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Paa•

10-The Dally Sentinel

Mental incompetence may
be misread as infidelity and arc planning to buy a la~ge home
in Arizona. 1-don't want to be stuck
with such a big investment if he is
• going to desert me for another
woman. What should I do? I need
some advice. -·TOLEDO

Ann
Landers
"'19M, LOll~

nne. svoolcMe m

OMtorl Syndicate"

Dea~ Ann Landers: My husband,
well into his 80s, seems to be
collecting women's addresses.
Several months ago, I went through
"Clyde's" suit pockets and found a
1101e with the address of a woman in
a city 250 miles away. In another suit,
I found $1,200. (I wasn't spying. I
wu getting his suits ready for the
cleaners.) Today, I found another
sheet of paper with the name of a
different woman who lives in another
country. Attached to the paper was
$2,000 in cash.
I don't lmow if c;:lyde is preparing
to leave me and is stashing funds for
his depanure or what When I found
an empty book of stamps, I realized
he must be corresponding with
several women behind my back, but
1haven't seen him writing any letters.
We are hardly out of each other's
sighL
Sbould I confront Clyde about this?
I don't know what 10 do about the
lllllMy. We both get an allowance for
expenses, and I'm sure Cl)'de is
accumulating this extra cash by
'saving his. But we both have acce,ss
to the bank accounts, and I'm
worried. If I tell Clyde how I found
the notes and money, he will accuse
me of aoing through his pockets. He
has a very nasty tern pet
We've been married for 25 years

DEAR TOLEDO: You say Clyde,
who is well into his 80s, is
corresponding with women you do
not know and is stashing rather l~e
sums of ·money? Have you
considered the possibility that he has
some neurological problems
resulting from the aging
process?
I hope you will share this
information with Clyde's doctot You
should also consult an auomey about
the state of Clyde's finances. It may
be that you need legal protection
against what could be Clyde's
mental incompetence. And P.S.: Hold
off on buying that "huge home in
Arizona." That's the last thing you
need right now.
• Dear Ann Landers: I'd like to
share something with your readers
that gave me a lift when I really
needed it.
My mother died of a heart attack
ilt the age of 72. She was a quie~
sweet woman who did not socialize
much. During visitation hours at the
funeral home, many people arrived
whom I did not recognize because I
have lived in Canada and Vermont for
more than 20 years. These
"strangers" did not recognize me
either.
Three women walked together to
the casket and stood quietly in what
appeared to be deep thought. At what

~.$

Monday, oecem.ber 19,1994

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

HOLID~Y DINNER

The annual Christmas dinner of
the Ladies Missionary Fellowship
of the Victory Baptist Church was
held at the church recently.
Betty Barker and Angela Hall
decorated the fellowship room for ·
the dinner and poinsettias were
used on the tables. Gifts were presented to Wanda Ashley by her
mother, Linda Keesee. Mrs. Barker
presented a gift to Angela Hall and
officers were recognized.
New officers named were Linda
Keesee, president; Betty Barker,

I considered--the proper moment, I
approached them and introduced
myself. One of the three said, "Vk
are checkers at the supermarket
where your mom shopped. She was
one of the few people who treated us
like human beings. The least we
could do is come 10 say goodbye." ..
ED IN COLCHES1ER, VT.
DEAR ED: What a lovely bibute.
That simple comment spoke
volumes.
Dear Ann Landers: The letter
signed "Bill in L.A." was a classic.
Here's a man who is looking for a
wife in the personal ads. He spends
$50 a month on phone calls, meets
IE'~:
four women in a year (that's $·150 a
date), and then ·the jaclca_ss is too
cheap to take them out to dinnet He
says, "Nothing clicked." The last of
the big spenders is now considering
a Spanish senorita because '
"American girls are gold diggers."
Ann, where do you find these
filberts? .. DON ON LONG
ISLAND
DEAR DON: I don't find them.
They find me! And I really don't
mind. Some of those leuers are a
welcome relief from the truly sad
ones.
Planning a wedding? Whals right?
. What's wrong? "The Ann LDnders
Guide for Brides" will ~lievt your
anxiety. Send a self-addressed, long,
businns-siu enW!Iope and a check
or money order for $3.65 (this in·
eludes postage and handling) to:
Brides; c/o Ann Lander3, P.O. Bo/C
JJ 562. Chicago,/11. 60611.0562. fin
Canada. send $4.45.)

-~

DECORATING coNn:Sl'
·
Ninety-seven homes were•; •
judged in the Racine Area Commu~• · :
nicy Organizallon' s Christmas dec;~ : .
orating contest held Tuesday,·
evening.

vice president; Tanuny ball, secre·
tary and Sarah Fowler, treasurer.
Mrs. Barker was speaker for the
program and Mrs. Keesee bad
prayer.
Others attending were Lisa
Johnson, Sue Adkins, Sherry
Jarvis, Pb)'llis Hudnall, Myrtle
Quillen, Dorothy Anthony. Bessie
Fisher, Jennifer Ashley, Molly
Johnson, Lucy Hendricks, Verenia
Barkman, Helen Jane Brown, Aora
Marie Gibson, Lois Hawley, Sandy
Laudermilt, Margaret Nunn and
Shirley Roush.

1*1':':.:. I

·Holiday Gift Subscription Coupon -

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STATE _ _ ZIP-.,....--

CrTY __________ STATE _ _ ZIP ____

By JIM FREEMAN .
repairing a slip.
10. Recreation - Blaeunar
4. City ball - Village workers touted a new little league ball field
Sentinel News Slllft
and 'renovation of the Butternut
. Pomeroy Mayor John W. Blaet- installed a new roof.
5. Wmer lines- Using a device Avenue Park as increasing recremar ended Village Council's last
meeting of the year on a wsitive called a "pig" to clean water lines, ational opportunities for area
1;1010 Monday night by pointing out workers almost doubled the amount
youth.
of water flowing into village reser- · "It's been a really good year,"
acronplisbments dining 1994.
· Like David Letterman of late voirs.
Blaettnar said. "We've accom6. New water tank - A new P.Iisbed a lot."
nigbt fame, Blaettnar presented a
·water t3nk on Lincoln Hill replaced
•ist of 10 village success stories:
' Blaettnar commended council's
the aging reservoir at that location.
1. Downtown revitalization "spirit of cooperation": "We state
A $327,000 grant bas grown to - 7. New well site - An option to · our opinions and often disagree;
$750,000, be said, with the possi· teaM~ a new well site in Syracuse but we operate as a group."
blllty of further explinsion of more may 'provide the village-with a new
In financial matters, Blaettnar
souroe of qtiality water.
.
than $1 million.
said the village stayed within its
8. Police deparunent - Blaet- budget Ibis year. "We'II finish the
. 2. Street department - For
exlensive road repair. "They didn't mar commended tbe police depart· year with about $200,000 in the
make them all, but they have done ment for keeping peace witllin the bank," he said.
viUage.
a very good job."
· In other business, council dis·
9. Fire protection - The village · cussed a problem with people loi. 3. Wyllis Hill Street- City
worken opened the one-lane road recently purchased a new $192,000 terinA on Main Street after dark.
for tbe first time in 8 years by pumper/rescue 11'\lck.
(Continued on Page 3)

-

·A uthorities to exh-ume
·r emains of Rose infant

~E----------------------

START DELIVERY DATE - - - - -

MONDAY
SYRACUSE- Syracuse Vii·
lage Council, continued session, 7
p.m. Monday, village hall.
RACINE - Southern Local
School District Board of Educa·
lion. 1' p.m. Monday at the school.
RACINE - Racine Village
Council, 7 p.m. Monday at the
annex in Racine. Auditors using
Star Mill Park council quarters.

Tuesday, 28471 Bashan Road. For
information, call949-3119.

Pillow Arm
Or Colonial

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THURSDAY
MIDDLEPORT - .Live nativity
scene at the Hope Baptist Church
on Grant Street in Middleport,
Thursday and Friday, 7 to 9 p.m.
each evening.

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BASHAN - Home School
Support Group meeting, 7 p.m.

'

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GATHERIG DUST,

TUESDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Special
meeting, Middleport Lodge 363,
F&amp;AM, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, Middleport Masonic Temple. Work in
EAdegree.

&amp;3~~~..,.~ =

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"SliTRACr THOSE THINGS

LETART - · Tbe Letart Township 11'\lstees will meet Monday, 6
p.m. at the offlce building.

11

JJJCDncrciJilla9

POMEROY - Alzheimers and
Related Disorders suppon group, I
pm. Wednesday, Senior Citizens
BEDFORD - Bedford Town- Center. Dr. Richard Boone, psyship Volunteer Fire Department chologist, to speak:.
Committee meeting 7, p.m. Tuesday at the town hall.
RACINE - First Baptist
Church, Racine, children's proPOMEROY - Fraternal Order gram, 7 p.m. Wednesday. One serof the Eagles Auxiliary, pizza vice on Christmas Day al the
party, Tuesday, 7:30p.m.
church, 10 a.m.
WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT . - Bennett
Benne It Post I 28. American
Legion, 6 p.m. Wednesday for a
Christmas dinner followed by sacking Christmas candy.

,,

Ingels Furniture &amp; Jewelry

----Community calendar---The Community Calendar is
published as a free service to
non-profit groups wishing to
announce meeting and special
events. The calendar Is not
designed to promote sales or·
rundralsers or any type. Items
an printed as space permits and
cannot be guaranteed to run a
specllc number of days.

·--

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, December 20, 2994

pouncil reviews accomplishments in '94

ADDR~·----------------------

The Daily Sentinel

ID 501.

3-6-11-24-34

'P'Omeroy's top 10 list

12 Months $66.56_

Reeth, Renee Bailey, Ryan Frazier; second row,
Darren Jackson, Ben See, Cody Smltb, Cory
VanReetb, Lucy Howerton, Samantha Cole,
Eri&lt;'a PO!Jie, Casey Dllllfee; aJTo:d tblrd row, Chris
Pickens, Deland Eltbtnaer, Alison Hayes, Joey
Taylor, Robyn Freeman, Erin Hartson, Kelly
Freeman. Others participating but not pictured
are Bridgett Johnson, Brooks Johnson, Dakota
Smith, Sarah CasiD, and David Tucker.

Low lo!ll&amp;ht Ia 381, dear.

WedDeidaJ, poortly doudy.lfl&amp;ll

Buckeye 5:

