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Page 1o-The Dally SenUnel

•

TUelday, December 13, 1994

Poineroy--lllddlepart, Ohio

Meigs
defeated
by .FHHS

Booster shOt cannot give positive Syphilis readin[ _.......... _
·

.

. positive on this test in his 22 years of
.
praclice.
Ann
Ed and 1 had a long heart-to-heart
Landers conversalion, and he swore that he
had never had sex with anyone. He
.. ,004 , L01 Angeles
has always been very truthful, and I
TlmetS~and
Cl'utol't SyndQI•~
believehl·m· lthenrequestedamore
·
specific testlhat showed the original
Dear Ann Landers: My 14-ycar- test to have been wrong. This episode
old son had to. have a complete caused both me and my son a great
physical before entering a high school deal of anguish. Is it possible that
sports program. This physical booster shots can cause false
included a booster sho!, a positives? •. ST. PETE, FLA. .
tuberculosis test and several other
DEAR ST. PETE: We spoke with
Dr Daniel Johnson an infectious
blood tests.
·
'
The following day, the doctor disease expcn at the University of
called 10 say "Ed" had tested posilivc Chicago Medical Center. He said
for syphilis. I asked if the positive quite emphatically that there is no
result could have been an errot The documeniCCI case of a booster shot
doctor said he had not seen a false causing a false positive for syphilis.

Dr. Johnson also made it clear tbat ··and I have yet 10 receiVe a bill.
chances are much greater that the boy
Dear Ann Landers: "Burnt Out,'

may bave had some other
inCcction, such as Lyme disease,
mononiiCleosis, measles or chicken
• postUve.
··
. h caused tbe .alsc
pox, whtc
Healsomenlionedotherdiseasestbat
migbt produce a false positive for
syphilis, such as scar lei fever,
.malaria, lupus or juvenile rheumatoid
arthritis. Your son's doctor needs 10
go back for a refresher course and
keep up with recent medical
, literature.
.
Dr Johnson's response remm'dcd
•
me, once again, how fonunate I
am to have access to top-notch
authorities who have been willing to
helpmeprovideexcellentresponses
,n areas in which I have no experlise

who complained 'about being
overworked,spokeformillionsofus.
I hope you will print several
•· th'IS sub':ICC t IS
· a hot
responses becau...
one
·
·
· · My h~sband ~~ a school
psychologiSt He cames a caseioad
that woul.d keep tw~ psychologiSts
busy. Tesung, evaluauons,paperworlc
and meetings take almost all his ti~e,
when he ~hould be counseling
·tro~bled children. .
.
My son works m a convemence
· ·
store. He. Is the only e~ployee there
for an e1ght-hour sh1ft. No lun~h
break ·• no breaks at all. He 1s
cashier,stocker,janitor,younameit
And he. IS ex peeled to sland up for

~ght ~urs. ;z,~t:~ ~ : n sup~

ml'With as
. m h couMn
1s e s~e everyw ~re. ost

pcople~a~.tocompl~~~use

somth eonek IS ~81'liung bford~~~r JO~ and
ey now 11. .oo a . u•ere IS no
be
1onger an mcenuve to
h d
ar -worIt'1 ~g an d 1oya1· Don 'I
bosses r~a~ tha t overw:;ed,
unapprec~a
cmp1oyces P u~
poor service, shoddy workmanship,
faulty fl!O!IIICts and safct~ hazands?
Dow.nslzmg has conwb~ted to
em~ distress, physical ailments,
family problems and more. No
der
1
ha
1o ally.
won emp oy~ vc 110 Y. ·
They feel as If they are bemg
squeezed dry.
.
When are ~he pe~cf'e ~:
managementgomg to u ers

Ground red pepper puts feline potty out-of service
By ANNE L ADAMS ud
NANCY NASB..ctlMMINGS
DEAR ANNE AND NAN: I
have a JX0b1em wilb tbe oeigbbcn'
cats using tbe Dice, soft dirt under
tbe 2-foot overbang of my bouse 10
"do tbeit dirty work." I am sure
tbere Is a "hooJcmede" recipe out
there somewhere that I can use 10
discourage tbese felines from using
my property aS their toilet If not
bMIC'!Iede,ls tbr:m sane f«!!JMI'·
cia! remedy? Please do not use my
name as I do not wish 10 alienate
my neigbl!ors, just tbeir cats. NO NAME, Topeka, Kan.
DEAR NO NAME: A relative
of ours was baving tbe very prob!em you describe. Her solulioo was
10 put growld red pepper in tbe soft

dirt tbat the cats were using as a
latrine.
We've also been stven Ibis
recipe: Grine! 3-4 garlic: b~ds ~ 3- .
4 red peppers and oombme wttb a
gallon of water, sprlnlde in tbe area
that you want cat-free and repeat
after eacb rain.
.
If anyone bas any better ideas,
please advise.
DEAR ANNE AND NAN: You
have a great oolumn! Can 1 you furDisb me with name(s) of a firm that
makes or bandies candle molds?BURNETTE JEANSONNE, Ville
Platte, La.
'
DEAR BURNETI'E: Here are
tbe names of tbree sources:
Barker Enterprises Inc., 15106
IOib Ave. SW, Seattle, WA 98166;

telephone 1-800-543-0601. To
receive a catalog, send $2.
Hawthorne Products Co., P.O.
Box 3683, Bloomington, 1L 61701.
Tbey'U send a free brochure.
Mann Laker Supply, County Rd.
40 and 1st St., Hackensack, MN'
56452. Fa' information, caU 1-800233-6663.
DEAR ANNE AND NAN:
Could you please fmd out wbere I
can fmd Scars Tough Skins overails? My husband needs size 54 or
56. Since tbey no longer bave catalog sales, we can't find wbat be
needs. We bave caUed Sears, but
no one bas been able to help us.
Tbe big-mao stores don't carry
beavy-duty work clotbes. He bas
tried otber brands, but they just

dou 't bold up well. -

HUNTER. Lalll'3; Obio

EVA

DEAR EVA: We can't find tbe
Sear Tougb Skins eitber, but tbe
J.C. Penney 1994 fall and winter
catalog bas a good selection of
overalls in sizes 4ti~S6. One pair
costs $35, a' if you buy four pairs
tbe price Is $29.75 per pair. Tbc
blue denim overalls are catalog
RJ545-4103E.
To order, caU l-S00.222-6161.
S11JMPED: WHAT CAN YOU
DO WITH OLD SHOULDER
PADS? Jane Burgess of Medford
NJ. writes tbat sbe bas 72 pairs of
sbo~lder pads made of foam tbat
sbe's removed from dresses and
blouses. "Tbey aren't suitable for
my shape; !bey make me look as if

monc~ is counter-productive,

demoralizing penny-wise and
. • •• BELINGTON
~~nd-foohsh?
'
·DEA.R w v.. There are a lot of
.. singing your song,
people who ·are
'IIi
i
·
but a totally di enenttunc s commg
from mana
ent Moreoo this 1ate1:
Keep thosf:uttals coming, folks.
you by? K!Jnt 10 im·
1s 11'It passing
social ski/Is? \D'itt for

Vol. 45, NO. 157

Copyright 1994

Anne B. Adams and Nancy
Nash-Cummlnp are co-authors
or "Ask Anne &amp; Nan" (Whet. stone) and "Dear Anne ud NIID:
Two Prize Prdblem·Solvers
Share Their Secrets" (Bantam).
To order, calll-800-81111-ll:ZO.
(For larormatloo on how to
communicate elec~Uy with
tbls colunmlst and others, con·
tact Auwrlc:a Online hy c:alllng 1IIG0-817~ ext. 8317.)

Rutland to end
1994 in black

-.-Y

Middleport giveaway
winners announced
Acquisitions Jewelry, Larry NaPper; Farmers Bank, Rutb DeLong;
Western Auto, Linda lett; Middleport Tropbies, Mila Woods; Geoer·
a! Tue Sales, Sbefry Wcaver;· King
Servistar Hardware, Sblrley Hubbard; Classic Cuts, Sbirley Jobnson; Johnson's Video, George
Abate;
Gingerbread House, Gerald
Powell; Middlepon Flower Sbqp,
Rulb Moore; Obio River Bear Co.,
Dan Tbomas; Country Naturals,
Diana Davidson; "T' Furniture,
Earline Ebersbach; Corner Restaurant, Tbeima Collins; Quality Print,
Naomi King; Dottie Turner Realty,
Cecilia Mileb;
Foreman &amp;. Abbott, Carl Stew·
art; McClure's Restaurant. Mildred
Pbillips; Peoples Bank, EmaJcne
Prau; Ellis BP, Toni Thomas.

fu't.;

c:onaae.

'•

"

5

!iia~l.~~anc:ial

District, Meigs County paving "".,..
jects, ceplacemcnt of tbe Keno
bridge and MJddleport paving pro· jects.
.
,
·
Various council members staled
their disgust witb tbe decision,
including Councilman Steve Jeokins.
MTbere,' s no way,tbat pavins
should get a blgber ,priority tban
something that determines the
beaJtb and safety of a village,"
Jenkins said.
Smitb said at tbe Slate level tbe
project could get eoougb points to
be funded. but tbia Is l!!ll Bitely.
, In otber action, c&amp;toc:il uoanimously bired Tim Gillilan as a
part-time marsbal. Qillilan will
earn $6.50 an bour, work up 10 39
houri 1 week and receive no beoematters.
Continued on peg• 3

Uncle Dan Hayman, radio personality wltb
WMPO, will&amp;he a Uve broadcast from Overbrook
Center frlllllll:30 LDL-4 p.m. Dec. 22. Tbe pu~Uc
is invited 10 UsleiiiO a 1933 Lum and Abner Cbriltmas.radio proJ1'IID if !bey Iring a gift for ..Y resl-

dent. Plelllred frllllllcft are: (alttlng) Evelyn Mur·
ray, Mary WatsoD, Uncle Dan Hayman, Clara
Davis and Dayton McElroy; and (standing)
Lawrence Stewart.

By,GEORGE ABATE

deadly overdoses bappeo easily.
About 600 common items including wbip cream, wbitc out and fryBut, tbe moat trqlc effects of iog pan spray, are sniffed and
alcoholllld dru.. are sec;o on cbll· snoned 10 cause a "bigb", Robin·
dren, said Rep Robinson, com- son said.
munity relaliou coordloalor witb
- alcohol-related accidents
Healtb Reooveay Servicel.
re!Q8in tbe top killer of youtbs "We're cowed in a - against out pacing Jbe next lbree top killers
drugs and I include alcohol," wbicb include bomicide and sui'
Robinsoo saki.
· cide.
-· Robinson staled some startling
- ·45 percent of area eighth
statistica about clruxs and dru&amp; graders responding to a survey Slat·
usage by youths:
ed marijuana is not barmful.
-about ooc-tblrd of all youlbs Today's street-level marijuana bas
are aildicted 10 alcohol or sane sort THC content about 10 times as
of drug. In Obio lilt year, two 6- potent as 20 years ago - some of
year-olds were treated for alco- wbicb is being grown bere in
bolism.
Meigs County. be added. "Cbrooic
- lnhalan.ts, or commonly- marijuana use may be a sboftatlto
found bousebold cbemicals, bave Alzheimer's," Robinson said,
become a reccllt concera since based on clinical studies of brain
function.
- wbile ci_garette usage may .
Sentinel New Stall
Drugs tiD,

By KEVIN PINSON
OVP Newa Stair
Guldin&amp; Hind Sdlool Superln~
tendent,Jolm D. Riffe, PbD., bas
officially tenclaal his reslpetioo
and ended a six-month conflict
witb two ldlnol aapoyeea.
Tbc GaJIIa County Board. of
Mental Reta(datlon and Developmental Dlsahillliea voted 4..0 to
accept Riffe's resiiDidoo. effective
Friday. The boara also agreed to
remove ~ from tbe files
of progr8m nune Kelly Davis and
speccb tbenlplst 'l1lelaa Eastman.
New hoard member Plllllp SJdcl..
more, wbo attended his first hoard
meeting Tuesday, abstained from
tbevote.
,
Prosecutinx Attorney Brent

We're deligh~ed with how Southeast Ohio has taken to dialing 10-ATT first
for. 10% toll call savings within the 614 area shaded on the map. So to keep
those savings·coming, we're going to extend the 10% offer through 1/31/95.
Ke~p dialing 10-ATT first, and the savings will keep coming your way.
· That's 10-ATT + 1 + the number as you usually do.
·
With A'I&amp;T there are no time restrictions, no gimmicks. No need to sign
up. No monthly fee. If you have any questions please give us a call. at
-1 800-282-4212, ext. 80010. It's all so simple. It's 10-ATT and 10% savings.
Al&amp;T is bringing quality and savings even closer to home.

I

r

1

1

•

'SM 111)1 c:n bills of Sl5 or less. COmparison 10 Ohio Hells lOll
., scht&lt;lule ll. Suhjecl 10 l&gt;lli~ av:Ubbilil)! N&lt;t availahle in Mt '"'"'I'"·
fredericktown. Darnrilh:, Gmnbit:r. Martinsburg Ulica, Homer and

Centerl&gt;urg ""-""· Prorrotion eXIendt:d through 1131/9Sc '

AtaT

Saunders, wlio serves· as the
board's legal counsel, said be
advised Skidmore to abstain
because be had not been involved
in tbe proecedlnss l~g 10 tbe
resignalioo.
The prosecutor said .Riffe did
not receive any sevenmce package
in excban'-c for his reslpatioo.
"Dr. Riffe bas resiglied as of tbe
close of business Dec. 16 - period," be said.
Sauoden said tbe 111111ter Is now
officially closed and tbat all tbe
parties wisb 10 move on.
''These types of ~ are not
easy," be said. "The scbOOI and tbe
hoard Is not placed in all easy position on a matter like lbls."
Continued on page 3

c

Environmental group gets
grant to oppose pulp mill

Am: Your lhle.Voice.'" ·

PORTLAND- Tbe Hope Bap.
list Cburcb of Middlepon will sla
tbe cantata "Home for Cbristmasft
at 7 p.m. Tbuisday at tbe Mqrse
Cbapcl Churcb on county Road,..3S.

POMEROY - Middleport
Child Conservation League, CbriJt.
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport mas party, Tburaday, 6:30 p.m.
LiterarY Club, Wednesday, 2 p.m., Rock Springs United Metbodlst
home of Mrs. Dewey Horton. Cburcb. Potluck dinner. Take tma·
Musical progrant
ment for exchange, and gifts for
needy families.
POMEROY - WildwOOd Gar'i
dell Clilb, Millle's Rcatui!Dt. 5:~
RACINE - Racine Post 602;
. p.m. Make and wear a
ffi!l American Legion, 6:30 p.m. dinner
wrappings 10 Include plant matm· at ball; meeting at 7:·30 p.m.
a1, packages 10 be jiiCiged.

'

GH superintendent's Chamber learns about drug problems
resignation accep~ed

-Community calendar--

'

,

.\

The Obio Valley Environmental
CoaUtloo, an 111vlroomental orgaoi·
zation tbat opposes the Apple
Grove Pulp and Paper Mill, Is one
of 17 110Viroomental group~ Dationwide !bat bas becn awanled a pant
by tbe FiolaMja Clean Water Fund,
tbe granting organizatiou
announced Tuesday.
Samara farber, spokeswomlPI
for Finlmdla, said OVEC • a Proc:- .
torvlll&amp;&lt;based grassrcxitl organization dedkaled 10 tbe improvanent
and preaervadon of tbe environment lbrougb ediiCIItion, orpaizatlon and leadersllip development •
baa ~n awarded $2,000 10 f~
Its causes. Tbe amallest grant
awarded was $500; tbe largeat
gi~ was JS,OOO, Farber said.

Subscription
price slated
to rise Jan. 1

Tbc siJbseriplloo pice of Tbe
Fllfber said tbe grant money will
Daily StlltirttVSIUiday Timts·
be used 10 belp preveut tbe degraStntilltl will rise for tbe first
dation of the Oblo River and ita
linie in nearly four years, from
tribulliries by deterring tbe use of
$1.60, 10 $1.7S per weet. effeccblorinc·bued blcacblns processes
liveJan.1, 199S.
at tbe proposed pulp .and paper
The illerWe in die su~
mill. .
tion rate reflects hisber
Tbe Flnlandia Clean Water
nc"::£~1. postage and other
Fund was seeded iast yC&amp;r by Fmpub ismDs aJStS. While !be 1111111
landia Vodka witb an IJUtial dona·
subscrlptiOD Jale will rise prolion of SSO,OOO. AdditlooaliiiODCy ' portionately, tbe single copy
bas been raised lbrouaJt .. annual . prices, 35 cents dally and S1
1,000-milc c:anoc ncc..ac:ross tbe
Sunday, ranalna Ulldlaoacd.
Great Lakes. Next yeam' 1 event Is
Youth carriers ancf motor
sc:beduled to besin In· €bicqo on
route driven will receive a sigJuly lli!Dd end In New :Yort Oty
nificant porlioD of tbe lqaease.
onAug.IO.
The Daily StiJtiMI1ast raised:
OVEC bas been funded by tbe
subscription prices in Much'
sroup cac~~· o1111 flnltwo yem ot 1991.
existence.
·

bave droppea recci\Uy, use of
smokeless tobacco bas dramalic:ally
increased. Snuff and cbew can be
directly-linked to lip, tongue and
throat cancer - wbicb bas less
than a 50 pen:ent cbance of survivins treatment after onset. be added.
"Tbesc are our kids and our
grandkids," Robinson said. "What
is more important is tbey '.re going
10 take care of us someday .... This
is everyone's business."
Early education and prevention
remain tbe key 10 eradicating drug
problems, be added. Next year,
Meigs County will bave its fust
DARE officer. Otber drug education programs bave existed in tbe
county ~ even witb puppet shows
for prescboolers, Robinson said.
Cbip Haggerty, Meigs County
4- H extension axent. said bis office
will conduct surveys tbis year on
. Continued on page 3

r

By JIM ntD:MAN .
Sentinel newaalnlr
Employees of lbe Melp COJIIly
Sberiff' s Department aot paycbecks this momln&amp; after a lut
minute call from tbe Bactcye S..
Sheriffs Association.
BSSA autborizcd a ..yment of
$16,479.47 from tbe deplrln='a
Law Eofoo:cment Tl'llll Fund i!llo
tbe county general fund - IIIOIIIeY
wbich will be used to cover the
sberiffs payroll uolilllle end of' tie
year.
Tbe action follow'!d a llp'dtl·
meeting Monday or tile Moll•
County Board of Comm.luionen
witb the Meigs County Budaet
Commission. The two bodlea discussed a sbortfaU in ·lbe sheriff a
budget and planned a COIII'Ie of
action 10 remedy lbe sltualiaL
"Their solution was to take
money from tbe I..ElF, mark it for
. keeping prisoners out-of-county,
and tben put it in tbe general fund
10 be used for payroll," be stated.
Tbe catch. IIX'.Oidinglll ~·
is tbat tbe BSSA says you can t
spend LETF money for bouiiDg
prisoners, Soulsby said.
"If! can't do it, I'm not going 10
do it." be said.
However, BSSA aulborized tbe
payment lbls morning· following a
IClepbone conversation wilb Prosecuting Attorney Jobn R. Lentes
wbo gave a lener 10 Soulsby saying
tbe transfer vrou1d be appropriale.
Deputies awaiting paychecks
this morning bad 10 wait about an
extra bour for tbeir checks wblle
lbe situation was resolved.
"This is a terrible tbing to bave
happen this close to Cbrlstmas," be
said.
Soulsby also responded to comments made by county officials as
reported in Tbe Daily Sentinel
Tuesday saying tbe $29,000 figure
used by commission President Fred
Hoffman was ioac:curate. Hoffman
said lbe department needed about
$29,000.

Soulsby said tbe correct figure
was Sl6,479.47.
In addition, Soulsby blamed Jbe
commission for tile budget problem
and said bis office look voluntary
cuts in its budgeL
"Last year I forfeited $30,000
from my budget and dido' t ask for
a new vehicle like we bave got Jbe
last five years," be said. "We buy
ContiniMCI on page 3

Officials say Mason County man
cannot be extradited from India
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP)
· -U.S. aulborilles c:auno1 ~tradlte
a Mason Comty doclnr accused of
taking bla two daughters to India
and refusing 10 return tbem 10 bis
esttanJCd Wife, authorities say.
India Is not a signatory to tbe
Hague Convention, wbic:b governs
international extradition , said
Bbairavl Chblbber, wife of Dr.
Baksby A.K. Olbibber.
.The Jus lice DepartmeuJ asked
tbe SIIUe DcplnmentiO make Indian 111tboritlcs aware of tbe cb&amp;rRc
against Cbhibbcr and seck h1s
return for ttfal, Assistant U.S.
Attorney Patti Billups said.
A federal grand JI!I'Y in Huuling-

ton on Nov. 16 indicied Cbbibber,
a Point Pleasant internist, on a
charge of intent to obstruct tbe lawful exen:ise of tbe parental rigbts of
tbe custodial pareol
Tbe cbarge carries a maximum
tbree-year prison sentence and a
$2SO,OOO fme, Billups said
Mrs. Chbibber, a native of .India
and a U.S. citizen, filed for divorce
in 1992, but tbe divorce is not final.
Sbe said sbe was siven custody of
tbe couple's two daugblerS, Preeli,
I0, and Heeral, 6, &amp;lid tbeir son,
Vinect, 14.
·
· Cbbibber is accused of taking
tbe girls to Greece and tben to
India In AugJ!Sl dpring a coun-

C&gt; l994 A'lli!T

•:

over two years to reduce by Dearly
half tbe uoderfunding of its biggest
pension plan wbicb covers about
600,000 b~urly workers ,and
retirees. Last year, OM bad a sap
of $15.9 billion between promised
benefits and plan assets.
Tbe pension ageDCy said tbe so
companies on tbe list cepresented
about 56 percent of nation's total
$71 billion unfunded pension liability.
The.agency said 10 cOIIIpaoies
listed tast year made plan improvements subltaotial eoougb 10 JDDve
off tbe list and an additional 12
fiiiiiS closed gaps.

Sheriff
counters
comments

Jverbrook Chri

Mayor Eads Informed tbe council
tbat tbe replacement of tbe 40-ycarold water tower and water lines
leading 10 it was not giveJI priority
by local and regional officials. If
tbe lines to tbe tank blnt, tbe vii!age won't be able 10 figbt fm:s,
Eads said.
The village proje(l was ranted
IOtb by tbe county commissioqers,
during tbe latest round of Issue
Two-nowkoownasstalecapital
ilJiprtlvements_]II'OgJIIII, Eads said.
ThC illatrlc:t o{[ljlc 'lo Marietta only.
' ~..Oo
tbe

wid! what we've got."
Rutland - a village of about
600 residents - operates on just 2
mills and barely flnlahcllln the
black last year. Tbc village's
expecttJCI incaDe for lbla year was
$321,210, wbile total expenses was
.plugged at $31S,SSO.
.
All fullds bad surplus balances
at tbe cod of November, VIllage
Clerk-Treasmer Sandy Smitb said.
Tbe general fund bad $701.25.
Olber fund balances included: civic
center, $1,290.63; law enforcement. $87 .33; bigb school pr~,
$600; capital projects, $0; street
fiiOd, $934.23; state bigbway fund,
$2,289.53; water fiDid. $7,142.77;
sewer fund, $1,4S0.44; sewer debt
fund. $19,295.70; utilities deposits
fund, $6,498.26; and replacement

HOSPITAL EXPANSION -Melanie Stelhem of Chester, who
•"'stmt ....UC.IIechnoiopt at O'Blenea Memorial Hospl·
tal, revlewl -tnldlon planlln &amp;be new laboratory recentlf construc:tecl u a put Ill &amp;be OIJIC)Ini ll!odernlzatlon project at the hosplt.L Tile 1ahontor7 wiD bealn 11rYlog patients Monday, The hospital'• new fad"'hh, lndudJna tile laboratory, wiD be open to tile.
pubUc rot tan OD Saadlly from 1 to Ci p.m. Otber areas to be
toured are the aew
department, acln*slou center; and
busiDea olllca, lllaow located In the newly constructed addidon
at O'Bieness.

SYRACUSE - Meigs County
Chamber of Commerce wlll bold
general membership luncbeoo
Tuesday noon, Carleton School.
Gueanpeaker. Rcxgie Robinson,
Heald! Recovery Services.

r-----1

:lo'iii~Tc~:"'wc ciO 'ibe.'t: =r~m:i:Oic'i~ SeE

Is 111e

CHESHIRE - Free clothing
day, Meigs-Gallla Community
Action Agency, 9 'a.m. to noon,
Thursday, at CbeshiR.

A Multimedia Inc. Newapapar

WASHINGION (AP) ·The gap biggest level of uoderfundlng.
assets compared to liabilfties, price of aluminum bas been at agreement includes language overbetween funding for private pen- . It was the sJxtb consecutive jumped ~ II ~niiO 23 per- -record lows" due to a worldwide bauling tbe nation's pension laws.
sion plans and the benefits the mcrease.
cent. wbtcb was an IDI~vement
over-supply.
An estimated 8 million workers
plans promise ~w by $1.? bWion
"Improved penaion funding
~~aveos"'!ood Is to tbc same
Du_ring tbe last year, tbe price of and relireel are oovered by underlast year at tbe companies witb tbe amona. some companies Is IIICOW· poSJuon that Jt bas been in tbe last alummum bas rebounded, "but funded retirement plans, 1.2 milSO biggest underfunded retirement aging, but tbe funding,gap remains several years bec:ause, wbco tbere's always a lag before tbe non of diem in plans sponsored by
plans. But in sane cases tbere was ~e and we must do more 10 clole Ravens~ood purc.based tbe p~t com pan~ realizes benefits," Gal- c:ompanles in. financ:ialtrouble.
llllp1'llvcmcnt
11,. said· Labor Secretary Robert ~ ~ser AIUDio:'um In 1989, It l~er 58Jd. .
.
Tbe pens1on agency bas been
Ravenswood Aluminum COI)l. Reich, wbo is chairman of tbe cor- . mbented a penuon plan tbal
I would like to make 11 clear more agressive in trying 10 force
of Ravenswood, W.Va. led tbe list poradon's board of dlrec:tors. He already was severely underfunded," tbal Ravenswood is in full compli- companies to close gaps in pension
for tbe tbild consecutive year.
said cbanges In federal pension spokesman Pat Gallagber said.
ance witb tbe minimum required by funding Jw.anse some retirees and
' The .di!ferco~ betw~en the laws ~!"'11 do tbls over tbe next few
·s~ that ~c, tbe.stale of tbe ~ederallaw. !t~venswoo.d fully · worters could lme benefits if tbeir
compan1es· pension liabilities and years.
worldwide alummum economy bas mtends, when IllS able, 10 mc:rease plans went bankrupt. Beginning
assets totaled $39.7 bllllon in 1993, .· Ravenswood In 1992 bad an made it impossible for its contribution 10 its pension plan," next year, tbe government will
up froJD $38 billion in 1992, tbe · unfunded liability of $89 million. Ravenswood to contribute more be added.
gllllllllllec up 10 $2,573.86 a mootb,
Pension Benefit Guaranty Corp. In 1993, that jUDiped to $101 mil• tban ibe minimum amounts
Legislation signed by President often less than {JI'Dmised benefits.
said Tuesday in releasing Its annual lion. However, tbe company's required by law," be said. "During Clinton last week committing tbe
Earlier tb1s year. General
list of tbe SO pi:usloo plans witb tbe funding· ratio, tbe perceataxe of . the last three or four years, tbe United Stales 10 a worldwide trade Motors agreed 10 spend $10 billion

.....

WEDNESDAY
.
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Amateur Guden Club, 6 p.m.
Wednesday, Cbristmas potluck
home of Jean Moore.

2 Sectlona, 16 Page~ 35 centa

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, December 14, 1994

By GEORGE ABATE
Sentinel New Slllft
Rudand vlllaac lbould end tbls
year in tbe blacl:, village officials
staled allasl nlgbt's mallhly couo·
cil meeting.
Rutland Mayor JoAnn Eads
commel\(led tbe village council for
spendlna tbe resldc:llll' Jlllllle)' flu·
gaily ....:. since many residents
remain on fixed iiiCOIIICI.
"We just didn't waste anylblnJ," Eads said, lddlna tbe viili&amp;c made no ~ since It did
h01
..... f!nviO Ml .! blot

.

Low loDipt In 301, CJaudJ.
TbundaJ, cloudy. Hlp Ia •

RAC's pension deficit at top of national list

'

THURSDAY
RACINE - Christmas in tbe
Park at Star Mill Park, festivitJca
begin Thursday at 6:30 p.m. Boofire and free music. Dress warm
and bring lawn cbairs.

