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Page-1D-The Daily Sentinel

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.Ohio Lottery

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One strike and he's out, Virginian says
asked me not to tell our adopted
parents, whom I consider my real
Mom and Dad, and I promised I
wouldn't I believe he doesn't want
them to know because he is afraid his
name will be removed from the will
if they find oul Aclllally, this is more
a concern of his wife's than his. She
really hates my folks.
Our folks aren't rich, and I don't
give a damn about the will, but I do
care about my parents' feelings. This
news will cenainly tear them up. If
my brother wanted to change his
name. he should have been upfront
about it with the folks and willing 10
live with the consequences.
Don't they have a right 10 know?
This is a tough spot for me 10 be in.
What he did was not righl I need
some advice.·· MR. "Q.T."
DEAR MR. Q.T.: I agree lhat your
parents should be told that your
brolher changed his last name, but the
news shouldn't come from you.
If he doesn't have the guts to tell
them, they'll find out through an
acquaintance or another relative. He

Ann
Landers
"1994, Lot Angeln
llma Syndic-'e and
CreMOI's Syndiclle"

Dear ADD Landers: My brother
and I were both ldopted ·when we
were infants. I was 9 months old, and
my brother was 2.
.
We were adopted by an army
couple stlllioned in Prante at the time.
Dad was hard-boiled and strict while
Mom was very sweet and loving.
Between the two of them, we turned
out preay wen.
1Wo years ago, we located our birth
mother, who introduced us to several
aunts and uncles in Germany. As time
went on, more contacts were made,
and subsequently, my brother's wife
talked him into changing his last
name to our natural mother's name.
She then persuaded him to change the
names of all their children.
When my brother told me about the
name changing, I was very upset. He

cannot keep this from them forevet
Meanwhile, stay out of it Sometimes
when people don't lili:e the message,
they kill the messenget
Dear Ann Landers: I IOially agree
with your advice about violent men.
You said, "One strike and he's out" I
learned this the hard way.
The first time my alcoholic exhusband hit me, I left him. He begged
me to take him back, saying the kids
needed both parents and promising
with his hand on the Bible lhat he
would never strike me again. He even
agreed to go with me for counseling.
A few weeks later, he had one too
many beers and beat me black and
blue. I med for divorce.When he was
served with the papers, he got so
angry he nearly killed me.Thank the
good Lord I was able 10 get out of
the house and run to a neighbor who
called the police. My husband was
arrested, and I am luclcy to be alive
10 tell this story.
Ann, I am not an ignorant woman.
I have a master's degree in sociology
and know all the pitfalls of domestic

PICTURE YOUR CHILD·
AMONG THE ...

violence, but I didn\ believe it could
blppcn to me. Please repeat your
ldvic:e to the women out there. If he
.bits you even once.lcawl and don't
look back. -- GRATEfUL 10 BE
ALIVE IN VIRGINIA
DEAR GRATEFUL: Thanks for
the documentalion. Too many women
want so desperately to keep their
Jamily together lhat they will put up
with anything.
A man who hits his wife, drunk or
sober, will almost always do it again.
A slap or a punch can easily escalate
to a beating. I repeat my admonition
- "One strike and you're out"
Lousome? Talct charge ofyour lifo
alld 1ur11 it aroUild. Writt for A1111
Landtrs'lltW booklet, "How to Malct
Frit11ds a11d Stop Being Louly."
Stnd a st/f-addlrsstd, lo11g, busilltss·
si:e t11velope and a chtck or mouy
ordtr for $4.15 (litis illcludu postage and handling) ro: Friends, clo
A1111 Landtrs, P.O. Box 11562, Chicago; 111. 6061UJ562. (/11 CaNJda,
send $5 .05.)

Our special page(s)
(lc years of age or younger)

Will be published
FRIDAY,
DECEMBER 23RD
.
t

Aated If be Iw a problem witb
wbat Waabington is doing, Geauga
County fanner D. Kevin O'Reilly
said: "How mucb time do you
· bave?"

PINN tncloN ttll·oddmotd,
...mped onvolopeto rotum your

phoio

O'Reilly operates a 200-acre
grain and sbeep ·farm
tbe nonbH in
said
· cast Obio county. e
be was
frustrited
by
tb4!l
govCIDDICIIt
aoo and doCa DOl ....,;ci...,•• inyears
fru'.
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Arrangements were discussed
for serving tbe canteen. at tbe
American Red Cross bloodmobile.
Nancy Morris and Peggy Harris
were oo-cbairmen.
A thank you note was received
from Darla, Scottie, Kaylee and
Clarice Kennedy for being invited
to tbe children's Halloween party.
Mrs. Kennedy is an honorary mem-

A project of helping a needy
family for Christmas was discussed
at a recent metins of tbe Middlepon Cbild Conservation League
held at the Rock Springs United
Melhodist Cbun:b.
Presents will be given to the
cbild in tbe family and food will be
donated to tbem fa Ouistmas dinner. This is an annual project of tbe
organimti011.

bcr of lbe organization.

Plans were made for a potluck
holiday dinner at 6:30 on Dec. IS.
There will be a homemade ornament ellcbanged and tbe decorated
packages will be judged for the
prettiest, most original and most
unusual.
Kitty Darst presided at the meet·
ing wbicb opened witb the pledge

tbe·Kountry Kitcben Restaurant in
Racine.
Kathryn Hart presided at tbe
meeting during wbicb time it was
noted that tbe holiday home deco~ raling contest will be _beld Dec. 13

Heather Fin/a w... continued rrom Page
and featured princess seams and
lace-edged collar. They eacb carrled natural baskets filled witb
ivory and coral rose petals, and
accentuated witb ivory and coral
satin ribbons and flowers.
The groom \Yore black tails witb
ail ivory shirt and black vest an!J
tie Best man was Cbuck Pullins ot-f
cOlumbus, and groomsmen were
Allen Beit of Hartford. W.Va., and
Donnie Fry of Pomeroy. Usher and
acolyte waa Matt Fin law of Long .
Bottom, brotber of tbe bride. Evan
King cousin of tbe bride, was the
rinJ·bearer and be carried an ivory
saun l!!ld ,Jaa: pillow. The groom's
party Wore: black tails, identical to
tbe groom. and Ivory and coral
boutoonieres.
For ber daughter's wedding,
Mrs. Finlaw wore a long-sleeved
ivory ahd peacb floral droppedwaist dresS wilb lace trim and pearl
jewelry. Mrs . Syl!der was i~ a
turquoise and wbite tapestry pnnt
ensemljle.

&amp;

A reception was held in tbe
cburcb fellowship ball rollowing
the ceremony. Tbe wedding cake
was a seven-tier design done in
ivory witb sotas lacework and
pearls. It featured a glass cross and
beart cake topper witb lace and
tu!le. There were ivo!Y and coral
mmiature roses and tvy between
the tiers. The cake knife used by
the couple was tbe same one tbe
bride's parents used at tbeir wedding.
,
The bride's gown, as well as
tbose of lbe bridal party, were all
made by the bride's mother and all
of tbe flowers were arranged by
Carol Adams, Syracuse.
Servers at the reception were
Carol Brewer, Pam Crow and
Marge !Jarr. Re~isterin~ tbe guests
were Lindsey Wi~t, NICOle Meekstrotb andJemca Johnson, all
cousins of lbe bride.
.
' The. coupl~ ~pent tbetr honeymoon .m V~rgmm Beacb and now
res111e m Columbus.

from 6 to I! p.m. Out-of-town
judges will select the tbree winners
and prizes of $50, $30 and $20 will
be awarded. Tbe winners will be
announced in The DaUy Sentinel, it
was decided.
It was reported tbat tbe new season's greetings banners will be
bung rigbt away.
·
Cbristmas in lbe Park is scbeduled for Dec. IS beginning witb a
candlelight walk and caroling. Kris
and Paul Harris, representing
RACO will recite "The Nigbt
Before Christmas" during tbe program . Tbe Racine American
Legion Post 602 Aulliliary, and the
RACO will provide candy treats
for Santa to distribute, and a live ·
manger scene with ligbted tree,
bonftre and display of a miniature
Racine Village will be included in
tbe festivities. Refreshments will
be provided:
.
Donations of homemade cookies are needed and anyone wisbing
to donate is asked to contact Marilyn Powell.
in otbet business Mary Ball and
Flllllk and Delores Oeland's pb'one
numbers will be provided to tbe
Travel and Touriam Office. Information may be obtained by calling
the members. regarding the second
annual RACO flower festival set
for April 22.

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Logan ASCS and SCS oftkes 10 close; duties sbifled to Atbena
County offiCe.

- Lawrence County

Ironton ASCS, SCS offices to close; dutiea sbifted to Gallla
County office.

- Vinton County

M Artb ASCS SCS
· c
ur
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OITJCCS to close; duties sbifted to Jackson
County office. ·

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paperwork for tbeir federal subsi-

dies.

USDA offices would disappear

frow
H Oeauga, HamUton, Harrison,

"It really isn't too feasible to
maintain
-·-"we bave m'
----- the wbole ...,.,
soutbeaat Obio," Sbeets said. "I
ca
ee · t
'
edu Ctng
·
s•-~s'... JUS reason &amp;Or r
"""
Geoffrey Hammond, a Morgan

~e:;!~':m:= d'!Ytw~

person agricultural office in tbe
c:ounty seat of McConneUsviUe. He
said its staff is efficient and oversees $11 million wonb of fiii'IIICB'
panidpation in programs.
"llhlnlt a lot of people will·quit

'

C. William Swank, tbe farm
bureau' s executive
' VIce
' prest'dent,
said the old system bad its sbare of
fru
·
F ·
·
· StraUons,
too. or tnstance, II
forced rarmen 10 deal witb two or
tbree arms of tbe same federal
~:!mtbaO:.:,~'t communi"The tr'ansition may be awkward and diffieuJL but Ibm bave to
be efficiencies for the farmer and
for tbe gOVCIDIIIent," Swank said.
"We're going to support it every
way we Clll."

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Premium Ohio Grown ,
6' to 7'
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Mail or bri11g the enlQ' form to:

40% off Regular Price

The Daily Sentinel '

Now 112- 118

Open 9 a.m. - 5 p.m. daily
12 noon - 5 p.m. Sunday .

111 Court St
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

ill. Hubbard's Greenhouse ·
·

BRIDGE DEMOLISHED - Worllen for

... ow. ..... Carpcndon nceatly ............
........ •

Clallllllrtdp or- lhe

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l&amp;' ..... k&lt;;' ..;o;O,I\&lt;;',.,..1\&lt;;',.o;l;, .•

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on tbe proposal after it became
clear tbat several lawmakers from
g·eo,..nbically spread out districu
.,.......
objected. Undtzcurreot JX'(ICCdures.full
.
lawmakers may bire 18 full-time
and
part-time
to
worttwo
in tbeir
offices employees
in Wasbingtoo
and the bome distriels. Wbile SliDe
lawmakers maintain only one
offtce in tbeir district, others feel
tbe need for more.
on1
or twoEwnRepubso,0f:usesa~r ~=

staff allotment, and Gingricb said

---ne would appolllt a task force to
study tbe subject.

Blakes lee bas served on tbe
Area Agency's Regional Advisory
CouncU 011 Aging for all 20 years.
Tbe Council reviews and comments on all community policies
and programs wbicb affect older
Americans. assists the Area Agency staff in assessing needs of older '
adults, and Identifying resources
·available to meet tbesc needs, and
recommends to tbe Executive
Committee of Buckeye Hills programs wblcb sbould be awarded
funding. as well as.funding levels.

Deadline: Friday, Dec. 16 at .3 P.M.

p-~~!~~!!~
B..

OffiCials said 110 vote was taken

Restaurant Ia Atbens during the
20tb anniversary celebration of lbe
Buckeye Hills-Hocking· Valley
·Development
Regional
District/Area Agency on Aging .

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during tbe day to tbe buge, relormmindt!l Dmtocratic fresbman class
tbat came to power in tbe Watergate era'- the caucus decision on
cutting personal staff was a setback.

be bonored Friday at the Sportsman

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If the proposed building sale

was a victory for lbe ftrst-termers
- a group tbat Gingricll compared

C. E. Blakeslee of Pomeroy will

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sis of tbe savings of staff cuts put
into moliOD by lbe GOP. Tbe most
likely building to be offered for
sale is a structure a few blocks
from tbe CapiiOI, and neitber lawmaker offered an estimate of its
value.

Blakeslee to
be.honored

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- Hocking County

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Syracuse . . . 992-577jf

A .separate FmHA office in Atbens to be moved into a USDA
mul~ belldquarten office in Atbeoa.

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Estimates will be obtained for
repair work on tbe women's rest
room at Star Mill Park.
Mrs. Hart appointed Mary Ball,
Ann Zirkle, and Frank Cleland to
tbe nominating .committee. New
officers wUI be elected at tbe Dec.
27 meeting at Star Mill Park.

J

- Athens County

WASHINOTON (AP) - Mov- tinuing tbeir caucus today by for- for a Pennsylvania caucus recepinJ swiftly on a campaign pledge _ mally naming axnmittee cbairmen, lioa to floral, liquor and pas11y bills
of smaller government, House· · · incloding Telllll Bill An:ber at '!be for a variety of groups.
Republicans want to sell one of tax-writina Wavs and Means ComWbile mucb public allflltion bas
·five Howe office buildings and cut mittee and Robert Livingston of been focused 011 the blact caucus,
off $5 millioo in federal subsidies Louisiana as acting bead of tbe tbe two legislative service organ!·
for tbe Congressional Black Cau- Appropriations Committee.
zatious tbat play tbe widest role in
cus and numerous otber groups.
In some cases, Gingrich decided · tbe House are tbe Democratic
"The American people voted to ignore tbe senionty system and Study Group and tbe Republican
decisively Ibis year to cbange elevate junior members be bopeg Study Committee. Botb provide
tbinss,'' Rep: Newt Glngricb of will be more aggressive in carrying . material for Iawmalrers on JegislaGeorgia, tbe Incoming House out the campaign "Contract Witb tiOD pending before the House.
spcwk«, said Tuesday after a puty Americ;a."
Officials for several groups
caueus in wbicb the 72 inooming
Republicans are also expected to JX!llested the move .
fmbmcn played an aggressiw role. formally ratify a proposed set of ·· Wbile tbe "Contract Witb
"'lbey voted overwhelmingly tbat rules cbanges that tbe fuU House America" envisions a tbree·fiftbs
tbia is tbe year to dramatically will adopt in January.
majority to pass a tax increase, tbe
sbrink tbe Congress."
'
Republicans said their plan to leadership now favors applying tbe
In a closed-door caucus tbat cut off funding from so-called leg- tbree-ftftbs requirement only to an
luted muc:b of tbe day, Repubti· islalive service orgaoizati~ would 1naease in inoome tax rates. Aides
ua11 There
• milli
eana atso approved a tbree- term saw $J
011 ann y.
are said the modification is necessary
limit 111 oommittee and suboommit- Dilw 28 sucb groups, including lbe to leave room for raising some
.,e cbalrmen, rejecting a proposal black caucus, tbe arts caucus, tbe taxes wbile towering others as
ID extend tbe time to a fourth tam. populiat caUCUB and .tbe~ cau- Republicans implement tbeir ambi·
. . .eral fu
..,_ tious 100-day agenda.
BlJl de._._
ua•wg to tbe -~-~• ....,. of 1aw- cus. tbat use •&amp;.,..
to IW~
from
Uo
rural
dis
taff
H
om
i
maken
sp11w g,
- s , use ouse
ce equ pment
Tbe plan to sell off one of tbe
tricts, they sbelved a proposal from and make free use of House office buildin'gs tbal bouses con-•ional
.,_,
torie a
in
o-tbc •u ..·termers to orce a 1cut
space.
staff waa pusbed by tbe large, 12pcnmhtaff.
Rep. Scott- Klug of Wisconsin member GOP freabman class.
Republicans will eofm:e a one- called tbese organi7Ji!iMs a "aim- Rep.-elect Sam Brownbeck of
tbird cut in committee staffs and mering scandal waiting to bap- Kansu emerged from tbe caucus to
elimin•le tbree oommittees, stepS it pen.' ' Lawmalrers said tbeir expen- say tbe idea was to beftin mating
Is estimated will save about $3S ditures are rarely if ewr audited decisious oo.a businesslike basis.
milllllla year.
and money cannot be accounted
On
00 b secood fresb
--1-11-~ Witb tbe 104tb Gonjress set-to-· for ..Republicanadiatributed a abeet
am 011 Ya
. •
convene in four weeks. House saying tbeir review indicated IIUIII;"Joe-Scarboro~f Flonda,
Republican lawmakers were oon- expenditures ranging from $9,287 ~~;;::sis and l~.:Y~

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to tbe Oag and tbe Motber' a Prayer.
For ron call members named something for wbicb tbey are tliankful.
Devotions were entitled "Snowman" taken from Ideals and siveo
by Darst
Darst and Linda Broderick were
hostesses. Patti Arnold won tbe
door prize. Sbe and Casi Arnold
were guests.

1

By The Alloclated Prell
NeigblniDg Ollio COODiies wbere tM Department of Agriculture
is closing field offices:

participating in government farm
programs,'' said Glenda Thomas,
wbo operates a dairy farm in Mon-.
roe County.
Agriculture Secretary Mike
Espy said ·he wants to close 34 ·of
tbe state's 109 USDA offices aa
part of an overall plan to elimiDaee
more tban I ,070 offices nation·
~ome Obio cou~ties would' be
affected to a lesser degree, as
p1acea witb men tban one office in
tbe IIIIIIC town or ooun1ry would be
oonsolitlated into ooe-stop service
centers bandling multiple programs,
The CDtire plan Ia designed to
streamline the buge bureaucracy,
· perhaps saving $3.6 billion over

Rilpublicans -m'i:ive -;a··sell off House office building

Article 19 gave nationwide suffrage ·to women. This amendment
was proposed to tbe Legislatures of
tbe several States by tbe Sixty-ftftb
C011gress, baYing been adoJ!!ed by
tbe Howe of Representatives, May
21, 1919 and by lbe Senate June 4,
1919. On August 26, 1920 tbe
United States Secretary of State
procl•i!D"'4 it in effect, baYing been
adopted by three quarters of tbe
Statca. Article 20 sets tbe terms of
President and VIce President to
begin on Janwuy 20; !bose of IICIIB·
tors and representatives on Jan. 3.
Article 21 repealed tbe 18tb
amendment (probibition).
Net meeting will be Dec. 10 at
the Meigs County Library. "Cbristmas in India" will be presented by
Mrs. David Gntbam.

ill

Ohio offices closing down

oclting, Lake, Lawrence, Lucas,
Maboning, Monroe, Morgan,
. =USDA offices oould maJce ='Ie, Summit and Vinton coon. it
for farmers wbo do partieDavid Sbeets, president of tbe
ipalc, be said.
· Hockini County farm bureau, said
Tbe department on Tuesday be understands Washington's
8IUIOuoccd plana to pull olftceS out desire streamline government,
of 13 Ollio oounties, forcing farm- capecially witb tbe numla offannera to go elsewbere to process tbe en di'clin!~S·

'Official Entry
Form

Jonathan Meigs Chapter, Daughten of t•e
American Revolution. WalcbiDg her spiD. l'tom
the left, are Abbey ·sentton, Grace Elcb, Mary
Carolyn Wiley, and Mary PoweU.

Plans made for home decorating contest

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are

ones.

CCL plans holiday remembrances at church

Plans for a bome decorating
contest and Cbrisrmas in tbe Park
were made during a business meeting wbicb followed a Thanksgiving
dinner of the Racine Area Community Organization held recently at

CINCINNATI (AP)- Obio
farmers
concerned tbat Washington's plan to close or consolidate some U.S. Department of
Agriculture offices will make it
men of a bassle b fiiiiDelS to get
their paptlWOit processed.
FII'IIICIII inla'Viewed Tuesday at
tbe Ollio Fann Bureau Fedmtion's
annual meeting worried tbat tbe
plan will cause confusion in government proarams, make it more
dlflicult to set belp from county
offices and replace experienced
qriculture agents witb younger

Per Picture Prepaid
'

2 Secllona, 16 P8gM 3 5 A lluiUmldla Inc. Newlplper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, December 7, 1994

Ohio farmers co·ncerned
about USDA's merger plan

"For Children Only"

$1000

a

9163
Buckeye 5:
l-9-11-33-36

Vol. 45, NO. 152
Coprrtgh11894

-ONLY-

aged balding area, Mrs. Scbul said
IIIey have acquired some excellent
guard dogs, Great Pyrenees, 10 belp
protect their flock from such predators as coyotes, wild dogs, and
domestic dogs. The dog' &amp; size and
manner discourages animals from
trying to enter lbe ftelds wbere tbe
sheep graze.
Mrs. Schul concluded ber presentation witb a demonstration of
spinning on spinning wbeel and
witb a band bekl spool.
Regent Eleanor Smitb conducted tbe meeting with Mary Kay
Yost presenting a flag fact - it
must never touch anything beneath
it,·including tbe ground.
Mrs. Yost also read tbe 19th,
20tb and 21 Amendmenrs to the
Constitution of tbe United States.

Pick 4:

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The Daily Sentinel

ume of wool she now bas eacb year
tbe band washing and combing
processes is very time consuming
and impossible to process a large
volume of wool. However, sbe
said, she holds back a number of
bigb quality fleeces of wool for
processing herself. The wool processed and combed by tbe processing plant is returned to ber in rovlngs or ropes of fleece for band
spinning into slceins ready to create
capes. mittens, sweaters, ek:. These
hand processes IK:count for the bigb
quality yam and increase in cost
compared to ordinary yarn.
Since lbe Jaoob Sheep are smaller tban ordinary sbeep, predators
are a ooncem witb raising this rare
breed of sheep. To belp protect tbe
sbeep, although held in a well man-

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SPINNING - Nam:y Schul talked about
Jacob Sheep, yam 1111d Its uses, and demonslnted spinning at a recent meeting or Return

Pick3:

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Spinning
Jacob's sheep
wool DAR
demonstration
Jacob Sbeep, rovings, bandspun
yam, spinning wbeels, milteiiS, and
shawls wae the topic of discussion
at tbe reoent meeting of the Return
Jooathan Meigs Chapter, Daughters
of the American Revolution, during
a demonstration by Mrs. Nancy
Scbul.
.
Herman and Nancy Scbul, Tuppers Plains, raise Jacob sbeep on
their farm, sbear tbe sbeep and process the wool for tbeir own use and
for sale. Sbe spins the wool on
spinning wbeels tbat sbe bas collected.
Mrs. Scbul said that tbe Jacob
Sbeep whicb originated in Syria
were farst imported to tile United
States in tbe SO's and 60's for flock
development. Tbe sbeep take their
name from tbe Biblical story in
Genesis, where it is recorded tbat
Jacob worked for bis fatber-in-law
and received all tbe spotted sheep
from tbe flock as payment for his
labor, she said.
The Scbuls are members of tbe
Jacob's Breeders Association and
bave some of their ewes registered
in the .association's flock book.
Tbeir flock increases eacb year
since tbe ewes lamb twice a year
and twins, even triplets are common. Jacob Sheep have distinctive
1118IDngs of bi!K:k and lilac patches
over lbe eyes and· on the muzzle.
1be fiber from a single fleece can
be spun into a variety of shades,
from wbite tllrougb gray/lilac to
black, Mrs. Scbul explains.
By combining colors, be ather
and variegated effects can be
~K:complisbed, sbe noted. In ber
presentation, Mrs. Schul outlined
lbe steps in tbe processing of tbe
finished yarn.
With the size of tlleir current
flock, tbey bire a professional
shearer to shear the sheep once a
year, sbe said. The sheared wool is
then washed by ber or sent 10 a processing plant for wasbing and
combing. Sbe noted that wilb a vol-

Meigs
snaps long
losing spell

._llhw

Ke- Hen. c-ty 119·

•••miD•

Robert Euoa
tile brldp aUt.
Euoa Aid tile $211,HI replacemeat ltrldp
-y be,.. ...... bJ tile ... rtl JMUrJ.
.
DHr

· Tbe contributions of Eleanor
Tbomai, former director of tile
· Meigs County Senior Center, and
Susan Oliver, current director, to
lbe .aing network of Soutbeastem
Obio wm also be aclmowledged
during tbe meeting.

NEW MIDDLEPORT LEADERS- Tlte ~eo­
muulty A.odadon elected new olllcen f..- llll!llt·r-r 81 1b _ . . ,
ly -tbtg 1at ulgbL They are front row, SecreluJ ...tty Aadlr·
11011. Rear. TftU111'ft' Dick 01Na, left, PallldeM Dennk Hnrhwt
and Secretary Patty Aadawo. Hodm•• nc:ceed1 former prealdent Tom Dooley. (Seatlael pllofo by Georp Abate)

Middleport to seek
revitalization funds
•

facades and any oode viollliolls.
By GEORGE ABATE
Altboufh tbe application will
Sentinel Neww Staff
· Tbe Middleport Community require qutle a bit of wort. lltiCII
Association endorsed pursuins bas already been prcpiRld incladstate revitalization srant fundins ins 10 f"0'410111ic imp11ct st•eement.
'
for tbe villaF. at its regular meelinJ sbeadded.
Community .Auociltioa PrW-·
Tuesday nigbl
Middleport 'rants coordinator deDI Tom Doolcf said .tbe sroup
Jean TrusseD said even tbougb lbe needed to COIDIDit to seetin8 the
viJiase's chances for getting fimded grant
"I bate to DOt apply because It
remain slim it sbould still 1ry. 1be
migbt
imply tbll we don't Willi it,"
last two years, Middlqxxt' s efforts
Dooley
said. "If thele's a ~ in
to gain Ibis fiDiding failed.
About $2.3 million will be Ibis county witb a vision it'a us.
divided between about six oommu- Wben we say we'D do sometbilis
nities across Obio, Trussell said. we do it We bave a gOod reputaLast year, Pomeroy nx:eived about tion in tbe oommunity and we need
$750,000 wben counting local to keep il"
Newly-elected president Deania
malcb money.
.
Hockman
said tbis funding lall8lns
Two rounds of funding will be
held Ibis year - one in February imporlant
"The ma;or asset of Ibis town is
and one in October, TrusseD said.
About 25 ~plicants are e~~ted its downtown. l'bat's our mall,"
to vie for this funding - wbile last Hockman said;li"We're sending a
sttong message to council."
year only 14 oompeted. sbe added.
One problem that must be recti"I want to know if you want tbis
and tben I' II lake It to oouncil. I fied in Ibis application is listing
need your suppon in the lead," e.~limates for tbe worlc to be dille,
Trussell said. "We bave to mardi it Trussell added. She said abe bows
dollar for dollar. We're looking f&lt;I StXMliiC wbo will make a free estileverage money now to make us mate f&lt;I busincuea iD IDWD.
In otber IICiiolt, the 8fOUP reportmore competitive."
ed
its November fioanclal stateLast year. a boat launcb grant
was used as mak:hing funds, she ment. Tbe ending balance was
said. This year, the Iauncb will $5,605.26, up from $5,042.51 a
have 10 be spent before the period mootb earlier. F'mal bilb from tbe
when It can be used as matclliog Middlepon River Festival still
~. "
. aren't in 10 an 'lsessmeat of the
But, Trussell added sbe could event's snccesa ~n't be made,
not predict the viJiase' s chances for Dooley added. '
Tile new officcn for nezt year
funding. The Fetxuary session will
likely fail, but October oould suc- inchade Trasurer Diet Owea, Secretary Pltty ADdersoa and Preaiceed. sbe said.
.:rm beartmed by !be business- dent Dennis Hodr:man. Doolev
'
es tbat bave opened in the last rew tJiiiimt lliC pq~ for lhclr
years," Trussell said, adding that during bis ltliure as pmiden~
existing businesses and propeny last two yea.
The next meetins will be beld at
owners can make upgrades to
5:15p.m. Jan. 3.

