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P.ga 0-8-Sunday Times-Sentine!' ·

Pom.ov-Middleport-Galipolil. Dhio.-Point Pbsent.

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w.·-Va.

.

Janu.y 27, 1991

•

Star Bank promotes Coleman and Shaffer

BARBARA COLEMAN

GALUPOLIS - Barbra F .
lng In July, 1989.
Coleman and David L. Shaffer
She Is currently VIce President
have been promoted to the
ot Education ,of the Hills of Ohio
position of Vice President at Star
Chapter, A.I.B.; a memberofthe
Bank, N.A:, Tri-State It was
Gallipolis Business and Profesannounced Wednesday.
sional Women's Club, Galllpolls
Douglas R. Daniel, President
Chamber of Commerce, Retail
and Chief Executive Officer of
Merchants Association, ComStar Bank, N.A., Tri-State said
muni(¥ Impri&gt;vement CorporaColeman will hold the position of
tion, and on the Advisory Board
VIce President, BranchAdmlnls·
of The Students In Free Entertrator, while Shaffer wUI be VIce
prise with The Center of EcoPresident, Loan Administration.
nomic. Education, University of
Coleman bas been employed at
Rio Grande.
the bank since 1974, and · has a
Coleman resides 1~ Gallipolis
diverse banking background.
with her husband, Eddie and son
Brian.
·'
She has worked as a teller, loan
clerk and ATM CO-ordinator.
Shafter . began his · banking .
While · working in the Retail
career With Star Bank in 1978·
Credit Department she was the
working In the BoOkkeeping
MasterCard CD-i~rdlnator and
Deparlment and as a Teller
later In charge of the bank's
before becoming Manager of the
Collection and Recovery Depart·
ment. She was promoted to
Assistant Cashier and Loan Of.
fleer In December, 1985, pamed
BY CONSTJ\NCE S. WHITE
Branch Manager of the Silver
GALLIA COUNTY
Bridge Office In June, 1987. She
SOIL,
WATER CONSERVA·
was promoted to Gallla County
rJON
DISTRICT
Branch Administrator tri July,
GALLIPOLIS
-: The. GaUta
1988 and to.Aaslstant ylce PresiSWCO
will
host
a
public meeting
dent In January, 19$9. In July,
on
Thursday,
January
31, at 7
19119 she was .1111med· Branch
p.m.
a.
t
the
Buckeye
Hills
Career
Manager of tl!e · Court Street
Center.
Assisting
with
thecoordi·
Office.
A 1969graduate of Kyger Creek nation will be Glenn Graham,
High Scbool, she has also com- farm business planning analysis
pleted the Ohio School of Consu- Instructor-adult services.
Jeff Wetherholt, district techmer Credit at Kent State Univerniclan
will review the district
sity In July, 19117, and the Ohio
no-till
program
and ·equipment.
School of Banking at Ohio UnlGuest
speaker
for the evening
venlty In June, 1990. She has
is
David
Baker,
director of the
attended the University of Rio
·
Water
Quality
Lab
at Heidelberg
Grande and received the FoundaCollege
In
Tiffin,
Ohio. The
ttoni of Banking Diploma from
laboratory
has
conducted
studies
the American Institute of Bank-

DAVID L. SBAFn!:R.

Dr. Holzer named director
:emeritus by Star Bank
GALLIPOLIS - At Its annual
_:meeting held on January 22, the
Board of Directors of Star Bank,
N.A., Tri-State elected Charles
E . Holzer, Jr., a Director Eme·rlus. The action comes as a result
:or Holzer's retirement from the
:Board of Directors on December
31, 1990.
·- Holzer joined the Boatd of
' Directors of the former Commer:clal and Savings Bank on January 17, 1968. He served on
numerous committees of the
bank Including Its Advertising
and Business Development and
Audit Committees. His father ,
Charles E. Holzer, Sr., also
·served as a Director untll1956.
A graduate of Haverford Col·
'lege .In 1937 and Cornell Unlver:stty Medical College In 1941 he
·began his medical career In 1946
:arter ·s erving his Surgical Risld·ency at Cincinnati ·General
Hospital.
From 1948 to 1989 he served as
Chief of S~af
kt! J:Iolzer Hospltaial Center. He was
-IHolzer M
:tnstrume · 1 In organizing
·Holzer Clinic lit 1950, expanding
:tts 5 physicians to over &amp;I today .
:Holzer has been active through-out his career In numerous
;professional and civic
·organizations.
: Oouglas R. Daniel, President

Giants win
25th annual
Super Bowl

Spring Valley Office In No· CredJt.at Miami University.
Shaffer Is a member of the
.vember, 1978. He was promoted
to .A ssistant Vice President In Galllpolls Area Chamber of Com19114 and became Gallla County merce. Gallipolis Kiwanis Club,
Gallipolis Golf Club Board of
Loan Administrator In 1988.
Directors,
Gallipolis Gulf . Club
A 1976 graduate of Hannan
Trace. High S!:hoOI, he attended Treasurer, Gallla Lodge 469,
Gallipolis Business College and Gallla Pride In Tobacco Assocla.
the University of Rio Grande, tlon, Galli a County Farm Burea,u
receiving. the Foundations of · and member at large, Tri-State
Banking Diploma from the Area COU!ICII of the Boy Scouts of
American Institute of Banking In America.
July, 1989.
He re,Jides With his wife Vicky
Mr,. Shaffer bas completed the and son, Brian.
following bank ~hools : 1981; The ·. Daniel stated, "Both Barbra
Ohio School of Consumer Credit : and Davl&lt;l have exemplified an
at Kent State University; 1986, enthusiastic Interest in adding to
The Oh.lo School of Banking at the · success', of Star Bank. They
Ohio University; 1989, The Ohio have been an Integral part of the
School of Commercial Credit, decision making process. r conMiami Untvenlty; 1990; The gratulate them on . their
Ad,v anced Sc booI of Commercial promotions."

"

'

lion Desert Storm, said U.S.
F-111 aircraft 11sed ' televisionAllied mUltary officials awa '• guided bombs to destroy two
lted word Monday on whether a
manifold facilities, a complex of
bombing raid !1-galnst pipes fe.e d- pipes 5 miles inland used to
ing an offshore Kuwaill (M!trocontrol the flow of oU to. the Sea
leum terminal would stop the - Island Terminal oft occupied
flow of oil Into a giant slick
Kuwait.
fouling the Persian Gull.
Allied officials said Iraq has
Gen. Norman Schwarzkopf,
dumped millions of gallons of
the U.S. commander oi Opera- . crude oil from the terminal Into

Gallipolis, Ohio 45631 .

1614 l 446-8677

..

·

!1-f&gt; Weekdays, Evening~ and Saturday by AIJPOinttnent

~Expor18 help cut national trade deficits ·
: COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) : Exports of processed agrlcultu. raJ products are Inversely re: Ia ted to the amount of domestic
market power held by processing
firms, according to Ohio State
University agricultural economist Dennis Henderson.
Exports help reduce national
trade deficits and promote a
stronger U. S. economy. Studies
of what determines ' export
. sales

· CHARLFi! LEGAR

by U.S. food manufacturers riote
a statistically significant, Inverse relatJonship between exports as a share of total sales
from U.S. plants and the concentration of domestic market
power: That Is, Industries In
which a few firms dominate the
domestic ma·r ket tend to export
relatively little compared to less
concentrated Industries.

D

ALL ALPINES ARE PRICED TO
MOVE. WE ARE MAKiNG
ROOM FOR NEW MODELS•.
""

· . Charles W. Legar, Sr., 6ii, of 104 and while there met ·his wife, the syStem. ·
He joined the Pomeroy Fire
Terrell Lane, Pomeroy; former . former Palmira (Polly),Lavin. ·
mayor of Pomeroy and long-time
After graduating in 1947, he up- Department in 1949 and was
chief of the Pomeroy Fife·. Depart: · pTcnticed at the Ma!on Memooal named chief in 1973 serving in that
ment, died Sanmlay, Jan. 26, 1991, Studios in Columbus. In 1949 Mr. capacity for many yeats. In 1972 he
at Grant Hospital in Columbus.
Legar returned to. Pomeroy to work became certi6ed as a tm training
He was the owner llld operator for the Norris Monument Works, instructor for the state or Ohio.
Mr. Legar was a charter member
of the Legar Monument CO. and purchasing that busii)CSS in 1967
of
the Pomeroy Emergency Squad,
lhrough the years was active iii and changing the name· to Legar
a
past
chief and secretary-treasurer
numerous civic and community ac- Monument Co.
for
many
years, and the former
tivities.
·
He served as Pomaoy village
Meigs
County
Disaster Service
A veteran of the U. S. Asmy cleJt from 19S4 to 19S8 and mayor
Director.
He
also
served as an
Combat Medical Corps during Ctom 19S8 to 1972. During that
American
Red
Cross
first aid InWorld War II, with two years over- time he was instrumental in getting
structor,
and
served
on
the planning ·
seas, Mr· Legar was the recipient of federal funds for the sani!My
four bronze stars, a combalmedical sew~ il! the v~e and funding committee of the New State F'ue
.badge and the vic.tory medal. '
for a ·new tm station. Tl)e water Service A~y in Columbus.
He was president of the Pomeroy
After leaving the service he at- company was pwdlased by the .viitended. the Barre School of !age and federal funds were secUred · Board of Public Affairs ·from 1972
Memorial Ans in Barre, Vermont, tluough his efforts to improve the .to 1978, served as a Meigs County
RepubHcan Central Committeeman
for many years, was a chants
member of the Mid-Ohio Valley
Mayors' Association, a pastiii8SICI'
of the Pomeroy Bead Grange, a
member of the American Legion,
and assisted in ~g the areawille Fire Assocl8tion. He was a
·' Jneriiber of '1\inity'Cblirch.
:.
Born on Aug. 18, 1924 in Meigs
County, he was the son of the late
Herman Lepr and Wllma Hines.
Besides his wife, he is survived by
Continued on page 5

The results of the 1990 census
have been released and ligures
from Meigs County reftect some

....

big~ges.

Countywide. population is down
slightly, from 23,641 in 1980 to
22,987 in 1990.
·
The most dramatic decreases aJe
· revealed in the villages in Meigs

'1" .. ,

'

$29900

r.....

;

JWJ

County. Pomeroy Village popula·
lion in 1980 was repMed to be
2,718 in 1980, compared to 2.2S9

.L.

COMPACT
DISC PLAYER

· ~4.2500
.· · .....

.... · ...

3522

·

AMPLIFIE~

....

30WAmlt

=:

in 1990. In Middleport, population
in 1980 was 2967. and
1990,
populations
2,72S. Other
are:
Racine, (1980 913, (1990
''729; Rudand, (19 ) 633,
469; Syracuse, (1980) 944, (1990)

tile piii'ICie with help from Melp Hlgh School's ·
band, tile Shady River Shafllen and Rainbow
thole orpnlzatloDS were joined by
tile
plblc In tbe parade.
.
.

....
;

:..

.827.

. ....

;

... :

.i.

.'

.

1he ~ 1he 11110. CD that gives v-tht
i .. if ...... up,
up, ....

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AMPLIFIER
61WAmx 2 ·

$19900

We look at our "Comforter" as a
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That's because the "Comforter"
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at today'sgood rate. !tactually
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PIE-AJIP 71AID

GRAPHIC
EQUALIZER

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BANKEONE.

Bob's .
Electronles
446·4517

Su~llriYII prn&amp;lly b"urly Wilhdrtwiil.
Afii'IWII ~11.-ld '-"t.lnJlUll-d by I.UYipuundlnt~ da1 l&gt;
M.M r-.!!~ib,rrt

'
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tud'llnJ(f.

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(1990~

.

YOUNG PATRIOT • This younpter was aot tile 01aly child who ..
participated In Saturday's par8de Iii Pomeroy. The parade bepn
on Eat Main Street ud ended up on Batteraut aear Powell's
Super Valu. People of aD aaet were • band to show their support
for the troops In the war In the gulf.

Commi&amp;sioners _ proclai~ Public Health Week

'

t

thopedic clinics, eye clinicl, ...
DOlle .. and throat clinicl, C8ldlac
cordina to 'lbrres. has helped 10 ClinicS.
weight COIIUOI pogi'MIIS
succ fuDy billie coaunllllicable
and
plastic
aqery clinics for
and iafeclioul d i - . IIUCh u
everyone
Ullder
the
of two.
tulJea'c:ulOiia, polio, inluenza llld
When
youngsteiB
-.:b
achool,
typllold.
.
bealth
deplrlment
program!
in~ of our loc:al and. lillie
deparlme~~ts.

M•mber FDIC

..

PUBUC HEAL111 WEEK DECLARED •
Tbe Melp Couty c-•lrd-a, Rk'ml '
Jaaea, ......... ato.ll ad DaYid Kolllttdl,
.
111ft pn I I ed thll weelt (Ja•l 21, . ~· FtiN ry I) to. lie l'l,tllllo .llelltll Week II Me1p

~)

p~~blic health prOfessionals have led

elude dental health proarams, heir.
to control of epidemic diaeases, ing and vision acrecming and school
. ..........
......... . 'nneil said.
safe food and water, and m-.nal sam
Protec:ting the health of the
The Meigs COIDity Commis-. and child health services that have
.......,.J COIIIJ!Iunity ailo includes
g
·
prevented
countleu
deaths
and
imsionen. in conjunuction with the
Meigs County Health Depanment proved the quality of American ~ng milk and drinking Will«
supplies. ~trollin' ~ts ~
have declared this week (Janw.y life." Tones said.
Acconling to 'Jbrres, every rodents and mspecung swunmmg
28-February 1) to be Public Healtli
citizen in Meigs County benefits pools, niler J]8lb and sewage
Wedt.
trealliiCIIt and dlsposal sites.
BeAcc:on1in~ to Norma · Torres, from services offered by the
cause
some
of
the
most
serici&amp;$
R.N., Nunmg Director of the deparlment, from the oldest to the .
Meigs County Health Deplrttncnt, fOIIIgcSL The department, localed iUnllltl affecting the public today
the event will be . observed . m the Mwti-Purpoi!e Building on ~~~e preventable, health department
statewide. 'lbrres StaleS • that the Mul!lcrry Heighll. offers ex~ semcet also include screening llld
week recognize~ achlevements of pamitl ClasiCI, pre-natal and child testing for sexually ttanll!liucd disthe public health ~ and helps health clinict, nuaition popams ~ h~on. cerviCIII ~
to make the public awn of the for infants and rnothen, immlllliza.. and tublli'l:ulOiiJ,
'Ibrrel has also pCIIIIIed a lleries
sc:r&lt;ices ~eel by loc:al bellth tion for infants and children, or-

By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Stan'

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Townships: Bedfml (19801975,
(1990) . 1,097; Chestu (1980)
2,061, (1990) 2,131.i. Columbia
(1980) 7SO, (1990)- 111.11; Lebanon
(1980) 823, (1990) 90S; Letart
(1980) 779, (1990) 689; Olive
(1980) 1658, (1990) tn7; Orange
(1980) 8S8, (1990) 970; Rutland
(1980) 2,437 ~990) 2,243; Salem
(1980) 9S1, (1
1018;.Sallsbury
(1980) 7,978, (1
7.227; Scipio
(1980) 1,021 (1990) 1094; Suuon
(1980) 3,349, (1990) 3,08S. . .

'
+·

$11000

U19

- . "OLD- GLORY'' • nie Chester 'fehla~~~eat ~ ,
the 'Aillertean Flail displayed on Its fire trac:k darlna SatUrday's
parade In Poaleroy. The parade was orpnlzed by local high schoof
students In honor of the troops serving In the Gulf War.

Meigs census.
figures are
announced

;

AM/FM CASSmE
PLAYD

3525

1 Section, 10 Pegu 26 ~ent~
A Multimedia Inc . NIWIP•per

terminal.
the gulf, creating a slick that by minimum of damage to Kuwaiti Broadcasting Corp. television,
.
The Washington Post reported
facilities.
.
Heseltine
said,
''Tile
allied
bombSunday !Jad grown to 35 miles
Monday
that early damage as-.
Because oll remained In pipes lng looks as though It has either
long and 10 miles wide, possibly
sessments
from the flr~t 10 days
leading
from
the
manifolds
to
the
.
very
severely
reduced
the
outthe biggest ever. Iraq blamed the
of
allled
bombing
against Iraq
terminal, Schwarzkopf said. it · flow or halted it. "
discharge on dainage from alUed
and
occupied
Kuwait
Indicate
would take until Monday to make
Schwarzkopf also said ill lied
bombing raids.
that
despite
many
successes,
sure the strategy worked.
!orces had planned to set the slick
Schwarzkopf said Sunday.at a
British Environment Secre- on fire but actually did so · Important parts of Saddam Husnews briefing that the allies
sein's war machine have not
targeted the manifolds to stop · tary Michael Heseltlne provided accidently Friday during a battle
been significantly harmed.
an optimistic early assessment · between U.S. vessels and a small
Iraq's act of "environmental
Continued on page 5
Monday. Appearing on British Iraqi mine-laying boat near the
.t errorism, " while · Inflicting a

•

7110

•

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.;

Certified Public Accountant
.

Low toallhl near 30. Tiles· •
day, hllh In mid 40s. Chance of
rain 70 percent.

·Former Pomeroy mayor, fire chief .dies

Lynn E. Angell

L

•

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio. Monday, January 28, 1991

By LEON DANIEL
UPI Chief Correspondenl

For complete, professional individual and business
lax preparation assistance call

I Otx&gt;n

Super Lotto
2-10-23-27-28-43
Kicker 966587

Allies wait for results on 'biggest' oil slick

.

i3ti :'iN·ond AvPnue

10-D; 5-S

•

•Ehtdroni, Filing Available"
•Dired Deposit of Refund (h«k
.

1

Cards: 3-H; 7-C;

•

.

Vol.41, No.194
Copyrighted 1991

In tne agricultural effects on gene~al effects of agricultural on
water resources. The levels of water quality and, upcoming
· phosphorus, n)trogen, pesticides legislation dealing with nitrates
and sedimentation were · andpesllcldes.
analyzed.
.
Ed Vollborn, 'OCES-Ag Agent ,
Recently the laboratory has and Patty Dyer-USDA-SCS will
been Involved In collecting data be on hand to answer no-till,
and analysis of rural private conservation, and related queswells from around the state In tlons that rqlght deal with their
regards to nitrates and pesticide · agencies.
levels. Gallla County submitted · The public Is Invited. Refreshsome samples to the rural well, ments will be served. For more
testing program.
. lnformaljon contact the Gallla
Baker will ·be addressing the SWCD lll446-8687.
·

and Chief Executive Officer of
Star Bank, N.A., Tri-State commented, "I am delighted to make
this announcement. Charles is
most deserving of this honor. His
presence on our Bank's Board
has Impacted our steady growth
through the years. He has made
numerous rontrlbutloD.s to our
success. I join the entire Board In
congratulating him."
Holzer resides In Gallipolis
with his Wife Roberta. They have
5 children and 10 grandchildren.

Pick-3: 556
Pick-4: 1826

Page 3 ·

Gallia ·common issues event Jan. 31

DR. CHARLFi! E. ROLZER;.n&amp;.

Ohio.Lottery

Such aw•ea ea, ac-

ase

~

'

~

-

... .

of DUbUc belltb IW- ea f""fta ·
in 1'be Daily Saulnelln tNepillllpo
of the wert'• olllcnlllco.llldlocal
healtb depaW ofBcllla will lib
JBI in a IISID-wide public ltei!th
mudl In CoJumbUI iltil week in
obleMnl:e Public Health Week. ·

or

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Commentary

Monday.

,,l

Janu...,• 28, 1991

I

•'

Businesses use public land for free
ROBERT L. WINGETT .
·
Publisher

CRULENE HOEFLICH

General Muarer

PAT WHITEHEAD
A .. llltant Pablllher/ Controller .

A MEMBER of The United Press lnternattonal, lnland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION arewelcome. They should be less Ulan 300
words long. All letters are subJect to editing and must be stsned with,
name, address and telephone number. No unstped letters wtll he published. Letters should be In good taste, addressing Issues, not personatt.tles.

What wars do··
to presidents ·

..

