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,. ·Family

:Re~taurant
'.. ..

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· Pomavy-Midclaport. Ohio

1G-The

..

228 West Main St.
Pomeroy
992-5432

• •

.,

THIS

Fri•• Al•••ti ·

Schedules
.

knock off

'SOUTHERN
BOYS

..

'

e

Jan. 22-lavenswaocl, Away
Jan. 25-Sautheastem, Home ·
Yol.41, No.180
Copyrighted 1881

Jan; 22 ...,.Miller, Away
Jan. 25-Vinton County, Away

~~derby-

GIRLS
.. Jan. 21 '-:'Eastern, Away ' .
· JCIIL 24-Nelsonwille· York, Homt

EASTERN
.

.

BOYS
Jan. 25-Symmes Valley, Home
Jan. 26-Miller, Home

. GIRLS .
" ''

~. ~-BOYS'
992-6661/· . _ ___.._.....
•
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.

.SE(ONt

~

SCHEDULES~---!1~-----~

-

.

SOUTHERN

,

Nov. 27-North Gallla .........: .. Horne
Nov. 30-Hennen Trace .......... Home
Dec. 4-Eastem ............=
.Away
Dec. 7-Southwe8tern,,,,,,u, Away
Dec: 8-Paint Valley.::........... Convo
.. Dec. 14-Kyger Creek .... .... ~ ... Home
Dec. '16.,-Symrnea Valley ........ Away
Dec. 21-0ek Hill .................. Away
Dec. 22-Southallstern ........... Home
Oec. 28-Athena .................... Away
Jan. 4-North Galli a....... ........ Away
Jen. 11-0alllpolla ...,.......... ...... Away
Jan.11-Hannan '!'race .. ......... Away
Jan. 18-Eallern............ ........ Home
Jan. 22-Ravenawood ..... ....... Away
Jan. 2&amp;-Southweatern ....... :... Horne
Feb. 1-Kyger Creek ............... Away
Feb. 8--'Symme• Valley .. ........ Home.
Feb. 12-Warren .............. .. .... Away
Feb. 111-0ak Hill .. ............... .. Home

•

'

MEIGS

Dec . 1 - Att.na .................... .. Home
Dec. 4-Belpre ..... , .... : ..... .... ,.. Away
Dec'. 11-Miller.... .\ .. ....... ....... Home
Dec. 14-Vinton County ......... Home
Dec. 18-Aiexan!ler .......... .. ... Away
Dec. 21-Wellston ................. Home
Dec. 28-Logan .,...... .... ...... ... Away
Jan. 4- Trimble., .. .. ... ,.... .... .... Away ·
Jan. &amp;~ Federal Hoeking ... &lt;..... Home
Jan. 11-Nelsonville· York ....... Away
.Jan. 111-Belpre •...... .. ............. Horne
Jan. 22-Miller .. ; .. ....... ......... . Away
Jan. 26-VintOh County .. .... .. . Away
Jan. 29-Alexandar ... : .. ...... ..... Horne
Feb. 1-Welllton ....... :.... ........ Away
Feb. 2-Atliena .. .... ......... ........ Away ,.
Feb. &amp;~Warren ........... ........ ... Horne
Feb. 8-Trimble.: .. .............. :... Home
Feb. 12-Federal Hocking ....... Away
Feb. 16-Nelaonville-Yorlc .. ..... Home

__........__ ____.GIRLS'

I

SOUTHERN

·-

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••

555 PARI ST.

•••

., . ~6tl

•,.•,....t...tan helps rescue downed pilot
a....
(:apL Randy Goff, 26, ·
.h ero; mission lastS
more than a·hours

,

. EASTERN SAUDI ARABIA (UPI) :.... Two U.S. Alr Forcefllers; one
from
Jackson, Ohio, and a helicopter pilot pulled oft a gun-blazing
By BRIAN J. REED
rescue,
flying deep Into enemy territory and picking up a Navy pOot
· •
Sentinel News Stair _
who
parachuted
Into the Iraqi desert.after his pla.ne wa,s shot dq,wn .
•
·
The
Alr
Force
pilots,
capping a frantic eight-hour search Monda.y ,
The village of Middleport will be
fired
a.rmor-pterclng
bullets
Into-an Ira.qi truck nearing the pilot just
lhc siiC for a, Regional All
as
the
helicopter
arrived.
American Sosp Box Perby in June,
Only 200 yards ·from the Navy pilot, the bullet-riddled truck
and plans are now lllldetwa.y for lhe ·
screecl!ed
to a stop, trailing black smoke a,nd flames, allowing the
funding of lhc event.
chopper
to
set down and welcome the aviator aboard .
This will be the first time that lhe
"My heart was pumping," said
detby will be held in Meigs
Capt. Randy Goff, 26, of Jackson, area, apparently headed straight
County, and numerous activities are
Oblo., one of the two A-10 for the downed flier .
being planned throughout the area
Johnson and Goff attacked the
Thunderbolt II pOolS who carried
.. to coincide with the delby. . .
truck with 30rnm galling guns
out the mission. "My mind was
; Boys and girls, aged nine
just rushing."
·'
mounted In the noses of their
through 16, are invited to
aircraft,
stopping It In flames on
Goff
Is
a
gradua.te
of
Ohio
State
ticipate in the "kit car division of
PLANNING STAGES - An event lile Ibis beld to get this tint evmt off the grouild. Roger
University,
where
he
was
In
the
a
dirt
road.
lhc derby, which gives the summer•s -Soapbox Derby requires a lot ~pin­ Williams, second l'rom the. rlaht, Is the derby's
school's Air Force ROTC unit.
''Unfortunately' the truck was
youngSiers an opportunity to work
ning. Here, the derby's board or directors was director. (Sentinel Photo by Brlan J, Reed) ,
'In
Jackson,
Goff's
mother,
In
the wrollg -place at the wrong
wilh their ~IS during the con- . 'bard at work a.t one or the muy meetings being
Betty
Goff,
sa.ld
her
son
was
time,"
Goff said. "We couldn't
Sliuction of their cars. ·
· _
.
excited
when
his
unit
was
deafford
to
have him be there. ·
The detby is being promOied are encouraged to consider entering newspaper man in 1934. The idea, Scott covered a race of ''boy-built"
ployed
to
the
Persian
Gulf.
'
'Things
are happening ra·
according to derby press material, cars in his home cummunity.
througbout a 6S mile radius, and the race, as well,'
pidly,"
Johnson
said with some
"I
have
been
Mncerned
about
children in Oallia County, Athens
The Soapbox Derby is an Ohio grew ol¢ of a photographic assignAs the ~torv Roe.~ . Scott was so Randy but notfea.rful because he regret. "We liave other things to
Colllty and Ma.son County, W.va. origi~ . being SlaJ!ed by an Akron · ment in Dayton, wherein Myron
Continued on page 10
hasn't been fea.rful," Mrs. Goff
worry a bout."
''These are thl! ones that really
said. ''I talked to him a week ago
Saturday. He said he had been
count," said 354th commander
Ervin C. "Sandy" Sharpe. "It's
sent over there for a purpose, and
he was really up."
really galvanized us, especially
The rescued pOol, whose name
beca.use of that," he said while
was
not
lmmedla
tely
released,
pointing
to a teleVIsion picture of
By LEE STOKES
Dhahran told a news brelflng In down ~our planes and nine wtpng, " a comll)eotator said.
was
unharmed'
·
captured··allled
pilots being he~
" 1llll&amp;ed
"'•ti"naal , , , Dba.-hran that aerial photQgraphs missiles.
.
'We are on the pat~:~ ju'li~.eand
"He
Is
ra
iher
pleased
to
be
!iilraq.
"""""·-·
•. , ·~ •w,&gt;
Showed smoke emergbjg trorn·· ""' 'l'ffe' comm'uiilque ' said the
will con~nUjl the struggle Until where he Is tonight, " said Capt.
Johnson and Goff had to refuel
CAIRO, Egyp(i- Iraq claimed Kuwaiti. oil wells and storage allied losses occurred between 8
victory."
Paul
JohnSon,
32,
of
Dresden,
In
the air four times for a mission
Tuesday . It captured another . tanks In the southern emirate. p.m. and 6 a.m. Baghdad time. It · It was not clear why Baghdad
Tenn., the · second A-10 pilot
that
lasted 8 hours and .1s ·
, allied. airman and shot down 18 .· Iraq had said It would torch said there. were 19 raids on
Radio did ilot mention the latest teamed with Goff as par t of the
minutes.
"'
bombers and missiles during Ku)Nlllti oU fields If a.ttacked but targets throughout lra.q, nine of
Iraqi Scud missile attacks on 354th Tactical . Fighting Wing
Johnson
said
the
pair,
speovernight raids, while a Saudi It was not known If It carried out them In Baghdad.
Saudi Arabia, a.lthough Cairo from Myrtle Beach. S.C.
c tally trained for missions In·
mWtary official confirmed that Its promise or If the fires were
Iran's official IslamiC RepubRadio spec,ulated Iraqi leader
•'It was a rather Indescribable
volvlng missing aircraft from
Kuwaltl oO wells were burning.
Ignited by allied firepower.
lie News Aiency IRNA said the
Saddam Hussein did not want to feeling to know that he was now
different
services, spent about
· The Iraqis did not mention that
Also Tuesday, VIetnamese offl· attack ·on Basra was so· heavy
admit firing Scuds at the host on the helicopter and we were
half
that
time
flying over Iraqi
they sent Scud mlssOes Into clals In Hanoi were quoted as "Iraqi anti-aircraft tire could be
country of Islam's two holiest coming out of enemy territory territory.
Saudi Arabia, host country ofthe saying 3, 000 VIetnamese clearly heard In Iran's Shalamshrines, at Mecca and Medina.
that
we
were
about
to
pull
this
Air ·Force spokesmen said the
two holiest shrines In Islam, workers In Iraq were trying to cheli region, 20 mOes from
Ira.ql radio reported that two
"
Johnson
said.
off
rescued
Navy pilot had ejected
perhaps for feu of denting flee the countcy to escape the Basra."
Ira.ql citizens captured a shotjust mlnu res before the helicafter
being
hit with ground fire
Muslbn support for Its cause.
bombings, which apparently desThe Iranian agency said the down pilot early Tuesday but
opter flew In to make the pickup, and parachuted Iii to,a wide open
Iraq' s official INA news troyed power generatqrs In explosions were so powerful, that · gave no details of his nationality.
the Iraqi truck drove Into the expanse of Iraqi desert
agency said the allled bombers northern Iraq and took Iraqi "buildings In the Khuzestan port Allied commanders say about 25
struck the northern, oO·rlch television off the· air Tuesday city of Khorramshahr, .27 miles allied pilots are missing In
region of Klrkuk from Turkish morning. ·
southeast of Basra, ·were se- action.
bases and that .bombs hit . the
Baghdad Radio sa.ld the over- verely jolted. "
Seven captured allied alnna.n
southern Iraqi portcltyoUlasra night raids apparently came
BaghdadRacilocarrledastate- were paraded on Iraqi television
with expioslons so powerful they . from a TurkiSh base and that It ment saying President Bush was .
ConUnued on page 10
jolted neighboring Iran.
·
. has ~n off and on the air since miStaken when he thought Iraq
Tehran Radio said the strikes war erupted.
•
would collapse easily under
A Racine man was received two citations .foOowing an
against Basra were apparenUy
Quoting war communique No. heavy allied bomoing. The stateaccident
on State Route 338 In Meigs County Monda.y.
Intended to destroy supply lines 14, Baghdad Radlosald "l8a1Ued ment said Iraq secured an inltia.l
Richard
D. Cummins, 20, was cited for !allure to maintain an
linking Iraq's 500,000-strong garwarplanes and missiles had been victory In the war a.nd would
..
assured
clear
distance ahead and tor expired registration after
rison to the Iraqi mainland downed" during the night. An continue the struggle.
the
two-car
accident
near State Route 124 In Sutton Township.
A Mason County, W.Va. man has
before the ground war begins.
earlier report, monitored In
"Thelnfldelsthoughtwewould
According to a reporlfrom the GalU8-Melgs post of the State
A
mOitary spokesman in Cairo, said Iraqi gunners shot colla.pse
but they were entered a guilty plea to charges surHighway
Pa.trol, C11mrnlns was southbound when he failed to
ro~nJ the kidnllpping of his
stop
for
a
car In front of him attempting to m$ke a left turn.
mmor ruece.
·
Cummins
struck
the second car, driven by Nancy J . Yoacham,
John L. Young pled guilty
36
Racine,
In
the·
rear, doing moderatedama.ge to both vehicles.
Tuesday momin~ to an indictment
Neither
driver.
was
Injured. Yoacham's passengers, Joan R.
charging him wtth kidnapping, an
Miller,.
63,
of
Arizona,
and Stephanie Jones, 12, Racln~ and
aggravated first degree felony: The
Cummins'
passenger,
Chad
R. Dlddle, 17, of Racine, were also
charge against Young also carries
uninjured.
with it the specification thai he was
previously convicted of a felony •
. ,..._
specifically the murder of Mary
Berry or Mason County, w .va
.
several years ago. ·· . ·
.
In December, a Meigs County
· : Saturday. February ~at 12 f!OOn is the deadline for casting absenCommon Plells Coun jury failed to
. tee ballots for the special election on February 5.
reach a verdict in the cue, and a,
According to Meigs County Board of Elections Director Jane
~jury trial was scheduled for
Frymyer, the board office on Mechanic S~t will be open on
Wednesday.
Fe~ 2 (Saturday) from 9 a.m. lll!til noon to allow voterll to cast
The plea bargain agreement was
absentee ballots.
·
.
reached Tuesday morning by Meigs
. The.special election give~ vote~ ~e opportunity once. again Ill
Attorney
County Prosecuting
vote on a county-wide 1.5 rmll conunwng levy for the Me1gs Board
Steven L. Story and Young's attor·
of Menial Retardation and Developmental Disabilities.
ney, Meigs County Public Defender
Voters in Souther~~ Local School District will Ca.st ballots on a
Ctw-les H. Knight
three year, four mill levy for lhc sl:hool district Both levies were
The indictment against Young,
defeated in November.
·
&amp;led last summer, charpd that
Young ll'8l1SIIOI'ted hill · teenaged

Nov. 20'.,-Mlller ........... : ...... .... Away
Nov. 23-Federal Hocking ...... Home
Nnv. 27.-Xyger Creak ..... ... .... Away !
Nov. 30-Southwestern ... ...... Home
· DEC. 4 - Southern: ........ :.... .... Home
Dec. 7-Symmas Valley .... '...... Away·
D.ec. 14~North Gallia ........... . Aw~y '
. Dec. 16..... 0ak Hill . ,...... ' l " ...... Home
Dec. 18-Weterford ........ .. ..... Home
Jan. 4-Kyger· Creek ... .. .. .... ... . Home
Jan. 11 .:..Southwestern .......... Away
Jan. 16-Hannan Trace ......... . Home :,
Jan. 18 ~Southam ............ ... .. Away
Jan. 26-Symmes Valley .... .... Home
Jan. 28-Miller .... .... .. ........ .. .. Home
Feb. 1-North Gellie ............... Home
Feb. &amp;- Federal HOC:king .... ..... Away
Feb. 8-0ak Hill .......... ........... Away
Feb. 12,....Waterford .. .... :..... .... Away
Feb. 16-Hannan trace ....·....... /(way

SCHEDULES~__........_,.

r.r.a,

LocaJ ·briefs____;..-___,;.--.
.

_ ___

.

Nov. 12-Nelaonvllle-York .... .. Away
Nov. 19-Meigl ... .................. Away
Nov. 28-North Oallle ............ Away
Nov., 29,-Hannan Trace .......... Away

Dec. 3-East"-t ............ .. ...... . Ho.,.
Deo. 11-South-stern., ........... Home

Dec. 10-Kyger Creek .... , ... : ... Away
· Dec. 13-Symms Valley .... ..... Home

Deo. 17-Waterford ................Home

Dec. 20-0ak Hill ........ .; .. ...... Home

Jan. 3-North C:hillla ............... Home
Jan. 10-Hannan Trtce .. ........ Horne
J.an. 14-Melga ............... .. ..... Home ·
Jan. 18-Nelaonville-York....... Home
Jan. 17-Eall~m ....... ............. Away
Jan. 24-Southwestlm .......... Away
Jan. 28-Waterford ............ .... Away
Jan. 31-Cyger _Creek ............ . Home
Fib. 4.:..0ak Hill ........... : .. ...... . Away feb. 7-Symmea Valley ........ .. Away

Nov.
Nov.
Nov.
Dec.

Dec.
Dec.
Dec.
Dec.

MEIGS

19-Soutllern ...... .. .. ...... Home
26-Trlmble ........ ........... Home
29-Vinton County ......... Away ·
3-M Iller ................. ....... Away
8-Eastern ..................... Home
1 O-Nel80nviJle-York .... .. Away
13"-Belpre .................. .. . Home
17- Aiexander ... ...... :..... Home

Dec. 20-Well11on .......... ....... Away
Jan, 3-Federal Hocking ...... ... Home
,..Jan. 7 - Trimble ......... .... .... ..... Away
Jan. 1 0-Vinton County ......... Home
Jan. 14-S®thern ................. Away
Jan. 17-Miller ... .. ............ : .... Home
Jan. 21-Eaatern ................. ... /(.way
• Jan. 24-Nelaonville· Yorlc ....... Home
Jan. 28-Belpre ................. .. .. Away
Jan. 21-Aiexander ................ Away
Feb. 4 - Wellston .. .. .. ............., Hoine
O::eb. ? .:...Federal Hock~g .......... Away

EASTERN

Racine man cited by state patrol

Young enters
gui,lty plea ·

Nov. 19-Federal Hocking ...... Home
Nov. 28- Kyger Creek ..... ....... Home
Nov. 29-Southwestern ......... Away
Dec. 3- Southern .... .......... ..... Away
Dec. 6-Trimble .............. ._...... Home
Dec. 8- Symmea Valley .. : ....... Home
Dec. 8- Meigs ...... .. ....... .. ...... Away
Dec. 10-North Gallia ............ Home
Dec. 13-0ak Hill .................. Away
Dec. 20-Hannan Trace ... , ......; Away
Jan. 3-Kyger Creek .... ... ........ Awey
Jan. 9- Trimble ....... ...... ......... Away
Jan.1 0-Southwastern ........... Home
Jan. 14-Federal Hocking ....... Away
Jan. 17-Southern .. .. .. ....... .... Home
Jan. 21-Meigs .... .................. Home
Jan. 24-Symmea Valley .. ...... A.wey
Jan. 31 - North G~illla .... .. ....... Away
Feb. '4 -Hannen Trace ·.,.. ........ Home
Feb. 7-0ak !-1ill ...................·.. Homt

·~.

.

Deadline for absentees Fe.b. 2

niece from ~eport 10 Mason
Coonty in August, raped her, and
then reaane4 lhc girl 10 her home

in~=~~

S~­

indiclell in
ber by die Mason Count)' Oranil
Jury on IS counts stemmmg from
the- incident
.
Young has been housed in the
Meip County jail ~ the dis-

s-

po~lion

•-.a

u

lllll'dlen CIU'I'Ied dpa wltli
lliCh "A
• Speed,- .V Idnn QCI e Sere Rehirn," "Support
11 "God m. o.r Troopa," ''God
Desert
Bleil 1M U.S.A.," "We lme 0111' Troopl," IDd
''Desert Storm: We Sappcri Oar Jllaa, Oar
Troops, Oar Coantry llld Oar PlflldeaL" Tbe
groap lllll'dled lroaa tile Tappen l'lalal Fire
Department 10 Route Qll 0. Ill Raate 7 IDd
throu&amp;h the Arbau&amp;b H01111D1 Subdlvlllon.

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1 Section, 10 Pog" 26 C.nta
A Multlmodlo Inc. Nowopoper

Iraq burits Kuwaiti oil fields

.'

. EASTERN

• ·.:=·- . ' •.

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F·

Jan. 21 -Meigs, H,ome
·Jan. 24-Syntllles Valley, Away

.

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Middleport
to ·be site

BOYS.

cloq Wedlleeday. Wp ID
·mid SO. Chuce of 1114!W 10
pereent..

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Tuesday, January 22, 1991

Jackso~

M·EIOS

,.

.

Low lc!DIIht near 11. M08tly

•

., I

• Jan. 24-Southwestern, Away
Jan. 21-Waterford, Away

,, ...,..

PiCk-3:452
Piek-4: 5591
Carda: K-11; 8-C;
6-D;2-S

Hoosiers

,GIRLS

.

Ohio Lottery

Buckeyes -

.WEEK'S
GAMES

•

Fealtrl•e
Kt•t•••t
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-t.:-~ ..----. .

I

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Qf hit cue m Meigs

ew,,,y, He ill now expected to be
tnlnSpOI1ed to Point Pleaant.

w. Va.

10 face the Muon County charles.

At pre11 time on n-lay, Young

was awaiting llellfaiCq on the
charge. Meip Couaty Common

Pleas Court JIJdge PredW. Crow m
Will hearing I provioplly scheduled
case and renlelll:ing had been
dcfemd.
.

EMS answers eight calls

Eight calls for usisWice were answtm1 by Meigs County Emergency Medica,! Services units on Monday and on Tuesday morning.
At 1:40 a.m., Tuppers Plains squad went to East State Route 681
for Wayne Gilliand. who Will taken to Callldcn Clark. At 4:4~ p.m.,
Middleport squad was dispatcbed to Overbrook Center for Oscar
. Price was taken to VetetiiiiS. At 8:57 ,p.m., Racine aquacl went to
· Perry Run Road for Gary Moore, who was tnllllpOrted to Veterans.
At 10:16 p.m. Middleport SQUid went to NOI'Ib Second for Mary
StilL Still went to Holzer Medic:al Center. At 11:45 p.m., Rutland
squad went to Leading Cnet Roed for Betty Lemley. She was taken
to Pleasant Valley HolpiiiL
•
At2:22 a.m. on Tuelday, Tuppen Plains squad went to Reedsville
for Norma Rockhold. who was 8CIII to to St Joteph Hospllll. At 4
a.m., Columbia Thwnlbip lire depanment weot to Cone Road for a
chimney lire at the Orlli Dungee residence. 1bey recurned 11 4:38
a.m. At S:OS a.m., Rutland IQUid watt to Dint Road ror James
Dant. He wu ICIIt to Holzer Meclic:al Center. At 5:57a.m., Pomeroy
squad went to U.S. Route 33 for Harry Ly0111, wbo wu ll'ealed but

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not1l1111p011ed.

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Commentary
The Daily Sentinel : Bombardment will continue
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO 'i'BE JNTUE8T8
OF THE
MEIGS·MAllO"'
ARE4
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t~~ ~'c~· ......,.,=•o:o ,•
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ROBERT L. WINGETT
PUblisher

CHARLENE HOEl"LICH
Geaeral Maaa1er

PAT WRlTEREAD
AN1at1111t Pablllher/ Controller
A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Assoclauon.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
words long. AU letters are subject to edlttna and must be signed with
name, address and telephone number. No unsigned letters wUI be published. Letters slloukl be In good taste, addressing Issues, not personal!·

~

ties.

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·

"

Why the GOP
had·chainnan woes
By ARNOLD SAWISLAK
UPI Senior Editor
WASHINGTON -There used to be a taunt that went something
like, " If you're so smart, how come you ain't rich?" Perhaps the
Republican Party can be asked a variation of that: "If you'r.e so
popular, how come you had so much trouble finding a chairman?"
Alter a number of !Its and Jtarts over a period of several months,
the White House finally came up with Clayton Yeutter to replace Lee
Atwater In the GOP job.
Yeutter, who Is secretary of agrlulture and before that was U.S.
trade representative, was chosen after WIUlam Bennett, who was the
adrnl1lls.tratlon's drug policy director and before thllt the former
admtnlstratlori's secretary or education, first accepted and then
dropped out as GOP chief.
•
·. .
Bennett said he couldn' t serve because he couldn't make en4s meet
on the $125,000 pay and would have to go out and about to give
speeches lor pay. And that, Bennett discovered after talking to his
brother, an ethics lawyer, might create a confliCt of Interest
There Is no need to rehash the Bennett explanation of his decision
except to suggest that anyone who accepts It at face value gives new
meaning to anot!ler old saytni about falling oft a turnip truck.
None of this answers the question: How come a political party that
ll.as won five orthe last six presidential elections and Is competitive at
most oilier levels of politics does not seem able to recruit a nationally
known political figure - a former governor or even an· Incumbent
senat.or - to head Its natlol)lll committee?
With all respect forYeutter, the truth Is he does not have any s\IIUS
lri national or state politics and he'Is not kno\vn as a fiery partisan w.ho
could roast the OemeK;rats (as Bennett wa expected to do) wllle
someone else did the nuts-and-bolts work at GOP headquarters.
Thereprobablyareatleasttworea~onsthepartyhadtolook.sol ng

j

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fo~n~s~':: =~hat affects every national committee chalnnan

Pe'te
~ l~ Ai\tUTTeD \tV ltt HAll oF FAMe •••
.