Page4

Vol. 45, NO. 161
Copyright 18M

----

~~~E----------------------ADDRESS
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_____________________

1992

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Pick 3:

Winners were, in order: Jim and
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Bostick and Roger and Jane Ami
Hill. Receivin~ honorable mention
were Paul Dadey, Paul Cardone,
David Hill. Jonathan Rees and Bill .
Bird.

IIIIT-..,1

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Saints

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Special Holiday offer ends
December _31, 1994.

PRESENTING MUSICAL - As most chll·
dren have been preparing for the arrival of
Santa, tllese dllldren bave been "Getting Roady
for tbe Mlrade," a mukaiiD be preaented 7
.m. at the Middleport Church of CbrlsL Partie:·
patlng are, left to rlgbt, front, Katie Jerfers,
Errlne Kennedy, David Poole, Luke Stinson,
Bradley Shrlnrs, Beth Wilfong, Chris Van-

Ohio Lottery

-~

By GEORGE ABATE
Sentinel Ne'WII Starr
Officials will .disinter the
remains of an dead infant today.
s&amp;id Meigs County Prosecutor Jobn
Lentes. 1bis grave removal is part
of an on-going investigation that
. drew rqiooal publicity wben bodies were searched for behind a
Racine farm this November.
·, MeiSs COOilty Coroner Douglas
Hunter and investigators with the
Bureau of Criminal Investigation!\,
and Identification will exhume Lisa
Rose, Lenrer said. The Infant was
about I year old when she alleged·
)y died from crib death and was
buried in a ·nearby cemetery in
1984.
Family members of Harold Rose
Sr. told authorities remains may
bavc been buried on tbe Mile Hill
Road property behind some sheds
and barns, Meigs Sheriff James
Soulsby said in a previous interview with The Daily Selllinel.
;Due to the content of the informl!tion, Soulsby said be bad to
investigate the allegations but no
c_barges ba-ve been filed at this
Gme. Rose; a 54-year-old farmer,
and his 19-year-old daughter bave
remained in the one-story wbite
farm bouse and have Cooperated,
Soulsby added.
Today's action occurred because
BCI investigators bave a strong
reason to believe it migbt provide
more evidence, Lentes said.
"Wben we get serious leads
about serious c~iminal activity it
can not be lgoored," Lentes said.
"Certainly, disinterment is not

something you take lightly ... the
flrst stage of the investigation gave
us a lot of information that was
corroborating."
BCI cbief investigator Terry
Neely said earlier about two hand·
fuls of· potential evidence were
recovered. .
The BCI targeted eight areas for
the search -with specially,~ lplined
dogs focusing on suspiciou~&gt; spots,
he said.
. The search was complicated
because one area bad 20 years of
trash dumped in it, Neely said.Rose bad brougbt four truckloads
of soil to fdl in the land - so the
search began below this dirt, be
added.
· This pbaMI of the investigation
does not focus on cbild br sexual

abuse, but the course of future legal
action will be decided by Lentes,
Soulsby added.
"(Rose) has denied doing anything out tbere," Soulsby said .
"He's saying we won't find anything. Wbat you bave to realize in
this caM~ tbe delivery of 14 babies
were made in the borne."
Rose and bis wife, Mary, bad at
least I 7 children, 16 of them still
living, Soulsby said.
The flve children living in the
borne, ranging from 9 to I 5 years
old, were placed in a foster home,
Lentes said.
In October, Rose's wife was
admitted at the Southeast Psychi·
atric Hospital in Athens due to
mental and emotional problems,
Lentes said.

Ex-investigator pleads no
contest to misdemeanors
A caM~ against a former Meigs
County special deputy and prosecu·
tor's investigator was resolved this
morning after be pleaded no contest to two misdemeanor charges.
Gary J. Wolfe, Racine, pled no
contest - to two misdemeanor
charges of menacing before visiting
Judge Micbael W. Ward from
Athens County in the Meigs Coun·
ty Coon of Common Pleas. A trial
scheduled to begin today was canceled and 76 prospective jurors
were scot borne.

M:u rder suspect pleads
innocent to indictment

In return, two felony c~ges of
abduction were dismissed.
Tbe cbarges stemmed from a
Jan. 22 incident in wbicb Wolfe
allegedly pointed a handgun at his
former wife, Sonya Wolfe, and
Harry Lyons Jr.. both of Racine.
Wolfe may now face a maximum jail sentence of 60 days, a
fine of $500 plus court costs and
costs of prosecution. In addition, a
coon order barring Wolfe from carrying or possessing firearms was
continued '&lt;II. Lyons' request.

ENTERTAINING- Among the entertainers
at the Pomeroy Mercbants AssoCiation's
"HomeiDwn·Christmas" Monday nlgbt were tbe
Big Bend Cloggers, directed by Vivian May.

Wearing holiday attire, the group had novel ·
program features, Including a costumed rein· ·
deer with treats ror IDts and angels wltb twin-

SANTA MADE THE SCENE- The finale of
tbe "Hometown Christmas" program Monday
nigbt was tbe arrival or Sa_nta. He visited witb

'the children and gave each one a candy cane
including this youngster, Aaron Ohlinger.

kling llgbts.

Holid~y cheer Jills.

By CHARLENE HOEFUCH
Sentinel News Starr
Those who bundled up and
braved the cold to attend
Pomeroy's "Hometown Christmas" program Monday night were
treated to heartwarming holiday
entertainment by several local
groups.
Jim Soulsby emceed the program, wbicb got underway with
lively dance routines by the Big
Bend Cloggers in attractive red and
white costuming.
The group, directed by Vivian
May, was accompanied to Pomeroy
by Rudolph, the Red Nosed Rein·
deer, Adam Jenkins, who moved
thrQugb the crowd to give candy
treats to the youngsters. One of
tbeir numbers featured several
cloggers in angel costuming with

village levee
.

twinkling lights spelling out the

the Meigs County lnfmruiiy.
Prizes of $25 for first, $15 for
Adding to the festivities was the second and SIO for third were ·
Christmas chorus of Jenifer Mor· awarded by the Pomeroy Merton, made up of Meigs Junior and chants Association, whicb sponSenior high school students who sored the contest in cooperation
sang a medtey of traditional and with the Winding Trail Garden
Club.
contemporary holiday music.
Entertaining the crowd with
· For the judging Sunday
familiar carols was an instrumental evening, the out-of-judges were
ensemble from the Meigs Marauder taken on a tour of the 1own by the
Band, directed by Toney Dingess.
garden club committee of Addalou
Winners in the home decorating Lewis, Alice Thompson, and Karen
contest were announced. First place Werry.
went to Mr. and Mrs . Wayne.
A bi'ghlight of Pomeroy's
Davis, 215 Mulberry Ave .. second Hometown Christmas program was
to Mr. and Mrs. William P. Ault, when Santa made the scene to visit
Lincoln Hill, and third to Mr. and with the children and pass out
Mrs. Kenneth McCullough, 235 candy canes.
Mulberry Ave. Honorable mention
The program was sponsored by
went to Margie Snyder of Brick the Pomeroy Merchants AssociaStreet. and special reco~nition to tion .
word "Noel."

--Christmas is... ----..

Court sets

bond in two

felony cases

· : GALLIPOLIS - A Gallipolis man charged in the Dec. 2 shooting
«alb of bis wife pleaded not guilty and not guilty by .reason of insanity at
!1J1 arraignment Monday in Gallia County Common Pleas Court.
.
Johnny R. Wbite, 37, 2029 Cbatharn Ave., appeared to answer an·
aggravated mUJder indicunent issued Friday by the Gallia County grand
jury.
.
· White's bond of $200,000 set two weeks ago in Gallipolis Municipal
Coun was continued, and Judge Josepb L. Cain scheduled a jury trial for
Feb. 27 at 9 a.m .
Cain appointed Gallipolis attorqey James A. Bennett 10 represent
Wbite. Meigs County Prosecuting Attorney John R. Lentes was appointed
\0 handle the prosecution after Gallia Prosecuting Attorney Brent A.
SaWJden applied Friday for a special prosecute(.
Wbitc bas filed a motion asking for a determination of bis competency
\0 stand trial. Cain approved the motion and ordered that a psycbiabic
evaluation be conducted at the Shawnee Forensic Center, Pdrtsmouth.
Wbite, wbo surrendered several hours after bis wife, Bonnie L. White,
32, w.as ·DJ!ed, waived a preliminary hearing in municipal court and bis
case was submitled 10 the grand jury.
. The maximum penalty fot aggravated murder is life imprisonment with
. parole eligibility in 20 years, according to the Obio Revised Code .
BCil8Use a gun specification is inGiuded in the-charge against White,
~ three y~ -must be served prior to the sentence on the murder

Two men facing unrelated
felony charges made initial appearances Monday in tbe Meigs County
Court of Judge Patrick H. O'Brien.
A Middlepott man wbo waived
appointment of an attorney and
decided to take 24 hours to coosid·
er pleading guilty to cbarges of
rape and arson Friday oow wants·a
coon-appointed attorney .
Russell M. Rousb, 32, 648 S.
Second Ave., wbo was arrested
Thursday night by Meigs County
sberiff's deputies, now faces
charges of arson and insurance
fraud in addition to a likely rape
charge'.
Assistant Prosecutor Chris
Tenaglia said Roush is accused of
setting fire to a mobile home owned .by_his brothcr,_Wiltiarn •
who also faces charges. The rape
allegations arose from the arson
investigation, be said.
Rape carries a maximum penal·
ty of life in prison, be said.
0' Brien set total bond at ·
$125,000 witb 10 percent cash
allowed and appointed attorney
Steve Story to represent Roush .. A ,
preliminary bearing will be held
Dec. 28 at 2 p.m.
·
In an unrelated matter, Tunotby
(Continued on Page 3)

~!C is alleged to bave sbot and killed Bonnie White in ~polis. He '

is.lllen alleged 10 have shot his cousin, Donald Wbite. 37, Apple Grove,
w.ya.;,at _a Muon County tavern, and then attempted to rob Southside,
W. Va.;rcaidents at gunpoint.
·
: 'The residelllS reportedly beat White and be fled th~ scene. Donald
White wu laier treated and released from CabeU-Hunungton Hospital,
Hun!ingtm, W.Va.
.
· Wbfte then went to a relative's home ·R!l! Bethel Cburcb Road in
Sprillafteld Township, when: he beld auth~illles at bay for four boors
before Slllmlllerillg. He has been held in the Gallia County Jail since his
arreit

•

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Commentar
The Dally Sentinel
. 111 Court Street
Pomei:OJ, Oblo

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publkber '
CHARLENE HOQLICH
Genua! Ma11111er

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

l.E'ITFRS OF OPINION ue welcome. They Jbould be leaa than 300
long. All lelltrl ue IUbjeet to editing lOCI miiJI be aigned wilb name,
lddreaa IIICI telepho110 alllllber. No lllllianed letlm will be p~~blilbed. Letlm
abould be in good t.r., odcllaliaa i.uuea, aot penoaalitioa.
wordl

Washington Today:

_.pago 2..,..The D81ty sintlrre~

Clinton shouldn't be written off.just yet
The Re~:~an Party's new
Paramount
, NewJ Gingrich,
compares his coming to that of
Franklin Roosevelt.
Just as FDR's New Deal mitigated lbe problems of lbe times and
ushered in a pro-government
approach !bat lasted 60 years, says
Newt, so does NLG' s Contract
Willi America meet current needs
and wlll set an anti-government
tone for the next 60.
Put another way, Newt seems to
think that Bill Clinton is the
Democrats' Herbert Hoover. A lot ·
of people seem to agree.
Since the huge GOP•victory in
November, Newt himself has been
acting.as if be has already taken
over lbe White House. His ultimatum to !be Bosnian Serbs to back
off or be bombed into oblivion,
delivered on NBC's Meet the
Press, was an audacious trespass
--

.

-·--

·~- -

- -

on presidential prerogative.
Many of CbntQn' s own cronies
are scattering like rats for lbe baseboards and daJic corners. The chair-

Joseph Spear
man of the Democratic Leadership
Council, Dave McCurdy, blamed
Clinton for his defeat in !be Oklahoma Senate race and maligned the
president as a "transitional fig ure." Rep. Pat Schroeder of Colorado publicly pondered wbetber
Clinton should band tbe baton to
Vice President AI Gore. A weallby
patron in Illinois, Richard Dennis,
published a letter in lbe Chicago
Sun- Times asking Clinton to
declare be. "will not seek, nor
accept, the nomination ... in 1996."
Maybe we do have anolber Herbert Hoover here.
Then again, maybe we don't.

!be

1 am not as certain as
pols,
pollsters 'and pundits seem to be
lbat Bill Clinton is a cooked capon
just yet He has a history of losing
and rebounding. He did it as a student leader at Georgetown University. He did it as tbe governor of
Arkansas, winning in 1978, losing
in 1980, lben coming back to win
four more terms before running for
lbe presidency in 1992.
His closest aides say that be
knows the voters were calling him
back to !be center of the political
spectrum in November and be bas
already begun the repositioning. He
wants more money for defense, he
wants a middle-class tax cut, be
wants to slash lbe bUreaucracy.
The Republicans have countered
bis every tbrust witb tax -cut and
government-trimming schemes of
lbeir own. By 1996, if lbe bidding
war continues, Uncle Sam may be

Ethics panel decision
hangs over Packwood
By LARRY MARGASAK
Associated Press Writer
.WASHINGTON - The sexual ~duct Investigation of Sen. Bob
Pat:kwood should m~eb a crossroads early next year, just as lbe five-term
Republican setdes Into a pivotal role as Finance Committee cbainnan.
As Packwood prepares to lead any Senate Republican tax-cutting
effort, tbe Senate Ethics Committee will be deciding - probably in
Febl'lllllj or March - wbelber to bold hearings or, possibly, whether to
recommend that be be ponisbed.
A group calling for Packwood's resignation, Oregonians for Etbical
Representation, urged the Senate earlier Ibis montb·to appoint a temporary
chainnan of the Finance Committee pending the outcome of the elbtcs
inquiry.
.
Some Democratic senators, meanwhile, say privately lbey are womed
lbat Republicans, in control of Congress in 1995, might try to protect
Packwood. Olber Democrats won't go so far blit promise to watch for any
GOP attempt to break lbe traditional bipartisanship of elbics investigations.
Republican Sen. -Mitch McConnell of Kentucky t.ike~y will becol!'e
Elbics Committee chairman In lbe new Congress, SWJtcbmg places WJtb
Sen. Richard Bryan, D-Nev. But the committee, counting McConnell,
remaiils split 3-3 between Republicans and Democrats.
Asked wbelber Republicans miP.!t be inclined to P,IDtect Packwood,
Sen. Barbara Boxer, D-Calif., said, 'I would hope not. '
" I lbink it would backlash against !bern if !bey did lba~" she said. "It
would not be well accepted by lbe voters if they would try to do a whitewash.''

..

Suzanne Garmeni, who studies political ethics at lbe American Enterprise Institute, said it would not be ,surprising if some Republicans were
inclined to pnotectlbeir colleague.
. But, she added, "Maybe some would be afraid thai seeming 10 protect
him would be a political liability. I have sensed !here are olber reasons 1
some senators feel a little bit protective of him. I doubt lbat many could
be nccused of lbe same behavior, but lbere might be something In a senator's past to stir a certain feeling of identity, a certain nervousnes~. "
For bis part,· Packwood bas maintained his silence on !be elb1cs probe
in recent weeks. Asked for a statement on the attempt to deny him !be
committee chairmanship, Packwood press secmary Bobbi · Mun~l)it said'
!be senator would have no comment
More lban two dozen women, iftcluding some former Senate emplo~­
ees have aceused Packwood of grabbing and kissing lbem against tbetr
will during his more !ban 25 years in Congress.
'
·
Ir !be Senate concludes lbat Packwood violated standards of cond~
he could face expulsion, a censure resolution condemning his behavior or
a mild rebuke. But short of expulsion, lbe most damaging punishment if carried out - could be a recommendation lbat Packw~ be removed
from his chairmanship.
In addition to lbe sexual harassment allegations, the ethics panel also is
looking into whether Packwood or his staff intimidated pote.n~ female
wimesses to keep them quiet; whelber Packwood bad a rol~ m JOb offers
from lobbyists and businessmen to bis former wife, at a ume when her
income would have helped detennine his alimony payments; and wbelber
he obstructed lbe investigation by altering his diarjes when he became
aware the committee would subpoena !bern.
.
A wild card is a separate Justice Department investigation of !be JOb
offers and lbe possible obstruction. Nobody can predtct the result of !bat
· probe or when it might be 'inisbed.
(Larry Margasak covers ethics and investigations on Capitol Hill
for The Associated Press.)

•:n.teldl!y,
December 20, 1884
ihij , o;

Pomeroy-411ddleport; Qtllo
·1\lelday, ~mber 20, 1994..

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

'

Today in history

1

OOV:lJ&amp;o,

ertvei.
s..

•

•/

•

~~.

~

'

1be Dally Sentinel P!AI ·

.Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

f.

.

Word bas been received here of !be deatb of Bernice "Bee" Nolan
Tate, Columbus, who died Tuesday, Dec. 13, 1994 at Riverside Metbodist
Hospital.
'
'She ·attended the Worthington United·Metbodist Church and was a
gradaate of Ohio University. She did post-graduate wort at Wi!leonsin,
Nortbwestern and Ohio State universities. Sbe was a member of tbe
Kappa Phi sorority and taught at Wasbington High School in Massillon
and Grandview High School in ColumbUs, and was yearbook advisor at

unable to do anylbing bill defend
!be nation and deliver tbe mail.
Indeed, Ibis is the Republicalls'
greatest fear - that Clinton will
·co-opt lbeir agenda, as .be did with
crime and deficit reduction. W,hen
the Washington Times, cjlief water
carrier for lbe GOP in the capital,
runs a story headlined "'Centrist'
President Won't Get Anywhere,"
it's a sure-fire indicator that the
Republican brain trust is concerned.
Then lbere is lbe possibility that
the Grand Old Party will selfdestruct. It is riven with factions
and may come across 10 lbe vQting
public as a collection of mean-spirited and retaliatory wowsers, antiabortionists, isolationists,and dilciples of voodoo economics who
could trip the economy and 'ihe
country into a tailspin. It does not
help lbeir case, eilber, when a Newt
Gingrich waves a McCarlbyite list
of alleged White House drug
abusers or a Jesse Helms seems to
suggest lbat !be president might be
knocked off if be dares visit North
Carolina.
I know what the polls say. They
say people are pleased witb tbe
Republicans and disapprove of
Clinton. l also know lbat a major
post-election poll conducted for
ABC, CBS , CNN, NBC and tbe
Associated Press found that the
Republican triUJ!lph was not a simple vote against the president. I
also know !bat Newsweek bounced
some questions orr a focus group ·
and concluded people are "more
disappointed lban angry" with llill
Clinton.
I also remember what tbe pun· dits were saying in January 1990.
They were saying lbe Democrats
were searching for a "sacrificial
lamb" to run against a very popular George Busb.
·
Smart people, pols and pollsters
and pundits. They could be right
that Clinton is anolber Hoover, but
I'd hedge my bets.
(Joseph Spear is a columnist
for Newspaper Enterprise Association.)

.both schools.

In addition, sbe was a member and fOrmer cballwoman of the Antiques
Study Group, OSU W!Dien's Club and a life member of lbe OSU Alumni
Association.
SbC ·is survived by ber husband, Frank; a sou and daugbter-ln-lilw, F.
Joseph and Karen Tate; grandcblldren, Kelly and Mark Tate; ,a brolber,
Howard D. Nolan of Syracuse; and several nieces.
Services were held Saturday at tbe Rutberford.Corbin Chapel in Worthington, with Dr. W. Edge Dixon officiating. Burial was in Rose Hill
Memorial Park ill Massillon. In lieu of flowers, contributions may be
made 10 a favorite charity.
·

Court sets bond in felonies
(Condoned from Page 1)
T. Thomas, 37, of 242 Condor St,
Pomeroy, faces a preliminary bearing Thursday at 10 a.m. on charges
be assaulted bis girlfriend's 13monlb-old baby Saturday mcxning.
Tenoglia .said tile baby was
assaulted after lbe infant woke up
crying. The mother took lbe baby
to the haspital, be said. Thomas
was arrested later by officers of lbe
Pomeroy Police Department

As Thomas is ·charged, felonious assault is an aggravated second-degree felony punishable by a
maximum of IS years in prison, be
said. Bond was set at $75,000, wilb
10 jlercent cash allowed .. In addition, Thomas is restrained from
contaCt with !be victim and the victim's molber in lbe event bond is
posted.
In ~eeking a high bond,
Tenogha stated: "These are the
r--..;..-..;.....;....;_ _ _.,-- worst injuries I've ever seen on a
minor child."
The Daily Sentinel
Thomas will be represented by
attorney
William Safranek..
(USPS ZIJ-HI)
Bolb men remain in j~l in lieu
Published every afternoon, Monday through
of bond.
Friday, Ill Court St., Pometoy, Ohio, by the
Ohio Valley Publishing Cmnpo.nyfMultimcdia
Inc., Pomcruy, Ohio 4.5769, Ph. 992-2H6.
SecoDd clais postage pald 01 Pomeroy, Ohio.

"

Mtmber: The Associated Preas, and the Ohio
