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                  <text>Ohio Lottery
Shop today,
shop locally

Pit'.k 3
860
Piek 4

]..ow toallllt lS. Cllance of

7596

enow te perceat. Tll•rdaay,
cllance of aaow fiu.rrlel. Hlp
211. Cbaace of
percent.

DI!U'

IDOW

i5t

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2 S.Ciionl, 20
A Multlmecllo

- · · Ohio, Wedneaday, December 13, 1989

.

EVEfW
TOY ON
SAlE/

l

r-1

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: $5.00 COUPON

II
II
II
II
II

$10.00 COUPON

New Meigs chamber
picks officers, board

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$5.00 COUPON .

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BRING IN THIS COUPON AND GET $5 OFF PURCHASE
BRINO IN THIS COUPON AND GET $1 0 OFF PURCHASES
I BRINO IN THIS COUPON AND GET $6 OFF PURCHASES
OF LADIES' I MEN'S DENIIIll JEANS DEC. 13 114 ONLY.
OF $100 OR MORE DEC. 13 AND 14 ONLY.
OF $50 TO 99.99 DEC. 13 AND 14 ONLY.
I
JEANS ADVEATISED IN OUR CHRISTMAS SALE CIRCULAR STAAnNG
. ONE COUPON PER CUSTOMER PER
ONE COUPON PER CUSTOMER PER
.
FAL DEC. 8 ARE EXCLUDED. .
_J
PURCHASE OF $100 OR MORE .
.J L
L - - -P~H~E2: !!0 ~ 9~9- . - - .JL-

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By NANC" YOACHAM
Dally Sentinel Staff
Board members and officers
for the new Meigs County
Chamber of Commerce were
announced at Tuesday's regular
- and final - meeting of the
Pomeroy Area Chamber of Com·
merce which was held at Veterans Memorial HospitaL
President Bruce Reed an·
nounced that bOard members for
the new organization will be Ron
Ash, Tom Reed, Bruce Reed, Joe
Clark and Mary Powell from
Pomeroy; Nick Robinson, Lenny
Eliason, Chuck Kitchen, Dick
Owen and Mike Gerlach from·
Middleport; David Baker, a
member-at-large; and Bill
Nease, representing Racine.
These 12 board members wlll
begin contacting other areas of
the county so that by the end of
1990, the executive board will
consist of three members each
from Pomeroy and Middleport.
CHRISTMAS IS .••tbe blrtbda, of .Jeea. At
CbrlltmM II the time ol the par wllea tile
and the rest will be from other
times the true meaalll&amp; ol Cbrlltmu &amp;ell tbrown
blrdlda, of .J•• II eelebnied• .Jesllca II ~eft~
parts of the county, hopefully
by the wayelde, but IDIIk uk little Je811lca
bere with her nativity scene wlllcb Ia displayed In
Including
the Tuppers Plains,
BlaettnU", dau&amp;hter ol Rick and .Jamie Blaettnar,
the yard of the Blaellllat realdeace on Butternut
Chester,
Racine,
Syracuse and
~
~
Pomeroy, and she'D be glad to tell you that · Ave.
:lj.utland areas. The new 'Meigs
County Chamber will be officially enacted Jan. 1.
Officers for next year will be
Prelter
Nld
the
extremely
low
Bruce
Reed as president; Lenny
TheOiilo"TutuonTrustAuthor· to assist Ohio famUies with
purchase price, about $30
, El~ ._,:~;and
lty (ATTA) today announced the planning. saving and paying for
wU1
~ Ow!lil.
urer. ..
-· · ::·~ 1111 ... 1.. ZLJUII.aal•· ,fll9f'ture.cDbaJieaek_!.IIIUDQ..br, _.. h• :. 1;,
~..: .. re at all ...._.
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'"'' c "'eaCIIl oc
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SchQOis.
an
·
enrollment
form
or , e
1
creBSel In tuition. Four hundred be $10 for no11-votlni asaoclate
I Sen, PaulE. Pfelfi!I". R-Eiu~y- Guaranteed Tuition Pr.ogram,
units ' would' tullY' 'tuafa child's members: $35 for l/otiJ18111dMd·
rus who co-chairs the OTTA whicH allows college tuition to be
ual members; $55 for vodng
account.
with Rep. P.aul H. Jones, D- pre·purchased at today's prices,
FamUies need · to enroll their businesses with one to 25 em·
Ravenna, said schQOls will be with guaranteed payments when
chUdren before the Dec. 31 ployees: . $75 for voting busiselldln&amp; brochures home with the child attends college.
deadline expires. Avoid the last nesses with more than 25 em·
students before the holiday vaca·
The OTTA Is currently offering
minute rush. Brochures are ployees; $125 for banks and
tlon. FamUies with pre-school an open enrollment period,
utilities. Two part-time em·
children should contact their through Dec. 31 for the tuition available at local schools, the ployees constitute &lt;me full-time
local schools and request pre-purchase program, Prelfer state legislator's office, or at the employee, Reed said. And any
brochures.
said. FamUies need to complete OTI'A directly. Addlt!onallnfor· member joining during the or·
the enrollment form and submit matlon on the program may be
ganlzatlon's first membership
The brochures explain two It to the OTI'A with a one· time obtained by calling 1-800-589drive
will receive charter mem·
non·retundable $30 fee for each 0TI'A.
programs the Ohio General As·
bershlp
status and a certificate to
sembly adopted earlier this year child being enrolled, he said.
that effect.
Reed highlighted 1989's
chamber·sponsored activities,
stalin&amp; that "Overall, It's been a
successful year." He extended
special thanks to members ofthe
Pomeroy Area Chamber's Executive Board for making the year
a success.
The Gallla County Grand Jury the Gallla County Prosecutor's $10,000 . .
Among final events being sPonAdditionally,
the
grand
jury
completed a two-day special office.
session In which It bas returned
Prosecutor Brent A. Saunders considered drug rei a ted cases as sored by Pomeroy Chamber are
78 secret drug charges, the Indicated that all 78 secret developed and Investigated by a Christmas lighting contest,
which Is being co-sponsored by
largest number ever returned In charges presented to the Gallla tile Ohio Department of Liquor
the Winding Trails Garden Club. ·
the history of Gallla County .
County grand jury are drug Control. The Ohio Department of
Anyone
In Pomeroy who decoLiquor Control, In cooperation
Judge Donald A. Cox, of the related.
rates
their
home will automat!Gallla County Court of Common
They Include trafficking In with the Gallipolis Pollee Depart·
Pleas, convened the grand Jury drugs of all types, from cocaine ment, assigned undercover
on Tuesday, Dec. 12, at the to LSD. These defendents, If agents to work In the GalUpolls
request of Prosecuting Attorney. convicted, fa~e sentences rang· area In June of 1989. Through
Brent A. Saunders. This grand · lng from six months to a their efforts, offenses such as
WASHINGTON (UPI~ - Rejury· culminates a 10-month un- · maximum of 25 years In the state trafficking In food stamps and
tail
sales rose a seasonally
Illegal
drugs
were
Investigated
dercover drug Investigation penitentiary with fines ran&amp;lng
0.8 percent In No·
adjusted
and
presented
to
the
grand
jury.
under the exclusive direction of from $1.000 to a maximum of
vember,
rebounding
from a 1.3
The Ohio Department of Agrlcul·
In
October,
as
percent
drop
ture In cooperation with the
consumer
purchases
picked
up
Department of Uquor Control
across a wide range of products,
was Instrumental In developing
the Commerce Department rethe. Illegal food stamp
ported Wednesday.
Investigation.
'lhe $1.2 billion surge In sales to
Task force undercover agents,
who conducted the greatest $144.6 bllllon was bigger than
share of the operations, were w~~&amp;t was generally expected by
located In the Gallla County area economists and reflects resl·
!Ieney In retail spending In the
and resided there lor approxlmat.eiy 10 months. Through their fate of an lncreas lngly s)uggish
efforta, purchases of drugs such economy.
One reason for the rebound was
as cocaine, LSD, marijuana,
that ·automobile sales rose 0.5
amphetamines, barbltuates and
percent during the month after a
other Illicit drugs were made
terrible month In October when
from over 57 defendants. The
dealers saw sales drop 5.3
purchases from the drug offendpercent.
ers were collected throughout the
Auto sales were pushed up over
lnvestl&amp;atlon, held and presented
the summer months by manufac·
as a group to the grand Jury. Thla
turers' sales Incentives but fell
was done to maintain tl)·e lnte&amp;·
off
when the Incentives ended at
rlty of the lnvestl&amp;atlon.
the be&amp;lnnlng ol the 1990 model
Michael FenderboiCh, Invest!·
aator with the Gallla County year.
Excludlq automobiles, retail
PrO&lt;teCUtor's Olflce .and corrdl·
nator ol thla multi-county drug sal• I'OIIe 0.9 percent In No·
vember after declining 0.3 per·
tuk force, stat• that the opera·
cent In October .
tloa was hl&amp;bly suceetatul beOverall retail sales of durable
eau~ It remained covert. Fen·
derboiCh Indicated that thla &amp;OOda - products auch as cars
operation remained secret due to dellpecl to Jaat at least three
the nature of druisand thesalety yeara - climbed 0.7 percent 1!1
tiNVIIU.U. 011"1' - Yet MOtller frGIIor lonner Orud Crealler
November after a 3 percent
of undercover a&amp;ents.
F"'Cl~wllebroapl:fametolllellelld-wll•lle......._, .
decline
Ill October.
Fenderboech al10 noted that
tror J-mPlal, lhella a..._ at 1
la!IJ...- wftll a
ltetall &amp;ales of non-durable
Ropr Brandeben :y, Special In·
rror ~~at• •• the lan ... a troc- llW wHII trea
&amp;OOda
roee 0.9 percent In No·
VII
tip
tor
lor
tbe
Gallla
County
._.... '1'1111 nlftJ fro&amp; caned Ia a - • waa a llolldaf 11ft trem
vemller
a drop of 0.3 percent In
p~tor·a
offlce
pi'OYlded
allr·
Walllae Bradford ol Cllerrr Rl.p,lel. B wfU talle a placle btalde
October.
Continued
on
paae
10
nun•- oilier frop Ia Fref'• free-.

cally be Included In the Jud&amp;ID&amp;.
Reed said, or If someone lives
outside, but near village ltmlts,
and wants to be Included, they
should call .Kay Frederick at
992·5rol, or the chamber office at
992-5005.
A Chamber appreciation
dinner will be held sometime In
January or February, and although Pomeroy Area Chamber
will be defunct by that time, the
new Meigs County Chamber
Board lias agreed to allow
Pomeroy sponsor the event even

though It will be held after the·
Jan. 1 date.
In other Chamber business,
Gary Bates, of GTE North, spoke
to chamber members about the
Llneskeeper program, which Is
explained In the most recent
GTE North customer bills.
Mary Powell apprised the
group of scheduledSesqulcenten·
nlal events.
,P lace and time for next
month's meeting of the new
Meigs County Chamber have not
yet been announced.

Tuition trust for'lns available

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$4.00 OFF
LADIES' NOVELTY
WOVEN SHIRTS

.
GIRLS'
FASHION FLEECE TOPS

SALE 6.49
REG. 12.99

•

SALE 4.99 TO 9.99
REG. 8.99 TO 13.99

S10.00 OFF

$4.00 OFF

LADIES' SWEATERS

BOYS' LONG. SLEEVE TOPS

SALE 14.99... REG. 24.99
SALE 19.99... REG. 29.99

WOVENS: SALE 6.99 ... REG. 10.99
KNITS: SALE 5.99... REG. 9.99

13
COLOR TELEVISION

ROTATING CHRISTMAS
TREE STAND

SALE 159.99 TO 199.99
REG. 199.99 TO 239.99

SALE 24.99
REG. 49.99

$5.50 OFF

$2.00 OFF

Gallia Grand jury returns
78 secret drug indictments

25 LB. BOX PUREX
LAUNDRY DETERGENT

BAMBI
. VIDEO TAPE
liMIT 2 PEA CUSTOMER

SALE 9.97
REG. 11.97

SALE 16.49••• REG. 21.d9

$7.99 OFF

$4.00 OFF

$1.00 OFF

SALE 4 FOR $3.00

LADIES'
NOVELTY FLEECE

BOYS' LONG SLEEVE
FASHION FLEECE TOPS

ENERGIZER BATTERIES

KLEENEX HOLIDAY
80 CT. TISSUES

SALE 10.00
REG. 17.99

SALE 5.99 TO 10.99
REG. 9.99 TO 14.98

4 PK. (C,D) SALE 3.49 ••• REG. 4.49
8 PK. (AA) SALE 3.99 ... REG. 4.99

LIMIT 4 PER CUSTOMER

$2 MFG. REBATE AV~ILABLE

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50% OFF

$40.00 OFF

SALE $1.50

SALE $1.99 EA.

FULL FIGURE
NOVELTY FLEECE

MEN'S, LADIES' ·
SEIKO WATCHES

(15 + 3 OZ.) FINESSE
SHAMPOO AND CONDITIONER

SALE 7.99
REG. 15.99

SALE 59.99 TO 109.99
REG. 99.99 TO 149.99

4 PK. GE SOFT·WHITE
LIGHT BULBS

50% OFF

$40.00 OFF

$3.50 OFF

SALE 2 FOR $3.00

LADIES' HANES HER WAY
6 PK. ANKLETS

ALL 5 PIECE
DINETTE SETS

2 DRAWER VIDEO
STORAGE CABINET

COLGATE TOOTHPASTE
FAMILY SIZE

SALE 3.99
REG. 7.99

EXAMPLE: SALE 79.99
REG. 119.99

SALE 6.49
REG. 9.99

LIMIT 4 PER CUSTOMER
WEIGHTS VARY FROM 8.1 to 9.1 OZ.

LIMIT 3 PER CUSTOMER

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$3.00 OFF

$10.00 OFF

$2.00 OFF

SALE $3.88

MEN'S LONG SLEEVE MOCK
TURTLENECK KNIT TOPS

ROCK 'N FLOWER

100 SQ. FT. FLAT

SALE 19.77
REG. 29.77

CHRISTMAS WRAP

DOWNY
FABRIC SOFTENER (120 OZ.)

SALE 6.99
REG. 9.99

$4.00 OFF
GIRLS'
PANT SETS

ALPINE SKI
STAIR CLIMBER, EXERCISE liKE
SALE 88.88... REG'. 88.88

SALE 5.99....... REG. 9.99
SALE 17.99... REG. 21.99

LIMIT 2 PER CUSTOMER

HO

SALE 1.49
. REO. 3.49

liMIT 2 PER CUSTOMER

SJ 00 ()IF

SALE $1.67

90 SQ. FT. CHRISTMAS
WRAP WITH 12 BOWS

8 PK •.
BATHROOM TISSUE

SALE 2.89
REO. 6.99

LIMIT 3 PER CUSTOMER

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Retail sales ·up 0.8 percent

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UMITED TO

SILVII RIDGE PLAZA, GALUPOUS, OHIO.
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LOW WATER MARK REMEMBERED - Pomeroy Area
Chamber ol Commenie Presldeat Bruce Beed may have met bls
"Waler'1oo during this summer's chamber-spoaaored PbU Dh1
and· the Dozers concert. Anyone who at tended tile coaeert will
remember that the raiD poured. And IOIDe wllo attended,
especially chamber memben, will remember Reed bopefuUy
checking the rain guage atop the press box at the Melp Football
Field where the concert wu held. Cbamber bad purchased a
quarter·lnch rain IIUiuraace for the event. Sa.ys Reed Ia retrospect,·
"It takes a lot of rain to make a quarter-Inch." Chamber IC18t
about $2,300 on the concert. Ia honor of Reed's "low water mark" In
his year as Pomeroy Chamber president, he was presented at
yesterday's Chamber meetiDI with a rain aua&amp;e --JustllketbeoJte
on the press box. His brother, Tom Reed, made the pgesentallon.

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Wednesday's report Is ad·
justed for seasonal variations but
not for the effects of Inflation. As
a result, overall sales for the first
11 months of the year were up5.7
percent over the same period In
1988, but the jump was largely

due to price Increases.
Nevertheless, the better-thanexpected sales may cause the
Federal Reserve to stay the
course In Its monetary policy and
not lower Interest rates any
further for the time being.

-Local news briefs ---~
Sheriff probes more hay burning
Hay bale burners were again at work In the county. Meigs
Sheri!! James M. Soulsby reports that Ills department was
notified at 5: 20a.m. Tuesday that bales on Mudsock Road had
been burned. Bales were also burned on Sumner Road.
Sheriff Soulsby reports there Is a Farm Bureau reward for
Information leading to the arrest and conviction of vandals
responsible for burning hay bales belonging to Farm Bureau
members. Anyone with Information Is asked to contact the
sheriff's office.
A deer-car accident Tuesday evening on Route 124 was
Investigated by the sberlff's department.
The accident occurred about 9:15p.m. at the six mile marker
near Southern Ohio Coal Company Mine 31, reports Sheriff
Soulsby. Charlotte E . Jacks, 23, of Langsville, was traveling
westln her pickup truck and struck &amp;;deer that ran Into her path.
There was light damage to the truck.
Raymond Litchfield, of Welsh town Hill, Minersville, has been
arrested on a bench warrant from the Meigs County Court for
failure to comply with court orders. Litchfield Is confined to the
county jail, reports the sheriff.

Driver injured in accident
One driver complained of an Injury In a two-car collision at
3:35p.m. Tuesday In Chester Twp., Meigs County. on SR. 2t8, at
the Intersection of Twp. flC, the State Highway Patrol reported.
The patrol says Allee E . Mays, 66, Reedsville, Ohio, stopped
Continued on page 10

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Commentary

Pege-2-The Daily Sentiflel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Peoples, Lacer capture top
UPI Division III grid honors

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Wednnday. December ~3. 198;_9 ....

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·The Daily

S_ent~nel_

• COIIrt Street
111
Pomerey, Ol!lo
DEVOTED TO TilE INTEKI!STS OF THE MElGS.MASON AREA

-.
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Geoeral M1111qer

PAT WJIJTEHEAD
Asslstallt Publlsher/ Controu.,.

-

A MEMBER ol 'l1le AModa&amp;ed l'ress,llllaad Dllily Pruls " - .
s fll' l'llbliobers Allodattoa.

dlliloo ud the ~New

LE1TERS OF OPINION ore weleome. They ohoUid bo l•albo SH
wordo IMI· All leliera areiiUbji!Cl&amp; IG odltllll ... muat be olped ,..IIh
aame, address aad leleplloae Dlllllber. No •DIIped lellen wW lie published. Lett.,.• should 11e Ia pod lute, ad*ea•Iariosuea, not ....-.11·

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A gentle
chairman
gentle

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wASHINGTON (UP I) - Under lhe weak chairmanship of Sen.
Claiborne Pell, D-R. I., the Senate Foreign Relations Committee has
sUpped lnlo Ineffectiveness and poor regard.
The Senate Is seldom an arena of rushed activity, but It is a bullet
train of motion compared to tbe usual scene In Room 419 of the
Dirksen Senate Office Building, where the Foreign Relations
Committee has been under Pell's gentle gavel since 1987.
Pell has great difficulty In even putting together a quorum so the
committee can do such essential work as voting on thenornlnatlonsof
ambassadors, foreign poliCy Issues, and ·a(d au tho.-tzatlons. He plays
no true leadership role In such matters as foreign aid, the Nicaraguan
Contras, arms control, or the MMiddle East.
It would be shocking for Pel! - a patrician, kind man of Immense
wealth, with a slight build and angular features- tomuscleh!s way
past his opponents and drive the divided committee to production.
He plays by gentleman's rules, and Is scrupulous In averting a clash
with the 18 other members of the once prestiiPOus committee that Is
no loager considered a beavy player by the administration on foreign
policy.
'
A Rhode Island Democral of old money and old world charm, Pel!
casts the Image of an aging classics profes110r at a sm,all Ivy League
college, pstlently waiting for his tardy and mischievous students to
settle down and deal with the day's lesson.
Days and weeks are iostas thecommltteedrifts, and its leverage on
Issues often go by default to more forc.-ful senators on other
committees. or rivals In the House.
Under the chairmanship of Sen. J. William Fulbright, D·Ark., the
committee was a hotbed or dissent durtny the Vietnam War.
President Lyndon Johnson felt the sting of Fulbright's Intellect and
tart tongue.
With Fulbright's defeat and the winding down of the war, the
committee began a slow slide Into obscurity that was briefly reversed
during the chairmanship of Sen. Richard Lugar, R-Ind., during
1985-86.
Lugar had one of the Senate'uUonpstvotlnarecorda 1ft llllpportof
Pr ldelltR-Id Reaaan, but he brokewilhhlsRepuiJijcu·leacleron
two pivotal ISsues- backing ecoiiOII)IC sanctiOns to protest the racist
segregation poliCies of South Africa, and pressuring Ferdinand
Marcos, the corrupt, Iron-fisted ruler of the Pblllpplnes, to step down.
Lugar worked behind the scenes to pull together the rna ny
self-promoting, forceful Democrats and Republicans on the
committee lo forge comprorn~ and consensus. He usually had the
eooperatlon and goodwill of Pell.
Bulin the shift of majority power to the Democrats In 1987, Pen
became chairman and Lugar was ousted from the ranking GOP seat
by a senior RepubliCan, Sen. Jeue Helms of North Carolina.
Helms, a master parliamentary guerrllla,ls a major reason for the
glacial pace in the committee, cleverly using the rules and political
pressures to delay action on nominations and affect pollcles.
Peli has never shown the toughness or consensus-building nature of
Lugar, and has rarely challenged Helms unless prodd~!d by
frustrated committee Democrats who press the charge.
Pelt Is praised for his fairness, but critics say he goes too far,
allowing the committee to wallow In Interminable quorum calls and
legislative gridlock caused by the competing egos and agendas on the
committee.
Pelt defers to the ambitious drive of other committee Democrats on
the problems of Latin America and the Middle East, and his lack of
assertiveness has only enhanced the powerful stalure of Armed
Services Chairman Sam Nunn. D-Ga ., on nuclear arms control and
superpower Issues.
In lhe House, hard-driving Chairman Dante Fasc,ell, D-Fia., runs
the Foreign Affairs Commlttee with a forceful hand and gets results.
Fascell plays tough - but fair.
There are no prospects for change In the Senate unless unless the
kindly, restrained Pellldses his bid next year for a sixth term.
He runs a tough - but fair -election race, but then leaves his
fighting gloves at home in genteel Newport.

1

Berry's World

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9811 fly NE,t,

WASHINGTON - Couwner
advocatell are taking sclason. to
the veil \If 11\ystery and complex·
tty that shrouds the insurance
Industry, and the Industry Is In a
panic.
That panic surfaced at a recent
Insurance con·•entlon that turned
Into s vll'ious pro-Industry rally
when Jobn Crosby. vtce pres!dent of the National Association
of lndep~ndf&gt;nt Insurers, took the
podium. In a carefully crafted
anaJOfY he suggi'Sted that propagand~ espoused by ronsumer
groups "parallels Hitler" and the
deception of the Third Reich.
Crosby jumped on the consumf&gt;r advocates who criticize the
Insurance Industry for taking big
profits. "Ralph Nader wants our
Persian rugs off our floors, he
wants to cut Insurance execulives salaries, he wants to cut

J'
report bolsters tl)e claims of
Nader and several members of
Congress . that the Insurance
lric!ustry. ts not exactly on the
brink or bankrUptcy, as It would
like the public to believe.
The American auto Insurance
Industry earned total profits ot
$22.6 billion between 1978 and
1987. The profits went up every
year during that stretch. For six
out of the last seven years. the
auto Insurance Industry paid no
federal Income taxes. Why?
Because of an accounting system
that vastly overestimated future
losses and wrote them off every
year.
The Insurance Industry, wblch
has enjoyed minimal feder!!l
oversight, Is now squinting under
the bright lights of Congress. Its
only consolation Is that the main .

your commissions as agents and
brokers," Crosby said. "Like
Hitler, there Is no appeasement,
they want It all."
The speech received thunder·
lng applause. but later Nader and ·
other · Insurance reformers recelved letters of apology from
Lowell R. Beck, president of the
association. ·Those letters said
CrosbY's remarks were unauthorlzed anit "unfortunate." NAil,
which represents about 50 percent of the auto and home
Insurance Industry did not take
Nader's advice to fire Crosbv.
The Insurance Industry should
realize tbat It has more than
Ralph Nader to worry about. The
General Accounting Office, the
tnvest(galory arm of Congress,
has finished a six-month probe
Into the confusi:nK led11:ers of
Insurance companies. tie GAO

see l'lo

He~R t-Ja
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WASHINGTON (NEA) - For
Inside players of Wall Street's
topsy-torvy world of leveraged
buyouts, It sometimes doesn't
matter It you succeed or not. As a
Senate subcommittee recently
learned, failure can stU! mean
mUllons of dollars In fees and
profits.
On Oct. 13, the stock market
firsl shuddered and then went
Into rreefall, dropping 190 points
on news that the $16.97 billion
purchase of United Airlines (a
subsidiary of UAL Inc.) by Its
management and pilots had
fallen through.
Among those worst hurt on
Wall Street that day were UAL
shareholders, who saw their
stock plummet from $285 to SU5.
Now, as Investigators from
Ohio Sen. Howard Metzenbaum' s
antitrust subcommittee have
learned, Insult Is being added to
the shareholders' flnanclll Injury. UAL shareholders are
being asked to pay lawyers,
Investment bankeni and banks
more than $58 million In tees for
the failed effort to bring off the
deal.
The UAL deal was t~ Wall
Street equivalent of smoke-andmlrrora. Manasement and the
pUots were payinl a record
amount, .Jl\lt they had no money.
Their up-front cash was provided
by Brltilh Alrwa;s In exchange

4

for 20 percent of the company and
a guarantee of a long-term
exclusive feeder relationship something all European airlines
are desperate for. The rest of the
money was going to be raised by
Cittcorp and Chase Manhattan
Bank.
The bulk of the long-range
financing was expected to come
from a consortium of Japanese
banks, which have recently provided financing for leveraged
buyouts here - Including the $25
billion RJR Nabisco takeover.
The UAL deal came apsrt when
the Japanese banks lost Interest,
having decided the purchase
price was unjustifiable.
Metzenbaum's Investigators
learned that just before the
purchase plan was announced on
Sept. 14, Henry King - managIng partner ofthe Wall Street law
firm repl'l!aentlng the UAL board
- sat down with Peter Aikins,
another major Wall Street lawyer representlnsUAL's manaJement group. They quiCkly hammered out an a,reement In wblch
the various lawyers, bankeni and
bankl puttinJ the deal together
would split $58.676 million, to be
paid by UAL.
Under the agreement, the
tarsest payment would go to
Lazard Freres and 8alomon
Bros., the pilota' lnvatment
bankers, who would get $16.,

•

t
t

go to school ·

.

million. Almost as much, $16
million, would go to the pilots'
stock ownership fund to retm··
burse It for costs going back to
1987 In the pUot~s lone attempt to
acquire the airline. The next split

Placeldek• - Brlu Sewanl. P•Uo,

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~

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•

not only helps working parents ••
but also keeps youngsters away :
from the potentially corrupting :
street culture.
•
Teachers and administrators ~
at the Corporate/ Community ·~
School become Involved In a ,.,
broad range of Issues that often :
affect students' performapce - :
Including health care, housing, •
recreation and transportation.
~
Mosley sees the school as a ~
"social services hub" dealing •
with students' problems athorne, ~
from malnutrition to sexual •
abuse. To assist parents lacking ~
an adequate education, she plans •
to offer adult literacy classes and ~
courses leading to a high-school ~
degree.
:
But Kellman Is undeterred. •
Determined to radically reform
and revltall~e elementary and ~
secondary education not only :l
here but throughout the nation, •
he wants corporate leaders "In •
other cities that have the same :
problem" to join In his crusade .. · ;

l

•
,,

Sedpr;

Lou V.-..J.W.

