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                  <text>Ponwov-Midcleport. Ohio

THIS

1990 Local Schedules

7 days

Pick-3: 970
Pick-4: 4470
Cards: A-H;

until
Christmas

WEEK'S
GAMES
SOUTHERN

Ohio Lottery

2-C; Q-D; and A..S

ltain ending Tuesday nlcht,
with a low between 35 and 40.
Chance of preclpllatlon Is 88
percent. Partly cloudy Wed·
nesaay. with highs between ~5
and 50 .

•

•

BOYS

'

Dec. 21-0ak Hll, Away
Dec. 22 -SOuthtntern, Hame
Dec. 21:_AtheM, Away

Vol.41. No . 188 ·
Copyrighted 1990

Dec. 20-.0ak "iH, Ha1111

BOYS

Dec: 11-AIIllander, Away
Dec. 21-Wellston, Home
Dec. 21-logan. Away

GIRLS ·

allles on separate continents
Monday, President Bush aild
Secretary of State James Baker
said the forces arrayedagalnst
Iraq remained strong and
unified.
"What we want to do ls to
Impress upon Iraq -the consequences of aggression and for
Iraq to leave every square inch of

Pomeroy council
OKs garbage service

·Dec. 17 -AIIliGnder, Ho1111
Dec. 20-We.. ton, Away

E.ASTERN

the Middleport Fire Department
In a related vein, Pomeroy Vii·
Jage Council member Bryan Shank
Pomeroy Village Council ap· submitted a proposed tist of by·
proved a funds transfer, new gar- laws for use within the fire depart·
bage service, and several purchases ment for council's review. The by.
at the council's regular meeting on laws, Shank explained, are a
Monday evening at Village Hall.
product of contributions from
By request of Pomeroy Village several fire department members on
Clerk Brenda Morris, the . council the operation of the department.
Council tabled action on the
approved a Y\l31'·end transfer of
$30,000 from the village's general proposal pending review.
fund to the street fund.
Council member Bruce ~eed
Ac!ion on a proposed zoning or- presented ·a. proposal of a commit·,
dinance for the Village of Pomeroy tee of interested council members
was tabled pending review of the who would meet on a quarterly
lengthy document by council mem' . basis with members of Middleport
bers. .
·
Village Council. Reed stated that he
Morris intrOduced a proposal for felt that differences between the
the installation or a trash dumpster I';"O &amp;f?.~PS had, in the pas~ been
and trash service through Manley's all'ed 10 the newspaper, and
stated that he wo~ld like to see the
Trash Hauling at Village Hall.
· Morris expla\~Jed that, at the t';"O ~es working to$ether and
.present time, village personnel .are . discusstng any problems m,person.
~ ~ to. the landfill in West
Increasing problem9'" With adult
Columbia, W.Va., costing the viJ. disturb!)IICe at teen dances at
!age in salaries,: gasoline and time · Locomotion &gt;yere discussed by
spent.
council last mght. Mayor Seyler
Mayor Richard Seyler also reported that two adults (one in his
brought to light that village mid-30's) had beep cited in
vehicles have become stuck at the Mayor's Court for an incident at
landfill on several occasions.
the dance last weekend.
Numerous calls, according 10
Council approved the proposal,
at a cost of $40 per month (based Councilman Tom Werry, are made
on two pick-ups per month), begin· to the Pomeroy Police Deparunent
ning in January. Council anticipates during each dance regarding adults
the new ·service for the village 10 driving around the building, located
afford a considerable savings from on Mechanic Street, and causing
taking the trash to the landfill via security problems there.
village trucks.
In other business Monday night,
Upon the request of Pomeroy CouncUman Shank also pointed out
Police Chief Gerald Rought, that several political campaign
council approved the purchase or . signs remain posted within the vii·
160 pcitice departmertt patches for lage limits, and stated that this was
potice umforms and Jackets, at a 10 vmlatJon of buth a village or·
.cost of $344. In a letter to council, dinancc and the bond agreement
Rought explained that purchasing that each candidate must sign
the patches in such a large quantity before posting campaign signs in
will save the village money, as Pomeroy.
Morris thanked. McPonald's,
p;uches purchased individually cost
$4 each, anjl those · purchased in Plcasers, Kroger, Kelly Snider, Pat
quantity are priced at $2.15 each.
Thoma, Jane Walton and Susan
An air compressor purchase was Sandy for their donations of both .
also approved by the village. The items and time at the village hall
compressor, which wiD allow the Christmas party, which was held on
fjre deparunent to fill its air ianks, Sunday, and described as a "big
was purchased second hand from success".
By BRIAN J , REED
Sentinel News Starr

·aoYs
Dec. 11-Waterford, Ha1111

GIRLS
Die. 2D-Hannan Trace, Awoy

-----BOYS'
SO.UTHERN

SCHEDULES~----MEIGS

Dec. 1-Athens ...................... Joiome
Dec. 4-Belpre .. ·.............. ....... Away
Dec.11-Mlller ................. , .... Home ·
Dec . 14-Vinton County ......... Home
Dec:. 18-AieXAinder .~ ............. Away
Dec. 2~ ~wellston ................. Home
Dec. 28-Logan ..................... Away·
Jan. 4'-Trimble ...................... Away
Jan. 8-Faderal Hocking ......... Home
Jan. 11-Nelaonville· York ..... .. Away
Jan. 16-8elpre .... ................. Home
Jan. 22-MIIIar ....................... Away
Jan. 25-Vinton County ... : ..... Away
Jan. 29-Aiexander ..... .. ......... Home
Feb. 1-Wellston .................... Away
Feb. 2-Athens ..................... ,Away
Feb. &amp;-Warren ...................... Home
Fab. 8-Trimble ...................... Home
Feb. 12-Federal Hocking ....... Away
Feb: 16-Nelsonville·York ....... Home

------tGIRLS'
SOUTHERN

.

1 Section, 10 Pages

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Tuesday, December 18, 1990 ·

By GAYLE YOUNG
United Press International
U.S. · officials, fearing Iraq
might Stage a partial pullout of
Kuwait in an effort to shatter the
international coalition opposing
the Invasion', reiterated the
stance that only complete with·
drawal was acceptable.
Speaking to different group s of

MEIGS

Nov. 12-NeiiOnville-York ...... Away
N~. 19-Meigl ..................... Away
Nov. 26""'North Gallla ............ Away
Nov. 29-Hannen Trace .......... Away
Dec. 3-EBitl!m ..................... Home
Dec. &amp;-Southwestern ....... ..... Home
Dec. 1 0-Kyger Creek ............ Away
Dec. 13-$ymms Valley .... ... .. Home
Dec. 17_:W•terford ............... Home
Dec. 20-0ek Hill .. ; ............... Home
Jen. 3:._Nonh Gallla ............... Home
J1n. 10-Hannan Trace .... ...... Home
Ja!l. 14-Melga ....................:.Home
Jan. 16-NeiiOnville·YOf'k....... Home,
Jan, 17-Eastem.................... Away
Jan. 24-Southweetern .......... Away
Jan. 28-Waterford ................ Away
Jan. 31-Kyger Creek ............. Home
Feb. 4-0ak Hill ....... .............. Awey
Feb . 7-Symmea Valley .......... Aw1y

at

A Multimedia

In~ .

25 Cents

New!M'aper

Baker, Bush demand full Iraqi withdrawal ·

GIRLS

NoV. 27-North Gellia "'""""'Home
Nov. 30-Hannen Trace .......... Home
Dec. 4-Ealtem .................... : Away
Dec. 7-Southwastern ............ Away
Dec. 8-Paint Valley .............. Convo
Dec: 14-Kyger Creek .... : ....... Home
Dec. 1&amp;~Symme• Valley .. ...... Away
Dec. 21-0ak Hill .................. ,AWIY
Dec. 22-Southelstern ...... ..... Horilll
D~. 28-Athenl .................... Away
Jan. 4-North Gallie' ............... Away
Jan. 5-Galllpoll• ............ ....... Away
Jen.11-Haman Trace ........... Away
J1n. 18-Eastem ............. ... .... Home
Jan. 22-Ravenswood ............ Away
J1n. 26-Southweetern .......... Home
. Fab. 1-Kyger CnJ&amp;k ............... Away
Feb. 8-Symmaa Valley .......... Home .
Feb. 12-Warren ......... ........... Away
Feb. 1·6-0ak Hiii .......... ,........ Home

•

EASTERN

Nov. 20~.Miller ...... : ............... Away
Nov. 23-Fadaral Hocking ...... Home
Nov. 27-Kyger Creek ............ Away
l',!ov. 30-Southwestam ......... Home
DEC. 4-Southern .................. Home
Dec. 7-Symmes Valley.......... Away
Dec. 14-North Gallia ............ Away
Qec. 16-0ak Hill .................. Home
Dec. 18-Wetlirford ... .. .... ,..... Home
Jan. 4-Kyger Creek ............... Home
Jan. 11-Southwestern .......... Away
Jan. 16-Hannan Trace ........... Home
Jan. 18-Southern ..................Away
Jan. 26-Symmes Valley ........ Home
Jan. 26-M iller ...................... Home
Feb. ·1-North Gallia .... : ........ .. Home
Feb. 6-Fiideral Hocking ......... Away
Feb. 8- 0ak Hill ......... ............ Away
Feb. 12-Waterford ................ Away
Feb. 16-Hannan trace ........... Away

SCHEDULES~·--------MEIGS

Nov. 19-Southern ................ Home
Nov. 26-Trimble ................... Home
Nov. 29-Vlnton County ........ . Away
Dec. 3-M iller .............·........ : .. Away
Dec. 8-Eastern ..................... Home
Dec. 1 0- Nelsonville· York .. .... Away ,
Dec. 13-Belpra ..................... Home
Dec. 17-Aiexander ............... Homa
Dec. 20-Wellston ................. Away
Jan. 3-Federal Hocking ......... Home
Jan. 7-Trimble ...................... Away
Jan. 10-Vinton County ......... Home
Jan. 14-Southern ....... .......... Away
Jan. 17- Milllir ...................... Home
Jan. 21-Eastern ...... ........... : .. Away
Jan. 24-NeiiOnville· York ....... Home
Jan. 28-Belpre ..................... Away
Jan. 21-Aiexander ................ Away
Feb. 4-Welllton ..................... Home
Feb. 7-Fadtir~l Hocking ......... Away

EASTERN

Nov. 19-Federai .Hocking ...... Honie
Nov. 26-Kyger Creek ............ Home
Nov. 29-,-Southwestern ........ , Away
·Dec. 3-Southern ...., .............. Away
Dec. 6,-Trimble ..................... Home
Dec. 6-Symmes Valley .. ,........ Home
Dec. 8-Meigs .............. : ........ Away ·
Dec. 10-North Gallia ... : ........ Home
Dec. 13-0ak Hill .................. Away
Dec. 20-Hannan Trace ............Away
Jan. 3-Kygar Creek ............... Away
Jan. 9-Trimble ...................... Away
Jan.1 0-Southwastern ........... Home
Jan. 14-Federal Hocking ....... Away
Jan. 17-Southem ................. Home
Jan. 21-Meigs ...................... Home
J1n. 24-Symmea Valley ........ Away
Jan. 31-North Gallia.............. Away
Feb. 4-Hannan Trace .... . ~ ...... Home
Feb. 7-0ak Hill ..................... Home ·

0, Mil lEN THE • Tlie Basta• ......,.
idoull Clab or Melli HIP Sdoolspauooed a
adUn tree lor tk Me... ~lllllltY ebllilrea eiiJ'OI.
led Ill tie H. . Start PJ'OII'IIIII· Wldl tbe llelp ol
··the faculty and lltlldellt ~ a total oliOS pain
, or mittens were doDited. shown .h2re, left to
, right, are frout
'I

. f

(

~

row,

Kuwait," Bush told reporters
following a meethig In Washing· .
ton with 28 members of the
coalition.
"I would think at some point he
(Saddam) would realize this
force being arrayed against him
would be devastating," Bush
said. • 'The United Nations said
that he should get out or all
available means will be used
against him."
BakertoldNATOforeignmln·
lsters In Brussels Monday thai
Iraq may withdraw partially .
from Kuwait around the Jan. 15
U.N. deadllne, but said the
alliance should stand firm
·

against partial solutions to the
Persian Gulf crisis .
"Just as I believe he chose to
release hostages for this purpose, I think he may take a
dramatic step on or around Jan.
15. He could withdraw partially,"
Baker said, according to excerpts of his closed- door testim·
ony released by u.s. offiCials.
The NATO foreign ministers
Issued a strongly worded state·
ment reiterating there can be
"no partial solutions" to the gulf
crisis.
·
Baker said he Is still willing to
go to Baghdad to meet face-to·
facewlthSaddam,buthesa!qthe

Iraqi president Is still Intent on Baker and Saddam will still take
trying to undercut the "collective place, despite a dispute .over
will of the international commun· dates.
tty to use force. "
, While Baker delivered his
·Bush said Turkish President warning, Baghdad·based Pales·
Turgut Ozal told him Sunday that tin ian terrorist Abut Abbas
Saddam was misinterpreting the threatened to attack U.S. and
debate on the United States over Western in terests world-wide If
U.S. policy in the gulf.
the multinational force confront"He thinks it means our ing Itaq tried to liberate Kuwait.
country is divided and we cannot
The official Ira qi news agency
go forward with the U.N. resolu- INA said Mohammad Abbas,
llons a ndhelsjust aswrongas he · better kn~wn as Abu Abbas,
can be," Bush told reporters.
secretary-general of the Palest!·.
Bush also said he hoped talks In nian Libera tion Front, · told the
Washington between himself and ·Baghdad Al-Jumhoriya news·
Iraqi Foreign Minister Tariq paper that American facilities
Aziz and in Baghdad between around the world had been
targeted.

Rains could
become snow

,_

By United .Press International
The National Weather Service
says the rain will end over Ohio
Tuesday night, butthe ral n may
become mixed with snow in the
north before it does.
.
Temperatures will fall into the
30s and the nor thwest corner
may even see some readings In
the upper 20s. .
Rain dominated the weather
scene overnight . A quarter to a
half an inch fell across the north
while three .quarters to an inch
and a half fell elsew here.
Temperatures were well above
normal as warm southerly winds
brought 50-degree readings into
Continued on page 5

IDGH WATER· This compact car was swim·
ming on Thesday morning at Hiland Road near
Pomeroy. High water forced the closing of roads

throughout the county, and halted clasSes in the
Meigs Local Schools. .(Sentinel Photo by David
Harris)

Midwest floods, Northwest windy
By United Press International
Two nasty cold fronts rocketed
across the nation Tuesday, the
first prompting flood warnings
and brtnglng heavy rain to the
Midwest and Northeast and the
second rating Into the Pac!lic
Northwe~ t carrying winds gust·
ing to 60 mph . .
By far the largest of the two
fronts stretched from Louisiana
to New England, ·and brought
showers and thunderstorms with
flashes of Ughtntng to northern
Louisiana while rain spread to
Texas, Oklahoma and
Arkanasas.
The brunt of the front hit
further north. where a flash flood
watch was · in effect for all of

Kentucky as light rain fell on Boston.
already saturated ground and
Across the continent, a cold
forecasters warned of flooding in front moved in off the Pacific
the coal fields in the southeast.
,carrying winds that were clocked
The leading edge of the front
near 60 mph, prompting warn moved rapidly through other
Ings in Washington, Oregon and
Midwest states, Including Ohio;
Idaho.
Indiana and · Michigan, where
High winds knocked tree limbs
light snow mixed with freezing
into power lines in Walla Walla,
dr!.zzle was falling throughout
Wash., causing several fires and
northwest Upper Michigan.
blew dust across Interstate·84 in ·
Further east, flood watches In
southern Idaho, cutting visibll·
effect for western Pennsylvania
ity. Wind also picked up in the
and the northern West VIrginia
Rockies, where high wind warn·
panhandle as up to 3 Inches of
ings were In effect.
rain fell in an hour, causing small
Clear skies covered much of
streams to rise out ofthelr banks.
the Great Plains where temperaIn New England, the front
tures were mild, but showers
caused freezing rain In the hills of from the. large cold front moved
northwest Connectlcu t a nd up to Into the deep South.

· A BEAR·Y MERRY CHRISTMAS .. A
Christmas hear, clouted by Suseu Baker of tbe
Ohio Rl.er Beer Compauy, was recendy used to
rlllse ruudll for die purchue or mittens for Head
Start children IDd to purchase preseuts for
. students at Ca~etou School hy Meigs High
School business students. Kim Burton; center,

l·r, Jeann~_ MeDouald,

~

.:4

Southern will
join coalition
The Southern Local Board of
Education voted to join the Coalition · of Rural and Appalachia
Schools at its meeting Tuesday
night at Southern High School.
The coalition has been organiZed
to work for equal funding for all
schools in Ohio. It was no1ed that
equal fu nding ,legislation will particularly benefit schools such as
Southern where the per pupil sub·
sidy is approximately $600 per year
less than the state average.
.
House Bill 140 .which relates to
student selection of schools and
districts as well as the opportunity
to attend college before completing
high school was disc ussed and tlje
Board approved a plan to get into a
computer program plan. Jodi A.
Harrison was employed as a substitute teacher. Cafeteria food was
discussed and it was -decided that
the price on meat sandwiches will
be increased from 80 cents to $1
beginning in January.
Continued on' page 5

was lhe reclpleut or lhe bear, and is shown bere
as she received the bear from Spring Reed, far •
left, the President of the Business Professionals
of America Club. Also pictured is Sue McGuire,
the BPA Club advisor. The dub consists or
students enroUed ill the vocational business
programs at the school

�•t '

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•

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...

...

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•

Tuesday, December 18, 1990

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel·
'

111 Cauri Street

Pomi!I'Oy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO 'IBB IN'I'BKESTII OF THE MEIGS-MASON AKEA

ROBERT L. WINGETT

CHARLENE BOEl"LICB

Pllbl18her

GeneraiMuar;er

PAT WIIITBBEAD
AMII&amp;IUI&amp; Pablloher/ C.onlroller
AMEMBER ot The United Press Interlll!tlonal, Inland Dally Pre5s
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OP(NION are welcome. They should he less than 300
words lonr;. AU letters are subject to editing and must be signed with
name, address and telephone number. No unsigned letters.wUI be published. Letters sbou ld be In good tute, addressing Is sues, not personal!·

· ties.

