia Vaughan, Ann
Bai~y. Katie Peyron, Bertha Fillin·
gez-, Angela Kelly, Tammy Barbu,
Becky Coursen, Youngstown; Bea
Luckett, Gena Wood, Jean Kelly
and Lori Kelly.
S~nding gifts were Sonia Ash,
Bet'ly Ash, Betsy Horlcy, Cliff and
Darla Kennedy, Wendy Gilkey,
Katl)y Board; Audn:y Coursen,
Clara Board, Mary Vaughan,
Jeannie Johnson, Milo and Belly
HuiChison.

The Daily Sentinel Page 11

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�Pqa 12-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport,

Thursday, December 6, 1990

Ohio

December 6, 1990

Regulator faults DeConcirii, Cranston for -protecting Keating
i

I

WASHINGTON (UP[) - A R·Arlz.. and Donald · Riegle ,
bank regulator singled out Sens. 0-Mlch., exerted Improper pres·
Dennis DeConclnland Alan Cran· sure on bank regulators on behalf
· '
ston tor Improper actiOns to of Keating.
. Keating, who has been Indicted
·benefit accused S&amp;L kingpin
· Charles Keating Jr .• but faulted on state. securities and fraud
· all of ihe Keating Five sen~;~tors · charges charges In California
for protecting a Keating thrift and Is the target of an ongoing
labeled "the worst Institution In federal grand jury probe, contrlbu ted $1.3 million to the
America."
senators'
. political campalngs
Meanwhile, the Senate ethics
and
causes:
committee, with the backing of
· Black was one of four bank
the Justice Department, voted
Wednesday to seek limited lm· regulators who met with allofthe
munity !or James Grogan, a Keating Five senators on April9,
!ol'l!1er, close Keating associate, 1987, one week after four of the
to compel his testimony before senators had met with bank ·
the panel. Sen: Howell Heflin, board chairman Edwin Gray .
D-Ata., the committee's chair· Black testified that Keating
man, said the panel "has not and · orchestrated the meetings to
will not "pursue such Immunity shake up regulators examining
!or Keating to avoid compromls· the operations ot Lincoln.
"I felt (the meeting) was
lngcurrent criminal proceedings
Intimidating
and I felt that
against him.
·Keating
had clearly set
Charles
William Black, general coun·
up
the
meeting
to
be lntlmldat·
sel of the western regional office
slack
told
the
committee.
lng,"
of the Office of Thrift Su pervislon
·
''This
(Lincoln)
was
an lnstltu·
and a former official of the
Federal Home Loan Bank Board, tlon that was propably the worst
said "political pressure" by the Institution In America and ln·
five senators was "critical" In stead of trying to help bring It
under control, five U.S. senators
Influencing the bank board to go
easy on Keating's Lincoln Sav· were pushing us In the opposite
direction," Black added.
lngs and Loan of Irvine, Calif.,
He said the senators "were
for nearly two years before the
coming
after 1\S" and that the
thrift failed In April1989.
regulators
were '-'under attack"
Black's testimony came dur·
until
telling
the lawmakers that
lng the 12th day of hearings
criminal charges against Lincoln
before the ethics committee,
and . Keating were being sought.
w(llch Is seeking to determine
Black said the regulators were
whether Sens. Cranston, D·
wary of telling the senators about
Calif., DeConcinl, D·Arlz., John
the Jqstlce Depar(!nerit involve:
Glenn, D-Ohlo, John McCain,

men t because " It would be too big board decisions " that allowed
a danger" the lawmakers would Lincoln to significantly expand
tip off Keating.
Its junk bonds, its direct Invest·
Black, whose elaborate notes
ments and this led to greatly
from the April 9 meeting have
Increased -loss for the insurance
been Important to the Investiga- fund (Federal Savings and Loan
tion of the Keating Five, singled Insurance Corp.) and now the
out DeConclnl and Cranston.
taXPayers. ''
Black faulted DeConclnl for
Lincoln failed In April 1989,
offering a deal on Keating's
becoming the largest single
behalf during.the Aprll9 meeting collapse in the S&amp;L crisis and
under which the regulators
costing taxpay.e rs about$2 billion
would grant' Lincoln a shield
to bail out.
from a federal regulation limit·
. Grogan, who served as Lincoln
lng risky direct Investments by · vice president and corporate
thrifts - a regulation Keating
counsel tor Lincoln's parent
had fought In vain for years -In company, American Continental
exchange for Lincoln making
Corp:, was one of seven former
more home loans.
Lincoln or American Continental
Examiners, who less than a
figures, Including Keating, who
month later would recommend
Invoked iheir Constitutional ·
that Lincoln · be seized by the
right against self Incrimination
government for unsafe and un·
when earlier called before the
sound practices, had already
panel.
uncovered ~~a massive violation"
Under so-called "limited use"
ofthe direct lnves tment rule by
Immunity, notes tlmony given by
Lincoln and said .DeConclnl's
Grogan can be used against him
offer would have directed the
In any future· court proceedings.
regulators "not to take any
No criminal charges are curfurther action and to allow that
rently pending against Grogan. A
violation to continue for some
U.S. District Court judge is
U1!5peclfled time period."
expected to formalize the grant
Black also said when DeCon·
of Immunity Thursday.
cini made the offer he used the
Heflin said the committee
word "we" - Implying consent
"cannot fulfllllts obligations" In
of the others present ~ and that
Investigating the Keating Five
"no senator who was present
matt~r without obtaining testim·
said, 'No, no, you're speakblg for
ony from Grogan, · who had
yourself.·:·
extensive dealings with the
Black also criticized Cranston
senators.
for acUons taken by a Cranston
"Grogan, as the aide (and
aide 13 months later. Black said
Keating's) chief lobbyist proba·
the aide's Intervention to to bank

bly had more contact and proba·
bly has more knowledge than
Keating, so, therefore, we think
that he Is more of an appropriate
witness," Heflin said.

recession this year.
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The .. : Retail sales have weakened
In other regions, manutactur·
Federal Reserve; In Its periodic .throughout the United States.
ers were mixed In their outlook
snapshot of the U.S. economy, The Fed survey found the dollar
said Wednesday business condl·
volume of retail sales to be lower for the economy. In San Fran·
tlons display an overall "weaker
In most of the districts In October cisco, the word was "continued
pattern" with declines In cqnsu· ·than a year ago In most of the 12 deterioration'' but in Phlladel·
phla, manufacturers expect
mer confidence, retail sales and
districts.
business loan demands.
"At best, only slight !creases "modest Increases" in orders
The survey, conducted by each
are rei&gt;orted ln ·the rest of the and shipments,
Most of the dlstrlcts ·cb!ltlnued
of the 12 Federal Reserve dis·
districts," the Fed said.
to
report sluggishness In con·
Poor consumer confidence lev·
trlcts, found economic activity
structlon
activity, with weakness
·
declining In many of the regions els were attributed to retail sales
In residential building. Several
after bejng sluggish ln recent declines .in Chicago, Atlanta and
districts cited "a glut" of houses
St. Louis. Most of the districts
months.
for-resale, the Fed said. l;{ouslng
"Several districts report a reported that retailers were
sales were down In ·Atlanta, St.
decline in co1111umer. confidence pessimistic about sales pros·
Louis and Minneapolis.
and business confidence and peels for the vital Christmas
Commercial construction was
many refer to expectations of season.
"generally
weak," with New
clintlnued dhnlmitlon In ecoThe Cleveland, Chicago and St.
York
and
San
Francisco suffer·
nomic activity," the Fed ,said in Louis districts noted "particular
lng
an
.abundant
supply of office
Its "Beige Book."
weakness" In the automobile
and
commercial
space. But Chi·
Industry. But again, weak dO·
1«'1all sales, after being ad:
cago
and
Minneapolis
reported
justed for infiatlon, fell below mestlc demand for manufac·
commerbrighter
prospects
for
year-ago levels In almost all of tured goods was partlally ·offset
cial building. ·
the 12 Federal Reserve districts by strong export orders.
None of the Fed's districts
..Richmond and Atlanta reand manufacturing conditions
reported slgnlflcan t wage presand construction have weakened ported stong export shipments.
sures and reports of price ln·
· In most of the regions.
Most . districts also said their
creases were mixed. Several
The Fed noted that soft domes- manufacturing Inventories apdistricts expect -price discount·
tic demand has been offset ln pear to be under control.
ing by retailers this Christmas
part by strong export orders.
"Manuffacturers have ex·
season to attract reluctant
pressed
concern
about
business
Another bright spot was found In
shoppers.
agriculture, which has been prospects . for · the coming
. In the financial sector, several
boosted·by strong crop yields and months,". the'Fed said ..
districts
. reported weaker deI,n BOston, for example, a
high livestock prices.
mand
for
consumer and business
Several districts also reported maJority of manufacturers foreand
almost all districts
loans
declines In business loan de- cast a national recession lasting
noted
some
-tightening of loan
mands and some tightening of two to four quarters. The region's
standards
.
·
credit standards.
·eco!i,omy has been wallowing ln

Heflin ~a id GrQgan wlll testify
In a closed session before the ,
committee sometime after Dec. •
13 and llkelywllllater testify ln a .•
public session.
'·

"Reports of banks' willingness
ro lend are mixed, with New York
reporting that banks are somewhat less wllllng to lend, but'wlth
St. ·Louis reporting no change,"
the Fed said.
The most positive aspect of the
report came from agriculture,
which appeared strong across
the country.
The "Beige Book" is prepared
by Federal Reserve staff
members and forward to the
Fed's Open Market Committee,
which sets monetary policy. The
committee Is scheduled to meet
Dec. 17'18.