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Cleal1 up nati.•onaI. .parks concession
•
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when his .party holds the presidency. What happens In such cases Is
that the White House Insists on running the party as well as the
WASHINGTON (NEA)- Like ·
goverrunent. That need not be a major problem as long as 1600 much of what occurs In this
capital, the decision to transfer
Pennsylvania Ave ..stlcks to policy and lets the national committee
deal with operations.
·
concession rights In Yosemite
, But If the key staff member at the White House- John Sununu In
National Park from a private
thepresentcase-has·aneedtoruneverylhlng,therecanbecontllct
corporation to a public foundaand Ills almostsure that thepersonphyslcallyclosesttothepresldent
lion Is subject to multiple
will prevail. ·
·
· ·
Interpretations.
In Atwater's case, he had established, hlmselt with Bush as head of ·
For those · concerned about ·
the 1988 campaign and .did not need to worry about kibitzing from the
growing Japanese Intrusion In
chlelolstafl, whoalterallseeshlmsellasapolltlcalexpert.Butthat
this country's economy, the
would not apply to Bennett and It won't to Yeutter.
recent development ·constitutes
The second reason the job Is hard also Is not new: After a relatively
an Important victory because the .
peaceful eight years while Ronald Reagan was In office, the
Matsushita Electric Industrial
Republicans are once again bickering among themselves.
Co. has agreed to only temporar:
lly operate the park concessions.
Bush tried lor years to convince the conservative wing of the GOP
that despite hiS Eastern establishment roots he was no Rokefeller
For Interior Secrefilry Manuel
"liberal, " but his reversal on the tax Increase last year undid all his
Lujan Jr., often characterized as
miSSionary work.
·
an unimpressive member of
This hostile political atmosphere, which has gotten worse rather · President Bush's cabinet, Matsu·
than better during the gulf crisis, will make '\'eutter's work twice as
shlta's relUctant aqJ,IIescence to
hard aild could undercut Bus)1's efforts to build a campaign for 1992.
his demands that It relinquish the

·lle'IIQ
.a IO the

I' ...:_
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edi••or___________________
1:

·

Inmate seeks help
Editor's Note: Jole Pari Scott
was r0111111 pDty ol attempted
murder aDd attempted bQI'IIIry
. ill a triel ID lhe Melp COUDty
Commoa Plea Court CODCiudiDI
on Dee. 13, 1990. Prlar to lhe trl=
a1 Seott was evaluated aDd touad
to· be SIDe, acconlllll to Meip
Couaty Public Detncler Cbarles
il. Knight.

I

.

1983. t "was treated but never fully
recovered. l lhen went out west
only 10 discover I still was suffering from the dinse. I lay frozen
benealh the snow for 7 hours and I
had a blood clot n:moml from my
blain the next rnaming afttt spending

28 days recovering I c.ne

l
_1

10

Ohio 10 tile Athens Mental Health
Center where I was admiaed for
dqlression and pUt on multivitamins, antidepressant and ttanTo the Editor:
I
qullizer
to help me sleep.
Please publish my lrUe $10)'. I
I
sooo
rose 10 the top but I was
·· was convicted of llllallpiCd mlllder
later
~hizophrenic
but !hey didn ~~
and burglary. I lin~ rHiimt ~ ~
think
sa,
I
went
bact
·a few times
suffering from IIUIIliC depression m
..
.

.

· Council thanks 8upportel'8
I

Dear Editor:
The Middleport Arts Council
wishes to express Its appreciation to all who participated In the
First Annjlal Village ChriStmas
Church Tour on Dec. 16. The
Christmas spirit certainly was
portrayed In all of the lovely
decorations and In the hospitality
extended to all visitors at each.

church. We also wish to thank
Judy Crooks wh.o assisted us In
planning this event. Suggestions
are being take-n, and plans are
being made for the Second
Annual VIllage Christmas
Church Tour In December, 1991.
The Middleport Arts Council
Chr. Mary W!~

•

Appreciates support
•

I

Dear Editor:
·
·
We, members. of the Rutland
Church of the Nazarene's youth
group, thank the following people
for their support In our seaveneer bunt: the people of
Rutland, for their aenerous food
donations; Carla Smith and
Darlene Vanaman, for organizIng the event'and cOunting what
we brought b~cll; Lily Kennedy .
and Darlene Vanaman, for get- ,
ling tiM! prllel; and several
restaurants In Athens, Pomeroy,
· and Middleport for donating gltt

certificates.
Our acavenaer hunt, beld op
. De,cember 15th, was for li needY
family. It lasted a little less than
two bouts and the four areas we
covered gave an outstanding
response. We collected over $140
worth of food for the family.
• Thanks again!
Mlsl Neutzllng, Renee Young,
VInce Vanaman, Jeremy
Grimm, Travis Drenner, Brtaa
Enright, Angle Sear lea and Mark
Brown.

.
agam and finally tbey discovered I
might
haveon
dual
personali~.
was
put
back
medication
for Imild
onwi..ru. was !noina touch with
;:;ji''b 1 th -:--o .
ty ut ey didn't think so. In
Dec. 1990 after ·being convicted

ToP-ranked UlVLJI
remaim unbeaten

Jack· Anderson

wanted this war In the first place
Internal pressure Is mounting eariy success of the mission was
to
destroy the Iraqi mllltary
Inside help. Several well-placed
wllhiJ1 the services. ·Pentagon
capability.
LUI October, a high·
Iraqis had been persuaded over
sources frankly admit that the
level While House soun;e-told us
Army Is ltcbtng to use Its M-1 the past live months to h~lp
that "the worst possible option,
locate
and
destroy
key
military
tanks and other eql,llpment lor
short or thousands of American
the ftrst time In combat to see II targets. The men - more sabodead, Is that Saddam leaves
teurs
than
spies
agreed
to
stay
they perform as · well as the
Kuwait peacefully."
·
behind
Instead
of
detecting
to
the
expensive Air Force weaponry
The bombing, which will likely
West.
They
!Ire
reporting
to
has. Our Pentagon sources say
continue lor a week and drop
the use of these. weapons In real , American, Saudi, Syrian and
hundreds of thousands.ol tons of
Egypi!!IJI
"handlers"
who
give
battle wUI be vital to the services
ordinance,
Is achieving those
them their marching orders.
In future budget negotiations.
objectives
with
a minimum of
They bad previously Identified
That. along with patriotiSm
casualties.
.
·
weaknesses In the an tl·alrcraft
and adrenaline are driving some
Because
or
the
current
win-win
artillery defenses, radar proArmy "strategists 10 badger Dem09d,
top
Bush
administration
files , transmission frequencies,
fense Secretary Richard Cheney
sources confided that even II
manpower, missile bases and
.and Chairman of the Joint Chiefs
Saddam
surrenders or Is kllled
radar stations.
of Staff Gen. Colin Powell for
by
his
own
generals, the bombing
The first day or aerial bompermission to "engage the
will
not
stop
until all the Iraqi
bardment was far more success·
enemy." But Bush knows tha~
lui than the White House or the military Infrastructure Is
could raise the body count
.
•
Pentagon had project(!(!. But obliterated.
expon~ntlally .
·
The
White
House
believes !hat
even
that
success
won.
'
t
tempt
While the technology or the air
'
no
subs.equent
disarmament
or
them
to
paUse
and
count
their
war has been Impressive,
peace
negotiations
could
ellml·
good
fortune.
The
White
House
another major contributor to the ·
nate Iraq as a threat as long as
the weapons are there.
The biggest bonus so far Is that
. .
the Israelis have not been Involved. Highly sensitive sources
tell us that Israel had the final
word on ~YhlCh targets would be
taken out 1\rsl by the U.S.
Tomahawk cruise missiles and ·
the first wave or bombers. In
exchange lor that right, Israel
promised not to l&amp;Jinch a preemptlve strike agajnst Iraq. The
Initial targeting plans did not
Include In the first wave of
attacks some targets that !srael
considered a priority, so the plan
was changed.
The Israeli leadership got
advance notice or the raid, as did
Great Britain, Franee, Saudi
Arabia, the Soviet Union, Spain,
Syria, Turkey, Egypt and Jor·
dan. Bush risked a leak of
Information by spreading the
warning to those nations, but he
had pledged to Inform the allied
coalition, and he had to warn
nations of possible overflights.
Bush also didn't want the skittish
Soviet Red Arm"{ to take the
Invasion as hostile action toward
them.
·

concession rights could be cru·
clal In enhancing his status.
But arguably more significant .
Is a third explanation: The
development represents a major
advance In the long but futile
struggle to control (If not ellml·
nate) commercial exploitation or
the country's most spectacular
landscape - Its national parks.
Because Yosemite was t'he
first park to attain that status 101
years ago, It has symbolic
lmpor!ance. But concession poll·
cies and practices at national
parks throughout the country are
In desperate need of reform.
Numerous Investigations con·
dueled by congressional commit·
tees In recent decades ~ave found
that the Interior Department's
National Park Service has
strayed from Its official mission
of promotlrig "the development
of parll area.s, the protection or
the natural environment and the
preservation of historic
properties."
Specifically, those probes have
shown that the companies autho·
r 1zed b Y NPS to provlde good s
and services to park visitors
amassed exorbitant profits at
Yosemite In California, Grand
Canyon In Arizona, Mammoth

Similarly, concessto11ers al lowed lodging and other facilities
to degrade, thus producing
shabby, unsanitary and even
unsafe conditions at Zion and
Bryce Canyon In Utah, Ever·
glades In Florida, Yeilowstone 1n
Montana and othe~ national
parks.
AI Yosemite, the grandeur of
the rugged mountains, tranquil
meadows and pristine lakes Is
often obscured by garages, service stations, taverns, liquor
stores, sandwich shops, pizza
parlors, dellcaiessens, Ice cream
stands, video rental outlets,
banks, golf shops, swlmmlng
pools, tenniS courts and other
enterprises.
At parks' everywhere In the ·
country, NPS has been giving Its
concessloners outrageously gen·
erous contracts. They typically
require that only pitifully small
franchise fees be paid to , the ·.
federal government. guarantee
monopoly conditions, run for
decades, protect the concessioners' "possessory Interests" and
.. ·•prererentla1 r1 gh ts "
even ouer
of renewal, thus discouraging ·
competition.
I.n 1988, the most recent year
for which complete statistics are

0

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TF/

W

l

By JOHN BENDEL
UPI Sporta Wrlllr
The Ohio State Buckeyes went
to one of the most unllkely places
to prove they belong among the
lOp-rated tealns In the country.
No. 4 Ohio State, behind a
29-polnt effort by J amaal Brown,
posted a 93-85 VIctory over tl)e
third-rated . Indiana Hoosiers,
winning In Assembly Hall for
only the second time In 19 tries.
The Buckeyes, 16.0 overall and
6-0 In the Big Ten, are oft to their
best start since 1962 when Indiana head coach Bob Knight was a
reserve on the Ohio Stale team.
The HoOSiers, who trailed by 22
points -early In the second half,
pulled within 84-81 wltb 1: 21
remaining on a lO.foot jumper by

One or the most Important
aspeets of serving as a State
Senator In the Ohio Senate IB the
work that Is completed Within the.
Senate CommUtee structure. In
th·e Ohio Sena•A
·all or the
.
"'

:
•
:
1

Allaallo lllvlllaa
W L Pd.
Bostm ................. 29 9 .763
Phtladelphra ........ 2211 .561
N.W Yorlt ............ 17 21.436
WsshiJ111m .......... 17 21.436
New Jeraey .•....••.. 1126 .297
Miami .... .............. II 28 .282

Team

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0

The Dfily Sentinei- Pa9e- 3

Tennesaee-Otat tanqa .
At Santa Barbara. Cellf.,
UNL V won Its school· record 25th
consecuUve game behind Ander· ·
son Hunt's 26 points. Larry ·
Johnson added 19 as UNLV, l4.0,
lmproved Its Big West record to
8-0. Gary Gray led the Gauchos
with 27 points. The 17-polnt
victory marked the closest victory or the season by _the Rebels.
AI Tallahassee, Fla., Todd Qay
scored· 30 points and five other
Razorbacks reached double fig·
ures, allowing 18-1 Arkanaas to
roll to Its 15th consecutive
victory. Arkansas led by live
points at the half and scored the
ttrst five points of the second half
to begin to pull away.
At Landover, Md., Dave Johnson scored 18 potnta aud Syracuse, despite going scoreless
over the flnal3: 18, held on for the
Big East ·conference victory.

Georgettowa (11'5 and 3-3 ) had
three shots tn the final 1.8
seconds, bu 1 !ailed to force·
overtime. The Orangemen, 17·2
overall and 5-2 ln the league, look
a one-half game lead over No. 9
St. John's, which plays No. 22
Connecticut Tuesday night, in
·the Big East.
·At Chattanooga, Tenn., Derrick Klrce scored 32 points and
grabbed 12 rebounds In pace
Tennessee-Chattanooga over
East Tennessee State.and break
a first-place Souuiern Conference tie between the teams. The
Moccaslna hit eight of 13 t~
point attempta with Ktrce connecting on three of four. East
Tennessee State fell to 14-2.
. At Hattiesburg, Miss., Darrln
Chancellor. scored 23 Points In
pacing Southern MissiSsippi to
lts·ntnth consecutive victory. He
scored· 12 points In an lJI.6

second-half run that gave Southern Mississippi, 11-1, a 71-53 lead
and put the·game away.
At Charlottesville, Va., Anthony Oliver scored 16 points and
VIrginia pulled away from Da- ,
·vldson In .the second half. A total
of 12 Cavaliers bad polnllln the
game as Vlrglnla went to 12-4 on
the season. V!rglnla outscored
Davidson 2IHi In the flrit 11
mrnutes after Intermission to
open a .54-29 advantage with 8: 59
to.play.
At Las Cruces, N.M., Reggie
Jordan and ROn Putzl each .
scored 15 points In helping New
Mexico State to an e~y Btg West
Conference victory over Cal
Irvine. UC-Irvtne was within
14·13 with 11:17 left In the first
period but the Aggles, 13-2
overall and S.l In the league,
went on a 10-0 run to take
command.

,J

.

Los Anaeteo ........ 26 16 5 57!t2152
C.lpry ...... ........ 2517 5551H 151
Edmonton .... ....... 22 20 2 t71!11143
Vancovw.r .... ...... 11 26 f 401110179
Winnipeg ............ 15 28 8 40180 181

..
'

6
7
111&gt;

14*
19\&gt;
211&gt;

ToniJbl'oNew Jeney at Charlotte, 7: 30
p:m. ! ' "
.
L.A . Lake'rsat Orlando;7: :.Jp.m.
Miami at Atlanta, 7:30p.m.
. L.A.!)IppersatSanAntonlo,8:30
p.m .
Milwaukee at Seattle, 10 p.m.
HoustCII at Golden Slate, 10:30
p.m .
Phoenix at Portland, 10: 30 p.m .

.
:
•

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~

WedllmdaJ'•fam""
p.m.
Chlcagoat New Jersey, 7; 30p.m.
Det mit at Bostm,

Indiana at Philadelphia, 7:30

p.m.

At111nta at Washlngt:m, 7: 30p.m.
.Cleveland at Dallas, B::W p.m.
New York at Utah, 9:30p.m.
Milwaukee::~t sacramento, 10:30

p.m.

.

In the NHL ••

:

. Pllrkk Dlvlllon
Team .
W L T Plo/ GF GA
N.Y. Rangers ..... 2616 8 60184153
Phtladelphla ... ...24 21 6 5' 169161
Pltroburt~h :: .... .. .25 21 3 53 210181

;,
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Sen. 'an M. _Long

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7: 35

Boston at Buffalo, 7: .3!1 p. m .
Wasblngtm at Detroit, 7:35p.m . ·
N.Y: Ranger sat N.Y. Islanders,
7:3!1 p.m.
·
New Jeroey at Pitllbursh, 7; 35
p.m .
,
Toronto at Quebec, 7:35p.m .
St. Louis at MlMeoota, 8:35p.m .
LOs ·An1eles ot Edmmtm, 9: 35

.·

Wai•Cood-ce

New Jeuey .... ....19 19 10 4817f 1M
Wsshlngtm . ...... .21 25 2 f41M 162
N.Y. Islanders...1625 638132166

...

~

w-.,·a-

.'

Edmontm at Vancouver, 10:35
p.m.

••

UPieollege
basketball ratingB
NEW YORK (UP!) -The United
International Board ·of
cOaches' Top 25
e basketball
'ratlllp, with !!rot· place votes and
thrOUJh Jan. 20 tn pa..,ti.
th-. total points ( bued on 15
pdnts for flnt place, U fonecond,
etc.) and prevlouaweek'arsoklnC:

Press

.

'

cou..

"'"'nil

1. UNLV (40) (IJ.O) .... ........600
2. Arkaaas (17-1) :.. :.:........ .5jl
3. Indiana (16-1) ............. ... .500
4. o.to 8lale ( IH) .... .. ... ....411

.,

I
2
f

I

5. Artmna 115-2) .... .... .........f37 6
6. Duke (14-3 ) ........ .. ........... 34l 9
7. SyracuE (16-2) .............. J19 8
8. No1111 C.rollno ( 16-2) ......305 5
9. St. John's (13-2) .... ......... 25' 10
10. UCLA (14-3) ....................!94 7
11. Oklabcma (1f.3) .. .. ........ 140 11
12. Nebraalta U&amp;-1) ...... ....... 13513
13. East T-uee St. (76-1) !3t!6
14. LouiBiana State (12-3) ... . 8117
-15. S. Mlsolslllppl ( 10-1) ....... 80 20.
16. PIUibul'llh (14-41 ............ 3114
17. Utah (11·11 ................ .. .. 36 22
18. Mithlpa State (!2-4) .. . 33 NR
1~. CoiiiWIICUt (12-4) ... .. ..... 3112
20. Georriot ...... (ll.f) .......... 29 18
21. Vlrstnla (ll.f) ........ .. ..... 17.15 ·
22. New Mexico State (~2) . -1.219
23. New Orleeaa (15-2) ... .. ... 1124
2f. Kanoaa (11-4) ............... 9 NR
25. Georrila Teth (11).5) ..... 7 NR
NR-HtauW

Otb!rs l'ecelvlnl votes: Ala·
bama. Iowa, Oklahuna Slate,

Prlncetm, Punlue, SoulhCaidlns,'
Texaa, Wyomm,.

l,
1

.

Toronto at Montr. .l, 7: 35p.m .
Colpry at HarUonl. 7: 3!i p.m .

1%
71&gt;
13%
131&gt;
16
18%

WashiJIIIm tn, Orlando 119 .
Denwr 115, Minnesota 110
Deirott101, Boston 90
L.A. Lskers 120, Indiana 114
Chicago 117, Mlam1106
Sacramento97, Houstm 94

•·
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GB

New York 117, Philadelphia 116

i

~CalpryToltipl'l
-at Pblladolphta,

p.m.

-

(QT)

·

WIMJpel 2, - o t a 0

p.m.

Mollll&amp;J''• ftul1

•

Mo..:.,•a.aao1

61&gt;
12
12
17%
18%

Weecera Coafereace
Mldftollllvlaloo
Toun
W L Pd.
San Antmlo ......... 2610 .722
Utah .. ......... .. ....... 2613 .667
Houstm ............... 20 19.513
Mlnneaota .... .. ...... 13 24 .351
Dallas ......... .. ....... 13 24 .351
Orlando ............... 10 30 .250
Denver ................. 9 30 .231
Paclao Dlvlaloa
Portland .............. 31 -7 .829
L.A. Lskers ......... 26-11 .703
Phoenix ............... 2512 .676
Golden Slate .. .... .. 2117 .553
Sesttle .............. ... l719 .472
L.A. Clippers .. ..... 14 26 .350
Sacraml!lto ......... 1026 .278

Note: By asn&gt;emenl with the
National Aaaoclatton of Balketball
CoaollesollheUnlledStatea, leams
on pr(j)atlon by the NCAA 'and
lnellllble lor the NCAA Tourna·
menl ire lnel181b!elor Top'25 and
natlollal champl0111hlp COllllderJ·
' Uon by the UPI Board of Coo ell•.

Th.,. schodo are Dltnoll, Ken·
iucky, Marahall, Maryland, Mlo·
sourt. Northwest Loutllana and
Robert Morris .

,'
CHASE LOOSE BALL- IndlaaaJIWd Lyndon Jo~~e~~goes out of
bOunds wllh Ohio State RWU'd Jim Jackllon after a loo1e ball durin a

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·;

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_,, =
lltaNI.....

.

......
•w-... ...............
. .. .. . . .. .... ...........
. . . . ........

_.,..ca.r, 0

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UJ:IIt.'!t.

WINNIPEG Manitoba ( UPI)
..,. Bob EssenS:. tied the Rangers'
John Vanblesbrouck lor the
NuL's shu lOut lead Monday
night leading the Winnipeg Jets
a 2-0 'vtctory over the Minnesota
North Stars.
Essensa slOpped 28 shots, and
also got a piece of rookie Mike
Craig's third-period penalty
shot
play came five ' minutes
Into 1he third period whim Craig

. The

put his sbotlntO the stands behind
Essenaa.
·
· "He came In and tried to roof It
on me. " said Essensa. " When
you're young you just want to get
a shot away.' I touched It a little
bit, but 11 I would have touched It
more It may have gone In the
net."
Winnipeg head coach Bob
·Murdoch preferred to call the
game
"defensive struggle,"
thOugh that might be a po¥te
·

a

word .for "boring. " Each tea:,n
Mlftllesota had many · scoring
had 28 shots, but ~nly Craig s
opportunities."
· ·
,
miscue, Mo Mantha s blast from
Winnipeg was outshot 1S·5 In
the point at 10: 35 or ~e third
the first period but dominated the
period, and Danton Cole sempty- , third 14-6 after Paul MacDermld
net goal at 19:14 would make the
llattenedMikeModanolatelnthe
II s I as , good sco r 1ng
second period forthegame'sflrst
op.portunltles. .,
legitimate hit.
.,
'We won 2-0, was the way
Craig could have changed the .
Murdoch respond~~ when ~sked
momentum of the game on his ·,
about the game. It wasn I the penaltyshot,buthewasnervous.
most exciUng game. B~t alter
"When I was circling around,
the first period , 1 .don t think and I was the 4nly one at center
Ice, my legs were shaking," Sjlld •
Craig. "It was pretty nerve- •
wracking. I just came up aglllnst · ·a big-league goaltender. Next
• ,
lime It's going ln. "
The Jets moved Into a lourtliBut that's been the story of
New York's season ~ settling place tte In the Smythe Dlvlson
debts wl th the other NFL teams. with the Vancou.ver Canucka .
New York ended a lour-game
losing streak against PhUadel· ~
SPRINli VAl LEV CINEMA
phla In the opener, ended . a
446 4514
.
three-game loslllg streak against
the Los Angeles Rams at midseason and defeated the Chicago
'
Bears for the first lime since 1969
In the playoffs.
The Glauts left San Francisco
on a charter !light Immediately
alter the"NFC title game, arrivIng at Tampa shortly alter 2 a.m.
EST. They are listed as 6-polnt
underdogs by Nevada nddsmakers and are. now one step from
thelt ~nd Super Bowl IItle In
four years.
"Everybody can make their
own hiStory," said Hosletle~.
who has.yet to throw an lntercep..
ttor\ In a pos.tseason game.

.NFL cancels_· Super Bowl party

.

TAX TIP OF THE. WEEK

.

IIUST I FILE A TAX RETURN?
Wllttlttr you must lilt 1 tu return lttllllliJ

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-

Winnipeg posts 2..0 ·win over Minne~ota.

