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December11, 1._ ;

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pl....nt, WV

New bulletins avai-lable at extension office .,
keep a copy available In their
office, abilp, or belllod the sell of
their pickup. The COli Ia $Jj() and
a good supply Ia available.

By EDWARD VOLLBORN
GALLIPOLIS • There are several new bulletins being released by
the OSU ExtensiQn in the coming
weeks. Just made available is the
newly revised 'Weed Control
Guide" for field crops. This bulletin historically was a pan of the
Obio Agronomy Guide. A few
years ago the Herbicide ,...,.-a.meodalion section was pullcd out of the
Agrmomy Guide so that the Herbicide recommendation sectioD could
be revised on a regular basis without need to revise the basic Apooomy Information. Most farmers

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culture anoouncect the 1995 Ohio
Agricultwal Fair sdledulc. Turn in
your vacatloll request, so/ou can
plan to attend the 132o Meigs
County Fair. Ausust 14-19. Congratulatioas to Mi. VirsU Windon
on being elected President of the
Meigs County Agricultural Society
fcir 1995.
Upc"'IJJIng EYeob:
The Southeast Ohio Tillage
Cooference is being held Thursday,
December 1Sth from 9 a.m. to 3:45
p.m. at Ohio University Lancaster
Braocb. Program registration cost
is $15.00. For further Information
please call Fairfield County SWCD
at (614) 653-8154.
Power Show Obio will be held
January 27, 28, 29, 1995 at the

By HAL KNEEN
POMEROY • The annual ·
Meigs-Wasbington County Winter
Vegetable School will be held
Monday, December 12, from 9:30
a.m. • 2 p.m. at the Racine Uniled
Methodist Chun:h.
Topics to be covered include:
growing tomato transplants, colb:lions, growers' panel on varieties
grown, worker protection standards, vegetable diseases and vegetable production. Registration
starts 8l 9 a.m. 1bere is a five dOl·
Jar fee to cover luocla and expenses.
One hour or vegetable pesticide
applicator recertification credit will
be pven.

; Holzer Clinic wins award

:

A good supply of Farm Amlunt
Books are also available for those
who want to get ready for 1995.
Farmer's Tax Guides, a refem~ce
that explains how the federal tax
laws apply to farming is ilso available. Eacb yCfll we get requests for
some of the tRS forms that are not
commonly available. Forms can be
ordered this year by callinR a Form

JAil.IPOLIS · At the seventh
Tbese cost reduction efforts
annual AmeriNet Membership were measured witbin .Holzer's
Symposium in October, Holzer own facility and compared witb
Clinic was presented tbe Presi- other non-acure care facility particdent's Award for utilization of the ipants in a 13-state region. Holzer
Value Care Purchasing Program by Clinic's percentage cost savings
AmeriNet President, Josepb Mul- exceeded tbat of mqre than 800
roy.
Administrative Resources memHolzer's cost reduction effons bers.
as measured by its overall reponed
Loves Lee Minton, genetal serparticipation and contract utilizalion and its contributions to Amer- vices manager for Holzer Clinic,
iNet programs and services were was instrumental In 111•nizing the
cost-savings prognun.
the basis for this award.

Extension Corner

The Ohio Depanment or Agel-

Ohio Expositioos Centet . Columbus Ohio. Free tickets are available
at the Extension OffiCe.

After attending our Annual
Extension Conference in Colum·
bus, 1 would be amiss if 1 did not
thank you for the joys of Jiving in
Meigs County: reasonable parking

WASHINGTON (AP)- Russia bas reaffirmed Its commitment

cause severe defoliatloD. However,

to work with the United States In
uying to J)revent any new Invasion
of the Asian gypsy moth, which
badly clalnaBed forests in the .Pacif·
ic Northwest three years ago, the
Agriculture DePartment says.
"By monitoring Asian gypsy
moth popuiatiool around ports with
direct ship traffic from Russia to
the United States, we can determine which ships might harbor
bitchhildng moths," Lonnie
acting administrator of the USDA s
Animal and Plant Health Iospectioo
Service, said In a statement
The nex:t step after identifying
the potential transporters of the
pest is to inspect the ships offshore
to determine which are infested .
before they dock and give tbe
nwths a chance to fly off.
Asian gypsy moths earned the
special treatment following an
infestation of Washington and Oregon in 1991 that officials beUcve
started on a ship originaliog in the
Russian Far East
According to the USDA. it .cost
more than $19 million to get rid of
the pest that time.
.
To prevent further outbreaks, a
working group was formed in 1993
comprising members of the Animal
and Plant Health Inspection Service
and the U.S. Forest Service and
their Russian counlerparts.
The group met fast month to
review the data on Russian pona
from 1994 and malce plans to COD·
tinue the program in the coming
year.
"So far the prognun has yielded
valuable information that bas
helped us develop our national
exclusion plan for Asian gypsy
moths," said Terry McGovern, a
plant protection and quarantine
officer and member of the working
group.
The Asian gypsy moth resembles the European gypsy motb
found in the northeastern U.S. except it is hungrier. Both prefer
forest environments and often

Kin,,

YOUR NEIGHBOlHOOD LENDER - Mike and DeaDIIll
: Stroll! ol Jac'- will become Paoeroy's newest merdllltts MOD·
day when they open "Yoar Neighborhood Leader" oa Sec:ood
. SlreeL Tile Strotll's_ •1 tbelr pill to dispel tbe popular DOtioD of
the paWDSIIop 11 a dalt, sllady place.

:Pomeroy business
.seeks to improve ·
:image of pawnshop
-common miscooccptioos surround. ing pawnshops. Tlie Slroths, from
Jackson, plan on opening their new
· pawnshop "Your Neighborhood
Lender" on Pomeroy's Second
Avenue Monday.
. "We're working to dispel the
. im113e of the paWII8hop," said Mr.
Stroth. "Wben mll!lt people tliink of
a pawnshop they sec a guy wearing
a visor in a dark room filled with
sbady merehandise," be said
"Your Neifhborhood Lender
·will be a wei -lit, modem store
very receptive to lady customers,"
he said
Stroth, a consultant overseeing
Pomeroy's downtown revitalization

~tnt

project, said a need exists in the
area for a place where people can
get money on a shon-term basis
without hassles.
The business will be connect via
computer with the National Pawn·
brokers Association to better assist
its customers, he said. In addition,
Stroth said the store is registered
with the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobac·
co and Firearms and will wort
closely with the Meigs County
Sheriff's DepartntenL
''The store is bei!lg designed in
accordance with the downtown
revitalization project and additional
painting and awnings will be
mstaUed in the spring," be said.
"We plan on combining modem
and traditional Styling," be added.

INSURANCE

-wASHINOTON (AP) -

rates, few, if any, traffic J8J!ls, ~
shopkeepers CII8Cf to assist you ancl
friendly smiles. in closing, to .,...nllralie a loc:al greeoboose operator, _
~veagreatweekl"
,
.Jlarold KneeD Ia the Olalo:
State Unlnralty Esten•loa,:
Mell• County, A1rleultaral:
Agent.

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We Know How To
"
WrapUp
Good Health

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Monthly membenhips available

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&lt;

6' to 7'
.•.·. 40% off Regular Price :
1

Now •tz • '18
-,.· Open 9 a.m. • 5 p.m. daily ._.
.·• 12 noon • 5 p.m. Sunday

-&gt; Hubbard's Greenhouse :
992-577~~

~-i'Jiiibuuu:·

Valley Drive• Point Pt..oant WV 2!550

.

Dog licenses are required by law. Section 955.01 of the Ohio Revised Code atatet.
that "Every person who owns, keeps or harbors a dog more than 3 months of agej:
.shall purchase a license for that dog before the 20th day of January of each year.'~
New licenses may be purchased at the auditor·~ OHice, Meigs County Courthouse or
by mall with this application.
•
The coat of each Dog License will be $4.00 and Kennel Licenses will be $20.QQ:
per kennel. The penalty, If late, will be an additional $4.00 per dog and $20.00 per,
kennel. The application below may be completed and mailed along with a check or:
money order to the oHice of the Meigs County Auditor, P&gt;O. Box 551, Pomeroy, OhiO,
,.
45769.

SEVEUL 1995
BUICK PARK AVENUES, PARK
AVENUE ULTRAS, GUND AM'S,
AND GUND AM GT'S.
JUST AJUUVED!

························~···········~)Application

Clip

AGE

SEX

COLOR
.!

Yea Month Male Femal

1

I;

~ c:J! !Ill-.:

c
~

Mall

~

HAIR

~

Ill

~ Long
~

.~

Feea

Breed
if Known

Short

'

Paid

'

See Bob Cook, Don Carter, Brett Epling, Jim Pierce

'

:B"IJIC:K.•

@

y

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PONTIAC.
1911 EASTERN AVE.

GALLIPOLIS

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·'

j

en tine
Vol. 45, NO. 155
Copyright 1984

· P.O. Box 551
Pomeroy, Oh. 45769 .

NANCY PARKER CAMPBELL,.
Meigs County Auditor
'

1 Section: 10 Pages 35 011111

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, December 12, 1994

A Mulllmecll• Inc. New1p..-r

·EPA fears river dioxin exceeds state level
· CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP)- Dioxin levels in the Obio Riv" near direc:tor of the Weat Vir&amp;lnia Divisioo of Environmental Protection, that
a proposed pulp mill at Apple Grove In Mason County alteady could was obtaiDed by the Charleston Sunday Gauttt-Mail tbrouJb a FreedaD
of loformatlon AI:J. rcqucat.
· exceed llmill set by the llltiC, a federaii8CIIC)' aaid.
A federal agency report released In September said dioxin causes can. The U.S. EnviiCMM ifeJ Pmlection Agency wantiiO perf&lt;m~. tests on
cer,
reproductive problema and developmental diJonten.
fiSh to determine bow mucll diolliD is in the water the flab came from.
Dioxin is a byproduct of the cblorlnc bleadlinJ process Parsons &amp;
Dioxin llllCUIIIUiala in Catty flab tissue.
.
The fedetal agency wd in a document JXIliiOIInt,:ore testing that Wbittemoce Inc. of Rye Brook. N.Y., would use alliS proposed $1.1 bil·
teats perf01111Cd by the U.S. FlsiiiNld WlldliCe Scrvk:e icaled the dioxin lion mill.
Callqb• wrote 10 the fedelaiii3CDCY saying it proposes dioxin testing
in the rivec may alteldy "exceed the Weat Vlrgioia dioxin lltBDdard of
proeedures wbicb •'DEP and most knowledgeable people within EPA
0.013 111111 per quadrlllleo...
"Wllbout a beeler sense or blcqrooDd dioxin levels, ltla DOt possible . believe to be scientifiCally unproven, and hcDce a•aail•ble.' .
Cal111811an dedloed to identify tbe people within the federal agency.
to know wllcther the CiJrrellt permit level Ia ~Ie, or what ao accept·
The state Environmental Quality Board last month suspended the pulp
able permit limit for dloxiD should be," said AI Morris, direc:tor of the
mill water pollution permit after the state agency said it wanted to com·
,federill aaency' I RegioD ID Water m!MU!F"'"!t divisloll.
Mmif IJIIdc the IIICitlon In a lcUer last month to David C. Q!Uaghan, pile information to combat aiticism of the assumption that there is no

...' c._,../ Q, .

MADD chief urges caution i·n holiday season

I

731 deatha and 29.2978 injuries. In
198.5, 746 deaths and 28,1.50
injuries. In 1990, 623 deaths and
27,9541ojnrles.
Locally, the ntnDber of fatalides
linked to alcohol In the last 10
years has drllllcally fallen, said
Sgt Dale Holcomb of the Gaiiia¥eisa Post of the St8te Hlahway
Patrol.
Not couatlna rJaouary, Metis
and Oallla counties had 721 aoadeer IICCideora lbia year, Holcomb
said. Out of this n~aber, 9.9 percent or 71 were aJoolaol-retated.
This Is well below the swe
averaae oC abot1t 2S perceat, aiao
below the Mllooal mnae ~lboul
35 percent. OnJy IWO people died
so far thil year in al'oholldnat·
relaled accident deldls - 1 Mella
County aula lnvolvlq drvp IIICfa
OaiUa County aula with a pec~ea.
triaD.
Holcomb said the sttitter lawa
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Three Albany men are being
beld in the Meigs County on
charges of aunvated burglary
stemming from a theft reponed
Dec. 7, Soulsby slid.
Mary Lovell, Albany, reponed
three fu:eanas were aiOien. Soulsby
said. On Dec. 10, Breu A. Chris·
tian, 18, Albany, came to the sheriff s deparunent with a fJreariii be
allegedly purchased froni an
uoknowo person at an Athens mall.
"He stated be saw an advertisement posted on a bulletin board
regarding the fuearm," Soulsby
said. "Deputies doubted his story
and upqn further investigation
obtained a statement in which he

!llmalb,-

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Two recent burglaries
cleared with arrests
M. Soulsby.

at Saata llllbltt au wort~~wbile.
"The trae IIMllllinl o( OuistIDIIla love IIIII Jivlolllld shar-- lng ud cnryooe lhould have
' !hal." Baile said.
SOccfl employee Mu
GENEROUS MINERs - bU.. Olllo c-t Co. d...ted loJI to 120 ddldren Friday. CbilWhitlatch aald he started the
dren In rOller an Ia Gallla and Melp COIIIItlelat oa Siuda Claus's ..P and opened presents
charity In 198.5 when he adopled
donated hy tiM BDina compaDy employe-. Ia tilt 1Gtll yeu ol this giveaWII)', the comr-ny has
a son and n:~allzed how much
ra11tc1 $145,080 ....0
some cblldren ao without
., ror area iusadYIDtapd y011tlll.
· MWe work bard and the
reward Is watching the kids·
made to PoweU's, Krogers and
smile. It's rewardlns," WhitVaughan's and other area busilaldl said. "If It w=o't for this
nesses who made 'ilonatioos,
Wbltlatch said.
'
they wouldn't bave lilythlnt ... I
juat wish we could do more.
. Any funds remaining after
the gifts have been bought are
The ~\,company tries to
pant each
d's first wisb sent t,o the area child-support
especially alnce atate money
agenctes for use throughout the
cannot buy hitb school class
year, said Susan Porter, a
rings or spona equipment, he
spokeswoman for American
added.
Electric Power. SOCCO's
· At tint, children asked for
Meigs miDing division is a subbasic itr.ms llke clothiDg, but lhc
sidiary of AEP.
Meigs County autdrens Ser~DOW buys llrictly larg1 ftl, Whitlatch said. Since
vices appreciates the donations,
1985, more than $145,000 has
said Carol Shank a social workbeen raised.
er who helped coordinate the
The benefit Ia a team effort
event
by SOCCO manasement and
"It helps give them~~~
lbcy wouldn't have, Shank
Uniled Mine WOlken of Ameri·
said. Mit made the kids I bad
ca Loc:als 1857 and 1886, he
there really tickled. They arc
added.
really tbrilled."
The CO!IIJIIDY sponsors a golf
· competition at the Riverview
All the cblldreo who received
·Golf Club and raised more than
gifts are in fostet care, sbc said,
$.5,000 this year. Each of the_ adding the state office takes care
800 employees ilso either takes
of the cblld' s basic needs.
money out of their paychecks,
Whi!iatch said the company
will hold a celebration for
(If dOIIBW time to belp poii off
employees• cbildreo and grandthis event, Bailey said.
cblldrell on Thursday.
·
Spec:ial thalita needs to be

'

Morris also wrote in the lelia' the state agency should order l'arsonl &amp;
Whiuemore to conduct more testa 10 determine the amount of dioxin the
plant would release.
.
Callaghan•s Dec. 2 response letter said the federal agency was aclinS
without authority. He said a 12·ye-.-old agreement between the federal
agency and West Virginia prohibits the fedelal113eocy from reviewina the
staae's wastewater permit because the mill is DOt desigoaled a "major clischargtt."
·
"The EPA has got to decide wbether our letter is correct from a legal
and tc:cboical perspective, •• CallaJban said. •''lbere is an outside polelltial
this could end up in federal coon.' •
Oo Saturday. the board of the West Virginia Environmental Couocll
asked the federal agency to take the wastewater permitting 1111bority fnD
the state agency.

burgiarielllave beeD recovered by
the Meigs County Sbcrift'a Depart·
ment, accOrding to Sheriff James

-~

By GEORGE ABATE
.drloking, she 8lkled.
StadMI Ne• Sid
"MADD believes intoxication
Twenty-foot atrlps of charred begins with the fli'St driDt." Chiprubber.
.
pas said.
.
But,
Olippas
ilso
suggestCd
that
aw~~ &amp;lass and aumpied the best way to sober up is just to
· Althouah viewer, have been give the bodt time, adding that
sbowaed by iml&amp;ca qlinst dnDt cold sbowers and even coffee dOII't
·driving, they m..t remember .the change the blood's alcohol leveL
:poeeodal for kiJedy when tllcy act
When out on the towti •nd
:bebincl the wheel 1ft«' jtlll a ICw someone has had too much to
:drlota, 11!d Michelle ChJppas, clrlok, if they're a fiiclld, take llacir
.Ohio executive dlrec:tor for Moth- keys. If II'&amp; a stranger, call 1-800GRAB-DUI, abe added.
:en Aplnal Drunk Driwn.
"We haw: a problem with repeat
· "Bchavlon •d attitudes·b1ve
:ctwlaed." OJiiJDII said. "''be ufe- offenders that goes beyOIId social
:1'1 of the publfc wUI override all drinkers," Chippas laid, a\fdlog
-else. DrlvlnJ Ia 1 privUege, not a MADD mull help tackle Iaraer
issues of joblessocss whicla pusla to
iiJbt"
•
: Alcobol·related aa:ideots and aicollollsm
M01e than 12,000 Obio drivers
«athhln OliJo llave fallen, maddng
Jhe 1111e • a model for the rest ~ have five or more DUI coovlctlons,
1be COIBitly; lhe added. .
accordina to MADD statistics. In
: Eacb ~ IIICIIhoilzes alalbol 1993, &lt;435 Ohioans died in alcdaol·
)lffereody - leldloJ to the cltal· relaled rilllc malles wbile 19,&lt;498
~. . 0( dclcnoining when to atop were injured. In 1980, there were 1

dioxin in the river.

F'Jrearllll, a gw. and an amplifi" reporled IIOicn in two lqllfalC

er

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Just In Time for 'lhe Bolida,s!