SPECIAL CHRISTMAS
DISCOUNTS AT ,
BAHR CLOTIIIERS
FOR THE WOMEN
LADIES

LADIES

SWEATERS

COATS

REDUCED

REDUCED

DRESSES

20% to 50% 20% to40%
BLOUSES

LADIES

REDUCED

lADIES

IIDUCID

I

,

agents.
In addition to the current
practice of giving donors a
written explanation of . factors
that put them at high .risk for
being Infected, the new :gil)deilr!.es call for each donor_to~- be
Interviewed face-to-face.
"Donors should not be CORSI·
dered suitable unless ' information about these risks ls available
In the language appropriate to
each donor and Is constructed to ·
be culturally sensitive to promote comprehension," the FDA'
said.
But the focus of these risk
factors "should be on behavior
and not on stereotypes," the FDA
said. For example, "many men
who have had male-to-male
"sexual experiences do not lden·
tlfy themselves as 'homosexual, •
'gay' or 'bisexual,"' the FDA
.said . .

The Perfect Christmas Gift •..

ISOTONER SLIPPERS
BUY NOW AND GET A.FREE
GIFT WITH PURCH~SE, WHILE
SUPPLIES LAST.
,
4!FIEE GIFT WRAPPING
•FifE PAlliNG

. LAYAWAY NOW FOI CHRISTMAS

htrifa!t hOU$t
Ulle

.

·MIDDlfPOIT
. SHOE PLACE.
.
99M627

·.
..
.'

BOB~S

MARKET &amp;
GREENHOUSES

:.•

20°/o

...

••

-.

log. 132.50

IIDIKtD

·'•

NOW$2000

20%
IMN'S

MIN'S

· fLANNEL

SUITS

SHIRTS
REDUCED

20°/0

REDUCED

20°/o

LEVI

lEVI S11AIG.HT lEG

DENIM ·
JACKETS

&amp; IOOlCUT
DENIM

MEN'S SWEATERS
V-MR, aoa fllfU
TIIRI NICI, C - fliCK

AND

CliDIG~N

· IEDUCID

20°/o

MEN'S LONG SLEEVE

KNIT. SHIRTS
0/0 OFF

20.
--BAHR CLOT«IERS
-- -

MIDDUPOIT

•

OPEN 8:30·5:00

Mondey-Saturdey

- .. 2.2351

·· Public Notice
LEGAL NOTICE
Sealed bido will be re·
ceivad by the Raclr10 Vllloge
Clot'k until 4:00 o'clocl! P.

the Board of Education of
the Meigs Local School Dis·

trlct, Malgo County, Ohio,
desirea to receive aaliled

M.. Monday. January 7,
1991, lor a 1990 fire tonker

bida for the following:

apparatus or ch11aia only.
40 One-fold cafetarlo tob· ·
Copy of the specifications
lea,
rectangular ahape, are availeble from the Vilu·o·· long by 30" wide by lage Clerk or from the Fire

ing -

enamel frame tttate

colors available). Laminate

Top (atate colors available).
Price Quote is to include
shipping to one t1Jioc"alibn.
All
aealed
envelopes
containing blda are to be
marked cleer.ty on. the out-

aide "BID FOR CAFETERIA
TABLES".
Seoled bldo will bo re·
Noon on Jenuory 4. 1991.
Bldo will bo oubmitted to thil

Board at Edue~~tlon at their
naxt ,......,, .meeting for
c~ftlider1tlon .
.
The board of edu~tlon intend• tO aCcept the lowest
responolble bid for the cafe·
teria tables, but ruervea the
right to reject any and all, or

porto of any ond 111 bido.
By ordor of tbe Board of
Education, Molgo Local
School Olotrtct, 320 Eut
Mein Strut, P. 0. Box 272,
Pomeroy, Ohio. 45789. ·
Ja,.• Fry. Treaaurer
112)8.13.20,27,4tc .

C8rd Of-Thanks

1

•
I WOUld like to then k
everyone for their
pray era, cardo. phone
·
ca II I, II Itt1 an d YIlltl
during · my recent ill·
ROll and lor my· 90th
birthday.
A apeclal thank you
to Dr. WHtmoroJond
end tho 118ft It Veter·
a no Memorial Hotpital
and a epeciat thank
you to ~~· Rev. Stove
Deaver and the Rev.
Jamal Seddon for t ho
time they spent with
me and my fllmHy dur·
ing my llln111 and for
all their vf1it1. May
G 0 d rl C hi Y b ..,_.., eac h
and everyone of you.

o clock P.M. at the regular
council muting.
Council reaervea the right
to accept or rejact any end
all bids.

.
thatknife
you wouldn't t'rade foraf1vthing?
· We never forgot 1t.. .

atber oolery ond fringe hot'•·
tofore provided tho oum of
Thr" Hundred
Oollero
($300.001 •• oddltionol .u·
lory.
Sec. 11. Thot be It further ·
reootved thot tbe Vlllego
oholl poy eech pert· limo am·
ployoe In thoectlve employ·
.montoftheVIIIegooooiO•
cembar 15, 1990 In oddltlon
to •II athor IOiory ond fringe
benoflto hlrotoforo provided
tho oum of One Hundredond
Fifty fiiiiO.OOI •• oddl·
tlonel eelory.
Sec. Ill. Thio Ordinance ·
oholl toke effect ond bo In
.force from ond - r '"" ur·
11111 doto provided by low.
Poo11d tbe 26th doy of
November, 1990.
Atteot: Jon P. Bud!, Clorlt
Dewey M. Horton.
Prooldont of Council
Jane Fry, Treuuror

Merchandise

(HRISTMAS SUPPLIES
CAN BE FOUND AT OHIO
VALLEY BULK FO()DS
Mtrckens Dipping Chocolate ..... s2.35 lb.
. Ambrosia Chocolate .................. SJ, 95 lb.
White Chocolata ........................ s2.15 lb.
Sucker Sticks • Molds ·
Decorative Candy Boxes
HOMEMADE CANDIES.. ..
Bon B«Jna ............ : ...........
Peanut Butter Logs ..........
Buckeyes .........................
Choc. Covered Cherries ....
Choc. Covered Pretzel• ....

Special Orders
.· ·We. Take
Christmas Candy

$3.26
$3.76
$4.26
$3.76
$3.75

lb.
lb.
lb.
lb.
lb. ·

992·5500

2171.

CHRISTMAS
TREES
Ft. to 12Ft.

5

*10 and up
FRESii CUT DAILY
' White 8t
Scotch Pine

808 SNOWDEN
Main St., l ..land
742-3051
ll·Z9·1

eeyele or

C~rlet••• Cee~l

Til-COUNTY
RECYCLING

OPEN EV.ERY DAY AT
POMEROY LOCATION
7 DAYS 9 AM-7 PM
CLOSED CHRISTMAS
DAY ONLY

Call 992·5114
For Current Prices
OPEN 8 DAYS A WEEK
ALBANY. OH. LOCATION
10 AM·II PM
CLOSED SUNDAY
We Will Clo10 At Alben
Doc. 24 to Jon. 2 For
Chrlotrnoo Vocotlon

Facility Oaocrlptlon: Com·
blnotlon of X ond Y
Permit No. OIZ00083'CO .
MOO - dopletoo
Interim
llmltoforoutfoll001: rovl111
lntro poregroph for final tl·
ble lor outfoll 001: raviHI ·

Call 691·611S
For Current Prlc..

~ehedule of · compliance;
adde requirement to submit

11,30-911-1 mo.

PTI oppllcotion: ,
Final I1R1ertce of Notice of

Raglltrotion.
Southorn Ohio Cool Com·
pony
S.R. 124
· Near l.angovlllo, Oh .
Effective Dote 11/30190
Applic&lt;ltion f!lo,(ol
08630000110 P801
11218 1tc

PubliC Notice

work l'tana.

1. 1972 International bu1 ·

81 paooeng• •
#136820H348047
2. 1973 lntornotlonol buo .

I beroby certify thlt tbe
above II a true ond -urate
copy of tho .
r..olution
INIIIod on October 1. 1990
by tho Sollobury Townolllp
Boord of Tru-•.
Soroh Glbbo. Clerk
Sollobury Townlhlp Boord
.of Truotooo
(121 8 itc

Ill PIIMHIQW -

1113812CHA20803
3. 1974 lntornotlonol buo ·
88 polling• •
#138720HA19902
4. 1975 lnttrnotlonol bUI ·

111~~~~".:\';.;411

P••-aer·

right to walvelnformal11;tea,
to occopt ar ,.}oct orrt ond
1·1
rt1 0 1
d 1It

:r.io~ po
ony on
Jane Fry. TrN.urer
Moigo L-ISchool Olotrlct
320 Eoot Moln ltroo1
P.O. Box 272
p
I)H 411789

om~:l'r4f992·58110

(121 B. 13, 20, ' 27 4tc

l!a

•Ohio Valley Bulk Foods
. 514
un
••

: POMIIOY · .

.

'"·"1'
•• Alupt

r-11-..

St.

911 ly...l
M11141eport,

Oh,

RACIIiE
• FilE orl"l •

lash...

DEER ·cuT;
WRAPPED &amp;
SKINNED
MAPLEWOOD
LAKE
6' 4-949-2734

11

2'h MI. outside
Rutland H New

Building

U lei.
ma

SAT. NIGHT

WI! Are A Peer
kl
S io ·
ec ng tat n.

rae tory Chab
12 Gaugo 5he(9UII .Only

Ch

Stri&lt;tly Enforcod

'·25-'99·11•

ll·ll·f·l•.

'.
....... ...'·
.'

~-----

HILL'S DEER
cuniNG

~, . ~
,iiiiiu: u Rc" ,n

· CUTTING,

205 N. Sec~ Str11t
MIDDLEPORTI OIIQ 457 ...
Office 614·992;2116
Heme 1114·992·56ti
DOTTII S. TIMII, . . . •:

SKINNING,
WRAPPING

BASHEN

RD.,

RA(INE

or

HOUSES•LOTS•FA~MI ;::

949-2206

614-949-2635
11-ll-10.1 ••.

