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.

January 13, 1991 ""'

Paga · 0·8-Sundey Times-Sentinel-

..

prize 'rrom the Ohio Val~y Publ111h1D1 ~-Leave
your name, address ·a_.d telephone numller with
your card or letter. No telephone calls. will be
accepted. All contest entries should be turned 1D to
the newspaper offtce·by4 'p.m. each Wednesday.
In case ol a lie, the winner will be c~osen by
lottery. Next week, a Melp County farm' will be
featured by the Melp SoU aad Water Conserva·
tloo District.
•

· MYSTERY FARM -

This weel\'s mystery
rarm, featured by &amp;he GaiDa Water Conservation
Dlalrlct, Is located somewhere In Gallla County.
Individuals wlshlnl to participate In the weekly
. coate5t ma) do • ·by J!ll.esslng the faJ:m's owner. .
.Just mall, or drop off your guess to·the GaJUpolls
Dally Tribune, 825 _Third Ave., Ga!UpoUs, Ohio,
411631, or the Dally Sendnel, Ill Court St.,
Pofleroy, Ohio, 45769,and you may win a S5 cash

Getting along with customers.
said critical for businesses
.

.

.

.

.

.

the form, and its cost, Sutton '
said.
.
The 8-year test was held at the
research center's Wagner farm
at Wooster. The soil lit the site Is
Ravenna silt loam,. which con·
slsts of deep, poorly drained soils ·
that were formed in glacial tUI on ·
uplands.
.
, No,tlll !)roductlon Is a type of
conservation tlllage, the um·
brella terJ)t for systems' that
leave at least 30 percent crop ,
residue on the soli surface at
planting.
Under no-till production, soU
remains unplowed and fertilizer
and pesticides are applied only to ·
the surface or the soil. The
method Cllts soU erosion and
eliminates crossing fields repeat· ·
edly with machinery to prepare
seedbeU. .
More than half of the 3.13
million acres of corn grQWn In ·
Ohio In 1989 were under some
form of conservatlpn tillage.
Production value of Ohio's 1989'
corn crop was more than ~
million, according to the Ohio'
Agricultural Statistics Service.

· Cants: 6-H; K.C;

3-Dt 5-S
5-17·1~1~22-24

Kicker 654972

e

I'

:Vot41. No.114
coeyrltllit..t 1111
~

,at
•

J

1

Talks fail; U.N. chief retums to New York
NEW YORK (QPI)

U.N.
Secretary General Javier Perez
de Cuellar returned to the Unit~
States Monday to report ori his
discussions wltb Iraqi Presld11nt
· ~dam Hussein, talks he said
earlier "made no progress"
toward solving the Persian Gulf ·

' .

•

crisis.
He told a Paris ·news coilfer·
"I do not want to hlde·from you
Perez de Cuellar arrived In . ence he "did not make any
that I did .not make any progr~s
New York at about 9 a.m. and progress" during his talks with l.n Baghdad," Perez de Cuellar
was to report to the U.N. Security Saddam and' said he saw no
said alter a meeting with Pres!·
Council later. A meeting tenia· reason to feel more optimistic dent Francois Mltterrand.
lively scheduled for Monday . about a peaceful set~Jrient than · · "I do not believe that today, the
morning was pos IJ&gt;oned but no before his three-hour meeting 14th, at this hour, there is tlme.for .
time was set.
•
Sunday with the Iraqi leader.
a diplomatic Initiative," Perez

• I

Stores ...

Cotton prospects are looking good

Recreation -compley nameP,
in honor ~of _Horace Karr
.

By Charlene Hoeftlch

The recrcalion complex which
Horace KaT built in 1987 as a pan
of·the multi-million development of
the Royal Oak Resort Club bas
been named in his honor.
In dedication ceremonies Sunday
afternoon, William Stuckey, vice
prelident of Family Resort, Inc.
which purchaseli lhe park in
.NC)vember. unveiled a blliSs plaque
· which had been affixed 10 the builii-

•

ing.

It Ieads "Hoiace Karr Recreation
COIDJI_lcx, November 7, 1987.
Royal Oak Resort Club." As Jll!l1 of
the design are five stars daloting
the rating which the resort has had
for the past two years from Coast to
Coast, an affiliation of~ clubs.
A ~nal plaque w•th simiJllr
insaiption was presented 10 Karr
NAMED FOR KARR ·A lmmze plaQae on · ~ COIIl)llu." Plrlldp_albiJ Ill the unvelUng . by Sluekey. who is also the park
' tiJe rftleadc!a COIIIplex at tM Royal Oak kesorl · ·•.a'lUbua Stuc._ · -llrrMIIIiooGl-11amll ~-•-•..,.
· .,
·
'"081'"- :al~YIIIed
Ia. a dedication • Rncd,'Bc- Qil ~ ·-~r~~·. or .the park,
.. -~her plaque, given iO Mund
. eemaoay namln1 It the "Horace Karr Recrea·
ldl, a'd 'Mr:'·and ~. Horace Karr.
.
Mrs. .{arr by the Meig~ County

.smiclay

---'-----·--~-·__, No one takes

..--.;..;
·,~--·

·Now In p,,,,,,,.

Oh • congressman on f ann committee

MEIGS TIRE CENTER.

Grain ·production
up
percent

-

'PLUS
SAVE TDOUS;\M)S ON THESE
GM FAI;TORY SAl~. ~ARS! .

• '90 Cadillac DeVille's
'90
. Buic~ Skylarks
• '90 Buick Grand Ams
• '90 Pontiac Lemans
• '90 Pontiac Grand Prix's
• '90 Pontiac Bonneville :SSE's
'90 Buick Reatta
'91 Pontiac Firebird GTA
'91 Sunbird 4door ·
'·

•

Ktnnel Llctnll $20.00

felllll $4.00

Spayed Female $4.00

IIIII $4.00

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SAVE
BIG

BUCKS

.comaissioners

responsibility .

Vest End ,
Sale

de Cuellar said.
· out 11 trjp to Baghdad by either
• But tie said certain' 'personali- French Foreign Minister Roland
ties without the support of any Dumas or Presldel\t Mltterrand
government may want to make a . as had been rumored during the
peace Initiative'' before Tues- · past few days.
day, when the deadline set by the
"I do not see a reason," Perez
SeCurity C9uncll expires.
de Cuellar continued, "to be
His remarks appeared to rule
O]ntinued on page 10

Dedication ceremonies held Sunday

'

Farmers ...

a

1 Section, 10 Po goo . 26 Conto
A Muhlmedlo Inc. New11Jepor

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, January 14, 1991

•

coun&amp;y, area and state -level. The
state
level first place winner will '
COLUMBU.S, Ohio (UPI)- It workers each season, l&gt;assewltz delivery."
receive
$800, second place ·
GALLIPOLIS - 'It's time "f or
. Passewit:z; said most skill In
costs busfnesses. almost five says. And often the emphasis ·is
winner
will
·receive $500, and
Gallla Coul)ty high school stu·
Continued from D-1
times as · much to get a new on production Instead of custo· dealing witll customers Is gained
.
their
place
~ner
will receive
from practice over .time. How.
Oklahoma, the :No. 2 winter dents to sharpen their pencils
customer as It does to keep an old mer relations.
$200.
.
"Let's face It, most small· . e.ver, be advises business owners wheat slate, has planted 7.6 and writing skills and dig In for a
one-. That means getting along
State 'level awards wUI be
to work with their employees to million acres, up 1 percent, chance to earn cash awards In
with customers Is critical. But business owners are more Inter·
presented
at the OFSWCD's
help them be more attuned to followed by: Texas, 6 mllUon the 1991 "Conservation Essay'
customer relations can be a real ested In producing their proSummer
Meeting
In Dayton next
customer needs.
•
acres, down 10 percent; Colo- Contest."
mystery for small businesses , an duct," Passewitz said. "If they
Sponsored by the Ohio Feder a· July. These cash awards are
Pleasant greetings are a good rado, 2.6 million acres, down 4
Ohio State University specialist have a fresh produce market,
lion
of Soil &amp; Water Conservation made possible by the ·support of
they
probably
are
more
con·
first
step
in
dealing
with
custopercent; and Montana, 2..35 mil·
said.
Districts
(OFSWCD), the con- the Ohio Farmers Union, Robert
cerned
with
gr
wing
the
finest
mers,
but
Passewltz
said
It's
"Small businesses have to pay
0
lion acres, down 13 percent.
test,
now
In· Its fourth year, Is- W. Teater, Cecil and Eloise
produce
they
can
and
making
.
critical
the
greeting
be
more
a more attention to customer
Iow11 again was the leading
open
to
all
students In grades Robltison and Emerson Marting.
sure
their
help
knows
how
to
do
than courteous. The seller must corn state with a ·harvest of 1.56
relations," Greg Passewitz said.
9-12.
.
Deadline for District judging Is
the
same.
'l'hat's
all
'well
and
show Interest.·
.
· billion acres. ·
"That's particularly true If the
March
1. We feel that there are
·
According
to
Mike
Hughes,
That means listening carefully
business Is service-oriented or · good, but someone has to be ·
Illlno~ was Nb. 1 in soybean .
students
In ow' county thai h~tve
concerned with s.elllng."
for " h~den messages In the production · with 354.9 mllUon Chairman of the dallla Soil and
seasonal In· nature.''
the
ability
to make It to the top In
Water Conser\ratlon District, the
Passewltz trains people from
buyer's questions or state~T~ents. bushels.
Small businesses, especially
the
state.
If
,YOU know Of
high
A buyer who dlsUkes a color of an
Sorghum production was listed essay contest Is designed to
family operations, are·less likely small businesses on how to deal
school
student
who
has
an
to !lave the business manage- with their customers. He said the Item may merely be asking If It as 571 mUUon bushels, down 7 encourage young adults to In·
hi
teres!
In
conservation
and
soils
ment and .m arketing background first 10 seconds of contact be- comes In other colors. Likewise, percent from last year, while crease their understanding . of
that Is necessary for long-term tween buyer and seller will customers who say they don't barley came In ai 419 million soil, water and related natural related material contact our
success, Passewitz ~aid . Custo· probably determine whether a mind waiting and then act bushels, up 4 percent, and oats at resource conservation Issues. office and the material and entry
mer relations are a:o big part of sale will be made and whether or impatient probably feel their 357 million bushels, down 4 ','This program draws on the form will be forwarded to them,
~I SCS &amp; SWCD programs and
student's research, organization,
not the customer will return.
time Is too Important to waste. percent.
that.
services
are offered on a nondls·
writing
and
analysts
skills,"
said
The
business
person
who
·
r
ecog''Communication
.
is
I\Tipera·
Service-oriented businesses es·
criminatory
basis without re·
·Hughes.
"It
also
offers
some
live,"
he
says.
"The
standard
nizes
such
signals
and
deals
will\
peclally depend on their ability to
gard
to
race,
color, national
attractive
c.
a
sb
Incentives
which
'Hello,
may
I
help
you
with
them
has
..
a
better
chance
of
.
deal with customers to be suc·
origin,
religion,
sex,
age, marital
could,
for
example,
help
with
retaining
something'
greeting
to
a
custo·
that
customer,
Passecessful. Seasonal businesses, on
status,
or.
handicap.
college
Continued
fro~
D-1
expenses."
nrer
can
either
turn
them
on
or
wltz
said.
the other hand, face the chal·
Essays, are judged at the
blend, and Comanche-orange ·
lenge of training part-time turn them off. It all depends on
red. ·
The Floribundas host these
varieties, Betty Pryor-medium
pink, City of Belfast-orange red,
Tex;~s bas nearly completed Its
WASHINGTON ( UPI)
Delta slates, which inClude Arka·
Evening Star-white, Crlm~on
Growers are harvesting 15.6 nas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Mls· cotton harvestiDg, the govern·
Rosette-dark red.
ment said, In projecllng ·Texas
million bales of cotton this sour! and Tennessee. The region
Popular Climbers ·are the ·
season, Including a record 1.18 was forecast to produce 4.93 and Oklahoma would produce
America-orange
blend, Blossom
million bales In LOuiSiana, the million bales, a 23 percent 5.38 million bales, up 4 percent
"I:Ime-medlum
pink,,
Don Juangovernment sald Friday, boost· increase from 1989 when exces- from last month's estimate and
dark
red,
Aurora-yellow
blend,
lng Its estimate of the U.S. crop slve spring rains disrupted the 77 percent larger than 1989.
First Prize-pink blend.
by 1 percent.
crop.
Miniatures are classed as fairy
If correct, the crop would be 28
roses
witb flowers less than one
percent larger than the preced·
10
Inch across and borne singly or In
tng crop. Upland cotton would
·
clusters ~ The bushes are hardy.
.
account for 15.3 million bales and
WASHINGTON (UPI)
, proceedings."
There were only five openings, resembling hybrid teas In form :
American· Pima cotton would Fresh":lan. Rep. John Boehner, .
and seldom more tblln 6 to 12
total 363,000 bales.
·
R-Ohlo, Monday was appointed on the Agrlqulture Committee.
Inches high.
·
Most oftlils larger outpulls due · to serve on the H;ouse Agriculture
Popular selections are the
to a 21 percent Increase In Committee, the first Ohioan to
Baby
Betsy McCall-pink, Beauty
JOHN FULTZ :... J. MUCUS FULTZ
acreage In 1990 year, although serve on that committee since
•
Secret-medium red, Gold Coin·
1972. '
242 W. Main
OWNIIS
Pomeroy
SIX
yields also are up slightly. About
"Ohio's largest Industry Is
deep yelloW, Over the Rainbow·
12. 3 million acres were planted
red •blend, Simplex-white and
992·2101
to cotton, compared to 10.6 . agriculture and. the farms of the
WASHINGTON (UPI) - U.S.
8th
District
are
among
the
most
od
Honert
Abe-dark
red.
mullon acres In 1989.
.. prod uc tlve In th ~ s tate. I am gra1n pr uctton this year will
aver
estimated
to
Yields Were
1
d t b bl 1
1 total 310 million metric tons, the
n pounds an acre this
P ease
Agr Icu1ture Department estla "e
" ..
""'
t 1 oth ie a1 tee o represen
b t th
season, 1 pound less than was no on Y e r n rests, u
e mated Friday.
Tb
. estimated In December but still Interests of Ohio's entire agrlcul·
lura! community on the House
. e projection was up slightly
26 pounas more than last season.. Agriculture Committee,.. from the agency's projection a
"Louisiana Is · expecting a Boehner said:
month ago of 309.9 million tons.
record·high production," the
"The failure of our foreign
If the esUmate holds up, U.S.
Agriculture Department said, trading partners to open their production would be 6 percent
with yieldS averaging 717 p&lt;)unds markers to our farm products larger than lastyear's282mllllon
an acre, compated to 672 pounds alid the subsequent coUapse of tons and would represent a vast
last season. The state harvested the GATT talks will force us to Improvement from the drought·
868 million bale!; last ye_ar.
review provisions of the 1990 slashed harvest of 204.2 million
-HarvestiDg was virtually com- , Farm BJil. 1 look forward to tons In 1988. There are 2,204.6
.
plete by mid· December ~n -the....-playlnlf'lln'-a-ctlve~role In those -· po.undsJn..a metric ton. .

Low Ia mid ae. &amp;ollllht.
Partly cloudy Tueaday. m1h
ID lower SO.. Cbanee of raJa 3f
perc en&amp;.

Super Lotto

a;

Con.Seroation essay contest
open to Ga~lia County youth ·

Pidc-3: 538 .
Pidc-4.: 7672

post wins

'

WOOSTER, Ohio (UPI) - An or 2,000 pounds an acre every 4
Ohio Slate University study has years. All three treatments kept
determined tltat farmers don't the surface soil pH at suitable
havetospreadllmeeveryyearto levels, Sutton said. That means
keep certain soils healthy for com ·growers could spread lime
corn.
just once every 4 years and still
The finding could help farmers reap good barves ts, he said.
cut fuel consumption and rna"Fewer lime applications
chinery use, -said Paul Sutton, would save a grower time and
agronm:ntst at the university's money," he said. "You have to'
Ohio Agricultural Research and · put a tractor and spreader In the
Development CenteJ; at Wooster. · fteld (to spread lime) , or you
Yields Iii continuous no-till have to hire someone to do It for
fields where earn has.beengrown you. Either way, It's just another
In back·to-back seasons without step In 'the operation that costs
plowing could benefit as well, you."
Sutton said.
Sutton recommends farmers
Corn growers spread lime to · have soil tested before spreading
ralsethepHofa.cldsoUs,because lime at any frequency. The
a. low pH may lead to lower : results will show the amount of
yields, . Continuous no-till corn lime needed per acre to reach a
causes sur(ace soils . to turn desired pil; applylng,too much or
acidic, ~ause under · no·tlll, too little lime could be avoided,
fertilizers are spread only on top be said.
.
or the !1!\n.
·
·
Sutton's study found no differ·.
Sutton soUght to determine If ence between calcitic and dolothe split applications of lime mltlc lime In terms of ability to
smaller amounts spread every raise soil pH or maintain yields.
year or larger amounts spread The form a farmer uses should
every 2 or 4 years - would raise hinge on the recommendations of
soil pH equally and produce . the soil test, the availability of
compatable yields In continuous
no-till corn.
He found no significant difference between applying 500
pounds of lime an acre every
year, 1,000 an acre every 2 years,
•
By COllltaace S. White