·

·

.

Wasting resources
of Pacific islands ·
By Robert Walters
. FUNAFUTI, Tuvalu (NEA) -To the norlb, an Australian firm
proposes paylri{Jhe mid-Pacific country of Kiribati $3.5 mUIIon
annually lor the right to dispose of 3 million of tons of liquid
Industrial waste from ItalY on remote Banaba Island every year.
To the south, the government of Tonga has reluctantly rejected a
plan - promoted by Princess Pllolevu, a member of the llland
nation's royal family - to build a massive Incinerator for the
purpose of burning toxic wastes Imported from around the globe.
On the east. Western Samoa bas joined the Solomon Islands, the
Manhall Islands, Vanuatu and other smalll:ountrles throughout the region solicited by buccaneerlng enti'epreneurs to serve as
waste disposal sites for the world's Industrial nallons.
On the west, a California-based company proposed construcllng
a $38 mUIIon chemical detoxification plant In Papua New Guinea to
handle Industrial wastes transported from tbe United States. The
provincial government was an ent~usl.sllc partner In the scheme
but tbe national government forbade lt.
Notwithstanding Its proud tradition as the planet's widest
expanse of clean ocean. the tropical Pacific Is In ·danger of
becoming a dumping ground for ever Imaginable form of garbage;
ranging from worn Ures to lethal chemicals.
Two International treaties adopted last year were designed to
deal with tbe problem- but both have naws !bat allow continued
promotion of waste disposal as a lucrative venture for Island
nations with few other economic-development alternatives.
the Basel Convention on the Control ot Transboundary
Movements of Hazardous Wastes and their Disposal, developed
Ullder United Nations auspices, Is !Died with general statements of
principle that are neither specific nor enforceable.
The Lome IV Convention IS much more specific In Its ban on all
Imports of hazardous waste Into African, Caribbean and Paclftc
countries - but tbe countries agreeing to abide by It Include only
about half of the nations In tbll region.
Kiribati Is a signatory, but !bat ·status has not discouraged an
Australian firm with no previous disposal experience from aeeklng
to buDd a $12 million treatment plant tor tbe Italian waste there.
The company proposes to use the residue from the process to fDI
craters on Banaba Island.
The Marslllill Islands Is not a signa lory, which may explain why
Its government In recent yeats has been willing to cOnsider various
appalllna propilsals.
For example, Admiralty Pacific, Inc., of Seattle, Wash., (!Uered
the Marshalls almost $140 million for the right to dump In the
ISlands 34 b!Won pounds of household garbage from tbe United
States durin&amp; a five-year-period - with an option to extend the
arrangement an addlllonal10 years.
. The garbage presumably would contain · ·no hazardous
components - but household waste Invariably Includes paint
removers and thinners, grease and rust solvents, drain and oven
cleaners, acids, dyes. disinfectants, pesticides, herbicides and
other toxics.
; The plan was abandoned not because of opposition In the
Marshalls but (among other reasons) due to a lack of Interest
among the cities designated as sources of the garbage: Portland, . ·
Ore.; Spokane, Wash. and California's three largest cities- Los
Angeles, San Francisco and San Diego.
.
: •'Admiralty Pacific has repackaged the waste export scheme as
alllheries development project using old tires to create artificial
reels," says a recent report from Greenpeace, an International
environmental organiZation. Indeed, the firm now wants 'to ship
milliOns of worn-out auto tires to the Islands.
No waste diSposal project has yet been launched, but promoters
of the schemes remain undeterred- and the Paclftc's despera:te
rplcro-states may eventually accept tbelr offers.

I

WASHINGTON - The White
House Is In search of a ftnanclal
bomb squad to sniff out dlsastel'll
before they blow up In the
laxpayen' faces.
The big financial scandals or
the 1980s - the savings and loan
bankruptcy and the Qouslng and
Urban Development debacle· could have been avoided had
there been trouble-shooters
watching the numbers In every·
governrnentagency.
Last month, President Busb
signed a · bill authorizing the
hiring of !bat squad of troubleshooters led by a "cbletllnanclal
officer" hand-picked by the presld_ent. He or she wUI operate out
of the Office of Management and
Budget, backed up by 23 assiStants In major federal agencies.
They will stalk !hose agencies,
watching closely for the signs of
fraud, waste and abuse. Here are
some cases that need their
Immediate attention.
- The Resolutlt;&gt;n Trust Corp.,

Berry s Wo rId

Page- 2-The Daily Sentinel -:
Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio
·,
Tuesday. Dilcember 18, 1990 . •

assigned to sell about $300 billion
In S&amp;L assets, needs all . the
attention that the chief financial
officer can muster. The race to
pick up the SI:L assets at bargain
prices Is an Invitation for fraud
and waste. We have learned that
tbe government forgot 1o factor
In the Colt ot local real-estate
taxes that the Resolution Trust
Corp. must pay while It still
manages the properties.
. - The Internal Revenue Ser·
vice has let tax cheats get away
with owing the'government more
than $60 billion. The amount of
unpaid taxes · has more than
tripled In the past 10 years, and
there Is no sign of a turnaround In
that trend.
The government already has
Inspectors general In every department, so why can't !bey do
the job without .adding another
layer In the form of financial
Inspectors?
The Inspectors general answered thai question at a House

Gove111ment Operations Committee hearing arranged by Rep.
John Conyers, D-Mich.. the author of the chief financial officer
legislation.
The Inspectors general described chaotic bookkeeping
procedures that are rampant II)
t!le federal government. Health
and Human Services Inspector
General Richard Kusserow told
Congress that agencies must tile
two separate financial reports one to !It the General Accounting
Office's standards and another to
please the Treasury Depart·
ment. There are seven accountIng systems In Kusserow's department alone.
Interior DepartmentJnspector
General James Richards said
that when he came one the job,
there were 13 accounting systems In the department and none
of them were approved by the
GAO.
Commerce Department Inspector General Francis De-

~

~
. aFTeR HaRe THaM
Lf.O YeaRs. THe
COLD WaR
iS oVeR!

FoR11JNJiel.V, We WeRe
~BI.e To r&lt;ef'L.ace iT
oN SHoRT ._,or;ce.
'------------""'\

o.JSTeiN ''f._,
RJ, :~-.y MIN ,
.

.. --

PI

1\kMJ-, : loi;_;_~

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

Giving grades on the gulf

Today in history:

•

bulnps ·L.A. ·

'

~

.

·~

t _,

;!

By MIKE BARNES
Mike Cofer had field goals of 23 - we kept pressure on him all
UPI Sports WrUer
. and 31 yards and Rathman added · night "
ANAHEIM, Calif. (UP!) a one-yard scoring run lor .San · Montana completed 15 o! 30
The Los Angeles Rams wrecked · Francisco. Rice's TDcatchln the passes tor 219 yards, one toucljtbe 49ers' chance lor a perfect secopd period was his 12th Ibis down and no Interceptions.
· season, but San FrancisCO ex- year and first In live gam~s .
•
Los Angeles, 2-6 at home Ibis
tractedrevengeMondaYnlghtby
"Thetwoblgplays-thei:meto ' ' seaS'on, moved 10 within 16-7 on
eliminating their · NFC West Jerry Rice .and Carter's In the Its final possession of the first
rivals from tbe playoff chase.
second hall - were disastrous half and had the ball on Its 44 two
Two big pla'ys - a 60-Yard for .us," Robinson ' said.' ""\lv'e plays Into the second. Everett.
touchdown pass lronr Joe Mon- ' could not match thern blgpiayfor though, fumbled and Matt Millen
tana • to Jerry Rice and a big play."
recovered. set ling up Cofer' .s
game-clinching 74-ya'rd scoring
Everett, who misfired on eight '31-yarder.
run by rookie 'DeKter Carter "- of his first nine passes, flnlshlid •· Los Angeles then got to within
pushed San Francisco· to a ·26-10 · 17 of 35 for 232 yards, one \9-10 wltel) Mike Lansford kicked
triumph oveF ·Los Angeles and · touchdown and two Interceptions a 21-yard field goal to conclude a
gave the 49er~ horl'l€'-fleld adva·n- despite working against secon· ' 14-play drive with 3:30 left In tbe
tage throughout' the conference dary, missing InJured ~tate~s third quarter.
playoffs.
'
· Ronnie Lott and Chet Brooks. He
Carter then sealed the victory
''The Important · thmg Is we also fumbled the ball away once. with his touchdown. Everett was
don't have to go ' tO Chicago or
"They had a good defensive . . later picked off twice.
New York;'' head eoach·George ' ·scheme against us, " Everett
After his slow s·t art, the quar- :
. Seifert ·said, ".:\nd· we have · at · said. "We were frustrated with terback appeared to get un-: ;
least one ·game 'ln "fr'oht ' of our that part: ·~
·";:. .; . ,;-., _ ·'tracked when, with - his team ;
fans (at Candlestick Park) !'
Said Seifert: ·1we' dldn 't'Sack trailing 16:0 In tbe ileCOnd quaf-+
1n avenging ltsonly.JossoHhe Everett often (three times) .b ut ter, he connected with Willie
season, the 49ers·capltal!zed on a · ·
.,
Anderson for 36 yards to the 49er
up 11 yards aller snagging a Joe Montana pass In
shoddy effort · by · Los ·Angeles· ·
•· · •
39 ' - - ·
quarterback Jim · Everett • to
•
'· · "
· .. "'·
•
. • h
the second quarter ol Monday· night's game at
boost
tbeh'
reoord
to
.1'.
Tlie
Johnny
Jackson
intercepted
,,
Anaheim, Calif. The vlsii!Dg · 49ers won 26-10.
13
H~
Everettontbenextplay,butDon
(UPI)
victory also extended their NFL.. ,
'
·Griffin was called for Illegal
vri))
contact, giving Los Angeles a
record road winning streak to18
games and Montana 's record a's ~
·
first down. Five plays later;
a starter at ~n,a~eim Stadlwn to ., week~S
rookie Derrick Faison scored his ..
9-0.
J,
•
•
·,:" ' •
• •
-e
"first . NFL touchdown off' Evestatistics. which saw the Redmen edge Shawnee
"lt would have been awkward
re!t's eight-yard pass to make It , '
36-34 on rebounding and hold Its turnovers to 11.
to lose .two gaines In aseason to
16-7 with 1: 321en in tbe nrst half.
The Bears committed 12.
·
them," fuUback 'Tom Rathman
·
·
·
c·oter· kl cked his 23-yarder In .. ;
Fox and Larry Tiller, the Bears' ace rebounder,
said. "We just don'Nike to lose;
TOLEDO, Oh~o (UP!) led their te!lmmates with 17 points apiece, with
that's tiie bottom lln'e." · ·
• Danny Young, who led Hiram to the first quarter, and the 49ers · •
Tiller bringing down 11 boards to keep the Bears
a pair of victories last week e
scored again when .. •Rathman ",
' .
pv r .. leaped over on 4th-aild'goal mid- '
. Los Angeles \VI:IIC!l stunned the •
in the game.
two-time defe~dlng NFL cham'.::_ previously, unheatel) fellms, has &gt;kay through the second period. ·
The Redmen, ranked nationally last week In the
0
pions 28-17 at Candlestick Park ·· ~~e;!~~etepdlatyheer 00 f1111he
Athelektlc
A high snap on the extra-point •:
NAIA 's report for team scoring offense (102 points
three
weeks
ago,
.
fell
to
5-9.
It,
Y
w
e
·
per game) and margin, connected on 31 of 60 field
marks only the second time In
ouQg, a S-foot-4 swlngman , attempt forced holder Barry . ·
goal attempts for 51 percent and netted 19 of 28
J
R
.
from Akron, scored 46 points In
Helton Into an Incomplete pass.
ohn oblnson s eight-year stint the two~ games. He· had 25 , ButonSanFranclsco'snextpiay, ·trips to the foul line fo r 50 percent. The Bears were
as Rams. coach that he will not includi_Dg , , the game.:wln'tilng ·, ~Ice blew past Gray, then came ·.. •
31 of 73 from the field for 42 percent and canned 14
take the tl:.l!m to the playoffs. .
basket with nine seconds to play
back to grab Montana's bomb for .. ,
of 22 attempts on free throws for 63 percent. •
With San Francisco leading In a 79_77 wl 0
Otte bel
' • &lt;I 16-0 bulge.
· "'
Rio Grande, now 8-3, Is Idle until Jan. 4 when.it
19-10 Carter took a handolf cut
n ver
r non
meets Seneca College, North York, Ontario,
•
"--'
Wednesday.
to the sideline and outraced . , He loll\)\fed that wf.lh 21 po,lnts
Canada, In tne opening round' o! the Domino's
,
VInce Newsome and Jerry.,!&gt;,r.ay In a 58·55 win over Ohio Northern
Pizza, Classic at Tiffin Unll(erslty. ·The Bears, who
"•
SPfl!NG VALLEY CINEMA
to the end zone wlth---·1!:44 · s
\h
··' ·• ·
went to 3.9,.i.wiil pa'rifc\J)ate in the Defiance
remaining for his flnt .':'NF'i. on aturday . In e two games, :..
446 4524
. ' .
Tournament Dec. 28-29 .
'
touchdQwn
Young made 18. of 21 1111id,goal
Halftime score- Rio Gran&lt;le 48, Shawnee Stale
The rim ~as the longest In the attempts and seven of nine free
43
.
throws.
NFC this season - GIU Fenerty
Havrilla n
d MAC
RIO GRANDE (86)- Gary Harrison 11-0·1-23;
.
of
New
Orleans
had
the
previous
player
ofS:::!
w.eek
, ..
_ Marl&lt; ~.rslan S-2'1-13;, Brad Schubert 0-4-2-14; Jeff
best agalhSt the Rams lasqveek , Wesiern.Michlgan cen'ter Jim ·
BrO'fw ~ -0-7-11; Troy..:!?\lnaldson 7-0-3-17; Darius
- and , the longest lor · San :Havrilla has been selected · tbe "
Williams 1-0-2-4; Jawanza Childs 0-0-1-1; Kyle
F~~nclsco since 1977.
Mld-Amerl.c an Conference
Schroer .1-0-1-3. TOTALS 25-6-19-86
That was the longest run ~! player of the week.
SHAWNEE STATE (84)- Eric Barnes 1-3-1-12;
my car~r since high school,
Havrilla a S-foot-10 jurilor
Travis Merry 0-1-0•3; ,Todd Fox 6-0·5·17; Craig
· ·
said the 170-powKII scatback. •
AllemeJer,, s;o:2;12' . :Larry L Tiller 6-0-5-17; A:lan
·'Guys aroullil tht-liakue already ~from Portage,lnd., had 50.polnts, . ,
Alley- ;"4';1,1.l}'lii;''€r.Uif~BI,IJI!l!J:ld .. 1-1-H; Rafidy . respect me. i'm ~"tittle bit better ' 14 rebQyl!ds al)d II~ ;assjsJ~ ~ll
ScarberrY 0-2-0-6. TOTALS":Ilj:g.J4-84
inside runner thJ-n people may • two games-,last week.. He.bad.28 .
have expected...
points In an 87-71 win over Siena
The former Florida State star onMondayand22polntslna97-68
CliNT EAST\.VOOO
CHAHll.
finished with l24 yards on 13 loss at Indiana on Saturday.
THE
ROOKIE
carries giving the ' 49ers their • Havrilla ,made 14- of.,24 , field .•
flrsUOO-yard ruShl!!g.'game this ~goal aJtei!\Pts and 22 of ~4 free . .,
'·~
season."
· • •
•
throws In the ~o games.

a

HANGING ON for dear IUe, L.A. Rams safety
Vince Newsome (22) tries to keep San Francisco
wide receiver John Taylor from going any farther
upfleld, but Taylor gets away long enough lo pick

·

..:arn's Young

WMU's Ha

Redmen edge Shawnee State
A missed three-point shot by Shawnee State's
Travis Merry In the final few seconds prevented
the Bears from _ slipping past the visiting
University of Rio Grande men's basketball team
Saturday In Portsmouth, and allowed the Redmen
·
to escape with an 86-84 victory.
Merry's shot was snatched on the rebound by
Todd Fox, buttoo late to do any good for the Bears,
who suffered their secona season loss to John
Lawhorn's Redmen.
Shawnee State, which underwent Its sixth
straight loss - an 89-79 decision to Georgetown
(Ky.) - last Tuesday, gave the Redmen a game
all through the evening, ·as they did when Rio
Grande invaded the Activities Center In December 1989 lor their last meeting on the Bears'
home court J;l.lo Grande won that contest by a
94-92 count.
For the third consecutive game, senior point
guard Gary Harrison led Rio Grande's scoring
efforts with a 23-polnt finish, leading four other
players - Troy Donaldson, Brad Schubert, Mark
Erslan and Jeff Brown - In high scoring for the
Redmen, who .were coming off a dlsappoln!lng
88-85 loss to·Central State last Tuesday.
It was that scoring - and · Donaldson's
effe cllveness on the boards (10 for the game) that put the Redmen ahead by five at halftime and
held off the Bears until the final buzzer was
sounded ..The teams were even on shooting durjng·
the" half (44 percent) and from the f&lt;!:UIIIne· (55c
percent) .
The closeness was reflected in the final

a
top caaers .

for OAC, MAC

.·

Ohio Sta~e thumps 'renne~s~ . ~ta~~
By GENE CADDE'!
UPI Sports Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) The shakedown cruise Is over for
No. 70hloStateand nowltsdown
to serious business.
The Buckeyes ran their record
to 7·0 Monday night with a 103-77
thrasnlng of Tennessee State, the
.sixth time In seven games the
Buckeyes have been over the
century mark.
Next on tbe schedule, a Saturday afternoon date In Las Vegas,
Nev . against No. 10 Georgetown,
the first real test for Ohio State.
"I'm very anxldus .for Saturday's game and to play a quality
program like Georgetown, which
has two of the best post people In
the country," said second-year
Ohio State head coach ;Ranily
Ayers. "I don't think this game
(against Georgetown) will make
or break us for tbe year, but our
players will be excited about the
game.
'
"Our players appreciate what
Georgetown has dorie over the
years," added Ayers. "It's going
(See BUCKEYES on Page 4)