',.
· ··

HOURS: Monday
thru Saturday
10 am t o 6 pm

6: 30 P.M •

1100 Remington
Slug Guns
870 Ramington
Slug Guns
Ithaca Slug Guns
11·13·1 mo.

&amp; SUPPliES· · ·
74.2·2421

GUNS

DEitY

992 2 U 34
• .~...

•COMMERCIAL
WE NEED USTINGS!

:
"
11·5·90·1111 "-'

1 t -&amp;·90· 1 mo.

CAIN'S

RACINE
GUN CLUB

UPHOLSTERY

GUN SHOOTS

Of Ml441eport
Hand Tufting
Custom D111pes

•·•

36 Yean Experience
61.·992·2321
213 North Secet~d

We Say What Wo Do.
We Do What Wa Say

•Vinyl Siding
·~eplacement

Windows
•Roofing
•Insulation
JAMES KE~SEE

SJ2 •.$20

Choice flllly

SHOOTS

DEC. 2nd
742-2143

RE~DY

START

SEPT 16, 1990

YOUNG'S

BISSELL

CARPENTER SERVICE

&amp; BURKE

CONSTRUCnON

-Room Addltlono
-Gutter Work
.
:...Eiectrlcol • Plumbing
-ConpreMWort&lt;
-Rodflng

•New Hames
•Gara g..
•Complete

..

R.emodellng

-Interior • Exterior

Stop &amp; Compare

Pointing
(FREE ESTIMATESI

Frea Estimates

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215

985·4473 .
667-6179

Pameroy, Ohio

M lddlaport. Ohio
1t/14/tfll

.'

ll·26-'90'1 ••.

Sept. 4,tfn

992·2772 742·2251
639 Bryan Place

"·

FOR SALE .
White 8t
Scotch Pine
6Ft. end Up · ·
··'
Wall Sheared, Grown . ,
on the Weber Farm In
Rutland

_ SUNDAYS .

111'14/ttn

5-31·'90 "" . .

.......,·.

...-~--

BISSELLBUILDERS ...
CUSTOM IUU

•VINYL SIDING

SER~ICE
We Ca!l repair cind rt·
~· ratliatort and
hlatll' cores• .We can
also "'id bail and rod
out radiators. We also
repair _Gas

Tanks.

PAT' Hlll

FOlD

992·21 98
Middleport, Obio

::t~:~:!.M SIDING
INSULATION

BISSELL , .
SIDING ·co.

HOMES &amp; GARAGU
"At ltasonoblo Prices''

New 1tetHs lrr!llt

PH. 949-2801
or R... 949·2860

"Free E1timetn"

PH. 94f-2101

Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CAllS

or Res. 949-2860
NO SIIJIDAT ClUS

.__ _ _,...,.,.p1,.;,"13-.;·lf;;,;c" L_ _.._ _.:+l6·!tlfrl

SHRUB &amp;.TREE
TRIM' "'d
REMOVAL
"LIGHT HAULING
"FIREWOOD

BILL SLACK
992-2269
.·
.

BAPE - ROBBE BY · MURDER
70% OF VIOLENT CRIMES ARE COMMITTED

IN AREAS WHERE VICTIMS ARE LIKELY TO
HAVE KEY CHAINS IN HAND
DO(II'T BE NEXT!
. Prot«t yourself with the
STUN-UM key chain sprayer
STUN-UM is the moat .advanced chemical
salf dafanae weapon available -your adga
against personal crime. ··
To Order Send (hiKk or Money Order

.....

For $19.95 To: ·
SEO SECUIITY OD_~IC~

USED RAILROAD nES

Help Wanted

CHRISTMAS TREES

1.2 Gaup Foctory

11·1 ..U.L .

J&amp;L
INSULAnON

t--------------t·· ·

1:00 P.M.

.

P, 0. Box 190, Pa•eroy,

11-12-90

/""J

,r

O.C.L. COMPUTER SOWTIONS, INC.

KOUNTRY KLUI

--;

-rl

ATTENTION:
Ravenswood Aluminum Corporation is now
accepting resumes for permanent employment at
' its plant in Ravenswood, Jackson County, West
Virginia, in various production and maintenance

e Millwright
e Roll Grinder
• Welder
Anyone interested in auch poaitiona ahould direct
reaumes to the attention of:
Personnel: Department

P.O; Box

, --·-·

98

Ravenswood, West Virginia

26164

Labor Dispute in Prograu
We are looking _for permanent replacement workers.

.

'

ScOtil

c.., .....

up

lEN'S

APPU-Na

AAE/EOE
M/F/H/V .

----------r---------.J·.··r
(61 . 446 -6000

Mow In

Stock!!

.

,.

.' '..

MOBILE HOME FURNACES·
... HEAT PUMPS
All FURNACE PARTS

~~--~~------~~~-.~··3

. SEIVICE
992-5335 ar tl5·3561

,,
',,

SPRING VAUEY PII,OFESSIONAL BUILDING
l06 JACKSON PIKE . SUITE 20J
GAlliPOLIS, OHIO 4l6Jl

DAYWA'IIIIm

Acraa ,,.. Pelt OHICa

•

"CUSTOM PROGRAMMINC;
•SALES
"ON-SITE CUSTOM TRAINING

USED APPUANCES

Crane Operator
Electrician/Electronics Repair
Equipment Operator·
Garage Mechanic
General laborer
Hydraulic Repair
Macl)inist
•

I

•ON -SITE SbRV!CE / HEPAill

JOHN TEAFORD
11-zt.tO·l ••

e Air Conditioning Repair
a Brickmason
e
e
•
e
e
e
e

BROWNING
CHRISTMAS
GRAPHITE
·
·
Orivor1 ... $8
Wodgei .. $6
.r .
Puttero ... t3
GRAPHITE SHAFTS
INSTALLED
BAGS .............. ..... .. I26
CHRISTMAS
TROPHIES • PLAQUES

Ch-. Ohio

RAVENSWOOD ALUIOIINUM CORPORATION

' Candy Demonstrations Given Dally.
Just Drop ln.

1

pd.

&amp; A••o
-

STEWAIT'S

•

River

holea, etc .• In roadway, and
ca~llng dangeroue conditlana to
townlhlp employ•• and
equipment
while completing molnto·
nance work on roada;
THEREFORE,· BE IT RE·
SOLVED BY THE BOARD
OF TRUSTEES OF SAUS·
BURY TOWNSHIP, MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO, THAT: •
{11 A permit for IXCIVO·
tlon or obotructlono ollall be

110.

G· u ...

GUN SHOOT

actkJne,

Tuppere · Plelno, Cheotor
Woter 0111.
39681 lor 30 Rood
ReedovHie, Oh.
111ue Ooto 11 /28/90
Rocolvlng Wotero: Ohio

linea, ate .•

'-•r

11$/'90/lfn

dlflcotlon to NPOES Pormlt

Town.tllp haa hlld numerou•

S.C.

I'OMIIOY, OliO

conditiona

exciiVationa by
pertonl,
flrmt orcorporatlonaforwa-

For

WE MAIL CHEESE FOR THAT SPECIAL
· ONE THAT IS NOT HERE

634 E. MAIN n.
POMROY

Acri!P f.-- Pflt OHice

clauifications such as •

o•

61 VINE
ST.
•
GAUIPOUS
446-1276

SERVICE

992·5335 ar 0'15·3561
'&gt;

Propo11d i11u1nce of mo·

the Village as of Dec~mber tlon ahall bll effective on the
15, 1990 far a period of olx oorllolt dlto 11 pro\lldod by
month a in addition to · all law.

54 · Miscellaneous

SAVINGS Of UP TO 25"/o OFF MANUFACTURER'S UST PRICE ON IN STOCUNIVES. STOP AND
SEE
FINE SIUCnGN OF POCIIEY, HUNnNG
AND KITCHEN KNIVES.
.

LUMBER

.

6. 1977 lntomotlonol buo ·
121 Pleno end opeclfico85
' #008220H826981
tiona ahall be aubmlned to
8. i 977 lntomotlonol buo •
tho Cieri&lt; of SolloburyTown·
811 peo1011ger-·
lhlp ..Vanty·two 1721 houri
Mark on onvelopo BIOS before • work ja planned to
#00822QH8251&amp;4
FOR TANKER APPARATUS start.
7. 1977 lntomotlonol buo.
.
or BIOS FOR CHASSIS.
85 PIIIHIIIII'
131 Plano submitted oholl
Jane G. Beegle, Clerk ihow IOC8tkln of work. aize
#D0822GH829432
Vllloge of and type of work, and dura 8. 1977 lntomotlonol bue •
.Public Notice
Racine, Oh. 45771 tion of
85 po-gor·
excevatlon con814-949-2891 templlted, method of oxco·
IID0822GHI211148
1121 e. 13. 20. 3tc
LEGAL NOTICE
9 ..1985 Ford Trucl!.
votion. refilling end r_,,.
F602A. #i'IIOAL888381
Noticoloherobyglventhot
toeing to bo followed, ond
tha pl.c:ement of warning tho a.,.rd of Educotlon of 1o. 1975 Dodge s-tllne
tho Molgo Locol School Olo·
-Pk:kup, 010 • . ,.
PubliC Notice
dtvlcea.
'
• · ....
trlct,
Mli111
County,
Ohio,
#0141B5S131032
(41 TrultMI m~y. If they
All lOlled onvolopeo con·
ORDINANCE
foal It lo n-110ry, require will offer far Alo by seolod
NO. 1234·90
the opptlcont to lndomnlfy bid~ .for light fBI ochool iolningblduritobomorkod
An Ordinance to Provide tho Townohtp ogolnot lleblll· bu- ond two 121 trucks, at ciHrly on tho aullldo ··BID
Additional Compen·Atlon tlea end damagea Naulllng tho T-ror'o Office, 320 FOR VEHICLE".
Eoot Moln Stroot, Pomeroy,
Addition lnlarrnotlon on
For Village Employeea for from the exCivltion or obOhio.
on
Jonuory
4.
1991.
·
tbeoo
vohlcleo rnoy be ob1990.
otructlon. ond roqulro the
.at 12:00 noon. Bldo wHI bo tolned at the MilII' L-1
Be it ordained by the applic.nt to poat bond.
Counc)l •I tho Vllllgo of
(II Tho leo ..comporrtlng oubmittod to Boord of Edu· suo Gorago, Rutllnd, Ohio
tho oppllcotion
ohtll be cotlon et their next rogultr 18141 742·2890.
Middleport 11 followo:
meeting for their conaidtra·
Term 1 of .... wll be uah
Soc. 1. Thot for tho yNr 12.00.
lion.
·
or check with pooitlvo ldon·
1990 tho Village olloll poy
(81 Duo to tho heoith ond
Tho vohlcloo oro 11 fol· tlficotlotl.
each full-time employ• In oofety of tM cltiZWII of Sol· ,
lowo:
Sold Boord .......,H tho
the activo employment of lobury Town""'p thlo rooolu·