By LISA HARRIS
tJPISporta Writer
Adamolllvlllaa
TAMPA, Fla. (UPI) - The
Boston ...............26 15 8 60 176158
Monday's coll9
Montreal . ...........26 18 5 57161146
NFL opened Super Bowl week
Bullalo ..............19 1710 48163149
basketball 8COI'e8
Monday by canceling Its tradl·
Hartford ............20 22 5 45137 157
tlolial Friday night party and
Quebec .... ........ .. 10 :W 8 28135 212
saying It Intends to play Its title
Alvernll 80, Albrtcht 75
()ampllell Coal_..
BlomnsbutJ 86, Mantfleld 71
game but Will monitor the
Nonla lllvllloa ,
Buffalo St. 64, Penn State· Behrend
56
•
Persian Gull war until kickoff.
Team
W LTPia.GFGA
''We expect to. play Sunday's
Ganlllus 66, Falrllold 63
Chicago ........... : .. 32 14 4 68167128
St. Louis .... ......... 2614 7 5917213t
Cea ConaecUcut69, Brooklyn 56
Super rlowl game betjYeen the
Detrolt.. .............. 22 215 49163170
Clarloa 93, Sllppory RDCk 91
Bills and Giants as scheduled."
Minnesota ........... 13 29 8 34 146 176
Coutal Carollno' 85, AUIIUIIa 80
Concollll04, .Biuelleld St 7t
TorODt0......... ...... 12 31t 281:11196
the league said In a statement.
Coppin 109, llelltu~'*maa ta
"We will take events In the
Co-179, Cotcob! 65
;..··
Middle
East -Into account up to
Dlckln1011 11, Juniata !58
E . StrwdobuJ119L KutBCMm 69
kickoff.
The Daily Sentinel
Edinboro 86, IUPU 83
. "Super Bowl week annually Is
' Eliaabelhl... n 8t, Wllileo 80
a time for football and celebr!l·
.· Holy er... 91, BroWn n ··
,
(UiPsUUit)
Kll!i'a
(Pa.
)
113,
.._,ravlan
69
tlon, both at the Super Bowl site
A I l l • - o l l l - l a , l...
I
KIDp 120, Concollli186
•and ln.many parts olthe country.
LaSalle 67, Sleaa 64
Publlahal every afternoon , Monday ,
In light of the war In the Middle
throulft Friday, 111 Court St., Po·
Lehlih 96, Columbia 70
meroy, O~ro, by the OhiO Valley Pub- , ,
MatMdluoetu 62, Vennont !58
East, we plan this week to
North...,lern 79, Tulaae73
lllhlna Compan~:ultlmedla, lac ..
emphasize the game Itself and
, Ph: 992·21!6. Be- .
Pomeroy, Ohio 4
Salem St 94, .N. Adam a St 72
the rich tradition of the Super
cond CIIJJ poltqe paid It Pomeroy,
Salam Telkya 98, W. Vlndala St. 74
Ohio..
~ •
Bowl
silver anniversary year,
Slteplil!l'd 109. Loapood 80
SblppeiiJburg 83, Lock Haven 77
While
moderating leagueMemi&gt;Or: United J&gt;rfta Intl!l'llatlonal,
So C8rdi111 St 77, Delaware St. 74
sponsoi-ed social events."
Inland Dally PrHt Auoctatlaalllldtbe
tOT)
.
Ohio Newapa~Auoclatlon. Nat~
The lavish Super Bowl party Is
Suaquehaana 9C, Lyoomm,52
Advertlllnl
eoentattve, BraDitam
Swarthm,... 83, PllU. Pltarmacy 79
the social hlgltllght of Super Bowl
Newopaper Sa ea. 733 Thlr&lt;l A-ue.
lOTI
New Yorll, N.., Yorlt 10011.
·
week, wltb tiCkets often as
Syncuoe 58, 0.0tJ-a.56
difficult to obtain as game
Weol Vlrfllnla 101, Rltode ltland 73 '
Weolfleld St. 96, Nldloll68
tickets. Willi Monday's an·
10
Tile Dally SontiDel,
1U Court SL,
~:
--Wllee!ID&amp;
Juult 8L Gl-Ula St 78
l'm11!'0)', 0111ofl'llll.
nouncement, the NFL set the
tOne
lor a less exuberant week
Alabama
St
151,
Gramblm,
97
SlJIIICIIIPI'ION IIATD
AiiDalachtan
St.
H.
w.
Coralllla 93
~adlng
to the championship
. · BJ Corrlor or-.. Ai'ltanMI 109, , _ St. t2
OneWHit................................... IUO
game.
Aum Paa.v 101, T-•• St 83
.Due Month ............ .. ................... IUO
''We recognize that the Amerl·
Cainpllelllll, CltarioatoD (S.C.) 53
Otoe Yesr ................................ , 172••
,ortda MM 88, Howard If .
Cf!D
people will not b~t paralyzed
IIMGa..OOJ'Y
Funtllll IZ, CllarlntoD llou 141
PUCII
by
the
' eyents In the Middle'
Jac:baa St till, Mill Valley St 89
lljiiiy ........... .... .. ................. 211 C..llt
Eaat,"
the
statment said, " but ·
IJbt!rl)' 51, Tile Olldll 55
LIVtttlltOD 70. TOIIL·Martla H
S~lla&lt;'ttllerlnat _....., !o!I0111Ie..,·
the words 'priorities' and 'peril·
Loullliaaa Tedt !Of,
57
rlor ~ mit 1ft ..,._ diNOt to
pective' are Important 'during
MeN- St 17, Nldlollllt N
'111e D l f i J - • a l . l o r U Super Bowl XXV activities."
It 110. IFIMIF , . 72
· Cndlt wtii boPfllvea carrllr •oil
t T - lit II. MoNIIIIII St !58
The NFC'champlon New Yorj(
IIIIHp•IZ,
TuiCUbtt ..
No oa'-'ipt~DDJ by md pormlllod. 1ft
Glull spent the day In Tampa
Mltrn¥11 1111, T-tTocll TC
after an early morning filght
Nortlt Cardlna It •·
76
available.
N.C. MT 1111, llaryla..r-Eialtnl
from San Franclaco. The AFC
'
IIIIOftlt
cliamplon
Buffalo Bills were to
N.C •.WtlrnlqtCD 71, W!lllam A
arrive
Mc,lday
night.
IJ ................................ ... ......lli.JI
After the conference title
,
1111, N.C.·AalleO:ue U
rrun
games Sunday,. players met at
R· '
l,yDcbloltJ tt
llalllloril
n.
,
_
Fall
Ill
midfield and knelt In a prayer for
JJw.- ..................................
. . .., 1tt. :..o...,oorl .,
•w-..................................
.JO
peace. Thl! display was not lost
.__________..... · .Ill! President George Bush, an

-I

Monday Dllht'a Bll Tea action In Bloomington. The Buckeyes won

93-811 to remain unbeaten In 18 starta. (UPI)

-

Berry's Worlg

sane

.. . ..

Calbert Cheaney. Browa re- lng five straight at home.
sponded with a lhree-poillt play
''We just had such a difficult
eight seconds tater and Indiana ttm:e digging ourselves out of a
came no clceer than six In the · hole In the second half," aald
final minute.
Kalgbt, whose team's ~14·game
"We're sky-high with confl· winning streak was broken. " We
dence," Brown aald. "We know weren't able to get Into any.klnd
we've got to play harder. Wben of offensive rhythm In the fir stthey came back, we didn't get half. "
.. rattled. They goi some threeElsewhere Monday night In
point plays and we misled a games ·Involving rated teams,
couple of shots, but we didn' t get J:lfo. 1 Nevada-Las Vegas was an
out of control." ·
88-71 victory over Santa Bar·
Ohio State head COI!Ch Randy bara; No. 2 Arkansas posted a
Ayers said. "Any ttmeyou play a 109-92 victory at Florida State; .
.great team, yoq know they will · seventh-rated Syracuse was a
make a run. We just had enough 58-56 winner over No. 20 Georgecomposure to get It do~J~t. Down town; 15th-ranked Southern Mls·
the stretch, our experience paid slsslppl topped Texas-Pan Amer·
off.''
lean 88-~; No. 21 Vlrglnla was a
The Buckeyes' were 1·17 In 71-47 winner over Davidson and
Assembly Hall before the vic- 22nd-rated New Mexico State
tory. 1be Hoosiers fell to 16-2 stopped Cal Irvine 77-60. No. 13
.overall, 4-lln the league. Indiana East Tennessee State was the
had won nine of Its J)revtous 10 only ranked team to lose Mon·
games 8fl&amp;lnst Ohio State. lnclud· day, dropping a 76-74 decision at

GB

Cenlrol Dlvta"'"
Ch!csgo ........ .... ... 28 11 .718
Detrolt ...'.. ... .. ..... .. 2812 .700
)1
Milwaukee ........... 27 13 .675 1 n
Atlanta .... .. .... .. .... 2315 .605 4%
Indiana ................ 15 24 .385 . 13 ·
Charlotte.... :......... l2 25 .324 15
Cleveland .. ...... .. .. 12 26 .316 151&gt;

'

million of all national park
concesstoners' gross revenues of
$506 million. At Yosemite, MCA
Is required to pay a ludicrously
low franchise fee of 0.75 percent
- or $637,500 on receipts or $85
million In 1989.
To his credit, Lu.jan began
campaigning for reform of ·the
system last spring. Late .In 1990, ·
he took advantage of the opix&gt;rtunlty presented by Matsushita's
proposed $6.6 billion purchase of
MCA, shamelessly arguing that
"foreign ownership" In a na·
tiona! park would not be
tolerated.
The companies Involved In that
deal Initially resisted that argu·
ment, but now have agreed to seu ·
the concession rights 10 the
private, non-profit National Park
Foundation when MCA's current
30-year contract expires In 199.3. . .
A-lthough theconcesslonngbts
are valued by the firms at more
than $100 million, they will be
sold lor only $49.S million.
Moreover, MCA wllllln•nce
the
~
entire purchase price through a
loan to the roundailon. That
ought to be a precursor olslinilar
transactions Involving conces·

= ··

"

Poma'oy- Middleport. Ohio

Butera r.ar. .oce

'

a ters

::: ta

••

Scoreboard ...
. &amp;m,.a·-In the NBA ...

.~ ..

comes law. Last year the Judi·
clary Committee was responsl·
J~
ble lor producing one of the most · lmpaci lor our Senior Citizens.
comprehensive drug enforce- The ex1&gt;anslon of programs such
ment and rehabilitation laws In as Elde·rcare and Passport will
tbe country.
.
be al the for.e front of legislative
leglsl~tlvebuslnesslsactedupon
Agricultural Is one of the discussion within this
within the 14 various Senate
premier Industries In Southern committee.
:th:~O:yc~~ •Committees. I am pleased to .. Ohio. As a member of the Ohio
As always, please feel tree to
I.f on!
. y ~ knew? Pleaae help me report this week that I have been · Farm Bureau and the Ohio
call or write me, State Senator
assigned to lour Influential SeFarmers Union, I. am excited Jan Michael Long, It you have
while I s · have what mind
is left. · nate Committees.· the .Finance
I'
and ..___
a bout s ervl ng on th, e Se fiJI t e . any questions or comments.
m . mg my spmts
"'~""' 5 Committee, the Judiciary Com· Agricultural Committee. In the about these or any other proposhigh?
hearme.
Jose P. Scott. 236222 mIttee, I he Agrlcu Ilura! Commlt· past t he State of Obto has been a is. My number Is (614)466-81!16,
tee and the Education, Retire- · active In attempting to open and my address Is the Stateand Aging Committee.
expo~ I ·markets lor Ohio's
house, Columbus, Ohio 4321S.
P.S. After my tumor was ment
The Finance Committee Is one
farmers. It Is my hope that we
remoml I lived for arouad two of the m011 lnfiueatlal bodies
expand on these efforts and
years in an old ablncloned school within the Ohio Senate. This can
continue to · assist the farming
house in lhe bllemeat five feet un- com.mlttee Is primarily responsl- Industry, specifically In the area
~ with oo ~d~mci~ or
ble tor preparing the State
of corn blended fuel such aa the
running Willa'. My beat was from Biennial Budget. This $24 billion
Ethonal Plant In South Point, r
an old kerosene 110\'C wbich I also · document funds our schools, our Ohio.
.
cooked on. My light Wll from oil · highways and various state proFinally, I am pleased to report
lamps, my Wiler f ~ from iJIC grams, ranging from home elder· that I bave· been named the ·
roof when it would 181D. My only care services -ror the elderly to
Ranking Minority Member or the
!lest friend wu my telrieVer. I wu Headstart programs lor our Senate
Education, Retirement
very happy !ben. Btu now I am children. With a S2.5· billion
and Aging Committee. As I have
confu801l:How long have I been in- budget deficit already projected, • stated In the past, one of lbe keys
witb dull
Does I am sure tllat this wOI be a very to assuring economic growth and
aayonc know?
syone rcally challenging session as It relates development within our corncare? It could easily happen 10 one to the Finance Committee.
munltles Ia having a solid educeo( you llld it does Mlyday. One of
Whether It be pollee officer
tlonalfoundatlon. As we continue
your toYed OIICI could be out til= training or stricter !lrug enforceto fight lor fair and equitable
110111ewhere lo8t llld c:ontu.od. No ment laws, the Senate Judiciary funding lor 011r schools; Ills my
one c:IRI' Cnouah to try and dis- Committee plays a pivotal role In
hope that we will nnally begin to
qi
cover and lcncf a helping band. Considering legislation of this see results In attempting to
They could be 6ving riibt down the nature. 1'he JUdiciary Commit·
Improve our educational fundi!IJ
""'- 11110- • · I loot mr /00. ..., GOOD
,..._ II. I Mill ,.,.., In II I nNmber o1 a
. arect. Pieae help~ who can't 1 lee reviews nearly 75% of all . system In Ohio. We will a!IO be
STUWT IJANG."
help themselves. Praise God. . ·
Senate legislation before It be- dealln~t with Issues of direct
'

,w • -·

'

~,l£~ f;;;;;;rlt~~·;;;~e;i;'&amp;ted J

ged '"y medicine. I am geiting
along just fine now but I am some-.
whll disturbed as to why I am in
prison. I never shot anyone especiaDy 8 friend. ·Who am 11 Who
· was
'ble 17
fi Was I· sane?
· ?oWas I respoft·
Sl
ormy.acbons.
Please help me to find the

...

No. 4 Ohio State posts 93-85 victory over No~ 3 Indiana

•

WASHINGTON - If Saddam
Hussein Cries for mercy now, he
wUI not get II. Under almost no
clf cumstance will President
Bush call off the punishing aerial
blitz on Iraq and Kuwait,·accordIng to highly placed Whl~ House
and m,llltary sources.
''The president Js unlikely to
pLit the braj(es on this war for the
next week, whatever the Iraqis
do, unless they can manage to
wlthd~aw all their troops from
Kuwait In a .couple of days," one ,
White House source told us.
Bush wants to carry the attack
as far as possible without using
allied ground forces, but the
Army Is desperate to get Its
ground forces Into the war. No • .
superpower has won a major war
. In decades, and no branch of the
· military wants to be branded as a
llench warmer In Operation
Desert Storm.

'

Tuaaday, J~ 22. 1991'

'

Page 2- TNrDeily Saudlwl
Pomaoy- Middlepqrt, Ohio
Tunt'ey, Jenu.-y 22, 1911 _. ·

.

I

. . ,...

•-....... ' ....... #-. . .......

.

lltlp ,oul

H&amp;R BLOCK
• 611 lAP lUll

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

•

,

.

.•.

.

PQ~OY

Hl-66.74
I

I

•

!

•

••

"

�•

•

,

bave won 16 of their last 19 games
Every night· you see a Iof of and are a perfect 8-0 against the
·
good moves In the NBA. Taunting Heat:
In
other
games,
New
York
Michael Jordan Is not one of
out-lasted Pbijadelphta 117·1161n
them.
•
In the third quarter of Monday overtime; Washington edged Or- .
night's CblcapMiaml· game; lando 121-119; Denver out-played
the NBA scoring champiOn went r,llnnesota 115·110; Detroit
In for a layup and H.e at forward tlowned BostOn 101-90; the Los
Billy Thompson made the block. Angeles Lakers.defeated Indiana
Then he made a mistake - be ~-114 and .SAcramento til,
turned to Jordan and told him not wnphed over Houston 9J·94.
Knick&amp; 117, '76ers 116 (OT)
to come back Into the lane again.
At
New York, Patrick Ewing
The response of tbe BullS' star
·
scored
six of his 37 points In
was to score 21 of his 37 points In
the second ball, leading Chicago overtime and finished with 16
rebounds . to lead the Knlcks.
to a 117-106 victory In Miami.
"It embarrassed me. It gt~t me Ewing caused the overtime when
going," .Jordan said of the be was called for goaltendtng
wltb 2.2 seconds left In regula·
·
·
Incident.
Willie Burton, who led the Heat tlon, tying the game 107-107. For
with 21 points, said, ''Wben the Knlcks, Charles Oakley con·
Mlcbael Jordan goes off like be trlbuted 20 points ·and 16 re· goes when be wants to go off, . bounds. Ph.lladelphta was pa:ced
there Is not much you can do ..:· , by Hersey Hawll!ns' 35 oolnts.
Bde&amp;slll, afapc 111
Heat coach Ron Rothstein said,
At
Landover, Md., Darrell
''I know exactly what to do about
Walker's
20-foot jump shot wltb
Jordan. Mostofltlsn'tlegal, bull
1.8
seconds
to go gave washtnr·
know what to do."
·
ton
the
victory.
He finished with
The win enabled Chicago to
15
rebounds.
13
assists and 10
stsy a half-gameabead of Detroit
In the Central Division. The Bulls

•

nuke.power plant
'

points. Harvey GraDt paced !he
Bullets With 31 points and reserve
Ledell Eackles added a seasonhigh 25. Denn)s Scott scored 30
points tor tbe Magic, who
dropped their fourth straight
game and are 2-19on.t heroad this
season..
.
Nu,ptsll5, Tlmberwolves no
At Denver, JV!Ichael Adams
scored 24 points and reelstered 13
asslsta as the Nugeets rallled
from an 1.8--polnt deficit In the
second quarter. Walter Davis put
Denver ahead to stay on a layup
with f4 seconds remaining. For
Minnesota, Pooh Richardson·
scored a team-blgh 32 points and
Sam Mitchell contributed 25.
1'1s181111101, Celtlc:l 80
At Auburn Hills, Mich., Joe
Dumars scored 26 poln ts and
VInnie Johnson chipped In 21 as
Detroit handed Boston Its fourth
straight loss. The Pistons, who
were Without Injured star Islah
Thomas, have won 12 of tbelr last
13 games. The Celtlcs, without
Injured starters Larry Bird and
Robert Parish, were paced by
Kevin McHale' s 24 points.

VOLTERRA, Italy (UPI) Pollee freed the 10-year-old son·
ot a rich banking family Tuesday
In a hell~pter raid on the
kidnappers' hillside hideout, end.Jng a 112-day search.
Four helicopters carrying a
pollee squad known as the
"leatherheads, " specialists In
fighting terrorism and kidnapping, landed shortly after dawn
In a ravine near a farmhouse ·
where the Sardinian bandits ·
were holcllng Augusto De Megnl
on a wooded hillside 3 miles
outside Volterra In central Italy,
·a pollee spilkesman said.
. A man Identified as Antonio
Staffa, a convicted kidnapper on
the run from pollee since 1982,
was guarding the boy. He held
pollee at bay for more than an
hOur, uslne the boy as a shield
and threatening to shoot him.
Finally, unable to negotiate his
freedom, Staffa surrendered his
gun and tbe boy. Pollee doctors
said be was In good shape.
Pollee, who found the hideout
on a tip from a man arres led
earlier·, allw arrested three other .
suspects, all Satdlnlans. Sardl·
nlan gangs, composed mainly of
shepherds, have long operated In
the Tuscany region wbere the
boy was held.
The kidnappers seized Augusto
De Megnl from ou tslde his
family's villa, near Perugla, Oct.
3 after tying up and gagging his
father, Dlno, 42, a financier.
The boy's 68-year-old grandfather, also na,med Augusto,
made bls fortune In the timber
. buslpess and former-ly o\vned the
Bank of Perugla along with other
financial Institutions In wblch the
boy's father worked.
The kidnapping caused a major outcry In Italy because the
victim was only 10 years old.
Student demonstrations demandIng action to free the boy were

.

By RICHARD LUNA

UPISporta Writer
HOUSTON (UPI) - Tbe agent
for Boston Red Sox pitcher Roger
Clemens Monday disputed a
pollee report alleging his client
placed a cbokehold on a uniformed officer.
Clemens, a two-time Cy Young
winner, · and his older brother,
Gary, were arrested Saturday
and charged with aggravated
assault resllltlng from an Jncl·

dent at a Houston nightclub. .
''We vehemently deny the
charges stated In the pollee
report .. . and we have several
witnesses willing to come forward to speak the truth, " Clemens' agent, Alan Hendricks,
said Monday. 'The fact Roger
was even jailed completelY baffles me."
Clemens and his brother are
scheduled to appear before sll!te'
Dlstrl~t Judge A.D. A21os Tues·

day on charges of aggravate!
assault, a third-degree felony. If
convicted, each could f§.ce two to
JO.years In prison and/or floes up
to $10,000.
Clemens, 28, and bls brother
Gary, 39, were arrested at Bayou
Mama's nightclub.
They were jailed for 11 hours at
a Houston Pollee Department
command station and freed after
each posted a $2,000 bond.

'

*'71DI to flad the laDe io tbe bullet duriiiC flral
balf NBA adlon at SIICI'IIIIH!nio. (UPI)

LOOKS FOR LANE - Klap' pard Travis
Mays drives Jato Rockela Vernon MaxweO'wblle

~

UNLV consensus No. I pick
·for sixth consecutive .·~~k
By JEFF SHAIN
ton, Ind.
UPISporta Writer
UNLV, trying to become the
NEW YORK (UPI) - Neva&lt;!a- first schOol to win back-to-back
LasVegasmadeacleansweepof national titles since UCLA's
the United Press International seven In a.row from 1967 to 1973,
college basketball ratings again lmp~oved their record to13-0iast
Monday, remaining the unanlm- week with routs of 117·76 over
ous No. 1 pick for the sixth Cai·Irvlne and 114-63 over Long
straight week.
Beach State.
. The Runnln' Rebels, who own
"I've seen for 30 years now all
"the nation's longest winning the good teams, and (UNLV) Is
streak at a school-record 24 one of the best," said Santa
' games; earned all 40 .first-place Barbara ·head coach Jerry
votes ·cast by - the 42-mtmber Plmm, whose team was to face
Board of Coaches to finish with the Runbln' Rebels late Monday
600 points. .
·
·
night. ''They cannot be disArkansas remained No. 2 with tracted. They don't have any
548 points. No.3 Indiana and No.4 weaknesses."
· Ohio State swapped places for ' Nevada-Las Vegas Is. averag-·
' the second consecutive week, lng 103.? points a game on offense
coming just hours before theh' and allowing opponents an averBig Ten showdown In Blooming- ·age of 71.8. The last time the .

Area college leagues name ~
week's top basketball players
CLEVELAND, Ohio (UPI) . Wooster guard Erich Riebe, who
. led the Scots to a pair of victories
last week, has been selected the
North &lt;;:oast Athletic Conference
player of -the week.
Riebe, a 6-0 junior from Wayne, dale High School, scored 29
· points In a 74·68 win over
: Wittenberg on · Saturday. On
: Wednesday, he had 16 points and
; six assists In a 59·58 victo11: over
· Allegheny, Including a pair of
game-winning free throws In the
final seconds.
04C selects IDram'• l;ampe
. At Toledq_, Hiram ·sophomore·
;. John Lampe has been selected
· the Ohio Athletic Conference
: player of the week.
· Lampe, •a 6-7 center from
Mogadore, scored 1'49 points,
grabbed 39 rebounds and blocked
eights shots In two Hiram victo' rles last week.
·
_ . ; : He had 24 points and 20
: rebounds In a 99-90 victory over
. John Carroll on Wednesday and
25 points and 19 rebounds In an
84· 70 win over Marietta bn
Saturday. ,
.
· MOO names MVNC's Perozek
At Cedarville, Mt. Vernon
; Nazarlne forward JamJe Pe: rozek has been selected the
• Mid-Ohio tonference .player . of
·
' the week.
.
'

Perozek, a 6-3 sophomore from
. Newark, scored 74 points,
; grabbed 20 re11c&gt;unds and had 10
• assists In leading Mt. Vernon to
; wlhs over Kenyon, Lake Erie and
: Urbana.
He had 28 points af\d 10
I

i

rebounds In a 97-77 win over
Kenyon; 26 ·points, Including
eight of 10 three-pointers, In a
98-64 win over Lake Erie; and 20
points, seven rebounds and five
assists In an 81·78 · win over
Urbana.
NAJA picks cenlriiJ•
State.' • Smith
At Cedarville, Oblo, Central
State guard Alan Smith, who
scored .fiT points In a pair of
Marauder victories last week,
has been selecied the NAIA
District 22 player of tbe week.
Smith, a 6-2 junior from
Denver, Colo., ~red 27 points In
a 121·107 victory over Cedarville
on Tuesday. On Saturday, he
scored 40 points In a 117-76 romp
over Dyke. In that game, Smith
bit ali eight of his three-point
attempts. ·
For the Wet!k, he wall 24 of 39
from the field. Including 11 of 14
from three-point range.
MAC plcb Central
MlcbiiiD'I McKiaaey
At Toledo, Central Michigan
. forward Darlan McKinney hils
been selected the Mld·Ameflcan
Conference player of the week.
McKinney, a 6-6 junior from
Lansing, Mich., totaled ~points
and 20.rebounds In two games
last week.
He had 18 points and 12
rebounds In a 63--61 loss to
·Eastern Michigan on Wednesday
and six points and eight rebounds
In a 73-56 win over Toledo on
Saturday.
McKinney made 17 of 28 field
. goal attempts and nine of 11 free
throws In the two games.
()

Runnln' Rebels were ~ot the
unanimous No. 1 pick was Dec.
10, when UNLV received 41
first-place votes and Georgetown
got the other one.
Before this year, the ·last
unanimous No. 1 choice was
Arizona In the next-tO-last week
of the 1988-89 season. North
Carolina was the last team to be a
unanimous No. 1 Iii consecutive
ratings, sweeping the · vote· ·for
~ree straight weeks Jn 1985'86.