Uf~olN

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GRABS REBOUND - Ohio State's Perry Carter rrabs a
rebound between Tennessee State defenders Nlco Childs (left) and
Patrick Robinson (11) durlag Monday nljht's. gaDie· at St. John's
Arena In Columbus, which tbe Bl_lck,ey~o won 103-'n. (UPI)

8IJIIIICIIIPftON RATB8
Br catrtor or - o r - .
aneweett ...................................auo
o.. Month ................. ................auo

ING5

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Rams .~ ~~ -·NFc -- pla}';offs

lishing Comr;any/ Multlmedta, Inc ..
Pomeroy, Oblo 4576&amp;, I'JI, 992-2156. S.- .
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I

. . . ____. . .,_

By Ben Wattenberg

In the U.N. If Iraq warits 1o harm favored sand-soaked sanctions talks. By sanctions and/ or force,
Israel further, they should In- forever. They are doing just fine.
we and our aliles have the power
vade Yemen next.)
Predictions: At the end of the to dictate a solution.
The w~- need-a-dralt arJNment day, the American alliance will
When the sand settles, Amerof columnist Mark Shields gets a prevail, probably peacefully, Ica - more so than ever- Will he
C-. If we didn't need a draft when possibly violently. Saddam will the mosi Important nation on
confronting a nuclear-tipped, ex- leave Kuwait.
earth. That Is also a muchpansionist superpower, we don't
The tough political test will desired part of the endgame.
need one now. Nor IS our military likely come alter that: What will
With a solid superpower In
a bunch of poor minority kids. be done about Iraq's weapons of place, a New World Order will
Our pilots, who will likely bear mass destruction? The Bush- emerge, with a reasonable
the brunt of any lighting, are and-Baker boys say they will ·chance to yield real peace. Give
highly educated professionals.
deal with II. I believe 11. Power peace a chance.
The Bush AdminiStration has
gon~ from an A plus to a still-solid
B plus.
Normally, the military should
make the tactical judgments.
Today IS T)iesday. Dec. 18, the 352nd day of 1990 with 13 to follow.
But this goes to the heart of
The moon Is waxing, moving toward Its first quarter.
American geopolitical credibilThe morning star Is Jupiter.
'
Ity. Now and later. If America Is
The evening stars are Mercury, Venus, Mars and Saturn.
able to make a major military
Those born on this date are under the sign of Sagittarius. They
statement with relatively few
Include German composer Carl Marla von Weber In 1786; ·English ·'
casualties, alld If potential adver- . physicist Joseph Thompson, discoverer of the electron, In 1856;
saries know and fear that, then
British short story writer Saki (H .H. Munro) In 1870; Swiss modernist
we are more likely to prevail,
painter Paul Klee In 1879; baseball pitcher Ty Cobb In 1886; film
without using force. That Is the
director George Stevens ("Giant") In 1904; actress BettY Grable In
game's name.
1916; West German statesman Willy Brandt In 1913 (age 77); and film
Fanfare please. Highest marks
director Steven Spielberg In 1947 (age 43).
go to the American public: a solid
A. First It was said they had no
On Ibis date In history:
patience. Then It was said they
1n 1865, the 13th Amendment to the Constitution abolished slavery
had so much patience that they
In the United States . .

I

t

San

By Jack Anderson
and Dale VanAtta
George said the Inspectors gen- .
eral cannot "go )I alone. " They
desperately need a senior finance officer In each agel)cy .
policing waste and
mismanagement.
Sources told our associate Jim
Lynch that the likely candidate
lor chief financial officer Is
Frank HodsoU, who Is now
executive director of the Office of
Management and Budget.'
Some are doubtful that Hodson
has the technical skills for the
job, but his reputation Is that of a
smooth .negotiator and a wellliked numbers · cruricher. His · •
boss at OMB, Budget Director
Richard Darman, has been a big
proponent of the creation of a
chief financial officer position.
And Darman welcomes the
added power the position will
bring to the OMB.

The Daily Sentinei- Page_:3

By winning 26-~0 Monday night,

Bush inoving to defuse fmanciall!omhs

Herewith a report card on who;
and what, Is making sense
regarding tbe Gulf crisis. Also,
predl.ctlons:
The ~mocrats (as a group)
have fallen .from an early B plus
to a C. Once again, they are seen
as the pussycat party. The
demise of the Soviet Union was
supposed to save them. It was
said that Democrats would no
longer have to worry about being
soft on defense. But: There they
go again. Ted Kennedy won't
even say use force It sanctions
don't work.
(Exempted : Sen. Charles
Robb and Reps. Les Aspln and
Steven Solarz - who have been
- ' ! - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - , t o u g h , and right.)
·
f
The press corps (as a group)
has fallen from B to a C-. They
mindlesslY pull~ a story about
how the American people turned
against the use of force, and
turned against the president's
policies.· Prof. Everett C. Ladd,
director of the Roper Center,
says "that never happened, not
even close, not a glimmer.... "
But we shouldn't be surpriSed.
Since VIetnam, this Is ·me 17th
' time the pressles have bought tbe
yawner that the anti-war movement was aboui to sweep the
nation.
i ll
Here are serious numbers,
from
nme/CNN: ·
I'
Q. Do you think the liberation
"
of Kuwait II worth flgbtlng tor?
I
Nov. 14: Yes, 49 percent; No, G
percent.
II
Nov. 28: Yes, 59 percent; No, 31
I
percent.
I
A Dec. S-7 Newaweek survey
••
sbows
a similar trelld, with a 56
I '
percent - 33 percent majority
favoring .American "enaaae·
ment In combate If Iraq refuHI
to leave Kuwait and restore Its
former government."
At the outlet It was "The Battle
of the Columnlals." How are the
~eer:s doinl? Pat Buchanan and
Robert Novak"aet a D plus. (I am
Jlllfteroua.) Eariy on, they botb
Indicated that Jew• In America,
hawks and doves alike, were··
puablng America to war becauae
It would help llrael. Today,
Jewllb hawlll sound like other
hawks. And Bucbanan and
Novak haven't apoiOIIZed.
(On the topic of Israel: One
Arab natiOn rapea another Arab
L...-----~--....;;;;.;...
__,11-.;,..-...;..J nation- and llrlelllsufler tor It

i

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

1 ...

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·DAILY SENTINEL

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"Your Hometown Newepaper"

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�Pao•

Tuesday. December 18, 1990

PQmaOy-Middleport. Ohio

4-The Daily S.ltiitel

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

Local news briefs----. -Announcements-- Beat of
Choir cancels appeara~

Atlanta, Utah cap
. tore wins in limited NBA action Monday
;

lly lOB llEIM
UPISports Writer
RICHFIELD, Ohio (UPI)- The streaky Atlanta Hawks are on the
•
: way up again.
Monday night's 109-98 win over slumping Cle~eland was the !11th
straight win for Atlanta and gave the Hawks a .500 record atll·ll, the
Jlrst time they have been at the break·even mark since they were 4-4
Nov. 16.
Atlanta was led by Dominique Wilkins' 32 points and eight
rebounds, 24 points ott the bench from John Battle, and 13 points and
. 16 rebounds from Jon Koncak.
. The Hawks started the year with wins In four of their first five
games, then lost nine In a row. But In the final loss In that streak, a
. home defeat to Cleveland, the Hawks Inserted Koncak Into the
starting lineup at center and have lost just o.nce In their last eight
games.
"We lost nine In a row earlier," said Battle, who shot 11 of 17 from
the field. " We want to win nine In a row to make up for that."
Cleveland was led by 33 points and a career·hlgl! 18 rebounds from
_Brad Daugherty and 18 points and 11 rebounds from Larry Nance.
The Cavaliers are 1-7 since point guard Mark Price went down with a
season· ending knee injury and h!IVe lost six straight.
. Atlanta broke the game open with a 19-6 second·quarter run that
snapped a 30-30 tie and put them ahead 49-36 wlt!l 2: 26 to play In the
ftrst half. Wilkins scored eight points In that run.
Atlanta led 51-42 at halftime, then scored the first six po'tnts of the
second half. With Willllns scoring 15 points In the third quarter, the
Hawks twice led by 18 before Cleveland scored nine In a row to trail
79-70, and the Hawks led 81·70 going Into the fourth quarter.
After the Cavs cut the lead to 81-74 with 11:03 to play, the Hawks
went on a 124 run tolead93-78ona palro!Battlefreethrowswlth7:02
left, and Cleveland never got closer than 10 the rest of the way.
The turning point In thiS game actually came Nov. 30 in Atlanta,
when Koncak was Inserted In the starting lineup and Price was
Injured running Into the scorers table trying to retrieve a loose ball.
Making matliers worse for Cleveland Is the continued absence of
forward John "Hot Rod" Williams, who has a sprained foot.
"We had to go through this adjustment last year," Cleveland head
coach Lenny Wilkens said of working through Injuries to key players.
"It's not that I look forward to It, but when you have key people out,
It's tough. People forget how good Mark Is."
No one who watched Monday's game will forget how good Wilkins
_Is, either, He hit on all seven of hiS shots In the thtrd quarter and 12 of
20 for. the game, making a variety of jumpers and shots off drives, and
.'of course one spectacular d\lnk.
• "After I hit my flrsttew shots, the guys felt I was on a roll," Wilkins
said. "When I get In a mold like that, Idon'tfeeianybodycan stop me.
When you're making your shot, going to the basket, there's no one to

.

san Ant CillO 81 Houstm. 8:30p.m.

In the Nn....

PftOPnlx at Dallas, 8:30p.m.
Minnesota at Sacramento, 10:30

Amert,:u C.DJere~e
Eul
W LTPei•.PFPA

T....
y·llulfalo .•........12 2 0 .857 390 220
y·Miaml.. .....•..•. ll 3 0 .78i 299 201
Indianapolis ...... 6 8 0 .429 2:1!130:!
N.Y. Jets ....... ... 4 10 0 .286 237 324
New England .... 1 13 0 .071164 391

Centnl
Plrtsburgh .. ....... 8 60 .571243206
Houstm ............. 8 6 o.sn 351 253
Ctndnnat1 .... ..... . 7 70 .500299318
CleYOiand ......... . 3 11 0 .214 214 406
Weol

Y·L.A. Raiders ..10 4 0 .714 292 232
Kansas City .... .. 9 50 .643 324 226

SeatUe ...~ ..... ... .. 7 7 o .500 2$9 264
San Diego ..... .... 6 8 0 .429 282 240
Denver ............. 4 10 0 .2110 297 344
Natlaul Co•flfftM:.e

T....,

Eul
W LTPel.

PFP~

x·N.Y. Giants .... ll 30 .7862981110
y·Washingloo ....
Y·PIIIIadelphla . ..
Dallas .. .............
Phoenix ... .. .. .....

-

9
8
7
5

50 .643 324 252
6 0 .5713!!6 275
7 0 .500 2312li5
9 o .357 216 34'.1

&lt;:etolnl

X· Chlca~o ...... ... 10 4 0 .714 3ll 245

Minnesota .........
Grt'on Bay ........
Tampa Bay .......
Det roll ..............

6
6
6
5

......

8 0 .129 310 278
8 0 .429 24UJI
8 0 .429 236 321
9 0 .357 339 360

&gt;·San Fran. ... ....13 1 0 .929 323 2119
- New Orleono.. ... 6 8 0 .429 241248
: L.A. Ram! ........ 5 9 0 .357 315 312
· Atlanta . ... ..... .... 3 II 0 .214 300 345

'

,.1!_

ll~l-1181 .IYI..,. lh.lfo
,.., ...dtol , ..

•••r'snaaJ

Washlngtm at Indianapolis. 9

p.m.

S.!ldaf.Dee.ZS
NPW England at N .Y. Jets. 1 p.m.

Dallas at Philadelphia . 1 p.m.
Miami at Buffalo. 1 p.m.

Cleveland at Pittsburgh, 1 p.m.
L.A . Rams ilt Atlanta, 1 p.m.

Tampa Bay at Cblcago. 1 p.m.
Ctncjnnatl at HoUston, I p.m.
N. Y. Giants at Phoenix, 4 p.m .
Kansas City at San Dteio. t ·p.m.
New Orle3ns at San Francisco, 4
p.m .
Denwr at Seattle, 8 p.m .

Eu~trn CoalerH~e

AUaDitc Dlvlskllt
.
Team
\1' L P&lt;t. GB
BostCI'I ............ ........ 19 f .826 -

Philadelphia ...... .... 15 7 .682
New York ........ ....... 10 11 .~76
New Jersey ...... ...... 8 14 .364
WashlngtM ........ .... 7 15 .318
MlamL ........ ........... 516 .238

31\
8
lOYJ
Ill\
13

p.m .

New York at Miami, 7: 30p.m .
L.A . Lakers at Cleveland, 7:30

p.m.

Chtcag() al Detroit, 7:30p.m.

Washlngtm at Indiana, 7: 30p.m.

Denver at San Antoolo, 8: 30p.m.
Mlnnestta at PhoeniX, 9: 30p.m.

In the NHLWaJ• eo.rereaee
PolrtdlDivloloa

Team
W LT Plo. GF GA
N.Y. Rangers ...... 20 115 45140109

Philadelphia ....... 19 15 3 u 126119
. New Jersey ......... 1613 5 37 1:11117
Washlng!M ......... 18 17 0 36117108
Pl!tsbQrgh .......... 1516 3 33137 1:11
N.Y.lslanders .... l116325 87112

Aduns Dlvilkln
. Boston .. ........ ...... 1810 5 41112101
MonlreaL .. .. .... .. I615 3 35107107
Hartlonl... .......... 14 15 4 32 94 109
Buffalo ....... ... .. ... 10 15 7 27 98 108
Quebec ........ ........ 7 21 6 20 94 149
Campbell COnlereace
NorrU Dlv .. lon
Team
W LT Plo. GFGA
Chicago .... .......... 23 IJ 248122 91
St. LDuts .. ........ ... 20 9 444 m 90
lletrol! ................ l613 4 36125123
Mlnn~ota ...... ,. ... IO 19 6 26101 116
Toronto..... ... ... ..... 8 25117 90 143

Cen&amp;ral Divll._
Chicago ................. 14 8 .636

1~

.~

4Yz

Cl£"Veland ............. .10 14 .417
Char lOti£' .............. . 8 13 .381

6th
61,.;

Indiana .................. 9 15 .375

7\!

" 'H&amp;rrw Cu•feft.ce

Mldwel Dlv•l•
W L ret. GB
. SanAnt oo io ....... ..... l4 5.7:rTTurn

• lJtah.. ....... ... .... ........15' 8 .6:;2 1
Houstoo ............... ... 1310 .565 3
• Dallas ......... . .......... 7 13 .350 .71!
Min~ota ...... .......... 7 14 .333 8
Ot&gt;nv£'r ....... ...... .,... 5 17 .227 IO I;i:
• Orlando ............. .. , 5 19 .208 11 \i

Parlftc Dlwil._
Portland ....... ......... 21 2 .913
Phoentx ........ ......... 13 7 .650
L.A. Lakers .... ....... 13 7 .650
Goldon State-. .. ...... 13 9 .591
L.A. Ol~rs ........ 10 12 .455
5eoltle ............ ...... . 7 13 .350
Sacromenro ...... ,. ... 5 15 .~

Calgary ... ....... .... 20 10 4 14143106
LDsAngeles ........ l7 95391:11102
Vancouver ..... ..... 13 17 3 29104 118
Wlnnil"'g -........... 10 19 7 27118 1:11
Edmootoo . .. ........ 12 lS 2 26 94 96
MoD!Iay's nna1

N.Y. Rangers 5, WWashtngtCfl 3

'IWeday'aaamea
Buffalo at Hartford, 7: 35'p.m.
Toronto at N.Y. Islanders, 7:35
p.m .
Boston at New Jer!ilt"y, 7: 35p.m .
Winnipeg at Pittsburgh, 7:35
p.m .
.
Montreal at Quebec, 7:35 p.m.
Philadelphia at Detroit, 7: 35p.m .
Vancouver at C81gary, 9: 35p.m .
Los Angeles at Edmont(ll, 9: 35
p.m.
•

6%
6\1
71\
10\1
Ill\
Ill\

. . .AJ'alfeM
Utah 100. New Jeney 98
At lana 109. a.,..,lanct 911
. , . . . . ,. . . . .&amp;

L .A. Clippers a1 Philadelphia.
7:30p.m.
Utah at Charlot:IP. 7: 30p.m .
L.A. Lakers at New YorK. 8 p.m.
Orlando ar Seellle.10 p .m.
Miami at Chla~go. 8: :II p.m.
Det rot!. at Milwaukee. 8: iiO p.m.

Wat~b

'f!le Youdl United for Christ of Gallipolis will not be singing
~hristmas carols on Main Street in Pomeroy as scheduled this evenmg due to the weather, according to Sherry Hart of the Meigs
County Chamber of Commerce office.

CohlerUI and Haggy led the
Marauders wltl) 11 and 10 points,
respectively.
GAHS will play at Logan on
Wednesday.
Quarter totals
Meigs .. ................ 5 11 6 G-28
Gallipolis .. .... ... ... 10 4 17 11-42

to be a great atmosphere in
Vegas. I'm sure our players will
be ready to play ..It will give us a
good Indication ' of where we

are."
Monday night's game was just
like the first six, admittedly
against outmanned opponents.
The Buckeyes jumped to an early
15·2 lead· and, although playing
poorly and hitting .just 10 pt 23
flrst·half free throws, led 46-23 at
the intermission.
Tennessee State, which fell to
2·7, never made a run In the
second half and trailed by 30 or
more points from the 10: 53 mark
when Bill Robinson converted a
three· point play.
Perry Carter with 20 points a~d
Jimmy Jackson with 18 led fiV.e
Ohio State players In double
figures.
'
Tennessee State, which fell to
2· 7, was led In scoring by S.foot·6
J .J . Eubanks, who came oft the
bench to score 30 points. Eu·
banks, a transfer from Marshall
University, was playing his first
game for the Tigers.
''I was happy to see our Inside
people play well," said Ayers.
"We needed this type of game to
prepare us for Georgetown.
Carter, (Treg) Lee and Robinson
all gave us some solid minutes."