••

~~~t,D

$180 Single
$280 Family

Low tooJpt In 281, cloudy.
Tuetday, plrtly lUDDY· HIP Ia
401.

3-5..0-3

..u.wa)'Jpnuiblc

An annual membership to the PVH Wellness
and Rehab Center is a gift that keeps on giving all
year long. To purchase gift certificates, call us at
(304) 675-7222 orstop by, shop around and see what
we have to offer this Christmas.

~ ~yracuse

Page4

By GEORGE ABATE
$eat1Del NeWI Sid
With eyes aalow, about 40
area c:bildreo ut on Saota' a lllp
and tore Into glfu Frida}' thanb to Southem Ohio Coal
Co. employees wbo raised
$1S.SOO to put tile &amp;1ft wiaiiCI
of 120 c:bildrell in foster care
from four aiiiiOUilCiins counties.
lociudlng Ollila and Meigs.
One UUie aid uted for just
one gift - a life·aized Barbie
doll, said Chrla Bailey. a
SOCCO CIIIJ!.Ioyee wbo helped
buy au the Jllll.
MShe wasn't much blgser
than the dOll, but that's all sbc
·wanted," said Bailey, a Pomeroy
resldcot MShc never let that dOll
out of ber hands."
All cill~ mU.e the gift

State F8rm Insurance Compantes • Home Offices: Bloommgton. llhnots

..

Pick 3:
4-9..()
Pick 4:

Needy l(ids get .their Christmas

Uke a good neighbor,
State Farm is there.®

®

October egg pfuduction rose 4 percent
from a rear CfiiUer to 6.37 billion,
accordmg to the Agriculture
Department.
Table eggs aa:ouoted for .5.44
billion of the total; with the mnaining 930 m111ioo eggs being hatch·
ing types. Of the hatchms egg
types, 872 million were broilertype and .58 million were egg types.
In,October, then were an average of 285 mlllloo c:hlctens laying
eggs daily, u increase of 4 pen:eot.
Production per 100 layers was
up sligbtly in October. cUmbing by
an avenge of two eggs over the
prcvi0111 year to 2,157.

Kicker:

• 5·3-7-1-3-4

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Home~518

Ea production up

c

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Carol Snowden
342 Sec. Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio
Ph. 446-4290

the Asian variety is less fiDic:ty,
including in its diet larch, oat,
poplar, alder, willow and some
evergreens.

Super Lotto:
5-16-18-27-28-30

·

"I back the famil
insurance J self
with iood neighbor
serv1ce.·Call me."
STATE FARM

qiants hand
Cincinnati
27-20 loss

naese

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Russia, U.S. work to
prevent moth invasion

'

POMEROY - Mike and Dean·
_na Stroth are QUt to disprove 110t11e

32.2% last year. Still not many·,
details on the agreement of the five :
manufacturers to purchase pool :
inventory over .the next seven :
years. Information from the B~y '
Tobacco Growers Coopera!ivc ;
Association indicates that toblcCo :
price supports, .tobacco aracllng :
procedures and tobaaxl loan Jatea •
are yet to be decided.
la&amp;uea :
will be addressed in the future by a :
commission compoeed of repreaeo- ·
tatives from all segmenu .of ~ :
U.S. Tobaa:o program.
. :
Edward Vollborn Is G•llla ·
County's aarlcultwnl tllfenltOo :

Annual vegetable school scheduled Monday

DISPLAY AWARD • Holzer-Clinic President, J Craig Straf·
ford, M.D., ud general services manager Lovea Lee Minton, dis·
play the AmeriNet President's Award. Holzer CUnlc's cost reduc.tlon efforts through the AmeriNet Value Care Program were the
basis for this award

.
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Farm Flashes

DisttibutkD Ceotei at 1-SOO-TAXFORM (1-800-829-3676.
A lot of Burley Tobacco Is
being sold .and with damper weather farmers are making better
progress with stripping and balling.
At the end or sales on Thursday.
December 8, the aVer&amp;Re price for
the season was $184.74. 'Ibis compares to $182.33 per hundred last
yep at the same point. That puts
farmers • take home slightly les$
than last year.
Taking into account the no-net
cost increase. The good news is
that the "pool" purchases for this
season totals 6.2% compared to ·

Ohio Lottery

enacted last year bave been effc:ctiw:. The aumber of alcobol-related
accldcoll has declined while the
number of arrests has stayed the
same, he said.
"I'm DOt aying there are more
dnmlts out there tbao before," Hol-

added.

Clinton hints tax cut
if he can pay for it
ByTOMRAUM
Associated Pre. Writer
WASHINGTON - President
Clinton is beck at work on his bud·
get aftet pvinx the broadest hint
yet be'll return to bis 1992 promise
for a middle-inc:aDc lax cut in the
aftermath of last month's GOP
landslide.

The administration bas been
suxgestiog for weeks that Clinti&gt;o's
fiscal 1996 budget will include
some form of tax cut Republicans
wbo seized control of Congress in
November midterm cleclions made
low" laxes and a balanced budget
a central theme.

At a news conference on Sunday
after a four-day summit with Westem Hemisphere leaders. Clinton
was asked directly if he would propose a middle-class lax cut.
•'I intend to propose one as long
•

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comb said. "We've got a pretty
asgresslve mldoiJbt crew."
The oa;ao.looal or casualllrinker .
has been more cautious, but the
. new lawlllaveo't affc:cted problem
driDters. HolComb 8lkled.
As laws haw ciwaged, people
wbo host a pany where someone
clrlnb and then causes an accident
i:ID DOW be bit with a civil lawsuit,
Holcomb said
Therefore, wbeo hosting a party
the ~ lactic when someone bas
had too mucla to drink is take away
- their keys and either drive them
00. or llllke them stay the nigbr,
he added. A oonoal person ihat
lelia • dae limit usually likes seven
(C.,..,h•ed oa Plat 3)

~

admitted the theft."
Two other pei10IIS were arresii:Id
along with CbriJtian. Soulaby said.
Also arrested were Wayne G.
. Howard Jr.• 22, and Cbristoplaer S. Caldwell, 19.
"The fuearms were recovered."
be said.
In addition, charges .-e pending
against two unidentified subjects
regarding the theft of a guitar and
amplifier from the Pentecostal
Assembly Church on State Route
124 near Racine, Soulsby said.
A Ravenswood, W.Va., man
reported be was offered the items
by the two suspects. Upon investigalion by the sberiff s department
and tbe Ravenswood Police
Department, it was determined the
items were stolen and they wac
returned to Meigs County. Soulsby

.

as I can pay for it," Clinton said
Clinton voiced support for a
middle class tax cut durin&amp; bis
presidential campaign, but abuJ.
doned it quickly after his election
- blaming higher-than-expected
federal deficit figures.
However, more recently, Clioton bas been boasting of recent
declines in the federal deficit and
of a booming c:conomy.
Clinton bad no public appearances on Ills agenda today. Deputy
press secretary Ginny Terzaoo said
he planned to meet on the budget
be is to submi_t to Congress late
next month or in early February.
Clinton said: "I want to fulfill
the commitment of our campaip
and my commitment to tax fauness.' '
Even so, the Wbltc House chid
(Contlaued OD l'llge J)

�Monday, December 12, 1994

Sentlnet.;Jl

Comlnentar

Page 2:...The Dally
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday, December 12, 1994

..

OHIO Weather
. Tuesday, Dec.l3

;

Accu-W~

, I

~------------------------------------------------------------~-------------- - ------~J'

O'Leary guarded about .Project Sapphire

The Daily Sentinel

forecast

MICH.

•

ROBERT L. WINGETr
Publllber
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Gtnenl Manager

MARGARET LEHEW
Col!lr'OIIer

I.EI11'.RS OF OPINION ue welcome. They lbould be leaa 11w1 300
won1a toaa. Alltetten .... AJbject to editins 111c1 Dllllt be •ianed with name.
lddnu llld tclopbo110 number. No Wlli&amp;JIOCI letlml will be publllbed. Letten
lbould be in aood wte, oddrealiaa
not penonllillea.

iu-.

Proposed bill would
force schools t()
make up snow days
BJPAULSOVIIRADA
AJirh.,.' Pna Writer
.
COLUMBUS - Even as lodian slll'nllltl was llftUbiug iDID tbe first
week of December, me Slate lawmaker IUmed biJ anentimto IIIOW days.
In a move sure to elicit groaus from pupils statewide, Sco. Dick
Sc:halralh, R-Louclooville, IDtroduced legislalion Jut week that would
·require sdlools to 1D8ke up days lost to bad weada w otbc:r CIIJCilleucies.
'reacben likely wiD groan at a baD on paying staff fw tbe makeup
days.
·
.
.
Scboola uow • ~~ .!0 ~becllile 182 days per adlool ~· Two
can be used fw pareut·IUcba'.coof~. Five- tenDed calaJility days ·
- can be mlucd wltbout peoalty f(ir emcqeuclca, sucb as bad wealber,
broken plumblog « ~ Jll'(lblems.
·_
Except fw last year. ~gid temperatures and beavy snow last wiDter
forced maoy dlatrlc:ta to close down foc more thaD tbe allolted five days.
The Legwatiue- after a cootenlious debate- ultimately let scme take
up to four IIIOIC calamity days.
That provided tbe Impetus roc Scbafralb'a biD.
"Qcarly, closlog scbool foc extreme weatber is often a necessity to
protect the safety of sdloolcbildren," Scbafralb said. "However, tbere Is
no good reason wby tbese days should DOt be made up.·'
Tbc proposal bas tbe backlog of tbe Buckeye Association of Scbool
AdminisntDn, wbich in June passed a reaolution calling foc lbe ellmination of calamity days.
·
· Scbafralb said other stales, including Indiana mel Pennsylvania, bave
similar laws.
Tbc state teacllers' union sees some problems witb tbe coocept.
For one, wbetber teachers are paid for makeup days Is bandied in local
cmtract bargaining, said Gary Allen, vice president of tbe Obio Educalion
Assoclation.
.
"And Ill wbal point does tbe scbool year eod?" Allen asked. "Based
on last winter, it could extend into July."
That l8ises tbe ironic possibility tll8l makeup days coold be canceled
because of beat.
Allen said extending tbe scbool year also could interfere wilh summer
jobs aod CODtinuing educalioo for tcacbera.
Scbafralb doesn't buy that. He rec:ommeods ladcing potential makeup
days 8l the end of the year- just in case.
,
H they're not needed, everybody goes bome early. H they are needed,
everybody knows wben tber.'U be,_J:!e aald
He conceded that tbe biD isn't going anywhere now. Except for tbe
oc:caslooal honorary resolution or committee bearing, no wQ!Ic Is being
done in the wanlog days of lbe session.
.
"l tbctJght witb tbe winter season upon us, alleast we could get it out
tbere on tbe table," be said.
ADen figures tbe OEA will face a fight when Schafratb reintroduc:es ·
tbe biD iD January.
"Witbo tbe mood of tbe electorate and tbe cbange in power, Sen.
Scbafralh wiD probably bave a sympatbedo audience,'' ADen said.

Today in history
By The AJsocWed Pna
· Today.ls Monday, Dec. 12, tbe 346tb day of 1994. 'Ibl2e are 19 days
left in tbe year.
·
Today' s Higblillht in Hlslay:
On Dec. 1:2; tefl7, Fatber Edward flanapn founded Boys Town outside Omabl. Nebraska.
On~-=

.

Ill 1787, l'eDDsylvania became tbe secood Slate to l1llify tbe u.s. eon.

stibU!oo

•

Ill 1870, Josepb H. Rainey of Soutb Carolina twame die fust black
~ awom iDio the U.S. House of Represenlalives.
111 1901, tbe lint radio sipalto aou the Allantic was pidled up near
SL Jobn' s. Newfoondltmd, by invcotor 'i:::r:ID!o MMCODL (lbe signal
was a-.witted from a point &amp;aDe 2,000
away.)
In 1913, aadloritlea iD Florence, Italy. announced tbat tbe "Mona
Lila," aiDIIII· from the Louvre MuseWI in Paria in 1911, bad been rec:ov·

C«&lt;d.
111 1925, die lint 11101e1 - the Mocellnn - opeDeCI in San Luis Obis·
po. Clllf,
111 1937, JipiDCse ain:raft sank the U.S. gunboat Panay on Cbloa's
YIIIP Rl~. (1apm apologized, and paid $2.2 mlllioo in reparations.)

from North Carolina has been
much too harshly and disingenu·
ously treated by lhose politicians
aod journalists. Asked on television

Why Ia everyme so mad? It's a since I left college in 19.5'77
p_erslstent. question tbese day•,
•
First, women tooli: off their
b'Y lbe politl- aprons and joined the wort ron:e,
gtvco extra 110
cal eartbquatc
llllllitb. You can . out of desire as well as necessity.
bardly read il newspaper or.
newsweekly without encountering . Hc:Jdding Carter Ill
someone' a answer, usually either
impresslonislic Of ideological, Here Some 60 perceo1 of aU women with
are a few more thoughts on the cblldten wort outside the bane, a
subject, wlllc:b like most will seem ~0 percent Increase In 30 years.
men self-evident 10 the author than t,tany tblnk of that as liberation!
. to the audience.
Many Otbm - inc:ludin, sane of
Let's begin witb a caveat: Most the women who go of to work
Americlna t~~a~'t actually mad aU each day- believe Ills an affroot
the time,« even 1 good deal of the to the normal Older.
·
Second, "'P Americans in the
time. What we're talking about
· here are the lttltucka of a minority South extra&lt;:fed tbemaelvea from
of the people, not a majority.
Jim Crow segregallon and began to
'I'1W a8ld. ilia no smprise tll8l a demand the rights and privilelles
number of people find It hard to loog dcoied tbem In achocils, joba
stay cllm and I.'OIItelll wben they aod polllicl. They also fon:ed white
are besieged by dlanges lbat 1.'011· society to.face-aad then, liter au
lradlc:t
beliefs « make anguJ¥ J11111C, ~y deny
them feel
· Everyone over - tbe reality tbat Norlbem·style
40 lcnowl flntband that a )Jiaenom. raclw bad .Southern-style conseenalaet of s~lal revoludou has quencea fw miUions of b~ 111
rolled ICI'OIS 11ie Dlllooaii'Ddacape tbe urban ghetto, Tbcr, Uid other
in 'tbeir llt'edme. IndiVidually, each ao-called ''ininorltlea,' became tbe
"!!I a llberadnJ expCrlence for a beneficiaries of innovaUve, frellgniflcpt group of Americana. · qaently infllriatlog measures to
Collectively, they frightened or undo lbe aJmDl effec:ta of previous
offended. a large body of other dlaalmlnalion.
1
~cana. 1 •
Third, homosexuals walked out
Exactly wJ!at baa happened . of llie closet and Into ....,,fthtsoc:i·

ctey-.,::

.,
II

f

-_.

I

Calm conditions to prev~Jil
until rain r•enters scene
By The AJioclat.d ...._
The relati¥Cly traDQnil weather
allonld cootlnuc IIIlo mid-weelt.
Temperlbtl'cl will recover 1 bit
.and be near 1101111a1 by mid-weelt.
Normalhlgba for mid-December
are iD tbe Dliddle 301 acrou nortbem Ohio mel lbe midtlle 40&amp; acrou
tbe sout.bern Jllll d tbe atate.
The next mance for precipitation loob to be 1bunday.
Tbc record blgb 011 this dale in
Columbus wu 64 In 1949. Tbe
IUQid low was minus 2 In 1962.
SUII8Ct tonlgbl at ~:07 p.m. Sun·
rise Tuesday at 7:4!5 a.m.

cloudiness. Highs from around 30
nortb to tbe upper 30s soutlicaat.
TonigbL •.Mostly cloUdy. Lows
20to2S.
Tuesday... r.tly lUDDy. Highs in
the upper 30s nortb to mid 40&amp; far
soutb.

Extended fonc:ut:
Wednesday ...Fair. Lows 20 to
2S and highs mid 30s DOrtb to mid
40s far soutb.
Thursday... A cbance of rajn or
snow north and rain south. Lows
2S to 30 and highs from the mid
30s to tbe lower 40s south,
Friday ... A chance of flurries
Weatlter foncut:
nortbeasL Dry elsewhere. Lows in
Today... A few momiDg flurries the 20s wllb blghs in tbe lower 30s
nortbeast...Otberwlse coilSiderable to lower 401.

Ohio wrecks leave 7 dead
By·TiteAJicrtlat.drrAt least ICVel people clied in
traffic acc:ldenll on Ohio roads
over tbe weetend, the Stile Highway Patrol lllld MODday.
The p11101 COUDied trlflic fltalltiel from 6 p.m. Friday tbroup
niidnlgbt Sunclay.
Tbc dead:
SUNDAY
CLEVELAND - Tom Hale,
83, of Cleveland, in a two-veblcle
accident 011 a city 11reet iD Cuya-

chief. •
'· ~oa
And Garry Wills, tbe historian
and columnist, lhundered: "For the
rest of us, there are legal restraints · •1
on encouraging assassination t.i,
attempts and calling tbeJ!l natural,.)
inevitable, aU-but-desirable." Wills
also charged Helms with suboming
insubordination. Worse yet, said
Wills, lhe senatoc bad engaged in _
. "wild and brutal talk of murder '?
and bodrguanls."
: '· ~
Signtficantly - according t!) ' '
Wills - ~'Helms bad made hiS: ·.;o.
semi-threat on the anniversary o~ ' ' 1
Jolm F. Kennedy's ~ination." •·•
Do you suppose that date was' ,
marked on Jesse Helms' calendar ;~
fortblspurpose?
~~ ·~
Jesse Helms bas said be made a ~ 1
mistake with reference to biJ com• ,r,
ment about lite bodygWII'IIs. He bas'
apparently learned, after all these 1·.&lt;r
years, to sort of censor blmself. 1 ·~
don't tbiDit that's of any great ben- •:•:
eflt to the nation. I would rather "'
know wbat lhe Jesse Heimses ol••·.v
tbe land are actually tblnklng.
: :d!
Nat Hentoff Is a natlonallr . e
renowned authority on tile First ' "
AJDeDdment and tbe rnt of tlti'·'"
BW orRJpta.
c'll!
(For Information on how tci
c:ommullkate elec:tronlcally wltft'-"ll
this c:olu11111iat and others, coti;· t
tnt America Online by calUqgt-.' 'l~
800-82'7-6364, en 8317.)
.
•· ·; "
' 1,:;,

~~;~:

ety's face M011t of iDtell luall
prayer decision for a slgnifiCllllt :
·
us
ec
Y
minority
of the populau·on was •~
understand that p_eopl!: should not
be pcn•liUd for their sexual orien- final proof that the government was -. ~
talioo any mcirc than for their skin the enemy of religion, and moi'C' :,
coloc or religion. Bat foc millions sP'Cifically, of their religion.
",.
of us. that's easier to say tban to
Not one of these was a small ~; '
feel deep in tbe-gut. For millions event. Eacb undid the operative :
men, gays and ~ are people myths or ClliDIIImly aa:cptcd.prac;:;·: •
who have deliberatiCiv dlosen to be Iicea of geDelllliona of AmericanS. ·• :
"perverts" llld abould be foroed 10 It was DOt merely lbe segregalion• :; l
pay the price for their dlolce.
ists' morally repugnant "way oC:. '~
Fourtll, abortion moved from life'' wblch waa destroyed. Mucb
butebery· ln the back alleya (or else iD the social cootract that bad
more comfortable alternative&amp; previously' been held sacrosanct ; •
ovene. for die rlcb) 11 the lepiiy hypocritically or not, was callect :.; :
pcrmlsalble lllalnalrcaDl of every- into question.·Most of tbe changes ·"' •
day medical procedure. Wbalever were swallowed: 'None. btl$ been :
the re11 ~ wa-c wiiCu abor- thoroughly digested, a point that ·'" '!
tiona were illegal, there are now didn't need lbe OlriatiaJi COO!tion
alxAit U milllon le1al abortiona to drive home.
'I , .
eadl year. 111 tbe mloda ol te111 of
But tbal only begins to fill iD tbe~ :~
million• of aincere men and picture. There Ia the lingering · ., - ~·
Woolen, each one II the murder of hangover from Vietnam, the (int . ,
au unbo.fn child, and therefore a war tbe United States ever lost ·'; " !
violation or that c:entra1 tenet of lbe Tbere Is violent erlme, lnstanUy
moral law, ''Thou ihaJt notldll.''
available Ill our homes In living
Fifth, the courts pushed ftate- color
·, '•
required (IDvarlably Protestant)
Hoddlng Carter Ul, forllMr" ·'
Jl'tl,ef out ot public sdlools. While State Department 'spokesman'' ,,· :
this 1a tbe subject of IDOII: .beat lhan 111111 awucl-wlnniDa nJM!!I1a', edJ•. •. •
light, alace few people actually tor .11111 Jlllhllllter, Is pr 'Ment ot ; l
Willi lbe llitlc to wrt~e Jl'tl)'erl that · MI!IDS~ a W~. o,c.-~ J
their cbOdren ~ be forced to bued television produc:lloll'comrecit.e, tbe beat Is Intense. The . pany.
·

.
1

I

;:

I.

.

'

i

AndevenifHelmsbadmeantit,
lbe f'ust Amendment protecU him
lngton, ac:c;psing him of being "a
unlesa - as ruled in the nmoimous
hYPOCrite in pubHc life. Tbc worttJ
Supreme Coun 1969 Brandenburg
wiD be puzzled to decide wbetber
v. Ohio decision - be was advo·
catlog
imminent violence (rigbt
you are an apostate oc an impostor,
Nat Hentoff
wbctber you have abandoned your
then and b) aad evidence was
good principles, or whether you wbetber be lbought BiD Clintoo Is produced tbat people were ready to
ever bad any,"
"up to tbe job of being &lt;XJIIIIII8Dder commit imminent violent aclion as
Ill tbe robust American tradiqQD. .in cb!ef,' 'J!e!!!Y .- !!~O_~~ not
a~ q(wbat be said.
of skewering public officials, Harty soliClied tlii: quesuon - answered,
There Ia no proof tbat Helms'
Truman said of Richard Nixon lbat "You ask me an honest question, · barbed advice to the president vio"beisasbifty-eyedgoddamnllar... I'll give you an honest answer."
laled Braodenburg.
be Is one of lbe few in lhe biJtory No, said Helms, Clinton is not up
The reaclion, however, to
of this country to run for bi&amp;b to tbe job. But I've met many pen- Helms' CQD1Dients were as if his
office talking out of bolb sides ef pie around the country who believe disrespect was of a similar order to
bis moulh 8l the same time - and that, in~luding more than a few
that of E.N. Fuller, editor of the
lying out ofbotb sides."
Democrats. It's not an act of trea· Newark Evening Journal, who
Also attacked wilh majigu gusto son to expreas tbat opinion.
wrote In an editorial during the
have been Jefferson, Lincoln,
1bco Jesse Helms unwittingly Civil War:
Franklin Delano Roosevelt and otb· turned himself into a modem ver"It wiD be seen that Mr. Liners occupying our highest office. sion of the old-time carnival game coin bas called for another balf milAs a boy, ~g most of lhe parti· in whlcb a man pokes his be.ad lioo of men. Those who wish to be
san daily newspapen in Boston, I through a bole while eager cus- butdlered will please step focward.