.Ohio Loitery

Giants,
Raiders

OS:U· Study firids. annual lime·
·application is Dot necessary

\

~~~~~:::!.)
Ll thuanlan Foreign Minister AI·
glrdas Saudargas said Monday
that Soviet ~sldent Mikhail
Gotrbachev failed to. tell his
Lithuanian counterpart, Vytau·
Ills Landsl&gt;ergls, who rules the
Soviet Union- a suggestion that · ·
·· the mllllary Is taking over.
Saudargas sa.ld during a vis(t
to Polandd that Landabergls
briefed him on his telephone
conversatiOn with Gorbachev.
"Landsbergls asked the ques·
lion:· who rules the Soviet Un·
ion," Saudargas told the news
oongerence. ''There was no clear
answer trom Gorbachev."
Then Saudargas, speaking In
Pollsb In a trembliDg voice, said,
"I'he events In Lithuania are
danaerous tor the whole world:
PRESENTED PLAQUE • Horace Karr, )dl, was presented ·a
Maybe a new leader may appear
p!aqae recopidon ol his contribution to the promotiOn of Melg~
who will order to fire at people In
County by Dr. Nick Roblll8on, president of tbe Meigs County
Kazahslan or somewhere else.
Cha,mber of Commerce. The. plaque bad been given to Karr in' l987·
"Nobody took responsibility
by tbe Meigs County Commissioners and was presented ror a
for ... what happened In Lithuasecond dme at the recreation complex d~ication ceremony Sunday
nia - neither Gorbacbev nor the
afterDOOD.
Soviet authgoritles," he sa!d.
"The _generals In Vilnius say
o·tbat-they aot orders from Mos·
cow," said- the mlnlslef "But ·
where Is this orders.g!vlng .cen·
ter In Moscow?"
Saudargas gave unconfirmed
•
BidS for a new W)ker truck were village to assist residents who had · news that .Soviet troops were
opened • last week's regular meet- been dispaced because of the recent attacking a local radio station In
Vilnius, noting that It was hard to
ing of ~ine Village Council at ftood.
Star Mill Parli:.
At lhe organizatiOhlll meeting of check because "tbose who 'tele'lbe bids ranged from $69 .~ 10 council, Henry Bentz wu elected phoned me are In the besieged
83,764. Council refenecl the bidS 10 President Pro Tempore. Mayor · (Lithuanian) Parliament."
He also said Landsbergls
the fire clcpai biJCnt for their review Cleland reported that the same
and recommendation.
committee memben would be begaed Gorbacbev to allow medl~ ·
Council also Opened the sealed reappointed. Council rules wiU cal teams to enter and help the
bids · for lhe old police cruiser. · remain WICbanged, and council Injured In several unspeclofled
· Harry S10ban and Tern Hysell meetingS" wiD continue 10 be the buildings taken over by the
submitted the only bids. Hysell's first Monday at 7 p.m. with the Soviet troops with the use or.
bid for $207 was accepted.
recessed meeting for lhe third violence.
The PoUsh government, led by
The 1991 annual &amp;jljiOjAiations Monday.
.
ordinanCe wu adopted · in the
Mayor Cleland recommended a. Prime Minister Jan Krzysztof
amount
of
$249,330.59. pay raise of $125 per monlh for Bielecki, met to review the ·
Clert/I're8Surer Iane .Beegle repor- Glenn Rizer since the villi&amp;~ is un· situation In Llth!lanla, · Poland's
·
ted that the ending ~ balance for able 10 get medical inSUI'IIIICC close nelfhbor.
the Yillaae for · 1990 was coverage for Rlz«. Mayor Clelln4 · President Lech Walesa pld,
$186,563.80. Additionally, expen- reponed that two companies had "our nelfhbon are struggling for
diiulel
f~
1990 toCalled reJected the lpJllicalioo for their Ina Ilena ble rights to be
$21S,4ll.JS, and Mceipu were coverage. Half of die pay raise, if free." He alsolallted to Stanislaw
$199,1110.13. Beegle reponed that . approved, will . be funded by the Closek, Polllh ambauador to ,
Moscow, on the events In Llthua..
the villlge had not MceiVecl tbc last Board of Public AJI'aln.
1990 lire c:ootract payment from
In other action, council:
nla and situation In the Soviet
Lelarl Township.
·
- ApprovCd the May~·s ap- . Union, the news agency PAP
Mayor Frank Cleland reoprted pointmcnt of Iohn Holman as Fire said.
Poland formed one state for
that Wuhinaton County will no Chief. The fire department recomfive centuries with Lithuania and·
IOIJF handle building permits f~ mended Holman's appointment
the villlge, and 1epmed 1hal Red
• Established two new funds 10 · over 1100,000 ethnic Poles live In
the breakaway republlc t
.. Croa lepi~tatiVCII were in lhe
~~Uilued on page 10

in

1987.

was

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presented for a second, time 10 Karr put back into lhe park-reinvested
by Dr. Nick Robinson, president of . here," said Fultz.
·
lhe Meigs County Chamber of
Pointing to the quality of the
Commerce.
part, Fultz noted that Royal Oalc is
It's inscriptioo credits Mr. and . one of only two five star )llll"k$ in
Mrs. Karr with "sigJiiflcant con- . Ohio. He said that beln~ the excelbibutions to Meigs County and 1ts lent facility thai it is "did not come
people by advancing economic by accident but by lhe interest of
nnWih, promoting tourism, provid' Horace Karr."
recreational tacililies and en··
He 'went on to point out Karr's
hancing lhe overall quality of life other !ICComplishments--bis suefor all Meigs Countians by promot- cess in rsising cattle arid farming, ·
ing ·and develi&gt;Jling Royal Oak and his work with the Wildlife
Resort Club"
Division which is, among othei
Speaker for the . dedication things, brlnging development' to
ceremony was Bernard Fultz who Forked Run State Park. Fultz condetailed the Karrs' development of eluded by thanking Karr for "shar·
Royal Oak from the time the land ing his success with all of us."
was purchased in 1962, to the park
Mr. and Mrs. Karr were honored
Md campsite development in the with a reception at the complex folmid-sixties, to 1985 when it was lowing the dedication ceremony. A
changed into a membership i-esort replica of the bronze plaque
club.
,
decorated the cake which was serFultz praised Karr f~ his dedic:li- 'led along with other refreshments
lion over the ~ ·five years toward '1o nearly a hundred Resort Club
develciPinJ a llrst-class facility. members, ·friends of . the Karr
"Every dime the memben have . family and Meigs County business
paid in, and then SQIIIe, has been and community leaders.

in&amp;

voinovich vows to retum .

prosperity to Buckeye Stat~
i

ment In remarks prepared for
By .JOHN T. KADY
delivery at his formallnaugura·
United Prese lnternatloaai
COLUMBUS - George Volno- lion as Ohio's 59th governor In
vlch characterized Ohio as a ·'no ceremonies on the west lawn of
growth state'' Monday but vowed the Statehouse.
Volnoviph was ·officially swprn
his administration .would bring
In
as governor at '12: 01 a.m. In
the Buckeye State back to ·
prosperity through m'a nage· ceremonies ·In a suite at a
ment, economic · development downtown hotel. He succeeded
-two-term Gov. Richard Celeste.
and education.
"Ours Is a great state with a
Voinovlch made the assess·

proud history," he said. "But
recent years have not been as
kind. Ohio today Is a no growth
state. OUr education system Is
lagging behind. And a one-and-a·
half to \WO·bllllon dollar budget .
shortfall looms on the horizon. ·
"Clearly, Ohio Is not working
.up to Its capacity," · he said.
"These are the new reiilltles that
Continued on page 10.

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Bids for new tanker truck
.. opened by Racine .Council·.

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Support union
Approximately '
800
people turned out at a rally
aFternoon
in
Sunday
Ravenswood · to show theb'
· support .or Local ~8 and to .
thank the area men:hmts who
liave supported tbe local
during tbe lock-out. Pictured
.at rlgbt Is Cbarlle McDowell,
grievance ebalrman or the Jo.
cal and member or · the
neaolladna team, addressinti.
the crowd. Below are some 0(,
the wlfes and
members
or tbe steelworken wltb tbelr
siJIIIS- Tbe union ne&amp;Otlatlng
team · will
01eet
with
R•venswood Aluminlilll Cor•
poratlon on Wednesday Ia Pit·
tsburgh to try to ·settle the
three moatb labor dispute.
(OVP phot011 by Mkbele Car·
let) ·
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run,.

·~c..IPAii?ITY·
~CAL H 668.·
fA\ItNSWOOV. W. VA.

KED OUT
RAC
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Moroda;• .J8nl-v 14, 1991

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ROBER'l' L. WiNGETT
Publisher

CRULENE ROi!:FLICR

G•eral MIUI&amp;pt' .

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PAT WRITE8EAD
AMWIUit Publlaber/Coatroller
A MEMBER o!The United Preulnter!llltlonal, lnland Dally l'""'s
Auoclallon and the American Newspaper Publlllhers AI!Soclallon ..

LETI'ERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be lee a than 300
words lone. All leiters are subject to edlttna and must.be slped .wlth
name, addreu and telephone number. No unslped letters wW bepubllllhed. Letters should be In good taste, addressing Issues, not personal!·
ttes.

Backstairs· at- the White House

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By HELEN THOMAS

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Talks

Squads-.have busy weekend

rane

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."Your job, Henderson, is to stand up there, look 'em straight·in the eye
and tell the world that we·expect record fourth-quarter profits;''

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Bush fightS for oii ___"---____Ro_b_er_tW'i_ : a~lte:. :. . :.rs

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POMEROY - Well, Amcriea u
the ._ year Sl8lts 0111 it would
am that ·fedelll workers and
Coapalllld Senale along with the
Vice President are. very happy wid\
aood 1111011 toO. They jult got a
!Milly 11-ve pm:~~~t ..,. raise wltile
the' Nit of l(le ~ wodrm
l8b pay CUll or ICC the JOmMICI1l
p111 laMIO put • out of work.
· And • die 111110 titne, Ill)' we·~
blob llld die S .t L's .-1 help on
W .,._ 10 ricb peQple. WeD thi$

to lel!d and speak out and clemlnd
chanps today 111 bow our tax dolIars are spenL We in ~ lad
times we could spend billlona Of
. dollan Ill home to' help the poor
whco they have motmting bolpUl
bills. We no,w elect a government
that bas no feeling for the public II
all. They let Americ.l falllpllt and
while ita clliel and IIIIa lr)' Ill

tlllke ends meet widn10 help fnlm
·
thOse in llid
around Washington li-ve high on the
II ·t.
~ mpe1f reel Americ111s ·sllouJd hot on their MW pay mile, let's all
J1111ri11
llld die llllional yell Ollllbout it bee•• America
debtiiiJiafdleliiiiObe)llidoff.
needs help too, and we, the
AJ Dl • we ..., Jiving bil- · ~ people, C8t IIIII lhould
llonl af IIX daUin away eiCb year do what we ca to c:hanae our 11110 bella. n"' • dill wal'l help oo,a into helping its !JW11 people
them· rill ..S pocht die money. ~at home in the good
USA.
We Ill .._.,. Mile Clllr eleclcd
·
·'
olllci"• af a. ciWQre af tax daUin
l44-F
hiiiH IIJIIl OIIU 1 JJr on II uII d S
our elected officials.
SO America, "bile

die.,....

ill bin •IIOine.
We die

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But the Bush admtnlstratlonNo proposal Inspires more
never touch an unpaved road.
fanatic opposition !rom Sunui)U,
responding to pressure from
Both consume fuel at extravaBoskln and other 11uto Industry dOmestic automakers - last
gant rates.
apologts ts than the cohcept of year ' successfully . opposed pro·
While promoting those cars sharply reducing domestic oil
posed legtslatton manda ttng a
specifically designed to travel at
consumption by Increasing the
new round and gradual CAFE
high, unsafe speeds - the autofuel efficiency of passen~r cars Increases that would · reach 34· makers sanctimoniously argue '
and other vehicles.
mpg In 1996 and 40 mpg In 2001.
that fuel efficient autos are
That approach, Initially em- ' Unlike their Japanese competl·
dangero11~ because theY:jnvarla~ ·
braced by Watkins, Is hardly
tors, the.autocom(lanlesba8edln
bly are smaller and ·lighter.
revolutionary. The Energy Pol· this country have always res- Thus, the produeers claim, they
Icy and ConservatiOn Act of 1975 Is ted calls for the production of
do not provide adequate post·
established Corporate Average smaller, fuel efficient vehicles
crash protection for ~heir
Fuel Ecollomy requirements for . because they make bigger profits
occupants .
~
all autos sold In this country,
selling larger, gasoline-guzzling
The Buill..admtnl~tr~lton ciln·
Those CAFE standards man- vehicles.
· venlently Ignores th~ realities
dated phased efficiency In·
Although the lumbering tall·
while tnslstlng .that government
creases - frQm 14 miles per finned }llghwa.y be)lemothS ofthe
Intervention, In the form of
gallon In 1974 to 18 mpg tn 1978 1950s and i960s are h~tol')'lo the
enhanced CAFE flandards,
and _finally 27.5 mpg In 198!1 and
buyers and sellers ot.. motor
would constitute unwarranted
subsequent years ,
vehicles have collaborated. to
meddling In a theoretical "free
Under President Reagan develop Imaginative new ways of
market.''
,
even lesa concerned ttian Bush burning exce11 fuel.
In ordinary times, tbat would
about energy conservation -the
City dwellers, for ·example,
be deploMble. When the White
Cl)o.FE standards W~f!!COmprom·
during the 1980s purchased mU·
House Is prepared to go to war.to
!sed to 26 mpg In 1986, 1987 and . lions of plck·up trucks whose
protect access to Persian Gulf oil
1988. A small increase to 26.5 mpg beds 'will never carry a serious
but Is unwilling to' Insist ·upon
was belatedly authorized In 1989 load of cargo and four·wheel·
conservation of oil-based fuel, It
and the loJ1g-overdue 27.5 mpg drive vehicles whose tires will
Is outrageous.
fe9Uirement Is now In force.
I

af Amtrlca aoed

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One of my ea~lle'st recollections of adults Ia of jllg people
comparing how they had lived
their lives to how we children
lived ours: You ' could call it the
' 'In my day ... " syndrome.
I'm affald I Inherited the
tendency and fell right Into step ·
onceibecameanadult. There's a
· ereat feeling of comfort In
believing that 'what one was
taught tO do Ia the ''right" way to
btehave, and that any subsequent
deplirture from those sate, well·
defined limits Is dangerous.
However, even though 1 realize
I am as bopelesa an old coger as
my parenll and their parents
before them, there Is stUJ one
teDdency nf some young people ·
today I find little chUIIng: their
· compulllon to plan every aspect
of tbelr lives, from ·elementary
IChool to the grave. almost as
rnetbodlcally as If they were
ciWtlllr It all on giant monthly
planners hung on the walls of
their bedrooms.
I gueaa we could argue that
people my age didn't do enoug~
planning that we tended to be
smiCk dab IIi the middle of major
lite ICtiVItlel befOre we stopped

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to think about whether JoVe should
be dotng them or not. But If my
generation was pne extreme, the
pehdulum has . certainly careened over to the far other side
with many kids . .They' re ~hoos­
lng colleges In junior high and.
deciding what kind of lifestyles It
wUI take to make them happy as
adulta and how much money they
will need. It giVes me the creeps.
What happens If things !lon't go
exactly aa they envision? And
what about the delicious elements of surprise and serendipIty that make life so entertalnlilg
,and challenging? · •
. Of oourse, the culprltss In these
, rigid scenarios are us adults, the
same folks who weren't planning
at all.back ~\'hen they were lllda.
What we lacked In goal·planntng
1kllls tn the '60s and '70s we made
up for In the yuppie '80s, when we
bepJ1 buying self-help bookl and
attending goal-planning semln·
ars Uke monks raised on brown ·
rlc:e who had just discovered
chocolate cake. We had to make
up for lost time, by golly, and
we'd make sure our kids got nff to
a more productive start than we
.. .
.bad.

.
We signed up our kids for.every

'

Frances

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A DIYW.... "'iM'

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..,.;.y lllllm0011.

I.Jto.
I

lntema!ICilil,
ObloNewapoEf:~::"latton. Neltoaal
M...-tlalai
laUvo, BrOIIbam
~:'r.:r, N.;,~.:'1:.1:d A~.. .
Momber: Untied Prell

~:--.U..

Ill o.trt St,

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IVIIIICIUPriON B.U'BII
. , (lanter . . . . . . . -

One WHI&lt; ..................: ..:............. h .tO
Qne Mcinlb ... ,........................... .:11.10
One Yoar ................................. $12.110
IINOU:COPY
PUCII
Dolly.................................... 25 Cnll
Sublerfbon!IOI clftirtncto pay tlloeerrler
remit Ia adv1ace c1r1&lt;t to

-r

-·_
..............
..... _,
w-.. . . . . .... . . . . . . ....

11toDally5elltltlelcmal,lorUDICillb ·
balta. Ci'edll will ........ ~·rrtor •ell

Tbe first brldp with aa elevated
walkway wu the BrookiJD llrldp,
wbleh 11pa111 the B8lt JU.- In New
\Wk City. Pedeatrtul a.- the
brldp Cll a prclllft •• IMdlt llboft
'
the roadway.

l l ' t l l l - - -·-

available. ,

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SCHOOl.

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~:-~ ~.i i:. I.: -:.~· ....

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Veterui Me•orW Hospital
SATIJRDAY ADMISSIONS •
Pearlie Jewell, Sr., Ponieroy. ·
SATIJRDAY DISCHARGES ·
Helen Miller, GeQiiia Swauger,
Octa W.d, Louise Heines, · llld
Mildred Smith.
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS -.CJifford Connolly, Racine, and RUS§CIJ
Cremeans, Coolville.
SUNDAY DISCHARGES
Edna Pickens,

.Ell,
- NOSE &amp; THROAT
.
· GENERAL ALLERGIST
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"WE HAVE HEARINS AIDS"

11c.a
UO.ID

.-•',,
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(304) 675-1244

11
ttO.JO
UWNIII ................................. . m.co

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PUASANT VALLEY HOSPitAL

w-....,.............................

"~~DYer, a C!OlJie. wu the .......
flnt due -.Je l&amp;lr. He a(IIIIINd lila,

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Hosp•·tal news

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d o hiJflli)V lpv 8 ;'lfli iCt! , •I t hi! Rp ui~ 1~! Tll•1! ti6n ! Of 1 1'110 TaA 'Yt~at Ill 1990 RD I U'IIIII tlf~S!.~j 1fl Oil llnr s IJnU l.IJnl~ Or'l lla&lt;.:h 0 r'll'l • ho ,\l~fll l II.•,(l :,r \

.JOHN A. WADE, M.D., ·Inc.

1.1
m.:M
211 Wtekl .•.•••.•:.......... ............... $!7.11

112

·- ....

., ·

six19
wlnntng
• The
17 18
22 24 numbers were
· ,; • • • • ·
Out of the ticket sales totaling
$5,271,138, 146 chose five of six'
numbers for . $3,080 each, and
6,613cbose fouroftheslxwlnnlng
numbers for S50 each.
·
., The Kicker portion nf the game
produced the number 654972, and
one player had that number.
good for $100,000.
Nine nt· the $757,181 worth of
ticket sales had the first five

No 111blcrlpllonl by mao pormtlted In

. t

. . . .World
111
Rowr
•lllOVIt
not. caUed
-.. ........

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1n pur su~~tQ ol L,1w , 1. G•·•·••IIJ M. Coii•J'! t. Trcasurt:r nL Mr.i[IS Coun'tv , OI'I•V,' "' cu~p_ti&lt;~IV.!!l V.• t l:). l'l'•!'~' Ct/00 N.u ~2;).. 06 •.1 ~ ' ''' '1 1 11. 0 ' ''"· ....

Moaday .

Inland Dally Pl'ftl A•..,letloBIUIIIIbe

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CLE.VELAND ( UPI) -No one , numbers for·$5,000 eacb: 66·had .
lbrCIIP Friday, m 'Caontt St,, Po- · "hose all alx numbers In Satur· . the first four numbers for $1,000
moroy, Olllo, by tile o* Valley Pal&gt; , "
lllltlsa co-IMuHimedla. lac., . day's su·per Lotto game worth
each; 676 ha d th e fl rs t three
l'omenJy. Oldo t5781, PI!. lt.:t·21K S. : $12 million, boosting Wednes·
numbers for $1.00 each; and 6,829
~::. ctaa1 paelai• potd at Pomoroy, · . day's jackpot to $16 mUljon.
bad the first two for $10 each.

to 1110 Dally - ·
I'Omoroy, ObiD . . .

. Rates of Taxation for 1990

No one
wins , ,jackpot
worth $.12 million
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rose or two. Now, let's go tell the
kids.

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Bleu you, Tom. I ·can stop

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Brldpwdway

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flagel~Ung myself and smell a

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Presentation &amp;Jated

Peters, who has made a U-Haul
full of money and writes · a
syndicated column on succeed•
lng In business, took up my
cause.
.
"Unfortunately. they are dan·
gerous pretenses," Peter says,
"which repeatedly cause .us to
delay Immersion In · the real
world ·Of happy. surprises, un·
happy detours and .unexpected
byways...

..Meia&amp; announcemen'"'.

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kind of !~son the finance com·
pany could pay for and drilled
them ivlth the Idea that they'
could be anything they wanted to
1J!! If they'd just adopt goals and
work bard. Meanwhile, we chas·
tlaed ourselves for not having the
•lsht kinds of Investment plans. •
The thougllt nf leaving a job ~lth
a good retirement plan and
benefits became tantamount to
treason, no matter how mlsera·
ble our high-powered careers
were making us.
Still, despite the pull i felt to
finally do the right thing and set
cast-In-concrete goals lest I end
.up living In a skid row hotel
because I didn't Join a 401K plan '
and Invest In real estate, part of1·
me held out. I thought It was
perhaps a basic character flaw,
no more tban one could expect
from a liberal ·~ major who
dldn' t have the sense to enroll In
an MBA program.
Then Juat before all waa lost
and I signed up for the "Plan
Your Whole Life and Escape Any
Rlakl or Nasty Surprises" se·
m[llar at the local co~untty
college, byalness expert Tom

voinovich. ••

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Spending policy changes needed

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Qver-pl~ing ·~ -defensive
~fad.~Sa-ranoverstretit
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Letters to the editor

Stocks ·

____
, ·Area deaths~--

Nancy Reagan took all questions In her stride on CNN's recent
"Lilrry King" show. And the questions ranged from her years In the
White House to relations with her chUdren.
She bit her lip, Indicating that she did believe the Reagans would
ever be reconciled with their daughter, Patty Davis.
The former first lady sliowed a lot of poise and was very frank In
assessing some of the hardships she faced and some of the happier ,
WASHINGTON (NEA) times.
,
President Bush clearly Is com·
She did say that she felt that her successor, Barbara Bush, had an
mltted to drastle military action
advantage of having known Washington and Its W!IYS for some 30
to P.r otect the Middle East as a
years before she mqved Into 11te White Ho:use.
reliable source of crude oil. But ·
Betty Ford, whQJe husband carne up from the ranks of Capitol Hill,
he unfortunately Is unwilling to
also knew her way around Washington.
faihton and promote an equally
It took a year, but there Ia no question that Mrs. Reagan did get the
tough and comprehenslye dohang of It and did make her mark with the an ti-d rug program.
mestic energy policy to reduce
l!tlll, It probably does help to know the nation's capital and the
reliance upon that Imported
plilyers. She noted that Rosalyn Carter was In the same boat, and both
petroleum.
·
ftrst ladles were concerned about acceptance shortly after they
Indeed, senior members of the
ooeame first lady.
· Push's White House staff dis·
suaded Energy Secr etary James
Mrs. Reagan did acknowledge some, chagrin that her husband's
D. Watkins from even tncorpoautoblgraphy was being compared on best seller ratings to "Millie's
rating firm recommendations to
BqOii," which concerns her sprlnw spaniel's llfe1n the White House. · the president In his department's
Mrs. Reagan thought It was unlair to say that "Millie's BOok.''
recently completed study - th~
dfSilgned for children, should be matched against presidential
most ambitious ever conducted
memoirs.
by ~ federal government - of
'
national energy strategy.
Presk!ent Bush, who loves to hop In his jumbo jet and fly to far-off
InStead, White House Chief of
places, Ia putting hla travel plans on hold during the Persian Gulf
Staff John H. Sununu and Ml·
crista. White House nfflclals Indicate that Bush wants to put off the
chael J. Soskin. chairman of the
Moscow summit, scheduled Feb. 11-13, but he does not want to hurt
.P resident's Council of Economic
beleaguered Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev while he Ia under
Advisors, threatened to withhold
tremendous pressure from the ultra·right, as personified by the KGB
su~t of Watkins' submission
and the Soviet Army. and the reform.llts who want almost total
unless It contained only optiOns
. .
autonomy for the 15 republics.
from which Bush could choose.
Bush also plans to travel to Australia and Japan later In the spring.
