<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="10920" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/10920?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-03T08:47:59+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="41886">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/9813ac648f7c16a907bd48ff96cd86e7.pdf</src>
      <authentication>bedcd4d0829d4c782a42e6c897f36525</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="34477">
                  <text>.-..,.....

...
I

Thurldav• .......,., n. 1991
~~~~g:I~1~2~The::::D:at:y~~S~a~~~··=-~--------------~~~~~--_!p~~~m~MI~OV~--~~~k~•~l~l~p~art~~~~~~--------~--------------------~~~~~~~~~~

Four teachers are
,
at
mee
·
ung•
. . ·
honored

1

Four

hen

~ · have been 1991-92 scbool yeet in order that
=~or
1:;:~~ ~';tr.::.::r.tlrllions
for a
· nacbm
by die Eastern Local
The board ll)llliOYed mcmbenhip
Board of Ed~on.
Nominaled for die honor at die
The_sday ~gbt m~nf' were J~
~ Gma Tillis, Rita Perr Wil·
Iiams, and Grace Weber. .
The board also recognized at the
meeting Rick.HoUon and C. D. Ml;In~ ror efforts 10 ·improye the '
,gym at Cbesltl Elementary. .
. It was llllliOUIICed that die annual
Meigs Cowlty SDCIIini bee will be
hdcf on Feb. tS at ,:30 p.m, at
Eastt:m High ·School in die band
room. SheUy Dubose and Dawn
Heiden!lan were employed as substitule teachen for die balance of
die 1990-91 school· year 10 be used
on an as-needed basis only. The
board also employed Dorothy
Calaway as 11 substitute seaetary
for the balance of die year and die
use or Randy Boston and Duke Pultins ill the areas of bus mechanic
and mainrenance. ' · . __
The res;~·,;ons of Susan
·Roessler as i'.tituiC teac~ lind
Glen Easterling as a substitute bus
driver were accepted The board
also panted a one ye66leave of absence for Linda Shultz for the

Two
... ~::;:=Con;;tln~ued;;trclm:;:;::paae~1~------;~=::-:==::::=:;:;:;:---=:::::::::;::-:;:::::-;-:;::::-::::-·
.
Some reports Indicated several aurreadel'ed.
forelpera In thecountrycould
lnJmedlately clear It Iraq ,was •
Iraq ' troopa have already
BaJbdadradlobroadcaitacall ao~thln15days.
draft1li&amp;'Arab81nlraqorwbether
·
Thunday for more troops.
1bere are an eatlrnated 100,000 the radio was callllli for volun- '
The radio aald "all able-bodied EIYptiW and other Arab expat- teen among the rountry's for- •
COmmission
Continued
page' , • • •
men abould report to conscrlp- rlate workers, aa well as Asians, elp commll!Qty to
for
do

trom

Dew-rt·

Meigs County Hipway
IIICIIt wae 11p1J10WC1 )Ill day.

report

in die Ohio Sehool Board Associ•
The COUDty will purclille a new
lion. A first "'*'in&amp; was giwo 111 a . Case
wheel
loader from
neW policy pertainin&amp; 10 die PuBt Southeasteril Equipment in Gal· SeconcWy Options for Studenrs. lipolint a priCe.ol
IJIII·a
Liability
. insuraoce . flilit new Intcmalionll t!athed tru4 .00
Nationwide 1nsun11ct io includo Ford dump truck from Gibson
die five boosiU orpnizations was Moton in Atbc:ns, at priccl of
approved and it was ~greed 10 ad- $S7,376 and $37,853.27, zapecvmise for buildin• insurance.
, lively.
· .
·
The ~ :,. authorized til
The board abo
a momake advanced draws against local lion yestetday
tu monies from die county audiror David Koblentz 111 Witbdraw from
this calendar year. The die commia.ee now COIIIidCrinf die
approved an agnlCIIIellt bet· consauction of a multi::J ,lliL
ween the dislrict ·and Veterans
· The n 11 .,ing
·
· die
Memorial J:loSpilal 1eb08ctive 10 ·widtdrawal. acconlins 10 Jones, is
Nov. 1 for physical thmpy services rhreefold .
for a student, . and an agreement
F'II'Sily, he said. die couitty iS not
between die dislrict and Everett finlllcially CIIPIIble of sharing die"·
Calaway for die purpoiiD of provid- cost of compfeting the inilial coning ll'll1lSp0118Ii for a student 10 struction phlise. .
·
·
the SBH 111it in AthenS, !ellOaCtive
Secondly, Jones said, die com10 Jan. 8.
.
n\issioncn do not feel that die
, It was also decided 10 mldvertise counly would be. able 10 ·slae in
· for bids on a used bus. Feb. 20 at the cost of openling the facnlty
6:30 p.m was set as die dale for die once the jail is eonslrilcled
next meeting. Altending were Ray
FinallY., Jones said, any IIIOIIies
Karr, president: Charles Kitight, available 10 die COIDIDissiollcn 10
vice president: and members, IIlli spend on jail· improvements would
Hanrium, L 0. McCoy, 11JC1 Jim be best spent on renovation of die
Smith.
East Second Str=t facililty now ill

•-,.·

'

Ohio.Lottery

Pistons
slip past .
Rockets

Pick-3: 924
Pick-4: 4662
Cards: 6-H• n ~.
' :7"\.:.'
9-0;5-S

Low tonight near 30. Cloudy
Saturday. High In mid 40&amp;.
Ch1111ce of rain 40 percent.

•

en tne

from~

·g::p

Vo!.41, No.1 as
Copyrighted 1991

CARPET SALE
LEVEL LOOP

BERBER
CARPET
oMONtlum O.uge

p.m., and on Sunday from "In no way, however," Jones
noon 10 S p.in.
said, "are ~ now .available 10 ·

Loopa ,

e18 Colora

SALE

.$12~.!

•St81n RMIH

IMtaiiM - INr.Ct ....

•8cotchgerd "

complete this work in·lite foreseeable future. •
Meigs County's wilitdrawal from
lhe ClllpDi?lltion now leaves only
two counties • Jacbon and Vmton •
considering such a facility, which is
:':·in die inilial planning Sl8geS at

. •1 00% Ny!Dn

o12

Colora .

·. . -- stoeks

SALE

$·1,8''
SQ.

· ·When Lawrence rurned ·around,
he saw the subject holding a paper
bag ~ a shotgun. The burglar, according to Lawrence, was wearing
a knee-length green overcoat and a
·gray mask.

SERTA ULTRA
SUPREME
Pillow Top •

TWIN

FULL

saa s1oa
EA. PC.

oMp Quilting

10 YNr W,.rnn11Y

TWIN -·"'"M.J.~

$1 08
· FW ""'"""'"·r.~Sl 54
QUEEN 5ET.........S354

SERTA
PERFECT
SLEEPER

•H•mpton Court
•Firm 8uppon
•111 YMr W1rranty

FULL SO

QUEEN SET

$169 $479

property

•

.,

•

-

.

Lawrence repotted thai he grabbed the subject and the two fell iniO
a cooler at die store.. During die
struggle, Lawrence was struck on
the forehead and sustained a gash
that.later
. hC$ , . • •
...
,_ req ui1'l'4
...~P,U:

but failed. The subject then threw
die telephone 10 die floor and
demanded · Lawrence's wallet,
which Lawrence surrendered.
No vehicle was identified.
Shcrtly afJer die robbery, a
nearby resident came 10 the store
and Lawrence informed him of the
incident and asked that he caD the
sheriff's department

AndBIIDn '1

BUNII.-BEO
SALE/
·YOU ·MUST SEE OUR
SELECTION!

.

By JONATHAN FERZlGER
United Press International

SYRIA

.
IRAQ
. Israel debated Its response t9 an Iraqi missile attack Friday
· that threatened to draw tM Jewish state Into the Persian Gulf
war as U.S.· led ·forces mounting thousands of air sorties a day
-Baghdad
.
destroyed
mol;&gt;Ue missile launchers .lnslde Iraq.
r--'
0
Israel! Prime Minister Yllzhak Shamlr met wllhhls Cabinet
I . . .
following the conventional missile attack that Injured 12
'1.
people. There was no Indication whether his nation woult;l
strike back .
·
. '1
I·
.
I
.
. . .
U.S. officials fear Israel! involvement In the ~ar could cause
the defection of Arab members of the coalition seeking Iraq's
ouster from Kuwait.
~~
"Israel retains the right to
Iraq said Friday Its air dedecide how · ;tnd when to re- fenses
have shot down 72 allied
r--~~-1 spond," Foreign Minister David warplanes , and has said the
Levy told reporters , alter emergKuwait
Ing from the meeting. "Should U.S.·led air raids have caused a '
we sl t down and a bandon the large number of casualties.
Schwarzkopf said the allies
security of our citizens, our
were
flying 2,000 air sorties a
·
children, In order to listen to
SAUDI ARABIA
advice? The reaction will show day, 80 percent of them successful. No ground bat ties had been
again that Israelis strong."
White House spokesman Mar- waged but a small artillery
lin FltzwaJer Issued a statement exchange left Jwo U.S. Marines
JORDAN
saying "the United States has and a Navy corpsman wounded,
EGYPT
been In touch with the govern- officials said.
The U.S. commander refused
ment of Israel to express its.
0
to
· sjleelllal~ on when· 9r, If a
outrage over !he missile ·atMiln
ground
. assault would be
!l:·:=
; =.,=··=·-=·'
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilliiiliii•---~
tacks"
and
to
urge
Israel
to
show
mounted,
saying only that Operaii
~~~ tion Desert Storm would continue
~
e
.
•
e
A senior Pentagon official said until Iraqi Preslden! Saddam
be . believed the missiles used
compiles with U.N.
~
against Israel came from mobile Hussein
resolutions and withdraws from
A Pomeroy man escaped serious Service was on !he scene and what caWed lite ca •·
li
lau,nchers In Iraq and It was Kuwait, which he Invaded Aug. 2.
injury in a C!lve-in of ground near recommended thai Phelps be taken repotted, although thev~tpo .ce "rela tlvely certain" that Uxed
Allied ground troops In Saudi
the mtersecbon of Mechanic and 10 the hospilal for elUIITiination, be and flooding in !hat area are {:ns sites in Iraq were knocked out by Arabia remained poised at the
Fourth Streets on piOpetty owned reportedly refused Jreatment and c.onsidered all 8 con!ributing f ~g bombings that started Thursday. Kuwait border.
. by Ben Ewing Thwsday evening.
was taken home by his wife.
Barriers have been erected : ~
At a Friday briefing In Riyadh, . The · missile strike against
WJ.ley L, "Buster" Phelps, 39, of
According 10 Pomeroy police, site.
Saudi Arabia, featuring vivid Israel Interrupted what had .been
196 Pleasant Ridgoe, suffered only Phelps was alone when the incident
videotape of direct hils by U.S. 24 hours of good news from the
shoulder injuries when die ground happened and was !i8pped inside
jets agalnstlraqt targets, Army allles, who reported that bomb·
C!lved in as he was unloading a lite bole for several minuJes before
Gen. Norman Schwarzkopf, u.S. lng raids begun Thursday
telephone pole from a pickup bUCk. someone heard him yelling and' ran
,
commander of Operation Desert against Iraq and occupied KuPomeroy firemen were summoned 'to the nemby file house for assisShield, said U.S. war' planes had wait bad met with little resist·
to the scene and put a ladder down Jance. Firemen rook a ladder 10 the
located 11 mobile missile ance and much success.
iniO the hole so that Phelps could si!e and reportedly encountered _no
launchers In Iraq Friday,
Seven · Scud mlsslls crashed
climb out.
difficulty in getting Phelps 'out of
Schwarzkopf said six of the Into Israel's heavily populated
While the Pomeroy unit of the the hole.
launchers were destroyed and an coastal plain shortly after 2 a.m.
Meigs County Emergency Medical
There is still 110 indication of
attack was under way against the Friday, said Schwarzkopf, who
Three motor vehicle accidents
remaining launchers. He said It said he bad no lnformallon about
were investigated on Thursday
appeared the launchers would Israel' s) •ext step.
night by Meigs County Sheriff's
have been aimed at Saudi
A Pentagon official said · one
deputies.
Arabia .
Scud missile also was Inter·
· At 4:30 p.m., Raymond L..
"Finding the !lxed missile cepted by a U.S. -made Patriot
Andrews, Long Botrom, had pulled launchers ·Is a relatively easy air defense missile Friday In
thing to do hut finding a mobile eastern Saudi Arabia, near
off County Road 25 onto State
Route 7 when his 1984 Ford stalled launcher Is like finding a needle Dhahran, the massive Saudi air
in die roadway. A nonhbound In a haystack, " he said.
base being used by the United
vehicle, driven by John T. Brown
With Operation Desert Shield States and other allies .
of Marietta, was unable 10 stop and having completed Its 36th hour,
The destruction of the Scud
hit lite bUck driven by Andrews.
Schwarzkopf said seven allied represents the first time an air
planes nadbeen lost- three u.s. defense system stopped a ballis·Allbaugh no injuries were reported, Brown's 1988 Ford was
jets, two British. one Kuwaiti and tic missile, said the official, who
moderately damaged while damage , one Italian - and all the pilots requested anonymity.
10 Andrews' auck was listed as were considered missing,
Israeli officials said the Scud
heavy.
He said eight Iraqi planes were -missiles - armed with convenAt 4:50 p.m.. Lori Louks of downed In alr-to-alr combat but tional, not chemical, warheadsLong Botrom was northbound in refused to speculate on Iraqi caused 12lnjurles and "considerher 1987 Plymou!h when sf!e sw- : casualties, saying, "We're never · able" property damage when the .
ted to rum in her 'driveway. She
going to get Into the body count
Continued on page 10
slowed and a northbound truck business."
pulling another car struck the rear

Sea

...

~----------~--~~

ves
•
Ground 'ca m' man escapes mlury

Deputies .
prO be th ree
accidents

of~ear.

The driver of lite uuck rold lite
sheriff's deputies that he was '
Jllepa!ing 10 pass the car so litat he
could get up speed to go up the hiD
by Eastern High School.
Moderate damage was listed to
Louks' vehicle and no damage was
listed 10 Hall's.
~ties also took a report of a
hi!/skip
accident
aJ .
lite
Ravenswood Bridge. Sometime at
around 4 p.m. on Thursday, an unknown vehicle came of Slate Route
338 at an apparent high rate of
speed and sltidded off lite roadway,
striking and breaking off one of lite
metal light posts 81 the bridge. .

'

Man cited by patrol
A Weat ~ man -

cited

for lallme to yield W!!!IJ!Miay alia'

' a two-c1r accldeal oil Sllle Roule

689 ill Meip eo..ty.
Ronlld )Jirdelle; 33, of 1.eoll;

:.r:!
·~=~71oft
.=.an:
lec!IDd car, dri¥ea by Ronda s.

' W.Va., -

ci!ed after

OUl

SleWa1. 17, of AibaJ, -

lnlvel-

~'!t't'::.":%:.mllclr· .Neidier .
s~
-

ddWir ....., ~.. ...-..

oiled for
wear a aafely belt.
· ~

'•

.

.Casualities· mount;
Israel leaders in
debate over attack

'l}'son-r:=:.

Warner.

.

'

·register
·~; Siubiect
went tO 'tlie cish !--~~-;;;~;;;~~~".
·:li~-·:~-.
and at!empled to open 'it,

Racine
squad
bansported
Lawrence to Veterans Memorial
Hospi!al, where be received ten
stitch«:.$ for lite cut on his forehead.
He was later released.
· The department indicate$ that investigation iniO die incident is continuing. .
.

In other action, the commis-

\

A Lonlj: .hottom man was
treated for mjuries following an
anned robbery of his grocery store
on Thursday nighL .

U:.,

SERTA PREMIER
·coMFORT
OulltONt Top • Firm Support
1 Y- Werr~nty
·

·. Armed
robbery
probed

Ai:cordiii~ Meigs County
ent, Howard
Sheriff's
Lawrence, 67, was alone at his
store on DeWitt's Run Road . ill
Long Botom shortly before 9 p.m.
when a male subject, 6 feet Jail,
tBpJied him on the shoulder.

sionen:

. '

fD.

•........ With 9/16 ......

ses.

- executed a new lease for
in Cbeltcr to Jbe Olestcr
~limteer Fire Depmuuent, lflirdmg a 5eVised resbiction on con·
·.· struction at the siJe from, 40 feet
from lite SQUJh llld east lines 10 10
81 lite east ·and 40 ·10 the soulit. The
Chester fire depalinlelit is curiently
planninl 10 exiJIInd dleir racillty
and will need 30 feet !)f space on
the east side;
.
- Jransfemd 1990 accumulaUld
viCIIion time for employees in die
Meigs COIJIIly Audita' 's Oflkle and
die Meigs _County EMS office 10
1991;
. • approved juvenile and probate
bonds for Probale and JuVenile Judge Robert E. Buck;
• uansfemd $40S from die
Meigs County Genml Fund 10 die
Community ComctiOIII Program,
upon die request of
un aneta' 1eresa M.
• . heard I presenlllion from
·Bryce Smith reganllug a new tempera!Uit lelllllr device for forced
air heating and cooling syiJellll;
~t Jones, Koblentz,
Commissioner Manning Roush,
C1ert ~ Hobstettcr, County En.sin= Pllil R~ and Highway
Department Supenntendent Ted

••

SELE(TION IS
GREAT!

r..,.;.

--~----· --~---

S· 1 · 3~t.

'

Ands11on
SERTA
ATTR.ES
SALE/

J~

missile launchers

.

lnlll!lt' Wl!lo 9/16 ...

PLUSH
CARPET
•DMP Rich Saxony

w;';·

·M•orr.clio.R,e HOuRs· ·

•·

8:30.8:00 '

Tueld•~·Seturdey
l:3 -&amp;:OO.
·•

Cou.-tbouse
to close '

All'V~nfD1\_,,.ON,,._, .

PUI.IUK, AI'PLIAIIal, IV'S, ROOI cova•G
992~3671
'
PO•lOY
· · DO-ow•
wn•

25 Cento
A Multimedia Inc. Newipaper

'

SALE

811leatlon
.ONylon Pile
•12 Ft. Wide .

•FHA Approved

10 6

'

SALE

2 Soetlono. 14 Pogoo

1991

Pomeroy--Middleport, Ohio, Friday, J'anuary 18,

..

CULPTURED
CARPET
,eExcellent Calor

·~t~~~ '$9 ~.!

Elizabelit Selllld, lite County
Cbamber of Commerce's new· Executive DirectortCounty DevelopIIICIIt Direcror, met wilit lite board .
yeslelday and ini!Oduced some of
her plans for lite county now that
she's on the job.
Schaad stared that one of her first
. goals is to establish a group made
up of econOmic develnnnl&lt;!nt pracyean - Rawlings, F-.7.~
litioncn, comilting oi".riii·Or thole
Chaie, Martin, Walker and Huntet.
.JAMES B"'"BF-LD
illlerested in community. de¥elopBirthfield llld hiS famil are
.-.. ...,.
me~t". .~luding governmenlal
. now compl.,;n~ 10111e minor
bodies, busmesses and ' interested
individuals.
wort (II10 the
~. and he intends
COIIIPidc
more major
The goal of sucli an Orpnlmtion,
reDOYIIions in lhe fulure.
·
Schaad said yesteulay, would be 10
Birthfield is a Rutland native, Dally •tack prices
network ideas and COiscentJaJe
die son of Howard and Marie Little (AI of 10: 30 a.m.)
~velopment effOI'\S iniO a countyBin:hfield. He has two children, Bryce and Mark Smith
wtde eftort.
·
Jeffrey C. Birchfield, 16, and Julia of Bluat, Eilll II Loewl
.Odter linmediate goais, accord, Jill'!Bln:hfield, 13, who !eSide wilb
ing 10 Schaad, are die development
'dleir mother in Glllia County.
· Am Electric Power .............. 28 · of lite Retention and ExpansiOn
Before his bainlng as a fUIIelll Ashland Otl ..... ............ :... :.. 28~ Progmm begun 110me time ago, indiieclor, 8irtb8eld worked in die AT&amp;T · ... · ··· · · ·· · · ................. ._30% liOductioo of leadenllip de¥elopcoel mines in Meigs County for 7 g:b Evans···· ...................... 14~ ment prograiiiJ, and incRasing conand a half yean. That time included
arming Shoppes ........ ......11% tact wilit Buckeye Hills Regional
thiee years au foreman.
City Holding Co .................. 14~ De¥elopment Center.
Bin:bfteld~s career as a fUIIelll Feder$! Mogul... .................l3¥t
''The key to success," Jones lOki
diieclor, in fact, began at die Rut- ~year T&amp;R ...................18¥. Schaad, :is die ability 10 tie people
land establishment • working as a
Y Centurion ..................... 11
together.
,
teenaged "lo-fer" for bodl Tom Lands' End ................. ,.......16'h
Jones refemd to "jealousies"
Marlin and Jack Walku.
·
Umlted Inc . ... ....................21&gt;,1 among villages as a ~ stum·
FoUowing biB lllduation ftom Multimedia Inc ..............:..... 62
bUng block of county-wide
colleae, wilit a B.S: degree in Mor- Rax Reslaurants ................. 'h
development
.
" tuarY Sc~• .Bircbfeld en~ SRohbbl~ &amp; ~yers .............. .. 20¥. ·
The deadline for purchasing dog
into an 8P~Rnti~ at die Biunoney s 1nc . ......................12&gt;,1 tags was extended 10 February 1.
ner Funeia1 Home in ~enlor.
~tar ~nk ..... ....................... 17. Dog tap are now available for $4
Bin:hfield will . conduct open We~ s lnt'l. ...................... 6%. and kennel licenses for $20, and
house at lite funenll borDe on
o
ngton Ind ..................22* .Jones s~ that afler the deadline,
!hose pnces would double 10 $8 for
•
dog Jags and $40 for kennel licen-

I

.. ·• ..

sn,soo.

Pomeroy.
Bin:hfield anticipateS die opera. lion of a full-service funeral home,
and will also ~ offering pre-amngement - either ihrough a bank or
through die Fo!ethough Ufe In·
sur8IICC Company, wiih which he
has"- aflllialcd for several years.
The funeral home is Jocaled on
Main Stn:et in Rudand, and has
carried several names •"-·"" the

I

·•

Page3

•

lhe

-...

. -· ·-. -. ·-·· ----·

lion centers by Saturday," and , ID Iraq and Kuwait. It was not combat duty.
, _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _..;.,.

useibat COIISiniCiion. aa:onling 10
Open house .for Birchfield
Jones, would includo ienovation of
Funeral Home ·this weekend =~~~ill~~
James Bin:hfield, a licensed Friday and Saturday lrom 10 a.m.
century-old buifdjng.
·. ·
funenll director and embalmer, haS
pW"Chased · die fofmer HUnter
FI!IICilll Home in Rutland.
Bin:hfield is a graduate of die
Cincinnari College of .Mortuary
Science and of Cincialti's Xavier
University. For die past four - - .
Bin:hfield has been employy~
.~-bydie Ewing Funeral 1ioine in

;

--·--~---.,·-----~·-·.-·-·

.

. DIRECT arr - TH nbble of a blilldiD&amp; hit by
~Iraqi mlulleTbu....ta¥,ln lbeTelAvlv; Atleut

.

'

I

1% people were llljared ID frl41 attaeka oa .eve.._l

.cltlet throualiout llrael. (UPll - .

'

The Meigs County Courthouse

will be closed on Monday in obser·
v~ of Martin Ludter King, Jr.'s
b~. a 1t11e holiday, according
10 Meigs County Common Pleas
Court Judge Fred w. Crow m.

War causes tightened
security around Ohio
By Unlteli Press ln&amp;ernallonal
Security has been Increased to
wartime levels at Ohio alrpurts
as a safeguard against terror·
Ism, and to, a lesser degree at
federal buUdings and military
Installations throughout the
BucJseye State.
Mark Courtney, a spokesman
for Cleveland Hopkl11s Alrpurt,
, said the security measures In·
eluded adding more security
personnel, Increasing patrols ,
and cbeckiDg passengers and
luggage more careluUy. ·
"The security Is certainly the
tightest I've ever seen It," said
Courtney.
The security measures also
Include:
-No. curblsde checking; baggage must be taken to the ticket
area.
-Appliances such as . hair
dryers. must be. carried In
. hand

,,

,.
'

.

,

luggage. so they can be checked.
-Levels on metal detectors
have been raised and more
passengers will ~searched with
hand wands.
. ,
-Only ticketed passen,ers
will be allowed through secunty
gates.
Similar precautions have been
taken at airports .In Cincinnati
and Columbus, where bombsniffing dogs also have been put
on call.
·
. "We want better physical
control over any checked baggage and there Is Increased
surveillance ol everything," said
Mary Ann Lynch, security chairwoman for airlines Dying In and
out of Columbus.
In Cl.nclnnatl, a scheduled
Dlght to Frankfurt, Germany, ·
was canceled Wednesday because of security concerns at the
Continued on page 10

�.

'

Commentary
·The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court SCHet,
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS
OF THE
MEIGS-MASON ABE,\
. .
.

.

A~

.

.

~mt\1 rT"\.,...1&amp;-...-r"ll""'ra!!!c:::I•F==~ \

'q;!v

.

,

ROaERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Mlmarer

PAT WBITEBEAD

I

A.salstanl Pablllher/ Coalroller
A MEMBER of The United Press International. Inland Dally P ress
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.

'

LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be leulllan 300
words tong. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with
name, address and telephone numt?er. No unsigned letters wlll be published. Letters should be In gnod taste, addressing Issues, not personalities.
..
·
··

.
1
1

Pomefoy-MidtJaport. Ohio
Friday, Jenuri 18, ~991

Poland backs away from nuclear plant
GDANSK, Poland -Tile far·
The construction at Zarnowlec
reaching and stUI·secret effects was so faulty and potentially
of t!te Chernobyl . nuclear aocl· dangerous that, according to our
dent five years ago we~ what sources, no foreign company
prompted Poland to cancel con· would even bid on a contract to
structlon of Its · first nuclear finish the plant to meet West
power plant near Gdansk.
European.safety standards.
The Zarnowlec plant Is half·
The handwriting waa on the
completed and has already cost wall for Zarnowiec ever since one
Poland $1 bUilon. But the work Polish official aot his hands on
was done during the communist til!! classified 1986 government
era when st!ety .. was not a . report on the mishandling of
priority. After ~lng what hap- health and safety Issues In
pened at Chernobyl, the new Poland after the Chernobyl
government of Poland has de- accident.
cided It cannot trust the workLess than 100 copies of the
manship of the old government. . unusually frank report were

made, and commuiilat officials
from the regime of Gen. Woj·
clech Jaruzelsltl thought they
had destroyed all of tboee copies.
Prealden t Reagan had already
offered to send Poland powdered
mUk from the United States, but
the communiJt aovernment rejected the offer as a "provocation," and sent blankets to the
homeless In New York to unders·
core the. fact that Poland ~ldn't
need any help from the United
States.
Then tbe Polish government
discovered that Its own milk was ·
extensively contaminated and

I

" I·

a

.

'

•
•

.••
.•••

Berry's World ·
.......

'

"

.

.

•
•

•

•. I

.•
. ••r,.
•

~

••

•'
•
•'••
•
•

·'•
•
,.•.

.·

'I,

,.••
•'

·:•

l
RECE$$10N? WHAT RECE$$10N?

·~

. ..
I

~

Jack Anderson
some had even been distributed.
~blankets were already on the
way, so It waa too late for the
Poles to aak for the U.S. milk
Without losing face. So they
simply said nothing and Jet their
own. milk be used.
~ secret Polish report also
says that the first signs that
·something had happened at Cher·
nobyl were Ignored. Swedish
scientists first detected fallout
the day after the accident on
April 26, 1986. The Polish government labeled the Swedish warn·
lng as propaganda.
When radioactivity be~ran to
reach Poland, selentllts at afield
station sent a telex to Warsaw,
but no one read the telex ~ause
II was Sunday. Officials at a
nuclear research station outside
of Warsaw also poled lricreased ·
radiation, but they figured there
was something wrong 'with their
Instruments, and turned them
off.
Finally, when the weight of the
evidence wail too much to Ignore,
two daXJI after the accident,
governmlnt scientists Iii Warsaw called the head of the Polish
Atomic Energy Board. His secretary put them off for hours
because he was busy. ·
Unofficial studies we have seen
Indicate that one In 10 people In
Warsaw may have radioactive
ruthenium In their lungs as a
result of a Chernobyl fallout. The
fiiiUre In eastern Poland may be ·
as hlgb as one In three.
The secret Poll.slt ,report on
Chernobyl warned that Zarnowlec was flawed too. But the
communist government continued the construction and. des·
troyed the report.