toolt foc .gnnted tbat in tbls won. tomers tbrow baseballs at him,
AU others will please stay at home
derfully open country - unlike three for a quarter.
and defy Old Abe and bls minions
those elsewhere - a Citizeil of any
"Mr. Clintoo better watch out if to drag tbem away from their fami·
.rank could tell any public official ·be comes 1/8to North Carolina
lies."
wbat be oc sbe lbought of him.
3/8," Helms said. "He'd better
Fuller Will indicted, convicted
But in view of the shocked reac- have a bodyguard" if be visits mil· and fmed for speaking against lhe
lion to Jesse Helms' receut disre- itarY bases there.
comm!llda-in cblef in time of war.
spcctful comments about tbe curThis struck me at tbe lime as a
Tbat Jesse Helms should escape
rent presideD!, it might seem that failed attempt at the klod of inor· punlsbment for what be said shUck
we have become a mucb moce ten- dant political one-liners wllb wbich such of his critics as Sen. Robert
der and sensitive people- at least Jay Leno peppers bis opening
Kerrey (D-Neb.) as scandalous.
as exemplified by certain.polili· monologues. lt never occuned to Kerrey demanded tbat Helms ''pay
clans and journalists among us.
me to take the bitter fantasy literal· a price" roc undenniDing tbe miliStill, I tbiDk for once lbe senator ly. ·
tary's respect fonlle COIDID8Dder in

County board approves hiring

Possibility of free trade
zones cheer U.S. leaders

Disrespecting the president
iD 1796, Tom Paine llpOke ofand to - PreSident George :Wash·

carl W. Shenefield

.,....,...dieD

IND.

i

Not all Americans are angry

Berry's World :

.,

Sbe told us 1be Ama1can team :
Assessment (OTA), officials at tbe
facility in JCazalrbstan say a group rushed tbe material out of Kaza- •
of Iranians visited two years ago in kbstan during late autumn - even :
an attempt to buy tbe nuclear mate- though inclement 'Weatber could :
have paralyzed the mission at the :
rial.
The United States is currently airstrip - because of "information 1
negotiating the purchase of SOO about who might be seeking some .r
metric tons of blgbly enriched ura· opportunity to get control of tbat I
niiDD from Russia As tbe top DOE (nuclear) equipment." Does that :
official told us. "H the same price mean the Iranians were getting :
•
·(as Project Sapphire) holds for closer to tbeir goal?
'.'Well, you know," O'Leary-:
Russia, tbey'll be able to balance
:
tbeir budget by selling enriched said
Was It tbe llanians?
' •
uranium to us intO tbe next millen"You can say anytlllng you l
nium. We oullht to bave concerns
want,"
she responded. "I tbiDk my ·
about that." lr tbe price paid foc
job
bere
is not to start little flares;
the Kazakb uranium is indeed a
beuchmark, America could end up I've got enough problems dealing ,
paylog more tban $200 billion for wilh people (bere) wilbout getting ,
bot language from my lips dlrec:t.ed ~
tbe Russian stockpile.
O'Leary admitted that ''all of toward another country. It's called '
those lasues were squn~ dis· not doiDg a 'Newt: (Gingrich)." ' ~
O'Leary concedes lhat America
Cussed by aU of tbe priDe'
wbo
can
only coolinue buying uraniWI( ·.
were negodating" tbe Kazakb deal
"if
It
makes ecooomic SCDSC iD tbe ,
.
But for .someone who bas billed
herself as the oracle of openness, long run. And there one bas to
O'Leary Ia evasive about the finan. quantify lhe cost - botll real and '
cial and terrorist threats posed to long-term - against unknoy.rn• .&amp;
wllh respect to wbat would bappeq
tbe United States.
to (the material) If It were no!
down-blended and used In a commerciaDy appropriate way."
· ••
But what I( Kazatb officials
simply told the American delega-. ~
lion, "You haven't met our price;
so we're going to sell our unmlunr ~~
to anotber country?" we asked .:,;
O'Leary.
"' . '·'
"I don't think It serves tbo , 1.~
nation for me to ponder a bypotbet-. :l•
leal," she said.
.
.
FOREIGN DIGEST- U.S.· , . 1
Amhassadoc 10 Japm Walter Moo;
dale bas !Old American visitors that I~
be's havlog qualms about retuminiJ ,.~
to Wasblogton in tbe,wake of the!
Nov. 8 Republican landslide.
• ~.,
Although be's beCD mentioned
as a possible successoc til SeaetarY
of State Warren Cbris~, MOD•' _.•
dale apparently believes the
Democrats are in need of bottom,-.
up repairs. Moodale, who vias vice _/
president under the politically unpopular Jimmy Carter, bas also':-.!!
been beard expressing sympalhy
for Vice President AI Gore, whose .o1
fate, Uke biJ own. is liDted to tbe ..-.
top ofthe ticket.
· ."
Jack Anderton and Mlch•el
Blmteln are wlters for United ·"'
Feature Syndicate, Inc.
.. '"

Local News in Brief:

Bontl&gt;c!:. 10, 190.'5 In Sanclyville, son of lbe 1at1: Martus Dental IDd
Edna Cumlcbat1 SbeDefield. he relired from United Fuel Co. • an operatoc aftel44 yean oltcnke. He was a member ot tbe ~Unit·
ed Metltotlllt Churc:t, SllldyvUie,
Survivlngn Ilia wife, PJiic Stanley Shenefield; two diiJghtm, Mar·
garet (BID) Boyd of Rlf.ley, W.Va., and Barbara (James) Walter of
SandyvUie; lix
and six gre&amp;t·grandcbllclml; two sisters,
Evelyn Hardeuy of Glassow, W.Va., aad Ernestine Llevlng of
Ravenswood, W.VL; mel sevemlnieces and nephews.
·
He was also preceded in deatb by a brotber, Clyde Sbendleld; and a
sister, Pauline Taaea1011.
Services will be 11 LID. Tuesday in the Straight-Tackei &amp;: Roua11
Funeral Home, Ravenswood, with tbe Rev. Paul Mmism and tbe Rev.
Danny McVay oftlcl•ting Burial will be in tbe Independence Cemetery,
Ravcoswood. FrieDda may caU at the funeral home IOday from ~-9 p.m.

I

WASHINGTON - Energy opinion.... It was a greatsucceas."
There's little debate that Sap·
Seaetary Hazel O'Leary iovited us
into ber oftlce to discuss our recent pblre bad a happy ending: poorly
coiWDD about Project Sappbire. tbe guarded, blgbly enriched unuiium
American mission that secretly
whisked weapons-&amp;rade uranium
By Jack Anderson
out of Kazalchstan.
But the cabinet secretary who
and
bas nurtured a repuralion for candor by de-classifying Cold War
Michael Blnstein
secrets was cagey about t4e highstakes post-Cold Ww game of anti- was kept out of tbe bands of potenproliferation. This despite lbe fact tial terrorists or unfriendly Dalioos.
that sbe and Defense Secretary The United States transported to
William Peny declassified Project Tennessee enough material to mate
Sapphire.
more than 20 nuclear bombs. If
In our rust column. we quoted a Project Sapphire is a barniDger of
top DOE offiCial as saylog tll8l the futllre deal"s; however, It's lime to
pnce America paid roc tbe uranium examine the flsc:al fall-out for tax- about $30 million for 600 kilo- payers. Sources involved In tbe
grams - ''may have set a prece- negotiations, for example, tell us
dent for paying an exorbitant the Kazakb aovemment orisinally
amount" tbat we can't IIUII.Ch iD tbe wanted $SO· I 00 million, which
futllre.
borders oo legalized exiMion.
"I think it's very Important to
O'L,ary binted that America
put down tbe individual (at DOE) was pressured to buy tbe uranium
who spoke to you off·the·reconlto because Iran was angling to get It
say lhat lhe price was too blgh," first. According to a report by
O'Leary told us. "That is not my Congress' Office of Technology

111 Cout Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

--Area deathsc.t WIIIiD Sllllefield, 89, Rt. 3, Sandyville, W. VL; died SlllUnlay,
Dec. 10, 19941n die C1evelaad CliDlc after a brief 111neu.

Iro~ec~o134• I

1

The Dilly Sentinel-Page 3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

DEFIANCE - Warren S.
McCaaue. 42, aod JJIIICIIBer Eliza·
beth McCqne, 9, both of Monlpe·
lier, in a two-c3 lll'l'l!Jmt m Ohio
IS iD Wllllna Cotmty.
CLEVELAND -Waiter Wilb·
nesky. 40, h0111etown unavailable.
driver in a two-car accident on a
city street in CuyabosaCounty.
VAN WERT- Mm'garette R.
Savleo, 60, of Payne, driver In a
two-car accident on Oblo 49 In
Panldin&amp; CODDty.
bopCotmty,
RIDAY
.
SATURDAY
TIFFIN - JusUn Hayes, 18,
WAUSEON - Tony R. Hert. Tiffin, in a one-car accident on a
Jr., :27, of Mctamon, unowmoblle - township road In Seneca County.
driver on a FuiiOn COunty road.

MIAMI (AP) - Tbc JIIOIIICCl of Christopher, usually given to
mammolh free trldc ZOIICI in tbe understatement, used words like
Western Hemlapbn llld Alia bas "landmark," "rcoaissance,"
U.S. ofllciaiJ lllldDI of a DCW era "extraordioary" and "unpreceof prosperity .aacf opportunity dented" to describe the proceed·
awalling futule~
ings.
'
That was the message tlley
Clinton llpOke wilb reli;lb about
boped to coovey Ill tbe conclusion the prospect of a free trade area
of the weekeDcl' a 34-nadou SIIJIIIIit wbere, earlr next century, tbe
of the Americas, comin81eu than a hemisphere s 8SO million con·
montb after the 18-natlon Asia· sumers will be buylog $13 trillion
Pacific Economic Cooperation wortb of goods llld services.
That compares witb the S12 tril·
aJUD•
· ~tdDDu:t:
lion value in current dollan of tbe
terpart, the Miami aunuilit, with Asia-Pacific free market-in·the
President Ctintoo serving as genial making.
bost, endmed the goal of a region·
After a 27-year blatus between
al free trade agreement that will Western ~ summits, the
have lasting consequences If It delegates
tbere waa a.Iot of
comes to frultiOD.
unfmisbed business. They vowed
Tbc first pbase calls for negotla· joint efforts on everything from
tiona to start 10011 m the lotegra- catching criminals to making the
tion of Chile into tbe tbree-Dalion hemisphere cleaner llld gla:zter 10
Nortlt American Free Trade Agree· strengtbening delooaacy.
menL
The summit produced remarkThe deadline for concluding ably few mishaps. Officials bad
negotlatioos for a bemispllere·wide been Cllllcemed about the possibili·
agreement Is 2005; actual imple· ty of disruptive actlona by Miami's
mentation would occur later. The vocal Cuban-American c:ommunity
target dale for lowerlog bartlm iD or that lbe summit could degcoer·
tbe Asla·Paclfic regiiX! is 2020.
are into an acrimonions debate over
The sun-splashed Miami sum- divisive issues, such as immigra·
mit featured soaring rhetoric and lion.
mind·numbing numbers, with deJe.
But no one, it seemed, wanted 10
gates talking almost casually about
the multitriDIOD-dollar martel tbey be labeled a IUDIDiit spoiler. Mexi·
can President Ernesto Zedlllo
envision.
to use the summit as a
declined
Clinton, mindful of frequent
platform
to
anti-immigrant
u.s. confronlaii(JIIin the past wilh senlimelltalnassail
California.
Latin America, said the current
cmvergence of views constituted a
Cuban-Americana showed
"magic moment" that can usber iD reaualnt during a mass "Free
a ''new era.••
Cuba" dcmoaatration on Saturday.
Secretary of State Warren

t:"'..:OC

Membc:n ol the Melp County BIBII of fdnration bandied perSODDel maaen lllllielr regu11r bon meeting 1bunday.
Vlderie Jllalby waa hired u a aubalilllle lpeecb tbenlplat IX! a

as-needed basis effective Dec. 7 foc tbe mn•loder of the school
year. In additiOD, die board accepted tbe realgnat!OO of Cordelia
"Dee" Brown u mabl-hlndlcapped tcacber'a lide effective Jan. 3,
199S.
In otbc:r "'•linen, lbe bon appoved membenblp in lbe Oblo
School Board AnocladM roc 199S, approved an amended c:oune of
study for weldlof llld set Jan. 12 817 p.m. for next year's ocgani.za·
tlonal meeting with llie J:Cg\llar meeting following at 7:30p.m.
Atteoding wue Snperilttcodent Jobn D. Riebel Sr. and board
members Jeff Harrla, president; Robert Barton, vice president;
Howard Caldwell; 1.0. McCoy and Jeanette Thomas.
.

Rutland mtm cited in accident
. A ~lland llllll waa cited for assured dear distance by tbe Qal·
lta-Metga Poat of the State Highway Patrol followlog a two-car
IK:Cident Slbday oo Slife Route 124.
Elmer F.llarmoo, 64, 3284S Beedt Grove Rllad, was westbound
in Rutland TOWIIIbip Ill 11:05 a.m. wbco be failed 10 stop in time
and struclt lbe rear of IIIOlber westbound car driven by Robin R.
Eblin, 20, Salem Stteet, R1Miaod, accmfing 10 1be zq,on.
Eblin was preJllrins 10 mate a left lllm into a private driveway at
tbe lime of tbe crub, the patrol said. Damage to bolh can was
slight.

Free clothing dfly Thursday

·

Gallia-Meigs Community Action Agency will have irs free clotb·
ing day 1bunday fmm 9 a.m. until 110011. Tbc agency clolblog bank
is in tbe old scboolbouse building in Cheshire.

Woman charged with vandalism
A 21-year-old 1'uppen Plains woman was cbarged wilb a felony
count of vnatipn -fOllowing an iiiCident in Tuppen Plains early
Sunday evenlog.
. Ciody Smitb wa arrested by deputies of die Mags County Sheriffs Depaatmeut after abe allegedly rammed her car into a bome .
occupied by Grea Reed. Aa:ording to a sheriff' a repM, tbe waD of
1be borne was ~ in approximately l·lfl feet by tbe Impact.
Smith is bemg beld iD tbe Gallia County Jail.

Child struck by vehicle
Troopers of the Gallia-Meiga Post of the State Highway Patrol
are investigaling an acddeot on U.S. 33 near Darwin ~ mornina
in wbich a child was reportedly struck by a vehicle.
Acc:ordiDg to UDCODfirmed reports, the cblld was aossing tbe
highway to wait foc a acbool bus when tbe accident OCCUlTed. Fur·
tber details were unavailable as of presslime.

Decorating contest slated
The Racine Area Community Organization Citrislmas decorating
contest will be held Tuesday from ~ p.m.
Residents liviD in the village and wltbin two miles of the corporation are lnvit:f to participate. Participants need to bave their
lights on during tbe judging period.
Five ont-of-cot~~ty couples will judge the displays.

Cancellation of ATR flights
leaves travelers relieved

CHICAGO (AP) - Travelers crash is under IDvesligatioo.
whose fllllhta were canc:eJed. SunTbc temporary shutdown affects
day OJ! American Eaale ATR thousands of travelers aaoss the
planes weraa't yog- lYPicalllrand- natioo since Chicago is the bub f&lt;X
cd commuters. Many were departures aod arrivals in tbe MidreHeved. not agry.
west.
No Injuries were reported In damage.
"I prefer eo be lllve IIIII driving
Thirty-two cities will not be
A 69-year-old Racine woman a rental car," llid Cnia Hukell. a served by American Eagle from
wrecks investigated recently by
deputies of the Mella County Sbet- was cited on a cbarl!e of falliii'C to businessman wbose llisbt from O'Hare untilalleast Dec. IS, when
control following an accident O'Hare to Bloomington, Ill., was the company expects 10 replace the
lff's DetlartmenL
Tbc lirat accident occurred Frl· around 1 p.m. Saturday near the among those &amp;alldlcd.
ATR-72s and smaller ATR-42s
day 8l S: 12 a.m. m Smte Route 124 junction of Morningstar and Pine
American EasJe gmtmdcd all41 with Swedish-built SAAJ~ 340
iD Salem ToWIIIblp.
Grove roads in Sutton Townsbip,
ATR commuter airplanes at planes. Ill the past. American Eagle
Grover L Riddle, POilleroy, was
According to tbe report. W'tlda 0' Hare International Airport on only used ATRs at tbe airport, the
(Continued lram Page 1)
"I don't believe tll8l we should eastbound wben he str11ck and W. Scarberry was westbolind when Saturday, a day after lbe govern- natioo' s busiest.
Rob Olson, who was in line
be
pitling the middle class against killed a deer tll8l no into the path she lost coolrol of her 1986 Dodge ment blloned the tulboplop aircraft
of staff, Leon Panetta, said Sunday
of bls 1995 Geo Trilcter. Damage pickup wbicb struck shrubbery and from Oylog in Icy weather.
witb
his wife at tbe American
tll8l a middle class tall cut Is not a tbe
'.' OiDton said.
to the front and left side of the a bouse belmgiog to Mike lble.
Ice
on
the
wings
bas
been
susEagle
ticket counter trying to get
administration"is reportedly veblcle was listed as moderate.
cerJainty, even tbougb It is under
Damage to tbe front of tbe lruclc pected in the Oct. 31 crash of an home to Greenville, S.C., said be
serious cooslderation. "We've got considering a tax break for couples
Raln·sllcked roads contributed was listed as moderate.
American Eagle ATR· 72 In had no problem with the decision
to look al the overall budget," be with cblldren. OiDIOil iiOll:d tll8l as to two accidents Friday and SaturIn addition, Deborah J. Roselawn, Ind., lhat killed all 68 by the American Airlines subpart of 1993 budget legislation, a day.
said on CBS' Face IM Nt11i011.
Toundas, 44, Pomeroy, reported people aboard. The cause of the si~.
Clinton suggested money could tax credit was provided for the
Alan R. Durst, 17, Pomeroy, salt fallin&amp; from a passing Ohio
"I m glad tbe pilots were COD·
be fouod iD the federal budget to working~.
was eastbound on State Route 143 Department of Transpmation lruclc
cerned," be said, referring 10 sevpay·for a middle class tall ~ut In
He said a tax break for the mid· Friday around 2: 3!5 p.m. when be broke the windshield of ber 1988
eral pilots' refusalro fly tbe planes
die-class would complement this lost control of bls 1978 Chevrolet Oldsmobile Cutlass Sunday morn199~ ''without hurting poor peoin icy conditions evco before the
measure.
plet
Camaro in a curve. deputies report- ing on State Route 7 near Pomemy.
government and airline intervened.
Am
Ele
Power
Qintoo said be wanted to find a
CllniDII cited "dlacipllne in wei· ed. Tbe car sustained moderate
Akm
..
-----------·---.54118
way to give midclle-inc:omc taxpay- fare reform" as a way to help
Ashland on ----------.32 11t
eis lnak "in tbe CODtellt Of DOt a tiDance suc.b a tax break.
AT&amp;T ·-------------.49 1/4
He said bis administration
lot of Irresponsible promises, but
Bank One·-----------.25 718
tbc real duciflines of the real would protect poor people who
Bob Evans--------.. --.19 118
world. 1bat is, do not want to see needed government helP. to get
Cbamplon lod·-----------24
Units of the Meigs County Memorial Hospital;
Cbarmlng Sbop-------......5 718
back on their feet, but 'no one Emergency Medical Service
Ibis deficit start goins up again."
6: IS p.m. Saturday, Pomeroy
City Hokllng --·---·-----.30 314
It was a dig 8l Republicans, who should get a check f&lt;X irresponsible recorded six calla for ·assistance Pike, Charles Crisllp, treated Ill lbe
Federal Mogul.-------.... 19 318
hav.e suggested cutting social pro- conduct."
Saturday and Sunday. Units sccoe.
Goodyear
TileR --------.32 518
The Clinton administration also respooding iiiCiuded:
grams to help pay foc tbeir ioltiaRACINE
K.,mart -------------.14 114
is
considering
trimming
tbe
Cabi·
tives, including a tax cuL
MIDDLEPORT
7:20p.m. Saturday, State Route Lands End -------- .. - .... 14 3/4
Clinton denied tll8l the election net and ordering drastic cuts in
Limited Inc.--------·--....... t9
S:5.5 a.m. Saturday, Powell 681, Benjamin Buchanon Camdenresults were forcing blm to propose hundreds of progtamS to sbriDk lbe Street, Carol Wines, Veterans Clark Memorial Hospital.
Multimedia Inc. ·-- --·--·-·.25 314
a uix cut aod pay for It by c:ulting budget and help pay for any tax
Point Baocorp ·-----·---....... t9
RUTLAND
Reliance Electrtc ____.........JO 718
reductions. Housing aad Urban MADD chief urges
programs roc poor people.
4:12p.m.
Satunla~. Rocksprings
Robbins &amp; Myen....--........ 16 1/2
"You tnow, people read the Development, Energy and Trans·
Road, Donna Griggs, Pleasant Val·
(Continued from Page 1)
Royal Dull:b--------·-·.105 314
electioos aay way they want," be portation are the most likely 10 be
ley
Hospital;
Sbooey's
....---------13
said. "I tbiDit the important !bing targeted.
bours to merabollze the alcohol
Star Bankloc
___
.:_ ______ ,__ .J4 3/8
I/4
10:16 p.m. Saturday, Happy
tbrougb their system.
is, do wbat we tbiDit is righL"
Hollow Road, Betty McKnight,
Wendy lot'L ---------·--14 1/8
"It takes a long time to sober VMH.
Worthington Ind.....--.. - -.19 1/8
10111eone up," Holcomb said.
·
SYRACUSE
Holcomb
warned
drivers
that
Stock reports ue the 10:30 Lm.
The Dally Sentinel
1:02 p.m. Saturday, squad and
quotes prnldtd by Advut or
during lhe holidays more patrols volumeer fire department, motof·
(USPS ZIJ.960)
Ga!Upolls.
OAPSEto_..
will be d,rivlog addilional hours.
vebicle accident at Pine Grove and
"Have
a
safe
and
happy
boliday
Meigs
Local
Chapter
17,
Ohio
Published every afternoon, Monday through
Morningstar roads, Wilda ScarberFriday, Ill Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio. by lhe
Association of Public School and drive carefully," be added.
ry, treated at the scene.
Ohio Vlllley Publishins Company/Multimedia
Safe party llpl
Employees, will meet Tuesday
Inc ., Pomeroy, Ohio -45769, Ph. 992-2-1.56.
• ask guests to cbo()se a desig·
nigbt at 7:30 p.m. In tbe high
Sec:Ond clast pollaJe paid ll Pomeroy, Ohio.
school cafeteria.
Merilber: The A11ociated Preas. and the Ohio
roods sucb
NeWsptper Associ•ion.
as dJeese and meat. since tbey stay
ProRnm to he prmllled
POSTMASTER: Send address corrections to
VETERANS MEMORIAL
'fhe Mount Hermon U.B. In the stomach longer,
Tbe Daily Sentinel, Ill Court Sl.,
•
minimize
salt,
since
it
makes
Satunlay
admissions - Bertha
Cbun:b
of
tbe
