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

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o-The Deily Saltinel

MondaY, Jenur( 14. 1891

Pomaoy-Middlaport. Ohio

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

outlasts

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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
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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

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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

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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
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.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

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Protest lockout

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.Steelwork~rs march on state capital
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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.
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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,"

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~ 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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Tueedey, J.uery 16, 1991

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The Daily

POf1'18{oy-Midcleport, Ohio

Sentinal-~3 .

With Mourning, Mutombo on bench,

Commentary
111. Court Street
Pomeroy, Oblo

WASHINGTON- The govern· wrlttng on ancient history and
ment fuddle factory has upended even teaching dance (WhiCh the
Its loyal civil servants again with law construes as. speaking !or a
a 'n ew and ridiculous law limltlrig fee .)
their outside Income.
Perhaps the hardest case to
Because • few bad apples In the justify Is the I (If the "cruclverbal· executive .and legislative lsts" - crossworld puzzle con·
branches can·~ dlsttngul,lh be- structors whose three downs and
tween harmfess moonlighting four acrosses embellish news·
and a job that conntcts with their paper comic pages and
public duties, everyone will magazines.
· suffer. Congress passed the
The puzzle Inventors even have Ethics Reform Act of 1989, which a Crossword Puzzle ,t.cademy,
bars federlil workers from taking made up of the creme de Ia creme
outside Income from speeches of cruclverbaltsts. And among
and writing unless the work was them are a number of federal
co.ntracted before Jan. 1, 1991. - workers who wU11have to give up
Violators could be tined $10,0011.
their night jobs.
Howevel- pure the Intent, the
One or -the most prominent, a
law has Infuriated civil servants top government Investigator,
who were , picking up a few sought guidance from his agency
dollars on the side by preaching, and the question went all the way
to the White House Office of

DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA
A~

~m~
~v

'

,.,..,__,.._-.-, M""E!!IIc::l•-=-

..

ROBERT L. WINGETT.
.· Publisher

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
.Geaer.. Mana1er

PAT WlllTEBEAD ·

AUIR&amp;Dt Publllher/ Controll_e r

-f. MEMBER of The Untied_Press International, Inland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper P~bllsbers As8oclatlon.
'

LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be l.. s than 300
words long. AU letters are subject to editing and must be signed with

'

name, address and telephone number. No unsigned letters wtll be publis bed. Letters should be In good taste, addressing Issues, not personalities.
·

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The GOP's small
voice of warning

Government Ethics. The answer "EthlcsRerorm Act."
One. federal otflclal told us;
that cam baclt was, no way. The
ethics czars said the federal "We have arcblvtstl who come to
employee had to ~ve up his job government frol:n unlversltlea on
as a crouword - puzzle writer the balls that the)' can keep up
unless tbe jniZZies were con· their academic standing. Now
tracted ·for before Jan. 1, or the)( find thatthey cannot publlah
outside artiCles, , even for the ·
unleu he does them fOr tree.
This paronola ab&lt;iut ethics most modest stipends."
Bush administration sources
might be ju1tUied If the man
were using "name of a mafia admit · that the law was poorly
Informer' • for 2o down, Instead of drafted and then rushed through
"ancient sun god of Assy:ria." when It should htive been·rewrlt· ·
Nevertheless, he ~ust now give ten. Efiortl are being made to
up his relaxing -little avocation correct the law In 1991.
MJ!anwhlle, tbe moonlighters
and the Income that. comes with
it.
'
are not holdlrig their breath. A •
In his filial puzzle, he Is court has ruled the! the law Is
thinking of filling a 15-letter .valid. The cruclverballat has
space with "~lsastrous blow to, already round a five-letter ,word ·
Innocent buh!aucrat moonlight; for "government action to ·cor· .
ing." You guessed the answer: rect wrongs." It's D·E·L·A·Y.

By ~OLD SAWISLAK
UPI Senior Editor
WASHINGTON'- The Repqbllcans In Congress are supposed to be
the conservatives, but recently the GOP minority In the House gave
-the Democrats a glimpse of a very radical political tactic.
The Senate has very few restrictions on the amount of time a
member may consume, but ol)e of the first things new House
members are told Is that without rules thatlimlt speeches and other
· elemen~ of the legislative process, the House would quickly slide l_nto
chaos.
'
One reason -for that Is that the basic rules ofthe House, dating back
to when It had 65 members, grants each member o~ hour on every
question - )101 only on e11ch bill, but on each amendment and motion
as well.
To say the least, this slaws down theworkofthe House, so It vested
Its R'utes Committee with the authority to propose special rules for
legislation. Thus, a non-controversial bill might have a rule that
limits debate to one hour, white another that has engendered a lot of
heal or spawned a lot amendments may be given a rule that permits
many hours, even days of debate and voting.
·
All of this permits the House tp get Its work done with reasonable
dispatch, b1,1t like any other Instrument or democracy, It requires all
the participants to agree to observe the rules.
·
In the Ho!ise, among other things, It requires me!llbers to quit
talking when their alloted time expires. Now suppose a member,
given the floor to speak for a specific period, refused to stop talking
when that time expired.
That Is what a Republican did on the first day or the 102nd Congress
earlier this month to protest what the GOP said was a Democratic
double- cross on the budget deficit reduction agteemeni reached after
major angst last fall.
The protest was led not by one ofthe GOP's recently emerged cadre
of firebrands, such as Rep. Newt Gingrich, R-Ga. , but by a most
unlikely revolutlona,ry - Rep. Nancy L. Johnson, a m11_tronly
five-term Republican from New Britain, Conn.
.
, .
Johnson, recognized to speak tor one minute at the end or the House
debate on adoption of rules for the 1991·93 session, stepped up to the
lectern In the well of the House and spoke far nearly six minutes,
Ignoring the Increasingly urgent raps of the gavel by Rep. Steny
Hoyer, D·Md. , the lictlrig speaker. At one point, Rep. Henry GOnzalez,
D-Texas, demanded Hoyer summon the segeant-at-arms to remove
Johnson. ·Hoyer, perhaps picturing the poUtical ef!ect of a burly
Democratic aide strong-arming a grandmotherly Republican
member, waited Johnson out.
Johnson made clear tram the start she purposely was violating a
As we begin the 1991-92leglsla'House precedent - the formal , rules had not yet been adopted ,....
llve session. there are many
because she wanted to demqnstrate what could happen If members ' Issues that confront us. Whether
could not trust each other. .
,
It be the upcoming biennial
The clear lmpUcatlon was that If the majority dldn' t play fair with
budget deliberations or the drive
the minority, tbe minority had the means to make life miserable for
for equity In education, It Is sure
the majority.
.
.
to be a busy and hopefully
The biblical description of the seemingly Innocent warning for an
productive time.
Impending great--storm Is "a cloud out of the sea, like· a a man's
' It Is estimated at the present
hand.'' In this case, It may be that this-augur o~ a political tempest
time that the upcoming state
was being de!Jvered to the Democrats who control the House In the
budget Is already projected at a
form.of a small woman's voice.
$1.5 billion dollar deficit without
expansion or existing state programs. As a member of the
'
Senate Finance Committee, the
•
legtslallve body which develops
the State Biennial budget, It Is
my hope that we will be able to
To the editor: After the last
We used to
what was called find existing pools or revenue
flood in Pomeroy, I have penonally the "FiremCil's Ball" every year

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deparunents. •
One day, the water, mud and
trash is cOvering the sueets and
• . parking' lots, and hours .la!tc.
.· · everything has ·been- cleaned and
flushed. .People wake in the man•
. ing to see a clean village. This is a
wet, cold and muddy job. In the
late hours of the night.

IndlaD•

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locatitf within the various state
departments to otfset this current fiscal situation. Neverthe·
less It will be a challenging efiort
' to balance· the current state
budget restraints and still provide programs of necessity for a
better Ohio.
•
Another 'a rea of extreme concern for all working Ohioans wlll
be the af!ordabllty and avallabll·
lty of health care In Ohio. So tar
two proposals have been submit·
ted before the Ohio General
Assembly; Universal Health
Care and Access Ohio. Both or
these avenues make attempts at
controlling the cost of health care
In Ohio.

It also seems that In 1991, we
will finally come to terms with
the fact that the way In which we· currently fund our schools In
Ohio Is Inequitable and just plain
wrong. The Select Committee to
study Ohio's school foundation
formula h11s been discussing
_efforts that would pool existing
State revenues to attempt to
offset the current Inequity In our
funding system. Presently,
report Is due out by the middle of
January which wUI hopefully
speD some relief for our schools
and our children.
'
Other Issues of Importance for
the · 119th General Assembly
Include: curbing our growing

a

Fanner!l Banlc and Savings ComWe will keep you posted on
bow it goes.
Again, tlJanks .to·the fi.req~eQ· and
· EMS, you . ~ very much ap..

preciatcd. · ·
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. Mayor Richard Seyler
Pomeroy, Ohio

Today in _history·.

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By UaUed Preu lnteraatlonal
Today Is Tuesday, Jan. 15, the 15th day of 1991 With 350 to follow.
The moon Is new.
The morning star Is Mercury.
,
,
The evening stars are Venus and Jupiter.
Those born on this date are under the sign of Capricorn·. They
tnclllde outlaw Cole Younger In ~; Greek shipping magnate
Aristotle Onassls II) 1906; nuclear physicist Edward Teller In 1908
(age 83~ ; drummer Gena Kl:upa In 1909; folk music scholar Alim
Lomax In 1915;' Egyptian Prealdent Gamal Abele! Naiser In 1918; civil ·
rlghta leader Martin Luther King Jr. ln 1929;"actor Lloyd Bridges In
1913 (age 78~, and ·actress Margaret O'Brien In 1937 (age · 54~ .

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On thla date In history:
In 1870, a cartoon by ThOmas Nast appeared In Harper's weekly
with a donkey 1ymbollz!ng the Democratic Party for the flr.st time.
The symbol stuck.
In 1922, tbe lrllh Free State was formed.
In 1943, the Pentagon, the world's largest building of Its kind, was
completed on tbe VIrginia side pf the Potomac River just outside
Waahtngtoft, D.C.
.
•
In 1973, President Nixon called a halt to . American mllltary:
ofienstvelln VIetnam.
rn 1986, Soylet leader Ml khall Gorbachev proposed a sweeping new
arm• control plan to eliminate all nuclear we11pons by the year 2000
and rid "mankind of the fear of nuclear catastrophe."

.--- ·
A thought for the day: Aristotle Onassls once said, ''The secret of ·

bulllness IJ to .know something that nobody else knows."
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WASHINGTON (NitA) - Af·
without astronauts.
ter wasting almost two decades
Indeed, NASA's claim that the
and $25 blllion on a- space recyclable shuttles could save ·
exploration program operated as money was based on the preposa show business venture, the terous assumption of 70 launches
federal government Is belatedly annually-almostoneeveryflve
moving tow.ard a more reliable day$ . _ Becalj_~ of \echn!Pal.dlff!·
' and· rational' appt:aach.,
· · · cultles .·. that sho~ld hav~ been
After completing It original foreseen, the agency has been
·mission - placing an astronaut "fortunate to complete a launch
on the moon- In the lale ,l960s,
every live months:
,
the National Aeronautics and
Now, the Committee on the
Space Administration success· FUtUre of the U.S: Space Profully preased the White House In _gram, a 12-member, blue-rlbl!ort
the ear!J 1970s lor a long-term panel convened by Vice Pres!·
commtt!nent to an extensive dent Dan Quayle, has called upon
program of additional filghts
NASA to abandon Its total re-with a1tronaut1 aboard.
llance;upon f11411ned lb!iltles and
That approach, In turn-, re- return to unmanned rockets as
quired the development of "shut· launch vehicles for · many of Its
tie" vehicles that could carry mlsstol)l.
,
,
people Into space and hack again.
S~lflcally, the committee
NASA argued thattbosereusable said In a recent report that the ·
craft were a logical nd economl· Endeavor, under construction
cal successon to the "throw- and soon to be compleied, should
'away'"· rockets 'of earUer years.
be the last shuttle bullt. That
In fact, tbe stated aoal or wouldatveNASAafleetoffourto
saving money was subordinate to c.a rry astronauti l.nto space when
NASA'• belief that mtsaloi!S with their presence Is justified.
. ·astronauts aboard proclucecl the · Acknowledging the lmporhuman drama that endeared the tance of astrona!II.J 'on .elected
·qency to the public aa well as to mlsslona, the committee cited
mere elite audlencea In the White ~ flnt aucceasful human ascent
House and Congress. ' .
bt the. world's hlgheat mountall!,
That support, In turn, l!SSUred In 1953: "There IJ a dltterence
the agency of greater glory and between HIUary reacblng tbe top
ever•lncreaalng budaets. Ig- · ot Everest and_merely using a
110red . were · the repeated lnde· rocket or loft an Instrument
pendent assessments that con· · package to the summit."
eluded NASA's mlulons (niost of .
But the panel added: •'Much of
which Involved placing 1atellltes · what humaas can perform In
In orbit~ generally could be space could be conducted at lesa
.conducted more efficiently and coat and ri1k With robotic 1pace- .
economically with the diSdained , craft- and tn many lnltancea we
"disposable"
' rockets - and believe II should be."
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Sen. Jan Long
solid waste problem, regional
state economic development ef·
forts, and reforming campaignIng spending. As \ve enter Into
this new legislative year, It Is my
hope that we can continue .to
work together to confront the
challenges before us.
As .always, please feel tree to
call or · write me, State Senator
Jan Michael Long, If you have
any questions or comments
about these 'll' any other pr(lposals. My number Is (614) ~56.
and my address Is the Statehouse, Columbus, Ohio «3215.

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. ·.· ··:

Robert Walters

Indeed, the Air Force, wblcb
operate• 1py satellites tor the
nation's Intelligence agencies,
The measage to NASA Is
began shifting to eonventlonal -unq~lstakable: If the agency Is to
rockets sucb as the ntan 4 as
make a significant contrlbqtlon
launch vehicles even before the to the nation ll!ld world In the
. Challenll"r dlsilll!!r. ,· _ ' . , futute,lt mustfona-ethehoopla
, Finally, -the. prestigious panel
and hullabahio It' has relied upon ·
of aerospace experts examining until now for popular and pout!: NASA's operations called upon cal support.
the agency to emphasize sclenlnstead,ltmustconcentrateon
tlflc research, which "ranks
serious, substantive missions
above space stations, aerospace
that may not generate as p~uch
planes, manned mlsslona to the
publicity !1Ut \viii lead to a
planets and many otber major
greater · underslal!dlng of' a unl·
'pursuits which often receive
verse we have only started to
greater vtalblllty. " ·
explore.

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KARATE CUSSES

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New Yorlt. New Yorlt 10017.

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Porrleroy. Oldo-.

StJIICaiPTION IIATIII

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214 EAST MAIN

No •bocrtptlmo by m~U permitted Ill
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Sublertbtrsnot_rt.,topaytbe.car-,, ,
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Member: United Prell• lntematlonal.
Inland Dally Preo1 Aasodotlon IJid tile
Oblo NOWIPOJNII' AIIOI!IIJIOO. Natlonll
Adwrtlolnl Rep'01011totlve, Branham

NOWJPOpor Bolea, 733 Tblrd Avriue,

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,...--------WE'LL
OVERLOOK
YOUR FIRST
ACCIDENT

a,c~orlhlor-

"OK, {IBIS and guys of the Armtld Serv1cee,
LET,'S GO .GET 'EM/"

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992-6839

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first balf of Monday night's Big Ten game at West
Lalayetle, ln_d,, which the vtsltlnr; Hoosiers won
6U2. (UPI) '

to 111e

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teachm"g p E to eD'Mide schooJe..a
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man, 5 potnts, 3.1 rebounds) and
Two District 22 teams With rebounds) aQd Kerr! Kidwell
Laurie
Hanson
(5-6,
sophomore,
.
·
·
:.
widely dtaerent records are on
(10.8 points, 7.3 rebounds). Both
7.5polnts, 3.5rebounds).Startlng - ·
the home schedule of the Onlver- enjoyed career high games last
slty of Rio Grand~ _women's week as Snyder scored 17 points
forwards are Lori Melendez (5·7,
.··
junior, 10 points, 4.1 rebounds~
basketball team this week.
In Rio Grande's 76-60 defeat of
and Theresa Bowlin (6-1, junior, ·_ ·:
~A
Tiffin, 11·3 and 2-0 tn the Lake Erie and' Kidwell brought
v~ ~a.aao
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a _o Mid-Ohio Conference. Invades down 16 rebounds In the Mount 4.2 points, 4.1 rebounds(. Filling
Lyne Center ·at 5:15 p.m. Tues- Vernon game. Rounding out the
th·e center l.s Lisa Javersak (6·2, . , .•.
CINeJNNATI (UPI~ - Pete about having an ex-convict teach
junior, 11.5 points, 5.5 rebounds).
.
Spiegel said he purposely
day, while Malone (4·11~ el!ters lllieup Is center Ann Barnltz, now
Rose, tresh from the school or their children mainly becauSe plc,ked live inner-city schools ,In
action against the Rio ladles at , .averaging 12.8 points and. 8.4 · 'The Redwomen will carry an , ..
average of 71.1 points per game
hard knocks, became a teacher Rose, a native of Cincinnati, Is a po&lt;irareas for Rose's community
•'
7:30 p.m. Thursday. Rio Gtand~ boards a game and leadiJ!i the
Monday.
closes out the week Saturday at team In scoring and rebounding;
Into Tuesday's game. Opponents
,•
local legend an!! baseball her~.
service.
Rose;just one week after being
Ohio Dominican.
Startlng.torTiftlnareUsa Witt
are currently averaging 65.4 . ,,
"I ihlnk the students will look
''ltose will return to his roots In
released ' from prison,- began up to him, " said Laynle Starm· -the Inner city In order to help
points per outing.
By record alone- and through
(5-6, freahman, 9 potn(JI, 3 reteaching physical education ·to stead, parent of an HeberJe
a seven-game winning streak bounds) and Jenny Kane (5·6,
.,
children there make something
' '
elementary school students.
Tiffin's Lady Dragons offer the sophOmore, 11 points, 2 restudent. "He's not like a har·
of themselves -and to encourage
., '
"I'm excited to he. here "Rose dened criminal. I think he. will . · them to work to succeed In their
blggest challenge to Doug bounds) as the guards. Forwards
',,I
said upon his arrival at Heberle help them stay out of trouble."
Foote's
Redwomen,
9·7
and
l·lln
are
Krlsl!na
Myers
(5·10,
sopho' goals with the same determlnaSPAINfi 'lA II fY CINfMA
Elementary School. ''When you
the MOC after Saturday's dis· more, .17 points, 10 rebounds~.
"fhls should be . a positive
lion and dedlcatiop that he did In
446 4'Jl4
were a kid, didn't you get excited experience !or the youngsters,"
heartening
72-70,
double
over.
with
Jane
Winters
(6-0,
senior,
7.
his own life," said the jUdge.
about gotng fu schooi?"
time loss to Mount Vernon points, 6 rebo!Jnds) taking the
said Cincinnati Public Schools
" We particularly want him to
But, Rose didn't become a staff member John Brunner.
Nazarene. Tiffin. coached by j)Ost.
·
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show these children that In spite
teacher by choice. The former
Annette Kessler, . entered the
Malone has so far posted wins
Several Heberle.stUdents said of the mistakes he has made, he
baseball star was ordered by they were anxious to ask Rose can learn and profit froJ;Jl them
MOC this season and bids fair for over Siena Heights (Mich.),
U.S. District Court Judge Arthur quesUons like ,"Do you U)&lt;e our and become a more humble and
domination of the seven-school 52·51; Notre Dame (Ohio), 68-59;
.,
Spiegel to perform 1,000 'hours of , school?" and "Will you show us better person from t~e
league at this time. Both ntrln Mount Vernon, 68-65; and West
•, ,,
· community service by working how to play baseball?"
and Mount Vernonhold2-0slates Liberty (W.Va.), 78-70. Its largexperience.
at rive Inner-city 5choois In (ioor
in the conference following wee- est margin of loss was to
.
Cincinnati neighborhoods.
kend play.
Youngstown State, 79-42.
The community service Is part
Tlfiln currently owns wins over . Lady Pioneers Coach Barbara
Malone, 65-48 and 60-46; Denison, Easlick, who will leave basket·
of Roll!' s sentence for tax eva·
..sian. He. just completed five
65-56; Oberlin, 68-63; Indiana- ball at the end of the season to
months In prison and Is living for
-Southeast, 68-63; Purdue- start Malone's first softball
the next three months In a
Calumet, 62-52; Michigan· team, Is expected ,to start as
halfway house. He will remain on
Dearborn. 77-54; Findlay, 55-42;
guards Tanya Erb (5-4, freah·
.,
probation the rest at this year.
Hope (Mich.~. 61-52; Bluffton~
.
"I think he Will do well at the
64-59; Ohio Dominican, 59·51;
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schools," said Cecil Good, Cinand Walsh.-57-52. Losses Include
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cinnati asslsta~Jt school
Findlay, 72-55, and Mount Union,
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superlnte_ndent.
53-42.
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Startlnt· Winter Quarter
Parents didn't seem worried
The Redwomen metTI!flnonce
1hun., Jan. 17
last season and lost, 84-82. On
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Tuesday, Foote will depend on
The Daily Sen't inel
' 7:30 p.m.
' ~
his starters to break the Ice
offensively, beginning with Jennl
,
At Carlet~n School .
(V8PsUHtl)
when .,... ....., • • -.., I oi&lt;l
·- '
Couch
(7.6
potnts,3.6~sststs
per"
·:·
A Dh&gt;lll• ollllolllmodta. 1...
Mlc
.......
•
IMtructer
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l• .i&gt; · ganie)·and Debbie FredriCk (11.3 _
~t'~~
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·Publlollocf eYei'Y 'ari-. Moitd.oy , . ,
points,
3
rebOunds~ at' the guard
Fir
.....
Wer.atiM
Call
tbrourtt Friday. 111 Court St.; Po·~.
uat•ua.
positions.
..,
meroy, Oblo, by tbe Oblo Volley Pub- ,
IIJIIIIIJ ,Contpony!Multlmfdla, Inc.,
I ... .......
Repeating as forwardS are
POmeroy, O)llo 4!1•. Ph. 112-2156, ~ :
.,
~....,
Kathy
Snyder
(7
.1
points,
5.9
cond clan pootoae paid at Pomoroy, ,