'

'

.

.

B;y United P~ IDiernadonal - Chuck Daly. "We work hard at It
The Detroit Pistons plaYed a and we rebound. When you
waiting game Thursday night: rebound, you've iot a chance to
Pound the balllnsl~e and walt for be a good defensive team."
The Pistons' job was made a
-· the Houston Rockets, playing
Without Akeem Oiajuwon, to little tougher by Houston's Larry
Smith, who had a season-high 23
wear down .
It took a little longer than they rebowids, taking ·the place of
Ol$ljuwon, whO Is recovering
expected.
Joe Dumars had to sink four from surgery on broken · bones
free throws down the stretch In around his eye. Smith fouied 'out
overtime to give thEl Pistons a · wttll 28 seconds left In overtime.
"I thought' tonight's game was
97-91 victory, their 11th straight
one that was decided on breaks,"
win.
" We knew we could wear them Houston Coach Don Chaney said.
down eventually without Ola· "Had we gotten the calls going
. juwon," said .James Edwards, our way, It could have changed
the outcome of the g11me."
who scored 17 points.
c
Thorpe had a chance to win the
"A lot of the shots they hit
game
In regulatiofl, but he
early,. they weren't maktne late
. J.n the game," he said. "When missed a short jumper with 13
Otis · (Thorpe) fouled out (with seconds left and Bill Latrnbeer
3:55 leflln overtime), that hurt grabbed the rebound. Johnson
them Inside. They had to rely on then missed a desperation 20the outside shots. "
footer, se!lcllng the game Into
VInnie Johnson score&lt;! 18 .overtime.
The Pis tons defense limited
points for the Pistons, Dennis
Rodman added 16 points and 1019 Houston to five baskets In the
for the Rockets, who dropped third quarter, but the Rockets
only trailed by 61·60 going Into
their fourth straight.
•·
"We've got a lot or pride In our the fourth.
The Pistons got 6 points each
defense,' ' said Pistons Coach

'

t ...

,•

.

.'

'

-.

Looking back on a bright future
WIU you all think less of me If I editor and Wick Allison as
some and fun. Under Buckley's
confess that I bellev National
sure hand, It played a .central role
publisher - screwed up tbe
Review Is a better magazine
courage of color tbe border of tbe
In stitching together, out of
today than It was when I stepped
Dec. 31 Issue red rather than
libertarians, traditionalists, and
down as Its publisher two years
blue. In 35 years, no border of ex- (or just anti-) eommunlsts;
ago?
.
National Review's cover had what came IQ1 be known ·as "the
On Dec. 31, 1988, after 31 ~
ever been anythlngbutblue.In35 modern conservative move·
years as the publisher (I.e.,
years, no border of Natlonal
ment." . Barry Goldwater was
business manager and general
Review's cover had ever been
hiring Its editors to write his
Number Two Boy) of BIU Buck·
anytlilng but blue. I would sooner speeches as early as 1956. Ronald
ley's little journal of· opinion, I
have expected Buckley to en- Reagan became a subscriber In
decided I had done all I could
dorse Dukakls for president than 1960. The rest, to coin a pbrase,ls
reasonably hope to do, ·to and for
change that border.
history.
It and the conservative moveAnd yet, symbolically, th.a t
But there came a time, I'll
ment, and did what I had long
change was just what National admit, when I . felt IUui an old
wanted to· do: moved Into a
Review had long needed. (The Tibetan moruc; routinely spin·
condominium on Nob HUlin San
border. I mean not Dukakls! ) nlng his prayer-wheel: "Om
Francisco.
"The old order changeth... "
man! pad me hum - Behold the
Last October, Bill Buckley
Back In the tate 1950s, National jewel In the lotus." By the 1970s,
(who Is two years my junior)
Review wasn't just the best :/}r little conservative move·
followed my example - except conservative journal of opinion; "' ment had become a mighty
for the California bit. What Bill . It was the only one. We had fewer Instrument of change, brimful of
longed for was more time to
than 17,000 subscribers when I think tanks, training schooLs,
pursue his lifelong passion: sail·
came aboard In 1957/l'oday there legal foundations and Issue com·
lng. Within a month he was off on
are 1!10,000 - 32,000 of them mlttees of every description. By
his latest project - tracing
added In the past two years, . the 1980s, It was positively awash
Columbus' route across the under tbe new management. with journaLs of opinion, each
Atlantic, from the Canary Is·
(That makes It, Incidentally, by reflecting a different facet of the
lands to the AntDies.
far the largest journal of opinion, conservative world view. Today,
·· It must have been while be was of any coloration, In the country.) from Irving Krlstol 's The Public
In mid-passage that the team
It was a great little magazine Interest to Tom Fleming's
that replaced us at National
In the old days - sassy, quarrel· Chronicles, It Is generating new
Review - John O'Sullivan as

By Ualted Preas International
The combination of balanced
scoring a sh~ky defense by the
opposltlo usually add up to
victory
t was the equation
the
Ia Flyers used
uebec !"ordlques!
he
got goals from five
different players In a 5-1 victory
on Thursday night and, on four of
them, Quebec goal tender Ron
Tugnutt was left without any help
when a Flyer got the puck
unhindered In front of the net.
·Rick Tocchet scored his 31st
goal o! the season to tie Detroit's
Steve Yzerman for second place
. on the goal-scoring list.
Scott Mellanby, Ron Sutter,
Murray Craven and rookie Mike
Ricci also scored against the
Nordlques, who fell to 2·8·1 In
their last 11 games and remained
winless In their last eight trips to
the Spectrum (0-7·1).
"The goals by Meila'nby and
Sutter were a couple of good
signs," Philadelphia Coach Paul
Holmgren said. "Maybe that
means we'll get a little more
balance down the stretch."

'.

•.

.

.' •

t

:b .

:: .,.?'

•.
•,

...
.
.,
.•
.

.'

FIGHT FOR BALL .;.. DUnoll' Renate Clem·
mou (rlchl) flr:hts with Mlchlpn Stale's Matt

William Rusher

Following two dlsappolntlilg
losses In the last ' several days,
tl)e University of Rio qrande
women's basketball team might
have been headed for a letdown,
but Instead reaffirmed its competltlve nature .Thursday with a
100'67 defeat of Malone at Lyne
Center.
· Six Redwomen, led by Kathy '
Snyder With 15 points, scored In
double figures over Malone.
The Lady Pioneers started the
game well but trailed 16-8 follow·
lng the first 10 minutes. With
Snyder scoring 14 of her points In
the first half, Rio Grande. connected on 19'
32 field goal
attempts and 14 of 21 free tlirow
tries to bulld a 39-polnt advantage entering the second period.
Malone came .back Into the
fight In the second hall and took
advantage of some of Rio.
Grande's 22 turnovers to gain
someground.LaurieJoneshlt25
points and ..Laurie Hanson had
eight rebounds to spark the rally.
Redwomen Coach Doug Foote
was pleased with his team's
comeback and was encouraged
by the Improved shooting percen·
tage of 60 (35·64).

'l

..'

'

.,

.,
,'"I

o!

..

Joseph Spear

·-~·

.'
.'
' '.
....
.''

...''
..'
...-•
...
.,

..

.•'

.•

.•

•

.·:.-

•

·'

'
••

'
'

•'

S&amp;elgeaga after Clemmo1111 knocked the ball away
from Slelpnaa during flrsl·half action Thursday.
·
. (UPI)

llio's ladies hand· Malone
100~7 loss · at Lyn,e Center

..

TV lets ·us see Congress in true fortn
A note to Keating Five Show Institution broadside." This In- Washington because we think
addicts: I hope you vl~taped sider was talking about the they will have the se1111e to know
the Senate ethics committee's testimony of Ed Gray, former when narrow constituent deevery senator has done lt."
hearings, because I doubt that chief S&amp;L regulator, wbo said the mands must take a back seat to
And how about the .·processlon
we'll see the likes of them again major cause of the S&amp;L debacle the safety of their constituents as
of character witnesses Dennis
for some time.
was "too much money chasing a whole."
·
DeConclnl -paraded before the '
too
many polltlclans."
,
It's not that they came up short
Lowllghts abounded. One
committee? There was a former
In tbe ratln111. Au contralre, from • Gray was the enforcer whO was- odious scene unfplded when Alan
U.S. Customs commtasiDner, a
all indications they were popular called oil the carpetln 1987 by the Cranston showed up · with .TV · dlsablet! veteran, a · drile· fare. .carried live over the · Keating Five senators - Alan props lit the form of charts ILstlntf
treatment worker, a sheriff and
C-SPAN cable network, they Cranston, D-Callf., Dennis De- all senatorial staffers who spe- . the governor of Arizona berself,
stimulated hundreds of calLs to Conclitl, D·Arlz .. Donald Riegle, cialize In ralalag campaign funds
Rose Mofford, who testified congressional offices and thou· D-Mich. , John Glenn, D-Ohlo, and argued that the senate Is
try not to 'g ag here - that sbe
sandl to radio call-In sbows. Most and John McCain, R-Ar12. Gray little more that a trading post. "If
·"first met Dennis when he was an
clttiens seemed to be say!ng the said the senator§ were trying to you decide that It's Improper to
al·t.a r . boy at St . . Gregory's
same tblng: Congress Is an get htrn and his coUea1111es off tbe take a lawful and proper action at . church."
ethical outback, a barren wasteback · of their "friend," S&amp;L any time In behalf of someone
Plain~, too many hypocrites
land where morality 'long ago tycoon Charles Keating Jr.
who has contributed legally and · got too much exposure, and the
died.of dehydration.
The five senators had received properly," said Cranston, "then
South African solu tlon will likely
That·~ the reason we're not
a total of $1.3 mUllon In political every senator, lnc;ludlng every
be employed. No more came·
- likely to see any more such contributions from Keating. . member of this commit~. had
ras.In this mOdern age, If lt.aln't
hearings for a while. Too many of They repeatedly argued they better run for cover - because
on TV, It ain't real .
you got too good of an l1111lde look were not doing favors for monw,
at the sleazy way tliit' system
but were only performing "conworb. So Congress will probably stituent service," for· Keating apply the iiQiutlon the .SQuth ·something akin, In McCain's
By Unlled Preu ID&amp;erii&amp;Uonal
Afrlcau have · used to handle
words, to "helping·the little lady
Today
is
Friday,
Jan. 18, the 18th day of 1991 with 347 to follow .
racial unrest: Keep the cameras
who dldn 't get her SOcial SecurThe moon Is waxing, moving toward Its first quarter.
.
·Out. If people can't see It, they
Ity." (If you believe that, please
soon forget it.
·
The morning stars Is Mercury .
write. I've got some lunar oil
·
The evening stars are Venus and Jupiter.
leases you might be Interested
Listen to Sen.·· Trent Lott,
Those born on th~. date are under the sign of Capricorn. They
'
ln.)
.
R·Miss, a member of ,the ethics
committee: "I think tbla Is a
The highlight of tbe K5 sertes Include English physician Peter Rogel, who complied "J;loget's
disaster· for the committee and
for me Wllf the day the unaf· Thesaurus," In 1779; American ontor and statesman Daniel Webster
In 1782· English au thor Alan Alexander Milne, who wrote ''Winnie the
fected Gray, under relentless
for the Institution." He was
Pooh,'! In 1882; and actors Oliver Hardy In 1892, Cary Gran lin 1904
talking about the negative Image
attack by the senat6n' laWyers,
lectured
the
sophlltlcatet
on
and Danny Kaye In 1913.
·
•• televlsloned Keating Five
their need for an ethical baromebearings were creating for
ColliJ'ftl,
ter. "We have heard a lot In these
On this date In history:
In 18'11 WWtam of Prussia was declared the first German emperor.
heartnp
about
ihe
respolllllblllty
Llaten to a staffer who was
In'
1943, Moscow announced that the 16·month Nazi siege of
Involved In the heariJ!gs, as . of the senators to represent
constituent Interests," he said, · Leningrad was lifted.
quoted by the Conlll'ft&amp;loilal
In 1986, Indira Gandhi, daughter of the late Indian Prime Minister
"but I've aiways aaumed' that
· Quarterly: "Gray was continuJawaharlal Nebru, became prime minister of India.
ally allowed to throw mud !!Hhe
we also sead our senators to

,1 ,••

•• •

i ...~

,,.

_.

•

fty.ers get balanced scoring mwm

.

Ideas (or new applications of old
Ideas) with a speed and jlower
that )eave the liberals ·
breathless.
It Is In this far larger context
that National Review must now
move, and I can only say tbat the
year~nd Issue gives me great
confidence that It stU! has much
to&lt;contribute, to the movement
and to the nation.
, The editorials - on everything
from the Gulf crisis to. the
Supreme Court's latest Miranda.
modification and the collapse Of
the GATI' negotiations - are
jewels of clarity and p~lslon.
The ·articles, from Christopher
Booker's masterly evaluation of
the late Malcolm Muggerldge to
Ed Rubenstein's brisk skewering
ofllberal attacks on the "Reagan
decade," llfl the spirits like a
•prlng breeze. Even -Bill von
Dreele's political parodies of
famUiar Cbrlslmu caroLs are
simply hUartous.
. So blessings on thee, ilttle
magazine. This old fellow 'Is
proud of you.

-,.•

~

from Thomas and Dumara to
grab a 20-11 lead befOre Floyd
answered with 4· polnta In an IJ.O
Houston spurt that helped trim
the Pia ton lead to 22-19 after oae
quarter.
,
·- •
Floyd continued his hot streak,
pumping In ~ points in a 9.0 spurt
to open the second quarter. The
Pistons came back l)ehlnd Agul·
rre and Edwards, who combined
for 10 points In the quarter to help
the Pistons take a 44-43 lead Into
the locker room.
In the only other game Thurs·
day night, the Los Angeles
Lakers overcame Sacramento
93-'iS.
At Sacramento, Calif., James
Worthy scored 36 points, .tying a
season high and leadlnil the.
Lakers. Worthy was 17 of 29 from
the field, Including two for four
from 3·polnt range, and did not
attempt a .free throw . Magic
Johnson added 15 assists. An·
tolne Carr led the Kings with 21 ,·•
. •
points. The Lakers went on a 7-0
run late In the third quarter to
take a 59-54 edge, a lead they
would not give up on the way to •••
· their fifth straight win.

•

'

Today in history

••
•..
·:••

-.
.' .:..·.
..·

..

......•.

-.

Pistons use ftee throws in
•
the ·streJch to post 97-91 WID

Page 2-The Dilly Sealinel

S?mehow, the story
will be told•••

By HELEN THOMAS
UPI While Hou.ae Reporter
WASHINGTON -The fact that the White House and Pentagon
want to control some aspects of the news reports out of the Persian
Gu If Is no.surprise.
.
.
But will It work? The world, now a global village, Is wired for sound
a nd It does not seem possible that with satellites In the sky and
reporters on the ground, somehow the story ·wili not be told.
The administration has retreated on some of the to~her mUitary
l .
, · restrictions under complaints l!Y news executives, It Insists that It
mainly wants to prevent the reporting of Information that would
endanger or compromise the security of the allled forces.
But there Is always the ·questlon of whether the censorship Is
designed to protect the administration's Image.
Some of the prohibitions are reasonable In terms of restraining
specific numerical Information regarding the troops or their future
plans as well as thelt deployment.
General datelines such as Eastern Saudi Arabia or Inside Kuwait
are permissible. But It Is verboten to discuss specific operations,
methods or tactics.
The Pentagon did compromjse In permitting ambush interViews
but it asked for good judgment In showing photo~aphs where the
wounded or dead might be Identified.
U.nder. wartime rules, correspondents In the Persian Gulf are
restricted )n their movements. No one would argue that security of
the troops Is .not a prime concern and that their operations must. be
kept secret to some extent.
d
But to sanitize the horrors of war to lighten the burden on the
l powers that be Is not going to work. Sooner or later the truth will come
out, and the administration's credibility will be on the line.
The Reagan and Bush administrations have success stories In
blocking reporters fr0J11 reporting the lightning Invasions of
Grenada, a dot In tl,le Caribbean Sea and Panama. .
The Reagan White House was able to keep reporters off the lslartd
... ....
for some three days during the mop up. Only later did the American
people learn that U.S. planes had bombed a mental hospital. The
whys and .wherefores were never bared, except that a comlt\unist
government was taking over and the neighboring Eastern Caribbean
Island nations were deeply concerned that leftist political regime
would spread Its lnfiuence.
Despite protests from the media, and Individual reporters, the
Reagan administration which had originally knocked down reports of
an American Invasion as "preposterous" Ignored the question of the
·
peoples' right to know.
In the case of Panama, the Bush aamlnlstratlon was equally
successful In barring any coverage of the American lnv~slon for a
couple of days and to this day, there bas been no final accounting of
the Panamanian casualties.
.
As long as the war was quick and tlle U.S. casualties were at a
minimum, there was no time for the public to become deeply Bl'oused
the administration was able to prevail.
Bush felt personally offended that during his televised news
conference day after the Invasion, Cable News Network showed him
on the o!her side of a split screen with the war dead being returned In
flag draped caskets.
Take It from Lyndon Johnson arid Richard Nixon, two presidents
who conducted the Vietnam War and who tried to suppress many
aspects of the southeast Asian conflict that deeply divided the United
States. Nixon tried to keep secret for 14 months the fact that the
United States was ·bombing Cambodia.
·
When the New York Times reported thatfact,lt's correspondents
were wiretapped. The Nixon White House established the
•'plumbers' ' to track down leaks as revealed In the unraveling of the
Watergate scandal.
_
Johnson had to renounc_e reelection because he lost his cr~iblllty
and conducted .a divisive war. Nixon become the only president in
lils tory who was forced to res lgn becaqse he too tried to keep the truth
from the publiC, particularly that It was going to be a longer war after
he had promised In his presidential campaign to end it.
A free press Is the personification of a democracy. Whlle some
concessions must be made to protect lives, war correspondents have
a duty to tell it !Ike It Is.

Pomaov-Mkkleport. Ohio

•

"That's probably the best
shooting we've had In two years," he said. "Offensively, we
were pretty good and I was very
happy we did some things pret!)'
well. Defensively, In the first
half, we played as good as we can
play, very Intense. In the second
half, we had the normal break·
down, which was disappointing.
But at the same time, we got to
play a lot of kids and ·our bench
did a nice job."
The Redwomen netted 21 of 33
free · throw attempts for 64
percent and posted 33 rebounds,
nine ol them supplied by Kerr!
Kidwell and six {rom Ann Barnltz. Barbara Easllck's Malone
squad shot 28 percent (24·73) and
was 63 percent from the foul line
(12-19), In addition, the Lady
Pioneers had 41 boards, but also
committed 27 turnovers.
With their overall record lm-

Philadelphia had been expe- Quebec Coach Dave Chambers · ·•· ·
riencing a goal drought but · said: "Then they got their third
scored five times for the second goal."
straight game. ·
In other games Thursday . .'· ·
"Anytime.the other guys score, night, Chicago nipped the New
that's great," said Tocchet, whQ York Rangers J. 2, Boston , .
wlll sLirt for the Prince of Wales dumped Los Angeles 5,3, MinneConference Saturday In the NHL sota stopped "Washington 5-2, . '
All- Star game. "We said In Montreal beld off St. Louis 4·2, . ,
training camp that we would Pittsburgh edged TOronto 6-5 In , . ·
need produclion from a lot of overtime, and Edmonton . ·
•
pounded the N.Y. Islanders 6-1.
different guys."
Blackbawka S, Ruprs I
·- '·
Joe Saklc burned the Flyers for
his 26th goal of the season, b~lefly
At New York, JeremyRoenlck
tying the score at l·lln the first had a goal and two assists to trlve
.,
period, but that was the only shot the Blackhawb the win Iii a
Quebec's leading scorer had In game between division leaders. , ..
the game .
with the NHL's best recorda.
· "There were only two shifts Chlcagti, which remained un· , ,
when Keith Acton didn't play beaten In Its last five games
.
against Sakic and he scored on (4-0-1), leads the league with 66 , :. :
one of them," Holmgren said. points. New York has 60 polnta.
'.
"The rest of the time, he didn't
Brulna I, Klnp S
' ·
generate anything'."
At Boston, Cam Neely scored , ·. .
Mellanby gave the Flyers a 2-1 three goals and Glen Wesley had , ···
lead late In the first period, and a goal and two assists, llftllig the , ~ '·
Ricci ended any suspense with a Bruins. Wayne Gretzlty extended , ,
power-play goal midway through a personal point streak to 'nine .. .'
the second period .
Continued on page 4
~ .' '
"For 30 rnlnutes, things were
pretty even on both sides,"

p•

proved to 10.S, the Redwomen
will take their 1-2 standing In the
Mld·Ohjo Conference with them
toOhloDomlnicanSaturdayfora
2 p.m. contest. Malone (4-12)
hosts Wilberforce saturday.
Box score:
RIO GRANDE (100) - Marlo
Kistler, H-2·7; Jennl Couch,
0.2-.1·7: Gena Norris, 0-2·5·11:
Michelle Crouse, 5-1-11; Debbie
Fredrick, 2-2-2-12; Kerr! Kid·
well, 6·2·14; Ann· Barnltz, 3·0-6;
Stephanie Gudor!, 2-2-4-14; Amy
Snyder, 1·1-3; .Kathy Snyder,
6-3·15. TOTALS 26-9·21-100.
MALONE (67) - Tanya Erb,
1-0-2; Laurie Jones, 7- 3-2-2~;
Roxane Brenly, 1-0-2; Lori Melendez, 4-4-12: Theresa Bowlin,
0·2·2.: Laurie Hanson, 0·4-4·16;
Lisa Javersak, 4-0-8. TOTALS
17-7-l2-67.
.
Halftime score: Rio Grande 57,
Malone 18.

'

'

Publlahod o-y ollern-. Monday

•

•

:•

lllhlna Compaay!Multlmodla, !..,.,
Pomeroy, Oblq C5781, I'll. 112·2156. Se-

,

·•

cond clul poltai'P paid at PomeroY, . ,
Ohio.

" •

.,

MM~ber: United Pre&amp;alntemallonal,
Inland Dally Pl't'la A•oclatloll lltd tile
Ohio Newopaper A•aclatloo. Nat!otlal '

AdvertliiDI Repreeefttatlve, Branham

!lewopoper Solea, 733 Third A_,..,
New Yorlc, Now .York 10017.

•1

;

••

·

'

\,

pq!TMASTER:
Sml · - chanpa
to
'!'be Dolly Sentinel, l11 0ourt St,

Pomeroy, Ohio..,.,

'' ,' I

..'•' .
..

IIIUCIIIPTION 11.\TIIII
• , Curiel' ... ,.... -

ane wee~c .............................. ...... uo

One Month .. .... ........................... 81.10
,,~
One Year .. ... .. .............. .... ........ rn.10
,
'•
IIINGU: ODPY
· P!gCB
Dolly ...... .. .. ::-:-...................... 25 Cenll . '•'
subocrlben not dellrlatl to poy Ihe car· '' •

.·..

'

ner maY rm~lt In advance dtrfrct to
Ttle Dally Sentinel on a '3, 6or 12 month
bull. CrocUt ...UI liP II~• carrier eech

.
'

No aublc:rlptlono by mao pormltted In

..........

• •

'

.
..

'·

~. • ·~

~

1-e Molp CoatJ

•

..,.,
'

are.• where home carrier Mrvft 11
available.
.,

Angeles Raiders Is among the
many Americans who this weekend will divide their attention
betweeri war and' football.
The former Navy supply offleer on the USS California has
scores of friends In the Persian
Gulf whO are deployed to get Iraq
out of Kuwait.
"I've been watching what's '
going · on," said McCallum, a
backup running back and special
teams player on a Raider team
that plays at Buffalo Sunday lor
the AFC championship and a
berth In the Jan. 27 Super Bowl. ·
"I'm a little worried for my
friends over there.
"Some people have brothers
over there, some have good
friends over there. Maybe It
affects me more than other,
because tliese are people · I
worked with, people who worked
. for me.''
·
McCallum graduated from the
U.S, Naval Academy In 1986 and
was a recruiter when he wasn't
serving on the uss California .
His naval obllgat).oq ended last
August, but he will switch from
Inactive reserve status to active
when the Raiders ll!"lsh their
season.
"Going over there hasn't 'Pee!!
discussed," McCallum said of
the Gulf. "I'll be a Blue and Gold
officer, helping young high
sc'hool students who want to go
Into the Navy .
"My chances or· going aren't
real great . because the job
FLOOR INTBNUI'Y - &amp; Malane pJaler at&amp;empla a abet while
Uatveni&amp;J ef Blo Grande women's bulletball team memhera are ·
specialty that I have probably
dete•«•na durin&amp; Thunclay'a 1ame It Lpe Center. . The
won't be needed. I'm not going to
Bedwomen woa 110-8'7.
say there's no chance, bull don't

' .. ·

13 Woeb ............. .............. .,.. ... fli.:U
26 Woeb ....... ... ................... ..... U'I.If

.,

52 Weekl ................. .......... ....... f7f.M
O.loNeMolpC..ol7
t3 woe~~~ ........... ........ :..............

' '

ao.•

FIGHT FOR PUCK - Pltllburgh'il Phil Boui'IUe (left) and
Toronto Maple Leafs Daniel Ma,rlon fllhl for puck durlal
Thuncly·· · NUL action In Toronto. ( UPI)

..

26 Woeb ..... .... ......................... NG.30
~2 wee~ca

.................................. m.co

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

~~··- ~

think it's real likely."
McCallum emphasizes that he
Is fully behQ!d the American
effort.
·'I believe It's going to be a real
short war,'' he said. "Yo11're
foUowlng what's happening. You
don't want II to happen. Basically
life goes on. The guys are trained
real welL
"We've got what It takes to win
early. We just have ia be !lift

alone."
McCallum never took part In
conflict, but he said he was
ready.

COLONY THFATRE

'CLURE'S
FAMILY RESTAU RANT
SPECIA.LS MONDAY, JANUAIY 21 ..
THIU SUNDAY, JANUAIY 27, 1991'

-SALAD BAR
5'9
ONLY

S260C)
'

......
,
asra•AIIT
McCIUII'S

Gtft.' HM!IIillr l'ltwy

MIDDLEPORT

·. 114-992-1248

FEATUIED TIIS

- ONLY$

04

FOI

1.

ChaOM from homemede

(SAVE

(Inside Orders Only),

OlE EVIII·I-7:30
ADIIISIOI 11.50
44f.OU3

HOMEMADE ·
. SOUPS

ALL YOU CAN EAT

been IOUP with oornllre1d,

v..etlblt IOUp, or ChiU IOUP
(WI

ftiiU oun eplay "hot"ll.

.......
anaiiAfiT ·
McC. .I'S

McC. .I'S
fAMILY

.,. J•ot an Pilla
OALLIPOUI
114-441·3837

3M lilt I!Wn lt.

ana•AIIT

- POMEROY
114·112·1212

...

p

•
'

I

ftek.

•

..

•· L ' •I

thrQUih Friday, l11 Court St., I'llmeroy, Oblo, by the Ohio Volley Pub- :

LOS ANGELES (UPI) - Napoleon McCallum of the Los

'

' '"

(USPs it....)