Newspaper Auoci atioa .
POSTMASTER: Send address corrections to
The Daily Sentinel. Ill Court St.. Pomeroy,
Ohio4S769.

... .

Two workers in Gavin plant
incident treated at hospital
CHESHiRE (AP) - Dust was
accidentally released mto lbe air at
tbe Gavin Power Pl1111t, and four
contract workers who suffered
brealbiDg problema were Sent to a
hospital.

Ohio Power, a subsidiary of the
plant ownec, also was working to
repair a new scrubber that was
damaged in an unrelated accident.
The four Pullman Power Co.
employees were given oxygen llld
taken to Holzer Medical Center In
Gallipolis on Monday. Two were
treated and released and two were
held overnight, sald.David Hagelin,
spokesman for Ohio Power Co.,
which contracted witb Pullman
Power.
Hagelin today said lbe men,
hired to prepare for the startup of
new scrubbers, opened a chute
without knowing fly asb was
inside. The dus~ wbicb is a residue
of burning coal, escaped.
Pollman Power is a subsidiary
of Rust International in Binning-

••e,~ns

Jrffl

::I

Pomeroy's top 10 list

(Continued from Paael)
bam, Ala.
particularly in front of drinking
No Injuries were reported in lbe establishments.
.
scrubber accident on Thursday,
Councilman George Wright said
said Jim Markowsky, executive " loiterers often vC2bally 1wass peovice president of engineering and pie walking along lbe sidewalk and
construction for American Flectric said police aren't doing enough 10
Power Co. AEP owns and operates combat lbe problem. In addition, be
the plant in Cheshire, about 85 accused loiterers of urinating in
miles southeast of Columbus in doorways and alcoves and hurting
Gallia County. Ohio Power is an business in the downtown area.
AEP subsidiary.
.
If people 10 c!Die downtown In
Markow sky said !be company lbe evenings, Ibis activity bas to be
suspects that a fan malfunctioned,
·d
causing a pressure problem in lbe sto~~: ~ Blaettnar agreed on
scrubber unit's steam generator. a two-pronged approach, wbicb
The problem caused a wall 10 bow may involve both increased patrol
inward and damaged tbe wall's activity and state liquor control
supports.
.
I sh ut down !be scrub- agents.
The Pant
When loiterers come out on lbe
ber unit, and it will reinain out of sidewalk, it's a police problem,
operation for several weeks, Wright said, but added that be
Markowsky said today. Scrubbers understood a lot !bat goes on inside
are being installed to remove sulfur lbese places.
dioxide from '!be coal.
After deciding atlbeir last meet·
The unit was installed Dec. 9
and was being rested, be said. The ing to stay wilb tbe village's current health insurance carrier, counsecond unit is expected to go into cil members changed track after
operation in March.
receiving notification lbat beallb
insurance coverage lbrough Central
Benefits of Columbus would
increase by 36 percent, or $1,261 a
Board will meet Dec. 28 at I p.m. monlb.
Council voted, wilb Councilman
atlbe library.
John Musser abstaining, to adver· .
lise for health insurance bids.
Long Bottom church program
In olber business, council:
The Long Bottom Methodist
•
Aulborized Blaetmar to repair
Church will bold a Christmas proor
replace,
at tbe lowest possible
gram at 7 p.m. Fridl!y at !be church.
cost, lbe engine in a village pickup
All are welcome.
truck.

announcemen
(-'--t---S

Chrlstmu Eve service
Evergreen and Candlelight will
be lbe tbeme for the Cbristtnas Eve
service at Reedsville United
Metbodisl Church. Services will
begin at 6 p.m. Rev. Charles Mash
invites all.
ubrary mtett1111 .-need
Tbe Meigs County Library

• Discussed establishment of a
routine maintenance schedule for
village vellicles.
• Established sites under tbe
Pomeroy-Mason Bridge and near
tbe old Pomeroy Junior lfigb
School building as potential !ilea- ,
lions for a recycling drop-off box.
• Approved second reading a
citizens participation plan for village progmms.
Present were Blaettaar, Clerk
Kalby Hysell and COU!lcilmeD Scott
Dillon, Bill Haptonstall, Musser,
Larry Webrung, Wright and
Wil'iam Young.
Next year's organizational meeting will be held Tuesday, Jan. 3 at ·
7 p.m. and will be followed b,Y a
regular meeting.

Ohio weather
By The Associated Press

Tonigbt .. Clearing with lows in·
lbe lower 30s.
Wednesday ... Partly cloudy . •
Highs in !be lower 50s.
Extended forecast:
Tbursday ... Fair and mild.
in lbe mid to upper 30s. Highs in
!be upper 40s and lower 5{)s.
•,
Friday ...Dry norlb ... A chance o(
rain south. Continued mild with
lows in the mid to upper 30s anll...
highs in the upper 40s and lower
50s.
·

Lows ;

Hospital news
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Monday "dmissions - none.
Monday discharges - Margaret
Ellis, Middleport; Lawrence Jinks,
Rutland.

•
I'll I

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ronment? Couldn; t soine enterprising entrepreneur come up with
PARENTS (patent pending),·providing
low -cost authority
figure/androids to !bose wbo desire
tbem1-'Ibe5e.. could. be..made-available to poverty-stricken dysfunc- ·
tional families lbrough special lotteries. (Or coupons! Poor people
virtually worship coupons!) Think
of the public relations value!
Despite everything, this problem
is best left to lbe private sector, in
my opinion. Government management of orphanages can only lead
to a whole new generation of disgruntled postal employees, even a
revival of miserable singer/songwriter/wouldbe poets. I don't know
if !be culture could stand it
In last week's Newswetk,
George Will dismissed Hillary
!:;linton' s criticism of this idea as
an indication of ber "tendentiO(!sness" (if Ibis is a sin, my friends,
George Will is twice-damned), and \
says the notion of orphanages is.
be\n~ considered by "serions people.' Good grij:f, don't conservatives know any humorous people?
Believe me, lbey'll be necessary in
lbe absurd times abead.
(Ian Shoales Is a columnist for
Newspaper Enterprise Assoda·
lion.)
·

•

but in public be allowed only ,
lbat "the perception" of lbe program was bad, distressing many
DLCers. .
One participant in the Oval
Office session said lbat many of
Clinton' s actions during lbe past
two years -including NAFrA,
national service, expansion of lbe
earned income taX credit. lbe reinventing-government initiative and
crime legislation - were in keeping with Clinton's 1992 "New
Democrat" agenda.
"Butlben," said !be participan~
"Joycelyn Elders will say that
cocaine nse isn't so bad, or there'll
be lbe bealtb care plan and peqple
will forget what direction be;s
beaded ln.''
In lbe meeting, McCurdy specifically said that "Flders is killing us
in lbe Soulb,'' where such moderl!te DemQCilltS as Rep. Jim Cooper
(fenn.) and Rep. Martin Lancaster
(N.C.) .._ not to mention McCurdy
himself - lost their races in
November. -.. - ....--- . -·
Witb Stephanopoulos sitting In
lbe room, McCurdy rCportedly ges·
tured to bini and told Clinton: "I
know that George WOibhard, ti!tt • ...
there have to be IOiile c:J.Jps.~· ·
McCurdy ultlmatcly'glwe ~:
ton a piece of gooe) lldv*: ~
u ·. if re-election doeia't mittilf;".' ··l
Politically, it's also· sound. Dotbg ·:
lbe right tblng and returning to lbe
"New Democrat" rhetoric of the ·
1992 campaign is the. best .!bing
Clinton could do as be looks
towanl-the 1996 race.
·

"

MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
t.-MdpCounly
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26 Wcekl ................................................. $•13.16
52 W.:.:kl ............................................. .... $84.76
Kala Oullldc Mclp County
13 Wt:eb ................................................ $23.40
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LI¥£ g{fLf{Io/IpY
SCf£'J\Lf£
tJYECE/.Jv{tJJ'£1{21 &amp; 22

7:00-9:00 P.M.

BRADFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST
•

Crossroads of Bradbury Road &amp; St. Rt. 124

• y:
. r
· · .Holiday•.J •
~Celebration

pan~

IJ

~.

' ;

Bernice Nolan Tate

0

Clinton shrugs off personnel suggestions

On

•

--"-Area deaths.......__-

GOP, remember: Father Flanagan is no more

I'm not surprised that prayer-in- molding tanks to alter lbe patbolog- public servant, I'd think. I don't
school bas become an issue again. tcal behavtor of lbe offspring of the- know much, but I know tbat pop
This dimwit notion pops up every poor, bolb Newt Gingrich and the culture and public policy make
10 years onlbe public screen, like a insistently intelligent George Will volatile companions.
curse.
Even if we could assemble a
Well, OK, say we do allow it
bunch of slnOgate parent/civil serlanShoales
What if tbe "teadter (MisJ Norvants whd 'fl&lt;!Ssess lbe minimmn of
gaarll)- should bajij&gt;en to overbear made reference to Boys Town, a the compassion/ability levels
this student's prayer: "Please don't 1938 movie about a delinquent required by law, turn Ibis dam wellet Miss Norgaard find out I'm an who's morally turned around by fare slate around, and prod•1ce a
illegal alien?"
Father Flanagan, the founder of significant number of responsible
If Miss Norgaard turns tbe child Boy's Town.
young people who drink sensibly
in 10 lbe FBI, does her act separate
Sure, I'm looking forward 'to lbe and don't experience safe sex until
church and state, or bring them remake of Boys Town (retitled as married, well, you know what will
together?
.
!be more gender-appropriate Per- happen don't you?
{)r, what if an angel should sonville, due out next Chrisunas I
Ten years from now, talk radio
appear and, on its own authority, suspect). The wayward youlb will America will squint only at those
grant !be praying tyke citizenship now be a "gangsta." Tupac wh.om this wonderful system
there on the spot? Such an act Shakur, if he makes parole (olber- failed, and whine, "My Johnny
could never be admissible in a wise Snoop Doggy Dogg reprising doesn't even have a pony,lbis little
court of law . Religious displays, Mickey Rooney's role), will be molberless child wants cinnamon
after all, have no place on public redeemed by Mister Norgaard, a on his gruel! They're coddling
property. Miracles are not permit- troubled social scientist witb a these pre-teen criminals! At our
ted in !be public education process. dream (Robert De Niro totally expense! I can't afford bouse payPrayer-in-school is a lame idea. replacing Spencer Tracy in our ments!" ·
It can only end badly: plagues, hearts and minds; I can even see an
Frankly; folks, our sympathy
. ftres, locusts.... I say, render unto Oscar or two in !be horizon). This level is pretty close to zero. In
Miss Norgaard the lbings wbicb are movie will make America feel America, the reque~t, "Please sir,
Miss NorMaard's, and unto God good about itself for weeks.
more," will always be met by
those which are God's.
Unfortunately for !be Republi- "Maybe, kid. First, fill out these
What about orphanages, can utopia however, Farber Flana- fonns.''
though? Whose things are they, gan is no more. Mickey Rooney
What about lbe private sector?
God's or Miss Norgaanl' s?
would
undoubtedly
jump
at
tbe
Why
don't we unfetter the free
By The·AIIodlled Prw
.
In !be public debate so far; it's chance to head " Boys Town" marketplace, so lbey can deal with
Today Ia Tuclday, Dec. 20, lbe 3S4tb day of 1994. There are deven ' hard to telL In lbeir endorsement of
2000, but he'd be a rather eccentric orphans in a truly capitalist envidays left In the year. Winter llrives 119:23 p.m. EST.
Toda~;s HlaJIIllbt in Hlalory:
Oa Dec; 20, III03,1be Jonl•ieu Purcbue vial CCIJIPieted u ownership
of the terrlltlr)' - formally trllllfencd fnm Franl:c to lbe United Stales
during w• 'l•»b Ia New Orlea. Tho U.S. bad l!lilllbe Fralch about
. $15 milia. ror the 1llld, wllidl effectively doubled lbe aizc of the counPresident Clinton rightly wants . arenoftha.e.J&gt;eanut gallery_ and into lbe lion in welfare reform, and cut cortry
Democrats to quit grousing ·about
porate subsidies.
•
tbil
elite:
him,
but
for
lbat
10
happen
be's
got
McCurdy
told
friends
afterward
DLC centrists aren' t the only
1
In 1790. tbe tint aua:easful cotton mill In lbe United Statca began to take the advice of critics such as that be resented the ''peaDJit Democrats agitating against ClinopcratiJ!g at Pawtucka, RJ.
defeated Rep. Dave McCurdy, Dton since lbe election. Even some
In 1820, Mlllouri tmpoocvt 1 badldor tax 1111 UliiJI8nicd JDeD between Okla., and set an unmistakably Morton Kondrac/ce .Senate liberals have talked among
lbe ages of21 llld 50. 1bc tax: $1 1 ,_,
.
' 'new Democrat'' course for the
lbemselves about sending a delegaIn 1860, Soulb Carolint. became tbe ftnt state to secede from tbe nexttwo years.
gallery" charge because he had lion to Clinton liext fall, if his politUnion.
In a tense, sometimes angry Jf·ust beeb n,!'!rou gkblablbe "camp~gn ical fortunes don't rise, urging him
In 1864, Confederate f~ evan•ated Savannah, Ga., as Union Gener- meeting in the Oval Offtce recent- rom e11 m 0
oma - osmg not to run for re-election.
al William T. Sberman continued bla "MJ.dl to lbe Sea."
ly, McCurdy tQld Clinton that be 55 to 45 percent to conservativ_e
Clinton and bis White House
In 1879, 'lbomai·A. Edisoll privately demoliStnlled bls incandescent should fire such administration lib- GOP Rep. Jim lnbofe in a race advisers have every rightiO expect
lightatMenloPark,NJ.
.
erals as White House policy advis- whose key issues were "God, tbe ragging to stop soon because
1n 1963,1be Bc:rlln Wall was opc:aec1 for the tint time 10 West Berlin- er George Stephanopoulos, Sur- guns, and gays" -and Bill Oin- news accounts of it only weaken
ers, wbo were allowed ooe-day visits to relatlvei in the Easlan sector for
geon General Joycelyn Elders and ton.
lbe president furlber. It's time for
the bOHIIays
·
·
beaUb care adviser 1m Magaziner.
Prior to 1be meeting, lbe White Democrats to rally, not shoot dleir
In 1968,iutborJIUSIDiDbectdledlnNewYCIItllaae66. .
Liberal tendencies in lbe admin- House reportedly was furious wilb own woonded.
In 1976, Cblcqo Mayor Ridllrd J. Daley died a qe 74.
istration, McCurdy said, bad ''deci- McCurdy because of an Associated
But for lbat to happen, Clinton,
· Io 1978, former White House chief or a1arr H.R. Haldeman waa m~ lbe Dem0111'alic Party in !be Press story quoting him as saying tbe leader, bas got to lead. He plans·
Dltllltbs for bla tole In the W~tergate
Soulb."
that two words summarized lbe to make an Oval Office address 1 et~ared fnm prison afttt iervint 18
·
Clinton didn't respond to tbe' reasons for his defeat- "Bill which some networks ate arrogantthe government of lbe Soviet Uaitlll COIIfirmed dial former personnel suggestions (though Clinton.'' McCurdy nominated ly'saying lbey may not carry- but
. Premier A1eJe1 N.Kclylin hid died two daya Clrller albe qe of 76.
,Elder&amp; resigned), but took a shot at Clinton at the Dem!JQ'3tic conven- it's not clear whether lbe speech
Inl987, m&lt;iie ilwi ),000 JICCII'le died In 1 double explosloa which his pollster, Stan Greenberg, for lion in 1992
w!!l se! out a future course or
occUtred When lbe Dorlll PiU, a PblllppiDe puac~~~er ship, coWdetl wltll assuring·blm at one stage Ibis year
White House aides also were defend Clinton's unappre,iated
lbe tanker Vector oft' Mindoro lslanil.
·
that the middle class liked bis ango- ~ M~Curdy' s speech earlier efforts of the ~ttwo years.
____ten rcarugo: TIILde(eoae_mh•I_IIer or die Soviet Uni1111, Dmitri F. heal !II carS~ pr&lt;!posal, tben later in lbe day saying lbat Clinton, forClinton' s OLC speech was
. U•tmciv died llqe 76; be _wu au~ wo·~ya ltilef.lfy Mmillll ~.~pubhcly· dectaring- tbat a-poll-be- mer-bead ofJihe-Dl.C, bas run .for mainly a defense in lbeflli1D. of an
5•
Sokol~.
lOOt for lbe DelllOCiiilic UMerslil(i' p~sldent as a ' 'new ~mocrat.'' · impassioned reminder of what he'd
yean qo: 1bc 1111lled Staia Jaunc:hed OperllloD Just Cause, Cour.cil showed tbatlbe health but govetned u _a "lransttlonal fig- tried to do io make the life' of anxseDdia&amp;IIOOIJiinlo Plllaaia to topple lbe p a w t of Geoeral Maoud plan helped cause the Democratic ore.'' yiekling often to li~.
ious· middle-class Americans mo~
Noriep.
.
election debaci~:Nov ..8. •
. Other DLC leadm in lbe meet- secure.
ODe year aao: Real eltllC developer Doaald Ttump married Marla
In the meeung wtlb McCurdy mg were Sens. John Breaux (La),
Still, CliJiton made no public
MlDlcaia 1 brief clelQIIOIIY ill tbe piiiCI blllroom of Trump' a Plua Hold and other leaders of lbe DeDIOCI1IdC Joe Uebennan (Conn.), Sam Nunn acknowledgment that his bealtb
jjJ]ilew YOit. AIIIII 'Fadlllllez Rivudll. ldNCI!Itr ofCubNI Plaldeut Leadership Council, sources wbo (Ga.), and Chuck Robb (Va.) and care plan, tbe centerpiece of bis
F1dd Caltlo flew 10 Spe!D, ;;il.; lbe wu sramec1 political uylum by lbe were present Say Clinton also the group's president, AI From.
• agenda, was lbl» bureaucrjlllc, amU Jimblsiy,
·
·
.
. ~ccused centri$t pmtoaats of f'!'lThe DL~ offiCially recommend- plicated aJ!d sove~nt-dominat"''l'cidaY'a 81dbdaya: Movie director Ge«ge Roy Hill Ia 72. Actress mg to defend biDI when enem1es · ed tbat Clinton take a number of ed 10 fly w11b the public.
.fcDDY Aguil« 1a 42.
"demonized" him and, dog like, specifiC policy stepS to decentlalize
In lbe Oval Office meeting, be
Thought ror Today: "WIDter comes but~ a year, ADd when It . "pissed on my leg."
,
fovemment programs, cre'ate a ·acknowledged lbal it was "far too
~ It~· lite doctor good cheer." - Osden Null, American
_In a recent speech to the DLC, 'GI Bill'"for worker reualniilg, complicated and couldn't be
Jllillarilt(l -1971).' ·
.
'
.
Clinton told the ~P to "get out emphasize teen pr,egnancy reduc- explained," according 10 a pard~-

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�Sports

Ohio

The .Daily Sentinel

Despite Smith's leg injury,

...ust~rn girls hand Southern 48-45 ·foss

Tuelclay, December 20, 1884

·

A large aowd was on band for a
good old-fashioned Eastern-Southem rivalry that went right dow,n 10
the wire .in girls' Tri-Valley C::Onference basketball action Monday
night at Eastern High School,
wbere the host Eagles defeated
Southern 48-45.
Eastern bead coach Scot1 Wolfe
said, "A win is a win, but we were
very llal. Any time you play Southem, you have to respect them. They ·
just teep coming at you . Jenni
Roush always has her troops pre-

·

Cowboys ·stop Saints 24-16
By MARY FOSTER
NEW ORLEANS (AP) - At
first glance, the Dallas Cowboys
.appeared to march merrily to the
last two Super Bowls and a 12-3
record this season.
· But it's not easy, not even for
the Cowboys.
Monday night on national tele- .
vision, as the Cowboys beat tbe
New Orleans Saints 24-16, they
saw Emmitt Smith. the league' s
leading scorer and heart of tlleir
offense, limp off the field with a
pulled hamstring. Then they held
off a Saints rally when Darrin
Smith grabbed his second interception, stopping a late drive.
"We haven't had a cakewalk
; this year," receiver Michael Irvin
said. "We've got to work for them
· all. Every game we've played bas
" been a tight game, so we'll be
- ready when the next tight one
" cOflles.''

Smith went down in the third

that," Switzer Sldd. ''The doctors
don't think it's severe. But time
will tell us."
"I'm getting myself mentally
prepared to play," Emmitt Smith
said, not ruling out an appearance
against the Giants. "I just want to
get in."
While the Cowboys worried
about Smith and what his injury
might mean to their chances of
winning a third straight Super
Bowl, the Saints (6-9) ensured their
first losing season since 1986 by
allowing two interceptions for
touchdowns. New Orleans also had
a defensive breakdown to open the
second half that allowed tile Cow·
boys to keep the football for 8 1/2
minutes.
"We just made too many mistakes to beat those guys,·' coach
Jim Mora said. ' 'They're too good.
You can't give them anything, and
we gave them too much."
Darrin Smith intercepted Jim
Everett twice in the fourth quarter
- the first be rerumed 13 yards for
a touchdown to make it 24-9. The
second stopped the Saints' final
drive and ended their threat of
craves ~e work. Defensive coordi- tying the game.
nator BtU Young srud that ethtc has
''I saw the ball coming to me
~ade htm one of the more each time and I just grabbed it,"
tmproved players on the team. ·
Smith said. "I didn't have time to
"He is so much better this year think , I just grabbed it. It felt
tb~ ~~ was a year ago,'' Young great."
srud. In the off-season program, · Smith's interceptions followed a
(strength coach) Dave Kennedy did 54-yard interception return by
wonders with him. His· quickness Tony Tolbert to open the scoring
and agility are so much better. for Dallas.
He'd come falling o~l of blocks a
year ago and now he s under conNew Orleans bad its chances. In
trol,-,
.
,
the second quarter Wayne Martin
. . And I JUSt can t. bel~ but lipped Troy Aikman's pass at the
believe that next year be •s gomg to Saints 32 and Darion Conner
have almost that same amount of grabbed it. Conner, a linebacker,
. 1mnrove!Dent Before he gel~ out ot sped down the sideline only to find
