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                  <text>Ohio Lottery

Tuesday's

· football

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Pick-3: 191
' Pick-4: 9902
Cards: 10-H; 3-C;
9-D; J~

results ·
- Page 3

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Vol.41. No.17S
Copyrighted 1991

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Partly cloudy tonight. Low
In mid 20s. Partly cloudy
Thursday. High In mid 30s. ·

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1 Section, 1 2 Page• 26 Ceflti

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, January 2, 1991

A Multimedia Inc. NeWIPBPBr

River crests ·above flOod level m Pomeroy .
•

By Charlene Hoeflich

less than a foot. Both K &amp; C and

in Pomeroy late Wednesday morning after having crested at 3:42 a.m .
at.49.4 feet- 3.4 feet above the
flood level of 46 feet
While the high water did not
reach the predicted 52 feet, it did
come high enough to get into most
of the businesses on Main Street,
cause closing of numerous roads,
and create some inconvenient and .
emergency situluions.
·
Main Street was closed late New
Year's Eve as water moved onto the
street The street remairied covered
with · water late this morning. Village officials would not predict
when the water 'fi:Ould be off the
street and baclt int2r'its banlc since it
is dropping so slowly, about a tenth
of a foot an hour.
The town New Year's Day was
jammed with sightseers and ttaffic
which had .to be routed up· and
down Second Street caused lots of
congestion. .
·
Today all of the schools in the
Southern Local School Disbict, the
Pomeroy Elementary School, lUld
Carleton School in Syracuse were
closed because of the high water.
A~id-morning
the Ohio
Departn_lent of 1iansportation
reported numerous Slate highway
closings. Roads closed included
248 at Keno; 124 at Roclt RunLong Bottom, 338 at Antiquity, .124
from Racine to Pomeroy, 33 from
Pomeroy to Route 7, Route 7 between Pomeroy and 248, and 124
between Rutladn and Rokute 325: _
Most of the stl)rCs while expecting three to four feet of water, got

block had about six inches on the
floor, while in the lower _block, the
Fallric Shop had just enough water
to wet the carpeting. While niost of
Jlte businesses inoved eve_rything
out of basements which were completely flooded, one 'store reportedly did not move merchandise
from the lower11 level and experienced a sizable loss.
'Jim Anderson reported that no
water got into Ande!'S9ns. This
morning workers were putting
paneling back' onto the walls which
had been removed New Year's Eve,
in preparation for the water coming
in. The furniture which had been
taken to the second and third floors
of the building was being moved
back down into the showroom
today and Anderson said he anticipates that his business will be
ready to open at -the regular tjme
Thursday if the water is off the
street
, ·Several emergency sit.uations
were created by the high waters. At
5:40 a.m on New year's Day the
Middleport Fire Department was
called to Noble Summit-Bradbury
Road, County Road 5, for Charlie
Meadows, Meadows had attempted
to drive through high water when
his vehicle flooded out He had
spent about five hours on the top of
his truck waiting to be rescued. He
was transported to Veterans
Memorial Hospital where he was
treated and released.
In the Racine area, five trailers
on. the river bank were moved by
• Continued on page 7

Flood water was slowly receding Swisher and Lohse in the upper
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· A LOOK DOWN MAIN STREET • The Ohio River made its 1.
way aci"Clll Main Street in Pomeroy early New Year's Day. This pic·.
ture, taken from the steps of K &amp;: C .Jewelers about 9 a•.m., shows

the water as it made its way to the front doors of many Main Street .
businesses· who were reed to move their merchandise to higher
ground.
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·,~~ ~!;r~~ ~~~~t: u?~ !!!!R,~ uckey~.!~~!:. v.. w.,
PeQple flooded out from homes Telephone cable In the Auglalze banks.
and shops along the raln·swollen River In Defiance became looile
The National Weather Service ·
Maumee River In northwest Ohio and telephone company officials recorded 1.95 Inches· of rain
gradually were being allowed to worked throughout Tuesday to Sunday at Cleveland Hopkins ·
return· Wednesday to begin the stabllze the cable to retain International Airport, following
cleanup. .
service to 6,000 customers.
0.9 Inches of rain that fell
Main St~t In Grand Rapids .,. FamUie&amp;-ln the tiny village of Saturd~
· .
. wa~ reo~J19c4 aad w.ater-.left Valley View usherad'1n tbe N&lt;?W . A
; Crof&amp; .disaster tearri
homes al)d trailer courts In Year, ·not with song and cham· spe~ our hours In Valley VIew
~fiance, where 60 people were
pagne, but with mops and Mondaypas_slngoutclean-upklts
buckets to clean up after a door-to·door while residents ·
evacuated earlier In the week.
The flood through Grand Rap·, 'week!!nd of flooding forced many pumped out basements or sought
Ids (arced shop owners to close from their homes.
help from the mostly volunteer
ddrlng the hollday weekend. U.S.
More than 100 people In the Fire Department.
Route 24 across the river that had Cleveland suburb were evacuFa mUles In Willoughby H1lls
been closed to traffic was al· a ted from 60 homes Sunday after sought refuge, some at a make·
lowed to reopen.
a $wift and steady rainfall fell on shift shelter at City Hall, when
Defiance officials said damage saturated gllound and caused the the Chagrin River ~n to rise
dangerously high.
"The current was raging Saturday · night," said ·resident
Kathy Wargo. "It's amazing to
see the force that water has:" It
moved so fast It was scary.
Thank God the river dldrt't come
up 6 Inches higher because It
would have flooded our home.
"We usually don't have to deal
with flooding until Feburary
when the Ice thaws," Wargo said.
Other families around the state ·
weren't as lucky as Wargo. ·
The Maumee River 1n Defiance- ·
crested at 17.3 feet.
· A drive around the area on New
Year's Day found summer---·
homes and, cot~ges flooded.
Much of the former Vollmer's
Alnusement Park Is under water
while U.S. Route 24 which runs
pa\'allel from Maumee to Napoleon has been shut down and
traffic rerouted.
· TheOhloDepartmentofTransportatlon said several highways
along low areas were closed In
Defiance, Fulton, Hancock, Lu· ·
cas, Ottawa, Paulding, Putnam,

A FUN
year old Zac:h Davis just couldn't
resist the temptation to 10 wadinl iD the Bood waters oa Pomeroy's
Maia
TUetday. But hill .....tsr.Jan and Greg Davis, had an·
ticlpated that. He had oa high boots.

S""'

Local

briefs--~

Deputies probe·two accidents
Meigs County Shrziff~s deputies investigated two accidents on
Tuesday evening.
.
• At 7:4S p.m., . Alan B. EdwardsOn of S.t Joseph, Mo., was
westbound 011 State Route 143 in the s!Iaight stretch and struck a •
wrecker that was sitting across die roadway hooking onto another
vehicle. The wrecer 'had its warning lights on and the operator was
·waving a ftaslllight
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Edwardson's 1978 Oldsmobile struc~ the towing section of Manley's 19,81 GMC wrecker, and .both vehicles sustained moderate
damqe.
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-"iei~n was-cited to Meigs .COWity Court for failure , to con~

tiol.·

At 11 p.m., Steven A. ~vine of Charleston, yt.Va. was
southbourid on U.S. 33 and ran into high water at Enterpnse.
According to the ~' Levin• started to back out and ran
' into a ~tch. The 1987
sustained heavy watt.c damage. · ·
• ·sheillr Jame1 M.
repona !hat David Carsey of Racine
JqKllled Oli Monday dial be d 11988 YIIIUlha four wheeler ~len.
· AccOrding to Soubby, lbe whlcle is reported to be white with
new tires and cbfome wheels.
-.
lnvestiption is condlluing.

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and Williams counties.
Mayor Thomas Wiseman safd
some sandbags were being
placed In Defiance streets that
run along the river. The mayor
said the flooding was the worst
• .Continued or. pa~e 7
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parts of Fourth Street; Mechanic Street and But·
ternut Street were underwater as the Ohio River
· overflowed its banks New Year's Eve.

WATER, WATER EVERYWHERE· Waters
from the Ohio River were everywhere New
Year's D~y IJi Pomeroy. T~is WJ~S the scene near
the Pomeroy Fire Department
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Some

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Fire chief
mjured in

Monday blaze
A Monday house fire has left an
Antiquity ~oman homeless and has
sent a Syracuse ~ghter to the
hospital.
. Sy_racuse Fire Chi f Eber Pickens was reported to be in stable
condition at Veterans · Memorial
Hospital on Wednesday, after fall- '
ing from the ltlof of the Dorothy
Graham residence on State Route
338 late Monday morning. A
spokesperson from the hospital
reported Wednesday ·mornih$ that
Pickens suffered baclt injunes in ·
the fall.
The one-story ,frame structure
has been . dec~ a total loss, I!Dd
all of the contepts of the home were
destroyed as weD. No one was in
·tho home, the fonnt.r Stobart
, resideqce. at the lime of tbc fire.
·
Accordin&amp; to a spotcspc2son
from Meigs County Emergency
Medical Services, units from ·
TOO'AL LOSS • 'he~ llCDe ol Dar·
leae G~ na d1 tu,ed Ma.day mora~
SyracUJC and Racine were dislaa biaze, whlcb a110 ..a IJi'lale Fin Cblef
patChed to the ICeiiO of tbc blazC at
Eber Pickens to tile llllplte), th1111 rl the lbcine
9:S3 a.m.
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aad Syracue fire departmats were dispakhtct
to tile Keae o1 the 8re, wldcll occurred at approxlmatel 9 a.m. (Seatlae! Pboto by Dennis
Wolle)
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.c.· onime_n ta.ry

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Wednesday. Janu.v 2, 1991

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111 Court

silee

1990: ''A·Year of Turbulent Change"
occaslo~l

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By U.S. Rep. Clarence· Miller

As the days on this year's outside of an
nalr·up
,
calendar diminish, It Is time we on the West Bank. things were
d
ts
' ·that did . unfold
DEVOTED TO THE INTEREST~ OF THE MEIGS· MASON A~A
look ·back at where we have beeq relatively calm In the Middle
. eve1;:men
th All in all ·.
12
~~
so that we can get a better fix on East.
.
~~;:- ha~ pa;t ::be\ year of
'
l:l:ffi;:::l I"T"-''-_,..,,.,....,;,.c:::to""'
where we aPe going.
As optimistically as 1990 beturbulentc:::ge: much change ·
~v . .
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It's that time .of year when we gan~ It would have been difficult
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all should pau91lo· to refle«:t and to anticipate how pessimistically
for the better but some change
· ROBERT L. WINGETT :
CHARLENE !IOEFLICH
remember. 'We shouid pause to it would &lt;;onclude. Asthe book ls
~~~~~;~r~~st noteworthy was
,.
· Publisher
General ~aa.ger
x;ecall both that which was about to close on 1990, the world Is
h
d Pf h
ld ·Cold
·•· pleasant and that which was poised for war as the United
I e en o t e 45 year 0
·
N
·
War With the collapse of com·
..
allons and Iraq build up their
· ·
.. painful. In· that there Is always a
PAT WHITEHEAD
1 . E t Ger
lesson
to
be
learned
from
life's
reSpective
~orces
along
the
Saudi
munlst
reglmdes
C
n • asl
k~
Assistant Publisher/ Controller
. r len·ces • It makes sense to aild Kuwait borders
'
many, Polan . zecnos ova
expe
.
'
As 1990 !gn
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and Hungary with 'l'evlslonist
I' •
stop and sort out the significan t
f Msl hs offG, the govern- . governments place In Ruma nia
A MEMBER of The Unl\ed
Dally Press .
Assocl8tion and the Amer ican Newspaper Pubus':f. Association. ·
J:iappenlngs of the year that just men 1 o
c a11 orbechev Is
Yu"oslavla and Bulgaria and
1
1
1
completed. · , •
ncreas ng Y turning away fr om
&amp;
d
So before we sing "Auld Lang . further reform and-turning back , wlth the reunlflc,atlonofEast~n
LETTE R S OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
word s long. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with
Syne," before we say farewell to the clock towa~d strong, central · West Germany, the abilitY~f ~e
name, address aiid telephone number. No unsigned letters wUI beputr
1990, I would like to devote this controls In an effort to stifle the
Warsaw Bloc t9 pose a a e.
lls)led. Letters should be In good taste, addr essing Issues, not personall·
· week'·s column to an appraisal of Independence move ments In
threat to the security of West!'rn
ties.
th.ls past year's significant many of Its socialist states.
Europe has all but dlsappea.red.
events and developments,,,
Once relatively · stable oU
Who would have thought at the
1990 was 3 year that started prices ·f luctuate wildly wlth'each
beginning of 1990, that later that
· with great promise. The Wall . hint of peace or war In the · same year, we as a natiqp would
was doW1'1 and the flush of. Perslan .Gulf. As 1990 draws to a
·be offering trade assisfun!!e to
freedom was rushing through sad close; so too does the
our principal Cold War adver·
Eastern Europe. The Soviet Uruguay Round of International
sary, the Soviet Union. In te rms
Union . was in the throes of trade negotiationS. Fractured by
of foreign policy, 1990 was truly a ,
dramatic change as reformers disagreements over the agriculmost significant year. Not only
called for a total reworking of tural policies of the European
dldtheColdWarcome toaclose,
that Communlststate. There was Community It appears the four
but So did the war In Nicaragua.
a cease-fire In Nicaragua as that year negotl~tlons will not result • With the eleetlon of Mrs.
country moved toward national 1n the desired treaty and that the
Chamorro that country likewise
elections. . ,
· trading nailons ~f the WQrld will
voted to tum away from the
. In Panama0 Manuel Noriega revert to protectlonsim as as
failed policies of a Marxist
.
By STEVE GERSTEL
.
.
government to free ·enterprise
had just been deposed and a .new means · of righting , perceived
WASHINGTON (UP!) - With a zeal that would have drawn the
de mocratic government In· ln!!Qullles. ·
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and free speeQh. Everywhere one .
•·admiration of many a n a.nti-royallst during t11e French Revolution, ·
stalled. Our nation's economy . • Now that I've painted a fairly
turned In '1990 dernocr.acy wa~ on
:·House Democrats sent two aging and weary committee ~.halrmen to · was continuing on Its e;ocparislon' bleak picture of what lies ahead ,, the move. Add to that t he
.•the guillotine a nd the mob thirsted for still one more bloody head.
1st course and - unemployment as 1991 gets underway , perhaps 1 · emergence of the Unit~ Nat1ons
•.. In their party ca ucus, the Democrats axed Rep. Glenn Anderson, Das ~ ·viable Instrument for
was .at a long-time low. Fuel should reture to 1990 for a few
•Qillf., the chairman of ihe Public Works Committee, and Rep. Frank
prices were generally stable, and moments to point up the positive
maidtalnlng world peace as
: /mnunzio, D-Ill. , the chairma n of the House Administration
Committee.
,
;.: ;\pd they were honing the knife for Rep. Henry Gonzales, D-Texas,
' ·. chairman of the Senate Banking Committee, who barely survived to
'){row old a little longer.
• · Although many issues played a part In the rank-and-file revolt
(against the three cha irmen, they shared one common burden- great
rage. Anderson is 77, Annunzlo Is 75 and Gonzales 74.
·· Age, by Itself, did not cause the revolt. After all, six committee
·chairmen are ove~ 70, and Rep: ,Ja mie Whlt!e!1, D:Miss., chairman of
'the Appropriations Committee, Is so 9ld he doesn't lls.t his age. But he
has been in Congress since 1941.
·
Anderson an&lt;) Annunzlo were the victims of a younger, different ,
gerwration of congressmen - ma ny o1 whom came to Washlnltlon
during the post-Watergate years- who chafed under the autocratic
,rule of their eider s a nd refused to accept seniority as the pinnacle of
'virtue.
·
; These congressmen are now moving Into positions-of power In the
:DemoCratic caucus and they want aggressive, knowledgeable
·chairmen who are willing to lead more by consensus than by flat .
·; .Interes tingly , no such purges take place In the Senate whero
:seniority"Is still sacr.osarict.
· ~
·: A few committee heads have been challenged but ev~lp (he years
·\yhere civil rights legislation was an overriding IssuE!, ·only a half- · ~· ' ·
.'hearted at tempt was rilape.to depose Sen. James Eastland, D·Miss.,
;the segregationist chairman of \he Senate Judiciary Col'l!irljttee.
·
, • The best, most· recent example of how deeply Ingrained the
:seniority system Is was _the flap between Sen . Richard Lugar, R-Ind .,
·and Jesse Helms. R·N.C., for the post of senior, or ranking,
~epublic an on the Foreign Relations Committee.
.
·
: Helms. the more senior of the two, kept his campaign pledge when
:Republicans controlled the Senate to serve as head of the Agriculture
.Committee, ceding the chairmanship of the Foreign Relations
:Committee to Lugar. ·
,
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• But when the Oemocrats seized the Senate in 1986, and took back all
1:!' the chal rmanshlps, Helms pulled rank on Lugar and.demanded he
~ the top GOP member on Foreign Relations.
•'. ·Lugar won that fight,· which was ugly, with the backing of some
•&gt;
~ena t ors who detested Helms ,· considered Lugar mucJ! the better
J:·
p1an, yet refused to meddle with the seniority system.
. .
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•- What did not escape the senators who supported Helms Is that the
~e n!ority system, once broken, can be ignored again. And they
~·
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r'kal ized that the nex t victim mlgllt be any one ofthem.
.
: •Tha t possibllity is not one that seemed to have bothered·the House
pemocrats, Yet, those who deposed Anderson and Annunzio, Rep.
Mel Price, D-111., In 1985, and three committee chairmen In 1975 will
I
II
afso one day be old, weary and part of the es tablishment.
: And then, they too, may become the targets of stili .another
ll'enera l!on of Young TUrks.
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Press lnternatlona~land

Washington Window

Democrats on the
;;~u~ting edge again
..

evidenced by Its .role In the
current Persian Gulf crisis, and
what you have Is a year that
significantly reshaped the world
order
·
Do~esti~aliy an undesirable
s tati stic Is the ' rising homicide
rates be!ng'experience in most of
·tl · H
j
•
ou r country s ma or c 1 es. ow.
ever significant gains were
mad~ on a number of fronts. For .
.
,
.· . .
.
the first time In years , lt;~ppears
the pervas iveness of drug use !s
on the decline in our society as an
·
sing number of you
mcrea
.
..
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ng

~~~~~~n:vor::t~:e ~~;~~e~~~
1 .

called coca n.
Environmen!'llly , -Americans
have become q1creaslngly consclous of our finite resources and
appear more lncllhed that~ ever
before to take constructive steps
to halt the abuse and misuse of
our natura l surroundings.
Las tly. there appears to be an
increasmg awareness of the
value ofvaluesasmoreandmore
Ame ricans take a stand on such
pressing problem~ as child abl!se
and n.eglect and the 11eed for
qu a 11 t Y e ducat Ion and
Instruction.
Granted, as tl!e cuttalnrlses-on
1991, ,the ~tage ,set. til]~ Is a little
darker·than we d like 1t to be, but
just as 1990w~nt from clear skies
to d ark, perhaps the reverse will
take place In 1991.

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No new taxes... how about the old? .

