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                  <text>KRAFT

N. C. State
upsets Duke
five, 95-89

HANDI·sNACKS

STORE HOURS

Ohio Lottery

2 CRACKERS PER PIG.

·,

·1o·51

Monday tlH:.u Sunday
8 AM-10 PM

Page 3

COCA-COLA
PRODUCTS

Vo1.41. No.192

Ll

MACARONI
or SPAGHETTI

La ··

LB. BOX

•••••••••••• •

HORMEL

By BRIAN J, REED

Sentinel News Staff

The Meigs County Commissioners approved a grant for lhe
Meigs County Local Emergency
Planning Commission at their
regular meeting on Wednesday.
The grant, totalling $23,574.87,
will enable the program's administrator, Roben Byer, to begin
the administration, development
arid implemenlation of the new
civil defense and emergency planning program.
.
The grant was broken down into
tfte following categori.es: $9,475,
personnel; $500, supplies; $5,550,
equipment; $1,200, contrlll:t services: $2,500, training; $733,
communication; ..$300, printing;
$1:!hr.'stage; $250, mileage; fire
de
ent
subsidy
training,
$2,500.
The commissio!lers also ap-

Ham Patties ••••~.~z. $J39

$ .39
Steak or Roast •. :~ .·1
COUNTRY STYLE PORK
·
$ 39
..

S-pare Ribs •.•••• ~ •••'! . 1

$

COLBY LONGHORN

Cheese ••• ~ •.•••••••.• ~~•• 189

ASSORTED
VARIETIES

APPLES

Kopec,
Luc:u ud
JobDSOD. Middle;
' at Salem Center Elementary
.
troops
Braclley Ritterback, Robe·r t Johnson, Bridget
· iD the Middle East over Christmas with
Vaughan and Brlau Bass. Back, Thomas Maine,
homemade Christmas cards and canned IIOO(Is,
Franklin Pierce, Becky SCott ud Leanne Davis.
; Pictured, 1-r, are, rront, David Lucas, StePbanle · ·· ·

3 LB. BAG

·

Second Young trial begins;
~lleged victimr-·-..-~~~JI,s ev~~ts

$129
.

9
Hot Dogs •••••••••••••• 6 (
SUPERIOR'S

.

12 OZ. PKG.

•

•

U.S.D.A. CHOICE BEEF ·

r· . ta

Round · Steak ••••••••

$2

STOKELY

39

By BRIAN J, REED
Sentinel News Stan

Mary Berry in Mason County,
W.Va. several yeaJS ago. ·
Young's first lrial in lhe court,
A second jury ttii1 is 'underway wlrich lOOk place in pecember, enbefore Meigs County C0111mon ded in a "hung jury", and an at•
Pleas Court Judge Fred W. Crow III tempt on Thesday to reach a plea
in the case of John Lewis Young, bargain agreement feU through
wbo is accused of kidnapping and when Young refused to plead guilty
,f~is teenaged niece in August to the charge.
The Victim. medical staff from
Young was indicted last fall by Veterans Memorial Hospital and
the Meigs County Grand Jury, law enforcement personnel from
·charged wilh kidnapping, an ag- both Meigs County an~ from West
gravated first degree felony. That Virginia lOOk to lhe wtmess stand
indictment also carried with it lhe on behalf of Meigs County
Specificatioq that Young had been · Prosecuting Attorney Steven L,
previously convicted of a felony .· Story on Wednesday morning, and
that felony being the murder of state's Iestimony was expected tD

TOMATO
JUICE
46 OZ. CAN

Cauliflower ••••••~~~.~ 99&lt;
FLAVORITE

PLASTIC
$1
4
9
2°/o Milk ••••••••••••
•••
GALlON.

· JUMBO

Parkay Spread ••• $129
3LB.

.. . .

DEL MONTE SQUEEZE BOTTLE
·~
28 oz.

•

KEMP'S PAIL

QU~RT PAIL$2 99
Ice Cream ••••••••••••

..
Catsu'p ••••••••••••••••••

12 PAK .12 OZ. CANS

Lotsa Pop ..........~.

$

:

1

79

···:couPON

LT. RED .
KIDNEY BEANS
JOAN Of ARC

1 ~Soz.3

j$)

FRISKIIS'

CAT FOOD

•

~A~z.

0... Only At '-all's Super Valu
0... JilL J6 tin Jan. 26, 1991
....., J ,., Cult•-

4/$)
Atr.wll'sS.,.Valu
,.,. Jill, 26, 1.. 1

(

S

B'ANQUET

ZESTA
CRACKERS

Settlement reached between
Pillsbury-Jeno's, workers
A settlement has been reached
In the labor disputE' between
members of Local 1059 of tl)e
United Food and Commercial
Workers Union and till' managE'·
ment · of Plllsbury.JI'no's in
Wellston.
.
The agreement produced a
new three-year contract grarit·
lng across-the·board pay increases for the 1,100 members
covered by the pact. The set lle·
ment aver.ts a threatened wal-·
kout · t,hat would have affected
.some 2,000 workers and contrac·
tors at lhe plan I.
The new contract givE's
workl'rs an lncrpasl' of $.30 an
hour over each of the next three
years.
· Roger VIncent, sltedlr~ct'or for
Plllsbury.Jeno's, Issued a state·

LB. BOX

99(
WHOLE

CHICKENS

I

69(18.

'DOMINO SUGAR
SLI.

lAG

Sl69

GeM Dilly At Pew••• Super Valu
0... Jan. 20 thru- 26, 1.. 1
llslllt I Plr CUlt-

HOT CO'COA ·MIX

COLUMBUS

• IO .ENV.

99(.

Gee41 o.1, At Pew••• Suptr Valu
Gee4l .len. 20 thnl ...... 26, 19il
Limit 1 Plr Cultefl\«

,I

-

Bob

Evans

Farms Inc., announced today plans

to rebuild its Gallipolis sausage
P.lanl. located on Texas Road, after
11 WBs deslroyeij by fire on Dec. 14,

1990.
The new facility will be a food·

processing plant, concentrating on
cooked products.
Since the lire, the plant's 32

LIVERS
5 LB. BUCKn

ment last Friday that calll'd thl'
pact "a good contract" for the
workers, the plant and for the
community.
.
"It was the right movl' at the
right tlml'," Vlncl'nt's statl'ment
said.
.·
Union ratification of&lt;the nl'w
contract came after all.day votIng on Friday . The w9rkl'rs had
ear ller voted to approve a
walkout after their old cont~act
expired on Tuesday, Jan. 15. · ·
.· Ratification was announced
after a n!'arly 2-1 voie In favor of ·
the company's offer. Work had
continued at the plant while
negotiations were under way,
and no production delays. were
encountered, according to com·
party officials.

provea a request nom the Emer- Health Week next week (beginning
gency Medical Services depanment January 28). Norma T~s, Nursto attend conferences and conven- ing Dtrector of the Metgs County
tionsfor 1991.
· . ·Health Department was on~ for
. In ·other action, the commis- the signing of the proclamation.
sioners granted pennission tD
The week, an annual event. has
Meigs County Sheriff James M. been established to promote health
Souls by to purchase.used cars from and awareness of lhe efforts of the
the Ohi.o Slate Highway Palrol Post local health dcpanmenL .
.
for use as sheriff's cruisers.
Meigs Cou!!ty Engmeer Phil
A sheriff's car, according tD lhe Robe~ and Highway Garage Su:
commissioners,
was
recently perintendcnt Ted ,warne~ were !&gt;n
deslroyed in an accident, and will hand 'lit yesterday ~ meeung tD disneed to be replaced.
cuss local road proJeCts.
. .
The commissioners will allow
Roberts reported that guardrail IS
Soulsby to use lhe office's $9 450 being inslalled across the county,
car allocation to pwchase lhe :.SOO having been installed to da~ on
cars
Commissioner
David County Road 25 (Pomeroy Pilce),
Koblentz reported that those used . County Road 28 (Bashan Road),
cars usually are purchased wit!~ Hiland. Road ll!'d Success Road.
85 000 to 100 000 miles on the The nul, according tD Warner, was
odOmeter, and c&amp;n often be used for purchased second hand. .
another 50 000 miles by the local
Also present at the meeung were
department
• .
Commissioners Richard Jones and
The commissioners signed a Manrung Roush.
proclamation declaring Public

Saudi fighter shoots
down two Iraqi je~s
~

:---..._.~ t'-~~ "-•

•

_.,.. ...,

,,.,

By United Press lnietnallonal
The Persian Gulf war entered
continue on Thursday.
Its second week Thursday with
That testimony was often emo- combat spreading to Ute air over
tional when. the Victim took · lhe the g\llf as a Saudi lighter pilot
stand yesterday and recounted her shot down two Iraqi planes
story. - that of Young allegedly !lPparentiy out to attack aiUed
transporting her from her ~d­ ships.
dlepon home and across state lines
While Baghdad Radio reported
iiiiO Mason County, where she was · a defiant Iraqi leader Saddam
repeatedly raped before being Hussein had Inspected his troops
Ietumed home the following day.
on thl' Kuwaiti war frontWednes·
Perhaps the most significant tes· day, allied participation In the
timony yesterday came from war effort Increased. Japanese
Trooper Howanl Brent Myers of Prime Minister Toshlkl Kaifu
the West Virginia Slate Police. announced plans to contribute an
Myers, who is slalioned at the State additional $9 billion to the U.S.Police's crime lab in South Charles- . led multinational "fol'Ce, an!(
ton, testified that Young co~l~ ~ French flghtl'r-bombers con·
the rapist, but that the VICtim s ducted their first raids Into Iraq.
boyfriend could not. That revelaIraq said Thursday aiUed
tion followed blood testing of the bombers and rockets struck
defendant .and the victim's Baghdad and other cities and
boyfriend, and comparing those ports around the country In 15
tests with the semen that was IJill(le overnight aerial assaults, and
a part of the rape kit submitted tD said aiUed jet fighters slammed
the slate police.
rockets Into two Iraq loll tankers.
Young was indicted last year on
Iraq also quoted a warcommu15 counJS relating to lhe case in nlque as saying 90 Iraqi troops
Masori County, and remains housed died during the first five days o(
in the Meigs County jail pending a the war. The allied forces have
verdict here. He was found indigent released no figures of Iraq!
at lhe commencement of lhe case, casualties. ·
and is represented by Meigs . The air battle started when two
County Public Defencler Charles H. Iraqi aircraft were detected by
Knight.
radar flying south from Iraq Into

...;,:

I

'

the gulf. T.hey were intercepted
by two Saudi fighters already In
the sky and ..A Saudi military
official said one of the two Saudi
F-15 pilots shot down boUt Iraqi
·planes, which were armed with
ship-killing Exocet missiles.
Initial reports Indicated U.s:
pilots WE're Involved In the
mission and British Secretary of .
Defense Tom King at first
Prroneously told reportersAmer·
lean planes intercepted the MIG23s. U.S. Central Command In
Riyadh said the confusion , re:
suited because both U.S. and
Saudi pianl's werl' operating In
the same area .. but tonflrined
that the Saudis did the shooting. ,
In Washington, President
Bush, who planned a morning
meeting with Republican congresslonalleaders, said aiUed air
power has dealt Iraq severe
punishment In a week of bombing
runs.
"There can be no doubt:
Operation Desert Storm Is work·
lng," Bush said Ina speech to the
Reserve Officers Association In
Washington Wednesday" night.
"There can be no pause now that
Saddam has forced the world Into
war. We will stay the course and
we will succeed all' the way. "
In Israel, Deputy' Secretary of

'

,

'"'1

'

State Lawrence Eagleburger
met Prime minister Yltzhak
Shamir Thursday for the fourth
time In five days In the U.S. effort
to keep Israel out of the war.
"Talks are being·held In a Vl'ry
friendly spirit with total trust on
both sidE's," said Avl Painer,
Shamlr's media adviser.
Iraq launched Scud missile
attacks on Saudi Arabia and
Israel Wednesday but U.S. Patrlot missiles Intercepted all the
incoming·Scuds, the U.S. Central
Command said · In Dhahran,
Saudi Arabia.
1sral'l has been hit by ·three
volleys of missile fire by Iraq, the
last successful at lack coming
Tuesday, leaving three people
dead and% Injured In Tel Aviv .
The Patriots were moved In to
protect Israel after the first two
attacks, and missed a Scud In the
Tuesday assault.
The United States has asked
for 1srapll restraint to protl'ct the
fragile U.S.·Arab coalition as.
sembled against Saddam and
keep Israel out of the war so as to
prevent an Arab-Israeli conflict.
In Cairo, Egyptian President
Hosnl Mubarak said Thu,rsday
IsraeL has the right 'to defend
Continued on page 10

..

.

Bob Evans Fanus to rebuild
sausage plant in Gallipolis

TV Dinne·rs .... ~:~!:!·.~ 9 9( CHICKEN
SWISS MISS

•

25 Cents

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Grant approved for
emergency planners

FLAVORITE ELBOW

Chicken Parts •••••••
.,. · DruRrKuEvmst· ··c· ks . ·
4·· 9(

1 Section. 1 0 Pages

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday; January 24. 1991

Copytighted 1881

12 OZ. CANS
12 PAK CTN.

MIXED FRYER

Mostly clear tonight. Low In
mid teens. Increasing cloudl·
ness Friday. High In mid 20s.

••

PIGS. FOR

298 SECOND ST.
POMERDY.
OH.
.
.
PRICES EFFECTIVE JAN. 20 THRU JAN. 26, 1991

BOSTON BUn PORK

Pick-3: 162
Pick-4: 54.77
Cards: Q-H;
IO.C;. 8.0; 7-S
Super Lotto
2-5-22-35-36-47
Kicker
. 4.84294

"

At that time, employees will be called back to work, based on
seniority.
. The Gallipolis plant produced·
smojccd sausage · products .and
Brown n' Serve products. Smce
December, 1990 the Galva, DI.,
plant added a !ICCOild shift lA) fulfill
orders for Brown n' Serve products,
· while lhe company's FL Worth,
Texas plant increased productim of
smoked sausaae.
. .
Bob EvBilll Farms owns sa

employees have been tempot .. ily
re-assigned to Galva, ru., BidweU
and Xenia, Ohio! prodoction plants
and to clean up and salvage at the ~e prod~~ plants, excl~­
site of the fire. TheY will continue ,ing the Gallipoli.l plant, and disw be employed until January 31. At !ribut.ea fresh port IIIUJIII&amp;Il.~ofts
that time 20 employeea will be laid m. 23 states and the DiBtrict
off until' the new f~K:ility is built, Columbia. Bob BvBilll Fanns &amp;!sci
which is expectcd·to be COIISirUCted owns and operateS 248 fuU,semce
approximaldy one year from now. family rest,aunmts.
·

•

.......
•

·-·. ..

~,

...
JOHN STAHL ELEVATOR - Tbe elevator at the Meigs
Cotmty Court1t0111e, lutaDed iD 1989, wla dedkated on Wednesday ·
as t1te Jolin Stahl Elmttor, In ltooor or tbe late JobD Stahl, a longtime coartbouse CUitOdlatL Here, MamtlnJ .Roush, CommlssiOa

Praldent, pretenla a plaque to haaJ at the eleVIItor entnnce to ·
Stalll'sllllter, Clara Gilkey, as elected oftiCials ud tamUy members
look on.

�•

Thursday, JllllUaly 24, 1991

•

Pomaav-Middlepol't. Ohio

•

CommentarY
Pomeroy, Ohio ·
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS
OF T8E MEIGS-MASON AREA
. ...,~

~~
.

.

. .-. . . . .

...,..~=·

.. .

..

ROBERT L, WINGETT

CHARLENE HOEFLICH

Publisher

General Muager
PAT WHITEHEAD

A88lstant Publllller/Controller

.

A MEMBER of The United Preoslnternatlonal, lnland Dally Press
and t he American Newspaper Publishers Association.
.

~ ssoclatton

: LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be leo s tllan 300
words tong. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with
name, address and telephone number. No unsigned letters wUI be publiShed. Letters should be In good taste, addrl!lslng Issues, not personall·
.