Se.iar; liottt ohJMpla,
Mar . .• hrl'f,
M, lealor; Cllrll
Reilley, . . . . . . . . _
J.-11, ltl,
Vh•~ eDI-81 . ~hey,

The Daily Sentinel

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-----Sports briefs

Subscribers not deelrlna:topey tbecar·
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Lane MacDonald, the College when be can resum~ hiJ career.
Player of the Year last season . ... Center Mario Lemieux of the
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doctor, who told him another hit the NHL .All-Star game With
on· the head could have "grave 210,54 votes through Dec. 8. Paul
consequences." MacDonald, Coffey, also of Pittsburgh, was
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Robert Walters ;

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PrlciiMI, Twlli•rs: Cll.mberla, 1-1,
SU. SeldOr;' PI&amp; Meyer, Glnrd, ..1. 1'71,

"LAY·A·WAY"

~

Interest."
:
No one from UAL management •
ed
h h
'
appear at t e earlng to Justify l
the fees . .Instead, UAL Crop. i
between Cltlcorp and Chase lor Chairman Stephen Wolf, who led •
arranging the financing.
the buyout attempt, sent a letter :
The problem? The fee agree- sayinl the deal was not dead and :
ment was not predicated upori that his appearance could •'prej· ~
thed!;!al's success. These were, in . udlce such discussions to the =
Wall Street parlance, "drop- detriment of our shareholders." •
deadfees,"whlchweretobepald
UAL's general counsel, Ed· ~
even though the deal ultimately ward Hoenlcke, In anolher letter ..'l
fell through.
sought to justify the fees as !
This does not sit well with "customary" In leveraged acqul· •
Metzenbaum, who has been
·1 1
f 1
bli
•
contemplating leglaiatlon setting s t ons o arge pu c com pan· •
up new rules for management les. He pointed out that they
amounted to less than 1 percent ~
buyouts that will require· those of the value of the falled bid.
doing the buying to use much
That did not pacify Metzen·
more of their own money· To baum who said, "Even If these ··•
Metzenbaum, the UAL lee arran· fees were reasonable for the :
gement demonstrates the kind of work done, ills a dlsaervtce to the :
conflict-of-laterest problema In- shareholders of UAL that they •
herent In _ management are being asked to pay any;
takeovers.
•
4
'1 believe that the agreement :::.~~.!~:~lfor !allure. 'Metzen·
to reimburse thse f~ clearly
Robert Monks, president of
violated the fiduciary duty the Institutions Shareholder Servl· •
boardandthemanapmentowecl cell, agreed. "Manaaement Just :
to Its shareholders," Metzen· cannot bargain wltb itll!lf, re- :
baum said at the start of a recent presenting both the shareholders •
heartnslato the UAL tee arran- and Ita own Interests," Monks =
gement. "The nesottatlon of this said. "lt Is not their money, It Ia .=
kind of agreement between tbe the ahareholder' 1 money, and ~
board of directors and Its own since at least 110 million Amerl· •
maaaaement raises serious cans are shareholders, It Is •
quest111n• about conflicts of everybody's money." ,
:
'·

&amp;HI• fllerbe.

Yo!UtptGWD Ur ...IDe, 1-11, 111, !le•lor;
C.ftb PeopiH, Cohmlllla HamUIGII
hw.Wp,f.l, tU,tlaaler, . . . . . . .11!.
lla~!J, f-1. 181, 8e•tor.

-

,.

corporations providing funding
for that city's effort are Baxter
International, United Airlines,
Quaker Oats, McDonald's, BorgWarner, Johnson Publishing and
Sears, Roebuck.
Their money was used to
acquire and rehabilitate a sturdy
brick building formerly used as a
parochial school; to hire Mosley,
seven teachers and five aides;
and to enroll 150 students be·
tween the ages of 2 and 8.
(Enrollment eventually will ex·
pand to 300 students up to the age
or 13.) .
The tuition-free prlvale school,
now In Its second year of
operation, spends aboutthe same
per pupil annually as the city's
public schools because It Is not
burdened with a large bureau·
cracy. But It conducts classes 30
days more every year and
teaches students 75 minutes
more every day.
Children can be taken to school
as early as 7 a.m. and picked up
as late as 7 p.m .. a schedule that

Mlnttr. T•mMciU•-. Akr•

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Y•--••
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..,. . II•• II, Ntw v...nl , .... Gl ....

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'

borhOOd where many cbltdrenraised In poverty, beset by drug
trafficking and threatened by
crime - traditionally have
either dropped out of school or
received an education so lnadequate that they are functionally
Illiterate.
While Mosley Is the school's
prindpal, Its founder Is Joseph
Kellman, the 70-year·old presl·
dent of the Globe Glass &amp; Mirror
Co. (a highly successful firm
with 70 outlets In 17 states) who
characterizes the venture as the
Initial step In fulfilling "a 20year-long dream."
Kellman already has raised
almost $8 million to open and
operate for six years a model
school designed to serve as a
"res~arch and development Iaboratory for Improving educa·
lion." He envisions similar mod·
els "In every major city In this
country" serving '.' to shape a
new agenda for changing the
entire system."
AmongthemajorChlcagoarea

......

, ... • • - PIR IOifla, CMIIII4 H,

••~e

,,,,

LVADoR POI.ICY

CHICAGO (NEA) - "The
problems sometimes appear to
be Insurmountable," says Dr_
Elaine C. Mosley In a rare
display of the frustration (If not
depression) that accompanies
lhetaskofattemptlngtoeducate
youngsters living In urban
ghettos.
·
Mosley's optimism quiCkly returns, however, as she proclaims
that "It Is possible for children In
the Inner city to receive an
excellent education," and speaks
of Instilling hope In both the
youngsters and their parents " so
that people become energized to
change their lives."
Mosley presides over an extraordlnary educational expert·
ment - an elementary school
entirely financed by corporate
and Individual contributions that
Is challenging most of the conventlonal wisdom about teaching
and learning In big-city slums.
The Corporate/Community
School is located In North Lawn·
dale, an especially mean neigh·

Gal....,,

.......... •tL ..........; ThnNenl.a.

----Sports briefs-----

Big-city corporations

..._

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI)
Bob Lutz, who gulclecllrontoa to
an unbeaten season and second
stale championship, bas been
voted the United Press Interns·
tiona! Dlvillon III coach of the
year.
Lutz, In his 18th year at Ironton
wilh a 175-21-4 record, Including
14-0 thilseason, received 10 votes
to 6 for runnerup Gary DeLuca of
Lima Bath In balloting by Dlvl,lon III coaches from around the
state. Bruce Kotllnskl ot Colum·
bus Hamilton Township was
third with four votes .
Others receiving more than
one vote Included Ed Rozum of
Campbell Memorial, Ed Bolin of
Waverly, John Boles of Genoa
and Gary Qulsno of Oak Harbor.

OOUIIIMI&amp; 011.. (UPIJ - 'nt . .
~--*.._. oww.. m

ByGENECADDBS
''He Is a very lnten• player wereBellalre'sJoeyGalioway, a
UPI8por111 Wrller
and has great leadership," added repeater from a year ago, and
COLUMBUS - Curtis Peoples Qulano. "He's been a great Tim Norvlel ol Lewlswwn Indian'
Lake, also a defensive back. Pete
of Columbus Hamilton Township player for us."
and Jamie Lacer of Oak Harbor,
Joining Peoples In the first Klein, a 6-foot-2, 220-pounder was
both dominating players on team backfield were three se- the tight end.
nlors -quarjerbackD.R. Robin·
Besides, r .acP.r, the down lineeither offense or defenae, head
the 1989 United Press Interna·
son of Waverly and running men were 6-foot-7, 306-pound
tiona! Division III All-Ohio foot·
backs Kevin Ellerbe of Young· Tom McKinnon of Akron Hoban,
stown Ursuline and Brian Range Matt DeVIcchlo of Youngstown
ball team.
Peoples rushed for 1,860 yards o( Bexley.
Ursuline and Bryan Mount of
(7 yards a carry) and scored 19
The 6-foot-2, 180-pound Robin- Ney; '.:oncord John Glenn. Camptouchdowns In leading Hamilton son completed .131 of-243 passes bell Me'l!orl.&amp;l's Slav Dlamandls
Township Into this year's for2,131yardSand22toucbdowns was the first team center and
playoffs. The 6-foot·l, 215-pound the paat season and a lao ran tor Philo's Ilrlan Seward the placek·
junior also was the RaDJers' nine TDa.
lcker. All are seniors.
second leading tackler from his
A 3.9 student, Robinson had
The hl!ge, all-senior fu·st de fen·
middle linebacker spot. And, career fiJUres of 3,631 yards slve line Included Urbana's Chad
there's more.
paaslng, 40 touchdown pssses Moxley (6-1, 245), Shane Hannah
"He's a devestating block"'r on
and 50 TDs accounted tor.
(6-6, 290) of Germantown Valley
sweeps," said Hamilton Town·
Ellerbe, a 5-11, 180-poiutder, VIew, Perry Pritchard (6-5, 260)
ship Coach Bruce Kotllnskl. "He rushed for 1,703 yards and scored of Twinsburg Chamberlin and
really aoes after you. He likes to 21 touchdowns for Ursuline the Pat Meyer (6-2, 275) of Girard.
.
past seasons, topped by a record
The first team linebackers
deliver the blow."
Kotllnskl, . who guided the setting 379-yard, 5-touchdown were Ironton's Heath BrownRanaers to a 9-1 regular season performance a1alnst Boardman. stead, Scott Joseph of Martins
despite a serious early-season He also played cornerback on Ferry, Chris Searcy o!I!amllton
. auto accident, believes Peoples defenae.
Badin and Lou Vassalottl of
will play either fullback or
Range, 6-toot, 185 pounds, Akron St. Vincent-St. Mary, all
linebacker at the college level.
rushed for 1,498 yards and scored seniors.
'.'He doesn't have the speed to 19 touchdowns for Bexley. A star
The secondary consisted of
play tailback on the coUege guard on the Lion hasketball seniors Chris Rothhaar of WI!·
level," said Kotllnskl. "He does team, Range also threw one lard and Delandual ·Conwell of
have good aJIIlty and quickness, touchdown pass, had an 84-yard Ironton and juniors Dan Finck of
game speed.
kickoff return for a TO and New Lexington and DeoDo AndWhen It ·comes to choosing
finished his career with a 377- erson of Youngstown Ursuline.
sides of the ball, Kotlinskl says yard, 5-TD game ~galnst
The first team punter was
"he likes defense a little better.
London.
Keith Oliger of Cincinnati Green·
He's a very aJgresslve kldouton
The first team wtde receivers hills, who averaged40.9 per kick.
the field."
Lacer, a 6-!oot-4. 260-pounder,
helped lead Oak Harbor to a 9·1
Aula RaclDI .
regular season.
fielder Hal Morris and pitcher
"He did just a super job," said
Organ lzers of the Le Mans 24 Rodney Imes. Leary had a 17-11
Oak Harbor Coach Gary Qulsno. Hours have asked the French record for the. Los Angeles
''He was dominating."
Natlona!Asll!mbly tor help in the Dodgers In 1988, but went 8-Uin
"We only gave up 41 points for face of strict demands for new 1989 with the Dodgers and Reds.
the season and he was a big security Installations before the
Basketball
reas011 for that," Qulsno said of 'n ext race In June. The Interna· '
North Carolina State's basket·
Lacer, who had 85 total tackles, ttonal Automobile Sports Federa· ball team was placed on probaIncluding six for losses and five lion has threatened to withdraw tion for two years by the NCAA
quarterback sacks. "We also Its ·sanction unless certain mea- tor Infractions resulting from
rushed for 215 yards a game and sures are taken.
Improper sale or use of complia lot of It came right over his
Baaebl&amp;ll
mentary tickets and basketball
The New York Yankees ac- shoes. The Wolfpack. 6-1 and
spot."
Lacer was a three-year starter quired pitcher Tim Leary and ranked 15th In the UPI ratings, Is
· at Oak Harbor, but played tight · minor le!lgue outfielder Van barred from this season's NCAA
Snider :rom Cincinnati for out· Tournament.
end his first two seasons.

·,

IAitz top coach

Division Ill UPI AU-Ohio

·

.
•..
crusader for Insurance reform In ,
the House, Rep. James Florio, . .
D-N.J., Is leaving Congress to ..
become governor of New J~rsey · , ,
Florio ordered the original GAO
Investigation after Industry lob- ,
bylsts repeatedly told Congress ··
that Insurance rates had to keep
going up because the Industry
was losing money.
Last summer we were the first . .'
to expose the mllllon-dollar·plus .,!
salaries of Insurance executives.
With the GAO's findings now out "
In the sunlight, the Industry will ':
have a harder time convincing ·
the public that rates must contlnue to climb. It's time . thai
Insurance magnates gave up ···
those Persian rugs and worked ,;
harder at providing reasonable
rates and service.
;,

Failed LBO reaps millions for insiders
R b t

~~
?

Insurance industry feels'ack Anderson
the heat
and Dale Van Atta

The Deily Sentinel Page 3

Pomeroy Middleport. Ohio

Wednud..,, Decernber 13. 1989

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Wedlu~ay.

Wzrlnlldly,
December 13, 1989
.,.

iUYIPDort. Ohio
MLd..

December 13, 1989

.Meigs downs Nelsonville-York . Eastern
50-43 for rll'8t hardwood win

'

LOOSE BALL- Melp aa• NeiHIMIIe-York

p!Qen aeriiJ!Ible for . _ ballnrta1 Tueeday'a

TVC colllellt a&amp; Reek Sprtap. Tile Marauders
won, 56-43. Oa left II Melp Mllre Vaa Meter (tl).

1)
.
By qaartera:
By DAVE BARRIS
NELSONVILLE
- Heath SavNels-York
..........
...
...
12
21
28
43
Meigs outscored Nelsonvllleage
5-0-11,
Glenn
Flores
Meigs
......................
11
26
31
50
York 19-7 from the foul )lne to
0-3-3,
Brent
Taylor
3-0-6,
MEIGS Robbie Fields
help lead the Marauders to a
50-43 victory over the Buckeyes 1-8-10, Cary Betzlng 1-3-6, Eric Wilson 0-0-0, Heyes Dean
Jason Wright 1-5-7, L.J. Mitch . 1-2-5, Ryan Mitchell 1-0-2,
Tuesday night. The victory was
2-1-5, Shawn Hawley 5-0-10, Ed Chilcote . 0-0-0, Brian
the first In three tries for coach
Jay Humphreys 2-3-7, Mike Withem 5-2-12, Guy Klneer
Rusty Boolanan's Marauders,
VanMeter 2-1-5, Trevor Harri- 2-0-4 TOTALS 17-7-43 3pt.
whlle Nelsonville-York remains
son 0-0-0, TOTALS 14-21-50 field goals-2 (Heath Savage 1,
wlnl.e&amp;s In five trtes.
3 pt. field goais.,-1 (Cary Betzlng 'Heyes Dean 1)
It was a see-saw 11~1 quarter
as both teams traded baskets,
but the Buckeyes took a sUm
12-11 lead to the bench when
Brian Withem hit a bucket In the
lane with 57 seconds remaining.
The Marauders took the lead
for good at 19-17 with 3:48
remaining In the half when Jay
Humphreys hit a short jumper.
Meigs Increased the lead to six on
three different occasiOns and
held a 26-211ead at the half after a
Humphreys free throw with 4
seconds remaining.
In the third quarter the Buckeyes cut it to a 1 pointgamebuta
bucket by Shawn Hawley with
1: 30 remaining gave the Marauders a 31-28 lead heading Into the
final 8 minutes.
The Marauders jumped out to a
9 point lead at the 5:28 mark
when Jason Wright hit a jumper
but the Buckeyes scored 5 of the
next 6 points to cut the lead to
40-35 with 4:11 remaining.
Humphreys made It 44-35 with
two free throws at the 1: 41 mark
but Heath Savage drllled a three
pointer to cut It to 44-38 with 1:19
remaining. After a Jason Wright
free throw made It 45-38, The
Marauders put the icing on the
cake when Robbie Fields was
fouled and after a Buckeye
technical hit all four free throws
to give the Marauders a 49-38
lead with 53 seconds remaining.
The Buckeyes scored 5 of the last
..SHOOTS - Melp' Cary Betzln1 ( l1) flrea Jumper
6 points from the foul line to close
over bead of Nel-vUie'a Guy Klaeer ( t4) durfnJ Tueaday'a TVC
out the scorlng.
game a&amp; Rock Sprtnp. The Mllrauden won, li0-43.
·shawn Hawley and Robbie
Fields led a balanced Marauder
attack with 10 poiJ!ts each. Jason
(All Games)
Wright and Jay Humphreys hit TEAM
W L P OP
for 7 each. Cary Betzlng 6 and L. · Miller .......... :....... 3 0 218 189
J. Milch and Mike Van Meter 5 Wellston ............ .. 2 0 117 104
each. The Marauders were • as
Belpre ..... ........ ... .3 1 280 251
cold as the weather outside
Trimble ............... 2 1 215 207
hitting only 14 of 70 for 20 percent
VInton County ...... 3 2 311 303
and while cashing In on 21 of 35
Fed-Hocklng ..... .. .2 3 342 350
foul shots for 60 percent. Meigs
Alexander .......... .1 3 276 280 • I
had 39 rebounds, with Mitch,
Meigs .................. 1 2 136 177
Hawley and Van Meter with 7
Nels-York ............O 5 234 336
each, Wrtgbt added 6.
Tueeday'a 11U11M:
Brlaa Wbtbem led the BuckFederal Hocking 67 Trimble 66
eyes with 12 points, Heath
Wellston 70 Alexander 58
Savage joined him In double
Melgs50 Nelsonville-York 43
figures with 11. No other NelsonMiller - open
,
OR
ville stats were available.
Belpre 69 VInton County 63
The Buckeyes won the reserve
Friday's games:
game to earn a spilt 57-46. Kyle
Federal Hocking at Alexander
Wilson led Nelsonville with 20
Meigs at Wellston
points, Trevor Harrison led
Miller at Vinton County
Meigs with 16. Meigs will travel
Nelsonville·York at Trimble
to Wellston on Friday n lght to
Belpre - Open
take on the Golden Rockets SaturdaY's games:
before returning home to face
Alexander vs. ceredo-Kenova, at
Vinton County next Tuesday ou
night.
Berne Union at Miller
Trimble vs. Huntington, at OU
MASON, WY.
VInton County vs. Greenfield, at
ou
College
Mississippi Athletic Director Wellston vs. Walbash, lnd, at OU
warner AI ford Is a candidate for
the Southeastern Conference·
commissioner's job. Other candldates Include VInce Dooley, the
former Georgia football coach
and the school's current athletic
, director, and Alabama Athletic
Director Cecil "Hootle" Ingram.

=
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l.wer T•'7 Ptue.• I• a l·Jt•

Maryland, Michigan State
upset in non-conference tllts

I
I

II
f

II

I
II

By BilL WOlLE
VPI Sportl Wrller
It Is said you lear!) something
every day and Tuesday night
Jerrod Mustaf of tlie University
of Maryland.made two discoverles - that Coppin State has a
• men's basketball team, and that
It Is a pretty good one.
Reggie Isaac scored 24 points
and Larry Yarbray's foul shot
with 59 seconds len proved the
winning point as visiting Coppin
State upset Maryland, 70-63, at
College, Park, Md.
Yarbray' s free thtow broke a
63-63 to nail down Coppin State's
third straight win and hand
Maryland Its first loss at home.
"I'm totally embarassed,"
Mustaf said. "I didn't even know
they had a men's team."
The victory by the visitors
from Baltltnore in the first-ever
meeting between the Intrastate
rivals spoUed a second rally by
Maryland, which battled back
from a 16-point deficit.
"It was a big win for our
communltyandforourplayers,"
aald Coppin State Coach Ron
Mitchell, whose team was the
preseason pick to finish first In
the Mid Eastern Athletic Conference. "II will give us some
recognition."
'
Larry stewart scored 18 points
and had 14 rebounds and Phil
Booth added 11 poblts to pace the
Eagles, who Improved to 5-2.
Teyon McCoy hit six 3pointers, all In the second half, to
.flnllh with 20 poblts to lead the
Terrap!M; 4-3, and Mustaf added
11 points.
Coppin State shot 54 percent
from the field In building a 39-25
brllttlme cushion.
Maryland raiUed behind the
outllde sbootlng of McCoy, who
bit tlx 3-poblters over a 10minute span. His tlftb 3-pointer
eave the Ten-apllll their first
lead ~~Dee the opening minute,
60-59, wltb 2:29 left.
Derrick Orr 8lld Stewart each
bit twO foull allots to put the
Eaglet back In froat, 63-60,
befDre McCoy's llxtb 3-pointer
laiDttld tbe score at 63-63 wltb
1: 13 lift,
Yl!'llray thell hit one of two
tree tlli'OIIII and Stewart foDowed

with a pair to put the Eagles up,
with 24 points In helping Brigham
66-&amp;, wltb 31 seconds left.
Young rally from an 18-polnt
Mustaf missed badly on a deftclt. Haws scored BYU's final
3-polnt attempt and Stewart 7 points and Andy Toolson added
followed Wltb two free tbroivs to 20 . points for the Cougars, 8-1.
Ice the game for the Eagles.
Utah State, 3-4, got16 points from
''They got physical and we got Rich Jardine.
physical back and proved we
At Philadelphia, Mlk Kilgore
were the better team," said · scored 15 points to help Temple
Isaac, who also finished With six coach John Chaney garner his
3-polnters.
400th coaching v1ctory ·
'1 think· maybe our players
didn't expect Coppin State to
come· In and play that strong,"
Maryland Coach Gary Wllltams
said.
Kelly Smith and Tricla Baer
''They did a good job on the combined for 30 points to lead the
boards and they ran their offense
Metes Marauders girls basketwith authority. They took It at us
ball team to a 48-41 win over
Nelsonville-York Monday night.
pretty good and I think shocked
our players that they would do
The Marauders puUed away
that." ·
from a sum one point halftime
In the only game Involving a
lead and I~ by as much as nine
ranked team, No. 18 Michigan
(39-30) on a Smith bucket with
State was upended 65-57 by
6:18 ·remaining. The Buckeyes
Illinois-Chicago.
.
pulled to wlthh) 43-40 with Just
Among other games, VIllanova
over three minutes remaining
but could get no closer.
held off Connecticut 64-57, St.
John's stopped Fordham 68-60,
Smith led the Marauders with
Brigham Young rallied to nip
18 points, Baerchlpped In wtfh 12,
Utah State 69-68 and Temple
Kim Hanning 7, Shannon Newripped St. Joseph's 74-54.
some 6 and Jennifer Taylor
At Chicago, Corwin Hunt
added 5. Meigs shot an outstandscored 19 points and Brtan Hill
Ing 54 percent from the floor
added 17 to lead Dllnols-Chlcago.
hitting on 15 ot 28. From the line
UlC, 4-2, played an aggresllve
the Marauders were 18 of 34 for
attacking defense that forced 24
53. Mlstl Pancake led the Lady
Spartan turno~s. leading to
Bucks with 12 points, B8rrl
several tranlltlon baskets. MlchFuller added 11. Nelaonvtlle shot'
lgan State, 6-1, was led by Steve
;18 ~ 50 from the floor for 36
Smith with 16 poblts.
At Hartford, Conn., Greg
Woodward scored 17 points and
Tom Greis added 12 plus 13
rebounds to power VIllanova, 5-3,
In the Big East season opener tor
both teams. Frethman Scott
MILlS ICI ON
Burrell scored a game-blgb 18
WINDIHIIID .
points for Connecticut, 7-2, which
• had Ita aever~-~ame winning
NON·IMIAI
streak snapped
12
tLTI4
At New York, Boo Haney
acond 20 polDII 8lld BIUy Sin,setonliiD lead St. Jolin's to 111
21at straiJIIt trllllnpb over the
Rama. Fordlwn, 4-3, drew
wltbln 61-56 but came no cl01er.
Malllr Sealy added l8 poblta fDr
the Redmell, 7·2. Danny O'luJU.
vu led tbe Rami wltllll poiDta.
At Provo, Utall, Marty Haw• I
1011 tbe 111fn"q tJw tbrowl
wltll :«J second~ left and fiDIIbed

I

•u

MANLEY'S
RECYCLE
CENTER

'Meigs girls post 4841 win
percent and only 5 of 18 from the
line for 28.
Meigs remains unbeaten in
five starts and holds a 3-0 record
In the TVC, the Little Marauders
also remained unbeaten In the
reserve contest with a 35-22
victory. Verna Compston had 12
for Meigs, Reva MuuUn added 10.
Meigs will host Wellston on
Thursday night.
Meigs ........................9 25 33 48
Net-York ...................6 24 30 41
MEIGS Kelly Smith
5-8-18, Trtcla Baer 4-4-12,
Shannon Newsome 3-0-6, Kim
Hanning 1-5-7, Jennifer Taylor
2-1-5, TOTALS 15-18-48
NELSONVILLE Barr!
Fuller 5-1_:11, Carol Schultz
1-D-2, Stephanlne McLaughlin
2-2-6, Becky Rosser 1-0-2,
Kelly McDonald 4-o-8, Mlstl
Pancake 5-2-12 TOTALS
18-5-41

You Are Invited To The
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The Highlanders won the
preceding reserve game by a
39-30 count. Adam Blair led the
Ga!Uans with 11 points, while
Eastern's Matt Flnlaw led all
scorers with 14.
Southwestern will travel east
to play Hannan Trace Friday
night. Eastern will head for the
river Friday night to play Southern before returning home to
take on Symmes Valley Saturday
night.
Score by quarters
Eastern .. ......... .. 12 23 15 22-72
Southwestern .... .. 16 18 9 26-69
EASTERN (72) -Fitch 11-0-022; Savoy7-Q-0-14; Frost6-0-1-13;
Caldwell 2-0-6-10; Durst 3-0-0-6;
Bissell 1-0-2-4; Murphy 1-0-1-3.
TOTALS- 3HI-10-72
Field goals- 31-70 (44.3%)
Foul shots- 10-14 (71.4%)
Rebounds - 45
Asslats- 15
Steals - 15
Til movers - 15
SOUTHWESTERN- JohnEhman 8-1-4-23; Metzger 5-0-8-18;
Bryant 3-0-4-10; Hammond 2-1-07; Potter n-0-7; Jesse Ehman
2-0-0-4. TOTALS - ~3-16-69
Field goals- 27-76 (35.5%)
Three-pointers- 2-12 (16.7%)
Foulsbots -16-25 (64%)
Rebounds - 32
Assists - 8
Steals - 12
Turnovers- 16
Deflectloll8- 11

•.•=•P.•·

Nopm•r.....,.let

~

their best defensive work playing
Metzger, who by this time was
which gave hla tean\ a 64-63 lead,
man-to-man, lhP Eagles simplY opearheadlng a concerted effOrt
and though the Eagles would
put all !five player$ on the , by the Highlanders to play
score tlx otralght points In the
ballhandler, .. nd as a . resUlt tougher on the boards, coMected
following 1:14 to keep the lead
forced turnovers In crltlca. sltua- on a turnaround jumper In the
they never lost, every point they
tlons. But with all that, the lane with 4:33 left to slash
scored was necessary. Here's
Eagles had to counter a lead· E.(lstern's lead to one. Then 22
why.
changing layup by Metzger with s'econds later, Bryant took a
With 48 seconds left, sopho25 !lllCOnd•, left with a layup by ;)esse Ehman pass in the lane and
more guard Bill Potter drUled a
Durst "itt 13 :oer.onds left to give hung In the air Justlong enough to
three-pointer from the right wing
the visitors a 35-34 lead at put In his layup, which gave
to cut the lead to 70-66, and
halftime.
SWHS a 57-56 lead.
following Bissell's miss at the
Becauoe of Jesse Ehman's • That lead lasted 14 seconds, as
line on a one-and-one 17 seconds
jumper at the thlrd-quar·ter ~ost put his helgbt to use by later, John Ehman made Eastbuzzer, Eastern had to restore grabbing a missed shot by ern sweat when he dialed long
the nine-point lead It held In the teammate Mark Murphy and distance from the left wing to
third quarter with a Fitch layup dtopping In the layup, giving slash the lead to 70-69: But after
17 seconds Into prime time. For Reedsville a 58-57 lead. John
theHighlan(lersgottheballback
the first two minutes of the last Ehman, whO responded with a and were heading downcourt In
quarter, things seemed to be ju!Jiper from the lane with 3:44 the game's last seconds, John
going Eastern's ,way, as the left to give the Highlanders a
Ehman missed twice from threegreen-clad cagers held oeven- 59-58 margin, was fouled seven point land and point guard Joe
and nine-point leads In that seconds after that pivotal shot Hammond, who sank a bonus
perl'ld, but now It was the and went to the line for the bucket In the third quarter, tried
H!g~la~ders' turn to reduce the
()ne-and-one. He made both to do the same from the right ·
Eag.es 56-47 advantage.
shots, and the Highlanders . baseline. He missed, and the
Metzger sank a pair of one-and- . p;idded their lead to 61-58.
Eagles got the ball. Eagle guard
one s~ots to cut the lead to 56-49
A pair of one-and-one shots by Kenny Caldwell was fouled In the
with 5:59 left, and John Ehman Tllll Bissell and a jumper In the exchange with three seconds left,
h!t a long jumper from the right lane by Frost put Eastern ahead and at the line he sank the final
wlng to reduce the iead to 56-51. 62;61, but a pair of one-and-one one-and-one shots to end the
the first time the Eagles' lead shots by Bryant gave the hosts a scoring.
was .five or less since the 2:35 63-62 advantage, Its last lead of
"We had time to work the ball
mark of the third quarter. After the night.
inside, and we didn't do It," said
he missed the front end of a
-Southwestern's loose man-to- Southwestern head coach Jim
one-and-one, JesS!! Ehman re- man defense continued to prove Walker. "Overall, we need to box
bounded the miss and hit a t:!ostly to the Highlanders, which out better and to have better shot
turnaround jumper from the helped Eastern in the game's selection. (The lack of those
right half of the key to cut the f-inal minutes. Fitch drove Inside things) were the keys to the
Eagles' lead to three.
for the layup at the 2:13 mark game," he added.