Chlq~go

INLt

-Signed rell..,.er

Emy Olivarez-Orteza, M.D.
'

announce the OPening of their

Cincinnati - Sent pitcher Rosa·

· practice in

with seven rebounds. Baer added
18 points and eight rebounds. Jennifer Taylor had team highs of six
assists and five steals to .go along.
with a six poin1 performance. All
10 girls that played for the
Marauders scored.
Angie Russell led Alexander iii
scoring with 12 points, Jamie
Rolston added II.
In the reserve contest roared out
to a 28·0 halftime lead and coasted
to a 46·19 win. Misty Powell led
the way with II, Missy Sisson ad·
ded eight and Joy O'Brien and Lee
Henderson
added
seven
each.&lt;_Meigs will · travel ro.
Wellston on Thursday night to play
the Golden Rockets.
Quarter totals
MeigS. 22+19+16+15=73
Alexwrder • 5+18+12+14=49
Meigs (73) • Kelly Smith 8·0.7,
23, Tricia Baer 7-04-18, Jennifer
Taylor 2·0· 2-6, Vema Compston 3·
0-0-6, Kim Hanning 2·0-04, Kim
Ewing 3-0-0-6, Missy Nelson 1-00·2, Mary Cremeans 2·0·1-5,
Missy · Sisson 0.0.2-2, Crissy
Taylor 0-0-1-1. Totals • 28-0·
17=73
ALEXANDER (49) • Teather
South 2-0.04, Kris Gilkey 3.0.2·8,
April Lawson 1-0-0-2, Jamie
Rolston 5-0-1-11, Jacinda Sams 10·1·3, Amlx's Davis 1.0·0·2,
Naomi Andrews 1-0-24, Angie
Russell 3-0.6-12, Shawna Wolfe I·
0·1·3. Totals -18-0-13-49

Southern ...

Weather

T_..

- Finer! Brad Gilbert and llllvld
Wbeataw U.OQO each for-a abbvlng
lncldtftt during-Grand Slam Cup.

I

Christmas
Greeting Edition
Mondaf,
Oeeember 24

Police jall man for theft

llo• Ope• For

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Sundays 1-5
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•Credit Terms
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I
I
I
I1

Adolescent Medicine
at

2907 Jackson Avenue
Point Pleasant, West Virginia

27" Diagonal

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

• Heillnt ChaSSIS Witt"
J~~CXJV~ar

I
·~·vvc ~ ~~

'

·

For appointments call

cnnrro.

~ r.: -eontrOI I e o

etearon,:

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Hospital News
.

· Veterans Memorial Hospital

SAVE S117

RaJ PLEAS.ANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
..... .,. family ol ~

.

Middieport;

I

Q

ft11

1

Wayne 'Davis, 11111111 Nelson, Jed
I

I

Will,llldGcorgiaS~

.,

limitltl Supply of Cotkllollt1, c--atin CoiMIIIIIIIadges.
You cat1 purchell any of tlttM it- frlm tht Mlip Co. Chantbtr
Office Montlay thru Friday, t AJA!-5 I'JL
DON'T FORGET...

1I

1
~AY DISCHARGES • 1

991-1635
1-100-416-5511

V*t DIM, Paint PIHin, WV 2511&amp;0 (304~·~

,_

MONDAY ADMISSIONS • Jetta .
On!, Muon. W.va.; Berthl Robin·
son Pomeroy; Charles Hoffman,
Dorothy Smit!J,

Furniture &amp; Jewelry

'

THE
PERFECT
CHRISTMAS 81FTI

I
1

FREE

~

c:nann~

nus

vHUBBARD'S
GREENHOUSE

and

Foallloll

Internatloul Tennll FederaUon

I

M Arthur man

help get plant

C.Uere

France~Chetd
and defen.eman Brian Curran.
Ottawa - Named Randy Sexton
chief execullw officer and Ottawa
Mayor Jim Durrell club president

.. .

--Area deaths--

Meigs girls down Alexander

General Pediatrics

MissOuri Westrrn- Named Stan
McGarvey foolball coach.

aUon to Toronto for left wtne Lou

-

·Rains...

RISING EXPECTATIONS - Meigs Marauder Kelly Smith
(right) rises above the defense offered by Alexander's Angle
Russell, as Spartans Tealher South (11) and Amber Davis (3~) look
on at left, to send the ball toward the rim during Monday night's
TVC game on the Marauders' home court, which the Marauders
won 73-49.

By DAVE HARRIS
· Sentinel Correspondent
The Meigs Maraudm jumped
out to. a 22-5 first qQMer lead wrd
coasted to a 7349 victory over the
Alexander Spanans in girls Tri-Val·
ley Conference basketball action
Monday night at Larry R, Morrison
Gymnasium.
The win gives the Marauders a
4·2 record in the TVC and 6·2
ovemil,. while the Spartans drop to
(Continued from Page 3)
24 in the TVC and 2·5 overall.
Kelly Smith and Tricia Baer led
Ohio State outrebounded the the Meigs onslaught in the . first
Tigers 60·37, with Carter, Robin· quarter, with Smith scoring I 0 firs.t·
son and Chris Jent all grabbing quarter points, while Baer added
11. Butthe Buckeyes finished just nine.
20 of 37 from .the free throw line
· With Marauder coach Roger Fosand hltjust51:9percent (41 of 79) · ter clearing his bench early in the
from the field, well below their second period, Meigs increased its
season's average.
lead to 41·23 at the half as Kim
"This Is the worst game we've Ewing came ali the bench to lead
had free throw shooting," said the Meigs scoring in the period
Ayers. "I don' t think we were with six.
concentrating enough In the first
The Mamuders, behind the scorhalf."
ing of Smith in the middle in·
creased the lead to 57·35 heading
"Ohio State is a great basket· into the final eight minutes, Smith
ball team," said Tennessee State had eight third period points.
head coach Ron Abernathy.
The Marauders held as much as a
"They have great ·a thletes and 27-point lead during the fourth
great talent and Randy (1\yers)
quarter but the Spartans refused to
also bas a great bench. The only give up despite the big deficit.
thing that remains to be seen Is Meigs had a 15-14 scoring advan·
who's gobig to beat diem."
tage in the final period to give them
Abernathy said he had been the final margin of 24.
waiting all year for Eubanks to
Smith led the Marauders with 23
become eligible.
points, the senior also chipped in
"He's a great shooter, al·
thOugh he might have been a
little off tonight," said Aber·
nathy, who was surprised to find
out Eubanks scored with 30
points.
Jamaal Brown finished with 12
points for Ohio State, Lee 11 and
Robinson 10. Tony Lewis was the
only other Tiger In double figures
with 11.

&amp;

rio Rodriguez to minor-league
camp tor reassignment .
Cleveland - NamEd Ken Ste·
fanov controller.
Philadelphia - Signed pileher
Danny Cox to a contract with
Scrant en-Wilkes· Bar rt&gt; of the Inter·
national League tAAA) .
Seattle - Signed outfielder Ken
Griffey Sr .. to a 1·year contract.
llultelball
Grand Rapids !CBA) -Traded
forward Nate Johnson to Rapid
City for 1991 second· round draft
chOice: traded 1991 fourth·round
draft choice to Yakima for center
Ron Cavenan.
NBA - AwardEd 1992 Ali·Star
Came to Orlando.

DaiJas - Cut onenslve guard
Tony Slaton and ~enslw lineman
Mitch Willis.
Boeker
Buffalo - Trader! rlllht wtng
Mille Follgnoanda tutu .. contider·

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

Tax bills are delayed

E. Neal Orteza; M.D.

Rue ball

Dave Smith to a 2-year ~ontmct:

the Bend..
-

Bob
Hoeflich

·:Panel formed

Transadions
president.

Meetlllt caDceled
The Ken Amsbary Chapter of
lzaak Walton will not meet on
Monday as was scheduled.
Christmas dance

By

injured in
one-car wreck

Wllll•mday'tla_,et

Atlanli&lt;' Coast Baseball League
!ACBLl - Named Bob Pertsas

Sunday at I p.m. There wiD also be
a 22-rifte shoot.

EMS responds to calls

Marauder ·g ents win
At Middleport, the Meigs
Angels win junior match
seventh·grade boys' squad
In the preceding seventh·grade posted a 35·29 win over Gallipolis.
game, the Angels won 42·28
Gary Stanley and Abbott led
behind the game-high 16·polnt the Marauders . with 10 points
effort of Whitney Hastwell and a each. Josh Cook led the Blue
10·polnt effort by Kristen Kerns. · Devils. 1-5, with 11.
The Angels' 10·5 first-quarter
The Devils will host Logan on
advantage slipped away In the Wednesday.

Buckeyes win...

ni&amp;bt service
The Racine Baptist Church will
have watch night services (Ill Dec.
31 from 9 p.m. to midnighL Music
wiD be held from 9·10 p.m.; fel·
lowship from IO.Il f.m. and wor·
ship service from 1 p.m to midnight. Pastor Steve Deaver Invites
the public.

I

1 know it's the Christmas season The center will mark its founh anbecause I keep hearing all of those niversary in February.
The Royal Oak Dance Club will songs that come out of molhballs
. Th~ Meigs County Sheriff's Depanment reports that several roads
Members of the Women's
hold its annual Christmas dance on every year to work up the spiriL It
Treats to be alven
•n Me~gs County were covered with water early TQesday morning.
Santa Claus will be at the Saturday from 8-11 p.m. at Royal seems 10 me I've heard those songs Auxiliary at Veterans Menma1
. U.S. Route 33 at Burlingham, State Route .124 at Rutland, State
Syracuse Volunteer Fire Depart- Oak Resort. Music will be provided before even though they're not Hospital are delighted. at your
Raul¢ 681 neat Darwin, Laurel Cliff Road, State Route 143 near the
ment on Sunday a1 2 p.m. to ~d by "Monta~e. » Snacks and punch from an old familiar score. I used to response to their tequest for help In
· old landJill, and State Roure 681 at Slate Route fin were all watercovered.
·
·
will be fU)l!!Shed by the dance club. · know a lot of the lyrics. Now let the purchase of. a wide-screen
out treats.
Membership dues for 1991 may be me see. How does those words television set for the hospital's Sldl·
In ad\lition tO the covered and closed roads, schools in the Meigs
paid at this time. Deadline for 1991 go .... .Jingle bells, jingle bells, oh led Nursing Facility.
·
Christmas program scheduled
.
·
Local School District were closed on Tuesday.
This facility is the one iii which
yes, jingle all the way. Now what's
The Middleport Elementary membership is Feb. 28.
•
the rest of that?
people actually live within the
Christmas program will be presenAction is gearing up at Locomo- hospital • some on. a temporary
ted tonight at 7 p.m. at lhe Meigs
Meigs County Emergency Medical ServiceS units responded to
C
tion - the teen dance center on basis and others on a more per·
· Jun.ior High Auditoriwn. Parents
seven calls for assistance on Monday and early Tuesday.
Mechanic S1., iit Pomeroy • for the manent one. The new television has
should have their children at the
On Monday at 4:67 p.m .. Chester fire depanment went to State
highlight dance of the year. That enhanced viewing for the residents
school between 6:20 and 6:40p.m.
Route 248 for a washdown. At 3:33 p.m., Racine squad went to Dr.
takes place on New Year's 'Eve, most of whom, of course, are senior
Hunter's office for Da-othy Smirh. Smith was taken to Vetelli!IS
Monday, Dec. 31.
citizens.
Christmas program
Memorial Hospital. At 3:38 p.m., Racine squad was sent to Durst
Admission this year will be $2 a
The Auxiliary has rccei~ aboilt
The · Long · Booom United
Ridge Road for Fannie DursL Durst was taken to Pleasant Valley ·
person,
but
all
in
all
il's
a
good
deal
$1100
in donations towards paying
Methodist Church will have its wrHospital At 9: I 0 p.m.. Rutland fire department and squad, and
A
McArthur
man
suffered
since
pizzas
will
be
delivered
for
the
television which cost apnual Christmas program on S11,11day
Columbia Township First Responder went to Township Road 7 and
throughout
mliior
&lt;Injuries
Monday
after
he
ihe
evening
on
an
every
proximately
$1750. Anyone wishat 7 p.m. The public is invited 1o atCounty Road 55 to a motor vehicle accident, wrd transported MiJce
apparently
lost
control
of
his
half
hour
schedule
and
pizza
and
ing to help may send a donation.to
tend.
Heilman to O'Bleness Memorial Hospital. At 10:21 p.m. ~ Pomeroy
vehicle on Meigs County Road 55 soft drinks will ~ free of charge the Auxiliary at Veterans Memonal
squad went to High Street for Lisa Whiting. Whiting was taken to
for all the teens attending. The Hospital, 115 E. Memorial Drive,
near U.S. 32.
Alumni basketball pme
Veterans.
dance will go from 9 p.m. 10 I a.m. Pomeroy.
Mlchale
W.
Hileman,
21,
was
The Meigs Basketball Program
On Tuesday at 4:06am., Middlepon squad was sent to Riverview
on
Jan. I and plans are being made
will sponsor an alumni basketball taken to O'Bleness Memorial
Drive for Steven Alexander. He was taken to Holzer Medical Center.
game on Jan. 12 at 6 p.m. Anyone Hospital by the Meigs County to dec001te extensively for the
Roger Williams, who heads the
At 10:10 am., Pomeroy squad went to West Main for a motor
interested in participating should EMS following the accident In evenL At mi~gbt balloons will Middleport Village Recreation
vehicle accident and transported Maria Waldnig to Veterans.
call Rick Edwards or Gorden Columbia Township. Hileman released from the ceiling to add to Department activities, is looking
was treated for lacerations to the festivities. By the way, help with ahead to January when plans will
Fisher at 992-2158.
the deromting is needed and if you really begin to roD for die staging
face and skull, a fractured hand,
and facial contusions and was can lend a hand just report at the of the first Soapbox Derby in Meigs
Muzzelloader shoot slated
Due to the fact that the Meigs County Treasurer's Office is unable
location on Sunday afternoon or County.
The Ken Atllsbary Chapter of the bjter released, a hospital spokes·
to get red~~&lt;:tion factors from the Ohio Depanment of Taxation,,tax
evening
preceding the dance.
woman
said.
lzaak Walton League will hold
The event will tie in with the nabills will not be mailed in the county until sometime in January.
for the New Year's Eve tional finals which .are held in AkDJ's
According
to
a
report
from
the
another muzzle loader shoot on
AccOnling to Meigs CD!I!Io/ Treasurer Gt;arge Collins, the office
GalUa·Melgs post of the State dance will be Jack Horton and A. J. , ron. Roger has a bundle of plans for
can accept advance payments based on 1851 year's taxes. However,
Highway Patrol, Hileman was Fox of WXIL in Parkersburg and the derby which will · require _a
adjustments will have to be made when new bills are received. The
weslbound when he went off the they will have some gifts plus some pretty fair amount of work and
last day to pay first half 1990 taxes, ~ccording 10 Collins, will be
left
side of the road In a right surprises. Some 20 or 25 adults promotion by various committees
Continued from page 1
sometime In February.
His 1977 Datsun B210 have volunteered already to be on which he hopes will be available.
the state. However, thecoidfront curve.
plck·up truck struck several hand to chaperone and there will The delby is scheduled to be held
pushed Into the northwest and trees and skidded down an police officers on lhe parlcing lot 10
dropped the mercury Into the 40s. embankment, sliding across help see lhat welcoming in Jhe New in Middleport in June but it is not a
Middleport event as such. It is an
Year doesn'l get out of hand.
Township
Road
7.
The
vehicle
area
activity - not only for Meigs
The latest weather map
Iva Sisson who head activities at County but for youngsten from
then went through a barbed wire
Randy Lowe officiating. Burial will showed a low pressure system fence and came to rest In a creek Locomotion reports that parents are neighboring counties.
Bill Collins
be in the Athens County Memory over northern Lake Huron with a . bed. Hileman was not.wearing a being encouraged and invited to
cold front trailing south Into 5eat belt and was thrown (rom help with activities and to see ~
You may have a long list for
Bill Collins, 54, Athens, died · Gardens.extreme
western Ohio then
Friends may call at lhe funelal
·good
times
with
their
children.
the
vehicle,
the
report
stated.
Santa
- or a short one. Even if;
early Monday morning at Univerhome on Wednesday from 2 to 4 southwest to Arkansas. A weak
By, the way, on Saturday even· Santa skips you completely·
·Hileman was cited for driving
sity Hospital in Columbus.
area of high pressure was over under the Influence, failure to ing, Dec. 29, the regular Saturday
..
rel)lember one lhing, just for me. IC:
He was the son of Jake and Hes- and 7 to 9 p.m.
th~ Plains.
control, and failure to wear a night dance will be held despite the you have good healrh • you have it'
ter Lenigar Collins of Athens, both J. Willis McMurray
upcoming New Year's Eve bash. all. Do keep smiling.
safety belt.
surviving. He was employed by the
United States Postal Service for 2V
J. Willis McMurray, 83, of Wesyears. He was a rural mail carrier terville, a former Bend area resi·
Continued from page 1
for Athens Route 4 and Shade dent, died Sunday at St. Ann's
The board approved the rate inRoute I.
Hospital after an extended illness.
crease
of J. W. Didion Associates
Mr.
Collins
attended
Born on June 12, 1907 at Midfor
life
insurance on employees, set
Mechanicsburg School and was a dleport, he was the son of the late
the
organizational
meeting for 7
graduate of Athens High School. Winn McMurray and Fannie Tal· .
on
Jan.
3
and
the
regular meet·
p.m.
He was a retired member of the bolt McMurray. . He was retired
ing
for
7
p.m.
on
Jan.
28.
Mail Carriers, a charter member of from .the Ohio Power Co. after 43
Attending were Chrvles Norris,
the ·Hocking Valley Sportsman years of service, Mr. McMurray
Club, a member of the Sourheastern was . a member of the United president; ~lillY Evan~, vice
presidnet; .. Gar)- Willford, . Sue
Ohio Bass Club, and a fonner Methodist Church.
He is survived by his wife, Grueser, and Scott Wolfe, memmember of the American Trap
SHooters Association.
Thelma P. McMurray, and a son, bers, $upt. Bobby Ord, and
Besides his parents he is sur· John W. McMurray, bolh of Wes- Treasurer Dennie Hill.
vived by his V(ife, Patricia Ely Col- · terville; a sister, Mrs. VIrginia Dill,
Iins, two sons and daughters-in-law, Columbus, and several nieces and
William L. · and Penny Collins, nephews.
Adlens; and Michael and Lorinda
Graveside services will be held
Collins, Adlens; one sister, Mrs. Thursday at 1 p.m. at the Beech
South .Central: Rain ending
Charles (Beverly) Rowan, The Grove Cemetery. The Rev. Don Tuesday night, with a low bePlains; and four grandchilllren.
Meadows will officiate. There are tween 35 and 40. Chance of
Services will be held Thursday at no calling hours. Arrangements are precipitation Is 80 percent.
1 p.m. at the Jagers and Sons being handled by Ewing Funeral Partly cloudy Wednesday, with
Funeral Home in Athens with Rev. Home.
highs between 45 and. 50
Tltorsday through Saturday: A
chance of rain Thursday, with
mixed precipitation Friday and
.'
Saturday. Highs will be in the 40s
Thursday, and ranging from the
Jerry Gilkey, 18, Cave St., Police Chief Rought reported.
upper 30s to the lower 40s Friday
Further details on the number and Saturday. Overnight lows
Pomeroy, is confined to the Mt.
Vernon jail pending filing of theft and ldnds of guns rerovercd wrd will be In the30searlyThursday,
charges there and in Meigs County. iheir value were not released by and In the 20s Friday and
• Acccrding to a report from · police at this time.
Saturday mornings.
• Pomeroy Chief of Police Gerald
, Rought
Tuesday
morning, Amusement machine
. numerous guns were rerovered at
' the Cave SL residence of Gilkey licenses expif:e
'- Saturday night
C~rltt••• Se1101f
Middleport businesses are ·re·
The guns reportedly had been
OPEN
DAILY 9-5
that all amusement
: stolen from several locations in minded
machine licenses expire on De·
SUNDAY 1-5
: Ohio wra West Virginia Several cember
31 and must be renewed
POINSEniAS
··have already been reclaimed, by that time. All coin-operated
7
Colors
- AI Sires
·amuSement machines In the vii·
'
POINSEmA IASIIm
lage are required to purchase a
HOUY nHS
yearly license, the proceeds of
which assist with recreation pro·
FOLIAGE BASKETS
:to
jects within the village.
UVE
&amp;CUT
The
charge
for
these
licenses
With wreaths of holly .and mistletoe, stockings hung
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) - A
For Tht Lowlll One's Grawe:
are S50 for a juke box, $50 each
'30-member committee has been
llaMtts,
and Sprays
for the first three amusement
by the fire and scenes blanketed with snow,
·formed to try to convince the
machines, and $25 for each
. :Department of Energy to build
machine after the first three.
Christmas encompasses warmth and good cheer as we
another uranium enrichment
Licenses may be purchased at
·plant at Piketon, in wuthern
cherish the blessings we've shared this past year.
the mayor's office between 8 a.
SYRACUSE,
OH.
Ohio.
m. and 4 p.m. Monday through
' Christopher Coburnofthestate
992-5776
For us it means saying "thanks" to you, our many
Frtdar.
Department of Development
said Monday state officials ex·
friends, old and new, whose kind support we'll always
peel Piketon to be on a short list
treasure. Doing business with you is our
of proposed sites for the $2.9
billion plant when it Is announced
greatest pleasure!
Friday.
.
.
The committee consists of
representatives of Industry,
state government and science
and is headed by American
Electric Power Chairman W.S.
White. ,
· Christopher said the new IsoTht Pllmeroy S...uletfltlllllill Cllllllllitt•stiH hen many souwertope separation plant Is not
nir iteins that's sure te pltate 111J0111 011 your gift list.
expected to eliminate gaseous
diffusion production at the cur•Sweat Shirts •T·Shlrts •Glass Mugs &amp; Caps
rent Piketon plant.