'BAilRETT ·1!118 deek ..,. Purdue guard Dave
Bar.,u
&amp;be Door 1o get tile looae ball before
pard Jamal MeekB r;ets to It during the

.

Will
NASA
h
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~n~~:na.~;~~-- .
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' ave its wings
p~~y.

game" agaln8t Mount Vernon, the 11th season
Redmen cilach will be looking to the starUng five
and his bench to make Contributions against the
Dragons, -who are continuing the winning ways
that led them to a 25-6 finish and 10·2 MOC
standing In 19119-90;
Tiffin has posted wins over Kentuclry Christian
(91-60), Hllladale (Mich.) (78-58), Wilmington
(94-69~, Wlltrld Laurier (Canada) (98·63~, Walsh
(69-66 and 94-64), Adrian (Mich.) (79-55h Bluffton
(78-46~, Wlndlor (93-70), Seneca (87-40~, Defiance
(59-58) and Huntington (Ind.~ (97·77). Losses were
to Wooster (88-69), Malone (83-72) ,Kenyon (66-59)
and Mount Vernon (94-91~ In overdme.
Leading the way for the Dragons am(lng the
starters will be forward Thad Patrick (6·1,junlor)
with an average of 14.8 points and 3.6 rebounds,
backed by forward Jeff Ward (6-6, freshman)
· with 16.8 points and eight rebounds, and guard
Don WUllams (6-1, senior), averaging 14.1 points
and four assists.
Roundllli out the starters' list will be guard
Brian Bicknell (6-0, senior, 9.1 points, 3.4
rebounds) and center Dale Kuhl (6-6, Junior, 9.4
potnt~. 4Jt rebounds~.
.
SponHnd nJPt - Wednesday's game Will also
mark McDonald's Night to recognize the
GalUpoUs and Henderson McDonald's reatau·
rants that donated to the .Rio Grande Athletic
Boosters organization. Fr~e tickets are available
at tbe restaurants and will be used to announce
door prize winners at the halftime.

Redtromen will host Tiffin, Malone

seen how dedieatcd our Pomeroy and everyone had a goad limo. I

critical of ~ in dJe past, but sonnet, and I am going to make lhe
never again! I will do my utmOst as first donation for a ball. If anyone
loog as I am may&lt;r to do whatever thinks this is a good idea, send in
!hey need or wan! .for their your donations to Bruce Reed and

Astrtneoffreethrolnthere.t overcame foul trouble to lift HOQI!enwasby the1983BigTen : .·
of the way allowed VlllalloYa, 9-6 lndlau put Purdue, giving the champions.
overall and 2-3.in the Big East, 10 Hoollera their 13th 1tralaht vic·
AI Durham, N.C., Thomas Hill
break a flile-aame ~ 1treak tory. Anderson and .· Cheaney acored a career-high 22 points
•
to ..Ge!)rcetowJI. The Hoyu are
each picked up their fourth fouls
and Chrlattan Laettner added 21
10-4 ill alJ gamea and 2-2 In the · early In tbe 11ec0nd half and
to lead Duke, 13·3 overall and 3-1
conference.
·
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Purdue, 10-4 overall ilnd 2•21ri the · tn the ACC. The Blue Devils were
Mutombo wa1 gooc1 onalletaht , B'lg Ten, .capitalized with a l2·2 a)lead 35-34 before closing the
·,
ofhlsshotsfromthefleldbu'ttlie_ run for a 52-48 Bollermalters ftnt half with a 14.0 run for
rest at the Hoyu, who started
lead.
control. Wake Forest was
four freshmen, hit only 13 ot 46
Anderson and Cheaney then dropped to 7-5 overall and 2·2 In
(28.3 percent) shota from tbe ·returned for Indiana, each scor· the league.
floor .
l..r 4 potnls to keep the Hoosiers
At Johnaon City, Tenn., Marty .
~ "When he was out, we were . close lll!tll a 3-potnt play by . Story scored 23 points and East
able to' take1heballtothehole
Jamal Meeks gave Indians a
Tennessee State won Its 24th
easier," said UnceMIIler, who
511-58 t.!ad with 5:51 remaining. straight home game In the
led the Wlldc!ltl with 18 polnta.
Anderson scored the next two victory over The Citadel, 2-9. The
"And he wu their go.io guy on
Hoosier baskets to put Indians Buccaneer~, 13-1, _received 21
offense. When he went out, we
ahead 63-60 with 1:48 left. Pat points from junior college
changed our dete)lse to suit their
Grabam added two free throws transfer Rodney English 11nd
players, rather than have two or
with 18 seconds to play.
were In .control from the outset
thtee guys aroun~ Mutombo." ,
Indiana (15·1 and 3.0~ last won building a 49'34 lead at .the hall
· AI West Lafayette, Ind., Eric
13stralgllt two seasons ago on the .and taking Ill blggestlead, 91-62,
Anderson scored 15 points, ,cal·
way to a Big Ten title. The most with 4:38togoonadunkbyMajor
'bert Cheaney added 14 and both
recent previous 15-lstart for the Geer.

The University of Rio Grande men's basketball
team (14-3, l·lln the.Mid·Ohlo Conference) hopes
to extend Its lucky seven string of victories with a
win over defending conference champion Tlftln
University (12-4,1·0) at Lyne Center Wednesday,
7:30p.m.
With tour games and four Wins from last week
behind them. the Redmen Will carry a per-game
scoring aver11ge of 100.1 Into the contest while
giving up 75 points to opponents. Jim Hammond's
Dragona, the 1988-89 District 22 champions, are
averaging 81.7 potn Is and surrendering 66.1 so far
this season.
.
John Lawhorn's five starters continue to
dominate the statistics, led by Gary Harrison,
who had a total of 83 points and 28 assists In last
week's action. Harrison Is now averaging 20.5
points and 6.9 assists per game, while shooting
guard Mark Erslan Is bringing 15.6 points and 4.1
rebounds Into 'the contest.
Small foJWard Brad Schubert Is credited with
14.2 points and 4.5 rebounds, With power forward
Jeff Brown adding 13.9 points and 9.1 boards to the
offense. Center Troy Donaldson, with 10,4 points a
game, follows Brown In the rebounding depart·
ment With 7.ii each time out.
Since Dec. 15, the Redmen have scored seven
consecutive wiris, lnducllag S)lawnee State
(86-84~ , Seneca (Ontario~
(118-64), Windsor
(Ontario) (100·76) , Waynesburg State _(Pa. ~
(98-72~. Wilberforce (110-72) Mount Vernon
Nazarene (90-76) and .Defiance ,(96-72).
After having what Lawhorn called a "complete

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lettel'8 to the editor

Thanks to emergency serorces

~~:

Tifrm to challenge. Rio.Wednesday

Issues listed for I 19th General Assembly .:

-~==-~m~:::.:~

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UPII!POna Wrller

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was· an 89-67 whuiei- over Wake · six~ foul on Mutombo with a
Forest and l&amp;th,rated East Ten· drive to the basket with 2: 04left.
t The Oeoraetown Hoyas, _per- ttessee State-topped The Citadel, The ensuing free throws broke a
ect tl)IJ Mu.on with Alonzo 96-76.
. !13-53 tie and the WUdcats did not
Mourning and Dlketnbe Mu·
No. 1 Nevada-Las Vegas trail again as Georgetown manlombo on the court, have found
played at Pacific and No. 19 New agj!d ju1t three points the rest of
themselvea very vulnerable with
Mexico State battled Fresno the game.
·
them.on the bench.
State In late 11ames. .
"Psychologically, It came at a
With Mourning missing his
Georgetown was 5·0 and bad. time," Georgetown coach
nlntbgamebecauseofastralned rankedflfthln the country when ' John ' Thompson said of the
. arch and Mutombo fouling out . Mourning was pulled from the dlsqualUcatlon of Mutombo, who
- with 2:04 to play Monday night, · )ineup because of the Injury to hls was uhstopi)able when be got the .
the 18th-rated Hoyas tell65-56 to . left foot. M11tornbo ~as tried to. ball. "We had been going Inside :
Vlllanova.
· cover tor Mournings loss and to him, It had a significant
. lnother:gamesMondaylnvolv- . plledupl8~potnts , ntnerebounds . bearlng(onthegame~."
,
lngrankedteams: No. 41ndlana and six blocked_shotsfagalnst ·
"it was a tremendous lJft to
survived a 1care In a 65-62 victory Vlllaaova.
- ·
- _foul out their best player, " said
at Purduei ninth· ranked Duke
But ~arc Dowdell drew the Dowdell.
BJ'.JOBNIIBM)BL

Reforitt .bill hUrts -wro~g people Jack Anderson ··

The Daily Sentinel
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,Pege-2-The Deily Saudnll '
Pomtroy-Mkld'aport. Ohio
Tu•clay, _J......, 16, 1991 _

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Georget()wn falls in 65-56 Big &amp;.st bout ~th Villanova

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POMEROY
COIIPLII;TEII FIB8T DAY - · Shown leavl~l Heberle
Blemeatarr llebool ID . ClaeiDDatl, fonner Cincinnati Redl

a-

maaapr Pete
completed hla ftrst dq ol communlt;r aervtce
.._.. er+•n&amp; 1)'111 teacher at Heberle, wbere be will teaeb fortbe
lllltl '~~'eel- Be-ll required to Mrve 1,180 boun of commaalty
-,rce • pari of h .. ~nlence for tax ~raud. (UPI)
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992·6687

H&amp;R BLOCK
611 lAST.1111

.11
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r.u
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H2·66.7C

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· 1und1¥• .lani*Y 16, 1991

11.1881

Bulls top Qucks ll0-97 to stay
in first in NBA Central Division
IIJIIdld Pre. bt .......
The Mllwaullee Buckl ·ran up a1alnst ScOttie
Pippen and IOr'oe contnmirslal calla, and they
had no defeue qalut either.
Pippen IICOJ'I!d 23 polntl, all but three In the
second bait, and Jay HumJ)brles wu hindered by
foul trouble In lbe third quartl!r Monday night as
tbe Bucb tell 110-97 to the Chlcaao Bulls.
Humpbrles picked up two quick personal fOuls
In the third Quarter, and finished with two points.
He entered _the game averaging 16.5 points per
. . . game.
·
''riley bad to be good calli especially rlflllln
front of the Milwaukee beiiCh;" ChlcJlgo h'ad
coach Phil Jackson ·said.
.
·
Milwaukee assistant Frank Hamblen
• disagreed.

''It's another night In the NBA," he said.
"You have to plsy above It;" Chicago's Michael
Jordan said. "'lbey're (officials) human. U we'd
lost, we'd probablybesaylngsomethlngaboutlt."
Chicago, which entered the game In first place
with a balf·game lead over both Detroit and
Mllwav..kee In the Central Division, won Its sixth
stralili{ game and 14th oflts lastl6. However, !he
Pistons stayed close .with Its 119-81 victory over
Dalla_s Monday. The loss was l !. e fourth straight
for the Bucks.
. -~
''We'll bounce back," Mllwauki!e's Jack Slkma
said. "We're a tougb 'team. The depth Is much ·
· greater than It has been In the ])481." ·
.
Jordan scored 34 points, marking the lOth game·
he has totaled at least 30, white Pippen overcame
a slow first half by deciding to freelance a little.
"I came out more aggressively on offenae,"
Pippen said. "I was looking for-my shot more. In
the first half, I didn't really get myself going In the
game.

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Beat /of
the .Bend..

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''I wu playlq a little more ODI-OD:ODt (In the
second half), looklq for my shot mon," be said.
. ' 'The 0111y way I wu aoingto Jetmy~eltgolngwu
to iel In the flow more." .
"Scottie definitely 10t more acttve," Jordan
said.
"Pippen reallY got away from ua In the aecol)d
half," said Hamblen, speaking on behalf of head
Coach Del Harrll, who hu a bad cold. "He
(Pippen) was a real thQm In our 11des."
·
In other 1ames, Detroit topped Dallal 89-81,
Atlanta defeated New York 9&amp;-82 and tbe Los
Ang'eles Clippers dOwned Ho1ilton 1.30-126 In
overdme1
1'11111• •· Maverlckl 81 - At DaliU, Vlnllle
Johnlou scored 10 points In !he fourth quarfl!r and
· Denali Rodman choked off a ·MaveTickl comeback wllh a follow ah&lt;it at !he two-mlilute mark,
brlnilni •tbe Plstona their lOtb stralpt win.
Dallal lost for the third stralibt time and suffered
Ill alxtb setback In !he lsst eight James. ·
Bawkl . , XaJeb a - At Atlallla, Domlnlque
WUklnS scored 26 points and pulled down 16
rebounds and Kevin W!Uis contributed 17 points
and 12 boards, glvlni !he Hawks !heir eighth win
In 10 games. The victory avenged a defeat to the
Knlcks In New York two days earlier. Moaes
Malone, who played his 1,0001h conaecudve game
without fouiJng out, added 16 points for Atlanta.
Qlpfen ISO, Roelleta 1M (0'1') - At Los
Angeles, Ken Nonnan scored five of bls 31 points
In overtime and Wluton Garland sanllslx tree
throws In !he flnal30 seconds to help tbe Clippers
snap a two-game loeing streak. Vernon Maxwell
paced the Rockett-with a career-blgll34 pobits but
went scoreless In overtime. Sleepy Floyd added
'21.

