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Page-12-Th8 Daily Sentinel

Monday. December 14. 1987-

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Consumer group: 1,000 brands · of alcohol
WASHINGTON (UPI ) - More
than 1,000 brands of alcoholic
beverages contain potentially
hazardous levels of the cancercausing chemical urethane but
the Food and Drug Administration has taken nQ action, a
consumer.group said today .
The Center for Science ln the
Publlc Interest released a 70·
page report titled "Tainted
Booze" showing that a number of

bourbons, sherries, fruit bran· tiona! Research Council said,
dies, whiskeys and table and "There Is no doubt whatsoever
dessert wines, Including some that urethane poses a real cancer
California products, contained risk to regular drinkers. My
urethane.
concern is whether regulatory
The chemical Is not an additive action will be tak_en promptly
and Is formed spontaneously, but enough to save some lives."
~o far mysteriously, In the
The consumer group said ure·
manufacture of the alcoholic thane levels In more than 100
beverages.
beverages sold In the United
Marvin Schneiderman, a States reached levels in excess of
cancer specialist with the Na- . limits set by the Canadian
government two years ago.

Soviet urges joint odyssey
going to Mars in year 200 I

coJttain~ urethane

•

The group said the FDA had products known to exceed the
not removed these products from Canadian urethane limits, an
the market and had not public· FDA spokesman said the agency
was actively working with bever!zed their names.
The group said the produc ts age Industry scientists to figure
Included certain Gallo and Chris- out specific techniques to ellmi·
tian Brothers 's herries, Almaden nate or substantially redu ce
and Paul · Masson table wines, urethane In alcoholi c beverages.
Jim Beam and Early Times The spokesman said urethane
levels in the beverages presented
bourbons, and Foster beer.
In a letter to the FDA commis- no significant risk to consumers.
John DeLuca, president of the
sioner, the group said some FDA
scientists have said the Canadian Wine Institute, said last July that
government underestimated the industry scientists were focusing
levels of urethane that are risky. on heat and levels of arginine, an
In July, when the consumer · amino acid, as possible factors In
group expanded an earlier list of the formation of urethane.

. DeLuca pointed out, "Mllllons
of people have been drinking
wine for thousands of years,"
and added the only thing that had
changed was the technology for ·
detecting minute traces of sub·
stances. He charged the consumer group "was playing a
numbers game at the expense of
Industry."
' 'People should be able to drink
without imbibing powerful carb'\ogens," countered Michael Jac·
obson, executive director of
CSPI. "The FDA Is derellct In
delaying, seemingly endless, the
protection of consumers."

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Sentinel News Staff

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tures overnight, most of the snow
was expected to melt early today
in the northern section of ·the
state, said forecasters.
Rain will fall statewide during
the early-morning hours today ,
they said .
the national - chic ago, milwau kee airports
closed; air traffic controllers
abandon tower )
Around Tl)e Nation
By ALAN YONAN JR.
United Press International
A killer storm that rampaged
east-from the Rockies , knocking
a plane from the sky and

triggering · devastating torna·
does , swept today Into the Great
La kes region with heavy snow
and 60-mph wind gusts , shutting
down Chicago's O'Hare International Airport.
At least 13 deaths have been
blamed on the bizarre mlx of
tornadoes, cold and record snow
produced by the first major
winter storm of the season for the
central United States.
The blizzard-llke storm howled
to life in ·the southern Rockies
du ring the weekend and spread
snow Monday across the Plains
and Into the Mississippi Valley
before reaching the Great Lakes
.today.

. Air traffic controllers at
O'Hare were forced to abandon
the tower briefly early today as
wind gust at the airport broke the
60-mph mark. The airport officially shut down at 5 a.m. when
blowing snow and high winds
reduced visibility to near zero.
Seven inches of wet, heavy snow
were reported at O'Hare as of
5: 30 a .m . ·
Am erican Airlines canceled ali
of its flights Into and out of
Chicago and airport officiirls
predicted other airlines would
follow suit.
Milwaukee's Mitchell International Airport was also closed
as crews·worked to clear at

least one runway for outbound
fli ghts.
Winter storm warnings were
up for Illinois, Wisconsin, southern Michigan and Minnesota.
The Nationa l Weather Service
said cold air from the same
storm system clashed with
warmer air to the ea st Monday
night and unleashed a tornado
that sla shed through West Me mphis, Ark.
The twis ter wrecked homes
and businesses alon g 15 blocks of
a downtown street, killing at
least five people and injured 160,
including 30 who had , to be
hospitalized , authorities sa id.
A tornado demolished another

10 to 15 homes across the
Mississippi River in Memphis,
Tenn.
' ')leople have been lost from
loved ones and fri ends," said
admissions supervisor Myrna
Clark at Crittenden Memorial
Hospital in West Memphis .
" We've seen some still wandering around looking."
In Illinois, state pollee said
snow had causes scores of
highway wrecks and pileups
even before the morning rush
and state trooper Tommie Artis
urged motorist s to "just stay
home. "

Transportation Department
Continued on page 5

mediation session Dec. 7, but
which MLTA denies having
heard about until the offer was
printed ln the newspaper. as
released by the board. Morris
said Saturday the board stands
by the
statement that the
proposal was put to the federal
mediator on Dec. 7, and that the
federal mediator told them (the
board) he had discussed ele·
ments of the proposal with

members of the MLTA negotiatIng team .
Without reading the proposal
herself, Slavin could not be sure
if the proposal was the same as
the one printed in the newspaper
following the Dec. 7 meeting.
Meigs teachers have been off
the job since Nov. 6 and since that
time, proposals and counter
proposals have been offered
Morris said. The strike is in Its
26th school day today.

Morri~ said the goal of the
Board ls to reopen schools "as
soon as possible' ' using substitutes. Although the Board hopes
arrangements can be made to
resume classes this week, as yet,
''no decision has been made' ' by
the Board, he added.
The board meets In regular
session tonight (Tuesday), 7
p.m., at the administration building In Middleport.
·

facility at minimum wages; and
short and longterm maintenance
of the faclllty .
'·
In weighing the pros and cons,
council said that the size of the
course can be adapted to fit a
corner space in the park which is
not used as frequently as other
areas, and that parking is al ready a problem and will con·
tinue to be untll council takes
steps to create more parking.
As far as maintaining the
facility and supervising em· .
ployees, recreation committee
members said they would do
their best to run· the course
properly if councll did choose to
have the course constructed.

In other business, Mayor Fred
Hoffman reported that he received a letter from the Ohio
Department of Transportation
regarding funding guarantees
for the village-sponsored subsidized taxi service. Hoffman reported that the taxi-service will
operate this coming year on
nearly a $200,000 budget, including $.151,617 from state and
federal sources, $40,000 from the
sale of fare tokens and local
match money of $3,500 from the
county commissioners and $1,800
from Pomeroy Village. The fund ·
ing for the taxi-service has grown
considerably since the operation
began in 1985, Hoffman said.
Environmental Protection
Agency approval of plans and
specifications for improvements
to the village sewage system has
been received. The improvements will bring the system into
compliance with state and fed eral regula lions and construction
should begin by mid-January ln
order to finish by July 1, the
compliance deadline. Council
moved to begin advertising for
bids for reconstruction of a
manhole on Race St., part of the
sewage system update, and to
pay the firm of Floyd Brown and
Associates, of Marlon and Can ton, $30,600 for engineering costs
related to the project.

Hoffman reported that : the
state audit of village funds has
been completed. Written copies
of the audit should be available in
January Hoffman said.
Council authorized Hoffman to
ask for a one-month extension of
coverage from Blue Cross in
order to allow council t.o check on
coverage from other firms. Middleport's Blue Cross rates are
scheduled to Increase 2'3 percent
for family coverage, going from
$233 to $287 per month. Blue
Cross costs were $33,000 this
year, reported Mayor Hoffman ,
but will go to $42,000 In 1988.
Hence the decision was made to
shop a'_round for medical coverage, before committing to Blue
Cross for another year.
Council also completed the
following matters;
Made plans to meet as soon as
possible with officials in Phlllipi,
W.Va. to discuss aspects of that
community 's municipally operated cable television .
Approved end-ofCthe -year
transfers of funds to balance out
accounts.

...

And unless it becomes neces·
sa ry to meet on the next regu·
larly scheduled date of Dec. 28,
canceled that meeting, and will
not meet again until the second
Monday in January .

Barley trial gets underway in Meigs Court

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, December 15, 1987

' 1!-PP!ll.'Prs that . Mlddl~port's
Hartinger Park will be getting a
mlnature golf course sometime
· In the near future.
Middleport Village Council,
meeting Monday night, unanimously accepted a bid of $14,570
from MGI Mini,Golflnc., Jessup,
Pa ., to Install ·an 18-ho)e mlulcourse with a riverboat theme,
and to enter intoa$17 ,0001oanfor
Installation costs and a fence .
The loan with Central Trus t
would · be at two percent below
prime on a five-year basis with
repayment of $334.62 a month.
The decision by council to
Council finally voted to go with
. move ahead with the mini-course
was made following lengthy the course, with Councildiscussion with Judy Crooks and members Dewey Horton , James
John Hood, members of the Ciatworthy and Bob Gilmore all
Middleport Recreation Commit- staling they felt the course could
tee. Committee members were be successful and would appeal
invited to the mee1ing to present to people of all ages .
Christmas bonuses of $200 for
their views on the mini-course
18 full-time villa ge employees
proposal .
Points of concern to both and $100 for five . part-time
recreation committee members · employees were approved by the
and council members seemed to Board, and the third and final
coincide - the usage of much of reading of an ordinance to
the · park's remaining open increase pay to councllmembers
space; ·lnadeqate parking which from $12 a meeting to $25, to
could possibly become a safety council president from $14 to $30,
. problem; finding enough depen - and board of public affairs
dable employees 1o operate the members from $8 to $15 .

8 OZ. SIZE

REG. 5229
REG. S289
REG. S339
REG. S359
REG.·S699

By Unlled Press International
Winter storm warnings were
issued in northwestern Ohio for
Monday night by the N atlonal
Weather Service, and winter
weather advisories were in effect
for ·the northeastern portion of
the state.
Northern Ohio had 1-2 Inches of
snow on the ground late Monday
evening, and It was piling up
quickly .
Forecasters said more than 4
Inches of snow would accumulate
In the northwestern part of the
state overnight Northeastern
Ohio was expected to. get 2-3
Inches. ·
Because of rising tempera-

DISPOSABLE
RAltJIIS

THERAPEUTIC
MIIIERAL ICE

'•

enttne

Hartinger P~k · may get minature golf course

SIUETTE

"C" OR "0" CEHPKG. OF Z OR
9 WJU-&amp;IHIIIE I'MCK

'

at y

e

A formal contract proposal
was sent Monday to Meigs Local
Teachers' Association President
Mike Wilfong, according to
Meigs Superintendent Dan
Morris.
Rita Slavin, ofMLTA, reported
this morning that Wilfong did
receive a proposal by certified
maiL
Morris said the proposal is the
same one the Meigs Board of
Education says they offered at a

:&amp;!i:@

9 ......................................... 7:00 TO 8:00
14 .... .... ............. .. ................ 7:00 TO 8:30
17 ................................. : ..... 7:00 TO 8:30
19 ....................................... 2:00 TO 4:00
22 ....................................... 7:00 TO 8:00

8 .... ...... ........ .. ..................... 7:00 TO
11 ................... .. .................. 7:00 TO
13 .............................. ......... 2:00 TO
16 ....... .......... .. ......... ..... ...... 7:00 TO
21 .... .... ...... ... ....... .. .. .. ......... 7:00 TO

•

Teachers .recetve formal contract offer

COMTREX

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
DECEMBER
DECEMBER
DECEMBER
DECEMBER
DECEMBER

•

Windy tonight. Scattered
snow flurries , Low in mid 20s.
Continued windy Wednesday.

•

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t:tiiHJH 11/XruRE

POINT PLEASANT STORE
DECEMBER
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Winter stonns spread into Ohio early today

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Vot.38, No.1 52
Cop ,· htod 1987

WASHINGTON &lt;UPI ) - On that landed on Mars in 1976 was up radioactive debris at
the heels of a U.S;-USSR space an immobile sampler, unable to Chernobyl.
agreement, a top Soviet space rove the face of the planet.
· Sagdeyev said constructing the
official has suggested the two Sagdeyev said constructing a Martian rover would probably
countries cement scientific coop· roving probe weuld probably cost $1 billion, and ·a mission to
eration with a joint manned .mean designing a "smart" veh!· return soli samples to Earth
mission to Mars in 2001.
cle that could use artificial "would probably cost less than$5
Roald Sagdeyev, the head of intelligence to solve movement billion."
the Soviet Space Research Insti· puzzles as lt encountered obstaSagdeyev, an adviser on space
tute, said Sunday a joint mission cles ln its path.
Issues to Soviet leader Mikhail
to Mars would cost " far below
Complex computer programs Gorbachev, said, "This joint
what our two countries now would have to be bullt into the space effort would not only
spend annually on nuclear rover because It would take broaden the dialogue that Is now
arms," and could be done in minutes formanlpulatlngslgnals under way between our two
stages, leading up to " the final from Earth to reach Mars, countries, but also bring a new
:stage- a major, manned expedl- Sagdeyev said ·American scient· dimension to it.
ists have more expefJence with
"If our dialogue remains based
lion to Mars."
••- Sagdeyev said this fina l stage the artificial Intelligence that on arms control, then only
''would cost $50 billion to $100 would be used, while the Soviets military aspects wlll be involved
· billion," and, "if all goes well might actually. · construct the . and we will have difficulty
with these missions,'' might be rover, using experience gained establishing the language of
achieved by the year 2001.
mak(Jlg a mobile robot to clean mutual understanding," he said . .
'That target date, he said in an 1 ------;--'--'------------------1
article in The Washington Post,
Is a "sentimental goal" for what
he called a joint "space odyssey"
to match the vision of Arthur C.
Clarke, British author of the
science fiction classic, "2001 : A
Space Odyssey." Sagdeyev said
the 70-year-old Clarke has promised he will "stay alive and in
good shape until then. "
Sagdeyev's invitation follows
I
an agreement signed Friday that
wlll lead to an exc.hange of
SENIOR CITIZENS CENTER
expertise and data. and possibly
to exchange of scientific Instruments and experiments aboard
Mars-bound propes - the 1992
U.S. Observer probe, and the 1998
Soviet Phobos probe tha t will
land on a Martian moon .
Sagdeyev said smaller steps up
to the big goal would be polit i:
cally realistic: "If Americans
are worried about transferring
sensitive military technology to
the Soviet Union , we should find
ways to work cooperatively ,short of fully integrated '
missions.
"For example, we could each
send payloads to Mars that would
.&gt;II
be launched separately from
Earth but work together on
Mars."
He said other steps might
include cooperative landing; by
GALLIPOLIS STORE
1994, of an unmanned rover that
could explore the planet, or a 1998
DECEMBER 10 .................. ..................... 7:00 TO 8:30
mission to bring Martian sam DECEMBER 12 .... .......... :................. :.. , .. . 2:00 TO 4:00
ples back to ea rth .
DECEMBER 15 ........ ; ........................ : ..... 7:00 TO 8:30
The fi:me rlcan Viking probe ·
DECEMBER 18 .... .. ........ .. ....................... 7:00 TO 8:30
DECEMBER 20 ............... :......... : ............. 2:00 TO 4:00

..

Christmas.
countdown

.

.

p '

Ohio Lottery

Defense Attorney StevenS tory
Intends to prove to a Meigs
County Common Pleas jury of 12
that Charles Barley, 48, of
Pomeroy, feared for !lis own
safety when he fired shots , at
David Talbott, 21, of Racine, in
an inclden I on May 23 at the Cove
bar on Route 7 near Pomeroy .
Story alleged ln opening remarks to the jury of six -men and

six -women that Talbott was
wielding a pool cue "in the
fa shion of a club'' ju st before the
shots were fired, and that he will
be putting two witnesses on the
stand to corroborat e that
allega lion.
Barley is charged wi th felonious assau lt with a firear m
specification in connection with

the shooting. The State's case
against Barley is being presented by Meigs County Prosecut ing Attorney Fred Crow III.
Actual testimon y ln the case ..
began about 11:30 Monday with
Crow calling, respectively, Middleport Policeman Clint Patterson, Meigs Deputy Kenny Klein ,
Meigs Sheriff Howard Frank ,
and ·Wade Connolly, 21, of Ra -

cine , who was at the bar at the
time of the shooting .
The law enforcement officers
described their own actions at
the bar following the shooting,
and Connolly desc ribed events
shortly · before and immedia t.ely
after the shooting.
Testimony ended about 4 p.m.
Monday and resumed at 9 a.m.
today.

MAJOR SNOWSTORM - Ernest Peters struggles through a
snowstorm as he pushes his shopping cart down a snow-covered
sidewalk in downtown Kansas Ctty. A major winter storm blithe
area, dumphig up to six Inches of snow, with a possible 121nches by
Tuesday morning. (UPI)

Five killed, 160 hurt
~y Arkansas tornado

WEST MEMPHIS, Ark. (UP ! )
- Rescue team s sea rched collapsed homes , bu sinesses a nd
apartme nt ~uildin gs a lon g a
short er, double sessions came 15-block pa th of des truction to·
because.. of teacher and class- day for survivors of a tornado
room shortages during World that kill ed a t least five people and
War II. This study .is to provide injured a bo ut 160.
Seve ral peop le were pulled
Information to school personnel
regarding specific outcomes of from the rubble of a truck stop
students In three option s of with only minor in juries after
being !tapped in the wreckage
kind ergarten."
The study, guided by a 29- for nearly three hours, a witness
m ember advisory team ap- said .
The twiste1· touched down a t
poin ted by Walter, is a n out9:45
p.m. Monday, skipping
growth of recommendations of
,.
along
Interstate
40 and 15 blocks
the Ohio Commission on Early
Chilahood Education in 1984. One of a downtown street in Wes t
Memphis and des troying houses
of those recommendations was
and bu sinesses in its p~t h .
tha t a child' s intellectual, social,
Another 10 to 15 ,homes were
physical, and psychological de,
demolished across the Missis ·
velopment should be monitored
si ppi River in Memphis, Tenn.
ea rly.
Abou t 160 people were treated
Students noted in the preliminary report will be monitored for . at hos pita ls and 30 remai ned
hospitalized today, Memphis
progress as th e study Corjtinues
F
ire Depar tment Lt. Bi ll Adelfor a t leas t three more years.

Full-time kindergai1en pupils perfonn better
39

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COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) Children who attend full-day,
every-day ·kindergarten classes
outperform their peers who. are
enrolled in either full -day,
alternate -day or half-day, every·
day sessions, a study shows.
The Ohio Department of Edu cation's PreschoolKlndergarten
Longitudinal Research Study
was presented Monday to the
State Board of Education. The
presen ta lion was a first -year
report of the f&lt;'i ur-yea r study ,
which is belleved to be the lar gest
of its kind In the nation ,
''While It Is important .to
emphasize that this prelimina ry
report is part of a long-tc•·m ,
study, these r es ul ts a re added
confirmation of the significance
of early childhood e&lt;tucation hi
Ohio," said State Superintendent
Frenklll1 B . Walter.

'

.

"The report indica tes that a lternate-day classes.
Res ults for grad es two an~
educational benefit s for kindergarteners in class five hours a three that yea r were even more
day, five days a week, outweigh , pronounced in favor of full -day,
the benefit s for those who are in " every-day programs.
class feWer hours." ·
The study of fir st grade readi·
Walter referred to two par t ~; of ness test res ults of 2,845 kinderthe three- part s tud y that report gartners in the spring of 1987
on test performances of Ohio notes that pupil s in full-day,
students.
ever y- day session s outperThe study of8 ,290chlidrcn who form ed their counterparts by
completed kindergarten between nine to 10 'per cent. The monit orMay 1982 and May 1985 examines ing of 3,675 pupils who ente red
later test perfo rmances through kind ergarten this fa ll also is pa rt
grade four.
of the study .
Test data collected in 19&amp;'i-26,
The third pa rt of the study
as an example, shows tha t grade invplves a survey, based on data
four stud ents that year who had ga th ered in the spring of 1985, of
attended full -day. every-day kin · beliefs and practices in Oh io
dergarten sessions pe rformed kindergartens.
fiv e to 11 percent higher on
' 'Th e first kindergartens in this
standa rdized t~sts that th ~lr count ry offered full-da y propeers who had attended either grams," said Patricia Smith ,
half-da y, every-da y or full-day, board pres ident. "The influx of

'

.man. sclid.

\

About 29 people were homeless
in Tennessee, but In Wes t Memphis darkn ess pre vented officials
from immedia tely assessing the
extent qf the dama ge. About 30
-people gathered at a Red Cross
shelter.
'
Herbert Hi rsc h, 40, a Thayer ,
Mo.. trucker. said he saw the
twister co mi ng_ and escaped
injury by lea ping behind the
co un ter of a truck stop where he
was drin king coffee.
"Some were trapped in there
for three hou rs." he said . " One
guy, he w.as under blocks , bricks
and s teeL It took 2% hours to get
him out He was bruised was all.''
Hirsch said there were 30 to 45
rigs at the truc kstop and all were
damaged.
"I know of four that .w ere
turned completely -over," he
said.
Downed power lines , twisted
metal a nd road signs Uttered the
ground in WPs t Memphis today.
r.
Co nrlnuev on page 5

•

�•
Tuesday, December 15, 1987

Ohio Outdoors

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel

'

,.

111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS ~F THE MEIGS-MASON A~EA

~rh

.