here, he s gomg to be a heck of a Larry Allen. a 330-pound rookie
player." . .
.
,
tackle racing along with him.
Tbe htgbhght of Ftckell s year
" I was blessed with speed,"
was an mtercepuon agamst r:'ltcht-, Allen joked later. "I just ran bard. I
gan that led. to the Buckeyes final felt I did something real good . I
touchdown m a 22-6 VICtory Nov . think that's the fastest I ever ran. I
19.
ran a 4.8 in the 40, but that was
quarter after slipping on the Superdome turf and pulling his left hamstring.
"I really don't know what happened," Smith said. " I saw a big
hole and just wanted to get through
it. My leg just felt like a grab, a
pull, and that' s it."
Dallas had already has clinched
the NFC East title and the second
spot in the conference playoffs
behind San Francisco. The Cowboys' next do-or-die game will
come in three weeks in tlte second
round of the playoffs.
Dallas completes its regular season Saturday against the New York
Giants. While the Cowboys are
locked into the second seeding
position in the NFC, they could
knock the Giants out of playoff
consideration, just as they did New
Orleans on Monday night.
"Emmitt thinks he will be back
(for the Giants), but obviously
we're not even . ~oin~ to consider

pared. "

CLOSE TO THE LINE -Eastern's Patsy Aelker (24) watches an
unldentllled Southern player barely keep the baD In bounds while an
,anldentllled Eagle slips In behind ber during Mooday night's HKk·
lng Division game at Eastern High School, where tbe Eagles won ,.g.
45.

: Fickell says OSU warriors'
: Florida trip is no vacation
• MELBOURNE, Fla. (AP) _
• Ohio State nose guard Luke Pickell
~ said tbe Buckeyes aren't spending
, their time lounging on the beach as
• they prepare for the Florida Citrus
; Bowl Jan. 2 against Alabama
"It's not a vacation " Fickell
: said.
'
"The linemen and the lineback• ers can let off and not bit the
· receivers and running backs (in
: practice). But up front, to get 'the
• full picture, you have to be going
pretty much full go. There is a
· chance of getting injuries but
: there's probably more of a chance
- if you just go )lalf speed.
"It's fun to be here but it's a lot
: of work .... I think maybe we
· bl!ven't had practices like this on
; the bowl trips in the past, but 1
~ guess we're just kind of getting
refocused and realizi~g what we
: have to do."
.
a Sei:On0-11eaJ

Texas A&amp;M 97. McNeese St. 68
Te m~ Chri ~lian Ill , Sam Hou.~l o n St.

Basketball

94
Tuas Southern 75. Tel4!&gt;-Pan American 73

NBA standings

Far West

Mt .. lk Dlmioo

r..
W.
Or1oodo ................. 17
N""'Vort ........... .12
801toa... ..
.. .. 10
New Ieney ........... .10
l'llitoddphia ............. l
Wllhiqtoa.............. 6
Miaml ...................... 6

L

l
9
14
ll
14
14
IS

rd.

Iii

.m

4.l
8
i.l
9
10
10.5

.773

.411
.400
.364
.300

.286

CentniDhWoe
IDIIlllla .................. -14 6 .700
CU!VtiLAND ...... .t! 8 .6l2
Chlrlotte ................ l2 10 .l4S
Chk:l&amp;o .................. 11 II .300
Delroft ..................... 9 12 .4.29
Atl.ID11 .......... ...........9 14 .391
Mllwaukte ...............7 14 .333

.l
3

Oonzap 1'74, Can.isiUI63

Oregon 97, Seattle 84

Tournam•nts ·
Aloh• Ciu!Mc-nnt round
Easl Carolina 69, E.lllinois 63
N. Arizona 80, Charninade 44

Other Ohio men's
college scores
Ohlo Athletic Conference

4

s.s

Baldwia-Wallace 74, M.tetta64
John Carroll 14, Capllal68

6.l
l.l

Non*O)nrereoce action
Denison 6S, Hiram 31

Wittenbera 69, Otterbein 63
Xavier 99, Dayton 73

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Mldwal Di•Won

Iaoa

~

l! J. r.t.

Iii

.m

2.l

Utah .............. ,........ 16 8
Houoton ................. ll 8
Dall•········ .............!I 8
Dmer .................. .t2 9
SaD Antonio ........... ! I 9
Mlnii&lt;IOII ................s 11

.667
.6t9
.l79

Ll

l.S
3

.SSO
.227

Podllc Dl"'ioo
Pboenil .................. U 5 .783
Seattle .................... 14 7 .667
!..A. t.atas ............tl 8 .619
. Portland ............... 11
9 .SlO
Sacramento ............ ll 10 .S24
Oolden State ............1 14 .364
L.A. Oippcn ..... :..... J 19 .136

Ohio H.S. girls' scores .
Amelia Sl, Coving10D {Ky.) Holmes

27

to

3
4
l .l
ti
9.5
14...5

Monday'sli&lt;Ores
CLEVELAND 77, ChitiiJO 63
Denver liM. Bolton U
Atoenis 113, Wu1U111toD 101

Tonlght'• pmes
Utah Ol·t'lllloddp11la, Hll p.m.
lndi&amp;Da .. OllrlOIIe. 7:lO p.m.
M l - II AllaD, 7:30p.m.
New ltney 01 New Yoot. 8 p.m.
Orl-01 Pl&gt;nJIIIIII,IO p.m.
!..A. Ctlpp!n 01 ~· 10 p.m.

Mi-IILA. I.alton,l~lOp. m.

Dall•ll OoldeD Stlle,IO:JO p.m.
WllhliiiOo 01 5.....,..10 , 1~30 P·ll\

Wednesday's games
Detroit at New Jmey, f:30 p.m.
Milwtutce at Milllli, 7:30 r .m.
Olieaao at lndi•na, 7:30p.m.
Sa.a AJKOnio at Oen\'Cf, 9 p.m.
Qr1ando01 L.A. Olppm, l0,30 p.m.

Major men's
college scores
East
ComtiiiO, Holy Crou 13
Douoll4. Na'162

Arcadia43, Van Buren 31
ArCIIIUm 62, O.y. Notthridae 53
AtliDJlon S6, Vanlue 31
Beaver l.ocal5S, Toronto S2
Beaven:reek S6, 1ipp City Yl
BellaircSL Joha'a 82, BeaJisville 47
Belpre 56, Vinton County SO
Dlanchelter 52, Oermont Nor1hcaslc:rn

40

Buckeye Local 48 , Edison 36
canton Calh. 67, Massilloo Jackloo 40
Olampion 60, Newton falls 35
Oill'doD ~.Perry 28
Cln. St. Betilard 68 , N. College Hill34
Cln. Summit 35, Batavia 29
Col. Brlw 34. Col. Centenllial 30
Col. EaslmOor 86. Col. East 20
CoDtlnental72, Ayenville S6
Cresr.ood 56, Field 42
Danbury Lakeside 65, Norwalk St.
Paul44
Day. Chaminade·Julienne 61, Day.
Patteoon 33
Day. Jerrcnon 55, Day. Behmot45
E. CIDion 51, Tuslaw 38
fairborn 61 , Day. ·StebbiDJ 47
fairlea SO, Stutdy VaiL 42
fairport lllrbor S3,1.uthcnn E. 42
federal Hockina•Bi Ale11Dder 'J1
Felicity 71 , Bethel·Tate 61
Findlay 4.5, Tel. Whitmer44
FrankliB Furnace Green 54. Chuapeat. Sl
Fremonl St. Joseph iO,Oid Fort 61
Ft. Jen.nlnill 92, Cridcnville Peny 25
Gallipolis 67, Oie&amp;hire River Vall. 38
Garaway 85, Dalton 46
Garrettsville 49, Woodridae 31
Georaetown 83, Latham Western 44
Gilmour 42, Orange Chr. 29
Oreenc~'iew SO, Cahvville 24
Grove City 79, Hamilton T:-p. 33
Hamilton 53, Keuerillll Famnont 42
(OT)

Pta.bwlh76, VUQUCIIIC 71

Hamillon Badin 83,
Hubbard 6l. liberty 40
Indian Vall. 65. Coventry 44
Jacklon Center 82, Indian Lake 24
Johnstown 47, Ucking Hts. 21
Kalida 98, Columbus Grove 29
Kcru;ton 89, Shaker Ht&amp;. 49
Ketteriq Alter 51, Carlisle 43
Keystonr 38, Elyri• Midview JS

Lc:bllnon 66, Middletown 42
leipiic &lt;48, Stryt.cr 35
Liberty Beaton 70, Hardin Northern 48
Liml Calh. 58, Convoy Cr ~ vi ew .S6
Lima Shaw nee 63, Parkway 52
Lockland !i I, Cin. C()UDtry Day 38

Loudonville 57, Ontario 29
Louisville Aquinas SS, Oaymont40
Lucuville Valley 61 , WavetiY.l3
Madison P!aiu68, Waynesville 60
Marietta 69, Jacbon SS
Marion Cath. 71, MaranalhaChr. SO
Musillon Perry 62, Manlllon 31
Miami E. .59,1rfad 44
Miller 43, Trimble 40
Minford .59, S. Webatct 42
•
Mosadore 56, RooUtown 40
MonroeCentnll62, Shadyside 44
N. Ridgeville 33, ColurOOia 29
Nelsonvi lle- York 47, Wellston 43
New Knoxville .54, Lincolnliew H
New Miami 55, Cin. Seven Hi11s42
Oak llillll, Wheelersb'"i 46
Ouawa Hills 68 , Maumee Vall. 36
Ottoville 75, Ottawa· Glandorf 56
Pandora:Gilboa 55, Mteomb 52
peeblel7'2. lynchbUrg Clay SS
/ Philo 4.5, Zane~;ville 35
Poland 62, G i ~:ltd 24
River 60, Bellaire 52
S. Charleston Southeastern 67 , CJinton-Massie .5 J
Salem 82, Nile£ 25
Sandusky 47, Lorain Soutlniew 34
Sherwood Fairview BS, Napoleon 37
Springfield Cath. S8, Sprin&amp;ficld N. .53 .
Tallmadge 64, Akron Spring. 43
Tinora 52, Defiance 29
Tol. Bowsher 66, Tol. Waite 51
Tol. Cenllal83, Tol. Slart 58
Tol. Christian In, ~vergreen 37
TeL Notte Dame 68, Tol. Regen 31
Tel. Scott46, Tot Libbey 21
Tuscarawas Vall. 40, Aluon Manchestc:r 28
W. Jeffenon S8, Millenport 41
W. Union 70, Maoche:Rer 42
Waplkoneta 69, Hou11.oa S6
Warren Kennedy 61, AshtJbu la St.
John's 20
Waterloo 58 , Rave1101 SE 45
Wellsville 65, Cadiz 41
Whiteoak 47, Leeabura Fairfield 21
Williafn'bu.rl 52. New Riclumnd 34
Windham IS, SIR&lt;IIboro 20
World Harvest 61 , Ohio Deaf 27

In Top 25 college action,

SACK TIME comes ror Dallas dde;;;;iv; ·b.dd;;
Russell Maryland, who geb to New Orleans quarterback Jim Everett (17) quickly enough to put
him to the torr ror a nine-vard loss In the rirst

quarter of Monday night's NFC game under the
New Orleans Superdome, where the Cowboys
won 24-16. (AP)

when I only weighed 305 and was end zone. But be was ruled out of
· bounds at the 26.
a senior in college."
Instead of a touchdown , the . "I don't think I stepped out of
Saints settled for a 21-yard field bounds," Sp~ncer said. "I think
the refs were picking on me all
goal.
night.
That and the first pass interAikman was picked ·off by
ference
call. We ' re playing the
Jimmy Spencer three plays later,
Dallas
Cowboys,
back-to-back
and th~e cornerback raced into the

champions, America's Team, so I
think I got screwed."
Spencer was flagged for pass
interference in the second quarter
when he knocked a ball away from
Alvin Harper, drawing a 16-yard
penalty. Replays showed no illegal
contact on the play.

Transactions
Cenlr.. rnn.ioa

Baseball

K-Pitt$burgh .... .. 12 3 0 .800 212 197

y.ct.EVELANDIO l 0 .667 305 19l
CINCINNATI .. 2 ll 0 .Ill 24l 376
Hcuatuo ........ H,_ 114 0 .067 202 342

C.nlnl Dbbloo
Minneaota .......... 9 6 0 .600 335 300
Detroit............. 9 6 0 .600 337 liS
ChlcaiJO ............ 9 6 0 .600 268 294

Watern Dlrillon

Green ~ay ......... 8 7 0 .SJJ 348 268
Tampa Bay ....... 6 9 0 .400 231 317

x-san Dieao ......
!..A Raiden .....
Kansa Ci1y ......
Denver ..............

10
9
8
7
Seattle ............... 6

5
6
1
8
9

o .667
0 .61\0
o :s; &gt;
0 .467
0 .400

344
294
300
319
218

'I12
:ll8
289
366
288

NATIONAL CONFERENCE
lutern Diridon

Isa

l! J. I !1: fA r.t.

x-Dallu ............ 12 3 0 .800 404 233

Weflern Dl'rillon
2 0 .867
New OriCIDI..... 6 9 0 .400
Atlanta .............. 61 9 0 .«&gt;0
LA Ra1111 .. ..
4 II 0 .261
1.-clincbed di".Jision
y-elinched playoff spot

•.s.. Fraoc~co 13

Monday's score
Dallu 24, New Orleans 16

491 m
318 l79
l)7 l79
265 341

Arnrrlc•IA•..
DALTIMO.E ORIOLES: Acquired
John DcSiiVI, pitcha,' from the l.ol ADgelel Dod1en for John O'Donoahue,
pitcher. Named Steve Putorino aeaaal
manaacr of ffiah Dcacrt of the California
League.
MILWAUKEE BREWERS : Named
Lamar Johnson batting coiCh.
SEATILE MARINERS: Sillfted Lu~
Sojo, infielder, to a one· year contract.
Named Terry Kenned·y manaaer; Ju•n
EicT. .!Ibereer pitchina coach; Tom LeV·
asseur coach and Rob Nodine trainer of
Riverside of the CalifOfnia League.
N.tlonall.e . . .
NEW YORK METS: Signed Mite

Birld:leck, pitctter.

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NFL standings
. AMERICAN CONFERENCE

ADD~s ~-------CITY
STATE ____ ZIP _ _
PHONE _ _ _ __ __ __

Eultrn Dl¥1tlon

l! J. I l'l fA r.t.

y-Miami .......... 9 16 0 .600 362 307
New England .... 9 6 0 .600 338 309
BuiT~o. . . . .. .... ... . 1 8 0 .41&gt;7 331 346

Stanford 97. American Univ, 71
Syracuat 103, Robert Morril ti7

Gift to;

Soutb
AJa1&gt;1m1 7), Cent Florida 60
Art.-Uftl• Rod&lt; 6,, Orari&gt;tioa St. 62
Duke 99, N. C.-olinl A&amp;T '6
Oeoraia Tedt 94, fUrmatl
MAIISIIALL 11, Cent Midti&amp;an 76
Mell'!'hllll9, Florida AAM ~4
M«eheod St 13. Keot74

NAME----~----~------­

n

ADD~S--------CITY
STATE-ZIP _ _
PHONE _ _ _ _ _ _..__

SE LDuill.,. 109, Soutltorn 91
Vitpnla ·IOO. VMI73
Vlrpnla Tech 16, E. Toon...,. St 64

Mldwost

STARI'DEIJVERYDATE ______

"'*'""'17,71.LoaW.a
1CMoM St.

.Q_.

Southwest ·

iloultA&gt;o 92, Houtlon BopliJI62
Oktlbo1111 91 , Mount St. Ma-y'•· MeL
61
.
1

The Dail Sentinel
I

By JOE KAY
CINCINNA11 (AP) - No Canisius this time . Cincinnati bas
learned.
.
The 13th-ranked Bearcats ripped
off·another fast start Monday night,
then kept going for a change. They
scored a school-record 65 in the
first half on their way to a 116-54
victory over Cal State Northridge.
It was Cincinnati's biggest point
total during coach Bob Huggins'
six seasons. It also was
indication the Bearcats learned from their
biggest mistake under Huggins.
Eleven days ago, the Bearcats
(6-2) blew a 20-point lead in the
second half and lost to Canisius,
perhaps the low point of the last six
seasons.
They got up 65-29 at halftime
Monday, and didn't let up. They
wound up with tlleir biggest point
total in 18 years and a win so convincing that even Huggins was
pleased.
"It was good for me," Huggins
said: "I don't know if it was good
for them, but I had fun."
fbe Matadors (2-4) were in a
panic as the Bearcats overpowered
their front line and rattled them
with a full-court press. Arthur Long
bad three rim-shaking dunks in the
first three minutes to start a 21-5
opening spurt
Unlike the game against Canisius, there was no letup this time.
The lead kept growing the whole
game. It turned into Cal State
Northridge' s most lopsided loss
since its ftrsl game in 1958.
"Blame it all' on Canisius,"
Matadors coacb Pete Cassidy said.
"I think Canisius ticked them off.

an

Eastern led at the half 23-20.
Southern took away Eastern's
inside g.ame the latter part of the
second canto and part of tile thin!,
but Eastern pulled the ball out in a
spread offense to open up tbe
inside. Eastern led by as much as
five in the third fram e with key
goals by Karr, Nicole Nelson and
Patsy Aeiker, bm Sisson, Manuel
and Turley countered with an
offensive spray of their own. Turley hit a key three pointer at the
.buzzer to give Southern a 32-30
lead going into the fmal round.
Eastern seniors Amy Redovian
and Jessica Radford alternated
much of the second half in foul
trouble, but still played key defense
for the winners going down the
stretch. Another senior Melissa
Guess bad several -key minute s
going down the stretch, grabbing a
key rebound and drawing a foul.
Michelle Caldwell and Beth Bay
also were credited with good
defensive games.
Going down the stretch, Eastern
twice led by six, but both times Sisson again came through in the
clutch . Manuel once halved the
lead to three, then Turley hit another three after EHS had ~gain buill
up a three.

. HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP) have a big ganie."
Marshall led 35-31 at halftime.
Central Michigan coach
Better
shooting and tough defense
h .eonard Drake complimented Mar·
helped
Marsball .lead by as many as
~ shall's offense but griped about the
19
points
during the second half.
\ officiating in his team's 87-76 loss
"The
game came down to our
~io the Thundering Herd.
poor
ball
handling
l\ bad job on
l: "They annihilated us on the the boards." Drakeandsaid.
"So far,
~ offensive boards. Our turnovers
:and their offensive rebounding every teanl but one we've played
has been a pressing team.
~made the difference," Drake said.
" Their press is very, very tena' ' However, "Where they bumped
cious.
They hit their threes (three~us. they were called fouls in Mount
pointers)
very well," Central
fPleasant (Mich. ) Here, they were
Michigan
freshman
guard Thomas
:not, " be said, referring to his
Kilgore
said.
!4:am's 87-80 home loss to the Herd
Marshall forced 27 .turnovers
$Nov.30.
and
gave up !he ball only 14 times.
: · Marshall (6-0) overcame a slugBonapart
Jed Marshall with 18
~ish rirst half to beat Central
points
while
Shawn Moore added
;Michigan (2-4) Monday under
14.
Tink
Brown
and Troy Gray
:iookie coach Billy Donovan,
each
had
13,
while
Hightower bad
'IDatching its best start since the
II.
:1987-88 season.
.
Kilgore led Central Michigan
, "It's weird. It feels lilre I'm in
•'Tbe Twilight Zone,"' senior with 20 points while Chad Guelda
added 14 and Brian Smith and
:SOard Malik Hightower said.
• "This is what I expect. This is Aaron Brown each had 10.
Marshall has started its season
:Wbat the team expects. It' s what
with
six or more wins 11 times in
:U.e coach expects," sophomore
·
the
83
years it has played basket1orward Thad Bonapart said.
.
ball.
Its
best start was 11-0 in the
• . "I thought we started the game
1929-30 season.
~ little flat. We took a lot of illMarshall· will bost Kansas State
)dvised shots," Donovan said.
on
Thursday .
.''Thad was able to step up and

' .

,; r

.

consecutive three-pointers in a 10point run that pushed the lead to 20
midway through the half.
And the unrelenting full-court
pressure intimidated the Matadors,n
who turned it over 17 times in tbe
ftrst half and 30-times overall. In a
one-minute span, they failed to
make it past midcourt on four con- .
sec uti ve possessions.
' 'They came after us like· a
boxer in the ring," Cassidy said .
"They bit us with a one-two punch
right off the bat. and we were like a
boxer holding on . You can' t get
knocked down that early."
It was the most discouraging
loss this season for the Matadors,
who lost by 23 to UCLA - now
ranked No. 2 - and by 22 to
"Alabama-Birmingham. As the
game got out of hand, the student
section started taunting Michael
Dorsey, who scored a team-high 15
points.
" It was pretty crazy out there,"
Dorsey said . ·' They have some
wild fans. I wish we had some like
that."
.
· The Bearcats arc finally starting
to feel better about themselves aftllr
the devastating loss to Canisius.
" We've got a lot to look for ward to," Durden said.

Reserve notes: Eastern woo 3316 led by Crystal Holsinger's 14
points, Tracy White's 10, Michelle
Caldwell's seven and Crystal Mor·
cis' two. Southern was Jed by Cynthia Caldwell's eight, Jenny
Friend's five, Jenny Roush's two
and E. Amott's one.

-·-·-·Southern

(12-8-11-1~5)

lonna Manuel 1-2-0=8, Renee
Turley 2-2-2=12, Brianne Proffitt.
0-3=3. Sammi Sisson 7-4-18, Jess
Codner l-2-4. fllon-scorers: Becky
Moore. Cynthia Caldwell , Bea
Lisle, Jenny Friend. Totals: 11-411123=45
Eastern
(13·10-7-18=48)
Jessica Karr 6-4= 16, Nicole
Nelson 2-1=5, Rebecca Evans 5·
7=17. Patsy Aeiker 4-2=10. Nonscorer.s : Melissa Guess , Amy
Redovtan, Jessica Radford Beth
Bay, Michelle Caldwell: TotaiJ:

Elsewhere in Ohio college basketball Monday night, Xavier celebrated the 75th anniversary of its
rivalry with Dayton by defeating
the Flyers 99-7 3 for its ninth
straigh_t victory. in the series. Dayton still bas a 71-46 lead in games
between the two schools.
Jeff Massey and Pete Sears bad
15 points apiece for the Musketeers
(6-1) . Also in double figures for
Xavier were Larry Sykes with 14,
T.J. Johnson with 13 and DeWaun
Rose and Tyson Brit with 11 each.
Chip Hare had 14 and Rodney
Horton 11 for Dayton (3-4).

8 18748 .

8

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·wvu tonight

Mountaineers (3-2) will take on
Obio University (7·3).
.
The Bobcats also are struggling,
going 3-3 since winning the Pre·
season NIT.
They lost 90· 71 Saturday to
Xavier, Ohio, despite 17 points and
15 rebounds from Gary Trent. who
is
by an injured hip.
· ~ow it's tlme for Jefferson: s' hampered
Last
year,
in a 90-81 Joss to
i ..amJDiles to reciprocate, Catlett
WVU,
the
6-7,
215-pound Tr~nt
laid.
~ "We can't be a one-man baslcel· . bad 41 points and 14 rebollllds. But
llall team," ·be said. " Somebody wvy cannot focus only on Trent if
1taa 10 step up and make a sbot'' · , it expects to win, Jefferson said
"We're not going in tbc(re only
:; •catteu will see If his pleas wOtt
10
bea.
t Gtll)' Trent. We're trying 10
rtl&gt;night in Atbe11s,·9hio! where the ,
beat C''lio l!.," be said.
;
- "/

.'

It gave them a wake-up call."
Cincinnati has won its four
games since the loss to Canisius,
including tight victories la.~l week
over Minnesota and Wyoming. The
game Monday gave them a chance
to work on some things in preparation for a game Wednesday night
against No. 24 California.
''It seemed like a practice game,
really," said Danny Fortson, who
scored 24 points. "It's good to
have Ibis kind of a game to get
ready for California."
"We had two rough games last
week. Some of us were a bit tired,"
said LaZelle Durden, who also
scored 24. "We haven't run a
Bearcat press in a while, so we got
to work on that today.
" I broke a sweat, but it's just
one of those games. We were kind
of tired. It's good to have a game
where you can rest."
The game was over long before
the intermission. Long scored 12
points in the opening 21 -5 spurt,
demonstrating that the Bearcats
could overpower the Matadors '
front line whenever they chose.
When Cal State Northridge
packed it in to cut off the middle,
the Bearcats simply bit from the
outside. Darnell Bunon bit three

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•' MORGANTOWN, W.Va. (AP)
:;- West Virginia point guard Sel- ·
ijoD Jefferson has proven how
~uc~ be means to the MounJaineers, averaging 18.6 points a
Jime and scoring ar least 20 in his
~ four gtlllleS, coach Gale Catlett

!Odi-St94,C~71

.

The Orangemen (6-1) forced 16
turnovers and held visiting Robert
Morris to 7-for-22 shooting (31
percent) in the first half as they
rebounded from being taken to
overtime by Princeton. John Wallace's 16 points led six Syracuse
players in double figures as the
Orangemen topped the 100-point
mark for the first time this season.
Gabe Jackson had 20 points to lead
tile Colonials (2-3).
No. 18 Georgia Teth 94
Furman 73
Drew Barry scored 25 points,
James Forrest 23 and Travis Best
22 as the Yellow Jackets (7-1)