~----~E~d~n:a:~:c:k:••:·~~~~1~21~6~,!1t~c-

O'DELL

RESOLUTION
. A RESOLUTION TO RE·
QUIRE A PERSON. FIRM
OR CORPORATION
TO
OBTAIN A PERMIT AS SET
FORTH
IN
SECTION
5671.08, OHIO REVISED
CODE FOR AN EXCAVATION OR OBSTRUCTION
ON A TOWNSHIP RQAO.
WHEREAS,
Sollobury

111

p~rticuler

Wit

K·E- N'S ·APPUANCE

all communiCotlone 111111 be
11111 to:
Helrlng Clort&lt;.
OEPA, P.O. Box 1041. Col·
umbuo, OH. 43211·01 49
Ph. 16~41 844·21111. Can·
oult ORC Chip. 37411 ond
OAC ChiP•· 37411-'47 ond
3748·11 lor requirement•·

Chief. .
required by pereona. firma or
;Bido to be opened ot 7;00 corporations
before any

29" height. No edge· bond·

Iring It In Or
. _
Pick Up.

tlce of further actlahe, end

Public Notice

ter linea.

LEGAL NOTICE
Notlcolo hereby given thot

A&amp;l UICIS

oddltlonol inforrnotlon . .Un·
le11 otherwt10 provided In
notice of

MOVING

OVEN IEPAII

poNd ectkln. Any per•r'l
1118y a~bmh: comment• end-

e. 13. 20. 27, 4tc

SALE
CAIPENTEI

MICIQWAVI

~3:~'~::~ .:,·~,.::·:::

theM cauaing aoft IIJOtl,

Public Notice

~;::=======~;::::::::::::::::1i=:======;~;::~==~=~~

tlonund lltUonce""'" of
propoMCI octlono of
draft octlono ore ototod . Fl·
N&gt;loctlonomoybeoppuled,
shell, enamel freme lltltl
coloro ovolloblel. · ·
• In writing, within 30 dlyo of
theclltoofthlonota. totho
Price Quota 11 to Include
lhlpplng to one (1 1location. EnvlronmentiiB.,.rd of Re·
All
111led lfiYolopeo vlow, Rm. 300, 238 E.
contlining bida ere to be Town St .. Columbuo, Oh.,
432111. Noticoofarrtoppeol
rnerkld ct,.rly on the Out·
lido "BIQ FOR CAFETERIA short .be filod with tr.. dlroctor within 3 doyo. Pro-d
CHAIRS".
.
Suled bldo will bo ,.. octlonowRI bocomeflnol un·
loll • 'WrlttWI edjud"'-tlon
celv,ct '1nd opened in the
Truaurer'a Office _. 12:00. hnrtng roquootlo oubmlt!od
Noon on Jenuory 4. 1991. within 3Q d•v• of the lo·
Bldo wilt bo oubmittod to tho -.•nee dlte: or the director
rtviiOI/WithdriWI tbe proBoerd of Education at thlll;

1121

. CALL614-992-7104 FOR APPT.

ceived and opened in the
Trelaurer'a Office at 12:00

There was something about a knife that made a boy a man.
And today we make them just as tough and reliable as ·
we did when you were a kid. With some 150 handcrafted
·
operations in every pocket knife.
You can still choose over 100 of world famous Case
pocket knives in all sizes, shapes and combinations. With
honed or polished edge blades, from 25/a" to 5" .
"{ou may have lost the knife, but we never lost the
knack.. Anybody who says they don't make them like thev
usec;i to doesn't own a ·Case pocket knife.

bldo for th' following :
350 Stocking
Choirs,
17'11" 1101 height, one 111
ploco molded polyp.,pyleno

Jane Fry. Treaaurer

20°/o .

ARROW lONG
&amp; SHORT SLEEVE
JEANS
SHIRTS

$23

~20°/o

REDUCED

duirtli to 1'8Ceive Hlltd

Tho fallowing wore NCoiV·
PUBLIC NOTICE
edl proporod
by tbe Ohio
Envlronmontll Protoctl011
1

/or 1 m"'lng rogordlng ony
&lt;lroft oction within 30 doyo
of tho dote ln~icotod. "Ac·
terlo tobloo. but rtllrveo the · tlon", 11 uMd ebove doel
right to rejoct any and otl, or not includo r-lpt of 1 vlfl·
fled complelnt. If olgnlflcont
porto of ony ond oil bido .
By order of tbe Boord of public intereat exi..., 1 pub·
Educotlon. Molgo Local lie """'tlng moy be Mid. Ao
School Oiltrlct, 320 Eoot to •rrt octlon, Including ro·
colpt of verified complalnto,
Meln Stroot, P. 0 . lox 272,
any ~r1on 1118y obtllin no·
Pomeroy, Ohio, 411789.

VERY NICE LARGE HOME ON APPROX. 3'h
ACRES- 4 BR, 3 baths. 2 garage&lt;, rented 1
BR apartment. Property inclooes pond. approx. 4,800 sq..H..farm bldg. and mOOile
home. A real barga~n at' $89,900.

SPORT COATS
&amp; BlAZERS

LEGAL NOTICE
Noticolohorobyglvon tMt
the BCHird of Educotlon of
tho Malgo LOCIISchool Oio·
trlct, Molgo County, Ohio,

Tho boord of educotlon In·

FOR SALE I RACINE

FOR THE MEN

·B.u s-I·n·•e. ss· Serv.ices

Public Notice

ten de to. accept the low11t
rooponllble bid for-the cofo'

Gallipolis Location Open
Mon. ·Sat. till 9, Sun. til 7
Mason Location
Open Mon.·Sun. til 8

JACKETS

PubliC Notice

next regular meeting · for
conlideration.

Now Stocked with
Beautiful Fraser Firs
&amp; White Pines, Live
Wreaths &amp; Garland:
Red, Pink &amp; White
Poinsettias &amp;
Much More.

.WQMEN' S DENIM

SLACKS CAPES

R(DUCED

Pleasant Valley Hospital Admin·
istrative Conference Room.
for information .675-4340. ·
ext. 232:

LADIES

FDA· unveils blood donation guideline
In a statement.
About 8 million people donate
blood each year ln the United
States and about 4 million receive transfusions. Although all
blood donors are 'tested for the
AIDS virus and rejected If they
test positively, -h ealth officials
discourage anyone at risk for
being Infected with the virus
from Bonatlng because a small
percentage of people sUp through
the tests.
Dr. Gerald Sandler of the
American Red Cross, which
collects half of all blood dona·
lions, said the number of AIDS
cases blamed on blood transfu·
slons has dropped significantly
and the new guidelines should
continue that trend.
· Under the new program, all
.blood donors will continue to be
tested lor. the AIDS . virus and
other
Infectious

BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE
4: 3~ P.M. DAY BEFORE
PUBLICATION
Big Kids &amp; Babies Program
will meet Dec. 11, 6:30 P.M.

'

'
WASHINGTON
(UPll - The
goVernment has dropped a ban
on;blood donations from Haitians
and people from other areas
wliere AIDS Is common, but
announced other measures to
p~tect the U.S. blood supply
frOm Infectious diseases.
'l'he Food and Drug Admlnis·
tratlon said Wednesday It began
notifying blood donation centers
thljt a ·new coUectlon system
"will be Implemented over the
next few months to Increase the
safety of the nation's blood
supply."
The changes "ellmlnate the
need for excluding certain donor
populations based solely on their
geographical or national orig·
Ins," the FDA said.
''The strengthened . program
wtU enhance, rather than replace, the current procedures
used to safeguard the blood ·
supply," Health and Human
'Sei'vlces Secretary Louis Sulllvall said.
"By shifting the focus of
screening procedures to cover a
broader range of risk factors,
FDA will build upon the safety of
the blood supply while providing
all healthy and willing lndlvldu·
all· the opportunity to donate
blood," he said.
An FDA advisory panel In
Aprll urged the agency to a ban·
don a policy of barrtng people
from Halt! and other specific
geoaraphlc areas from donating
blood. The ban, Instituted In 1983
becauae AIDS was believed common among Haitians, had
sparlred protests by Haitians,
who said the policy was
dllcrlrnlnatory. ·
Inasead, the advisory board
urged tbe agency to take other
stepl to recklce the chances that
someone Infected wl th the AIDS·
caullng human lmmunodefl·
cleney virus, or HIV, will donate
'
blood.
. Tbe In ternatlonal Alll4nce for
tlaltl pral~ Wednesday's an·
IIOIIIICement, calllng It "welCome
_ . to the Haitian CQmmunlty"

BULLETIN BOARO_

I

Fed suroey shows 'weaker' economy pattern

The Daily

MOilLE
I

&amp;

COOLING

Lomted oa S.H..-d Sdleol ltl. eft lt. 1•1
"1•1 446·M16 •r 1·1t0·172·5967

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LAFF-A-DAY
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I'

December 6, 1990

.Ohio

Sentinel
42 Mobile Homes
far Rent

71 Al,ltOI fOr Sa~

KIT 'N' CARLYLEe by Larry Wrlpt

48 Spece fOr Rent

-··

.......... -.CIII

18110.0........., loWmlloo,

aula :wtlc. 11.100.