Texu
rmnmunlty
Pomen&gt;y.Ohlo 45769.
·
will have a Cbrlatmu prrogram, people thirsty and speeds up intoxl· Smltb, POilltroy.
SUISCRJmON RATI!S
"Got to BNethlebeJD," Sunday at callm;
Salurday·dllcitaiJes - nooe.
By Curler or~ ltoale
·provide D(JI-ak:obolic drinb:
sunc~ay mluiml
nooe. .
7~.m. lbe public Ia invited to
One W!ek ..................................................$1 .60
a
.
• collect car keys when peopt,e
Sunday dlscbaraes - Bertba
One MOIIIII ................................................ $6.95
One¥..................................................... $83.20
arriorbatsve,·,tagglog tbe::ays
.. ~ta Smltb, POilltroy.
HOLZEil MEDICAL CENTER
SINGLE COPY PRICE
• mix driDb Y
' vOiding
Dlacltara•• Dec. 9 - Brice
Oally .................................................... ll Cena
open
bara
to
better
moultor
Pratt,
Cyntlll~ McCany, Kallie
LOST 2 female dogs, · drlnters' levels·,
Subsinbcn nee deairinJ to pay the Cllrier m~y
LIIIIer, uo•,_
~~.... .--.
,._,__
mnit in atvance direct to The Gallipolit Daily
1
gold
&amp;
white
Collie
• watch guests' bebavi«, espe·
Bbtltl- Mr. IIIII Mrs. William
Tribonc on a three, 1i~ Qr 12 month buis .
Credit will be JiveD cirrier each week.
cially tboae who stagger, taUt too ('tmunlop son; BidweU; Mr. aod
&amp; answers .to Fred
mucb, show glddlneu or sleep!· Mra. Artlttir Wojwzet. son. Bid·
No lubscription by mail pennilted in areu
ness;
weD.
where home carrier service is available.
1 Lha5a Apso brown
• plan activities, such as cba1&gt;11c11arp1 Dec. tt - Bernice
Ravenswood,
(304) 273-2152
MAIL SVBSCRtmONS
multi
answers
to
Sassy_
rades,
joke
contests
and
board
Duct,
Jam's Hall, Mrs. Arthur
1-Gollo Cooonly
Prtneed- Atneed- Postneed
gamea so ckinldna Ia not the party's Wojtaszek and son, Diana Gill,
llWed&lt;J...... :...•....!........................ ......... $21 .84
past Sputhem
26 Wed&lt;J........ :.......................................$43.11&gt; .
focal point;
· Etllel Bondi, Eusenla Culwell,
SERVING JACKSON (WV.) MASON (WV.}
52 Wed&lt;J................................................. $84.16
• clOIIe tbe
90 minutes before Mrs. Wlllla Cummings llld 8011.
. High School
·, -OodoldeGolloc-,.
AND MEIGS (OH.) COUN11E.S
the party cadi. aerviDi desaert 1111'
llrCU - Mr. IIIII Mn. David
llWed&lt;J............................ ............ ......... $23.&lt;0
26 .............................................. $45.l0
coffee
or
ICI.
Rancmber
mly
time
W&lt;XIww,
1011,
Wdllton.
REWARD • 949-3501
l l -........... ,............... .....................$83.&lt;0
will sober peat~.
(Plat' I td wltli pw '' I doa) ·

Deputies probe 4 accidents

Clinton hints at tax cut
K:'

· Stocks

·----------..33

a

·EMS units record 6 calls

-·-·-

Announcements

~.!:~gb ~in

Hospital news

~

( ..,

Siraiglit- rtucl(r.r &amp; !Rpusli
!funeral !Jl~
wv.

'*

�Mol)day, ~ber 12, 1994
. . .
.
.

The Daily Sentinel

Sports

.

Monday, December 12, 1 9$4

I

.,

Page 4

Giants beat Bengals 27-20 to stay alive in playoff chase
ByTOMCANAVAN
·
EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J.
(AP) - Oo a day lbc New Yort
Giants kept their faint playoff
hopes alive by beallog CiDciJmad
for the fust time, Beogals toaeb
David Sbula jlllllost IL
An aogry Sbula ripped lbc officials minutes after a questionable
pass iotedcreoce call set up Rod·
ney Hampton's game-winning
three-yard touebdown roo widl 40
seconds to play Sunday, giviD&amp; die

Giants a 27-20 victory and their
fourdl slraipt win.
The Giants (7 •7) probably bave
to win their final two gam~s to
have any chance or making tbe
playoffs. They will play at
Pblladelpbia next Sunday and will
close on Christmas Eve at bome
agaiDst Dallas.
"The effort was good but we
made a lot of mistakes," Giants
coach Dan Reeves said. "I'd say
our (playoff) ch!mres are still really

slim but I'm ootgoins to worry
about iL We still bave our work cut
out for us."
Tbe Beogals (2-12) made the
Giants work a lot harder than
expected to post their fli'St win in
five games asaiost them. Ciocin·
oati rallied from a 20-10 fourthquarter deficit to tie the game on
Jeff Blake's second touchdown
pass to Carl Piclreos and a 23-yard
field soal by Doug Pelfrey with
1:47 to play.

However, Dave BI'OWII bit three
straigbt passes to move die Giants
from lbcir own 34 to lbc Beogals'
25, and then came the play that
probably will get Sbuia a telepbooe
call from the NFL executive
offJCCS.
With ~\{ike Sherrard rponlog a
go pattern on the left sidelines
against
Sawyer, Brown went
deep. Bolli players went for the ball
and it feU to lbc poulld. So did a
flas frtiJn '!_de _judse Dave Wyant

Corer

for interference.
It gave New York a first and
goal and Hampton scored bis second touchdown 011 die next play.
A livid Sbuia said Wyant's call
was borriblc, allbou&amp;b the word be
used was a little worse.
"We got screwed," Sbula said.
''Corey Sawyer is doing everytbins
you teach a guy to do. He's in front
of tbe receiver, playloglbc baD and
the receiver runs up from behind
and we got caUed for piSS interrer-

ence. You explaio lito me. I don't
understand."
Sawyer said be told Wyant tbaf
be bad given tbe game to tbe
Giants.
"If I was a Giant I wouldn't
lake tbat win," said Sawyer, wbo
set up two Beogals touchdowns
with a punt return and an in~er~:ep:
lion. "It's under the win column
but I don't consider it a win. It's •
CbriabDal Jll'CSCIIL"
(SeeiENGALS aa ..... 5)

.

' Chesap~ake boys

,, \

•

' "·

..

record 69-53.victory over Eastern

By SCOTI' WOU'B
· while Josh Rusiell bad IS and
SentlaMI Cenwp Nllhat
brothen Sammy and Alex Gue
Cbe111pc h'a l'aolben plucbd eacbbadah.
Eastern was led bY IDOtber IJII.
tbe Eastclll Eqlca' wiD&amp; lcatbcn
early In tbe fint balf, tbco iunlved anced attack of Jt. from Brian
a gallaot F.qlc ocmebal;k 10 c:lalm Bowen, ten from Cbarlie Bissell.
a 69-53 DOD-I~ boys' basket· Eric Hill lCD and abt each by Jeff
baD triumph at
llpellke Satur- Stetbem and Jasoo Sbeell.
Eastern was out to Iuocb in.tbe
day olgJJt.
Norm Pelnou'a ~ ooe of first ball. Eagle head coach Tony
the most eatabllsbed in lbc state, Ia . Deem said, "We were flaL We bad
DOW 2-0, Wbllc Eastem dropped to olbcr thinss on 0111' mlnd"bcsldes
0-2.
basketball. Cbesapeete Is one of
Ryan Mount led the winners tbe state's premier prosrama.
with 23 points and s~ rebounds, They've bad the undefeated sea-

Scoreboard
'

"-hi

Bask etb all

Evs-pee~~ 46, Uberty Centt:r 41

c..~ ·

a.-........ ·

Foirfleld Uoioo 63, Ubftty Unlo454
Faith Cbr.S4, Xcola Clr. :16
Poyelle 9(1, Maumee Vol. 31
findlay 51, Umo ShiWDII 49 (OJ')
Prodcrictlown 70, LoudOnYillo 54
Ft. Reeov..., II, r'fOilldiii·Mo""'IO
Gallipolil71, Vinton Co. 61
Gllmo.. 62,P&lt;try 48

,_,._

M&lt;Ry, N.Y. 7S, bomiDiioa, N.Y.1l

·NBA stancUnp

Bloomllold7S,-.. St 41

Esldbldoa

Adoaic-

~-·- . . . . ......lf ~6

New Yort ............. II

rr •

B""""-....................1 II

6lfl
.421

9
"'---'' ............7 II
New!tnoy .............l 13
MJamt ................... .4 12

.319
.311
lSO

W=•••••••oooo•O•-'

•~

C.tnl5 .'706
CU!VBLAND ...... Il I .579
Clllrloao ............... J 9 .500

~................... J

'
10
Allolll .......... --.-.1 II
M -............. .6 12

.500

.4JI
.333

Salvday'l .......
-C..Coo6own
""""'"' 63,1lot1JGO 60
Doollora75,Eorlblm61
'
W-51.~53

2

u
u

ow. Allliodc c..r--.w
.....

II.Cooltol79

4J
5
6.5

1Wdolbq73.-~

ldto can.u 61, oaneta 62
-._6I,Mow11Uol01160
ObJo Norlhon !n, Hlnm 82

.....,.._

WPSTIRN CONPERBNC£

~

. . . . . . Jf

~If/

6 .625
I J7f
7 .563
9 .471

J)ooi"' ...................10

Ulab ....................... 11
llallaa ...................... J
5u Altlllllo .............l

--

. - . -................3 ., .167
l'llotola .................. l3

IIOORANDB II9,Molo110101
IJrt&gt;oDo97,SitlwiOOSL 14

N•-' .... ..._ ,

Gl

BowUaao.- '19. Loyola.lll.l!l

· I
IJ
2

a-.y12,WIImiD&amp;Ioo71(0I)

Delroil 70, Wolob 6f
l'llldloy 13, ObJo Wllloyoo T1
IIIIi SO,I'Iirfield 4!1
ObJo Dolllillklll 911. Wilborf«oe 79
Tol«&lt;o 7'1, Colorado SL 61
Wri&amp;lll St 11, Do,... 53

u

9

5 .722

Xo-.!cr 15, U.U11111 51
YouopiDWD St.69, Mrooll

s.olo .................... l2 6 .647
I
LA. ................... 11 7 .611
2
.................. 9 7 .563
3
........... .10 I .556
3
Ooldoo-........ ....1 10 ...... .
'
LA.OI- .......... .2 17 .105 IIJ

T~mta

lhlta.U...a..Jc

M.w~ior....:r... !n

,_,._

Salurday'l IICOnl

ctodi!DIIi 110, r-.-lolortlo 56

\llew Yort 107,1'bilodelplilo 103

-!tnoy 101,-•96

-lo:i.NJ·-•9

Dollo 119,a.Jollo 16
Su Allloalo 101,-.. 96
llorlwiii,W-19

Blull\aa 96, Mallo~D 71

Spaldilam. c"""' st~o3

w............ Allolllo,l:lO p.m.
~•llbll.9p.m.

Ohio women's
coUege scores

--·-o,9p.m.

-·Jibll. . . .

-y

Tueldlly'•..-

lo7:l0p.m.

Mllwollk&lt;o. a.Jole, 7:30p.m.

- · - - 7:30p.m.
-·a.8VI!LAND,7:l0p.m.
LA. LoUn• Dollll. I p.m
Dolld. Chltoao,l:lO p.m.
WMIIIafoa•Houotoo.l:lO p.m.

Sacnme1to at Oolde1 StK.. 10:30
p.ta

•
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AP10p25
women's poll
wltb fiflt·plac• •otea 11 pareathuea,
.-.1-.,.
Jloo, II, to4ol poilll btold

oo 25 pojiiiO for • flnt P'- - _.,..
ODI poill (or I 2$tb piKe vote ud 1. .
-··rut~~~:

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w;r:
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721
705

610
633
623
616

·no

SOli

501
443
120
406
3:16

311
293

2
3
4
6
S
1
10
9
I
II
II
12
16
ll

13
II
19
21
22

127
10&lt;
21.lon........................ ).3 •. ~
2 5 . - ..................... 3-1
41

24

2:Z.SO\dlnCii ............. H

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recthlaa .,.... , DePaal 39,
""' Moltoo II. 16.l'lorido .............

u. D~.-11.10, r... 1 0 , - 1,

=to•

OIUO ST. 7, Dou 5, Oklahoma Sl. S.
3. W~uatte 2, Stepbea F.
2, W - o 2, Groml&gt;llqlt. I,
. - 1 , OU Doailioo I.

t

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•

Cldontlle 16, Wolob 56
RIOORANDI! 106,Malooel6

Wolobl-"12,_...,53
W.,U.-74,0....We51
W.... lllrdlnl!n. Oe. WOil Toc111l

w.....n7l.-59

Wayaeovllle 52, S. CbarlcJioA Soudt·

I.

Wilca~:~~la 71, Toledo61

0111091, SacraaeaiO St.l6
Pod&amp; 74,01110 ST. 67

Sunday's soor•
N~ru•~~«

E. Dliooll63, Ciociao.atl61

Toumamenta

Ohio U.S. boys' scoi'C!'
B1ttlmore St. Francis 66, Cia. WI~
row 57
BNVcr EMtern 88, S)'JIUDCII Val. 79
Bdllxoot 60, Day. OviJtloD 56
Belloloawae11, Moryovtlle 50
Bolprt 64, W.,eo Loco! 56
a ... u. Normandy 62
Botkiu 51, New 811m0o55
Brlltol 85, G!ud Vol. 65
BNOb 64, O.yobop PaiiJ 62
Bucbyo Cealrol 12, Plymo&lt;Oh 64
a..u,. Trail46, Coldwell 32
c..IPIIIIooNW6l. 1\Waw 53
C..On Cath. 66, Looilville "
Catoa OleDOU. 61, Cutoo. S. 43
C.Oo McKioley 61, Cl~ Hoy 47
ClrdillJto• 79, Johoatowa Northridae

.

Q
I b69,Reodovlllo-.53
Cia A!Ua69,Col. Wh.,...,.,.
Cia. !hthea59, Cia. Mlriemolll S3
CiA. lodiulllll72, Cill. OviJtloD 52
CiJI. l.alo&gt;lo55, Clo. "'""'" Hcolthy 54

.

.......

Cia. Woloutlllllo7l,cto. Colni1156
Cba. Wllll.oa Woodl76, Cln. Moeller ,

r.,w..

01 1'111_!'-11, uc Drmo 61

111P 73, N. Colonldo 15
TN
s

a.-

Cia. Wooclwln156, Day. Belmont IS
Cle. P..nr'icttM 69: Cle. &amp;lt66
Clo.- 64,
Poli162 .

Clo.Colll-15, Tii. Ubboy71
Clo.I!Mt Toc1176, !oloillu 64

C1o. St. - 1 6 . Clo. ~Uc 31
Clw Port 75,1lonvtllo 29
Col. ~n sa. Woo~&lt;rvillo s. 41
Col. J..
61,81!~- 56
Coi.St
•65, C.I.
emySl

x:t......

Col1111

a..vtewn

Wcaten

Reacrvo

Adttahilri Hwbcr 39, CoLUieaut 35

Atbeu fi1, Alc1111der 39
Avoo Lake 59, N. Royoltoo26
Bay 42, Rocky Rlvu li (01')
Beaven:reet 13, SJriol· Ncxth 2!1

liu 4S (01')

Ci&amp; S....!DIIo 63, Loctlllld :16 .
Cia. Sl. Xovltt 63, Cbi&lt;IIIO St. Ia·

.....

·~ A.tron SJriolfield 65. Lauilvllle 36

Cln. Col eniD 45, Cio. Wllnut Hilb 41
Cill. Couatry !loy II, Clo. Hilil a.;..

KoeaCioak
1\lrdroand
OIDO ST. II9,IdahoSt ~3
Pacific 14, OHIO 71

Cia. Purc:eli·Nirloa 65, Cia. Nottb·

t-IO,-Col71

Akron CovcD.b'}' 7S, Akroa Blmt SO
AiroD Hobaa ,2, AtroD Cea-Hower

BotldDJ 45, Miami E 34
Bucyruo 53, Norwalk 35
CoolOn Codt. 17, Mn&gt;D Buchl&amp;l4~
Cardinal 56, Borbblro 26
Carrollton 10, Culm s. 31
Cen..,.llle 51, Spriq. Soulh lO
Ce11tral Bapt. 4S, New OCII.ioo 31
0Yrdoa43, Wk:k1Ufc26
Q&amp;ou NOd ~3. Pad• 31
CII-49,CIIcolllreRJverVol. !3

KoeaCioak
s....d ........

64

Ohio H.S. girls' scores

Buley ss.Uckillo v~ . 32
Bloct Rlwr 60, Niroout Sll'llul 57

Toumamenll

_..

Zaoolvllle 13, Col. EMtmoor 52

BdleV\10 ~.Shelby 4!

Xovl• 17, Doyloo T1 (OI)

ss

tllltn31
W01tllb
w. o10
WIU-buq6 ,Bilbei·TIIoll
WllmiDIIo013, Goolteo 41

aa. mr:•

Na.a.' wee..._
Plodloy ll,lld.-1\!r.·Pt. Woyao59
llealll, YouoplowD St69
Uodocy Wllooo 95, WUI&gt;orfon:e 53
· Lauilvillo 63, Mloall 61
Moult St. Jooepb 66, M01111t Vemoo
N-64
Nd&gt;roob T1, Bowll'l Oroco 61
SE Miunli 71, Clcvel1.11dSt 67
Shawooc St !15, Pikeville, Ky. l9 .
SL Frm:i1, N.Y. 12. Mroo 69

19

ll

W. -IIO,Oitlr&lt;l75
W. Cb81ter LltotJ.:55, Cit. Mouat

_,,.

OW. A.tWedc Cuilwwcc
Copltol61, Bokhrio·Woll&lt;a SO
llllrl... 61, lfolcloll&gt;q 61
Mault Ulioo 10, Mlaldqtlm 69
ObloNorlhon57,Hlnm49

17

211
:171
2111
179
llS

n-.NJ&amp; .........s.o

.}

'

Nardi c...r Coilhiw
76,11oayoa ,.,.
lllofMJ070,- 55
WllleDbera70,W-.r44

'lbo Top 25 ,...., lo lilt -'-lllld
- · ..,_., ..........._poll.

2. CoaaJC'IQC ................S-0
. 3. l.Diillla Tocb ...........$-1
Ulordt ClnliiM ...........7~
5 . -.....................7~
6. StuCoriL................ , .4-I
7. r... St. .......................S.I
1. Colonolo .....................$-1
9. Y-Ilt .....................!
10. Wlllll- .............. 6-1
II. T - Tocii ............... 6-Z
JZ, JC..oo ......................6ol
11 ViriJolo .....................S.Z
I~ Oecqlo.....................:J-0
ll. ......................4-3
16. W. lloalllet)' ...- .......S.O
17. fllorido ......................$-2
tle. G.
S.O
. 19. Mioolooi ..............6-0
20.
...a
21. SeoJaJIIIII .................t-1

V-Buu.5!,......,_41
VIIIDIIloo Sl,l'orl CIIIIOD39

Saturday'•...,....

55,

ColltOC:II!UI,J..IcldqVII. 64
, !loy.
Y-lbyon 63
Dlllo 66,
. VII. 43

Dtm:!f

CloYort-

Doll"-~
50
B.
..,... ... ~69

B. LIYirpool CbrlOIIao 114, Atroa

Qlr."
Brio (h.) l'l1p 10· Cit. St. ipllluo 66

Cill. Morey 46, C.l. w......, 45
Ciu. Priuc:doa 43, Milford 31
Cln. St. Bemonl 61, Cln. Deer l'llrt 41
CIA. TUiplo 5l, Kiop 40
Cle.llor, 14, Lonolo S&lt;AIIhview 37
Cle. He''"' 66, VoDey Forae51
Oe. St. ]oooph A&lt;od. 56, Shaker lb.
Laurd27
Clyde 46, Mll•l!dlooo J1
C.l. Academy 47,Morloo Calb. 46

...

....
•

...
•

...

614-949 -26 82

Bill
Plunllla' maucer at Jactaoaville or lhe

South... . _ .

JJETRorr PISTONS: Placed Uodsey
Humer, plrd, u.d Oliver Miller,.center,
oa the lujURd JilL Actintod IVIDO New-bill, fOIWwd.. rrom lhe iDjured lilt.

....

•

....

....

....

...

Hocltey

eo.......,~

ERIE PANTHERS: Waived Ju11in
Peca,forwonl.

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

74· 1111 ua.l

+

•• •
.... ....
....

.

.....

~

....

....

.
.....

.
•.....
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•
... .*
.
...
•. •
• •
.•
...
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•

....

.... ...

.... ....
....
....
•

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_._._.

EASTEJlN
(l-7-16e22-53)
Brian Bowen 6-0.{1..12, Ryan
Buckley ()..().l•l,Jetf Stdbtm 3.()..
o-6, Travis Curtis 1.0.0.2. Jaaoa
Sheeu 3..().{).6, Eric Hill 4-0-2-10,
Cbarlie Bissell 4-0-:Z.IO, Micbael
Baioett J..().()o.2, Mlcab Otto 2.().. .
~. Totalr. ut-5113oo53

CIII!SAI'EAD

(17·1~"1"1~

Sammy Gue 1-0-4•6, Ryan
Mount 9.()..5-23, Rob Smidl O-O:Z.2, Cbria Moore 1.()..1•3, Alex
Gue 1-0-4-6, Lee MooD 1.()..1•3.
Josh Ruuell S-1·2•1S, C"rrey
Harli11 0-0-4-4. Totals: 21·1·
24141-69

+ ....

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

...

To Place Your Greeting
Call Dave or Bob
at 992-2155

....

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!t .

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Three Rio Gnndc players reeled
off 20-poiot-plJa perforiiiiiiCel to
pace die Redmcn eo a 119-101 wiD

over vlsltlna Malone Saturday

ni~ RedmaP &lt;H&gt;. playing their

Mid-Oblo Coafenaee opener on
Bob Evma Filma Nl&amp;bt. saw Snyder aiok a game·biJb 26 polnta,
including four out of five from
tbree-point range. Coreoo bad 2S
points lind ciJbt rebounds, while
Mall PoweD bad 21.
The RMmen, w11o led 47-38 ac
balftlmc, bit44 of 72 (61.1'1&gt;) for
lbc pme from lhe field, wbile Mal·
one turned In a 41-for-72 effon
from die fJCid. (56.9'1&gt;).
Jason Carver lind Ridt Mast led
Malone wltb 23 and 20 points,
respectively.

Tbe Redmen will so west to
play Wllberfoo:e Tuesday at 7:30
p.m.

Rio Grande's Rc:dwomeu 1001t a ,
Now Open For
55-36 balftime lead and stayed · .
Christmas Season
abead eo route to a 106-86 win
Poinsettias-6 colors
over bost Malone in the visitors'
Poinsettia Baskets
MOC opeuer Salunlay nigiiL
Foliage BaskeiS
The Redwomeo (4-6) shot 42
for 76 (55.3'1&gt;) from the field and
Christmas Trees
11 for 14 (78.6'1&gt;) ..tlbc line. MaiFor the loved ones •
ooe sbot 43'1&gt; from die field.
Monument Sprays, vases &amp;
Stacy Riley paced lbc RcdwomGrave blankets.
en with a 36 points c:aning mostly
on 14-for-22 fti:ld-goal shooting.
Hubbard's Greenhouse
Sbe also bad a team-hish nine
Syracuse, Ohio
rebounds and dlree steals. Megan
992-5776
Winters bad 29 points and cigbt
Open Daily 9-5
rebounds.
Sunday 12-5
Malone's Tooya Miller led all

!

But hurry, this offer expires .
December 31, 1994!

.

~

'

'·~~f'\ .

&lt;

' """"" .ta..f.- t I
TRIPPED - Cincinnati quarterback Jeff
Blake (left) lllta lite tarf after the New York
Glanta' MldaMI Straiulll trl.. ~ In tile aecond

'

;
;
1 • '"

'

'

•

•

Bt~nga/s

lose again..._&lt;;_Co_ntin_ued_from_Pag..:..e....:..4)_ _ _ _ __

Sberrard said lbc pattern was an
adjustment because the Beogals
were blitzins.
"I went deep llld be tbrew it up
and there was a little tusscliog," ·
Sllemud said. "Tbe rules say you
can't touch aoyooe after five yards
and he definitely did."
The call was made and the
Giants' playoff hopes remained
alive.

"I'm not ready to use the P
(playoft) word yet," said Brown,
• • wbo bit 16 of 26 for 222 yards, a
•
IQUdldown and two interceptions.
With lbc Be11gals tralliDB 20-10,
• • S,awyer started tbe comeback by
picking off a Brown pass . Jeff
Blake cappecl tbe ensuing 60-yard
drive by bitting Pickens 011 a three·
·• yard toucbdown pass with 9:23 to
play. Pic:blla also bad a five-yard
touchdown in lbc SCC4Ind quarter,
~' but saw bls streak of 100-yard
receiving gamea ended 11 four.
Adrian Hardy bloeked Mike
Horan's punt on tbe following
sertea, giving the Beogals lbc baD
at tbe GiaDta' 46. Blake. wbo was
17-for-37 ror 200 yards. bit Dlmay
Scott on passes of eialit IIDd 16
yards and got tbe Bengali to the
New York five. Tbat set up a
·: . aame.tylns 23-yard field soai'by
Pdi'ey.
.
Dave. Mcnett returned tbe

. ..

quarter of Suda:r'• aame In Eut Ratiterford,
N.J., w11.-. tile Glaab woa 27-20. Blakeaalned
four )'udJ aa ... na. (.AP)

ensuing kick to lbc GiaoU' 34 and
Brown took over, blttlllg Aaron
Pierce for 23, Chris CaUoway for
10 and Meggett for 12 to the Bengals' 2S. Tbe pass interference followed .
"Nobody said anytbios,"
Meueu said. referrins to die fourplay, 66-yard same winning drive.
'Nobody bad to. We all knew
wbat bad to be done."
The Beogals did what they felt
lbcy bad to do.
"When you go out there and
buSt your taU for four quaners and
lose, tbal's line," Ilndw*er-Steve
Tovar said. "But wbeo It's out of
our control, that's not rigbl''
New York toolt advantase of a
22-29 mpb wind in the second
quarter to open a 17-7 halftime
lead. A little crosaing pattern tbal

Holiday Gift

Sberranl turned into a 53-yard gain
set up HamptOO's sbon roo for a 7·
Olead.
· Dal uiso, replacins slumping
David TreadweU afltr ldcking three
field goals in a win over Ocvelaod
last week, stretdled tbe lead to 100 with a 52-)'lll'lk:t.
,
. But a 40-yard punt return by
Sawyer mel a penooal foul put die
ball at New York 12. Five plays
later, Blake bit Pickens In tbe back
of the end zooe from five }'lWs.
Brown drove New York 65
·yards on tbe next scrle&amp;, greatly
aided by a 42-yard pass interference call aglinst Mike B1im. From
tbe eight, Brown hit tlgbt end
Howard Cross on a touchdown
pass.
Pelfrey and Daluiso excbaosed
tbir&lt;kiuarter field goals.

Subscription Coupon
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CITY

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ADD~S

CJTY

STAIU DELIVERY DATE-----·· -

Wade, M.D.

Suite 112 Valley Drive
Pt. PIMMDt, 1n'. :
(:all 304-875·1244 fo~ .-\ppt. or Iaforauadoa '
M--..r of ~a PPO A .i'e41era1

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For Ear, Nose &amp; Throat lncludina
lohn·~.A.

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"

31 poinU.
The RedwOIDCD return home to
face Cedarville Tuesday at 7 p.m.

iCOfaS wilb

A Sentinel subscription is the perfect gift. It's useful and fits every size and taste. Just
out the coupon below, and you'll get 20% oft' the subscription cost.

....