~

'

The Chicago Farm~rs:
unique to big cities

'WASHING1UN- ScoU Nelson
blows findwJd the character of
America's "fricuds" in the Pasian
Gulf. Five yean aao Nelson was
jailed and tonuredlit Saudi Arabia
for blowing tbe wbislle on dangerous conditions 81 a Saudi
bospi
_ lltal where .he worked. He went
to Saucll Arabia looking for top
wages ind instead found liimse1f on
the wrong side of the royal family.
NelsoJ!, an electtical engineel',
took a job with the Kin Faisal
Specialist Hospiral in
His problems betpm in March 1984
when be spoiled what he thought
was a fire hazard in the hospital's
oxygen and nilrOUS oxide lines. He
reported the hazard to his supm~n,
but was ignored.
Whistleblowers in the United
Stales know the mejlning of on-thejob harassment, but Nelson found
out that it has another meaning in
Saudi Arabia. Six months after he
first be~an complaining, Nelson

SaucJ~.

was caUed into the hospillll's
security office llld arrested for unspecified charges. He was Pill in
foot shackles, thrown on the ground
and beaten on hi~ back, chest and
,legs.
.
, ''They bi'Okl: my knees," Nelson
told us. "They beat my feet with
bamboo canes and fm:ed me to do
knee bends with a rod between my
•
legs."
It was not until four days later
that Nelson got a visit
Embassy officials. Nelson claims
he told them about the beatings, but
· the response was that if the emb$sy filed a complaint "it could
make maaers worse."
· Nelson was moved to AI Sijan
Prison to await trial, for who knows
wh81. He described the ttea~ment
there as "sadistic." He was kept in a
cell made for SO men, but which
held llO. He slept on the floor in
the bathroom while rats crawled
. over him. The lights were left on all

rrom ·u.s.

pas ted Providence 92·19, P urdue
a dva ntage.
.
downed No. 18 Mi chigan State
At Providence, R.I. , Jason
Balanced scoring and clutch
Matthews scored 25 points for ,.
free-throw shooting down the , 62·51, NQ. 21 VIrginia bea t V!rgl·
nla Tech 86-61 a nd No. 23 New
stretch Wednesda y night e arned
,.
Pittsburgh, which wlths tood Eric
Orleans de feated Central Florida
•
North Carolina State a s hare of
Murdock's Big Eas t·rec.o rd 48
•
first place In the Atlantic Coast . 72· 64.
point s. The Friars guard hit 16 of.
At F ayetteville. Ark.. Todd '31 field-goal attempts, Including
'\
ConferencE".
Day
$COred
22
points
a
nd
Lee
~dney Monroe scored 35
I
· 7 of 12 3-po!nters, and 9 of 12 free
l
Maybe rry a dded a school -record
points to lead five Wolfpack
throws .
I
I
13 assis ts to send Ar ka nsas to its
players In double _figures, and
At Wes! Lafayette, Ind .. fres h·
I
16th
stra
ight
victory.
The
Razor·
N.C. State sank 63 percent of
man Li ne Darner scored 16
•
backs are 19·1 overall a nd 7·0 in
their fie ld-goal attempts to reg)s·
point s and P urdue held Mich igan .
the Southwes t Conference.
_ter a 95-89 triumph o ver. sixth·
State- to its lowest point tota l of
At Winston-S alem . N.C .. Ki ng
ranked Duke.
•
the season. The Boilermakers'
Rice tied his career- high wi th 22
'('
The victory Improved the Wolf·
pa ti ent .offense and stingy depoints and Rick Fox scored all of fense limited Big Ten scoring
pack to 10·4 overall and 3-lln the
••
his 20 points in the ·second half to ' leader Steve Sm ith, who aver·
ACC, good fo r a firs t-place tie
I
I
lead the Ta r Heels. The winners ages 28 pqlnts per game, to a
with . No. 8. North Carolina , a
•
mana ged · a 47·30 rebounding
winner at Wake Fo res t. T-he Blul'
season-low 20.
Devils dropped to 15·4 and 4·2.
N.C. State made 35 of their 55
attempts from the field , !nclud·
•
ing 17 of 25 in the second ha lf. And
)
SPRIN6
VALLEY
CINEMA
I
BARGAIN MATINEES SATUR DAY &amp; SUN DA Y
, In the· final 4: 01, the Wo!fpack
I
446 · 4~24
. . . ~ ...
BARGA INNIGHT TUESOAV
spread the offense and c anned 11
•'
of 12 free throws.
LAST DAY I
.
Bryant Fegglns added 17.
_ _ _ _ __;J_AME.;_S CAAN l KATliY BATES 1n ':.:.Ml:.;,S.:;ER;_Y_
' - -----'
'•
L
7:00 &amp; 9: 10 RATED (R)
. Kevin Thompson had 16; Tom
_...•
Gugliotta 14 and Chris Corch!anl
ll for N.C. State. .
_
Duke wa s led by Christian
Laettne r with 23 points. Including
sev.·n In the flna l1: 50 as the Blue
~ward
· Devils got dose. Bobby Hurley
£1550RHAND5
jOO\\Hlrl' lt.'M\1 t!Dll i!!tii•
contributed 18 pOints for Duke
STARTS TOI«&lt;RROW I
while Bill McCaffrey had 17.
FRIDAY 7
Laet tner drilled a three·
SAT.l :OO,J :lD
SUN.l ,OO,J:lO .
pointer from the corner with 37.9
)
seconds le lt to pull the Blue
1 "'
Devils to within 91·87. But two
free throws by Monroe and a pair
by, Corchlan ! In the final 30
seconds sealed the vict or v.
.
Elsewhere, No . 2 · Arkansas
routed· Texas A&amp;M 113·88. No. 8
North Ca rolina topped Wake
Forest 91-81; No. 16 Pittsburgh
By Untied Press lnlernatlonal

-.

Jack Anderson

night Mail was destroyed and food
was SCIRC.Sen. Edward Kcnncdr, .
D-Mass., found out about Nelson s
case and petitioned King Fahd to of spying. Smrkovsti's crime ~as
release him. Nelson was freed 39 ~owing someone wh.o was ~!"g
days after his arrest The Saudis of- investigated by Saudi authoriues.
fered him his job back, but all he They thought Smrlmvski knew
wanied was to get out of the something he wasn't telling, so
they jailed hiin.for 454 days.
country.
.
Back home in Raleigh, N.C.,
Smrltovski said he was bealen
Nelson lias undergone swgery for and tortured. ''The worst part came
his ·knees. He says he will be dis- when they mutiliited my toenails, "
abled for the reSt of his life.
he said. "I passed OUL"
The State Department won't talk
''The worst pan of my experience was dealing with our own about specific cases of human
government," Nelson told our as- rights abuses in Saudi Arabia, but
would only reD us that it bas protessociate Me6nda Maas. 'The State
Department ignores the jailing and
ted those abuses.
·
The Yemenis said they were tortaturing of Americans in Saudi
tured by electric shock, deprived of
Ambia because of the country's insleep
beaten on the soles of their
and
valuable
export,
crude
fluence
..
.
feet
submerged in water. The
oil .
Saudi . government,
when
Jim Smrkovski .of Iowa has also
tasted Saudi hospitality. ~e was questioned by Amnesty, said it
imprisoned and tortured in Saudi · treats its "brothers" from Yemen
with "affection and dignity."
Ambia in 1985 after being accused

..

aoo

By DON PETERSON

I

.
Unlled Press llllernatlonal
q uCAGO - Finding someone ln. tlie heart of Chicago who Is
Interested In agriculture might seem as tough as finding the
proverbial needle In a haystack.
·
Not so.
An organization called The Chicago Farmers has been In existence
. for nearly 60 years. Some have said It may he \he best kept secret In
the city.
·
F'..ourided In 1933, the organization Is unique to a large city like
Chicago,
":I'he London (England) Farmers Club has a similar purpose as
ours," Chicago Farmers President John Cottingham said. "We' ve
never had reciprocal meeting arrangements with Londo~ut we are
planning a trip to England next summer to attend the Royal
Ag~!culture .Show and we hope to arrange a Joint meeting with the
London kroup."
· GDttingham is president of Agricultural Investment Associates
Inc:. which Is engaged primarily In farm real estate Investment and
management.
The Chicago Farmers, a non-political, non-profit organization, Is
dedicated to education on agrlc.ultural!ssues.
- ''.It is set up to serve men and women who are actively Involved or
hav.e an Interest In farming," Cottingham said. "That may be
so"'.!eone who owns a 'farm or Is active In the bush)ess of farming or
someagrtbuslness t:)'PE' entity."
.
The membership Includes a bout 400 men and women of all ages.
Some of the women are landowners, some are In an agribusiness and
others have spouses who are In those categories. · .
The .Initial goal was to bring together landowners who llved In the
Chicago area. At one time, membership was limited to those who
owned a farm. but that rule was relaxed about 30 years ago so
agribusiness owners could participate.
The Chicago Farmers hold regular meetings throughout the year.
Between Labor Day and Memorial Day meetings are held twice a
month , except for December. The annual picnic comes after Labor
Day and a dinner Is held In the summer months.
" We have a variety of speakers during the year." Cottingham said.
" Last fall, Agriculture Secretary Clayton Yeutter spoke to the group,
and 12 members of the British Parliament who were on a fact-finding
tou~ attended a meeting."
A. recent seminar dealt with the topic of how to buy a farm and who
can help. It was In preparation for the Farmland Investor Fair
scheduled for March which Is one of the larger events of the year.
. "This will be the sixth year for the fair," Cottingham said. "Those
who attend range from,larmland realtors to farmers themselves and
other agribusiness people who want to meet Chlca~ residents who
ml~ht be Interested In buying a farm ."
Another facet of the organization Is distributing money from a
scholarship fund to Midwest land grant colleges like Illinois, Iowa ·
State, Purdue, Michigan State and Wisconsin. Some money also Is
donated to the Unco!n Park Farm In The Zoo and the Chicago
Agricultural School.
There Is no dollar limit to the scholarships for ag students at the
land grarit schools which are awarded by school officials.
" We're thlnking·about changing the system and putting In some
basts for receiving a scholarship, whether It's because of need or
academic or activities," Cottingham said.
The scholarships are announced In June.

I

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(V8PalfHtll
A. Dlvlll011 of Multlm... a. lac.
Published every afternoon , Monday

through Friday, 111 Courl St., Po·

GRABS REBOUND - Du!&lt;e's Greg Koubek
( rlgbl) hauls down a rebound In front of North
Carolina Stale's Tom Gu~:ll,.ta (24) In the · first

By JEFF SHAIN

·"Excuse me ... but I'm a new congressman, and 1believe you are in my
assigned parking space."
.
. ·
.

Nuclear
tests left ocean of. woes.. Robert Walters
.
.

The dreaded mushroom·
shaped cloud rose 25 miles Into
the sky and spread until It was 70
miles wide. A radioactive storm
produced ash and powder that
fell on _Rongelap's people and
covered the ground to a depth of
two Inches.
. Even though radiation levels
remained_dangerously high, the
Rongelap residents were re. turned to their homes three years
later. "The habitation of these
people on the Island wiU afford
most valuable radiation data on
human beings," said a secret ·
AEC report.
Now, the tribunal here In
Majuro · Is processing claims
from residents of Rongelap and
other atolls suffering from leuke·
nita , lymphomas, multiple myeloma , hyperthyroidism and
cancer of the thyroid , breasi.
pharynx. esophagus, stomach,
ovaries, colon, pancreas. small
Intestine, bile ducts, gall bladder
and brain .

..........

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half of Wednesday night's ACC game In Raleigh,
N.C., which the host WoUpack won 95·89. ~tJPI)

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Ph. 992·2156. S.·
cond class ptWtag:e paid at Pomeroy,
Ohio.
·

Member: United Preas Internaf(onal,
I~la~d Daily Prt"'s AuoclltlQ.n and Ote
Ohio Newspaper Aaoctatlon. National
Adv.erttalna Representative, Branham
New-spaper Sah~e. 733 Third Avenue,

Nets hand Bulls 99-95 loss

.

"You are to avoid stress. That means no more
watching WORLD, NATIONAL or LOCAL
news. "

meroy. Ohio, by lhe Ohio Valley Pub- .
ltshtng Company/MulllmMia, tnr ..

By holding Jordan to 35 points,

World

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The Daily Sentinel

MAJURO, Marshall Islands ment to make a serious effort to
!Ish caught In radioactive
(NEA) - In the middle of this protect the health and safety of
waters.
community's modest central those weapons test victims. In·
At a 1956 briefing, an official of
business district are the offices or deed, there Is considerable evl·
the U.S. Atomic Energy Commis·
an organization unlike any other dence that. many of them have
slon noted that the Marshall
In the world. The sign on the front been used , without their know!·
Islands are "by far one of the
door
says:
"Nuclear
Claims
edge
or
permission,
as
human
most
contaminated areas of the
· A thought for the day: When told In the House of Commons that his
Tribunal."
guinea
pigs
by
scientists
and
world,
" then suggested that the
fly was open, the aging Winston Churchill replied, "The dead bird
The
three-member
tribunal
physicians
employed
by
the
Indigenous
people were prefera·
does not leave the nest."
has a mandate to dlstrl~)lte federal government to study the
ble as t~st subjects to the mice
$45.75 million to the thousands of effects of radiation exposure.'
usually used In laboratory ex per·
residents of the Marshall Islands , A 1977 study of Bikini con·
lments for cancer:
who contracted cancer or otber ductedbytheU.S.Departmentof
"While It Is true tha t these
· devastating afflictions following .Energy concluded that radiation . people do not live, I would say,
..
exposure to atmospheric nuclear levels exceeded federal guide·
the way Westerners do , civilized
tests conduct~ .by the United · lines decades after the nuclear
people, It Is nevertheless true
States. (The money was contrfb:
tests were concluded, bu t the ·that they are more like us than
department was unwilling to
mice."
uted by the United States.)
But that sum Is not likely to
evacuate the atoll because It Is
That policy has produced
"possibly the best avallabie
dreadful outcomes . Because of
satisfy Marshallese victims who
have filed clvli suits. seeking
source of data for evaluating tbe r ad I o act I v 1 t y • s 1 n t e rr
.
approximately S7 billion In com·
transfer of plutonium acmss the generational · ·ge netic effects,
gut wall after helng Incorporated some women In the Marshalls
pensatlon for death and Illness
Into biological systems."
still give birth to " Jellyfish
suffered as a result of the 66
nuclear weapons detonations
In other words. DOE officials babies" - grotesque. shapeless,
above Bikini and Enlwetok Atolls
wanted to examine the Marshal· spineless collections of fluid and
lese after they consumed. crops unformed organs wrapped in
between 1946 and 1958.
'"' 1"1
Moreover, the United States
grown In radio-active soli and skin that are lifeless when they
has never fulfllled Its commit·
'
emerge from the womb.

s·erry'~

•

N.C. State beats Duke 95-89

Page-'2- The Daily Sentinel
· Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Thursday. January 24, 1991

The Daily Sentinel · American learns justice the hard way
111 Court Street

The Daily Sentinai'-Page- 3

Lujan should have· to walk the plank
Manuel Lujan Jr. Should be
sacked.
Here Is a member of the
president's cabinet - not some
bars tool philosopher, mind you,
but .a man at the seat of national
pow~r - who · stoops to Japan·
bashing, proclaiming he's under
the "Impression" tllat the Japa·
nese are "buying up the whole
United States."
·
If the Interior secretary really
Is under such a shamefully
shallow Impression, he should
have taken a moment to check It
out before going public with 11. He
might have dialed up fellow
cabinet member Robert Mosbacher, for example, and asked
the Commerce secretary 11 he
could shed any light on . the
matter.
Mosbacber's department' pro·
duces an annual Survey of
Current Business, which In Its

most recent edition pegged Japa·
nese Investment .In the United
States at $70 billion. That com·
pared with British holdings of
$119 billion, out of total for eign
Investment of $401 billion.
Meanwhile, the United States
had Invested about $373 billion
abroad - Including $67 billion In
Canada alone, with Its mere 25
million people. Talk about buy·
log up the place! 1
It's true, of course, that Japa·
nese. tnvestment has mounted at
a galloping rate - more than
trebling since 1985. But the
Japanese aren't close to •'buying
up the whole Unlted.States," any
more than this country has
snatched the net worth of
Canada.
The Immediate cause of Lu·
jan·~ outburst was, of course, the
Japanese takeover of a company
that has operated concessions In

·

Yosemite National Park for over
half a centu..Y. Lujan accused
Matsushita Electric Industrial
Co. (which under 'pressure has
now agreed to sell the .conses·
s!ons) of seizing monopoly con·
trol of a national shrine. "The
whole question Is foreign o\YIIer·
ship of a part of our heritage," .
Lujan opined.
The Interior secretary's latest
gaucherie should be his last. A
man of little professional or
Intellectual distinction, he has
repeatedly betrayed an appal·
ling Ignorance of his depart·
ment's activities . Indeed, he
even admitted this Innocence In
tHe early months after his
appointment. Bl!t now Luj a n has
gone too far. He has Joined the
ranks o! the bigoted Japanbashers whose tirades threaten
to trash the system of free trade
that has generated so much

Vincent Carroll

worldwide prosperity during the .
postwar era.
Many Americans share Lu·
ja n's fears, of course, but that
hardly exonerates him. The
benefits of free trade and Invest·
ment - like the benefits of
. capitalist competition - ate not •
always grasped at first glance,
and It Is easy to conclude that
Japan's every advance comes at
our expense.
It Is unforgivable, though, that
a cabinet member should be
equally prone to xenophobic
myths. Lujan had disgraced his
office with his anti.Japanese
outbursts, reinforcing a danger·
ous current In contemporary
thought. Like previous cabinet
officers In over their heads from Earl Butz to James Watthe should be forced to walk the.
plan~ .