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ROBERT L. WINGETr
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publishe)'/ Controller
A MEMBER of The United

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

Press International. Inland Dally Press

Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association

I

LETTERS OF OPINION are weloome They should D~ less than 300 words
long ~lllctte-rs are subj ec1 toedltlng and must tie stgnro with name addrf'ss and
teh;phone number No uns1gned letters wUI be published Letters should be In
gocil taste, addressing Issues, not personalities
,

What's wrorig with
Memorial Day?
By DICK WEST
WASHINGTON (UP I) -Although I have no Idea as to the number
of "bowl'' games that will be played this month and next, 1 do have
some notion of the family tree.
If you accept the concept of the Rose Bowl as being the
"granddaddy" of post-season college "classics," perhaps you can
think of the Cotton, Sugar and Orange bowls as direct descendants.
From there, it Is only a short distance to thinking of the Sun, Gator,
Liberty, Aloha and Peach bowls as the next generation.
Therefore, such extravaganzas as the California, Freedom,
Independen~e. Holiday, All-American, Citrus, Fiesta, Hail of Fame
and Glasnost bowls must be succeeding generations.
Glasnost?
Well, we need a game to commemorate summit meetings, don't
we?
If you accept this concept, you are nut!Jer than I suspected.
I can hear complaints being raised already. Someone Is certain to
pomt out that the Gator Bowl, to pick a name out of the referee's hat,
belongs In another generation.
I recall tea,ms from arch rivals SMU and TCU being Invited to play
10 the Rose and Sugar bowls, respectively
A headline writer In Fort Worth conceded the Dallas entry, which
lost, had appeared In a more prestigious game but concluded TCU,
wh ich won, had played In a sweeter bowl. It lS hard to argue with logic
hkethat.
I also recall a Cotton Bowl, or Boll, game bemg memoralized by a
punning cousin.
,
When Marquette U was Invited to participate, he said: "The
Wisconsin team will win You can marquette up m your little book."
It was about thiS time that I, an Independent, dropped out of the
bowl picture. I seem to remember a time when Notre Dame a Cotton
Bowl participant next month, and other Independent .:majors"
turned up their noses at all post-season classics.
If bad punning doesn't cause you to drop out, nothing will.
I a lso remember no self-respecting bowl sponsor would consider
stagmg a game on any date other than New Year's Day, when the
sporting public was properly hung over.
That taboo no longer exists Some bowls are scheduled In early
December, others m early January
Some years ago, I was able to prove it was p,osslble to watch three
televised bowl games on a single day without the eyes wobbling In the
back of the head.
Maybe there was a shght wobbling of the knees, but m those days 1
was filled with SCientific dedication and have long regretted I have
but one hver to give to my country
Television, I suspect, has had a greater impact on post-season
games than the sponsors hke to admit. Given a TV contract, the bowl
people probably don't care whether the crowds of ticket-holders come
or not
That, however , IS pure conjecture on my part I once knew a couple
who asked me to attend the Liberty Bowl, of all things . Fortunately,
that game will be played, this year at least, during prime time, Dec
29, so It was easy to beg off
I s imply pomted out that it conflicted wlth a re-run of M-A·S H

Berry's World

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday. December 15, 1987

The KG8 search ------,----:..,.~_.:..,ByJ_ack_And____,_erson
•, WASHINGTON - This 1s the
week when U.S. and Soviet
officials meet In Washington for
toasts to peace and understand·
lng, for smiling photo opportunl·
ties In a general atmosphere of
warmth and good c heer
But there's one man who is not
welcome. In fact , If MaJ. Stanis
lav Levchenko were to show up
anywhere near the Reagan
Gorbachev summit pageantry,
he would be risking his neck.
Forget glasnost, detente, nuclear
disarmament and Mikhail Gar·
bachev's sunny smile. TheKrem·
lin's KGB agents would do their
utmost to grab Levchenko and
smuggle him back to j\'loscow,
where he would be summarily
executed
Why? Levchenko used to be
one of the KGB's most effective
agents - skillful at plantmg
d!slnformation with Witting or
unwlttmg editors, positively brilliant at luring susceptible foreign
nationals m1o working for the
KGB - m short, an ail-around
good ole Kremlin spook.
But in October 1979, Levchenko
defected In Tokyo, sending shock
waves through the KGB In
August 1981, a secret mlhta1y
tribunal m Moscow found him
guilty of high treason and sent
enced him , in absentia, to the
"highest measure of puntsh·
ment ," That means 1f Levchenko
IS ever captured by the KGB,
he'll be dragged back to Moscow,

marched Into a' prison courtyard,
bound but not blindfolded and
shot In the back to the head while
his former KGB colleagues witness the grim lesson
'
Even with Gorbachev's more
benign glasnost, Lev che!lko 1s
under no Illusions. He knows his
hfe Isn't worth a plugged kopeck
If the KGB ever gets Its hands on
him. During a series of clandestin e meetings with Dale Van
Alta, Levchenko never disclosed
where he's living. He travels
under a pseudonym - and after
eight years still drives with an
eye on the rear-view mirror
looking for the KGB tall
'
This isnomorethatreasonable
precaution We have learned that
one particular "diplomat" at the
Soviet embassy In Washington .
has one and only mis sion· locate
and snatch Levchenko
Durmg the trial of Richard
Miller. the only FBI agent ever
convict'ed of espionage, wit·
nesses testified that Levchenko
headed the KGB's hst of most·
wanted Soviet defectors Wit·
nesses said that Mlile1 's Soviet
handlers asked him to check w1th
h1s FBI buddies and find out
where Levchenko was hidmgout.
An even more interestmg tactic was !ned using Nikolai and
Svetlana Ogorodnikov, the bumbling KGB couple who lured
Miller mto theh· espwnage web.
Nikolai contacted a lawyer,
claiming h1s wife had been

1mp1 egnated by Levchenka, who
he said was probably living In
California under an alias. The
lawyer was paid $700 of a
promised $10,000 to find Levchenko for a paternity suit. But
he failed to find the elusive
ex-KGB man
"Few men understand the
KGB better than Levchenko, "
wrote Readers Digest senior
editor John Barron In his book,
"KGB Today: 'Phe Hidden
Hand." Barron. the most knowledgeable American author on the
Soviet secret service. concluded
"(And) few, If any, have done as
much as Stanlslav Alexandrovlch Levchenko to wound the
KGB. He understands that, as a
consequence, he will alWays be a
hunted man "
Levchenko, now 46, managed
to hide the fact that his mother,
who died in a later childbirth,
was Jewish, by being adopted by
h1s stepmother His father was a
. research chemist and army
officer.
In 1958, the teenage Levchenko
began six years of training at
Moscow's Instltue of Oriental
Languages , and became fluent m
both English and Japanese. In
1966 he was drafted Into the GRU.
Soviet military Intelligence, and
was tramed for a World War III
suicide mlss1on to Liverpool.
In 1968, against his wishes, he
was recruited by the KGB, the
civilian spy outfit Eventually he

•

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TH£ ElECTroN.
M~

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•

IS JAMMED!

was placed on the staff of\ the
magazine Novoye Vremya, or
New Times, which is 11ddled with
KGB agents. Under the maga·
zlne's journalisllc cover he was
sent to Tokyo as a spy In 1975.
Levchenko scored many espionage coups for his KGB
masters while he was In Tokyo
They Included early warning of
the Lockheed bribery scandal,
which shook the Japanese government to Its roots, and recruitment ·of a Japanese Intelligence official who gave the KGB
total access to secret Clies,
Including minutes of a conference In whlc}l top Japanese
intelligence officials discussed
their operations against the
Soviet Unwn. and the 700·page
directory of all Japanese secur·
1ty officers - Including their
names, addresses and telephone
numbers .
While he was accomplishing
these Fierculean feats of espionage, however, Levchenko had
secretly becorne a Christian , and
had grown disenchanted with the
Soviet system. Yet, when he
defected and was taken over by
the CIA defrlefers, he provided
only minimal Information at
first .
Two telephon e calls lo Moscow
in 1980 changed that Both were
to his wife, Nataha, whom the
KGB had thrown out of work and
nearly starved to death. Lev·
chenko' s son had been ostracized
at school, and had developed high
blood pressure and a . stomach
· disorder .
On the second call. Levchenko's wife told him, In a faint
voice, that she had shrunk from
120 to 90 pounds. "I am without
hope ," s he said "I am lost I am
only a grain of sand "
Thai did it. Levchenko de·
clared war on the KGB that day
He briefed the CIA 12 hours a
day , seven days a week He
unraveled the KGB's entire Tokyo spy network, painstakingly
built up over decades.
He fingered the KGB's 25 top
agents In Japan, and with his
Incredible memory for names
.also identified hundreds of KGB
spies and the people they had
recruited In »"estern countnes.
Some of his analyses were read
pesonally by President Reagan.
''Maybe someday they will find
me," Levchenko sa1d with clasSic Russ1an fatalism "But I must
continue to fight them If I do not
- II we do not - they will
degrade all human beings Into
s imple grains of sand."

•

Scientific pork barrel----=-·_
WASHINGTON (NEA) - lm·
agine a tunnel buned about 100
feet below ground. It's only 10
feet wide, but 1! traverses a
spraw ling, racetrackshaped oval
53 m lies long
The tunnel' ~ inter ior wall is
hned with 10;000 superconduct·
ing magnets that guid e two
beams of protons around the
course In opposite directions
They accelerate until they atta10
a blindmg veloclt y
Finally, when the protons are
traveling at almost ' the speed of
light - 186,000 miles per second
-they colhde at a phenom enally
high energy level of 40 trillion
elect ron volts
Welcome to the wor ld of high
energy physics and the Supercon
ductlng Supe1 Coilider. It 1s w1th
this tunnel tha t scientists expect
to probe the previously unex·
plored realm of " mner space" the submicroscopic world of the
atom.
They already know that all
ma tter- people, food, air , water
a nd everything else - 1s com
posed of only three types of
sub-atomic particles: protons,
neutrons and electrons. Prev1ous

controlled collisions at smaller
particle accelerators or "atom
smashers" have shown that
protons are composed of even
smaller element s - quarks,
gluons and leptons - but the
search for the very essence of
matter continues.

Major particle 'llcceletatm s
are located In New York, Call for
ma and llhnols. Even larger
facilities are under construction
10 Switzerland and pl anned m the
Soviet Union - )6\l t the SSC wil l
be by far the 6s t powerful.
A joint co
ittee established
by the Na onal Academy of
Sc1ences a d National Academy
of Eng
ring 1s assessing proposals 01 35 possible sse sites
subm I ted by 25 states Next
mont , the committee w11i s ub
m1t
the Depa 1tm ent of Energy
a " est qualified lis t," ilkely to
m ude only about SIX to eight
ahs ts
no.,; will select a single
p1eferred s1te 10 mld-1988. Finally, that ten ta tive designation
will be formalized m early 1989,
just as a new president 1s bemg
Ina ugurat ed

For the states mvolved, the
stakes are high. The project w11i
create 4,500 temporary construction jobs and 2,500 to 3,000
permanent positions. Its annual
budget, all paid by the federal
government, will be at least $250
m1lhon.
But some skeptics warn that
the boondoggle aspects of the
SSC have obscured the important
deli~te over Its scientific merits
"Th~ urgent political necessity of
SSC politics Is to Inflame domestic pork \l}arrel passions," says
critic Dan1el S. Greenberg.
"There has been no debate
about the SSC's pnonty on the
long lis t of unmet needs 10
American science," adds Greenberg, editor and publisher of
Science and Governmen t Report,
an In fl uential · Wa s hington
newsletler
That view IS shared by some
highly regarded sc1entists, including James A Krumhansi, a
Cornell Unjverslty phys1cs professor and VICe president of the
American Physical Society:
"Unless the many other 1mpor·
• tant areas of engineering and
sc ience are restored to adequate

___::::...:BYR==obe•:.:_:::'
wa:::::.:.::I'e•s
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funding levels, the commitment
of the amount of money contem·
plated for the sse project will
certamly have a damaging nega·
live effect nationally "
Similar concerns have been
voiced by others, Including
Sheila Wldnaii, an MIT professor
who Is preside!'! of the American
Association for the Advancement
of Sciences.
sse propon~nts argue , how·
ever, that this country could
relinquish its pre-eminent posi
lion In high energy physics If I~ is
unable to compete with the
powerful new accelerators
planned for Switzerland and the
Soviet Union
The sse surely out to be built ,
but it hardly mer its the "crash
p1ogram" status Its mo st zealous
supporters - and the states
anxious to snar c a " free" federal
project - have attempted to
award it .
Indeed, there are fundamental
technical ma tters related to sse
constn;ct10n that remain unresolved A fum commitm ent is
called for, but so is a more
deliberat e pace

By JERRY PICKRELL
Outdoor Writers
A~soclallon of America
Distributed by UPI
Durmg the deer gun season
JUSt passed and the primitive
weapons season upcommg, there
will be no other hunting permitted during the dayhght hours,
except for waterfowl, anywhere
m Ohio
This Is not new It's been
showing up In the "Special
Notice" section of your hunting
law s digest for years now
Many hunters have considered
this a matter of simply shutting
down other hunting Interests for
the days the other hunters are
seeking deer. Actually, there's
no need to do that.
After all. the law states "durmg the dayhght hours". Night
hunting - mostly for forbearers
- 1s snll permitted and makes a
good adjunct to deer hunting It
could even help pay for the t np
or, at lea st, the deer perm1t
A red fox pelt can bring as
much a $50 during a strong
ma r ket with a gray fox fetching
only a little less These animals
and others, like the raccoon, are
hunted primarily at night.

" BLESSED ARE THE MINELAYERS - FOR
THEY SHALL BUG THE UNITED STATt:S . . "

Today in history
,
By United Press International
Today Is Tuesday, Dec. 15, the 349th day of 1987 with 16 to follow .
The moon is wamng , moving toward its new phase.
The morning stars are Mercury and Mars.
The evening stars are Venus, Jupiter and Saturn
Those born on this date are under the sign of Sagittarius They
Include the Roman emperor Nero In 37 A.D.; Polish lingui~t Ludwlk
Zall'\enhof. creator of the International language Esperanto, In 1859;
French engineer Alexandre Elffel, builder of the Paris tower that
bears his name and engineer of the · Statue of Liberty, In 1832;
playwright Maxwell Anderson In 1888, billionaire oilman John Paul
Getty In 1892; pioneer rock ' n' roll disc jockey Alan Freed In 1922,
comic actor Tim Conway In 1933 (age 54) , antl actor Don Johnson In
1950 rage 37)
On this date In history: In 1791, the Bill of Rights, comprising the'
first 10 amendments to the Constitution, took effect following"
ra tification by the state of Virginia.
In 1944, American forces led by Gen. Douglas MacArthur landed at
Mindoro In the PhJlioolne Islands .
\

Yes , it wlllbedifficull to totally
venfy the medium-range missile
treaty (INF); yes, we should
have had the details pinned down
before we made a summ1t date,
yes, ,In arms control the devil can
be In the details , yes, INF Is
causjng so me ' nervousness
among our allies
Notwithstanding, the Republican hardliners who are opposing
th e treaty are wrong - tact!·
ca lly , subs tantlv ely , domestically and Internationally. Many
of them . are generally responsibl e people This tim e, their
act ions are not.
Conservative action groups
are gearing up for a fight to block
Senate rat lflcatlon. Four of the
six Republican candidates fo r
president are against INF : Jack .
Kemp, Alexander Haig, Pierre
du Pont and Pat Rober tson. Sen.
Robert Dole Is on the fence.
Wisely, Vice President Bush
favors INF
One wonders. Do the hardlin·

crs realize JU St what they are
throwing away politica lly'? Con
ser-vat 1ves have been making a
case for decades that the way to
nego!fate with the Russ ian s is
through strength. In 1981, when
President Reagan proposed the
zero-zero optiOn, II opened up
global giggle season. Fo r Reagan
1! must have been like modeling
for that old ad, "They laughed
when I sat &lt;\own to play the
piano.''
The press and the crltics,had a
field day We were told, "It was a
phony proposal - Reagan
wa nt ed It to fa 11 "We heard that
" the Russians would never accept 1! " We were informed that
"the West Europeans would
never allow deploymen t "It was
sa id that " Reagan doesn't rea lly,
want a miss il e deal. "
It wasn t phoney Reagan
wanted 1! The E uropeans deployed the mls~lles · And the
Russians- facing strength- sat
down and cut the cards

Th e conservatlvess proved
thei r case:. Be tough and succeed. They had acquired a
combinatiOn lock on the two best
words in th e presidential pOlitica l lexicon: " pe ace" and
"strength." In political 'p ractice,
the term of art is "America needs
a policy that is based on peace
through strength "
This seq uence should put Re
pu)lllcan conservatives m the
catbird seat. They should support INF, and when Democrats
support it too (as they will), the
Republican s should be saying,
"There n ev ~r would have been a
deal If we had listened to you
Democrat s. You were for a
nucl ear fr eeze If we had froze n,
the Soviets would have had a
thousand SS 20 warhead s; and we
would have had no mPdlu m·
range missiles at all. TheSovirts
never would have dealt . But we
hung tough, and e nded up with a
real reductidn " The conserva·
Uves not only would hiwe l!ad the

W:::at~tenb~erg

___:B::._:YB:::.::_cn

\
liberal Democ ra ts on the defen·
/'

s1ve, they could actually have
helped educalc them
Instead, the Republicans w1li
be saying, "The verlflcat wn
procedures a1 e no good, Re agan
got snookered " Doubtful lf,1 as
all agree, the act ual milit a ry
Implications of INF are s lim,
then the hkehhood of Soviet
cheating (on a nsk·vs 1eward
basis) is small and not monumen·
tafly consequenl!al. Mor e Important, the verlficatwn protocols
will probably by adequate
The political advantage can
now go to the Democrats who will
say, with 'meril "These conservatives can't take yes lor an
answer. We're supporting Regan's toug h And we'll support
more treaties like it - negotIa ted
with pallence and strength " In
fact, those softlsh Democ1ats
who originally only sort of
half·believed II, may now (I
hope ) b~om e true believers.

Fox hunting at night may be
the easier to get started in, since
you need no elaborate eqUipment
beyond a strong light with a red
lens and a tape of some kind of
fox call. All of thes~tcan be picked
up at a local huntmg supplies
outlet for very little money .
The tape can then be played on
a standard tape player with the
hunter not far away and ready
with the light.
Fgxes will hear these calls and
practiCally run over you to get to
them. In fact, you'll need to be
careful not to shoot your tape
player. Some hunters claim to
have had their tape players
damaged by foxed chewing on
them.
If you decide to try this, make
sure you read the laws on usmg
lights and eiectromc calls No
parts of this rig can be attached
to a vehicle You should have no
~rouble
fmd1ng portable
equipment
Check ahead of time for the
location of the nearest fur buyer
Th1s Is especially true If you're
a deer hunter using this as a way
to fill an evening You'll want to
get the pelt off your hands as soon
as possible so you can get back to
the real sport at hand.

Scoreboard ...
Tuesday's

NFL results

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II !&lt;lorida (5-I}
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IHI 15
12 Mlthl.-an (1 I )
115 14
13 Purdue 11-11
14() 16
H Okllllhuma (6-01
15 Nnada LIL'I Vl'l(ll.~ (50)
9117
Kill!
16 GNn... f'low n (4-1)
., MIS!Otlllf'l (J-1)
:1'110
~.. 19
IK Hll.nSit.H I &amp;-21
19 llllnuiH (7 II
1!0 Mt•mplliK Stat;• H I I
l unnu1kl'd
Othe-r n•LelvlnK \\KI tt Notr t• Danll',
BriKhllm \ ' ounr. Brudk'y, lowu stalt&gt;, sa
,John'" Gl"u'R'IIl Teth i\uhurn Ohio

9

!oi~•all~

fut'!&gt;.du~ 1;

PtJinl!ll
filii I
565 t

nl11111

lluu .. lnn 111 Ht nvt r nlghl

NHL results
N,\110Ni\l 110( Kt. \ Lf:,\Gllf...
MutKia,v'~ lll'~ull

N\ K.utgj•n-1, Jhtrolt :1

&amp;Sl'l!all
Ki.UIIlln - Tra.d~·d tuhiM'r Man: ~uUI
'an to llowdon for K fllllyl'r Ill he• nanu•d
Cbl.:a~u (NL) Slp•d fru•· a~nl
lnllt•ldl'r V 1Ull I' Law
PIU.,hUI'Ith - Namrd la.v Wu.rd nmn
u.-:rr ul Salem of thl'( lll'tlllna lA•ugUt' ('\I
B.a.illkllhall

tinued the onslaught in th e
second half, outscormg Penn 25 5
1n the first seven minutes and
pulhng out to an 86-29 lead w1th
eight minutes remaining before
UCLA Coach Walt Hazza rd
cleared his bench
Tyrone Pitts led the Quakers,
1-4, with 11 points and Hassan
Duncombe added 10
The game was the first basket

ball m eet ing between the
sc hool s
Dave Imm el added 13 points
for the Bru10s and fres hma n
Gerald Madkms with 12.
LARAMIE, Wyo (UP() Fennls Dembo scored 29 points
and grabbed 7 rebounds Monday
night to boost No 6 Wyommg to a
100 89 tnumph over Georgia

Among the non-conference
hardcourt e ncoun ters awaiung
for the White Falcons th1s season
will be a pair of games With
Kyger Creek, Buffalo Putnam
and county rival Point Pleasant
in additwn to a single game w1th
Huntington Vinson , the 1986 87
state runner up
Wh1te Falcon head ,coach Le
wls Hall Will be entenng his mnth
campaign at the helm of the
Wahama cagers with the veteran
hardcourt mentor compiling an
80-94 record and a .494 winmng
percentage through eight sea·
sons at the Bend Area school
Hall' s teams have won sectional
titles m 1980·81, 1981-82 and in
1985-86 but have yet to claim their
fir st regiOnal victory Assi s ting
Hall this year will be Frank
Capehart, who returns to the
coaching ranks after enjoying a
successful stmt on the jumor h1gh
level at WHS for a number of
years
Th1ee retu rmn g starters g1ve
Wahama a soi1d nucleus for the
commg season but the locals w11i
still be considered young and
mex perienced w1th depth be in g a
maJOr obstacle confronung the
Bend Area team. Senior forward
Brad Bumgarner, semor guard
Robbie Grimm and junior center
Chris Jewe ll are Ihe rertunmg
regulars with 1emammg squad
members totaling JUSt SIX games

of varsity experience between
the m
Bumgarner, 6-2. Is a two year
starter for the Wh1te Falcons and
1s the locals top returnee after
leading the Bend Area team in
scoring last year with a 12 3 per
game average Robbie Grimm,
6-1. senwr guard also returns for
WHS with the three sport athlete
averaging 6.1 pomts per game
dunng the 1986-87 campaign
Junior center Chns Jewell, 6 2,
aver~ged 8 6 points per contest
as a sophomore, but Will be
unavailable to parhc1pate on the
hardcourt until sometime after
the Christmas hohlidays. J ewell
IS stili recovering from an
m)ured foot durmg the Wh1te
Falcons' grid season.
In addition to the three returnmg lettermen on the Wahama
varsity roster are seniors Jeff
Noble, 6 1, center-forward , Jason
Roush , 6-0, guard Bart Davis, 5 9,
guard Dave Kmg. 5·10 and Larry
Goodmte. Juniors of the varsny
roster mclude forward Bobby
Kincaid, 6-2 . 5-10 guard Billy
Zuspan and forward Eric Petry,
6-0 The lone sophomore on the
varsity unit it 6-2 forward Tom
McDerm itt
The junior varstty team ts
compnsed of 5-9 senior Mike
Flowers and sophomores J1m
Ashley. 6·0, Shannon Barrett, 6-1.
Ryan Wood, 5·9, Lee Herdman,
6-0. Jamie Burns, 5-9, Rodney
Bumgarner. 5·10. ' Jon Merntt.
5·9. Brent Fields, 5-10. The lone
freshman on the )umor varsity
squad 1s 5·8 .John Barnitz.
The White Falcons open their
season on Tuesday night when

they tra vel to Cal houn Co unty to
m eet a vateran Red Devil team
Calhoun County finished the
1987-88 season w1 th an imp res
s ive 16 6 record while averag mg
more than 79 point s per game. All
LKC conference forward Todd
Molessa and 5·11 Tony Franco
return for the Red Devils which
provides the local cagers w1th a
most forl'llldable opponent for
th1er 1987-88 season opener.
Wahama w11i make thier hom e
debut on Sa turday night. when
they host vis iting Kyger Creek at
the Bend Area school with the
Bobcats being the lone Ohw high
school opponent on the Falcons'
schedule this year
Coach Lewis Hall sa 1d, "Th1s
group of prospecllve candidates
has worked as hard as any bunch
that has been here for a while. We
w11i have to run as much as
possible in order to be s uccessful
as hustle 1s one of our strong
pomts a long with the tea m's
attitude and shooting ability Our
biggest weakness 1s m the pivot
w1thout Jewell "
•
Expected to get the startmg
assignments for Tuesday mght' s
season opener are Brad Bum·
garner and B11i Zuspan at the
forwards Robbie Gnmm and
Bart Dav1s at the guard positions
with Jeff Noble In the pivo t Also
figurmg to see plenty of play ing
time will be Jason Roush, Bobby
Kinca id and La r r y Goodmte
Tlp-o,tf· t1me for the preliminary encounler Tuesday mght 1s
scheduled for 6 p m w1th the
varsity contest beginning about
20 mmutes followm g the conclu,
SJOn of the JUmor varsity ac twn .