Dear Editor:
. I would like to comment on Mr.
}:!oeflich' s column a'bout 'the
r increase in gasoline prices.
! Mr. Bush said "no new taxes"
i but nothing a bout raising old
' ones. He is asking the American
: PeoPle to conserve ·fueL I wonder .
1how mucli Air Force One has
i usee! on his .world tours and the
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SCandal

fishing boat guzzlers he has used.
I wonder what his ZIP code !s.
He's never In Washlngton, D.C.
WASHINGTON - Alush Ga·
when 400 Albimlan students
I believe Mr. Hoeflich Is using shl , a Yugoslavian surgeon, flooded hospitals In the Kosovo
tlie wrong words in "Keep . made the rounds In Washington
region complaining of nausea,
smiling." Maybe- It should be In October trying to get someone
stomacll cramps and breathing
"Keep grlrna~lng . ".
to . pay attention .to a chilling
problems. Overthenextfewdays
story. He made ·no secret about · more children came In with the .
VlrgU Walker his mission , even though he fully. sam!! ailments. Federal medical
"
,R acine expected to be thrown In prison
experts came from Belgrade to
~----------~~--------------,
•
when
he
got
home.
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Investigate and found no traces
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He was rlgl!t. On Oct. 26; .J n of polson. They concluded that
Prlstina, Yugoslavia, Gashl was
the children were faking it.
But .;a ·well-respected Frenc!t
attacked and beaten by a dozen ·
or so pollee officers armed with . doctor and human. rights advo·
machine · guns. · Then he was
c"te, Bernard Benedlltl, was not
convinced. He traveled to Yugos.pushed Into a car lind driven to "a
detentlon center where he was
lavla to do 'his own Investigation.
again beaten and detained for
It was harder than he had
anticipated. "Serbian pollee
four hours. He has been fired
from his job as dean Of the
guarded the doors to the hOSP,I·
University of Prlstlna medical
tals, confiscating the passports
school, ~d IIY.s that 1,000 of his
of forelpers and forbidding
colleapes have also been ftred
anyone from removing docu·
- all because of a story that the
ments or blood samples from the
Yuplivlan government IIYI Is
hospital . .
a lie, . concocted by Albanian .
Benedlttl managed to slip out ··
•· majority ·In the Kosovo region to ·enough blood samples· which,
embarr'a ss the Serbian
whenhestuclledthembackhome
governmebt.
.
In . France, convinced hJm that
· U Gash! Is not lying, someone
the children had been exposed to
tried . to polson hundreds of a polson similar to one used In
Albanian schOOl children In Yu· · pesticides. ·
--,.~!-...;.,.--" · goslavla and then cleared the
He now claims that nearly 3,000
-hospitals of Albanian doctors so
Albanian children were poisoned
between · February and May. by
they could not prove ·what h11d
happened·.
someone who toued canisters of
. Albanians and Serbian ethnic
toxins Into the schools during the
.groups In YuplavJa 11f1! not
hours . on)¥ Albanian children
above blaming each other for all
w,ere present. . (Yugoslavian
the Ills that befall either, · but
schOOls are segregated.) .
Dr. Barend Cohen, a Norwe- ·
Gash! , swears the polsonlnp
were not mere rumor.
· ·
: gUm human rlglits advocate a'nd
it happened on a day in March •physlcl•n. was on the scene with

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·College bOw~. gamebleakers

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By United Prela lallraa&amp;lonal
AU·Purpose
Georgia Tech's Shawn Jones2 TD pasaes, 1 I'IIShlng a1alnst
Nebraska. ·
, .
,.!:&gt;
CleQtaO!I'~ · DeCh•ne caim!ron
- 17 rushes for 76 yards, 2 TO
pules agatft.t llllnoil.

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r,•s SACK TIME for lbete Coloraclo defeaden,

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In the NBA...

hi the NHL_ .

Euler a.Co•fereaee
T...,

Allullc Jllvlokra
'

WoltoC..,._o

•

W L Pet. GB

Bostoo ............. .. ... 23 ~ .821
Phlllldelphla .. .. .... 1910 .655 4\1
· NeW York ............ 121~ .f44 10\0

Washlngtoo .......... l1 17 .tor 12
NPW Jer,ey ........ .. IO 18 . 3~7 13
Mlaml ................... 7 21 .250 16

nothing wrong with them.
Whatever the truth may be,
mistrust runs deep In the region.
The epidemic has never been
satisfactorily explained. A· spokesman for the Yugoslavian
Embassy In Washington tpld us
the story was manufactured for
political reasons.

·Palrldt-

Team
WL T Pta. OF GA
N.Y. Ra-a., ... ,21 \3 7 491:14 126
Pblladelphla ....... 2118 517146142
New Jer,ey ......... 19 13 9 17156133

8 .724
Cblcago ........... .. .. 20 9 .690
Detrolt ................. l911 .633

I
2\0
Atlanta =~ ....... l~ 13 .536- 1\0
Cleveland .......... .. 11 18 .379 10
Indlana ...........·..... 1!18 .379 10
Charlotte .. ........ : ... 9 18 .333 11

.'

w•••CO•I-e
MI-IDivto...

Team
W L Pet. GB
San AntCIIIO .....; .... 19 6 .7li0 · Utah .................... l9 9.. 679 1\0
Houstoo ..... .. ........ 1613 .~52 • ~
Dallas .. ,............... 10 16 . 38~ 91\ ,
Minnesota .......... .. . 8 18 .308 11\0
Orlando .... ,........... 7 23 .233
Denver :................ 6 22 .214

Today in hist~ry . .
follow.
.
·
The moon' is .waning, moling toward Its ·last quarter.
The mornlrig star Is Mars.
The evening stars are Mercury, Venus , Jupiter arid Saturn.
Those born «:!n this date are under the sign of CaprlfOrn. They
Include Vltglnla patrlo~Nathan!el Bacon In 1647; British Gen. James
. Wolfe, hero of the battle of Quebec In 1727; fan dancer Sally Rand In
1904; au thor Isaac Aslmov In 1920 (age 71) : singer Julius La Rosa In
1930 (age 61) and slnge!· S~ngwriter R?ger Miller In 1936 (age 55) ,

On this date In history: . , - - . .
In 1788, ~org!il ratified the Constltutloil, the fourth of the original
13 Clllonles to qo SQ,, and ·was admitted to the union. ·
In 1942, Japanese forces occupied Manua, forCing u.s. and
Philippine forces under Gen . Douglas MacArthur to withdraw to the
Bataan peninsula.
· •
In 1959, the Soviet Union launched L'unlk·l, the first unmanned
spacecraft to travel to the moon.
In 1974, President Nll!on signed a bill requlrlilg states to limit
highway speeds to~ mph or lose federal highway funds . .. ·'.
---

. A thought for the day: In a speech to a Jolrit meeting of Congr~s In
Aprll1951, Gen. MacArthur said, "In war there Is no substitute for
victqry.''
·
·
..

14\2
1411 ·

Padftc lllvlll..

7
L.A. l.ak!:"S ... ...... .16 9 . ~ 8
Golden State ... 9 ... 1513 , 136 1010
Seattle .............. ... 1215 .tff 13
L.A. cu_.... ..... 10 18 .~7 1~10
Sa&lt;ramento .. ........ 6 :10 .231 18\0

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

,.,.,

~ehtduled

WUblnStC11 . ...... .. 18 2213713313,5
N.Y. Ialandeta .... 1119 5 33108130

lforlt ~ rBooull ,

8 p.m . ·
lllllwauk.., at Charlotll', 7: 30

•'

.....

L.A. Clli'PIJ• at AUi nta . 7:30

p.m .

.

.

ft hlllll ~-laud. 7: 30 p.m.
~-•••u 7: 30p.tn.

•••""'""lana, 7:30p.m.
~olo,8p.

E

BostCII ................ 20

12 8 f813tl30 ·
MontrNL.. .......... I9 ~ 7 513131133
· Bllllalo ,.............. u 16 9 37130127
Hortlon1 .... ......... 16 20 I 36111135
Quebec ................ 9 ~ 7 25113111
ComplieD Ceol-- Norrla·I I I -

TWLTPta.GFGA
ChlCQo ............ .. 2713 3 5710 112
St. Loull ..... , ....... 2112 6181:11112 ·
Detroit.. .............. It 171121:11139

Bmr.,olllvlll• ·

WIMIJ1011 .. ........... 13 22 7 331r1151

rw...r···----·
.w-.,.
.......

New Jerf/IOY al Wuhlftllm

m.

IJtltll, ~ 30 p.m.
'tiHttle, 10 p.m.
'......'iiRiiJI!I!Uili!tf!
.. pmea
.
at Ill• roll&lt;, 7:30 p.m.
~ at Wuhlfti(CII, 7:30

-Loo liDceleo at N.Y. lllaadero.
7: :! p.ni' '
'
N.Y. R&amp;naj!roat P1t-l'lb. 7:35

p.m.

. . ,.,
•
New JoriO)[ at Chl.,.lo. 1 : ~ p.m .
ToiUito at MlnDHota, 8: 3S p.m.

.....

.......

LA. ~· at Orlando, 7:30
p.m.
Dlllla at Milwaukee. 8: 30p.m .
CJ11a1o at Houllm , 8: 30p.m.

OoMoil sa.te at Sacramento,
11:18p.m:
1-1,. Llllero ot .Portlalld,."l0:30' .
p.m.
'
'
'

..

ex-

. Mllwauk.. - Reocllecl .• .,...
• m81t With 11Mnl Alvin Robert1111
lor 1 &lt;11111,.&lt;1
thrOUih

llfl....

l

'

'
Mlchilan's Jon Vaughn - 15
carries; 128 yards ·a gainst
Mlsslulppl.
Mlchlpn's Ricky Powers -14
carries, 112 xards a1alnst
Mluiallppt.
Geortrla Tech's William Bell16 carries, 127 yards and 3 TDs
againSt Nebraska.

'
p ......
Mlchlian'a Elvis Grbac caner·hilh 4 TDs against
MlulJSippl.'
. ·
Miami's. , Craig Ericliaon CcuiOn Bowl-record 4 TDs
against Texas.
Recelvta,;
Michigan's Desmond Howard
- 6 receptions, 167 yards 2 TDs
against Mlnlaslppl.
Miami's Wesley Carrol- 2 TD
receptions aralnst T6As.
Team Offenle .
Michigan - 715 total yards (391
rushing, 324 pallf)ll) against r
Mississippi.
·
' TeamDef·Mlchllan- Forced6Michilan
turnovers.
Clemson- Registered 5 11ckl,
held DUno!J to 247 yanb.
.
Miami - Forced 5 turnoveu,
recorded 8 sacks and held Texas
to 205 total yanb.
lndlvta.IDefeue
Clemson's Arlington Nunn .,..
34-yard InterceptiOn retuni for
·· TD alialrist niinola. ·
Miami's Ruuell Mlirylalld -3
sacu against Texas.
'

Special Teama
I,'A

283·
298
359

256
317
412

378

354
TOTAL8 ............ 27 27111'7 1m

Vantouwr at lbrtlotd, 7: 3~ p.m.
N.Y. lalandll'a it Bullolo. 7: 35

v,ncoTllo~··-·
..... at - · 7: 31i .p. .m.
Qilobeo ot .St.
, 1:311 p.m.

~

(SVAC only)
TEAM __ _
WL PF
Sol!thern ....... ....... 6 1 39'1
North Gallla .. ... . .. 5, 2 418
Oak Hill .... .. .. . ... .. 5 2 4011
Hannan Trace .... : 4 2 326
Eastern ... ....... .... . 3 3 284
Symmes Valley ... 2 5 ..318
KY.ger Creek........ 1 6 272
Southwestern.:..... 1 · 6 234

C.lpty ., ... ......... 2214 H8117 131
Loo Alllelto ....., .. 1913 5 43151125
.EdmCIIIC11 ..... , ..... 1817 2 31125117

'.

714 733
733
736
386 507

(Reterves)

Mln..,.otA ....... :...1123 7 29121142
Tormto.. .. :.......... l2 26 2 26115160

· Mont~yllot Edmoruoo. 9:35p.m .. .
• Loo liDcelto 1! N.Y. Ron1ers,
7: 35p.m . •
Mln,..oto at Detroit, 7: 35p.m.
C.lpry •• Wlnntpoa. 8: ~p. m .

462 480

· (Conference)
Hannan Trace ... ,. 6 0 476 304
Sol!thern.............. 6 "1 · !133. 429
Eastern ............... 4 2 434 431
North Gallia .. ... ... 4 3 577 537
Symmes Valley ... 4 3 · 400 417
Oak Hill .. .... .. .. .. .. 2 5 456 515
Kyger Creek.... .. ... 1 6 411 533
Southwestern." "" 0 7 386 507
TOTALS ......... . :. 27 r7 11'71 11'71

p.m.

......, •• pm.

No aames

PF PA
727 5s.
6f5 481
610 623

' I

Pittsburgh .......... 2118 315176154

Vancouwr .. ........ 17 n 3 r/129145

Portland ........ ....... 27 4 .871
Phoenlx .. .............. 11 9 .m

T~ay Is. Wednesday, Jan. 2, the second day of 1991, with 363 to ,

(Overall)
'TEAM
WL
Southem .... ..........s 2
Hannan Trace ..... 7 2
EaStern ..... ...... ... .6 3
Syt11J11411 Valley ... 4 '4
North Gallla ........ 4 5
Oak HUI .............. 3 7
Kyger Creek ........ 2 1!
Southwestern .......O ·7

........ JIIvloiGII

Mllwauk.............. 21

'

'I'

SVACstan~

•

Ceolnl Divis...

.!"

lbe Irish 18-8 Ill their atronp~~t clilm to the
aa&amp;lonal cbamplollllhlp. (l!JPI) '

Scoreboard ...

By Jack Anderson_ and Dale VanAtta
Benedlttl. Cohen ,. took his own
· blood samples and found no
traces of polson, but he will not
rule out Benedittl's findings . And
Goben· told us that It would have
been Impossible for the Serbian
authorities to do adequate testing
on all the children and conclude
In justa few hour~ that there was ,

Orup Bowlin Miami. Fla. The Baffal- edpd

wbo gift-wrap Notre Dame quarterback JUek
. Mlrer .&lt;In white) Ia lheflrsthalfof'l'laesda,·•IIJbt's

Yugoslav.doctor punished·· for exposing

Berry s World

;

By oiEFF SBAIN
out the clock to what Is expeeted
ud they certainly have every,
In other New Year's bay rec:overlllg two of three onslde
Fl•ca Bowl - At Tempe,
..
UPI s,on. Wrtw.
to be Colorado's first national
right to claim a national cham·
rames. No.- 7 Wlllhlnatoan ~ou:t·_,_~
kle:u~ln
~the~flna:~l;6~:30~
. r~~=-At-.:·:
Ar~;tz~:·~·:;;~~m~~threw for
Both No. 2 Georgia Tech and
title. ~- ~
- piollllltp;" lild OibOrne, wbose
luted No. 15 1:owa.wt II
No. 4 Mlaml 1118de loud pitches
''That's the way I · feel, "
team lost Its fourth atralght bowl Rose Bowl, No. 10 Tl!lllleltee Tampa, Fla., DeChtllll! Cameroa .and three touchdowns, l nc,ludlng
for the national championship Colorado head coach Bill
game.
clipped No. 23 VlrltDIII 23-22 In t11rew for two touchdowns to lead · two to AnthO"ny CummiJIIII,
Tuesday, but all their posturing McCartney 11id. " You've gpt to
At Dallas, ·c raig Erickson the Sligar Bowl, No. 11 Qemaoo ClenutOn to fta firth strallht bowl Louisville erupted for 25 ftrat·
probabJy won't dQ them any give a lot of credit to our defense ·.threw tolir IO\ICbdown pules In · blanked No. 17 Dllnoll ~ Ia tbe victory. cameron threw TO (Juarter points. Nagle completed
good. . ,
- holding Notre Dam~ t9 nine
leading Miami to the blgelt Hall · of Fame Bowl, No. 12 puaes of 14 yanb to Doug 20 of 33 passes on the day ,
No. 1 Colorado tightened Its
points. We were lucky there acorlng ·outburst In the 55-year Michigan blasted .No. 14 Mlssll· Thomas and 17 yanb to Howard breaking the record o!-422 yards ·
grip on the top spot on New
they clipped on (!small's) run·
history of the bowl.
slpl 35-3 In the Gator Bowl a11d Hall, finishing with Ul yards set last year by Florida State's
Year's Night, as Eric Blenlemy back. But we bl!ld on." .
Fl!eled by a remark early ln
No. 16 LoiiiJvllle abocked No. 22 ppllq,_Otrla Gar docltl added Peter Tom Willis. Playlq In
scpred from a yard out In the
Both Qeorgla Tech and Miami the week by Texas offensive
Alabama 3f..71n the Fleata Bowl. field aoal~ of 18, 26 and 43 yards thetr tlrst bowl game st.nce'1977,
thl!ld qW!rter to give the Buffa· posted stroq victories In thetr · lineman Start Thomas, tile Burri· . Role Btn;l - · At Pasadena, , tor the Tl!ll!rs.
th~ CArdinals' 25 points In the
loes a 10-9 victory over No.6 bowl1famesonNewYear'sDay, caneaplayedapbyslcalbrl!ndof Calif., quarterback -Mark Bl'll' . Gatorllowl - AtJacklonvllle, first quarll!r al so set a Fll!lta
N:~tre Dame In the Orange Bowl.
hoping ·to. attract the eyes of . football that also resUlted In an
pell ran for two touc:hdownl and · Fla., ~lvis Grbac threw for ~ Bowl record.
The 1990 national champion voters.
·
aatonlshlng 202 yards 'worth of pulled for two others and Wa· yard1 and four toucbdowna,
..,arBowi-AtNewOrleans,
willbedetermlnedWednesday!n
At ' Oi'lalulo, Fla., Georgia penalties,
shiJIIIOD got two m~ scores lncludlnc a pair to Desmond Tony Thompson s~ored two
voting by th!i! United Press Tech's 45-polnt outburst was the
·"Our football team came out troni ltJ defeue and speelal . Howard, as Mlchilan ran I!P 715 II!COnd·half touch~wns - In' · .
International Board of Coaches.
moat points eYer allowed by and played with great Intensity,"
teams. Dana Hall raced 27 yanb )'ll'lls totatbfti!DII!:-Grbae toWd~lliliiJil one .WI til .31 ~J¥21 - - ·
J"he Buffaloes won the game NebraskA In a bowl game and Dennla EriCkson said. ''We went wJtb a· blocked Pllllt for one Howard on scoring panes of 50 remaining - to lead Tenlll!l~ee
·
behind the work of their backup · eqUaled the most points scored Into this game ·on a mlaalon. We !Quchdowll and Otarlel Mincy ·an4 63 ~ds. leadlni the Wo.Ive- back from a 16-0 halftime deficit ..
quarterback and a little luck In . on a Tom Osborne-coached Ne· wanted to come out 'and get - returned the first of hll two rfllel toth~trleCOndco~tlve Thompsop's leaping one-yard •
the final minute.
braskateam.
respect."
Interceptions 37 yards for boWl victory. The Rebels, play· ' scorecameattheendofatunous
Charles S. Johnson came on In
Quarterback Shawn Jones was
And how much respect could a anOther score · as the Hl!lltles lnr In tbetr first New Year's Day 89-yard clrlve by ihe Volunteers
.the seeond haifAor the InJured · nallled the game's MVP, com· ~~!f'galn by being fl.aued· fpr . · bull.t a 33,7 halfl1me lead. Tlte . game lllnce.1971
. , committed alx after VIrginia's .Jake Mcinerney
Darlan Hagan and completed pletlng 16 of 23 pas1es for 277 ~~ of penalties?
Hawkeyes made It close by • turnovers and scored on only one kiCked his third field goal of the
five of six passes for 80 yards, yards flld two touchdowns..
. 'Football Is a physical game .
of tllelr 13 possessions. ·
night.
lncll!dlncqt. key thir!l-doWI'1 com·
"You can aiW.ys count on and r,eople have .to uilderstan~
pletlon on the winnln~t drive.
. Shawn to ,rlie to the OCC!!slon for that. Erickson .sale!. "It tsn t
Notre Qame appeared to have big baligames." Georgia Tech tennis. .There were too many
won the game when Raghlb head coach. Bobby Ross said. "I penalties: It was almos.t rldlcu·
1small returned a punt 91 yal'ds can't say ·enough about his lous. But!nthesecondhal1wecut
.
.
'
for an apparent touchdoW1'1 with pertonnance." ·
"
·
them down."
43 seconds left, bl!t the 'runback
W!Wam Bell also ran . for 127
The 43-point victory margin
was called back because of a yards and scored three times. broke the previous record set In
• clipping penalty.
catching a two-yard TO pass 19451n Oklahoma A&amp;M' s 34.0 win
n:nr SJLUN
and Iowa State, while Sy~cuee
three positions to 14th.
Tl)e Fighting Irish still drove to tram Jones and addlnc scoring
over Texas ChrlsUan. Miami's 46
UPI!Ipolta Writer
·
pounded Wagner.J01·5!1.
Nebraska, which with 12 vlctonear mldftelcl, but Dean Figures runs of six and 57 yards In the points broke the m!ll'k of 45
NEW YORK (UPI) -Nevada· · llldlana b~ held fifth over
r1es already has topped last
Intercepted a Rick Mlrer pass . fourth quarter.
recorded by Boston College In
La~Vetr~~. remalnedlheunanlrn·
Ohio State, flnflhlng ,with 363 seuon's win total, jumped four
with seven seconds left and ran
"Georgia Tech Is undefeated beating Houston six years aro.
pus No~ :1 choice and th.e e enure
points to the Buckeyes 3&amp;2. The · positions to 15th, Its hilhelt
Top 10 wai UI!Changed Monday In
Boosters won their heme HOOIIer
rsnklng since the 1966-67 season.
United Press International's col·
Classic with victories over Mar· _No. 16 Georgetown remalned
lege basketball. ratings. . . ..
sllall and Ohio, wl)lle Ohio State
unc ~nged.
'!be Runnln' Rebels ~re the . · took the Palm Beach Classic with
East Tennessee State moved
·uDI!IsJmfACI.,Ieaders for the third
victories over Mlsslsalppl State . up three spots to 17th, and No. 18
straight week, earning all 36 and Mlam_J (Ohio) ·
Southern Mississippi jumped ·
first-place . votes cast ly the
No. 7 NorUI Caronna, No. 8 four places. No. 19 Iowa and No.
42-member UP! Board of Duke, No. 9 UCLA and No.10 St.
20 New Mexico State each
·Coaches to fbitsh with !140 pollltli. John's also remained unchanged
Improved two positions from taat
Arkan11s remained No. 2 with from last weell.
week. ·
476 points.
The remainder of the ratings
No. 21 Michigan State slipped
UNLV and Arkanus eaally underwentashakeupafterlolees
three spots despite winning Its
won thetr only games last week by Pittsburgh ~ South .own Spartan Classic by beating
- theRunnln' Rebelawltha92·72 · CaroUna.
.
·
Geortre Mason and Louisiana
victory over Pacific and t~ · No. 11 Oklihoma Ju peel three 'fech. No: 22 Virginia Improved
positions !lfter vi rles over two places and No. 23 SouUI
: Razorbacks with a 126- 89 ..blowout of Jackson State.
· Dllnoll State ancl Tulsa, and No. Carouna plummeted nine postNo. 3 Arizona, whleh surpaaled 12 Louisiana State moved up one t)ons after falling to Marylud 1n
Syracuse a week ago, ~lned
spot after bammerlnl Nlc~Jis the final of the ECAC Hobday
Festival.
In third place with 433 polnll to State.
the Orangemen's 428. The Wild·
No , 13 Connecticut lmprqved_
·
cats won thetr own Fiesta Bowl
two places and fellow Big ·East
Classic by . beating Pepperdlne
member . Pittsburgh dropped