Pick 4: "
2632
BuckeyeS:
1-22-23-24-31

en tine

•.

TUESDAY
POMEROY - Meigs Local
Chapter 17, Ohio Allociation of
Public Scbo.ol Employees, wi~l
meet Tuesday Digbt at 7:30 p.m. m
tbe bigb sclioolcafelcria.

,.

•

~:O:~rs' lltW lxJokJ~t. "How 10
Make Friends and Slop Being
Lo~~tly." Send a self-addtesstd, long,
.
.
•• •
__,
busmess-sut en~1ope a.... a cncc..
or mone order for $4.15 (this in·
d Y 1 and handling) to:
~1u e~oJ a,(e Landers P.O Box
1116061f.os6i.(In
1 J~6'2 C~i~ag~"
Canada.
send .s5.o5.)

0

Tbc Middleport Merc:bants'
giveaway entered Its tb1rd wcdt.
Tbe winners, witb corresponding
stores include:
Dairy Queen, Carl ltobinson;
Millie's Restaurant, Charles
Wrlgbt; Ingels Carpet, Rhonda
Davis; Frutb Pharmacy, Candy
Smitb; Dan's, Tim Baker; VaHey
Lumber, Sue Hussell; Mill Street
Books, Jimmy .Graham; Trolley
Station Crafts, Jenny Barrell;
Vaughan's Cardinal, Virgil Hart·
ley;
Locker 219, James Conkle;
Babr Clotbicr, Elizabeth Davis;
Mill End Fabrics, Barbara Young;
Ingels Furniture, Wanda MulUnl;
Johnson's Variety, Corrine
Ambrose; Middleport Departm~nt
Store, Nellie Zerkle; AB Cutting
Cellar, Teresa Walker; Big Bend
Healtb &amp;. Fitness, Wanda Asblevj

061

PageS

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Pick 3:

·ASK ANNE. NAN

1 don't have a neck," sbe says.
Nan, too, has several pairs,
wbicb sbe bas bung on 10. Will tbe
football p~ look come back?
Dear Readers, please send us
your ideas on wbauo do wit!l tbese
pads.
.
STUMPED: VEGETABLE
SOUP RECIPE FROM THE
BACK OF A HUNT'S TOMATO
SAUCE CAN- Carol Turrentine
of Lawrence, Kan., is looking for
tbis, and we're sure someone will
sbare tbeirs.
Write 10 "Ask Anne &amp; Nan" at
P.O. Box 240, Hartland, Vf 05048.
Questions of general interest will
appear in 'tbe oolumo. Due to tbe
volume of mall, personal replies
cannot be provided.
·

New labora

Ohio Lottery

•

ordered visitation ana tben taking
tbem to New Dclbi, India: Tbe hoy
refused to accanpany his fatber on
tbe trip, Mrs. Chbibber said.
Cbbibber lOOk tbe girtS because
be wants his wife to drop tbe
divorce proceedin'gs, Mrs. Cbbibber said.
"They are bostages,'' sbe said.
"They wOuld not bave gone if lbey
bad a rboice. It was a very vicicius
and vindictive act"
Mrs. Cbbibber said sbe objected
vdlemenUy wben 1 Masoo County
family law mastet aDowed ber busband to take tbe &amp;iris oot of tbc
country.

�1994

Commentar

Page 2-The Ollly sentinel .
Pomeroy-Middlepoft, Ohio ·
Wednelday, December 14, 1994 .

Rotary .s_ays
goodbye to

OHIO Weather
·Thursday, Dec. 15
'Actli-W~

forecast for daytime conditions and high r=peratures

student

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·The Daily Sentinel ·
'

mile deep iD lbe elllll. a lons,·lqllll

ROBERT L. WINGB'IT
Publlllber ·
MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

CHARLENE BOJI.P.ICH
GeoeniManqer ·

LET11!RS OF OPINION are welcome. They lhoukl be lco• than 300
words Ioiii. Allletten are 1Ubject to editing IUid mu11 be signed with name,
addrca1 IUid tclepbono number. No llllligoed !etten will be published. I.ettcn
should be in good IUte,ldclrelliDg iauel, nol penonaliliel.

The specialists
By WAL'I'Eil R. MEARS

APSprid~

Organized labor brllces for GOP·· Congress
APPALACHIA, Vtrpnla- A

' 111 Cout8tnet
Pomft01, Oblo

.

MICH.

miniDI machine briatliDI wltb
dozens of twirling ateel bits Ia lin·
ciously cbewing into a 4-foot-bigll
seam of coal as if it were a layer of
weddills cake.
Toas of coal arc spit bacll: into a
waiting vebicle tbat carries it to a
coove~ belt for a Ions ride to lbe
coal tipple outside. Wben lhe
"continuoua mioer" pauses, a few
meo rush in and 1moct woodeo pllIars into place, tigbtenlna them
with wood chips. The supports
aren't expected to bold lbe roof ujl;
they provide wan:.:r of a cave-ill
wben tbey bend,
lbe SOUDd of
timber spli!ting reverberates
through lhe dalt shafts of lbe Bullilt Mine in the town of
Appalachia. .
For these miners - and organiw!labor across the country Nov. 8 may come to symbolize the
sound of timber splitting as their
agenda caves iD to lbe Republican
landsHde. But there won't be
mourning among lhe miDeWOtters.
As one miner put it: "We have
seen our loved ones die In bazardous occupations and ftom
unchecked diseases. We have been

billi:ed of land, minerals and bal- lbelr rcpieaeotatlves.''
Trumka Is DO attlllger to SIIUJ·
lads. Webave becll ~
lied to, and done 111i0. But we bave gle. A lblrd-genenulon coal mill«,
he pulled. himself up from tbe
endured"
southwestern Peonsylvanla IDWD of
Nemacolon to graduate from Villanova University Law School. In
1982, at lhe age of 33, be was
elecled beal\ oftbe UMWA. Today
be remains tbe youngest bead IX a
major labor union.
The kep)lblican Congress will
That's·also lbe atdtude of their be no cakewalk, Trumlca allows.
chief, Richard Trumka, president of But be's already been through tbe
the United Mine WOlters of ADler- longest anti-union period Ia
ica. He's uot wearing a black arm- decadea- lhe 12ycan under
band these days, 1101' does be barbor Ronald Reqan and George Bush.
any illusions about lhc mood on It wu a dille. after Reagan broke
Capitol Hill. His solulion Is to go lhc alr·uafflc conlfollers unioq
back to lbe grassroots.
slrllte, lhat other unions adopted
"We have to approach new clefeadll MdnM!t,t,
labor legislalion lbese days differTrumka ineiated tbc union
ent than just an inllde·tbe-beltway would like "no badtwllnlltepl,"
campaign - because' you bave a and die ei&amp;bt·lllllllli 1989 PIUIIOD,
determined, obstinate Republican Va., strike be led revitalized lhe
Party that can today stop anythlng eotlre labor movement. At one
TI'OII! becoming law," Trumka told polm. more tban 45,000 union men
ourassociateDaleVanAua.
and women toot vacation lime to
1 "So what we have to do is a travel to southwest Virginia iD SliP"
grnssroots campaign gead toward port of the llrlb. 1ben-Labor Secgetting people, tbe average WO!ker, retary Elizabeth Dole finally
· and the communities on our side .... stepped In and ended lhe suike
And they will_t!J!ln -~~-to £011l8Ct with a wiD for lbe union.

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein

The

sui:Qled UDder RepubliQD rule, and
be feels the same will be tnJC with·
a GOP Congress. He already baa ·
slllllificaDt support in tbe Clinton
adininislrallon, most notably fran
Labor Secretary Robert Reicll and
Laura Tyson. cbair of tbe Councll
of Economic Advisers. Yet be suapectslberc will be rough aledding
in the )'em'S ahead to
8CI'Illl his
belief that coHcetive
aiDing Is
the only way to raise mid41e-class
Jiving standards.
''There is a direct correlation
between the number of people In
unions and average Income,
because collective bargaining Is
wbat built tbe middle clasa,"
.Trumka said. "You look aUbe
'average annual salary of people
:that have a collective bargaimng
'qrcement, and those tliat don 'I.
(Tberc is) a couple blllldftJd dollars
a week difference iD unlonlml and

a

non-uni~.··

It's DO
t, be believes, tbat
fran 1972 to 1992, wbeo unionized
labor sbranlc frool 35 pertent to 16

Shirking toward the new. .· lle~n m
Joseph Spear

Caucus,

move

rcfonn

Constitution mandates states' rights
eamxnneotal

Joseph Perkins

l
l

,
r

C::

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,,

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--

Prt•••
....,_38

I•

I

f:.a

•

bye" to lhelr excbanae atudeat,
Gustavo
Alfaro. at Monday night' a
'
meetln~ beld at Healh United
Methodist au.dl.
Mansfield 145"
Alfaro wbo bas been atteodlng
Mclga
High School since last
'
IND.
March when be came to Melaa
County, will be I'CtlninJ to Colta
Rico on Jan. 3. He will be unable to
\
attend next week's meetin!! since
• lcolumbusl47"
that night be will be wrestling for
\~
Meigs Hlgb.
Tbe youth dlanked Rotary for its
sponsorsbip and talli:ed about bow
much be bad enjoyed being at
Meigs High and in Meigs County.
He said that living in lbe different
FAREWELL TO EXCHANGE STVDI!NI'
culture will be somelblng be will
w.yA.
- G.IIIYG Amini w11J ntllrD to Colla Rico 011
long remember.
Jan. 3 after lla..... IPIIIl tile pill nine -·•Jwln
The Rotary student excban1e
Melp CH•ty u a llotal')' Excbanae Student.
program is just one of lbe efforts of
Rotary to build fellowship and
good
will on an international basis,
(f
-==eon=u=n\led::.:...:.:.rro:.:.::m;.!:.:p•::.;g•:...:.1_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
it was pointed out
Litter Control to pay for Ibis site.
Wbile berc Alfaro joined olber
for $1, since lbe village used Ibis
fitS, Eads said.
Rotary
exchange students at sevaal
Couocil
did
not
choose
lbe
locaAshland
company
as
its
supplier
MHe' 1 working part-time at
tion
oftbedrop-off
center,
but
litter
get-togetbers
in Disuict 6690
for
sewer
pomps.
The
ttuck
baa
just
Syracu~C." Eadi said, adclinJ as village manbal at Syracuse be will conuol should remove the recy- 68,000 miles and will resolve some which includes clubs in Obio south
wort up to 20 hours a week. clables each day to keep down of tbe equipment needs, but a back- and east of Delaware and Ml VerGillilan will fill the shoes of former smell and rodents. councilman hoe is still necessary, said Dave non, as wen as those of lhe eotirc
. lower and mid 30s. Highs in the . marshal Ben Davidson who was Danny Davis said. The site will Davis, · village maintenance · Ohio Erie area who bad a three
Soulh·Central Ohio
hired as a deputy with the Meigs likely be located ncarlhe civic cen- employee. Council will wait until week bus trip which included
Tonight. ..Moslly clqudy. Low 40s.
ter.
attractions of lhe middle and westlhe spring to paint lbe vebicle.
Saturday...A cllance of rain or Connty Sberlfl' s·Depanmcnl
around 30. East winds 5 to 10 mpb.
CoUncilman
Dick
Fetty
warned
em United States.
passed
the
second
of
lhrce
·
"We
just
feel
be
was
die
best
for
lbursday...Mosliy cloudy. High snow. Lows 30 to 35. Hlgbs upper
(eadings
on
a
village
numbering
Host families for Alfaro while
the
village
it
should
be
careful
lbejob,'
Weberlllid.
30s to mid 40s.
aroulld40.
since people could abuse Ibis sys- ordinance, AU banes iD lbe village here in Meigs County were Doug
Living
in
Middleport.
Gillilan
Sunday
..
.
A
chance
of
5now.
&amp;leaded forecast ,
tem - although the litter control must bave tbree-incb-tall numbers and Darla Staats, Jennifer and
Frld&amp;y...Rain liJcely. Lows in the Lows 25 to 30 and bigbs In tbe 30s. must wort aDder a ltx-month pro- office performs its job weD.
on the front of each home. The James Sheets, Linda and Tom Brill·
bationary period
"If you get it out back, people numbers will not be used for postal gle. The youth's father will join
In other business, the village
purposes. Council also appropriat- him in Meigs County for a few
agreed to place a recycling drop will stan abusing it." Fetty added.
Council
also:
ed
$140 to buy 66 plat maps to days before the trip home.
site somewberc ID lbe village. State
Another aspect of lhe Rotary
- bought a 1979 Chevrolet dell!rmine who lives in lbe village.
grants will be administa'ed through
- continues to try to resolve a Student Exchange will be 1be Disthe Meiss County Department of ttuclt fran Hydromatic Pwnps Inc.
dispute over a drainage ditch along trict 6690 Coounittee on outbound
David Willi:es' property. The mat- students in 1996. Sbeets will serve
Aaron Buffington, S5, Detroit, Mlcll., died Tuesday, Dec. 13, 1994, at
ter was discussed iD execulive ses- as chairman of lbe district cmunitGrace HOIJlllal in Detroit
·
sion, but no details could be tce.
Arrangements will announced later by Ewing Funeral Home of
Jon Perrin, ~RSident, IIIUI1lUIIOCd
Trial
released concerning t!lis on-going
Pomeroy.
the
CbrisiDIM dinner and pwtY for
court
case,
council
members
said.
A former lnveatiaator fo'r the Meigs County Prosecutor's office
Monday night for Rotanans and
~ agreed to shut off one village
charged with abductioo and aggravated IIICII8cing will stand trial starting
resident's water since lbe propeny their families. There will be no
Tuesday ib lbe Meigs County Court of Common Pleas.
Hazel E. Hussell, 62, of Point Pleasant. W.Va., died Tuesday, Dec. 13,
Gary J. Wolfe. Racine, allegedly pointed a handgun at his fcxmer wife, owner bas not resolved late pay-: Rotary meetings on Dec. 26 or Jan.
2 because of lhe boliday, be noted.
1994, at Holzer Medical Center.
Sonya Wolfe, Mid Harry Lyons Jr., both of Racine, on Jan. 22. The inci- ments.
Womeo of Heath Church Served
learned
area
churches
will
She was lhe vice-presklellllllld co-owner of the Crow-Hussell Funeral
dent allegedly occurred at.a restaurant then owned by the Wolfes while it
the
dinner.
present
a
live
nativity
scene
and
Home. Sbe was also a member of tbe Heights United Methodist Cbbrcb.
was closed for storm-related repairs.
choir
Christmas
tree.
at
7
p.m.
Sat·
Born Feb. 2S, 1932, in Grimms Landing, W.Va., she was lhe daughter
At tbe lime Wolfe was a special deputy of the Meigs County Sberlfr s
. of lbe late Stanley R. and florence E. Hayes Tuclter.
offrce 1114 employed by lbe Meigs County Prosecuting Attorney's office urday in front of the civic center.
Survivors include ber buaband, Louis A. Hussell; one daughter, Lu
EMS logs 3 calls
as an iDvelli&amp;ator.
Ann Hussell of Point Pleasant; one son Louis "Andy" (Debi) Mussell, Jr.,
Abduction is an aggravated third-degree felony punisbablc by; 1 maxiof Point Pleasant; four brothers, Jesse (Jewell) Tucker of Veolce, Aa.,
mum prison term of five to I 0 years. Aggravated menacing Is a rustUnits of the Meigs County
Denver "Denny" (Ella Mae) Tucker of Buffalo, Dale "Tom" (Ruth) TucltContinued from page1
Emergency Medical Service
degree misdem'!lliOI' punishable by a six-montb jail terJn.
er of Waterville and Bobby .(Maxine) Tucker of Alexandria; and two
In exchange for lbe resignation recorded three calls for assistance
'!be trial will c0111mence at 9 a.m.
and removal of the reprimands, Tuesday. Units responcllng indudgrindcblldren.
She was prcc;eded in dealb by ber parents and three brothers, Harold R.
Davis and Easunan agreed to drop ed:
any claims against tbe board. The
MIDDLEPORT
Tucker, WW1am E. Tucker lllld Major Jimmy G. Tuclcer.· Three Albany men arrcsJed on burglary charges Sunday pleaded guilty
The funeral will be Friday, 2 p.m., atlhe Crow-Huasen F~ H~
women bad retained Logan anor8:39 am., Overbrook Nursing
to felony c:luqes otlnaldng and entering Monday.
ney Richard Wallar to bandle the Center, Pauline Hudson, Veterus
wi!b tbe Rev. ~en StevenS and Rev. Hennan H. Jordan officraun~. Burial
Brett A. Christian, 18, Wayne G. Howard Jr., 22. and Christopher S. negotiations.
.
Memorial Hospital;
will iie iD Kiikhuid Meinorial Gardens.
'
Caldwell, 19, stole gun from the residence of Mary Lovell, Albany, on
The claims included a complaint
5:21 p.m., Middleport Volunteer
Friends may call at lhe funerapx&gt;!OO lbwsday, 2·to 9 p.m. .
, .
Dec. 7.1be three guns were later recovered.
by Davis that Riffe bad sexually Fire Department, Mrica Road in
1'boSe wishing to make contributions may do so to lhe He1ghts Umted
"An three (men) were exttemely coopeiative and we bad great assisMethodist Church Building Fund, 2QI6 North Main Street. Point Pleasant,
harassed her.
Gallia County, automobile fire,
tance
from lbe victim," said assistant Prosecutor Christopher Tenaglia.
Davis said Tuesday she did not Geraldine Stewart owner.
W.Va 25550, in memory of Mrs. HuaselL
· Breaking and entering Is fourth-degree felony punisbable by 18 months want to go into specific;s about lhe .
RUTLAND
in prison and a $2,SOO rme, Tenaglia said.
allegedbarassmenL
10:33 a.m .• Meigs Mine 2,
Sentencing was scbeduled for Jan. 25, 1995.
"I set out to do two dlings: Get James Potter, Holzer Medical Ceomy
job back and get (Riffe) out of ter.
. Eva Mae Leach, 74, E. 11th Street, Wellstal, died Tuesday, Dec. 13,
here
because be was not helping ·
1994 at Oak Hill Community Medical Center. Sbe was a b&lt;memalcer and
----=-eo~n;.;_;tln_ued_rro_m....:.p...:•ge::..__1·_ _ __
lhe
program
at all," she said. . .
member of tbe NIIZM'CIIC Church in Wellston.
.
cars
with
90,000
miles
on
them
for
same
thingsT'
Davis
was
fu'ed from ber job m
Born Dec. 7, 1920 iD Jackson County, she was 1be daughter ~f the late
"If they can't afford payroll,
$300
and
tty. to keep lhem running.
June.·
She
claims
ber termiDation
William and Ruth Lncas.
. We have cars with 200,000 miles they can forget about a new jail,"
was
prompted
by
her romplaints
Survivors inclucle one daughter, Lura (Mike) Swiger of Syracuse; one
be
commented.
on
them."
about
Riffe.
In
August,
the State
son Sberman Loa, Jr., of Wellston; one step son. Arthur Leadl of Oak
"We
returned
$7,000
from
tbe
Personnel
Board
of
Review
ordered
Hill; on brother, Raymond (Betly) Lucas; two slsttn, Marie Fanar and
Furtbel'llltce
of
Justice
fund
and
tbe
Now
Open
For
tbe
MRDD
board
to
rcinstaiC
Davis
Lillian Spnauc both of Wellston; three grandda,Jgbters, one grandson, board of commissioners cut $8,000 '
with
full
back
pay
and
benefits
Christmas
Season
one great
two step Jllllllddaughters and six llql great gnmdcbllfrom ·tb·e department's Public
dren
.
.
..
Poinsettias-6 colors
System
Employees
Retirement
si.e was preceded In dealb by her parents; ber husband. Frank Leadl; (PERS) fund," be said. "Now we
Poinsettia Baskets
DOWNING CHILDS
one infant sister and one infant graoctsm .
. are $3,400 short on PERS."
Foliage Baskets
MULLEN MUSSER
Friends may call 6 to 9 p.m. Thursday at lbe J.P. Rogers Funeral
Christmas Trees
"1be last four years we've never
Home, 12S E. Fnt Street. WeUston,l where services will be be~ 1. p.m.
INSUUNCE
bad budget problems. If lhe offrce
For the loved ones - ,,
Friday with lbe Revs. Rodney Kuhn and Raymond Stockman offietatmg.
is
fon:ed
to
cut
services,
the
citiMonument Sprays, vases &amp;
Buria1 will be iD Salem Cemetery.
111 Second St., Pomeroy
zens of Meigs County arc the ones
Grave
blankets.
who will suffer when patrols arc
YOUR INDEPENDENT
continued from page1
Hubbard's Greenhouse
II
··~=.=.;..;.:..-=---- CUI clown to one deputy per shift,"
AGENTS SERVING
Syracuse, Ohio
said.
be said.
tobacco usage. Haggerty added be Robinson
In bomel wllb llddicUi4 patents,
"It's ail politics;" Soulsby
992-5776
appreciates lbe work of Ibis drug- cblldlal Qll be negleclic4. SCllualiy remarked, "if Ibis would bave hapMEIGS COUNR
Open
Daily 9-5
counseling and education agency.
and pbylically abused llld forced pened 10 any otber office would
SINCE 1868
Sunday 12-5
Despite all the horrendous fig- to survive In abject poverty, be IIley (commissioners} bave said the
ures, Health Recovery Services baa added.
.
proveo it can belp adults and chil"The aDOiiODal toll b . incredidren with drug problems, Robinson ble," Robinson said. CbWrcn who
said.
8fOW up with ID alcobollc are four
"The problem Is taking lhe stig- times more llkely to bavo a drus or
ma away. Tberc's DO big mystery, alcobol problem.
...
·W . r e pleased to announce our
we're just here to belp," be added.
Health Recovery Services bas
Dnag abnae doesn't ju11 affect operated In the area for ,20 years
specialists in obstetrics and gyneeology.
lndlvlduab, it bits entire families, and out of Meigs Count)' for IS
years, Robinson said. 1be 1111ency
Left m right are Jack Chan, D.O., Kenneth
Daily
Sentinel
offers In-patient, residential serThe
Glinter, D.O. !Sr£Jfed) , Catherine Coats, D.O.,
vices for youths, wome11·and will
soon be adding one for men. Out(USPS liJ-'160)
anJ Jack Ramey, D.O. For more
patient services iD dlis c:ounty are
Published cver'y nftcrnoon . Monday through
available tbrousb lhe .eomeroy
Friday, Ill Coun St., Pomeroy, Ohiu, _by t~e
information please call
clflce on Mulberry Aveoue.
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lo other ac'tion, the chamber
(t\ t4) 593-2j9s.
Second c\tUs oostage paid at Pomeroy. Oh10.
board of directors announced its
t
officers for the next year. They
MtDtbtr; The Associated tress, and the Ohio
Newspaper Auccillion.
Include: pesideot, Cbuct. Kildle!l;
Ohio
vice president, Hona: Karr; treaPOSTMASTER: Send nddress correction~ to
Univlnily
surer, John Weeks; and sectetary.
The Datly Srntinel. Ill CouN St., Pomeroy.
o•p!tlltic
Ohio4S169.
Patty Calaway. The oew board of
Mldical
directors
will
.also
conabt·of
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CetJIIr
Roland Wildman, Steve:Dunfee,
a1 Carrier or Motor Routt
Steve Story, Joyce Quilleo and Ron
McDade, John Weeks and Blll