Bruce told the newspaper. " Eve
knows I want to think this
thing through thorougly "
The former OSU coach wants
certaln.financial guarantees and
obligations written Into what
probably will be a five year
contract, the Dispatch reported.
Those guarantees were not
included In his three-year contract at Ohio State, a pact that
allowed the university to fire him
without giving a reason.
Bruce, who coached at Ohio
State for nine seasons, said
Kansas has met his requirements for assistant coaches'
;alarles.

the darhngs of the network or the
nation ," Walsh said. " But we are
a good, solid team."
"Our people were upset at all
the talk about being a finesse
team," the 49ers coach added
Chicago Coach Mike Dltka,
who was forced to play without
startmg quarterback Jim McMahon Monday ·ni ght , was ~tunned
by the loss.
"We mad e bad de~lsions, the
penalties killed us," he said. " We
played like there was nothing to
gain After s1x turnovers, the
defense, the offense a nd kicking
broke down "
San Francisco broke out to a
20·0 ha lftime lead on the stre ngth
of a 1· yard scoring pass from
Young to Rice, a 13-yard Young
Coptinued on page 4

State.
•
Robyn Davis added 21 points ,
and Reggie Fox and Wilhe Jones
each chipped in 12 for the
Cowboy~. 6·0 Harlan Graham
scored 24 point s for Georgia
State, 2 2
The Cowboys held a 43 38
halftime lead and went on a 27 7
1un to open the second half.
IRVINE. Calif (UP!) -Mike
Labat made two free throws with
6 seconds left to lead Cal Irvine
to a 93-91 vict ory over the
University of New Orleans , .
which missed an opportunity to
t1e the score when referees ruled
Ledell Eackies' dunk came after
the buzzer.
Gabe Corch1ani had tied the
,score 91 -91 for the Privateers
when he hit a three-pomter with ·
11 seconds left. Corchianl then
fouled Labat, who made both free
throws
Continued on page 4

Allison OAC honoree
TOLEDO. Oh10 (UP!) - Wit tenberg's Steve Allison, who led
the Tigers to three victories last
week. was selected as the Ohw
Athletic Conference player of the
week Monday
Allison. a 6-foot-4 wmg from
Cmclnnati, scored 56 pomts In the ,
three wms over Manetta, Hiram
and Otterbem, hittmg 25 of 35
shots from the field ( .743
percent)

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"TONIGHT"

C'u llt Itt'

M ~ K•nna

c ryone

medical ,help he ca n have, " he
sa id. "We have to go on."
Rice , who ca ught 8 passes for
75 yards on the night , tied two
NFL records. Hi s fi rst qu art er
touchdown ran R1ce'sstreak to 11
straight ga mes with a touchdown
catch , tymg a mark 1010tiy held
by Elroy Hirsch and Buddy D1al.
H1 s 18 touchdown catches this
season mat ch a record set by
Miami's Mark Duper in 1984
While Young and RICe we1e
taking care of the offensive end,
the 49ers ' defense wa s dominat ing its opposition San Franc isco
picked off four passes, recovere&lt;l
two fumbles , collected three
sacks and never let the Bears
gam momemtum
''We're not America' s team ,
the Monsters of the Midway. 01

W ahama has three starters
back from last year's quintet ·

Christian F1n:d fuuthall
n.!Crulllng t uordiDII.Iilr Hay Se\lualt
Fuothllll
~llltagu Pluu•d q1111rlt'rback lim
H• Malton 011 lhl' lrw~ UVI.' list
Hutlley
Harlfonl - 1'\J~·d .~:oalk·ndl'r Mlkt
Uul lt1 a 3-yl•ar tuntrad
i.IJ!II Ang-t'le!O- a.,~allt•d rll[t win.- Paul
(luuy from New Hu~rn Df lh£' Amf'rkan
Hot kj•)' IA'a.-IK' ~;ent right wlnr Doh
Kudel!ikllo Ne w Hu,en
Toronto Traded lurwarrl Mllw
o'\lll•n In l.v~t AltKeiHior rlrha wlnlt l'iean

Bruce 'aboul to sign Kansas deal'
COLUMBUS, Ohio tUPI) Former Ohio State football coach
Earle Bruce says he Is' 'close" to
making a decision on whether to
accept a Similar position at the
Universit y of Kansas.
" 1t's getting close," Bruce told
the Co lumbus Di spatch Monday
night after meeting with Kansas
Ath letic Director B9b Frederick,
who was in town, apparently to
finalize negotiations with Bruce.
Bruce, who was fired by OSU
President Edward Jennings on
Nov 16, sa id he had not made up
his mind whether to take the job.
"! am under no pressure In that
regard (to make a· decision) ,"

LOS ANGELES tuPI) - Trevor Wilson scored 21 pomt s and
Greg Foster added 15 helping
UCLA snap a four -game losmg
streak with a 98-49 rout of
Pennsylvania
The Bruins, 2-4, held a narrow
lead through the first 10 minutes
but went on a 21 4 run In an 8·14
span that gave them a 40·18
half time advantage. They con-

Sat num•mu - 1\t Qul"•d .-wrd Mlkt•
Mdfee from ,\llantu. fur lwn ...,, ond
round dl'lltllc hull t '!l walwd furw~rrl lot•
i\rliiut k11."
Tl'~~;a~;

was helped from the field with. a
spra ined left knee and pulled
hamstrmg and is doubtful for
·next week's game.
Young came on and completed
JUSt 9 of 19 passes for 100 yards,
bu t fo ur of those tosses were for
touchdowns
"Sieve didn't get to practice
much this week , a nd so a lot of the
more sophisticated things we
couldn't do," 49ers Coac h Bill
Wal sh said "But he's a great
athlete. demonstrated a lot of
poise. and showed he Is a wmning
quarterback "
Walsh sa1d he thought Montana
would be out of the lineup for next
week's game against the Atlanta
Falcons
" We don ' t have tim e to be
upset about Joe , he ha s the best

UCLA snaps four-game losing streak

Dtvtsion

9. Syn&amp;t'UIIe (i-! I

onfrrt&gt;nt t'
,\tlanlh Dl\'tslun

6 II
! Hi

UPI ratings

1 Dulw (I)(" 0)

""tt rn ~

W .~~hln~;tun

Girls Oh to Hl11h Jolt hoot Baskelbnll
By Unlk'd Pre!l."'lnWrnatknw.l
Mondll)' , Det 14
Aurora :Jt, Richmond Hl!'j 35
BI'IMtol U, Cir11ntl Vallf'y "' (ol)
Brookfield 16 East Pll.letlllllf' 37
Buckt&gt;yl' Wet~t 511, Woodsfield .IS
Cedarville "3 EaJtl Ulnton Sf)
( hamplon 79, KIMman 8ad1er 41t
OelphuK Sl ,John" 19, St Mllr:t'R 52
I&lt; leld 7(1 W&amp;&amp;tertou 511
Fon Fr,.e 12, Cll ldw l"ll"~
GarrellHvllle 61 Ma~•lllll ( rcstwoud 15
K•nt KoO!!ielielt M, AkrSprtn"' 27
k11vltWturw LaBru.e II, Lat...vlew 59
MUKIIdol'l' 81, StreetliKft'o 3M
Rootstown 7... Porta«e So11theast :J!\
Met~t Bnt.nc:h 6'l, Vuun1x EaHI29
WlndMm 58 \\ioodrldre U
Vnllftl• Uberly SS, Ntwkln F11llM ~6

I PIIL'Ibu,._.h (3) (I 0)
I North ( ar.rolllll&amp; I }I I
!\ Indllll\ll 15-1 )
6 Wyoml•~ II) (H)

Rt\:o;KETBi\Ll t\SSO(

ti

Girls scores

t i\rbou (9) (7 CH

NBA results

l'hllulii'IJihlu

St louiN al NY 181anderil K 05 p m
Wednellda)''il Gamll'!i
Ne• Jene)' 1\t NV RU~Ren;, nlaht
Quetlee Ill Montreal, nl1ht
WMhlnJI•n ac Delroll,lli,llhl
Chlt:qo al Mlnne!lota niR'ht
Wlnnlpelf Kl Cal gar)', nl~t:hl
Edmonlun Ill Lo11 An[(eles, nl1hl

Tt'Um
I KPniutk,V (2K) (I-D)

Hidl.l..'i 111 tt\ ltttms 9 p rn

N&lt;lol'\nrk

pm

ni.Oidflll: ,

Mondll)', Dtc 'ZI

1

Toronto, 7 35

at

t:olleKf' hMkcthall rallnp. with UrHt

l'hiludl'lphla ~ N\ ,Jets, 1 p m
MlnnNwlu 111 Dt·troll. 1 p m
NIW F..n~t; lundW Buflalo, I pm
Nt"' Orlt•nl'lai rlndanall, I p m
l'Utshur)l;h ad Huusiun I p m
S1•11U1f' at ('hlcngo 1 p.m
~~ Luuls ut Tumpa &amp;y, -1 p m
,\!ll).nta ul San F ra fll: IJ!Co, -1 p m
flo ~•·llmd Ml LA. R~ddo•r,. 4 p m
lndhmupull~ Ill Sun Die~. I p m
Wao;hln&lt;tun at Miami, K p m

1\u.. tun

W~~~thla.-tun

SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) The San Francisco 49ers turned
what had bren billed as a battle of
the NFI..'s best Into a 41 ·0 rout of
the Chicago Bears
The 49ers los t quarterback Joe
Montana early In the game , but
backup Steve Young threw three
touchdown passes to Jerry Rice
and the San Francisco defense
collected six turnover5 Monday
night to hand the ·Bears their
worst defeat in 10 years.
San Francisco. 11-2. has the
best record In the NFL and
needed the victory to stay ahead
of New Orleans, 10-3, in the NFC
West Chicago, the champions of
the NFC'Central , dropped to 10·3.
Montana went down m the first
quarter after trlppm g over the
foot of tailback Roger Craig He

By GARY CLARK
OVP News Staff
Despite the return of three
starters from last year's 3-18
squad, coach Lew1s Hall and hiS
Wahama Wh1te Falcons basket·
ball team have their work cut our
for them th1s season with a
devastating 21 game regu lar
season schedul e awaithing the
Bend Area cagers
The Class A White Falcons'
1987-88 winter card features one
Class AAA opponent, seven Class
AA foes and only three Cla ss A
nvals m additiOn to 12 Little
Kanawha Conference games
WHS. a member of the seven
team South dlVlSlon of the LKC,
will play home and away contests
with Ravenswood, Spencer, Cal·
houn County. W1rt County and
Gilmer County wlthln their divIsion along with single games
against St Marys and Williamstown from the N01 thern

plii.ce \'oleH and l'tL'tlrd In parenlheHeN,
total polal11 I IJII.'II'd on IS pnlniK for flnl
plact•, U for!k'tond,rit ) and I-I week'"

Sundwy',. GauJW!II

t

p m

NEW \'ORK CUPI) -Tht'UnMedPre!ri~
lnwrnatkn•l Bov.rd of Coac:he8 Top 20

Mundtty's lte,;uU
!-Oun t"rttncil;cu -II, ( hlca.-u 0
!:illlurda~y "GameN
{orl'l'n Ray Ill N \ (,111nbt,l2 :18 p m
Kun!ollls I II) ai lh•nwr, -1 p m

~ t\riONt\L

7. 35

Philadelphia at PltWaurwh, 1 l5 p m

Am.. rlt ~tn Conlt&gt;I'E'Ik e

Sl aUh at l'ortl.md , 10 ~0 p m

INFantile conservatives___/_"+; _

49ers rout Bears; Joe Montana injured.

Hunting for fu.rbearers
could prove profitable

\\o dm•sduy !I Gamt'K

§

I
I

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinei- Page-3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

MONDAY, DECEMBER 14th
AND

TUESDAy DECEMBER 15th
I

....... llllld ... wt'l be
1w1 will PI Dft'llll, con-.
Cllllld iniUIIIICe • a. We
. . ry Ill be lrllnda ....
Cll'l dlplllll on. Cll •

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�-

Tuesday. December 15. 1987

Pomeroy Middleport. Ohio

Page 4 The Daily Sentinel

Zanesville's Howe, Princeton's Reese head All-Ohio team
By GENE CADDES
·former, ran·. passed and .both ',
UPI Sports Writer
punted and placekicked, out of
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPii
Za n esville's s~ldo m -see n
Zanesville' s Busier Howe. a offense.
modern day ·single-wing ta i !He rushed lor l. 713 yards.
back. and William Reese of averaging 6.9 yards a carry,
Cincinnati Princeton. the lnspi- scored 34 touchdowns. kicked 38
ra tiona! as well as field leader of extra points and two field goa ls
the sta te champion ViJ&lt;ings, head for 248 poin ts. He averaged 40.9
up the 1987 United Press 1nferna- yards a pun t and had eight
.tlonal Division 1 All-Ohio Foot - interceptions on defense, returnball Team .
ing one lor a touchdown.
. Howe, a 5-loot-10, 183-pounder,
" The impact he had on our
who excelled at both offense and football team was unbelieveadefense lor Coach Whitt Parks' ble," Parks said of Howe ."! ha ve
Blue Devils, was selected the
never ~en a guy who could
UP I back-of-the-year in balloting · control a football game like he
by coaches from around the could with 21 other players on the
sta te.
fie ld-.
Reese, a 6-foot-2. 215-pound er
"But,' ' added Parks, "the
defensive iackle who a !so played greatest thing about him is not
tight end du ri ng· Princeton's his stats bu i the kind of person hi?
drive to the state title, was the is. We've never had a higher
coaches' choice as the state's top impact person come out of our
Division I lineman,
school. He just has a great
Howe, a triple-threa t per- per sonality. He's well respected

"

tight end Chris Sesteli of Lakewood St. Edward. guards John
Woodlock of Massillon Washlngt~n and Corey Parga of Toledo
Rogers, tackles Steve Schoephoerst er of Kettering Fairmont
and Ron Woods of Princeton and
center Doug Burwell of Massillon
Perry.
.
The first team placekicker Is
Princeton's Allan DeGraffen reid, who converted 50 of 55 extra
points and 6 of 9 field goa l
attempts.
Reese anchors a defensive line
that also includes ends Ma rk
Cunningham of Chillicothe and
Dereck Moore of Dayton Meadowdale and down linemen Scott
Frazier' of Gahanna Lincoln and
Rich Frlmel of North Olmsted.
The three first-team linebackers are Westerville North's
Kevin Kershner, Randy Stark of
Mentor and Scott Zele of Cleveland St. Joseph.
Cincinnati Moeller' s Rick Bennett , Massillon Washington's
John Miller and Kevelin Capers
of Lima Senior make up the

1981, when Viking tight end
by everybody."
, Howe is being recruited by Arnold Franklin took the honor.
While Reese played defensive
Minnesatll. Notre Dame, Penn
·
tackle
lor Princeton, college
State and Ohio Slate and may
recruiters
look at him as an
also visit eit her Mi chigan State
outside
linebacker.
or Pitt. with the Buckeyes ,
"He truly Is an outstanding
despite the firing of Earle Bruce.
player
and young man," said
still considered to have the edge.
Reese was the key to P rincet- Mancuso. "I don't know of
on's swarming defense with his anyone we've had who deserves
ability to range from sideline to 11 more than he does . He's
probably the hardest working
sideline to make tackles.
practice player we've ever had.
"But," said Coach Pat Man- The kid never went less than 100
cuso, "an Indication of his value percent."
Joining Howe as running backs
to the team came the last four
weeks of th e season, when we . in the first team backfield are 5-9,
165-pound Desmond Howard of
also played ·hi!)l at ti gl)t end.
"That move really enhanced Clevel:tnd St. Joseph, 5-i1 , 195our offense, because of his ability pound Chuck Webb of Toledo
as a blocker. When he came over Macomber and 6-1, 195-pound
to the offense, the other offensive Eric Dixon of Dayton Wayne.
The first team quarterback Is
linemerrreally had to perk up to
Mentor's
Eric Hull , a 6-loot-2,
meet his challenge."
Reese is Princeton's second 190-pounder who completed 160
UP! lineman of the year since of 283 passes the past season for
1.822 yards and 16 touchdowns.
Rounding out the first team
offense are split end Mar k
Szlachcic of Toledo Whitmer.

.

... .
......

MONTANA HURT - San ,F ranclsco quarterChicago. Montana was immediately forced to
hack Joe Montana grimaces with pain as he hit the
leave the game with a pulleo! hamstring and a
turf trying to escape In the first quarter of Monday
wlsted knee. However, thy 49ers beat the Bears
night's game In Candlestick Park against "' 1-0. (UPI)

l

PhQne446 · ·~

SATURDAY &amp;SUNDAY MATINEES
All SEATS 12.50
BARGAIN NIGHT TUESDAY $1 .99

I_!ECEMBER 11 thru 1_!j
rR:IOAY thru TtiURSOAV :

*MOBILE HOMES
*MODULAR HOMES
*DOUBLE WIDES

ONLY 10% DOWN - FIXED RATES

Toledo Rockets hike season mark to

PEOPLES BANK

a

@

GIVE BLOOD
AT

RED .CROSS BLOODMOBILE
GET CHICKEN LlnLES FROM
CROW'S FAMILY RESTAURANT
WEDNESDAY,. DECEMBER 16

1-5:30

A

l:]l:l .

·Newsome
'
MAC honoree
TOLEDO. Ohio !UPfJ -Miami's Eric Newsome, who sco red
63 points irt the Redskins' two
games last week, was selected
Monday the Mid-Ame rican Co nference pla yer of the week.
Newsu m&lt;', a ;.fool -8 senior
from Toledo. set a n ew Millett
Hall record by scori n g 40 points
in Miami' s 110-JQ2 win over
Eva nsvi lle Wednesday night and
came back with 23 in a 91-73 loss
lo XaviPr on Saturda y.
His 40 points brok€ th e previou s Millett record of 38 poin ts
hPid by Ron Ha rper.

A Rutland man was cited In an accident Monday, at3: 48p .m.,
. In Salem Townshfp on County Road 1, about half a mile north of
County Road 1A, according to the Ga llia-Melgs Post of the State
Highway Patrol.
Roland E . Will, 19, was cited for failure to yield after his
motorcycle was hit by a pickup truck driven by David C. Smith,
39, of The Plains.
Smith was drivi ng south when Will pulled from a private drive
and Into Smith's path.

Emergency squad has 2 runs

Eastern board hires bus driver
The Eastern Local Board of Education, In special session
Monday night, employed Bob White as a substitute bus driver
for the 1987-88 school year and approved payment to the Blue
Streak Cab Company, Pomeroy , to transport a student daily. as
reqlred. to Carleton School.
In a lengthy executive session the board discussed the 1988-89
budget.
"'
Tile next meeting, in regular session, will be Monday,
December 21, at 7 p.m. at the high schooL

G. Dan Boone
Division Manager

rD tve
1

k t•[[ed ... _
Continued
1 __
_from
_page_

Rescuers searched through the
rubble of a collapsed liquor store
looking for possible casualties .
among the stench of alcohol.
The search and rescu e elfort
continued through the night and
was to Intensify at daybreak.
"We've had our search teams
out ever since this incident
occurred," West Memphis Pollee
Lt. Gary Gitchell said. "We're
·searching all the homes, busi'nesses and apartment
complexes."
Most of the damage occurred
along Interstate 40 and along
about 15 blocks of Broadway In
the Arkansas town of 30,000
'people.
Gitchell identified the dead as
John David Russell, 17, Heth,
Ark., who was found In a
.supermarket parking lot; Helen
·Beasley, 11 months, West Mem[?hls; a woman ln,her 30s found In
a field; a man in a retirement
home who died when a wall
collapsed on him, and a man
from Memphis, Tenn. , who died

Stocks
Dally stock prices
(As of 10:30 a.m.) 7
Bry&lt;;e and Mark Smith
of Blunt Ellis &amp; Loewl

in West Memphis .
Pollee said they were checking
several reports that a church had
collapsed but were unable to
immediately confirm th e
reports.
" People have been lost from
loved ones and friends. " said
admissions supervisor Myrna
Clark at Crittenden Memorial
Hospital in West Arkansas.
" We've seen some still wonder ing around looking."
At Earl's Hot Bfsuit restau rant, those stranded by the
tornado waited in the dark and
sipped coffee during a temporary
power outage.
Jack Adkisson, 54, of Wes t
Memphis, said he watched the
twister carry his truck at least
100 yards after he stopped to eat.
:·1 heard some rocks hitting·
these windows and then I hit the
floor ," he said. "We .were eating
carpet instead of milk.''
Bill Adams of West Memphis
wa.s driving his pickup when a
watermelon-sized rock crashed
through the·windshield.
"! don't know "!here It came
from," said Adams1 who was not
injured. "It took- out all my
windows. I just covered myself
and waited it out."
·

Dorothy Ritchie, Racine, will
Am Electric Power .... .. ....... 26~ · undergo by-pass heart surgery
AT&amp;T ................................. 28~ today at Mt . Carmel West HospiAshland Oil .................... ... .57\', tal Columbus. Her room number
Bob Evans ... .. ........ .... ......... l4 'l\ is E-52.
Charming Shop pes ............... 12
City Holding Co ..... .............. 34
Federal' Mogul ..................... 31
Veterans Memorial
Goodyear T&amp;R .............. ... .. 55%
Admissions - Linda Cozart,
Heck's Inc. .. ........................ 1~
Key Centurion .. .. ............... .. 36 · Pomeroy; Joseph Roush, .... New
Lands' End ..... .... .. .............. 19 % Haven; Lois Evans, Middleport;
Limited Inc.... .. ........ ......... .17~ Allie Simon, Pomeroy; Helen
Multimedia Inc......... ...... ... .44 ~ Miller, Middlepo rt; Crystal
Rax Restaurants .... .......... .. .. 314, Pridemore, Pomeroy; Thomas
Robbins &amp; Myers .. .. ............ . 6\S Grady , Racine.
Discharges - Rosie Searls,
Shoney's Inc . ............... :...... 22Ys
Wendy's Inti. .... .. .......... ....... 5\i. Martin Chapman, Carl Findling,
Worthington Ind............. .... .15 % 'Kathryn Grady, Etollia Cassell.

..

Hospital news

· Everett

Thornton

Everett W. Thornton, 73, died
Monday In Putnam General
Hospital after a short Illness.
He was a Ufe long resident of
Putnam County, a retired farmer
and carpenter.
He was preceded In death by a
grandson, two brothers and one
sister.
·
He is survived by his wife Mary
"Bird:' Thornton; three sons,
Keith R. Thornton. Point Pleasan,!; .Vernon Thornton and
Philip Thornton, Hurricane; two
daughters, Mrs . Lonnie "Rosie"
Campbell, Culloden and Mrs.
Billy "Norma" Thornton, Hurricane; one sister, Mrs . Elva
Sloan, Hurricane; one brother,
Elwood Thornton, Hurricane;
three half brothers, Leonard
Thornton, Fla; Howard Thornton, Ohio and Buford Thornton,
Hurricane; two half slsters,·Mrs .
Edith Johnson. Ohio and Catheryn Coyner, Florida; three
step brothers, Jasper Oxley,
Beckley, Bernard Oxley and
Raymond Oxley, Hurricane; 14
grandchildren and 10 greatgrandchildren.
Services will be held at 10:30
a.m . on Dec. 16 at the Allen
Funeral HQme, Hur~icane with

Weather
South Central Ohio
A high wind warning Is in effect
for today.
Windy today, with a chance of
snow flurries and temperatures
falling to near 32 this afternoon .
Windy again tonight, with scattered snow flurries and a lllw in
the mid 20s. Continued windy
Wednesday, with widely scattered snow flurries and highs
near 30.
The probability of precipitation is 70 percent today , 50
percent tonight and 50 percent
Wednesday.
Winds will be from the southwest at 35 mph and gusting to 60 .
mph today and from the west at 20 to 30 mph tonight .
Ohio extended forecast
Thursday through Saturday
Snow flurries likely Thursday,
with a chance of snow squalls In
the northeastern part of the
state. Fair Friday and a chance
of rain or snow on Saturday.
Highs will .be near 30 Thursday
anp between 35 to 40 F rlday and
Saturday. Overnight lows will
range from the upper tee ns to the
mid 20s Thursday and Friday
mornings and from 25 to 35 early
Saturday.

\ .

WEATHER MAP - The major storm system will move
northeast and bring snow, heavy at limes, from the middle anJI
upper Mississippi Valley through the upper Great Lakes. Windy
condllions will resullln blowing snow from the central Plains Into
the lower Missouri Valley. Rain and scattered thunderstorms from
the eastern Great Lakes and southern New England through the
Ohio and Tennessee valleys, the middle· and southern Atlantic
Coast region and the eastern GuH Coast Into northern and central
Florida. Rain showers will be scattered across the Pacific
Northwest with snow showers in the higher elevations and across
the northern Plateau

Sa~e

Two marriage licenses were
Issued in Me igs County Probate
Court to James David Allshouse,
33, Washington, D. C .. and Mliisa
K. Rizer, 32, Pomeroy, and Andy
Lee Patterson, Middleport, and
Te rri L y nn Wil s on, 23, ·
Middleport.

l

Elder Veldon Lynn officiating.
Burial will follow in hte Mount
Moriah Cemelery, Hurricane.

Francis Biron
Francis E. Biron, 72, Midd leport. died Monday evening a,t
Holzer Me dical Center .
Mr. Biron was born November
6, 1915 in Chicago the son of the .
late Joseph and Ro se Mayer
Biron . In addition to his parents
he was also preceded in death by
one brother, William Biron.
Mr. Biron was a proj ect
e ngineer , a member of Sacred
Heart Catholic Church, Pomeroy, past president of the Knights
of Columbus, fourth degree.
Survivors Include his wife,
Catherine Jan~n Biron ; one
daughter , and son-in-law, Jane
and Donald Frymyer, Shade;
three grantlchildren, Lisa, Da~ld.
and Michael Frymyer, Shade;
several nieces and nephews.
Mass of the Resurrection will
be held Thursday at 10 a.m. at.the
Sacred Heart Cathollc Church
with the Monsignor Anthony
Glanamore officiating. Burial
will be In Sacred Heart Catholic
Cemetery. Friends may call at
the Rawlings-Coats-Blower Funeral Home Wednesday from 2 to 4
and 7 to 9. Rosary services will be
held Wednesday at 8:30p .m.

INCOME FUND
If a managed portfolio of high·
yield corporate bands appeals to
you, call for a prospectus contain·
mg more complete infoilll&amp;tion,

including charges and expenses .
Read it carefully before investing
or sending money.
Yield al\(1 share price will vary.