Local News in Brief:
Youth training providers sought
Gallia-Meigs C'rmmnni!y Action Agency is seeking edooitiODal
institutioos to provide oompctency-based training for at-risk youth,
ages 16-21, in Meigs County. All participating youth must meet
Jobs Training Pannership Aa (ITPA) eligibility.
Training sbould Include pre- and post-testing measurements of
pre-employmeat oompe~encies and job specific skills related to lbe
retail sates industry.
All traioinB sbould be offered during regular scbool boon IDd
should result in tbe acquisitioo of academic mdit per youth tninee.
The training program must consist of a minimum of 60 training
contact boln per studeot.
.
Training instructm must bave a demonstnited pcqormance IDd
cettificalion, where appropriate, for serving at.fist youth. For more
information, c011tact CAA-JTPA, P.O. Box 272, Cheshire, Obio
4S620, pbone 367-7341 or 992-6629 by Dec. 9.

Youth cited in Monday accident
'

'
A Long Bottom youtb was cited for failure
to oootrol by tbe 011lia-Meigs Post of tbe State Higbway Patrol following a one-car
aasb Mooday 011 State Roote 124.
Everette L. Cline, 16, sum State Roote 248, was soutbbnmd 1n
Oliw Townsbip at 8:30 iUD. wbeo be loa! control of lbc car, slid off
tbe left side of the road, and SlruCk a mailbox IDd culvert.
Tbe car was sligbtly damaged, acxordins to tbe repon.

Continued on p~g• 3

..

.

r

�.

Commentar
ROBEKT L. WINGETI
Publisher

~Mua&amp;er

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

J.JITJ1'.11.S OF OPINION are wek:cme. 1bey lbould be laa than 300
wcnlo loa&amp;· All lea.n 11'0 subject ID editiJis IIIII 1111111 be sisDeCI with DIDIO.
....._ IIIII tel rb - ntllllber. No Wllipod lctlon will be publilbcd. lettm
sbou!d be ia pxl lalli:, lllclraainc · - · oot pnonalilicl.

Excerpts from other
Ohio newspapers

worst nishtmare in die pmoaage
of Seo. Jesse Helma, R-N.C., the
aew chairman of the SCIIate FoFeign Relatiooa Commlaa:. He haa

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein
pmnised a thorough review, along
with probable cuts, of f01eiga aid
as pan of oext year's budget Israel,
and other frieodly COIDitries in !be
Middle East, cao hardly e~pect to
be exempt from Ibis review.
All told, America's suppon of
peace ill the Middle East (oountillg
IJaq) Ia in excess of SIO bilUOD per
year. 'lb8l includes direct aid, 108111
and foreign militarY sales c;redita
along with other not-so-obvious
means of suppon - sucb u the
charitable tax dcductiooa allowed
fo~ blllloas of dollars givea by
Amcricaos each year Ill Israel
Our congreasioaal sources p1e-

By ne Allodlted rrF.diiA:Iials rl.llateWide IUid natlcJ!a! interest from Obio newspapm:
Spri•cfteldNewi.Sliii,NoY.27
.
u Republic:llls ~~e serioua about reeormm~c,.~r· sea. Jesse Helms
sbould DOt be oext cblirmiD rl. !be Semate
· Relalioos Commitllee.
Helma 11811 emblmumcDL ADCl be is a tbreat to tbe security of tbc JR'idmcy IIIII dda lllllioa.
Llll week, 1e1111011 be... meetinB in Wasbingtoo to disaJu cbanges
ill anmlaa: IIIIIK:tlile. With a mandate to Je\'11111) tbc way Cooarcu does
hgsl"'*, tbcy lbould 1111t by lbolisbing !be tnKIItioo of awll'llins lcadc:rlllip politloaa based solely Oil seoiority.
.
eat.mly, DCiooallll bave bad 11pr abale of UDSivory dlairmeo. but
Helllla' fi!Deaa Ia oon pllliallllssue ao)'lllll'e. If !be RepublicaDs put bim
ill power, be could become !be best lbing going for !be Drmoaals.
TIM Vladlclltor f6Youptowo, Nov. 29

Tbc Uolted Sr.&amp;es bad loog takco a positioo that appeasemeot of
Boaolao Sabl w11o were belli oo elQ18!1Sionism would DOt cod !be figbtiog
aod !be llllfferiii&amp;ID wbal was ooce Yugoslavia
1'1* Uolled Stall:l favored lir llrikes. The Europeaos opposed them
becauiC they felt lir strikes would eodaoger their "peace-keepjns"
JlOUDd fm:ea. The Uoited Stales ldvocaled lifting 811 ll'liiS emblqo thai
bad obvloualy wuted apiDst the Muslim 8lld Q'OIIIiao fm:ea, silll% tbe
Sabs weJe geUIDg au tbc a,nrup!!!:llj they oeeded from Sabia. The Europeaos Dilted tbat idea. too.
About the ooly tblug tbc United States Jefused to do was commit
grouod II'OOpS.
.
•
If it mates Freocb 8lld Brilisb dipiOOUIIS, com!!!Mtatonlllll meo m the
street fell beUer to blame tbc UDiiCd Slates, tbeiC'a oothiog much we cao
do about tbal. But we fiDd it IDtrmiiDg dlaiiiOOie of tbc same people wbo
complain about tbc AmericaDization of Europe, tblult that the United
States sbould baw: made a BJQ1e1 commitment to 1e101ve (yet aoodler)
war onlbcir a111tloeol.
·We ere ClOIIIilrtlble with the prqiOSitioo dial the failure to nesotlale an
boDolable peace is lllributable IDOil: to a lack of Ewopean 1e101ve than to
an abiCoce of 811 AmerlcaD pae~CDCC in Boaola-HerzesoviDa.

AllroD BIICMJ--'o Dec. 2
Jo AnD DaYidloo is 110 Newt GingridL Sbe basn't dabbled in eSOieric
ekaotnll of coilaerYIIiam or iDdulged in tate-oo-prisonen partisanship.
For 13
ba$ bcellalc\d-laded aod blrd-worldng lawmaker.
AI atillful.M sbe Ia, tbc Ill = ·to-be will need every OIIC It ber tools
to IJI8IIIIC the GOP majority dfectively. Republiclll House mrmben ere
DOt a !IIIJIIOiithk: buDciL 'lbey could easily f1od tbcmaelves baltliDg each

yean,*

otto.~r::=g~ majority f~ OD twoltey items. .
First. Republk:alll llbould improve tbc etbica1 climate of the House.
Yes, after 20 Yean under (oqtgOing Speaker Yern) Riffe' s thumb, the

ranptalion may be to strike bKt. But Slale govcrameot c:aoDOt afford a
bout of reveage. Davidson baa pledged a more qpeo aod democratic

House. Sbe aboaJd deliver.

Scco!ld. !be speaker-to-be must cootaiD !be yaboo factor in tJM: l&amp;t)'.

ApiD. tanpWioos may be stroDg. Ohloana. bowever, 11e looking for
~J=:; So far, Davidloo bas Slid die right tlllngs. Sbe bas
JOClical acticiu Oil ampeip-fioance reform, Vllllbn' oompl:ll- satklland ldlo!ll fundill&amp;.

·

inflation.
What in tnat1oo Ia wroos with

them, these people wbo doo't
worry about inflation? Have they
DO memory of the bavoc wrcaltecl
by !be double-Ggit inflallon of tbc
Jimmy Carter years? Have they
forgotten the pala of the deep
recessioo tbal followed, wbeo the
Reagan admlni•lnllion and a compliant Federal Reserve Board
wnmg the economy dry with light
credit lmd huodreds of farmers lost
tbcir land aod thousands of businesses folded and miiUOIIS of people were laid off?
They fall into 11001e predictable
Cllegories. tbcse people wbo don't
· worry about iliflalioo. There are !be
knee-jerk lefties wbo like hot
economies, berate '"Wall SIICCt,"
insliDctively dis!rUst bankers and
financiers and pine for "soft"
money and the dissolution of the
Fed, the nation's central baak,
wbicb ane.mpts to coottol inflalioo
by adjusting money supply and
credit rates. ~ explains why tbc
exceedingly liberal Natiou magazine crusades for the "demoaati-

zalion of the Fed" aod argues thai

ita governors should be elected
instead of appoloted.
That's all we Deed - Fed man-

Joseph Spear
ben who bave to campalgo like
politiciaos aad cater to special
interests to keep their jobs. That
would slabiHze'tbc"'id economy,
for certain.
Theo there are the pollticlaos,
usually liberal, wbo would love to
be able to manipulate the ecooomy
to accomplish tbclr social goals or
to funher tbcir owo polltical forIUDeS. This explains wby Sen. Paul
Sarbanes, D·Md, rarely pasaea oo
a chance to bub the Fed 8lld wby
Seo. Byron Dorgao, D-ND ., cootends, as he did in a USA Today
editaial last month, thai the Fed's
boaid members ''masquerade as a
buDcb of cbaste CCODOIDic IIIOIIb"
but ill fact wonbip Wall Slnlet aod
hike ioterest rates every time tbc
bond market "so mucb as shiv-

ers.''

Well, yes, !be an)llllles wbose
stocks are sold oo Wall Street do
employ people by the miUIODIIUid
that seems lllte 1 fairly c:riticai •

'

meat of a sound ecooomy. And
yes, the bOIId marta is regaJded as
a basic bll'ometcr of inflatioo fears.
Bonds ere Ions-term iavescmeats
and those who buy them want to
know that their returns arel oot
going to be eaiCD alive. And bonds,
after all, are the IDsttumeots thai
pay for industrial developocatlllld
blic infrastructure llld a1e IIKnjustly viewed as .the fulaum
upon which tbc ecoocmic seesaw
teeters.
1beo tbcre In tbc higbly iotelllseot ancllupi'CIIIely oonfidmt iodivlduls who just believe lbcir aystal balls a1e clesra' than !be Fed's.
They ace DO ligna of ioflatiOD and
think the central baolten erred
wbeo they boolted infcrest rates a
total of 2.S pointa over the past
year. 'lbal explailla why my wife
re'olarly jeen my conservative
attitude toward loOalioo
But dear wife, IIUJUC, tbc Fed
COIIIIIIb a myriad of indices. They
loot at tbc -ploymeat rate, fac-·
tory onlcn, order bacltloss, productivity, IXI!Imodilies prices, vendor deHveriea, stoc:t lllltkct perforIJIIII!;e IIIII bOIId llldet Oucwalioo
and 011 and oo. lt Is !be Fed's job to
detect the faiDtest wbiffs of lnOatioo and Ill)' abcad of IL We bave

f!e

• IColumbus 142" I

llllliveraa~Y.

W.VA.

-----Weather--------

Ralph L. Groves

Berry•s World

"lntMesting! Getting. ~yers back in the
sctiools isn't exactly at '• the top of my
priority list either. •

J

(.

wimlpl.

·

wn•rrorNe~r~

AuodaUon.

(For lnror-lloa oD •ow to
mm-nklk ele ttronJnUy wl6
tltil colamilllt aDd otlten, CODtact A!.r!Ca o.IIDe by callblt 1·
80N27-6364, Gt.l317.)

Fair board named in lawsuit

Deputies probe wrecks

--------.

.-

c:oyotry.

• .
•

•
:

POITMA81D• Seod- .. to
' Tbo Dolly Sntlaot, Ill tourt St.,
45W.
.

"""'""'.llblo

LARGE SELECTION

S1JIIIICIIPI101114'1U

.. - a o..-.a,c-w
.. _..........,.................................
st.60

O..Mo!d! ......;........................................$6. 9~ .
O..Y• .... ,.................. -........................ $1120

,
,,

=~=~::
r
itlypaillllieiDttlleri&amp;btiOprtva..

-Ia-best-----1

I.

IDOLPB'I

.I

,
IIINOLI COPY I'IIICI
,
Dollj&gt; ....................................................15 c..

ooly:L:wmaten

i

Slllooaibonaotdoolrl .. topoylbo- ..y i
dlroet to 'lbe o.tllp!ilto Dolly
· 1'ribue 011 a duw, 1i1 or l2 moath bllil.

cy. ltia the
may allay powiDa
fcln tbal
Big Brother lalteeping tabs oa.
them.

I
I
I

Cndlt"WWII

No ..bom&amp;&gt;lloo by moll ..,...- lo • -

-bomocont•-lo•Y!!Iloblo.

I

1.... htial ... ala I t
ror T~e Saa Dleao Ualoa-Trl- '

WA!LIIlllcaJPTIONS

l!toWoGollac-,

.'---c-11

w-... . . . . . . -.. .... . . . . . .

ISW-............................ _,_,,, .........J21.14
· 26 w-.........:....................- . ....._...J41!6
. 51
JI4.76

·:

·,

I
I

Free Cbrlstmlls
Layaway
I

. ISW-........................... .................. J2MO
26 w-..................-.........................145.50 .
5 1 -.-................ ,_,,,,,_, , , ,........SIUO
.

'

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·I

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A

I

WATCHES

. 1

Middleport Dept. Store
"On tbe 'T' In Middle

rt"

II

1.
u__
_

FOOnONG
$159
W/FIIES•••••$2.29

··-·

a.-..

Hospital news

·Senten'cing set in foot, car chase

loladooal work regia try. A
(For InronaaUoea oa •ow to ,.;
fedlnll'llllllllluloo oolmmiJI'IIloo - a • thctnahll:r wttaa
reform 11u proposed Cl'elllOII of a lilt. co..mnlat IUid otlaen, enac:ompaterlzed realalry tbal would IKt ADrlca Oalllle by ·calllna lIdentify people accor.liq to their , -.&amp;2'1-63U, at.l317,)
I
'

•

from Steven Robert PeCltltam, both
of Pomeroy, Nov. 28; Regina A.
Dillard, Chester, from Jon R. Dillard. Paneroy, Nov. 28; Sbaron M.
FreDCb from Keitb E. French, both
of Middle~; Linda L. Mitchell
from Merlin M. MitcbeU. both of
Rutland, Dec. 2.
Dissolutions BrBDted - Mark
Elwood Rbooc:mus and Tent fJiglaod Rbooemus, Nov. 21; Randall
D. Reiber and Ruby J. Reiber, Nov.
28; Susan Howell and Craig Howell, Dec. 5.
Divorces grlillted - Susan F.
nompsoo from Thomas Cbarles
Tbompsoo, Nov. 22; Michelle R.
Biggs from Richard C. Blass Jr.,
Nov. 28; Kenoetba Digangi from
Ronald Digangi. Nov. 29; Darlene
Mac Kemmer from Jobn J. Kemmer, Dec. I.

.

DAR to a.t s.tanlay
:
The Huntingtoa, W.Va., RchaReturn J....- Mrill
bllllation Hospital wiU sponsor a Dau&amp;fiterl or the AmeriCIII Rewio- :
Multiple Sclerosis support sroup tion, will meet Saturday, at 1:30 :
for those afflicted and family man- p.m. Ill the l'oolaoy Library.
ben. The meetins will be beld !be
•
aecoad Tuesday of each month. Breekhlt willl Saitta
!.
Tbc next meeliDs will be at 6:30
. Evangeline Chapter and Job' a :
p.m. Dec. 13 at the bospilll. For o:t~ters, Bethel 62. will bolt a :
more information, call 304-697- br
ast with Santa Saturday, 8 :
6603.
a.m. to noon at the Middleport •
Masonic Temple. Eggs, pancakes, :
Hlldde Baptidl..t.clledale
sausage and beverage, $3 .SO Pic- :
The HiDJide Bapcist Otun:h will tuJes to be taken.
:
present "1bc Utile Matcbgirl" at 7
p.m. Dec. 21 and 22. Also, the Live Nativity to be pr•eated
:
churcb set regular services for
A live nativity will be presenrcd :
Christmas day - 10 a.m. Sunday by Fatben House Church, Dec. 17, :
acbool, II a.m. morning worship 6 p.m. at Hartford, W. Va.
··- .. •
and 6 p.m. evening worship.
DAY and AIDillary to-t
:
MueaptliOitl Santa breaklaat
The DAV and Ladies Auxlliary :
Brciltfast with Santa will take Christmas dinner and gift :
place Saturday at the Meigs 'Muse- exchange, Mooday. at Middleport :
um. Cost is $2.SO for cbildreo American Legioo ball, 7 p.m. Gift •
under 12 and $3 for those aver 12 exchange, $5 with men to take :
and accompanying adults. There something for men, and womea to '
will be aafts for tbc cbildJCD, aod a take something for women. ·
special reading of Clemeat
Moore's classic, "The Night Befcn Eutem ~to meet
Christmas" Reservations are due by
The Eastern Local Board of
Thursday, 992-3810.
Educalioo will bold a special meeting at 6:30 p.m. Monday at the
Appndallon dlnDer plaosiCd
bigh scboolto discuss personnel.
Cbesler Ftrc Department Otristmas pany Sunday, 5 p.m. at fue Shade River Lodge
bouse. Everyooe who belped out
Shade River Lodge 453 F&amp;AM,
during year wilb barbecues, dinners Cbester, will meet in regular sesaad during fair, iovlted. Tbose sion Tbursday at 7:30 p.m. to
aueodiog to take covered dish. install officers. Refresbments will
Lcoaard Koenig, Jr., Chester Ftrc be served.
i&gt;eplnoerltiiiiiiOUIICCd.
DAR to-t Saturday
Return Jooatbao Meigs Chapter,
LoDS Bottom church ~o.u diD- Daugbters of the Americao Revoluocr
tion, will meet Saturday a1 1:30 at .
The Faith Fuil Gospel Cbmdt in the P&lt;mer0y Limry.
Long Bottom will hold a dianer
and sins Friday DigbL DiDocr will Racine man escapes
be served Ill 5:30 p.m., foUowed by
the Clark family's entertairuoent at Injury In accident
7p.m.
A Racine, Ohio man escaped
injury in a single vehicle accident at
Company Chriltmu pllluecl
the intersection of Anderson Street
The 811Dual Christmas diDoer for and U.S. 33 in Mason early :ruesday ,,.
retired and present employees of
Foote Mineral Co. and American morning, according to Sgt. Danny
of the Mason County SherAlloy will be beld Saturday at the Pearson
iff's
Department.
USWA 517l Union Hall ia HanDavid W. Deem, 20, of Racine
ford, W. Va Serving will be from
was
travelin g east on U.S. 33 when
II a.m. to 5:30 p.m. TbeJe will be.
he
apparently
feel asleep, Pearson
DO deliveries.
·
said. The vehicle Deem was driving,
a 1984 Jeep registered to Melody
Carr of Pomeroy, traveled off the
right side of the road, struck a powVETERANS MEMORIAL
er pole and crossed Anderson Street
Mooday admissioos - Angela striking road signs before coming to
Dailey, Pomeroy. .
rest.
Mooday discbarses - Norman
The vehicle was I isted as a total
Humphreys, Pomeroy.
loss followin g the 7:30a.m. wreck.
Tuesday . admissions
Deem complained of injury, but was :
Clareuce Coldwell, Pooteroy.
nol treated, Pearson said.
Tuesday discharges - Mary
McAogus, Pomeroy; Cccilia Usle,
Syracuse; Tooya Bun, Pomeroy.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Dlscbarses Dec. 5 - Karen
Units ' of the Meigs County
Crabtree, Cbristopber Molihan. Emergency Medical Service
Mrs. Greg Cunningham and daugh- recorde4,. si~ calls for assistance
ter, Gary Foster, Robert Alkire, Monday and Tuesday. Units
Aurelia Williams. Mrs. Jimmy responding included:
MIDDLEPORT
McNerlin and daugbter.
Blrtbs - Mr. and Mrs . Jobo
8:54 a.m. Monday, Oliver
Haislop, son. Oak Hill; Mr. and SIICCt, Carl Martin, Hol7.rl Medical
Ceater.
Mrs. Ricbard Hall, SOD, Oak Hill
Dlsclaarges Dec. 6 - Velma
Rurt.AND
Rbodes, Amanda Peters, Dian
5:06 a.m. Monday, Rose Hill
Brown.
Road, Fraoltlio Dickens, Pleasaot
Birth - Mr. and Mrs. Mart • VaUey Hospital.
Hurlow. daughter, Point Pleasant,
POMEROY
W.Va.
7:50 p.m. Tuesday, State Route
143, Herman Redman, PVH.
TUPPERS PLAINS
.......
12:23 a.m. Monday, State Route
681 West, Jean Hank, PYH;
10:09 a.m.
Route
Am Ele Power ..............................33
681, Vera Kremer,
den..CI&amp;rk
Akzo ............ - .......... - ........... 55 Ill
Memorial Hospital;
Aablud OU ........................... .33 1/4
7:55 p.m. Tuesday. Sumner •
AT&amp;T.................. _ ......................AII
Road,
~g Carpenter, YMH.
lleDk 0De ................................l6 Ill

Units log 6 calls

---- Local briefs... - - - r."""(Pu"""blislled~wl"""tla"""5!iper!='mlulo"""""""n&gt;
Stocks

....:

'

&amp;

littez said

Marc Noble

I worry about them.
.
JOHp Spear Ia a ay'Dcllcated

l!aDe.

The request followed !be recovery of a torpedo in Pearl Harbor in
1991 and the discovery about a
year ago of U.S. ~Air Cor!ll
aerial pbotos of the
ta1teu to
days before the attack, Martinez
said.
The analysis indicates tbal the
Japanese photos were taken 6 to 8
minutes after the attack started at
7:S5 a.m., said Autometric team
leader Jolm Rodgaard. "Our analysis c:oofirms the )Rseoc:e of a submarine,'. Rodgaard said.
The analysis, wbicb included a
close look at shock waves and coovergence tracts, also sbows that the
Japanese sub probably fired its two
torpedoes, one at the USS Oklahoma and the other at the USS
West Virginia, Rodgaard said
Four of the five subs believed
used Ill tbc aaact were previously
accouoted for, including two that
- suot after peoellatlog the harbor, but one is still missing, Mar-

Pneumonia vaccine will be given will protect against 23 types
administered at the Meigs County of pneumonoccal bacteria that
Health Departmeat, Mulberry cause 88 perceot of the worse
· Kalhleeo Vir~er, 76, of Ravenswood, W.Va., died Monday, Heights, Pomeroy, Saturday from pneumonias. It is ltilled, or iliacDec. S, 1994, at
-Clark Memorial Hospital in Partenburl!. ·
10 a.m. to 2 p.m. by Norma Tmes, live, vaa:loe, and moat people wbo
Bom Nov. 17, 1918, in Raveaswood, the daughter of the late P.mltt and nursio' director, and nurses who receive It will develop protection
Mary Baker Patterson, abc was a llomcmatcr. Slle was a member of tbe are w1th "Guard Care" of the against most or all of tbc 23 types
Wildiog Methodist Omrch and the Senior Otizens.
of bacteria within two or three
Natioual Guard.
Sbe is survived by ber 1001, Wilford Hafer, Virgil Hafer, both.of
The immuoizatioo program is a weeks after they BIC vacdoated, the
· Ravenswood, and Carol Frances Hafer of Falrbom; daugbters, JIDice .cooperative ooe between tbc Ohio health nurse said.
Salser and Barbara Jean Dunbar, both of Fairbonl; sisten, Beulah Adams Department to Health, Meigs
· Some high-risk people may lose
and Betty WilkiDsoo of RaveoswQOd; brother, Warreu Patterson of County Health Department and tbc protection abou~, six years after
Ravenswood; aod several nieces and nephews.
vaccination and requiJC revaccinaNational Guard.
She was preceded ill death by her husband.
.
tion.
Tbe National Guard will be
Funeral services will be ~at 2 p.m. Thursday at the Sttaiglit-"l'llcbr- bringing approximately 500 vac'
Those wbo suffer from fJequent
Rousb Funeral H&lt;me in Raveaswood. with tbc Rev. Betty Shields offici- cille doses to be givea that day only colds, sinus infections or allergies.
until 2 p.m. or tbe supply is and women who are pregnant
atin~WiaJ will follow in tbe Wil~g Cemetery.
exhausted. The cost for ailmioister- sbould DOt get the vaccine.
Frieods may call between 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. Wednesday at the funeral ing the vaccine Is $2 a sbot
For those who bave still not gotbome.
ten
their fiu vaccine, some doses
Adults age 65 years or older and
BJe
still
available. The fiu vaccine
individuals with repressed immune
will
cost
$1 for those wbo a1e SS
systems are encouraged to take
years of age or older, and $2 for
advantage of the vaccine.
. The pneumonia vaccine to be those UDder 5S years of age.
Marc Noble, 47, of HaliOOI City, Texas, died Tuesday, Dec. 6, 1994, at
a Fort Worth bospital.
The SOD of Betty Noble of Charleston,, W.Va., he was a police officer
with the Haltom City department. He was a U.S. Anuy veteran and a
member of !be Haltom Road Baptist Church.
Continued from paga 1
He is survived by his wife. Sllerri Noble of Haltom City; lOllS. Chris
Noble of Gulfport, Miss., llld Matthew Noble of Midland, Texas; stepson, Ste11011 Smith of Fort Worth; step-daugbters, Stephanie and Seleste
Smith, both of Fort Worth; brother, Jack Noble of South Charleston,
A Loog Bottom mao faces sentencing Jan. 16 after pleading
W.Va.; mother, Betty Noble; and grandmother, Neva Rimes of South
guilty
to a felony charge of failure to comply witb tbe order or sigCharleston.
nal of a pollee officer.
Funeral services will be 8l I p.m. Thursday ill the Haltom Road Baptist
J. Craig Bolin, 29, Long Bottan, was acculed of tleeing Meigs
Chun:h. Burial will follow " - in the Gravel Hill Ceuletery Ill Cheshire.
County
Sberiff James M. Soulsby on Nov. 7 ftrst with a car, aod
Fricods may call betweeD 7 aod 9 p.m. Wednesday at tbc Mount Olivet
then on foot. The cbase followed the theft of beer from a delivery
Funeral Home in Fort Worth.
truck in Chesbire.
Bolin pleaded guilty oo Nov. 30. UDder the proposed plea agreement, Bolin may be SCDteoced to 12 months io a penal institulioo
(Editor'• note: A laW..lt out- of Athens
with the state Jeeommeodiog shock pubalioo after 30 days 10 the
1IDes the pieviiiJilel o1 oae party
Actio~ Sports Promotions Inc.
Soutbeastem Probation Treatment Alternatives Center in Nelagalnat anot~er, It does not alleges the fair board violated a -1--son
......;vill~,c
' ae~n.Jim
..
eStatillll pUt or iDDoceDCe.);...=:.-.__C;;.O;;.:DUllCH IJtmiJliD~I l;-1 992 .
. 8 to a court entry, ICDiellcioB WI&amp; delayed pendins liU.,.
The Meigs County Fair Board Under the contract, the company
missioo of a victim Impact statemeat
·
was named Ill a suit flied Nov. 28 was to JXOIII(}(C, organize and conby Action SP\)rts Promotions Inc. duct a motocross race at the 1992
Meigs County Fair aod would further bave the rigbt for tlnt refusal
No injuries were reported following two deer/car accidents
'The Daily Sentinel ~ to organize the 1993 Meiss County
reported by deputies of the Meigs Couoty Sberiff s Departmeut
Fair motocrosS race at DOt less than
Tuesday nigbt
.
(USPS 11J.Kf)
$5,000.
Donna A. Sayr11, Racine, was southbound on state Route 7
The complaint states the fair
around 6:20 p.m. and Slruck and tilled a deer that ran into the path
board contracted with another indiof bet 1989 Ford van. Damage to the Croat of ber vebicle was listed
vidual to conduct the 1993
. aSheavy.
.
motocross event
Roger L. Mof..ery, Pomeroy, was oortbbound on state Roule 7
Action Sports Promolious Inc.
around 8: IS p.m. aod struck IIIII tilled a deer thai ran into the road.......... Tbe .Wodt'ed Pre., u4 tbe QUo
seeb
a total of $15.000 in damages
Ne•441r Allodalioa.
way. Damage to his 1988 Chevrolet truck was listed as heavy.
plus interest aod court oosts.