.•

UPI Sports Wrller
Just when the New Jersey Nets
were ellpected to sink back Into
the depth s of the NBA Atlantic
Division, they are making some
of the league's elite pa y fo r their
overconfidence.
Regg!e.-Thetis scored 25 points
Wednesday night , Including
el!!hl tree throws In the final 8~,
seconds, to lead the Nets to their
third victory in their last four
games with a 99-95 triumph over
the Cl\lcago Bulls.
During their recent stretch. the
Ne ts have recorded vlcl ories
over division leaders Boston and
Chicago - Including a 111-106
triumph at Boston Garden- and
a road win Tuesday night at
Charlotte.
" It's a good growth lesson tor
these guys. " Nets head .c oach Bill
Fitch ~id. ' 'Any experience you
can get like that - where you do
something enough that you ex·
peel to do It ever y time - can
only help."
.Even more Impressive was
that the Nets needed only e ight ·
players to beat the team with the
fourlh·best record In the league.
Ne w j ersey dressed only nine
players. a s bo th Sam Bowie and
Roy Hinson were injured a nd
Greg Anderson wa s unavailable
after being traded earlier in the
day. ·
" When you 're on the road. you
can't say , ' We're supposed to win
this g&lt;tme ,"' . said Chicago's
Michael Jordan, who scoted 35
points. ' 'It's not that way . It's
ha rd ."
.
Fitch sa id: " We played sma rt .
against one of the e l!te teams of
the lea gue. We pla yed with a
little more characte r and under·
s tand ing at the end of the game." .
The Net s broke away from a·
90-90 tie doWn the stretch by
keeping .Jordan-f rom get tlng off a .
clean shot. The NBA's leading
scorer found him self double·
teamed nearly every time he
came close to the lane, a nd hit
only nIne of 23 s hots from the
floor.
"! ca n't complain 'a bout the
shots ," Jordan said. ' 'Th'e shots
just were not dropping. ·
''They kept coming at us . Even
when we got up four or five
points, they kept coming at tis.
Especially on the road, we have
to keep up our inte nslty."W!th the score tied 90-90 and 97
seconds. left , Theus stripped
Jordan of the ball a nd was fouled
by Jordan as he drove to the
bi'i skPt.
" On that par ti cular· pass, I
, _knew Michael was the guy they
were going to come to," Theus
said. "I bad to get In the right
position defensively and was
lucky to get my hand on the pass.
Nine ty-nine percenf of the time In
that situa tton, they 'll go to him. "
Theus hit both free throws
after the foul , then connected
two more after being fouled by
Scottie Pippen on New Jersey's
nex t possession.

on

After two Jordan free throws
pulled the Bulis Within 94-92,
Theus hit a free throw and
Chicago's John Paxson missed a
three,pointer. Chris Morris was
fouled and hit one free. throw,
then Jordan m issed a layup as
the Nets Iced the victory . .
. Derrick Coleman and Mookle
Blaylock added 21 points each for
New Jersey , which had lost 11
straight games prior to their

New York, New York 10017.

Send addreu changes
to Tile Dally sentinel. lll Court St.,
Pomeroy, Olllo 45769.
~:

current four-game stretch.,
Pippen finished with 18 points
. for the Bulls , while Horace Grant
had 13.
·
In other NBA action Wednes·
day night , India na edged Phlla··
delphia 110·109, Wa s hington
clubbed Atlanta 104-99, Bos ton
hammered Detroit lli -94, Cleve·
land beat Dalla s 99-85, New ¥ ork
upended Utah 109-94 and ·sacra·
me ~,to topped Milwaukee 95-91 .

ment of memori a l Insignias,
patches and decorations, includ·
ing the American Flag to specific
area s on uni forms," OSHA said
in a statement.
"For examp le. the Na tional
F ederation basketb a ll rules a t·
IQ.W that the fla g be put on the
gam e short&lt;; or on the warm-ups,
but may not be put on the
jersey .· • the sta tement sa id.
"It ·is not a qups tion of
pa tr!otls·m or lack of support fo'r
our nation's in vo lvement in De·
sert Stor.m.'.' OSHA said. " Sup·
port can ce rta inly be shown with
the fla g worn as indi ca ted. or by
man y other kinds of prega me or
postgam e ceremonies." ·

'·

FlexSteel, La·Z·Boy and Other Brand Name
Recliners...................................................5149 &amp; up

.~
.,, II

.,!(• ·

··,y

Gibson 25 YearTub Warranty
.
Washer and Dryer Pair..;.~.'.~!~~.~.~.~~:..~.~ ..s649 ··:,..·''
..."
I

8UII8CBIPTION BATES

By Carrier or Motar llolde
·o.e Week .. .......... .. .... ...... .. ..... ,... SI.40
Onp Month ......... .... .. .... ......... .. ... $6.10

One Year ............. ............ .. ...... 172.M
SINGLE COPY '
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P)IICJI
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Dally. ,......r;,,.,, ,,,,,, ................ . ~ :S, Cf'!111

Su~crtbE&gt;rs not desiring to pay t~caJ..
~;1ft'

may remit In advance dlrK"t to -

The Dally Sentinel on a 3, 6 or 12 month
basts. Credit wut b(l glveri carrier ea.,ch
....k .

Schools asked to promote patriotism
COLUMBUS, Ohio iUPI) The Ohio High School Athletic
Association s&lt;tid Thursday It
encourages member schools · to
promote patrlotlsni in ~upport of
the war In the Middl e E a st but
warned' schools to be careful
where they put a ny insignia s on
team uniforms.
OSHA said many ath1etic ad·
mlnlstrators have indicated thei r
desire to display an Am erican
flag on their school tpa ms'
uniforms. The association say s it
encourages .such displays of
patriotic support .
"However: National F e dera·
Uon playing rules restrict placp-·

,_, .
Large Selection Of
..
Curios and Gun Cabinets ................S165 &amp; up ·'•'. .

50°/o Off
"
Selected Group Of
Living Room Suites and
Living Room Table Sets!
. ....
·Mason ·F urniture Co. .' ·
' '·'

, ;-_

·I!, ~

No subacrlpUons by mall permitted In
areas where home carrier service Ia
avaU,bie.
Maii811Merlptloa11

Jaalde Melp County
13 Weeks ..................... ............ 119.24
26 Weekll .. ........ ................ : ...... . l37.96
52 Weeks ................. ....... ..... ,. .. . $71.36
' Oulalde Melp County
13 Weeks ....... .... ....................... $20.80
26 Weeks ........ .. ........... ............ . $4!1.30
52 Weeks ...................... ,........... $75.10 ·

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2nd Street

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(304) 773-5592

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"A lOT~ CIWIID SN:E ltiJSE DAYS."
I·Vt' heen lucky enough 10 ha~r

~iVf

won .. (ew rntxha11 gamc:t over rhc .
years. ~I her i1 was in high !OChooL
Ar Annapolis. Or (o r tflt. Dalla"
Cow boy&gt;.
But I d1dn't do ir ;tlone. lt rook

with • fntnd , No rouprotll

reQWI'fd Nol va!KI W11h ( oi M

coup."" or ntlm.

t t~ m work .

'ot''"

Tha('s why I listened when my
:tem in a
pltl)'. Or a n.'Cei~r told me he could bear his mnn deep.
just like I Hsten today w~n myCentral Trust b;mkc r tdl ~
me I siK~ Id h"ndlt my rinanc~ dtrrerrnrly.

Th:u\ nOf po!l~ibk-. of cour"". Bur you t"IIJ: work w 1t h
b.m~crio who ~pend all thti r t im~ doi n)!. wh ;tt'' hht (tl r )'Uu .
Like tht people ;U Centml Tr u~ t . People COO}Iilltted rn
gi ving you product., and ..ervices with di!ltinct adv,lntilgc,,
They can make a re;tl fiM nctc~l dif(en·net· in your life.
A,nd give yoo the winni ng edge.

•

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Mn IT'S 'Ill All AClm ~'t!UI IM«::AA.lf£.

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If you 'rt find ing it more difficu lt tucOpc: with llll the
prc !&gt;it U~.~

and options in your fm:md :rl
lift , maybe you lust haven't fou nd tht•
nght b:mk.
Hut that\ easy to ~l ve.
just calf or !.JOP by any Centrnl ·Tru~t

'QJ IMlllmEN 1l1lf EXP£1!1S

Evt'ryching was a kx simplrr when I was &amp;.rowing up in
Ohto. I'ob.,urally, all of that h,as ch,a ngtd. Especia ll y wht n
it come~ to ban~ing.
•
Today, the! only way to keep up with all the chomgin g
- fln~t nd&lt;~l optiom is to brcOI'llC ;&amp; full-time- ba nker.,

••'

of(i&lt;:t!.

h WQf1't ta ke you long to fi nd oot what I' \It' known
for a long time. Wlw:n yo..•'rr tc:tmed up wit h Crntr.t l
Tru\1 , you jo\t c:1n'r bt- ~:u .

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303 Upper River Road

813 W. Main Street

Pomeroy.OH
Gallipolis, OH ·
•
Phone
(614)992·6426
Phone (61 4) 446·6483

....

\kmhu ll&gt;l4

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CENTRAL TRl.ST

·-

APNCBANK

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Page 4-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Mid_dleport, Ohio

. Thursday. Jariuarv 24, 1991

, ~.January

North Gallia hopes to bump Hannan Trace from !i~~~~~!·m·•·
By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
OVP staff Writer

pack In more first-quarter points-than the 11 they had against Eastern
. last time, and after tha~. step up the offense (last time, Valley scored
'
171n the second, 16 In the third and 15 In prime time) .
Last year Hannan Trace suffered through a regular-season series
Oak HID VII. Kner Creek - Oak Hill has the edge In size In the low
sweep by North.Gallia, but the Wildcats got revenge by beating the
post, with Chris Simpson (6·6•.soph.) taking on either Kyger Creek
Pirates In the Rio Grande sectional. This year money time against
center/forward IJamle Bush (6·3, sr.) or forward / center Bryan Hall
· Ro n Twyman's Pirates will come a bit earlier for Mike Jenkins'
(5-10, soph.) In what can be a seriOus mismatch If the guards Wildcats, as both teams will meet on the Pirates ' home·court Friday
sophomore point man Benjl Lewis and junior off-guard Brad Davisnight.
. ·
can get him the ball.
If the Wildcats win, they will keep pace with a Southern team that Is
Though Simpson Is averaging 14 points per game and Is growing
the odds-on favorite to beat Southwestern (for reasoi)S to be explained
Into his role as a force on the boards, he doesn't have to carry the
later), while North Galli&lt;! will be eliminated from taking any piece of , offense by himself, because Irrepressible junior forward Bill Potter
the SVAC championship. It the Pirates win, Hannan Trace could for
averag~ 16.6 points per game and hasn't been held .to single digits
· all practical purposes be bumped from title contention, as Southern
since Hannan Trace limited him to eight points In the Oaks' 8045 ~oss ·
.has on Its r¢malnlng schedule only one team-, Symmes Valley !8·5,
In the .season opener.
.
.
·
,
6·4) . whom the Tornadoes will host on Feb. 8- with a winning record.
The sap is flowing OIIC!" again In the Oaks' offense, as the Hill s 77,66 .
The Wildcats have won four of their last.flve, with thelr79-60 home overtime victory at home over McDermott Nonhwest Tuesday night
loss to archrlval Southern - Trace hasn't beaten Southern at home - the Oaks' second win In their last three games - should serve to
since the 1987-88 season, when 'the Wildcats won 85·77 behind Chris
drive the south Jackson cagers to victory over a Bobcat squad that
Petro, Scott Rankin, Rick Swain, et, al. going against Dave
has lost Its last four games.
: Amburgey , Jeff Caldwell, Kenny Turley. et. al. - being the only
Southwes$ern va. Southern - As the host squad, Southern should
; setbacll in that span. Going against a Pirate crew that has dropped
have little trouble doing no worse than keeping up with Hannan Trace
• four of Its last six co ntes ts, Trace would .seem to be the express train · against a team that has lost Its last three games and Is In the grlp.of.a
: In this encounter.
11J.game losing.streak In the conference.
: · However, Trace will have to work at and continue to be vigilant In
The Tornadoes, who lost 81-77 to Ravenswood to bring their record
keeping North's fast-break qffen~ from getting any steam, and when
against non-league quintets to 2·3, have cut down on their turnovers In
the Wildcats get the baU, hit the baselines quickly and often against
their last three games (from 21 vs. Hannan Trace to16vs. Eastern to
• the Bucs' defen se, which has shown chronic problems with guarding. eight vs. Ravenswood). which means that Southwestern will have to
: the baselines.
·
make Its own breaks and be offensively produ~Uve and defensively
: Hannan Trace has a relatively prolific offense, as Its 73.G
tight throughout the game, especially In the second quarter.
: points-per-game aver;lge In all games (14) and Its 78.8 points-per·
That. was the Infamous quarter (at least tor Southwestern) that
• game a verage in the league !10 games) demonstrate, and the
spelled disaster for the Highlanders, as the boys from the bend
· stingiest defense In the SVAC, as Its 55.1 surrendered points-per·
outscored Bob Dunlap's crew 25-121n that frame In their last meeting
game average In ali games and 53.3 surrendered points-per-game
on Dec. 7 a date that saw Southern walk
. away with a 73-56 'road
average In the conference show.
.
victory. .
Overall, North Gailla Is scoring and giving up81.6 points per game,
Leading the Highlanders' offense are senior forwards Chris
: but In the league the Bucs are producing 8,3 points per game and
Metzger
(15 pts.!game) and Richard Haney (13.9 pts.lgam.e) , while
·
.
: allowing 73.6.
heading the Racine Lakers' net-burning parade (the Tornadoes
: Matchups- In the backcourt, Trace's J .J. Bevan (10.9 pts./game)
average 74.1 points per game and surrender about 63.3 points per
• should draw North's Chris Tackett (conference-high 25.9 pts.lgame),
game) are senior guards Andy Baer (21.4 pts.fgame) and Todd
and Wildcat off-guard Jason Black (11.7 pts./gameJ will be shadowed
Grindstaff (11.2 pts.lgame).
. by the Pirates' Brl~n Stout (17.6 pts.lgame) . On· the wings, HT:s · Deadlock to end Friday - . Alter opening the season with
Riehle Cornell !W.S ptsJ game) and North's Brandon Twyman (4
back-to-back losses to Oak Hill 01nd !,louthern, Don Saunders' H.annan
; pts./game) shOuld match up, arid Trace.' s Todd Booth,e · !11.5
Trace reserve squad has won Its last nine league games to get Into and
• (its .Igame) and the Bucs' Darln Smith (8.2 pts./ga.me) will tangle ln11
stay
a flrst·place tle.with Gregg Deel's No~th Gallla reserves, who
; mini-battle of the team's strongest players, while Wildcat Craig. · h·aveln.won
their last six Inside the conference. Unlike the varsity
: Rankin '(13.7 pts./game) and Pirate Shane Smith (11.9 pts./game)
co-leaders,
who have a shot at sharing the league·title, one or. these
will bat tie In the post.
·
teams, both of whO!fl have 8·2 conference marks, will take sole
Symmes Valley vs. Eastern- The winner will stay In the hunt for a
piece of the IItle for one more ·round of games, while the loser will
, forget about the crown for yet- another year ..
~ This game seems to be a virtual toss-up, as the Vikings and the
• Eagles are equally strong In and out of the paint. Let's see why .
: For Symmes Valley, Mr. Inside Is Carl Robinson, a 6-3, 230-pound
• senior 'center who averages 15.3 points per game and averages
somewhere close to double digits on the boards, while the outside
• threats are Chad Renfroe, a 6·3 senior forward whO slgljs In at 12.6
, points per contest, and Andy Lester, a 6-1 senior guard/forward who
• averages 12.4 points per game. These ~re the three that head coach
: Terry Saunders Is counting on to keep the offensive fires burning for
• the mid-Lawrence scarlet and gray. ·
· For Eastern, point guard Tim Bissell has seen his offensive
production slow down just a bit, as it tOQk him seven games to reach
the 200-polnt p)llteau (he now has 235points in13games) after scoring
his flrstlOO In the Eagles' first five-games. But the 5·9 junior has been
no less effective In making his contrlbui:lons count, as he has been
• held to fewer than 10 points just once- an eight-point effort In the
: Eagles' 63-59 road win over Symmes Valley In mid-December. ·
· But Bissell, who averages 17.9 points per contest, Isn't the whole
· story, as the points-per-game averages of junior off-guard Jeff Durst .
(17 .3) and senior center Randy Moore (15.3) show. Like Bissell, Durst
has been held to single digits just once (nine points In the Eagles'
home game against Southern In early December) and Moore has been
shackled just twice (s!x at hm;ne VS. J{yger Creek, four on the road VS.
• Southwestern).
.
·. If the Eagles are to sweep the VIkings, they must not lapse In the
: third quarter, as they did when they , scored niJ)e points against
: Symmes' In that frame 111 their las( meeting after posting an.
• eight-point lead at ·halftime. If the Norsemen are to win, they must

possession of first place when t ey
,
ev~~it Wickline's Southern squad 9·6 overall and 7-31n the league. Is
behind th . G 111 froni-runners and Tim Sites' Oak Hill
one game
e a a .
:
.
team Is two games behind at 6-4.