Vegas-re_mains
topa, Ufl ·team in cag~ poll

-.

'

·:

Nem~~as

..

!Letters
to .the editor
.
.

Sentinei- Paga 3

The

1

· ~~-~~-~-~~· =
· ==·=·~~===f·~~~·-~~~~--~-~
· ~~~~~~--~~~~~~

·

Ohio

Colorado ba,lts Notre &gt;Dame 1~9 to lock up No. 1 spot

2
~:ero-y r:~~S:::·

.~.~

::. The Daily Sentinel

.

2; 1991

Clemson'J Otrfl Gardoekl - 3
FGI a1alnst Dllnoll.
Miami's Carlos Huertl -Tied
Cotton llowl rec:ord 'tr~tll 110-yal'd
field aoalasAiut Tnu ...
Mlallallppl'a Brian Lee Gator Bowl·rec:ord 51-yard field
119Blaga~~WtNUcb~. · ·

.

.

.......

.,

Geol'lla Tecb

'lbla week's iBm•
.. f'rlda, • •
Hannan Trace at Oak Hill
Southern at North Gallla
Kyger Creek at Eaa tern
SOuthwettern at Synunee Valley

- Flllllhed the

The Daily Sentinel

season, as nation's only unbeaten
Division team (11·0..1) and posted
achool's fll'lt unbeaten· season
since 1952.
Mlaslaslppl - Played In f!rsi
New Year's Day bowl since 1971.
Clemso~ - · Posted fifth
strallht bowl victory.
Miami l&gt;rodllced most
points (46) and largest margin of
vlctbry (46- 3) In Cotton Bowl
hlatory.
Miami - · Penalized 16 times
for m records.

·wHEN YOU'RE
IN· NEED oF·
'
HARDWARE
.
SUPPLIES•••
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(UIPslt .... )

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A DIY- lf'M-1&amp;, loe.
Publllb«&lt; •YWY attemoon, Mooday
tltrooiP' Friday, 111 Court St .. J'o.

-oy. Olllo, by lllo Ohto Volloy Pu.._ .
llthlnl ~ny/Multlmedta, lac ..

l'Omergy, Ohio 4117t1, Ph. 992-21111. a.
oond ol~l pcotqe pold ·at Pomoroy,

Obto.

•

United Preu lnternaU..Il,
Inland DaUy PrHa Auoolotlollllltd tile
Obto N""apotr.;A•oolatlon. NatloMI
Adverttabq
eHiltotlve. BrUIIUI

Member.

Newopoper so ... m Tlllrd
New Yorlt, New Yortr 10017.

A-ue.

PQmiASI'ER:
-, . ..I_
10
Tilt Dolly Ser!ttDOt'
111 Court
I. •
Puuauy, Oldo45'781.

iwlaurnON Jt.\'01
. , c:-hr ... - - .
Doe ....... .. .. ........ ...... ........... ,..,Q.liO
ODt Moolll ..... ............................11.10
OntYoor .. .. ..................... ........ m;tO
IINGLIII10PY

PRICI ·
O.Uy ....... ... ... .. ....... .. ... ........ 25 Citata
'

~ben not dellrtorto pay tbtoor,
rtor may ...,It In advan"" dii'IOI .to
TIM! Daoy Seallnet oa • 3, I or 1 2 bull. 0'«111 wUI bo atvon carrlor ......

-

.

'
No lllblcrlptl,..a by maD pormm.ttln
. _ . wllere bano oorrlfto IOI'Vloo 11
aVIIlable.

'

-~~~~w-...
............................... N.M·
21111'--·-~
..........." .........:..... ..... .*"·
u w-........... ................... .... rrus
. ·CiiriaM-olp Coal7
IS W- .............................,.... ao..
.,.............,............:.................
U Weeki ... ......., .. ..................... I'IS.40

11

.

.

..
Csl

..

.

·I"!U¥11.11111 JUU

•nu""" IIIIYIOOQ wttn metldly, satety·

conscious propane IIIVk:t 111 Fefr8ltgas commitment.
For 50 yews, wt'w twldlld 1111 ~~o'tl}day and emergency
naeds of families like yo1,11.. FerrelgM . .. 1hl folks 10 lily on whelhel H's the
cokllst ~ ollht year, weellttlds, evenings, even
holidayS.

Clll eboul out epeclll Cuetomlr Programs:
• 24.Hour EmerQ811CY Servic8

-• Levei Paynlant ~ • Flll'lllgu lnslination Review

CIULDS
MIU.EII MUSSEl

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tl1 s. ••• St......., .

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rf.'\ AGIII'IS - -

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. •c•1•••

"·

'.

.

�'

.

'

Pege-4-Jhli Daily Sentinel

-

.•

.

.

•

'
.

· Wednesday. Januari .2. 199.1

90-70 non-conferece hardwood setback
r-

·Bronchitis considered qs ·caus.e.
of coaching legend Allen's death

Clvitaln 'llnlrnameot. Sheets II sllowli above
piu!lll!g the hea~lght fiom Marietta.

.

.

No flowers from . Georgia Tech
:to Colorado for wiD over Irish
ORLANDO; Fla. (UP!) Georgia Tech still claimed to be
.• . the best football team In the
~ country following Colorado's 10·9.
· , : victory over Notre Dame Tues: : day night at the Orange Bowl.
Yellow Jacket players
· watched the game from their
·; team hotel In Orlando after their
: 45-21 victory over Nebraska In
• the Florida Citrus Bowl.
'
Their argument for being the
No. 1 team was simple: Georgia
· • Tech, 11-0·1, finished the season.
. as the only undefeated team In
· the cOuntry.
.
·: "I guess we have to leave It to
·: the pollsters," said Yellow
: Jackets receiver Bobby Rodrl·
, guez. "We've.done that all year
and we still can't get to No. 1.
· · We're the only undefeated team, ·
. ; and that's all that needs to be
··said."
· Colorado, which en~ered the
Orange Bowl game holding the
, top spot, won partly because
Notre Dame had an extra point
blocked. Georgia Tech players
also argued that the Buffaloes
· won at Missouri earlier this year
' when they were mlsiakenly
: given five plays to score In the
• : final minute.
: "Everybody knows they lost
: that game," said assistant at·
Jtlellc director Kent Hill. "It's
ilke a man who ml!rdered some~one and everyone sees It and he
• )'nakes a confession and t)ley find
: him not guilty In court .. Colorado
• has two losses and a lie as far as
: we're concerned."
; The Buffaloes finished the
· .season at 11·1·1.
· · Cornerback Wlllle Clay said
~he fact that an undefeate!l team
lhat beat five bowl teams during
:·;the regular !Jtason can only be
• ranked' second Is reason · to
: instttute a national playoff
: system .. .

~

:Shot.

~

J0 h0800·.Q raDD'P Bo.W } ·MVP
e~

MIAMI (UPI) _The man who said. "The coaches did a good job
scored on the most famous play of keeping with ··the game plan
. of the 1990 college season _
and I just wanted to go out there
Colorado's fltth-dowrl touchdown .. and get the first downs."
at Missouri _ played the most · Colorado head coach .Bill
prom~nt role In the Butfaliies'· McCartney said: "You've got to
final march to an apparent give Charles. a lot of credit. He
na\lonal title.
.
·
·
went out there and d)d 8 super
Charles s. Johnson, the backup Job. He's done It before and we
to starting quarterback' Darlan knew he could do It this time...
Hagan, came to the rescue
The one person who might not
Tuesday ·night tn leading the have been surprised by John·
Buffaloes to a 10-9 victory over . son'sherolcswasHaganhlmself.
No. 6 Notre Dame.
"Darlan came up to me at
Johnson took control after halftime and said, 'It's really
Hagan went down late In the weird but I had a vision earlier
second half with · a ruptured this week that you would have to
patellar tendon in his left knee go In there and win the game for
and was named Colorado's Most us,"' Johnson ~ld. "I don't think
Valuable Player. Nose . tackle hewasmaklngltupjustto·getme
Chris Zorich took the honors for psyched up or anything. He
Notre Dame by recording 10 sounded sincere."
tackles and one sack.
It was Johnson who-9cored the
Johnson found out when he got on a fifth-down Ql\e-yard keeper
to· the locker room at halftime . at Missouri to iJ'Ve Colorado a
that he would run the Colorado 33-31 win.
'
offense In the second half and
"I didn't really like the talk of
responded brilliantly. By the the fifth down," Johnson . said.
ttmme the Buffaloes held their "What was Ignored was that our
Index fingers ' In ttie air laying team demonstrated great char·
claim to .the national champion- acter In corolng back that day as
ship, Johnson had completed 5of we did tonight. I llllnk the fifth
6 passes for 80 yards .. ·
down has been mucll overplayed
"I just wanted to go out there and I think It's time to put It to
and play Within myself and tile rest."
•
·
keep the team moving," Johnson

.

score

• The
tied six times befOre
McClolkey's two points with nine
; aeconda left put the victory Into
Queens' hands.
Tbe Royals finished witll 43.3
percent on sll~tlng' (29-67) to Rio
Grande's 31.9 percent showtn&amp;on
22 of 69 attempts. The Redwomen
did bet~ frotn the foul line,
alnklng 10 of 17 .tries for 58.8
.
"

\

J

'

.

'

..

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-

Sentinel Calendar
Community Calendar Items
appear two days before an eveot
and the day .of that eveot. Items ·
must be received. in advaoce to
insure publication in· tbe ealen· ·
· dar,
THURSDAY . .
POMEROY · The . Pomeroy
Group of AA and AI Anon will
meet ThiU'Sday at 7 p.m. at the
Sacre!l Heart Catholic Church.

MH
. S .tru8h WID8
• ·lwO·•ll•Jl8·

. R~

Mei8&amp; wrestlers

tUth in meet

•

COUNTY
APPLIANCES

percent to Queens' 40 percent on percent for the half, held Rio
15-7·10-11.·
two of five attempis, all made In Grande's high to 10 points twice.
Halftbne seore; Rio Gruule :u, ·
tile second halt.
R~o Grande's · shooting lm-.' Qu.eeDS 2%.
·
·
Both teams ended nearly·even prov~dfrolh ~he_;toor (26of53for
..::___
'
on rebounding, with Queens 49.1 percent) and the team neUed
RIO GRANDE ('II) - Jennl
pos11ng 45 to the Red women's 44. 20 or lts25 free throw auempts for
Cou~2-2•6-16; Gena Norris,
Additionally, Rio Grande com-· 80 perceni to keep ahead pfONU,
o-i-5bble Fredrick, 4·1·2·
mltted. 24 turnovers · to Queens' .. which was 43.8 percent on shoot- · 13; · Kerr! !dwell, 2·2·6; Ann
25..
lng (26-64) and connected on 20 of
Barnltz, 6-3-15; Stephanie GuIn addition to Barnltz, Kerr!
Its 31 foul shot tries for 64.5
dorf, 4·3-2-19; Kathy Snyder,
Kidwell scored 12 points and
percent.
1-0-2. TOTALS 19-7·18·79.
Gena Norris 11; while Queens
Gudorf fired 111 19 points and ·
OHIO NOR111ERN , (17) - ·
was backed upby16polntsand13
nine rebOunds for the RedwoChris Colopy, 1:3-5; ·Dawn HIJJ, ,
boards from Moore, Former Rio
men., followed by 16 points from . 5-2·2-18; Deb Miller, 1-3-5; C11rla
Grande players · Betsy Bergdoll
Jennl Couch, 15'by Barriltz and 13
HOffman, 2·7-.11; KeJU Hancock,
and Beth Con, who joined the
from Debbie Fredrick. Hill had
4-1-9· Lori Trame 3-2·8· Doede
18 markers and eight rebounds to
Don~ugh, 1·3·0·11;' Laur~ Allen,
Royals when F-lelltz-accepted the
coaching job there .in 1989, each . lead .ONlJ, ..wJUcb.. ..also ...drew.......S.1;7~ ....0enlse . McNeely·,- ·O·H: . :·..
had eight points. Coil also supp11-polnt performances from
Andrea Donnersbach, 1-0-2. TOlled 10 rebounds 'foi' Queens,
Carla Hoffman and Doede Dct
TAL$ 11·5-20-17.
.
wfilch won the tournament after
naugh. The· Polar Bears had 24
Halftbne pre: Ohio No1111ern
defeating. Georgetown (Ky.)
t11rnovers all'd39reb0u~•· while
Sf, Rio Grande Jl .. :.
Sunday.
the Redwomen posted 37 boards.
·
·
Shrugglng~off .the' loss, · the
Now 7-6, IUoGrandereturns to
Red women IJouilced back the
season play Sunday at2 p.m. In a .
next day and overcame Its total
home contest against' Lake Erie.
27 turnovers to get back above · Box 1100ret1:
.500 wlih. the nartow win over
: QVE~N8 (IS) - Trlcla MayONU after Dawn fi!U misled~ nard, 346; Beth CoU, 3-2-8; Lori
shot with six seconds left In
Moore, 8-0-16;· Jaclde MeCJos. ·
game.
key, 11·1·0-2!1; Betsy BerJC!oll, '
The Redwomen trailed by four
~-2·0-8. TOTALBII-S-J.G.
at tile half against the nationallyRIO GRANDE (811 - Jenlll
ran~ed Polar . Bears, but " a
Couch, ·0-2-3-9; Gena Non-Is,
Kidwell goal at 15:10 put the 1-3·0-11; Debbie Fiedrtck, 2·1·0vlsltors. ahead by two and al·
(; Kerrt Kld'll'l!ll, 4-4-12; Mindy
loWed Rio Grande to maintain Its
Montgomery, 1-0-2; Ann Barnltz,
GIWPDUS I . . . .OY
6-3-15; Stephanie Gudorf, 0-1.0.3;
lf'IP on lite .lead. ONU, subailtut·
lq heavily and shooting 44 Kathy Snrcter, 1·0-2. TOTALS
446·06"

••ns

EDUCATION
CUSSES STAmNG

JANUAIY 7, 1991 .

Mason· Family Qe~tauran
. Thursday N. t is

· LeOOing

halllQCIIted on County Road 1 near
Salem Center. Potluck refreshments
wiD follow meeting and all members are urged to attend.

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

-~ The Daily Sentin81-Page-6

-Tired of qld ways

Ann

onJy· a~s~~a~~~~~~~~~Ain~a·~IA~~~~·:I:~~:mM::m:-~D~~~R:ffi;S~S~ED~[N~~V~~~;:~~~~j~~~~~

wock - center
not In a n•
service
,
.
ith all
ANN L~NDER~
still largelY poor. The area has .
enugraaedli'om
DEAR VANCOUVER: w·
" 1989,LO.~n~..Jbeen home to the church's Irish 10 yeas ago. A3 a result of 'that· due 1especlto yourculiWal heritage,
Tim .. s,••,.,..~ •••
founders,' Italians, Slavs, Hlsa- . u'itforgeaable war, the desperation a woman of 22 should be free to
c~ .. - sr""'•••
panics and blacks. It now Is a mix for freedom, being a refu&amp;ee livins have friends, both male and female,
bfblack. Hispanic and Italian. He in lforcigrn:ounay with a diffcn:nt so that she C8l! develop cilltwally and away we go.
.
described the· church as the culture (Canada) , and' facing an and emotionally as well as intdlcc·
My longest wailtng periods are
"Ellis Island of the Midwest.''
uncertain future, I am mature tually.
. ·,
after I pick up a bunch of high scbOol
He said funds will alloW contl· beyoiKI my years_ yet I am~
1Urge you to discuss this problem and Wlivenity StUdents. They are the
nuailon or resumption of the ·liJteachild.
•
withaprofessorB\yourschool Your laSttogiveupaseat.
·
parish grade schpol, thrift shop.All my life I have been an obedi; mother's .·. life has been a v«y hard
I guess a person's true colors show
fl)od . pantry a11d adult literacy ent dutiful daughter. Beipg the one and she deserves respect, but wllen asked to give up a liUie bit of ·
y~gest girl in the family has its you
entitled to a life of your comfort for a saanger. This is-proba_program.
. · Holy Family was founded by benefits but there are also many own and I urge you to assen -your· bly the same all over the world . ..
the Rev. Arnold Damen In 1857 drawb~lcs. To explain: 1 am a self.
·
BUS DRIVER IN EDMON'ION
· and wa~ one of jy_st .five _publlc-straight~A-student;-buH-am-not~-Ann-banden:A while-back~ DEAR ED: Thank~ for the
buildings that .surviv~d the Chi· allpwcd to have any dates even 1 re;111 a letter in your column from commentary from the dri~er's seat.
cago ·Fire that began nearby on thougil I am nOw 22 I cannOt go Sally p in ToronlO. She wroce about
. Sot!): to ~ear that tile ~Jgh school
Oct. 8, 1871.
· Wb
.h
· ' th ,
bl' • sponau'on and how bus and un1v«Sity students m EdmonDamen vowed during the !Ire any . ~re Wit OUt
I'/IO er S pu IC ttan
ion et ton need extta prodding to behave
seven lights would burn forever penntss•_on. 1 must floJSh college,_ , and sub~ay passengen. no
g
in a-compassionate manner. I woQld
inhonoro!OurLadyo!Perpetual . have a Job, b_uild a career and be offer th~rr ~ts 10 the Sick, elderly never have su . Uld this froin the
Help If the church ·was .spared. · .wltat my farmly expects me to be. or handicapped.
· .
· spec F . ;,. .
pn
, I drive a public
transit bus in puzzled.
letters they wnte. ran-. 1Y, 1 m
The now electrified lights s·till Ann •.I feel like
.
. .'soner· .
.
illuminate the Interior
.. Be111g r.a1se!l m an On ental E&lt;lmonton, Albena. On a subway,
Anal hoi . bl ~ H
_ The Holy Family beli tower, at family will always assure obedient the ope13tor has no contact with the
. co pro tm. · ow can you .
226 teet, was the talles i structure . and dutiftl;l children. My. mother is passenger.~, so they're on their o~. '/!IP your_~e~ or sotMone you !0 ~t?
Ill Chicago at the~eof tlie tire. vr:ry strict and domineenng. I was But tJn my bus, if I have a Slanding. . HA/co~lism· !ff.Wh 10 RHtcog.!'1fcdt.
uained to be an achiever. I am not load, and a person boards wllo
ow·~. eo •": 11 11• . ow 10 · onOW OU ' · OW
·
iued to have any Close friends, should sit for any reason (pregnant, qlll!r 11 wtll gwt you the aru:wers.
By United Press ~ternatlonal
or female. Consequently, I have handicapped, elderly), ask if one Stnd ~ st/f-lllidressed, long, buszResldents of Accra, Ghana, are become a loner.·
of the 'kind gentlemen will offer his IIUS-sut envelope ~ a. c.heck or
known as Gas. people who live In
You'd be amazed how many seat. If that approach doesn't work, money order fo~ $3:65 (this lllcllliks
the one-letter town or YIn France Orient81 children are in this same I then announce that ·r am not poslflgt and luindllllg) to: Alcohol,
call themselves Ypsllonlen an.d
. .
PI
d ,
.
th b
'I
hod
c/o Ann l.andtrs P 0 Box 11562
. citizens of Yoknapatawpha pos!uon.
e~se on I sugge~t movmg e us untl . some
y Chicago, II/.
(In Can:
County, Miss., which was family counseling beca'!50 that , 1s shows the decency to make that tida lid $
)
4 45
created by ' nov~list William defm1tely ~of the q~stJo~. Thank small sacrifJCC. .I then sit and wait .:·.:.:..·s.;,e_;_·..;,.;·_..;._ _ _':t
Faulkner' said they were you for bemg a !rue friend m whom until the person m needof•aeat has
.
Yoknapatawphan.
1. tan c'onfide. Sign me -· been ~ndated. I always thanic
OPPRESSED. REPRESSED ~ the kind soul for bemg so generous .

are

mr

a

N.

y

0 1

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J::

ru

606n4Js62.