broke it open at home in the second
half. Furman (2-5) scored the frrst
three points of the second half to
close to 43-42, but Georgia Tech
scored the next I 0 points, with
Barry and Best each bitting a .3pointer . Jeff Sexton scored 18
points to lead the Paladins.
No. 22. Virginia 100, VMI 73
Virginia used a 20-3 run late in
the frrst half to take a 51 -28 halftime lead and then cruised to the
easy home victory. Harold Deane
had 21 points to lead five Cavaliers
in double figures. Lawrence Gul· lette scored 32 points for the Keydets (2-5) , who lost their fifth
straight.
No.l3 mmols 90, Mercer 66
The llhm (8 - 1) scored (be
game's first 10 points and Jed by as
many as 36 as they won their fifth
in a row. Freshman reserve Bryant
Notn:e led five Illinois players in
double figures with 15 points .
Chance Solomon scored 30 points
to lead .the visiting Bears (3-4).

i""arshall men post 87-76
:~ ~in over Central Michigan
.

bhio
to host
4
.

12 Months $66.56_

Bullet 76, DePauw 47
CIICiMIII 116. CS NollltridaoS4
Clevelud St. 92. Prairie View 69
CreiaJt1Do76, BdhutteCoolt:man 74
DlillollllO ......... 66

By The Associated Press
Final exams are eitbe~;, going ·on
ot have just ended at most campuses. Christmas is Jess than· a week
away. There aren't supposed to be
many good college basketball
matchups at this time of December.
There weren't any good ones
Monday night as the sil ranked
teams that played won by an average of 33.8 points. The squeaker of
the flight was No. 18 Georgia
Tech's 94-73 win over Furman,
while the most lopsided victory
was No. 13 Cincinnati's 116-54
dismantling ·of Cal State
Northridge.
In the other games involving
,..ranlced teams Monday night it was
_No. 9 Dulce 99, North Carolina
-A&amp;T 56; No. 14 Syracuse 103,
:;Robert Morris 67; No. 22 Virginia
: 100, VMI 73; and No. 23 Illinois
!90, Mercer66.
·
,
, No.9 Duke !19
•·
Norlb Carolina A&amp;T 56
:. The Blue Devils (6-1) won their
:93rd consecutive borne game
.against a non-conference opponent
:as Cherokee Parks bad 19 points to
;tead five double-figure scorers.
•Duke led 47-18 at halftime, holding
;tbe Aggies (1-4) to 4-for-26 shoot-;ing (15.4 percent). John Floyd Jed
·North Carolina A&amp;T with 19
:points, all but two in the second
'half. Duke was witbo\11 freshman
:forward Ricky Price, who sprained
:an ankle in practice Saturday .
Price, averaging 11 .8 points, is
-expected to miss the Blue Devils'
·:three games next week in the Rain·· bow Classic.
::
No. 14.Syracuse 103
Robert Morris 67
•

•'

Willllvop 1.4, Samford It

TolUC AI&lt;M 44
11' Uberty 76 .
N. lowa
lllud Uaiv. 10
N.C.
&lt;fl. A1ooa 44
S. llllocio 93, Oral Roball 71
SL LDui19J, Soulhcnt Mellt. 69
Wii•.Qooell Bay 76, Morau St. 4S
xa.to&lt;, Ollio 99, Dayton 73

game:·

hang on for the win . ll,ebecca
Evans bit 5-7 and Karr went 3-4,
while Aelker and Nelson each hit
1-2 for a 10-16 fourth -quarter
streldl.
With Eastern leading 46-40,
Turley drilled a three before Evans
canned bOlb ends of the bonus for a
48-43 tally. Sisson hit jumper for a
48-45 tally and Eastern bad lbe ball
with 25 seconds left. EHS ran it
down 10 eight secolids and called
time, then Redovian went to the
line with five seconds left, but
missed. Southern got the rebound
and Manuel got orr a near half
court jumper that caromed off the
rim at the buzzer for an Eastern
win.
"Southern toot away our bread
.and butter for a while, our penettation with the guard working off tbe
post. They ~ave us tbe short shot,
but we didn I take advantage of it
We missed a lot of bunnies early
and that took away our momentum,
but at least we found a way to
win," summed up Wolfe.
Rebecca Evans led Eastern with
17 points. Sisson led Southern with
18.
Eastern hit 17-61 for 28 %, 0-2
treys and was 14-23 from the line.
EHS grabbed 42 rebounds, led by
Aeiker's 15 and Evans' 11, while
grabbing five steals, five assists, 16
turnovers and 21 fouls.
Southern hit 11-48. 4-12 trevs.

was 11-23 at the line, had 29
rebounds, Jed by Joona Manuel's
eight, Sisson's six, Codner six 8Dd
Proffitt's six, had 14 sreals (Proffitt
three), seven blocks, 16 IIJmOvers,
six assists (Manuel two) and 21
fouls .
·
Eastern will host Wellston
Thursday, while Soutbem wiU bost
Meigs.

Georgia Tech pounds
Furman; D.uke downs In Ohio college basketball,
.
North Carolina A&amp;T- Cincinnati blasts Cal State Northridge 116-54

Football

Ium

Eastern (4-2 overall and 2-2 in
the TVC' s Hocking Division)
played a typical Eastern game, getting down early, then coming baclc.
The Eagles feU behind 4-0 on Brianne Proffitt's free throw and
Jonna Manuel's three-.pointer. Jessica Karr nailed a baseline jumper
to bring Eastern back, then Sammi
Sisson drilled a two to widen the
SHS lead.
Eastern went into the press, but
Southern blitzed the Eagles up and
down the court, prompting EHS to
go back to a half court game. Slowly, Eastern fought back with four
more Karr baseliners and an Evans
jumper to take a 13-12 lead at the
buzzer.
Southern's Sammi Sisson knotted a game-high 18 points and provided the Tornadoes (1-3 &amp; 1-5)
witli four of their eight second peri·
od points.' Wolfe said, "Sammi

Key free throw shooling going
down the SIICtdl allowed Eastern 10

(Sisson) was the thorn in our side
all night long . Every time we
would make a run, she would drill
a key bucket. S be bad a fine

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In the NBA,

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'" ~ :;:~· · ..· .

LCavaliers, Nuggets &amp; Suns notc-h .w1~~
By MIKE NADEL
CHICAq&lt;&gt; (AP)- The Cleveland Cavalte~ have become very
good at makmg opponents look
very bad. None looked worse than
theCbicagoBulls.
·
. ,
Unable to counter tbe CavaHers
slow-down of!ense, stifling. defense
and aggresstve ~ebounding, the
BuDs set a franchtse record-low for
points and were booed off their
home court in Monday night's 7763 loss.
"We're not trying to keep a
team under their franchise-record
scoring. We' re just doing what we
have to do to win," said Tyrone
Hill, who ~ad 16 points an~ 17
reb~unds tn Cleveland's stxth
stratgbt vtctory.
Tbe crowd of 22,301 fans reacted angrily as the Bulls shot 37%
~om the field, 42% from the foul
hoe and I7% from three-point
range. .
.
"Tomgbl was embarrassmg,
probably the most embarrassed I
have ever felt in the NBA," BuDs
guard Steve Kerr ~d. . . .
Larry Krystkowtak, m hts ftrst
season with the Bulls, wishes the

fans would be more patient.
"If people are going to boo, I'd
just as soon get in my car and
leave," be said. "It's not going to
help the problem."
Elsewhere Monday night, Denver bear Boston 104-85 and
Phoenix downed Wasbington 113I02.
The Bulls, who won NBA titles
in I991, I992 and I993, are 5-6 at
home and 11-11 overall.
"I know that people here have
gotten used to championships,"
Krystkowiak said. "Butlbe fact of
the matter is we're a .500 team. We
don't have the talent of those
cbampionsbip teams."
. Cleveland is not overly talented,
ettber. On Monday, the Cavaliers
weren't even healthy. Mark Price
(rib injury) and Tony Campbell
(stomach virus) missed the game.
Chris Mills arrived shortly before
tip-off after getting treated for a
virus. Brad Daugherty and Gerald
Wilkins are out all season with
injuries.
"We've been doing it on the
defensive end, and team chemistry

is a big part of playing that style, ••
Mills said. ''We just go out and try
to bold a team to their average or
less. We may not be the most talented team, but on the court we
will give the most out there. We
always feel we're going to stop an
opponent ••
The 63 points were the secondfewest points ever against the Cavaliers who held Indiana to 61 last ·
seaso~' Cleveland is allowing only
88.1 points oer Qatne- by far best
in the league.
John Williams bad 18 points
and II rebounds for the Cavs, wbo
won despite shooting only 42%.
Scottie Pippen Jed tbe Bulls
with 14 points . Like the rest of
Chicago's starters, be sat out the
fourth quarter.
Afterward, Bulls coach Phil
Jackson was contemplating more
changes.
"I just think we have to get
some things done differently,"
Jackson said.
Suns 113, Bullets 102
Rookie Wesley Person scored
10 or his 12 points in the first 5 112
minutes of the fourth quarter as the

On the NHL lsbor front,

Players may reject owners' latest
.offer.at Wednesday's meeting

BAM! - Cleveland forward Chris Mills (24) slams the ball
through the hoop In front of Chicago defenders Toni Kukoc (behind
Mills) and Pete Myers (20) in the fourth quarter of Monday night's
NBA contest In Chicago, where the Cavaliers won 77-~3. (AP)

Most NFC Central
clubs have chance
at making playoffs

..

By BARRY WILNER
Detroit also resides in that silly
AP Football Writer
Central, where everybody but. nat·
The road to the Super Bowl has urally, Tampa Bay, bas a. shot at
four branches: the ins, the outs, the the division crown and a wild card.
W!lllnabees and the NFC Central In fac~ the pecking order is clear in
Division.
the NFC ~entral : Minnesota,
The ins - an Francisco 49ers, Detroi~ Chicago and Green Bay, m
Dallas Cowboys, Miami Dolphins that order.
.
.
and Pittsburgh Steelers - know
If all four win, all are m, wtth
' the post-season road well, having Minnesota takinJ~; the division. If
won I4 Super Bowls between any of them lose, they're in danger
them. The San Diego Chargers and of having the Giants or Cardinals
Cleveland Browns have also steal away the wild-card berth.
clinched post-season berths.
_
' 'I would rather be in our simaSixteen of the 28 clubs won ' t · tion and have the pressure," Packmake it into the playoffs, and the ers coach Mike Holmgren said of
Buffalo Bills, for a change, will be Saturday's game at Tampa. ." To be
on the outside looking in. Tbe Bills able to go into the last game of the
have been in the loser' s locker season with a chance to go to the
room the last four Super Bowls.
playoffs if we win is 'ood. Not
Monday night's Dallas victory every team can say that.'
ovllr New Orle ans ended the
Not quite, but almost
Samts' chances, sHcing to nine the
The Vikings might have the
number of clubs in the running for toughest task. They need a finalthe remaining six playoff spots. game victory to finish I0-6 and win
Those nine include four-firths of the division. But that victory must
the NFC Central.
come against the best team in the
Among the group of uncertain league, the 49ers , on Monday
team s are one that lost seven night, after everyone else has finstraight (the New York Giants), ished . .
one that bas done almost all its· 1
And if they lose, while the other
winning behind a backup quarter- three Central teams win, they could
back (the Chicago Bears) and one sink to fourth in the division, and
that seems to win despite itself (the out of the playoffs if Arizona beats
Los Angeles Raiders).
Atlanta and Dallas beats the Giants.
"There's a Jot of football lef~"
Four of the contenders meet Satsaid Patriots coach Bill Parcells, urday: T.he Patriots vs. the Bears,
who worked his miracles in New and the Chiefs vs. the Raiders. The
England much quicker than anyone winner of Kansas City-Los Angeles
_ including, most likely, himself is in. no maner what tbe Patriots
- could have foreseen . "When do.
you've been in the league as long
Two contenders meet Sunday
as I have, you retain that thought. night, the Lions and Dolphins. Two
A lot of things can happen in a others, Arizona (Atlanta) and
short lime."
Green Bay (Tampa Bay) have the
A lot of things must happen in a possible good fortune of playing
short time, one week to be exact. also-rans.
"I'm sure (Dues coach Sam
But Dallas made the list a linle
shorter. defeating New Orleans 24- Wyche) bas some surprises, be
16 Monday night to eliminate the always does,'' Holmgren said.
''We should be ready for most anySaints.
That leaves six teams going for thing."
four NFC berths - the Central title ·
The Vikings and Giants can't be
and three wild cards. None of those sure what to get ready for. Neither
combatants plays each other, but the 49ers nor Cowboys bas much
the Bears play the Patriots, who incentive next weekend. But they
m~st win at Chicago or have
are clearly superior teams that want
Kansas City lose to the Raiders to to fme-rune things before their bye
get an AFC wild card. The Patriots weeks. ADd, in Dallas' case, a loss
also could win the AFC East by to the Giants that put New York in
beating the Bears and having the playoffs would be particularly
Miami lose to Detroit on Cbrisbnas galling.
night.

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By KEN RAPPOPORT
AP Sports Writer
The Nlfl..' s Board of Governors
bad its big meeting. Now it's time
for the players.
"This will be serious," Bob
Corkum of the Anaheim Mighty
Ducks said. "There's a feeling of
severity, of whether the season will
be lost or saved."
Corkum was among the player
representatives meeting with union
boss Bob Goodenow today. A mass
meeting of players is planned in
Toronto on Wednesday.
The last time the players held
such a meeting in November, about
200 showed up. Hundreds of players are expected to attend this time,
as wen.
"I think it bas to be bigger than
the last two," said Corkum, referring 10 player meetings in October
and November.
Like the last two, Wednesday's
meeting will be largely informational, with Goodenow updating
the players on labor negotiations in
the last month.
And Hke the last meeting, players will be able to voice their opinions on the situation.
"II will be a strate!I;Y meeting,"

only a pair of questions before
leaving.
..
If players do make a new proposal on tbe central payroll tax
issue, it probably won ' t be until
Wednesday or Thursday. While
Colorado Rockies chairman Jerry
McMorris is scheduled to arrive
Tuesday, the rest of management's
bargaining team, including Boston
Red Sox chief executive officer
.
John Harrington, isn't due until
Tuesday night or Wednesday.
If the sides move closer on their
tax ideas, acting commissioner Bud
SeHg ~ys it's possible to move the
twice-delayed deadline for imposing the cap. If there isn't progress,
the ruling executive council will
declare an impasse in bargaining
and impose the cap, leading to a
court fight and the possible use of
replacement players next spring . .
Tbe·centtal disagreement is over
the payroU tax. Owners want a rate
that continues to rise until the players' share of revenue drops from 58
percent to 50. Players want a tax
only high enough to fund increased
revenue-sharing for small-marlcet
clubs.
Union lawyers said the sides
went over the differences on many
areas Mond;iy ·
"It's always useful after a hiatus
to review where you are," said
Lau~en Rich, the union's No. 3
official.
.
.
Included m the talks was a bnef
discussion of salary arbitration,
which owne£1 want to eliminate.
· "They '!ave to teD us what they .

want, and they know wbatthe price
is," Febr said. "If you want to get
rid of salary arbitration, you have
to make everybody unrestricted
free agen(S all_tbe way down ."

FRfiHTIC
SfiHTfl
SHOPPIHG
·SPREE
. THIS FRIDAY
DEC. 23rd
I pm • 12 pm
.See Our Ad In
Fridays Dally Sent/nat

AOORNG
NEW·REPAIR

CHARLES A.
VAUGHAN
who pared IW8y on
Dec. 24, 1992.
We mi.. you end love
you more than we Cllll
lilY·
A precloul one from ua
Ia gone,

v..

Clarence Lee, Et AI,
DaltndMia
ClortnGI Let and Roll
Ellen L• will take nolle•
:· A voice we loved Ia thai on the 8th day of
flit.
October, 1114 tht Plaintiff
A place Ia VIICIIIIIn our flied Ita compltlnt agalnat
you In tha Court of Common
hell11t,
'
Thll can be lllltd. Pllu of llllp County, Ohio
raquattlng the Court to
Reel In puce,
terminate any lnltrtll thai
mydlrllng.
you have In the preml111
l'IIU-you
d-rilled lllollowa:
eomeday.
PARCEL ONE: Situate In
Aunt Ftv- tha Townahlp of Sallabury,
l Uncle Alfred Wah County or llelga and Sttta
of Ohio: BEGINNING at 1
point located In · the
Northerly ad111 of Chiller
PubllcNolle:e
Rotd (S.R. 7), aald point
baing N. 84' 37' 'E. 152.21
LEGAL NOTICE
· fut from the S.E. comer of
IM-13117·TP.PEX •
a 1 Acre lol owned by W.C.
114-13011-TP.PEX
and Thelma Herman,
I
NoliCI II given that a "'lallly'e 1 Acre Lot", 11
' petition waa fllld with lhe recorded In Vol. 168, Pg.
; Public UIUIIIn CommiHio'! 200; thence from 11ld point ·
• of Ohio, dockatad aa C111 of beginning and palling
; No. 14·1307-TP·PEX, through property owned by
' lltklng tht lnetltutlon of Kathy Andtraon ••
;-..y, non-optional, recorded In Vol. 286, Pg.
I amndad am IIMct (EAS) 3211, N. 27' 52' W. 12.52 fill
~ batwlln, on the one hand, to a 518" 11111 Iron pin aot:
1the Naw Marahfltld thenct continuing N. 2r 52'
Exchange of GTE North
101.27fut to i 5/1" atetl
Ilneorpctl'llld (GTE), •and on w.
pin HI; thence S. 12' 07' W.
the other hand, GTE'a 35.00 fell to a point: thence
rAibany and Shade N. 27' 52' W. 00.12 1111 lo •
: exchang11. Llkawlat, point located In the
• another petition. w11 flied
Una of lht
•with the Commlaalon, corporation
of Pomeroy; thane•
1docktlld ae Cue No. M- VIllage
with ukl COfJICirallon
j 1308-TP-PEX, -king the along
line, S. er 15' E. 124.53 fall
' 1nat1tut1on or
non1 point, baing common
optional EA8 .,._..n, on to
CQrntr to Kathy Anderaon
1111
0111'
.....
,
Gft'S
Albanr
1, ~.and QTl'l Naw and Robert D. Fila; thence
with property llna In
• Mtralltfeld and Shade along
common
lht above
: exchang11, on the othr perlita, s. with
28' 15' E. 47. tO
to I 5/8" altai pin 111;
: ::~;::: ~:'.:'=o~a~:: fill
thence
s. 26' 15'
•for public hearing to begin E. 71.18continuing
teat to a 518" a;eel
:at 10:00 a.m., on pin
111: thenca continuing
PWtdnladay, January 18,
28' 15' E. 11.77 f11tto a
!11M, at the AlexllfiUr High s.
point In the Northerly nne or
tSchool, State Routt 50, Cheater
Road; thtnct along
,Albany, Ohio C5710. Any with aold Cheater Road, s.
1 lntartaltd
paraon may ·a r 11' w. 70.157 teat to the
:obtain lurther Information place of I!EGINNING and
:regarding thla maltar by containing 0.265 Acree,
,dlrtetlng an Inquiry to the mort or 1111, 11 dtalgnatad
lPubllc Utllltlta Commllalon on "Mop Showing Survey
:or Ohio, 110 E11t Broad
•&amp;trill, Columbut, Ohio

,J

-y.

State Aulo's already lo\Y
premiums can be
reduced even more by '
insuring both your car ·
and home with the State
Auto Companies.
Let us tell you just hdw
much your savings can·
be.

•H.W: Heatera

oMicrowoveo o[)ii()OIIII
•Thanka Moigo •
Surrounding Arua
(614) 985-3581 or

1~11/ln

KENNE~
·

Cocker Spaniels -

Bred lor
Quality
and .
Temperament
Sp«::aaizing In Part-colora
tor
llhow and companions.
Slud NMct &amp; puppies,
young acll~ for lale.
487
':.:1~Hg~ Rd.
114-840-2487

915-4473

'"!I

Public Notice
(S.R. 7) from th• ·s.E. comer
or a 1 Acre trect or lot on
the North aide of 11ld Roid
conveyed by Elizabeth Jay
and Martin Joy to George ·
Jay, September 29, 1911,
Vol. 107, Pg. 157, Molga
County, Ohio Deed Recordo
to which roferonca II
hereby r:nado for a
description thereof: thence
N. 26' 15' Wttllo land now
or formerly owned by Clara
M. Dow; thence In a North
and E11torly direction along
Claro M. Oow'o Uno to a
point whore 1 lint running
S. 26' 15' Eaot wllllnteroect
aeld Cheater Road 70 foot
Northeuterly liom the
plaeo of beginning; thence
s. 61' 50' Wool along uld
road to lht place of
BEGINNING and containing
1/2 Acre, more or ltll, 1/4
Acrethoreof belngaltualeln
the Vlllega of Pomeroy and
114 Aero In tho Townahlp of
Slllobury, Meigs County,
Ohio.
. FOR LAST SOURCE OF
mLE SEE D.B. 286, Pg. 325
and D.B. 287, Pg. so, Malga
County, Ohio Recorda of
Datda.
Puctl
Nos .
16019404.000; 16·01983.000,
16-01965.000, 18-019847.000
and 18-019048.000.
The Plaintiff requeala thet
11ld promlota bt aold, your
lntertal therein forecloeed
and for any other relief aa
lhall bt Jualand oqultablo.
You oro required to
anawer lho aald complaint
by tho 4th day of February,
1995 or Judgement by
Default will be rendered
egalnll you.
.
David H. McCown,
Reg. No. 0008600,
Attorney for Plaintiff
(11)29;
(12) 6, 13, 20, 27; (1)3: 6TC

DEER CUT &amp;
WRAPPED
Cundiff's
Custom
Cut
Maplewood Lake

St. Rt. 124
Racine, OH

Call949·2734

Shrubs S~apped
and Removed
Mls. Jobs.

Bill Slack
992·2269

•

214 EAST MAlN
POMEROY
992·6687

I

I

WEBER'S
CHRISTIUS
TREES

. Pubic Nollce

RUTLAND, OH
Homegrown·Carefully
Sheared Scotch &amp;
White Pine 4' &amp; Up with
a great selection of
larger trees.
Call 742-2143 or
742-2979

COUNTY, OHIO

IIIIYI K. Qlaa, Plaintiff

71

!wcls •••• are unknown.

'. 417W,

· presents

"THE LITTLE MATCH GIRL"
DECEMBER 21-22,7:00 NIGHTLY
.39724 S.R; 143, POMEROY, OHIO
:- --- · -- - - ... 982-5705 or 892-6788 -.~- - .

t

c

There Will Be Services.on Christmas Day,
··
December 25
·
. At Hillside Baptist Church

Service nmet Are:
WELCOME TO OUR SERVICE
.
'
.
..
·. .:SUNDAY SCHOOL.............................·.10:00 a.m~ ·:··
::MOANING WORSHIP..................;·.......11:00 ••m..:.
•• EVENING SEAVICE:.....:....................... &amp;:OO p.m. '
EVERY()NE WELCOME!

....... In the Complaint.
•. Dated thla 11th day of

Classifieds
._ :_446-2342

Mo1.·Frl.
9:00 to 5:00

992-2156.
675-13.33

Deoa•er. -1...
• . .
LMr lp
·''
Cllrll of Courts
~~~ .. i?;
.