.(I

I

The Daily Sentinel
A lllvlll.. ol ...11-la, Joe,

McC.al.lum has diVJ.ded
thOU...J.,.ts
ea• 00 wo..
A&amp;' ~00tball

·"

•

&lt;I

�•

'

••

--- - 1 --- --· ~-

•

•

Page- 4 - The Daily Sentinel

friday,

JMIUairy

18, 1991

Frid!y, JMUairy 18, 1991

Eastern .girls top
Southern, 65-48

f

I

The high-Dying, league Jead.
ing Eastern Eagles of coach Dawn
Heideman too1c. anodler step up the
vic!Ory ladder in pursuit of the
1990-91 SVAC championship
· Thursday evening with a one-sided
65-48 win over winless arch rivsJ
Southern.
Easiem is now 8-4 overall and 8·
0 in the SVAC, . while Southern
drops to 0-13, 0.9.
Southern grabbed the opening
tip, but Eastern guard Shelly Met·
ger stole the .ball and raced down
the sideline, where 9he scaed the
game's first points on a driving, in·
traffic lay-up. .
Junie Beegle, the four-year
Southern star, then hit a 10 footer
tO tie the score and it appeared a
gllod baUle was in tap for this
night.
· Metzger then hil a lbaseJine jum·
per as Eastern patiently worked the
ball aroimd the perimeter. the score
now 4-2. Mica Jones hit a· long
jWliper for Southern. to again knot
tile score, 4-4, but Lee Gillilan who
l$d an assist on the previous EHS
. bucket, then canned a jumper of her
oi.vn to put EHS up 6-4.
Sophomore rebounding ace nf.
fany Gardner worked the pain! weU
ahd lifted an inside jumper over the
ouueached hands of the Southern
!~~~fenders for an 8-4 lead, but
sOphomore Sarah Duhl hit a jumper
. from - the wing and hit the enswng
foul shot to pull SHS back to
v,:ithin one at g. 7.
.
• At this. point Eastern had placrd
tJiree players in the scmng column,
hpwe&gt;ier, its great balance was not
evidenced until the 3:11 mark of
tile first frame, when the Eagle contip~ent scored 10 unanswered
pomts. ·
.
, Sophomore post lady Srcpltanie
Olto, pearled around the Southern
defender and drove baseline along
tile right win~ where 9he was
fouled. Otto hit both ends of the
charity toss.
At the other end of the court
Beegle had a chance to pull SHS
back to within one, but both tosses
hjld a little too much english a
stJiraled away.
·
• Senior substitule Lorrie Baker
sY.,ished a long jumper on the next
exchange, then Jenny Roush reversed a lay-up off the glass for a 14· 7

sively.
The way the momentum. shifted
to the last half of the first frame, it
appeared thal Eastern wu facing
another giant" bloWOUt, but
Southem, having four fresbmen on
.its squad would not give up and
kept pace the last half of the game.
Hopes of a win were however,
neverwithinsighL ..
Eastern leda1 the half 65-48.
Gardner, Otto, and Roush were
big forces for the Eaglettes in· the
third round, · both offensively and
on the boards.
That trio, ' combined with good
bench play, sparked the Eagles to a
59-38 score a1 the end of the frame.
Southern outscored Eastern 10.5
in the last round, but the shoot-out
had already been decided as EHS
ooasard in for the 65-48 win.
Eastern was led by Otto's 17
points and 12 i'ebounds, while
Roush bad nine points and eight
rebounds, Metzger nine point$,
Clay niile, Gardner seven points
and ·11 tebounds, Lorrie Baker six,
Gillilan four, Jaime Wtlson two,and
Penny Aeiker two.
Southern placed duee girls in
double figures, led by Beegle with
16, Jones with 14, and Sarah Duhl
with 11. Amber Ohlinger had duee,
Aimee Mills two, and Wendy
Wolfe two.
Southern hit 18-57 overall and
canned 13-22 from the line, while
Eastern hit 23-60 and 19-26 at the
line.
.
.
,
&amp;stem · outrebounded Southern
' 4l!-22, led l!y Otto, Gardner, and
Roush. WOlfe had seven for SHS.
. Southern had just 12 turnovers,
three steals, and 19 fouls. EHS ·bad
16 turnovers, eight Sleals, and 20
fouls.
.
Southern won the junior high
preliminary 34-31.
Wednesday at Nelsonville-York,
Southern dropped a S6-2S decision
to the non-league Lady Buckeyes.
Junie Beegle led the Thrnadoettes with nine points, Mills
had six, Duh1 four, and three each
from Ohlinger and Jones.
. N· Y was lrd by McLaughlin
. with 15, FuUer with len, Schultz
witH eight, Rasser five, Gale five,
McDonald four, Pancake four, Warren three, and Blactbwn two.'
Eastern plays Meigs Monday and

scoreOtto. aa:oin drove baseline from
....tJie right side for her fourth point,
then after an SHS tumovc:r, drove
bBseline from the opposite side un·
d~r the ptlllrd out SHS defense.
Otto made the buckel and was

Britain con_derims ·. attack on .Israel; calls for restraint
LONDON (UPI) - Britain . Shamlr called an emereency
strongly condemned the Iraqi meeting of the Ca:blnet todtacuu
mlulle attack on Iarael and Israel's response to tlie attack,
calted on the Jewish state Friday which wounded 12 people and
to retrain trom mllltary ·retalta· destroyed several bulldtnp.
tlon In order to maintain tbe
An Israeli retaliation aeatnst
and-Iraq coalition.
.
Iraqi mobile missile launchers
Prbne Mllll&amp;ter John MaJor would ·severely strain the 28wu "appalled at these unpro- nauon anti-Iraq coalition that
voked and ui!foretvable at- IDCiudes Iarael' s longtime advl·
taek.l," a 10 Downing .Street sary Syria as well. The United
spokeswoman said.
States has repeatedly urged
At least seven Scud. mtasDes Israel to maintain a low. profile
with ., ~onventional . warheads and not become Involved In the
were fired early Friday trom · Persian Gulf crisis.
western. Iraq and landed In
Adtlresslng the House of C&lt;&gt;m· ·
israel. Prime MiniSter Yltzhak

,.

·

BAKER SHOOTS - Eutem'1 Lorrte Bat• ( U) lbootljamper
over Soullten'• Betb Clark (Ill) elllOuie to J!:aclee' 8H8 SVAC wiD
~ay eveabtc.
.

WASHINGTON (UPI) - Pen·
tagon omctals Indicated Thursday ~ taxpayers are getting
their money's worth u mWlons
9f dollars or high-tech weaponry,
some .making their battle debut,
· are performtne satlsfactorUy.
. · As of Thursday . afternoon,
Defenae Sec~tary Dick Cheney
said that of more than 1,000 air
· sordes In the first 14 hours of the
allied war against Iraq, the
· United States lost just one
aircraft and Its pilot - a Navy
· FA-18C, which has a price tag of
"'million.
''We're very satisfied with that
level of perfonnance on the part
of our .aircraft. We are very

GilLIAN FIRES AWAY- Eulern's Lee GJDian, 13, flm away
dtirtal' Tltunday's 8H8 over SouUtem. Tr'alllltc play II Sbetq
Metqer.
·

·No•.l Rebels _· humble Anteaters, 117-76
'

By United Prell lllteraatloaal
The Runnln' Rebels roD·on.
Larry Johnson scored 25 points
and grabbed 16 rebounds Thursday night to power No. 1
Nevada-Las Vegu to their 23rd
straight victory, a 117-76 Big
West decision over California·
Irvine.
Anderson Hunt added 19 points
and Stacey Augmon had 18 for
the Rebels, who Improved to 12-0
overall and 6-0 In tbe conference.
The Anteaters, who received 18
points trom Jeff Herdman, fell to
7-11 and 2·4..
UNL V took a 58-45 halftime
lead and broke tbe eame open
.!l'lth a 26-9 run to open the second
half. UC Irvine shot just 31
percent from the floor for the
game.
In other games involving other
top 25 tea:ms, No. &amp;Arizona edged
Arizona State 74·71, No. 20
SouthemMJsslsslppl beat Tulane
64·57, CO· NQ. 22 Utah defeated
WyomJng 90-83 and No. 24 New
Orleans downed Lamar 76-66.
At Tempe, Ariz., Chris Mills
scored 19 points and Arizona
sank 62 percent of Its shots In Its
Paclflc-10 victory. Tbe Wildcats
are 14·2 overall and 4-1 In the

.

...

.

'

.

l

.

Scoreboard ...

Boys ratings

..

(lie) Miller City and Lorain Ca·

moor 8.

.

lhoUc, 26 each; 14. Hlllt~ 21; 15.
Berlin Hiland 20; 16. llelphoa St ..
John' s 19; 17. Antwerp 17; \8 .
Sl)adystdel6;. 19. Fort Jennings 14;
20. Liberty-Benton 1l

·

Team
Pta.
I. Dayton bunbar (21) 19·01 ... 338
!. Porllmoullt111 (ll-1) ......... !tl
3. Kettering Alter 131 (9-1 ) ..... 240
I . Willard' 141 112.01 .... &lt;.......... 226
5. Bettelontalne ( I ) (13.(1) ...... 180
6. Vermilion 111.01 .............. :.. 105
• 7. Otl. ForHt Park (11·2 1 ...... ~6
, , 8. WarreniYIU. \1811 11 ) tll·l l 69
• 9. V1a Wort (9-31 ................... 54
; IG. Collllil.bto1Undon Ill 19·21.. 52
..., 11. Loxla&amp;tlll ill 50;
12. Oncltt111ttl (:reltthUII (I I 48; 13.
Beloit Woit Branch 39; 11. C\rcl ..
, ville 34; 15. Younp!CM'a Rayen 32;
16. (tie) Doytm Chamlnad ..
•Jullenne .and Av10t .._ke, J6eoch;
anctn.I!Atl Rocer Ba~ 15; 19.
. (tli!l MaryiVllle, ~c:ksvllle and
•Uhrtchovtlle Oaymoat, 14 each.
•
\o
Dlvlaloom
'Team
Pta.
1. Weal Muskltttl)lm t61 112.01 252
2. Bellbrook Ill) t!J.Oi .......... 235
3. Yolllf8IIDWalJberty 181 18·
.1) ........................................... 224

:IS.

f , Orrville (3) (11·1) .............. 2011
• S. Shlltattdolh II) (12.0) ...... .. 156

: 6. N. Madlooa Sprtnlllleld 131
.1!00) ...................................... 130
· • 7. Convoy CreslYiew t9·1) ...... 129

I

Galllpolls at Logan
\'flartetta at Jackson
TblaWeek'o
Warren
Local at Athens
Ohio Collqo -elbollle~edtote
Chesapeake at Fairland
FRIDAY, UN II
Case Reserve at Washinatm (Mo)
Greenfield at Hillsboro
S.t.TU!p.t.Y,IANlt.
,..
Pt. Pleuant at Huntington East
Ullnota .at Obto State
1 ·
Minford at Waverly
Oil to UnM&gt;roUy at Kent State
Central Mlchtpn at Tolodo
Ashland a! Portsmouth
Bow ling - Green at Eastern ·
Wheelersburg at Valley
Mlchlpn
'
Southwestern at Hannan Trace
Vlrlfnla Tt!dl at Cln&lt;lntlltl .
EvaaiVllle at O.yton
•.
Eastern at Southern ,
St. Louta at Xayt..Kyger Creek at North Gallla
Younptown Stale at NE Oltnola
Valley at Oak Hill ·
Symmes
Akrm at Eaati!rn lllinoto
DUnota-Citlca&amp;o at Clevotond State
Meigs -open
M!11ourt·KC AT Wrflht State
. Nels-York .a t Alexander
. John Carmi! Itt Mulldnaum
'
VInton, County at Federal
Ohio Noi-iliern at Mount Unl1111 1
Heidelberg atllo-ln·YIItllace
Hocking
Otlerbeln at Capital
Miller at Wel"ton
Marietta at Hlnm
Trimble at Belpre
Thcmltl More (Ky ) at Dentallll
Ohio w..leyan at Oberlin
Vlstlon at Wahama
Wtttenberl 11 Woooler
IWIII'IIQ'• 1amee
Wltlolt at Lake Erie
Oak Hill at Minford
Malcme at Sllawnee State
Wlln!lllltm at Blufttm
GatllpoHs at Waverly •
Rlo Grande 11 Cedarville
Athens
at Alexattder
Dyke ot Caatral State
West
Union
at Portsmouth
Urben. at Mt Vnt~&lt;ll Nazarene
Tltlln at Ohio Domlntcail ·
Jonatban Alder at Wheelersburg
. Ashland at Bellarmlno (Kyl
Wabama at Tug Valley.

This week'• games

Dl•lllon D

·•

Tonight's games

.
•

4·J, }VOn !lll-80 at Alabama Tuesday and ·technically leads the
SEC. Its lone league loss came
two weeks· ago at Kentucky.
Mississippi State was favored to
move Into a tie with the Tigers
Wednesday night, but Georgia
overcame a 14-polnt first-half
deficit and won 81·73.
In otber SEC games Wednes·
day night, Kevin Anglin scored 26
points In l.e adlng Vanderbilt to an
80-59 rout of Auburn, and Allan
Houston scored 24 while leading
Tennessee, coached by his fa· ·
ther, to a 70-67 ~ctory at Florida.
Mississippi State Athletic Dl·
rector Larrjl Templeton said ·
SEC Commissioner Roy Kramer
talked with the league's athletic
directors Wednesday about pos·
sfl,11y postponing Wednesday
night's schedule because of the
Persian Gulf crisis.
"We talked at length aboul
what to do, " . Te111pleton said.

"The conference, as a group,
.made a unilateral decision t!tat
there was nothing at that time
that Indicated we were at war."
The SEC plans a fuU slate of
games Saturday. with Mlssls·
sippi at LSU, Vanderbilt at
Kentucky, Georgia at Alabama,
Auburn at Tennessee and Mlssls·
sippi State at Florida.
"We think (Auburn basketball
coach) Tommy Joe Eagles made
a very good point," an SEC
spokesman said. "When asked
why 'Auburn was continuing to
play, he said, 'to do anything else
would make us another hostage

WATERSMEET, Mich. (UPI)
· - Tbe people of the remote
western Qpper Peninsula community of Watersmeet are burst·
lng with pride because the
heroics of a borne-town boy .who
· shot down the first Iraqi Jet In
Operation Desert Storm.
Air Force Capt. Steven Tate,
28, a araduate of Watersmeet
High School, Is credited with
shoottna down the first Iraqi Jet
Jitst minutes Into the U.S. and
aWed air attack In Operation
Desert Storm.
On · Thursday, Maurice and
Betty Tate, owners of the Sunset
Motel, 8aw their son on television, tal!dJig matter-of-factly
·about the event tbat will at the
very least earn him a footnote In
the history books.
"Ever since he was a young
kid, he liked planes,'' .his father
said. ·
Steven may have first been
liltrleued by fl!iht as a child
when the family liVed near

.....

"""""
.,

&lt;,!1/WC !"'OM

~ .

SKYLINE 28x52
SAVINGS
UP TO . . . . .

$a·· ooo00
'

. ·

9 .995

l'olneooy, OH.

TUESDAY THRU FRIDAY
I A.M .-II P.M.
SAT. 9 A .M.·1 P.M .
CLOSED MONDAYS

COLE'S

~THE

'

MOBILE HOMES

'G RAVELY
.

•

·'

I

'Located 5 Mlies East Of Rt. 33
on·.Rt. 50,
592-1972
(

Americans concerned about
traveling to and from Europe
because of the Persian Gulf War
rriay reschedule or cancel their
tr11vel dates wlthol!t fare penal·
ties, major airlines said
Thursday ..
The carriers normally do not
allow passengers to make such
changes without penalty on
tickets booked In advance and
obtained at discount prices.
tl'se Olson at American Air·
llnel In Fort Worth, Texas, said
her carrier will allow paaseneers'
already' In Europe to change
their Itinerary and return to the
United States without a fare
penalty.
' However, there will be no
change In the routing.'
''This means that If you tra·
veled from · Chicago to London,
you must come back on the same ·
route," she said. '
"F.or those. yet to travel, we
will lssu~ a· voucher for. future ·
travel ob Amertcaii. In other
words,Jf you have a tlc:ket togo to
Europe on a particular ~ay and'
you have now decided not to 101
we will &amp;lve you a voucher with
.the value of tbe original ttcket
which -yoU: could use to travel
anytime ,by Dec. 31 of thla year."
·. In such cases, passeneersmust
make new reservations subject
to availability of apace, she said,
The new provisions will continue
Indefinitely.
Pasienaera provided with
vouchers equal to the dollar
amount of their canceled tickets
will, however, be required to pay
an extra amOUDt It fll'ft are
lncreued on tbelr d111lnatlons.
Olson allo noted the penalty· ·
tree provlslona will apply only to
""'erican'a European destlna·
11ons and not O{l other roulel to
Latin Arr\erlca, the Caribbean or
Asia.
'
Northwest Atrl1nes, bued In .
Mlnneapolla, will re-route travel·
ers to and trom Europe or etve
them voucberl to fiy at another
tbne.
"OUr policy Ia paqenaen
travellnl (owr the Atlandc) to
and tram Europe · can either
cbaJIIe lbtlr Itinerary or they
~ . can caneel their triPI .with no

. • .. I •

Every home has been marked down to
make room tor new spring stock.
BRAND NEW 14 WIDES $
ST4RTING AT .. . . .. .. .. .
,
'
See John or Dick
Today
You'll Be Glad YoL.I Dldl -

FaD li-WIDter Hours

'

I •

I

GRAVELY TRACTOR
. SALES &amp; SERVfCE

8Y81"EM

..•

11'· , .

Continued trom pag 3
games with a goal and an assist,
Increasing his totals to 6-15·21
during the span.
' · Nortlt stars 5, Captlals2
At Bloomington, Minn., Brian
Hayward made 34 saves and
Brian Bellows scored a goal and
as sis ted on another give the
North Stars their fourth victory
In the last :ll games (4-14·2). The
North Stars, who entered the
game with the second worst
penalty kUling unit In tbe leaeue,
denied tbe Capitals on all eight of
their power play attempts.

204 CondOr St.

By IIABJIIAB KBJSBNAN
United Preu lllternatlonal

·--·

•

'

'

;( ~
I

....--News at a .- glance_...,

WASHINGTON - U.S. war planes, having located 11 Iraqi
mobile Scud missile launchers, destroyed six of them and are
A variety of other expensive
working on eliminating the rest, the commander of the U .$. forces
· Air Force warfare was used lit
In Saudi Arabia said.
the Initial air campaign over Iraq
JERUSALEM - Prime Minister Yltzhak Shamlr met with his
and Kuwait. Tbey Included, with
Cabinet Friday as the world walled to see whether Israel would .
approximate per-aircraft cost:
retaliate for a conventional missile attack by Iraq that Injured
-F·l17·A Stealth Fighter, a
seven people. President Bush condemned the attack and
bomber. Price tag: $46.2 million
Washington hopes Israel will n91 respond and break Ul' the
each. The Stealth Is deslifted to .
anti-Iraq Arab coalition.
.
.
·
·
eiude enemy radar and perfonn
NAIROBI, Kenya - ·Rebels In devastated Somalia appealed for
·missions In hlihly defended
the world ltot to let their need for food, medical aid a nd other
target areu. The Stealth' was
assistance be forgotten In the concern over the Per sian Gulf war .
lnltlat'ty showcased during the
" Deaths and refugees are Increasing dally ,'" the rebels said ,
U.S. lnvulon of Panama In
predicting thousands of deaths If there Is no help.
December 1989.
.
· WASHINGTON- Tbe high-tech weaponry being unleashed by
-E-3 Sentry AWACs, an air·
American forces on Iraq - Including weapons used for the first •
borne warning and control syslime In live combat -Is earning high marks from U.S. officials In
tem providing surveiUance, com· '
the early stages of Operation Desert Storm. The Patriot missile
mllolld,
control and
came through l)y knocking down an Iraqi Scud missile Friday.
communications needed by com·
WASHINGTON- The U.S. merchandise trade deficit narrowed
manders of the U.S. a[ld NATO
11.7 percent, or $1.3 billion, In November to $9.7 billion on Imports ·
tactical and l trateglc air defense
of $43. 3 billion and exports of $33.6 billion. November Imports wer e
. forces . Price tag: $109.4 million
$2c7 billion less than October Imports of $46 billion while exports for
each.
the month fell $1.4 bllUon from October's $35 billion.
. -F-15 Eagle, a maneuverable,
OCALA, Fla. -.A transient woman described as a "klller that
tactical fighter designed to gain
robbed" was .charged with murder In connection with the killings
and maintain air superiority In
of 1.0 middle· aged men shot to death alang roadways In central
aerial combat. Price tag: $47.2
Florida and south Geotgla. A close friend of Aileen Susan Wuornos, .
million each.
34, Is being held as a material wltnes~ against her.
·
-F·16 Flihtlng .FalC!JJ:I, a
YELLOWKNIFE , Northwest Territories- British millionaire
multlrole fighter aircraft that
Richard Branson and Swedl.sh pilot Per Lindstrand crossed the
can be used In alr-to-alr combat
North American coast to set a distance record for a manned
and air-to-surface attack. Price
. balloon In an odyssey from Japan. "No crait In the 200 years of
tag: $18.6 mutton each. ·
ballooning (has ) flown so far 11nd so last," a spokeswoman said.
-EF·lllA Raven can detect,
WASHINGTON - Economists cautioned that early military
sortand Identify different
s~coess against Iraq, while possibly dimming prosjlects for a
enemy radars and render them
prolonged war, does not signal a quick end to the U.S. recession.
Ineffective. Prlcl! tag: $73.9
The economy still mustc9ntend with unemployment, Infla tion, and .
million each.
softness In manufacturing and real estate.
-KC-10A Extender, which reATLANTA - A dentist who died of AIDS may have Infected as
fuels fighters ani! bombers ln.the
many as four patients with tbe AIDS virus, fueling debate over
air and simultaneously serves as
whether dentists and surgeons who carry the deadly vir us should
a cargo plane to carry people and · practice. In addition to the publicized case of Kimberly Bergalta,
equipment. Pr.lce tag: $73.6 milofficials say two more patients of David Acer likely were Infected
lion each.
.
.
during dental care and another also may have. ·
• -F-111, a tactical strike alr·
Light snow fell over Ohio and western PennsylvanIa Friday,
craft that can fly at supersonic
while showers dampened Texas and log settled over parts of the
speeds and operate trom tree-top
Midwest. In Texas, thunder s tonns dumped rain on San Antonio
level to altitudes above 60,000
and showers fell over Dallas while_fog shrouded an area covering 1 .:
teet. Price tag: $35.9 miiUon .
Omaha , Des Moines and St. Louis.
each.
! •

.

we

,.

'

of Saddam Hussein."'
LSU' s 7-foot-1 Shaqullle O' Neal
continues to lead the SEC In ,
scoring, although getting only
half his average In the Tigers'
tast two outings. O'Neal, held to
15 points by Auburn and 16 by.
Alabama, Is averglng 27.6 ppg.
He also leads the nation In
rebounding at just over 15 a
game. Litter tal Green of Georgia
Is second at 22.8.
.
Kentu~ky has been winning
with balance and speed. Its
leading SCEirer and only senior,
Reggie Hanson, Is averaging
only ~5.9 ppg.
• J_

...

Chicago and made excursions to
months. About five years ago, he
O'Hare International Airport to switched to the Air Force and
watch takeoffs and landings,
gTaduated first In his Officers
Maurice Tate said.
Candidate School class In DeThe Tates have not seen their cember 1985.
son In person since April, the last
He was among the first U.S.
time he came home for a visit to
troops to arrive In Saudi Araba
hla home town. Tate's 7lst after Iraq's Aug. 2 Invasion of
Airborne Division squadron Is
Kuwait.
stationed In Langley, Va., where
Interviewed on a tarmac In
his wife and two children live.
Saudi Arabia early Thursday,
TheY last talked to him on · Tate. said the Iraqi jet he shot
Friday and "he said there was . down was a French-built Mirage
some serious flying to be done, ,; Fl fighter that was threatening
Maurice Tate said Thursday.
another U.S. aircraft. He said he
The Tates moved to Water- fired a Sparrow air-to-air missile
smeet, population 1,092, when to destroy the aircraft.
Steven was 13. He.. played bar!·
''Afer Identifying a hostile
tone trombone In the school band aircraft about 12 miles away, I
and won letters In cross· country just let one FOX 1 (missile) go,''
and baseball. He won the gOOd he said. "Then about 4 miles In
Citizenship Award at Water· front or me, I eet a huge fll'eball.-' '
In an Interview broadcast
smeet High School.
Steven Tate Joined t.h e Marines around the world, Tate said, "I
out of high school, gJ,'aduated feel gOOd. I never experienced
first trom his boot camp and was this before. It's unfortunate that
promoted to sergeant In about 15
had to go to war but I guess
there was no Other way."

"Different percepi!OI!S of what
Is happening In the Gulf held by
some parts of the British Muslim
community should not be seen as
calling l.nto question their loya lty
to their country," Baker said In a
statement. This week, a mosque
In Batley , E ng land, was set on
fire by ar sonists.
'
The Ministry of Defense· said
Friday, a Roya l Air Force Tor·
nado GR1 fighter bomber and Its
crew of two failed to return from
a mission ThurSday night - the
second RAF Tornado to have '
gone down In 24 hours. In all, four
British airmen are missing.

Airlines allowing . flight .changes
to Europe without fare penalties

.

WAIT TILL SPAIN
Winter Clearance Prices
·ON ALL HOMES!

Flyer~... .

turned, " he said.
During the Initial hours or
Operation Desert Storm, · the
United States launched more
tban 100 Navy Tomahawk cruise
mtaslle - the malden 'voya,ge for
.these sea-launc)led long-range
.missiles tbat cost $1.34 mDllon
each.
·
·
"I'm extremely pleased with,
extremely pleased with theeUectlveness of the cruise missiles,' :
Powell said.
"The (stealth) F·117s appear
to be living up to the expectations
about their ability to get In
without meeting a high level of
resistance," said a senior Pentagon official. Tbe F-117 Is a
fighter aircraft.

.

conference.
victory over Northwestern. The
tlirows In the final 1: 41 to gain a
AI Hattiesburg, Miss., ClarWolverines won for the first time 86·77'declslon over St. Louis.
ence Weatherspoon scored 16 In five Big Ten games.
At Pulbnan, Wash., Nell Der·
points to lea" Southern Miss to Its
At Madison, Wls.,,Tim Locum
rick and Terrence Lewis scored
seventh straight victory. Ml·
scored 25 points and John Ellen· 21 points each as Wuhlllgton
cbael Christian bad 16 points to son added a career-high 21 to lift
State beat Oregqn State 99·77 to
pace Tulane.
Wisconsin to a 91·79 victory over deliver the Beavers their first
At Laramie, Wyo., ,Josh Grant Iowa. Tbe Hawkeyes lost tbelr' Paclflc-10 loss this season.
scored 23 points and Utah-held off · set'tind straight to fall to 13-4.
At Los Angeles, Brian Hen· .
a late cbarge by hitting 18 of 23
At MIMeapolls, Arrlel McDo- drlck bad 18 points and . 14 ·
tree throws In tbe final three
nald scored eight of MIMesota" s
rebounds to lead Cal to a 69-66
minutes. The UteS used a 16-2 run
lutlO points to lead the Gophers
victory over Southern Cal. 'lite I
midway through the second half
to a .59·56 victory over ,Purdue. Trojans' Harold Miner missed
to gain control.
· McDonald finished with a teamtwo three-point shots .tit the ,1ast
high 12 points.
10 seconds.
At New Orleans, Tank Collins
AI Seattle, Brent Merritt sank
At Austin, 'Texas, the long·
scored 14 of his 18 points In the
range shooting of Joey Wright a 3-polnter with 72 seconds left to ·
second half to power New Or·
and Teyon McCoy fueled a
lift . Washington to an 88-86 ·
leans. It was the 14th consecutive
second-hall comeback and
overtime victory, over Oregon.
win for the Privateers, 14-2
brought Texas a 90-84 victory Merritt finished with 22 points .
overall and 4-0.
over Houston. Tbe Longhorns
At Logan, Utah, Kendall ,
In other college basketball
YoungblOOd scored 17 points to
pinned yellow ribbons to their
action Thursday night:
jerseys to honor American troops
exceed the 1, 000-polnt plateau
At Champaign, Ill., Steve
In the ·Per~J,an Gulf.
for his career and lead Utah Stale ·
Smith &amp;Cored 35 paints and Mark
At South Bend, Ind., Dalmon
to a 74·64 Big West victory over ···
Montgomery reelstered alll2 of
Sweet scored a career-best 22
Pacific. ·
his points In the second half to
points to send Notre l&gt;ame· to an . At Fullerton, C3llf., the Big
. rally Michigan State from a
80·73 triumph' over Marquette In West game between Cal State
10-polnt halftime dellclt to a 71·68
the Fighting IriSh's first game . Fullerton and Long Beach State
victory over llllnols.
since LaPhonso ElHs was de-· was suspended when forward
At Ann Arbor, Mich., DemeKevin Cutler of- the 49ers shatclared academically Ineligible.
trius Callp scored 22 points and
At Dayton, Ohio, Chip Jones
tered a backboard with a first·
·Kirk Taylor added a season' hlgh
scored a llareer·hlgh 33 points ' half dunk. Tliegamelsscheduled .
21 to lead Michigan to a 79-68
and Dayton made alllO of Its free
to resume Tuesday night.