But that schedule also Is being held In abeyance.PI!pdtng thr;: outcome
of the gulf crlals.

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ported tn New Engla nd with lows
below zero In some of the deeper
valleys of New Ha m pshire, while temperatu res In the 20sand cleat ~
skies covered the Middle Atlantic
states.

l

••

•

Plains a nd Mldwes t, with Chicago reporting hlllhs around 40,
wltlle In Louisville, Ky. , clouds
moved across the region and
lows were In the 205 and 30s.
Mos tly clear skies were re-

------W~ther
-----..

-- ·

Some Arab leaders are very gung ho to take out Iraq and say, the.
sooner the better. But the United Stat~ Is not abOut to let them·cali the
shots, having put thousands of Its own men Into the front lines.
The story Is being told by Insiders tluit when Secretary of State
James Baker went to Saudi Arabia and paid a visit to the exiled emir
of Kuwait, the emir taunted Baker on when the war was going to start
and when he would get his country back.
His hackles rising, his finger pointing, Baker told the Emir, "Look,
you don't tell us when or where. "

.

brought clear skies to the South,
but caused overnight tempera· ,
ture1 to drop Into the low 20s In
Georgia, while highs were expected to approach 60 degrees.
'Clear skies also covered th~

Success, sOOndal color Celeste era

UPJ White HoUBe Reporter
WASHINGTON- White House press secretary Marlin Fitzwater
says he had nothing to do with rules governing news coverage of a
•
possible war In-the Persian Gulf.
· Remarkably, the administration has used the media, particularly
t,elevlslon, for all aspects of Its gulf diplomacy. But now the military ··
has laid down dos and don'ts · tn What can be written .and
photographed.
,
.
Censorship to save lives In war Is acceptable. But a blackout to ·
prevent bad news and searing photographs that might affect public
•
·
. . ·
opinion Is another thing.
President Ronald Reagan effectively Instituted a blackoutfor three
days during the Invasion of Grenada.
.
·President Bush's Panamlan Invasion ·also reflected the same
attitude. The so-called designated pool of reporters and cameramen
who were supposed to be on ha~d to report on the Invasion were
delayed In getting to Panama and then kept In a compound for a
couple of days before they were allowed to go to the scene of the
devastation.'
.
.
After the Grenada Invasion, Reagan went to Japan on a state ,visit
and at a reception for the press In Tokyo, he made a lavtsJi· speech
about Thomas Jefferson's reverence for the First Amendment and
freedom of the press. When confronted after his remarks on how he
could reconcile coverage of Grenada wl.th Jefferson, he quipped,
" Jefferson would have lost t!le .war.' '

By Ualled Preas lateraa&amp;loaal

Skies began cle~ng In the
soaked Pacltlc Nor thwest Monday following a weeketld of rain,
while clear skies covered mucl!
of the rest of the nation and cool
temper atures prevailed . .
Fog blanketed south-central
Kansas, cutting visibility at ·
'
.
Wlcbtta's Mld·Conttnent Air port
to a quar ter mile.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) - As mUIIon travel-and· tourism con·
method of funding Ohio schools ''·
'
Clouds thinned and ~an to • Gov. RichardCelestepreparesto tract to the publ ic rela tions
was Inequita ble.
Slom11
... ··~ \
~lurrlft
~~ ~~i!, ••
clear out near Denver, but clouds take leave of the job be's held for agency that handled his guberna· ,
Celeste
has
called
his
greatest
TfOuan \. \ \
SUuo"....,
Lo,
·r emained draped over higher · the past eight years, supporters torlal campaign.
-o.
~ ~·o~l
L ,,._,~
. .
accomplishment his leadership
.
,.
foothills to the west, causing . and detractors hold different
Celeste also drew criticism
during· the state's savings and , .
WEATHER MAP - A low preeiiUI'e system wuJ brlns s11f1wera
pe(lods of light snow alld carry· views of · how hi$ tory will · re- when hts Youth Servlcl!s dlrec- loans cr isis. After the coUapse of
ud lbUDtlentonlil to much nf the Mld-t and Solilb.
· ·.
·lng winds that reached 30 mph.
member the !58th go\rernor of. tor, James Rogers , was Indicted HomeState Savlngs Bank ln1985,
Rain and drl.zzle continued Ohio.
for crimes In ntflte. And the most ·· Celeste led the effor t to reorgan·
through the night In Washington
Celeste SJ~pporters .say he was recent controversy has centered • lze the savings and loan Industry.
state, but partial clearing was . the governor who put Ohioans
around his granting of clemency
On the other ha nd, Rogers and
day. with lows mostly In the 30s, expected during the afternoon back to work and the leader ·
Soulb Central Ohio
to 25 . women based on the . other Cabinet members prove d 1
Pl)r,t ly cloudy Monday night , and hlgbs rangltig from the upper. with highs around 50 degree$.
who acted to avert a savings
battered·woman syndrome. ·
to be an embarrassment to. t he
wltb, a low between 30 and 35. · 30s to the middle 40s. (\.chance of
To the south, clear skies and and loan disaster.
Prosecutors across the state Celeste a dminiStration.
.
.I
Increasing cloudiness Tuesday, snow In th.e--eastern part of the light winds covered Southern ·
His detractors say Celeste's have called Celeste' s pardons to
Minnie Fells Johnson, direct or '
with a chance of afternoon state and fair weather In the west .California, bu I a wind advisory aCcomplishments are tainted by · the women convicted In connec- oftbeOhloDepartmentof Mental
showers, and highs In the lower Thursday. with lows In the 20s was posted for the mountains scandal and administrative tlon tothedeathsnfhusband.s and Retardation, left when reports •.
50s. Chance nf rain Ia 30 percent. and highs between 30 and 35. Fair north of Los Angeles where gusts blunder.s - like awarding an S8 boyfriends, misguided and lrres· · surfaced aboutneglect a nd a buse ;
weather Friday, with lows rang· reached 25 mph.
· EwtenW Forec..t . .
ponslble at best
·
of patie nts at state facUlties ln.. '
tng from the teens to the low 20s,
Wtdneaiday thraulb Friday
In his farewell address to the .1985.
.
·
jail.
~
~
A large area of high pressure
and hlgbs In the low to mid 30s.
Rain
·or
.
·. . snow likely Wednes·
.
General Assembly last week
Roberta Steinbac her, former-~·
Celeste said he leaves office with director of the Ohio Bureau of ·~
· Continued from page 1
optimistic, to have more hope " enthusiasm tempe red by E mplO¥ffient Services resigned· ' :
In 1988 during an tnvestlgatlon of....
than I had when I left for disappointment."
He
said
he
learned
a
.
tough
state
telephone contracts.
., . ·
•l!lck prices
Baghdad.' '
AI 9 LJD. 111 Slllllllay, Pomctot who was taken 10 Veterans. At 8:52 Dally
lesson - "that good people can
Pamela Conrad, flnance dlrec· ~
(Aa of 10: S8 a.m.)
squad Yient to County Road 19 for p.m., Middleport squad WCJit to Beyce and Mark Smith
He said that during his talks do bad things."
tor of the Ohlo Democratic P a rty
Carol Knotts, wbo iv8il taken to Fifth and Main Streets for Flo of
Saddam
the
Iraqi
president
wltli
But
he
also
took
credit
for
and
Larry McCartney, head of
~unt, Ellis &amp; Loewl
had "never mentioned the word pulling Ohio back from the abyss . Celeste's r e·election committee,
VCialtiS Memorial HosPital and Grucser, who was taken to
later was tranlportcd tii 'Riwrside Veltii'BIIS. AI 9:59 a.m., Middleport Am Electric Power ....... ...... 27% 'retreat, • and If he mentioned It , of raging recession and high also were Indicted In a grand jury
Metbodill Hospillll in Columbus. squad 'went to North ~ s~ Ashland 011 .... .... .......... .. ....27¥. It was not In the sense of being unemployment that greeted htm lrlvestlgatlon of state contracts
At 11:56 -.m.. l'omcroy squad was ror Mary Steele, wbo was taken to AT&amp;T ................... ......... ; .... 29% ready to retreat" fr om Kuwait, when he took office In 1983, The a nd state employee hiring .
sent to Blake Hill Road for Beva Holzer. At ll:Sl a.m., Pomeroy Bob Evans .......... ................ 14')1. which was Invaded by Iraqi Cleveland Plalnd Dealer re- ·practices;
Gruetler, wiio was liken to squad went to East Main Street fo~ Charming Shoppes .... .... .. .... 10% forces Aug. 2.
ported Sunday. .
Weeks after 'Celes te appointed
Ann Morris, who was treated but City Holding Co. ... .. ~ .... ....... 14~
Luxembourg 's Foreign Minis·
Veterans, .•
. .
''The only thing thatfrustrates William Sykes dl ~ctor of ihe :
'
.
Al12:36 p.m., Racine squad was not lransported ·
Ohioans Is when they don't have · Department of Administrative.·
Federal Mogul. ................... 12')1. ter Jacques Poos said after a
At 12:01 p.m., Pomeroy squad Goodyear T&amp;R .. ... ......... , ....17% · meeting with the U.N. chlef·that an opportunity to work," Celes te Services In 1983, It was reported· .
. jlispaiChcd to Mile ~ Road for
Icy 1Uckel. J'uckm' was ·liken to was sent to Peacock Avenue for Key Centurion ..................... 10~ the chances •for peace In the gulf said.
Sykes oroeredstate employees to .
VelaanS. At 3:08 ·p.m., SyrBCI!Se cirolyn Wut. Wut was treared but Lands' End .. ............ ........ ... l4')1. were demtnlshlng "minute by
Celeste's accomplishments In· deliver surplus state furniture to.
squad wenuo Bridgeman Saee~ for not transPorted- At 12:34 p.m., Limited Inc . .......................19% minute."
•
elude spending nearly $5 billion. his new home In COlumbus.
Poos, whose country currently
ThafOid. w11o wu taken to Pomeroy squad WCJit to East Main Multimedia Inc ..... .. .... ......... 59
upgrading Ohio's roads and
Now chairman ofthe Ohio Clvlt·
Street . for Georgia Swauger, who
holds the rotating presidency of
highways, and modernizing au to Rights CommiSsion, · Sykes was.. ,
Holzer. At
Ra:ine squad · was
·
Rax
Restaurants...
..............
~
· taken to Vererans. At ·4:29
wem to B
wn Road for
Ucense reglstratlons with a mall· found gully of violating a faw that
Robbins &amp; Myers ... .. .... ....... 19% the European Community, refused to say whether Perez de
Courtney Jones, who Will 1aken io p.m., Middleport squad WCJit to Shoney's Inc . .. .. ................... 11
In system.
·
prohibits state employees from ·.
Cuellar bad asked the EC to
Veitaans, and later tllllSPOIIed Ill Overbrook Center for Mary Gib- Star Bank .... ........ .. : ........ ..... 16
Celeste also forged a partner· 'seeking state business without ··
Chlldren's Holpital !n, Columbus. son. Gibllon wt11 taken to Holzer. At Wendy's Int'l. ... .... .......... .... 6\ii Initiate a (Ina! diplomatic effor to ship between private enterprise ·disclosing their employment or•,·
resolve the crisis peacefully.
At 10:10' p.m., Racit!e squad was 6:39 p.m., Middleport squad went Worthington Ind ............ ,..... . 21
and higher education and the scope of other state contracts ·,
sent to Cmpenter 'Raid far Mary to Railroad Street for Cindy
Earlier the U.N. head said any l pumped nearly $300 million Into .. they hold.
,
Evans, who wt11 btlliijMtcd to Woodson, wbo was transporied to
European Initiative would have
the Thomas Edison Program for
Other agencies tainted by
Holzer. At It :44 p,lll, Middleport Holzer.
· to be decided ~Y the l2·members
technological research.
scandal 'under Celeste's reigll, ·~
Oli
·Monday
at
S:S6
a.m
.•
Tupof the Community, whose foreign
squad wentlo lllrtin8'« ~Y
He
·
used
his
Educ
ation
·
2odo
Included the Ohio Student Loaa· .
Contlnl!ed from page 1
· for Andy · lan!Jimlli, who was' pen Plains squad WCJit to Uttlc
ministers are scheduled to meet
Commission
to
forge
,
e
ducation
Commission,
the Industrial Com· .1
Forest Run Road for Floyd Barrin· the village bOob upon recommen- later Monday In Brussels to
tleated but not tnlnSJlOrl¢.
reforms.
But
the
Cleveland
mission
of
Ohio,
the State Liquor. ·,
On · Stillday -. at 3:41 Lm.• Jjer. He wt11 taken td SL Joseph's dation of the stale examiners. The review the situation.
BoardofEducatlonputadamper
Control
Commission,
the Lottery ·
two funds will be known as the . "It Is very difficult tc go to
Pomeroy !I!Qiid Went to East SIBle Hospital
.
.
on
the
Initiatives
by
filing
suit
Commission,
and
the
Depart·
"refuse coUection" and "debt ser- Bagh_dad at this moment," Poos
Route 681 for Jooa•hln Richards, ·
against
the
state,
charging
the
ment
of
Agriculture.
vice" funds. ·
said. •There are not too many
• Discussed prospective . im· · airplanes."
"
provement Pru.iects for the new
Continued
from
page
1
Before leaving for New York,
year.
Perez
de Cuellar separately
He was born in Meigs COunty,
Michael Hewkt
• Discussed a sewer blockage received the U.S. ambassador to this generation. of Ohioans mu st what we want Ohio to be, we ca ri ·
the son of the late·Roy Vmeyard problem on Main Street.
confropt."
le ap . out a head of o u r '
.
Michael E. . Hewitt, 38, of and
France, Walter Curley, and the
Ora
Bailey
Vtneyard
Goodman.
competitors."
'
Volnovlch
warn
e
d
that
Discussed
the
vehicles
oarking
Pomeroy, died Sunday afternOon at
Soviet envoy, Your! Doubt nine,
He
was
a
vetaan of the U.S. Anny across the sidewalk at Dr. Hunter•s
·
·
Volnovlch
said
Ohio
must
Ohioans
must
be
reallstlc
about
Vetmns Memorial Hospital follow~pectlvely, to personally In·
during WCJrld War U.
the limits to what government create a ·business environment •
office causing people to walk into form them of his talks with
ing an extended illness.
He is survived by two sons, the roadway.
can accomplish and the limits to that allows· the state to retain, .
·
.
·Born on June 24, ,1952 in ·Robert
Saddam. ·.
Vmeyird
and
RoyYmeyard,
what government money can expand and .a ttract more and .
Discussed
Eber
Pickens'
pos·
Columbus, · he was the son of the lloth of Fort Myers; a daughter,
In an InterVIew earlier Monday
buy.
.
better jobs.
·
...
sible
intention
of
replacing
.
late FJ1noes. E. Osbourne HewitL Unda Ryneer, of Fort Myen; two
on French radio, KuwaltiAmbas·
"We
must
emphasize
sclence
''
"Gone
are
the
days
when
sidewalk
that
was
~mOved
near
his
He was a laborer and a conslrUCtion brothers. C. W. "Bill" Vmeyard,
sador to France Tarek Razzouql
and
technology
'and
the
export
of
public
officials
are
measured
by
station.
Gulf
worker. '
'
'
estimated that a war In the Gulf
Wooster, and D&lt;nel Vmeyard,
Ohio products Into the global' .,
how much they . spend on a
Present we~: Mayor Clellnd, was "very probable."
He is survived by a son, Jason Tllt:h; two sisters. Louise Lyons.
marketplace," Volnovlch.
problem,"
he
said
.
"
The
new
Clert
Beegle,
File
Cllief
Holman,
Hewitt· of Wooster; a siStu, Beth
"We would like to recuperate
Fla.,
and
Muine
Creamer,
Linked directly with an lm' ·
realities
dlct4ie
that
public
offiRoben
Jolutson,
·
Street
Commis·
(Gary) Knous; Ravenswood: a Coolville; five grandchildren; and
our country peacefully by finding
proved
business atmosphere " I'~ ' 1
cials
are
now
judged
on
whether
sioner Glenn· Riw. Council mem· the smallest gesture from Iraq
. brothel, Robert (Oaylenc) HeWitt of three gn:at-granckhildren.
. bers Robert Beegle, Henry Bentz,
they can work harder and smar· something very fundamental Mulllll, Ohio; a S!ep(ather, Oeoqe
Graveside services will be an· Ronald Clark, Carroll Teaford, Jeff that would give us hope, but · ter and do more with less.''
educ ation," said Votnovtch.
·
Moore, Pordand; three nieces. nounced Iller by White Fun~
lnfortunately It Is very probable
"
'
"Among
the
latter,
we
will
Thornton and Larry Wolfe.
Bobbi 8nd Terry of Gcolgia, and Home In Coolville.
that there will be war," Razzouql
.
place
special
emphasis
on
manKnotts, Ravenswood; a
said.
•1
agement, economic development
nephew, . Mark
Hewitt.
He saidCouncil
he did not
the
and education," he said.
-e..,
10
Security
will~lleVe
take any
Ravenswood, and an uncle and __;...
I
SPRIN6 VAllEY CINEMA
Votnovlch said he Is aware that
'"IIUIIL
·
new steps when It meetS'In New
446 4524
.
The Coolville Vf'W Post 3478 York later Monday. He said . talking abOut betier manageBesides his mother, he is
Youtb iJ'OUP lo meet
$2JS .....,. IOT!IIU ~-· I . _ , \f
The Trinity Youth Fellowship will hold ·a hunter safety course President Bush, whose couniry ment won't win any popularity
JlRI(:odtd in death by a brOther,
IMUI• Rl8HT TUESM¥
.:1
but'lnststed
that
better
contests
will meet Thursday at4:30 p.m. at Jan. 21, 23, 28 and 30 from 6-9 has the largest mUitary contlng·
· HarryL. HcwiiL
-IIIIYII .._17
"I
·AIM¥ thru ~QUI
Smices will be on Wednesday the church. The meding will con- p.m. at the Coovi!Je Lions Cl~b ent In Saudi Arabia, has the · management of state resources
and state services will add to a ·
Building on Third . Stteet . m . neeessary au thorlty to start a
!'t)JI:m. at Fisher Funeral Home in clude 116:30 following dinner.
.
1:15,8:30 M IL¥ SQ'1worzeneQqet"
better quality of life for Ohioans. ·
Coolville. For more mfonnanon war without further U.N. action.
~ Burial will be in
SATfStllf ~m.u: s
Kine~
...
call
Bob
Pullins,
667-38381,
Ed
·
Votnovlch
said
the
second
!!rea
1:15,l : l0
Siivomille ~tuy. Friends may
· Racine Le&amp;(on lo m~t
MTID lrt·U)
of special emphasis will be
The Racine American Legion Wigal, 667-665? or Ed Rood, 667·
. callal'the funeral home on Tuesday ·
.
'
.
economic development because
, from 2 to 4 p;m. and 7to 9 p.m.
Post 60T'will meet Thursday at 6348.
, :20,1:,30 01\ILY 51~ 01.11w.=uo ~
Rev.
Alan
Blackwood
will
the Ohio economy has been
SAT/~ ~1'1NlES , . , itn«n•.t.
7:30 p.lll..
LZO,l . JO
,
4
.. l
~Obert Vineyard
FOE AUIUiary lo meet
present a slide presentation from sliding for the past 10 years.
M"' " "
Little La&lt;l
The . Ladies Auxiliary of the his recent trip to Romania on
"To make matters worse,
Prayer vlall to be held ·.
Robeit
Vmeyard, 63,. or
Friday at 7:30 p.m. at Calvary we' re one of 30 states with
The Fint Southern BaptiSt F.O.E. will meet Tuesday at 7 p.m.
North Fort Myers, Fla., .died
Bible Church. The church 1s projected budget shortfalls," he
Thursday 8l Southwest Regional Ch~~~th, Pomeroy Pike Road. wiD
'•
Democratic
committee
to
meet
located
on Pomeroy Pike near sald ." 'That's the bad news. The
'
Medical Center in Fort Myers·after have a prayer vigil tonight (MonThe Meigs County Derruieratic Chester. The public is ,invited to at· good news Is, If we can deal with
day)
at
7
p.m.
Pastor.
Lamar
a brief'iUness.
Executive Commiaee will meet ten d .
our budget deficit and define
..
O'Bryant inviteS the public.
Thursday at 7:30p.m. at the Car· ....-::_..,....,..- - - - - - - - - - - - - --:-- - - - - - - - - -- . -· "
·- '
Huter sarety course
pen~·s Hall. The pulllic is invired
.• ·
The Daily Sentinel
-to attend.
.

Jack Anderson

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· Eaves was gambling. The
·
WASHINGTON
- In these
wliere
side' In a few minutes w1I h an _ _..:.·_ _......,_ _ __ __
days oflawlnlnessandrarnpant
agent told Eaves he waa break· apology, and the bat. He had
street ct1me It's titce to knOw lngthelawbywearingtheForest thought It over and decided that
An spokesman for the Tolya.,e
that at least' one federal law Is
Service emblem and that he the hat was not contraband
NatiOnal
Forest told our reporter
could go to jail If he didn't because It was only a knock-off
strictly enforCed - the unauthoPaul
Parkinson
that the agent
rlzed wearing of a U.S. Forest surrender the hat.
and not the real thing. " Allfar.as
was just doing hla job, ''Reno Ia a
Service hat. · ·
The agent waa telling the truth. I can tell, wearing a .!~cslmile of
orest Service town. We try to
Reno; Nev., resident Merrlon Tltle'18ntilie u .s . Code makes it' the emblem Is OK, tbe agent Fkeep
a white-hat Image around
T . Eaves can testify to tllat. His
Illegal to "possess any tnstgnla of sald.
. - ,
here,''
Staff Officer Dav.td Haney
hat waa grabbed by the long arm · the design prescribed by the head "' Eavei'knew wl)en to ~lei e:r,
"And
gambltng Ia no way to
said.
of the Forest Service.
nf any department or agency of and when to fold em.
e
do II.'' Evidently · tile Forest
Eaves was playing dollar slot theUnltedStates. " Theoftensels accepted his hat and got ?ut;f
Service can't affort to have
mscblnes In a Reno casino last punishable by a fine of $250 and there. But the story doesn t e d
people thinking Its •gents are
ther e either.
. summer when a man approached six months 'in jail.
·
sitting
around, In uniform, play.
Eaves, belng·a reasonable guy,
The agent had another change
him and asked him, "Do yqu
tng
·the
slots. Hailey aald ·fore.
work fo~ the U.S. Forest didn't want to go to jail for a hat, of heart, ani! no sooner had
sters
are
guys. ''W~ do not
Service?"
s0 he turned It over to the allent , Eaves arrived home, than there specializegood
In
belllg
officious buEaves doesn' t but his hat bore · and went back to playing the was a knock on hla door. Yup. It
reaucrats
here,
even
though this
an emblem th~t ~ooked like a slots. But the agent wasn' t was the agent In bot pursuit, a~~
smacks
of
it."
Forest Service logo: Eaves go! finished. He launched Into' an he wanted tbe ha!.back aga~~· I
· the bat as a gift from his boss, a lnqu.latlon, asking Eaves where !IJI!de a mistake, ~e said. ,The
The cap caper Is iar from Qver. •
hatcoilectorotsorts, andhellked ., he got the cap and wby he was . rule says you c.~n t wear any
The Forest Service 11131sta It will
it.
,
,
. wearing It and whether he had likeness thereof. · .
.
keep the hat. After all, Title 18
But the man who approached any other Items of clothtng with a
Eaves handed over the hat
him didn't. He was an area · Forest Service emblem.
agatn. But, after a few months, gives the government that right.
Meanwhile, the banned hat Is
When _ thi! Interrogation 'was the Incident began to grate on
special agent fro_m the Toiyabe
collecting dust on .a shelf In a
National Forest headquartered over, the' agent left with the hat. him, and he wrote to us to see If
federal storage warehouse In San
In Sparks, Nev., and wils attend· But the story doesp't end there. we could help him get h~ bat
Diego. ·
lng a convention In the hotel The agent was. back at Eaves' back.

fiimlli! """""'._...,...,r-T"&amp;&amp;c:l•""' ,
~v

-~

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'4

Forest serviee serious about. its hats ,

Sen~inel

111 Cauri Street .
Pome...,.; Ohle
DEVOTED TO Till: INTE&amp;ESTS
OF TilE MEIGS-MASON
A&amp;EA
..
.
1'1~

~· ...

Oily Sa 6111
Pomaov-Midd!IIPQI'to Ohio .
Monday. J....-v 14, 1991

Commentary
The Daily

Skies mosdy ·clear across nation today. -.

~2-The

Page

The Daily Sentin~Pagl 3

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Page-4- The Daily Sentinel

This week's games
ThlAWeek'e

Ohio Coll01e llaskelllall Schedule '
MONDAY. JANll
.Wi s·Mtlwaukee at Youngstown
State
Western llltnois a t C!e-.oeland' State

;

Northern Iowa at Akroo
Kenyon at Mt Vernon Nazaren e
T~DAY,

JAN 15

Massachusetts at Xavier
Emory ((ia) at c_,se Resero,oe
Malone at WBl sh
Cedarville at Central State
,Cinci nnati Bible at Wllbertoree
WEDNESDAY, JAN 18
Ball State at Miami
Kent State at Western Michigan
Toled o a t Ohio UniverSity
Wright State at BowUng, Green

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Ohi o No rthern at Olterbeln
Hiram at John Carroll
Musk ingum at Heidelberg
Capital at Marietta
Baldwin-Wallace at Mount Union
Allegheny (Pa) at Wods:ter
Denison at Ohio Wesleyan
Earltlam ( Jnd) at Wittenberg
Obetlln at Ke nyon
Thomas More cKyl at Bluttrm
FindlaY a t DPrtance ~ -Wilrillngtoo at Oh io Dominican
Tiffin at Rio Grande ·
Shawnee StS:te at Urbana
THURSDAY, JAN 17
St. Louis at Day ton
Evansville at Xavier
As hland at Kentucky State
Michigan-Dearborn 'at Walsh
Lake Erie at Mt Vernoo Nazarene
Wilberforce at Dyke
FRIDAY, JAN 18
Case Re~rve' at Was tdngtm (MOl
SATURDAY, JAN 19
Illi nois a t Ohio State
Ohio Un\Yersi ty at Kent Slate
Gentral Michigan at Toledo
· Bow lin g Gre~n at Easte rn
Michigan
Vlrg ln l.a Tech at Clnclnn~tl
E va n svllll'" a t Dayton
St. Louis at Xavier
Youngstowp Slate at NE Illinois
AkrCJI at Eastern IllinOis
Ullnols·Chlcago at Cleveland State
Mlssouri·KC AT Wright State
.fohn Ca·rroi.J at Musktngum
Ohio Northern at Mount Union
Heidelberg at Baldwin-Walla ce
Otterbein at Capital
Marietta at 'Hiram
Thomas More ( Ky ) at Denlsoo
Ohio Wesleyan at OberUn
Wluenberg at Wooster
V.,:alsh a t La ke Ertl'
Malone at Shawnee State
Wllmlngim at Blutrloo
Ri o Gra nde at Cedarville
Dykt&gt; at Ceritral State
Urb ana at Mt Yemen Naza~ne
Tiffin at Ohio DomJnican
Ashland at Bellarmine &lt;.KY)

· Transactions
Suaday Sport1 Transactions

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Basketball

New Jersey - Placed forward
Derr1ck·Gervtn on the Injured list:

activated guard Tale GeorgE: lrcm
the Injured list.

CoUe,e
South ern Mtsstsslppl - Named
Jim Dtckey d efensive
cocrdlnalor.

CoJI~ SCoreS
Mea'•
Ohio Co !lese Bukelball R..uKo
By United Pres1 ..&amp;ernatlou.t .~
saturday, Jaa. ·II
Ohio State 92, Wisconsin 60
• Bowling Creen 72, Central Michl·