Far example, an 00/00/861he net
asset value per share was $0.00
and an 00/00187 it was $0 .00.
•Based en ( D A T E )offerillcpri~e &amp;~~dan
mn~tion of the Fund '• moat recent
monthly dividend. Tht Fund LIHUgenerally
lt~,t~: ACCOWltin( principle lm()W'II U

tioo. Thev.U~~e o(yollliuve.tment&amp;t
redemptioo may be more or leu than your

@n;r_ciQd ©- .~
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You'll have the Pomeroy Daily
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To start or renew your subKription just fill out the coupon below and sl~d with your
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DECISIONS ALONE?
,.
, Occasionally we hear about people
I
·who have considered arranging in ad.vance for their funeral services but did
.not because they didn•t know how to .
approach the sJbject to their spouses .
It's difficult to talk about death. they
say.
Well, sometimes it is . But, we, as fu. neral directors, believe that openness ~..~rr:::li
is still the best policy. You need feel no ~
embarrassment in talking with your
....... .
husband or wife about final arrange.,. ·.· .
ments . Chances are that he or she will /~;j;~~~_:;:::;;;.'d-'"'·' -''
also have thought of it.
•
And talking over with us your plans for ·
. services will make sure e11eryone you, your spouse, your clergyman,
·and ourselves - understand exactly
your wishes. 'That's important to you
and to us.
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POMEROY DAILY SENTINEL

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CHRISTMAS SEASON
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12.9'1/o*

Yourself Some Money

Licences issued

'
,.

today on NBC's "Today" pro- the cost of some retiree benefits
gram, J ames Miller, director of and forbids any rate Increases to
the Office of Management and offset the $1.7 billion price tag.
Budget, said Americans "ought
Asked If Christmas mailings
to be angry at the Postal Service. could be affected, Coughlln said:
I mean It's almost as If they took
"They could be, starti ng &lt;JS
Christmas as hostage for ran - early as next week. If It (the final
som . Talk about the grlnch thai bill) came out the way it Is
stole Christmas ."
currently spelled out In the
Miller said the Postal Service legislation. yes, we would reis playing "the Washington Mon- spond almost 1m mediately. We
ument game. ... They are would have little choice because
bluffing ."
almost a quarter of this fiscal
"I would ask the postmaster year is gone."
general to go back and look and
~ossible cuts Incl ude limiting
see If he co uldn' t find ways of post ollices to six hours of
Continued from page 1
meeting all these service obliga- window service on weekdays ,
tions at lower costs, " Miller said, eliminating most Saturday win·was hurt, authori ties said ,
adding, "Surely they can shave dow service, red uc ing the
Five inches of snow fell In St.
2.2 percent."
number of workers, halting 70
Louis , the n thunderstorms
House and Senate negotiators major construction projects and .
erupted. Lightning struck the
are working on a compromise 532 smaller construction proroof of the Our Lady of Perpetual
package to trim the federal jects, canceling co ntracts lor
Help church, igniting a fire that
deficit by $76 billion over two new automa ted equipment and
gutted the building.
·
years. The Senate version re- delaying the purchase of new
quires the Postal Service to bear vehicles.
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST TO 7 AM EST 12·16-87

spokes woman Patti Walker said ,
"We have all our crews on right
now and we're trying to get a
handle on the snow, which is still
coming ·down. From what we
understand , it's now hailing on
some of the expressways."
A 55-year-old man died Monday night in Chicago when he
slipped on wet pavement and fell
under the wheels of a bus he was
running to catch. Icy or snowpacked roads were blamed for
traffic accidents that killed two
people In New Mexico , two 1n
Oklahoma and one .each in ..u ....,L
Arizona and Nebraska .
A 17-year-old boy lost his way
while looking lor a Christmas
tree on his grandfather's ranch
Sunday near Aquilar, Colo., and
froze to death, authori ties said. A
search party found Gaetano
Avila's body Monday.
"They found him about two
miles from where he cut the
tree." town deputy John Martinez· said. " It looks like he just
got lost in the woods and froze to
death out there.'''
Thunders torms triggered by
the storm spun off several other
~ •••;:!sNOW
-RAIN
[?; ~2j SHOWERS
tornadoes, including one that
demolished three trailer homes FRONTS: " Warm "
Cold
. . Static . . Occluded
in southeast Missouri's Stoddard
Ma::&gt;
shows
m t nim:.~:r. tem:&gt;e~at"Jres . At !eas: SC% o~ any s~aced area is t: recast
County Monday night. No one to receive ::~rec,;l!:auo;-, .,o•ca:ed
·
UPI

Has surgery

Area deaths

approved.
"We will be forc~?d to take
strong measures" if Congress
accepts the plan, Tisch said,
raising th e possibility of shorter'
service hours , staff cutbacks and
cancellation of most of the Postal
Service's construction and 'modernization plans.
Mail still would be delivered on
Saturday but Deputy Postmaster
General Michael Coughlin said It
is not safe from elimination later.
'
Asked about the comments

.Winter storms...

Clarence E. Persinger, 68, and his wife Minna, 89, of Rt. 2,
Crown City, were found dead at their residence Monday , at 6:15
p.m.; hy the sheriff's department. They apparently died from
gunshot wounds, according to the sheriff's department. ,
The state Bureau of Criminal Investigation was called rn to
assist the In the continuing investigation.
The bodies were ta ken to the Franklin County Coroner's
Office In Columbus for further examination.
Present at the scene were Sheriff James M. Montgomery,
County Prosecutor Joseph L. Cain, Assistant Prosecute~ Brent
A. Saunders and Capt. Carl Langford, chief Investigator fo r the
sheriff's department.

Tuesday's games:
Eastern
at Parkersburg Catholic
· - - ----'-c_o_
nt_in_ue_d_rro_m....:p:._a=-ge_3_ _ _ __
Meigs at Alexander
Irvine Improved to 5-2, while points and freshman Richard lead 45-33. The Broncos built Minford at Oak Hill
New Orlea ns fell to 2-2. The Dumas contributed 16 points and their lead to 53-38 with 8: 28 to go, Parkersburg South at Point
NEW MANUFACTURED HOME FINANCING
bu t Andre Sims of the Bulldogs Pleasant
Privateers led by at leas t 10 7 rebounds for the Cowboys.
Tom Lewis led Pepperdine hit 4 3-pointers to help close the Boyd County at South Point
point s for most of the first half
. AMOUNT
15YEARTERM
ANNUAL
and started the second half with a with 25 points and 6 rebounds . -margin to 67-66 with two minutes Wahama at Calhoun County
(180
Monthly
Payments)
FINANCED
PERCENTAGE RATE
West at Peebles ·
59-47 lead. The Ante aters nar - Levy Middlebrooks chipped in 13 remaining.
Both teams missed scoring Athens at Nelsonville-York
rowed the lead to one with siK points and 8 rebounds.
13.25%
$128.17
$10,000
opportunities
until Santa Clara's Marietta at Cambridge
minutes left.
Friday's games:
SANTA CLARA. Calif. !UPll Mitch Burley was ·routed inten13.25%
$1'92.26
$15;ooo
Gallipolis
at Logan
tionally
with
three
seconds
lo
' STiLLWATER. Okla . (UP])- -Da n Weiss scored 20 point sa nd
Marietta at Jackson
John Starks collected 20 point s Santa Clara withstood a Ia te rally play and hit both free throws.
13.25%
$256.34
$20,000
Warren
at Athens
Jervis Cole sco red 19 points for
and 10 rebounds to pace Okla · to defea t Fresno State, 69-66.
Ironton at Portsmouth
Santa Clara went on a 16·5 Fresno State, 2-4. Santa Clara
homa State to a 83-66 vi ctory over
Pt. Pleasant at Huntington High
spurt early in the second half to improved to 3-2.
Pepperdine.
Southern at Hannan Trace
Sylvester Kincheon added 18
Other Terms·And Amool"rl~n Request
4-() North Gallla at oak Hill
.
Kyger Creek at Symmes Valley
Loans Subject TQ Qualification Of Borrower
Eastern at Southwestern
MIAMI (UP!) -Toledo guard 63·60 Toledo lead.
William Branch hit .two free
The Golden Panthers guard
Wheelersburg at Portsmouth
~rls
throws with lour seco nds left as Robert RowP scored two free West
the . Rockets defeated Florida throws with no time remaining
Waverly at Northwest
The Me igs J unior High Maroon
ln·ternational
63-62
Monday
on
the
clock
lor
the
final
margin
.
Chesapeake at Huntington SJ
squad upped its season record to
.
,
Toledo
freshman
guard
Keith
Greenfield
at Miami Trace
night
a perfect :!-0 wit h a recent 51-14
With
Toledo
up
61-60
and
FlU
WadP
led
all
scorers
with
20
Saturday's
games:
5th Street 12212 Jackson Ave.,2nd Street
victory over Federal Hockin g
controlling
the
ball
with
six
points
while
Whigham
topped
South
Point
at
Gallipolis
48-17 win over Vinton
and
New
Haven
Point Pleasant
Mason
seconds remaining, Branch stole FlU with 16.
·
Wheelersburg at South Webster
County.
882·2135
675·1121
7.73·5514
The win gave Toledo a 4-0
Coal Grove at Symmes Valley
· fn the Federal Ho cking con- ~n erra nt pass thrown by FlU
forward
Sylvester
Whigham
.
record
on
the
seasot\
while
FlU
Kyger
Creek
at
Wahama
IC's!. thC' little Maraudere1tes .
Waverly at Jackson
quick!)' fe ll behi nd in the flt:st Bra nch was immediately fouled fell lo 1-4.
both
free
throws
for
a
Greenfield at Ross -Southeastern
and
made
ha lf minute of play, 4 to 0. After
Equal Housing Lender ·
Member F.D.I.C.
Logan at Meigs
that it was all Meigs as they
reeled off 41 unanswered points,
holding the Lancers scoreless
until ear ly in the fou rth quarter .
· Eig ht pta yC'rs entered the
scoring column for Meigs with
Tricia Baer a nd Kim Hanning
IPaading the grou p with U and 10
points respectively. Chris sy
Weaver was close behind with 8.
t;ovc Batey co ntributed 6. as did
Mary Cremeans, and Va ler ie
Wilson and Mis ty Butcher had 2
SENIOR CITIZENS CENTER
each.
t GTE, it's not enough to-simply m eet
AI Vinton Cou nty, th e Mara Liders quic kly ~~ the pace as they
your expectations for service. Our goal is to
broke into a 16-2 first quart er
exceed your expectations. We urge our employees
!Pad and never looked back as
to reach constantly higher. To continually seek out
thev once again placed eight gir ls
int&lt;; the scoring column wit h a
new, and better OPJportun ities to se rve you . Without
,;er\' balanced attac k . The Mayour support, our standard for excellence would
raudl'rettPs co nnected On 24 field
goals wit h Tricia Baer and Verna
be meaningless.
Compston ca nn ing'10 poin ts each
Satisfaction. Our signature on service.
as Kim Hanning a nd Reva
Mullen added 8 apiece. Chipping
'
In with 6 poi nts was Ch t'lssy
Weaver. Misty Outcher, Melan ie
Qualls and Mary Cre means co ntributed 2 points each .

Meigs junior high
still unbeaten

WASHINGTON (UP!) -PresIdent Reagan 's budget direct or
today accused the Postal Service
of being the grinch tha t stole
Christmas a nd said its threat to
curtail service Is a bluff.
Postmaster General Preston
' Tisch told a news conference
Monday that even with the
Christmas rush on, the Postal
Service may curtail weekda y
hours and close most post offices
on Saturdays if the S~nate's
deficit reduc tion plan is

Gallia couple found dead

You'll Be Home.
For Christmas

UCLA snaps four ..

Rutland man cited after wreck

5::11 JAdKSON PIKE · RT. J~ WEST

continued, starting with an 8.3yard punt return for a touchdown
by Dana McLemore. Young
completed the night with touch down passes of 16 and 2 yards to
Rice.

Tonight's games

--Local briefs--_, Reagan's budget director says Tisch ls bluffing

Two emergency runs were made by local units Monda y· the
Meigs County Emergency Medical Service reported .
. At 6:33 p.m. Rutland to Maln.Street for Francis Anderson,
taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital; at 8:51 p.m . Racine to
Antiquity lor Thomas Grady, taken to Veterans Memorial.

Continu~d from pa~;:e 3

.49ers rout Bears...
scoring pass to Dwight Clark and
Ray Wersching field goals of 20
an&lt;) 45 yards.
The 49ers defense grabbed its
six turnovers.by halftime and the
San Francisco offense rushed for
116 yards in the first quarter. The
Bears entered the game yielding
an average of just 82.3 yards
rushing per game.
" We felt we could run against
their defense," said fullback
Tom Rathman. "We ran well
both inside and outside."
Tomczak, who threw all four
interceptions, said the first half
turned Into a bad dream.
"The game turned out Ia be a
nightmare after awhile, " he
said. "But we're champions and
champions always bounce
back."
In the second half. the rout

defensive secondary, while the
punter on the first team Is Joel
Kesseli of Massillon Perry .
Princeton, with three first
learners and two on the secondrunning back Markus Thomas
and llneback~r Charlie Williams
- had the most players selected
to the team . Cleveland St . Joseph
had three and eight other schools
had two players on either the first
or second team.

The Daily Sentinel- Page- S

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

T~~December15.1987

I
1

(6 141667-3110

COOLVILLE , OHIO

�••

The Daily Sentinel

'

By The Bend

NEW YORK (UP!) -Second-.
ranked 'Arizona crept closer to
the top spot whlie Kentucky
became the !lrst team to hold the
No . 1 ranking for successive
weeks In United Press lnterna·
ttonal's college basketball rank·
lngs released today .
Kentucky, 4·0, a 76-75 victor
over Louisville ln Its only game of
the week, received 28 first -place
votes and 610 points. The two
previous No . 1 teams, Syracuse
and North Carolina, each los t the
week after earning the top spot.
Kentucky's margin over No. 2
Arizona shrunk !rom 106 points to
45 as the Wildcats garnered nine
first-place votes and 565 points.
Arizona, 7·0, won twice during
the week, including a 66-59
triumph over then-No. 3 Iowa on

TROPHffiS PRESENTED - Winners In the
Christmas parade held November 29 In the
villages of Pomeroy and ~liddieport were
presented their trophies Monday by Bill Nease,
president of the Pomeroy Area Chamber of
Commerce, the sponsoring group. Trophies for
top winners went to, rrunt, 1-r, Charla Burge, the
best non-commercial entry as Meigs County's

U ttle Miss County Fair and Mellsha Swisher, The
Dance Company: back, Peggy GIUespie, the
Styietles BatOn Corps; Susan Houchins and
Shirley Quickel, The Dance Company; Patrece
Circle, southern Band; . Linda Diddle, J .D.
Drilling Co., and Bill Nease. Absent was
Vaufl'han's Cardinal for the best equestrian unit.

The second six weeks grading
period honor roil at Rejoicing
Life Baptist Christia n School has
been announced. Making a grade
of B or above in all their subjects
to be named to the roll were:
Grade One: ·Rachel Forbes,
Jacque Hall, Daniel McDonald.
Eric Richmond, Audra Gaul,
Steph anie Jones , Rachel Pangia.
Grade Two: Tara Davis, Seth
McDonald, Aaron Panglo, Ca·
rolyn Sue Ellen Barnhart, Steven
Rice.
Grade Four: Todd Davis,
Shawn Rice.
Gra de Five: Emily Asbeck,
Mandy Jo nes, KristFn }'orres,
Ryan Dodson, Jason Pa ngia.
Grade Six: Deanna Boothe,
J e!!rey Nevitt .
Kindergarte n: Max Bratto n ,
Joshua J ones, Tiffany Rich ·
m ond. Candace Werry, Je nna
Boring, Tawny Jones. Ann')
Story.

POMEROY - Xi Ga mma Mu
Chapter , Beta Sigma Phi Sorority. will meet Tuesday at the
j'lome of Anne Chapman, High
St. , 7 p. m . Members are to take
gifts wrapped in while paper and
a red bow.
MIDDLEPORT - A special
of Middleport Lodge 363,
F&amp;AM wilt be held Tuesday, 7
p.m. at the hall. Wor k in the
(eltowcraft degree w ill be exem·
plified. Refreshments will be
~eeti n g

Served.

~

,

RACTNE - Racine Lodge 461,
F&amp;AM wil l meet . in specia l
session Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. fo r
the purpose of installing new
officers. A fi s h fry will folloW . All
masons are invit~d.
MIDDLEPORT - Group II of

Citizens Center in Pomeroy on
the Middleport Prsesbyterlan
Wednesday !rom 1 to 5:30 p.m .
Church will meet Tuesday at the
Blood is urgently needed.
church, 7:30 p.m. Mrs. Harry
Moore will have the Christmas
MIDDLEPORT -The Middle·
program and the thank offering ·
port
Literary · Club will m ee t
will be taken. In lieu of a -gilt
Wednesday,
2 p.m., at the hom e
exc hange, 111embers wtll coin·
of
Mrs.
Bernard
Fultz.
tribute to a needy family . Mrs.
Moore, Kathryn Hysell, and Mrs.
THURSDAY
Eddie Burkett will be hostesses.
RACINE - Racine Elemen tary School will present a Christ·
MIDDLEPORT - Xi Gamtna
ma s progra m on Thursday at 7
Epsilon Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority, wil meet at the home of p.m . at the Racine Fir~ t Baptist
Phyllis Hackett, sponsor, at 6·: 30 Church. Everyone is welcome to ..
attend.
p.m. on Tuesday for a Christmas
.
party. Members are reminded to
ROCK
SPRINGS
Rock
take a gift as welt as an ornament
Springs
Better
Health
Club
will
for the exchange.

---

POMEROY
Frater nal
Order of the EagtesT~:,~~·;:;
Auxiliary 2171 wilt met
at 7 p.m at the hail. There will
election of a vice
Members are reminded to
items for the Christmas oasK&lt;ets.r

CHICAGO (UP I)- Plans for a
post-season basketball tourna·
ment in the Big Ten were
sidetracked Monday when the
league 'presidents postponed a
final decision on the matter.
The Big Ten's .Councll of Ten
was expected to formally ratify a
post-season basketball tourney,
beginning with the 1988·89

season.

GLASSIHtD AOS
asupermarket
for everything

But the group decided to
postpone a final decision and said
It would try to get additional
Information.
Items the school's presidents
and .c hancellors wanted more
Information on conce rned possi·
ble · missed class time, site

POMEROY -The Red
Bloodmobile wtll be at the Senior)

U.S. Capitol

Rome

The U.S. Ca pitol was designed by
Dr. William Thornton, an amateur ar.
ctiitect. According to The World AI·
manac, he submitted his plan in 1773,
receivjDg $50 0 and a city tot as comp~nsation . The present Senate and

Rome emerged as a major power in
Italy after 500 B.C., dominating the
more civilized Etrusca ns in the North

and the Greeks to thf South. Under
the Roman Empire, w~ich lasted until
House wings and the iron dome were the filth century A.D., Rome ruled
designed and constructed i n 1807 un- moRt of Western Europe, the Balkans,
der the direction of Benjamin H. the Near East and North Africa.
Lat robe.

Kaff-kajj!
By MaJ. Amos B Hoople
Wizard &lt;d,Odds
Egad, friends! The early boWl
lineup in college football has
some very Interesting pairings.
So, let's get right to the pl'Obable
results.
lndependen~e Bowl: Washington (6-H) vs. Tulane (6-5),
Shreveport, La., Mizlou-TV, Saturday, Dec. 19, 8 p.m. EST.
Coach Don James of Washington Is making his eighth straight
bowl trip and his 11th overall. For
Tulane coach Mack Brown 11 Is
his first bowl assignment.
James' Huskies played a more
demanding schedule, losing to
top powers UCLA, Southern Cal
and Texas A&amp;M. Look for Washington to win, 35-20.
All-American Bowl: Brigham
Young (9·3) vs. VIrginia (7-4),
Birmingham, Ala., Raycom-TV,
Tuesd~cy, Dec. 22, 8 p.m. EST.
BYU, second In the WAC ,
finished on· a high note, wtnntng
etght of Its last nine starts.
Vlrglna was a surprise second to
Clemson In the tough ACC. We
look for LaVell Edwards' BYU
Cougars to defeat the Cavaliers.
37-24.
Sun Bowl: Oklahoma State
(9-21 vs. Wesl Virginia (6-5), El
"Paso, Texas·, CBS-TV, Christmas
Day, Dec. 25, 2:30p.m. EST.
The won-lost records aren't
indicative of their abllittes.

RACINE . - Racine Elemen·
tary School will present a Christ·
mas program on Thursday ·at 7
p.m. at the Racine First Baptist
Church. Everyone welcome .
Planned parenthood
POMEROY - Planned Parenthood of Southeas tOhio patient
services offices will close Dec. 23
at 5 p .m. in observance of the
holida ys. Offices will reopen on
J a n. 4 at 8:30a .m .

'

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509 SOUTH THIRD.AVE., MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
THURSDAY, DECEMBER 17
FROM 9:00-12:00 (NOON)

tr-

THE TESTS WILL BE GIVEN BY A LICENSED HEARING AID SPECIAUST.
An~one hu
lleatlng ot Uftllelllandlng con..,1111on 11 lnwllod lo
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with ~ou lor 1'0111 FREE HEARING TEST ol ~ v1tue. Adull1 onlr. PleiN.

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selection and financial
considerations.
"They postponed final consld·
eratlon, " said Big Ten spokesman Mark Rudner. " Notlmewas
set to bring up the matter again."
However, Rudner said the
Council of Ten meets only " once
or twice a year ," He said the
council coulcj call a special
session to consider the proposal
and still have It In place for next
season should the plan be ap·
proved. N~ plans were made to
call another meeting on the
subject at Monday's mmeetlng in
' suburban 'Chicago. Other Items
were discussed at the meeting
but the post-season basketban
tournament was the major

agenda item, Rudner added.
Big Ten athletic diredors
approved the proposal for a
pdst-season tournament earlier
this month. Conference basket·
ball coaches approved the plan
earlier this year with only
Indiana coach Bobby Knight
voting against the proposal.
The Big Ten Is one of the last
holdouts for holding a post·
season tournament to determine
Its automatic NCAA tournament
representative. Only the Ivy
League and the AMCU-8 are the
only other Division I conferences
tha t do not conduct a post-season
tour nament to select its ·automati c
NCAA
tourney
repre sentative.

Watch for OSU to bowl over WV A

meet at the Rock Springs Church
at 12: 30 p.m. on Thursday for a
potluck Christmas dinner. There
wilt be a gift exchange. Cand) '
and cookie tray s will be made.

' COUPON
- HEARING TESTS IN .MEIGS COUNTY

fall of the week, dropping lOs pots
to 17th following the etght-point
loss at Memphis State. Iowa and
Georgetown, which both absorbed their first defeats during
th e week, sUpped five spots
apiece.
Temple shot up thre~ spots as
dtd Michigan. The Owls won their
three games during the week by
an average of 16 points white the
Wolverines thrashed three oppo·
nents by an average of 40.
Five tea ms from the Big Ten
made the ranklngs with three
each .from the Bi g East ·and Big
Eight. Two teams from the
Southeastern Co nference were
listed.
Ranklngs are based on 15
points for first place, 14 for
second. etc.