.

I

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Culllll
·lhlrp,
_., auto
traM.m.lon,

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THURS.. DEC. 8

-loW . .... .wNI•""-·
Call 114 .....
. 4441

IAU

•

EVENiNG ·

.~

r.lerChJildiSe

....

Television
Viewing

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ili&amp;~~-pretll
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1B World Today

W14AT A GREAT IDEA !

VIS II T El&amp; cl .,1
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=~· ~~~e~!~.~~a~

1111 Our HouH

TI4.E FIRST TIME
I'VE EVER SEEN I-IlM
SPILL 1415 WATER DISH ..

1:05 (I) Beverty tillbllllel
1:20 (!) Square One TV l;i
1:30 ()) 8 II) NIC Nlglltty Newl

"There is often a

~,_and Co&amp;1811o

eAllllllcii;J
AIC Newai;J
a 1121e Cll HaWs I;J

II

ID SpoftiCantor

•

DOTEMS

IIlle Andr &lt;lltfnnt

1:31 (I) Andy Qrllfltll
7:00 ()) G llll 0 Whaet ot ·
For!IIM I;J
I!JI Drum of Jeannie
lnlkll Edition 1;J
(J) &lt;Jl
C1l (!) MicNeii .Lehrer
. New014our
.
liD. Night Court Q
1121 Cwrent AHIIi 1;J
111 MacOyver t:;1 ·
1D Collega llllikatball
1B
1111 MOVIE: ViHI Rlclao (RJ
(2:30)
7:05 (I) Happy Days

e

M_,.,.

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

11M Fonl Pick-up, euot..n :,o~

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Oondltlon,. " " - · lul-lc,,
114-251-1221.
.
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Vegellblll
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for '"''"'
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114f11t2..2'7M.
1111 Fonl Aonr::.~T~, Y.. !
..........1100.
.

w. .-pi
otompo. v.MIJ olop)!loo

--·

1

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock
Aolrlgofllor'o, 1121

73

~8:1!.":=-~

, ,..

- .

WlmedtO Buy

-lnlo!l

~·

Couch,

Cllllr, Oitll, Twin led, - ' ... lortnga. 114 411 1117,
114-44&amp;.lM:I.

·-·
rn;rp.,
-·----of
RENT20WN

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Ond Chair, ft,ta por-

I .,.._ Waadl'!l''l
welll. L4h•ll•d unk· ....
- - ond Chill o f -

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wlh 4 Cllln, 17.10 1'!11' - · 4

Wonlod To Ivy: Junk Autoo

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Lilly Uw11J. 114 1• lUI.

-· ..... t12.20 por
Dnl-11.10 ~-AI. 141,

14

4 111111 011 At. 7 In ~­
HOURI: fton!!oy thru Sot-r,
........,...,.......,, 12 -

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Allroln

Rot...... 114-

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srm

-IISouthllllom
VIII.,
Ptua. Call T~ U17fl
Aogllllflllon
121111.
BUll.,...~.

36

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AMf~lt:A

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--r

3•••". CJ-7,.
Joop '

111111- 15

hard top,

Uveatock

'*'·~

HERE, YOU TAKE

THESE THINGS!
THEV BELONGEP
T'BII.I.Y &gt;.. MP&lt;H

'

11110, ,

Motoi'cyclaS

.i

At.RTNERI

a&lt; I/O 114471-27l11.
'
11M 8lazw 810, ¥-1, auta, air, :
cruiH, uww-. ......, PW, •
PL. 15,800. 3IJ4.61W:Ia.
,~

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.80!11 ooniHion. no ruof, $2,100 ,
Sowcholnlbuy2ai1111M.
SI*N Equl_.-, ~lll:n.

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liZ &amp;I Top Cops An
oHicer chases an armed
suapa&lt;rtin Brooldyn. (R)
Stereo.I;J
llll• The Slmpeona Ban
pllns to perform a
death-defying stunt. 51ereo.

1

g
Murder, She W~tei;J
a

1111
· oond,
• - rlr
ZIIDX.oxc
30W7W131
or 304-1Jt..2121.
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Amllllcan Music Shop
IB Prii!IINeWI
1:05(1) Po,Y Maaon:"Ainartca'o
·
Lawyer This special hosted
by Barbara Hale lncludBtl
The Case of the Final Fade
Out, The Case of the Twice
, Told Twist and The Case of
tho Deadly VardiC1.

~ , 11100 ~~ . or"'· ;

75 Boats &amp; Moto111

d\

EEK A.ND MEEK

ww

fOr Sale
·: ,
~,m=-17=-:;I.~SI;;:o..,~ro~ft-1'11-H::-:-:~ull :
-

10 ~ ffi§!VIlY...

· 121 HP, Ewlnrudl Enalile, '

- · · lop, Clll - - · • · n o rUDholt1ory.
t;oo P.lft. ;'

76 · Al,lto Parts &amp;

~£

~IVI'&gt;t

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IWAIN

.

I FURNITURE. 12
Ollw 81., Golllpoilo. ~Nor. ~
lumft..., ........
1

w•em

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-lopot!.

Yorj Choopl Odd Jobo. 30W75Z1Uia&lt;I7NI21.

Norlh Third .......
Ohio. 2 be &amp;hom fw nlabud apt,
ro_onci.._H...,ulrod,

I:DD ()) e i1J Cheers A prank
starts an argument between
Sam and Frasier. Stereo. t:;1
(J) (I) Ill Glt~el'l FIN
Gabrial's investigation of
ViC1orla's father points to his
guin. Stereo. Q
(!) Myoleryl Colonel
PrOiheroe is found murdered
after gOing to tile vicar's
. office. Q
llll. Bev~y Hilla, IG21D
Brandon is heartbroken alter
being rejected by an older
woman. Slareo. D
111 MOYIE: Not.I l&gt;anny
MaN, Not a Penny Lau(Pt
2 of 2) 12:00) Stereo.
Naohvllla Now
Coil• llaakalball
1B Larry King Uvel
. 9:30 ()) G II) Grand Carol
receives deatn lhreata from a
raadar of her advice column.
Stereo. D
Ol liZ • Doctor, Doctor
Mike's psllonll begin to
cancel after his lawau~ Is
made public. Stereo. 1;J
1111 Ctarenca The story
1 behind the movie Clarence Is
featured. (0:30)
L.A. Llw Van
10:00 ())
Owen represents a dying
friend in need of a kidney
transplant. Stereo. Q
I!J NaWI
,
Ill (J) G Prlmatlme Uve

.....
Lur loblo,
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loblf; _
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WMAT KIND OF ·

53

Antiques

~E:TTI~

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THE USUAL. KIND: ..
S'Tl.JCK·'Tl:l6E:.THER
eoPA&lt;S-He:TTI.

=-

McDinlll CUllom ~o~-..a,
Conlo llld Door. IOWIZ·

ATTIIITIOH POrtEROYI
-ALJOIS'
111.41 • 114.10 hr. No ~~PM­
....... ,_ n1111 oncl oppllcoo
lion .,.... 01111 1-ZIHP-1537
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Dolllo. 111 - - Eol. . .

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APo
NUAS1NC1 · ASI&amp;

HIRING

. IIIIOVID

STATE

TANTI

,.n•n
nllhlnl ....... a
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~

5 II&amp; • • 1~224.

I DON'T SELL NO
CHAWIN' TERBACKY
DN CREDIT II

lllondlna lmbw. Top pMII
pold, IWMHIII ollor 7:00p.m.

=r,. •
WIN do

polnllng 114-1112·

AN' WHEN YOU GIT H.OME-TELL LOWEEZY I GOT THEM
PINKIN' SHEARS SHE·
ORDERED

llollr ol11ng 11r hour «

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FillariCidi

IIITSLUCIIHCI
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1 1.11. • 5:110 p.m. Alii! 2 ·10.
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'fUIIIIn NkeAiue
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1111 - I nof-- 0&lt;
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IIMpiM.I.O.L .

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Opportunity
1NCmca1

OHIO VALLEY PUIUI- CO.
- - - thll ,.... d o --~,....NOT 10 Mild _,., l,;.;uaj,i'lii

.....

.......... ,.... tho~

'"'-tTgotod

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Plumbing&amp; .
Heating

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onc1HIM''-"'

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Ollta.

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Read the Best seller

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Read the·

.:··CLRSSfiED RDS
;

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Ill.,.........,.,. '

11~

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"I mlglit hitvt gotten a ralle ·
H I hldn'tlllllll uteap during
my·Job avalulilon meeting."

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w.:.-:..m: :; .