,dreams.
But these aJe people wbo dOII't
worry about inflatiOD.

Wltb 10 muell petiOIIIIIDformalion tied to the Social Security
alll!lber, It acema Ol)ly a IDIUer of
time befcn !be Jovemmeol begins
to compile detailed electtoalc
doeliaa 011 eacb llldew:ry cl(bm
If we were ctra'IDP. with laolaled
cases, we woaldat oeecl' to be
alllllled by revelation• or IRS
IIIIJ!Ij•111, aaliOII 1'1811 DNA datat.lt, pMU&amp;e of oew wiretap Jaw
and the proposed creatiOD of a
n•liooal work resiatry. But lbeiC
sova-t aJntMkl'l of priVIC)'
rlibU ire J*l of. diatl8bm&amp; llald.

bigb-tccb photo lmqery.

Pneumonia vaccine clinic
scheduled for Saturday

Kathleen V. Hafer

to lnlll them.
Tbco tbcre R the young folb,
Generation Xeis or dose to It, wbo
simply have DO vivid memory of.
!be hell that iDflalion cnates. This
explaiDs why my nephew, sitliDg
arouod my slater's Tbaoltsglvios
table as we disaJsled wodd history, foreign 'affairs aDd advanced
ecooomic .theory. auddcaly
· exclaimed· "I'm JeadY, for a Uale
inflatioot'•
Ob bow I want to lbalte these
well-meaoing but uabruised
slriplinss and tell them thai in an
inflaliooary economy, oothios is
certain aod everytblog is crazy llld
the world itself seems out of
wbact. IDflatioo Is wbat cnated the
S&amp;L aisis. iDOatloo fuels the federal deficit lof1atioo decimates JKI·
vate pensioas. Infiatioa destroys

Social Security ooiober. Ostensibly, it would be uaed by ~yera
to detenniDe tbal a job epplnnt Is
either 1 U.S. c:llizea or an lmmi·
arant authorized to wort lo thli

Support pap to -.t

Divorces and dissolutions

--Area deaths------

.

ioaeasinsiy, bumao DNA Ia being
saved by reaearcb laboratories,
bioledmolosY compmies. fertiiUa.
tloa cllolca and certain health
illlunllce ...,,wdeo.
- Wiretap acceaa. Coogresa
ippUved Jegia!atioo tba1 will make .
It easier for police to mooilrf' private ldepbooo calla witbout court
permluiOII.
The Orwellian---a "Digital
Telephone aod Privacy lmproveDient Act" mandatea that the
Dllioll'a tole *"mllljctdcw, anpaoies enaure withiD four )Wfllhat
tbclr oew telephooe oetworb IIIII
aervtcea can be wilellfiied. While
wlretappiDg Ia a oftell lieCasaty
crtme-fighliD&amp; tool, the oew law ·
opeas ~ the potential for llbuae. ·
That a because the tclophoae
compaolea are beiDg required to
iDIIIli COI'Ip'W dllpa Ill~
equlpmeatthat provide remoteKlivated urvdllancc ud eaves· droppins etpallillty 10 ~. ADCl
becauee thele dlipl will be apecillly "Ci!IUYpkAI," telefho'IC alllplalca will DOt blow wbc11 !bey a1e
belli&amp; acdVIIOd. nil will permit
tNa ...,. pollee of8cen to IXIIIdact aaaathorized, aadetectable

Hillllrilm bave lalowo for IIOOIC
lime thai the Japanese Navy used
five midget submarines Ia the
attack. But until oow, It was
belleved dial oooe of !be five succeeded in anadcing aoy U.S. lhips.
Maninez said.
Photos ta1ten by the crew of a
Japanese torpedo bomber durlog
the auaclt Dec. 7. 1941, analyzed at Martinez's request by
Automelric Inc., an Ale~andria,
Va.. company that specializes ia

snow north and rain elsewbere. 1
Lows from the upper 20s DOtlb to
the middle 30s south. Highs 3S to
The following acliooa to eod
40.
Saturday llld suoday ...A cbaoce marriage weJe filed ra:mtly in the
of snow showers northeast. Dry office of Meigs Couoty Clerk of
elsewhere. Lows io the 20s and Cowts Larry Spc:ocer.
Dissolutions asked - R. Vic
highs io the 30s.
Laughery, Reedsville, and Denise
A. LauBbery, Coolville, Nov. 18;
Wesley M. Smith, Pomeroy, and
Droeea R. Smith, Nortb
Charleston, S.C., Nov. 21; Ricbard
Douglas Darst Jr. and Dorothy
Alma Dant, both of Cheshire, Nov.
21
; Brenda Aaoeue Harper,
Ralph Leo Groves, 60, Rt. I, Raveaswood, W.Va., died Mooday, Dec.
Racine,
and Lewis Wesley Harper
5, 1994 in JacbOII Geueta1 Hot~pllal, Ripley, W.Va.
Jr.,
Pomeroy,
Nov. 23; Ralpb B.
Born May 4, 1934 in SIJIIIIJierlvllle, W.Va., SOD of tbc late Sbermao
Koffel
and
Rcgeoa
K. Koffel, both
and Mary Vqinia McCue Groves, he was a fumace tedmlrao for Kaiser
Alumloum Corp., and was a member of the ceca Run Uolted Methodist of Reedsville.
Divorces asked - Amy L.
Chun:h, Flatwoods, W.Va.
Scbartiger,
Long Bollom, from
Surviviag ere his wife, Dorothy M. Groves; a daugbter, Darleoe WhitDonald
L.
Schartiger,
Cheshire,
ley of Wheelenbur(l; a 1011, Ralph Leo Groves n of Grottoes. Va; four
Nov.
28;
Deborab
Kay
Pecltltam
graodcbilckell; a brother, David Groves of Raveoawood; aod two sisltlS.
Louiae Groves of Arlington, Va., and Helen Bartley of Prattville, Ala.
Services are II a.m. Thursday ill the Strai~Tuclter .t Rouah Funeral .
Home, Raveaswond, with the Rev. Verlio
p officiating. Burial will
be ill the Mount Vernon Cemetery, Summersville. FricDds may call at the
limeral bome today from 2-4 aod 6-9 p.m.

Soutii-Cenlral Oblo
Toaight... Decreasiog clouds.
Low 30 to 35. Northwest winds 5
to IOmpb.
Thursday ... Variably cloudy.
High in the mid 40s.
Exteacled roncut
Friday ... A chaoce of raio or

Technology__endang~rs ~rivacy
rights
..
Not liDce 1971, wben 18-year- the Fouodc:n aever dreamed, the
olds were glveo tbc rigbt to vote, Fourth Amenclmeat has proveo
· has a constitutional amendment inadequate io llfesudioa !be pubbeen approved by Coog~ess aDd
lie's privacy rl&amp;bts.
ratified by !be llaiCS.
This very well may cbaoge next
h n ,/
year, whea the new Republican
0S8p · r8fll1 nS
majority Ill Coopess considers as
many u four aew amendments,
Cooaider tbeae ra:mt aflioots to
covering a b!l~ budget, scbool privacy:
prayer, term limits and unfaoded · - rits IIIIOOpias. Io a hearing
mandates. As loog as the Republi- before the Seaate Goven1111ental
CIDI are of a mind to amend the:
Affaln Commluee, Intenlll Rev·
Coostitution, there Is aoother mea- enue Service officials cooflnned
sure they ought to cooaider - an that 1,300 or tile I&amp;CDCY'I aoploy!lll1!lftllrncn that proiCcls the priva- ees have beeiD IDV'CiliP"''' ovir die
cy rights of the citizenry.
past five,_.. O!l•...iclotl ofiUIIl·
Iodeed, unlike the rights to maglbJ lhrouah Jirivatc taxpayer
peaceably uaemble, to keep and files for 110 oCfii:ill JIUIPliC.
Ia' IIIIlS or to speedy and publ,ic
mmoat c:aaes, !be ·IRS worters
trial by an implrlial jory, !be ri&amp;llt peebd lllbe RCu1:DJ of frleada. tel·
to priVIC)' Ia DOt explicMly ICl forth atives, oelpbon and co-worken.
in theCoolliluliOD.
But some of the inoopers, were
Rather, it Is implied by the curioua about !be penooa1 ftll""'tt
Fourth Ameodme!ll, which atatea of promlileat tupayen, such u
tbal the ''right of the people to be sports fiprea. polldciaoa, enter·
secure Ill tbclr pcrsooa, houes llld laiDen 8lld hub 11 cxealllves.
effecta, agalaat uoreuoaable
- DNA databank. Uobe·
aean:bes llld sdzurea. sba11 DOt. be kaowoat ·to moat Anierlcaaa, a
vlollled."
.llllioowldo DNA ...,....Ia bela&amp;
Thia amendmeat, bowever built U. con«•lnt blood umplel
vque, provided citl7t:DS adequate from mlll"" or ddleDJ, wlledler
psotectioll oflbelr privacy darlag or DOt they mr bave boea IDvolved
the early dlxa of !be Jcplblic. Bat · 111 1 ablle.
1
in our IIIOdcrll limea, whea ledlnolAt Jlle moaent, aaaplea are
OBY eolb~ both ao•a-.... llld beiDa pdllnd Jllllllllly rnm three
DODgovCi1IIIIC!It endtlca to illaude · · IOift.el:' IIO'Wbcirll btlbfea, military
upon the lives of cilirms Ill ways reallila 1114 ccln\llded llklDa. Bat,

HONOLULU (AP) - A aew
analysis of pictures talteo dwinl
!be llll8ct 011 Pearl Harbor j!ldlcaiCS
a Japanese submarine may bavc
slipped into the barbor and fired at
u.s~ battJet1:· a bistoriao said.
In fact:~· sub may still be
there, c:ovmid with lllt Oil !be har·
bor floor.
"nil informatiou could alter
blstory and cbange our illteqntallon of the attack," National Part
Service blstorian Daniel Martioez
said oo the eve of !be llllact'a S3rd

IND.

Don't bring back the bad old '70s ·
If anything worries me more
than the specter of inflatioo, it's tbc
people who doa't woay about

Meigs announcements
.

Old photographs show
Japanese sub may still be
on bottom of Pearl Harbor

MICH.

diet that Helms' lint IIIJel will be beyoodEBYJll.
Israel' I pariDCn ill peace - DOl . The deal tbal the ClloblldmlnIsrael itself. Slooe Pleaident Jimmy lilllatkJI belped alrilte bctweeD JorCarter signed the Camp David dan 8lld lsraellbe week befcn !be
peace aa:mls, it's beane aa:ept- November elcakm cost Amerlcao
ed wisdom among Middle East tupayers about $1 blllloo. As
leaders that making peace with incentive for Jordaa to algo the
lsrae1111C811S an illflux of AmaicaD aa:mls, !be Uolted Swes ll8fCCd to
forslve $900 mlllloo In Jordaolan
dollln.
debt.
Aoocber $37S mUlloa was put
The first beDef1ciary was Egypt.
together
in 1 fund to auppon forSeveral years after Egypt kicked
.
!be Sovieta out, it was perbaiJIDat- eign lovestmeat in Jordan.
The aewly created Palestinian
ural dial Anwar Sadat Would 18JeC
to Carter's peace initlalive. By risk- territory In Oaza and Jericho will
ing the etulomic Wllllh of ita Arab also be looltillg to the UDited States
neighbors, Egypt lias beeo JCWBnl- with outstretched hands. So far, .
ed with rouBbly $2 billioo in 811Du- America has pledged ~ly SSOO :
al aid from the Uoited States, while million owr five years to belp lbcm .
Israel receives about $3 billion per rebuild their war-tom, poverty· :
year. Tosetbcr, lbcse two countries stricken land. Tbe money is far ·
from adequate, Palestinians :
1e1p about 40 paceot of !be eatire
believe. By any JCCitonins, It will ·
foreign aid budget.
SOllie ailia view Ibis as bribinR take c. more thaD bas alJeady been
made avallable to create a Pales·
people to do wbat Is lo tbclr IDlertlnian
economy thai cao stand on
Cat fn !be first pl.:e - mate pi*C.
Yet receat ~ ia !be Middle itsOWD.
Fioally, pro area&amp; on a peace
Eaat peace proceu lugeat that !be
ectmioill•adoo Ia ilmlt oo broaden- accord between Syria and Israel
IDS Its dollln-for-peiee illllialives meaoa Syria might 1000 joill the •
list of nations at the Amerlcaa
trough. Hafez al·AIBad - the IJru.
tal diCtator wbo baa munlered lbouaaods of his own people and sup- ·
ported terrorists wbo have mur- ·
dered huodreda of Americans expects direct American aid and
trade cooaideralioos If be signa a
peace treaty with Israel.
Our IOirCCI predict thia Ia wbtft
Helms will draw the IIDe: No aid ·
beyon4 a paltry tokeo amount as ·
incentive (or Assad to make peace.
After all, Assad is almost uaured
or geUIDg at least J*l - If 1101 au
- of the Golan Heights back.
Helma illiltely to argue thal Assad
siiOu1d take biJ land llld be happy,
ralber lban expecting further sweetener from the United State1.
It is men than a litde ironic tbal
Republicans, who are ready to
· speod us into masaive deficits to
fmance IIIIOther defeose balldup,
may prove lbemsel~ unwillins to
pay fur peace rather th8ll preparing
for w.r.-Any vol!mtecr flrallaD can
tell you it costs leu to preveot a
fire lban to put ooe out -llld pay
for tile repain aftawlrd.
·
Jack Aadenoa aad Mtc•••l

The Dtllly Sentinel Pege 3

53rd anniversary o(p~mbing

Tbunday, Dec. 8

Alldea.a _.. wrlten for United
F•tare Sflldlcate, IDe.

K~~~~t-. .Yam~~aecont.couter, Dec. 5
.
Acquired Jmmune deficieDc:y s)'llllrOiiiC bas bee•""' the Black Plague
of !be 20th a:otary, ltilliDs and affccdos mllliooa. And. uDfor1UIIalely,
despite ra:mtlllides Ill poiODBing imrnioeol death, there seems to be 110
eod to !be brulal dl - e.
.
.
World AIDS Day, wbic;ll took place Thursday wu a day set aside for
ew:ryODC ill the wuld to wake q1 aod reaJile the effect tills borJendous
disease baa oo everyooe. Some, bowever, still feel thai AIDS will never
ilfQ:t them. Tbey couldn' t be~ wrmg.
·
H )'Oil ere lilOIIOgiiDODS IUid don't UIC drugs, you may,thlnlt you won't
be affected by AIDS. But tblult spin. Aside from those wbo put themselves ll risk penooally to AIDS, there ~ those wbo are affected ~ .
SCJINi!"e they 1mow bas tbc diselle. It 11 perbaps dda CODDCCtloo wtth
AIDS thai Ia most sad, becaoiC the friends aod families of people with
AIDS ere fm:cd 10 Wlldllbcm suffer.

P.omeroy-Middleport, Ohio

OHIO Weather

Helms' new course in · foreig~ aid ··

WASHINGTON - The oew
Republiclll aden Oil Capitol Hill
promise to chl!lse tbc way bull·
oess is dooe Ill Wublogtoo. They
also may redefiae the fiaaocial
relatioaship betweeo the UDited
States govemmeat aod governIJICIIts in the Middle East.
While ckml'ilil;. re!Oims will be
at the top of the Republlcao ageada, GOP leaden a~e· also liltely to
sbiDe a spotlight on a queslioo dial
basa't been asked mucb ill JCCCDt
yean: Can America afford Jli*C Ill
the Middle East?
Ooe of the prime targets for
GOP budget cutters this January
will be the $12.3 billioo foreign aid
budget, a pemDDial target since it
lacks 811Y clear political cooalitueDcy. The lone exceplioo to Ibis rule
- Israel - may also feel the
pincb, as its SIJilPOl'ICI'S bave given
disproportionately to Democrats
over the years.
Supporters of foreign assistaooc
- wbicb makes up less than onebait of I peroeot of the federal budget - a1e about to confront their .

I l l C01Irt &amp;beet
I'OIIleroy, OIIJo

. *1181day, December 7,1994

~

file Dilly Slntlnll
· Pomeroy Mlcldllpon, Ohio
Wldn11d1y, December 7, 1114

Plgl

. Accu-W~

Jes~e

The Daily Sentinel

C11A1U.ENE ROFfl.ICB

.'

I
1
I
I

Tuesda6;!tate

Boll Enu .............................. .lO 314
Chempl011 lad .......................,2.4 314
Cbii'IIIID&amp; Sbop ....... - ............. .6 1/4

City HoldJD&amp; ............... - ...............32
Federel MOEUI----- - ....--.19 314

Goodyear TI:R .................. - .333/1
K-mu1 .........................., .........13 711
Leads Ead ..............................14 Ill
Umlted lac. ............................19 1/4
Multtmedle lac:. ·-.................27 711
Point BeDcorp ···- .. - ............. - ..19
Relle11&lt;0 Electric _ .......................31
Bobbin~ &amp;. MJnL ~·, ....... l 6 lfZ

Roy.J Dutdi---.................. 105 511
lac. ........... - ............131/l
Star Beu .............................. .35 Ill
Weedylat'L ........................... 14 1/4
WortbJac1oe lad ....................lf 1/4
Stook npor1a ue t.be 10:30 LID.
quotu proYided by AdYeot ol
Sbo~~ey's

GaWpolil.

Thomas P. price, M.D. DABOG,
FACOG, FACS announces the relocation
of his office from the Holzer Clinic to
the Medical Plaza, 936 State Rt. i 60,
Gallipolis, Ohio after January 1, 199-5.
He will be associated there with Drs.
Abels, Subbiah and Vallee. He will
continue his hospital practice at the
Holzer Hospital. Medical Plaza offers
laboratory, X-ray, and A.C.R.
accredited and FDA approved
mammography. Appointments can·' be
made by calling (614) 446-9620.
• I

�..

Sports
River Valley
reserves top
Meigs 47-46
AD unheeded time-out in
the final minute of Tuesday
night's reserve basketball
game spelled disaster for
Rick Edwards' Meigs crew,
wblcb fell 47-46 to River
Valley in tbe Marauders'
seasoo coounenc:ement
Tbe Maraudcls led by four
at the end of the first quarter,
but Cbris Elkessor' s Raiders
(2-0) outscored them 17-7 in
the second frame to lead by
six at balftime. Tbe seesaw
game continued into the third
quarter, a period tbat saw ·
Meigs scare 17 points to the
Ralden' 10 to take a 34-33 .
lead into prime time.
Tbe final minute saw the
Marauders' 46'43 lead,
created by Chris Roush's two
free throws (:33), saw tbat
lead melt when Aaron
Adams' layup cut the guests'
lead to 46-45 witb 24
seconds left. Eight seconds
later, Meigs frontman
Nakuma Tyree, tryiDs to Bet
Into position alons tbe
baseline to take a shot, was
&lt;:ailed for travelina before be
could aboUt. Tbal gave River
Valley tbe ball, and tbe
Ralden got It to sopbomore
Ricbard Stepbens, wbo drove .
to the hoop for tbe pivotal
layup that, with nine IICCoods
left. created the final scare.
But Meigs wasn't done.
With five seconds left,
sophomore guard Jeremy
Pierce was · called for a
cbarge, which put the baD in
River Valley's banda. Tben
Pierce called time out, but
the cfficials didn't respond to
bls signal, and time ran out
Stephens' 14 points !led
blm with PieJte for scoring
honors. Adams chipped in
with nine points, wbile Josb
Witherell got 11 f&lt;l' Meigs.

l)sery says
baseball
owners
should scrap
salary cap
By BEN WALKER
ATLANTA (AP)- Baseball
owners sbould not impose a salary
cap and sbould allow bargaining ~
continue, mediator W.J. Usery wd
today after meeting wilb more than
80 striking players.
"From my process, Implementation would be very, very unfortunate," Usery said. "I've told owners !bat and everyone concerned.
Certainly, tbat' s not in tbe best
interests of collective bargaining,
the best interests of my trying to
mediate."
Usery persuaded owners last
week to postpOne a meeting Dec. 5
at which tbey were expected to
Implement tbeir own system, which
also would elimina!i: salary arbitration. Owners now plan to meet
Dec. 15 in ~blc:ago and say they
; will Impose tbe system if lbere is
: no settlement by tben. General
' manasers bave been called to that
, meeting, likely to be briefed on lbe
&lt; new way of doing business.
;
Usery was invited by players to
: speak during tbe middle day of
! their three-day session. Playen are ·
• boplng tu come up with a counterproposal to tbe owners' tax plan
: presented Nov. 17. Owners and
~
players are sclleduled to resume
~
bargaining Friday in Rye Brook,
1 N.Y.
•
Kirby Puckett, Paul Molitor and
~ Fred McGriff were among tbe 16
t
11ew players who arrived at tbe
~ JOCelin&amp; today. Tbered were 78b playb~ era present Moo ay, a1t oug
! union officials would not say
~
wbelber any bad left
1
U8ery met witb players for
J aboUt 90 minutes. He spoke rtrst,
j tben listened to tbe playcn' coo-

l

QCtDS,

"That's bis only job, to make
sure we're tryiDII to do sometbing " flee BJieDI Teny Pendleton
iatd.' "We understand be can't
!J18ke us do anytbing."

.J
~

'

-

The Daily Sentillel.

By beating River Valley 74-71,
By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
OVP Staff Writer
Senior guard Benny Ewing's
last-minute three-pointer aacted a
71-71 tie and gave tbe Meigs
Marauders a 74-71 win over the
bost River Valley Raiders Tuesday
night.
·
Jeff Skinner's Marauden, wbo
opened their season, extinguished a
22-game losing streak that swatlowed the 1993-94 seuon and a
61-58 loss to Gallia Academy in
the Divi$ion II Rio Grande sectionat upper-bracket title game oo Feb.
27, 1993. Tbeir last victor}' was a
63-60 decision over Vinton County
in the Division n sectiooal toumamenton Feb. 24, 1993. Their last
regular-season victory wu a 84-57
win over Federal Hocking on Feb.
5, 1993.
"We knew they're basically a
zone team, and we prepared f&lt;l' lbe
zone," Skinner said. "'We exploited

Chang.
Cblllll beat Alberto' Beraaatep

J

:{ o1 SpaiD 6-1, 7-5.1D tbe otber fint' ~ round matebea, Boris Becker of
~
Germany defclled WayutJ Fmcira
. ~ ot South Mrlca S-7, ,6-4, ~3 and
Gorlll Ivllliaevlc: of Croatia beat
J!Jau Bjlltanan of Sweden 64. 62.
f.·.

'

..'

point run feinured baskets from
junior Jamie Graltam and senlon
Doug Lloyd and Jason Stout
(Stout's layup at tbe 4:58 mart
gave lbe Ralden an 8-7 lead, their
last of the night), Cleland's layup
and bonus flee th."''w -junior f&lt;l'ward Greg James' second foul
made the latter neceswy - gave
Meigs a 10-11 lead, wbicb was the
last lead excbanse of tbe night
Tbe nine-point lead the Marauders took Into tbe second quarter
was as mucb a product of tbe
Raiders' 6-foc-17 field-goal shooting in the frame u it was a result of
their 9-for-18 field-goal shootins in
the period,
9oth teams sbot less than SO%
in tbe second quarter (5-14 for
Meigs &amp; 6-15 for River Valley),
but what was crucial to the
Marauders' expanding their lead to
11 by halftime was their 9-for-12
sbowin¥ at tbe foul line in act two.
Abbott s S-for-6 effort made bim
their main charity stripe shooter in
tbe frame. 1be Raiders, whose
most productive foul shooter
(James) was on tbe bench witb
tbree foull wben tbe frame began,
made only·five out of nine.

theNBA~

In

CLEVELAND (AP) - One
tbing the aeveland Cavallen bave
goina for tbenl tonight 1bc Orlando Maalc shouldn't be quite so
mad.
Tbe Magic arrived at Gund
Arena in an cnery mood Tuelday
night and disposed of the Cavaliers
· . qukldy, scoring a team-record 42
flnt-quaner points on the way to a
114-97 victory.
They'll meet again tonigbtln
Orlando.
"Tbey are lbe·best team that we
· bave played BJialnst," Cleveland
· coach Mike Fratcllo said. "1bey
are a. very deep team, and tbeir
· starting five presents a lot of problems. We just bave to play better
· tban we did toolgbt."
Tbe MaBie came to Cleveland a
bit upset over losing a two-point
. g11111e at Atlanta on Salurdar night,
a loss tbat ended Orlando s franchise-best winning streak at nine

.

it until the fourth qu.ter, wbeu we
got tenative."
"We gave up tbe baselines,"
said Raider mentor Mike Jenkins,
whose charges absorbed their flnt
loss of tbe year. "Meigs came to
play, and we weren't quite aurcssive_____
in tbe
rust balC u we were in
.. balf."
the """"""'
Meigs wu behind only twice.
Tbe ftnt time came wben Raider
postman Bruce Ward scored tbe
game's .ftnt roints on an iu-~e­
lane jumper 7 seconds after Upoff. Then Meigs got seven unanswered points -junior forward
Cass Cleland bad tbe Marauders'
rust four, all on drives that used tbe
open baselines the Raiden' 1-3-1
and 2-3 zone defenses gave up · before junior center Travis
AbboU's tbrce-point shot from tbe
left comer at the 5:56 mart gave
the Marauden a 7-21ead.
Then after River Valley's six-

•

Magic beat Cavs 114-97; Pacers win

Meigs ends 22-game losing streak in opener
However, tbe Raiders bad made necessary by James
already laid tbe fomdation for their Cochrane's tbird foul slipping
comeback. Two-tbirds of tbeir away.
Tbe minute tbat followed saw
flrst-balf poiDII and all but twO of
Ia~
by James and Ward cut that
tbeir 12 t1nt-balf field goals came
lead
to
a two-point margin. The
in the paint, and a similar percentage of field goals wu true in tbe Marauden bad a 71-69 lead that
second balf.
.
their fans expected to grow when
Ward, wbo finished witb 17 junior gnard Paul Pul1lnl atepped to
points RaiDed mostly on 7-for-14 tbe line for tbe one-and-one
field-goal sbooting, be~ cblpplng because of Ward's tblrd foul with
away at the Marauden lead with a 1: II left. Pullins milled the sbot,
pair of buckets In tbe third quar- and Ward came down wltb the
ter's first minute. Outscoring tbe rebound.
After several short-lived possesMarauders 21-11 in the quarter's
first 6:15, tbe Raiders cut tbe .sions in tbe next 38 seconds, juni&lt;l'
guests' lead to a one-point margin guani GMy Stanley's fifth foul sent
before the Malauders settled for a James to the line for the one-andthree-point lead at tbe period's end. one. JIIDCs made botb shots, and
Tbat the Raldm were able to do the gliDe was tied at71.
A mid-court scramble for tbe
this oo 9-for-lS field-goal sbootiDg
wbile allowillg Melp to bit seven loose baD on tbe Mmudera' downof 10 from tbe f1o&lt;J' is a testament court lrip and the following lockup
to tbeir refusal to throw in tbe resulted in Meigs setlina the postowel. Tbe Marauders, wbo led by session . .Then Ewina 1101 .tbe
seven in the flnt two minutes of inbounds pass and, balf a step
prime time despite Cleland's and bebind tbe 111: on the right wing, be
liwing's livin&amp; in tbe shadows of buried the trey witb nine seconds
their four-foul penliCIIIIIellts, found left to create what Jwame the final
tbe six-point lead tbey created · scare.
when Cleland's layup (2:13) wu
With lbrce seconds left, James'
followed b)' a bonus free tbrow
(See MARAUDERS OD . . . . 5)

gam~.