Roads underwater in county

second frame, as Meigs scoredll
to take a 16·14 lead at halftime.
However, In the thirc! quarter,
the Academy scored 17 pointsfive more dian the Marauders
would have the rest of the g11me
(12)- towalkawaywlth the win,

The Meigs Marauders eighth·
grade girls' basketball squad got
14 points from Butcher that
proved Instrumental In Its 39·35
victory over Gallla Academy
Monday night in Gallipolis.
The Ma·r auders coasted to a
23-13lead at halftime, and traded
baskets In the third qlll\fter, but
barely surVIved being outscored
14·8 In the final quarter.
GA's Misty Coleman led all
scorers with 17 points.
Gallipolis, 0·5, will play at
Logan on Wednesday.
·
Quarter totals
Meigs .......... .... .... 13 10 8 8-39
Gallipolis ..... .... .... . 6 7 8 14-35

waived pitcher Randy Kramer.

Mllwaukee ...... ... , .... 16 7 .§96
- ' lle!roil. .. ........... ..... 14 8 .636 1\!

J

Wnlnf!lday's1ames
Philadelphia at Boston, 7:30p.m .
L.A. Olppersat New Jersey, 7:30

'
The Nets defensive pressure forced a backcourt violation wilh2 .2
seconds to go and after the Nets In bounded the ball. Mookle Blaylock
was fouled by John Stockton with four· tenths of a second. left.
Biaylock made the first free throw a nd Intentionally miSsed the
second. Theus charged Into the lane, caught the rebound and his shot
was just long at the buzzer.'
Malone added iO rebounds for the Jazz and Eaton added 14 boards.
Stockton scored 17 points and handed out 14 assists and Jeff Malone
chipped In 17 points:
.
. ·
Chris MorriS led the N!!ts with 19 points, and Theus, Jack Haley and
~rrick Gervin added 14 e;~ch .

On the junior high circuit...

Quebec at Montre-al, 7:35p.m .
Toronto at N.Y. Rangers . 8: 35
p.m.
Washlngtoo at Chicago. 8: 35p.m.

In the NBA...

..

p.m.

Bmyllle Dlvi-

San Francisco 26, L.A. Rams 10
Sal.....,. Doe. It
~~ rult at Green Bay, 12:30 p.m.
L.A. Raldersat Mlnnesot.a , 4 p.m.

Atlanta ..................1111

, p.m.
Golden State at Portland, 10: 30

stop you one on one. "
In addition to starting Koncak and bringing Moses Malone orr the
bench, the Hawks also got Glenn Rivers healthy and moved Spud
Webb Into the starting lineup.
"It's hard to. believe that early this year we lost nine games In a
row," Wilkins said: "This team pulled Itself together, made a couple
of changes In personnel to have more role players, guys who know
their limits and know what we need to win. I think that's been the big
difference."
In a sense, Battle's recent surge symbolizes the play of the Hawks
this season. lfe has rallied from being shut out two gam~s ago to
·
. scoring 52 off the bench In the last two contests.
' 'When the ball stops dropping, they start looking for the hot hand,"
Battle said. "I just felt like It was the first game of the season."
The Cavaliers would like to turn back the clock to the start of the
season, when they had everyone healthy and were an!lclpatlng a
50·wln campaign. ·
"The thing that makes It even more difficult this year Is that we
have so many young guys," Wilkens said. "I haven't been able to find
out who Is going to be ready each night yet. Each night It's someone
different, and until we get thai coriSistency, we will struggle."
In the only other NBA game Monday night, Utah edged New Jersey
98.
I
Jazz 100, Nels98- AI EastR,utherford, N.J., Kar1Malonescored23
points and grabbed 10 rebounds Monday night and the Utah Jazz held
on for a 1()().98 victory over New Jersey when the Nets' Reggie Theus
missed on a foUow shot at the buzzer.
The Jazz b&lt;lve w0 n seven of eight games while the Nets have
dropped three straight.
Utah led .98-92 wltb 51 seconds to go on a Mark Eaton dunk but the
Nets battled back and nearly tied the score as time expired.
Chris Morris nailed a three-pointer With 40 seconds to go and after
Eaton lipped In a miss, Morris converted two free throws with 15
seconds remaining to bring New Jersey within UJ0.97.

The Daily Sentinel-Page-S

Pomerovt-Middleport. Ohio

I

December 18, 2:00 p.m. Meiga C~unty Choir Cerol.

·

ing on Mllln St,...t.
December 18.1:00 p.m. Mtlgt High School Chorua •
perking lOt atage
1:20 p.m. Melga High School bend-parking lot atege
. December 20, 1:30 Youth United for Chrllt, Choir
Meln St,..t
··

1.••••••••-•••-•••••••
,\ I

I
I

I
I
I1
1
1

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

I

ADVERTISING
ASK FOR BRIAN OR DAVE

1

992-2156

THE DA.ILY SENTINEL

�..

•

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

Page- 6-The Daily Sentinel

•

Tu~sday. Decer;nber 18. 1990

Tuesday. December 18, 1990

ON.,DEC ~ 24

CLOSED

WED

RISTMA
DAY

I

THUR.

I

I

FRI

DEC.

21

SAT.
DEC.

22

I

SUN.
DEC.

I

COLLEGE STATION, Texas
(UPI) -Hagar the camel will be
home tor Christmas after all,
pleasing her owner and the
congregation of Austin's Park
Hills Baptist Church,
.
Just a few days ago, C!:hrlstmas
wasn't looking all that merry for
Hagar, a 'GOO-pound, 6-year-old
dromedary camel.
An accident In her pasture
brolle her lower jaw, leaving her
In obvious pain and unable to eat,
said her owner, businessman
Don Chapman.
Exotic animal care specialists
at Texas A&amp;M's College of
Veterinary Medicine came to the
rescue but lt wasn't' easy, said
A&amp;M veterin ar ia n James
Herll'lan.
Veterinarians at the university's Veterinary 1'eachlng Hospital s~rted by surgically putting
Hagar's jaw. back together. ·
"Just her size lnakes any kind
ol surgery a little difficult,"
Herman said.
·
Dr. Clifford Honnas, a veterl·
nary orthopedic surgeon, lm·
planted two quarter-Inch stain·
less steel pins In Hagar's jaw to
stabilize It while the break heals·.
The morning after surgery,
Hagar was happily munching
hay In her stall at Texas A&amp;M's
Large Animal Clinic .
Veterinarians expect Hagar to .
return to Austin In plenty of time
to play an Important suPP9rting
role In the church's annual living
nativity scene beginning Friday.
Hagar will carry one of three
wise men in the church's . reenactment of the traditional
Christmas story.
Honnas sald the pins will be
removed after the break Is
completely healed, probably ln
four to six weeks, and Hagar
should recover completely.

MON.

DEC.

23

24

0

•Alt FRAGRANCES
&amp;GIFT SETS
Sav61lp·To 70016 Off Mfrl. List!

29. Coats ...... RED TAG
Children's 14.99 Coats .. RED TAG
Men's 19.99 Coats ........ RED TAG
All Children's Sweaters
Regularly 5.99-6.99 ..... RED TAG

Price reduction taken at regi~ter.

20.00
10.00
15.00
$4.00

Many more items! Selection will vary by store.
OPERATION DESERT SHIELD • AMN Christopher Lance, son
or SMS Roger W (USAF Ret.) and Bertie Lance, Pomeroy, is now
stationed in Saudi ArabiJ!. He is a 1989 graduate or Eastern High
School. His address is AMN Chrsll)pher Lance, 428-29-1529, 1650
CSG/CES APO N. Y. 09603.

j

.'

;t

~~

'

•

.DEWXE

.54,000BJU

·All CHRISTMAS

GAS.GRILL·

. ..;:· ,,
·• GARI.~.ND • ICICLES
~ORNAMENTS ···

"

Price teduction taken at register.

$•11 ,, lfljlf Dilllrlt StDIII
Tll/1 Yur For $159/ L:.-n

Now You Know
By United Press International

BArrEW OPERATED

"

Con·

··MUSTACHE &amp;
BEARD TRIMMER
lndudes: Barber comb
cleaning brush, oil, •
stand and comb
attachment

99
COMP. TO
S12.99

5-GALLON
WET/DRY
VACUUM
CLEANER
Includes
attachments.

The Department of AgriculENTERTAINS • Lisa PouUn tapped to ''In tbe Mood" as a part - ture estimates the United States
of Shirley Quickel's Dance Co. entertainment at Overbrook Center . w!ll export a record 160 blllion
cigarettes In 1990.
recently.

'

.'

99

•'
TO PLACE AN AD CALL 992-2'156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. S P.M. .

to

SKU•

83642

8 A.M. until NOON. SATURDAY

. COMP. TO $44.99

y

outside Meig5. Gellie or Meson count..is must b e r;~re ·
plid.
.
.
•Aec"""• 1.50 discount for eds pa rd'" edven~
. . e
•free ads - Gtveaw•v 1nd Found ads undet 15 wt&gt;rd s Will b

run J

d~s

at no ch•ge.

·o,av•

16

3

15
15

1~
Monthly

16
15

9'tz.2772

742-2251

639 Bryan Place
Middleport, Ohio

11 / 14/ tlft

BISSELL &amp; lUilE
CONSTIUCnON
•NewHomas
•Garages
eComplata
· l.a•odlllng
Stop &amp; Compare
.Fraa Estimates

985·4473 .
667·6179

A1111 ou II ceIll e11 Is
1 - C1rd

~Thinks

3 - Annoucements
4 - Givuwev

•A c lauified advertisement plac ed In The Da lly Sentine:',IP ·
r;8pt -:- clalified displ-v. Butin•• Card. and legal nottct~~
will 1110 app ear in the Pt . Ple•ant RegiSter and the Gall

pOiit O.ilv Tribune. reaching over 18.000 homes.
COPY DEADLINE -

MONDAY PAPER
TUESO&amp;Y PAP,ER
WEDNESDAY PAPER

THURSDAY PAPER
FRIDAV PAPER
SUNDAV PAPEA

OAV BEFORE PUBLICAT ION
~ 11 :00 A .M . SATURDAY
:_ 2o00 P.M . MONDAY
-

2 :00P.M . TUESDAY

- 2 o00 PM . WEDNESDAY
- 2 o00 PM . T~URSDAY
- 2 :00P.M . FRIDAY

Rete

e4.oo

Ov•r 16 Wordo

·

.2o

16.00
19.00

.30

.42

o13.oo

.eo

., .30 / day

.. 06/ doy

MercltJndtse

,

G11t11 County
Are•Code_614
44•l.a.mpolis

'317--Ch•hira

· Me•a• county

·

c; d 814
Are• o e

912 - Middi.Ort

Pamlfov

981 - Ch•wr
245-Rto Grande . e•l- Ponllnd

388 - VInton

211-Gu\lln Oitl.
•41- Arlbll Dist

37e- wllnot

247- Lotorl Folll

e•9 - llhc:lne
742- Rullend

. Maton Co .. WV
Artl Code 304

&amp;7!t- P1. Pl•••nt

•18-Leon

171- Apole Gro"•

773- MIIOn
882- NIW' Hlvtn'
891- Ltt•rt
937-luffaiG

187 - Coolv~le

•
54 - Milt. MtrcP'Iandise
56 - B~o~ildinv Suppli ..
58 - Pell tor Salt~
53 - AntiQ~o~il

5 - HIPP'J Ads

6-loat 1nd Found
7- · V ard SeltiPaid in edvtncel

a - Public S.le. Au ction

9 - Wanctd to Buv

OPEN 8 DAYS A WEEK
ALBANY. OH. LOCATIO
10 AM-5 PM
CLOSED SUNDAY
Wo Will CioN At Alban
Doc. 24 to J.,, 2 For
Chrlotmu V-llon

Call 691-6115

For Current Prlcas

11·311-90·1 ....

mWART'S
GUNS &amp; SUPPLIES
742·2U1 ·
lutlantle~~flaw

u-•d.

57 - r.tlusiealln•trum.nt•

58 -,ruitl • Vegttlbl•
59-For hie or Tr•d.t

Fm11

S1:rvtces

Slilllllti'S

(; liVI''ll'l

1 1- Httg W1nted •
12 - S ituetK)n Wented

k

11 - F1rm !quipm.,.t

13 - lnaurance
14- lutin•• Traming
16- Schoolt &amp; ln1truction

11- Rtdio. TV. CB Repeir
17 - MisceUtneou 1
18 - War"•d To Oo

21 - lusin•• Opportunity
22- Mon• 10 Loen
23- Prot•llonll llfvicet

12 - Winted to Buv
83 - Liv ..loc.ll

54 - "H•v &amp; Gr•in
66- Seed &amp; Fertililtr

71 - AutOI for lelt
72 - Truckt for Sale

73- Yint a 4 vyo·s

7•- Motorcyet•

75 - IOitl &amp; Molon for lillt

31 - 11om" for Stlt
32- Mobila Hom• for Salt
Jl-Ftrmt tor Sele ,

3~- luoin.,o lull dingo

78- Auto Peru&amp;

~cc•sori•

77·-- Auto Aepaif
71.-Ctmpinv Equipment

79- Cemp•• 6 Mo1or Homn

31- LOtl. Acrtl ...
31- Ae811ht.te Wanted

tor"'"'

41 - Houlll
42 - Mobllt Hom .. for Rent

,.,_,.,.,.h......"" .
41- ·PHI for ......
o67-Wanted to "ent

41- ltu!lln'lnt for Aont

•t-ht U••

,

White a.
Scotch Pine

·ROOM

eFt. end Up
Well Sheared, Grown
on the .Weblf Farm In
Rutland

EMILEE MERINAR

su. $20

ow.,r &amp; OperatDr

liADY Dl(. 2nd

614-992-6820

74!-2143
11•26·'90'1

mo.