By
Bob
Hoeflich

of . .a photo or some of lhe panicipants
~ a
!he voluoteer oqinizalion which . recent response to a one ear acci.· does such ID CJ~cellent job in belp- dent 011 Route 33. In the opening,
ing In inany ways 8l the instiwtion the article swes:
- COillinuel to move towards the
"Thanks 10-lheir quiet l'elpOIIse, .
realizaljoo of lhe 51739 needed for outstanding patient usessmeni and ·
· its recent project of providing a teamwork in rescue IIIJd transport,
· : widD-saeen IV set for residents of this 69-year"()ld patient survived
' !he Skilled Cart Facllity.
her ,life,threatenint injuries. · .
~ Faithful Followers Class of · According to lhe account, Linda
!he Hemock Grove Church of Diddle, · a vetmn voluillcer
Tiffany McDonald
Christ bas ~ $lOS to !he limd paramedic of the Racine Squad,
drive bringing the ptesent total to was with bet unit on another call ·
$1,453.
when a report of lhe accident came
CBrrie Kennedy, active membet over the radio. Since the accident
.
Tiffany · Kaylee
McDonald
of the group, bas penned personal was ncaroy, Unda was chopped off
nOiel to all of lhe individuals and 8l the scene to do whal sbe could
celebrated her first · birthday
rcq:ntly at the home of her
. organizalions helping • with the until the Pomeroy Unit arrived. Sbe
R.N., far left, Is Opal Dyer, Star Grange, CWA,
GRANGES PRESENT TOYS • AD Melp
grandparents, Danny and Judy
• projccL
.
found the vehicle had goQe out of
director for tbe activity. Others pictured are, 1-r,
County Granaes apln IIIII year presented toys
. Tile deservins group really ap- control mi the road's gravel
McDonald.
.
lo V~ Memorlll Hospital for use by its · Emma Adams, Racine; Mary Easterday, Racine;
A "Baby Minnie MouSe" theme
predates your support. On their be- shoulder and rolled down a five
Helen Quivey, Hemlock; Bernice Midkiff, Star;
youag patients. Granges contributing were $tar,
· half, Thank You.
. · · foot cn:et bed onto iiS passenger
was carried out.
·
Dorothy Bolin, Star; Barbara Fry, Rock
HarrisonvDie,
·
Helialodl,
Racine
and
Rock
Cake, ice cream·, chips and pop
side in six to eight inches of water.
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Sprlnp. Presentlna a toy lo Rhoilda Dailey, . -Springs; and Anna Halliday, Star.
Local residents continue to take
-The· victim, awake and alert but
were served.
.
Attending
wei'!'
her
mother,
advantage of·the heart disease care ' complaining of sev~ pain. .had
Mindy McQonald, her uncle,
and treatments afforded by Colum- parts of her body ptnned: Linda
Danny McDoftald, h~ aunt, ~gie
bus hospill!ls - and we have come knew . there would probably be
McDonald, Tommy and Shtrley
. such along way with that.
.
serious i!ljuries so she radioed to
Mrs.
Carol
Moore, were K.Qthryn DieiZ, Belpre; Bill, Simmons, Melanie Dudding, T.T.
Olarles Ltgar,; fooner Pomeroy put LifeFlight on staaidby. · Linda , Nina Boston and .Patricia Eagle and
mayor, underwent emerge!IC)' sur- began prilper procedures and within visited wilh Mr. and Mis. Steve Ravenswood, W.Va. to the Coxes Nancy and Katie DieiZ, Columbus; Dee, Thomas, Tyler. and Trista
and Jay, Kay and Courtney Long, Simmons, Kathy and Amanda Jefgc:ry at .Grant Hospital 011 Saturday four minutes the Pomeroy Rescue Boston and family, Middletown, recently,
recently.
·
Mr
and
Mrs.
Denver
Weber
and
Vincent.
and Dick F'mlaw, former Pomaoy team arrived and ~ Clltricalion
fers, Ted and Marge Cremeans, Lee
Mr. and Mrs. David Weber,
Visiting with Chester, Teddy and and Gallipolis businessman, was of the patient UfeFilght was called
Morris, and great grandfather,
returned to his home on Sunday fol· in from Columbus. The rescue team Lori Mundry during lhe holidays Morgan and Erin, were Christmas
Theodore Cremeans.
lowing ueaunent 8l a Columbus had a scare when gas fumes and were Charles and Grace PriCf:, dinner guests of ~- and Mrs. OsSending gifts were Sharon Wise
hospital. Others having ftlCCIIUy water began to fill the car. The trip Long . Bouom; j?:velyn Mondry, car Weber and Chloe of Keno.
and Mr: and Mrs. Gerald Shuster.
Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Balderson
un&amp;:qone treatment ,or ~ ;to Veterans Memorial by the Mike and Kelly ' Cunningham,
proc:Cdures at the Columbus
Pomeroy Unit coincided {!C!fectly Columbus; and · Kevin, Angie, visited with Mr. and Mrs. Jay Long
CoUrtney, Vincent. on
stitutions' include Clyda . Al· with' the arrival ·of LifeFhght lind Sandy and Kevin Powe~. Vincent; and
.
lensworlh; Louise Heines, Margmet. .'ibe ' patient was loaded '.into !he and Donnie Marshall, L1nle Hock· Christmas day.
Amanda Jeffers, daughter of Mr.
.·.
Mr. and ' Mrs. David Webet and
and Mrs. John Jeffers, Albany,
Bailey and ,Cornelius Phillips. This helicopter. T1,le patient ~~ eight ing.
Visiting their parents, Mr. and daughr.ers visited over !he holidays
many I know 'about and probably days . m !he Grant Intensive Care
celebrated her third birthday
!here are others.
·
Unit before beiDa able to be retur- Mrs. Emest Whitehead, during the with. her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
recently.
.J
ned to the Cl[tended care facility at holidays were Jane Hensch and Vaughan Taylor, Dayton.
.
Attending were Mrs. Mildred
Mrs. Nell Wilson visited With
Bill Stuckey staged a ple8sant Veterans Memorial Hospital and sons, Eddie and Matthew, North
Jeffers, paternal grandmother;
social affair 8l Royal Oait Resort sbe since bas been returned to her Canton; Mr. and Mrs. Walt (Juli)· Mr. and · Mrs. Clwles tongrove
Betty Longstreth, Mr. and Mrs.
Hensch and children, Lisa and Jor· and family of Zanesville, and Mr.
Lan,nr. Longstreth and son, Corey,
Sunday a&amp;moon at which time home.
dan, ~ Fulton; Jean Frydman . and Mn. Robert Sams ~ family
high tributes were paid to Dorochy
The anicle conclUtles:
Mr. and Mrs. Danny MacDonald,
and
daughter
Sarah,
Evanston,
lll.
·of
Weston,
W.Va.,
dunrg
the
Angie
and Danny Jr., Mindy Macand Horace Karr who built the
"Special ~~ for this run needs
resort, ~eeently ~ by to go to .both EMS units and 'lhe Sarah remain~ for·a visit until her holidays.
Donald and Ttff~y. Melanie Dud·
Mrs. . Lona Chevalier spent
Family · Resort. lilc. · of · which hospital ER Slllff. From the moment school resumed in January. . .
ding, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Sim·
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Westfall at- Christmas day with Mr. and Mrs.
StuckeY is vice presidenL . It's ·a they made the deCision to drop
· mons, Thomas, Tyler .and Trista,
tended
the 43rd wedding anniver- Roy Reed and family, Thppers
teally " nice / facility for Meigs Linda at the sceQC .until IIIey
Mr. lind . Mrs. Tommy Simmons,
County and ii one of two five-star released the patient to us, they .did sary of Mr. and Mrs .. V.C. Cox at Plains.
maternal grandparents.
Visiting with Lyle and Ruth
parks in Ohio. The Rev. Carl Hicks. everything appi'DJJriate_ for; her sur- New · Cumberland, W.Va. The'·
Sending gifts were Theodore
.Amanda Jeffers
who serves IS pastor 8l the resort vival. . Beeause of !hell'· teamwork Westfall's also accompanied Mr. Anile Balderson during the holidays
Cremeans, Jack and Monna Martin.
was on hand for prayer. The ·Rev. and rapid acdon w~ were able to o_f.
Mr. Hicks is marking his 60th • · .. fer dus patient immediate ~ m
niversary in lhe ministry · be's such the most prompt manner posstble."
a pleasant addition to any gather•
Now, that should make you feel
a dry eye In the house." DUring
By Unbed PreM International
ing.
·
especially good about our EmerOfficers were announced at the review by saying that "The Celts"
Its seven-year run, "Mary Tyler
- gency Medical services.
recent
meeting of the MiddleP?£1 is the story of Northern European
JED'S MAID DEPORTED: Moore" created three spin-off
We KNOW the eme'l!eiiCY and
Literary
Club held at the Mid, cuiiUral ancestors whose language
So it's January 15th- the Persian President Bush's son, Jeb, . Is shows and won a record 29
Teseue squads of the Meigs County
dleport I,.ibrary with 14 members · is still spoken by more than two
· Emergency Medical Services are Gulf deadline. Not
the looking for a maid who's a legal Emmys.
and one guests, Mrs,. Sonny Wise, million people in Brittany, ScotROWAN'.S JOHN HANCOCK:
developn~C!J,IS
in
Ibis
point
in
ume
it U.S. resident. A ma~ who had
good. Howevu, did you know that
;
attending. Mrs. Dw1ght Wallace land, Ireland and Wales.
two of the units were featured in a would 1!0 'ait:tremely frivolous for worked at Bush's Miami home Syndicated Washington colum· was the hostess.
Mrs. George Hackett Jr. presided
double pal!_e ~ of lhe winter is· me to advise:' you to Keep Smilinl!· tor three years was deported nlst carl Rowan may have a case
Officers for October 1991 to at !he business meeting in which
slie of LifeFiight J,.og , in Colum- I won't do 111at · but I do hope It back to her natl~e Honduras .ofwriter'scramp.Lasqnonthhe May 1992 are Mrs. Bef!llllll Fu~tz, roll call was answered with each
signed .~.800 copies of his .~'fie- president; Mrs. Carl Horky, VIce member bein~ asked, "Is my . an·
bus?
. · turns out that you will have a great . Thursday.
Bush
was
out
jogging
when
molrs,
Breaking Barriers, In president; Mrs. Dwight Wallace', cestry Celtic?'
deal
to
smile'
about.
.
·
.
'I1KI feaaure story, complete with
•
Immigration agents shawed.· up · · 11 hours and 38 minutes during ,a secretary; Mrs. Wendell Hoover,
Mrs. Chester Erwin gave a btief
so his wife, Columba, had to deal two- day period at K·Mart s
insight of her life so tlie members
treaslll'er.
With them. ''She Indicated, 'Yes, world headquarters In Troy,
Mrs. Carl Horky reviewed the could become better acquainted
she works here, • brought the lady Mich., and K-Mart plans to book "The Celts" by Gedtard
with her.
•
out and the two agents showed distribute the autographed books
· The hostess served refreshments.
·
Henn.
her' !he deportation order," said to civic and polltlcall~aders. The
In her review, Mrs. Horky. stated
Richard
Smllh
director
of
the
book
outlines
Rowan
s
rise
from
win
meet
Wednesdar
at
7:30
p.m.
that !he story takes place in the year
ComlnUDity Calendar Items
INS's Miami olflce . . "She said, poverty to his relations ~llh civil
appelll' two daJII before u eftllt at the church: Kathenne Brown will 'Yes, I've been expecting that."'. rights leaders and presidents and 2000 and is an ep1c story of Nor·
manage~
them European civilizalion thal
and the dliy of tlult event. lteml be the hostess.'
Smith said the maid had used up , he also addresses problems with rivaled Greece and Rome for rich. must be ll'Ctlml Ia advance to ·
Carolyn Bradford, Cherry Ridge
RUTLAND · · Leading Creek all of her appeals In the lmmlgra· American education, health and ness, diversity and power. '?riginat· Road, Pom110y, bas been appoinJcd
IIIUre publlcallon Ia the W,n·
Conservancy District's Ol'ganiza· tion judlclalliearlng process and human service~, racial attitudes. ing with fiert:e naked wamors who . to Business Development Manager
dar.
tional meetina and regular meeting "It wu dme for her to delJilrl."
collected enemy beads ils war
GLIMPSES: Prince Charles trophies, the Celts eventually made at Bank One of Alhe111, N.A.
to be held on Wedllesday at9 a.m. Bush called the feiJ]owing day to
. )'VESDAY
"
Mrs. Bradford is • 1961 graduate
make sure that the woman had and Prln~essDiana· are bound for their influence felt from the Middle
POMEROY· The Drew.Webster at the office.
of
Ohio University, a 1983 graduate
Czechoslovakia
In
May
.
been deported safely. "He lndl·
East to the Atlantic. Mrs. Horky of the Ohio UnivetSity Scllool!of
Post No. 39 of the American
cated they had no problem with
TIIURSDAY
.
went on to say that they brought Banking and a 1990 p-aduatc of the
Legion will meet Tuesday 8l 7 p.m.
I'OMEROY • The Meigs County the two agents coming to the
with them a unique culture and Kent State Universtty School : or
Dinner will be seiYed. The meeting
mythology and a style of art con- Consilmer Credit.
will honor Hugh Custer, retired Democratic E1&gt;ecutive Commiuee house," Smith said. "They were
·
sidered the greatest achievement
Vetenns Service officer for his 12 win meet Thursday 8l 7:30 p.m. at only concerned the lady got home
She
joined
Jfank
One,
Athens,
north of the alps after the Ice Age.
years of se~Yice to Meigs County !he Carpenter's Hall in Pomeroy. safely. After three years, she
N.A. in 1981 as ·an Assistant
kind
of
came
to
be"'
part
of
the
The
public
is
invited
to
attend.
Mrs. Horky concluded her Cashier and Customer Contact
veterans.
family. · We obviouSly verified
Officer. In 1983 she was appoilitcd
POMEROY • The Trinity Youth that and they're !julie happy."
POMEROY
The Ladies
to Branch Administration Officer
MORE . MA·RY TYLER
Auxiliaty o( the F.O.E. will meet Fellowship will meet . Thursday at
and overlooked lhe operation of :10
4:30 p:m. at the churcli. The meet- MOORE: The cast of the vener·
Thesday at 7 p.m.,
·
w.T. English, son of B!U and Bank One locatlo111 in Athens,
ing will conclude 81 6:30 follo~g ated "Mary Tyler Moore" show
Becky English, was recently Meigs,
Hocking and Perry
will gather for an hourlong
diitner.
WEDNESDAY
deployed to the Persian Gulf in the Counties. ·
special on CBS Feb. 18 to mark
POMEROY • There win be a
Middle EasL
•
Prior to joining lite banlc she suRACINE
The
Racine
American
the show's 20th anniversary.
financial aid workshclp in the Meigs
Cards IIJ!d letters may be sent to pervised 14 women's apparel stores
High SchOOl Library on Wednesday Legion Post: 602 will meet Moore will be the hostess and the .
MM3 English, M-Division, USS for Sax Fifth Avenue and Joseph
at 7 p.m. Representatives from the Thui:sday at 7:30 p.m. for its show will feature clips from the
Blue Ridge LCC-19, FPO San Magnin StoiCS in Northern Califgrpast and appearances by co-stars
University of Rio Grande and from regular meeting.
nia.
•
Francisco. Calif. 96620·3300.
'E d Asner, Betty White, Valerie
Bank One win be presenL
MIDDLEPORT • The Mid· Harper, Geol'l(la Encle, Clorla_
SYRACUSE - The Third Wed• dleport Child CODJerVation 4ague Leaclimu and Gavin MacLeod.
Thunday 8l 7 p.m. 8l the · •'ThtS has got to be the all-time .
nesday ' Homemllkers Club will will •
meet Wednesday at 10 . a.m. in Rock Springs United MetiKJc!ist best reunion ever," Moore says.
Syracuse. The . project will be 'ChUrch. Guest speaker will be "We loved the show and each
W.T.Enlllah
Wendy Halar. Sbe will present a other so much that therewon'tbe
maaamechails.
·.
program on chilcben with spe&lt;:ial
h
.
. MIDDLEPOIIT • Group 2 o,f the m;eds.
!I!
· , Middleport Presbyterian Cliurch •
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The' Women's

Auxiliary

Vett:ranS MemUial Holpital- that's , in the puticular inciden&amp;;

- McDonald birthday

Family members meet------

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EWING DRIVEs- New Yorkpoetman Patrick
Ewtnc (33) drives p""l Atlllllla lower Jon Konen
•'

--~--.

(32) for a layup Ill the. second q'uarter Of Mond&amp;J

nJcht'e NBA cune at Allllllla's Omnl, which the
Hawke ~OD 16-81. (UPJ)

Granger holds lead in $175,000 Showboat Invitational

LAS VEGAS (UPI) - Purvis
Granger ·of Columbus, Ohio,
grabbed the first-round lead
Monday In the Professional
Bowlers Association $175,000
' Sllowboat Invitational.
Granger holds a 36-pln lead
over Ron-Palombi Jr. of Erie, Pa.
, ,Granger Is IQOklng for. his first
PBA title. Palombi Is the reign-

lng U.S. Open champion.
One-time tltllst Tony Cariello
of· Carol Stream, lll., holds the
third spot. Cariello, who's win
came In 1985, toppled 1,818'plns.
Seven· time winner Randy Pederson of Santa Marla, Calif. , sits
In the fourth posltfon with a 1,801
plnfall total.

Scoreboard ...

PBA Hall of Farner Marshall
Holman of Medford, Ore., rounds
out the top five. Holman, a
thlrd·place finisher last week,
scattered 1,792 pins. He finished
seeond liere last year.
,
This Is the 32nd annual Show·
boat Invitational with the winner
taking home $34,000.

-People in the news

Loyola (Md. I 84, Navy 77
Maine 79, Fairfield 76
Manhattan' 90, CoJaate 68

Masa.-Bostcm 77, Clark 72

Momnoulh 90, Robert Morris 84

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the NUL...

(O'J')

Wala Colllereace
Pllirl&lt;k Dlvloloa
T"""'
W L TPio.GFGA
N.Y. Raqgers .....2615 759180148
PlttJburgh .. .......24 ~ 3 51 200'171
Philadelphia ..... .22 21 6 50 159156
Now Jeroey ....... .l919 9 47172163
Wuhlnrtoo ... :.... 2123 2441150150 ·
N.Y. lslaoders .. .16 23 6 Jlj U7 155
· &lt;\d...,olllvlo...,
Bostm ...............24 15 8 ~ 166151
Montreal... ........ .24 IB 5 !!J 152143
Bullalo .......... ....18 17 10 46 158146
Har~onl .: .. ........19 22 5 43'1331M
Que be&lt; ..............10 29 8 28134 207
Campbell Coaflftoee
NonltDivlo ...
TWLTPto.GFGA
Chlcaio ............ :. 3114 3 65162 124
St. Lou!• ............ . 2513 7 57 163 132
Detrolt... ............. 22 20 5 491110 165
Mlnneoota ........... 12 'rT 832140167
Tormto ............... 12 30 4 28130 190 ·

J

Smythflllvl....,

..
,.

...
'.

••

..
'•

.,.
..
•

,.

,.,.
•'

Los Angeles ........ 2614 55~ 186143
Calpry .... .......... 24 17 s 5J 187 146
Edmmton ........... 2120 2 44142140
Vancouver .......... 18 25 4 40149177
Winnipeg ............ 14 26 8 36151173
MoadQ'• fta.ala

Bootm 6, Detroit 1
Buffalo 9, Tormto 3
Lo!l Angeles 6, New JerSPy 1
Toate:bl'a camet
Bo1ton at N.Y. I!llanders. 7:35

p.m.
Edmontm at N.Y. Rangers, 7:35
p.m. '
.
.
Plttsbu l!rh at P~lladelp~la, 7: J5

p.m.

Mont~al at Minnesota , 8: 35p.m .
Wuhlngtm at St. Lollis, 8: 35
p.m.
Winnipeg at Calgary, .9:35p.m.
Wednflllay'a 1ameo
Los Angeles at HarUord, 7: 3~
p.m.
.
Det mit at Buffalo, 7~ 3:'i p.m.
. Chicago at NewJeney, 7:f5p.m .
WlnniP£'1 at Vancou\ler, 10:35
p.m.

In the NBA."
Eute;ll Co.tereBICf
Atlutlc Dlv'llloa
Team
W LPOI. GB
Bolloil ..... ............ 29 6 .829
Philadelphia ...... .. 2214 .611 · 1\\
WashlngtCII .......... I~ 18 .455 13
New Yorlt ... , ........ 15 19 .441 IJ\\
!'lOW JerEy ........ .. 10 24 .291 181\
Miami ................... 9 26 .2~7 20
~atnl

I

J

•
••

•

•

'I

•

,.

.-

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Dlvlololi
Chlcaao .. ............. 2610 .722
Detrolt ................. 2611 .703
Mllwaukee ........... 2512 .676 II\
Atlanta ......... ..... .. 20 15 . ~71 ~I&gt;
lncllana , ............... u 21 .400 II)&gt;
Charlotte ............. 1122 .333 131\
Oeveland ............ 11 25 .30~ 15

*

Wea~~era

C.ldereace
Mid-I Ill......
T•am
W L Pd. GB
Ban An tonio ......... 24 8 .7150
Utah ............. ....... 2tl2 .667 2
HOIUtCII .. ........... .. 1917 .528 7
Dallu .................. t2 22 .353 13
MJnnosota.. ....... ... 1122 .333 13)&gt;
Orlando ........ :...... 10 26 .27S 16
'Denvor ................. 1 28 .200 18!&gt;
Padle lll•lsloa
Porlland .............. 31 . 7 .816 ..,.
PhiiOtllx ............... 23 11.676 . 6 •
L.A. Lakora ......... 2211 .667 6\&gt;
Gqlden Slate ........ 1816 -~29 11
S..ttlo ................. l518 .455 131\
LA. Qlpprn ....... 13 24 .351 17)&gt;
sac:ramento .......... 8 25 ,2n 201\

•....,,.......

Atlanta 911, New Yorlt 82
. Chlc,.io 110. Mllwaullet! 97
Del roll 89, !Jolla&amp; 81 ·
.,
L.A. ClipPers 130, Houlton 126
(OT)
.