'

pleased with the Initial results,"
Gen. Colin Powell, c halrman of
the Joint Chiefs of Staff, told
,
reporters.
. "We have damaged the command and control capabiUty of
the Iraqi government and Iraqi
armed fo~es and have done
reasonably well, as best we know
rlgbt now, with the prellm~ry
bomb damage assessment In
attacking airfields (and) fixed
Scud facilities around the countryside," Powell said.
·
The general also said that of all
the air strikes so far, 80 percent
have been rated effeCtive. "The
aircraft got to Its· target, dell·
vered Its ordinance and re-

Pilot gulf war's first hometO'Wn .hera

Wildcats contmue successful- comeback

field S...tor :11; 15. Cincinnati
Wo-anl 24; 16.- Cincinnati St.
.X~vlerl~; 17. itlt')1Uma Senior and
Cl ndnnat! Elder, 12 each; 19.
HamlltM 11:' 20. Columbus East·

" But we bellev~: that restrain measures adopted acr oss Bri taln
to prevent pro-Iraq terrorism ,
by Iarael at thta time will be
has been steppeq up
security
Interpreted as strenlth not wea· ·.
synagogues
and·tr~ps deplOyed
klless given the powerful mD·
at
London's
Gat wlck Airport.
ltary operation. now underway
The
army
Wednesday
sent sold(·
against Iraq," he said.
ers
backed
by
tanks
to patrol
A spokesman for the opposition
.,.
Heathrow
Airport,
the
busiest ·
Labor Party, member of Parlla·
airport In Europe.
ment Gerald Kaufman suppor ted
In an at tempt to prevent ethnic
tbe JrO'I'ernment's position and
strife as the war unfolds , Home
said Iraqi · ~i!Sident Sacldam
Hussein bad unleased the mls·. Secretary Kenneth Baker told
Brltatn's Muslims that the con·
sUes '•to cynically set a trap for
filet should not divide Britons
the .lsraeUs, and I hope the
and afflnned their right to hold
Israelta .will not fall Into that
trap.,
opb)lons at odds with govern·
rhent's anti-Iraq poUcy.
As part of the unprecedented

mons, Forelan Secretary Dou·
etaa llurd ~ndenmed the attack
u a ' 'recklels ploy to widen the
conflict" and said Britain undet·
stOOd Israel' s anger.
"We've asked them to under·
stand In turn tbe need to retain ·
the ereates t poulbte support for
the m!Utary action being under·
taken aeatnst Iraq, Including the
Arabs nations who bave Joined us
In this a ction or support II," he
said.
Hurd affirmed that the Jewish
state bad the right to defend
.
Itself.

Expensive weaponry. performing·well

Kyger Creek Thesday.
Score by Quaners;
Southern 12 15 11 10-48
Eastern 21 2·1 1!7 8-65
Box Score:
Southern (48)
10 Mica Jones 4-1·3·14; 34
fouled ont he piay fQr a 19·7 EHS Junie Beegle 7-2~ 14, Wendy Wolfe
181111.
.
..
142, 12 Sarah Duhl 3-5-11, Jen.
, FCC$hm~ Amber Ohlinger h1t nifer Cross 0-0-0, Sherri Stover 0·
thtee of four free throws at th,e 1:10 '· 0.(), Beth · Clark 0.0.0, Christie
rOark and 0:37 mark fa- Southern's Cooper 0-0-0, 30 Amber Ohlinger
fi,rst score in over two mmutes, the 0.3-3, Aimee Mills 1-0-2. totals 17now 19-10, however, fresh. 1-13-48.
man guard Jaime Wilson swished a
long jumper from the ~ing for
· Eastern (65)
Eastern final score of the frame,
24 Stephanie Otto 5-7·17, 32 Tif·
tl)en SHS guard Jones notched a fany Gardner 3-1-7, 22 Suzanne
jumper st the buzzer for a 21·12 Clay 4-1·9, 13 Lee Gillilan 2-0-4,
Eastern advantage: 42 .Lorrie Baker 1-4-6, 34 Jaime
: Eastern substituted freely in the Wilson 1-0·2, 14 Karen Morris().().
second round and mainlained their 0, 45 Penny Aieker 0.2-2, 21' Nora
ATLANTA · (UPI) - Their
niome~~tum, outscoring Southern Easbllan ().().(), 55 Jennifer Roush
goals are limited because or
21.-15 in the round Otto, Suzanne 4-1·9, 12 SheUy Metzger 3· 3·9, 12
NCAA sanctions, bu I the Ken·
Cley, Roush, ~cr. and Gardner Debbie Gray · 0.0-0, 32 Aubrey ' tucky Wildcats continue their
W.ere sJI baving btg nights olfen· West0.0-0. 101als.23-19-65.
successful trek down the basket·
ball trail.
Those sanctions bar the Wild·
cats from winning the Southel)St·
ern Conference championship,
from participating In the NCAA
playoffs, and from IM!ing In·
8. Colonel Crawford il l tiO·II 115
eluded
on the UPI Board of
9. Cll-ake (1-11 .. .... .. .. .. ... 78
•,- COLUMBUS, Ohio tUPII - ·This
· ranklngs. But that
Coaches
10. Federal Hooklal (11·1) ....... Sl
S.OIIId
lea:'
11.
Bunoo
Berkshire
hun't
stopped
them from playII wetk's United Prr11 International
28; 12. (tiel Freder1Ckti1Nn and
; OhtoHtgb!khooiBoanlofCoaches'
Ing winning basketball.
Avon, 26 each: 14. New London 25;
• boys baskotball ratings twit~ first
The Wildcats are 13-2, the
15.
Bellaire
20:
16.
Heatb
17;
17.
•• place vote-s and won-lost records In
Bedford Chane_! 13; 18. Columbus
losses by 3 points each to No. 4
:, parentheses I:
Hartley 12: · 19. HavUand Wayne
Indiana and No. 5 North Carol·
Tracell;
20. ~· qel E~.stCantcn and
'·
Dtvlalott I
Ina.
They are the only Southeast·
Cinclnnatl1ndlan
Hill,
10
each.
,•Team
Pb.
-. Dlvlllon 'rv
ern Conference team unbeaten In
1. W. Chester Lakota 1111 11401 ...... 25511 2. Bar berton (10 ) (10·
'J!eam
'
Pta.
teaeue play .
0) .................. ,........................ 222
I. St . Henry 1271 111&lt;11 ..... ..... 315
Kentucky went to'5-0 In the SEC
2. Columbus Wehrle 111 110.21 264;
3. Beavercreek (l) tll·OI ....... 168
Wednesday night when John
3. Trl-VIIIagetU.OI .. ............. 202
. 1. Canton McKinley (10-31.. .... 145
4. Cedarville 112.01 .......... .. .... 123
5. Clev. VA-St. Jooeph t 10-4} .. 133
Pelphrey made six 3-polnters
5. Fort Loramie U0-11 ........... 115
. 6. Toledo St . Franclo 18·2 1...... 113
·.
and scored 29 points In a 95-85
1. Masslll'"' Perry (!1-11 ........ 74
II- Fru- Fumace Gneo 1111} .. ......................................... 11!
decision 9ver Mississippi. With
• . 8. Warren Hardln~t -( 9-~ ) ......... 73
1. C\n. Count!)' Day llltl2.01 99
,..•. L.itKait••• (11-1) .......,..... .... ..
four !&gt;ther play~rs scortng· In
8. Kirtland 112-11 .....·......... ..... 84
. ..to. Toledo Waite t ll·IJ .......... .. 51
double figures, the Wildcats led
9. Mansfield St. Peter 's t10·11 19
lett: 11. CUylhOtla Fa lls
10.
Ltrha
Central
C.thollc
t7-3)
55
by
21 points late In the first halt.
' 36; 12. Uppor ArUJtilllt ·35; 13.
Second lea: 11. Holgate 39; 12.
Clncllmatt WUhow 28: H . Mam·
· No.l7 Loulalana State,ll-3 and

seore

The Daily Sentinel Page · 5

Pornlloy-Middleport. Ohio

change fee or cancellation lee or
penalty," said spokeswoman
Christy Clapp.
Clapp said the offer began Jan.
11 and Is good through Jan. 3i,
. although It may be extended.

Trans World Airlines Inc.,
which earlier suspended service
to Athens, Greece, Tel Aviv,
Israel, Cairo, Eqypt, and lstan·
but, Turkey, said It was handling
cancellations to those cities In a
normal rriantier. A refund will be
Tl)e offer also Is good for Issued or a passenger can retravelers using Northwest to book without a penalty.
·
connect to flights to Pakistan
TWA said passengers going to
because there Is a travel advl· other European elites between
sory for Pakistan. Clapp said now and the end of January will
there have been few oancella· be allowed to book on a different
lions or flight changes by date without penalty or allowed a
Northwest's customers.
refund In the form of a travel
In Chicago, Sara Dornacker at voucher.
United AlrUnes, which serves
New York-based Pan Amerl·
Paris and Frankfurt, said her can World Airways, also In
airline bas received only a few Chapter 11 bantauptcy, aald the
calls from people wanting to carrier Is allowing passeneers on
change their travel plans.
restricted tickets to change their
"But to the extent that they plans without penalty and Is .
have, we've re-aceommodated providing travel vouchers to
them," she said. "We're more others for travel at alternative
than willing to work with the dates. A spokesman said no
customer to re- accommodate, · refunds would be gtven.
but we've had few people call
The spokesman said service
saying they want to change their trom the United States to Nal·
plans."
.
rob!, Kenya was suspended lndef·
Dornacker said many of Unl, · hiltely Thursday. Earlier this . ·
led's customers had known abOut · week, Pan Am suspended servicethe Jan. 15 deadline and had to a number of other points In
made travel plans accordingly.
Asia and Europe In response to
She said requests for changes the threat of war. However, the
or refunds were being evaulated outbreak of war 'tn the Middle
on a case-by~ase basil. No time East Is having no effect on Pan
lbnll has been set for bandllng , Am's level of service to Europe,
those requests, and all . pas· the spokesman said.
seneers will be treated similarly,
regardless of nationality, she
said.
Squads make 5 runs
Atlanta-based Delta Alr Unes
Five calls for assistlncc wae
said It too was deallni with the
situation on a case-by-case basis. answ&amp;ed ~ Meigs County Emer·
Spokesman Neal Monroe said the gency Medical Savlce&amp; on Wedcarrier had received few re- . nesday 8JIIi early Thtlliday.
At 9:33 a:m., Rlllllnd ~qUill wu
quesll. Most such calls came
called
to Swe Route 124 few Lacy
from pusenpr1 ticketed on
Chips
w11o
!ibn to PJee.filihtJ to Europe, be aald.
HosjJJtaL
At 10:45 Lm.,
David Mettslq ,of Houston·
Middleport
squad
wis dlspan:bcd
bued Continental, currently· opto
Route
124
for.
Rick Johnson,
eratlne under Chapter 11 bank·
taken II? VeleranJ
· ruptcy protection, said 1te knew who
of no cancellations because of the Memorial. At 3:12 p.m., Racine
squad went to Wells Run Road for
war.
"If you happen to hold a ticket J&gt;earl Hawthorne, who wu taken to
for transatlantic travel, non· Veterans.
At 7:56 p.m., 1\Jppell Plains
· refundable orcarrytnga penalty,
we will allow you to refund that squad was sent to Eut Slllle Route
ticket," he said. "The penalty or 681 for Oene Jones. Jones wu
llOil-refundable (ticket) .Is re- taken to Vetenllll.
At 12:06 a.m. on Thunday,
funded In the fonn ·of a travel
Pomeroy
squad went 1D West Main
certlfJcate for future travel."
Street
for
huliDe ,SiundeiJ, .,...11o
· He said the policy wilt'continue
was~tov-....
·
u lona as needed.

~hool

May Be More
Confusing Than.
You Think

•

days of ~Reading, 'Rithig and

'Rithmetic." Kids today learn about
everything from space to square
dancing.
AJ early as elcmenwy school,
chncmn a1sQ learn about drugs.
. The problem with this subject Is
that not all of the teaching·comes
from the right instructors. While
reachers are busy poin~g out the
negatives of dntg abuse, other
students oft'er the message that It's
O.K. tO .UIIC dntp.
All these mtud signals can ·be .
confusing. One way tO help your
chllcmn ~ out the meuagea Is to
establish good Unes of

was

VBllcy

was

•

'

'

0 '

:

'

'

communicado'n.

'

••

.

i\

Let them know how you feel
about drug abuse and find out how
they feel. Try to ease their ·

Times have changed since the

confusion and listen to their point
ofvlew.
· ·
By talking to your chlldren

calm, rational manner, and really
listening to them as well, yo\.1 may_
be able to teach them something
~ut drug abuse and about
·
relating to other people.
It may be the most Important
lesson of tbelr lives. You ·may learn
something, too.
•

'

'
•'

•

f

,•'
''
•
I'
t

I

The
Daily S~ntinel

-

'•

,..
•
•

••

POMEROY, OHIO

~

•

,, .

.'

.

In a

,'•
•

•

'

'

''
\)

i,

.I .

'

�friday, Janu~WV 18. 1991

Page- &amp; .The Daily Sentinel

.

.

~

fXrERIENCf THE JOY Of RELIGION
•

•

By. The Bend

This MPSSBge aiul (Jr~ J¥ectoi-r, SJK!fi¥J~ By .'!#!:fi lnte_rested Busim•es Listed On .Thill fagl}o :
:~ . MEIGS nRE ·
.
TEAFORD REALTY ·
P•.J. PAULEY, ~~~ ,
Farhily Restaurant
&gt;.
9.'1litlltllf 1t11111ir Ftltl C411h• "
~
~
CENlER,
INC.
m s.second
NaliJJnwide Ins. Co.
Ul W. Main St., Pomeroy

I

14

992-5432

~;~:;,\"

JohnF.FuiU, Mgr.
Ph. m · 2111

Pomeray

~

·'

0

.

Prescriptions '

UIM( J,

., .

.

SNOUFFEI .
FIRE &amp; SAFEn

~·

~

..

SAlES .. SERVICE

'r

. 992-7075 .

BILL QU IICKIEL

PRESCRIPnON SHOP

· GRAVELV TRACTOR SALES

992-66119

.....

204 (GIJdor St.
P-roy, 011.

iiWe

992-2975

271 ......

llltloliport,

FISHER
FUNER4L HOME

(.)\\;ft

EAST LETART- Mol'lllnliWOI'IIIID9:00
a.m.; Cburoh-ID:OOo.m.; UM'NIIrtt
'l'lleldaY 7:110 p.m. (Grace) .
llACfNE - Cblul:b Sehool, ]I) Lift. ' WOI'
llllpllLm.; UMWfourOIMondayotT:IIOp.
m.; Mea'a Prayer - u t , w-.oy, 8
a.m. (Grace).

DEJCl'Eil CHURCH OF CHRIST,
Ropr Walaon, mltdlter; NonaaJ~ WUI,
aupl Siaday Sehool 9: 110 a .m.; Wol'lltlp
aervtce 10:30 a.m. Bible otudy, Wedllti-

~~H'A~D

F:t:

.

~~~~CHURCH

"'f.l&gt;~"tAN~

.....--

''

sYRACUSEFmsTCHURCHOFGOD.
.
MORIAH JIAPTiST, Fourlh 'i bd
- ·Penlecoolal. Worsblp aervlce Sunday
Main St., Middleport. Rev. Gilbert &lt;lr~.
10 a.m.; Sunday~ 11 a.m. Evenllll . Jr., paator. Mra. Ervlll Baumcardnor,
woraltlp .atr'YIC.'J" '1!110 p.m. Wedn-Y
Sunday School Supt. Sunday Scbool 9:30 a . .
prayer meetlnll7:00 p.m.
m .; Wor~ Service, 10:45 a.m.
M't. HERMON UNITED BRETHREN,
SUCC
ROADCHURCHOFCHRIST
- J01epb B. llolklaa, evanaelllf, Sunday
IN CHRIST CHURCH, Located In Texu
Community oft Ct. Rt. 82. Rev. Robert
Bible Siudyt a.m.: Worship, 10 Lm.; Sun·
Sanden, putor. Jell Holter, lay loader;
day evenlna aervlce 6 p.m.: Wedne.day
Ed Roulb, Sunday School Supt. Sunday
evenlnroervtce, 7 p.m.
1
School 9:110 a.m.; mol'lllnll wonhlp and
PENTECOSTAL ASSEMBLY, Racine,
. children'• cbu...., 10: 30 a.m.; evenlnl
Rt. 124•. WUIIam Hoblct, paator.' Sunday • ·
preacblnc oervlce n...t tbree Sundayo,
khool10 Lm.; Sunday evenlnc service 7
7: 30:J:i;.m.; Spedal ll!l'Yice rciurth. Sunday
p.m. WOI!n-y evening service 7 p.m .
· p m w~
-•· Prayer
Don Cheadle,
eve
' 7: 30- . , ;
ocuniiC'.w~y
S CARPENTER
t S..-•- "·hBAPTIST.
It
.
Meetlnc, Bible Study and Youth Fellow·
up · . - Y "" oo :30 a.m. MorniDK
ohlp, 7:30 p.m.
Worlhlp 10: 30 a.m. Prayer servtce, ajtern· .
CHURCH OF GOD OF PROPHECY.
ate Sundayo.
• "
'
Located on 0. J . While Road o!Hipway
THE CHURCH OF JESUS ' CHI:UST, '
160. Pat Heuon, paator. Sunday SehooiiO
APOSTOLIC FAITH - New ·Lima Rd ..,
a .m. Cluaeo torall&amp;~~eo. JunlorChun:h 11
next to Fori Melp Park, Rutlal)d,. Robert.
a.m.; MorniDC worship 11 a.m. Adult
Rlchardo, paotor. Services at 7 'p.m : pn
Choir practice &amp;p.m. Sunday. Youn1 Peo-.
Wedn&lt;:OR~ and Sundays.
. c '
pie's. Chlldreil'o Chu...., and .Adult Bible
liAR
NVILLE HOUNESS CHAP ·
Study, WednOidoy at 7:30p.m.
~~ oE! t heFIWeldaeoleyan HoUneoa Chtin:h.
HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEL, 570 Grant
~·· ar1
. paator. H~nry .EilJin.
Sunday &amp;boot SUpt.; Sunday S.hooiJO,a.
St., Middleport. Atnllated wltll SOulllem
BapllatConvetltton.DavldBryan,Sr., MI·
m.; Momlnl Worsblp lla.m.i EveniDC
nlater. Sunday Sebool 10 a .m.: Mom1D11
oervloe 7:30p.m. Wednesday
• wonblplla.m .; t:veniDC*orlhlp7p.m.:
vlce7:30p.m.
.
' '
,
Wedll-y evenln&amp; Bible study and
STIVERSVILLE WORD ·or FAITH,
prayer meetiDK.!.E·!"·
Gary Holter, paator. Sunday seryJc:eo 9:30
BRADFORD ~Jl~RCH OF CHRIST, St.
a.m. and 7 p.m.; Midweek aervlte', 7:30 p.
Rt. 124 and Co. Rd. 5. Dere!&lt; Stump,'butoc.
mCOO
. TlluLrVadaR.yLE
. UNIT
William AmberJror, S, S. Supt.; !Iunday
•
ED ME'I'JIODIST
PJARISH- H. E. Allay; paator. M1keand
School9:30 a.m.: MomiDC worlhlp 10:30
a .m .;· Ewnlngw.orshlp7:3Jp.m. Wednet-ane ~l~ past(l'l at Torch
day w..-ahlp 7:30 p.m.
CbndurcFhl!tb
. ·S
CHURCH; Main
ST. PAUL LVTHERAN CHURCH,
a
IL Worship !lervlqe, 9( a .m.; .
Corner Sycamore and Second Sts., PoSunday SchoollO a.m.; Bible Study Tueo· '
me&lt;oy The Rev Laura A Inch pastor
day, 7 p.m.; BETHEL CHURCH: '!'own·
Ch. ~ '
11.
ahlp Road ~: Sunday School 9 a .m:
Swt da Y. Sehool9 :'••
•• a.m. u~uii!I'Yice
Church Service, IOa.m.; BlbleStu_!!r, ib
a. ~CRED HEART CHURCH, MIJII'. a.m. Wednesday; HOCKINGPQRT
Aalhony GlaMamore. Pb. 992-5898. SaturCHURCH, Grand St-: Sundav'Scbodl10
.day Eventna Ma•• 7:3J p.m. ; Sunday
a.m ., Churchservtcell&amp;.m.; BlbJeStUdy ...
· Muo, 8 a.m. and 10 a.m. Coaleoolono one
Wedn-y, 8 p.m.; TORCH CHURGJI ,
!WI hour before eacb Mus. CCD claaaes,
County Road 63: Sunday S.boo19: 30 a .m.;
11 a .m. Sunday.
,
.
Worahp Service, 10: 311a:m.
,
t
VICTORY BAPTIST, 525 N. 2nd St.,
MIDDLEPORT PENTECOST"" , Third
Middleport . James f' . KeeiH, paatc»'.
Ave. Rev. Clark· Baker, pastor. Carl NotSunday morntnc wtrJhlp 10 a .m .; Even·
ttngham, Sunday School Supt. SlJ,nday
IDa aervlce ·7 p.m.; Wedn-y eveniDC
worolllp7p.m. VllltatlonThuraday 8:30p.
SchooiiO a.m. with cluaesr..- all ages.
m.
Evenllll oervlcesat 6 p.m. Wedn4!1day Bl·
MORSE CHAPEL CHURCH: David
ble ttudy at 7: 30p.m. Youth aervl"'"' Frt·
CUrfman. paotor. Sunday Sebool, 10 a .m.;
daM6:~&amp;:'fiL~OWsliiP, 128 MQI SL,
w..-.hlp II«Yice 11 a.m.; Sunday nlgbl
Middleport. Brother Chuck McPhero&lt;ll,
worolllp oervlce 7:.30 'p.m.; Midweek
paator. Sunday School 10 a :m .; Sunday '
prayer aen1ce Wednesday 7 p.m.
· evenlna services at7 p.m. and Wednesday
WESLEY AN
BIBLE
HOUNJ;SS
servlcea·at 7 p.m.
·
•
CHURCH of Middleport, lac., 75PHrl Sl.. .
ANTI~UITY BAPTIST. Keanellt Srnftb,
Rev. Ivan Myora. put..-: Rocer Manley,
•·
9
Sr., Sunday SchoOl Supt. Sunday Sehool
paalor. unday ~hool :30 a.m.; churoh
servtce7: 30 p.m. ; youth !ellowlhtp6: 30p.
·t · 30 am . Mom•·· wo ••1 1o: 30
•
· ·•w-w..••7:30p.m.
r~ P •
a .m.;
7 30
Evea.l111
Wednelday
m. ; Bib! es tud1Y· Th unda
oa~·x ·:~p. m .
•• - r
FULL GOSPEL LIGHTHOUSE, 33045
even1n11 Bible otudy, Prlytr and pralae
Hiland Road, Pomeroy. Tom Kelly, . JIOII·
IM!I'VIce, 7:30p.m.
tor. Danny Lambert, S. S. Supt. Sunday
FAITH GOSPEL CHURCH, Loftg Bot·
momiDC oervloeat 10 a.m.: Sunday .Von·
tc:wn, Sunday Sdtool, 9: ~ a .m.; MOmtna
- - • - 7 30
Tu-•
nd Th
1III~·~Y
Worlhlp10:t5a.m.; Sundayevettlna7:00
: f.m . ~aya · Uri·
p.m. (oummer 7:30 p.m. ); Wedn-y
da~s;v::v~~ c~.rCH OF~ N~·
night 7:00 p.m. (aummer 7: :1! p.m. I.
ZARENE, Rev. Glendon Stroud, putor.
NEW LIFE COVENANT CHURCH OF
GOD, Chester_ Gary !Dneo, ::'"'· Sun·
Sunday S.bool9:30 a.m.; Worsblpae~.
·~-• 9 30
,_
10:30 a.m. ; Youth service Sunday 6: .15 p.
daY - : a.m.; won 1P aerv~.
m. Sunday evening service 7:00p.m. Wed 10: 30a.m .: evettlnlrltn'lce.&amp;p.m.; Dlod·
neoday Prayer Meeting and Bible StiidY
- plNhlp ~aoa. Wednesday, 7 p.m .
7 00
Mr. OLIVE COMMUNITY CHURCH,
: ~~E SE'ITLEMENT CHURCH, Stl~.
La.....,.. Buoll, paator. Sunday School
1
• :r1 Th
9:30 a.m.•, S"""
. "" and Wednesday even· . day a temoon aervt.,., at ~: . ur,adly
-r-J
ev~llj_tervlcet at 7: 30.
·
ln8 w..-.blp Hl'VIceL 7:00p.m.
FlJIST BAPTIST CHURCH, Maa111, W.
UNITED FAITH&lt;.;HIJRCH, Rt. 7 oa PoVa. Rev. Wallace Mlnp , paator. Sunday
meroy ·By·PULIIeY.IIobertE .Smlth,Sr,
SchooiiOa.m.; Sundayevealngoervlce; 6
putor. ~MD ~ate, S. S. Supt. Sunday
~m.; Prayer meetllll and Bible ' tudy
Sc-t. 30a.m.. MoniiDCWol'llllpl0:30,
ed~esda 7·30~m
•
EV1!11'""
• m. ·, Wodneoday
'D ·FR · 'WILL
·
"'" Worlhl~ 7:00 ~
R
BAPTIST, Sa·
Prayer Service, :00 p.m.
lem St. Rev. Pat.~l Taylor, n~~ator. Sunday
FAITH BAPI'I!IT
CHURCH, Railroad
~
_..... · e..:.LooiiO'
M
School to a.m. ; Sundiy ewntng7:00p.m.;
. St ~-8.._y.._-.
a.m. : om- ·. · Wedn-y eveniDII prayer meeting 7:00
InC .w«~hlp lla.m.; EveniDC 'oervlce 6 p. ..
m. Proywr maetbll and Bible Study Wed·
P·;;UTH BETHEL NEW TESTAMENT
CHURCH, Sliver Ridge. Duane Syden·
n...S.y. 7 p.m.
FOREST RUN BAPTIST. !leY. Nyle
atrlcker. paator. Sunday School 9 a.!!).:
Bordell, putor. Cornelius Buncll, aupt.
Woraltlp. ~rvlce,lO a.m.: Sun~eVentng
Sunday Sdlool 1:11 a.m.: Second ond
10rv~ 7 00 m w~ -•
bt Blbl
fourth Sunday• wonhlp service at 2:30 p.
~~. :
P· · ~n=ay
e
otudy 7:00p.m.
,

"t! -·II

··-y·-..

·"

".

.

Q. ..

.

..,,re

'n,._.

=:

. ~mmwjity calen9ar

'""'niDI..,..

., -on.

m.

Sermonetteolu ud , _ , . u from 1111 artpteo

.

- . - I lobi: t (BSV)
'

.

Bend, IncJ.

She allo won die e!P* I'IUIICI'·
up in the Mia Mlr.lcntt ~
America CGIIIIIIl lllo ~Nacre
Dame. Sbe is die~ Min Ohio
River FeltiVII.Qur ea
April is a l'wtwo twlrkr for die
Meip Mlnllder s.4, prllideal of
ber junior clan, 1114 • lllllllber of
CIOII~ llld hell: 1111111. She
patticipldes m •Will (liiJIIIizlllol

..

Poet's oorner ..,

=~=a=a~-r-~
inltnJc:IOt of Jhe Ruftlel llld

r~

·IICW

Flourishes BlliOII Calpllll4'•• dl
the MJddle(JOit.Out'cb of OlriiL

Her b8loil ll'lltri£111r is Mn. Judy
Rigp. Reedlville.
'·

.

Eleanor Circle ·
meeting a:mducted
Jeannie Aanc Bllllbury ~­
IC4 a prosram en '!Nostalgil ll the
receiu meetin8 of die Blelnor
Circle of the HeMh tUnitec1
Methodist Chun:h.
'I'Mla Cbildi praicled ' at the
meeting llld Orace Jolmeoa pw

next

Trustees meet

SEC halts tr(lliing ·
Gil-Med lnd1ntrles

C

•

LAPAKOSCOPIC
CHOLECYSTECTO
•

Announcements

.,

.

· ReVival slated

.

'

,.

I

.

f

.

..

•

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

d'

J

,

lllicfll .: 11 llvl ' k - . . . .. ,

, ........ , rtl • .....

I

1.·

.

. . It's fantastic th~ we have ,.
this procedure-right here at hc;&gt;me ·• ·

d

J.

"

.

. IJPI"IZJII
n Q. v...,,,,
... ..,.._.., a 11 a

,,

.. .

..:::-~

·~·r •., 1

,·,

l '

l

~· "• t

in&amp;...,.

rut - • ... malreo • .... n•ll• fer len. " - ·
_......., frtim tile ne Upper 8oom DaUJ Devottoaal G ...e,
.
lu.·Feb.·lHI.

'

'

April RtMboo, dlft&amp;blllr of·MirY
Hudlon, 1114 die lila BfYI!IlHud1011, PomJIOy, roc:ead7 won !he In·
tcrmeclillr ohiO swe Solo Twirl·
in&amp; and SlllltliDa lilies in Colum·
bus.
.
Miss Hudlon holds · lhe .Mia
Msjomtc of Obio tide It die ·
N.B.T.A. Nllional ~
at Noae Dillie Ualvalil)' in Soutb

Ju. 28 tiJrou&amp;h Feb. 2 at 7:30 p .m.
fli&amp;bdy. 1'bete will be apecial sing-

heallnl come~ throup fOJ'IIveneu. Yet even though we ask Gdd's
lot'llveni!U wben we faU, we often make lbe mlltalteol seeln1 ounelvet.
,alUI lainled bY 1111 oa lhe'lnllde. We may,even allow put laUul.ft.lo keep
ua from reachlq out to 1hoae whO need ld. We may •leel that we are
broken ve11811 and cannot be elfeetlve In conveying God's love.
AIIIICh tlmel, we would do weD to heed the pntle prompting of ou,
ICI'Ipture text. aocl'• foi'JIIvet~e~a heal• ouraoula at aln and rea tom u1.1o
be etteet.lvt veoll!la for Cod.
1
PL\YBB: IAnqJ Qed, we If¥• Y• IIIub for Ynr lerpv- ~

...

Girl wins
twirl event

Rmval widl Nuiu•t ~or will
be lteld It die Alit Straet Preewill
Bl!plilt Cban:h in Middlepon oa

WileD you aet a 1mall 1cretchorbrulle, dO you-ever notice -quickly
II dllappeera! God I1AI created the bOdy with a wondertul ability to Ileal ,
Ibell. lmapne llr a moment If lhla were 1191 10: a collection of acar1 and ,1
brulle' would record our every ac:ddent and fall.
·
ln a similar way, God lntendl ·o ur aouls.to be beal&lt;ll trom sin, and thla

(

APRO.IIUDIJON

clcvotiOIIs
, POMEllOY • "Swill Family
The
meeting . will lie held
RotliniOn" IIIII "Pocket for Cor· Feb. 14 and a V-'enline sift exPRIDAY
· eleroy" will bi: shown, free of change will be held. .
_ CHilSTI!R - Rev. Allen Black- cbqe, for cbildral ~ dlo II'Cl on
HoAem• Audrey Devenwood wiU prm t -a llide _.... SaiiJiday It 2 ~-y" the Meip port, Helen Byer IIIII Jran Cook.
011 bil tec:ellt Yilh to Rclnania 011 Colllty Pllblic Li
in Pomaoy.
Friday niJbt a tbe Calvary Bible
Cllaltb 011 l'uliMroy Pike near
CHESTER • The Diltrict t3,
ChrJ&amp;cr•.Tbe public is invited 10 It· 'Dat'i1"t'n of 1Altlerlca. wiU meet
tend.
·
Saturday It 1 p.m. It the Oluter'
The Bedford Thwnship TrusteeS
Lotlp HaD. Plttcdce for tile rally in will meet Wednesday at"' p.tn. for
n1PPERS PLAINS • There will April will br held. AU !ftOI!Ibers ur- an cqanizational mretir)g.
. be • round llllllqllll'e dlncc Prirlly pel to lliOIId.
rmm a-u:~ p.111.' 1t die 1\lpperl
.
SUNDA'W'
Pllins VFW ialldlq re.na
POMEllOY ·The MCOIId ltllion
~ ~ I11J11111S. Altbur .
Coo ,1 7' wiU be the caller. Public in- of 1 12-llrp aerie~ ol meetings for
the Pomeroy group of A.A. lbtl AI·
vifed.
WASHINGTON (UPIStates)Allan wiD be held Sunday It 7
The.
Securities and Excbanie
. 8l the J.T.P.A. oflic:e, 117
SATVRDAY
Cornmlsllon
hu b&amp;lted tradlq
~.The OaDil 5ecOIId SL In Pomeroy. ·
,
In
!he
stock
of
GII·Mecl IndldtriH
Ttrirlen We ~ · a Scpre DIIICe
POMEROY • The Molp County Inc. for 10 days to answer
Club Will bolcl I dlllce Salllrdly
Gel
rn'Qiic:ll Society will meet quetJUona about lhe operatlona
from 1-11 p.m. It die Hatkeoa
Sundr!y
It 2 p.m. a die Melp and act;Uracy of public flnaDCial
ea.Iunity c- In Ilnldlreoa,
to.uj
Mlllltlll 011 Mulberry diaciOiurea ot tilt Nortllbrook.
w. v.. 1bal Poe wiU be die caller. AWIIDt. The
piCJI'IIII wiU be lin in· . Dl.-bued maker o( dllpoeable
IIOduclion
10
die Liller n.y Slintl medical bap.
· POMEllOY •• The Belles and
geae11og1ca1
tec:onll
011 miCID4she
After the resptlon• of Gil·
BeiUI Wt111et1 Sq--. Dance Club
by
Lloyd
Bllctwood.
Med
President and CEO Shlinon
will' .~ 1ft open diiiCe It lho
·
Gillott
&amp;nd Treaiurer and Chief
Seaior Qdzall Caller In pomeroy
Operatlq Officer Geula Glborl
Jan. 10 and Jan. 11, GII·Mtd•told
the SEC Ill financial auditor had
wltlldrawn the report for the
company'• lt89 fllcal year, and
Siilpes In Apic:ullllfti will lake tllat tile report wu not rell&amp;ble.
place Oli Feb. 21-24 It Lilicoln The Wllhclrawal caused the quarThe Soudlem Loc:al Borud of Neb. ReliltllliOn is $94 by Feb. 1 terly reporta for the perJocla
EducM'I'I will lnve iai tepla IIIII $1~ efter lhaL Funher lnfor- ended March 31, 1990, Juae 30,
me it•. oa J-. 21 It 7 P-'!'· It lllllioil lillY be obaincd from 1990 and September 30, litO to be
unrell&amp;ble, u well.
Soutbetn HiP Sc:llooL In COII.JIIIIC· Karen Shell, (614) 763-4362. .
Two member1 of tile GIJ-Med
· tion with die , . . _ •Ilion ~ dlr
_
botlrd
of directors have a110
bolnl, a budpt ni'll tiliJ wjll- ~
tesJined.
hci!L
"

U we.,.._....-..,., (Gotl) Ia fallltflol,;,d,JIIIt, ud wiD forpve oar

s-an.

a...

,.

I 011 Muloorry A...

wrr:

CHURCH OF JESUS
lnll Service 7:00p.m. Wed., 6 p.m. YoUftll
CHRIST OFLATI'I:RDAY SAIJml. Port·
Ladles' Auxi liary. Wednesday, 7 p.m.
Family Worship.
1
land·Raclne Road. William Roulb, paa·
tor: Janice Duaer. cbu...., ICIIool tiJn!r.
HAZEL COMMUNITY CHURCH. 011
tor. Cbu"'b oebool 9:30 a .m. ; Momlag
Rt. 124, 3 mnes from Porlland·Lolll Bot·
KENO CHURCH or'CHRIST, Starling
w..-.hlp 10:30 a.m.; Wednesday..,.,...,
tom. Edsel Jfart, putor. Sunday School,
Ma11ar and Ollwr Swain. Sunday School
prayer IOI'Yicel, 7: lO p.m.
9:30 a .m.; Sunday ·mornine preacblnl·
Supts. Preaclllnl9: 30 a .m . each Sunday;
10: 30 a .m.; SUnday evening services, 7: 30 ..... Sunda~hooltO: 30 a .m .
BETHLEHEM BAPTIST. !leY. Earl
:
p.m.
Shuler, paotor. Wol'llllp aervtce, 9:30a.m.
HO
N CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
MIDDLEPORT FREEWILL BAPTIST
~nday S.hooi!O: 110 a.m. Bible Study and
CHRISTIAN UNION, Theron Durham,
prayer aervlce'l'lllll'lday, 7: 30 p.m.
CHURCH. Comer Aab and Plum. Noel
putor. Buday tervlt~. 9:~ a.m. ; even·
Jierrmann , pastor. Sunday SchoollO: 00 a.
CARLETON INTERDENOMINATION·
Inc aervtce 7:00 p.m. Prayer meetiDC.
m.; Moml111 Wol'llllp, 11:00 a.m.; Wed·
AL CHURCH, Klllpllury Road. Rev.
Wedn-y, 7:00p.m.
nelday and Saturday Evening Services at
Clytie W. Head......, putor. Sullday
IIEAI!WALLOW RIDGE CHURCH OF
7:30p.m.
_
School9:30 a .m.; Ralpb car~ SUpt. Ewlf·
CHRIST, Joct Col'll'ove. paator. Bible
MT. OLIVE UNITEQ METHODIST 1111 worolllp 7:00 p.m. Prayer meotlnlr,
Clau,9:30a.m.: MomiDaWol'llllp10: .30a.
Ott I:U, behind Wllkeovllie. Charleo Joneo,
Wedn-y 7:00p.m. ·
,
m.: EveniDC wo;p. 6:30p.m. Tlluraday
pastor. Sunday School, 9:30a.m. ; mCO'DIIII
OLD BETHEL FREE WILL BAPTIST
Bible Study, 6: 30 p. .
worsblp, 10: 30; Sunday and Tbunday
CHURCH, 2811111 Illite Route T, Mlddle~N..GhORCH
CHRIST, Pomeroyev~IDC
, 7:00p.m . .
Sunday School10..m.; Sallday ewt~·
Han11C11vWe Rd. (RL 1f3) Robert E . Pur·
aervtce 7:30 p.m.; ~l' aervlce,
tell, min liter: Steve Stanley, Bible Sehool
7 p.m.
.
Supt.; Harley Johna&lt;ll, Aut. Supt. SUNHYSELL. RUN ,HOLINESS CHURCH,
DAY: Bible Sellool 9:30 a.m.; Wonhlp
Bob Grimm, putor. Sunday khool9: 30 a.
10::1! A.M. and 7: 30P.M.: Wednesday Bl·
, ble Study, 7: '00 p.m.
m.; Worohlp 10:45 a.m.; Sunday evenlnr
oervlce, 7 p.m.
ST. JOHN LUTHERAN CHURCH; Pine
FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION at Bald
Grove. Tlle .Rev. Laura A. l..Hdl, paotor.
· Cburob aervtce 9:30a.m.: SI!Dday School
Knob, located oa County Road 31. Rev.
!0:30a.m.
Roller Wl)l!ord, paator. !tmay Schobl 9: 30
a :m.: Momlag Wol'llllp IO:t5.a .m.; Sun·
BRADBURY CHURCH OF CHRIST,
Tom Rwtyon,paat..-, Sundiy School9: 30
day ev0111111 wonblp 1:00 p.m.; Wedaes·
a.m.: .Larry Hayn01, S. S. Supt. Moralnl
day even1111 Bible Study 7:00p.m. ·
worahlp 10:30 a.m.
WIUTE'S CHAPEL WESLEY AN. Cool·
VOle RD. Rev. PhUIIp Ridenour, paiiCO'.
RACINE CHURCH OF THE NAZA·
Sunday School 9: 30 o.m.; wanhlp aervk:e
RENE, !leY. Tllomu L. Gateoll, paotor.
10:30 a .m.; Blblelllldy ond wtrlhlp oer·
Ora Buo, Sllllday School Superlnteadent.
Sunday Sehool, 9: 110 a.m.; wol'llllp .-vice
vice, Wedn-y, 7 p.m.
10:30·a.m.; •-InC aervlce, 6 p.m. Wed·
RUTLAND CHURCH OF CHRIST. Eu·
nesday evnlq Nl'VIoe, 7 p.m.
- Churoh School 9: lO
cene E . Underwood, min later. Sunday
a.m .: Wonhlp 10: 30 a,m.; Bib'* Study,
LIBERTY CIIRJSTIAN CHURCH. DexSchool, 9:30a. ~i MomiDcworlldp, 10: 30
Wednesday, 7: JJ p.m.; Communion Firat
ter. Woody Call, paator. Servt.,.. Sullday
o.m.; E.....,lna 'ftol'lltlp. 7:00p.m.
Sunday ot Month (Rev. Charln .Eat&lt;ll)
10 a.m. alii! 7 p.m. Wedn-y, 1 p.m.
RUTLAND lllm..E METHODIST, Rev.
REEDSVILLE - Silnday Wonblp ser. · DYESVILLE COMMUNITY CHURCH,
Ivon Myero. Stmday School 9: 30 a.m. wltb
vice 9:30a.m.; Chun:h School10:30a.m.; . Lloyd Sayra, Supt. Sunday S.hool9: 110 a .
Sonay Hudaon;--tupt.; Evenl111 ...-vice
Bible Study 7:30_p.m. Wedn-y.
7:00p.m . Prayer meet~n~~ alii! Blblutudy,
m.: momiDC worsblp IO:lO a .m. Sunday
TUPPERS PLAINS ST. PAUL - ·
,W edn-y, 1 p.m.
ewnlnl aervk:e 7 J&gt;·f!L
• ·•
Churell School 9 a.m.; Wonlllp 10 l .m.;
RUTLAND CHURCH OF THE NAZA·
Bible Study, Tuesday, 7:30p.m.: Commu·
RACINE FIRST IIAPT!ST, Steve
RENE. Samuel Buye, paalcl'. Sunday
. alon First S~ily.(Haulllllln).
Deaver, Put..-. Mllie h:ltrer, Sunday
School t :30 a .m .: Wol'llllpSarvlcelO: 30 a.
Sohool Supl.; SUday Schcicil 9:110 a .m .:
CENTJLU, CLVI'Iml .
m.; YOIIDI People'• Service &amp; p.m.
Jlev.Dooll...owa
MomlliC I"WIIIIP 10:to a.m.; Sundiy
Evancellatlc aervloe6: 110 p.m. Wedn-y
eYtltllltl worolllp T: 30 p.m.; Wedn-y
oervlce 7 p.m.
~·-ley-­
....
Fruit 8mlllo .
MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST, MIUer
ReV. !WIIrp BDq
.
St., Maltoe, W. Va. SUnday Bible Study 10
Bul .......... Ray Lautlennl~ pollOI'; flo.
Rev.a..Pt..., .
o.m.; Worllllp llo.m. and 1 p.m. Wtdlleo·
bert O t a r t , - put&lt;r. SundayRn.-orCrdiday Bible Study, vocal mule, 7 p.m.
Rev.,.,-oe...,...
10Lm.; -p7p.m.: w~.6p.m.
UBERTY AliSEMm..Y QF GOD, Dud·
ASBURY !Syracuoe)- Wol'llllplla.m.
diDC Lane, Muon, W.Va. J. N. 'l'llaclter,
)'OUIII.-...; - · 7p.m . - : Churoh Scbool9:45 a.m.; Ch&amp;rae Bible
·PINEGROVEHOLINESSCHURCH, 1&gt;
put«. E-ln8 7:30 p.m.; WomlleolfRt. 325. Rov. Ben J. Walll, paat..-.
- Study, Wednesday, 7:30p.m.; UIIIW, tint
men'oMIIIIItry'l'bunday, 9:30a.m.; Wod·
Tuesday, 1:30 p.m.: Choir ReiiNraal,
Robert Sear1eo, S.S. Supt. Sunday Sdlool
nesday Prayer and Bllllo Study 7: 15 p.m .
Wednesday 6:30p.m. (Thatcher)
9:30a.m.; Momlq Wonblp 10:311 1.m.;
JULLSIDE BAPTIST CHURCH, •· Rt.
Sallday ............. Ice 7:30 p.m.; Wed·
ENTERPRISE - Worahlp 9 a.m.;
143 juot oil Rt. 7. Rev. Jam01 R. A&lt;mSr.,
ne&amp;day aervtce, 7: 110 p.m.
Cbureh SchooiiO a .m .: Bible Study, TU&lt;I·
putor; Rev. Mite WUiel~ AJII. Paator:
day, 7:00p:m. ; UMW, Firat Monday, 7:30
SILVER RUN BAPTIST, BDI Ltttle,
Joe Humphrey, S.S. Sup~ Stutclay School
p.m.: UMYF Sunday, 6 p.m. (RUj!y)
puttr. Steve Ultle, S. S. Supt. Sunday
IOa.m.: MomlnaWonblplla.m.; Sunday
Schoo110 a.m.; MorniDC worllp, II a .m.;
nATWOODS- Church School: 10 a .m.
evenlag ~«VIce I p.m.; Wednesday even·
Sullday even1111 woroblp 7:110 p.m: Prayer
; Worship, ll a. m.; Bible Study, Tllun·
meet1n11 aDd Bible oltldy Wednesday, 7:30
day, 7 p.m.; UMYF, Sunday, 6 p.m. (RI·
FIRST CHURCH OF THE
ley\ .
. p.m.; .Youth meetlniWedn-yol7p.m .
NAZARENE, WUIIam Juatla, paator. Sun·
REJOICING LIFE BAPTIST CHURCH
FOREST RUN - Worship 9 a.m.;
day Sohool Supt, SOnJ• Jullll• Slllldoy
- 383 N. 211d Ave., Middleport. Sunday
Chureh &amp;Mol 10 A.M.: Choir practice,
School, 9:30 o.m.; moriiiDC wonblp, 10: to
SehoollO a .m . Sullday tvetllllll 7:00p.m.;
Tllursday, 6: 30.p.m.: UMW third Monday.
a.m.; Sunday and Wedn-y aervlceil,
(Thatcher\
Mkl·weet aervlce, Wed., 7 p.m.
7: 30p.m. _ _ _
LANGSVILLE CKRimAN CHURCH,
HEATH (Middleport I - Churoh School,
MIDDLEPORT OOMMUNITY CHURCH,
Soliday S.bool9: 30 o.m.; Jeff Smith, oupt.
9:00a.m.; Morning Worahlp 10: 30 a.m.:
5'1!1 !'Oar! St., Sam - . JIM!or. ~nday
Youth Group, 4 p.m.: Wedn-y, Bible
: Momlnl wwsblll 10:11 a.m.: Sunday
Jtt&lt;ll'llln&amp; .........,, lD Ltn.; I."Yetdna ..rvtcoi,
em~lag IM!I'VICO, 1:30 p.m .; Wednesday
atudy 6: 00p.m. Choir reheanal7:00 p.m.
~and Wednesdi.Y, t.30 p.m.
1
(Fronk Smith I.
•
,
evenlq aervk:!r.,! 30 p.m .
EDE'N UNuo;D BRETHREN IN
MINERSVILLE - ,Church Scbool 9:00
CHRIST, Eldm R. ma•e, put..-. Sunday
a.m.; Wonhtp set:viCf' IO:QO a .m.; UMW
HAATFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
· School 10 a .m.; Gary ·Reed, -Lay)eador.
third Wednesday. 1 p.m. (Thatcher\
CHRISTIAN UNION.-ilardord; W. Va .
· PEARL CHAPEL - Chu!oh School9: 00
MomiDC oerm&lt;11. 11 a .m .; Sunolliy Dllbt
!leY. David M&lt;Ma!lll, putor. Church
a.m.; Worship Service 10:00 a .m. (Fit&gt;
IM!I'VIcea: Cbrlatlan End ..vor 7:30 p.m.,
9: 30 a .m.; Sunday mllnllnJ aer·
ren.ce Smith )
SOnt oervlce 8 p .m. Proech11118:30 p.m . School
vta., II a .m.: Sunclay ...,... aervlce,
POMEROY - Chun:b Sdlool, 9: l.la.m.
Mkl·""k prayer meetlag, Wednesday, 7
7:30p.m. Wedn-y prayer mHIIq, 7: 30
p.m.
: Wonhlp 10::1! a:m. ; Choir rehearaal
p.m.
Wedne~day , 7: 30 p.m.; UMW, .,...nd
. CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP CENTER,
FAIRVIEW ""'LE CHURCH, Letart,
Tueaday, 7: :rlp.m.: UMYFSullday,6,p.m.
Salem· St., Rutland. Robert E. Muaer.
W. Va., Rt .• l , J a - Lowto, lltllor. Wor·
{ Meadowsl ·
putor. Sunday Sellool 10:00 l .lft.; Wor·
ahlp .., _ 9:30 a,m.: Sunday S.boolll
sblp .JerVIce, 1: 15 a .m.; Sunday rveatna
ROCK SPRINGS - Church SchooL 9: 15
a.m.; Evenllll !'trllllp 7:30p.m. Tunllay
a.m.; Worship 10 a.m.; Bible Study, Wedaervlce. 7:00p.m.; Thuraday e..,nl111 oer·
cottaee prayer meet~n~~ and llqiJe study
vice. 7:00p.m . .
n~day, 7: 30 P.1m.; UMYF (Sentonl, Sun·
9:30 o.m.; Worablp otrvl&lt;e, Wedll-y
dliy, 6 p. m.; (Junl«s) every other Sun- . NEW LIFE COVENANT CHURCH, · 7:30p.m.
day, 6 p.m. IRUeyl.
·
Ch01ter, Gary Hln01, put..-. Sunday
OUR SAVIOUR LU'l11ERAN CHURCH,
S.bool 11 9:30'a .m. ; Wonblp oervtc'e at
RUTLAND - Sunday School, 9:30a.m.;
Walnut
&amp;ad Henry Stl., R&amp;Vl!UWood, \\'.
Worlhtp lei'Yice, l0:30a.m.; BlbleStuy, 7
10:30 a.m.; Sunday ewnlag oervlce, 8: 00
Va.
Tile
Rev. Georp C. Wetrtek, put..-.
p.m . Thursday. (Crabtl'ft') ,
·
P·!"·; Wednesday Dllclple Cluo, 7:00 p.
SUIIday SChoolt:30a.m.; Sunclay,....blp
SALEM CENTER- Chu...., School9: 15
m.
11, a .m.
a.m.; Morrrtnc Worship 10: JS a.m.
CALVARYBIBLECHURCH,Iooatedon
(Fierce)
·
HEMLOCH GROVE CHRillTIAN, David
Pcu~Ute,
County Road 2S . .r Flat·
SNOWVILLE ~ MomiDK.Wol'llllp, 9:00
I'IJolloo,
- · Cb- Domlpn, Sun1000111.
. lllaftWootl, putor. Sarvlcel
day Seliool ~pt. Moi'Diq Worlldp t: 30 a.
a. m.; Church School10:00 o.m. (Floretlce
onSudayatlO:IILm. and 7:30p.m. Willi
Smith\
m.; Swttlayllohooi!0:30a.m.; ~-·
Sunday Sohool9:30a.m. Bible Study, Wed·
vice, 7:00p.m.
rOiday, !:II p.m.
IOIJ'I'IIBBN CLUITD
MT. UNION IIAPTlST, Paalclr: Joe N.
SP!RrruAL FAITH CHURCH. Slate
Sa,-., Iunday Scllool9:111 Lm.; -~~~~
Route 331, Atttlqult)'. A·.
paator.
w..-.blp 1:30 p.m.; Prayer MHIIDt, 8:30
a..
......
.... C...I . . . .
SUnday Momllll, lDLm.; Stutcla)'t-1111
p.m. Wedll-y.
APPLE GROVE - Chu...., School 9:00
7: II P.'!':i...'l!'tlladaY IYIDlJw T:ll ~~om.
"ruPPERI1 PLAINS CHURCH OF
MIDDu:ruRT llfDEPENDEN'I'HOLI·
a. m.: Morn InC Wortlllp 10:00 a .m.; Bible
CHRIST. Robort Footer, putor; -ard
Study Sunday 7:00p.m.; Prayer moetlq
NESS CHURCH, lao., ., I'Hrl St. Rev.
Caldwell, SuPifltttelld•t; Cbuteb' IChool
7:00JI.m. Thurlday. (Htcllli
·
Ivan Myln, i!.C!IIDI paallr; ftolorlfanley,
•:=onldp.-.tcet:ea.m.lllld&amp;:30
Sr., Suaday l1c:md ~. Iiiii·
BI:J'HANY - Wo111t1p f a .m.; Churc•
p.m.
&lt;lit_,;
day S.boal 1:10 a.tL; Mondu - l p
ScbooiiO..m.; llblolltudy Wedll-y10
R .CHURCH OF THE NAZA·
a.m.; Dorcu Womea'1 Fellolrllllp Will·
lt:30 a.m.: ....... ~p 'f:ll p.m.:
RENII:.
llortMrt Grete, · lloui
ne&amp;day ll a.m. (Belter) .
Wedneoday ........ Batt atudy, pra)a'
IIIIMil. •pt. llullday ldtool 9:110 a.m :;
and praiM 1erv10e, 7:11p.m.
CARMEL- Churoh Scllool 9:11a.m.;
Lf!L •
7 p.m. lila·
Worllllp, 10: cs...m. Second lllld Fourtll
CHURCH OF JISUS CBRI8T APQII.
da . *"a:JptP.f!L Prenr meetliq.
Sunclayo; Felltl.nblp dtaaor wtt11 Suttoa
UIII:L
FRD: MITRODIII'r TOUC- VUZUdt and Ward Rd. Elder
Jam01 IIID•, putor. 8tmdoy ldlool,
tbltd Tlluraday, 6:311 p.m. (Beltor) .
CIIURal. William WIJllellli, paatar; fto.
MORNINGSTAR- Qareb !ldloolt:lll
10:30,a .m.; Wonlllpr::~· T: 30
11trt 1:. ~~an~~~, Dtnetor or Clu'tltlaa £du.
o.m.; Woroblp 10: 30 a.m. ; Bible Study,
p.m .: Btblo '!!!Jf..!'-""
T: p.m.
ca-= ...,. J:b11D. a • - .lwtday
CALVARY rJ1.U1UM
Barr!·
'I'II'L~J'· 7:110 p.m. (Balter).
lldJool 9: II LtD.; Jf.Onlllll -.bl_j110: 10
IGIIYIJio Roed. Rov. Vlotor Rotull, paator;
S
N - Churob Sehool. f: 30 a.m.;
a.m.; , . _ Ill Aetlae, 1 p.m.; EV8IIIt
Monlllll WOI'IIdp10:45a.m.llnt lllldllllrd • WorUip. T:IO p.m. Cbclr lftdlet I p.m . CJJatoa r ..... 1ot1111ay ldlool-": Sua·
~ya: Flllowahlp dina• wtt11 Cumll
, tlay lldloal t: 10 a.m.; mamlllr Wii-iidp,ll
thlri!'l'llunday, 6:311 p.m. (Belt.-) .
~prayer and
IIIIQIIodv.
a.m .; S~ ~- T:30 p.m.
Pre- Meetlltl!. Weda-y, T: ll p.m .
e •

.r:

'

992-2121

5trltf .(B...I;,

p.m.

..

"Oi/{nil y and Service A·l wayi"

112-88117 -11118-00KIII

Middleport

Chlldrea's Church 11 a.m. SUIIIay E\'ell-

""*-'

13 MHIItreet
Mldtlepolt; Ohio 41780

992-5141
SYRACUSE FIRST UNITED PRESBY·
TERIAN - Sunday Sdlool, 10 a.m.;
Church service, 11:00 a.m. ; Youth rroup,
ftnt and third SUDdays, 4 p.m.
RUTLAND CHURCH OF GOD, Put..-,
John F . Corcoran. Sunday SchooiiO: 00 a .
m.; Sunday MorniDC Wol'llllp 11:00 a.m.

EWING FUNERAL HO~r''

-~~cx~t

.wbelli

RAWLINGS-COATS

2M South 2nd

. ,j

Established 1913

=CI!IIII"m

~

POMEROY, OHI0;..992-66'n

· 214 E . Main
· 992·5130 Pom•roy

U2 North Se&lt;otMI ArL
. Mid•••art,· CJIIio.

Deployed to
Persian Gulf

JIIOIIIOIItaip, or if you would like 10
hCip or~ in tile nco illdf,
you can call bim at992-6782.
Jim Pipe of s~ is VfZ'J inYOlved in lhe tJIInniDa ptOI II U
well, llld can 'be COIIiicfed if You
are inla Uti in beill&amp; •IE ol dlo

SI :5 II New 811ft'
The Mdp CQUDty Chamber of
~·· ll--ve onelortcc.y J)nW'Y ._1 Diloc:lial',
E!jz '
S¢ s'la Ia lhe pi' 1
o1 1ea1iJti1 ill, .l.d 1111 101M bii
plliis (Mi a lot ~ lllnl wort) in. cxclrtmeaL
lUiie • die ,_- 1D cxae. ,
It ia bopetl dill lhe derby will
I w.- ID w '
r l!li!libeth to Jive 11011111 much-11 elied apostll'l
the ws
'!Jt IIIII it mi&amp;ht be to die county, 1114 thcnfln yoor
nice if 7PD'd do dlo- wileD you •s• 1•tsrce ia doubly ~
,
· lnCidanllly, Jhe COlWell is 1101
..
• '
nllll'ic:IGd to boys and lirls in MidI've
'IJ!ddlllaV.dl&amp;•iup
hn .1111 ICC pll ld Gaile I '
County, into Oal1ia, A1bcnJ
eat Ullia'Rc~P$tr,w119is.0~7. 1114
Counties n alJo enwould liD die wilDie world 10 ............. to
.. . .
thlt Ill._ doJf 1 'die Nilop- .
. . . . . . -...., 3". J.aln. who porlllnity for • 10111, fathenl;
1111 ]IIIJiildle ~ b ' aiiiOIIIb. is .dau&amp;l*n flliJ/or molhen 10 spend
1 fll'a ...._ •
lllemn . some "qllllity timc"!Opther. . .
wy Sc:\eol. Ill ......... JUIIia
.
1111 woa ower Mlrio l lid Mlrio 2.
The American Heart Anoci•tion
u well.
is ftlllliDdin&amp; tis of ill- 'Mem«iil
If JW'W lrirltl die pall, Conlribution Propar11.
.
you
.HJ' LWJWII .......... lhe
Not only is a memorial c:ootribu·
slpillk.• Ill ~ JUI!Ia's It· tim! an lllllpiOpliale lributc 10
ccmp"' '
t .I !~aft, .a 111111 ma dec•.,.., lo\'Cd ooea, but MiDic
~·it'Ii 1101 u lllily u it 1118)' MicHf. the AHA mcm«iaa
llliiDd Tllea ¥ideo .....- ale quite 1!ftliPIII1 's clilinnml in Meip
a c:heDegp
·
County, SII)'S d1lt the cmttibutions
·
can lllo be llllld 10 honor a
· Kids .irl r•a ~~-'l¥*t loot ~- . ~·· ~ lllllivenary•. .
Wlftl to • -~~~
nr m bil',lbdly, ,nd.-oo or odter SJlll"
MldC ,Jtilt. . . . . . . noW lllllltlf· . cilloccuion.
I
'WI.'f aJr I ~. hl Dltby,. to be
~ 50 pcli'CCIII of aD deaths
held ill ... Jta 'l1le cielbY llllowl IRl I ~t Of cardio¥IICII1ar dis·
yo~~~~ llotr 1111 Pll · .... lliRe eue, llld last )'ell', lhe AHA spent
daouP la • ID " ,I uct rac!DI men tMI $172 lllilJion for
Qll
(Jill, '
lilt from Rill LCb . 11411J111'l, l'dtX:IIion and
......--. ~ 1114 .-- commllllily JliOIIUIS.
tic~ . r Ill till dlrtiJ'. Tbe wilmer ol
Locally, lhe Meip Divilion of
lhe MIHJepnrt liCe wiD travel to die AHA olral a wido -*&gt;' of
lhe Dn,'1
in Aban pnllTMIJ. incladini.Healt 'l'ftlllure
for till "tiiilllll" in AupM
Chest, OeainJIO XiJow your Hart,
1'llo ~ ii bela&amp; 'srH Up by Food PeltiYil, Save 1 Sweet Hart.
Miclll~.... l lion . ,DIIoc:O- lllld Speabn' B - . ~b IIIP. . ~.Wllljlml.
· . .
· ~~ lf'"lnn I'! comm1111ty or·' ~ C. ;uel)'OIII' .!Mip; if •yotl .I*' 11 MKJIIS,
'
.
· a iltllitlt' d ~· ~
MI. MidkUf. can pve you more
IIIII !Iii t I nltllill 11'8
.ill illl'onnllilll if you wrifle 10 ber 8l
U ceipOIIII-.4 bulb•• Blat One, P.O. Box !186, Pomeroy,
_,..,._
. . or if you caD 1 (100)212-2091.
. If J11K 1ft a ' fztWI J*DI iataeltd is plitll II ~ w1111 a
Pnty tor pe.1 .

'

, •

•.
Pomeroy

" 2·2955

Hometitr S•ws

~ .

COnsider
this
...
··a,
•rm

"}C.

IIITURE &amp; HARDWARE

.
ftiJ /. J• I f 11, 1•1
,... 7

'

'

*

PHARMACY
·~
w. Fill Doctors'

SUPPLY ·

ot Columbus, D.
. ....W. M•in
"2·2311 Pomeroy

..,.,., ..

..

SWI~ &amp; LOHSE

RIDENOUR

m
1.:13

Th~
Daily Sentinel
.

·.;.

U, MUIIHP

~

.,...

...... ,1 JIII ...... ~----J

s·

�•

'

•

•

Page 8- The Deily Sentinel

·
1·
Beat' 0 .
the . Bend••

"God knows" - uely lbele will be
a IW in your crown.
·

Bob
Hoeflich

BJ 1Jillted l'r•eiDter

aH..-1

at Uni\Wiity lbpilll in Coflllllbus
where sbe bu lllldcljoae triple
VIDEO STABS: Robia Leach bu a new
bypllll ' - ' awpry. The room
syndicated show that's a comblDaUon of bll
_..;.,....;..._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _,.. · number is 911, Dolin's Hall. Sbe's
"Ufestyles of ' the Rlcb and · Famous" and
Jqiltaal under the liiiDCI of Alma
"Amertc:a's ~t Home Videos." Leachwu
1We didll't let 100 mudl gras
Once IPin it's a ple1iine 10 M11pnuo carduiptld be sent ill
In New Orleans thiS week to promote "Celebrity
· grow under our feet before we report dill lbele are lllill !JOllie lhlt 111111e.
Home Videos" at a televlllon PI'OIJ'amroera'
chaogec! Desen Shield iniD Desert hooeat ~ io die Wllrld • well, •
conven lion and 'said viewers will see such ll&amp;hts
Storm. If it bas 10 be dolle, I "'""" leas&amp; in Mei&amp;l Colinly.
Caryl 1114 1Joe CoCJt. tonner
u Bd MeM•W. ba•"'Rft b.ll'--ar-old da.. ftbter, . .
pose it's just u wen 10 mO\'e aiUl
A !rieiJd of miDe - who lftlcn 10 POmeroy n:siclaiiS now c:onfined 10
British comedllll!.;;;;; BID ~"vacation, Debllle
with it. Although 'Ibunday ni&amp;bl ranam lliOIIyiiiOUS- lliwed by a a ('nnw:lialt niDina bome. smd
Glbloalnberfll'atpublll:a~Da~Daappell'AIICeiDan
brought aboul some backlashes and ~ busy J&lt;ro&amp;a' 111ore ill Pomeaoy aJana tbelr tbub to you. They
tee cream parlor ,lind Prl»ce Char~ dolq Monty
complications, liope(ully the thin&amp; on Cbrislmal Eve. · Sbe went in, .Rally apjHteiated you . remember·
Python shtlclc In 11-n army camp. t.each uy 1 he
can be wnpped up and our young boulht a bl!bY and since the iDg tbCim 10 wen with the binhday
was lnuncl!!ted wtth material $Iter putUna out a
people Wntd home.
·
turkey boud and bin1 10 and Olristmas cirds. y 1111•re nice.
call for celebrity vicleos. "Every star baa a video
. The television cowira&amp;e of lhe handle, laid her pne ill lhe shop· c:amera," he said. "Within a week we bad
I war, I find. is amaziDg. Talk about
Pin&amp; aut with lhe tlilby. Sbe left
And you've really been nice to
mountains of it. It (bellll on bllsbow) will be the
up to lhe minute CO'ICfiiC. One the SIOre,lolded the IIJit,cy iniO ber lhe Women's Auxiliary 11 VeteranS ·
new status symbol for tbeln. Firat we did the
could spcacl the rest of lhe car and lOOk off. Mi1e1 ..nver, it Mcmorill Holpltal.
Architectural Digest thing with !IH!Ir bomet. Now ,
glued to lhe aet evea dJoush at dawned on benhll she had left ber
Cootribulicioa 10 belp . the
we're dolq It with their home videos."
liiM8 lhe tepons do .act to be a bit pone in lhe sbclppipa cart. So blclr. voluveer """"' with the .....,..,_
KENT STATE , &amp;BMEMBEBED: Growiili
repetilioas. ·
to lhe WJI)' busyiClupt's sbe weaL of a ·~ ~e~evt;O.b
anti-war sentiment has created str0111lntere1t 1n
~wbile, blek 011 the bome Of courae, slie coodda 't lociiO lhe residenll of die· bospilll'i Sklllecl Alan caators, one of nine people wounded by the
fronl we're undelgoing a wa&amp;cr cart, so she ~went to lhe oftice in lhe Naninl Facility now tolal Sl66S,
Ohio Nalfonal Guard .21 years aro In a yletllam
~~ our ~- Wa&amp;cralllinc hadsuxe._~~~it or"~~ just $71 sbolt of the IDIIl of $1739 ·war protest. Call1ora, 41, said he Is In clemaDCI~ a
gomg 11101t

te(llll' ...,... -

day

......... uoo

~

LAFF-A-DAY

Poop)e,in the news

. blow
· AnnaberMllpRc
~ey - you a11
• Mllpret - is a 1J11ient

By·

yean &amp;ad llaa appeered ou network teievtalOD

.-r

spent onlhe projecL 1be WOIIIIIII of

At~Uc

Rosat11~~·

~ntwof-~reaandd

on Wednesday and 011 Thursday · qrt 1114111d 1U11JeC1 it in. My friend die exceUent arntm can't belieinto lhe nigbt • that m - no waller. ~ ber pune bact with. nuinenius .the ..great
you've , giv;
But-1 woo't COO!plain. We don't 111lp0rlliltpaperundbermoneyin- · them - lheyareileligbted. , ,
have 10 wear gas .inasks, sleep in · IICL She's so gntduliO'the Jiona1t
La1est conln'buiOn are Marion
lhe sand, live in fear tbat a missile shopper 1114 aenc11 along a big Ebersbacb, Abbey Strattoo,. who is
or a bomb is going to bit us and we thaDb. UnfonnnMcly, lhe 1111110.of an acdve member of tbe
•
are at home. Howevea:,· die old the - .......
n.. in lhe .....~... •......
....... ..
__.. "'·"·,
-·"'- . 'lhful, hospital and as a -··
.
...--·
-·-.
..._.....
".,.... ...........
•.....,t 1mows wen
CbriJIInu
iiill full
Talk -"-~ ....,.,;,. - . . ._.dlly'
saying, "y\111 never miss the wa&amp;cr etboc* Wllll't teClOided so I can't hanf-~8 member of .......... m, bo ,. .
our
~-.
Y
...,._ - - .,..... ,_,_.
'til the well nms dry" is ringina evengiwylllltbatiiMie.Howevtr, and M;;J;: ~) ~
weuecnvelbeAU'Iiliatyis. .
deconled, remains in our livillg and the day bef~n 1114 ;111e day
some bells.
. to lhlt st;opper let me also lillY· . wbo is a ~-·-cinle .......in.- 11 the
room. IIIII is ligbllecl e~ nigi!L before, e~e.l Do bep •illng,

3t Homee tor Bell
,.,_-.
.......

..-.~lic.J'I •..

..toiler - . I0441WiLIG. Cool! ..
IINIW.....

~

""""'

•: ,.,;y....,.

I -

,_ v.,~

I
,
3
6
10
Monthly

CLOSED SuNDAY ·
~

Rate
$4.00
.6.00

Ov'r 1 &amp; Words

n3.00

.60

.

.20
.30

•e.oo

.42
.06/doy

' $1 .30/ day

1,5

' .v~""!'-•
.•,..
~"''""'

·-Aflt.2ilr,1bolh,priftlo

-

.

~

,

• 7 potnt tin 11 WPt onty uMd . ·
'
' ,
~
·se~ttnul IS 1\0I responsible tcH errors iltler tir.st th•t- CChltdl :, ;·
lor e•r~rs tiisl dftri illd nuls in papltf) . Call b ..ore 2 :Dfl PeR, ,

,
1

.., . .

, .;.._;;._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _...;._ _ _...;....;._ _.;.;.._.....;_

1 .-

,,

111

~~J/Iowifll{

H•ppy Ads
Y•d Slllw

,1

11 :00 AM . SATURDAY
2 .00 P.M . MONDAY•
2 .00 PM . TUUOAY
2,00 PM . WEDNESDAY

'THURSDAY PAPER

~

.

·

381 Vtnton
245 Rto Grenda

DAY BE. FORE PUBLICAI tON

COPY OEAOLINE
MONDAY PAPER
TUESDAY PAPER
W[ONESDAY P.. PER

•HoPAY PAP~
SUNDAY PAPER

441 Cialo•JI7 Ch-o
2H Gu,.n Ditt.
143 AleiMeDisl.
379 .w-1

m::.:=rJ':v"···

tlu• ·

:1!:'• ::-

Fat; •lo ar

,r .JW, ;

-.,

'~""

....

It,

E"""14rr'.\.

"That does it! You either find
a violin or you're frred."

" J.i:l-

ir.fl'\fW.

•IJ•I (I~ .

Mason Co., WV
Ate• Code 304

~iddiiiPOf'

182

&amp;75 Pt. Pluunt
458 leon
57e Apple Gro"e
843 Panland
173 · Muon
247 lelal1 falls · 8i2 New Haven

'9 41 R•cin•
742 ' ..., _

· 895 L•.-t
937 ~~~-

61 7 Coolvllo

.. 1 aooc1 11onw
~-~~~
-• ' ·
9

,,n..., .. ·

_,,

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

F,_ io

'

;:;~

bluo

m_

' •u•.

~

~

2

-Roofll!ll
·
-llltlrklr • Elllertor

r.......

~- .

•

CFREE ESTIMATES!

V. C. YOUNG II
ft2-6215
__,_

Open House on Monday,

January 21 from 9 AM to 7 PM.

• OIMNJ• -

. PlACES TO GO
TRAVEL AGENCY

W!lber

In Loving Memory

of Our Mother
,

Lovwcle M. Evene
whoptiHIIIWIY

•VINYL SIDING
• ··
•ALUMINUM SIDING

.oiLOWN IN .

.
'

. , BISSELL // ·.
SIDING
._ CO•. .

Jenu1ry 1 8, 1 990.
January eoiMI with

"F- EltliMtOI"

PIL ,49·2101
., .... 949-2160

nct....,.U.
The dly •. ~ month

wldlOUt you.
....,
tlmw . naildad you, ·

A mlllon tlmll
cried:

If love aould hive
IIUedVOU

....

v...............

It bnLIIe our hOirtl to
loile ,..,·

.
not go

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

But you .d
,~

~

,..

1111

....... ,

For

•

.

.

,.., ....

... _you ........

.

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

8011'1 I den _,.-1
l'or He Oftly ...... ....

110 SUNDAY CAllS

!i!
'

@

/..·
l!lf!:~·
· -• 201 NORTH "IECOND AVE. -

.

.

. •
MIDDLEPORT. 'OHIO
OFFICE H2·28MIHOME --a·lll2
· DontE I. TURNIR. BROKER

.

tar
lllis Comllllrcill iLuftdltiJ 111a loeiUna brick buldlllatllllll
set up u • hoiiLI, bul cilld be chanaed IlL •bout anythlna.
H1i 6 rooms with 6 bitlis. plus 1 11111 IIILnoll 1r111.

.

uet•l- flit~ nwdlil'- lor iltis 1~

•I

21 Burin•• Oppot•unlly
22 Moner 10 Loan
23 Prof•lion• &amp;erYices

...-

~

-, .__

- •·--olr

-'-' ·'" ·'(

hOml

.r,u; -..

rt'CI,

10

·.n-•
-.
_ . ,, ' -

uo::

1114-

.

''n .l;.:•

-

1 ,_,

'_,.1
&amp; Jound
...,..
.-~

.,_,
..... ,_
-.o~c~;,a_,_awhMo,
6

'-n

~1C,

...._

ViolnftJ

·

'":1' ,::::

........
r.;;;-.o..;"'c::=:

ci.nt.rp~ ~=t~

IIO.ln4-UI-Ioll..

=•

. .

-

ol

old. IIWI7-aDI.

111110 ....

i

Mobile
Homes
forSale

Emp loymenl Servrces

.

=-

gango, 11x24 otorago bu~d~~~·
121.1100.
114-l!llltclt, II
8
1

::,1880
•~' -BIY\'IeW
:--.,.----M..,O .Moblll
Homo wllh
0 7X24
2 Add.Oii :oomo.pu~ ':!~

Tcolol Eloctolc, 4 h d - Ex·
cellon! Cond~Lon. C.U - ·

-'-=··..,-------::
Liollyptolk 21&gt;&lt;, lolol
-. muol ooll 1mmedlolo1J.c:.tii14-441·MOI.
1117 MKlll Cllyton F-ay,
1111

- -·

OIL 44801. ('ltl) 435-

=;1:':...~....~mp
..
421.

·-·-.

Bonk ......~
'"'~' '
12ltl0,11444111112.
New11Lt114x71mollllo homo In

-

-

"'

...._

'

.'
"'
'I

-c....... Rl,-. outo, ....
mUll
1W4.

SOMERYILLE'S Armj
booldo lllndwlllo Pool
, _ lootn, Frf, ~~~~sun.
:30 PM. Hoovy w«1t
clothing - · In - k IR wlntor,
llnod blba, --·lo
1011. ott "'ILUilr prico. !Rontal
Burp!• ~ng). 304~.
SAM

-·Tm.

dllpOIII and ,...,.ncn
qulred, . . . . 2111

Co-

,.!

.'

. t14-446471t, 14-441-

...

72 Truckl for Sale

I

li¥Lng, , and
2YllloM
·- _opollmonlll
...
and . ..Rlnrolilo
Apoulllllllie In Mlddlopott. .,_
IIW. Call
EOH.
In lllddl pall, Ololo, N. ThlnL
Ave,1 ~ ...................

' '

.--lae~). - , IM, - · -wllh
·

54 MIIICIII&amp;f!IOUI
Merchanctlae

12xH 3br, mobllo "-o, with

=101, mUll ba """ 11/
~=..
ond In mint -Iori. Coli 214 houow. ,_.,....1311
14 Ia 1112
bL
·
Ill.
.
.
Wlnlod to buy; Julllk wlih llpotilr, 1 1 flnonCiol Anolyll,
or wilhout ..... l - IIIII· -Qpoo)~ fllro11. 11447N121.
with o P.C. fliallclenoy, 1 1.1. In
Wlnlod
Buy: I'IIOiorl.
J ... Auloe
~lndogaod
wilt
or To
wlthoul
Cltll •
• • lllnd.. ~
U.., Llvwly. 114 1W 1111.
RIMY lllld IILnao-._to: eli 101 · 11f1. Olio
Wl ..od: lllohSoltlorPuppy Col Llpoilo ILeh T-.121'Thlnl
_..
-1117.
·
'
A-Gaol-OIL
t1WSL
w.•o buy your"'"""""' FGNLgn .....,..,. co'., ...,
timber. HardwoOd &amp;\Pine. L.oaail W.rUd . ..., lill~l•n•uti• 11
. 1120, 114411&amp;- ' - ' · 1IMt
u ......~
,
·~ -~ C.H ';;,•;
_
, - n Pion, P.O. Box2111,

I14-W:i·

~ .-'

v.y ........., .._

: -~ ~.,..~

11

'

' I

ltll7 ........_ Plolo•- ·•-~. bod
.:::..-•
~ _,
"
11111
iroln ~ now po..,laribvln
l3ii
"1'- · - - 4 11:1

.',.

:;;;;:·=::-::::-:---:,---:-::-o

. 'i .

:;;- -~ "'41
""" • on,
bad plelt...,IIOO.

.

aU:'l; lltti

' '
...

ll421.

....._Mel C.taala, ...,

" " Chevrollt, . . eond, ,.,.

_ . , _ ............. homo,,

torr luclllt

-··~·
lilt. Alum.

mile bllaw t 'b;~ t:k
rtv.-, CA, hell,
W.
114 1 " Dill
I

' ,.

_ , QIIC 1H-AIIII,

loci - - bad;
l1711ummli Dump Tnllor"=3011,

Nooth ThLnl llnot, IILckiLOI I,
Ohio. 2 • ....,. .....,...._.. ••
..
- ...... l'lqti(Nd,
:IOW8MIIIa.

CIIL -7p.m. 111(.211 P•

....

•

Wood -w-1155. 304- 1111 Clwvy4wlllltl-. v.., 4

;,

mr~I
·
I ayl., llttibod,11:100
tall..• · :~

W241111.

==~~~...,.~~~n

~

•

•

'•

lol ......._ .

•••

Re•ll ...e Wlnted

51
12 63
64
66
Iii
67

HO&lt;i..holciOoodl

58

Fru.. s

·

-1 .....
su,ooo

35 Loti &amp; Acreege

,.
'

7

. Glilllpolla
·&amp;vlclnHy .

: . 73,· ~-v ... • 4'wo·. " .
,7 , , MotorC'fd•
,., • 1
75 8Htl • Moton tor S· ~e · ,
'76 Auto P•t• &amp; ACci..,;•• , ! ·
'77 A.Jto Aepait
:-.

''

R - Z Alitlon, I acn 1010, 3
mlloo oouoh Oalllpollo Lacko,
pubUe ....,, no r.atrlatlon1,

liZ- Esl. K•10111.

-

Hiring. c.tl (I) -

--

JIGf:S

i;l,

2 bod,_ holM In Now
wv. :104-173-6111.

"'"''

4 BA, 2 bath,

DIN'S ·

- ·-·

'4-11-*tfll

. GROOM

IIAIISIIISSION
and AU10 IEPAII

• ilolf,!llf f

241!181 .

.-

'

Bus.i ness ·Services

-~ li

-~ , ·.~-. ~.il!_~

S--'•1111 I
..-- ng n.
Aut!Mnltlc '

Tnon1lnlalono, lrH•••
Juneup, 011 Cll8nge,
' Cl· ..... RIPIIr

....... ·
=~:!~,:;'.!~!

•
·
992 5517

ROOM
Comple111 (iroollllng
All II ••
.

1

· "'' . ne •
· eorlel·

EMILIE MEliN AI .

......
ecQel-

•K.-oMne StovH

Wlc...

I

Owner &amp;Opntw
614-992-6120
Panura.v. Olllo

361 last .....
h•uewl 01.

ECMO DEALER

...

We Do Wlek Repal1r I

MOIIIS EQUIPMENT
742-2455
Sid ..

..,._.

rrl/ll/1 ...

THE' HARDY OUTSIDE WOODBURNING
HEATER WITH INSIDE THERMOSTAT

. . . . ,lftlo--

CPATENTED)

--"'--

In&lt;---= ........- ......Sitllhlnoldo'-

IACIIIE ,
.FilE DIPr.
/ EYRY .

S&amp;.T.IIGHT
6:30 ....

12....

a.

Qooly

Strldly

•Siding·
•Pelntlng ·

•

,

1110 JOB TOO SIALL
F.REE ESTIMATES .

LOAD EVRY 12 HOUI/S

·,
, "'
1'
1

CEDAI . .,.
'•
::
CONSTIICliOI
;1
991·6641er
::•' "
691·6164
. ..J.!

orlonlod IRm . mombot • OEMTAL ASSISTANT lo join ..,,
pnocOce po~~Lmo. Exportonco
hllplul, but not M II II'J. Will-

to-_,

Ing
Bind uo ''""
, . _ ond 10 Box CLio OSB, c/o
OoiiLIIOilo Dole, Tribuno, 82!5
Tlolrd Av.,uo. Qalllpoolo, DH

.

............ AIIil,.-11'1....
Jlhano C304JI7~5 Iller 5 p.m.
';

.... o......... ...
Chldt Out 'ow ...
Prkll .......... Ztttr
TMCten .........lit
Now .. Stidd

MOIIIS
EQUIPMENT

&amp;L

INSULAnON

_..

oti"!!'od,

Rlh

,.,.._ to:
DIILLIIOILII DILIJ Tribuna ' 82!5
Tlolnl Avo. Dllllpolle, OIL W:ll

Sltultlon
Wanted

otve
p1- - - 1n .., homo
to
bealnMrt,
1cfV1n&lt;*t

•VInyl Sldi!ta
•Replaoemen'
Window• ·
•Rooting.

•lneulltlon

JAMISBISd
992-2712

742-2455

Sit 181 ..... lwtl•••

J•Mm

131B!YinPieoe
· Mlddleaort.
Ohio
·--,-r.

•ON -SITE SERVICE/ REP AIR
•CIJSTOM PROGRAMMING
"SALES
"ON-SITE CUSTOM TRAINING

Ce.,..mal ·

•WiliNG AND
ROUILE SilooTWG
Cec II filii 81afl Id1111

PI'OIIall

lw

IANIS
CONSTIU(JION

SPRING l'otLLBY I'ROFESSIONAL BUIWING
J06fACKSON I'IKE · SUITf 10j
GAWP011S, OHIO 4J.JI

a

TZliiB.

....,.NIIoia I" "" - · llontiiJ
lloru FolliiJ• ..Yo -

-,104-t71-411:..
DIS Clillnoll CUllom luiR
Hand Cnitod. Anr ~,. ol
Wood, ~ Our Polcoo. Froo
~~~~- SM--1117.
G11ope Poot-Biwmlll, _ ,
Mul , _ lotiO to IM moll lUll
coll304-471-1ll7.