Cleveland pollee made matcen
worse by stopping tbe Magic's
team bus a couple of blocka from
tbe areua because traffic was
jammed up before tbe game. 1bc
two-block walk on a cold, drizzly
evening did oothiDg to Improve the
MAolc's deme&amp;D&lt;l'.
-·-r.I was mad," O'Neal said.
"We almost got arrested, and we
bad to get off tbe bus. Tbanb for
making us walk in tbe oold rain."
Tbey took out their fiustrations
on the Cavalien, whose frontcourt
wu weakened by the absence of
power f&lt;l'Ward Tyrone HID, side•
lined by tbe flu. Center Jobn
Williams played despite a sore
bamstmg thai bad kept ~ out of

the~vloua game.
'I don't tblnlt tbey bave anybody wbo can contain Sbaq IIi the
middle,•• said Nick Andenon. wbo
shared the team scoring lead witb
O'Neal at 26 points each. "Tbey
tried to contain blm by double
teaming him. and it's tben tbal you
just bave to make awe you make
lbe pusea to get into position f&lt;l'
the sbot.''
Orlando ran off t.lje ftrst cfgbt
points of tbe game on fut-break
dunks by Anfcmee Hardaway and
Donald Royal and a pair 11 baskets
by Horace Grant
Tbe Mask exreoded tbe lead to
double diBits for sood on O'Neal's
book sbot midway tbrougb tbe
period, and they quieted tbe sellout
crowd of 20,562 by: making five
tbree-polnt abuts In the Jut four
minutes of the quarur.
Tbe Cavs lnli1ed 42-24 after one
quarter and 68-SO at tbe balf, and
wben they made a modest nm that
got tbem wltbln 14 early In tbe
thin! quarter, Hardaway -wered
with ~even auict points Ill the IIIKt
of a IS-O Oltando spgt thai ended
alldoubt
'
"Tho bluest tbing about tbe
rtnt quarter was tbat we &amp;bot the
ball excr::z well (69 percent),"
Orlando
Brian Hill said. "To
get those shots, we pauecl tbe baD
extremely well. Tbe· kev to Ibis
team at this point is its willinJIIICSI
to pass the ball to the next IUY wbo
bas tbe open sbot, and tonight we
made the opeD sbot..
Hardaway flalsbed wltb 20
poitits, and Grant bad IS points and
10 rebounds.
Williams and Terrell Brandon

scored 14 each and Mart Price bad
13 for. theCavallen.
''Tbey bave 10 many weapoos,''
Brandon said. "You try to close
out on~on and they bave
another
. They lbrow It in to
Sbaq and be tbrowJ it out eo ADdersm. Tbe addition 11 Honce Grant
bas made a gJe8l traDSillm fot their
team. It gives them gJatleadenbip
and reboandinll sldlla wblcb they
needed last ye111 In tbe power forward position. Tbey just have a

aa lona aa we can keep learninJ
wbi1e we'~e lmprovlna. this team is
lloina eo be vay fill to wlldl. ••
Jamal Mubburn scored 34
poluta IDd Jimmy IICbcin 28 to
key Dallll' CXJDdW'k victory. Roy
Tarpley bad season bigbs with 22
points llld 141Cbounds.
Even tbougb Robinson came
Into tbe pme Jeadilll the ~ in
rebounds, Dallas outrcbounded tbe
Spun62-33.
ID a fourth cp111er tbat feannd
six lead changes and nine tics,
Robinson's layup and foul shot
gave the Spun a 110-108 lead with
43 seconds left in regulation. A
three-pointer by Lucious Harris and
a flee throw by Mashburn folted
overtime.
Mashburn's free tbrow came
after Kidd came up with a late Sleal
with 13 seconds remaining.
''I knew we needed a big play in
that situation," said Kidd, wbo bad
10 points, a career-high 13 assists
and five steals. ''I gambled and
was lucky to cane up wilb the big

pal package."

In otber NB A Jl&amp;mCI, It was
Dallu 124, San Antonio 121 In
overtime; New York 104, Boston
90; Indian• 90, Detrolt83; Denver
102, Minnesota 95; Atlanta 94,
New Jeney 91 in overtime; Seattle
103, Houston 90; Charlotte 106,
Utah 97; SIICIIIIItDIO 1111, Milwaukee 95; and the Los Angeles Lakers
113, Golden State 101.
Phoenix's game wltb tbe Washington Bullets at USAir Arena bad
to be postponed because of condensation that made tbe court unusable.
MaverkkiUA, Span 121 (0'0
David Robinson, meet the new
and Vlllllly improved Dallas Mavericb.
Tbe San Antonio Spun center
got a good lode at bow '!'ell Jason
Kldd, Jamal Mashburn and Jim
Jackson are aming together up in
Dallas. Despite Rob1nson's 42
poinll, the YOIIIII Mavs came from
hebind to beat tbe Spun 124-121 in
overtime Tuesday DighL
Tbe win broke Dallas' 16-game
losing streak to San Antonio.
"Confidence for Ibis team Is
high right DOW," Kidd said, "and

play."

Robinson fouled out witb 54
seconds left in overtime, and Jackson's basket witb 37 seconds left
gave Dallas tbe lead f&lt;l' good.
KnJcks 104, C.ltlcs90
Charles Smitb bad 20 points and
New Yort sbut down Boston in tbe

BClsk etbnll

tbelr thin! straight, made only I~ of
36 shots after balftime. ·
Dlno 'Radja bad 23 points to
lead Boston.
Pacen 90, Plstonl83

NBA standings

.»:
~ .................. u
New Yort .............. IO

a-. ........... _........7
fteii+J¢le ..... ....... .6
.s

w......,. . . . . . .

New.lorll)' ..............7
l\lloml .............. ........4

MaraJen

lo

!:!-:,

replar==

=

\

,.

I

.Iii

3 .100 .
.667
2
9 All
5$
' .-400
6
1 .315
6
12 .361
7
9 .301
7

_,II,

.!163

.4!1
.313

--~

li:..
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Dol......................9
UIIII ....................... IO
Dollll .......................l
5u ADkllllo ............7

--

~ ..........-.... 3

rat
.600

Allllud13.-6lil

Blulllool1.-74
Codontllo 103. Wl-76

Obio women's
college scores
Oblo CGuf-.aace

I

14 .176

PI&gt;oealz .................. ll

S..ale .... ................ ll
LA. Llbn ........ -..10
........................ 1
Goldeo Slolo ............ l

l
S
6
7
I

Akroa Colll.·llowa' 91, 0.. Blot Tocb
'
AkrooCo..oy7S.-49
Aboll Npr=fwt« 71, AkloD BJel J3
Akroo St.V.SLN 61, Aboo Ollfiold

I
2.!1

.SOO
I'Onlud ...................7 7 .SilO
LA. Olppen ...........0 t6 .000

NHL

Ohio B.S. boys' scores
19

.611
.611
.625
.!133

3
3

62

Mlella71,Ciom*-&lt;11161
"""""92. Oilfield HIL 66
,+,..,.Lob 74, BJOOiillde Sl
a., vrn,.. Bay73, Bin w. l2
Bwtauwk 76, Day. StebblDill
Bedlc:rd 64, OllqO S4
llorlllllllud 96,l--5cio 60

II

Tueldal!,New York I&lt;W,
o !10

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I'Oiud 76,1!. Palllllille 41
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l!idpwood 56, Gonway 39

RIVER VALLEY
(12-18-:ZS-16=71)
James 5-I-6n=l9, Ward 7-03/4=17, Uoyd 3-1-519=14, Graham
5-0-0/1=10, Stitt 1-0-215=4, Pettit
0-1-010=3, Hunt 1-0-0/0=2, Stout
1-0-0/0=2. Totals: :Z3/5:Z-3/II161l7=71
Total FG- 26-63 (41.3%)
Rtbounds-43 (Ward 11)
Alollfa - 16 (Graham g) .
Steals- 18 (Lloyd 6)

Meigs will stage its bome and
Tri-Valley Conference opener Friday night BJialnst Nelsonville· Yorlc.
River Valley will play its first
Soutbeastern Obio Athletic League
contest of the season Friday night
as tbe guest of lbe Marietta Tigen.

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(ZI-:Z0-17·16::74)
Abbott 3-1-9/11=18, Cleland 7. 0-212=16, Hanson 3-1-0/0,;9,
Pullins 4;0-0/1=8, Stanley 3-01/1=7, Ewing 0-2-0/0::6, Haning 10-3/4=5, Hendri~ 1-0-112=3, Yost
1-0-0/0=2. Totals: l3/4:Z- 4/1516fll=74
Total FG- 27-57 (47.4%)
Rebounds, assists, steals &amp;
tumonrs-N/A

~
~

f'l:

~

Hubbard's Greenhouse .·

~

Sh...,. Hu. 12. Cle. Cldlollc 12
S.IOD 64,1\1ayfiold 62
Sprlaa. Clllhollc 74, KeolDD Rldp ~I
Sp~iDJ. Northeutern 70, MecbauJct-

.IL-l
I

bura~7

Steubenville Cllh. 66, Ulllly, W.VL

59

Stow II. AboofiratoDc !51
S)'IDIDCI Vall. 74, ltoatoa St. JoHph

lO
Thoma• Worthlaatoa SS, M11ion

.bn11Da53

Tol. Emanuel Bapt. 6•. Whiteford,
l\lldl. 62
ToI. 5t.t S4. Tal. Whitmer 4S

~--y,...

Wolti:66, Fr&lt;!IIDII Roa64
Tri·Volley ll, Rlwr VIew ll (OJ')
IS,Mohtn S4
,.._..VIII. 10, Cldlz 46
W. Oooup 63, Meal« Lll:e Cltll. 'II
W.lolulkiqWD 17, Pltllo 62
W.... &lt;lllq&gt;lon 76,1\111b.... l9
Wuren Howland 70, illlttabulo liar·
bor44
W-=ltoolody73, Brootflelcl 52

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w......rn• 61. a.. Lilcolo-WOI! 66

Wlllorloo71,NewtooPoiiiSO ·
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JilL Wol¥ed Gonld l\ladi:IDI,IUif'l.
INDIANA PACERS' A&lt;tl. .ed lolill
WIUIIml, lorwonl, l'nlm tile llllured Uot .
Pllood AltoDio IJovil, lcxword, OD !helD•
jlndlllt

.

three-point attempt frOOI the right
wing bounced off tbe rim and went
off to the left of the lane, where
Lloyd grabbed it as time expired.
Abbott's accurate foul shooting
made up for bis 4-for-11 field-goal
shooting. Oeland finished with 16
points gained mostly on 7-for-11
. field-goal shooting.
James' game-high 19 points
came mainly on 6-for-13 field-goal .
shooting.

,.._..Cab.

Col. -92,-0.. 62
Col.llortiiJitld 76, Col. Soulll70
Col. bodJ 62, W.W..,.a S3
Col. Wllllud 61. !Iron Cliy 56 .
Cooottoo VoiL 61.~ LoQI S9
Codlud-~ 62, 111111 McltlD·

Saulll
AIL·BinniDI!Iam 91,111Doa 51.11
~ 74,Eoot CnU•56

Joepocolllrld.

w....... ,

-..7.~•·5

OL OK IUU. 71, Cia. St. Xovt,. 67

Cia. Se•• IUIIa 65, CID. Ludnwk
0..60
Cia. S t - 60, Cia. CllrWiu 5l
Cia. Suii!DIIt Couatry Dar 77. Cin .
Lodllod4.1

Major men's
college scores

: •:

Cia. - 7 3 . aa. eowuy Illy

(01')
Clo. Ro. . - · 69, cto. SyC11110re
l7

Thunday'•l-•

...

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64

PboelllliiiNowJ...y. 7:30p.m.
a..totlt Ill Howtoa. I p.m.
WIIIIIDSI&lt;&gt;D II Doilll,l :30 p.m.
UtlbltS.. ADtonio,1:30p.m.
-11Saaomoii!D, I0:30p.m

+ ..

2-dltlott

"

p.m.

.......

~

CU!ooCath.II,Niona73
CaniiDIIMooooyS9, Y - Blol~l
ClrdlJiitool3, ~ 73
Cbe11puke 71, PraatUa Furnace
0...46
• CNI-52.-SO
Cia. - 7 3 , 0 1 . - 3 1
a.. 01•11111 93. )llllc:rd S9
Cia. 111111 011. AI:IJl 52, Mllml VIII.

Milwaukee at L.A. Clippm, 10:30

trodolba••-Hinlldl.plldl«,lo ·
NowYort.
PIIILADBU'IIIA PIDWI!S' Sipod
I:J11 AllttoCl. ,.._., to a ..,.,.... coa·
..., 1011 Norm a..lklo ud Jell lull,
pltdlcl&gt;,
.. miDarl-·
PmSBURGR
PIRATES
' Slaned
Rudy St. Claire, pitcher, to a miaor

. loloplowoocU6,lolkoe SS
lolorllqtoo67.Ra.... s...-tS4
M1t1i1o Peny Tl, Ulloa LoQI 52
loloynlllo SJ,........, 42
- - s o , Jluct.ye 'l'rlll41
~ 74, &lt;lHillln Rl,... VIII. 71
- 5 3 , Clo. St..._ 44
lolllml Trloe 64, Oleellevtew Sl

c.apoll·-

ToaJ&amp;hi'•'•I-

loleli • the llnl pla)W to bo !111!114 ID tile

-..1

W..llol~-73,

IODSI

AllolloiiB-.7:30p.m.
CLI!VBLAND 11 Orlando, 7:30p.m.
Altlodolpbla II Miami, 7:30p.m.

N"""-!Lo.-

.......... ,,lhadRl-43
Uctlla H1L 12, Col. Tno ol UlelO
LonloiDwa 74,Joeboolollltoa 63
Loudo..rn. 67. Hlllod.de 66

Bloott&gt;Cim&gt;IJ66, UJ.ty Ullloo 49
llricfJotpcn 66, ........ Sl. lobDI !l7
66, Y...,. WU-

Od-11~. Cl.I!Vl!LANil '11
- 9 0 , Dotrolll3
Dolmr IOl,llliDDelola 9l
-103,-D!IO
Doillll24, San Alllollio 121 (OT)
a.toue 106, Utili '11
LA.Labn lll,Ooldoo5!Jiol01
s ........toiOI,Mi-95

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...

.. ..

Pboeai1 It Wublaatoa (ppd., wet

lloor)

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...

-94.Newl-r91(01')

FLORIDA MARUN!: Trlde4 Bret
BlrbCitio, ncond biMmu, to lhe Balli~
monOriolel rcr by Powell, pitcber,
HOil5'fON ASTROS' Mp&gt;lnd T&lt;dl
BecDrmo. plldutr, 11om the Now York

.._.54, -lbotlla .,

TUllo 53

Blulftoo II, CoiiXXdlo. Mlc:b. 53
-19.1.allocllo67
Ullloa. Jtr. 91, Wllberf- 67

2

· 71,
.......,Ooet62,Corrolltoa46
1o1m Olea W, New Lella&amp;toa 44
Ald..- 52, Triod ;j&amp;
lteootoa 119, ...... Cntotwood 57
loUiriq PoiJmolll TI.Thlo City 0
'"'"'- 64, Colllld&gt;lo 39- .
ltlrtlud 67,
Polio 61
l*RldJITI,M.JD.IoJ:Jl
l.aDiolldiSS,N-~32

Naa_,_..,......

3.5
I.S

a-

Laltniowfl.NIIoo

Mld-OIIlo c...r.r.ce

Pladlly 71,

TEXAS"=E~med £ocb

-Jtome clubltouao IIIli equlpmelll

o..a

Olllo"""""'

1.5
I.S

.!171
.467

-l:IB-,.

BIIHbaD

-·159

remaining, but Dettoit used a 12-2 -his rust poillts oftbe.game -to
run to pull within one on a three- nun a one-point deficit Into 111 88pointer by Terry Mills with I :47 83 lead with 6:08 to play. A 10-1 ·
remaining. Mills scored 11 of his spurt capped by Ellis' baseline
16 points in tbe fourth quarter, jumper sent tbe Timberwolves to
going 3-for-3 from tbree-point their 12th straight bome loss.
· range.
Brian Williams bad 17 points
Miller, wbo scored 18 points, and 13 rebounds for tbe Nu,sets.
nailed a tbree-pointer with 22 sec- Doug West led the Wolves wttb 25
onds remaining to seal Indiana's · points.
bomec:oiKt victoly.
Ha'll'b 94, Nell 91 ( OT)
Nugeta 102, Ttmberwolva 95
Craig Eblo converted a breakDale Ellis scored 14 of bis 18
(See NBA on J'aac 6)

Marauders win ... &lt;contlnuedfromPage4&gt;

Transactions

muaaer ud Joe Macko YilitiDJ c:lub-ltoiM-.

Ia-

Joldwla.W-62,-CoL55
Clptlll i3,
31

.Iii

6
7 Jll
~

TUllo,.

Mort-56.

fbakUa 71, Bdinrood 6J
ftWI!aHIL 6!, Col. w....,. so
O.Oeld lh Trlalty 53, Wll.ob leouit

O...MU. Oilmour 67, Newbury 41
Oirlld II, Youq.Uborly 66
Gloowood!III, .......... W.~S
an.t VIII. 715, Jemnoa 59
Onald'riow
63, - · Twp. l7
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Hauh!RI1W7l,-62
Haw.... 54,
46
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WlrSI'DN CONFERENCE

NHL players and Qwners • • • • • • • • • • • • _. • • • • • ·• • • • • • ... •
widen gap in negotiations -+ •-+
-+ .._
ByMIKENADFL
·
"too far apart on substance" '
• ·-- -----·-q";he 'l)n,llf( Sentinel's
·~
CIDCAGO
own- regarding salary arbitration, free
ers, the playen contend, are glut- agency and rookie salary cap. He
tons wbo feast at tbe labor buffet, said negotialloos ended even before
wipe their chins .and return for ownen Introduced a plan to tax up
more.
to 25 pen:eut of the entire payrolls .
NHL players, tbe owners of teams tbat exceed certain BJigrebelieve, are money-grubbers who gate salary ceilings.
care more about tbei{ BMWs and
"Tbe players told us that tbey
batik accounts tban about tbelr bad gone u far as tbey could," be
league's beallb.
said. "With or without the contrllt was in Ibis environment of bution plan. there was rto basis for
enmity on the 671b day of tbe own- a deal.'
en' lockout that labor negotiations
But tbe players said the sides
broke down Tuesday, with botb were close on the rookie cap and
sides agreeing only that prospects Cree BJICDCy. And, tbougb there was
are slim for saving the season.
still a gap on the arbitration issue,
"We've given tbem everything' they weren't forlorn until the paythey wanted,'' said Mike Gartner, roll tax bit tbe table.
NHL Players Association pres!"Tbe big difference was Gary
dent. "We've made a tremendous Dettman was dying to get this tax
amount of concessions along the on tbe table and be pulled It out
way. Right now, tbe owners are wilb flying colon," said WubiDgbeing gluttons about it. They've ton'sKellyMiller,amemberoftbe
been gobbling up everything tbat player's negotillllng team. ''They
we've been giving and now they're wanted to say, '1binfS bave brolccn
sayin~, 'We want more. more and down, be!!:'3 the tall.
_ more. "
"Maybe they felt that by tbrowNHL commissioner Gary . ing tbe tax on, they could·get more
Betunan bad bls own opinion:
concessions. Tbe way I loolt at it,
''Tbe players are of the view I've already given diem my keys,
that they want to maintain the sta- I've given tbem my wallet, I've
tus quo, even if It's something that given them my car. At sane point
makes a good number of our teams you've got to say, 'Hey, no, you
unprofitable and not competitive." can't bave my kids and you can't
Dettman said the sides were bave my wife."' .
·

'

C..W-13,o.la73

$

CI.I!VELAND .........9 7
Clllcalo....................l I
Dolroi. ..... ,_............ J I
. Alllllla ...... -.............7 9
_ _ ............J II

INSIDE POINTS- Mei11• forward Can Cleland (15) &amp;eta
between River Valley's Jamel c.::::;ne~a;dr!::'Y.:;..~!
IT'S OVER!- AI River Valley'• Doug Lloyd
In&amp; tbe Marauder•' 74-71 nuon-openllll will
(rlgla~: :~: ~:~J.eIn:::..~wMn Clle
1ur- · waJb olf tile c:oart. Melp buketbaD players nrom Rim Valley Tuesda:~t. Tile dedlloa
:::.a 'i:st-quarter rally win 74-71. Cleland lbalslaed with 16 · round bead c:oac:b Jeff Sldaaer (center) willie
=~~
points. (Dave Harris plaoto)
rM_e_:lp;._cbeer
__
leaden
_ _;Jola
__ln_tlle
__
cele_bra_tloll_'_OIIo
__
w_·-~-----------:--~-~j

SESSION FEE
'17.99

L !II.

C.lrolladiiM ................... IO S .667
C1tor1ot1Ao ..................9 7 $63

221
(AP) -

Nortll COM! c..fereace

Alilode....,_

z-

--66.--40

..... 53, Pollcily so
1!..._
65, Tol. CbrUdu 51

Obiomen's
college scores

SMACKED - Clevelaad froutman Daany Ferry Oeft) smaeb
Orlaado'• Anfernee Harda-y In the wiiUt llarda-y a- to
tbe lloop dlll'IDI Tuadlly Diglat'• NBA pme In Cleveland, 'Wbere tk
Mqlc: beat tile Ca~allen 114-97. (AP)

Dale Davis bad 19 points and II poiniS in the second balf and rookie
rebounds
aild Reggie Miller made a Jalen Rose started a fourth-quarter
second balf.
key
lbrce-polntcr
to stop a late rally rally to lead Denver over MinnesoTbe Knick&amp; led by as many as
ta.
as
Indiana
beat
Detroit.
20 points early in tbe fmal period.
Tbe
Pacers
led
by
13
with
5:30
Rose scored six slnligbt points
Tbe visiting Celtics, wbo dropped

Scoreboard

Te~~~~~a

~

•

Wedheld•y, December7,1994
Pt~ge 4

·Sports brlefa-

MUNICH, Germany (AP) " Top-ranked Pete Sampras beat
~ . Jlime Yzaga of Peru 6-2, 64 in the
~ - flniiOUIId of the $6 million Cool~ 1*1 Gnnd Slim Cup eo advance to
' ~=terfinal match against

Ohio

Wednllday, December 7, 1994

wiiiiM glv•• I• Melts/Gallla Cou•tles by

HEARING AID CENTER
•• .&amp;frw·
Friday, December 9, 1994
••
In Dr. A. Jackson Balles' Office
224 East Main, Pomeroy
,II
9:01-Noon
•: (all Tol fr• l·IOo-634-5265
for •l••ellatt

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�..
Deceinber 7, 1994

In college hoops,

-

Wed~ay, December?, 1994

.-...
..."',_.

. Pomeroy-Midclaport, Ohio

Daily Special In Our Bakery
10 am until 2 pm Mon- Sat.
Hot Dogs 2f$1.00 with sauce 3f$1.00 plain

Connecticut ekes
out 74-70 victory
~
over Boston
College ~
~

••

~r&lt;i:·

MOIIday thn s,May

3

1994-95 REDWOMEN - Member• ol tbll year'• Rio Grande
women's basketbal tum are (-ted, L-R) Shan._ Mlller, Stacey
Riley Heather DkoD, Amy Floyd, Michelle Tabor, IDm So-ra lllld
Chrbty BartleU. Standing are dudent' ...Utant Joy O'Brien, Ileac!

t:UIIt:ll Dam! Smalley, atadeat aalatant Mlb Y011111o Mepn Winten,
Trlcla CoW-. Tonya Smltb, Rachel B011tle, Jodi Rawllnl, lltudent
usiat.nt Chryftal Huntzinger IIDCIII'alner J - Stewart.
.