Toool&amp;bl'o pmoo
Golden State at New Jeroey, 7:30
p.m.
.
.
Atlanta at Indiana 7:30p.m.
Orlando ar Miami, 8 p.m.
Portland at Mlnneso1a. 8 p.m.
, San Ant CillO II Utah, 9:30p.m.
WashJngtCII at Phoenix,9: 30p.m.
DenYPr at Seattle. 10 p.m.
Charlot !I! at L.A. ,Lakers, 10:30
p.m.
IJ'odafl&lt;ioy'a 1om'"
Golden State at Bostm, 7:30p.m.
Miami at Cleveland, 7: JO p.m.
Minnesota at New Yorlc, 7;30

p.m.

Chicago at Orlando, 7:30p.m.
Indiana at Milwaukee, 8:30p.m.
Dallas 11 San Antmlo, i: 30 p.m.
Charlotte at Denver, 9:30p.m.
Washlngtm at L.A. Clippers,

!0:30p.m.

UPieoU.
basketball ratings
NEW YORK \UPil-·TheUnlted
Preis International Board of
COaches' Top 25 coUege basketball
ratlnp, with f~rlt-place- vote!l and
~rorda throogh Jan. 13 In paren·
theses, total points 1based on 1~
pdals for:- tlrat pLa~. 14 for second.
etc.) and previous week' s ranking:
I. UNLV 1121 ill·Oi ............630 I
2. Arkansas tl5-1) .............. .574 2
3. Ohio State U4-1Jl .......... ."..!H3 4
4. Indiana UHI ................ .509 ~
5. North Carolina (lJ.l) .. .... 456 5
6. Arizona t13·2t ................. 405 6
7. UCLA t13.2t ................... .295 7
8. Syracuse 114·21 ............... 257 8
9. Duke 112·3) .. .................. 24811
10. St . John's 111·2) ............. 23510
II. Oklahoma !13-2! ...... :..... 21912
12. Conne&lt;!lcut 112-21 .. .......... 100 9
13. Nebraalca 116-1) .. ........ , .. 96 it
14. Pittsburgh 114-J) ............ 9316
1~. VIrginia 11(1.3) ............... 7015
16. EasiTeanesoeeSt . ll2-ll 6717
17. Louisiana State (1(1.3) .... 5~ 19
18. Georgetown (1(1.3) ......... . t813
. 19. Now M•xlco State ill· II . 3718
20. Southern Mississippi .IIII) ........ .... ........ ,. ............ ..... 33 23
21. Seton Hall(lO.Ji .......... 13 NR
22. !tiel Utah 115-l) .. .. ....... 12 NR
22. ttl•) s. Carolina tl2-3l ... 12 21
24. New Orleans 113-2)' ...... 11 NR
25. Wyominl (13-2) ..... ....... 10 NR
Nil - aol IUked
Others recf!'lvtng vote!l: Ala·

bema, Georata Tech. Iowa, Kan·
sas, Mtchlpn Stat~. New Mexico,
North Carciina State, Southwest·

ern Loulalana, Texas-D Paso.

Note : By, a.,.emeat with the
National Au«lallc.a of'BAiketball
Coachea oftheUnl~d State1, teams
on probation by the NCAA and
lnellilble lor the NCAA Tournament are tneU&amp;tble for Top 25 and
national champlonlhlp consldera·
lion by the UP!' Boord of Coach•.
Tho., schools are IllinOis, kentucky. Marshall, Maryland, Mli·
soort, Northwest Louisiana and
Robert Morrts.
'\

Monday's eoUese .
batketball reauha
EatI
Bartlesville-Wesleyan 84, Friends
82 lOTI
Baruch r.l, NYU 84
Bucknell 78, Md. BaiUmore Co. 56
Calllomll (Pa.) 120, MIErleordla
64
Carnegt .. Mell&lt;lt st. EmOIY 77
Cheney 62, Widener 54
Coppin St 87, Md. Eutt!rn Shon!63
Dominican 97. Sr. Jo.,ph'S (N.Y.)

72

.

DowU111lOL West Chet"'r 91
EAst Stroudsbur, 100. Uncoln 18
Gl..,vllle 109, Columbia Unim 81
Holy CI'•IJ, AasumpUon 70

.... 90, 81- 75
John Jay II, Albertus Mopus 77

!'JDP Polllt 5I; NY MoriUm• 51

'

MI. St Mary's 8~. St. Francis (N.Y.)
81
Point Park 711, Houghtm 62
Potldam 71, Corlland 63

87
.
James Madison 73, NC-Wllminl!1on
69t0Tl
Lafayetr 73, Miami 1Fla . ! 57
Lam~r 79. McNl'ese St. 72
Loutsvtlle 79. Tulanl• i:~
Mobile 85. Dillard 71
Murray St . 70, Middle Tennessee
· St. 66 .
NE Louisiana 66, Nortllwes tern Sl.
65

Radlonl 80, Winthrop 78
Randolph-Macoo 73, Roan die 56
Rldlmood 85. Charlelltllll !S.C.) 54
South Carollno St 85, Bethune
Cookman 74
St. J&gt;aul's 72, Bowie State 68
Tenn. Wslyn. CoUege85. Tusculum
82
Tenn.-Chattanooga 73, Vlr,lnla
Military 67
Texas Southern 711, Grambling 73
Weolfrn Carolina 93, Marshall9t
lllllweol ·

Al&lt;rm 67, Nonhern Iowa 56
Benotllctloe College 119, Bethany
College88
Blackburn 100. Principia 88
Carthaae 75, Rocklonl65
Cleveland St. 93, Western Dlino!J 72
Drake87, SW Misoout1 st . 85
Gusta~us 82, RamUne 62
Illinois Sl. 56, Indiana St. ~5
Indiana 65, Purdue 62
MI. Vernm Nazarene 97, Kenyon 77
Norlhrldie St 109, NE llllnolo·82
St. Thoma 72.St.John'stMinn.)69
Valparallo 58, Wb.·Green Bay 55
Wuhlnatm \Mo.)90, Haverlord43
.Wincm St. 74, St Xavier IDI. 162
Wls.·Mtlwaukee74, YounastownSt .

72

.

8oolllw•l ·
Arkansas· Utile Rock 68, Bamford
53
'
East New Me.too 109, O.ntral St. 79
Hendrix 83, Hardl111 80
·
Stoplien AusUn 74, Nicholls St. 67 ,

Texas AAI\t 103, C..ntenary 112

Woal
Air r • ..,. 73, Do•n• 65

Transactlona ..
1
Mln-.U - - ....
SI..,..S
pli&lt;hors
Pau I Abbott, Tom Edena and Bart
Peter-. thlnl buemon Terry
Jo,...., ..., ou~lolder J .T. Bruett
llld lint .....111011 Joey Mey&lt;!r to
l·year.....,..cta.

.........

Charlottl! - PlaC«! ' forward ·
Ke""y Glttlom OD IDjured list;
slped forward Earl CUretm to' a
10-day Contract.

. 1991 ,officers elected

knowin'

Rhode lsland97,St. B:&gt;naventure79

Scrantm 10.. Lycom1111 60
St. Francis (Pa.) 82. Wagner 58
VIllanova 65, Georgetqwn 56
William Pat!l!rtOifllJ, Stmy Brook
78
Worcester Tech 87, Suffolk 70
Soodh
Alabama St. 88, Alcorn St. 66
Alder101·Bi'addus82, Falnnont St.
73
Augusto 80, NC·Ashevllle 68
Auotln Peay 86, Bradley 76
Coastal Carolina 86, Charleston
!S.C. ) 70
Davldsm 59, Campbell 53
Delaware St. 87, Morgan St. 79
Duke 89. Wake Forest S7
East Tenne'uee St. 96, The Citadel
76
.
Elm83. Longwood 81 12 OTl
Ferrum 93. GuUionl 87
Florida AIIM 80, N. Carolina A&amp;T
73
Florida loti. 106. U.S. In!l.-94
Florida Sl. 69, St&lt;tJOO 64
Funnan 91, ,\ppalachlan St 87
George Masm 74, East caroUna 72
Geol'ieWuhlngton 65. Old Domln1011 55 .
Hampden·Sydney71, VIrginia Wesleyan 69
Ja ck1m St. 99; Southern 90
Jack1onvtHe 91, Western KPntucky

Birth&lt;iay celebration

BATI'LEFORPVCK-BoslonleftwiniJBI'ino
Kelt:alalnea (riChl) and Detroit's Brad Mc&lt;:rlm·
mon battle for the puck u Red Wine patle 'nm

In the NHL Monday night, ·• ··

'Cheveldae Jaolia oiJ dadq the fin&amp; period of
Monday nllh&amp;'a came In the lloslon Garden,
wblch the BruiM won ••· ( VPI)

·

.

Community calendar

.

Boston posts 6-l .win over Detroit
By FREDERICK WATERMAN
VPJ Sports Writer
The more you listen to the
Boston Bruins, the more they
start to s.ound like the Three
Musketeers.
The skaters In black and gold
k~p talking about self·S{Icrlflce
and playing /Is a team. They do
everthing but stand · up and
shout: "One for all and all for
one." But you wouldn't be
surprised If they did.
On Monday night, the Bruins
scored four power-play goals and
played a tight-checking game In
their 6-1 victory over the Detroit
Red Wings. It was the kind of
game captain Ray Bourque
expects.
"As Boston Bruins, we're supposed to show up every night and
play hard wlth a lot of enthusl·
asm," he said.
Glen Wesley, who registered
two goals and two assists, said,
"It's no secret, we don't have a
lot of talent on this team, which
means we've got to have all 20
guys work hard."
The Bruins, who led 6-Qearlyln ·
!he third period; extended !heir
Adllms ·Division lead to three
points over the Idle Montreal
Canadlens. Detroit Is winless Jn
Its last six. road games, manag·
lng justa 0~1 mark, and Is 4-14-5 .
this seuon In road games.
''We've had a couple of dr.ead·
fulgames on lheroadandtonlgbt
was one of .thi!IJ'!," said Detroit
coach Bryan Murray.
Also SCOrlni for Boallin were
Dave Chrlsdan, Bourque, Ken
Hodie and Crall Janney. Detroit
scored on Steve Y:rennan'a 31st
·goal, a short· handed Iaiiey that
ended Andy Moog'a lhUtol.ll
hopes at 3:08 of tbe third.
Boston jumped out to a 2-0'Jead
Ill&gt; the openln1 3: 29. Christian
scored h~ 23rd ot the seaaon at
2: 11, capitalizing on a power play
with a backhander . from !he
bottom of the left circle. Bourque
scored on another manadvantage opportunity 1: 18
later, with a low 50-foot slap shot.
''It's a tough way to play scramblJna to come from behind
against a teun like this, especlslly In their own bulldJna," said
Murray. "And they really fotechecked well."

Appointed

Boston added three goals In !he
York Islanders.
second period. Hodge's seventh. . In other eunes MOndaY night,
goal also came on a power play,. _· Loa Angeles r.outectNe.w- Jersey
37 seconds Into !he period, when
6-1 and Buffalo pounded :roronto
~-3.
the center, stancUng In the slot,
denected Bourque's wrist shot
"KI• I, DevUsl
from the left point. Janney's 15th · At East , Rutherford, N.J.,
goalboostedtheleadt\)•-Oduring Tomas Sandstrom scored a ~t
another man· advantage opportrick and the Kings won their
tunlty. BOurque's slsp shot from
seventh stralgl!t gune, keeping
the top of the slot was deflected the Devils winless In !heir last
and Janney. standing near the nine. W!!yne Gretzky added a
goal and two assist. and Tony
right · post, knocked the loose
puck behind goalie Tim Granato had tl-.ree asslstlforthe
Cheveldae.
Kings. Los Angeles' seven
Three minutes later, Boston straight wins are one shy olthe
scored Its first even-han~ goal. club record set In 1972-73. •
Sabres I, Maple Leafl s
Wesley, skating down ·tbe ~lot,
took BOb Sweeney's pass from
At Toronto, Pierre Turgeon
. the left post and one-timed the · and Alexander Mogllny Scored
puck past Cheveldae, who was two goals and had lhree·asslsts ·
. then replsced \IY Glen Hanlon.
apiece, leading !he Sabres. MoBoston's defense lfmlted !he gllny put on a virtual one-man
Red Wings to just three shots on show·Iii the second period when
goal In !he first period and he stole the puck, spun around
stymied Detroit on Its six power- and got It to Turgeon. The puck
play attempts.
was relayed til Dave Snuggerud,
Cam Neely, Boston's top who scored. Just over two
scorer, aggravated a tlght-l!nee . minutes later, . Mogllny a1aln
Injury and did not play after the forced a tumaver and moved the ·
flrlt period. Boa1Dn head coach puck to Turgeon, wh&lt;i wrlaled ItMike Mllbury said Neely would past Reese to make It 6-3.
"definitely" miss Tueaday Mogllny added a short-handed
night's game agalnat the New goal at 14: 38.

W.T. English,personal

Family Restaurant
'MasonLunch
Feature
•

•

•

Randall F. ~wklns, ·M. D.
•

Internal Medicine
•

Offtce Hours
Monday through Friday

9 a.m. -5

p.m.

:•

&gt;

Suite 13,
'
PVH Medical Office Building

~·

•

(304) 675-7700
'

Vdl/rf ~.l'tllnl Pl.atant, w. va. 25550 .
.'
/

......

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·• I

Pickens dinner
. ,.. held
-

.....

.•

'

· The ·annUal CluiSID1as buffet of · Wiff:, Warren ahd Lillian Pickens
the family of the late Harry Pickens for their e7&gt;change of gifts. The
wu held the Sunday liefm Pickens' were unable to attend the
Chrislmu 8l lhe home of Jlmest · buffet due to lhe iUness of Warren.
and Maxine Whitehead, Reedsville. He had jusf returned home from a
Gifts were exchanged following . Parkersburg hospital where he was
confined for . two weeks with
the meal. '
. Attending were Gladys and BiR pneumonia and complications,
Metedilh, Beverly; Roger llld Jeri
Maeclith, Vincent; lUi Meredith,
Colnmbus; .Mary Ruth DeLlmerins, Gallipolis; Joy Sauer,
By United Preu litterna&amp;lonal
Middleport; Jean ll1d Sarah Fryd·
man, Evanston, Dl.; Juli and Walt
,Hensch and children, Lisa and Jor. · Rep Henry Hyde, R· Ill., follow·
dan, Canal Fulton; Denver, Grace . lng Sec.r etary of State James
and Mark Weber; Qavid' IIIJd Deb- Baker's briefing ot CO!IIfl"l!lslonal
bie Weber and diaJhlers, Morpn leaders on the 111lf crisis: "We
are all together on lhll. There
and Erin, Reedsville.
During the eVening, . Mrs. wa8 a feeling that tl)ey OUihl to
Wlritebeed, Mrs. Weber and Mrs. let the commander In chief be the
Memlllb anc1 spona. drove to the commander In chief.... We just
Dellby ~"'0( their brother and walt and pray."

Quote of the Day

.

· Special Offer Good
Monday-Frid.1y, 11 a.m. to 4 p.m.
'

Mason Family Restaurant
•

Rt.33

(3041 773-5321

Mason, WV

(NEXT 10 MASON EXXON!

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· Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Page- 6-The Deily Sentinel

Revenge is not .always sweet

·A rea students_invited

to .participate· in contest
.·• 'Meigs County high school
students are invited to paniciparc in
die Mid-Ohio Valley chapten of
Software VaDey and Data l'roccssing Management AssocialiOn.
The purpose of die compclition
is to encomage high school
students to develop so~
programming allilities lmd to
tecoani&gt;.e their accomplishmeniS.
·EiiSible to partici are high
school smdents in
Jll:k·
$&lt;(in, Pleasants. Rin:hie, Roane,
TYler, Wirt and Wood COWities in
West Vuginia. and Athens, Meip.
Monroe and Washington COunties
iq Ohio.
· Each high school is to select on
student for the competitiOn, which
will be held at 8:30 a.m. on March
23 in the McDonough Building at
~etta College.

~un.

- . ..

Dear A~a Laaden: I reel
compelled to . comment on the

Military distributes · gas masks to Pale8tinians

orthOpedic hospital with a ae- you R able. Beaer to hl.ve done
neck injury. I've relived dill experi- IIOibin&amp; until you were in a position
~NLANDER!
advice you pve •Arielie" wl!o was eou doams of timca ia die ... few . to wape 10 a piKe of aafety.
•t...,IMA.......
Dear Ana Laac1en: My Iiiier
n .... ..,....__.
The contat wW fealllle a first · llpiCl when I 1111111 Ia die deYator- years and concluded that I had lJc!tn
en-... , ......
place award of $900 to die Sllldent. soapped her J&amp;lty bote while her an enabler. By biuing the ID8D fint, and I lave had 11101180'"1 clisap'eoA Mlcintosh systan to die student lllDS were full r:A ~a IUPPiies. I gave him the jusdfiCIIion, • least , mont~MC the definition of a cloile
8111H4SO to hia cr her billh school. She
felt lib allpping bini. in his tw~ !ftind. to~ mo up. of fresh garlic. 1 say One clove iS"
Second plate ia $SO() to tfle lhviM! You adviJccl bcr to go ahead and • I now live 10 1 small town and. one piece pulled off a bead of
and 5300 to the high school, wid! makcy 1 scene. ben
·' :·
· . yes, I still ride elcVIIOII, 11ut l'llla garlic. My sister says one clove is \IP86l IIOIIIICbs. Aristotle use4 it for
1 was young, lot 1110rc cautious. If a potaltial one bead ·
third place bing $300 to die student
~ •· w
anilllal biles. Albert Schweitzai:r uSed
and SISO to the high school. In con- foolish 111d unconcerned a~t panenaer loob IUipicious, 1 wait . Yesterday Sis was mikin&amp; it in Africa 10 treat infections.
junction with die competition, a periOIIII aafety, I fOIIDd myself 11 a for. the next elevator. - LESSON,· ipaaheui. The recipe ~ for six Garlic may nduce c:M(es•..ol, lower
free oae-day seminat on 'Iia'bo similar silllation in 111 ~with LEARNED IN ONEONTA, N.Y.
cloves or prtic. She had cut up six blood p:ean and improve circulaPascal for high ~~ehool sllldents my II1DS full of groc:erJQ. It -was,
DEAR. L.L.: An elevator is an heads of garlic:. enougb ·to take care lioo.lleCOIIIIIICIId it
with considerable .
in
broad daylight and I .was !"'tun:'~&amp; ideal place to get mqgged, rollbed of half of N~.
And what about friendships?
knowlcdge .in BASI~~ to my apattmenL I lived IR a ruce or f8PCd. An lllllhr need only press
I've had friends. and family call Chew 6ah sprq o( panlcy and
fmd Saiurday, January 26 from
buhenildinl~-~ ..~!t nothlclng or.thit the .stop llilllon l&gt;etwcen floors and -~bUt 1M will 1101 believe anyone. . ewrylhing will~ hunky.:ooty:..
8:30 a.m. until 4:30 p.m. at w
wauwuiOto...., evatorwl
keephisviclimawayfrQmdlealarni. . Sbc'H believe ym~, Ana, 10 please
·orugs art ewrywM,rt • .TM.y're .
Marietta College. The seminar is
a
11111!'
who
~
neatly
dressed
and
It
pays
to
be
111m.
If
you
get
on
aeute
it.
A
dinnc:(
iJ
at
italcc.
You
iasy
to get, lfiSJ to usi aiuJ even
limited to 30 Sllldents. Conducting
with several other passengers and haYe my permissioa to plint my easilr to 1111toolretl on. If you llave
the session will be Or. E. Robert weanng a yachlillg cap.
.
As
soon
as
the
elevator
door
they
get off, leaving you with a name .•• JOYCE SHANNON, qiiUiioluabqllidnArs,'ytiUMUAM
Anderson of Marietta College.
closed,
the
~
p~ccded
10
fondle
person
wh0$C looks you don't like, HAMPI'ON, GA.
Lturdt!rs' bookllt, "Till Lowdown on
Those principals interested in en~y
~·Thinking
I
could.
handle
it
is
best
to
get
off,
too.
And
do1101
DEAR
JOYCE:
You
·
win.
Dope.•
~IIIIa ~lf-oddrustd,long,
rolling students may call Dr. Anhun smce _we were appro!'~ly · attempt to use the stairs. You could Acoord8Jg to Webster's Third New blllilteu-W,. tttw/opl.aNJ ached:
derson at374-481S.
the ~e SIZC, I smacked hun ~n the meet the creep in lhe.Siairwell.
lnlel!lllional Dictionary, a clove is o,r _ , onler for $3.65 (tltl.r in·
'.
.
face. His only COIJU!IOIIl was, You
I agree with )'OlD' conclusion abolt "one r:A die lllllll aections developed cllldes poiiiJge aJid haNIIillgJ 10:
hurt me, now I'm gOing to hurt you:" having "ins\igated" the iutaclc that in a larJe bulb (as in garlic)."
Lowdown, c/o AM Ltwlers, P.O.