I

·
WASHINO'l'ON"- PDiitcly allfCd, dley a Legialalive Service Orgapercent of lbe wodd"orce, average
nlzadOIII. to put It more blundy, dley are die often-clubby caucuses of
annual Income for wlllters fell by
IJke.m!qdc:cl HOUIC mcmhm wbo QD lllld somclhuca bave bec:ome spe20percenl
. clal iDia'Cit lobblea wllb iDilder llt8luS.
As be speaka about this, Trum· 1bat lll!!dlngllld die IU dollln ~y 'ot widl it, will be lllrlpped away
ka's eloquence and passion spills .
in Jan'*)' by die DCW RcpublicaD ma~, over die predictable prolllsls
out as be sits at bls cluttered desk,
SliouLP ~ PaY Ttle.
of tbe 28 interest llloes dial baw beld official House sanction. staffing and
filled with mementos of battles
BiLLSoR MaiLT~M? We
oft1ce ipiCC.
·
.
··
··
fought .and won, or keepsakes and
What's lost iD lbe sbouting, iD lbe accusatioas of racism IUid Republiletters from grateful mine workers.
CaH'T 4fFoRD BoTH.
can efforts to suppress dissent, is lhe fact lbal oobody can. will or ever
The tough Pennsylvania accent gets •
shoulclldllc JIOUIIIdlal bave ~qaniw!to promote lheir abarcd Interests.
stronger, lhe moustacbc somehow
Tbeir comblaccl voice&amp;, llld votes, are wbat counl Their power is not in
more emphatic, as be shows that
office and aides, or glossy oewsletters.
.
life in Washington bas not torn bim •
The SeoaiC doesn't pennit lbe system of publicly financed caucuses
from his 10015.
that baa built up iD die Rouse. althQugh some senators are members of~
"Right now, one out of every
House JII'OIIPI. But a difl"eriDg system hasn't prevented Interest blocs 10
five workers who worlcs 40 hours :
the SeoaiC from combining forces to tty to win lheir way.
or more a week lives below the
Nor, as die oull'l8ed losers argue, is dlis a new RepubllcaB plot. Rep.
poverty line," be arsues. "Tbese '
Pat Roberts, R-ICan., baa beeo on tbe case for more than a decade, cluilain't welfare bumai'Jbese are pel}- .
lenJIDg lbe caucuses and lbe way lbey've spent money, inaisting lbalthey
pie who work 40 hours or more a :
should be subject to the same reponing and accounting rules tbat cover
week and live below the poverty
liue."
.
members and i:ommiucca.
Roberts coiltends that Legislative Service Organizar!oas spent about
Trumka may be optimislic tbat
$35 million iD lbe past decade, with no accounting for more than $7 milleaders in Wasbinotm will come to
lion of it.
embrace his tbintl'na~ After failing
Tbe House Republican Conference last week approved a plan to preto get labor-friendly laws through a
vent members fran assigning people on lbelr official stalfs to w?rlt for
Democratically
controlled
caucuses to take away 16 House offrces lbe caucuses have ocaJpied lllld
Congress. however, it DOW promisto forbid lbe financing of cauws operations from the office accounts of
es to be an eYeD tougher seH.
Jack Andenoo and Mlc:llael .
House members.
·
·d
Each member of the House gets $557,400 a year for staff salaries an
Blostein are wrlten for United ·.
an additional $122,500 for expenses.
Feature Syndicate, Inc.
. That's where lbe caucus workers and subsidies have come frool; to tbe
Republican claim tbalthe change will save $5 million and lop 96 slots off
the congressional payroll, the caucus adv~tes - Democrats .an - say
there wiD be DO real savings because tbe aides and lhe money will go back
into otber. Individual office expeoses.
any form of behavior. Faye ·
There's a certain risk to that argument since it could be taken as
By the end of tbc ,cuq~t times in· his ll!elong denial of magaz1ne feat~red ~.cbver st~ Resnick, lhe C!!Hfomla socialite ·
grounds 10 pi1b for cutting office accounts. Fresbmeo Republicans sought decade, lherc will be: no need !or responsibility for the Wateraate last Aug~st entitled, ~lilY: It
wbo wrote a book about Nicole
staff cuts, but couldn't get lbeir elders to go quite that far. But they scut- canons, rules or Jawa. There will be break-in and cover-up."
May Be m Our ~nes.. Sci~ts Brown Simpson, said abe rushed
tled a JIIOP06aldlat each party be allowed to keep one caucus with House no cops, no jails, no judges, no
What we know for certain, bow- at Rocltefeller.Un1vemty claim to into ber first sexual encounter :
oourts - lllld tberc may even be a ··
!Jive f~ an "obesity gene" dlat because bcr fanatically religious ·
fu~.migbt bave saved die ~!Or of them all, the Democralic Study paucity of prcacllers.
IS dys~ iD fat people.
mother convinced ber lhe world •
Group crelled In 1959 wben Hberal and modc:l1lle DemocraiS .were snugThis is the conclusion of the
MEN. 'lb1s half of the human would soon end. Colin FergUSCin, :
gling ~galnst 1 power structure dominated by conservative S~. most recent Snear Foundation ever; is that llle fledgling move, race, panicularly lbe wbite f~ of
Tbe group•became a major fute in lbe rcsearcb and coooliDatloD that ulli· Report, endtled ~'lbe Alibi Age." !Dent burst Into full ~ower as tbe them, arc now ~gb.t respoas1ble lbe black man who killed six pas-·
sengers on the Long Island Railinately won Civil rights and Great Society legislation.
• It is the second iD a series of futur- 80s gave way to tbe 90s. Sudden- for every bad th1ng !bat occurs, . road, waa said by Ills lawyer to ·
Republicans set up a CO!JIIterplllt of ~· tbe Wednesd~y Group•. in ist stndii'S publisbed by tbe feisty I~, 1be denial of ~ ~- from tbe amputation of lbelr own
1963. Conservative Rqlllblicans counteied with the Republican Semce little think tank. A lhlrd will be billty was in: The ozone bole did it; penises to asterolds.burtliDg toward bave acted out of "blaclt raac...
The SF's futurists tripped over
fonhcoming wben lbe funds are.
. Television did it. 1be media clid It earth. Ma~ Sbaroll Pratt Kelly of one unusual case while readiDJ a ·
~ Congressional Btact
best lmown of them all after its push
reason why everything bav- CI:bat one .is clearly _attributable to ~ Waablngton, D.C., atlrib~ted her New Yorlc Times story dlat ouoted
to'
u.s. intervendon ID Haiti eadier Ibis year, was .rounded iD 1971, ingThe
to do wilh the regulation of Richard Ntxon.~
.
.
recent election defeat to mascuauto salesman: 01 IIIed
with to members. The outgoing dlairman, Rep. Kweisi Mfume. D-Md., enant bebavior will becane extinct
Social scleotiSts were jolted mto lioe'' elements on Capitol Hill. atoCalifornia
customers. I deceived them, 1
said the Republican
"created 41 pit bulls who will cbase Ibis ele- is because lhere wUl soon be an full awareness In 1991, when 1 Actress Ruby Dee said tbat perevaded
their questions - 1 take
. pbanl" Make,tbat 39. Tberc a two ~lack ~lican congressmeo. .
excuse for every single act lhc woman In Ft. Lauderd~lc, Fla., formln&amp;ln women's prisons bad responsibility for lhat. I'm not '·
· Tbe caucuaes became a growth busmess m tbe early 1981_Js. IO_tbe pomt mind can conceive. All dlings will blamed ber nympbomanra on the convinced her that moat of lhe
that.tbe House set rules pulling tbe AdminiSjllllion Coomuttee m charge be abided because alllhlngs will be llOPIIIa;r antidepressant drug Prolac. Inmates were there because lhey blaming it on my rbildbood; I'm
not blaming It on anyone else."
o( wbicliJot caucus atandiDg, and limiting lbe list to 30. In what was forgiven
'rb"ls, indeed, became one of tbe were lllklll advantaae of by men.
The futurists arc not sure ·.
meant as a
move, lbe caucuses were told dlat in onler to use House
The ·Foundation •s research major alibis of 1be era. To dale, 160
ATIENTION DEFICIT DIS- wbelher this is a new trend In lbe
funds. IIIey would have to forgo 0111Side fund-raising.
·
turned up a mix hire of opinions civil suits have been ftl¢ against ORDER. It Died 10 be called "dayThey run from "A," for arms, arts and automotive, to "R," for regarding tbe roots of tbe Not Me Proza~·~ manufact~rer, ~~ Lilly, dreaming." Now it lslmown. as making or an aberration. They're ..
.
Republican Study Ccmmittee. DemocralS dominated lbe system as tbey trend. But given lbe fact dial we arc by "vtctims" or lbelf' relatives who ADD. ScDe pellple, It seems, jUst leaning towanl al!emllon.
Ja.epll
Spear
II
a
lflldlcated
dciminaled tbe House. Textilea. steel, lbe elderly, space, all bad lbeir can- certified Richard Nixon balers, we claim lhe drug made them do lt.
can't. focus on the Wlc at band. writer for NeWipllper Enlerprbe
tend to give great credence to a theMost of .the alibis created thus Tbey get borccl. 1beir minds wan- Aaodatloa.
•
~lf it were a zoo, it wonld be from aardvarks to zebras." Roberts said ory postulated by author Cbarles far fall into recognizable cate- der. They abould be treated with
(For laformatlon an llow. to ·
on a Sunday tcleviaioo allow.
Baxter, who wrote In tbe Fall I994 gorlcs. Aside fran Tbe Media and clignity and respect -111011 ootably c:ommlllllcale etectn.lcally wllll ·
Eveo though dleK JII'OIIPI DOW will bave to function without special issue of Ploughshares quarterly: Prozac, tbey include:
borccl ~ts wbo fall asleep and IIIII C(llulllllllt and otlten, cen- ·.
status or earmarted tax dollars, lberc's nobody and DO rule tbat can keep "Nixon, as the spirltualgodfalber
GENES. Heredity Is an ,old fall tests.
tad Amedal Oalloe by calllai 1· .,
members of Congress from combining !heir efforts and those of therr of the contemporary disavowal excuse !Jut !be genlnses of lbe ~
ABUSE. 'Ibis bas become an 1181-827-6364, ext. 1317.)
aides on C(JIIIIIIOII interests.
movement set the tenor for the arc taking 1t to new levels. Trmc acceptable excuse for just about
Rep. Jini N1111le of Iowa. iD charge of lbe transition to Re_publican rule,
said all thole groups will keep. working togelher on tbe things that coocern tbem Mid lheir constituents.
.
·
"lbey're not going to ~ quiet just beclll"' ~y bave one less staff
1bal wu the fllal oaw or Oin1114
At lbe top of llic govemm' list to balance ltale
If Patriclt Henry, Paul Revere
.-..... and one less pbone and one less de8k.'' be wd.
·
ton'
a vainglorious attempt to .
CCCM¥"'1ic
IDtercsb,
and
10
proteCt
new federalism reforms Is a
r-ii"cieed. the old-fashioned way of supporting a cause - ~asion, and John Hancock were alive of
rema11e
tbe llcaltb care aynem and ,
today, they'd be ·ptottlng revolu- repeal or unfunded federal man; the IIIIIC'I wcxtcn. 'l1le DOtlon tbat lhe ncar~rlllal flaw of lbe urrowly
logic and a bit of bargaining- uiipt turn out to be more effective.
lbe IOiona iD WIUin8fCB can do a
tion. Not agalnal tbe oppressive dates. These are laws that Wash" beUir
.
job of all tbese things simply passed federal aime biB.
EDrfOR'S NOTE- Walter R. Mean, 'riel prurident abtl colum- rule of King Georae, but a1ainlt
Tbe
White
Houle
proposed
a
Ia a fcdcnl ClDIICOil
nld for The AaiOC..ttcl
•a• reporttcl on Washington and the tyranny of the federal governIndeed, recent history shows one-size-fits-all bcaldJ reform plan 1
ment, whlcb has concentrated·
nallollal polllki for~
Yean.
tbat
innovations iD public policy that was siqJpose!Jto apply 10 all 50 I
power in Washington at the ington requires tbe staleS to comply
stales, froiD dny Rhode Island to :
· expense of the 11111e1.
with - like tbe new motor-voter almoat alwaya orialnate in tbe mammoth California. Tbe more •
That is not wbat the natioo's regbtratlon law and tbe Brady gun statei lllber tbaD WasblngiOn. It logical 8IIIJIQICil would bave been !
Founders iDICDded. 1bey wanted a law's wai~erlod :- .even standi to reaon, tbeo, dial • best
the fcids Ill CUCOUf1AC die states 'I
· llmlted goventiiiCIIl iD WasbingiOII. though DO t
mooey baa been way for lhe Wblte House and for
to experlmeot witb llcaldl care.
Congress
to
deal
with
long-standTltat's why they P!IS!!Od t!!e lOth ~et aside to belp states shoulder 1be
Maybe IKliiiC states would bave : I
ing public problems Is to get out of
Amendment, which declareldlat costs.
·
been
dumb eoough to tty a governtbe
way
and
let
tbe
states
bave
a
go
"The powers not delegated to lbe · But, say foes of lbe new federalment-run, slogle-payer approacb. •
at
it.
United States by lbe Conslitulion ... ism, If we Jet rid of unfunded manTake welfare reform. While Others would bave tried a more :
are reserved to the states res pee- dales. lberc will be DO enforcement·
lawmakers
In Wublngton are still consmncr-based market IIJIIIIOICb, · :
lively, or to die IJCOil(e." So far as I of such federal laws as tbe Clean
Over time, we would discover •
have read the Consiirution, there is Air Act or lbe Safe DriUing Waler ttyiDg to figure out wbat exactly a which appol&amp;b was best at provi(JDCW
.00
Improved
welfare
system
DO anicle, DO aectlon, DO amend- Act or lbe Americana With,~llil­
llke, atate governments IDa quality covenae to tbe gc lleat
nient tbat gives lbe federal govern- ities Act. But tbat c1oea 110:1 neces- abouldloolt
already
arc
I1')'IDa
various teforms. ·· proportion of people at tbe lowest 1
ment lbe power to oversee the cit!- sarily follow. Califotnia, for
'• '
Califomla.
for
lniiiiiCC,
passed a ~
' 1
'•
zenry's health, education or wei· insiiiDCC, baa ~w air-quality stan-.
'
Tbe
federal
crime
bill
could
·
i
welfa
law
dill
year
dlat
rewards.
fare.
dards dial ac11181ly are more exactbave
been
improwd
by
100
pen:eat
!
Nor docs tbe Constibllion clear- ing than the federal requirements. .miller tban'punlllw poor moms for
lawmatcn bad resisted lbe temp- . '
ly set fortll a fecleral ~e in crime And if lberc wete no federaJ,.~­ geUina married by allowing lbem . If
tation to micro-muage local law 1 i
and pomisbmeot (excqJt safeguard- ing warer Sllildarda or federal rules to retala medical and child care
ing lbe rlabts of lbe accused), eovi- for accommoc1atlnl the cllubled, benefits for )IJ) to 18 montba after- enforcement an4 simply sent the
$30 billion iD block grants. : :
ronmental regulalion, or labQr mat- stale le&amp;illebJI'CI simply could pass ward. Orcsilo IW a new welf~ states
After
all,
state and local govern- 1
rule
tbat
wltbbolda
cub
payments
ters,
lbelr oWD lawa If dley IIW fit
menta
oug~t 10 lmow beet what :
frool
teeo:~~~e molbers if IIIey quit
1bese are powers lbal properly
AJoog the ume linea, lberc realshould reside wldl lbe staleS. And Iy is no CO'QP"'IIDJ reason for the school. Aad .MicbiJID baa new · lbeir aiJI!C-figbtina priorities arc. : :
dial curb bene, The crime bill dictates tllat tbey . •
lbal is lbe reason dial a llll:iorlty ci goverumeat to micro-lllllll!lge tbe wdfarc
fits
for~ people.
birc more cop~, bnild more JMisons I'
the nation's govemon- mosdy nalion'alleallbc:arcsyltelllllftDICt
It
rem•ln•
to
be
seen
wblc:b
of
and
boot camps and fund more
Republican - have voiced lheir down natiollll educalloo staiidlrdl
ibese
1tate
welfare
reforms
proYC
crime
"prevention" social pro- ' ,
support for a "new federalism" · or to llnplemeDt sweeping welfa
grams.
Maybe state and local law . I
most
effective.
Until
we
see
some
agenda that restores 10 the states reform. Similarly, state govemresults,
it
mates
llale
sense
for
die
enforcement
officials agree with . •
some of the po~ dial bave ·been IIICits a iD a better position than
federJl
government
10
Impose
ita
these
federal
goals. B'ut the final :
abrogated over the decades by the WllbinJIOilto cletermiDe bow belt
llpPI'OIIdl
on
all
50
states.
discretion
should
bave beeQ left 10 · :
fede.... government
10 fight aime witbiD lbelr bnnlen.
I
tbem,,ralher
than
·
t
o
Washington.
'
I

,;no

Middleport-Pom;:r.

Rotary Club JIICIIIbeR said M

TrumJia poiDta to tbe PittaiOa :
slrite as pool' dlallbe UMWA Qll :

·

aS8. .

Rutland.••

-----Weather-----

---Area deaths-Aaron Buffington

--Local briefs-set for former investigator

.

Hazel ,Hussell

Riffe•••

Three plead guilty to charges

·

Eva Leach

Sheriff••

111••••

C·&amp;..amber.

(

t

8:~~··· · " ·• · ·•·• •••••~· " ~H~
1

SINGLE COPV PRICE

Oi!ily ,........................ ........................... 35 Ccnl•

Sublcriben nQt detiring to pay the .carrier ~ay

remit in advance direct to The Ollily ~ntmel
o1 ad\rt:e, tb. or 12 month b4sb. Credit will be
aivcn carrier f:8Ch week.

No 1ubJCriptJon by mall permiued in ureal
where home carrier .ervice it avnilnble.

Nease.

·

'

.No official word c.-. be released
concemlng the oew looalkw! for the
Meigs cbamber offices, Kitchen .
added.
! .
Last month, Horace .kr and
Julia Houdasbeli·Tbom-., COIIDty
economic development cllrcctor,
met with Oblo Unimty ·Prcsldeot
Robert Glidden to diseuaa lhe
de~eot of U.S. Route 33.
In otber oewa, lbe llOUIIty'a nnl
en~ zone - 'wllicll Clltablisbes a means for buuoesa .Ut llpply for
~breaD- wu ~by the
state, 1bomton added. ..IK · . ·

•
,I

�•

•

Sports

.

: In the NBA,

Sent~el
Wednetday, Decembel'14, 1994

The Daily
·

.

.

WUlle Burton bad sometbiDg to
prove. Nick Van Exel was just iD
the groove.
Burton, released last month Ill

the Miami Heat, helped the
Philadelphia 76ers win Tuesday
night by scoring S3 points against
his old team in a 105·90 wiD.
·
It was the top performance In

the NBA this sia50n, and it even
outdid Michael Jordan's S2-point
scoriDs record set at Pbiladelpbla's
Spearum on Nov. 16. 1988.
"I'm soing to have a hard time

In a auae tbat barred no
agly),
the Soulbem TMI4f'•ea rolled to a
72-56 triumph over the VInton
Cboou~tyTJlvklnga TueadaC
~ Y night iD
ys ... ailey an.ereuce bas·

CliJICIIIC 011 men cclra (It-

.
sleeping tonight,'' said Burton, galore against MiaDil. the Lakers'
waived by the Heat on Nov. 3 and · Van Exel was putting on a three·
picked up by the 76ers five days point display asalnst the Dailas
later. "I just want. to savor this."
Mavericks.
Whlle B11111l9 was bitting layups
Van Exel made eight of 16

t:etballlactloo.

three·pointen for 3S poiDta iD Los
Angeles' IIS-108 vic:tory against a
Dallas team disrracted: by a. mid·
game spat between forward Roy
(See NBA oa P... 5)

Southern is now 2-0 In the
Jeaaue and 2·1 overall, while ·Vmton CoUnty la0-2.
Soutbem (2~ overall and 2-I in
the TVC's Hocldng Dimion) bad
tbe intensity, but could have
opened the game wldc open iD die
first half, missiD8 13 'layups in a
frigid rold speD that saw Soutbcrn
hit 11 of 47 (23..,) from the field
for !be fli'St half. However, Soutbern led 36-31 at tbe half. Had
Southern made half of its layups, it
would have been a 48-31 blowout
itt the half.
Southern bead coach Howle
Caldwell said, "We didn't play
well and we win by 16. That's a
crediL This was not a pretty win,
but we'll take being 2-1 over 1-2

Scoreboard
,

· I.Jibon !li4, Uctt~oia 4.5
LopD 69, Marlella 62
LoPD Elm 64, AnucJa.Cieostreel&lt;53
LontltoWD 61 , Dada« .7
Lowellvllle79, Mllhewt 67
LoCII !2, Daovllle 4.1
Ll'fiChbws Cloy 86, ll. aiatoa 83 '
MalvaoSS, Rid&amp;ewood 53
M~DN~Cretlwood7B, 11av.... 1o
MIIIIDJ Fmy 52, Buckeye Local 50
Maullloo Cbr. 41, Akn&gt;D Cllr. ll
MIIIIIIOD Wuhinaton 70, Claymoot
l6
Maumee u. P,Y.bwa6l
MechlllJ ~:sbura 57. Beojamia Loaan
lS

Ohio H.S. boys' scores

Basketball

ADo• BudUI65, Al:roo l'llollooe 63

NBAstandlngs
All•llc.,..._

RC'd. . . . . . . . .JJ

New v..t .............. u
801100 ......................9
AllladeiJIIIIa ............. a
New hney ...... ........9
w....
6
Mlami .............. ........5

i....,... .. . . . .

61

~ ~

1 .611
11 :4.10
11 .421
13 .409
11 .1!3
13 .271

Aboo N. 67 ,.Akn&gt;o Ceot-Howa: 60
Abo• SlV..SlM 12, Revore 45
Ame1la 74, Cio. WIID\tllllll66
""'"63, _ .. 60
ADthoayWaYDe 75, MIUb'"Y LW 61
Alblahula Ed,.....,OO 51,Je1Tono•5S
Aurora ll,lDdepeodeaoe S9
A,.. LW 79, £lyria W. ll
Bllavla 67, Sl Bemnlll
Beacbwood 70, Brooklyo 54
a.........t 86,l(ellla 53
Bedford 66, Marllold 63
Bedford. Mlc:h. 63, Fromo•i Roa l 6
Bdlllno ll, llaolllbll Rlv"' 51
Btlore 64, ReecbviUe llasl«a4.'l
Ba:llllllllud 70. S...bwil6
Bcttnillc 43, Tol. Enmucl B5'L 36
Bloon&gt;CinoU 79,111miltoo lWp. 7S,
l OT
Bloollileid 65. Led&amp;omoot 3&lt;.1

Iii

3.s

6.S
1
7.S

a

' 9.S

C..t&gt;olo..wladlaoa ................... l 2 6 .6fi7
CIJ!VELAND ....... l 2 I .600
CblriOUt ................ iO 9 .526
Cbl-.................. 10 9 .526
Allula .....................9 11 .4.10
Delroil...................... 11 .421
Mllwaukoo ...............6 13 .316

I
2.l
2..1
4
4.S
6.S

lll£ L 1!11.

X..

Howtoa ................. t3
Uta11 ....................... 12

o....................... Jo

6 .684
8 .600

1

.sa•

DIIJ• .......................9 I .529
SID Alltolllo .............9 9 .lOO
MIADelola ................ 3 16 .151

Podll&lt;nAiooola .................. l4 5 .137
Selllle .................... 12 6 .667
L.A. Lal&amp;n ............ 12 7 .632
Sacnmello ............ 11 I .579
PortJIIIII ...................9 I .529
Ooldeo Slate ............ ! 12 .400
LA. aipp&lt;n ...........2 17 .105

.Iii
Ll

2

3
3.S
10

J.l
2
3

(01)

4
6.l
12

Tonight's games

CLEVELAND 1t New Jcraey, 7:30
p.m.
[)wi.Ya" 111 Orl10~, 7:30p.m
llilrloae .. Ddn&gt;i~ 7:30p.m.
. AlliDia llladlalla, 7:30p.m.
!!lab 11 Mio-.1 p.m.
Phlladelpbiall Mllwaulloe,l:30 p.m
Botto.o Ill Sa ADtoDio,l:30 p.m.
s-Je II Aloeab. 9 p.m
.
LA. CUppcn II Poltlaiiii, IO p.m.

S9

AP Thp 25 college poD
'Jbo top 2$ loami ID 'lbe Allociated
Prw' - · · c:oll. . bolkdball poll, with
Clnt•place YOtel la pareot.huca, record
illlouF Doc. 11, UJial poilU blled OD 2l

r« a ftnt.pllce vote lhrOliJ,h oDe

point r.. a 25ll&gt;pilce vole, IIIII pnoeiiOD
rutiDI'
Loll

r..
..... &amp;lYakI
I. North Carollta (5Z) .... M 1,631
z. UCLA(l) ................... :l-() I.SOl 2

•
3

5

New BOlton IS, Ironton St. JOiel'h 52
New LelliDatoo l6. Moysvllle 55
Nordonill II, Willouahby S. 66
Nonhwood 66, Ols11o 61
00 Hill 10, McDennolt Northw..,1J
OhioDeari7,Cln. St. Rill«
Ollawallllls91, Moumee Val. 73
p.taenUle Harvey 93, Athtabula St.
JohD 11
PlriD,.viUe Rivonlde 82, Alhllbula 41 •
Paoctor.Oilboal5, IWida 52
Pwma60,1'1rmaHolyName5l
l'oeil Ia 74, Wblloook 70
l'eppc&lt; Pit. Uolvenity S7,
4l
Pickcriaaton !Iii , Th00111 Worthioatou.
49
Portlmouth Notre Dame !59, PiketoD
56
Radoe Southern 72, Vinton Ca.' S6
RichmoDd Hll. 49, C'Diurri&gt;l&gt; 37
River View 13, W. M.aaklapm 63
Rock Hill 59, PorlamolOh ll. 41
ROOUtoWD 75, Louisville AquiDOI 74
Rwford lO, HollaDd Sprin1. 39
5. Webll&lt;r 61. WoVII!IY 53
Shadytlde 69, UnioD Lo&lt;:aJ 48

•

Zl

14
2l
24
20
22
23

8

Col. Uoden MciCIDlee~ · EMt 41
Col. M111llo 71, Col.
ft 64
Col. S..lb 72, Col. Walo14Ridse67
Col. Wall1, 0&gt;1. Marioo-Fnokllo 65
Col. Wb011toao 63, Col. Nortlllllld 62
Colulmlau 10, Ullitod 56
.
CoODeMII92. Alhlll&gt;ula lllrbor 52
Colhocto•
w. Hoi.,.. 64
Cmtwood 71, Ravenu 70
Cuyahoaa Htt. 61, Clc. Luthcna W.

·

Sprlq. Soulh 71 , Palrbom 61
• St am ville 70, Brid&amp;eoort 67
· Steubenville70, Wdr,W.va. S6
Steubenville Catb. 62, RldunoDd F..di·
IOD45 .
Stow 73, HudloDl6
Stro1111ville 11, Breebvllle 36
Sylvania Nortbvtew 66, NapoleoD 62
Sylvaaia Southview !li9, Bowl ina
Oroea57
VIL 78, Ol!lo VII. Olr. 3IJ
e&lt;lllllld!S7, Spriq. CllhoUc 54
Tlffi• Calvlll 7l, Millo• Cath. 60
Tlpp City 92,1lay. Northrldae 61
Tipp City ll&lt;lbol66, MJam1 Val. 41
ToI. C'biiUID 72, N. BaJUroore 65
Tol. Ropon, llelta65
ToI. Wsllo 53, Swutoa SO (01)

47

Torooto69, Wellsv1Ue64
Trt·VIIIey76, Shrolclu 49
n - Ctlh. 14, leweii-Scio 61
Upper AriiDJII.., 43, Wealervllle S. 39
UrWa ••• Onham 4S (01)
Victory Cbr. 67, l!rie (PL) Belbel 39
Vllcerl w.... 50, Ollllpolll44
Wllftll (])aqlioD 69,Nil.. 63
Wllftllllowlllld 70, Newtoo Fills 32
Weirton (W.Va.) ModoaD052, Cadiz
Welllto• 72, Trimble 48
w-.~~row. 74, BelbeJ T.,. 59
W-.lla«ft ll, SpriDio Lo&lt;:al 56
Wllliamtbtl:l69,81Udlal&lt;r 59
Wirldhn n . Moplewood 56
Woodmore 14,1Carua LaiDta 39
World U..al 74, - C l l r. 41
WorllllnJIIODOir.IOI,Jo-.70
Yooq.llonmul9,Sirulbon41
YOUIII. CllaDey II, IN&gt;IIon161
Yooq. l!ast75. Youq.Ubllly 52
Yooq. Mooaey 60, Clq&gt;bell39
Youna. Rayeo 66, APJit.Jutowa-Fitcb

61
66

You.na. Ur~ullno 67, Youna. Wilson
/

Ohio H.S. girls' scores
Alllaooo Morllqtoo 6S, Fairlea 49
~lO.Adeu30

Alblaad 6S,IAnla Adm.lth&amp;31

- C l l t. 4l,M-Cllr. l7
AWD Lab 116, Pairvfew 49

Latola62,CiD. A!Ua50
Lucllter Sl, Dublltl 41
Lebuo• 79, Doy. Carroll 41
Lemoo Mo1110e 69. Treotoo IJdFwood

B.-bllloD 77, Wlllh 1111111134
Bedford Clllllel SO, LW Rldae 2l
Bellevue 52. Nornlk II
Bexley 75, Lolldoa 44
Bucl:oye VII. 41,Bi&amp; Walrlut46
CaiYifY a.-. 55, X- Cbr. 25
C..tooc.th 69, Akn&gt;•llobu'61
Cutoo MciCloley 53, Slow 29

67

Ubedy Cbr. 85, De-Chr. 36
Ubedy Uoioa 59, New AlboDy 53
Uckiq ltll. 64, Plsh&lt;r Clllh.59
U1011 Caah. 63, Allen E. 31

Eut
Foltfield 66, Mo1111&gt;01&lt;h, NJ. 41 .
llarvwd ~ I . Dottmouth 55
RJdcr 13,~SL Pet«' a 71
Ru!Jon i'7 , 8utl:aell72
SIIOD Haiii03, Columbtol6

C..llltllyltlal
WD PC, ManlbiP
... llltwftl

South
0e0r&amp;laSo10bcro9l, VlldoolaSL61
Nldlolll Sl 107, SB Louillua 11

FarWeat

39

Maturity
Annual
Percentage

Yield

Federal Hocking
beats Meigs 76-69
'

•'

:\ laturit~·

· ·~

7

'.:

Annual
Percentage

0

· Yield

Minimum Deposit: $500.00

..

'
•'·

. .. . . . .. . . .
. ~·---·-·---·---·---·----·---·----·---·----·--~· ~
·:
•
Annual
&lt;·
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.. ..
.
..
..
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..
...

...

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...

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...

....

...

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C[;he ?:Jailu1 Sentinel's

•

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.... ..

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....

....
·+
....

•
•• •
.... ....
•
• ·+-

•

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llllfi*O 19, Olllo tob11tonl2
RIOORAI'IIll!96, Wllb«&lt;orul2

.... ....

,._,._,._,.,_,.,_,._,._

#

...

Ohlo women's
college scores

lllllll: .,...

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.........

,..,.._..,.,..
.......,... , ........._... ..,.

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

)(lu \ 't' );()f

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....

....