-.1.._.,..1 ·

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...._.. e1 P.nll)'er-, ,:II p.m.

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·----------1 The Perfeef I

1I

up their lead to 22-14. But after
the Highlander&amp; got the ball and
senlorforwardJohnEhman, who
found the nylon useful for a
game-high 23 points, connected
on a layup oft a Chris Metzger
mlas to boost the SWHS lead to
24-14, the Eagles got revenge.
Back - to- back ba sellne
Jumpers by sOphomore guard
Jeff Durst and a bounce pass in
the palntfrom point guard Shaun
savoy to forward scott Fitch
(team-high 22 points) for tqe
layup, all occurring In a 28secondspan,cutthehosts'leadto
24-20. But John Ehman ronowed
wlth 'a layup and a pair of free
throws In an elght-set-ond span to
put an eight-point gulf between
Southwestern and Eastern.
The Eagles went back to
chipping away at the lead until
6-4 plvotrnan Mike Frost broke a
28-all tie with a layup at the 2:59
mark. Fouled on the play, he hit
the foul shot, and the Eagles led
by three.
. Unlike theHIRhlanders, who do
·

Scoreboard ...

TVC standings

I

SWHS 72-69 for fifth consecutive victory

By G. liPBNCEJt OOORNE
OVP lMaff WrMer
Eastern overc4me a threepoint, fourth-quarter deficit and
survived Southwestern's 10·for13 prime time foo~l shooting to
poat a 72-69 victory, the Eagles'
flnh straight, In a game rescheduled because of last Frlday's
snowstorm.
The Eagles started out by
controlling the boards and using
the Highlanders' loose defense to
drive Inside for numerous
layups, but It wasn't enough to
keep the hosts from using their
defense to aet up the fast break
and get away with poatlng a 16-12
lead at the end of · the first
quarter.
,
However, the Eagles, which
had been nailed for two technical
fouls In the flrstquarter;were hit
with No. 3 less than a minute Into
act two. The Highlanders, who
had missed four shots on both .
T-foulchances, sent senior guard
Brad Bryant to the line. He made
: ·both, and Southwestern pumped

(]eMI.. -

The Daily Sentinei-Page-5

Pomero•t-Midr.ltpOit, Ohio

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Shawnee State slips
:past Rio's Redwomen
_....,,,,m.

Del. . ., ...
Pll...lx M ll&amp;alll, 1: It lf.m.

PORTSMOUTH - . A high
turnover rate - 36 In all - may
•- havekepttheRioGrandeRedwo:
• men from defeating Shawnee
State Tuesday, but better shootlng·made the day for Coach Doug
Foote.
"We have taken a big step
forward In the gQals of our
program," Foote said as he
looked back on the 52.8 percent
field goal shooting standing the
Redwomen posted on 28 of 53
atiempts, an Improvement over
the team's past performance
from the noor.
Shawnee State won 78-71, escaping a late rally by Rio Grande
that saw the visitors, keyed by
performances by Angle Packard, Kathy Snyder and Kerr!
Kldwel~ trail by two points with
' 1% minutes remaining. A set of
·turnovers ·gave the Lady Bears
the opportunity to pull away for a
larger lead In tbe final seconds.
,
"T.he ladles played hard. They
; . onlY turned the ball over a few
· times too many, but I'm very
proud of what they did tonight,"
Foote remarked. "Shawnee
scored 78 points not because of
our defense, bu I because of .
turnovers. And that happened
not because we have lnexperlenced players, we just have
young players."
The Redwomen are 3-5, while
Shawnee State Is 5-2.
.The Redwomen, who fell 70-52
to the Lady Bean In tbe Bevo
Franct. Clalllc champloDihlp
game Nov. 18, played wltb
enough Intensity to cut Sbawnee
State's margin from double fig·
ure1 to two polnta at 1111 halftime.
'l'llroqbout the MCODd parlor!,
the Lady Bear•' larJelt laed was
IIIli. Wllu. Shawnee State was
IIIICCellful In boldlq Ill tui'IIOV·
en to 21,. tbl!y were on nearlY

.... ................ 51

. .ldw'...

THrSJSN'T ATRACK MEET, butRioGrande'aToayEwlng(t2)
doesn't think so after baYlor to lulrdle over Cenlralll&amp;ale'aMarcus
Gray (Q) after Ewing' a buket dartng Tuesday nlgbt's rame a&amp;
Lyne Center. The Redmen won f!;81. (Photo by Kazranllwue)
.

.

..

Redmen survive late

'
Central State 'blast
.

~hlnblall

Rio Grande men's assistant second period attack that saw
basketball coach Earl Thomas Rjo Grande's lead dip to 90-81 at
described Tuesday's game with 3:59 when Vaughn posted his
Dis (riel 22 rival Central State to final 3-pointer of the game. By
"sitting on a keg of dynamite. slowing the pace and holding Its
You know It's going to explode, total turnovers to 19, the Redmen
but you don't know have power- ilekl off the visitors until Harrison hit a basket at 1:57 and
fully or how wide."
The Redmen discovered Cen-, Schubert added a pair of free
tral State's patient offense dur- .throws and a trlfecta shot for the
equal terms In rebounding.
Ing
the second half at Lyne win.
Shawnee State recorded 30 and
,.:'We played a great second
Center,
but were able to slow
the Redwomen 29.
half, but our problem all season
down
long
enough
to
post
some
Pacing the Rio ladles' offense
bas been putting two halves
were Snyder and ,Kidwell, who extra points and record a 97-81 together," Porter said, "Our
each scored 14 points and had win over the Marauders.
Following a quick first half intensity and defense In the
four rebounds each. Ann Barnltz
second half was quite different
added 13 markers and led the that saw Rio Grande establiSh a from the first. Jerry Vaughn shot
25-polnt lead at halftime, Kevin
boards with seven.
the ball well for us, but you have
For Shawnee State, Susie Huff Porter's club wasted little time to' give Rio's guard (Gary)
and Susan Conley each posted 14 wlttllng the Redmen advantage Harrison a lot of credit - he
points, Kim Danner and Jamie down to single digits with three dlstribu ted the basketball. very
McGraw had 13 and Amy Edler minutes remaining.
"Central State Is a very tal- w~U."
poated 11. Huff was top reented
basketball team," Rio · ' Rio Grande shot 53.7 percent
bounder with five.
Grande
Coach John Lawhorn from the field, connecting on 36 of
In addition to the Improved
Its 67 total attempts, while
field goal shooting, Rio Grande remarked. "We tried to tell our Central State was 44.4 percent
was 75 percent (15-20) from the guys during the halftime they'd. (~81) . On foul shooting, the
make a run and that the first five
foul line. The Lady Bears conminutes would be the key. We · Redmen netted 13 of 17 tries for
nected on 29 of 64 attempts from
76.4 percent and the Marauders
the field for 45.3 percent' and knew they were going to explode, were 2 of 5 for 40 percent. The Rio
netted 20 of 27 tries from the free · but they didn't In the first half." men outrebounded the guests
The Redmen scored 27 of their
· throw line for 74 percent.
60
flrst-perlod points on 3-point ~9&lt;28.
Rio Grande travels to Lake
field
goals fired In by Jeff Brown, · Lawhorn hailed the work of his
Erie Friday for a 6 p.m. game
Brad
Schubert and Darius Willi- , starters, partlcular·ly Troy Doand to Notre Dame (Ohio)
ams.
Central
State never won the naldson, who has Inherited the
Saturday at 2 p.m. Shawnee State
lead
but
came
closest at 17:06 ' post due to t)le Injury that has
hosts Concord (W.Va.), Glenville
(8-7).
Rio
Grande
went on a sidelined John Lambcke, possiState . (W.Va.) and Tri-State
bly until after Christmas.
(Ind.) In a tournament this three-minute offensive spree at
Tony Ewing took high scoring
14:49 that put them ahead 30·14
weekend.
honors
with 20 points and 11
before the Marauders could put
Box aeon:
febounds,
while Jeff Brown and
any additional points on the
SHAWNEE STATE (18) Brad
Schubert
each had 16
board.
Kim Danner, 6-1-13; Amy Edler,
points,
Darius
Williams
12 and
'J erry Vaughn, who Scored 28
~5-11; Sulle Huff, 6-2-14; Usa
points for Ce~tral State, led the a,rrtson 10. Brown bit the
Brandenburg, 3-2-8; Susie Bo.
wling, 1·1·3; Susan Conley, 5-4----------~---1
14; Jamie McGraw, f-5·13; Aretha Porter, 1-0-2. TOTALS
~

.....,..

RIO GRANDE .(71) - Jennl
Couch, 0-5-5; Cindy Ridgeway,
1-5-7; Debbie Fredrick, 3-0-6;
Kerrt Kldwel~ 6-2-14; Mindy
Montgomery, 2-().4; Ann Barnltz,
6-1-13; Angle Packard, 4-0-8;
Kathy Snyder, 6-2-14. TOTALS

·11·11,
Balaa--re: BloGrudeS'J,
lha- 8tate II.

FINDING THE JL\NDLE on the ball can be tourh at times, as
Southw-rn's Brad Bryaut (Ia wblte) finds oat when Eastern's
Tim Bllaell cloaes ID for a steal attempt durlnr the second balf of
Tuesday nllbt'a game at Gage. The Hlglllanders blew a
fourtll-quarter lead and lost 72-611. (OVP p~ by G. Spencer
Osborne)

...DOWNING CHILDS

GOOD USED

WA-IS, DIYDS,
llfii.UTOIS, TYs,

MULLEN MUSSER

INSURANCE

111 Second St., P•n•roy
·.YOUR INDIPINIIIT

AGENTS SEIVIIG
MEIGS COUNTY
511(11161

GAS I EUC. UNGIS

'•

COUNTY
APPLIANCES

.......,...

617 lniA-. G II• alit

...

IIOIISa • l.M.-6 ....

--

boards 12 times and Harrison
reasserted himself as the team
assists leader with 13.
Supplementing Vaughn's performance were Joseph Carson,
who netted 16 markers, and
Kevin Mobley with 13. Vaughn
and Francois D'Ernevllle led the
rebounding with six each.
The Marauders, now4-7, travel
to Georgetown (Ky.) Thursday.
Rio Grande (6-3) faces Shawnee
State on the Bears' court Saturday at 7: 30 p.m.

IH.
Halftime score: RloGrande60,
Central State 35.

Box score:
RIO GRANDE (91) - Gary
Harrison, 5-0.10; Mark Erslan,
0·2-0-6; Brad Schubert, 1-4-2-16;
Tony Ewing, 9-2-20; Dad us Williams, 3-2-0.12; Jeff Brown, 1-4-216; Tim Christian. 2-4-8; Troy
Donaldson, 3-3-9. TOTALS 24-1213-97.
CENTRAL STATE (81) Joseph Carson, 8-0,16; Keith
Taylor, 2-0-4; Ronnell Jones,
4-0-8; Kevin Mobley, 5-1-0-13;
David Chumley, 1-0-2; Jean
Marie Dlop, 1-0-2; Francois
D'Ernevllle, 3-0-6; Jerry
Vaughn, 5-6-0-28. TOTALS 29-7-2-

.

'

~·-·"""-=~1

Middleport
Merchants

OPEN
TONIGHT
-Free Parking-

.... ----""-=~(....
$,p1~111 01 The

1....

=

-¥'

Week/

FISH TAIL

•*
*

S1.24

....

WnH FRIES....... s1.79
I

.

.ADOLPH'S DAIRY VALLEY:
"At 'lhe End Of tha Pomeroy-Mason Bricltlt"

~ POIIIIOY,

992·2556

OHIO

,· s ... ( •·•;

!,

a

.... ;

s ·••
'

'

�WeclnBrcley.

'

Decefnber 13. 1989

.

lcley, Decenlbel 13. 1989

•

Porrwoy-

Sentinel- Pea•. •7

·MidciiiiJCK't; Ohio

·:·Pistons rally .to defeat Denver; Hawks, Pacers triumph
•.

. , BFII' 8IIAIN
UPI Itt ••• Wrlier
A warnqto NBA teams -the
Detroit

Platona

have

added

' uodler weapon to their defen·
slve areeut.
!l Tbe Pistons, employing a new
:; balf-court trapping scheme, ral·
lied from bebiDd Tllesday nfehl
; to take a 121-108 victory over
.. DeniN!I' and hand the Nugaets
1 their Orst horne defeat this

.;, se11011.

-'&lt; Denver had jumped to a 50-34
:; lead In the second quarter before
'!; Detroit came back behind the
.:. strength of a 12-lloutburstlargely
created by the trap.
._ ''We had been fooling a r ound
"' with a half-court trap In prac.; lice," Detroit Coach Chuck Daly
~ said. "When we fell behind, we
&lt;.; put In the trap, gotlwo or three
: SIDIJI, and that put us back In the

_ game.··

• Joe Dwnars, who finished the
.;. first half with 20 points, hit a
~ tbn!e-polnt shot to cap the run,
aDd Dennis Rodman's follow shot
~· at tbe halftime buzzer cut the
; DeniN!r lead at 58·54i. ,
.. lalah Thomas, who was held
scoreless In the first half, scored
:: the first four points of the second
• half to give the Pistons their first
~ lead of the game at ti0·58.
•
"By the time Islah got hot, we
! were already In trouble," Denver
• CoachDougMoesald. "The thin&amp;
.:.. tbat kllled us was that our bene h
" pve ua tbeblg lead, butour(lrst

j z

I.

i.

t

.
!.. SVAC standings
-:

i=

(AII&amp;amee)
W L PF PA

TEAM

·~

Euliel'n ...............5
Soulbern........... ...4
., Soutbwestern ....... 3
:1 Symmes Valley ... 2
;: Hannan Trace ..... 2
::: Nortb Gallla ........ 2

1 451
317
3 · 440
2 248
2 239
3 342
,. OakHIU ..............0 4 242
;; Kyeer Creek ........o s 273

o

406
239
'403
, 271
231
332
313
436

h

•

(SVAC r;ames)

""

,.. TZ.UI .

W
,;; Soutbern ........ .4
~ Euliel'n .......... 4
. ~ Hannan Trace 2

L
0
0
1

PF
317
291
196

team couldn't hold II. Tbe first
team couldn't play defenae, ud
that was the key to the game."
Thomas • 17 third-quarter
points helped Detroit build a 91-88
lead enterlnl the final period.
"Islah broueht them back,"
Denver's :Michael Adams said.
" He made a lot of toueb shots
with defenders In his face. We
just didn't bury them when we
had tbe chance."
Denver entered the contest
having won all nine games at
home.
"In a place where a team
hasn't lost, It's a, real morale
booster," said Detroit's Mark
Aguirre, who scored a season·
hfeh 29 points. "I've played a lot
of games In Denver, and I know
this a tough place to win."
Walter Davis, who Improved
hill string of consecutive free
throws to 53, scored 27 points to
lead the.N URRets.
Elsewhere Tuesday night In
the NBA, Atlanta stomped San
Antonio 102-94, Indiana nipped ,
Minnesota 113-112 In overtime,
the LA Lakers blasted CharlOtte
103-89, New Jersey dumped Phi• .
ladelphla 97-82, Chicago beat
Dallas 105-97, Houston blasted
Phoenix 105·83, Mawaukee
topped Orlando 106-103, Golden
State beat Sacramento 118·103
and Portland defeated the LA
Clippers 99-92.

We R•serve The Ri&amp;ht To
Limit Quantities

STORE HOURS
Monday thru Sunday .
8 AM-10 PM

,.

GRADE A-12-22 LB. FLAVORITE

Turkeys ••••••••••••• ~••• 59&lt;

HawkllH, Spurs M
At Atlanta, Moses MaloDe
scored 24 points and pcllad down
9 rebounds to lead tbe Hawks to
their seVE•ntt. straight victory .
Atlanta outscored the Spun 19-10
In the final 7: 26 to llt'al the win
and snap,. six-game San Antonio
winning streak.
Pace... IU, Tlmbelwolvea 1121
At IndlanapoUs, Reggie Miller
scored• 32 points and Chuck

!

am

PF

l

136

131 ·
122
103
174
177
231

79
Sl
Chuck Roast ••••••• •
$ . 39
Chuck Roa.st •••. ~~... .1
39 (
Leg Quarters •..• ~•••.
Sl·
49
llolo!lna .••••••••••••:••

U.S.D.A. CHOICE

CHICKEN

:: Nortb Gallla ... 2 1 139
~ Hannan Trace 2
2 128
t Symmes ......... 2 2 166
~ Eull!m .......... 1
3 149
~ Soutbwestern .. 2
3 202
~ Kyeer Creek ... o 4 119 181
~ TOT.U.S ........ 1$ II 1.%$1 U1G

Ground Turkey.:.. Sl 09

•

.

.

.

THIS WEEK
AT THE

PRESCRIPTION
SHOP

'

MIDDLEPOIT,
OHIO
.
'

SOME
·SELECTED ITEMS

'

'

~

'

50°/o OFFII

You'll Find Savings On

..

4 LB. NAVEL or 5 LB. FLORIDA

.Oranges··~·········:~ ••

•CHRISTMAS CARDS
•DECORATED TREES
•PLUS . .CH MOlE

.

Gift .Wrapping
Offll GOOI
'11. DIC. 16, 1919

"S••• •••r• S••••·s••,•..-....,; ·

(
Margarine •• ~ •.•••• ~••• 39
TV Dinners .~ •• !~~.0!·••• 99&lt;

~

--·-··
......'"•·=··
ftr

PIESCIIPTION SHOP

. . . . . . .,, __ 0 ;

•
., .....,:""';

--·-----·--·~--

w~.,

,

.........

•

••

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

(

••

,,:·!~.

3/S2

11M 1 PD (USTOIIII

333 PAGE STIEET
.lkEPOIT, OHIO 45 760

....,••,..

CAKE MIXES

-.,...

8001 OII.Y AT POWil'S SIIPUYALU

GOOIIUN. DEC. 10 111111 SAT DU. 16

..

!

.

'

JELLO GELAnN

·:o~z.

. .

.

4/99(
-

'

'
•. .

.

••~

..

U. •

,,

·'I if\~ J

,I

-~

.,"
-,
,.

.

..
'
)

. ·.
• •

ALL
WEEK
LIMI110

COUPONS

\

'

'

•

I•

soc

.

GRAN. SUGAR

$299

4LI.

lAG
. ~ ',

••

IIG CHIEF

GOOD ONlY AT POWIU.'S SIIPIIVAI.U
GOOD SUII., DEC. 10 TIIIU SAT. DEC. 16

'

,

...

.

MAXIMUM .'

'

'"! . ll. \

"".

••

l.IIIIT i Pa OISTOIIII

LIM 4 Pa CUSTGMa
GOOD ONlY AT POWIU'S SUPIIYAIU
GOOD SUN., DK. ID T1llll SAT. DE&lt;. 16

.·.

.

t

nDE DOERGENl'
• 4 w.
3 oz.

.)

( ·l

COUPONs··

VALUE

(614) 992-6472

, .. . . . . . . . . II

.

White

~enU/ft

W...tn Ctltlpt•••"-•

.

RHODES

DUNCAN HINES .
""""" , .. Ctrtfflft

•

BANQUET

..
..
.'

DOUBLE

PARKAY

I

•••Free"

$

$ 69
Flavor1te Milk...... 1

PLASTIC GALLON•

Come io Overbrook Center. . ~discover
.
again the Christmas Experience, and let
us show you that all Nursing Homes
are not alike!

•Layaway

UTHLEEN WELLS
IHOfiDA DAVIS
a. L MAnox
IUTH GIATE
PAUUNE IEUTEI
IBVA WWID
JEllY TIWS
MAll. YN POWELL
CHEIYL WWOID
CHAILENE SWAnz
SONYA WAYLAND
NEWE MYEIS
ADA IEESEE

.

UP TO

EVERYTHING IN THE STORE
EXCLUDING COLOGNE

. 992-6669

'

I

The Staff at Overbrook Center
invites you to attend our
"HOLIDAY OPEN HOUSE"
. SUNDAY, DECEMBER 17
1:00 to 4:00 P.M.
In keeping with the spirit of the
season, there will be carols sung in our
dining room with . refreshments, and
tpurs provided through our attractive
Overbrook Center giving you a
"'Season's.Greetings" of holiday
decorations.

SAYINGS .

20°/o OFF

.

~.

.

$50 GIFT . -.
CERTIFICATE •
. ..
and a
·.
'
$25 GIFT
..
CERTIFICATE
Will be given · ·
away each ...:
Saturday from :
now to Christma$~;

DECEMBER
WINNERS

·

ECKRICH .

"Special Care For People .W ho
Are Special To You"

SPRING VAlltl' GINEMA

SATURDAY, DEC. 16·
SATURDAY, DEC. 23

NOD NOT IE PIESENT ~
... '
TO WIN .

•

446 4:1/4

•TOYS
•GIFTWARE
•CHRISTMAS WRAP

CHOICE BONELESS

tl

PA

140

$

.

FRESH

PA
239
245
176

21ll

..

99
Boneless Hams •• ~.. 1 . .

tWI:)·

BAll
' W L
: ,. 1lt ............ 0
Oak Hill ......... 2 1

LB

CORN KING-6-8 LB. AVG.

z

(

P·or-k · Lo1~n ......•. $139

,.

1'4.

North Carolina ·.

Now thru Dec. 24
we will have a -,;
daily drawing for .
free groceries. ~
Sign you~ cashier·
tape and if your ·~
name is drawn, .,.
,.
you will be
reimbursed in :
"
cash for the ..•
amount of your ~&lt;
purchase.
'
----- ...
'

298 SECOND ST.
'POMEROY, .QH,
PRICES EFFECnVE
SUN., DEC. 10 THRU
.
. . - SAT., DEC. 16, 1989 .

2 2411 • 271
• Soutbwestern .. 2 3 351 3tiO
:: North Gallla ... 1 2 209 197
Oak am ......... o 3 192 238
: Kypr Creek ... 0 4 232 310
li031
..." TOT.U.S ........ 11 11 ~

HELPING YOU
CELEBRATE THE
CHRISTMAS -·'
HOLIDAYS ' .
•·

:. Symmes ......... 2

.:..&amp;.~

;~

99C

Stop In The
Store For
Details•.

'

••••
. ,"~
.. \l.;'·,·?
. ....

.

~

'

�. .l

'

PoiMioy WhUIPOit. Ohio

'''

·snow, rain, sleet make trav~l treach~rous
.

ern New Enal8nd .and tbe mer·
. , lfdri Preu Jllter..all-.1
cury dipped below l'll!l'o In parts of
Snow, rain and wind combined
vermont and New Hampshire,
to make traveling treacberous up
and M(lntpeller, Vt. , reported
and down the Atlantic Coast
light snow.
Wednesday, sleet pelted several
Arctic air remained en·
southern states and an arctic air
trenched over the nation's mid·
mass dropped temperatures
section, dropping temperallll'e5
below zero In the nation)
belOW zero for a second day. Tile
midsection.
The National Weather Service · ·cold air combllll!d with a low
pressure system over the Plains
posled llood and gale warnings
trlgga ed snow over parts of the
for roastal areas of New Jersey
Dakotas, Nebraska and lowa.
and Delaware where 3 to 4 Inches
of snow feU overnight. Up to 5
By Tuesday night, up to a ((lot
Inches of snow covered parts of
of
new snow bad fallen In tbe
Maryland, VIrginia and
Blaclcbllla
of South Dakota, tbe
Pennsylvania.
·
·
NWS
said.
Clouds carrying the threat of
Eatly morning temperatures
snow drifted over parts of south·
were below zero In tbe Dakotas,

.