Big 10 postpones tourney decision

Community calendar
TUESDAY
. RACINE - Regular meeting
e! the Southe rn Local School
Bard will be held Tuesday at 7
p.m. at the high school cafeteria .

the road.
Pittsburgh was r~nked third,
then lt was North Carolina,
Ind iana, Wyoming, Duke, Iowa,
Syracuse and Temple. The
Panthers picked up three first·
place votes and the Cowboys and
Blue Devlls each had one.·
Florida led the second 10
followed by Michigan, Purdue,
Oklahoma, Nevada· Las Vegas,
Georgetown, Missouri, Kansas,
Illinois and Memphis State.
Illinois and Memphis State
joined the rankings while Auburn
and Notre Dame dropped out.
The Illlnl beat Auburn In the
championship game of the Illlni
Classic while the Tigers downed
Missouri. Notre Dame lost to
DePaul.
Missouri suffered the biggest

25°/o
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OPEN EVENINGS TIL 8

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OSU 's two defeat s came at the
hands of our No . 1 team,
Oklahoma, and No . 5, Nebraska.
WVU lost to rugged Pitt , 6-3, and
fought No. 4 Syracuse (11-0) to
the last 20 seconds before falling ,
32-:il. In a close one, look for
AII·Amertcan RB Thurman Tho·
mas to lead No . 12 Oklahoma
State to a 31·28 victory.
Aloha Bowl: UCLA (9-2) vs.
Florida (6·5), Honolulu , ABC·TV,
Christmas Day, Dec. 25. 3:45
p.m . EST.
.
Terry Donahue's UCLA Bruins
are making their seventh consecutive bowl appearance. No · 9
UCLA features QB Troy Aikman
and RB Gaston Green. They will
duel Gator QB Kerwin Bell and
freshman RB Emmitt Smith. It
should be an Interest lng after·
noon. In a squeaker, the Hoople
System calls It for UCLA, 33-28.
Liberty Bowl: Georgia (8-3)
vs. Arkansas (9-31, Memphis,
Tenn., Raycom-TV, Tuesday,
D!!C. 29, 8 p.m. EST.
When the SEC's Georgia Bulldogs, No . 18, play SWC power
Arkansas, It should be a good
one. VInce Dooley Is going to a
bowl for the 19th time In his 24
years as coach of Georgia. For
the Bulldogs, Lars Tate, averagIng 102 yards -per-game rushing,
should spell the difference. Bui
the Razorback attack, sparked
by RB James Rouse , has lm·

proved week-by-week . They
co uld surprise . However, make !I
·
Georgia, 26-23.
Holiday Bowl: Wyoming (10-21
vs. Iowa (9-3), San Diego, ESPNTV, Wednesday, Dec. 30, 7:30
p.m . EST. ·
.
Paul Roach, tn his first year as
head coac h of the Wyoming
CowbOys, took his team to the .
WAC title and a 7-0 conference
sweep. For Iowa coach Hayden
Fry. whose Hawkeyes finished
seeond In the Big Ten, It Is his
lOth bowl engagement In 26
years. Offensively, Wyoming has
472 yards-per-game to 43ll for the
Hawkeyes. However, on experience, the Hoople System likes
Iowa, 37-35.
Freedom Bowl: Air Force (9-3)
vs. Arizona State (6·4·11, Anaheim, Calif., Mizlou-TV,'Wednesday, Dec. 30, 8 p.m. EST.
The Air Force F;~icons are
(surprise! ) very strong on the
ground, averaging 38ti rushing
yards per contest. Soph RB
Michael Downs accounts for 110
of those yards each week. And
the Falcons had better stay on
the ground. Arizona State LB
Eric Allen picked oil eight
opponent passes this year, re·
turning two for TDs. ln a real
crowd -pleaser, we see Air Force
taking ·a 32-28 decision. Harrumph!
Watch for · my major bowl
forecast coming next.

CJ

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417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
Gallipolis. Ohio 45631

or at

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Public Notice ·

onoa
0101111

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OHIIIII

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. Clauified page• oover rhe

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fulluwlng I P. Iephone exchtJnlfet ...
....
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:'.:"c~":t.

···.,_,...
'"'*"-·
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.,...,_..

HILAH
aka HILAH VOOHRES
SMITH, aka HILAH
VORHES SMlTH, aka
HILAH DOROTHY
VORHES , aka HILAH DO·
ROTHY WQORHES. at al .

aka Hilah Voorhea Smith,
aka Hilah Vorhes Smith, aka

Hilah Dorothy Vorhes. aka
Hilah Dorothy Voorhaa, Ga·

raid A. Smith, . Mary E.

Derry. and the Unknown

Heirs. Nut of Kin , Adminis-

~~::,e.o-

M l - IAO.......

1 -_..-__,
-·-·· --·-·.,•n•··-·-·•l&gt;o
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:t::l;':'"-

··-~

Public Notice

signed Case No. B7-CV-303

and is pending in the Court
of Common Pleas of Meigs

County, Ohio, 46769. The

n~- .. - ·

?7--·-

Gerald A. Smith, and Hilah

Voorhas. aka Hilah Dorothy

Vorha .s, Presbyterian
Church of Wilkesville, aka
First Preabyterian Church of
Wilkesville, the Unknown
Succeuors. if any, to The
Presbyterian Church of Wil kesville, aka The First Presb·
yterian Church of Wilkes·
ville, be granted to quiet title
to real estate, and costs of
this action: and all o1her
sBrv and prop-er.
You are required to
answer the Comolaint

__

:-c.

___ _ ,,
""
._......
·1·-·------··
-·-· =·. =-__,_,_."""'
=-··-- ..
,,

Public Notice

Public Notice

within twenty-eight (28)
days after the last publication of this Notice, which
will be published once each
week for six (6) successive
weeks. This last publication
will remain on the 5th day of
January. 1988. and the
twenty· eighl (28) days for
answer will commence on
that data.
In case of your failure to
answer or otherwise re ~
spond as requastad by the
Ohio Rules of Civil Pt"oce·
dure. judgment by default
will be rendered agair1sl you
and for the relief demanded
in the Complaint .

(12) 1, B. 16, 22, 29; !11 5,
6tc
Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE

l'C"'-

===~'::'~-

H - ...........

::::::":!'!.'1:'"' .

prayer of the Complaint
demands ju 9fll&amp;nt against
the Def
ants, Hllah Do·
rothy
mith, aka Hilah
Voorhes Smith. aka Hilah
Vorhes Smith, aka Hilah
Dorothy Vorhes, aka Hilah
Dorothy Voorhes, Gerald A .
Dated this 25th day of
Smith, Mary E. Derry. and November. t 987.
larry E. Spencer,
the Unknown Heirs, Next of
Kin, Administrators. EKecu· .
Clerk of Courts
tors. Devisees and Assigns~ By Marlene Harrison .
or SucceuOfs, if ,my, of
Deputy

Dorothy Smith. aka Hilah

·-N
..----·-·--·n
,._---••
,.........

U - CI. "!VI~-·- ...

~-

trators. Executors, Devisees Mary E. Derry, Gerald A.
and Assigns or Succeuors, Smith. and Hilah Oor'othy
If any, of Marv E. Darry, Smith , aka Hilah Dorothy
Dorothy Voorhea. aka Hllah
Dorothy Vorhes, Presbyter~
ian Church of Wilkesville,
aka First Presbyterian
Church of Wilkeaville. the
Unknown Successors, if
any. to The Presbyterian
Church of Wilkesville, a~a
The Firat Presbyterian
Church of WilkesvWie.
You are hereby notified
that you have been named
Defendants in the action

U_,._,.. ...

:: :=t.:..~

Plaintiffs Vorhes, · aka Hilah Dorothy
Voorhet, et ·al .. Defendants.
- vs.DOROTHY SMITH, This actioru, has been as·

Case No . 87·CV·303
NOTICE BY PUBLICATION
TO: Hllah Dorothy Smith,

GALLIPOLIS RETAIL
MERCHANTS ASSOCIATION

......

OUIO
OUOO

entitle William Crav . et al.,
IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT Plaintiffs. vs. Hilah Dorothy
Smith. aka Hilah Voorhes
OF
Smith. aka Hilah Vorhes
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
Smith. aka Hilah Dorothy
WILLIAM E. CRAV, at al

Defendants

'

1-clftl'~

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--..............

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11'1- ... . -

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,., . . . ..........
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3 FREE .
Fabulous

SUNDAYS
1:00 P.M. TIL 5 P.M.

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RATES

0. !I WIIIICI 11 · B WDIIDt II

!D UI

Housing and Urban Develop-

ment.

The Village of Middleport

is considering applying for
UOAG funds for new busineu developef'lt and will
present basic criteria of the
UOAG program at this meet·
In g.
Anv intarBStad parson is
invited to attend and provide
input on this program or
written comments may be
addressed to Mayor Fred

Hoffman. 237 Roca St ..
Middleport, Ohio45760. All
written comments must be
received by 7 :30 P.M. De-

cember 28. 19B7.
Fred Hoffman. Mayor
Village of Middleport

(12]16 1tc

Public Not.ice
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On December 10, 1987, in
the Me1gs County Probata

·

A public hearing will be hald

by tho Vllage of Middleport
on Monday, December 28.
19ti7 ot 7:30 P.M. in the
council chambers IOe&amp;\ed at

237 Race St.. Middleport.

Ohio 46760 for the purpose
of discuuing the Urban De·
vetopment Action Grant PrOgram of the Department of

Court. Cau No. 26402, MltchaiiJ . Altar, 580 South High
St-. Suit a 330, Columbus.
Ohio. 43216 woo oppolnted
Special Adminiotmor of the
ootata of Robert B. Morrio,
deceasad, lote of 114 Union
Avanua,

457.69.

Pom«oy.

Ohio.

Robert E. Buck.
Probate Judge

Lena K. Nea•lroad. Clerk

112115, 22, 29 3tc

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'
10· 7-tln

CHRISTMAS

TREES

Gamr~

Tag Your Tree
Early
For Christmas

p!r gom!
OVER 110 PWPL£

$65 p•r gam•
r.n,., 111

.nolu~HI

1 Hard

'" .l.dm•uroo

Card~

fRH

w1lh lh1\ ad and punhttu
of mtmmum pa1koqe.
lim11 1 p•r cusfomtt p•r
Binqo "Uton.
L~ . ~ 005 - 01 hp. 3/19/ 17

PUiliC I"VRID

Harley Haning
Residence
35975 Flatwoods Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio
2'1• mites from Five Points.
ll-23· '81 l mo.

Roger Hysell
Garage
.AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Also lrantmltslon
PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

members and all

•Holida¥ Parties
•Weddings
•School &amp; Ct'iurch Programs

1/2 PRICE SALE

Racine Emergency

those who made his
lest day bearable a~d
for the comfort they
gave to his family
and friends in the
days of grief! to Rev.
Roger Grace and
Rev. James Corbitt
for their caring; to
those who 'ware
honorary pallbearers

Record Those Speciai
Occasions on VHS
Tape

Femele Black Labrador. Call

Squad , the Doctors
Veterans Memorial
Hospital. the Pastors
of the Meigs United
Methodist Co-Op
Parioh, ,Rev . William
Middleowart, the
Apple Grove United
Methodist Church

FREE LANCE
VIDEO

Basham Building

Rt. 124, Pomeroy Ohio

and Nurses at

tank. and watch it subtract and
display fuel consumed .

If interested stop by.

1 Card of :rhanks ·
The family of
ROBERT K. SMITH
wishes to thank the

Before and after auto tune-up.

(Comparator) Fill up your

Vard Sale items to giveaway.
Call 614-388-8449.

12· 2·' 87 -1 mopd

JOHN TEAFORD

miles per ga llon readout.

Know your fuel consumption
from one block to hundreds of
miles.
Commercial:
Store to Job Cost
. Taxi Service

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

PLASTER CRAFT
CERAMIC BISQUE
MAKE &amp; BAKITS, ETC .

'CHE$111, OliO 45720
11·20·' 87·1 mo.

Add on mini fuel ~ computer
system. Fits any car. Instant

l2·J.87-i mo.

IS FOR SALE

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992-2772

•Golf Clubs
,!.__:;,
Shirts - Shoes
•Trophies -"'Plaques
Badges
•Name Tags for
Dogs.

Home &amp; Auto
(6141 992-371.8

Rutland, Ohio

Middleport, Ohio

GOING ON NOW

THE
KOUNTRY CLUB
"ChrltiiiiU r·~~J
Stle"
\ ;

-

·' . R

CONSUMER MONITOR
SYSEMS

WEBER FARM

THE DABBLE SHOP

FREt ESTIMATES

11·23-'87· 1 mo.

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

ij:'·• · .. .

White Pine.

1-23-'87-1 mo.

"CALL 742-2315

BILL SLACK
614-992-2269

11 ·5 -87· 1 mo.

PH. 992-2772

992-6226

Per Pickup load
Delivered

Middleport-Coi.J Ohio

•FURNACES
•AIR CONDITIONERS
•HEAT PUMPS
FREE ESTIMATES

Ron Diles or
Gary Cummln1

Oak, Cherry

$3500

MAPLEWOOD
LAKE
949-2734
.· 11 · 27·'17 1 mo. pd.

DIANA IHLE ·
949-2890

WIDE
SELECTION ,
ALL MAKES AND
MODELS·.

locu~t.

Monitors for MCF -CCF used
for furnaces. calibrated to
your gas meter.

$5.00 Extra

Call For lnfarmation

NEW AND USED

FIREWOOD

UNDER '90

S2SOO

Teaching Thompson,
Schaum, Bastian ·
From Baginners to
Advanced Students

PARTS

12/ 14/ 1 mo.

992-3410

1:00 P.M. ·
RACINE
GUN CLUB
RACINE, OHIO

614-742-2355

DENNY CONGO
'WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

1-24-'87· 1 mo. pd.

GUN SHOOT
EVERY
SUNDAY ·

Heppy Hollow Rd .
RUTLAND

11·23-'87-1 mo.

3-ll·ttn

MARCUM
CONTRACTING

Rt. 124 Across from

11 -23-'1 7 1 mo. pd.

·

OPEN FOR

. •SLUGS ·
•AMMO
•GUNS
•MUZZLE LOADING
SUPPLIES
OPEN 1 to 9 P .M .

992-3711

YOUNG'S
PlUMBING &amp; HEATING

HILLSIDE MUIILELOADING
GUN SHOP .

E.O.H.

Veterans Memorial Hospital
Mulberry Hgts, Pomeroy.

•Insulation
•Storm Doors
•Storm Windows
• Replacement Windows
•New Roofing

•

7

Business Services

VINYL ·&amp;
· ALUMINUM SIOING

" .'

D~y

The

Kentucky retains top ranking

Honor roll
announced
by school

More coats needed...
By KATIE CROW
Thursday, December 17, at the
More coats are needed for the Racine First Baptist Church;
:·coats For Kids" project spa n· Syracuse Elementary next Mon·
sored by Bank
day, December 21; Syrac use
. One .: of Po me·
Presbyterian and the First Bap..
roy. according
list Church , Middleport, both on
to Bill ' Nease,
Sunday . December 20.
branch
Time of the events· 7 p.m
manager.
·According to
Do you have pet peeves · I do .
Nea se all coats
For instance trying to sort
that need to be cleaned are being . clothes hangers . Just when you
cleaned by The Fabric Shop,
think you have mastered the art
Pomeroy i free of charge.
of sorting the monsters they get
Persons who have coa ts they all ta ngled up and you lose your
wish to donate to a worthy ca use cool.
a re asked to drop them of! as
Another one is getting the
soon as possible. Chairman of the Christmas lights all arra nged,
ipecial Christmas project is checked out and in place. only to
t&lt;illhy Stewart.
. ·
discover no outlets where you
· Coats may be sent to Ba nk One wa nt them or lights have burned
in Pomeroy or the Rutland out and replace(llents har d to
branch.
find. Drives m e up a wall.
Can you spare a coat? Sure you
How about those missing socks
can·' tis the season to give· check or getting ready to bake a cake
your closets maybe you have one and you don ' t have that one
ingredient a nd the stores are
··!o spare.
closed, was hing the car and it
It 's that time of year- for
pours rai n, writing a story and
.Christmas programs that is.
the computers won't work, or
: Schools as well as churches
putting off today what you can do
\V!ll be featuring such programs .
tomorrow only to find that
Letart Falls Elementary will
tomorrow never comes .
present their program this eventog:
Racine Elementary on
And so it goes.

Tuesday. Dacember 1

Tuesday. December 15, 1987
Page- 6

• Katie's korner

•
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

6· 17 ·tic '

BISSELL
BUILDERS

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
11

At Reasonable Prius"

PH. 94«}-2801
or 949-2860
Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CALLS
4·16·86-lfn

BOGGS
SALES &amp; SERVI~~-•·-H-....,
U. S. RT. 'SO EAST

GUYSVILLE, OHiO
614-1167-3821
Authorized John Deere,
New Holland,.jush Hog
Form (quipment
Deoler
Far111 Eq•lpr~tnt

P1r11 &amp; Servlea

1·3·' 86

6~ 4- l56- 9332 .

.

Black mother eM &amp; 2 kiuens, 7
whs. old. Halllt~ . litter tl"llined &amp;
beautiful. Call 614-446 -7904.
1 Irish setter, female. House
broken. Registered, paper in. :
eluded. Call 614- 367-7870 .
1 female kiuei-t. Stripped1abby .

Cell 614-446· 7137 att• 5 PM .
Kittens to good home only . Gold
m ale; black and gold female; 2
tabby females. Call 6t4· 84J ,
5445 .
Adorable plavtul Austr•lian pup- '
pies. 304-773-5696 .
,
To give. ·Away Miud Rooster. :
304 -895-3 681 .

6 Lost and Found
LOST: In Kroger's on De c. 6thWhite ge ld ring witf't Ruby
setting with 6 small diamonds.
Reward II fOu nd call 614-446 - •
2689 .
FOUND: Fridll"t'· Small Banji
type dog . Oownlown area. Call
and ident ify , 614-379 -2597
FOUND: Puppy. SA - Kan&amp;uga,
light bmwn &amp; white. Call

514-44 6 -1602 .
LOST; Ladies wat«;h, Sews - .
Silver Bridge Plaza , Saturday. •
Dec. 1 2. Reward . Call61 4 · 446 8046 .
LOST mal e Blue Tick Coon hound on Mill Creljlk ' Rd . RE·
WARD , 304· 675 -2799.

9

Wanted To Buy

We pay cash for late model clttan
u t ed cars.

core rad '
and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

PAT HILL FORD
992 -2196

Midt:eport, Ohio
t -13-tfc

. Jim Mink Chuv .-Oids Inc.
Bill Gene Johnson
4· 446· 3672

6,

TOP CASH paid for '83 model
and newer used c.ws. Smith
Buick· PontiK. ,1 911 Eastern
Ave ., Gall ipolis. 'Call 814-446·
2282.
WANTED TO BUY: Used wood

&amp; coal heaters. Swahfs Furniture, 3rd &amp; OINe St. Gallipolis.
C~ll 614·446· 31 69 .

'

�,.
t

Page-s The
9

•'

Sentinel

Wanted To Buy

LAFF-A-DAY

44

10 buy· Standing timber.
can et•-379-2758.

Buying daify gold, ailver coins.

rings, jewelry, 11erling ware. old
coins, l~tga currency . Top priEd Burkm Blirber Shop.

«"·
2nd. Ave. Middleport. Oh . 614992·347e .
Raw fur, beef and deer tt idM .
Gyn Sing and Yltllow root We

wheat

and

nita lites.

Trapping aupplie~ for •I e. (Buying u1ed trapf) . George Buckley.

Hours 12-9 . 614· 664-4761 .
QUILTS
High prices paid for pre- 1950
quiha. Applique, phtced, any
condition. Call 614· 992-2101
or 1514-992-5667.

Employment
Scrv1ces
11

Help Wanted

TEXAS OIL COMPANY noedo
mature person for thort trips
IUrrounding Gallipolis. Contact
cullomera. We train. Write P .B.
Dick•son, Pres .. Southwestern
Petroleum, 8011 961006. Ft.
Worth, Tx . 78101 .
Gen••l
Farm Work
Some
experience
required . long
term employment for a qualified
p•son. Home &amp; utilities pro-vided. Mutt Uve , on farm. An
older experienced person preferred . Wages &amp; benefits negot~
able. Cell or write: Rich•d Innis.
Rolling Acre~ Farm. Rt . 2 Box 86
Wiseman Rd ., Patriot, Ohio
46858. 614-379-2297.
GET PAID for reading book1l
t100.00 per titte. Write: ACE -

33E . 161 S. Linoolnway. N.
Aurora, II. 60542.

Excellent income raking short
phone m11111sages at home. Call
for information. Ext. S -313.
so•-6•9· 7922.
Caring S. responsibi e person to
care for infant in v,our own home
in or nMr downtown Gallipolis
to st.rt after New Year or sooner
if postibte. Send info. to Box Cia
114 c/ o Gallipolia Daily Tribune
825 Tt!ird Ave .. Gallipolis. Ohio
45631 .
Dairy Farm. Must h-.,e milking
experience . Call 614 -4942790.
Government Joba. $18,040 ·
$69,230 yr. Now hiring. Your
•ea. 805-687-6000 Ext. R9806 for current repo federal
lilt.
Job huntlng7 Need a skill7 We
train people for jobs aa auto
maehMica, carpenters, alactrlci.na, food service workers,
el.ctronica technicians. indus·
trial maintenance workers, nurslng aaaiatants and ordarli&amp;S,
machiniltL an~ weldert. Regis. ter now tor clastes b•ginning
Januery •th. Cell Tri-County
Vocational Adult Center a1"7533611 ext. 14 , A variety of
funding sources to pay for
training are available for thou
eligible.
Build for your future. Le.-n both
rough and fini•h carpentry skills
at the Adult Educ.tion Canter·Tri-County Vocational School.
The Adult carpentry program
will provide you with training to
become a c.-penler, Carpentry
•kills are so important and
varNtile thai carpenters make
up the l•g•t group of building
trade workers. To register for
cl••• beginning January 4th,
call 763· 3511 ext. 14. Ask
about our variety of funding
sourcus availablu to pay for
trsining ..
Tax .. 011 Company needs ma ture person for ahort · trips
aurrounding Middlti'POrt, Pomeroy . Contact cUttomers. We
train. Write N.J . Dielterson.
Pres .• SouthweJtem Petroleum.
Box 961006, Ft. Worth, Teus,
76101 .
Get paid for reading booksl
$100,00 per title. Write: ACE
1636 , 161 S , Un colnwav. N.
AurOt"a. II. 60642.
AVON • All &amp;rea. Call Marilyn
Wuver 304-882-2645 .
AVON all areas. Shirley Spears.
304·675· 1429 .
MOM AND DAD: l&amp;t the Army
National Guard help pay lor your
child' s college education. Call
3o•-&amp;76· 3950 or 1·800-6423619 .
PRIOR MILITARY SERVICE
m ..ns extra money tOr member~
of the Army National Guard. Call
304-676-3950 or 1·800-6423619 .
Substitute teach ers for the Ma son County Board of Education,
cell Elizabeth Mattox at 304676-4640.
Need dependable woman to set
w ith 80 veer old lady fo r wetHI
during Ct'lristmu, refreoces required. call• will be accepted
ontv 12 :00-4 :00 pm , Man thru
Fri. 304-675-1349 .
Telephone canvauer , ax perienc;e preferred, male o r femel e.
304 ·676·6262 , 10:00 to 4 :00.
Exparienced siding and window
install••· must be available for
work immeditrtely , c all 9 :30 to
4:00, 304-675-6252.
12

Situations
Wanted

Lady would like mtddle-aged
lady to sherei apartment and
expensu. Call e14-448·0388.

~-----:---· l c­

Child care, expet'ienced mother.
ell hours , ell ages welcome.
Supervised activities. Meals fur nished. Ca11614· 992·2458.

13

"I think I've got the itinerary
all worked out. We spend
Christmas morning h with
th
your father, have lunc wi
y Our mother l Spend the
afternoon WI'th my l(l.ld.ler
and have sup'per with ffiY
mother."
21

·Business
Opportunity

I NOTICE I
l-HE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO . recommends that you
do business with people vou
know, and NOT to sund mo'nuy
through the mail until you have
invest igated the offering.
23

Professional
Services

2 BR . home- recenlly remo·
deled. ST.RT. 279. Oak Hill &amp;
Rio Grande. No children or pets.
Co11614-245-9316.
large 2·3 BR . houst. Plenty of
storage. Henderson area.· Call
614-446-7026.
2 or 3 BR unfurnlshecfha. Yard,
city &amp;ehools. $275 mo. plus
utilitiee: &amp; depoJit, Call 814446-2615.
3 BR .. double car g~~n~ga. range,
r.rrig. dlatlweaher, f360. Dep.
required. Cefl 61 •·446·1 134.
Furni1hed Two small hou••· 3
rooms each. Nice and ciNn.
Aduhs ontv. No pet:s. Ref. "-dep.
Call f1"14-•4&amp;-2643.

Real Estate

New extrs r\ice 2 BR. duplp,
furnished kitchen. low utilltiel.
No pats. Oep. &amp; ref. required.
Colle14-446-1250.

31

Homes for Sale

4 BR ., fireplace. full basement. 3
mi. so. of Gallipolis. 834,900.
Call Davs-614-446-1615. after
5 :00- 446-1244.
Brand new 3 BR , near Gallipolis
locks on Rl. 7 . 2 car garage. nioa
lot. Immediate p_ouession, Will
consider trade in of Mobile
-home, propertv. etc. Bargain
priced. Call 614-446-8038 .
3 BR . Ranch . Attached garage.
In town . Good location. low
40' a, Call after 6 :30 PM. 814·
446· 1406.

3 BR . home in Centenary on Rt .
141. Raf. &amp; Sec. dep. required.
Awllllblo in January. Call 614446·66e6.
4 BR. Country Horne for rent.
$276. Virginia L, Smith-Real
Estat•614·388-8826.
Nice · 4 BR. hou• downtown
Gallipolis. Centrally located for
schools a ahoppong. *360 a
mo . Call 614-0152-dav. 448·
1291 after! PM.
·
2 BR . ~ouse unfurnished. Full
basement. No Pets; Call after 6
PM. 8,.-388-1121 .