AEROBICS
CLASSES
lUES~·~~ ~OT~u::AYs

Quote of the Day

~~~a1l~=~~~ :;l~ls~~e~::t New tpnstruetion
marking the establishment of a
separate Jerusalem pollee
district:
"Terrorists who i::ome to Israel
to perpetrate attacks should
know that If they don't blow
th mselves Up the security for
cese will take •care to liquidate·

them."

WASHINGTON (UP!) -The
value of new construction fell to a
' seasonally adjusted annual rate
of $422.4 billion In November
from$425.lbilllonln0ctober,the
Commerce Department reported
WednesdaY-.

values drops

Starts Jan·. 8th at the
Middleport ,Arts Council

The department 's Bureau of
the Census said In the first 11
months of 1990, $403.8 billion of
new · construction was put In
place compared with $399.1 bll·
lion for the like 1989 period.

·

·

$ 000 A MOII1H

2 IBJIJIAII
DEIIIE
-STIUCTOI
on

•

Call 992-7741 f- lnf-mation
-

'

~fF
spe-

Coose~Vancy District to hoi
cial board meeting on Thursda~t

5 p.m. at its office.

·

•
LOTIRIDGE · There will be a
pi&gt;tluclc supper at ' the Lottridge
Community Center on Thursday at
~p.m. before the meeting at 7 p.m.

TUPPERS PLAINS • The Tup·
pers · Plains ' VFW Post . 9053
Auxiliary will meet 'l'hursday at
7:30p.m.

~()..6

a

-ll~C'-HCh1CIJlAcGhO,r-the-.'-'EllllsHoly
Fam, of the fund -raising program "
Island of- -t;ane ·S1!lct; - ·..
· '·

The first phas~ of the restoraMidwest" and one of only five
public · buildings that survived tioil will consist of roof, tuck'
the 1871 Chicago Fire, has pointing and plaster repairs' on
defeated !he wrecker's ball.
tl1e church -opened Sunday for
Supporters scrambled for two the first time in six years and
days to raise the last of $1 million attracting 3,000 visitors and what
needed to start restoration work. Lane described as a
''huge
Officials told a jubilant news basket ot envelopes."
conference on the. steps of the
The fund·r~lslng effort was
130-yf:!ar-old Victorian Gothic required to raise $3 million of the
structure 'I)Iesday that they $4 million totaL
·
raised more than $2 million.
•one donor · noted that · her
Failure would" have meant grandparents were · marrl~ In
demolition of the bulldil\&amp; that the church In the 1880s. Others
boasts the city's oldest stained said their family roots dated
,.__,~ta,;s . and - other lrreplacable - back to the 1870s In the WestSide
artifacts.
.
area on wh.a t then was a pral'rte.
"We're overwhelmed, · Some
"It's one of the very very few
are calling It something short of a early Gothic chu.r ches 'around In ·
miracle,".. said the ~)( ...Ceorge the area ," said Richard Kleck·
Lane of the H~~yFamlly Restora· hefer, professor In NGrthwestern
·lion Society. .The bells of lfoly .. Unlverslty~s Oepart!nent-of the
fiamlly Church are peeling with History and Lltf~rature Of Rell·
Joy today for 1 can report that glens. He said ltoly Family and
we've gone over the top." 1
themorefamousWaterToweron
· The society has Just more than
North Michigan avenue are
$1 million In cash and another . closely linked "fanciful, lmagln'
$990; 000 In "good" pledges, · alive examples . of the Gothic
Including $750;000 from the Chi· . style.
cage province or the Society of
·'From the viewpoint of arch!·
Jesus, which owns the church, he tectliral history, tearing It down
saiCI.
would be tantamount to tearing
"It looked very bleak but we downtheWaterTower,"hesald.
were not without hope. In the last
Employees of the No'rt)lern
- 30 days through an incredible Trust Bank helped tally .the
combination Of prayers, peOple last-rrllnute donations that came
and publicity, the Holy Family to $296,000 In cash.
,
Preservation Society can report ' At Thanksgiving, only $500,000
to the church's owner that we had been raised.
have met our deadline and are
Lane said the society feels it Is
ready to begin the second phase vftal to continue the ch.u rch's

'·

PALOS VERDES, Calif. (UPI)
WbO delivered peppy, almost . said.
arcane Inspirational slogans to
Corey Johnson. the athletic ·
- Coaching legend George Allen
had contracted bronchitis soon · egg on the aging, beefy veterans director at CSULB, said Allen's
after members of his team
who played tor him.
death represented the loss of "an
doused h)rn with Ice water and
Tributes to Allen continued to ambassador, a leader,aspeakec,
was under a doctor's care when . pour In Tuesday,
a motivator, a teacher and above
he died suddenly, a Cal State
President .a nd Mrs. · Bush all, a specl~l person."
.
,
Long Beach 49ers ottlclal said
Issued a statement saying that .
CSULB established a trust
Tuesday.
.. .
Allen had "Inspired Americans fund In the coach's memory, with
However, exactly what k!Ued togreaterphyslcalfltnes~justas anymoney raised us,:o!l to·fulfil·
the former 72-year·old coach of
he did his football teams. He- ling ~len's goal of bundtng a'
· the Los Angeles · Rams .and
to~hed many itves In a profound football stadium at the campus.
Washington Redsklns remained way and. for six decades was a
The university announced that
unknown Tuesday, and whet~eader In the sport. Our nation memorial services for AI lei!'
the bronchitis was brought on by will miss him."
would be held Friday af Rolling
the dousing was unclear.
The Redsklns and.Dallas Cpw- Hills Covenant Church In Rolling
ys once enjoyed one· of . the Hills Estates. The serVJ,ce will~.
In other details that emerged
Tuesday, teB.lll SP9kesman Steve f rcesl' rivalries In the NFL.
open to the public, and the family'
Janisch said Allen's wife found
Tom Landry, the former Cow- asked tllat In lieu of flowers, .
her hulband unconscious on the boys coach, said Tuesday he lost donations be sent to the Georg~'
kitchen floor of their home In a rival and a friend.
.
·
H. Allen Endowment.Fund, Creg
Palos 'Verdes after returning at ·
"George Is type of gpy you Allen,. 420 Malaga Lane, Palos
12:30 p.m. Monday from running
thought would go on forever," he · Verctes Estates, Ca,llf. , 90274. · ,,
errands. ·
· .::
·
~
·
Etty Allen called paramedics
L-;._
but the coach, a fitness buff,
could n'ol be revived.
# ·
Janisch said Allen came down
out to a 12-7 lead at the end of the
By DAVE HARRIS
with bronchitis, an Inflammation
first
quan.er and increased the lead
SeJitiDel
Con
espoDdent
of the lining of the lungs,
to
24-14
at the half. Nelsonville
T)le
Meigs
Marauder
freslunan
sometlll)e after l)e wa8 show!!red
started
to
· chip away at the
basketball
team
recently
won
two
with the Ice water by his players
Marauder
lead
in the thin! quarter
In celebrating a season-ending of t1we games 10 nm their ~
pullinJ
to
within
36-28. But Meig~
victory Nov. 17 over the Unlver• to·6-l on the year.
went
a
cold
in
the
founh quarter
In the first contest the Marauders
slty of Nevada, Las Vegas.
as
the
Budceyes
outscored
the
blew' away the Jactson . Iron,men
Another team official, Becca
maroon
IJid
gQid
15-5
in
the
final
Wohll, said the coach had not 61-16. The Marallllers~·1ped""OUI
to a 13.0 lead at the
of the first period to post the two point win.
been feeling well ever slpce. ·
. . Ullter 8lld incieased iho lead to Bllld 1\nderson :and Hea(h Hu~
.Janisch said Allen wallindera
atthe half. Meigs placed tliree I~ the way with 10 each:. Randy
·doctor's care but continued to
players in double figures as Bllld Cline had 15 JXlints to led- tile way,
come to work dally.
the Nelsonville.
.
··
"His voice was hoarse and the Anderson led the way ·with 12, ·
Meigs slipped past Belpre 34-3'l
such and he was told not 'to go Heath Hudson added 11 and Jack to post their sixth win in ~ven
Stanley
added
10.
Hill
ied
the
running for a couple of weeks but
tries. On~ again Meigs jumped out
he wasn't bedridden," Janisch Ironmen with four points.
to an ~ly lead holding .a slim 17~
Meigs
lost
their
first
game
of
the
said.
14 lead at the half, but Meigs had
year
10
a
vr:ry
good
NelsonvilleAdditional))', the Los Angeles
to hold off a Belpre comebaclc at·
YOrlc
team
43-41.
Meigs
jlllllped
'I)mes on Tuesday reported that,
tempt as the Eag~ outscored
at dinner Sunday night, Allen
Me1gs 11-7 in the iinal period but
told Frank Bowman, the housing .
the Marauders held on for the win.
director at Long Beach; that "he
Anderson and Stanley led the wir.had gotten a cold on Saturday,
ners · with 10 each. Lorentz . led
because he didn't wear a Jacket
Belpre with 21.
··
·~
•
at the ,(school) practice field
The. Meigs Marauder 'VI'e5tling
when he watclled (ihe University
team. finished fifth in the Belpre
of) Iowa's team practice for the
Civitsin Tournament last week at
GOOD AJSED
Rose Bowl."
·
Belpre. ,
'
· Allen, who returned to coach·
. WASHERS, DRYDS,
Mei~ placed four ~
lng at Long Beach Just more than
REFIIGEIATORS, TYs, ,
• •
~:00
the.hea~all
· IIlli
. '
a year ago after retiring from Aaroadi
VISIOil p1
g up pms m
GAS &amp; ELEC. RAriGES
professional football in the mid·
mau:hes. Burt Kcnoedv placed first
19ll0s, was known for motivating in lhe 189 pound ~vision piclcing
troubled 'teams.
up five pins and a decession. Eric
He coached the RalliS In the Heck first in the 12S pound class
1960s and the Redsklns In the with five pins ·and a decession, and
1970s. · Both teams were str111· Joe McElroy placed second in the
627 )rd Awe., Gallpolls
gllng franchises that Allen 130 pound class.
·
.... 446-1699
turned Into powerhouses . .
Meigs took pan in the GalliJXllis
HOUIS:
I A.M.·6 P.M..
Thecoac)t.was also known as a · TOilmament this past Saturday.
.
.
tlght·mo~thed disciplinarian

~Redwomen.
split
pair
of
·tourney
games
..
.

Despite a 15-polnt, 21-rebound
: ~rformance by ..._center Ann
: Barnltz, the University of Rio
··Grande women's bas,ketball
·team lost to Queens (N.C.) In the
opener of .the Ohio .. Norlbern
Tournament Saturday. ·but re.. couped with a victory over the
; host sch09l Sunday.
Queens; coac.hed· by · former
:· Redwomen mentor Che,ryl Fle. utz, handed .Doug -Foote's club a
'63-61loss, with Jackie McCloskey ·
:scoring 25 points for the Royals.
: The Redwomen edged Ohio
' Northern 79·77 as freshman for: ward Stephanie Qudorf led three
Rio other teammates In high
·.scoring for the Redwomen.
: Poor shoo11ng (25.6 percent) In
·the first half harmed Rto
'Grande's offense,, although the
. Redwomen held a 24·22 advan.
. : tage entering the second half.
· The Royals !lelzed the lead
: (26-24) at 19: 03 oil two-pointer by ·.
'-tori Moore and lost It again at
11:59 (37-36) on a Barnltz foul

J

"Everyone wants to know who Colorado beat Nebraska 27-12,
Is the legitimate No. 1," he said.
but Georgia Tech scored the
Georgia Tech QB Shawn Jones most points ever on a 'rom
paced the hotel lobby throughout Osborne-led Nebraska team durthe Orange Bowl game. He said It lng theQ' 45-21 rout.
·
was too hard to watch.
..
''The other thing Is Colorado
"The bottom line Is, Colorado . lost to llllnols and Illinois . got
has one loss and we don't have annihilated by. Clemson, and we
any," Jones said.
beat Clemson," Rodriguez said.
Rodriguez said there. were two "I don't think Col,Ql'ado deserves
comparisOns between Colorado to be No. 1, at leasf not over us."
and Georgia .Jech, and both
TheUPIBoardofCoaches'Top
tilvored the "'Yellow Jackets. 25 comes out at 6 p.m. today.

.

'

Historic ·church meets first deadline
I

CHAMPION
• Melils Marauder
piD aU s1x ~ his Op•.
heavyweight AlU'OJl .
poneots to ·place first in· the recept Belpre ·

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Pomeroy-Mi!idJeport, Ohio

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CHESTER · The .' Chester
Township Trustees will hold their
year-encf meeting Thursday at 7:30
p.m. at tbe Chester Town Hall.
POMEROY • Weekend revival at
the Calvary Pilgrim Chapel on
Route 143 will · be held Thursday
lhrougll SundBy ·at . 7:30 P·~·
nightly. Rev. Don Dav1dson, God s
Bible School. will be preaching. He
ami his wife ~U.l be singin•. Rev.
Victor Roush mvues the pu~lic.
. MIDDLEPORT • The Evan·
geline Chapter No. 172 Order of
the Eastern Star, Mid&lt;llcpon. will
meet Thwsday. Oftlcen
to wear
· street dresses.

are

RUTI.i.NI&gt; • The Rulland
Township Trustees will meet for
their · organiiational meeting fol· ·
lowed by their regular monthly
111eeting .on Th~y at ~:30 p.m.
' at the Rolland FJTe Sl8lJOII. The
public iS invited I'! aaend.

FRIDAY
- ROCK SPRINGS
· Meigs
•County Pomona Grange· wiD meet
' Friday • 7:30 p.m. lit the ~ock
Springs Orange Hall. Rock Spnngs
•grange will be the h~ts. All gran.•ges 8fC ~inded to bring ttems for
. , ihe grilnge calendar. ,
. ·•
SATURDAY
· SALEM CENTER • Sial' Grange
Star Junior Grange will meet
Sarurday at 7:30p.m. at the grange

aoo

4 P.M. • 9 P.M.

No lotterywinners

.. Spaghetti
. .
•

! ..~..~~.~':'.':~.5~.~.~

•Chid(en.
Cacciatorie
All Dinners Se~ed. WithOur'all-U-&lt;:are-To-Eat
Soup, Fruit &amp; Salad Bar &amp; Garlic Bread,
Or Try One Of The Other Fine Menu Selections.
· Take Out Orders Awilllble.
"Senior Citizens Receives 10% Discount

Mason Family Restaurant
Rl33

...

(304) 773-5321
(NEicr Tb MASON ExxON)

Mason, WV

,,

.

HARR!SBURG, Pa. (UPI) -:Pennsylvania Lottery officials
said the Wild Card Lotto Jackpot
for Friday would have an annuity
value of at )east $5.7 million
becau!ie no Lotto players picked
. . . all siX of th~ numbers drawn
Tuesday nlghf.
· Officials said one Lotto players
' piCked five of the six winning
numbers plus the ~lid Cud
. number 42 and won $45,493.50
each, while 92 players piCked five .
of six without the Wild Card
number and won ~Officials said 1~ players
picked tour of six plus the Wild
Card number and won $590.50
· and 4,645 ayers piCked four of six
without the Wild card number ·
and won $19.50 cash. Another
4,158 players picked three of sixnumbets plus the wild card
number and won $U.
,.
The Super .7 jackpot for Wed·
nesday will have an · annuity
yalue Qf at. least $513 million,
officials said.

·SURGEON GENERAL'S WARNING; Smoking
Causes luAg Cancer •. Heart Disease.
Emphysema. And May . Complicate Pregnancy.

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PJ!ge-6-The DaiY Seultiuel

The

Ohio

,.

Continued tram page 1
'
the Racine Fire Department and
Emergency Squad after 1t appeared
there was a thteat of heavy damage.
The residents had already left the
trailers. .
1In Rutland things are back 10
normal after · the. flash flooding
Sunday evening and the evacuation
of three families. EMS Director
Bob Byer reponed however that a
gasoliQe odor detected at the tim.e
of the Hash ·ftooding continues and
Environmental Protection ,Agency
officials have been. called into investigate.

MAXWELL HOUSE.•
MASTER BLEND
'

COFFEE
.
. '34.5

STORE HOURS

oz.

•

Monday thru Sunday

~ $399

8 AM-10 PM

.

.....,..,~

_ j;._...;..-;..·...,.q '

298 SECOND ST.

I, I

ZESTA·
CRACKERS

P-RICES EfFECTIVE DEC. 30, 1990.THRU JAN~ 5, 1991
·.

'

'

J

LB. BOX

99(
U.S~D.A. CHOICE BONE_LE~~. ,BEEF

Chuck Roast ••••• !~.

$l 89.

LONGHORN

2-

45_

1·
Sandwich Spread •• ~ 99(
.

- - -.Area
deaths-..----..
.

GROUND
BEEF .
10 LB. PKG.
'

Colby ;Chee.se •••••••·$J89.

SJ390

lB.

•

. ·

A LOOK DOWN MAIN STR'EET • Tbe Ohio River inade its
way across Mlli!l Street In Pomeroy early New Year's Day. This pic·
ture, taken from tbe steps or K &amp; C Jewelers about 9 a.m., shows
tbe ~ter as it made its way to tbe frqnt doors or many Main Street
busmesses who were forced to move tbeir merchandise to higher
•
ground.

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GRA6E A

'

UNDER WATER • ·East Main Street in
banks on New Year's Eve. The river crested
Pomeroy was impassible New Year's Day due-to · . early. Wednesday morning and should begin
higb water fJ'om tbe Ohio River wbicb Je!t its . J'ecedmg sometime today.
·

Also surviving are three
daughters , Aretta May Montgomery of Letart Falls, Ohio,
Dorothy Ann Haskins of Nelsonville and Virginia Lee
Schmeltzer of New Matamoras,
~.Ohio; one sister, Marilla Gothard