'

.

~.DeoNnbw13,1989

'A11dnulilly, December 13•• 1989

•

· ' NATIONAL WEAntER SIRVICII'ORECAIT TO 7 AM' EST 12·14-119

MIMelota and ~lpn'l Upper tbe Flbrida Paabandle. .•
ln some areJa of -tern
Penlnaula. For'3Cuters said !be
Montana,
vtalbiUtte. l"ere 'recoldat temperatiii'N were .ex·
duced
to
less· than one mUe
peeled In weole,·n North Dakota,
because
of
snow and blowing
wiM!re It could reach ~ below
snow caused blf gusty nOftberly
zero.
Oklahoml, New Mexico,. wlnda. Overnlcbt low tempera·
Texas, Arkansu and I.oulalana lures east of tbe ·Con linen tal
also shtvcniil thr01111h another Divide were expected to 1i! - r·
· night nf tem111!ratures In the zero.
Colorado reported a few anow
teens and lower :108. The weather
servtc., wd light snow was flurries tast nJibt In some central
possible In nort()western and northern mountains loca·
· tiona, but skies were clear over
Arkanllllb. ·
,
Freezing weatber over most of the rest of the state.
A combination of dense 11111 and
the South led to sleet and snow In
the mountain sectlGns of Georgia low temperatures left tbe threat
and No•t.h Carolina. Tempera· of thin, almost lnvtslble Ice owr
tures dipped lnlo tbe 20s and :lOs the highways · In Callfomla's
over !'!lOSt of tba n!elon as far as Central Valley .

•

Poland and Hungray call for urgent Western assiStance
BRUSSELS, Belgium (UP!}Poland and Hungary called on24
Western nations Wednesday for
urgent assistance to steer their
economies toward free-market
systems.
Polish Foreign Minister
Krzysztof Skublszewskl and his
Hungarian colleague GuylaHorn
outlined for their 24 Western
counterparts 'the ·far-re,aching
economic and political reforms
their countries have undertaken.
"Our country tries to make for
Itself a new place In Europe,"
Skublszewskl said.

•
~SNOW

Monthly
statement ·

w'

.W

WASHINGTON (UP]) -The
National AIDS Commission
called on the government to stop
· marking passports of AIDS.
Infected foreigners traveling In
the United States and urged tbe
relaxation of Immigration laws
'
related to AIDS.
, The recommendations made
Tuesday · by the commission,
created bY Congress to oversee
the nation's fight against the
deadly epidemic, came amid
threats of boycotts of two lnterna·
: tlonal medical meetings planned
In the United States next year.
' Some activists who object to
the restrictive U.S. policy on
AIDS-Infected travelers have
· vowed to shun the Sixth Interna·
Uonal AIDS Conference In San
· Francisco In June and the 19th
' lnternatlonal Hemophilia Con·
gress In Washington In August.
· Organizers of the San Fran·
• cisco meeting estimated that up
to one-third ofthe expected 12,000
. participants may boycott the
gathering If visa rules are not
' changed.
Currently, travelers to the
United States are required to
state whether or not they are
Infected wltl\ the human lmmu·
nodeflclency virus, or HN,
which causes acquired Immune
deficiency syndrome. HIV·
Infected people can obtain walv·
, ers allowing them to vlslt the
United States for 30 days, bu I
their passports are marked with
a code noting them as carriers of
the AIDS virus.
Dr. June Osborn, chairman of
the AIDS commission, said,
"There Is no public health
justifications for current poll·
cles. They fly In thefaceofstrong

is released
Middleport village funds at the
end of November totaled
$209,235.17, with receipts being
$106,381.49 and disbursements,
$82.051.40, Clerk-Treasurer Jon
Buck reports.
According to the report the
general fund had a balance of
$75,970.63 with receipts for the
month totaling $47,854.86 and
disbursements being $6,469.34.
The street maintenance fund
showed a defiCit of $13,083.28 with
receipts for the month of$5,859.98
and disbursements of $6,348.99.
'l'he fire equipment had a deficit
balance of $9,355.22 with $2,371.38
In receipts and $758.96 In
disbursements.
The balance of other funds,
Us ted with receipts and disbursements, respectively were as
follows:
•
Fire truck: $66,5732.81, bal·
.ance; $4,1180.38, receipts and
$403.13, disbursements.
Sanitary Sew~r Escrow:
$2,448.84, balance, no receipts
and $1,500 disbursements.
Economic Development:
$3,580.15, balance;
$1,380.03,
receipts, and $1,559.77,
disbursements.
Public Transporatlon ,
$3,714.92 deficit balance,
$16,383.50, receipts; and
$14,669.86, disbursements.
Water tank: $69,736.43 bal·
ance; no receipts, with $150.38,
disbursements.
Water: $11 ~ .99 balance; ·
SU,082.02, receipts; and
b.6,618.51, dfsbursements.
: Sanitary sewer, 19,109.20 bal·
ance; $11,373.53, receipts, and
i 1,793.58, disbursements.
: Swimming pool, $16,262.89 deficit; $9.64 receipts, and $537.15
disbursements.
Cemetery, $5,775.89, deficit;
with 1509.02 receipts, and
$1,795.209 disbursements.
· Water meter trusts, $16,056.48
!lalance, $6,245 receipts, and $960
disbursements.
: Miniature golf, $3,582.06, bal·
a:nce; $52.15, receipts, and
$352.92 disbursements.

ABf! 8. First library card.

...

Lottery numbers
CLEVELAND !UP]) - Tuesday's winning Ohio Lottery
numbers:
PICK·3
860.
· PICK-3 ticket sales totaled
$1,314,855, with a payoff due of
$284,887.
PICK...f
7596.
PJCK·4 ticket sales totaled
$235,533, with a payoff due of
$124,100.

Middleport poliee
IUTfJIII 102 people
during November
The Middleport Pollee Depart·
ment made 102 arrests and
lnvesU,ated II!Ven acclllents
durlag tbe month of Nowmber,
accordllllf to tbe poUce report A
total of 147 meals were lei'WCI to
prlsoaers by the resident
dllpatcher.
Merchant pollee collections
totaled $24 aDd parkiDI meter
colleetloDI, $616. A total of 281
parklnJ tickets were written.

.' .

•

~

.

International opinion and 'prac·
tlce. They lead to unconscionable
Infringement of human rlgbts
and dignity."
HN Is spread by sexual or
blood-to-blood contact, such as
Intravenous drug U!M!rs sharing
needles, and can be passed from
mother to child. The deadly virus
cannot be spread.· by casual
contact, like shaking hands or
sharing food .
"HlV-lntected travelers to the
United Stat~s pose no greater
risk than any other Individuals,"
said Dana Van Gorder, an
organizer of the San Francisco
conference. ·
Besides the United States,
commission members 3ald the
only nations having HlV·related
travel res trlctlons are Bulgaria,
Chile, China, Cuba, East Ger·
many, ~ungary ; lraq, Pakls~n
and South Africa.
Duke Austin, a spokesman for
the Immigration and Naturallza·
tlon ServiL-e, said the Bush
administration Is aware of the
concern about marking pass·
ports. "We a,.., looking at the
posslb!Uty about how that could
be avoided ·- how It could be done
so It would not remain perman·
ent," Austlp satd. ·
At a news conference, the
panel displayed the passport of a
12-year-o!d British hemophUlac
who was lnleded with HN by a
blood transfusion. When the boy
received a waiver allowing him
to travel in the United States, his
passport was marked 212 03 A6
- a code for an Incurable
contagious· disease. AIDS Is ·by
far the most common Incurable
contagious disease In the world.

••'•
•

economy and politics," wblch he
said would lead to successful
results.
The ministerial session of the
Group of 24 was called to take
stock of action plans deviled In
three meetlnp of high offlctals
and to lay down programs for the
future.
Actions proposed solar In·
eluded over $4110 million emer·
gency food aid to Poland, opening
up Western markets for Polish
and Hungarian exports, promot·
lng lnveslments and Joint ven·
tures In the two countries, and
cooperation In professional train·

RENT TO OWN .
I STOREWIDE
1
HOLIDAY SALE

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R~~eN~·co~eupassedlegls· 1

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RENT TO OWN ·

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·
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COMPLETE

11

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$1 o5 EA.

II

FW SIZE

Start at

$7 5 set

RENT TO OWN

RENT TO OWN

VAUGHAN lASSEn

10 GUN

11

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$ 10

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11

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S6.00 Per Week S4.00 Per Week
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11

~

SUPER ·SOfA GUNREG.CABINET
GUN CABINETS I
S1200
Reg. 5199.00 I

foreigners who would otherwise 11EXTRA NICE-Reg. S749 INNERSPIING MAIDESS
quality for permanent residency, II: .
refugee status, asylum or legal!· W
REG. ' 199
zatlon, especially "where family
unity, humanitarian or public 1
Interest grounds may exist."
NOW
Currently, fqrelgners request· .I
lng long-term stays must un· I
RENT TO OWN
dergo an AIDS lest as part of a W
medical examination.
~
$1450 Per Week
Bank credlt-Qrd users bad average

•.

SUNDAY 12 NOON-S P.M.

1

1

i.

/Jnrlv

I

I

$6 99 AU WOOD 369 AU WOOD I

$369

11

RENT TO OWN

199

$20 Per Week

RENT TO OWN

$1450

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i

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D!ODth, down from 40 percent In 1917.

~----1!101'111¥1!Ao&lt;•--l!ll¥•!11¥••!11¥••••••••1!1;i••••••••••1

~':!Jf~:~~~~= I

VI'RA
'
F
URNITURE
I
lt. 141 4 Miles
614-446·3158
Gallipolis, Ohio 1
ROYAL CROWN

Whole 114·17 ·•· Ave.)

Semi-Boneless
Smoked Hams

•

•

Water Added

•

•'

A,~! 27: .First i«iaJ cbdl

c

nEMS AND PIIQS GOOD IN
GAWPOUS Ate POIIIIOY.
GOOD s•IAY, DIC.IO IIIOUGH
SA1'URDAY, DEC. 16, 1919.
WIIESEIVIIHE liGHT TO LIMIT
QUAN1111ES. NONE SOLO TO DEAURS. ,

•

AB1! 26: FJShirrg limlse

. ..;1,,.,.;,,,/.~

I

·'Thatcodewtllremaln'acode 1
for all of about 30 seconds. Soon I
everyone will know what It Is.
What's Important Is that the
marK Is not Just there wben they ,
comelntotheUnltedStates,lt's
In their passport permanently," ·II
:
saldDr.MervynSilvermanofthe II
American Foundation !or AIDS
OPDUIO.DAY·FIIDAY 9 AJI. TO 6 P.M.
latlon adding AIDS to the list of
conraglous diseases -Including
1ep1·osy and syphilis- tor which
a forelgnercouldbedenledentry
to the United States.
The government eased those
rules to allow 30-day travel
waivers In May ·after a Dutch
AIDS activist was detained by
u.s. officials In Minneapolis on
his way to a medical meeting.
But no waivers have been
granted to HN·lnfected foreign·
ers seeking longer stays In the
United States, the American Bar
Association said.
The 12·member AIDS panel

lng and envlrtonmental
protection.
The G-24 operation Is coordl·
nated by the European Commun·
lty's Executive Commission at
the request of tbe summit meet·
lng of seven leading Western'
Industrialized nations In Paris ln.
July.
The 241nclude the 12 EC states,
the six European Free Trade
Association countries - Austria,
Iceland, Norway, Portugal,
Sweden and Switzerland - and
the United States, Canada, Aus·
tralla, New Zealand, Japan and :
Turkey.

,........................................................------.

•'
•'

LB.

Thorn Applo Volt., Semi· Bonol••

Smoked Poniona.......... lb. '1.19

•

Soulh Cenlral Oblo

Mostly cloudy Wednesday
night, with a chance of snow
flurries and a low near 15.
Chance of snow Is 40 percent.
Considerable cloudiness Thurd· ·
say, with a chance of snow
flurries and highs near 25.
Chance of snow Is 50 percent.
Exteaded Foreeul
Friday tbrourh Sullday
A chance of snow Friday and
Sunday, with fair weather In the
southern part of tile state and a
chance of snow In the north on
Saturday. Highs will be between
10 and 20 each day, with over·
night lows between five and· 15
early Friday and between zero
and 10 above Saturday and
Sunday mornings.

' 'The factot· of time Is the most
Important,'' he sal&lt;!. "For this
reason International aid and
cooperation are Indispensable."
He said b~ w~s convinced that
aid and cooperation' 'constitute a
contrll.Jutlon tc the unification of
EuropE: and world s.olldarlty."
Horn said the reforms In
Hun~;ary guaranteed good use

would be made of the opportunl·
ties offered by foreign resources.
"I believe It Is unquestionable.
that what now appears as a
partner 1s a radically renewed
political and economic system In
Hungary," he said.
"Hungary Is a partner which
has opened the channels of
openness, a country where
parliamentary and gocernment
decisions as well as their
Implementation are lncreas·
lngly under public control as
democracy Is unfolding."· .
He called for a "long-term
strategy In the mutual play of

•

'

Weather

the Polish people will tace
hardships, lncl:Jdlng c. drup In
real revenu£ of !letween 20
percent and 30 perc..nt.

"•!

AB1! 18: Colkee ID

ABf! 18: Draft card gmnt.d

Welcoming the aid Western
democracies have promised to
the reforms, he said Poland was
not justlooklngforasststance but
" a cooperation which can free
our economic potential for better
use."
"Investments In Poland ...
constitute good and solid Invest·
ments In the future and In peace.
Theycontrlbutetowardthebulld·
lng of a unified and economically
Integrated Europe," be said.
Skublszewskl conceded that
rigorous monetary and fiscal
measures will be required and

Panel seeks easing oif trmJellimits

.RAIN
E ~d SHOWERS
FRONTS:
Warm "Cold
Static
Occludea
Map.- l'lirilllum lelnaeniiUm. At 1111150% ot IllY snaaea arwa1s forecast
:0 1ecei.. pt'ICI. . . . . lnaici!IG
UPI

11

The Dllily Sentinel-Page 9

Ponwoy- Midc..port. Ohio

113 SIZE

.,'
•
"

Martha White
Flour

California
Navel

S...Big

E.-

c

•

'''
,,

•'
ABf! 30: Health club

'

,.,. 55: .RJIO/Ij, Smior Cllam/1&amp;

-Of aJl the cardS yotiveeverh d, . .
your Semor · ps· holds emost.
Over the years you can accumulate a lot of cards.
Cards that entitle you to all sorts of things. Cards that
recognize you as a member of a special grwp. ·.
But of all the cards yOO.ve ever held, the card
you're entitled to at age 55 may be the most vabmblt.
. . It's the Senior Champs membership card, avail·
able ooly at BANK ONE.
1111
a• •••• 1111

financial news, health informatiOil and travel tips.
liT

KROGEft IIUTTI!RSCOTCH, MINI OR

SEMI·SWHT MORSELS

JUMIO e SIZE ... 3 FOIIti.OO

t2·0Z. · · .1 .11

•

.•
.'
'•'

•

IN THE DAIRY CASE
CHILLED

U.S. GRADE A
16-LBS. AND UP

Tropicana
Orange Juice ·

Kroger Fresh
Young Turkeys

1hz.

•

P11..

101

A~week Can'bbean auise. 1Wo tickets to Phantom
of the Opera. Or two fur dinner. Whatever trips or
get·toRethen your local BANK ONE Senior Champs
~has planned, yoor membership card
assures wu'U always be welcane to go along.
And it's all yoors when )'00 maintain a deposit of
$5,000 in_atlY_~Iinatioo of savings or COs (except
Inclu~ afree SerOOr Champs checkinR
accoont with mterest and 110 cha,.efor checksfl.ots of IRAs) at BANK ONE.
extras like b atela s checks and mooey or .,tel sat m
1he Sena Champs membership card. Available
cost And a free subsaiptim to the newsletter that
ooly at BANK ONE..Stop in today and see how much
keeps you informed 011 the latest BANK ONE services, it tdds b' )00.

-

'

-TO·TO·----IaiiCIS.

For
KIIOCIIII PIIIIH EGG NOG 011
BOILED CUSTARD QUART .•. ti.CII

Spot!i~

Springdale 2%
'

Bean COffee·

LowfatMilk

~

I
I

Gallon

-

LIMIT 1 WITH ADDITIONAL PURCWE
UMIT ONE COUPON PEA FAMILY
e.G~--

INAf. IIIC..II. , .

MMJ11.PIICIN m11• IGIIt. Will

------------------

I
I
I
I
..

OICA,..,.TID 81'QTUGHT IIAN
COfRI1·LI... 2 FOil

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... ...-- -~-·------...,;,

__________.-

�Wednndl'f, Decemblr 13,1188 ·

Pig n 10-The Deily S211inonl

_.,....-Local· n:ews briefs... - - Gallia...
Continued trcm pace 1
behind a,; school bus and when the bus moved fotward, abe
started forward. Her 1983 Ford LTD was hit from behind by a
1981 Ford truck driven by Elmer C. NewelL 39, Lon&amp; Bottom.
There was minor damage to the truck; moderate damace to the
car.
.
Mays complained of an Injury J!,nd was transported by the
Meigs County Emergency Medical Service to St. Jo5epb's
Hospital at l;'arkersburg, W.Va.
The patrol cited Newell for failure to stop within the assured
clear distance.
.
The patrol investigated another Injury accident at 8:55p.m.
Tuesday onSR. l24,1nSuttonTwp.,0.7of amUeeastohnUepost
24.
•
.
Troopers say Gary E. Jenkins, 42, Syracu.e, lost control on a
curve and his 1985 Chevrolet Cbevette went off the road, Into a
ditch then struck a tree. There was heavy damaee to the car.
Jenkins was Injured and transported to Veterans Memorial
Hospital at Pomeroy. He suffered lacerations of the head and
face and was admitted to the hospital for observation.
The patrol charged Jenkins with driving under the lnfiuence
and !allure to maintain control.

Ucenee iMued

Contlnlled tram page 1

veiiJaDce 8Jid security tor the
undercover agents durlni most .
of the drui purchases, Pros2cu·
tor !!Junders, serves as the
project director !or a tour c~unty
drui tasi force which bepn
operations iill987. The task force
Is funded through the Governor's
Office of Cruntnal Justice Services and tloe BoardH or County
Commtsalonersln the partlclpat·
In&amp; co.mtie.~. The remaining
counties are continuing their
IDvesUgatlons Into :!licit drug
dealings.
Saunders states that the grant .
received from the Governor's
Offk'e o% Criminal Justice Services has been a tremedous asset In

our f!iht against drugs here In Salillbury And Gallipolis Pollee
GalHa County. ''We haveudllzed Chief, Joe Owen, aloaa with
funds to brlni undercover apnts ottlcen from each department,
Into our area and the results are were present Wednetday to exe78 drug charees." He added the cute the arrest warrants, Immeoffice Is relentlessly pursuing diately, In a "county wide ,
drug offenders In Gal ita County. sweep."
Hla office baa continued to
receive the assistance of the
community and maintains that
all callS regarding Illegal drugs, · CbrilllmM play
received by his office, remain
A Christmas play, ''Someeonfldentlal.
thing's Going On In Bethlehem,"
In addition to the support ofthe will he presented Sunday, 7: 30
citizens, Saupders add&amp; that be p.m., at the Mt. Hermon U. B.
appreclatllS the local courts Church, the
"continually taking tough stands Texas Community. Rev. Robert
against drug offenders."
Sanders Invites the public to
Gallls County Sheriff, DenniS attend thts special hoUday

-

---Mei@s announcements _ _ __

lj

Caalaia

A Christmas cantata, "Love,
Light and Life, The GiftS of
Christmas," will be presented
Sunday evening, 7:30p.m., at the
Racine First BapUst Church. The
public Is Invited to attend.

By CHARLENE JlOEFLICH
If you're planning to give toys
as gifts this holiday season, then
he sure to check
them out care, fully for sharp
edges, small
parts that might
break off and be
swallowed, and
ones made with
flammable and toxic materials.
Meigs County Health Department officials join the Ohio
Department of Health In caution·
. log parents and others to watch
what they l:)uy.
Last year more than 142,000
children had to he treated for
Injuries In toy-related lncl·
dents. Toy safety should be
uppermost In everyone's mind
now since more than half of
' annual retail toy sales take place
during the six weeks prior to
Christmas. .
while 85 percent of all toy-related Injuries happen to children
under 15 years old, nearly 50
percent Involve chlldren ages
five and younger.

~-Area

deaths--

Dale Wemer
Dale D. Werner, 80, of Marble
Cliff, Columbus, formerly of
Meigs County, died Dec. 2 at Mt.
·
Carmel Medical Center.
He retired In 1974 as plant
manager of the Columbus Gas
·co. having worked there for 43
years. He was a member of Phi
Delta Theta, Professional Eng!·
neers Society, the Clvltan Club,
the Cliff Heights Senior Center,
and McDowell Senior Centers.
He Ia survived by his wile,
Lucille Mayer Werner, a son and

daughter-In-law, Donald B. and
Nancy Werner, St. Louis, Mo. ,
grandchildren, Julie, Danny and
David Werner, a brother and
slSter·ln-la·N, Paul and Mickey
Werner, Pomeroy, and a sister
and brother-In-law, Betty and
Roscoe Fife, Middleport; a
slster·ln-law. Kathryn Mayer
Gardner, several nieces, n~
phews and cousins.
Funeral services were held at
the Dayo-Davls Funeral Home
In Cl!liPnbua. Buriel was In
Beec1:i Grove Cemetery, Porn~
roy on Dec. '·

And please don't eat the
mistletoe this holiday season!
Did you know that while It's tun
to kiss under the miStletoe eating
the red berries can be fatal.

ELECTRONICS

101 N. 2ND

Also bet you didn't know that
today Is PolnsetUa Day, a time
designated to honor Dr. Joel
Roberts Poinsett, the plant's
namesake.
Poinsett was born on March 2,
1799 In Charleston, S.C. and
Introduced the plant to the U.S.
after serving as U.S. ambassador to Mexico from 1825-29.
While there he became fascl·
nated with the "fiower of the holy
night" and the legend of a poor
Mexican boy who had nothina to
give to the Christ child when the
beautiful plant appeared at his
feet and he placed It on the altar.
Speaktna of polnsetUas one
local grower adverUsed seven
colors...... Now let me see, red,
wl)lte, pink; pale yellow, even red
and white spotted (personally 1
thought It looked like someone
had dripped white paint on a red
plant) and there's two more
colors, but what?

DI!ALER

See Wh.rs Really
NEWI
'

Stereo and Aoc ass a.ies

• Autolound Cornput8rs • Video
Eql tlpment • Phones CD
and Communications Eqt II!Jmenl

• Eledl oolc Toys • Cellular
Phones • VCRs • Reoordats • .
Recording Tape • Antennas •
Batteries • Clocks • lntarooms
• Parts • Cak;ulalors

•TWO LOCATIONS •CREDIT TERMS •SERVICE DEPT.
I

&amp; J~!91'

'

GALLIPOliS
446-8084

Holl~ay
DIU lUilE

SIIIIDDID-...Ib. $2.19
SUKED.....Ib.

I.

1 II. PIG.

MARGARINE
QUAmRS ....................89C

10 CT.

LARGE EGGS ......P.P.~ s1.29

TANGELOES ............. 2I 49&lt;

.OliO COlBY lOHGHOIN

(HEESE ••••••••• ~ ••••• ~...... S2 .19

Plenty of Toys .for Boys

TANGERINES............ 3I 49&lt;

IEAVO YAUEY GlADE A

Ladies Circle
meeting held
;

17/ICT.

STOP IN AND SEE THESE PLUS OTHER
ITEMS FOR A SUPD Gin IDEA.

Tire Driving For~e High ,~m NlKE. Crt
a !''"~.for your farorite athlete tQtiay.
r.rey re the stuff dreoms arc made of.

J."...... 39•

CARROTS ...........

PRESRIPTION SHOP
992-6669
271 North S.COIM3

FRESHLIIE PEAS •••••••• l~.~~. S1.79
•Nun IU30
APPLE JUICE ..............l1.Pb S1.19
PAll FA.
CHICKEN LIVERS ••••••••lt.P!•••••9 S&lt;
SEASIIE-15 OZ.

BUnER BEANS ••••~~•••••• 2/S1. 19

DEL MONTE- Wh OZ.

STEW~D

TOMATOES •••• 2/S1.69.
·LIBBY'S PUMPKIN ••••••!I.~1. S1.39
CIIEAII Of MIISIIIOOII-10'r'• OZ.
CAMPBELL'S SOUP••••••• 2/S 1.19
RALSTON
RICE CHEX
CEREAL
•••• l1.Ph S2.69
NES'IU
.
.
TOLL HOUSE MOISELJ.~1•• S1.09
NESnE-12 oz....
BUTTERSCOTCH MORSELS •• S1.99
JIF PEANUT BUIIER ..l!.~!. S2.39

......

--

llllltl.. part, Ohla

Sorority chapter meets

The Wlndll)g Trail Garden
Club has joined with the Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce In
sponsoring the project.
The judging will take place on
Dec. 19.
It's really not necessary to
register bu t'if you happen to live
In an out-of-the-way place
and want to be sure your
decoratiOns are judged you
should let the Chamber or Kay
Frederick, 992-5101, chairman,
know so you won't be missed.
The categories are entrance,
religious, and overall, and there
will be a first, second and third In
each category.
Do remember to have your
decorations lighted before 6:30
when the out-of-town judges
begin their tour of r.hc town.
This Is the stressful season and
If you don't believe It, just read
the cove~a of December ISsues of
magazines the next time you
stand In the grocery checkout
line.
Everyone has a solution on how
to relieve yGur hoUday stress
problem.
I like tile "lllugh It off" and
''talk It out" solutions but somehow as I'm standing there with
my jug ot milk waiting to get
checked out, I can't quite bring
myself to do either.
You know how some people are
- they might not understand or
want to get Involved with my
stress problem.
"Run It off' Is probably a
better solution to the stress'of the
season and that's one you can
probably !ncorporate with your
ChriStmas shopping.
Then tpere's the suggested .
solution ot "soak ltou t." Presurn·
ably that means In a bathtub.
And whilE, you're there you can
"laugh It off" and "talk It out"
and come out not only clean but
relieved of all that stress. Gee!

,.,.,.,

29.99

lfl-ln. VariAsh Splld lev. .lng Drill
'1111" frllll 0-2,50G rpm. lodtlng trigger. 1/3
HP. -~~•
15117111

..

Mltzzle loader shoots
'The Ken Amsbary Chapter of
the Isaak Walton League will
ha\'e muzzle loader shoots on
Suoday, and Dec. 24 and 31.
Various prizes of cash and meat
will be awarded.

Christmas program
The Morning Star United Meth·
odlst Church will present Its
ChriStmas program on Sunday at
7:30p.m.
Pastor Kenny Baker Invites
the public to attend.