WASHINGTON
Spread
across J&amp;tS of Sc:oasdale, Ariz., m
two lush golf counes suitable for
the likes of Jack Nicklaus and Asmild Palmer. Players pay up 10 $75
in gretnS fees, bringmg in a hefty
profit for the operators and the city.
You should make a hefty profit
too, hPab'"" you as a taxpayer .are
the landlord. The federal gOvernment owus the land, but doesn't see
a penny from the golf comse
operations.
.
Uncle Sam has leased acre after
acre IX public land 10 enaepreoeurs
who bQild all manner of _ . .
tiona! facilities on iL The government charges lillie or nothing in
rent on the land and, in many cases
gets little•or noching from the business operalions. Those lost
revenues could be put toward
reducing tbe m8S$ive federal qeficit.
· More !han 10,000 . businesses

opcntc

on fcdenll land. The&gt;: in-

elude ski Ja011S, touring

golfcounesaodOiheruses.
·
Capitol Hill sources l(lld our associatc ·Scoct Sleek dill they have
been trying 10 get the problem correeled for some time, but can't
arouse ~·ft"
publi.c attention.
Th4t_......,..,
changed earlier this month
when one company finally.
managed to push the right buttons
with ihc public. The J~ant
Matsushia Electrical Ind · Co.
took control of the concessions in
Yosemite National Parle.
Interior Secretary Manuel Lujan
protested that it just wasn't right not in theS:lic i.ntaesL It wasn't
'
so much
a pnvate
company
was profiling from a national
treasure, it was the fac1 that the
company was fOreign. Matsushia
owns MCA Inc:., and MCA Inc.
owns The Curry Co., which had
operated hotels, restaurants and

came;::!:

l

Jack Anderson

·

befme the Japanese
MCA has since a
in
,•• A. h'ch would
negotiations, 10 sell the concessions ing of publi~ Uluuo, w 1 ·
10 the National Parle FoundatiOil, a show Americans how · they m
non-profit organization,. and the being shonchanged.
fires!on!l around Yosemite has ·set"While the nation is srruggling
tled. But that doesn'l. take ClUe. of with budget deficits. budget cuts
· micks I(! 'enhance fed!ql
the othet 10,000 plus enuepenuers and gtm
making a living on public property. revenues' without ra,ising J&amp;Xes, the
Nor does · it eliminate all foreign government gives away. billions of
ownership of businesses on federal dollars of· pota_ltial rev~~es b a
land. At least five ski
on song," Synar smd.
·
public land are owned by foreign
T'llllblfr ccrnpanies also take adcompanies.
vantage of sweet deals. They pay
A congressional panel headed by minimal fees to harvest trees on
Rep. Mike Synar, D-Olda., found federal lands. Ranchen pay. below·
thai the use of public lands by I1U11ket mil on federal grazing land
.
IS 10 $S forLu,,
their· cattle.
·'
IJ!IV&amp;te enlrejftll~ ~
ma
.. y have'J .....,ned
a Pan·
billion 10 $10 billwn m annual
, 80
.....revenues that the government c~d doni's box by protesting the
collect but ~·t. Synar has ~- Yosemite situation. Now that he~
troduced a bill that would requue focused attention on one park. he is
the administration 10 disclose in- under pressure to Stop being such a
fonpation abOut the sale and leas- g~ landlotd across the board.

resorts

Pro results

i

By ARNOLD SAWISLAK
UPI Senior Editor
WASHINGTON -' Some opponents of tbe Persian Gulf war say
President Bush got into it to divert attention from problems inside the
country and to bolster his 1992 re-election prospects.
This theory appears to be based on the spurious premise that
propelling the coun.try into a war Is somehow sure to solve a
presldept's polltical problems. In fact, the evidence, at least In the
20th century, suggests just the opposite.
Start with World War I. WoQdrow Wilson did try to keep the United
States out of it. . But when the Germans pushed too hard In their · ·
submarine war In th~ second term Wilson barely won with the slogan
"he kept us out of war." He then followed changing public opinion and
asked for a declaration of war.
·
The country did rally behind the war effort, but Wilson destroyed
his health and lost his grasp on national leadership to isolationist
senators when he tried to take !he postwar United States Into the
League of Nations. He died a crippled and bitter man and his
Democratic Party was massacred In the 1920 election by the
mediocre Republican Warren Harding.
The Idea that wars unite the public and enhance presidents'
polltlcal standing may come from World War II, when a sharply
divided nation did come together after the Japan~ · at!ack on Pearl
Harbor.
·
But 11 Is hard to support the argument that Franklin D. Roosevelt
profited politically from the opset of war, even though the fighting did
erase economic problems that had persisted from the Depression.
It Is true tha.t FOR's margin or victory II! 1940 was less !han his 1936
landslide, but the war, which the United States entered at the end of
1941, did not Improve his election showing.
·
Even though It was In the midst otthewar and the United States was
starting to win, Roosevelt got a smaller percentage of the popular
..
-.: vote and fewer electoral votes in 1944 than he got four years earlier.
He died In 1945 and the next year the Republicans won complete
control of Congress for the first time In 18 years.
·
The next war was In Korea. and It certainly didn't do anything tor
Harry Truman. There was a small surge:'of national supportwben he,
like Bush, sent U.S . troops Into battle under the United Nations
banner.
But that wore off as !he Chinese entered the fighting and the armies .
stalemated at ·just about the same place the two Koreas had drawn
their border before the war.
Truman, figuring there was no 1948 miracle to be found In 1952,
withdrew and the Republicans captured the White House for the first
tfme In 20 years.
.Lyndon Johnson won a Roosevelt·style landslide In 1964, but his
The "post-conservative Reescalation of the American presence ln.VIetnam poisoned what had
publicans"
have landed, though
been the most productive presidency since FOR's first term. Like
they don't (yet) have the situa'i)'uman, LaJ bowed to a rising storm of anti· war opposition and quit.
tion well In hand.
•.Vietnam may have helped Rlchar&lt;! Nixon win In 1968, but his
Before It nominated Barry
!liability to get out of the war quickly, as Dwight Eisenhower did in Goldwater
for president In 1964,
Korea eventually saddled him with Johnson's legacy. Watergate the Republican party had for 0
wasn't about Vietnam, but the bitterness It created prepared the
many years been controlled by
lljlt!on for a near- Impeachment and a ruined presidency.
•'I'hese circumstances, of course, won't quash the accusations of Easterners. These leaders, such
as New York Governor Thomas
~sh's critics any more than evidence to tile contrary will stop those
E. Dewey, were relatively "libvjho support the president from charging those who exercise .their eral," In the sense that they
.,
r!ght to oppose the president of disloyalty.
believed In going further than
Ohio Sen a tor Robert Taft ·and
other "conservatives" toward
••
.accepting
various New Deal
•••
reforms and other liberal pol!.cles as perma~~ent.
••
· Even Richard Nixon, In accepting the nomination In 1960,
•
received It with ihe consent of
these liberal forces - as he
•
recognized by his famous
"Treaty of Firth Avenue" with
Nelson Rockefeller, and by nalJIIng Massachusetts' Henry Cabot
Lodge Jr. as his running-mate.
. Goldwater's nomination
•
shifted control of the GOP
sharply to the' right. When Nixon
•
won the nomination again (and
with It the presidency) In 1968, It

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Today in history
By United Preu lllternattonal
Today Is Monday, Jan. 28, the 28th day of 1991 With 337 to follow.
'l'be moon Js waxing, moving toward Its full phase.
o
iThe morning stars are Mercury and Venus.
There are no evening stars.
Those born on this date are under the sign of Aquarius. They.lnclude
Canadian Prime Minister and statesman Alexander MacKenzie In
J.a2; Cuban. revolutionary and poet Jose Marti in 1853: French
novelist Colette In 1873; concert pianiSt Astur Rubluteln In 1887;
abstract expresslonllt painter Jackson Pollock In 1912; sculptor
Claes Oldenburg In 1929 (age 62) ; actor Alan Aida In 1936 (age 55) , and
ballet dancer Mikhail Baryshnlkov In 1948 (aee 43)..

lin

.

Houstoo 103. Oeveland 97

•

New York at Golden State, 10:30

p.m.

New Jersey at Sacramento,lO: 30

®

p.m.
Atlanta at Portland, 10:30 p.m.
Tuel&lt;lll)' Gam..
Miami at Wasntngtm, 7:30p.m.
Phoenix at Orlando,7;30 p.m.

l
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Charlotte t\1 Cleveland, ,7: 30p.m.
San Ant Cillo at Houstoo, 8 p.m .
Denver at MUwaukee, 8: ~p . m .
Seattle at Dallas, 8: 00 p. m.
Atlanta at Utah, 9:30 p. m.
N'ew·Jersey at LA Lakers. 10:30

..

New Yc;u k at LA Clippers, 10:30
P·IT\·

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NATIONAL HOCIIEY LEAGUE
SIIUniil)' a-11
Monlreal 4, Buffalo 1
Bostm 5, Calgary 2

·

Hart!onl 5, Philadelphia 2
Pittsburgh 6. Quebeo 5

MlnriesOia 3, New Jersey 1

Chicago 5, Tormto 1
St. Louts 5. Det rolt 4 ! OT)

Los Angeles 5, Vancouver 4
SuadiJ .KMIIIEI
WashinRt&lt;l'l 5, NY .lslanders 4
lOTI

Bostoo 3, Montreal!
calgary 5, Buffalo 4
Edmontm 3, Winnipeg 2
· Mooda,. Gam•
New Jersey at Detrou,.7: 35p.m.
Minnesota at Tormto. 7: 35p.m .

'

was with the support of a large eventual victor, George Bush segment of a conservative Insisted that he personally was
movement.
·-a·conservative.,,
Gerald Ford,' a cautious cenBut now a few Individuals are
trist, had named Nelson Rocke- . striding toward leadership In the
Another prom in en I postfeller as vice . president when
Republican part}' whom It Is
conservative
Republican Is John
Ford SUCCeeded Nixon In 1974.
Impossible to define as products
Seymour,
the
state senator
But In 1976 Ford had to drop
of, or (like Reagan) 'converts to,
whom
Wilson
has
named to his
Rockteller from the ticket altq- the conservative movement.
own
former
seat
In the U:s.
gether before he himself could
They are far too wise to Identify · Senate. Seymour was Wilson's
(narrowly) Win the presidential
themselves· with that disastrous
campaign manager, and (not
nomination against the powerful old ruin, liberalism. But It Is
surprisingly)
agrees with Wilson
challenge of Ronald Repgan.
.•' probably fajt to call them "postabout
just
about
everything With Re{lgan's nomination and
conservative Republicans. "
Including
a
pumber
of matters,
election In 191!0, the conservaOne Is the newly elected
such
as
abortion
and
environtives swept the board as far as governor of Cal!fornla, Pete
mentalism,
on
which
Seymour
the Republican party was conWilson. Wilson Is not necessarily
h!n\self has only recently shifted
cernec!, At the 1984 Dallas con- on bad terms with California's
leftward,
vention, where Reagan was
husky conservative movement
All of these men can reasonarenominated, Drfw Lewis, chair(save on abortion •. where he Is
bly
expect to be discussed as
man of the platfo'rfn committee,
pro·cholce). But he has the sort of
possible
presidential timber In
was asked by a reporter whether bland, CaiJtiOus personality that
and_
after
1996. What's more, the
the platform wasn't pretty con- blends ·smoothly Into the walnew
chairman-designee
of the
, servative. "It Is conservative,"
lpaper - not exactly a conserva- Republican National Committee,
Lewis a~eed affably. "We are a
tive characteristic. Moreover: in
CQnservatlve party, with a con- his·. State of the State address to Clayton Yeutter (whose own
affiliations
are
Unclear). mu&amp;t
servative candidate."
'
.
the legislature be delighted libertreat
all
aspirants
alike, whether
So It was no surprise that In als, and lllsmayed conservaare
"movement
conservathey
1988, when half a dozen promi- tives, by calling for a laundry list
tives"
or
not
.
The
post nent Republicans strove to win qf sqclal reform projects that had
the .presidential nomination, ev- Democratic Assembly Speaker conservative ~publicans are
likely to give him his first big
ery one of them - including the Willie Brown heamlng with joy.
test. •

.,

ma~e

slon with the certain tragedy of should have
this ciear, It
war Is designed to do rtothlng less appears that mapy of us still
than give aid and comfort to our don't have any concept of how
enemies by unnerving the Ameri- easy It would be for a Saddam
can people.... Like all other Hussein to rise to power In the
patriotic citizens, the news meUnited States It the press did not
dia should be uniting the country exist to shine lights Into the' dark
behind our PI'P.IIIdent In defense comers tbat his Ilk would like to
of principle." ·
.•
keep hidden.
·
And for this conflict, the
'l'he argument that any dissent
government has come out with
weakens us may sutter from guilt
unprecedented restrictions on
by association. Since so much
the press, requiring, among about our leadership and deciother limitations, review of all
slona In the Vietnam conflict was
news material by mUitary au·
nawed, the dissent that led to the
thorltiea before It can be broad• exposure of these flaws some,cast or. published. Military estln)es gets blamed for the weacorts must be with reporters at ·.kness. This Is slmpJy not wh11t ·
all times.
happened. Vietnam wan claaslc
I am stunned by the governcase of stupid executive deciment restrictions and genuinely
sions, Ul-tated mll!tary strategy
surprlled at the amount of
and Inadequate understanding of
antl-any-ldnd-of-dlssent sentithe 'VIetnamese people, their
meat. Reporters have never
country and their history . •
grouaed at restrictions designed
Where there are worthy goals
at protecting the security of our ' and constructive action toward
armed torcea. But these further
accomplishing those goals, their
restrlctlona aren't security; this
own strength • and success ean
Is blanllet ceDBOrshlp and manip- · ea1Uy wltbltand opposing opinulation of news eatherlng.
Ions. If Operation Desert Storm
After years of reportage that
Is etfective, It wUI be becau~e the

••

Sarah ·Overstre~t

Tuelday Gamee
. NY Islanders at Hartford, 7: 35
p.m .

Winnipeg at Quebec, 7:35p.m.
Wasiu.n·g tm ar Pittsburgh, 7:35
p.m.
Buffalo at St. Louis, 8;35 p.m.
· NFL Playoll a ..ulo
Wild Card Ro"""
Salon!ay, loa. S

NFC - Wa shlngtCfl 20, Philadel-

phia 6
.
AFC- Miami 17, Kansas City 16
Sundoy, lu. •

AFC- C!no!Mat!IL Houston 14
NFC - Chicago 16, New Orleans

6

Dlv!Jion.ll PIAJallo
Salunl&amp;J, Ju. 1%
' AFC - Bul.lalo 14. Mlam!31

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s.....,,Ju. W

AFC Cl!omp-lp
Buffalo 51, Los Angeles 3
NFCC ..........Ihlp ·
NY Gtant5 15, San FranctJCo 13
S.per llowt XX\1
Jfll). 17
NY Giants 20, Bullalo 19

This week's games
TldaWeek'•

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WI!IC·Green Bay at AkrCil

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Kenyon at Youngstown State
Nonhern Illlnots atClrvelandState

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(vaftl-l

A Dh'W. .r ..... d'•, I.e •

Poblbhed every ....,.....,, -day
through Friday, 111 C&lt;Jurt St., ...,_
moroy, Ohio, by th.e Oblo Valley Pubo
Ushlng CompaoyiMultlmedla,. 1....
Pomoroy Ohlo 4!1'1119, I'll. llf2·21!16. SOpol late paid

Oiito.

Momber: Va!ted Preo1 IDiorlla-&amp;1.
Inland Dally~ A•aclatlaa ud 1M
Ohio NIW;eAIIocl&amp;tlaa. Natlaul
Advertllll!lt
-uve. BruiWn
·N.,..IPIJI&lt;r •• '133 Tldrd A-.
New York, Nw Yor1110017.
.
~ro

pq!TMASTER: /10111 -

SVIIIMlUPI'ION &amp;ATIII

. , CUrlet' .. -

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OneWMit ......... ... .... ............ .... .
One Month ........... ..
One Year ...............,..................

llll'IOU: COPY
. . .()11

Dally ............ ....................... Ill
,.' .

rter may

Aritanuo 73, Baylor 68
Arllaauo St. 74. Lamor 6t
Cu!W!r Stockton 81, Tarldo 82
Do!Joo 76, Aullln 55
E. Texao St. 78, Abel!neCI!r!Jdan 52 ;·
Loula(41na 'Tedl 89, Pan Amorlcan
511
N. Mexico St. 86. Utah St. 86
NE Loulolana 58, S.F. Aullln 44
Nebraaka lU. Olcllhoma t.t
New Mnlco 83,·Hawoll 17
Oltlahuna St. 85, Kaaaa St. 70
RI.,.III,T...oAAM71
S. Methodlot 81, Houlton 75
SW Tnu St. 76. NW J.oulolano 72
TOlW 90, T...• Cllr!lttan f9
T•xn Tedi H. SIU·Edwardlvtlle
II&amp;
TOltii·ArUngton M, Sam lloultllll
·I!J.
.
Texao·El Paoo73. San DIOIO St. 67
Toxao-San Antonio 103. Stetoon 87
Calllomla 85. Arllona 78
Cal·II'Vln• 92, Full«tlll St. 87

...

Claremont·Mudd 81,

Pit. . 74

Pomone

Fori'-11 101, Fort 0.YI St. 81

rr.no St. 84. P1dao'M'

Idaho 72, E. Walltlnltllll 55
" Idaho St. 89, N• Arlzotta 7f
Loyola Mary.lll, Soo Fructoco 90
Mollllllla 91, MontiDI St. 69
NE Dllnob uo, us ·International
lal
No..,.Jdie St. 92, Sacrameato St.
83

Ptw»•dl• 'It, St . llary'o. (Calli. l

.18

. The fUtest scheduled ,._a1er
trato run In tile United State IIIII
Canada ~ the Amtrall 20 MetroUner
from Baltimore to WlllnlnJtan, Del.,
which reaches 9eedl of •P to t5
. ·
.
. miles per boiar. ·

Redl&amp;lidl

............ .
·'

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at Ponwror, .

to 11Je Dally - · D1 o.rt
-oy.Oblo-.

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The Daily Sentinel
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Hi,' J' m Mitch!
I iust got back from the
AtlantCJ Furniture Mart of

N. lowa 73. W. IIJ!nob ~~
N. Mlcblpn 85, WI)'IIO St. ·74
NW loW. 100. Briar CIIII N
Oakland 80, Mlcblpn Tedl69 .
Ohio iltllldhlcan 65, Bluftm 62
Ohio ~ortbern 69, Hartwick ~8
Olllo WeoJeyan 911. Findlay 85 10'1'1
Oral Roberts lOt, Ark.·Pine ll!u1182 .
Otterbein 88. Jolin Cor roll 75
Quincy n. W!a.-Parkllde 62
Rio Grando 76. Wollll 71
Ripon 68. Monmoutll !III. I 6C
,_•.
s. IUIIIoiJ 82, Drak• 63
.sw Bapdot 82, SE MJuour!67
SW M!MOIOCa 51, MlnneoWIDu!Uth 50 .
SW Mil..,n St. 1!8. Dlllloll St. 46
St. Lou!• 73, M&lt;lrquetl! 69
nmn 87. Urbana 93
Tri-State 64, Albion 61