of ,Bidwell; nine grandch!ltlren; ~ 16 great-grandchildren.

Beatrice Bell

,...

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159

HOMEMADE

. ken .L.1vers
· . •••••
·
(h 1c

Middleport and . Syracuse both
for. the most pan escaped problem~
of flooding although some residents
reponed that they did have: water in
their basements. An area near the
· Hobson bridge in Middleport was
closed for a shOrt time when water
covered the · road, although this
. morning' it was passable.
. .

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S L8•• AG

Sausage ...•••.•..••~~.
$

I
-,_

FLAVORITE
·suGAR

69
Cube Steak •••••.• !~. $2 ·
BALLARD'S LINK _or ROLL
$ ,49

.·

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Whole Chicken~••••• S9C
1"t4 por.k -Lo1n.. -.-.....~... $1· ·6..9

.

BULK' ·
.

\

SLICED
10 LB. PKG.

$1390
I

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Beatrice Mathers Bell, 72,
Coolville, died Tuesday at her
residence.
" '
Born in Alma, W.Va. on April 2,
1918, she was a daughter of.the late
Gilbert and Bessie Brown Baker.
She was a member of Our Lady of
Loretto Catholic Church in Tuppers
Palins. She was a licensed practical
He was preceded in death by
nurse and a member of the Meigs eight brothers and two sisters.
Cminty Senior Citizens.
Funeral services wlll be conShe is survived by her. husband,
Fr d
w
Clarence - 0. Bell; a son-in-law, dueled 1 p.m. I ay at aughHalley-Wood Funeral Home With
' Joseph Sayre Sr., Racine; three Rev . Paul Voss offlclatlng. Bursons,
Edwin
D. Mothers, ial will be In Ohio Valley Memory
Parkersburg, W.Va.; De~l S. Gardens
'
Mothers, Lady Lake, Fla.; Ivan G.
·
Mothers, The Plains; a step-SOil,
·
Dljvid Bell, ~..Qlll;. brother, ... Fr~e~~alla!,Ule~~e~~l •
Dale Baker, Alma, W. Va,; three sis· 'li61\'i
_lf.fiV''J'Jffirsil'ay ·
tcrs, Melba Rabel, Proctor, W.Va.;
Grandsons and greatand Pbillippa Campbell •. , Sis- grandsons w111 serve as
tersville, W.Va.; and Winifred Mar· pallbearers.
cinko,
Reedsville;
15
grandchildrend and several great .
~ks
grandchil&lt;lren.
.
~
Besides her parents she was
preceded in death by her first hus- Dally slilck prices
' band, Issac Hugh Mathers, and a (As of 10 : 30 a.m. )
, daughter, Elizabeth A. Sayre.
· Bryce and Mark Smith
Services will be held Friday at of Blunt, Ellis 1o: Loewl
\1 a.m. at Our Lady of Loret!Jl
Catholic Chun:h in Tuppers Plains Am El trl p
28". with Rev. Father Frank Patala.
ec c ower .. ·.... ...... .,
.
Lad f Ashland Oil ........, ..... .......... 27%
0 Bo Y o AT&amp;T .............. ................... 30%
Burial Ci11 be m Lour
LoFre~o emeterycallm
ntheg Wttohi~· · Bob Evans ....... .................... 14
nends may
at
te· Ch
1 Sh
11
Blower Funeral Home in Coolville Clta:Hm nldgi 0cppes .. ............ 1. 41~
, on Thursday from 2-5 p.m . and 7-9 Fedy 0, Mng 1
13it
· p.m. Rosary services will be beld at G odera, Togu&amp;R....······.... ··.... 19'"
0 year
' 730
Th da
.. ................ ..
: p.m. on urs Y·
Key Centurion .................... 11~
: Keith Arnold
Lands' End ............... .. ........ 13%
·
Umlted Inc .......... .. ............ 17'18
Keith E. Arnold, 73, of New Multimedia Inc ..... ... ........... . 68
Haven died Sunday, December 30, Rax Restaur~nts............. . ... ~
1990 in Leesburg, FL.
Robbins &amp; Myers .............. ; .!8~
Born August 6, 1917 in Carbon- Shoney's Inc ............ .. .. ... .... 11%
dille, O,H. he was a son the late star Bank ....................... :.... 17
Willis and Jenny (Cox) . old. He Wendy's Int'l...................... · 6Y,
was a member of Masonic Lodge Worthington Ind..................22%
#283 in Duncan Falls, ·OH and the
ScQttish Rites Consistory of Charleston, WV. Arnold was a shift
operating engineer at Philip· Sporn
\
for 35 years.
·
He was also preceded in death by
a daughter, I udy VanMeter.
.
Survivors include his wife, Mary
H. Arnold of New Haven; a son,
Jerry of New Haven; three sisters,
Mlirgy Cullins of Mesa, AZ, Mary
Long of Pataslcala, ·OH and Joan
Groves of Philo, OH; two brothers,
Orville of Coshocton, OH and
Gene of Beverly, OH; five
grandsons, two. step-grandchildren
·and four great-grandc)\ildren. .
~
· Service will be hyld on Friday,
:January 4, 1991 at 1:30 p.m. at
:Foglesong Funeral Home with the
·Rev. Jack Grimes offtciating. Burial
willile in -Sunrise Memorial Gardens.
'
Friends may call at the funeral
·home on Friday·frorn· ll :'30 a.m. to
· 1:30 p.m. .. ,, ·
· · In lieu of ~flowers, the family
as~s that contributions be made to
the Mason County Chapter of .the.
American Cancer Society.

S•

.BACO·N

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·GROUND·

CHUCK
10 LB. PKG.

3 LB. BAG ·

Yellow·· Onions~ ••••• 49(
•

. ~LAVORITE

2°/o Mil.k

.

GALlON

••••••••••••••

Sl590

$~I 69·
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CHICKEN ;.
tEG 1/4's

I.

JUMBO~BONUS '4 LB.

.

UnLE DEBBIE

•

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&gt;

··s·
l
'29
·Parkay Spread ••••
-

Sna·ck Cakes ••••••••• 69. ( Fried Chicken •••!:.•:-$229
ARMOUR TREET
.
TONY'S
.
"· .
. . · .
· , p·1zza......
· · 3. ,. ·s.-s
.Lunch Me.at ..••• ~2.~z••• 99&lt; ·Frozen
BANQUET '

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SURF DETERGENT

STARKIST TUNA

•• 6.5 oz.
CAN

2/Sl
"
''"··lin

136

0~. $

5~ 9 .

GMd 011¥ AI ....., 5lplr Yllu .
. . . . . . ,., )990 ...... 5, 1991

GoM O!olr At ,....., S.,. v•
GMII Die. 30,
JM..s. 1991
Uooll' 2 Pw C.ll II .

lilll!t I

ht

C.t•••

MAXWElL "OUSE

INSTAtf COFFEE

12~1. ~399

$490

eMtl Only At ,... .,

5lplr Yllu

..... ... ,., 1... ,.,. ..... '· 1991
u.1t I Pw CMII I II

• ASSORTED

PORK ·
(HOPS

PEAl ·

PINTO BEANS .

~~. 4-/Sl

Geed Chlly At ,_••, .sl.p.r V.
GMd lllc. ID, 1... lllru ..... 5, 1991
liMit ~ .., C.lllllll

'

10 LB. PKG.

'

. 12 PAl

. .

c

10 LB.

PKG~

$JJ90

Zn

An-Ashville man was treated at
since 1982, when the Maumee
Columbus
hospital Tuesday for
a
· River crested a.t 20.5 feet.
hypothermia
after falling Into
· FlOOding' also began in Grand
the
rain-swollen
Scioto Rlver
Rapids, several miles upriver
from Waterville. Pollee estab- while duck hunting with two
lished barricades along Main companions in Plckaway
Street, a historic street with County.
James Philput, 30, was in a
shops that runs parallel to the
boat on the river with companriver.
In · Findlay, the .rise of the Ions Rick Wilson of Ashville and
Blanchard River covered parts Brent Trego of Lockbourne when
of M"'"'Streetand led to a limited It capsized. The boat flipped over
state of eme~gency. About a as Phllput stood up to shoot a
·
dozen homes were evacuated duck.
Wilson
and
Trego
swam to
there .
shore
while
Philput
held
onto the
In Delphos Sunday about 100
boat
and
maneuvered
It·
to an
people were evacuated from two .
Island.
After
he
collapsed,
he
was
trailer parks .that were flooded
to
shore
by
another
boater
taken
from runoff from farm fields . ·
Those people were expected to be and then flown by helicopter to
allowed to return home Tuesday . Grant Hospital In Columbus.
Meanwhile; about 150 pecple
Pelphos Pollee Chief Dennis
from homes In the
evacuated
Kimmet estimated damage at
Shadyside Acres Mobile Home
$750,000.
Park near Circleville planned to
Waterville' s annual New Ye. ar's Day Polar Bear Dip was return home Wednesday after
flood waters on Big Darby Creek
· MOVING UP· Before tbe Hooding Oblo waters began lappiJJg at
postp~ned becauSe of too much
the door, tJ!e first Boor ol Andersons bad been emptied of furniture. · water flowing In the Maumee receded.
, The residents were evacuated
The beavy pieces were ~!loved' to tbe elevator and taken to tbe
River. ·
Waterville Mayor Charles Monday night after three to four
second and tbird Boors or the building. Among the good-natured
"movers" were from tbe left, Laura Anderson, George Morris,
Duck said heavy rains have feet of water flowed Into the park,
created high water levels near · surrounding 56 trailers. Most of
Jeremy Rose and Jamie Anderson.
the bridge where a group o! the dwelllngs were high enough
8
nl'lnD'
0 1
people take their annual plunge to avoid being inundated, said
, park
owner .
·
.
-.~~
intotheriveronNewYear'sDay. Gary Stites
.
J
.
...... Meigs:CoooiY Emergency Medi.''" ireatid''llili :K;t uanspone"if At:!i:40 ~-A local motorcyNe·ctub also uses
cal Services units responded to 17 a.m .. 'Middleport fire department the occasion to Initiate new
calls for assistance over the holiday went to Noble Summit Road and · members.
Soulh Central
period, beginning on Montlay and Bradbury Road for a high water
Partly cloudy Wednesday
ending Wednesday morning.
rescue. Oulrlic Meadows was taken
with a low In the mid 20s .
night,
On Monday at9:S3 a.m., Racine to Veterans. At5:47 a.m:• ~omeroy
P~rtly
-cloudy Tnursday, with
Veterans Memorial Hospital
and Syracuse squads wen,t to Siate squad went to the shenff s office
MONDAY
ADMISSIONS
Khtghs
between
35 and 40 .
Route 338 to the Darlene Graham for ~1,11 . Kent, who was taken 10
Ohio
extended
forecast
residence 'for a structure fire VeteranS. At 10:15 a.m., Pomeroy Eber 'Pickens, Sr., Syracuse; Octa ·
Friday through Sunday
Racine squad took Eller Pickens ~ squad went io Locust Street for Wllrd, Pomeroy; Linda Hawley,
·
F
air
Friday, and a chance of
Middleport;
Robert
Fife,
Mid·
Veterans Memorial ' Hospital. At' Mary Long, who was taken to
rain
·or
snow Saturday and
.
dleport.
•
.
12:47 p.m., Syracuse squad went to Veterans. At 1:24 p.m., Middleport
Sunday.
Highs
wlll lie in 'the 30J
MONDAY
DISCHARGES
Bridgeman Stteet for Maxine Phil- squad went to Railroad Street for
Friday,
In
the
40s
Saturday, and
uanilll
Gerard
and
Charles
HofJ
son, who was taken to Holt&amp; an electrical fire at the Parley
ranging from the 30s to 40s on
.
Medical Center.
residence. At 3:02 p.m., Racine fman.
Sunday. Overplght lows will be
TIJESDAY ADMISSIONS
At 5:30 p.m. Tuppers Plains squad went to Bucktown Road for
Frances
Sampson,
Pomeroy;
mainly· ln the 20s throu gh the
squad took- Jack Lantz to Velerans Courtney Jones, who was taken to
period.
Theodore
Sttom,
Pomeroy;
Robin
...,
from their station. At 7:02 p.m., Veterans. At 3:53 p.m., Middleport
Dugan,
Middleport;
Judith
Pomeroy squall went to ·the Meigs squad went to Lincoln Street for
County Sheriff's Office for Ira Van Jack Bachner, who was talcen to Laudermilt, Pomeroy.
IEMEMIEI
TIJESQAY DISCHARGES
Cooney, who was ll'eated but not Holzer. At 5:56p.m., Pomeroy staWITH FLOWEIS
transported. At 10:02 p.rri., Mid- uon we~t _
to Butternut Avenue fD! a Marie Roy and Betty Boyd.,.
To oend a beauotllltty
dleport squad went to Zuspan Hoi- fuel spill. At 7:42 p.m .. Rac•ne
d8lped funeral
low Road for Bernice Jones, whd' squad went to Perry Run Road for •
Women Alive to meet
Ju•l
.was tteated but not tnmsponed. At Gerald Moore, who was taken. 10
Women Alive will meet Monday
nil or "ltrdt
10:59 p.m., Rutland squad went to Veterans. At 8:05 p.m. Racme at 7:30 p.m. at the Kyger Creek
' POMEROY
' State Route 684 for Frances squad went to Front ·Street and Clubhouse. There will be a devo· . FLOWER SHOP
Sampson, who was taken to tmnsported William Robinson to tiona! spealcer and craft making of
Veterans. •
· - Veterans.
porcelain ftowers from silk flowers .
"Th~ ~H.
L~·:•''
On Tuesday at 12:09 a:m., Mid· · On Wednesday at 1:18 a.m., Refreshments will be ~vided.
dleport squad went to North Racine went to Buclctown Road for
Second for Roy Boggs, who was· Courtney Jones, who was taken. to
Veterans.
#

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a
usy
d
Squ d b

h J•days

Hospital news

A992:"64s4

"'DANCE FOR JOY';
AEROBIC DANCE CLA-55
11 CLASSES

...

.

9 WEEK WINTEI SESSION $3900

BEGINS JAN. 7th, CAaEION SCHOOL
. · SYilCiisl, OHIO
CLASS TIMES: MO~.-WED. 7:30 P.M.-8:30 P.M.
TUES.-THURS. 6:46 P.M.-6:46P.M.
CALL JOY KING 992-3794
JEANNIE OWEN -992-6893

'

Randall F. Hawkins, M. D•
•

Internal Medh;:ine
'

OfRce Hours
Monday through Friday

..

9

a.m~

- 5 p.m.

•

Brown
.::Fred
Fred Brown, 86, of Portsmouth

Suite 13,
PVH MedicalOfftce Building

-Rd., died Tuesday, Jan. 1,1991, In ·
'university Hospital, Columbus.
' He was born Aug. 17, 1904 In
. :Creen Township·, GalUa Cil11nty,
:son of the late Richard M. and
Nancy Kay DeWitt Brown.
. .He was a retired state employee and attended the G'arfleld
Avenue Church of God.
'
He 1s survived by his wile,
Geneve (Musser) Brown. ·

f304) 675..7700

BOMlDING VJ!. Protectloa ~11M ataa from ·Year's Eve. Titus, owner tbe buUdinl, ooted
water In tbe door•
tbe tnr•ulpre and debrla qftbe 'Oblo River Will . tbat It takes 47 feet tu
wllat Ball Titus bad ln. mind u be boerded up ' AU or the -children's c
a' and accesaorles
tbe attore front or "Buttons and Bon" on New were moved out by shop opentor, VIcki Ferrell.

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Jd PLEASANT VALLEY.HOSPITAL
V1 TMiamil, ol.fJfoltulollolt'
.
Valley Drive, Point Pleasant, w. Va. 25550

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MeanwHile, · Meigs : County .
Sheriff James M. Soulsby reported
that his department was "swamped"
with phone calls regarding the high
water. He also .reponed that some
motorists ignored the "road closed"
signs and while attempting to drive
through high water-~ flooded out and
required assistance. ·

Flood ivaters ... · continued from page 1

BUCKET

S LB. BUCKET

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POMEROY, OH; '

lrl

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. : Page- S. The Daily Sentinel

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~y-MKidlaport,

•

·. Chickculee flys the coop
MEDINA, Ohio , iUPI) . - A catch the bird.
· northern. Ohio super~rket is
. "It's warm. rt has food: It 's all
trying to deal with a chickadee . set for !he winter,lt people would
w.eighing less than a half an · just leave It alone," Koppelounce bu 1 creating problems
berger said.
because it's been lunching on
Koppelberger, however, said
store broccoli for the last month. customers shouldn't really be
that concerned.
A Finast supermarket near
Medina, acting on customers'
"People think: 'It' s a.Wild bird
concern about sanitat ion, con- and we have food In here,' butit's
• tacted Medina Col,lnty humane a big place and a little bird, "
officer Vic ~oppeiberge r to help Koppeiberger said ,

W~nesdav.

Ohio

Wedoaaday,......, 2. 1991

Janu.V 2, 1991

_N o.n.:m:edical /actors play role in Caesareans

. ne )'Dutb ot Trinity ~ in

tlon is more expensive and .i-tsky
than . Vaginal de liveries and Is
~ften unnecessary.
In the new study , published rn
the Journal of the American
Medical Association, Randall
Stafford of the University of
Californta-Biirkeley and his col·
leagues exam1ne4 tile relationship between various factors and
Caesarean sections. ·

· · ~ ll'mnted cheir -ua~
~ JliOjiiDI dwin&amp; a.~

DanieiJe 111111 Midie'"' 'lbnml•
iad
[)epoJ ~ "The
lind" fer die ccacluaioll ol the

.. . 'Ibole
in the
'· "CoiQII of
" wte Jessica
~ ll!aemw, l.auleo Sclunoll, J.ue
, Sclm!oll, Slrlh Hawley, Brandi·
· ·'I'IIcJ;nls. AlY"&amp; Holla-, Roes Well,
· Dailicllc
1bonw. Mlchtlte
~1\5. fie~ Depoy and Robert

propam
On
'22 tbe lfOUP, youlb,
leaders, )llllmll, ~ IIIII
frieDds went Chriitmal c:aroliDI in
dowmowD ~- . Aflerwlnla
tbe poup enjoyed a piZZIJ*\Y •
. Main Srrcet l&gt;izza where Slllta
Claus made a visit.
·

· .

.

r-

. - ·. Presentins oCher lel!dings w=
Jessica. Mu:um, "Holy Night;"
·.
Karyn Thomp!OII. "Tbe-Wondious
Sill';" Adam Thomas, ·"Wilen He
Came;" R)'tlll Well, "To Fllld tbe'

~-

;.--rc;PYAIGHT 1990 · THE KROGER CO . ITEMS ANO
. PRICES GOOD SUNDAY . DEC . 'lO 1990. THROUGH
. SAT~R!lAY, JAN. _.5, 1991 , lt.!. POMEA,OY ·
.

.

.

ManFr.

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES . '
NONE SOLD TO DEA LERS .

ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY · Each of these adVertised items is requ ifed to be read•tv a\latlabte t01