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ga n 57

Ea!:i fllt n Mldligan 78, Ohio Unlv. 68
Mia mi 76, Kent State 66 ·
Toledo 71, Western Mldtlgan 62
Wes ~rn Illinois 9.1, Akrm 84
South Cardlna 85, Clnclnnatl69
Cleve~and State 67, Nor1,hem Iowa
~8 .
Evansvi ll e 78, Daytoo 76
Xavlt.'"r 8l, Lo~ola (Ill ) 74
Wr lghl State 84, Wisconsin·
Mllwauk~79

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playoffs with.Stinday wins

Francisco's Candlestick Parlt. The tBers won
28-10 to earn the right to play tile New Y or\ Glantll
- a 31-3 wiaaer over the Chleago Belll'll Suaday Ia aext week's NFC champloll8hlp.game. ( UPI)

Redwomen

.'

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Giants~ Raiders advance :in

JONES GRABS PASS - San Francisco Ught
end Brent Jones takes a Joe Montana paasln front
of Washington's Andre ColJJns In th~ third quarter
of. Saturday's NFC pla~off game In San

.•

•

Mond8Y. J.,._., 14, 1991

Pomeloy-Midtleport. Ohio

•

••

.-

Youngstown State97, ChlcagoState
81
.
. MarJetl4 79. Ohio NortHern 76 1Jot)
Otterb'eln 83. Baldwtn·Wa lla ce 76
Hiram 79, Ca pttal·7l
De n lsoo 7~, Beihany tW Val 68
Case Reserve 69, Kenyon 67
Wittenberg 81, Oberlin 42
Ashland 101, Kenlucky Wesleyan 99
Wllbe-rtol't'ett Florida Atlantic
Tlllln !H, Walsh 64
Ml Ve rnon N82 81, ObloDomtnlcan

71
Rio Crande 96, Defiance 72
LakeErle94, Dyke85
Centra l Sta te 110, Sha~neeState 74
Goshen nnd. ) 70, Blufltm 58

--·

Natloaal Coli&lt;ce llasketball R..
Adelphi 99, Conconlla I N.Y . ) 85
Alfred 47, Oark•m 36
1
Bln!lhamtm 90, Plattlbu l'fC 69
Bloomfteld 109, Centenary JOt
(JOT)

Corne!1641r Dartmouth 52

Dlcklnsoo 83, TUba 70
Eas Ern H, camerOn 17
Fairfield 89, Manhattan 86
Falrlel&amp;h DtcklllaCII 61. Marllt 62
F.ord ham 92, C.olgate 81
Franklln6 Marshall &amp;I, Albrlehi 59
Go~ St. 70. Elmira 65
Goor&amp;etawn 61, Boston C.oiL 56
Glassboro 89, Jeril!y City St. 83
Grove City 92, Fr011bur&amp;69
Hartwick 92, Kings Polnt40
Harvard 77, Columbia 76
Hofstra 711. Dm&lt;el 71

•

Holy Cross 80, Bucknell78
Indiana St. 75, Boston U. 65
Iona 87, Canislus58
John Jay 97, Pratt 58 .
·Kean 83. Montclair St. 75
LIU-Brod&lt;lyn 68. Mt. St. Mary's 65
La Salle 84, Niagara 78
LeMoyne 74, Phlla .. TexUie 65
Massachusetts 95, St . Bonaventure
86
Knox 84
Mpnmouth
Muhlenberg 87, Lebanm Valley 67

ss.

Nazareth 86., Roberts Wesleyan 80
. Northeastern 60, Maine 56
Penn St. 75, Duquesne 60
Pennsylvarila 59, Yale 57
Plltsbul;'gh IOl, Pt:ovldence82 · .
~ Point Park 80, Westminster 72
Princetm 67, Brown 42

Rider 76, Delaware 55
Robert Morris 103, Wagner 981 OT)

Rochester 74, Washlngtoo {Mo.) 71
Sacred Heart 75. K...,. St. 59
Salem St. 115, Fitchburg St. 70
Scrantoo 82, Juniata 58
Spring!leld 79, Qutnnlplac 75
St Anselm 99, American Int182
St: Francis (Pal 90, Monmouth 89

lOT)
.
St. Joseph's 1P~l) 89, R . Island 81
lOT)
St ..Peter's 66, Army 51
St. Ro"' 79, Caldwell61 .
St. Vincent's 82, Wash. &amp; Jefr. 76
Stmehlll 78, Bryant 74
S!my Brodt 106, Meclgar Evers 92
Susquehanna 80, Drew 61

·

Mlchireat

Alma 78, Albion 76
·
Ball St. 105, Slippery Rock 68
Bowling Green 72, C. Michigan 57
Buller 76. Detroit 62
Case Reserve 69, Kenyon 67
Ceotral St. UO, Shawnee St. 74
Cleveland St. 67, N. Jowa 58
DePaul 76, Houstm 62
Denlsoo 711. Bethany 68
Drake 717 Bradley 62
E. Michigan 78, Ohlo68
Evaniel 75, John Brown 72
Evansvtlle' 78, Daytm16
Goshen 70; B!ulltm ,58
Gracelan~ 95, Tarkio 81
Grand Valley St. 63. N. Mich igan 45
• Hlllsdale104, Lake Super lor Sl. 77
Hiram 79. (;apll;ll n ..
Dl. Benedlctlne105, Rockfonl70
. Dl. Wesleyan 95, Carthage 78
Indiana St. 75, Bostm Unfv. 65
Lake Erie 94, Dyke 85
MacMurray 94, Maryvllle(Mo.) H
Marietta 79, Ohio Northern 76
(JOT)

MlamiiOblo) 76, Kent St. 66
Mi chlgan St. 66, Northwestern 59
Minnesota 79, Iowa 77
Missouri 62, Kansas St. 60
Mo .-Kansas Glty 77, NE Illinois 69
Mo. Western 81, Mo.·Rolla 62
Morningside 97. Sou ill Dakota 118 ·
Mount Vernan.81, Ohio Dominican

71

Nebraska 97, Iowa St. 87
North Park 81, Mllllkln 63
Ohio St. 92, Wlocouln 60
Ott;~wa 69, ~t : Mary's '! Kan. )58
Otterbein 83, Baldwin-Wallace 76
Pu nlue 86, Michigan 69
Rio Grande 96, Befiance 72
SW Baptist 90, Washburn 71
SW MIS50Uri St. 70, Dllnols St. 64
Saginaw Valley St. 62, WayneSU2
SW Minnesota 64, Wln(Jla St. 62
St. Jo!ll'ph's I Indi 78. ln&lt;llanapls 76

lOTI
.
St . Louis 72, NE Missouri St. 64

Tllfin 94, Walsh 61
Toledo 71, W. Michigan 62
Va. Commonwealth 62, Old Domin·
ton 60
Valparaiso 75, Dl.-cliicago 68
W. llllnds 93, Akrm 84
Wls-Lutheran 87, , Northwestern
Col. 70
·
Wis. -Groen Bay 72, E. Illinois 62
Wittenberg 81, Oberlln 42
Wrieht St . 84, Wls.·MIIwaukee 711
Xavier 10hlo)81, Loyola (01.)74
Youngstown St. 97, Chicago St. 81
Soutlnreol
Arkansas 113, Texas Tech 86
Arkansas St. 68, SW Louisiana 63
Arkansas -Uttle.Rock 96, Merc·er60
C. Florida 81,. Pan America n 80· .
Lamar 98, Hartford 86
N. Texas St. 61, S.F. Austin 58
Oklahoma113, Colocado 97
Oklahoma St. 78, Kansas 73 lOT)
Oral Roberts 99, Philips 82
SMU 65, Teus A&amp;M 50
Texas 92, Rice 79
~exas·-Arllngtm 101, SW Texas St.

Texas CJirtsUan 68. Baylor 65
Texas-San AntmtO U S Centenary
97
'
Wichita St. 83; Tu 1sa 74
. I w.. t
AriZona 82, UCLA 77
Boioe St. 80, E . Wash lngtm 69
Brigham Young 72. New Mextco65

Cal-Davis 80, CoU . Notre Dame 65

Cal Lutheran ~. Redlands 91
Cal Poly-Pomona 59, Los Angeles
St. 57
·
Cai·Riverslde101, Cal Poly·SLO 83
Colorado St. 61, San Dlewo St. 51
Fresno Padftc 71, WestmMt 67

Hawaii Mi. Air Fore e~

Hayward St. 54, Humboldt St'. 51
Idaho 78, Weber St. 71
Laverne 8.3, Claremmt·Mudd 58
Mo.ntana St. 81. N. Arizona 71 .
Nevada 86, Montana 77
Nev.·Las Vflu'll7, Frf&gt;ano St. 9I
New Me~ico· St. 61, Santa Barbara
57
.
On!aoo St. 84, ~on 76
PepperdiM 67, Santa Clara 61
Portlaad &amp;e, St. Mary's !Calli.) 63
Son Dl&lt;wo98, Loyola Morymount90
San Frandaco 78. OoiWiga 68
Stanlonl94, W.. hlnxtm St. 63
Utah 67, Texaa·EI Paso60
W. Ore&amp;on 71, Puset Sound 68
WhltUor 81, Ocddenlal SS .
Wyoming 81, Charloltm (S.C.) 59 '

lose double

.OT contest· ·
loss Is always a disappointment, but the University of Rio
Grande women's basketball
team had to choke back their
share of unhappiness over losing
to Mount Vernon Nazarene 72-70
In --two overtlnies Saturday at
Mount Vernon.
Ann Barnttz and Debbie Fredrick each hit 17 poiJ!Is to keep
Doug FOQte's Rio ladles on an
even keel In the first half with the
Mid-Ohio Conference opponent
and Improve their standing to a
five-point advantage at the half.
But Jeana Howald's Mount
Vernon club, led by Shannon
Bell's 22-polnt performance,
chipped away In the second half
to to tie at 54 at- the end of
regu)atlon. The teams · were
again deadlocked 111 M after one
extra period, and with the score
set at 70 for both.as time ran out
· lri the second OT, the hosts
sUpped In a two-point field goal
·
for the win.
A

-overall shooting hurt the Red-'
wofnen again when theY posted
36.7 percent (29-79) to MOunt
Vernon's 38 percent (30-78) .
Rebounding-wise, Rio Grande
recorded 53 to Mount Vernon's
51, with Kerr! Kld~ll recording
a career high of 16 and Ann
13arnltz bringing doWn 11. Jennl
Couch, the Re&lt;lwomen's top
player In assists, was credited
with 10. Mount Vernon's Eve
Webber had 10 ·Jx&gt;ards In the
·
game.
The Redwomen did· bold an
advantage over tbe Lady Cougars In their three-point shootIng, sinking six of 14 attempts
(42.8) percenu to Mount Ver·non's 33 percent (4-12). On tree
throws, Mount Vernon posted
eight of 12 irles fOf 66 percent,
while the Ri!dwomen were 62
percent (6·9).
The loss put the Redwomen at
9-7 and 1-1 In the MOC, while the
Lacly Cougars went to 4-4 and 2-0.
The Redwomen face enother
conference opponent, Tiffin,
Tuesday at 5: 15 p.m. In Lyne
Cen~r.

Box score:

MOUNT VERNON (72) 5-4-0-22; Lori
Brown, 3-5-11; Unda Ward, 1-0-2;
Erin Sharrock, 2-1-5; Roblnne
Barton, 7-2-16; Mandy Jam·
borskl, 2-0-4; Eve Webbe(, 6-0-12.
TOTALS Zl-4-8-72.
RIO GRANDE (70) - Jennl
Couch, 1·2·4; Gena Notrls, 1·2-08; Michelle Crouse, 1-1-3; Debbie
Fredrlcli, 2-4-1-17; Kerr! Kidwell, 4-0-8; Ann Barnltz, 8·1-17;
Stephanie Gudorf, 2-0-4; Kathy
. Snyder, 4-1-9. TOTALS 23#70,
Bal.ftl!JtescoJ;e: Rio Gr.,.de 28,
Moullt VeriiOil 23. ·
·
Shannon ~ Bell,

--Spor18 briefs--

Br DAVB LU'FO
UPISp..U WrMer
EASTRlJI'HERFORD,N.J.The Battle of the Backups was a
blowout.
Jeff Hostetler, making his tltst
playoff start, played like a
polllbed veteran Sunday In place
of PbU Simms.
· Mike Tomczak, filling In for·
Jim Harbaugh, played like the
guy who ~n pts booed In his
home sladlum. ·
.
Hostetler passed for two touchdowns and ran for another to lift
the New York Giants to a 31-3
rout of the Chicago Bears In the
NFL playoffs: The victory sends
the-Giants Into uematcb against
the 49ers Jan. 211 ai San Francisco
for the NFC championship. ·
"I always believed 'I coUld do
It,".said Hostetler, who Is 5.0 as a
.starter over his.seven-year NFL
career. "The opportunities just
haven't come.
·
''I felt really good. I !lad some
'jitters but In the locker room I
sensed the gu~ !tad confidence
In me."
Hostetler completed 10 of 17
passes for 112 yards and no
Interceptions, whUe running six
times for 43 yards. Tomczak bit
17 of 36 for 205 yards and two
lntercepdons.
· The Giants' cOaches put their
bye weektogooduse. They added
pla;v: action and rollout passes to
Ulke advantage of Hostetler's
mobility and shifted from a 3-4
defense to a 4-3 to shut down the
Bears ninnll\g game. ·
· Chicago, 'ihe NFL.'.s second
lit Saturday·nlght's non-league
leadlrig runnlilg team, was held
game
at Stewart, Federal Hockto 27 yards on 16 carries, no
Ing
had
four players score 23
rushing first downs and the.
points
each,
which was enough to
Giants staged two eoal· line
hand
North
Ga!Ua
a 106-95 loss.
stands In the surprisingly lopof·
Beblnd
the
team-leading
sided game.
tense
of
Tracy
Bobo,
Mickey
.
- . During the week, talk focused COzart, Randy Shuford and Matt
on how slinllar these tea ins were,
but there were no similarities Watson, the Lancers, 11·1, took a .
nine-point lead .Into the second
Sunday . Bears defensive tackle

.

.

'SOccer
Battling fans and a stampede
by hundreds of panlek¢&lt;1 onlook(Reserves)
ers killed 34 people and Injured
.
(SVAC onJr) . .
more than 50 at a game In South
TEAM
W L PF PA
Africa. Pollee said the death toll
North
Gallla
..
..
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..
7 2 532 389
.was the worst In South African
HanJ!8ll
Trace
..
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.
6
2 437 346
sports hlstQry. Fighting broke
Southern
..............
6
3
491 398
out following a referee's call in a:
·
Eastern
................
5
3
373
386
game between the Katzer ChiefS
Oak
Hill
.........
,....
~
4
495
469
and Orlando Pirates. ... A 16year-old fan died after being hit Symmes Valley ... 3 6 415 !108
In the stomach by fireworks Sout~~western ....... 2 7 316 437
outside a stadium In Athens. Kyger Creek ........ 1 8 ~ 481
Later, a teargas bomb fired by TOTALS ............ U U Mlt, Mit
hoolig'ans forced the referee to
SaiiJ!'day'a llnals
abandon the game with Olym)lla- ·
Federal
Hocking 106, North Galkos leading AEK Athens .2-1.
Ita 95
Symm:es Valley 61, Ironton St.
Plan basketball
.Joe. 56 ·
·
·

.

tournament

TueldaJ'a llale
- The Southern Athletic boosters Hannan Trace at Eastern
are sponsoring a · ftfth and sixth Wahama at Kyger Creek
gmde basketball tournament Feb. 2 _ New Boston at Squthwestern
and 3 at Southem Hiah School. InTbU'IIIiq'•llllle
terested parties are asked to call North GaiUa at Maysville (Ky.)
949-2025 for Jlllditillllll iaformaFriday'• actloa
.
. lion.
·
Southwestern at Hannan Trace

.

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k

A chili ~was enjoyecfby 11
· ~\ ·lnemben and one iuest at the
(, m:eni meeting of the Preceptor
~ -'Beta

Bell Chlpter, Bela Sigma Phi

• '·SorOrity, held Ill the Grace EpisCOII8I ChUn:h in Pomeroy.
"'lll* pe was given by Velnia
(I Rue. ·.,reSident. and. the chili. was
.I' served' by . the social comnuttee,
,'~ 1ane ~ton. Cbarloue Elberfeld,
·~ Clarice Krluaer !1J1&lt;1 Rose Si118011.
~
A brief diJelission was held on
'• the ConventiOit in Philadelphia.
· ~ The cit}&gt; council tepreaentatives
~ Mil meet a&amp; the home of Susan
' Cllrt ' IIJDi&amp;bt (Monday) to funher
) plans fl)l' ihe dance ~ celebrity
If night to be held In the IJII111g.
1 lt - noted that Sandi laJtnuelli
· ·, will ~~ all chaplen or Beta
~~ Sl-- Phi II the Meias County
of Conlmen:e Meolin .
.
&lt; ' A hancls to hasrt m~tiag be
~ held Feb. 14. Jlaeb member is fJ

~

•spaghetti
•Lasagna
•Chitken
CacciatQrie

,.

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.. o:;;ber

DOWNING CHilDS
MULLEN MUSSER

INSURANCE

.·· .·.

Heard
..about
.
.

·\~~/
.
~ (
Bee
' fTips
.._
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"""""'II - - ~
',.,.., , .............~. ··. Sauteed Wilh ~ree~ pep~rs and
:. J·:::::.
_;.,-.1"'"'..· . ~.:2/
. ./' . · onions.
Served with mashed
,
potatoes and.green beans.

.

1 ""::"'

RAPID REFUND?

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~~~~~t~o~w~o~rk for you! '
POMEROY .
.
618 EAST MAIN STREET

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·

Country Fried Steak
Li~hdy hreaded and topped,with
wuntry milk ~mvy. Served with mashed
p(&gt;tatoes .and ~recn heans.

·. lr-;:~~J)-­
f,t;
£:$
,&lt;(

'

~-::::--),· "~·A

992"6874

"--('\ \

Available at
Participating Locahons.
Prices May Vary.

:ifl'

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Meatloaf

l'l~an y. homes1yle m~ailoof.. ·
ServL'&lt;1 with mllshed JXllaloes
and ~r~r n ht,an.s.

..

:!i~.W:Ie.

.~
CeCil has iiMficlled that she
.,:
aaead one af our meetings
:, In 1a1e Februlry or early March to

• UDJain bow to judp IIJiiiques.

•

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': liOiterrer Cor the Jan. 24 ~

I•

., will be Velma Rue and Rose Sts-

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Api1 Smidl. a pell, held I dis-

•' CI.P, Clll pmel and

BaJderduh

~.· -played tiy the IDCIIlben.
:• ' ·A d1 JH t COinO was al8o IICrVCd
by the IOClal camniaee. ·
.I

Herbalists meet

(;)~~\\\ Golde~~
-:

··' Preceptor Beta
Beta chapter
,. h.
•t o""s.·meetmg

4 P.M. - 9 P.M ..

&lt;NI!XT TOM~ EXXQ&lt;I)

Dinner out at MiUie's Restaurant collect
was enjoyed recently by members
New program books were disof the Fernwood Garden Club. • tributed for review.
The group had met previously at
It was noted that the club
the home of Marjorie Purtell for the received a second, two third place
December meeting.
and one foutth place ribbons at the
Ida Murphy presided at the meet- · recent Christmas Ho"'er shoW at
ing in w!lich all repeated the club Royal Oak Reso,rt.
. , A variety of games were enjoyed
ami han!) made gifts exchanged.
The next meeting wUI be held
tuesday at the home of Ida Murphy
with ihe program "Kitchen Scrap
Plants." Each is to tate a plant they
A Christmas party was held have started from kitchen scraps.
recently by members of the River
Others attending were Wilovene
Valley Herbalists at the decorated Bailey, Helen Eblin, Suzanne W.home of Bobbi Karr. A tour of Mrs. ner, Chelsea YDIDlg, Nick DetKarr 's herb garden was conducted.
twiller, Evelyn Thoma and Kathryn
A book, "Kitchen Herbs," was Johnson.
shown that will be presented to the
Meigs County Public Library ih
memory of Ernestine Hayman.
Each member brought a wrapped
ornament and "ornament steal" was
conducted. A cookie exchange was
also held. ·
There will be no January meeting and the February meetmg wiU
111 Second St., PIIIIIII'Oy
be held by Betty Milhoan or at a
YOUR INDEPENDENT
·
public loeation.
A revised copy of the by-laws .
AGENTS SERVING
and the new calendar will be anMEIGS COUNTY
.
nounced soon in a newsletter cr disSINCE 1R61
tributed at ihe February meeting.
•

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992-613'9

Muon,WV.

·Fernwood. gardeners meet

The third . binhday of Joshua
Pape, son of Allen and Carol Pape,
was observed recently.
A "Bugs Bunny" theme was carried out with cake and .other
refreshments served to Chelsea
Pape, ~arents, Larry and Phyllis 0 Brien, great grandparents,
Bob and Florence Adams, Rex and
Mary O'Brien and Nial and Vtrginia Salser, Jim O'Brien, Lisa
· Pape, Linda, Derek, Dale and Darin
Teaford, Raymond Adams, Thmmy,
Jordan and. Kevin HiU, Beclcy and
Dalton Jenkins, Erica Arnott. Shirley Aaron and Lori Sayre, Mjssy
and Macy Rees.
/
Sending cards and gifts were
HeJSCbel and Eileen Roush, _great
graiidparents, John and Patty Pape,
grandparents, Johnny, Rae Jean,
Andrea. Chris and Randy Pape.

rary

·

·. ·te
•· W. G·a··r·d.en··· :·
' Verv
.
mee·
tl.
ng
'
Club has

Mlck Ho-I • llli1ructw
For Mort lnfor••IIM Call

(304) 773-5321

Hill

',R.i

_Family Re&lt;Btaurant
Thursday ·Night is ·
I' 1·:\ I.L\ \ ~ Ic ~ 11·1·

Rt. 33

Commualty Caleaclar items

T;b

At Carfeto• School

Mason Family Restaurant

Pape ·birthday

UMW has meet

J•.

~nior Citizens Receives 10% Discount

~-----

JOSHUAPAPE

Syracuse Asbury

Startl111 Winter G-.arter
Thun.,
17
7:30 p.lll.

I

The Wildwood Garden Club's macaroni. Favors of handmade lace
Christmas dinner was held.tecently wm~ths made by- Kathryn Miller
at the Mason Family ResrauranL
were distributed to the members.
After the meal a shon business
For Now is the Time. Beuy Mil- ·
· meeting was conducted.
boan noted it is .a good time to plan
For devotions, Doris Grueser you spring garden." The spring
read "Let Me Keep Christmas catalogues will be coming.· soon.
Fo~ver," "For Every Christmas Winter is a good time .to c;lea!J
Candle," and "The Mystery of fence rows and briers. Clean pes·Christmas."
ticides from sprayers with ammonia
For roll call, members showed a water. She also noted· not to store
miniature Chrisunas wreath they fruits arid flowers together because
had made.
·
bananas, app~. pears and pbtatoes
For the prop. everyone.read a emit a tiny quantity of ethylene gas.
favorite Chrisunas reading and This quantity.however, is so minule
Doris Grueser had a contest with that it lias no effect on man. It does
everyone trying to guess die name however, shonen the. life of
of a Chrisbnas carol. Betty Milhoan flowers. . .
..
After ·the close of the meeting,
and Juanita Will won the prizes.
For show and tell, Juanita ' Will · gifts were judged and exchanged.
gave each member a little &amp;rigel she Prettiest packages went to Evelyn
had millie using an assortlilent of Hollon, Heidi Elberfeld and Connie

HARRISONVll.LE - The Har- nesday Homemakers · Club will
. aP,Pear two da)'l before an event risonville Senior Citizens will bold meet Wednesday at 10 a.m. in
aad the day of that evenL Items a potluck . dinner at noon on . Syracuse. The ·project will be
.mut be n¢e!.ed In advance to · Tuesday at the townhouse. All macrame chairs.
~ ·' aaare pubUcalion In tbe caleninembers lire urged to. attend. In
..,. dar.
~DDLEPORT - Group 2 of the
case of bad weather the meeting Middleport
Presbyterian Church
will be canceUed.
~·
wiU meet Wednesday at 7:30 p.m.
MONDAY
POMEROY - The Drew Webster at the church. Katherine Bro~n will
"
CHESIDRE • Women Alive will
:1 meet Monday at 7 p.m. at the Post No. 39 of the American be the hostess.
' Kyger Crcet Clubbouse. Refresh- Legion will ,meet Tuesday at 7 p.m.
Run.AND
Leading'- Creek
, ments will be provided.
Dinner will be served. The meeting
will honor ,Hugh Custer, retired Conservancy District's Oll!aniza·
.,
ROCK SPRINGS - The Rock·,, Veterans Service officer for his 12 tiona! meeting and regular meeting
.; '. Springs !Jniled Methodist .Church years of service to Meigs Coun~r . to be held on Wednesday at 9 a.m.
at the office.
~· , will be open for anyO!IC ~anti.ng to veterans.
i , . cane to jfty for the SituatiOn m the
The United Metliodist Women of
. Middlo Bast .00 for those serving ·
POMEROY
The Ladies '
1'
.
the Syracuse Asbury United
' .. in Operation' Desert Shield.
Auxiliary of Veterans Memoril!l .IJ
. .
drJeS,'
Methodist Church met recently.
1
. '
Hospiral will meet Tuesday at 1::30
The meeting was opened by
. roMBROY - The . Disable p.m. All members are W' bring
By Ruth Powers
' Mary Cundiffand prayer by Hope
Atnetaot Velerllll and Ladies finger foods..
. ,
. Moore was followed by a reading
• ; . Auxiliary'· Will meet Monday Ill 7.
. WEDNESDAY
Yes, Virginia, The Middleport by Mary Lisle, "A Direction of
, • p.m. 11 'lhe· ball on Buu.emut
POMEROY - There wiU be a Library is open. It bas been Faith."
.
·
Avenue. .. ·
financial aid workshop in the Meigs reopened since Dec. 3, 1990. The
There were 33 shut-in calls
High School Library on Wednesday hours are 12 noon to 8 p.m. on reported.
WNG BOTioM - Aame Bible at 7 p.m. Representatives from the Mondays and 9 a.rn. to 5. p.m.
A box will be placed in the entry .
study will be held Monclay at 7 University of Rio Grande arid from · Tuesday thru Saiurday. The library room of the church to teach the
p.m. Ill the home of Mary FOlmer. Bank One will be present.
has been completely remodtlC!i and children io put money in to help the
The'public is invited.
",
is very altrBCtive. There is a .wide poor children.
. .
. T~DAY
SYRA,CUSE - The Third Wed. variety of new books to pick from ' . Mrs. Moore described !he skit .
· and a nice abnospbere to brpwse in. she is writing for the program in
The Pomeroy Library i~ cur- February.
·
rently showing movies every
' Mrs. Moore is to send for a book
.Salllrday at 2 p.m. Check your on rule's and regulations of the
·
'
newspapers and radio for the titles United Methodist Women and she
of the movies each week. The titles suggested that work begin on items
are posted in the library every week for the festival of sharing.
also. Be sure and check the bulletin
Mary .Cundiff conductccl the
"What .
board.
•
,
program with quiet day service and
The Olristmas . meeting of the
The program,
. ts · ' · 1 The Bookmobile is on .the road closed with a reading from
Riverview Gardea Club was held Christmas," con~ of readings , •very w~. You can check the G1,1ideposts arid a prayer.
recently at the home of Maxine' by members mterspmed With j!aper for the schedule, come to the
Mrs. Moore served refreshments.
Whi~. Reedsville. Assisting . Christmas carols, was conelucted by library and get one or go io the
.'
hostes~l . were
M1;garet . Ella Osborne, Janet Con~Uy and bookmobile. Two new ·runs have
_ _ _ _ _ _ _._IW •
and Marlene Putman:
Gladys Thomas. GJI!uP stnK!ng of been added this year. They are at f
t. .•Grossnickle
Roll call W8S answeted With po)iular and favoote Christmas · Pagciville and Blli'lingbam. Watch
•.
!·\members giving an original songs with Mrs.-Wbitdtelld at the for the bookmobile in your area.
' C)Jristmas verse. Ruth Anne Bal- . piano concluded the·ll!Ognun.
. . TEACHERS I ~ Library has a
.1 ~ presided_ at the !ftCC.ting in .Following_. a ~~~ exc~ange, Portfolio 0 n 1Jncleptanding Taxes.
l . which ihe Christmas lilbtmg on members enJOYed a light Christmas Included besides the lesson plan, is
I Dec. 3 at the Belleville Locks and buffet . Lighted red can~s and a video; ·software for an IBM PC
1 Dam Palt. spo!lJOI'Od by the club holly centered the table With an atand 100 percent canpatibiles. This ·
J and the Olive Thwnship Firemen's uactive arrangement .of crocheted could' be Used in a civics .class, · ~
; AUltiliary, was discussed. Par- red and white bird house fa~ors economics, consumer ..or business
"
1 ticipating in the ceremony were made by Mrs. Grossnickle.
ediJCilion class.
,IIICJ!lben . of· the Tri-~ Music · Attending were Opal Harris, · The library offers, the latest ~
,
Socieiy !iho performed mstrwnen- Pauline Mym, Frances R~, N~la seUers, videos, magazines, movies,
tal nUIIIbers.
.
Young, Mary Alice Btse, Kila lludio cassettes, story hours, bookt
• Giftl.of candy from the club Young, Janice Young, J~et Con- by-mail service, bookmobile set~ given to two ~mbers for noUy, Del~ F~ Marilyn Han· vtce and . many lllOI'C sa-vices.
) · thetr-IIJIOUSCS wbo are til.
num, Phyllis Larkins, Ella Osborne, You'U never know what you aro
•.;
·
· , _._ __
Gladys Thomas, Nancy Wachter, missing if you l)on't come in and
GnicC Webrr and Ruth Anne Bal- check us out. Make a New Year's
Setved with
• / ·
derson. ..
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.
resolution to visit YOW: library at
'
~hcd fX&gt;laiOCS and ween !Jeans.
~
The January meeung will be held least once a month. It wtll be wonh ~~'-~
1..J
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at the Weber home.
the trip.

IAUTE CLASSES

.

Community calendar·

...

Three-polaters - 8-20 (40%)
Free throws- 7-12 (58.3%)
Rebounds...;. 47 .(Farley 11)
Aulats -: 25 (Tackett 7)
Steall- 17 (Tackett 9)
Tunovers -17
·

All Dinners Served With~ all-U-Care-To-Eat
.
Soup, Fruit &amp; Salad Bar .!t Garlic Bread
·
. Or Try One Of ll)e Other Fine Menu Selections.
· Take Out.~ers At~t~illlbl~.

Wildwood Garden Club meets ·