•

(Overall)
TEAM
W L
; Hannan Trace ...11 3
'Southern ............ ll 4
;Eastern ............. 8 5
.Symmes Valley . 8 6
North Gal!la .... .. 6 8
Oak Hill .. ... ...... 5 10
·Kyger Creek ..... 2 12
Southwestern ..... 1 11

PF PA
1031 772
1112 950
878 919
848 845
1143 1143
. 990 1078
835 1041
683 875

.

(Conference)
Hannan Trace ..... 9 1 788 533
Southern ... .. ......... 9 1 783 629 ·
Eastern .... .. ......... 6 4 702 727
Symmes Valley ... 6 4 590· 586
·North Gall Ia ........ 6 4 830 736
Oak Hill ... ........... 3 7 625 726 ·
r. Kyeer Creek...... .. 1 9 583 762
:Southwfttern ....... 0 10 535 737
TOTALS ..., ... ..... &lt;Ill 40 5436 5436

(Reserves)
(SVAC only)
TEAM
W L PF PA
No~th Gallla ........ ·8 2 597 427
Hannan Trace ..... 8 2 570 431
Southern. ,...... ,..... 7 3 558 445 .
Oak Hill ........ .. .... 6 4 540 511
Eastern .... ........... 5 5 461 520
Symmes Valley ... 3 7 457 553
Southwestern ....... 2 8 360 503
Kyger Creek ... .. ... ·1 9 393 546
TOTALS ............ 36 36 3522 3522

.D of A meeting .held· recently.

Several 111111a1 were dilcus8ed congress: to pror.ect federal jobs eligibility of United States CIUZCII•
"· 'Several meetings were an- read. the minutes of the frieDdsrup on Aug. 19 at Mlrietta. Mary K.
I10WICed at the rcc;cnt meeting of meeting.
Holter was appoinred chairman of at lh6 recent meetiq rl the. JeserVed for velmns; support for ship for . those Filipino veterans
l..eilioa Lewfl ~ die Veunns AdminiSU'IIion Home who served during World War U.
the District 13, Daughters of
111ere were 29 members pre~e~~t the hospilllity table at the stare ses· AmericiD
Awlil*y'No.l63 held. the bome Loan Prognm; and change the flag She mentioned a resolulion of NaAmerica, held at the Chestet Lodge and the following reporu of the sion.
of Dtl'otby Clley it Oalllp&gt;~ with coc1e to obla've ~o.w. and M.I.A. tional Convention held in 1990 urHall.
·
sick were given. Faye Hoaelton,
Mn. Harden appoinled these MlrJIIret Bowlei .. '1i"'.
' day. She said that the National giilg qovemmenl to. contin~ to
Meetings IIIUIOUilced by Esther P.S.C., Belle Prairie Council. members 10 work oo the foUowinl
Dlimer
a Poci1onJII was beld Awareness Assembly beld in give pnonty 10 Amenll8Rs still ac- ·
HaniCn, district deputy, include Belpre, iB home from the Clevellnd tables at the Sprinj _RaUy on ADril Jncedina die Dll ling with Lone1la w.shington, D.C. is villi to the
counred for in Indo-China.
Feb. 9 at 1 p.m. at the · Chester · Clinic. Beulah Moy~•. .GOlden 13: registralion - Mary K. Hof~. hualoD u hollea
security of the United States.
· It was stated thal the American
.Lodge Hall; March .9 at I p.m. at Gleam · Council, Marietta, · is Dorodly Ritdlie, Marcia Keller; na·
Friendship lilltlln were aent to
A donation was made 10 the Legion reaffirms the resolution to
the lodge hall; AJxi1 7, 1 p,m. at . progressing and Octa Ward, Ches- tional ways and means - Cha'lotte .the jmident ~ die eighth district, U.S.O.,
whiCh i$ a part of the Na,Meigs High SchOOl and the Spring ter Council, is also home from tile · Grant, Thelma White, Mary Jo Bar· Muine BlmCI, f&lt;r mid-win. tional Security l'l;ogram, alid 10 suppon the Cenaal Intelligence
RaUy, April 13 at Meigs High 1!,.,;181, ·
·
. riilger, Betty. olfe:. guess whale crime prevenlion
. , blood program Agency and Fedeml Bureau of In·
' School.
· .•.•,..
.
. Belt)' · Spencer, Mildred Lowery, CClllfem!CC.
vestigation. . .
Bonds.
Mn. Casey iclpoited Cll. the . and U.S. S
: Mrs. Harden also anllOUJICCd the · Th(l group practiced IeCeiving Doris Grueser; state ways and Christmas bolt lellt to the .Chi!·
Prayer for .the siblation in the
·
gave a repon
following for the rally: balloting for national and state officerJ Intra- means • Mary Moose, ·Margaret liccxhe Veta'IDJ HospiJa1. ·
Middle
East by Mrs. Bowles closed
She said that
candidates by Guiding Star duoo\ were Esther Smitli stale Couerill, Faye Trowblidge; district
the
meeting.
Partial repoots were n'lade by the
Council; rcc;civing national and councilor; Dorothy Ritchi~. past ~ of order - Be!te Biggs, unit chairmen. An · invitation was
• stale offieers by the district officers;. state councilor: Erma aeland statt: Elizabeth Roberts, Bonnie Landers; reCeived from the Feeney Bennett
. the memorial by Perry Council; judiciary committee; Mary Moose. distr!ct deputies - ~ Cleland, Poet No. 128 in Middleport to atPomeroy
presenl8ti011 .of colors by Chester Perry Council No_. 283, New Lexi- SylVIB Bownes, Eileen Clark, laid. field service orientation On
Hours:
'Council; and the silver shower by nattv~, a national representative; Beulah Moyers, Alberta Hartshorn Sllilday at die 1egioll ball.
WE NOW
11 am to Mid. Sun.-Thurs.
HAVE
Lo
Council.
E1'icen c1art, deputy stale adn Essa vamer.
.
DltT
PESI.
11
am
to
1
am
Fri.
&amp; Sat.
roAnn Baum, district councilor, councilor. Guiding Star Council
At the .c!ose of the mee!JIII. tion
LulaforHamplon
spcb
011
"
"
"
•
veanna
ud ntmonal
· pnsided at the meeting. Pledges 10 No. 124, Syracuse; and Esther Har- members JOllled hands for sile~ securily. She men*-1 some of
the ~ and American f!a$s den, deputy of District 13.
prayer for the men anc! women m the reeolllliona faclna the 102nd
and the Lord's Prayer were given m
Erma Cleland, Chester Council, the Gulf War..Erma Cleland prayed
uniso~.
. .
· was appointed to make plans for for thCI!I too. Helen Wolf was
Jan1ce Lawson, disbict secrclllry, · the morning tour at the state sessiOn pianist for the meeting.
Resina Walla was welcomed a8 a
' Refreshments were served by the
new lllelilber of the Rlitland
.-·--·--"-·_,..._..,,...__..._,--~--..
..,......--.....~-------~.....- ·...- -'·"' Guiding Star ColUlcil.
WITH 4 PEPSI'S
Attending were Mary Moose, Fimnea's Auxiliary a a recent
PAN OR
Betty Wolfe, Perry Cquncil; Mar· meeting of the group held at the
OIIIGINAl
By
llrebouse.
NOW ONlY ...
~~ Cotterill, Janice Lawson,
mLE .
. .
Doma Williamson read the
Bette Biggs, Betty Spencer, Eslher
Harden, Robert Harden, Eileen ~·srepon.
Kimberly Willford was elected
Clark, Guiding Star Council;
new
IICCietlly ud ODa1 Dyer was
:Thelma White, Esther Smith,
J'
Everett Grant, JoAnn Baum, Opal elected !IaUer. Othec offices
~----·----~..-·-·_ _ _ _ _ _..,.._ _ __. Hollon, Charlotte Grant, Faye were not lilled.
A pizza paity was planned for
rt's difficult to come with terms Jeannette Thomas, 784 Chestnut Kirkhart, Ethel Orr, Elizabeth
·
Feb.
20 at 7 p.m at the lire house.
Hayes,
Jean
Frederick,
Doris
that we are definitely n.ow involved St; Judy Crooks, S36 Hiah SL, or
Anyone
over the ·1111e of ~8 interes~
In ll war - unfortunale, but true. I . 1\Jancy Cale, 342 S. S~dt SL All Grueser. Marcia Keller, Bulah
ted
in
joining
is·inVIted 10 .uend,
have only compassion . for the three reside in Middleport.
. Ml!xey; Lawa Mae Ni~. Dorothy . A disculsion to check into purRitchie, Belly Young, Mary K. Hoi·
thousands of our troops serving In
clwiing a fleezer was held with no
·Desert Storm. I pray that they have
A nice salute rcc;cntly was accOr· ter, Erml!. Cleland, Kathryli Baum, definite plans made . ..
a :Q!Cedy return home.
,
ded Middleport's Feeney-Bennett Helen Wolf, Chester Council.
bemilnstrllioos have been pretty Post 128 and it's Women's
prevalent in some of the major Auxiliary by the Ohio Legion News
cities. Everyone by now should - the state's newspaper devoted to
. have expnssed an opinion one way
Legion activities.
or another and sinc:e we are under American
In
a
front
page box, the News
threats rl terrorism perhaps, it
salured
the
post
Auxiliary IJ!us
·would . be a good idea for the loCal supportersand
for having sent
demonstrating to stop so tliat the over 4,000 worth of mm:handise 10
many police officers involved can
Destit Shield.
.
:concenttate a·bit on .those lbreats. I .Operation
Ohio
Legion
News
salutes
''The
'think I'd feel betlcr about iL
·,; A nice gesture in regard 10 the this small .Post with a big heart,"
· the ariicle concludes.
:war took place at Locomotion .•
, that's ·the teen center on MechaniC
! SL in Pomeroy. At last Saturday · A$ tiie January blabs take over
the mail per$011 keeps bringing
· night's .dance some ~ y~g and
you
reminders of Chrisanas past, I ·
' people ·took part in an IDipreSSive
decided
to write you a poem in
, andlelight service in tribute and
•
hopes
of
picking yDU up a bit. A
' meiiiOJy to the troops in the Persian
Wall Whitman. [ ain't, but I never
Gulf. DurinS the c:eremonies, Lee said
I was nor did I promise you a
GreenwoOd's recording rl"God B·
rose
garden.
Well, myways ......
less the U.S.A." was played. Mn.
In Jtllluary
Iva Sisson who heads the weekly
Let
me
hit
you wjth a scoop,
teen dances read the names of all
.
O
ur
attitudes
are bound to droop.
''known kbi servicemen and serIn
January
vicewomen serving in the war.
The blahs· are sure to have their
Candles were provided for the way,
·ceremOnies and young people were
To •make ·us pay, and pay, and
,allowed 10 keep them as a memen10 pay.
&gt;of the occasioo.
In January
. 31" dla. Supet'Mt II
. .
Not 10 worry, you're not by
MTS
Stereo
Monitor • 3-in-1
: A little time usually brings yourSelf.
.
SupeRemote with Leam Mode •'
r,.answers.
Sometimes the blues put us all
·~ A rcc;cnt column told of a on the shelf.
Color Picture-In-Picture • H)-wan
•'. Kroger's st.upper who had left her
stereo h~fi sound system • 31 " Dark
In January
purse which included important
VIewer Involvement
Lite 100 flat square picture tube •
So what do we do to shake these
• papers and money in her shopping things. .
Surround Sound patch panel
with
cart and remembering on the way
That the post Chrisunas season
•·home what she's done returned 10
always brings?
Bri.VANIA SUPERSCREEN SPORTS
the store. Her. pocketbook, comIn J111uary
,pletely intact, was turned over .to
We've got ·tO figure, it's much in
: her from die staR offic:e. She, mthe
mind,
*
• deed was gra~eful even though no · And
count every blessing we can
~-one ~as able 10 supply the name of find.
..
•·the person who found the pockIn January
'
'~etbook and turned it in. A$ it turns
When ,that's accomplished we'll
1out !hal person was Michael Mayer, see in a while,
tcan employee of the store. Michael,
That once again, it's easy 10
•the son of Linda and. Don Mayer of smile.
, ~
, Pomeroy. could undoubtedl,r have
In January.
•
; :gone the "finders' keepen route ·
· but inslead chose 10 be honest •.
:Very commendable, Michael.
... dll . ..._ ,
•' .
.
• ROSS -·On-Screen System
Remote Portllblt • 178 total
I KNOW it's cold, but despite
• Muftl.lunclion 23-butlon IR remelt
channel capab.l~ • Programmable
• 178talal dlont1el capability
• . . one bas .10 think of spring .and
scan-cunlng • Mulli.color OU..C!Mio
o Cork Lho 100 picture tube
SYLVANIA 25" da. Remclll Alldy Console 1V
graphiC ditplays • Pic1urt&gt; rMet •
that. of· course, brings iniO focus
• Random IICCtSituning
that it is time to complete scholar·
Sloop '""''
• 178- Clpllllllly
• Progtanmable scan-tuning.
• 01111 Li1e 100 picture lube
shi
lications.
• On-sc:reon displays
• PICgr.,._ ...,..luning
' &amp;'i\t!n of alumni of the former
• Picture 1'8881
•• Qn.sc,._,
- · control
.-y
Middleport High School ~ ~ing
• Room tight "'"""'
clloploya
• s.p timet"
• SS.1000 c:llulia
invited 10 make such ~
• Gr..alned Walnut on non·wood materials
SALE
'for the Susan G. Parle Sc
ip.
·~Mioct
•
eorw.n~o&lt;IICOildary
contrOls
!t.pplications may be secured from

Beat of
the Bend..

cotmROil.LING TJIE
as Eastern ceater Randy
Moore Is shown doing In a game earlier this season, Is what the
Ea&amp;les will need to do In Friday night's SVAC game against .
vtsitiag Symmes Valley. The VIkings and the Eagles are tied with ·
North Gall!a'lor second place In the conference, and this game will
decide who stays in contention for a piece of the title and who must . ·
walt 'til next year.

SOlder Seal .
Starting Auad
or SOlder Seal
Diesel
·
Treatment
~tM3B- 1 5 .

3499
sparkomatic

100W6"2Way

Sp&amp;akers

"''"'

.

Que.

''""

'

14995
TRW

Pinion
Units

S20 ott

w.-ne w:wrant'l

•

.

.
I '

..•

-59°

· •Cllic~en

Cacdatorie

Mason·Family Restaurant
RL33

(3()t) 713-5321

..

.'

\

Ma110n, WV

.

DAYS A WEEK·

· •'"roughSaturday
OPEN· ·SEVEN
Mondayu•
m. to 7 p.m.
sundaY
•
30 1
Store houra: a. and
,1

1o a.m. to 5 p.m..

GALLI~~';5Road
.2~~n)lle-3807

TABLE MODEL
SALE$439

• Ellc:tlllllie """""" cOntrol
•" Highly e··~· ljllok"

ATTENTIO.N

•

25" DIAGONAL

SUPER BUY$499

PRICED
. .