dopooll

.......... owqulrod, II iii
Porlo-h Roid. SM-441-1171.

lA'lLO 2

45

Fumlsllld

Rooms
.R-ior...,

ttt

t

- · orid lhllvlng. 114-4414314.
·
CotiOiole. P!!lollc ....... ......
Joclt-

·Oflt
CAIN'
S
..l.,t{t .
UPHOLSriiY

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

St., &amp; C•pare

Mend Tufting
Cuetom D,.pe,

IIYe-~ae

915·4473 "
667-6179

614-tft·JUI

111 ..... 11

•

We ley Whit . . Do.
W• Do Whit we lilY

51

HousehOld
Goc)ds
CARPET

14170 2 BR, Ewlngton - - 114- ~ ~ fno. Good
.
........_,T.V. . - Clilln
~

14170 -poondo 3BR, 2 blllll,

I a.m. 10 I p.m. Mon...... tM448-'ftl!.t_l27 3rcl. Ave. Olio
Npollo. ""

n- ·.-......-

l:"O:.u

i:"=~. ~':....
-.~
·
2otl'lll-

~-

-IJ:;

I '

61 Femi Equipment

•VIR QIAN YOUI
IUIIUS Allll

A1

., a

w.-. ...........
Securltr . . . . and.......,.. ~r~lf ·fttwr-ar
'
.
'
2 b a d - lllddl p '"· Cillo.

0000

oequlnil, *-tt2121l

---

2 lA pollltiir lwn'od, . -

UIIO

~

APPt lANCES
4

pp1fiODII,

--·-

............
Col-71111.

~~.~-~-~~~~·~-~~~...~·~·~-~"'· ~
Llglllod

-

. .h

'

IMitl:l·-

aitor 1:00

-·

DI'S .......
sn¥ICI .

--·-

992·5115. 115-1$61

•

.....
•

-; ....\
'

1bt11nngM: For Solo: luoiloye
1111111 oohlno 302A Dlo!!l.,
P,IOO; Aloo 'l'tro AC-HIUl

.......
Elich,-.......

-~
0. , ·

---

Uilllly Bulldng IPL:

zrxlll'llr

1•13'xr ~ - · ,., • ...,;
~. -:"1. Cholool 01 11 Colon,

.......

lulldon,ll4aMIU.

63

_ __
Llvntock

..... .....

Ron'O lY IIIMoo, _..elllna
In iloo ... •lolnl . motil

...... Lonndo. . . _ ....... -

~=~·::

..... loTriP .......... IIO Goillo

..... GIIIo,

Co. IYANIINTUPIILIU,
.....-.OIL I~

.llnuooy lllh, 1p.IIL F.,...o

G orgoo ~ Rd. 1'1111,
~...... ond dOll...,. 114-

~...............

C.·rllaUM

CoioLog Callfl+tiMM, '

for

.

-

82

...,'

:

Olftct 614-~rM!W
..... 614-tft·Mt2

... '
MOilLE
. ,,
• HEiniG &amp; COOUIG
.._.... • Saffn Sdl6ill Ill. eH lt. 1U

'·

!.,'

-v.o - oup:

••
••

PlUmbing &amp;
Heating

-- ..

.

'•
~
i

""" .....