~~~~~~~~;;;;==~~~

1:'1: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___;...;.;._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _

...

-

SSJ and benefits
me

95
'
Field goals- 40-82 (48.8%)

(Centereace)
Southern... ~ .......... 8 1 693 558
Hannan Trace ..... 7 1 617 430
Eastern ............... 6 2 5q4 551
Symmes Vailey ... 6 3 535 522
North Gallla ......... 5 4 721 676
Oak Hill .. ....... ..... 2 7 !161 671
Kyger Creek......... 1 8 523 653
Southwestern.. ..... 0 9 499 652
TOTALs ..... :...... 31 U t7U t71S

.

eligible. if be or she bas an impair- • from worlring:
Jllqlt comparable· to one wbicb - In addition to income limitations,
"· would prevent an adult from work- a person ' cannot have resoures of
ing. .
more than $2,000.
limit for a
,
If you have limited incotne and
People can. get .SSI even if they couple is $3,000. R~s include
:. RISOIIIC«!8 lind are age 6~ or Older, have . other income. Many people sayings and checking acoounts, .
" . or blind, or disabled, you may be get · Social · Security benefits and bonds, stocks, life insunnce, real
... • eli&amp;ib!o for ~OIIIhly Supplemental SSI. The amount of a person's SSI and personal property. Not all
. ,. Security Income (SSI) payments. · payment depends on how . much . resoqrces ~t, bo~evcr, The
' SSI . Is a Federal program that other income he or she has. Income people at Soctal Secunty can gtve
1 '· makes ~ to persons with
includes SQ!;ial S«urlty benefits, you more infonnation about what
-" limited
e arid resources who &amp;alary or self-employment inccime, . does !Ill~ doesn'tcount
aro lied. blit!d or disabled.&lt; A pensions or anniDtieS; or any . .S?, tf you thmk you are ~
blincl_pcrson wbose vision is less money received, as well as housing elig~ble for SSI beu~ of~ mthat 2WlOO with glasses, or who arid food paid by another person.
coote or resources, thtnlt agam. You
,. has tJJnnel vision of 20 cJegteeS or
In 1991, a person can have may be. Conact Social ~llrity to ·
' I.C8$ &amp;hould consider SSI. B'ut, yilu countable income of up to $427 a get complete mfonnatiOII. The
r cannot llave much income or own
month arid still get some SSI pay- people there can tell you what you
, much jHOpeuy, But, you can have . ment An eligible couple can have want to know. Just call the toll free
1. ' your 1JW!1 home. There is no mini- income of up .to $630 a month and telephone ni!Jllber - 1 (800) 2345 . I ' mum or maximum age for ~le
still get some SSI paymelt~ Social " SS;&lt;' (I (800). 234-5772) for an ~
~ who 111e blind or have a disability.
· Security doesn't count all mcome, pomtment wtth a Social Secunty
,. ~au · should apply for SSI if rou · however, so you may be abl~ to get representiltive who will help you ·
cannot 'work becaose of.a phySICal some SSI even if ~u have more sign up.
. .
; or menial condition that is expectal income, especially if you live in a
The Athens Social Secunty ts
' to ._ II least 12 months or result state that adds money to the SSI · located at 22 If). Columbus Road.
' in death. A child under 18 is cbecks or if most of your income is If you, wish to visit or drop us a
·
line.
.,

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MOnday, January 14, 1991
Page 6

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quarter and jetted away before
th~ Pirates,' 5-7, could shrlnk the
19-polnt lead Federal took Into
the fourth quarter to 11.
North's Chris Tackett racked
up a season-h'lgh 37 points - .the
second dme this season he has
scored more than 30- to earn the
game's marksmanship trophy.
Nor.th Gal~; (}J3 against nonleague opponents, will seek Its
first non-conferenCe win of the
season . wb~n tlie Pirates sal!
south to pla'y at Maysville, Ky.,
on Thutaday before" returning
horne and to Jeague ·actlon on
Friday against Kyger Creek.
Score br quarters ·
.
North Gallla ..... 211 19 28 28- 95
Fed. Hocklng .... 29 26 31 21-106
FEDERAL DOCKING (196)Bobo 7-3-0-23; Cozart 4-4-3-23;
Shuford 11-0-1,23; Watson 8-1-423; Summerfield 1-1-2-7; Mar·
tlnez 2-0-0-4; · Deaver 0-0-3-3.
TOTALS- 33-9-13-108 '. ·, .•
Free tbrowa - 13-20· (65%)
NOR111 GAILIA (8$) -Tackett 11+3-37; Stout !&gt;-2·2'18; D.
Smith ~-0-0-10; S. Smith 5.0.0-10·
Staton 2·1-2-9; Fadey 3-().{)-6; .
Ratliff 1-1·0-5. TOTALS- IU-7-

.
(Overall) .
Eastern at Southern
TEAM
W I.: PF PA Kyger Creek at North Gallla
Southern ........... , .... 10 3 945 798 . Symmes Valley at Oak· Hill
Hannan 'trace ....... 9 3 860 669
Saturday'• game
Eastern ................. 8 3 740 743 Oak Hill at Minford
Symmes Valley . .. .. 8 5 793 781
North Gallla .......... 5 7 953 978
Oak Hill ,................ 3 9 787 889
Kyger Creek ........ ,: 2 10 705 8!l6
Southwestern ......... 1 9 588 721

By The Bend

· Your Social Security

Federal Hocking hands North
Gallia 106-95 loss Saturday

________ SVACsbnd~·------

T-he Daily Sentinel

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•

RECEI~ JlLACK BELT-Ryan Holter, left, or Racine recently
passed bls blac:li: belt tettal Ohio Slate University iD Columbas after tralal~l "iib memben. of the Meigs County Karate Club for
approxlalalely )'tUI. Holter Is {e(Orded as one or the youn·
gest to ~ve a BlaCk Belt Ia Sllotokan Karate In t~ Uaited States
.I t tbe qe ri/14. Plc:tared wltlt tbe youa11 Black Belt is Ibis instritc·
tor Mlcli RoweD.
·

.•.

.-

Dan Hampton predicted the next Sunday to compete a spot In
game·' would be a "slobber · Super.Bowl XXV.
Schroeder, unquestionably a
knocker." The Giants knocked
weak
Unit entering the season
the slobber out of the Bears.
exhlbfted his 1990' maturity by
Raiders Zl, Benga1110
leading the Raiders to the gameBy .JEFF JUSEN
•t: winning touchdown. After the
UPJSporill Writer
Bengals pulled even with 11: 49 to
LOS ANGE~S - Many Of go, Schroeder marched the Raid·
those calling for a dismantling of ers 80 yards, .
The quarterback kept the drive
the I.,os Angeles Raiders after a .
tour-year absence from the. going when he connected with
, playoffs wanted .to Include Jay , · Tim Brown for 26 Yl!rds on
.·Schroeder and Marcus Allen thlrd-and-20 from the Los An·
among the discards.
geles 22. Three plays later,
Schroeder, It was said, was too 'Horton got behind .linebacker
erratic. Allen was too old. Sun· Leon White down the right
day proved. the critics all too sideline and Schroeder hit him In
stride for the TD.
wrong. .
•
Schroeder threw two touchdown .passes, Including a 41·
Schroeder, who completed 11
yarder to Ethan • Horton that of 21 passes for 172 yards and one
snapped a tie wltb 8: 52 left, to lntercepdon, also threw a 13·
help the R.alders advance to the yard scortng strike to Mervyn
AFC championship game with a Fernandez In the second quarter :
20-10 victory over the Cincinnati Jeff Jaeger had a 49-yard fleld .
Bengals before 92,045 - the goal In the third . quarter and
largest crowd of the NFL season. capped the scoring with 19
"It's a lot of fun when you play · , seconds left when he bit from 25
In front of that many pl!!lple," yards. . .
Schroeder said. "I loved the
The 30-year-old Allen, playing
atmosphere. I'd like to see It extensively becauJe of an Injury
packed every time. It gets you to Bo Jackson, gained 140 yards
on 21 carries. Jackson Injured his
excited."
Allen rushed for 140 yards, left hlp on the seconcl play of the
ensuring the AFC West cham- second half and his status for
pion Raiders a visit to Buffalo next week Is uncertain. ·

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Shoru:y 's wekomes the

American E4lJ'ss' Card.

•

.J

........_;...,._ __..,. - - - - - - . • ........_ _ _, _........, • ~
..IW_...........,,.-

••

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�'

Pigs 8 The Deily Sentinel

Polr1810J'-Mhlcltportf ,Ohio

· Monday,

Janu-v 14, 1991

Explosi~e (p.as~ . eruption .seen _ _.______. .;. ._. ;_______
Astronomers Monday an·
noUDCed the discovery of a
record eruption from a quasar 2
b!Uion . light years away, an
unimaginable three-mlnu.te
hurst of energy. that, when
viewed trom Earth, rivaled the
IQtal outputofthesunover nearly
1mllllon years.
"Quasars, even ln their quiet
state, are really mind boggling In
how m!ICb energy they radiate, "
said astronomer Ronald ~millard, co-author ol a paper on the
flare presented Monday at a
meeting ol the American Astronomlcai,Society In Plllladelpllla.
"That s ,just parf of why . so
many astronomy researchers
are working on trying to really
nail down the last secrets about
them because It's just phenomenal what they do."
A Japanese satellite pamed
"Ginga" - Galaxy - recorded
the X-ray burst from quasar PKS
0558-&amp;14In the constellation Orion
at 8:12 p.m. EST Nov . .13, 1989.
The quasar Is ~lleved to be 2
billion ligbt years from Earth, so
far ·t hat light! traveling )86,000
mUes per second, took 2 billion
years to cover the distance.
The an·nouncement of the flare
discovery was made Monday
after. extensive analysis to make
sure the unusual signal was real.
The discovery was made by
gpaduatestudentBruceGrossan,
Remillard and Hale Bradt, all of
the Massachusetts Insdtute of
Technology In Cambridge,
Mass.; Takaya Ohashi of the
University of Tokyo; and Yasuo
T~naka, Klyoshl Hayashida ana

Fuml)oshl ~aklno, all of the
Institute of. Space and Astronaut·
fcal Science In Sagamlha~.a.
Japan.
Remillard said the signal ,detected by Glnga Indicated a
record three· m,lnute eruption
equal to the suns total energy
output over nearly 1 mllllon
years, assuming the outburst
was spread /evenly ln all
directions.
To put that Into perspective,
the sun produces about 53 mllllon
watts ·of power each second for
every square yard of Its su,rface,
enough power per square yard to.
light 100,000 average homes.
Put another way, the sun
· converts 660 million tons of
matter Into energy every second.
The conversion of a mere 1 pound
of hydrogen Into energy through
nuClear f.uslon can power a 100
·watt light bulb for 450, 000 ~ears.
But when It comes t~ sheer
energy production, nothing In the
known universe rivals the output
of quasars, mysterious objects
that can be as Sl!1all as a single
· solar system and yet outshine
entire galaxies.
It Is widely believed that
quasars are located at the cores
of distant galaxies that serve as
hosts to super-massive black
holes, objects with such tremend-·
ous gravity that not even light ·
ran escape. QuasarPKS0558-504
Is thought to have a central black
hole with a mass of at least ioo
mUlion Urnes that of the sun.
As gas, d!ISt and other· stel.l ar
debris .falls Into such black holes,
It Is heated to extreme tempera-

feople in the news
~MEKICAN

CINEMA

Mf/ABD8: Hollywood's lamee
!!Mwart, Laarea BaCilli and rom
CIWae bave won the American

King and Mandela made this
troubled nation the crossroads of
freedom," Sullivan said

a

tures. High enefa:y light In the
limit · to how much
quasar's
form of X· rays and gamma rays
energy output can Increase In a
Is emitted before the matter falls 'given period of time "before
Into the black hole past the point
you're·actually getting too much
where gravity p~ents anything
light out of the system and It's ·
from escaping.
going to stop the gas from going
"For the time being, It's
In," Remillard said. "The probcertainly taken· for granted that
!ern with our flare. is we ·exceed
the gravity of a super-collapsed
that number. "
object 1s about the . only thing
But by assuming the flare was
anyone can lmaglne that could
caused by matter traveling In the
powe~ (a quasar)," ~millard
direction of Earth at a -velocity
said In a telephone Interview
near tile speed of light, the
from Cambridge.
astronom~rs were able to use the
Buttheveryenergyemlttedby
concept of "relativistic beammaterial falling into the hole can
l'ng" to explain the titanic erupproduce· an outwal'd pressure
tlon, based on Einstein's theory
pushing against · the falling
of relativity.
matter:
•
"I'hls comlltlon ... may arise''
''Thenaturalthlngtoassumelf
part oftheenergyofthe lnfalllng
you see a · quasar flare is that,' matter Is dlrec~ to the formawell, just an extra blob of stuff
tlon of a jet of gas that escapes In
fell Into the system "Remillard· a narrow beam (like a high·
said. "The problem Is ... willie
pressure hose) before falling too_
gravity Is pulling things .In and · near to the black hole," the
keeping the gas together near the
researchers said · In a news
quasar, as you start adding more
release.
and more light comlng.()ut of the
Thus, saying the three-minute
thing, the light starts pushing on
flare equaled the ou,t put qf the
the, gas. It wants to drive stuff. sun over nearly 1 mU!Ion years Is
outward.'.'
·
true for observers in the dlrec·
Ca!&lt;;ulatlons show there is a·
tlon or Earth but might not be

'Meigs County land , transfers ··
CompOed by:
Emmogene Holstelo Congo
Recorder, Meigs County, Ohio

Tuppers ·P lains, Chester Water
. District. Orange.
Joseph F . Llevlng and Betty Jo
Llevlng, right'or way. to Tuppers
Brian D. Mantcke and Kat·
:t;'ll)lns. Chester Water District.
hleen Manlcke. right of way. to
Chester. •
Tuppers Plains. Chester Water
Sharon L. Ifulib~rd. right of
· District. Orange. ·
.
. way. to Tuppers Plains . Chester
.Jimmie Bailey and ·Beverly
Water District. Sutton. • '
Bailey. right of way. to Tuppers
Penny Clark: right of way ., to
Plains. Chester Water District.
Tuppers Plains. Ch~ster Water .
Orange. ·
District. Chester.
·
Sarah E . Caldwell. right of
Kenneth E. aka Kenneth Euway. to Tuppers Plains. Chestt&gt;r
gene -Hysell. dl&gt;c'd. cert. of
Watt&gt;r District. Orange.
trans .. to Wilma )'o{ay Hysell.
Cecil Caldwell and M!Jdrt&gt;d
Rutland Vllla~~:e.
Caldwt&gt;ll. right of way. to

&lt;lpema Awards · for dlstln·
i!lllhed achlevemnt In film.
S!;ager Whlllle7. III'UIItoa got the
award for music~ pertorme~ of
tl(e year. The American Cinema
Flfundatlon's gala ceremony Sat·
urt~ay night drew more thall2,000
i)\!Ople, Including some 200 &amp;tars .
mostly from the past, : at a
$2',!500-a-plate .baaquet. The banqget benefitted the Motion Pic·
tl![e and Televlllotl Country
Kiiuse and Hoaplta,l. I.Aloklna
at'OIInd the spacious Interns- ·
tiona! Ballroom at the Beverly
Wlton Hotel, Actress Arleae
Dlllll, who had flown In from New
York for the event, said seeing
"all these famtllar races Is like
g9fll&amp;'. to a class reunion.''' Pres·
ealers were FnalllllaMn, Gre- '
PI'J Peek; Kll'll Doqlu and ;

;;:p.,

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Soup of the P•y - lean Soup_&amp; Corn lread

Wednesday -Be1ked Ham
Soup of the Day - Broccoli Soup

Thursdav--..Meat Lodf ·
·. . Seup .of the P•y-lean Soup &amp; Corn Bread
.Friday~Ham Loaf . . .
.

·

Soup ,~f.

,._

Day~Potata

Soup

one.

Karr led the

with six

BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE
4:30 P.M. DAY BEFORE

points.
.
The girls will host Gallipolis on
Thursday with action"'sct to begin at

LAYNE FURNITURE

5:30.

REGULAR ............... .......................... '78
FIRM .......................•··;······--····.. ·····--· '88
EXTRA FIRM .................................;... '98
ORTH&lt;fEOIC KING Sll£ SEI$...... .'350 f. UP
QUEEN SIZE SETS...................... $275 l UP
SUNK MATTRES$........................... 148 l UP
BED FRAMES

The . Meip ~~r . eighth
grade girls team railed It s recad to
7-.1 after picking up three ~lit
wms. Colch· Clthy Edwards crew
~up wins OWl' Eastern,

the Eagles

force

5-1 in the fourth quater

FULL OR TWIN SIZE

Kim Haggy and Emily Johnson
led the Maraudcn willl eigltl point!
each, Butcher lidded six, J~e;lyn
SWII'IZ added thm IIIII Steplwrle
Davis two.
.

the

overtime. Billie
Butcher led the way in the overtime
scoring five of her teams 10 points
and give Meigs a 27-23 win.
to

IIIII O.IIIA;!!•
.
The ~
tam IJIC~ .
up I 27•23 WID OYer Eutem ID
ova-time. . Bulan h!ld rallied from
a 9-8 Mllnwder halftime lead to
take a 16-12 -IC!Id heading i1110 the
.final quitter. aut Mci&amp;l•outscored

-~----Spor18
Golf

New Zealand's Greg Turner
took a runaway four-shot victory
In the $1 million Palm Meadows
Cup 1n Australia. tUrner. winless

.·

MATIRESS OR BOX SPRINGS

Meigs 8th grade girls improve rec,o~d-" to 1·1

briefs------

BINGO

for two years before winning last
. month, posted a 17-under·par 271
to beat Australia's Greg
Norman.

MIDDLEPORT
FIRE DEPT.
MONDAY NIGHTS 7 P.M.