Indiana. which was leapfrogged by Ohio State a week
ago, jumped b.aCk over the
Buckeyes after victories over
Purdue and Iowa. The Hoosiers
collected 500 points In this week's
voting, while Ohio State earned
490.
The Buckeyes, the only other
undefeate_d team In the nation at
15-0, defeated llllnols 89-55 In
their only game last week.
No. 5 Arizona took advantage
of North Carolina •s loss to Duke
· las I Week to move up one
position, while the Blue Devils
lnlproved three spats to sixth.
No. 7 Syra'CIIse sUd up one place
and North Carolina wound up
eighth. .
St. John's· Improved one place
to nlntli after victories over
Providence and Pittsburgh, and
-No. 10 UCLA dropped three
positions on the beets of Its 89·82
loss to Stanford . . ·
No. 11 Oklahoma remained
unchanged, while No. · 12 Nel)raska moved up one place
heading Into · their Big Eight
showdown Saturday llgalnst the
Sooners .. No. 13 EI!St Tennessee
State and No. 14 Louisiana State
ea.ch Improved three spots from
last week.
No. 15 Southern Mississippi
jumped five places and No. 16
Plttsbursh · slipped two spots
after loslnr to St. John's. No. 17
Utah, tied with Arkansas for the
most wins In !he nation at 17,
vaulted up five positions.
Michigan State jumped back
Into the ratings at 18tli after a
one-weelt hiatus, while No. 19
Connecticut plwiuneted seven
· spota after tosses to Syracuse and
Providence. No. 20 Georgetown
dropped two places after falllllg
to VIllanova.
No. 21 Vtra'lnla fell six positions
on the heels of Its loss to Geoi'ila
T~b and No. 22 New Mexico
State sUpped three spats after
falllng to Fullerton State.
No. 23 New Or.leans Improved
one .position, wblle newcomers
No. 24 Kan~as and No. 25 Geoi'ila
Tech
completed
the list.
.
.

· PRAGUE , Czechoslovakia (UPI) - Alire broke out at a nuclear
power plant In central Czechoslovakia but was quickly put under
control, the official news agency cyK said Tuesday.
The fire, the second at a nuclear power plant In less than a weelt,~
occurred late Monday. In the switching room of the first unit of the
power plant at Dukovany 'tn South Moravia but was extinguished ·
_wlthiD an hour, p)ant director Jan Krenk said.
The Jlrst unlf was sb'ut down after the fire was detected by the
automatic alarm system.
· ·
·
. ·
1be fire had no direct Influence on thenuclear.orradlation'S8fety
of .tbe power plant anci there were. no Injuries, CTK said,
Authorities Were ~nvesllgatlng the extent of damage.
.
Laat Tuesday, a fire broke out at the country's oldest plant at .
Jaslovake Bobumlce In West Slovakia, In the south.central
portion of Czechoslovakia. The fire was soon exllngutshed and
there was no radioactivity leak~ officials said.

Police free kidnapped
boy in helic~pfer raid

Police report on Clemens' alleged:
assault of patrolman disputed .·
'

~ation

FJ.re put o-qt ·at

MJ's 37 points ·leads Bulls to
117-106 .victory over ~eat .
By UDited 1'..- lnlernatloaal

The Daily Sent~p!-Pege-6

Tundav. Jenu.y 22. 1991

Tuesday, January 22, 1991

staged .several times In Perugla
and Rome. ·
The case took on extra drama
whenn a new law aimed at
curbing kidnapping Imposed
heavy penalties on anyone In·
volved In paying ransom money.
On.Dec. 31 a Perugla maglstrtate
ordered the seizure ol the De
Megnl family property to prevent them from paying the
kidnappers.
Unconfirmed reports Slild the
kidnappers were demanding up
to $17 million for the released of
Augusto De Megnl but It was not
known If tbe . family paid any
ransom.
.

marks holiday of King amid war

. · WASHINGTON (UPI) - As enereY from theatrugele for civil
to do now Is speak outaild call an
combat continued In the Persian rtgbts, Mrs. King criticized the
end to this holocaQst over there,
Gulf, Americans on thehome- Persian Gulf war, which Is
thlswarlhatlsgoJngon, "Hayes
front jl&amp;Used to remember the dlverllng resources for the fight
salcl.
· nations foremost apostle of . a~~lnst poverty and racism.
r
1n San Antonio, a crowd of
non-violence, Martin Luther
. Letusbecleartbatwearenot
30,000 marched a miles through
King. Butthewarwasneverfar flgbtlngrorclemocracy,forthere
city streets before stopping to
from mind.
.
Is no genuine .~mocracy In the
sing and pray at a rally on the ·
Across the nation, federal and rerslan Gulf, Mrs. King said.
city's east side.
.
most slate offices - wltb some
'This war Ia yet another mJsSpeakers criticized President
exceptions, such as ·New Hamp- guided attempt to make the
Busbforchooslngtovetotheclvll
shire and Arizona - were closed United S~tes the world's
rights biD, even though black·
Monday. Prayer breakfasts, vlg· pollcernan.
·
soldiers make up a large portion
llsandsmallmemortalmarches . Att,hesametlme,Kingpralsed
of troops stationed on the front
were held In numerous Israel for Its restraint In not- lines for the United States In the
communities.
militarily responding to Iraqi
Persian Gulf war.
·
King, born Jan. 15, 1928, came m~slle attacks.
One child carried a sign that
to national prominence as the
It takes courage and wisdom
said, "War Is costly;. peace Is
leader of tbe 1955 bus boycott In to refuse to be sucked Into the
priceless "
Montgomery, Ala., and then as cycle_of retaliation, and I hope
About 6,ixlo people peacefully
the premier leader of the civil and pray that Israel will be able
marched 5 miles from San
rights movement. In 1967, he also to co~.tlnue to exercise resFrancisco's Bayview Hunters'
brokewlthotherblackleadersto tr~nt, ~~e~ld.
PolntDistrlcttotheCivtcCenter,.
denounce America's war In the ~~~i~a~ c;le~r~ed
the scene of strikingly different
0 r. ar 0 . u er
VIetnam.
.
anti-war protests last week.
He was shot and killed In 1968 King ~r U:n Monday with .prayBut the rally ended tragically
as be stood on a motel balcony In e~ .," gthe .~n!tpleas for peace
when a man was killed In a
. · .
·
·Memphis, Tenn., where. be had . a
ro r 0 ·
possible gang·related shooting
. gone to support striking sanlta·
~:pi: frlg~ ~mperat~
.on !he second-level balcony of the
tlon ~orkers.
·
a u
peop e emonstrat
· Civic Center Auditorium, where
. Corella Scott King, widow of ·outside the South African Consu:
thousands had assembled to sing
1
.c~goblslngthdlng
and listen to speeches honoring
· tbe civil rlrhts martyr, set the late 1 nbdowntl town, KlngChl
tone for many of the gatherings a ce e ra on
s r ay
King 1
•
when she opened weekend obser· and opposing apartheid In South
Th~ sbootlng brought the rally
vancestoacapacltycrowdof700 Af:a. Rl h rd M D
ld
toahaltandsentmanylnthehall
yor c a
· aley to
scrambling to the doors. Pollee
people Sunday at King's old
pastorate, Ebenezer Baptlst ~':u~: peo~le ~t ~ ~uth Side
saldtbeviolencecouldhavebeen
n r a ser ce I.~ portant
a spillover from an altercation ·
Chureh In Atlanta.
ln a "State of the Dream" to prom?te peace not just In
between two groups of youths
speech, Mrs. King ' reaffirmed someone s P,~bllc life butln their
earlier In the day. Although
ber late husband's plea for a private life.
pollcewouldnotcbaracterlzethe
world where ambassadors, not
Rep. Charles Hayes, D·DI. , told
attack as "gang· related," some
missiles, settle lnterna,tlonal ~: O~ratlon · PUSH audience , spectators said It appeared the
disputes. .
at
ng would not have sup- . ·people Involved were gang
And, as he .spoke out against. po.~~~rlonl~~e(Persl:nG:!i
members. No one was arrested.
eve w a peop &gt; n
About 200 people braved chill
the war In VIetnam, then sapping

°

arms deadline
Yugoslav presidency meets after
.
.

BELGRADE , Yugoslavia
lies have warned that ·their ' bla, the largest of the six the republic's military reserve
. (UPI) The . communist· security forces and citizens republiCs, and share the Serbian- force and bas been accelerating
dominated Yugoslav ,presidency would flgbt military dominated military's determlna· moves to secede, buoyed by a
lion to preserve 11 socialism- Dec. 23 plebiscite· on
met In emergency session Tues· Intervention.
Independence.
day , divided by a dlspu te over
The presidency convened 12 based federation.
Concerns of military lnterven·
whether the secession--minded hours after expiration of a
The directive was rejected by
Slovenlan and Croatian republiCs midnight Monday deadline set VIce President Stipe Mesic of tlon were also fueled by the ·
risk army Intervention for refus- under a Jan. 9 order for the Croatia and Slovenlan represen- apparent ·deliberate vagueness
Ing to surrender the weapons of disarmament of "Uiegal para· tative Janez Drnovsek, whose of the presidency ·order regard·
their pollee and military mUitary units" allegedly formed governments began moving to lng those against :whom It
by unnamed political parties secede beCause of concerns of .applied.
reserves.
.
Croatia contended that the
As Yugoslavia's worst post- along etbnlc lines. exacerbating Serbian domination after they
World War II crisis deepened,
tensions pushing tbe nation to- drove communists out ot power directive was appllcable only to
security remained high In the ward civil war.
In Yugoslavia's first free elec- majority Roman Catholic Croats
and members of ·the. republic's
Sloventan capital of Ljubljana
The order threatened unspecl· Uons last April.
~
and the Croatian capital of · fled ''legal"' measures for violaCroatian President Franjo Christian Orthodox Serbian miZagreb, with pollee In camou- tors and entrusted enforcement Tudjman said that In talks held nority armed themselves after
flage suits and carrying auto- to the communist~ommanded on Friday, MesiC and Yugoslav polltlclans reignited the blstorl·
matic weapons guarding key Yugoslav Peoples Army.
President Borlsav Jovic of Ser· cal hatreds between the two
government buildings and tbe
The presidency's vote on the bla, the current bolder of the ethnic groups tbat exploded In
cities' l!lrports, witnesses said. · order was not unanimous, how· annual rotating presidency some of the worst atrocities· of
.
Authorities In Zagreb also ever,' reflecting the ethnic and chairmanship, ~re unable to · World War II.
Leaders of Croatia's 600,000
positioned buses and · trucks polltlcaldlvlslons threatening to agree .on whether the order
overnight near the city's main sunder the Yugoslav federation referred to the Croatlah pollee Serbs, with strong polltlcal sup-port from Serbia's communists.
bridges tor use as barricades, of 23 million people from six main force.
·
declared
autonomy In October
state-run Zagreb Television said. ethnic groups and three major
Croatia and Slovenia feared
and
set
up
a parallel government
Tbey were · \vlthdrawn before religions.
the army, the last bas tlon of the
The order was approved by the Ideals of the late communist
dawn.
The nationalist governments of body's six communists, who are dictator· Joslp Bro:z Tlto, . would
Yugoslavia 's wealthiest repub- aligned wltb Marxls"t-ruled Ser- use the order to justify a
crackdown against them, and
accused Serbia of mastermindIng such a plan.
Mr. and Mrs. Warren Connolly
Both republiCs refused to surrender weapons they Imported hosted a Chrislmas OIJCR house
republiCs to Impose direct pres!- leadership was prepared to
last year for tbelr poUce and recently in honor of thell dsughter
dentlal rule because of what he accept a form of presidential
military reserve forces In de- and son-in-law, Amy and Kevin
calls unconstitutional moves to · rule to calm tensions In the
fiance of the army. They claimed Morris. Tiley were visiting from
break from Moscow. Most of the republic.
they were within their legal · their home in SL Petersburs, Fla.
requests, however, ap)iarently . Col. Vlktor Alksnls, a Latvian
rights and had been spumed -by
AI!OOdi~ w«e R~ and Freda
came from minority Russians army offiCer wbo opposes Baltic
Yugoslavia's only small arms Larkins; D1ck, Ang~e. Karen and
and communists In the republics. Independence and leads the con·
factory. which Is controlled by Crystal Moois; Clyde and Jean
"Over the last days both at · servatlve Soyuz (Union) taction
Morris; Kelly Morris and son,
Serbia's ruling communists.
official and unofficial levels In the national Parllament, said
In addition, Slovenia's ruling Zachery: Doris Deder; Kenneth
rumors are being spread saying communists In Latvia who set up
United Democratic Coalition last Davis, all of Long Bouom; Roberta
that the leadership ofthe Latvian a "National Salvation Commit·
summer assumed command ot Hill, Galloway; Alta Dill; Janet
republic has allegedly agreed to tee'' to take power bad expected
the posslbltlty of Introducing Gorbachev to Impose presldendtrect presidential rule," Gor- tllil rule.
bunovs said In an offlclaf
" Maybe I am disclosing · a
statement.
secret," Alksnis told tbe Mos·
"Such ~reatment of the ques· kovsky . Komsomolets news· ·
' •
;. •
•
uon does not ·correspond to the paper. "lspokewtthmembersor
ooo~ne
11• ..C)
. true position of the Parliament the'Latvian salvation coriunlttee
I:' r U IIV
II

DISPUTES CALL - Top-~eed ed Steffl Graf of

Germaay aesturee aa sbe disputes a tiDe call
_duriDI quarterflnal 101111 to Jana No~laa Mollday

In the AustraiUan Open Tennis Cbamplolllblp
belnl played In Melbourne. (UPI)
·

•
No. ·1 ~eed Graf · upset tn
tourney
the main thing Is that Hana has ·
By BRIAN DEWHUBST
MELBOURNE, Australia taught me to adopt a new
(UPI) - No. 10 seed Jana professional approach to . my
.
Novotna pulled off the upset of thinking," sbe said.
"I didn't have that sort of
. the Australian Open Tl!esday by
topping NQ: 1 seed Stefft Graf In· thinking before and Hana bas got
me Into great physical shape that
three gripping sets.
The tenacious Czecboslova· you need for a match like I've
klan won 5-7, 6-4, 8-6, her flrat just played," said Novotna, who
triumph In 10 meetings with 1M bas bad difficulty winning tight
matches In major tournaments.
defending champion.
.Novotna will ' meet the winner'
lnanother match, third-seeded
.
of
tbe Gabriela Sabatlni-Arantxa
Mary Joe Fernandez of Miami
sanebez
VIcariO qliarterllnal. ·
moved Into· the semifinals with a
6-3, 6-2 win over Katerlna Ma- • Graf was overwhelmed by
Novotna's blistering attack and
leeva, the filth seed.
The NovoJna·Graf match was trailed 1-4 and 3-51il the first set,
one of the best women's matches tben 0-4 In the second set
Novotna has never been past
seen at the Australian Open since
the days of the Martina tbe third round In any of her three
Navratllova-Cbrls Evert clashes previous Australian Opens but
against Graf she was much
a decade ago.
.
The 15,000 fans stood and eave faster and very confident at net. ·
Fernandez, who was born In
Novotna a prolonged standing
ovation when Graf pushed a
forehand Into the net on trlpJe.
mstch point. .
The West German, who committed 49 unforced errors during
the 164-mJnute match, saw ber
game fall apart when her back·
band deserted her. Later, she .
blamed herl!l!lf tor letting No-votna dictate tbe terms ot the
contest
·
"I stayed back too much, I
should have . mixed It up more
than I did," the defeated cham·
pion said. "I didn't ret lim wellthat was the key to the match."
Novotna Is coached by
Czechostovaklan·bom Austral·
lan Hana Mandllkova, who defeated Navratllova In the l9IKI
Australian final. Novotna said
her victory II the result of 12
months of preparation.
"Hana and myself worked on
plans to upset Stefr.s attack, but

J·-

tbe Dominican RepubliC, beat
Maleeva 6.J, 6-2, · setting up a
semifinal clash· with the winner
of the quar terllnal mate h between teenagers Anke Huber and .
M:onlca Seles .
Maleeva struggled with her
forehand, which she repeatedly
sprayed over the sidelines. Fer·
nandez bad more control over
her first service and moved In to
take Maleeva's tentative second
delivery on the rise.
Fernandez led 3-1· In the first
set and took tbe next seven
games when Maleeva fell Into a
string of unforced· errors.
Fernandez .lost to Graf
the
final of last year's Australian
Open.
.
·
The only nseeded woman left
Is Huber, a .1
ar'&lt;~ld Germsn,
, 2 Seles .of
-wbo takes on
Yugoslavia .

and the government of Latvia,"
t_he statement said.
U.S.S.R. Supreme Soviet
Deputy Anatoly Denlsov, a
conserva IIve communist :wbo
led a delegation to Latvia, said
Monday In Moscow the Latvian

pe
,. r
"" u ;' l

and they pUt It this way: 'We
have carried out all that Gorba·
cbev asked us to do. Following
the action he was to Introduce
presidential rule, but be betrayed'us. "'
•
.
..

s • u •·

·

·
·

STRASBOURG, France (UPI)_ · aid Included $325 million In our worst fears" and added that
- Tbe European Parliament emer~rencv food aid to Moscow.
"perestroika and glasnost have
Tuesday postponed a debate on
The aid was meant to streng- given way to nationalism" In tbe
emergency aid to the Soviet then Soviet leader Mikhail Gor· Soviet UniOn.
,Union as representatives of the ·, bachev· as he prepared for a
He urged Soviet authorities to
12-member Europe11n Comm11n· tough winter of Increasing food renounce the use of force and
, tty met to review the sltuatl\'n In and medical shortages.
beeln a dialogue with the Baltic
• the Baldc states.
Luxembourg's Foreign Minis· states to ·reach a peaceful solu: The actlon .by the partlament
ter Jacques Poos, whose country tlon to the crlals.
, came after the European Com- currently holds the Community's
Poos made his comments dur·
· mission cancelled a scheduled rotating presidency, said Mon- lng an emotional debate on the
: m~tlne on economic coopera- day nlgbt that all EC aid "'Is now Issue Monday night at the Euro• tlon with Soviet authorities untll subject to re-examination" and pean Parliament. A resolution
, "constructive declalons can be · announced a special meeting In condemning the use of force In
, reached about the situation" In Brussels Tuesday of top EC Riga ·and other Baltic cities Is
: the three Baltic republics, ac-. officials to review the situation.
scheduled to be voted on
• cordlne to · Commission VIce
Poos recalled that the EC Wednesday,
; President Frana Andrles~en.
foreign mlnllters, at an emer·
The resolutlona Introduced In
. The declllon by the European gency session In Paris Jan. 14 the PaU~ament call tor a cutoffln
deputies means ·a number of . · called to review the gulf crisis, aid to 'Moscow and ask Soviet
: emereency measures, Including threatened to cut qft aid to the authorities to ~end a representa. a ~antee ol ~million In Soviet Union If Moscow con· tlvetoParllamenttoexplalnbow
klan• to belp MoiCOw buy badly thiued Its repressive policies In they Intend to resolve the probneedeclfoodandmedlclne.ltalso the Baltic states.
· lem posedJiy the BalUc atates.
Includes ~20 million In technical
Poos IBid that the mUitary · Latvian - President Anatolljs
, aid to-the Soviet UniOn this year.
Intervention In the Latvian cap!· Gorbunovs Ia ICheduled to meet
•. ; The aid was decided at a
tal of Riga Sunday In which four Gorbi\Chev In Moscow Tuesday
; summit meettne of, European
pe_rll()ns were killed "confirms to discuss the situatiOn.
·
·leaders In Rome last month. Tbe
\ ·

TUESDAY
NIGH1
SPECIAL

i·- I

.,

'·

CoMOlly; Debbie Weber; Carole
and Kevin Barber; Kristina Connolly and Bryan Chadwell, all or
Reedsville.
Renee Kaylor, Dayton; Kenneth
and Betty Barbee, Hebron• Thrry.
Tammy, Brandon and Nicholas
Coven: Kenny and Beverly Con·
nolly, all of Ncwadc; Jessica Bar-:
ber; Jody Scbackel, Athens.
· Mrs. Morris also Jeeeived a
phone call from Tom Zigan,
Newark.

EC Commission cancels economic
h
M
..."tu"n meet"n.u W"t
OSOOW
STRAS 0
_ The ~li~pe~F~'::n~f~~

examination" and announced-a
speclalrneetlnglnBrusselsTues·
d
t t EC ffl 1 1 to 1
cancelled a scheduled meeting
ay o op
o c a s rev ew
on economic cooperation with the situation.
Poos recalled that the EC
'Soviet authorltles as Luxem·
bourg's foreign minister . an· foreign ministers, at an emer·
nounced an emergency EC ses- gency session In Paris Jan. 14
slon Tuesday to review tbe called to review the gulf crisis, .
situation In the Baldc states.
. ·threatened. to cut off aid to the
. TheCommlssliln, wblchactsas Soviet Union It Moscow con·
the execu tlve branch of the tlnued Its repressive policies In
12-member European Economic the Baltic states.
q!'mmunlty, decided iate Mon• . Poos said that tbe 'llllltary
day to pastpone the meeting and . Intervention In the Latvian captwalt · ~until constructive conclu- · tal of Riga Sunday In whlcb four
slons can be reached about the persons were killed ""confirms
situation," aecordlngtoCommls· our worst fears" and added that
slon VIce President Frans "perestroika and glasnost have
·
given way to nattonallsm"1n the
Andrlessen.
The Commllslon's decision Soviet Union.
wlllfreezetheeconomlccoopera·
He urged Soviet authorities to
tlon between the EC and the renounce the .use of force and
Soviet Union decided at a Rome· begin a dialogue with the Baltic
summit of European leaders In states to reach a peaceful'solu·
December 1989.
tlon to the crisis.
Poos tnade his comments dur·
The EC agreed In Rome to send
$325 ·mUIIon In emereency food lng an emotlona~ debate on the
aid to Moscow and to guarantee Issue Monday n!lbt at the Euro$650 mUllon In loans to belp trbuy pean Parliament. A resolution .
badly needed cOnsumer loodS. . condemning the use of force In
Tbe EC alao alfeed to provide Rlea and other .Baltic cities Is
$520mllllonlntechnlcalaldtothe scheduled to be voted on
Soviet Union this year.
Wednelday.
The emeteency aid aereect to
The reaolutiona Introduced In
hi Dl!cember was meant to tbe Paruament call for a cutoffln
strenrthen Soviet leader Mikhail aid to Mo!ICOw and !Ilk Soviet·
Gorbacbev sa· he prepared for a authorities to ~end a reprnenta·
tough Winter o1 tncreutne food tlve to Parliament to explain how
and medical shortall!l,
they Intend to ·resolve the probLuxembourg's ForeJin Minis· tern posed by the Baltic states.
ter Jacques Poos, whole country
Latvian President Anatolljs
currenUy holds tbe Community' a Gorbunova Is scheduled to meet
·rotating p~ldency, said all tile GorbaclleV fn. Moscow 'Tuesday
,llkl "~ now aubject to
to dllcun the· altlljltlon.

.

..
p arJim·en
· t pos
·· t
···.··
pones
Euro
·
•d
·
·
on 81
•o
OVIet
mon .
li
·
li
.
d eb a•e

In

In the enclave around the town of
Knln, protected by groups of
mutinous pollee and civilian
vigilantes.
The Serbs claimed they suffer
-dlscrlml!lation under Tudjman' s
nationalist Croatian Democratic
Union, which they charge Is a
reincarnation of tbe Ustaahl,
pro-Nazi extremists wbo slaughtered tells of thousands of Serbs
surlnr World War IL . 1
Croatia and Slovenia are demanding that Yugoslavia · be
converted .Into a confederation
Independent. states. Serbia says ·
It will only accept confederation
U the country's Internal borders
are realigned so that all 8.5
million Serbs live In . a single
state.
·
About 2 mUlion Serbs reside
outside Serbia, mostly [n Croatia
· and Bosnia· Herceeovlna and
redq~wlng
Internal borders
would almost certainly trigger
civil war.