During the high court session,
JERUSALEM (UPI) - Is· an emergency situation Is de- ' _fDgh Court to rule on the
mllilary'a failure to distribute tM military ar1111ed that not
rael's fDp Court' ordered the clared," the spokesman aald.
gas maskS to the local Palesti- enough gas ma.s ks were ava!IA·
m!lltary to be8fndlstrlbut1nggas
Also· Monday hotels In Israel
ble and the territories were not
maskS to PaleiUDIIIIJ tn Israel's received gas masks for their nian population.
The appeal ·said Israel as the considered a potential target fo~
occupied terr\IOrles.
lllle$.18, Israel Radio said.
Judge Aharon Barak sharply occupying force bad responslbll· an lraql missile attack, Army
The ruling came Monday as a
tty for the welfare and safety of Radio said.
mJlltary spokesman advised Is·
crltlzed the muttary's decision
the. local population.
Israel has distributed sll\c-:
raeus .to prepare an airtight
not to distribute the protective
"Hence gas . mas~ must · be October approximately 3.5 mil·
room to be used In case of an
kit, calling It "a scandal," Army
dlstrlbu ted .. . according to the lion gas mas~ and protectlv~
Iraqi chemiCal missile attack.
Radio reporll!d.
· "In response to requests of the
. The High Court ruled that gas · same considerations as theY · kits to civlllans In urban a r eas.
Sunday, 900 chill defense cen·
·public the civil defense com· A masks must lle distributed tmml: were dlstrlbull!d to the Israeli
population,"
the
appeal
said.
ters
started distributing an addl·
mand advises tclllzens) to seal a 'if dlately to Arab adults In the
Military
sources
said
recently
ttonall
million masks and kits t9
room," ~lle spokesman ~lei. He
Jer!lsalem ~rey and settlements
180,000
kits
ball
been
purchased
Israel's
rural sector, l11cludlng
said such rooms should only be. · near Israel s-:1967 Green Line
for
distribution
among
Pales
tin!·
the
approximately
90,000 Jewisll
used In an .emergency situation;
border.
.
ans
In
the
West
Bank,
but
no
date
settlers
llvllig
In
the
lerrilorles,
"The advice Is given In order to · A resldentfrom the West Bank
Approximately
1
mUllon
Paleshad
been
set.
shorten preparation tlmein case· city of Bethlehem had asked the
tinians live In the occupied West
Bank.
Meanwhile, approximately
60,000 Jews gathered at Jerusa;
!em's Wallfng wall, the holiest
sile In Judaism, to pray for
Israel's safety.
.
"I can't say II wlll avert a war
bu 1 we hope and pray .to keep ·
DHAHRAN, Saudi ·'Arabia wallis about one week' after the day i' he said.
Israel secure and out of the war,"
Al-Sabah said he was "not
Invasion.
(UPI) - Iraqi authorities have
said 22-year old Boaz Stein.
''They stopped doing this . and given up hope of a. peaceful . . "It's tlrile all the Jews get
captured more than 10,000 Ku·
wattls to be , used as "huinan · then again they started two days solution" to tl)e gulf crisis despite · together and pour out their
ago taking Kuwaitis to be used as the failure of U.N. Secretaryshields" In case of a war, a
hearts and ask God, well yoil
human shields at Installations In · General Javier Perez de Cuel·
Kuwaiti official charged.
know, to help us out,'' he said'.': .
lar's peace mission to Baghdad.
Sheik All Al·Sabah, the gover- Ir&lt;&gt;q and Kuwait," he said.
Several Palestine Liberation
He alleged Iraq now has about "But I. don't think the Iraqi
nor of Kuwait's 011 Province,
Organizations factions distrlt&gt;
regtme wants that."
also said Monday more than half 10,000 Kuwaiti hostages.
ull!d leaflets Monday urglrii
He said Kuwaitllroops ...should · Palestinians to escalate .their
Saddam In December released
the Kuwaiti population !las fled
tlie country since the Aug. 2 hundreds of Western hostages take most of the casualties'' In
struggle In the territories .
~
'h'Vaslon by the forces .of Iraqi ·from the country, some of whom · case of a war. "It Is their country
"Our battle Is the same as the
had been kept at sites likely to be and their land." But he said he
President Saddam Hussein.
battle of Iraq; It's ihe battle· of
targeted by the u.S.-led mulllna. was not worried that an attack by
·He told a news conference
the Arab people." salda.leaflet ol
the allies would destroy his
tlonal force In a war .
Il'aql troops began seizing Ku·
the Popular front for the Libera·
country.
·
'
.
'
Al·Sabah, a member ·of the·
lion of Palestine. . ·
"We have already lost much
· ISRAELI SOLDIERS READY- Two Israelsoldlen wltii .M-16 '
· "We are at the same front as
Kuwait royal family , said thai
Infrastructure,"
he said. "We .• the I~aql people . We . have. the
rl0e8 walk put a battery of lfllwk anjl·•lrcraft m~llel on 8D
between 350, 000 and400,000ofthe
1sraell Air Force mlssUe base overlOOking tbe Jol'daa 'y,liiley as til~
· pre-invasion population ·of really don't have .f~~UCh more to . ability to defeat the imperallsts
'
· ·
·
· u. N. ·deadline lor Iraq to put out of Kuwait neue. (lJ.PI) .
670,000 ·had left Kuwait, \he lose."
and the Zionists ... Iraq Is pot
'
I
',
,
,, ~• •
By Ulilted Press International
He
also
rejected
calls
that
the
Grenada or Panama , (Iraq) can
majority
for
Saudi
Arabia.
'
.
allied
troops
should
overthrow
But he said the exodus slowed
be another VIetnam,' ' the leaflet
Mo~
Jim Bridger, a famed moun· after last month's U.N. Security Saddam Hussein If his forces
said.
to report for duty Tuesday, said lain man who led the ill-fated Council resolution calling for were ousted from Kuwait.
Jerusalem Mayor Teddy Kol·
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) "It Iraqis decide Hussein
lek Issued a letter to Jerusalem
Ninety-two members of the 35th John Foreman, spokesm11n for Donner party through the high . Iraq to withdraw by Jan. 15 or
should stay In power,lt Is a threat
residents saying they should
Aeromedical Patient Staging the 907th Tactical .,Airlift Group Sierra's In the winter of. 1864, face the possible use of.force.
purposely
lled
to
the
group
when
''In October and November an to Kuwait, but Kuwaitis would
prepare for an emergency sltua·
Squadron at Wrlght·Patterson at Rlckenbacker Air National
average of 300 per day were not Interfere. If he Is 10 be
tion and they should not panic
Air • Force Base have been Guard Base near Columbus. The he said the rQute was "a fine,
activated in support of Operation 35th APSS Is attached to the level. road." Brldg!!r owned a leaving, but after the resolution punished, he should be punished . and follow Instructions, Isra~l
supply post ·along the, new route.
thiS decllned to aboul 25 per by 'hls own people."
Radio said.
Desert snteii:l.
.
907th.

~,

said.*

a

Birth is announced

Dave and Lita Burt, CQlumbus,
formerly of Meigs County, are annOWicing the llirlh of their first
child, a daughter, Morgan Lynn, on
Nov.6. ·
·
·
The infant weighed eight pounds
two ounces and was .20 and a half
inches long.
Grandparents are Marvin and
Lois Bun, Pomeroy, and Larry and
Nettie Young, Thppers Plains.
Great grandparents are Olen and
Josephine Young, Reedsville, and
Ruth Powell, Torch.

HelleatmeSO$C~erely~I~t
nearly ·two weeks 10 tracnon m an

' NEW YORK (UPI)- A 's tate
grand Jury began its review of a
case against the Brooklyn man
accused ·of slashing the Rev. AI
Sharpton as the outspoken civil
rights aclivls twas a boutto lead a
protest march.
The flamboyant minister,
meanwhile; continued his recov·
Anna K. Stanley was nsmed to. ery from the puncture wound at
the Dean's L~t at Otterbein Col~ Coney Island •Hospital. ' Spokes·
woman Pat"Purcell said Shl!rJ&gt;·
lege with a 4.0 grade .,Oint average.
She is the daughter of Olev~ and ' ton was In stable condition
Mo.nday "and wiU be with'ils for a
Larry Stanley, Edison.
few more days."
A spokeswoman for Distt1ct
Attorney Charles Hynes said the
secret grand jury reviewed the
case throughout the day Monday
and was expected to return on
Tuesday. The panel began Its
hearings two days after the
attack
on Sharpton In the pre·
But, he said, "the basic picture
dominantly
white section of
thai emerges Is If's going to be .
Bensonhurst.
tight before the next cereal ·
The s~~esman said the case
harvest." Even If there Is a big
against
Michael .Riccardi, 27,
crop, II' would be "extraordlwho
recently
· moved to that
nary" to reap enough grain to
neighborhood,
would be pres·
last until the next year, he said.
en
ted
"swiftly."
The suspect Is
Vegetable production Is up,
Clawson said, and the new potato
crop In early sprlng·"wlll be very
useful."
When the embargo was lm·
posed, analysts dlaagreed how
long ·Iraq's food supply would
last. Some estimated - stocks
would run low .In a few months
while others said tile supply
could last eight months. In the
past, Iraq lmpotted about threefourths of Its food.
MEDINA (UPI) -The defense
Analyst Andy Bellingham of for a man accused of raping his
· World Perspectives pointed to · s~pdaugl!ter lost a bid Monday
shortages o( tea, vegetable oil, for Information to be withheld
sugar and meat but said there . from the juryGOncerninghlspast
might be a fair supply of grain. membership in the Hell's Angels
Iraq may have had more food on motorcycle club.
hand than recognized when the
A Medina County Common
embargo was Instituted, he satd: Pleas Court jury was seated
. A study produced last fall by Monday and opening statethe Library of Congress said Iraq ments were to begin Tuesday In
could blunt the Impact of sane· the case against Richard
lions by · using barley' as a ' Frailer, who In Cuyahoga
supplement to wheat In making County faces separate charges
bread, rather tlian feeding It to of murder In the death of hts
lives lock. Fish could replace former stepdaughter.
meat and potatoes could be
Frazier aHegedly repeatedly
substituted for Imported rice.
forced Tiffany Skiba to have sex
In a monthly report on agrlcul- with htm from the time she was
turaltrade, the Agriculture De· lluntllbewasdlvorcedfromher
partment estimated Iraq would mother. Skiba said · Frazier was
acquire 300,000 metric toni ot the father Qf a child she bad two
wheat and 200,000 tons offorelgn- years ago.
:
grown rice thla mar(letlng year,
On Nov. 8, as Frazier was ·
compared to the 5.1 mUl!on tons awaiting trial · on the rape
of grain, rice and soybean meal Fharges In Medina, Skiba, 18,.
that were Imported In 1989·1990. wasfoundstlibbedlodeathlnher
There have been concerns
grandparents' Cleveland home.
about evasion of the embargo
Frazier was later 'arrested In
but the department's flllllre is
Sheffield Lake and charged with
u I) c h a n g e d f r 0 m 1a s t
murder. . .
November.
In Medina, Frazier faces two

..

Morgan Burt

:Few outside food
sources for Iraq

WASHINGTON ( UPI) - Iraq
may be able to Import onty
one-tenth as much grain as II did
pear ago thanks to the lnterna·
· Uonal embargo, a U.S; estimate
~ld and analysts questioned how
well Iraq could compensate for
:che losses.
· ,
·! Iraq has taken steps to encour·
lasre farm production In response
!'&gt;the embargo. Wheal acreage is
4iji . sharply and Baghdad has
.raise&lt;! the guaranteed price for
crops such as rice.
•
In some published reports,
Iraqi offlcta:ls have said their
nation could be self-sufficient In
.tooil by the end of the year. ·
, J{owever, one analyst fam!Uar
With the situation but who asked
aot to be Identified noted Monday
).hilt It will be another three
)nonths or four months before the
wheat crop will b~ ready lor
~arvest. The new rice crop
~ot be planll!d unlll April or May.
)·
j "Definitely, the ·Shortages are
,tl}ere." he sald,llstlng sugar and
•vegetable oil as examples. ''We
.;know . they have. reduced their
;poultry fiocks be&lt;;ause of lack of
ft~· We know their l!vestock
.•lterds are down. ''
~
,_ Another analys~, .Pat Clawson
tof the .Foreign Policy Institute,
lsatd Iraq would be !W'd·pressed
: to ,beCOme ~lf-s!Jfflelent since It
•does not grow oilseed crops,
; ~hlch produce. vegetai1le oll, and
1!m)duces only small amounts of

·wm

j ~bgar.

, ~ "The Iraqis have great paten·
1ffa1 to produce more cereals,
. l greal potential," Clawson said
! and said Iraq has taken steps to
&lt;encourage 1arge wheat and bar·
: ley crops by making more seed,
fertilizer and credit available
llnd offering higher prices for
fgraln.

charged wltb attempted murder,
cttmlnal possession of a weapon
and violating Sharpton's civil·
rights, and Is jail without ball
until his next hearing
·Wednesday.
The attempted murder charge
carries a possible maximum
~trlson term of.eight and a halflo
25 years.
Rlcca.rdl's Legal Aid attorney,
Benjamin Brinn, was not Immediately avallable ·for comment.
Riccardi Is accused of luMing
at the portly Sharpton 'last
Saturday, jabbl~ htm With a
5-lnch kitchen knife blade just
moments before the minister
was to have led a protest march
through Bensonhurst.
It was to have been the 29th
protest Sharpton organized In the
neighborhood - besieged by
demonstrations since the Aug.
23, i989, raflal slaying of a black
teen. Yusuf Hawkjns.
.
·
Saturday's march was designed specifically to protest the
light sentences given to two of the
eight defendan't s brought to trial

colunts of raping Skiba and one
charge each .of gross sexual
Imposition and sexual battery,
. Defense lawyer Edmond Bow·
ers ar1111ed that m~ntlonlngFraz·
fer's past association with the
Hell's Angel's could preVent
Frazier from getting a fair tt1al,
but Judge Judith Cross ruled the
jurors.could be told. ·
Prosecutor Dean Holman
argued that his past ties to the
Hell's Angels supported the rape
cqarges against htm.
Hell's Angels officials In Cleve·
I and said Frazier was kicked out
of the club after allegations about
his involvement with. ·his , siep·
daughter surfaced.
Judge Cross did rule, however,
that jurors could · ndt be told
Frazier was supsected of kUling
Skiba, although they could be
told she Is dead."
The prosecutor said jurors
probably would hear a tape
recording of a statement Skiba
made to Medina County sheriffs
detectives about Frazier, and
they might also see a written
statement Skiba . gave to
authorities.

. .

EAST HANOVER, N.J.' (UPI) ·
Sandoz Pharmaceuticals
Corp. announced Monday a way
tor patients to obtain the anu:
schizophrenia drug Clozarll without buytng the company's costly
testing system.
Mental health groups and
' health care providers have attacked Sandoz's requirement
that people who buy clozaplne,
·sold under the trade name
Clozarll, also buy Its blood·
monitoring and lab-testing pack·
.age. Critics claimed the system ·
was too expensive and pushed the
price of the medication beyond .
the reach of people who desper·
ately need 11.
Together with the monitoring
packilge, one patient's yearly
supply of clozarll currently costs
about $8,944. The monitoring
system tests a patient's blood
each week to detect potentially
fatal side . effects that strike
about 1 percent to 2 percent of
users.

u:

Janet's Hair-Go-Round
Heather Hargraves
.

j Dinner ~ of Mr. llld Mra.

and daughter, Athens; and Oeral·
'Don €ode:ril1 were lhcir children dine ROIS, Ona, W. VL
}tmd' families. Mr. IDd MrL James
Mr. and Mil..John Williams have
•Coa«iil local; Mr. IDd )irs. Ropr returned l'roni Mlcbigan w~ !hey
lC'otieriD' and Childml, loell; Mr. spent die holidays with their 1011
.land Mrs. Fln1cy and childlen, IIICI and family llld Olher !elativel!.
·Mr. and Mrs. James Bible IIICI
Recent visitors of Louise &amp;bellcltiidrea. Columbus.
man llld family RM their
' Mr. and Mrs, Duane Sllllley bad ~tr:r
and
~ .
L. RCelll visiran, Mra. r...o.- ~ter. Otway; and Minnie
~ NolsonYille; Mn. Jlllel Mar- 'McOralh,-The Plalnl.
~ and twa dlulbtm.
Ruth Lowe a wd• &amp;hetman
~ Mi'. IIICI &amp;.(is. Steven Stailey - t to .Cohnbul wllae Mrs.
;
··
lilllclman COIIIUlllld a doc:lllr.

n......,_

Staff Of Professionals

•Terri Roush •fane! Compson •Htathtr Hargrrives

j'

'

~

't

(

~~

...

DR~ TRAINING
. INSIRIICTOR NEEDED.
PERIIAJIENT 'AII;T!IE.
IDI'AL FOR AmiEU AND
TI'ACHEIS. WIU tRAIN.
lUST 8£ R£UA8Ll HAY£
GOOD DRMIIO RECORD
AND VALID DRIVErs
UCEIISl SUBMIT RfSUME
TO: AM'SOU1H CEIIIRAL
· · OH , 360 ~ Sl, ~
Grl Is 011. 45631.

·.--

VInton

245 A•o.G•ande
256 Gupn D•t1'
-643 i Ar~b•a 0111
379

· w•n~ou

98S c .....,
843 Por11end
247 letar1 falb
949 Ra~ne
742 Fhttl.tnd

.Ant11 Code 304
67~

Pl Phr••n1

468

'oon

576.

773
BB;Il

ass

Appl~ Crovr
Mason

We Say What We Do.
We Do What We Say

CARPENnR SERVICE

.PUBLIC NOTICE
On Jonuory 11. 1891 ot
10:00 A.M., tlte Home Nl·
tiolllll Bonk, et lloclne. Ohio
wtii"'tler tor .... et public
1uctk&gt;n. on tlttlr preml•l,
1882 !JMC P/UP
Truck S.rl1l
•1&lt;rr8814A7C210ff47

Jhe term• of the 11le1 11

the .....

(i)11.14; fl. 3tc .