8 y owner- 3 BR . home in
Kanauga. Fenced yard. carport,
county water, nvw renge- retrig .·
water t\eater. 832,600 Negotiable. Call614-379-2441.

Jen. 1· 3 BR. home in country.
Vinton area. WIA8f &amp; t,.lh
furnlthed. $200 monthly. t1 00
Oep. Cotle)4-389·1&amp;86.

2 bedroom. 2 bathl, 2 car
garage. level lot on Rt. 33.
Swimming pool. satelite. clo.~e
to Meigl High. Call 614-992·
3264.
.

2, 3, or 4 bedroom-houMS and
In Pomwoy ern. Pay own
utlltties, depoeil reQuired. Call
614-992·6113, 614-992-8723
or 814-992-2109. Call aft•
6:00. ple.e.

6 rooms. bath. encloaed porch,
forced air furnace, insulated new
roof, new carpet. Uppet' Mason,
W. Va . 614-992-2813.
Furnished home in Middleport. 7
rooms. 3 bedrooms, 2 l•ge lots,
2 blocks to shopping, churches,
boating. fishing, 1wimming. Call
614-992-5304 before 8a.m.
After 6p . m . Price under
11,5 ,000.
GOVERNMENT HOMES from
81 .00 I U repair) for&amp;cloaurea.
repos. 1811 deliquent ,properties.
Now suiting your area. Call
1 ·315·736·7357e•t. ZP·WV-H
for current lilt, 24 H RS,
32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
New 1988 Prestige 14~t70 total
elec., 3 BR ., 2 bathe, lurnished.
Anct'IQrs, skirting. l.,oaded with
euraa. &amp;111-,500. Kanauge Mobile Hom•· 814-448-9682.
Trailer for Sale- 8x60. Call
614-388-8294 .
Muet Sell-67.111 4 2 BR . Victorian
Deluxe. Gas heat. partly fur·
nished. Cell after 6 PM 61444e-2157.
1984 Skyline. 14x70, central
air, underpennlng, decks , new
carpet, kitchen appliancu. aet
up on rented lot, K &amp; K, Point
Pleasant. $15,500. Call weeki!H'Ids or after 5 weekdeyL
304-675· 1294 .
33

Farms for Sale

200 acre farm located off At. 62.
3 milee on Manall Ridge Road,
Putnam County. Mlnaral rigtlts
Included, 865,000.00 DW"nM
will finance with $6,000.00
down. 304-937-3383 before
8 :00am or after 8 :00pm.
34

Business
Buildings

Commerci-' buildings tor leaae.
Downtown Pt. Pleasant. Storea,
oftices. A-One Real Estate.
Carol Yeager. Broker. Call 304676-6104.
749 Third Ave. Presently The
Gift Shop. 1800 Jq, ft . Commerci tl or warehouM. Parking on
sid e. Adjacent to Th ird &amp; Pine St.
C ell 614 · 446 - 2362 for
appoint ment.

&amp;

Acreage
'

2 Building lots- 1 Va acre~ eech
w it h county water. Jerry• Run
Rd. Apple Grove , W . Ve. Cell
304· 576.2383.

Rentals
41

Homes for Rent

3 ·BR . houte &amp; g arage. A-1 Real
Estate, Carol V&amp;ttg&amp;r"- Broker
304 e76·61 0 4.
Nicety furniahed •m all house.
Ad ult s onJv . Rat. required . No
pst a. Ca ll 814-448-0338 .

Galllpolls-2 BA. ept. Aduha only.
2 BR. mobile home. C.ll 614446-8221 .
Furnished apartment. $210.
Utiliti• paid. 1 BR, 701 Fourth
Ave. Galllpoli1. Call 446-4416
aher 7pm.
Nice 1 BR.ept. Rangeandretrig.
furnithtd . Water Jl g.-bage
paid. Deposit required. Call
614-448-4345 ah.- 6 PM.•
Gracious living. 1 and 2 badroom apanmants at VIllage
Menor and Riven/de APflrt·
ments in Middleport. From
8215. including utilitlfll. Call
814-992·7787. EOH.
Nice apt. Hudd •PPrOved. New
~arpet, clean, Pt. Pleasent. 614992·6856.
.
2 bedroom apt. end 1 bedroom
house tor rent in Pom•oy.
614-912-8216.
APARTMENTS, mobile hom11.
houses. Pt. Pl ...entandGallipolio. 614·441-8221.
2 bedroom furniled apt, ref and
depolit. New Haven, W. Va ..
304· 882·3217 or 304· 773·
6024
Beech Street. Middleport. Ohio.
2 bedroom furniahad apt, utilities paid, ret«ences and deposit,
304·B82·26e6.
In Middleport. Ohio. 1 and 2
room furnished apts, priv.tll!
baths, utilities paid, 304-882·

2518.

a~;n.

One bedroom furnished apt, very
clean snd nice, aduha only. no
pets, phone 304-871-1388.

Nice 3 bedfoOfn hou•- Family
45 Furnished Rooms
room, garage. baaem1nt.
forced-tir hut. 6 wooded acre~.
Roorn~ for rent, dev - week.
bern. 1276. p.- month. t100.
month. GaiUe Hotel. Cell 814depo1it. No inside p•s. 10 East · 446-9580. Rent aa low u $120
St., Pomaroy, Ohio. 814-423month.
e2BB.
Furnlahtd room. $75. Utiltti•
3 bedroom house. Batement 2
paid. Sh.-e bath. Single m•e.
atoraaa buildinga, g•aga, Slaw
9't9 Second. GalllpoliJ. Call
furniahed . *2&amp;0 .,. month.
448-U11 after7pm.
Depoait required. 614·949·
3027.
46 ·space for Rent
Hou• for rent. 3 bedroom.
g•sge. d•posit requifed. 614992·8550.
Office Speca for rent. Excel.
~
-lrrdowntown Gellipolis loCirlion.
Houae for rent in Middl~ori: . 3
lnquiri• call 814,-448-4222 .
b•droom, LR , Dining room.
t emily room, fully c•rp•ect.
Mobile Home lot. 60ft. or leu.
c•port. IM~ndry room, U&amp;O
920 4th., Gallipolis. e7&amp;. Water
month pkls utlllti• and depoah .
paid. Call614-446-4416 aft• 7
Avai111ble•Jan. 16 or before. C•ll
PM .
e14·992·7Be3 .

90 Dey a same , as cash with
approved credit 3 Mil• out
BuhiVille R~- Open 9am to &amp;pm
Mon. tt'lru Sat. Ph. 61•·4•60322.
I
Vallev Furniture
New end used furniture and
applicances . Call 6U-4467672. Hours s:&amp;.
PARSON'S FURNITURE
New wood 8 pc. living room
suites. $399 .96; cheat of
drawers·• drawer. $48; twin
mattreaset, 896 •at; microwave
oven stands.
TH.E WORKING
MAN'S FRIEND
Like naw couch S. love~eat.
Call 614-•46· 7307 aft• 5
PM .

Porteblo dryer Space Saver.
f90. Kenmore wash.-. Both
excellent ahape. $12&amp; . Call
614-3e7·0322 .
3 pc. BR. suite. guitars. 10 spd.
bike. kitchen table. Celt 61•·
44e· 0558. ·
Brown. flowered couch, rocker,
chair and end tabl81. $200.
Good condition. Call 614-9B6·
3610.
~:-::---,-,.------

53

Antiques

ANTIQUES; Buy or Sell. Rivarfne Antique•. 1124 Eaat Main
St. Pomeroy. Hourt: Mon.·
Tues.-Wad. 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.
Sun.- 1 p.m.· 8 p.m. By chance
or appointment. Ru11 Moore
614-992-2526.
54 Misc. Merchandise

'
Callahan' s Uud Tire Shop. Over
1,000 tires. sires12, 13, 14, 15,
18~ 16.5. 8 mUM; out Rt. 218 .
Calle14·266·6261.
MuuJeloading Suppli81- Prices
have been reduced. Shop going
out of bt.IJlneu. Koebel'•· Mill
Creek Rd.Hrs.- Mon., Wed., Frl.6-8 PM . Set.· 1-6 PM. Phone
614-448·231e.
Electric wheel chair, like new
cond., uaed very little. Adutt
potty chair. Call61•·446-0646.
Used bu1in111 machln• A.B.
Didt dupaicator preuand Ron eo
mimeograph machine for •le.
Call 614-446-0:198 or 4484404.

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Perk.
Route 33. North of Pom•oy.
Aentfl trailars. Clll 614·992·
7479.

1978 Dodge 'II ton pickup,
eeoo. Se.-swood &amp;coal burn•
with blower, $260. Call 814·
448-8688 .

Two bedroom house half mile
out Jerirtlo Road. call after
6 :00pm, 304~676-8483.

Spac;e for amaH trail.-a. Ail
hook-ups. Cable. Also efficiency
roo~s. air and cable. Mason,
W.Va. Coll304· 773.&amp;661 .

Remington 1100 12 ga., auto.
Rifled .1lug berrel. Call614-4467076.
.

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

Spaciou1 mobile home lot• for
rent. Family Pride Mobile Home
Park. Gallipolis Farry. 304-175·
3073.

2 bedroom1, partly furniahed,
cable, huh. e1&amp;0. per month,
1100. d4tl)osit . No drunks or
dope . 150 Osborne St..
Pom•oy.

•

2 BR . trailer. $150 e mo. No
pets, Ref. required. Call after 8
PM, 367-0181 or 367-0121 .
2 BR . Mobile Home for rent. Call
after 2 PM-814-44.8-0627.
1 mile from H.M.C. - 2 BR .
trailer. Call 814-24!-6682.
Trail•• for rent cheap, 68
Burdette Addn, Point Ple~~&amp;nt,
private lot, used rental clothing,
304-273-5656 .
44

Apartment
for Rent

2 SR . apta. 6 cloiets. khchen-

1B Wanted to Do

Would like to do babyJittlng in
mv hame. Call61•·448-9840.

Homes for Rent

Bob Cline Ta.11idermy. Member
W. Va. Taxidermy Assoc. Rl . 2
Box 782, Point Pleasant, W . Va.
304· 675·1448.

35 Lots

Mother of 2 will care for your
children during the holldav fet·
tlvitl•. Even ing•. weekends. or
during the school va c at ion
Convenitf1t to car lo n. reasom»ble
ratn. Call 614-448-0065

R'::r.n.':'Mr."~ 1 :';~'.".:':::

liiiiiiitiiniiiiiilr.;';=;===:;=:;==i
41

· Furnished upatair• 1 BR . 'utilities paid. 1210 a mo. Dep. 94
LOCUJt St. Cell 814-448-1340
SWAIN
or; 441-3870.
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 62
Olive St., Ga1lipoli1.
2 BR .' lpt. Stove &amp; refrig. NEW· 8 pc, wood group- t39 • .
furnishH. Ne• Go Mart. Cell Uvlng room suites· t199-1699 .
614-448-7025.
Bunk bedl wh.h bedding- e199 .
Full size mattr•s &amp; foundMion
. BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT l1lrting - 8 99 . R•cliners
BUDGET PRICES AT JACK· starting· 099.
SON ESTATES. 1536 Jackson USED- Beds, dr....ra, bedroom
Pike from 1183 a mo. Walk to tuitua , t199 - S299. Deaks.
shop •nd movl•. 814-448wuhar, a complete line
_3_9_9_7_
. E_.~o_.H_._ _ _ _ _ _ 1 ., -""'~ turnitura.
W•tern boot• t30.
Furnlahed apilnment- 4 rooms&amp;: Workboott t18 S. up. !Steel &amp;
beth. 1 or 2 aduhs. No pats. Ref. toft toe) . Call 614-446-3169.
• Sec! dep . required , Call
814-446-0.44.
County Appliance. Inc. Good
used appllanc:ea and TV Jets.
Up1tairt, unfurnll!hed apanmant. .9Pen BAM to 6PM. Mon thfu
Carpeled. Utilltiee: p1id. No Sat. 614-446-1899. 827 lrd.
chil*en or pets. Cell614· 446· Ave. Gallipolis. OH.
1e37.
'
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
For rent •Partment. trail•: fur- Wuhars, dryer•. refrtg. .tora,
nished, unfurniahed. Woodburn- r~nges . Skagg1 , Appllanc.a.
ing fireplace. Wattlf', .ewage Upp• Rivtr Rd. b•kle Stone
paid. Clean. Quiel. Foster' s cr,.t Motel. 814-448-7398.
Mobile Home Perle. 448-1602.
LAYNE'S. FURNITURE
2 BR . Honev.ouckle Hlllo. Goo
heat. private petloa. Water, Sofaa and chairs priced from
$396 to t996 . Tabl• $60 and
up to $12&amp;. Hlde-•·beds t390
3344or448-1134.Equa!Houa- to 8696. Recliners 1226 to
;og Oppprtunlly.
8376. Lamps 828 to $125.
Dinettes t109 and up to t496 .
Lu.llury T•a Apartments, El• Wood table w-6 chalra *285 to
gent, 2 Sr. 2 floor, fully $796. Oetk 8100 up to t376 .
carpeted, CA and heat . Private Hutch• 1400 and up. Bunk
entrance. endo.1ed patio. pool It beds complete w· mattn~Jaes
pleyground. Stlrt -e299 per 8296 and up to 8396. Baby b•~
month. Ut1Utl81 no~ induded.
S1 10. Mettreuas or box springs
full or twin $88, firm 178, and
cell 614-387- 7&amp;60.
$88. Queen 1811 t2215, King
Modern nice 2 BR. apt. Located f360. 4 drawer ch•t $69 . Gun
at 541 •th. Ave. Adutts onty. cabinets 6 gun . Gat or electric
e226 per mo. Cell 814-446- range $375. Baby mettres. .
2300.
$36 a S46. Bed frame~ $20.
Furnished Efficiency . 8160. S30 • King frame S60. Good
Utilities paid. 607 2nd. Gellipo- selection of bedroom suites,
metal cabinets. headboardt S30
lis. Sh.-e bath. Call 448-4418 and
up to $66.
after 7 PM .

'

4'n~l..

Insurance

Cell us for vour mobile ho me
inaurence : Mil ler In s uran ce,
~04 - 882 · 2145 . Al.1o; au to,
home. life, health.

CHRJ~TM~S .

appl.
furnl•hed,
Washer-Dryer
ho~k- up,
ww ctrpet,
newly

P~mted, deck. Regency. Inc.
Apts. Call 304-67&amp;-7738 or
875-5104.

Trail.- spaces for rent. Rt. 1
locu1t Road, back of K &amp; K
Mobile Home Perk. 304-675·
1076 .
'
47Wanted to Rent
Furnished 1 BR aplrtmant, Or
traitor. Call 814-379 -2668.
49

For Lease

1400 aq. ft. comm•cial 1pace
suitable for offices, retailing, or
services. Prime location-corner
of 2nd. &amp; Pine in Gallipolis.
Ample parking in rear. 1360 per
month. Call 814·446·4249 or

ROll bar
·off road light• for
short bed pickup. Call614·4460362 or 446-7303.
1 -Solid CBit iron woodbui-ner.
8 100. 1-dlnette let with 2
chairs. 816 . Call 614-367·
7e7o.
Wood.lplitter- 3 point hookup,
8 ' "1 beam. Set on•" alum. mag
slot rims. Call614-245-6198 or
446-3818 ask for Mike.
Mixed h•dwood slabs. 112 pet
bundle. Containing approx. 1 1/t
ton. FOB. Ohio Pall81 Co.
Pomeroy, Ohio. 614-992-6461.
Firewood for sale. All h•dwood,
split and deliVered. t 36. Also
1977 LTD . Call 614-992-6&amp;19
or 614 -992~ 3662 ,
Satellite Sy1tem for Ill e. Cost
a 1 600 .. aell 8599 . C•ll 614·
992 -8206 .
·Mixed hay tor sale, Cell 814-

~

Downtown· Modern 1 8R .,
comphrte kitchen, carpet. air
electric heat . Call 614·446:
4383-dlfiL 446· 0139-e'tlen. &amp;
weekends.

54 Misc. Merchandise

61 Farm Equipment

All Christmes Tre• 812 .. Coma
before cold wesr:her. 1111g
your trte at Newell's Christmaa
Tree Farm 1 mile ebove Mason
on Hanging Rock Rd. 304-7736371 or 892-2888.

Utilitv building 1pl: 27'x36'1C8',
1-13'x8' 11iding door, 1 -3 ' service door- t4444. Iron Horse
Bldrs. Call 814·332·97•6-

••tv

Mixed firewood, 180.00 dump
truck load. deftvered, 304-6762903.

1987 long 80 HP Bulldozer, 20
hours on tack. like new. Interne·
t/onal Industrial tractor with
loader. Call 614-286-6622 .

Firewood delivered. •tacked.
$3.6 .00. Muon Count ill, Gelllpolia other are• within n~ason at
our discretion, 304·896-3446.

International 668 Di•el tractor.
*4360. ·2010 • J .D., PS·IIve
power, $3360. Call 614-288e622 .

SURPLUS ARMY, DENIM ,
RENTAL, CARHART CLO ·
THING . Original army camou·
flage. H. 0 . "Sam" Somerville'•· Old Rt . 21
Eest-R1111enswood. Fri. Sat, Sun,
noon · 8:00pm. 304· 273-6656.
Insulated camouflage coverells
$2&amp; .00 . Black-White snow

3600 Ford with plows, disc, 2
row Ford planter. 6ft. bush hogNic;e. e69&amp;0 . Call 814-2866622.

camoull~e-

Marlin 12 geugeover end under,
Model90, $275.00. Winchester
22 Megum pump Model 276,
$100.00. 30··676·6944.
SIGNS: lighted Arrow Sign
8299; Non·Arrow $289; unligfltad 1199. Free detivery letters
till Dee. 11 . W.Va. 1-800-6422434. Ohio 1-800-533· 3453.
SURPLUS ARMY, 'DENIM ,
CARHART CLOTHING. "S1m"
Somerville's. Old Rt. 21 East,
Revenswood. Noon-8 p.m . 304 ·
273-6666. Insulated camouflage coveralls e26.00. Blackwhtte anow cemoufl-ulll· After
Christmas. .friday, Saturday,
Sunday only .
Antlqua whieker furniture 304·
676-6617.
Men• K-2 180 aids, bindh1gs,
aize 10 boota t90.00. Ladl••
Rostignol 160 skis, bindings,
slzl B boou $160.00, $100.00
without boots. Ajay Utltcise
machine sao.oo. 304-8822060 after 5:00.
55 Building Suppliss
Bt.~lldlng Materiels
Bloc*, brick. sewer pipet, windOWL linuMs. etc. Claude Winten. Rio Grarde. 0 . Call &amp;142•6· &amp;121.

Concrllttl blocksalltizea vard or
delivery. MasOn sand. Gallipolis
Bloc* Co.. 123YJ Pine St.,
Gallipolis. Ohio Call 614-•462783.
Ready mix concrete and all
concrete auppliet. Call us'Vall~
Brook Cement and Supplifll,
304· 773·5234.
56

Pats for Sale

Dreaonwynd Cattery Kenna! .
CFA Himalayan, Pertian and
Si•meee kittens. AKC Chow
puppl•. C.ll 814.446.3844
aher 7PM.
New arrhlels lor Christmes·
Regiltered AKC Chow puppl•.
Coll614·318·1801.

'

BUY WHOLESALE. White farm
Tractor• at whol . .le invoice
plus freight. Campara the price
and quality. Models from 16 to
180 hp. leel:lng available. Off•
good through Dec. 31. Siders
Equipment Co .. US 36. Hender·
son. W. V1. 304·675-7421 .
62 Wanted to Buy

Livestock

1979 F100. New thode•. new
duel exhaust. wiper motor,
hose•. thermo.ltat. oil filter ,'
anti-freiiZe. E.~~eellent con&lt;Htion.
•3350. Call 614·949-3003.
1982 Ford F1 60 long bed. 351
engine. euto, power ltnrlng,
power brak•, trail• towing,
AM· FM radio. new tir•. XLS
Pkg., camper also available H
wanted. Call 814-742-2289.

M~..,

•

73

Vans

·

&amp;

II (})

'80 Chevy truck cab. 14.000
mil til re• end 1nd rally wh ... l, ·
.400.00. C.ll 304·076·2884
aft.- 6 :00pm 304-676-1030.
79 Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

Hog 625 to 1560 lbl. Ready for
butchar. See on farm. $22!5. Call
614·256·6509,

21 tt Nomad camper, phone
304-458-1891 .

Transportation

Sharp 1983 Tovota Supr1,
loaded. Sport package, power
steering· brak• window._ automatic Climate control. All
performance itema. Awrage mi·
leage. 6 1peed. Mechaniully
perfect. Meticulously main·
t1inat. Gorgeoutl Cell 8144•6·2417 Evening•.
1982 Pontiac Trans-- AM. PS.
PB. T·top. AC. AM -FM-Csss.
S3600. Call614--388-9098.

B1

Home
Improvements

BASEMENT
. WATERPROOFING
Uncondhionll lifetime guaran·
tae. lac .. r.t.-..ces furnlshad.
Free •tlmMea. Cell collect
1-814·237·0488, dll\' or niQht.
Rogers Basement
Warerprooflng.

RON'S Television Sel'vlce .
Hou" cells on f'CA. Ouazar.
GE. Specl .. k'lg in Zenith. C•ll
304-5715-2398 ~ or 81 4-44-0·
2454.

Rollrv or cable tool drillinG.
Most wells completed sam ad.,,
PuiT!P ul• and aervice. 304-·
S96-3802

Bundv Trombo)'le. Excel. cond.
Call 814-448-2177.

•1982 Cut1e11 Suprema C.lais.
V-8 , air, tilt, cruite, PS. PB, rew
defrost T-top. Call 614-3877174.
1976 Chev. 4WO truck. 1980
Chav Monza. 4 cyl., 4 spd. Cell
614-446-2668. mornings or
evenings.

Far fila Fiar Pre camp and F8rfiH I~:=:--:~:--:----,--Transicord 8600 .00 . Conn- 1987 Olds Cutteu Supreme.
double k8Vboard consol organ Top stlape. Assume loan. Flber8400.00. 304-67&amp;-1431 or glasetopperforEICamino.Call

-;;;=:==:;:::=;====
fruit
Vegetables

CROSS&amp;: SONS
U.S. 36 Welt, Jackaon. Ohio.
814-286-6461 . ·
Maney FerguAOn, New Holland,
Busfl Hog 5&amp;1 06 &amp; Service. Over
40 used tractors to cho o11e from
&amp; complete line of new &amp; UMd
·equlpment. Largett .l&amp;lectlon in
,S .E, Ohio.

avenlnga
304·773·&amp;91
1 or
304-773-6616
.
1980 Cadillac S•dan DeVille
Deisel. Show room condo.tlon.
All power, 1 8 ,000 mil• on nfMI
motor. 30 mi. per gel. This is a
ttetl at only 13200. 814-992·
3187.
1980 Pontiac Grand Prill . Good
COf!ditlon, Four 16x7 Ch..,y
Ralty Wheela. Cell 614-742·
2e76.
1987 Chevv Altro van. 304882-3686 or 676-6300.
787 LinoolnTown Car; 78 Mark
V; 77 Cadillac Sedan DaVllle.
Good Condition . 304· 773·
6840.
•
1990 Olds Cutla11 Brougham.
1980 Chrysler Lebaron. Both
hO\Ie low mil•. loaded. ohorp.
304-676·5291 '

B2

1----- - -- - - '72 Chwy, 376 motor, 304.
675·2457.

.' .

..
.'.

(I)

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I

.

I

'

'•...

,-··
'·~

-

MO!&gt;TW,

•,·

TRV IJOf fO PANIC.

HANG

I~T
WO~ A'-!D

@ Moneyllne Current
and financial news with Lou

Dobbs. (0:30)

Ill @ Q5J Wheel of Fortune

o·

77'~ ,, c~NIE') ~fTWEEN

•
,.1

. / JOSS -- THE ONE l-IE
DIDN'T TA~f .AND
THE ONE HE: WoN',T

......,

~

&amp;,A("PL'f fOR,

'j
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aa~.:..":&gt;:~
.. ·.

•

7:05 ill Andy GriHith
7:30 II(}) Hollywoqd Squares
® NHL Hockey
IJ ())Judge
®J Wlleel of Fbr1une 1;1
@Crossfire (0:3,0) .
Ill@' Q5J Jeopardy\ Q
01l Barney Miller
Ill (!) WKRP in Cincinnati
7:35 ill Sanford and Son
8:00 (IJ Crossbow The Moor, Part
1
II(}) Q5J Me11ack Mallack
lries 10 defend a
hard-drinking country singer .
ril li) ()) Who's the Bou?