Open house held for couple

; La~an president meets Gorbachev
MOSCOW (UPI) - Latvian
leader Anatolljs Gorbunovs tra·
vel~ to Moscow on Tuesday IO '
meet Mikhail Gorbachev but
denied reports the Baltic republic Is ready to accept a form of
presidential rull!.
Gorbunovs and Gorbacbev
were . expected to discuss the
Soviet military crackdown In the
Battles, lficludlng Sunday's at_tack by Soviet special forces on
tbe Latvian Interior Ministry
that killed five peDP.Ie.
•
Gorbachev and other leaders
of the central government deny
any a(lvance· knowledge of
. bloody Soviet military assaults In
Lltbuanl$ and Latvia. which
have been portrayed by Moscow
as the result of local tensions
caused by the Baltic lndepend·
ence drive.
The Sovi~t leader says he
received numerous requests
from residents of the three Baltic

winds and wet snpw to march
·across the Brooklyn Bridge for a
rally ' at City Hall In lower
Manhattan, wberetbeycalledfor
racial juallce at ~orne, and an ·
end to the war In the Persian
Gulf,
Led by the Rev. AI Sharpton,
making his first p_ubllc appearance .since being stabbed In the
chest nine days ago the
marchers ch"anted "get out of the
Middle East" and " no blood for·
•oD.'~
'
•
In Washington, Latvian VIce
. President Dalnls !vans llsued a
statement honoring King. On
Sunday, Soviet troops attacked
the Baltic republiC's ·Interior
Ministry, kllUng five people and
wounding nine others.
·
"Martin Luther King pursued ·
his dream of freedom lhrollfh ·
peace, dignity and dlsclpllne,"
!vans said. ' These are principles
that have guided the Latvlall
Independence movement from
Its Inception. Even durtng these
difficult Urnes, when the Soviet
Union threatens our people with
genocide, we continue to guide
our actions according to these
principles."
The National Conference of
Christian and Jews used the
occasion of King observances to
decry wbat It called escalating
Incidents of anti· Arab bigotry In
the wake of the Persian Gulf war.
"Arab-Americans must not be
made scapegoats for Saddam
Hussein's aggression," the Interfaith group said. ' The wa~ In the
Persian Gulf · Is no e~tcuse for
Arab-bashing In the United
States."

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'11Alc.NER ~
1uuraue Services

214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY
992·118"1

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Tunday• .-...y 22.1881

·Mubat-ak fi•1nly backS multi-nati~nal coalition against Iraq

The Daily.
- Sentinel
.

By The Bend

-

'

.

llJ N&amp;GID III:GALLY

CAIRO, J:a:ypt (UPI) -

:

The honor roll roc the Rejoicing
Life Christian School has been announced.
Kinclergarten: Joshua . Ealge,
Amailda Fetty and Ashley Whaley. .
F'arst grade: Brandon Werry.
Second grade; Chasidi Biggs,
Erin Harris, Isaiah Keblet, Jenny
l.onl{ and Rose Schrock.
'liiird grade: Thwny Jones,
Joseph McCall. Aaron Schaekel

· New Co\aumt of Mwu.'lta101
Nazarene Co~ge will present lbe
·gospel ol Jesus Christ iil music on
Sunday ll the Fellowsbip Cbdrch
of the Nazamle on Routt 124 iD
Reedsville at 10:45 LID.
New eov-t. one ol lbiee ·
lliiveling groups from Mount Vernon Nazarene. will JRSC11t a
Members illclude Jim Shaw,
Jonna Bol&gt;"''d. Melanie Brown,
Tim Uoyd, Ann McDonald and
Michclle Morpn.
.
Founded in 1964, Mount Vernon
Nilzalme Colic is an ~red
. four-year
arts C(lllcge sponsored by the Cbun:h of the

The Eagles Class of the Syracuse
Asbury United Methodist Ch~h
· held its December meeting ~ the ·
chun:h.
·~
~ Cundiff used 'The Praying
Hands' and the story of the. painting by Duerrer as her devotions and
the Lord's Prayer was repeated.
·
ReportS were read and the
. Christmas dinner was finalized.
Each member brought two wrapped gifts for the "Sharing game."
The.class also took fruit trays to the
.shut ins in the community and the
members at nursing homes.
·
Rev. Wesley Thalcher gave the
bleSsing for the dinner.
A shon Christmas program was
arranged by Mary Lisle with Betty
. Ash realling sclipture. The Bearers
of Good News were "Hope" by
Ann Siluvage;. "Love" by Helen

ui::F

Nazarene.

MVNC's Ne-W Covenant

I

:Fernwood Garden ·Club meets

~30p.m.

• The club made plans f01: the open

iDeeling 011 Feb. 19 at 1 p.m. Cindy
Oliveri, Meigs Cowlty Exlmsioo
Ji\aent, will bave the program
~ve

Use of Herbs" and ibcm
will be a display of herbs and

books about herbs.
palms.
Mrs. Mlll]lhy bad the program on
Mrs. !dmPhY also reviewed the
'"'ible Scrap Plants." Sbe reviewed boot "GroWJDg Plants Indoon" by
the book "After Dinner Gardening J. Lee Thylor. This Writer
Boot" by Ri~ W. Langer. Tbe demonslr&amp;led the many different
alllbor lives iD an apanment in the · ways to divide and grow plants
city and all his experiments used using lcalbud, leaf cutting, sec!ion
9nJy milk cat'IOIIs, coffee cans, pot- culling, stem culling, using suckers,
ling soil and implements found in Iayelrjng arid runners. &gt;
the kilcben. He also ll one time had
For roll call members brought
used the bath bib to help Sjli'OII1fug. plants they had started from the
He used plastic wrap and kitchen: celery, carrot, lima beans,
newspapers for tents over planiS. cusbaw,
turnip,
pineapple,
He bad grown · many ordinary sun11owc:r, scented geranium and
plants from fruits ol die kitchen sweet potatoe.
Commualty Caleadar items
such as yams, bananas, lemons,
Others present were Kathryn
appear
two days Wore an event
piDeappiCs and avocadoS to more · Johnson, Tbelma Giles, Wtlovene
exotic ones such as mango, papaya, Bailey, Helen Eblin and· Suzanne and the day of that evenL Items
mnst be received In advance to
prickly pear, coconut and date Warner.
assure publicatloD In the calen.
dar.

•

wbat·would happen to our family if
we should die.
That's why it's important for. you
10 know tb8l your Social Security
iaxes are paying foJ a lot more than
just Rlliremcnt bcneftiS. In fact, you
could think of your Social Security
taxes as a premium on a potentially
valuable liiSIIl81lCe plan. Besides
retirement, s~ Security also
pays ~can!. survivors benefits, •
and disability benefiiS. .
.
. Want to know wbll's in it for
· you? Yon can get the details with a
Personal Earnings and Benefit Estimale Sl8telllent from Social
Securty. It will provide 811 estimate
of Vo(bat yOu've paid in. Your statement will have a year-by-year
breakout of your earnings under
Social Security, and you will also
get estimates of the Social Security
benelits due you 01: your survivors.

Gun safety, precau~.·~. ..,.
prevent needless ·loss
'

.

·'

; DEAR READERS: Thia is a
ljlbjett dill sbould be ol iDiaelt to
Ill . . . . . It illbaut c:lildreD llld
flrianns. Please, plcuc Jeld it
c.refully. The infonnllion il l'mn
die Americln Academy oi.Qiild llld
Adoleaceat Plychiaey.
: l'lmlll, piOI'eaionlls llld many
othen are concenaed about tile
incn:asiJii Rl...ben ol c:lilldral llld
adoleacellts killed by .....
Every day, 10 Americln cbildren
18 yara old llld )9"111" n killed
in handgun suic:ldea, bomlcldea llld

. - .... lillile 1986. .
. Sixty pen:ent of rcea deadls by
suicide inwM die - of a IW'L
Nearly 3,000 11111111 - handguns 10
commit pdc:ide eWil' ~·
·
; An eatilnaled.400.000 younpcen
&lt;:)uricd handpas 10 a:bool ill 1987.
.. Baltimclre, balf lhe niab ill high
arhoollllid 111ey had taken • pro
tcbool. At leut 2S million Aineri·
boullboldl teep.llandsuna ~
50 pectent oldie ownen keep them

more libly to have been drinking
than those wbo used other means;
In a study of rucarm-associatecl
murders among family members,
almost 90 percent of '""' offenders
and victims bad usedralcohol or
drugs before die killings.
The average American child
witnesses 4S acts of violence onlV
each day, most involving handguns.
Children often imitate what IIley see
and are more aggressive after
eJttensive viewing of TV violence.
Parents should help protect their
children froin the effects of WIIIChin&amp; 1V violence. F01: CliBDlple, they
can ration 1V, watch with their
children and "'-~
of the vic).
__,....u.~
1
. ent episodes, poinli!lg ~oilt emphalically th8l such behavior is not the
way to resolve a problem.
Children. and adolescents with
emotional or behavioral problems
may be more likely 10 use guns,
against themselves or others.
Parents
are conceined tblltheir
ddldistoo...-~ormlablhave
• 111110-"'"""11 dilonler lhou1d lid:
u evaiUilion by an adoleacenl

loade.d

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

aocidenll. .r.ay-are~
GUIIIbot WoundiiO c:bi11bn 16111d
IInder ha~ inaeued 300 peiCiilt in

can

who

•

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.

I

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.

TUESDA.Y
MIDDLEPORf • The Meigs
Junior High Academic Boosters
wiD meet Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. in
the Meigs Junior High cafeteria.

1b get yo'ur perSonal stalenlent,
call 1-800-234-5772 roll flee. Ask
for Form 7004. You will need 10
complete the form and mail it back.
In a few weeq, you .will have your
own statemenL From it, you'll be
able 10 get a pretty good picblre of
wbll part SQCla1 SeCurity will play
in your linancial fublre. Remember,
this is a free service.
I can't~ dlat you'll ·Icani
10 like·paymg Social Security taxes,
but I think you'll mind paying them
a bit less. That's doing some
serious thinking.
The Athens · Social Security
office is locllled ll 221 1/2 Columbus ROlli and our local ·phone
number is 592-4448. In 1991 a
representative of the RailrOad
Boanl will make visits to the
Athens office. Please cal1 for the
exact times and dates.

POMEROY • TM Ohio Era Phi
Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi Sorority
will meet Tuesday ll 7 p.m. at the
Meigs County Public Library in
Pomeroy. Debbie Evans and Julie
Dillon will have the cultural repon
and refreshments.
'·

WEDNESDA-Y
BEDFORD TOWNSHIP • The
Bedford Township Trustees will
inect Wednesday at 7 p.m, for an
o~onal meeting.

WELLSTON • Tbe Southeastern
Ohio Holmes Safety Association

calendar

demuded.

.

· Tile J:iyptlan IIHer balled Israel's rastrliilt In
DOt NtpandtDI 10 Iraqi ~lallle atlacb, IIJid
rldll:a}N Saddam Ru.e!D for ftrlna nu..u. Into .
Sallti Anbli, wllleb boata two of lalam's lloll..t
abrtaei.
.

Mllbarak njected appeala

District Council will meet Wednesday at 7 p.m. at the Royale Res·
taurant in WeUston. THURSDA-Y
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
Group of A.A. and AlAnon will
meet Thursday at 7 p.m. at the
Sacred Heart Catholic Cburch. For
more infonnation ca11992-S763.
REEDSvn.LE • The Rivtiview
Garden Club will meet Thunday at
7:30 p.m. at the home of Mrs.
Grace Weber. Gladys Thomas will
serve as co-hostes$.
RU1LAND • The Meigs County
Women's Fellowship will meet
Thursday at the Rutland Church of
Christ at 7:30 p.m. Nora Rice will
present the program.
. POMEROY -lli Precepuir Bela
Beta Chapter, Belli Sigma Phi
Sorority will ~eet Thursday at 7
p.m. at the Grace Episcopal
Church. Refreshments will be lei'·
ved by Velma Rue and Rose Sisson.

. :.\1\iN

... 9 ... LotAn,....,.
Tim .. s,.ndiNif' •nd
c,..Mon Syndl"'ill!l~~"

with ber all those years wu becanr
the rJt !WI 50 good. My guess is
her husband is going tbrougb his
.mid-life crisis and abe doesn't know
a compliment when abe bean one.
When mllriages go on the rocks,
the rocks are usually in the mattress.
:I'he vast majority of husbands want ·
more sex than tbey n getting. Studies show dlat men think about aex
an average of siJt times an hour,
which is about 750 times a week,
1101 counling drams. Compare tb8l
f~g~~re with this one: Tbe &amp;VC111Je
manied couple has sex l.S times a
week.
~WI you ever ·heard Of a man .
leaving his wife and family for
another woman becanr abe is a
great coot or a fabulous housekeeper? Men leave their wives
because they want more and better
sex. Let's face iL "Tulsa" kept h&amp;
. husband bee•.. ,.. sho is good in bed.
Sbe should be proud of henelf and
·
appreeaate her husband's frank,
uuthful complimenL It might be
useful for her 10 sect out and talk to
1 i wbo didn't think seJt in
marria&amp;e - dlat imporllint and as1c
dlat woman bow happy abe is with
her separation, divorce and
singleneas. "Tuusa" could then as1c
her bow impOI:lBDt the other things

Larry D. Brogan, a financial
consultant with the ParkerSburg
· oQice of Wheat, First Securities,
has graduated from the firm's
Financial Planning Institute.
"Having successfully completed
aU requirements established ~ the
Wbeal First Butcher and Smger
Financial Planning Institute and
having demonstrated the ability 10
use die principles of pelSOnal _
linancial plariiling 10 serve clients
in an ethical manner, Larry Brogan
is recoanized as qualified to otTer
comprehensive personal · finance
guidance 10 clients," said Director

D of"A installs
new officers
FolD' members were installed at
the recent meeting ol the Chester
Council No. 323 Daughiers of
America. Installed were Joan
Baum, councilor; Alia Ballard, associate councilor: Betty Young,
conductor;_and Vuginia Lee, warden.
A~

were Dorothy Rirchie, .

Esther Sm1th, Alia Ballard, Erma
Cleland, Betty Young, Elizabeth
Hayes, Joan Baum, Vuginia Lee,
Mae Me Peek. Lora Damewood,
Opal Hollon, Laura .Mae Nice,
Sandra White, Doris Grueser, Ethel
Orr, Marcia Kelkl', Doris Koenig,
Ada Bissell, lbclma White, Betty
Roush, Helen Wolf, Jean Frederick,
Mary 1o Barringer, Beula Maxey,
Bonnie Landers. Goldie Frederick,

~S:is

were

served

by
Kathryn Ba.um, Ethel Orr and Bonnie Landers.

of Financial S ttategies Charles M.
Aulino.
Brogan joined the finn in 1989.
He is a gmduate of Ohio Ulliversity
and bas earned the CIC designation
from the Society of Certified ID·
surance Counselors. Before entering the secmities industry iD 1985,
Brogan was the owner of three independent insurance agencies in
Southeastern
Ohio
including
Pomeroy.
Wheat, F'arst Securities is a leading financial services and investment banking firm, headquartered
in Richmond, Va. Wheat and its
Butcher and Singer Division are
represented by more than 740
financial consultants in 90 offices
in 12 mid-Atlantic and southeastern
States and the District of Columbia.

a

.M ' · b h
O'l/le! tO e ~ Own
"Cougar" and ''Goliath U" will
be sbowD ll the Meigs County
Public Libnwy on $atun1ay at 2
p.m. All children arc invited. ·

-•t

U.S.·led multi-national COA!Ittoneollfroatlqlraq.
·'

Classifie
ANGm

Om

Angie Rusaell, 19, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Sheridan Rusaell,
Rutiancl, will partici.,. ill the Miss
Ohio CHd Pageant·State Fmals to
be held May 31 and June 1 ll the
Ohio Regency Hotel in Columbus.
Miss ltusaell is sponsored by
Feeney Bennett Post 128, Railage
House and Locket 219, J.E: Kessinger Trucking and .Middlepon
Trophy Shop.
'

15

~--'·

Gatwa Cowmy

, ~rHC04el14 .

.

~rc-*it
lalaJtao/

......,t::::-,

LIGAL NOTICE ·
Notloa ,•
"" tile 13tll ..n l
ry
1H1. Ia 11:0o A.M. ~

Centmfuten..

.-,,....

................... lloltla

"'*rlnt-.. ,........ ,..
aatiiiR ol1114 -1111:00 P.

I

c . .·.1.- ·.. ..... .........7.000
1•=-:..~.......... ..... 000

M.. PIIM-t Ul; 1tl1, In
tile oflloo ol tile . _ .
County
C..mi11IDniera.
Courthauoo.
...___
Oh..
·-•-vr,
....,,.... · vocotton bolliti

•-11••• ••

....,..,..

tol-

loowlllll ................... 100

Colaeteoturel
. . 11111 ................ 1.000

llong

lup...IMd

• • • •11111 ....... ...... .. 1.000

TOIII Clelll.
1\tll . .. ..... ...... 11,100
COUNTY AtMitor'1

-"--·

lOUth .....,

_.,...

Cll M04

from ltl ln..,wtlon with
old Molgo Coumy llood
1711; lhonoo, In • northeao·

,..., ,..••......•.. ...•. 24.000
-OTHIII GINIIIAL

••w

18rly d l - " ' - CR
11404 lor a
ol 0.07
olollllt.---.-

CIOYIIINMINT:
Ill loa~ ........ 4.100

lmlblhll

~ ................oiOO

."
l!f '·""
-. .....
-_, ·.......
8altlotpolftt
tile
lntoi-tlon ol •lliotlnt CR
,404,.... _.. Moltt c-~y
Rood 171.
. .
T l l o - of 1llo ......

,...... .... .
.................
," .................

-·

nottile~-IIIMIIICIIM04

12,100

..

a.u·an ... ;........
...,,na,

..

Tho "-tltlun to _.._,
Ill mil.., aM other
peltlilant .............ft . . . . .
.......11 to ...........
for ulewll4•tllellflloeef
tile . _ " ' Moteo c-~y
Ca.-IIIIIAII'I.
At:ra•.wiMintteMmll
I ........ ltiU hliil • II·
hlillt _ _..,. . . iiNioot
moy do 10 liy ,. II Ulntll ot
tile hlelinf or malllne 11 to
tile Clltil ol tile loitd ol

T,_

c ..... lllllft•

• ....d
,....,.,, Ohio

. .* Courtiii!J8e.

IIIWt,
417111.

MoipC_,Iy
CommiiiiDMrl

M.-y Halaetul•, Cleitl
.

!11 22, Zl. Zto

.......

Oilier

Cae:•wtl,.,
..-&lt;1111 .............. U,!IQO
T'*'DIM' . . .
Utility .............

101,100

•tl
..................... 20.000
Doll!
.
.
Rellto.n.ill .... .........1.100
T'*' Chlwr Geulal
GusaiWtllflt .. .... , ...,700
TOTAL I'IICMIIIAM VIIGINIRAL 80YIIINMENT
Otlwr u... of,.....
Tua&amp;l... a ........... 111.410
T'*'ChlwrU...
of,... ........... 111....0
GIIAIIID TOTAL MliiiiiAL
I'llNO AI'I'IIOI'IIIATION .............. - .710
tiCTION 4: n.ttlwN ..
......... - - . . loi=~PICIAL IIIYINU!

... drnrllll IIi for tftl ·pu•
No"e oenunt11.., Md wef·
mape~

u.ooo

T'*'"T.-Y-11111
II'*' ..,11......11,000
,..OGIIAM Y1 GINIRAL IIOYIIINMINT

I'IIOGIIAM 'li1'Miilai'Oin'ATION

~~ . ~k-.baHua

..,_ Malnla

I I loa~ ...... 1UOO
...................... 1.000
0--'

lljls

, (IJ IIIII llh•-1

.................:zs.ooo

.......................100
Coc&amp;IIWI181
a.rtl 1 1.............. 111,110

..........................100
luppllu end

T==·
;;;,·~·IOO
11tuw11W Olfto
..... 17,100
.,

-:s...~. . . . . .

M,IOO

Tu ... , ~.................1.000
T'*'I-MIIil"'
.... " ....... ........ ,, 1,110
T'*'lor8_11.. aay
Ple::paaiYTsa p lsllan .•. 111.HO
'AIIICI AND
II!CI!UonON I'UND
I'IIOGIIAM Ill LIIIUIII nMI
ACTIYITIII .

BQLLEJJN ·BOA ltD_
BULLETIN BOARD DEADUNE

.

,..........

""•"'"'
......... GOL'
MINIA'rultl

4:18P.M. DAY BEFO:&amp;E

........

PUBLICATION

..

flp t 1£1 flaw
/

ua)

.

........ .,.,............ l.oiOO
1r111111a•
•• llltc ................ 1..00C»

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

•Lasagna

c . .......

BASKET WEAVING CLASSES
Mille yow own btSicet by allrw:
.The Blsllel Weave 992-6855.

Melallela ............... 1.100
~= ~:~ 4.000

' , r'H/

811-1-X 1'1111 TRUCK
111 rr' ' Raw••)

:7.~::-.~'.~2.100

"==~.:

. . .... .

1111-t·l - .....

..
"""""*.........
,. ,..
~QU~~~t~gNT !IJ

Mason Family Restaurant

II

.

lila lie/

_,.,.. - · M
or
polllfor_,....,_
•••.
IIOIIIto '"'""null1jlioyod
llrewn

==-.. . . . . .

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ro~=;;;·v:.. ·

,,

PU8LIC N DTICE
. In ·-~~~- with loc·
tlono1701 .87 .,d 1702.41
ol tho Ohio llaviMCI Codo•
Natloo lo hereby gtwn tilot
onJon...,rv17.1111 . o....

Ctrtlflcwta ol DI-lution
with tile hcroto,Y of tile
._ofOh• .
(1122. 21, 2ta

to.Yt.oo ..............11.000
.

•c":rro:c'DIYii~:ooo

. ......,

MINT I'UIIID !IJ IIIII

.......

c~'::i,;.' .................

lala 110/
~ ................. 10.000

Busi·ness

ser·VIc-es·
•

co

M - o ............. 30,eoo
17•000
Dallla.•toe
..........
Tranotoro ...........
....... I,IOO
T.... Ollloo ...llll!y
lowor,unc1 ....... 111.ol00
T'*' hlr laolll 9 . _ .
l'urod •u otNiolton -

a.; ................... , ,000

lu11pllt1 •II

M...... ................ 1.000
TOTAl. ECONOMIC
DIYILOI'MINT
FUN0 ..... ............ 11,110
I'UILIC TIIANIf'OIITATION II......
R-•1 ·

"""'""'
v- ..... Utlllly
lttwlooo ............ 111,40o

IWIMMING I'OOL:
I'IIOGIIAM 111-LIIIUIII
nMI ACTIYITIIIlela• tool
17•000

.

Wegee .....................100

'J ... 14. 1111
ATTEST: Jon Buck.
Clofl1 ol Counoll
Dowoy M. H-n.
. ,.,..1ld1nt ol Councll
CEIITI'ICATI
!!""Notloht 1701.:11. II .C.
.,,...laliN .,..

-

=::::!!::":,~.:

app=t...

"- "'""'· ""'
w1t11
1~111
1111 otllor out.....,1... ""'-'"'"'""· do
110tu-.loUIIIIollkotalootl·
maM or a.-ociM Olllalol ••
tl-. Wlwltiw -Prlo·
•
. . . _ _...,....., ol·
llololdl ottahoil-... tile oounly
au tor
live - ' I Mill·

lloalllforth...lih--v·

0
CA__....., SE

.

111r""'"" RVJCE
-11- Acldltlo1w
-CJunor Wool1
--cEioot
!,_~mlllnl

_"'*
..

==• ._...
00

nwn

r:..':\ITtMATEII

¥. C. YOUIIG II

Ht-6115

, , • • ,.,,

Ollie

·aiSSEl.L·- '
IUILDEIS
.

w.eoo .................

',

.._...a.................

o:. . . :

=':e =. . .

A--

::0:.:!.'':.-=0hloto

..........

::.=

"""'Ill

"*'"'·

.......

rOUIPMENT

o:= :,':1iRW'Av:Z·

.
.
.
.
.
.
=
I'll==. . . .

T... ODNII W.lllcu;J:i
t1 too
Gil N TOTAL INCIAL
IIIYINUII'UND AI'I'IIO·

I

.aor,=ir.
........................... 1,000

T... .....

o.,,.................... t,ooo
GIOtiiiTOIIITN•

................ E-~o:~.'"'E
.00.11 0

On Jen. 21 .

.

..... .,..tett ........
llr
lut d - feel ..
atone.

I'IIIATIOII••,.. t.MI.IM

CXM¥1111
~=
WATIIIIY8TIM IM·
I'IIOYIMINT I'UNDIutllllllolond
Moeltlola .............zt,OOO
,, ...,. . .......... ...... 11.000

.... ... Ylllal l Clillll to
,....., .....11.. ,. . . .

-

. . . . . . . . . . . . . TJM..

..... torpcrt:a!Sisflonteny

IISSELL
SIIIIG (
0. '
-=-~· "

·=

Pll. 949·2101

et'

I ... 949 • 2...

ND SUIIIh\Y CAllS

4-

I

,

.I

1111

DAN'S
" TIANSIISsiON
CIIIIIMTO-AII
. • .......... IJt

A-10

Tr-mloltoM,INktt.
TuntMIJI!, Oil ~.
Cluloh " - " ·

.......

'"••
lmMAnt
tv
.....
, r •••

,..ttJ.JSI7

IISSIU &amp; IUID

........."
..........

COIISTIUmOJI

ecet

/•

I '•te

... ldllilll
SteJIC1••1rt

,,...111Lu"'·

•n·••n ·

. 667·617t

HI-'

••ano•
J&amp;L

Win~

Tlte ...,. , .. no1 for-

:...-:-..:::~:=~-:=
,..,.. ..
........
.......
,.
=•:::tllttl=
... ... .........
... ,...........40.000
.................. _'"'....,
...,.
Ae.,..
,..,...