(!) Myoteryl1:o1onai
Protheroa Ia tound murdered
after going to the viCar's
office. I;J
Knoll Landing
Greg makes tlnal
preparations for his death.
Slarao. I;J
Slllr Tift: Thl Hold
GenerIB CNN Evening Newt
1D 7DD ClUb With Pot

a 1121e

Aab1rtlan

·

10:30 8 CI'OIIII and Chill

11:00 ()) • ill
ii)Newl

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8
8

American

Mullc: Shop

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lcllrec:row and Mro. ICing

11:20(1) MOVIE:.....,-

RIIUIIII (2:00)

The weak two-bi~ was invented by
the late Howard Scbencken. He in•
tended the bid to show a decent six·
card suil but·less than an opening bid
in high cards. Modernists have eased
Ibis standard, trading the risk of bid·
ding with a weaker suillor the ad van·
l;lge of foreing the opponents to start
al a higher level. Experts are almost
unanimous that Ihe bid should not be
made with values approaching open·
ing·bid strength. So today's South
passed originally.
When South later overcalled, part·
ner Norlh could do .no more lhan raise
to three hearts. Of course North hoped
he could double three spades, but that
was a vain hope. So North-South
missed a reasonable game contract,
which depended on West holding the
club queen with hearts divided twotwo, or on West holding three spades
with the jack plus one higher honor.
(Declarer leads up to the queen of
spades twice. When the jack later falls
under the queen, there are two dis·
cards available.)

.,

•

SOUTH
.54

•KQJ1073

tJ

+A 9 8 3

Vulnerable: North·Soulh
Dealer: South
Soulll

Well

Norl~

Ea11

Pass

1t

Pass

I•
Pass

2•
Pass

2•
3.,
Pass

Opening lead: • K
L-------..,..,.....,,--,--J
Sure, lhe game might be , missed
even if South opened the bidding with
one heart, but my view is that a hand
too good to open with a .weak two-bid
should always be opened with ·a one·
bid when it contains two defensive
tricks. In accordance with that princi·
pie, South W()uld open the bidding,
West would double. and North would
redouble and later raise hearts. Game
migllt be reached, _and this time th~
cards are right lor 11 to make.
.

DOWN

· 1 Cicatrix
5 Set In
10 Illuminated
12 Antisocial
sort
13 San
Antonio

landmark
14 Mirror
sight
15 Wire
measure
18 Ship's
windlass

11 Popular
food fish
20 Archliic
21 Stika
23"-Miserables•
24 Palmer ·

Joen

1 Bridge
coups
2 Lashes
3Toany
extant

4Jamalcan
export
5 Faux pas
&amp;Hanks
and
Brokaw
7 France of
France
8 Feasted
t Directions
11 Penn. .
mountains
17 Picnic
visitor
11 Deface
22 Art
lover

24 •farris
Buelklr's
Day: 011"
actress
25 All
. together
21 Haw
preceder
28 Shares lor

trio
members
30 Nile viper

Answer
33 Tbrill
34 Musical
sounds

35 Used up
37 Small
shark

38 Cash

. •.t

·register ·

..

section
42 Solo

'

. ..·.-,

of "Star

Wars·

--....-.r-

..

21 Moult
21i Badge
mal erial
211 Glut
:11 Bowler,

i,

..

e.g.

32Soma

Hnan

.....,

·~

38 U-235,
e.g.

"'

31 Cut off

40Boca41 Macbeth,
lor one
43 Curtain

."

44 Dined
45 Store
averits
48 Lair

"·

DAILYCRYProQuOID-Here'ahowtoworklt:

1216

One letter slands for another. In this Sf!mple A is used
lor the three L's, X f91' the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and (ormation Dllhnvords are all
hints. Each day the code letten are.dirrerent.
CRYPIOQUOTE
UEARVDGRNDRYDFA.
.
- OWCG

GQ

DGFWOC.

~~&gt;e:;:cg

DYUEARV.-

TWPQADVM

URF

R

L R Z

JDFGENTDVMOZ
R. MNRURA
aa TRUE .GOODNESS

c.,,..,...

Yeetel.,'e
SPRINGS FROM A MAN'S HEART, All. MEN ARE

BORN ~· - CONFtKlUS .

.
..
"

.

.,'

AXYDLBAAXR
lsLONGFELLOW

QC

•r---Ponlght
:..,:::....

• 8762

tKQ5 3
+7 6 4

e 0 Tonight Show
s-.
IJ) Olloet ....,

11:30 ())

EAST
., 6 2

IIJle

as.o.c.

2
t'allor~
p i J - 1 dop. IM 1•

2 IR, unlum., lloauUtut ~­
-.llolltll
IWLIIMo
~

Stereo.

BEDEOSOL

F-ond
Galllp lk Ohio
111 1111111
•

Jl Jat•hoMe.MatenRoMI.
141~. Wlltllk.

influences whiCh are jjovernlng you In GEMINI I~ 21-.IUrie 201 The examp!e
lhe year ahead. Send for your Astra- you eslabllsh when dealing wllh lOved
Graph predictions today by mailing ones tOday will be 1he one they'llfollow.
$t .25 to Astro-Graph , c/O this newspa. If y,ou'ra shorHampered, cranky or lm·
per, P.O. BOll 91428, Cleveland, OH patlen1, you won'l like the clones your
44101-3428. Be suralo alate your zodi· behavior createS.
ac sign.
·
CANCER (June 21.July 221 You might
CAPIIICORN (O.C. 22·Jan. 11) Don't have lo deal wilh a difflcull person to''
lake something you want repaired or day and ll may be hard to keeP your an·
BERNICE
serviced back to an establlshmanl ger in check. II will be best, however, 10
where you've had problems in the past. smolder In silence rather than respond
You'd be wise to look for someone In kind.
,
more reliable.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 221 Financial arAQUARIUS(Jen. 20-Fab. 11) You equid . rangernonts with lrlends could cause
be a trifle too possessive tOday with problema tOday. If a·disagreement with
people with w!lom you're emotionally a •pal arloes over somethl"' material,
·
Involved. Unfortunately, '!he ll)ore con- suHer tho 1 - rathor lhen JeopardiZe
·
AE....~
r
trOI you try to exert •.the more likely they the relallonahlp. ·
1
..___
are to rebel.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-lept. 22) There Ia a
PIICEI (Pob. 20-March 20) Oullldera very flnilllha tOday ·b e - belliillf:;
should not be broughtlnlo the picture lectlvely usertlve or Just plain aQGrnIOday to netp resolve o disagreement al!i8. If you are nol carelul, you might
O.C. 7, 1 •
bet_, you and your male: If you lhlnk nave
trouble
dlatlngulshlng
the
You will be both bolder and morumter- things are heated now, w~l unlll lhey boundary.
prllinv In 1ha year -.c1 In deVelOP·
start pouring gaiOitne on lhe fire.
Um!A (llpl. 23-0ct. 211) It's best 110110
mentslhll cGUid lncr- your Income ARIEl ( - 21-Aprll 1t) Don'l let bUll Into tilly alluallona tOdoy 111111 do
or lloldlnga. Your drive will be chan- outside lnftuencet '*'M you to be un- not d)reclly concern you. You won't deIn poeltlve dlrecllono ond the re- duly rushed wllh tacks or Ullgnments 111ve any benllllla trom getting In tho
tOday thll ora delalled and Intricate. middle Of - ·• - ·
at.ilto llhaukl 11e 10 your liking,
IAGmAIIIUI (Nov.
21) Hule could cau11 oerlout errors or SCORPIO (DoL :M llav. 221 TriYIII di.-Soineone " " - cooperation 11 ea..,.. complications.
, ~~~ could be. blown out of protiel 1o you at this time II alerting to T AUIIUS (April 111-1111; 20) You could · portion tOdl)' If you encauntanomaona
waver a bit. If ihll peroon Isn't treated cruto niole havoc In your llllailcilll at- wllo 1e • otrcing-wllled and Inflexible
·diplomaticallY tOdoy, 111/n could be- fairs tocay than p,_lly axial If you about hlo/her opiniOns a you are. 1111
come 111 lldveraary lnlfaacl ot an ally . . juggle - n i l around to rob ~ter to on guerd.
Get a jUmp on lilt by underltoncllnp 1111 poy Paul. Try to live wllhln yOC.r ~ns.
... ...
,.

• Q 10 9 3
., .~: 98
+976
+KJ5

JAMES
JACOBY

ACROSS

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1:30 ()) 8 .liJJ Dttf-nt Workl
Whitley leama the maanl"i.
of Christmas. (Rl Stereo~9.
Ol iiiJ • Thl Flalh Barry s
secret identity as the Flash Ia
disco~erecl. iRl Stereo. I;J
liD• llltbla Ronnie's
restaurant bUms down when
Charlene takes over. Stereo.

lp.m.

Reel Eatate
Wented

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hold fumlohlnv. 112 1111.
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(J) (I) Ill Falhlr Dowling
Myaterlea Slstar Stave
impersonates a vlalting
member of royalty. (R)
Stereo. I;J
(!) ECIIOaa ot lhllllg llltndo
With MeN Clrlffln FHm clips
· of the 1930s and 40s psy
tribute to Benny Goodman,
Glenn Millar, the oorsoya,
Cab Calloway. Helan Forest,
Helen C'l'Connall and many·
more. (1:50)
·
(!) Mylleryl A ghostly dog
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'·

PRINT NUMBERED
LETTERS IN SQUARES

e

OAUOLOAD CAASII 1100. '14 :
VW 1841: 'rl 111W 12110; U.S. •
SEIZED. FREE 24 hour nconl- '

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.
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Completo tile chucklo qvoNd
by filling in tho mllllnv -d•'
you develop !rom IIIP No. 3 below.

BRIDGE

7:30 ()) • llll II) J~rdyii;J
l!l Nlglll Court I;J
(J) IIJ
En-rnent
TontaM Stereo: I;J
(J) G Mlllll'l Family
liD• Tllroa'e Company
IB Croasflrl
7:35 (I) The JeHe~a
t:DD ()) G II) Colby Shaw.The
Huxtabiaa begin to treat Clair
lit&lt;a an old woman.·Stareo.