sale If) each K.roger St.ore, except a~ specificaU.v nOted in t~is ad: If we do run out of an
ad'olenised item,
will otter you your choice of a comparable' 1tem. When available.
reflecting the sanie savings or a rain check which will entitl~'vou to ~urct~a~ the advertised
item at the advert ised price within 30 days . Only one 'olendor couppn wilt be accepted per,
item purchased .
'
·

Alice

_ . • ·The Area's Number 1 Marketplace
'·

Ov,r 1&amp;Wordo
Rate
•
. 20
15
t4.00
1
.30
$6.00
3
16
.42
$9.00
16
6
.60
$13.00
.
10
-151
.06/doy
$1 .30/ dBY
16
Monthly
Ret~llfO ·fOr con•WII¥1 runa. brokM~pd-.sw"' btc:tt•gtd •.
lor each .a., n HP•••• ads.
'

Oi.ltstd~

Me1ys. Gal!••

Of M~sun

counttes must btt pnt

pad
·
·n~anvt! f . SO d•seount tor o~dl Pl•d '" adllance.
,
! f1ee ottb
Giwe.way 11nd Found ads undllf 16 wordS wtll be

d~ ilhllfl' pubiJCilh011 IO fNk~ COiti!Citon'

Kroger Chunky
Vegetable Soup

'

G•lha County
AreaCode61.

clast~htld

tlltPlwY. 84il'inun Card and luuill nollc.rSI
·) \Ntu illstt itppeitt 1n It!~ Pt PTu•ant R•n•sun i111d thv G.-lh
•. pult.· Oaity lrlbUIItl. ntilehtng OVUI 18 : 000- hOnl~l

.

Quaker

..

12 -- 18-oz .

..

'

· Kroger .
Pinto Beans

·

Boneless Pork
Loin Chops

.

'
'.

.

.

.

··.

\.

·

.

-Boneless
Chicken Breasts

-I .J .

..
I

I· ~
•

,

.~ " -~ .....,~'

.......... .

JJ#'

- ~ :J

'/

~~ ~ ~-

.

. '--.;
i

.

J-

'

.;..

...·'•

Pound ·

24-oz.

··------

.

.

•

Loek Who'•

c..

18 , •••,,

POMEROY- SR 124- Approx. 3\1 acres of .nca~t
land. Wiler, elettnc, liS
milable. lots of fire wooct
ind a suitable srte for pnly
$4,9110.00. .

. Public S8Ie

RACIIE - This house
needs some work to make rt
a home bUt the beautHul
larll lot i.n town would be
thereward for your efforts. 4
bedriM!JDS, older Ill story
frame l!ith part basement.

~:00 ~.M.

,,2,0011.00.

J&amp;R Auction :

.

LHe,
•••&amp;h4

..

.....,.,.

Owner may help finance .

$7,500.011.

POITIAID - One ~oar, 2
bedrooms, I 'bath, wrth fuK
buement. Glraae and metal
shed silli!.I\JIII+ acre. free

. Real Eltate General

.

. .
~

'

'

·IUt

Springdale· 2% .
Lowfat ·Milk .
Gallon

· 6.4.:oz. T~J~e

f

$J99

, .I

-

14·3 f•tn• tor R.nt

f II :' I: I ' I' 'I I
;I' 1.J I ' ,)
Helo WMtld

12
1l
14
1ft
16
17 .
U

Situetlott W•ttd
lnsur.nct -.

71
72
7l
74
75

-

41 s ...u tor R.nt
47 WeniH to Rent
41 EquCtm.nt tor Aunt

11

41 , fot L•.••

Mtsc:etl~n..us

, 51

Ser~ices

Hou11hokl Goods

U · !I-Un1 Ooodo

81
82
83
84

53 Antlflluts

54
M"c. ,...,c"-..d•••
55 Bulldirig SupRh•
!51 Ptts for S.t , .

21 lutin•sOpporluntty
22 Monti¥' to Loan
2l' Prof•ltOul Strwiars

...,Till
....... _ _,the
1~ llld. or 1111at the belt

A~tPIIII

flten VOlJ' HaiEt

Public Notice

,..':I...;ANCIIIDS
...;7.;
be ............

M1ry HohUJter. cIDMI a1 MeJp County
Coftlrt*llonen
l121 21: ,, , z. 2tc

El~rical• Relr~g••t•on

86 Mobile Humo
87 Uptlollterv

58 Fruits &amp; Vtgtlt•bl•
· 59 Fo1 Slle 01 Trlfl!

Public Notice

Home lnlPfOvetnenl s
Plumbtng &amp; H•ll•nu
Eac1111ating

85 Gun••l H•uln•g

157 !"ush:lllnsuumef'lu

Pub.llc Notice

Auto Repotu

78 Camp•ng Eqmpmttrll
, 79 Ct~mPtf5 &amp; Motor Hunws

lusift•s Tr•itlig
Schools• lnttructMrn
R-.ciio, TV • Cl A•p11u

Wi1RtH To Oo

Tran sporta tion
Autos fo• s ...

Truck1 lor St~l t
V•• • ~ wo ·, 1
Motorcycl.8uat1 &amp; Motort IOI" S ..lv •
71 Auto Plfts &amp; Acc.._.a.ua

44 .Aptrtlft.,t lor R•nt
45 FunWst-M RMms

NQOft.

with awant f\d

the lillelll Ceunty l'u!ollo U·
!orMy ot 21.1 W. Main lt..
OH 41711. untft
12:00 JonufiFY 3,
1110, for Cl-p I n - •
· .oonrl
lrldudng
Jlolpl111, ·
Llfl
JIN-lp!lon
-..1 "'"'Ill for 1 D em·

Po-.
plot'"·

'-

2-Ltr•
1

10.-&amp;

Offici 614-"2·1116
lillie 614-"1·5691
1011111.
WI NIIED

........ .
IEMotAL

*LIGHT HAULING

·~rtrmcK

'992-2269
'
.
.

USED UILIOAD

m

.11·10dl

lariks .

C.USTOM III.T .
-HOMES &amp; GAIAGEI
"AI lntiR ..It PriC.s"

"2·5009

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

.I'"

GUAitANYEIDI
I! lmMATEI

SUIIAYS

..._,...,

· -OTSSIAIT
· SIPT U, 1990

INSULAnON
•VInyl Siding
Wlnclowa

JAMIS DISII
992-1771 . 742-2151
131 BIVIn Plac11
Mlddl•po"l .

·•RiMIIOdllnt and

Home RIPIInl

•Reoring

•Siding
•PIIntlng

. GlOOM

ROOM

110 .1011110 IIALL

COIIRftCIIOft

9tJ-6641 ...

.......

·691·6164
,..,,

110 SUIIIA Y CAUS

-...--~-4-pl;ol- Ill

YAIDMAN &amp;
ECHO IEALEI

•Any !Mitth ..W
ohelnl antiiOill•
. eorl;!le

·

eKil'lunolto ..••
Wlob
We De_Wlela· a.,..;

... .......
741o2455

..

. Sid••• ..... hils:..
IZ-24·10-1110.

DrER
WRAPPED &amp;
SIINNED
UNWOOD

FBEm•am
CIIAI

PH. 949'·2101
., .... 949-2160

smnsAGAII

4.tfn

J&amp;L . .

"Free Eltlm11t11"

fftRCUAN'CU

II=~_.
~

Day"
NO SUNDAY

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

Helmet·

1iOOP&amp;

..

BISSELL .//
SIDING co;'

~Gutter

GUN SHOOU

..... 949~2101
.

•VINYL SIDING
• ··
--LUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
.
INSULATION

Construction

.RACINE
GUN CLUB

BUILDERS

...

····1157

Ml-4466'

•••1111111111 ....

, ,.,

slltlq···

ON zmiiiiUCI'OIS

PIIIOtt!or.._.. di
OldlhtOwlew

IEW.NG AND
11011111 SIICIOMG
C.llfW •ulll!l•

,..........
...........,' ..

IANIS
CONS11Utnofil

r•ar
r•t·UII

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

1..'

''

lOS N. S.llllll Str..t
l•euPorr, 0110 u11,.

'
ELECTRICAL SEIVICE

----·49·2660
llUI ... :,_

y

SIIUI&amp;II8

OwMr &amp;o,. ulor

6U-992·6120
, _..,, Ollie

LAII
614-949-2734
or

·

WI-UITMI

.newer heal ~u~. Pyi&amp;IJI, vinyl sjdlgL tnd 1 DicMIIInce
tor pnyacy. Dqn t mill aut on lhis DEAL JUST $27,000

'~~-

'T.i"ii'N r: ll ll ' ' l l

•ROofing
·elnsuletlon

llan. PI.GOD.OO.

IT. 33- Allolt llllfwlr t• a•an- Brand new canllructioo. Hea a spacious, bNutlful2\4 acre tat, kitdlen willl islind, dlnln1,_ wlltl atnJm door, and llalflliwln\::",
~-1---, Hal 2111!1 .... end 2 .,... doAII:IIIIilt,lftd CIUld
2
biJ111om1 ._. ...._... UIIIIIJfa.llwnlr wll flnWI•IJIIIIra
. for a llltft !!1G11 111111".
IIUI'f II THIS OlE PO.SOO
' ' li

Utili

A. hill. &amp;arden
Also
hu lllkonlllnlll we un~.
Mlny 0111• nict lllblra
$39,5001.011. M1ke olltr.

noor. Clll ton•ore Inform•·

.'

StM\- Why looklonlllf?- Thin are '
1mr-tl~::~~-111•
.
ill thll 1~ starY 11omt on a 5Dxl40 lat. 1111

I

..

Ohio 41711.

•Rep!tlcement

POifiOY - Co.-cl1l
lllldiRI - Pvssible allice
pee or apartment on 2nd

· IIDDLEPGIT - HistoriCII ioolllna corner store.' Hea 6
' aperlmttlls up ind anotherllorl dawn. Sll!t your awn bull·
ness. HIS lots bf room, and he en Income. Clll for 111011 d•
iJils.

Coca Cola ·. •
Classic

' ' '

Buthkt

dulll home sittin&amp; on 2lots
in t011n. 2 ctr prap:N.G.F.

•r•..

WAIT- lalnltlllnc1 fiN hllrior- 4 bedlooms, 2
balM, 3 sitting porches, and 1 dinin1 room. Nice bi1level
yard. fenced 1111 with barn f01animals, an!! atree hoJJSe lor
, children. · ·
.
· lUST SEE $42,500

NONRETURNABLE BOTTLE, DIET COKE,
CAFFEINE FREE DIET COKE, ·
CAFFEINE FREE COCA COLA CLASSIC OR

Gallon

IIDDLEPOIT .- 1978 mo-

IAYLOIS .,. - BeautHul, corner lot with 2.15 acres. Hat
nlllural psacross the road, electric available.'Oiderf'riwway. ·
.' IUOO

.

Kroger
Buttermilk

$19,9011.011. Make oft~.

· 201 NORT.. 81COND AVE.
MIDDLEPORT. OHIO ' ·
OFFICE 112-2888/HOME 112-1812
· DOTTIE 8. TURNER. BROKER

.

..

LOAIT - 7 room .house, 3
bedrooms. I beth. cei'J)et
throuahout. 1.Jr11 ,JiitCI!en
tnd patio. Gas heafind hot
water hut 2 car a••ll·

..

.

AEG~lARlY

Lelatt

Hou ..~ 101 R...t

42 .-,Mobile-Homn tor Rttnl

•

POIEIOY - K11pbury
bod - 2.761 acre lots.
Water and electric aYailable.

Acreil ......
. Wtlfenl A..o

======--

78·

••

4\

Business S.e rviees.

... m.soo.OII.

22-oz. Dozen·

=~~

&amp; 3 LiVItttoelt
64 · Hay I Gr&amp;,n
.
6 5 Seed l Fl!rttlinr

1;411 '

Awctton

11

61 Finn equlpmunt
62- W.n~ed to Buy

'

FRIDAY
JAN. 4

c

Crest .
Toothpaste

Rull•d
Coohiille

.. 2

Public NotiCe

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

Larg'e Eggs
18

141 Recine

·

Grade A

· .Kroger ·
Cottage Cheese

.,

247 let1rt falls
742
·· 667

Apple Grove
Mason
New Hav•n

713

Adl

5

KROGER

NONFAT '

PO&lt;tlond

&amp; L1 Vl!Si 11Lk

3. 8usin"• •luildlnv. ·35 :· Lou • Acrno•
36 Rell Eat11e Wentttd

l.on

458
. 578

Jon, I, 1111. TM !olde wll
.. oponod lnd ned eloud ..
don 107.11 aftfll Ohio llo• 1 o'alorak P.M. an Jon. I,
C-, -~~~~ IIHII WMI 1111 for the puro!o-1 of:
· • roaoilvetl by the loortl of One new 1111 Mils• County Commllllon•
LOidlr 3.0 au. ydo.
... Court Hou•, Pomeroy. One new 1 191 e!ngle exit
, dump trucll.
0... new 1111 otriglo oxlt

AUCTION
""''ULAn, LPWFAT OR

Ch•tlr

843

TRUCK DEALERS

I Auction

U.S. GRADE A PERDUE

986

'- .· PI~t~~~~nt

675

F,1 : 111 Su ppl ie s

,

Homn f01 S.al ..

OHIO'S BEST .

8

•
•

s... •

1

32 Mobit•Hom" lor S!litt
33 ' FMms 'tor Slle

6 HIPPY Adi
I Lo1t •nd found
1 Y•d a.. elpatd 1n achancel
• 8 PuMic

r .,, ' ,,.,t.

•

·4 $1 '
Fnr

•'

·

Rnr, ,,1

11 2)10, ·31: (1 I 1. :Ita.

Astrology Palmist
Card Reading
405 Florence St. Belpre, O!lio·
Phone 423-7292

' Corn
Jiffy
Muffin Mix

4-lb. Bag

1&amp;2. Miflllopon
Pom•ov

NOTICE TO

,

THE HOUSE OF JACKSON

,.

. I

CENTER CUT

---·

.

' \$229

12-oz:

l:.imit 2 With Additional Purchase

I

· ~

Mason Co.• WV
Ar•aCode304

a,..c~e614

Public Notice

·BULLETIN- BOARD
... ___

.

Instant Oatmeal

Young .
-Turkey _B reas

•
•'
•
•
•

gg :

CONCENTRATED

Kroger
Orange Juice

Mt•gs County

441 GotltpOiia
367 Ch•IWe
381 Viman
:ll&amp; Aio Grinde
256 Guraft Disl.
643 • Ar•bi• Dial.
379 Wllnut

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
COPY DE "OLINE .'
.,
11 .00 AM s•TURDAY
. ' MONDAY PAPER
2 ·00 PM MONOAY
TUESDAY PAPER
WtONfSOAY PAPER
~ ~ ' ~EE~~EASYDAY
THURSDAY PAPER
2 :00PM . THUASDAY
t-HIOAY PAPER
2 IJO PM . FAIDAV
SUNDAY PAPEA
r

..

For

1 /,, • .

f•ill11wi111{ I c•l••pholll' c•xc·/tall!{f'.\...

· •A tliiUifll;.,l mtverllltiJnV111 ploteLod m The Douly Suut•nttll~•

••

L'la.\sifi•••l /JR/{1'.~ •·m:•·r

1b

' 'Ads lhM rnust be Pl•d '" adv•noo ilffl
Ctud ollhnk~
Hi1PPY Acb
In Mumon11n
Y"d Sitlt5

I

31

· • ol . Oiwe...,ay

tor erru1s fNsl ·d., ad tmts tn p.putl . Call blffore 2 00 p m

· • cwt

•

1 C•d Of "'Mill .
2 lnlllefnoty
~
· J Annouc....,.ts ·

------ /

• '7 .,0 ..1 line IYIMI onty UHd
·svntll'ltlf t1 not rnponslbltt tor euors aher li1s1 dllt'· tChvc:k

10.75-oz. ·

•

...

·

.. ,

9 W•t•to Buy

"''' 3 d.,s at no ch•g•
'Puc• c.l 1d fo• all c•••ll•n•s '' dqcublu puce ot ad cos I

Kroger
Tomato Soup

Words

D•v•

POUCIE:S

'Atls

...

RATES

TO PLACE AN AD (All 992-2156
MONDAY thru ' FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.
.
I A.M. until 'NOON SA.TURDAY
. CLOSED SUNDA~
.

•

•

otl!e~

'

Pound

'·

I

•

Salad
Tomatoes

GraJl· A Fro:en
(+7-lh. A.\'~.)

'

~

· •-:·~--

SALAD

L.S~

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

run

we

•v'·""

news-----~------ Purchasing
tour II chief of tbe U.S. UaiiOII part. It doi!sn't have 'mueh to do managers report
Office lnBeijlqln 19'14-75. "I did
With money. It doetn't have
have allttletlep-lllon: ... 1 DOW much to-do with ... two cars. II further econom~- ·
real12ie that tiJere
a lot of has to do with loving each other
reasons probably. But It waa and doing for
peoplll!. I'm
· tiny. II juat ma4l me ·more not saying aon't work hard. What decline

the

•).n: '

.act

Baby;" and Jobn Cooke, ''Hello."
. • Megan GIIIIICI joined ibe ~
·...in singi~ "Away in tbe
· "He's Still Worldn' on Me," and
·. "We W'!Sh You a Merry Christmas."

. .

The Daily Sentinel-Page 9

'·

sympatlleUc to other people.
I'm saytq II, enjoy It when you
What I'm uytq to people 11. If do It Have fun ."
you have a depn!laion, 10 Re
By JON HURDLE
your doctor. I waa too prolld and
SEEN AND OVERHEARD - ·
UPI Butnee1 WrKer
a little stupid, too. 'AIId talk to
Alec Gulnneu Is sUII going
AaeiJdin8 were Kenny, Mary .
him al:!Out It and fllld 'out.
strong at 76. His latest movle.ts
. NEW YORK (UP!) -The U.S.
and Robel:t IUnil, Dan. Fonda,
And thrUst Y&lt;&gt;unelflnto other - ·"Prl!lude to a Kiss," also state
economy declined further In
projects. 'l'bat'a really how I got
ring Alee Baldwla a.n d Mer lyu Decembet,the Natldnal ASioclaMichelle; DanielJe ·and Het!tber
Thomas, Jim, Debbie, Lalnll IIIII
over 11. I atopped thlnklnl·about
... About half the New York
tton of Purchasing Management
... and started thb,Jlcing again
Giants welcomed 1991 with tans
said Wednesday.
, .Jamie Schmoll, Sandy and. Sanlb
about others~ And"lhat makes the · who could afford 1350 to ride a
The Purchasing Mana1..-1' .
Hawley,
Karyn . IIIII
~
Thompson. N1111t:y Pic!rens, Juaca
bl&amp; difference In' Ute,"
yacht around Manhattan, com·
Index,, Indicating the state of the
·
~plete. with music, champagne, manufacturing· economy, leU tO·
D•uu••. San Cilia. Jeaial Wri&amp;ht. Becty ltitl
Deacw
.·
·
filet mlpon and lobster Iaiii . . -tq.4 percent from 41.3 percent In
Brandi and Adam 'J'ho!nu.
THE FIRST . LADY ON
... AND ON LOVING AND ·Thelllaestdralv was Law- Nowmber, marking Its sixth
Alyssa and Kelley Halter, Debllie, CHEERING UP - First lady RAVING nJN - , Frost won· Taylor, who ahowed up for the monthly decline.
·
BcdaJy 11111 1o1m Cadre. Connie, Barbara Bull thinks one way to , dered 11 peoplf1, Jud&amp;IJII by the player Introductions, then dlaaiJA reading below 44 indlc-tes
. Jeasic:a-11111 JOib Man:am S111111 , overcome depression ts to get problema eonfronuna .them, peered from the festlvltlel ... the overall economy 1~ In decline.
·'Ryan
ROlli Well, 1~ SJIIUII' · busy dolnl thlnp. In an Inter· have lost the element of joy. Mrs: uld Cller on Opnla Wl!Jfrey'i .the IIIIOClatlon said.
PaW. Mayer, 'lwJirie Hauck,
View wil!l David Fra.t on PBS' Bush responded: "1 think 10111t ahtllll': "I ·am very geatle and
The Index hit Its lowest point
GlobObr, I&gt;iiDne Hawley, JoAin .• TV and Nat (Opal Public Radio, people.- not many ...,. llave put · really . aweet. Bu.t If you alnee the trough of. the 1982
and Roland Wildman, Belly Reibel, she acknowlqed leeltng .down , the wrona emphOla · on their . , - - - with me, I'll mop the . recetslon: when the level was
Hulf, Ralph Wf/lty, and Santa. when Georae Bwib tlniBhed his lives. And joy Is a verytmpolllant fioor with you."
39.2 percent.

~ Nancy ~ ~ee;,ted
Getty ,Really for ~tmas.
.
·TbomJackie .~liCk, Julie Spaun1 Matt
... ~n • . Bctl!any • ~ and
S~ Oli8 presented -n.t s What

-- ~Is."

ROCK ·'N' BOll JtiUI TO BE
JIONOBED - ZZ Top, the bl\11!1
rock and rOU trto,ll to be honored
Saturday by Tennes-. Shelby
County and !he city of Mempblll.
BID)' Gtllllo•, Fruk Bell'll and
DaltJ'.BIU will be special guests
at a recepUon prior ·to their
concert In ~emphts. ·Gov. Ned
Ray MCWherter will attend and .
present a special award !rom the
, state for helping to "keep the
blues aliVe." ·T.IIe group hal been
lastrwnental In ralJIDg mo.ney
lor the Delta Blues Museum In ·
C111rksdale, Tenn.
··

Dec.

H;uria.
·
.
. ·MelOdy Ho~y, JOsh Marcum

·· .. '

~

.
.
By United· Pres~ In¥r.iatlinlal

nevor

~~

·· ·

c

Pon:""-Mhklaporto Ohio

·_ Trinity Church .holds program -.People

0

I

CHICAGO (UPI) - Women
medicalfactorsappearedtopta,that thre.a ten themotherorchlld.
appear more likely to repeatedly
an Important role In determining ~ About 967,!100 caesarean sec- ·
give' birth ·through Caesarean
whether women underwent relions . were performed II\ the
pe'ated Caesarean sections.
United States In 1988, accounting
sectio n if they have their babies
In teaching and non- profit Caesarean sections Involve
for about a,quarter of all births.
surgically removing the · baby
The· rate has quadrupled In the
hospitals, and If they do not have
medical Jnsurance, researchers ·from the womb rather than
United States In ' the pas t two
reported.
delivering the . child naturally
decades.
A study published Tuesday