'

··-- -

FOR SALE IN RACINE ·

VERY NICE lARGE HOME ON API'I!OX. 3~
ACRES- 4 BR. 3 baths. 2 garages, rented 1
BR apartment. Properly inchrles pond·. ap·
prox. 4,800 sq. h. firm bid~ and mooile

home. Areal bargain al $89,900.

[ CALL 614 -!ljlm 04 FOR APPT.

....
-·

(304)1~

•

..
.'

,.

HOU8E8oi.OTI•FARM8

1 Clrd of Thanka
. I

8TH ANNUAL TOY RUN
·Perfect weethlr, Iuper people, and a great
ceuee. Thtee faeton all mede • winning combl·
netlon for our 8tlt annual toy run .11ecauM of everyone'1 terrific cooperation and dedication lt'a
1 worthwlla protect, we've juet hid our bell toy
Nn yet ..
Toye were dletrlbuted to Melg• 'County'r chll· ·
drell through.the lahtlltlon Army and commun·
lty A!Cflon Agency. Aloo WI will - n done til
•1.000.00,10 Syraeun VIllage, to be uud for
the children.
·
·
The folowlng Individual• 111d)JU1In- have
donated time, money end/or·merohandiN, In
order to eupport ourefto.u io that ar811 kldr can
h - a happier Chrllltmae. Hwe'w f~ ..,.
Y·ot:t• we apologize and hope you. know aach
end .f tM'Y bit of IUpport hal been grNtly IP·
preclatlld 111d 101111 not be forgotten:
AFSCME. Melge County Local 11300. ,J.D .
Drlhlno Co:t Fran!! Hereld Jr .• Racine Gun ·club,
Whaley'l, ftll'l DeWitt, Mobonatd'r. CloK Markilt, . K~. Powell'e, Foodland, VI!UIIhan'l, ·
Subway, Crowe. Plaze Hut, Fruthe, Hainer'• ·
Bal!ery. Mlddlejtort Trophlaa, The Dill~ l111tl·
net. Middleport a Pomeroy Pollae · Deph.,
Athemr 8p0rt1 Cycle. Frye~' Cycle Parta, Malge
Farm MarUI. IJttle Colli luabt, Pt.-...'. Hud·
na1re. I'M Pointe ExPNM• ...,., Tony'• C:.ny
Out. Mlddlaport F l - lhop, Riverboat Inn.
Cedar lar. Comer lar. Court ltiHt Grill. llue
Tartan. Kllly'e Komer a Mlaway.
A epeclel think-you eo- to Lenny Tennent
end hie el!lploy- et the Rhr!lrboet Inn, end to
Stafthouee ROid and the Mud lllver IMd for •
IUptr time.
· Set you ln'tlJ
·M•Iv• County Blkera

Po-roy, Ohio ·
11/1Mtfft

ELECTRICAL SERVICE
Rt~idential · and

•Any length
chain• and acceaaorlel
•Kerosene Stovll
Wlek1
.. we Do :Wick Repair

lltland

mo.

Coflll~lh

.VII CLIAN YOUR

[hob

12'-P

GUTTERS AGAIN

$trlctly

DAN'S
TIANS-SIOft
and AUTO •111
Autolllltlii

NO JOB TOO SMALL,
FREE ESTIMATES

Clutalt II. . .

. CEDAR .. ,
(ONS1RUCTIOrt _
992-6641 or '
698-6164

........

,.,!Ill.,.

Pra•rrey, OIL
rtl/tl/1

r

•Remodeling and
Home Repelrs •
•Roofing
•Siding
•Painting

,t92·SSI7

110.

KELLII'S CUSTOM BENDING ,,

Groomint

EMILEE MEIINAI

992-5335 or '.15-3561

Owner &amp; Optrattr

Acr- p,_ Pllt OHica

614-992·6120

217 L Sec. P-.y
POIIIIOY, OliO

OUAAANTEEDI
FREE ESTIMATES
IZ·I9.'90·t

Owly

8 y - ..

far All'lr...

KEN'S APPUMCE
SEIYICI .

~Helmet"

SAT. NIGHT .

Fr•l~..

AlL IUDS

aGuner

I

.Filii! IITIMATU

GROOM
ROOM
.

992-5009 .. '

Tr..,omt.lonl. a..u..
TuiiiUp. 011 Change,

T~

Iring It In Or wi·

UCINE
.FIRE DE".

REWIRING AND
TROUBLE SHOOTING

MICIDWAYE '
OVEN IEPAII

· Banks ·
Construction ·

GUN SHOOT

Speolellllna In

IANICS
CONSTRUCnON
992-501t9

742-2455.

,_

Com1111rdol

CarfMietf llectri"-

MORRIS

. ' &lt;:'

6:30P.M.

11·5·90·tfn

_"ldt Up.

a.·, 2·10 1101
-

(FAEE ESTIMATES)
V. C:. YOUIIG II

•COMMERCIAL

Slcllhlll

USm RAILROAD TIES

Bash• luldlng
RElY

'IVE NEED USTINGS!

'"· 9491-2101
or les. 94•)·2160.1
Day ar Night
NO SUNDAY

992-.2269 .

-Room Addltlona
-OunerWork
-Electrical • Plumbing
-Concrele Work
-Rooting
-Interior • Exterior
Pointing

992·6115

YARDMAN
ECHO DEALER

tho totlowlng:

Cllh.
The Ho,. N1tlonol Bonk
,...rvlt the right to bid It

101111 s. , •..,110111

"At l10.....le

BILL SLACK
·-

YOUNG'S

937 ButliiiJ

ClAIIfiED ADC
fll Til

•fiREWOOD

••

Nf!W Haven
h1•rt

CUSTOM IUlT ·
HOM£S &amp; GAIAGEi

"LIGHT HAULING

Jl.t ..T.IJI.

• 66 7 · CooiYIIIt

.Public Notlc:e

·BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE
4: 80 P.M. DAY BEFORE
PUBLICATION

•'
I

Ch•hlre

Mtddlepon
PomltfOV

Mason Co . WV

614·991-JJII
213 llorlh S.C•tf

Western Auto
EVERY FRIDAY
AT 7:00P.M.

_,DLEPOIT, 01110 4576
Offke 614-992-2116
llomt 614-992-5692

BULLETIN BOARD.·

· at
2907 Jackaon AvenUe.
Point Pleaeant, West Vqinia

•

•••

992

Galll!ohs

County

Across From

r

3 Announcements

Adolescent Medicine

'IN..,

Ar. . Code6U

...

,, .

and

II,

M~ugs

Artt• Codtt6'•

I'xdttllll-(1'.'

REMOVAL

Hend Tufting
Cuttom Drapes
38 Yean EXIM!rleDCe

205 N. S.OIMI Str11t

General Pediatrics.

Orlw, Poilll ...,

G•llta Couna,

367
388

: , DAY BE: FORE PUBllCAfiON
.• MO~OAV PAPER I·
.., 11 00 AM SAlUROAV
TU ESOA'V PAPER
'2 "00 PM MONDAY
' WlllNFSOAY PAPER
·2 .00 PM TUESOA:'t'
2 .00 PM WEDNESOA"f'
THURSDAY PAPE.R
2 .00 P ~ THURSOA'V
· ~H IOAV PAPER
SUNDAY PAPER
2 ')0 PM FRIDAY ~

announce the openinr of theiJ:.
. practice in

v..,

foi/11Will I{ I f'i 1'/lhlllll'

TIIM'.,.d

UPHOLSTERY

MIDDLEPORT

BISSELL-·.
BUILDERS'

.SHRUB &amp; TREE

CAIN'
S
Of Ml ••lttort

AT
.

••

COP~ ciEAQLINE

.· Emy Olivarez-Orteza,
M.D.
.

(304) 773-5404

..

• A c1a:ss•ll1.:d ;uiYI!flllen'""'' llhtc•:•l 'n I tu: O;ulv Smll uutl I t!l
crpt
CIOISSII tt.'tlti,S!.'I&lt;tv . 8111&gt;IIIUS S Card ttnd IU{pll nOIICCSJ
~ w•H l .. ll.u'd~t:lfl' fll lhc ' Pt PIU~OIIf11 ~ll~JI!iiCI iUUt lhll Gallt
1 IJplt!i Oouly T rthun''; rc':.Chtll~l over 18.000 home~ ,

I

J&amp;R
AUCTION

,.

.

(

.05 / day

,,

at no ch.,o~

tui' l!rrm !&lt; lttst dHV ad nm ~ 111 po.~.mr 1 C;tll ht!'hlft! 2 00 p nt
llif'l' dht!i JJUbi•Calton tnrnaktt r.urrectton
'Ads 1h•l rnust 111: patd 11 1 atlllclllCc ..aro·
.
c .. utnl ltlitr'"' ~
H,.ppy Ad 1o
J
V ;1rd Sales
In Mumo11aru

•

IV"' I'Jd•*olpra&amp; ., IIIII . .

t

'

{!.,,;

.4Z
.60

lor IKf\ dl't as .s-..rlllldS .

'P"cb Ol •ae1 tm i!lll capnall@l.lt!n no double pr•c~ o\ ad coil
'7 ~ulill hn p typu !lilly u•e•l
' ' ',
.
·
'S r.•1ht1t~
1101 ft!IPOIISibiH lor lliiUI!&gt; iiht!r hrSI till!¥' ICht~ck

I

I

3

.'

Busi'ness Services

.20
.30

R11es fMC tor ~onaec:ulrv. run•. bt'olwnuPdiiY5w'll bech.lrged

, "RcCt!llll $ 50 dt$Counl tot Old! pa1d Ul.'htv ,m c c
(
·t 14w ;~ds
G•vl!ii~IY and found aas und•' 15 word~ w•ll b t·
' ruu

15
15
• 15
15

Monthly

,

P~'d

.
$4.00
16.00
. B9.00
$13.00
• st .30/dav.

15

3

Over , 5 Words

Rate

Words

.6
10

,p()llC IE:S ·
'Ad~ mlli.•th: Mtt • ~~ GaU•a o ~ Masun counl18'» must bt: Pit!

Dd PLEAsANr VAll'" HOSPII'AI.

Janers:Hair-Go-Round

,

Davs

MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to S·P·.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
(LOSE6"StJNDA'f"&lt;"' • • -...

Under the new plan, Sandoz
said tlie wholesale cost .of CiazarU for most patients will be
$4,160or leas pe'ryear. The cost of
patieat testa conducted by heall)l
care providers wlll be extra, but
many publiC · health systems,
lncludh!i the Veterans Admlnls·
tratlon, have said they can
perform such monitoring at a ·
lower cost than the Sandoz-run
program.
"Providers will offer their own
monitorlna at . whatever they
want to charge," said Saumel
Ostrow, a spokesman fO!'Sandoz,
"Clozarll will now ~ priced like
any other dnlg In the counlcy."
Last month, a iawsult filed by
22 slates charged that Sandoz
violated antitrust laws with Ita
monitoring . system. and artlfl·
clally boosted the price of the
drug. At that Ume, state pi'oaecu·
tors accused Sandoz of "tootdragging" . and falling to
promptly · follow through on
"vague promises" to cut Clozar·
II'S price.

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

RATES

TO PLACE AN AD CALL 992-21'b ·

For appointment. call
(304) 875-4107

20% Off Her Professional
Heir Styles And Cuts
Tllru Jan. 31,19911

(IGssifie

•

..

tteather Will ~· Offering

3rd Street

T~h:e~A~Ir~Y~o~~~~~~s~e~rvl;:•~;·~w~e~r~ellllllllllll~ll~ll~. .llllll~llll~ll~llll~llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll. .lillllllllllll.,llllllllllllllll~ ··

.
Sdnrpatienta
·
9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday.

·20% DISCOUNT

•

..• •

•.

.

'

'Air Force resenists called up

..

&amp;

I

Now You Know

'-''

•

fl.amsonville hapPenings

-,.")

E. Neal Orteza, M.D.

. : · WASHINGTON (UP I) - Re- the smallest since a 3 percent year up 0.3 percent.
In oU prices for the year led
tall sales feU an estimated 0.4 gain In 1982, .the government
service
stations to post an 18.7
Food stores posted a sales
. percent In December to close the said. Retidl sales rose 5.1 percent InCrease of·o.~ per~ent las! month
percent sales ,g ain for the year,
;year up3'.8.petcentfrom the year ... tn·l989.
.
·
•
·
·
the gi:&gt;:vernmenl silid.
· to close the year up
fiercent.
:belpre, the lowest annual· In·
Most of the monthly decline
Sales at accessory and apparel
Falling oll prices caused the
;c:reaae since the recession of carne from sales of durable value of sales at gasoline service
stores fell 2 percent last month
•1982, the Commerce Department goods, which dropped 0.8 percent stations to fall 3.1 percent last
and 0.6 percent for the year.
;'said Tuesi:lay.
In December. The durable goods IJIOI!th. But the overall Increase
:.• ThedlsappollitlngsalesfiiiUres slump was led by automobile
·mr what Is usually the retail dealers, who saw sales dtop last
~~duslcy's busiest month offered
month by 1.4 percent. Annual
let another refleCtion of the auto Illes rose 0.6 percent.
Sales of non-durable goods fell
1weakneaa that has strapped the
(304) 773-5404
3rd Street
:nation's economy. ·
0.1 percent form the previous
: Rer.,ll sales of $151.1 billion In month but closed the year up 5.3
Announces
.December brouaht the annual percent.
·
:salet total to $1. '19 b1lllon, . the
General merchandise stores
~wrnmenl said.
suffered a sales drop of 0.9
Last year's aales Increase was percent last month but closed the
. Hu Joined Their

!

.

san· doz· .announr.e,'s

!Reta~ s"-les fell 0.4 .percent during December

~ecent

'·

moves to rut cost
of drug used for
$chizophrenic5

Trial begins for man .
accused . of raping and
killing stepdaughter

J-

0562. (In CIUVJda, u,d $4.45.)

In the case.
black man was chased to his
But Sharpton, In a bedilde
death by an angry white mobstatement read by national civil
to·the slay~ of Hawkins, whose
rights leader Jesse Jackson on
conb'O!!Iatlon with a bat:wledliDI
white mob led to his sboodng
Sunday, called for calm and
understanding In the wake of
death juat blocks away from
the attack- carried out before
where Sharpton was stabbed.
some 200 pollee, and llbout
Nevertheless, the assault on
twice that many marcherl.
Sharpton seemed lo shock even
. "We must commit ourselves those who I!Xpressed little syrn,
toward working calmly go the pathy .for his crusades. Indeed,
question of racial harmony," the some of the earlier ' mll'Ches
36-year,old mln1Stet's statement. through Bensoahurst produced
read.
.
'
jeers, curses '8Jid racial cruel
Butinapoollnli!rvlewSundiiY, taunta - spectators hotsdtlg
Sharpton described his assailant waterrneloas above their heads
as "the (lersonlflcatlon of a lot of as black marchers walked sl·
hate." J!IUI, he ad~: "I don't lently past them.
·
have Ill feelings ·toward him."
A pollee spokesman, Officer
Sharpton has bei!li a lightning Scott Bloch, said Riccardi has a
rod for racial controversies thai previous criminal record of ashave polarized the city for the · saults, Including a 1982 ease lllld
last 'five . years, cases ranging · another three years later that
from the 1986 Howal'd Beach Involved the attack on a pollee
racial murder case - In which a officer.
·

Kuwait authoriiies say Iraq has
10,000 Kuwaitis as human shields

-·

Btn 11562, Chiciigo, Ill. 606ll-

rm a clove-a-day girl myself.
Hippocrates recommended it for

·New York grand jury probes $harpton slashing

Dean's list announced

:•
•.
, · ..

putyouinthehospital.Itisfootish
to smack a fondler in the face when

The Daily Sentinel-Page 7

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Ann
Landers

Pom·III'OV. Ollie

We .l lftt Changl'tl Our Locati011 To
Ph . . . East 011 Rt. 241 through
Clmttr, Oh.

SPECIALIZINO IN ... .
•Custom Bent E11heust Syatema
•Co,.lete Une of Exhault Suppllea
•Hendle and lnltall Monroe ·Shockr
C..e _. See U1 For A Free Jupeellon
and E1ttmate
PI, 61 ••915 ·3949 IODNIY DUll .
471.. 1t. ~. 241
. J' long lolli•m.,

:Vf/'10/lln .

O.C.L. CdMPIJ'tER SOLUTIONS, INC.

AL

INSUUnON
•VInyllldlng
•Replecement
Wlndowa
eRooflna
el,.,latiOn

."2-2772
JAMIS -::~151
7'
1531 lryailllllllle

I,

,·

•

'

'ON -SITE SERVI C~ ; REPAIR '
'CUSTOM Pll&lt;XiRAMMINC;·
'SALES
•ON-SITE CliSTOM TRAINING
SPIINC fiALuY HQFEJJIONIIL BUILDING

w JACKSON nx£ .. sum zoi
GAU/I'OUS, OHIO 4J6JI

'

•

)· 446-6000
,.
.

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Page 8-:-The

Sentinel

·-.,.... _

Announcements

LAFF-A-DAY

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

,

3 Announcemems

_

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

.......

-~~~~---­
po111. caN ,..,. onc1 Dout

collect M,dme 114 151-!•. -

GOLD CREDIT CARD, liP'
..........
...-.
- tor.__
llno
"""'"'llock
D...,._
ptoto lnh&gt; Coli 1~
$25. 1oo.
•

.

.

I•

.,

II

,,•

-

.....

Go!od

l

1:011 C2l•

o•-mon

! M I I w _ ' - _ _· ....
ooltont - - ·e14-44N1tf
• .
altar.,.,.,
.

--LXI=

.

low ,1
•
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- . .. 112,IGCI.

...... {p.m.

Very lriondly dog to a DNd
homo In
~ hail al

.'
'

.
1,..,

12ti2 .. ,.

1~blcco

biN, WO(K Uop, t .. l1.... hook·
up, picnic ar• under root, 2
Mrnl, rural wlter, Rt. 7. oOn·

•.

Gallpolls
&amp; VIcinity

,..,. -

i

6

~·~~-=~-~·=~~~·~
,..
D .1 N I L .

my sister commented that . il
was
the food of the future. MY. ..
nephew replied, "If you don 1
mind, ---· ·---.•

r, _;.L;...J.-.1..-.L.-L..~

Comploh! tho · chuckla quotad
by filling In tho milling -d•
rou dowelop from llop No. 3 below,

-

(I)

lnellnt Rec811

CD

(I)

llacNeiiJ\AIIIW

-.. ''

.
-

..

--

ballral*..._for417
far ..........

,..rotct.~.

PubliC Sale

&amp;Auction

lV REPAIR polt lima, oould

- o p Into ~II lime. On.IY n·
....... -· noail ...... K.E.C:.
w,
Poinorow, OH

171-2331.

-W.-:

38

*

••n.

Enoogotlo
_...
t•m ,_bar : DENTAL HYGIENIST to loin ourlloa poltollml. lxpollonoo holpo
lUI, lllut "" 1 11
wo Willing to

--1111110
- CLA-.
~--""'r
loll
olo
Galllltal1 Dolly Tribune, 121

J'"* - . Cal

Thltd
OH
41111. - · Oalllpollo,
• .

with or llllllout
Lorry LMIJ,I14 111 11 n.

WMIId: 'JillofMIIto •
. . . giUO,

Wo
- Hl-11lo ""' .........
.,
tlmbor.
.._.

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=-."" . .