$284

BERKLINE RECLINER SALE
'

SUPER BOWL
SPECIAL

Swisher·Lohse Pharmacy is.
now authorized to fill your
prescriptions for eligible drugs.
We do the billing. If you have
any questions ple1111 iee our·
pharmacists.

_,.....,,.,.......,.,.FY

PlttPen~ 1

·All Dinners Served With Our all-U-Care-To· Eat
Soup, Fruit &amp;t Salad Bar&amp;: Garlic Bread,
Or Try One Of The Other Fine Menu Selections.
Take Out Orders Available.
· "Senior dtizens Receives 10% Discount

'l

RemanufaCtured
BloYief' Motors

~~
Pitt Penn Gasllne.., .....:· '----Antlfree%8
!~ P"' .

Your Needs

FEDERAL
BLACK .LUNG .
.
PROGRAM RECIPIENTS:

1399 . '

"""c . ,\

•Lasagna

-

CHECKlHE

For All

Steering
Special CY()9(S

31 " PICTURE

CLA551flf05

Rack&amp;

1n sux,., (Jlly

$.1799

----

-

$1549

carpet
1
(Bad~.Aedl ,

P"'

$1 099 .

· Bob
Hoe'lich

46" SCREEN
·sALE

.

IIM24·12

Queen
Rolled

-

$699.

Big Picture, Big Sound ·
Unparalleled Realism-

ftubbef

WaaherSolvent

.PIZZA .

,SYLVANIA TV'S

MaSQn family Restaurant
. Thursday ·N~ghl · is

·....

LARGE 1 ITEM

Ande,lon '1 Su '' Bo.wl Sale!

'

•Spaghetti

·LARGE DELUXE

PIZZA

799

age
'
.
Pitt Penn Windshield

PICK-UP ONLYI

Fire Auxiliary meets

Friday's slate
Hannan Trace at North Gallla
Southwes tern at Southern
Sy!Jlmes Valley at Eastern
Oak Hill at Kyger Creek
Sa~urday's conteSt
Miller at Eastern

4 P.M.- 9 P.M. '

m~ts

Lewis Manley Auxiliary

992-2124

I

SV AC standings

J.

The Daily Sentinei- Page-5

W
.
t

.

.

24, 1991

$
•

'

.

.__,- .....

MOll. -

...

I'IIUCIIII'TtOid

1. -

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

o,................ .

,__,OH.

. . . . . 011
SDYICI_A_

•

STORE HOURS
Monday 1:30·8:00
Tue1day-Saturday

9:30-&amp;:00

I

�Your Social Seruuity... _ __.____· Chatter Club
By Ed Petenon
. Social Secarll)' Br111cb M111acer
In Athens

People wbo receive Social
Security or Supplemental Securlty Income (SSI) checks often .
become alarmed If they do not
get their checks In the mall on
time. More than 39 million Social
Security and 4.6 million SSI
payments .a re usually made
timely · every month, but occaslonally some checks are
delayed.
, Social Security checks are
usually delivered on the 3rd of the
month. If the 3rd falls on a
Saturday, Sunday, or legal hoi!day~ the checks are delivered on
tile last banking day before then.
F.or example, September 3, 1990,
was a holiday so Social Security

checks were delivered on Friday,
August 31. November 3, 1990, fell
on a Saturday so checks were
delivered on Friday, November ,
2.
SSI checks should arrive on the
. 1st or the month unless, of course,
the 1st falls on a weekend or
holiday. Then they'll be dellvered the Jastbanklngdaybelore
the weekend or holiday. September 1 and December 1, 1990,
. tell on Saturgays so SSI checks
~ere delivered on Friday, August 31 and November :.&gt;.
People should allow 3 full days .
from the expected delivery date
for their Social Security or SSI
checks to arrive.' Generally, If a
Social Security check tsn't recelved until the 4th or a month,
give us a call. We'll correct the
problem as quickly as we can.

OAPSE

=:.t:t

Auxiliary meeta
The Bashan Ladies Auxiliary
held ill January
made
plans to have a
dinnec
on'March 17 from 11 un. to 2 p.m.

Janu.y 24, 1991

AIHIOLI! i(; Ill·' I I'

The Rutland Ganlen Club will

.
.
The McJgs High School Band
BoosiCI'I will meet Monday at 7
p.m. at the hip school bend ille?m
to plan for lhc chicken .noodle dinner to be beld Feb. 7. All parents
11111 urged to llald.Salem Center
Elemenllr)' Cutlinc

Several maacn were dinaed
at die m:enl meeting of the Chllter
Club beld at the home .of Linda
Hubbard, Syr~C~~Se.
Dues and flower fund wm colto meet .
lected llld ~ pVGI. ·
The OAPSE Chlpler No. 17 will
Hostea gifts prescnttd to meet Jan. 31 11 7:30 p.m. at the
Ms. Hubbard llld sbe. was alao
presented a birthday gift. Ruth Meip Jupior High School.
Young received In lnnivenary gift.
Following dinner at Oscar's the
group went to lhi home ot lbil hostess fiX a Chrisunas party and .gift
exchange..
, ·
· .
New officers wem clectcd and ·
games were played with winners
being Isabelle Couch. Janice Fetty, .
. Maly Myers and Ruth Young. The
door prize was won by Doris WUL
The next meeting will be at the ·
home or Delores Whitlock,
Syracuse in February.

deposit. There's no worry about
lost or stolen checks and you
won't have to walt at the mailbox
for your check or walt In line at
the ban It to cash !t.
lfyouhaveanyquesttonsabout
when to expect your check or If
you'd like to SliD up for direct-deposit, call us at 1-800-2345-SSA
(1-800-234-5772). Tbe best times
to call are 7-91n tbe morning and
5-7 In tbe evening. The Athens
Social Security office Is located
at 221~ Columbus Rd. 1\lld our
.Jocal m,amber Is 592-4480.
i'

Band Booster meeting Garden Club meets . '

hoIds meeting

A sure way to avoid late checks
Is, by signing up for direct

Thursday,

Thursday, January 24; 1991

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Paga-6-The Daily Sentinel

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

mcd Monday itt I :30 p.m. 8l the
borne of . Mrs Chris Dicbl. A
~
''Flowe~i '
=!ants and Hanging Baskets

Ponwoy-Middlliport. Ohio

_..__ ........... _

LAFF·A-DAY

11

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

•

Autoa tor Sill

77

Help wallled

~--­
-."=~-·
1111- COl Kor.
""- .

.....=···"i
. . ..... ,. _•:?s:..=:.."'
~==

will be presented by Mrs. ~n ;
Weber and Mrs. Cunis Dallon.

9- ..

......... tM'UW lftll IW-·
goad •uwuMlliiioll _.. ;MI

.

Southern Board meets

·-2~-.:s.=

~P.O.
-A,
_,. -c,wv-.

The Southern Local School
Board wUI meet Monday at 7 p.m.
aa the high school.

-

TYPillli, PC

-

· Colihi.OGO
Dible.
(1) 101 ......,u&amp;
-

•

,bMale"""-....
hllrel t.nlil ...,..

can 114&gt;411H2711.

En B-4sez.

21ong

to ghwwsw

Planned Parenthood
to note 20 years
Planned Parenthood of Soulheast
Ohio will celebrate 20 years or service iii southeastern Ohio at the
Fifth Annual ChoColate and Olampagne Affaire on Feb. 9 from 5:30
to 9:30 p.m. at the Dairy Bam .in
Athens. A donation of $10 will be
charged. Fer moie information,
contact Planned Parenthood at 5933375.

,,.. Orond

11,400 mlln. Call

KELLY S. OGDIN

. Revival will! Nonnan Taylor at
the Ash Street ""Free Will Baptist
Church in Middleport will be held
Monda] lhrougb Feb. 2 at 7:30
p.m. njgbtly. There will be special
singing nightly.
.

TIMOTHY ENYON

~rvicemen deployed to · Gu~f

72 . Trucks tor Sale ·-.,

MIDDLEPORT. .
'

'

12

-

11114 Chevy
GMC, 4x4,

Situation

,.

·~

·J '

.

•

I•
'

I •

•

..

j

Banks
Construction

GUARANTEEOt

Our Most. Compact
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Pocket LCD
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Con1plete Grooming
AN Bree4s

EMILE( MERINAR

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614-992-6820

Low AIS15 P•llonth •

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on·the-go. 1116-159 .
'.

WlSHIIh$100 ""

SERVICE

992-5335 • .. s.3S61
AcrDSs f11111 Pest Office

POIIROY, OHO
I 0/l0/19 lfn

79!...

15

Super value! Plays on AC,
DC or batteries. 116-120

"'"•!II•

Inc• loll

::fliJMIIIi&amp;enlll are Austin
IIIII Doma Wolfe; Racine. Malanll
P

e

are Dick and B.tJm
.

.

·Save '30 ~ &amp;915
•
R41g .....5

M 7 Jill Jftlll pandmocber is
. Cllrl Manll. Racine.
. -

Cut 334Mt

3915

. Lightweight AM/!=M
Stereo Headset

254Mt Off

Cut45%

2185 ~,5

• VHF TV•Sound/AM/FM Portabie

Cut 3~

27!

31.15

- Big 4" Speakar

HMdphonn extra

Covers VHF·TV

Reg., 59.95

:

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,,

2·13, FM, AM. 112-648

DOmE S. TUINII, 1101111
HOUSEI•LOTSiFARMI
COMMERCIAL
We Need Uadnpl

.•• ..1

BR; I ..... a
doullll .... 111 ...

We Do Wlek Hepa?r·

MORRIS
EQUPMENT

INSULAtiON
•VInyl Siding

eReplecement
Wlnclllwa
•Roofing

•lntullltlon

JAIIIS ms11
992-2772 ar
742-2251
1138

arv.. fllece

Middleport. Ohio

I -14-lflt

•FIREWOOD
BILL SLACK
992-2269
USlD IAIUOAD TIES
•· 1 2. 9C).tfn

11 MIMI.,ott
UPHOLSTDY

Sec••
IIJJ?epert

Ill le.

Hend Tufting

-1224.
· Dn&gt;p-1..
WilD.
7lL- 111 Ul

f

21

llhlllCI~I

.Bualnea
Opponunlty
INOIICII

· .._ .............. eom.
-·-"10311011t.

AM/FM
Pocket Radio

Hltlhrrofflc,
·
- _ .- ....11oM.bull-..
oqul...-, 1 - 2114 113413.

a•~

•

l
•
I

•'

WI hy Whol We Do.

23

Protesa?onal
Services

Plllno Tl:n~ year c:l """
-Uno
Dinlolo.IM-'JII2-HI1·

_..,..,.ondadjur ........

31 Hom• tor Sale

IENNm'S MOilLE HOME
HEAliNG &amp; COOLING
LeGtetiO. s.Henl Sdt•'•f U. eH lt. 141

l

112-~

24~ Off· 18!

'

Rt~14tntlal

.S

.

Check Your Phone Book tor the Radio 8hllclt Store or Dealer
'
Moll - , . _ . . , oooquulolp"".,.llllnt acludM bllttrtll ... :

•Rentcldlllnl and
· Home lteptlre
•Roofing
•Sic?lng

COAl

c•ora-taumoN
992·6Mier

:tou

FJ 1111 SuppltP',
,&lt;, l1vr ,tock

·--.......- . . . . ,_
-- _,_ ..

and ·
..........
wv. IMurlty
,........
.........
....
11134217.

IIIHI'ZOWN

-·~~~~~-

I Poloo W..:tltlroup, f!M.OI jlor
. . . IAIIIJijd . . . . . . .

81 Fall'll Equipment

~ ....~.14

w.ot Odlc!"'="~4~~.?~·;

....

_

...

""

=-:mr~.rDII-=· 4
wllh 4 Cllol:e, 11.10 ..... -

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.......

1:·.,.
........ Iron
n ··~·

llllpto:noo~.. luy,
... ~ trodl, l:ti0-6:00 IHOiulaya,
lad, ttUO par loll t i l l - .........
4 - ~--Chell
of 111111J lul..ng IPLi :rr'di'JS',
..
Rt. ,..,
4 011 Ill. 7 In C.:*'• I· ,.,.... _ , . Door, 14' .....
_ , llo;;dof """ ..........
Of 13 Colc:ro,
..............; - , , 1 1 - ~- -

-

,

.

_

..,_
~--

ttay ·&amp; Grain

.......... -.114-

-....= -.
'·

ondH......

, _ aNI Pint
Qallfpollo, Ollie

Eleclr?cal •

Relrlgel'lllori

fi,OO - ·

O.C.£. (OMIJUTII SOLUDONS, lf'IC.

·-

•ON-Sil'E SERV!CE;REPAI~
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0 SAI.ES
0 0N-SlTE CUSTOM TRAINING
JI'IJNG YAluY raMwoNAL ~ILDING

J06 JACKSON rtKI - SI./IJI ZOJ
CAWIOUI, OIDO 4JIJI

446-6000

Pf\ICES APPLY AT PARTICIPATING STORES AND DEALERS

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-~~4!··~~-~·--------~ ''"

....
... -. 84
Dlluata
AuAMIJ
.,.......
H:r.

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---:c.:-..~....
~.;;:.,.::;.~.,;:till:-,.-...,.;._" :

..,...... . --.11-hy. M;

REWIRING AND
TROUILE SHOOTING

FREE BTIIATES

•rest

I badroom tumiiMcf In New

Plumbing&amp;
Heating

COIIIIMI'cial

NO JOI TOO SMALL

lncludn l*phllne
Great eoundl Hl/lo tone lwitch. 112·716

~

and

•Palntln21 _

24•

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COMPLETt
ELECTRICAL SERVICE

992~5009
12-19·'90- I 110.

I

With emphone. Strawberry
COlor. 112-720. Blueberry color.

&amp;lo

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Asls:Mtwl leowlty.,.....
.,••• 0444.

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MOBILE HOME FURNACES - HEAT PUMPS
All FUINACE PARTS

t

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Servtccs

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614·992-1321

IANIS·
CONSTRUCTION

Alkaline
Batteries

Fuii·Size AM/FM Portlblt Radio

robuln, otonlng ot '"' 114-248- -

.1177, 114-371-2211.

22 Money to Loan

C~tllf1Ml8• ?old••

Cut26%

76 . Auto Pans •
Acceisorlea , •
----~~~~~~~
~
Budget Tronomln~. UtM ... ~! ~'

VIJ«&lt;INQ ROUTI: l'or hie.

frH ls?luaftl
·'

-In

-with_..

56 Yeon Exp&lt;rienee

Now /11
!toekl/

-·-·-·

3 t ,_,,..li!"t!.!!*

-.y, III-U7-

OHIO VALLEY PUBU8HINO CO.
--lhotyoudobuolyou k.-L and
HOI' to oond moner Uvougn lho
llllllluntl JOU hoveln-ogllad
lhoollori""
.._. V.ndlng Aouto. High

Curttom Drape•

W.OoWMIWeley.
IO.It-1 ••·

2 BR porllolly lum'ad, oablo
OVIIIablo. 8Mutllul rlwar vt.w In
KMMugo.
F-r'o
-

ti-S:»IIo

Weight Jlllt 8 Oz. •
Enjo1 hands-tree listening to
the play-by-play. 112·125

rlet
•Keroaene . Stove• •
Wick a

jjj";iU c ~ Rc .-. , n

Office 614-"2·2116
· HOME 614-.. 2·5692
I

NIIOI

·1- l l l ·&amp; TREE
.111M and
.REMOVAL
•LIGHT HAULING

~

205 N. Secentl Str11t
•DDUPOrr, 02110 45760

Pe?'IOnal AM/FM
Stereo Ca...tte

Great buy! Super on·the-go
stereo listening. 1114-1073

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Capture the big game on tapell14-752

Hlgh·Splld Dubbing

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&gt;

1«rY IIIII J::n~'=!lll:ill~ll!l·:~~=

AM/FM Stereo Cassette

Records from AM, FM or "live". 114-782

new

the binh of their
ftl'll child, a dauJhter, Hannah Erin,
oa lin. 14 Ill O'B'- Memooat
Hollliral ill Athens.
.
'111e Infant weighed . seven
IIIII four OIIIICel mel was 20

llffiiGIIAIOIS-$ I00 up
IANGES-....n.c.·-$125 up
FaEZEts-$125 ""
IIICIO OVENS-$7' op

liEN'S APPLIANCE

Dual-Cassette AM/FM StereO

length

chain• Md ICCMIG-

J&amp;L

DIYH-$69 op

Save'20

• Any

USED APPUANCES
90DUWAIIANn

l'

YARDMAN&amp; .
ECHO DEALER

Panurav. Ohia
148.15

B&amp;WTVWith
AM/FM Radio

1)e chaner was draped for Stan·

IIUIOUIICina

.