TO PLACE AN AD CAll 992-21$6
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.
8 A.M. until
NOON. SATURDAY.
.
.. ,.. .ClOSED SUNDAY
.

..

y

POUCII:S

'
'
"AII5 outsKh: ,M ctgi, Galli' or Mtisun counulli\ 11~111 btr pr•
p~d
'
• R,~ clHVt' s 50 d!~cou~ tm ;utf p;~td tn attv.u,lcc
' f•t!tl ;nls
G•vl!aw•-w a11d Found Ads u~t~ ~5- wurd1 wtn br
run 3 d&lt;rts at no ch•ge
·
• Pncu ol ad lot all cap•talleuers '' duublu puce ut 11d ~~:u51
•7 ~nmt 1111~ typu (tnlv ultld
•Sclltilu~ 1S not respo11a1ble lor t:rrors aflt:r hr~t tiOIW !Check
for entHS l11sl dOl¥~ runs 111 papm) Call hcfure 2 00 P fll
day ahm pubhcahou to makt! currttclmn
·Ads that must ~u· pa.~ 111 advancu ar•1

Crow's Family ,Restaurant
POMEROY, OHIO .
fried ChldiH

·

C,trd of lh ;Mik s

H&lt;1ppy Ads

In ,Mc"'Ort ... ll

Y .w.d Saltri

OAV

·

FORE PUBL"ICAftON ·
1 00 l .M SATURDAY
2 00 P,M MQNO.lV
2 .00 PM TUESOAV
,
2 00 PM. WEDNESOAV \
2 ·00 PM. THURSDA'I' '
2 'JO PM . FRIOAV

Public Notice

• The Area's Number. 1 Marketplace
.
.

RATES

•

16
16

· Monthly

.

.20
.30
.42
:60
.06/ dov

$6.00
$9.00

$13.00
$1 .30 / dav '

lor e.:h dav as Mp.,1te ads.·

3

Annouc~~tm•h

31
35

C/n.•si/i••d /lfl~l'.'
followitt~
G•ll•• Counl¥

11•l••plww•

r.rva Codv 114
~46

GallipOliS .

!&amp;7 Ch•M11
388 Vinton

24&amp; AN Gttnde
256 GuYin Diu
6;3
3 9

l'lll 'f'r.

ArMMaDisl.
w•nut

••-rdtimw·-• ... ..

Mlt•gs Countv
Ar.. Code 614

992

t l11•

Muun Co , WV

AruCude 304

Muldleport
Pom"o'

985 Ch•eer'
143 Portl.,.d
241 Le~an Fills
949 Raan•
742 A:utiWNI
667 Coolvtlle

14

8us1n•s frauHn!t

713

M••on

882 New H1ven
895 letart
937 8uftlllo

48

Equtptnen1

for leMt

15 s,hools. lilstruchun

55 -Bu;ld.ng S1,1pph•
Pwh to, S1l11
Mus.ical lnwumltf'lt'
f'uuta &amp; V11gt1t1bl os
for S•l• or Trarlt!

21 Busmt.a Op,ortututy
2 2 Money to Loan
Ptof•IIOnal "SI!f\IIC~

•

c-"

..d... ......

c.t;l:;,

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

*

.......

...... - """'

...... ., ............... ... IAUIIDADC

.....,....

of

....... • ••

, lituotad In tho VH!ige of
IU ~ on .....
· I'D-.r, County of Metgo lilloii.t . .. of 4 .... M e
Mid · - o f Ohio. ond rnorw
•
fully lioundld and • - • • d
not .. n••,. 4.0 mila
~fat-:
Noh ~ dolllir of traluo·

Hon111 linpfu'IUuJent t;

=~ ~~~~~~~j~:

."-

·. 56
57
58
59

HII.MIU

84 F.lectucal &amp; Atth'ilutMhcm
8!t Gunttral Hilul!ng
86 Mobile Hum"' A11pilu
87 Upholatury_.

.,
.,

BISSELL-'
BUILDERS

CUSTOM IUIT
HOMES &amp; GAIAGEI
"At ._.... 11 PriCes"
.... 94!·2101
or Its. 949·2160
Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CALLS

SHRUI&amp;TIEE

TIIM 9IICf
REMOVAL
•uGHT HAULING

•ftR~OD

81

lACK
992-2269
1-12·10

. 4-16-11-lftl

DIN'S
'II&amp;NSMISSION
aRid liTO IIP_.I
Bpectallllnt In
. Automatic
TrM&gt;Imltalolll, lrtltos.
Tunaup, 011 Cilento.
Clutch Rapelr.
FIIEE EITIMATII
IYHral!llplrlonce .

......

992-5517

FUJII

a~Helmet·
Gutter

' lash•luldilll

EYRY , ' "
SAl. NIGHT . ~
·6:30 ....
F•ttry CW. .
.
12Go• ...... 0111,
Strklty Eaferclll ' • 1
L.------~~2~ .
'

GUARANTEED!
FREE ESTIMATES
ill

.
WPENTE1t SDVICE ,.
YOUNG'S

CAIN'S

1

Of Mt••l•~ort

-RoomA-..a

-Gutter Work
-Eilctrlcol • l'tumbing
-Cone,... Work
-Roofing •
- t n t - • Eaterlor
Polntfnt
lfiiEE ESTIMATI!I)

UPHOLSTERY

Hand Tufting
Cuttom Orepee
II Yean Experleoce

Office •14-992·21"
Henta 614-992·5·92
s.ta~~~~l

eomc
HOUIEioLOTS•FAJIMI

614·"1·2Jtl
IU llertiJ S... •

. •COMMI!IICIAL

WE NEED USTINGS!

Pr.·laFI•tt• ·

IANIIS
CONSTIUcnGN
992-5009

•RemodeNng and ·
Home Repelre
•Roofing
•Siding
•Peln1ing

·NO JOB TOO SMALL
FlEE ESTIMATES

c~...,attAJ-·--

•VInyl Siding

•Replacement
Wlndowl

•Roofing
olnaulatlon

.JAIIIS mill

"2·2772 741-USI
8311 lryM P!He
Middleport, Ohio

......

BISSEll .
·SIDING CO~

SW.WI

tO 'DAYWAliRIIm'
WAIHli$-SIOO op
Dl'f£1$-$69 up
FEFIIG!EAIOIS-SIOO ,j
IIAIIGIS-1111-Eltc.- $125
FtEIZUI-$125 ~P
IIICIO OVEIS-$7t IP

Riji.-rtll~l

MOIIIS EQUIPMENT
742-2455

.........

lutlttntl.

•

Oil'S, AllftiANCI
SERYKE
992-SUS er tiS-Is.J
Acr• · - , ... Offlas

ti·II·IO·tfft

,~......-:-----1..

IISSEU &amp; lUilE '

MICIOWIVE
OYIN IEPIII

..........
•o-••

CONSTIUcnON

All lUllS
lik11 It l11 Or Wit'
Pldc Up.
llfi'S APPUANCE

SDYICI

....,

ec:••, ••••
...... nl...
st.,. &amp; c 1 ,.,.

.

frH llfiMWift

"2-SJIS er 9.15·3561

915-4473
"7·6179

Acre.
- , ,_.,
... Offt.e
2111.·s....

......

xbiCE AND IIPAII
ON IITOI YUCTOIS
H. Otlter ...... I I
Oeclt Ovt Ow ....
Prtns aa "New" ieter
, ...........l....at
""' .. St.dd

MOIIIS

••f- !etlnt_..

PH. 949·2101
or Its. 9~9-2160

We Do lV loik

.., ...41 .,.

11/14/tfol

.VINYL H)INQ
•ALUMINUM IIDINO
•BLOWN IN.
INIULATION

-

CCHISTIUcnON

110.

J&amp;L
lffSIUnON

USED APPUANCIS

YARDMAN &amp;
ECHO DEALER
•Any length
cheina and ecce•·
aorlea
•Kero11ne S10v11
Wlcka

,,

Y. C. YOIIG II . "
Ht-·215 . ,
,_,.,, Oltle . ;
, 11.11,..

11-l ..l.f.&amp;

OOUilE SHOOTIIG
•Certified ... ., ....

ItO SUNOAY

RACINE . .:'
'FilE DE".

'~~Tuiiiu: wRc ~ n

We Do What Wo S ..y

co-dll
REWIRING AND

....

GUNS~OOl ~:

992-5009

12·19-'10-1

We S.y WhM We Do.

COMPLETE
ELECOICAL SEIVKE
. . .ntial and

12·1 ·'10-

Ba'nks
Construction

NEVER ClEAfii YOUI
GUTTEIS AGAIN

USED IAJLioAD TlfS

w

Till,..,.
"
........
... """"""'ililld

81

Services
Business
...... .,.....~ -v-.~on, ~'1·--------~----..-r--~~--~-------r-----------------,----------------~r----------------;

'""'"Dv.

.. _
331124.
12.11. 22. 71. . . llh . , il ,.......,,
Meitll CDiiiiiY. Ohio, and te 1110............., ~ewy.
fix tile ..... of llold lnlatu,in_.,_......
"'Y·
to _.IRiallu:c.fllr . . ...._
I a - ...
Cllficllly ~.. Jhd .. .... tit of .......... Leaolhr . .

Ser~1ces

62 - Sporting Gooch
53 Anttquea
54 Mtsc . Mer chandts ll"

J Nile Notice

-·-bi•

·-

•or Runt

Houwhold Goo~s

51

.. ljhfiiliitiiJ
23

73 Vo.n • &amp; • WO 's
714 Mut01c~clllli
75 luats &amp; Moton tur Sal u
76 Auto P•ts• AtCUS1Klfii.S
17 Auto Repan
78 Clllntptng Equtpment
79 Cil. n•~Ktn &amp; Molut Huuu~

Merchandtse

,, A.tio, TV &amp; CB Fllepom
t 1 Mlu;:ell~nwut
· 18 . Wamttd To Oo

675 Pi Pt~...nl
leon ~
~·~ AppltrGtove
518

71 - Auto• lo• Salu
Truclls fnr Silhl

72

Furntshed Rooms

49

Suod lo F~ttilllle'

l r .msporl;ltun

46 Spac u tor Renl
47 Wtnhtd to ~801

1 1. tielo Wantud
12 Situatton Wanted
lt'IIUiiiiAICI

65

Mobile Hom.s htr R t:nl

45

1J

1

43 F"""· tor Rtrm
44 Apartment tor Aunt

vl l.~ j

51''

63 ltvttltoc k
·
64 Hay ·&amp; Gram

Hou~s fOf Rent

4t

Ellq,luy t,t:tll

61 · Ftum Eqtllpmunl

62 Wo.r.11e'd lp 8tiV

ltJh • A~~:retgtt
Real fstan Wantud ·

36

w... ttllltoBu,

.,

on

-n

HonH.'S tor Sale
Mobtle Honu11 tor So1lu
fa'rn1s tot Sille
.._
Bul•n•s Bt.r~d•nus

31
32
3J

42

'!':,:
......

''

Card of lh..,lls
In Memory

9

GROOM
ROOM

--= .

1
2

Far111 Supp11es
&amp; L1 vt~slock

Real Eslale

4 Givtaov•y
5 .Happy Ads
6 lost and found
1 'V•d S.&amp;elp.~td •n arh .. tc;el
8 Public S.t e • AttehOtl

Ra1ft are to' consecutNe run$. bro•enup dii'\'IWIII be chii'Q8111

,,

·-ton

Ann ou 11r.r.111?. nIs

Over 15 Words

Rate
S4 .00

Words
15
15
15

01ys
1
3
6
10

tlon, _ , amou- teforty
PARCEL NO, 11·WO
IN THE COURT OF
-fotoMCh-hundred
(HIGHWAY!
COMMON PLEAI OF
. MEIGf'COUNTY. OHIO . '.A'tN';!l/i.J~~[!ND
·~
d.-re
.;lome!d 1. Hu,..
The polla for oald Eltctlon
SIMPLE, EXCLUDING
· Olr..:tor of Tronoportatlcln
will be open ot 1:30 o'clock
LIMITATION OF ACCESS,
,State of Ohio
THE
•· rn. 1nd rern11ln open until
IN THE FOLLOWING
PLAINTIFF
7:30 o'clock. p.m. or Hid
DESCIIIIEO
PIIOfiEIITY.
V&amp;.
. day.
INCLUDING THE
'Unknown Helrt, DIVI-o.
Bv order of tho
STRUCTURE
ntEREON.
·
ofxliCutoro, Admfnlotrotor1,
loard
of Ellctlqns of
Iaing lila norih half of Lot
:Or Aoalgno of tht Eo- of
·
Melgo County, Ohio
17
ond
till
whole
of
Lot
18
Mollll WIIIIII!IO, Oocee-.
Enlyn Clork. Choirmon
Con. .tt Grooming
at el.
oltullted on till .... of
J - M.• ,rymyor, OiriiCtor
tierra
Run.
and
U.
I.
HorDEFENDANTS
i
Alllrton'a Addition to ,.....,.,; O.lld: Oea. I, 1IIKI
c- No. 10-CV-2111
Ohio, lha oool • " w- ml- . (117.14. 21. 28. 4tc
AFFIDAVI"J'
EMILEE MERINAR
State of Ohio,
...,.11 - - ..........
Owntr &amp; Operator
;county of Melgt
with
to nlinl lht
PubliC Notice
, RICHAII 0 A. SZILAGYI;
614-992-6820
-~~~~­
'1111"1 flrot duly IWOm, de· ond rlgh1o o f - olone any
NOTICE
OF
ELECTION
po•s ond AYI !hot he II I m-ol Ohio
"-'tfno On To• levy In ea...,
duly oppolnted, quolltle&lt;l -..ofore ·r w - to I.
of lhl Ten MHI Umltotlon
ond octillg ANiotont Altar· WvtHo l'omaroy.
Noticelo hlrolly gl.,.. thot
Owlllt'O retain tiiht• of ill·
ney Glneral of tho &amp;tote of
In
jlurouOflceofl lleoolutlon
••••nd
.
.
-toMdfrom
iOhio: !hot tha Plolntlff. Ber·
of tile Board of !ducetlon of
3 Announcements
nord I. Hu ..... Director of any Nlidu .. iNa~
OwnM cttlrn tall by ill· tile County of Molgo, Ohio,
TronljiCirtotio!n. Stat• of
PMII!d
lhl 14th doy of
'bhio, Hek1 liy hlo Petition.
otrurlllltt
·...
· · 131,
In v.
231.·ot-P
of .............. 1'110. -·will
to •ppaopriate the property luml
doocrilild lheroln ond 10 fix tht Diad 1 1 - t of M.... 11a - l t t l d t o o - of lhe
-plf of oalcloulidlvlolon It
County, Ohio.
't he volue "'"'"'' that It • ·
Sold peroone noted ,,... olpoolol Ellctlontothehold
"""' that the Unknown tlloll furthot- ...-that 1n lhl
DIIVO liAIIIIItG
of Molgo.
Hoi,.,
IIISTIIJCTOR NEEDED.
Admlnilli-,., or Alllgno unllu tilly, or lholr- Ohio, .. the ...... r ....... "'
votint thertiln, on tlse· lth
I'£RIIAIIOO PAIT·TIIt
of: Mollll Wllllomo ond ney, fila on A n - NO LA- day
of Feliruory, 1111. die
IDEAL FOR RETIREES MD
Mulo Adell lloyoter ond Ad· TEII THAN 21 DA'I'I tsltor
llACHERS. IIU TRAIN.
oil Royotor. cllc•Oid. art lho aomp-n of 1111 a.. queotlon of tavylng • tex, In
"' Publlclltlon. they wll u - • of the ton .mHIIImlta·
MUST
IE REliABlE. HAVE
neceiAIY """'" tolhle pro· vice
.-lng ond II further .... bl dllmoct 10 heW wal.,.d tlon. for the -tit of Molao
GOOD 011¥1111 RECOIID
County,
for
the
puipOIO
of
puro thot their ,.,.... •nd lholrrltlhlto•-·•""th•
MD VALID ORMrs
Placet of ,..ldenct .,. un· Potltlon wlllil ...on oo ~ main-e• IHid operetlon
UCEIISE.
SUIMR HSUIE
of
Co-n
School
ond
1M
kno- to Plolntlfl .1nd """' ond julitlmont wll
TO:
SGUnl Cfii!W.
NndoNd .....,nllftllly; Clvl Mill• lilduatriH -rkohop
nol wfth.
clll~
for jilrOOftl with llllllloi re·
OHIO, 310 s-.t.St,
gence be oece,.lnect: •nd II ule 1 2fAII11.
and
davllo-n·
tardotion
BERNARD
I.
HURIT,
Gill II . 4!1631.
lhet It I• nooltM'V lhwefore
ciiMbiiMile.
to give notlco of till flll"' of Dl1'811tor of T,.n~n tellold
IU being on oddl·
fh• Pflllion heroin br Publl· (117. 14. 21. 21;
t1ono1
tea
of 1.1 mlllo ot a
(214,11,1tc
utlon, In aecordance wMh
.... not - - n t l 1 .I mHII
hctlon 2703·14: 113.07: 111·1120
for •Gh dallor of voluo·
2703.24: and Clvl Rull
tton. which omounto to 111·.
PUbliC Notice
4.4(AI. llw- Cadi.
PubliC
Notice
teen
cents
for
Nch
one
And further offlont eolth
hundrwd clolloll ofvaluetlon,
not.
FIN 'Equlp-t F - ~
Rlchlrd A. lzlagyl.
PUIUC NOTICI! .
fon:=J~;· ..Id EIIICtion r.om UI.OII to U7.000,
.Aoliotlnt -Attomoy G-ol
On JonuOtV 11, 1H1 ot will lie open II 1:30 o'cl9c:k
Wow.._... fund~ Swom ta befo,. me ancf
10:00 A.M., . . H - No- •· 111• ond remain untM
from .177,110 to .111,000.
..liiicrllild In my prltlf!CI tlollll ................ ONo
fund lhla 13th uy of Dlcemlilr. wHt -tor eo11 M IPIIIIIII 7 :30 o'clock p.m. of oold
.1141.711. •110,000.
1990.
. •
auotlen, on their IINIIIIIIt, Mv ·
By o.;.. 1111
lwl"""int ....... fund Amy II . Goldotoln, E1q. tllefol=.
r.om
UUIO to •11.2".
Board
of
Ellctiona
of
j&gt;jotary Public, Stole of Ohio 1112 GMC /UP
Meigo County, Ohio
C.met8"*
Fund - from
LEGAL NOTICE
,
Evelyn Clork, Cholrm1n
TNak llrliil ·
127.200 to I:SII.OOO.
I FOR I'!UBLICATION
111GTBI14A7C2101147
Jano M. Frymyor, Director ·
Mini Golf fund .- 'From
Unkno- Holro, 00¥1-o.
Tlse tormo of tho loiN lo Dotod: Dec. I. 1110
110,100 to 112.000.
Elecutar1, · AdmlnlotraiOrs.
A,. Council Fund -from
Homo National lank f1l7.14. 21.2l,&lt;&amp;lc
or AMIIno of the Eot- ol
nooo
10 14000,
Mollie WIHIMca. Dta1aud. .............. rftllit to blclot l ---~~~~-I!C. II. That dilo ordt·
lnd Unk..,_ Holrt, Oev· tlle All.
Public Notice
ne- II llaroliy .......... to
iNes. E - n . Admlnl• (11 11, 14,111, 310
be on emo,... .. y In order
,.,..,..., Aalanl of till II·
!hot the vllllee may poy the
OflOINANCE
tate of.Moata Acllll lloy-.
NO. 1217·10
ooot of varlou•-"'"1 ••·
PubliC Notice
DoceeiOCI, ond Unknown
.,.._ and oorvlc• for tile
Aft OtA*IOI To ....,....
Helro. Owl-. ExecutCin,
•
.,
...
rtotton
In
Vortovo
-lndlr "' , 110.
NOTICE OF I!LICTION '
Admlnl-re, or AAigno
· IEC. Ill. Tllla Or.nance
On
T
..
t.awy
In
E
1110by till olioll ..... ..,_ ""' ... In
of tho &amp;tete of Adoll lloy•
II '"""',..
II ordalnod
of tile TM Mill U111 . .1....
... 0.0....... wllltekl Counol! el'
'VIIIall of ,.,.. from ""' """ Deli.
10, 1110.
tiel - tillthey
hl¥lofT,... lnpunu-otalllnl n.r, MIUIJU'!._"!.followHO aA:
.luldioy
OlrKto•
IIC. I. •,... 1
ppro· ....... till 10th day of
of till ..... of ...........
oport-n of tho State of
.......,., Mlnon•aad In the DecemtMr.tt!IO(lhio, who hoo lnotltutld 1 lha '"""""' Loa! ..,._1 feltewlllfl !undo:
ATT!IT:
Ohio,
p.ocOidlntl In the Common Dlotriot. llaolna,
Jon P. luolt, cr.rlt
""oaad
on
lha
1
llh
day
of
Pllu COIWt of
Moltll
100 ...... 100.
Dewey M. Horton;
Nowam•. 1110, "-• wit ....
.c..Unty, oloto. to epproprl- llaouMIIIted
,.,.._.., of Cou. . . . . . . . . . . l'und~
. . . . . . . ,. .
... .utn prapa IW . . .....,.._,...., t•l I M toao~~11DI.t'IOIDI1 . .000. JAN. 14.1111
ocrfbld harufUI for ....,..
1!"8'1 purpo- ,......, lhe • l!lt&amp;'llltuatlli• .-wl------------+--~-------::--"'1
/naktnt, oonotiuctlon or lm· "' tile IGutltaflt ' .......
Ia"""' Dlalrltit el ......
,.,_tof:
Coullly. Ohio. . . . ......

o...-.............

.

.

Classifie

PubUc Notice

SURGEON GENERArs WARNING: Smoking
Causes Lung Cancer .. Heart Disease.
Emphysema, And May Complicate Pregnancy.

BULLETIN BOARD

••

·Sa-turday-Chicken &amp; Noodles
Turkey. &amp; Dressing

PH. 992·5432

E8gtes

Stellhanie
led Meigs with
eight points each, Bobbie Butcher
lddcd six, Billie Butcher five, Am·
bet Blackwell four and Erica

Nelaon, Redovian and · Robie, Melissa ' Oifford, Kim
Schultz added four each, Congo Haggy, Emily Johnson and Melissa
duee and Radford two.
Vance scored two poiniS each ..
ln the win over Wellston, Meigs
In the win over Gallipolis, Meigs
jwnped out to a 18-2lead.at the end jwnped out to a 23-13 baltime lead
poillla,

Hudson and Whobrey with six
points·eacl) and Peiersolfl with two
points.
Meigs placed lhree players· in
double figures' in picking up a 52·
34 win over Wellsloo. llucjson led
the way willll4, Wagner and 1111dech
Stanley 12 -"· Other ~
scoren were ADder'son With e1ght
and Grimln, Doyglas and Peterson
with two each.
' Ande111011 led the III8I1IUders in
the win over Southern with 22
points as the marauders posted a
62-40 win at Racine. Eric Wagner
added 16 point!, 'Stanley and Peterson added six each, Grimm fOiir,
Hudson three Cremeans and
Douglas two ~h and Whooo,y

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fljm lind TV eele1Ji1tli!J. The

u.a.

· Tues~cly-(Varies from Week to' Week)

.• .

and held olf
All&amp;d comeblk:k
to
39-"35 win.
Bobbie Butcher led the way with
14 poi.niS, Amber BalclcweU lidded
eight. Eriea Robie seven, Vanessa
Compston six, and Billie Butcher
and Melissa Oift'ad two eiiCh.
Blackbum led Gallipolis with 16

of the first
and rolled to a
41·11 win over the Rockets.
Venessa
Compston
and

and Grueser led
Soulhem wilh 11 -.:It, W"dl.iams
added eight, Sabin four, Northup
tme, Rieber two IIIII MeKel...,

-IJ''"." 0.ulv T".~'''ml. wo~ctunn •o~r
1 .000 hotn~

sl,ll!dal GIGliA.__ Humaa-

C
'Q. ......