'-"=--

,.

•R•tallllent

.......

llnoe Ootl clllttl you

·•ILOWN IN
INIULATION

eYinylllctfnO

I kn- lt'e . _ five
YNfl

l:n..t ...... ..

~

~·

•VINYL UIDINO
•ALUMINUM IIDIN" ,

11/14/lln

.... from tile I'PIOO!rlatlng
lmplor•
- . . . , • oortlllld copy l!f
CUSJOM -T
. . ......... " ........... J. 200
tile ~ro,rtotton
fMa.
H-5
&amp;'GAIAGU
C-...1
Emp~oyeo
f:s~
of
Oh•.
S.viDU ............ 200, 100
lttwlllll ................ 1,700 Moltt c ntt
"At luun•l• PriCe~"
lupplloo ..d
I,
Jon
~i.rt
ol
tho
. . . . . . . . 110 I
M....................... HO
Itt rio 1 ........... ..... 4.000 vu,__ o1 MI.,.••" In 111 ~
1
.:
.
ftc:lllu•lllt ol
luflfiiiiiM4
. ........
Ill
. . . . . . . 2160
Doll! ..................... J,OOO
=-~ I
':.':,~
'hy • Nitht.
...._ .................... 1.100 Tr•..-, .............. ....... IOO
110 II-~..__
TOTAL PIIMeT,_
T'*' lw!Mft11r1tl
_,.. . . ••~u IOd lly ,.,.
...... ................... . 31.110
NO SUNDAY CAW
A:r=·iNG .... 211.o100
TOll!
fllr
...
ltiMII...
.....
thot
h
,.,....
....
1
""-:----...;;;~
!....... 11-uol
fund A111- t o Ordlnonoo to '"
llllrlll/
- LolouiO 1I1M and ooptod " - tho
Wegee ...... ........ ... 11.000 ""'-'-Actlvlttae .... ......... l1.310 •ltltwl o.._
n - on
SIIYKE AND IEPAII
~~~
INTIII
...
IH
fll
Hid
Vlltate,
thot
............ ............ 2,100
ON ZETOI TIACTOIS.
Trewl ,.,.,..
C!MmRY FUND:
llw fwogo ... Otdi- heo
..., oo,.aiOII by mo with
.Plll Other".............. .............. ,1100 e111 ,...1
Contnotuol
Check Ollt Our t.w
Watoo................. 2 ... ooo ~:~"t:'::::t::'~
... .,IDII ................ I,IOCJ Emplo•••
.. _ ..
Pricet
011 "New" Zlflr
luHIIIO...• ft 10 ............, . 10' 1100 00PY -.. -·'--·IO,tilla
Mellllolo ... ............ 1.000 Cat.M! 'd
fl:lld. . IIIII -.~~"I
..,.-n.--.. ... ,. '"""-••
TOTALAIIC
a.wtoa1 ...... ..... ..... 1,000 14th doy l!fJon~ ~:!;
HOUIING ........... 21.000 luptll 1 OOid
Clorll oltile Wlaeo of
IIOIIIS
IIIYOL¥1NG LOAN I'UND
....... "'" ........ " 2 •000
'
\ Mtdll~o"
·ffJII'I' lie II Yll
TDIIIICMta•y
, .~
Caebaul•
- 100 !11Z2, 1tc
Moltt County. lllo
-...... ...... ....... ...
741·1455.
... n... ..............a.ooo
::=:.::t:~~ -2----ln-Mtmory
_ _ __
_ _
TOTAL Jllwe~W.'lt
S"Jhll._.,..,._
000
INTIII1'11181 'UNDI A'·
iAF!TY,UNO
I'IIO ...IATION ....... 11,ol00
18poellllll-l
OthwTJu•Con b......,
.....llol .......... "112,1100
EY~A Y. 8ARRI!TT

c........

-·.

::.::a':,=.-::=.: t=:.r;:=======::r.::;;;::;;==:::
lltt~-,--U-N""G-'$---t

.. ............ 21.100 ::...tt!""
..ltt•looo
,.... ...
... ..,t.;..a:"-....:.:

. ....................... 1.110

loncl EtoCtrtc:· tnc., IIIN. o

t----------.:...--------

..... ,.::,;.·;;:..-:-···,....

gortten

Your t.O. to often ap-

Yeur INIIOt I. liMr IIIII·

Ullf'S
Oflr..,,rt

Anti.,... Mem, ladll

__

Your

1r1111

"

I feel

lllkiiMIIM
..... encl . . .
Antlytturvellel

williaM ..

IY. ltt1y Caldwlll
le4lrmlntd~
Pamly,

• ............. ~........... 700

T.....

Public Notlca

lila ...... ..,

1 1;ti~fllv'iim~~~:o l:':ino:

I'IIOOIIAM V-IAIIC
UTILITY IIRYICU
latariiOI
....__
11 000
lmPtT,"~" "" """'"' '
1tMR111 .............. 111.100
ld. MM1 COIIUftiUIIn
oiOO

•

PubliC Nollce

1•1 010 .. IICTION .12. Thill ,_II!·

Put111

".......,

-

·

15 Gun•al Haul•nt
II Mobile Home Attpltt
87 Uphol•tery

a-.- :::;.~~t~~ agallllt

Dallltoo•toe .......... 11,,0 00

c.............

ConlriOII!ol

Bl E.c.,•ting

14 Etedrh::al • Relr~g••t•on

.._............:.... zo.ooo ::;;"::,:."'-'"' - -

........................ 1,100

Rwlltamentof

................... ..... 1,000

,.

by

In aocor"'"- with low or - Mnoe. ,., wld1d furtt.r thet
... IIIP,.,...tloli, tor- oonlllthorlty· ol ond

lo JJIII -

C1 tiiUhll

/

Hom• lmprowtn~en1a
82 ·• Plwmbing • He11Mtv

81

61 '••• for ' " •
1.7 Mutieal lnllrument s
61 FrW1s &amp; Y•a••W•
~~ For s••., l'ude

. . . . . . . . . . . ..... .~~~~~~~. ~.:--

.......ftt ...........

.........

73 V.n• &amp; • wo·.
7A Molorcvcl•
75 801111 • Moton tor Sal t
7e Auto P•u • Accaaor-••
77 -, AutoAtp..,.
71 camping Equepn1""
.
79 C•mpen • Motor Hotnn

lio tHii sr:

It ooo
"•••••a
.
.
_
.
...............
,,ooo
TOTAL l'tfo
llz,zoo :5.~~:::::::::::::,:110 :=-::;=?~~

·CULTURAl 'FACIUTIIIAril COIMIIII PUIId •
· lvebMMUitJnt
..... ~·_
!IJ Ulal "--1 , ..
llylllr.. lltiiill
'TOTAL- Calllllullhn
c........ '
, .......................40,000
............... ..... .4.000
ol - · ,. ..... tile •·
GIIAIIIO TOTAL CAI'ITAL·
lllll • • lli '"''l.lftMt•
2.000 I'IIO.IICTI 'UNO AI'I'IIOPIIIIATION •.•••••••••.••40,000
TOTAL Cullurlll
, ... 1111 ................. 000

All Dinners Served With Our ali-U-Care-To-Eat
Soup, Fruit&amp;: Salad Bar &amp; Garlic Bread,
Or Try One Of The Other Fine Menu Selections.
Take Out.Orders AwiiRble.
, ""Senior Citizens Receiv.es 10% Disco~t

~TOMASCN BXXQIII

..

I'IU'I I MMI

Class will be Thursd1y, january
31st Hurry! Limited space.
,
·' 1-----"""-:-""""-'

Muon,wv.

• IICTION .7 . T1wt ........
.,... .,..... " - tile .
te11owtn1
!NTIII"'II!
FUNDI.
WATIIII'UND:

C.:.,.................,...000

T-IIIUI H

71 - A"'o' lor •••
72 Truc:h tor 5al•

sz - s...,.lntGoo•

••vice~

•

Hou•hokl Qoecta

Public NotiCI

DoM .................'121.000
, ...__ .. ..................4.100
T'*' GI-7-A INCOME
TAXAQMINTOTALFIRE
.
. IITIIAnON ......... II.tiOO
TRUCK ............. 131.300
CLIIIIC. TIII.UUIIIII
' IIIU! II ' FUND (lpoclll
......., " - ...... 11.110o

lltlnoeporma..,tv•

.......

ftlc: ................ I.IOO

..,...,,....... ,"'"'

(3(M) m-5321

23 ..............

TrMt. ., ;................2:20o

GI-7·A INCOMI TAX
AOMINIITitATIOIII
hu::ll . . ulau
..........__ ...•.. 11,000

Wll vlnw

the , . , ... , n11111n ef
. 0 .07 ..... l!f c... .., "Moe (OIIIItate ll4iute 1241

..... Couftlt

Rt.33

w-wroo.

21 Bwin•t()p~tuMtv
22 Mon.,. ID LNR

· Cortba.."lUIII

t-:.:t;~!~.~:~ ........ I,.OO

• - 1 ol .._... Ceoillty

Mobile Hetn.. tor R..-.t

M1 ~rr

.,....a.~

.. . . ,................. 21.010
~ .............: .... 1.100 ' Oilier ~atlon • .
Molnt ................. ... I,ZIO

-••rHoo

~Spaghetti

c:.w..

Tr J.I\IJDrldiiUII

Hou.., for Rem

4~
~l

53 Ani . . .•
6" · Milt. Merth~tndise
66 I Widing luppli•

77::J . . . .
D2 N._H.,en
L. . .,

247 l ... , hili

11404 (Old 1-11-12"1
batlnnllltotoiiOinllntile
ol o•llllt'l CR
1404..... jiiiOint ..... 0.07
olollllt. !NINoriNo,ao

·family Restaura~t ·
· Thursday ·Night.is

137 .......

s7a

... """'•

-ion ol o ,..,_ o1 Cll

Kath'-

742 ... -

~~

6&amp; - Seed 6 Fmtl11lf

41

61

PubNcNatiCI

moro 'fully

Andicw Miles, minister . or the
Pomeroy Cburcll of Christ, was
honored recendy with a miscellaneous shower at lhe church.
Attending were Elaine Kelly,
Frances Eskew, Betty Spencer,
Junior and ·Linda lAndennilt,
Kathy Haley, Charldene, Roger,
Chris and Debbie Alkire, Janet IUld
Ed Venoy, Margaret Holmes, Pat .
Thoma and Andrew Miles.
·
Frances Eskew led the congrega- ·
lion in opening songs with Janet ;.
Venoy at the piano. Mrs. Eskew ·
read the 23 Paa1m and a poem, "A. ;
Thought for the New Year."
Haley read "If God Went .
on Strike." Pat Thoma read "A
Prayer for Middle Age."
'
Bible trivia was conducted .by :
Frances~w.
·
. Tbe public iS invited to bible,
study and prayer circle every Wednesday evening at 7 p.m. Study wiD •
being with the book of Acts.
·

,, .........

. 14 .~ ,.,...,., rr-.,. 9
11 &amp;choofl. lnthUCIIOn
16 RediG. TV l Cl A.,•ir
17 MllieeM.nwus

1

64 H.,. Grain

4•

I

468. L.o"

... llll•llf
IU ....,._.

'

-e:

Pomeroy Church
, of .Christ
gives shower

112--..

'17. . .. , . _ ,

tt7

I '

&amp;2 W_.td to Buy
63 Liwnt!K'Il

farms tcw Rent
44 ·-A,.rtment lor A.n1
45 - ·furnished Rooms
SPice tor Ren1
47 W~~nted to Rent
4' ,fqulpmeftt tor Rent
41 For leMe

11 ·· tWow
WMted

.

MM~ Co .. wv
ANaCeM.,.,

....,_ c-n.y'
A,.aCode 'l14

\~

~ll.''\llll:k
61 - farm Eq""'~'

I;IIIIM

Wlftt .. le • ..,

12 Sit... t;io" W•l•

t•xt•ltatlp;t·.~ ...

followinp;
I t'lt'llhmw
.

Y•d Sidus

OAV BEfORE I'UILICAJION
11 00 A.M . SATURDAY
2 '00 P.M . MONOAY
2 '00 P.M TUEIOAY
2 ,oo P.M . WEDNESDAY
2 '00 P.M . THURIDAY
2 00 PM . FRIDAY

.

•., "r••
~- ..-••ewnce.
&amp;llllpaid in ..... uj
I Pultli c ... , • Auc:1 iofl

c:ta~sifit•tl llnf{t'.~ l'lil't•r tlu•

~ Olltfy Tnbune. M1111chtng owr 18,000 honlW-

lUfiOAY PAPEN.
W[DNESOAY PAPER
THURSDAY PAPEII
'HIDAY PAPU
SUNDAY PAPER

5 ............

Jl Fifm• for •••
31 ........ lwilding&amp;,
35 Lots • Att•11•
31 Alii Estate W•ect

)'

wt•

Racine Volunteer . Fire
Ilepartlnent has rei.....,. its annual
report for 1990. During the year the
fire ~biiCIIt responded 10 80
' runs, o~bich there were 13 struc- .
ture fires, 31 111110 accidents, 16
brush fires, three au10 fires and 17
miscellaneous runs.
The
depMtment . expended
. 1,83S.S man hours for an average
of 23 man · bours per · run and,
1,006.5 man hours on training.
Officers for 1991 are John Holman, chief; Ralph Fisher, asaistant
chief; David Neigler and Richard
Lyons, caPIJ!ins; Scou Hill, first
lieutenanl; Damon F'lsber, second
lieutenanl; Kenny l.ay11e, third .
lieutenanl; David Neigler, ~~­
dent; Hank Johnson, ~ ~t;
and Doug R~, ~tary-treasurer.

31 .. HG.n.. t., s ..,
32 Mobile ttom.. tor SOli ~!

Annouc.-....,
ow....,.

F .1'111 \rq11JI":\

.

'

1 Cor' •• "'""'..
2 · 1" .........
l

•

.10

.0$/day

RRal Estal e

[ ' 't I , I t "I I I''[

"A t:l~ ..ttact acherlisemunl pl'~ctkl in lh• Oatly St!nl••l4 Ce~~~ ··
tepl · ~lauth.O 1h1pltrt. Bt,slltuu CiMd and lwgtl ltOticn)
;tlsU ..PP•• "" th" Pt PI••••• Aegelt-' and,.,_ GMh·

MONDAY PAPER

.42

I

.,It

COPY 0£ ADLINE

••. oo .

.• 8.00
t13.00 .
, t1 .30/ day

A•1•1':. ''·' 1' 1·"11'

.20
.30

Rae .. •efolcon•c:u•••un._-.,....,YP"-r•WIII~dl• ...
t.......................

. "R•cwrP. • . 50 thcount lor actl ,.id tn adwiln ce.
"frftHs
Gfwt'IWIY and found ads und• 1&amp;wunts wiN be
""'3 dflf&amp; at no ch••·
·.-.ic. of_. t01 aM c.,..all,..14tr l • dOublu Pflal of ad eoSI.
, • 7 poNtt • • lype onty uMd
"s-t"•tl • not rnponslbtw IDe" •rors11he r tint d~ . IChttdl
fer .,,uta first .• ., .cl runs in p..,....) . Can IMrtore 2.00 P·"'·
daw ..,., publ•c•ton to mlktt correc:tton
•
' •A• th.. must be ,...tl in adYancllt
Card ol Th.,ks
Happy Ads

Racine Fire Dept
releases report '

.

••.00

11

10
Monthly

.....

"

''

3
II

Ov" .11 Wonll

Rate

16 ·
15
15

1

"Adl oul_.e Mittgl. o.llia or Mason counli• •nusl b• PM·

.

·W..ciO

Do yo

POLICIES

In MMniDiill'n

• .The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

RATES

TO I'I.AU AN AD Clll ,92-21511 .
MONDAY thru FIIDAY I A.~ te 5 P.M.;
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
CLOSED SUNDAY

In pageant. -

History group meets . •Chicken .
The Bedford Lodi History Group
.Cacciatori,e
s-·-'- 7
lhe
will meet ........y ll p.m. at

· Modem Woodman Hall in Burlingham. Betty Milhoan, 111C111bet of
the River Valley lbbalists, will
present proJr8D1 on "'ur Ancestas and 1belr Use of Habs." Tbe
junior members of Modern
Woodmen Will be iD charge.

from EIYPilaD

oppoe!Uot! JI'OUPI for a ceue-ftn tn the aulf,

The

Brogan graduates class

Ann
Landers
LANDERS

We cannot gg~-piOOf Oil' children I'"T~More informatioa ja available
and •tin rO!U, Ill what Clll we oo'i from the Cenler to Prevent Hand51018 al rna= mbc!ec! i.n a
Violeoce, 122S Eye Streel.
sec:we.ly locJred c:oatainer. When BUll
N.W., Suilc 1100, Washingklo, D.C.
brfldlinJ Ill' cJc I linl a gun,. IICYa'
leave it unattellded, even . for a ~ AnD l-aaden: Regarding
mOmenL
.
jhe letter demandiDg a little ~~~IN~~~::.mhard.
Even if p&amp;mU don't own a gun, c:onunoa court.el)' flom the pC!IIOII
•.,.,. .,,..., .....___,__ •
DEAR B............,, ..........or a
they llbould cbect wUb pamlts at wbo dlallthe ......,., number: HOw
----.
1eaer dill reflects more truth than
other pll!:el whele their children about the -from
the pa1011 whO .....-... I couldn't have said It better:
play, to-lllllre lafecy precau- receivallll:b a Cllll? Tbe RUOII 110 ..-,
.. folr lfjed. Ia • IIUdy of many people bq up wilbout apo1o- myaclf.
ecc:ldental lll8dpa sbor!tiap of
· · · ............ IIIeY 11 afraid f
n:e•v~• . Wht11 plaMillg II wtddi'lg, who
dlildreD 111111111' 16, ..ty 40 pen:eat ~
beilll
·
pays /tl' illlllll? Who IIIIIUls whtre?
o( tile sboodDp occ:arrecl ill
llaould
bear
in
mind
dlat
nobody
'Tilelolut'«de.,GIIitlejorBrida"
.,. ..... ollriciDdlllld l1llallvea.
dials
•
wnllll
number
0!1
JUPOIC
has
1111 the - •· Send 11 sdf-o/J.
Tile lllll , . occ:urred 111011 often
.
and
11
often
mew
the
~
of
a
drUMl,lmrg,IJIUIMINize
MW/ope
wileD Ailclaal wac loft •mPIJI""·
qUill«. - MICH.
111111 a clred: or mottey ortkr for
viled.
DEAR
MI~~::
How
·
tr~e.
$3.45
(tiUI iiiCIIIlks po1tage lllld
When~- aJoobnl and
cost nothing fraltdliltJ) to: IJrilla, clo AM fAn.
111o •~ a 1111 milable, die ria:
.
0...
Au
I
mtin1
I would lillie WI, P.O. Bo.r ll$62, Chicago,/11.
for '""""., npidly IDCRms lila
,audl IUiddo lllldy, vletlml wbo roreplytD"B""'e1ill1'ulsi"wboee o6(}61/-0$62. (/11 Callllda, 1e11~
ued llacan -lbout live dmel l!ulblncl aid the ..._ .. 11ayec1 · $4.4$.)
I

Teaford; "Joy" by Beulah Ward;
"Life" by Irene Parker: "Prayer" by
Hope Moore with Ann . Sauvage
leading the singing of 'Christmas ·
carols. Each lighted a candle as
they read their parts. The game was ...
lead by Wanda Rizer.
.
. Attending were Rev. · and Mrs.
Wesley Thatcber, Bob and Donna
Smith, Franklon and Wanda Rizer,
Karl and Eleanore Kloes, Vrrgiland
Helen Teaford, Russ and Hope
Moore, Beulah Ward, Mary Lisle,
Irene Parker, Betty Ash, Jeml,Stout,
HaUie Robertson, · Martha Moore,
Marcia Karr, Emma Jean Congo,
Hmriette
Sinclair,
Marie
Houdasbelt, Elma Louks, June Lee,
Ann Sauvage, Mrs. Brown, Eileen
Clark and Thelma Haw ley. Dinners
were sent to Carl Weese and Archie
Lee.

Co~munity

;¥our Soci~l Serurity... _ ____;.__
January bas always seemed to
me 10 be a serious time or year.
Maybe it's tbe winter landscape 01:
the long houh bf dab:ess that ~
me iD a serious mood. Probably, It's
just thinking about my income
taxes dlat does iL
Certainly W-2 fornis deserve
. some sober tliiating. AU those tall
entries - Fedcnil raxes, State
taxes, .and wbat's this one- Social
Security taxes? Enough almldy!
Well, I won't' try 10 explain Sly
Of your othtz IIJtes, but I can help'
lOU ~ wbll your Social
securily taxea do fot you.
. Today, ~·n: Wotking llld
Jl.llying Social ~ taxes. Bll
Uimorrow may be a different stOry.
Some people plan for their retirement, but not wry 111111y of us gi~
enough thought 10 what . would
happen if we bocome disabled Or

.and Candace Werry.
Fourth arade: Rachel Forbes,
Jacque Hall, Stephanie Jones and
Rachel Pangio.
. ,
.. ' Fifth pc~e: Aaron Pangio and
Steven R1ce.
Seventh grade: Shawn Rice. . ·
Eighth grade: Emily Asbeck, ·
Mandy Jones, Jason ·Pangio and ·
Kristen Torres.
·

Eagles class meets

V!Kiety of musicll styles.

Several matters were djscnssed
. 'at the recCIII meeling . of lbe
llemwood Garden Club lleld at lbe
hOme of Ida Mwpby wbo presided
at the meeting.
· : Marjoie Purtell gave devotioQs
~ an ~le. "Recipe For a.
Happy Year.
•. An invitation to an open meeting
Of the MiddlePort Garden C.Jub was
R&amp;d. This WI be ll the Middlevort
l!resbytailm ChUICb 011 Feb. 4 at

of PuliiDc l;upt's troopl out of the gulf war u a
amall EIYPUan lettlat oppoaltlon party Ud

"A en .. tin ftlle Iraqi troop1 are still In
citizen that · I will DOt · allow uDder IllY
Kuwait would be a Ylolattlllloltbe U.N. re.oludon,
clrcumalallcea anyone to attack one Inch of
wlilcllsaysloree can be Ulld to liberate Kuwait,"
. EIYPU&amp;n territory ... (Saddam) CIDJIOtattacktbe .
be 11114.
.
Hlp Dam, even If be hu anytbbll (such u Seud
Allied to COIMIIIIt OD demonatratlou In the ' rnllallei In Sudan) ... and even U be manapd to •
!louin 1 capital af Kllartoum, c1111n1 onSaddam
get anytbtna In SUdan, I wouldn't allOw It to•
Jluatln to strtU Etypt'l AIWaD High Dam and
remain Intact, alld Sudan would pay a dear price,:
ancteat pyramlda, Mubarak said he would not
and the officials who aeree&lt;~ to thla would pay an
allOW 1uc:b move.
·
extremely hlah price ... I mean buatneu here, for·
'1r• 1tranp that a demonstration held by the
(Saddam) cannot strike the Hl&amp;h Darn."
lallmle l'rollt of SUdaa lbould calUor a sirlke at
"Even If he 1Tl8llaJed to strtke anytbln&amp;, It
the Hl&amp;h Dam, beealill the Hlp Dam Ia • JY111bol
would be reckleta ... tn tbll cue, I would teach
... tbiY al10 call far ab'llliDC tbepyramlda .. , liut
them a Ieeson, for I would retaliate wtthln 26 bourl ,
what Ia tile relation NtwwD the Hllh dam and the
at the most, and I have tbe capability to dQ that."
~T'' lilullarak uked. _
1
•
Mubarat 181d he would not withdraw 10111e
'1 doD~ lllinll: tile Suclt" 111 people accept thla · . 30,000 tan~·led E&amp;YPUID troopa In Saudt Arabta .
kind ot lolle. and I Wlilt 10 a&amp;IIUI'e each Etyptlan . and tile Unllj!d Arab Emirates.
.
.

Arab
from KUwait, for the CIC!C!IIpaliOD ot by anoaa.r ullq force II a vwy .WU. ·
mattlt', and iiCibo1y cu accept aueb a
the
tum of the lldl cea,tury, H Aid Mubaralt, wllo WU
speakiDCat bla auburball pr,eatdentll1 paleee In
Hellopolla, -~of Cairo.
"Iraq muat wltbdraw from Kuwait becau11 tllt
falla to wltlldraw frCIIII Kuwait, we CIDDOt
CODV1i1Ce tile ID. . .tlonal eommUJdty to IIIDp die
(allied J!c)mbllll ralda) ap!Dat Iraq,'' be IBid.
·'Nobody would lila • lll today u'"' blpD 1n
tnltlattve callliiC tar a ceuefllll,' 'laid Mubarak,
wbo bu mM1Md a 1tauneb supporlllr of tile

COUDtry

from tta territory.
Mul~Ud'1IDid rwpoi lei a that he bad DO lntelldon

Rejoicing life honor roll listed

to appear

..

Preltdent S..nJ

•,_.IIYPt

atrtba

..

saytac,tllll wu aut oC tile q_.tlaa willie Irwql
troopl ~ Ia Kuwatt.
''We atllllllllat OD the Iraqi fnlop withdrawal

Mublrak said Tlnldll)' 111- wouJd be no cbaqe
In EDPt'• tovp stud tii'Mt lraq and warae4
Sudu of m1lttary retallltlon If It allowed any

MVNCgroup

The Deily Sa ttlntl Pllgs 7

.

.,

..

\I

USID UIIIOAD 11S
·-.•,

.:.JJ...

�•

n.

fla;l 8

s........

22. 1991 .·

LAFF-A-OAY
..-

Pomeloy- Miclcleport. Ohio

BORN LOSER

-

.

22,1991

11

Helpw.nted

~::·:ll~:-'.:'·1!?'

•

Television
Viewing

32 Mobile Homll
2

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-

.....
.... t ...
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- . ootlli

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·..
1:00 . . Pll. D.
=._........... ~ ....
..... '" -';;t't

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'

TUES.. JAN. 22

•

MO(J)e Cll (I)• •
-

..,.. ...

Glvuny.

4

Celt--,.. .... """""'·
a.."""

.,..

8

• ""

ldiiCil .... , 1rm IFita
· 1:30 ~~· 0 NIC Nlgloflt Newe

anJ Cliloa,
FeuNt. 114 .......

il

YlldSale -

"Why can't you be like other
cats and go out at night?"

•

'

_,_1~-.JEI_". . ~IL.-G" I'_v..s.I.....JI ; ;~~-~~~h~~~q:,:

iJi Allbolt anc1 ca mra
[II lf~......... Q

~,- t....
OIIIDe • Mill 11 1 WI It
110 . 4....... ....,.

3

d ""' '" " " - •

"•

. ,I· IA NI HrE Yr ~ • "Love
another at wedding reception .
is blind, but marriage is

Wolld
.

Ohio ..

Lalllr . Ctloe 1

7

-·~·
=:
.:......
boo'..
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.....
-In"""""'
..........................
"'thoi.......,.

SOME KIND OF 600D
EARMUFFS ...

te anJ

Lost &amp; Fouild

Loll:

WI-IAT I NEED IS

a- -

~~~
aUOUr"-Q
Todaf.
DNMTOCIIr

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

10M714110.