•
. '

Manhall abead to stay. He allo fin.
isbed with a team-blah .seven
rebounds.
Caniaius baa built a repalllioo
for secood-baif comebacb. Tlie
Golden Griffin• overcame a 20point deficiltpinst No. 13 Clndaoati on Friday nlpt to reach tbe
title
•
~made a 11111 at IDOtber ooe
Saturday, audng a 10-poinl delic:it
to 87-82 wldl2:23 left. But Moore
and Tmk BI'OWII bit free throws tO
blunt lbc cbarge.
•
Donovan UICd every op)ICIItUIIlty to mnind bis players about ~
Golden Griffin's peodlam for &lt;XJme
ing from behlild
"We talked about it durin&amp;
every •iDWllll
don't relax. lbcy
am cane bact and win die bastctball pme." Dooovan said.
•

One Size Fits All

!

,..:

.
....
• •. .. • .••

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

'
.~

just didn't lift lbc team tbc way be
bad In our fiiitdlree pmea. To me.
it was just a ladt of cfforL He Will
a differeut player tooigbt ''
Evidently, be toot it pcnooally.
"Even though I bad played a
pretty good game (Friday), 1 didn't
play witb die sue type of inteosi·
ty," Moore said.
.
It as there in the title game.
Moore, averasing 22.8 per same.
bit 13-of-25 from die floor and 9of-10 from die foul line. He bad 18
points in tbe first ball, wbeo Mlw·
shall took advantase of 13
DDDOvers to build a Jlinc.polnt leld.
Michael Meeks bit a layup tbal
Sparked a six-point roo lhal cut it to
40-37 at halftime. A dunk by
Meeks put Caoislus abcad 66-65
with ll:lOiefL
Moore bad a steal and laylo as
part of a six-point spurt that put

.

~

.... • ....
Advertising Deadline:
•
• • • Monday, December 19th, 5 PM .... ....
.... ....
••
.....

'

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2dltlon

;. ·

•

~

•

... ... ...

In actloa at Skyllae Speecl-y. Driver Qdl Stllttl
drore the car to H1'eral featwe wlna IIDII tile tnck
cllamplo•lllp at Skyllae, wille allo ea&amp;'IIIDa tllp
llo110n at MYeral aliter- tnc:b.

CHAMPION IN ACTION - Tllll picture
sbo'WI dte l"'edaluo Aat11motln fS.8 eau.ro, oae
or t11e ana'• bwt Joold1111 IIDII r.tat pue ..........

llukelb.U
N..._. -..w"-&lt;larloo

&lt;lhe 1Jallu1 Sentinel's

~

...

:J
m iles pil s t
Southern HI&lt;Jil Sc hool
St. Rt . 12·1 Rilcine. Oil

..;;•_..;....

•

CUyobop Pollo79, Atroo N. e7
CUyobop Hta. !3, WOO&lt;lidp J1
Dt.ab·ury Ukclldc n, Maumee Val.

KARENS
GREENHOUSE

DETRO~~kr"l:omed

r'

.
.
.
:....._•:.....-•:....._•__.__.__. ____.__.,
.....

•••

42 (01')

1.000 to choose fr om .
Chr ist mil s Trees. Bul k
Ca ndy. Crilft s. Ami sh
Jel ly. App le But ter.
Cancly &amp; J ell y Gift s.
H:mdm .1 de Basket s

...

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Poinsettias

o

l·SU-.,. 12 2 0 .157 119 256

C.I.DoSoleo50, Teoyo Vol. 33
C.l. Roody 46, 8Joom.CIIYOII4l
Copley 42, Orw.burJ ar-lO
Qeotwood II, Oly11lop VoDey Cit.

DIJ.i=lallfe-Ju.liell.ae 43, TrotWood·
3)
Doy. lell...,. SS, ~ Volloy I."

der, which broke opeD a 3S-36
• pmc. For die Ea&amp;Joa. JOIII C.to
. 11111 l!ric Dilllrd eiCb w 1~CbriJ Bailey 10. Cb8d Mom led
the S)Jif1IDI with 16, willie leaDI·
mate Pmmca SIDderl wldlaiDe.
Eastern will go to Belpre Toesday.

Rio teams beat Malone in MOC openers

''

BMOIJall

w.... - .

Col. Brookbavea SJ. Zlllaville Ra.

Coulllry !loy 21
DonvlllelOI, Lllcll26

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

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Tran sac ti o ns

c..allll.......
......... 9 s 0 ~3 316 259
Delroit .............. I 6 0 .571 296 2911
Cbi"'l!' ............ I 6 0 .571 :UI 211
0..0 Boy......... 7 7 0 .500 327 251
~Boy ....... 5 9 0 .357 215 30!

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2vz
23!
324
271

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

Slrio....... 57, Uttlo Mllml37
ieayo Vol. lS,IIerlte Union 61

ToI. Roll'!' 93, BlyrlaiO
Tol. St FnDda ()1, Tol. Whitmer~
Tol. St lobo'• 76, Doln!k Uolvcrdy
65
.
Trotwoo4·Mid,llqn I!, lf· CUI'ollloo
61
Troy 59, Tlpp ¢ltr 5S
Upper Arlluloo51, .,.._th 51
Utica 73, E.ltoo•71

N--.odlao
PoinnootSL91, Lob P.ric 79

Mlllli•NewYart, 7:30p.m.
OU!do•llowl-.7:l0p.m

171

311
311

............. 7 7 0 .500 lOI 250
Pbllldelpbia...... 7 7 0 .500 265 269
2 12 0 .143 212 !74

(01')

Sunday'oiOOI'tl

-·•-.Hop.m.

190

.!It L I !! fA lsi.
•·DaUaa ............ IT 3 .116 310 211
N.Y. Olell ....... 7 7 0 JOO :UI 212

Jia

Tifrln Columbiu 12, Bellevue 76

•

TOIIIPI'•..-

m

6 o.m
6 0 .531 :UI
7 0 .500 300
• 0 .429 262

ByJOEKA.Y
. CINCINNATI (AP)- Sbawn
Moore showed why bls coac:b
expect110 IIIIlCh out d. him.
Cballcnsed by his c:oacb to do
better, Moore did bis best Samlday
nipL He ICXRd a seuoo-hl&amp;b 3!1
poinll to leld unbeaten Manhal1 to
a 102-92 v1c1«y over Canislua lnd
the Delta Air Lines Ciaulc dlam·
piooshlp.
.
Manlllll (~) added to its best
Start in ICVCD yean by
up
tbe defensive preasiR 011 Om Ins
(4-3) and bavins coadl Billy DODovan tum up die peuure 011 Moore.
Donovan demanded better of
Moore after the 6-foot-6 forward
bad 24 points but only {our
rebounds Friday olgJJt in a vic:tay
over Temessee ManiD.
"I really cballensed Shawn
Moore," Donovan said. "I felt be

turnlnf.

NAnoNAL CONJi'ERENCE

Spriq. Calllollc 74, SJrioa. Sbowneo

42

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

-93.SI&lt;nmoaloll

LA. Raldoro ..... a
Konao Cky ...... 1
Dcnv&lt;r .............. 1
s..u................ 6

Sprioa. Ncrtb.weatera 102, Maplotoa

II.J'r...... JaLT..,._I

SIIIICIIIy'oiiCOR

for

2!71
lOS
215
305

w.... - ..

51

C.U. riW. Villioll911. Aohlood 74

Sk:rllne na1-• lob T1Jinna1 aDd brotllera
Nathan IIDII Janloa Steal. nil race cl......, tile
champloulblp for StatU, no II~ b:r Precision Aatomotl•e, Sine Wave~, beDIII&amp;IloGarrett
. Ford, BG heiiiDIIIAbe, R.W.Ow laD aad JJ,'•·
Stotts II alnMiy .....,...... 1111 car for D O t and lllooldail
additioDaJ lpGIIICII'8IIIp

Son JlieiD......... 9 5 0 .643 323 266 .

Ryle, Ky. 69, 8010v1160

51

297
311
241
217

C..alllhlolw
Y·PI- ... :.. II 3 0 .716 265
Y·CUM!LANDIO I 0 .711 298
CINCNNAn .. 2 12 0 .143 . 2!6
llo..... A............ I 13 0 .011 193

NationaJ Tnill1, Preble Shawnee 61
Newark 71, Mlfion Hardlqa67
New1rt Cath. 81, Millet 52
Nonhmont 75, Day. M-dolo 69
Norwalk 72, WW•d S4
Narwalt St. Paul13, Suduaty St.
Mwy'o58
Oak Harbor 62, Woodmen 56
Olcoloqy68, WatkiJ!I Mcmorlal61
Qreaon Strittll 63, Fre100Dl St. lolejlh

Shaker Hll. 94, EoJt Cl~ Show IS
Smllhvlllc 63.1ndion River 61
Sparta HJahlud 56, Colonel Crawford

WT-

U....fl

New J!oalud.... 1 6
Bullolo.............. 1 7 0 .500
N.Y. lela ........... 6 I 0 .129
JIICIIalupollo ...... 6 I 0 .129

Poebleo 69. Adeu 59
PtrtiD180, Flreland•12
Pleum 78,N. Uniou 40
Ro11 79, Norwood 56

lldloao !n, Miami T1

LA. LIUIII20, Utili Ill
S..-106, Ooldoo SlaloM
Sooalo 132,1.A. Cllppn 177 (2 01')

=. . . . . . . . . lf ~ io.I.J.m.M~

Millmport 66,/ohDJIOWn 49

Fnotllo 95, Dodiooo I!

~106.~103

--

AMERICAN CONJi'ERENCI!

61

a.-........
..a._,.....,
-.a..olc
a..........

SEASON CIIAMPION- Qrll StoUIIII Duwin ..W d ... 1fN V-1 I've Stock Street Steck
Chilmplillllldp at Skylhll Sa-lway In ltii1!1H
118-8 C......,. S.....- - n l featwe .,..-at
Skyline . . . . ..... aat lo lad race Ill ... IOD, wMn .. II - - Mn .. Yktery . . . widl

NFLstandlnp

MWJoD Cath. II , MBl1UIIlhl Olr. 40
M.-ioo l.oall 47, Convoy Cratviow
4l
.
MIIOD 67, KiJIII 54
Maulllon Pony 64. Cle. So~ 60
Miami E. 58, HOUilon !9
Middletown Madilon 66, Twin Valley
S. S2
Millbury Lake 63, S""""o 62
Mill« City 66, Von Owen 46

......... a-le

Ort-169,- 91
CI.IM!1.\IID 17, Doavk 79
-117-103

Football

ley Qr. 6.l
Mldiooo Pial'" n. E cu•oo1l
l\lanlfield as. Sonc!tal:y 11
Mor~ 92, Sen"" E. 64

.....aw.c..t...c.

. en ~qat a 50-41 cledaloli eo AJeaD..,

Moore's shootinp helps Marshall .
men win Delta A1r Lines Classic title

Oreeoevlew $6, Ccdnllle !13
Oroeofleld 74.1'aiot Vol. 57
Heath 54, Hdlroo ~ 5I
lldlu vo1. 43, o.....y"
Kocuria1 Alter 64, Day. Ool.wood 54
Kidron Olr. 60, Wayuedale S7
Llkewood 33, N. OIIDIIOd 31
Lao&lt;:ooler 42, Groveport 31
Uoesvllle, Po. 56, Pymllllltlnl Vol. ~
l.oodoo T1,1ooothoD Aid« 52
Loraill KiD1l1, Cle. Rhodoo 56
LouiJvtllc Aqulnu 87, Cloyobop Vol·

college scores

I
IJ
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and die trlJll to die atafe, They ' club, wen relied from Tuesday' a Cbealp'Ve, who lllllde ·7-9 aotn1
know how to wiD and they're wiDOverGreell. Qes} eeteacttbe dowll die lll'etdlllld 24-40 for tbe
cstabllsbed, but I felt we abould early tempo, ~llilll 3·24 for S4 . pme. Par= lbollllea lilies at
have given them a beat.r pmc. We pertCDt, dlroalboat die flnt ball.
die llae dina a...~ b: lllldc, bit·
finished strong. That's encoutagThe usually bard working liDI oaS-13.
ing."
Eagles were CIIJbt away from
F.talau'a '*-!bid came at 62·
Dean said, "We'll build oo tbat. their nut several tlmea on the Sl, but fon:cd eo foul, tbc Eagles
They say when you play JOOd com- back-door cut allowlaa the Pan- Willed.
petition, you get better. We've then to lake a 17-8 first period
E•tem bll ~ frail die floor
plar.ed a couple tOUJb ODCI and lead. Cbesapelkc maintained its for 3S paau1, Wll ().10 011 dlrees
we ve 'ot a few more abead. I intensity, while Eastern couldn't IIIII ... S-13 at die Doc lilr a mea·
think IIlia teiiD will cane togetbcr buy a buc:tet and also Jot in foul ser 38 )llltCIIL (]IS bll22-42 for a
really sooo."
trouble, resultina in a 35-lS ball- bot 52 pcn:co1, blaiDsl-5 treys and
Tired and weary from Friday's time ICX!Ie.
aoini7A-40 It tbe Doc.
guc, Eastem faced a fJesb Pandler
Eastau cac out wldl renewed
PHS bill 37 rebounds, led by
intensity in lbe second balf, cblp- BiaseD (12) llld Bowen widl seven.
ping away lllbc Pllldler leld llld wblle CHS gathered 29 led by
twice )IRIIIIIJtin~ to sipal Harllas, S. Gue and Mount with
for a lime oul
cut tbc leld
six. PHS bad three steala, nine
to 14 in die tllild fnme, but coded turnovers, three as nits and 31
off to a 51·31 tally after three fouls.
rounds. Early in lbc final round
CHS bad five steals, seven
Eastern cut it to a SS-44 maraln. tun10ver1. foor UliltJ lnd 14 foull.
but O'C'•pcake 101• COUple bact·
Eutero dr~p the reserve
breaking reverse layups by Mount pme 48-31
te Cllria Bailey's
and RusseU that toot IIDtiiC of lbc 14 points. Cbr Fizer led CHS
air out of Eastern's cx«nddack.
with 15, Jerod DineD widllO and
The lop-sided foul marpa. 31· DoooieJooea witb ei&amp;bL
14, ended.., wloomg die game for
In Friday' a reserve game, East·
SODS

Onham 71, Bcojamll Loau 4C
Ort64vlew 69, Buckeye \fal. 44

Ohio men's

7.5
7.5

lldlau .................. ll

llolroll.....................

c.aioodcut !16, - · 011 19

J.S

.The Dally Sentinel Pega . IS

Pomeroy-;-Middleport, Ohio ·
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�hge-6--The Dally Sentinel

Ahn retracts response on birth' swftching
Mediterranean substituted? I see a Iotofilllanswered
"
convinced that Eve is my daughlel;
Boise, Idaho: I couldn't believe
but I don't know how 10 go about your column about the twins. How
proving
iL • He added, "I can't alford did thepresentp~re~~tsofthe linlegirl
M IJ84 , l011~
10
hire
a
~wyer. What should I do?" acquire the chi.ld? Did they adopt her?
rmn~•.no:i
CtNIOfl Synck:Me"
I told hun that~ could be right Did the hospital accidentally or
but 10 lake the chtld from the only intentionally switch babies at the time
·Dear Friends: More than 10,000 parents she had ever known would of birth? ntis is entirely possible. I'd
rciaders can't be wrong. That is be exltCillely disruptive and that he look into iL
Thmpa,Fia.: Iamaregislerednwse
approximalely the number of letlers should leave well enough aiclle. In
I bave received complaining about retrospect. I realize that my response with experience in obstetrics. Before
tile answer 1 gave 10 lhe widowed was stupid. Here are some of my leaving the delivery room, every baby
r.mer of an 8-year-old boy whose readers' responses. There were plenty is tagged, usually with two bracelets.
twin sister had died at birth •• or of others, but most of the language Even so, unless those babies were
never removed from the mother's
so be was told by the hospital was unprintable.
From Helen, Ga.: 'Leave well room, there is a real possibility lhata
lialhorilies.
The boy, you will recall, enrolled enough alone,' you say? Are you out switch could have taken place.
in a new school After the first day, or your mind? That father should go Sometimes, this is done if a child is
he came home and IOld his father 10 the police immediately and chect defective and, of course, there is
II!= was a girl in his class named out a few things. For example: Did money involved. If that baby was
"Eve,' who looked very much like anyoneseethetwinthehospitalstalf born alive, there should be some
him •• blond hair, blue eyes •• and said died? Was lhere proof that she record of what caused her death. By
t. tllat she was born on the same day wascremated?lfEve'smolherwasa law, these records have to be
and in the same hospital that he was. maternity patient ~day the twins maintained for 18 years. If they 8re
Soon after, the father atlended a . were born, the ~·tal shout~ have not available, somebody is hiding
,. school function and met Eve's a record of tt Dtd he check thts out? something.
paren!S. They were both of dark tr she was, could her own baby be
VISta, Calif.: The leiter from that
complexion, brown-eyed and the one that died and blonde Eve

Ann
Landers

obviously

of

exllaetion. Tile man wrole, "I am now questions here,

faJber made me want 10 ICI'C!IIIII. My
husband and I are fair-skinned
AlneriCIIIS looking for 1 Mexican
newborn 10 adopt. We don't want
anyooe coming up 10 us a few years
down the road, 11ying, "That's our
daughter. We thought she was

~""'·
""'~••·YOUR
•·'*"'·~
"·'··
~·
·~ .PICTURE
,GUILD
:~
AMONG THE.'..
.
'

care. There are oo dcductibles and

Medicare pays for services provid.ed every day by a hospice. This
progiBJD also permlta a hospice to
provide appropriate personal care,
iJ~~:IudiDg bonMlmaker serv1cea and
cowueling. In otha' words, it's the
SP,=cial type ot.care that a lmDinal-

Iy ill persoo needs.
A hospice may be a public asen·
cy or a private organization that
provides care for terminally ill
patients. It is not a hospital. The
terminally ill patient can be cared
for at home or as an inpatient at the
hospice. Tile hospice also provides
respite care so the home caregiver,
usually a spouse or relative, can
bave a few days off. Respite care is
limited 10 no more than live days in
a row. There is no limit to the numher of limes respite care can be
used during an illness.
A tmninally ill patient can-qualify for lbe hospice benefit and
Medicare Part A will pay for bos·
pice care if all tluee of the foUowing conditious are met. 1. A docror
certifies thai the patient is terminally ill. 2. The patient chooses to

receive care from a hospice instead
of a hospital. 3. Care is provided by ·
a Medicare-participating hospice
program.
In addition 10 doctor and nws· ing services, the hospice provides
other Medicare covered services
including medications, bcme bealth
aide and homemaker visits, medical social services, medical equip-.
ment, short-term inpatient care
· (including respite care), and cowiseling for the patient and the caregivers. ,
The hospice benefit covers a
seven-month period. This time can
be continuous or, if the patient
chooses, may be used in two 90day periods, and then a 30-day
period. If necessary, this time can
be extended. Tile patient may SlOp
the hospice benefu period, relllrD to
regular Medicare coverage, and

Pomeroy--Middleport, Ohio

:

dead."
Dallas: Get conscious, Ann. With

· ~,..

Is alcoltol nli11illg your lifo or the
lift of a loved ont? "Alcollolism:
How ro Recog11ize It. How to Otal
Witlllt, How to Co"'luer It" CQ/IIIlr/1
thillgs arolllld. Stlld a st/f-oddleutd,
lo11g, busiMsNize tnw!lopt and a
clteckormoneyonlerfor$3.65 (this
includes postage and llcuadlillg) to:
Alcollol, c/o Ann l..twkrs, P.O. Box
11562, Cllicago,/1/. 606114)562. (Ill
CIJMI/Q, stlld U .45.)

T••

Our special page(s)

-·

?····
~·6~~
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1

'1.
LAST CllltiSTMAS ·Abel Martina, 31, of New York, llold Jail
neplew, Mk..eel, 3 1ll, u tile cWid naclae.-o•t for a ._.._ dulna a~ DUtY In New York S•nday. Martlnu: II rallla&amp;
both of ... ....-'.lti cUldna Ia a -wr-a aputlneat. One
'aliter cllecl of AIDS 111111 tile ._. II aow dyllla of tile dlnan. The
party for"""'" riPDed apart by AIDS,.... tllrown by Selllelp, a
'IIOn•proftt qeDCJ lcitmded by sunlvon ol the Bolocaaat. (AP
l'llotQ(Cark J-)
'

Parents with AIDS enjoy
what could be last
holiday with children

ALFRED - The Sbade River
L = 1453 F&amp;:AM will bold a
s
meeting at 7:30 p.m. Monday .to wort on the Fellowcraft
Degree. Refreshments will be
served.
TUESDAY
POMEROY - Big Bend Farm
Antique Club, Christmas dinner,
Senior Citizens Center, take covered dish, and a gag gift, Tuesday,
6:30p.m.

wm be published
FJUDAY, DECEMBER 23RD
in the

then u t the bosplce benefit apin
if another benefit period la available.
Tile patient pays SS toward each
. prescription, and five peroent of die
Medicare-allowed rate for respite
care, appollimately SS. If
a patient needs treatment for a condition not related to the temlinal illness, Medicare contllluea to help
pay for all occessary covered services under die 1tanc1n Medicare
benellt program.
If you are Cll'ing for a terminally
iU penon and bave any questions
about Medicare and the hospice
benefit, visit or write the Athens
Social Security office. You may
also call outiOU-I'rec number, 18()().772-1213. Out busleatlimes
are early in the week and early in
the month. If possilite, it is best 1Q
call at ocbet times.

_The Daily Sentinel
-ONLY-

$1000
Per Picture •
Prepaid

P-

oncl- Hll-eddro-.
atampod IIMOiopeiO mum your
photo

all this," Nelida Burgos, a 32-year. .lrW
Writer
old mother of tbree, said at the
NEW YORK (AP) - Life party. "You're so~yyou forget
~·1 pt muc:h tougher for Abel you are s~. And that s nice for the
Manlncz,
holidays."
• He's llising his sisters' s!x chilMartinez, like scme of the other
dren in a one-bedroom aparunent families, bas a double burden in' one of the city's poorest neigh- cbildten who are HIV positive.
botboods. One sister died of AIDS Martinez's nepbew, 3 1/2-year-old
and the olhel may 10011 follow.
Michael, was born with the virus.
· Martinez tried to put his trou- The boy's mother, who died in Janbfea ulde Sunday at a Cbristmas uary, was infec:ted with the disease
party fw 103 dlildreD whose par· through SCllual coatact, be said.
~lill, 111111y of
and most
Many of the heme-care workers
WllllleD raising
alone, are were on band Slmday 10 cbase after
df)lll_of AIDS.
cbildn:n whil.e sick plrellts relucd.
; "1bil party is a nice break," There was a sills-along, a clown
did Mlrtinez, a 31-ye.-old who performing misJc trias, and Santa
lotU DKRiike the bmthet than the Claus, of coune.
Martinez's nephew and nieces
l'lardiaD of his oephew and five
Diecea.
clambered onto Santa's lap, first
· ••tbe gifts, the entertainment. for ·a picture, then 10 get presc:nta.
We have sadness, but being here
Six-year-old Wendy Vasquez
tc~epa everyone from lblnking bopped around In disbelief after
alloulit fw awblle."
she opened her gift and found a
' It W. the ICCOIId IDDual party Barbie doll iD a bot-pll* b1ldni.
f&lt;W AIDS fm!JIN ICnlld by Self'Talwaya wanted one," abe
k~tioll-profit ICCIIC)' founded
said breathkuly.
by Holoca••l survivon.
.
f!er sister, 10-ye.-old Kimber•. - Seltllelp provides bome-care .IY, Jot a plutic pink·and-puiple
WOikn to keep a fulily tosether . cosmetic box. "I already have ooe
klooa·as poulbk by helping par- . at home,." she said, but with a
enta do laundry, coo)t and run smile and not a hmt of disappoint·
tilillllb. Tbe aaency llao be~ fiDel mcoL
I.Wdiilla to raise the children
"It's very aenerous of the peoMicolbelr JDD111m die,
pie 10
to all Ibis IIOUble for our
, ' •"It' a beautlfial to come' and ¥C family, ' the )'(JUII8SII:r said.

":l'J:

P&amp;mllc Notice

PubliC NOlle.

PUBUCNOnCE
The Leading Creek
Conaarvanoy Dlatrlct public
water aupply haa complelacl
the 1884 monitoring cycle
lor volallle organic
chemiCIII (VOCe) 11
requlracl by chapter 3745'11
of the Ohio Admlnlltnlltva
Code(OAC).
Upon completion of aach
voc IIIOf'lltorlng cycle, regulatlona alao require lhl
owner or oparetar of 1
public walar auppl.y to
notify Ita oonllimera of the
availability of tha VOC
inalytlcel reeulte for tha
ptrlod telted. Peraona
wanting to revlaw tht VOC
l'llulla ahould contact:
Leading Creek
Conaarvancy Dlllrlct
"" Brent Bolin, General
U.nagar, 34481 Com
Hollow Roed, Rutlend, Ott
45775, (614) 742-2411.
(12~l2; 1TC

NOnCE OF
APPUCATIONS FOR
CHILDREN'S TRUST
FUND MONIES
Tha Malga County CTF
Advlaory Board Ia .now
accepting eppllcltlona tor
chlklrt!l'• truat lund monlaa
for program• d11lgnad to
reduce child abuae end
naglect. ($1 0,000 each year
tor two (2)' yaere)
Application• may ba