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control theclock. Theydldalotfll
"We played about as well as we opening drive for. only the second r
BJ LIM JIABIU8
time In the lost 13 games.
hurt us, but we knew It we could could today. Who kpows, It we
UPIIporta W,_
Bahr's opening field goal gave
keep
running
the
football
we
·
played
them
tomorrow
they
TAMPA, Fla. - This time, !he
the Giants a 3-0 lead but Buffalo
could~ througn." •
might have won 20-19."
New Yortt Glantt prayed for the
tied
the score on a 23-yarder by
1
The
1ame
was
played
amid'
the
kick to fall.
Bahr's
fourth-quarter
kick
Norwood.
The
Bills
took
the
lead
tlghtellt
security
ever
~taged
for
Their Super Bqwl championa aporu event In the United ended a 14-ptay drive using 7: 32, at the start of the second quarter
ship and 20-19 lead over Buffalo
States.
The Tampa Stadium a drive keyed by the Hostetler-to- with Smith's 1-yard TD run and
hinged on a field soal attempt by
moved a head 12-3 when Hos teller
croWd
of
73,813 nae-wavlng tans Mark Bavaro connectiOn.
scott Noi'WO()d of the Bills. And
Hostetler,
who
took
over
at
was sacked py Bruce Smith for a
was
searched
·wlth
metal
detec.
when he . mllsed with eight
t
quarlel'back
~hen
Phil
Simms
safety,
the sixth in Super Bowl~
tois.
while
mUttal');
8Dd
pollee
~ seconds lett, the Giants were
was
Injured
Dec.
15
In
a
loss
to
history.
.
,
.
helicopters
circled
the
stadlum:
NFL champiOns for !he second
.·Buffalo,.
completed
a
3-0
playoff
Hostetler
started
for
!he
Giants
~
- ,_
The
game
waa
watched
by
time In five years.
run
by
completing
20
of
32
passes
for
only
the
seventh
time
in
his
about
120
million
viewers
In
the
It wasluat a week ago, with the
United States and ·some 750 for 222 yards and one touchdown. seven-year career- and kept his
Giants huddled In prayer on the
· New York held the ball tor the record perfect. He brought the
mUllan
worldwide, Including
, MoWlt Unlcm. a't Hiram
Bldellne, that MaU Bahr kicked
first
9:29 of the third quarter, . Giants through their second
Otlerbetn ot Marlftta
U.S.
troops
l.n
the
Peratan
Gulf.
the last-second field goal that
Caoe -""otAite8h•i' !Pal
capping
the drive with Ander- straight game without . a turright
to
The
NFL
reserved
the
sent New York Into the Super
lleaio,. at w-w
·'
son's
1-yard
touchdown for . a nover. In fact. neither team
pcistpone the game undl kickoff,
Eorllam lind) at Ohio WH!efan
·Bowl.
17-U
lead
but
the
Bills went back· committed a turnover Sunday.
OINtriJD at Allrlaa (Ml'*l ,
"'lllt
no
security
lncldentt
warOn Sunday night, the Giants
In
l'!lt.•aberllat~
front
on
Thomas's
31-yard run
Buffalo quarterback Jim Kelly
ranted such action.
.
struck much·the same pose. They
MAJ.CIIe at Ft.Ddlay
.!on
!he
first
play
of
the
fourth
completed
18 of 30 yards .for 212
Dellal1ceat Trl·Siate ilndi
knelt In clusters on !he sideline. . This marked the seventh
quarter
to
lead
19-17.
•
WllmlmliGD at WllberfoiCe
yards
but
the
Bills offense had a
straight year, and ninth of 10, the
fllv-AY, JAN II . _ ~ Quarterback Jeff Hostetler waOn
a
handoff
from
the
shotgun,
far
tougher
time
than In last
NFC has won the NFL's show,
' !ted for the referee's arms to
Ohio Slote at Mldtlpll Stole .
Thomas
wept
t)u:ougll
a
huge
week's
51-3
rout
of .the Los _1
case game, and was only the
YounpltM'II Stall at 'I'll• Citadel
signal wide. ·Ottls Anderson, the
bole
oft
right
tackle,
broke
Gary
Jndlanapallo at Alhi&amp;Dd
Angeles
Raiders.
•
•
second dme a Super Bowl has
Moat Valuable Player who ran
Ohio Domlll!catt It Shawnee State
Re
..
OIIS'
tackle
and
bOupced.
of(
the
first
halt,
we
had
so
•
"In
'Centro! State at 'l:tllln
•· · tor a' touchdown and 102 yards, · , ended on a last-gasp field goal. safety· Myron Guyton ' at tjle 20 ·many opportunities," Kelly said. _;
Jim O'Brien won Super' Bowl V
.PIUDAY,FDI
,
· saw the Irony In the moment. ·
No aomea oolledulld
for the Baltimore Colts With a · before· breaking outside for the "We could 'only 's top ourselves
•
'I
was
just
laughing,"
he
said.
fiA'f\IIID,\Y,IID.I
sCore.
32-yard kick.
and we did. "
.
.• ..
"We won In Sann Francisco on a
Eonern MlcbiPO at Miami
'Anderson's
first
big
gain
of
the
Hostetler,
given
smell!ng
salts
:
The
Giants
also
scored
on
a
Toledo at Ball 91ote
field eoai and here we were
game
was
an
18-yard
run
that
on
the
sideline
after
taking
a
hit
~wuae Green at
Western
14-yard
touchdown
pass
from
.
hoping !here wouldn't be a field
Michl- ..
Hostetler to Stepllen Baker In the helped set up Baker's touchdown b}l Leon Seals 'In the second
goal. We worked hard, gave all
centro! Mlchlpn at Ohio u
second
quarter and a .28,yard , that pulled the Giants within quarter, returned when the
Kent Stato at Wrllht State
that we could give and It was up
Valparaiso •t Akn:n
field
goal
•by Bahr In the first 12-10 with 25 seconds left In the Giants took over on their next
to a kicker again.'.'
·M emphis State at Ctnclnnat 1
half. He also had a 24-yard run on possession at their 6.
quarter.
Norwood's 47-yard field goal
CJevelaDd State at Dl·Chlcaao
the
scoring drive that opened the .
"It would have taken a little
Thurman
Thomas
powered
the
Detroit at Dayton
had enough distance but the kick
second
half.
That
drive
was
kept
more
to get me out," Hostetler
XAVIer at St. Loub
Bills,
rushing
for
135
yards
0!115
sailed wide right.
Youaptown State at DavidaCit'
altve
by
a
14-yard
third-down
said.
"I
just wanted to stay In ..i:--·-'
carries
plus
making
five
catches
. "I'm disappointed a lot
Nortl!om Kl!ntucky at Ashland
pass
!rom
Hostetler
to
Mark
there.
They
were crashing down '.: -· ~
for
55
yards.
Thomas
scored
on
a
Ohio Nortbem 111 John car roll
· people were let down," he sal
Ingram
on
thlrd-and-13
from
t)le
Inside
trying
to stop the run, so ·;Mar Iotta at Heldelberi
31.yarll
run,
with
the
other
"I'm certain I won't ever t Iii a
Capllal'at BaldWin·Wal!Jce
Bills
32.
.
we
took
advantage
of that by · ·
Buffalo
points
coming
on
a
,
~ point where Itotally (o
tIt, but
Musklngum at Hiram .
·
going
The
Bills
quickly
put
their
outside
for
the
passing ; • -·
23-yard field goal by Norwood In
Mount Union at Otterbein
· I won't let It carry ove f!ir the
no-huddle
offense
'
to
work._
but
game.
We
just
kind
of
wore
them :,
Allellu!ny IPa'l at Konyon
e first quarter, a l·yard touchfuture.''
cas.e Rei!TW! at Ohlo Wesleyan
they
failed
to
score
on
the
down,"
wn run by Don smith In the
A Super Bowl overshadowed
Den lam at Wltlenberi
serond quarter 11nd a safety later
Eorlllam tlnd) at Oberlin
by war produced one of the most
Blufftm at Findlay
In the periOd.
tense finishes and riveting
Wllbel'lo"'• at Lake Erie
The Billa drove 71 yards after
games
In
·
the
championship's
Mt Venum Nazarene at Walsh
taking
over at lhetr 10 with 2:16
Wlimlngton at Malmo
:5-year history.
Deftanceat Cedarv1Ue
left
In
the
game. Thomas broke a
· Norwood's bid to give Buffalo
Urbana at Ohio Dominican
third-down
run to the Bills 40 lind
· Its first Super Bowl champiOnRio Grande at T:ltftn
11
yards
to the·Gtants 29,
dashed
·· Centnl State at Chicago State
:· ship came after the Giants
SVNDAY &gt;FEll S
the
line
of
scrimmage
.for NorI controlled the ball for 40:33, a
Pu nlue at Olllo State
wood's
failed
kick.
Super Bowl record.
. T·he game fulfilled all expecta.
Bahr kicked the Giants' winCollege 800I'e8
tiOns
In tesitng !he Giants' time- .
ning field goal, a 21-yarder, with
.
consuming
style a~alns t the
MI-l
.
7: 20 remaining. Last · week,
Alma 86, Adrian 70
· .
Bills'
quick·strtke
teinpo.
Bahr's kick against the 49ers
Ashland 123, Ind.·Punlue·Ft.
'
When
the
Giants
drew' within
came from 42 yards .
Wayne84
.
12-10
at
halftime
on Baker's
Auguatana 86, Elmhurwt 87
•'I felt for him," Bahr said of
Aurora 83. Rocklortl67
touchdown,
Parcells
reminded
Norwood. "No kick's a chip shot.
AVua 89, UndftiWood 64
then\ that Super Bowl XXI was
·I know what the situation feels
Baldwtn·Wiuace91, Marlotla 11
Ball Ss. 59, C. Mldtlpn 56
won In the second half.
- like but 1 don't know what was
Bellarmlne 103, Indianapolis 93
"Hold them basically 'I was at
going through his mind.
Beloit In, DIIIIOIJ CA&gt;U. 75 .
a
Super
Bowl ... and some of you
"It
really
was
tough
because
Bethei83. llamllne 80
.,
guys
(19)
were with me and we
BoWIIJII Green 116, Kent 60
you don't want to root agalnt any
Bradley 70, Wlclllta St. 51
were In the exact same situation
Individual but I'm ecstatic about
'
Cerdlnal Ssr!tch 63, NW Wbconi!n
as
we are now.' I told them the
getting another ring."
56
.
first drlv~ of the tl)lrd. quarter .
Central St. tObi 108. ll!lch·
Norwood was consoled by
Dearbomll6
was
the most !Jllportant (\f th.e
several teammates at midfield
Concordia (Minn.118, St. Olal46
game.
We had to do something ·
' I
CA&gt;ncon!la (Neb. l 89. Doano 73
. Immediately after his wayward
with
!.t.
And we held the ball IoriO
Crei(IIltm s:i, Indiana Ss. ,S
kick.
Day ten 82. Det rolt 77 '
minutes and stuck It tn the end
1 "We still love him,... Bills . zone."
DePaul75, Duquoane 62
Coach Marv 'Levy said. "He
Denlloo56, Oberlin 42
E. Dllnob 73. Valparaiso 68
~oesn't have anything to ,be
E. Ml djl11n 82, Tolido 60
•
ashamed of. He's won a lot of
Foatbome 85. Webl•r 82
Fr!eadl 58. St. Mary' I Plalna 53
games for us."
Gr!nne!J115. Law ltnce 88 •
. Lawrence Taylor, the Giants'
Gustavus 7J, Auctbllll i6
19-year All-Pro who said this was
Hllledale77, Sa....wValley St. 67
Hope 82. Kalamuoo 72
the hlgbllght of his career, .
DL weoleyaa 69, Wh•tm 58
,agreed:
"I hate to say ltbutltfelt
Dllnola 72, Mldtlpn 87
great."
Indiana 97, Mlcblpn st. 63
Kansas 95. Colorodo 62
, Anderson, tbe durable 33;yearKy. Wesleyan 82, Lewis 81 tOTl
old
who proved hls.contention he
MacMumy 86, Pr!nclplo 81
gets
stronger with use, rushed 21
Malooe 101, Dyk• !18
Marion 68, Edaewooll 67
times.
·
Miami tOhlol '111, Ohio 57
"My
offensive
ll!le
did
.a
super
Mld-An&gt;erlca 84, Evancel83
job for me, •• he said. ''When lh~
M!l!Udn 93. Carthqe 88
M!nneo00185, Nortllwel~&amp;rn 68
block the way they do, It ·S
Mlsaourt 82, Iowa St. 78
au tomalic. I think ·we know we
Mo. Weatern 74, Wo&amp;llbum 541
~an put points on the board and
Mo.-Rolla 53, Pltublra St. ~~
I
~
•
Mt. Vernm Nazarme 80,
vllle 78
·~
Muskhll\lm 73, Capital 71
N. Dllnob 48. Akr!a 30

C4nferenc e Chomp-lllpo

I

i

4

I took my ••·........

Sunday, Joa. IS
NY Giants 31. Chicago 3
AFC- LA Ralders 20, C1nttnnatl

Ohio C&lt;Jlle!:e IOoketii&amp;IISebedule
By VnMed Preoolaleroal_.
MOND,\Y, UNit ·

i

,.. .

1991!

NFC -

cond cia~•

strategy Is sound and the goals
are wo.rthy and workable, not
because no·one uttered a discouraging word.
Operation Desert Storm II
under way. Dissent will not deter
It unless !he ·operation and
motives are defective.
U Its strategies prove sound
and Its leaders effective, dluent
will remain what It Is: a valuable
American freedom, our rtght to
choose and expr~ What we will
believe.
,
,
U Desert Storm's leaders and
deciiJons are flawed, dilsent will
focua our attention on that
knowledge. A free press II our
only guarantee that that knowledge wlll reach ua.

,...

NFC - San FranciiCO 28, Wa·
shlngtM 10
·

l

- ·

WILLIAM WICKLINE
MEIGS COUNTY AUDITO.

Chtoagoat Vanoouver.lO:3~p.m.

William Rusher

- - -

1991 .TRAILER TAX &amp;.
DOG TAGS ·MUST BE
PURCHASED BY
. JANUARY 31 TO
AVOID PAYING A
P.ENALTY'

p.m.

.

.......

t

illondll)' Gameo
Washlngtoo at Detroit, ·7: 30 p.m. -.
Bostoo at Minnesota, 8 p. m.
Seattle at San AntC11Io, 8: 30p.m.

•'

NOw is ·the time for ·'public disserlt
There Is no longer !he hope of
. averting war, only the hope that
death and destruction will be,
minimal, ·. that objl!etives most
conducive to peace In the future
wUI be accomplished quickly.
. On the first day Qf America's
newest war, I hosted a call-In
proaram on a talk-radio station
in SCIUth-west Mllsourl. Some of
the callers' sentlmenta could
have come from radio transmissions bouncing back Into the
atmosphere from across the
decades:
"Those anti-war protesters are
sepdlng HUiseln the me.. age we
aren't united - that we're
weak.'• ..
•'Why 't the media reporting
the positive things about thll
war, rather than how horrible It
will he? We don' t need to hear
that."
Even the U.S. conaresaman
trom our dlltrlct, Rep. Mel
Hancock, a Republican, has
publicly castigated · anyone who
doesn't aaree With the president
100 percent, and most especially
the media; ':Their morbid obles-

&amp;-

San Antmlo 112, MlnnesWI 105
Phoenix 112. New York 91
Den""r 120, Utah 115
Seattle 103. Atlanta 102
LA Clippers 99, Milwaukee 98
Portland 121. Sacramento 96
Saad&amp;J Reoul
La lakers 101, Bostm 87

••

Post-consenrative Republi~ans rise

Berry's .World

W L p.,, GB

Basion
30 11 .732Philadelphia
2319 .548 7\1
New Yori&lt;
18 23.43912
Washington
18 23 .13U2
Now Jer,.y
U 27 .34116
Miami
11 31 .262 19\1
Chicago ceotrallllli
2 2.7111 Detroit
30
698 Milwaukee
2717 .614 3\1
· ,Atlanta'
2117 .5115 5 ·
Indiana
17 24 .UH2
CJ"""Jand
14 27 .3411~
. 13 21·.3Z l~\1
Charlot~
Wes&amp;erD o~liferelee
MldWHilliTeam
IV L Pet. GB
San Antm!o ............ 2910 .744 Utah ....................... 2715 .643,.,.-,.~
Houst111 ........... .. ..... 22 ,_ . 8\1
· Dallas ..................... U26 . !1015\i
Mlnneoota ............ :.. 13 26 . 3316
Denver ................... 1130 . 19
Orlando ............. ..... 1032 . 3820\1
Portland
36 1 .
LA Lakers
30 11 .732
• Phoenix·
27.13 .67!5 7
Golden State
2317 .5'1!511\1
Seattle
19 20 .18715
LA Clippers
15 27 .3~7 20\1
Sacramento
1127 .289 22*
Salanl&amp;J Reoullo
Dallas 99, WashiJIIIIII 96
Charlotte 79, Philadelphia 75
Detroit 121, Orlando 81
New Jeroey 127, Mlamll05

''Our satellites have detected sto.ckpiles of &lt;conve~tior,1a1 weapc;m~ ~nd
nerve gas, as well as a huge cache of B'ob Hope jokes dating back as far
as·world War II."

.·

EuleroC.af-e
AIJUaclliYioloa

Padftc Dlvlllea

'

IRAN

" .

-AY, lAili.. .
VIOiporalao at Toildo
· ·
Not"' Dame at Day..,
Olllo JlomiDICall at W&amp;lsh ,
·- , . a t Mt Vert~a~
Lale Erie at Dyko
Cedarville at TUlia
Rio Grande at Vrblna
Shawnee State at Kentucky
Chrlodan
WBDNBIDAY, JAN M
Ball Slote at Bowlla&amp; G"'""
'
W•Wn Mlddpn at Ohio U
Miami at C.Dtr&amp;l Mlcblpn .
· Kent State at Euler• MlcbiJan
XAVIer at atoctnuu "
Obki Nortbem at Heldelber&amp;
Baldwtii·Walla""at Muaklngum
·'John Carroll at Capital

SOC.

Team

.

..

•

Pnlrlo VlfW' at WriPit State

NATIONAL BMU:ftALL All-

•

®
0
I ~AQ~"""""-­
® ® ®

''

setviCCS,

stores in Yosemite for 65 years

-

•

·-

.· Giants hold on,. claim ch~pionship

I•

,.

'

.

..

~~~~~~!:..:~~-~~.....~~~~~~----..!POI~m~~~ov~~M~id~-dl~ep~-~o.~:!;..~Oh~io~. --:-..:.-_..,'"'7--::------:-The~~D~Iily:·==Se~ntl~n:::ei:=,:Pac:::~ge=._-:;3~·:::

.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

..

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

~· -

.

~

Page 2-The Deily Senti lei

. ·- ....... .. .. . .... .. . .... -··· -"!' .. .-.. --- -· - ..

- -· ~

.

~~~!!,lOt

I

, Prep seores
Oil!~ Hlp S.bOGI luketlloll
8al•rdAJ, , ... 18

· Bryan 92. Pauld!l\g 77
Loumvllle 58, Caraway 53
wo..ter 93, Alhland 57
' Olr!l Olflo Hlp SdiOGI IOokotball
lol•nlay, Jaa. M
Bellaire St. John 65, Wellsville 60
BeriJD Hiland 18, Stnabu 111 31
CoVIngton 54. Tipp'City Bethel 52
Fremmt Sl. Joe 16, Old Fort 31, ,
Greenlle!d Ml'Claln 6~ No Adams
47
Kalida ~. Miller City 65

Dad, Skip, with me. W~
bought truckloads of new
furniture to be delivered

--

Mar1aretta 68, Sandusky Sr. Marys

44

.,

WOOIW 17, Ashland 31

SOON!

TI'IUI8At.'tions .

J

•

........

a....,~... TruudloM
Miami - Activated center Rony

Selltaly lrom Injured 1111.
, PhOIMlix - Placa1 tOrward Kurt

My Grandpa, Casby Jr.,
wants to know where we're
going to put it all, ~ecause
we still have a store full of
.1990· Furniture!

· Rambls on Injured Jist; signed
center Joe Barry Carroll and
ploted him on ouopended list.
Collolo

· Plltsb!II'Jh - Suopended tall·
back Curvin Rlcharclllnde!l·
nltely .

Montroal -

Heekl)l

Called up def..,...
flUID Luc Gauthl« fran Frederic·

till or American Hockey l.eiJIIO
and delenooman Patri&lt;O BrJaebO!s
lrom Dnunmondvllle or Quebec
· Major Junior Hockey Leque.

,. PRINb VAl t I Y I;INt MA
Hh 1'u·1

Dad and I said, "No Sweat." We'll MARK IT
DOWN and MOVE IT OUT!
This week ..
· January 28th thru Feb. 2nd•
LOOK.FOR RED TAG SPECIALS!
'

'

6 Months lo Carrying Chara•·
90 Days SaN Ai Cash.

Fill DIUVIIY, And Y1s•••
C•hl

\

.

�•

"Page · 4 The Deily Sentinel

• Monday, January 28, 1991

The United Steelworkers of
America have filed charges with
the National Labor Relations
Board against Ravenswood
Aluminum Corporallon, alleging
negotiating In bad faith. The
charges· are based upon a company announcement Jan. 16,
stattne It bad no.contract offer on
thE: table, according to a USWA
press releaSe Monday.
The . new complaint replaces
earlier charges of bad faith
bargaining that were Withdrawn
last week to allow the flUng of an
expanded complaint that covers
the period from Sept. l, 1990
through the last federal media·
lion session Jan. 16 In Pittsburgh.
USWA representatives say

'

.

'

'

that session session exemplifies
RAC's-consistent refusal to bargain In good faith. At that
meeting, RAC announced there
was nothing to negotiate because
Its last otfer bad expJI:~ two
months earUer; according to the
release.
.
The charges .also claim RAC
failed to explain why ·It partlcl·
paled In four bargalnlnJ sessions .
since that tlme ·wtthout protest·
lng or even noting the laclt of a·
proposal. ,
The USWA complaint also
accuseS RAC of violating the
NatiOnal Labor Relations Act by
Interfering with, restraining or
coercing employees In the exercise of their rights under federal
law.

- -·- Area deaths--Former...

BROWN SNAGS REBOUND - WaiJh'a Todd 8rown 11111p
rebolllld durlnc Mld·Oblo Coaference came apllul Rio Grande
Saturday nlcbt. The Cavslost, 76-71.

DONALDSON SCOBD - Rio Graade'a Troy Donalhn (11)
In two points aa Rio Grande defeued vtaltlnc Walsh 7J.'71 a&amp;
· L;vne Center Sa&amp;urda)' evealnc.
.
puts

'

es nip Miller five, 69-65
I '

j

.

By SCOIT WOLFE
Senllnel CorrapoDde11J
• Led by senior Matt Finlaw's 19
point effort, the . Easlem Eagtes
scored a 69-65 comc-from-bebind
overtime win oYel' the non-league
Miller Faleons Saturday in boys'
vanity bps[rtdJall action.
This muted lhe sec:ood c:onsecu:Uve overtime game for lhe Eagles,
~bo dropped a cble one on Friday
night 10 -Symmes Valley. This time
lhe result was different as Eastern
lifted its recon110 9-6 and 7-5.
, Finlaw .. claimed top honors in
both scoring (19) and in lhe
rebounding department whele he
i:olltcted six. Behind Finlaw came
.i well-balanced . attack as
Sophomore Chad Savoy had one of
his best outings 10 lie Randy Moore
for nmner-up honors with II
points. Senior Mark Mwphy, lhe
dependable senior. rallied nine,
junior Jeff Dunt nine, TIDI BisaeU
eight. and Wes Holler two.

Chip Gossman, son of Coach
George
Jed all scorers
with a game-hi8h 24 points, while
Eddie Paige had 14, Jim Hom 10,
Willy Peyton 10, Sean Banle.y,
Joey Smith, and Randall Dillion
two each, and Rich West one.
Miller of lhe TVC niCed 10 1 1211 lead at die end of the first
quarter, then IS Easlem's oll'e:nse
Ium~ on,~ as a resu1r of
Friday's disappoinnng loss, Mill«
increased its advantage w·27-24 at
lhe half.
.
. A Gossman, Paige, Hom, Pey10n
combination only made thinga
worse for the E!lgles in the third
fr8me IS Miller blltzed 10 a 23-13
explosion in the frame, lhe score
50-37.
When the going got lOUgh,
Coach Larry's Bunger's c~e was
ready for the chlllleage. Picking up
lhe lempo and gaining momentum,
Eastern outscaed. Miller 24-11
going down lhe Slretch led by Fm-

Gossman.

law's high scoring and an ovaall 38, led by Willy PeyiOn 'with 15,
balanced attack from all the Eastern Eric Gaddis with 12, and- Bruce
five.
.
Lanning with .11. Wes Holter and
Eastern 'knotted the scored at lhe Mike Newland shared top ·honors
end of regulalion for a 61-61 score, wilb eight ea:h, while Jeremy Cline
lhen claimed the four-point victory had7.
in overtime, 69-65.
Eastern plays North . Gallia
Eastern hit 23 of 59 ovaall for Fridsy.
39 pettent, hit one of 12 three
Score by Quarters:
pointers for a mere eight pcn:ent,
Easteru II 13 13 24 8-69
and hit20-37 arlhe line for 54 per·
Miller 1215 23 11 4-65
cenL Overall, EHS hit 24·71 for
Box~:
33.8 ~ flom the floor.
Easteru ('9)
Miller hit 23-S I, 3 of 7, and 10- · Wes Holter 1-0-2, Olad Savoy 423 at the line. the one place in 0-3·11, Man Finlaw 7-0-5-19, Tun
which Miller possibly lostlhe game Bissell l-1-3-8, Jeff Durst 4-1-9,
with a dismal showinJI·
.
Malt Murphy 2.{}-5-9, Randy
· . Eastern had just rune .turnov~n, Moore4-3-fl. Totals 23,1-20-69.
21 fouls, eight assists (Finlaw four,
Bissell two), had 16 steals (BisaeU
Miller ('5)
five. Finalw four), and 32 rebounds,
Eddie Paige 7-0-14, Jim Hom 5led by Finlaw and.Mwphy with six 0-10, Chip Gossman 5-3-S-24,
each.
. Sean Bartley 1..().2, Joey Smith ().
Miller had 21 turnovers, 25 2-2, Rich West 0-1-1 , Randall Dil·
fouls, 36 rebouDils led by Gossman lion 1-0-2; Willy Pey10n 4-0-2·10.
wit!l nine, and had six steals.
totals 23-3-10-65.
Miller won the reserve game 48·

SHUBERT BITS LAYUP - Rio Grande's Brad Shubert puts fa
layup during Sa&amp;urday's 76-71 win over villltiDc Walsh. Walab'1
Todd Larson, left aad DeMont Wood, rlgbt1ook on.

.