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N
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SCIAM LBs ANswus
·• ·r•.
Yearly- Linen -:- Sorry - Weaken ..:. ONE YEAR
·
"You ate two pie.ces of pie at one time!" admonished
the wife. The husband, who was always dieting replied,
."I think of it as two pieces in ONE YEAR!"

e

IMulllul dining,_ ....
- ; IIIDioof
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I' I

7
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1_,J,L-.J.L-.J."-.J
L-L.-l..

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we fear

1

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�Page 1 6-The Daily Sentinel

1

Thursday. Dacamber 6, 1990

Pomaroy-Middlapot1, Ohio

Farm Bureau delegates attend annual meeting

ATI'END MEETING - Gecqe Holter, Racine, left, ad Rex
SheQefteld, LangsviUe, recently alteDCled tbe Ohio Farm Bureau .
Federation's 72nd Annual Meeting iD Columbus. Tbe theme of the
'AtiO"
meetiDg was "Farm Bureau- "
u=&gt;ocracy
tn
c u.

:Teens do good works
as often as adults .·
WASHINGTON (UP!) -Despite their somPtime• being ste·
reotyped as selfish and selfceniered, American teenagers
do voluntary charitable work at
about the same rate as adults, a
new study reported Tuesday.
, And, between trips to the mall
:and the movies, teens a lso dig .
Into their pockets to do good, with
'· 48 percent of teenagers contributIng money to causes last year .
The average contribution was
. $46.
The findings, by Independent
Sector. an umbrella group of
voluntary, non-profit groups and
big donors, come on the heels of a
mid -November survey that
found a marked in~rease in
giving and volunteering by the
adults of the "baby boom"
generation .
"This news (about teens),
coupled with that of the ·adult
survey, paints an optimistic
picture of the future capacity lor
volunteering and giving In ArTier·
lea ." said Brian O'Connell, pres I·
dent ~f .Independent Sector.
' 'These findings certainly fly In
the face of those who say that
philanthropy In America is erod Ing with each generation."
The survey of teens found that
58 percent _of American teenag·
ers volunteered In· 1989, compared with 54 percent of adults.
Teens averaged 3.9 hours of
volunteer time each week and
over one fourth ·Of . the teen
volunteers gave five or more
hours each week.
According to Independent Sec·
tor, that meant a total of 1.6
billion hours of volunteer time by
teens in 1989.
" One of the reasons lor the
specific study of teenage charitable behavior was our concern
that those who came before

them , the 'baby boomers, • were
nott showing up in surveys as
particularly generous of time
and money." O'Connell said.
" Independent Sector .w anted to
see if the problem began at even
younger ages."
But he noted that the report
released In mid-October showed
that the " boomers" have now
caught on arid are contirlbuting
time a nd money in generous
degrees.
" With this second study,whlch
now indicates that the younger
generation Is even more Involved
In service, we can be relieved and
encouraged about the prospects
of active citizenship and personal
service lor many decades," he
said .
Schools and religious organizations emerged as the primary
institutions that get teenagers ·
involved In voluntary activities,
with 52 percent of the teen
volunteers indicating they got
lnvolv~d through their school and
50 percent citing their church or
synagogue.
Through the schools, teens
were most likely to get involved
as volunteers In areas of arts,
culture and humanities (78 percent), education (74 percent) ,
human services (55 percent ),
and environmental causes (52
percel)t).
. A growing emphasis on community service by schools (s
apparantly having a positive
Impact on teen volunteering,
accotdlng to the survey. Among
the 61 percent of respondents who
reported their schools encour·
aged community service, 69
percent actually volunteered.
Among the 28 percent who
reported their school did not
encourage community service,
howeve r . just ·44 percent
volunteered.

Delegates liom Meigs County
Farm B1m111 joined nearly 300
official delegates a1 lhe Ohio Fann
Bureau Federation's 72nd annual
·meeting in Columbus. Members of
lhe Meigs de~galion included
Gecrge Holrer, Racine, and Rex E.
Shenefield, Langsville.
The meeting camed lhe lheme
"Farm Bureau -· DemocraCy in
Action." The delegates auended lhe
annual meeting to determine stare
and national policies for the coming year. The policie$ will guide lhe
federation, which is lhe largest
farm organization in die slate wilh
over 112,000 family members,
during lhe coming year.
Delegates heard Bob Vice, president, California Farm Bureau,
speak on "Agricultwe, Environmentalists and Politics.• Denis
Avery, director, Center of Global
Food Issues at lhe Hudson Institute,
~ve his views on "Global Treiuls
m Food, Farming and 'Thchnology.•
Peter Neckerman, . vice president,
economic and irlvesanent services,
Nationwide Insurance, gave a
"World Economic . Overview.•
froiD
· Soviet
"Greetings
Cooperatives" were given by Pavel
Fedirko,
Soviet
Consumer
Cooperatives.

•
•

18 days
until
Christmas

i

•

Ohio Lottery

t .

•

Pick 3: 777
Pick 4: 5995
Cards: 3-H;
A..C; 2-D; 9-S

•

Partly cloudy Friday, fair
and cold Friday nlr;ht.

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Vol.41, No .l·&amp;t
: Copyrighted 1990

.•

JOI?.[7

·•

CO!MNI

Syptcuse garbage·rates
•
to Increase ·on Jan. I

JOJJ
COLOJUNG CON'il:ST WINNER - JeliDy
Cllll'ord, the daughter of Jilll 8Dd Faye Clifford
of Pomerw, Ia the district winDer of a coloring
CODtest held In conjunction with tbe video re1aa
or ~AU DOgs Go to Htaveu". Jeur will now ad·

vance 10 lbe state level J.1or winning in the dis·
trld contest, Jenny Is the willuer of a new·Mag-

navox videocassette morder. Here, KeDDetb
Searles, left, VIdeo Manager of Vaugba'&amp; Car·
diDal in·Middleport, presents the VCR to Jenny.

By KATHRYN CROW
West Coliunbia. If an individual
Garbage rates in Syracuse wiD dumps two bags a1 lhe landfill, it
be increased beginning Jan. 1, still costs $15.50, he noted. Eblin
Henry Eblin, · collector, told used the West Columbia facility
S~use Village Council Thursday due to its closeness to Meigs
mght. .
County.
Mr. and Mrs. Eblin and son, · He explained that he nm:mally
Mi1re. met with Council to talk hauls whatever residents put out to
about the rate increase and explain be picked up. Council told Eblin
. why it is necessary.
they appreciated his. iltlending lhe
Eblin slated thai due 10 the $3 meeting and explaining what is to
incre;~SC on dumping imposed at · occur. He is the only authorized
lhe West Columbia dwnp facility, trash hauler for the Village of
and the high cost of gas at lhe Syracuse.
pumps, he was increasing regular
Jim Pape, Council member,
rateS $1.50 per monlh, and senior stated thatlhe viUage be required to
citizen rates $1 per month.
begin a recycling program in 1992.
Regular rates wiD increase from
Mayor Erer Pickens announced
$9.50 a month to $11, while die that dogs cannot continue to run
senior citizens rate wiD increase loose in the village. He said lhai
from the present $7.75 to $8.75.
owners must confined lheir dogs or
Eblin explained that it costs · they will be cited to court. Both the.
$15.50 a ton or less to dump at mayor and Council members iii-

.

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•
CHRISTMAS

Hostage ~lease offer
.conrmned by.Iraqis

·I

I
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II
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•Remote Control
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I·
Graphics
•Cable Ready
•3 Cabinet Styles I

Old pals in London town
government out of the wa'y and
the people did the rest, " he said.

Public Notice

YOUR

CHO~CE $549

CRAFTY
GIFTS

WASHI NGTON (UP!) -]'res-!dent Bush and Secretary of State
James Ba ker welcomed Iraq 's
announced Intention to release
all hostages in Iraq a nd Kuwait,
· but said the United S tates will
co ntinue to demand uncond!tiona! withdrawal of Iraqi forces
from Kuwait .

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992-3671
DOWNTOWN POMEROY, OHIO

fundin g for the !Joat launching fa cility for the past several years
and ex pressed appreclatllon to
all who have ass isted with this
project. He stated that a meeting
which was he ld last year with
boaters, village officials, and
E ric MetZler of ODNR had been
very Instrumental In obtaining
additional funding for this project a,nd e xpressed thanks to
those who attended this meeting
and expressed their views to
ODNR on the Middleport facil Ity.
Hoffman stated that he anile·
!pates aU paperwork being completed for the project during the
winter months with the construction to be completed In 1991.

Deer accident investigated

I

STORE HOURS
Monday 9:30-1:00

1be51l Improvements are to In.Middleport Ma)l!i\r Fred J{off· .
clude bank protection from eroman announced today that the
village has been. awarded a sion, ·launch site paving, new
v.nderwater launching pad, guard·
$50,000 Waterways Safety Fund
rail, steps to provide easier · ac·
grant lor Improvements at the
cess,
courtesy dock and landscap·
boat launching site near the old
of
the area around the launchtng
railroad depot on the Ohio River.
Ing
facility
.
·
The mayor stated that this
The
only
portion
ofthe
grant
ap·
grant, along with a previous
plication not now funded Is the
award of $25,000, will mean that
proposed renovation of the old de$75,000 In grant funds will be
pot. It was suggested by ODNR
available for this project along
thai the village seek other sources
with the required local funds of
of funding for this portion of the
$37,500, bringing the total cost of
project since they did not feel this
the project to $112,500.
would be of direct benefit to re·
With these additional grant
creational boaters.
·
funds available, Hoffman stated
The mayor staled that the vii·
thai substa ntial Improvements
lage had .been working to obtain
can be made at this facility.

Shock probation granted

Picture rent•

Cherry, oak ar pine
finishes.

Slit /~UII

·Middleport IS awarded
$50,000 ODNR grant

Local news briefs----.