obtained at the Malga
County euparlntendent'a
ofllcie and mual be
aubmltlad to the ume place
by 12:00 noon .on January
11, 1185. A public melting
to ravlew eppllcetlo~a will
fie held at 3:30 p.m. at tha
llalga
County
Superintendent'• olflca · on
Jenuery 17,1185. Approvacl
application• muat be
aubmltted to the elate by
March 1, 11195.
John Riebel, Sr.
Chelrmtn otMalga CTF
·
Advloory Board
(12) 12; 1TC

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Form

OFFICE 992·2259
SYRACUSE· 6th Street located In town S.yracuse. On lhls
property is a 1 story structured homo, This nice house has 5
rooms in total, including 2 lovely bedroomsr 1 bathroom with
FORCED AIR AND NATURAL GAS HEATING. that means
cozy days and nights! "ALSO"· CENTRAL AIR
CONDITIONINGII This homo is a bonus, it has a two garage,
TOTAL APPLIANCES Ill DISHWASHER AND ADISPOSAL.
ETC. This home located near Banking, Post Office, a Cozy
CountrY Restaurant, walking distanca ... Of oourse this home
Is located on a paved road. ASKING PRICE $42,000,
"MAKE US AN OFFER"I
POMEROY· Seneca Drive- NEW LISTINGIII Pomeroy
located, a briCk, splh foyer entrance, large home, n has 3
bedrooms, 2 1/2 baths, lor tho extra conllienc:e. This lovely
home is equipped with furnace and heat pump. The interior
walls are drywall, the flooring is carpet and there Is a family
room down stairs, total appliances, refrigerator and range.
Storm windows for good insulation. and AIR CONDITIONING
for those hot summer daysl All tho winter is upon us this
home is equiped for the coldest season as well, there is a
FIREPLACE located in the family room. There is a cement
driv• ·rety which makes for convienl parking. '
ASKING PRICE $85,0011

Home National Bank
raaarvea the right to reject
any or all blda or lo remove
any unit from the 1111 11
anytime.
In Cll'$r lo lnapect any of
the above property prior to
the uta arrangemanta may .
be made by calling 9492210.
(11)21(12)5,12,3TC

POMEROY· Crow Road location, approximately 1.78+ acres
of "VAC.ANr GROUND'II This property is a BEAUTIFUL
piece of ground• Utililiea are available and this property is a
· great location lo blild or lo set-up a modular home on for the
person that likes to de things · quick and with precision
building exactly the spot where YOU want HI You will love lhls
place, come and see ij soonl
ASKING NOW $7,500, IIAKE.4N OFFERIII

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Public Notice

z

PROBA'Ti COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
ESTATE OF Nona E.
Nelaon, Deceaaecl
CeN No. 28707 Docket 13
Pege51t
NOnCE OF APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
lievl"d Code, Sec. 2113.08
"On Novamber 17, 1884,
In lhtiMelga County Probate
Court, Cua No. 28707, Pat
Story, Mergertt StorySchwab, Steven .Story, ·and
Jam11 D. Story, c/o 113
South Thlfd St., Middleport,
OH 45710, ware appolntacl
co-axacutOrl Of lhl ealall
of None E. Nelaon,
diCMMCI, ._e ol111 Union
Ave., Pomeroy, Melga
County, Ohio 45711."

rl)

POMEROY-114 Union Ave., 2 story frame home, 6 rooms, 3.
nice bedrooms, 1 1/2 baths, unh air coneitionlng. natural gas
with forced air heal, the wannest heal that you can heat with
and Includes a gas hot water lank. This homo has so many
appliances ~ you like alitlle more conveniance and less daily
chores; h has a dishwasher, disposal, range &amp; refrigerator.
Carpel ftoorlng paneled walls and yes, a lireplacol This nicely
remodeled kijchen is oomplete. Nicely painted home in 1987
also has a front sitting porch. To add tolhe extra styling of
this lovely home there are shutters to dress up·tho windows
which gives a Colonial touch. ASKING $35,0011, THIS IS A

0

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CHESTER · Located on SR 248 a great lOcation IYou are half
way to Pomeroy, Athens, or Parkersburg ' lor convenient
shopping. This nice 1 1/2 story frame home features 2
bedrooma. and I bath, " has nice hardwood and carpel
flOOring. Warm heat, Natural gas with forced air heating. TPC
water. New part roof, some new siding, and this homo has a
lull sized basement, attic space, lots 61 storage space, and
this hoine haa a small garage and a large rear yard: This
home Is equlped with a FIREPLACE lor those that enjoy
anuggeling up lo the soothing sounds and warm feelings lh8t
a fireplace brings, h will chau the winter chill away. This
home is PRICED TO SELL· $2t,to0.

~

....c:
;:I

0

~

Robert E. Buck,

Probata Judge
(12) I, 12, 1!: 3TC I .
.. __ _. _. •

De,dhne: Friday, Dec. 16 at 3 P.M.

s~c~~';;.~~l:: :c:::.-::teh~! "'""~~

tCCC1ved onlcn to die A1n:nft Car· ~ Cut c•rfstmas ~·~
rierVL,Aiilerica; Ml'kwd in Norfolk,
: Premium Ohio Grown :
Dwell M.~U~ey
·
•
· 6' to 7'
Navy sc n• Derek M. Rainey,
.•_~. 40% off Regular Price :
soo of Roacr IJid Kim Rainey of •·•
Now 'll • '18
:
Point Pleasant, W.Va., recently . .,:· Open 9 a.ll).• S p.m. daily •·.,
· ~ bMlc lllillllll ill Orla·
' 12 noon • 5 p.m. Sunday ·:
do,Rainey joins 55,000 men and
/ Hubbard's qreenhouse •. ,.
women who ~ill enter the Navy ~ ~yrac11se
992-577!1

:!:t~~ara::::~ ----~· ·
.,

614-742·3051
BINGO
Racine American
Legion Post 602
, Now having Bingo
&lt;every Sunday Night
Starting 6:45 pm
Doonl open 4:30 pm
The mont people
playing the bigger
the pay-off.
ad for 1 free card.
949-20311 or 949-2044

POMEROY· LOCATED ON PEACH FORK ROAD- VAC.N-lT '
GROUNDIII BEAUTIFUL LANDI This property InCludes an
old barn II you would Hill to h.,_ live~ or horau on It h
hal roylillea of $101.00 per.month, and should have free.!Ill
with the property, for a possible heeled barn, or structured
home. This property is very nice . and Qnly "YOU" CAN ·
DECIDE WHAT YOU WN-lT TO PUT ON n'l IMMEDIA'Ti
POSSESSION.
ASKING $2t,OOO

Mail or bring the entry form to:

The D.aily 'Sentinel

WE HEED YOOR HOliES TO BE LISTED IF YOU ARE
81!LUNO, CONTACT THE PEOPLE THAT CAN SELL 1'011
YOUI CLELAND REALTY, INC.

' I

. ..

· ,'

.

111 Court St

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

.

.

·· .

'" ~-~••r..••••~•••w••~

_,

Startlag Slug

••c•••

KA1'HY·CL.I.L.AiitD••••••••!....................................J•• III4111

OFFICE..........,.......~ ...- ................................,......111-2211

,,

..

O&amp;E ELEC'IB.IC

..

·• Cuatom llade

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

• Solid vinyl

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

rtpiiCIIIIIRl

Prldar, Nov. 11
6a30
SulldaJ, Nov. 13
hOO

window•

·• Fre.e Eltlmates

•VIS" OUR SHOWROO/Ir
110 Court Sl Pome:-oy,.OIIIa
''Look ror.JM Red ~ White Awnllll"

992-41'19 AI rr-Owiilr 1·800..291-5600 ·

011 Step C.11plete Aute

•••Y Rep1lr

PRECISION AUTOMOTIVE

1192-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio ,

Chuck Stotts

~t&amp;t21fn

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

~::::::::::::::::·~::::::::::::::~ :

MODERN Sllfti!IIN .

Federal Emergency
Managem.ntAgency
Faclarallnauntnce
PubliC Notice
Admlnetretlon
Propoaecl Flood Elevation on 11o own, or purauanl to
Datarmlnatlono
pollclaa aatabllahed by
AGENCY:
F • de r a I other Federal, State, or
Emergency Management regional anllllta. Theae
Agency
propooed elevation• will
ACTION: Propoaecl rule. ... ,, .•ateo be uaacl to calculated
SUMMARY:
tha approprleta flood
Technical Information or lnaurance premium rat..
commenll era eollclttd on lor the new bulldlnga and
the propoaed baae (1 00· their contenta.
yeer) flood elevellona
Purouant
to
tho
ahown In your community'• provlalona of 5 usc 605(b),
prallmlnary Flood lnauranct the Admlnlatrator, to whom
Study and Flood lnauranct authority hu been
Ratt Map. Tha baa• (1110· delegated by the Director,
yeer) flood elavetlona ere Ftdoral
Emergency
the baala tor the floodplain M• na a• m• n t
Agency,
·menagemllll meaaur11 lhal hereby certlfl11 that tho
the community Ia required propoaed flood elevation
to either adopt or ahow delermlnallona,
If
evidence of belngalraady In promulgated, will not have a
allect In order to quollly or algnlflcant economic Impact
remeln qualified for on o oubatantlal number of
partlcljletlon In the National amell entllleo. A flood
Flood lnaurence Program elavatlon determination
(NFIP).
&amp;~nder Section 1363 forma
DATES:
tho baelt for new local
The parlod lor comment ordlnancu, which, If
will be nlnaty (10) dey• adopted by a local
following the aecond community, will govern
pubUcatlon of thla propoaed future conatructlon wllhln
Nle In a newapap" of local the floodplain aret. The
clrculetlon In
thl elevation determlnatlona,
community.
however, Imp o 11 no
ADDRESSES:
r11trlcllon unie11 ond until
Study and mapa ahowlng the local community
odopll
tha propoatd baae flood voluntarily
elevation• and lhelr floodplain ordlnencta In
delln11tlori ara available lor accord wIth tho oo
review
at
the olavatlona . Evan If
Commlaalonera Office, ordlnancea are adoptacl In
Courthouat, Second Street, compliance with Federal
Pomeroy, Ohio.
atandarda, the alevallone
Send comment• to:
preocrlbe how high lo build
Mr. Friel Holfmln
In the noodpleln end do not
Preeldent, U.lgo County
prohibit development Thua,
Board of Commlnlonera lhla action only forma lht
Courthouu
bula lor future local
Second Slrllt
ectlono. It lmpoata no new
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
requirement; of hoalf It haa
FOR FURTHER
no oconomlc Impact. .
INFORMATION CONTACT:
L111101 and ownora of
Michael K. Buckley, P.E., real property In the
Chill
Unincorporated Areu of
Hazard ldanllllcatlon Malga County,
•re
Branch
tncoureged to ravlew tho
MRigetlon Directorate
prellmlnery Flood lnturance
Federal Emergency Study and Flood lnturanct .
MlniJIIamanl Agency
Rate Map available at the
Wuhlngton, DC 20472
addrou cited above.
(202) 146-2786
Propoaod buo flood
SUPPLEMENTARY
alavatlona elong flood
INFORMATION:
eourcet etudlaclln datall ara
The Fadaral Emergency thown on the flood·prolll11
Management Agency glv11 In the atudy. Tha flood
notice of the propoltd eourcee otudled In detail
delormlnatlona of bue are:
(100-year) flood elevetlona,
Source of Flooding,
In eccordance with Section Range of Baat Flood
110 of lha Flood Dlaaatar Elavallone I Depth In teat
Prottcllon Act ot1873 (Pub. above ground. •Elevation In
L 13·234), 17 Stat 880, IHI (NOVO).
which acfdacl . Section 13t3
Ohio River, *174 • '803.
to lha Netlonll Flood (12) 5, 12; 2TC
lnaurance Act of 1HI (Title _....;.._...._ _ _ __
XIII ot the Houalng and. 3 Announcement~
Urban Development Act of
. 1HI (Pub. L 110-448)), 't2
u.a.c. 4001-4121, end 44
PFA87.4(a).
Thaae
elavatlona,
·together with the floodplain
menegament meuurea
requlracl by Section 10.3 ot
the program regulatloni,
ere the minimum that ere
Friday,
requlracl. Thay ahould not
1M conatrued to m..n the
.community muet chenga ·16th 6:30pm at
eny u!etlng 0\:lllnancll lhet'
Forked Run
are 11101'1 etrlngent In their
llood,leln mtnagement
Sportsman
nqulrimenta .
The
Club
cOmmuntly mar ·II any time
enact atrfctar requirement•

MUZZLE
LOADING
Gun Shoot

Kenny's is the place to co• .:
when you need a car reatal. ·
We lt•ve C•rs
Kenny's A.u to Center
264.Upper River Rd.
Gallipolis, OH 45631

NOW OFFERING GENERA L HAULING

Llmeatone, Sand, Gravel and Coal
WE HAVE A·1 TOP SO IL FOR SALE
U
aed I B did 20
992 ·3954

.-------------....;"~!
ANNOUNCEMENT

.

Now Accepting New Clients

Emcrqency Pllonc 985 341 8

DENISE L.BUNCE

~ ·rrr

''

AnORNEY AI LAW

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.
•·

Kenny's Auto Rental '

••d V•••l

POMEROY, OHIO
Septic tanks cleaned &amp; portable toilets rented.
Dally, weekly &amp; monthly rental rates.
Job sllel' Camp Silas ' Family Reunlonal Partin

. Cundiff's
Custom
Cut

CaD 949·2734

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

StateRt.33 ~· l
Darwin, Ohio ~ · :

1112Mfn

Maplewood Lake
St. Rt. 124
Racine, OH

Estimates

Insurance Work Welcome

J&amp;D FLEA
ITEMS

614-992-6223

Free

NOW OPEN
NEW &amp; USED

Doug

John

V.Cf. YOUNG Ill

MARKET

t

.)

992·7162 ~

992-5251

• $200 lnatalled
Call For Details

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE .
efloom Addition•
oN.wG.aga
-Electrical &amp; Plumbing
-Roofing
olnterlor I Exterior
Painting alto concrete
work
(FREE ESTIMATES)

Dec.

HENRY E. CU!LAND....... - .......·........................ 112-t111
TRACY BRIIIAOEA..........................................~
IHERRI HART...,...........................................!.....74Z.."z357 .
Hl!iiRV E. CLILAND 11........... ,..............................111

,.

SPOilSMAN
CLUB

DEER CUT &amp;
WRAPPED

WANT ADS

Official Entry

The

Robert J. HIU, SOD of Pbll and
Cbrill Hill of Syracnse, has com~Ieted Navy recr111t training in

lo• S11owd•'• Lot
S.R. 124
lutl111d, Ohio

Public Notice

Cllh.

In the service

CHRISTMAS
TREES &amp;
WREATHS

A111 PUNCHI

Seturdlly, December 17,
1994, at 10:00 a.m., the
Home National Bank, Third
.Str111, Racine, Ohio, will
otter. lor aale at public
auction, on the Bank
parking lot, the following:
1991 Ford Aero818r Van
Serial Number
1FMDA31 X8MAB01957
Terma of' the aale are

ROBERT J.IIILL

I

PACK

Public Notice

rr-

915-4471

Real Estate Genel'll

WEDNESDAY
.
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Amateur Garden Club, 6 p.m.
Wednesday, Christmas potluck
home qf Jean Mooce.

JlJ ANDil&amp;\ HAMILTON

FREE ESnMATES

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

(Hi years of age or younger)

lpMI

SYRACUSE - Annual Christmas progiBJD at tile S)'IIICIISC Ele·
mentary School, 7:30 p.m. Monday.

Remodeling 1
StOp &amp; Comp1111

"For Children Only"

SYRACUSE - Meigs County
pennlllud Chamber of Commerce will bold
cannot be paranteed to raa a general membership luncheon
speclftc: number of UJI.
~ Tuesday noon, Carleton School.
Guest speaker, Reggie Robinson,
Health Recovery Services.
MONDAY
RU'll.AND - Rutland Garden
MIDDLEPORT - M1441eport '
Club, Christmas meeting, boole or Literary Club, Wednesday, 2 p.m.,
Mrs. Vernon Weber, Rudand, 6 home of Mrs. Dewey Horton.
p.m. dinner followed by gift Musical program.
el!Cbange.
POMEROY -:- Wildwood GarEAST MEIGS ~Eastern Local den Oub, Millie's Restaurant, 5:30
Board of Education special meeting p.m. Malte lind wear a oonage. Gift
Monday, 6:30 p.m. at the high wrappings to include plllll mataischool to discuss personnel.
al, packages to be judged.

an prlnW u

oComplet8

WAYNE'S PLACE
Middleport, Ohio
An all time place tor tun.
OJ JOE
EvelY Tue, Frl, &amp; SAt.
TUE, LADIES NIGHT
.
Reduced prices
KARAOKE EVERY WED.
Waynes Place Welcomes
BAD HABIT
LIVE BAND
Sal. Dec. 17th
HAPPY HOLIDAYS

-Community calendarTbe Commalllty Calendar II
pablll..d a1 a free 1enlce to
non-profit aro•p• wll•lng to
announce meetlnp and 1peclal
events.
calendar Ia not
designed to promote 1aln or
rund-raben of any type, lte-

..

I•NI- HomH

lhe availability of DNA testing,
which is almost 100 percent
conclusive, this father Clll get some
definitive answers. If the hospital
knowingly switched babies, the law
should be called in.
So, dear friends, wwyou've read
is a 'Ia')' small sampling. ntis is Ann,
admilling I goofed big time.

Medicare provides help for terminally ill at home
.
By ED PETERSON
Socllll Security Mama•. AliiOne of lbe lea&amp; known Medicare
provisions Ia providlnJ relief to
many terminally ill peliellta, pdc:utarly those who prefer to spend
their final days In the comfort or
their home. Medicare's hospice
care eases the aliCia for both the
~ent llld the fiiDily lbrough special services and care.
The hospice benefit provides
cOverage for a variety or services
not u~ually covered under Medi-

..

Monday; Decembtr 12, 1994

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

m

New HOmes • VInyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing ·
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL ·.

J.I)..J..-'1..\

105 Second St., Pomeroy, OH.
(above Bank One)

l:'"f1..

Tel. No. (614) 992-5730 ~..L.-'1..\

General Practice of Law includ ing ~
Divorces , Real Estate &amp; Business
·

·
1111111 mo.

. FREE ESTIMATES
614·992~7643
(No Sunday Calls)
..

-

Morrison's Heating &amp; Cooling
Sales, Service &amp; Installation
Your Total Comfort As.sured Dealer
Low Rate -Financing Available
Call Today for Free 'Estimate

(614t 992·7434
Autllorlud Amll'feaa St.ndal'll Berlin
111M2

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS
Specializing In Cuatom
·
Frama,.JPPalr

7131111 TFN

Ont~, mile out
143 from Rt. 7
Tues. • Wed. • Fri. • Sat.
~~

• Crllltsman Tools
•Toys
•Guns
Loads of Misc.
Buy-Sell·Trade
992·2060 !&lt;l'511 mo.

Howard "-· Writesel
ROORNG
NEW·REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

FREE·ESnMATES
.,C9-216~
........ TfN

Craft Shop
Located on Cherry Ridge : From At 33, tum East
Sat Darwin onto At 681 . Go 4 miles to Cherry
Ridge Ad, 1 1/2 miles to tree farm .
WATCH FOR SIGNS. 10•00 am til dark Nov. 25 thru Dec. 24
Wa on rides Fri. Sat. Sun.

LINDA'S
PAINnNG &amp; CO.
lalerlor &amp;
bterlor

TREE TRIMMING
AND REMOVAL
Uglit Hauling,
Shrubs Shapped
and Removed

BEST RECEPTION
For the best in satellite
sales and se rvice contact
Bryan of
Best Reception.
-We have even better
and quicker service.
- Over 10 yrs
experience
· Service on all system
types.
· Besl prices all around
the area.
992·2903 or 992~320
RIGGS

Bill Slack
992·2269

CHRISTMAS TREES
Choose and
cut your tree.
(or we'll cut il for you)

Riggs Tree Farm

For All•ior
Ira...
Und Appliaaces
for Sale
C1ll

614-992·5515
tat11iln

WEill'S
CIIISTIW
TUIS
RUTLAND, OH
Homegrown·Carefully
Sheared Scotch &amp;
White Pine 4' &amp; Up with
a great selection of
larger trees.
Call 742-2143 or

3 Announcements
lwiUnotber

r

Ph

tor-.

doillt.
- o myotlf.
d "' .........,
.11'!'/W'"
olhor then
"Tony" B. Rlllle.

dogo.--.. . . .

Jo'a Counlry Coafto 011 RT Ill

to ~~~--cad i!ftdgo.
homo ..... · - - - . ;
n111

10om-Spm.ai4-84W:ln.. ,

Lodloo, No Jol&amp;ol 11/bluo M Yr
okt, Ambutlone nan • Drtwee
..... . . . _ frlnoly ""

::'-""'~ .=:: :,:o=J

I'm oltn• oily 11 11ro1 -lllsrWrllo to: PO 11ax :1115, Qil.
llpollo,Oh. 451131

IIEET NEW PEOPLE
THE RJN WAY
_:
TODAY
t
1·1100-~ Ell. 2101, Bo 18 Yro 12-H Pw lin. "'-aal

co. 602-I~'JUO,
~"

Now

1 ;

I~

o;;(

~~opt,
er..~.:7~";.'· ....__, WV.\

Clnnlunltary, smoked deW anhHie.

4

Giveaway

1yr. old ;roy 6 wbMt •mJ.4ano.·
hatr.d ...,.... Cit, Indoor or

Mls. Jobs.

DII'S
APPLIAICI
SDVICI

Announ ce me nt s

Opori

614-118~180-

DARWIN, OHIO

DAVE'S
. SWAP SHOP

OR CUT YOUR OWN

!MINge.

TOLL FREE 1-&amp;10-141-1071

-

flESH CUt TillS IYIILliLI

Alrer&amp; p.m.

'··ti2·55U OR

R•••o•••le , ....
JH .. Slyre
SAYRE TRUCKING
614·742·2138

BRADFORD'S.

F- Eatlmatae
Before 6 p.m. leave

m-intoe

Uinestone
&amp;Gravel

•

· Tab the pain out of
painting. Lit ua .., II for
you. Vary ,_....,...

NEW l USWPARTS FOR
ALL IIAK~SIIIO.DEL-6

HAULING

'

CHRISTMAS TREES.

39507 Rocl;springs Rd.
(at comer of US AI. 33)
Pomeroy, Ohio
992-5702
Carol &amp; David Riggs

"" ""'

~=:::::::::;;::::

f&amp;A Tree Servke

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

·AMBERWOOD·
KENNE·

Cocker Spaniels
Bred tor
Quality and
Ttlrf1lllrament
.
Speclalzlnil In Part-colora
lor 'allow and companions•
Stud •rvlce • pupplet,
ycung ad.lllaforoale: ·
48750 IItie Hill Rd.
Aaclne,Oh

11'-"114487

~~=•lnt I

con' hop.

3yr. old oil bloclr '-to c1oa. :
groat wlchlldren. 1r1ov1no lli'd
con1 kMp.

304~-L

~AKC~Rea~ll=::ot::_7..zC::.y,:=:_=:Oid'"""lltl-,..."
motion Y:-lo, Frw To Ooad '
Homo With Running S-114.&lt;,

441-&lt;0118.

6

Lost &amp; Found

I.QII-4 month old ldlton,
w/4 wtthe PR'S. ..,...... ..I'll .
unclor neck, In Rutlonrl, 114-N! ''
3200.
.
-~

E-.,

loll: . -

blind, '

. -su.ae·, 37111 A 3rllf't9 Ad;.•i.
114-882~ -~~. .......

OOirlen 1111.-1 .,.

Loot: -

1 IIIII Borer,- IIIII . . _. ~
Coller With...,_ lour: F - .
Callnd With ............ ·
- · llorld... On

a- •

- · 'llclnftr: Noa ec... ...
~~. . ·~ ~a..:.
:.!

Mentg•.

7

Yll'd Sale

'.'

------~· '
Gallipolis

&amp; VIcinity

-~
..,

o.

S... 11ut1 II Polrllr\'
A..._, DEADliNE: 1:t1 ,..._ ~

All Yard

tho., .............. ...

~-=-a:
~-m. s_,_ d.:;'. Ci

�•

12, 1994

Ohio ·

r.

BRIDGE

NEA Crossword Puzzle
418hallow .....
42Co-UIQegalln
1511011 Ill

ACROSS

PHILLIP
ALDER
KIT 'N' CAIU.~ by Lin} Wrtpt

8

MA'f&amp;lf 11'~ No1 ttty

lloul'i: ........ N. .,......
0122, 3 . . . - ........ All.
-Do!Miy.

lUll lllno - - · ODIIIJIIIII
ouetlon
..........
IIN,ONo l VlfV!nla, 77U7II.

f"Aill-1 ~ MA~FJ I W~
oN'- AIMliD BY ~

~I

'II

............. Clnlr.

1M!.

"
''
11W41-::

10K J 3
vQ J B 6 2
•Q J 6
11&gt;10 4
EAST
aQ 9 8

U:K&amp;MEEK

f16C.IO oF fi/Ff4rrv~." ~

9

Wanted to Buy

•2

a.n Lalo Clro Or
Tn.cb, 1117 Or Nui!!'1
Smhb IIUicll Ponlloc, 1 -

KQ 9 83 2
01&gt;10

•9
•AK1098753

phonM,
........-oloDIII._
- ....
IRU I I it
. ,- , .

fllmlunt.

-

•&amp; 5

SOUTH

&amp;lltm Avenue. Cllllpall

...

s2

vAI0543

---·--..-.-

•• 01. olnglo

8 Grid. dig.

12 Egg-lllalled
52g:::
13 DeVootaie
Amorlcan oil
14 French reo