through the vagina. The proce-. • Health exper.t s have been try·
dure Is designed for when prob·
lng to reduce the Caesarean
Involving 45,425 births among
California . women found nonlems develop during delivery
section rate becauSe the opera- '

•.

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741-1411
ft&amp;al"'

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WeANAD.r
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OYEII. IEPIII
&lt;AI.L MAliS

lrin1 It In Or We

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liN'S APPUANa
SEIVICE
"2-5335 or 'tl5·1561
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Tra nsportat 1011

''The oil ·ciul labeL saitJ yot.t
can gel 10,000 miles out. · it , ·
·but ·1 hardly ·got across · Uw
strt&gt;et!''

..-.-.

-

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=-=·AIC,2~-

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· • Opponuntty

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OHIO VI\WY~LIIHING
mill

~~.".;..&amp;Oli

INTELLIGENCE
JOBS.
All
·
U8
Cuotomo,
DE~
ole. ·Hiring. Coli (11 805-&amp;81'
1000 Ext. K·IOfll.
·

EmploynH' nt Sr.rvtces

FlldoJ olan,.ry 4111 'IOI.m. • 12 Noon. (SI:I) 7Tfo.

.72. .

: 11 . Help wanted •
; AVON - AI • - . Coli lla~lvft
, WMYI!f10W:IZ-2141.

,

.

=

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7:0&amp;' (]) HIIPPY llllyo

1240.

7:30 (J) •

:; 1 _ , .... ltl~--

I

uoo. 8141247-4ZIZ.l

31 Homes for Sate

.
-·~~~

-011

"
·Canllcl:- OoofTI!t,
!IIIII F~ II S--1341. 'r .

HloltOI)'. 81W41-1115t.

1111 Fonl Ronaor. 4 cyt.,
$3100.114-441-7131. .

Dlllverad. Alii, 0111,

~ · su~. tf

you

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TIPPL-E

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$E~V1CE

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.. up

PA~Pt-~1

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NEWLY REIIODELED wllh
RENf and a tow t1ot1o11t to Ill

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or
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Dill aow-. mt-aoas

Plllfjllll&amp; I HUnNG
·

Ntwlamtioou

161 North S.Contl

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Oloio 45760

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CALL IT
VJHEIJ 11-\£ 1-\ELP A~UWR
GIV£S 10 CU. caE1100JL

..............
dipoell--.--

···"-"

'•'ON -SITE SERV[,CE/REPA!R
•qJSTOM PROGRAMMING ....
•st.l.ES ·
·ON-SIT!l:CUSTOM TR·AIN!NG

eoal'lll• ·
-c-plete

.....odaUng

Stop I Clllllpare
' " ' Estlntatn

.

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INC.
-111111401- ·In
M~. Coli T0111 Ar-m
1141111:1~- 1:00 p.m. •

~-~.:~on
Loncl 1..,--~-----_..._
55 Bul~lng

35 Lots.&amp;Acrelge
LDn1 FCA BALE In Golllpollo

=:.:M::·=.._~~

5I

J06 }AQ(SON PIKE · Sili11 .10J '
G.tLUPOLIS, OHIO 4J6JI
•

·

BE NEXT!
. Prot1C1 \'GUrlelf with the
.
STUN-UM lioy chain sprayer
. ·
STUN-UM Ia the moat lldvanclld chemical

.

"""-r• ... f3

. GRAPHITE SHAFTS .
INSTALLED
IAOB ..................... I21

Or.,

agalnat.personil crime.

To

.JOHN TEAFORD

SciUtC. . . IMd
Ch•tor, Ollie
n-2HD-1 ••

~

AND WINTHROP

.

·

YOU DEVELOP A

Set vtces

.5ENSeCf=

HEARIN&amp;-.

~lrtll

MY l'l&gt;'\Pet&lt;
SA&amp;.

Home
Improvements
=·~lponlol
Me roglolaod lolwiluzor,'

.

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o.auanwrnd c.tt.-y ,......,
• - ind HlnfOIIyan w-.
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8:30 ()!I

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e

WHAT IN THUNDER
ARE YOU 001!'1',

5Htl Chick ·or M.ty Order
For $19.95 To:
.

Lilli'\' Kllfll uvet
())
Maniaci People .

Allan worries about being
ljkad when his lather-In-law
visits. (A) Stereo. g
.
10:00 (J)
11J H - Hunter 4 '
confronts a priest who may
have heard a killer confess.
(A) Sltieo. I;J
' · .

BARNEY

:

(Jl-

The Brotilerhood
Two brothers on opposite
sides ol the law light to ·
control their family and each
·. other. (t:OO) ,
,
(I) Amertcln Pit Stereo.

P. 0. lox 190, ;titi..roy,

Kelby Is ' ... ·
chOHri to wHness the
·
execution of mutderer.
Stereo. g ·
· ·
lllJe !br Trek: The Nellt

a

cuniNG .

CUTTING,
SKINNiNG;
WRAPPING
RD.,
.. IASHEN
RACINE

~;~::&amp;!T!f~

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10:05 (]) MOVIE: Dlainond Head

·,-2-...
PI..
u_m_b-ln-g""&amp;----

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Heating ·

~lo,~

. ltyi • .,

THE HARDY OUTSIDE
. HE.AJERWITH INSIDE THERMOsTAt
.

- .. ,.

·

(PATEHlEOI . .

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

84

EIICtrtcal &amp;

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oflclllllil,li!.cl-•lroldllraia

.........~---

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POMIIIOY ~TION
7 DAYII AM·7 P!li
.CLO.ID CHIIISn.tAS
DAY ONLY

•

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...., ......110-IIIOirrrt ....... -

Call 991-5114

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lOAD iVf1tr 12 HOuiiJ

ONN I DAYI A WlllK
~IANY. OH. LOCAT10

&gt;~&lt;t
.

a.1f.:::u,.,

CALL
'

lillve instincts In the yeer ahead· Ther.e
18 a pou!blllty yqu might be able to tutn
. one o1 your taten!• Into somattllng

.

J'l~ til!tJ1lN211 oftor-1 )t.IIL

profitable.

· "~ nunkllel
..
~-·

.

lion tamer'• SC)IoOI."

.

.,,

.

1l~)
. ound

advice giVen 10 you by ·your mate today
will be worthy o1 con-Ilion. ll'allkeIY io be beller than I\IQOIItlons you'll
. get froql.l hot·ihol pal who layo claim
to al tlto!l answero. Trytng to·palch up a

'

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'•-•

CAPIICDIIN (Doe. 22-..

' ·.•

•

Try to give fuller exprwaton to your cro- .

•

VICKER'S WOODHEAnNG

'

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'.

'!Ill""

n:OO ~ U

iGi

sura. you lhto ·a commjtment that may

not serve your bestlnteretlts. ,
TAURUI (April :ZO.IIbJ 20) A pr_,t
arrangement which Is proceeding ""'
8ctly al you planned COUld be jeOpardlzad today !f you let people tnterfll!e
who havli no place In the operation .
Keep kibitzers out
. 011111111 (llbJ 21-Juno 211) Try to avoid
making Impulsive decltlons today
where Important Issues are copcerned .
You need time to think things over, beyour
first thouglits may
cause
'
.
. . no!. t&gt;e

·'

., .

-

··.-

-·' ~·-

.Yo.u get tOo nosy.

·

,

lilli
Arunk&gt; Holl g
11J teml VIce Q
a

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·

a•
'

·

·.

King ot Country Music

· Roy Acuff and Minnie Pearl
are lnttrvltwad by Olnah
· Shore. (1 :00)
·
@~Cef!lor

8M-rllne

8

~rec~ 1~ M,.. King

e

11:30 (2)
IIJ) Tonight · · stereo .
· (J) Tho llouatora
·

Monitor '

i

DAILY CRYPToQUo'rES- Here's how to work it:
AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW

T~lgllt

121 8porta Tonlglli
11 :311J) ClioeiW g
12:1111 (I) e l!;io the ·
Stereo.
l!lle Mr
· ae C88L.all N11M ·
. 0 Tho IQUall&amp;er
T_ • • . . . . .
.

8NIIhvltlNow

.

1uc1 ~ -um Trllllllon
Nltlonlrl a............. .

1/2

One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
f9r the three t:s, X for the two O's, etc. Single ietters
apo~trophes, the length and formation of the words are ali
: hints. Each.. day the code letters are.&lt;Jilterent.
:. .
.
CRYPTOQUOTI;
.
.
VTA
C WW L
T A .K W 0 G E 11. WJ K
.

•

~lltllneg
• Arne=

=

43·Track
even I
.44 Sage·
brush
· state

~

KHUMDO · .SNASBK

· &lt;D Amerlcl'a.Defense

.SCORPIO (Ocl. :M.Nov:22) Your vlev..W
and (lplnlona might not be'tn harmony
with yO\Ir mate's today. You can't win
your, mate 0V01 with reasoning; getting
angry won't
tho 'trlck, either.
SAQfTTAIItUI (Nov. 23-Doc . . 21)
· Y~'re ·not
to be .reluctant aboul
poking a lillie tun at your compa_
niQns
today. However. when the shoe Ia on the
, other foot and they rib you, It might be a
bit painful.

do

l!ll
Cllllt1 I;J

CIJ •

(!)
(!)NIWIWitCh

=rrtrhday
. ·•· · , "".

Jon. 3, 1tlt

..........,..,..............,_
'

·

(2:15) .
. 10:308 Crook . and Cltall

broken romance? The Astro-Graph
you&lt;·best ones..
Malchmaker can help you · to under'
CANCER (~u,.. 21·July 22). You have
stand what to do to make that relallon a~equate flnanci~l ,
today, but
ship work. ~ail S2to '(latchmakei, P.O. - you also have a stre'V' extravagance .
Box 91428, Cleveland, OH 44101-3428.
DOn't let the latter olfsetthat which you
AQUARIUS (Ja'l- 20-Foll. 11) It co.uld
gain with the former.
•
·
BEFINICE
be rathereaay lor you to get a favorable
LEO(~UIJ23-Auo.221 You might have a
BEDE OSOL response. lrom people with lillie clOut bit ol a problem getting .your priorities
today, but very tough gelling approval
In ordertoday . Pon't waste your efforts
from those who htive the real aulhorlty.•- on tllelllllj)nlllcant while giving .only loPIS.C EI(Fell. »March 211) II you don't
ken· allentlon to Important mailers.
have something nice to SliY abouJ anVIAQO CAuo. 23-Sopt. 22)' Y.ou . might
oilier today, It's baSI you uy nothing,·. not. get everything you requestlrom en•
•
· flllpeclally If (lf11lre discussinG a person • other today, so don't heve unrealistic
with someone who likes this Individual
expectallons. Try to be gretaluland ap·
better than !lilt lndlvldualllkM you.
preclaiiVa rathet than reeentlul. ,.· ..
..,. ARE. (118rch 21-Aprlt. 11) Don't ~
LIBRA (llopt. zHict: 21) Try .t o keep
too gullible lor your own good tOday. An , .your curiosity within proper bounds to,
associate might Sel up a ·friendly little . day when conversing wKh • secretive
frll!nd, This Individual might get angry If
get-together to serve as a.ploy to Pt•

· ASTRO-GRAPH

ACROSS.
45 .Over .
1 Silver an~ · ·· whelmed
gold, e.g. 46 Very
.7 Newcastle
slylish
product
DOWN
11 One kind
1 Tourist's
of. energy · aid ·
12Parlol ·' 2Greek
A.D.
vowel
13 Colon's ·
3 Cargo unit
Yesterday's Answer
counlry
4 Stun
14 Under5 Rickey
17 Com30 Com ·
world river
ingrfi!dient
plains .
· p~d.__
.15 High point 6 Read over 18 In lhe
· costs
17 Dessert
7 Cuba nneighbor- 33 Go lor a
cart
honcho
ho.od
spin
,.choice .
if In a
19 Have in
35 Conlir~ed ..
2!llike lre~h
precarious
re.serve ' .36 Eternally
posiCion . 21 Car-buy - 37 His lory
. celery
_ .2.3 1\.ctgr
9 Some
ing cho.ica
chunk
10 Bagel
22 Slage
38 fido's fool
Vigoda
24 Noted
topper
needs
40 Earlhy
mis- ·
16 Com puler 24 Chimney
color
· Cleane'r,
·41 Tolal
speaking
screen
revereri~ . .. 1mages
25 Seed
42 Utler
26 Caviar
~-=-_.._,,---.,_..,._.._,,.-27, Victory
28 Court:
room oath
29Punch
and Judy,
.·
eg.
··. 31 Topper
32 Put away
:13.Sludies
34 RCA's
mascol
:J7 Heroic
' tale
39 Pero.ri and
name sa~es

Roberta011

· ·-==-~

--2321 ·

11 -11-10-1 mo:

c.16ti.. IIS
•• Cu•t
Ptlas
I .

-

at1 CNN Evening Newl
0 700 Cl~b Wltll Pal

TrOmm lulldlrs:

- - ........ ond - ·

-

O.Mrlllan

_...._, .,.

Mnlk:el
lnatNIII8ntl

949-2206

· Weft Cloee At Alben
Del. 24 • JM. I For
Cllllsn oi v..aon

t.

c• WtOU

.. I

HIU'.S DEER

.OPIN
'IECYCUNG
IVEIIY OAY AT

'

C1J ()) e

JIMMY JAMES?

l7il

e.,,Ill-COUNTY
....,O•••'

A

pilot crasbes Into lila Empire
State Building; a 'housewlle
remembers her data with
· Elvis Praslay; a mau
wadding In 1962 Is recallad.
(1 :001 stereo. C
·
11J MOVIE: Porky'l II: Tile
.N ext Drty IAI (2:00)
1111 NllhVIIIt Now

Tl-lE!I&lt;&amp;SA
LAD'1'8U&amp;
WAU&lt;I!o&amp;ON

VE~ACUTc

· SED SECUIImii~!~DJ'J~

•

11J Story llellilld the Story

~~--~~~~~~

-poppor,ttiO.
I -~.·
• Old, 1111 ono

Mlf defeose Wilpon avalt.ble ~your 8clge

TROP~~:~s:=~QUES

Houlet!Okl
Goodl

At. TNorth.
- -lno.
· Good
c..,
•7
,PI
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• llall.4il. .,..
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. -Onnclo,
. ..... OH
Cloudo
Colt -114-

.................. Corpoll.

ICOUNTRY IClUB

'("'1·

~

CARKT
FUIIMTURI

446-6000

5-31-'90 lfh

y

Supplies

5/'JIING I'A.UEY PROFWI0/1/At BVII.DING

985-447;1 .•
667-6179

BROWNING
CHRIITMAS
GRA,HITE

wanted to Rent

Q

IOW?II-7144.

2731.

.

GlOwing Pains.
·. .
Eddie surprises Mike Wilen • ·•
he shows up wllh Mike's
ex.girllrlend. g
8:00 C1J (I) • DOogle Howser,
·
M.D. Doogla feels guity
,. when trying to hide
somathl!!lj Irani hls.dad .
Stereo. !;I
"
(lJ (!) .C.megle Hal ol100:
A Place ol Drelma The ·
world-farno~s concert hall's
•
. rich history Is traced with
interviews and footage of .
legendary P~~rtoi'mances .
(1 :00) Stereo. • .
1!1J ltJe Jll!eand the
F....,n Jake hunts lor a
'witness In a case against a
mobster. Stereo. Q

. WAT to

~--·llolh,

BISSELL &amp; I_UIIE
COfiSTIUCnON

by THOMAS JOSEPH

· 8:30 C1J ()) e

PHONE

.

CllOSSWORD

(2:00)

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

Phor&gt;e
BIUa Here .

.

.

8:051lJ MOVIE: Blue HIWIIII

flohlng 8UPIIII•

f!

2.

(2:00)

SALES &amp; SERVICE

W.

•s

e

~ . ......

1-Z-11

~Biil to Win, Play for Pleasure " (De- •
vyn Press), by George·Rosenkranz a~d WEST
EAST
Philip . Aide~. is ·a remarkable brid!le • Q 5
+10
book. It elucidates a system of btd· • K 10 1 6
'QJ
..
ding, Romex. which has enabled · t K to 1
tJ.9812
+J8.143
George Rosenkranz. to .win 10 North . +A K 6 5
American Championships, tiut inter- ·
SOUTH
sperses this detailing of system .with
• .A K 9 74 3 2
entertaining and instructive deals
,.,,.,
l 2
·
!tom actual competition . So the read·
tAl
er becomes familiar with the bidding
+10
methods · while being entertained by
Vulnerable: East-West
the exciting deals. Today:S deal is one
Dealer: South
of these.
,
·
I
Although South was minimum in · South
West
North ~last
high cards, the playing value of his
Pass
Dbl .
1•
cards mushroomed -when his spade
4•
All pass
suit was supported, so he went right to
Opening lead: • K
•;
game.
West did hi's best by first leading the
.· ' .
king of clubs and then switching to a
heart. . When declarer played a low throw away his ace (!f clubs , he w:as ,
heart from dummy, East won the jack still helpless. Declarer played a heart,
and continued with the queen. So South putting West on lead and forcing him
took dummy's ace, cashed his A;K of to play away from the king of dia·
spades · while unblocking dummy's moods. For poor West; it was a case of
jack, and then ran all his trumps, com- having just too much in high cards .
ing down to Q·6. of diamonds in dum·
Ja'mes J•cobf'J books •JM:Oby Dll Bridge ~ and
my. Poor West had to keep a hig~ ~Jacoby on CBrdGarnes~(written wilh his f~t&amp;er,
· heart aod the guarded 'k ing of ·dia· the late Osw11Jd Jacoby) 1re now av•U.ilbl• at
monds . Even though he was . able to bookstores. Botb are published by .Pharos BotJks.

g

a:oo rn •

IS

NORTH
+J86
'-'954
• Q6 5
+Q9 2

:-;:?""Ill•~·~~--~. By Jamet..~J,coby
=·

(J) 1121e E~tnmenl
· Tonight Stereo. Q
·
. (J) • Mllme'a Family
liD• Th,..., Company
8 Ct'llalt..
7:35 (]) Tile Jaltaraona
Col.at ileakllbllll
(D MOVIE: tho Bell of
Tlmea (PG13) (2:00)
C1J OSU ll!ltk-1 PNvlew
'Cll (!) Talking With llrtvkl
Frolt George and Barbara
Bush $llscuss the midpoint of
Bush's term of office.
(J)
The WoncMr Yur8 -·
The·Arnolds learn that
accepting change Is part ol
grOVo!lng older. (R) Stereo
_. Q
· I!IJ 112118 48 Houia The tear
of doctors and nurses.
infected with AIDS Is
discussed. Stereo. Q .
. lllll8 MOVIE: Chlld,.n ol
· the Corn &lt;Rl (2:00)
IIJ.Uneolvod Mysteriea · .. '
Stereo. Q
11J Murder, She Wrote
Stereo. g
·.
1111 Ktng .oi .Country . M~Iie .
Roy ACUff and Minnie P.,.rl
· are interviewed by Di!lllh
Shore. (1 :00)
8 PrlmtNtWI ·
IIJ) MOVIE: The Oelaha Boy

l·

....,_,
u.-.1111-..-_

or~.

IIJ) J~rdyl

(Jl Nlgllt CcHirt Q

1112 Chovy T"""'- ley!., ) •
...... ~· 814-441-1357. -.:
111111\.210 Font phi' lor- 314
- - - · ·a nd_,.,.
- . - . . - r r t o tranolt.IM--11.
,,
-101110W71-7111. • . 1t84 Chovr 11-10 lloz•, 4 wl!+
· v.......,.............
eo-.. pi!llllo ............... aUIOIMIIo t~. -''·

o.. nc~e....~~mo. ,,....._

I!IJ

BRIDGE

·

. ~~ Mra. King

I) Sci
_.· -.

1... ~.

1 . BR opt.:!...Cenlral Ave. In Rio

MonoyllM

1111
~~~.T!III., Aulo
PSPB\Eac'Ofl
At:.,· _,.N~n,o~~aa.,
4 dr.,.•