Because of mutua/Interest,

By DOUG TUCKER
gambling than there bad been the
KANSAS CI1Y, Mo. (AP) previous live yean.
Between the staid NCAA and the
"Not point shaving," be added.
glamorous, anylhlng-goes Las "I'm talking about students and
Vegas Sttip, a curious lie took rooL student-adlletes involved with parNormally, these two are worlds lay cards and commonplace gamapart. The NCAA campaigns bling, and also gambling on college
against samblins at every nun and evcniS."
has adopted bylaws lhat will proFor the NCAA. the value of the
hibit Las Vesas from ever hosting games' credibility was never
illl annual convention.
greater. On Tuesday, the NCAA
Yet, boll! sides sbare -~ mutual agreed ID a $1.125 bUHon conlraf;t
interest in the integrity of college wat keeps the Final Four on CBS .
sports. If games were "fixed" by througll 2002. It is the blgliest to1a1
players or officials shaving points pricetag of any TV sports rights
to insure gamblers' winning bets,- -deal ever made.
Nevada's lesaJ sportsbooks could
. The most recent point-shaving
lose a fortune.
scandal to roclt college&gt; baaltetball
The NCAA, whose lifeblood Is came in 1985. Another such scanCBS television money and other da1 during dlla lime of beisbtened
revenue from ita super-successful public ~ migllt undermine
basketball tournament. cobld lose the F'mal
iiSclf. And a point·
even dlore.
shaving scandal that damages the
"We try to maintain contacts Final Four mlglltalso spur congrcswilh individuals in Las Vegas," sional intervention In college albsaid Rich Hilliard, a director of lclica, lhc biggest fear of most
enforcement for the NCAA who adminla1raf.on.
helps 1ctcp a watchful eye on gamBut officlala also fear dlat imJo.
biers and gambling. "It's in their cent players could get trapped
best interests when they think unwiUin&amp;ly.
something is amiss to alert us.
"An athlete could be jut acting
They wiD tate a game risbt off If lilte any other student In a dorm
there's a big fluc:tualiOD in the point and play one or thole parlay cards
spread. These are people who are for a dollar, not understanding the
leJitimate employees or the gam- ramifications," Cawood said.
bling Industry m Nevada."
"And suddenly bis whole career
For a varlet)' or reasons, many and the university and his team·
off'u:lals believe the climate is ripe mates and his ooach could be tarfor a new scandal cngulfmg college oished by tbc revelation that,
basketball because gambling on 'Here's a siUdent-alhlete betting on
sports events Ia growing among sports.'
_
college students In general.
''A guy migbt not give it a sec"1 have 110 ltnowledfe 01' infOI'· ond thouglltlf everybody else in
matioo that something s about to the diiiD wu doing IL"
bappen," said Dave Cawood, the
The NCAA brieRy considered,
NCAA's assiatant eJI:ecutive direc- then abandoned the idea of with·
tor for broadcast services. "But holdias tournament credentials
tbal doesn't mean it's not going to from newspapers publlsblng point
happen today.
.
·
spea~~s.
- "It's prominent for fratcmitiea
People believe one factor malt·
and olher student groups to sell log college playcr.a more susceptiparlay canis," Cawood said. "Peo- ble lban ever to pnblcrs' offcr.s Is
pic don't even tblnlt about it any- the spread of legal casinos around
more, it'sao CXIIIIIIOD."
the counlry.
Hilliard said lbere bave been
"It used to be lhat you bad to go
"more cases in the past three yean to Las v~ to gamble legally,"
involvlns student-a_lhletel ,and · said Jim
y, executive director

NBA action...

or the National Aasociallon or Basltctball Coaches. "Now there ..-e
riverboat operations up and down
the Mias~ppi, Sll!lbling OD '!'dl·
an rescrvaliona. Things dial rused
our eyebrows 15 yean ago are DOW
acccplllllc. It's somedling coaclles
are very worried about."
·
Otben believe the biggest dan·
ger comes from drugs. Lem
Banker, a ·prominent Lu Vegas
gambler and authOI' of sports bet·

ting books, said he would be
''more suspicious of the·officials
111an or the u players."
"Rigllt oow llblnk the game is
pretty honest," Banker said.
"Every star player tblnks be's
soins to set a blf NBA or NFL
contract, 10 tbey re going to be
veiy hesitant to rialt all that f« a
SS,OOO payoff. But a guy can get
booked on somedling, and tbeu he
could be blarkmaiWI."
,

Lu among Chinese swimmers
getting two-year suspensions
LONDON (AP) - Cblneac
swimmer Lu Bin, wbo won four
~old medals and set a world rec«d
m the Asian Games. has been aaapended f« two years ror faillns a
drug test, a top international swimmin fedelalion official said today.
~A secretarY Gunnar Wemer
s1_1id Lu tested positive for the
banned substance dehydrotestos·
tcrone in a IID4km out-of-axnpeti·
lion sampling Sept. 30 before the
start or lhe Asian Games In
H\roshima, Japan. Werner said
FIN A will not recosnize Lu' s
world rec«d in the 200-meter indl·
vidual medley.
It's the second positive teat
involving Lu, wbo was among
seven Cbinese swimmers wbo test·
ed positive for dcbydrotestosterone
during the Asian Games. Lu and
the other Chinese atbletcs wbo tested positive were stripped·of their
medals last weekend by the
Olympic Council of Asia.
Wemer said be had heard
reports thai the Chinese federation
had banned lhe seven swimmers
for two yellfs, tilit tie waa still
awaiting official notifli:atlon. If
confumed, FINA would upbold the
bans on an inlfmlllionaJ basis.
Lu was the second Cblnese
women swimmer to flunlt a preAsian Games test admlnlst.ered by
FINA. Yang Alhua, the world 400-

'

meter freestyle champion, also lest·
ed positive for testostcr.one on Sept
30 and was suspended for 2 years.
The suspensions, wblch will last
through Sept. 29, 1996, will keep
LU and Yang out of the 1996
Olympics in Atlanta.
Lu won the 200 individual med·
ley in the w«ld ch1111pionsblpa in
September and also woo two sold
medals in relays and sliver medals
in the 100 and 200 freeal)'lcs. Lu
and Yang wUI DOt be stripped of
tbeir w«ld championship medals
because lhcy tested negative in
Rome.
Wemer said FINA asked lhe
Chinese federation to investigate
bow the swimmers obtained lhe
drugs and whether anr coaches,
IJainen «doctors were mvolved.
Many international swimmers
and coaches have accused the Chinese of running a systematic doping program. but Cblnese officlala
and FINA have blamed the positive
cases on individual athletes.
"Right now, 1have oo reason to
believe the Cbinese federation is
behiod it," Wemer aaid.-'-'-We-lllveno proof or a systematic, governmental or federation doping cam-

Jlilgn."

No.s:vt-H.-Fioddasa.7s
At Tucson. Ariz., Damon
Stoudamlre bad 2S points and 12
assists to lead the WUdcats (4-1),
who shot 64 perocnt in the second
half (21-for-33). Stoudamlrc and
Reggie Geary tumed in inqJreasive
defensive performances lor Ari·
zona, holding lhe bigb-scortng
backourt or Bob Slllll and James
Colllna ID 15 and 12 polnll, respeclively. 111c 1oaa waalbe Senilnoles'

finl.or~~~eN-:;on.,:.~.rme-·

c-.

w..i.laatoa 73
At Dlqlml, N.C., t6c Blue Devns (4·1) pot on.a &amp;booting clinic
early and bad dlla one wrapped up

-

Sports briefs--

T••lllua
NijW YORK (AP) - CBS
Sports llld the NCAA ligned a deal
that will keep the FiDal Four on
CBS tlmlgll ibc ~ 2002 as pan
or a package coaling tbe network
$1.725 billion.
-'C
""B.'S aad the NCAA said lhe
deal replaces ·a 7-yeu, $1 billion
deal lhat - to bave ruil tbrougb
1997.

,.

.fts far
,,
Hm

V1

••

8AM·10PM

2,8 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD DEC. 3 THRU D~,C. 10, 1994.

&lt;ContinuedfromPaae5&gt;

with 28 ·points, wbile Karl Malone
bad 31 f« Utab. .
K1np 1M, Mlwaube 95
game.
~
,_
Olden Polynice had 22 points
r.foolde 81aylock linislled with and 16 rebounds and Walt
17 points and 12 assists, Stacey Williams added 20 points to lead
Augmon adiled 17 points and Grant Sacramento over Milwaukee.
Lcillg 16 for the visiting Hawks.
The win 1avc the Klass their
Keany •:Aadcrson led the Nets with best early season record in more
, 24'pointsllld H aaailla.
than a decade - elsbt wins in IS
~~ 11.1, llodtea M
aames - and the beat since lhe
Gary Payton ICOI'ed a ICISOD· francbiae'a 1982-83 season In
bljb 30 poilU to lead Scaltie pall Kansas City.
vlalting Houstoll, wblch alrUggied .
Gleim Robinson bad 31 points
wllboul Hakcem Oll,juwon.
for the villdng Buda. Mitch RichOtajuwon, last season's Moat mood scored 17 points and Spud
, Valuable Player and Houston's Webb 16forthe1Cinga.
ac:QriDJ and reboundlna leader,
La1ren 113, Wlll'l'lon 111
inJII!red bll riBbt wrist laiiThunday
Los
a fi'anchiae• ~ be fell ODto a camera duriDJ rec«d 11
ten to bold off
a pme qaillt Goldeu Stile.
vialdng Golden tate. ·
, .._.. 116, J... VI
Cedric Ceballos ba4 28 pointa
,- , ncu Curry made alx or Cb•· and 12 rebounds to lead 111e Lakera,
II*'I 13 dl&amp;ee poiDten; incincllna · wbo outrcbonndcd Golden State
f""' in the fourdl qua1Ct, ta lead 61-42.
' 1 dle1fcncllll Uta6.
T'an Hardaway scored 23 poinll
' I; l.ury Jobnaon .Jed Charlotte .for the Wll'rion;

Anq

Footblll
FAYE1TEVlLLE, Art. (AP)SiJI: Arkansas freshman players
were disciplined after authorities
began investigating a report lhat an
18-ycar-old woman was seJI:ually
assaulted in the •thldlc dorm.
Tbe school said two athletes
were suspended pending further
investigation, willie four olhen
were suspended for not reporting a
violation of dorm policy barring
unautborlzed visitors.

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away layup and foul shot widl 0.3
sCccindS rem•lning as Atlanta beat
New Jmey 1D win iiS third straigllt

•

By Tile Aaodat.d rr. by .half~ with a 30-point lead.
Colulej:dcut found out dial even . Duke made 11 of its 13 sbols in the ~
early Big Eut games against out· .~g 6 l/21111D~tes and was led ;;
m!IIIIM'(! ~tam tougiL
'by Cberotee I'IRa aner-blgll 29 ••
1bc lOtb-nmkcd Hustlca looted points as it WOD ita 9111 consecu- :
vecy good in a win over tbeu-No. 6 live game at Cameron IDdoor Sta· :
Duke in last week's Great Eigllt. diam agaiast a non-conference ;~
Things were a let different in the opponeaL Nimbo Hammons led the ~.
~:.:!f coach Jim Calhoun after Colooials (5·2) widl22 polnta.
~
y nlgllt' a 74-70 victory over
No. 14 Wllcoalla 69
:,
Boston College, a team tryins to
Valpullllo 51
:;
replace four atarttn from 1a11 seaAt M..Uaoa, Wia., Michlcl Fin· ,..
SOD wbllc benc!Hng the lou fX star ley had 28 points, including the ::
freshman Chris HemD ror the sea- Bqcrs' lint 11 of the game, but it ;;:
aon because of wrist IUI'It:CY·
was a slnlggle until the final min· ~
"I don't lblalt the Clpi)ODellt was utes. Valparaiso, which played "'
' lhat important," Calhoun said. without Injured leading scorer ::'\
"'lbc OIJIIOIICIIt was our own unl· Dave Redmon, trailed lust S4-SO :J
forma. We didn't play widl euoagll with 7:15 to play, but Wisconsin ::
emotion. Some guys I ellpiiCted 10 (4-0) cloled the game with a IS-I · •
respond clidll't mpoail."
run. Lance Barter's 16 points led :';
'!be Puakies (4..0) don't play the CIUiadln (1-3).
'':
again until Dec. 23, and tbat means
No.19 SJI'IICUII &amp;l, Mlam165 ·:
plenty of lime for Calboun to lbint
At Miami, I obn Wat lace was ·•
about the tougll road victory over 11-for-13 fnm the field, scored 23 the Eaglca (2-1).
poiDts llld grabbed 10 rebounds as ;,.
1bc game wu tied 68-68 when the Orangemen (4-1) handed lhe ::
Doron Sheffer. bit a IS-footer widl llunicancs their 21st consecutive -,
. 341C1l011da left 10 give the Husldes Big East loss In lhe conference :;
the lead for good. Mlclrcy Curley opener f« bodl. Miami (3-1) ocntcr :;!
tbeu iDbouDded the ball and, when COIIItiDtin PlliJ8 bad 17 poiniS and ; :
Duano Woodward didn't move 13 rebounds. 'Tbc Hurricanes lost .;
toward It, Brian Fair stole It and ·leading rebounder Steve Rich for
scored with 28 seconds to so.
four to six weeks widl a stress frac. 1:
"Tbey played wllh a lot of ture in bla rigbtleg.
,,
couraae and played their bcarta
VIUiderbllt '70
1
out," Boston Collcae coach Jim
No.21VIrJialll65
•
At Naabvillc, Tenn., the Com- ;;'i
O'Brien laid d bla ICam.
Fair led Connectlc;ut with 21 modorca (3-1) bounced back from ~
points, wblle Ray Allen with 14. tbclr 1011 at Pam Slife, but barely :'=
Danya Abnuna carried the Eaalcl hun&amp; on after leading by as many •
with a c.eer-hlgb 29 poinll anil10 as 19 points. Vanderbilt abot 26 :
rebounds.
.
·
percent (S-for-19) in tbe second :
in ()Iller games involving nmted ba1f llld didn't ICUe flail the field ~;
teams Tucaaay nlgbtlt was No. 3 ID the flnal12:29 as Virilnla (3-2) ;•
Artanaaa 121, Centenary 94; No. 8 doeed-'I 63-59 wldl1:2fto go, but ·l
Arizma 96, Florida State.78; No. 9 the Commoclorea IDide seven or 10 :;
Duke 103, George WaabingDI 73; free throws in the fina11: 14. Ron· ;;.
No. 14 Wisconsin fiJ, Valparalio nle McMahan and Frank Secltar ~
Sl; No. 19 S)'lliCUIC 83, Miami 6S; each bad 23 poinll f« Vandelbilt.
Vandelbllt 70, No. 20 VIIJlnla 65; while Harold Deane led the Cava- ::
and Texaa-El Paso 77, No. 22 New lien wilh 16 points; Virginia •s ~
Mexico Stale 68.
C«y AleUDdcr 111111181ed only five '.!
No. 3 Arkamaa Ill
points on 2-f01'·11 sbooting.
:;
Centeury 94
T--11 P-77
~
At Fayetteville, Ark., Clint
No. 22 New Meldl:o St. 68
"
Mc:Daniel bad five ~lots, three
At El Paso, lhe Miners (2·1) :;
assiStS llld two steals m a 19~ run dominated from lhe start in a ' .•
as lhe Razorbacb (4-1) cruised. rematch of lheir only loss of the ·:
There was some worry, however, season last week. Mark Ingles -•
as forwllld Scotty Thurman left the scored all but three of bla 18 points .::.
game with 8 1/2 mlnutca to go II! on lbree-poina:n and led six Min· :~
the lint ball with what IJIPe8l'ed to CIS in double ligures. Iobnny Selvie :
be a sprained anltlc. School offi. bad 12 poiniS to lead the Auies (~- ..
cials said he would be X-rayed 2), while Antoine Glllespiillad 11 ::
today. Darnell Robinson scored a points, 14 below bis tcam·lcadlng ·~
aner-blgll 24 poinll in 23 minutes average. Ingles bad three lhrce- ~:
f« the dclcndlng national~- poinlcrs in the Miners' 10..0 run to :&gt;
ODS, wbllc McDaniel linlsbed With q~en the game.
•
17 points and 10 rebounds. Aljay
:':
Foreman led the Gents (1-4) with
~
24points.
:
b

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�Pomeroy-Middlepon, Ohio

Ohio
I

Ohio University
College of Osteopathic Medicine

Family
Medicine
John C. Wolf, D.O.
Associate Professor
of Family Medicine

Gable Vision
launches teacher
· awards
program
piut

.Look back 14 billion
light years finds chaos
in early universe

PICTURE YOUR CHILD
AMONG THE ...

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1ttl4 - THE KROGER co. ITEIIS AND PRICES 0000
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AIMIII1ED IIBI POU:Y· Each o1 111e1e adWiilsed Items ts reqt.jred 111 be readiV avatllllle for sa tn
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days. Only 011e vendor eoupon will be accepted per 111m pll'thad.

: - -As

of its ongoing local edu- . $\,SOO in video and computer equip. cation initiative, Project TEACH ment and electronic field trip from
: (Taking Education Along the Cable Thrn.er Educational Services.
l:...i/.,i;~~,:;,.------..------.,1, Highway), CableVision has
Third pl ace: Winning teacher
{,/uestion: My nelgbbors' S- loose in ibc bome or yan1. This is announced the launch of its 1994-9S receives $250 and school awarded
year-old son wu bitten by their especially lrUC if tbc dog is snariiDa Teacher Award Program.
$1,000 in video and computer equippuppy the other day. Fortunately, and lunging against a cbain. A
The awards program, open to all ment and electronic field trip from
his injury wasn't aeriou.s, but It did good preventive meaaurc is to give teachers, media specialists and staff Thmer Educational Services.
remind me of tbc time I wu bitrell all dogs on acbain a wide ber1b.
in CableVision's service area, is
Entry form s, avwlable at the local
and required stitches. How comODe of the best pRCilc:tln of bit- designed to recognize innovative edu· CableVision office, must be coming bellavior Ia the breed of doa. cators who use-cable television pro- pleted and returned by March I .
moo are dog bites?
Answer. About 36 pen:eot of German sbepbcrds and. abepbcrd gramming as a means of enhancing
The awards program is one of
American bouaebolds own dogs, mixed breeds are two to five times classroom curricula.
many elements of CableVision's
making the IIBiion'a tolal dog JIOPU· 11101e likely to bite than any otb«
In addition to local prizes, area local education initiative, and follows
lation about S3.S million. That's a breed. 'lbeycaweabout20percalt educatorsare eligibletocompetewith closely on the heels of our
lot of dogs! From tbia large number of all reported bites. Cbow Chows . Winners in other CableVision systems Cable+You campaign. Cable+You
there are about SSS,OOO bites that are next in line. Tbe ofren feared for national awards, including:
raised over $4,400 for schools in our
are serious enough'to requn 'medl- Doberman Pinscher accounts for
Grand prize: Expense-paid trip four-county system, some of which
cal atrention eacb year, including less than 4 perteDt ot bites. And, and scholarship for winning teacher is targeted to provide "Ingenious"
about 20 dealbs. These numbers Cbihuabuu, Golden Retrievers, and administrator to J.C. Sparkman modems for our local high schools . .
indicate that aboUt one out of eacll I..abralb' Retrievers, Poodle&amp;. Salt· Center for Educational Technology Ingenious (formerly X-Press/ X100 dogs will bile aomeone eacb tish Terriers and Shetland Sheep in Denver, co. In addition, the win- change) is an educational computer
year. That isn'ta lerrible risk. but it dogs eacb IICCOUIItfor miy about 1 ner will receive $750 and school information service available through
does hlgbllght tbe need to approacb percentofrec:orded bites.
awarded $2,500 in video and com- cable television.
dogs with caution. And I tbink that
Dogs tbat are S years old or puter equipment and an electtonic
Lester Errett, general manager,
these statistics only indicate the older are more litely to bite lhan field trip from Turner .Educational said,. "Knowing how many great
most severe bites since many and are younger dogs, and maic dogs Services.
teachers we have in our area, we feel
probably most bites are never are more likely to bite tban
Second place: Winning teacher sure one of them will capture the
reported.
or female:
ones.
Dogs bite children more fre- oeutened
Finally,
Jet' s talk
about treat- receives $500 and school awarded national award."
quently than they bite adults. A mcnt. A :.t's mouth Is full of
survey of Pennsylvania scbool cbil· germs bacteria and viruses
dren showed that 46 percent of - that can make humans Ill. 1be
high school seniors bad been bitten most feared infection is rabies,
by a dog sometime in their lives, even thouab It is no looser very
but only 17 percent bad obtained common in doss. The apecler of
medical atte_ntion. And boys are rabies is quire scary because once a
bitten more frequently than &amp;iris. _person bu developed lbe sympSo, your neighbor's experiellce eer- toms of tbe Illness, It always leads
tainly fits the noona.
to death. Fortma&amp;ety, there is ~
Question: Are there easy ways to start effective trealment after a By PAVL RECER
wbich swa are orbilina a central
to predict if a do&amp; will bite?
dog bite but before symptoms AP Sdeace Writer
ccn in an onlerty Jlinwbeel forma'Answer: There is no foolproof develop. Therefore, it is quite
wASHINGTON (AP)- Four· lion. Tbe Milky Way, wbldl COD·
method to predict wbic:h dogs will important to c:onfme the dog until teen billion yean 880, the universe taiDB lbe sun, is a spiral g~u:y · .
bite. In fact, I lbillk it is safe to its rabies sbot bistory can be doeu- was a cbaotlc collection of stellar Nearby clua~Cn~ also bavc elllpdcal
'assume that all dogs will bite if the mented and a famUy physician or fragmellts amid neat galactic dus- . galaxies, though they are far leu
circumstances provide the proper public bealth official can advise the ten, according to telesropc views CCIIIIDOII.
motivation. Wbile SClllle dogs take bile victim if rabies sbots arc nee- that loot back to near the beginBut the universe .., to 14 billion
considerably Jess provocation to essary. I should add that Ibis once Ding of time.
~ ago wu dlaotic, messy and
make them bite than others, I can painful series of injections in the
Hubble Space Telescopi photos different.
give you some general tips that siOOUicb Is oow reduced to five cas- rcleued Tuesdar by the National
Mark Dickinson of the Space
may belp reduce the riSk of dog By tolerated shots - usually in the Aermautics and Space Admlnl•tta- T~Iescope Scl~nce Institute said
bite.
arm - over a period of about·a lion are views of objects tbat are up · VlCWS of plactic clusters 9 billion
Fust, it's a good Idea to keep a month.
to 14 billion lilbt yean from Eartb, l~Rb~. )'~ars away showed many
Large bites may require sti!Cbes faribcr away dian any other visual e~ 1D1 few spiJals.
close watch when children and
dogs play together. Children are to close the wound wbllc smaller objects ever studied in detail. A
'Elliptlcals are remarkably
more prone to be bitten because ones may just require vigorous lilbt year 1s the distance light ttav- Oldlnary in appeman.:e, but spirals
they speDd more time with pets and cleanina and a bandage. All will efs in a year, about 5.9 trillion are few and far between and look
engage In rougb play - often benefit from a few days ol antibiot- miles
weird; uymmetrleai and dlstortwrestllog with a weD-loved dog as ic trealmeDt. It is also lmpMant to
~tronomen beUeve that lbey eel,'' said Dickinson. ''There Ia a
though it was another child. For the be sure that the bitten person bu are Jooldog far back in time wben menagerie of strange object&amp; that
record, 50 percent of dog bites bad a t.etanua sbot witbln tbe IastlO they look at very distant objccta. bave J?? counterpart in today' s unl·
occur in playgrounds or otber pub- Yel!R·
.. , " IJal!l..aai!ria&amp; at Elirtb from a
'verJe."
.
lie places like streets or alleys, aild ·
("Family MedidDe" II a weekaboWa tbe way tbe star waa It tbe
l&gt;uccio Maccbetta; wbo led an
8110tber 43 percent of them arc in Jy col--. To lllltmlt q~~etdou,
time the llfht ltarted =~L':Jif· STSI team studying Images of
lbe dog owner's ,.-cl or lll!u4C- . • .,wrlto.fo ,J4til~t t!. Wolf, D.o.~,~~· '~·•·· •t~llll 11 14
t oblccta ~2 billion llgbt years away,
Second, keep In mind that OhioUamnltyColhp ot&lt;&gt;.teO- . ysn away is scm u it wu 14 •. safd be ilao found ordinary, weUcbalned or lied-up dogs are more pat111c MedW-, c..,.,._. a.u, lion ~ago. ·
formed and very old elliptical
likely to bite than those that are just Atlte-, Olllo 45'711.)
The picturea show fragments of
but no spiral galaxies.
piA"ica and tom and shredded au.be said, !ben: waa a colleciR)U(iinga with I1IIJed and irregu- lion of ' 'ragged objects" wilb no
Jar edges. Also seen are neat and definitive sbapc.
app~~~a~tly very old elliptical plaxThe new llubble finding adds to
ics
·
the scientific dcbllc about the aae
is in coottast to tbc y0111g, of the universe and the sun wltiJ!n
nearby
galactic
cl~ tbat can be
it. A Hubble atndy anooun~ m
by Bob Hoeflich
studied by ground telescopes, · October put the age of the IIDlverse,
astronomers said. These clusteis based on tbe measured ra!e. of
contain many spiral galaxies In expanalal, at 8 biUion to 12 billion
yean.
Thanks! My tltanks.aa well as then phoned to talk to her
thanks from many other residents Fred Bias, anotber Overbrook resiof Meigs County to !bose of you dent, sang tbe happy birtbday lOIII!
who have decorated the exterior of over the faellity- fntercom, wbicb
TAX SCHOOL
6696.
their homes so exteDBively for the pleased everyone.
A
farm
tax sdlool will be beld
And,
by
the
way,
Doris
and
Christmas holiday season. I wooder
CCC CAMP
where you 11et all the ener11y Eber, observed their 47th wcddin&amp; for Meip County farmers at tbc St.
Two
Meigs
County residents _:..
Paul
Lutheran
Church,
Pomeroy,
required. You make the world seem anniversary quietly at Overbrook from 9:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Frl~ Kelfie Neece of Middlepon and
so much nicer for tbose of us wbo Centet oo Nov. 30.
day. This sdloolla being IPCJIIIQI'ed Brad E. Haggy of Pomeroy just don't get around to making the
Before
the
Meigs
County
Big
by H &amp;: R Block and The Ohio . were were blrcd last month to wort
effort.
Bend Talent Sbowcaae fades too Stale University &amp;tension, Meif,a at tbc ble'lld CCC Camp ~
in ZMati State Forest.
Mrs . Jean Ables bas been far out of sight, let me thank you County. Scat&amp; may be reserved Y
Tbc Civilian Conservation
calling .the Meiss County Oft"lce at
returned to ber Pomeroy bome for your suppon of lbe musieai. 992
Corps
offers on-the·job training for
-6696.
·
from the Holzer Medical Center, Crowds were &amp;ood both nights and
men
and
women betw.een 18 and
Topics to be covered include:
where she underwent major a report will be issued on the fman24 years of age. Employees are
cial
sua:eu
of
the
abow
as
sooo
as
•
How
to
report
income/expenasurgery. Jean tbanb all of you for
hired for 12 months and start out at
your cards and prayen as well as the bills are paid. Botb lbe MelliS es in laqJe and small fiii'IIU, cape- minimum wqe.
Division
of
the
American
Heart
cially
on
vegelable
crops.
roadside
the visits. Thanks, too, to the
Pomeroy Fmergency Squad for the Association and the Mlddlepon markelinJ, .machinery sales and
IMMUNIZATIONS
help of squad manbers during ber Arts Council sbould come out well breedlngfmartet livestodt sales?
A
free lmm~ clinic will
·in the fmai countdown. Tbe two ~Payroll and payroll related
time of need.
beld
Monday
from 3 to 6 p.m. at
Visiting Jean and bcr husband, I!J'OUPI co-apo!IIOO:d the s!HiwJ«~ oi·99:4 tall Jaw cbanJe&amp; aDd Reed' s Country
Store. Cblldren
Tom, during Thank ~ ,iving week the second consecuti~ year. .
IX*Dtiai tax problems. ·
·
from
birth
through
middle acbool
were tbeir family carolyn and . The _two sponsonng orgiiJIIZII• Can investment/retirement are invited to lltelld.
Agustin Montanez of Arecibo, ttODI did present Rifts to Jennifer planning save you lax dollars?
The Hepatitil B VICdnc seriells
Puerto Rico; Agustin and Marcedes Sheets, wbo was rehearsal and
Speakers include Bud Carter, also available to ail children bgm
Montanez and son of San Juan, abow accompanist, and Paulette DiaCrlct Exteusion Specialist, F- after Nov. 2, 1991, a are flu sliOts
Puerto Riro; Marylyn Battle, a1so HaniiOII, wbo did all of the cbore- Management· Karl and Mary for persms 6S liiCI older.
of San Juan; Carolee Montanez of osrapby u well as planned the Kcbler, 0~ of the local H &amp;: R
The clinic Is provided &amp;r!e
Germany; Shawn Montanez of cianeers costumins.
Block. and Karl Kcbler, m. Kcbler Ohio University College .of
•
New Haven, Conn., and Todd
Botb Jennifer and Paulette _are Buaincss Services.
pathlc
Medicine's
childhood
Montanez of Milwaukee, Wis. It an absoluee delight to wort wtth.
immunlzation/roJram'i mobile
must have been a lift 10 Tom and 'lbettate the ball and run with it
VEGETABLE MEETING .
bcaith unit an the Ohio Depart·
Jean to bavc so mucb family com- We re lucky to bave people like
A
Winttz
Vegelable
Sdlool
will ment of Health in ll00prlllil011 with
these two in our mldat. Jim and be beld Mooday from 9:30 a.m. lo
ing so far to be with thCm.
Susie. Soubby, wbo are such faith- 2 p.m. at tbe Racine United the Meigs County Health Depart·
ment. Those lltelldinll are to take
Eber Lewis marked bia 79th ful WOitm, not (JI)y wilb the abow Metbodlst Owrdl.
their
chlltlren's sbot reecxds. ·
birthday Jut Sunday, Dec. 4, at but in 10 many other directions,
Topics
to
he
covered
include
It
wu reported that while 96
Overbrook in Middleport, where be were presented a gift for their con- growing llliiUilo tnDapllllts, collcc- percent
of cblldren arc properly
sistent vollmteer service. 1bey are liona, arowen. paoel on vlrletles
ia'a resident
vaccinated
anyHis Wife, Doris, beld a JlllllY in such great worken. Tbe aponSOl'l grown, worker protection atan- where frombyHkincleraarten,
to
3S
percent
of
bis bonor with ice cream and cake also preaeated "yonrs truly" also Jiarda. vegetable dlleasea and veg- cblldren, agea two and under are
being served to the guesta, wbidl with a gift.'I 'precialc the gesture.
etable production.
~ ·
not adequately _protected against
lllcluded residents and employees
Registration will start at 9 a.m. cbildbood dlscues IUdl u German
of O...tiblo'*- Tbe Lewis's daughThis is the S3rd anniversary of A SS fee Ia payable It that time; To meulea, mcules and whooping
tel, Janice Springer, who relidel in Pearl Harbor Day - Dec. 7. 1941. pre-register, farmen may call by
Woodlands, Texas, tbcse days sent Do )'Clll raDCIIlber? Do keep 111111- eail tbe extension office at 992- eoilgb, BCaJrdiDg 10 ibc Calttz for
Disease ControL
a bouquet of a dOzeD Jw!Ioons and illlRill graduated In 1994 from
Mala=. He graduated Ill 1993 ton, son ·of Wlncla Hamilton of
Soutbem
Local High School.
from
t Pleulllt HIP Scbool.
Coolville, recently completed
recrnlt ~nina at Parris Islalld,
Ropr L Neilan
IUdlard J, like
Aap1a M. Roll•
S.C.
Air Force Tcdl. Sat Roger L.
Navy Seaman Ridlard 1. Rice, .
Angela M. RolliDs baa COIIQIIetHamilton sraduated in 1994
scio of Clarenee and Pllricia Rice ed buie training at Army ROTc from Federal Hdcki111 Hlgb Nelson ;ecently paduated from a
non-coliuniuloned officer acade·
of Poini J&gt;Ies ·1, W.Va., Ia in the C.Op O.aJiense in Fort Knox. Ky. School.
my.
middle of a lix-moath deployment
ROllins, the daugbttz of Beman!
NciiQD Ia a maintenance enlli·
in the western PIICiflc lboard the and Clara Rollina of ~y. Ia a
RAIIIIrtJ,'QII
alrcnP't carrier U.S.S. Kitly Hawk. University of Rlo Gnnde lbldellt.
Navy seeman rccndt Robert J. neer technician at Maxwell Alf
WbiJe deployed, IUce baa vWt·
I
HID, son of Pbiiiip and Olri&amp;dne Force Base in Montgomery, Ala'.
ed Japan, Sou .. f{qrea , Hons
Stev• A.llaadltoa
HID of Syracuse. receudy complet- He is the son of Liela Nellon of
. Kqng, Singapore, Guam and
· Marine Pvt. Steven A. Hamil- ed buic lrainins • Chat Latea. m. Middleport.
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�pege-10.:.111e.DIIIy Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

