<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="10911" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/10911?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-07T06:53:06+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="41877">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/0abc9c3d339e622b59434299828bbcbd.pdf</src>
      <authentication>067a6f9225d8391ea0ae4f532e4ae085</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="34450">
                  <text>•

'
c

'Th_e

By. The .Bend
/
r----

.

'

. - ·

-

..

·

Angry fans take over theater
ALBANY, N.Y. (UPI)- Alter
a prqjectli&gt;n room malfunction
rubbed out the sound In the final
10 minutes ·of " The Godfather
m, ••angry moviegoers occupied
the theater ·for an hour until
pollee arrived .and made them an
offer they couldn't refuse, a
newspaper repOrted.
A broken "exciter bulb"
knocked off t1Mi film's sound at
Hoyt's Cinema In a suburban
Albany mall Friday night as 75
people prepared to watch the
film's climax, the Albany Times
Union reported.
An unidentified theater employee offered the patrons free
passes to another shOWing, ·but
the audience responded with
shou Is of "Rewind It! "
The employee finally agreed to
rewind the film and promised
free passes. But after the ending
was sbown again. as a talkie this
time, the· employee and the free
passes could not be found.
The moviegoers headed for the
unoccupied . concession stand
looking for passes, and banged on

' door of the projection room.
the

Lallden: I was a

happy, comenlied WOIIIIIII unlit five
~~ ago., This is old fl!"ri~ now,
.tiut u .conunoes 111 .cause pam .00
Clilba!'rassmenL
1 found out dial my busblnd was
exposing himself )II ow .next-door
IICighbor while 1 wu JRIIllllt with

under7 Me. DuriJ1g·thecourse of our

· separalion my story beCiiine known

to family members and professiona1s; I· now knoW dlat this problem
req~ intense therapy and some.. limes even ihat fails 10 set things
righL ;
·
.
My husband refuses to have
therapy. 1lle more I'm iround him,
the mon: lfeel that something isn't
rigiL My pOOiml is that I can'tto ,......,
-·'-· :.
__ ....,__ , wt'"--·•
...,. .
• .........,.....y
.....,.. .....
man even thouah I don't bave ..y
real feelings for him. I believe
SliOngly in family life and he is a
wonderful fi!lber.lf 1 can'tliw: without him, how can I live with him?.DESPERATE IN . A SOUTIIERN

our second child. She became frightened and repcxted him 10 the police.
I was shocked and IDCally dcvastalied.
I 11m two small chikllen and "•ell
that I had no choice but Ill forgive

himandgo®.Noonetoldmeabout
the potential da11gers of this
sickness. O;ur relationship was badly
damaged and I have been an
emotional WJeclc ever since I found
ouL ·
I try to forget, but we ·still 'live
next door to these peaple and it's a
cont!~u~ iource of anguish and
hunulialion for me. I cannot look
the woman in the eye and try to
avoid her whenever posstble. It does
not seem to faze my husband in the •
leasL He flatly refuses to inove.
We fmally separaled last year but
we've been ~ and forth with each
other six times. Guess who buckles

CITY

why you are so dependent on a man
you do not love and c:annoc respecL
When you fmd oot mote about yourself you will be in a betler pllsili9n
to either kick your husband, out
permanently or make an~
dation and learn to live with him

Eventually, another employee
told th«:~ crowd that since they had
seen the end of the film, no free
passe~ would be given out
•
The crowd refused to leave and
. OW OU
W
pollee were ' called about 1: ilO
peacefully.
.
a.m. Saturday.
. By UnUed Presa inlernatlonal
.
Dear
Ana Landers: I am 30 years
· ''The officers arrived and
old and have bad a cardiac paceworked It o~t sq the patrons got
The hlgbest-llvtng mammal In
free passes, and everyone wound the world Is probably tbe yak of maker for II yeaJS. My husband and
up happy," Jack Tanski, a Tibet and China, which occasion- I love to iravel but bccanse of the
Colonie Town pollee dispatcher, ally climbs to an altitudeof20,000 · lack of cOnsidelation lmd downright
rudeness of airport security
said Sunday.
feet.

N

Y

.
Kno

devolapmon-

..... tiJI ......... odell- '
- • tN of 1.1 milo It 1

dalllr af wluetlan, to flf·
--foriiCihonl
hundrld clollrl of.....,ltlon.
forth--~

The ..... for ..... !llallon

- I l l - I t 8:30 o'clock
e.m .. 8nd remeln untl
7 :30 o'clock p.m. Df Nid
. ly-ofthe

Bawd of E.._e Df
Molgo County, O.hlo
Evlllyn Cll... Cllllrman
Jone M. Frymyw, Dlreotar
Dltld: Dec.•• 1180
(1)7, 14.21,21, 4tc

NOTICI 01' ILICTION
Oft fiX looot In E Dt tlw·T., MIU UmltlltiOn
Ncltlcololllreby"""~

, . In punu..,.. Df I R..olutlon
... tile 1-.1 of EdUOitlon af

...

~~ ~ ':,'::::~

_.... on lhe 11th doy of
.......,. , 110..... Will
be lUll nlnldtol-ofthe

11"1'!1 Df ..W oubd._., It
1 lp 111111 Elootlon to be held
In tile loutllem
~·
........ Dl..... of Molgo

- COUIIIY. Olllo. It the._ ...

*'

...........................
.......... _., .... _
.....,..ofootlolltlllrein, on
the lth
af ,....,_,,
1110. tile • I lion af .....,.

lit of .......... I..- lor the
........ af . ountnt ....

,._.·
.... tu ......... lddl·
..... t8JI Df 4.0 milo It 1

_____ .........

- noit.n . cls4 4.0 milo
lor ..... _ ...............
tiMI. wlllslll•a• 111 eo forty

"'ntla •·· for

filii ,... f1lr _..Ita d m

-

. . . . . . . . . . . . 0 ......

a.m. .-InN.-.,._.
7:10 o•.- ,..._ of 11111s1
lef

...... COI&amp;Lif• CHilo
l•iii.-~~~&amp;Cfl.M-n

.... •. ,,,,., •• Dtt~
Dltld: Dee. •• '110

1117. t.t, Jt. H • .._

'

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT:
GENERAL ALLERGIST
~ (304) 675-1244

.
REVIEWING APPLICATONS • AmerkaD
Red CJ'OII pe.-aaellllla Me1p C0t111ty to _ ,
~~..=
.
f t aac1 provide t-rpacy a"""aoce.
to
lamillell w11o aeed food, dotbing or
sbelter. To date e!Kbt applications for usistance
· bave been reeelved. Here from tile left reviewing

applicadoDI 11ft C. J, Howelc!ed Crcas
Vobmteer , _ tile llaiiiiDatlla
, Bob Bye11
Melp C01111ty Db ector oiEmergeacy Services;

name - oil and gasoline trom the

_Avenue.
Acconling to Klein and another
resident - who did not give her

c.-

Rita Fieldl, local Red
representative; md
Phyllis Carry, ·asak*ID~ dlredor of. Emergeaey
Semces, Westem West Vlrglaill Chapter,
American Red Croa.
·

Jan

\!

c::;:

rree

busineSs

commissioner.
Also named Monday were
Ucklng Courtly .engineer Jerry
Wray ail director of transportation, and Charles Shipley as
highway safety director.

'

SURGEON GENERA~'S WARNING: Smoking
Causes Lung ·Cancer. Heart Disease.
Emphysema. And May Complicate Pregnancy_.

attempting to land at Ga)lla. By MELINDA POWERS
Melgs when he ran Into some
OVP Newa Staff
'
· An lnvestijl&amp;tlon Into Sunday's problems.
"He was on a non-directional
fatal airplane crash may take
beam
approach, his sight was
1110re than 12 months to turn up
clear,
and
he could be seen on the
evll;!enceas to why thecrart'\Vent
.
grourid,"
Yunilan
said of Whl.tdown; officials said Tuesday.
ney's
attempt
to
land.
"However,
Alan '(unnan, Investigator
• with the National Transportation he told the tower that he thought
S!ifety Board, _said Tuesday It he was too high and he decided to
could take 9-12 months or more tQ go back around. That's when the
sift through eyewitness accounts · crash occlirred."
Yurman and Fletcher had
and airport records to determine
searched
· Monday throng~ the
why the plane went down .near
wreckage
of the slngle-enilne
the Gilllla-MelgB Regional Air-.
Mooney
stttlne
nea~ the Intersecpor.t and burst Into nunes, kWin&amp;'
tion
of
State
Roule
7 and Airport
Dr. WI!Uam R. Whitney, 51, of
and
said
they
were unable
Road
t:lalllpolll. .
.
to
detennlne
tf·
anything
could '
.: · Yurmant alone .with Bob
have gone wrona with the plane's
tietcber 01 the Federal5an lnstrumenll.
A;dminlltratlon, have p . , o' "We went over the aircraft and
~her what they believe ar be
eventl that happened before the didn't fladanydtaere~ncles, but
craah rrom \heir preliminary . all the laatrumenta and cockpit
are burnt up. There's nothing we
Investigation. could tell from that." Yurman
Whitney and his wife, Jean,
had
to Florida over the said.
Yurman and Fletcher, who will
Clirtatmas hoUdaya 'a nd ,had
be
leaving the Gallipolis area
attempied to fiy back .to GalHpotOday,
were scheduled to speak to
111 wben Whitney wu (orcecl to .
WhitneY'•
wife 'l'lleaday mornland bll p1aDe 1D South Carolina
She
was
awalUna Wbltaey's
Ing;
due to a mAtntenence problem,
at
the
airport and · was
arrl\lal
Yurman sal4. Whitney bad KOne
Iookln&amp;'
on
when
her husband's ·
to Colllmbla,
to piCk up tile
plane
craahed.
·plane and bring tt borne and was

nown

s:c.

'

,~1·

regular basis.
Klein, who threalened to notify
basement and lawn during last sevMII lelevision stalions if the
week's high warer, causing possible p!(lblem was not resolved bnhealth and safety problems. ·
medialely, was · told that the
Klein said that "seven or eight vehicles · were already in the
months ago", he was assured by the process of being - removed and
council that the Pomeroy · Police should be gone from lhe JKOPC!ly in
Department woUld. resolve the . · a matter of days.
problem, and when KleiQ reminded . Mila WOQd Of Lincoln Hill,
council of thai. last night, Mayor alollg with her son and daughler-iliRichard Seyler assured Klein. ~t law, Mr. and Mrs. Chris . Wood, ·
action had been laken by Police related a drainage problem 10
Chief Jerry Rought a1 ~onday to council.
According to Mila, a ponion of
remove the vc:hicles, which are
moved on and off the property on a
.Continued on page 10

I 19th.Ohio General .Assembly
to face ·ntJJnerous ·problems

1

.

·."Probe of Sunday's
prash may take mpnths

Public Notice

'

PLEASANT VALLEY ·HOSPITAL

topics

cars seeped into the woman's

Problems with junked cars on
Butternut Avenue and a ~
problem on ·Lincoln Hill were dis..
cussed with residents at Monday's
regular meeting of Pomeroy Village
Council. ·
· Kenny Klein reilerated a complaint that ht; refstered with the
council several months ago regarding an excess of junked cars at the
Lemley residence on Buaemut

•

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

"WE HAVE NEARINI AIDS"

c~uncll

By BRIAN J, REED
Sentlael News Staff

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) Gov, -elect George.Volnovich has
named three more cabinet dlrec•
tors, Including fonner Franklin
County commissioner and audl·
tor Roger Tracy as state tax

dly.

I

issues

Gov.-elect Voinovich .·selects
three more. cabinet members ·.

......... 1.I milo

for...,., -

I

,~

busiMss-siu enW!lope and a chtd: \1,&gt;'
or mollty order for $4.15 (this ill- · '&gt;·
eludes postage and lrandli11g) to:

vou:h· ;s-

•for-no-ment81re-

.., .......

Lonely." Sendaself-address~d.lollg,

J'

of .......

c.-

..__ . . .

ed cars, drainage

Ann ~rs' new boofcltr, "How ro
Mafct Frie11ds and Stop Being

eRr

..,_of the ,., mHIIImltotlan. lor t i l e - of Mellll
Ccaonty, lor 1M p u - of
...., _ , . end .,.,ltlon
of
School lnd
Melp lndu- Wa,.lhop

•.

Val.41, No. 180
11111

irilfe' '

lilly of .........,._ , ••,. the
_.ion Df lovytnf I tu. in

Ill

1 Section, 10 Pogq ·25 C.nto
A Multlmedll Inc. N-op1per

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

c

OIIID.IItthe._llr ........ of
voting tMNin., on the lth

...,.

yelled, "OK, WHBRE'S THE
PACEMAKER?" Naturally; every·
one turned to stare and I felt like a

•'

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) The 119th Ohio General Assem··
bly co_n vened Monday for a
~0'
two-year session expected to be
Meigs County witll Mrs: CUrrv is
be paid for a month thrOugh the especially trying because of
By. Charlene Hoe81eb
J Howell a · volunteer trom . emergency service prosram. She mental health mandales, con- .
_, An American Red Cross Disaster H~tington, who has been driving said that in instances where lip. . gresslonal redistricting, general
around tbe county and meeting plianCes were damaged many health care and school financing.
Service team is in Meigs County to with Iocal oflicilils to do actual on- times the Red Cross can •pay for
"Add all that together, and
assess damase resulting from last sile damage assesssmenL
tbllir repair or replacemenL
could present quite a problem,
week's Ohio , 'River Hooding and
Mrs.
is also bemg
' assisted
Need is always a factor in deter· said state Senate President Stanh;.,n~~:;nlJIOI11Y beadquaners
•~•
,.,___
··
mining
'
,_,
•
·. --:Aad· • • ley Aronoff R-ClnciMatl. "This,
'g-.CaiiUofthe-Mtigs -- j)y, ......,..
,....- lCjMAin'ftW!O, '"'
· 111-IICI'YICCSqlet-•n~, -· •. .. r· · ' •· :,lJi!' partf - ! " iy
Ciil'lil
. :w 'Ill
. nlel&amp;eJICV ~~ 5er7 , Rita FjeldS, as well as Bob.. _.y~. ·¥1:1, .~ted ouL She said session ,;wtll
1
cu ar
"1'
~ ....... - ""-'-~
Meiatt Couaty clilec:tor of' Bmer- thil all
. ' lh
and that difficult
'
vices, Mulberry He'~~""', ~Y·
.Services and volunteers, ihere iS no "'pay blck" requirement
Aronoff added the .•'trtcky
Phyllis C~, assistant director luthyCarseyand Debbie Cundiff.
Cleanup kits including mops, subJ~!s of the environment and
of~ ervices f~Jtthe WesThe Red Cross repeSientative brooms, buckets and sponges were crime also will be on the agenda
tern
Virginia Chapter, said that tbele is more daJna&amp;e,in paned out earlier to ·those who. of legislators elected and re~rican Red Cross. Hunlington, Meigs County lhan many residents needed them, she.said.
elected Nov. 6, 1990.
.
is in clillgc of taking appic:ations realize. In ' jbcine a number of
Last .,week when the cleanup
Amid much glad-handing,
for assistance from individuals who ttailers wm moved by firemen began in Pomeroy the Mid-Ohio back-slapping and plcture:::erne~ fc:,:::;.;~· : during tbe !Ieight of the flooding Chapter of the American Red Cross . taking, lawmakers took their
-...le
f and many 0::..:-'' exteMive damage. came in to povide faod for firemen oaths of office, swearing to
While
of the displaced and other volunteerS assisting in the "discharge and perfo~allofthe
handle the imm~ ... ~ ms 0
geaing back into theii' homes.
families·are wilh relatives or are al- cleanup.
du tie~. Incumbent upon them,, ~s
She noted that while no cash is read beck ·in tbeii trailers. some
FigUreS on actual damages an:
they shal,l answer unto God.
actually given to an applicallt, with rem~n in need gf housing assis- not available at lhis u.·me, according
Monday ssesslonalsolncluded
the exception of reimbursement ~or tance
,
•
to Mrs Cwry who also noled that housekeepiJig votes, resolutions
some pun:hales,
~
~ Cwry said that these cases . while
damage has been and the election ot officers.
sued .to. a merchant c OJte or are stili bein&amp; assesSed to delerlnine · assessed, there is no. indication ·lhat ,L egislators are scheduled to
needed ltt.ms.
onc!a' the Red, the need. Replacement of the actual assistance· tO merchants who had return In joint session Tuesday !o
· Sunday llld M
Y
· ••
•
•
flood
. 'd th .
.
hear Gov , Richard , Celeste s
Cross IIIIi: eillbt .applic:ations for,, liVInJ quarters 1s not an option, acwaters ms1 e eu stores IS farewell address.
"
eiiiQgency ~. mostly from cOrding to the Red Cross worker, needed.
Separate Senate and House
the Roule 124 and Racine areas. In · who did StaiC, however, that rent
sessions are slated fQ,r Jan. 15.
Committee hearings begin the

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

...... ,.,..

•

'

In purMs-. of lll....eutlon
... tile ..... af ............ af
tile County. of Melal. Ohio, ·
............ 14tll lilly of
Nouanbez. 1110. tMre will
.............. to.-of ....
,...._.,....,.,. .•i•lanM
I lpeaiol Ellctlontotlw Mid

me -

l

or·

crowded lirpClrt, the aec:urily penon

LOw tonlaht Ia mid :sa..
Cloudy Wednetday. IDp In
mid 40s. Cbaace ·of raJa to
percent.

•

•

'

.. 1989, .............
personnel, lravel, has become a
nmMSyn.dl(..rud
nerve-wracking ex!Jaience for us.
c:n..... Sylldlt•f'
I re{CQO the X~ray machioeslll!d
di:IC(;IOJI pislciligcn must Jllll8 Sutter the embamssmeiu
being
through befilrc boan1iJ1a; Pacemaker pulled aide lind hand searched while ,
palients are now allowed to show an · everyone looks to see if you are
J.D. card and be hand searched.
concealing a gun. :- DREADING ·''
111e ·problem is the attitude of · 1li:E NEXT 1RIP IN L.A. ,
DEAR L.A.: Your point sounds
many or· these security people.
~, while wailing in a long valid to me. Does anyone in the airline, I told the IICCUrity penon that I line industry wish to respond to this
"-'
-·"
-. 1 ·. ,___ __. wcrnan's letla? I wiU be del!ghtm
,_, a .
.w- • - " " " " '
to •go wail over ihere. •. I dicl as I to give you eql!il time.
wu told and waited anotber IS
Lonuome? Take clwge of your
minu~ Then, in the middle of the ·li/t .and runi. it around. Wrile for

mew

..

•

Landers
ANN LANDERS

Red Cross Disaster.Seroice
• fil. 00· d , ' ·'
.t eam as·sesses MeJDS

Df ~ TM Mill Umllllllan

tlllcl..aHKt....

Ann

.

On Tu Lew In E•-•

.tlrdltlon -

Pick-3: 088
Pick-4: 3106
Cards: A·H; Q-IJ;
4-D; 3-s
' ~

76ers

DEAR'SOU11IERN CITY: Scny,' criminal.
· '
1 have no magic wand handy, dear. . . Wouldn't it be limpie for airports
What you have described will to set up a separate screening IIR8 Frittub, c/o AM Lalldei-s, P.O. Box
require a lot of hard work on your for passengen with handicaps lll!d , 1,562, Chicago, IU. UJ611-Q562 . (1n •
part.
disabililies? This way ,no one would CtJNJda, StNJ $5.05 .)
---......,
Get into counseling 8nd fmd out

· NOTICE OF ELECTION

•

·

W
.
'J

Public Notice

In .... CounJv

·

J

· Ualted Preu laler-*lonal
ROSE SPaUNG: Shamed slugger Pele Rose will be released

~ear Aaa

.Spurs

Ohio Lottery

·,

defeat

BATER

from federal prison In Marlon, lll., Monday a fter serving a
five-month sentence for tax evasion. Rose, 49, was banned from
baseball in l989 following a major-league basebaiHnvestlgatlon
dlsclj)SI!Ig he bet on baseball games. Rose pleaded gutlty to two . ·
counts of fiHrig falSe Income tax' returns In 1985 and 1987, and ·
admitted to hldlne more than $354,00() In Income !tom personal
appearances, the sale of memorabllla and gambling. Included
In thattlgure was $129,000 he gotfor selUng the bat with which he
broke '1) Cobb's all-time record for hits In 1985. Rose still must
serve a 1,000-hour court-Imposed probation, working at five .
lnner:.CIIy Clnclllllatl scbools as a teacher's aide beginning Jan.
14
ii£LMET IN THE RING?:· Football great Roger Staubacb
says he Is not ready to run for public office In Texas. The former
Dallas Cowboys quarterback has been mentioned as a potential
candldateforTexasgovernor, U.S. senator, or mayorofDallas.
Speaking In Dallas Saturday, the legendary signal-caller said
he lias been busy running his commercial real estate firm since
retiring from football In 1979, and hasn't had a lot of spare time
for politics. Staubach, who says he llelleves the ghosts of slavery
and segregation remain, was recently .Involved In an
unsuccessful campaign .to e~pand minority representation on
the Dallas City Council. "I'm proud to have been Involved and
would do It agatD," he said. "I wish I had done more. "
·

Sentinel

•t

Peopk BFF
-in the news-:-....,.--Dainaged relationship needs counseling .
1brea
. k on the ifie S p(/,rt
or a com-htete
r
By

•

Da~ly

.

'

next day,
.
.
unanimous vote.
Rabbi Alan Clner of Columbus , . Levey called Aronoff " a long- .
led senators In prayer. asking time friend and political ally"
God's guidance as lawmakers- who has more energy and stam61 Democrats and 38 Republl- Ina than anyone he knows.
cans In the House and 21
"He has- the stamina and
Republicans and 12 Democrats In energy of a camel, " said Levey, •
the Senate - "determine the adding Aronoff exemplifies the
fabric of life for all the citizens of fact that legislators can debate
Ohio."
and be partisan and still do It
Ohio Chief Justice Thomas
'"with dignity and fairness to
Moyer. calling !t " historic, and
all."
.
impbrtant moment," admlnisAls o e lected unanimously In
tered the oath of office to
the Senate \Yere President Pro ·
Republican senators. and state
Tempore Richard Fliian of Cln·
Supreme Court Justice Allee
clnnatl, Assistant President Pro
Resnick swore In Democrats.
Tern Eugene Watts Of Columbus
In the House, Democrats took . and Majority Whip Roy Ray of
the oath of office from Columbl- Akron .
ana ·County Common PJeas
.The GOP leadership team was
Judge John Shivers and Republlsworn In by HamUton County
cans were sworn In by Ohio Municipal Judge Mark Palnler.
. Secretary o.f State-elect Bob • Senate Minority · Leader RoTaft.
bert Boggs of Jefferson, AssistIn their first roll call ofl991-92,
ant Minority Leader Alan Zaleski
Republican senators unanim-· of Elyria, Minority Whip Robert
ously accepted the appointment Nettle of Barberton and Assist:
of Clark County Commissioner ant Minority Wblp Jeff Johnson
Merle Kearns to replace fonner of Cleveland ~re elected unSen. David · Hobson, R: anlmously to their leadership
Springfield, whO ·wi!S elected to posts.
,
Congress.
·
The Democratic leaders took
Aronoff, nominated by Sen. the oath of office froni Ashtabula;
Barry Levey, R-Middletown, to County Common Pleas Judg!!
again preside over the upper Alfred Mackey ,
chamber, was re-elected by a

a

Snow is blamed for 4 accide_nts
Snow-covered roads c0111ribuled·
to four accidents investigated by
Pomeroy Police Monday morning.
None of the drivers were injured
nor issued citations.
1\vo-of tbe accidents occwred at
about the same lime on the road
under the Pomeroy-Mason Bridge
with bolh vehicles having to be
towed from the scene. Pomeroy
police received the calls just before

Tracy, 52, will berome the
state's 12th tax commissioner,
·succeeding Joanne Umbach,
who has held the pos tfor all eight
years of Democrat Gov. Richard.
Celeste's administration.
Tracy was Franklin County
auditor from 1979 to 1984 and
county commissioner from 1985
to 1988. He alii!) served as state Sa.m.
The fiist involved a car driven by
superintendent of savings . and
loan associations and two terms
In the · Ohio House of
Representatives.
, For the last two years, he has
•worked In the Columbus law firm
of Schwartt, Keirn, Warren and
"Rubenstein, He will earn $75,000 .
annually as state , tax
commissioner.

'

Paul Morehead, Jr., Gallipolis. His
1979 Ford slid off the .road and was
hangin$ on a retaining walt There
was mmor damage to the car although a wrecker was required to ·
pull the vehicle off the wall and
back onto the road . .
The second car, a 1977. To,yota
driven by Joe EdwBrds of Cheshire,
slide on .the snowy road. over a
three foot wall and landed on its
top. There was heavy damage to the
roof and side o( the vehicle.
.
Tel~phone poles were clipped off

in the other two accidents mvestigated by Pomeroy police Monday.
At 9:33 a.m. near' the intersection
of Butternut and Brick, Brenda
Darst · of Pomeroy struck a pole
causing front end damage to her
1985 Buick. Ben Ewing, Pome~.
slid backwards into a pole in h1s
1978 Chevrolet There was no
damage to his vehicle.
·
Middleport police reporlied thai.
despite the slick roads lhere were
,.
no acciden~ in the villag~.