Barbar a's School of Dance wlll
present Its annual Christmas
dance program on Sunday at 4
p.m. at the Southern Junior High
School. The public Is Invited to
attend.

Chirstmas program
The Mt. Union .Baptist Church
will present Its Christmas program on Sunday at 7 p.m.
The church IS located off Route
143 on County Road 14, two miles
south of Carpenter.
Joe N. Sayre, pastor, Invites
the public.

VALLEY
LUMBER
·. 555 PAIII ST.

MIDDLEPORT

992-6611
-;

Stnd

SINGING SUNDAY -loaa
WelHnpoa, lead alnpr wltll
the Fellowllblp Slocers, from
Vlntoa, will be aiDpag Saodl!f
eveolng during the. 8 p.m.
service at the Pomeroy
Church of the Nuarene. Putor Glean McCluqlnvlte&amp; the
publiC.

POMEROY
FLOWER SHOP
"2-6454
"2-6455
'106 Niililll1' AVE.
POIIEIOY, 03110

SWISHER-LOHSE

NURSE MATES
WAS $48.00

•

NOW

$41 00

CIILDRIN'S KANGAROOS

T.ENNIS SHOES S26"

n.RSDAY THII SA1UIDAY
Happy Holidays From All of Us

REG. 95c

ONlY

HOOD
FAMILY
SHOES
210 on IWN
"2-6254
POIIIIOY

.THIS

69c

I

lf:2 PRICE
.

CHRISTMAS
.
WRAPPING PAPER...................

THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY, &amp; SUNDAY

WIDE
,~

COMPlETE STOCK

JEWELRY

TIMEX
WATCHES

1/2 PRICE

40°/o OFF

AMITY
BILLFOLDS

N
TS
FRESH FROM OUR

I

1/2

/o

0

OFF .

PRICE

,. MACIINE•

Buy 4 Ounces
Get 2 Ounces

F

LADY smsON; .375 OZ.- REG. SUS

SPRAY COLOGNE ................ ONlY

SOPHIA MAE

SPRAY COLOGNE

PEANUT BRinLE

ONlY

$2 79

8 OZ.- REG. S1.19

77(

ONLY

'

lAG OF 40

HOLIDAY BOWS .................. ONLY

I R

OPEN
MONDAY-SATURDAY
8 to 8; SUNDAY. 12 to 6
-·· .... ... --. -

c

We Speclalbre Ia
•
'9 '

CHRISTMAS
·DECORAnONS..........................

'

.

'

$119

1/:2 PRICE

TINSEl.. ORNAMENTS, UGHTS, ICICL£S

-.

FREE Gin'