Cent•.

742-2455
Si..hjll ...... lutlanttl
12-24-90-1 ...

Reg.

I'

Hemlock Grange
has meeting

1enr 111&lt;1 owe Wolfe. Racine,

- THf
GROOM
· ROOM

I

·-

-

Tn4.

Peuta'o Doy Ca:e
..... lflordeble. chlldCIN. Mof
1 a;m. • 5:30 p.m. •
2 ·10.

12-11-' -1

09750.

Birth announced

W-J'l

1112 Chevy Plymouth
new bnlkM a tlrM. 1'M411'-,,

...

. 992-5009

FREE ESnMATES

Shield, APO New York, N.Y.

were

"' -•

NEYER ClEAN Y()UI
GDmRS AGAIN

Dcc:cmber.

ford Stockton, a 50-year member of
the Grange, when the Hemlock
Grange mctm:ently at the ball.
The mccling was conducted by
Zioo Midkiff, master.
1'aUy Dyer,
grange deputy,
gave ber report as delegate to the
Stale Grange Convention.
The lccruter's . program was
directed by Rosalie Story wilh New
Year as lhc theine. Stvi:lal readings
given: "Priorities" by Naomi
Reed; "The Family" by Muriel
Bradford; "Requisite for LiVing" by
Sara CuUums: "Plan for Tomorrow" by Helen Quivey; "Cross in
My'Poc:kcl" by Rosalie Story.
Helen Quivey, home ec
ctuWman, UIDOUDCcd a 12 1f2 X 12
112 quilt block is requested from
cacb lady granger.
.
The next meeting will be a
baking oonlest of apple crisps.
The meeting was attended by 16
membcn, one guest, and two .
juveniles.

~

-~

Bua?nea

Kelly S. Ogdin, Uniled SIBICS

Timothy Eynon, son of Jim and
Ruby Eynon, Racine, is serving
with Operation Desert Storm.
· Cards and lcaers may be sent 10
SP&lt;I 1imothy Eynon, 296-828008,
396dl Tnm. Co., 16 Support Group
4 'Iilas ' Bn., Operation Desert

lotY Bucket ~I!J.!.nd
wnh alr.l14-;me..eo~~t.

~Helmet·
1

Navy, son of Mr. and Mn. Del Ogdin, LangsVille, and Pamela Fen·
wicb, WeUston, bas been serving
with ()petation Desert Storm since

San Diego, AFS-6, F.P.O. New
York, N.Y. 09S87-3035.
·

.,,400. -

R'!Gutter

.

' and Mn. Ewing Hutton, Rutland;
and Mr. and Mn. Charles Young,
Lanasville
Cirds and lettets may be sent 10
KeDy S. Ogdin, 0101 Div., U.S.S.

In

,a:.

11,000.
bltttrY, fwt

1m C'-"'•'· oxc. ""C'!;,f%.
·' ' '&gt;

__ ..... __

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

1

tru~k

ntW

~·· good,

Wantld

. '

He is the grandson of Mr. and
Mrs. Frank Helm, Wilkesville; Mr.

nl~

114o441-7Jil',

4 -and
· loldod
Including~
air
00. Ellc
....,..;
h,RO. ....a4m.
"*
For Sale Or Trodo: 1111
210 ·z.x GOOd Condll,lon, ~-·
.,. 441 0840, lftW &amp;p.m.

'··

Kenneth R. Hu11011, United
Siales Navy Sailor, son of Ed and
Pf,l Huaon, Yawhey, W.Va., has
been serving with Operation Desert
o SUlllll since October.
~11011 is formaUy of Meigs
ColliilY and is .the grandson of Mr.
and Mn. Ewing Hutton, Rutland;
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Young,
lMIJsville; and Mr. and Mn.
Elli'ncst Wright, Langsville.
-~is married to lhc former Char·
loae Midkiff, Yawhey, W.Va.
Cards and Iettets may be sent 10
Kcnnclh R. · Hutton, U.S.N.
WEPS/Isi Div., U.S.S. 'Mac
DQnough, 00039, FPO Miami,
Fla. 34092-1257.
'

loadod. ~

aft., - · ot an,~tme _.,
Weekende.
· ·!'.
' ....... f l - , .., ,.,. --~

Revival set
. KENNETH R. BlJTTON

P~x,

tonod grwY, lntonor I

'

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,,

.

·" •'Ill

�'

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..

,-

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.
.
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.