Wray, .5. who has served as
Ucklng Count)\ engineer since
1981, said he was fiattered that
Volnovteh picked him over several other "fine people'' under
consideration. .
The transportation depart-·
ment !las' about 7,800 employees
and an annual budget of nearly
$1.5 billion. Wray said he hopes ' ·
the .department can take care of
needs bef9re they become
problems.
.
"When a transportation system Is working well, we'd like for
It not to be noticed," Wray said,
concedllll that II unlikely when
orange ~rela go back up for the.
resumption of cons tructlon and
repair projects In the spring.
He willbepatdl85,000ayearln
·hisSblpley,
new position.
~--the '
48, will IUpervile

RASH OF ACCIDENTS. SDOWcovered I'OIIdl
M-"'·•
.,...., -~-·
...,. .._ created a l'8llt o1 acddenll
State HIJbway Patrol allli the , .· 11r011nd Melil-nty. "'" a wrecker&gt; pullsa car
Buteau of Motor Vehicles. He
owned by foe~ ol Cllesbln back 01110 '
Will be paid

m.ooo annually.

'"

tile J"CCICL Tile ftllde slid on tile 110WJ nacl andel'illltb die Pumeroy-~ Brldae, aad It
· weal over 1 tkee foot wallud landed on IIIIDp•
Tbe driver not lnJIU'ed but tben '11'81 men.
tlve dam11e to die velllele.

·--

�'

;

'

.'

/.

.

"·~r-

(:om~entary
.

'

'

.

•
•

'

"'~

~

~v
..

·-

.

'

-.

~

. . •.

.

·•·
.•.

..

.

.

--. .. ' ..'

. CJIARLENE BOEtLJCR .

·: · ROBE RT L. WJNGE'l'T
•
Publl8her
•
•
•
•'
•

.

I'T'-''--.-'.rr e u::::lo""" i

Geaeral Maaaser

PAT WJDTEBEAD
Asslslu,! Publllber/Controller

:&lt;

A MEMBER o! The United Press international, Inlan.d Dally Press
:~ssochi.tlon and t~ Amerlcan,Newspaper Publishers Association.
••

·;; : LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome, They should be I~ slhan 300
'""6J1ls long. AU letters are subJect 'to editing ani! IIJUSt be signed with
•llame, address and telephone numbel'. No unsigned letters wlll bep~b­
.Jished. Letters Should be In good ~te, addressing Issues, not persoJI!lll·
. ties.
·

Ban nuclear tests,
send savings to cities_
.

'

.

.

By NED KJLKELLY
,
UNITED NATIONS (UPI) -Mayor David Dinkins urged a dozen
mayors from the United States and the Soviet Union lo pressure their
federal governments' Into banning all nuclear weapons testing and
sending the defense sav)ngs to problem' plitgued cities around the
world. ·
.
,
Speaklhg over the weekend at the United Nations on the eve·of a
. U.N. conference focusing on an International prohibition. of all
nuclear testing, Dinkins addresSed five U.S. mayors, all from the
Norlheas t, and seven of their Soviet coimterparts.
·
The mayors were meeting to discuss tl\e lnipllcatlons of a:
Comprehensive Nuclear Test Ban Treaty on domestic an\1 urban
policies In both countries now t,hat the two ~uperpowers have
unofltclally declared an end to the.Cold War and In some Instances,
such as the international embargo of Iraq, found themselves working
together .
D)nklns cited the easing of U.S.-Soviet tensions and saving the
environment from the damage of further testing as compelljng
reasons for the United States and Great Britain to join the Soviet
·UniOn In expressing support for a comprehensive ban on' nuclear
tes ling, bOth above and underground.
·
"For more than 70 years, the American and Soviet peoples have·
been taught to distrust each other," said Dinkins, adding that the two
societies must now "turn our weapons and mlsslles ·lnto trucks and
other useful Industrial products for Ol!r own jleople and for people·
throughout the world."
As New York and other U.S. cities face the problems of crime,
drUgs, AIDS, racism, declining schools and an eroding qualllyofllfe
that threatens the future of the nation's children, Soviet cities lace
grave economic problems and potential violence brought on by ethnic
unrest, Dinkins said.
'·
·
"In both countries, Ills time to turri our economies and our societies
-and that Includes. the banning of all tests, anywhere," the mayor
salcj.
·
Dinkins left the United Nations after making hls remarks, saying
he was headed . to Gracie Mansion to continue the "Painful and
dlstas(!!ful but necessary" processor shap!ngtheclty's budget, which .
Is expected to call for thousands of layoffs' and deep cu IS In city
services. ·
.
·
.,
The three-hour meeting was organized by the U.S. Conterence of
Mayors, which supports a comprehensive. nuclear test ban and a
resdlstrlbutlon of federal funds !rom defense to domestic ·n~.
Mayors Sharpe James of Newark, N.J., John Bullard of New
Bedford, Mass., and Ted Mann of Newton, Mass., attended Sunday's
session.
·
·
T~e flrstfull session otthe U.N. Test Ban Treaty Conference began
Monday.

.

.

~

WARSAW, Poland - The Pol, familiar with that American
Ish · people. are ti)e dreamers o{ pattern - .singing the praises of .
central Euroi)e, and now they are struggling C~?untrles when It Is
asking America to help them convenient, and then abandoning
become the doers.
them when It lsl\'t.
By rorglviJlg the $3 billion debt . Poland, which has done. so ,
Poland owes America, George . . inuch for America, can't affoi-4
Bush has It within his power to to be neglected now . . Polish
show Poles tbe llgJtt at the end of Immigrants and their descend;
their long economic tunnel. The · ants l!ave played a vital tole lri
debt was accrued by communists An)erlcan history. It w'as•Poles
• who · are now gone, and the who staged the first labor strike
forg!v1111ess Is owed to the new · lnAmerlca·- inJamestoW!t, Va.,
regime or Lech Walesa, who was In the early 1600s when Polish
demanding freedom lor his coun- workers .went on strike because .
try nine years before ·the other the English colonists · refused
Warsaw Pact countrl.e s caught thein the right to vote.
tlie fever.
More than a million Polish
It Is
tar nobler gesture 'ta ln'lmigranls came the Unlied
forgive Poland a c;lebt It cannot States before World War I . When
pay, than :It was for Bush to ·President· Woodrow Wilson ·
forgive Egypt Its $7 billion _a ebt . called for American volunteers
as the price of buying Egypt's . to fight In World •War'I, 40,000 Of
loyalty In a war against Iraq. the first_. 100,000 ·to eniist were
Poland's problem Is that the Polish Al)lerlcans.
..·
newfound democracy · there Is ·
President Bush, ~hen the
last year's news, a.nd that Bush Is Poland's cause was ·celebre, .
now more 'Interested In what's recognized the bond between the
two nation's, "We are bo1,1n~ to
happening In the Persian Gulf.
The rest ·of the World Is sadly

a

Jack Andersan
,..

.

'

'iOU NoTICeD TU6.T

ME'ATsc~

AT 1U-

·- · . ' · ToNIGiiT?

TABL~,

.

-

I

I

.

,.

SAUC€1,
PLE:~r;e
•

\

.
By GREG HENDERSON · ·
WASHINGTO~ (UPI) - The
Supreme Court Monc!ay dellvered a blow to National Football
"League players In their battle to
win unlimited tree agency.
The court let stand a decision
that the NFL cannot be sued
under 311titrustlaws for blocking
Its best players from becoming
free agenls, as long.as a players'
. unlon_remalns Intact, even In the
absence of a collective bargainln~~gret!men~lled
ep yers
ac1ass-action
suit the day their 1987 strike
ended without a contract between the 28 club owners and the
league's 1,600 pJI!yers.
James Quinn, a lawyer for the
players, said the court's decision
only delays an Inevitable jury
trial. Quinn claims the NFL
Players Association Is no longer
an official union and· ·S imilar
antitrust-suits flied by Individual
players will proceed.
Quinn says the NFLPA off!clally decertified In 1989 and
functions solely as a trade
'association representing the
players .. The NFL contends the
NFLPA remains a union and
ongoing antitrust suits should be
barred from trial by Monday's
action.
·· On such suit Involving eight

d.,

George Plagenz

.

'J;oday in history

to

Berry's World
.

Sen. Jan Long
A celebration ,lor .Ohio
science
..

'

For nearly a century~ the Ohio
animals ln'educatlon an~ student · le~der;hlp of chairman Or. Eu:
research · facllltle,- and
Academy of Science has helped •research; .aerospace medicine, . gene Appie, reiiFed
the · equipment.
advancesclenceandenlflneerjng
the, mapping of -Ohio's soils, General Electric COrporation,,Is
This handicap makes It' harder
In
Ohio.
Several
generations
of.
__
geology In the 2ist Century, Ohio now organizing and beginning to .. for Ohl«1 uqlversllles and colleges
.,
.Ohio scientists have made. their
nora and vegetation and narcotic undertake the job of planning for
to attract students to study
first contribution to science by
receptors in anima~ and humans · 'next year's centennial celebraScience and engineering; and to
presentlng papers at the Acade·
are just a- few of the subjects tlon. The commission's job Is an
recruit ·and keep' outstanding
my's annual meeting and llavlng
suggested as topics o.f symposl- ' ImpOrtant one, and the success of · graduate students and faculty. ·
those .papers publl.shed In "The · urns at the annual meeting.
· Its effor.t s will be measured by
Clearly, Ohlt&gt; cannot advance as
Even . more exCiting than the howwellltcapturesthelmaglna· . a leading state In promotjng
Ohio Journal or Science," the
.
Academy's scholarly .journal.
· meeting Itself, howeVer, Is what tlon of the scientific·community
research and development, .and ·
Is likely to .evolve from the In promot!Jtg Ohio as a leader In
Now the Academy, founded In
It Is up to .us In tbe General
1891, Ia geartng·up tor Its 100th · commission's work. S.B. 260 also the na tlon ' s . technological
Assembly to provide more moII
birthday. Alaw, S.B. 260, passed . requites the creation of the Ohio advancement. ' ~
ney
· whe11 Its need can, be
.......
earlier. last year by the. General
Academy of Science Foundation , Ohlo'has long been:a leader In
Justified. . ,
·
··
AsSelllbb'. set up the Ohio
to provide financial assistance' to ~ clentlflc achl.!'vemerit, with .. .The Ohio Science lllld Technol' .
Academy of Science Centennial
the commission and provide an · such native .sons as Thomas
ogy Commission correctly notes ••
Commission .to plan next year's
endowment for programs, actlvl· Edison. the Wright brothers and
that the 1~ hold new com!&gt;ett- ·
celebration: ·The hlgh!tght of the · ties · and publications of the Gharles Kettering. Ohio h!Storl· ' ·tive c11allenges, and much te. · festivities . wUJ he the centenil)al ' Academy as It enters Its second cally has been recognized as a
malns to be done If Ohio •Is to
·a nnual ·meeting, ·scheduled ·to
century.
·:
leader in sclentl(lc achievement, · regain and hoi&lt;( Ita past preeml·
take j)lace A,prU 26-28.
The foundation will live on but much mor.e must and should
nence. Ohld schools need to raise
' '
· . A banquet Is planned to honor · after January 1, 1992, when the be done. According to a recent
their standard&amp; of science and,
the · state's top -scientists, both
centennial commission will report by the .Ohio. Science and
mathematics ·teaching, and
past and present: and ..aa occurs · · cease to exist.
Technology,Commission, unlverOhio's untverilty
and
One of the other exciting slty research-funding lags In Ohio education programs must ln'"es(
wlth each annual meeting, pap"
•
ers on new scientific developprojects under conslderatron ·1s relative to the . Midwest and
wisely to achieve excellence.
•
I
ments
will
be
presented
by
some
publlcattop
of
a
book
that
W,l)uld
nation
as
.a
whole.
,
If you have any questlou on
'
400 students and academicians
Identity the 100 sites of scientific
In 1988, Ohio, with 4:4 percent
these efforts, . or on the state' a
(
~......
from across the state.
significance In the state.-. This of , the nation's population,
role In encouraging sclentlftc
1
•.
C[) 1_990 l&gt;y NEA. Inc:. 'I'&amp;~
The subjects suggested for
book could serve both 'as a celved just 2.9 percent of the
excellence,· please conl.sct me,
dl.scusslon at the meetlng .show
valuable r'esearch tool for stu- . nation ' s academic · research - ·State Senator Jan Mlcbael Lonr.'
the diversity o1 Ohio's. sclentlf.lc ) dents and as a tour guide for funds, or some $382-mllllon of the l ·may be reached either by
research. WeUands science and
Ohioans looking· for Interesting ' $13 billion national· totai. Ohlo''Y writing the Stateb!&gt;use, Colum·
policy, nutrition, neui'Qiclence; · places to visit on weekends.
campuses opera1e ·under the
bus, Ohio, 4321!5, or by calllng_me
Th!l commiSsion, under the .. handicap of having not enough at (614) 466-81!16.
forensic chemistry, molee~~Iar
.
L---.,...;______...,__~_-:"__.,_____. ·genetics, supercomputing; use of
•
·.

from

..

.

.

,.

..

'

~

qt;. ....

SHOP ;TIL YOU DROP

.

·re.

'

..

•.

.

II

...,..

.

Redwomenface first MOC
contest tonight .against Walsh

!

· wanted a man with NFL coachlng experience.
Jim Reid, current head coach
at UMass who was ·MacPherson's defensive coordinator with
the UMass Minutemen, told the
Herald his foriner boss Is "the
· vibrant, highly energized kind of
·guy t~e Patriots need."
·
At 60, "he's never been out·
worked by any member of any of .
!lis staffS. ~e never stops," Reid
said. "I'll tell you what - this Is ·
the best tiling that 'could have
happel)ed to the Patriots. Mack Is
going to make football In Foxboro fun and exciting agaln.' 1
The: Patriots' season was also
marred by Qff-the-field Incidents
that Included sexual harassment
chargesbyBostonHeraldwrlter
Lisa · Olson against several
players,
An NFL Investigation Into tile
Incident resulted In fines ·of
$72,500 levied , agalut · the club
and players Zeke M;owatt, Mlchael Timpson and RObert
;E'errylilan.

co- Rio GI'Uide'a Mark Eniaa (W~~te.
Collele;s Joe Jolmacin (10) loob
nlahl's1ame at Lyne Center. ·!n1lall IC)Ortd -lJ
pOIIIts In lhe
a 88-72 vlclliey. (Photo by Kaz~~D~IIwue)

The second half of the season .
Intensifies tonight for the Unlver·slty of Rio Graride women's
basketball team when It travels
to Walsh College today for Its
first Mld·Ohlo Conference· en- ·
ci&gt;unter of the campaign. Game
time Is 7 p.m.
The Redwomen, . who placed
second In the conference behllld
Urbana last season, wlll pit their
8-6 recol'd and attendant experience against an embattled
Lady Cavaliers team coached by
Michelle Steele, wbo, like Redwomen mentor Doug Foote, Is
undergoing her secon&lt;! year ·
helming a District 22 program. ~
Walsh enters the contest at 5-7, ·
with point guard Jlll Hanlgofsky,
a ~ .senlol'l leading her team· .
mates In scoring with an ave~age
of 15 points a game. Center
Jeanine Kleinhenz (5·1l, sopho-