..

'

"

I

...

992·7162

John

Doug

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS
S.....,.lallzlng
In Cullom
.-Frame Repair .
NEW &amp; U.SED PARTS FOR
ALL IIAKESliiODEI.S
112·71U OR
·U2·5553 OA
TOLL FREE 1-IOO·UI·ml
DARWIN, OHIO
7r.J1 ..1 TFN

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

MODIRI SANI'rATIOI
POMEROY, OHIO
Septic tanks cleaned &amp; portable toilets rented.
Dally, weekly &amp; monthly rental rates.
Job sites • Camp Sites • Family Reunions &amp; Parties
NOW OFFERING GENERAL HAULI
Limestone•. Sand, Gravel and Coal
WE HAVE A·1 TOP SOIL FOR SALE
u ..., • a ded 20 years ex rlence
992·3954
Emergency Ph one 985 -3418

New Homes • VInyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERClAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE F.STIMATF.S

614·992:7643

lateriar &amp;
bteriar

Taka the pain out ol
ptlndng. ut 111 do It tor
you. Very,_,...
F- EatliMtel
Before 6 p.m. leave

FACE LIFT!
Not you. your home!
Will create a new
look for any room
using your
collectables and
treasures.
Bring new warmth
inlo your homes for
the Holidays.

(No Sunday Cells)

Kenny's Auto Rental
Kenny's is the place to come
when you need a car rental.
We , • .,, '"" .,., V11111!
Kenny's Auto center
264 .l.lpper River Rd.
Gal~is. OH 45631

1·800-486-1 5!10
Bus. (614) 446-9971

o.. Step Ctmplete Aute 8e4y Repair

PRECISION AUTOMOTIVE
614-992·6223

,

Free Estimates

CHRISTMAS
TREES

Insurance Work Welcome

&amp;

WREATHS
Ready Nov. 23
$10 &amp; Up
Open 10 am· 9pm
lob Snowden's Lot
S.R. 124..Rutle•dr Ohir

614·742·3051
YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE
-Roam Addlllont
-New Garagea
-Electrical &amp; Plumbing
•Roollng
ofnterlor a Exterior
Painting elao concrete
work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio
ltitCWZtln

DAVE'S
SWAP
SHOP
.

•

BISSEll BUilDERS, INC.

liNDA'S
PAINDNG &amp; CO.

Stale Rt. 33

~

Darwln,Ohio ~-

,.,.,_

•

CHRISTMAS TREES.
BRADFORD'S

. FRESH. CUT TREES AYAIUBLE
OR CUT YOUR OWII

· Craft Shop
Located on Cherry Ridge : From Rt. 33. turn East
Bat Darwin onto Rt. 681 . Go 4 miles lo Che rry
Ridge Ad , 1 112 miles to tree farm .
WATCH FOR SIGNS. 10:00 amtil dar!&lt; Nov. 25 tl1ru Dec 24
Wa on rides Fri. Sat. Su n

O&amp;E ELE£1.BI£
OUR PRICES WILL NOT.PUT YOU
IN A STATE OF SHOCK.
Resident and Small Electrical Repair
(Lamps Welcome)
Home Repair Also

One mile out
143 from Rt. 7
992·5251
Tues .• Wed . • Fri. · Sat.
John
1-6
• Craftsman Tools
oToys
•Guns
Loads of Misc.
Buy-Sell·Tn!dt
~L~Cualom
. 992·2060
1G'511 mo.

992·7162

.lldn

Doug
H/1111111

WIIDOW IYSftMI

Made ··

· • sond Ylnjr --·- ..

~--

HAULING

IFC ...............

51080 SR 124
Racl1,
949·2311
949·2600

l

"======'!;'l2tllf=•~
•

Uineslone
&amp; Gravel

'"'*·

(1) 3, 10, 17, M; lTC

Autos tor Sale

90 Yamaha Wave
Runner II w/trailer
1
3,000
90 Ford Thuaderbirtd
RS damage.........12,725
87 Acura Letend, htotl
tlat.age......._ ..13,225
87 Mercury Caugar,
rMgll ............... 11,425
85 Tayota MR·Z, tail
lgM ............ 12,325
84 Porsche 944, LR.
Qtr. dallage_14,SOO
79 Porsd• 928 928
$410ok,.,..,.., 113,000
·68 AMX 390, 4 spd.,
Texis (OJ ........ 13,700

· · Yotl are hereby notlftld
na,.ad
·~In a legal action
,e~ lllva K. Glaza VI.
·;!:•rry lmlth, et al.,
~nta. Thllactlon hu
t1ttn iulgned c - No. 114CY-300 and Ia pending In
itht Common l!leaa Court of
':lllltl• County, Oltlo, Court
"llrttl, Pomeroy, Ohio

;tliat you havt IIHn

. Tha ollject of tht
.Complllnt II to quiet lltlt to
1111 atelt IIIUIII In 100
,ecre Lot. No. 303, Town 2,
.118!!11 tt, In the Vlll'llt of
&lt;Paiilinrr. Mtlga County,
.Ohio, and to quill IIIIa to
·'lite lnllrtlll of the Plelntlfl,
)o preclude any claim In
.Jntartal lly the Dafandant"
,!tnd for DOIII of the ICilon.
·&gt; You are hereby raqulrtd
Jo anawtr the Complaint;
within tweniJ-tlght (21)
'taya after II!• .lut
ubllcatton of thla notice
fllofl will lte publlahed
·o not • ....If-lor alx (I) fUDDIIIIvt -u_ The 1111
lubiDIIItn wilt Itt made on
ilia 24th diY of Jenuary,
IIHi twenty-light
for -ftrfng will
onlhlldlll.ln
1111 of your failure to
tnawa.r o~ otharwlet
~ .. rwq'*'tl lly the
Ohio ·• 'l lultl of Cl.vll
ffOCidure, Judg,.ent tty
fei.UN will Itt rendered
tt~alnll you · for the relief

992·5251

Chuck Stotts

Va.
Larry Smith, Et AI,
Dtfendanll'
, CASE NO. 14-CV-300
~ NOTICE BY PUBUCATION
: To: Ulrry Smith; Mary
•Sllllth; and the Uninown
l Htlra, Next of Kin, Llget11a,
1Dtvl1111, Admlnlatratora,
Executo(a, Succeteora,
Spou111, ·and A11lgna, If
any of uny Smith Md Mary
•:Smith, whott lui

;

·

Phone 247-2206

:1121 20, 27 (1) 3/ 3TC

l

Resident and Small Electrical Repair
(Lamps Welco~J~e)
Home Repair Also

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

614-llll&gt;-4180-

Llgtit Hauling,

l

ITEMS

IMHage.
Affer6 p.m.

TREE TRIMMING
AND REMOVAL .

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

, .• ' t "'0 p,1

·! IN THE
COMMON PLEAS
COURT OF' MEIGS

Aut9_
Companies •

For the best in satellite
sales and service contact
Bryan of
Best Reception.
·We have even better ·
and quicker service.
-Over 10yrs
experience
- Service on all system
types.
· Best prices all around
lhe area.
992·2!103 or 992-6320

:OZ1W7113.

'

JJ ~tate

lEST RECEPriOII

O&amp;E ELE£TBI«:;.

NEW &amp; USED

AMBERWOOD

11 /2 1194

for Kathy Anderson,
eHUtlld In the VIllage· of
Pomeroy,
S allo bury
Townehlp, Mtlgl County,
Ohio, Selle 1" + 4 40', dated
May 21, 1985," relartncato
uld map baing made htrtln
tor al ptrtlnanl purpoa11.
PARCEL TWO: Situate In
the Vlllege of Pomeroy,
Sallabury Townehlp, Melga
·county, Ohio: BEGINNING
at a point N. 61' 30' E11l 64
lutlrom the S.E. corner or
1 1 Acre lot on tha North ·
aida of the Cheotor Road
(S..It Route 7) In lhe Village
of Pomeroy convoyed by
Elizabeth Jay and Martin
Joy to George Jay by deed
recordld In Vol. 10, Pg. 157,
Melgt County Deed
Recorda, reference to which
Ia harolly made for •
daocrlpllon thereof; thence
N. 61' 30' Eaot along sold
North aide of aald road 87.5
feet; thence N. 28' 15' Weal
to land now or formerly
owned by Claro M. Dow;
thenct South elonq Clara M.
Dow's II ne I o I he
corporetlon nne to the N.E.
corner of a 0.25 Aero .lot
described In deed from
Ematllno Pertlow to Volvoy
Kaye dated October 25,
111-48
reeorded In .O.B.
112, Pg. 327 of the Melga
County Dttd Recorda:
thence S. 36' 30' Eut along
tho Eaet Una of aald Kaye
lotto the place of B111lnnlng
and eon..lnlng 0.50 Acres,
mort or le11, 0..40 Acrat
thereof being In tho Vllllge
of Pomeroy and 0.10 Acree
baing In the Townahlp of
Sollallury, Meigs County,
Ohio.
PARCEL THREE: Situate
In Salisbury Township,
Mtlga County, Ohio :
BEGINNING Easterly 150.5
feet along tho Chesler Road

J&amp;D FLEA
MARKET

614-992·5515

1211Wn

•New Homes
•Garages
&gt;Complete
Remodallng :
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

PubUc Notice

NOW OPEN

for Sale
Call

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

Choose and
cut your tree.
(or we'll cut it for you)
Riggs Tree Farm
39507 Rocksprings Rd.
(at comer of US Rt. 33)
Pomeroy, Ohio
. 992-5702
Carol &amp; David Riggs

IN THE COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
Cau No. M-CV·22t
NOTICE FOR
PUBUCATION
Mld·S- True!, II
Plaintiff, ,,

lr•••
Usedlpplll•c••

olllohwaohora

992' 5335

Tree Trimming ana
Removal- Yard Care
Frea Estimates
614-992-4447

For All•ior

•Wethers • Dryer• - R•ngea
-Refrigerator• •FrMzera

CHRISTMAS TREES

In Memory Of

1

•Foot flo"oble Service

RIGGS

In Memory

Parta

• service

&amp;'tS/14 TFN

F&amp;A Tree Servke •

Dll'l
IPPidiiCI
IIRIICI

•All MakH -42 Yoora

949-2168

J

'2

oficlory Authorized

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter .Cleaning'
. Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

To my sweetheart, thanks for lhe
most wonderful weekend of my
IWe. I love you whh all my heart.
Merry Christmas!

.P:~"*··~"·"*~""'"'·
i .. HILLSIDE BAPTIST CHURCH'~*-;·..g·

~&amp;·---~=~·-····
'·

-'IIPPI.IIICI
111111:1

Howard L. Wrltesel

a source close to the -negotiations salaries. It was one of the points
told Tbe Associated Press . The made by N1ll.. commissioner Gary
source said lbe players will proba· Bettrnan following a meeting of the
bly qlke a vote to decide whether or Board of Governors in New Yolk.
not they want to accept the owners'
After the meeting, Bettman
latest offer.
announced tbat owners gave him
Randy Ladoucer•, the Mighty authority to cancel the season if no
Ducks' captain, doesn't think they agreement was reached on a new
wiD accept - even if it means los- labor contract.
ing the season. Ladoucer said be
With the meetings between
expects the same show of solidarity players coming up, it's apparent
from the players as their last mass that Dettman and Goodenow will
meeting \11 November.
noi be meeting at least until Thurs·
"Th~ meeting .in November Wi!S
day, or possibly later.
very umfied," ~d Ladoucer, who
If full negotiations begilt Thiii'Sattended that sesston.
day, negotiations likely would
Although there have been recent adjourn Friday to allow the particireports that some of the players pants 10 return home for Christmas.
most prominently Stepbane Richer Talks then could resume Dec. 26 at
of the New Jersey Devils - would the earliest.
be willing to give in on' the conThere bas been little commullitentious luxury tax issue, Corkum ·cation l'etween Goodenow and
disputed it.
Dettman. They have spoken only
"I don't think Bob will accept briefly by phone once since their
any concessions on the tax,'' be last talks broke off Dec. 6 in Cbicasaid. "I think the players will stay go.
finn on this issue. The tax is someStill, some NHL officials were
thing the players ate not ready to encouraged about the prospect of a
accept.''
settlement.
Last week, the owners expressed
' 'There is still time,' ' said Gerry
a sim!lar solidarity, most particu- Meehl!//,., executive vice .[!resident
larly m the area of the so-called of hockey operations for the Buffaluxury lax on teams that spend lo Sabres. "I ' m optimistic about
more than the league average in
havin~ a season.

Baseball strike matches length of season
By RICHARD KED..
WASHINGTON (AP)- Today.
marks a milestone of sorts for the
baseball strike: It's the 131st day,
matching the length of the 1994
season that ended when players
walked ont Aug. I2.
Talks resumed Monday, but
··
.
there were no postttve
or negattve
signs to indicate whether this round
of bargaining can end the longest
work stoppage in the history of
• · na1
Th
U.S. pro.essto
sports. e session was mostly a review and formal presentation of the ideas the
union discussed with owners last
Wednes¢1y before talks stopped.
"We put numbers and words
aro~nd it, •• union head Donald
Febr said after the 7 1/2-bour session ended before 6 p.m. EST.
And there was decidedly little
drama, even though the owners
have approved a 12:0I a.m. deadline Friday for declaring an
impasse and implementing a salary
cap if an agreement isn't reached
by then.
Despite the possibility of this
threat, only one member of management' s negotiating team attend·
ed the session: Philadelphia Pbillies
co-general partner Dave Montgomery. Lawyers Chuck 0 'Connor
and Rob Manfred, whose role bas
steadily increased throughout the
23-montb ne~otiation, also were on
management s side of the table.
''The talks we bad today were
productive in the sense we bad a •
healthy exchange on several
issues," O'Connor said, answerin,ll

Suns won their sevetitli straight
game and improved to 12·0 at
home.
· · •· ·"":• · · :":
Mitchell B.u~ler 11\ade: ~~e,e
three-pointers . tll .th~ 'fiii&amp;l)~i!JU;ter
fat: tb~ Bullets, wtJo,·got,w,! , ...)~X
twtce m the fma13:30. ~ilt iJI!yup
by Dan ~rle with ~:95 Je ,, · a~e
Phoenix a I08-IOO lead; mil tJie
Suns went on to band the Bpllets
their sixth consecutive defeat
. Kevin Johnson, Danny MIJD~ng
and Charles Barkley bad 19 potnls
each for the Suns. Juwan Hpward
bad a career-high 22 points for t1!e
Bullets.
' , ·:
Nuaets 104, Celdcs 85 . '
At Denver, reserve Malitno11d
Abdul-Rauf scored 2'T,P,OID.~J 1 as .the
Nuggets defeated colil' sllooung
Boston.
.
..
Abdul-Rauf bitJ9•of,.15 shots
and banded out six assists·.for Denver, which led 74-67 after' three
quarters and graduij)ly P,u1Jed away
in the final quarter.
·
·
Dikembe Mutombo had 13
points, eight rebounds and &amp;even
blocks for the Nuggets. ~ck F~)l
had 17 points for the Celttcs, wbQ
shot 38% from the field w,ithout
leading scorer D0111inique Wilkins,
sidelined with an ankle injury: :

Joe I.'Sayn

SAYRE 'lRUCIING
614·742·21.-1

,.,......

replacement
'!lndowa
• Free Estimates
• $200 Installed
C1ll For Details
•ttrsff OUR SHOWROOII" •
110 Court St. Pomt:-oy, OIUo
•'Look for the Red and White Awning"

992-4.119 AI h • OwW 1-10~291-5600

�••

.•

'Jiif

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio.

1994

BRIDGE

NEA Crossword Puzzle

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

ACROSS

PHILLIP
ALDER

1 Leltero ond

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G:.uae:.n
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BEATTIE BL YD.® by Bruce Beattie

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WHAT DO YOU
THINK OF ELVINEY'S
SECRET RECIPE?

2br., N;, . . . . . . dryer,
1200fmp. pluo utlllloo, .._..
I304"''"'-·
no houoo
polo.
.._
.

Yuppie snowman .

7

Real Estate

Fumlohod Mabllo Homi 1 Bodroom, 1120 FGurth A...,ue, Qol.
tlpollo, 112211/110. w..., Pllld
814 448 1418 Aft• 7 P.M.
'

"

LAYNE'S FURNITURE

m..---'"'

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AVAILABLE: _,IHimo
AN far mldnlahl ""IN far 118 bed
olclllod nunlng . tacllnv. EOE.
Clnho.., &lt;II PVInl -nt, AI
I llal 121, Palnl Pleaunt, WV
2MIO~o0Jenmork

Foclllty.
POSI'AL JOBS
Stoll t11.41 /Hr. For Eum And
ADallcollon Info. COli (21g) 7181301 Ell. OHNI, t A.ll . .e P.ll.

Sun.ftt.

All real estate advertl&amp;lng In
this newspaper is subject to
the Federal Fair Housing Act
of 1968 which makes It lnegal
to advertise ~any preference,
limitation or discrimination
ba&amp;ed on race, color, rellgioo,
sex famllial status Of national
(!rigln, or any Intention to

0 191Mb¥ NEA. Inc

W.nlod lo ....,. •• ., 110 ....
IIOUI- or LB. \41, joodod, 4' ,
door,..14-'Jili48Da. ,
I'

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56

Pets tor $Bit

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By

Apartment
for Rent

~

make any such preference."
llmllatlon or discrimination.•

This newspaper will not
knowfingly accept
advertisements tOr real estate
which Is in violallon of the law.
Our readers are hereby
Informed that an dwellings
advertised In this newspaper
are available on an equal
opportur&gt;ty basis.

11uv1na
a ooJ!Ing
.....,...
Jolinoon'o
Vldio,.llld.

••

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dlepolt, , . . . . Ml1.

30.01. llomlnglon 'IIICIO. ouco.
,_ Slll1n1Cin0 Whllo Toll - :
1550. 30W1W17I. '

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Pn 14 -10Wir-or 243
Cotlbor CUol..., Curly

8tootc. SIOO Finn,
Aftw I P.ll.