CAIN'S .

Of Ml ••leport
UPHOLmRY

H•nd Tufting
Cuetom Drapet
S8 Yeen Experleace

61.·991-2321
tU llet1h S.Cenll

We Soy What Wo Do.
We Do What .We Say
11·14-fl.&amp;

NOTICE TO BIDDERS .
COMPUTER SYSTEM
UPGRADE
MEIGS COUNTY
DEPARTMENT OF
HUMAN IERIIICES
Soo'"" bldo wUI bo r-vod
by tho Molgo County Boord

of Comml•llon•• In their
office locotod In tho Court·
houoo. Second StiMt, Po·
moroy. Ohio 41711 untH 12
noon on tho 2elh cloy of Do·
combo&lt;, 1880.,dot1 :4SP.
M. -nod by tho Clork of
told Boord ond Nod oloud
for tho purchooo ot on up·
gr.to of tho ..llllng compu·
tor oyolom ond rontol of loft·
woro for .tho Ohio JOBS Pro·

arim.

Tho Moig1 County Ooport·
ment of Hum•n Services
wishes to auto~n~~te the Ohio

· JOBS
lng ln·hOUM
Pragr1mCCI-Uior
on Ita exist·
1¥·
otem. Tho ln·h"uoo oyotem
mull ba ~pgrodod with oddl·
tiona! memOry, u•r up-city, lwmlnolo/koyboardo,
for off 1lte procuotng . A
oollware
progrom whk:h'
will procooo oil aopecto ot
the Ohio JOBS Program lo
doolr.t. lnotollollon of tho
h•rdwltl'e and 10ftw1re, 11
woll u trolnlng ond oupport
11 oloo roqulrod.
Spociflcationl
tor olld
computer upgrade •rid aoftworo rontol moy bo obtolnod
troin tho Clorlc of lho 1-d
of Moig1 C.ounty Comml•
lionero tho houro
of 8:3oa.m. ond 4:30p.m ..
. Moncloy through Frldoy.

The Commlalonera IN
boUnd by Focloroll- which
prohlbh1 controctlng from
., ollobllohmont !hoy or a
may havo a
tomlly
tln..,alel lnt•oot ln.
The Commlulo-1 ,.••
orvo tho right 10 Nioct on;
ond oil bldo 1nd/ or oc-t
tho bid tor thO lntondod
purpo...
Mory E. Hobl1oltor, Cieri&lt;
Molg1 County Board of
Commiulonara
(12111.18210

mo-

· Public Notice ·

office

located In the CaurthouM,
Po-..y. Ohio untH noon on
Oocemba&lt; 28, 1890. Tho
bldo will ba oponod at 1 :30
p.m. on Oocemba&lt;21,1180
end rud oloud .for tho fo~
lowing building lu1o. Eoch
bid to meel tho condllloni
ond opociflcotlon1 01 tol·
lowo:
Office opoce to hou• tho

We Are A Deer
Checking Station.
11·21·H . ..

HILL'S DEER

cuniNG

CUTTING,
SKINNING,
WRAPPING
BASHEN RD.,
RACINE

949-2206

11-&amp;-90·1 mo.

I:=J§~~~!:=
Notice

Meiga County D••rtment
. ot Humon Servlcoo JOBS
Olvllion, 700 oquoN minimum totol IJIIICO.
Conollllng of o minimum
of two olficoo. AccoOitotollet lacllltloo for mon ..,d WO·
mon. Sold office 1J11C1 11).111
hovo bOth hooting ond olr
conditioning, odoquoto ftuo,.._,, lighting 1ufficlont
for oftlae worl&lt;. Wiring for
lhrw prong oloctral plug1,
oloctrlcol outlot• ............
ory olx teot opart .
· Sold offici IPOCI muot bo
located within a reooonoble
dlnance from our tixllltlng
location• 10 that tho County
Agency llloll not lncurr u,.
noce1ury coot In tho lnotol·
lotion ol our tolophone ond

computer sydem.
Rontll roqulrod for oold
building ond Nlotod tocillllel ohould bo brok., down
for o ont I 1 I yoor boll I. All
bld1 ollould Include tho! bid·
der It to· pravkfe malntenonco for the exterior and 1,.
terlor ol tho building.
Tho Boord ot County
Co!'llmiMionera miiY' require

oddltlonol controcit provl·
alone with the eucceaeful
blddor Including but not
limited to tho right ot tho opo
lion to concol tholeooelt n•
ceou,. by giving • minimum of olatv (801 doyo writ·
lon notlco. ·
Tho front ot tho onvolopo
MICioolng tho bid mull bo
marl&lt;od ""Snlod Bid"" JOBS
Olvloion . Blddor oholl fur·
nloh tholr own bid torm1.
Tho Boord of County
Commlnionwo mor occopl
tho lo-ot bid or ooloct tho
boot bid for the lnlonded
purpou, ond the Boord ot
County Commloolonorl •••
orvotho right to rojoclony or
oil bld1. .,d/ or ony port
cheroot.

Mo.,. E. Hobatottor. Clork
Molgo County Boord of
·
Comml181onera
112111.18, 2tc

.BULLETIN
--. BOARD_

DEER CUT,
WRAPPED &amp;
SKINNED
MAPLEWOOD
LAKE

614-949-2734
or

614-949-2635
11·21·10.1 ••.
•VINYL SIOir.;;;; ·-· •·
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN iN
INSULMION

BISSELL //
SIDING
_._ CO.,

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

...

...

"FrH Eatimatet"

PH. 949-2801
or les. 949·2160
110 SUNDA T CAliS
4-16-16-Hn

GUN SHOOT
RACINE
"FIRE DEPT.

Iathan IUM11g

EVDY ,
SAT. NIGHT
6:30 , ...
. Faciory Choko
12 G-. htt- Only
Strictly lllforCIII

25-'19· n

I

I

'
:

205 N. Stcllllll StrHt
,_.,LIPOIT, 01110 4576
Offkt 614-992·2116
llono 614-992-5691

'

I

!

1101111
s. " ' -.
..
HOUIEioLQT
..FARMS
oCOMMERCIAL
f t NEED USTJNGSI

,
•

11·5-tO-tltl

••

I•

MICIDWAYE
OVEN IEPAII

t

&lt; .:

All liliES

Iring It 1-. Or We

. Pick Up;

.

lEN'S APPLIANCE" '
SEIVICE --:. .. - I!
.

992-5335 or ~15-3561 - •
Acroos FNM Pest Office

217 L Sec. '-•Y
:
POIIDOY, 111110
L...----.,;;3/;.;;l;.,;/'90;;;/~H~n·. 1

-·

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,,'
•
•'

•

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,_,.,,Ohio

, 114/ tfft

••
•

PlUMING &amp; HEATING

· Now Lo.tian:

161 North Socontl
MWdltport, Ohio 45760

~SALES &amp; SERVICE

w. C11f!Y Flohlog SuPtlll•
Your Pho11a

.....--· Billa Here
IUSIIES! PIIOIII

991-6550
'IIOIIE

1.......

KOUNTRY KlUB
("'
.

CHRISTMAS
· GRAPI!rrE
Driver1 .. . t8

- ..... ts
Putter• ... U

r

ClRAPHrrE SHAFTS
INSTALLED
BAGS ..................... I21
CHRISTMAS
TROPHIES • PLAQUE$

JOHN TuFOID
Scoot(_ ...

('*"'· 11-Zt-111·1
..... ••

BISSELL-·
BUILDERS

ltas•••lt PriGs"

PH. 949·2801
••

or las. 949·2160
Day Ill' Night
NO SUNDAY CALLS

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM f\llld
REMOVAL
*LIGHT HAULING :

*FIREWOOD

BILL SLACK
992-.2269

;'

••

USED RAiliOAD TIE$

••

.. 12·80 tfit

I

•

USDA=NCES

90 DAY W Aim
WASHEU-$100 up

DIYlll-169 up
·
IEFIIGERATORS-S100 •/ •
IIAIIGES ills Eloc.-$12 up

.•

FREEZERs- $125 :/

I•

IICIO OftNS-S

••

•

.

lEN'S AHUANCE
SEIYICE

;

9'f2-5335 • 115·3561
Acroa F.- r.t Office

•

•
•

•

!

CHRISTMAS
TREES
5

Ft.
1

to

12Ft •

10 and up

FRESH' CUT DAILY
White lo
Scotch Pine

101 SNOWDEN
llaln St.. hll•d
742-3051

•

. 11-21·1 .... pd.

THANK YOU

The Mason Town Council
Chuck Kitchen

~'

Y. C. YOUIIG II
992-6215

AFTERGLOW DISTRIBUTING

MIDDLEPORT ARTS COUNCIL
For Judgmg Our Christmas
Light Contest

'-

IU'iiN c.u Rc ,; 1 n

!FREE ESTIMATESI

''At

992-7564

&lt;

CARPENTER SEIVICE

CUSTOM IUIT
HOMES &amp; GAIAGEI

For Your Glow In The Dark Items.

J

-Room Addlllono
"'Gutt• Wort&lt;
-Eioctrlcol • Plumbing·
-concreco Worl&lt;
-Rooting
- l n t - • Extorlor
Pointing

WANT TO BRIGHTEN YOUR
HOLIDAYS?

CALL

'~

YOUNG'S

RACINE
GUN (LUI
GUN SHOOTS

SPr v 11 P\

Grooming
AlllriMs

thru Sstur•y
10amto6pm

E111 piny 1111: nl

43-Fermt for Rent
0\4- Apertmtnt for Rent

let Retulf• Fltt.

Call 992-5114
For Current ,rica•

FOI SALE

,_

&amp;t - HouMhold Gooch
52- Sponmg GoiHII

T1illlSJIIlrl nllllll

Classified paf{es .cmw I he
follou·ing telephom.&gt; exchanges ...

OPEN EVERY DAY AT
POMEROY LOCATION
7 DAY$ 9 AM·7 PM
CLOSED CHRISTMAS
0AY ONLY

THE

Cllllnus nns

HOURS: Monday

Public Notice

their

IECYCUNG

2'11 MI. outside

5·31-"90 Hn

in

Til-COUNTY

Altft are for conMcutive runs. broktn upd.,t will be Chll'fil.d
fnr 11ar.h ti.w
adt
·

•1 point line type onlv uted .
.
.
•sentinel is not rHponsible for e,rrors a her l~rtl diV: jCheck
•Ads th.t must be paid In lcf111nce are
C~rd of Th-"lts
Happy Ads
In Memoriam
Yard Sall5 ,

ISJ'MAs DOMEsncs

Words

2 - ln Meml)rv

diW a her publicl1•on to m•e correctiEJn.

COMP. TO
• $11.97

RATES

•P..ice olad tor ell capi11 1 18nen 1s double price of •d cost,

for etrortlir•t d..,. ad f URS in paper) ~all bii'Jfore 2 .00 P m

•

J.AIIIS IEESII ·

aion••

'

&lt;

latterlet.

•Vinyl Siding
•Replacement ·
Windows
•Roofing
•Insulation

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
MEIGS COUNTY
OEPAI,ITMENT OF
HUMAN 8f.RVICES
JOBI DI'IIIION
In accorct.nce wfth uc~
lion 307.81 of tho Ohio Rt·
vlood Code. -led bldo wHI
bo rocoivod by tho Moig1
County Boord ot Commlo·

Classifie

'

IF NEW

.the

.c•rllf•••,.,. e"...,

J&amp;L
INSULAnON

print• end cammunk:lt)ona

By United Press International
Underscoring the U.N. dead·
line of Jan. 15 for Saddam
Hussein to withdraw his forces
from Kuwait, President Bush
touted the size and strength of the
estimated 500,000-member multi·
national , force aligned against
Iraq:
·
•· "I would think at some ·point he
(Sadda!T)) would realize thls
force being arrayed against him
would be devastating, The Unl·
ted Nations said that he should
get out or all available means
will be used against him."

Features: 757 SQ. ln. cooking surfare,
cooler side shelf, cooking timer, porcelainized cooking grids, front panel,
condiment rack, beat indicilfor, fuel
gauge, weatherproof stainless steel third
b!lmer and/cooking window.
.

• NOVELTY CANDLES
• WICKER • STOCKINGS
.:• FLOWERS .
...
• NOVELTY ITEMS

Quote of the Day

WiTH THIRD BURNER

• TREE SKIRTS·
··VIDEOS •·WREATHS

·Business Services

No place
like home
for Hagar

®

PEN •r11.:
6 P.M.

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 7

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

·hOOP.M.
SlllllYS

12=hdwy

SIOOIS=R

SIPI1

1

!
I

MOVING SALE . '•
'••
CAIPINTD
GINS&amp;AMMO ••
I

tl1 llr••l St.

·~·····"·
t9J-J034Oh.

1 1 00 ltemlngton
llug GuM
170 ltemlnttoll

811111

lthaoe

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•

TUES.. DEC. 18

''

Glvll\~

4

'

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t' for""'

The Deily Sentinel-Page

Television
Viewing

'

..........
~
--•-a••r""""'
(·:
..........

--"'"--·, . . not be I
... J. ~

...

Pomeroy- Midcleport. Ohio

18, 1910

9

tAU

·-'
•

.'

EVENING
e:oo(]Je

w we

.,'

.

a 1121•

·.

@lion

&lt;lJ C"- 1ft C.~ Q
(!) 3-2·1 Contact
I]) Square One
Q

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[De ALFC

Ytrd9tle
1110 -

2br, .... -~~~,

Gtlllpolll
&amp;VIcinity

a

11ntod lol. 123,11011, or

. . . .-••• JIQmlnto. I

AL~ Yard SoiH -

It Pold In
DUIIUNE' 2:00 p.m.
the doy bolorl tho Ill II to n10.
SUIIdoy • 2:00 p.m.
F -. llondot Odlllan • 2:00
p.m.a.turdar. .

Now 1ttt' Mx71 mobile -

Public Sale
&amp;Ailction

J,..

....,..,~ 11

CJ.-UM,.,.,

In
Tom Anderlol•

Mlddtat aft. can
,,......4Mia1W 5:00p.m.

33 Ftrma rcir sale
a~~r· w o.~~o~a ,.,. Homo,

· "He's . just a shell · of . his
forme( self. lJe USed- to .be a t'J".:'~; NUts ontl up.

real nut."

Rick,..,_ Auction eompany

··

~ Lots &amp; Acreage

:=...:.·:..~·=:.:
•Woolf
..:: L.:========:r-========::"1 ~
:1: =i..~=~J:
Llconood Oh!!._
wttor Mllolltl.
. -.e75-

~tucky,
VI'lllnll, _,.....,,...

9

11

Help wanted

11

Help wanted

c•~.-piL-~ .

Wantedoto Buy

11.~ hove

......... _
-lyplng .and ~ oammunatlort
lllllll. Computer llnowlldQI
bo holjlful. .......
ond '"'"'"""'"to P.O. lox tiS,

ca-

..::"~·c.:,·~'-----

:;:2'1:1.::33:;,
,

. _ . wlh· river ~
511-DH.

3()4..

Rentals

.

•-rt:~.·~·h
341.

E'IERVONE WllO WALKS 8'1'

.COAT...

I]) 3-2·1

BEAIIT1FU~

APARTIIEN'TS AT
iUDGET PRICES AT .IACKSON

UT~~.-~ . ~ ~u~~~~~~==~~:r::::::::::~==~~

Fum..._. A1i:pt
. 2 br,

54 llacellaneoua

Household

51

l1ercl'lllndlae

Goods

1131

(!) I]) MacNetlfLehrer
NewaHour
[lle Nigh) Court 1;1
IIJ CiifNnt Alfalf 1;1
Ill IICGyvor MICGyver
must matcn wits with a bend
ol
internatiOnal tn•""'· "
ID~-,....,.

am; . . . 1p.l!l"

lo,

Countr ~~Good
..... ,,ifc.n, T
.v...... o..n
Fumlohod olllcloncy, an uti- ...... tot p.m. - ...... .,..
f27 3nl. Avo. Qol.
paid. bath. tt:Wmo. ttl
Hpola,un
'
-

1,

-'"!.,.

apan-: 00011 UBEO APPLIANCU
u.,..
..
,.,
quiet, '.......... .... w.-.
.. _ . .........
'55
1&gt;01111, pooldna.

_... _..., __ .-. """' - .........
dryono, ..............

ldoool

utliftloo P!llil, 120 l'au~h, Clol:
lipotlo. f14.441-44tl after 7 pm.

Oooclouo living, 1 onol 2 Ioiiiopo~mOnto II 111llanor •
ailll
Rlvwolal
Apaotmonta)n llklcltoPGOt. F,_
..... Coli 114-tla·mt 1!011.

-

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ter

Sp.m.

we lluiiJII.

.,.,....

a~Hne

Building
Supplltl

......... Ciaiodewtn.
1-, \liO car-, OM Coli 114-

..

NowiUood

lloooJooi!ookl . loomlo~ 112 mi.
Jorotcho Rd. Pl. PI_,., WY,

Laogolloond- " - ' - ' · 0111304'115-1450.

Kft"""' Fu...-_ 231 l'lrll
2br ·1114 Third ..- . A_.., __..,., phil ullltlol,
poll,
~ ~~~ ~·~
..

'

&gt;

' .

,
'

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fM..441.4m.

'

Vldeoayncraty 1;1
7:051]) HapiJy Oaya
7:30 (]) 8 l!li «J) Jeopardy! Q
® Night Coun "
&lt;lJ 11J • . Enteri:tnmont
QJ) 18 rtlrH'a ComP!'ny
1D Collage BlilkelbiH
. acroaallre

UH, M~. f!lFI•Pit4T···
f'IOW.WOULI&gt; you
FffL AlOLIT . .
LIP-SYNCING-

.