6

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P.O. .... laD, ,.,.,., WV :111171

Tile ......

•

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(tlllwtSI
Lll"*'l

Ml7tl . ......

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- t
Tlionollw. 11 . . . 7:00 I AoMoOn
lloltl. .... _........,. .. .. Tlilll
11oat1ta.
4
a
II·
....... Conolfllon. Col 11M ••
I Jiii.Jatlw~ 111'1!

........

•

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oe

IIINIWI

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--

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diiU tl ..... ~M-nM~rn.
• FI I
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Toolw I '-!

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1

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DUpCioaa

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you dnalap from...,. No. 3 below.

1:31 (I) ...., Grilli!

7:00~•-at..o WhMI"'

(i)~ of J••••

(l)lowtl?lll .....

__
_
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NIWIHoeerQ

~-~.
:=:8

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... Colt rta,.

.,.....7710.

v.

~-,:.::&amp;,
®e ,..._., Co?npany

FRANK AND ERNEST

t-.
~

Ltotloii

Plddlp.
ori'i ~~NA~a
· SRVICI ..
992-UIS • t~Ji·Ui•l

7:31CI)Iarefonl8??d lon
1:00 (J) • ill Mliracrt Ml7loCk Ia

arralled for tile murder of a
judge. (Rl Stareo. Q

(I) MOVII!: lily Peapll (A)

overindulgence jeopanlzea
Samanlha'a growth. S..O.

' I D'J PI d ......._
Col at ....... ... •• 1111
IlLII.

'' ''
'"

(!)

ALLEY OOP

wrect&lt;. Stereo.

®e MOVII:

,:,:oo)
aan4
·
·8.

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

=-··

0 MOVIE: W- (2:00)
1:01 (I) MOVIE: TlitiiAgley (A)
(2:00)
1:30(1) (1). Family Mattaro
Stevt'a crush oro Laura
spartdea when troay work
~r In clau. (R) SinO.

: lllclllCicil

IAN IS
CONSTIUCflON
992-5009

I

..

HeW~

rr GOIOO wnH &lt;tOJ

Clleon:lo ltrMI II 'I n
(I) • Roarrrwee llacky
deckltii1D 1110¥1 aut alter
. RoaMn111 blcanon a
dlaclpllnarlan. Sloreo. I;!
(!) MHing lanel cilflle

I.

fWD 1I1AT Pla:l'£5SIOOAL
· ~IS PtAI.fE.R lr&lt;XJ'~
BEW SWt..JQ. ?

I . . , _ ll!fddllpao:?, Ohio.

~=·and
l&amp;fi:&amp;UID.
-qr'_.,~DI'l

-·-

'1:i 'l.atee- Dove
(PI 2 01 41' Cll T77lediJ

Movra (2:00) s-. &amp;;II
0 It fnl arTuuJo) Night

I Ill roartll?lr fum'ad, -

"ON-SITE SERVICE/REPAIR
~USTOM PROGRAMMING
"SAI.ES
•ON-SITE C::USTOM TRAINING

l'lghll

nallalole.loMiii!IArlwwwllwln

Now
~.any Klnll LMI
1:30 Cll (I) • Colalo Hayden
trlea 1D ..... donation from
~~~ Mr&amp;nlla

~
---17102.
In

a

Unllornlohad llor II- lloma,
eo-n ere,, Itt :Ill 111:10. •

crm.t ant
~- Stereo.

going 10 I

Unllornlohad
llor - - ..
......
~·-1141-1101.

SI'IING V.UUY rtOI'iSSIONAL IUII.DING
J06 JACXSON ,IKE - Sllt1E JGJ
GAUII'OUS, OHIO 4UJI

'

)

tht.ao

44

446-6000

. I.ONIIIY flAIL
Up to ",DDO rn
roouow.

...

1··-

..

·r--~--- ~....:.---~---

n

w.

:.:n"= =.1\".:, :r=

I

Apanmrnt
torRent

22 Money to Loan

1 Ill, I:IOO!o!oo.; 2 lA, ~:i
1 rooono a ba?to._ te71. All
utiMIIa lnotoMaol. DorootK ,.
........,_ Ca7l L.afmlto lloll 114-

S~Re MYeEL.F.

t

-··-·-.No . . .
furnllhed.

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP':--..----------.
Dl D 'I TF:L.L.'10I.J n-v.T I .SI..oFA:R
THAT MEANs r'M eo
FICO't\ AL..LUIWPHO&amp;IA"' ·
AL-1-URII'G THAT r

I

..._nu• ua-4222
t

1- 2.2....

·

C.

DC F II' I 1! II al
tO:OO (J) e 0 L8w I OnMr
Violence bnlaka aut during
the transfer of lhree Faclerll
prlaonert.'Stereo. &amp;;II
(I) Nlwl
Cll · (I) e llitliiiii11111V1r101eomm•ot•,. o!rlll•
. Ellyn and Billy'a relattonolilp
Ia
old
llama. Stereo.
~loT EM Ill
of file

compllcatedL.,.

1 unlurnllhedi

Rslstww a INurlty o.;a.ll

®e ~ Tl'lk: T'P7I Nut

.,, 111 aut.

ClecuaiiOit

8 CHN EVI?IIniiHen
u 700 Cltlll Wfill ....

Floun.on

tO:OI (I) MOVIE: Delli! of a
Clnlerfofd: Tlitl Doe Dt!lr
lblntn IPiary (2:00)
t0:30,. Cooolc and Cl7lal

. BARNEY
HAVE A OOOD
FLOAT-FISHIN'
TRIP, PAW

VACATION
TIME II

tt :00 (J). Cll (I) •

•

IIINewe

=·

(I) l?lgll! c:-1 &amp;;II
(D ..........
(Ill• AlllniO Hal Stereo.-Q

SOn=
8

0 Miami vroa Stereo.

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

ttf.,..,.._•ns-aH1
ili\ICI

~

THE

GlOOM

8Mo~

IIU•'S CUSTOM BElDING

lcarwoa

Wtllnt Or arl lhrr h rlllw To
1'II ........ lt. 241 .......
O.tw, Olr.

WCII!d.

aC&gt;.atom lent bhrlllt Syrtema
•C=:- Line of Ellhlust luppllel
•H
rnd lniUII Monroe lhookt

· ~!.:r:=Ytereo. Q

C... ...... tla l'7lr A Free ~pedto•
. . . . l'h••Ht '

ASTRO-GRAPH

.

birthday 1gift. Send for your AstroGraph p(edlctlona for .the year ahead by
mailing $1.25 to Astro-Graph, c/o thla .
newwpaper, P.O. Box 91428, CleVIIand,
OH 44101-3428. Be ouno to state your '
zocl*olgn.
ZOIICII (,._.. ali :ID) Your aval·
al dawoiOPfl*lla IOday could

'

Cer.lte Gr11ui1:g

••a•

EMiliE

0... &amp; o,.mir

,.,.,.y, Ollie

614·992·6820

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

. THB HARDY OUTSIDE
HEATER WITH INSIDE THERMOSTAT

____ ...............___

,..,.

·a \

(P~i&amp;IID)

reflect eilher too much aptlmlom or too

gloomy a ~ . Reality Ilea where In tile mlddla. . . . . . (llalalo 21·Aprll 18) Ba •••
lrtanely c:erelul regarding the man- In
Which you conduct your material affaire
tOday. If you ere cer.,... or txtravaDinl, will? •you gain COUld lllp right

. ....... t .......... _

. , . _ ...... 'Iff•

.....lP........-

.......

?

.......1.

........................
...1171'... .r .......

......

l ..z•R I h

-·

.............
..'\1-PMI
~

ar.ecr' 1oo1c

•

IINIII.,._ Spa

.

..

,•4

,J

~

•

•.cteewotl.

"The belt l*t of our 1ld trip?
lor tiM! Clothes!"
•• ShoPJ!II'IQ
'

.

1....

'

oata - · you mlglot overlook a crltl·

oaf rlltll8llan thll llhoulcl be corrected.
Troia -.lei compllcatlont rllloer

hn.....,...l.......

on·• (11-r IWuna 10) YOAJr ludll·

1111711 mlgfll not 1M up to par today, a
problem wNcll may 1M compounded by
"'" ollable hunc:hea ancr percapllona. 11

AQUAIIIUI(.Ian.21,._ 'lt)Youmlglot
riOt be the clomlnltlva party If you be- you're doing _.. a1 ~ critiCal naiUre,
InvOlved 1n okl-tunlonlcl 1o0rae llave " doubfa.cloec:lced.
trading lodly. Tlitl more campra~ lhe · CAJJCIII ,,._ 1Wu1J 12) You might
negotllllonl, the mora yau•,. lllctJV to
10 gtllllly
- H you
of putchano
tOday.
1£1'11-· Aqoearlut, traat youraalf lo a 1M InClined
. . feel. a

.

..

CAsd

10 ..., 10) Through
eupadltlaua doolrw or by trying to pia·

YOVI mater181 proapectl for the year
ratloor encouraging. Your·
oubll~ntlwl golna. howe..,, .,.
llclly t o - not from your ·UIUIII Jn.
oama genoratoh but from atloor

CAU.
'f""'ICKBI,_'S WOOD HEATING

110.
IIIAll
f.III'IIIATIS

T AUIIiiMi

..... tet1

lOAD IVIIY II H011a1

•P II ....

CBAI
UMSIWCIIOIII
HJ 11411 .,..

throuGh your flnglra.

........1_101111

..1••

I

e:~bJ Night' Cll

ourge cif ttoeee lmpuliea, leave your

DlltoriiC•-

• Clleon:lo ....... lltlllon

lOOM
Al.rr ..

sttreo. . . . .

(l)llllei
Cll AdaM lnollli'a lloriiJ

IPICIALWNG IN ....

. Pl. 614·tll·lt4t •iuu 18111
•mt St.lr.MI
....

and Mra.- ICing

tt:30Q)e . O .Tanlgflt lltoa

..

.

',I

.~. ·~

..

'

·~ ·

p

.

.

.

_t..,

credH carda at home.
LIO (,., :13-~711· II) Weak, Jnefftoc.

IIY&lt;I .,... or your own lndlflerent attl·
lucia could ba the culprit of anv mlollred
plena tOday. Be MriOUI about the ob-

11 lpolta Toni!IM

YIIIGO (. . ... llpL II) YOU'Niucky
tOday, but II eoulclllave cle!Jnrg llmlla·
tiona. H you cwwaeep tiMI boundartll,
not evoro loor1aalooM, four-! cto-•eo a
or wlaldut tlolnklng wtll come to vour

-·

;

1t:31Wa.a-Q
t2:00(1) · -. . . .s -.

&amp;sl1:;-WMh
...........,

jeCt._ you lllllllltlo.

•
Now
.
D GNat Atllll1o an IVI?tlll
. .

lattlahdy PlllarJ

. a) Try to keep
(lept. 21-Gat.
othera out of vour conltdentlll atfelrt
tOday, aopeclelly a ,.,.,1-lnr..tloned

lhlrKII up Halvtln a !rea hMCI•
ICORP50 (Oeit. :N-No¥• . , ~fullon
ra the rlt?lly ancr .-.n today " you ....,

(i) IIIOVII: T'P7I , .......

LIMA

friend. Tlola lndlvldull could ....rry gum

-o
DnlillA.......

.....

.
• ....., ~~~.. Willi Nil

E:-:'n

too manv vllw!l!*rra. DMIInQ with diWW'Qtlllt opiiiJON could hive you Nn·

nlnCI8found In Circlltl.
..
IAGSTTANUI (Now. II Deo. 21) Try to
reatrlc?

your attention to file ,_ .,

fill!d today. Atl8ioijltlng to do one filing

-

your mind

r. on
anoth« vyarron.

~ 1ar unri'IC 1

the

CAfiiiiCOIIN (DM. . a ~- 'It) Your
Checkbook might not be ..,. to your luxul'iculnctlndone loday. II they
gain the upper ........ you might .,_,.,.
lnvolwd In along-term obllptlon.

.

of Loft

. . . . . . . Capr
t2'.ai(J) Loft Coli?li.O,IOR

t:OOI!!.:',.Vr;~

,

IRaallda
D l'aiiNa•rr
Prr Tunda, Hlglet

Jt":,'*
. ~:a=i'!::=~

....'

..

•u
SOOTH
+JIOtl7

·~
• K4

..

' ,

...' ·~. ..
'

.

+109743

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: North

,.

Pl8

w..e

Nortlo

H
Pass

Db!.

1'1

••
Opening lead: +Q

Eut

,.

..
.- ..
.
. -..
•·

Pl8
All poua

.

-

stead East put the king of hearts on .. .
the iable. That held the Irick, and a
aecond heart pl.yed by Eilt beat four •
spades. Wbet1 South ruffed and played
dummy's A·K of ap.ides, be could eiat
prevent East from making a trick ,
with his remaining small spade in ad·
dillon 10 the spade queen.

·'

One letter stands lor another. In this sample A is used
ror the three L's, X ror the two O's, etc. Single letters,
rpostfophes, the length and £ormation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different:

0 MOVIE: W - (2:00)

Nlr Hua~ancl~ (2:00) ·
(l)llgi. .IIQ
t2:30(J)e
a.. Nfllll W!tll

EAST
.QIU
'IKts
+AHS

AXYDLBAAXR
IILONGFELLOW

OT'P?I

t:I:OI (I) MOVIE:

+AKJ5

1 Responds , dance VIP
5 Check the
to stimuli
7 Secular
size of, as
shoes ·
11 Blazing
" 12 Cuzco
6 Very, in
native
Wiesbaden
13 "Broad·
7 Straight
casl
8 Picnic
visilor
News" ·
Ye1terday'a Anrwer
aclress
II Top the
15 Actor
torte
21 Hive
airport
Greene
10 Train
resident
33 Thlinder·
16 Fads
compo·
22 One of
bolt hurler
nenl
· the
34 Boiling
18 Uses a
raygun on 140pen a
Stooges 35.- .
.
21 Sow's
jacket
23 Aries
Burrows . ·
16 Drink to
mate
25 Spread
36 Director
17 Polo of
22 Vanily,
out
Howard
feature
travel
28 "Batman" 37 Bud's ·
24 Corn unH 19 Lion
butler
partner
25 Soak up
group
29 Friend of · 38 Under the
20 Fizzy.
26G&amp; S
D'Artagnan
wealher
drinks
princess
31 Chicago 39 Catch
27 Houdini
feat
29 Early
gardener
30 ·Bridge lee
31 Mine
yields
32 Nickname
of Earl
Hines
34 "LA Law" lr:--1---+-actor
40 Hautboy
41 Maryland
· baseballer
42 Care lor
43 Outcome
. DOWN
1 Cheering ·
word
2 ConceH
3 The works L--....l....J--1.DAILY CRYFI'OQUltl'~- Here's how to work II: 1/22

fJ

IT Cff ..

9QJ lf71
u
.

by THOMAS JOSEPH
4 Square
• ACROSS

iil

~E:

..

~~~-··

CROSSWORD

1:00 Cll

O.C.L CoMPUliR SOWnONS, INC.

. ""-

L.ut

PIIIUINI•I

~Gutter
~Hebnet·

Wr Iaiii

a car

Amltl atn Vlrllln

992•5009

B-NGAND

=Iter

o• Rnaur. .,, An

.Infant Ia

Construction

110UILE SHOOIIIG

try

expedition waa loat. C

Ill

Banks

COMPLE11
llECTIICAL SEIMCE
•1 'lnrllll 111111
Ca:••rlill
C. IIHsll

flleam whyNovaa Canadian
Sclentlt!8 10
Arcllc

I

2·1 ...

·-I. .

a~

.
(I) (I). Wllo'l file . . .,
· Tony ancr Angala'a

Business Services

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

DCaFtgaiiMII. . . .

(2:00)

..••.

ML••wn

,

\

KLEPT MANIACS
.AN NVM US

Picturin~rthe declarer's hand is cru·
cial to accurate defense. Part of that
me11ta1 effort Is IIIIIDIDc declarer
val- wbea lie bicla; jeeat u important
II realizing !bat be cannot have cer•
lain cards when be falls to bid. This
fhou&amp;bt prGCeSa helped EUt to defeat
four spades.
South passed his partner's opening
bid. West competed with two dia-.
lllonds and North doubled, not !or pen·
alties·but.to sbow a strong band with
support for the other suits. East bid
three diamonds, getting in North·
South's way, and South came in with
three spades._It mipt have been opti·
mlatlc for North to now bid four, but
tbe play for game was reasonable. In
fact, even with tbe 4-1 trump split, declarer would bave made 10 tricks ex·
c:ept for pMI defenae by East.
•
East won the ace of diamonds and
made a mental note that South held
the kine· He could see a spade trick for
Ilia lide and reaUzed that ~t must
bald the heart ace. (South would never
have paaed the opening one-heart bid
with tbe diamond ltitlg pleea heart ace.)
But If East carelessly returned a low
heart, school would be out, siDce South
could neff the lleCO?Id heart return, and
dummy's heart stilt would be good. ID·

e lneril•••tirr•wtmllll?lltllt

(I)

NORTH

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AVON • M :Col .....,.

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....

ICUMI,ITS ANSWIRS
•·" ' 1
Wisdom - Graft - Month -G~m - FRONT ROW
.Overheard In line at .movie theater: "Did you ever
notice lhat fools rush in, but they always seem to get
lhe sets in the FRONT ROW?"

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Crypt041•ote1 TODAY, IF YOU ARE
NOT CONFUSED, YOU'RE J~ST NOT THINKING
CLEARLY. - IRENE P,ETER·
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Page 1 0---n, Daily Sentinel

Ponwoy Midclaport. Ohio

Tuuday• .lanu.-y 22, 1991

•

Some Ohio roads~ slick with snow, ice

M'I'ICIW. WEATHER FOMCAIT.._ 7 AM 1·2M'i TO 7 AM1 ·M1

By Valted PrMa IDternaUo.Ml

Inches of snow the clly received
A· weather ~tl!m aloft that Monday upped the amount to
moved acrou Ohio durlq Monnine lnches'·~r January and 16.4
day nllht and TueadiY morning Inches tor the aeaaon.
The snow squalls that were
left mow In aome areas. Snowfall
amoiiJita were a-rally an bich over northeast Ohio Monday
or leas, but It was enoueb to cau~e
some allppery roada.
At 8 a.m. Tuetday, tbe Nattonal Weather Service reported
Six Inches of snow OD tbe ground
In · Cleveland, tbree Inches at
. Akron-Cantmt and Mansfield,
· two Inches at Findlay and Youngstown, and one Inch at Columbus, .
C!gclnnatl, Dayton, Toledo and
Zanesville.
The weather service's state
office In Cleveland said the five

Will

WEATIIER M.U" - A pair or cold froata
lirtq aowera to
parlll ol the Soaheat ud IIIIOW to l!le (;nat Lallea·nlloa. Arctic
air will pualllato lbe upper Midweat keeplq blpa Iaiiie leelll. Tbe

wealem tblrd ol tile coutry wlll aee 111oMb' 11U1111J aldN 1111d
WII'Dler tempera&amp;urea u blp pa llollll'll
(UPI) '

re1un..

decreased In Intensity after ·
midnight.
.
. Skies were partly to mostly
cloudy with overnight temperatures generally from around zero. ·
to 10 above:

High pressure will move east ·
TueSday night and that will allow
another weather system that was
over the PlaiDs to move toward
the state and cauae lacreulq ·
clouds.

"

:!

''

are

-----Area death8

•,

Brit derby, 10 be beld In June. Tb1a one Is iD8de
or ftber..... bat Ida are also availal!le for a
wooden model. (Sentinel Pboto by Brian J.
Reed)

;

..

Streets. .

c:==

Crisp pleads guilty to LCCD charges

Metgs
• LocaI sch00Is ..eh•

carpent.er_
· ·as

~urct ~

•
d
supennten .e nt

llouse Bill 703 p·asses

c3!c

AU In The Pamilyo
When the Smith children
'come home from school; Mother
isn't always there for .them. And
even when she is, .they sometimes
wish she wasn't. Because Mrs.
~mith is an alcoholic.
· Children of alcoholics suffer the
weight of adult problems on their
small shoulders. And they often
learn that the way to deal with these . .
problems is by drinking. Worse still, .
the tendency to,wards a!coholism
can be hereditary.
If you have a problem with alco·
hoi, don't le~ve your kids a legacy
that could drive them to drink. Seek
professional help now. ·

POMEROY, OHIO

.J . · ·

'

.