Cabinets

,,,.,

Baker :told' lhe House Foreign
Affairs Committee on Thursday
that the Iraqi Foreign Ministry
had confirmed otrlclally that all
foreign nationals will be permitted to leave. ·
Tl)e Iraqi ambassador to Wash lngton, Mohammed alMashat, in an Interview on Cable

•

News Network, said, "All our
guests once again will be in their
·h omes well before Christmas. "
But Baker, testifying before
Congress, and Bush, at a news
conference In Santiago, Chile,
both said freeing the hostages
would not soften U.S. Insistence
that Iraq conform to all U.N.
resolutions demandllig fuU withdrawal of Iraq from Kuwait.
Earlier, Baker had expressed
reservations· to the House Foreign Affairs Committee about
Initial broadcast reports that
Iraqi
President Saddam Hussein
Becky Davidson has been·rewlned from lhe State Correctional Inhad
asked
Iraq's parliament to
stitution on Thursday afrer her release .on shock probation by lhe
approve
the
release of all foreign
Meigs County Common Pleas Court.
natiol!als
.
According to the Meigs County Sheriff's Department, Mrs.
But In the course of2 'h hours o(
DaviCison had been in the slate institution on a drug charge.
testimony, Baker learned that
David Lawson of New Straitsville was returned to Meigs County
''
government-to-government' '
on Monday from the Alhens County Jail to answer a bench wanant
confirmation
of the report came
from Meigs Cqunty Court. Lawson had apPeared in County Court
In
a
telephone
call to the State
earlier this year on a charge of stealing a aailer from Mike Appel.
Department
from
acting Ambas. Lawson will be "laying out'' his fine and costs in the county jail.
sador Joseph Wilson In Baghdad,
who had met with officials of the
Iraqi
Foreign MiniStry.
Meigs Couniy Sheriff's deputies investigated a deer accident on
The
exact number of foreign
Thursday. According to lhe accident report, Tanothy B. Bowen, of
nationals
In Iraq and Kuwait has
SistersviUe, W.Va. was southbound on State Route 7 when he struck
never
been
precisely es taband killed a deer that ran into lhe path of his 1981 Plymoulh.
But
It
Is
thought there are
llshed.
The accident took place at lhe Texas Road intersection shortly af.
around
900
Americans,
Including
ter 9 p.m: Modcrate damage was rePOned to Bowen's vehicle.
·
88 held as human shields at key.
Mike Sigler of Beech Grove ~mid reponed a vehicle fire on
Installations around Iraq, plus an
Thursday, as well. .
· · · ·
estimated
5,000 o11ter foreigners.
Sigler was working on his 1974 truck when lhe fire Slartcd under
Opening
his testimony before
lhe hood. Dainage to both lhe engine and lhe cab were reported, Rutthe
House
panel, his second
·
land fire deparunent responded to the fire. ·
appearance on Capitol Hill In two
days toexplalnthe Bush administration's Persia n Gulf policy,
. Eight calls for assistance were answered by units of Meigs
Baker
said, "We should acknowl,, County Emergency Medical Services on Thursday.
edge
that
this (hostage report) Is
At 8:21 a.m. on Thursday, Pomeroy squad and fire department
a
welcome
and significant develwent to State Route 681 east to a motor vehicle accident, and
opment. But we do want to see It
transponed Many Bailey to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
actually
happen.
At 12:05 p.m., Middlepon squad responded to Soulh Second for
"S~ondly, let me say that It
Homer Moodispaugh and transported him to Holzer Medical Center.
does not lessen nor should It
At 12:37 p.m., Rutland unit went to Smilh Run Road for Miclure1
lessen our determination that
Bissell and took him to Veterans. At 1:13 p.m., Racine fire depan- . Iraq's aggression against Ku·
ment went to State Route 124 at Portland for a buement fire atlhe
walt must be reversed by full
Schuler residence. 'At 6:26 p.m., Rutland fire dcpaibiteDt went to
Implementation of all of the
Beech Grove Road for an auto fire at lhe Zigler residence. At 7:10 ·
Security Copncll resolutions.
. p.m.' Syracuse squad went to Sb!-te Route 124 for Carl Weiss. He
"And, third .. . I think tha t this
was 1ta1cen to Holzer Medical Center. At I 0:20 p.m., Rutland squad
Is a sign that the strategy of
went to Pageville Road for BOnnie Quivey. She WjiS traDSpOrted to
diplomatic and military pressure
VeteranS. At 10:39 p.m.,
squad went to North 'Third for
Is working. It seems to me no
to Veterans.
Lois TeiTCII, who was tran
coincidence that this announcement comes just one week : ..
- after the International common·
Veterans Memorial Hospital
lty has authorized the use of
TIIURSDAY ADMISSIONS -Pauline Barber, Reedsville; Zeva .
force. "
Kitchen, Albany; and Ellen Young, Racine.
..
Bush also said Saddam's offer
.· nruRSDAY DISCHAROBS - Mabel Tnlcy and . Mary Ann
to free the hos1a11ei "would be
Myers.
·
·
· welcome If true, bu 1 It will not
Continued on page 10

On-.crwn graphle diiiU¥• •

6, 8 and 12 gun

REG. $89.00

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\I . CABINETS

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ASSORTED FAIRK
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CONSTIUCTION

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BASKETS, QUILT
RACKS, CHRISTMAS
SANTA$, POnERY,
MIRRORS, COAT
RACKS, PLACE MATS,
CHAIR PADS, COnOM
THROWS and· Much,
Much More.

Love 'EIIIf

'
WINNERS - Scott Lucas, Administrator of
Pomeroy; Pauline Barber, Reeds yille; Dortha
Veterans Memorial Hospital, aided by Ad·
Handley, . Langsville; MicheUe .. L. Taylor,
mini.s tr ~tiv e Assistant Dor~s lble, selects winDers
Pomeroy; John Corcoran, Rutland; ·Betsy
in the hospital's Beary Christmas coates!. The
Weaver, Middleport; DeDDis Gilmore, Route 2,
hospital is giving away 10 or the white, plush,
Pomeroy, aad Reggie Pratt, Pomeroy. Winners
musical bears in a contest opea .. to all restdents
may pick up their bears·at the Gift Shop couater
free of charge. Drawn as winners among dte 366 - ..... in the · hospital lobby.' However, they must
· entries were Carolyo Bissell, 'l)tppeis . Plahi~;
provide proper ldentUicatioo. ,
Pauline Morarity, Syracuse; Candy . Bachtel~
.
.

,,

SYLVANIA
25" DIAGONAL I

COLOR ~
CONSOLE I
TY .· I

dicated that they are "fed up" wilh
dogs running loose and have every
intention to stopping it.
Pape also announced lhat Meigs
County wiD sponsor a soapbox
derby in June at Middleport. They
need manpower, money, and media
coverage to l'romote lhe event, hl:l
said. Pape explained that lhe jleopld .
involved in the event will be meeting wilh village officials. It will
cost $300 to $350 for a yoWlgster
to purchase a kit to participate in
the event, he reported.
Mayor Pickens announced a new
radio has been placed in the police
cruiser and worlc on the new addition to the fire station will begin
Monday.
Others . attending were Janice
Lawson, clerk-treasurer, .Teresa
Tyson-Drummer, Mintor Fryar, ·
Katie Crow, and Kenneth Buckley.

•

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, December 7, 1990

Hospital news

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created by Chadwell's students in grades three
throuFh six, will be mailed out to the servicemen
on Frtday. Pictured, left to right, are Robin Barringer, grade 3; Angie Bissell, grade 6; Wesley
Kanawalsky, grade 4; Matthew Marcinko, grade
S; and Adam McDaniel, g~de 6.

SOLDIERS HONORED - These students at
Riverview Elemeatary Schnol, under the direction of teacher David Chadwell at Riverview
School have been hard at work--oa letters and
Christmas cards for local soldiers on duty in
Operation Desert Shield. The cards and letters,

FmHA to grant .fewer direct loans
CINCINNATI ' (UPI) - The
administrator of the Farmers
Home Admlnistr.a tlon says the
federal budget crunch means
fewer farmers will get direct
loans from the agency .
LaVerne Ausmail ·told a meetIng of FmHA state directors
Thursday thai more borrowers
will have. to apply to commercial
banks for loans. FmHA Is a farm
and rural housing lending
Institution. ·
• 'Since 1985, we have moved to
·guaranti1E' loans that are made
by other lenders," said Ausman.
"This year , 58 percent of our
loans were guaranteed . The 1990
farm bill continues that trend
with a few new wrinkles."
Ausman said the agenpy Is
"burled with new regulations
from the 1990 farm bill." He

t"

estiamted It would take about much as 4 percentage points for
20,000 man-hours to perform all qualify ing applicants.
Another c ha nge would ex tend
the regulatory writing required
reduced-rate
r ural home loans to
to clarify the new rules.
The FrnHA has been called the median· Income !amllles . Pre··
"lender of last resort," because vlously such families earned too
It finances farmers who cannot much to qualify for FmHA loans
qualify for commercial loans. and too little to receive commerAlthough It provided about $22 cial .loans, Ausman said.
''This is a $100 million pUot
b!Uion In farm loans last year, ·
program
," he said. "I don't see It
the majority of Its loans are
bringing
a lot of new people to
made for rural housing.
·
areas,
but it will help those
rural
Housing's share of the agen·
who
are
already
there."
cy's loan portfoUo Is $:.8 billion,
He said some loopholes In the
Ausman said. The organization
also has $4 b!Uion In loans to write-down process also will be
facllllles or businesses In rura l closed by the new rules. The
regulations will put a $300,000
communities.
limit on the amount a farme·r .can
One new rule will allow the
write down and will requite the
len!ler lp bi!Y down Interest rates
Iarmer to lncluC\e all his or l)er
for farmers and rural housing
assests when filing for a write
borrowers. The agency can use
down.
·
funds to reduce Interest rates as.
. ·~

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