84
Tr ansportatron

71 • Auto• for Sale

•- i

..........
-.........
IJolriNd tlutrtal·an. Ridenour
Elooirlool, :t044ll-17111.

CUSTOM BENDING

We ,Haft Clu a•t Our l.oclltlan To·
. 1'1t Milia' East ...... 241 , ........
·
Cheater, Oh. ·

•mas

•Cuatom Bent Exhallll 8yetem1
•Coillplete Uno of Exheuet Suppllee
•Handle end jnfltall Monroe Shocke
Come. aa4 See U1 For A Free lalpeetloa
aadEeflmete ·
·

IIGIJIS &amp; IMI.
, . . . .•

P1L 949.1101 .

.

.........9·1160

PIL 614·915 ·St49 IlliZi 1BU1
47269 51. 111. 241
~~

&gt;

,.

•.

..,

..,.

,.

''.
.'
•
''

.. i
I

~·

·i

_,

''••

'
~

.

. •'••

SPECIALIZING IN....

,~.,

•
\

Cllrt...
andHoollna
Q,s:
M Ohio
114 •• nrr'
'

Buiii'IHI

.••
•

Pktmbll.

...

II

•

•
,

•=

Wll~on

., ..,.M16 er 1-101-171·1"7 ·

"At .'

'•
Servrcrs

Couoiiy .

KELP~'S

AUCtiON

AT

sm. -

11eo11ont CondMiolo

."*·5109

~Gutter
~Hebnet ·

•
•

&amp; liVCS!OCk

li-I..U&amp;

I'&amp; I

lVIII ...DAY

=::::r.
r..,..;

•'•

lllaeaoocl,
ooockod,
_
.... •- •• --31
,.., .... -~· ·
,..... • Ell"""' .... Rill

HDO.
WIFP,
- ...
-·
-~TFir::e
LP
heM, onto
HMniNI
IIOhoalo SM-211-1111-1.
Tap • ROiun 1111, 42
Inch Dlnollo SOl 4 Cl1lln
z bl-.1411711 o._,., aOoci ~Bock IIM_...II~iohtuo
lit,
- · load obat:y Aloi. f04:'m. -·• a Loooao ~onu, CoUnloy
~ «114 112 :MOl.
lluo Plold, lJU all• 1
2 mobllo ..... ~ a 1 Enol Tabil, wMo
ulll-.
Lito
p;j,Oii -Ind. 304-f71.1010. ...hoallnY~..., lit-Ill.
2 bod-, iumlliMcl, 1:1011. I Chiln,' lluo • - · Plold.

&amp;Auction

Wtdel'll Auto

wfi••

Auto Parte &amp;

Acceuorles ·

· FUANnuRE
o:II;;::::U::_
, -::-;---;-· -:-:---:--:lloiiOhoft FLn111un • C.rpoh. I ioio-od. loNe .....,., ......,
ill. 7 -. 1-1'144Pl. I~ . ......-P - .

Banks ·
Construction

3 to 4 bid·

AcroafrOM

p.m.
EloaloLO ..... lnd rolrldaln"'!,
gold ind ohalr,
iuo
bod_, oullo. 114-11112·

78

Fellin Suppl1rs

Couch • for rent111 prap1r1Y or
your Call
-1141112·'/IP
· Oood oorodKion,
11211.
oltor 4:00

ond ero.
-~HIJiop X Yolk ond L4!mP X
Duowo , OpOn GLLio ond ....,.

.,_....,........;.;~;;;,~

PubliC Sele

•••o11

.... DH1.aoo.aJU- .

l.lerchandrse

Pun INd

..........

~ ::.-:..~:~&amp;::'a:.1.t~niDILL.flmily .

Ron._ .............

Cllll Itt • ...,.., d• 71t.m.

Wllolobll'n 111481 Aoouollc
OUHar. Uko , _, AOO. Call 114111124141 _.,.,._

App~

.curl•te

8

lnltNments

c.h " ,, .... ,...,, 3dr

f

ILiu - Y- 1111 lift. T/2111
- - K - lion., Snlllor,
AIC, H•, Very nlol nnntture
~ ..... Lnl., _ , ~. 2
riwlne-. ~..... ildor.

Musical

46 Space for Rent

42 Moblla Home•

_1014 _ .

HP, E-~

MIO.

Ael,.,.eonwv.

-lojlelll.

for Rani

11112 17 fl. .....,,... TrJ.HuU
1
- - 121
oomiiLOio lop. now
' · •'
ColltiWM-1311 lilor .110 p.M,.

SliiQ roome wtth ~
Aloo
or-.AIIt I~
Coli oftor 2:00 p.on., -

.......

I• ·

·-or month,

toiOry wllh 3 lo 4

IIZ·'I'IM oiler 7:30 pn1.
lmiU houR. ,.loNtoCM ,._
quLNd,~1311.'
.

,"

S401tl~ li_ll20/l!lo,- HoiOI•

-

. ) 446-6000

,~1/14/tfll

...... woo . _..,

~~- "l ldull1. Aloo t-h

18 Wallled to Do

RllldHtlll and

Houoo For ReM/Solo. 3Lir 1 112
bath, '*1101. no polo. PIO/IIIO.

4 bodtGOm houol.
1321 -.thly ..... dopooll. 1111-

bulln111

Buelness
Training

ELECTRICAL SERVICE

=-"'

jwq~ Mna
Bar Ci1 011 DID

••pLio,

IIOglol-lon

SIIYKE AND REPAII
ON ZETOR TIACTOIS

Fumlehod, tbr CoiiiJIII, nloolor
ono .....- ot ooupoe. No polO,
- I C I. IM-4411-

Wanlod: Opl-rlo -ont,

lra._tng
chonllna. II In·
l-...oaoii--M03 .

.

":2and 1 both In
Pomeror. • , -3027. ·

7 -Room

bodI 112 balho, coil :J04.11733030 or17144J1,

VICKER'S WOOD HEATING

!

drlvorl,

AvO.l'olnl Pioloont, 'i/V.
_,
Eftooptlc pec&gt;JIIo

12

CALL

1

lltd........,

!LowiiLSoulhoniom
• - Coitogo, Slllina VoiiOJ
Pl-. CoiL T~M44143117R

a...-.....tol2~·24-;::

--- ~

·•Roofing'

~;;1
-~~'

I

·-In,......., 3004 Jocltoon

41131.

........ :LOfthlqoU•jaor~- ........
olloybt Loooiodlll-111011111oom Llw.QUioooiiii-

. .,t
;8::!

Wallo

nwmo.

Diuo .._n, Olllouo colla one,.
lLCLI-'IINIZI.

AOII&amp;In

.

GUN SHOOT

•AemodeNngencl
. Home Repelrs

-··

In

4br, ~ ..., Oalllo,- •••

YAIDMAN &amp;
•AIW' length
'"""el
nd

-Ida

Sout-m School DIOIIIcl.
1210 mo. piue1210 dopooll , 114celoom ...... _

,

,:;

1112 Dloleon King C.b, 4 fl .... aooc1
........ 11,1110. 30WlW217
..

Ha-.

'
,'"tr"~~
~t-lu.'!i.k!

,J.

'

l~/ll42o2424 onor 1:00

d-.-""'· new

41 Hou... for Rent

&amp; Auction

ot'.utJt

-·
p.on.

Rent~ Is

Public Sale

8

11177 .loop CMrotltM 414, V-t
onglno, Dood lira, ,... ..,...

frontego, 3114-

wllh , _

~--

-on ·

79 Camptfs a Motor HonHn

a Veg ...lll•
Foi
.. S.ee or. lrede .

LN'IIUJQINCE
JOBS.
All
Ln-.
US Cuol-, DEA.
010. -

ALL Yoni11eloelluol B1 Paid In
Advonco. DEADLJIE: 2:00 p.m. '
liMo ""' blliarw tiMI od 1o "' run.
SUF. llliiY '
2:00 p.m.
- - _ , odlllon • 2:00
p.m. s - , .
.

78 Clmping Et~u\pm.n

St:r

AYOfl I304-t75-t421.
AH - · I Shirl.,
.,_.,

LDT1 FOR SALE In Qolllpollo
.....,, Will nlloni, cHJ
- · ovalllblo. Ploano 30W'/I2122.

Yard Sale

'• 71' • ~Utoa fDf Slhl ·
72 Tr\tdLs fot-. S~.e

MuliU.instruments

.

=-

rural - · · AI, -~ •oan·
.,... Lind -..... ....1113-

-:;::~

SpottillgGooclo
Antique•
Miac- M•chendiae
Budding Suppli• •
Pets tor Sll •

69

REouc::~ 12112 """" , _
liaRor_,,
- -2
up,.picnic -ehop,undor

rl r.!~

61 - Ferm Equipment
62 -WIMtd to luy
Bl Liv•tock
64 Hay a Grain
65 - Seed • F.Oihzer

F*"'• tor Sill•
Bulin•• Buildings

Hou. . tor Rent

Help wanted

--

. .,

........
••••••• •

.

..

.

Wanted To Do

COIS11Ucno•

.
IIDDLEPOIT - 11101 11rwt - MANY POSS181UliES
-

-~ion

ClrLiior Jr.,

-

Avo.,

. • • , ... ., NIA. InC.

Help wanted

11

Ottlnl...

bodoilom

8iiiLna

·•ssiLL a lUilE

· IUTIJ.D - ..._ I1Nit - MliLt edp of 101111. Aon.
story 11nch with 3 bedr-. lui blnLRIILI. atbcbed prep, 1nd 1 nice llyin&amp;lat Nellillr bltlland equipped kKchen.
Garden or pooi11ea.
S2UOO
.

Miscilll~ntiOufo

.............
... ...
INSULATION

1 .,..r ego,

·- wll never fOr·
get
A. - nclly Nmem·
blr
Your lliMIIfiiiiOIMIIft"'f Ia h ln evW'Ythlng we
.uy end do.
lt'l ionllll!lll h....

.

Situat.on WMted
Insurance
lutin•s Traimng
Schools &amp; lnsnuc:t10n
Radio. TV &amp; CB Atlpour

, 1114ttlft

417 SECOHO AVENUE
· GALLIPOLIS
CALL 446-6446 or 1-800-Bn-2292
.
DON'T MISS 1"11

In llsmory

" " Ken

112

Old=.
Fal,~~ pilyilll ond

i ~~,,

, r~

..m. a

2

'

-tl!~~.r.~ 'll.P. :.;,: =.i"'' -,. ~:' l"": ':'.it~~:::J

_, r,
1o0011-- . - ..,._
1
lo, I - - i ·-

1

-RoomAdclltlonl
- G - WDik
-EieolliDII • Plumbing
-cono1tta Wolk

PlACES TO GO TRAVEL AGENCY

o-r and Zllda

.,..

oloopord 1o Jlbod -

..

::.,~.~~-;.;.;,:;tis;,::~R.;C_,:;Kon:::!,!lt-1-iiet-

-

.......,_ _ __ . . 1 1 - - - - - , - - - - - - - r - - - - - - - - T - - - - . . . - - - . --.~:•:t

'.

_enjoyebll.

-

••.,.••.

!'~~ft!' l

Business· S:e.rvi'ces_·.

'
YOUNG'S
l!l--11!"11111!"1---------~---~~·lr---=:-:::::::"::"--"1
WI'BdY SERVICE

mallothe~on

-~!11-

Moll

" '"

:;:o,.a 12~.

Cn~ ..

·

"~~"~

l r-----~--~------~------~~~-----L----------~----~--~~~~~------l.--~--~~~--~

4:30 P.M.
DAY BEFORE
PUBLICATION

ANNOUNCES THIER 1991
MOTOR COACH TOURS!
Over 15 Tours to Choose
· From. Join us for our

12
13
14
15
16
17
18
.

•

BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE

o-.

C :-t.• -~~

Wanted to Buy

•

·•.

We -uld llke10 t
think 1H our frllnda,
Mlghbon end
relltiYOI for their
cardl, gltta end
v111ta during our
tilth wedding ·
enn"'-rY· Our
grandeon, David,
and "11 wife,
, Dibble. for the
flo-r antntilment,
end for OVIIlthlng
our eon,
end hla wl... G,_,
haYI elMo til help

'

PDrn..-vy
91i Clt•ltr

BULLETIN
-- -·- - BOARD
- --

lid_~ . . . . . . . . . . ,

114144C-7.1R doyo,
1114/44U32ll ....1• . For "'"
lt.r lnionnallon ooM oolloCI
- . -. WILl flnonco.

'-;:::::;;~~~;:==1=======~ 32

"f""tJI"
: "!!l':: .

;

4U

-·-·=·_..,._-·
01..

, . . ...,... ."1'101

1111 -

-..,.

-~

42' Mobitw Homes lor R•nt
43 Farms tor Rent
•
44 - AP.rtmn for. Aetll
~5 - · Furnished RoomS .
46 &amp;peee tof R•nt· -:
47 WMted to R•~ :. -· -~.
48 lquipment for ~lin•
49 For lAiat
·

1 1 ·- HelD W~~tled 1

I'Xc/Ul/11{1'.~ ...

Meeg~ County
Area Code 614

A•.. Co4e514

·41

'.

Sl'rV ~-~HS

l'lll't;r

11'/l'flhlllll:

G•li• caum,

"A c:lal~lfiod ;u~.-rtfstrnlun( ploK": ..'iJ 1n The Oatlv Sctt111ttl I•
cttl)t
c:htnthlild dls~&lt;lf· Busin•n Catd .,,d ll!U"al noticn)
w1ll .. lso 01pptlM lf'l 1hl!: Pt Phu•..W R_,,,,_ttn and 1he G11fh
puhs Dally Tubune. ~achmg owr 18. 000 hornft

t

I

-~~.......:x..o:r.-.a=:
111

1"""'-...

"om•
tor Sele
Mollile Ha•• tor Sale

·

Ernphrvnr~nl

"

Cla.ssifit•tl .f1f1J{I'.~

dw ahHr pubhcMton to "'aktt couectHm.
' Ads that must be ll*d tn lldv.nc• arn
Card of Thlflklli
In Mu~t~ori..-n

s.o•r..,;d '" ..........

31 ,32
33
3I
35
36

9 W1nted to Buy

.;
'Price ot ad fo• all c~Piii .. I•U•n 11 doublu JNiet ol ad cost.

j

1 ~..-dotlh .. b
2 In Memory
3 Annouc•ents
4 Givt..,ay
5 Heppy Adl
· 6 loot ·~dfounol

B Public Sate• Auction

'Rue:.,..., I .&amp;0 discount tor •df ~id in adv01nce.
..
•ftee MIA
G•VtiM'ay and found ads undef 15worcbw•A be

-

0

·• '"a••·

A11 n111111 cern e11 s

· 1 Y•d

,

runld.wsatnoch•B*· .

I COCA f\iiulehed In Nlw

ancl . . . . . . . ,....... ...
W2-l2l1
.

' 4@111,

•'

..

POLICitS
'Ads outlldc Meigs, (HII ia Of M••on counli• '""" b• pq
p~t~d

'

33 Fanns for Sale ·

Wortla ·
111
1&amp;
15
16

D•v•·
.

~

Hnw,WV. --,dlpooll

~t' ~ f"~ ,

i .

RATES

TO PlACE AN AD CAll 992-2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY I A.M. to 5 P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY.

-· ~·- ·
0

·~

.,,

Olio " - " " ' ea. Pll, M,

-

2

,,h,.ni,

!" ~ I.'U' !
1 A :i~~

.• ·T~e Area's ~lfmber 1 •ar~etplace ,

torRent

rl"'!;o

----~--------------------------------------

•

Apenment

.. •••&amp;!1'..

1 know you won't tdl noul that

_,.......,-

44

• #.t'fl"'! .

~· ~;;;=;-:;;.;;;:;;:;;t~-:~c;:;;;;-;;:-;;-;::;-:;;;:;;::;";:;:;::;~;:::;;t "'"'-II
·;i..~: .
...;;::.

......

_

_. ...'tf.o.Tl

li ft.' '

frequently. '"lbemoatrvemadetrun upeedlll
Sl,OOO, but I'm not In It for the moJieY," be 11814.
"I've III!Ver been too motivated purely · by
monetary motlvaUons." cantors promllel to
doaateaportlonaftheliiOIIIYheeerlllthllyeUto
the Kent May ' Center, an orpnlzatlon that
promotes dl8cuulon of the Kent State lacldellt. In
which four protesters were kUJecL cantors ·Po
hopea to bulldaaatlonalstudentmowmentatined
at avoldln&amp; the miltakel of bll&amp;l!ll!ratlon. ' .
WAR ON TIIIUil MJNDI: The Rock •n• Roll
Hall of Fame lllductiOD •bow ID New York ,._. a
I!»JleWbat aubclued aJfa1r IM!Cauae of the outbreak '
of war ID the Middle Eaat a '"hours before the
ceremony. Tile B)Ttllt, who were Inducted byDoa
lleJIIBJ, played their hit "Tum, Tllm, TurD."
drawlll&amp;.ipud appJauae u they IIIII "a ttme fl!r
peace, I sWI!ar11t's not too late." OJJe of the Hall of
Fame's foUIIderl, AluDet Ertepa of
Records, said before the ceremony, "It's a
dlfflevlt time for the world. I think lt'l on
everybody's mind. I hope DOt too many people cUe.
I hope for all of you who have friends and relatives
over there, I hope that all of them come 'home
.TbeStoaere alsoPubwaslllb!
·
speaker ~cause of the Middle East crisis and an
.....
~· Increase lh studen_t ac:tlvlsm and be 11 plan.;.... ft to
...,........ Bro111ae's anU-wa~ ·sona "Livet In the
sign soon with XftteTnatlonal Talent As..,;;t.,
l!alance." The other lnducteel lllc:luded Be U4
·the finn that handled the late radical Abllle . Tiaa "Tui'D!!I', WliMD PlelleU,, the lmJil ' •••·
BoHmaui. Cabfqra says be bas made more than LaVera ·Baker, .John Lee Booker and the late
100 college speaking appearances In the putfour .llmmJ Reed.
.
'
·
·

•

KIT 'N' CARLYLEtl by Larry Wript

!o,Nii;~

1

m ""'

The Daily

Ohio

18,1·1 -

Ohio .

'

•'•
'.

Proteealonal

23

Strvlcll

...

•sm

to weed out the
slow bobsled teams..." .

"We uae

i

,

,

•
j

•

~-

�,.

... 1t .. .. ... ,., ., , .... ... ... ., ,. .. '· ... •• ,.

'
Paga 10-The Deily Sentital

F

-

~

c

"

»= .._

I
I

.

(

,_

~

.a&amp;.....

.!

-

,....

... ,.

.

~

CIIM

,_

SIMM

--

~

it,:}, ,_.,... $ ,:,.
.

-...&amp;.~ f"C'
;r--,~

._

WEATHER MAP - lkonn IJIIelllll alq llle C•D!•ian bOrder
aad aloq llle Glllf c;:ou&amp; will br•l preciJ!IIalloa 1o 111e aorlbera

c
I

ud -~~sen

frlllaw olllle udoa, willie qulel wealher prevalll
eiNwhere. Hlp Jll -re frtm lbe frtm lbe Grell Buill 1o the
.mld-AIIaDIIc 1t1te1 wUI provide ceae.rally fair wellllier ud
Jl'leiiiDIIemperlt-. (VPI)

I

snow again Monday and fair
weather Tuesday. Hl&amp;h temperatures In the 30s wtll fall into the 20S Sunday, with hl&amp;hs ranrtnr
from the teens to the n~ l!D
Monday and 'fuesday. OVernight
lows will be In the 30s early
Sunday and ran&amp;ini from five to
15 Monday and Tuesday
mornings.

and an F-15-e Strike Eagle. No
other details were available.
A British Tornado warplane
went dolll'llln Iraq with an engine
fire, and sell'Cbers were looking
for the missing pilot and navlga.
tor. Tbe MinistrY or Defense said
. a second Royal Alr Force Tor·
nado fighter bOmber and Its crew
·of two failed · to return ~te
Thuraday.
Italy reported .one of Its ·Tor·
nado f!gbter·bombers failed to
return from a night mlaslonearty
Friday. There were no details on
the two crewmen.
. .
Kuwait said one of Its planes
also was sbot down.
Tbe French Defense Minis try
said a squadron of Jaguar
fighter-bombers attacked an
Iraqi munitions depot In Kuwait
Friday an&lt;! returned safely to
base. There was" no report on
damages.
· · ·
Iraq said Friday It was dlstrl·
bu tlng hundreds of thousands of
rifles to citizens In Baghdad and
other ~Illes to help the army fight
the war.
"Baghdad has tilrned Into a
forest lull of fighters, whose
weapons will force the enemy
planes to fiy at high altitudes In
the sky," Iraqi. Paruament
Spea"'r Saadl Mabdi Saleb satd
In remarks 1carrled by Baghdad '
Radio, . monitored In Cairo,
Egypt. . ,
Iraqi Information MIIJlster
Latif Nasslm Jasslm said, "The
war will not be easy and may not
be short because no one can
predict the will of the Iraqi
people."
Jordan, Iran and Syria braced
for returees fieelng from the war
In the gulf.

3

~eigs .

announcements

Eutera BOIII'd -as
: The Easlaa Local Board of
EducaliOn, meeting in regular session on ~.IIJlPioved the sellDig of Olie used bus. ADyonc illter·
• ·• eStcd may submit a bid to the
~·s office by Feb. 14.
- .
.

..

RiverYiew Gardea Cl.. to meet
: The Riverview Gilden Club will
!l)eel Jan. 24 at the bome of Mrs.
Grace Weber at 7:30 p.m. Gladys
~ will serve as co-hostess. ·

'
'

,.HHVRDD comlllittee to meet

.

The n:gw. monlhly Jllfetjng of
the Buckeye Hills-Hocking Valley
Regional Development District Bx·
eculive Commiaee will be beld Jan.
29 at 7:30 p.m. ill the confcmlce
room of the BH-HVRDD offices
lcx:aled on Washiagton County
Road 9. The J:'sonnel commiaee
will meet ill
offices of the elt•
eculive din:ctor at6;30 p.m. .

BOOIIters to •eet
The Meigs JuniCI'
High
Academic Boostm will meet
TuesdaY at 7:30 p.m. ill the Meigs
Junior High cafereria.

:!~~te=:.b

monitored In
"So let America hear the
wa!Ung of ber daughter, planted
In 11\e heart of the Arab nation,
after America tried to spare her
tbe hardships and losses of war
and .tried to compensate for the
losses of agrresslon by spllllng
tbe blood of the American people
and other naUons."
The Emuan Clblnet and
~ATO ambassadors held emerrency meetings to dlacu11 , the
attack.
Britain strongly condemned
tbe attack but called on Israel to
refrain from responding In order
to preserve the anti·Iraq
-coalition.
. ·
. ·

. : Emma Wea¥17 Lcdlie, 74, of
I;angsville, died Thlll'lda
. •
J~uary. 17, 1991 It ~~­
Cal Celiter. She WU 1 homemaker.
She wu born Aug. 6, 1916 in
S ton Mo •'- .........,,_ of •'u Homa'
'
·• ""'
and
Alice Waver.
· · She wu a member of the
Langsville Chrislian Olureb and a
. member of the Harrisonville Order
of Eas1an Star No. 2.55.
; She is survived by ber Husband,
Wdliam Bc:m1nt Lcdlie, LangsYil·
te; two dauabrm. Clrol Ritter,
Cbesbire, ancf Mrs. 11m (Shirley)
u......._.., Col..-'-- 1 "'"'-

-&amp;-·- """

I•

M";;"~. of'~ Pie;".;~

W.Va.; two blolhen, Hcrbeit
Weaver, Lady Lake, Fla., and Mar·
ellS W&lt;eave~: ' ~ ""'""

a-

~ M:;:.,~··u~)
Bays, IDd Jodi Riller, bolh of
Chcshin:, and Chrislllpber Merrill,
u_.___.. ....... .,- 1immy ...,.WUIIII
...
..........
Hac:iwortb, all of Columbus; IJid a
sister-in-law, Dmothy Woodard,

U.S. officials said the U.S.jets
lost Included an F-18C, piloted by
Lt. Cmdr. Michael S. Speicher,
Ccmecery.
. 33, assigned to the USS Saratoga.
The family will n:c:eive friends No hometown was released because Speicher Is listed as
one bour_priCI' to the service.
mlssln&amp;ln action.
Pentaron spokesman Claude
RoDin Wolf~
Young said two other U.S.
aircraft failed to return to 'their
· RolliD L. 'Wolfe, 76, of 377 Lin· home base and were declared
coln SL, Middleport, died Thursday
missing - a Navy A~ Intruder
Jan. 17, 1991 at'Vetr-·
_orial
.... ... ..
....,.
..
Hospillll following a brief illness.
· Born on Nov. 23, 1914 at
Minenville, he wu the son or the
GAU.iPOUII'niCIIYAIIDS
!ale Waver and Delta Cmoll
Wolfe. He n:linld aeveral years ago
from the Americao Agn:gates,
Mm
Frame lA IlNers:
................................. ll .... lU...
Columbus. He wu a Jllelllb« of
. . . . . . . ......................... IJ.If.lU..
Masonic J...Odge 164, F. and A.M.,
tt....J••
-.vt' ................................ . . . . ..
Pomeroy fCI' 3"5 years.
,:
• • • • Pnme 161Belfen:
Mr. Wolfe is survived by hls
wife, Margan:lba Wolfe, Mid·
.:.,.
dlcport; fo..- sons. Jim Wolfe of
....,..,,... !'" ''" '''""''' ' ' " " " ' · · · ·
Milwaukee, "W'JS.,. FIM Wolfe of
.................................ll.lf.'JI.II
Middleport, John 'Wolfe of
D f1D•Cew•
Pomeroy, and Hllold Wolfe of
tllltltloo ••·•Nt.M: c••••, 1c...·. ,
If: LlaM ....... low IT'- COWl
Phoenix, Ariz.; three dluldtters, ......
Pauline Reuter of · Middleport, • • ...uw llilf..............
Cathy r:-~- Of CDIC';,Ot; - A
tllWIIoo IUI'It.M: Caaaor/C
""' ...,
. ..Ier
Deln Milia' of Columbus; two llisVeoiC..._,
.
.
ten, Roaeua Dreaer and Beatrice
Cillolee/frlme ll.lt-lN.M; llotlam
Vetel'llll Mem«&lt;aa B111pltaJ
l'ollldwale, bolh of Columbus; a
51.:.:-ar.~: ~ c-C.../Call
THURSDAY ADMISSIONS •
1J1.1t- .. YVODDe ·Reltmlre,
Syncase;
.
~f-c!,~=l :_
- · lloWo: .
·
· Clarenc:e Gntellel', Rac:bte; Helea
10 grandchildren, IJid four great·
A.· wnu...., Mlddleport; ud

J.:angsville.

.

; Berlcles 11er pants, she

was

.,.eceded ill 4eadl by I • • Helen
servilii will be beld

.&lt;tt:na:laJ

War ...

l Livestock ·report 1
,_.,_

''*•

--lloL . ... . . . . . . . . . ..
- ........ ..... .......... ..,.. ................
.....N...
:-n..
.................................... .•
....................

·N- ....

-·-

Hospt"taJ
_ news

.....

Stocks
Qall11toet pdcel
••·.II a.m.)
(-•- of ..
~.::: : : :

.

=

.

•

may eall at the funeral
home Friday from 7 to 9 and SaJur.
dsy from 2 10 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.
Muonic riles will be caidlJcted It
. 7 p.m. Salunlay.

~ Eiectrlc Power .. ~ .(JblaDd 011 ........ ,...............30)1

.

~

Organizational
ATII'f ..... ~ ................
31%
·
~ Evw ....... ;............. ,.... l5% meeting slated

=r=.:1~~=
-~.

A local board made up 011 Meigs
County citi2ena will determine bow
the funds awarded 10 the county an:
to be distribUted ainong !he geney food
.
and shelter JX08111111S
run by local service
· ·
ill the ·are&amp;. The local~
also be ~nsible for recommendiitg agencies to receive these funds

oo.d.
· · g
have a. voluntary
.
organiZIItonS are urged to apply.
Meigs Qlunty has disll'ibuted
emergency food and shelter funds
. previouslv with !he Gallia-Meigs
Community Action Agency. Fur·
-~ information on the program
may be obtained by cqntact!ng Sidney Edwards, Executive Din:c!CI',
Gallia·Meigs Community Action
Agency. :

Treasurel" Buck releases
Middleport
financial report
,,
.
Ballllces iii all Middleport Vii!age funds at the end of , 1990
· totaled $246,087.30, according ,to
the montbly report of Jon Buck,
clert-IIWuret.
Total reCeipts fCI' the month, illeluding some fund 11'811sfen, IDtaled
388,015.39 with disbursements
totaling $297,856.60.
The bala~ ill the general fund
was $2,976.08 with n:c:eipls beillg
$174,693.91 and disbursemeniS of
. $153,1195.75. Then: . wen: no
receiptS into the police fund fer the
income tax fund but disbanemeniS
wen: $20,970.24 from the ~lice
and safety fund. and $2, 74ii3
from the income tax fund.
In the .street maintenance fund,'
receipiS totaled $40,609.41 with
disbursements ''"'""nw
~... 27 oJ~79•34 .
leavin~ a halance of $126.30 at the
end 0 the year. The mini-JI(IIf fund
had receip!S of $!,200 'Nidi disbur·
semenu or $340.90 and becauae of
a deftcit in November showed only

'

~ Mason · Family
Rt. 33

- ....