WICinesdey, Dece11'1ber7, 1894

'

W~l'leldey,. December
7, 1994
.
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PomeroY-ulddlepon, Ohio.

Daddy's little girl turns into daddy's big disappointment
Deir A.. Lallden: After four
sons, my husband and I got the
daughter we looged for. 'Melinda'
wu the can-clo-~wrong apple of
her daddy'a eye.
Slu1ly before her 17th birthday,
Melinda and her 21-ycar-old
boyfriend. "'ke; came to tell tis she
wupregnantllllltheywantedtoget
married. My husband literally threw
Ike out of the house and forbade
Melinda to see him again.
Th~ next day, we made an
appomtmenl with a doctor to bavc
"the JIIOblem" talten care of. The day
berore the appointment, Melinda
- climbed out her bedroom window
and nn off with Ike. We received a
card two weeta later teUing us that
they bad gone to IIIOlher state aod

gouen married. There wu no return
atldreas.
My husband was furious. He
would not allow myone to mention
her name in our home. He told all
family members aod fiiends thal he
no 1ouger bad a daughteJ; only four
10111.

Wereceivedabirthannouncement
when , Melinda's daughter was
born -- no return address. The
postmark was from another state.
Three years later, another birth
mnouncement came - tdling us they
bad a1011. Again, no address.
Outoftheblue,wercceivedanote
from Melinda last week. She wants
us to come for a visiL "It's time the
kids met their grandparents, • she
wrote.

My husband refuses to goaod says
if I go, he woo't be here when I get
back. We arc now slcepina in
separate bedrooms, and he hasn't
spoken to me for four days. Our sons
refuse to take sides.
I bought my airline tickets this
morning. Alii want from you,.Ann,
is a hand to hold when I board the
pl~e. l need som~ne to tell me I~
domg the nght thmg. Please g1ve
me some courage. -- A
GRANDMOTHER IN POtU
WAYNE
DEAR FORF WAYNE: Here's my
hand to hold when you board the
plane. I believe you 11rt. doina the
right thing. I pray that your husband
wiD extend his. hand w~ you return
and that he w1ll open h1s heart and

Scholarship
program
established

By BRENDA C. COLEMAN

·AP Medical Writer

CHICAGO (AP) _

Binge

1
a1
dri_,_,_
WLWg a rampant oo moat a

third of tbe oadoo' s campusc;:s and wbere it prevails, sober students sutfer, a survey found.
"Stndents on campuaes where
there's a lot of binge drinking are
affected in a number of ways iDcluding pbysical assault, sexwil
barassmeot, paoperty damage aod
interrupted aieep or study time,"
said Henry Wechsler, director of
tbe Alcobol Studies Program at tbe
Harvard ScbooJ of Public Health.
His
surveyed 17,S92 stu•
denll on 140 campuses last year.
F'mdings appear iD today's J&lt;UDBI
of the American Medical Auocia-

ream

r•·

WEDNESDAY
PAGEVILI..B- Scipio Township Trustees meeliog 6:30 p.m.
Weduaday at tbe Pageville Towo·
ship building.
POMEROY Pomeroy
Muoolc Lodao 164 F.tAM will
illltall officalat ill regular meetloB at "1:30 p.m. Wecloeaday at tbe
Middleport lodge. Refresbmentl
Will follow.

_,
- - - - TlllJRSDAY
POMEROY - Preceptor Beta

speaker, a video, and ~ts.

Officers of the orgaoizatloo,
wbicb wu formed in 1993, are
Sbeets, president; Hal KneeD. vice
president; Karen Griffith, secretary;

Ddn Aoderson, treasurer; aod
Witherell, scbolarsblp cbairman.
On tbe board of directors IR Bob
Buck, Doug Hooter, Suzy Parter
Carpenter and Ridt Crow.

b'OI, by diet or - if necessary by medicalion.
Hypertension and elevated
blood cholesterol are a dangeroua
combination tbal. if untteatcd. cao
lead to circulatory disturbaoces,
beart disease aod stroke. Conaequendy, I'd prefer to. address (aod
cootrol) your pbysical disorders
before blaming yous problems 011
atress.
I gather from your statement
tbat you bave probably been prescribed a trauqul1izer or aod-anxiety drua, sucb as Advan. Sucb
.medications may be completely
appropriate ror you, but they
sbould ooly be used for a sbort
period - up to a mootb, perbaps
- because they are babit-forming

and cao, over time, affect your
memory aod other brain fimctions.
If, in fact, your symptoms are
tension-related, a more suitable
Iooa-term tberllpy Ia stress counaeliDg. Sucb counseling is usually provided by a meatal bealtb professiooal, who will reach you ways to
mluce atms aod cope with tensi011
more effectively. ·
I doo't blami: you for objecdng
to aod-slleal drugs. This Ia oonnal.
Make sure yous doctor is solving
your pbysical problems, THEN
cooaider counseling.
To give you more infOIIIIIlioo, I
am I!CIIdiDg you a free copy or my
Health Report "Help I: Physical
lliDeaa." Otber readers wbo would
like a copy sbould aeod $2 plus a

Forty-four percent of students
.......... biD in .. _.,_.... .....__
re...,.- Dlllgm g, ,_....,.. II uuwu•
ing five driDb or beers iD a row for
men or feu iD a row for waoen at
least oace in tile two weeks before • Bi gers were seven times as
tbe
survey.
n
Nilleleen pera!llt of all atudcnts likely to bave uoprotected sex u

«

Hender-Son birth
... announced
Jeff ud DtiiJDI Heailenoo
Mll(cJnl.
- -),farle,
'lllli)C die birdl
1 1'elf
Nov. 27

.-l -

:::.£ tNGnb

Hospital
TN lafut welshed elabt
.,...sa, l3 OIIDCCI aod WU 21

---··----Dive

llt , me' .
...
_.,,..wtaare
-Steve
. . t.dy lfCodriloD oll'clmemy.
p ..
"AID
fte1p1 d Blue Alb,

•

llld

Ann
landers

o,

o,

At The Co•ne• of
Gen. Nal'tinge• Pkwy.
and Pea•l St. • Middlepol't

A Cardinal- Affiliated Supermarket

uon-bluge drinkers, 10 times as
likely to drive after drinking aod 11
times as likely to fall bebiJtd in
their studies, tbe survey said.
At about one-tbird of tbe
scboola, more iban SO percent of
studelltlsurveyed were bingen. At
anotber third, fewer dull 3S percent
were biDgers. Tbe survey did not
Identify particular sdlools. .
Sober students at the beavydrinking scbools were much more
likely to endure abuse rrom drinking studenll dull teetotalers 'It tbe
lowest•levei driDking scbools.
At tbe beavy-:drioklns acbools,
sober students were more tban
twice 81 likely to be loaultcd. bit,
assaulted or experience unwaoted
sexual advaucea liaD clrlnting studellll.
.
Tbey were also aboo.t 2 112
times u likely to bave their study
or deep intmupted or thrir property damaged by driDken, tbe uvey
said.

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PETER.
GO'IT, M.D.

long, sdt'-lllldrelled. llllllped envelope to P.O. Box 2433, N'ew Yorlt,

iide.

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DEAR DR. GOTT: A receot
television program revealed bow
doctors can DOW go inside the 1111111
of empbyaema sufferers aod cleiD
out tbe IIICI to afford belter bleatbing. Are you aware of Ibis procedUre and die reaultl?
DEAR READER: Tbis technique, whicb makes sense aod
OOUid become ao enormous bmlktbrougb, Ia atlU experimental. It Ia
not gCDelllly pafonoed and is DOl
available to rant-11111-flie padeDtl
witb empbyaema, because it Ia in
tbe process of beiDB studied aod
perfeaed.

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available, I'll keep my readers
pol!lld.
..Flowers
.., Lo~
w;· Remember tbat emphysema is
From!"
worsened by smoking and can
often aucceaafully be treated with
broncbodilators (medicine that
•
opena tbe breatbiog passages) aod •
POMEROY
by suppltmental oxygeo.
cwl~4 NEWSPA·
FLOWER SHOP
PER
EASSN.
(For Informatloa oa how to
106 Butternut Ave. Pomeroy, OH
CO!IIIDIIIIIatle eiec:trenkally wltb
(614) 992-6454.
thla columnist aod otbers, CODtact America Oollne IJy c:a111na 1·
(800)433-6203
1100-81'7-6364, ext.l31,,)

--

Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma Pbi
LONG BOITOM - Faith Full
Sorority, aonual Cbristmas party, Gospel Cbun:b, Loog Bottom, dinTbursday at 6:30 p.m., bome of na aod ain8 Friday nigbt. Dinner at
Charlotte Elberfeld. Members to S;30 p.m.; Clark Family singers, 7
taktitems fm- 8a'enity House.
p.m.
11JPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers
Plaios Post 90S3, Thursday, 7:30
pm. at post bomc.

FRIDAY
POMEROY - Meigs Soilaod
Water COIISCIVlilion District Board
of Supervisors, 7 p.m. dinner at
Tbe Stowaway, Gallipolis.
POMEROY - Return JOIIIIIban
Meigs Cbapter, Daugbtera of the
American Revolutioo, will meet
Saturday at 1:30 p.m. at tbe

Pomeroy Library

SATURDAY
BIRMINGHAM - Burlingbam
Modem Woodmen, aonual Cbristmas dioner, Saturday, 6:30 p.m.
Turkey aod bam fumisbed. Tboae
attending to take covered dish.
Santa' s coming.
SUNDAY
CHESTER - Appreciation dinner, Olester F'U'C Departmeut Sunday, fire bouse. Take a covered ·
disb. EveryODC wbo belped during
year' s activities invited to atlelld.

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SAlE DATES DECEMBER 4 THRU DECEMBER 10, 1994.

spaniels,lM!ernmhnastlffs .~

Good
through
Sunday

'Complete Stock 40% off
Early Bird.SpecialThursday - 8 am- Noon
SO% off
Limit 2 per customrr

Tbe followiog people won
prizea in Middleport's boliday
giveaway in tbe secood week drawinK of five \VCt'l promotion.
Tbe winDen were,~ by
tbe oame of tbe paKli pating mercbaot, 81 follows:
Dairy Queeo. Larry Lallllemtilt;
Millie' s Rcstauraot, Kay Morris;
Inaels Carpet. Keith Pbalin; Fruth
Pbarmacy, Brenda Moore; Dan' a,
Cbad Dmcio; Valley Lumber, Bob
Pooler; Mill Strcell!ooka, Ludlle
Palmer; Trolley Station Crafll,
Judy Willlama; Vaugban's Canll- ·
nal, DonoaMalford;
Locker 219, Dlaoe Lyocb; B...
Clotbler, Tracey Smilb; Mill Bod
FaiJril:a; TCII')' Snider; lnacls Furniture, CaroiYD Beaver;·Jobuoo'a
Variety, Kilby Rice; Middleport
~blkilt sm. Cbarlca Roub;
Culliog Celllr, Lila ROUih; lilt
Bend Fitnea; Fred PulliDI; Acqoilidoos, Terri Smith;
F1nDcn Bank. L)'lllllootmao;
Westem Auto, Judi Cowao; Middicport 'I'miJblca, Nola Smith; GcuCIIII Tire Salea, Bob Speacer, JCIDa
Servlaw, Naocy Arnold; Claaalc
Cuts, Raody Riffle; Jobo'aon'•
Video, Patty Clark; GiDaerlmld
House, Scott PoweU; Middle~

Flower Sbop, Linda Rbodes;
Obio River Bear Co., Becky
Keams; Country Naturals.• Debbie
Jarrell; Furniture,oo T, Derek
GObert; Comer Restaurant, Shan·
0011 Wise; Quality Print Shop, Aoo
Kellner; Dottie Turner Realty,
Tammy Hysell; Foremao and
Abbott, Cody Smitb; McClure's,
Deoise Sbuster; and Peoples Billie,
Daoa Be11tz.
.

Christmas Cards
in Boxes ·

l/2 Price

-

Fruit Candles

Sou th er n Hrql1 Sclwol
St. Rt. 124 R;ICIIlP. Oil

614-949-26 82

Only 5

2.19

Lorus
Disney Watches

40%

I
I
I

- S·HURI=RESH
LARGE .EGGS

Parker Pen &amp; Pencil
Gift Set Reg. $9.98
Only$6.49
Pen only Reg. $7.so

$
FOR

ONLY $4.79
Charlie Cologne Spray

.5 oz. Reg. $11.50
Only s8.49 ·

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SHURI=INE - 1 · ~HERSHEY'S
SUGAR
1 BAKING CHIPS

c:

GRANULATED

c:

I

I'

ASS' T. VAR.
10-12 OZ. PKG.

DOZEN
CARTON

Desiguers lmpo~ters
F~agrance Body
Sprays

· 1.3 oz. Reg. $15.00

.5 oz. Reg. 99¢

Only'9.97

Only 69• ·

. Mon. thru
Sunday

-

off

1/2 Price·

Dr. Grabow
Pipes

30% off

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Jewelry
Complete Stock

Only 55¢

30% off

1/2 Price
Box of 2 Reg. $3.49

11111'~·; p:r~.r

Reg. 79¢

Various Size Bags

1.000 to choose from .

:1

Assorted Chocolates in
- - Santa Box~l~6-oz.-

Zippo Lighters

Thtj look &amp; smtlllilct real fru ·

KAR ENS
GREEN HOUSE

Russell Stover

Christmas Bows

Poins etti as
Ch ristmas Trrr s. Rtrlk
C:rr1dy. Crafts. Arnrsll
Jelly. Appl !' Butter.
C.111cly &amp; Jelly G1fts.
Handrnildc [3;lskcts

QUM111'1111G111'1USIIYED. lOT lf!IIOISIBLI RllmoGWHICAL 01 PKroiiAI EIIOIS. 111ITUIS NOIAVAIWILIIIII1 510115-

Timex Watches

0

According to dos experts, the
POMEROY - Salisbury Townsix
majQr sroups of dogs are greyship Trustees, Friday, 6 p.m at tbe
towmbip ball, Rock Sprioga.
- bounds, wolfhounds, bounds,'

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NY 10163. Be sure to mentioo tbe

As more ioformatlon becomes

Giveaway results posted

'I'E8811ENDD80N

A l=amiiV ownet111nt1
Operated Supermarket
OHering the best
ser11iee,
oualitv anti Priee, to the
People
our tommunitv

.,

Ill. 6061].()562 (ill CIJIU/da, $6),

·:1cn

lion

'----Community calendar
c--III&amp;J C.leodar ..
pabll..ed •• a free aenlce to
DOD•proftt 1roap1 wllhiDI to
auoaaee -tlap aad apeclal
naall. The eeleQdar Ia oot
daalaned to promote aalea or
faad nlaen of BDJ t:rpe. Iteau
.... prtated ...... )Nimlbi and
caJMiot be panoleed to run a '
lpedlk ......... ol days.

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Gem of the Day: The trouble with
talking 100 fast is lhat you msy say
something you baven't thc!vlht.of yet.
i.JJoki11g high aNI towfor 1ile perfeel slockillg s111jfrr? A1111 Ltwkrs'
new booklel, "A Collec1io11 of My
FavoriJe Gems oftile Day" is il. Seltd
11 se/f-aJt/Jyued, long, busiuss-sise
tllvtlopt and 11 check or mouy order for $S (this i~~elluks postage and
handling) 10: Col/eclioll, clo A1111
l..twkrs, P.O. Box 11S62, Chicago ,

were frequent blogera - baviDg at
least tluec bioses in tbe period. Tbe
five or four drinks did DOl bave to
be CODsumed witbiD a specific time
period to qualify u biDgiDs.
Bingen tend to drl~k for the
express ~ of getting drunk,
w~: Talbott knows tbe type,.
,Tbe fresbmao at Southero IUlnoia
University iD Clrboodale lllid offCllllpus t11n that IIR studelltl with
discounted pltcben of beer only
make matla1 WCJISC, •
"They've got all those specials
at tbe bars 011 weekdays, 10 that' a
everybody goes," Talbott
''They'D ccae in (the dclrm) at
2 or 3 in the IIIOIIIlog, and maybe
I'm actually ~g to get to bed
early dill DIJbt, ' be said. "Tbey'U
be runoiDs· up aod dowo tbe bail&amp;
aod stul[ 1"beo I can't et to sleep
If I've 11 1 9 or 10 ofclodt ~
tbe oext day, r~ Dot very happy... .

Symptoms should not be blamed on stress too soon
By PtrrER H. GO'IT, M.D.
DEAR DR. OOIT: About three
weeki ago I began to feel Ugbtbeaded and bad a dnJiing aenaat1011
iD my hands IIIII feet. I suffer frool
blgb blood preaaure aod bypercbolesterolemia. My family doctor
aeut me to a Jlcl!rologist wbo indicaled I sulrer frooiiii'CSS. I'm DOW
011 medk:ldon twice dally but doo't
lite lbe way I feel. Wbat do you
advise?
LEAR READER: Stress can
·certaioly cause tbe aympcoms you
delaibe. However; before blamiDR
this old cbestnut for your IiJbt·beadedoess IIIII dngiins, I'd waot
to be damed sure that your blood
JlfCIIIR is 1101111111 UJd your cboles1Cf01 Ia belDg brougbt under con-

··
'
.

Study finds drunkenness at college
makes sober students suffer

The Obio Stale University
Alumni Club of Mdga Couoty will
spDIIIOI' a SSOO Obio Stale UDiversity AIIIIDDi Scholenhlp for a hip
school senior living in Meiga
COUDty.
Tbe scbolarablp program is
iDieDdccl to provide RC10J1111ioo IIIII
financial as&amp;illallce to incoming
freabmen or uodcraraduate atudelltl.
AppiQdnaa for die ldlollnblp
may be obtained tllrougb couoaelon iD die tbree Meigs COUDty
higb adlool&amp;.
Tile dradJine for appllcadoo Ia
Jao. 25, 199S.
For addidonal iDformatioo studeatl may CODIICt Jeanie Witbelell
at 992-7789 or 1CIIIIIfer Sbeetl at
992-21Sl.
Plans are belog made for a
aellior reauitmslt Dipt 011 J111. 19
liaD 7 10 8:30 p.m at tbo Pcmcroy
Public Library. Tbere,will be a

in PlusiMqh two yearsaao, Melvin
took our 14-yca--old cJaushter to the
amuaement park and his mother
lll'lllged tollaveoneofhlsex-wives
moet him there. Our dlupt« couldn't
fiaure out who this WOIDIII was and
came home upect and confuaed.
Words cannot describe the
humiliation I have suffered at the
hands of this polecat. Knowing I ~ill
be free his made me feel tcmfic.
Please print my Jetter and give
courage to other women who have
been dumped. Let them know there
is life after divoroc. - STARTING
OVERAT.SOINFLORIDA
DEAR STARTINO OVER: I
admire your spiriL Please write again
in six months and let me know how
you're doing.

home to the new liu!e family.
Too many people wute 100 many
yearslockingeachotheroutoftheir
lives. Time is such a precious
coumodity. Lost years can never be
recsllcd. This lesson, 100 often is
lesmcd the bard way.
'
Dear Ann Laodera: I'm sohappyl
I've just lost 200 pounds. I'm
divorcing my husband.
1was "Melvin's" fourtil wife. In the
19 years we were married, 1 did
anythingandeverythingforhim.Two
rnonths ago, he kicked out the ICJWlt
who rented the upstairs apanment,
and he moved in with another
. woman.
And good riddance to mv
mother-in-law, 100. Get this, Ann.
Wbilc we were visiting my in-laws

R.
a:w a.m. to 9:00p.m.

a.m. to 4:00 p.m.

PRESCRIPTION
PH. 992-2955
E. Main FriArvtru Service Pomeroy, Oh.

...

Priced
Good Thru
· Sunday .
December
11

ADD'T. PURCHASE '4

__________ ... .

ASS'T VAR .
24 12-0UNCE CANS
L,IMIT ONE WITH ' 10.00 PURCHASE. One Coupon
I Per Family. Good Only at Var..ghan's Supermarkets. I

I

1119

I

u

.

.•

I •

\

�•

Page-12..:.The Dally Sentinel

••

. w.dnllday, December 7' 1884

Pom•oy-Middleport, Ohio

Porn.oj-Middleport, Ohio

B.D.- Wong finds work as an angel in 'ABC Afternoon Special'
By SCOTI' Wll..LIAMS
AP Tclevlsl011 Writer
NEW YORK 1AP)- B.D.
Wong, an actor whose Asian heritage bas shaped his career and
informs his craft, is downright
gleeful about his role as a "teen
angel" in lbursday' s "ABC Afterschool Special."
' ~ I was much more excited
about gettiDg tbis part tban almost
any other that I ever got,' ' said
Wong, a Tony Award winner for
"M. Butterfly" and a featured
player on the ABC sitcom "AllAmeriean Girl."
For once, Wong said, bls role
bas nothing to do with his identity
as an Asian man: He gets to play a

good-looking guy, rather than a
good-looldng Asial1 guy.
•'For once. the issue of etbnicity
is not a specter that's hovering
above the whole thing," be said.
In the special, "Magical
Makeover," Wong plays Johnny,
an angel who grants the wish of 16year-old Christine (Amy Hargreaves) to uansform herself in
hopes of gaining the atttntion of a
high school hero.
Christine awakes each day in a
new incarnation with all the
rew!K'ds and perils of each lifestyle.
J obnny t.ries to tell Christine
she's better off just being herself,
but her transformations stan to get
out of conttol and she realizes that

her feelings are changing toward
the angel.
"I bad the opportunity to play
sceaes, have saeen time and experiment without any specter of polltics or anything!" Wong said.
His agenda Is very much In
place for "All-American Girl,"
wbicb stars comedian Margaret
Cbo as a typical Soutbem California daughter of ttaditiooalist Korean-Ameriean parents.
As the only all-Asian cast In
network prime time, its. ~~~:tors feel
a "tremendous responslbUity" to
Asian-Americans, Wong said.
"We try to exercise that in our
discussions about character, dialogue, technical advice," be said.