$419

NIGHT RHYTHMS
.4 OZ. - $4.95 Value

~~~5JioES

t

RUSSELL
STOVER
ASSORTED
CHOCOLATES
2 oz.

40°/o OFF

•' l

Mr. and Mrs. Brian Well,
Middleport, are announcing the
birth of their leCOnd child, a son,
Richard WIWam Vaughan Well,
on Nov. 1~ at Holzer Medical
Center.
The couple has another child at
home, Elizabeth.
Maternal grandparent&amp; are
Richard and Ruby Vaughan,
Middleport. Maternal great
grandfather Is Richard E.
Vaughan, Pomeroy.
Paternal grandmother Is
Evelyn Well. Pomeroy.

•It

31eleflom:
more than flowers.

·ALL LADIES HANDBAGS .

The December meeting of thE
Ladles' ClrcleoftheFalthGospel
Church, Long Bottom, was held
at the church. The evening
Included a Christmas dinner and
gift exchange.
Members and friends present
for the evening Included Thelma
Smith, Pat Martin, Pauline
Baker, Violet Satterfield, Erika
Boring, Dolly Reed, Vlvtan
Humphrey and her granddaughter, Jennifer; Tammy Cowdery
and her son, Christopher; Audra
Ruckman, Debbie Barringer,
Emma Durst, Nell WilSon, Mary
Allee Blse, VIrginia Walton,
Verna Rose, Pearl Baker, Sandy
Cowdery. Connie White and
Bobble Reed.
Sandy Cowdery, program dl·
rector, led devotionals with her
program, "Why We Celebrate
ChriStmas.'' Violet Satterfield
provided the evenlng!s music.

The Rutland Fire Department
Awdllary wtll hold Its Christmas
party on Friday at 6:30 p.m. at
the fire atatlon.
Tlloee at.....,lng are to bring a
cOwred dllll aad there will be S5
ilft -haJIIe. Membera are also
to brlq flft aame prizes.

Give Flowers
ina Shiny
Brass Match
Caddy.

Dance program

Have a nicE&lt; week!

Auxiliary party
s/4ted Friday

992·6491

Carolyn Collins presented a that the Cbrtstmu d!Mer and
cultural report on •'Everyday gift exchange will he held at the
EtlquP.tte and Manners for Mod- home Annie Chapman on Dec.19
ern T.l mes'' at the recent meeting at 7 p.m. Gifts are to be wrapped
of. the Xi Gamma Mu Chapter, In white paper with a red bow.
Pat Arnold thanked everyone
Beta Sigma•Ph! held at the home
for
their jjeneroslty In bringing
·of A.R. Knight, who served as an
envoy member.
gifts and canned goods for the
Kay 1\dklns . presided at the needy.
meeting In which the secretary's · Lynn Shuler suggested that the
and treasurer's reports were group use an "Euter Rabbit" as
given and a thank ~ou card was a spring tund railer.
A "Do Your Own Thing Auc·.
read from Paula Haynes.
lion" was held with Sheila Harris
N~l~l Gerard reported that
she and Kay Adkins had attended serving as auctioneer.
Hostesses were Barbara Black
the dedication ceremony of the
Advent candle at the Grace and IriS Payne.
EpiSCopal Church In Pomeroy.
Charlotte Hanning reported

Birth
announCed

Pocket-size,
2way
communication

786 NORTH
SECOND
.,DI.EPOIT

Wadnanctay, December 13, 1989
P8gl 11

Again this year a· home decorating contest will be held In
Pomeroy.

l~eal

COOKED HAM ••••••
S1.99
IIOBADE
MEAT SALAD •••••••••••••~!·........ 89&lt;
ECIIKH
JUMBO BOLOGNA ••••• l!·•••• S1.79
BREAKFAST HAM LOAF ••lfo. S2 .S 9

. . ID.IET

Commumty corner

Selecting toys...

evening.

EMS luJs nine Tuesday rolls .
Nine callS for assistance were answered on Tuesday by un~ts
of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Services.
Pomeroy at 4:40 a .m. went to Welshtown Hill tor Herman
Redman who was taken to Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Tuppers Plains Fire Department was called ai 5:07p.m. to a
hay fire on the Carl Findley property on Sumner Road. At 6: 56
a.m., Tuppers P·lalns Fire Department was called to Mudsock
Road for another hay fire.
Middleport went to Zuspan Hollow · Road at 7: 19 a.m. for
Minnie Thompson who was taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
Racine at 8: 12 a.m. transported Larry Powell from Antiquity
to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
The Chester Fire Department was called at 3:18 p.m. to the
Parker residence on SUmber Road where a stove had
over-heated.
At 3:43a.m., Chester Fire Department and Tuppers Plains
EMS were called to a motor vehiCle accident on Route 248. Allee
M11yer was transported from the accident scene to St. Joseph's
Hos pita!, Parkersburg, W.Va ..
At 8: 58 p.m., the Syracuse Fire Department and EMS unit
were called to a motor vehicle accident in Minersville. Gary
Jenkins was taken from the accident to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
Tuppers PlaiDs at 9: 14 p.m. was called to Route 248 for Violet
Parker who was treated but not transported.

The D·aily Sentinel

By The Bend

A marriage license has been
Issued In Meigs Probate Court to
Larry Lee Cleland, 40, Rutlalld,
and Bo,nnle . Lou Cleland, 38,
Pomeroy.

OFFEI
GOOD
.1HIOUGH
17, 1919.

�Wednnday, December 13, 1989

•

Community calendar

Chester D of A nominates.officers
Officers were nominated when
the Chester Council 323 Daugh·
ters of America met recently at
the ball with VIrginia Lee as
councilor.
ThepledgetotheChristlanand
American flags were given, the
Lord's Prayer was repeated, the
flrststanzaofthe"StarSpangled
Banner" was sung, and Psalm 87
was read.
It was reported that Doris
.l

DONAftON -8ula Clau (Mu Wldtldch)
. . .ted by laW helper. lacll stolllllp, rllbl.
pneeated caaciJ to tile pella and children
11Ueadlq the recent carepven reeopltloa party
at tbe -lor citizens center In Po..-oy. Both

•

-are-benofLoca1181'7oftbeUnlledMiile
Wo""-a af America. They also gave a doiiiUion of
Sll to 8llaroa Wright, for the Alzheimer's
program effered through the Melp Couaty
Couacll oa Artng.

'Grueser
1s home
from
the hospl·
tal, and that
Betty
Roush
Is not
well. Helen Taylor was also
reported to be In the hospital.
Esther Smith read a letter
from Jean Frederick thanking
all who helped In any way
following the death of her bus·
band. Alta Ballard also thanked
the members who assisted her
after th~ death of her brother.
The Good of Order had a cake.
walk with Ruth Smith the winner.
1 The Past Councilor's Club wlll
meet at the lodge hall for the
Christmas dinner at 6: 30 p;m. on
Wednesday.

· Caregivers recognized
recently at center
\

Area caregivers of people with
Alzheimer's Disease or other
related disorders were honored
recently at t)te multi purpose
senior citizens center In
Pomeroy.
Forty-five people 1ttended
the event which was sponsored
by the Alzheimer's DlseaseRe• . Ia ted Disorders Program and the
• Retired Senior Volunteer Program (RSVP) through the Meigs
County Council on Aging, Inc.
Receiving recognition and
presented certificates by Sharon
Wright, caseworker, and Ric
Abel, of Ohio Valley Health
• Services In Athens, were Janet
McKee, Racine; Don and Betty
Maurer, Pomeroy; Doris Jack·
son, Tuppers Plains; Lucretia
Smith, Pomeroy; Hallie Stol·
lings, Chester; and Mary Slg·

.

•

program which was developed to
help not only youngsters, but
adults 1,1s well, to understand and
be acceptlllg of all people, and to
be willlnr to let t!l!lr circle of
friends and aequalntances grow.
The Green Circle board cost the
service unit apix'oidmately $70,
of which $10 came In the form of a
donation from the Meigs County
,
CB Club.
Leaders Beth Theiss and Connie Collins have agreed to represent Girl Scouts on the Meigs
County Junior Fair Board, alonr
with Girl Scouts Heather Burch,
Sherry Jl&gt;hnson, Anita Thomas
and Wendt Harmon .
It was also reporled that at
least two-thirds of the county's
Girl Scout troops partlclpated ·ln
the Pomeroy-Middleport
Christmas Parade.
Cogar.urged leaders to consult
the Cluster Clips newsletter and
The Launch to keep apprised of
events outside of the county. She
reported that Council's annual
Spring meeting will be held April
8 at West VIrginia State College,
lnsdtute, W.Va., and also suggested that leaders consider
participating In the National
Celebration of the Out-Of·
-Doors to be held March 22-29.
Information about the national
celebration Is In the Cluster
Clips, Cogar said.
From January to April, any
leaders with questions or problems should contact Kathy Price
at 992-7725, Cogar said.
The evening closed with the
party and Invesdture-Rededl·
cation ceremony. Dee Lawrence,
Girl Scout Field Director,
Athens, assls ted with the
ceremony.
The nex I regular service \IDit
meeting will be In February at
the Pomeroy United Methodllt
Church. In addition to any
business that month, a song
workshop wlll be held with a
guest presenter, so leaders are
advised 1o bring tape recorders.

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY -A representa·
RUTI.AND -The Church of ttve from Conaressman Clal'l!nce
Jesus Chrllt Apo1toUc Faith, Miller's office will conduct an
New Uma Road, Rutland, will open door aesllon on Wednesday
have revival through Saturday at .from 11 a.m. tol p.m.lnthecourt
7 p.m. nightly. The evangelist house fn Pomeroy. Anyone hav·
will be Lovle Foster and there lng quesdons Is urged to atop by
will be special singing each and di!ICUSS them with the
night.
rep~ntatlve.

r~Ot~he;::r!s.!a~tte!:;!!nd~in~g~th~e~~~L---------:~:;-:::~1

*

¥_., . .
·

.

:..

•

POMEROY -The Meigs
County Cooperative Parish Food
Pantry will be taking appUcatlons for food baskets based on
low Income on Wednesday and
Thursday from 9:30 a.rn.-12:30
p.m.
.

"f'll Be Home
.
CILristm'
as •'~if" ..
•.
rl'.or
~
II
"

.

This is a favorite song for many people at this
time of year. But for some, it's not because
they find themselves or a loved one ill and in
the hospital.
·
At Professional Care, we want to make your
·
Christmas speciaL
We can provide professional, quality care in
the comfort of your own home.

For more Information call Lynn .
O'Leary our registered nurae at

SIM-5845and you too could be sing·
tng ....''l'll Be Home For Christmas"
Grace Crabtree

Professional Care
Home IV Services

.. Girl

Meigs County's Girl Scout
" leaders gathered thiS past Thursday for a ChriStmas party and
Investiture-Rededication ce• remony. The party and cerem.. ony wen held In conjunction wftb
~ the December meeting of the Big
~ Bend Girl Scout Service Unit,
., held at the Syracuse United
, Methodist Church. Shirley
• Cogar, service unit director,
• coaducted the meeting.
.
•
Among the business Items
• dllcuased were Thinking Day
patches which ·are being ordered
by Connie CoWns, of the Syra·
•• cuse Brownies. Collins reported
• that the patches sell for $1.25
• each and must be Ordered prior
• to Dec. 30. Anyone wishing to
order the patches must notify
Collins before that date and the
patches must be paid for In
•. advance.
·'
Thinking Day IS scheduled for
Feb.
24 and will be held In
,.
• conjunction with Pomeroy's Sesquicentennial Celebration.
;
Cogar reported that the annual
" Plus-One Program will start
Jan. I and continue through June
.. 30. Anyone who brings In a new
scout, or leader, Is eligible for
; the Plus-One patch which Is
~ sent from Black Diamond Council, Charleston, W.Va.
·;
Cogar also noted that the
annual Girl Scout skating party
• will be held March 10, 2 to 4: 30
• p.m. at the Chester Skate-A·
way, and IS open to "Girl Scouts
• only." Debbie Cooke Is chairing
' the annual event.
f The skating party Is always
held In conjunction with Girl
• Scout Week and Cogar would like
~ to have additional leaders take
charge of the week-long
• celebration.
•
A chairman Is still needed for
the April 28 Mother-Daughter
l Banquet. Gladys Thomas agreed
• to start· the ball rolling on the
: banquet by taking charge of food
• Items needed for the evening.
A March age-level event tor
• Juniors and Cadettes Is also
tentatively scheduled for March
:- with Debbie Cooke, Gladys Tho-~ mas, Nancy Yoacham and April
Harmon planning the event.
•
The Daisy-Brownie age-level event has not yet been
IICheduled although Cathy Cllf·
• ford, Jane Moon and Brenda
Neutzling have agreed to plan the
• •cttvlty.
;: Leaders were reminded to
·: IUbmlt Information for the Girl
! · ScoutDiarytoTbeDallySentinel
:-· ottlce by Dec. 20. 1nformatlonfor
• the Diary should Include actlvl'· del from November through the
:. Chrlltmal bollday seUIIII. CoiDr
': aaaptbota are perm lAible wftll
Diary artlclel as tong as the
SDIIPibola are aood quality.
The lei"VIce unft- baa It's
: OWD Greea Circle board for the
•. county's five Green Circle train·
• era- Copr, Beth Tbela, Debbie
:• Coolre, Connie Coi11DI and NBJIC)'
: y oecbam. GreeD Clrtle Ia a

were Sadie Trussell, Dorothy
Ritchie, Betty Young, Lora
.Damewood, Goldie Fredrick,
Bulah Maxey, DoriS Koenig,
Marcia Keller, JoAnn Baum,
Eva Robson, Geneve Ward,
Everett Grant, Opal Hollon,
Laura Nice, Faye Kirkhart,
Ethel Orr, Mary Holter, Eliza·
beth Hayes, and Doris Grueser.

Some of the in home
therapy we provide
includes:
.
• Chemotherapy
*Total Parenteral
Nutrition
• Antibiotic
Therapy
*Pain
Management
*Enteral
Nutrition

man, Cheshire.
RSVP volunteer caregivers
who received specl:ll recognition
were Ja~'S Travls. Pomeroy,
and Frances Starr, Pomeroy.
A skit, written by Evelyn
Clatk, manager of the Maples In
Pomeroy, was presented by the
"Geriatric Gestures." Per·
formers Included James Travis,
Evelyn Wolford, VIrginia Rowe,
Dana Bunch, VIrginia Phalln,
and Dick arid Polly Curti•.
Margaret Holmes Introduced
Pam Thelsmg, new Skilled NursIng Facility Director at Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
Door prizes were awarded to
Jim Travis, Frances Starr, and
Lula. Hampton.
Polnse1tlas used for the door
prizes were donated by Hubbard's Greenhouse In Syracuse.

Scout Service ·
:· Unit meeting held

The meeting closed with Erma
Cleland reading "Any Other
Day ." ·
Those observing quarterly
birthdays were Charlotte Grant,
Sandy White, Ruth Smith, Ada
Bissell, Inzy Newell, Katheryn
Baum, Alta Ballard, Mae
McPeek, Esther Smith, and
Thelma White.

_w_~~~~·~o~--~m=bw~1~3~.1~98~9------------------~--~P~~~o~y-~M=~~~~~~~~·~ONo~-~----------------------~Tiw~~o~~·~y~S~em~~-~---~~~-1~3

,
•

CHESTER
Chester Township Trustees will meet In regu·
lar session Wednesday, 7:30
p.m ., at the town hall.

•

SYRACUSE - An lnforma·
Ilona! meeting to discuss Social
Security benefits for workers
, who have handicaps will be held
• Wednesday, 1 p.m., at Carletori
School In Syracuse. The meeting
Is sponsored by the Meigs Board
of Mental RetardatlonDevelopmerital Dlsabllltles .. A representative from the Athens Social
Security office will be present.
All enrollees of Meigs MRDD
programs, their parents or
guardians, and other Interested
parties are Invited to attend.
Parents of school-age MRDD
program enrollees may also
receive useful Information.

POMEROY -The Pomeroy
Group of AA and AIAnon will
meet-Thursday at 7 p.m. at the
Sacred Heart Catholic Cburc h.
For more Information, call
1-!110--333-5051.

TBUBSDAYc
ROC!&lt; SPRINGS - The Rock
Springs Graage will meet Thurs·
day, 6:30 p.m. This will be a
potluck and members are to
bring canned gc.ods to the
meeting.
POMEROY -The Lauren Cliff
Better Health Club will have Its
Christmas party on Thursday,
6: 30 p.m. at ~e home of Marge
Fetty, Route 143. Dinner will be a
potluck with salad and dessert.
There
also be a $3 gift
exchange.

will

POMEROY -The XI Gamma
Epsilon Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority, will meet Thursday,
6:30 p.m. at the home Ann and
Richard Rupe, Wright St.
Members are to bring secret
sister gift&gt;, an or~ment, and
Items tor the needy family.

MIDDLEPORT -TheMiddleREEDSVILLE -The Riverport'Literary Club will meet1: 30
p.m. Wednesday . Mrs. Daniel view Gardeu Club will meet
Thomas will · be the hostess. A ·Thursday, 7: 30p.m. at the home
review of the book ''Snow Leo- ·of Gladys Thomas. Co hostesses
pard" ·b y Peter Matthlessen, will will be Grace Weber and Polly
be given by Mrs. Wendell Baker.
Hoover. Roll call will be "your
' FRIDAY
personal Shangrl La."
Run.AND -The Rutland Fire
MIDDLEPORT -The Middle- ,D epartment Auxiliary will hold
port Amateur Gardeners Club Its Chrlltmas Party on Friday at
will have Its Christmas party at 6:30 p.rr.. at the fire station.
the home Gene Moore on Wednes- Those attending are to bring a
day, 6:30p.m. Instead of a $5glft covered dish dinner. There will
exchange, the money will do- be a $5 gift exchange and
nated to the American Cancer everyone Is to bring five game
Society. The party will be a prizes .
. potluck .

SATVIWAY
HARTFORD, W.Va.- Annual
Chrlltmaa dlr.ner &lt;'f .American
Allay employees anJ Foot~ Min·
era! ret£rees and families will be
Saturday,ll:3C a .m. to 6 p.m. at
the Union Hallin Hartford.

Kilns proposed for Pennsylvania
attending are to bring a covered
dish. Meat and drinks will be
provided, and the public Is
Invited to attend.

RACINE -The cantata,
"Christmas From Scratch" will
be presented at the Racine
SALEM CENTER -The Star Nazarene Church on Saturday at
GriiDge will hold Its annual 7 p.m . The chpldren's 'program
Christmas dinner and gift ex· will be presented Sunday at 10: 30
change on Saturday at 6:30p.m, a.m. The publiC Is Invited to
at the fire station In Salem · attend.
Cenu.r. All members and friends
TUPPERS PLAINS -The
aditnvited to attend. Ham will be
tulhtsbed and . members and VFW Post 9053 and Ladles
Auxiliary In Tuppers Plains will
gue~~ts are to bring a covered
dish . A $3 gift exchange will be have a Christmas party for
members and family on Satur·
held following the meal.
·
day at 6:30 p.m . The auxiliary
COOLVILLE -The Lottrldge will furniSh the meat and eveCommunity Center, Lottrldge, ryone Is to bring a covered dish.
will have Its annual Christmas Santa Claus will be present to
dl110er on Saturday at 6: 30 p.m. give out treats and there will be a
at ~e center located on Athens gift exchange for the kids with a
Count;( Roaij 53 South. Those $3 limit.

VALASSIS

LATROBE , Pa. (UP!) - A
Cortland, N.Y. , company says It
plans to build a wood processing
plant In Westmoreland County In
western Pennsylvania.
Gutchess Hardwoods Inc. has
applied for $9 million In bond
financing from the Pennsylvania
Economic Development Finanelng Authority. The authority Is
expected to consider the request
In January, a spokeswoman said.
Gutchess wants to build Its
plant on a 42-acre site In Unity
Township near Latrobe. The
company plans to process 15
mUIIon board feet of green
lumber In 16 kilns each year at
the site, company vice president
Gary Gutchess 111ld thll week.
The facility also would Include
stacking and sorting equipment.
Initially, the plant would employ 50 people on a one-shift
basis. Gutchess would buy rough
green hardwood lumber from
sawmills In southwestern Pen·

nsylvanla, eastern Ohio and
eastern West VIrginia . The
lumber would be kiln-dried at the
facility and resold, Gutchess
said.
"We sell primarily to wholesales," he said. " About 30 per·
cent ends up going e xport ."
Gutchess officials told munlcl·
pal officials they were attracted
to Westmoreland County because of low electric power rates
and to Pennsylvania because of
the · abundance of hardwood
trees.
Pennsylvania's forests Include
such woods as oak, ash and black
cherry. Gutchess says his company plans to process mostly
oak.
"We have a few obstacles to get
over but we're very hopeful that
we'll get everything together
next year," Gutchess said. " If
things work well, It (the work
force) could expand."

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CAREGIVER RECOGNmON ·-8haroa Wright, left, cue·
worker for the Meip County CoiUICII oa A&amp;lag, lac., preaeated a
certificate re~ildDI the spedal carepvfng of Janet McKee,
Racine, who e - for a loved one afftlcted with Alahelmer's
DiseMe or otber Related Disorders. McKeewu oaeof several wbo
were recoplled receatJ.y at llae llelllor eitlzea1 center In .Pomeroy.

Athens. Ohio 45701
(614) 594-5845 .

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Choir to sing
The Racine United Methodist
Church Choir will present a
Christmas cantata, "Christ Is
Born," by John E. Boalt, during
the Sunday mornlnll 11 a.m.
wc)rahlp service. The public Is
Invited to atleild.

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Pom•ot ·MI UIPO't. Ohio

·Director named for new commission

In the spotlight

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) Jean Droste of Circleville was
named Wednesday as the first
director of the Ohio Commission
on Education Improvement.
Rep. John Bara, D·Elyrla,
commission chairman, said
Droste was selected from 32
applicants.
Droste, 48, will earn $50,000
annually to head the commission
thai was created this year as part

Safe home for holiday
a, Qa47 S. Oliveri
CoutJ Exk lee Apat,
a.- ~:co-a;t-a

Christmas season ill a special
ttme with twinkling lights, fetlve
decorations, parties, and Kood
old-fashioned joy and sharing.
Christmas can also be a hazardous time because cit extra burden placed on electrical circuits
and fireplaces. this week "In The
SpotUght" takes a look at some
considerations to make your hoi·
!day a safer one.
Overloading of electrical clr·
cults Is common lp homes over
the holiday season. Consumers
tend to allow the overloading of
extension cords and the scatter·
lag of cords on the noor because
It Is a temporary condition durIng the holiday season only. It Is
safer to avoid these practices,
even temporarily.
· Inspect extension cords and
other cords on hollaydecoratlons
before using them for the boll·
days. Look especially for loose
connections or frayed or exposed
wire. Discard or repair any detective cord or product.
Use extension cords approved
bY a recognized testing Ia b. Pick
the correct cord for the job. If
multiple lights are to be used,
rely on a heavy-duty extension
cord; If you plan to use outdoor
lights, make certain the extension cord Is labeled for outdoor
use. Fasten outdoor lights securely to trees, house walls, or
other firm support to protect
from wind damage. Keep connections above levels of water
puddles. You 'II be safer If you
tape connections with electrical
tape. Make certain each plug Is
Inserted fuUy In the outlet, with
no prongs exposed; poor prong
contact at the outlet could cause
the plug to overheat, or to be·
come a shock hazard.
To avoid one source of possible
overheating, do not coil or bunch
an extension cord while It Is In
use; don't place the cord under a
carpet or rug for the same reason. Cords should be resting on
the fioor In a safe location so they
do not overheat or cause people
to trip.
Tum off all lights and other de·
coratlons when you will be gone
trom the bouse, ·and before you
·go to bed. Lights could short and
cause a tire.
Another potential aource of

problems Is ihe fireplace.
A Hre on the hearth Is a horne
tradition, butcareshouldbeused
'to make It a sate source of heat.
At holiday time, tor ell&amp;lllple. It
Is a common mistake to use the
fireplace as an Incinerator to
burn gift wrappings, boxes, cartons and packing materials. Because these wrappings bum very
rapidly and generate blgh heat,
they should not be burned In the
fireplace. Chimney fires have occurred when flames lplted soot
deposits In the chimney. Remove
all wrapping papers from tree
and fireplace areas Immediately
after presents are opened. Have
the chimney Inspected once a
year to ensure that allllnlngsare
intact; keep the chimney tree of
soot and blockage.
Apart from these precautions,
be certain that the tlrescreen Is
In place whenever the fireplace
Is used. Cinders exploding from
wood In the fireplace should be
stopped by the ftrescreen.
Before lighting any fire, remove all greens, bouglw, papers,
and decorations from the fire·
place area.
Another safety tip Is to always
have a fire extinguisher handy.
Make your holidays happy and
safe this season.
For additional Information on
holiday safety tips, contact the
Meigs County Extension Office.
Did You Know That "tire
salts" which produce colored
flames when thrown on wood
tires may contain heavy metal.
They should be stored away from
young children.

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GRAND OPENING WINNER - .Jaale Woedl of oear Pomeroy
tile wtaaer or a pair of • - a&amp; the p-ud opealac celebration
of Rood FamUy SboM, EMI Mala st., PomeroJ. Here Betty Reed,
maaqer, banda Ma. Woedllbe llltoes tlhe aelected • her prize.

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ONE DAY ONLY!

AMERIA HOST INN

Christmas dinner
The LottrldgeCommunlty Center will have Its annual Christ·
mas dinner on Saturday, 6: 30
p.m. at the Center, which Is
located on Athens County Road

ad $529

53 South.
Those attending are to bring a
covered dish. Meat and drinks
will be provided, and the public Is
Invited to attend.

20 Home St., Athins, Ohio

"
'

.•

FRIDAY, DECEMBER 15,1989
10 A.M. to 6 P.M.

•

Mayor Edward Koch Insinuated
himself Into the case, describing
Leona Helmsley as "the Wicked
Witch of the West."
And fellow real estate tycoon
Donald Trump, who had a
squabble with her over a parcel
of Atlantic Cit~, N.J .. _real estate,

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the sentencing, newspapers ran photographs of the
grave of her son, who died
several years ago, as well as
pictures of Hetmsley next to
Charles Manson. Joel Steinberg,
Sirhan Sirhan and Richard
Speck.
Two former business associates of the Hetmsleys also were
sentenced. Joseph Licari, 51, of
Oyster Bay Cove on Long Island
was Jiven 30 months In prison,
three years' probation and a
$'15,000 fine. Frank Turco, 45, or
Lutz, Fla., was sentenced to two
years In prillon, three years'
probation and a $'15,000 fine.

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Helmsley, quoted during her
trial as telllng an employee, ''We
don't pay taxes. OnlY the little
people pay taxes," was convicted
of evading $1.2 mUtton In taxes on
renovation work and fumillhlngs
for the opulent 28-room mansion,
Dunnellen Hall, In Greenwich,
Conn.
The hundreds of personal,
taxable Items allegedly hidden In
the real estate emptre'.s books
were as diverse as $500,000 worth
of jade art, a $28,000 cruise, a ·
$12.99 girdle, a leg waxing
session and a $10,000 bust of
Leona Hetmsley!s late son.
Helmsley was acquitted of
attempted extortion of Hetmsley
employees and contractors, the
most serious charges she faced. '

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As sentence was passed, .
Helmsley stood at the defenae :
table, her eyes cast down. When :
Walker flnillhed, 'she slumped '
Into her chair. Her 80-year-old ·
husband sat In the third row in
back of her and showed no
emotion.
The judge said Hetmsley's
community service would be
performed at Hale House, an
acclaimed treatment facility In
Harlem operated by 82-year-old
Clara Hale.
Harry Hetmsley's tmmenae
real estate holdings Include 21
luxury hotela and the Empire
. State Building.
'Both Helmsleys were origl·
nally charged in a 47-count
Indictment, but Harry Helmlley
was severed from the trial after
he suffered a stroke. But Walker
has aald that he might have to
stand trial later.
Leona Helrnsley wu the stolid,
anent star In a senPtlonal trial
that extended . tbrough the
summer and received worldwide
coveraae. She did not testify and
was ordered by the judae to make
no public atatemeatl outllde the .
courtroom.
The tolle of the eiJht-week trial
wu 181 by ber lall')'er, Gerald
Felter, wbo told the jury his
el1111t reJarded u a "touah
bitch," wllo IC!'et.med at employees and otten fired them
btdlllerlmlnately.
But, be told the jury, "You
doa't put people IJl jail tor belnl

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____ .,

,.-

PM'fSBURGH (UPI)- Blade
Communications Inc. has an·
commented, " When Go.1 cr£ated
nounced The Pittsburgh Post·
Leona ' the wurld received no
Gazette
and the Toledo !Ohiot
favors."
ln the middle of th" tr!al, the . Blade will have new publishers
effecllve Jan. 1.
Helmsley hot~!;' ad agency reJohn Robinson Block, 35, and
signed the account, saylr.g Leona
W,llllam
Block Jr., 45, will
Helrnsley had retused to pay
become
the
third generation of
two-thlr:ls ~f her current bill.

.

the Block family to lead the
newspapers. Both papers are
owned bY made.
The Blocks will replace Wll·
Uam Block, 74, who Is retiring.
The elder Block will continue as
chairman of PG Publishing and
Blade Communications.

John Robinson Block IS the son
of Paul Block Junior, who had
served as co-publisher with Wll·
llam Block unlll his death In 1987.
Paul Junior and WilHam Block
became publishers of the PostGazette following the death of
their !ather In 1941.

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UNTIL 7:00 P.M.

EASTMAN'S FOODLAND'S ENTRY BLANK

NAME: ..
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ADDRESS: ....

CITY; . .

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No Pure~~•• :-.l•us•rv- Mu• t. 18
or Oldet tO Entef.
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People
BJ Ual&amp;ed Pre~~~lnteraatloaal
LOVE TRIANGLE: Television
viewers are going to be seeing a
lot Marla Pualt, the woman
whose husband jnted her for
gymnast Nadia Comanecl, because she needs the money.
Panalt's lawyer says she's hit·
tlng the TV talk show circuit
because she's penniless since her
husband, Coaetaallll Paaal&amp;, a
Hallandale, ·Fla., roofer, helped
Comanecl nee Romania and
started IMng with her. Panalt
sold her tale to "Inside Story" for
an undisclosed fee and Is negotiating with Sally Jesse Raphael
to appear on her show. She also
accepted $2,000 from a London
tabloid and an undisclosed
amount from a Brltillh radio
station. "We are trying to get
Marla money any way we can at
this point," said attorney Robert
CeUlnll. "We wouldn't ordinarily
do something like tbls, but this Is
a woman that Is very young with
four little children who has
abSolutely no means of support.
It's Christmas and she has
nothing. We're trying to create a
product here, so that Marla can
earn an income."
GM VS. MOVIE!: Michael
Moon says pressure from General Motors caused the Detroit
Institute of Arts to cancel the
Jan. 11 premiere of his film
"Roger and Me," a documentary
that mocks GM Chairman Racer
Smith. Moore said the cancela. tlon was "an act o! cenaorshlp"
but DIA DWectorEIIIoU Wllllelm
pld the action waa taken becauae Warner Br08. couldn't
J118fantee that Moore would
attend the opening of the film,
whkb lhowl how GM cutbacks
· 11ave hurt Moore's hometown of
Flint, Mich. Sm lth Is on the board
of trustees of the DIA Founders
Society and he and his wife give
' between $10,000 and $49,999 to the
Institute. GM makes cumulative
contributions of $100,000 or more.
GLIMI'SB8: 1960s LSD advocate TlmoiiQr Le.., was spotted
dancing JleefullY at Friday
niJbt'a Gntefld De.. concert In
Los Angelea ... Milt •• tan, at 79
· the dean of jazz bua players, Is
• u talented with his cameru u
; be ill on tbedouble-llan. Hinton ill
; a renowDed pllotoJrapber wbole
llebllld·tbe-ICeaetlllloll ablce the
mld-19:.JI have captuted a candid aide of muatclans that the
· plblle rarely sees. Some of
HJn1Dn't finest works and his
udoteS are featlll'l!d IJl the
• J;tiO edlUoa ot Aetna Lite '