Bo~rd

1

Pomeloy-Midcleport. Ohio

BORN LOSER

·UPI Spons Writer
place vote lolal drop from 21 to tbe - • week 1a a row wltll
and Y&lt;OUIPt""" Rlyen. 12 eech; 19.
' •1
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPli
. six, but still accumulated enough
flnla 11111111! polilll. PoriaClaymMt 11: 20.
west
''\!
Dayton Dunbar. despite absorlr poU points for a 213-i92 margin moutlllal!-1 ud Willard lW.
''i
ing its first loss of the season, over runner-up Alter, which
Vermilion advanced from
Dlvloloo m
·
·
/I.,
managed to cling to the top spot received nine first place votes. sixth to fifth and was followed by
T
Pia.
178
17 11 1
1 2.· Weot
~ubr"'*
(91 tlf.01 1..........
in this week's United Press Both teams are 11·1.
Bellefontaine, Columbus Linden
MuoklDIUm
4-0 ............
........... 1o
:&lt;'}
Internaionai Ohio High School
Porllmoulll, wlllcb beldlllelop McKinley, Cincinnati Forest
3. Orrville 121!13-ll ......................... 137
!•
of Coaches boys' Division apot two weeks ap, 1 Hppecl · Park, Warrensville Heights and
4.
Sh-nclolll
m
t1UI
...................
I22
.
:!
5
II basketball ratings.
.
another ne~lch lhla week to tlllrd Lexln...
.
Uberty 110-11
............
',',
6.· Youllpt&lt;M'II
N, M'tCM'IISprlnlfleld
(1) t12.U)
.... 119
79
, on.
5
Dunbar. beaten 86-74last week wltll three flrall aDd 177 polnla,
The other three leaders re7. Convoy croatvtew 1111-11
..........:... 76
•' .
8· Bllrtm~ruhlre J3.11 ........... c.... 36
malnedunclulnged-WestChes·
FOR
SALE
IN
RACINE
~:
36
8. COlonel Crawford C12-ll .. ..............
VERI' NICE lARGE HOME ON API'ROX. 31!
-ur
ter J.akota In Dlvblon I , West
11. ao-ak• tl..ll ........................ M
•.....,. --• BR 3 ..... 2
1
,
Musklngum in Dlvlston'II and St.
.....,.
...
,
1L
FHenl Bectlq II: 12.
~
•
...
m, , . . .._ rentt!d
Bellaire 24: 13. Fredl!!'lektown 1~: 14.
BR 1111rlmonl Property includes pond, •P·
•I- "
lo
Heath 7: 15. Bedlonl Chanel 6: 16. N,...
P''*· 4,800 14ft. firm bld&amp;.•nd mObile
Henry l.n Division JU, althoug h
-•
r
i
~I
of them were b!!lng hard
London5; 17. tllel HavllandWay..,Trace;
hOtM. A resl blrllin It $84,900.
By United Press International · the game at 16:08 when his two
''
II
pressed.
Clnctnnatlllldlan Hill and Rocky Rtvor. 4
CAU 6)4·992-7104 FOR APPT.
I
• 1\
Calgary Flames head (!oach centering pass from the left side
.,
'
Lakota, 15.(), held just a 186-181
each:
20. East C..ntCII
and Atwater
# I 11
Wat~rloo. 3 eaclt..
·
Doug Risebrough _says his squad ot the net caromed off Calpry
• ••
·- t'
has forgotten one of hockey's defenseman Roger Johansson' s margin over Barberton, 12·0. In
Dlviii._IV
••,.
skate and went Into the net'.
Division I, bUt received 14 firs\
keys for success.
Team
Fta.
,.
"There was some good fortune place votes to just six for the
1. St . Henry 1211 (12-!11 ..................... 254
· "The bottom line Is we did not
'.I '
2. COlumbus Wehrle t31 (11·21 .......... 2Jl
Magics.
battle enough in the first two on that one," said Cyr.
3. Tr~VIIlage (1~) .......................... 198
••, ''
The victory, which gave the
~·
FOR SALE: 69 ford ~ Too
periods and we put ourselves in a
i. FraakllaFto-oeGrea (1M) .... 1U
Canton
McKinley
advanced
a
... .. l • •
Whalers a 5-2-1 mark since Jan.
~. Cln. Country Day (1) (13-01 :... :...... 108
; ~ . •,
position where we had to win a
very pod condition; 75 Cadillac .
spot to third this week with 141
6. Kirtland 113-1) .............................. 94
-~
game by playing the third 2, also pushed Hartford within points, dropping . Beaverc~eek
..A~.a '
Cpe., good condition; 65,000
7. Cedarville tl2·11 ........................... 81
.'
·)···..
one
game
of
the
.500
mark
at
period," said Rlsebrough. "And
,. · · ~
7. Fort Loramie 112·11 ..............:....... '81
btu electric furnace, used 2
down to fourth with 130. Cleve21·22·5.
.
.
9.
Manllleld
St.
Peter's
t11·1)
...........
17
that 's not good enough."
.winters; hay, small bale. ·
10. YellowSprlnRatJ2.21 .................... 35
"This was a character builder land Villa Anpl•·St. , Joseph
"1it
· The Flames made a gallant
11-4
record
still
which.
despite
Its
leo:
11.
Lltt\a
Cothollc
23:
12.
992-5888
'
''t1 .,
us,"
said
Francis.
"We
for
recovery In the final period.
ttlel Hollate and LoralnCothollc.22each:
lulsn't loilt to Ohio teaq'l, again
. ./.~::
14. ~run Hiland 21: 15. Miller City 16; 16.
scoring four times In a 9:40 started playing better the week was ·firth with 107 pol1tts.
I tiel Shadyslde·ond Wayneofteld·Goolten.
stretch to take · a one-goal lead before the (Ail·Star Game)
.
Toledo St. Francis, MaasUlon
11 eacb; 18. Fort Jennlnp 8: 19. tile!
break
and
we·v~
been
working
before eventually losing 5-4. The
HouotM and M4nllleld Chrladon, 7 each'•
·Perry,
W
ari'en
Harding;
Lane
as·
t·
defeat was their fifth in the last hard for 60 minutes.
ter
and
Toledo
Waite
rciunded
out
"After the break, you don't
'""
six games dating back to Jan. 10.
"~~·,.
want to come out flat and then the Division I top ten.
Calgary Is 25-19·5 on the season.
'
Musklngum
remain~
West
"We have to find ways for have to find yourself again, " said the No. '1 Division lli team, but
'{:
.,
battl(ng fo.r 60 minutes," said Francis. "We• hurt ourselves the Tornadoes also were:feel!ng
'
· Risebrough. "Webattledforonly when we stopped flnlshlng our the heat.
.
.
-1 ,
'•
checks and let Calgary free. 20 minutes."
WeSt Musklngum led runner·
••
Ironically, It was almost wheel."
•'•'
In other games, Montteal up Bellbrook 178-169' In · this
enough to catch the Whalers, who
trounced· Toi'QIIto 7-3 and Van· week's third of ~en weeks of
bllill a 3·0 cushion early In the
balloting, but trailed the Golden
third period before abandoning couver outlasted Edmonton 6-5.
E4gles
Ill first place votes, 9-7.
Caaadleaa,7, MAple Leaftt 8
their fonichecklng. Rob Brown,
'
Both
have
14-0 rec&lt;lrds.
•••
At Montreal, Shl\yne Corson
whO .scored twice on the ·power
· Orrville, 13-1, regained' third
,,
play, and Paul Cyr had staked and Stepluln Le~a1.1 scored two place this week with 137 points
RATES
goals
apiece
to
lift
Montreal.
The
· Hartford to Its lead.
1/
'·
and Sarahsville·Shenandoah, ·13TO PLACE AN AD
992·2156
Oytr 16 Wordt
Rati
Word~
But Mark ·Hunter, scoring victory pulled the second-place o, advanced one place to fourtb
D1y1
'·
•
.20
,,
14.00
111
have lost just
MONDAY
thru
FRIDAY
I
A.M.
to
S
P.M.
twice, triggered a four -goal bar· Canadiens,
.30
with 122. That dropped Young-.'
fi.OO
16
3
,.•'·
.42
rage by the Flames along with twice In their last 15 games, stown Uberty, 10·1. fl'om third to
t9.00
8
A.M.
until
NOON
SATURDAY
15
••
.eo
113.00
Joe Nle\lwendyk and Steplulne within a point of the 8os tlln flrth .thls week with 119 points.
111
~
I
10
y
.05/day
t1.30/dly
15
Monthly
Matteau that gave Calgary a 4·3 Bruins In the Adams Division.
New MlddletOWJI Sprlnlfleld
runs. brokenupd11¥1Willb1Chlf'ted
•
lead and had the Whalers' hope Toronto Is winless In 1991, going remained in sixth, lollowed · by
or
Pfl0-6-3.
sinking before two late penalties
Convoy CresMew In seventh,
Canucks II, Oilers 5
·~::::• · 10 cltlooum for eM ..ld in ..,en c..
-sabatoged the Flames'
Burton Berkshire and North
•1
- GiveiWIIY Md Found adl und• 11 word• will bl
Mer c11" !HI Is e
At
Vancouver,
BHtish
Colum·
comeback:
d.,.llt noch . .a.
Rob1J1son
Colonel·
Crawford
tied
1 -Card oiThanka
5 t -Houlllhold Qoo~
bia, Igor Larlonov had two goals
of 8d tot' II c..,..ll•terl • double ltl'iot of 1d c:pst.
2-lnMemery
Veteran~ Jim Kyle, for high·
12-loontn1 o for eighth and Cb...,e,ake I•
"7pointlna._Otlly .-.
.
3-Annouc..,•t•
·
and
tw9
,
_
assists
and
Trevor
53-Antiqun
sticking at 12;00, and Gary Suter,
"lomlnol is not •ponailllolor arrorlafiiJ firll dtl\' - IC:htd!
lOth.
.
.
.
4-GMI•~
14-Mitc. 'M trchenditt
for' holding Qt 13: 22, gave the U nden scored the eventual game · ·In Division IV, St. ·Henry
~ "'~' flr111 dill •d runs 6n "'*'·C.P. ~2 :00p . m .
1-H-..~ Adt
11-luitding Suppli•
d• •"• oui:IUoUon 10
correction.
I-Lo11 ...d Found
Whalers a 5-on-3 advantage and winner early In the thlril period, con~nued .to hold a solid lead
!6- Pt11 for S1h1
•Adt thll mu• be ,l'lid In edv•nce trl
7-Y•d S.81alp.tid in l~tnctl
57-Mulic-' lnttrumentl
glvlpg the canucks their second
the game turned around.
1-Pubfic ... , • Avc1ion
•. Cart~ of Th.,.ks
Htppy Aclt
over ·runnerup Columbus .Web·
11-Fruitl 6 Veg"tttl•
In
their
last
12
games.
win
9-W.,.otlto luy
Hartford, striking for the ty\ng
59-For Salt 01' Trldt'
In M-ilm
Y•d S••
Vancouver broke out of an rle. The Redsklns' margin this
goal by Ron Francis during a
I
rrqilnylltr'lll
254-230,
with
a
21-3
edge
week
was
•A cl•tifi.. HltMtMm.m placed in The Deily s.nttn.. , ...
5-on-3 power-play situation at O.for-19 power-play siump with in first place votes. ·
oept - cl•lifilll dilp4-r". lusift•• C.r·d end legtl nofiCft)
hrrn Stll'llllr~s
\I r Vlt.I!S
1110 app.., in 111e "'· Pl . . .nt R....ur and'. ht G•lli·
13: 59, won it on Cyr' s second of three power-play goals.
New Madison Tri-VIIage (15-0)
poUt O.ily Tribune. •aching over 11,000 hOmll
tY llii~SIIII:k
1 1-Holo Wtnta4
was third with 198 points, foi·
t2-&amp;iluati0n
w
..
~ee~
DAY IEFORI PUILICATION
CO"' DlAOLINl 81-Farm EquJem.,t
towed by Frallklln Furaace
t3.-:lnltH8nce
. ,.1 1,00 A.M. IATUIIQ,O.Y
MONDAY ,A,ER
12-Wanted to Buy ·
t•-lutin•t Trtining
Green, Cincinnati Co~dtry Day
- z,oo , ,M. MONDAY
TUESDAY PAP£11
13- Livfltodc
15-lchool• • l"etruction
- 2 :00P.M . TUEIDAY
WEDNEIDAY PA,ER
and Kirtland. Cedarville and
14-Hay • Grain
11-RMio, TV. CB Aepair
2
:00P.M.
WEDNUDAY
lHUIIIOAY PA'I!R
66-Sttd &amp; Fart_iliur
17-Mttc.lleneous
Fort Loramie shared ·tbt No. 7
2
:00P.M
.
THURSDAY
FIIIDAY P ...Pllt
1I-W81'tHI To Do
-2:00P.M. FRIDAY
Thiel 113. WI)'IW!Sburg711
lUNDAY PAPER
spot, then came Malisflel!l St.
VermMt 79, Dartmouth 77
CoUege seores
Peter's In ninth and n~er
Westbrook 102, Daniel Webster 73
Tnw.porlailtlll
Yellow Springs In )enth.
,
Widener 71, Haverfont47
C&lt;lllelo
21-lulinw• Opportunity
Classified
pa!(es
,cot·er
the
Men'allaaketball Reault!i
South
71 - Auto• for Slla
22-Mon-v to Loan
Here's this week's United
Ala .-Blrm.. 89, Va. Commonwealth
72 - Trucks for 8•1•
WedneodiiJ, Jan. 23
23-Pro,..liOael
I•YIOtl
68 .
Press International Ohio High
73-Vtnl 6 .. \'\'D's
Miami86. We! tern Michigan 80
following lf!lephon-e exchanges...
74 .... Motorcvcl•
Ald~rson· Broaddus 96, Co~o I'd
Toledo 57, Bowling Grf'en 56
School Board of Coaches' boys
71-Boatl 4 Moton tor hit ·
M.. onCo .. WV
Ball State 78. 0hlo ~nlverslly 50
COL 84
MeipCoumy
aema Countv
basketball ratings (with first
1e- Au1o Pans• Ac:c•IOf'i•
31 ~~om• for Stlt
Central Mldllpn 69, Kent State 60
, Aubuf!l 59, Georgia 158 t20Tl
Aral COde 814 AruCode304
A11oCoda 814
77 ~.:Auto Repair
32-MqbileHom• ior 1111
place votes and won· lost records
Akrm 71. Younastown St 66 (0t)
Austin Peoy ~. Ark.·UIUle Rock 77
78 - Camping Equipment
171PI.
Pl,.ant
33-Farms
for
lilt
112-Mid.eport
441-Ga!lipofil
tharlestm Southern 77. Liberty 73
Wrt«ht St 99, Texas Southern 87
In parentheses):
79-Campers &amp; M01or Hom•
451-Loon
34-lutin•• 8uldlnas
Pomlf'DY
317-Ch•hira
Cheyney 91, Dlstrtct or Columbia 71
Otterbein 110. Hiram 75
DIY11 ... 1
3&amp;-Lot• .. Ac••lfl•
311-Vinton
171-....;to
Baldwln·Wallace 65. John Carroll
Dldtln""' 84. W. Maryland 52
31-A. .I btet1 W.,..tld
Team
.
.PIO:
773-M,.on
z•D-Rlo Qrendt 143-Ponllnd
Fairmont St. 83, West Uberty 73
,,,._
!i6
1. W. Chester Lako'- 1111 t1~1 · ....... 186
882-Ntw Htvan
247-Lttort
Foils
211-Gu""
Diat
Heidelberg 67. Capital 54
Flortda AltM 97. Florids Memorial
2.
BarbertM
t6r
t12.Ui181
111-L..•rl
143Are•l•
Dlst.
•••-"•aint
'
Marietta 83, Mount Union 67
78
3. C..ntcn McKinley 112·3) ................ 141
742-RU1tond . 937-luttllo
371-WIIftCit
41-HOUUI fat Atftt
:.
Wooster 69. Ca&amp;e Reserve 61
George Mosm 72. American 69
4. ~averereek Ill tlU! ............ ...... IJJ
817- Coohlllo
1
42-MobiltHom•
for
R•nt
'
t&gt;Jietlheny 1Pa 1 79, Oberlin 57
James Madlson81, Navy 80
5. Clev. VA .St. Jo,.ph (11-41 ............. 107
Ohio WeslPyan 96. Kenyon 87
Kentucky 81. flOrida 65
43-FarmlfOrAtnt
81-· Hom•lmprowm.nu
• .,.,,,.:-,.\~\1
6. Toledo St. Francia t12·21 ........ ....... 76'
""-A'*"rMM
tor·Aenl
12-Pklmbing
6 Helling
Rio Grande 112, Dyke SS
Md.·Boltlmore Co. 78. Delaware77
7. Maulllon Perry tJ3.11 .................. 60
415-Furnilhed Aoom 1
83-Eac.,atinl
· ·
t.. .,.....,..,.
Defiance 50. Blufftoo 46
Mlslislippl St. 68, Al.abama 59
8. Warren Harding cU·ZI 53
41-boeo
14-Eioetricol
Aolrit•ation·
""'-''
N...- Ork!ODI 72. C. Florida 64 ·
47-Wantedfor
to••••
Rtnt
88-G•n••l H1u11ng
' ., .
•. ~-· (1 ..1) ft
WedneodQ'I COilere
North Carolina 91, Wake Forest 81
41-leuq.mtm ior Rtn1
18-Mobil• Home Ret)aW
' ii'IJ'
10.
Toledo
Walk'
tl2·2l
.......................
34
Bukelball .......
N. Carolina AlrT 81, NC·
He- "'n: 11. Upper ArUnj{lon 28: 12.
••
' ,,
Eul
Creeosboro 67
.
Cuyahfllla Falls 14: 13. Cincinnati Wool·
Adelphl94. Old Westbury 76
NC·Aihevllle 91. Wlnthr"' 68
••
ward-13: 14. MansfteldSenlor12; 1~. ltlet
Alle«heny 79, Oberlin 57
North Carolina St. 95, Duke 89 .
Clnclllllltl
St.
Xavier
and
Shaker
Heights.
Bloansburg 69, Millersville 67,
Richmond Tl. E. Carllblto 114
11 each: 17. Cincinnati Wlhrow 9: 18.
1. ClrdotTMnka
Salem Ttlkyo 117, W.Va. Wesleyan
Brown 98. Bryant 81
Columbus Euanoor 7: 19. Llma Senlor6:
Colgate 75. Lafayette 65
96
20. Findlay and Toledo St. John's. 5~ach.
Drew 56, FDU·MadlsCII 49
South C..rollna 85. Davldslll 57
E. Stroudsburg 98, West Chester 84
Southern 103, Nlcholll St. 76
,.,,
Dlvla... U
Ettzabethtown 69. t&gt;Jbrltlht 64
The Cltodel 8&amp; Ceolllll Sl. 711
Team
Pta.
Fordham 79, Bucknell73
Tow100 St. 7~, ~Xf!l 70
st.ran llllley llld ltllf
1. Dayton Dunbar (6i lll·l1 .............. 213
"
GriM&gt; City 71, C..rnegle-MeliM 53
Tr~ St. 157. VoOI'hees 116
2. Ketter In~ Alter t9111H! .............. l9%
would Iiiii tD lltlllk . . .
Hartford 86. Nortlumtern 79
Vanderbilt 89. Mluluippi52
SERVICE
AND
REPAIR
I. Porilm- (I) (1.1) ................... 1'11
"
HELP WANTED
Holy Croos 71, Army:;:;
Vlrglnlll 86. VIrginia Teclt 61
Co. Int. . . cllwdlel,
I. Willard t!l tlU1. ......................... 172
ON ZETOR -OACTORS
p•· 's
KlnR' S! Pa. )9fi, Wilkes 82
W. Vlrgtnlll Tedl91, Glmvllle St. 84
RETAIL SALES
5. VermUIM (12.01 ...... ..... ................ 72
flrllllll ..... .,. a..Lehlgh-92, Pennsytvan Ia 78
Plus
Other
,._
lrandl
6. Bellel011talne (14-11 ...................... 70
-''1 i1:
PERSON
LowetllOO, New Hampshire COil. 96
Akrtll 71. YOUJllltawn St. 66 tOTI
ICIII iAPt Polt. lllclne
7. Columbus Undett t13-21 ................ 56
..:...~j
Check Out Our Ia.,
H11dw11a, Lumb•.
Lycomlna 80, Junlata 61
Baldwth-Wallllce 65, John Corron
8. Cln. Forest Park 112·21 .. ............... 53
and
Middleport;
Rllnbow
CUSTOM
IIILT
MIT 68, Notwlch 52
56
lulldllll
MP.WI.
Prl411 on "Ntw" Zator
9. Warl'l!llsv1lle Hts: t1J.11 ................ 49
Moravian 76, Muhlenberg 70
Ba II St. 78, Ohio 50
10. LexlniiM (11 (13-11 ...................... 411
Mull
hevt tiQiel'lanct
bulilllll·
HOMES.&amp;
GARAGES
Troctora
and EqulplaHI
Mt. St. VIncent's 92, N.Y. Tech 70
~thany 95, Kansas Weolyan 91
s..... loa: 11. Van Wert t7: 12. Dayton . 111111, Clrulefl, lnd •Jl inIn lhtH tin... Full
New H.Jven 7,, S. Connecticut St .
(01'1
Now In Stodtl
Prices"
Cl!af!llnade-JuUt!llllo2~; 13. Clrelevllle:IO;
llmt wllh llenefhl.
770
.
s.thol 80. Conoonlla tMltuL) 71
*idlllll wiNi cer.- out
14!
Cln&lt;lnnall
GreortiiDII
19:
15.
(lie)
,
..
949-2101
MORRIS
PlttohUrgh 92, Pr""tdence 79
C. Mldtlpn 69, Kent 110
Join • troWIIII
MarysvWe and Sprlnjl!lela ~ton Rlflle,
til . . .
I HapjiJ
Pratll01, MoDoy 93
C. Mlo ..ll1 71. NE Ml11011r1 ·57
EQUIPMENT
CllrlltJntl for: tht nil·
Chicago St. 109, ~E Dllnots 107
or ••· 949-2160
Sacn!d Heart ~'· 8rldgeport77
THUMIAS
DO·IT
Scrantm 68. Delaware Val!ey 50
DePau 192, Droke 71
742-2455
Doy or Night
staJndj~~ c11nce ot 111e ltonlt.
·Slippery Rock 97, F.dlnboro68
oenanre 50, Bluff1cm 46
Sidlhill
hiland
SIIJIY Rrook 101\ Ct':NY 7l
NO SUNDAY CALLS
4-11-11-tln
(All Games)
•
).Team
W L
Fed. Hocking .................. .13 1
" l ·,
IKAH-A-W~Y
•.
.
· Wellston ....... ;... .: ..... ........ 11 4 11 Help Wllitecl ' .
Dill'S
.,
'.._,.
t!!"t N ~~n f. I '· -~ I .
'
. Vinton CCounty ............ ~ .. 8 5
CAIPENTEI SEIYKE
11 or;
I
11ANSMISSIOI
-Room Ufldlll:a
Belpre ........ .... .. ............ ... 8 6
..
' '.
aiMIAitOIIPlll
.
Trimble ....... .................... 6 7
..,..!~·
'
_._....and Ptu-..
Meigs ..................... ......... 5 7
HELP WANTED
SpA-== In
.t:· •,: Hl'_O'Dell Lumber Co. Is the next O'Dell Lumber," Perdue saltl. Alexander ............... .'.. ..... 5 9
RETAIL SALES
Tr-rnllllona,llnbl.
-Roolnl
· t. I
11\N
••
i ~··
sponsqr of a University of Rio ''In order to malntalli the quality Net-York ...: ................. . .. 3 10
-t-lor 8 EK•Icir
TUIIIIUp, 011 Chltngt,
. PERSON
I .
;; .. ' ..
Ptolnllnll
Clutah'll....... .
....
Grande men's basketball game of a program auch as ours, the Miller ............ , ............. ;.: .. · 1 13
Hmlw-. Lumber,
(Fftll UnMATESl
FIIIIIITIMATIS
ImPortant
when the Redmen host Wallh community playa
luHdlnl,.......·
Mun ~~we..,.,._
,,
•
TVC Gamet Only
College Saturday, Jan. 26 at 7: 30 part because It recoplzel the
V. C. YOUNG Ill
'
,,
value
of
education
received'
at
a
In
theM
llMI.
Full
992-5517
.
q
f··
Team
.w L
p.m. In Lyne Center.
9412-6215
11mt
with
Ilene
lila.
collep
or
1.1nlversity.
local
J
Free tickets for the game are
Fed. Hocklng ...................10 1
, _ , , Ohit '
"
' iI
Join • t-'111 ·
Wellston .......... ................8 3 ·
available at the O'Dell stores In O'Dell Lumber lias proven t~ver
'
11-14'90
tfn
;&gt;r:
com,.nv.
the years It Is a supporter of the
Vinton County ,.. , ...... ........7
3
GalUpolls and Pomeroy.
THOMAS 00-IT
A donation by O'Dell to the Rio mission at Rio Grande." ·
Belpre ......... ............... .....&amp; 5
THE HARDY OUTSIDE WOODBURHING
CENTER
"O'De)l
Lumber's
support
is
a
Trlmble ................ ...........5
6
Grande Athletic Boosters organ!·
•VINYL SIDING
(814)441-2002
HEATER WllH INSIDE THERMOSTAT
zatlon has assisll!d the university . major reason why Rio Grande
Alexande,r .......................4
6
•ALUMINUM SIDING
. (PATINTED) ,
Mr.
Thomes
·
received
wldes·
athletics
have
Meigs .. ,....... .................... 5
5
in Its efforts to recruit and retain
•ILOWNIN .
..,.,._._ _ Not
pread
Interest
In
tbe
commun·
Net..York ........................2 9
promising scholar-athletes, AI·
INSULATION
· ........ ,tltiii ...... WIIOII
· hletic Director Tom Perdue lty," Redmen Coach John La· r MIUer •.-.... .... :.................... 1 10
. . . . . . . . . t llllhiiiiiM
whom remarked. ''That aupport
T'fleed•r'• l'flllulll: ·
explained.
:
........ l()ftltlaltg._.lp MMtui!P 39 ,
"I thiDk the university has llu beJD&amp;~ted not only by
beeli very tortiiJII.te In havlq a . our team. but all tile otllet Federal ~-·ll'rlmble
......,. . . .11..1tiD!esl.... Vlnt,DII CO\Iftty 73 WellatoD 69
1oq and Joyal aupporter In vartlty .patti at Rio Graade." ·
,,,.. l!lllnwlel''
4lllnllll-.l'*-' ;tn
Nellonvllle·Yorli 77 Belpre 75
•
lOAD
EYfRY 12 1101111$
...
949-1101
Alexal!der - Open
1916 JAIUAI IJ6
:
wlllo94t-1161
CALL
,I
VANDIMPIAS
. . .,au.s
Alexander at Miller
VICKER'S WOOD HEATING
4 Dr•• l-.111 no dl.
3-ll·tllt
F.ederal HockiDI at Wellalon
Center.
.
.. I
..............wv.The otflce or Alumni Relations
IIIMob,.,.....wllta• .
' .•
Alumni and guesta will be Melp •t Vinton County
at the UnlversltyofRioGrandels
PIIIMI*II7H2Silfl1erl PA
admitted free, Alumni Relatlona Nel1011vllle·York at Trimble
encouraalag all alumni In GaiUa,
..........
111111111
Director Suaan Banks uld. Re- Belpre - Open
JackSon, Meigs and Vinton coun·
11M._, ....,. . dill.
frelhmenta
will be avaU. ble I!J ·
ties to attend the men's balket·
$11,110.80.
the Boolter Roam, adjacent to Miller at Eaatern
ball aame between Rio Grude
,, ..147-4161
.
NeliODvllle-York
at
Lopn
lbe gym. Alumni are aalr:ed to
and Dyke Collep on Saturday,
'
white to tbe aame. · warren Local at Belpre
Feb. 9 at 7:30 p.m. In . Lyne . wear red and
&lt;•

BULLE
.
T..IN
. ' BOARD DEADLINE
4: 30 P .M; DAY BEFORE
Pl!JBLICATION

24, 991
.

Thursday, January

·.~

BULLETIN BOARD

•

M THURS.. JAN. 24

0
e.