Limited value for theatre programs
By ANNE B. ADAMS md
produced work for programs.
toes. Good recipes for canning
NANCY NASH-CUMMINGS
Photographic illustrations can tomatoes can be found in "The Joy
DEAR ANNE AND NAN: I also be significant "Often the real of Cooking" or "The Fannie Merhave some programs from the value of die program rests with the . riu Fa111Cf Boston Cooking School
Mettopolllan Opela, Carnegie Hall supplemental material printed Cookbook..''
and other New York City theaters inside," they say.
As for dleny tomatoes, we rectba1 are dalcd 1912, 1913 and 1914.
Paper collectibles are called ommend adding I teaspoon of
I would like to know if they have epbemera, and because the authors vinegar to C8l:b quart as tbis variety
any value to collectors. - REX don't list any cOllectors' clubs for is not as a~:idic as hytnd IOIJiatoes.
PATY, Cbichsba, Okla.
· theater programs, we tbiDk it would The vinegar won't affect the flavor.
DEAR REX: We turned to be worth writing to 1be Ephcrema
READER ALERT: Teresa F.
"Warman's Papa'" by Norman E. Society of America Inc. at P.O. Hanlon of Hat.sboro, Pa., wrote to
Martinus and Harry Rinker (Wal- Box .37, Schoharie, NY 12157 for tell us she used SOKOFF to
lace-Homestead Book Co., 1994). more information on your pro- remove baked·on grease from her
The authors say the market for the- grams.
stove burners. She writes, "I read
ater programs is very limited,
DEAR ANNE AND NAN: Do all the directions and warnings.
because as they note, •'Theater you have a recipe for canning cber- Then I covered the burners with the
patrons love to _save theater pro- ry tomatoes? - JEANNE YOW- product and put them in my Corean
grams."
ElL. Arlington Heights, Ill. ,
sink. NO! NO! The best thing I can
However, the authors sttess tbal
DEAR JEANNE: You follow tell you is tba1 it melted huge boles
It's important to check the cover the same recipe for canning dleny all over the bottom and sides of the
~ as often well-known illustraiOn
tomatoes as you do for other toma· sink. Corean is acry~c and. the bot-

"Your average actor doesn't have · my way. to be a successful actor i drawing moat of its comedy ftml
to do anything like thal. ... So tbis . bad to do with the color of my : the conflict between Asian and
other thing becomes an added task.
akin," lie llid. "I was justified in American culbl'e.
"That conflict Is very valid,"
''I want to empllaslzc that It's feeling dlit way becal•ac tktc realnot somelbing tball reaeut. or that ly weren't opportunities for me counters Woog.
"As an Asian-American, It's
any of ua reaeut· It's just aome!bing when I se,t out, but I became resentthat's not tberc when I'm doing a ful and bated myself for those very difficult to usume any one
part like Jolmny ."
things when, in fact, those things specific identity," he said. "David
As a teen growi,ng up in San became of great value to me, and Hwang (the 'M. Butterfly' playFrancisco, Wong experienced the allowed my work to become ... wright) calls it 'riding the bypben'
conflict between his parents' cui- greater."
- when you're from a cultural
ture and the American identity,
"lbal pain dlat I fell as a teen· identity that baa a bypllen in IL''
reinforced by popula' culture, mass ager wisblng to be a white peraoo
media and peer pressure.
was still validatc.t when I got 'M.
"I think the paena: of Asian''Those influences are very COD· Buuertly,' because I toot all of tba1 Americans on television ... is of
fusing," be said. "I know, because experience and put it in the play."
great value," Wong said. "I grew
!felt it"
. Some critics dismiss "All- up without having anything like
"1 felt everything that stood in American Girl" as lightweight, it."

ASK ANNE. NAN

A total of 40 donora, two first
time ones, gave blood during a
recent visit of the American Red
Cross Bloodmobile at the Meigs
tie said notlliiiij
Senior Cidzeu Center.
face."
Donors were as follows:
So, Dear Readers, take special
· POMEROY- Debra Mora, .
care if you have Corean counterS or Betty Lowe. Aladine Bam, Rebec·
sink, and call the manufacturer of ca Newell, Cyndl Kiag, David
an unfamiliar protlua so the same King, Donna ·Davidson, Jane Wal·
thing won't happen to you.
ton, Harriet Friend, Amy Yates,
Thank you, Teresa, for the Dan Follrod, Janice Davis, Mary
warning.
Spencer, Gerald Rought, Paul
Anne B. Adams and Nancy Marr, Maureen Hennessy and
Null-Cununlnp ue co-uuthon BCI1Iadetlc Anderson.
MIDDLEPORT - Patricia
of "Au Anae A Nu" (Wlet·
stone) md "Deu AIIDI md Nu: Arnold, George Harris Jr., Donna
Two Prize Problem-Solvers Hawley, Arleua Vanover and GloSllue Tllelr Secrets" (Banlllm). ria Peavely.
REEDSVILLE fonda
To order, caD 1 8GO 888 1220.

Thomas, Barbara Roush, Teresa
Talbott and Howard CaldweU Jr.
NEW HAVEN, W.Va. -Eddie
Bungarner.
RUTLAND ....- Marta Black·
wood.
RACINE - Marie Bush,
Charles Busb, Patsy Cornell and
Ivanna Lidcl.
LONG BOTI'OM - Henry
Babr and Lawrence Driggs.
MINERSVILLE- Kenneth
Wiggins.
SHADE- Willillm Cook.
LANGSVll.LE- FJiis Myers.
SYRACUSE - Kathy Cumings, Deborab Lowery and Velessa
Hunnel Pickeas.
The next bloodmobile will visit
Feb. 1 ftml1-6 p.m.

truth. Dana Carvey's simple-mind· despi~ themselves. 1be getaway is
ed character likes to slip small something else. Not ouly are they
objects in his overcoat, much like plagued by a blizzard, the local
HarpoMarx.
pollee and the FBI, they also are
The brother played by Nicolas pursued by two locals aiming to
Cage is uyiog desperately to go share in the haul, plus two escaped
straight. He manages a New York convicts who figure the bank's loot
restaurant, but his hopes are dashed was meant to be theirs.
with the arrival of his brothers.
The biggest hazard facing the
They persuade him to drive to brothers, or at least Cage, is the
Pennsylvania (a parole violation) generosity of the Paradise inbabion a humanitarian mission concoct· lants. They are so kind, so wholeed by Lovitz. What be really wants some, that' be can' l bear to spoil
to visit is a nice IIUle low-security their Christmas.
bank waiting to be robbed.
The ghost of Capa movies ~~
The Firpos pull off the job hovers over "Trapped in Par-

adise." George Gallo makes bis
directorial debut with an obvious
homage that ignores today's perceptions. Should three criminals
commit a felony and end up as
heroes? That's tough to accept,
even at Cinistmas. So are the comcidences that riddle Gallo's script
Cage helps bold the fa. ble
together with his familiar depictioo
of the well-meaning guy trying to
cope with an avalanche of events.
Carvey, with his heavy-lidded eyes,
puckered mouth and infant voice,
manages to get more tban one note
out of his character. Lovitz bas a

snug fit in his role as the relentless
liar.
Do the Uio seem like brothers?
Not for an insbmL
Standouts in the.IU)JI)OiliDg cast:
Madcben Amic:t ("TWin Peaks")
as Cage's love interest and Flo·
renee Stanley as the brothers' bat·
Jle-ax motber.
"Trapped in Paradise" is a
Twentieth Century Fox release produced by Joo Daviloll. Rated PG13, mild swearing, morality considerations. Running time: Ill miD·
Utes.
Motion Pictnre Association or

America rating defini•:
G - General audiences. All
ages admitted.
PG - Parental suidance suggested. Some mataia1 may not be
suitable f« cblldren.
PG-13 - Special parental gnid·
ance strongly suggesied for children under 13. Some material may
be inappropriate for young c:bil-:
dren.
R - Restricted. Under 17
requires accompanying parent or
adult guardian,
NC-17 -No one under 17
admitted.

Beauty of furs and ivory threatens survival of endangered species
By JEFF BARNARD
at the museum tracing the tusks,
Aaoct.ted Press Writer
teeth, skins, bones, feathers, fur
ASHLAND, Ore. (AP) -'A and even blood and intemal organs
Siberian tip skin graces the floor of wildlife from poacher to the tioof a Victman bunter's den.
· _ . phy rooms, gift sbops and traditionCobra beads mounted on the al Asian medicine shops where
toes of snakeskin cowboy boots people buy them.
.
stare out from a curio shelf.
lbe exhibit, called ''Beauty in
A bear's gall bladder sits in .the the Beast," runs through the wiDglass case of a Chinese II{'Otheeary. ter.
.
These are all strands m the web
''Tbe problem with it is it's
of international trade in wildlife. absolutely gorgeous stuff,' • said
That trade is responsible for 40 per- Lamb. ''You look at it, and everycent of the vertebrate species on the body says, 'Ooooob, I'd love to
endangered species list, said Ron have something like that' That's
Lamb, director of the Pacific what drives the trade.
.
!llortbwest Museum of Natural His. ''We're the problem. Not the
tory.
people who do the poaching. If we
Lamb bas assembled an eitbibit
·

didn't buy the stuff, they wouldn't
po&amp;~:b it."
The exhibits were assembled
from the warehouse of the U.S.
Fish and Wildlife Service Forensics
Laboratory. Python skins, elephant
tusks, crocodile purses and a
stuffed caiman situng in an easy
chair smoking a pipe.
"It's a big problem," John
Bnds, senior special agent for the
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service in
Washington, said of the illegal
trade in wildlife. :'It rivals the drug
trade as far as profit."
.
lbe museum says international
trade in wildlife goods amounts to
aS much as $5 billioo to $8 billion a

year. The biggest consumer in the
world is the United States, which
impor1s $1.2 billion a year in legal
goods alone.
For illegal products, the marlrup
is incredible. A born from the muzzle of a black rhino might earn a
pD8I:ber in Africa $50, but be worth
$40,000 to a dealer, Brooks said.
By the time it Ia grouad up into
dust and mixed with a potion (or
cure-all pills, the final markup
could be $100,000.
"Ironically, the smaller horns
are worth more, because they
believe the potency is fYliiiii'ICIC'I,"
Bndssaid.
Tbo belief that a person who

eats something from an animal will
acquire that animal's strength and

power bas created a demand for
wildlife products for traditional
Asian medicine for 4,000 years.
Chinese Ivory carving dates from
the Sbang-yin period, which ran
frooi 1783 B.C. to 1123 B.C. Trophy hunlinL was known in ancient
R.ome andosaomCd aa the tum of
the 20th centuty, when it became
fashionable for rich sportsmen to
go on safari.
"As long aa that tradition wu
practiced. primarily by affluent
mdividuals and tberc weren't 100
many of them, there really wasn't
any stress on ~ populalions of the

ABC nips CBS in weekly ratings race with 'Grace Under Fire'
. ..; ;:o TT WILLlAMS

tbe estimated 95.4 million TV
ABC's resurgence comes on the
CBS on Monday announced
· homes estimated by Nielsen. Share beets of CBS' victory during the t1uec new oomedics, starring Cybill
NEW YORK (AP) -ABC's is the percentage of sets tuned to a Nov. 3-30 ratings sweep- one of Sbepberd. Delta Burke and Robert
"Grace Under Fire," "Home ~ow or. network during a specific the year's three monthlong periods . Pastorelll. The shows will join the
Improvement" and "NYPD Dine" lime period.
. ·
of intensive audience II' uurement aetwork' s extensively revamped
finished 1-2-3 in the ratings, lead"Grace Under Fire" was TV's that enable local stations set ad prime time llcbednle the first week
ing the uetwodt to first place in the top-rated show, followed closely . rates.
of January.
weekly Nielsem.
·
by its Tuesday night lead-in,
ABC said it was No. I among
The Top 1.0 shows, their netABC llnded seven of ita shows "Home Improvement," the No. I· the key demographic group of works and ratings:
in the Top 10 and won four of the rated show for the 11 -week-old adults. ages 1849 f« a fifth coo• 'Grace Under Fire,' • ABC,
seven nights among llousebolds season.
secutiveNovembersweep.
19.~; "Home Improvement,"
and total viewership, acconling rat·
ABC's adult-tbemed police
ings released Tuesday ratings for drama "NYPD Blue" finished
the week of Nov. 28-Dec. 4.
third, and ABC's "Roseanne" fmOverall. ABC woo with a 12.2 isbed fourth. NBC's "Seinfeld"
rating and a 20 percent share of lbe tied for ftftb with CBS' "60 MiDaudience. CBS bad a 12.0 average utes."
mling and a 20 share, and NBC an
Amon¥, the nightly newscasts,
W . r e pleased to announce our
11.5 mling, 19 share.
ABC's ' World News Tonight"
Fox Broadc:asting Co.,.{lfOgmDI· won widl an 11.0 mtin2, 21 share;
specialists in obstetrics and gynecology.
ming only IS of the 22 prime time CBS' "Evening News'~'• was secLefr ro right are Jack Chan, D.O., Kenneth
boors, bad a 7.8 rating and a 12 ond, .with a 9.S rating, 18 share,
share.
and NBC's "Nightly News" a
' G)inrer, DO. (seated) , Catherine Coats, D.O.,
A single ratings point equals 1 close third, with a 9.2 rating, 17
JICCCCI!l. c. 954,000 bousebolds, of share.
and Jack Ramey, D.O. For more
; , · ·! ..:e•i.&lt;ion Writer

Schools to jump rope for heart
Students from Middk:port, Rut·
land. Bradbury and Hlli'risonville
elementaries wUI jump into the
fight qainst bean disease as they
J*ticipate in Jump Rqle for Heart.
· 1be ·event Ia aponaored by the
Americ~ Alliance for Health,
Pllysical Education Rcaeation and
Dance, and local .pbysical education tcachen, to benefit the American Heart Aaaociation,Meigs
CouDty Dlvlaion.
Students wW Ilk family, friends
and neighbors to SJXIIS« them fc.
JB1idpatlng in the education aerobic 1111
1be
will fund
the ~bean ::n:food vessel
research, public education and
community programs, such as
"Getting To Know Your Heart,"
Wbkh is Uled in the Meigs County
scbools. Moat of all, students will
lie actively ·involved in learning
about tbe'ir, hearts and bea:lthful
lifestyles.

Heart attack and st.roke are
America's leading cause of death,
·accounting for 49 percent of all
deaths in Meigs County. Jump
Rope. for Heart emphasizes to stu·
dents that you ean oever learn 100
soon about the kinds of things that
ean be done to reduce the risk of
heart disease.
Since it bCgan in 1979, Jump
Rope for Heart bas involved more
than 10 million teachers and stu·
dents nalionwide. By participating,
scboo1a receive'educalional kits f«
use by all teachers and pbysical
education e9uipment, as well -as
individual piizes for the students
colleclin&amp; pledges. It is just one of
many projects of the American
Heart Associatioo. For more information ,about Jump Rope for H~ \
educ8tlonal Hterllure, or other programs, residents may call the
American Heart Associatioo at 1· L - , - _
800-AHA-USA-1.

information pi~ call

(614) 593-2398.

ABC, 19.1; "NYPD Blue," ABC,
18.2; "Roseanne," ABC, 17 .5;
"Seinfeld." NBC, 17.1; "60 MiD·
utes," CBS, 17.1; "Frasier,"
NBC, 16.3; "Monda Night Foot·
ball/' ABC, 16.3; "~n," ABC,
15.9; "20-20," ABC. 15.3.
The game of dominoes is
believed to liave originated in Italy
in the 18th century.

animals," Lamb said. "But at the
present time, we continue that tra·
dillon, and lbere are so many more
people. Then it pull a tremendous
pressure 00 the wild populadon .••
A chart shows bow rlllno JIOPUlations have gone from 2.50,000 in
Igoo to 2,500 today. The numbers
of tigers and elephants have made
slmllar d«&lt;ines.
1be Convention on Internatiooal
· Trade in .Endangered Species. or
CITES, was establisbeil in 1973
and bas helped reduce po~~~:bing on
elepbants tbrou&amp;b 1 ban 011 internatlooal trade in ivory.
Now Open For
Christmas Season
Poinsettias-6 colors
Poinsettia Baskets
Foliage Baskets
Christmas Trees
For the loved ones Monument Sprays, vases &amp;
Grave blankets.
Hubbard's Greenhouse
Syracuse, Ohio
992-5776
Open Daily 9-5
Sunday 12-5

Cundiff's
Custom
Cut

EVERY THURSDAY &amp;
FRIDAY IN DECEMBER
Select Members of the
Female Review
FANTASIA

Maplewood lake
St. Rt. 124 ..-,
Racine, OH

Cal949·2734

Will Be Featured At

2

'•

In Memory

. 5

Happy Ads

In Loving Memory
of SHERMAN I.
ROBERTS, who
passed away
December 7, 1982.
As evening shadow•
drsw near
My thought&amp; tum to
the one 10 dear.
We didn't went to lose
you,
But you a lowly
ellpped away.
We will meat again In
e better place aome
day.
Sadly mined by wife,
Dorothy, and eons and
daughter and families.

-·

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
•New Homes

oGeragee

Lord~,

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Remodeling 1
StOp &amp; Campara
FREE ESnMATES

. 915...73

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asupermarket
for everything

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Legion Post 602
Now having Bingo
every Sunday Night
S1artlng 6:45 pm
Doors open 4:30 pm
The more people
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Save ad for 1 free card.
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COLUMBUS - The thieves who stole a 7-foot statue of a
founder of the Ohio State UniYCQity College ol Medicine thought
they were geUing a statue of PresideD! Jamea Garfield. a pollee
detective said.
•. .
Daniel B. Zacks. 3S, of Columbus. was cblried Tueaclay with
receiving stolen popaty. Pollee said be was involved in the lbeft of
the 115-year-old brvazc atatueof Dr. Samuel Smitll in laic October.
Burglary Detective Clyde Schultz said two or three otben may
be charged in the QIC,
''lbef thought
were getting a atatue of Prealdent James
Garfield.' Schultz · . "It's aobenvy that it wonid tate that many
people to lug it around.'·
Zacks was scheduled to be anaigned today in Fnmklin County
Municipal Court He baa an Jqlllblished phone 1111111ber mel could
not be reached to awnmenl
.The bronze statue was taken fnxn outside the Cobmbus Health
Dep!I1JDCilt and sold to an antiques dealer in Atlanta, dlen resold to
a dealer in Durham, N.C., for $6,800.
It was confiSCllted by Durham pollee.
Columbus city officials estimated the statue's value at $25,000,
Schultz said.

:eJ.

992-7162

992-5251

Doug .

John

tft-4119AI-rr.-Owiirt--291·5600

· Oat Step Ct11pltte Auta Btiy Repair

(FREE E&amp;nMATES)
V.Cf. YOUNG II
192-6216
Pomeroy, Ohio

PRECISION
AUTOMOTIVE
"

Chuck StOtts

1110'121n

614-992-6223

Free Estimates
Insurance Work Welcome

BEST RECEPnON

For die best in sateDite
sales and service contact
Bryan of

_

~·

StateRt.33

. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~

CHRISTMAS TREEs ··

•

·~

Darwin,Ohlo

Best Reception.
-We have even better
and quicker service.
·Over 10 yrs
experience
· Service on all system

BUDFORD'S

FRESH CUT TREES AVAIUILE
OR CUTYOUR OWN

1-

CraftShop ·
Located on Cherry Ridge: From Rt. 33, tum East
Bat Darwin onto Rt. 681 . Go 4 miles to Cherty
Ridge Rd ..1 112 miles to tree farm.

MODERN Slfllfi,OI
POMEROY, OHIO
Septic tankl cleaned 6 portable tollell mnted.
Dally, weekly &amp; monthly rental !'Illes.

types.
• Best prices all around

the area.
992·2903 or 992-6320

WATCH FOR SIGNS. 10:00 am til darl&lt; Nov. 2511w Dec. 24

Wa on rides Fri. Sat. Sun.

Job Illes • Camp Sites • Family Reunlona 1 Plllles
NOW OFFER IN G G ENERAL HAULING

In Loving

Suspect charged in statue theft

Resident and Small Electrical Repair
(Lamps Welcome)
Home Repair Also

*VISff OUR SHOWROOM•
110 Court St. Pomeroy,.PW.. ·
"I~Jor.the Red ii)il' While Awning"

CARPENTER SERVICE
oRoom Addition•
oN- Glrsgea
tEiactrlcal l Plumbing
-Roofing
tJntertor l Exterior
Painting aleo concrete
work

Tree Trimming and
Removal- Yard Care
Free Eslimales
614·992-4447

Ohio News in Brief:

ELE£'1~1£

OUR PRICES WILL
NOT PUT YOU
·'
· IN A STATE OF SHOCK.

·• Cuato• llade
' Solid vinyl
i .
replacament
windows
i Fre.e Estimates
• $200 Installed
Call For Details

711 South Third
Middleport
Houra: 10:00 A.M.
to 4:00 P.M. Dally

F&amp;A Tree Service

Wife, Ora,
children,
grandchildren a
great-grandchildren.

O&amp;E

'i ·

NEW &amp; USED
ITEMS

lnllemory

Memory Of
LEONARD
BASS
Dec~ 7, 1991.

HappyAds

H11pPJ4ot.Ja
·Birtlulia1
Meliss11!

· -··

•aurr ....,..,,.,,••

IIDWD,III

YOUNG'S

BINGO

THE SOUTHFORK INN
SHOWBAR

40 donors visit Red .
Cross bloodmobile

'Trapped in Paradise' offers alternative to typical Christmas vacation
ByBOBmOMAS
Aaoclated Prell Writer
"Trapped in Paradise" suggests
an unu&amp;ual way to spend Cbristmas
Eve: Rob I blllk.
Tbal's what the fumbling Firpo
brothers do 011 a cbllly day in Paradise, Pa., a village preserved via
time warp from Frank Capra
movies. The townspeople are so
kind and generous that even bank
robbers ean develop consciences.
Two of the brothers have just
been released from the slammer.
Jon Lovitz plays a schemer who
bas never been known to tell the

DEER CUT &amp;
WRAPPED

Limestone, Sand, Gravel and Coal

ANNOUNCEMENT

WE HAVE A·l TOP SOIL FOR SALE

UcenHd I Bonded

rs e

20

Now Accepting New Clients

len

DENISE L.BUNCE

992-3954
Ernr•gcn:y Phonr&gt;

'IWi-1~

18

,

•t

AnORNEY AT lAW

.

-

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

3 Announcements

~

(above Bank One)
~
Tel. No. (614) 992·5730
General Practice of Law including:
Divorces, Real Estate &amp; Business 11111 11 mo.

· Nf\V Homes • VInyl Siding New

Feeney Bennett
Post128
SHOOnNG MATCH
BAILEY RUN RD
Time: 1:00 p.m. Dec. 11
Factory Choke Guns

Garages • Replacement Windows•
Room Additions • Roofing ·

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL '•
FREE ESTIMATES

.,._

614-992•7643
(No Sunday Calls)

Gunman
surrenders
to police

--....

- ·-

-- . .

.

RIHS

PAINnNG &amp; CO.
polnllng. 1..L-'

,. do It lor

ycML .._., _ ....

Free Eatlllllllu

Before II p.m. IMve
rnll'l lg&amp;.

~6p.in.

114-IIIS-4180-

11/211'9t

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS
Specializing In Cul10m
' · Frsme.Jtpalr ·
NEW &amp; usliPARTS FOR
ALL IIAK~h IIO.DEL-6

Tue=~ Lee Henderson, 36, of
' . .fl2·5553 0~
CHB..LICO'IliE- A man who admitted ldlliDg bis wife and ber · Troy, tOOt no hostages and made ·
TOLL FREE 1·100·141·1071
boyfriend said at 'bis sentenCing dial be was still in love with her
no demands before he was forced
DARWIN, OHIO
when he shot them.
from the room by tear gas, pollee
7.131111 TFN
''At the time of the shooting, I was as much in love with my wife
said.
as any husband ever bas been," Wayne Snyder Jr. told a threePolice were called to the 11·
judge panel Thesday in Ross County Common Pleas Coort.
story motel after receiving a report
Snyder was senteoced to life in prison. The judges ru1ecl be must
of shots being fired. Police
serve 30 years without parole. He also was IICIIteDCCid 10 11111dditlon·
spoktsWIIDllll Cbelley Siebelt said
al three years for using a band~ in the ~·
the suspect fired two sbota through
Judges Nicbolas Holmes, William Corzme and 1'hiiDaa Geiken
his door when officers got off the
found Snyder, 3S, guilty of aagravated murder in the alayings -of- --elevator oo the eighth floor, leading
Sherrie Snyder, 38, and Brian Bloascr, 30.
to the standoff.
Snyder pleaded guilty to all charges on Nov. 28.
Ms. Siebert did not know bow
Snyder admiued aboolin&amp; Mrs. Snyder and Blosser 011 Feb. 3 in a
many shots were fired duriag the
Joel. S.yre
parking lot behind a bowling aney, He aw•eoclc:ml mimMel after the
nighl Henderson fired II least 14
ldnings.
times out the window and through
SAYRE TRUCKING
his room door at about 2:30 a.m.,
sbe said. He surrendered after
614-742·2131
Ohwmfonnmwnnowonne~ork
police fired tear gas into the room
COLUMBUS - Users of Internet computer network can now
four hours later.
-· . . . ..
get informalion about Ohio in words, pictures and JIIIPblcs.
As police looked through Henlbe Internet Ia an intematlonal system of computer networks
derson's motel room for evidence
Howard ,L. Writesel
linked by telephone lines tbrough universities, the aovemment,
Tuesday afternoon, ~enny Gwin
.ROOFING
COOipllliea ad private users. It is accesalble to 29 mi1liOD people.
examined the five. bullet boles in
. The vehicle for Ohio information Ia USA CityLink, 111 oo1ine
the steel door.
NEW·REPAIR
service thal provides information about 17 cities but is explllding 10
Gwin, 40, of Memphis, Tenn., is
Gutters
100 cities and states. (:lncimali also is I*t or CityLint.
helping renovate the DIOICL He said
The information was COOipiled by CityLink from material availDownspouts
be was on the lOth floor when he
able through the United Nations trade point center, 1 computer
beard the shooting. He called the
Gutter Cleaning
clearinsJioUIC linldng Columbas and 47 sites around the world to
front desk and was told to Slly in
promote intematlonal trade efficiency. Columbus Is lbe only trade
Painting
his room and lodt the door.
point site in the United States.
. ·
"When you bear there's a nut
FREE ESTIMATES
Carol Blake, president of Blake .t Associates, operatotl of
with a gun, you do what you're
949-2168
CityLink. said the service is provided 11 no additiODal chlqe to
.told," Gwln said.
llti/MlfN
· Larry DeCaio, a motel security
internet users or the state.
_,...~
gulld.·sald ~ IIi every room on
Ooors five through nine were nod·
DAVE'S
ficd by police.
.
Hunget said only two other
SWAP SHOP
rooms on the eigblll noor were
01'111. tnlle out
occupied 11 ~ time. BIQ rooms
1u frolll Rt. 7
were evacualed.
Tuel. • Wild. • Fri. • Sat.
· Police cbarlcd Hendenon with
1-6
two comus·mlelonioas uaau1t and
• Cl'lfii!IIIR Tools
one count ol hiVIng wcapoos lllder
•Toya
disability. He also was held on 1
•Guns
felony warrant ftml Miami County
Loacllrof Mlac.
of receiving stolen property. He .
Buv-s.Jt.Trade
was being held IIi the Mootgomery
992·2M011W/1 mo.
County JaiL

Not you. your home'
Will create a new
look for any room
us ing your
collectables and
treasures.
Bring new warmth
into your homes for
the Holidays .
Phone 247-2206

-

HAULING
Uinestone
&amp; Gravel

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

.......