SVAC standings

more) and small forward Felicia . ,
Baggett (5-9, junior) are respon·
slble for the bulk of Walsh's
rebounding power, with Klein-: '
.benz averaging 7.6 boards and
Baggett 7.5.
·
··
For Rio Grande, center Ann
.Barnltz, ter!lled Rio Grande's.
most consls.tent player by Foote,

~~~!~~~~ ~~~;~~~~~~= '

11.5 points and 7,5 1J9ards a game
prior to· the Christmas break.
Debbie Fredrick (5·7, sophomore) , the Redwomen starter on
shooting guard, led the team .,.
scoring with 12.5 markers a \
game before Rio Grande entered ·
the Ohio Northern Tournament
Dec. 29-30. While the Rio' ladles
emerged. with mixed results '
there (a 63-61 loss to Queens,
N.C., and a 79·77 victory over .· ·
Ohio Northern), their return to '
contlnes of· Lyne Center Sunday · .
afternoon resulted In a 76-60 win
over Lake Erl"
,
Also starting for the Redwo· •
men will be Jennl Couch (5-4, ·
senior) at point guard, With Kerr!
Kidwell (5·11, sophomore) and
Kathy Snyder (5-JO, junior), who ' ---~
enjoyed a 17-polnt. eight·rebound
game over Lake Erie, as the·
forwards. Walsh's remaining
starters Include Stacy Richards
·· (5.6, junior) at shooting _guard
and Shelly Dunmyer (6-0, sophomore) at forward.

(Overall)
·, TEAM
WLPF PA
Southern ... .. ... .. .... 9 3 866 738
Hannan Trace ..... 8 2 726 528,
Eastern ... ............ 7 3 .674 685
~
.
Symmes Valley ... 6 4 618 603
players Is scheduled lor trial Circuit Court of Appeals.
Unions representing players In
North Gallla ....... .4 6 783 814
Aug. 8 In Minneapolis. The
The Justice Department
the National Basketball Assocla- Oak Hlll .. ........ .... 3 8 729 814
league has filed suit asking the claimed the ·sth Circuit ruling ·uonandNatlonaiHockeyLeague · Kyger Creek ... .. .. .2 9 655 800
federal court tliere to clarity the could ·have lmpUcatlons well
asked' the high caurt to hear the Southwestern ....... o 8 441 586
NFLPA's status.
beyond the sporis and en't ertaln·
case. So did nine states and the
The players, forced back to ment Industry and could "desta·
Justice Department, clalmjng
· (Conference)
work after a24-day~alkoutwhen blllze labor-manage!llent relathe 8th Circuit's decision coulcl
Hannan Trace ..... 7 0 55-7 351
the league· fielded teams with tlons"lnmorethan600colleetlve
allow management groups to
Southern .. ........... . 7 I 614 498
"replaceme,nt" · players, are bttrgalning relationships lnvolvthwart a fair negotiation process
Eastern ............... 5 2 498 493
-nearing the end of their fourth jng more than 3 mlllloll workers.
and then hide behind the law
North Gallla ........ 4 4 646 618
season without a collective .
In 19118, a federal judge · In
whlle Imposing work rules. ·. . l ... Symmes Valley ... 4 4 479 472
contract.
· Minnesota ruled the continued
The NFLPA bargained away i Oak Hill .......... .... 2 6 503 596
At Issue Is whether the NFL restriction on free agnecy In the
free agency rights In return tor
Kyger Creek ........ 1 ·7 473 597
could claim protection from absence of a collective bargainother concessions under the
Souihwe~tern ... ... .' o s 44~ . 586
federal antitrust laws while lng agreement and lack of
flve-yearcontractthatexpiredln
TOTALS ............ 31 31 Ull 4211
unilaterally Imposing previously renewed negotiations was sub- . 1987.
negotiated restrictions that ject to antitrust laws.
·
The league has since cut many
(Reserves)
make It virtually Impossible for · But · on Nov. 1, 1989, the 8th · of those concessions,· lncllidlng
(SVAC only)
the league's ,top players to work Circuit reverSed ihe ·decision.
severance and pension, and
TEAM
W L PF PA
for the team of their choice.
The CO!Jrt of Appeals claimed a
unilaterally adopted a so-called
North Gallla ... ..... 6 2 473 345
"TheSupremeCourt'sruljngls non-statutory labor exemption Plan B free agency system In
Southern ............ .. 6 2 444 338
positiVe news for the league but from the antitrust laws remains
1989 under which each team
Hannan Tiace .. ... 5 2 377 299
.not an unexpected develop- In effect Indefinitely ln . such a
ptotects37playersandtheothers
Oak Hlll ....... .. ..... 5 3 451 410
rment,'-' N:FL spokesman Joe multl-emplpyer bargaining urill are free to move from team to
Eastern ....... ... ... .. 4 3 336 354
Browne said In a statement. "It with a union, even after a
team.
Sy,mmes Vailey ... . 2 6 364 462
confirms the NFLPA's lengthy contract has expired and the
The class-action suit was flied . Southwestern... .... 2 6 284 400
course of litigation- rather than sides have reached an Impasse In by nine current and former NFJ:;
Kyger Creek ........ 1 7 309 430
negotiation - will only prolong negotiations.
.
players, Including Miami DolTOTALS .. ...... : ... at 31 3038 30lll!
the timll before a new collective
On Moriday, Justices· Byron phlns quarterback Dan Marino
bargaining a-g reement Is White and Harry Blackll'lun and Buffalo Bills wide receiver
Saturday's finals
reached.'' ·
wanted to hear the case, built . ' James Lofton.
Ga!Ua Academy 15, Southern 58
Tbe court's 7-2 decision not to · takes tour votes for a case to be .
NFL player$ negotiate their
Symmes Valley 77, Port. N.D. 68 .
even hear the case was cons!' considered. White starred as a ·own salaries, bllt the collective
dered a SIITilrlse because the college running back at Colorado bargaining contract would set
Tuesday's slate
Bush administration and nine and played for the Pittsburgh minimum salaries and take care
Jackson at Hannan Trace
states had -asked the justices to Steelers and Detroit Lions In the of other concerns, such as
Symmes Valley at Raceland
overturn a declslonofthe8th U.S. late 19a0s and early 1940s.
pensions.
(Ky.) '
Southwestern at Hannan
(W.Va.)
·· Friday's adlon
' .
Southern at. Hannan Trace
Butnowthecleat lsontheother
touchdown run by Jackson early long pa~lng game, which has
Eastern at Southwestern
foot. The Bengals travel to Los' In a 1989 game set ·the tone for a _also hurt the .~ngals In recent
Nordl Gall !a -at Oak·Hill .
Angeles where" home-road his27'7Raldervictory. A month ago, contests.
Kyger Creek at Symmes Valley
tory heavily favors the Raiders.
an 88-yard run by Jackson helped
On .offense, c:Jnclllna!l will
.
Saturday's games
ClnclMatl has played the Raid· Los Angeles toward .a 24·7 wjri.
have a healthy Boomer Eslason
Nordl Gallla at Federal Hockjng
ers 11 Urnes on the West Coast (In
"I'm pretty good friends with to go against the Raiders this
Symmes Valley at Ironton St.
: Oakland . and u:&gt;s Angeles) and Bo, butl'mgettlngtlredofseelng time. A month ago, Eslason was
Joe.
lost 10 times.
too much of him ,.;. on television · severely hampered In Los An·
_ ''The Raiders are' going to be ( and against us," . said Bengals geles because he was suffering
heavily favored against usj strong safety David Fulcher.
from a pulled groin.
again," sa1dBengalsbeadcoach · The Cincinnati defensive
''TheRaldersbeatusuppretty
~'""-'~Tt
. Sam Wyche. ''They've ha9dled ·coaches- who wo~ked up a solid good the last time and I threW
us every way you can handle a
game plan that · wrecked Hous· some lnterceptiou that made It
team."
ton's Run and Shoot offense easier for. them,". recal.led EstaThe last two tlnles, Raider are tl')1ng to come up with some son. "I can play a little better
blazer Bo Jackson haa personally new schemes to thwart Jackson .t han I did last time."
·
handled the Benaals. A 92-yard and still contain the Raiders'

. ,_,. .:.··------=..
The Daily Sentinel
' (VBPI!ltHit)
A Dhllloa or MoJnm..ra. rae.
.

By RICK VANSANT
CINCINNATI (UP-I) · - The
Bengals would 'like to keep
playing the Oilers In Cincinnati,
wheretheyusuallydestroyHouston. But ·the NFL playoff achedule Is sending the Bengals to the
West coast; where they us~lly
lose to the Raiders.
The Bengals advanced In the
·playoffs this past Sunday by
routing Houston 41-14 in ·Cincln·
nat!. But what's new? Cincinnati
has won 10 of Its last 11 home
gS:riles against the Oilers, the last
three by the combined .Core of
1~aD
· .

G~

•

•

son Wall&amp; said, "Both teams play
the ·same type of football. 1'heY
try to conttol the ·game defen·
slvely and alao on the offensive
line by runnllli the ball.
"1. think the Bears will be a
tough opponent slnlply because ·
their defense Ia one of the
top-ranked. defenses, It not . by
statlltlcs . definitely by i-epu~tiOn. They're known aa a big pl&amp;y
detenile wblch can cause a ·
pr.oblem Ofteaalvely."
.
The Gtanll Wen! bounced from
the 1985 playoffl with • 21-!}1011
at Soldier Field and JOlt there

.\

.

' .

again, 34-19, In the 1987 season
qpener . .The Bears have be11ten
the Giants live straight overall ·
dating to 1970 and eight of nine
goinll back to. the 1963 NFL title
game.
' 'There will lie some good
modvation for the guys who have
beell arotind," Giants fullback
Maurice Cllrthon laid. •'They
embarrassed us pretty good tbe ·
last two tllilea we've played ·
·them. They il}oWed us what It's .
like to be phyllcal.':

I

Member: United Press International.
Inland Dally PI'Ha All«llllon ud the
Ohto N.,.apaEAaoclatlon. Natlooal

Advertlllnc

esentatlve. Branham

· Newopaper Ss ... T33 Third
New York, NI!W York 10017.

Aven~.

~:Send-oh....O
to The Dolly Se$lnel. 111 Court St,
PoiN!I'oy, Ohio C!l789.

· '

...

'

ura

lt!IIICIIIPTION
87 CUrler or Mot.. -

One Weell ........ ......... .... . :............

tuo.

One Monlh ......... ......... ... ........ .. ..16.10

One Year .......... ,...................... 172.80

..

liNGLE COPY
PRICE
Dally ........., ........ ... ............ .. 2li'C.nto ;

Sublcrtbera not deilrtDt to pay the car- :
rter may remtt ln advance dl~ to
The Dally Senllnel on a 3, 6 or 12 monlh
hull. Ctedll will ho 11von corrler ...h
week .
No IUblcrlpllono by mall perml!!ed 1n

areas where home carrier •rvtce Ia
available. .

!\:'=

MillS.......
.· 13 Weeks.... ;..... ........
J
.
...... ..·
............
$1U4

' .

r

I

26 Weeks .................., ....... :....... S3'1.96
~2 Weeks ........................... .. ..... t'lt.36
O.IINe Melp Couit

•

·

13 Weeks ...... .. .. .. .................... ;.$21l.IIO
26 Weeks ... .. .............................·tto.ao
!12

w~

. ... ............................... m.to

'TAX.!fiP OF THE ·WEEK ·.

'

SHOIID I nMZI MY DEDUCTIONS?

.,I

,, .
18 ~r to play Bears at home

. EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. .
(UPI) - The New York Glantt
hope playing Chicago at home
Sunday In the NFC playoffs Will
bring a changeofluck agalut the
Bears.
The home field could make a
big difference In an otherwise ,
even matchup. Both teams play
strong defense, rely on the
runnlng 11ame and start backup
quarterbacks ·- Jeff Hoitatler.
· forNewYorkandMikeTomczak
• Cbtcago. ·
.or
,
"It's eolllg to be a ~ jiii)'Bical
game.'"Gianl&amp; corneyback Ever·

'

PubiiJhed every o1tern0&lt;11, MoMay .,
lhr&lt;X&amp;Ih Friday, 111 Court St., Pomerl)f, Ohio, by lhe Ohio-Valley Publlohlllll Company/Mulllmedla, Inc .. '
Pomeroy, Ohio 4!17119, Ph. 992-21!16. Se· '
cond o1a11 poolare "'kl at Pomeroy,
Ohio.
,

Raiders·heavily favored against .visiting Bengals

'

'

.

Supreme Court ruling ·stings NFL players

Mikhail Gorbach~v Is making sey, "Wben he said; 'For I will In their belief that the -world's .
things difficult for . the believers
take you from a111ong the nations destruction Is imminent, It would
'
In Bible prophecy.
and gather you out of all not necess!lrlly follow that the . " Incredible to think the Jews'
hopes· would have been lifted by
How can the ~Inner ot the countries and bring you unto Bible prophets foresaw a 20th
Nobel Peace Prize be passed off your.own land .~ ' ·
century global cataclysm 2;500 . the Assurance that 2,500 years
.later they would have their
as the bad guy In an end-of-theAnd,. says Lindsey's • book, years ago.
·
· .
couniry back. It would be like
'w orld scenario that calls , for when ' EZ!!klel spoke o( . great
Most Bible scholars are sure
comforting Americans In· 1990,
"Russia's hordes" to mount a northern armies lnvadlng-Isrl\el · theprophetswerenot.speaklngto
.
wl\o are · concerned over their
massive millta_ry attack on Is- after the ·restoration, l!e meant us or to .our day when 1they
country!s loss of world prestige, ·
rae)?
the Sovle! Union. ·
~ predicted coming events. They
with the pro111lse that In the year
In the next chapter, ,t!le plot
The scenario played well durwere referring . to happenings
4490
the United ;!tates wlll .agaln
calls for the Western p'owers to lng the ~ years of the Cold War that would take place In the near
be
pre-eminent
in the world ."
··annihilate R11ssla In a nuclear that pitted COmmunist Russia future · - usually within the.
By un·taed 1'.-eu lnteraatlonal
Among the ·evangelicals who
Today Is Tuesday, Jan. 8, the eighth day of 199i with 357 to follow. . confrontation paving the way for against the free world. But the lifetime of.thelr readers.
are ··counting the hours ~nd
. Armageddon - the final great downfall of co:mm)lnism and the . These scl!olars maintain that
T)!e moon Is waning, moving toward Its new phase.
war of human history- that will rise of Gorbachev as a champion ;. the· book ot Revelation was ·_'· minutes until t&amp;e-end comes you
The morning star Is Mars.
w~'t find the name or . Billy
,usher In the mlllenlum. Israel In of world. peace (and Nobel Peace . written
be a steadying. lnflu~
The evening stars are Mercury; Venus and Jupiter,· . .
Graham. In 1950, Grabalil told an ~
· Prize winner) have thrown the ence on Christians suffering
Those born on this .date are under the sign of Capricorn. They . the end wm be saved by God.
audience; "We may have anotller
.persecution In the lsi century.
include financier Nicholas Biddle In 1786; educator and hymn writer · . This . Is all In the Bible.-, evangelicals Into confusion.
year, maybe 'two years. Then I
according
to
evangelicals
such
Any
uprising
In
the'
Middle
Such
repeated
expressions
as
Lowell Mason· ("Nearer My God To Thee") In 1792; James .
believe It Is going to be all over."
as · Hal Lindsey, author of 'the . East Is the cue for believers In
"what soon must take place" aDd
Longstreet, Confederate general in the C!vil Wa~. In 1821; publisher
The evangelist burned himself
·
best-selling
"Late
Great
Planet
Blbleprophecytosaytheworldls
"For
the
'
time
Is
near"
must
Frank Doubleday ln1862; actor Jose Ferrer In 1912 (age 79); comic
that time. He Is more
badly
Earth."
The
enigmatic
symbQ·
.approaching
the
.
"end
.
time"
·
stand
as
warnings,
these
schoacior Larry Storch in 1925 (age 66); comedian Soupy Sales, In 1926
cautious
today when he speaks of
lism
and
Imagery
used
by
the
Old
referri!d
to
In
the
Bible
..
The
Iars
say,
against
applying
the·
(age 65) ; rocls 'n' roll king Elvis Presley In 1935; actress Yvette
the
last
days.
He says; "I do not
Testament pr0phets Danfel artd .doomsdllY cries are being heard
prophecies In Revelation to later.
Mimleux In 1939 (age 52); and singer-actor David Bowie In 1947 (-age
know
·
i
he
hour,
the month or the
44) .' '
.
Ezekiel and the ·writer of the again In the wake of the Persian · centuries.
year.
God
alone
knows. But what
Book of Revlatlon refers, say the Gull crisis - except now the
The prophecies of Ezekiel and
we
see
happening
today may well
evangelicals, to present-day pieces don't fit -together so
l;lantel, according to this view,
·
a
preparation
lor. God's.
be
world powers like Russia and • neatly . Gorbachev has changed . were Intended to brlrig hope to
In
human
affairs
lnterventioh
China.
all that.
.
the Jews of that day who had •
"E;zeklel was speaking of the
Can the evangelicals rewrite
been dispossessed of their land . when Jesus will come and set up
a new social order. " ·:·..
flnai restoration of the _Jews to the script now with new names?
b}'·!orelgn Invaders.
That's safe enough.
Palestine· In 1948," writes Lind·
E_ven If they turn out to be right
One Bible scholar finds -It .

.

.

league and the worst In franchise · unselfishness'· In his philosophy
hlsfDry, In Rusi's first year as of producjng successful teams.
coach. The Patriots tied league
Regardjng .his' deparlllre from
records tor mostlosses and mqst Syracuse, where he . was coach ·
consecutive defeats (14).
for ·10 yeJlrs, MacPherson said,
' 'Hiring Dick MacPherson as "I did not finish what 1 started
head coach of the New England there and I feel bad about that." .
Patriots Is a great way to start a
·But he said that as the new
new era for this organization. Patriot ilead coach, " I look at It
Mo~ayatapackec;tnewsconfer·
Dick ·as · he~d football coach as an opportunity to put out a •
ence at Foxboro Stadium with represents all the qualities that product people love to see and be
team owner Vlctoq Klain and we believe are essendal to a part of." He said he requested
that he not be Informed about the
Patriots chief executive Sam winning In the NFL,"
Jankovich.
.
"Dick has a wealth of expe- contractural statuso!theplayers .
"As coach of the Syracuse rlence, character and knowledge so that It will not affect his roster
Orangemen, I always stressed that translates Into exciting decisions. · ·
MacPherson, now the 11th
. the ' Importance of taking the · football," Jankovich said.
program to a higher level each
Klam said about · his new head coach In Patriot history,
year," MacPherson said. "AI coach: "His history has been one began his coachjng career with
this point of my life, I felt that I ot,teachjng and motivation: I feel the University of Massachusetts.
couldnotrefuseanopportunltyto we are definitely headed In the He has been coach at Syracuse
take my · coaching career to a right direction.".
·since 1980.
higher level."
He led the Orangeman to a 7-4·2
· MacPherson replaces Rod
MacPherson, a riatlve of ·Old record and a .victory over Ariz·
· Rust who was fired Friday by Town, Maine, said "I cannot' ona in the Aloha Bowl this
Jankovich In his first major think of any better place to end . season. He has served as an
move after jolnjng the Patriots my · career than In New as'slstant coach In the NFL with
lasi month.
England.''
the Denver Broncos and creveThe Patriots finished the seaMacPherson emphasized the · land Brilwns.
,
son atl-15, the worst recoi'ljln the Importance of "dlscipUne and
Jankovich said .. Friday he

..

us iD. Diind

'

By FRED WATERMAN
FOXBORO, Mass. · (UPI) - Dick MacPherson of Syracuse
University Monday accepted the
job as new head coach of the New
England Patriots to take his
collchjng career to a "higher
level." .
:
·
MacPherson was lnti'Qduced

S'Tt&gt;A.K

Did_Bible ·prophe~· ··have

.. . .

loss·

\ MePherson·named New ·England head ·cQach,
.

.,,

fOR

hand~ Waynesb~ _ State 98-7~
" .

i

I

PA~'tk

.

~

a'

a

~£eR. ISN'T BeGGING
. '.

'

'
primary attention Poland got
Poland· by a very s~lal bond, a
from
Americans came In the ·.
bond of blood, of culture and
form
of
" Polack jokes." Not so
shared values," be .s aid . In . a
ago,
street vendors In the
long
s~h In 1989. And he ended that '
nation's
.capital
sold a "Polish
speech by saying, In Polish,
coffee mug, " with the handle on
"Nieck zyj e Polska," let foland
the Inside.
live.
.
We . asked recently· reSii!led.
It" Is time for Bush-to back his
Polish Prime Mln!Ster·• Tadeuaz
words with some action. Poland
Mazowieckf. about America's
Is vlgoro_usiy1 trying to make a
sense· of humqr. ·"We were, of
free-mar~nomy work. But
a mllllon Polish workers·are now 'cou!'Se, burt," he Said, adding
that the Poles in·return have lltt!e
unemployed and prices are high.
but ·prai se for Americans •.
American Investors who look
into Poland · are sp()oked abqut ··"There are very few nations on
this planet that are treated by,the
the staggerl"g $44 billion na·
ttonal debt that accumulated · Polish .people so much without
· ·•
during the communist era. Ex· criticism as America." ,
He continued, "Many coun·
perts In Warsaw and Washlngtort
believe that If the United States tries have alteaily trekked the
forgives the $3 billion Poland . road from a free market j!C()n·
omy to
centralized, plano~
,owes· America, the rest of the
eeonomy,
-but
the reverse has
creditor nations will follow suit. _·
never
been
tried
befote.",So, he
Sachs· believes the debt must ·
said,
Poland
Is
. on, a "great_
· be forgiven before Poland's
adventure,"
.
, ·
parliamentary eleqtl:His In April.
The United States needs to foln ..
That would "ca)m down the
that trek . with .more than just "
~ltuatlon and give them a clean,
. good wm . .
fresh start," he said.
There was a \lme when the.

· ~o~A.V€

.

Ohio

.
.
University of Rio Grande head of · his 15 points ·and Heath
example for us on how to make Donalclson 6-04-16. TOTAIA...,.
coach John Lawhorn has not · McCrommon added. eight of hla
the transition."
111-118
been shy abo11t using all of his te81J!'S 22 opening half rebounds
Statistically, the Redmen conWAYNESBURG STATE ('J1)
playerslnagallle,andthecrowd to !ts off.eDSive play. McCrorn- nected on 37 of 75 field goal - Dan Conn 3-1-4.-13; Anthony
attempts tor 49.3 percent, and . flenderson 1-().0.2; Joe Johllloa ·
attending McNelly-Patrlck Iilsu- mon was also Waynesbutg's top
ranee Night : at Lyne Center . $COrer for the game with 17.
netted 16 of 21 tries from the ftee 7-6-1-15; Larl')' Waahll!gton 2-0-6Monday were treated to another
llenefltinr lrorn a 12-potnt . throw line for 76.2 percent. 4: Ray Threet 1..().0.2; Maurice
example of all-out effort when performance b)' Gary Harrison
Waynesburg Was successtulon32 · BlackWell1-6-2; Heath McCronl·
the Rio rrien handed Waynesburg and 11 from Mlfk Erslan during · of Its Ill attempts trom the floor . mon 7-1-Q-17; . Jamar Sl\egoc "
State (Pa.) a 98-72 loss.
·
· the firs.t hillt, Rio Grande held ott for 39.5 percent aDd made stx of · 5-0-1·11; Sam Pez:zl.1..().0.2; Brlll!l ·
" It was a balaheed effor~ and 1· the Yellow Jackets IQng enough
nine tries on foul shots lor 66.7 Belan 2-044. TOII'!LS .,_...,..,.
llkedthe.wayouF)Mioplecameoff · to hit their stride In the secorv;l · percent. Rio Grande commltted
,
-. the bench and played," Lawhorn period.
21 turnovers tQ Waynesburg:s 17.
REDMEN NOTES: Tonight's :
said. :'The bench came In and
Rebounding was again Rio
Now 11-3," Rio Grande plays opponent, Wilberforce, r,e,
gave us a lift."
.
Grande's lltrength as the Red- Wilberforce University ·a t home . entered - Intercollegiate PlaY.. In
· While the bulk of the high . men polted 49 to Waynesburg's
today ,at 7: 30 p.m., while the Dlstrlct..22 .tb,la ~~~~~
· scoring ,again came !rom his . 44. TroyDonaldsonbroughtllown
Yell0 wJackets(4·8)hostCallfo~- - . ~,;QriJ~Ii~~~~o~~~J:
!
·. starters, La'{o'horn's younger eight boa~ for the hosts, with
nla University of Pe~YI~~::~~~ · · JA~;~eoiCM'
play~rschlpPedaWaHtWaynesseven frQm lBrad .Schubert' and
on Jan: 16:' •: ' · ·, .··••.-,; {.., ~:\ ?t.:~M:DW!li-~'it)i .. ~;·~ere' tnniricec!
burgs game,.partlcularly In the six apiece supp~ by Jeff Brown
. IIJIIftlme sc~re - Rio Craric;Ji!· : . - ~•.-.y.':''-t:edarvti)e Saturday_.
secorid half when_ Rio Grande and Tim Christian to ope" up · 49, Waynesburg State 39.
Top srorer for Wilberforce prior
pulled. away from a 10-polnt additional scoring opportunities.
RJO · GRANDE (88) - Chad to the Cedarv!Jie .c ontest was 6-7
_ advantage and kept the Yellow· ·· McCrommon 11!1' his teammates Shumate 1-0-2-4; Gary Harrison center Frank Mason, who aver..
Jackets at bay with a cornforta- with 11.
·.
6-1-4-19; Jawanza Childs 0-0-2-2; . aged 21 points tllffie. MasOIIIS
ble, 20'-polnt·plus cils!llon. '
:
·
Lyndell .S nyder 1-().0.2; Ma~k also-the )ead man In rebounding,
The prlmarlly youthful Yellow
''We.had only two upperclass- E:rsian 2·3-0-13; Brad Schubert with a 9.5 per-game average that
. Jackets, coached by veteran ·· men In there tonl8ht, so It was 1-3-6-11; Terry -Farley 1-0-0-2;
nearly · rivals Rio Grande's Jeff
Rudy Marlsa, stayed hot on the another case of learning bow to Joe Edwards 1·0-0-2; Lester Brown, wbo was credited with 9.8
Reclmen's heels during the first run the floor," Marlsa· com- Smith 2-0-0-4; Darius. W!Ulams boards per oudng prlo( · to
halt as Joe Johnson poUred In 12 mented. "Jobn's tei!Jll set an . ·2'1·0-7; JeffBrilwn 6-0-4-16; Troy Mol)day.

'·

.Poland ~worthy_ of ()ur - ~elp

111 Court streel ·
· PomeroJ-, Ohio .
.
DEVOTED
TO
THE
INTERESTS
OF
TilE
MEIGS-MAsON
AREA
'·
.
. '
.
.

·f!!m!ill

Rio

"

.: T.he Daily Se·ntinel

. .

......

' 1991

.

.

.. .,

:

'
'

·•t·~· ,

~n

Mill

If JOI UL f01 Clllllttieflt flolil

dldiCIIoM II tllln wour 11111danl diiiiiCIIoo:·l...,llld ilooloctfool

••

. •tid!'-'
Oltllt Md ltcll ,.., tlllll, IMHil,

'

lid........ ,..,
IIIII dHtll cara.

.........

oclllrltlllle cotitrliltdlfl\'l.

--"r or tlwfiiDIHI.

,

•• 11111111 . ..

•INIII-•Joll.l--. e•d

til . . . .lltial COI!t.
U11 llf frll TAUAftl liMIOfl or ' ...
TAl IECOIDlD IDOl. iMIIIMeiiiiJ
• ·
.
Hll lloct olllor, II IlCON 1 - .
. . - . IHotlllt IIIIOIIIIIIell_..tor,.. rltww....,..,!IIJIIfiiCII(ItlforH-

diCI!Me ..,._, Do,.. 11M 11111t1o1n dalt 11orr tllltu 1M lfleet,.., nllnll
Call ,.., lociI Hllllocl olllct. lllttlr "'- llip 11r till a•
Jtl. W1'11 ""'to
. llllp ,..,
.

••rwt

6111An ••••

}'
i

IIIM!ztlllf tt1t lOIII of yourlt•l~

... , _ . pro,l!ty·tlltl.

~ · H&amp;R

'

lou••
1111111111 ,.. tWtoctlooo
,_JOlt'
11111111. JO!IIIIotld Itt-

OCK

"1·6674

'

'

\

(

I

�,

.

Rose .
three-month stay
in Cincinnati 'half-way-house'
J

•

./

.'.

CINCINNATI (UPI) -Dueand bep.a a ~molltllatay at
a IIJIIU"I8II "llalflray boule" Ia Ilia
bonietDwD of &lt;lJicbmatL

past ttve months tor tax fraud.
Baseball's aU-time hit leader
wallcecl out of the prllon' s admi.Dstratlon building at 9:30 ·a.m.
EST, wearlni a blue Winter
jacket against gloomy cold