Rio edges Cavs ·
76-71 in loop tilt

untfl the 2: 01 mark. The Caval!·
. To bear the coaches tell lt,
Saturday's 76-71 defeat of Walsh r rs, 'led by center Greg Gelg's
College by the University of Rio 18·polnt performance for the
Grande at Lyne Center was not game, fought back and were
behind 37-26 as )lalftlme began.
Indicative of either teams'
ability.
Rio Grande post Troy Donald·
"We had the lowest level of son snatched a total of 10 of the
scoring at the half we've ever team 's 30 rebounds to help the
had," Cavaliers Coach Ron Fre· Redmen advance In the second
deres said. "We haven'l 'dlsco- period and his output was
vered how to play hard for 40. matched by Walsh's Todd
minutes." ·
Brown, who had 10 of the 33
"It was not a pretty thing, "
boards credited to the visitors.
Redmen mentor John Lawhorn Brad Schubert, hlttll)g six of
added. "Walsh's athleticism
seven three-pointers, added a
really created problems for us total of 19 for Rio Grande.
and we had to shoot free throws
Both teams also shot evenly
down the stretch. Walsh Is a very · from the floor at 50 percent as the
good basketball team, as their Redmen connected on 28 of 56
record Indicates, but any time attempts 1six of 12 from the
you get a win over Malone and three-point range) and Walsh
Walsh in one season, that's sank 32 of 64 (six of 10 from the
good."
.
outside) . The Redmen clearly
Rio Grande gliard Gary Harri - held the edge from tile foul line by
son, who led all of his teammates ·making 14 of 21 attempts fof 66.7
· with 20~JQints, shot slxofslxfrom
percent. Walsh was allowed only
the foul line) mostly In the second three tries and scored on only one
half to lift the Redmen above. c;&gt;f them. The Rellmen commlt~d
KidWell hit 17 points and netted The Redwomen committed 23
Walsh's late• rally after the 14 turnovers to Walsh's 15.
12 of Rio Grande's 46 total turnovers and the Blue Falcons
Cavaliers had fallen behind by as
The win shot Rio Grande's
rebounds •. while Selene Rich, lost the ball 22 times.
much as 16 points In the second
overall record to 19.-4 as It
Notre Dame's top player on the
The Redwomen go back on the
half. .
.,
prepares for battle with Urbana
boards, contributed 13 of tile 39 road Tuesday for a . 5: 15 p.m.
Harrison shot two free throws on the Blue Knights' court at 1: 30
credited to the team. Michelle contest with Tiffin.
with 24 seconds left to bQost Rlo. p.m. Tuesday. Walsh goes to 15-5
. Crouse provided seven assists to Box score:
Grande to 74-66, but wh,en the and hosts Ohio Dominican
the Redwomen offense.
NOTRE DAME (66) - Ml·
Cavaliers fired In an additional Tuesday.
The Redwomen shot 50 percent chelle McHenry, 2-1-5; Michelle
three points, It was Harrison's Box !14lore:
(5-10) from the foul Une, wbtle Hess, 2-0-4; Selene Rich , 3·3·9:
duty again to score an additional
RIO GRANDE (76) - Gary
Notre Dame, noiv 5-10, shot 30.8 Dessa Dzubak, 0-4·2·14; Hollie
two foul shots with nine seconds Harrison, 7-6-20; Mark Erslan,
J)ercent from the floor (24-78,
Kslezyk, 5-3-13; Angela Neff,
remaining to finish the scoring.
1-0-2: Brad Schubert, 0-6-1-19;
four of 10 from the three) and 70 1-3-5; Rosie Schneider, 4-2·10;
"We had good ball movemel\'i, Jeff Brown, 5-3·13; Troy Donald·
percent (14·20) on free throws. Erin Kvach, 3-0-6. TOTALS 284son, 7-4-18; Darius Wllliams,
and we were defensively bet d!r In
IUI.
2·0·4. TOTALS 2%-6-14·76.
the
first
half."
Lawhorn
sald.
RIO GRANDE (86) - Marlo
WAUi.. (71)-+- Jason Freder"Offensively,
we
did
a
lot
better
·
. Kistler, 2-0-4; Jenn1 Couch,1-0-2; ·
Ick, 0·2•0-6; Elliott DeVan, 1-0-2;
at
12
minutes
Into
the
second
Gena Norris, 0·1·0·3: Michelle
Tlm . Debevec, 2-Q-4; Zedrlc
Mackey nailed a Jumper with Crouse, 3-0-6; Debbie ·Fredrick, half."
McDonald, 1-4-0-14; Todd Brown,
The Redmen and the Cavaliers
16:16 left that Ignited a 20-1 run 1·2-4; Kerr! Kidwell, 8-1-17; Ann
6·0·12:
Corry AppUne, 6-1-13;
by the Jackets. Barry cashed Ina
Barnltz, 13·1·27: . Stephanie Gu· each held 3·2 records In the
GregGeig,
9-0-18; Demont Wood, .
three-poln.t try· to put Gedrgla
dorf, 4-0-8; Kathy Snyder, 7-1·15. Mld-Oh lo Conference as the 1-0-2. TOTALS 5-6--1·71.
.
game began and the pressure
Tech ahead 60- 59 with 12:42 to TOTALS 3&amp;-1·10-86.
.
Ha!ftbne
score
Rio
Grande
.
play and forward Bryan HJII
Halftime score - Rlo Grande was on In the first half In a 37, Walsh 26.
defensive battle which slowed
flillsbed the run with a 48, Notre Dame 28.
down both teams from the floor.
backboard-shaking dunk at the
Walsh held the lead twice early ·
12:09 mark, putting 'Georgia
by two points. but the Redmen
Tech on top 62·59.
·
wrested
control away from the
North Carolina regained the
-(All
Games)
visitors,
yet • didn't have Its
lead three times In the final 10 Team
· W L largest margin of the half (34-22)
minutes, the last time at 86-85 on
Federal Hocking ... ...........13 2
two free throws by Fox with 11
Wellston .... :..... ..... ........... 12 4 - - Sports briefs~.-seconds left.
Speedskatlng
Vinton County ... ..... ..... .. ... 9 5
.111 S.Cond St., Ptmeroy
Georgia Tech bit only 38 of 83
Uwe-Jens
Mey
of
Germany
.....
...
..
8
·
7
Belpre
........
........•..
shots frbm the floor, Including
YOUIINDEPENDENT .
Trimble ........... ................ 6 8 won the 500 meters at the World
four of 221hree-polnt tr~es. North
Meigs ......... ........ ............. 5 8 Cup event at Innsbruck, Austria,
AGENTS SEIYING
Carolina out-rebounded the
Alexander .... :..... .... ......... 6 9 In 37.41 seconds. Mey took the
JacketS 51·37 bUt bit jUSt 3} Of 77
MBGS COUNTY
'
Nels· York ..... ...... .. ..... .. .. .. 4 11 lOOOas well, in 1: 15.67_. Norway 's
. shots from the floor·and commit·
SINCE 11161
Miller ...... : ...... :......•......... 1 15 Johann-Olav Koss took the 5000 In
ted 16 turnovers to Tech's 11.
6:55.13.
~---TVC Games Only
PALO. ALTO, Calif. &lt;UP!) Team
W L
CenterisaacAustln·pumpedln17
Federal Hocking ... ......... ..10 2
polntsandgrabbedflverebounds Wellston ... : ...... ........ ........9
3
to lead Arizona State to a 58..-47
3
Vinton County ........._...... ...8
'
win Sunday over host Stanford
Belpre .... ...... ................. .. 6
5
University In a Paclfic-10 game.
Trlmble .......................... .5
7
The victory raised Arizona
Alexander .... ....,..............5
6
State's record to 12-5 overall and
Meigs .............................. 5
6
SPECIALS FOI MONDAY, JANUARY 21
3-4 ln. the conference. Stanford
Nels-York ................. ....... 3
9
fell to 10-8 and 3-5.
tHROUGH SATURDAY I FE.UARY 2, 1991
Miller ............... .. :....... .. .... 1 11
Arizona State guard Slevin
Saturday 'a ~ults:
Smith contributed 15 points and
Eastern 69 Miller 65
Tarence Whet&gt;ler added 13for the
Sun Devils. who shot.576 percent · Logan 96 Nelsonville· York 70
Warren Local63 Belpre 56
OLD FASHIONED
from the floor to S.lanford's .419. ,
Tuesday's cames:
AND
Stanford guard Kenny Amman
Alexander at MeigS
scored a game·hlgb 21 points for
Belpre
at Federal Hocking
the Cardinal, while center Adam
i
Miller - Open
Keefe added 16 In, the losing . WellstOJi at Nels-York
"
I
effort.
VInton County at Trimble
FOR ONLY

Damitz leads ·Rio Redwomen in win over foe ·
University of Rio Grande center Ann Barnltz exploded ·tor 27
points and nine rebounds· Saturday to lead her teammates to an
86-66 thrashing of host Notre
Dame of Ohio Saturday In South
Euclid.
Barnltz's career 1high topped
off a week of milestone-making
performances by DOug Foote's
Redwomen, who are now 13-8 on
the season. In last Tuesday 's
. 101·79 defeat of Urbana, Debbie
.Fredrick had 31 points and Kerrl

Kidwell chipped ln with 22.
The Red women raced to a 48·28
halftime advantage over the
Blue Falcons and sl!o-t 54.1
percent overall (40-74, one of
seven from the three-point
range) to keep ahead. Rio
Grande posted Its largest lead at
30 during the second half.
" It was a great game by Ann
and we got very good games from
Kerr! and Kathy Snyder, " Foote
remarked. ''We shot the ball well
and we rebounded well."

Georgia .Tech five-upsets .Tar Heels
CHAPEL HILL, N.C. (UP!); Forward Malcolm Mackey's
•driving basket and free throw·
:with 3 seconds left Saturday gave
:him a game-high 24 points and
•lifted No. 25 Georgia Tech to an
:ss-86 victory over No. 8 North
~ Ca rolina.

1-

0

· Guard Jon Barry added 20
points for the Yellow Jackets,
:who fought back from a 16-point
·deficit In the second half to
:improve to 12-5 overall and 4-2 In
' lite Atlantic Coast Conferel!ce.
Center MattGelger had 17 points
and point guard Kenny Anderson
14 for Georgia Tech.
·

Guard Rick Fox had a teamhigh 20 points for North CaroUna,
14-3, 2- 3. He failed to get off a·
las t·second' shot that would have
sent the game into overtime.
Fox's last try, 'a drive along the
baseline, went through the basketbutwas a fraction of a second
late.
Forward George Lynch bad 16
points !or the Tar Heels. Forward Pete Chllcu I scored 15,
while guards King Rice and
Hubert Davis each added 11.
North Carolina led 45-34 at the
half and by as much as 52-36 on a
th~ee-~lnt goal by Fox wt.ih
18. 21 to play·

TVC cage standings

DOWNING CHILDS
MUlLEN MUSSER .,

INSURANCE

·Uenke
captures rDh oenr.x
• 0 pen
1·
·
.
.
J.l

SCOTI'SDALE, Ariz. (UP!) Nolan Henke birdied the final
hole to win the Phoenix Open
Sunday by one stroke over Tom
Watson. Curtis Strange a·nd Gil
Morgan.
• : "I can' t believe I won It," said
Henke, who l·lnlshed at l-over 71
:and recorded hts second PGA
Tour victory. "I was having
· trouble with my putting through
most of the front nine. But after
the 13th hole, things went my
.way. I told myself I needed to
:relax. I thought Curtis· Strange
•would win II, he's s uch a great
player. I just didn' t want to beat
myself by being overanxious."
. Henke f lnlshed at 16-under 268
for the tournament. His birdies
Sunday were on· the third, sixth,
'lOth and 18th hOles. His bogeys
came on Nos ..2, 13, 15 and 16.
Henke, 26, missed his first
attempt to get a PGA Tour card
In 1987, but made It on the_second
try later thai year.
Strange shot a 67 Sunday,
Including a 31 on the front side.
Morgan shot a 66 and Watson a
M, Including a 30 on the back
side.
.
.
: " I had a great back nine
tnday," Watson said. "I really
played well all week. In fact , I hlt
the ball better today than I have
.In 10 years. I think
. ibis looks like

.

I

a good season for me. When you
get to be past 40, you change your
swing a Utile bit and I've done
that . I hope this Is the start of
something much better."
Watson birdied Nos: 5 9 n 13
14, 16, 17 and 18, with bogey~ 0 ~
the first and fourth boles.
Strange recorded bogeys at the
14th and 18th holes, with birdies
at Nos.1, 6, 7, 9,12 and 13. Morgan
had birdies at Nos. 3,10,12, 13,14,
15 and a bogey at the 18th.
Mike Hulbert, Jay Don Blake
and Andrew Magee tied for third
·

Sports briefs

·Sumo
Ozekl Klrlsblma lifted Yokoz·
una Hokutouml high In the air
and.out of the ring to win the New
Year 's Grand Sumo Tournament
In Tokyo. Klrlshtma, 14-1, won
the Emperor's Cup for the first
time In his long career. II took the
muscular 31-year·old Klrlsblma
96 tournaments to win one.
Golf
Jeremy Robinson shot a final·
round 70 to preserve his victory
In t!Je $135,000 Kenyan Open at
Nairobi. Robinson owned a tourround total of 269, five shots
ahead of Phil Golding and Sandy
Stephen.
-~ · ·
·
'
\
.
/

I

McCLURE'S
FAMILY RESTAURANT
HOT HAM

MILKS HAKES

CHEESE
SANDWICH

. .

JOHN A. WADE, M.D., Inc.

FOR ONLY

PLEASANT VAUIY HO. .TAL

EAI, NOSE &amp; TIIOAT
GENEUL ALLERGIST-

"WE NAVE HEARINI A/0$"
(304)

6_~5-1244

I

$1 29

....,

9-9(

Not , .......
fl1td fro111 "Kratch"l.

.

McCLIIII'S

ana•arn
Gen. HerttngerPkwy

••u

McCLRI'S

ana•a~n
478 Jacbon Pika

IISYA.llll

MIDDLEPORT
1114-182·11248

GALLIPOU8
114·441·3837

314 E88t Meln lt.
POMEROY .
1114-112·11212.

•••n

Dorothy Raybum

·

Mayo Bales
was

All•

and~sius

· ,·

JJ

.

---Meigs announcements--.

Free dotlllng day
The Oallia Meigs Community
Action Agency will hold free cloth·
ing day for low income persons on
. Tuesday. from 9 Lm. 10 noon at the
old high school building in
Cheshire.
.

1::y •'

Winning $8 million Super Lotto
ticket purchased in Rio Grande

'

Weather

C'

' ~~o •'

..

~.

___
...
-·-

··-

TUESDAY
NIGHT
SPECIAL

.......
.._
...

..•..

Lilli'«\~

,........ Oily)

oti.Y .

_......_IIIOtPI ""'*·

llerved Willi wtllilpld J;OII-. clilabn
......,, oote ._, 11ot n111 end
lony, no
b10 ••1•
Willi eddltionll prioll.

JOIJiil

$ 345

NOW FEATURING HOMEMAQE DINNER

-, -CIIW'S
PH. "2·5411

••••••

ROL~

YIISTAUIANT

ro••Y,-011.

...... Clllchll

'

Every home has been marked down to · ~
make room for new spring stock.
'

'

BRAND NEW 14 WIDES
$
STARTING AT ... . . ... .. ,. ·

.
9, 995

See John Srrilth or Dldl Cole Today
YOU'LL BE GLAD YOU DID!

BIWIIIKL

None.
Rev. Raymond E. Blrtcber, 76,
· of Cheshire, died Monday, Jan.
'28, 1991 at his residence.
· He was born Jan. 1, 1915 In
: Nelsonville, son of the late
In Frlday's edition of The Daily
· William and Hazel Cam~ll Senlinel, it was ~e:J reported
: Blrtcher.
that Bnlce lmd Rita
were die
He retired In 1974 as a United
ts of two children. The Reeds
_.._,... with lwinl on die
Methodist Minister and was a
one ........
.
: member of the West Ohio Metho- · way. The Daily ·Senlinel repelS die
dill Conference.
euor.
\i ·

.

~.

US~AY DISCHARG~
DISCHARGES

..

WHY WAIT TILL SPAIN
Winter Clearance Prices .
ON ALL HOMES!

HOspital News .

SUNDAY

Squads have busy weekend
.

Square Dance Club will bold a ' Units of. Meigs County Emer· squad went-tQ.,Idnloln Heipb for
dance Saturday from 8·11 p.m. at gency Medical Services responded Sarah Houa«. Hous« was taken to i" ·
lhe Hendmon Community Center, 10 14 calls for assis181lce over the Pleassnt Valley. At 8:07
Henderson, .W.VL
.
weekend.
Pomeroy squad went 10 Mul
·
Boosters tOurney slated
At 12:09 p.m., Middlepon squad Avenue for Charles Murray . Mut·
The Eastern Athletic Boosters went 10 South Third Avenue for · ray went 10 Holzer Medical Center.
are. sponsoring a fifth and sixth Ben Batey, whO was taken 10 At 8:24 p.m., Middleport squad
grade basketball toutnament at Vettzans Memorial Hospital. At went 10 t.Julbcrry Avenue for Robin
Garden dab to meet
Eastern High School on Saturday 12:56 pm., Pomeroy fire depan- Pridemore. Pridemore was. treated
The Wlklwoocl Garden Oub will and Sunday. Cheerleading competi- ment was sent to Union Avenue for but not transpcxted.
meet Wednesday at I p.m. at the tion will take lace durin lhe a garage file. At 1:59 p.m., Mid·
On Sunday at 2:05 p.m., Mid·
horne of Doris Graeser.
.
games under the Con of 1oAnn dleport squad went 10 Patk Street dleport squad went 10 Bndbury
Newsome. Cheerleaders should for Dorothy Bigelow. Sbe was Road for li.lsic Blnlhln. She was
lnlpectioalllatecl
pre-register by calling Newsome at taken 10 Veterans. At 3:55 p.m., taken 10 Vctmna. At 3:47 p.m.,
Annual inspection of the Bos· 992-3382. Call Dennis Newland, Pomeroy squad was .sent 10 Rutland squad Was sent 10 I
worth Council 46 Royal and Select 667-6306, for infonnation.
Americare for Georgia Marlowe, · Kingsbury Road for Hazel Six, who
Masons will meet Wednesday at
who went 10 Veterans. At4:04 p.m.. was taken 10 Veterans. At 5:10 .
7:30 pm. There will be work in lhe
Movies to.be shown
Middlepon , fire depanment and p.m., Middlepon .fire depanment ·
Royil Master Degree. Refresh·
Counby Coyote Goes Hol- squad were dispatched to County went 10 Syaunore Street for a .
' ments will be served.
lywood" and "Puppy Saves the Road 5 and 7. The sqilad transpor· chimney · fire at the Fisher
Circus"·will be shown at the Meigs . ted Mickey King 10 Veterans and residence. At 5:56 p.m, Pomeroy
AA Group to m~t
County Public Library in ~Y trealed but did not transport Wll- squad went 10 Mount Olive Road
The Pomeroy Group of AA and on Sllbmlay at 2 p.m. for a.- liam Whitlock and Csrl llubbard. for Yvonne Driggs, who was in tun1
AIAnon will meet Thursday at 7 children.
.
At 7:14 p.m., Tuppers Plains ~uad taken 10 Vctmna. At 7:03 p.m.,
p.m. at the Sacred Heart Catholic
·
Brleflag to be held
was dispaldled 10 Silver . Ridge Rutland squad went 10 the Fnie
Ch~J~Ch. For mae information call
The 3664 WYARNO . Point Road for Jessica BeaumonL She Will Baptist Chun:b for Dorothy
992-5763.
Pleasnt through teen mobilization was transported 10 Pleasant Valley Ramsbwg; who wu treated but not
processing exercise department Hospiral. At 7:28 pm., Pomeroy transported.
,,
I ·',''
Revival sdleduled
briefiog will be held Sunday at I
Revival at lhe HyseU Run Holi· p.m. at the Point Pleasant Senior
ness Chapel will be held Thursday High · School. All dependent
·.
through Feb.- 2 at 'I p.m. nightly. children, age ·to and ov«, sbould
Dave Canfield, Ashland, Ky., will attend. Items 10 be disCussed in·
be the evangelist. Joy Sizemore on . elude legal assistance, financial,
CLEVELAND (UP!) - Ohio
Wednesday night's Super Lotto
Thursc!ay; Gabriel Quartet on medical insurance '811d issuing Lottery officials reported Sun- Will have a $4 mllllon jackpot.
Friday and Dan Hayman and lhe dependent ID cards.
day that there was one winner of
In Saturday night's kicker
Faith liio on ·Saturday. Public is
Saturday night's $8 million Super game, the wlnntn~ number was
invited ·10 attend.
·
Alumni game to be held
Lotto ja~kpot .
.
966587. There was one winner,
Men's and women's alumni bas·
The winning ticket was pur- who will receive $tp0.000. Five
WVARNG to meet
ketbail games are planned for Feb. chased lq Rio Grande. The name people had five of the numbers
The 3664 WYARNO Point 9 at Eastern High School. Men in- of 'the winner will not be an- and will receive S5,0Q0 apiece.
Pleasant unit family support meet· terested in participating should con- nounced until a conllrmation There were 59 people will\ four
ing wiU be held Thursday at 6 p.m. tact TIDI Baum, 985.-3301.•Women procedure ls completed.
numbers, worth . $1,000 each.
in the Annory dsy ~should contact Tammy Capelwt or
There were 612 people with three ,
Pam Douthitt at the high school,
The winning numbers were 2, numbers, at $100 each.
·
OAPSE chapter to meet
985-3329.
10, 23, 27, 28 and 43.
Saturday night 's Plck-3
Turkey setnlllll'
Five ol the six numbers were
. The OAPSE Chapter No. 17 will
number
was 556. The Plck-4
The Southeastern Ohio and picked by 100 people, who will
meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at lhe
number
was
1826. In the· Cards ' '
Hocking Valley Chapters of the Na· receive $1,154 each. Fo~r of tbe
Meigs Junior High School. •
.
game,
the
wlnner.
s were the three
tiona! Wild Turkey Federation will numbers were picked by 4,862
of
hearts,seven
of clubs,· 10 of
Trustees to meet
hold its annual turkey seminar at · people, each of whom will rediamonds
and
five
of spades.
The Lebanon Township Trustees Hocking Thchnical CoUege in Nel· celve $74.
will meet Thursdsy at 7 p.m. at lhe sonville on March 9. The featured
IOwnship building.
speaker will be WiD Primos from
'
Primos· Wild Game Calls. For fur.
Loc11e Inspection
The annual inspection of tiler iRrormition call Dave Graber
Pomeroy Lod&amp;e No. 164 F and AM after 5 p.m. at 614-373-9613.
will be held Friday at 7:30 p.m. at
lhe Middleport Lodge Hall. Work
I'
The OH KAN Coin Club wiD
"
in E.A. Degn:e.
meet 10night at Burkett's Barbel'
Shop in Middleport. The aading
Revival to be held
sess1on will begin at 7 p.m. Plans
·Revival at Fath« 's House will be made for a coin show and
, ,r
,.
.,
Church .in Harford, W.Va. will be refreshments will be served.
f
: •
held Friday through Feb. I0 at 7
!II EO~
p.m. nightly. Rick Weaver ~be
.,., 1
"tTCJoOf.Ni
• South Central Ohio
., '
the eV~J~gelisL There will be · ial
,,.
"""'"'
singing nightly.
Partly cloudy Monday night,
with a low near 30. Rain llkely
'·I
Hymn slnllclledDiecl
Tuesday, with highs In· the mid
There wiU be a hymn sing at lhe 40s. Chance of rain Is 70 percen\.
Mt. Olive Community Churc.!t on
Extended Forecast
Saturday 11 7 pm. Pastor Lawrence
'·
· Wednesday tllrouch Friday
Busb invites the public.
.
·
.,
A chance ol rain or snow
,
-...
Wednesday and Thursday. with
12"· 0 '
·
Gran1es to meet
fair weather on Friday . Highs ·
The Star G1811ge 'and Star Junior . wlll be mainly In the 30s Wednes·
G1811ge will meet Saturday at 7:30 day and Thursday, and ranging
••
pm_. at the grange hall located on from · the low 20s to the low 30s
Couilty Road I ~ Salem Center. Fttilay. dvernlght · lows will .
Potluck refn:shments wiU be ~«·
range from 15 to 25 Wednesday
veil.
.
morning, In the 30s early Thurs·
day, and between 10 and 20
Dance to be beld
The Oallia Twirlers Western Friday morning.

fatl!er. he was
preceded in ckath by a sister,
VetenDII Meaiorlal H01Pltal.
Delielah BaleS, a nie.ce. and a
SATUIU)AY ADMISSIONS
. nephew.
.
Services were 10 be beld_ on Msbc1 Shields, Racine; Dorothy
~ at McDoweU Fliilaa1 Bigelow, Middleport; Paul Hatfield,
· Home m Boykins, va., with Re~.
•
William Hawkins ofllciating. Burial .
None.
,
·
was in Severn.
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS ~ Elsie

: Raymond Birtcher

)J

BIG CROWD ·A lot Iii people iD MelD COIIDty support tbe war
eft'ort In the Middle East, ucl those In JIOmeroy 011 Sllturday were
not afraid to now tlelr support. Fire departments, sa~ut troops,

.