~ C..uity't •'Calftdar ot African·

NEW YORK (UPI) - Leona
Helmsely, who remained silent
during a summerlong trial in
which she was called a witch,
bitch and tyrant, flnalty spoke up
at her sentencing, tearfullY
pleading for mercy from a
federaljudae.
The judge, a cousin of President Bush, was not lilltenlng
Tuesday and sentenced the hotel
queen Jo four years In prison for
falllng to pay more tban n
mllilon In federal taxes on
per1011al !lema charied to her
huaband'a real estate empire.
"You were not dr lven by
financial neceslity," said U.S.
District Jud,e John Walker.
"Rather, you were a product of
naked Jl'eed.'' He aald she
possesaed "the arrO&amp;ant belief
·that you were above the law.''
Unmoved bY the 69-year-old
Helmsley's pleas, Walker told
her she had shown no remorse
during her trial and also fined her
$7.1 mUlion and ordered her to
serve 750 hours In a facility that
treats babies addicted to drugs
and suffering from AIDS.
She was ordered to pay $1.2
million In back federal taxes and
close to $500,000 In state taxes.
Helmsley, whose flashy ads
portrayed her as a gracious but
stern hostess offering perfection
In hotel service, but whose
enemies described her ils a
haughty, harsh and hot•headed
tyrant, was allowed to remain
tree on ball pending the appeal of
her Aug. 30 conviction.
Her eyes swollen, and chok,lng
back tears, Helmsley pleaded
with Walker not to send her to
prison. ''I'm more humUiated
and ashamed than anyone could
Imagine. ... 1 feel I am In the
middle of a nightmare," she said.
'Three years ago I lost my onty
child," she said, referring to her
dead son, Jay. ''They dug up his
grave they took pictures of his
grave. ·
· "I beg you don't let me lose
Harry too," the defendant said,
referring to her aging, ailing
· husband. "Our whole life has
been work and each other. We
have nothing else. I'm sorry,
your honor, I'm sorry.''

/

Third generation .Blocks to lead newspapel"8

Helmsley sentenced 4 years

of an education reform package.
The commisSion is charged with
overseeing the spending of $90
million In a state education
Improvement fund through June
1991.
Droste has been a member of
the Circleville School Board tor
12 years and has been the
district's representative on the
vocational school board for six
years.

The Daily Sentinel-Page 16

Ponwot-Midclaport, Ohio

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Minister's daughter released

'

•I

.

SRJNAGAR, India (UPl) TW kidnapped dauahter of In·
diaD Home MiniSter Mufti Mohammed Sayeed was released
WdDrc1ay In exchange for five
Moalem radicals held by state
aulborltles, tbe Press Trust of
lDdla reported.
'"l'be detainees were released
at 1: 30 ( 3 a .m. EST)," Sayeed
was quoted as telling the news
..-:y Ia New Delbl.
TW Praa Trust reported that
bill daucbter, 23- year-Old Rublya
Sa)oeed, was released and was on
ber way back to New Deihl,
family sources said.
Tbe breakthrqh came after a
souree close to the discussions
sald talks stumbled Tuesday .·
beCause the Jammu and Kash·
mlr &amp;QW!rnment, demandtna a
almul.t aaeous exchange, rejected
a compromise for extremists
wbo wanted the prisoners releued first.

..Vedneadey. December 13. 1988

Mk'-'~1port. Ohio .

State Home Commllsloner plndl, Amanulla" Khan, a flreM.L. Kaul said diiCIISIIoDI re- brud leader of the ~'LF, bad
sumed at 4 a.m. at a secret claimed durlnl a telepllolle Inter·
location between four Interme- view with UriV!d PreiM lDternadiaries representing the aowrn- tlonal that New ~lhl w11s stalment, and members of the IIDa so It could learn thP. secret
Kashmir Liberation Front structure of hta secessionist
(KLF), the Moslem radical arovp and then move aaalnst 11.
group that bas been holding
''Tile iO'ernment II still trying
. Rublya Sayeed for six days.
to aaln time," charaed Klian,
The abductors had said they wbo co-founded the Kl.F In 1967
would kill the daucbter of Mutt! and DI'W Uvea In Karacbl. "Tiley
Mohammad Sayeed It autborl·
have not beell able to arrea t the
ties did not tree their five
lddnappcrs yet. If the girl Is
captured comrades from cuamctY
released simultaneously tbey
In the state's summer c apltal of
could arrest the boys again. I
Sri nagar, 400 mUes north of New can't trust the giM!rnment."
Deihl.
State Chief Secretary Moosa
An ortgtnal deadline for ber
Raza said talks disintegrated
death passed Monday, apparTut!Sday because the goveJ•nently because the abductors were
ment wanted a simultaneous ·
satisfied with aovernment
exchange, while the kidnappers
pledges the five would be redEmanded a IJiree.hour pp
leased once logistical matters
bt:tween the .release of the
were resolved.
prls&lt;Jriers and that Of Rubtya
In the Paklstanl.c lty of Rawal- · Sayeed.

Some 6,000 III!Cilrity personnel

Prime Minister V.P . Slnah,
wbo took office Dec. 2, had
previously left the problem en·
tlrely In the banda of the Jammu
and Kasbmir administration,
apparently In keeplne with his
campaign promises that New
Delhi would allow states to
handle their own affairs.
Rublya Sayeecl's Friday a bducllon from a bus In suburban
Srlnagar came only three days
after Mufti Mohammad Sayeed,

hall conducted raldl, searches
and roadlllocka In Srlnaear and
the •UITOUIIdiDa Kalbmlr valley.
trytna In vain to locate Rublya
Sayeed, a medical Intern.
Tbe ceatral aovermnent also
had dlsjlatched twO Cabinet
members - Forelp M{nllter
I.K. Gujral and EneJ'IY Minister
Arlf Mobammad Khan - to
Srtnaear to review 11\e negotiations and aaaesa law and order.

a native Kashmir!, was sworn In
as India's first Moslem borne
minister In S/Pah's minority
National Froll,l 'irovernment.
The KLF Is one of several
groups fighting for Himalayan
Kashmir to secede and join
Pakistan. Scores Ql( people have
died and hundreds ' have been
wounded In confrontations du r Ing the past two years between
authorities · and pro-secession
activists.

.

emergency powers Aquino Is
Aquino bad requested Anieriseeking do not Include ratlflca· can air i'(lver after rebel aircraft
tion of treaties.
strafed and bombed her palace
Defense Secretary Fidel Ra· on the first day of the coup
mos gave a security briefing attempt Dec. 1. Defense ·and
during a Cabinet meeting Wed· mUitary officials said the U.S.
nesday, the first since the rebel- "persuasion flights" swung the
lion was crushed.
tide of battle In favor of loyalist
Ramos later told reporters forces;
U.S. officials said the Phanalthough l ,665 mutineers had
surrendered, their leaders and toms dld not fire a shot, but
"well-hl!l!led" civilian suppor- Laurel· said many Flllplnos beters remained at large and still lieved the American flgbters
have the capab!Uty to mount · partlclpat~ In the bombing of
"terrorist attacks, sabotage and rebel targets.
assassinations."
'1t will be bard for the
The Pblllpplnes hosts six U.S. Americans to reverse that permllitary facilltles, including the ception," Laurel said.
giant Clark Air Base and Sublc
Aquino bas said the bases
Bay Naval base under a 1947 question did not come up when
agreemen I expiring In 1991.
she requested u.s. air cover. She
Under the COI)stltutlon, any said the request did not comnew agreement must be
promise her negotiating position
proved by a two-thirds vote ofthe In upcoming talks early next
Senate.
year on the future of the bases.

ANCHORAGE, Alaska (UP!)
- The city's municipal assem!
bly, rejecting a proposal by the
mayor to outlaw marijuana,
decided to keep pot possession
legal In Alaska' s largest city and
let the people vote on the Issue
next year.
The 8-1 city assembly vote
.Tuesday night keeps the status
quo, which allows adults to
JliOISI!Ss up to 4 ounces of
•
marijuana In their own homes
'
under a 1975 Alaska Supreme
Court decision that said' personal
•
privacy was more Important
.
lb an marl j u.a n a 1a w
.M • entorcemen t.
The assembly acknowledged
·r '• .that Alaska Is the only state that
•' permits possession of marijuana
;.
l!Y adults.
The state's h1ghesrcourt ruled
"•
~I the r!Jhl to privacy. ensh"'• w rined
In the Aliulka constitution,
••• protects
marijuana possession at
hoine and no. adequate justification exists to violate privacy
:: ~- rights to arrest pot users.
'f.he court. said the right to
privacy at home would have to
give way If there were an
overriding state Interest, but the
"state cannot · impose Its own
".,, notions
of morality, propriety or
fashion on Individuals when the
•• publk: has no legitimate Interest

..

..

..... ..
~.

••
.,,
..

..

From '20 &amp; Up

Anyt~ing from a beautiful Zippo pen and

. and a lao engrave many gifts wiih name
pencd set with • lifetime guarantee, to a and dates whieh make 'the gift even more
handaome Davos or Bulova watch to a memorable. Best Of all thanks to (!I'OUp
monogram or fine diamond ring. We can buying we can offer excellent pl:iceo.
help you with ideas and with gifts. We

$m16ff ,,•• ""' ,.,,.,, ,, filii ,,,,,~
lf•wr /JO: Tw ,,.,.._, l•tltn OtlftlzlfiH
l"""r irrlfl lr llflli.

l,.,.,

Use Our
Lay-Away
Plan

FREE
GIFf
WRAPPING
212 EAST MAIN, POMEROY, OH.

.,,.
'
;

Chinese defectors '
leave for Taiwan

".~
,
._..
.. ,

. ·t·'

•·

Steurer, 55, of Tunnel HIU, whose
burned remains were fou!ld near
bls farm last Jan. 4.
Steurer's son, James II, 24,•has
pleaded guilty to complicity to
murder. and other charges. He Is ··.
awaltlna aentenclna.
A trial for·the third defendant,
Sandra Maxwell Griffin, ' 26,
Cleveland, Tenn., was to resume
Wednesday .

,.
•
•
;,

ll

:. ·
n

a

---

Christmas Candy Boxes
Reg. so• SALE 45&lt;
CHIISTMAS COOliE CmEIS
ROARED &amp; SAL1ED IIUTS FOI
' CHIISTMAS SEIYING ·

Club

OBSESSION. 3.4 oz. Spray ................................................... •41.00
KNOWING. , R .•••...................•.••..••..........••.••••..•••••••••••••••••
oo
ESTEE LAUDER YOUTH DEW, t.B oz. .................................. a&lt;f4.10
· EUZAIETH TAYLOR'S PASSION. 1.15 oz. ............................. 127.00

-u.

• The Area's Number 1

With wreaths of holly and mistletoe, stockings hung by the fire
and scenes blanketed with snow, Christmas encompasses
warmth and aood cheer as .we cherish the blessings we've shared
this put year. For us it means saying "thanks" .to you, our many _.·
friends, old and new, whose kind support we'll always treasure.
Doins business with you is our greatest pleasure!
0

,,.

IHAUMAR, 1 oz. ................................................................... 23.00
GLORIOUS by Gloria Vanderbih, 1.7oz.................................. '24.00
OPIUM. 2 oz. ....................................................................... 147.10
OSCAR, ·2 oz. .............................~ ......................................... ~.10
UZ CLAI80RNE. 1 oz............................................................ *22,10
CAUfORNIA by J~~eklyn Smith, 1 oz ..................................... ~7.10

~

ANNE KLEIN 1,. .1.7 oz.·······························~························ tl32.00

CALVIN I' liN EftRNITY. 3.4 oz.....................•..........•••....•• "41.00·

-

EVEN.GS
.t/ll/tl91 tfn

''

ADVERTISING

•

••

_... ......

992·2156

c..,.,=

UNDA'S
PAINDNG &amp; CO.
IJITIIIOIIITIIIOI
Rental Cllanups &amp;
Painting

I. L HOLLON
. TRUCI(ING

THURSDAY PAP.ER

FRIDAV PAPE.I
SUNDAY PAPER

Classified

DAY BEFORE PUBUCATION
- 11 :00A.M . SATUAOAV
- 2 :00P.M . MONDAY
- 2 ·00 P.M TUESDAY
- 2 00 PM . WEDNESDAY
- 2 00 P.M . THU~SOAV
- 2 :00P .M FRIDAY

pal(e .~

".WI-GallipoliS

. 31l-Ch•hire
311- Vinton
245-RiO Gr•nde
266- Gu¥8n Diu,
843- :t.(abia Oist.
379-Wanut

. 985•4422
11-8-89-dn

OhiO Department of Natural
Resources,
Division
of
Redamation. hereby gives
notice of the avlilebility of a

FINDING OF NO SIGNIFICANT IMPACT for an
environmental u ...ament
which concerns an aban·

992 - Middleport
Pomtr.ov

67fi - Pt. Pleaunt
451$- leon

985-Ch•tlr

576 - Apple Grove

143-Portlatld

773 - Maton

247 - letert F•ll•

882-New H~en
89fi-Lttart

742-RutiWid
667- Cootv-.le

937 - Bufhlto

3

15

16.00

.60

. 0~/ day

Mer r: hanrl • ~ ~
51 - Household Goock
62- Sponlng Goodt

3 - Annouceffients

53 - Antiques

4-G•veawaV

54 - Misc . Merchandise

5 - H•ppy Ads

56 - Budding Su.,plies

6 - Lo11 and Found

56 - Peu for Sale

7 - Y•d Sete (paid in advance!
8 - Public Sale &amp; Auct1on
9 - Wanled to 8uv

57 - Musicallnsttumenu.
58 - Fruh:t &amp; Vegetable.

59-For Sate pr Trade

Frn~Jicvr11Pnt

Farm

Ser vtLPS

61 - Farm Equipml!nt
62- Wanted to Buy
63-livestoch

13 - lnlurince

14 - Busmau Train ing

15-Schools &amp; lnst1uc1ion

l6 - Red1o , TV&amp; CB Repair
17 - Mitcellaneou •
l8- W1nted To Do

64-H•v &amp; Gr.tin

65- Seed &amp; Fertiliter

Transportation

21 - Bu1 ln81s Opportunity
22 - Monerv to Loan ~
23 - Prol•••or\al Ser¥"ices

Rf:ilt

f sl ole

31 - Hamee for Sale
32 - Mobile HomGs for Sele
33- Farms for s•e
34- Busln•s Bult~inos

35 - lots &amp;

Suuplr~s

{, i IVI:,It•t:k

1 1- Help Warued
12- Situation Wanted

AcreiGt

71 --Autos for Sale
72 - TrucKs for Sale
7 3 - Vans &amp; 4 WO "s

74 - Motorcvclea
75-&amp;oat• &amp; Motors for Sele
76- Auto Parts &amp; Aceeuori•
77- ·AUIO Repair
?8- Camp1ng Equipment
79 - Campeta &amp; Motor HQm•

ld§l@l
41 - Houiea for Rant
42 - Mobile Homes for
Roomt

46- SPICe for Rifnt

•7- Wiru•d to Rent
.t&amp; ..... Equipment for Rent
49 -- For

Lt••

doned mined land reclema·
tion p~oject in the State of
Ohio. The Stott of Ohio h11
prepared and the Office of
Surface Mining Reclame·
tion and
Enforcement.
United Stlttea Depanment
of the Interior, h,. approwd
1he envM'onmentet ........
men1 for this project which
was submitted by the Stete
in application for Title IV fi·
naneial uliltance in reclaiminQ and r•toring land
and water reaourc• adver·

oetv affected by ptot mining.

A complete copy of the en ~
vironmental ....amant Ia
available from , the Ohio
Department of Natural Ra·
1ourc11. Divlaion of Racla·
motion,
11&amp;5 Fountoln
Square Coun, 8ulldlng H-2.
Columbua, Ohio 43224 .
Included in thi1 action is
the Klngobusy Cretk Rtclo·
rwation Profect. locMed in
-ord ana Scipio -r..,.,n.
ohlpo. Tho

~~
!.

origlnol

project

wu '!mended to include ten
potential borrow ar811 total·
ling 103 acreo . RHolllng
f'l&amp;terlal will be obUined
from thua areaa, ..,read

992-2772

Slrictlw EnforllMI
10-11-tfn

ltfore' h p.M.

90 DAY WIIIAIIIY

WASHER5-SIOO up
DRYERS-$69 up

tllll
E.Mtln '

POMEfiOY. OH.

991-2269
MIDDLEPORT - 2 Un~
Apartment House, needs
some wor~ Afi&gt;t!f upper for
a rental income. Corner lot.
$6,900.00.

- ·--

POMEROY - A 2 story
home with ·a large lot, big
kitchen, 3 bedrooms, buill·
in china cabinet, nice deck
in back. and a part basement. $25,000.00.

POMERJII' - Appra&lt;. 3\i
acres, vacant grourd. Good
buil!lng site. Close in. Water
may be available $7,500.00.

POIIEROY - FLATWOODS
RD. - 10.73 acres of va·
cant ground. Would make
nice home sne. Call for more
information. $21,500.00.

8

••Iff

ohouiCf fila a r - t wMitthe

~

Commlllllo!l. elong with a

r

motion "'. lntorv.,e. 011 or
before Januuy 11, 1110.
UniMolheC-IolionN·

Hlf·oontlllolnt with tile Pub·· oh...- for ..vto.
• He ~ C-llolon of 11 ln-Mion, edmlnlotrl·
'
Olllo(C:..Na. lt-147-TP· ........ phyILF) ....... thet Ito ..Iff. cllongoo, oxpedlted ...,...,
1 : P.U.C.D. No. 2, II u~lt 111vlce ociiWtrllono, lilting
..... _
...... In - - ct~
•~-· .,
•• mar. wht
tlo not u• order canc.ll.clona. Any In·
qlrtaln lldmlnlatrotwe ond
,,

.IIIII--

.,.._....,arequ.tforaral

-.and an ••nopanw-

lng m"!ion to lnt.....,e, the

lEN'S APPLIANCE
SEIYKE

We Carry Ftohing SuppU•

SALES &amp; SERVICE

Your Phone
.._ .•,.~ .C~ble Billo Here
IISIIES! PIIONI

f614) 992-6550
IISIIIBm PIIONI
16141

PAT lULL FOlD
' 992-2196

Middltiport, Ohio ·
1-.13-Ht

' HOMES &amp; GAIAGES
''At ltcKonaltle Prices''

PH. 949·2101
;or les. 949-2160
Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CALlS

DAVE'S
SMALL ENGINE
IE PAll
loaotedatv•,........,
Mll~hpert,

In

011.

-·-

PARTS AND SERVICE
For Most 2 and 4 ·cyde
Stock Part• for
Homolito. Wotdlllltr,
Tecum..h, lrigg1 &amp;.
Stratton.

PH. 992-3922

6-21·'19-tfft

KOUNTRY KLUB
GOLF &amp;
TROPHY
SHOP
•New Grips
•Clubs Customized

ALLEN'S
HAULING

·1600 GAllON

WATII SEIVICE
UMESTONi

SPIEAD

992-5275

FIVE POINTS AREA Three- one acre building
s~es. Elec. &amp; water available. Good location for your
new home. $5,900.00.

MY-T-SHOP
CUSTOM SCIEEN

DOUBLER
TACK SHOP

PllrmtiG

ALBANY I OliO

PORTIMD
- SHARON
ROAD- MINI FARM IN THE
COU Nl'RY -In Southtrlrilistrict 14+ acres. HI strry
house w~h 4 bedrooms. 2
kitchens, 2 baths. 2 iiving
rooms, carpel, natural gas
heat. garden and well watt!f.
$39,500.00.
.
Htnry E. Cllland-992·6191
.Je_, TrusSIII-949-2660
Jo Hill-915-4456
Office--992-2259

HATS
T-SHIRTS
JACKETS
CHEml, OHIO

Western Boots, Hats,
Shirts, Belu For
Men, Ladies lit

'

OUR.l989 SALES VOUJME
HAS BEEN GOOD .N DWE
NEED PIOPERTIES TO
SELL, NOT JUST
ADVERTISED. LIST WITH
CLELAND REALTY FOR
• THE BEST RESULTS!!

.-

46317 Scout Camp load
11-17-'89-1 mo.

985-4300

.5-17-lfl

691-6500
Children.

SADDLES &amp;
HOISE EQUIPMENT

11-17-tfn

CHIPWOOD
WAIITED
W. Ya. Chipping,
Inc.
lodlsprings ld.

Po-ny, Ohio

'"· 992-3561

Buying Hours:

7:30-8:00.
Mon. thru Fri.
7:30-4:00 Saturday

CHRISTMAS
TREES
DIE&amp;

SCOTCH PINE
FRESH CUT

&amp; SHEARED

sn

to s1a

WEBER FARM
IUTliiiD, OliO

·(II) 7-' IH mo.

---·

Public Sate

·Roger Hysell
Garage

..

Rl. 124, "-OW ~

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Alt• fr•••leel••

PH. 9··5682
or 992-7121

1fa.¥!U!o . .

•RACINE ·
GUN CLUB .
GUN SH001.
EVERY SUNDAY .
Beginning Sept. 17
Storts ot 1:00 P...
Factor r Choked 17
Gauge

4-25-lln

••acE
FUINACE

,
••
a
PARTS AND IEIIVICE
.,
bll

CUSTOM IUIT

Chtsttr, Ohio

be deeldod on the

zo. n.

· out radiators. We also
r1p11ir Gas laoks.

BISSELL.
BUILDERS

Din HAULED

1.1t7:00P.I.
111111 oftllelnfann-ncon- l n lhe aompl- .,d
lhe afltlaJita oullmltllld 11r
LITe!. f'urt,., lnfannltlon
moy be olltei!M41 II¥ oont8ot.
Inti the Publlo Utlltlle Commroolon of Olllo, 180 EMt
Brood l t - . ColumbuL
Ohio 43211·0171.
f12) 13,
Jte

SER~ICE
We can r1p11ir and II·
cort rtllliators and
heater cores. We can
also -acid boil and rod

JOHN TEAFORD

&amp;Auction

87 - Upholstery

IlEA nNG

location:
161 Herth Socond
¥'disport, Ohio 45760

MINERSVILLE RD. - RA·
CINE-:- 2 story house w~h
2 bedrooms, bath, carpet,
paneling and in Southern
School District. Retently re·
modeled and in good condi·
lion. $29,500.00.

100% tader~lly "funded.
112) 13. 1tc

83 - EIIC8VItlrtg
84-Eit-etricll 6 Atfrigl'ration
85-General Hauling
86 - ..-obilt Home Aeplir

- w•

PI.UMIING

RANGIS-;a.-Eiec.-1125 up
FREEZER5-Sl25 up
IIICRO OYENS-$79 up

81 ·· HQme Improvements
Q2 - Ptumblng 6 He•lng

tlr81tad pwaon, tln11, oor·
porwtlon. or tnthy deo ..lng
an oral hMrintln thle nwttllr

12-ll-'19-1 mo.

Np

REfRIGEIATOR5-$100 up

over the proj8C1 liter and all

· PubliC N atlce

LEGAL litDTICE
_p_hy_olcol--...,-. --.-,.-bu_:_r..
~ II ....... thllt ·UTol 'dined wlth' tllolr aoot. LITol
_,: T - - - . l o n o Carp- propo- Ia om.,d Ito
·• Ofllllorl (LITol) hoo flied • to ln..--• prountlylarlffed

VINYL SIDING
VINYL REPLA(EMENT
WINDOWS

USED APPUANCES

load.... fit ....
Public .N otlce

Wl•ter Sp11111 0•

FREE ESTIMATES

oftected lond wHI 1M revt·
gelated. .Tlli• .project it

-- ~... . ·----~

--=,.-ublic:-::---:N:-:-ot--:-ice--l

INSULAnON

Factory (hoke

Ser voct:s
Rtl'lt

J&amp;L

12 G. . . Stsot.,... Only

36- Rul E. nate Wanted

•~ - Fumithtd

f '-

.42

91.30 / day

1 - C•rd of Thanks
2-ln Memory

43 - Ferml for Rent
••- Apartment tor Rent

..

. 30

$9.00
$13.00

15
16
115

.20

i--'"' ear.h d41lf •• Mparate •:;;•;;.•~-------

1

Oet -Retaltt Fast

.

15 Wordl

F11181 are for conMwtiVe runs, broken up dlf'iswill be charged

cot·er the
Muon Co., WV
Aree Code 304

949 - Racine

$4.00

6
10
Monthly

joll01.dng telephone exchanf{es...

'

15

ljilfihlhbil

Meigs County
Aru Code 614

O~~t•r

1

GUN SHOOT
RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

AFT.ER 6 P.M.
(614) 915-4110

SYRACUSE- RUSTIC HILLS
- Ahome to be proud o~ 3
bedroom ranch, i \i baths,
family room, formal dining
room, page, electric 1 8.8.
h~ tireptac~ on a 112'199'
lot Very Nice. REDUCED TO
$39,500.00.

Redametion Act of 1977,
30 U.S.C . 1201 ot uq .. tho

Rate

(614) 667-3271
Grant A.

Reel Estate General

Purau.nt to Title IV of the
Surface Mining Control and

Word&amp;

DUMP TRUCK
Sand-Stone-Dirt

992·5335 or 915-3561

•LIMESTONE
·•FILL DIRT
•ANYTHiNG
AT ALL

~arketplace

Days

or

YilT IIASOIUR£
HAY£ IIFIIINW

IIVUIG ROOM SUITES
IEDROOM SUITES
DINEtTE SETS
"NEW" RECLINERS

• •GRAVEL .

· 992·6910
We Ac&lt;11pt '

·

H&lt;Otl-hJJ~IOJO

.NEWLAND
ENTERPRISES

Basham BuHding
EVElY
SAT. tiGHT
6:30P.M.

USED FURNITURE

~

ASK FOR ·BRIAN OR DAVE

"2-6669

MONDAV PAPER
TU£1DAV PAPER
WEDNESDAY PAPEA

~

.DI! I.A. MNTA GJFT lET ............................•.....•••....• '40.00

PIESCIIPnOI - ·

COpY OEAOLINE

.

Wish all your customers and
friends ·a very Merry Chris.t mas· in
our Christmas
Greeting
Ediiia.n.. on
.
.
December 22nd.

CHER'I UMNHIIITED, 1.1 oz. ..................................•.......... 1 30.00
UZ TAYLOR'S PASSION GIFT SET ....................................... •40.00

FSUVA11 COIIICIJON GIFT liT ............................................00
Gl OIIIOU8 GIIPT SET by Glorft VendartMit .............................

I,

~~.

1

...

BILL SLACK
992-2269

CHESTR, OliO

RATES

TO PLACE AN .AD CAH992-21 56

OMIM ROlE, 1 oz ........... ·.................................................... •11.00

... ~

·•

....,_.;;;;or''#f{~ ;;;,~~

POLICIES
.•
• . , . OUtSide M~gs, Gallia or 1\t!Uoft eoul\t i• must ba pre·
paid.
'
"Receive S.50 discount for ads J)'lid if)adval')ce
"Free ads ....., Giveaway and Found ads undw 15 words will be
um 3 d..,.s at no ch•ge
'"Price of ad tor all e.pilallelters is double price of ad cost
"7 point line 1ype only used.
"Sentinel is not responaibtetor enora at1at l•nt d.,. iChe ck
far errors flrs1 dey ad runs in paper! Ctll before 2 :00p.m.
d..- ah• publicat ion to JTlake correction .
•AdS thM mUs1 be paitl iri advance are
·
Card of Thanks
Happy Ads
In Mamori.m
V ard SaiM

1'
,

Toll Free

Collect 0 1 5·~ ~· 1 7::?. 1.

Takt lht pain •• of poioliott
Lit us dt il for f •

12-7-'19-1 mo.

hod Stamps

MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to S P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
CLOSED SUNDAY

.•

Ca ll Don Hi, kman

FREE ESTIMATES

•FIREWOOD

MAIN ST., IUTLAND

fiA&amp;I

New Colognes Arriving Daily!

J71WIISK-

•LIGHT HAULING

•Brake Work

Ohicf Valley Bulk Foods

1 eept - etMslfied ditplfiV. Bus in•a Card and 1-sal noticet )
1 will el._o epphr in the Pt. Pleaunt Revister and I he Galli·
polis Daily Tribune, reaching o11er 18,000 homes,

0~

•SHRUB 8s TREE
TRIM and REMOVAL

•Front End
· Alignment
•Oil Change 8s Lube

HOLIDAY BAKING SPECJAUI
Powd.,tel Sugar rog. •uo ................ w. 11.20
Chopped Dates,... •2.47 ................. 5olo 12.~5
Red Chlrrits rog. 13.50 lb. .................. Salt 13.40
Fruit Mixes rog. •2.141b. ..................,.Solt 11.10
Dark Raisins rog. '1.71 lb. .................. !tlt 11.69
Min&lt;tlllllll .................................... Sale 12.25

514 East Main

hy

DOZER
SITEWORK • ROADS
CLEARING

,\mu..:h. l~nm'''''~ '7111 ~

•Tire Sales

(No PeanUts)
Mix w/pte110tt, rog. •3. 75 ...... !aloi3.3S lb.

Pomeroy

lie~ ured

mmltl home. startin g at S l 2.47~.
Rctam your (Urtent joh

.!711 M urlrL'I.'•t"'lrn ttJ.

742-3018

Fancy .Cashtws rog. •7.49 .............. !altiS.7S lb.
Ca1htw Pieces rtg. $3.99 ............... !olol2,99 lb.
Delux Club Mix rog. '5.91 .... -....... Salt 14,60 lb.

"A ' ~;lanified ldveni'lem•u placed m Tha Daily Santi.pel fe~ -

7

Investment lOCK

NO SUNDAY

RUTLAND ..TIRE
SALES and
SERVICE

$110

Classifie

•

•

PH. 949·2101 '
or 1-. 949-2160

OFFICIAL NOTICE

ftiYP'

UCZ.w.NT INCOME POTEN1L\L

•Mobile Home
Parte
•Mobile Home
Rental•
•Lot Rentals

.....

Public Notice

L

.

.....

dealership

MOBILE
HOME PliK

"Freo htimetes"

742-2455

Mik Rog. 11.90 lb. SALE $170
P-1 WJH1-. Rog. 12.15 II. SAL£

-

Salam St,,, Ruttla!lld

Ambrosia Block Chocolate

, The defectors, Including five
students, two factory workers,
two drivers, a teacher, an accollntant and a merchant, landed
on Cheju Island 140 miles south of
Korea's southern coast early
Nov. 21 after sailing from China
In a rented fishing boat .
The defectors, all from Zhejlang Province on the eastern
coast or Cblna, had left a , po~t tn ~
Jlangsu ProvlnceNov.l5, hoping
to go to Taiwan, but arrived at
Cheju ·Island alter several days
on stormy seas.
Seoul decided to honor their
wishes and send them where they
wtshed after consultations with
Taiwanese officials and the Of·
flee of the Untied Nations High
Commissioner· for Refugees, the
spokesman said.

)

•
•
•

WLK-WIITE-COLORS
Rog. $2 .:15 II .. SAL£ $215 II.

SEOUL, South Korea (UPI) Twelve defectors from China
·&gt;
who recently landed on a south·
;r ern Island of Korea departed for
:.; Taipei, · Taiwan, Wednesday
where they were expected to seek
~;
asylum, the Foreign Ministry
~: ''" sat d.

·,.
'
'

Tennessee mari convicted on charge

BISSELL
SIDING
_, CO •

coumY

MOR.. S
EQUIPMENT

Merkins Chocolate Wafers

••"

~

OPEN FRIDAY I&lt; SATURDAY UNTIL 8 P.M.

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

Located Behind

·-.
.,

1"'1 tw

witness his topside..! less.
Without even taklll6 ••P Fink's
recrimlnaltzatl'ln ordinance, the
assembly voted for • resolution
that delays cnanglng marijuana
laws to let voters have their say
on the Issue nex I November. ,
Only one assen,bt~·man, Fred
Dyson, spoke up tor the mayor's
proposal.
Some assembly members rejected the Fink ordll!ance, wtth
Its one-year jail term. bu t believe
marij~ana should be lllegal.
Assemblyman Jim Barnett said
city vfflcials 'must come up with
new medical evldPnce to show
marijuana is harrnful to with·
stand a challenge or the Alaska
"Supreme Court will blast us out
of tne water."
P.ssemblyman Joe Evans said
the recrlmlnallzation was a
"ponr law, poor Idea, unconstitutional, and there are a lot of other '
things we ought to be doing, not
this."
Assemblyman John Wood, a
llbertarlan, challenged city otflclals to justify \he need to outlaw
marijuana.
Sale of marijuana remains
llleg~l and juveniles may not
possess marijuana.

17

usiness Services·

Tractor Deel•ahip._

•

••

In the affairs of those
Individuals."
Most of those who spoke during
a night-long public hearing Tuesday embraced the state Supreme
Court decision. Many stressed
they did not use marijuana but
that Alaskans valued their freedoms and privacy and urged the
city to leave the law alone. Some
argued that alcohol and tobacco
were more harmful.
But a new movement, gaining
strength In the wake of President
Bush's war on drugs, seeks to
outlaw marijuana In Alaska and
has collected enough signatures
to put a recrlmlnaltzatlon proposal on next November's state
ballot.
)
However, Anchorage Mayor
Tom Fink couldn't walt until then
and proposed that thell-memher
assembly oq tlaw marijuana
sooner .tn the city Umtts.
Two assembly supporters of
Fink's proposed pot recrlminall·
zatlon law were absent, but the
proposal to outlaw the substance
didn't stand ·a chance. Six assembly members sponsored a resolution rejecting changes In the law
for now. The mayor left the
meeting early without waiting to

Daily

The

Anchorage keeps marijuana legal

.

ap-

COSHOCTON, Ohio (UPI) -A
Cleveland, Tenn .• man was convicted Tuesday of aiding In the
January slaying of a Coshocton
County farmer.
A Coshocton County Common
Pleas jury found Carl Lewis, 25,
guBty of complicity to aggravated murder and guilty of
aggravated robbery with a gun
specification that carries a possl·
ble death penalty. It found blm
Innocent of having gun in hls .
possession at the time of the .
killlna.
The jury Is meet again Jan. 2 to
recommend a sentence, which
could Include the death penalty,
life In prison with no chance of · ·
parole for 30 years, or life with no
chance of parole for·20 years.
Lewis also was convicted of'
complicity to theft with a gun
speclflcatlon. possession of dangerous ordnance and abuse of a
corpse.
.
Lewis Is among three people
cbar~red In the slaying of James

Poma-oy- Middleport, Ohio

..
..

Op,osition leader warns against
Aquino emergency legislative power

MANILA, Philippines (UP!)Opposition leader Juan Ponce
· Enrlle warned Wednesday that
President Corazon Aquino could
~ the sweeping legislative
~rs she Is seeking from
' - CoJ11I1!Ss to extend the lease on
key U.S. military bases in the
' Pbillpp~.
.
.
ln a speech to the Senate,
.Enrtle said Aquino has become
"beholden" to the United Stales
for providing air cover at a
ctuclal stage of the worst coup
attemPt In her nearly four years
as president.
,
"With one stroke of the pen,
• Mrs. Aquino can now bind the
nation on the extension of the
mWtary .bales agreement," said
Enrtle, the lone opposition In the
' • 23-member Senate.
Also Wednesday, VIce President Salvador Laurel said In a
radio Interview that the opposition Naclonallsta Party that he
.- beads has rever!ll!d Its stand and
.•
Is DOW demamllng the cancella·
·- tlon of the leases In 1991 due to
: : Washington's Intervention In the
: : Dec. 1-9 Insurrection.
· • "Originally, we were agreeable to a five- to 10-year phaseout
• extension of the mUltary bases In
•. ov COUDtry alter 1991," Laurel
•c saJd, adding that because of the
•· U.S. Intervention, "the Naclona·
·- llsta Party met on Dec. 6 and
.•. paa!ll!da resolutlonasklngforthe
: · dllmantiiDg of the U.S. mllltary
b - after 1991. No more
.. extension."
Tbe Senate Is debating the
National EnJergency Act Aquino
bas prcpllled to deal wiJb the
Impact of the coup atlempt that
left U9 people dead and nearly
toppled her government.
· The legislation, among many
other things, would allow Aquino
to Issue laws foe six months
wltbout consulting Congress.
'"l"llat's way off," said Aquino's spokesman, Adolf Azcuna,
··
when asked ·to comment on
EDrtle's speech. Azcuna said the

Wedileaday, December

ALL MAllEI
GAS OR ELECI'RIC

1111'S APPUAIICI
SDVICI
992-5335 tiS-3561

..,

lcrwR

....

DEll
CUT AND.
WIAPPED
MAPLEWOOD

LAII

•

'

614-949-27M

�1989
December 13. 1989

Ohio

LAFF-A-DAY

11

--

3 Announc&amp;millll

,.. - , .JtJO"' ,..,

.....

. . . . - . . Wt

--·
-· ...... =--illr!r __ __

GIYU'ny

A&amp;N?

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Toa
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eon .- Gllllp a11 D.,J:r'

Lost &amp; Found

yOU?"

- · - N d L a - f 'P---------------~~--------------~
=-~==:;~=:~~

1--------------·
to Buy
tt Help Wantld

.-= ..- . ..... -- ........
-

Laol: ·- . - -Ill

.. -...
D7CI.

9

Wanted

Wiliiled 10 ...,

.. ..... of fot1WdhDott,

~

Loll:lllck Onyx •IIIII ...MIMI
~
~ ....,.,.. Pal. .......