Tony and Samanlha each gel
a job a1 1he same popular
1een hangoul. Q
(J) [D Nova Archaelogists
unearth clues about the Red

Paint People. 1;1

ALLEY OOP

l!Ol lll1!21 Rudolph the
Red·Nosed Reindeer Based
on the popular song, a young
reindeer with a nose that

glows is ridiculed by olher
reindeer until Santa

recognizes his 1rue wor1h. Q
@ Primenews wrap ups of
the day's world news and in
deplh fea1ur8 repor1s. (1 :00)
IHl MOVIE: Tile Bishop's
Wife (NA) (1 :48)
Ill !1J MOVIE: Chri11ma1 In
Connecticut (NAI (1 :41)
8:05@ NBA Basketpoll
8:30 (I) Bu11orfly loland
ril Ill ()) Growing Pains
M;ke puts off assignmonl

..
.,

which could delay graduation

EEK &amp; MEEK
L£AV£ 'rOJR fJA!v"{., SIR ... AND
WE'lL Cilti. t,OO Fa!~ U:XT

if nol finished. Q
9:00 (I) 700 Club
II [2) Q5J J,J. Starbuck
Corrupt realtor breaks up

marriages to create new

Nf IEI&lt;·1HE·SICJW SAL£

.,

listings.

0 ()) Moonlighting
Msddie's dad confronls
David about his plans for
Maddie ond the baby. 1;1
(J) [D Frontline Discuss 1he
start of aparthe;d ;n 1948
· and the cam..£11ign of
(I)

resistance. Q _
l!Ol 111!21 TwaiHh Annual

Circus of the S11rs Stars
become circus pertormers
1!11 Lorry King Livel In depth
interviews with top
newsmakers and celebrities~

IT WAS ONLYON~ A

TI-lEY q.&gt;.VE MY D&lt;\0 IHI:O
W~TAPEATTHEYIDEO
RENJAL SlDR~ YESTERDAY...

MINUTE

ANDSUDDE:Ni..YMY HATWA6
PLILLEDOV!:R MY EYES ...

AND, THE NEXT fHING f
KNEW

r

WAS UPSTAIRS

10:00 (IJ Stralgh1 Talk
II ffi Q5J Crime S1ory
Defecting Russian pilot may

IN MY BED.

be shipped beck home in a
spy swap. C
ril 0 Cl)th1rtysoma1hlng
Michael and Hope disagree
over celebrating Christmas or

Chanukah. Q
C!J Frontline Examine a key
policy of

~partheid:

creation

of black tr~bel hcimelsnds.
IIJ) IB) News

1;1

@ Evening News A wrap up

of today's news and a look

Il-l&lt;

THANKY, OL'

REVENOOERS ! !

ENNY LITTLE THING

I CI\N DO

FER

ahead to tomorrow's news
s1ories. (1 :00)
til (!) Benny Hill
10:20 CD MOVIE: Apache Upriolng
(1 :30)
10:30 (}) Celebrity Chefs
® Pursuit of E~cellence
Senator Bill Bradley !n
[I) Tony BrOwn's Journal
f!l (!) Hogan's Heroes
11:00 (IJ Reming1on Steele
11 m ril o ()) ®l m1121
Q5) News
(J) Sign Off
[D House for All Seasons
@ Moneyllne Currenl

OADBURN

BUDDY--

IF THAR'S EVER

YOU-·
JEST

Electrical
Refrigeration

WHISSLE

Residential c.r commerciel wlr·
i~g , New service or repairs.
Licensed elactrician. Estimate
iree. Ridenour Electrical, 304·
676-178e.

reports on world economics
and financial news with Lou

Dobbs. (0:30)

General Hauling

1BJ Jefleraons

Ill (!) Lave Connacllon

A\.IA ,. I F'OOl.ED

Dillard Watar Service: PooiJ.
Cistern•. Walls. Delivery Anv· ·
time. Call 614-448-7404-No
Sunday cellt.

PECAF'F~I'\A'TSD

a

tim Magnum, P.l.

J J Water Service. Swimming
pools. cisterns. wei11. Ph. 814246·9286.

[D Orluly: Tile Shining
Mountains Issues e)(plored

R It R Water Service. Home
cistert, wells. pools filled . Formerly J•mas Boys Waters. Call
304·676-6370.

currently facing the American
West: to preserve or to
develope undisturbed areas.

symbolize the dilemma

packed sports hlghUgh1s wi1h
Nick Charles and Jim Huber.
(0:30)
.
lll1!21 •Diamonds' CBS Late
Night Mike and Chrislina
search for lhe dazzling Sea .
Stone diamond . (R)

~.S - 3171 .

Watterson's Water Haulhlg,
reasonable retes, immediate
2,000 gallon delivery. cisterns,
pools. well, etc. call 30•-576·
2919.

Mowrey's Upholsterillg serving
Ui county.erea22 yaart. The belt
in furniture upholstering. Call
304-676 - 4164 tor frae
estimates.

.PEANUTS
WI&lt;'( DO 'I'OU WANT
TO SEND ME A
CliRI5TMA.5 CARD?

I SEND CARDS TO
A LOT OF PEOPLE ..

I T\.lOUG~T WELL, OF
COURSE
MA'f6E IT
BECAUSE I LIKE
LIKE ME

'I'OU ..

AAU6H

@Magnum. P.l. Autumn

Warrior

f!l (Z) M'A'S'H
12:00 (IJ Bums and Allan
!!I Ski Won~ (R)
(I) Nlghtuna Q
0 ()) Fall Guy
IIJ) Sign Off
1!21 NewsNighl Live news
with Patrick Emory and

'·'

Kirs1Bn LlndquiSI. (1 :00)

'

what one I s - about."
•'

Complete the chuc kle q uoted

NUMBERED lETTERS
IN THESE SQUARES

UNSCRAMBLE LETHRS TO
GET ANSWER

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

" •.

Av/11/y - Grove - Wa18r - Invent - NEGATIVE
A lrlend opened a camera shop. He being an optimist, I was

surprised to- lhls sign on the door: "Think

BRIDGE

NEGATIVE."

NORTH
+K 7
• A J9 5
• QJ 5
+AJ74

Setting
the stage
"Selling the stage " is a term famil·
iar to playwrights. Bridge players also
need to know it because successful de·
clarer and defender play often re-·
quires stage-setting. In today's deal,
declarer failed in his slam contract
because he did not properly "set the
stage."
Diamonds were led and ,continued,
declarer unblocking his king alid win·
ning the second trick in dummy. He
then played king and ace of spades.
With the spades splitting badly, his
only chance was to reduce his trump
length to that of East and then wind up
in the dummy to lead a suit that East ·
would have to ruff and he would over·
ruff. So he played to the heart ace and
ruffed a heart. overtook his club king
with dummy's ace to ruff another
heart, and then played queen and a
club to the jack. If everyone followed ,
thal would be fine, but West showed
out. That meant South had to try to
cash a third diamond in dummy. But
East ruffed with the setting trick .
Declarer can prevail with a small
dose of caution. After winning the second diamond, he should immediately
play ace and ru!! a heart. Then he

•

12-lf.-8?

EAl&gt;'T

WEST

+J B 3 2

+5

• K 10 a
+AB
+10632

.Q6432
tl07432
9a

+

SOUTH
+AQI0964

.7+

K96
+K Q o

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: North
·
West

North
I NT

East
Pass

Pass
Pass
Pass

3 NT

Pass

Pass

Pass
Pass

••

Opening lead:

,,

South

3+

4NT

s• ·

+3

should play ace of spades and a spade
to the king in dummy. Thal will give
him the bad news, but he will be in
dummy to ru!! another heart, reducing his trumps to the same length as
East's. He can then play K-Q of clubs
and a club to dummy's jack. Now the

ace of clubs lives as declarer sheds his
last diamond, and at the 12th trick he

is in dummy. East· must ruff, and ·
South can overruff and make his slam.

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS

42 Raison

1 Ac~artlef 43 ~~uthwest
5 Spice
wmd
DOWN
9 Venez·
1 Ab 1om's
uelan
. sa
SISter
copper
2 Brazilian
center

.

b~rd

10 Shanty
11 Shopping

3 As a lark
place
4 Make lace
Ecstatic
5
Conclude
12
a case
14 Carney
6 Humming·
15 Hebrew
bird
at 7 E!\ioy
16 leattveerH
· (sl.)
it (try)
8 Refined
17 Hooray!
10 "Crimes
18 English
of the-"
actress
13 .
Mary
19 Naughty
City,
20 Redact
Kan .
22 Suspend
23 Vault
25 Feed
the kitty
26 Water
(Sp.)
27 Film
director
29 Coq au30 Child's
card game
31 Treat
for a nag
34 Sioux
35 Lean -to
36 One (Sp.)
37 Barn beam b-+-+__,
39 On one's
toes
40 Headdress
41 Hindu
festival

"·.,
28 Gallery
· offering
bird
21 Goddess 30 "- or
(Lat.)
when"
22 Mr. Solo, 32 Old·
womanish
of "Star
Wars"
33 Tropical
23 Relish
ungulate ~
24 Stir
38 Tobacco
2 7 Gene
irritant
T'
39
Cry
of
lerney
triumph
film

15 Parson

..

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..

..,

.
•
••

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES- Here's how to work it:

•t

12!15

AXYDLBAAXR
is LONGFELLOW

...

.'

'

One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
for the three L's X for the two O's, etc. Smgle letters,
apostrophes, the iength and fonnation of the words are all
hints, 'Each day the code letters are different.

...'

CRYPTOQUOTE

1!21 Sports Tonight Action

Paul Rupe, Jr. Water Service.
Pools. cisterns, wells. Caiii514-

One philosopher to another: "It
is easy enough to hold an opinion,
but hard work 10 actYally know

I

T I XCE E

11:30 II (}) Q5) Tonlgh1 Show
(!) SportaCan1er (L)
ril Che11s
0 ()) Nlghllina Q

. YA ... fT'S

~·

By James Jacoby

@ Cheero
@) (!) M'A'S'H

JDH o!J

~

5

P~INT

Q

reports on world economics

·'

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I I I" I

E F I N.G

by fi lling in the missing words
' .-.J...;.....J..-.J.L-....1.-.J.L-..J. you de-..
e lop fro m step No. 3 below.

@ Inside Politics '88
IHl WKRP In Cincinnati
f!l (!) Too Close far Comfort
6:35@ Carol Bume11
7:00 (IJ Remlng1on Steele
II(}) PM Magazine
® SportsCen1er (l)
(I) Enter1ainment Tanlghl
0 ()) Peapla'a Court
(J) [D MacNeil/ Lehrer
NewoHaur (1 :00)
l!Ol News

.'

1

~-.,,,.;--...;.1...:.::.,,,;,:....::;.,,..=:.,1.--~ G)

0 Cll ABC News Q

[D OWl TV

CARTER'S PWMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth •nd Pine
Gellipolls, 0 hio
,
Phone 614-•46-3888 or 614·
446·4477

B5

2

(J) Nightly Business Report

Plumbing
1-Jeating

&amp;

NALTLL

l!Ol Ill 1!21 CBS News

&amp;

84

.
I. 1 I' I U
. i

0 Cll l!Ol Ill 1!21

~ Seube (R)

•

Starks Tree and lawn Service.
lewn care. landscaping. etump.
removal, 304-676-2842 or
&amp;76·2903.

1986 Dodge Shelby Charger, 2
door. t7,000.00 or taka o\llr
payments. 30•· 87&amp;-15705 .
'72 Buick Skylark. $ 260 .00.
304-675-2338 .

GAN DO FOR 'IOU-

SWEEPER and sawmg machine
rep1ir, perts, and suppll•. Pldc
up and delivery, Davis Vacuum
Cleaner. one half mile up
GeorgM CrMk Rd . Call 614446·0294.

1876 Ford LTD. Cell 814-446·
8034.

Musical
Instruments

..

S1~rviccs

2 ve• old female llau Apso
AKC Reg., blonde. Clll 614446-4737 after 6 PM.

1983 Z-28 Camero, 40,000
mil•. $8196. Call532-2613 or
AKC Registered Pomenmi• .532·0040.
puppleJ. 1 male. 1 female. 8
weella old. S160 . Call614-667· 1977T-Bird. 361auto.,PS.PB,
6758.
air, AM - FM-Cau pleyar.
wheat•. Excel. Cond.
Christmas puppltll, AKC regis- Chrome
S900-was asking t1 100. C.ll
tered Minhure Schnauren. Shih 51.· 246-9857.
Tuis, Cock• Spanllllfe, "'altese.
Sweater and cap with each 1983 Chwy. Citation. Am radio,
puppv. Shots wormed el1o 69,000 milea. 11700. Can be
health record . 304-676-2193 .
aaen at the Gallipolis Dally
or for more information
loving family wanted for tamale Tribune
Pomtrsnian puppy, 6 monlhs call614-446· 2342.
old, not .egi.1tered. Very friendly_,
Fibergless topper-EI Camino.
loves children, housebroken. $400.
Call814-367-7760.
025 .00. 304·e76-6479.

WHAT VOU WANT OF ME
AND WHAT I IN TURN

•
•

Auto Parts
Accessories

Fr•h Holstein Hallet's, also
D.H.I. record.lonDams.elsoA.I .
Sired. We can help you with vour
bull needs. C1ll 814-288-2498.

Dec. 19th- 1:00PM. We witt be
holding a apecial feeder calf sele.
All breed• lnctudlng Holsteins.
Cattle will be eccepled starting
at 4:00PM. Fri., Dee. 1Bth up to
1:00 PM, Sat .. Dec. 19th.
Hauling avail able. Athens Livestodc. Sal•- 1 mile east of Albany
on St. RT. 50. Call Stock
ysrd-614-692-2322 or 8983531, Evenings.

I TRW&gt;' CON!HDER

1981 Harley Dtvidson Super·
glide. Good condition. Call 814-742· 2675.

Baby rebblts. t6.00 ea&lt;:h. Tur·
lur,.a. t12 .60 each. Call 814246-6831 .

(I)

anchored live from New
York . (0:30)
IHl Fac1s of Life
f!l (!) One Day al a Tima
8:05@ Allee c
8:30 II(}) Q5) NBC .Nightly News

3 -Wheelet' ATV-Kawa .. icl 200.
Good cond. Call 814-4487026.

Fetty TrM Trimming. 'etump
removal. Call 304-176-1331.

57

W~EN

Motorcycles

&amp;

1

I 1 I I I

the entertainment world is

CAPTAIN EASY

FRANK AND ERNEST

76

KARrEB

Q5J Nawo
® Spor1sLaok (T)
(J) Dr. Who
[D Square One TV Q
1!21 ShowBiz Today News of

19n lnternationel Scout for
sale. 4 Wheel Drive. t300. OBO.
Cell 614· 992-2016.

8 Yr. old Reg' ed Sorrell Quarter
Mare, 16·3 hands. 1860. New
Shoe saddle. $1100 value - for
$886. Coll614·286-e&amp;22.

low fa form four simple wards,

•

6:00 (I) Crazy Like a Fax

4 W.O.

1982 Dodge2&amp;0 Rem. Cullom
conversion. Trail• ready . C•ll
614-448-4383 d11¥S. 448·0139
evans. &amp;: waekMds.

TUES., DEC. 15

'

r::~:t:~' S©V...&lt;illA-~£~S*
:::~
Edllod by CLAY I . POlLAN _,:__ _ _ __
0 four
Rea rrange lette r• of the
scramb led words b•

EVENING

'72 Chevy pick up, 12 tt V
bottom alumn boat, 7Yt hp
McCullough motor. 304·8751816.

74

Now buying thell corn o~ ••
corn. Call tor latest quotes. River
Citv Farm Supply, 614-4482986.
63

1986 Ch..,rolet El C.mino.
ShBrp. Topper, loaded wfth
extras. Low mil• E~C.Cellant,
cond. C•ll 614-446-1288 after
&amp;PM .

1988 ChelfMte. Vary cleen.
Standard shift. 15.000 mil•.
$4600. Clll614·441·4841 .

61 Farm Equipment

•
mouth guard popped out, loa?
Hp1m ... tastes like I got the wrong one back ."

.

AT MATIL

PM·
1977614-446-3243.
Chw. truck. Call after 6

AKC Sib.-len Husky puppiet.
Blue eyed be-..ti•. t12!. Will
hold for Christmas. C•ll 614•48-6927.

&amp; LIVI~:&gt;Iud

Modern 1 BR apartrMnt. Call
e14·446· 0390.
' .

Now till Dec. 31 all Zaetor
tractors in atock 10 percent over
cost. No trade--in . Morris Equipment, Rutland, Ohio. 614-7422456 .

71 Auto's For Sale
Groom and Supply- Shop·Pat
Grooming . All breeds . .. All
stylet. lams Pat Food Dealer.
Julie Webb Ph. 614-446-0231 .

Fm11 Supplies

Furnished: 4 rooms &amp; bath.
Clean. No peta.· Adulttonly. Ret.
&amp; dap. required . Call 614· 4411519.

R anew tv r.decorated. Vtry nice
lpartmants In downtown Gall~
pol is , 1 &amp; 2 8R .• unfurniahed,
second flo or, from •176· 8226.
Dep. !t reftwenCM required. Call
eva. 61 4·448· 2326 or 4414249.
.

=

r~~~~~·~~~~;~;~:r;.~~~~~~~~;~

The Daily Sentinei-Page- 9

Television
Viewing

fM iE~~IBLE'

1979 Ford 160 Ranger 1'-tP•
Cab, V-8. automatic, PS. PJI.
Cab has no rust· Bed h• aome.
81600. Call614-693-8831.

/J _,,.

Jack• Frull Markat, Route 36,
Henderson. See u1 for all your
Christmas need1. Apples Navel Orang• - Banenes Tangelos - All kind• nuta Candy - Grapes &amp; Tometoes.
Baking Potatoes. 60 lb. 84.00.
Sweat OniOns 26c pound Green cabbage 20c pound.

Nice 1 BR . apt. Ne.- HMC. No
pets. Stove, refrlg.. drapfll.
1226 a mo. Ref, required. Call
614· 446 -4782.

.;encH

1985 Dodge D-100, 4- epd.
Sharpl 1549•. John'• Auto
Sales below Holidav Inn In
Kenauga. Oh, Rt. 7 .

&amp;.

Furnished apt. ne~~:t to librlry.
One prote.. ional adult only.
Parldng. Call 61•·448-033B .

J

'69 Firebird, nitw motor. 4
speed, tilt wheal, factory air,
bodv needs r•tored, h...,e nerw
qUIIrt•n, fenders. new· factory
tie. full 1pring1. . trunk lid,
02.600.00. 304-871· 2814 oftar 6 :00pm 304-876-1030.

~-4i4r6-:2:3:25:.::::;1;::::::;:;::~;7:4;2:·2:7;1:6:.;;;:;:;:::;r-!676·4146.
58

wm1r

V'

1989 Plymouth Fury t400.00 .
1979 Chev•tte •ooo.oo. Phone
304-895-3427 or 304-8715·
8806.

!.

'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

1987

198&amp; Speclll Edltton Chwy
Cal.,ler, fuel Injected. • cyl, 4speed, 1lr. ah•p IMtle ear,
t4, 2915.00. Phone 304·67&amp;·
6768 or 0715-21563:

CA1NlP MCIJ'£ U!{TII..

I-_;__________

c••- Bod'!''• towed away. Call
61&lt;1-2.-6-9264 or 682-6750.

h•a

IT r.IA'&gt; AMWrAIG! 10
11Q' 10 Hit€ HI'&gt; r.~ew

51 Household Goods

Junk c•1. t25 for complete

.

71 Auto's For Sale

Mcrch a1111 is~~

Apartment
for Rent

Want~

DeCember 16, 1987

Ohio

•

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Yesterday's Cryptoquote: MOST ALL THE .TIME,
THE WHOLE YEAR ROUNO , THERE AIN'T NO FLIES ON
"ME, BUT JEST 'FORE CHRISTMAS I'M GOOD AS ! .KIN
BE. - EUGENE FIELD
•'
© 1987 King Fealurto Syndi&lt;;llte, Inc
1

.
'

�•

Ohio Lottery

Tuesday. December 15, 1987

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-10-The Daily Sentinel

,.----People in the news----------. Interfaith·holiday ineans
coopetation and conflict.
By WILLIAM C. TROTJ'
United Press International
SECRETARY OF STATE ROCKY: And now, a little political
analysis from Sylvester Stallone: " I think it is just a
smokescreen," he says o/ the Reagan.Gorbachev summit. " II
you notice, they walked out without any commitment to reduce
anything in Afghanistan. All I know is the war Js goipg on in
Afghanistan and ' glasnost' is not going to change that."
Afghanistan is Stallone's favorile cause since his third
" Rambo" movie, which he is working on in Bangkok now, is
about the Soviets and Afghan rebels. He told reporters the new
movie will be " much more soc ially s ignificant" and he hOpes It
wlll help the cause.
"Hopefully this film can help assist that grievous situation,"
he said. Stallone's director, Peter MacDonald, says Rambo will
be a little less violent this time. "Mostly Rambo's part in it is
,like the Afghan villagers- just surviving," he said. "I suppose
if you had a body count it would be the Russians 50, Rambo l , a
reversal of the normal odds. "
FERGIE FLIES AGAIN: Flying Fergie has done it again .
Prince Andrew's wife, the former Sarah Ferguson, won her
airplane pilot's wings earlier this year and now she's qualified
to fly helicopters. Andrew was watching proudly Monday as,
Fergie passed her test after 43 hours of instruction.
Fergie, dressed in a flying jacket and black polo neck
sweater, landed the chopper· peffectly at the end of her test at a
Royal Air Force base northwest of London and then posed for
photographers. "l'li probably get a toy helicopter for
Christmas," she said. "It was quite a challenge."
Andrew, who (lew a helicopter during the 1982 Falklands war,
was amazed at how quickly his wife had progressed. " I am
constantly suprised by her, " he said. " I' ve sat in the back of the
aircraft and it has been most interesting. Her deiermination to
learn was absolutely fascinating. "
ROCK FOR HOMELESS KIDS: Some of the biggest names in
rock were on stage Sunday night for the finale of Paul Simon's
concert to raise money for the homeless children of New York
City. Bruce Springsteen led a rousing show-closing version of
" Rock ' n' Roll Music" with the likes of Simon, James Taylor,
Chaka Khan , Lou Reed , Deborah Harry, Grace Jones, Dlon,
Ruhen Blades and BlUy Joel helping out. The benefit raised
$475,000, according to Simon, who had previously donated
$80,000 to buy a van for homeless kids. "It's sad to think there's a
generation of children out there whose memory of home is going
to be a welfare hotel or a shelter," Springsteen had said. Some of

the celebrity waik,ons included New York baseball heroes Don
Mattingly of the Yankees and Ron Darling of the Mets, who
jointly introduced Sprlnrsteen, and comedians Bill Cosby and
Whoop! Goldberg, who both played percussion during Blades' s
set.
SANTA DOM: The portly Dom DeLuise made a convincing
Santa Claus at the White House Monday and managed a few
laughs from fir st lady Nancy Reagan as he made fun of Mikhail
Gorbachev.
DeLuise said Gorbachev jumped out of his limo not to meet
the American people but because Vice President George Bush
had "tried to rub the spot" off his forehead. DeLuise, on a roll.
said President Reagan saw Gorbachev getting out of the car and
'thought ''he was trying to defect." DeLuise then grabbed the
first lady and they danced a few steps to "Frosty the
Snowman."
Mrs. Reagan , who was showing reporters the White House
Christmas decoratio.ns, apparently is still waging a cold war
with her Soviet counterpart. She was asked if she was looking
forward to seeing Ralsa Gorbachev at a summit in Moscow next
year. She pointedly responded: "I'm looking forward to seeing
-Russia. "
MUSIC TO FRANCE: Lorin Maazel, head of the Pittsburgh
Symphony Orchestra, signed a two·year contract Monday to
become musical director of the National Orchestra of France.
Maazel, who worked with the French symphony orchestra as a
guest conductor in 1977 and 1979, will officially begin in his new
position In September 1988 . .
" I am 57 years old, I was li6rn in Paris and during my first
meeting with the orchestra I felt like a son," Maazel said upon
signing the contract. "Today the orchestra has rejuvenated
itself and I feel almost like Its father."
GLMIPSES: ''Lethal Weapon" was named best movie and Its
co-star, Danny Glover, was named best actor at the 20th annual
Image Awards presented by the NAACP. The best supporting
actress award went toTraci Wolfe and Mario Van Peebles was
named best supporting actor for his role in "Heartbreak
Bridge." Lionel Richie was named entertainer of the year,
while Aretha Franklin was named best female artist. Jazz
legend Ella Fitz~;eraid defied her doctor's orders and appeared
to receive the president's award ... Singing duet Nick Ashford
a nd Valerie Sim(ll!on now have a second daughter. Simpson
· gave birth Friday to a 6-pound, 6-ounce baby In New York and
they named her Asia. Their first daughter, Nicole, Is 12.