we•ther. He was taken IDa white
station wagon to another part of
the prison ~here his wlte_was ·
waiting lor blm. Tbe IJ)I!IIla was
kept about 50 yarda away from
the prilon gate.
.
When asked how he felt, Rose
said "great," but Ignored other

'*

improve road_record to 12-5
By .JOE CIALINI'
him."
. UPI Sports Wrl&amp;er
The loss was the tlttb In six games for
• The roa(lls _tra&lt;lltlonally an unfrlen&lt;lly place In
Philadelphia, which !ellto4-llnovertlmecontests
.the NBA.
an&lt;l13·3 at the Spectrum. ·
· Only six o! the league's 28 teams have winnbig
"Before the game, I saw the Slxers were 4..0 In
recoros away !rom home but the San Antonio
overtime an&lt;! I thought that was amazing," San
Spurs Improve&lt;! their road mark to 12-5 Monday
_An to$ head coach Larry Bro\\ll said. "But they
nJ&amp;ht with a 111-102 overtime victory over the
have Barkley and I can see why. Then I see the
Philadelphia 76ers.
.
g;1me Is g_olng Into overtime and I said, 'Oh, man,
The triumph was the Spurs' ninth In their lastlO
we better get the jump and get a quick start."'
The 76ers scored only 13 points In the fourth
road·games and only Portland (12·3) has a better
mark away !rom home this season. ,
quarter as they blew their nine-point lead.
"On the road, I don't care how good you are, you
"It was one o! those games we could have won, "
have to stay In the game and stay close," said • saldHerseyHawklns, whohad30polnts. "Butyou
David Roblnsbn, who had 31 points, 16 rebounds
have to give them credit for a good offense. They
hit some big sl)ots down the stretch. "
and three blocked shots. "If you stay close, y.ou
. have an opportunity to win it. And If you have
Barkley said the 76ers might have ~n a little
some opportunities, you'll pull out some at the
sluggish !rom their recently concluded six-game
end."
West 'Coast road trlp.
·
The Spurs have been pulling out more than
''You can always corpe up with excuses but we
some lately, largely thanks to Robinson.
. prefer not to do that," he said. "We just didn't play ·
With San Antonio trailing by nine points alter
that well. We've got to play better."
three periods, Robinson scored 6 points as the
. In other. games, Phoenix tipped Minnesota
·spurs used a' I0-2 run to get back In the game.
119-106, Orlando topped Sacramento 111-83 and
"At one point, I was getdng the ball and felt
Dallas dumped New Jersey_88·87 In overtjme.
good, " Robinson said. "I got some baskets that
·su1111l8, Tlmberwolves tee- At Minneapolis,
got us back In the game. We sUpped a Utile bit but
Kevin Johnson scored 29 points and added 14
we got right back In II."
assists to lead Phoenix. Johnson scored 10 points
Phlladelpl)la had a chance to win In regulation,
In the first lour minutes of the fourth quarter to
but Charles Barkley, who had 31 points, hltonlyl
help, the Suns halt a two-game-losing streak.
of 2 tree throws to give the 76ers a 96-94 lead with
Mlnilesota lost Its third straight.
1: 12 left.
Mastc 111, Klnp 83- At Orlando, Fla., reserve
Jerry Reynolds scored 19 points and Otis Smith
That enabled Rod Strickland to tie the score
with a pair ollree throws ~lth 12.3 seconds to go.
came · of! the bench to add 17 tor the Magic.
· In the extra period, Strickland hit a three·
Orlando recorded Its !ourth victory In s1x games
and avenged a 117-108 setback to Sacramento In
)lolnter to give San 'Antqnlo the lead lor good and
·Robinson sank six straight tree throws to enable
mid-December.
·
MaverickS 88, Nets . 87 (OT) - At East
'the Spurs to pull away.
: "We stayed In front of guys and made tllem
Ruther1ord, N.J. , ROlando Blackman hit a
;shoot ove~ us and that .was the dltlerence In · -- th'lf'polnt shot with 1.8 seconds le!t enabling
DaiJlls to hold off New Jersey: The victory helped
overtime, said .Strickland, who had 21 points.;.
the Mavericks snap a three-game losing streak
.~ ·we _all understand what Dave can do. Having a .
guy like that enables everybody else to !~ off . 'While the Nels dropped ~heir seventh straight. ·

.

phio State ~oves . to foUrth ·spot
~

Umted Press Intemalional .poU ·
8)1 " " " ' SHAIN

. UPI8ports Writer
NEW YORK - Indiana and ·
Ohio State, bpttllng for ·supre- .
macy In one o! the nation's
tough~! conferences, gave the
Big Ten two positions In the Top 5
Monday In the United Press
International college bas.ketball
ratings.
·
.
. Nevada-Las .Veeas rem-ained ·
the unilnimous No. 1 choice for
the fourth straight week, earning
aU 42 first-place votes cast by the
Ul&gt;I Board ot Coaches to finish
with 630 point.. Arkansas remalned No. 2 with 577 points.
Next came No. 3 Indiana and
No. 4 Ohio State, which already '
are the only ·two undefeated
schoolS In the Big Ten. The
Hoosiers, 14-1, opened their conference season ·I-t week with
victories over Illinois and
Northwestern, while the Buckeye~ ran their reCord to 12:0 with

Harrisonville hap~nings

a

~purs hand Sixer8 lll-1021oss to

NEW YORK (UPI) - The
II Rose were to be elected, Hall
hallowed doors o! Cooperstown o! Fame officials would have to
beckon lor RoWe Plngera and worry about backlash from t11ose
Rod Carew, but will they be who .believe Charlie Hustle
cloled to Pete Rose?
doesn't belong. Some Hall o!
The Baset~all Writers' Associa- Famers have Indicated they
tion of America will announce would boycott Rose's Induction
Tuesday night (10 p.m. EST) the ·ceremonies.
results .of this year's Hall ·of
The Hall's board of directors
Fame vodng, and. Fingers and can make any· changes In the
Carew are likely assured eleetlon voting and selection process,
In their first year on the ballot.
even remove all power from the
On Thursday, however, ttie writers.
,
Hall of Fame's board of dlrectars
Jack Lang, executive secre. wtll meet to discuss whether tary of the BBWAA, said the
Rose should be Included on next organization would fight -any
year's ballot.
drastic changes, such as barling
Since the Inception of the Hall Rose or taking away their right to
In 1935, the BBWAA has deter- VQte.
mined what players appear on
"The writers will oppose that,"
the ballot. A BBWAA iUidellne Is Lang sald. "The rules olear ly
any player who spent 10 years In . state (procedures) · can be
the majors Is eligible.
·
amended by the 1 . bQard, but
The Hall may not want a they'vl! never taken away our
baunecl player and convicted rlghta until now. We've been
felon in Coo!)erslllwn, even It voting since 1935 under the same
Rose Is baseball's career .Jtlt rules with no hindrances."
leader. U Rose Is lnchided on the
Rose was banned from baseballot, there 11 no guarantee he ball In 1989 by late Commissioner
would receive the 75 percent of . A. Bartlet Glamatd for gambling
the votes necessary lor election.
and Monday was relea~ed from
· TheHallapparenUydoesn'twant · prison alter serving a live-month
to take that chance.
term lor tax evasion.
'Fingers, the , all-time saves
u ....... leader, and Carew, a seven-time
cage s...........ae.. batting .champion, hold strong
·
·
. Hall of Fame credentials. .
(All Gatne~,)
·• ·
1
Team
.
WL
Fed. Hocking ... : .. ......... ....7 1
a ;.&gt;-;;,

,......

'

4
5

PICk·

llulinetaa iMUrance

ege, t118t Is. lt"s SERIES

cllurehas. a~rtmanta 111d
ilrug 11oras. Call udoraproposal and qu9tatlon.

214 EAST MAIN
PO!iiiEROY

99t·&amp;687

~
lnaur.,c•C-.,.i••
, ,. . . . . . .0

'

-'.!

.

c•

Rt. 33

·a

.

'

FARRAH RYAN AND BLOODY LIPS- Actor Ryau O'Neal
says his lov~ affair with Farr&amp;b.Fawce&amp;t began when she was
stllr married to actor Lee Ma,Jon, who In !act helped set llln
inotton. O'Neal told 'IV Guide tllat Majors asked him to take his
l wife out while he was makln&amp; a movie ·tn Canada. The marriage
· was already on the rocks and the date was the beginning of a
love match that Is now 10 years old. At the end otthelr tlrstdate,
"We sat and kissed and kissed until our Ups were bloo(ly. I could
have gone on kissing her for a year,'' O'Neal said. Thlngli got ·
, -more lll!flous the nl!llt ntabt. ''It was WIbelievable; She bas such
a body- that dny ~alst, those muscles. I said, •my God, Heel
· ; Jllte I'm In bed with Olga Korbut.'" O'Neal and Fawcett have a
:son, Redmond.
. oiiJII·OWNERS NIX lt08EANNE, CYBDL - Glamourous
' cpiU llllepllard and raucous ~- Barr apparently have
something in common: the owners of TV satelllte dishes can do
without them both. The ~aders of Satelllte TV Week voted Barr
· "The Molt ObnOldoua Kid on TelevisiOn.'' Shl) won the award
. easily, helped DO doubt by' her sln&amp;lng of the National Anthem
, lalt summer at the ball 1111rk In San Diego. The same readers
: decided Shepherd' • commercial for expensive shampoo and
. hair coloring, featuring her declaration, "I'm Worth It," was
· the wiDaer In
the "Worst' TV Commercial" cateiJOry,
,. . . .

Family Restaurant
773-5321

Mason, WV

(NEXT 10 MASON EXXON!
I

.

•

·- -·

&amp;

Emy Olivarez-Ortez&amp;, M.D. ·'

•
·:J

-~.--. ~

$7S ~tilt
COUPON
t7' ~tilt
FREE ELECTRONIC HEARING TESTS

;people in the news

.

(304)

E. ~eal Orteza, M.D.

.ostess.

.

. Special Offer Good
Monday-Friday, 11 a.m. to4 p.m.

~ason

1

Achievement lirt announced bj SBC .

L

.

Middleport First
Baptist Church
has youth lock-in

"qlllled

ONE. a broad-......
competitMiy-priced
plln
for retail · ltOraL. ~~­

...,

.

::ky:

Friendly Circle has ·meeting

6.
7

6

Pu/Jinr perronal
~and
we~

Alfred notes

.6

1
2
2
2
2
2
4
5

Modeffl Woodmen celebrate victory

Co11111}unity calendar

~=~: : : : : :::: ::: : ::::::::: J !· . Mas.onL Family
R~staurant
'
L·F
uncu
eal ure

cats !ell 70-56 at Wasblnrton and
Syracuse lost 76-66 at home to
VIllanova.
. .
VInton Co11nty ........ ..........3
- North carolina also moved up Alexander .......................4
two positions to fifth, followed by Melp ......... .. .. ...·; ... .... ......2
No. 6 Arizona. No. 7 UCLA MlUer ..............................1
Improved two spots and Syra- Nel. -York :.... .. ~ ................1
cuse fell four places to eighth.
Connecticut jumped four spots
to ninth and fellow ' Big East
TVCG-Onl;y
member St. Johns remained lOth ' Team .
·
W
despite losing to Syracuse . In Fed: Hockln1J .·:..... ;...........6 ·
overtime. ·
W~llston ........ ..... :..... .... ...5 :
· No. 11 Duke dropped three Trimble .......... ............ - ...3
spots atter a big Joss to VIrginia VInton County ..........:.......3
and Oklahoma ~lid one .place to Belpre .. ........ , ..................4
12th. No. 13 Georgetown move&lt;! Alexand~r .......................4
The Hoosiers and Buckeyes
up three positions and Nebraska, Metgs ............................. .2
are expected to be part of a
at 14-1 off to Its best start In 78 MIUI!f .... ,....... ~ ....... , ....... ..11
four -team battle lor the Big Ten
)'ears, Improved one spot to 14th. Nei.-York .................... .'...0
title, along with Michigan State
No. 15, V.l riinla vaulted up · Tollflllt'a pmes:
and Iowa.
seven places, Pittsburgh sUd two Alexander at Trimble
Both Indians and Ohio State
spots to 16th and No. 17 East Federal Hockloi at Melp
moved up two positions In the
Tennessee State remained un- NelaoDVIIle-York at Miller
ratlniJS alter 11pset losses by . changed. New Mexico Stste VInton Co11nty at Belpre
Arl,zons and Syricuse. Th~ Wild· . Improved two positions to 18th . Wellston -open
'.
.

=

Helping Hands
e meet s·

Fingers, known lor his handlebar mustache, saved 341
games In 16 years ·

!C

wins over Iowa and Mlchtaan.
·Ohio State remained one of
only two unbeaten teams In the
. nation Saturday by . winning at
· Michigan tor the first time since
1984. Jimmy Jackson scored 12 of
his 16 points during the final 8: 17
as the Buckeyes took a 67-57
victory.
"~e really turned It up a notch
In the last elghf or 10 minutes'"
· Ohio State Coach Randy Aye~s
said . "That's what ~akes hln'i a
special player. He wants the ball
· In · his hands when Its · the
: toughest." ·
·

T[atfier.
' b·llt
· hda.Y

w.

Hall beckons for Fingers, .Carew

. C
TV

H•

dar.

hours' community service at a
BOSE RETURNS HOME- Fonner ClaciJ!Dall Beds pla)ler ud .:
boys center and five Inner-city
MIIIUIIer
Pete Bole arrived at the Talbert BoUle in ClaclDDalllate
. ClnclnnatlschoOia as a teacbei'' s
Mollda)lloDowiDI
hla rei- from lhe federal prison In Marlon,
ll!de beginning Ja11. 14. He will be
DL
after
ll!rvlDIIIve
JliOBtba for tax fraud. Bole will be reqldredto
asstcned to physical·fitness and
·
Jive
at
the
halfway.houie
for ~~everal months whUe he completel
health teachers.
1,000
)loun
of
commlllllty·IM!rvlce.
(UPI) ·
After Rote Is released from the
,.
halfway house In three months,
he will be on probation another residents," Craddock said.
committee will meet In New
nine months.
Prison olflclals In Marlon said York to review the election .
"To us, he's just another Rose was a good Inmate· there.
procedures. The purpose o! that
" (Rose) worked hard In
mf!!!tlng Is to adopt a new
number coming In," aald Larry
Bennett. assistant director of the manual labor job In a remote guideline regarding players susCornerstone halfway house. "We area Inside the main penitentiary pended from baseball, such as
~lmn.'_!. do anythln&amp; special for and otherwise serve&lt;! hiS time II) Rose.
a quiet, unremarkable fashion,"
The Cincinnati native com''We I'U!1 a tliht ship," Corner- prison Warden John Clark said. pUed .4,256'hlts In 24 seasons with
stone program director Deborah "He 'neither asked for, nor was -Cincinnati, Montreal and PhllaCraddock said. "We teach people granted, any special privilege or · delphia and holds several other
to be good citizens."
condition and· was cooperative major league records: games
Rose will be one of45 offenders with our s taft.
(3,562}, singles (3,215) and 200-hlt
living at tbe halfway hoUse.
"Mr. Rose Is looking forward seasons (10) .
Furnishings In Rose's room . to returning to the community
He was' banned from baseball
Include a metal spring bed, a . and the chance to assist young In 1989 following an Investigation
steel trunll:for his belongings and people as ordered by the court," that disclosed he bet on baseball
a modest bathroom with an Clark said. .
games.
old-fashioned sink. The plaster
Rose was allowed to travel to
Rose pleadi!d guilty to tiling.
walla are painted Institutional the halfway house . with his !alse Income tax forms In 1985
yellow.
famUy, Clark said. The 17-tlme and 1987, and aclmltted to hiding ..
Besides working during the All-Star had "made It clear" he more than $354,000 In Income
day at the schools, Rose also will did not want to be Interviewed, from gambling, personal appearbe expected to sbare housework the warden said.
~
ances ana the sale of memotabl;
Rose's release comes one day !Ia. Included ·In that figure was
.at the halfway hoUI!I!, lnchllllng
W(l&amp;hlng !ll.lhes and cleaning before the results of baseball's $129,000 Rose got tor selling the
bathrooms. "We hope to foster a Hall of Fame election will be bat with which he broke Ty
· spirit of cooperation among the released. On Thursday, a special Cobb's record forJhlts In 19gj. ·

.

.

The Janlay "mciiclng of the was presmted· by EIWI&lt;I' Knight.
Cheater Gilden Oub wss held She displayed 8owen ·and plant
recently at the home of~ Dun material of exCeucnt color preser·
with KatbryJi Mora, essiSI'nl hos- ved in sev~ ways. She disciiSSed

Paw

questions.
Rose, 49, still must serve 1,000

ntcbt'l NBA game Ia Mlnaeapolls, wblcb the Suu
won 119·106. (UPI)
.

..

tn.

rei~ fi'Dnl a federal prison ID
MarioD, Dl., where be II)II!Dt the

MAJ'ERU: DRIVES- Pboeaix'l Dau Majerle
(9) drlvee 10 the hoop &amp;laiDit Mhmeeota'a Tony
Campbell (19) In the first q~~&amp;rter of .Monday

· Tuesday, Janua"V 8, 1991
'
Page 6

of drying material. Cover c8refully
with more drying material, cover
with tight lid and set aside from
seven days to two weeks. The "·
~and demonstrated drying puce- drying time nuly be shortened by
The Oub· Collect opened the dures. The oldest .,.(1 most simple puaing the containers in microwave
mceWig.
way is JRSSin.B.between pages of a with one half cup of waler on high
Io Hill
·ded at the meeting large book: Displayed were well for three minutes. Allow to cool 24
and roll ~. BIIIIMmi with
preserved specimens, quite old For hours beflft checking. "Creative
New Year's zesolution for my gar- · air-«ying, material should be c11t in Decorations with Dried flowers"
den."
,
mid-day of 1 SUMY day, when by Dorothea S. Thompson is availDevolions by Pat Holte included moisture has evaponred. Strip able at the . Meigs County Public
•
"k Couldn't Be Done; by Edgar A. lea~ flom stemS. Han&amp; upside Library.
Guest, and a: "Parody on T'was the down, unerowded, in a warm, dry
Jo Hill gave a demonstralion
Night Bef01e Chrislmss." by David place. Alferabllll and yarrow may ''Romantic florals: Dried flower
, Dixon.
'
be 1Uced in waler a couple of da_ys Picture." She made small hats by
.shaping stiffened doilies. Using a
Mrs. Holter noted !hat the dis· before hanlfing.
bit of spragnwn mass ss a base for
play
of
50
Madonnas
at the Meigs
Pine
cones,
pods
and
grasses
dry
BRopKE A. TRAINER
Ciluntr Public Lilnry by Mrs. we}:l placed m a shallow box, the ' tiny llowers fastened with a
~ during the past .month would .cuihioned with. paper. ·Mrs- Dean glue gun,. adding beads and ribbon.
be m place for another week.
' ·displayed coxcomb · thus dried; of 'the Victorian hats were displayed
on small hat stands. The hostess
Sunshine
reports
were
made
and
excellent cillor. ·
Br9oke Alysse Trainer, daughter
~ucted a memory contest Won
thank-you
notes
from
Debbie
and
Mrs.
J(night
demonsttated
drying
of Mike and Natalie Trainer, Mid·
Chevaller and Ovetbtook with silica ge~ DOling that sand, by Maida Mora and Pat Holter.
c;':;a:!.~r first birthday Rodney
A salad bllffet wss servecl. The
Ccnle!' were !e8d. The sick were borax or com meal could be used.
A..--''·~
ua.. and S
Feb-uary
meeting will be bCld at
noted
and
a
card
silned
for
Nancy
All
must
be
dry
for
successful
~~'6 were ..-....e
usan
the home of Mallrita Miller. A mis·
Miller
Mays,
South
!&gt;oint
results.
A
'ICrJ
shan
stem
is
left
on
WICkline,
Gerry and Susie
"Everlaslina Flowers: How To" the llower, placed singly in a layer cellaneous auction '!&gt;'ill be held.
Lav.:rence, ~ Remy, Peur:
J~e and Bnllney Scarberry, Tami
and Cody Thomas, Dwuane Perry
and S~y S~.
. S~g_gifts were Ray Tflol:nas,.
1bC "victory J11111Y" for the George Gilbert and Sharon Gil· assistant pastor ofTOICh.chUn:h.
Ronme, .Lmda .IIJ'!d Andy Trainer,
Modern
· Woodmen of America J()IJ!ey, ttustees.
·
Free hemocult tests were made
Steven and .~lln Hus10n, Irene
Camp
10900
Matching
Fund
Drive
·
A
list
of
donors
to
the
Matching
available
and the value of the tests
Thomss, B1ll, Be~ and ~&gt;?~
10
bene1it
the
Ton:h
United
Fund
Drive
was
read
by
Edna
Forwa5
furnished
by -Athens County
":elker, ~t, Cledith and Heuli
~tbodist
Church-CommJ!nity
rider,
~urer,
Ton:h
Church.
The
Cancer
Society;
Edith Van Dyke,
Oiler, RICk . and Amy ~ohn~n.
Bllilding
was
held
New
Year's
Eve
total
amount
netted
by
the
drive
representative.
F{eda W~lling and Ke1th and
at the church.
was $5,175. This amount includes
Contest prizes were won by
Lynette Aeiker.
~v. Mike King gave the bless· $2,500 in matching funds con- Lucy Davis, Da110n Forrider, VIring. R.C. Hendcnon, Coolville, led tribuled to the drive by Modem ginia Null, Thelma Clegg, Nathan
the pledlfe of allelfiance 10 the ~-' Woodmen of America, Rock Island, Bumter, Annda Rood, Leona Sears,
Faye Criss led the Woodmen il W• .Appecialicn fa the drive was SIIC Breedlove, Zona McPherson
.
JMarieUa, and Sharon Gillogley.
Tom and Stacie Pullins, Doug, Terri c-ct and Marjorie Malone led the
sinpng
of
hymns.
Weekend guests Of Mr. and Mrs. Mr. . and Mrs. Mildred Christian and Justin Browning, ChuCk,
Officen are John BRiedlove,
Lonnie Bolen were their children were Lois Christain and son, Donna. Susie and Chuckie Pullins
consul;
C.W. Hendenon, advisor.
and families, Mr. and Mrs. MrsJack Devin, Nashville; Mr. and Mrs. and Shelly Hill, Vic, Denise, Mike
Gamer
Griffin,
sentry; Don Dunfee,
Kanhner, Dayton; Mr. and . · JaineS Harmon, John and Christine, and Michelle Laughery and Scou
Greg ·Steiner and c~ns: Le!Jan,!!:._• Port1ancl;
and Mrs. Mike McDonald. Jean, Angie and Chris
Dianna Camden, UICinJiatl; ...... Grueser and Meron, Mr. and Mrs. Spencer and Bill Osborne.
·
anll Mrs. Bill Srollff and sons pf Rob.en Snowden and daughters.
Dexter; Mi. and Mrs. Frank New Year's Day guests were Mr.
HoWard, Brooke and Josh, local. and Mrs. John Bums, Wellston, and
They also had Christmas in their her aunt, Mrs. Pearl. Bower,
·' ·j ·
hOrne fa the six' Folley children, Zaleski.
.
ClCC
Memben of the Middleport Flr&amp;t
Cbaril)', Junia, 'JY, Casey, Katrina " f,frs. Vrrginia Gibson visited
Marge! Purtell · presented a Baptist Church Youth Group
and Amber, Rutland.
over the weekend with henon, Mr. program on time and the new rear recendy held a lock-in in the
Mrs. Deny Bishop visited ha' -and Mrs. Allen Gibson and sons of at the JCC('Jit meeting of the Cucle church bEsemeDL
brother in Columbus on Thursday.
Colwnbus.
• o(Helping Hands held 11 her home.
Throughout the night the f'OUP
Dinner guests on Christmas of
She noted that at the average age of . enjoyed devotions, a pizza diana",
70, only one and a half years are skits and games.
spent in worship of any kind. She
Attending' were Sheny Seddon,
read of·ffi!11l)' famous people who Tammy Queen, Tracey Grueser, Elhad used their pe time and .insde len Lewis, Jennifer Fink, Sean Walgreat accomplishments. Sev&lt;nl ton, Eric White, Penny Lewis,
Commuity Cllendar Items Council 323 Dau1JIIIers of America · ~mbers ~ poems about New Danny White, Peggy Lewis, Cathy
appear two days herore an event will meet Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. Year's resolutions and making the Riggs, Donna Grueser, Sharon
most of life. ,
Seddon and Rev. James Seddon.
and the. day or ttiat evenL Items · at the home of Esther Smith.
Lucile Allen presided at the
The group elected oflicen
must be received ill advance to
assure pubUcatloa Ia the caleB·
LEBANON TOWNSHIP • The meeting and 1'!111 call was answered recendy also. They are: Tracey
ELECTRiCITY BASICS / CoJumbns Soathen Power ComLebanon Township Trustees will using a scripture with the word GniCICI', president; Penny Lewis,
. dar.
PH7'1
Louie the Llabllllai Bag rec:endy :visited Sallsb111'7 Elemen.
vice-president; Sherry Seddon,
TUESDAY
meet in special sesson on Wedncs· ''wisdom."
tary.
Wearln&amp;
tbe COitame Is Fred Desldlllo a representative o1
Kathryn Jobnson had devotions secretary; Sean Walton, treaSUrer;
POMEROY • Dr: Walton Mac· day at 7 p.m. at the township buil·
Columllns
Southern
Power. LotUe villted the seiKiol to aplalb the
giviniJ a monolog entitled, and Thmmy Queen, publicity.
Millan, Kennesaw, Ga., Bible dling.
buka
of
electrlclt,
and
oft'er sarety advke. With the "hdp or Lee
'"Another Year."
teach&amp;, will bC reaching the book
THURSDAY
Smith,
Louie
uses
a
variety
ol visual aids Including an eleetrlcat·
A note of thanks was received
POMEROY • The Pomeroy
of Acts at the First Southern Baptist
outlet,
a
lamp
or
coal
and
a
hair d1'7er to Ulastrate the saret7
Church, Pomeroy Pikt, lhrough Flame Fellowship Chapttt_ will from Brad Zink, stationed on the
theme.
. ·
Thurs4&amp;y at 7 p.m. nightly. The meet Thursday at 7 .,.m. at the ~s~~Y for the food box sent
Clvistmas guests of Mr. and Mrs. ·
Senior Citizens Center m Pomeroy.
public is invited 10 attend.
Lester Keaton were Mr. and Mrs.
MIDDLEPORT · ; Middlep6n JeMy Cadle, Leon, W.Va., will be
Plans were made 10 honor .the . Bob Keaton and SOIIJ, Bobby, Mat·
;
I,.odge 363 F and AM will meet the speaker. The public is invited 10 resideniS at the lnfirmiiiY during the thew and Kevin.
Valentine season.
·
Martha, Joe and Will Poole and
Tuelday at 7:30p.m.
attend.
A hOliday diMer was enjoyed coins. Dianne Hawley gave each
•
The giOIIJ) will make qllilts fOr Nellie Pllter hosted ·a famil
fec:cndy by members of the one a hand-crafted omamenL
I POMEROY • The Precepter Beta
POMEROY • The Xi Gamma
the Grundy Mounlain Mission and holiday diniler 011 Doc. 30. The&amp; -Friendly Circle at Trinity Chun:h at
Gay Perrin presided at a brief
home was decorated in a Christnw the home of · JoAnn Wildman. business meeting when reports of
Mu Chapter, Bdan~rna · Phi , Belli . Chapter, Beta Sjgma Phi liave a day later 10 tie them.
Sorority will meet
y at the Sorority will meet ThlltSday at 6
The Meigs County Women's Fel- motif with a nativity scene and a Mildred Ward was a guest. Grace completed Chrisanas projects and
p.m. at the Grace Episcopal Church Jowship will be January ~ at ~ . lighted Christmas tree.
home of Debbie Miller.
b) Mrs. Wlldnwi preceded the o( the ill were made. Propam
for a chili supper.
Rutland Church of Christ With . Willis Patker asked the blessing candle-light dinner.
·
books for 1991,
by Norma ·
POMEROY • The Ohio Eta Phi
Nora Rice ss speaker.
•before the meal
· Alice
Globokar,
program L. ~ewell, were 7 lribUted.
Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi Sorority
WELLS'ION - The Wellston ··The next meeting will be held · Guests ~t were Wilma and chairman, p_ve a reading, ''Trouble · Gifts were exchanged and Mn.
will meet'Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the Ohillco Society will have a Feb. 7 at the home of Virginia HoWlEd Patker. Looise Michael at the Inn, and a poem, ''The Time Perrin shared her just completed
baseball card show on Thursday · Wyatt at I p.m. with devotions by Gary and Kim Michael, all of ~ · Santa Dldn 'I Come." She gave each book of original verse. '"l"he
Meigs County Public Library.