__ _
-·-··--·*. --=

lor Rent

eoo.g..Basklllllltt

8

111· .......,. T.v•• eM-441-

In-......·-·
.. .
~-

a

. 1-:

depression is when you re out of wclrti. When your wtle
is out of work. now that's PANIC.

I

1

1577 Chovy. pick-up, 1111""- I
cyl,, "-automatic, runt aooct.
~- .111!8.Ho... Cl500 Mai"f'

:.1:..

-

'

ICUM-UTI ANSWIII

/mmune-Price-Qui!Jff-8/ceps-PAN/C ·
A recession is when ~our neighQ!lr. is out of work .. A

(lJ (I) Mac:Neii/Lallm
NnraHour
liD. Night Court Q
IIJ
Cunent AHIIr I;J"
IIJ ac:O~ Starao._Q

1117 Ford Bronco II XLT. • 4
Whoil Drln. 17;100. 114-2411:131.'

. . ., iilce,

'UNSCRAMBlE lETTERS .lO
CET ANSWER

.CIJ &lt;ll ••n• Edlllon Q

12 Trucks for Sate ·

44 ..Apartment .

Poll~lino ·.~ mon -hove pli!' _, - · Min~
num wogo .,....
milo for goo
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CONSULTANT
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and " aduftl with • - •rtou.
problom. • Enureola. · Appol_. ... .., uo. Hard
and IN¥11 NqUINII. llau
140,000
to "?j~ commllllon.
Call 1.-.71
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Yesterday'• c..y.l~~~tei A GOOD CURE FOR A
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BEFORE INSTEAD 0[ THE MORNING AFTER : LAURENCE PETER
I

'·

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�'

Sentinel

V:ldnllday. JMuery 2. 1991

.

•

.

•

•

BEND -·
. Your .Locally ·o w.n ed ·
LOW-PRICED · SUPEJtMAR~,.L&lt;

•

qumte~

DtA

resume play

~~

REDEEM YOUR
SPECIAL OLYMPICS COUPONS
ON PROCTOR.&amp; GAMBLE PRODUOS
. WITH US•••••...

Piek-3: 4.9
. Pick-4: 4310
Card&amp;: 8-H; 3-C;
4-i&gt;; 7-S
Super IAlto
16 4~~27-2242

•·

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FOOD LAND
•

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in tho

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Publlshtrs' Clearing HOUio 'Envolopo _
In lOur Mal.

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Meigs .,Commissio11ers
adopt gerieral budget

'

TISSU

•

FLUSHING THE MUD

oocld water goes

·

down, mucb

• When tbe
mud and

debris Is lett bebiDd. Bepnlng Wednesday af·
ternoon ud tontinulq tbroqhout tbe nJpt,
Pomeroy lirfmea beP . bOIIIng do- • tbe
sidewalks and streell in tbe Pomeroy busmess
sectloli as tbe W.ter ~- Bobby Je!fers,

$

Wayne Davis and Rick Blaeltulr were amon(l
tbe firemen volnnteerina their time to tbe~
cleanup etrort. Thursday mOI'IIIq tbe American
Red Cross was in Pomeroy serving breakfast to
: the Bremen, many or whmn bas worked
throughout tbe night in tbJ! ~anup errort.

.: Flood wilters ·recede; firms .
begin cle(znup ope·r ations here

BONELESS
•

CHUCK_
'

1 Section. 10 Pagoa 26 Cento
A Multimedia Inc. Newiplp&amp;r

3, 1991

UNIVERSITY OF RIO GRANDE
. REDMAN BASKETBALL
'VS.
MT. VERNON NAZARENE COLLEGE

USDA CHOICE

' · State highways in the county
.. were opening as Ohio Depanment
·of Transport.atioo worters removed
.the mud and debris put lhm b\!k'
f!oodilig Ohio, schools wm . .
in session, and for many Main
Strt:etJI!erchaniS in Pomero.J·j!;:S
y
"b:'l!l"ell""as 111m11 -~ ·'HI
mQllliri~. .
~ ·
· The flood wale~$ were completely off lhc Slleets in downtoWn

.

ROAST

Pomeroy early. Thursday ~g in lhe cleanup process.
although lhe pmting lots were slill
While ~Y of the stores were
c:Overed. The water stood at 45.5 at open for busmess Thursday morn9:30 a.m. and wa8 falling fast.
ing after O'!'ffiers BQd emp~
. PomCJ'C?Y firemen were out all · woiked all rught, Sl_lllll-weni still. m
rugjlt hosmg lhe mud olf.lhe streer,s the process ol pulllllg mq-chancJ!se
5o, that lhings . could, $Cl back .to"· back on_ lhe. ~!ves. ~rs . m· nOI'mahrrsc;xm as ·JIOSSible.. 01t ibe dlc&amp;ted ihal 1t 'Cowd'"lakii liOOilier
.scene ear~y Thursd,lly rnCJ!Dlllg _was day nr tw() bef~ they are,~Y . to
the AmellCiin Red C(OSS. m town to open;
~rve fOod to lhe wcrtem involved

1990 Meigs ~ou~ty
~vents review~
.
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH

By BRIAN J. REED
Retardation and Developmental
• Sentinel News Stair
Disabilities, $1,118,424; Publi~ AsA general fund budget fnr 1991, sistance Fund, $5,053.725; Liller
totaling nearly $3 million was Control and Recycling Fund,
adopted at .Wednesday's regular $60,000; Real Estate Assessment
meeting .of lhe Meigs County Fund, $218,934.80; Motor Veliicle ·
· Commissioners.
and Gasoline Thx Fund (County
Tile funds and amounts approved !ln~ineer.&lt;Jarage), $1,948,149.16;
for lhe 1~1 budget were.: Board of Sod and Water Conservation SpeCommissioners, $208,858; CountY cial Fund, $48,150; Youth Service
Auditor, . $193,093.17; Count}&lt; Subsidy Grant Fund, $26,363 .49;
Treasmer, $105,572.11; olher EMS, $408,805; TB, $120,710.88;
financial administration, $2,364.10;
·Children
Services
Fund,
Prosecuting AtUl'DCy; $173,674.97; $143,849; Marriage License Spe..
Bureau of Inspection, $55,000; cial Fund, $3,165.77; Community
County Planning Commission, Development Block Grant Fund,
$8,784; Common Pleas Coun, $105,593.47; Revolving Loan .
$65,952.25; Domestic Relations Fund, $8,471.99; State Funds,
Juvenile
Coun,
$54,432.75; . $13,602.94; Mental Relardation
Probate Court, $30,020.30;
Bonds, $51,860.22; Computer
Clerk of COurts, $128,069.28; Research, $1,945.97; ·Trust Fund,
· Coroner
Office,
$26,709.81; $13,229.94; Law · Enfon:emeni
County aild Munici~ Courts, TruSt Fund, · $7,655.70; Agency
$97,211.88; Board of Elections; Funds, $294,189.75, all totalling
$95,916.92; Capital Improvements, $12,527,453.85.
$60,000; Maintensnce and OperaCommissioner Richard , Jones
tion,
$206,404.42;
Sheriff, explained at at Wedmisday'$ meet$397,033.49;
Reco,der, ing lhat lhe b!ldget was wilhin
$75,003.08; Disaster Services, $31,000 of the 1990 budget, and
$6,975.48; COW!!y Public Defen- pointed out that, ~ven the large
der, $23,000;
.
amount of money mvolved, lhat is
Agriculture, $89,375; Registra- very close lQ laSt year's figure.
tion of Vital Statistics, $160;
In other action on Wednesday,
Children Services Board, $111,450;
Soldier's Relief,
$44,429.10;
Velaan's Services. $31,S71 .26; ·
· Public Assistance, $71,080; Park .
Ceminission,-"-$23,100; Engineer
{plat map), $39,910,45; Law
Library, $1,396.20; '. HisiOrical
Society, $7,500; MisceUaneous,
$202,414.12;
Contingincies,
$75,000. •
ThoSe departments receiving
special revenue for 1991 are: Dog
and . Kennel Fund . (half-year),
$8,164.63; County Board of Mental

I'

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the commissioners passed a resolu,
lion agreeing to participate in lhe
Hocking
Valley
Community
Residential Center, a de~ntion
facility lbr juveniles who have
committed lhird and fourth degree
felonies.
·
Olher counties participating in ·
lhe program wiU be Hoelting, •
lawrence, Athens, Ross, Jackson,.
Fairfield, Vinton.• Washing~!l'•.:Pike
and Gallia.
..
The resolution, which in effect
establishes an executive committee
to oversee lhc planning stages and
the actual cperation of the center,
was passed by lhe board pending
the approval of Meigs County
Juvenile Coun Judge Robert Buck
and upon consultation wilh
Prosecutor Steven L. Story.
Meigs · County . Engineer Phil
Roberts repOrted to lhe commissioners that damage to county roads ·
due to lhe high water in the county
was, to date, minimal.
· However, .Roberts said lhat
linother slip at Wf~lshti&gt;wn HiU
would need to be ~leaned up after
the waters receded According 10
Roberts, no further .road damage ·
was incurred due .to lhe slip, and
Continued on page 10

day later prominent Racine riders on openiBg day were Rhonda
Sentinel news stair .
businessman, Roy E."Proftitt, who CoUins and Judy King.
,
.
Happy New Year. ~t·~ 1991! •
· was· in lhe oil and gas drilling busi;
· Announcement of a $300,000
Shiny and untarniShed, filled ness for many years, died.
.
Ohio River access to be consttucted
wilh promise and hope. .
Middlepon ViUage Council ap- . near the ·enttance to Forked Run.
But before 1990 gelS lost in the J)l:opri~ $1,378.709 fnr village State Park was made by lhe Ohio
shuf8e of coping \Yilh _ lh~ after operations in 1990.
Department of Natlinll ~·
holiday blues, not to menuon · the
Manning· Roush was re-elected · A $200,000 worker ll'Blllmg
bills, let's look to lhe year now pas· president. of lhe . Meigs County grant to assist coal miners who
sed, and·lhe evenrs which inftuen-. Board of Commissionem.
welt laid off from Solllhcm Ohio
ced decisions, fonned opinions,
Winner nf The Daily Sentinel's Coal Co. as a.result of layoffs was
Brian E. Bass, who escaped from
even shaped lives,
1990 First Baby of lhe Year Contest announced by lhe. Ohio Bureau of the Meigs County· Jail in August,
It lakes reflecting on lhe past to was James William Nally, son of Employment Servtces.
1990 is to be returned to Meigs
put t.hillgs in proper perspective so James Gerard and Katie McBride
.FEBRYARY , .
j County from South Carolina to
that we can more clearly look 10 the Nally of Pomeroy, born on Jan. 2.
The.Me•gs _County ComlSSI~ners answer felony escape charges.
·future imd the challenges of a new ·
The problem of teenage preg- authonzed Michael Sw1sher, dirccAcconling to Meigs County
.year.
nancy and what can be done about tor of lhe De~ent ~f ~uman Sheriff James M. Soulsby, Bass
JANUARY•
it was discussed at a meeting m- Services to begm mtemewmg ar- was amsted in late October in
Several thousand Pomeroy cus- itiating the "Hcallhy Babies" chiteciS for lhe construction of new Aiken Soulh C.Oiina by agentS of ·
tomers of the Ohio Power Co. progmm of the Department of facility in Middlepof1:. .
· the ~cral Bureau of Invcstiga· celebrated the New Year and then Human Services. Meigs County has . The.flu-~hed ep1de~mc propnr- lion, acting on infllq)lation fi!r·
almost immediately eJ~perienced a the third hij!hest rate of teenage nons m Oh1o a~d Me1gs County niShcd by lhc Meigs County Sherifpower olllage. Just past midni~t a pregnancies m Ohio.
was not far . behmd as ~ Hcallh f's Department.,
·
tree feU on a ccnductor on Umon
A $7.5 million general fund Depar)ment ISsued a wammg about
Bass then refused to waive ex- ·
Avenue and 3,200 households were operating budget was adopted by the illness.
' traditicn .and Meigs County
without electticity.
'
the Meigs Local School DistricL
Syracuse approved an annual~!(&gt;· Prosecuting Aaomey Steven L.
Soulhem High School, Soulh~
Jane Walton, clerk, and Reed propriations ordinance for 1990 m Sto
began
exttadition
Junior High Sc!I001 and Rl!cme Will, street commissioner, bolh the amount of $1'52,289..
.
~gs.
Elementary studenrs got an un- retiring, were presented plaques by
The first of four public mceungs - Soulsby rejlorted that ·lhe Goverexpected extension of their Pomeroy Mayor Ric¥nJ Sey!er at on lhe comprehensive so~id waste
of Soulh Carolina honored
Cluistmas vacation due to a water a . m~ting of Pomeroy Village . management plan for the s1x county
's request and issued a Goverleak in Racine.
. Council. . .
..
area was held. ·
,
s Wanant onlering Bass·to be ·
·: .. · The ; .debate , beP!I over who
.An $828,000, waler line extenEight-year-old. Ryan Ramsburg. · limed. ·
. ·
.
would provide fire p'oUCllon for sion of the Tuppem Plains-Chester son of Robert and Christy
POME~OY UNDER WAT£R • Tbls was the way Pllmeroy
Bass was indicted by lhe Meigs
Letan Township ie,sideniS, the Water District service area was ap- Ramsburg, returned from the Na- COunty Grand Jury in cady Oclooked Wednesday momin11 just before .tbe flooding Ohio River
Syracuse
or
Racine
Fire proved by lhe Fannem Home Ad- tiona! Kid&lt;!ie Tractor Pull at lOber on a fourlh degree felony es- began recediDg into Its banks after reaching 49.4 feet. This picture
. Departments: It was finaUy decided minstration.
was taken trom lbe roof or Andersous Furniture in ·the middle
.
Columbus w11h several troph•es.
cape charge.
, .that lhe levy proceeds would· be
block, of Main Street. · ·
.
Plans began fnr lhe sesqu1cen•
Seventeen people were ralcen c
·
split with both,departmen~ ~fil­ tennial observance of Pomeroy. ·
from the old American Legion Hall .-.------------~--..-:-~......::.
ing and asswnmg responSibility for
Enroilte to a fire on Wolf Pert in Middlepon to the emC!llency
·proteCtion to 10wnship residents.
Road, a Pomeroy fireman lost con- room of v'etcrans Memorial
The Mci~ Local Board of Educa- . !n&gt;l of a tanker truck and it ov&amp;tur- Hospital after showing symptoms
tion decided it would take two ned on Union Ave. .
of what apJ;lCIU'ed 10 be carbon
meetings a monlh .to handle busi"
David M. Persons of West monoxide poiSoning.
. ..
ness or the disnict. The ijvc board Columbia was found in~nt of a
Temperarures reached 68 m
members are compensated at $80 a charge of escape folowmg a two- · down10wn Pomeroy on Feb. 7. .
~g.
.
day trail in the Meigs County
A new Meigs County Chamber
Pomeroy
Attorney Charles CommOn Pleas Court. . ·
of 'Commerce was fonned and
Knight was awoinled ~lie
The Meigs County Regional Bruce Reed was elected to serve as
defender for Me1gs Cpunty I!' a Planning Commission approved its first pre!lident. .
·step 10 proviile better legal serv1ces
p~ for the Rol!in 's C~ Sub- . 'Middleport ViUagc C~uncil·h~
.10 indigent defel)dants , • a lesser .diviSion ncar .Racine pending ap- its own devel~?pment direciOr, ~·U
. proVal by engineering and heallh . Miller, alreBdy a half-arne
COSL
•
. The · multi-county landfill con- officials.
,·
.
employee of lhc village.
.
str'uction and operation could carry·.
lriformatiooal meetings on conThe Meigs ·Local · ·Board of
· a price tag of $12~ million, accord~ solidating the seven ~en~ EducatiOn decided', to ~n
·. ing to SCS Engmeers, the firm .· schools and perhaps the Jurum: hlJh .pl8ns fDI: a bond IS~ to I'8ISC
representing lhe Solid Waste of the Mcip Local School Dis~ct money .for the constru · ·""'
Management Dislrict of Athens, were held ·~ anticipation of vol!ng · ction of two new school
Ga1lia, Hocking, Jackson, Meigs on the issue in May.
buildings because or the IJOOl:
and Vinton Counties. ·
.
Seventy-one year old Paul A. response from the votm of the disRacine lost twO · w~ll-lmown Duff was convicted by a federal lricL
.
residents in early I•IIIIY· W'ldely- ~ury of cliargcudalin11 to the grow-- ·Meigs County was granted
tnown Rae~ .Wcknt and long- ·•ng, l!lllrijuana on his Meigs 'County . $4 2S,OOO in 1~ n mo~ies to be
time chairman of~ ~ip ~ty farm.
used for infrasii'IICtiii'C proJCCIS.
Democratic _Exec:utive Cbm1111UCC,
An elcvaiOI' installed in the
Jtomeroy
.
Council · approved a
WATCHING THE WATERS • H~ oJ
-111'111 ot p; etloalloodl, IIDt ot wblcb were
Meigs
County
Courthouse
at
a
cost
$1,0.5,972
budgeL
. ·.
people Ventured IDio Pomeroy on New Year's
Ernest A. (Bud) W'mgctt, died at
mncb wont and IIOIDe ot fticb were not. Here, a
Tipping fees which has nused the Day to aee tbe'lloodlq O'k! RIVer. For many It
VeterBns Memorial HOIIPital follow-· of $138,000 was ~mpleled. and
smaD arooP ptben at tile. corner or Lynn and .
Continued on page 7
. was a 11ft' sl•bt. fC!I' 1011e It . broqbt back
ing an extended illhcss. Just two · opciiCCI to lhc public. The first
Malo Street earl1 New Year's Day. .
.

Bass returns
to county to
face charges

•

High In lowe-~: 40s .

tne

·-

ASSORTED COLORS
.

Mos.ily clear tonight. Low
near U. Partly cloudy Friday.

•

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•

Ohio Lottery

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