15 Abominable
53W"-llrack
enowman
154 F._ oymptom
16 Long·Urne
55 Art deco
reoldent
Uluetrator
18 Brookfaot food
56 Unclo
20Cholceol
57Cuohiono
21 Flnlah
22 Hawollan dloh 58 Shortly
24 Twtllod (lhe
hando)
DOWN
27 Prlmllfvo clock
31 Clrcutor lenl
1 Chlld'oloy
32Typeold- 2 Eyeloyor
orllnt
3 Melrooe Place
charoctor
33 IIIMbell 34 llaiUtbell org. 4 Nulrlrnenl
36Fondloo
5 Expanalve
38 Sharp bark
6 Soothe
37 Wrellllng holda 1 Succor
3tWoluln- B Exploolve
4G Dance llep
(abbr")

....

,.

1117
. . . .linllltlr,.
. ~ ....
.
_ .~

I.AYNI'I RJAIITURI
COOl plolo e- u.iiil....._iii*o.,

Rlcll .,_,_ Auotlan ComponJo

1 AriiONI clly
I Cry of a lamb

II&gt;A J 7

~

9 Apploorpear
10 Tlrita
11 Soli

171ntlleoamo
Dileo(-.)

19 MIT grod

I

21211.Wo11Uy-

Vulnerable: North·Solith
Dealer: South
SQUib
West North East
2v
DbL
201&gt;
I •
" Pass Pas•
5.
Pas•
lead: •K

..........

I'ICI(&amp;III RJAIITURI

... , ,
iililllllj: w.

HoiiJhuld ...

rri. ....... All. Pl.

.......... wv.... - - .
............
IWAII"
MICnON a RJAIINII. II
01wo a , -...... - a.Walk boal&amp; 111 . . . . .

Lend him
a helping card

---.-a

By Phillip Alder

All realoatalo advortloi!YJ In
lhls newspaper Is oubleciiO
lhe Feder;~I Fair Housing Acl
ol1968 wtllch makes II Illegal

POITAI. .10111
._. $11.41 Mr. For EDIII And
ADDioollon """' Clll 12111 ,...
dill Ill. 011111, t AJI. 4 P.ll,

-.ffl.

to advertise M
any preference,
limitation or dlocrlmlnolk&gt;n
booed on race, oolo&lt;, religion,
sex familial status or national

44

Apartment

for Rent
1 Mil 2

t

'cut

IP.•IN••

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pola,tiMIN:IIL

origin, or any i11entlon 10

52 Sporting Goodt

....

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Col AJI.. INIIr 1111 - a ..... ....,~DWJ~.

make any such preference •.
!Irritation or dlacr1mlnatlon •

WELL,SioiE'S REALLY
OIJT OFi MV CLASS, BUT
WE'RE IN THE SAME
CLASS, 8UT I'M HOT
IN loiER CLASS ..

&amp; L1ves1ock

.....

·~··Of

Employment Serv1ces

DON'T CRI(,
MAAM .. I1LL
SURVIVE ..

ACTUALLV, SJ.IE
PR06A8LV DOESN'T
KNOW 1 EVEN
E)( IST ...

1111
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4411Ailor7P.II.
IIEAUTIFUL APAIITIIEIITI AT
IUIIOET PAICE8 AT , . _
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•

Woodrow Wilson said, "The highest
and best fonn of efficiency is the spon"
ltarteo•Js cooperation of a free people""
Well, if we assume that bridge defend·
ers are free people, finding the way to
defeat a contract often requires spon·
taneous cooperation.
How would you assess the blame for
. today's contract being allowed to
make? Defending against five dia ·
monds, West opened with the club
king: four, six, ace. South immediately
led his spade 10: ace, three , two. West
cashed the club queen and then led
a ... spade" Declarer happily won with
dummy's king, discarding his heart
loser. He drew trumps and claimed"
North's two-hearl response was
non·forcing - what is known as a negative free bid" Normally, North would
have a sixth heart and a point or two
fewer"
East's double wasn't for penalty it showed spades. (After three suits
have been bid around the table, I like
to play that a double shows the fourth
suit and tolerance for partner's suit. A
typical holding is honor"doubleton in
partner's suit. With no tolerance for
partner's suit, I just bid the fourth ·
suit.)
West surely erred when he returned
a spade" He knew It would supply
South with a discard. And it was high"
ly unlikely that South had ace·third of
to hearts " East could have made it
easier for his partner, however"Under
the spade ace, he should have
dropped the queen, the high card """
ing a suit-preference signal lor the
higher-ranking side suit. Now, even a
sleepy West will find the heart switch.

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Cetebnty Cipher cryptograms are created from qubtationl Dy lamoua ~ . puttnd ~
EadliEitler'io the cipher Slandllor anott.r. Tcdly'• ct.: Z eq&amp;Mis A

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ALZO,

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WLEN

PREVIOUS SOLUTION : " Aclin~ is lhe most embarrassing business in thfl
world" You never know when you re going to eat' - Dub Taylor"

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letters of the
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EX D I

Marriage counselor to very
~ upset client "If you speak when
. " " " " "
you're angry you'll make the
,._E_C_R_A_R_E_--. ~s! _s~~~ch you'll eve.r live to

a.

llpolle.ll4 ttl 4411M•7P.II.

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bv t.ll.ng 1n the rrt1SS1ng words
IL....L-'-...1..-Io.-...L....J
I. I. . . . 1vov develop
lrom step No. 3 below.

Tr311 sport at 1on
YoY WERE

e

eaRN

IN PUERTO
RICO, RIGHT&gt;_._

,...liO

Comple oe the . chuckle quOiod

PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES
UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE LETTERS
TO GET ANSWER

SCRAM·LfU ANSWERS

Yla.lxp.

frMEitlmi(M.I'M Ztl 0104

Omelet • Bland- Carry- Neatly • ALL DAy

Clllond ...o

STRIKE A 8LOW IN THE WAR ON
HIGH PRICES. SHOP Tl-£ CLASSFI£DS.
·--~-

.... ....

" " H~w do "you lik~ retirement?" I asked my neighbor.
Well, he s1ghed, the beg d"1fference is, that you don't
always get to QUit after work1ng ALL DAY!"

IMONDAY

DECEMBER 12 I

Rentals
41 Hou111 tor Rent
Wll .. """ ~, In 1holr
-'rhunday llondor,""
Wid .....,~.
oft•
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Opponunlty

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clo lhis newspaper, P "U. dox 446911New
York, NY 10163" Be sure lo slate your
zodiac sign.
BERNICE
CAPRICORN (Doc. 22·Jan. 19)
BEDE OSOL ·Someone wHo has manipulated you in
lhe past might IIY using nanery IOday 10
pull your strings again"
AQUARIUS (Jan. ~. 19) Tey nol,lo
boast aboul things today if you haven't
• accomplished lhem yet. ·11 you miss lhe
mark or tall shOII, rt could provrLembar·
rassing.
PISCES (Fob. 20·11orch 20) Guard
against lhe inclination today lo viaw
important developments nol as they aclo·
· Tuesday, Dec" 13, 1994
ally are, but as you would like them 10 be.
Your material conditions will probably ARIES (Morch 21-Aprll 18) You may
Improve in lhe year ahead" This could be have substantial material gains loday,
due, In part, to atarting a new job wilh bul there Is also an Indication tl)at you
might be reluclanl lo share whel olhere
gree1er beneftta.
·
SAGmARIUS (Nov. 23·Dec:. 21) It is helped you aljlluire"
usually best to let our hearts rule .our TAURUS (Ajlrll zo.Mey 20) Today you
.heads when making decisions concern· might maka adjustments or ooncessions
ing friends" Today, hOvievel·, lhls policy above and beyond wiMit is nt&lt;leSNI)' lo
could 09'•!plicall matters. Major changes appease SOf!HIOM important to yort Be
.,. ahead lor Sagi1tarius In the coming lair wi1hOtJI being fOOlish.
year. Send lor your Aatro-Graph predic· GEMINI (May 21r.lune 20) Your ideas
tiona today. Mall $1..25 to Aatro·Greph, ara raaaonably good loday , but you

,.

•

,. might implement lhem in a counterproduclive manner. Be assertive , bul also
, use your head.
' CANCER (June ~!·July 22) You ao.e
· usually a very taclful and charming per·
son socially. Today, howevar, you are
prone lo say or do extremely rude lhings.
' Be carefut
"
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) You can handle
today's unfortunate developments in a
manner that will not tarnish your image"
However, your associates might not be
so lucky"
VIRGO (Aug. 23·S.pt. 22) If you are
selling a product or promoting an issue
today, imrt your presentation to lhe facts.
· Attempts 10 embellish could cost you
cuslorners"
' UBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 23) Doing lhings
, for' others only in hOpeS of gelling aome" thing better in return Is &amp;11~·defealing . ·
When you offer your help, your g188lesl
reward will be lhe act ilSIIIt
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Ho¥. 22) Your pall· I
"ners might handle collactive inleresls "
more compellnlly than you loday. ·
Instead of rejacting lhelr efforts, il's in
• your b&amp;st lnterasl to cooperala.
.

'

'

"

�..
Mondey; December 12, 1994

Poineroy--Middleport, Ohio

Page 1G-1lle Dilly Sentinel

Ohio Lottery

Finger
points
at
audi~or
in
bankruptcy
Guard says Dahmer
lawYer

killed to get respect

MILWAUKEE (AP) -The motive for lbe falll prilon aaacb
on left'rcy Dabma' llld Jesse ADdenoo may have bad more 10 do
wilb piDing respect and fame lban race, a guard said.
Dabmcr and ADdcnoD. wbo wen: wblte, wen: aarlrwl Nov. 28
at lbe Columbia Comctiooallnatitulion iD Portage.
.
Dabmcr II a f01111a: resident of subwban Akron, Obio.
Cbristopber Saner, 25, a CDDvicted killer, bas been identified
by autborllles 11 lbe cbief suspect iD tbe attack, but no cbarges have
been flied. Sauvcr Is black.
"He's respect~!~~," lbe guard said Iii a report aired Sunday by
Milwaukee television slation WISN.
1be guard said a lot of mail glviDg money and praise bad beell
sent ID gcarver 11inc:c tbe aaacb.
Other inmates are getting lbe message lbat aime pays, tbe repm
said.
Last weet. WISN reported the same guard said a corrections
off!CCI' was "jamming to music" and engaged in a telepbone conversation and another officer was not present when Dahmer and
Anderson were attacked. Two other inmates conspired in the
auacks, tbe guard said.
·
Aoolber guard said security at tbe prison failed and lbe publ.ic
needs ID be made aware of iL
"When: everybody was and wbatevc:rybody was doing- you'll
be very awprised.lt'O cane out," tbe guard !Did the Daily Register
of Portage.
The guard said authorities would not comment on whether
surveillance c:ameras wen: iD tile area or lbe auacb because State
OtjlillbiiCIIt of Corrections Seaetary Michael SuUiviiD said early on
in tbe investigalioa that autllorllies would view a tape of tbe Incident. The guard said lbere are DO cameras.
"He (Sullivan) doesn't know the fltSt thing about CCI," the
guard said. "We've asked and asked for cameras in that area.
That's a heated area for assaults."
.
Neilber guard wbo commented was identified and WISN took
steps to disguise tile appearance and voice of the guard it interviewed
Meanwhile, Columbia County district attorney Mark Bennett
said repons 011 autopales performed on Dahmer and Anderson will
not be open to public inspection until the investigation into their
slayings II finis!w! ,
Bennett said tbe reports are part of the criininal investigation and
thus not open m:ords, as defmed by state law.
Columbia County coroner C. Keith Epps said last week that several inmates at the prison had requested copies of tbe autopsy
reports. Olber requesiS were received from the media.
Epps said tbe inmates cited specifiC statutes in their efforts ro
obtain tbe reports.
Columbia County sberlff lames Smith said investigaiDrs have
interviewed several prison staff members and inmates, including
i1111181es wbo have been transferred ro otber cooectional facilities.
1be IIBDSfen do not iDclude any of the eight people lbe investigation is focusing on, Smith said. Those inmates bad nolbing ID do
with the case, but investigators had ro follow every lead, he said.
"Forensic evidence seized from both crime scenes has been
delivered 10 tbe lab and iDvestigators ha.ve consulted with lab analysts regarding the processing of that evidence," Smith said.
"Additionally, Olbcrmvestigative activity that will not be disclosed
at this time, is planned or is occurring.
Smith said be was not sure when the investigation would be
canpleted, but it should be within a few weeb.
•
Benneu visited the crime lab l115t week along with other law
enforcement officials. He said he hasn't seen all of the reports, but
he bas been moolllll'ing tbe investigation. He said lje did not know
·when charges would be flied.
·

Street sharb eye ID eye."
ego.
ilalDe of a
or spokestlllll.
By E. SCOTI' RECKARD .
John Moorlaoh, an accouDiimt
A county audit last year found
"He seems to be doing OK,
APBusi-•Wrlter
who
cballeoged Citron iD the June
SANTA ANA, Calif.- The he bad overstepped his authority although I understand be's a little
election
and lost overwhelmingly,
man whose investments prodUced with junk bond and foreign inveat- stressed, you could say," says
bas
a
decidedly
different perspec·
nients,
and
that
be
made
some
Greg Sanders, a neighbor In the
.tbe laraest govcmmeatal bankruptdeals
solely
ID
keep
federal
regulative.
prosperous but not showy area
cy in 0 .S. history has never let
He said !bat Citron bad grown
tors off tile back o( his lead broker- wbere Citron has lived since 1972.
life's hurdlea INir his path.
conceited
alter sambliDg successage,
Merrill
Lynch
&amp;
Co.
Sanders,
a
lawyer,
shakes
his
Robert L. Citron is a Democrat
fully for 1S years on declining
Unllincbing, Citron replied that bead at Citron'. fall.
in solidly Republican Orange
Gesturing up and down the interest rates and was unable to
County, yet he won election as "risky," "unusual" aud "pru ..
dent"
as
used
in
the
audit
were
·
street, he tells how Citron pounded adjust when rates began their
county tax collector and treasurer
for
us
to
objectively
"difficult
on doors for Kiwanis youth dona- upward spiral,
seven times begiDniDf iD 1970.
"He made the assumption, and
evaluate."
tions and was active in University
He's described as 'honest as tile
spelled
it out in September 1993,
of Southern California alumni
day is long," a man who could
" The current management style, clubs. A street iD nearby Anaheim thai interest rates would cootinue to
stand up to "the · Wall Street
sharks.''
' although not the nonn for county wu named for Citron's pbysician decline for another three years,"
When state law kept him from govemmen~ is the best one for the . father, he says. Only the most high- Moorlach said.
On Mardl31. 1993, the county
ly regarded of Democrats could
using borrowed money to buy treasurer-tax collector."
portfolio
contaitled about SB bUiion
When
Goldman
Sachs
investhave stayed in office in Orange
securities for the county investment
in
invesnnents
bought with the ·
ment
bankers
balked
at
fmancing
County for 2A years.
pool, representing 185 local govagencies'
funds
-and
an additionhis
heavy
borrowings
last
year,
he
"He
is
as
honest
as
the
day
is
ernments and agencies, be got the
al
S4
billion
purchased
with borreplied
that
"we
do
not
have
any
long,"
Sanders
says.
"He
made
·
law changed.
Tbat change began an investing trouble whatsoever" with 12 other millions and millions for Orange rowed money.
Over the next year, Citron borstrategy that averaged 10 percent brokers, according to a letter County over the years. He is a
obtained by the Municipal Bond ttemendous asset for Orange Coun- rowed SB billion more ID invest in
returns for 15 years.
ty - or was until they kicked him bonds and in securities that were
County. Supervisor William InvesiDr newsletter.
even more sensitive to interest
He
told
Goldman
Sachs
not
10
out.''
Steiner told tbe Los Angeles Times
If the 69-year-old Citron was rates.
on Saturday that he was !Did losses bother seeking further business
As interest rates rose tbe value
from the investment pool have wilb Orange County.
regarded as high-handed by the
Now it's Citron wbo's DO longer investment community, Sanders of his holdings tumbled from $20
reached at least $2 billion. County
officials have already started llim- in business. Forced to resign by the says, it's because he was justly biUioniD $18.5 billion.
Tuesday, the county sought
ming spending items, including county supervisors, he bas been proud.
bankruptcy
protection for tile fund
holed
up
in
his
Santa
Ana
ho.me,
"Bob Citron was managing one
youth programs and public worb
as
brokerage
firms demanded more
refusing
ID
open
the
front
door.
A
of the largest portfoli!l'l in the Unitprojects.
Along the way to this debacle, woman speaking from behind the ed States and was highly respected collateral to shore up loan agreeCitron sprouted quite a professional door declined even to provide the . for it. He was able ID meet tbe Wall ments.

FBI/inks killing to work of serial bomber
Mosser but said it was "exttemely
By DONNA DE LA CRUZ
powerful."
Associated r.... Writer
lie said he did not know when:
NEWARK, N.J. - A bomber
lbe
package orlgiDated.
who bas killed oDe person and
the
FBI believes the person
iDjured 23 others over the last 16
years appears ID have strudt 1111ain, who has been makiDg and sending
this time kilHng an advertising the bombs is a white male in his
executive with a mail bomb, the 30s or 40s with a bigh scbool education. Mawn would not elaborate
FBI said Sunday.
Thomas J. Mosser, SO, was on how tbe FBI came up with the
killed Saturday in his kitchen in COOiposite. . .
1be FBI is offering a $1 million
suburban North Caldwell when he
opened a small package addressed reward for information in the
ID him and delivered by the Postal bombings.
Mosser's wife, Susan, received
Service, FBI agent Barry Mawn
the package Friday but her husband
said.
No motive had been determined. did not open it until Saturday.
·but the FBI believes Mosser's Essex County Sheriff Armando
death is linked to what it code- Fontoura said. Mrs. Mosser did not·
names the "Unabom" series of have to sign for the packase, he
mail bombs sent ID university pro- said.
fessors and executives of airlines
and computer companies in the
United States, Mawn said.
"The components of the bomb,
LOS ANGELES (AP) - 0.1.
its construction, make us believe Simpson is repoi1Cdly on tbe brink
tbe bombs are ll'nked," Mawn said. of a major change in his legal stratHe would not elaborate. on the egy.
makeup of the bomb that killed . After hiring a high-priced team
of lawyers to dlallcnge virtually
every drop, strand and speck of
evidence, Simpaon baa decided to
abandon an effort to have genetic
evidence
- the heart of the proseDeed, Evmtt and Gloria Hutton
cution's
case
- dismissed, CNN
to Stan ley Hutton and Debra
reported
over
the
weekend.
Pierce, Salem parcel;
Instead, Simpson's lawyers will
Deed, Vernon and Mildred
Blevins to state of Ohio, l;hallenge tbe evidence in front of
the jury, CNN reported Sunday,
Cbes~/Salisbury parcels;
citing
unidentified defense team
Deed, James A. and Carol Will
sources.
to swe of Ohio, Chester parcels;
Deed, Charles Lewis Shain ID
state of Ohio, Salisbury, 1.484
acres;
Deed, Pomeroy Gun Club Incorporated ID state -of Ohio, Chester,
1.809 acres;
Deed, Pomeroy Gun Club Incorporated 10 state of Ohio, Chester,
.083 acres;
Deed, Pomeroy Gun Club Incorporated to state of Ohio, Salisbury,
.146 acre;
Deed, James A. and Carol Will
to state of Ohio, Salisbury, .709
acre;
· Affidavit, Lee Roy Fryar,
deceased, to Mary L. Fryar,
Orange, 40 acres;
Deed, Cecil C. and Allen C.
Christmas Hours
Heilman 1D Robert Gene and Ruth
·Ann Graham, Bedford, .1.030
Mon ~·Frl. 9-8 pm
acres;
Sal 9-5 pm
Deed, Joyce E. Utsinger to
sun. 1-5
Larry W. and Teresa L. Stewart,
Rutland parcels;
Deed, Lee 0. m and Teresa L.
Wood ID Nelson R. and Vicki Morrison, Middleport lot; ·
Deed, Michael and lillie Perry
to J,. Mitchell and Eleanor M.
17.8 Cu. Ft. Refrigerator
Speus, Columbia, 1,18 acres;
•Temp-Assure
Deed, Terry and Donna
System Keeps
Matthews ID Buddy Rentals, MidFood Fresh Not
dleport lots;
Just Cold
•17.8 Cu. Ft. of
Deed, Jon D. and Carolyn S.
Storago Spa~
Jacobs to same, Salisbury. 1.91
•Gallon StO&lt;age
acres;
•Refrigerated Dell
Drawet"'
Deed, Warren D. and Esther M.
•FaCIOIY Installed
Black to Ralph E. and Bonnie M.
Ice Maker
.Searles. Rutland villaae• .390 acre:
Right of way, ~ogene and
Nancy Phillips to Tuppers PlainsOiester Water Distric~ Scipio lots;
Right of way.• Jim Farris to
Extra Large Capacity Dryer
1PCWD, Scipio, 1.4795 acres;
Right of way, Dennis and Juanita Bryant to 1PCWD, Scipio, 23.15
. acres;
Deed, Church of the Living God
ID Larry and Beverly Rupe, Rutland village pan:el;

There is no evidence lbat MossMrs. Mosser tlescrlbed the~
er
was
involved in organized aime
age as small, neatly wrapped and
white. Mawn said it was the size or or was a witnesS in a criminal trial,
or of any threats against him or bis
a videotape.
Mosser lived witb his wife and family, Mawn said.
The fmt "Unabom" package
two children, aged 13 years old and
15 months. They were all home at bombs were mailed in 1978, Mawn
the time of the blast, along with a , said. Cues linked to the bomber
neighbor's cbild who was visiting. were iD IUinois, California, Utah,
Tennessee, Michigan and WashiDgNone of them wen: injured.
The package exploded in Moss- ton state.
The other death linked to the
er's hand and blew a large bole in
the kitchen counter, filling the series oo:urred on Dec. 11, 1985,
when a pacqge exploded as Hugh
house with thick smc&amp;e.
Mosser was recently promoted Scrutton picked It up near his
to general manager and executive Saaamento, Calif., canputer rental
vice president at Young &amp;; Rubi- store.
Targets of other bombs have