·
· ·WEDNESDAY
from 4-9:30 p.m. at the SL Peter Marge Purtell and program by Ida Chester area; Irene Parker, member a small Chrisanas sock 111 Present Gold" with design by Beth
• : RACINE·
The
Southern and Paul 'Parish Hall on South·Pen- Murphy.
;
Syracuse; Mildred Caldwell, Tup- hold the year's Thankoffering Perrin Johnson.
l!oosters will meet Wednesday at nsylvliJiia Avenue in Wellston. Ad·
Othen present were Peggy Bole, pen Plains Sarah and Homer
7:30 p.m. at the high schoOl and all mission is $1 a $2 per family. Virginia Wyatt, Ida Murphy, Lucile Parker, StivdmJic; Aaron Parker, ·{'f~~=====~==============~========~
parents, coaches and advisors are Door prizes awarded. Call 1-614- Allen, Evelyn Thoms, Suzanne Columbus;
Willis
Parker
Warner, Hazel Stanley and Chelsea Parkersburg, W.Va.
'
384-3850 for Information.
urged 10 attend.
Young, a ~JileS!.
·
: MIDDLEPORT · The Mid·
ROCK SPRINGS · The Rock
&lt;tJeport Literary Oub will meet at SpriniJS Grange will meet Thursday
f:30 p.m. Wednesday in the at· . at 7:30p.m. Ca1ificates of 50 years
tivities room of the ~Middleport will be awarded. Members urged 10
The achi~vement list fa Spires, Belle Polc:tn aild VICki
Branch of the Meigs Coun~Public attend. .
,
Soulheastem Bnsiniw College in Ulo...Ol· ·
Library. Mrs. C8rl
will
.
Galllpolls has been 811J10U11Ce4 for "s~~ obtaining 3.5 or better
review "The Celts." Faye allace
POMEROY' • The Pomeroy the fall quarter.
are Sandi Cole, Michael Aowss,
'
o;yiU be
Gro11p of AA·and AlAnon wiD meet
Studenls eaminl a 4.0 avaaae Stephanie Ward, Laura Smitb, Judy
announce
the
operrine
of their
·
ThlltSday at 7 .p.m. at the Sacred are Becki Ball, R-.y Keams, Bennett, .Patricia Daniels, KeiJY.
::CHESTER
The
Past · Heart Catholic Church. For more Richard Reianire, Darla Rousb, Joy
· practice in
Nelaon; Brenda NOU. April
Councilor's Oub
of
the
Cllester.
information
calll-800-333-SOSL
Thompson,
Debra
Mullens,
Julie
.
.
.
Shoemaker and Bartlie Wray.

way boUle, surrounde4 by a
friendly crowd of several
hlllldted people•. J()me of wbQm
can1ed •litiS saylag, "Welcome
back, Pete."
Roll! ari1ved at the balfway
house, so-called becallll! It Is
halfway between prlsoD and
freedom, late Monday afternoon
- about seven boun atter.belaa

'

•

~··

Chester Garden Club has meeting

time he visits WIShingUIII, D.C., he
visits the Vietnam Memorial Will
of the ~ .Lesion. was the. 10 pay his rospects He OODCiuded
guest speak- It a recent meeting of by sayins to , stop and dliDk lbout
ihc Return JODathan Meip ChaPter. the c~ to love them llld thO
Daughters of the American Revolu- llag and not 10 bum iL
lion, hdd 11 the Grace Episcopal
On bd!alf of the lh~inp ChipChurch. ·
ter, Sons or the American RcvoluDuriag his year ·as National tion, Jack Kallff, vice president,
("nmnmndor, Epling ~ that he presented Epling witb a cedificato
had villtcd every stale, sometinies and bronze metal fa Good Citizenmae than ~ and also sev&lt;nl shi ·
COILIIries. On a bip 10 Nicanwgua
Ronald ReYnolds. !epllt,
he ltllliDd that the aroup his was opened the meeting in ritualiltic;
,lnlvclina wilh was not permitted off form with. Mrs. Eileen Back.
.the plane beca~ two men had just chl!plain, offering p:ayer. Del~
been killed. They also c:ould· not and alternsiCI 10 Stato and national
talk 011 the obone a in their lOOms conferences were elected.
beciiii!JC of d8nger. He met a
Delegates tQ . state are Mrs.
fourteen. year old girl who had · Reynolds, regent; Mn. .Wendell
fought for two years to be flee. The · Cleland; Mrs. Robert D. Ashley;
rest rl.
fantily had been Jdlled. and Mrs. Eileen Buck. Willi Mrs,
Whea he made 1 trjp to Berlin, he Gene Yost and Mn. Roy Holter as
wen&amp; to Cbeclc .Polnl Charlie wheft: atternate.&lt;J. The nationll delegates
he'met a lady who thanked bim for are Mrs. Clclaild. Mn. Reynolds
freedom.
and Mrs. George Hackou with Mrs.
.Epling Silled that Americans live Yost as altemale.
ill the "peaJeSt COIIIIIQ' in the
Pennies wac ·collected fa the .
world." Other countries Still do not - "Mile of Pennies" project for the
have electricity, television a other DAR schools.
itans !hit are taken fa granted in
Mrs.
Eich donlled the
the United States-. He said that each Meigs County History Book,
every hour, ·a child commits Volwne u, to be at to the DAR
swcide and be knew of a child who library in Washington, D.C.
had committed suicide with his
A discussioa was held on sevaa1
fallter's pislol. He ~ the IIICIII· grave markinlll! in the spring and
bers 10 tell their children that they prOspective members.
love them and to encourage them 10
A dessert course was served by
respect the American 11ag bec•nse the hoslesses Mrs. Dwight Mil- ·
the llag still stands fa freedom and hoan, Mrs. ~hael Elberfeld, Mrs.
to believe in iL He slated that each Gary MOCft and Mrs. John Ra~e.

''I teet ereat." aa1d a-u be

.,•.

..

- ¥i1e1 .. Fd'
.,. b,
• Point Pleasant,
W.VL, Put NlliOIIII Commsncler

Cbecked Into ' 'Corllerlble"llalf.

~

By The Berld

The ·n aiiy Sentinel

.

.

DAR m~ting held

ball lepDd Pete Roe eaded a
ftve..moath prfloD term Monday

'..... .

-.

I

.

~
~

l

..,)

·General Pediatrics
and

·Adolescent Medicine

will bt givMI in MEIGS COUNTY by

BELlONE HEAliNG AID .CENIEIS ,
~

HOME CAIE MEDICAL·EQUIPMENT
224 EAST MAIN ST., POMEIOY, OHIO
THURSDAY, JAN. 10-9 A.M.-12:00 NOON ·.

---lllTONE HEARING AIR CENTER

I

'

'-

r•

For appoint.menta call .
(304) 87G-4107 ..

CIII
fnl NE '
1·110-634-5165 fw I 11 lw ;;tltu:ut.
THE TESTS Will IE 81VEI BY ALICEISED H~llflt AID SPECIALIST

to...,., PIIU ........ -·•-lftNapro
..,..,_ .. ......._llrlnttNa
'ltll HIAIIING TIST II t71 ¥111u1. Aclultl

-..poR wllh ,... fllr -

only,,......

,

11 dlnflonMNIIOAitlnvtMcl

.

\

.DLI PlEAsANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
11f"l rite k.rtlly olP' ' Ia .U
•
'

.

V..., OINt. Po1n1 ~ WY aillo .(31M).~

UMWA , !JAW · OTHEII INSUIIANCIE PROVIDE II

WMI-IIS WRCO.

I H 1 . - _ , ..... cw,reoallllo

•

Srcfne patienta ·
. , .9 a.m.·to 5 p.m. Monday 'throUgh Friday

1312 EASTERN AVENUE, IRT. 7)
NEXT TO PIZZA HUT, GAWPOUS, OHIO
WEDNESDAY, JAN. 9
9:00 A.M. TO 4:00 P.M.
CALL 614·446·1744 or 1·100·634··5265 .

~wllo'-t..We .......lllf ... d

at ·
2907 Jackaon A'enue
Point Pleasant, Weet VtrRinia

• -1111111
'

...

•

'

l~

•.

•

.
I
1

-~

�~

., .

.,.

..

'
I

!

-;. . .. . . ..

.. .

·,-

~

.....

- .,....

~

.....

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

..

•

·

'

.

.

. .

,,

.... . ,..

-

'

•

Tuesday. Januarv 8. 1991

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page 6-7The Daily Sentinel

:AJinal look ~hack at 1

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

in Meigs County

P.......,.

JIG=

GEOMETRY fROJEcrs SELECTED •
Tltele
lladelall Ill Mn. Nanq Larldas
It Eallmt .
Sdloal rated lint, IIKOIId ud
tblrd place recilpilloll ror 111e1r ewalioiJ or a
. problem ror that d-. wlllch they solved by Ill·
~active re•tt'lll. Plctnnd, 1-r, rront, are Keith

'

·r

·'

desifD,

remember ·Fillmore
day tenure.
.
Fllbnore tried to enforce the
Fugitive Slave Law, which re·
qulred runaway slaves be returned to. their masters, but the·
effort did not sit too well with his
Whig · Party, which turned on
Fllbnore and disowned him.
He ran for president on the
"Know Nothing" ticket ln 1856,
but carried only the state of
Maryland.
,
Flllmore was best remem·
bered for Installing the first
bathtub ln. the White House, but
H.L. Mencken, the famed Balli·
more scribe, later admitted he
made up the story.
. Copley, however, credited Fll·
lmore with being the first presl·
dent l9 .Install .plumbing In the
White House. And while he ·
conceded the bathtub story may
be a myth, he said his town
never,theless holds annual bath·
tub races ln the summer to honor
their First Son. ·

Rus.sian Orthodox· celebrate holiday

J

Randall F. Hawkins,' M. D.
Internal Medicine
Oftlce Hours
· Moild~y through,Friday
I

. . (304) 675-7700

R

JIJ PLEASANT VALLEY HOSI'ITAL
1n n. bnl~ ol proleAionclll
.
vauev """·Point'**'"'· w. vo.'2SSSO-

ANCHORAGE, Alaska (UPI)
~ For the 20,000 Russian Or·
thodox falthtulln A111ska whose
dlcicese stl~ka to an old calendar,
Christmas came Monday.
. At Saini Innocent Orthodox
Cltbedral In Anchorage and In
more than 8o other towns and.
villages throughout Alaska,
Chrl&amp;tmas was celebraled In a ·
mix of Eqllsh, Russian, old
church Slavonic and Alaska
· native languages.
. Alaika Is theonlydloceseClfthe
Russian Orthodox Church In
,America that still celebrates
•Chrlatmaa when the Ruulans do;
. In Juuary, ·following lhe old
,Julian calendar, tlioqh a hand·
ful of acattered parlahes elSewhere allo adhere to this part of
the old tradition.
, Other dloc r a have since
, conto~ed their church calendar
to lbe Greaortan calendar uled.
.by lbe 'nat of the Wescern
Chrl&amp;tlan world.
: · Every year, Ruulan church
'.leaden In Alaska confront the
&gt;lllue ol. whetber 10 keep to tile old
;caleadar or fWitcb IIi the new, as
; otller dloc.... did )'eNI 110, but
Ill&amp; diYIIIoJI In oplnlon bu ttot
miUtatetl for cllanp aiad Father
N!cbolaa Molodyko-Rarrll of
Saint lllaaeent l&amp;ld, "It'1 betcer
'to lftve It u It II.''
ODe ol. till mo.t endurlnJ
tradltlou 01 the Rulllu Chrlat·
ID8I celebration In Aluka Is
·. "•~·" In wblcb enllre vU·
lqel ftillow a prleat carrytnc a
laip t'Wirllq ltar -l'epreleatlill tlle ltar of Bethlehem -with
uleon of Jft111 wbne going
from
.
,.;
'

I '

lion, many residents at retirement eluded: a parlc design with scaled
opled to remain at the space port 'lll8p where 1 em = 1 m showing all
and lhe executive council of the improverneniS, an iremized list of
space port · ~ to turn over to costs and e~planations of how their
tile local al1i1iate of the Senior design satisfied each of lhe three
Cmens Association an un- criteria. '
developed agriculrural pod for·
According to Mrs. Larlci!IS, the
developmeill as a retired asttonauts students completed work in the folpadc.
·
.
.. . lowing areas to accomplish tbe
The StudeniS' job was to ~ubmil' a problem; budgeting, scaled ' draw·
.proposal with a limited budget for ing, area.., perimeter, linear
the parlc design before a panel of measurement, cost effectiveness,
judges. The judges selected a park satisfaction of crittria, landscaping,
poposal after hearing &lt;n1 presen- the writing . of ,an article for the
lations based on the following :ojlenintt of the park, creative minkcriteria: safe
aesthetics, in- . ing, scientific theory, sales presenDOvation and optmlurn use of the llttion techniques, blue prints. and
area and cost effectiveness. . cooperalive learning.
StudeniS' presentations also inc·

. BUFFALO, N.Y. (UPI) ~The · noted ..
19lst · anniversary of Millard
While many yawn at the
Fillmore's birth almost went mention of Fllbnore's name,
· unnotfc~-butfortwocommun­ officials of the university where
ltles wbo braved bone- chWing he served as Its I n1 chancellor
cold to mark the event.
for 28 years say they t,ake the
A few dozen people.: most 'or event seriously.
them offlcla:Js from the state
"His achievements have had a
University of · New York at profound Influence on Buffalo .
Buffalo, gathered In 23-Qegree and New York slate," noted Dale
temperatures at Fillmore's Landi, the · Buffalo university's
Forest Lawn Cemetary grave vice president for sponsored
site Monday for the annual programs. ''Those achievements
tribute to the nation's 13th continued to shape our communpresident. ·
· Ity for years to come."
And the mayor of Moravia The brief ceremony Included
three miles. nordl of ·Locke . the placing of a wreath sent by
Township, Fllbnore's birthplace President Buall on the grave and
- also honored Fillmore In a
the plaYing of taps.
special way.
'
Born In 1800, Fillmore became
Mayor B(&gt;b Copley said he the nation's chief executive In
' "took the.day off' to commemo- 1850 when President Zachary
rate the anniversary. ·
Taylor died In office. He served
"Half the town has dl!feren t unW 1853 and Is looked upOn by
things In the area that are named most blatorlans as a leaderoffew
for Millard Fllbnore, :· Copley · accomp~hments during his 236-

stockholders, bondholders and · FDIC:
creditors of the Institution.
The two larger failures were
The New York Stock Exchange those of Continental llllnola Na·
suspended trading In Bank of tlonal Banis: In Chicago, wltb $33.6
New England Corp. stock and billion In ~ssets~ on Sept. 26, 1984,
said It would seek SecurlUes and and First Republic Bank In ,
Exchal!ie Commission permls· Dallas, with $32.9 billion In
slon to permanently dells! that assets, on July 29, 1988.
stock, and a related bond Issue:
Losses to the FDIC were
: The Institution's collapse was greater only at First RepUblic,
the th!,rd largest U.S. bank S2.9 blllion, and at MBank-Dallas ·
failure In terms of assets and In In Dallas, which cost $2.7 billion
anticipated ~ost to the troubled each to mop up.

PVH Medical Office Building

Geometry students of Mrs.
Nancy Lar1tiiiS at Eastern High
School m:ently WIR offered anew
~ 10 that IUbject.
.
than die nonnal textbook
appruach, the studcnll were given
an indliCtive reasoning problem in
which teams worked 'to-r to
,solve the sitliMiqn..
In the problem, the Yll&amp;r was
206S on lhe lunar space port
Galileo. The space port, in continuous operation for 25 years, included die research facility, the
recreational and li · quarters, the
agricultural andY1RfJe support
divisions, and the lunar landing and
surface !IWpOI'tation depanmenL
·· After years of sueceasful opera-

I

'
'

.

-

./'
''

t

1

.

CALL 614-992-7104 FOR APPT.

992-5009

S'!Gutter

~fa Helmet '
"

NEVEl CUAN YOUR
GunEIS AGAIN

GUN SHOOT

· RACINr
.
FIRE DE"•

Bashan luHdlng

oonold..-.d ond contlnuld
lrom •...,. to doy untH flnolly
dlopo... of.

.

Any peroon lnt.,ntld
-y file Willt•• OXCIIptlonl
to uld 811COUntl or to m~~n­
oro ....... nlng tO lho IUCU ·
lion of the tNit, not teoo
Ilion llvo doyo prior to tho
dote .., fol heorlng .
llobert E. Buck, Judge
Common PIMo Court,
Probete Dtviaion

.

Melgo County, Ohio
111 B. 1991 . 1tc

EVIIY ,.
SAT. NIGHT
6:30P.M.

Fonn•rly of Pomeroy,
now ,.oldlng It 6831
Camelot Court, Key,
otone Heighto, Florida

32868

We

205 N. Second SlrHt
liiODLII'ORT, 0111() 4576
Offka 614-992-2116
llonte 614-992-5692
DOmiS.tJ•a•lllll
HOUIESOL'OTI•FARMS
•COMMERCIAL
WE NEED USTINGS!
U-S-90-!fn

MICIDWIYE
OVEN IEPAII
ALL ~llES .
Brl~g It In Or We
. Picll Up..

lEN'S ·APPUANCE
SEIYICE

.

992-5335
or 985-3561
.

Aa:ou F..- Pest OHke
211 L S.C. Pontoroy .

POMEIOY,

'

'
•••

...

llow Homes hilt
"Free Estlmetea"

PH. 949'~2101
or Res. 949·2160'
110 SUNDAY

•sSELL &amp; BUllE

.... ·-··

CONSTIUCTION

•Gart~~os

SERVICE AND REPAIR
ON ZETOR TRAUORS

MOUSE INERflOYIINC?
CUAH UP Willi I

. Plus Other N- lrontlt '
Che&lt;k Out Our Low
.Prices on "Ntw" Zeter
Tractors and EqulpiiMnt
Now In Stockl

CI.ASSIItO ADS .l 'J

.MORRIS
EQUIPMENT

98~-4473

12 Ga. ~~~- Onlj

667-6179

Slrictly lnforl8d

. .l

992-2156

742-2455
Siclohill Road,

f.ut._.

12·24·10-1

mo.

15-'ll·tl•

COMPLETE
ELECTRICAL .SERVICE
Residential and
Commercial

liD• In
Stock!!

J&amp;L

INSULATION
•VInyl Siding
•Replacement
Windows
•Roofing
•I nsu letion ·

REWIRING AND
TROUBLE SHOOTING

Certified lltctrlct..

Fne lstlMat•

JUlES KEESEE
992-2772 742-2251

IAN IS
CONSTRUCnON

992-5009 .

12-19-'!IG- I mo.

&amp;39 Bryen Plec.e
Middleport, Ohio

tl/t4/tln

USED APPUIJICES
' 90 UY WMIAJfTY

WASHER$-$100 up
Dmi$-$Qup

WGES-Gn·Eitc.-$125 IP

FIEfZER$-$125 up

MICIO OYEN5-S79 up

ON'S IPPU4fi'CE

SEIYI(i
992-5335 er t15-3561
Aa-- FNM Pelt Office
I'OIIIIOMIIIO..:

HEATING &amp; COOLING
located on Safferd SchOOl ld. off lt. 141
(614) 4...·9416 or 1-800-172-5U7

. GROOM
ROOM
Co~••tt

Grooming

AHirtlds ·

.

Chester, Dh.

SPECIALIZING IN ....

•Custom Bent Exhaust Systems
•Complete Line of Exhaust Supplie1
•Handle and Install Monroe Shocka
Com·e 811d See U~ For A Free Inspedlon
and Eallmate
PH. 614-985·3949
IIUII
47269 St. Rl.' 241

Lo..

O.C.L. COMPUTER SOLUTIONS, INC.
•ON -SITE SERVICli f l\ li PAilt
•CUSTOM PROGRAMMINC;
0 SAI.IJS.
_
•ON -SITE C:IISTOM TRAINING •
S/'11/NG VAUEY i'IIOI'ESSIONAL BUIWING
J06 jACKSON ,KE · SUITE l OJ
GAi.UI'OUS, OHIO 416)1

446-6000

ow..r &amp; Operotor

,_,.y,

. 614-992-6120
Ohio.

~:A~:o~,:J:~~;E~~~~:~~~~~G,
(PATENTED)
.
tn..,.--...., oHo.,.,.,,oohooorlioodllllh-iloueo.
' olluml "'1D If.~&lt;~~ dlomlllf-.
;
ofillll '!lllr br i'orMholil Ull'
• . . . "' 1D ~ifch "''I wood .

.:

.u...,.,. _ _ cliCI..,....
·· -Marbotoc.lociiO.tOOI•IIrom ... t.a

,: -&amp;~~r81alllcoraucr~on
LOAD EVERY 12 HOUIIJ

''

CAlL
VICKER'S WOOD HEATING

•a...ww-

a10.-.llli-,
PIIolll (301) 571-2251 ~I p.m. '

..

.
'

.

'

KELLER'S CUSTOM BENDING

EMiliE MERINIR

.

'

·10110/'19 tin

THE

.·

.'.

'.

We Have Changed Our location To
1111 Miles £ott on Rt, 248 through

IEFIIIIERATOI!$-$100 up •

·r

.

'

MOBILE HOME FURNAClS • HEAT PUMPS •
. ALL FURNACE. PARTS l
' .·
.
.

h~.;rt

The Daily Sentinel is in ur-·
gent need of 7 copies of
the news!Japer dated Noverilber 1, 1990. Please
call 614/992:2155. . '

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

l~modlll•

·· Filctory Cholto

.. 12-to

' .

•VINYL SIDING
,
•Al.UMINUM SIDitlilG
•BLOWN IN
. INSULATION

11/1,./ttn

Stop &amp; Compara
FrH Elfl-tos

USED RAiliOAD liES

.

Lordy, Lordy, Look •.
Who' s 401
Bonnie June Banka
Lightfoo1
,

3 Announcements

•Complota

992-2269
- .. ...

.

Prices"

Pll. 949·2101 ·
••
or Its. 949·2160
Day·or Night
NO SUNDAY CAlLS

12·11-'10-111

Bl L LACK

.

"lll~t~~analllri

Y. C. YOUIIIG II ·
992-6215
Po-roy, Ohio

GUARANTEED!
FREE ESTIMATES

•fiRfW~OD

FOR SALE IN RACINE

CUSTOM BUilT .
HOMES &amp; GARAGEt

CARPENTER SERVKE

.

'

. Happy Ada ·

. BUILDERS

-Room Ad-no
-CJuttor WCHt .
- Eiiotrlcol • Plumbing
-Concrete Woll&lt;
-Roofing·
-lnt.,lor • Ext.,lor
Pointing
(FREE ElffiMATES)

SHRUB &amp;TREE
TRIM· 9lld
. REMOVAL
"LIGH.T HAULING

--.

YERV NICE LARGE HOME ON APPROX. 3*
Aal£5- 4 BR, 3 baths, 2 &amp;lfl&amp;es. renl!d l
BR IPII1menl. Ptoperly inoludos pand, ap·
·~111 . 4,800 sq. ft. larm bld~and mooile
mo. Areal bllpin at $89, 0. ,

5

of FeiHuory, 1991 , otwlllch
time Mlcl occourito will be

,.

YOUNG'S

Banks
Construction

CEDAR
.
CONSIRUCnON
9U-6641 or ·
691-6864

~

'.

992-5517

3611111t .....
,.......,, 01.
[/l/11/t ...

FREE ESTIMATES

.

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

. Speclellzlng In
· Autamotlc
. Tranomlulano, Bl'llllel,
Tuneup, 011 Chenge,
Clutch Rtpalr,
· FREE ESTIMATES
I Yooro E11perlence

NO JOB' TOO SMALL .

BULLETIN.
BOARD
.. -·-.,

DAN'S
11ANSMISSION
and AUTO liPAll

· ~Siding
•Painting

..

. . ·- -

E-

•Remodelnll and
Ho!Tie Rel)alra
•Roofing

house . to house singing and · settlements, they also estjlbsometimes even traveling to llshed their religion. Russian
neighboring villages.
. churches_were !JuUt In southern
In Anchorage, a city of a coastal areas and Inland as far as
quarter of million people, where ' Russian missionaries traveled.
It Is Impractical to go starling to · By the time Russia sold Alaska to
the homes of the Russian Or· the United States In 1867, the
thodox, Molodyko-Hirrls con· Russian Orthodox ~ellglop had
dupts starring activities every ·taken root..
Olrlatmaa at the Alaska Native
About70 percent oft he Russian
Medical Center hOspital and at a Orthodox In Alaska are Aleuts,
. nursing home.
,
Eskimos and Indians, according
When Ru,slan explorers to estimates by a church official
reached Alaska and established in Kodiak.
·
·

.

F!ubllc 'Notice

Notice

Business ·Services

.

"

~Communities

ptcy, depositors caltn

9 a.m. - 5 p.m.
Suite 13,

~pencer, Nucy NaUy, Michelle Laugbery, Bob·
tile Wblte, VIcky Warren and Aubery West.
Baek, Ruby Bnrke, Jeff Durst, Matt Mlebale,
Chad GrlfHn, Jeremy Buckley and Jay. Holsin·
ger.

;EHS·geometry _students try .out
new approach to preblem solving

: ero.;

failure.
pened accounts since the FDIC
San Francisco-based BankA·
Cassidy, who works for the
took control.
.
merle a Corp., which last year
New
York Investment bank
Monday, some worried custo- pushed Into the No. 2 position
Tucker,
Anthony &amp; R.L. Day,
mers withdrew deposits or empamong U.S. bank holding comof ~ew England coUld
said
Bank
tied sale- deposit boxes. Butmost panies, said It Is Interested- but
be
a
fine'
acquisition.
went calmly about their business that a deal would I:eQulre •'sub- ·
"If you bi!lleve New England Is
at banks now officially owned stantlal 'FDIC assistance. "
not
slnklng·lnto the Atlantic, here
and operated .by the Federal Another West Coast money cen·
Is
an
opportunity to buy mer·
Deposit Insurance Corp.
ter bank, Wells Fargo &amp; Co., was
chandlse at a very depressed
"l don't want to lose what little believed to be looking.
price that will eventually come
I have left because of someone
Bank analysts also cited NCNB
back and shine," the Portland,
else's mistakes," ·said unem· Corp. of Charlotte, N.C., to which
Maine-based analyst said.
ployed Bostonian Char!es . the,FDIC bas sold a failed Texas
For the New Engta:nd reglon1
Heffl16r, 21. He closed an account bank,and First Wachovla Corp;
such an acqulaltlon deal cOuld '
Monday at the Bank ' of New of Wlns.ton- Salem, N.C ..
stitch a silver lining Into the
England's headqwi'rter.s branch . . McCoY of Bane One, ·which
dark bank failure cloud .
Jl,etlred postal worker _Harold bought Dallas's failed MBank,
"You're esaentlally going 16
Vlgoda said he had changed.hls said the Bailk of New England,
have ·clean banks operating In
mfrtdabouttakingoutblsmoney. Wttb a strong branch network,
New England, and these banks
"I was worried but J calmed was "our type of bank.''
.
.
will
be able to go out and seek
down," he·sald.
But lie expressed reservations:
new,.
creditworthy .c ustomers,"
Meanwhile, Bane One Corp., a When his company boqhl Dal·
he
said.
"In essence It Is a rebirth
· Columbus, Ohio superregtonal las's failed MBank, "the econ·
bank WhiCh alreal!}r bas one orny of Texas waa down aa far as of the banks."
Monday's bankruptcy, fllln~
failed-bank ,takeover under Its It would go," whereas In New
; ~lberegton's . aaggtngeconOiny
belt, emerted as a leading , Engtand; "we haven't hit bottom concerned only the holding com·
pany, which lost ll,s subsidiaries
.by enabling banks to resume
candidate to take the three failed yet So thalia of concern to us."
(lendlq to credlt: starved New · bank units off the FDIC's hands.
after It effectively dlscloted Its
McCoy said he wouldn't go for
a "whole bank" deal, ~king to lnsolvl!ncy. Also co.ncerned are
•Englllnd buhieslies.
FDIC Chalnnan L. WWiain
aqulre. only the deposit b111e and
'· The FDIC aelzllre ot the Bank Seidman said when announclnl
..
of New England'soperatlnl unlta
the aelzures that there were two ·retail system, leaving In federai
was expected to cost the agency active bidders In play for the· hands the huge portfolio of
.at leall S2.3 bllllon. The FDIC banking units.
·
nonperforlnlng real estate lOans
that
killed the lnatltutlon. That
;said all deposits of 1be banks .
"We will be Interested Iii
would
mean that the FDIC would
•were Insured - Including those looking at Bank of New Eng,.
exceecllnl a nonnal · $100,000 . land," Bane One Chairman John bear most COlla of the coua:pee.
New England bank analyst
tmtt
B. ' McCoy told United Press
Gerard S. Casllldy said Bane One
A spokesman tor the banks, · International In a telephone
looked like the top contender to.
J&amp;llll!l Dorsey, said lbe aelzure Interview. ''II doesn't aay we'll
''revened'' the deposit run expe- buy It or we're going to bid (on u, ·pick up the pieces. The Midwest
lnstttutt6n 11 financially atroq
'rtenced laat week, and O.:.t six but) when we're given 811 opporlarpeorporatecustomel'l, "ll'ia· tunlty to (Cdnslder It), we'll do . and waa clrcllnl the Bostonbaaed bank even beto~ . the
jor area employers; " had ~ that"

Public

NOTICE OF
fol~ Mmod flduci·
h- flied In
APPUCAnONI FO"
CHILDRI!N'I TRUaT
Problte Court, Melp
FUND MONIES
County, OHio, for epp-.1
The Melgo County CTF ond -lement:
IC·
EITATE . NO. 221101 Advloory Boord lo ........,. oppllcotlono for Pint Aaaaunt of t. C.roon
ChllciNn'o Trull Fund . mo- Crow, CJurdlon of 1M Eonloo for
~~~1.'1~ ·. 1- of
amlth, on In·
to ...Suce child obuM
oompelent P -.
negloat.
EaTATE NO. 2480a .Apptlcotiono moy be ob· Fifth Annuli Account of
tt the Mllgo County JennlferL. lheeto,Guerd"n
auperlnt•-·• ofiiDe end of the Eltoto of 011- E. lol·
muot be IUbl!'llled to tho ley, on lncompenlont Por·
111m1 pllce by 5:00p.m . on
oon.
..,
JIIIUM't 2a.
ESTATE NO. 25708 A IHibllc ~lng to ro· Second Annuol Account of
vlow oppllootlono wHI be· Noncy L. Ho~ger, Ou•r·
held ot 7 :00 p.in. et tho dlon of Dorothy v. Proffitt.
M,.,. County 1-"'ten· ., lncomp- p.,oon.
clriid'o office onJonuery 28.
ESTATE NO . 25331 App- oppllcotlono muot faurth Annuol Acaount of
be oubrnltted to the 111te by lobby Amold, TN- of
Merch 1 .
.
the Truot Cratod by Item II
Jo.....o A. Dlelol, Chllrmln of the Loot Will Mid Tnto·
Melgo CTF Advl...., lloerd mont of Mll'lllret Elll Llw1o,
(11 S. 1tc
! ) - l d.
,
ESTATE NO. 211530- Fl·
PubliC Notice
not •d Dlotrllutlvl Acc&lt;lunt
of Nellie M. lrown. Execu·
trlx of the Eottt8 of YJrvM V.
IN THE
Brown, DecMMCI.
COMMON PLEAS COURT · ESTATE NO. 21174- Fl·
PROlATE DIVIaiON
nol •d Dlotrll)utlvl Account
MEICJa COUNTY, OHIO
of J . l . 0'8....,, Eliecutoraf
the Eotote of Milford S . Holl.
~m:::JE~FOF
Dece111d. ·
ACCOUNTS,
Unl•• u.ceptlonl
IN
PROlATE COURT.
flied
tho....,,
Hid occounto
MEIGS COUNTY, OiUO
be for IMoorln' before
Account&amp; 1nd vouch•,. of w!ll
Mid Court on tho 2th doy