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I

a

By DAVE IIARRIS
able to COllie up wid! the big steal
Seallliel Conwpoadent
or bucket to keep the Marauders at
Federal Hocking outscored a distance. Gary Stanley made a
Meigs 14-S in the finai 3:30 en short jumper with 3:21 left iD the
route to a 79..(1} over Meigs in Tri- game to cut the Lancer lead to 6S.
Villlcy Conference basketball 61, t that was as close as Meigs
action Tuesday evening at Larry R. could get to Paul ~ttlt' s Lancers.
Morrison Gymnasium.
Federal Hocking bit 13 of 18 from
Tbe loss·was the (lrst In three the line in the fourth period.
games for the Marauders, wbo are
Nelson led four Lancers in dou·
1-1 in the TVC' s Ohio Division. ble figures with 19. The Lancers bit
The Lancers raised their record to • on 29 of S6 from !be floor, inelud·
2-1 on the season and 2-0 in the ing zero for three from three-point
TVC's Hpcklng DivisiotL
range for 52%, and 21 of 28 from
Meigs jumped out to an early S- the liDe for 75%. Whiling grabbed
0 lead. Benny Ewing bit a three· 13 of the team's 30 rebounds.
pointer from !be left wing just nine
Abbott was the only Marauder
seconds into tbe ga~e. Travis iD double figures wilb aeareer-bigh
Abbotl bit a short jumper 2S sec- 25 poinll. Meigs bit 25 of 54 from
(C,ootinued from J&gt;ase 4)
oads later and !be maroon and gold the floor Including four of 17 fnlm
went on top 5.0.
three-point range for 46%. Meigs
lfawks85
Chad Nelson completed a three· cashed 1u on IS'.of 21 from the liDe Tarpley 8itd coach Diet: Motta tbat
Tlmberwolves 83 (01')
)IQint play at the 6:31 mark of the for 71%. Meigs pulled In 25 led to Tarpley's suspensioo.
Allauta's Lenny Wilkens moved
In other NB A games, it was
period to tie !be game at five. The rebounds with Cleland grabbing 10
Lancers then went O!l top IS-9 on and tumcd ,the ball over 19 times. Charlotte 107, Milwaukee 101; within three wins of Red AuerJeremy Tolson' s bucket with 3:07 Meigs bad 11 steals•.~th Cleland Cleveland 90,lndiana 83; Cbk:ago bach's NBA record for coacbiDt
rkft...·~Re.riod'bai:t
· ·
getting three, and 11'-laslsts, with 98, Detroit 78; HOII,!iton. ~3; Wash· victories as the Hawks defeated
ington 8S; and Sacramento 112, MinJ!esota !!I QVeJ1imc.
· · Melgi eut It
to a two point Pullins getting three. ".'
·
Andrew Lang's short hoot: in
game at 1S·13 wbeo Cass Clelanil
Reserve DoteS: Meigs ouiSCOI'ell' Golden State 107.
the
lane wilb 1:21 mnaining in !be
76en 105, Beat !10
·bit two free throws, but the Lancers Federal Hocking 18.() iD !be second
extra
period at The Omni gave
Pbiladelpbla took its biggest
stormed back to ti1t:e a 19-14 lead period and went on to defeat the
Atlanta
its fifth victory in seven
lead,
8S-64,
with
9:33
to
play,
but
with 38 seoonds left wben Jeremy- - Lancers 47-32. Josh WitbereU and
games
.
.
Miami
went
on
a
19-6
run
to
close
Dotsoobitashortjumper.
Robert Qualls led Meigs with 10The · Timberwolves have
Nict: Haning bit a I 5-footer point efforts. Josb Cbapman led to 91-83 with 5:21 remaining.
'
dropped
IOoflbeirlast 12.
Tbe
76ers
then
scored
10
from the left win with 25 ticks left Federal Hocking with 21.
Moolde Blaylock led the Hawks
straight points, capped by Dana
·on !be clock to cut the Lancer lead
Meigs will ttavelto WeUstoo on Barros' three-pointer with 2:47 to with 19 points and Isaiah Rider
io 19-16 at !be end of the period.
.
!
paced Minnesota with 23.
Behind a balanced scoring Friday evening to play the Golden play.
Bulls 98, PlstoiL'tl 78
Glen Rice bad 25 points: and
• attack !be Lancers toot: a 10 point Rockets, while Federal Hocking
Cbicago
came bai::t: from a borBimbo Coles bad 17 points an!ll2
lead (39-29) with I :58 left in the ttavels to Trimble.
rific
third
quaner
to defeat injuryassists
for
Miami,
wbicb
bas
lost
fust half on a put baclt by Whiling.
depleted
Detroit.
four
of
five
games.
Barros
added
The Lancers increased the lead to
FEDERAL HOCKING
Soottle Pippen fmlsbed with 31
17 points for Pbiladelphia
(19-:J6.11-l3or79)
45-33 when Tolson hit a baseline
points
and Toni Kut:oc a careerHornets 117, Bucks 101
Mark Whiling 7.().2=16. Jeremy
lay-In with 55 seconds l~ft. Paul
high
28
for tbe Bulls. Joe Dumars
Hersey Hawltins made all six of
Pullins bit one of two free throws Roush 1.().3:5, Jeremy Dotson 6and
Teny
Mills bad 16 points each
with 23 seconds left to cut Federal 0-2:14, Scott Nippert 1-0-0:2, his free throws down the stretch
for
visiting
Detroi~ playiua without
and
finished
with
23
points
as
Hocking's lead to 45·34 as tbe Cbad Nelson 6·0·7=19, Jeremy
injured
Grant
Hill, Lindsey Hunter
Charlotte
handed
Milwaukee
its
teams went into the locker room at Tolson 5-0-6:16, Nathan Gilders
and
Oliver
Miller.
The Pistons,
0111
loss
in
II
games.
I
3.().1=7. Totals: :Z9..0.:Z1=79
thebaiC.
wbo
commitled
28
turnovers,
are
With
the
score
tied
at
90
with
iD the third period, the Lancers
scoring
only
84
points
a
game
dur·
3:03
remaining,
Larry
Johnson
MEIGS
held a lead of five to 10 points
scored a key basket inside and DeU lug a four-game losing streak.
throughout the period. Brent Han·
(16-1~17-lao.69)
Rockets 93, BuUets 85
Gary Stanley 1·1-2=7, Cass Cle- Curry bit a three-pointer to give the
son's sbort jumper cut the Federal
Helped
by Otis Thorpe's 27
Hoct:IDg lead to S6-Sl beading into · land 3.().2=8, Paul Pullins 1-l-1=9, Hornets a 97-92 lead with I: 17 to
points
and
14
rebounds, Houston
Benny Ewing 2-1·0=7, Donald go. Charlotte then made eight
the fmal period.
.
withstood
a
late
comeback by
straight
free
throws
to
seai
the
win.
Meigs refused to die in -the Yost 0-0-Z..2, Adam Hendrix 0-0Washington.
Alonzo
Mourning
added
20
foll1lb period, but it seemed like i=l, Brent Hanson 3-0-2=8, Nick
The Bullets, down by 17 points
every time the Marauders were Hauiug 1-04=2, Travis Abbott I 0- points for the Hornets . Rookie
Glenn Robinson bad 24 points for in !be third period, ~tscored Hous·
able to cut it to a three· or four- 0-5=25. To•ls: 21-4-15=69
the visiting Buch
point game, Federai Hocking was
Cavallen !10, Pacen 83
aeveland scored the first eight
points of the fourth quarter to best
six of It from the line for 55%.
oold-sbootima lndiJRI•
By DAVE JIARRIS
Reserve notes: Meigs defeated
· The Pacen, who shot just 27
Meigs jumped out to a 31-21
balfiime lead and went on to post a Wellstoo 36-20. Candice Miller led percent iD the fourtb period, bad
6342 wiD over WeUston in girls' a balaDced scoring attack wilb nine tbeir five-game winning sl!'eat:
TVC basketball action Monday points. Martin scOred six for Well· snapped. Cli:veland bas won three
iDa row.
evening at Larry R. Morrison Gym- ston.
Cbris Mills scored 17, lobo
nasium, acc«ddng to a report subMeigs will host MUier Thurs- Williams IS and Bobby Pbills 14
mitted Tuesday aftanoon,
for Cleveland. Mark Price bad 13
' · Tbe Lady Marauders are 2-3 day.
points, II assists and seven
overall and l-2 in the conference,
Wellstou
rebounds.
while WeUstoo dropa to 1-S and 0(9-ll-8-13=42)
I
Rit: Smits led Indiana with 26
3 oo the season.
Andrea Wyatt 3..()..().o6, MaMee points, and Daie Davis scored 16.
Meiaa jumped out to a 11·9 lead
after one period behind Vanessa Argabright 8·0·3=19, Nikki Reggie Miller b8d 13 points on 6Compston, wbo scored seven first Downey 1·1·3=8, Dana Stevision for-17 shooting, Including 1-for-7
· 2-1-0=7, Cora Walters 1-0-0=2. on three-point attempts.
period lul8.
. Am~r Blackwell and Comp· Totals: 14-l-3=42
ston scored six points eacb in the
Melp
B·P beats Eastern
second period 81 tbe Marauders
(11-:ZO.l:Z..l0-63)
.
outscored !be Lady Rockets 20-12
Amber Blackwell 6-2·0•18, • junior high ~quads
to tilt:e die 10-pointbalftlme I~
Tbe Marauders· beld a 43-29 Laura EaslDlan 0-0-3=3, Melissa
Bidwcll-Poner'a junior blab
Clifford·~-(}.():4, Cyatbia Cotterlll
i lead after · three periods and .·0-Q.lsl,
boys'
basJred&gt;all leal WCR vk:toVanessa Compston 11.().
l outacored Wellston 20-13 In tbe So;:27, Anne
rious
In Monday a~es aaainst
Brown 0-0·2•2,
• .finill JjeriOd to wiD soma away.
Eastern.
!
OWnparoa broke out ol 111 early· . Cberyl Jewell 3.().2-8. TCJials: :Z:Z.
Joey JIIIICI aoorecl26 point~ and
l-1111413
: IICMOII ICOI'ins slump to pour iD a
Midlld Ste- bid I liD 1*1' die
i same-blab 27 polnu for Meigs.
Sports b~~:
PiJates to a 56-24 vk:tary over the
• BIKkwell added 18. Meigs bit 24 , DALLAS (AP) - Dalla! for· Eagles In ellbtb-pade actioD. F.ast·
l of 51 from the noor, iDcluding two ward Roy Tarpley was suspended em's Josh Sanden wu·Wgb IDID
' for two from tbree-poil!t ranse fpr
for bis ICIID with clgbt pcDII.
47%.' The Marauders bit 13 of 20 without pay by coach Dick Motta
The seventh andc team dcfCil·
after
Tarpley
reac1ed
anartlY
wileD
from the line for 65%. Meigs bad
ed Ea\ttCID 61·31. with AIIOD SuW- 1
be
wa1
removed
from
the
Maver·
38 rebotJDds led by Compston wilb
van pumpina in 20 points and
10. Meigs bacl 15 assists, led by icks' 11S-108106S to the Loa Ange· Cbarlca Auael 18 marten. Matt
Cyndlla COOaill's aix. Laura East· les Lakers.
Tarpley, trying 10 make a come- Bissellaud Eric Smith eacb bad
man bad five of the Marauden' 14
back afler being binned for drug eight for die Eqla.
: steals.
The ticlms, CICb 3~ 011 the sea.violations, drcaaed and left
:
Mllldee :iabrisbt led Well- Reunion Arena following a half· son, play Gallla Academy tonlaJII
: ·11011 wilb 19 · ti. WellltOD bitl6
in Gal1lpolls.
.
• ··ot
52' from c IOoorCor 31 ~ and time alterCation with MOtll.
.

action ...

-·-·-·-

.

·

Eastern into the intennission with
buge surge of momentum. Eutern
left that momentum in the locker
room at the half.
lo a game that Eastern played
very well overalL bead coach Tony
Deem said, "We played a perfect
fli'St half. If we play like that. we
could blow lots of teams out. To
play wi!)l the defending district
champs, a school the size of Bel·
pre, wilb a program the caliber of
Bel()rel that is an accomplismenL I
would have lite to bavc brought
home the win. The kids came out
ready to plar. We're close, very
close, but we ve got to put together
four fuU quaners."
Easterner's Eric Hill and Jason
Sheets did the job defensively on
all-stater Kent &lt;Jarrett; holding him
scoreless in !be fli'St half and to just
four points for the gallle. Garrett is
one of !be top prospects in soulbcm
Ohio and around the state, last year
averaging over 16 points a game.
Belpre picked up the tempo
defensively in the second period,
limiting Eastern to a perimeter

. Meigs girls beat Wellston 63-42

.2.-dltlon

...

By SCOTI WOU'E
SentiDel Conwpollllent
Two halves Dlllt:e a whole.
Simple math could have solved
the deficits Eastern bu succmnbed
to over its first three games. iDclud·
inf the division that saw Belpre
blister the nets with a sizzling
62.1% shooting percentage from
the field in Tuesday's 64-4S Tri·valley Conference victory over
Eastern.
Eastern Is 0-3, playing the tough
portion of Its scliedule up front,
while Belpre goes to 3-1.
Eastern dominated !be first half
with a spartllng 12-19 assault from
the Ooor for 63 percent, leading !be
game at the half by seven points
30-23. Belpre edged Eastern at the
initial buzzer 13·12. but Eastern
pouuded away inside with Charlie
bissell. its go-to man, iD the paiDL
Bissell was 5-7 the first baif with
ten points, but was virtually shut
clown the rest of the game with a
still hot 6-9 game overall.
·Witb Eastern leading 28-23,
Brian Bowen drilled one at the
buzzer just before the half, sending

-·-·--·-

....

....

r;:!ect

•.

grabbed 10 rebounds and dished
out seven assists, accounting
directly iii 40 ofSoulbern's points.
SHS stumbled through the third
period, but its conclitiooiug flourisbecl In the finale, wben it
outscored VC 22-14 for the 72-S6
wiD.
.
Bo Skeens led Vinton County
wilb 15.
Southern bit 20-67 from the
floor ( 9-20 die ICCODd halt), bit3·
II lines and- 10-16 a1 the line.
SHS grabbed 33 rebounds le by
Williams' 10, bad 13 steals (Martin
bad four), 10 turnovers, 13 assists
(Williams seven) lll)d bad 19 fouls.
VC (0-2) was 20-45, 2-9 on
threes and was 23-31 at the line
with 34 rebpunds, led by Skeens'
nine. They had six steals, 21
turnovers and 27 fouls.
Re~ern notes: Southern won
the reserve game 5348 led by
Adam Rouab'a 13, 12-point efforts
by Tyson Buctley and Gre~ McK-

iliney an4 RyBD .Norril' II). Nkt •
Sparb 11111 17 for VC.
Soutbcru bolts Aleunder Friday.
-•-•-•SOUTHERN
(13-2J..14-ll=7l)
Jeremy Hill 1· 1·2• 7, Ryan
Williams 10-1-3:26, Ryan MaatiD
2-1·1• 8, Jamie Evans 2-0-2-6,
Jesse Maynard 1~·2=4, Spite
Rizer 1.{)..6..8, Jay McKelvey 0-Q.
2=2, J~ ~buler ().0.1=1. Mason
Fisher 343:9, John Harmon 0-Q.
1=1. Totals: :Z0.3-llf31=7l
VINTON COUNTY
(16-15-11-14=56)
Bryan Huff 1·0-0=2, Jeremy
Ward 1-0-5:7, Jobn Murphy 3.().
0:6. Doug Williams 2·2=6, Shawn
Davjs 1-0-0=2, Bo Skeens 4-2·
1=15, David Huff ~0=12, Brian
Ratcliff 1-2=4, Carl Smith I ~2.
Totals: 20-2-10116:5«1

_

Belpre gai.ns 64-45 victory over Eastern

NBA

.
..'
•

r

Noa-c:onlenace octloa

· . . . - .. ..

WORKING THE PAINT - Wltb Federal BocldQs'• Natlaan
Gilden (right) tryiJII Ill vala to stop blm, Melp froatmu Tram
Abbott 1Ue1 aim Ill tile .paiut during tlae tblnl qlllll'ter ol Tllelday
algbt'• TVC aa- at Melp 111gb School, when tile l-aneen WGD '7969 delplte Abbott'• pme-blgh 25 points.. (Dave lbrrll pllnto)

'I nnth

PM

Other Oldo men's
collqe scores

.~.t i~: .·

Ra,..,.

Talirmdll ''.
&lt;It
Tho. . WorthiiiJioo 63, W.....,lllo
.
.
N. 55
Tree of Ulel6, 0&gt;1. Academy 37 .
Vlllllllto 72, Trt.VIIIqe 21
VICtory Cllt. 57, Erie (PLJ Belhell4
W. Bruch 54, CIDto1 S. 43
Wllklu Mamorlll 36, Clrdevllte 32
Wayoeoville 46, Bellbrook 38
WID1n154, Shelby 35
WUioull!by S. 53, Nordooi&gt; 39
Wyo!onl46, Rl....tale 44

llwllo• 60, Akn&gt;o Bllel4l
HIOOD 69, SIDdulty l'wkiDI 24
Lokoll !4, Cio. Coltnlo 37
~
LoroJa Cllb. 42, Lonla 31
LoUdoDVUie62,NcxtllweltaD 52
Louisville 5S, Uolootowll LW 53
Madeira ll, Clll. Toylor 34
.
Mopillcoll9, Akn&gt;aSl V-SlM !3
M--lal3, Fool aiotoo 41
Msrli•atoa 65, Falrl• 49
M.olllo• Cbr. 41, Mroo Cbr.Jl

any day. I tbiDt: everyone it look·
ing forward to comiD.f home for
our home game Friday.
If the saylna "aomeumea you
play to die caliber of your competi·
lion" is true, tbeJi Tuesday was a
example. The usually sharp
omadoes played a bit ababby, but
did excell defensively, forcing 21
Viklog turnovers in a display of
full coun aggres,Uve pressuie.
Ryan Martin earned the praise
of bis coadl. drawing four charges
and playing exceptional, pralseworthy .defense. "He's all over the
floor. He's a bulldog. Ryan·exemplifies !be typicai'Soutbem basket·
ball stereotype."
.
Southern was down 16-13 at the
initial buzzer, but with tbe aid of
senior ballbandler ~yan Williams,
marcbed baclt to a 36-31 halftime
lead. WUiiams again equalled bis
average with a dazzling 26-point
performance, his tbird 2S-point
plus game of the season. He also

After erasing Eagles' halftime lead,

St.!lea!Y ~ w..,liD_ 31

.... +

- O t n i i, Drqool3

-

3S

Unaa•

.... Advertising Deadline: •
. . ...... Monday, December 19th, 5 .
.. ..
... .. To Place Your Greeting
.
•
Call Dave or Bob
.. ....
.....
..........
..
.
---.
at
.. ..
..
-···.
........
...... .. .. ...

n.

Noa-c:onlenace ICtloiJ

Fut--~"!·.~viU·
34
0
4 1.
43
Oreerr 44, CIDII flllto1 NW 41
Hlrdltl .... 64, Uma !'wry »
- . y 11mn 51. Fairport llrirla

... ...

I
Soutlnreat
~St.
Teu.-Marlio 12

-.w.u-92.&lt;!n&gt;'!!CII)'42
- 6 2. -lolon54
.
OllloNorlbtrll 61, Blullloo 51
WriPI St 69, CiDdWil S4
Y.......... 51. 10, Oe•elaDd Sl79

PIJIIIOI"h46,NewLo•do•17 .
l'wllmoulb •7,Bea"'- 46
ReyooJdtbuta41,Col. Westlald 31
S. Cellral 61, Mo...mtle 17
Sidley lO,
39
5pwta Hlll!laad 41,
l'&lt;rt 36

...

Poll 62, Mldllpo 60

_,.,

Plrmy 12. ~·• 45
Pl..,.! 50, M..,DI Olltld 41

·

-+-

010090. wo... Sll6

Mld-&lt;Wo Conrereace

Ol!eriiD 49, Sl AuiuiUot 22

onoae Cllr. ll, M'eotor 01'. 16

These COs are automatically renewable. Penalty for early withdrawal.
A.P. Y . is available as of the cjate of this issue, but is subject to change.

Mldweat
Cladulll91, Mioo-11 (01)
DJ..O.iciF 103, NE nu..o 74
No&lt;1llwet1«117l,Y..,_.SL6l

Codlnillo 79, RIO ORAND£ 70
SbawaN St. 91, Mont Veraoa

l!aslldeN. 66,BIIIIhll

&amp;tonll_ Arcanum (JJ
Euc:lld 52, Maple lila. 45
Falrfleld 31, R. . 27

Norwalk Sl. Paul 39, A1hlaod
Cralvlew 31

.To/. WNirDI!f' 60, Foltoria ,54

Major men's
college scores

OIIJD Adallde Co. .niiCI

ow.5,~,J)ay. cr

Minimum Deposit: $2,500.00

=

Pe••

Ollarlooilll2, lllrfm,47

Columbla63,1o-deaee 42
Copley 73, Akn&gt;o koamore 40
Coventry 61, Dlltoo S6
~'"'!fi:'t" !4, ~. Jell'~· 41

l\lnnth

6~0

Shewdolh 74, Wltedord 66
Sprlq. North 64, CeoterviUe 48

w.,.. so

·

'

New CD Specials!

o..o.-

o...

7
I ·
'6
9.
10
12
11
16
17
II
19
13
ll

31

68

Cuyahoaa Val. Chr. 64, Peainaula
Woodridlell
Day. Meodowdale IS. Day. lefi&lt;RoD
74
lleOnll' Rl""'ide IO,IadlaD LW 6S
Do,.75, Csnollloo 59
ll. Koo• 6l, NortJrtdse 4.1
E. PaiCitlDC n, Cohu:mt. . Cratvtew
l4
Easllate N. ll, LylldlnniBrusb 69·
Elyria Mldvlew 52. Elyrlo l:e,.toDO
42
EJ,na Ope• Door 60, Medlu Buci;eye
ll
ljuclld 13, Mlplellls. l7
fairbllll&lt;l 61 , RicfseliiODt 49
l'airlleld6S,OieD&amp;Ie6l
l'llrfleJd Ullioa 63. Teays Vll. l9
Fairlea 79, Miaerva 12
Fi11rpor1 Hlrdiq 12, 1.a1o Rldsel3
Fedft Hoc:ldDI 79, Melp 69
Fellcily 76, New Rl&lt;h•no•d 64
Fool frye 74, ColdW&lt;JI59
-kUJI91, O.fordTallWIIIda 31
Gnway 59, f....,crt LWIIIIII 56
Mills Ollmour 61, MogadoleS2
Oalel Mlllsllawl:oD 62, kirilaod SO
a...
.. 64, - · 61
o.-6l,EMiwood54
OlbtollbwJ 90. Elmwood 70
-6l,Triad53
.
Grllld Rl,.. 69, WIUo-Hill62
llrove Cil}' 61, Col. BI11P 49
llamllto• Btlli161. Ketterma Alter l2
llalh 90. llerDe UllioDl9
HiUaboro 62, Clermont Northeutern
42
Hollud 70, Newto• Palls 32
"·-w.
VL n, Bcallsvllle70
ledlaD Creek 73, Beav&lt;r Lo&lt;:aJ 66
lroDtoo 10l, Coal0rove47
JacboD 73, Cb.shire River Val. ~
JacUonMiltoa67,Miaml RidaeS4
John Glenn 70, Philo 59
Kcttcrina Faitmoat 55, Hvba' HeiaJlU

New York II Sacnunellto,J0:30 p.m.

(01)

N. Adamo 52, W. UuloD51
N. Canton 58, Orten 48
Nelloavtue-York 13, Hemlock Miller

n.

Thunday'agomes

Mopdort Cbr. 60. Atwater Cllr. l2
Motroe Centnl 73, Frontier 64
Mo~p~64,Croobvllle61

• 48

!!lab .. w.bl ...... 7:30p.m
Deliver at M1ami, 8 p.m.
,Boltoa II. Dallll, 1:30 p.m.
L.A. Laton 11 .. 8:30p.m
Ponlllld II Sellllo, I0 J'DL
Ooldeo SIJia w. L.A. Olppln 11 ADahelm. Calli., 10:30 p.m.

. Ollom recohtaa..._, Iowa Sl Ill,
Dliaoil ll4, Nebnal:a 130. SL lobo's 77.
Alabama 74, otlltloma St. Sl, E:•ten
Midlipo 35, Brijbam Yooq 32, Tul.tl1e
30, M-lppi St r/ , JoWl 26, t.t.11uoa.
22, CoiiiDnlla 21, LSU 21 , St Loufo 16,
N.C. Ollrlolle 12, TCUI II , T,.. Tedl
11, Otllllomt 9, Vlqillla Ted19, V -biU, FIIOida 51.7, Geoqja 7, l'el!ll 7, 1D·
diaaa 6, Ullll 5, Oeorae Wuhlqtoo 4,
Mluouri 4,
Sl 4, Mitaitllppll, u
Salle l,llawalll, Slaofonll.

l8

CiD. LaSIIIe 71, MouOI Healthy 33
Ci•. McNidlo._ 51. Day. 011111111111..
Julienne48
CiD. Sumpllt Couatry Day 74, New
Miaml52 ·
CiD. Walen Hills 62, Cl~ Huaboo 61
Cio. Withrow 76, Hom., J(y, 72
Circleville 11, C&amp;Dal WIDdletter 70
ae. Adaml60, a~ Manliall 51
ae. C'DIIIowood 68, aa East 59
Cle. Olen.Uie 15, Oe. South 59
Cia Ke!toody 61, Cie.llay 46
ae.U.OOili·Walll; CJe.RbodalO
Cle. W. To:h 83, CJe. E. To:h 73
Col. Brookhlven 50, Col. CenteD11ill
42
.
Col. ladepeodeaco 74, Col. EallmOor

Phlladclpllla 105, Mllml90
01111oue 107, MilwoulloelOI
Ad...al5, MlM1!101al3 (01)
CIJ!VEI,AND 90,1odlana 8J
L.A. Lakeft 115,Daii•I08
ClliciF 91, Delrolt 71
JlouRJD 93, WllhiDJIOil "
- . , t o 112, Ooldea Sll!e 107

3. ~ (6) .................. S.() 1,503
•. ~(3) ............... 6-1 1,478
5.M~ ............ J.I 1.401
6. K.Otucky .................... 4-l l,l91
7. AriroDI ....................... S·I 1,169
I . PJorida ........................H 1,167
9. Duu ...........................l-1 1,147
10. Q&gt;.-Jcui ..............4-0 1,110
II. M ' -................. 6-lJ l,o40
12 Mary11Dd .................. 6-2 152
13. Ati!DuSl ............... 4-1 749
14. &lt;*waiaTecb ............ S.O 73&lt;.1
15. o-actowo ..............H
653
If&gt; SJIOCIII" ...................H
60S
17.ClNCINNA11 .... ...... 4-Z 411
II. Mlchlpo St ............. l-1 347
19. OIDO ........................H
33&lt;.1
20. WiiiCOIIIIJI ....... .......... 4-I 326
21. Wate- ............. 4-J 293
21 VlllaaoYa ..................4-2 224
23. VlrpDia .................... S-2 112
· 24. New Mexico Sl .......6-l 168
Z5. Mlcllipo ..................4-3 Ill

Medina f'ir•t Bapt. 6S , Elyria fint
Bapll6
Melita Cllr. 61. Orange Chr. 55
Miamlabura 71, Mi.tllet()Wn Fenwick
70
Mid,.,t 58, Ooverleaf 47
Mlllcnport 49, Granville •3
Mllton·Unlon 63, Fnmtlio Mo!U'Oe62
MluluiDIWI VaJ. 153, Uololl. City, IDd.

Brillol 63, Ullrae59
BN111wict 79, N. Roy.lloD 66
Buckeye TraJI93, Neweomcntowa Sl
Cambridac 72, BtraelvUio '8
CanOckl Sl, Cm.laod-I..Ueview 46
CIDIODI'krlltle 71, S. Ellc:Ud Luther·
IDil. 75
C..y 62, Corv-RaWJOD 47
·
C..lnll Bspt !13, N"""""' Ba,t. IO
O...U Palls64, B"""" Bttbblre51
Olilllcolhell, l'ortlmolllh52
O!tUdu Comm. ~. N. C011t 40
Cin. Laod._k Cbr. 61, Loc:k1111d 58

Tuaday'siCOI'OI

pol all

Medina 66, Bera S!li

Bodtlu64, Ho-.toD ~7

WESTERN CONFERENCE
MWw..cDhWo.

AboD ll. 61, AboD ICelllllln55
AboD 11Jid75, AboD Otrllel4 64
Aboo Mooch..,. 95, Akn&gt;• Spri•&amp;·

Maylleld 63, Bedfonl43
MediDa flnl 81p1. 54, Blyrlo Firat
8spt44
lollllli VIL l9,SprlqVII. Acld.l6
MUIDI!Ailon41, 00Hnor44
Now Rlep170,llopeweB t.udoo 41
Newbury 38, Wlllo-HiU 16

Col. N-md 64, 0&gt;1. WbOIIIota 27
Col. Wabtll Rldll 39, Col. ilo.-!137
Col. w.. 6l.Col. Mn~r~-Frutllrt3J
CollluW•~~nR.... 4l,Mipl""•

Clrllllt 49, SpriD&amp;b&lt;R 41
ClllUoollle 70, Groveport 29
Cltr. fiDDt)towD 7l.ilOCI'JWt60
Cltr. Olea F.ala 55, Cltr. McAuley 41
Cltr. LovelaDd 52,llldiiDHill21
Cltl. Nor1h Coil... HiU 38, Qo. Seve•
Hilla)()
.
Clo. 00 Hllls6l, Cio. Sy"""""" 41
CID. Pr1DcetoD61,CID. Wllbrow44
Cltr. SIIOD 51, Moon! Healthy 41
Cltr. St Rila 32, Ohio Deal'21
CiD. Sl. U11ula 39, CID. Wllllul Hilla
Sl
Ci•. Woodward 64, Cio. Allroa 23
Cirl. Wyomlq 37, Mariemuol 3l
ac. c:.tbolk 7!li, ,_.moll 34
Cle. C'DIIIllwood 66, CJe. East 37
ae.ll. Ted141, CJe. W. Tecb 20
Cit. Oleavllle 52, Oe. South 40 ,
Cle.llay 62, Cle. l:mllOdy 29
Oc.IJDcolo.-WMt51,Cie. Rhodel41
ae. Lotherao ll. 49, Cutoo llotilap
43
ae. Marthall71, CJe. Adami S2
ayde 52, Sllldulky St. MIIJI S1
Col. Beedleroft 56, Col. Mlllllllll •
0&gt;1. lln&gt;okhlvea 76. Col. Ceatelllllal
II
Col. Eulmoor 72, Col. lndepeDde•oo
59
Col. Uodeu-MdClolcy 47, Col. Eut.
38

•

Southern defeats Vinton County 72-56

. Page 4

:Burton helps·Sixers. beat ·Heat; Cavs bypass Pacers 90-83
' By.The .u.oc•ted Pna

The Dilly Sentir)t~age 5

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

-- _, --

game. Meanwhile, Eastern's bactside defense loosened. and Belpre
altact:ed the spot. Scott Gerken
stepped up with IS second half
points for Belpre, including three
tbree·poinlers and an ll· IS night
from !be floor, while Walker went
four for five in the second half.
Breat:iug the camel's back was !be
fact that Belpre drilled four of five
three-point sbots In the second balf.
Belpre led 46-36 after three
while limiting Eastern to 15 second-half points.
Bissell led Eastern witb 16
points.
Geiken bad 21 and Walter 14,
while Gaul added nine.
Eastern bit 17-35 for 48.5%,
was 1·5 on treys, hit 8-17 at the
line and bad 19 rebounds, led by
Bissell's six and Bowen's four.
EHS bad five assists (Bowen bad
two), seven steals (Otto bad four),
13 turnovers and 13 personal fouls.
Belpre hit 23-37, hit 4-7 treys,
was 6-12 at the line and bad 26
rebounds, led by Walter's seven
and Simpson's seven. The Golden

ton 9.0 during a mid-quarter spurt
to !rim !be Rockets' lead to just 7771.
Washington then cut tbe Houston ma&amp;gin to 88-83, but that was
as close as the BuUeu could get.
W&amp;1blagton, wblcb lost its third
straight, got 22 points and 16
rebounds from Cbri$ Webber. Calbert Cheaney and Scott St:i.les eacb
added 16 points.
K1np 1U, Warriors 107
011 to its best start since 198283, Sacramento best Golden Stale
in Oakland for only the second

Eagles bad five assiats, Garrett two; ·
nine steals, Sjmpson four; 12 ·,
twrovers and 18 personals.
The Eastern reserves dropped a
48-31 decision. Zacb Klein had 17
for the Golden Eagles, while Eric
Bradshaw bad II and Scott Roberu
bad 10. Josh Casto led EitittCID with
eight. while Chris Bailey bad seven
and Stevie Dint bad six.
•
Eastern hosts Miller Friday.