......

_..

Yard Sal&amp;

.7

pdoM.

NIIDnMIJ

.
'=,.,.: ,r.:=:oE':.'::

l*d 111l'!l. EARN IIONEY
11~

2211.

Employment Serv1ces

..

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~:.:=
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Ill. ..
10101.

MouN,---..,

51

liD •hOld

se

IIJ He-Min
6:35 (II Andy Qrli1ith
7:00 ()) MOVIE: Tha LMt lllde 01
lite ~ Clang (3:00)

Pets for Sal&amp;

Goods

2411, Vldoo Inc. ... I •
PFU,

=·.,.c:., =:-o.=r.

Mec:Nell Lehrer
Newlllow
® e112 OIW-01 ·

32 MobllaHomii
for Sal&amp;

GallipoliS
&amp;VIcinity
ALL Yonl - - lo Po!d Iii

Fortune !;I

....., .. , 1

....

Live Ill -

Pomeroy,

s

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

&amp; VIcinity

e(l) USA TocieY

ill) e 01 01 JaoplfrdJII;J
ataJI M'A'S'H
iiJI Croaatlre
ilJ Nlgltt
Ia Top Cerd

u-.---.........
1114 -

1'410,- ton Duo7Fy,
.,.......,.. ..........14-

----·--·
111,100.

Ml~ltpOrt

F-, F-

1001-P.110--t....
...._ ,.. • .,.. ......... !IIIlO.,
Plll'l, . . . Olftd.l11 t ••••

.. Spice for Rent

.......... , . alhw,
11 t 111 D211 after

~ VideoCoun1ry
7:05(J)Jattat-•
7:30 e (J)
(J) College Beaketball
ttl En~Mtalnmenl Tonight

1m-haft~=-.
17,001-11~-.

C l l - 2:00 ......
1101, . .-wv.

Modgoot-.AFoooon thO 1o1. Ill of _,._

FrJclaY.IIoodayod!tlon·2:00
• p.no.Salunloy.

ilJ Chaara
11J Miami Vice

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

..... _ ,1_ _ _

DEADLJNE: 2:00 p.10.
, . ..., ....... Jha wl lo 10 ""'·
Sunday wlhPoo • 2:00 p.m.

...._7471.

Court

7:35 (II S.nlord And Son

33 Fsnna tor Sal&amp; ·

·--···-- ·- -

'
:
..=e:·
•
.
.
_,
=-.:..,."'=
.

wanted to Buy

Co7F !..on)' I.Miy .....

-

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...- PlrlnO tot&gt;
IMM . :r:'

117-1210.

:=-"

Lola&amp; ACI'IIge

........

IIIII "'"114-70.
..,
Phonl

10 ... ·17...

Loll ,., -

~

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I·=

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,..... . , . -.m;

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_r,.~•rrarm
t
n.
11.

...... ,_..!!

Business, Services
•IN STOCK•
••r ,....n
M" 111'S
IESTliUtll

Is still ewlllll _.
1p aratlll lty Millie

..

~~una~

Cookln' Come See Uo!

742-2455

......, ........lio'l""'"'"rt

......

11 ...... I
---11~
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•s- Suppli•

992-7713

p .,.... _ _

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P,IOO

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:l.=t• 't W. Lawow•-

u. ......,. lor Cllilll

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I

1,.... .. . . , _ .

IG!:iJl

1 1·:J0..1 mo.

.........

......
_ . . 121,711. I1~'*-I.I17111G11

n

Strlllo St.,

-

-...• •
.., ~~
- .

:::. ~ ~'M;j;,t;;: 83

•Chllins •Chllin Oila

1101115 EQIIFMIII

....

I 'I IIHII, 114-

Lh'Uiodl

-.010....... -1117.
-llwoiEJ
....MaoliiiFt,
, _ ... _ _

. . . .0144- .

Science See how hlbematiOn

Owellers lrom the
TunneP World attend
Catherine's funeral. 1;1
aJ1 MOVIE: II_. on
3411111Net(2:00)

• ,_

a· I

0 PrlmiNIWI

IDl MDVII!: Sera age (2:00)

.......

o-.hwm.

_1_11oMa_IOW15-

7112.

Ia Churato 8trMt Station
. 1:05 (II MOVIE: Gone WITh 1be
Wind (3:42)
· 1:30 Ill e (I) 01 Tha Clau
--- - The IHP clan oijiHiiO tutor
an athlete lor college

75 Boa1a &amp; Moton
for Sal&amp;

-.,•.,..,•-=

1mf7t:-· -

caul Pe 1.,. , . Utili
•
Co7F ,,~1111 ••• 7:00 .......

entrance exams. 1;1
Ia Crook A ChaM
t:OO e (J) 01 Chtiatmaa In

__ _
..,.,
_,..,, .....
--.
......... -.

- : A Lowe Story A

globe-!ro!ting photographer
"lOoks baCk on the various
stages Of his life. Four
vignettes, which an take
place at ChrlstmasPime,
dramatize his l~e . (1 :00) &amp;:;1
ttl eCil Ooogle Ho-,
M.D. Scheming to avoid the
Christmas Eve shill, Doogle

All ••lUll truok ~ Aa ......
bed ....,._IE:IIUMII'I . . . ...,..,
ltFIFI. " " ' ...
...... iO'Wi'FI f7 Contra. R

~ ....1.. - . .........

J!odti! ....... _ _ _
~-.-.

......

makes a CiiiCOV8fY. 1;1

(!) (!) IUgiJt To Die?

• "" ....,... 11WD:

Ia1

z ..

!J""'-,,.
_.,,.p....
--a.

-a: LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

" ',,...
""'"·
The ...... 44
'!fiFilill
_
• TrH:auriFy

l.icensed" Cfinical Audiolocist
l614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-2104

u

·z~ 417 5tcorrd Averiue, Bat 1213
-

.-

.... unfwu ........
wiNI. eu •• naa

s

..

ii:i.oar

......

111.&amp; (ooo
eowol.ilrwi, -

e1'JIIano.

71

·-•nt
forRtnt

MORKME

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l110dopoal!,
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llulldlng

T

---·--•. --..• ,..
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QUILTS
CLOCKS

011001RTI-Ip.a.
1111 ~ 2 . . . . . . , .....

CHAIRS

1m

~

..... a

M1.-

F-n The Christmas
seuon takes on new
meaning for Jake and

McCabe. !;I

iiJI Lwry King Uvel
11J MOVIE: Jual Anothrlr
(2:00) Stereo.
-

a11Naoll--

t:30 ()) College ....._
ttl e!ll Arl,..igltrl .......
M!tlly - • as

OWJobo

goall

!!oJorr

1m CUitlll

BARNEY
LET ME RUN

HEY.t SHORTY II

A SNAPSHOT

OF YOU

I

drlftM.

Julia And C.rol, Togetllw
Again Julie Andrews and

Carol Burnett reun~e for

anotner landmark
entertaiMMJnt special. (1 :00)

-0

a11 e112 WI...., The

pieces Of the diplomatic
puzzle begin to come

-Yao .......
puCnio!IIIJ.IIorta, ....

~- olo!Mrj.l14:

together lor Vinnie. Cl

e aJ)IIttw Twilight t -

lall7lo Tao~ P-01 110._\la!..

IIJE""*'i'llttwa
I!JIIttwa
.
10:30 e aJ1 CrtrneW- Tonight
ta Celebrtllee onttsg• v

eo;- E.VANilNTIFIP"'SU,
prlu epln.I14- ..........
OH 1-·117-MU. .

.,1.....

110

Plumbing &amp;
Heating

year ahead by mailing S 1.25 Po AorroGraph, c/o this neWij)IIPI!I', P.O. Box

#'~.,.,..,.=

949-21
-+

Deo.11,-

Some exciting IU!'pllau. u Mil .. ,.._ ·

'

.....,.., ... 1-.

.......

.· C'
- etlUI1i itP,:---:t
t"! I , .....
n

•;I

PI,~

u11

IlL

0rr11

:::c=-'ft·Aprii

11) In aplle oi
oomed clwrgel, GOUld ... In litl oiling
)'OU7' good lnlenllonl you might T!llcl up
lor,.. Ill lila ......... One - . I . .. crwtlng illoDer probiornt lor one'"'- '
- I D triaaW lira Oilier.
.
you'l.,.., to llt8lglrten out.
IAGifTAIIIII (IM. II D11 11) -"*'
Don'T 1111_.,. ...... lnvhtl.
Tlrn'l. ~~~':':"
ntlliM ... 7111- f TAIIMii (Ap11 M
IJatrally you
nlpo~ lad
I
trrd~W ..... .
hrlvt
-.ably
good
PDIIata
oi con- ,
you'll ,_,. to CSUU for IGIIIIIDUI j
!Mikllioo1. but today you rnlgiJibef/N-·•vlilllll. lalilrteo~ .. to rie)odt-tlirigl!ld ftlghle of ilncy,

c

for~="·

"So
muah Ralil.
l!'ltllllrla
""
compeny we l'lllieellt from."
~

= ••=
,...,..,..,up

care Of Important mattn COUiCi
loeiey. You mlgltl
- t o PlY alligglr pr1ae lor ,_1110'
and make lhlngl herder 011 YGUONii
lhan you entlelp..ad.
•
(AIII-II
Tirll may
ther ,hey llhould be.
' " Cll (Feb. • nn oil Ill ConljliiCa- ' bethrl r1g1r1 " - to
on rllicy
Ilona couiCi ..... In • - alluiTiln 1o- •pdp n _ , 1
wl1h
Cloy~ you'relnvotM with., ~FtiMdl., .l illencl wtro ..,.., ~ out on top
•. wilo II c:onatMIIy on . . . Tirll J*•, iwlth .,.,.. llec:nllll.
...... a.ll-lmportanoe wll ......... you , ~ &lt;--. IMaL . , lite ...,..

not 1111 hii.)FJI ... -

:a

t".i

trat ~· •l!lrtildttJ
lor
; your !\rote G_raph prp lllc~- lor ,_

•

J.,

{!el

;::':;!,':
:::- J..t!.r::.':::
lng 10 lulilil yow PIJMI!rai ambllirlna.

· You ..,.,_. win lira 11111t1e, 11u1 ' - lila
-·

ICGNIO (a.&amp;.M •
. , Don't lumP
•to - l l u l a .... •• e ,one wlro II•PPl!h! JU11 ~tlrwwdort
may dlllt.erlt.i) tiltirllilld- rwiilnt
ilctlln order to rllltort till plctn IFid .
' ll!row you oil.

.,..,._II) Vour ....

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lllllttwhert

IIJ-VIce

lng

·,

tKIOt7S
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Tbe bidding and opening lead made ••••

EAST

'tJI3
-..

By JIIII!H Jaeoby

tAQJS 6432

tu

+10863

it very clear to South that East held an
eight-card diamond suit. Wbr. else
1would West not lead his partner s suit?
So when East won the club a!!e and led
back a low diamond, South was very
quick to ruff with the 10 of hearts.
West, of coune, could ovemrff with
the king, but it was mucb better for
bim to simply discard a low spade.
West's K-9.-8-7·3 of hearts bad started
out as being worth two tricks. Now
suddenly the holding was worth three
tricks and declarer bad to go set. So
what slrould declarer bave done about

SOUTH
tA
'AQJ 10642

••••

+KJ751

VulDerable: Both
Dealer: South
N_,.
Pus
It
All pass

West

Seollt

••

I'

Opening lead:

East
tt

+3

1..----------..J

oit?

Declarer is certainly looking at a
freakish deal. With diamonds split
around the table 8-:&gt;-0-0, there is F!ertalnly a fair chance that West will hold
' all the remaining hearts. To guard
against such a possibility, declarer
shOuld ruff with a low heart. Many
times that will result in West's making
' a small heart trick wben othenrile the
defenden might be limited to only two
tricks (ace of clubs and king of hearts).
But the play is still correct, since It
guarantees making the contract.

Incidentally, an opening lead of a
spade from West would almost surely
beat four hearts, sin!!e South would
likely loee two heart tricks and two
club tricks. In addition, if East wort'ed
out the play of the club nine to the first
trick. declarer would also bave to 18se
four tricks.
Jlmt8 J-y~ - "JIICOby or,./lridt{e' ...,
'hcrJIITOIIC.nlc.m..'(wril~ .nib btl

f•-

tiJt late tlnnlld J«!!bf) ·~ JJOif' •valldle .~ Bolb1re Pfl"''dN by PUrr:a Boot1

CROSSWORD
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS

38 Drench

1 Form
39 Spirit
of poker
lamp
5 Cicatrix 40 Old-time
9 Mulberry
dance
cloth
41 Yule song
10 "Nightmare DOWN
Alley"
1 Fret
star
2 Small
12 Black
drum
13 Griffith·
3 A person's
Joyner,
oath
14 Freeway 26 Pungent
e.g.
4 - Cupid
1827 Gralls
15 Gained
5 Run
reckoning
variety'
18 Uproar
8 Nobleman 11 Mar on a 29 Tantalize
17 Phirlppine 7 Beard
car
· 30 Threefold
tree
ol grain
22 Proffered 34 Oct.
18 Granary
8 Pay homage 24 Daring
birthstone
menace 11 Vaquero's 25 Mit. rank 38 Prompt
20 Greek
· rope
(abbr.)
37 Snuggery
Iefler
21 Oscar
Madison

•

Is nol

• 23 Finis .
24 Nonsense!

·25Hesve
27 "Gone" bird
28 Berlin
outcry
29tnnate
gift
31 Golf
expert
32 ShrEtwm)Use

33 Gold (Sp.)
35 Destroyet'.
In naval
argot
37 Nerd

lr.-11-+-

DAILY CRYPI'OQUOTES- He~'• how to wort It:

ttfl3

AXYDLBAAXR
IILONGFELLOW

eaJI,._Nall

n 1111tor1ce11y Ci__..
LEO (....., II-AIII- Ill Putting oil
haW~

Jt.JS.It

'$

.

(!)NewaW-

IOdllea wtro

sllortCUIIwl1haM!g,_,.slhatrequlre
time one1 Pl!llence could Cio you In today

:A.r:t.

......

abruptly lodoy

NORTH

tQ10917

Freak
show ·

1t:OO(Jlaa• (J) Ill • &lt;ll a11 e112

..... you .-lnflllll alone. A'IOid •

t,.......,..
AQUAIIIU8 (..... M Feb. 11) Taklflll

85 GanaiBI Hsullng

lP

11·'-1 710.

mlgllt cltaroge -

day. Pro- Cll1 be IYOided; ~
or, If you try to gl¥e yow cohort• kid

'

o•s-

OPEN 9 AM-7 PM Moncley-Frlclsy
Saturday 9 •m·l pm

venPu,. or partnerlhlp ....,..,_,.
could be a1011rce Of Irritation lor you to-

glove

RACINE
GUN
SHOP
...It .ISIIGUOW ._
DEER SLUGS ... S2 .20 lox
GIITARS &amp; GIITAI STRINGS

Don't llllke eny large, long-term loMe
wl1houl proper calleterel.
CAJICIII (,_ 21-.ltrir Zl) Someone
wilo· lhouid be ftrmly In your -

sure to state your zodiac lign.
CAPRICORN (Dec. II _, 111 Joint

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

George J~s. Lorrie
Morgan and the Gatlin·
Brorhers open their homes to
holt L.oMnne Crook.

oources must be hlildled vwy carefully
todoy or • IIUddln loa8 could raautt.

91428, Cleveland, Oti 41101-3-428. Be

f:i·=·=...-~

Go.

ghost-busting
wapaychoiODISt 1;1
ttl e (I) ATiT Pl;.,;a00H_...
_

AN' YOUR
SHANTY?

=..~-~

PIZZA

sam leaps Into lhe life ol a

..

•2-1 2

22 Nail

e (J) 01au.mum Leap

GIT MY OL'
SIDEKICK rr

HOW ABOUT I TAKE

Ohio .,,._

or ooblo too!

-

a panelist

on a TV talk show. Q
10:00 (Jl 700 Club WITh Pel

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Pizza-Subs-Salads-Daily Specials .
992-2221
.

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GLASS
WICKER

LOWESI FIKES
IIGHISI' QUAliTY
flEE lGEM DIUVIIY
POIIIOY AND IIIIIDLEFOIT'S 011. Y
LOc:AUY OWNED PIZZA SHOP.

THAT oeeQia-.CE SCHOOL.

ie&gt; L..IKE iHA.T

WINTHI&lt;DP~10.

Home
lmprovemants

to

=~;;.:.

SCHOOL..

battle to rerriove their

daughter lrom a life-support
system. (2:00) t;!
a~~ ei!J Jake AnCi Tha

11-1~

dopoaiJ

S•nta Shop•

tha Cruzan family's court
HE 5HOUL..D eEAeL-5
TO HEEL.., 61TUP.AI-JD
FETCH ""NOW.

IF lTS ANYTHING L.IKE

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Reexamine the complex legal .
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HOURI: 8 AM·I PM Dolly
CLOSED SUNDAY

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ForG...t Home

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PRINT NUMBERED lETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES
.

Elfort- MaiM· Ruddy· HypiNin - HERE FOR
"Remember," lectUred the mom, " you ate her!! to help
olhers." The young bOy quizzed, "And what are the other
people ~RE !:Qfl?"

e (J) PM "rgnlre
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by fd ling in rhe miuin9 word s
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SORFTY

The man returned a
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defective life preserver. lt had
.
I. I• . . . torn all apart. The clerk
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Ill C7laolee In a..,.
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.

12 Tlucks for Sale

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PERIIAPS THE FL'f'IN6 ACE
M1611T &amp;E WILLING TO TRADE
IT FOR A LITTLE KISS ...

WORLD WAR 1 FL'f'IN6 ACE
HOW MUCH I ADMIRE HIS
&amp;EAVTIFVL. SILK SCARF?

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6

HAVE I EVER TOLD THE

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19

Television
Viewing

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One letter stardl for another. In this sample A is used
for the three L'a, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
up.'lei, the leictli llld f011111tlon of the words are all
. Elch dl;r the code letters are different.

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II·II

KIAIP
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YIPXIH.- AXK HEYNUUIP
Y......,.. c.,e•ll•lll&amp; GIVE TO' EVERY
HUMAN BEING EVERY RIGHT 11MT YOU a.AIM
FOR YOURSB.F. -ROBERT RIIGERSOU.
C) tlllt ICing F - SynciFcete. lilt

.•"

�AT SAVE•A•LOT
YOU NOT ONLY SAVE MONEY ••
YOU WILL SAVE MORE,
BECAUSE WE HAVE DONE
YOUR PRICE COMPARISON AT
OTHER LOCAL STORES!

.,

SAL
J

39¢
Muffin Mix 1 oz.
65¢
Yellow Popcorn a2 oz.
49¢
.Budding Lunch Meats 2.5 oz.
$5.49
Cheese Singles 31bs.
69¢
Pimentos 4 oz.
99¢
Tea Bags 100 ct.
$2.99
Wesson Oil 64 oz.
35¢
Chicken Gravy Mix 1 oz.
Instant Oatmeal Variety 10 packets $1.59
79¢ •
Chili Powder soz.
'
99¢
Pan Cooking Spray 9oz.
79¢
Sage 3oz.
Orange Breakfast Drink Mix 21 oz. $1~69
.

l

Wedne.day, December 13, 1989

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-20- The Dally Sentinel

BB

K·

61¢
98¢
69¢
$8.59
.
$1.15
$2.49
S4.49
7/Soz. 79¢
$2.09
4oz. $2.69
8oz. $2.89
.5 oz. $1.65
26oz. $2.49 ·

TOTALS.............817.81 . 831.60

65¢
$1.29
65¢
s9.99
79¢
$2.29
$4.39
7/Soz. 75¢
$2.19
4oz. $2.49
6 oz. $2.59
5/Soz. .$1.89
26oz. $2.49
832.45

59¢
$1.49 '
65¢
$9.29
$1.09
$1.99
$4.29
7/Soz. 79¢
$2.29
.5 oz. $1.69
8 oz. $3.29
.5 oz. $1.75
2601. $2.69
'

831.89

57¢
$1.01
89¢
$9.29
$1.11
$1.59
$3.99
118 oz. 75¢
$2.39
4oz. $2.63
8 oz. . S3.39
1. 3/4 oz. $3.53
26 oz. $2.79
833.93

Now That You Have Seen That You
Cannot ''Bear'' Those High Prices And
The ''Scissors'' Just Don't Cut The Cost,
Come And Shop Where You .Always
·S AVE • A • LOT!

THESE PIIICU WERE EFfEC1IYE
IN OUR COL EiliiMI11011l
DIC.I'IIIIIU 11

IIOl.RSI
I'IOftDAY-M'IUlDAY
8A.....eP.IIL
SUWAY, II AJII.-8 PJIL

MID MAIIIVIOUI', OWriER

RT.62NORTH

(304) 675-1155

POINT PLEASANT, WV

11

Pick 3

636
Pick 4
3465
Super Lotto
14-16-20-23-30-40

Low lontctH In mid teeu.
Chance of snow 10 percent.
s.- Friday,
Ia teens.

~!!L_JU

•

'.

.

Vol.40, No.113

r-

.

·-

.

·-·-

Z S.C.Iono. 14 PogM 26 Clnto

· ·~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, December 14, 1989

Copyrig-1888

Christmas Is ... ------____,

A Multlmedio Inc. Newopopor

COunties must front
•
•
computer....·•zation costs
•

v·

F
'

Shop today,
shop locally

Ohio Lottery

By NANCY YOACBAI\l
Dally SeaUnel Staff
The upcoming computerlza·
tion of the Meigs County Title
Office was dlscu ssed Wednesday
by the Meigs County Commls·
stoners and Larry Spencer,
Meigs Clerk of Courts.
The state-required computer!·
zatlon of all county title offices is
to start In February or March
with VInton County as the pilot
county, Spencer said. He antic I·
pates that computerization ofthe
Meigs County office will follow
sometime in early summer.
·
As pointed out by Spencer, the
counties must front all costs
related to the required computer·
lzatlon, although the state will
supply all the needed materials.
At some point, the state will
reimburse the counties for the
costs which will vary from
county to county and have yet to
be determined.
Spencer said he has requested
three terminals and two printers
for the Meigs office which Is
lOcated on the second floor of the
courthouse, however, whether or

remains to be seen.
Employees who wlll operate
the terminals will be required to
participate in training sessions,
the costs for which are also state
reimbursable, Spencer added.
Training Is expected to start in
June.
Spencer also presented com· .
missioners with an accounting of
summer salary costs when he
had to hire part·tlme workers to
replace employees who were
either IU or on vacation.
Only one bid was received by
the commissioners for office
space fo_r the county's Child
Support Enforcement Agency. ·
The bid came from Maxine
Gaskill and Is for the same place
where the agency Is currently
housed in Middleport.
Michael Swisher, director ol
the Meigs County Department of
Human Services, was present for
the bid opening. The bid, for 980
square' feet at $775 a month for

two years, was accepted bY. the
commissioners subject to state
approval, since the rent is
reimbursable from the state.
Bond for Shelly Fortune to
accept after hours recognizance
bonds for Meigs County Court
was approved by the commlssloners. Fortune IS a dispatcher
for the Pomeroy Pollee
Department.
A request from Kenny Wig·
gins, litter control program man·
ager, for a $5,862 advance lor the
balance of 1989 was approved.
The amount will be reimbursed
by the state In February.
In final matters, end·of·theyear Interdepartmental budget
transfer requests were approved
for the SoU and Water Conserva·
lion Service, Meigs Emergency
Medical Services, Meigs Clerk of
Courts Office, County Court, the
Meigs Prosecutor's Office, the
County Highway Department
and Probate-Juvenile Court.

• ht
rD.•ft
l '\/
-e
J.U
.J
•o'

are
Q;lll;~~~.:;s arrested in Gallia
~-c:!!.~
,
r:t!id.s
.-Wednes!kY
.
Q!Jip f..e!J!P.~rat~re . Y2Ul~ :dl:Dil.~- . 0lllllf:
, m1unn 00
into 'single digits by Saturday
GMNG TO O'DIERS'- The bulllaeas Prole&amp;·
lllonals of America Club at Melp High School
lpoMOred &amp; nil&amp;tea delve for the students enrolled
Ill tile Bead Start program In Melp Cnunty.
DoiUUID• were received from National Honor
Society memiNin, teacllera, and the student body.

Shown here decoratlnr; the tree are, clockwise
from rlr;ht, Allee Jacoba and VIcky Woods, from
Bead Start, Jennifer McKinley, kaeellnr;, Kenda
Kloee, Spring Reed; and Usa Daral. The studenla
are officers of the club. A total of 75 pairs of
mHtens were collected for donation.

By United Pre&amp;a International
wind had begun kicking up.
O~lo has been gripped by
The mercury is to continue to
wlotry weather for·weeks, so It's gradually drop over the next two
hard to believe the official start days, with Saturday morning
ofl"ln~tr IS stll)rn9rethan a week
readings being In the single
away. And tlie National Weather digits. ·
Service said Tbu~ay It will get
Snow moving across Ohio
even worse this week.
Thursday morning was to grad\i·
lJghl snow fell over much of ally diminish, giving the state a
the state early Wednesday and short reprieve from the precipi·
mld-mornb;lg temperatures were tation through most of the nll(ht.
In the upper teens and ._)ow 20s.
Anot)ler more significant ODS·
Wlnd-chW readings, howtlver, · laugh! of snow will reach southw·
were conslderabjy colder, below est Ohio late Thursday night and
zero In western Ohio where the spread over all o! Ohio Friday. It

By DICK THOMAS
Incarcerated untU he posted a
OVP News Staff
$00,000. His arraignment Is scheFifty-elght persons were ar· duled lor Friday.
Thomas R. Quillen, of Route
143, Pomeroy, pleaded guilty to
rested Wednesday as clty,county
One of the 58 persons arrested
and
state
law
.enforcement
offl·
yesterday
was not charged with
appears southern Ohio will expe- cultivation of marijuana on a bill
rience the most snow accumula· of Information when he appeared • ctals began serving warrants trafficking In drugs. Shelly
after the largest number of Banks· Patterson, 34, Gallipolis,
tions from Friday's system.
Monday .before Meigs Common
Early-morning accumulations Pleas Judge Fred W. Crow III.'
indictments In the history of was charged with aiding and
Gallla County. ·
abetting a trafficking in drugs.
totaled 2 inches In northwest
Accordllll\ to Meigs Prosecutor
The day and a half-session of She pleaded not guilty on ar·
Ohio, and as much as 4 Inches in Steven L. Story, the charge
some parts of the Snowbelt against QuUien came about In
the grand jury resulted In the ralgnment and her case was set
Indictment of 62 persons , ori a for trial Feb. 13, 1990.
counties In the northeast.
August when Meigs Sheriff's
Looking ahead through Mon· Deputy Tom Smith went to the
total of 78 secret Indictments. .
Here are the people who
day, It will remain very cold, Quillen residence on an unreThe Indictments, according to pleaded not guilty to charges of
with a chance of snow in the lated matter and while there,
Brent A. Saunders. GalllaCourity lrafflcking In drugs, along with
Prosecuting
Attorney, resulted their trial dates:
saw
marijuana
piants.
northeast Saturday and state·
warrant
was
then
A
search
from a 10-month undercover
Jean Wamsley, 40, 41 Lincoln
wide on Monday. Sunday will be
drug Investigation under exclu· Ave., Gallipolis, Feb. 26, 1990;
fair. Highs willbe10to20over the obtained through Prosecutor's
weekend and in the upper teens to Investigator Don Snyder and the sive direction of the Gallia Charles K. Smith, 23, Gallipolis,
sheriff's department, Story County Prosecutor's office.
March 6, 1990; Sam E. Bennett,
mld·20s on Monday.
reports.
.
Arraignments were held be- 23, 37 Smithers St., Gallipolis,
A search of the Interior and
fore Gallla County Common March 6, 1990; Teresa L. Willi·
exterior of the home netted 13 Pleas Courl Judge Donald A. Cox ams, 34, Rt. Galllpolls, (3counts)
sizable plants, says Story, and an
yesterday afternoon and last Jan. 24, .1990; Debra Bradshaw,
agreement was reached whereby
night. Additional arraignments 33, 18~ Eastern Ave., Gallipolis,
Qulllen opted to plead guilty to
are expected as more warrants March ·9, 1990; Mike Lee Rossi·
th'e cultivation charge.
after Indictment are served.
ter, 21, 41 Lincoln Ave., GalllpoA pre-sentence Investigation
Of
the
58
persons
arrested
Us,
Feb. 12, 1990; Phil E. Shafer,
Wanda Fetty, .Lula Hampton, was ordered by the court In the
yesterday
by
law
enf9rcement
24,
41 Lincoln Ave., Gallipolis,
Peggy Harris, Emma Clat· Quillen matter, Story says, with
worthy, William and Joyce Ho· sentencing schedlued for Jan. 30, officials, 28 were Incarcerated In Jan. 17 ,1990; Curtis Lee Lambert
the GalUa County jail, until they 22, Rt. 2, Bidwell, Jan. 15, 1990;
back, Florence Richards, Macel 9a.m.
posted bond.
Brian Arthur, 26, Rt. 2, Bidwell,
Barton, Evelyn Gilmore, and
Also on Monday. LaDonna
Kenneth
R. Clark, 31, Rt. 2, March 27, 1990; Mark Shane Hill,
Gerald Wildermuth. Friendly Nestor, of Mason, W.Va., was
Circle of Trinity Churchhserved given a six-months suspended Bidwell, did not waive the 20, 729 Second Ave .. Gallloolls,
24·hour walling period and was
Continued on page 14
the canteen.
sentence, placed on two-years
The donors by communities probation and fined ·$250 and
were as follows:
costs for passing bad checks.
Pomeroy: Marsha L. Barn· Nestor had previously entered a
hart, Brenda S. Cunningham, plea of goUty to. the charge.
Lenora J. McKnight, Mary K.
Conditions of Nestor's proba·
Spencer, Billy J. Spencer, Debra tion include the continuation of
The position of coordinator for the talented and gifted
D. Mora, Scott A. Eichinger, counseling and that she not write
program
in Meigs County has been changed from a half-time to
Waller R. Couch, Phylls M. any more checks, reports Meigs
a
full· time position for the remainder of the 1989·90 school year.
Continued on· page 14
Prosecutor Steven L. Story.
Action to amend the contract of Kitty Hazier, the TAG
coordinator, was taken at the Tuesday night meeting of the
Meigs County Board of Education held In the county offices.
The board also voted to hire Donna Grueser as a substitute
teacher aide. Membership In the Ohio School Boards
Association was approved and Harold Roush was appointed as
legislative liaison for 1990. The board also created a position of
CLEVELAND (UP!) -There
teacher aide for the Severe Behavior Class at the Rutland
where, with those arrested being were no grand prize winners In
Elementary School.
.
held In several spots In the Wednesday night's Super Lotto
A school bus driver's .certificate was approved for Carl
drawing, boosting the jackpot for
building, awaiting arraignment.
Robinson.
By 11 p.m. last night, 42 of those Saturday's drawing to at least
The oraanlzatlonal meeting of the board was set for January
$19 mllllon,lotlery officials said.
arrested hat! been arraigned,
2, 1990 at 7 p.m. with tbe regular meeting to follow .
A tolal of 268 players matched
and 16 of those were released on
The oath of office was administered to Robert Burdette,
five
of six numbers for second
bond.
Harold Lohse, and Bill Quickel, a new member who will begin
The Gallla County Jail holds up prizes ol$1,000each. Third prizes
serving a termon the county board onJan. 1, by John D. Riebel,
of $75 will go to 12,735 players who
to 30 on an overnight basis,
treasurer. Others attencllni the meeting were VIrgil King,
matched four of six numbers.
according to Chief Deputy Carlos
Harold Roush and OriS Smith, members.
The Super Lotto numbers were
Wood, but is set up rqr 15 males
14, 16, 20, 23, 30 and 40. Tolal sales
and three female priSoners at
were ••623,797.
any time.
In the Kltker game, one player
"I'm pleased with thecoopera·
The Bailey Run Road home of W.rs. Eldon (Phyllis) Morris
matched all six numbers for a
tlve• efforts of the law enforcewas destroyed by fire early Wednesday afternoon.
grand prize of $100,000. Ten
ment agencies," Saunders said.
Pomeroy Fire Department was called at 12:55 p.m. and Chief
players matched five numbers
The element of surpriSe
Danny Zirkle reports ·that he Immediately called Middleport
for $!1,000; 100· players matched
seemed to work In the officers'
Fire Department for assistance. Flames were already showing
four numbers for $1,000; 1,096
favor, .with those named In the
fr-om all the windows as firemen arrived on the scene, Zirkle
playen matched three numbers
warrants being caught off guard.
says. Only a shell and the chimney of the two-story frame home
for
$100; and 10,909 players
Saunders said he could have
were standlna when firemen left shortly after 5.
matched two numbers for $10.
taken the charges to the grand
Mrs. Morris was not bome when the tire slarlled, Zirkle
The Kicker combla&amp;tlon was
jury one or two at a time, butthat
reports. A neighbor discovered the fire and called authorities.
8686t8. Total Kicker sales were
would have jeopardized the un·
ConUaued on page 14
$1,212,934.
dercover agents' Identities.

·Meigs Countians donate 85 -units
of blood during bloodmobile visit
Eighty-five units of bl.ood were
received during Wednesday's
visit of the American Red Cross
Bloodmobile at the Meigs County
Senior Otlzens Center.
Twenty-two of the units were
given •in appn!Ciatlon for blood .
received by a relative-or friend.
Multiple gallon donors giving
at yesterday's visit included
Wlllam H. Hoback, nine; Leafy
M. Chasteen eight; George Har·
rls, five; Adelle L. White and
Jeanette M. Radfoi-d, three, and
Ralph H. Ballard, Sullan A. Karr,
and Jeffrey D. Holter, one.
First time donors were Scott

Eichinger, Angela Cundiff, Jac·
quellne Wamsley, Cheryl D.
Halley, and Janet R. Leffle.
Dr. James Witherell and Dr.
Wilma Mansfield were the physi·
clans In charge with Lenora
Leifheit, Beulah Ward, Winifred
Marcinko and Naomi London,
·nurses, assisHng. Clerical
workers donating their time
were 'Jean Nease, Carolyn Bar·
ton, and Edward Cozart, repre·
sentatlves of the Vietnam Vets
Morotcycle Club.
Others assisting were RSVP
workers Marion Ebersbach, DOrothy Long, Helen Bodimer,

Local news briefs-....,

Board changes post to full-time

Elemen~ of surprise worked in

No one claims

lirwmen's
favor during Gallia raids
.

:Wtto jackpot

.
By LEE ANN WELCH
OVP News Staff
.
Like something out of a Holly·
wood movll!, pollee cars lined
Locust Street, and law enforcemeat officers awaited · their
orders early Wednesday. At '
approximately 11 a.m .. 40 offlc·
ers were spU\ _up into five teams
and they hit the streets to arrest
those Indicted by a special grand
jury Tuesday and Wednesday.
Within ,flve hours, 40 people
had been arrested and taken to
the G'a!l141 County Jail. By the end
of t~e day, 58 people had been
arrested In the sweep.
This was the first time a secret
tll'sn!1 ,jury bad been convened in
the county, and according to
offlclala, Is something even Co·
lumbus hasn:t done.
"We hope this will send a
message to those Involved with
'

drugs," Prosecuting Attorney
Brent A. _Saunders said of the
•
sweeping arrests.
Saunders' office spearheaded
a 10·month-long undereover In·
vestlgatlon which resulted In the,
indictments ,and arrests
Wednesday.
,
Most of the 78 charges held In
the Indictments were for traffick·
lng drugs, Saunders said, adding
all were drug-related.
_ After Common Pleas Judge
Donald Andrew Cox diamlssed
the grand jury, arrest warrants
were given to officers or the
GalHpolts Pollee Department,
the GalUa Cnunty Sherlfrs Department and the Ohio Depart·
ment of Liquor Control. The
officers then made several
sweepaln the city and county.
At the courthouse, there was a
packed courtroom and law en·
forcement officers were every-

Home destroyed by fire

&gt;to

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