mous

~ of New England .files b......

The

PIJIIIc Notice

(Tblll&amp; tile IIDallilstaloeat of highway improvement needs to the tor/DeVelopment Director in Sep- tioo to the district's decision to pay for the · event. bringing ten eleCtion in February. The commisa lel'lee rec&amp;ppfDI tbe events of • forefront d.uring •tile fall campalgn teniber, With its first stop being the addilional funds Ill the district's en- s.temwheelers and a tow boat widl .sioncrs agreed 10 the elec_tion.
gine!:r, and an amendment 10 the them. Enletl8inment and exhibition
Family
Resort,
Inc.
of
: 1 • In · Me1p . COunty on a season.
vil1ues in the county.
· monlll-to-monlll bul8.)
The home of the James RichA $20,000 I!Jl'llt for a computer district's flow coattollanguage.
races were all a pan of the ew:nt.
s~
· eld became the owner of
Ruth Powers, MeWS (:ounty . The · Obio Departlllenl of Ro
Oak Ream ncar ~·
: Once again tile F~ers Bank mond family near MiddlqJort was and illlpnnemeniS to die beating
Libtaw.,
was
hol101ed
by
the
·
.
.
.
.
.
,
8RDOimced
its
plans
w·
·
Stuckey. the .corriplny s
:and Savinss Company was .the Jar- desttoyed by fire in early Seplem- and cooling system at the Meigs
Meigs
County
Bollrd
of
Elections
~~easibility
Sllldy
on
the
vice
president,
emphasized dult lhe
gest single buyer at lhe annual bet. The cause... was determined to County Senior Olizcns Cenler was
Meigs C:m~ 4-H - FFA Junior be a leat in a boUled 88S line.
8IIDOUIICCd in September. The funds a~Gby Secretary of Stare Shemld repllcemem of lhe Pomeroy-Mason overall Ol)erllion of the resort
. .
·
would remain unchanged.
~air . Liv
Sale held at the .
Jonalhan Shawli Cline. 18, was came from the Obio Department of B~. for her efforts in the na of Bridge.
vOter registration.
A public meeting was held a
The Meigs ~11- ))c;partmenl
Me;.,. County Fair .
recaptured after eScaPioB from the Aging.
.
Rutland V~ was awarded a ·
election
of Human Scrvicei iiiiniduced its
: s-;-te funds in· lhe amount of Meigs County jail in · ~ He . Service men from across the
~$49,700 in lhe.form of aioW:inter·
and another pnsoner, Bm11 Bass, CO!D!tY began 10 Dickie into the $1.S million grant for constrUction dl:ussbe~= ~ alignrne~ Job Opportunities and Basic Skills
·est loan was presented to James R. escaped by chipping through ·. the Persian Gulf to ~cipate in P!'esi- of a $2.~ million waste water col· .of the proposed Raveliswood (JOBS) program, aimed ·at reducing
'HJil enabling him to assume c.eUblock ce
. iling, crawling dirough dent Bush's 'Operation Desen · leetion and sewage treatment planL Bridge Connector which when the welfare rolls through education
The poject is expected to begin in ' and if completed,' will ,;oin U.S. and ttaining.
owilership of the Pleasers Res- the jail's attic and out a secand- Sheild
Route 33 at Rocksprings widl the
The AGHJMV Solid WasiC Dis~in PoJocroy.
.., ftoor window.
Former officers and die curient the spnng.
Ex-Leading Creelr; Conservancy Ravenswood Bridge. ·
trict'sr policy .comriiittee .approved
·..:~·-- ~Shilila Haslunan,- a teacher far- · Meigs High School's Marauder general manager of Leading Creelr;
Middleport's first Halloween the distirct's solid waste jilin, and
::":,,...tdiO· newly developed program of Stadlwn . was : re-llllllled Bob Conservancy Dislrict were-indicted·· Disaict officers Jilek and . Glenna
Crisp
en~red
not
guilty
pi~
to
the
Haunted
Hayric!e was a "smashing submiited the plan to the Ohio Eil~ JiiC~tion / foe pre-school . Roberts Field, m honor of long- on a total of 26 couniS bJ a Meigs
··'·~,;
'capped children, was hired .by . time Pomeroy High and Meigs . County Grand Jury on :september 24 cnminal charges facmg them success", briilging. in an estimated . vironmenlal Protection~~·
before -Meigs C"ounty Common 2.000
. people. The event was sponDr. Nick RobinSon of ·
~ Meigs County B.oani of Educa-. High teaeber and scorekeeper. 23. General Manap:r Jack and
:000.
Robert "Bob" Roberts, who died in Glenna Crisp, both Conner officers Pleas Court Judge Fred W. Crow sorec1 by lbe Feeney-Bennelt Post was nominated. as President lhe
of the American Legion, iiS Meigs County Cbam~ of Com·. · . ; Obio Secretary of State Sherrod 1982.
. .
of ·the water company, and their m.
The VICtor Will case was put to auxiliary and the village, and was merce fur 1991. ClJarles Kitchen
.,. ·._. BI'OWn voted ''no" on .a motion Ill
Contracts for Issue 'I'w9 projects son, J~ J. Crisp, the current
· · ·· · ~ a 1989 decision · of lhe in Suracuse, Middleport and Ches- general manager, were indicted on rest on OciDber 16, when Doug held at the Middleport Marina.
was nominated to serve as vice
Hluris..was sentelqd to 18 months
· November
president and Dic:k OweR Will con~igs County Bo.ro of Elrx;tion~ ter 'Ibwnship were 'awarded by the various miSIIlBIIIIpRent .c~es
The Eastern High SchoOl Match- tinuo to serve as seaetary and
·to . close lhe Reedsville ~lling .. ~igs County Commissioners.
following a lengtl!y invesliganon in jail for his inVolvement in Will's
June
death.
Will
was
strnclc
by
a
·
ing
Band took 10p honors at the treasurer of the group. . · ·
~ .and combine ·it wilh tlie Lon!! · " Tuppeis Plains-Chester. Water headed up by Special Prosecutot K.
pickup
driv~n
by
Jason
Riggs.
state
level in Novem~?et. ~ trjP
The Meigs Local School Board
boiiOIR precinct. . ·. · · . . . . · Distnct announced that it !J8d COI!I· · Robert Toy of Adlens.
.
Will'sbody
was
lhen,thrown
over
a
home
following
the
c:ompelltton
m
adopted
a ''no slilOking~ {MllicY for
Meigs County j&gt;rosecullng At· . pleted work on what It call!"~
Middleport Village Coimcil Bob
hill
in
rural
·
Chest.tir
Towdship,
10
Co~bus
Concluded
~~
a
~stall'
in
iiS acbools beginlling in
tomcy Sleven Story was asked 10 "Phase N", which allowed the dis- Gilmore resigned from that position
honking and b!ill·nngmg tnp 1991.
"take immediate steps" to enforce Diet to add 150 new customers and due to health-related ~lems. be discovered a day later.
Rex Shenefield of LangSville through the school disttict. .
An II year old cltild was charged
existing laws which could be ~ installe4 three new "standpipe" Gilmore p~ coatinllillg involThe Meigs County fair board an- in Meigs Coilnty Juvenile Court
10 halt lhe renting and selling of x· water tanks. Those new customers vement -m village-sponsored ae- was named to the Ohio Farm
rated videos.
are located in lhe Silver Ridge, tivities. Jud)' Crooks was later ap- Bureau Policy Development Com· nounced that it would extend the widl aison following a house fire in
mittee. Shenefield, at the time of fair to six days (Monday throu!!h Salem Township.
Plans were made by the Meigs Leran FaDs. Kingsbury and Coon pointed to finish his term.
~ -- -· December
County Pioneer and Historical Street~ of Meigs County, and ' Richard · and Patty Manzey, hiS appointment, was President of Satorday) for 1991.
Despite . a victory in his own
The Meigs . County CommisSociety to publish a new history Lonridge m Athens Cou.'lty.
·
Pomeroy, were honored as lhe ~igs County Farm Bureau. "I
Ground was broken near Forked county, Meigs Count[ Commis- sioncrs passed a resolution in
boot, "Thru the Years in Pictw:e."
After the prl)jeciS were com· Southern Ohio finalists in die 1990
' : A renovation project at the pleted, Dislrict Manager Don Po!&gt;le. Ohio Conservation Farmer Awards Run State Park for a river ai:cess sioner RiChard Jones, a Republican, Decembet tmning the , Meigs
facility, 75 acres was purchased by lost his bid for lhe 94th House Dis- County
Emergency - Services
Meigs County Sheriff's Department · stated that no m'!"l e~ . program.
.
not only gave die office a facclift could take place until lhe discnct s
Bedl Theiss of the Meigs County Ohio · ~ent of Natural aiel to incumben.l Democrat. Mary · Agency, which . will act 111. a
but increased the safety factor for ~I pl!Jnt at Long Bottom Council on Aging, received the Resources m 1989. The project cost Abel, and Commissioner Manning· modem-4ay civil defense program.
those who work there every day.
was upgraacd. ·' • ·.
..
Award for Excellence in Case was estimated to . be $732,000, and Roush retained his office by a nar· . The l¥ency will be managed and
A resolution authorizing tile
'l_bc usually-silent bell Ill the Management at a case managelilent will iliclude a two-lane boat ramp, row margin despite opppsitition administered by Bob Gilmore.' .
After being closed for .several .
ttlnsfer of property on West Main Meigs County Courth~ tolled at convention in Cincinnati. · The a COUI1esy dock, tie-up area and a from Democrat Janet Howai'd in
paved
parlring
lot.
November's
general
~lion.
mimths,
the newly-renov8ted' Mid- ·
Sired 10 the McDonald's Corpora- the f~ of~ Meigs County award was presented by Governor
The
Meigs
·
County
CommisOther
winners
on
the
local
level.
dleport
Libiary
was reopened to the
qon was 8JIP.IOVed by Pomeroy Vii- &lt;:omnusssJODet Richard Km, who Richard Celeste and Vanha Knissioners
approved
plans
for
a
three
were
State
Senator
Jan
Michael
public.
llge Council.
·
died on Septe~ber 12.
.
ley, Directot of the State Departstory colonial styli: additioo to the Long (D-Cirtleville), who faced • A rainy December 3 set tho scene
~ Three motions filed on behalf of
Ath~ns. Metgs and Wasii!Dgton ment of Menial Health.
•
current
headquarters of the Meigs competition from Meigs Countian for die Middleport Christmas
Jason tuggs by his attorney were COIDIIICs we~ dec~ a d~'•"?"'
Roscoe Mills, the franchise
County
Dcparanent of ·Human Ron Eastman (!-Pomeroy) and parade, sponsored by the newly·'denied at a .-e-aial bearing in the area allowmg resadents wtlh owner of Pomeroy's new Me·
Resources
on Race Slreet in Mid- Republican Dan Hiemimus . (Iron· formed Middleport Community As~ case before Meigs County property damaged by late-summer Donald's restaurant and his wife,
dleport.
'That
project will COSt ton); Probate and Juvenile IudM ·sociation.
'Common Pleas Coun Judge Fred llooding to take advantage of loans · Sandy, both of Ripley, W.Va., hos·
w. Qow m.
·from the Small Business Ad- ted 200 people at a VIP preview of nearly a million dollars, but the Robert Buck (R-Pomeroy); and The jury in the Meigs County
Holter's Holstein Farms of ministtation.
the new restanrant two days prior to. state will ieimburse the county for Auditor Bill.Wickline and Coroner Common Pleas Coon case of John
·
Doug Hunter, bodl imchallenged L. Young, accused of kidnlpping ..
t'tJmeroy was awarded. the Purina
Pomeroy continued its celebra- lhe ribbon cutting and·dedication of the project cost.
· A 14 year old Oleshire · boy, Republicans.
·.
·
his 17 Yea' old niece, became a
Mills Company's MDistinguished. tion of i~ ~50th birthday with Fall the business in late September. The
The Eastern Local School Dis- . "hung,jljryK, and it was later deter- .
Dairyman of America" Aw.ard. The activities 'i n September, including a restaurant seats over. top people Donnie Nixten, was acejdentaUy
shot by another 14 year old boy on 1. Diet, facing consolidation wilhout a miiled that the case would be re:farm received die award for out· volksmarch tlttough Pomeroy, en- and employs nearly 100 more.
Ottober 17. The shooting was ruled victorious levy, was granted ,a Died in January.
'
standing milk productiOn.
tertainnient, and bratwurst and
.
October
as
accidel1tal.
Donnie
was
the
son
reprieve
when
voters
there
apThe
Village
of
Middleport
was
' Jasoa Riggs was sentenced in German· dancing in lhe' municipal
The first weekend in October
Meigs County Common Pieas parking lol
.
was an evenlful one in Meigs of Pamela Casion, and was· a proved a five mill emergency levy. awarded a $50,000 Waterways
·Court on tiRe charges. Riggs was
The Meigs Local School Dislrict · County, widl Racine holding iiS fall . sevenlh grader at Meigs Junior Levies in the Meigs Local School Safety Grant for imprcivemeniS at
disbict and in lhe county-wide · the marina there.
Jl!lllrcaced to one and a hairyears laid off five. c!JOb in the disaict, f~tival (c;hristine ~on, a High School.
Jim
Petto,
Republican
challenger
.
MRDD program were defeated .
Americare · Pomeroy Nursing
on the charge of gross abuse of a d~ .to ~ enrollrneat ~ Southern High School Senior was
for
the
office
o(
State
l\Uditor,
,Y:'as
soundly.
"
Center
was pwthased by a Mil..:orpse; two years in prison on a distnct financial jroblems. A su:th ~rowned gueen) and Pomero.y hostthe
keynote
speaker
at
lhe
Meigs
Work
began
on
a
culvert
waukee
corpon1tion known as
:tampering wtlb evidence charge· cook was trans(erred to another mg the R1ver Valley HerbalisiS for
cOunty
Rqiublican
Party's
fall
replacement
and
road.
relocation
Unicarc.
.
)lnd five to ten years on a charge of position in !lJe district.
.
~ir Herb Fest '90, the first of w!tat
rail)'._
·
·project
at
the
interesection
of
State
Last-minute
Christmas
shoppers
liSSfiiVBted vehicular homicide.
Drug aials and plea bargain IS hoped to be an annual cvenL
$2!5,000 fiJI' improvemeniS to the Routt 124 and U.S. Route '33 in ' in' Pbmetoy t.&lt;ere'lhwarted, at Jea'st
Riggs was also fined $2,500 on lhe agmmeniS coolin~ to keep the
~enny Wiggin~. the Director of .
' charge of gross abuse of a corpse courts and prosecutot s office busy, MeigS County Litter ContiOI, was existing boat ramp in Middleport Pomeroy. Projrx:t cost is. estimated . temporarily, .by high water. · The
·.
Potnell)y Municipal Parting .Lot
liJld $S 000 on each of lhe other as 12 alleged drug offenders faced presented wilh an outstanding ser- was awarded in the form ·of a I!Jl'llt at $1 .8 million.
Meigs High School's band was submerged, and s,lllie highways
:chargea'
indictments ranging from Cultiva- vice award at the Buc~ye Hills to the village in October. The im· . The ·last four monlha of 1990 lion .of marijuana to trafficking iii Resource
Conserv~tion . and . proveme111S !here will include lhe .~ed an Mex~en~" rating at the and county roads alike were ciosed
replacement of sections of the dock OMEA compelltton m Colwnbus.
due to ftoodinR:. '.
, :saw the rise of the golden arches in ~·
.
.
Developm~t banquet m Mariellll;
Gary Snouffer of PomeroyJiled a · · Elizabelb Schaad of Marietta
:Pomeroy's busineas district and the
In liS ~mg fi~ agamst What
The MeigS County CornmiS· and road as well as paving work.
John Causey of Reedsville was lawsuit in Meigs County Common was named as Executive Direc-.
defeat of Meigs County's senior it termed . obs~mty", d!e. Meigs sioners
awarded
Community
county COIIUilissioner in his bid for County Ministerial Assocl8tton ur- Development Block Grant Funds to charged with mlllller after a shoot- Pleas Olurt against his estranged tor{Development Director of the
the 94th House Dislrict.
F~f!osecutor Steven L. Story to
seven projec~. Monies wc:re awar- ing incident at his home on October wife and anotla man, ~g that Meigs County Chambei of Com• · A much-hyped cow received an mve!lbgate the sale and renlal of ded to the villages of Middleport 27, which left his next-door . S~ Sn~er and Danny Zirltle merce in late Decmeber, following
· several montha of search and inter• interesling name and Meigs adult videotapes and movies, call- and Pomeroy, the TP-C Water Dis- neighbor, Edmund Shamp, dead. pOisoned him.
Causey
was
reltased
on
a
Jll'llllCrty
More
than
200
people
attended
viewing. Schaad will arrive in
: Countians experiCnced a "wet ing the material "obscene and of- trict, Sutton 'Ibwnship, and the
bond
several
days
later.
·
an
open
house
at
Meigs
High
Meigs
County frooJ the Marietta
; Christmas, as 1990drewtoaciO~e. fensiVC:~ and .alleging that its Bashan,, Syracuse .and Chester
~cember
avail~Ility ~ tllegal.
·
Township
Volunteer
Fire
A fire .destroYed die one-story School on .Nc;wemher 8. Various Development Office.
,
. A stmlge room at ihe Meigs
• "Miss Meigs" a dwarf cow coMiddleport s annuaJ .,bJock ~ DeportmeniS. The granrs totalled frame hllme of Mr. and Mrs. Martin pro~s wtdtin die school system
Woodyard on Hysell Run Road on exhibited lljsplays .and 'made County Museum was converted
:owned by Pomeioy Attorney Fred .was ~bed as a "big suCCCS!I • alm~t $94,000.
. .
•w. Qow, Jr.. and Mike Warner; be- offermJ up fOOd, games 811!i live 01)10 Senate Minonty Leader Q!:tober 28. The State Fire Mar- presentations: and !hose attending iRto a mlding room in December,
: came known as "Miss Hind Teat enterWnment on blocked-off Harry Meshel was lhe speaker at shall's office was called to inves- were afforded lhe . opportuOW to · offering visitori a chance·to review
tour lhe school.
. .
area newspapers from the mid-19th
:Tillie Meigs", following a lengtlly Second Avenpe. _
. .
the Mei~ Collllty Democratic Par- ligate th;e fire.
Marc• · Karr of Syracuse . . On the heels of a deciSion to centorv to the orescnL
''{and mucb publicized) ''name-theOnly two mondls after _res1~g ty's fall dinner.
· 1close iiS doors for three to four
In rememb!UC!e
: cow" coatesL Bob Gilmore of from I!Je post, ~Y . Zirld~ was
Over 100 bikers ~ . as far celebrated her lOOth birthday.
• Middleport won the grand prize for . reappomed Pomeroy s 6re chief by away as 'Ibledo held !herr SIXth anThe dream of Jim and Donna months in 1991 following the
The Vietnam War Menlorlal was
: the new name and several other Mayor Richard Seyler at a regular nual Meigs County Toy Run to Davis of Minersville came ll'lle on defeat of its 1.S mill levy, Meigs dedicated on Nov. 13, 1982. It bonon
October '1:1 when Pomeroy held its Board of Menial Retardation and the men and women wbo served in tbe
:individuals &amp;lsi&gt; won prizes, both ~ . o~ Pomeroy . Village benefit needy tots in ~e anea.
Disability armed foJUS in the Vietnam War. Lo• f.or names and poetic works about Councilm mid-September.
•
The Village of Middleport .an- first "Big Bend Sternwlleelers Fes- Developmental ·
• the cow
The Meigs County Chamber of nounced that it did oot endorse the tival", Members of the American petitioned the Meigs County Com· cated in Waslllncton, nc., the memoinitiated the contest in an Commerce began iiS search (or . pniJ]osed. plan of the. AGHJMV Stemwheelers As&lt;oclatioo, based in .· missioners for pemiission to place rial Is lnlcribed with the names of
more ~n 58~~ wbo ~~o~ve their lives
:&amp;aanpt 10 bring Meigs County's funding iiS new Exeeutive Direc· Solid Wasre Disaict, lalcipg excep- Marietta, converged upon Pomeroy lhe levy on die ballot in a special or
remam miBSIIIg.

BOSTON (UPI) - The Bank of
:New England ·Corp. filed for
:bankruptcy Monday, one day
-after federal regulators seized' .
. 'three subsidiaries with $22 bllllon
In assets In the third-largest bank
failure In U.S. hlstpry.
·
: ,. Tbe Chapter 1 filing In· U.S
• Dla,_lct Court sougl:lt liquidation
, ot t'lle company under a courtappointed· trustee. But It didn't
. Involve the three failed banks ~ Bank 'of New E~gland In Massa·
•cbusetta, Connecticut Bank &amp;
iTrust Co. and Maine National
;Bank - closed Sunday by the
•Federal Deposit Insurance Corp,
: The FDIC took oVer the banks
!to halt a run on deposits and
· !restore confidence In the region' s
banklnl system, undermined by
crashing real estate prices and
rocked by a credit Union crisis In
I ntllbbortDg Rhode Island.
: Reptaloraalaclhopedtostabll·

'.