-·-·-·-

EASTERN
(12-111-6-9:=45) .
Brian Bowen 3-0-0=6, Jetf
Slethem 2-0-2:6, Travis Curtis I·
0-0=2, Jason Sheets 0-1.():3, Eric
Hill 2-0-1=5, Charlie Bissell 6.().
4:16, Micah Otto 3.().1=7. Totals: '\
17-1-8117=45

BELPRE
(13-10.13-11=64)
V. Reams 1-0-0=2, J. Wesson 00·1=1. Kent Garrett 0-1-1=4, J.
Walker 7-0-0:14, Gerken 5·3·
2=21, A. Speoce!' 1.().1=3, J. Gaul
4·0·1=9, Jim Simpson 5-0-0=10.
Totals: 23-4-6112=64

time in four years.
Brian Grant scored 13 of his I 5

points in !be fourth period, helping
the Kings send the Warriors 'to their
seveolb slraight loss.
Mitdl RichJilO!ld' s .29 poiDis Jed
!be Kiil~s. Olden Polynice bad 20,
Walt WtUiams 15 and Spud Webb
13 as .!be Kings improved to 11-8.
Tim Hardaway scored 23 points
to' lead !be Warrior's, who have lost
II of 12 since starting the season
7-1. Qillord Rozier, Rony Seikaly
and Carlos Rogers each added 14.
Seikaly also bad 12 rebounds.

Sports briefs
using up the money it saved by
Buebllll
ANAHEIM, Calif. (AP)- Free dealing Jose Canseco and his $5.1
agent reliever Lee Smith, base- . million contract to Boston.
Gross, 33, a free agent rightball's carceJ saves leader with 434,
agreed to two-year deal with Cali- bander from Los Angeles, will
fornia for $4 mlllion.
mate $6 million over two years,
Tbe Angels said the only factor including a $400,000 signing
remaining before Smith signs is a bo nus. He can earn another
pre-contract pllysical exam. Smith $300,000 in performance bonuses.
will gel an $&amp;00,000 signing bonus.
McLemore will mate $1.7 mil$1.5 million in 1995 and $1.7 mil· lion, with possible bonuses of
iion in 1996. He can earo an $400,000 in 1995 and $350,000 in
$500,000 a season in performance 1996.
Football
bonuses .
HOUSTON (AP) - Rich
Smilb, 37, led !be majors with
Brooks, who led Oregon to its rust
33 saves last season for Baltimore.
Bowl berth since 1958, woo
Rose
BasebaH
the
Bear
Bryant Award as college
ARLINGTON, Texas (AP)Texas signed pilcber Kevin Gross coach of the year. The award is
and infielclcr-outfielder Mark presented by the Football Wrilers
Mclemore to two-year contracts, Association of America.

�•
Page ~The Dally Sentinel

Wednesday, December 14,1994 .

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel-PIG•

On the NHL'Iabor front,

League and union negotiators return to bargaining table
By The Aaoclated Prua
With one club president suspect·
ins It Is too late the save the season, oesotiatora for the NlU.. and
union are goios back to tbe bargalniuslable.
Tbe two aides have agreed to
resume talks today or Thursday,
altbousb NHL spoke5q180 Arthur
Pincus would not say Tuesday
night where they wUI be bcld. The
last time the parties m~t was in
Cllic:aao last week.
"I don't tblok we bave tbat
much time," said Tonr Tavares,
president of the AnabeiDI Mighty
Ducks. "My gut sense is that it it
too late."
Tbe talks will be beld on an

informal, though official, basis and
not involve tbe full barsaining
coounibees.

The new round of nesotiations
comes with the lockout iu its 7Sib
day, lllld two days af\Q the owt;lti'S
rejcctecl tbe players' latest offer. .
The NHL 'a board of govemon
beld an emergency mcedns iu New
York on Monday and authorized
NHL commissioner Gary Beumao
10 caocel tbe wbole acbcdule if be
thinks a season can't be salvaged.
Dettman bas said there is a window
of a week to 'JO days to strike a
deal.

The season Is already down to
60 sames, each team's schedule

quence.

"It lends legitimacy," said
Harry SiDden, scneral manager of
the Bostoo Bruins.
.
Given a desired l&lt;Mlay !raining
camp, a cootract would have 10 be
settled before Christmas to ensure a
start-up date early iu January and a
50-game season.
"My sut sense is tbat (Christmas) is too late," Taveras sliid.
"Personally, I feel that is pushing
it. There's 001 eoousb time unless
people are willing to nesotiate
around the clock 1111d I haven't seen
that."

No. 19 OU rolls to 9Q-56
win over Wright State
ATHENS, Obio (AP) - Tbe
prognosis doesn't sound sood for
Obio Univcnity'a IIJICOO'ing opponeots: Gary Trent ilb&amp;Ck: at fuU
streogtb.
Trent was feeUnJ beallby fm lbe
fllSt time Ibis season as be srorecJ
20 points lllld bacl 10 rebounds iu
No. 19 Ohio University's 90-56
victa'y over Wright State on Tuesday.
Trent recorded his ninth slraight
double-double, even lbough be was
on the bencb fm 16 minutes.
"Gary was l'llllllins lllldjumpiug
as well as be bas all year," said
Obio coacb Larry Hunter. "I think
we are as bealthy as we've been all
year."
Trent, a 6-foot-8 junior forward,
baa been bothered by a stomach
muscle pull be suffered this past
fall. He sat out the Bobcats' last
~~n::7-S7 victory over Obio
Wright State's freshman center
Vitaly Potapenko, wbo was averaging 19 points per game, sat out
much of tbe first half with foul
ttouble. That allowed Trent to play
b'
ua1 domlnan 1
14
as us
points
iu the half. t ro e, acorius
"We just hav~ to play better
defense wben Potapcnlco goes out
of the game," said Wright State
coach Ralpb Underbill. "We
haven't found a center that can
back him up."
The Bobcats (7-2) built a 19-4
lead on Gus Johnson's tbree early
thfee-pointers. Johnson finished
with 17 points and was S-for-10
from beyond the tbree-poi_nt line.
Antuao Jool(son's Up-iu cut the
lead to 25-1 S, the closest tbe
Raiders (2·3) would set
· A three-pointer by Mike Reese
pushed the Bobcats' lead 10 44-23.

slashed by 24 games. The leasue
bas suggested that SO games would
consdblte a season of some conse-

They weie abead 53-29 at tbe balf.
"I tbougbt we played a great
first balf offensively," Hunter said.
"We played as uoselfisly and
moved the ball as weD as we have
all year."
·
. Ohio was 22-for-32 from tbe
floor io !be fllSI balf and made 6of-IOsbots fran three-point range.
The Raiders got DO closer tbao
30 points in the second half. Rob
Welch with 12 points was Wright
State's only double-figure scorer.
Geno Ford a4ded 12 points lllld
Curtis Simmons bad 11 for Obio.
The Bobcats made 36-of-62
field goal attempts for 58.1 percent
and hit 10-of-20 tbree-point tries.
Wright State was 17-for-53 for
32.1 percent
"1 didn't think they'd sboot that
well from three-point range,"
UnderbiD said.

'

.

..,.·-·~·-

'
Beuman said Monday the play-

wbo wants hockey tbis seaion

IIIOie than I. But not 11 any )lice.

"In that BCIIBC, I'd prefer IQ lose
a
season
than 10 watcb the Jeasuc
era' lareat offer was uo.anlmolisly
disarpear completely. Tbat' s
rejected at die bollld meeting.
The mnmi11llliiCI' also said lbc wbat s iu suxe for us If we don't do
Slllletblnl about II im~i•ly.''
play~ra· proposals need an overQuebec Nordiques president
haul before the Jeasue would ,be
Maroc! Aubut remains opdmlslic a
ready to drop lbe tax.
"We need a system that will deal wiD set clone.
"It is just a fcelibg," be said. "I
allow us to srow, not just get
along," Montreal Canadiens PJeSi· feel comfortable in saying that the
dent Ron Corey said. ''In tbat rationale of inteUigent men will
sense, our proposal for a punitive save tbe day. Tbe fact is the dam·
age to bocltey mlgbt be too mucb
tax was very generous.
"If we have to cancel tbe season .to overcome ... that will dictate
because of Ibis tax, It wUI be terri- people 10 find a mnnvm pound.''

At The co•n•• of

Gen. Haftlnge• PkWY.
and Pea•l st.•Middlelloft

A Cirdlnal • Affiliated Supermarket

a sood nio 8t them. Cedarvillc's a Sablrday at Shawnee State.
quick team wilb a good inside Box score:
game, and they sot us Ibis time, but
RIO GRANDE (3l·38a70) I'm stiU pleased with the effort we Floyd 2-0-4=8; Winters 8-0-3•19;
putout"
Dixon .0-2-0=6; Collins 2-0-l•S;
Megan Winters led tbe Red- Riley 2-l-0=7; Smith 5-0-t .. n;
women with 19 points and eight Bostic 1-0-1=3; Tabor 1·3-0=11.
rebounds. Tonya Smith and To~:21~10=70
MicheUe Tabor each bit for II, and
CEDARVILLE (42-37,.7!1) Amy Floyd collected eigbt. Riley Cremeans .5-1·1=14; Fraley, 1-0bad seven points and three steals 0=2; Hartman 3-0-2=8; Dctwiller
before ber injury, while Heather 1-1-2=7; Randolph S-0-0=10; DunDixon sot six, Tricia Collins bad lap 2-4-1=17; Cave 3-0-3•9;
five and Rachel Bostic bad three.
~.J;land 6-0.();12. To~: 26-6The loss drops the defending
champion Redwomco to 1-1 iu the·
HalftJme KOre: Cedarville 42,
Mid-Ohio Conference and 4-7 Rio (lrande 32
overall. Their ne~t game ssi·iiS~piiii.miii·~-...

don ' t tbink anything's broken,
· though. It burt us wbeo sbe went
down. Sbe•s a sood player lllld we
could have~ CedarviDe If we
just had more players. Rigbt now
we only have cigbt, and you just
wear yourself out lryiosto peas."
The Redwomeo did make a
solid run, closing to within four
points twice, With 7:15 remaining
iu the game the acore was 63-59,
but tbe Inexperience of tbe team
showed through as CedarviDc toot
advantage.
"It's tougb to get Cl[pericnce you
need and pull out wins wblle
you're doing it,K Smaney said.
"But we played hard and we made

The University of Rio Grande
women's basketbalrteam, already
suffering from a rasb of injuries,
endured yet another Tuesday nigbt
as Stacy Riley went down with a
sprained ankle and her ltJ!mmates
lost to visiting CedarviUe 79-70.
Tbe game was tight until two
minutes remained in the fust balf.
. Riley tben suffered her injury while
going for a loose ball, and
Cedarville guard Karl Dunlap bit
three straigbt three-pointers to give
!be visitors a 42-32 balftime lead.
"We're afraid Riley might be
out for awhile," Rio Grande bead
coach Dave Smalley said. "We

Genenl
NEW YORK (AP) - Olympic
champion speed skaters Bonnie
Blair of the United States and
Johann Olav Kosa or Norway were
selected Sportswoman and Sportsman of the Year by Sports Wustrat-

PRICES GOOD DECEMBER1·31, 1994

ed.

·Blair, 30, woo the SOOmetersiu
the last three Olympics and also
woo tbe 1,000 In Albertville,
France, iu 19921111d LIUehammer,
Norway, thla year. Kosa, 26, act
world mcorda in the 1,SOO, 5,000
lllld 10,000 in 11JW!•mmer.

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Eastern. '
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Joey JuneallllllCCI26 polnla ad
Mic:blel Stevena_, 1110 1*C lbc
Pin1tes to a 56-24 viclory over the
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Southern
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Bea Lisle 4-1·1•12, Jonoa
Manuel 0-1-0..3, Bcclty Moore 20-o-4, Jess Codner 0-ll-1=1, Brianne Proffitt 2-0-3•7, Sammi Sisson 1-0-3=.5. Totals: !1·2-81l!c31

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BasebaU
MONTREAL (AP)- Montreal
manager Felipe Alou, wbo directed
the Expos to a major leasue-best
70-44 record last season, agreed to
a contract extension through 1997. .

Vinton County girls notch
55-32 win over Southern

Southern soes to Eas(ero Mon-

felt lui wcct dlat our proposal was ble for evctrone, atartios with
cloae 10 as far as we can so. We myself. Tbele 1 no one in the v.uld

Sports briefs

Four Univenity of Rio Grande 18-4 seorins run put them ahead
. baalcelball pia,:.: for double · for good.
figures as the
won 9l)..g2
''Our point guard play from Jack
on tbe road asainst Wilberforce Morgan and Cbad Barnes was
Tuesday oJsbt
good," Redmen bead coach John
· Tbe win brinsa tbe Rcdmen 's Lawb001 said. "lllld we rebounded
record 10 7-1 on the year.
very bard late in the second balf.
Mau Powell acorcd 18 points But at times, we bad DO intensity
for Rio Grande, while Brett and sometimes we dido' t bandle
Coreno, Rick Konicki and Larry the pressure weD."
Caudill eacb netted 17. Jlll:t Mia'·
Tbe Redmeo controlled the
gan and Walter Stephens chipped game and bcld off two Wilberforce
in wilb cigbt points apiece.
runs late in tbe second period.
Wilberforce was led by Cliff Once again, bencb play was solid,
Brown's29 points, wilb Ron Whet- Lawhorn said.
stone recording 161111d J.amandreo
The. Redmen wUl re-enter MidDerrick acaing 12 RID Grande led Ohio Conference actloo Saturday at
at the balf 49-37.
7:30 p.m. at Shawnee State. Rio
1be Rcdmcn feU bcbind 6-0 in Grande, the defending champion, is
tbe early sows, but establiabed its 1.0 .in conference play.
running game_to come hack. An

. R-"•

A ·JIIIIIIIIV t:111111ed 111111
· . Dperatell superm11rlret ·
.tlller11111 tiJe IJe•t o1 sewlce,
011GIItr 111111 Prlee, to tiJe
People Ill our eommunltr

Ced_arville beats injury-stung Redwomen 79-70

Redmen record 96·82
victory over Wilberforce

Undefeated Vinton County took
a 27-14 ha1flimc lead, then RPCI1ed
a mild Soutbera comeback In the
secODd balf to claim a SS-32 win
over Soulban iu a Tri-Valley Cw·
fere!JCe girls' basketball JIIDC
Monday oisht, according to a
report released Tuesday afternoon.
Soutbqn (1-3) bit 9-47 from the
fteld for 19.1 %, bit 2-6 from threepoint range and wu 8-ts at tbe
line. Soutbero grabbed 19
rebounds, led by Sammi Sisson's
five and four Cldl by Jess Codner
lllld lonna Manuel.
SHS ba&lt;f seven steals, 23
turnovers, eisbt assists and 1.5
fouls.
Vinto!l County (5-0)bit 17-43
two's,- 2-8 oo threes and hit 1519 at i.be line. VC had 24 rebounds,
led;by Brie Hayes' 10, had four
blocke.d sbots, two steals, 22
tumovcrs and 13 assists and 16·
fouls.
Southern was led by Bea Usle's
12 pOints.
Erica Hayes bad a pDC-higb 22
. fm Viu.IOD County.
nOt•: Vinton Couniy
won 29-21 bebiud six-point eft'orta
by Olna Fee lllld Heather Vance.
Soutbem was led by Jenny~··
seven and Cynthia CaldWell's six.
Cmtai Barnett had five lebouods,
wbile Darlene Flowers bad four.

1be main stumbUng block i&amp; the
luxury tax. Tbe owocra want 10 tax
teams that spend more than the
league average iu 8alarlca and distribute the money to small-market
teams that don't
Tbe players made recent proposals iu the areas of a rookie salary
cap, free asency and. arbitration,
but stayed away from the contentious tax issue.
"Our position hasn't changed
since last week," said St. Louis
forward Guy Carboooeau, a member of the union's bargainius COOl·
mittee. "We want a system wilbout
a tax.
"If they bavc new Ideas and
new avenues. we wjlllisteo but we

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99

�Page 8 The Dally Sentinel

Wednelday, December 14,1994

Wednesday, December 14, 1994;

Poineroy-Middleport, Ohio

I

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
AIMITIED ITEM Plll.tf· Each Qf these ldvertlled Items Is l'ellllred to be l1ldiV available for sale In
each KroGer 51Dte, .-as IDICffiCaiY noted In this ad. If we dO 1111 out Of 1111CMrllled Item, WI!

'

relleetl=:l" liVIngs
or a
within 50

Scarlet letter ruins relation$hip with .· virgin boyfriend . .
·

' • disappointed" in· me. He said
goodbyewithtcarsinhiscyes.
He didn't phone for two days, so I
called him and left word on his
answerins machine. It's been five
days, and I've beard nothins. .
Ann,lhis guy is a prize, and I want
him. How can I get Michael io
• .
understand that sex is justa pan of
Dear A.. Laude!": Michael," life? 1 was never promiscuous and
~,aDd~
~mg ~e~ for ·I'm upset tbalevl'.ll though I only had
~011 ~· e ~· a vngm and sex once, be is holding it against me.
docs.n t bcheve ·~ ~c_x before TeU him this is the 20th cen~ not
~· I told hlDI VDgm~ty was not the 18th. _ POim.AND, MAINE
UDpOitant to me and admatted .thai 1
DEAR PORT.: Michael knows
~had sex once to sec what at was what century it is. That's not the
like..
.
problem. He is looking for a vi'l!in,
Michael made 11 c~ear as be drove and you don'lqualify.
me ~e ~be believes se~ before
Forget about this man. Even if you
marnagc as wrong and e was couldgcthimtosccyouagain,inhis

Ann
Lan derS

WC:

eyes, yOu have the proverbial scarlet
A federal law called the
leueronyourforehead,andbewould Individuals with Disabilities
never let you fOI!Ict iL
Education Act ~as written ~ years
Dear Ann La•den: You reccndy . ago to help special-needs children by
prinled a letter from a teacher who, making their experience in school as
with at least I 00 children in the 'nonnal" as possible. Today, this law
hallway, witncsaed a hiDing, kicking, makes it virtoally impossible to
screaming tantrum thrown by a disci~lin!) or expel '!'esc children
special-needs student who was · even afthey becomev1olent. Nor can
usignedtoaregularclassroom.That they be expelled if they come to
letter brought up a dilemma for school with weapons.
educators, especially principals.
The !ndivid~als with Di~bilities
1 seriously doubt that anyone Educauon Aetas up for revacw next
would cJisa8rec that a principal should year. We would like to updare this law
keep the school safe by taking quick to ensure that all yOWigstcrs can. be
llCtlonand removing a violentlllllllent protcc!M whale they !!elan_educauon.
from class. But I wonder how many "!'ncipals need legal backmg to keep
of your readers know that the violent vaolent student.s out of our
child may be right back in class in 10 classrooms. This may mean pulling
days.
violentspecial·needschildrenoutof

_,...,_

aod uRoacanoc."

NBC's exclusive tbree-hour
broadcast of tbe classic Frank
Capra tale '!It's a Wonderful
Life," whicb aitcd wltb 51 minutes
of COIIliiiCrCials, finlsbed 44tb.
Overall, ABC won tbe week
witb a 12.0 average llllinll811d 11,19
percent share of tbe audlc:na:. NBC
bad an 11.7 ratins and 19 share.

·

.... .,_

Home·-~
22.3/33
• ABC,
................ .....

CIPALS, BOYERTOWN, PA.
.
. DEARMR. B~O:t~N:Thankyou;
can get intensive instruction from for a letter tbal·maUa~ of teachers~
experienced teachers.
parents and students WIU IIPlllalll!- I,
If children are forced by law to hope when the Indivlduali wath:.
endure oultlursts and tantrums by Disabilities mtnc:atjon·Act ~es DP:
their classmates, what mcaqea arc for review, it will be updated to.
we gi~ing lhcm? It,is~ possible to rellect ~y's needs., ·
;
learn tn suc'la a SCUIIIJ.
T.M ltolidlzys f1llt Jllll amlllld IM;
We are ,educators, Ann, aot corMr.AMI.altders'itewt,oollet, "A
bouncers. We don't like to kick Collectio~ of My Favor~ Gems of.
~ts out of our &amp;ehools, but the tht Day," is the perfect stocklll(
nghts of the well-behaved must not stuffer. Sttrd a self~ssed, lo11g,
be infringed on by the conduct of busiMss-sizt tllvtlopt atrd CMC~ or·
those studen~ w~o create havoc. I mollty order for ·~ (tills i11cl~(
hope you -w11l pnnt my letter, and eostage and ltalldl111g) to:Colltc/1011,
you ma~ use my name. -- c/o A1111 Landers, P.O. B.ox 11562.:
FRED BROWN, PRESIDENT, Clricago,/1/. 6()611.{1562 (Ill CaMda,
NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF $6).
ELEMENTARY SCHOOL PRJN-

self~tai\tedclassroomswhctedlcy

Gift
Certificates
for Holiday

Giving.
See your friendly
Kroser store or

•

By ROBERT DVORCHAK

.llrllt:

••A M

'Ono=poi'!--1V--Io

·-

•
•

tory. The so-called pasans were
dl bard Tb
,
I
e
s. ey wercn 1 so ng 10
give up their pracdccs. So it was a
smart poUilcal move to infuse tbese
~~.~~O::y ~ttstian signifi-

He was tint dcpicled as a merry, :
corpulent figure in ClaneDt Clark '
Moore's 1822 poem "A Visit from ·
SL Nicholas."
.
:
Santa's modem lmasc .orlgi- :
nates wltb Thomal Nlll. a Gcnn8Jl,
immlgnmt whole editorial C81tOOD&amp;o :
One oft seiverall mytbstb wiodtbdGer- pictured Santa in red, white and ·
man roo a nvo vcs e I
ess blue as a w~to c:hcer UDion sol; t
Hertha, who was believed to follow
smoke down to a file, determine ' diers durin&amp; Ovll War. ·
·~
who was good or bad and tben dis.··
pcnse gifts. So this female figure,
SORORJI'Y DINNER .
.~
whose name is tbe basis for tbe
Members of Xi Gamma Mu,
word hearth, was a precursor of ChapterofBetaSigmaPbiSorority ~
Santa Claus.
met recently at tbe Holiday, I~n ;:,.
Then there's mistletoe, a para- Gallii;Xllis, for their annual Christ1
site tbat grows on fir trees. The ~T·adinblc~:A-tioos of Christmas'~'
druids, a Celtic religious order of
""""'"
prieslll and soothsayers, beticved it wreatbs were woo by Sharm Pratt,
was a symbol of-peace for a bird Sandy Hanning, and ~y Aclkins ..:
called tbe ·· d tbrusb to
tbe Memben exchanged gifts after tbe~
IDIS e
.carry
dipne
.
plant in its~laws. ,
K:ihy Jobnso.n presented the'_:
They beJ!Cved a spriJ! of misde
thrush toe, or mistletoe, could cultural ~gram on "Literaturemake warriors drop their wcapona Poetry.' She read "T' was the
and bug each otber. The kissing Night Before Christmas," 119d an
custom evolved from tbaL
excerpt from "He was Only a
. If you hang a stocking up on Babe.'
·
·
Christmas E .... ~.. SL N'""Aias
'
Sheila
Harris
presided
at the
1
A 4tb
ve,
d 800
"""tb · meeting during which time the
century tgure an
cr memben were remindtA to provide
early form of Santa Oaus, SL Nlclt ·gifts for Screnitv Hno•coo.
for tbe
tbreegold
daugbten
Of
aprovided
nobleman
placing
by tbclr
LARGE
bed 5 C th' ·
dd' d ·
·
·
or . eu we mg ownes..
But one tune be slipped. and JOid
feU into a stocking hu~g up to dry.
Santa Claus came m all sorts of·
variations, and even used a donkey
and 'WBSOO in the earllcat legends .

fi

f""'iAiiGits''iiv-E&lt;ffimr-1

•

..,.....-------~.society scr~pbook-~--~--. SOLDIER OF~
"&amp;io Army National GUinl ·Prfvatc F'nt Class Adam Little, Middiepcl1. 101 of Mlcblclaod Tcma
Utdc, Middleport, was named sol-.
dier of the year for Battery C,
· 2J174tb Air Defense Artillery Battalioo.
Little received a plaqne Sunday
at the battery's annual CbrlsbDas

dinner in Mc:ConMI•villc.

Baneu ID llld Mllie Willfonl, cap-' •
~•
" • &lt;
tains; Keith t.folden, first lie11vm ELECl'ED
teDIIIt, anc1 CariDI McKnight, aecMcmbcn of the Rdland Volun- ood lieviCIIIIDL
. tccr Fli'C Department elected offi7
Mike WlllCord was clccled prescenllt tbe dqwtment's meedng m ideDt wltb Paul Michaela beiDI
Dec. S.
.
elected vicc-pmidenL Owlie BarNewly elected offlcen include rett III, Don Davis and OweD
Dave Davis, cbief; Don Davis 111111 Wiseman were elected secretary,
Ray Willford, assistants; Charlie trea8UR'I and reporter, IC&amp;peetively.

----Community calendar---Tile Community Calendar II
pubUalletl •• a free aervlce to
aoa·pront groapa wllblag to
auouace meetlna aad special
enatl. Tbe calendar 11 Dol
dealaaetl to promote sales or
r.alfnllera of aay type. ltelDI
are rlall d • ipiiCil pennltlaad
callllOl be paraateed to ran 1
lll*ll'lc alUilber or daJL

p.m. Make and wear a corsage. Gift
wrappings to indudc plant material, packascs to be judgC141.

WEDNESDAY
. MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Amateur Garden Pub, 6 p.m.
Wednesday, Christmas potluck
bomc of Jean Moore.

,CHESHIRE - Free clotbing
day, Melss-Gallia Community
Action Agency, 9 a.m. to noon,
Thursday, at Cbesbire.

THURSDAY
RACINE - Christmas in tbe
Park at Star MIU Park, festivities
begin Thunday at 6:30 p.m. Bopfire and free music. Dress warm
and bring lawn chain.

American Legion, 6:30 p;JII. dinDer
at hall; meeting at 1:30 p.m.

MIDDLEPORT - Meigs Jr.
Hlgb Boosm AssoclatioD meeting
8 p.m. ot lmmecllately following
girls' basketball game in school
cafeiCria.