Correction

McCI81'S

.

He began his ministering In
Logan County, w.va .. ln-1958and
· C::ontlnued from page 1
also served at churches In
Wauseon,
Tedrow, Taylor,
a son.,.and dal!ghter·in-law, Olarles Striker and Deshler.
W. Ugar, Jr. and Amy Legar, Hem·
He was preceded In_death by
lock Grove; . two daughters and
his
first wife, Julia Cerepes
·sons-in-law, Millie and Cecil~Blrtcher
on July 5, 1983 and
kiff Hemlock ..Grove·
.
. lmd
married Ernestine Vaughan on
and Michael Wayland, Homestead, · Nov. 9, 1985, who survives.
Fla.; seven gnmdchildren, Courtney
Other survivors Include four
and Carson Midkiff, Charles w. m. daughters,
Hazel Evans of HanHeidi and Kirk Lepr, and Brenton lawson, W.Va.,
Ml!-rgleBrownlng
and_Colin Wayland, and his step- of Huntington,
W.Va., Pat
father, J~n Terrell, Pomeory. . · · .. Schultz of Wauseon · and Nancy
AlSo surviving are seven sisters, Hornlsb. of Port Charlotte, Fla. :
·Kathtyn . Legar Spencer, Anna one son, Ray Blrtcber of NapoMaria Island, Fla.; ·Mrs. Joseph leon; two brothers, Floyd
(Manha) Sttuble, Pomeroy: Mrs. Btrtcber of Mann, W.Va .. and
Gene (Lila Sue) Mitch, Pomeroy; Guy Blrtcher of Napole&lt;in; two
Mrs. Francis (Martha) Anderson,. step-children, Barbara Angel of
Middleport; Mrs. Elza (Evelyn) Wheelersburg and Fred GillenGilmae, Pomeroy; Mrs. William water of Wichita, Kansas; 18
(Louise) Morris. Phoenix, Arizona; grandchildren; 15 greatand Mis. Leota Norris, Akron,-and grandchildren; .six step numerous nieces and nephews.
grandchlldren: and two stepBesides his parents he. was great -grandchildren.
preceded in desth by rwo sisters.
Funeral services will be conFrances Hudson and Freda Cole.
.
1 ducted 2 p.m. Thursday at the
Funeral services will be held Pomeroy United Methodist
Wednesday at I p.m. at the Ewing Church~ with Rev. Don Meadows
Funeral Home. The Rev, Roland · and Rev. Frank Rowe offlclatWildman will officiate and burial . tng. Burial will be In Deshler City
will he in Beech Grove Cemetery. Cemetery. Graveside services
Friends may call at the funeral will be at Deshler City.Cemetery,
home from 7 10 9 p.m. Monday and 2 p.m. , Friday.
2 10 4 and 7 10 9 p.m. Tuesday.
FrleJidS may call at WaughSpecial services will he held by lhe Halley-Wood
F11neral Home
firemen at the funeral borne Mon· Wednesday from 6 to 9 p.m.
dsy (tonight) at 7:30p.m.
The body wUI be taken to the
church,one hour prior to services
on Thursday. ·
.
. Dorothy Luelle Rayburn, 64, of Nfichaellan@o~
•
208 Corbin Dr., GalUpolls, died
Michael Thomas Langona, 69,
Saturday, Jan. 26; 1991 'at her
of Sixth Strathmore, Athens, died
residence.
Born March 15, 1926 In Perry Sunday, Jan. 27, 1991 at Holzer
Township. Gallta County, she Medical Center, following a brief
was a daughter of the tat«: Gomer Illness. '
He was born Aug. 6, 1921 In
and Effie M. Meadows Bostic.
Surviving are her husband, West Hempstead, N.')!'.,sonoftbe
LesUe Rayburn, whOm she mar- late Michael and Pauline Reichel
ried June 19; 1946 In Greenup, Langona.
He was a retired employee of
Ky.; a brother, Nelson Bostic and
·a sister-In-law Eleanor Bostic, the New York Telephone Com·
pany In 1976, a retired U.S. Army
both of Galllpolls.
She was a membeJ: of First veteran, and a member of the
Cheshire Uritted Methodist
Church of the Nazarene.
Services will be 1 p.m. Tuesday Church and the Telephone Pioat Waugll-Halley·Wood Funeral neers of America. He · was a
Home, the Rev. Michael Bearden resident of the Cheshtre com·
and Rev. Eugene Harmon offl· munlty from 1976 to 1990.
He was preceded In death by
elating. Burial foUows In Pine
wife, Jeanette Rice Langona
his
Street Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral In 1975.
He Is survived by one son,
boJile, 6 to 9 p.m. on Monday.
Pallbearers will be NelsOn Michael w.. La~gona of Athens;
Bostic. Nelson Bostic Jr., Dan two granddaughters: one
Wasch, Ernest Thompson, Paul brother: and two sisters. Marion
Henkell of Warwick, N.Y., and
. Cherrington and Paul Rayburn.
Ann Forger of Englewood, Fla.
Funeral services will be conducted 2: 30 .p.m. Wednesday at
'
· Mayo R. Bales, Sr., 56, died on the Cheshire United Methodist
·'Friday, January 25, '1991 at his Church with Rev. Ernest Perkins
oftlclating. Burial Will . be In
home near Severn, N.C.
· He
an employee of Gemgia Suffulk Cemetery, Long Island,
Pacific at Skippers, Va., a veteran N.Y,
Friends may call at Waugh·
of the U.S. Ail 'Force, and a form«
Halley-Wood Funeral Honie
Rutland marshal. ·
Tuesday
from 5 to 8 p.m.
. He was born on August 8, 1934
The
body
wUI be at the church
at Garber, Okla.; the son of the late'
al
1
p.m.
until serytces on
Lester L. Bales and Faye Balrice
Wednesday.
(BanOri)Bales of We11al0n.
Besides bls mother, he is sur·
' vived by his son, Mayo Ralph
' WS •••
; (Connie) Bales, Jr., of Ru~ liis
Continued from page 1
· dsughter, Rhonda E. Malkin of
The Post said the Pentaeon Is
· Kyger; five brothers, Marvin Bales, not releasing details of the
· of Wellston, Sylvan Bales and Wil· assessments because officials
: 1iam Bales, both of Spencer, W.Va., consider them subject to dally
; Dean Bales, Severn, N.C .•.. and . chariges and because ·officials
~ Clarence Bales, Brem~~~; . a ~· are concerned the first asSess·
Chlrylene. Slalaa, Qallipolis; I ments might suggest tncorrecily
granddaugbler, ltichel ~; rWD thatthealrcampalgnlsnotgolng ·
. J!CliiiCisons, Jeremy Malkin . and well.
Joshua Markin; IIIII several rueces

'

COLE~s ,
MOBILE HOMES
Located ·5 Mlies East Of Rt. 33
· On Bt. 50; Athens

5~2-1972

1

�.•.
Page-6-The Daily Sentinel

-.

. -...... -

•.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Panic ·attack leaves her white-knuckled
Dear ADD Laaden: I am a
successful businesswoman who
suffers from pini&lt;: 1!11Jtcks Out of
the blue, almost always wbcll rm in
a public place. I begin 10 feel faint,
my bean jlounds and I think
going 10 die. My rll'Sl panic I1IIICk
001umd four years ago and they ue
getting more frequent ll!d. more
intense. These snacks ~~ei'Uilllllgmy
life.
1 bare spent years lrying 10 avoid
siwations where I might panic. My
world is becOming. small" every

.
~ Ami Lladen: Please print
my letter and ru fcnad it to die
person who needs 10 see iL If it fill
~ people's situatioo (and ru bet
it does),they're welalme 10 111C iL
Dear "Friend": I weicomed )'011
into my life and my home. You
helped yoursclfiO my &amp;icndsllip, my
hospitalil)' llld my liUSl Thco you
helped yourself to my bnsband
I don't blame you for tbil!king he
.was wonderful l ·thoug~ so, too,
when we first met. You saw a bard· ·

clay.

working, "" c ss"d man who was .
channin&amp; and good-looking. But be
is 110 longer any of the above.· He .
nshed his~ bcnv"C' be spent

.
I recently IIUII1icd the best 1111,11 in

~

.,

-~ ·~"'

.... .... --~

,_ ....

..

-·
MonclaY. January 28, 1991

'

rm

...

0514.

the world. He knows nodling about
my problem, and I'm ashamed 10 tdl
him because it is 110 embarrassing. too mucb time away from the
He
10 ttavet and its agany for oflicle. Money is very light now, and
ole 10 go with him, but I've been if I didn't have.a good job we'd be
fcin:ing myself. I'm a white-knuckle up lpiDM it. You 1111111 be paJing
Oyer and almost faint on lake-offs for eweqdliua her••• be doeln't
bave a ~p~ae dolllr. He'• put on
aod lalldings.
realize that this illness is now wdcbt llld lolt 111011 of bis hair. If
c.Dming out of th\l closet. ·I know you bid met 111m today you woilldn't
. llpt resean:h is being done to help give him a sec·· m look.
· \he millions of people wlio are
' You sacrificed your self-respect
piralyzed by this crippling condi· and lost my friendship for a man
lion. It is impossible to describe how wbo now is .b ftlb and afJaid .0 be
aifficult it •is 10 live with an illness. seea with you. He's lllill liviag at
dlat can come on without warning home tw...•se be can't afford to
move out. fd lddt him out if it wacaM knock you f1aL
read thai rescarcb indicates n't for the. kids. You've got a real
~ic aiU!Cks have IIOibing 10 do wilh gem ~ bone)'. Aren't JW proud
WIFE, ANY.
piental Ulness but arc brought oo by of youneU? ··
a chemical imbalance. I want to live WHERE, USA
DEAR USA: Thecild ldagc8CICms
I normal life again. Please help all
Of ils by Idling us whele 10 go for strangely appropriate here: "Be
Jielp. ··CHICAGO CLOSET CASE carefulwhatyouprayfor,youmight
' : DEAR CHICAGO: A 31"81 deal get iL" Thanks for writiag.
df pugrcss .bas been made in this · Gem of the Day: A loud mouth is
echo
- and thousands of panic auad often notbiag more than
from
an
empty
bead.
·
.
J.iafferers arc finding relief thanks 10
Do youlunt qi/Uiions about su,
lame highly effec:live diUas and new
but110
OM to talk 10? A/Ill lAnders"
~ lplliOIIdles.
: ·I have made it a pncticc not 10 bookie~. "Sa alld tile Tttn-A.gtr,"
;aenlify specific drvgs in this is frtW. lllld to lilt poilu. Stnd a
· ~UIDII for obvious JaSOIIS, but I ~1/-odilrtsll!d, lo11g, bJUiness-si,zt
ij:Jpe diose who need help will aJIIo eltW/opt 111111-a cJrtd: 111011ey or·
:J!!Cl their physician. Meanw~ile, du for $3.6S (this illcludu postage
'!i'nYone who wants informalion can fiNI htuulllng) 10: Teens, cia Anll
::Write to the Anxiety Disorders Lattdm, P.O. Boz 11562, Chicago,
Association of America, P.O. Box IU. 60611-0562. (Ill CDIUJIJ4. send
·42514, Washington, D.C., 20015· $4.45.) .

loves

·:1

0.. .u.• sdn: Myllulbud
bepll 11zma • aftalr ooe yw 110

y

1

day.IfJWI!eWOIIIIain&amp;how

I blow lbo euct date, I got a
reminder y raday IIIII I won'tiOOII
fcqct. .

I was

liaiDa GD die t.:t porcb

when a dclhay ~showed up
with abuadaofbiiDGDIIIId aboule
of cbelp wiue.. He ubd for my
liulberul. One blllooD bad tbc

mc11age, HAPPY ANNIVE~ •
SARY. Aaathcnald;ILOVEYOU.
The man said the balloons . . - 10
be delivcnd 10 my b•"" 11 die
bam in our blckyllcl where be
continues to work, but be wasn't ·
lbere. I ,aid fd llllc tbcm.
Our. 23rd W&lt;CMiag lllllivcnary
was die prerioulweek,llld I tlioughl
maybe . - who didn't blOw
we had ...-clbld 1e11t lhat lift.
I .,...,., die cad and it wu 10 my
husband from his girlfriend iii
celdlnllion of lbeir meeting a year

ago.

Monday. Janu-v 28. 19$1

. CONCORD, N.H. (UPl}- The
Christa McAuliffe Planetarium
wasr closed Monday, the fifth
anniversary of the Space Shuttle·
Challenger disaster that killed
the Concord schoolteacher aad
six fellow astronauts In the
n a II on ' s w or s t a .p.a c e
catastrophe.
The $2.6 million glass pyramid·
shaped · structure Is ljsually
closed on Mondays, and planetarlul!l officials decided agaln't
holding any speclalceremony on
the anniversary of tlte disaster.
~:The PlanetariUm Committee
felt t!tat the facility Is a monument to {McAuliffe's) life and
. work," said planetarium dlrec-

.1PPc-·:;;r.
· Csllletoie1e•sz MSt
u- Norman fiylor begins Monday
tW
· lbiOu&amp;h Feb. 2 at die ~ Sll'llel

-·-............

TI-S,.NI _

Chal~enger d~Mlster 5

Calendar

Ann
Landers
.
ANN LANDERS

IU'

_, .

&amp;..... Sy.dlf'. .

and fiaancial
IR!UDds. We pt aJoa&amp; very well
IOgelber. So what's die problem?
We WIDIIO start a fanlily. Robert

.... tile .... uat. . . . . Flee Wtll Baptist Chwdl ID Mid·
..... lie .-lwd Ill - - lo dlepolt at7:30 tid~· Special
-nrt p1bllcab Is tile ealell- singiag will be
eldt (light. •
dsr.
.
POME!lOY • Tbc Mei~ High
MONDAY
School Band Booslm will meet
MIDDLEPORl' • InrtDilim of Monday 81 7 p.m. ID plan for the
ofth:ers lx Belhcl 62. In1llmllioall chicken noodle dinner to beheld
Order of Job's o.upwn, will be Feb. 7. All parenll am urpd 10 at- - .held It 7:30 Moitday ~ at the lelld. . . .
Middleport M~ "nlinple. ,
· POMEROY • The Meigs County
RU1LAND • ThO Rildand Gar· Veterans Service Commission will
den Club willllleel Moaday at 1:30 Cl1le( Monday at 7:30 p.m. in the .
p.m. 11 the home of MIS. Chris vc:taans service office in
Dicbl. A jaopiDI on ~ Pomeroy.
. ·
.
,
Houseplants and Hanging Brirem
'POMEROY • Special meeling of
wiD be JIII'IC!'III'CI by-Mia: ~ the Meigs LGc:al School bon
Weber and Mrs. Cunis Daltolt. .
Monday at 7 p.m~ ID discuss per-

is the llxth gCIICII&amp;ion "Smidt. • His
only brother is several y:ean older.
His brolher's wife has given birth 10
(our daughlcts, hopi)lg every lime
for a boy. After Iter last pregntiiiCy
when she nearly died, Iter doctoi'
suggeacd dtat she have Iter lubes
tied. Her husband insi'll:d lhat she
do it, aod she lgl'eCd.
My . father-in-law; a de., sweet
sonnel.
man, is very eager for a gmndaon 10
RACINE
•
The
Soutbc:m
Local
carry on die family
but he
TUESDAY
would never eomc out llld say iL Board of Jld!ntm wiD meet
Monday
.
at
7
p.m.
at
the
big!l
CHESTER
The · ·Otester
So, Ann, II it up to me to htive· a
school.
Township
will
meet
Tuesday at
boy. I would bate to let diem down.
J
·
·
·
·
·
7:30p.m.
at the town haD.
II there anything we cail .do to
'MIDDLEPORl': • Revival widt ·
produce a male cbild? -BOSTON .

.. TO Pl~CE AN AD CAlL 992·2.1 5•
MONDAY thru FRIDAY I A.M. to 5 P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATUIIDAY
CLOSED SUNDAY
POLICIES
_
'Ads outside Me•g'. ,G .IIta or Mason counll• mu" bill' PfW
pot~d

ms

'Recew.• ~ S

SO d1$COUnl tor 1dl f)ll•d 1n ~dwo.ncc.
' free oads
Glve..waw and found ar;ls u...:IM 15-wo•di••Mt..
run 3 d•s at no ct'•D•·
'Pru~t: . ol ad tor ail caprtalleUws •s doublu Pf,lctl of ad .cott
'St~ nhntt'l IS

'Ads that mus~ be P'Nd '" adV•nct:'ar•: .
~1ud ol Th~tnlnl
' H;~ppy Ads'
h• Mi.tnior (lll'll,

"

C()PY DEADLINE

Y atd Sillm

BAV BEFORE PUBLICATIPN
11 00 AM . SATURDAY
2 00 P M MONOAV
2 .00 PM. TU£SDAV
2 .00 PM WEDNESDAY
2 '00 PM TKUASOAY
2 00 PM F~IOAV

POMEROY, 0.
992-2259 .
PRiCt ~~uu~tU - lA·
CINS' - Thisc nice• ranth

DEXTER - Rail~ $1uet
- 3 bedroom, I batll, IYz
story insulated home. has
bay window in living roOin: 2
story cellar house. Storage
building, Ylith · eKira lots.
$19,500.00.

RACINE - I Yz story home
with 3 bedrooms, basern-.
c..,m. lalge lot. carpet end
harittwood ftocn Baement. fn
goOO condi!Dn. $29.500.00.

· D~R

- Here if your
home in the country - secluded 3 Kfl. WGGd'!fheiM
site and ,a n - blfft style
home In ereat condition. 3
· bedrooms, 2Yz baths, fuN basement. We would lqve ·to
show you this one. Barpin
at $56,00jl.OO.
•'

SENIOR £1TIZENS SPECIAl.

At.t.-YoiJ-CABE·To-i;AT

•••.
n.. "'·
118 EAST .

All-8 PM: Set. I AM-I PM
~
ET -POME~OV

Mas~n
.
Bt. 33

(!104) 77!-5!2i

Muo..,
(NEXT TO MASON EXXQN)

•

-',

'"

LOfiG 'AonoM · - 'Toll!

electril: randl .hDfllt IIIII il
Pf.iwjile . ind quietly ...
eluded. 3 bedrooms, 2
bath!, appliances. ~ on
1.35 acre. Close to Ravens·
wood Bridge. $59,000.00.

DARWII - Acountry Ill·
tin&amp; tor ttl is .111 electric 1110dular home witll 2 car pr·
age. 3 bedrooms, I bath, sit·
ting on 1 IQI!. Immediate
poSsession. $34,000.00.

. ...,
1

j POMEROY '

Remeilelt!

home in town, .3 01 4 bed·
rooms witll a larae lot. Elec.
b.b. heat. Pric:td to sell

$22.900.00.

•· RUTIAIID ...: liUI 111tiD Ill'

'

prD(a 3 bedl OOIIIS, II+ bstll

Bedhll

Family Restaurant
wv

There' I I tMn .In thll

· P-ytown

..-••

Flllld C ....

12/JI /10 , , .... 27, 1ll.tl

o., •.nory

r .................... te.121.11

- - , ... , .. , 27.1U.II
Total T-oy
' •••• • ... ,., ;; ~ .21, , ••.••
TOTAL
IALANCI ...... 27.11t.it

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

'-e .... ~., ............40Z.I3

1,....4Uhnwntal

...'" .
...'

1-'fY_......,,.... . '
.. ,
-,·•.
· ... ....ot
of ..., k•••••
..
·~ ......,.c.....
70V-IId.

........ ........ 43.112.71

l n t - ............ ... 1.124.07

""a- .

Jlscella ......... 23.147.11
TOTAL
IIICEII'TI. :.... 11.121.11
OtiiiJIIIIMENTI:

fl

Po-ioy, Olllo 417U

fiJ.

l

Anneuc: em•t 1

.06 /&lt;!ay

5

HIIJPYAds

114-742·2412

n. 1111

LOll Md Found.

1

s•••u,

..,
' '

41"

'•'

til ', illy'
Cltu.~ifiN/ #IO~I'S C'UI'I'r .1/tc•
.

'

11
· · 12

441 G.. ., Ia

c.. _...

' l l l """•

· 241 11;. C . -

2M

o.._Dil•.

143 Ar•aOttl.
l"H ........

...,.c......

14
15
11·
17
11

U2-.......
••z
AMa CIMie 114

••• ett.....

143 .........

247 LM'" F....
, •• RKtne
741 ..- . . .
167

c-.

· Area Cede 304

62 Wlft'IIHito luy
63 lNettoc::e14 H.y &amp; GriM
l!i!i Sttell • h•t•••••

42

Hou,. . tor lltettl
MotMie Homn lor Attm

44

Apwtment fo• Rent

1r rlii}.WOilrtliUII
71 Autos lor Saht
72 T1ucks fot"Sille
73 v'"'" • 4 wo ·,
71t Mot01cyclt!ll

45 · Fw.-shM Rooms

I''

46 s,.~. to.- lltent
47 W..,ted to Rent
48 E....,;pment fot Runt

HNWMt ..
SMu.tt.n w.....

13 lnsuranc•

.followiu~ i t•ll't'hmil' t'xl·ltanl{es ...
a..... c-...,
w
M ..an Co., WV
ArqC. . I14

r \,; I L

·

49

for Le . .

51

Hou•hold Goedl

''•n.nw ,

Buslnliill
Sch9ola • InstrUctiOn
Radio, TV .. CI "IIP"'K
Mflnlant!O\i 1
W1nted To Do

7&amp; lottll • Mo1on tor Silo
71 Auto
Acc•aooe~~

11 Aulo

81
82
13
14
15
II
17

til A'"Mtuas

New Htven
. . llttart

137 ... , ....

fhp~~tr

SPr'•ICPS

62 - soon.,,a.a..