'

�-

'

Page 8-The D

•

.
i

Seutinel

Ohio

LAFF-A-DAY

21

Bualnau

m

42 Mobile Homes
·tor Rent

-·--· .

••IIII!IL - ,_,..._ .....
...
1(-..go.
-

.

2 lA ,t,.._ tor IWII. 111 1M
-.

'

.•

2br _ , VII-. AIM.

St-. -

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

:=-,'::i~
•

23

ProfessiOnal
. 5ervJcea

'

and

1 rlhday
Olft

Planning,

w..PI&gt;Ing ale.

)'llhrwquoota.

,

Real Estate

.
Mio4 ilr CU.Y 1. ~UN - ' " ' :.-- - - ltearnsage leliert I# lila
four .....led _ . be•low Ia lono lour . , . -.1t.

M

TUES.. JAN. I

0 QAT U·R

I!VIHINCI

.....

!

lloblll ...............

~. ·

I:ODaie w we 111 ae

::c

ONewe

(J) ClleltM In
m
:s-2-1 Conl8ct

·a&amp;::n'i...aNIATodly

3 t d - - - with

r".r ,'U.~)'':.-::.:.::
--10101.

· 8 World Todly
. 1D OUt Hou11 Q
1:01 ill le•etiJ Hllllll*aa

1

1

1M AWAKE.

'1'0U D BETTER·
WAKEUP.•~E

8UT M'( LUNCI-I

··•;• 0 •

IS STILL

SCIIOOL 8US IS
COMING ...

r

15

j

11 I

a

One
. . woman to another,

~ea.:._~lyr»!at~

IG

;::~~;::;:::;:_:, than yours.

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

ME T S S Y

h,~ll":''-!1-:-'..,.1.;......,.-1..;...rl-1

aecaa,.£~;~

.Gil

~!~.

.L 0 N ·E D
._-;,...,..~1""'1--1

(I) Abbott .... Ca1t1la
~~~c.·..:.Neiii•Q

ASLEEP

II· ·

DULEE

4 l,;;.....;;lr--~
~I
, ~1

(!) Math lrtmlng

EmndiWvlae.0-8.....

·

':;::.' ~tl~lA-4~~s·· :::

TeleVision
·Viewing

2 IR ........, twn'... -

\

The Deily Sin1inei- Pagl 9 :.'

· Pomero'(-Midclaport. Ohio

'N' CARLYLd by I.:anJ Wrlab~

•

•

•

•

•

I!IIe AnciJ Clrlftltll

a:a Up Cloll

n may help when
youwantto - - .•
Complaiw "'" chuck._ qiiQiecl
by filling In 111o -ng _ .
you deniDp from 11ap No. 3 below.

•
1:31 (I) Alttltof Clrlftltll

r.oo 12le IlL o w..-. of
· FortaNQ
·
Ill I Do..m of Jaan.w

llle lnlide Edition Q

(J)

'.

.. ~NII/IA!W8I

kiiAM
1111 ANIWIII
•- 7
,. . .
Mikado- Yokel- Issue- Tsrt/v ~ YOU ar8 OLD
A gentleman who had turned 90 said happiness was
based on not how old one Ia but how YOU are OLD .
,

~~~~~Q

o un11r, ""' w. Sllreo.Q
32 Mobile Homes ·
fOrSale ·

-air,-·

10dl -

.,...

home, 2 bod·

12,000. -

1 lA apl., Control An. In Rio
Grande. tii!Jmo. 1141 - •••
or24H401.

1 lA, hOO/mo.; 2 IR, f40CIIm!:i
2 .. tot~i?ll. ...
utllltloo inclutet.
n ,..
qulrod. Clli l.atootto on ew.
441-7133 or 441~

::=8

_ . . , _ _ _ _ _h.

2 'totnoom llimilhod In Hav.n, WY. -rttv dljlolil
lnd ........ce. requhd. 3CJ4.

11124217.

'

2tr oportiMIII, -. IWIYIUwoior
iUmllhot,
.. iMng --·

..... a

.......
448-IIMO. trooJo -

.. both.
Refsa•• I
....... -'inat.IM-4....1111.

3 , _ llimilhld opl, around

~...... 1111.

FOIJ!!.I!. ................ -

..._., traeh

, $allfmo.

114 441 I:MI.

,Yard Saie

-

tiOO.

'

· lMfOFTIP wiNE, I'UT
:t iAf'l,JT/(!, ,,.,

-.....7715111
,.!.. -.... illlll
• •

•·

Al.7-.---

55

(R) (2:00)
~ Murder, She WI'OM

SUpplltl

1D MOVIE: Love and KiiHS
(2:00)
.

1:05 ill Shakl ~ulu (Pt 2)
1:30 (J) Ill. IIMcl of ... Clue

•

lnvestiGIIe an accident
cauaedf moonohlne.

..... -for--~~~
•" ...,.._. iOii
..........

en.a

1o

Stereo.

AOINMI Dan's
father plano.to marry
Roaeanna'a beet friend (PI 11 ·

(J) (J)

-~

ACL,

ood - .
....,..,.. 21ZII.

Bollman,

Ste':£.

Hoip W.ntot: Hourir Cllnlo Aide

...,~- • In
01111 Mil Uaewuoe ooundit.

wantld to Buy

._dwcodor

- · f1WP.7111.

Wanil1 lo 1M: J ....... with

Emplo·;nll'nl Serv1ces

41 Houses lor Rent

:=-:.-.
a

w- hllpU; . .,,,... .,..

r.:

p -·
_.....
~-.,.....,,lng llild ........., ... lo
bl 111, I CUt TraM peJd 10 out
.. _ , _ ..nt_ol
1111-. ant two
to
PWwllll
'-lltlnd
Dl
- - Ohio, 388 Rlcllilnd

8:30 (J) Ill e Collch Hayden

Douber to fuH-tlrne
ooach alter he ftnall!

· pramotaa

graqtaa. Stereo.Q
a:l Colllga a,lkltlliiH
10:0012le 0 Law • Orcler An
anti•lbortlon 1&lt;1v0cat1 II
killed In an abortion cliniC
bombing. Stereo. Q
l!lllawl
.

12
MY~ &amp;.'15 IF~ HADKNON,N
IN\151-lT
CONTACT LISNSIS-e&gt;•••

60MESODY'M&amp;t:!O~TO

• ...,,,._ •••n•

.,,.,..., I

"-""*'"·
o1onuorY

Ill. tllittyiOin8lhl
Mllllla't phOioa are lhOwn

(I)

Oillo 48701. by
11,1111. EOEIESP.

-~• gkt ...-c~t

a......

p a i d - - 114-

' HOME

.-....
-

4512.

TYPISTB,

335,000

PC

Now

LMy Kina Uvet

... lndl,llllll .._ • ....etlve

~£":"$

eiiiO~E: 'Bare

Eaa •"•• C88 Tuaadly
Movie (2:00) Stlreo. Q
•
111 Bultwtlur Tllladly Night

.. ........-.;pod-. . 'DiUM lldllii; •a au KJ wlh

.... r:::-. - -

.. ... IIWJNGt.

Ill C

'

.........

......

~ ~MIIIIii!O !i!

Rentals

In a glillry. Stereo. Q

m Cll loVIela

UM&lt;W

I!IIe 8l8r TM: The NUt
a. .....
a CNN Evanlng New ,

potttlllal.

· (1) 805 1117- Ext. B·

1D •....,...., WCNidlln
Contlol' 700 Club I!IIGIII:
Sp lrltu.. WOIIda In Conflict ·
(1:00)
10:01 ill MOVIE: AntiiUtll illy

·.

' (2;)5)· •

BLISS YOilli
THOUISHT'Y

11:00I2le m we 111
ONewe

IIDNflll

=•

!Jl:-.!:Q

Do you have anything in your
house rhO.t can tum into
'·

'

10:30 Ill Ctook llld Chal

I!IIe ArHnto 1111 Q
11 111 Mllmt VIol s-.
1110n8!1gt

eM..,..

ID lea,_ ow llld Mrl. King
11:30 12le .o Tonight ......
. Stereo.
Ill Riker
!DAdlm8lilttli'IMoney

money?

Wortcl

.'
.I!DTL
aa IPo
&amp;:tiC...........
titer

'
mer11. Caprocorn. lreat ~ouraell to a wl3hllii thinking leanother.
.
birthday gilt. Send lor your Aatro- CANCER (.Iuiie 21-.IUIJ 22)' Conditions
Graph pradlcilona for ihe year by mill!- having an !nlluence on your llnanclal M·lng $1.25 to Aatro-Graph, .c/o thll cur11y mlghi be ml•ed today. In one
.-lpaper,'P.O. Bo• 91428, C-and, case, you may gain. while· In another,
OH 44101-~28. Be aura to stale your you may be oorry.
•
zodiac sign. ·
1.10 (.lulr 21-Aug. 221 In order to
BERNICE
AQUARIUI (Jan. :Ill Fall. 11) II mey IIChle,.. clellr8bil ratuna today. you'U
;..,
'""'
mora ~I to let MOther h... to hit the ground running. If you
BEDE OSu ....._ handle an lmporjant rneittr lor you to- • procrutlnate, your poalbNIIIee lor lui.
· day, bui thl• could prove unwlle. Tho ftlllng your axpectettona ere reduced.
IndiVIdual you chOOM might be .lnaflec. VIRGO (Aug. 21-lopl. 22) Ia graitlful
live-· you would know exactly whai end not greedy with people who pul
to do.
ihem181vee out for your concern• toPIICEI (M. 2WIM!h 20) Thill II not day. II their elforto are not LICkilowlagoo&lt;lday Ia preiend to be knowledge. edged properly, thtuymlght not tleavall·
able about _,lng whlc:h, In truth, IIIIa next,_ yau r...s thlln .
you ere not, eapeclally II othenl ·.,. ~A (lepL a.oot. :D) A friend who
counting on your know..flcll!r to keep an 11 a lkl"-11 manipulator onlght try to
endeevw on triCk.
·.
......., big dlmenda of you today, (II orAIIIII (...,_ 21~ 11) Try not to · ifer'tocompeulltetorumlllhmlrthll
get lnvoiWd In the lnlrlceie alfalra of ~ lndl¥kluel - l l y granted you.
.IMI.t.1111 .
othlrl todey, becN!II your ~lei Keep 1 ~lc:k hlncly.
aptltlodel might not bl up to par. You ICOIV'IO (OoL 1M Naw.IZJ Thll could
Something ...-· lliriiOidlnary, and. COUld lllllka mettera - ·
be a vary -ding Clay for you, pnMd•
highly advantllgl0118, rnlghi oc:cur In the TAURUa (April 20 ..., 20)1n an effort ad
you cap11a11a on your IVII!Ible opve- 11.ec1 through a lide lllflture In to MllntUI hlrmony on the home lront portunlllll. If you mer.~y llllcallllngl tor
which ·you'N lmiOt..cl. You'H have lo loday. you may put too much ernphallt granted, you COUld mill the boet.
stay on your t - In order to capltliiD on p o i - ofappnu
which will IACII'TTAIIIUI (llol•. Dlo. 21) Your
not-your-oryourmeta'a-bMI · Initial 1111nmenll of lltllltlonl .. .
orrd.. eiOP'f*'"·
CAIWCOMI (Da ....... 11) A Joint ln18IMIS. Ia ,...IIIIC.
likely tO bl OIL target todey, bUt you
- - In Wltlall you'N lmlolved IOOkl GIIMI ,.., 21-.IUM 20) Guard . might let negatlft, IIConcl tliOuglitl
~ at f11'81, bUt It might not .,. .. igllnlt lnclllllltlonl to rettonlila away
creep 1n and CIU88 doUble the! COUld
apectecular uyoutlllnk. Ul•lllatleex- probjems ·which 3h0Uid be taken aerl· neutrlilze your appr.......
pectatiOfll cciuld llld 10 dlllfiPOini- oualy todqy. Optlmlam 11 one thing;
~

ASTROORAPH

___ ..,..,..
Electrlcll ..

.....,.,

tl

Refrlgerlltlon

A ......

•

DOiftl&amp;aalli......,

Uaeriit• llntrWin. Rklinour

I

614-992 ~2 ·1 56
304-675-1333
.614-446-23,42

\

Ills' 011111'81 HIUIIng

~

'.
'

'

''

I

CIILIIINigltt

I!Jlhalqueher

L,...

Ill tire h .. Now .

1en1ar 0a11

IIIDotalll FI'OIII'Tuceiln, Ariz.

(A)

8 NIWINif"
1D M0¥11:,!!18 Indian
l'lgMir (2:00)

.

12:30 ill•

zJ

0 Ll5l Nlihl Wl!h

iii~i_ -

12:JI (I) Low Colo18011on

1:00(1)CGuJQ

. 1.
RlwliiCie
11J lud&amp;

IIIII Tlllldly Night

fL1glile (R)

,J•. talhowlll Todlly
I'

'

GC

GBP

F

ZYOPWGFJFMV

..

V' P

•

•

G BZG

Z

HCGFOZGPJ

WPHPHQPW

XPCXEP.
PYJPE. -

.·

..

·~

'

CRYPrOQUOTE
1·1

Dlvldl..ittcs••
Ill MOVill Ctllu:••

•

•
One letter stands ro~ another. In this sample A is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrop~. the length and formation of the words are .all
hints. Each day the code letlen are different.

12:01 tillli14tlllr110 Q '
12:20 ill MoviE: ,_.. lhe Titlnl
. . RIIOh (4:10)

=m=

AXYDLBAAXR
lsLONGFELJ.,OW

:.:~=a~ lmponlll'

a...,.

•s

41 "The ACROSS
1-· in on
(From
Another
(went
toward)
World)"
6 Stallions' 42 Appaars
43 Ditties
mates
DOWN
11 Coeur
1 Hall of
d'-,
Hispaniola
Idaho
2 Actor
12 Mirror
Yesterday's Answer
'Merlin
. sight
9 I worship· . 25 Pipe loss
13 Noted sci· 3 Ways'
partner
li writer
per
26 Croquet
4last
15 Numbilr
10 Septua·
needs
Spanish
genarian's 21! Ball wear
for Moses
queen :
aga
30 Treaties
16 Pub quaff
140utof
31 "The 17 Had a bite 5 Century
parts
the
wind
•
the Hat•
18 Illegal
32 With
6 Scrooge, 19 15th or
trader
e.g.
13th
of
33 Distinct
20 Noisy
7 "What ·
the month
flavors
commo·
Kind
of
22
Silent
38
Set one's
lion
Fool,-?'
perlormer . sights
21 Actress
8 Fasting
23 Fine points 39 Owl's
Wallace
month
24 Supervise
query
22 Ship pole
23 Gives
(out)
26 like juleps
27 Oecembar 6-+-+--11--+-24 and 31
.. 28 Cheese·
cake
poster
'
feature
290olong.
• . e.g.
.30 Skunk
341ndiana
Jones find
35 Piercing
tool
36 Carte
preceder
. ' 37 Calculus
creator
40 On the up
and up
DAIJ., Y CR YPTOQUOTF..S- Here's how to work it: "118

12:00 (I). IIIIo ... Night · -·
. lllle P8rtr MaDhlne with

\

••ot.

"Recruit this kid I e'hasing ambul8ncet,. he
ru1111 the 100 in 9.4 aecondsl"
I

. - J , liOMJI.1788.

81p0111 Tonight
'11:31(1) ChM.. Q

'

••u

by THOMAS JOSEPH

Nlfiht Gillespie end VlfQII

..
""""'...-. - .......
--.
.
,
.
.....-;-·-=
__ ...,. . ___
PublcSale
&amp;Auction

c
==r

CROSSWORD .

Ill Church lftat lhatlaft
9:00 (2). iiJ In ....... of ...

1-,_,._!'0

p.m; lelunily.

P!M

·

lt:s~

a PllmeHewe

ALLYenl--11-ln FEDERAL OOYERNMENT 18
- . DEADIJOIE, I :GD p.8. HIRING tlt.il00482 GOO Y.,.
ihltleJ ..... tho 11 1110 - - Coil
................. 2:00 ....... ...... Jl aeiiiOOht.oa
••• ., ,... . FutdeY. 5lonteJ • 2:GD Good
wlih ..u.

9

!D (!) Novl Nature's ,
rli«Jvery from the St. Helena
eruption lo examined. Q
1111 a~taeua: ttt
~tereo.
I!IIe
E: CaauaiBex? ·

. BUilding
i.

·

· Till prom bloomll •
prOblem lor Arlltotla altlr TJ
turns him dOwn. Stereo. Q

Gallpolls
&amp; VIcinity .

8

jaep and returns Hwllll a

Goods

t JOIUU

- ••

._?

(!) ColleQe lllkatblll
(J) (l}e·Who'a lhe
Jonalheo) borrowa Tony's

scratch. Stereo. Q

EAST

plllyen might prefer a strong one-noJ
SOUTH ,
trump opening: Whell East passed and
1
South overcalled two bearta, West re.QJ$42
bid his spades, not wishing to sell.oul
.AJ
cheaply with a reasonable band. Tbat ·
.QU4
placed North in a slightly awkward
Vulnerable: Neitlier
position. North bad iDtended to cue-bid
Dealer: Weal
. two spades as a stroag Invitation to
1ame, but tliat device was taken away S..lll
Eut
Norllo
from him by West's action. With too
PIA
PIA
t
+
good a band to bid only three bearta. 2 •
All pua
I+
North bid the game.
West ted the king of spades and cqn·
Opening lead: • K
tlnued with the ace as East plllyed
high-low. West DeJ:t played tile six 9f ' - - - - - - - - - - - - - - '
spades, and East ·was momentarily
_..
non-pl.-d. West bad bid and rebid al tricks trom his ow:n trump boldln&amp;. ·:
spades. Certainly that meant he bad. Tbe nine of hear.ta did not looi like a ·
five of them, which would include tile giant tr!llllp. but .thil lime It did Ita
queen and jack. So why didp't West work. Wb~n East ruffed with the ninecontinue with another high spade?
spot, Soutli had no~bilill better to ~o
Tbe answer was not difficult. Clear· than to overruf! Willi tbe jack. West a
ty West wanted East to ruff thia trick, K-10,7 1ben turned into IW!J defetllive
wbicb could only mean tliat West wu tricks, enough to set the came ·
lookln_g_for a way.to promo~............ contract.

Broadway-bound musicaL

-~/11~1'....

HouHhOid

I+

7:31 ill~Andy Clrlftltll'
1:00·1 2le 0 MatlOCk MatlOCk .
,dalenclllhe
author/composer of a
Stereo. Q _

..,•u

I

(I). Mlllll'l l'llillly

IIIIe 'l'lww'a COIIIpiiiV

ae CroufiN
ca•••• llakatblil
.

)OMf /)0/olrlff'l(;
/TUFF TH~O/JGH A.
· TAIWAf'lf..(.F '"Wf.I,.,G

CooL liN, Cllo¥n.

Aloe. Far ~ gutdl

t,1ercllilllCIISe
5I

-

.................
_........
r:.fl

Clill

"-· prtnte - - .na ll8ftl.
tng, utun~ee ~na~utet•••~· 1112- ~- . • . month, WIIIICMpl: Hud, ;JU44,. ....-.! A ld. Mol- llimi7344.
'
turo.IL n~h.IM-441-11144. . ·
311 Will Apt. 2111', 1' both, prlftie
CARPET "
I'URNfTURE
enclo•d ~=:to 1f11D!11Y
ltONIII
center, water, lllhahln ,..,....,. &amp; C.l'pllta.

11711--4.

7

-

-.
...............
..
c-.: =-== -:...'"'I..C:

AdUii -'in~ ........ - -

· .....

s lumlohecl olein, no -...

;_.;:_-~it :t P'ON'T. HAVf AN'(

Wanted to Rent

Q

CIQ

•Au

. tKQ
+AJ105

WEn'
+AKQJI
By James Jacoby
• K 10 7
+97 2
West bid one spade, although,some K 7

Tonight Stereo. Q

. . ....l

NORTH
+10542

Jockeying
for a ruff

~ 'r.c:::.Li

....•

BRJDOI

_,

7:01 ill tt.ppr Dar•
7:301])• Ill IIJ Jeapinlyl Q

'

~

''

lcafiCIOW end Mrf. Kfni

lltarting
----111
• • ..
•10.

'

XPGPW

' G B P·

'

YWSARPW ·

v-·~·•1''• CrrPtaq•ote: IT IS . BEltER . JO
HAVE LQAFED AND LOST THAN NEVER TO 'HAVE
LOAFED AT ALL. - JAMES THURBER
.
•'

'"

.,

'

.

..

'

'

. I

.'·

I

�•
•

•

Page- 1 0- The Daily Sentirial

Tuesday. J8nu-v 8, 1991

Form~r area priest Golubiewski
dies
.
.

......--~Local

brief-----.
SqiUlds answer jive Monday. calh

.