Soup oh.. D•y - P.a Soup

The Oily Sa 11iltl Plga 7

The Meigs Mnuder fre8hamD
basketball ....
liP three
Alexander,
Wellston and
•
The Mara1pn pollfd a ~33
win over Alo:cancler behiDcJ Brad
Andel'SQII and Eric Wqner .who
scored 11 poiniS eacb. Other
scorers for Meigs ' wae Sranley,

•

,

14, 1991

·Meigs freshme1;1 ·record three · eourt victories
one.
a Jlt.
quarter
plcketl
Clelillld
luempt 1J01! a
more wins rec;:r:
Davis

just to eject something like this.
On the other band, It's describing
something In a way to make It realistic that 's not precl~ iaDY·
more. In our direction It looks to
be this way."

-FROM CROW'S
Monday-Chicken &amp; Noodle~ .·

JMU~Cy

, ."A cloiiO~IhtKI ;utvtHII Sttntt.~ll pl" c -.~1 111 lhi!Oatlv Stmt~tut4 It!-"
t:!,'PI
clitUtllt.'d th'iplil'f . Buttnms Cmd .ttut lt.~loi not tent
w•ll ;,ll. u ••ppcar 111 thu Pt Plcit5an1 f\t!"t&amp;lcr ,;md thu Gi.llh

Maueea O'Bara. Robert .'
Waper played holt to latl'llduCe
ltliNn Award·waaJM'n to lAO
..... former cll8li1aaJI ol Colqrtlbla PICture..
IFIBS'l'UDY CBMps INTO .
TREE- ON A SJ.ED: First lady
!lN'bu-a llulll was only doing·
what any able·lxidled, 65-year·
oili grandmother might ~ ex·
pected to do In . the snow · sledding with her pandchlklren.
aUt then her sled crashed Into a ·
lrt!e and Mrs. Bush was ott to the
htlpltal •what Dr....wreaoe
14Ur, the White House pbysl·
cttn. delctlbed as some minor
lacerations~d bruises. At the ·
hOspital, It aa discovered that
$alsoha crackedflbula·lnher
left leg. It wasn't serious enouah
to putln a cast, butshewiU IM!on ·
crutches tor a while. She won't be
ready to go sledding again lor at
least five weeks. The president
and Mrs. Bush were playing with
several ot thelr·grandchlldren al
Camp David · about 10 a.m.
Sunday after atllendlng church ·
services when the accident · oc·
cqrred. Mrs. Bush was al~ on ·
the sled when she hit the tree,
White House spokesman loba
~rrick said.
... MORE BUSH FAMU.Y
NEWS: The first couple's son,
Georce W. ·J1u8b and his twin
daughters, Joined boosters of his
Tbas Rangers In a human chain
to; show support for a new facility
for the Amerlcari League baseball team In Arlington, Texas.
BUsh Is managing general
partner of the Rangers. Arllngtoo Mayor Richard Greeae told
a"ut 1,000 boosters of the
1M-supported complex their •
"jreat . human chiln" symbol·
~ the city's commitment .t o ·
protect a cherished asset.
"We're going to all join banda to
tell the world that we mean to
keep the Ra111ers playing baseball In Arlington.~· Greene said.
'file city wants.• half-cent .._tn .
tax to help finance a $165 million
1tadtuni complex. The rally was
tile llralnchlld ofBrld.IIICkner, a
._,_,-old Arllngton faa who
n'till J'lllldents to form the
._.s the stadium to
complex.
;b'UI VISrr&amp; SOlJTJI
4
•
Secretary of.
. . 'Q Jllnman Servli:es
. . . . . t • • visit to South
ADI 11,
black leader
Md
wall slain U.S.. .
c.iiviJ rflldl UIJwllt Muda
C....ICIJI. ''I ....-ve tl)at_...

true for observers moving along·
side the jet.
" It's not entirely smoke and
mirrors," Remillard said .
' 'There has to be tremendous,
lncrejllble amounts or energy

Mew.cia,.,

IQUIPMENT.
742-2455
SWhll ............
.

.12-24·

1110.
tl . '

Staekll

..MOilLE HOME F.. NACES • HtAT PUMPS
All FUiitAcE PAm
IINNm'S IIOIIU
HEAtiNG &amp; COOUNG
l.eciltW ......... Willi ... tH lt. 141
(6141
... 1--o171·1"'

.

.

IJ

.'
,I

.!

�.-

• I -

'
"

Page_ 8- The Daily Sentinel
Announcements

31 Homes tor sile

LAFF· A·DAY

3 Announcement•
ADOPTIOH

~:'7. ";':.*'...::;"':

=

a ..........,_m ... ~ ... -

:¥6.""

Giveaway

111-. lomlly room, fl.......,o.
- - Aoolly, S04-112.Z401
-~

.

Froo """"'""'. .......-- . 1144414227.-

...a oil
_ _.., 1 yoor

In - r y. ....

·---

oki. IM-:117-4201.

6

Lost &amp; Found

LOST: A chocolllo
Lob.
I!Mrlo-. Dutcll Rldae oroo;
Athono
Coun!Y. llocf&lt; ·
REWARD. Coli'- 114-112:11124.

Autos fOr

•

Sale

I

12110,1~

IJeJI'RlDA

DUS ~Klfl~H ·

•

MON.. JAN, 11 .

I .,

.....
:rmo.Q
51:
.An....
. .

I:OG(J)e ~ ~· •

mMe bllaW tow•~::;::'11fta
livor, ~1- . . . ..
llo[

/

'

=· -

l I~ 1 i II

Oe
.

1

Clllllelln~Q
a--2-1
Contut .

TRUE! TRUE! I{E551ROO!
FALS.E! TRVE ~ FALSE!
TRUE! 'f'ESSIROO!!

Thlni atrMi_ III:UI'I p ut,

,.dopoolt
Olllo.
2 -ond
·" ' "....,......,
' - ...
304.UZ-2111.

...

o N8C 'IIIII••• ....,.

1li Allllllll IIIII Co nr I a

1...

I lt!.t,C.:I=r:•Q

Q

W LETTERS

•
.

1:11 ~ Alwlr Glllllth

1:aae._o.:ko....., of
~

!ll..:=:-Q.

.

W.nted TD AMI, wtth ol)i:lot:t tO
buJ, In _,ntry, Coil oftor
-... eu ttl 1111.

Rentals
Furnished
Rooma ·

~~~~~- 114--:111-4720, .,.......

2 Mdroom home In NW H1vei'1,

- · H o - I Plno. .__

54 MIIC81181180UI

R-l&lt;&gt;rront·-or .....h.

wv. SIM-7'7UI81.

Stortlng ot t120Jmo. lllllll Holol.
114 4 ......

Employment Serv1ces

wllh -""'~~·
AleoiNII«-.AI-po.

Sleopl. . -

oa.

Coli

2:00 p.m. 304·77:t-

1181.......

wv.

.

MerchllndiM

=.... .....
•

-Ston.

.,

vestoch

\ t

dryer . . . .

Of'l

dlyor .,,., - -

81 Farm Equipment

rodlo_oncl _ _

.,

~

~

lnb·--.--.~t~~oWa.

111111111' ,_.._ .... '!...1!'!11
- Ill' lAw H!a 11,110; 1ou ...
Dull A1n r,· 14.sf0; • IIF

- . - ol , _.... .....
c .................

1M P10
111aww.111m

LAYAWAy, BOUGHT'

Will

4....
11471-=. . . .
-

I;IOUiehold
Good•

...•

ploiiiiL

Rl.7-.·-·-·
Mon.-.

I o.m. to I p.m.

114-

llpolo,OH
- . 127 Srd. -

-

.

unkdlr..

..,..._ T.Y. ooto. ODin

APPLIANCES

PICICENS FURNITURE
NowiUaod

Houllhold . . .hi... ~ til 1111.
Jorrlcho lid. Pt. - . . . . WY,

ooll304--111---.

· . AENT20WN

~~·MOVIE;
'Whir
aIIIII of Jenny' AIC

..... -=

Coll-:la.

ouMo pluo - - I boo
opringo. $3711. Col 114 441 221:Z.

II~

~~

=· .

Motlllllr !'!111M MoM 12:001 •
~Ala 'ian fsplrleiiGI Q
Ill
......
Eldln'a artlltlowpllr
talent
It

~-~••a=

Stereo. C

K - - I Dryer, tzDO.
:r:~·.::..~ Choir,

•

__ ...,

od,

. .eiiWJ

111 .........001

-

I'll

diiCDvlt'lcl .,..,. • gllllry
lhOwl hit WOlle. Sttreo. Q

'::l:=.t

114-441-3181
bundle. ........ 7:• l.nt. •
ond Chelr, SUI por ...._ 1:10 p.m, Ohlio 1'1111 Co..
I .-.~oe Waaidpa•, tM.Ot p1r PJ
_,,ON&amp; IMII2 ltl1.
...
,
...
, .4Cbr11a, . . llonrol 64'
Boddl.ng
ond
Chill
ol
Dra.ro
1..81\oplcl · - - ·

-1 . . . . .
Inc-

21

KELLER'S CUSTOM BENDING
We Hawe (hanged Our l.amtion Te
Jl/t Milts East on lt. 241 threup

•

Bu•tneu

INOTICE!
OliO VALLEY PUBUSHMI CO.
II
i.IWnda thlll ~do bueh
~
ond

,.., k-,

NOTIO_.......,=ntho

SPECIALIZING IN ....
•Cuatom Bent Exheult s.,.tema
•Complete Une ol Exhauat Suppllea

-IIIIIHJ!MI-

...._
14.44 por .....

AICIInerlllll ......... - o
4 CIIOiro, P.IO per...._ 4
- · , , . . llod, 112.20 per
..... 4 . Clloot of
Drlllworo, suo
Rt. 141,
4 Mil• 011 Rt. 7 In Cot \leo .. y.

per-·

1 BR, l30011no.i 2 IR, 1400imo.;

2 • bot~7!1.It ,._
All
UIIIHIIe
In at d1 d.
qulrod. Cell ~Atoyott• II 114-

tlwu lel!lf'lo7,
................ ; _ , , 12 -

HOURS:

446-7731or 441-tUa

~

lp.lll.

Come aad See Ua Fer A Free lnapeetlon
-and Eettmate ·

Sl WHI Apt.

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

:MI-t24t

Zllr, 1 both, prime

en
elm rd
IIDNII'
a•

_ . , .....

111 UIIMI.

I

oftw

4:GO

Pll

tnter,
Atlllno,

·

r-,

A,:::t

-Wi=.

elter IMming her deciiMtl

__
-.
2111-

. Building
Supplll•

..

-

I .DON'T. KNOW· WHEN

=·~---- tt.OO ......

I EVER BEEN 50

ALL·FI-6D CLUMSY

WITH MY
I~ONIN' !!

. ,• • 1111111111 ..... of ..,.
111141 ltl7.

Trek: Till

·.FIRST
' I BURNT
_N'/ •
FINtiER

82

· Plumbing &amp;

114 441 ,...

ASTRO-GRAPH

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

·~

...

iAIIII;:!kjdo;;,jjj
....
;j"~.;:-~;;;;IM;;;••~olol;

lloot-.--.

.........---~
u I d 111111' L . . . . . . ..,, .
~·,
u o.,erei Haulng • '·'•
I

....,........ 10-101 ........ _
Sllletlw . . . . 2

lllll_llorwloe.,., ....

. . . , Will. lna•III~.OOO or
~ . . ~~••. 01• •

lOAD IWIY 12 HOUIIJ

t

BERNICE
BEbE QSOL

•

Refrigeration

oilo-.-.-................
....................
..,...,..._

.

PAW'S
BDTTDNII

••

1PF IUICU\
IILIIJ:all~

OCMIANIIENT HOIIEI from t1
CU -"~· Dlllllquonr tu
lfti*IJ- .~­

4112-_...,.. .....Eat.

-

(1) IIDWI7-

"' ,....

_...

In

_;,."!~

..... ~ l '"'~"
r':l
......d ...

·I·

Tu~~
.000 • ' all\:,,:~.
I
Will, Ito. Cd! ~

QH.

Pl.

0

"Sf

.11ft. 11,

-1

You will nolbe clepdve(t olsubltanll•l

opportunltlllln the ~ llhMd, lnelucf..

lilg -whiCh COUld be lOng - ·- Ae-llrlcl ,our rllk·llklllll to sure th4nQI. .
CA.''IIICORII (Dec. :a-.1111. 11) A jOint
Yenture requl,. utute hondllng tOday
10 , ... ....., arid ot the ..~ dq~· ·
1111 on you (u • .....,n Olsomethlnll you
permntect your
to menlllll·
_c.,._n, '""' ,oul'llll 10 1 birthday
Olft. Send lor your AJ!I'O-Graph prectle·
llonl lor lhl ye..- lheed by ll)llllng

-"ttrP111

" You muat be the winner." .
I

.SJ .25to·Astro--Graph, c/o' this newepaper, P.O. Box 81428, Clevelancl. OH
44101-3428. Be sur~ to stale your zoctl·

ac sign.

Ellctrtcal &amp;

CPAJENTED)

.

8pl1111e1Wotldttn Conflict
(1:00)
10:10 (!) 8adcllm 1'1411111.
Dlfrlnl 1M World Saddam
HUIMin'o roect to poWir Ia
end hltt rlvalt are
.. . prollle!l. (0:30)
iO:ID ~ MOVIE• Dual II Dleblo . · . ; (2:151
10:30. CIOIIIt and ClleM

tAU2
+QJ 10
SOUTH
tAJ
.
.AQta3
tKQ5

....

Vulnerable: East-West

•

Dealer: South

W..l

Eut

p. .
All pou

p. .

PaD
Opening lead: • K

and force out lbe ace of dlamondl In
plenty of time to slled a club Oli the
lut diamond In dummy.
.
.- Playln&amp; duplicate, declarer II UIIIUil·
ly ript ~ .r ilk lbe contract by cu,ln~
to dummy and lakin&amp; a heart
.
Tbat'a ~0-50, witll lbe ~ker tllat
sometimes e~~e~~ wben West llolda the
heart king, one defender holds five
clubs without an entry to casb a club
trjck later.

.
.
.

:

I

AQUARIUS (.1111. Ill Feb. 111 Take
nothing lor grantect II you have to nego-llate en lmport.nt maller.toctay. II yOil
· get car-. the ectge ' upon wllleh
yoo're depending COUld be whlllled
away.
.
PIICEI (F..,_ 20 Marchllll Thlnga wl~
not automellcally like care ot them·
.toctay, even In an arranoemonl
where you leal IJilU have ~tum . II
yoo take r.our IDol off the eccaleralor,
the endeavor could come to a stop.
AlliS (llerall 21•Aprll 111 Gutrd
~~Qj~lnot lncllnatlont lo overindulge In I,.
your
vot.amenla which could budget to ....., lodlly. Extraveg1n1
urgoo mus1 be kept -~ contrOl.
T~UIIU· (Apr!! Ill . ., 1111 You mlghl .
be temptect to flke gam-In order to·
echleve your Mtbllloua objectl- to-day. Don't lei your Impatience ~..
you to reuon uriwleely. ·
· ·
or'•l (.., 21""- 201 Retr'lln from
embellllhlng lho lnlormatlon you on lo othero toctey. Your crectlblllty
could IUII1Ir II your llat-1 C81tl be
biiCkecl up by lacto.,
CANCIII ~~- 21-.lu!J 21) 11'1 not a
good policy tiiday 10 count your chiCk·

21gn~ed

anew

3 Coffee's
attraction
4 Barrie's

boy
5 Mark ,
Twain's
coup
ifTIPFeS·
reallirsl
21 PIIICfllor ·
slonist
name
some
paintings
6 Take as
cooking
29Fixed
one's own 22 Walks
cliairs
7 Parking
proudly , 30San
place
23 Horizontal
A_
nlonio
8 Group of
bar
landmark
three
exercises 31 Places
, 9 Quite a
24 Royal
32 Bou· few
finery
quet
12 Calm ·
25 Dilly
36 Actress
16 Bridge
27 Some
Jill ian
.,-.,...,.;,....,....r....,..-,-,r-~

votes
33 Actress
Merkel
34 Like 11
cherub
35 Louisi11na
unlverslly
· 37London
gallery
38 Piaoo .

1/14

.O!Je lettet: stands for another. In thla sample A Is·Uled
for the three L's, -1 for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apoatrojlhes, the length end foftnaUon of the words are all
hints. Each dtly the'code letters are different.
.

i=
1NO&amp;•L:::

I!

CRYPTOQUOT£8

I*~

12:001

I

AIYDLBAAXR
. II LONGFELLOW

=--

(IIDir.•

•

.....;_....J

DAILY CRYPtOQUOI'ES _: He~'1 'low to wert It:

, ....rt':L

1..... - .......

•

tiller
41 Sand

- ~~

~.a;.:
'
I 2!'J:.:
•••••

.

c

~~ant

-HI!T'V::-2.
ana
·On=
8
laerwew and MIL tong

- belorelhojt've hatched. Try not to
bank too heavily on -nlrig _wllleh II
ftnanclel but not yet rMNstle.
11:30 (2). 0 TonlghiiMw
LEO (.lutr 22-AUI. 121 · An auoelete
wnol8awllethatyouC81tbemenlpulat·
eel through ttallery might lay It on rathor
.
thick 10ay 1n orc1er to Killen a Plllle·
ulet purJioM, Be on gultel.
V111G0 (Aiott,' 21-lepl. 211 UIUIIIy,
you're tho type or perton who can be
~lded upon "'*'you llllllca a comm-1. Howaver , you might pretend
tonavetlken care.ol-.e!hlng tor an·
11:JI~ a-.Q oilier tOday when, In actuellty. you
ha-·t.
,
UIRA (lept. 21-0at. 211 Thlngtlhould
Will
work out ralhor well tor you today In lit·
· IlL-!:;_~ h oa~11it1'
uatlona Where you rely iOIIIy upon your•
aell. The miglll not be true, !low·
,_, In mon.. where you .,.
del*- upon frMI!dl.
KCIIII'IO (Oat. II .... 221 Tilting
- . Pf1IIII8IUNIY tor _,InC! ,ou
Q
h - yet to ecoompllh eou1c1 blokftre
12:01~ ....... 1;11
•
on.you 11 lhta time. Don't 111 your ••· r tt-.30(J)e OLMINifiiiiWIII
pecl8llona put you In a lltuatlon that
DiNiiiLe. ._
might-_.,.,. ll?llllll.
~ IICMI: •
.., ..,
UCIITTANUI
111o.111 Under
(1 :001
.
. .
moat oondlllol•, you ap 1 111 r81her If.
~= Meallllw WIIIINI .
lect!wlr ...., hancllllg -.lcpnw~ta
11 111eJ ooaur. But, If you don't ~
IIJellrTallt .,_ --your .,....._, -=tt ltlfl ot the
12:11 ~ MOVI8: Hour ..... Gill
way today, you - 1 Ntcelhl _....

DOWN
1 "Entertainmenu·

39
40 Hourglass ·

Cl)Niwawalefa

ondHMIIna
-ondl'lilo
Wlp •• Olllo

. "'-1*117W211..., I p.m.

I BURNT

(I) ~ ~· Ill
oeoNewa
·

· THE HARDY OUTSIDE WOODBURNiNG
HEATER WITH I~SIDE THERMOSTAT

••

211 SOlicit

CNH lventne .._
0 7GO Clull 8DI clal. ·

11:00(2).

Heating
~ Plunlllli.

.....................
"'.

Next

a

AN' THEN

1rciiiS pur 1.. 11011

14! 446-6000

VICKERS WOOD HEATING

8Qer-aon
••

for.Sala

Real Estate

: CALL

· i 111
~~~!='d
ae 1'1111111 of ROell

lalhet hid en allalr. Stereo.

Sarvlc:n

I:;AWPOUS. OHIO 4UJI

!

Sclentitla end tanners WOIIc

O'Neil Rolli"~

SPRING VAUEr PROFESS/ONA.liiUilD/NG
1005 JACKSON PIKE • SUm lOJ

11"1&lt;,..----...,.,

a·

10:00 (I) IIUIGiuallon lp 1 air'

.

Proteulonal,

'SALES
'ON -SITE CUSTOM TRAINING

1:30 ill 0 • ~llgnlng Women
Anthony ltltl hiS meniiOOd
by ll8nt!!!lll up to • bully.
s~ereo.

n• '" •• au

-IIIVILLt'l

ll! ......, and ... lull Q
1:10 -~ FrOII..N lplalal Report

DCollgellllkellllll

-IIM4Nd7.

•ON -SITE SERVICE/ R EJ!AIIl.

·- ..

Ael&lt;: 'lOUR MOM. IF IT
HU~ MUCI-4 10 HA~
'rt:liJR E;.AAIS PIISRCED.

1(1

• Lenr King u..t

_ _ hoy ... _ . , , . .

J::.:' - , OH Col 114-58

23

-

..........
, ...,,_ .....
_...,.,...
r :;.=.-==::
55

.. '.

'CUSTOM PRCX;RAMMIN&lt;i

AND "ttlU WANT 10
STIR UPA L-ITTLE
E&gt;&lt;CIT&amp;MeNT. .•

Hay&amp;Graln

.

Mil.

R
•~an~~~ 'R"ut•ra. ~
-II •U..eudr'
pl'l!lllllllliiiW.hlr
..

I 11*4 ~

==:.:••groaery
.-.,

l.oltg 11111-

-

\

Hoy,
. . 10 round ....... .,, ••

E~'i.f::t
In... wine•,
~.::;....,.
.. c:r=,.

11W217.

PH. 614;915 ·3949 ....n Owl

I200.J!MI
1.....

IWIIIDM. , . , ............

U.ll

2 hdTDPlft fumllhed In New
HoVOft, WY. ....,rltv dopoolt
and ,...,..at requlNd. 3D4-

Tillie·-·

0 .....
•••
lhlllllow

_
....... ._
..
__ ............ ---;
--o
.
. . .......
...... u;oao...... - - ......

OrytrSt

eel

tho-... .

•Handle and Install Monroe Shocka

47269 St. II. 241

Apanment
fOr Rent

Opponunlty

,_...,h

(htstll', Oh.

44

11S.M por

ACROSS
1 Ensnare
5 Sailors
1 o·on this
spot
11 Worship~
13 Oodles
14 Criminal's
ruson
15 End-of last
11nnouncernenl
17 Actor. .
Beally
18 Young
actress
19 Writer
· Levin
20' Chum ·
21 ERA or ·
RBI
22 "Gellosll"
25 Fashlon .
26 Now's
counter·
. part
27 Pasture
sound
28 _Equip

Mille. Stereo. Q
.'Qn 8l8gl
.
9:00 (2) e 0 'o.lt ...IIOWI (PI
· t of ~· NIC Mo11CIIIr fillllll
at 1111 Movlle (2:00) Sttrao.

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by THOMAS JOSEPH

Mljor deltrop Owlny'a 1110111
chefllhecl po11111lon: en

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PhiiOIIOphy professor 1o graduating clus: "If you ~
greatnell, you shoUld first -.11 lor truth, then you Will

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FURNITURE

UNSCRAMBLE FORI
ANSWER

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40,000 IJ.....
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I..Oftlt&gt;lolw tho chuckle quoled

by filling In the mllli,. -d•
you dovelop from ltlp No. 3 below.