17• Acltrl• Grow. .
773· Ma10R
·

f'.,t••

78 C•mP'nu Equtpn'""'
· 79 Cttm.,....a. Mot Of Hormnr.

Mt:r tl1arHI1;,e

175 ...... .-.nt
••• hen

~

61 .. hrrn Eq"""""'t

43 F•unt tor fhnt

1•1'1

qqJ!lll~l~

1

&lt;'. I I I I', I u,

_l;filll

B ~c
Act-..
t w........

~t

I ,,,

t SL1il:

33 h''"' . . . . . .
3 1. lusin•sluitdlttgl
35 \.ots• Acre~ge
3i Rell Ettt1e Wln!ed

,,..d ., ..,.,. c,..

, 6

v•• s.a,

'~

31 , Horries 101 ltle
32 Mobil• Horn.. for Sill•

• o;v...,..,

&amp;4

Mtsc. M•chandd.e

6i

''"I ding Suppli•

21

lu•fn•• Opponwnnv

56 . ' " ' fo.- Slle
57 Mu•cal lnst"'"''""

22
23

Mon" 10 LOaf'
ProMttenal S•vic..

'58 Fru1t1 • YeOIIIaiH •
59 fDr S.te 01 Tucte

Homelnlp•OWmW!ts
He•my

""rnbtng ·

f.c~t~~attng

El.,ucal • Ref••••'~'
Gunwal Haultnv
MoiMie Hon•e f'ep1"
Upholl,et"Y

..

tamsd .....

:-,.,.~C/~=
Six ICflll $oM,D08.00.

SERVICE Afll IIEPAII
ON ZETOI TIACTOIS
Plus Ott.r " - h .. I
Cited O.t0111' ....
Prien • "New" Zetar
Traders .... r.lr IM
Now Itt Stwcld

.fJI(JIIIS
·EQUIPMENT

...
'

THIS 1"xl"
... .. ' · · BULLETIN BOARD
SPACE AVAILABLE 1 '
1
- AT '5.00 PER DAY. .· .

. 142-2455

~I ·

"At taus

.,

warming up

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

ellve •• -

,
PLAINTifF
YS.
U,.nown HoW.. Devlsn1.
Mlnlnlatc~

Alslgns of the 1 - .,

Mollie W . . mL DJ aIll ad.
Mel.

County of Melt•
IIICHAIID A. IZII.AG¥1,
....... tint ..., _ _ ...
poMS- _thef ......
duly ........

....Hiell
.............."_"_

ney ~_.. "' the ltete .,
Ollie. 111M .... ,. •• 1111....
M-.

,....,.= ....... .,
.,... s.

til

·a..... ,.,

"" 1111 ...........

q.,-lltw ..... , ,,

daacnaM=
~- Ia ftll
the value
• 111M
,.... tt.t ... UMteewa

It.-

H-., Deul Ill 1111

Ill~

............... .,. \1

of: CUI I 111 . . .
MaleA4111111.. 1K _ . . .
ell II~.
$,.,.
• auuarw partlletsthle..,..

••n

oudlfttl .,.,

It......,......

.,..,. tllat ~·
.,_. ~~pt utldanoe" un·

.....
....
-n::..,;;.-;:..i:

......... l'ltllntiff ... -

_..wllll

-

~.:.

Ill

ll

-·~

-

the , llll&lt;ln ........ ""
....... In
.... . . .

lsatlool 1701-14: 111.07:

270a.24; _, CMI ._. .

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

4.4CAI• ._..._. c.a

-·

.
11.-A. t ·ajp,t.
AMietMt ~'' IMsaaat

r:::::

....... ........ _111141
aul£ ILid .. ~
.IIIII 1J11t . , of .Ds •·-···
1110. .

Ill ...

'•'

,.,,_.dal

lllilllllltill ....

IEWIIING AND
TIOUIU SHOOTING
C. tlfW •• tsld
fret hllllltW

HELFWANTEO
RETAIL SALES

lanks

CoMtfuction

PERSON

Hartlware, Lul'llber.

H2·S009

IAN IS

8u1Wtno Meterlela.
Mutt IIIVI ••~~~rtence
In tiiM Nftw, FuM '

~Cutter

time with Hnlflta.

~Helmet ·

Jein•er-inv
oompiiiiY.

CENTER
(1141441·2002

J&amp;L
INSULA
nON
•VII'I'II 8kllng

ltate of Ohio

.

, .... ,~ 01. '

n,

THOMAS DO-IT

Director of T,..oporlalton

....... Olllo.

,,

,ttt-5517
..... .... .

IYwruh,.....,ce

OliO

MIIGI COUNTY, OHIO
......rdi.Hunt

""!DAVIt

Clutch 11......
, PillE EITIMATII

ElECTIKAL SEIYKE

ft2-5JJJ w tU-Ii61
..... , _ "" OHict

COMMON PI.IAI Of

A-tltl
Tr-:niMions, lralleu; ·
T:-.. 011 Clletl11.

Acretil
· .......
- ,... tfflc•l
1111

"

lEN'S APPliANCE
SfiVKE

IN THI COURT OP,

DEI'INDANTI
CaM No. 10-CV·III

"7·6179

IICIIO omtS-$7t .,

Public Nollel

.,...lllntlln

. Oil'S IMIAIICI
SII¥ICI
tti·IISJ er
t1J·SI61

tiS·••n

. . .IUrOIS-$111 "
----$t2S.,
f&amp;DIIS-$US.,

goel. '

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

ftAJI-SSIOI '
..... AUTO liP All

AI&amp; IIAIIS

, ,. . htllll •••

WAIIIIIS-S Ill .,
llnS-S.. .,

.wJahlng you the hlp-,
P..lt blt1hday Ill
the while.
Keeping,._ tu.IMII

DAti'S

OYIII-111

I•••Jall 1
Still I C••11••

usn
IPPIIIIIOS
9tiAYW-.nt

ear can teke Itt
toll.

.

•••It Prieta"

Day or
NO SUNDAY

hie

•CIOWAYI

ec: ....lite

PIL t4t-tlt1

Pelntlng a roof or In·
ataHing en -lllng
,II not quite hll
ltyle. .
Drinking coffee and

Ohio.

••••••••
.......

COISIIGC'ROR

HOMES I GAIAGES

grit.

Executon.

•ssm &amp; IUID

CUSTOM IIILT

More oft111 thsn not
. h1'1 roiUng on tile
ground end •tlng

0&lt;

Iuthi~~

· BISSELL
BUILDERS

1

Who un be-n
riding 1 bike, try·
ing to ltsy fit.

POMEROY- Older 2 story
home willl 1!01111.0US Ylood·
wor~ fireplace, nice llilchen
cabinets. Three lledi'OCIIils.
equipped kitchen, teftflllir,
gara&amp;e &amp; storaae. $39,91!0-00.

'

Team to

Calllh .........

ca::f..rr..'l.:'r~~tts
RECEII'TI:
'

1 c ..... tl"h8ftk.a
2 In Memcwy"

.30
.42
.&amp;0

1

POMEROY - Two bedroom.
I Yz story- home with c.rpet
bui~,in book. shelves, patio
and re~r balcony with view ol
river. Garage. $23,000.1Xl

Resta~ant

~2.99

.I

~

~

NEW LISTING- FAMilY·
/FAST FOOD RIDAU RANT ·
-This established business
on Rt 7 at Chester is a creal
opportunit1 for a ,person
who wants to own their own
business. Details too num,
erous to list. Ple1se call for
information. $92,000,00.

A111 PliOil

ONLY

$1,00
113.00
, •1 .30/ d•v

.20

R••••lefc:e.•cutweru~~t..WoMn"'d.,aweNMct\•eed

lou.

PAD&lt;

. RAPID REFUN

.....

••.oo

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

-lhly

'·

home has been reduced and
is read1 for
Home has 3
bedrooms, bath, carpet,J.
0. furnace. C/A, recreation
room in basement. Ra~ge
and freezer stay with home.
2 car garage, $69,000.00.

WANT ADS

Heard about ·

tl
16
11

'

E, MAi::W.

SMALL

~ Ia the evening fa best • ·

D-. . . ...
,uM
••
,.
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. BULLETIN BOARD DltADLINE
4:38P.M. DAY BEFORE
PUBLICATION

People in the.. news

period,

DIIUii I 11, 1110
IC..O TOWNIHIP
Ceullty .. .::::
''Thie •• - u
J
Plftal aiel R.,.rt..
IUMMAIIY
CAIH
IALANCII. IIICIII'TI

•

WITHBAIIIA•

hospice

e

'10

...,.

'&gt;

11
16

3

H7

MONOAY PAPER
TUESDAY PAPER
W£0Nf.SOAV PAPER
THURSOAoY P.APER
1-HIOAY PAPER
SUNDAY PAPER

.....

1

Wordo

;

'A clid!iolfuxl adverhsemunt plilct.'tltn lhe DatiV Sttnln1tll Ifill.
,cttpt
chtst~ l•ud d• spl;ry . But.1liuu. Car~ and 111\)111 noiiCdl •
w•ll ;tlsu .tppe&lt;M 111 the Pt Pleil6illtl Rllt1tl51tH ilftd the 9alh
puhs Da.ey lflbtHU!, mach•n~t ovur 18 ,000 horn•

WAffTADS

During

,

O..y: .

1101 responsible for et'tOU 01her hrst d.., . !Chedt.

.Jackson to help ·PUSH. out of a financial hole

:;:=;:===~===:::~~===::;::::==~

.....................1!1.217.21
HM111! ......... ~ ... ... 1.0tl.22
Ooltloy ..... 1,102.13
TO At. DIIIUIIIE·
MINTI .......... U. 711 .IS
T.... llntllltl Over/
{U....,
2,144.07

· ,., ...._ Ywl...,.

·• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

R.ATES

to• ttrrurs hrst' df/11 ad h1ns m papurl , Ci.ll lurlore 2 00 p "' ·
riiiW ahm publiCa~ ian lo maktt cori'eclM.In

or

Featurins: Fresh Scrambled Egga,
Hoinestyle Bucuits, DaniSh,
Mu:/lim, Pancakes; and
Much, Much Morel