RUTI.AND - Leading Creek
Conservancy District moDthly
board meeting Thursday,
at
the dislrict office. Public in

sJ.::

FRIDAY
RACINE - Racine American
PORTLAND- The Hope Bap- Lesion Ailxillary .Cbristmas party
SYRACUSE - Meigs County tist Churcb of Middleport wUI sin§ Friday at 6:30 p.m. at tbe restaurant
Chamber of Commerce will bold tbe cantata "Home for Cbrislmas · in Racine.
general membership luncheon at 7 p.m. Thursday at tbe Morae
LONG BOTTOM - Youth
Tuesday noon, Carleton School. ~1 Cburcb oo county Road 3S.
revival witb Cbad Emerick, 16Guest speaker, Reggie Robinson,
. POMEROY - Mlddleport ycar-old evanaelist, at Faitb Foil
Heallb Rccowry Services.
Child Conservatim ~ Oiriat- Gospel ChiRh, Route 124, Friday.
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport mas party, Thursday, 6:30p.m. Special sinsing, dinner following
.
LifcnrY Club, Wednesday, 2 p.m,. Rock Springs United Metbodist scrvk:e.
bome of Mrs. Dewey Horton. Churdl. POllack dinner. Take ornament for exchange, and gifts for
Muak:al program.
needy families.
POMEROY ~ Wildwood GarRACINE - Racioc Post 602,
dcll Club. Millie's Restaurant, 5:30

Thomas R. Spencer, D.O.

Oldest giant
panda dies

FamilyPraaice

"Make The Mme With
Quality Health~

~ ~ lltributcd lbc deatb

New Location:
306 North Sect&gt;nd Avenue
Middl~rt, OH

to Fei' Fel'a ase, adding lie had
beta 'ftllk and aufferlns a lack of
&amp;piiCiite Iince last October.
Ho· wu doaatcd to Japan by
ChlDa Ia 198Z to CIYDmcm&lt;Jillfe tbe ·
10dlllllliVCIIIJY of tbe rcopcDIDI
of NlldODI bctvieea ~ two COIIDIrics.
'
Platt official Kenjl Sbibusawa
said they would not try to find a
rcpl• . . . Car Fcl
I

u:=

~

.::~t~~:::=:.:::m::

in tile wild

D

\

their Dative China.

and100iD~vl~

I

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Efftai, 'T'IItlrsillly. ~,. 1
OfficeHoun
Monday through Friday
· 9 a.m. - 5 p.m. •

Fcl.
::-Fcltboupf'.:.

ODC dial died at an """""""' qe of
32111 ChlDa tbll ,_.,be said.

wlll

The new officers
assume
their dillies at tbe first oflbc yelr.
DEAN'S LIST
dean's listf(X' fall1994
.
The followins local students
were named to tbe fall term president's and dean's Usts for Wa&amp;hingtOD State ~illlty College in

President's list - nanette L••
Jones, Long Bottom; Carrie R.
Morrissey, Pomeroy; AaroD A.
Wilson and Patricia K. Hayman,
botb of Reedsville.
Dean. s list - Katrina R. Turner, Mary A. Wolfe and Melissa t.
Arnold, Paneroy; Man: T. Pierce,
Tuppen Plains.

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TOKYO (AP)- Fci, one of
tbe oldest Billlt Jlllldll ill c:apcivlty,
dlcd at Tokyo'1 Ucao Zoo today.
The male bear was ~ 27 JC111
old - tbe cquivaleDl of 80 hlDDIIl

we AaiRvE THE·AIGHT TO UIIIT QUNITITID, NOIIIIOLD TO . .AI IJIL

regular cla$ses and placing them in

The folklore behind Santa, mistletoe.,
yule logs is hidden in ancient cult~re.

AP Natloaal Writer
Ever wonder wby .Santa Claus
21.3 chooses the cblmney iDstcad of tbe
door? ADd wbat' the y1b behind
a,.. UndtrFin
• ABC, 21.5/32
20.4 mistletoe, lllyw&amp;;? m
E.R.
For answen, look to the folklore
•
NBC,21.0/35
20.0 or ancient cultures. Wben the days
grew sboltcr under winter's dlilly
18.7 grip, secut..- ceremonies empha:.-.~;~; ;; ............... ~;:.~ .~ sized fire aDd llgbl Over time, they
became associated witb tbe relil
-' -~- ;; •. • ••.••• ••• ••.•1~;:.;1_1 gioas thc:mcs of Christmas. ·
"So many early cultures had
IOIIhiMI
. • cas. 11.21211
17.3 fesllvities surrounding tbe wiDtcr
.NFI.IIondlr.._,.Foalbllt ,
solstice or tigbt overcoming darkABC, 17.7/211
1U netborss,"ofsaithed Drbook
. D~naH lli~daDyoFosselky,
~. Phobias and Fun.'~
ll6lnll ~'I
Clllllll•• V.O.Ion (R)
Bonfires were a universal way
. 1_5.8
~;~;/;25;...... .........1;.4.8
;·,;. 1 to Combat tbe dartricss. Noi'scmcn
-called tbeir winter festival yuletide,
•
...,.lllltWilll
and tbeyburned yule logs
CBS. 15.4/23
14.6
a;;;····-···------·-···.. ··-·l , 'They helped good sp· iri11 see
their 'WBY and scared away tbe evil.
~~-1_:~~~-------·-·-···1··u···-· l Candles and lights on trees IQday
Mo4AIIoul'lllu
are rcallr, symbols of tbose early
~.1!1:~!~.---14.4
bonfll'CS; ' said Dossey, a psycho!·
ogist
from AsbeviUe, N.C. ·
R - (R)
ABC 15.1 23
The
prevalence of winter fcsti14·4 vats helps
1
•
explain why Dec. 2S was
1\.-11 ..,.;,..
chosen as Christmas Day. Some
Vtgllll ~
scholars say Jesus was !ICiu allY
born in the spring, when shepbcn1s
tended tbeir flocks. But the
Catholic Church merged older cus12.11 10.7 11.7
7J
toms into tbe religious events of
..
.nv.............
Christmas.
''When Christianity ::Jan less
II'I ......... I"Ainlltslllpoiol
than 2,000 years ago, It
no his·

CBS slipped to tbird witb a10.7
rating 1111if 17 share.
Fox Broadcastins Co., which
programs only IS of tbe 22 prime
time hours, had a 7.2 rating and 11
share.
One ratings point equals 1 percent, or 9S4,000, of the nation's
estimated 9S.4 million TV bouseholds, accordlng to ~aelscn Media
Research. Share is tbe percentage
of sets tuned in during a specifiC
time period.
Amonf, the evening newscasts,
ABC's ' World News Tonight"
fmished fint for tbe 118111 lime in
119 weeks witb an 11.0 llllinr, 21
share. CBS' "Evenlns News'" was
second witb a 9.3 lllling, 18 share,
and NBC's "Nigbdy News" was
tbird witb a 9.1 rating, 17 share.
The Top I 0 shows, tbeir networks and ratings:
"Home Improvement," ABC,
22.3; "Grace Under Fire," ABC,
21.S; "ER," NliC, ~1.0 ; "Scinfeld," NBC, 20.7; "NYPD Blue,"
ABC, 19.0; "60 Minutes," CBS,
18.2; "Monday Nigbl Football,"
ABC, 17.7; "NBC Sunday Movie:
National Lampoon's Christmas
Vacation," NBC, 1S.6; "Murder,
Sbe Wrote," CBS , 1S .4; (tic)
"Ellen," ABC, IS.l; "Mad About
You· Thursday," NBC, IS .I; and
"Roseanne," ABC! IS.l.