'

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....._ fUnl. For 1 • 2
Paopto. Not - l o r _ . ,
• pill&amp; 11t

t. DJW

RentJis

2 IR, 1111- fum'ad, A- 231

pullibiML

"""'·
IEliO.
lor "
' --own.
...
oouplt.
Walk

..,

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lo

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14

Yegetllbfes

• oyl., llalbijl, sat&amp;.

-•·a

1113 F-210 piU far - · 314
-t...... 11t
-and
Ill.1131.
'

'

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giiDIIM · Mglnl,

t

automda llinlmiNion, air,
14,400.
Contact:-~.
Mon IIIIU F~ 111114441 1345.

'
'
,

11M Dodge -

ate•m

a-

- - - r, 4...-,1 .

........ P.lllll. ,,.......,.,.,

S21G/mo.......

.....

--

wamec:Jto Do -

Ulll~laa. ~~

l&gt;'fAPPIAflfp,

i•

jeopardzn Samantha's •
g_rowth. Stereo. Q
CD (I) Novl The anormoua
promlae ot nUCINr tullon Ia

1-1 ~

ll-1AV",S'

ex~. Q

Cl 1"1 try NEA, IM .

-

(J)

Aclcllctlonl JennWer
ln)8rllewa addlcta, their
tamAles and lrtendl 11 ehe
*'&lt;lee tha drug lillie.

u...

...

4 BR, 2 IMth, dontiiiLt . . In

Soudau atem Schoof Olllflct.
1210 mo. ptua 1210 dopooll, 114atl •••
7 houao and 1 llath In
Po:M4 01!, 114..12 1027.

...

•r.~=r:

til MOVIE: King (PI 1 ol 3)
(2;00)
1:111 (I) MOVIE: Bad !Iori (R)

I ·r•n S11p~~ 1 tP(~
6. L1vt&gt;,toc~

(2:00)

~ Roa••,.• RoMtnne

5I

14dlmollllo -

·-·7101.

pllnl a weddlna_tor Dan's
"'lhlr. Stereo. 1;1 .

CD

• . -.

141711 Z IR, Ewlngton -

11J lulhel- 'rllllday Nftlhl

I'IJihll

2· bedroom tumlahad,. oil
- · ... aond~lon ........
Poula'o Dow Coni cantor,
allordabla, qhii-N. II·F
• 1::10 p.m. AQO! 2 ·10.
aftor ..- . Dropolna
114-MWII4.
.

'"5·4473
667-6179

•

d'f:~~~~-.
~-nc•
• Phono -.-a7.

I

f HATE

I Hdroctin 7nlllr, 8210. per
~. utllltloa, .. , .••

=
avo-.
2 b

. "10

fAL.~IN.ef

.TAU..

llld 1 Jut, Ohio.
_.lndlltliMI!CII

llllhvtlle Now
II t.any King Uvel
1:30 (I) CoaGII Luthar lak41 over
whln Colen Hayden
deve~n abacllsad
tooth. R) Slereo:

eec.weli: WHEN

I TAIJC
10 '1/eFl'f TAU- PEOP\..E,

. MY CAP FA• I *'!OFF.

f'EOI'IS.

t oou-.

--21217.

-·-1102.

I .S D lPPUliiCU.

SIIVKE Ate REPAIR

90DAYWI'BUII'Y

ON ZETOI TIACTOIS

rr. Otlllr Natilt lranth

Chick Out Our low
Prlc11 011 "New" ZtiOr
Tract'" and Equipmlnt ·
up
New .. Slodd
- 1111'S lPPUliiCE
.

MORRIS

sEIYia

EQUIPMENT
742-2455
Sitlthlll .... ltlfland
12-2'-90·1 110.

/i.....

-

SPrviCCS

llllrtyiOIIIIIhing
Hope and Ellyn ponder lhllr
long hit~ •• trlende. (R)

......,.

...,

~- lllltlma guaNn-

BARNEY

... .
.,

lao.," - - - - fum-. ' •
-

. . """'... Coil -

,_ ,.,

~daror

992-5335.115-3561

"
llnj.

'
·. · - · - '"' Office

-~~~

·

........

_..,._

IAIHAR'S
TATER?

'

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- ~

~

:=r- - af .,.

Coo!pll.i--.......

a••• ~.

roofing,

=.-~

..

PLAYIN'
"FOLLER T~'
LEADER" WITH
OL' BULLET

IDle ..., TNII: Till ~~ext
O.Mi Uta
CNN •ven~n~
0 7110 Club Specllt
SpllltUII WOIIdl In Conlllct
(1 :00)
•

,

t

1CI:CII Cll MOVIE: Vrlll!rJ Girl (RI
-_(2:00)
.
.
10:30. Cnlok 8lld Cllall"

. ;~ ..

.

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••lao
. . . . _ ........ WY '

' ;I

11:00 (J) •

})

Dovla

-o.

='i~~~.~';:

82

ntE HARDY Olffl51DE WOODBURNING
HEATER WITH INSIDE ntERMOSTAT

84

1

C.rtw"a Plunrltlftg
andHIIIIInll ·
- a n d Pita '
Oolipolo, Ohio

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

.

•

Elactrlcal &amp;

Rlfrlgll'lllon

(PATINTED}
IT'l&lt;~-....,. ........ 1_
..--lrairlti'raUM.
__

oflo-.....

'blr
'Birthday

.....
......._.-""..........,..
..... _lorh

....,.. _

~iiiiirl.'

: ..........

hall""

.IMI.11,1111

tii-111D ......... ""-

_,I

LeW! fVEIY 12 HOUI/J

c.w.

................,.,....."'_
VICKER'S WOOO HEATING
,.._.. C'INII7H2Sihl P.ll\

.

';

t
•r

ASTRO-GRAPH·

Plumbing &amp;
Heating

eu ••.a••
•

-·-·

I

y '
our relatlonllhlpa with peopl•ln gener·
al could undergo a marked Improve-.
ment ln·tha year ahead. Yoor greateet
opportunltlel wtH come through thoae
wllh you IIUOCiate -the , _
cont..:ts you eatllbllllh
CAPIIICORN C0.C. zi...Mn. 111 II WOU
h.aven
. :t been lmprauacl with the- an
atiOclate hal handling a joint ancleav«,lhlalsagooddaylomakamanagerlalcliangel. ll'tllme 101 you 10 ttar1
.. ceiAng' the 11\011. KM0101 to look
tor romlnce ~net Yf"'ll flnd.lt. The AS"

1/o..Graph Malchmaker lnetantly ·reveala which Bill"' are romantically per.
tec:tfor you. Mall $21o Matchmaker, c/o
lhlsnewap!IP8r, P.O. Box 9142!; CleVeland, OH 44101·3428.
•
AQUARIUI lolan. »Fab. 11) Try 10 go
with the flow oteventlloday. Lady Luck
will be trying to fl\11 you In the right spot
at the right lime so you might be able to
reap a harvest In an area you haven't

Explore all your options.
CrUICI!R (June Z1.,JuJy 22) In mattws
that aflecl-bolh you .and your mate, II
might be wise today to base your ~eel·
!liOns on wour
11111111 of reuon·
lng u oppoaed to yQUr own. .
LEO ("""'
2Z) You c:ould be
luckier lllln uaull todaw In ttgurlng out
ways to luiiUI your emiiHiout objeCtives.
HB¥1ng - • goala lor wl!lcl! to aim
sown.
.
won't put wou 111 diledvlnlage, either .
PISCES (Fob. 20-lbrch 20) Strive lo VIRGO (A.......... 22) Wllllnga have
be ~xpeclant and optimistic today; not running u - l y tor wou u
don't be afrlld' to lhlnk big. The only you would have thouglll, this lu day to ·
lhlng lhal could hold you back at lhla ·. raorglllile wour allalrs 10 function more
lime Is, the llmltallons you put on your ,efleC!Ively. Put your - I n order.
Own lhlnklng.
·.
UIIIA (llept. 23-0ot. II) You llhould be
AJIIII (March Z1·April 11) You are r111W lucky 0J1111n todll)' where lavorpr...ntly ooder InflUences that could able ....na are
Keep In
enhance your status and popularity mind II Is the boltom llno lhlit lalmpor·
- • peera are eoncerMd. Conllnue tanl and dlract your ellortuccO.dlngly.
, ,o opetata In wa~ thet add luster to ICCIIIPIO (Ool. M Now. II) You're an ,
your lm8Q8
· ututa thlntlar tOO., end tile !d-. wou
TAURUS (A,rit 20-May 201 In your In- conceive will have go0c1 probelllllllel
•
~
wt" take
volvernenll , wllh others today, you re our IUCCUI • ...., thOugh IIIey
not llkel)o to make the same types of lime lo be properly dt&gt;alof*l.
.
mlatalcesthoywlll. Theaspectolndlcale ' IACIITTARIUI(NIW,II 1110 :Z1)Shuayoue-_.!1~ profiled from your Ilona whiCII are Pill I rillY running ~
-~
prolllabla 11-ll!ould no1 be etiWid at
. . . . , .... 21..J- 20) There are this time, ...., H you think they llhould
-•
~
.-...
•••
.
. etrong lnctlclllons al this time that you - .ea.... .,. wou more t,,.., they are prlllcoutd genarato a prolll from a aouree anlty genaratlng. Be patient. ·
other than yo\lr usual mean• of income.

Sol IGIH lnd .M.... ICing

11:30 (2). !IJ Tonight Show

part-·•

::~~~;..

11!31 (I) Clllera Q
12:DD (1). IntO 1111 Nlglll Slereo.
!Ill. """ ..... With

C81Ln=

OTIII

. nr

•N•r~..OW
OGNIIAIMIIDI"I......

.

D 110¥11: Ww """" (2;00)
12:011 Cll MOVII: Till 8lunt .....

•

1:;1

1z:ao (J) • a ..... Nltlhl Willi
Oavtttw•Cil 110'111: Till WI&amp; 101 (2:30)
8 ...., UIDhlM With Mle

~ ;';.:, Telk 8how

•

I

tA963.

+AQ5

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South •
Soall!

I NT

2t

3 NT

WHt
Norl. Pass 2+
Pass 2 NT
All pass

Opening lead:

Eul
Pus

Puo

+J

two, playing ace and a diamond? Then ~·
you can later lake the heart· linesae ·,
when East no longer, has any clubl to
lead. •
North was right. By giving up on the
. diamond finesse, declarer can be as- sured of · enough tricks to make the .~
hahd safely, as Ion&amp; as Weet is leading ,,
from length. And It's unlikely that , :
East would have long elubl and not
ha~ made a lead-clirectinl double of
two clubs.

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elhics

I

27 Hispanic
211 Excitingly
foreign
"30 Cui out
33 Challenged
35 Friend's
pronoun
38 Soak up·
311 Prefix for

~

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cycle

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ner, Willy Nilly, bid one no-trump.
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- 17 high-card poirllll pius a 10-spot.
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played low, Willy showed a small
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Sentinel-Page 9

TUES., JAN. 15 •

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31 Homes for Sale

16, 1991

16, 1891 .-:;:

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Ohio

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EMVXNEP . - BDP .B EB . HBROWIMNJ
Veatu•••'• Crilptoq•ole: ADVICE IS WHAT WE
• ASK FOR WHEN WE ALREADY KNOW THE
' 'ANSWER
BUT WISH WE DIDN'T. - ERICA .lONG ·
'

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'

Page-1 0-The Daily Sentinel

.

TO!Id Hill of Syracuse is one of 14 men and women enrolled at Hocking College activated as a part of Operation Desert Sheicld, according
to David Mingus, Vetenils All'~ Coonlirialor. Mingus said three
women and 11 men jlave been activated to dale. Hill is in the U.S .
Navy. ·
.
·
.All three of the women and one of the men me nursing Sludents and
one of !he women is a grandmocher, according to Mingus.
"As far as we're aware, alll4 me either Reserves or National Guard
members, but .we have two individuals whose branches of me service
we've been 1!118ble to dclemline," Mingus said. He said that student information has been obtainCd through !he college's wilhdtawal process
or from !hose stUdents he maintains cootact wilh lhrough his dunes,
Compared to olher college or university date of Operation :Desert
Shield participants, Mingus said !he number of Hocking College
students appears 10 be higher than olhers. "The reason could be thai
more of our students need financial .assistance and one means is
through reserve and national guard prograins," Mingus said.
Lists are being posted throughout !he college wilh lhe name of each
student taking part in Operation Desert Shield and names will he added
as additioruU inf«matin is rtceived, Mingus said, He is being assisted
in !his effort by Ralph Moran.
·
.
'

Roush heads county commission

.~ning Roush ~as elected President of lhe Meigs COWJty CommiSSioners and Davtd Koblentz Vice President when !he Board· of
Commission~ .met for ~ir ~ meeting on Monday.
.
The COIJl!TIISSionets will c_onunue meetutg weekly on Wedr!Qsday at 1
p.m. for the!l' .regular meetlllgs, and Mary H:obstetter will remain lhe
board clerk,
· AdditioJl!llly, !he commissioners made lhe following appointments:
Homer Smith, courlhouse custodian; Ray Parsons, courthouse janitor;
Wayne Roseberry, dog warden; and Everett Holmes, apiary inspector,
F~ Hoffm~ ":as named to another three year 1tnn to the county
plannmg commJSSIOII yesterday, and the board re-appointed several
county boards.

'

'

'

By Ualted Press Jalerlllltloaal
southwe~ t early Tuesday night
Ohio's dry weather Is expected • and move Into the northeast
to come to an end Tuesday night pordoaa ot the state by Wednesas a stol"ll) system moving up day morning. Overnight lows will
from the Gulf of Mexico spreads remain well above norma) and
rain Into state.
will ran~~e from 35 to 45 deltl"t!f!S.
The rain will begin In lbe
High thin cirrus clouds doml-

Taft vOws to reform
campaign finance laws
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) - campaign flnange laws to shine
Bob Taft, sworn In as Ohio's 47th · the ll&amp;'ht of day on the now of
Secretary of State, says one ofhls special Interest money and curb
toP- priorities Is to.reform cam- the practice of awarding large
state cofttracts to large campaign finance laws.
paign
contributors," Taft said.
Taft, 49, .took the oath.of office
"It wUJ be my job to safeguard
Monday In the capitol rotunda
from hiS father, former U.S. Sen. the Integrity of the election
process," said Taft. "I pledge to
Robert Taft.
· you to do everything within my
His lett hand was on the Bible power to keep Ohio's elections
'Used by his great-grandfather open and clean, honest and fair."
William Howard Taft, when he
Taft began 1990 as a candidate
was sworn ,I ll as president In 1909 for the Republican nomination
and as chief justice of the u.s for. governor · but switched to .
Supreme·Court ln -1921.
·
running for secretary of state at
"I will work hard to reform · the ~i'glng of party o'fflclals.

u. N. considers... -

nated the sky.durtng the night.
· Light southerly winds blew over
the area cand helped keep the
mercury above nonnal for this
lime of the year. Early morning
readings_were In the 30s.
The Tuesday morning weather
map showed a stationary front
running east to west from New
England through the Great
Lakes. A low pressure system
W!IS over the Mississippi Delta
and a high pressure area was
centered on the mid-Atlantic
Coast. ·

'
UtUe change Is expected with .
the stationary front, but by
Wednesday morning a low pressure system will be over the
Tennessee Valley. This weather
system will move . northeast
through the Ohio Valley Wednesday afternoon and night.
The National Weather Service
said there Is a chance of rain or
snow Thursday, with lows In the
30s and highs 35·to 45. But Friday
·and Saturday should be!alr. with •
lows In the teens to the lower 20s
and highs mainly In the 30s.

Pick.:3: 625
Pick-4: 9895
Cards: A-H; M::;
Q·D and 6-S

•

)101.41.

2 Soctlono, 18 Pog01 25 Ctnto
A Multlmodlo Inc. Nowopapor

.

Continued from page 1

Egypt's leadl.ng newspaper, AI
By LEE STOKES
_
Ahram,
said the Iraqi leader was
Untied Press IDieraallonal
Troop movements were re- directing his defenses from one
ported by Iraq and the United of these redoubts through his
States Wednesday, the day after various Intelligence agencies.
''The Iraqi president Is sur·
the U.N. deadline for Saddam
Hussein ·to withdraw his forces rounding himself with an Iron
from Kuwait, while the Middle curtain of secrecy, set ling up 54
East and the world braced for secret l)ldlng places. In various
parts of the country that are not
war.
After touring Iraq's front lines known even to his famu.-. " AI
Ahram said , quoting anonymous
In Kuwait to boost troop morale
and chat with local commanders, sources In Baghdad.
A diplomat from an Arab gulf
Saddam was reported Wednesday to have gone Into hiding In nation said Saddam was unlikely
one of his 54 bunkers to avoid to appear In publjc now that the
possible allied action to elimi- U.N. deadline has passed "to
ensure he cannot be an easy
nate him.
PRAYER FOR PEACE -

Stocks

Hospital news

Correction ·

School May Be More
Confusing Than

wv ·

I

·~

I

~·'

target lor any strike by the
U.S.·led multinational force."
The envoy, who requested
anonymity, said Saddam regularly · rotated his hiding places
during the 1980-1988 lran-lraq
war "because of the possibility
he could be assassinated," but
occasionally spent several days
at tl)ewar fron\eltl)ercommanplng major batUes or raising the
morale of his troops.
.
.
Meanwhile, President · Bush,
described as being at "peace
with himself' about the prospect
of au thorlzlng a military at tack
to liberate Kuwait, spent a quiet
Continued on page 11

'

chief execu tlve officer ol and Oile
and Thomas H. O'Brien, chairman, president and chief execU·
Central Trust Bank branches tlve ofllcer of PN C.
''The addition of these four
In G~llpolls and Middleport will
banks
will add 67 branches 10 the
now become part of the Bane One
current
341 Bank One offices In
Corporation after Central
·
Ohio,"
McCoy
said . ''We were
Trust's tiarent corporation, PNC
tniereijted
In
this acquisition
Financial Corp, sold four bank
since
the
banks
are In-areas that
afflllales Wednesday .
we
don't
currently
serve."
The local branches were acThe
tour
banks
have
emphasquired after PNC agreed In .
principle to haniJer · ba11ks lted middle market and consuoperating under th name Cen- mer lending In their local market
tral Trust Compa
that have and have combined assets of
headquarters In C nton, Lorain, ,approximately $2.1 billion. Pend·
Marietta and Newark, according lng review by various govern·
to a press release. The Gallipolis · ment agencies, the transaction Is
While emjJiiasis is on reaching those going through lhe clinic. The and Middleport branches l!ave expected to be complete_ by
. By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
the elderly and disabled, lhe blood work provided by Vererans their headquarters In Marietta. mld-1991, the release said.
SentiDel News Starr
Bruce E, Robbins, chalnnan
A comprehensive multiphasic prograni is not limited to those in- Memorial Hospital will he offered The announcement was made by
·
and
chief executive officer of
heallh screening clinic has been dividuals, A total of 400 ap- ata near cost figure.
John B. McCoy, chairman and
l'lans call for residents to go
scheduled fiX Oct. 3-4, and 7-8 at pointments will be lnade for lhe
lhrough lhe health screening and
lhe Meigs Multipurpose Building four-day program. .
The
cost
for
going
through
lhe
then receive a coupon to take to
on Mulberry Hei~hts.
heallh
screening
clinic
will
be
Veterans
Meinorial Hospital for the
The first planmng session for lhe
based
on
a
sliding
fee
scale
and
·
blood
work
on the following day.
screening clinic was held Tuesday
range
from
$5
to
$25.
.
.
.
·
Details
of
how
the scheduling will
at !he Senior Citizens Center wilh
According
to
Norma
Torres,
R.
be
handlec!
at
lhe
·hospital will be
representatives of the Meigs
N.
of
the
Heallh
Department,
the
worked
out
by
Rhonda
Dailey, R.
County
Health
Department,
wide
range
of
tests
offered
would
N.,
director
of
nurses
at
Veterans.
Veterans Memorial Hospital, lhe
The role of'·the Mei~s County
Meigs County Tuberculsosis As- cost several hundred dollars if
provided
lhrough
a
·
regular
Council
on Aging w1ll be to
sociation, and !he Meigs County
physician.
provide volunteers to register
Council on Aging anending.
Becky Ball has been employed residents as !hey report to the clinic
Those agencies work with area
heallh professional.s who volunteer as coordinator for the health clinic and guide them through the various
lheir time to the four days of clinic and will be responsible for securing heallh stations on bolh !he first and
geared to deteclins heallh problems the health professionals and second Doors of the building.
The last multiphasic health
of Meigs COWJtians ·who have not scheduling residents.
As in previous years, financing screening clinic was held in 1987
had a qxnplele health check up
· for the heallh clinic will be handled and at that time 469 persons parover lhe past year.
The tests will include coniplete wilh levy funds from !he Meigs ticipated. Numerous physical conblood worlt as well as urinalysis County Heallh Department. The ditions needing further evaluation
and hemoccult tests, dental evalua- tuberculosis test materials will were detected and lhe information
tion, tuberculosis test, evaluation come from levy funds from. the was sent on to the individual's r
·for glaucoma and other eye dis- Meigs County Tuberculosis As- specified physician.
'Another meeting of lhe planning
eases, he8ring 'testl, pulmonary sociation. It is anticipated lh8l the
program
will
cost
from
'$6,000
to
committee
was set for Feb. 5 at 1
lun~ capacity tests, and perbaps ex$8,000
over
the
amounts
paid
by
.
p.m.
· .
amlllllions by podiattists.
By MELINDA POWERS
Tribune News Staff

Health screening dates scheduled

SENioR CmzENs SPECIAL

J\,,,,.