.=

,...,....a.ty .......7.UI.I2

· PINANCIAL II"'OIIT
OI'TOWNIIfM!I

~~~-.............. 11.147.47

'7 po1111 atne type 011ly uNd

an

Mason.Fami1y

~Nollel

A project· that bepn 11 a
triumph and an object ol pride
for the New Hamplhtn city
where people knew Mc:Atilltfe as
a teacher or netahbo~ blcame
lnatead a permanent 10urce oi
grief, but one that Is most otlrn
expressed privately.
The moment of silence observed" Concord HighSchool on
the fifth anniversary of the
diluter will be the last one. It
hu beea held annually, but Foley
said the school district pl'l!fers,
like the plailetarllll'll, to 1tres1
the positive upectJ of McAulltfe's lite rather than the
tragedy.
·

C·l assifie

..

.Paris spring fashion
.
opens on wart!ffie tone

your Social Security

years ogo today·

tor· Clinton HAtcllett. "Tiley did . llf•IIOw deeply people 1tlll feel
not ·want to do 111)'111111 lllat ·Po~tt tllit trapdy.
·
empllallzel her deatll."
.
~pie niii!Ud wttb eatbuli·
That attltude-...lOIWD up . ._ '1111111 McAuliffe .,.. cbown
the respoitte to tile ftldllll~· from -tllaa lO,OOOappllcanta
sary of the dluster Ia llcAu· to 11eeom1 till flnt teacher to
llffe's hometown. State aad cit)' trawl In IIP*C.. The)' folloftd 1n
officials planned no oblervancn detail local aew1 accounts as
and the attitude wu 1110 low-key McAuliffe spent months training
at Concord High $cbool, where at NASA faciUlltl In Texas and
McAuliffe taugbl SOCial st\ldlel.
watcbed Intently on televtalon as
·
CballeGpr· finally lifted off a
'.'We'll hold a IIIOiilellt of Cape Cauvwallaunch pad after
silence, tllat'a Ill," ..ld PriDe!, - a ot dalayl, ·
pal Cluirln Foley.
f11eY watched lutunned dlsbeThe studied etrortatdoWIPlaY· . lief u, 73 1te0ndllato the Olght,
log shuttle aanlveraarlel bas tile spaceerafltxploded, killing
become a pattern In the state all aboard.
capital of 3li,OOO, perllapl retied·

Sentinel-Peg a 7

The

j

name.

I pboncd my husband's girlfriend
and thanlr.ed her for the .wine 'and
DBAR BOsTON: I c:Onsultcd a ·
balloons. Sbe Jqllied, "11 wasn't for reapecled geaetici"l wbo rerhes ~
you." I said, "It was dcliveftid'IO our Hamnl Medical Scbool and litis is
house and I thought you ..- sweet what be said: "Keep trying."
.
to ~ane~~~ber our 23rd anniversary."
He added,~ have been some
She hung up, speechless. ·
sporadic reports, met with some
·rve
I left the balloons and the empty llkqlticism, of success in separating
boUle ouiSide where my husband 'male-dCierlllining' from 'female·
PARIS (UPI) - Under tight ti9ns clpsely checked. ·
.would be sure 10 see them. I8118Chcd delmnlnlag' IJICI1II - the feni~ing security against terrorism, dewar altady has taken a loU
a noce saying how much I Cl\iayed spenn de!e!mines·the sex of the off· signer Ch~lstlan Lacroix aban· InThe
the world of haute couture, or
the wine and lh8nked him for die spring in humans •• and tilting the doned his famous pouts and high fashion. The Pier~ Bat·
great year. : .
odd4 in favor of haVing a boy or a French folklore themes Ill favor main salon c;losed Its couture
~ctually. tbe. year, bas bee.a girl. s~ of Ibis sort, however, of pure structure and glitter at
department to · concentrate on
ten:il&gt;le and ~ were ~Y days have been mCldcstly ·successful. I his spring high fashion show In ready-to-wear, perfume and acwhen I found It bard tQ smile, but • repeat. Keep trying.•
warttme Paris.
·
cessortes. A house spokesman
~y l couldn't keep from laughPress and 'buyers lined up In said the usual Balmaln clietjls
P.S. If you don:t get a boy, so
in g. •• RIGHT HUSBAND, wbal? MiW0111 of wjlmen would be tbe Intercontinental 'Hotel . for from the Persian Gulf failed to
WRONG
ANNIVERSARY, lliriUcd with a·healthy baby 'girl.
· passport and Invitation cbecks fly up to P!!ris last autumn 'to
LASAU.E, ONTARlO
Is thlu AII/I Laltdtrs collUM you Sunday. After this grim note they order custom clothes.
The same probll!l!l crippled the·
DEAR ONTARIO: Lauslilel can clippt!d years ago yellow with age? happUy applauded the Lacroix
Nina Ricci salon, which tempor·
~ good medicine. I hope you heal For a copy of her IIIOSI jrequtlllly line that Ignored his usual prints,
m a hurry. ~· The fact IIIII ~ requtsted potmS tJIId essays, send a colors and styles from his native arUy laid off half Its seam·
could wnre this lellel shows you re ulf-alliJrawl, lo11g, busilltss-size Provence region In southern stresses. P.resldent Vladimir de
Kousmlile said the gulf clients,
on.~ road to recovery. Thanks for tnvelopt and a check or IIION!Y or· France.
The new, sculpted finery me- . · usually accounting for fiO .percent
~tmg.
dtr for $4.85 (this illcludes postage
gigantic PQinted collars, huge of the salons couture business,
Dear AIID Laaden: "Robert" and alld lttutdlillg) to: Gems, cfo Ann ant
puffy sleeves, curved jackets' failed to appear.
I are both 26,dle ~ mall:h ~ Ltuulen, P.O. Box IJS62. Chicago, over narrow or full above·llnee
The Chambre Syndlcale de Ia
from the. same rehgtl)us, social•. Ill. 6061 UJ562.
skirts, short tent coats.
Haute Couture: whtcli groups the
the' dean-cut simplicity was fashion houses, says ltlgh fashion
adorned with enough sparkle to In France emp!oys40,000persons
light up a Paris night - wide and brings In $74 ·mullon a year.
rhinestone dog collars above
The Arman! shOw was for, the
strapless or low-cut dresses,
young, the slender, the beautiful.
Jackson founded, Operation
"When America has a. cold,
CHICAGO (UPI&gt; - Jesse live Director the Rev. Tyrone
giant
rhinestone
buttons
on
a
Hemlines
were the shortest since
;Jackson will return to .Chicago Crider told a smaller-than-usual black folks have pneumonia, " he PUSH Christmas Day 1971, after
suit,
an
entrancing
black
the
clothesJess
cave man days,
white
a rift with Ralph Abernathy, who .
croWd at the Operation PUSH ' ·said.
·
·~Is week to help ·his old power
tong
pleated
suit
jacket
with
·
.
just
barely
covering
tbe ·behind.
was picked over Jackson to head
base, Operation PUSH, out of a . weekly meeting Saturday.
He _said economic woes were a
three
·
wide
rhinestone
frog
Wee
sculpted
suits
and minis·
"One of the proudest moments factor In the decision last year the Southern ,Christian Leader·
lleep financial hole, PUSH offl·
closings.
cule
gently
fitted
or
loose
dresses
of my\ life WB$ when I Informed not to renew an annual charity ship Conference after King's
clals said,
:
Lacroix
also
plied
feathers
and
came
In
blinding
Italian
colors,
·PUSH, facing a deficit of the PUSH staffwewerel!'table to basketball game featuring Ml· death. ·
lace
.
onto
the.
rigorously
cut
from
spaghetti
r~ and Medlter·
JaCksof!, In the restructuring
undetermined proportions, last pay them and they said resound· chael Jordan and Magic John·
outfits. The audience could not ranean blue to sunshine yellow
.
lngly
they
will
work,"
Crider
after
King's assassination, was
week laid off all 14 of Its paid
son, which had raised $100,000 a
stop
applaudll)g a short strapless .and cyclamen ·red.
·
··
staff. Most have agreed to stay on said.
year for PUSH for the past given leadership of the SCLC
gown
entirely
embroidered
with
.
Arman!
used
wide
bands of .
economic arm, Operation Bread·
Ull11ty bills and other crucial several years.
the job as volunteers.
,
gold and pink sequins plus a pink medieval llallan prints to edge
· The organization was oneofthe expenses continue to be paid and
Crider said the PUSH budget is basket. Ironlcalty,)ls split with
fea~her hem. White lace 'pettl·
many outfits.
•
first major civil rights groups to the weekly PUSH meetings will about $1.~ mUllan a year. He said Abernathy ·Involved , Br.ead·
coacsshowedbeneathshortevenBut
It
was
the
spectacular
.
liPin off · from the Southern continue.
Thursday's board meeting, basket's financial successes and
lng
outfits
and
a
grandma's
white
accessories
lllat
stole
the
snowChristian Leadership Confer·
which Jackson Is expected to a resulting spirit of Independence
lace collar softened a black tong pumps combining three or four
ence after the assassination of
Crider said the problems are
attend, will determine exactly among Jackson's followers.
puffy gown.
colors with staggeringly · high
Or. Martin Luther King Jr. In the result of a slowdown In
how far In the hole 't he organlza·
heels and globs of sequins and
'1968. Jackson, Its founder, cata· contributions rath~r then any tlon Is and what can be done
A fresh note was gltigham -a
beading. Those decorations
putted to national prominence mismanagement. He said the
about the situation.
· pale green gingham checked
echoed the chunky gll!n 1earrings
and two presidential campaigns economic recession, among
Jackson recently won elecllon
sull, and an embroidered
and necklaces sparkling on the
other things, has taken a toll on
as bead of PUSH.
as a non-voting representative
gingham peplum jacket over a
peanut-sized outfits. Even hand,
: "We . simply decided to stop the abutty of the black commun·
for Washington D.C. In the U.S.
green lame skirt
bags dripped with baubles.
f!emorrhagllll!." PUSIJ Execu· lty to contribute.
Senate and now lives ln. the
Many Invited fashion journal·
The final explosion was a
nation's capital.
lsts, private clients and store
sIring of females sheathed In
In an annual report filed with
officials, mostly from the United
skln·tlght body sitlts completely
the state, PUSH, which slttnd for
States. so far have refused to fly . em.b toldered with tumu,ltous de"People United \O Save Human·
to Paris for the shows because of
signs Including Marilyn: Monroe
lty," listed $992,795 In fund·
Iraqi terrorist warnings.
faces.
raising Income, contributions of
· The noted magazines Harpers
By Unl&amp;ed Preu 1Dterll8&amp;1anal
$235,846 and expenses of $830,811,
Bazaar 11nd Vogue, however,
.JACKSoN TO GIVE A FBIENDLY PUSH: Jeaae Jackson Is
the Chicago Sun-Times reported
have Paris staff members who
returning to Chicago fromhiS. new Washington, D.C., base of
Sunday .
are covering the shows.
operations to try to revive hla flnanclallyaiUng his old
Italian designer Giorgi Arman I
organization, Operation PUSH. Last week PUSH. People
took
the minds of the fashion
United loSave Humanity, was forced to lay offltsown huinanlty
oft the war with a wildly
world
- all14 aalarledemployees. Execudve DIJ"eGlor Tyrone Crider
colol1ul and cheerful parade 'In
said during the weekend that fund-raising woes, compounded
the luxurious Hotel Ritz that
liy the recession, were to blame. "When Arrierlca has a cold,
opened
the flve·day shows Satur·
black people get pneumonia," Crider said, Jackson Is expected
day
night.
·
In Chlca11o Thursday to belp restructure financial operations.
• ~.
As
at
all
'
the
presentations,
LAUGH AT THE BIG PlcrtJBE: A. Wblilley Brown d~llvers
HOSPICE CARE IS SPECIAL Medicare pays die IWJ cosi of all
security
was
strict
with lnvlla·
his "Bill Plcture"commentary wllh a straight face on the
CARE ·
·
covered lllllViccs for the terminal
"Weekend Update" segment of "SaturdayNlght Uve" but he
· By E4 Pete..·ilbiess. There are 110 dcduaibles or
doesn't want anyone to miss the joke. ·~I pretend to explain the
soditl·Seauity
co-payments except for part of the
Brueb Manapr
costs of oulpllienl druBS and in·
entire world," he says of his wry analyses. "Bull! anyone takes
It seriously. that's their fault."
Ia Atheas
patient qlte care.
.
GRoWING OLD ON THE HDL: Rep. Dan Roatenkowald,
Respite care is a lil!ort·term inD·DI., one of the mostpOWerful members of Congress as
Medicue ·hotpilal insurance can patient stay wJ;Ucb may be. needed
. Rt. 33
. MaiO!l, WV
chairman of t~Hquse Wayund Means Committee, Is thinking
help pa~ for hospice care if a doc· . for the lJIIIi.cnt m order 10 pve lem·
.
.
about retirement. 'He says Whea he arriVed In Washington
tor certifieS thit a person has 8 let· porary relief. to ~ person who
'
minal illness. If you know of such a : ~ly assts1S wtth ~e, ~·
• nearly 40 years ago, "I was only 29 years old. I looked around
and asked myself, 'Who. are all these old fossils and when are
person, it's a good idea to make inplliCllt reaplte care IS limited
they going to leave?'"
sure he or she knows about this itn- ,each lime, 10 nays of~ lllort than
.ESTEFAN'S CRASH SC"-RS: Singer Gloria Estelan Is
portant Medicare benefit
live days m.a row.
.
.
recovering physically from .the nearly fatal crash of her tour
Hospice care it a special
For ~te cue, ·the pabcnt IS
bus last week but she says thel'l! Is still some psychological
program of care intended to give respDIISlble for five pe~t of the
fallout. "I can't live In fear, but I'm really paranpid whenevef
pain relief, symptom management, cost or about $4.13 a day in 1991. M
. We'~ driving In between large vehicles and when a big car
and support services to lerminall
~ Mcdlc:are Handboot. ·
comes toward me," Estelaa, who suffered a broken back In the
ill J!C'OIIIe and dteir fiDiilies. A.,J pubfisl!ed by • ~ l:kaith ~
eruh oa a Pennsylvania hlgllway. told People magazine,· 'I've
son must sign a swcmcnt dloosing F'll1811C~ Adm~. CORII!RS
become a real bad backseat driver, My cousin and my husband
hospice care inSiead of standard · more ~ about bospice
~ drtve me arOWid but I drive them crazy now. They have to be 10
Medicare benefits for die lenhinal care. ~ were rec:eally 111111t 10
car lengths behind the car ahead. They try ·to be nice but my
illness
all Medlcire bene8cilrles, btl&amp; you
COI181D recently turned to me and said, 'I'm getting ou 1 so you
Medicare·can pay for two 90-day can ~ I copy by calling Social
Clll drive. I can't take It anymore."' Nonetllelesa, Estefan, who
periods of care ooe 30-day period. Securil)' I IIIIJ.fnle telephooe Rljlll~ ·
1tu a new album, "Into the LIKhl," saysshedoesa't think there
' and one exlelisioo period if tliC ber, 1,.800-234!1-SSA (1-800-234wlll be a problem when It comes time to go on tour.
patient is still taminally ill.
S7'n). Call early Ia the morning or

Ohio

Mr. Thoma•

""•*-'
•"ooftn'
•lnaulallon .

SHIUI &amp; 1111

JAIIIS TIIUIUI•
tt2-!772 ..

IIIIOYIL

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NOTICI OP lliCTION

O.T••'-k:'Milt Uol:btlon

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742-2251

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THE

NOTICE Of ILICTION'

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MlddleporL Ohio

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INSULAnoN

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Page- 8 - The Daily Sentinel

Monday. Janurt 28. 1991 •:::

.3

Pomaoy-MiddiiPOit&lt; Ohio

BORN LOSER ·

KIT 'N' CAIILYLE~ tty Llny Wri&amp;llt

42 Mobile Hamil

LAFF·A·DAY

Mondrrf. Janu.y 28, 1991

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TI-IAT WASN'T TI-lE RI61-1T
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WHEN A PERSON 6ETS A
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lle

y.

I

. . .. . ,

•

...,

Olnelt'

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·

114 •• 10'2

....-..................-.

and lolgh1 du11M, _ ,
owu- laMNp IIIIDI,. .,...
a 1 .......
' ru LJndJ
''"' Dr
oal1114Cion

LloaMJd Cllolo, 1Can1uoky, ~-mml.

durlngciJr.
ICMctMI• to ewe tor

wanted to Buy

~oo!.i\::.-(1) • MMlil'l fturnlly

'

FRANK AND ERNEST

·WISEGUY GREETING

:CARD COy~ .. ·

'

- .r 'M

VV~ITif'l(; A
~ ·~ .~ . VA&amp;.fNTINf 'J' CAJq).
V!ffAT ~tfYMf$

.

1---10.

WI Ttl
11

'-' '-'fil" I p •7
•-28

32 Mobile Ho-.,,..

·=·

for Sllle

::..
';"'a
-7Zil'

/::.'":1
, , d - 110011- 17,200.

.,.,.,Av•s

fum:llltld
., .....
All
.,..... aald. tllr • J ur'r;

..._. Awe.:i Aa&amp;,... •

'"" • .

u..mr after ....._1144wl121
=;ii"iid;:c;;;;;;;;i;;;lai;
............
1110 adO, ColnntldDN, lallll u,.,,
-.ao,- drvor AC, good 1-.114 ~·au.
NII.••IIIII for
or

t:IIO P1L

-111on.I1WII6-tii'r.

Duly -Aldol flllwM II
.1"1
. . . .-liM

lllollPoa~
now ta at Ill-'""
t' elol-. ....

9

I

l.o:t.

Public Sale
loAuctlon

8

...,......:

fllalll!!i$ -

WI/-

Paid
In
DEADIIE: 1:00
p.tn.

p.m.

1111,

.

=

-~··-"'
···=

CI*IIDyMEA.IIIc.

..... ln ... - · 1111• lllii..,..
-~~~
llogiJIJr, 'llo Box
- · 2110 lllln 81., Pl. Pft, WI/

21110.

Lola a Acruge

!:..:.:!.'~

SPECIALIZING IN ....
•Cu~m

Bent Exholllt Syateml
•Compl"o Uno of Exhelllt Supplle1
•Hendle end lllltell Monroe Shockl
Come &amp;Dd See Va For A Free Impeelloa

The,.,...,. ... ,., ....... fDr
-

..............u..luloiaJID.
... "-;:w &amp;'lila.,.,....

... 614-915·3949 IIIIIIY ..a
47269 St. 11. 241
'-I laH- a.. 45743
.

and

of

.II ......................

.. 1/3/11/1 . ..

....,.!1 ............

and •

tiQ c::;2:;• In "T!

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....... . .

~-···paiL Col '" 112

; ; [ lid,

N••l•
111611

......
N!JP I

M

II Mthe•

a

MOIIU HOME FURNACES - MEAT PUMPS
AU FURNACE PAm

The ON. Dlplrl-ll of You1t1

:······~
...:r=~~

........................
,, ···~··......
,..,

IENNm'S MOIU HOME
HEATING &amp; COOLING

I

==-......
........, Rt. •

~.,

Leaatetllhl s.tt• Sdlnllli. eff lt. 141
16141446-t4U er 1-101·171-5t67

---·

110. .,...

O.C.L. COMPUTER SOLUTIONS, INC.

1.... -

......
H I 'ty,

Tult

Stereo.~;~

IliOn Stage
1:00 (!) Amelloln Explflencl Q
1111 1121
Murphy Brown
Miles recelvea faxed Ioiii
letters from a lllCrll ucln;tlrer.
(R) StereO. D

e

0 MOVII: 'Manhunt 'l1la
........ far .... Night .......
NIC Monday Night Ill lla
Moolee (2:011) ~i&amp;
(!J) l'llme Tllne w
• Nalllvllle Now

Ill. 31,

--·-lorm
lat.·....

........,. I

1

.,.

••

Ullij

ln:,. ·:utta. Buy,

JJ111, .... I:DN:OOJa

I I Jlo

Cll Lany Klnl LMI
IIJIIINuty ....... lleuatQ
1:30 (J) MOVII: Mlflllun1: 'l1la
IHICII for 1lie Night ll.rllor .

e

1

...,_,.,..Uaadllao,

-..

(1 :30)

411. lll4lllol - - -

--~----

= .......
~

HERS.

Fumllllld

IJii .0 •

Tflala of 1101111
O'Neill Rosie finds old

Rooms

grudges eonurge wh&amp;n aiJ8
attends her clan reunion.

Sterao.Q

. _ , 11o2t£li- 7IM,

Allar: 111111 Ill L

48 Space for Rani

c.., ........... .......

·'··==

..·~
j

j ,, h

~

-

42 IIDblle HOme a
for Rent

•

I

··On=
8

IDIIa-•

11:• &lt;Jle

CUitom Dn1pe1
S6Ywrala,..._eo

614-Ht·lltl
W.luy Wllai·W. Oo.
W. Oo Whet W.lay.

.

..

IO.lt-1

wo.

Tonight 1111ow

(l) !..~
oloumll

~Tunic PUINllna .,luQal~l

,

I..... ..

Dnla.... CIJOII
IJw.Yao
-. ·
Q
Rd. .......
and dJIUWjO 114- ;:.

N."""

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.

82

.........

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.....
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...

ASTRO-GRAPH

1.1

.... \:. ... lull&amp; ......

......................
...,
.......
., ....
•.=-==, . . . . .,-.

r

•

Aalro-Graph Malchmaker lnatanlly , .
veala which signa . . romlntlcully par·
feet for you. Mall S2to Malc:hmukor, clo
lhll llftlpaper, P.O. Box 81428, CfeVe.
land, OH 4410 1·3428.
PIICIS
(Fell. 211
101 Expec1
BERNICE
more 1hll1 you ere
lmately untl11ed
BEDEOSOL 10 and you could be dlaappolntucl ,.,.
day. The train 1ha1 provlclecl lhl lr•
rldJO hU ~ 1he 11&amp;11on.
Alllll ,-.... 21"Aprll11) Don't oul your u l c - H you'ru lnvltucl to a
social ~I today. H you're
numberucl among the ..., urrlvale, try
1o bu one oltlie flrst 1o teaw.
TAUIIUI (Aprtl211 MIJ 211) You mlgh1
.put yourJIIf 1111 1)01111011 w11n you'll be
0-'Y ....,.,, upon lfl undlplnclabte
ally 1oe111r. Hthlrlll 1 mor1110 1lltt uaory
tor 1he future, H'a to coun1 IOILiy on
. . a,
youi'Mit.
Glllllll (..., .,....._ 211) You may
Thare . . lndlc&amp;tlonu In the y.- uhJucl . 10 .... wl1h .. lndlvlclual who,. clll1tut you lillY .,,., 11110 a purlnerahfp -rlcilly appou~ 10 -•llllooljj you
wl1h a penon who II reo .-oucl lOr good favor loclay. Neftha&lt; onu'1 ~rg~~menll
luck. Some of H!MY rub off on you.
uru Nkely to be LlrllfiG :nough 10 -Y
AQUAIIIUS (,_ 211 Fell. 11) Your l h a -. .
fudgmenlehoukl be,._ good loday, CANCIII (,... 21-- D) Conii~M lo
pert11n1ng to thlngl 1hl1 un.ct you lnclf. . IIIOIIIIor your ..,_MIIIurll wl1h pru- .
'lldullly.
- ·ID- COVLryou
8X1WidH dence. Thla II 1101 1 good tlmt to llkt
'fOUl
eveiU&amp;IIonu
Olhorl,
on any IOnO-hlfm llnanclll obllgatlonl.
could tie IU01hlt elory. Know wlln to It could put you 111111 awkwllrd 1)0111ton
IOOIC'IOr romence and you'll lind H. Thl down the line.

•I \

•=•...,
,.

a

Plumbing lo

Hilling

C ALII,='IIIhv
US?ft

I

I

o

&lt;IJNikla

~-toiu

H1nd Tufting

.

l e i - and Mrs. Klllg

Slerto.

,.,..........u.............

,

1111 De

CGurt Q
CD Nlwewaleh
lltlll sweo. Q .
..0llllli';.rlla
VIle Stureo.

lf1WII.

.,.._,

. ....,,

(I) (J) e

(JJ Nlghl

Lollar .................. ""'

wl1ll -

. . . -4:00 I'll-...

:::.-.
, ,:.,.r:-~

111.,1m••

11:00 (J) e

Ollloa
.. Coull ...... -

18 Wlnted to Do

UPIIOISTRY

·~
f0:30 18
CNOk 111d Chuue

.;a;. .-=.,•..... .

-.ColT==
·:r ......
..,...

,.,,.,

.

1111 700 ClUb With I'll

DONE IT!!

12

•

446-6000

TIME IS WHAT

Roull
. ..
. . .....
. . . .- .
LJIJ
..
'"
Jl7l.

rlilllllan,OH1~

SI'IIIN.G VAWY noltiJIONAliUII.DING
106 JACKSON rfKE · SUm lOJ
GA~. OHIO .UJI

LIKE THEY SAY,
LUKEY-"T/ME HEALS
ALL WOUNDS"

C11 CNN Evening Nawa

fiJI Nawu

eo; liON 1-INTIR

•ON-SITE. SERVICE/REPAIR
•CUSTOM PROGI!.AMMING
"SALES
•ON-SITE CUSTOM TRAINING

a.. .tlon

LOOK AT THAT
KNOT ELVINEY
PUT ON MY
PUN KIN HAlO !!

• .., p 9 , . , ... .....,......

.......
. . . . , cay
.....Llllll1a.
,

lllle sw Trek: ThL Naxe

BARNEY

~

-

111 eo••ae lllkMbJill
10:00 (JJ Now&amp;
([j Catfe .__ An uptllle
New York COHN hOUae
· receives a tribute lor ~s 30
r~am quality muiicil f. ..

c;

1111....

--

Stereo. 1;1

1111
IIJ) • D:Jiinlng · Julia's slrange behavior haa
everyone atlhe Sugarbakera
baffled. Slerao. Q

THAT I GAVE
Ntf Nail. FOR

Puwrra,, U7l

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

::-::."'flldr
.......
.............'~..:l
. ..
=-:. :==~P!·=··
....

11oft. " ' ••• . . .

fuo.

llofwn-.-.-h,
= ~·· Chial•c
~
..,_
OaTeola. Olllo:
OIIIOa ' 1 1ft 1:00 A.M. ....
....... .,..
L'TT..
"1:'1=
.... ..........
••••HJa 1 twil)
•
art•~·-~to
.... IIi ... to palwcii;

biiiiUWii tlll&amp;ne.

,

.

ta~a. IW•n ,._....,.

::.,: •• hI

u.d

. . . . r,.;::• . . . .

~

"The view lllnka.
I take a piCture of my
Wile lllndlng In front of y011r van?"

\&gt;

•

=-

LEO (olulr

a-a,..

Ill) . Even !hough

you're Mkely lo JOIIcH lldltk:e from
frlendl today. lhelr eugguutlonu may
hava lilt. Impact; you'N apt to clo
thlnga - you ...m.ny lnltnducl.
VIIQO (Alii- . . . . . II) Thare • I
poulblllly you mlgll1 - - lOr lfl
aatgnmenl 10&lt;1ay 11111 II beyond you( •
cup0ftl1i&amp;J. Your gclod lnl&amp;nltonu wt11
counator H111e Hyou toullhlnQI up.
LIMIA '(lepl. D-Oot. Ia) You're In 1
ralhor lucky cycl&amp;, provlclecl you do nol
lake crl1tcalluctora lor grunlucl. U1Uiz8
yaurluc:k, bu1 111o drew upon your tal·
en11 and uperllle.
.
~0111'10 (Oot. 14 Maw. II) Tiling&amp;
could be 1 lrllla unH1IIuclln your.,_.
hold loduy, you lillY 1na1ut on doing werylhlng 'fOUl own Wllf, while your fMII
1\u the Pact oppollte In mind. Stop
clluNng and aterl coopurlllng.
IAGIJTAIIUS (Nor. tl lu. 21) H'l
imp0111n1·10 kiiP 'fOUl
proper
pwupec1tve10&lt;11¥. 1:-.lhOugh you're
ll&lt;ely 10 -tllln1&lt; 111 ......... IJrml, you
!MY JIIII-'OOit I number ol-'111
dellllll.
CAI'MCOMI (Ilea. D tl) Try 10
be JOCutl1)'sil.ldecl NgUrdtng 'fOUl
prlz8d p l
IIIII&amp; tCJCIIIY. Mnol, you
mlglrt find - • llldng 1 ' - to
aorne1tllng you'N UJP I cllly fond of

r-.tn

. youi'MII. • .

I !,r,.;:;~

:.

Com~lol4o
by lollong

lllo ."huckl1 quot.cl
In t1ou Milling -do
you do•olop from 110p No. 3 bulow .

'

o.- 11"

....

NORTH

BIUDOI

1-ll·tt

tAQH

.••a
....,.
•w

By Jumea Juroby
It's rare lbese days for a jump to
tuee diaiiiOIIda to be a pme-forcing
bid, but !bat wu part of North-South's
system. Malt experts prefer to pl1y

three diiiiiOIIda In lbla llltuatlOD u a

limit ln'ritalional bid or even a preemptive bid. Any1ray Weat'a r1lae to
three hearts released North from the
obligltian ·of. biddlnc. lie paued ·It
around to South, wbo bid three spades,
more to pve North ane Jut chance tO
bid three 110-trump lbal1 for aaytbln1
elae. But North relied to four spades,
and South decided to sit it out.
Wt!lll. led the king of hearts and
awilcbed to the queen of clubl. U cJe.
darer WOD the club and illlllltdlately
played K·A-Q of tram.., boplnc for a
S.lspllt, be would be aet. 'Welt would
trump In 011 the third diamOIICI, and the
defenders would cub two more quick
beart tricks. Instead South protected
apinlt the more common 4-2 trump
split. He played a low spade fi'Qm both
his hand and the.dumm~. Tbe defend·
ers were now belplea. AI. soon as declarer 8ol back on lead be caabed king
of spaclel and then the f!·Q. Tbe diamonds now r&amp;D to provide plenty of

EAST

Wl!ST
tJtS3

.KQ5

2

.... 10172

•u

au

•u~•

.QJ 10 3

·'

SOUTH

•u

tKU

.QIU7h

.... .t ·

.'

.••

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: North

,

Nardo

P•

Opening leed: ' K

". .,

.,'

_..rt

tricks.

What aboilt East's
owercall? That's not really the etyle of aay
aeaaible

periOD, bolt

aometm. pley· ..

en pt carried away by f.-.ble ..

... ,.

vulnerability.

CROSSWORD
by THOMAS JOSEPH

1:30111 1121e Malor 0ac1 VIce
Proaldenl .Dan Quayle makes a gueaa·!Ppoaranco. (R)

* ., .............. -.
t; t ·1::tl...
~
,......
W~lrn:...,- "'- ;;::;
u1IPIIe h olodof In ...., """'
=-:•
...... PhOne
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dol. .,

...........

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.
................-................
...... • '1111....:

IAL£ Ill Qalllpola

2122.
.... ~--.11.........
.._ eoUIII oa•J •• &amp;MD.
puMio ..... ,. iillblotloiw.

Wt HaM (MngM Our Ltmtieft To
llh Miles East on lt. 241 tlwough
c~~est... 011.

1..mng Illude,

IDIINutyWidlh&amp;IMIIQ
1:01 (I) MOVII!: 'l1la a11mo (2:.1)

•

1111111

a•

8 PilecwNaaa

· I olrlc,
loJd.
~~~~~

=
:l
_............ -

OLLER'S CUSTOM BENDING

Cll Live From Uncoln c.Siereo.
(!) T....,.. Stereo. 1:1

Storeb. Q

111
..liP,....
-,_:.110;
....... 1G11
Wllh
-l..oadaf·II·.J,Will
........ 1!4 •

Business Services

-1.

eOn ...

It Farm EqulpiMnt

IDI'I -

IDUI/rhythm rnd bluea,
c:oun1ry, helvy
rap
unci dance are hilnorucl. (L)
(3:00)

LNguee Under lha IH
(2:00)
.
IOl Utleolved Ml/&amp;..rlel A
possible link . , . _ , 1he
Son of Sam murcters and a
cull Is found. Stureo. Q
tiJI Murder, 8ha Wrote .

411-'ftft

ae

w w•

Amlfla111 Mullc
awlf'Ciu Ar11111 Of pop/rock,

Staieo. D

IN'a. ~ -

C1Jr1ooo
. . - ...... -

7:311 Cll llntonl .and Son
8:00 (J) • Colllga lllak&amp;llllll
(JJ Colllge talkllllll

lllle MCIVII: 20,000

~ T.,_,
air - · · 4 ""'lla1h, •oa.
1 1o2
1.111 01 Ia·

-

IIICfOIIflre

Wood and ' Ava remlnlabOut Avl'a election vlc1ory.

• ._ of
-..JPrloodTo_Coll_

eklerty

Th-··

llll•
Comjllny
ID
eonaa• lllkellllll

1111

. ALLEY OOP

1110 lar.lau
14li70~
......
with I 7124

:=':!c.I

..

7;30~ u~·Jbcop, d~,~ Q

110....,. . ....-_~

IIIPOUUIID HOMII

...... i&amp;pflllnlllltve.
11 ,.
.............. lllhllleok·

lfTELLICIENCE

a.a•.

7 ...- Ill gill• red ~ " " -

...... 6 ......... 1100 ....,,
lor twlonil ~C.....­
Con;- •
. ... piing
of IIIII. - - - ... ..... ~ton Of APR. ~recllt. .lohn hltey,

II ON T.V. ....., -

7

... .

7:01 (I) Hippy .,.,.

Looldna lor..-.~... ~~- 114-

......n,l1t111AM.

111 'ill .,. ..

eel

8ca~ and Mta. King

QH.

c.o., -

.,.. Pl. I'll. -

"""

1 1 1 - &amp;1.

.

SCIIAM-Lm ANSWIIS

!.l!:==Q··
l ,=~~a_

58

.

.•

.'
Nephew- Sadly ..;. Title - Impair -THIRTY
A mother of lour teena~ers was goinQ on a trip. "How
••
long will you be gone? I asked. Sm1llng she replied,
"For THIRTY meals!"
,...:..---·- - - - - -.....,

· (I) I DIMin of J...-"'11e

31 Hom• fOr S.le

h~

I
I'· I I' I 8

1:31 (I) Anclv Qrlfflth
E~IJie

~}'"j

I' I' I' I
I I I I I I I I .I

II&amp;,'W:rQ
Real

IJ

2 I' I" 1
1 I'
• r:;~:R~UMBfRED I' 1

w•a-1c-S
IDUpCIOH

r Ml·

A' R

I
!!Hended a very posh
, 5
Weddtng. While 111 the buff~
1 ·
~ • . table I ovemeard one guesl
L-...L.....&amp;..,-1.--J--J:..
~Y to another, 'This marriage
......- - - - - - - will never last. He's camp rrre
WE V L I ·S
and she's ......... •

a--.

•1:30~· tiJ NIC

2

S H CA M
T'

ID loll DIIIIIIC

,

j

..