,l

j

.. . -

--

'

Kenny's Auto Rental
Kenny's Is the place to come
when you need a car rental.
We 1111111 C11rs 1111d Vans!
Kenny's Auto Centar
264 .Upper River Rd.
Gallipolis, OH 45631

1·800-486-1590
Bus. (614) 446-9971

..

'

.

Morrison's Heating &amp;Coohng
Sales Service &amp; Installation

'

FACE LIFT!

112-ftllO~

... ,_

.... .'

. CHRISTMAS TREES
Choose and
cut your tree.
(or we'll cut~ for you)
Riggs Tree Farm.
39507 Rocksprings Rd.
(at corner o1 US At. 33)
Pomeroy, Ohio
992,5702
Carol &amp; David Riggs

T.U .,. poln out of

Convicted sh~oter gets life

·- ·· - ..

UNDA'S
l1terior &amp;
Exterior

DAYTON (AP) - Employees
and guests of a downtown motel
waited anxiously for pollee to close
in on a gunman wbo wu firing a
gun ftml his eighth-Door roan.
The apprebensloo gave way to
relief early Tuesday as police
forced the man out witb ll!a' gas.
Days Inn Manager Lori Hunget,
who spent the 11-bour IC!!IIdolf at
the motel's front desk, said police
calmly bmdled the standoff.
"I'm just thankful everyone is
safe," Hungctllid.
No one was injured in the standoff that began at about 7:30 p.m.
Monday and ended at 6:SO a.m.

-- ---- -

105 ~nd St., Pomeroy, OH.

..

Ill' I
IPPLIIICI
SUVICI .

ForAilMajf,
lr•••
Ust.AppU.ICII

Your Total Comfort Assured Dealer
Low Rate - Financing Available
Call Today for Free ·estimate

(614) 992·7434
Alltllorlwd Amnic•n St.nUI'II U..ln
1111112:

TREE TRIMMING
AND REMOVAL
Ugllt Hauling,
Shrubs Shapped
and Removed
~ Mis.

:Jobs.

Anno uncements
3 Announcements
IEET NEW PEOPLE
THERINWAY
TOOAY

,_!_.t~321~SCIOGCC Ell!. 2101, -

.. 11 y,. 12.11 Per llrn. Proc.a

co. - - -·

Bill Slack
992·2269

forS.Ie

Cell
614-992·5515
1C&gt;'11111n

FORKED RUN
SPORTSMAN
CLUB
Starting Sl•l
Mate•••
Friday, lov. 11
6:30

s....,, lov. 13
Part CocW llllll!llle. 3 1!1. .....

1:00

1 buff, 114-MNI32. .

..

CHRISTMAS
TREES &amp;

WEill'S
CIIISIIW
liEU

WREATHS
Ready Nov. 23
$10&amp; Up
Open 10am ·9pm

&gt;aM SaowtiH'I Let
S.l. 124

htleM,OIIIe .

RUTLANO,OH
Homegrown-Carefully
Sheared Scotch &amp;
Willie Pine 4' &amp; Up with
a great selection of
larger trees.

Call742-2143 or
742-2979

614-742-3051
'.

.

SmoN ~wory
lrlondly I
..,... wllh
to a good

fiamaonly,

6

Lost 6 Found

-

: - l o n Plok.U. AI

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

Ylclnlly: - . c.l! A}:
til' I Rll.l14 Ul 1311

~: ·=· ~
-liM,--.
VInton:.=
"-''t
I

-

On IZI,

llaf.

I .

�I,

..
.'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

NEA ·Cro11W'ord Puzzle
ACROSS

PHILLIP
' ALDER

m

BEATTIE BLVD.TM by Bruce Beattie

•

0

~N' CARL YLM by Larry Wrfaht
eK9532

llollllo_.__.....,

0

I' IJihi,IU 1413111.

•

....

,,

llollllo
..,._-IIICI
tor .... In
_
, .- ...,._
..,. fnchidod, mtlllltle,
~ luot 10 lllltM• fram

0

=1117::::.---.""'T:-,.,.--,AIII-:-'.....,-.-:-1· ":
13,111111, ._......
' ,

Alhono, IIWtN!ft

1111- _

Mercnand1se
51

.....

... 4

-~~.
nu.

HousehOld
Good•

•

K107642

:=: ~ :

" '

'

10 5 4 3 2

1110 ....... ~4o-, ;
Bllahl . . _ To """" Fendlr, •
13,100, 114-41UIIZ.
',

-Uo..

.

-- ·

111ndolent
18MM11ng
21-Angeles
22 SlngerAcl8mo
24 Garrulouo
21Crylng
30Now--me
down to aleop

49!!:::;
lhlwtm.r

52 Compua pt.
53 lluu of poetry
54Regrwt
55 Elevation&amp;

(abbr.)
56 Ranted

57 Canine cry

DOWN

31R~

SOUTH
eA J 10

32ChiMU
phllooophy
33 Superl8llw

+K 10 9 8 5 f '3--.)
eQ 7 6
G

34 Rodent

·-··

111:1 !'old TIIIIPO, _PI, Pl,,5!..;
W!Y•
'"".
lltlngN;,
ptlrall
' ••

ending

1 Flnnloh first

nama

2 Flying ......,.

3 Vec:lllato
4 Stylllh

5 Evoluote
&amp;Poem
7 Baker'&amp;
p&lt;oduct

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South

WHAT
ARE YOU

New cond., ....... ~~- ..
......... no,........,....._

"She wouldn't stop sulking till we put some
lights up on her house, too'"

EAST .
8Q 7 6
vAJB53
+Q 7 2
eA K

8 4

·91Deei'hldo
1 Tile""
4 Lel8hill
38Uflle olelllntlr"'m""
• IINitldut lood 401.Mftln41 Nlltlvo of (oufl.)
12Pri-'l
42WIII40..-!
45Booed
13WII'IIIenMI
14 Wldl aholalzor 48 Wlihout enc!
15Gangater
1
durtng
17 Bern8111n, lor
oltort

vQ 9
tA J 6
eJ 9 a

35 COIIntry Of
Ewope

South
1t
2+

West Nortb
Pass 18

Eut
!NT

2V

3V

38

4V

48

Pass

Pass

5•

Dbl.
Dbl.
Dbl.

Pass

UP TO?

Pass

Pass

Opening lead: • 6

Read one,
·play in one

Old .,, -

..............
- w..

-·

0o1t Hll 8 - Truo!dnll eon..
PMY ..... Paof ulaMI orR

on.... Duo ToE= 8or-

llghlon, .........

..__

-~.!!
Drtvor.
Will
bmlngo
•

_ . . Ilona• ... nrag h-.
ondOoltr llotlln,
...._.Tnli
__ • - :

on..,."Who Tile Prldo In Tltolr

•••lpm.

Jo1to And Willi To Work For A

Wllllod To luy:

~... Autoo
Wlh Or Wll- llo4on. Coli
Lorry Uwly. 1141. I !II.

=

~
~ Plld: AI Old U.S.

Gold

c:=.Rl'ft.'t:

111 -A-Goll(tlollo.
WI- To B u y : - To Bur

._

ijiC:w....
ilx:"n~~rn
Loolllna
For ~Priirollllooollliollarollll

Wlnlod to bur: 1. . '"""""
221 lull OOI'IIUII 4o-wtlall• lor
poole. :14J4.17S.- or J04.4II.
11114,

0:

~l!.m.~-=
111113 lllono I P.ll.; Aa• I P.ll.
Colt 114-241-1304.

PorHirno

bookuJ.. llo~r

5t..,...':.:'*-~ ':l
-Con All-....

to adVentse "any pralaA111C8,
limitation or discrimination
baaed on race, color, religion,
sex familial status or national
origin, or any Intention to
make any such prelerenct.
llmlta~on

or discrimination.•

This newspaper will not

1

T~E'f RE SI-IOWIN6 PICTURES

OF f.IU6E SNOWFLAKES ,.1'\.,.u,.,,
6ENTLV ON Tl-115 BEAUTIFUL
SNOW COVERED MEADOW ..

a l1drooJR lloMie Home,
In Tho Qolllpallo
....... . - 2 4 f t No

...... -....w-

knowllngly accept
advantsements lor 1881 estate
which Is In violation olthe law.

IOW7WGA.

Our readers are hereby

SWAIN
FURNITURE. U

AUCmON I

are available on an equal

31 Homes for Sale

Olivo 81;, Qolllpolle. New. Uood
lurnlllft,
~....... :Ill.
- - ..
Workboolo.l

TEA I P.ll.

loco!, ........,IIICI_

l!dtnlnlot..tlvolncl _ , . . , llllltln. lllnlrnult!-dlarM In Eaanomlo
...... ..... ..... oqulpmont.
11-.g, · s..- lnqutrloo ....,. · - -llelll •ioli,
- . or .......
eaul¥111001'~
.,...._
rnurno
whh
_...,
,..
COIIIIUNITY CABLE
quiNmont•: 8ol C40. ·c/o Pl.
PI-nt
81"
E/ITRY LEVEL..._ ~Win­ PI.Pioaoni,'WY
tot. Wo llorbl All ~ 01
WI- CABLE TV Syottt111.
W• Will Por y., Evon Whllo
Tl'lllnlng For A Hlgllly Pold Sol•
-

....,., """ loot guhorlot lo
!ann cowtlry ond rilcll bond,

Roalot•z: ......

-·

Nnl.-••ldooooll.RIIon· llghl.

liable twon. In tho CCIInlryWIIor, gttrbogo IIICI D-Alhlnl, ~10
...,_
fram
o1ort1ng ot U40-

Korr,OH41441.

""" ol
lnd~.
Aooll4
"' ...
11011111on
otditlna
lnduolry.
lklll
hove
u
"ori
111C1
...,.. OOIIIIIIIII!Ioltlon IIIJtto,

-=-- ·•*·
-

w

=

......... _doalltllhlo

.-.- .......

-.AoliWIFilodiiiCI

JACK TONEIUJTE OR
VITATAIS. DollolcM Mlppleo

.,

~YIIMtln.

12 rtorlll, Llloull Rd.

Smol Locol Flm S.ldna Full
Help Wanted
Tlrno /On Col Cleotllng ,.......
AVON I AU .._. I Shlrtoy nlclone. 111101 II DIDindeblo.
SpooN, S04-I'lll-14211.
lloopoMible, Comrnldod, ~Toll Ttl-lend
R - To SQCI P.O. loll AI,

11

--1nc1-a-•
-of
""""'""'-· Uooto---

·--

YI'RA FURNITURE
t IIU. c:M Rl. 141

211 8 J ...... llollllo . In
Nloo lllttlna. AI Roolno. Coli
At 'IIUI2.-, Or 114Cor IIIZ.QG.
ar......... -...., tor

I I t * - ~~ege 1 z
- c . . . ~m.=rJ!

'(OV CAN SEE
THE SAME THIN6
R16HT NOW IF
YOU 60 OUTSIDE ..

1'1111 ,.... • I'll ........ 2411
......... Aft. P!M.m,

Informed that al dwelling&amp;
advenlsed lo this nawspaper

CorGI
llaU014,
.......llcCIIIIIn, -

•••

PEANUTS

opponunty basis.

111101 have High dlpiOIM
OilS.
Uood- - · · - Inti 1111 18yla or - · ~ to
Wlnlod: lllndlng . . - . colt - wllh - I n Cou~ with •ualo,.._.... dll114 11:1 1010, all lor llandr.
obltftiOHo
•11r
living oklltL- For -.............

Ernployrnenl Serv1ces

All real estate adVenlslrg In
this newspaper Is subject to
the Federal Fair Housing Act
ol 1968 v.lllch tnakes MIllegal

::~:.~ S@~4llA~~£~s·

52 Sporting Goods

114- 351 IIAIINUII ~E MOO;
NIOI I or I ..._.. IMbUe 1Mc251 1311.
. _ In -port, ........
Colt AR-11 H-lllr rtfte • ' mount I ...,. cllpe. 304-713On Lind Conlrlol z 5311.
For-1n-"-~-­ ltJ.-, Nllllllll au Fill"
- - . . ... 114121Zor ..... In Clilllpolio,l1t 141 ::1003 54 MIIC8IIaneou.
IU IIM21..
.
HP.II.
Merchandise ·
liege For . . ~ Ownor. 44
Apanment
~od AI II Hllill Dlfve.
17
liP Or-, riding - ·
FollvW SubdlviMn. · hhlnil
~ - . SIICIO, .,.....
for Rent
!lflr!o1i
Vollov P~V., CanvMIIrt. Gulli
_...a ad 1 lnd 2 bedroom ..,tmenl..
Coli 114-141-'111111 Doio: Or .,.. lumlohad ond unlumlohad, 1111 1111 CoN 8IJd
t41 eta E..tnp a"WH~ranca
llW ~. OliO - . Nqulrod, no 171-2072
oft•I:OOPII.
p14o,l1t
••

- Or ...
Or.--,

..,... eo.

tn p1ono. - . . . ,
~'!!!.!.!!I. to .........
~-a.-.,.

' &amp;oleo Ellporlon.. IS HOI' ~

::

I

BEIRNLOSER
~

Pal WINKLE. I~ 'MIT .,

foJ.L RIGHT, a~ ...
~7R.\ WHO CAA TELL
/#C. WAAT
PE:RIIoJINI(L£ I~?

Farm Suppl1es
&amp; LI'Jeslock
81 Fann Equipment

~~-~liD~~
~CWITH"ffi£
R.YI~6 50011i:li:E.l.

I

' • I I . Is
. . . 1
. .

I!

~· courage the new guy who had
_ been booed by the audience.
'Don't be discouraged,· he told

-L---,1

...,-G
-E-W-G-I
the fellow, "one laugh far out~_:;_:...,;.;__:;.,..:..;....~;....l weighs a hundred •• - • - • •

1 • - • Fumlohad Ao4. All
Utltltloo Pold EJIOtlll Efoctrtc.
PIIYIIo Porldna. Loj:otlan 111 t....cta.

t200 4100 PER
WEEK TO STARTI

r~ -

0

73 Va,.. &amp;4 WD't

_.. , =

EARN FROII

Some years, the' book about the pre. vious world championship bas yet to n•...-l,...._-1-appear by the time the next champl·
onship has commenced. Happily, that 11....--1~-1-­
situation did not arise this year. The
victory of the Netherlands team, the ll..ril---1-youngesl ever to win the Bermuda II-....1......1Bowl· (average age 32), and the fourth
-consecutive U.S.victory in the Venice
Cup are recounted in a book available
CELEBRITY CIPHER
from Baron Barclay Bridge Supplies
by Lull Campos
(800·274-2221) for $27.95. It makes inter·
c.letlrily Ciphef tryptograms .,. Cf'N!Mi fn:m quatlitioN bV fwnout people, put Met pr....-.t
esting reading, particularly for re·
Eld11ertei in !he ciphar !Ilardi tor analtw. Todlly'sc:Jc..-: X.,.,. K
searchen of the game.
This deal from the Venice Cup final
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the United States and
Germany had some instructive points.
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At the other table, Karen McCallum,
West for the United States, made a
H Y S ' .W
G L M W Z • '
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weak jilmp overcall of two hearts over
South's one-diamond opening. Not
DLWUPIX.
everyone's.choice, but it workedwell
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I know when I've really made n when nny name io in
here. She ended in live hearts doubled,
making with an overtrick after a spade 1 tho LA Times crossword puule.'- (Brady Bunch's) Eve Plumb.
lead and diamond switch at Irick two.
In today's auction, when West
1
1
showed length in hearts with bids of
two hearts and four hearts, ·why was
ltllt..r ~ CLAY I. POUAII .......;;__ _ __
East doubling everything? Why wasn't
she raising hearts?
Roorrongo letters of 1M
four scrambled words be.
Against ftve diamonds doubled, West
low to form four words.
led a heart. The declarer, Sue Picus,
ruffed, played a diamond to dummy's
ace and finessed her spade 10. Next
VASLIH
canie the spade ace and East retained
her queen (though I don't Utink it mat·
lered&gt;. .Declarer continued spades,
neutralizing East's trump queen and
making her contract The United States
gained 18 international matchpoints:
one-third of its winning margin.
The moral is: Play the card you are
~----------~ ~
known Ill hold.
T R0 T E
The older comic tried to en-

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then vou must watch YOUR STEP!"

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to state your zodiac s~gn.
',
I blinders and evaluate the situation car&amp;,
CAPRiCORN (Ooc. Z2.Jen. 19) Resist fully.
seWish Inclinations today. II you don\ a CANCER (Jt11112Nuly 22) Treat others
friend may let you know exaclly how kindly today even wthey deal with you ih
he/she feels about your sell·serv111g man· a cool, calculating manner. ,W you match
ner.
•
their negativity, il'll be twiCe as hard to
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fell. 1II) StriV( to get bacl&lt; on tracl&lt;.
keep your accounts in proper order LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) You will irritate
~...
today. Don't tQtncl ft,tnda you have Jlar· your co-wOO&lt;ers w. you pus1t them lo get
~
marl&lt;ed for crilieal future expenses.
things done and then stack oil yourseW. II
Clll_.lvl_r
PISCES (Fell. »March 20) Keep your you want them to meet your expect&amp;·
-.-a .......,
plans to youn1811 today. II you~ liOnS. meet theirs.
Dec 8 1994
your intentiOns. what you say could be VIRGO (Aug. 23 Sept 221 Repay social
•
Thursday,
· '
.
. used against you later.
e . debts on your _. l(lltlative today. Do not
In the year ahead, keep specific goala 1 ARIES (March 21eAprll1t) Money might make so·meone ask for your help it
and olljectives In mind, bUt remain flax~ '. be the root of your p!OOiems today - nqt. they've been ol uaislance to you In the
,_,.)'cu wtn need to adapt your plans to • tho lack of~- Your skills In managing VOU.' pest. ,
· 001 . . , . u they ahlli.
·reaources range frOII) being very oooc:!.to U8RA (llpt. zt.Oct. D) You may only
SAOITTARtUIICNov. ~· 211 Do-lt· very poor.
'·
•
. fliel incllnlld to wor11 halll today wavery·
~ alound the hou8e could TAURUS (April ~Y 20) Temper your thing is don8 your way. Try to be more
·be ft1n today and even save you money. optimism with reality today. ln~ntill: cooperative and leal ternperlln8ntal.
Slgl!lartue, ·treat youraelf tq a birthday hopee are easily shattered by minor dis- SCORPIO CQct. 24-Nov. 221 You are
· gift. .Sepjltor your Aalfo.Graph pre&lt;lic· lllPOinlmenta.
8!1litled to some fun and rel8xation today,
tioni' for lhe year aMad by mailing $1 .25 G!lllllllllj!Y Z1.June 20) VI?" can lulfill but not to the extreme that you ignore
II! Ailfo.Graph, rJo thlo newttpaper, P.O. • .an ambition today, bUt the pnce yqu Pl'Y VOIJr reeponaibllltlo.
eox..:.e&amp;. New York..NY 10183. ,811 eure might exceed Its worth. Take off you~ .

BERNICE .
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EASTMAN'S

Give the
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A
foodland
Gifl
Certificate

FOOD LAND

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Poinsettias
EA.
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~ale!

liolida Coli
HI Dri Paper Towels

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Ragu Spaghetti Sauce

Umn one free decorated only

Um/1 ono 27.&amp;-30

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Md:ornlkk $eas0111t1 Salt

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Bananas

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Umit one free to oz. only

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21 3

16 oz.

$2''
•.

' Freckers Nutty Buddy 8 ct. $1.59 '

Let us prepare your holiday
PARTY TRAYS. Several
varieties.to choose from.

·•

,,

Experienced Dell--.kery Help Wanted
See Store For Det-.na

ODLAND,
64oz.

10 Umll Quant'"- • Prien Efl~ Thru Sit., Dec. tO, 11194 • USDA Food St8mpt and WIC Coup0111

•

RSVP holds 21st annual
recognition celebrati~n
The University of Rio Grande presented to Luther Tracy and Representative , Douglas . E.
Retired and Senior Volunteer Ruth Evans for 15 years of Mitchell, Director, Fern A. Evans,
Program (RSVP) recently held its service, to Alice Miller and Vera Administrative Assistant and Rev.
2 I st
Ann u a I
Volunteer Ross for I 0 years of service, and Gomer E. Jenkins, Advisory
Recognition on the campus of the to Eunice Alderson and Betty Council Chairman.
University of Rio Grande. This Lamphier, AI Morris, Delia Peck,
The University of Rio Grande
theme,
"RSVP Ruth Pyatt and Velma Rue for 5 Chorale under the direction of Dr.
year's
Volunteerism Gives a Warm years of service . In addition, Merv Murdock, presented a high
Glow" was carried out with Evelyn Hartwell of Hamden was energy musical performance
festive balloons tied to each chair presented an award for serving on including many "oldies" that
---,--~of lhe dining
of ihe Slliaeiil the RSVP Advisory Counc ll-'for pl_eased volunteers and guests- -u-eae Brannon :'irf Rill'
Annex Center.
20 consecutive years.
ahke.
.
.
Grande was r«ently honored
A highlight of this years
The key speaker was Ms .
The Retued a~d Senror for serving 20 consecutive
program featured an RSVP Pamela K. Matura, Executive Volunteer Program rs feder~lly years of volunteer service as
Volunteer from each county who Director of the Area Agency on sponsor~d by New Corporatron an RSVP Volunteer. Brannon
shared what t~eir volunteer Aging lt7. Ms. Matura, a dynamic for ~attonal and Communrty was presented a corsage, 20
experience means to them and speaker, acknowledged the Se~vrce_ and !ocally by the year certificate and a
those they serve. Ml!fgaret Blazer various contributions that RSVP Unrv~rsrty of Rro Grande. RSVP COIIUIIendat(on from the Ohio
represented Gallia County by volunteers make throughout the provrde~ . quallly · volunteer senate on behalf of Senator
sharing a volunteer assignment in Gallia, Jackson and Vinton area. opportun~t1es fo~ persons age 55 Jaa ~lchael Long. Brannon .
conjunction with the Cooperative Likewise, Dr. Clyde M. Evans of and o~er r_n a vanety of n~n-profit his provided volunteer
Extension Office entitled the University of Rio Grande, orgamzauons a~d agencres. For services to the Gallla County
Grandletters. Blazer and her 4-H greeted volunteers and guests more mformatton contact the senior center and lhe
pen pal, Jennifer Cornelius shilred · alike. The Rev. Marion Williams . Retired • and Senior Volunteer Unlvenlty of Rio Gnade llince ·
what they had learned during this offered the invocation and Program, I02 Broadway Street, 1974.
intergenerational letter writing • acknowledgments were presented
~~~s~hio 45640, telephone IN MEIGS COUNTY
project. RSVP Volunteer. Richard by Jean L. Cooper, Grantee
Whitehouse shared his voh!!lteer
experience by installing life line
devices for Holzer Medical
Center. Mr. Whitehouse said he
received a "volunteer high" by
helping others. Vinton County
Volunteer, Margaret Sowers
inspired those in attendance· by
The annual Retired Senior
sharing her many volunteer
Volunteer Recognition was held
assignments, particularly, those
recently at .Dale's Smorgasbord in
involving children. ·
Gallipolis. Plaques for ten year
Olive Brown of Jackson and
service were presented to Rose
Irene Brannon of Rio Grande
received
the
awards
IN GALL/A
commemorating 20 consecutive
years of community service as' a
•Join us for a wonderful time of
RSVP Volunteer. In honor of their
Christmas
celebration on .
achievements , Senator Jan
14th
. We will he
December
Michael Long presented
En Deuauer has been an RSVP volunteer· for ZO years. She hosting a sing-along of Christmas
commendations on behalf of the
don IDGII of her volwnleering Ia the dining room at the Center. carols. Our celebration hegins at
Ohio Senate hononng Brown and
Allee Wolfe, RSVP Director, presented Eva with a gift certlftcate II :OQ ~m and ends at noon. We
Brannon for titei'r dedicated
' "
-. have. invited Pt. Pleasant•ScnioJ ·
; 1 • • ~ • ·set\'t~e-. • 'Other ·awafds• ·were ••••\l ....qye.. ~q~~t. . .,..,.. S) \(' " · .

room

Senator Jan Michael Loag
extended congratulations and
greetings to volunteers
attending the Univenily of Rio
Grande · Retired and Senior
Volunteer Program's 21st
Annual
Recogaltloa
Celebration held at tbe
Student Center Annex Ia Rio
Grande.

Retired Senior
Volunteers honored.

Velvet lee Cream .

s qt. pall

"Dedicated to enriching and
improfling the life of Senior Citizen.r
in Mason, Gal/ia and Meigs counties."

1
I

Umrt one free 16 oz. less 181 only

I

Buy One Get One

1

LB.

.

New York G.lc Bread

I Um" one he 17 oz. Vonilla, Devil Food, Clotmon Choc., Coconut only

- - ·- ,· Um~ one ~oe 16 oz. French Onk&gt;n, Veggle 0&lt; Rllnc11

1

Buy One Get One

with 1hls couoon

Buy One Get One

LB.

umn ~ne free t2 oz. only

.

SUPERMARKETS
• Not R11p01111blt lor

or Pkitorttl Erro111.

. ...•

Nid; y, Marabelle Frecker, Alice
Brown, and Beulah Ward. Fifteen
year gift certificates were
presented to Beulah McComas,
Dorothy Davis and Gladys Dillon.

Christmas sing-along
Center, Meigs County Senior
Center and Hol zer Hospital to
join us. Please plan to· help us
ring in this holiday season with
song. (We also might get a little
visit from Santa and Mrs. Claus if
~ really-sing well!) ,

..

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