.

Local Central Trust branches
·: taken over ·by Bane.One

. Cub Seoul paek attended candles for the CriSis ceremony In
New RaveD oa Tuesday nl&amp;ht,
armed with flap, caadles and
alps of their hopes. Nearly
300 people turned out the
servtee. At rl&amp;ht, IJnda aad
Rebeeea Zuepan of Mason
h1ht a eaadle for their aoa aad
brother, Billy Zuspan at the
vlgO. The ceremoliy drew
DalloDWide atleadon when H
wu pleked· up from WSAZ
TV3 for the 11:30 p:m. NBC
News Speelal Crtala In the
PenlaD GuH. (0\IP-pllotos by
MIDdy Kearns)

•

You·CARE-To-11~T

Central Bancorporatlon said
"This iransactlon will allow us to
focus more completely on the
greater Cincinnati area through
our banks In Cincinnati, Dayton
and northern Kentucky where we
believe our strength and experience offer significant
opportuliltles ."
Bane One Corporation has
assests of ,$2~ .4· billion as of Sept.
30, 1990 and operates with 51
afflllate banking organizations
with 747• offices In Indiana,
Kentucky, Mlchlga,n, Ohio,
Texas and Wisconsin. Bane One
also operates several additional
facilities tha engage In travel,
trust services ; mortgage bankIng consumer finance and other
services.

year's anauil Girl SCout Cookie Sale. 'tbe cookie
sale starts at 4 p.m. on Friday and wDI continue
through Feb. 3.

STRATEGY
- Cainllla and Leu
Yoacbam, 1-r, of Racine, uae cookie order llslll
from yean past to plan their strate2y for this

Girl Scouts ·take to the streets
and phone .lines to sell cookies
'

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$2.99.

Mason Family· Restaur~t ·
Rt. 33

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(304) 773-5321

MBIIOD,

wv

(NEXT TO MASON EXXON)
' .

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something,

learn

toO.

The
Daily S'entinel
POMEROY, OIDO
•

HEALTH SCREENING TEAM • Oct. 3, 4, 7
8lld I were tet 11 tile cllltea for il comprehellllve
IICI'HUI&amp; proaram at tile Melp Maltlfiii'JIOII B111Miw&amp; wileD die pl•nnln&amp; team met
1'MidiJ at the Sealor Cllbe11 Cealer. Attelldlna
die ......... mrioll rro. tle left aroaaa
die llble, J011 Jacobi, Melp Couaty Health
ne,_ liiieDt ldmllllstrator; .J01111 Tewksbary,
couaty tullemllo* D-, Zaae ~t of the
. Healtfl Department, Jeanale' llraua, Sealor

-.wa

·

ONLY

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Featuring: Fre$h.Scrambled Eggs,
Homestyle Biscuits, Danish,
Muffins, Pancakes, and
Mucli, Much. Morel

Let them know how you feel
about drug abuse and find out how
they feel. Try to eue their
'"
. confusion and listen to their point!~,
ofvlew.
·
By talldng to.your children In a "' _·
calm, rational man~. and reaDy · '
_lbtening to them as Well, you may . '·
be able to teac,h them 110mething
about drug abuse and about
relating to other people. '
It may be tbe most Important
lesson of their lives. You ~

·

AM ·

·

MoND"Y·Fam"Y' 8 AM·ll

Times have changed since the
days of "Reading, 'Ridng and
.
'Rithmedc." ICids today learn about
everything from space to square
dancing.
As_early.as elementary school,
children also learn about drugs,
The problem with this subject Is
that not all of the teaching comes
from the right Instructors. While
teachen are busy pointing out the
neptl\tes of drug abuae, other
students' offer the' message that It's
O.K to use drugs.
All these mixed signals can be
confusing. One way to help your
' chlldren sort out the messases Is 10
~lish good lines of
communication.

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A!Jove, members of a local

announcements._
._

a

Mason,

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Steelwo.rkerS

Rt. 33

)

·Deadline passes; troops
move, Saddain ·hiding

~
· Meigs

Mason Family Resta~ant

Rain likely, probably ehanglng to wet IDOW Wedlleeclay
al&amp;ht.' Mosdy eloudy Thursday, with a cballce ol en ow,
malaly In tM'moraiDI.

No., ••

_;...__ _ _..,..Weather--------

Continued from page 1
how mental health services can
benellt !he elderly ' as. they also
receive s«,Yices tllrO!Jgh the Options prognn.
'
Oliver will repOrt directly to Dr.
·Ramola Hopltins, executive director or lhe Gallia-Jacksolt Meigs
Board of Alcohol, ~ Addiction
'lllld'Mental Health Servx:es.
Iri 1976, Oliver was hired by the
Meigs County Council on Aging as
'a social .semces cliordinalor. Alter
being in that position fiX twO years,
she became lhe Retired Senior
Volunteer Program adminlsll'ative
assistant and was later named director of that IIJ'Ogr&amp;m. Her wart as
RSVP director was highlighted by
the intergenerational volwueer
project "Yesteryear", which has
reached 1300 children since 1985
and has rtceived recognition
lhroughout the state including Gov.
Richard Celeste.
The RSVP progrim has contributed over 420,000 volunteer
hours to the commllllity since 1984,
)ICCOI'ding to Mrs. Oliver.
In 1982 in additioll to continuing
to setVe as RSVP dlrec10r, Oliver
was nanied assistant directoc for the
Meigs County councll oa Aains. In
that position she hal -dlored a
pilot federal Jl'l)ject ealidccl "At
Risk Elderly in Rtnl Anaica:
Creating Family Suppcn Net·
wprks", has condllclod IDYCIII
workshops: and worbd in the
litci'acy prllgl8111 in Meigl County.

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Squads respond to 5 calls ·

:susan...

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Copyrigllted 1111

slve'' withdrawal from Kuwait day night fn New York,
~nder the supervision of a U.N.
Inside the gulf region, troops
observer force. The plan pro- and many residents of desert
poses the SecUrity Council agree nations prepared for a conflict
WEATHER''MAP - A low pressure system will bring a good
to Iraqi President Saddam Hus- that most believe Is Imminent.
ehance of rain to the Northeast aad the East )Joaat, With (lo ·few
Units of lhe Mei~s Cotinty Emergency Medical Service responded
sein's demand for an InternaA convoy of U.S. warships led
thllllderstonns acr01111 Florida. (UPI)
~to five calls for ass1stance on Monday and early Tuesday morning.
tional conference on the Israeli- by an aircraft carrier armed
On Monday at 10:36 a.m. !he Pomeroy unit was called to Route
occupied territories and the wltli nuclear warheads crossed
681 for Juanita Geerhart who . wi)S transported to O'Bleness
Palestinian question. ·
the S~ez Canal on Its way to the
HospitaL
.
·
·
·
The plan was handed to the Persian Gulf, Egyptl'an ofllclals
At 12:38 p.m. the Rutland unit responded to Meigs Mine No. ll
. South Central Ohio
A chance of rain or snow
president of the 15-natlon coun- said. U.S. military officials
for Hubert Wolfe who was taken to Ve~s Memorial Hospital.
Rain llevelilplng Tuesday
Thursday, with fair weather
cil, Zaire's U.N, Ambassador would not conflnn that report.
The Racme unu, at 3:13. p.m., went to Route 124 for Goldie Holnight, with a low In the mid 40s.
rrlday and Saturday. Highs will
Bagbenl Adelto Nzengeya,
man who was ttansponed SL Joseph Hospital. .
·
Chance
of
rain
Is
80
percent.
within hours after the Parls
rang~
frOJD 35 to 45 Thursday,
Oftlclals In Syria said an
The Middlepon l&lt;"~re Department was called out at 9:41 p.m. tb
and be mainly In the 30s Friday
government announced Its Inten- estimated 35,000 Syrian troops Occasional rain Wednesday.
Fiflh and Fisher Streets for a chimney lire at the residence of Teresa
tion to Initiate a peace bid to deployed In Lebanon wer~ given with highs between 50 and 55.
and Saturday. Overnight lows
Haley.
.
salvage the failed weekend mls- · gas masks and chemical warfare Chance of rain Is near 100 will be In the :lOs early Thursday,
On Tuesday at 7:14 am. lhe Pomeroy unit went to Blake Hill
;·
and ranging from the teens to the
slon of Secretary-General Javier equipment because of fears that percent.
Road for Beva Grueser who WI)S taken to Veterans.
Perez.de Cuellar to·Baghdad.
low 20s Friday and saturday
Exteaded
F•recaat
.
the battle over Kuwait would
lill)mlngs.
Thursday
tbroqh
Salurday
·
The French proposal drew an spread to other countries In the .
·
.
angry
response from the United region. '
continued from page i
'
Iraq Is believed to ha"Ve more
States, which said It was concontact .!he president of lhe Mid- across from Frulhs Pharmacy. It trary to U.S.Inslstencethat there than 500,000 troops In Kuwait and
dleport Ministerial Association was reported that BiD Haptonstall be no linkage J&gt;etween Iraq I along the Iraqi southern border.
Group to meet
The largest ~merlcan mllltary '
' S!\uare dance .
regarding having a member of lh8l who owns' Sears has purchased the withdraw! and an International
The
Pomeroy
group
of
A.A.
and
·
deployment
since
VIetnam
The
Gallia Twirlers Western
association open village . council property and is now in lhe process Mideast conference.
Al-Anon
Will
meet
'Thursday
at
7
numbers
380,
000
troops
enSquare
.
Dance
Club will liold a
meetings with prayer. It was noted of tearing it down.
In Washington, a White House
p:m.
at
the
Sacred
Heart
Calholic
camped
In
Saudi
Arabia
and
dance
Saturday
from 8-11 p.m. at
that this was done by the Associa- · Attending the meeting were spokesman said Pres! dent Bush
Ch~h.
·
lhe Henderson Community Center
lion for many years before being Mayor Hoffman, · Cleric-Treasurer was ready to au thorlze military aboard ships In the Persian Gulf.
in Hende!SOI), W.Va
:discontinued a dozen 1:1 so years Jon Buck, and Council members· action against Iraq If It falls to Approximately 50,000 more U.S.
llo1JIId
and
square
dance
ago.
Horton, James Clatworthy', Judy withdraw from Kuwait by the troops are expected to be In place
There will be a round and square
by next month. Complementing
Jack Satterfield asked about . Crooks, Paul Gerard, Jack Satter- U.N. deadline.
dance
at the Tuppen Plains Vi'W
A ineeling of the Meigs County
sonie dilapidated property located field and William Walters.
"Any moment after the 15th Is American forces are an estiBuilding
on Frida from 8-11:30 Board of Menlll Rewilation,
borrowed time," said Bush spo- mated 230,000 troops from counContinued ·form·page 1
·kesman MarUn Fitzwater. ''Eve- tries participating In the U.S.-led p.m. featuring lhe ~ocky Mountain Developmental Disabilities, will be
Bluegrass. Arthur Conant will be held Wednesday at 7 p.m. at the
•• ··- - ' - - - - - - - - - · ryone has to · 'assume mnttary CO;!IIIIQn against Iraq.
.
!he
caller, The public is invited
I
Carle1011 School in Syracuse.
hoped, according to a Charleston
The story states that technically act19n could come at any time."
'
Gazeue story. .
retirees, lhe workers will have !he
Perez de Cuellar said he had
'
. A Division of Employment amount of their pension benefits failed to find a peaceful settleSecurity administrative law judge deducted from lhei,r unemployment ment to the criSis during hiS trip
turned down union members, who benefits.
\he previous day to Baghdad.
had hoped to have lower-level
The workers, mostly 30-year
"I doriotbellevethattoday, the
decision reversed.
veterans of K'ai$Cr Aluminum, ac- 14th, at this hour, there Is time for
quired
retiree
status
when •a diplomatic initiative," said
Ravenswood bought !he plant from Perez de Cuellar. Nevertheless,
Kaiser two years ago.
he scheduled a closed-door T,bll/.
The
issue
was
whelher
lhe
pen!!ecu
rlty Council meeting MlinDally stock prlees
sion
was
paid
by
Ravenswood,
as
·
(As of 10:30 a.m. ) '
the company claimed.
Bryce and Mark Smltb
The union argued !he retirement
of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewl
was negotiated with Kaiser and lhe
VETERANS MEMORIAL
sale
price
reflected
lhe
payment
of
MONDAY
ADMISSIONS
Am Electric Power ............. 27~
those
funds,
The
judge,
however,
Chester
Coif,
Mason,
W.Va.
Ashland 011 ............... ,........ 28%
found
no
evidence
to
support
that
.
MONDAY
DISCHARGES
. AT&amp;T ............................... .. 29~
view.
·
None. ·
I
Bob Evans .......................... l4~
The
decision'
·does
not
affect
Charming Shoppes ............. .10~
more lhan 1,200 other union memCity Holding Co ................. .143,4
who will continue to receive
Federal Mogul .................... 12% hers,
full benefits.
Racine Village Qetlc Jane
Goodyear T&amp;R .... .. ............ .17~
Steelworkers call the situation a · Beegle reports that there was an erJ{ey Centurion .................... 10~
lock-out. bur company leailers label ror in the repon of lhe last Racine
Lands' End .......................... IS
the dispute a strike. RAC has hired VIllage council TfiCC!ing.
Limited Inc .................. ...... 19\1,
725 replacement workers who
:!ns~U:: =~·froln
Multimedia Inc ................... 583,4
'
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together wi.lh supervisory People,
Qerk Beegfe advises lhat she
Rax Restaurants ................. ?2
'
lhe plant.
· · Robbins &amp; Myers .:.: . : . :.: . : . : .:19~ · · runThe
union has ......... 'ed · the reported that she received . checks
Shoney's Inc............... ........ 11~
"""""'
from
Sutton and Lebanon
ruling, which will now go to the Townships. The council apologizes
•Star Bank ............................ 16
for any inconvenience.
Wendy's Int'l ......................... 6 agency's full board of review,
Worthington Ind... .. ............. 21%

LeJ!

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Ohio
Lottery
..

Eastem
loses to.
Hannan Trace

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Middleport..

. -.

Tueecifv, J8nuarf 16, 1991

....---Local briefs-----__, More rain ·moving 'into Buckeye State·
Hill among students activated

..•.,

......

·Girl ·Scouts throughout M.:fts troop profits are used to fund camp- and coconut; 'Illgalongs, wafers
COWJty will be making phone
s ing weekends, trips and the pur- topped wilh peanut butter and
and knocking on doors beginning chase of new eqUipment. Proceeds covered with chocolate; Thin
Friday and cootinuing through Feb. from !his year's sale will also help Mints, which are chocolate wafers
3 during lhe 1991 Girl Scout suppOJt Girl Scouting's nstionwide wilh natural peppermint and a
Cookie Sale.
"Right to Read" literacy service cocoa coaling; Trefoils, shortbread
Throughout lhe United· States, project.
cookies wilh only 32 calories each;
Girl Scout cookies have become an
The girls also eam individual ·Trail Mix, • blend of chocolate
American tradition and in Meigs . prizes for selling cookies. Items chips. onuneal, sesame seeds, ·.
County; scouts will be takitig orders such as sweatshirts, tote bags and nlisins, sunJiower seeds, almond
for lhe old favorites, such as Thin hats are awarded, as well as the md. apple pieces; and Chalet.
Mints and Trefoils, as well u a embroidered pau:hes which are Cremes, an asiiOitlllent of lemon
couple of new ..arieties, Trail Mix J)(lllU1Jr with the scouts.
. and vanilla sandwich cremes.
and Olalet Cremes.
· 'This year's theme for lhe annual
All Girl Scout cookies are made
Girl
·
Scout
cooldcs
have
been
cookie
sale
Is
"Growins
With
with
100 pertent vegetable shonenCltlzeaa Cellter; T. C. Ervla, R. N., Pain Theiss
sold
in
the
United
States
for
more
Pride."
Girls
will
beain
liking
oring
and
contain no preservatives or
and AHce Wolfe, Sealor Cltlzeu Ceater; Norma
lhan SO - ... Cootie sales have den for lhe cooties•Friday after- artillcial colorin •
.Torra, R. N., Health Dtpartmeot, IDd Becky
always
imporlantiiClUI'CC of noon at 4 p.m. This yell''l cookies
111= are
million Girt
Ball, wbo 1181 beelllllred 11 coordloator lor the
funding for local Girt ScouiiTOOJIS will apin sell for S2 a 1m llld in- ~ts in lhe United Swea. Last
PJ'OII'IDI• all ~eated; IDII IIIDdlna, Rhooda
and lhe prodll from ~e sales chide these varieeies: Do-Si-Doa, a yeu, IICirly 27,000 l!irll lerVed in
Dalley, R. N., Vetenor MeiHI'IIl HCilpltal director Ill aunl•g; Linda Frlead, Sealor Cltlzeas · are of direcl bencdt to the girls. cruncby. oatmeal cookie wilh Black Diamond Girl Scout Council .
Ceater, aad Dr. James Wetherell, medical ad· · Troops retain 1 percen~age of the peanut buuer llllins; Samoas, a which includes Meigs County and
,pr()C(.Cds from each box sold. Tl)e . combinatiQD. of, caramel, chocolate . .55 odl!:r counties in Otlio, Pennsyl:
visor.
' ..
·
vania, West Virginia and Virginia. ·

___ _______..._.......
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�</text>
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