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IIGO.pllonl~s
7
75 Boats a Motorw
for Sale

Musical
lnMruments

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MerchandiSB

,OOT WAAT

NEW~

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.ll\£.. P&amp;K£ !It:
BY l'l'tEJil ?

~_::_::::~~~T\'~ ... YOU
rIUJ&gt;. '-'"' E!IJ'(

For Sale
or Trade
IIIII Doloon truok

SNi'E..

~If

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['It\ ~T GOI!-l(, TO p~'( fUU..
PJije£ FOR ~ ~I X- ,III.ClNTI+Ol.C&gt;

""

Phillip Alder

I

ro£V 1~1 ON !

1

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campae
Celflbnty C.,tler c,yptograms ar_
e created !rom quotations by famous people , past and pr&amp;Uf'll
Ea&lt;;h ~tier m tN:t c 1Ph&amp;r stands !01 another . Todily's clue Y equals G

' OUXADJ

RIVYPR
RNUCA

VJGNURIXJ

UNAODJAXSKN

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IGRXDJA . ' - RXC
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PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "It was so hot in Tampa I saw a dog chasing a cal
and they were both walking: - (New Orleans Saintl Frank Warren .
'

- - ...... -

~

'::~:~· scc:~c4l~-&amp;£~s·
ltlllN
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0 four
~.arronoe leHers of
tcrcJmbled words

::::

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the

be·

low to form four words.

Iw

0 L F0 L

Phillip Alder's new book, "Get
Smarter at Bridge, " is available.
autographed upon request , for
$14.95 from P 0 . Box !69, Ros1yn
Hts.. NY !!571·0169.

=

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,.,...

OUT

In 11110;
_onllq
_. _
. olr_
- .......

TOOI'\'1' t1E.'S

0\.A''""· FRt.NC.IS.

pumpo,tiiO;--

eEI'IT'

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

HE'LL

HIM.

8
I

~
~?
STBIKE ASLOW IN THE WAR ON
SHOP Tl-£ CLASSfED).

HK;H PRICES.

.Bnollng
. _ - Age lullo,
llolloro,
Aloo
.,..._
:1481.

PRINT NUMBE~EO LETTERS I
IN THESE SQUARES

I

UNSCRAMBLE LETTERS
FOR ANSW ER
•

SCJIAM.I.ETS ANSWERS

61 Fa1111 Equipment

Enguff - Husky · Brine - Pencil - SHINING
My savings account is depleted. Now when a rainy
day comes all I'll have is a lot of debts I was making while
·the sun was SHINING.

81

By GARY LARSON
BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

Tid11opOIIdl1011
Wednesday. Dec. 2t , 1994 ·

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

111'7 l'eod L1D Goool Cenci. ' -

"CHICKf.N UP!"

I

Rloe
Foel poorly
HorN color
- Thin Air
Jacob'• oon
Prefix lor com
or form

Juocl

~s:r--ti,!Oo;taP
.......ion, . . .

THI FARIIDI

7
8
9
10
II
17

Pass

Yesterday we looked at a deal in
which it was correct to take a finesse
lor a queen, first through one defender
and then through the other defender.
Today's deal bears some similarity to
that the.me. It occurred during the qual·
ilying rounds of the 1977 Bennuda Bowl
in Manila . ~itt1ng Wesl wa s Mike
Passell,pne of the world's best players.
Again st the ambitious grand slam.
what should Passell lead ? Well. h e
knew that if he didn ' tlead a trump - as
recommended by the textbooks when
defending against a grand slam - the
declarer was sure to play him lor the
queen. So, trying to deflect the declarer
!rom a winning course, Passel! led the
spade lour!
•
Dummy's spade I 0 won the first Irick.
Totally deceived by the lead, South
cashed dummy's spade ace at trick two.
When East discarded, the shock wave
that ran through South registered about
eight on the Richter Scale.
Passel! deserved his good result, but
let us analyze South's play. In the real
world, the trump lead is either !rom a
holding without the queen or !rom
queen·fourth . Therefore, it seems to me
that the right play is to lead the spade
six from the dummy at trick two. Here.
East discards and declarer knows how
to play the suit without loss . But if East
follows with another low trump, declar·
er should finesse his spade eight' So. in
~ gr~nd slam missi~g the trump queen.
declarer can conceivably draw trumps
Without usmg the ace or king on etther
of the first two rounds of the suit.

'IWIOWMII&gt;
H\J.-1\ru· ~'(

\WJ;t) UNTIL
t-ar

Employment Serv1ces

Pass

1 Monuloctured
2 Donlsh
measure
3 By the time -to Phoonlx
4 Jacket poor!
5 Slltuo6 Reoult

Lead the suit,
score the honor

WO'J"W!

54 Mlacellai'MIOUB
Marchi nell•

Ront: 2 StdroonPO, ........ au
F....._, In O.Uipollo. . _
2003 Or 11M411-MOI, 3-7 P.ll.

~::::-:-='==

Pass

DOWN

• '1.0

LA 1*-a.'"'\

For ron! 2 bedroom troller In
Cornplolo
..
Reclnt ina.l11 . . 8031.
Houni:-,H.·~
0322, 3 iM Bulnlllo Rd.
Nloo 2 or 3 - - mabllo F-llollftoy.

44

7a

22 ConciH
25 Can. prov.
28 Mttlroae Place
charac:1er
29 Keen enjoy·
menl
33 Wearing no
clolhei
35 - - wont lor
Chrlotmaa ...
36 Leel-cutllng
ant
37 lnvaelon
39 Fate

lead: ??

' - In lllddloport. 11WIZ-

""" limo .............. ·
.............
of
quill-.... 111101'111100
to: Tlw Dolly 8ontlnol, P.O. Box
IUCIIon. ........ Un- 7214. Pcw•MoJ, Ohio 41781.
•,OIIIIr
a - Vlrfllnlo, - . P I - Con Center lo 77WJII.
Aoao!lllna AIIDIIc:OI- For
N- Alclo Trilnlng P1011rom
Tlvu .,..._ 22, 11114. Tlw
Clooe Will Run Appfoxlmatoly
Two
In .lanuooy. Contoct
T l w - Dlnclor or N..,..
lng Al-7112 EOE.

I0 5 3

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South
West North East
South
1 ...
Pass 1 •
Pass
1•
Pass 3 a
Pass
4 NT
Pass 5 •
Pass
SNT
Pass 6 •
Pass

211&lt;. trollor, . . . lrallor lal ""
"'"''·
.,.,.,.,.. a ._., AI 1·
112 nonh, Locuol Rei. on right.

15 Profound
115 Kill
18 Go In
20 Egg producer
21 Nellher'a

portner

EAST

10 ~D MlGR'&lt; UJITH .
EKH .atHER

I

lullo, 12111 11p. T-. •
Cholro, fl4t ..,.. c.w~o. 4 a a
DnAI-2 a.., t44.tl ... lml.

17M120.·

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lllt IIJIFE "THIN~ 1J.E .
SCCRET 10 A SO:CESSFUt.
MARRIAE£ I~ k.a'ER 00

'

of '1/~IJ.P
, ~&lt;1 p.p.6 w~

por -.th
1250. -uotty ....... 2 COUNTRY FURNITURE
room 1280. por month NO.
-uotty ..,_, T - p11kl, Nc COder
· ......
- .....,
Moll,...•
Sot,
lpa. CIE
=~ ~277 .... 1:011
UJt. ipo. L1Y1na

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an.

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c.r.-.
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•A J 10 6
•A Q J 7 4
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Mini 1111n ~ tiii Cloollllot

Houaehold

Goods
14170 ....... lttdroo~M, ..
Corpot
I
VInyl
In._ M.GO Yd
· fumoolohod,
c:on-a
toy 1:100.
por _ . ,COmp
dl!iolll
ut~ll'-, hal waadbu~n~~. .,... IUpiOP-..,.01Corpot In 8toolo. 0.. M Pot87UOOI.

4Ciooow ................ Oid,
To Glood lliooM, ._1012,

6

KIT 'N' CARDVLE® by larry Wright

r.1 erchand1se
51

12·20·94

Vou ~ linancial position will become
stronger In th e year ahead, but don't
spend what you gain loo quickly or in
unwise way~
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-;Dec. 21,1 When
asseosing developments today. 'rety on
facts ~ not intuition. If you aren't prQil8rly
anatyUCal, your overall picture will be dis·
torted. Sag;ttanus, treal ywrseH to a birth·
day gift. Send lor your Astro-Grapll pre·
diction&amp; lor the year·ahead by mailing
$1 .25}0 1\St&lt;OtGraph. ~o this newopaper,

,.,
'

P.O. Box 4485. New Vorl&lt;. NY 10163. Be
sure to state your zodiac si~¥~. .
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jon . 191 Do not
allow a disagreement over a material
object to drive a wedge between you and
a lriend today . Worldly goods can be
repLaced. pals canl
AQUARIUS (Jon . 20-Feb . 191
Companions who dO not share your vision
today will be more of a hindrance than a
help . Try not to let them impede Y(\Ur
progress • . _. __ - - ·
. _ ____
PISCES (Feb. ~rch 201 Make notes

.~eersons
who_dO nottorgive readily.
~~feog;:B;r;,;;=Bi:=--i~~~~::::~~~;;;;ii':N;d;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;:v;;;i;:K;;~=t.cn:=AQ;;ii;d~~t~-~---VIRGO (Aug."n-Sep£' 22,-Si!Ualions can - ,

of critical informatiOn today Instead of rely· .
ing on your memory. Your' anention span
might not be up.lo par.
ARIES (March 21-Aprll 111 Self·disci· .
pline is essential today . Do noflet plea· ,
surable pursuits take precedence over .j
your responsibilities. Remember: If vou :
plav. you'll pay.
TAURUS (April 20.Mey 201 Conditions
rnJght be tenuous toda~ 1!9tween you and ·
your mate. Try nol to do anything thai
would irritate him/h8r.
GEMINI (Mey 21-June 201 Don't count on

'

your co-workers 10 do your work lor you
today. Pleadirig won't alter conditions, so
do what needs to be dOne .yoursell.
CANCER (June 2hfuly 221 Any financial
problems you have to contend with today
are apt lo be of your own making. The
root causes are probably carelessness
andextravagance.
• •
LEO (July 23·Aug. 221 If yo.u have
authoritY over other wor1&lt;ers, dO not abuse
it today. Abusing your power could offend

develop the way ygu viaualize them today.
If you foresee positive resufts. you will do
all the right things to bring them about.
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0cl. 23) Companions
can exert a sub&amp;tantial influence over your
spending patterns toc~Jy. K they are' loose
with their money, lhere is a good chance
you'll folloW suit.
SCORPIO(Ot:L 2~. 22) If you hope
to achieve anything today, get motivated.
Vour Cha~ ln!lieatll yO\J rnlghl rationalize
and procrastlnll,le instead of resolving
proble,''" at this ti'l"'.

t~~;;;-"'fs;;;;;;;---~;t.~~~:T;j;";t;:;;;;;i;-~i;~jH;i.j~~~~~~~;;t."--t

�'

.

•
. ..... . 1~1lle

Animal abuse is symptom
of mote serious prob-lem ·
Ann
Landers
DWAaa Laaclen: Recenlly, you
responded to a reader from San
Anlllllio who was concetned because
her S.year-old nephew had choked a
rabbit 10 deiJh IJid it WIS known lhat
be bid been cruel ·to other animals.
Your ...wcrwas right on, Ann, but I
do wish you had said mort on the

subject.
The American Humane Associa. lion is this counlry's oldest child and

llliinal prolleelion organization. We
have chected out incideniS tbal are
hair-nising. It It frightening how
often children 1nd animals arc
victims in dyafunctional family
situations where spouse abuse, sexual
molellalion Jlld other brutalities are
cvuyday occumnces.
We are well aware that.children
who ue cruel 10 animals are in
desperlle need of help. One of the
mOlt dramatic examples of what can
happen i,( animal abuse by a child is
overlooked toot place in NewYOIIc
1t11e Jaa yeat A 13-year-old boy was
chaqecl wilb the murder of a 4-)'CIJ',old child. The small community was
in ahodc. Yet one year earlier, tbat
.neboyhadchokedaneighbor'scat
with 1 hose j:lamp, and 'Jiothing was
done about iL

· People still shrug off abuse to
animals. "It was just an animal,'
"Boys will be boys• and "It's just a
phase" are classic phrases heard from
the judicial benches across the
counlry. But cruelty speaks volumes
about the pcrpetralo~ no mauer if the
victim is human or animal.
~ Please belp us get the word out .0
parents, law enforcement olfteerS,
teachers, prosecuting attorneys and
other professionals who can help us
break the cycle of violence to
chil~n and animals. SINCERELY
•• MICHAEL E. KAUFMANN,
COORDINATOR OF EDUCATION,
AMFRICAN HUMANEASSOCIATION
DEAR MR. KAUFMANN: You
are right when you say chis problem
should be looked into and these
children need help. It is also true lhat
children often abuse animals to
release aggression chey feel toward
abusive adults. But merely knowing
WHY they do ·it is not enough.
Society also needs protection against
these sick kids.
I do thank you, however, for
givinc me the opportunity to shine a
spotlight on a problem chat needs a
great deal more visibility.
Dear Ann Landers: I am writing
in response to your miserable answer
to "Stumped,• who asked what to say
to her 17-year-old pregnant relative.
Her comment was 'I cenainly can't
say'Congratulations.'"Your advice to
remain silent was not much help.
As a childbirth ec!ucator, I have

----Honor ,.,.,.,.,...-...

end

.

Ohio Lottery

Southern

·•

REDUCTION

dealt with a great many pregnant '
teens. The last thing they neecHs
stony silence. True, tbis may not be a
situation wh_ere congratulations are in
order, but how about saying: "I'm sure .
this wasn't planned, but I'm here to ·
help you make tbe beat of it"? -LAKE OSWEOO, ORB.
DEAR OSWEOO:I gotcl&lt;lbbaecl
from all sides for my JUy-Uvered,
no-braincr reipoiiiC. Thanks to all
who SUJ8ested tbal I wlkc up llld
smen the coffee.
Dear Ann Landen: Our 7·year·
old son loves to visit Ilia gnndmodler
and sleep ovemighL She hu a ODebedroom apartment, and when
"Danny" Slays there. they sleep in the
same bed.
I feel tbat Danny is too old to be
sleeping with his grandmotber and
that he should be on the Couch. My
husband thinks I am "evil-minded.•
At what age should a child no Jonaer
sleep with a relative of tbe oppcllite
sex?- RHODE ISLAND
DEAR R.I.: Experts disagree on
Ibis point, but I say 4 years of age il
the cut-off poinL

races past

N-Y quintet

'. "'

·E

Page4

Vol. 45, NO. 162

1994 PONTIAC SUNBIRD

7

\n stoc"

$185

An alcohol probkm? How CG/1 ',ou
help yo~~rself or SOmtOM you love?
. "Alcoholism: How to Recogniu II,
'How to Deal Wuh It, How 10 Con·
quu It" will give you the tiiiSWU'S.
Sendaself~ssed, ltmg, bulilteusiu envelope IUid a checlc or IIIOMJ
oi'IUr for $3.65 (this illclllllu poll·
age IUid handling) to: Alcohol, do
AM l.antkrs, P.O. Box 11562, Cldcago, Ill. 60611-0562. (Ill CtJNJila,

I

'

Finance $8995 for 60 mo.@ 8.'75%

1994 BUICK CENTURY

1994 GRAND AM COUPE
OILY

$23712 .
PER MONTH
Vol, tift, crulu, CIIHite,
Power wlndowl, etc.

Auto, A/C, UH, cruiM, CIU lilt, Rl. dlfog
I

1983 CHRYSLER 5TH AVE.

The body of an exhumed infant ·Gilmore Cemetery on Forest Run
is on irs way to lhe Franklin Coun- Road.
The disinterment is part of an
ty Coroner's office for a complete
autopsy, investigators said Ibis ongoing investigation that drew
regional publicity when an extenmoming.
Lisa Faye Rose died Oct. 7. sive search was conducted for bOd1984, at two months of age, ies behind a Racine farm last
according to Meigs County Prose- month.
Family members of 54-year-old
·cutor John R. Lentes.
Meigs County Coroner Douglas Rose told authorities remains may
Hunter and investigators with the bave been bUried oo the Mile Hill
·Bun:au of Criminal Investigations Road property behind sOme sheds
-and Identification unearthed the and barns, Lentes said.
Autop~y results could be
infant. lhe daughter of Harold Rose
retony4
jn-l!boul three weeks. but
Sr. and Mary Rose on Tuesday,
charges,
If
ally are tO"be made, may
~tes· n~JIO!led.~ : ~. . ~
. · At tbat time of her death, tho Ifill be filed soon since auilrocrities'
coroner ruled tliat the cause WIS are investigating all"inConn\uion in
crib deatb. 1'be llurialtook
in Ibis complicated case, be added.

f~G~Dr~~,champayne se1ge wM '2495......................................... .Now '$1488

·· ld~Yrfm ~1~'At'c· Car~ Owne~.. ........................ ~............:.....................................$1888
'3995-::·· ...........,........... ~ ....................................,.NOW $2980

.· ... ~~~f~Atrz...............

l. .. ...... .. ....... ..... .. .................... .. .. . ... ...................... $3995

&lt; filllNW~r•e-me, PW, PL. One owner W/IS $6995..................................... $4888
·• ·• t59imtWfila?.'WA-~r&gt;·))~lx

. e·tj'o~~- .............................................................Now ss990

.. V--6 S

&amp;f.m ~~f-~rs·. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . NOW $6200

Exlnl

1987 ~~AN

1

· ~ ~l{rf ~&amp;1f~Fv~ll1'• sunroof, power windows, aluminum wheela ................$6500

place

. . • .Local trade-Shows T.LC., lilt, cruise, C81881te, duel tanks, only 84K, Extra Clean
,
·. ~ ~Y'Slt:l!!'N~W\iOl!!I&lt;~A· · ···~ ............ ..... ....................................... ~ALE AT_$6870

· · ~~cl!ffi-l'6'fM~A"f~NBiue cloth lmerior,locally owned. Priced right to movel .........$6990
.

.

Southern Board gives
-nod-to budget, pact

.

2

~ ~ ~passenger, wM $8995.......................................'....................... "ow $6900
· · Just lrlded on .-- Grand Prix, Platinum Beige finish, 561&lt;,
• .
.. v8B2sme,~~equlpped, ........... :!.............................. ,......... ....................... PN LY $7200

1
•_14arPb'ift'l~lll'cfi1flB- ~ln'tfe; super clean, 301&lt; W/IS $8995 ..................NOW $7400
·. 18~!1 ~f11\'d'fiLM.Jn 'ff~\lo,m ............... .:................ ................ PUR PRICE $7800

tom' photo) were, front row, Connie Pooler,
Melissa Dempsey, Laure• Young and ·Brlan
· Bowen; middle row, Jesslc:a Karr, Brandl ·
Reeves, Robert Murphy, Rebecca EYIDIIDd
Jennifer Mora; and back rQw, Heidi Nelaoa,
Amy Redovlaa, VIc VanMeter, Suaa Brewer,
Julie Brown aDd Heather Well. Tbe (II'Oup will
bold a food drive tills sprina 111111 will eoatiDue
other seniee projects, sucb u pllmtln&amp; llowen
near tlae building at bomecomlag, Roush nld.
(Seatlnel J!hotol by George Abate)

fNA'§ ~&amp;ROYR~'miJ'W&amp;'B!=~' ~·cruise, 24K W/IS $9900 .....CLEARANCE AT $7999
Scarlet &amp;Gray exterior, dual tanks; color TV. &amp;VCR, Ilk, cruise, casaette, pow.- windows &amp;loclul --~

~ \i~fBk-R'OAfiMAS'f~-~- ........... ................................................................. "ow ·~

. Only 34.000 low mlle_S. We sold ~ neiv, leather trim &amp; full luxury equlpmem
·
. ~~&amp;YlfiA~-~r-tANfi'Pl!!I);('S~'OAN"'"'""'""""'"'" """"'""""REDUCED TO $1 3,500 ·

t
f'll
b
k
t
f
h
h
.
•
er
a
IS
s
·
1
as
e
s
or
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o
1days
I
H b
1
homemade foods basket.