By .LEON.DANmL
UPI Chief Correspondent

Israel held an emergency
•
Cabinet meeting Wednesday .to
RAVENSWOOD, W.Va. - Ravenswood Alutnlnum Corporation
dlscus.s the latest and bloodiest
(RAC) will mall metal price bonus checks to members of the
Iraqi missile attack- an assault
United Steelworkers of America (USWA ), Local 5668, on
that kllled three people and
Thursday, Jan. 24.
Injured
96. Iraq said it was
These checks represent a metal pr~e bonus of $1.25 for every
suspending
fuel sales to civilians,.
hour worked In the month of October , 1990 or a total one-month
an
Indication
a!Ued bombings
payment of approximately $350,000 to striking members of the
an
economic
toll.
were
taking
USWA.
.
The
Israeli
offlcials
also
sought
This metal price bonus was based on the average "Midwest
to
'
determine.
why
tlie
U.S.Transaction Price for primary aluminum ~urlng the· fourth
manned
Patrtot
rockets
failed
to
quarter of 1990 and Is being paid within 30 days of the end of that
·
des
ti-oy
.
the
Scud
missile
thai
·
·
·
quarter.
T!Je provision for a metal price bonus payment was contained In · slammed Into a Tel Aviv neighTuesday . night. The
. .the labor agreement whiCh
. expired at midnight on Oct. 31, 1990. · borhood
attack renewed concern that
Israel would enter the ·gulf war
by striking Iraq and threaten the
fragile allled coalition. ,
"Every person In the state of
Israel ... would say to you that
(we) must hit them back so hard
that their screams.of pain will be
heard to the edges of the earth for
John Lewis Young, accused of against the ~nt and decided a long time, " Health M;lnlster
kidnapping and raping bis minor to let a jury decide his fate.
Ehud Olmert said shortly before
niece; Js e~tpccted to face a jury on
The kidnapping cluuKe against the Cabinet meeting began in Tel
. WedneSday, despite a last-ditclt ef- Young is a fiiBt degree felony, and . AVIv.
· ·. ,. ,,
fort to'plead his ~ ):es!er$y. .
stems from an August incident in
"Fight them back. the basThe Daily Sentinel yeSterday er- whil:h his under-aged niece iYIIS tards," echoed Zevl Maim on, a
roneously printed a story stating uansported from 11&lt;7 Middleport Tel A:vlv resident carrying bethat Young had pled guilty, when in home into Mason County, where longings out of a damaged office.
fact Young changed bis mind about she was allegedly raped and ihen . " I have five wars behind me, now
TEL AVIV HOMES BOMBED- Emergeooy
alter It was hl,t by an Iraqi Scud missile a short
a pmposed plea bargain agreement returned a day later.
·
.
per110nnel and local Israeli residents go through
while earller. (Reuler~
'(this Is) one more." ·
at the last mmute.
·
Youn$ was a1sn indicted on 15
reml!lns
of
a
demoHshed
!lome
In
Tel
Aviv
·
the
Continued on page 3
Meigs County Public Defender counts 1n Mason County, W.Va.,
Charles H. Knight, who was ap- where the alleged incidents occur. pointed to be Young's ancrney, and red. Young has been housed in the
Meigs County Prosecutor Steven L. Meigs COilllty Jail pending disposi~
Story had hammered out ·an agree- lion of tile Meigs County case.
ment and presented it to Meigs
This is' Youn~·s ICCOIId jury rrial
By BRIAN J, .RU.I&gt; •
· bainging to an end .one •of Jliree, . Because the charge. is one of · tinued. "I personally am glad this.
Count)' Common Pleas Court Judge on the.kilfillpping chal&gt;lt-in Meigs
Sentinel
News
StaJJ
LCCD Cases.
. ' theft · in office, Crisp is now wirch hunt is over with 'regard 10..,....
. Fred .W. Crow m yesttzclay, and aU . County • the ibsl rrial ending in a
.
James
J.
Crisp
pled
J!Uilty
on probibited by law from holding any Jim, and bUst that we can now get
indications; includi!)g Slalenlents "hung jury." Jilry selection for the
A
former
general
mllllllge1'
at
Tuesday
to
a
charge
of
theft
in plisition of public employment ftir down 10 the business of legitimate
·made .on the court m:ord, indicated second .rriaJ is e~tpected 10 be comLeading
Creek
Conservancy
Dis~ office, a first degree misdemeanor, a period of seven years. According prosecutions."
.
that Young would plead.
·•
pleted . sometime on Wednesd!ly
lrict
has
enteald
a
~ty
plea
to
a
wbile
another
felony
charge
was
to
a
coon
spokespelliOn,
Crisp
has
Knight's
apparent
reference
to
.
When jJresented with a written morning, wilh testimony to begin
reduced
criminal
c
m
Meigs
dismissed
at
the
same
time.
·
resigned
as
genetal
manager
at
plea form after yesterday's pl'eSS thereafter. .
other poasible prosecutions is apt •
County Common
eas Coun,
Crisp, who was indjc~ iii Sep- LCCD.
·
James Crisp's parents, Jack , and
time, however, Young decided
tember on felony charges of theft m
"The dismissal of all . felony Glenna Crisp, face a combined total
office and grand r.heft. entered bis charges against Jim ~ves what we of 21 felony charges resulting from
guilty plea to the misdemeanor have·said all along, Crisp's attor- a lenglhy grand jury investigation.
.
before Common Pleas Judge Val iley, Charles Knight, said Wednes·
Special prosecutor K. Robert Thy
Mowery, sitting on assignmeQt day morning; "No criminal activity of Athens was assigned to the in·
from Ross CQUDry.
. : occurred and no actions hannful 10 vestigation of the organization in
Judge Mowery sentenced Crisp · Leading Creek ever occurred." .
1989. At the time of the into a suspended jail sentence of siX
"That Meigs County has expen- dicbDeniS against the Crisps, Thy
.
was
sullmiucd
on
behalf
of
Carolyn
the
church's
pastor,
Rev.
Roland
By BRIAN J.REED
Smith, dl?ing business as Smitty's Wildman, stabng t)lat the, building montbs, placed Crisp on a two-year ded thousands of doll&amp;rs invesugat· said lhat Leading Creelc Watershed
Sentln~l News Starr
Restaurant and Bar. That license, if was in close proxiJIIity to the term of non-reponing probation, ing nothing and proving nothing is Association, a non-profit' organ~
approved,
would be assigned to the Trinity Chii!Ch, specifically a sec- fined him $1,000 (to be paicl in four a sad commentary on the use of ~on. was used increasingly in the
Pomeroy Vill~e Council is seekS~;~rk
building
(fomerly:·the Rite lion c;&gt;f the church used fc;&gt;r youth months), and ordered restitution in publiSf.unds to illiempt to prosecute 1980's as a "conduit to ftltet funds"
.· ing ·public JQCbon on two liquor
politiciJ. enemie~~ Knight conAid
pharmacy
and
the Ripley Fac- funcuons. · Such a JQCbOn has the arilount of $300 to LCCD.
Continued on page 3
permit ttansfers within the viUage.
tory
.
Outlet),
also
on
East
Maip'
prompted
council
to
tequest
the
Two applications for such
·transfers 'were presenled to council Street The license in question for written input from rcsidenrs on the
e
~e
at their re~ meeting last night that location is currently held by granting of that license.
Anna
Roush
at
the
Wbitehou$e
Bar
According
to
Village
Clerk
.1.
'
.1..1.
'
One applicatfon was submitted on
Brenda Morris, those letters should
behalf of Pearl's Bllllon, located on at Kerr's Run.
This
second
request
bas
be
mailed to Village Hall and must
East Main StreeL That establish- ·
ment is ·seeking the ttansfer of a
m:eived no later than February
license from David Reed, ' who
In·addition, council will request
op,nted a business at the same whiCh is located directly behind the
Stark
Building.
A
·
leUer
was
a
hearing
from the Ohio DepanByCHARLENE HOEFLICH tendent of the disrrict. Carpentet ln other action die board adopted
locatiOIL
·
received
by
C&lt;!UIICillast
week
from
ment
of
Liquor
·
Control
on
both
Sentinel News starr
was assistant superintendent under a job description for the Junior
The second proposed ttansfer
license tn!IISfers, and the date for
James Carpenter, superintendent Dan Morris, resigned. for five High Athletic Director and set a
,.salarY for the _position. The salary
'" "
those hearings wiU be announced.
of r.he Meigs local Sc&amp;ool District years.
·
AppOjl!iations for the 1991 for the past three years, has been
Presented at the meeting was a was set at e1ght percent of the
""'·
budget were approved Monday rehired to the position for another leuer from Rutland.VIllage request- salary for a beginning bachelor's
.
The . Meigs County Health ganizations, ·ss, and a non-profit night in
the amounr of two years.
ing that the Board ·;.;: or lease" degree.
Randy
Churilla.
qualified in
Depar1111ent announces that the pas- · yOUih group $3.'
$1,418,513.38. Speeific departmen·
By a vote of three for and two . aU p1openy in the vi e, including
physical
education
7
·
12,
was hire!~ .
sage of House Bill 703 concerning
House Bill 703 mandales that al- tal break-downs on the budget are . against, Carpenter was given a two the old Rutland
h School
fee structures for various environ- though temporary food service not yet ~ailable.
. . year conuact at the same salaJy, property and the field and area IJe.. as a substitute 1eacher for the
mental hllalth. programs has im- operations may be categorized as
Cc;&gt;uncil also held the ~ currently $54,688.27 per annum, at hind that building and !he Rutland remainder of the School years. ·
The board granted dock days to
plemenled a change in policy J ype of operations, they . can no JU4ing on . a Jli~,,::)!'!!!c Tuesday . night's meeting of the Civic Center, to the vjDage. No ac·
regarding temporary food service. longer be categorized into different 1bomZ1111ng '~d· B v-....._S~..·.-:_._.... Poard. The contract begins wir.h the · lion ~as ~ o~':'iuest last Sandy N!IPJ!el and Donna Nease. •·.
operations. ,
fee$. The fees must be uniform
. as "erry .an
ryan . ,,..... . 1991 -92 Year·
nights meetmg r.-·-:-·1 •
us- · Negotiabona with die Meigs Lo-• ·
Prior to the passafJe (If this bill, . therefore all temporary food service apm voted agamst ~ ordinance,
Voting in favor of the contract sion of options WJth the prosecuting cal Teachers Association was discussed and a negotiating ~ will,
temporary food semces opemtions licenses will be $15.
while the others voted~ favcr. ·
were Bob Barton, Larry Rupe and · attorney.
. were divided into different
Any questions concerning lhis · In '!te only o!her acbon,lllkr:" by Richard vaughan. Bob Snowden · The letter indicaled that in the be named and dates set for negotiatcategories such as regular, non· chinge 10 licellse fees may be counc1l on Mondsy, an addiuonal and Jeff Werry · voted against the event of a ttansfer or leasing of the ing sessions.
profit orgaftizations and non·profit directed to the Meigs County $3.390 was approved as a supple- contract
property, the school district could
Following the meeting die board •
youth if!-~~~PS. Tbe cost of a regular Health ~enL
ment . ~ . the temporary 1991 apPrior to being hired as superin- continue to use the area now serv- moved into an executive session to
discuss personnel.
'
licel!lse being Sl5, non-profit orpropnauon. .
in~ as a bus garage.

~&amp;ted

L---~--~~-~-.--.---~------~~~~----..,-.-----..----~----~--~--------~. ~ ~

'

2 Section•. 14 Pogo• 25 Cont1
A Multimedia Inc. Ntw11Jopor

'

THE· D·AILY ·SENTINEL

I

"

Council wants reaction on transfer
of two liquor licenses in village

Oblo

'

en tne

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday. January 23, .1991

Ji~

from Bank One prior to its eonstructlon or a new
fadlity on tbe coruer or Sec:ond and Lynn

BUILDING RAZED .• The former Bank One
drlve-tbru beside tl!e Pomeroy U"lted Metbodist.
Cburdl wu torn down Monday aftenoon by
Pulllas Excavating. BID Childs purdlased the lot

news

.

•

.Kidnapping, rape case
may be heard by jury

Iraq ...

'

•

•

'

:S·6:r

j

and 20. Chance ol snow Ia 50
percent..Mostly' cloudy Thunr
day •. wltb a chance of snow
Hurries, and highs between 20
and 25. Chance of ·snow hi 40
percent

I

RA C to mail metal
price bonus check~ ,

petVISJOD.

',.

Page 4 '

Vol.41 . No.191
Copyrighted 1991

preceded in dealh by 11&lt;7 husband,
The construction need not
Marlon Ebersbach
James R. Baxtet, in 19,50; one monopo~ the ~ months for
Marion F. Ebersbadl, 81, of 531 brotber, three sistets and one the participants, erther. If the child
grllllddaupter. .
his family spend a little lime
Mulberry Heights in Pomeroy, _died
Services will be held Thursday 81 and
each
evening on the cars, it is esSaturday, Jan. 19, 1991, 81 River- 2 p.m. at Ewing Funeral Home with timated by derby experts that the
side Methodist Hospillll in Colum- Sreve Fuchs ofliciatin". Burial will . car can be ~leted in about a
· bus. She was a retired school
. •
teacher.
be in Oteny Ridge Cemetery..
. month. In addiuon, ftbeJglas kits
She was born in Pomeroy .on . . . Friends .may c:all at the timeral ·. require less lime than the wooden .
'
June 5, 1909, the danghrer of the home on Wednesday from 2-4 p.m. kits.
7
9
Williams
reports
tiW
the spon·
late George ljiH! Laura Hobbs and · p.m.
sored cars will be assigned on a
• first come/lirst served basis. In
Ebersbach.
' in -the American Dorolh y Gil mQre
She was active
other words. afte[ tbe sponsored
Red Cross, the Meigs County
'
Senior Citizens Olnra- llld the
Dorothy L. Gilmcre, 72, Mid· cars are assigned. tboee children
Pomeroy United Methodist Church. dleport, died Monday, Jan. 21, left m~ bear the cost of their car.
Sheissurvi~~nephews, 1991 II VetaanS Mancrial This W'dliams says, em=.;zes
·the Deed for both spo1110r · lnd
Newark
Hospital.
Howard
S.
•
Cwark;
Born
July
20,
1918
at
Bladden,
early pllliclpm!t regislrlllion.
Thomas A. Ebersbach, On:hard
The rpce 11 to be beld on General
Lake, Mich.; and Lawtenee s. she was a daughter of the late John
Hartinger
Parkway the swimEbersbach, Symcuse; two nieces, Call and Margaret Cook.
Louanna Wllcox,
Unionville,
She is suavived by a. daughter ming pool, and will tate plsce on
. ptf&amp;
and Carol Jacobs, and 80D·in·laW, Mrs. . OJarles June 22 and 23.
Conn.;
Not
only.
will
the
derby
winner
· Clearwater, . Fla.; three grand (YV&lt;llllle) Wtlson, Micldl~ one
nephews. . . John L. Warner, grandson, Chlrles "Eddie Wdlon, be recognized 11 a local awards
Pomeroy; Steven R. Warner, Albu- Middleport; one p-eat gqndlon, dinner shortly after the race, but
• two will acx:anpany hiS or her family to
querque, N.M.; and Je.....
w"y J. W:ar• Harley Wilson.
Call Marietta;
Loag BouDm
ner. Pomeroy; and a gnmd niece,
Zancivme; two .;._ the AU American Race in Atron in
Unda s. Cozart, Pomeroy.
and ~
She was ~ in death by ten, Ruth Criner, Middleport;
two lwthers, Clifford and Howard, Nellie Frye, Bellaire; and seveaal
two siJtas, Edith and Lydia; and a nieces and nephews.
.
•
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'
·
.
Besides
bet
)*elliS
sbe
.
ruece,
t:111 " ... ·-·
.
.._... by
Cdntinued from page 1
Services will be held on Wed- preceded in ....,..,
one Siller,
nesday at 10 a.m. at the ~ Hazel Gilmcre, and two ·llrotbas, ·Sunday and Iraq said Monday
u~•"-''· Ch h
·
Wood!ow Calli and James CalL
United ....,........,t
urc ' wt
. Services will be held Friday at 1. more thail 20 allled airmen are
aev:Don MCadows officiating.
. ., ___,
being used as human shields at
Burial will be in Beech Grove p.m. at Ewllig ""'"''.. Qome. ·
scientific
and cheJIIICal
Canetety.'
Friends tnay call on Thursday
l'
Installations.
Friends may c:a11 at the funeral from 2-4 p.m. and 7-9 p.m. . .
The Iraqi move'causeci outrage
In Wasblngton and London and
':to~~.Po:'~~, llld.z~. Hospital
the International Committee of
Donations may be made to the
the Red Cross In Geneva said the
Veterans Memorial H01pltal
American Red Cross. .
deployment
of prlaonersot war to
,
MONDAY
ADMISSIONS
•
Arnngelilents are being handlCd
stratetlc targets and appearance
Ric:ky
Jolwon,
Middiepln
.
by Ewing Funml Home.
·
MONDAY DISCHARGES • on televisiOn violated the Geneva
Yvonne ReibDire, Avanelle Bass, ConvenUons and was, In effect, a
Lena Baxter ·
war crime.
·
and Bell)' Archer.
On Monday, Iraq's ruflng ReLena L. Baxter, 98, Hemlqct
volutionary Command Counc:ll
Grove. died Mondav, Jan. 21, 1991
voted to cancel all accorda and
si•lb Cenlral
at Velr:nlns ~ Holpilal.
agreementa
with Saudi Arabia,
Becomlilg cloudy Tuesday
,Born Jill. 31, 1892 slie was a night, with a low near 15, but presumably lncludlq a non·
datqbrer of die !ale Jolm and Chloe rising In to the 20s by momlq. aaresaton pact alped when
ThomJIIOII Biftbi•l She was a Mostly cloudy Wednesday, with a Klq Fllhd.visited Baghdad last
member of the Chuadl of Ouisi.
cnance or BilOW flurries, and year. Bagbdail Radio reported.
Silo is .suavived. by JiOIIs and highs between 30 and 35. Chance
cairo Radio, meanwhile, redaugiUiers-in-law, Clyde IIIII Hazel ' of snow Is 50 percent.
ported Saddam called on Iraq Is
Baxter, Albay; Noaii6 llld Gilda
~ldwide to wage terroi'lst
Exteaded Foi'eeut
Baxlllr, Athenl; Homer and Irene
attacks against the Installations
ThluildQ llliouab &amp;a&amp;urdQ
Baxter, Pomeany; 1o1m llld Sue
A chance of snow or anow ot ·A rab and Wesla!rn countries
Baxter,
Reedlville;
lO tllll'l'ies Thuraday and Friday, allied against hbn, saying such
........biklrea,
23
pal
with mostly fair weather oil .attacks would cauae the alliance
jjiMQhiJdren llld ro. gn!81 pal
Satw-.s.y, except for a chance of to retreat from the miUtary
pa"'"i~
anow tlurrtes In tbe nortbeastern effort to oust hla troops from
&amp;elides ber p!Riltl sbe was part of the state.
Kuwait.

Weather··

nlgbt, With ICMiered IIDOW '
Hurri es and a low between 15

Cards: 6H;

at

----Meigs announcements---

'

Pick-3: 789
.Pick-4: 3102

'

·=lion

l

Marauders
•
WID one

4C; 2D; 3S ,

Middleport ...

Continued rrom page 1in.pr ssed with the event dl81 he
acquired a copyright fer the idea
and began the ~ of a
similar
iladoiiWide.
Some~ cities" sponsor a
"maaten" level of oompedlion as
well • the ''kit-ar" contest, but at
least this y!'8f, only the "kit car"
. eport. is being planned for
' Roger Willilms, the Recreation
Dira:IDI" for the Village of Mid·
dlepolt, bas taken on the role of
Dclby Director for Meigs County,
and W!lliams has assembled a
of interested individuals to
::'!fin the event
At a prospective sponsor dinner
held on Thursday, Wtlliams IIICI IS·
DERBY EXPERT ~ Mike Rodl, pkt•ed bere, Ills been lnvalved · sistant direcllli" Jim Papc countered ·
Meigs County businesses with two
in IIDIP boX aerby lldMtin IInce be was a youDSfer, ~ u I racer,
proposed event ~ps · cortben as an lll'pllizer and eftlt promoter for .the event Ia Lallcuter.
porate spoiiSOI'Ships and car sponRotb wu tbe keynote speaker at 1 dlaner 01! Thundlly in Mid·
sorsbi
dleport, wbel'e tbe county's first -pbox derby is now being plan·
i:rj,IanS provide "perks" for
ned.
those businesses partie~ in the
SIJ(liiSOnhip program, including ad·
Vertislng. ileCaiS and deaby-.elal.ed
Meeting cancellation
on Thursda;r at 7:30 p.m. The appCarllll'el:..,__h;_ m· ~-.,
Meigs Junicr Higb Acadmtic public is inVIted to attend.
..,..._""1"..,
Boosters will not meet blllight due
will benefit the young JI8R!ClpaniS
Jnnlor Woodmea to meet " and their fatnilles, in that the $300
to wintet weadter conclilions.
The Burlingham Junior Modem
will defra
b f
Woodmen No. 7230 will have a ·SPIJIISOlShips
'I
muc 0
'
Legir permaal
Family Together meeting on Satur· die cost 01 the car ~- Witb _a
Cards and 1eum may be IICIII to day
II 7 p.m. Members will tell ljJ()iiSmd car, the ~d and his
Charles Legar, a palient at ~t hO\Y the)' help keep families parents are only required to ~­
Hospital in -Columbus, 11 Grant
toge!her: The Bedford Lodi Hlslori· ' chase the necessary ~ eqmpMedical Olnter, 111 Soutl\ Grant cal
soc~ty will also 1neet and Betty IIIC!It and the wheels for his or her
Ave., Room 326 · C.C.U.. Colum;
Milhoan will discuas the use of · car. .
,
· bus. 43215.
herbs Juniors Will Serve refrelh· , One impcrtant factor in race sucVFW Post 1o meet
ment8. The public is invited 10 at· cess is the similarity of the cars in
The Tuppeis VFW Post No. tend.
the C:OOICSI, w.bich is provided by
9053 will meet Thursday 81 7:30
·
Lodge to meet
t!Jc kits purchased for the competip.m. at the post home. ~ fiflb an·
Annilal
inspection of the Shade . bon.
.
.
niversary of the ~ will be ob- River Lodge No. 4S3 F and AM
Cars can ~ built euher of a
served with a porJuct supper. All will be held Saturday 11 the l.od8'e fiberglas ~ or of w~. and
members
urged to IIIICDd.
hall in Chester. A halnloaf dinner !he only ~~ allowed Ill ~
be served 81 6:30 p.m. l:.o;d4e m competll~ is m !he ~on
Guestspeaker
· will
will open 81 7:30 p.111 . with woalt m of the vebicles (Le. pamung,
Jerry CotttiD, Palestine, W.Va.,
Entered Apprentice Degree. All ~· ~.).
.
will be the ll!le8l speaker at the the
masons invited to atlald. AU Shade
Building a soap~x derby em: ~s
-· Stiversville Wool of Faith Church River ·members bring a homemade meant to ~ a :t'ami!Y aff8Jf •
' .
·
Parental gwdance ts not only an
.
pie.
advanraae. but. the use of power
~Is and materials iii_ the consb"ucuon .o~ the cars reqwres adult su·

Ohio Lottery

Meigs ·

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Postal rate iricrease··approved; 29-cent first class starts Feb. 3
WASHINGTON (UPI ) - The
U.S. Postal Service Board of
Governors approved Increases In
postal rates , Including a hike In
!lrst class postage from 25 cents
to 29 cents, to become effective
Feb. 3.
The board voted 8 . to 1 in· a
closed aesslon 1Tuesday to ap;
prove "under protest" the recommendations of the Postal ·
~ate CommiSsion for Increases
In all classes of mall and for
various changes in rate structure
. to allow discounts for mailers
whO help · the postal seFvice
1
streamline mailings.
Board Chairman Norma l&gt;ace
told a news conference the
approval came ''under protest" .
' becauae the governors feared the
·-'

''"

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Independent Postal COmmls· has· correctly esUmated volume recesslonary economy and ·the
slon's recommended rates would . ape! ·revenue," Pos.tmaster Gen- Impact of the Increases themfall to provide sufficient revenue · era! Anthony Frank said . "If selves on second and third class
to.operate the Po.tai ·Servlce. . they erred, and we believe they mailings.
In seeking a rate Increase have, the recommended rates
The new 29-cent first class
more than nine months ago, the may well prove to be 'penny wise leiter rate will mean the average
Postal Service asked for a 30-cent and pound foolish," ' Frank said. consumer will pay $8 to $10 more ·
Critics of the Postal Service per year In postage, according to
first cl11ss letter rate.
"I! the commission's volume charged Its move to require more the Postal Service. The lncreaae
esdmates• are Incorrect, the Information from the Rate Com- In all rates average 18 percent,
recommended rates. ' will not million was' merely. an attempt . Including 22 percent tor regular
meet the l'ostal Service's re- togo back for the full 30-cent rate second class mall, 25 pereent for
venue requirement for the· test . It originally requested.
third class mall, 19 "percent for
year of 1992," Pace said.
But Frank said the Postal priority and "15 . percent for
The Postal Service Is required · service needa to bring In $48 express ma II.
by law to break even, or cover Its billion with the rate Increase and
Beginning Wednesday, Franlt
own operating costs, by 1992.
he .feared It would fall short ol said, · post offices will offer a
"With all of the llnanclal ' that by several hundred mllllon 4-cent "makeup" stamp to be
pressures we are facing, we dollars becaulll! the Postal Rate uaed with thecun-ent25-centflrst
cannot afford to gambll! on Commission failed to fully take class stamp, 1\S well as an "F" ,
whether the Rate CommiSsion · ,Into · accou1 the effects of a ·stamp worth 29 cents. ·

.

.. ' J"' ,., .......

"01_......,.,..-

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To enhance the postal aervlce's · It could eliminate "confusion"
move. toward automation, the through consumer education. .
rates include several ways' for
But cons11mer advocate Ralph·
second and third class mailers to Nader charged lhe Postal Ser··
get discounts through u~ of vice delayed the. first class,
presorting, barcodlng a11d other discount rate because It was
means of streamlining.
un))appy that the Rate CommiSButtheboardofaovernoruald slon recommended it. .
·
it would delay "lnde!lnltely" the . The commls,slon "formally·
commission's recommendation recogniZed that fin( class uaers:
to allo~ ·a :t -cent 'discount tor subsld121! commercial and they;
pre-barcoded tint class letters. ' don't like that, " Nader said.
Thai would !lave allowed consu- '. Nader criticized the rate In-:
mer~ to pay only 27 cents to mall · creases overall as unwarranted.:·
payments of many bills, for
"They reflect the false lmpresexample, in barcoded envelopes slon coming from the Postal
provided by large mailers such Service, which Is trying to have It
as utlliUes.
both ways, " Nader said. "They
Frank said the first class say their volume Is up, their
discount would be implemented productivity-Is up,and then they
after the Postal Service was sure · ·
Contlnlled 'on page 3

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