. Old·Une ruiJber bridge players had
wear two bala wileD they started
playing duplicate. AI rubber bridge
7:01 ~ lfiPPr lllya
it's ri&amp;flt to play carefully to make
your.
contract, and you bappily sacri·
7:30~
~JQ!!!IIPflll•nl.,¥!1 Q
fice
any
opportunity for overtricks to
"il"i ...................
parantee
lbe tricks you need. It's dlf,
onlghls-.Q
ferent at duplicate, wbere your score
~
Is comp~recl with that of many othen
ID !.~'• Companr
l,llaylna the aame contract. If they
D
llltllellllll
• Croll fill
.
score a trick m~re than you do, you
can gel a poor re111lt eveu thoup you
7:11 ~ Alwlr Grlflllll
bave llllde your contract. This prob1:00 (2). iiJ ,_,. Pllnce oi
lem
can live even experts beldacbes,
· 1111 Att Aunt Vlv YduniMrl
to INCh a lliiCk hlalory Cleat · as In lodey's deal.
West led the Spilde king against four
et flei.Air Academy~ Stereo.
hearts. AI tournament bridge, where
overtricks are Important, declarer
mlpt win tbe spade ace and go to
f..:!AIC Nne lplllll
tlumrlly
with the ace of clubs to take a
(!) Ca ere Megtc: IINIIIM o1
heart
f
' - . Wben the heart f ' '
woru, declarer takes 11 tricks, forcIng out the ace of diamonds and geeIIIICIJ
ling an eventual cluli discard on the
WOOd diiCO¥erl hell ol hll
long diamond. If the . beart fmmultKhe It milling. IRI
Slllreo. a
IOHI, lbe defenders will play another
. IDe MOYIE: Nlghllhlfl(lll
club and set tbe contract with a trick
12:001
In every suit.
Ill Munier, Bile Wrvll
AI rubber bridge, deClarer should
S'tereo. 1;1 ..
win with lbe 1p11de ace and immedi·
ately play ace ol bearts and a heart.
8 Pu~:eatkwa
Whatever happe01, declarer will be
and . . . . . . Q
able to draw lbe opponents' trumps
I:CIIIIIJ NIA 11111111181 ·
1:30 (J) a 0 Ito••- Blossom
.

45

O

ANDBOTH.' .

· 1'-==~

llaoon County, I&gt;W81--8105 ol·
lor 12:00.

41 Houses tor Rent

Te!lcher to p!lrenl: "I hllve a
hard lime gelling your
daughter to talk ir'l ciiiSs.'
Parent: "I don't suppose
~~e~~-~.~~1, you can sit her

ICIAM.&amp;m AJfiWIIS

of 111111111

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bodroom
homo, 1 toGallo
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priced
rauonoblo,
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OUpetoee

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jiroflii'lod. No - · 1210/1110.
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Zllr, llcJ'!I.Ie.!~ Bonk Poyolf,

'

The Daily 81 itltitl- Pagl 9

qu1Nd. 104 Ita 2111.

11117 t4•7D Cloyton Fonlloy,
IOidld with mroo; hill pump.
Con be loll on lol, .,.._.7!1-2425.

ted
or e«~ld be movocf.
...100. 11-WII-1037.

TAIUWI!M~

Ohio

Television
Viewing

WJW, sv ~lilt&gt; 1lf.

~lY ~TBM

•

..._.Mil aallli•ns · ,.

114 .... u:al.

totalllaetrlc, .....

cort teur&gt;.f rr!"'' ,...~l Aeaff $

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........

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Pomeloy-MidciiPOrt&lt;

BORN LOSER

· fOr Rlnt

11177 Dulul CrOwn Ropl troller,
~.tJ.!I9:. Cou - o n M p.m.

2111:-.
1d,
toe

Yard Sale

7

.

32 Mobile Homes
fOr Sale

Vort frlondly dag to o _ ,
-· I

·-

71

KIT 'N' CARLYLEe by Larry Wr!Pt

Mal·~·,..,.,., 14; 1991

-~...... , ..... 2 .....
,
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1 - ~ bolho,IOX40 - ·
piUo ~ trollo&lt; 1 - · - r
St Rt. Mt,'/00. 11+211- . _ _ In lllddloDOI'l a;• . Coii-7Jit ION.
ov.rtoou rw., vert nice, 3 In IIIHilp 11t, Ohio. N. 1"'Wd
bedroom holM, 2 Mthe, 2 car Ave. 1 ll1:i0Mu turuiiiiMd .,e,

cotlletanyttme tl4 Ill IM.

-

Apanment

44

5 , _ , . I both, lorgo ronl,
._.,. .... 114-2110.

hofM to • white u.-bof'n. b·
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4

Monday. Jamwy 14. 1991..;;

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

.

1·14

TPNUAB

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Yeet. . . .'e Clw14Miliott~ YOU CAN'T TURN

BACK THE CLOCK, BUT YOU CAN WIND. IT UP
. AGAIN. - BONNIE PRUDDEN
.I

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..

,.

• •

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PIPat~~:~g~&amp;a-1

'

o-The Deily Saltinel

MondaY, Jenur( 14. 1891

Pomaoy-Middlaport. Ohio

'

'

THIS
Middleport
i. 992-&amp;49J
.

outlasts

-

..•

Pick-3: 108
Pick-4: 9395 .

·· Purdue

WEEK'S
-· GAMES

786 N. 2114

Ohio Lottery

Indiana

Card8: A·H; 33-C;

Low tool~rht In mid tes.
Chuce of rain 80 perceal.
Wednesday, high In mid 1108.
Chance of rain near 100

10.0; 6-S
'.

•

SOUTHERN
.

BOYS

at

.

Jan. 11-Eutem, HoiH
Jan. 22-lawenswoocl, Away

GIRLS

'Vol.41 , No.1f!5
-Copyrighted 1991

Jan. 14----~Ho...
Jan.16-Nels.·York, Home
1 Jan. 17 -Eastern, Away

-··

MEIGS
BOYS
Jan. 15 lalpre, Home
Jan. 22-U.r, Away

GIRLS
Jan. 14-Soutllerft. Away
Jan. 17 .-.Minar, loma
I

\

EASTERN

1 Section. 10 Pogn 25 Canto
A Multimedia Inc. NewiPaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday. January 16, 1991

Middleport Councll.OKs:1991 appropriations
im-

,By CaARLENE HOEF.UCH

$112.500 Ccx- the levy
provements, $88,()()() · in ISsue 2
Funds totaling $1,885,960 were monies for repair of Pearl Street,
appropriated fQI\ ylllage operations $42,000 revolving loan fund
in 1991 at Monday niaht's meeting (money from the Ohio Department
of Middleport Village Council.
of Devtlopment) the lire truck
. It was rePMed that estimated • notes 'of $135,000 and the public
receipts for 1991 IOial $1,939,537 transportation funds of 540,000.
which includes estimated fefCipts
Appropriated to the various
:or $1,693,42S added to the year- funds for 1991 were $596,750,
. end balances of $246,112.
general fund (includes the safety
·Mayor Fred Hoffman reported fund); $135,300, lire lruck;
that this · year's apptopiidtion ex- $ll1,660, street maintenance;'
. teeds the 1990 ap)1l0priation of $37,600, cemetery; $31.350,
,$1,459,846 by $426,114. ThiS, he swimming pool 8J!d recreation;
·explained, is because of the Ohio $218,400, public .transportation;
·Deparllllent .of Natural Resources, $195,050, water; $40,000, water
-Division of · Waterway funds of system im~ro~ment; $88,000, Is-

sue 2; SY ,000 meter deposits:
$155,400, sewer fund; $52,200, fire
equipment: $13,650, economic
developmenl;_ $121100, ·mini-golf;
$6.000 Arts Council; $29,000, ARC
hoauing; $42,000 revolving loan;·
$112,500 ODNR Waterways Safety
Fund.
Dewey Horton . was re-elected
preS!
. ·dent of Council by unanimous
vote. Council renewed lire p-otec:
lion contracts with a secbon of
Salisbury Township,
$1,1 00;
Cheshire Township, $4,650; and ·
Cheshire Village, $2,800·
'I1IIi mayor's rej)ort for the month
of December IOialed $3,954.70.
Mayor Hoffman reponed that the

WashingtOn County Commissoners
wiU no loriger provide building
permit service and inspection fer
the CoUnty. .
Activibes of the Middlepon Arts
Council were discussed and appointments made to the Board of
Directors. Sue Baker, Jeanette
Thomas and Mary Wise were
named to five year terms; Nancy
Cale to a four year renn, Marilyn
Meier _to a thne year tenn, Malgie
Balcer to a two year term, and Shirley Quickel Ill a one year term.
Edison B$ker was appointed to a
five year term · on the Middlepon
Planning Commission, and Horton
was named to represent VIllage

Council ori the Commisson fer Sigma Phi Sorority who have both ·
1991. Brian Conde whose tenn on sent packages, and said that he felt
the Middlepon Recreation Com- if the-village initiated some project,
mission
has
expired,
was then it would encourage other inreappointed fer another five year dividuals and groups to do someterm.
thing. ~ending personal items and
Mayor Hoffman reported on the newspaper to the 45 to 50 ser·
granll! from the Department of vicemen were among the suggesl'raJL&lt;;porlaliod for the public transit . lions given by Gerard.
system (Blue Slreak Cab). He said
Action on the project, while it
that the village got "exactly what had fuU support from Council, was
they requested" · $49,809 in federal postPoned until the next meeting.
funds and $64,569 in state funds.
Council did however, pass a resoluCouncilnujn Paul Gerard sugges- tion in support of the troops in the
ted lhat the viUage "do someihing Middle East as presented by
in suppon of those in service in th~ Gerard.
Middle East." He noted the projects
· in other action it was decided to
of the American Legion and Beta
Conl!nue on page 10

U. N. considers peace plan
as 'Iraqis take to the streets

BOYS
Jan. 15-llaM• lraca, lomt
Jan. 11, Southem, Away

GIRLS
Jan. 14-Facl.•locklng, Away
Jan. l7 ~Southern, Homa

IRAN

BAHRAIN

SOUTHERN

MEIGS

Nov. 27.:..Noi1h Gallle............. Home
Nov. 30-Hannan Trace .......... Home
Dec. 4-Eaftllm ................ ..... Away

Dec. 1-Athenl ...................... Horne
Dec: 4-Belpre ....... .... :.. ......... Away
Dec. 11-MIIIer ...... ................ Home
Dec. 14-Vinton County : .... .... H_ome
Dec. 18-Aielllnder ............... Away
Dec. -21-Welleton ............. .... Home
Dec. 28-Logen ..................... Away
Jin. 4-Trimble .... ..... .. .. ......·... Away
Jao. 8-Fideral Hocking ......... Home
Jan. 11-Neleonvllle·York ....... Away
Jan. 16-Belpre .... ........ .. ....... Home

Dec. 7-·Southwestern,,,,.,,, Away

Dec. 8-Palnt Valley ............. , Convo .
Dec. 14-Kyger Creek ...... ;..... Home
Dec ..16-Symrne• Valley........ Away
Dec. 21-0ak Hill .................. Away
Dec. 22-Southeaetern ........... Home
Dec. 28-Athenl ............. ....... Aw~y
Jan. 4-North Gallia ............... fJ.way
Jlin. 6-Galllpoll1 ............ .•... .. Away
Jan.11-Haman Trace ........... Away
Jan. 18-Eaet•n ..... ........... .... Home
· Jan. 2~-RaveniWood ............ Away
Jan. 26-Southweetern .......... Home
Feb. 1-Kyger Creek ...... .... ..... Away
Feb. 8-Symme1 -Valley .......... Home
Feb. 12-Warran .......... .......... .Away

J;8n. 22-MIIIer ...... .. .............. A'!V•Y

,Jan. 26-VInton County .. ....... Away
Jan. 29 -Aie111nder .. .. .... .. ...... Home
Feb. 1-Welleton .... ... ...... .. ..... Away
Feb. ~-Athens ....... ........ ...... . Away ·
Feb. &amp;-Warren ... ... ................ Home
Feb. 8-Trimble ...................... Home
Feb. 12-Federal Hocking ....... Away
Feb. 15 - Nelaonville-York ...... . Home

Feb. 16-0ak Hill ................ .... Home

...JIIV';:.:=::::j~~_..J

Riyldh 0

_ _...._..;;..___.BOYS' · SCHEDULES~------ -

SAUDI ARABIA

EA'STERN

Nov. 20-MIIIer.·..................... Away
Nov. 23-:-Federil Hcicking ...... Home
Nov. 27-Kyger Creek ............ Away
Nov. 30-Southweetem ...... ... Home
DEC. 4-Southern .................. Home
Dec, 7-Symm81 Valley .......... Away
Dec. 14-North Galli&amp; ............ Away
Dec. 15-0ak ~111. ..........._. ..... Home
Dec. 18-Waterford .. .. ...., .. .... Home
Jan. 4-Kyger Creek .... ... ...... .. Home
Jan. 11 ~Southwiltern ....... .. . Away
Jan. 15-Hannan Trace .......... Home
Jan. 18-Southem ........ .... ... .. Away
Jan. 25-Symme, Valley ....... . Home
Jan. 26-MIIIer .................. ; ... Home
Fllb. 1-North Gallia ....... .: .. ... . Home
Feb. &amp;..:.flderel Hocking ......... Away
Feb. 8-0ak Hill ........ ............ . Away
Feb. 12-Watllirford·................ Away
Feb. _1 6-Han_nan trace .......... .. Away

Arabian Sea

·

Gull of Aden

, AREA OF POTENTIAL CONFLICT -

This UPI newamap

shows the proximity ol the key counlrleslnvoived In the slmmerln~

Peralan Gull crisis.

. - By GAYLE YOUNG
Unl~d Preu lnlerlll!*lonal
The U.N. Security Council,
facing Its own deadline Tuesday
for Iraq to get out of Kuwait,
prepared to discuss a last-ditch
Initiative offered by France for
peace even as troops and clv!ll·
ans In the Persian Gulf made
final preparations for war.
Hundreds of tho11sands of Ira·
qls burned U.S. flagsandchanted
pro- Iraqi slogans Tuesday II)
orchestrated demonatratloiiS In
Baghdad" that W!!re !llonltored by
arrped members of the ruling
Baath party, Cairo radio said.
_Several Iraqis at one rally tokl
a correspondent for the British
Broadcasting Coi,J. they did .!lOt
, think there would be a war.
But Egypt's Middle East News
Agency said most shops and
businesses In Baghdad had
closed and that people ventured
outside only to stand In line for

1.

---------GIRLS' SCHEDULEs~-----~~~~~~~~~-~
~-. ---MEIGS

SOUTHERN

Nov. 12-Nel10nvllle-York ...... Away ·
Nov. 19-Melgs ........... .......... Away
Nov. 211-North Gallle ............ Away
Nov. 29-Hennan Trace .......... Away
Dec. 3-Ealtem :.................... Home
Dec. 11-Southweetern ............ Home
Dec. 1 0-Kyger Creek ... .. ....... Away
Dec. 13-Symms Valley ......... Home
Dec. 17-Waterford ........ ....... Home
Dec .. 2!)-0ak Hill .................. Home
Jan. 3-.North Galli a ............... Horne
Jan. 1 0 ,..-Hannan Trace .......... Home
Jan. 14-Melgi ...................... Home
Jan. 16-Nelsol)vllle· York ....... Home
Jan. 17-Eaetem ................ .... Away
Jan. 24-SouthwHtern .., ....... Away
Jan. 28-Waterford ................ Away
·Jan. 31..:.Kyler ·creek ............. Home
Fllb. 4-0ak Hill ........... .. ........ Away
Fllb. 7-Symme• Valley .......... Away

•

Nov. 19-Southern ................ Home
Nov. 28-Trimble ...... .... ... ...... Home .
Nov. 29:--Vinton County ...... .. . Away
Dec. 3-MIIIer ................... .. ... Awa.Y
Dec. 8-Eaetem ..... ,..... .......... Home
Dec. 1 0-Nelaonville·York ...... Away
Dec. , 13-Belpre ... ....... .. ..... .... Home
Dec. 17-Aielllnder ............... Home
·Dec. 20-Welleton ................. Away
Jan. 3-Fideral Hocking ......... Home
Jan. 7-Trimble .. : ................... Away
Jan. 1 0-VInton County ..... ... . Home
Jan: 14-Southern .... .. ......... .. AWay
Jan. 1 7 -Miller .... ... .... .. .. ....... Home

'

Jan. 21-Eaetern .................... Away
.Jan. 24-Nel•onvllle· York ....... Home
J1n. 2B- 8elpre .. :.......... :....... Aw1y
·Jan. 21'-Aielllnder ................ Aw1y
Feb. 4-Walhiicm..... ....... ......... Horne
"eb.
7-Fideral
Hocking ....... .. Away
'
.
~

'

.E ASTERN

Nov. 19-Fedaral Hocking ...... Home
Nov. 28-Kyger Creek ............ Home
Nov. 29-Southweet•n ......... Away
Dec. 3-Southern •...•........ .; .•.• Away
Dac. 6-Trimble .............. ....... Horne
Dac. 6-Symmea Valley .......... Home
Dec. 8..,-Meigs ........ - ...... ... .... AwaY
Dac. 1il-North Gallia ............ Home
Dec. 13-0ak Hill .... .......... .... Away
Pee. 20-Hannen Trace :; ........ Away
Jan. 3-Kyger. Creek ...... ......... Away
Jan. 9-Trimble ..·.............. ...... Away .
Jan.1 0-Southwaatern ........... Horne
Jan. 14-Federal Hocking ....... Away
Jan. 17..:.5outhitm ................. Home.
Jan . 21-Meigl .......... ... , .. ...... Home
Jan. 24-Symmet Valley ..,.. .. ;. Away
Jan. 31-North Gallhi ............. Away .
Fllb. 4-Hannan Trace .., ... .... .. Home
Feb._7-0ak· HIII ......... ,.... ....... Home

SWF;ARING IN HELD • Three re-electfcl
Melp Couuly ol'lkllll _were sworn In lor tllelr
new terms on ' Monday mornlq by, M~jl
.Conly Common Pial Judge Fftc!W. Cniw m:
Pictured; lert to rlpl, are Me!p CoUDty Com-

milllloner Munlng K. Rousb, Melp ·count;
Auditor William R. Wickline, Melp Counly
Probate and Juv,nUe J•dge ~o~rt E. Bud, and
Jud11e Cf!IW. - · ·
·
· . . ·

bread at the few bakeries that
remained open. Ii said many
Baghdad residents were fleeing
the•clty.
·
Diplomats sal!i the Security
Council would lake up a six-point
peace plan proposed by France ·
to avert a war between Iraq and
the 28-nallon U. S.·led multlna·
IIOIII!l force In the Persian Gulf
when It reconvenes Tuesday

morning.
ollsly to support a jihad, or ljoly
. The French proposal was set , war, against more than 500,000
for discussion less than 14 hours U.S.-Ied forces massed In the
before the Security Council's gulf. And President Saddam
midnight deadline for Iraq to Hussein told his country to
withdraw from Kuwait.
psychologically prepare for war.
Iraq, which has occupied Ku·
France's last-minute peace
walt for 5 *months, has rebuffed plan would have the Security
all peace proposals presented so Council gall on Iraq to begin
lar. In Baghdad Monday, the Immediately a "rapid aqd masIraqi Parliament voted unantmContinued on page 10

Swan -Oliver
accepts new
health post
By Charlene Hoellich
Oliver, employed by the
Meigs County Council on A~g
for the~ 15 years, the past ,eJght
of which has _been as BSSlStant
director, has resigned 10 accept
employment as a mental !Jea!th
coordinator in a nine county area of
Southeastern Ohio. .In the newly
crealed position, she will serve as a
liaison between the -Buckeye Hills·
Hocking
. Valley
Regional
Development Dislrict Options fer
Elders program and lhe GaUia1ackson-Meigs Board of Alcohol,
Drug Additon. and Mental Health
Services.
While Oliver •began her new
employment on 1an. I, she is sliD
·working on a pan-time basis at ~
Senior Citizens . Center pending
employment of new personnel
there: Her final day at the Center
wiU be 1an. 31.
Oliver's responsibilities will be
to develop tear~\ aPJl!OIIChes 10
caring fcx' elderly ~llents who need
the services of beth the Options for
Elders and lhe Mental Health Ser·
vices.
. '.
NEW POSfnON ·After 15 years of working wltb programs for
She will w,orlc w•th local me~tal the elderly Ia Melp Counly, Suan Oliver has resigned to accept
health staff to assess the serv•cesthe tbe newly created position of )'dental Health Coordinator with the
most _needed an~ fe!!lll;sted by
Opdons lor FJders PJ'011'8111 aDd lbe Gallia·Jaeboti-Melp Mental
el~y. and_11181t)181{1 data _on _the_ Heallb Services. . Her rtllpatloa as .~SVP· director 1nd asslstanl · · . · .
· Conlin~ on Paae 10
· . ·!llrector of tbe Meip;Couly COIIIIdl on Aging is effective Ju. 31; · :••

Susan

'

..

'

Protest lockout

..

.Steelwork~rs march on state capital
'

•

Locked-out steelworkers mar·
c~ !hrough the halls of state
government Monday to deliver
Soiidarity Information Packets to
state legislators and elected state
officials, according to· a release
ft'om the United Steelworkers of
America. The packelll detail \he
struggle of USWA Local 5_668 to
achieye a just contraCt w11h the
Ravenswood Alwninum Corpora· .

&lt;•

'

uon.
· negoliabons,
The release stated RAC locked
The locked-out workers 8IC as•
out the local's 1,701 members in king state leaders whether they
Nov. 1990 after rejecting a union want West Vqlnia to be
offer to work under the old contract synonymoau with union busting or
while negotiations continued. Since whether they are willing to bike a
then the workers have watched as stand to support the ,rights and
die ~ompany has brought in per· living standards of West Virginia
manent replacement workers- workers.
·
many from cut-of-state-while
"This march on the capital is fur·
refauing_' to engage in meaningful ther evidence that Steelworkers and
West Virgin~s will net be beaten
by RAC's intimidation and
- stonewaUing," said USWA stati
representati-.:~ Joe Chapman. "We
'
s,ld Fisher.
· The m!lln purpose want
to engage in prodiiCtive talks
cit government Is to take care of
and
hope
the company will
the little guy - In effect, to put come to thethat
table
16 With the
the law on the side of everyday same attitude. ButJan.
until
the comOhioans." ·
pany
shews
some
sign
of
· "Puttlili a face, and a heart
reasonable
intentions,
we
maut
alert
and a 1oul on government Is our o.. srate leaders to the injustice
challqe- a~ In that sense the be1ng ·done io West Virginia
campalp should never end," he steelworkers."
said.
Nearly 500 of 1,700 idled RAC
Tbe win by Fisher was the workers
learned they will
closest itatewlde race In Ohio receive .have
smaller
unemployment
hiiiOry with a total of 3.3 mi!Hon ·
checks
from
the
state than they had
votes cast.
·
'
·
• · . C:Onilnuecl on page 10 '

J»roves one vote makes a difference
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) Lee Fisher, who won a contes led
attorney ·general's race by only

1,234 votes, was sworn In Monday
and saki be proved that one vote
can make a difference.
Fisher,
Democratic state ·
senator lrom Shaker Heights; Is
being challenged by Sen. PIIJI}
Pfeifer, R·Bucyrua, who has
taken the case to the Ohio
sUpreme Court.
"One person can make a
. dllfere~ ill e11111rlng thai justice II served tor all Ohtoani,"

a

'

.:..!..or....-.

.

•

j _

..

I

.

I

\~J

~ lor llle job Ia lite n-•ber, ucl wiD
operate out ot tile cllallblr'l ltoi ell oot
he8dquuten '"' FMt Mala Slnt. Dr. lob'alco,
meuwblle, toolt tiM nlau .ot tiM chamber OD
Janlllll')' 1, succeedlllc Bruce Reed.
__ __

......

~-

-

~

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