Points to rtmember wben doing
a gift basket are consider lbe person who will receive the basket and
persooalizc it to them. Pick a central tbeme and build around it, use
big baskets and other non-uaditional containers for flair, use plenty of
filler, line your baskets and tie on
large festive bows, she said.
Linda Mc:Coy reported on berbof-lhe-month, mistleroe, noting tbat
tbe main uses of mistletoe arc to
lower blood pressure and as a sedative. Mistletoe acts to slow tbe
heart rate and dilate the arteries,

~o, ~·
~ogger,
·199"i&amp;lf.lPJh"A·...-s·2·t&gt;oe)lnr4·r&gt;e)b~s
......................................................Now sto.~
power windows &amp; door locks, rear

thereby lowering blood ~ure. It ~

28K, bal ol36136 warranty

, " .

V-6 engine, auto, A/C, tih, cruise, 23K, ONLY $218.40 per montll with $500 down 6Q mo. @9.25
·.
10
1993"SUICKU·s·iern~tCO'SlO'M""'':'........................ ::............................. $ ·900 ~ale price ..

::r~::: s~:~~~~:ee:~~~ ~~ti'::

~~~ ~=e~~-~~~~~::~~tst:x~

.

effects on lhe liver. Indeed, there is
evidence tbat mistletoe may bavc
anti-tumor activities, said McCoy
cautioning tbal tbe berries are bighly poisonous, and bavc been claasi·
~~;!:~!~~!:~~nd Drug

~'ft~Cf~lnf4~·Jii(S~d~ew/IS$15,900 ..................................NO\Y $1 3,850 -. •
Loaded, tih, cruise, C8118lte, power windows, dual air baga,much more, WAS $14,11QD

·

. ·. i9!M'Cfi~V:·A'S't'AO'VA'tf"'"'""""'"""': ............................................. ,......f' STEAL AT$1 2,990
8 passenger, lUI, cruise,

pOwer windows,

4:9 t, V--6 engine, auto, AJC W/IS SJN~Bt

. i994'~0m'IAC'BO~N~'illtl.:~ ..........

exJ:~g:!n~~~i: ~~~':

+.................:............. . . . . ...

~~O''fe)'~n;101)'

.··. Dual ailbaga, power seat, pow8r windows, tih, cruise, casaette, loaded, 20,000 .low miles
· 1~ tfuft!kPARKAVENUE""· ................................................................... ~OW 15,740

evening. In January tbe steering
commiitee will be meeting to plan
~ 1995 calender.

&lt;

Power seat, pow.- windows, tih, cruise, ~· air big, antilock brakes. 31n lltOck

-----Community calendar------ ·-._ 1~~Bft:·A·~~lcsr:cecr·s~:R~...................................................... FRo_~ Tlae eo-nlty c.JeDr II
pabllllled at a free aenlce to
aoD•prolit aroupa wlalalal to

•r.•::

BEDFORD - Bedford Township Volupteer Fire Departmein
Commluee meeting 7, p.m. Tucs~y ill lbe town ball.

promo e •a ea or
of any type. Item•

POMEROY - Fralemal Order
of tbe
Auxiliary, pizza

:::.:~1-:."c'!i:~!~

. .•·- fm·~~~Jf'd~l~f~wildowa, IIUnrun wheels, 8KIOcll1 - - ~~··"·· ..,...,.

RACINE - First Baptist. .
~
Church, Racine, children's pro·• ~fl!' ~-Expect the~- ·
zram, 7 p.m. Wednesday. One aervice on Christmas Day at the · .· ~1ftf-~ wheels, Sharp "Black"

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in Middleport,
WEDNESDAY
· I p.m. Wedlleaday at~ cbun:b.
MIDDLEPORT - Bennett '
TUISDAY
. . Bennett -Post 128, American
TBUilSDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Special Legion, 6 p.m. WednesdAy for a
MIDDLEPORT- Live n=·vi
meetlDJ, Middleport LodJe 363, Chiislmal dinner followed by sack
th H
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·
,
L u1
m ....___..... y Mi...
m' • ""-'--·· -.l....oy.
. -. scene -at e ope """~""'t
30
7
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on Grant Street in Middleport,
F......... : P· · • ,....,. • udleport MIIODic Temple. Wc:.t in
Thursda
d Frida 7 t0 9
BA~
POMEROY- Alzbeimers IBid eacb ev~.
y,
p.m.
Related
Disordem
support
group,
I
'
BASH.A.N - Home Scbool pm. Wednesday. Senior Citi~ens . TIJPPERS PLAINS - 'I'unxn ,
Sll)iport Orouf meetlug, 7 p.m. Center. Dr. Richard Boone, psy- ,Plains Veterans of Fi&gt;reign Wars
Tlllll1ly, 2147 Bllblll Road F!l( chologist, 10 speak.
·Post 9053 meetin&amp; Thursday, 7:30 ..
. • ~ Clll949-3119.
p.m. a1 post home.
of 4aYL

! ·~

I

'

1.

•..!

to run • '
•:

4/ •.

.

,.

graphic equalizer, A/C, lilt, cruise, FOITlllt

G111n.

1

A 1995 budget of more than
• · $5.5 miUiou was approved, as was
• a two- year contract between lhe
Southern Local Teachers Associa• lion and the Soulhem Local Board
: of Education at Monday night's
• · board meeting.
.
·
' · The section of lbe budget dealing wilh the district's general operating expenses IOialed $3,704,872.
: The remainder of lhe $5.5 million
: includes funding for luncb rooms,
. state and federal programs, activity
: and athletic funds , and retirement ,,
· program funding, according to
: Treasurer Dennie Hill.
·
:
The. board also approved an
· advance draw of $300,000 from lhe
; county auditor on lhe February tax
' settlement for January and Febru' ary's operating expenses.
' : Tlie contract between lhe board
, ·and lbe teachers association will be.
, :in effect until July I, 1996, Super. · intendent Bob Ord said. No salary
·increases were included in the con: :tract and lhat mosl other provisious
· ·remained lbe same as lbey were in ·
; •lhe previous contract, he added.
;~
By a vote of 3-2 , the board
; :approved dismissing school on Fri. :day because of lhe Cbrisbllas boli: -day, wilh the makeup day to be
: :negotiated between lbe board and

lhe teachers.
Approval of several fields for
soccer, kindergarten through sixth
grade, was given by che board.
,
Brandon Floyd was accepted as
an open enrollment student, and
Mary Felts, William L. Gee, Joseph
Hall Jr., Melissa Heiser, Janelle
Hineman, Jennifer Martini, Tonya
Meadows and Melanie Van Meter
were hired as substitute teachers.
Tina Young wu employed as a
substitute cook..
·
The board accepted tbe organi·
zations of the Syracuse, Letart
'Falls-Portland and Raclne elementaries' PTOs, the Soulhern High
School Alhletic Boosters and the
Southern Junior High Athletic
Boosters so IIley can qualify for Jia.
bility insurance under the board
program. Fees for coverage are to
be paid by lhe organizations.
The board's organizational
meeting was set for Tuesday, Jan. 3 ·
at8 p.m. at the high school.
Attending were Tom ~Rosellerry,
president; Joseph Thoren, vice
president; Susie Grueser, Marty
Morarity, and C.T. Chapman,
board members; Ord, Jfillies Ray
Lawrence, superintendent pro tem,
and Hill.

Low tonlghtiD 301, .,...Uy

cbudr.Thu~y. pard7
cbadJ. High In 501.

2 Secllollll, 16 Pagee 35 cents
II Multimedia Inc. Nwapljlar

A TIME TO RELAX AND READ - ''Tbe Nlgbt Before
Cbrlstmu," written by Clement Clarke Moore In 1870, Is a
poe_m that e.Voys JIOJ!ularlty year after year, without getting old
Ia the sense of hnlng been beard many times. Julie Hubbard of ·
Syracuse relues Ia ber rocker with 4-year-old daughter, Sarah,
for a reading of the holiday perennial.

Fed delays action
on interest rate hike
11y JAMES H. RUBIN
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - Higher
interest rates are on lhe way early
next year, analysts say, even
though the Federal Reserve bas
decided not 10 play Scrooge during
lhe Cbrisanas seasOn.
Private economists disagree on
the size and frequency of future
rate increases. But they say the
economy is too strong and the dan·
ger of inflation too great for central
bank policy-makers to remain on
lhe sidelines for long.
':T,!IeY. c)10se, wisely in my
opirilOil; to leave monetary policy
unchanged for a time," said
economist Eugene Sherman of the
New York investment firm M.A.
· Schapiro &amp; Co. after lbe policy-set·
ling Federal Open Malt:et .Commit·
tee adjourned Tuesday without
boosting rates.
SbeiUlan predicted the central
bank would resume pushing inter·
est rates higher on Feb. I , at lhe ~
conclusion of lhe next meeting of
the 12-member FOMC. He said be
e~peciS four interest rate increases
in 1995, each one a half-percentage
point.
But economist Stepben Roach
of Morgan SlaDley &amp; Co. in New
York City said rates could be near
their peak during lhe current cycle.
"Unless I'm wrong on the inflation risk, the Fed has very lillie
tightening to do, •• he said.
David Jones of Aubrey G.
Lanston &amp; Co., a New York government securities dealer, speculat·
ed the nex1 increase in rates. could

come as early as mid-Januaryeven before the next FOMC meeting at lhe end of lbe month.
Federal Reserve Chairman Alan
Greenspan may have been given
aulhority Tuesday by lhe commitlee to "pull lhe trigger again
lhen,'.' Jones said, if inflation figures are worrisome.
Fed "actions will be very sensitive 10 price increases from now on
to stifle any expeCiations of infla·
lion,'' be said.

The Fed, which has boosted
rates six times since February, held
!l.ff m.Pviog again ailllt meeling in
private for nearly four hours Tuesday.
The .decision to remain on lhe
sidelines during lhe Cbrisbllas season came as no surprise. Only five
weeks have passed since the central
bank· s last rate increase - a whopping three-fourths of a percentage
point jump on Nov. 15 tbat was lhe
largest in 13 years.
· " The Fed made a bold move a
month ago," said Roach. " We
have yet to see anything close to
tbe .full impact from the earlier
increases. The Fed-waniS to mbve
in more measUred steps.'·
The stock market initially was
heartened by the Fed's decision, as
prices moved up after the
announcement. But stocks sank
later, with tbe Dow J,ones industrial
average down more than 23 points
at lhe close.
Beginning in February, the central bank ·reversed its five-year
course of lower or stable sbort-tenn
interest rates.

.Shell expansio-n prompts new rail car order
APPLE GROVE, W.Va. (AP)
- Shell Chemical Co. in Mason
County is expanding and bas
ordered 100 new rail cars from a
Huntington manufacturer, officials
said.
Tbe cars were ordered from
ACF Industries to handle shipments of raw materials and finished
products, said Barry Cristea, a
spokesman for Shell's Apple Grove
plant

The plant makes polyester resin

pellets, which are used in plastic
containers such as soft drink bottles, peanut butter jars and
microwave food trays.
The company is building an
addition to increase irs production
capacity by orie-lhird, 10 800 mil·
lion pounds a year, by 1996.
"I think Jan. 15 is lhe first date
of our cars coming off the line,"

Cristea said. "The re'll probably be
another order when lhe expansion
comes tbrougb."
ACF, which will retain ownership of lhe cars, will lease lbem 10
..Shell.
Dennis Nib ert , manager of
ACF' s Humington plant, said the
order won' I mean new jobs. The
plant will continue 10 complete
about six cars a day, be said.
But lhe order is a plus for lhe

busy plant. Nibert said.
"We're booked out rigbt now
lhrough three quarters of '95,'' he
said.

Because the Shell plant is only
aboul 30 miles away, Shell and
ACF are cooperating in lhe order.
Nibert said.
.
Shell employees will lour the
ACF plant 10 see bow the cars will
be built.

~Officials

defend use of force after
iattack_
er shot near White House
..
· · By NANCY BENAC
: Associated Press Writer
,;: WASHINGTON - Federal
: : offiC~ are ~efending lhe shooting
, . of a kmfe-wtelding homeless man
~: outside lhe White House as a justi; : fi_ed use o'f force because lhe ~
-did not follow orders to give up liill

; :lions have been ·
light
: :Of a string of recent incidents, but
~ ;POlice rejected any suggestion IIley
; .were more prone to shoot.
::· :'They rook the appropriate
; acuon under the circumstances,"
:Park P~l.ice spokesman Maj.
} l.obert Hmes said Tuesday. "If
:they were not quick to fire, we
; J;ould have an officer over there
:~tb a knife wound." '
·. Hines said the officer who fued
!be shots wu a seasoned employee
·who would ~ assigui:d to adminislrallve duty mkeeping with roul)Il~

procedure. The officer was not Secret Service officers before lhe
shooting.
identified by name.
Extraofdinary video· footage
The alleged attacker, Marcelino
Cornie!, 33, was in very critical from the Conus television service
condition at a local hcispilal after shows lh~t in tbe fmal moments of
being shot twice by a Park Police lhe confrontation, Cornie! stood
offtcer during the sidewalk slaDdoff practi'cally motionless facing four
on P-enqsylvania Avenu e. He officers. one of whom . then
undersent surgery twice, the second advanced and fued.
one
·
12
after
Witnesses said officers had
four hours until &lt;hnorllv
a.m. lilts morning.
Prosecutors planned to charge
·
Cornie! with assaulting a federal
officer, said Monty Wilkinson, a
spokesman for lhe U.S. attorney's
office. Additional charges could be
added later, investigators said. The
assault charge carries a maximum
penalty of 10 years in prison.
Wimesses said Comiel ·cbarged
across Pennsylvania Aventie from
Lafayeue Park armed wilh a knife
and menaced Park Police and
II

r

f'(lli TU
:Jl

r: u J:

· made in 1990 while campaigning," Story said. "It's been designated ~ as a
Ibis in lbeir lifetime," she said.
.
.
t&lt;:okosing Construction Co. of Fredericktown beat out five other con- major corridor in Obio."
The project bas succeeded because of the collective commitment from
tractors witb a bid of $12,320,373.45, Collins said. The olher bidders
were, in descending order of bids, Geupel Conslruction, Elmo Greer &amp;. numerous counties.and across state bounllaries, be added.
"It's 1101 everything we need, but it's a start," Stoiy said.
Sons.. Beaver Excavating, Marshall C. Rardin &amp; Sons and Shelly &amp;
About 3 million cubic yards of dirt will be moved on Ibis project,
Sands.
Five of the six contractors were under the slate estimate, which means Yoacbam said.
"This is a high priority pr()je~:t or il wouldn't have been funded," she
lhe project remains feasible, be added.
Kokosinc spokesman Dan Compston said bis company can't wait to said. "'fbe remaining portion of the connector is also a high priority."
The rest of lhe interslate connector is divided into lbree projects. The
begin moving dirt.
ne~t section from the Ravenswood bridge to Rolandus could be sold by
The fum bas complell:d numerous projects for public and private entities over 40 years. Area projects included continuing conslruction of the lhe beginning of 1997, Yoacbam said.
Pending federal approval. lbe next phase could be designed in-bouse to
Gavin Power Plant saubbers and work on U.S. 35 in GalliaCounty.
The company employs about 1,000 workers each year, wilh at least 50 save time, she added. H this isn't accepted, lbe project must be approved
by Slate, re~ional and then federal highway offiCials in Washington.
employees devoted to che intenlate cor1Declor sile, he added.
Soil bonngs and aerial photos will likely be done this spring for the
·~we're always concerned wilh the safety people near tbe site," Compne~t phase, Yoacbam said.
ston said. "We don't mind sidewalk superintendents from afar."
About $1.3 million in federal highway dcllars were raised by outgoing
Local connci:tor coordinator Steve Story bailed lhe sale of the project's
U.S. Rep. Ted Strickland this year. This money wiU be spent on the prefmt phase.
"II shows Gov. (George) Voinovicb is trying to honor the promise be
(Continued on Page 3)

·Autopsy slated ,....-- Christmas is... for infant's body

,•

Finance $11,490 for 60 mo.@ 8.75%

ALL CARS PRICED FOR CLEARANCE!

-~&lt;fiE~-~~/IS

~-, , .~.,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, December 21, 1994

By GEORGE ABATE
Sentlael News Staff
Meigs County celebrated a milestone Tuesday as iiS.fmt stretcb of new
highway in more than 25 years is being JRpared for construction.
A 2.25-mile section of lhe U.S. 33 connector was sold to an Ohio fum
for about $12.3 miUion, more than $2.5 miUioo under lhe state's estimate,
said George CoUins, spokesman for the Ohio Deparunent of Transportation Districl 10 office in Marietta.
"It's a big day for Meigs County and would be for any county to have
a project of this size," said CoHins, who bails from Meigs County and bas
worlced on Ibis project since lhe early 1970s.
"Our future depends on this," be added.
Tbis first phase of lhc connector, between Rock Springs and Five
. Points, may be underway by February once the contract Is signed and
could be ready for use by tbe spring of 1996, said Nancy Yoacbam,
ooor spokeswoman.
· The 1.8.6-mile connector - wbich is divided into four sections from Rock Springs to lbe Rltcbie Bridge a1 Ravenswood. W.Va., is scheduled for completion by 2000, Yoacham added.
''lbere are people in Meigs County who lhought they would never see

Finance $10,490 for 60 mo.@ 8.75% .

send $4.45.)

~

CQnnector's first phase sells for $12.3 million

1994 BUICK SKYLARK

ONLY

.

en tine
Copyright 1994

.Finance $11,490 for 60 mo.@ 8.75%

Denise Arnold presenltd a program oo bOiidlly Blft ba8kcts when.
tbe River Valley Herbalists met
recently at Seyler's House of Treasures for a holiday dinnea' party.·
Tweuty-Four members and
guests, Sharon Toothman of
: Ravenswood and six members of
the newly formed Gallia area interest group, joined the Herbalists for
lbe dinnct party.
Arnold displaying many baskets and gave suggestions on bow
to fill tbein. There was a soup bes~ket. a gardener's buket, a fresh
Jab basket. a cookie basket and a

•

On January 1at, 1995 our entlraliwentory Ia subJect to peraonal property tu:...
In order to lower the tu: we mu~ reduce our entire atock of new I uaecl C.nl

.

EASTERN ELITE,.._ Eutern High School
IDcluctH Ita National Honon Sudety membets
Jut WMk. ne lltudents Jllllllt demoiBtrate oer•
Ylce, la!denlalp, dander ud .tcholanlllp to be
noml•ted, ad'Wtlor Cheryl R-h ald. Selllon
IDdllded last year (top pboto) IDdllde, trom left,
· hlltorlan, Jeulca Chevalier; treuurer, Ryan
Bacldey; prealdeat, CbarUe BlueD; sec:retary,
D.vld TOIIIIdu; and Ykle l:.ealdeat, Jeaka Rad·
toni. Studeata Inducted r tile lint tiJM (bot-

Pick 3:
833
Pick 4:
. 8680
Buckeye 5:
5-18-21-25-30

l'j

the knife, which it turned out was
taped 10 his band.

Hines said lhere was no doubt
the suspect posed a threat. "The
fact tbal be bad the knife taped to
his band, what does tbat teD you?
He wants to use it. He wants to get
at them,' · Hines said.
·
In Anaheim, Calif., police Sgt.
Mike Hannah said relatives who ·
filed a missing persons report on
Corniel on Aug . 26 notified 'him
that be was the man shot in fronl of
the While House.
·

SHOOTING-SCENE- tvlde~ teclmldluu
examlaed the scene of 1 sllootlag outside the
Wlalle a - Tuesday. A mUJ, said to have been
rllllllintl toward the White Boase bnndlsbinl a

lmlfe 01' machete, WIIS shot by police Ia the tJaJrd

slaootlai laddeaht or near the Wlalte Boase Ia
two IIIOIIths. (AP)

1

'

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