church's ,transition of masses
Goll;lblewskl's body will be
from Latin to English. GOlu- taken from Waugh·Halley-Wood
blewskl also formed a Knights of . Funeral Honie at 4:30 p.m. on
Five calls fw aaislancc were uuweted by units of Meigs County
Columbus chapter, which helped Thursday. Friends an(I fonner
F.melpncy Medical Services on Monday.
. fund the priest's weekly radio parlabloners ,are Invited to acAI2:1S- a.m.. RJJ!IIIMI aquad '!'fC!It to ~riar Ridge Road for Helen
program, and the group partie!· company the body or to partie!·
JkCielland, who was tmll8pOIIal to Vetmns Memaial Hospital Al
p•ted In .community activities pate In the welcome at St. Louis
2:4&amp; LID~ .Pomero1 «ppld went to Lon&amp; Hollow Road. Ruletla ·
like parades and the county fair. Catholic Church.
Rolietls wis treated btl not lllpSpO!ted. AI II :01 a.m., Racine squad
' In addition, the chapter do·
weat to Swe Route 124 for Otis McClintock, ·who was· transported
Friends may call at the church '
nated a large Cruclt!X, a replica Thursday, 5 tQ 8 p.m., and a vigil
to~
'
of the bleeding Christ of Llmlas prayer service will be held at 8 '
. Al S:S6 p.m., S'yracuse squad went to Second and Apple Stn;ets
Crucifix In Italy, to the church p.m.
for Kelly Cook, wbo wa lr8IISpOOtld to VeiQlU!S. At 9:26 p.m.,
during Golublewskl's time In the
Pomeroy. squad went to West Main Street for Lea Harrington;, who
The Mass of Christian Burial
parish.
.
was taken to VCleJBDI!. ·
wll,l be held Friday lla.m., at St.
Golublewskl alsO oversaw the LQuls Catholic Church by Bishop.
purchase of a roller skating rink, Albert H. Ottenweller, and Msgr.
had It redecorated and opened It WW!am R. Myers and other'
for activity. In 1957, a grammar dloc~n and clergy In attend·
school was ·added to the tac!Uty, ance. He will be burled ln. Holy
Meetlna amceJied
Sorority, scheduled for IOIIight
but due · to a lack of Catholic Cross Cemetery, Grand Rapids.
REV. ADOLPJI GOLUBIEWSKI . The meeting of the Xi Glllllll!l (Tuesday) has been cancclled. The
Sisters to teach there,- the school
Mu Chapter, Beui Sigma , Phi . mcecing will be held next Thcsday
was not opened. It Is currently a
car.·~
Continued from page 1 at 7:30 IJ.m. at the home of A.R.
Head Start Center, and Is used J 1
"'•••·----___:___,;....,_---------Knight Tile meeting will be a sofor catechism classes of the
the driveway 0!1 her propeny members countered · that · the or· following receipt of a lettet from cial
church.
periodically
lloods due to a lack of dinance would allow for exceptions Middlejlort ·Mayor. Fred Hoffman
FOE Auxliiary 10 meet
Also In 1957, the priest orga1n·
drainage,
and
has,
in
tum,
·been
and
"leeway"
if
the
need
would
concerning
the
grant;
The
F.O.E. Ladies AIW1iary will
!zed the Flgl!ttng 69th Chapter,
damaged
arise
for
wmving
certain
portions
of
•
Expressed
appieciation
to
the
ineet
IOrught
(Tuesday) at 7 p.m.:
,It's plll'pol!e to Incorporate the
In addition to ohysical dainage ~ the ordjnance, and that council Was Pomeroy Volun~r }'ire Depart· There will be a poduct dinner•.
sixth and ninth commandments
· '
to fight spiritual battles with evlt the driveway, Woods said, the not in~ in ~hibiting ll!inor ment for iheir hours of worlc during
D8Dce scbeduled
,
In 11163, the' priest established a wa~r depo$its mud and debris on COIIStlVCUOD proJects on pnvate the reccntllooding;
the
driveway
which
then
be jnoperty .
.
•
Disc.
w
sed
needed
repairs
to
,
There
will
be
a
round
al!d
Catholic High SChool at Cheshire
·
"With. the ordinance," Council- Pleasant Rldg~ and the parking lot dance on Friday from 8-11:30 p.m.
for students from Gallla and remove4 by.wheelbarrow..
Village· Admi}listrator John An- man Bill Young said, "we're just · walls.
~lain!hcs ~ B_uildings:_l.?p,penf
Meigs Counties, which oi;lerated
derson,
wbo
has
investigated
the
trying
to
put
an
end
to
~me
of
the
•eaiUnDg
~ o
for about 'two years, after which problem, reponed to council that things that go on lhat can't be enBluegrass.
Roonie
Wood
will be.
It was closed for a lack of pup Us,
the
ditchlinc
ncar
the
property had foo;M."
•
the
caller.
The
public
is
invited
10 ·
,and was sold for Guiding Hand
Some eXamples lhat were cited
attend.
School and sheltered workshop. · become ov~ arid has since
been
dug
out.
In
additioo,
Andenon
by
the
council
memliets
in
favor
of
.
DaJiv
_,_
..
.
prtnBorn June 12, 19ll In Grand
said, the tile at the drainlge site has the ordinance included the junked
Y ......,.
~
Rapids, Mich., he was the son of been
opened up by villagcaews..
car
protiiCID
discUSJi:d
at
this
meet·
(.U of 1t:SO a.m.)
the late John and Josephine
n.;..:natty, Andenon said, the
·
·
f Bryce and Mark SmMh
South Cenlral Ohio
Golublewskl.
~·-ing and the persistent problem 0
of,Blut; EIIII 1o Loewl ·
· Mostly cloudy Tuesday night,
He was a gradual~ of St. drain. was· privaldy built and then unsafe and unclean . residential
was joined wilh the city sewer prope¢es and are&amp;'! within lhe vii· Am
Joseph High School In Grand lala"
system.
.
,,
!age.
.
.
.
AshlElecdt rt c Po~er .~ ........... 2 1~ with a chance of drizzle,' and a :
Rapids, Mich. · and . attended
betwel!n 30-an"d 35. ·Chance of 1
Council assured lhe Wood .family
In other action at last night's · · an 0 11 .... ·.. .... ... .. .... .. .. 27 7&lt; low
precipitation
Is 40 percent. · ·
seminary . both there and at that
the problem was in the proi:css mcecing, council:
· ·
AT&amp;T ........~ ........... .. ...... ,..... 3,0
Cloudy·
Wednesday,
with ' a
Mount. St. Mary's Seminary In of being corrected, and that the
~ Appointed Larry V(ehrung as . Bob Evans .......................... 14%
ClncfJinatl, Onto. He altel)ded the driveway would be repaired at vil· president for the 1991 term;
or
sno~
flurchance
of
drizzle
Charming Shoppes .. :........... 10¥.!
ries,
and'
highs
between
40
and
45.
Grand Selnlnalre at Montreal, ' !age expense when the drainage
-Approved the Mayor's report of City Holding Co.... :............. 14~
Chance
of
precipitation
Is
40
Canada and was ordained In . system repairs were Completed.
fines collected for December in the FGoodederal Mora! ...... ,, ........... .12%
June, 1949 at Steubenville, Ohio.
percent.
Council q:xaducted the first read·
OUDl f $2 726
year Tom. .................... 17
ing on a zoning Cll'dinance on Mon- ~ ~ted' Cl~ Brenda Morris Key Centurion ....................10%
day eveni!Jg, wilh two members of to write a letter requesting a profit Lands' End ........, ........... :.... l3~ Hospilal news
the board • Thomas Werry and and loss statement, as well as other Limited Inc....................... ,.18%
Vetei'IQIS Me-rial Hospital
Bry_an_Shank • vocing _against the linan&lt;:ial infonnation, regarding the Multimedia Inc.................. 63tj
MONDAY
ADMISSIONS
Thursday, 5.to 8 p.m., and a vigil Ordin8nce.
Blue Strcalc Cab Company and the Rax Restaurants. ,..,.,.......... !)(.. Herbert Sbield!l, Racine; Otis Me·
prayer service will be held at 8
Bolli Werry and Shank expressed transport8tiQO gral)t entered into Robbins &amp; Myers .... ;, .........18% · Clintock, Racine; Kenneth ~n.
.
p.m.
the opinion tiuit they felt the or- between Pomeroy, Middleport and ShQney's I~c .... ,.................11% Hanford, W.Va.; · and Martin
The Mass of Christian Burial · dinance was tOo restrictive 10 theMeigli Coun'l Commissioners. Star :Bank ................ ;~......... 16~
Chapman. Pomeroy.
will be held Friday 11 a.m., at St. property owner&amp;.
.
That infortnation 1s being requested Wendy's Int'l. ..... , ................ 6 ' MONDAY DISCHARGES
J,.Ouis CathQllc Church by Bishop
''This one is worse than the his·
Worthington Ind ....... ;.......... 20~ Cora Jlecgle. · ' .
Albert H. Ottenweller, DO and torical oolinance, and the· people
Msgr. William R. Myers VF and
,.
other diocesan and clergy In voted it out," Shank sail! in the dis·
cussion
of
the
proposed
ordinance.
·
attendance.
He refened to a historical or·
'' Burial will be In Holy Cross • dinance
that was voted down by the
Cemetery, Grand Rapids.
electlnte
in 1989 • an ordinance
In lieu of flowers, contributions wbich would
have established hismay be made to·a memorial fund
torical
districts
the village
at St. Louis CathoUc Church, In and a committeewithin
to
ovecsee
those
care of Msgr. WIWam.Myers, 91
districts.
State St., Gallipolis, Ohio, 4!W\31.
MaYor Seyler and other council
.
' .

By LEE.ANN THOMPSON
OVP N"'Ys Stall
The Rev. Adolph- Golublewskl.
. the longest-tenured priest at St.
Louis Catholic Cliurch In Gallipolis, died Sunday, Jan. 6 In
Sebastian, Fla., at the age of 79.
Golublewskl went to Florida In
1980 after retiring from the local
parish. where he served 30 years.
"Father G," as he was called
by parishioners. oversaw many
developments and changes In the
Galllpolls parish during his time
.here, l!CCordlng to church re·
cords and members.
St. Louts was . Golublewskl's
only parish, arriving after his
ordination In 1949 at the age of 39.
Golublewskl was "pretty· special" according to many of his
parlshoilers. Mrs. Harlett Davl·
'
son remembers
his 30 years. In
Gallipolis with fondness . Durin!!
Golublewskl's time In GaiJJpolls,
she and husband James gave
land to the church for a Catholic
·
Cemetery. .
•'God gives to us and we give
back to God," s_he said of the
c.emetery's establishment.
She reminisced Tuesday about
'the many things done at the .
parish durl~g that time, singling
ou t his Involvement with the
Altar Boys 'Ot the church, and
taking them to .hIs camp In
Michigan for a yearly summer
outing.
According to Mrs. Davison,
Golublewskl was a professor at a
boy's school In Canada:prlor to
becoming a priest.
The priest ·also was Involved
with Gallipolis· . Development
Center, serving a-s ' the faclUty:s
chaplalh, Mrs. Davison said.
Golublewskl rapidly began es·
tabllshtng programs and making
chan~es In the local church, upon
his arrival,· and oversaw the

·.

Dr. William Russell Whitney
Ill, 51, of 297 Duly Rd., GaiJJpolls

j '

· died . Sunday, Jan. 6, 1991 In
Gallipolis.
He was born Sept. 15, '1939 In
Topeka, Kansa:s, son of the late
William Russell Whitney Jr., and
Margaret ta Clevenger Whitney ..
Or. Whitney, who had practl·
ces In Galllpolls, . Jackson and
Ironton, became a licensed psychologist In 1978. From 1976-78 he
was associated with the Gallla·
Jackson· Meigs Mental Health
Center In G!llllpolis. Prior to
coming to Ohio, he was a
professor at the College of
Education Counseling and Reba·
. bllltatlon Services, Florida State
· Ul\lverslty, Tallahassee, F1a.
He received his B.A. from
Harvard College, Cambridge,
Mass., and his Ph.l&gt;.' froni
Was hington Pnlverslty, St.
Louis, Mo. He!Was a member of
the American Psychological Assoclatiol\..the Ohio Psychological
Association, the American So·
clety qf Plnlcal Hypnosis, the
American Academy of Psychoth·
eraplsts and th!l Airplane
Owners and Pilots Association.
He Is survived by his wife, Jean
Holway Whitney; a son, William
Russell Whitney IV; and daugh·
ters, Lynn _Whitney ot New
. Haven, Con~.. and Kara Lee
Whitney of Bridgeport, Conn.
Also · surviving Is one l»'other,
John Whitney of Tucson, Ariz.
Memorial services will be
conducted 11 a.m. Thursday,
· Jan . 10, at the McCoy-Moore
Funeral Home, Wetherholt
Chapel,' Gallipolis, · with Rev.
John Ja9ksoh officiating.
In lieu of nowers, contributions
may be made to the Airplane
Owners and Pllols ·Association:
·Air Safety 'Foundation, c/ o Dr.
William R. Whitney Memorial
Fund, Ohio Valley· Bank, 420
Third Ave., Gallipolis, 45631.

Stocks

Weather

UAL

We're Celebrating Wit~
_. Super January Savingsf
OFFEI GOOD NOW THIU SAT., JAN. 12, 1991

50°/o

~ROUPS

'

OF

L.A. GEAR
.
'

TENNIS SHOES
LADY'S DRESS SHOES

•

OFF

·ALL LADIES' DRESS SHOES

Cane Chairs

·I-ONLY

~~.$199

•BARCLAY
. LOYESEAT

CASH '
. ANP CARRY!

In Ear.thtoae colors.
.... *469.00

•Solid Btass
Headboards .................... 1~2 OFF
•Solid Oak Boston Rocker

...

By Naturalizer and
· Hushpuppies

. Sale
I · s1·s• oo ~~~······

.

ALL· NURSEMATE
SHOES

Reg.

Living Room Tables ·
-

OFF A .
SElECTED
GROUP!

$' 79.00..... Sale S11900

•FlORSHEIM •CfiEIOIEE
•HUSHPUPPIES

•LA·Z•BOY MODULAR
SUnONALINCUNER·-

..... S2021.10 SAil sttS.IO

JJO lAST Ull

All .TENNIS SHOES

liN'S' • WOfmf'S • CIIUIIII'S

•LA. GEAI ecONYIISE
euNGAIOOS

POMDOY, OHIO

Cards:. 5-H; 8-C;
K-D; 3·S

Page4

•

'
at.

e
Vol .41. No.181
Copyrighted 1991

·FREE
DELIVERY
OPEN ·
MON.-FRI•.9·8
SAT. 9-5 .

• !40UR8: Mon. thru Fri. 8:00-15:30; SAT. 8:00-15:00

Low tonight In mid 20s ..
partly cloudy . High
In lower 40s. Ch!UlCe ol rain 60
Pl'rcent.

Thu~ay,

!"

.

2 Sttctions, 14 Pages

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, January 9. 1991

COIID OF
GAWPOLIS .

JU &amp; GIAPE
446·3045

..
.

'

26 Cents

.A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Meigs board
·adopts budget
By CHARLENE HOEFUCH
by the board.
Just hpw that ' money-and no
Sentinel News Staff
A budget with anticipa!ed one ,seen1ed to know how much it
receipts of $7,793,300 and expen· will be--&lt;:an be spenl for only cerditures of $8,949,200 was adopted tain things, lilce buildings or
by the Board of Education of the tran!l)Xlrtation, and cannot be con·
Meigs Local School District sidered as a part of the general
Tuesday.night.
·
operating budget, it was noted by
While the budget shows a deficit Snowden . The board decided to get
of more than $75,000, it was more information on the money
pointed out by 1ieasurer Jane Fry and how much it wiU be before.fur·
· "that the board has · a spending . ther disc.ussion on how it will be
reserve of $310,189. She explained spent.
that an amount up to that figure can
Enrollment Options
·be borrowed agamst future tax col·
The board approved a policy for
lections to keep the district out of a the post-secondary enrollment oploan fund.
tions for students in accordance ·
during the organizational meeting from the lel't are Jeff Werry,
ORGANIZATIONAL MEETING • Bob Barton, fifth from left,
However,
it
was
also
pointed
out
with Senate Bill 140.
Robert Saowdtn, (Rope), Richard Vaughan, (Barton), board memwas elected presideat, md Larry Rupe, !bird from lel't, was named
that
the
budget
d&lt;?Cs
not
take
i~IO
The policy allows junior.; and
bers, Supt. James Carpenter, and Treasurer Jane Fry, who was
vi~e presideat at the organizational meetiag or tbe Meigs Local
consideration
medical
and
other
tn·
seniorn
to enroll in college on either
.
School Di,strlct_Board or Eduntlon Tuesday night. Others pictured · ' rehired with 'a four-year contract.
surance increases, nor salary in· a part-time or full-time basis with
creases which might be negotiated credits to be awarded on both the
by the Meigs Local Teachers As· high school and college level.
sociation and the local chapter of
Pan A of lhc program permits the
the Ohio Association of Public upper class students ·10 go to col·
School Employees. Both groups lege ful! time and pay their own
have contracts lbat will expire in .way, while Part B allows students
'
the next fiscal year, it was noted.
to &amp;a4 college part-time while at·
Mrs. Fry explained that the tending high school . with the dis·
figure for anticipated revenue iniO · trict to pay the expense out of Slate
the general operating fund is at l)!e Foundation Funds.
same level as the current fiscal
Supt. James Carpenter explained .
A federal mediator in Pitts·
year. She said that her com· that currently the dis tri~eives
burgh has set contract talks for
pulations provide for no significant about $2,600 per student and that
Jan. 161n a two-month old dispu te changes in laX evaluation nor State the amount would be pro-rated
between the Ravenswood Alum!·
Foundation fund receipts.
between the dis!rict and the college
num -Corp. and the United Steel·
Board Member Bob Snowden if a student' attends college while ·
wor.kers union, which represents
did note that ,since the county. is remaining in high school ·
.'
1,700 workers now off the job; the
currently" doing an updating. of
Other Business
Huntington Heral,d-Dtspatch re·
property values thiS could pos~rbly
After opening four bids for . 40
ported Wednesday.
mcrease revenue to schools.
cafeteria tables and 350 'chairn for
I
The talks before mediator
On 'the. expenditure side, the the high school, the board accep1cd
Carman Newell In Pittsburgh
treasurer said that the only in· the low bid of $15,750 from the
""II be the first meeting.; §!nee
creases she has anticipated in Farnham Co. ofWcsterville.
Pee. 12, when talks fell apart
making her estimates are one per· · Bids were accepted by the board
after a federal court overturned
cent in regular step salary inc~s from the high bidders on the old
a West Virginia court's order to
for reachers, and a three percent tn· bus bodies which the district had
negotiate, the artlcJe ·stated.
crease in several misc~llancous - for sale.
The union, meanwhile, file suit · categories to cover inRation.
. Maternity leave was granted to
Tuesday In Jackson County Cl r·
The budget coven only general Barbara Mathews Crow for thC
cult Court seeking wages . and
operating funds for the district.
second semester of this year, and to
benefits It claims the workers are
The money which remains in the Sheila Bevan from Feb. 4 through
owed for work done before Nov.
bond retirement fund (from the the remainder of lhe year. Dock
1, the day the dispute began.
retirement of bonds 0.11 Mei_gs High , days ,were granted to Sand_,Y Nap- ·
The workers' contract expired
School in December) was drscussed
Continued on page 3 ·
Oct. 31. The United Steelworkers
clalrri 250 workers arrived late
fbr work that night and were
ordered out of the plant about 1¥.,
hOurs later, after the contract
expired.
The union says that the com·
A deer accident was investigated reported Monday morning that he
pany owes the workers wages. by lbc Meigs County Sheriff's had . parlced his 1989 Chevrolet at
Unde r the old contract, any Department on Tuesday.
the State' Route 7 Parle and Ride at
employee who reported for work
Steve L. Sayre, 43, of Mid· around 10:30 p.m . on Sunday.
ws due a minimum of eight hours dleport, was southbound on State When he returned .on Monday
wages. _the article said.
Route 7 near the East Shade Road morning at 9:40a.m., he (ound that
The suit also says all 1,700 when he struck a deer that ran iniO the driver's door glass had been
union worker s are owed the path of his 1980 Oldsmobile. broken out, the hood released and
production-based bonuses·.
The deer was knOCked down, but his car battery s10lcn.
~-.
In a ~ews release, the United got up and ran. Moderate damage
,.{'}
Investigation, according 10
Steelworkers said it did not know was hsted 10 the car.
' " ''- a
Sheriff Soulsby, is continuing iniO
According to Sheriff James ' the matter.
·
sun screen, frisbees, plus lbousands of other· · exactly how much Ravenswood
LARGEST PEACETIME AIRLIFT • In the
(Continued
on
Page
3)
Soulsby,
Chris
N=
of
Pomeroy
Items tlie troops h•ve beea askina for. Joe Drury,
largest peacetillle airlift or gifts, one-half million
'
a
Wendy's division vke )l.resideat, is shown
pounds of presents, collected at Wendy's Reschecking some or the last items packed before
taurants, was sent to Saudi Anbia in operation
the mlift. '
•
Desert Shield. Some or tbe gifts Includes razors,
iMect repellllnt, rootballs, cassette tapes, books,

- Contract
talks set
Jan. 16

.

0

Deer strikes a~tomobile,
causes moderate damage

.

a

·solution. to gulf crisis
still
·
·
._ unsol-ved_ .a.ift_e. _r .4 h._o u.r ·Session

DRESS SHOES

992·6254

.

'

MEN'S

HOOD'$ FAMILY SHOES

-

S9900

LEATHER BOOTS and
.- ALL LUTHER PURSES

RUBBER FOOTWEAR

by

'

AlllADIS' ·

· LA CROSSE

$199

SOLID WOOD

•Solid Oak Mag. lamp Tables

'

Pick-4: 2794

Marauders

.,.

LOW 01 HIGH lACK

•

Rev. Adolph Golubiewaki
The Rev. Adolph J . Golu·
blewskl, "79, of Sebastian, Fla.,
died Sunday, Jan. 6, 1991.
Born June 12, 1911 In Grand
Rapids, Mich .. he was the son of
the late John and Josephine
Gotubtewskl.
.·
.
Father Golublewskl was the
prtesl of St: Lout's Catholic'
Church from 1950 unUI his
retirement In 1980.
He was ·a graduate of St.
Joseph High School In Grand
Rapids, Mich. and attended
seminary both there and at ·
Mount ·St. Mary's · Seminary In
Cincinnati, Ohio. He attended the
Grand Semlnalre at Montreal,
Canada and was ordained In
June, 1949 at Steubenville, Ohio. ·
· Surviving are three sisters,
Helen Glltnsky of Sanibel Isla'nd,
Fla., Gladys Bergsfi'om of Bur· ·
ton, Micb., and F1orenceSchabof
.Grand Rapids; a brother, Harry
Golublewskl, ·also of Grand '
Rapids.
Father Golublewatl will ·be
taken from Waugb·Halley·WOOII
Funeral Home at •= 30 p.m. on
Tbunday. Friends and former
pa,rlshlonera 8.11! lnvl~ to accompany the body or to partie!·
. pat,e In the welcome at St. Loula
CathoUc Church.
;
Friends may call a 1 the church

•CLOSEOUT ON ALL
SIMMONS MAnRESS
AND BOX SPRINGS.
•OCCASIONAL CANE CHAIRS

THE FLOODING -IS OYER!

lARGE

Pit!k-3: 606

sqm

must

- --Area deaths-Dr. William Whitney Dl

I.ancer8
defeat

--Meigs allDoWtcements......,...-

'unked

Ohio ~ttery

'

. GENEVA (UPl) -Secretary levelof!lclalsofthetwocountrles situation In the whole of the
of State James Baker and Iraq's slrice Iraq's Aug. 2 Invasion of . region, · If there Is a . sincere
Intention make peace In the
Foreign Mlrilster Tariq Azlz met Kuwait that sJiarked the crisis.
Middle
East.
,
fpr morethanfourhoursWednes·
Security was tight around the
"We
are
ready
to
ne!(otlate,
"
, day , bu t there were no clear signs Geneva Intercontinental · Hotel,
that the meeting would prompt a where both men were staying. the Iraqi rorelgn minister said,
diplomatic solution to the Per· U.S., Swiss and Iraqi security "but If we go on hearing the same
sian Gulf crisis.
,
teams used metal detectors and kind of talk that has been
The two men sat down for talks dogs to check those who had the repeated tn the last few months·,
at 11 a.m: local time (5 a.m. f:ST) official passes needed to enter. · then we are going to give the
.
,
B!Jker . and Azlz were each proper answer.' ;
after firs t posing fQr photograptiers. They broke for lunch · · accompanied by seven staff , _:Baker said he wi.U use the
at 1:} 6 p.m. and res-umed at 2:28 members plus and .Interpreter meeitng ·as an opportunity to
. ·p.m: The second round broke up · ;ilid were seated other at 'a ·make It cle'ar to Iraq that the
.at 4:53 p.m. with no word on rectangularconferencetablelna International coalition aligned
whether they would resume.
medium-siZe meeting room on against Iraq would accept no·
During the June h ·recess 'Baker the•hotel's ground floor.
' thing shor.t Qf an unconditional
called Bush at the White House to .. · On his arrtval Tuesday In lraql wlthdra'wal!roin Kuwait by ·
· give " his description of events, " Geneva, Azlz Indicated that he the U.N.·mandated deadline of
presidential spokesman Marlin was determined to seek In link Jan. 15.
Baker iatd he would emphas·
Fitzwater said., The talks wer~ the Persian Gulf crisis with an
lze
to Azlz that " we really mean
"substantive," Fitzwater said. overall Middle East peace lnltla·
bUsiness.'"
Baker said Monday In
but he declined to characterize live and that the Bush admlnlll·
London
that
he will give Azlz a
tratlon's stand would not "bring
'the atmosphere.
·
strongly
worded
letter from
Baker, who.c alled the meeting about any positive results.''
President
Bush
to
be
forwarded
at a Geneva hotel "the last best
"Iraq has made Its position
to
Saddam
outlining
the U.N.
chance for peace," and Azlz cle11r from the very ~ginning.
arrived Tuesday pushing differ· We clo not yield to pressure," A:tlz · position of unconditional with·
ent agendas for the first head' to· said. "Iraq Is open to a genuine drawl and the res.toratlon of the
nead discussions between top- exchange· of views about the exiled Kuwaiti government .

i'· , A

'

Finding for recovery of $27,566
made against.26 _welfare recipients

which names appeared .on bolh Meigs Coonty Prosecutor SlEven ·
lists.
.
Story.
.
.
. Ca~·by·casc audits of lhe "hits",
Fergusqn created the Ohio Task
Meigs County Welfare Depanmem, . using welfare and employment Force .QD Welfare fraud in 1989·
according to a report from the · records, allow assistaqt auditors 10 with the purpose of developing
of6ce of Slate Auditor Thomas E. determine which cases involved uniform investigative JCChnique~
fraud , and the amount. · ·
Ferguson.
,
designed specifically for welfare ·
The Meigs County Dcparunern fraud inv~gation, promote mutual
According to the report ·the
findiilg was made as the result ,pf of Human Services has been ad· . cooperation and provide technical
· the first ~omputer cross-check audit vised of the audit rcpons and as has assistance in each county.
·
•
of county welfare roDs and slate in·
come laX data.
•
Ferguson's program of computer
matching state income tax data
with co!Dity welfare rolls was
authorized by passage of House
. Bill 242 by the Ohio G.eneraJ As·
sembly in 1986. The law ~ ef·
Election of officers was held ~llry. repons that some enterfeet -ill 1987 and Ferguso!) s.office
recently
by the Meigs County Fair ta!lliOcnt for the .1991 Meigs
immediately !!egan the· process of ·
determining which recipieniS . ~ Board and officers for 1990 will be County Fair, which will be held
received A.D.C. or Medicaid retained for 1991. They are Bill Aug. ,12·17, has been scheduled.
·benefits to which they were not en· Radford, president; Ben Slawter, Entertainment includes: "The
vice . president; Barbara . fry, · Vogueia." a SO's and 60's musical
iitled.
.
Assistant a~ditors obfa!ned com· treasurer; and Mary Gilmore, group, and "The Hollanders," a
group which plays a variety of
puter tapes fro~ the Oh•!&gt; _Depart· ' secrewy.
Aaending · · lbe Ohio Farm mlllical~electlona.
ment of Taxauon· con!ammg the
Mn. Gilmore ~ lbit a new
names and,social sec urity numbers Managm Convention·in Col.umbus
of persons who- filed state income Jan. l-5 were C.W. and Thelma demolition derby will al8o be hold
HencfcriOn .. Laurie Rood, Dan and . this Ye.' IIIII poaibly a IIIOIOICIOI!Ii
laX return's. Computer tapes ob·
tained from the various ·county Donna Jean Smith, Bill 8J1d Louise competition as well u 10111e other
Department of Hum3!1 1.Services Bradford, Ed Holter, and Roger and . new ideas wbich are prmmJy
being investigated.
offices were then matc!Jt1.(1 against ~ Gilmore.
·
M
m.1
Gilmore,
fair
bOard
the incol)'lc tax data to detennine
A finding\. for recovery of

~;~::asor~"~:~e~~:t~~

Radford narne.I head
of ~eigs Fair Board

·•

.

,..,

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="306">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9594">
                <text>01. January</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="34452">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="34451">
              <text>January 8, 1991</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="6574">
      <name>golubiewski</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="3394">
      <name>whitney</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