'::~::' SCCll~lA-~£b#se:
loy CUY F. "OIUIII

Television ·
'
Viewing

torRent

Announcement~

The Dally Sa ltiiNI Paga 9
I

'ltureo.Q
Amerlol Tonlgllt

~=-

• ......,.Tanlght
11:31Cil ~ Y9llflllllly
'f"e11!11 IGI (2:00)
(I) CliMra Q
.
12:00(1) .............. Slareo.

lllle Pwty M1ahlloe Willi

Nl8 Pttplta

D .............
0 'l1la .......,
18tiEbht.INow

.

IDeo:
... llllkfllblll ·
.............

ACROSS
DOWN
1 Con game 1 Barber
5 Scandina·
pole
via native
feature
9 Uncle
2 Eye part
Tom's
3 Came to
creator
4 Whimper.
· 10 Bikini, for 5 Cham
one
workplace
12 Quiver
6 Had a bite
unit
7 Mannerly
13 Stop
8 O'Hara
between · 28 Convenes
14 Piano
sighls
23 Rickles or 29 Silent one
sound
9 Gluls
Knolls ·
(sl.)
16 Tavern
11 Wildcat
17 Fencing
15 Malicious 24 Zhivago's 30 American
portrayer
linch ·
need
k&gt;ok
25 Wadding 33 •Jeop·
18 Whirl,
111 Yoked
' wear
ardy" is
wind .
beasts
26 Man of
one
21 Red or
20 Disen·
Dead ·
cumber
the church 35 Pester
36 Nlnoo_m·
22 Fairies
22 Tyler· · 27 Harmonize
poop
23 Handed
Taylor go·
oul
24 Hot, in a
way
26 Hoover, ~
for one
29 Thickset
30 Ballet
leap
31 Far
from
strict
32 Compare
34 Sports
site
37W~oie
38 Gih·
. slricken
. king
39 Computer
pictures
40 Mists ·
41 Area
DAILY CRYPTOQU(TI'ES- Here's how lo work It: 1128

'
'I

'

•

I

'

.·

AXYDLBAAXR
IILONGFELLOW

•'
•
'

.

· One letter stands fot another. In this sample A is used
for the three L's, X tor the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and flinn1Uon of the words are all
·. hints. Each daf the code letters are dlrfennt.
CRYPTOQUOTES

'

~j~ot~

•
cCCnr
......

'.,
"
''

..
...
•

Dltllllt'llldllaltletQ ,.

12:GI(I)III(IIIIIntQ
1:11:30 (J). tiJ Lela NlgM Willi
Dnld LMIIelllllfl
(I) ......
18 lllrtr MFCIIN Willi Nil

'

l

. I

R

ARY

YWKWN

SYCHE

•

UCH

I

r• '
1

QC

ERZ

Y WK W N

MCCJTZW:

:5 Y C H E

R

HCARY

HUWY

•

'

QC

l2:31 (I) W. Caw aallan

1:01f11:.:.~Q

!le1tur1•1
0 MrdERlf'll'llot
1811tftaTOCIIIY

Dllllllfllld~ltMIQ

ERZ

BQ. - UWOWY
NCHORYJ
y_._..,,,
Cr,,.,....., THE BEST LIAR IS HE

WHO MAKES THE SMAll EST AMOUNT Of LYING
GO THE LONGEST. WAY. -SAMUEL Bun.ER

.'
I

•
•

•

�.... . -

•

•

Monday• .hwlu-v 2s. 1991

Poma-ov-Middlaport. Ohio

l'llgl

THIS

&lt;

&lt;

Kyger Creek

1990 Local Schedules

Ohio

girls defeat
Eastern 52- 39

WEEK'S
GAMES

'
Lottety

•

Pick 3: 440
Pick 4: 5359
Cards: J·H; 5-C;
8-D; J·S

Page 7

Low toolrh&amp; aear 31. Chaace of
h!Zia&amp;" rain 100 perceat. Wedesday, hiJb Ia mid 30s. ChiUice
f rain 7G percent.
•·
•

•

SOUTHERN
BOYS .·.·
feb .1-llyger Cr11k, Away
Feb. 1-Symmts Vallly, Home

GilLS

1 Section, 10 Pogo•

Jan. 21-Waterford, Away .
Jan. 31-Kyger ~rttk, Home

1,258 jobs hinge

MEIGS
BOYS

.

.

GilLS
Jan. 21-ltlpre, Away
Jan. 31-AIIxandtr, Away

~pliance . .bY . American that lhc initial cost of the plant con- Power is Slarting discussions with
EICC111c Power With lhe complex struction in the mid-1970's was interested groups to review apand COSily Clean Air Act amended $600 million. The public affairs plicaiions of the complex and
by Congress lale last year col;lki.. vice
presiiledt
emphasized, cosdy Clean Aii Act amended by
. mean the loss '?f.h~ of Me1gs · however, that "no decisions bave Congress lare last year.
.
ColD!~ ~ IDlDIDR JObs.
been reached yet, that cutrendy the
Beginnins this wee!~, in a series
~iniuy sllldies con~f:CC! by. company is just doing preliniuiary .of meetings with gO'iemmein.al
. ~ i.ndi&lt;;ale that fuel SWitching af analysis.
· leaders, industrial and residential ·.
Ga:vm may procluce the lower cost
Ron · McDade manager of · customers, .regulatcrs, coal. industry · ·
of COlJipliance for Ohio Powet: cus- Colunibus Soub Electric: Co
rapresentallves, and envuorunentomm. However, ~an action, if whk:h setves Gallia and
talisls, AEP will discuss the impact
taken. would mike It ~sary. to Counties, attended Monday's ses- of changes in the aean Air Act and
close an AEP-owned mme m Me1gs sion. A press release submitted by the need to tate some steps this
County ~t employa 1,258 pec!ple McDade said American Electric ·
Continued on page 6
and proviCics most of the plant's
·

EASTERN
&lt;

&lt;

feb. 1-North Gallia, Home
Feb. 5-Ftd~rai·Hocking. Away

Meip

GilLS
Jan. 31-North Gallia, Away
feb. 4-Haillllln Trace, Hamt

SOUTHERN

Nov. 27-North Gellle ............ Home
Nov. 30-Hennan Trace .......... Home
Dec. 4-Eettem ............... ...... Away
Dec. 7-Sou1:hweatern,,,,,,., Away
Dec. 8-Pelnt Valley .............. Convo
Dec. 1 4-Kyger Creek .........,. .. Home
Dec. 16-Symmea Valley .... ,:.. Away ·
. Dec. 21 -Oak Hill .................. Away
Dec. 22-Southeettem ........... .. Home
Dec. 28-Athena .................... Awly
Jen. 4-Nort!l Gallili ............... Away
Jan. 6-Gellipolil ................... Away
Jan. 1 1-Hannan Trace ........... Away
Jan. 18-Eettern ........... ......... Home
Jan. 22-Ravenewood ............ Away
Jan. 26-Southweatern .......... H'ome
Feb. 1-Kyger Creek ..... .. ........ Away
Feb. 8-Symmas Valley .......... Home
Feb. 1.J-Warren .................... Away
· Feb. 1 &amp;-Oak Hill ................... Home

SOUTHERN

Farmers

· j.,., ~ ·Bank

I

.

~opti':;::~;

C

"l

port ouncz,
=~~.~tin~~ supports stage project .·

according to an ABP spokesman.
· ·
·
One of tbe least cost options
By JULIE E. DILLON
program similar to that of Star Mill .
Melp Couaty a·~· Plaalq C-'r 1•.
DEVELOPMENT SPECIALIST • SliD Craw·
which they are obliged to pursue by .
Seotlael News Stall'
Park in a&amp;eine where a night of enPlctaftd, left to
b'- an Brace Reed, CI'IIW·
ford, a developmRt speclalkt witb tbe Oblo
the
Public
Utilities
Commission
or
tenainment would be held weekly
ford, aod Melp · mty Cluuilier Executive •
Cooperative Exteasloo Sen-tee gave a five-poiDt ·
Ohio
does
include
fuel
switching,
'I'IIlee
bids
for
the
construction
during
the summer. He went on to
list at advke iD tbe area ol commuolty develop· .• Director Elizabeth Sdu111i. .
and
if.
that
were
to
happen,
it
could
of
a
new
stage
area
at
Dave
Diles
say
that
if this were inlplemented
meat at Mooda:f's quar:terly meetiag or tbe
mc:an the closing .Of lhe Meigs ·Park were inlmdnrl'd to Middleport thai perhaps the businesses in MidMines 2 and 31, Luke M. Fed:, Village Cooncil by Bob Gilmore, a dleport would stay open 1a1tz to
e~gs
~~;~~~affairs, CE'~SC:UragvAs:c.::,n~ ·· =~:~ing for those who
·
"I buleD. to add, howevet:, that day night's regular 1J1e1!1inJ of the
Gilmore also· requested a pledge
we are talkiDJ with a number of counciL Bids ware submilled by or ftnancial s~ from Mid·

SCHEDULE~$~~~-MEIGS

Dec. 1-Athens .. ...... : ............. Horne
Dec. 4-Belpre ....................... Away
Dec. 1 1 -Miller ............. .. ... ~ ... Home
Dec. 14-VInton County ......... Hilma
Dac. 1 8-AieXIInder .......... , .... Away
Dec. 21 -Wellston ......... ... ..... Home
Dec;. 28-~gan .... '............•.... .Away
Jail. 4-Trimble ... ...... ............. Away
Jan. 8-Federal Hocking ......... Home
Jan. 1 1 -Nelaonville-York ....... Away
Jan. 1 &amp;-Belpre ..................... Home
Jan. 22-Miller ...................... Away
Jan. 26-Vinton County ......... Away
Jen. 29-Aiaxandet ................ Home
. Feb·. 1-Welltton .. ........ .......... Away
Feb. 2-Athens ......... ............ ,Away
Feb. &amp;-Warren ...................... Home
Feb. 8-Trimble ......... ............. Home ,
Feb. 12-Federal Hocking ....... Away
.Feb. 16-Nelsonvllle-York... .... Home

_...._....____.GIRLS'
Nov. 12 -Nelaonvllle·YOrk ..... .. Away
"Nov. 19-Melga ..................... Away
Nov. 21-North Gallla ........ : ... Away
Nov. 29-Hannan Trace .......... Away
Dec. 3-Eattem ..................... Horne
Dec. 1-Southwettern., ..... ..... Horne
Dec. 1 O.;...Kyger Creek ............ Away
Dec. 13-Symma Valley ......... Horne
Dec. 1 7-Watertord ............... Horne
Dec. 20-0ak Hill .................. Horne
Jan. 3-North Gellla ............... .Horne
Jan. 1 0-Hennan Trace ....... ... Home
Jan. 14-Meiga ......... ............. ·Home ·
Jen. 1 1-Nelsonville-York ....... Home
Jan. 17-Eettern .................... Away
. Jan. 24-Southwettem .......... Away
Jan. 28-Waterford ................ Away
Jan. 31-Kyger Creell.. ;....... ,.. Horne
Feb. 4-0ak Hill ....... :.........~ ... Away
Feb. 7-Symmes·Valley .......... Away

Middle

coal supply. Gavin COIISUIIICI1 about

...,;,..--.......,-BOYS'

..,'lt;'\"'iil_.., ·"

'

on AEP decision

Jan. .29-AIIxander, Home
Feb. 1-Wellston, Away

.BOYS

26 Canto

A Muhlmedla Inc. Newapopor

Nov. 20-MIIIer:..................... Away
Nov. 23-Federal Hocking ...... Home
Nov. ~7-Kyger Creek .... : .. ,.... Away
Nov. 30-Southwestern ......... Horne
DEC. 4-Southern .................. Home
Dec . .?..:.Symmes Valley .......... Away
Dec. ,4-North Gallia ............ Away
Dec. 16-0ak Hill ........... .... ..'.. Home
Dec. 18-Watarford ............... Home
Jen. 4-Kyger Creek ....... ........ Home
Jan. 11-Southweatern .......... Away
Jan. 1 &amp;-Hannan Trace .......... Home
Jan. 18-Southem ................. Away
Jan. 26-Symmes Valley .........Horne ·
Jan. 28-MRier ...................... Horne
Feb. 1.-North Gallia ...... .. ....... Horne ·
Feb. &amp;-Federal Hocking ......... Away
Feb. 8-0ek Hill ..................... Away
Feb. 12-Weterford ................ Away
Feb. 16-Hannan trace ... ....... . Away

MEIGS

Dec. 3-M iller .....•....•........•.. .. Away

Dec. 8-Eaatern ...... ............... Home
Dec. 10-.,Nelsonvllla-York ...... Away
Dec. 13-Belpre ..................... Home
Dec. 17-Aiexender ............... Home
·Dec. 20-Wellaton ................. Away
J41n. 3-Federel HC!cking ......... Home
Jan. 7-Trimble ...................... Away

Jan. 1 0-Vinton County ....... .. Home
Jan. 14-Southern "" ''""""""' Away
Jan. 17-Miller ...................... Horne
.tan. 21-Eettem .................... Away
Jan. 24-Nellonville-York.: ..... Horne
Jan. 28-Be!pre ................... .. Away
.Jan. 21-Aiexender ............... , Away
Feb. 4-Welleton ....... ;........ :... Home
"eb. ?-Federal Hocking .... , , .. , Away

·,

f p • ls
OlJ,nty OJJ lCUl

f. •
• t
~Jtve·por,n

lQ.

p .- n

· •·

·
d
·are presente

By ~RIAN J, REED

8eatlael News Staff

clan

E~~=~~;:·=r~

EASTERN

Nov. 19-Federal Hocking ...... Home
N11v. 21-Kyger Creek., .......... Home
Nov. 29-Southwestern ......... Away
Dec. 3-Southern ................... Away
Dec. &amp;-Trimble .... , ................ Horne
Dec. 8-Symmea Valley .......... Hoine
. Dec. 8-Miligs .............. ..... .... Away
Dec. 10-North Gallia ............. Home
Dec. 13-0ak Hill .................. Away
Dec. 20-Hennan Trace .......... Away
Jan. 3;:-Kyger Creek ............... Away
Jan. 9-Trimble .......... ...... ...... Away
Jan.10-Southwestern ........... Home
Jan. 14-Federel Hocking ..... .. Away
Jan. 17-Southem ................. Home
Jan. 21-Melga ...................... Home
Jan. 24-Symmea Valley .. ;..... Away
Jan. 31-Nortll Gallia ............. Away·
Feb. 4-Hennen Trace ............ Horne ·

·

to · tmpr.~ ~nomy-· sl';h:t:J:':-se:;:~ =:a~=~~~ ~~~:=~~

new businesses get started. Work·
ing with entrepeneurs helps communities in developing a good local
A five-point
for improving . business base.
economic deve opmen1 in M~gs
The final step in Crawford's list
ColUlty was presented to the Meigs was to k~ money in the comCotu~ty Regional Planning Commission when it met in regular session on Monday afternoon.
Sam Crawford, a District Exten· cal buying between businesses and
sion Specialist from JacksQn, industries.
presented the plan to the board
Anothet: important point siressed
a!Qng with three new county profi- by. Crawford ycstenlay was the
les compiled by the Ohio Stare value of local effort in community
University's Cooperative Extension eeonomic development
Service.
."Whatever happens." Crawford
The lint point, according to said, "will be because of whal hapCrawford, is to attract outside finns pens through people in Meigs
to the area. · Locatio~ like Meigs County, not what state and federal
County, Crawford pomted out, of· agencies 01' money do."
ten find this a difficult goal due to a
In other busineas, the commisIact of access to· the .IIUifkels that sion re-elected Middleport Mayor
new businesses need.
Fred Hoffman as its President
Rlaal areas .e ol'ten plagued yesterday, and elected Owles
with a lack of good sires, Crawford Blakeslee as its Executive Director,
said, and devefopment of such new
business sites is the second important step toward community
deve~nL According to Craw- ·
fol'd, potenlial locations sltou1d of, · fer,. at .the least, sewer, watel' and
three-phase electrical service.
Thirdly, Crawford said, recention
and expansion of existing businesA mobile home belOnging to
ses is crucial Jo economic Crystal
Simpson of Syracuse was
devclopmenL 'lb4l key to SIK:cess in destroyed by fire on ~y.
this step, Crawford told the comAccording to Meigs County
mission, is to. "recapture tax dol- Emergency
Medical Scnoices,
. Ian" (i.e. learn to lake advantage of
Racine
and
Syracuse
fill:
community grants and other special deparunents responded
to
the fire
funding):
on Quroll · Street in Syracuse at
The founh step in successful 11:02 a.m.
communiiy economic development,
At press time, lire department
accll'llin~ to Crawford, is helping
personnel were on t1!e scene of

.'

SCHE.DULES~....._~........--

Nov. 19-Southern ................ Home
Nov. 26-Trimble .................. ~ Home
Nov. 29-Vinton County ......... Away

c.

•
M

EASTERN

~orne

BruCe Reed as First Vice President, ·
John Rice as ~d Vice Presi·
dent, Joyce Bowen as its Acting
Secretary, and George Collins as iiS

Treasurer.

guidance as we pursue the Icasi
cost alternative," he continued.
Peck talked about the hi¥h suiph... content ot the coal mined in
M,eigs County lnd noted that to put
acrubbers in at the Gavin plant
would cost $800 million. He said

He stated that a portion of the
money could be raised through '
fund-raising events . held by tfJe
Middleport' Community ·Association. ··
After discussion, council on· · Continued on page 6
'

Union steps up camp·aign
· again
. st RAC
About
1,700 workers at
The United Steclworten union
· has SleppCd up its ~(II apinst Ravenswood Aluminwn bave been
RavelliWOOd Aluminum COrp., an· oft' the job since their contract ex:
noiDICin" plans to enlist political . piredNov. 1,1990. Union members
and buSiness le8ckn in · bids fOI' ssy they. were locked out, but the
· support and ~~:Cnsing the company company saya they are on strike.
Ravamvood ofllcials say they
of bl!d-faith balpining.
· .
had filed a petition in cin:wt court
The union, on behalf of United seeting to have lhc union found in .
Steelworkeas of America Local contanpt of an order designed to
5668, ll1ed an amended complainl ·hold down vialenc:e.
with lhe National Labor Relations
The company his hired 750
Board in which it II:Cused IeJ!Iacernent ~ and said it
Ravenswood of trying to influence will hire more when it restarts an
alwninwn line.
01' coerce employ~
The union earlier accused
Ravenswood with bad faith bar·
gainin~but withdrew those c~
., '
and
an expanded complaint,
which covm Sept 1, . 1990,
through Ian. 16, die last fedaal
mediation session.
•
The union said it decided to expand its complaint bl!canse
another slrUCture tire and wi!re un- Ravenswood announced at the Ian .
able to report on dama~.
that it·had no coniJact

is destroyed

by ftre in Syracuse

Feb. 7-0ak Hill ................. .... Home

Hapney.
·
·
The proposed structure, approximately 25 feet by 35 feet and
open on all sides, would provide a
covered area for various activities
that take place at the part.
.Gilmore sugested starting a

otfer pending.
"At that meeting, they announced there was nothing to
negotiate because .liS last offer had
e~ired two months earlier," the
unton said. "But it failed to explain
why it participated in fo~ bargaining sessiOIIll smce that time without
protesting or even noting the lack
of a proposal."
Ravenswood Alwninwn declined
comment on lhc action.
But it has filed a complaint in
Jackson County Circuit Coun contending that pickets are responsible
for violence and vandalism at the
plant
Special Circuit Judge Fred Fox
issued an ooler Dec. 7· limiting the
number of flickels to six at plant
entrances and prohibiting lhmlts,
harassment, weapons, and other
acts that could cause violence.
The company said two dozen
vehicles have lieen damaged, in·
128 Ules and 10

windshields.
A hearing is scheduled Thursday
before Fox in Ripley, a court of6.
cial said.
·
In addition, · the company in·
creased the reward it is offering for
infonnation that will lwl to the
conviction of whoevet: is responsible for the shooting of a plant
security guard.
The reward, which was S10,000,
has been doubled. It is being paid
for lhrou$h donations by hourly
and salaried employees, the company said.
..
Also Monday, the union said it
would meet Jan. 31 with "business
and community leaders from the
Ravenswood and Ripley areas io
explain the lUlion's posillon."
On Feb. 7. the union said, its
leaders will meet in Washington
with West Virgjnia 's congressional
delegation and 'u.s. Sens. Howard
Metzenbaum and John Glenn of
Ohio.

Southern board hires two
substitute teachers Monday

ir , ~

,~ ·

Two substitute teachers, SheUy

-R. DuBose and Jeffrey Batet:, were
hired at Monday niglt's meeting or
the Southan Local Board of
, Education and Gwen Sayre was
hired as a substitute ccxK.

Police probe wreck

..

.'

·-

&lt;

I,

Pomeroy police are continuing 10
investlpte an incident which QC•
cumd at the intersection of Cbestet
Rold and Nyc Ave. Saturday afltr·
nom. Aa:oldin&amp; to lhe police
report, Donald Bunce of Middlepod, bid IIOPIIed • .the trafllc
~ when a boiife sauck lhe door
window on lhc left side of his 1986
FOrdlnJCk. The window WIS shatteted, it -reporllid.It bu.not yet
been deteoDined from where the
boale- thrown.
.'f .

'

Appointed to the Commission
Budget Committee were Bobby
Ord. superlnlen4ent; Denny Hill,
treasurer; and Denny Evans, board
president
The board also amended the Tide
6B budaet which increased by
$284.
'.Micbaela Kuclma, .Soulhern
j
~-;~ 't'"....;
. Junior Hip Principel. reponed to
.
.- ( --. the board that the math JIID8f8111 at
the juniOI' blgh will be improved
and tmt the.pncra1 math pro£ralil
will be reiDstWd
.
•
Joyce Rilddc and Jan Hill, Olapter I, ~led IIIII tbare will be a
rodeo II the Meigs Coanlr Fair ·
Grounds on ~10. Cbapla' I will L-;;;;;-;;;;;;;:-:--;.;:::=:-;:--;;:;;::::-::::-:::=:---:::::-::::::::-::~
~'lbe~
~
SNOW STOPPER - Not everyoae Ia GalUpolll was IIICicy
aociw lllo"er paued tbnqll, a lew took to tile eutdoera wWt
b the Buckeye odeo Com
ea0111b to re&amp; iDow &amp;bill moralar, u a .._
8hower" bit alaa&amp;
llbo¥el1 iD baud to clear away 10me oltbe- to &amp;wo l.._af-.w
Y.
lhvilfe. R
PIIIY . Eaatero Aveaue aro.-4 8:10 a.m. n- Madlq dowa Eaatera
tbat had lallen. Pldlll'ed g Darrell Fellare u beclelre a_, moW
outofNas · e.
Aveaae drove tbrourb wbat ~eeliled to bed- lor. Just u tbe
l,alroatoflbel!uperlorCarW&amp;ab. (TrlbuaepllotobJKrlsCocbl'lll) ,

·-·

.

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&lt;

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