By United Press International
Carren Kay wants the Christ·
mas tree in her South Euclid
home to remind her children of
their Christian heritage, even
though they are being raised in
the Jewish faith.
The J(ay• are an example of
interfaith couples who each year
decorate their homes with Hanukkah candies and Christmas
lights together .
"I think it's pretty ," says
Carren's Jewish husband , Stephen, pointing to the Christmas
tree. "She won't let me (help
decorate the tree) because I
can't do it right."
For the Kays, the holiday
season means twice as much fun ,
but for other Interfaith couples,
problems over religion are
magnified.
The First Unitarian Church of
Cleveland held a ~orkshop last
year on the holiday season in
interfaith hom es. Church
member Kate Greenfield of
Aurora ·s aid, " It was obvious that
it 's a terrible problem for some

Christmas
.c ountdown

the Toledo Museum of Art
through Jan. 3 along with the
"Holy Family With Angels"
through Jan. 3. "Minge!: Japanese Folk Art" through Dec. 20.
-"This is Not a Photograph"
is at the Akron · Art Museum
through Jan. 10.
-"Nutcracker," Ballet Met,
Ohio Theatre, Columbus.
through Dec. 24. 614-224-1672.

· and Dec. 27 a t the Historic Ly me

Fuel inj .. 6 cyl .• air cond. , PS, PB, tilt, cruise. stereo cassette, auto. load

· Village In Bellevue, Sandusky

lovots,

~~t~t~~/~~e b~~\~J~~~ ~~~ ~~ccoh

•

at y

tells of a different type of
Chris tmas.

Extra sharp . 9,000 miles .

Stan Hywet Hall in Akron ha s a

1987 OlDS CUTlASS SAlON .............................. S14,900

Chr istm as Ope n House Sunday,

T-top, V-8 , power seats, windows. door locks, cruise, tilt, much more .

putti ng on a program aimed at
child ren:·
Hal e Farm and Village at
Bath, Sijm mcit County, holds its
Yule Log eremony Sunday.
This is a n E nglish tradition to
welcome c hristmas..
Holiday a ctivites this season:
-A Victorian Christmas at the

13,000 miles.

John Hauck House in Cincinna ti

V-6. auto. trans., air, tilt. cruise,

runsthroughJan.3.
-The Camp Toodik Christmas
lighting display ca n be seen
nightly throug h Dec. 30. More
lh an 40,000 lights illumina te the
display In Loudonville, As hland
County.

-the Lights Before Chrlstmas
a t the Toledo Zoo are more than
100,000 light s illuminating the zoo
nightly through Ja n. 3.
-Santa' s Christma s Fantasy,

1985 FORD T-150 Xl PICKUP............................ S8, 795

V-8 , fuel inj.• air cond., 2 tone red and white. Extra sharp.

1985 CHEV. S-1 0 PICKUP ................................... S6, 995
1985 DODGE D-100 PICKUP .............................. s7,495

318 V·B. auto. tnins .. sharp.

1985 DODGE D• 50 PICKUP ................................. ss •295
·

1985 BRONCO II .............................................. $10,900

V-6. auto . trans., air cond ., power windows. doors. tilt, cruise. 28,000
miles . Extra nice.

1985 FORD Fl SO PICKUP ................................... S7,895

V-8, auto. trans .. Explorer Pk. Air, tilt, cruise, dual tanks.

1985 AlliANCE 4 DOOR SEDAN ......................... S4,695
Auto . trans .. air corid. , PS. PB , extra sharp. 26.000 miles.

th rough Dec. 28a t the BearCreek

1984 OlDS TORONADO .....................................s1 0,500

Resort Ra nc h near East Sparta,

V-8 . Loaded with all extras. low miles. Extra clean.

Stark County, is a walk through
cabins decorated in different

.'

door, a1r con d., au to. trans .. s tereo .

·

holiday themes, with animation
a nd Jots of lights, arts a nd crafts.
-C hristmas a t Gi ll mer Hou se
In Warren Is an ex hibit of
Trumbu ll county artwork,
through Dec. 23.
-Wtnterfest at Kings Is land ts
open through Dec. 31, except
Dec. 24 and 25.
-Chri~tmas at Ohio Village in
Colurn bus goes through Dec . 27'
except Dec. 21 and 25.
-A Garfield Family Chris Imas at Lawnfield in Mentor,
Lake County, is open through
Jan. 3. ·
-T he Olso n Chr istmas display
of lights and figurines is lighted
at the Olson Farm near Mansfi eld rhr'JU~h .Jan .l
" ,, ·' ic
h• II'&gt;~ king
VaJJey Scenic Railroad in Nelson ville. Athens County, Sat urday
and Sunday. Reservations arc
being taken at 513·335·0382 or

'

.

T

D
S:4 395
1984 FORD ESCOR 4 OOR .............................. ,
Air. auto. trans.' Cruise.
4 door, V·6, auto. trens. Air.
0nIy S4, 995
1984 FORD lTD ............................................
1984 DODGE OMNI........~..~~.~r;.~~~!;.................... S3,495
S5 995
1984 DODGE DAYTONA TURBO.......................... ,
Air, tilt, cruise. stereo cauette.

·

1983 IZUZU 4X4 PICKUP ...:'l\~·.:!~~~.~~.~!~~~; ......... ss, 99 5
1983 CHEV. CAPRICE ClASSIC............................. S6,495
4 dr., V-8, air, tilt, cruise.

1983 CHEV • MAliBU 4 DR • nuooouoououuoouoooououn
V-6, Air, lilt. cruise. S4 495
I
1984 FORD RANGER 4x4 PICKUP .....Y.:~:.!!.~P.~!!~. S6,49 S

"our
Last
l

Car Sh I

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

Wish all your customers and friends
a verf'Merry Christmas in our .· ·
Christmas Greeting Edition on
D'ecember
24th.
. .

ADVERTISING
. ASK FOR BRIAN OR DAVE

992-2156
614-992-2551
31D &amp; ElM STREET
IT. 124

RACINE,
OHIO

salaries which striking teachers
are no longer receiving.
One parent said that she knew
of several teachers who did not.
want to be on strike. Another said
that many parents are becoming
very aggravated with the situation as It stands.
ln regard to the amount of time
between. media !ion sessions,
Board member s maintained that
sessions are established a t the
discretion of the federal mediator. . Supt. Morris said that ,
parents, if they wished , could call
the . media tor to voice their
feelings a bout the length of time
between sessions.
Other actlfms completed by the
Board included:
Unanimously approving the
hiring of Rich Kizma, of the law
firm Reid, Johnson and Berry,
Columbus, for legal services to
the Board during the strike, and
the employing of the firm Bob
Dalton Investigations Inc., Parkersburg, W.Va. , for security
during the strike.
Setting Thursday, 5 p.m . as a
special meeting.
Setting Jan. 6 from 7 to 7:30
p.m. for the 1988 organizational
meeting, to be followed by the
regular meeting on that date.

Hurricane-like winds cause
damage around Ohio ~uesday

the plant's operation. Davis- around."
By United Press International
Hesse, located about 20 miles
A winter storm blew into Ohio
east of Toledo, has an intake pipe
Dennis Lyons, owner o'! a
Tuesday , heralded by nearin the lake.
downtown dell, lost $300 to the
hurricane-force ~(Qd~ that blew
The plant conilnued to operate high winds. He was en route to a
down trees and utility poles and
and no problems resulted from bank, wlth·the cruih and a deposlt
left 't housands of people without
the low water level.
slip in a jacket pocket, when he
electricity.
.
The
wind
tapered
off
Tuesday
saw a woman losing a battle to
Wind gusts reached at least 50
evening,
but
the
temperatures
the winds.
mph throughout the state. One
headed
sharply
downward.
After
"It appeared she was going to
gust of 70 mph - 5 mph short of
highs
in
the
50s
Tuesday
morn
be
blown into traffic, so I grabbed
hurricane force - was recorded
a
pole
and grabbed her," he said.
readings
were·
.near
30
ing,
in Toledo at noon, while several
the
state
early
today,
''The
wind
blew the money out of
throughO\It
stations reportedgustsof65mph.
With
wind-chill
readings
near
and
it was gone." '·
my
pocket
• More than 60,000 .homes and
zero
in
most
cities.
The
weather
even
carried a bit.
businesses were withOut power
of the grinch with it, as the wind
In downtown Columbus, the
at various times during the day .
top.pled the city's Christmas tree,
A wittter weather advisory was wind halted work on several
in effect for extreme northeast high·rlse construction projects .' in front of Columbus City Hail,
and sheared off the top of the
Ohio today . Forecasters said leaving canvas tarpaulins on the
Christmas tree in front of the
squalls would dump four to five framework of the 2 Nationwide
·
Statehouse.
inches of snow in that. area by this , project in tatters.
Local Board· of Education. Parents asked
A
Toledo
Ed
!son
spokesman
Police
closed
two
major
down·
· CROWD ATTENDS BOAltD MEETING
evening, with more snow ex·
questions. The B01ird answered. Teachers
said numerous outages caused
town streets because of debris ,
About 50-60 parents and teachers attended
peeled tonight.
listened .
large
plywood
sheets,
including
by high winds in the company's
.Tuesday night's regular meeting of the Meigs
High winds Tuesday pushed
site.
northwest
Ohio service area
blowing
from
a
construction
water out of the western basin of
affected
approximately
20,000
Lake Erie, causing the level to
The
intersec
tion
of
Broad
and
customers
at
various
times
drop and prompting the Toledo
High
streets,
normally
packed
Tuesday.
Edison Co. to declare an unusual
'
Some 30,000 Cincinnati Gas &amp;.
event at its Davis-Besse nuclear with office workers at noontime,
was nearly empty.
Electric customers were without
power plan t in Ottawa County.
Sharon Glaser, an office power because of wind damage.
Spokesman Chuck Krueger
nounclng its opposition to
WASHINGTON (UP!)
Kennedy and his family were
said the alert, the lowest of four worker huddled in one downtown That represented 5 percent of
Kennedy last month.
American Bar Asso~iation offi- taking the public Whit~ House
Nuclear Regulatory Commission building, sa id she hadn't seen CG&amp;E's customers and the util·
Tyler is chairman of an ABA
ctals said today that Judge tour today when "word spread"
"action levels," Is required when such vicious winds " since Do- ity )lad 50 crews · working to
committee that evaluated
Anthony Kennedy's past mem - of his presence, and they were
an event occurs that could affect rothy and Toto got blown restore power.
Kennedy and gave him a unanim bership in private clubs that brought to the Oval Office for a
ous "well qualified" rating. He
excluded women was not viewed brief chat with the president,
told the Senate Judiciary Comby them as a factor that would White House spokesman Marlin
)nittee that although Kennedy
disqualify him from service on Fitzwater said.
did not officially resign from one
the Supreme Court.
He said Reagan congratulated
of
the clubs until October_ when
Opening the third day of him on his two days of testlmqny.
name began surfacing as a
his
Kennedy's confirmation hear- . Kennedy 's previous memberpossible
high court nominee, he
ing, the ABA's Harpld Tyler Jr. ship in clubs that formally or
had
tried
last summer to get the
testified, "We believe he was Informally hav e excluded
club to change Its policy.
sensitive to the issue when It women was one of the Issues
'!'he ABA's report, based on
surfaced, and he tried to do raised by liberal senators with
interviews with almost 500 lawysomething about It . Perhaps he Kennedy during his two days of
ers and state and federal judges,
should have tried to do something testimony. It was also among the
termed Kennedy "among the
earlier about it, but we did not reasons cited by the National
best available for appointment to
view it asadisquallfylngfactor." Organization for Women In anthe Supreme Court ... from the
stand.poin t of professional competence, Integrity and judicial
temperr menl."
made and the dissemination to
An unfair labor practice
It echoed the generally favorathe public of this inform a !ion ble atmosphere surrounding the
charge has been filed wi th the
without having made such a conclusion of Kennedy's two
State Employment Re lations
proposal in bargaining consti- days of publi c te s timony
Board by the Meigs Local
tutes direct bargaining and an Tuesday .
Teachers As soc !a !ion as the
attempt to interfere with the
result of a statement published in
Judiciary Cornmlttee Chairadministration of the Meigs man Joseph Blden, D·Dei., said,
The Daily Sentinel on Dec. 10 In
Local Teachers Association, the "I feel he did well. He didn't
reference to the teachers' strike.
bargaining
agent lor the certified thoroughly satisfy everyone in
The charge is being brought
teachers
in
the Meigs Local terms of the answers he gave,"
against the Meigs Local Board of
School District.
Education and Dan E . Morris ,
yet his responses were "com ·
"Such dissemination of false pleteiy different" from those
superintendent.
information Is an .attempt to given by defeated nominee RoAn explanatory attachment
undermine and discredit the bert I;lork in the areas of privacy,
accompanying th e charge
negotiators ·for the teachers free speech and 14th Amendment
state~:
assocfation. ·
rights.
"A' copy of the news article
"On or about Dec.lO, 1987, the
Biden, who conceded he would
from
the
Thursday,
Dec.
10,
1987
have preferred a nominee ' ·more
charged parties released to the
Dally Sentinel If hereto attached committed" to women's and
public media in Meigs County,
reported an oula&amp;e in the Happy HoUow Road
STORM DAMAGE- IDgh Winds played havoc
and rna rked Exhibit A."
Ohio and speclficaiiy the Dally
minority rights, said Kennedy
area,
near Rutland, ol106 customers fJ:Qm 11:19
in Meigs County Tuesday. At Francis F1orlst In
A spokesman for the teachers came .a cross "as not dissimilar"
Sentinel what purported to be a n
a.m.
to
12: SO p.m. Tue!lday and at 12: ~a. m. t&amp;ls
Pomeroy, a 'large plate glass window was blown
said that a copy of thechargewas to Justice Lewis Powell; whose
offer made at the bargaining
morning
an outare occurred in the Mile HID Roacl
out by the winds and was boarded up until a
hand deiivered to both Supt. resignation June 26 created the
table during mediation under the
area,
Racine,
where about 100 customers lost
replacement can be 's ecured. While the Southern
auspices of David Thorley, fed- Morris and the State Employ- vacancy Kennedy hopes to fill.
service.
Service
there was restored at 7 a .m .
Ohio Electric Co. reported no outages in Meigs
ment Relations Board In Colum- Powell was regarded as a moder-·
eral mediator.
today .
County due to the winds, The f)hio Power Co.
bus on TueSday.
"In fac t, no such offer was
a te conservative. '

·ABA says ·club membership should
not disqualify Kennedy from post

·

Air cond .• 5 speed . LOng bed.

enttne

A revised school calendar erwlse payable to the Meigs determine il the described finan - public participation.
By NANCY YOACHAM
·
adopted
last night calls for school Local School Dis tr ict for school cial situation does exist, and if a
Sentinel News Staff
Questions centered around
on Dec. 21,22,23,28,29 and 30; · year 1988-89 may be withheld ." deficit is certified, to request the concerns of parents.
.Meigs Local schools will be
reopened to studl!nts on Monday. ' Martin Luther King Day in Other than the reminder of the State Department of Education · One parent said that if quality
January; and every other Satur- time factor, Sno)Vdeh saiEI the to secure a loan on behalf of the education could not be provided
"That's our plan," reported
day starting with Jan. · ~~ and State has taken "a hands off district.
Supt. Dan Morris at Tuesday
with substitutes, then his chiidpolicy" as far as . the strike
night's regular meeting of the
concluding with May 7.
I
"We all agree we need more ren would not be attending when
Last days for students and siutatlon, despite req uests from revenue," said Morris , but there school reopens. "That's one of
Meigs Local Board of Education.
teachers will differ from school the Board for sruldance.
Students of the district have
are only two sources, local and the reasons we've taken such
Following the a doption of the State. In a local effort to increase lime in choosing our substito school with the revised schebeen in limbo since Nov. 6 when
teachers took to picket lines over
dule. Pomeroy's and Salisbury's revised calendar, the Board revenue , the Board will be t ute s," · responded Morris .
sala.r y and job security issues,
last day will be June 9; Harrison- unanimously passed a resolution placing a levy on the May ballot Snowden said that the State
ville, Rutland and Salem Center, requesting a "Cash Financial for an additional 21 mills, which would be Inspecting for quality
Today is the 27th school day of the
Analysis" from the State Audi- if passed, would take the district I\';, and "if the quality isn' t there,
June 10; Middleport, June 13;
strike.
Meigs High, June 15; Bradbury, tor , a measure which Morris from the current 20 mills to 41.
Board members took action
they (the State) will shut us down
June 16; and Meigs Junior High, called "the first step" Into ttie
last night . to designate this
Morris said there should be no anyway."
State Loan Fund.
Friday for tnservlce for substi- June 20.
Another concern to parents
' accord- increases of expenditures with.
This action was taken,
,tute teachers, an'd to open schools
The revised schedule was
. out additional revenue: .o r assu- was student safelY if schools
announced by Assistant Supt. ing to BDard President Robert ranee of additional revenue. reopen with substitutes . "Can
to students on Monday. Not all
schools in the district will be
James Carpenter who explained Snowden, because the school "You don't run a household or &lt;1 you guarantee safety?" a parent
opened, reported Morris, but an
that only five calamity days are ., district budget shows "a zero business that way and I don 't asked. In response, Snowden said
announcement of the schools
considered In the revision. if bad · balance" for the fiscal year think you should operate a school he did not feel any teacher
which will be opened and of bus
winter weather makes it neces- ending June 30, 1988.
system that wa y," he present or not present at the
Although striking teachers commented.
sary to miss more than five
routes , etc.. will be made public
Board meeting would interfere
calamity days, there will be a few have made requests to the Board
either today or Thursday , he
Morris said there would be a with 'a child bodily.
added_
additional Saturdays as well as to enter into the Loan Fund for slight Increase In the budget
Board members also voiced
"We're planning to open on
the last few days in June, left as salary purposes , Morris wa s after paying substitutes from the encouragement for parents ,to
quick to explain lha t the Board is salaries of regular teachers, but come to the schools to observe
Monday and will do everything
make-up days, Carpenter said.
we can to open on Monday,'' said
A written reminder received requesting the Financial Analy·
the excess would go to other once the schools are reopened,
Morris. Board President
by the Board from Franklin B. .sis for this year only In order to areas.
asking only for parents to give
Snowden added that "there are
Walter, Ohio Superintendent of meet financial obligations which
Between 50-60 parents and substitutes and students a couple
are expected to exceed revenues , teacher s were at las t night's of days to adjust.
certain aspect of the reopening
Public Instruction, was reported.
The reminder pointed out that through no fault of the district.
which have not been finalized."
In answer to another question ,
meeting of the Board and followAnnouncement of the reopen - the minimum school year must The loan is not being requested ing completion of _regular bus!- it was ex\)lained that the substibe completed by June 30 or for salaries, Mor.is pointed out.
ing came after about a half hour
ness, the meeti~g was opened to tutes would be paid from the
It will now be up to the State to
·-·school foundation moneys othexecu !lye session.

~

1986 MERCURY lYNX .....;................................... S4,995
4

•

Morris Says schools will reopen on Monday

a
~
,,

1987 FORD RANGER SUPER CAB ........................ S8,500

V-6, air. 14,000 miles.

Clear tonight. Low near 20.
Sunny !l'hursday. Highs · in
lower 30s. Winds lrom northwest, 15 to 25 mph tonight.

Vol.38, No.163
p
M'ddl
2 Sections, 16 Paget 25 Canto
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ron bars. br~sh guards. Much more. 13,000 miles.

19 87 FORD RANGER .~.~.~!·:.!!.~P.!~.~:.~~!.f.~.~.~~~~!!~ .. S5, 99 5
1987 TOYOTA 4X4 PICKUP .............................. sll,SOO

Pick 4

•

'·

RACINE
MOTORS

I

7344

people."
Rabbi Bruce Abrams of the
Euclid Jewish Center said it's an
important part of Judaism to
have a Jewish home. Abrams,
whose wife is a former Protestant who converted to Judaism,
said living ~ith Christian sym-.
bois is tantamount to worshiping
them.
Even though the symbols re·
present peace and love, Abrams
said they stili remind Jews of
many years of anti·Semitism.
Keeping religious heritage
alive Is a particular worry to
America's Jews. Some 40 percent of thOse who marry today
pick spouses !rom other faiths.
Greenfield said there are a
number of ways that interfaith
couples handle their conllicts. .
For example, .some couples
observe one holiday at borne and
visit relatives for the other.
And some minimize the con-·
flict by explaining one or both
holidays to their children as
customs, downpiaying their reli·
gious meanings.

How Ohioans have celebrated the .holidays
Special Exhibits:
614-753-0531.
By SANDRA L. LATIMER
-A Charles Burchfield Exhibi-Street of Shops Comes to Life
United Press International
tion
is displayed at the Columbus
There's a little bil of Christmas at the McKinley Museum, Can·
Museum of Art through Feb. 7
everywhere in the Buckeye State ton, Stark County, Saturday and
-Artists' Architecture is an
Sunday.
.
as Ohioa ns approach the
exhibit
of doll houses and ,bird
-Ludlow
Falls'
Annua
l
Christholidays.
at the SoUthern Ohio
houses
mas
display
of
lights
can
be
A Candlelight Tour of historic
Museum
and Cultural Center In
viewed
through
the
end
of
the
churc hes will be held Friday
Portsmouth
through Jan. 3.
over
Ludlow
Creek
in
year
night in downtown Portsmouth.
-Holiday
Skies
is the planetaMiami
County.
Also in that Scioto County city, as
at
the
Museum of
rium
show
-A
Poinsettia
display
at
the
part of I he Dickens of a ChristNatural
History
in
Cincinnati
Franklin
Park
Conservatory
and
mas, will be instructions SaturJan.
3.
through
day through Monday on how to Garden Center in Columbus is
-Art in the Computer Age
offered through Jan. 11.
make gingerbread houses .
shows
how artl~ts use computers
-The Dayton Holiday Festival
Cos tumed guides lead visitors
in
their
work, at the Contemporon a leisurely stroll ·by candle- runs through Dec. 24.
ary
Arts
Center in Cincinnati
-The Children's Wonderland
light through Roscoe Village in
through Jan. 5.
is open through Dec. 31 at the
Coshocton Saturday.
-;-At the Cleveland Museum of
Lucas
County
Recreation
Center
Christmas celebrations will be
.
Art:
"Master Drawings from
In
Maumee.
he ld Thursday and Sunday at the
Chatsworth"
through Jan. 24;
-Christmas
at
the
Centet
of
Hanby House in Westerville,
"W.
Eugene
Smith:
.Let Truth be
Science
and
Industry
in
ColumFranklin County, home o( BenPrejudice"
through
Jan. 24.
the
runs
through
Dec.
31.
.
bus
jamin Hanby, who wrote "Up on
-At
the
Butler
Institute
of
-Christmas
by
the
River
at
the Housetop."
American
Art
in
Youngstown:
the
Wolcott
Museum
Complex
in
The Orange Johnson House in
"Adolph Gottlieb: Works on
Worthington, Franklin County , Maumee, Lucas County, runs
Paper" through Jan . .10, and
Dec.
31.
through
has a Children's Christmas celeWatercolor
by Gregory Stra-The
Winter
.Festival
at
Sea
bration Saturday.
Dec.
27
through Jan. 24.
chov,
World in Aurora is open through
A Victorian Christmas Cele-Surimono
from the Chester
bra tion can be seen at tbe historic Jan. 3, except for Dec. 25.
Library
In Dublin is an
Beatty
- The Festival of Lights is at
Kelton House in Columbus
exhibition
of
about
100 Japanese
the Cincinnati Zoo through Jan.
through Dec. 27.
3.
.
woodblock
prints
on
Ireland, at
Christmas at Malabar Farm
State Park in Rich Ia nd County 1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-J
through Sunda y inc\udes tours of I
the Big House, a live nativity
scene, a nd , weather ·permitting.
·
~~tol.,
.
bobslide rides.
Christmas of Yesteryear Is
"'I
I.~. _
observed Saturday and sunday
1987 'COMANCHE 4X4 PICKUP ......................... s12,SOO

"•

Daily Numbe.r
201

THE DAILY SENTINEL.

Charge unfair labor practice

..

-·~

'·

'

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