cam Inc. in New York. Mawn did
not know if Mosser's accounts had included a geneticist • tbe Univer·
any relationship to any of the sity of California-San Francisco
and a computer scientist at Yale
bomber's previous targets.

O.J.'s team may contest DNA evidence
Slmpson'•s lawye~ will file a
motion as early as Tuesday seeldng
the cancellation of a bearing on
:ovhether J?NA evidence may be
tnb'Oduced at the trial, CNN reported. That could allow lawyers to
begin opening statemeniS in early
January.
None of Simpson's lawyers
returned calls from The Associated
Press seekins commenL
.
The report came as lawyers
awaited a decision today from
Superior Court Judge Lance ItO m
whelber one of tbe members of the
prosecution team must leave the
case.

·Meigs County·land tran·s ters
The following land transfers

Joyce E. Manuel, Sutton;
RobinsOn,
Robinson,
Glerida M. Donovan and Gregory
A. Winebrenner Orange pan:eb·
'
'
Deed, James R. and Ruth A.
Priddy Sr. ID Fred E. and Mary A.
MulfOid, Middleport lot;
Deed, Virginia Pritchard to
William E. and Carolyn J. White,
Chester parcels;
Deed, Kellee 1. to Daniel A.
Nease, SuttDn;
.
Affidavit, Bill L. Henderson,
deceased, to Ruth I. Kitchen,
Salem;
.
Deed, Albert B. Cone to Paul
and Maudie Spry, Columbia tracts;
Right of way, Myra L. and Gary
L. Kennard ID Mid-Con Petroleum
Company, Olive, 135 acres;
Affidavit, Kail and Lena Knapp
10 Doyle KnaPI';
Deed, Ka1l Knapp, Tonda
K~pp, Tonda S.alser to 'Gregory
M. Stewart and Laura M. Salser,
Rutland;
Deed, Donald W. and Nellie M.
Stauch io Robert Charles Albright,
Salem pan:eb;
Easement, Ronald and Linda
~!:f. t~ Energy Search
, Olive, 30 acres;
Right of way, Virginia Forres
Hoselton to Energy Search Incorporated, Olive, 47 acres;
Deed, Danny Joe Dotson to
Naomi R. Bissell, Naomi DotaDn,
Chesterparcela;
Deed, Charles L and Nancy I.
SPires ID same, Rutland village, .52

,were~ RCetldy in tbe office
Certificate, Glen f.
. of MeJSS ~ty Recmler EIIIJII()o_ .deceased, to Wilber E.

'gene~:
.
. Certificate, . v.eda E. DIVIS,
deceased, ID William and Robert
Lehew, Pomeroy lot;
: Affidavit, Jerome Goldberg
family Trust, et. al, to Raven
'Hocking Coal Corporation and
Douglas W. Little;
; Deed, Ravea Hocking Call Corporation ID Valley Coal Corpora)ion, Sutton )liii'Cels;
· Deed, Patrleia L. Smith ID Pearl
A. Smith, Bedford pan:els;
: Deed, Bruce W. Hoffman, Patri~ia E. Stewart, Patricia E. Hoffman
1D Richard C. and Ruby E. Eblin,
~alisbury, five acres;
, Deed, Patrick L. and Julie Law~ ID Damn I . and Tina M. Rees,
Columbia lot;
: Deed, Carol D. Trussell, Carol
D. and Gregory A. Bush, Salisbury,
:32 acre;
. ~ Deed, Forrest T. Adams ID Mar·
ilyn 1. Swain, Olive pan:els;
: Right of way, Harold H. and
Helen E. Blacbton ID Alvin Ray
lind Ruth Ann Taylor;
· Deed, Harold H. and Helen E.
Blackston to Francis E. and
Dorothy Mae Shaffer, Chester,
p77 acres;
·
· Right of way, Paul D. and Patricia L, White to Tuppers PIJinsChester Water Distric~ Bedford, 8S

acres;

. : Right of way, Keith A., Marjorie, Jeffrey B. and Melissa
Collins ID 1PCWD, Olive lot;
; Certificate, Arthur Dallas
Heiney, deceased, to Mary lean
Keller and Shawn Paul Rollins,
Olive lraCts;
Deed, Gary L. and Patricia L..
)Volf to Bruce B. and Donna L.
Po1!rm and Francis B. and Stilly S.
Blake, Olive lot. .
; Certificate, Virginia E. Hartley.
(leceased, 1D Doris E. Pooler. Rut-

land:
•
I Deed, Virginia E. Hartley,
Cicceaaed. ID Doris B. Pooler, Rut-

land tracts;

.
' Deed, Vi(linia E. Hartley,
deceued. 10 William R. and Hdea
M. Capehart, Rutll\M, UXl6 acres;
1 Affidavit, Lucille M. Rhodes 10
HowiRI and Realba Allea;
; Deed, Lawrence B. Peck to
Clwles B. and Roberta 1. Lee,
8odfoqS pEel;

I Deed, Ciaratce C. and Wanda

'-· Wolf to Randy Ryan Wolf,
~
1
, Darrell Lee and Wanda
to.Nora .M. Cid),l,ebMm,

Se:
S1

~ Deed, Altbur B. ml ~Jean

Hoo4 10 Gary Lee IIIII BoDitio Sue

Wanier. Salilbury, 89.1~ ~aa;
: DeOd, John II.; Cbarlea B. and

"B~

Bllke 10 Donald W. and

aCIU;

Deed, Thomas E. and Mary L.
Berry to. Albert R. and Patricia E.
I.oscar, Lebanon, five acres;
Deed. Brenda S. Nutter 1D Farmers Bank and Savings Company,
0ranae lOlii;
Agreement, James C. Stamper
and Max Cheyney Jr. 10 Columbia
Gas of Ohio Inc .. Columbia Gas
TransmillioD. Olive;
Deed. Mary 0. Folmer 10 Gregory ond Denjse Bush, Lebanon
pan:els;
Deed, Clifford and Minnie Harris to Patricia Anp Triplett,
I..eban(m, .63 acre;
,
Deed, Mitlu!el E. and Stephanie
L. Ash to Mart E. and Teresa A.
Davis, Paneroy parcdJ;
Deed, ·Marcia Karr ID James B. ·
Jr. and Darla N. Thomas, Syracuse,
1/2 ~
· Deed, Robert Michael and
SJuuon Lyun Rhodes 1D Fraritlin A.
i~a Penny Wolfe, Letart, 3.20
~
·
Deed, Bruce E. and Donna L.
Dounn to Henry E. Amell. Olive,
five acres;
'
Deed, Norma Rockhold io
Tommy J. and Regina D. Reed,
Reedsville, 1/4 acre;

•

The defense bas said that
Deputy District Attorney Christopher Dar!len Improperly gained
access to iDformation on Simpson
in his role as bead or tile grand jury
investigation of Simpson friend AI
Cowlings.
Also on tap for this week:
• All jurors and their alternates
have been ordered ID come to court
today for fiX1her insUuctioos. Last
week, the judge, attorneys and
three jurors met privately.
.
· • Rosey Grier was ordered to
return to court Wednesday to CDDtinue testimony over an apparently
overheard jail bouse CDDVersation
. between blm and Simpson.
·- _, ....

-

~

·

&amp;JeW ry

·

\nge\'s Furniture . . .

When You Know Exactly
What
Want.
20.7 Cu. Ft. Tamp-Assure" System
-•Splllsaverr• Shelves
•20.7 Cu. Ft. of Storage
Space
-Gallon Storage
•Refrigerated Dell

.....

DOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER
IISUUNCE

tfatm

YOUR INDEPENDENT
AGENTS SERVING
MEIGS COUNTY
SINCE 1868

-

Sllgt

--

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

:F p , • - Iller lilt ...

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D1~!9!DS 1(06 NORTH SECOND AVENUE • MIDDLEPORT, OHIO 45760

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•\\We llllcliono: flmOUI tnndl
•-

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Ovtn Spaco

INGELS FURNITURE &amp; JEWELRY, INC.

• FM l'lfTIIWII tA )tiUf Old TV 01

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Mid- Size Microwave Oven

Memory
• Sl•ong W"""'Y

$369

l'tNI ~~ , _ Whon
l'tNI luy AI /nffle-.
•Ftos-,sndllloiJilon mot!

111 Second Sl, Pomeroy

I

10-L.Mii

99

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Mlku h Ellayl

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614) 992-2635 • TOLL FREE 110().426-5581
.

gains berth
in playoffs

211

Pick4:

0011

Low toaJchtla-. . .
Wed...toy, .,.y.81Pa_..

Buckeye 5:
20-27-29-35-37

Pap5

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. CredHerm5 •lay·A·Ways • MasterCard • VISa ·

90DAYSNOINTERESTONDIAMONDI'REFERREDCHARGEJ
.- - - • FOR OUAI.IFIEO BUVEM

•

•

en tine
Vol. 45, NO. 156
Copyright 1894

On
line
First scrubber unit

·=ilia.;=·::c::t::i;"c:f

Section. 10 Pageo 35 cento

A Multimedia Inc. Nowapopor

Commissioners vow
to pay sheriff's ·staff

at Gavin finished
ahead of schedule
The first of two coal cleaning
units at tbe GaviD power plant Is
operating more than eight1110111bs
abeatl ci lldledu1e, Ametlclll Electric Power Corp. officials
announced Moaday.
1be unit started opmting over
the weekend due to what AEP
called "superior project performance" that prompted 811 early
canpledon or tbe job.
The seCOIId unit Is expected ID
go on line iD Mimi 1995 and will
be 10 111011tha abel4 of the CXllllpletion date originally projected by
AEP. AEP installed tbe units, techniaally known as flue-gas desulflrization systems and more JlOPular- ·
ly as "scrubbers," as the t'ltSi step
in an effort to comply with the
aear Air Act.of 1990.
The scrubbers will remove 9S
percent of sulfur dioxide from coal
burned at Gavin that generates
electricity for such AEP subsidiaries as Ohio Power Co. and
Columbus Southern Power Co.
Gavin's coal comes from the
Southern Ohio Coal Co.'s Meigs
Mines.
AEP expects the cleaner coal ID
satisfy federal mandates on cleaner
ail; keep the Meigs t.JiDes open and
maintain 800 jobs at the mining
C(JIIplex.
' lames A. Howard, AEP's Major
Proj~~ l,')ivWon .~• &amp;llrlbut-

I

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, December 13, 1994

By JIM FREEMAN
threw some of the responsibility Soulsby use money from the law
Sentinel Ne1n Starr
back onto the commissioners, say- enforcement bUSt fund and furtherThe Meigs County Sheriff's ing budget cuts are necessary to ance of justice funds ID meet Jl8)'Department needs approximately kecp the county in the black.
roll. They also requested that
$29,000 to make payroll for the
"There is going to !Jave to be Lentes meet with the sheriff.
res( of the year, prompting a spe- some drastic changes made to
"I think people ought to be
cial meeting of tbe Meigs Board ol make it lhroug~ next year," be said. paid," Hoffman said. "We'll wort
Commissioners Monday to recon- "As long as you spend more money out somelbing."
cile the slwation.
than you take in, you'll never surSoulsby said lbe budget problem
More immediately, the depart· vive."
has several causes, including the
ment needs about $10,000 to meet
. "You bave 10 bite tbe bullet and cost of housing prisonen out-QfWednesday's payroll, said Com- just do it," he said.
county and associated expenses,
mission President Fred Hoffman.
Frank also discussed the sale or including uanspor1ation.
Commissioners considered guns confiscated by the county
Soulsby, who said his depart·
appropriating the needed money from Robert Fife, Middleport. in a ment has eight fuU-time road
from the general fund into tbe sher- recent criminal case. Sale of the deputies ID cover the entire oowity,
iffs budget, an idea rejected by guns would have perhaps brought also blamed the problem on overTreasurer Howard Frank, president in enough money to resolve the · time and the cost of aiminal invesof the budget commission.
jlroblem.
· ligations includinsthe recent weekFrank said the county needs to
"'lbat was why I wanted them end-long pobe and excavation of a
bring in an additional $40,000 this sold," Frank said.
farm near Racine wbere inveatigamonth before it can meet the origiProsecuting Attorney Jobn R. tors were looking for evidence,
nal certification approved in Jan- Lentes, also a member of the bud- including human bodies.
uary this year.
get commission. said the board
Present were Hoffman, Com"The county commission can't "can't count on the guns being a mission Vice President J8Jiet
appropriate money in any category nest egg;'
.
Howard Tackett and Commissioner
until tbe county government . "We don't know what they'll Robert Hartenbacb. Representing
receives $40,000," he said.
bring in," he said.
·
the budget CQI!mission were Frank,
Frank, portraying the dilemma
The commissioners decided to Lentes and AudiiDr Nancy Parker
as a symptOm of a larger problem, request that Sheriff James M. Campbell.

May.or feels belt-tightening
wUI~t -Mi.~dJe.port in black
~ .~~~a•~e.- ,,

SCRUBBER OPERATING- The ftnt of two coal cleanlllg

I!Dit.l!l.lhf;:.r.;•w plut ....... openllna over114 lhe.wee~.
~Datlllc -=~·G.";'~~-==- ~~• 0

englpeer!ng and design w
By GEORGE ABATE
cooperauon from permitting agen- rized by tbe Public Utilities Com- state through construction labor Sentinel Ne1n Starr
employment and related costs for
cies, a good relalionsbip with labor;- · . miss_ion of Ohio.
.:
After a year of paying bills up ID
contractor efficiency and early
PUCO approved ~·s clear air goods and servioes. Approximately three moolhs late. Middleport Vildelivery of cornponents.
c001pliance plan in November 1992 63 percent or tbe project's dollars lage Council anticipates ending tbe
"'lbe project truly was a team as a "prudent an~ least-cost" for labor and material went to Ohio year in the black, Mayor Dewey
effort in which we continually method of meeting federal guide- firms, according ID AEP estimates.
Horton said at 1994's final oouncil
In addition, full-time employ- meeting Monday.
sousht to create opportunities for lines. AEP decided in 1992 to conment at Gavin, opened in 1974.
improviD~ the schedule Jllld reduc- tinue using Meigs coal at GaviD in
The village continues to be
expanded
by 118 ID meet the opera· audited by the state, with a status
ing cost.' be said.
place of buying coal with lower
1be project's estimated cost bas sulfur content from 'the western · tiona! and maintenance needs of · conference set for 4:30 p.m. Monthe new equipment. Operation of a day, Dec. 19 in the mayor's office.
now been downsized ID $688 mil- U.S.
scrubber
landfill will also create 25
lion - more than 1S percent below
AEP feels the projeCt provided a
"We have made a real conscienthe $815 million cost limit autbo- significant economic benefit 10 tbe full-time positions.
tious effort ID get it iniD tbe black
this year," HoriDn said.
Horton highlighted tbe steps the
village has taken ID pare costs and
reduce pe\jous debts, including:
• changing the balance of all
funds from $43,915.0llast October
to $92,77759 this October. Also,
short-term interest rates six timeS
By JAMES II. RUBIN
Alsocllted ,._ Wrller
in October 1993 there were ·22
since February, but tbe tightening
funds with 13 showing deficits.
· WASHlNGroN - Retail sales bas had limited effect in slowing
while this Oc!Dher there were 19
surged 1.2 perclent iD NQvember, economic growth.
· funds with nine in deficit.
the sixlb sblight advance, as the
The CODlDierce Department said
• cutting payroll $45,974.05
Cluistmu lbcJRlial seuciD got off sales totaled a se8S011811y adjusted 1-:.:.--------...tH
through tbe third quarter by elimito a flying start at tbe end of the $194.2 billion in November, up
month.
·
nating steady overtime costs and
from $191.9 billion.
,
rerucing employees· hours:
The Commerce Department
Retail sales have risen every
• increasing income tax collectoday also revised upward, to 1.3 month since May when they were
tions
ID $42.497.47 through Octopercent from an earlier estimate of unchanged. They are 8.7 percent
ber;
1.1 percent, the increase In total higher than a year ago.
• saving $21.226.32 by changing
sales for October.
Analysts said that Americans
the village employee' s health insur·
1be Novanber gain, more thaD continue to spend, despite higher
double what maily analysts predict- interest rates, as higher employance:
• tightening control of building
ed, was rva;:ically 8CI'IlSS tile baird ment and incomes feed consumer
permits:
and like y will f~ new speculation confidence. Retail sales represent
• loaning the grant coordinator
that tbe Fedcnl Reserve will raise about half of all consUmer expeotlito
the
oounty, for which lbe village
interest rates yet again to slow a tures.
will be reimbursed;
consumer-driven eoonomlc expan- '
Building supplies, hardware and
• raising fines and bonds, while
sion.
' garden supplies led the way in
raising fees for housing prisoners
The Fed's key policy-setting Nov.ember, rising 2.9 percent, and
next year;
panel, the Federal Open Market cars and home fumisbings were not
• purchasing a oomputer systeill
Committee, is due to meet in one far behind as all major durable '
tq
quicken
and better control viiweek. 1be eentral bank has boosted goods sectors posted gains.

about is the amount of leverage,"
Trussell said The village will bave
to provide a I0 percent match of
the entire State outlay.
"The competition is real fierce
and it will be fierce again." she
added.
Trussell said her office could
use the belp of property owners to
line up their commitments of what
they intend to refurbish. An indi·
vidual will provide free estimates
for repairs, she added.
In other business. council
approved the third and final read·
ing on Christmas bonuses for the
viUage employees.
The bonuses will be paid
through the general, water, sewer,
street, cemetery and safety funds,
Horton said. Some council memt&gt;ers had offered to lake a pay cut to
finance the · bonuses, but this
motion failed.
Bonuses for 23 employees will
cost $2,050. but an individual has
donated $1,000. reducina the village· s expenses, Horton said.
• Middleport ended November
with a general fund balanc~ of
$5,118.28. Other surplus balances
included : street maintenanc:e,
S I .707 .97 : fire equipment,
$4,732.99: water system improvement, $359.55: water, $10,892.74:
billing.
sanitary
sewer. $33,770.96; water
In other action, council gave
meter
tru
sts; $28,877 .26; ODNR
grants coordinator Jean Trussell the
waterways,
$1,244.97; revolving
go-ahead to seek two rounds of
$10,331.74
; refuS'e fund ,
loan.
revitalization grants next year. ·
S
i
3.069.67:
and
law
enforcement
. Trussell said the village bas a
chance to gain up to $400.000 in trust fund, $2,714.43.
De(icit balances included:
state funds to rebuild the downminiature
golf, $1,472.08; fire
town· s storefronts and mng .buildtruck.
Sl
,266
.58; tree olanting,
ings up to code.
(Continued
on Page 3)
"The only thing I'm worried ·

lage fmances; and
• paying off longer-term responsibilities, including a police cruiser
that cost $407.14 a month, a
breathalyzer costing $182.50 a
montb and a backhoe that cost
$6.510 a year.
Many of tbe financial decisions
in the last year were difficult to
make, Horton said.
"We're on our way to having a
better village. Council bas been
handling more work and taken
more interest in the village," Horton said. "The employees need to
be given a lot of credl~ too."
Last year ' s severe weather
forced the village to pay $20,000 in
overtime and costs it had not anticipated, be added.
'lbe village must still resolve a
traSh-hauling contract. Since June,
the village has operated on a temporary basis with Manley's in Middleport.
Councilman Paul Gerard pre·sented a draft for the council to
consider.
Suggestions included raising the
carrier's insurance coverage to
$500,0001$1 million, continuing to
bold an annual spring cleanup, and
maintaining a $10.000 per year fee
the village earns for handling

Gerard quits
council post
in Middleport

Postal governors approve
increase in price of stamp

Chiller""

•Factory Ice Maker

1-m

Pick 3:

Spurt in retail sales gets
season off to flying !);tart

•

Stor-Mo..- Refrigerator

Miami

at 12:01 a.m., local time, on New
WASHINGTON (AP) Happy New Year from the post Year'•s Day under a unanimous
oiTtce: 1be 32-&lt;letlt ¥&amp;mP Jwwnes vote Monday of ihe governing
board of lbe u.s. Postal Service.
ofCJCiaiJan. 1.
Board Chairman Sam Winters
Millions of Don-priced stamps
noted
that tbe increase of a firstbearing the letter "G" and an
class
stamp
from the current 29
American flag are en route to post
cents
is
tbe
first
iD four yean and is
olfJCCS for use until '3~ llllll1pS
below
the
12.2
percent consumer
can be printed. Tbe Love stamp
price
inflation
for
that period
being issued for Valentine's Day
1,The.new rates are expected ID
also will be --priced. Iince it had
bnng the Postal Service $4.7 bilID lk printed in advance.
.Also planned ia a non-priced lion In added income in 199S. It
"mateup" slllllp, bearing a draw· lost $914 mi1lloo in the just-comlug of a dove, that Is worth 3 amts pleted~ year and $1.7 billion
and can be OOIJ!bincd with leftover tbe year before.
The independent Postal Rate
29-cent SlljiDPS to equal the new
Commission
approved the new
rate. ..
rates
in
late
November
after nearly
It takea about 90 cltys to com:
nine.
months
of
hearings.
plete printing lltld diltrlbution of a
Charges for international mall
stamp, so ttam)ll bearing the 32wiD
also Increase, but the date and
cent price should.begin appearing
amounts
have not been detetmined.
after lbat time.
Postal
oflicials
said.
1be new rates bcoonle effective

' '
\\

EASTERN DONATION- The art d - . at
Eastern lllalt Sdlool recelnd a $111 ...._,..,.
from OMEGA·JV5 S•adfY for palatiq tlte ,,
Pomeroy ollka' wbtclowa.
left .,. Allly
Smith, OMEGA'• Patty Pickens, art tcacker
LoUta. Morrilw and. Cr)'ltal Smllh. Eutei'JI'a
.-t
.

'rom

'

'

,,

classes bve lleld .candy sal11 and Cltrlstiau
window paiDU.,. to ralle D!DMY for a c:omput•
cr. The OMEGA doutioll will pay for IOftwan.
Not pictured Wll Jamie Drake, wllo allo laelped

paint lhe storefront. (Sentinel photo. by
Abate) ·.

p-.

By GEORGE ABATE
Sentinel Ne1n Stair
Middleport Councilman Paul
Gerard fmisbed seva1 years of service on council Monday night Ger~d s.ubmilled his reai&amp;Dillion letter,
citing a planned move to Chester IS
his reason for departing.
"I have enjoyed It a lot and I
will miss it a lot,a Gerard said.
"Middleport' s I very special
place."
In his resignatioo letter, Gerard
asked that council select someone
who loves the village as much u
be does. Gerard has lived in Middleport for 37 yem, saying he will
return often since he still has fami1y in the village.
"Just because I won't be living
(Cootinlied IJII . . . 3)

,I

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