7:351]) The JaHe11ons
1:00 (]) 8 «J) Matlock Matlock
delends his neighbor. a toy

store owner accused ol

murder. (R) Stereo. C
&lt;lJ MOVIE: A Child ~lied
Jeoua (PI 2 of 21 (2:00)
·
&lt;lJ (I). Whe'l the lou?
Jonathan borrows Tony's
jeep ailll retums ~ with a
scratch. Stereo. C
(!) I]) Nova Children in a
small Brazilian town fall
victim to a fatal diseaoa.
Stereo. C
I!)) i1J .,lleM:ue: 91.1 A
Santa Claus seves a child
from chol&lt;ing to death in
Phoenix. s....O.•g
.
[ll. MOVIE: The Name of
the Aooa (RI (2:30)

~lAGAN JpEEC~fJ?
12· 16

52 Sporting Goocll

Ill.MOVIE: Murd&amp;or, Slto

H yau ilorl, own tho ""'"""'
,..,.,. wfth, mar!&gt;~ lfOII niod a

1!~!'.'!'2~

114-44f-'10t, 11W7f.ZM.

' ) .i

J •,J

,. '!&lt;'

.......
53 ·!'

:riii.Uij.""' Col

Mobile Homes
for Rent

. , .flow Ia · ·
: ·: ~Stockll''

-

=1-

......a tOday, ... - .

--..:&gt; .•
..-.~l-OW.

SrMII . Fu"*Md

Emala~,

........
tor.,., ........
-. . ... pootil'
.....

' ', l· '

Wrote (1:00)

oa Chti!CII ~ne~ station
8 PrlnNewa ~ . .

lum
MW A1111i1a'e
_ , . lowe
ell.-.,.,..
·- Into a •
rul IM .. I I We

hlml-, -11 houoo
.. In thO city. 3 rooono a. bath.

ID

MOVIE:

(2:00)

....

Aritlquel .

Buy .. HI.. I I - AntlqUH,

-a.m.

1'114 I. lllln ...... , . . ...,.
- . : II.T.W.
to 1:00
.....;;,.,
Sunday 1:II to 1:00 IIJII.

•.......,..,212f.

Q

Tonight Stereo.

Cll 8 Mama'• Family

. $0/Vtf OLP

Po~lllly

SaHertl SchMI N. oH 'lt. 141
I• or
Stortlna
11 • -· 114
4 "-1510:

Homa far the Holkllir•

Baillie and the Boys, Clint
Blacl&lt;, K.T . Otlin, Paul
Ovarstreet and Restless
Heart celebrate Christmas.

trouble. Stereo. Q
(I) G Ro-nne
Rose~nne laams something
shockina..abou! herself.

78 :, Auto Partl ..
· · AccruartM

Cll

S!ereo._~;~

lleeplng roome 'wllh aaaid,...
Alao trailer..,_,.. All huk Up&amp;
Coli oft• 2:00 p.m., 304·77J.
5151, llaoon WV.

(!) . I]) Fl'onlllne

_

-....... -lot
.. ,.....,.

'

bod·

;= - h
II
utll~loo, ooi ,ll'll' lot,-

.........

·-

l'7MI31.
.
.lloololtoo ho.. fully hlmlohod,
....... dry•, AJC, 2 tiJdf"'OtM,
304•77M11511.

WHA"rlS MRS.
ARMSRUSTSR.
L-IKS":i

Poulc,

RouiO 33, ~ ol P-OOJ.
~1~111, paola, ...... Coli
114--·1'171.
•

(PGI (2:001 Sterso. 1;1

SO/.JNDe L-ltc:e•et-leS
A PRETTY GOOD

I!J MOVII£: lllg 8lid Mama II
(R) (2:00)
13 Naohville Now
a l.lrry King Li...l
1:30(1) CllO CO.ch Hayden's
ex·wile gives him an ·
unexpect8Cl Christmas gilt
Stereo. 1;1
1D Collage BelkllbaU

BRAINWAe.·USR/ TOO.

for'""'· 3111120, lllil-

~~:a.:,';: oou oft• 5:00 Pll,

Merc11and1se

9:451]) MOVIE: A Ilia Hand I~
the Lll1lo Lilly (~:00)

llobllo - . far ""'" or -

·-·'11171.'

10:00 (]) 8 11)1 U f - 1 A TV
·

BARNEY
..............

lin Pllul•'• Day Clre Center.

Solo, allordab"' chlidca11. ll.f
I 1. m. • 5::10 p.m. Agoo 2 ·10.
Betore, after echool. Drop-Ina
WIICDnHI.~I1~-IZ24 .

r:r."",' .l!'•~·~na
wantod to, do

lloUM

et4:1'12Cloanlng,

llperiei'W:IId ,lAd • ,.,.,.~ ••
304~1'171 ,

'.

•ON .SIT E SI;IIYICE/ REPAIR
• c USTOM P,RllCRAMMIN&lt;;

' •ON.SITE C:t JSTOM TR AININ&lt;I

.

'

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oHoiilndii.litlioiblioaollillill-liouoo

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/ . ../ ' -14Jill•tN'J!II...-~.

-14Jiii:IOftftloog,-

ofotayllolooilllhO:siolaii~U.­

oSIIInlllllllllcowa :1 n

Calor .... 4tlllll.

.

.1150. 114........

iMo

58

Fruita&amp;
Vegettblel

YOU CAN 'fAKE HOME
SOME OF MY BODACIOUS
:SUGAR COOKIES,
·JUGHAID--

SOON AS
I FINO
A TOTE
BAG

I GOT MY OWN
BUILT-IN

-·
=
-=·. . .

.,._.., , .... -lull olllr
.., tf A!loonJ. We . . . .

-

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1'

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..,_
1111.

ilf

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,, . ,.,

Pastor-lmbue-T~ROW/T

BRIDGE .,

NORI'II
.A.J IU

At the bigbeat level of competition,
lhe mark of an expert is Ute ability to
search out lhe unUStial play that will

+52

ti It

«J) Newa .
&lt;lJ Night Court Q
(!) Nliwtwatch
·

[lle Araonlo HaN 1;1
lor the year ahead by mailing $1 .25 to voiVIng youl'll811 In a joint venture. be
Astro-Graph. c/o this new!!paper, P.O. coirtaln your counterpart can oHer as
Box 91428, Clev8iand, OH 44101·3428. much as you can. II there Is PIII'IIY. the
Be sura to state your rodlac algn.
eni!eavor has a good chance for
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jon. 111 Your success.
' leadersl&gt;lp qualities mlgllt be put 10 CAHCEII (J,u ne 21-.luly 22) PercepBERNICE
good use today w11en YC&gt;Il're callod tlons are extremely Important In the noBEDE OSOL upon to help sort out a situation a'nothar • gotiatlons Of a critical maner. Be sure
hoa on8ll4ld up. You can do 11.
you are perceived as a perso11 Who will
AOUAIIIU8 (olen. 20-l'ell. 11) You can honor your commitments.
belt oaist a
about iillom yooo'll 1-!0 (.luiJ IS-Aug. 221 Arry extra allons
bil concerned today by letting him know you expend loday In being ol assistance
, you're behind him. However, he muat to aomeone iillo ·needs your help will
also be made aware of lhe fact, ~· has not go unnollced . It lfllll create good will
to do cartlln things on his own.
upon which you can draw 'later.
PIICE8 (felt. 211o11Mc~ 20) ~ew llle' VIRQO (""' 1!3 ltpl II) A limited rill&lt;
, and Vltllliy Gin ·be lnluald Into a project might be ,.qulred In order lo lldvanoe a
todey that hu ftounclorlng. ' It -ture In wloich yoli'ft be . , _ to• looks like
have a winner ·on your day. Be COI!rloooul If necnaary, but
handall you don't • - the towel. .· , · don't be rah or loollllt.
.
Dec.,.,,. .
'
.
AR.I (MIIOIIJ1-Aprll 11) ~tlon LIBIIA (llpL :lloOcL D) Something
You could be extremely foitunatoln the and ..-dtlong overdue pertllning to •you've been Wlit1tlng to change but
Yillr ahead In an arrangemenl you'll -ltlng on wltlclo ,..,·ve wort&lt;ed very· have been unable lo do might be Illwhich you
have wllh an IndiVIdual who II ralhar hard could be , . . .led II thll.llmli. 11'1 liNd today .by fOICII hellO no ~. What OGCUrS lltoukl
aarirtg end pf9111'1111ve. He ,may toe'P likely Ia come In apurtalnstead of a
atant flOw.
· be to your llkllog.
·
·
you··~jr-" a dllclrded ln-1.
TAUIIUI (Aprll--11) Bold moa- SCOIIPIO (Oat. M Nu. ll) A per.on

Ill Miami VIce

•llli•i.•••tiri• ·

~~·

ARIUt

Q

~.

remu-•

in order to ..-tve a '*'Y
.tlon.:oooct
good PlY• llogll·
tarloa, treat YoUne1f to il blrtllclay gift.
your ll'ltro-Orjlph predict-

wPrkltlllll•

tilke .thl lnlll8ilve youi'Mif Instead of
wa1ttrtg 011 · othlrl to atari, lhe ball

::Ji. (Mar 21.,_,,., Se~

""'*' eupport you need for •

Wort~~

Nlglrtllne~
aCll eNight
Court

1121. Amattcto Onlaltt
1211 Homa for lhe Holklayo
Baillie anjl tho Boys, Clint
Blacl&lt;, K.T. Oalln, Peul
OverstrHI and RHtllll
Heart -ate Christmas.
(0:30)

Involvement can be~ to your way
of thinking lodoy If you 1110w him It
·1111 P.IIICI!cflln'-18 u will u

In· . your own.,' •

a lpo rtaCenttr
a ~pam TOitlgltt ·

11:31 (lJ a..... 1;1
.11:411]) MOVII: Vn CNa (2:00)
1:1:00 Cll 8 hiiD 1111 Nlglli Stereo.

.

current

QI~,P.I.

[l)ICZI~IItow

II!

::'=arNight

....

aMr•IPNow

.•

is

=~=...~
tonarta
·

ID

+KJIHU

Wltat happened to SoUth playing to-

SOUTH

Eut-West's methods were different
from what we call standard. East's ,
Openinl twodub bid allowed IOtll!
clabl as.well as moderate hip-card 1

'•·

.KH76U
+AQt

Vulnerable: Eut-West
values. West's two-heart respanae was
Dealer:
East
sjmply a 11tural competlag bid, 1101
requlrbl1 East to bid agaia. So South s....
wu DOt IDcllqecl to Mil out, and brave-

ly bid three diamonds. That broupt an
111-coacelved double from Welt.
South won the queen of clubs and

-

z•

Nor..

2•
Dbl

,·
l!aot

1 ..
PU&amp;

Pta
All ,...
•pre-emptlft, 1·11 bi&amp;IH:ard polnll

s•

wu plcturlnl an overtrick wben be

tried to cub the club ace. Welt ruffed
and played ace and a diamond. That
left pCIOI' declarer with only elcht
lricu. You mllht think declarer could
·~ by playin1 diamonds rlpt
away. No. West wvuld take the leCOIId
diamond and lead a spade. East would
win and play the klnl of clul111, rufflal
oat declarer's ace, and a sullllequeot
club trick would stiU Mt the contract.
Instead at trlct two 114!c!larer mut
simply play the aiDe of clullll from his

..

•u
•s

day's doubled contract.

Opening lead:

.. .

+ 10

'------------'

.

. .
.
·
band. Sure, East will win lhe jack, btll
what then? With a heart bact, declar- ·
er will take the ace ud ruff a bearll
and then play the club ac:e. West cad
ruff, but dummy.'s Q-10 will be tbeni
to ovemtff, and South wiU duly mall:e
his nine tricu.

•

ACROSS
42 Utter
1 Do ring
43 01derly
p11cticing DOWN
5 Drinks
1 Vegas
quickly
machines
2 Trial
10 Cruise
episodes
ship
12Good
3 Beast
4 Gun lhe
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�The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

Ohio. Lottery·
6 days
until
Christmas

Tuesday, December 18, 1990
•

Page-10

· ••• _ _ _ ____;_
By _
Brian.
J, _
R~
_
-..;.
Consider th lS
If you haven't yet trimmed your
Christmas tree, I might suggest that
you drop whatever you are doing
{after you finish reading the
newspaper, that is) and get started
on it
As my contribution to , your
holiday environment, . !----though I
would take a small
of this
· space and enlighten you with some
Christmas tree trivia.
Did you know that over 36 million American families will
celebrate Christmas with a live
Christmas 1ree?
The Christmas tree is used as a
. symbol of life, and originated long
before Christianity.
Egyptians
brought
· palm
branches into their hqme.s on the
shortest day of the year in December and Druid priests decomted
' mighty oak trees with golden appies for .their winter solstice festivities.
In the middle ages, the Paradis
tree, an evergreen hung with red
apples, was the symbol of the thenpopular Feast of Adam and Eve,
held on Christmas Eve.
The first recorded reference to
our Christmas tree dates back to
16th century Gennany, where
families, both rich and poor,
decorated fir trees with colored
paper, fruif and candy. _
. .
. Theii JJ?pularity grew srates1de
m the m1d 19th century, when

Part

PLAY TO BE PRESENTED • Taldng roles in .
''The Reason of Christmas" to be presented at 7 ·
p.m. each evening WednesdaY 11\roligb Saturday

Hillside to present play

Charles Minnegrode intrOduced the
If you have decided to buy a real
custom of decomting trees in Wil- tree, be sure to keep it watered and
liarnsburg, Virginia.
place it away from heat sources
The first retail ~ lot was begun (that includes TV ~ and other
in 1851, when Mark Carr hauled an appliances!) .
o~en-driven cart loaded with trees
--'''--· from · the Catskills· to New York
Those people involved with th~
City.
volunteer fire department a\
The White House Christmas Tree Syracuse have the right idea. The
was begun in the 19th century, as folks there are inviting anyone with
weD, when the 14th President of loved ones ·in Opemtion Desert
the United States, Franklin Pierce, Shield to pin a yeDow ribbon on
brought the tradition to the one of the decorated Christmas
president's home. In 1923, Presi- trees in front of the firehouse.
·dent Calvin Coolidge staned lightIrdoesq't take long to think of
ing the tree in a ceremonious way.
someone you know whc is involThe Ohio Christmas Tree As- ved in the activity in the middle
sociation says nat to worry about , east, and I am sure that you'll agree
the environmental impact of buying that this is a thoughtful way to
a real tree, since two to three rem em beithem · durirtg
the
seedlings are planted for . each holidays.
Christmas tree cut, and since most
Christmas trees come from ·farms
Christmas caroling is underway
which grow trees for that reason , in Pomeroy's business district. The
and not from forests. ·
Meigs County Choir, unde~ the
Of course, it. doesn 't take a direction of Lois Burt, kicked
genius to realize that real Christmas things off on Sunday; the Meigs_
trees are biodegradeable - branches High School Band will play on the
can be removed and used for parking lot stage at 5 p.m. on
mulch, and the trunk can be chop- Tuesday night, and the Me1gs High
ped and used for mulch, too.
School Choir will perfonn after the
If you're not that ambitious, you band at 5:20p.m. The Youth United
can also place the tree in the garden for Christ w1D take to Main Street
after the holidays and use the tree · on Thursday.
·
as a bird feeder and shelter. (Don't
forget, you can also b~y living trees
which can be planted m the yard after the holidays.)

The first annual Christmas play Erica Peck, and Joe Humphrey, Jr.
will be presented at the Hillside
After that "The Reason of
Baptist Church at 7 p.m. Wednes- Christmas" will .be presented by
day through Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Jones, Miss AnThe program will begin with the gie Willett, Joshua Jones, Ryan
sounds of the season by the Hillside Clonch, David Johnson.
Baptist Carolers. A play, "Jesus'
The Rev. Jams R. Aeree, Sr., pastor,
invites the public 10 attend the
Birthday Cake" will be. JX:rformed
by the children of the Hills1de Bap- programs of the church locat¢d on
~t Church, Joshua ones, Michelle · State Route 143 just off Route 7. A
Stahl, Kenny Large, Caleb Jones, staffed and equipped nursery is
Peter Jones, Valone Clonch, provided.
Heather Hood, Kandis Humphrey,

It's the SERIES ONE .
business Polley...
packaged protection for
retan stores, offices,
churches, apartments,
drur stores. Simplified
Ia coateat, coavealeat.
Ia format and very
affordable.

J_

Chester Council meets

A holiday dinner pany at Crows
enjoyed by members of ·tile Past
Councilors Club of Chester Council
323, Daughters of America, was
followed by a Christmas program
and gift exchange at the hall.
Enna Cleland gave the blessing
preceding the dinner. At the hall
gifts were exchanged around a
lighted Christmas tree.
Mrs. Cleland read "Is There
Room?" which was followed by the
Lord's Prayer and pledge. ro . the
American flag given ih unison. In
response to roll call members
talked abouttheir holiday shopping
experiences.
It was noted that at the Jan: 9
meeting new officers will be installed. Jean Frederick and Elizabeth
Hayes gave officer's repons.
The
program
by
Lam
Damewood and Ethel Orr consisted

of readings by -Thelma White,
Charlotte Grant, Esther Smith, Jo
Ann Baum, Betty Roush, and Enna
Cleland. There was group singing
of carols with Lorn Damewood at
the piano.
Door prizes were won l&gt;Y Betty
Roush and Elizabeth Hayes. En)la
Cleland and Dorothy Myers served
· refreshments.
WINNERS - Diane McVey won tbe doD
· Others atlending were Faye
donated
by the Middleton Doll Co. of Belpre,
Kirkhart, Opal Hollon, Mary K.
.
and
Lynn
Starkey, the $100 U. S. Savings Bond
Holter, Mae McPeek, Marcia
donated
by
Farmer's Bank of Pomeroy, In a
Keller, Lalira Mae Nice, Com
fund
raising
project
for the Big Brothers-Big SisBeegle, Betty Young, Sadie: Trusters
of
Meigs,
Gallia,
Jackson, and Mason
sell,
Inzy
Newell,
Pauline
Ridenour, Alta Ballard, Goldie
Frederick, Margaret Amberger,
Virginia Lee, and Ada Bissell,
members, and guests, Mary Jo Bar·
ringer, Beulah Maxey, Shirley
Beegle, Mary Newell, and Bonnie
Landers.

Announcements
Syra«:use Christmas program
Syracuse Elementary School
Christmas program, "Three Wee
Kings" wiD be held on Thursday at
?p.m.