AP TeleYWoa Writer
NEW YORK (AP) - "Home
Improvement" aDd "Grace UDder
Fire" finished 1-2 for tbe week,
giving ABC Ita niDtb wecldy ratIngs crown Ibis IICIIOD aDd cs!abllsbins .its T110sday liDeup as tbe
moiiJ-watcllcd even!Dg iD televi.
.sloo.
NBC. tblrd-rauked ID tbe 12weet-old season, dimbed into secDOd place for tbe week of Dec. 511, lauding four of Its sbows In tbe
Top 10.
"ER," NBC's top-rated new
series, was tbird for tbe week, a
notdl abead of "Seinfeld," wbicb
is NBC's top-rated series.
NBC's Sunday movie, "National Lampoon's Christmas Vacatloo," fmisbed eigbtb. It ran opposite ABC's 23rd-ratcd "Hook" and
NBC's "Mad Abwt You," wbicb
tied for 10tb wltb ABC's "Ellen"

~~~tee

COI'YIIIGHT , ... . THE KIIOCIEII co. ITIMI AND PIIICII 0000 lUNDAY,
~en 11111, THIIOUGH IA'I\JIIDAV, DICB
• 17, 11M .. ~.

"

ABC edges surging
f\!BC, CBS slips into
third in weekly ratings
By SCO'IT WJLIJAMS

will offer 'IOU your choice Of acomparable Item, M avillallle,
ral~ whldlwll entitle yuu lD IIIJ'dwelhlldwrtlsed Item at the
days. Dn!Y one vendor coupon w11 be ac:cepted per ltan lllldlaSed.

The Dilly Sentinel-Page 8 •

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Simply Call Your Local
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�lllge 10-The

Sentinel

Ohio

Dylan goes unplugg~d thirty years later
. By DAVID BAUDER
A-odllted ~ Writer
Bob Dylan must be a.pretty
peculiw sisht fc. a DCW se-adon
of rock fans, partlcaluly when
compared wilb oilier ~endary
artists mating IICWS this
There's another epic tour by the
Rolling Stones, a well-oiled
mncbine that hawks its warea on
everything from "60 Minutes" 10
"Beveriy Hills 90210." Music no
lonaer seems Ibis corporation's
main focus.
Tbe Eagles re-formed for an
expensive to~ and a dour MTV
special that was church-lite in il!
self-reverence, and Jimmy Page
and Robert Plant joined for a special every bit as bombastic as Led .
Zeppenn at its peat. .
Yet the ever-inscrutable Dylan
barely comea out from bebind his
dark .glasses on his first "MTV .
Unplugged" show, which premierea at 8 p:m. EST tonight. It
seems just another evening for Bob
Dylan, working musician.
So what's all the fuss about?
Dylan, of course, is the spiritiJal
godfather of "MTV Unplugged,"
as DC~ President Judy McGmtb
puts It; Hla songs are sacred 10 mil·
lions. He'a even reaching the 30year anniversary of a Newport Folk

Festival show where plugging in,
not plugging out, was his act of
deftance.
Now in his 50s, Dylan bas taken
this "worting musician" !bing to
almost ridiculous extremes. He's
on the road_ COIStanUy, wryly dubbing one recent series of concerts
bisNever-EndlngTour.
A Dylan show Is one of the last
great rolls of the dice in concertgoing: Will it be a mnglcal moment
or just anolber run through the
motions foc a couldn't-he-bothered
legend?
Oddly enough, that might be
one of the most appealing aspects
~f bis career now. The spontaneity
•s somelbing many of his peers
can't .,.... er won't- cbance, but it
teaches young people a valuable
lesson in music as a living art form.
. Ou the t&gt;{TV show, Dylan conllnuel his long-running Jlabit of
revising his songs- cramming
two linei of lyrics where one
should be oc adding new inflections
to prevent a performnnce of "Lih
a Rolling Stone" from becoming
an anthem.
Even a sldmpy eight-song show
leaves 1'00111 for poe of those moddeningly perfunctory performances
that be's so often guilty of, Ibis
time on ''Rainy Day Women 12 &amp;

35."

Renwkably. thai improvisation·
al feellng 11181188es to cane tbroush
on a taped show, even one as hlsh·
ly stylized as "MTV Unplugged."
It's the sort of thiDg tbal keeps
Dylan's songs alive, fer a new sen·
eradon and f« older ones, instead
of serving as museum pieces.
It probably is the sort of thing
thai Jceeps Dylan alive as wen.

This sbow, however, fortunately
calcbes Dylan In one of his strong
cycles. l'le' s coming off a wellreceived performance at Woodstock, and his fall concerts have
deservedly Jeeeived fine revlews.
His band Is aJOO(I one, with Bucty
Baxter's pedal steellllld slide gultan IKklins a diJtinctive twang.
Except for Dylan and .Jolin Jackson sticldng 10 acoustic gultan, the
special Ia essentially lite most of
the abows be's done lately.
Some of his quieter momenl!,
llh on "Sbootina Star'' or "With
· God on Our Side.' • are amona bis
most affectina. "Dignity," a new
song on a juat-releaac4 greatest bits
set, Is performed In an obvious
marketing move, but It still outsttipa any new mnlerial the Eagles
or Page and Plant came up wilb on
lbeir shows. And "Knocldn' on
Heaven's Door," in a strong new
arrangement, is forcibly reclaimed
from the Guns N' Roses catalogue.
As In most of his shows, no
one's ever quite sure where Dylan
Is going « how the ride will be. lfe
provides no clues, a shy smile and
awkwanl high-five with someone
in the front row at the end serving
as bis only contact with me audience.

Elsewhere in television ...
TIJRNING, TIJRNING POINT:
ABC airs two versions or its
''Turning Point'' newsmagazine
Ibis week.
Tonight's edition includes an
exclusive luterview with 14-year·
old Eric Smith of Savona, N.Y ..
who was sentenced to nine years 10
life in prison after being tried as an
adult in the murder of a 4-year-old
boy. Smith tells reporter Meredith
Viem he still seea himself as "just
a normal kid, just like anybody
else," while his parents remain
frustrated tbal be cannot understand
the enormity of bis crime.
On Thursday, a special "Turning Point" lll8lts the SOtb anniversary of the pivotal German offensive of World War 0, the Battle of
the Bulge, launched nine days
befcre ChrislmnS 1944. 11 was Germany's last, desperate gamble.

-----Alfred news notes _ _ _ __
By Nellie Parker
, .
giving with her daughter, Janice son went to Osie Mae and Clair
Pistor Sbaron Hausman opeQed and Steve Web~r. Others there Follrod' s for Thanksgiving dinner.
!be advent season at the Alfred were Doris, Ben, Beth and Benny Others attending were Kathy, StaUnited Methodist church with the Ewing, Kim ·and Randall. Hawley, cie, and Alan Watson, local; Karen,
banllng of the greens service. all local. and Peggy, Charles, Car- Steve, Katie Brian and Brannon,
Members of !be church assisted rie and Crissy Caldwell, Columbus. Athens.
· Charlotte and Warren Van
with re&amp;IJings and group singing,
Thanksgiving guests of Thelma
Tbe miniMer will lead CbrislmnS Meter spent Thanksgiving wilb llendorson were Linda and David
Bible study dlls month at 7 p.m. at their daughter and her family, Williams, Belpre; and Aaron
tbe Alfred Unlt~d Methodist Joyce and Jerry Burke, Greg, and Williams, WasbingiOn, D. C.
Marie and Charles Sargent host·
Church where the BIIDual Christmas Sherrie. Others there were Lisa,
proaram will be held at 7:30 on Kevin and Austin Lute, Trica and ed a family dinner on Tbanbgiv·
Greg Carpenter.
-in g., Present were Ethel and Wil·
Dec. 18.
Clam
Follrod
and
Nine
Robinlena Maze, Belpre; Joe and Kay
Sarah Caldwell spent Tbanb·

Baney, Chris anil Beau, Steve and
Carol Erwin, Paul and I amie,
Paul;'s Friend, Beth; Chuck,
Janeel, Cory, Kyle, and Casey Sargent; Pat Spencer, all of Meigs
County.
Eloise and Russell An:ber spent
thanksgiving wllb their dauahter
and her family, Joyce, Stephen and
Stephanie, St. Clair, Lancaster.
Other guests were I ackie, Eric,
Erin and Jody Brooks, New Manb· ·
field; Mr. and Mrs. Jim Archer and
children; Springfield.

Literary club ·hears about Stephen King's work
Martha Hoover reviewed the always a spell-binding story teller
work: of popular horror writer, easily compared to Poe, as !be
SteJD:n King when the Middlepon excerpts which she shared with the
Literary Club met recently at the group clearly demonstmled.
home of Clarice Erwin.
His style is brisk and readable,
King is the anther of many long, characters seem 10 rome alive, and
scary novels, som(l of wbich bave contrary to many other literary
been made into movies. According w01ks, his forwards are always roo
to the reviewer, the levels of horror important to be missed, Hoover
involved and the type of langWII!e said.
.used vary in different works.
She noted !bat King started bis
Nevertheless, King, she said, Is career with dramntic short stories

Ohio University
College of Osteopathic Medicine

-Family
Medicine
•

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

lli-""-..._....:O.._____...,..____...I.
;

Questioll: I've hid quite a bil of the tube·that conneets the vagina
: trouble wllb bladder Infections. with the bladder. Once.in the blad·
' They always scrm10 111at IIUddeDiy der, the germs multiply and the
: and lllllke me quile UJIClOI!Ifdrtlble. infection Is establisbed.
: 1 drinJc.eranberry juice every day,
The E. coli bacteria cause more
: but they still happeD. My dactor than .90 pcrtCDl d. cystitis cases - "
• doeSD't ICCID very CIIIICCI1Ied. Do typically brinaing on symptoms ·
: you have any auueallona about quite rapidly, just as you have
: what 1 caD do?
experienced. Because we pbysi·
:
Answer. Bladder Infectious are clans see this cluster of s)'lllpiOOis
: .very commou - particululy iu so often and they are so~• reprodudive-qed womeD. In fact, istic of a bladder Infection, most of
: bladder Infection makea the list of us do only a simple urinalxais
: .the 10 lliolt COIIIIDon reasons for before starting a reproductive-age
• going to lbe doctor. About S per- · :womnn on an antibiotic. Fortunate: cent of the ~l•don are victima ly, the E. coli bacle~ are easily
: of bladder ·~. called "cysti- killed by a variety of antibiotics.
: tis" ·ln cloctor lan8UIIe. with a 50:1 'Today, following the advice of
: ratio of females to males. This is recent research, most docton pre• ovlirwbelmingly lopsided, especial. aaibe aaly 111ree days of antibiotic
: Jy when yon consider that lm the luiCad of the ~even- or ten-day
: first year of .Hfe and again after age · lle"'""'Pt dill 'W8I CODSidered beat
: SS, mea and womta have lboul the just a few ,an ago. ·
: same ·numberofblaclda'iufcctiona.
Yon meutioued that you drink
• Perbapl your doctor doesn't seem cranberry juice to help prevent _
~ very concerned becansc eyltitla Is bleddor IDfeclloo . Many of us have
• such a (10111111011 ailmCnL
J"CC"""'""k this foc yean, and
:
You sa1cl thai you have Mqultc a DIIW 111tn Is addllloual scienliflc
• bit of ttoUble" from bladder lnfec- dala IIIII uowa It doe&amp; certainly
~ line. bu~ "quite a bit" i_l llar4 to redullll c.'a lilt o1 bleddor lnfcc: mcuur.o. Many women in the tic1L AI JQIIIave DOticd though. it
: i~ years have one er two d~u't aaarantee that you will .
.; ·e,piaod~ per year without any avoid diaD onplcecly.
~ tJilderiYjq abnormllity causing the . ne beat preveutlve 'measure
~ l!lfeccfoll:~ IID't ~ oCten.lf you a~~lllld 11101111 IDd waacr. Be
=~- or a loved ODe lftll l tile Ol!e lure Ill lildle bef«e lnterCOuriC.
• ~·· die bumina wn uri- Thil rcduca the 1111111bct or bietci, .~ llacion, (te4uenl urination and ria present on the Kin, wblcb con~ uraent need 10 urlnaJe thal are the aeq~y reduces the rifle of get; ~ sy....na ol this oondldon. tina tbeiD into the !Jia¥ei- Ills also
. : lf, on ~fie Olher lumd, you are the Important to only wape from !be
~ one willi «;lllitia. twice a year may · rroat 10 the bact after going 10 the
:- scem lite 'filii: a bit d. trouble."
balbrooll. Thla wiD reduce the risk
• · · . There are ~evaaJ · ~tbJ!Ob-f of bringing more E. coli_bacteria
lema that Clll 1ncreuo ""' •- o from llOIIIId the rectllDl forwanl to

•r ~~ ~~·~·m·=~~t:·:

1114 ~rmoeup-

the ~aud urethra
.
'~.rl~c:- - ltl"lplte pf lbeir bell effons,
caD II

Y some womeu alill have bladder
of
Jna per- lnfecllona more than twice a year.
\
Ia dlciC IIlii- · 1bla ·lhould purnpt your doctor to
dcfCDIC ayslt:ID ~alee' aure you don't have ·au
lt:~~~.•l&gt;lllilllotr the'· .uileblylaJ disease or abnormality
lit
JCl into ibe blld- in the atructure of the bladder or
dcr, 10 dlele.JI!IDII can I'C)IRlduCe uretbia. Often. however, thc5C 1e111
! In Juae eJ10Uib nliDben IQ ~ are quite IIOIDial. Some: women lite
: an inl"ecdoD.
·
just auhacky. Perhaps !bit Ia wby
• , PreJ1181!CY q a COIIIIIIOII .condl- you have Mqulte a bit of trouble."
: ~~ dial illclelles tbe lilt in RilrO("FIIIIIIy Medicine'' Ia a nit; dlicll~ ~ ~~ the ,.._ 1y coha!na- To nbmlt q-tloal,
: est qat Ia aemallntem!une. J:lUi:. write fo JOhn C. Wolf; D.O.,
~ ina lnten:Oine the E. coH '*-11 Olalo Ualwnlty College of O.teo: dill n pe:aeat ui&gt; the .stln aa be pM1t1c MecUdne, GI'!IIVenor U.U,
' ,: f9ia!cl ,.., the WODIM'I uret!ft - ·Atbens, OWo 45701.)
-

'

-

which frequently exemplified the

..

evil. One review stated that the
"tap the roots of myth buried in all
our minds ...
"A Winter's Tale: the Breathing
Method" which Mrs. Hooverchose
to bigbligbt extensively, is from
''Different Seasons," a roUection of
four novella with one depicting
each season of the year, wbicb bas
become a national best seller.

By ED PEI'EISON

eflts thai have been reduced under
the old rule, you wUI need 10 contact Socl•l Security If yqu want
your benefits recomputed to the
higher amounL Your new benefit
amount can beilin in JanWII')'.
Benefits for your spouse, even .
your divorced spouse, and dependent children may inmasc, roo. If
you are the widow or widower of a
deceased weekend military
reservist, your benefits can also be
recomputed.
If you think this Important
change in the law applies to you,
write, visit, or call Social SecUrlt:y
now. The toll-free number is 1· 800-TI2-1213.

years 19S7 tbroagh 19877 If so,
you lhould be aware of a JeCCDt
cbange In thc law that may affect
your Soclal Secmtybenetlll. .
Under the new rule, your Sot:ial
SeCurity bendlts will no longer be
reduced bcattse you receive a peasion based, In ·jllrl, 011 prior milltary reserve duty.lf yon are already
receiving benefits, !bey can be
recomputed to give you a. higher
amounL
Effective 'Jan. 1, 1995, neilber
the Govermneilt Pension Offset ncr .
the Windfall FJiminatlon Provision
will be applied to the Social Security bellefits received by members c.
formermembersofmllitaryreaerve
components, including the National
Guard.
Ordinarily, these provisions of·
the Social Security law reduce ben·
efits when a perllllllil Jeeeiving a .
government pcusion and Is also ellgible for Soclal Security benefits.
Under the new rule, if you
served in the military, whether on
active duty or inactive duty, and
illso worked in a job thai qnaUfles
you for Social Security beueflta,
you can now receive your pension
from the military and Social Security benefiiS unreduced because of
your mill1ary peaaion.
If you are already receiving beri-

2UTER

c

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.

WE RESERVE THE RIGHI ·JO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD DEC. 11 THR., DEC. 17, 1994.

RC COLA
PRO DUOS

WE NOW ACCEPT WIC COUPONS

24 PK 12 OZ. CANS

Our special page(s)

''For Children Only"
(16 years of age or younger)

Will be published
FRIDAY, DECEMBER 23RD
'

in the ·

U.S.D.A. BONELESS BEEF

_.-ONLY- .

·•$Iooo
,-...----·

U.S.D.A. CHOICE BONELESS BEEF. .

$ 59

PIZZAS

$ 29

280Z.

2
(
Bacon •••••••••••••••••~..... 69
$
79
79(
Cheese ••••••••••••••• ~...... 1
,Turkeys ••••••••••••••••••••
Bottom Round Steakl·~

Per Picture . Prepaid

CAROLINA SLICED

· · · IIIMijlod oriwlopo to rotum your
•'

CHEF
BOYAR
.
DEE 2 CHEESE

Chuck Roast .........~~•••. 1

The Daily Sentinel

pllolo

12·22 u.

U.S.D.A. CHOICE T·BONE OR

Official Entry

SWEET SUE

LONGHORN COLBY

SWIFT BUnER BALL

CHICKEN BROTH

.

14.5 OL

$449

_-.

Porterhouse Steaks .'1·

Form

.UCKfl'CUBED

. .

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' ' $249

Steaks •••••••••••••~••••••:~
THORAPPLE VALLEY
Weiners •••••~! •z.
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....l:l

ZESTA
CRACKERS

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SHORTENING

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1.000 to choose from .
Christmas Tree s. Bulk
Candy. Craft s. Amish
Jelly. Apple Butter.
C&lt;1ndy &amp; Jelly G1ft s.
Handmade B&lt;1sket s

ell

.g='

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KARENS
GREENHOUSE

G)

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Southern H1gh School
St. Rt. 124 Racine. Oh

3

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614-949-2682

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Pizza .................... ,
.Salmon -••••.•~!·!!:~~•••••••••
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Muday tm S••llaJ
a·AM·lO PM

Poinsettias

Thomas· P. Pnee,
.
M.D. DABOG ,
FACOG, FACS announces the relocation
of his office from the Holzer Clinic to
the Medical Plaza, 936 State Rt. 160, ·
Gallipolis, Ohio after January 1, 1995.
He -will be associated there with Drs.
Abels, Subbiah and-Vallee. He will
conthiue his. hospital .ptactice. at the
Holzer· Hospital. Medical Plaza offers
laboratory, · ~-ray, and A.C.R.
accredited and FDA approve'd
mammography. Appointments can be
' made by calling (614) 446-~620. ·

PEPSI COLA
PRODUCTS

StoRE HOUR$

Social, Security t)enefits
nolongerreducedfor
military reservists
SocW Securtly M.....r
Have you served In the Nallmal
Guarder the mllilal'y mervea?
Were you on weekend military
reserve Wtr ll any lime during the

Daily Special In Our Bakery
10 am until 2 pm Man- Sat.
Hot Dogs 2fS1.00 .with sauce
3fS1.00 plain
.

PICTURE YOUR C..ILD
AMONG THE ...

An addition to the afternoon's
progmm featured a series of musical selections perf«med by Clarice
Erwi1_1 at the piano and Jeanne
Bowen on tbe Sl!XOpbone. First
were bean! three compositions by
Scou Joplin, "The Entertainer,"
"The Mapleleaf Rag," and
"Swipesie," followed by an
arrangement of the classic "Pacbel·
bel Canon."·

primal struggle between good and

Sentinel P~ge 11 '

Ohio

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S~I!S MISS HOT COCOA..

10

·peadline:
frlday,,Dec. 16 at 3 ~M
•.
..
. .
Mail or bring the' entry form to:

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court St
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

.

,,••

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TONYSFROZEN

C BANQUET FROZEN

SURF
DETERGENT
980Z.

.

TV Dinner ••••:-.1~::-........

.

Congratulations to
the winner of our 3
ll)inutes shopping
spree·
Mrs. Goodwin,
Wolfe Pen Rd.,

�(

12-:-:
'• _P_ag.;;.•__
-The;.;,;,;:.:D;.::•::.:.IIy:=Se~n:,::tl:.:,:ne~I-----~:-------...!:P~om::er!oz:y:· :M:::;Id~d~le~po~-rt~,~O~h~lo~-----_:...__ _ _ _ _~W!!!ed~n~N~d~a~~~·Dacei~~m~be~·~r,!1~4,~_1!99!!!,M

..---An Eastern Christma

NATO generals slate.meeting·!. .
on defending peacekeepers ·:·.
,By PAUL AMES

· Allloclated Pre. Writer

The F.Mr.amp Sdlonl Bud performed a medley of~..._ at
·
concert
Smday aftei'IIOUII • a member of the brus aec:tloo deiiiOIIItntea abon. EHS Band Director
Clllner, Ia ... lint
director, Aid the band ... clrumtkally lmpro\ted and the atudenu .,. DOW ·~~~:quluted with ••· Below, parenll and 1tlldenll ollR"ed paiutlngs and
dnwlup
liiP Khnolltudellll dlartJI8 ID Iota nl loa at tile moual Cbrlstmu con·
·
cerL (Sentlael..._ 'f Gecqe Abate)

s.....

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41

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~

'I

ltRUSSELS, Belgium- As
Serbs bauer, bJocli!!!le and bumillaic U.N. troops in Bosnia, NATO
defense ministers today called ibeir
top generals 10 an emergency meeting on ~lans to tougben ibe peacekeepers defenses.
A senior Y.S. official, speaking
on condition of anonymity, said the
decision marked a dramatic
turnaround at NATO, wbere military planners bave been rushing in
recent days to prepare for a possible U.N. withdrawal.
Gen. John Shalikashvili, chairman of the U.S. Joint Chiefs of
Staff, and the other NA~enerals
will decide whether to se additional resources to the igbtly
armed U.N. troops, the official
said. He did not say wbetber tbat
meant more soldiers or weaponry.
· The meeting will be held Monday in the Dutcb city of Tbe
Hague.
·
At separate talks before today' s
NATO meeting, U.S. Defense See. retary William Perry met with his
. British and Frencb counterparts to
review plans to give more teeth to
the peacekeeping force.
· Options include redeploying lbe
24,000 peacekeepers to more
~ecure positions; granting them
increased powers to return fire if
attacked; extending NATO air
cover; and creating a fortified supply corridor from Sarajev9 to
coastal ports.
· •
But any sucb plans will need
U.N. &lt;tpproval. "We &lt;tte not in tbe
lead of the operation," NATO Secretary-General Willy Claes said
today.
Allied military planners bave
been drafting plans for up to
45;000 NA'ID ttoops to ride shotgun if the peacekeepers are forced

to reueat under f1te.
Howe~er, the 16-nation North
Atlantic Treaty Organization bas
stressed that pulling tbe blue bel-

RECIPROCATING
SAW )'lntsl ';

,,,Tile culprit, whose'Perverse
outlasted tbe careers or
DIADY federal agents and police
aftlc:a1 trying to ird: bis.vaporous
~nil, II blamed for tbe death SaiUrlay of 'lb(lmiiJ 1. Mosser, ·a New
)'cirt"advcrtiSjJig exeCutive.
.
·Mauer died wben a videocastettc-aizcd package se111 to bis
N'cll*eaJdwell, N.J., home exploded iD Ilia ldtdlen. Tbc FBI IIYS be
W. ~- lalest victim in a Sling of
~fol'inl b()D!bin:gs tllit have
~ bas

"BAD HABIT'
FRIDAY,
DECEMBER16

Cocker Spenlell
Bred for
Quality and
Temperament

Downspouts

Gutter Cleaning
· Painting

417110 llle Hill Rd.

FREE ESnMATES
9:49-2168

lf&amp;rlp.rn.

young alta lor Nle.

"-ccne,Oh

11&lt;H4W417

111a4TFN

Friday, Dec.
16th 6:30 pm at

•

..''"

Forked Run

•

Club

Sj)ortsman

_,•

L$1030

SAYRE TRUCKING

15148

O'DELL LUMBER
CO.
Iii

".
..'

. SAVINGS•••

••'.

.

f&amp;A Tree Service
.Tree Trimming and
Removal- Yard Care
· Free Estimates
614·992-4447

1'1"1 WORm UPZA!'IRO
·ftT OLABIDUIDI

in the £Iassiftedsl

·'

"

TREE TRIMMING
AND REMOVAL
Ugllt Hauling,
'
Shrubs Shapped
and Removed
Mls. Jo.ba. ·

1111 Slack

.•
••

!•:
;: ·

a window deanw, 1tarted the 11111gadne willa a
friend J-a=:lted tltat the lnduatry needed a pabo
llcatlon dedicated to ltllll-. (AP Photo/Steven
Lewis)
.

DOING WINDOWS • R!clard FallrJ Ilea
amtd so~e receaaa:.:•ea of bil maaalllne
AaMrlcan Window
r _ , bls ' - Ia El
Sobrante, Cdf., Nci¥. 10. Fabry, wbo ued to be

~f Magazine is window on world of
-!~: professional

window washer

:: · BJMICIIELLELOCKE
says frequent contributor Bob
·' Allodated p._ Writer
Williams of Cascade Window
' : . · EL SOBRANTB, Calif. (AP) Cleaning in Portland. Ore.
: • 'I'bere's Time. 'Ibn's Newaweet.
·As a promotion blurb puts it,
·: There's Fortune and Forbes and "Before American Wil!dow Clean:: Playboy.
-'
er came on the scene. in ~986, the
: • ·. Aad tbeu tbere' s American only way to get qu1ck mdustry
·: · Window Cleaner, the magazine · know-bow was to lddnap a window
:- tbat proudly declares Itself the cleanerandmakebimorbertalk."
0: "Voiee of tbe Profeslional WinAWC founder Rod Woodward
:: dow Cleaner."
got the idea of a trade magazine
: •. Hub?
wblie traveling to promote a swivel
· : · That' 1 a tr.&amp;': reacdon, says squeegee be bad invented. Tbc first
mag.- pub
Ridwd Fabry. issue was S,OOO sample copies of
: • · "Everybody conslsteDtly, no mat- an eigbt-page newsleuer.
.
·! ter what their station in life. is AirTbe notion of providing a public
~·: : prlsed."
forum for wbat bad been a frag:; · If yon tblnlt it's bard to fill six mented industry caugbt oo quietly.
..;- 40-page Issues a year, you're Tbe second issue doubled to 16
, ' wroog, be says.
pages and today, ibe magazine bas
~l
Since 1986;Fabry and bis acirculatiooof9,000,Fabrysaid.
:~ intrepid contributors have been
Texas window cleaners Jim and
::\ reporting on tbe ·windc&gt;W washing Jacinda Willingbam {lecidCd to
:f Industry; coverin&amp; everything from bold annual woltsbops, .cventually
:J tips on removing troublesome leading to the formation of the
• 1 screenbum to c:linibing tbe ladder
International Window Cleaning
! of successful bigh-rise wort - Associallon in 1989.
f~ witbquttilling off.
Tbc association bas since tacit:!' · In a ~nt issue, investigative . led such )KOblems as safety regula•r•_reporters even pulled out thai old lions and!s working .~ll getting
:~ jOdnlalistlc standby, anonymons some lobbyinf clouL ·
:w· Waabington soun:es, for an expose
"Now we re beginaing to feel
·: on tbe secrets of White House win- our power," says~­
:•: dow cleaning.
Many AWC ·articles deal with
:: : "For someone wbo wants to serjous is~ues, aucb Ia safety,
-; leaiD about Ibis·industry ... it's·tbe insurance and equipment. There is
:: . ouly :place.they can really go," 'also ligbter fare, sucb as "Your
•
:·'
.•

::&lt;

,,

·:

Mrs. Mildred Jacobs, Mrs. Reg!- Mrs. Kenzil Scranton, DaJble. Ari·: na Swift, Mrs. Jessie Mae Brannon, q~as, and Jordan, Mrs. Brenda
: 1111d Mrs. Clyda Allcnswortb were Haggy and Kim, Mrs. Judy Wolfe,

.• ~}.!~~!_guests of Mrs. William
: urueser on 'lbanltsgiving Day. .
·! Holiday guests at tbe bome or
• P,{ra. Ann Mash were Mr. and Mrs.
: P8tiJohnson, daughters, Kellie and
: Sam, and Mr. and Mrs. Wayne
.
1
:• Pl!Jlins andJesse.
~- Mrs. Rutb Preston of Suffollt,
· " Va. spent several dayallere visiting
Mrs. CliqoniJIICObs.
... . -Guesta at tbe-bome of Mr. and
} Mtl. James Giliuore' Were Mr. and

I

&lt;

lll COURT ST•.- , ·

•,

FOM£ROY,
OH.
.
(

~'

f.

eas~gW~i=~~t!t~~
House staff would not goon record
so Williams relied 00 sources, publie documents and eyewitness
accounts from bis fu-llung correspondents.

be:.~~=;=.:c:::

~! ;~:i~C.:~~:~~;dw/il'e~
rep&lt;l'l:

"The State Room windows
looked clean; bowever,llooked up
at tbe curtained fanligbts over interior doorways and noticed these

lr•••

Mrs. Sandy Gilmore·, Deanna
· Dorst, Mrs. Pam Glaze, and DemWI
Gilmore:
Mrs. Jeau Wrigbt bas returned
ft'om a Visit witb Mr. and Mrs. Jobn
Anderson and family in Cam•
bridge. ·
Friends visiting Mr. and Mrs.
Clifford Jacobs oo b.s. birth~y
were Diana Asb, Mr. and Mrs.
James Gilmore, Mrs. Steve Eblin,

"

,,

Kenny's Auto Center
264 .Upper River Rd.
Gal~is. OH 45631

for S.la

1-800-486-1590
Bus. (614) 446-9971

. One mile out
143 from Rt. 1
Tues. - Wed. - Fri. - Sat
Hi

• Craftsman Tools
•Toys
•Guns
Loads of Misc.
Buy-Sell-Trade
992-2060 101511 mo.

MODERN Sllrri,..ON
POMEROY, OHIO
Septic tanks cleaned &amp; portable toilets rented .
Dally, WMidy &amp; monthly rental rates .
Job sHes • Camp Sites • Family Reunions 6 Parties

.-

oEiectrlcal &amp; Plumbing
-Roofing
&lt;Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting alao concrete
work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C(. YOUNG III
1182-6215

Pomeroy, Ohio

W10'821frt

WEIER'S
CHIISTIW
TREES
RUTLAND, OH
Homegrown-Carefully
Sheared Scotch &amp;
White Pine 4' &amp; Up with
a great selection of
larger trees.
Call742-2143 or

CHR1ST MAS
TREES &amp;
WREAT HS
Ready Nov. 23
$10 &amp; Up
Open 10 am- 9pm

Bolt Snowtltii'S Lot

S.R. 124

Rutland, Ohio

614·742-3051

lEST RECEPTION

NOW O FFERING GENERAL HAULI

For the best in satellite
sales and service contact
Bryan or
Best Reception.

Limestone, Sand, Gravel and Coal
WE HAVE A-1 TOP SOIL FOR SA!W

Ll

·We have even bener
and quicker service.
-Over 10 yrs
experience
- Service on all system
types.
- Best prices all around
the area.
992-2903 or 992-6320

20

Emergency Phone 985

3~ 1 8

, et

011 Ste~ Ctm~llfe Aute 81., R1~1lr

PRECISION AUTOMOTIVE
Chuck Stotts
614-992-6223
Free Estimates

BINGO

Insurance Work Welcome

StaleRl33.
Darwin, Ohio
--

1-

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.
New Homes • VInyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL ·•
FREE ESTIMATES

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS

614·992:7643

Spec:laUodng In Cuatom
Fra1111 R.palr
NEW AIISIOPARTS FOR
ALL IIAKElliiO.OEL-6

IU·tit~

sed &amp; Bo ded

992-3954

Racine American
Legion Poa.l 602
Now having Bingo
every Sunday Night
Starting 6:45 pm
Doors open 4:30 pm
The more people
playing the bigger
the pay-off.
Save ad for 1 free card.
949-2038 or 949-2044

(No Sunday Calls)

o,

.
,RJC

o&amp;~ ~L~~'I

~ ~

· · ·112-5553 OR

TOLL FREE t-t•t ..1 0071
• '" '

~'-'

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

. DARWIN,o~!~"'""'

Resident and Small Electrical Repair
(Lamps Welcome)
Home Repair Also
992-5251
992-7162
..-----------------.,
John
Doug

.ILrrY

-~
f ==:;:=~~·;'"'.~...,~~===~~

dows
platesbaven'
lookedt been
smoky.
done
These
in a winlong
time.

Mrs. Aon Mash, and Dwi~bt
Cuililll a1 bis bonle on Laurel Cliff.
'Tbc Rev. and Mrs. Pl:ter Tremblay and family spent Tbanltsgiviog weekend witb Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Paulman of Dansville, N. Y.
1 Tbe Rev and Mrs. William
Williams JPCDI tbe weekend witb
Mr. and Mrs. James Gilmore and
attended tbe Cbristmas dinner at
tbe Free Metbodist Cburcb.
Mn. Aan ·Masb and Mrs.
Wayae Pullins and son, Jesse,
spent 1 day in Columbus recently
. viiitillg relalives.

c.,. ••, ,•••, '

UsadlppU•acea

1

Lau rei Cliff news notes~

'.•

'T he Daily Sentinel

Ooss and Dogs: Staying Warm &amp;
Dry," and "Zen and the An of
Window Cleaning.''
Tbe July-Augnst issue featured
a composite cover sbowing Bill
Clinton, sqlleegCC in band, in front
of tbe Wbite House.
Inside, Williams reported that
tbe ''Wbltc House window cleaner
pulls bis squeeaee straigbt across
the window panes I" That's bad,
because it apparently leaves a horizontal line visible to eagle-eyed
peers. The article did give credit
for a perfect job wiping off tbe
mullions, slender vertical bars
between tbe ligbt:s of windows.

Kenny's is the place to co•
when you need a car rental.
We h••e

For All•for

DAVE'S
SWAP SHOP

oNawGar11gea

.

Kenny's Auto Rental

DU'I
IPPLIIICI
IDVICI

-· ... ..
ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTROOION

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE
-Room Addition•

=~ ·

11121194

-·

"C

J

OR CUT YOUR OWII
Craft Shop
Located on Cherry Ridge: From At. 33, tum East
Bat Darwin onto Rt. 681 . Go 4 miles to Cherry
Ridge Rd. 1 1/2 miles to tree farm.
FOR .SIGNS. 10:00 am til dar1&lt; Nov. 25 1hru Dec.
. Sun.

1Wt1MII

. .. .

&gt;• .

to 4:00 P.M. Deily

FRESH CUT TREES AVAILABLE

Riggs Tree Farm

614-992·5515

915-4473
71'l2/M
. - ·- ..
. - . ·-

..

~ours: 10:00 A.M.

BUD FORD'S

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

992·2269

oCompkltl
Remodeling:
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES
!

:.

ITEMS

711 ~Third
Middleport

CHRISTMAS TREES

Call

•New Homes
oGaragea

:-:
•:

11+1116-4110-

..

-

·'•'

m••••ge.

1-

I

'

VINE ST. AT THIRD AVE.

614-742·2131

IIEW &amp; USII

St. Rt. 124
Racine, OH
Cal949-2734

~,.. • p.m.INve

Choose and
cut your tree.
(or we'll cut it lor you)

Joei.'S.yre

IIOW
J&amp;D FlU
MARIO '.

Maplewood Lake

IIHS
CHRISTMAS TREES

R......... R.t.a

Gun Shoot

.
.,

oul ol

. lib the

Uinestone
&amp; Gravel

;

L1:

Cundiff's
Custom
Cut

~lizlng In· Pall~
lor lhow and compMiona.
StudiiNic».&amp;pupplee,

MUZZLE
LOADING

GllNDER

DEER CUT &amp;
WRAPPED

,.Jntlng.
111 do II lor
you. V., I IIID ftllal1.
frw Eatllllllll

9:30 P.M.-1:30AM.
•

4• DISC

UIDI'S
Plllnll I CO.
laterlor &amp;
Exterior

Gutte~

HAULING

I

•

I

(614) 1185-3561 or
992-5335 11114/lfn

ROOFING
_
NEW-REPAIR

KENNEl .

3 Announc.menta

.ostectives rap FBI secrecy
·surrounding serial bomber

bomber."

Howard ._ WrlteHJ

KIT

By MICHAEL FLEEMAN
cal scientifiC testimony.
Associated Prea Writer
' 'The defense wants to preselit
LOS ANGELES -OJ. Simp- as mucb technical information as
· son's attorneys bave tried ooe possible in front or the jury in tbe
novel approach after another to hope that tbe technical information
bave evulence excluded from bis wiD only leave tbe jury mon: contrial, mostly without snccess.
fused, and open to the defense IO'be
Tbcirlatestefforttopstbemall.
able to say, 'If you're confused,
The defense wants to bold a you bave doubt, and you'll bave to
hearing on ibe admissibility or cru- acquit,''' be said.
cial DNA evidence in front ·of the
A preirial DNA h~ng could
jury rather tban outside tbe panel's last as long as eillht weeks and cost
'presence, according to a motion_ Simpson $500,000 for legal fees
filed Tuesday.
· and expert testimony. If Ito'
Under the proposal, opening approved ibe admissibility of DNA
statements would begin Jan. 4. evidence-andbebasrarely·sided
Then, in mid-trial, jurors would witb the defenie .so far -many of
bear Iawyers·discuss whether DNA the same issues would bave to be
,tests on blood Samples talcen from
fougbt;~~~~,t again at trial wbcn attarSimpson aod the crime scene are a1eys try to show jnrors bow mucb·
reliable and should be presented.
weight should t,.. given to the eviSuperior Court Judge Lance 110 dence.
1
would decide whether jurors sbould
In tbeir motion, Simpson's
·bear about tbe actual results.
attorneys agreed that if be is con: Legal analysts said they bad victed In the June 12 imlfe ltiliiogs
:never beard of a tactic qllite like of ex-wife Nicole Brown Simpson
~Ibis one. And wbile they .g~ve ~e
and ber friend Ronald Goldman,
;defense bigb ~ for ~gioall!f, the fact that jnrors bean! the DNA
'!bey suggest the 1dea won t fly Wltb discussion would oot be used ~
J to because the decision on whether · ' grounds for 111 appeal
;to. admit.the evidence does not lie
But if tbe judge admus ,ibe evi;witb tbe )Drydeoc:e, Simploo'~ lawyers reserved
: . "TbiS motion shows a fair ibe rigbt to use tbat decision as a
amount ol cbutzpab on the part of basis for 8RlCal
:the defense," said law professor
Tbe judge :.Vas to set a date
;Myrna Raeder of Southwestern today for considering the motion If
:Uni~ers_ity. "If they c~. pull Ibis be turns down tbe defense req~t,
~. 11 w1U be a real roup.
legal analysts said it's back to
, Prosecutors would not co'!!- square one: a DNA bearing ouiSide
JD!=IJL But on Monda~, Deputy Dis- the I?reseoce of the jury before
:met Attorney Marc!a Clark sug- opemng stalements.
·
;g~ted sbe wo~ld ObJect ~ a midAlso on the agenda for today:
;tr,ial DNA ~g ~use 1t would the continuation of a bearing
~sttact ~e Jury while_tbe prosecuregarding statements Simpson
:UOn is tryillg to prove Its case; .
m!lde during a jaiibouse meeting
. Legal analysts a!!~ Umvers1- With fontball-star-tumed minister
:ty ol Sou~ Calif~ta Ia~ pro- Rosey Grier. Tbe statements
.lessor ~m CbemennJ:kY satd the reportedly were overbeard by an
jury m1gb1 bave to sll tbrougb inmate wbo iben told a jail guanl
,weeks or mind-numbing, tbeoreli'
·

By M.UK FIUTZ
AP N•llonal Writer
; Tbc FlU~ to cbaoge its tactics if It wants to end tbe murder;
ous spree of a aerial bcimber who
bal eluded autboritlea for 16 years,
·say two bomicide detectives wbo
wOrked oo ibe case.
"This is not an investigation
you can conduct in secret and be
successful." said LL Ray Bioodi, a
Sacramento, Calif., detective wbo
relired last year after seven years
-on the Unaboalber case. "There
· are people w!IO blow tbe bomber.
Tbey just don't realize be's the

THE WATERING
HOLE

CORDLESS DRIVER
DRILL

.

•Aft Mak81 o42 Yllll
oflltRel-. ._
• Dryell- Rlngn
-.igll'lklfl of-11
oOIIhwoH.W.Hea1111
olillciOWiftl •Diepollll
•lhlnke Mllge 1o
Sunoundlng-

PRESENTS

W' VARIABLE
SPEED DRILL

~ -·

IIIIICI

Even Santa Needs AMakita For
CORDLESS DRIVER

. .. ..,

ofoctory Aulh011Z8d P &amp;~lce

O.J.'s lawyers want
to discuss DNA tests
openly before jurors

killed one other person 1IDd wounded 23 in eight states since 1978.
Tbe FBI kept any connection
between tbc first 10 bombings a
seaet until ibe Dec. 11, 1985 dealb
of Hugh Campbell Scrutton, wbo
was killed wben a bomb exploded
bebind bis Sacramento computer
store.
· Biondi arn1 tbe otber Saaanlento County .S heriffs Department
detective assigned to tbe case,
Robert Bell, said tbe, FBI ini~y
refused to go public with ~led
information about tbe links to the
previous bombings. Even after the
FBI acknowledged a connection
and made a public appeal for information, it released few detaill. ·
The culprit bas been dubbed tbe
Unabomber because of a: fondneu
!or targeting people wbo wort at
universities and aitllnes. Tbe FBI
. describe\1 tbe bomber in a profile
I!C\'etal ~ago aa a "quite Intel- ·
llgent" white male In Ills 30s at
40s witb a bigb ICbool educaiion. ·
Tbc largest reward in federal blsto-.
ry, $1 million, is being offered for
information leading to l)is capture.

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

mets out would be a risky last .'
resort. and NATO's biggest military powers are seeldpg ways to ·:
keep the UN. force in place;

WJIDOW IYI IWI

• • Custom Made
• Solid vinyl

~1

. replace"ent

Call Sentinel'

CLASSIFIEDS!
992-2156

windows ;'
• Fre.e Estimates

· · ·• $200 Installed
Call For betails
'VISIT OUR SHOWROOM" '
110 Court St Pom9:-oy, Ohio •
"Look 'for' the Red and WhlleAwnint"

992-4119 AI"-Owiir l-aG0-291·56tO '

�Ohl.,

NEA Crosaword Puzzle ·..

BRIDOI:

.•
4

40 Tower of Ice

ACROSS

PJ{ILLIP
ALDER
BE.\TilE BL VD,TM by Bruce Beattie

Announcernents

Rentals

41 Houses for Rent
beaup:nllll twq
·
CGntroctod
.OilJOOW
olllor lhln myooll.br ~U-.y
""fOllY" B. Rllll&amp;
Jo'a Couft!!Y Cnllo on RT 1131
!jut to
~

RA••-oad
liomo made • - . - - . ,

...........r. . . . . .

c~oeo

lllpt,

Dopoolt, 114-441-11111.
D'owniown.
-·

'

i i

policy reqUires

bodroomo,

oJI

Help wanted

11

Wantlld to Do

18

r~ fill

woodbllmar. -

Pupplol- Ill blacll, 11M Qoldon
All-/ Lab INI Chow 4

56

oaor

Pupplao, 4 1l2wlla. old. 4 onooir
whho, 2 block l - · llotllor

Lost&amp; Found

2
'Air Condhlenod,
No ...... ·-797-4345 Or .,...
245-«&lt;IM EV11tll1fiL
211r.' traitor, 111o tnllor 101 lor
lint, nlal'lltCI • do-'1, Rt ,_

Samoyod. 304-«1.~114.
SIK Fomalo Black, 1 :ran Malo
PuppiH1 2 Old, Clnoat
Dono l ~.ab, 514~4.

..._., ac. -

••*-!!!,

12 North, Loculi Rd. on ~ghl:

301..75-1011.

.........

No llltllf- lllllllhold fUr.
llflhlr1tl. vz 1111. .......... Rd. Pl.
-

Fmanc1al
lool·f01110lo Ellcllouncl (bllndl,

--

Aooallllonlotlob.ilf!,IJ
AI:
llocloal
- ...

m-aozt,tzo,_nl.
LoOt: Block Lab, U..lng

Conlnal Fnlgllt CUr1on Inc. II 1--_;:"!~~:;:~;.;:__ _

_T_,.,

Suolo1 Roclaoprlnp Ad, cal 114- · -llouto110, Qolllpolle.

Business

21

OpportunHy

--10011

filling

=

1_ , _1

""
tllo CIHIOVAUEYPUBUSIIINQCO.
vonlllolbod tllvfllon, pn&gt;lltablo Noolnll•• t!IM rou do DW...Copl114-

=.:::r,:":..:"':..•=z
-. and limo
floml, no 1111 to
- - on. Coli lloyd, 1-ZIB-

::.,~==!.':':

Ulo_.,..

mol Unll""' -

2421

lnnotlgllod

Real Estate

&amp; VlclnHy

All11111 ootate.advel!lalng In
thla nawapaper Is subject to
the Federal Fair Housing Act
ol1968 whk:h makes nIllegal
to adve- "any prelerence,
llrnhllon or dlstnmlnatlon
baled on race, colot, religion,

u..-

773-578!.

Auctl- Cot. Oocor E. Click,
Ll.:.nM I 754-M l llonclod,

make any such preference,

Cloon Lato lloclol Can Or
Trucko, 1987 llotlola Or -~
Sm~h Buick
1
Eaotom Avonuo, Ooiiii""'L

This newspaper will not

2lfZI. We bur-

Ralph Waldo Emerson claimed, " A
great part of courage is the courage of
having done the thing before." This is
true in bridge. It is much easier to find.
the right play when you have seen the
theme before. But even when I he s1tu·
ation is new, counting and deduction
will usually lead to the winning de·
fen se or declarer :Play.
•
Today·s deal occurred during thi s
vear' s World Women' s Team
Championship.
1 don 't mind South's opening with
two aces and a king, though I would
need a better club suit. And I Uke the
one·no·lrump rebid, showing the hand
type as quickly as possible. But if it is
right for South.to rebid one no-trump,
North should check back for a 4 ·4
spade fit. Four spades makes easily.
Sitting West was Lily Khalil, from
Cairo. Against three no·lrump, she led
her fourlh·highest heart. Declarer
won with dummy's queen, East signal·
ing an odd number by dropping the
five. Declarer played a spade to her
ace and a second spade, scooping up
Lily's queen with dummy's king. Now
came a heart back to her king.
Lily wondered why declarer wasn't
playing on diamonds. The only log•cal
answer was that South held the ace. If
so, it looked as though declarer had
nine tricks established . The only
chance for the defense lay in clubs ,
despite South's opening bid. So, Lilr
won with her heart ace and 1mmell1·
ately switched to the club six. Four
club triclts later, the contract was one
down .

knowllngly a"""'ll

'__-·~For-_...,.
.........

advertisements for real estate
wnk:n Is In l'lolallon o1 the law.
Our readers ""'hereby
lnlonned that all dwellings

.......... wlolootronlc
-~ - $1)0, wll - · tor

Uwlna ltoont ..... $200, .,...

llNJZGAFTER I P.M.

FRANK &amp; ERNEST

Antiques

\J.

- · good canofl. Juot In Tlmo For CMot. . .: 2
lion, S250; lltllquo 1n1M: 114- Fomaloo l 1 Malo AKC Roaie112-a41.
1- lui T.nor P"upo •c,::::::::::..;..:,=,:.,.::-:--.~
·
Dloo.
WIU441Tiki
llololgonton, ltootoo, w.lhoro
Hold, 814
12711. llopootto To I:
· 1111011 """'•,.....,..
And 1lryon, All Rlooncllfonotl
lnolt, - - . 111.
A n d - ttoo """u,.. 57
Musl,...l
boil. w
,.,. 1... ooad

loy!.-·

... -

..... Arrm

IM=

::S 1a_.,-_,....
~-..,·ln,.,s..,..tr..,..u..,m_,e...,nt_s,_._.,

Poll
1by~- "' ...
Mfay 111'11
114oWz.a'IO
C:hrlatmM. ~ (Jr.
•
~

Fdtlll Suppl1rs

IIIO!do,

~

&amp; Li vestock

twu'

~.-.._

s.

LATf TO MAIL

POfT
OFff{,E

$1000.-.,...

1011.

CIIIC '-'f!do':O1144111..... '

,,

MAIL T~~lt'l

,.

vans a. 4 WD'•

Pllnt PIUL 104o171-4014.

,.y

Cti,ISTMAS C,Afl.l&gt;f
~AP.LY, SVT IS ·IT
jlll)~rn TOO ~A,l..Y TO

-------

73

.TOO

"An?

BORN.LOSER
61 Fann Equipment

~£':&gt;, Vt~INifo.,
~~~~

scro~X£!

Phillip Alder's new book, "Get
Smarter at Bridge," is available,
. autographed upon request,for
$14.95 from P.O. Box 169. Roslyn
Hts ., NY 11577·0169.
ll i994NEA

,,.._..ML

are available on en equal

Uon ... - - ut. 31'10,

~ F1m1 8111dna FUll 3t Homes fOr Sale
Time /On Cal C1 ..... 'Tooho
111111 .. Dopindablo, 3 l1*oaac ..._ a 2. &amp;r
A p I Iibll, ~ Will-

To .. Tnlnod. ..... n.=.~J!
- T o 1ICCI P.O. lu 518, lERIP.IL .
ICorr, Olt 4ll4i.
8toll ol1loll IIIII _..,_
a.._
-''"'
111r1o Old,
On
I AoneIIMoll
1 VZ Y11n
loneol ....
........ CIION R..... tii,OOO,
OIIJIII
buolo
IIIII lncfultry. Alllll In n· ~~

._,..,lllll_

I'M

INTER.VIE'"IN(r
OI(Til. ! HE 'S HALF
PUER.TO RIC.AN , 11ALF

lltiiiiiU
....... to ...,.. Lloo* •
Aonlrloon ..,., ....... -

ooollo, ....... Fnod, - AOIN.