..; .

Restaurant
Mason,

WV

'

.

Internal Medicine

_ ,

Ray Karr 'Will elected preeident
and
OWiea Knigbl, vice Jinljdenl,
Qood)'ear TAR ............... ....18"
Qf
the
Butan Local llcllnl of
~ CeDturloD .,.,,,,.,, .. ,, ....... 11 ,
MrMjcmat•~
Ittncll' J!Dd.........................15"
t:lml1ed IJie........................ 20~ mec:cing bel4 Tuelday niabt •
.
)JuJUmec!ll IDe...................59)1 Eulem HiP Scbool.
The bolrd let the dllnl WednesJllx ~ta.IIJ'Uitl ................. 'n
day of •
111011111 at 6:30 p.lll. •
Flolablllllr ...,.,. ········~···· .... 20 !be daliD IDd time for lbe reaular
!llolll)''alae....................... 12~
.9ta.r Baat............................ l? · meeting. The next mud:\,will be
WeildY'• Iat1. ...................... 6% beld • 6:30 p.m on Feb. in tile
high scllool cafeteria.
WortiiiJlltODIDd.......... ;,,,,,22%

Office Hours: ·
Monday through friday

· 9 a.m .. ~ p.m.
· Suite 13, PVH Medical

MoruA~·IiuoAY, 8 .ui-Il.u.

Featuring: Fresh.Scrambled Eggs,
Homestyle Biscuits, Dani.sh,
Muffins, Pancakes, ~nd
'
~ M~ch, Much Morel

.

omce BuiiCIIng

(304) 675-7700

.

•

lid 'PlEASANT VAll E.Y HOSPII'AL

. . . . Tlta family ol,.,._,

ONLY

..

"t" ..

•

'

.. -

-

.

'

1

r

•

..

75 et!nts

College basketball results

Famlly
roots are
traced in
- Ireland

JaJilftl
. Sands:
-

*2.99

Rt. 33

(804) 773-5821

Muon, WV

(NEXT TO MASON EXXON)

. ·,

"·

'

I

C-1
\

Inside:

Opera houee was once IOt'Jded in buDding
whieh houae&amp; Central Supply Co. - B-5

Aloaclbe River ......... Bl-7
B u i -.................... Dl-8
Comics· .............. ~ .... Ia.ert
. Claulfleda ................. Dt-7
Death• ....... ........ .......... AS
Edltorlalo onooo onooooo oooooooA2
Farm ........................ Ql-8
Sporllt ....................... Cl·6

I Area hoop action: · .
· ·
. Southern, Hann~ Tl'ace and l.osan cagen
·' lnaintain respeetive loop l~s - C section

.

Cloud)'. mp !11 mid
Chance ol preclpltat ton 50 .
cent.

ts
'

i
•

f·

Vol. 26 No. 150

14 leatl6no, 14 Pogn
A MultiiMdle Inc . N-op-r ·

Middleport-PQnta'OY-Gallipou.-Point Plaaaaut. January 20, ,1991

Copyriglltlcl 1991

Bush ·confers . with aides, reassures Israel
WASHINGTON (UPI)- Pres!dent Bush twice reassured Israe! Saturday that the United ·
States was working furiously to
halt further Iraqi missile attacks
and apparently won an Israeli
pledge to hold offtor the moment
on any retaliation.
Closely monlfortng the .tense
developments In the Persian Gulf
corifllct, Bush met at midday
wlth his top diplomatic and

national security' advisers to · the Jewish state would continue ·
to hold ott from any reprisal
assess the J.day-old war, which
was greatly complicated near action.
Tbat remained condiUonai;
dawn by a second missile attack
however, on whether there were
against IsraeL
further Iraqi attacks.
But. heartened In part by the
The United States tears an
limited extent of the second
Israeli
reprlsahvould jeopardize
attack and ,by the two "very .
the
28nation alliance
positive" phone calls trom Bush
Saddam
Hussein, which
to Israeli Prime Mlnls~r Yltzsome
Arab
states
hak Shamlr, admlnlstratloJ! ortlIsrael,
clals expressed optimism tbat

Egypt.
Shortly after Bush sum,noned
his top advisers to his Camp
David mountain retreat to confer
on the war against Iraq, Bush
telephoned Shamir for a second
time to convey the ·massive,
around-the-clock U.S. effort to
' 'seek out and destroy the missile
launchers." "
White House press secretary
Marlin Fitzwater declined to

Ohioans· back attack
CLEVELAND (UP!)- A poll hit one of the aircraft carrlers.out
conducted on the evening of the there and It went down, It could
second day of the war In, the change very quickly," said Gor·
Middle East showed four out or don s. 'Black. ''People at · this
every five Ohioans In favor . of point don't believe It's going to be
President Bush's decision to a very long war,"
The telephone poll of 81,8 ·
attack.
Results of the Gordon Black Ohioans had a margin of error of
. poll . published ·in Saturday's plus or minus 3;5 percentage
Cleveland Plain Dealer said 81.9 points. That means, according to
percent of the Ohioans surveyed . the pollster, support for Pres!·
favored the attack, 11.8 percent dent aush's actions could be as
opposed It, 5.9 percent said they high as 85.4 percent or as low as
..
didn't know and 0.2 percent 78.4 percent.
the
attack was
Support
for
refused comment.
·
strongest
among
males
and
The pollster, however, cautinon-blacks.
Among
males,
89.2
oned that such public opinion
percent favored the attack, CQm·
polla could change rapidly.
(Stle OHIOANS, on All)
.
"If we have an ExOcet missile

characterize .Shamir's response. to suppress and destroy the
''1just can'tspeaktothequesUon mobile Scuds," and pressed him
of assurances." Sut he did add, In both calls to continue to
"It was a very positive remain outside the conflict now
conversation.' '
under way In the Persian Gulf.
And another official 5ald, ."We • Asked If Bush was able to tell
have ·always asked for restraint the Israeli how many or the
and they (Israel ) have been very mobile missile launchers had
forthcoming."
been taken out, the spokesman
According to Fitzwater, Bush declined to be specific .
assured the prime minister: "We
" The president obviously
will -use every resource possible talked to the . prime minister
"a bout the ... amount of successes
and achievements that We've had
and he obviously talked to him
about showing restraint," said
Fitzwater.
While the presidential diplomacy was under way at Camp
.. Oavld, an Iraqi diplomat was ·
summoned for the first time
since the conflict began Wednesday to the State Departmeilt to be
reminded of the Geneva Convention accords on the treatment of
.· (See BUSH, pace A3l _

fordan's king

. ·
warns agalnst
'

• •
•
alr
lnvaswn
•

Gallia· school ·butlget
shows money problem
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia
County Schools budget released
recently for the 1991-92 school
year is representative of the
district's financial problems .
The budget, released Jan. 15,
all~r $11,794,200 In revenue
co~to the school district.
This figure Includes the $1
million loan the district received
recently to tide It over unUIIt can
collect revenue from .the 3.75-mlll
levy passed In November; How·ever, the budget calls for expen- .
dltures of $12,573,430.
The 1990-91 budget Included .
$10,517,939 In the gener;ll fund,
which also Included a $1 miiUon
loan, and expenditures or
$12,500,887. This deficit necessitated going Into the State Loan
Fund, administered by the State
Department or Education, last
spring to 5e!! the district through
the end ur the fiscal year. .

•

AMMAI'f, Jordan ( UPI) -::- A
solemn. Klftll, Hussein or Jordan
warned agalnat the rerlons's
"slide Into darkliess" Saturday,
but reiterated a warning that the
· Jordanian military would defend
the ktnrdoin' s air space from
both Israel and Iraq.
The Jordanlall king, who has
deplored the air strtkes on Iraq
by the U.S. -Ied force attempting.
to oust Iraq from Kuwait, said In
a news conference he believed
' 'the effort that was put Into the ·
mUitary option was Infinitely :
greater than anythln&amp; that happened In the diplomatic realm." .
Hussein called for a ileacetut .
end to the fighting without ·
offering a specific plan · fol' :
negotiations.
Calling the situation "a slide

According to Gailla County
Local Schools Superintendent
Robert Lanning, the $1 mllllon
loan just obialned was borrowed
against andclpated revenue
from the new levy. lle said he
expects the district may ·have to
stnc:e September. Tbe twln1 are .resldlng wltb
borrow more than $1.8 mllUon
TYING YELLOW RIBBONS • Josb)ll and
tbelr IP'andparenll, Rev. and Mn. KeDDetb
from the state between Aprtl 1'
Jam~ Baker, l·r, remember their rather, Sgt.
Baker
of Raclae. They are
tying yellow
and May I to again see the
Ricky Bilker or 10llt Alrb0111e Divlson, wbo Is
to
tbe
fill
pole
at
e
Elemeatai'J'
in
ribbons
district through the fiscal year. · servin11 with Operatloa Desert Storm in tbe
boaor
or
their
rather
who
will
be
ooe
or
tbe
fir~
The payback to the state comes . Middle East. Sgt. Baker, wbo has been Ia tbe
ground troops to adyance witb tbe Marines tr
out or the district's monthly
. servl~ for nine years, has been ill Saudi Arabia
any
II'Oillld ac:tlon is taken.
allotment from the State Found a·
·
don Subsidy Payment, which ·
leaves the district with little or no
money from the state to continue
0'
how, by some miracle, we will
Its day-to-day operations, he
said.
! _J..:.. .
turn the - comer away from
res~n
hatred and destruction '" toShrinking tax revenue, partie·
wards peace."
ularly from the John M. Gavin
By CHARLENE HOEFUCH
safe return home. In addition tile
His leuer reads:
He called tor the ·battle to be
and Kyger Creek power plants,
Tlmes-8entlnel News Starr
legionnaires are usillg yellow rib"Hello from Saudia Arabia!
pu~ " on hold for a period of time
and Infiatlon, are being blamed
POMEROY
Flying the bons on trees and other locations .. I am writing · this letter to thank to enable all people qf goodwill to ·
for the financial faclnr the
American
tlag,
putting
a lighled around their homes to show their the people of Meigs County ~for try what has not .been tried yet
district.
1
candle in the wmdow, displayillg suppon. Numerous schools and writing me.
adequately, the approach of
Unfol'JWIIItely I do not have the dialogue and quiet diplomacy .•. ".
yellow ribbons, even wriung the otlier organizations in Meigs
·troops, ~ all ways of showing COiinty have joilled in the yellow time to answer all of the leiterS.
When questioned by reporters;
support for those servillg in Opera- ribbon campaign,
Things in Saudia 1llll goillg alright Hussein reiterated that white •
lion DesenStorm.
On Feb. 3, ·the Auxiliary and We'~:e all anxious to get this ovo- Jordan wanted .no part of the.:
Syracuse resident Joann Smith Llgion will observe Four Chaplains with soon!
current confliCt, It would defend •
says that she"will fly her flag until Sunday combininl it with a special
I hope your support for us is still Itself from Incursions Into Its ;
the war in the Middle East is ovo- service of prayer for those serving high. We all prormse to do our.very territory.
••
and
~other
n:sideniS
ID
joill
her
in
Operation
Desert
Storm
at
the
best
for
the
U.
S.
and
all
of
you.
I
"
...
this
Is
a
sovereign
cQuntry
la!Jor charges and put them Into
one charge," Chapman said. as a show of support for the: scr- Middleport Fint Baptist Church, hope to Jetum to Meigs County af. · arid we will d,etend. our terrttocy •
· comer of Sixth and Palmer. ·.
ler all of this is over and visit all of -and air space from .Incursions ·
"We're going 'to reflle It as one· vicemen and w.omen then:.
Members
of
the·
Auxiliary
of
The
imponance
of
contacts
froni
you that have ~ time 10 write. from any side, " the king said." .
charge surroundln&amp; everythlnr's
Feeney-Bennett..
Post
128,
home
is
emphasized
in
this
letter
to
Once
againyou all.
"Our ,means are limited, but •
that happened with the talks."
Your friend in the Desen.
we are determined to do whaAbout 1, 700 union workers at American Legion, are burning the: editor received Friday from
has spent the
Spc. CunisJones, 294 ' 27"9175
tever we can .to ensure our air.· .
RAC have been out of work since electric candles ill the windows of Cunis Jones,
HHB 2-18FA .212th BOG, space Is not violated fr'om any •,
Nov. 1.- the day after their their homes. As explained by Mrs. past several lnonths in Saudi
..
side, In any conflict that may btl:
contract with management ex· Virgil Parsons the candles burning Arabia. Jones is the grandson. of · Operation Desert Shield
AP() NY, NY 90218.()()()6·
part or this very, very difficult'
plfed. The . union claims It has .24 hours a dsy an: symbolic of a Ayward and Mae Jones of Racille.
been locked out, while managesituation ... he said.
: •
men t said the workers are on
strike.
Some additional 750 replacewar began, woundlnl at least 22 ,
ment workers have been hired at
e
people, and It Is believed the&gt;
RAC ·since the ·dispute l;legan.
Since the contract expiration,
both sides have met five 'times.
any Jordanian action to counter~.Here are the new call-up the missile attacks.
;: ~
The latest barralnlng session
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Pres- reservists and National Guard
numbers
by
service,
under
old.
While
Jordan,
flanked
by
rs~
:
was Wednesday, and after Its
melllbers
lor
one
year.
Under
ld~nt Bush has au thorlzed the
rae! and Iraq, has publicly':
failure to · reach accord, no · military to call up 170,000 more current authority, 189,250 reser- and under new authority:
-Army: 115,000 under old supported the U.N. resoh,adons ••
further talks have been reservists and National Guard to vls ts and Guard members may
authority;
·220,000 ·under new aimed at Iraq tor Its Aug. 2
scheduled.
be
called
up
for
180
days.
serve In the Persian Gulf for one
Rather than go to. the next authority.
lnv:aslon or Kuwait, Iraqi Prest·. ' ,
Chapman told. the .AP the year, the Pentagon announced
-Navr:
30,000
under
old
audent
Saddam Huaaeln Is very-.
higher
authority
permltwel
company's actlona at the talks Saturday.
.
.
would
have
permitted
1
·
thOr!
t-y:
44,000
under
new
popular
-among tlie Jordanlaq• ~
which
prompted the union's attorneys
"We are runnln&amp; outoltlme for
million people to be called up tor authority.
population which Includes many·
to drop th~ original charge&amp; and some critical skills In reservists
-Marl~ Corps: 23,000 under
Palestinians.
: ·
two years- the presldeflt signed
retlle .
and Guard members who have
Saddam haa repeatedly linked ,
an executive otder that calls tor a . old authority; 44,000 under new
"The federal mediator said been deployed to the Persian
more limited' Increase.
there was nothing on the table to Gull. We need to keep them for a
authority.
. any resolution of, the confilct to
-Air Force: ·20,000 under old resolving the lssue of Israel's
The people called up under the
discuss," Chapman said. "He IQDger time and 're may also '
new order would be on active authority; 52,000 under new occupation of. Pal~tlnlan Iandi.
said the company had withdrawn ' need &amp;llihtly higher numbers,"
status tor one year. The one-year authority.
all . their . proposals, they'ce ll&amp;ld Pentsgon spokesman Pete
Observen feat that Jordan .
term
is
also
true
for
those
-Coast
Guard:
1,250
under
old
would
enter the war If Israel
cleaned the table.
.Williams.
·
already In the gulf. Individuals authority: TransportatlonSeere- retallalel agalnat 1raq for two
"In 24 years of being a tabor
The new execu tlve order gives · whO began serving In August, for tary .s amuel Skinner has not set aalvos of inlsllle attacks, cross.
representative, that's the first
example, would be enUtled to } he new level yet.
lng Jordanian airspace to attack ·
time I'Ve had that happen," Defense Secretary Dick Cheney
the authortt_Y, t&lt;! call up 360,®0
relief In August 1991.
·
' Chapman added.
1\8 targets.

=red

Writinu, disnlay.s
r
. unt"ty 0 if
shO'W

candles
t s j or t roo)ns
r

ol
11,.-s,
'J J "'-'6'

~:S:!'~d:~~:e~:a:o~~~~~~~

·steelwQrkeJ;s droP..
·._ ·charge_s~ may refde .

"This basically clears the air
of any union alleratlons claiming
that RAC has barralned Improperly,:• Earl SChick, RAC's vice
president for labor relations,
said.
.
.
"Even If the union flies add!·
tloruil charges ' based on subse·
quent Incidents, the NLRB's
decision on this Impasse will not
change," Schick said ~
Tbe AP reported that Joe
Chapman, the USWA s tatr representative for District 23, was
unaware the NLRB planned to
drop the charges.
"We'll take all of the unfair

Mason Fami1y Res~atirant

Valley Drive,.Point Pleaaanl, W.Va. 25550

!-~.-

I. '

.

. RAVENSWOOD,W.Va. -Des·
plte Its dropping of cttarges or
ul)falr bar-gaining against Ra· ·
veriswood Aluminum Corp,, the
United Steelworkers of Americamay reflle the cttarges next week
as one consolidated complaint.
RAC otllclals said Friday the ·
union drQpped the charges, because the National Labor Relations Board told both sides In the
contlnutnr labor dispute It
planned to dismiss them, the
Associated P~ess reported.
The union had chargeil that
RAC Improperly declared an
Impasse In negodatlons after the
latest attempt to come to agree. ment on a contract tailed In
Pittsburgh.

THURSDAY ADMISSION •

Randall
F. Hawkins, M.D.
.

·

Oharmllll Shoppel .. ,... ,.......u~
City BoldiJII Co .......... :.......le&gt;,i
F.ederal Mopl .................... 13%

!

Ill&lt;&gt;£••· ·

funds under this phase of the
10 supplement emerpncy food and
Under the ~s of
grant
shelter progulins ill the area.
from the National Board, local
The selection 'NBS made ~a Na- governmental or private vohallary ,
tionalllc8d COIIIpOICCI of!iatr:s ~ons chosen to receive
.o f national volun...., cqanizations funds must: 1) be IIOII·pl08t, 2)
and cbailecl by the Federal Emer, have an !ICCOUDting system and '
~)' . . Manaaemc:nt
AgenCy CC!Iduct an lllinual audit, 3) .,...O:tiee
(FEMA). Unitecl Way of America IIOihdiscrimination,
4) · have
will )IIOVide the admint!llftlive Slafl' demonstrated the capability to
and function u ftac:al ~t. The deliver emergency food andlor
Board is tbaipl wilh dislributillg shelter programs, and S) if they an:
a private volunllr}' ~·
· ·,

Lltlns Sayre.

! • •••••• • ••

,..._

Mei$J County bas been selecttid and any additional funds available

10 teeeiYe $21,915 in fedaal

Avuelle 8111, Pomii'O)';

Funeral services will be bcld "a t I
p.. m. SWiday ltlbe Ewing Funenil
Home. Mr. AI Hartson will officiate
and burial will be ill the Minersville

Ccm

.

-•.................. . ...............,u..

- · ~ ••-•·
~~J.!-~ J:~~ gn;~.L~ (amiS, Mr. Wolfe :t=r:_
................................71.
Pastor~ Musser ofticiatlag.
was ~eded ill death by a brother.
Pip IIJ ...., ..........
.Interment will be in Robinson

Meigs to receive $21,9l5
in federal e~ergency fUnds

. "'·••tt:

:S!w!=..

·-.. . .

"

Suncldy

over Missouri and a Weak extension of this system will move Into l
the state by Friday ntrbt aa 11 .
travels east and then off tile
South Carolina coast Saturday.
A cold front approacblnt the
Upper Great Lakes. will move ,
southeaa t tbro1111b tbe eaatern :
Great Lakes and off the New
En&amp;land coast on Saturday. A
low presaure system developing
over texaa will move northeast
Into the Tennessee Valley by
Saturclay nl&amp;bt. A low and cold
front will drop soutlleaat out of
Cailada Into the Upper ·Midwest '
on Saturday.

balance was $90,142.67 with
receipts of $3,500 and disbur·
sements of $4,676,25.
~ipts· or b'ansl'er of funds,
disbursemeniS and balances ill tile
other funds as shown on tile
monthly statement from Bud:;, listed first, second and third n:&amp;pee·
lively, ~ as follo\vs.:
Ecoaomic
development,
$791.95, $5,267.65, and $5,377.69:
. public b'anSpOrlalion, $24,924.50,
$18,025.29, $3,153.65: 'Miler syS·
tern improvements, no receipts,
Conlin~ from page 1
$15,189.14 disbmsements, and
Frankfurt airport.
$45,547.29
MJ"''";
water,
At Fernald, Onto, where the
$23.581.46, $21,658.59, with a
·
balance of $3,798.98; $8Ditary · ..
federal government stores rasewei, ·sll,651.91, $15,828.96,
. dloactlve waste from uranium
balance, $4,451.13; swimmillg
processtn1,
security
has
been
stepped up. Security also has
poo1• $19•800• $ I,956.65, balance,
~!@en tightened at a General
$69.01.
. .·
Electrtc jet engtile factory In
Cemetery, $15339.08, $3,493.66,
balance. $4,631.60; water meter
Cincinnati, where enrlnes tor ,
trusts, 5315, ~s. balance,
r
many m illtary PIan es a e rnade·
$18,716.63;
Middleport
Arts
Securtty guards at tbe federal 1 ~·--of $62 02.
·
c
il $1 "99 3• $233
bulldln&amp; In Cleveland have 11·
.,.........,
·
ounc •
"" · J, •
.75 •
mlted public access by closing all
Balance in the fire equipment balance, $93.99; ARC Housing, no
but one entrance and have fund at the end of December wu - receipiS,
$2.005.14,
~.
started sell'Chlng handbags.
$23,551.58, wi£!1 receipts of $605.51; and the R~olving .Loan
Michael W. Sprtn,er, director $22,000 and disbursemeniS of Fund. $42,783.17 wtth no disbur· ,
of bulldfnll faciUUes, said the , $634.65. In the fire truck fund the semenrs.
procedures "are not a normal
poUcy" but declined to say how
long they would stay In effect.

----Area deaths-Emma I edlie'

_.,.

.,

The mee~lng, called In Pittsburgh by Carmon Newell of the

Casualties mount ...

EMS has seven calls

•

'

Currently, Ravenswood Alum!· · still available. ·
num hss no offer on ihe table.
The USWA made no new offer
Federal Medl!ltlon and .Cancilla· PrevioUs offers had Included and the economic gap between
tlon Service, did result In tbe deadlines, which 11ave long since what RAC bas offered and the
clarification of some non- . expired. T.h e comparty does re- union requested Is still about $70
economic Issues. However, the affirm Its offer. that members of million.
No future talks have been
seemingly Insurmountable eco- Local. !5668 are welcome to return
nomic dlf(erences between RAC to work. If appropriate jobs are scheduled.
and the union continue to exist.

Ravenswood Aluminum Corporation (J'tAC) recently reported
that no real progress was made
durtnr Thursday's meetinr between the company and representatives of the United Steelworkers of American (USWA),
Local 5668.

Continued from page 1
·landed at sites Including the
clUes of Tel Aviv and Haifa.
Tbe air attack was the first
Meigs County Emagency Mecfi. Etiubeth ·Beaumont to Pleasant agalnstlsraelslncethe1973Yom
cal Services lllSIYeRid seven calls Valley Hospillll. Pomeroy squad as- Kippur War.
f~ assistlnc::C on Thursday and on sisk!d. At 3:45 p.m., Pomeroy _yeis:~:~~:s""ur~octe~teda from
Fridsy monung.
squad went to Ball ROD· Road.
On Thursday at 9:21 a.m., Tup- Connie Scholden:r WIS taken 10 using a Jtas mask. Medical
pers Plains sqJIId went to State . Holzer Medical Center. At 7:29 · workers reported at least 74
Route 681 East fot _I,elia Cremeans. p.m., Pomeroy fire department and · cases of shock, some as a result
She w~ . labn, to Camden C1aJk squad went to. Mechariic Street for of people Injecting themselves
Memorii1 Hospillll.
.
Wiley Phelps. wbo was treated·bul with atropine, an antidote to
~t 1:04 p.m., Syracuse sqJIId not tnlnsporled. At 9 :21 p.m., polson ras but toxic when used
went to Neue Hollow Road for Racille squad·went to DeWitt's Run prematurely.
Jljmcs Patterson. wbci wu &amp;ranspor· Road fCI' Howanl Lawmace, who
Tbe ~aql news arency quoted
ted ID ~ I At 1:16_ _p.m., was talcen to Veterans Memcrial a government communique as
Pomeroy sqUid went to Liberty Hospillll.
saying Iraq fel'arded the war
Avenue fCI' Avanelle Bass. Bass
At 7:09 a.m., Syracuse squad zone'asstretchlngfromWaahinr·
went to ~ At 3:20 p.m., was dispaldled to Spring Avenue in ton to Tel Aviv.
J!ippers .Plains squad wu IICIIt to POIMIO)' for Audrela::Old, who "Our st:ru.Qllng missile forces
Sliver Ridge Road and transported . was taken to p
t Valley hit their political, economic and
Hospital
. scientific targets In Tel Aviv,
Halfll and other places In Israel,"

'

~

...

RAC says no progress with union representatives

--------~--1VN~r--------Soalb Ceab'al Ohio
Partly cloudy Friday night,
~th a low near 30. Becoming
cloudy Saturday, with a chance
of rain, and highs !&gt;e!Ween 45 and
50. Chance Of ralpls 40 percent
Exleaded Foreeut
S.ndaylbroqh TMida,Sndw, or rain chan&amp;lng to snow
likely Sunday, with a chance of

'

Buckeye State

By Ualled Pre. lalerDitlollal
Is on tap for the first part of next
Early morning temperatures
A brief warm-up Is In store for week aloag witb a rood chance were In the middle 20s to near 30
Oblo this weekend before much fopnow .
·
degrees.
colder air Invades the region on
Partial clearing waa expected
Sunday.
.
Temperatures are expected to over much of the 1tate Friday,
Saturday Is expected. to begin drop Into tbe 20s Sunday after- except considerable cloudiness
with partly BUDDY sties, but noon, and hi&amp;hs will ranae trom
waa to remain In the northeast.
clouds wllllncreue throuahout the teens to tbe near 20 Monday HlgiJS were to be In the 30s to near
_ the day. Rain cou!d develop over and Tuesday. Ovel'lll&amp;bt low1 wtll
40.
extreme southera Oblo by late In raDII!fromflveto15Mondayand
Mostly clear to partly cloudy
the day Saturday and hl&amp;ba will Tuesday mornings.
skies are In the forecaat for •
ranae from the 40a to aear 50.
· Snow waa widespread pver Friday night. Lows lVIII be In the
The mild · temperature~ on northern and ~en~ Ohio Tburs- . 25 to 00 degne ranre. ·
Saturday lVIII be· sbort:Uve4, . day -nllbt, but It was ienerally ··
On the latest weather map, a.
however. A strong cold trout Is very light. Tbe exception was
trough of lo)W" presaure over Ohio
forecast to .crOBS the state on over the lakeshore counues east was to move southeast of "the
Sunday, sending the mercury of Cleveland, where 1 ro211lehes region Ft:Jday. High presSU!'I!
plummeting. Very cold weather of snow accumulated overnight.
.

-.!:,)· -

c

t

h~ding 'for

Colder air

.

,

Friday. J....V 18, 1991

Pomaoy-Middaport. Ohio

•

...

't

'\

'

.

w!-'

•
u
·
·
·
·
II
,
Whlte ouse ca 8 ' up more

•
·
N
al
G
d
.resenr~sl$, ation
uar

·-....... --

m~:~~~~~~~~i:~a~~~:~~~~e~f

~~~~~its::=a:ola:o~~r·

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="306">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9594">
                <text>01. January</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="34479">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="34478">
              <text>January 18, 1991</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="2147">
      <name>ledlie</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="154">
      <name>weaver</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="14">
      <name>wolfe</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