Church program
A children's Christmas program
will be presented on Wednesday at
7:30 p.m. at the Calvary Pilgrim
Chapel on Srate Routel43. Rev.
Victor Roush invites the public.

Alumni Game
The Meigs Basketball program
will hold an Alumni Baskethall
game on January 12 at 6 P:m. For
information, call Gordon F1sber at
992-2158 or Rick Edwards.
'
Garden Club
The Wildwood Garden Club wiD
hold its Christmas dinner at 6:30
p.m. on Wednesday evening at The
Mason Family Restaurant.

•
Christmas P.arty
The Middlepon Child Conservation. League will hold their annual
Christmas dinner and party on
Thursday at 6:30 p.m. at the Rock
Springs United Methodist Church.
Bring gifts and food for needy
family. There will be an ornament
exchange and decomted packages
will be judged.

.

Community calendar
Cominunity Calendar items
ppear
two days before an event
11
and the day of that event. Items
must be received in advance to
insure publication in the calen·
dar.
TUESDAY
POMEROY - The Xi Gamma
Mu Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority will meet Tuesday at 7:30
p.m. at the home of Annie ChaP.·
man for a Christmas dinner and g1ft
exchange.
ROCK SPRINGS
The
Christmas dinner for ·the Rock
Springs Beuer Health Club will be
held Tuesday at noon at the Rock
Springs United Methodist Church.
A gift exchange wiD be held.

SYRACUSE - The Symcuse
Third Wednesday Homemakers
Club will meet Wednesday at I
p.m. at the Presbyterian Church.
REEDSVILLE - The Eastern
Academic· Bocisters will meet Wednesday at 7 p.m. in the high school
cafeteria.
POMEROY • A children's
Christmas pro~ at 7:30 p.m. at
Calvary Pilgnm Chapel on State
Route 143. Rev. Victor Roush invites the public.
THURSDAY

RACINE - Regular meeting of
Racine Post 602 American Legion
on Thursday at 7:30p.m. Plans wiD
be made 10. sack candy and fruit for
nursing home. Refreshments to be
served following meeting.
·

MIDDLEPORT • The Middleport
Elementary
School's
Christmas play at 7 p.m. on
. SYRACUSE - Syracuse ElemenTuesday 31 Meigs Junior High tary School Christmas program
School. Public invited.
"Three Wee Kings" at 7 p.m.
WEDNESDAY

ROCK SPRINGS - The Mid-

RACINE - The children of the dleport

Child
Conservation
Racine Baptist Church will present League's annual Christmas dinner
their Christmas program on Wed· and party on lbunday at 6:30 p.m.
nesday at 7:30p.m.
at the Rock Springs United
Methodist Church. Bring gifts and
. POMEROY " The Wildwood food for needy families. There wiD
G8l]len Club ChristmaS dinner 31 be an ornament exchange and
6:30 p.m. • Mason Fnily Res- decorated paclcages will be judged.

INIDL

STATE AUTO
OFFERS
SOMETHING
SPECIAL

214 EAST MAIN ST.
I'OIIEIOY
9412·6617
Counties. PrOceeds !'rom the rund raiser will be
used to match children in the four counties li'om
single parent families with adult volunteers. Pictured left to right are July Sofranko, BBIBS Ex·
ecutive director; Diane McVey, Lynn Starkey,
and Nancy Pierce, BB/BS Board member.

. '

Pick-3: 682
Pick-4: 7999
Cards: 7-H;
2-C; 7-D; and 6-S

•
Vol.41, No.189
Copyrighted 1990

Tonleh&amp;, partly cloudy with
the low 3~ to to. UK"hl east
winds becoming southeast.
Thursday, Increasing cloud·
!ness, breezy and unseasona·
bly mild With the high around
60. &lt;;hance ol rain 20 pereenl.

•

'

2 Soctiono. 18 Pages

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, December 19, 1990

.

26 Cento

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

House passes·
budget bill;
-Senate next
COLUMSUS, Ohio (UPI) of the solution, described the
Legislation scraping together· projected $271 million deficit as a
"hiccup" In the overall $27 billion
$191 m!llion to close a .hole lrl tbe
state b~dget by June 30 cleared state budget .
·The greatest objections,
the Ohio House Tuesday, 62-30,
despite complaints (hat spending chiefly to th~ use of the lottery
money, came from the Republl·
shoull;l be further curtailed:
The bill went immediately to can side of the aisle.
Rep. Richard Rench, R-MIIan,
the Senate for a Finance Commit·
said lawmakers made a ''solemn
tee hearing Tuesday evening.
The Republican-controlled Sepr9mise" to the PeoPle of Ohio
nate is expected to act favorably
that lottery funds would be \(sed
only for education. "I think we
Wednesday or Thursday on the
budget-balancing plan, which
ought to beiooking at cuts," he
was arranged In private last
sal_d.
.
,
week by House Democratic and • Renchsuggested4percentcuts _.,
in the admlnstrative budgets of
Senate GOP leaders and the
the Ohio Board of Regents and
administration of Gov . Richard
Celeste.
·
Oliio Department· of Education, .
TRYING TO UNTANGLE THE BARGES - Twelve barges
' State legiSlators plan to adand reductions Ill appropriations
loaded
full of coal .got away from Its tow late 'l'llesday nl(lht when
journ Thursday for the reto · the Ohl.o Arts Council, the
·
the
powering
vessel lost an eliglne. None of tile barges went over
. mainder of the yeaf. The 119th
Uniform Accounting Network.
the
rollers
at
the
Gallipolis Dam, but were jammed up against 11.
session.of the General Assembly
and public transP\)rtatlongrants,
The American Commercial Barge Une_ol Jeffersonville, Ind., low
-convenes Jan. 7.
among ·other things.
The stale Office of Budget and
. Rep; JoAnn Davidson, R·
, Management determined that
Reynoldsburg, offered an
dwindling revenues and unantici· . amendment canc.ellng the $41
pated expenditures, particularly
million In lottery profits and ·
By United Press International
in the area of welfare and
replacing it with$41 million more,
With winter several days
Medicaid, would put a $271
Iron\ the $360 million ''rainy
away, . brutally cold . weather
mUlioll gap In the budget by
day" fund.
inCluding wind chill factors of
June.
aut her amendment was tabled
minus
45 dem:ees froze !he West
The governor made selective 4 liy majority "'Democrats atte.r
"
Weonesl!pJr,1ftillerivers fiooded
- percent spending cuts totaling
Sweeney said raiding the savings ·
't heir banks ''!n 'thl! ' Midwest
almost $80 million, leaving the
account could endanger tbe rat·
following a day of lieavyrain.
Legislature to do the rest.
.
lng of Ohio's bonds.
·
Winter weather advisories
To balance the budget, the
Rep. Robert Netzley, R·Laura,
were
up from Washington to
legislators are counting on $18
said that by failing to m~ke
Soutb Dakota as snow and high
mUiion in Interest on the stale's
further cu !backs, the Legislature
winds hit Oregon, Utah, Monsavings account, $33. m!lllon In
is forcing Gov:-elect George
tana, Idaho, Colorado and Netrust funds no longer needed to
Voinovich to raise taxes.
braska,
making driving
pay' for the state's 1985 savings
Sweeney scoffed at this, saying
dangerous.
. and loan crisis, and $22.6 ml!Uon
the budget balancing package
Anarcticcoldfrontaccompanin deferred prize money from the
was put together with the approled
by winds reaching 20 mph
state lottery.
val of Republican senators. He
dropped wind chill. factors to ·
In addition, the state is saving noted that Gov. Richard Celeste
near minus 45 degrees in Wyom$9.7 million by closing an Income faced a $528 million deficit when
ingwbileastormdutnpeduptolO
Valerie
Connolly
tax loophole on out-of-state he took ·office in 1983. "We are
inches of snow on the mountains ·
UCA 111 Star .
earnings.
giving the next governor
and
up to .8 Inches at lower.
Ttie largest transfers will be balanced budget," said Sweeney.
·
left to the discretion of·the new
In other 'action, the House
budget director: $~million from concurred, 90-2, in Senate
t)le state's "rainy day" fund and changes to a long-stalled blll
$41 million from excess lottery establishing a statewide compuWestminster's New Year's Parade,
Valerie Connolly, daughter of
profits, if necessary, In ApriL
terized fingerprint network for Mr. and Mrs. George Connolly,
highlight of the trip for the All
Rep . . Patrick Sweeney, D· crime fighting. The bill now goes
Stars.
Syracuse, will be in London,
Cleyeland, one of the architects to the governor.
Miss Connolly will leave from
England, Dec._26 to Jan. 2, as a part
Pittsburgh by British Airways on an
of the Universal Cheerleaders Asovernight
flight the day after
sociation All Stars.
Christmas.
The Southern High School
Practice sessions will be held
sophomore was 'selected to go on
prior
to the paride, but there has
the trip during the Ohio University
also
been
time set aside for touring.
· cheerleading camp this past sum·
·girls
will spend their first day
The
The National Weather Selvice has issued a flood warning for the
mer on the basis of her ~or­
getting
a
panommic view of the
Ohio River at Parkersburg, W.Va., Pomeroy, and ?Omt Pleasant,
mance tryouts. She will be JOining
London,
then
will visit .St. Paul's
several hw\dred cheerleaders frtlm
W.Va.
.
f
·
ed
.
cathedral.
the
rower
of Londo~, the
A spokesperson from the Huntington Corps o Engmeers stat
across the nation.
River
Thames,
London
Bndge,
Following · their selection, the
Wednesday morning that the river should crest m POmeroy someWarwick
Castle,
Stratford
Upon
time Thursday morning between 45 and 47 feet. Flood stage m
cheerleaders were sent video tapes
Avon, Windsor Castle and Village
of the routines they were to learn in
Pomerpy is 46 feet.
and Oxford.
preparation for the Lord Mayor of
Continued on page 8

was making a downriver approacll when It lost power and went
. outSide the lock wallis~ 'a ccording to Lockmaster Pal Wherle.
Rising waters on the Ohio River are creating a problem lor the
rescue · but operatloDS are expected to be complete sometbne
Wedn~ay afternoon, he said. ( OVP photo by Stephen Wilson)

Freezing in· West, floods&gt;in Midwest

a

Local youth chosen for tour

Local news briefs.-.....,

Ohio River Flood Warning

elevations.
but the flooding was minor as
High ·winds caused blowing _ engineers adjusted the flow to
snow in central Washington,
control heavy runoff aqdto ·help
cutting visibility to an eighth of a
20 barges in· trouble at the
mile and closing highways near
Galllpolis Dam. ..
_ " . . .
·Spokane.;- while slm1lar oonm,- -- - :ur Ohllr,' tr60d 'Wm-nlii!;S were ·
lions and wind chills near minus
issued-IIi several places along the
30 hit Idaho .
Great Miami and Scioto rivers
The rough weather stretched
but water rose only slightly
as far east as South Dakota,
above flood stage.
where light snow was falling and . A cold front moving across
temperatures dropped tominus7 . North Carolina . We~nesday
degrees with winds gusting to 30
morning prompted a small craft
mph.
advisory along the coast while
Water rather than ice was the
patchy fog formed in southeast
main concern in . Ohio, West
Kentucky and northwest
VIrginia and Indiana where
Alabama.
rivers flooded their banks, sendPartly cloudy skies and lows in
ing water flowing over low-lying
the 40s were reported in Los
areas .
Angeles. where a cold frontwa,s
The Ohio River along the
expected to pass through bringOhio-West Vlrglna border was . · ing high winds and possibly some
over Its banks In several places · rain.

Record rains in Ohio
By United Press Internallonal
Heavy rainfall throughout
most of Ohio tbls week broke a
110-year·old record in Cincinnati
and made 1990 thewettestyear of
the century in Columbus .
Clncinnatl, with 1.9 Inches of
rain Tuesday, broke its annual
rainfall record with 54.7 Inches.
The old mark of 54.67 inches·was
set In 1880:
·
The 1.5 Inches of rain recorded
In Columbus this week pushed
the rainfall to 50.04 Inches,
eclipsing the old mark of 49.17 set
In 1979.

Cleveland' s precipitation stood
Wednesday at 48 :49lnches for tbe
year. short of the record of 53.51
inches set In 1871 but the third
highest total ever.
Flood watches were issued for
several areas of Ohio.
The rain ended over western
Ohio Tuesday night and over tbe
eastern portions by midnight.
Skies cleared In the western and
cen-tral regions of the state,
allowing the mercury drop Into
the upper 20s. The cloudy areas
of the east had readings in the
30s.

Baghdad criticizes EC for rejecting meeting
By LEE STOKES
United Press International ·
Iraq lashed out Wednesday at
the 12-natlon European Community for refusing to meet with
Iraqi Foreign Minister Tariq
Aziz, and Egyptian news reports
said :rraq was bolstering Its
forces In Kuwait with troops
moved from the border with
Syria. ·
Reports of the Iraqi buildup in·
Kuwait surfaced shortly before
Defense Secretary Dick Cheney
and Colin Powell, chaitman of
the Joint Chiefs of Staff, were due ..
to arrive in Saudi Arabia to meet
with U.S. troops and military
strategists. ·
Egypt's Middle ·East · News
Agency reported Wednesday
that Iraq had withdrawn large
numbers ot Its troops deployed
along Its border with Syria to
bolster Its troops In Kuwait. .
In a dispatch from the Syrian
capital . of Damascus, MENA
quoted sources In the border
. region as saying, "armorel;~ Iraqi
"troops, tanka and artillery units
• had been withdrawn to CCCII pied
Kuwait.':
I

·t

Regional' observers . sal~ the
unconfirmed Iraqi reinforce·ment of Its 430,000-strong force IJI
Kuwait and southern Iraq was an ·
apparent sign Baghdad was
preparing for a U.S.-led attack
after the Jan. 15 deadline set by
the U.N. Security Council for
Iraq's withdraw from the oil-rich
emirate.
Earlier Wednesday, Iraq
Issued a statement condemning
the EUropean Community for Its
refusal to meet with Aziz before
the Iraqi Foreign Minister had
held talks in Washington -with
President Bush.
Plans· for the Aziz-Bush talks
and a • reciprocal meeting . in
Baghdad between Secretary of ·
State James Baker and traqi
President Saddam Hussein have
been put on hokl because Baghad
and Washington have yet to
agree on dates for the meetings.
'The European Community's
action demonstrates that It Is
appeasing the United States and
its aggressive poDcies," said
Baghdad Radio, mDnltored In
Cairo.
·
The state-owned radio quoted a

.

.

I

I

foreign ministry spokesman ·as
saying the EC action Ignored
"European Interests In tbe Mid·
die East" and warned Europeans
they would regret their action.
U.S. Secretary of State James
Baker told tbe mllllsters earlier
In the day the United States_
would not oppose a meeting
between Aziz and the EC, as long
as Iraq did not receive ."milled
messages from the countries
involved."
Some EC countries wanted the
meeting to go ahead, but British
Forelgu Secretary Douglas Hurd
opposed It, pointing out that this
would gtve Saddam the opportunIty to say tbealllanceconfronting
him over Kuwait was crumbling.
Baker, In Brussels for a meetIng of NATO foreign ministers,
_also said he expected Iraq to
attempt "diplomatic sleights-ofhand" In the coming weeks and
reiterated that a partial Iraqi
withdrawal from Kuwait was
unacceptable.
Proposed meetings between
Aziz auCI Bush in W&amp;abington and
between Baker and Iraqi Pres!·
dent Saddam Hussein In Bagh-

dad have been stymied as the two
Michells talks and supported all
date of his trip was not released.
countries argue about appropIri otber developments:
diplomatic efforts toward peace.
riate dates, 28 days before the
"The one thing we do discour•
U.N. deadline.
age . are discordant messages ,
Iranian Presldfnl Akbar
Excerpts of an Interview with
mixed messages or mixed slgHashemi·Ralsanjani said Iran
Saddam taped In Baghdad ear- , ·nals," he said. "The message
waS•opposed to a ·u.s. attack on
Her ~ere released Tuesday fn '!bat's going to go to the Iraqis
Iraq, but that Baghdad would be
Ankara by Turkish state televi- must be a unlfrom message,
responsible .If war broke out in
sion. Saddam told the interthe region, the official Islamic
which Is tha.t they must comply
viewer, "There is no need lor vs
with the United Nations resoluRepublic News Agency reported.
to go to Washington If Bush is to
!Ions In full."
-Britain's Prince Charles will
repeat to us the U.N. Security
At the Pentagon. Spokeman
visit British troops in Saudi
Council resolutions." The resoluPete Williams said the U.S.
Arabia over the weekend in a trip .
tions · call for the complete
forces In the Gulf region- which
arranged at his request, the
withdrawal of Iraq from Kuwait,
British Defense Ministry said.
now total more than 270,000 which it invaded Aug. 2.
-Egypt's Middle East News
will be prepared to force Iraq out
Turkish television said the fuD
of Kuwait-on Jan. 15.
Agency reported that the foreign
interview would be aired Wed·
He said the United States rrlinister of Yugoslavia will lead
nesday nlght.lt did not say when
"absolutely" would be ready lor a delegation ol non-aligned counthe interview was taped.
offenslve action on that day.
tries to Baghdad on . a peace
The EC had earlier this month
The U.S. troops now in the miSsion that sources In Baghdad
agreed that Azlz would meet .with
region are joined by about 220,000 said Saddam welcomed.
EC President Gianni de Mlchelis,
a!Ued forces, and the U.S. conthe foreign minister of 'I taly,
tingent is expected to grow to
-Iraq said 626 chlldren had
after his talks with Bush in
abpu~ 430,000 by mid January or
died during the past month as a
Washington. The ministers said
early .February.
result of the economic embargo
Saturday they would not chan_g e
In a related . development,
Imposed against Iraq by the
the ground rules for the proiJOsed administration officials said United Nations following the
EC meeting.
VIce President Dan Quayle wilt , Invasion, according to a report
·Baker said . the United States
visit U.S. troops In Saudi Arabia -from . the official Iraqi new!{
would not 'object to the Azlz-de
sometime after Christmas. The agency INA.'

'v

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