I

,

....

I"IE~

I CAN

I

r:.:""'...:' .::==x ::.~
....__'*lllo,

---

odmtnfll.-hlo""' ~

I . . . _ , 2 lla4ho, IIIII
Puoop,
1 -.

a. .......

=.,ron-. 112.000.
For ...

t340IIIa.

-

..:..~·-=~

11

18

HtlpWinted

Wanted to Do

p':i

-

Serv1ccs

~.:n:.b~ !AvoiY s ....... ADirtmont In
AeacJr To Be

114 ttl WO

Point

P I - , 111111 Hove
Clll After

---:\
6P.II.514
4

• ,Home
lmpnwements

\l:rrl.

Modem 1 B1droan1

Apartmen~,

T1 ansport at 1on

ASTRO-GRAPH

71 Autos lor Sale

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

,.

¥your

~=--

Furnished
-

-

Aooma

141'711, ........ -

hamiOILNi6
""' ....... ,....,...
... 1 R· -

I

monthl Filii 1o4 ,.._ Only

Thu~y.

=~MporntO.

35 loti lo Aci'IICie
4""'"' 011 - - ...... Cor&gt;
nor 0 1 - n . t And • Rood, tM,ooo, 11""31Jo'lltt.

"""""'Couo!tY
tor - ·- 112 Nortltiii!J
ill
~
Cuotono
log
........
114112DIL '

I:
I•

XKWCCW .
ODWCCH
SJ E C

DZRGAZD
J

DZJME

ZKO

KM

Z K L

J

F C W N S

XKWCCW .

K

K

JMLGODWN

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ocxwco .·

SJV
DRWWCO .
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Make yourself an honest man, and lhen you may be
sure there is one less rascal in the

world . ~-

C 1994 by NEA, Inc.

,.Thomas Carlyle.

'::~~:~' s~~otl}A-~t.~s· ....
WOII

...,;;,:,::.:,;;;;_..;__ ldlttd ~y CLAY I. POUAN

Roorrongo lotton of 'tho
0 four
ocromblod words below to form lour llmPio -dt.

E MD I L

I I IzI

I
.__._I-~...1_._1',_.....I__. ..
SULYT
3

Ml
Is I I I .~

~M,:.,..:..I,....R_C,_P ~

We attended a very boring
seminar "That speaker was a
self made man, • my friend
..---------.,laughed, "and I think he sh?uld
SPAJ E R
have made one-······.

I

~~r=:=ER lETTERS TO

r I' r 1 r I' I
1

IIIIIIII

DECEMBER14I

- o d : - - W o o b r 32 Mobile Hom•
LfooMI Or llcanood Elfglblo.
for Sale
lointl .......,.To: Lifo Cou11111 lold111, A l l - Eula, 12dl !lUddy, 2 ....,_, LA,
.. ...... 110, Qollfpotll, Kit, D11, Lailnd R. Tall! Eloc.

Emp' c)'nlF ilt Serv1ces

MCPCW

Roqlllnd.

113-122-GZM.

=--=-~-a:-Ill.,

Olt4Mit.

'J

Waffle · Usher - Yours· Outset- TRUTHFUL
Before breaking up with his girlfriend my son asked
me for advice. I told him that one should be tactful while
being TRUTHFUL

Houll
By OWnor:
Locatod AI II Hllilll Drt.vo1
FoJrvlow 1-.tllon. Bohma
~ Can._..,_
Submit Sprln; Ylllof
With
lllory
. . -!!•.~ghlliltu od
.....,...., Bo1 c-a,.O!o Pl .
Coli · - - Drio:
Or .,...
.._Evonlngol
.........
In~

by Luie Campos

SCRAM-LETS ANSWIRS

Country Sldo ~-. 2 llodrocimo, w-d.~ HooMJp,
CA,

8 Score
9 Second of a
group
10 Waste metal

Celebrny Crptwf cryplograms are created from QuotaiiOI'II by famous people, past and IQia'tl
Each letter ., the ciPher stands lor anomer Todays clue · G equals U

•

Building
Supplies

........ -

•

CELEBRITY CIPHER
'

e ~~~~rs~~~E~mus I'

TEOO~

~~

1llnl . . 1111« good ooodtlon,

Gardner
7 Observer

Complete tho chuckle quoe.d
by ftllin; In the miuing words
L....L-.1-....1.-L-~--' you dovolop lrom slop No. 3 below.

t Plgo " - Fill Top Cllulao,
......, Trootoo', 114-m'

BEAliTtFUL APUTIIIENI1I AT
BUDGET PRICEI AT .JACKSON
ESTATES. 131 Joolalon Plko
from t22i to tze8. Wolkto ,...,
6 movloo. Cal 114-441-2568.
EOH.

. 1 Tiny
2 Above (poet.)
3 Gungrp.
4 Pricey
chocolate
brand
5 Female
aoldlara (abbr.)
6 Actress

1-....:;..jg,.:..,,~..;,;_:;"Tj'-Tj:;7-t U

opportunity basis.

tppltco-

~ ~NO..., IT'S

organ, Wll
- Conoldor

Cllllllaup)
. . . 1Mit .,. ahuallla

lloiMia!on - .
....... IIIII
.flay""""'
.a.!dJ
oolui I
....__.
-••••M
Whhl T.. eoope.
• pplu Now
oec. ·24:
auto.,

A TWENT't'-DOLLAR
61FT CERTIFICATE.

S ROOIIII Plllly Flllnlohocl,
Wator, Trllll Pilei, No Plio, Jlor.
ter Ar•.•14 •·Uoo.

advertised In this newspaper

·
Corrlona,
~ - •- . .....
molnt.
,lobo.

52 Sponlng Goods

-----·

M'l CLASS ..

-

11D RATHER ~AVE

WOULDN'T 'I'OU LIKE TO
I-lAVE SOMEONE WHO LOVES
'I'OU GIVE 'r'OU A 600K
OF POETR't'?

A 800K OF
POETR't' .. I1M 61VIN6
IT TO A GIRL IN

,..':'=•••

limitation or diSCrtmlnallon.'

Pont!".':

__,R-__ _

Apanment
for Rent

TI-llS?

'IIIW7Ht..
- · ... lhor\llid. .lllngor.

...-

DOWN

By Phillip Alder

WI-IAT'S

WIIIDolwr•. _ _ . , ·

19Anger
21 Violet
24 Art deco
llluatrator
25Arubaand
St. Croix
27 Shouta
31 Nol11
32 Otherwise
34 Tranooctlon
35 Calllt- 37 Rowin~ tools
39 Jackie a 2nd
huoband

a....,.,._

Listen to
the line of play

STATION II

Pets for Sale

1pr. llllrle

tN-1228.
1uy or 111. Rhorlno Ant.....
2 Roome • Solh, No Kltchon, 1111'4 L llrlll. on 11t. 11c:;
UOOIIIo. AI ~~~~- lncW .....,• .,. Noun: fl.tw. 10•
114-444-7733, 1:111 1.111. to 1:00 ........... , 1:00
-5:00.
2bdmi. apta., 1dal oloclrlc, op.
pll1nc.. lumlohotl, llundiy 54 Miscellaneous
room
ochoci1
Men:..ndl•
In town.
1onotoonlloblo
II: VII'1 A..o. M1 or
call514.ft2471110H.
3 Room Fumlohod Apt., AI
UIUHin
Pllld.
llollinotaln
S235111onth. t1t ao-.1 Ave.
0111lpolla

origin, or any lntonllon to

Wanted to Buy

Docorltod · -...... -

5858.

Ford-or von, ........ 114-

ae1 familial status or nattonal

304..05-3430.

,.,_, old lampo~old inomOion, old
anllquo
fumft..._
lftuH.

Nlce 2 or 3 l:l•*oan mobile

homo In Mlddlopo&lt;t, 114-tltzo

1 and 2 bod- .....,11111111,
tumllhod and . . , - .
-ll'fty
nqulrod, no 30.01
...... 111 tlll:lpll.
1 br. lumlohotl .....,_, v.y
cloan, 1250
.
por '"".!~t 1181 53

PubliC Sale

full time •uc:tlonMr, compllte
auction
aorvlco.
IN,Ohlo l Will VfrFIIa, 304o

·-

Alhono, llartfng II $Z4CI300Jmo2 . - o-fllo, I'Mtt24181.

?"pit

&amp; AUctiOn

WV,ca1*-1450,

Fumlohod llobllo 1 flocl. I'M 441a4tl
room, 020 Fourth Avenue, GatSWAIN
llpollo, $2251Mo. Water Paid,
AUCmON l FURNITURE. 12
114-4-11 AharT P.M.
For nnt 2 ...,_, IIOIIar In OU..IIt., -polio.-.~
-W...o~-!'!!111'
Roclrwana,l14-11112-1031.
ok- 11 •
vrRAFUIINITURE ·
lloblll In tllo _ , .
4 lllllo Out Rt. 141
Willi, Ol!rboQo And ....
eluded. Jllll 10 mlnutoo from

44

Rick Poarwon Auctforo Com,..,y,

1

Root: 2 Bo..._, Nllurol 011
Fum-, In QoiiiDofll. 114-441- ~-- lion ~ H ~ a •
2003 Or 114-441-Mot,. s.r P.ll.
~·
• • -·
n - ~:
Don,
Forgot . Our REPO. lion.

ALL Yard Saloo Mull So Polclln
Advanco. DEADUNE: Z:OO p.m.
tho dov boloN tllo ad II to tUn.
Sur\dov odltloa • 2:00 p.m.
Friday. Monday od~IOII • 2:00
p.m. Solurday.

8

BROKE
TOE II

lfnod C1llnlz ..... - ·
..--.~­

PICKENS FURNITURE

18 Tu agcy.

.

lead: •2

BREAK tT AT
TH' RAILROAD

i:oo

2 Bod- llobllo Homo, Rt. T
North In Tllo QIIUpollo Chy
Uoi1f1e, 114 Ul 2411 No Ano. ·
Lllve lllllogoAnd- No.

Gallipolis

PAW!! YOU GOT TO

11 ·1'1--

maiH, 3 lamolol,l14-112·2405.

Yard Sale

TH' RAILROAD PAID $20.00
ELVtNEY $ 20.00 FOR A BROKE
FOR HER
TOE!!

$250. "" month $150.
-ll'fty "'-11. Tnoh pokl No

=~ ~75-tlm

SUrlnen
• 13 Acknowledge
· fronkly
14 Yale lludent
15 Uproot
17 Young1ter

'

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South
South
West North East
1 ..
Pass 1 •
Pass
All pass
1 NT
Pass 3 NT

2 bod.- $275. "" month
wo: ....~y dapoolt. 2 bocf.

Roollng zOYri. Eip. .
F- Eollmat11.11444&amp;-0104
Coli andllovo

614-Xl'-ot ...

7

. .=

Cl1tiUPf' HEA, Inc:.

:;~'".:,"':'.::lJ,.~m~ '1rt

SOUTH

.,

t~~"'
wt'-10\l:f

141'10 1 -

/loA 3 2

•A 9 S 2
•K 6.3
tA 9
.. 9 8 7 4

1&gt; ·•1

I te ll you it's

•IO 8 3
•10 7 5
tJ 10 8 4

Ol, LW.L ..

1111 fllynwlh Onnd "'"'· Vol,
4 .,_ Tlno, Goad . . .

114 14i •••

EAST

A!UlJO HERE LIJ ~ll£

••••
oon•tn. .... ~ '
lll2:21lll or 111243114.

actually an hour. three m1nutes. and ten second glass .''

Giveaway

Ref,
Wnt Cc1':!!!'_~1 ~1J, kill 123-M.304-t,_.

!I

42 a.toblle Homes
for Rent ·

Pretty llarkod Black l WhMo _ _.;_;...:;....;,;,;;;,;.;,:,;;.;;;__
HOUII Clt~_Approx. 10 lloo. Old,

6

1N7 Chevy lllonlo Carlo II, T·
lopo - . w!tlto l fluralntlr.

P.ii'o.~

"Our

•Q J 4
•K Q 6 2
•Q 5

W6U.,l-£UD, S!RA\.X?£R . .
WE HA'JE.ijT ~Ekl 'd:XJ

I

:...~~~-,

CMatmaa Pullllloo, llotllor
Boa;lo Wilt Bo Small Doge, 814-

•'

'IZitolarlpm.

1111 SoNttl QT, "~ Can-

mna•g•.

448-31m

• ·K J 7 4

tlon. ......., 12200. ....... - ,

Qol.

Clooo To

D..t

amokod doli avolloble. en..
lord'• Qroeory, - . . . . wv.
304-875-5404.
REDUCE· bum oft flit wllllo you
lloop. Tako OPAL, ovolloblo
Fruth Phormocy, lllddloport.
Roword tor lntormoUon portolnlnQ to thoft of n-·llolon from
Rodmond Rldao ..tdonoo. 243
Romlnglon rltiO, bolt ICtlon. ZZ
lla~ln Mini lloloa rlfloL nlplatod • ._. ft HlR plotol,
coclar grl,.. Jonnlngo Qolo
Force bOw. 304-GTWIIO, • n

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KIT 'N' CARL\'LEtt by L1rTy Wript

f.1 ere 11" 11111 se

1 ActrMI Anno
May5 Alii - lor
Chrlotmaa ...
I Youth org.

AniWtr to Pracrtaue , . _

42 Longed (for)
44Couml
46 Blllltird lho1
47 Hurtful peroon
50 Actor- Murroy
51
Gedclel
52 Dev1811on
57Hutunll
(abbr.)
58 !ludoy bn!w•
59 Author Hunter
60 ExelamaJion
61 Vegetoble
62 Aotronaut Slayton

.
P Bo
N
, something lhat the other finds obje&lt;;lion·
c/o thos newspaper, ·0 · • .4465
. • ew 1
E
· lr eli ns mighl gel oul
·NY
10163
"e
sure
Ia
stale
your
'
able. ven sma 11 In a 0
Yor.k · .
: :-"
·
·
0f hand. ·
zod1ac sogn .
·
-.1 1 22) y
on'l
21
CAPRICORN (Dec . 22·Jan. 19) Avoid CANCER (June
uY
ou w
·
work well under pressure today, so $tay
experimenting w1t~ unteste~ .procedures
n
or our duties and responsibilities.
al work today. Stock to 1rad111onal math· ~ lop
be ablelo cope witn a pile·
ads lhal you know w111 produce the
ou mig no1

ht

resulls you want
. '
.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fab .. 19) You m~ghl
not shop w1sely today 11 Y.ou have a
strong desire tor 1nstan1 gratification. You
•
may be tempted by a bum deallhat costs
·~-·
.•
- ·
more lhan 11 s worth.
PISCES (Feb. 2D·IIflrch 20) Oo nol
blame someone else 1or your own goo 1.

Dec. t5, 1994

Your affiliation wllh social and political
oroups may be a tremendous asset in the
year ahead. Don't be afraid to run for
o111ce nasked.
SAGfTT"RIUS (Nov, 23-Dec. 21) Your
independence and your mobi\lly could be
extremely lmportanl to ·you loday, so
avoid arrangements 1hat prevent you
fro'm moving around freely. Sagrttanus,
treat yourseff to a birthday 'gill. Send lor
your Allr'O-Graph pred'lcliona lor the ye~~r
ahead ey mailing 51 .25 to Aatro·Graph,

up today. II will make you look petty and
the scapegoat will hold it against you.
ARIES (M~rch 21 ·April 19H'repare to
ad1ust your th10k1ng today 1nslel'l' or holding onto obsolete methods. An
mind
and an altitude receptive lo 9llggestlons
Will take you tar.
.
·,
TAURUS (April 20-Moy 20) Do not-~ake
anything tor granted in your linanclal
.
I
careless some
deahngs today . I you get
:
•
.
type of loss - large or sman ~·is ~ble.
__ _1
.
GEMINI (oaoy
2hlune 20) You1and your
mate musl be carelul today not to· do

open

~~O (July 23-Aug. 22) Slay in control ol
n im ortanl development today.

~meo~ may lry to put you in a posnion

ld
longer call !he shots.
wl1ere you cou no
1
Don't lei thiS happen.
A
.,....,_. 22) You• probabi~
VIRG0 ( ug. ........,....
..
ihes tor success are only marg1nal ·~·• · ,L
.0 don't leave lhe late ol important mat·
lo h
Creale a plan and stick
tars up c a ·

nee

~~~~ (Sept. 2:1-0ct. 231 Make a con·
c8rted llflort to listen carefully today. You
be raaponsible 'lor passing valuable
along to others.
SCOIIPIO (Oct 24-folov. 22) Be carelul
.·
, •·
toda 'especially K
In ~usl~~~-~llngaajolnl .!~ture Bauble
you re ln........, '" .
•v
.
check your partner's work and let him/her
doubl!l ~ yours .
·
0
caiMNEWSf!APERENTEIU'IUSEASSN.

::rmallon

.

�..
P-ve--1&amp;-J'he Deily Sentinel

Wednesday, December 14,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

BIG .BEND

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· Keebler
Zesta
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11·12 Oz. bag

lb.

18.25 Oz.

• ,Plain • Self Rising

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Hudson Cream

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12/17/94

I

Duncan Hines
Cake Mix.

Umit one with coupon and
$10.00 additional purchase.

Velvet Natural
Rounds lee Cream

.2 Y2 gal. ss.

Velvet Sherbet Qts. 99'
Velvet Dream Bars '1.69

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box

Keebler
Townhouse
Crackers 1 lb. box ·
Tropicana
$
Season's Best
Orange Juice 1/2
Emperor
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lb.
Grapes
Fresh
Tangeri~es or
Tangelos Ea.

c

Two dead, 15 injured
in latest plane crash
Cembloed AP nportl
A l..ealjet crulled 01110 a street
and plowed Into an apartment
bulldlug, touc:!.!t off fires and
exploaloos aDd
1 tarifled reaidl'nts to throw babies from winde /fl.
'lolh people on tbe small jet
dieu ·vednesday. Tbe pilot, who
had just completed a National
Ouanl Will game, ~~~~~~~aged to avoid
homes aDd an elementary scbool.
At leut IS people oolbe lltQUIId
were Injured. The state Ofl'JC:e of
Emeraency · Services said It
n:ceived a report that ooe pcrsoo at
lhe around was tilled,, but lhere

c

$ 9.9

Bloomer Chocolates
Gift Baskets
of Bulk.Candy

EASTMAN'S

$899
141b,. Tubs $14.99
II

Wll DO confirmalillll.

The plane was returning to an
airport about DOOII wbcn lbe civil. ian @ol repucled eDgille problems

ea.
/

D
SUPERMARKETS

'

(

I

;~

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Most economists predicted
claims would drop, but by a larger
amount tban lbe actual total.
Initial claims have seesawed
over tbe last seven weeks, minoring lhe enatic pattern b much of
· the year.
The Labor De~DI reported
that its four-week mOving average
of inilial claims dropped to its lowestlevel in nearly two mattbs. The
total last week was 322,750, down
750 from tbe previous week's
revised avemge o1 323,500. It was
lowest since 320,750 on Oct. 15.
Analysts consider tbe four-week
average a better indicat« of hiring
trends tban lbe inilial claims figure

.·39

Holiday Poinsettias

18.25 oz.

SLb.
tub

11b.

·I

,
5#

ni

Flour

$ 49

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89

Domino Cane Sugar

Clinton's advisers debated wbetbet he sbould go f~ a bolder cut up tO
$100 billion over five years, or to limil it to about $30 billiat to $50 billioo.
.
Wilb bis political aides pusbed for a bigger cut, officials suggested •
$50 billion remained lbe best ballpatt estimale.
Wilh so many details still unresolved, it was unclear what kind of
impact !be lllll cut would bave on middle-class Americans
·
·
·

211ter

31b. or more

Duncan·Hines
Cake Mix

plan fO.. lllll breaks for families earning up to $200 ()()() a year aDd a proposal by House Demoaatic Leader Richard ~~ for a lllll break for
all workers carnin8 up to $75.000 a year.
The While House bas aiticized Republicans for oot saying bow !bey
w~ld pay for lb~ir ~Ian. They also argue tbat tbe mixed-bag approach
Clmton was coosl(lering would - unlike Gepbardt' s _ provide iJicen.
lives for post-bigb schoolbaioing and pi vale savin8s. GePianll also did
not say bow be would pay for his plan.
.

No Limit

t~

lb.

Nestle
Morsels

-

Meigs trainers'
donation to give
the gift of sight

c

99

Country Style

Visionary
present

Diet or Regula_r

39

Tenderbest U.S.D.A. Choice

'

Limit one with coupon and $20.00 or
more additional purchase.
G d th 1'&gt;112/94
oo
ru "
.

L-~~~~~~~~~~-~L---------------------------------------~

Tyson Holly Farms
Split

~ Chicken

By RON FOUilNIER
Coogress already bave offered tbeir plans to cut llllles.
Aaoelated l'nll Writer
The brief speech will be carried at 9 p.m. EST oo lbe four TV net·
WASHINGTON - Beaten to lbe pundl by Democ:ialic aDd Republiworks.
..
can Jawmaketa, Plelident CJiDtoo hopes be's better late tban never wilh
Administration officials an~ advisers, speaking on condt~ton of
bis venioD of a middle-class lllll cut.
~!lymily, said Clinton wasleanmg toward a lllll-cut package cosung $50
Cllntou's package will give individual Ameticaos a few bUDdred extta btUton over five years.
.
.
.
doUars a yetll, butlbe impact oolbe federal aovemment will be anytbing
He Is expected~ revi~e a 1992 campatgn ~ for lllll ';DIS f~ Dlld·
but modeat: Several Cabinet agencies face clnalic CUll and dozens of pro- die-class oouples wtlh children and Jll?pose acdil5 or deductions for colgrama will be eJim!natcd to pay for it.
. lege and olher ~t-bigb school cduallioo.
. . .
.
On lbe eve of tonlsJit's address to the natioo, Cllntoo bad yet 10 make
Aides also said an ex~011 of lllll breab for ~vtdual rewement
final dedsiODs on bow 10 cutllllles lltd wbm ID cut governmeDL But bJs
accounts mllbt be includec;l m the ~tag~.
.
.
inlentloos were clear. '
·
The Wasbingtoll Post. m today I ediliooa, said a vocalional tax cut of
.· He 11opea 10 a keep a fmaken 1992 campalp promise aDd show vot$20 billioo and lllll relief. of $35.billio~. for families wllh cbildren age 6
en that bJs actn!lnitlnlliott Is responding to tbeir dm!and• for a cheaper, aDd under was bebtg coosidercd. m ad;di~n to lllll breaks on IRAs. . .
leaner governmeDL The address also offers bim an opporbmity to stake
Genetally, Ointollia expected to limit !be lllll breaks to !bose f31Dllies
his claim llllbe political center, although Republicans and Democrats in
earning under $100,000 a year. That would put him between a Republican

1

I
UmK 1 ham po&lt;coupon• umK 1 coupon""' I
customer To the retailer: Please send .-ad I

A Muttm.dle Inc. Neon p rp Jr

Clinton readies Unveiling Of tax cut packag«;!

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2 Secttona, 16 Paga 35 centa

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, December 15, 1994

.

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Ham

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s,litl»:.'ue

Vol. 45, NO. 158
Copyright 1994

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•
..,
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~

•

and ibe plane Veeml from Its Oigbt
palh, said Air Natiooal Guanl LL
CoL IIIJiies Anbur.
Wllneues -said lhc plane, wllh
oac en&amp;iDe burning aDd lhe other
apparently dead, clipped a power
p()le and crashed Into lhe street
about ba1f a Dille from an elementary acbool.
"It deftllitdy 1oob like lbe pllot
wu trying to save people, to avoid
lbe acbool, wbcn be put it down In
lhe street." Fresno Fire ~:ranmen! Capt. Bob Wllla:IIOD
.
"It looks to me lhat lhis pilot
was a llero," said Fresno Mayor

Jim Pauersou. '1'114rvlctims. IIIIOleS
were DOt released.
Tbe flaming wreckage rolled
half a mile, scattering debris lhlll
blew out wbtdows and set buildIngs and Ill least 20 can oo fire. As
lhe plane aasbed Into lhe 18-uult
apartment buiklin&amp; leaving a huge
bole, residents saamblcd to escape.
One woman broke ber leg· when
she leaped from a: second-story

wlnoow.

• 'They were throwing their
babies out lbe Windows - TV s, all
lbelr vallllbles." sail Kim Brown.
wbo works nearby.
Meanwhile, National Transportadoo Safety Board Cbalimau
Jim Hall said Wednesday said a
prellminary liDdin8 in lbe aasb of
an American Ea&amp;le COQimg!er
flight at Ra!elg~-Durbam; N.C.,
TuesdaJ. lndlcaled lbat J!!IOII spc*e
of an engine Ouucoui" aDd c:oosidered aborting lllelr landing
approach before the. erafl made a
sudden, sluup drop. i~
~ "WIIh DO wunlna, the bottom
dropped out," said a survivor wbo
cmw1ed frootllbe bunllng wrectage
of tbe cnab tbllldlled,13 paisegers
aDd both plloCa,
I
Two pilots and 18 puseoaen
were aboard tbe plane when It
sii'Dmed Into woods It 200 mpb In
rain and fog.

because the looger period smoodls
out weekly ups and oowns.
The most closely walcbed iJidi.,
cator, lhe. moodily unemployment
report, dtppcd to 5.6 percent in
November. That is a four-year low
and a level that many analysts
believe represenl5 fUJI employment
for the ealiiOf!IY·
The largest increases were
reported by California. up 24,024;
North Carolina, up 13,661; Pennsylvania, up 12,297; New Yad, up
10,447; and lllinois, up 5,631. The
largest decreases were in Wisconsin. down 7,070; Puerto Rico,
down I ,352; Lonlsi8!Ja, down 727;
Idaho, down 488; and Utab, down
168.

Carter to try securing
Bosnian peace.accord
WASHINGTON (AP) - Securing promises of c:oocessioos from
Bosnian Serbs and offering his
diplomatic services to lbe war-tom
region. Jimmy Caner hopes 10 succeed once again where President
CllntOD could not.
For the lhinJ lime this year, the
former president bas waded into a
foreign policy mauer buffaloing the
White House . With cautious
approval from Clinton, Caner, wbo
defused a nuclell' standoff In Nortb
Korea and beaded off a U.S. btva' siooln Haili, maf now try to broker peace In Bosma.
And. once again, lbe adminisll"'ltion is skeplical,
•
"President Caner Indicated that
if be goes 10 Bosnia, be would do .
so aS a representative of lbe Caner
Center and lhat be would do so
only if lhere were dear ·evidence
lhat lbe commilments oullined b~
(tbe Serbs) were being fulfilled,'
Wbile House press secretary Dee
Dee Myers said Wednesday ulgbt
in a sllltement lbat subtly distanced
Caner from lbe Wbite House.
The stalement was Issued ooly
after Caner 8DilOUJICed that be met
representatives of Bosnian Serb
leader Radovan Karadzlc at bis
WEIGHING DAMAGE- Fnmo (c.Jit.) dtJ _. COIUit)' fire.
Plains, Ga. , home· and secured
lla•ten ltiOod amid lila wrecbp fll u .,........, '*'!dina lllat
promises
lhat would return U.N.
- aU bat dellnl)'td wileD a Lear 35 jet Q' hd Jato It W.._.
operations in Bosnia to tb.e sbalty
day. (AP)
I

"

.;

status experienced belare an escalation of Jensions last moolb.
The Bosnian Serb leader told
CNN be would allow tbe free
movement of U.N . con,yoys,
release all U.N. personnel wbose
movement bas been restricled and
release all Muslim prisoners of war
under age 19, · ·
He also said be would order a
unilateral cease-ftre in and around
Sarajevo, reopen lbe Sarajevo airport for humanitarian flights and
guar.uuee human rights.
Karadzic said that lbe JKUPOSals
would be implemenled wilhin 24
hours and tbat he boped Caner
would travel to lhe region in lbe
next couple of days to restart talks.
Carter said be will go if lbe _sert,s
keep their promises.
·
The Wbile House reacted cautiously, in part because of the
Serbs' long history of breaking
promi.!es. But lbe development also
eotild'present pqlitical problems fCI'
Clinton: Aides ' have warned b~
about public perceptions that bis
foreign policy is too dependant 011
•.
Caner·'
Allbougb Caner's wm mHlld
and North Korea drew paiae from
Clinton, some critics inside and
outside die admlnistratioo accused
bim of meddling.

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