~==-~Q

ita!!nt2:Q ·.

an

l-Ias ~E FOR60TTEN TI-lE

TI-lE FAMOUS SERGEANT OF
TI-lE FOREIGN LEGION LOOKS
SAP TONI61-lT... IS 1-lE
TJ.IINKIN6 OF TJ.I.E PAST?

SLOGAN OFTJ.lE LEGION :
'' JE .Ne, RE6RETTE RIEN "?
'' I RE6RET NOTJ.IIN6! 11

Dlullllal~~
.,.....
e

I RE6RE!TJ.IAT 1 DRANK
TI-IAT LAST ROOT BEER ..

wortcl Today

DOUr"-t '
1:01 (Jfllavetlr IIIII IIIII

1:301l&lt;• 0 NIC Nlgltlly News

~ Allbolt IIICI CDIIIII

......
8

~ ~o.•,.,:.

Cil~o:l-.1 Cantacl

..

~Up

7:01! ~l.&lt;1J WMII of

,,
. ..

'uu

whO

'e~!::M:..:.flO&lt;~Oai=U•

NenHowc ·
ltJ)· ·~e-e

·•=::!~ .
I=:o•·-··

..
.,

and Mn. King
7:01 Ill H8ppr Dlyl
7:30
c:..~JbiOIIPIIIItnteiiYIII

,

'·

•

~

'

~ TO MA~E A ~NG

· · · ·'

'

~

eero. ••

7:31 Ill lanfonl and 8on
· 1:011 a&gt; • 0 Colby !!how Pam
Ia preaaut'ld lo provo her
affection for her boylrland.
Stereo. C
MOVIE: 1bt Ttm11n11
(P0112:GO)

'-... _,...,

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

. we.. ..........

(!) W11 i PNQ8 In tilt
MIIDII•r Age

(1).

FLOW

1'..... DOAIIJ
My11trlea Dowling and 811111
SIIYe try to stop • political
aaaanlnallen. ~. Q

C/'IAflT.

..

. , ·P

w llotMtlme g

&lt;II 0 . Top Cope The

ALLEYOOP

murder of 11ven vlctlmlli
trllced to • dtnUat. Slfto.

8.
~·Homer
teaasea111 1"- alllr he Ia
Thl

poltontd and h81 24 hOurs

toHve.s-.c
0 Murder, .... WnM

w•

S"lereo.~

aOnatital
II PrllnAwa
Ill MOVII: 1bt Dirty Donn:
Tha
"~ulan 12:00) Q

'*'

Scoreboard ...
Oblo

1:01 (J) MOVIE: Act of
vena••~ (1:451

1:30 w lhle Old I1DuN

,

EEK

a bum get off the alrttl and
1Um hla llle around. Stereo.

i.
·~-Dove (PI 4
of 4)' CBS Mo¥1t Sptclll

CAWIJG IT

12:00) SteNO. C
• AmMican r.fualc lllop
1:00 C2le 0 C...... Robin hires
Bobby Hatlteld to fling 1o
Rebecclllll their wadding.

''MJMS"V\X'

Slereo. Q

-

"' a •· .,.

TVC cage

l
I

___...

an

Brandon falls for a HniOr ·
who haa a blby. Stereo. C
·0 MOVIE: The E•Oicld (1!1
(2:301
Nubile Now
• Lany ICing Llvel
t:30C2le 0 Wlnp Fay's apirh
sag olter she loin a tennlt

a

clla!l'llklnthiP. StlriO. Q
~ Cal•lll Iaiit.....

'

URIAH If YOU BEEN
GLUED TO THAT

~::~:)Q

NON II I'M ON

MY BREAK

~,,.,P~tln.mttlltlltlllim11111 U¥t

TO MOVE?

(!) Eyee on the Prt&amp;e:

Fill TIN
NINUTISII

Arnerlca'a Clvlllllghtl Ytani
~Under,.

..

lClttlll•lon
tD • ...r Tnllc: Thl Next

Ql CNH. EveninG NIWI
. D 700 Clu1l Willi Pat ·

R*'-

'

- ,.

'.

- "' ·-

"'

"

10:30W Will Vltgln18 Lag! I 1M
Report

11:ooC2J• &lt;Il
' 0 ......

•SSEU
.511110 CO;

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

a

......

.......,

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

......,..• ,_:

'••

.....

~

I

•

'

l........l.i..._...L.-.1...-J.'---J~o Employee: "I cleaned out the
.--.,..-------. bank." Employer:· "I see. As
,......;N.:....;:O:,...:.:.R..rG;...::E:,....:..I..,.,..-llthe J·-anitor or lhe •••• .-.... ?"

~ I 'I

II I 19 e Complete

8

PRIN
. T NUM8fQED It
LETTERS
.

I)

NSCQAMBLE
ANSWER
U.

IIIIIII J I

l·lf.ll

NORTH

.KJ5
.A 742
tAQ5
.QJ5

ByJamesJ~y

When you respond to partner's take-:
o!'t ~ouble over an opposing opening
btd, tt Is normal to jump in a suit with
9 or 10 points, not as a forcing bid but
only to leU partner that there may be
ia &amp;•me If he bas something extra for
his takeout double. It is important for
a defender to take note when this does
not bappe_n. In ttiday's ileal, South bid
only ~ spade when North doubled.'
Wilen North CODtinued with ·one not~p, tbeoretlcally showing 18 or 19
pomta, South mentioned his other suit.
North bid two spades, and South, as·
sllllllq that North had a better band,
went.rl&amp;bt to 1ame.
Declarer won the opening lead with
tbe klnl of hearts and 'led the 10 of
spades. West ducked. When another
spade wu led, West took the ace.
Since South had shown up with the
heart king and (by Inference) the spade
queen, west correctly assumed that
Soutb could not also hold the ace of
clubs. (He would tben have j,umped to
two apatles as his response to l'lorth's
takeout double.) ·So West played king
of clubs and a club, and got a ruff to
~t four spades.
Declarer made it too easy for West.
U declarer had won dummy's ace of

EAST

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161n
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exceed
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11 Lams il
15 "Clumsy
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bye-bye
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servings 31 Court
20 Bridge
hearings
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33 Lamb's
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alias
money
34 Longings
22 Mark
35 Whirlpool
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26 Debased
setting
28 Signs ol 37 Knight
tomorrow
Iilla
30 Hilma ol 38 Mine
the brave
output

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liver, e.g.
29 One way
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hearts at trick one and then played
king of spades, West might not have
been able to read that hl• partner beld
the ace of clubs. And what If South
held the ace of clubs anyway and bad
made a terrible underbid originally?
Then West bad 1011 only an overtrick
and ri!!Vtr was aolnc to set tbe band.

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Our young neighbor nad watched iny son try to drive a
stick shift car. He came to me and asked "Ooes that
ear drive or does it JUST HOP?"
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DailY Sentinel

Thul'lday. January 24, 1991.

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

---Area deaths-- County EMS.answers 7 calls . _,...._Meigs announcements-John Meeks

Falls; and sevUal nieces and
Meigs C®nty EmcqaJcy Medi,_,__
c8l Services llllSWeled seven calls
John A. Mee.b, 76, of 42725
In addition to his parents, he was
Gilkey Ridge Road. Shade, died preceded in death by a soo, Dolllild
Wednesday, Jan. 23, . 1991, nt MiUer in 1979; a stepmodler,
Veterans Memorial ~ilal.
Mamie· and a sister G111:e
Born in Lodi Township in Athens
The ' funeral will be ·held on
C~U~_~ty, he was ~ ~ of the late Saturday at 2 p.m. at Ewing
William and Mazie Gilkey Meeks. · Funeral Home with Rev Earl
He was a ~ ~ !~~tired Shuler officiating. Burial will be in
employee of Ohio Uruvemty, an · Letart Falls Cemetery.
Low income Ohioans have five
Anny veteran of World War II and
Friends may call at the funerlil working days left to file their
a mem~ of the Albany Veterans ho!lle from 4-9 p.m. on Friday.
regular HEAP applications before
of Fore1gn Wars Post .9893, and a
In lieu of Dowers donations may tbe Jan. 31 deadline. ,
member of Harrisooville Masonic be made to . knerican Polio
Rei!Ular HEAP pays a portion of
Lodge411. .
Foundationor the American Cancer · eligib1e households beatiil bill for
He is survived . by his wife, Society.
·
December, Janllll')' and ~ebruary.
Thelma P. French Meets; a son,
·
Assistance for this program is
John w. Meeks of Albany; a son Floyd Baninger
limited to One per Mating season
" and daughter-in-law, Robert F. and
·
but any income-eligible households
Joyce Meeks of Guysville; a
floyd F. Barringer, Jr., 62, of which have not applied are wged to
daughter and son-in-law, Florence Reedsville, died Wednesda milm- doso.
·
and Matthew Grueser of Shade; a ing, Jan. 23, 1991, at .SL roseph's
The regular HEAP prognim
bro!M' Dawson Meeks, also of Hospital in Parkersburg, W.Va., foi- benefits are not classilled as emerShade; nine grandchildren; two lowing an extended illness.
gency ~ applicants do opt have to
step-grandsons; and two step-greatBorn in Meigs COIDity, he was meet eiiiC!l!eiiCY .criteria to apply
granddaughters. .
,
the son of the late Floyd and Lucy for the regul.- HEAP program.
· Besides his parents, he was Deeter Barringer. He was a veteran
The (!eadline for the eme~gency
preceded in death by three brothers, of the U.S. Anny during the Korean HEAP program .is Marc.h 29. EmerVinton, Rex and Everen; and two confticL He was previously ~ency HEAP provides assisl8nce to
si~rs. Flossie Bricldes and employed · by
Walker
of lllCome eligible hQuseholds who
Aorente Sloane.
Parkersburg, W.Va. .
have had ·· utilities diseonnected,
Funeral services will be held
Surviving are his wife; Elizabeth face the threat of disconnection or
Saturday at 1 p.m. at the Bigony- Johnson B8rringer; four daughters, have 10 days or less of bulk fuel
Jordan Funeral Home in Albany Mluy Sue Barller; Little Hocking, supply
·
with W'dlard Love officiating. Sherri Bauman, Marietta, Tammy
ApPlicatiOn must be made in
Burial will be in the Burson Putnam, Hockingp&lt;Xt, and Teresa . penon by an adult household
Cemetery at Shade with military Barber, Reedsvilfe; two sons, Thny membe'r. Additional information
graveside services by the Albany and DarreU Barringer, both of . can be provided by calling 446VFW Post
Reedsville; two brothers, Dorsel 0611 in Gallipolis, 367-7341 in
Friends may call at the funeral and Gerald Barringer, both. of Cheshire, or 992-5605 or 992-6629
home 2 to 4 p.m. and 7 to 9 p.m. on Reedsville; three sisters, Lori in Pomeroy.
Friday. Masooic services w'dl be Smith, Reedsville, Betty Keams,
conducted by the Harrisonville · Clifton; W.Va., and Donna Gibbs,
Lodge at the funeral home at 7:30 Letart,
W.Va.;
several
p.m. Friday.
grandchildren
and
step-

·-·-WS.

Application
deadline is
January 31

grandchi~dren.

Lewis Miller

In addition to his parents, he was
preceded in death by an infant sis" .
fer and an infant grandson.
·
Services will be held on Saturday at ll a.m. at White F1111C1111
Home in Coolville with Rev.
Gerard Wilson officiating. Burial
will be in Weatherby cemetery in
Coolville.
Friends may call at the funeral
home from 2-4 p.m. and 7-9 p.m.
on Friday.

Lewis Miller, 79, of Tuppers
• Plains, died Wednesday, Jan. 23,
1991, at Holzer Medical Center, af.
fer a lengthy illness.
.
He was retired from the Union
Barge Line after 20 years of service
and was affiliated with the United
Methodist Church and Maritime
Union.
He was born on March 6, 1911
in l.elart Falls, the son of the late
Ban and Mina Harris Miller.
·
He is .survived by his wife, Ruby
Marr Miller of Tuppers Plains; five
sisters, Mrs, ~les (Irene)
Hayman, Westerville, MIS. Elmer
(Lydia) Stultz, SL Mary's, W.Va.;
Mrs. Wilmer (Cma Mac) Byers,
Warren; Mrs. Bernard (Opal) Diddle, Racine, and MIS. Kermit (Jean)
Fisher, Galli lis; ~ brothers,
Bjll Miller, ~ipolis. Bob Miller,
New York, and F~ Miller; Letart •

'

Clarification
Donald R. Hall, Williamstown,
W.Va., was the driver of a truck in
an accident last week involving
Lori Louks of Long Bottom.
Hall struck Louks' vehicle as she
was twning into her driveway from
Summerfield Road, and his name
was omiaed from a SIOJy regarding
the accident in The Daily Sentinel.

•

BOosters will meet Monday at 7
far assistance on Wt4neoday and
. Gardea Clab to •eet
.Thursday IIIOfllina.
The Rutland Garden Club will p.m. ll the hi~ scbool lllnd room
. At 12:36 p.m., Middleport~ meet Monday at 1:30 p.m.. ll the to plan for .!be cbiclcen DOOdle dinwent to R.mOid Saeet for Sue home of Mn. Qlris Diehl. A net to be. held Feb. 7. All parents
are wged ·to llald.Salem Centtz ·
"FFowerin
Yares. who was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital. AI 8:10 p.m., ~lallts.:Hanging Baskets~ Elementary Cutline
·
Pomeroy squail went to Pomeroy will be pmiCI1Icd by MIS. Vernon
Nursmg
. and Rehabilitalion
Cent.rz Webtc and MIS. Curt1s Dalton.
.
flW Iva Johnson, who was II'IIISpOI'·
Vetenllll Memorlallfoepltal
ted to Holzer Medical Centtz. AI
OAPSE to •eet
WEDNESDAY
AD~SSlONS ·
The OAPSE'Cbapf« No. 17 will
8:59 {l.m., 'Rutland squad went to
Fosler, Racine.
KingsbUry Road for Debbie Six. meet Jan. 31 Ill 7:30 p.m. at the ' Frances
WEDNESDAY
DISCHARGES •
She was taken to Veterans. AI 9:23 Meigs Junior Higb School.
None.
p;m., Middleport squad went to
Southern BOIII'd to meet
Powell StreeL Anthony Perry was .
The Soutllem Local School
,·
taken from there ·to VelerBJIS. AI Board will meet Monday at 7 p.m.
Continued-from pager
10:31 p.m., Racine squad went to at the high schooL
itself
from attack. .
State ROIJte 124 for Misty Grueser.
Revival
'
'Every
state in the world has
Grueser went io Veterans.
.
Revival
with
.
Norman
1ltylor
at
rtght
to
defend Itself accordthe
On Thur:r at 12:53 a.m., Mil\·
the
Asb
Street
Free
Will
Baptist
ing
to
the
U.N. charter," Mudleport sq
went to Leading Church in Middleport will be held
barak
told
reporters after adCreek Road for John .Lambert.
Monda.Y
througb
Feb.
2
at
7:30
dressing
a
special sessiOn of
Lambert was taken to Pleasant Val,
p.m.
nightly.
Theze
will
be
special
,
Egypt's
parliament.
ley Hospital. AI . 7:59 a.m.,
His remark was the clearest
Pomeroy squad and .Chesler Fire singing niglltly.
to date that Cairo would
signal
Department went to State Route 7
Band
boo5ta
8
to
meet
not
leave
the coalition If Israel
for an auto rK:CidenL Pearl Edwards
The
Meig~ High School Band
struck back at Iraq.
refused treatmenL .

Hospital news

Saudi ... ·

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a1
Vol.41. No.193
Copyri~hted 1991

ANKLE &amp; DRESS

S15 oa2/S25

S15!

Allies record 3,
sorties against Iraq
By PAUL BASKEN
United Press International
, U.S.·Ied pilots took advantage
of a second straight day of clear
skies Friday to continue heavy
bombing · in their air campaign
against targets in Kuwait and
Iraq.
The pilots, plagued earlier this
week by several days of cloudy
weather In the Persian Gulf war,
greeted clearing skies over Kuwait by pountllng airfields, fuel
dumps and Iraq's elite Republl·

DONATIONS MADE • Meigs County's rour
banks have lent a helping hand to the Meigs
· County Chamber or Commerce. Each bas
donated $1,000 toward the cJuunber 's new Ex- • ·
ecutive Director/Development Direclor's oRlce. .
Pictured at the presentatiOI! · at Fanners Bank
and Savings Company's main ofBce in Pomeroy
on Thursday are, · l·r, Chamber Director
.

BOOTS

AU LEATHER

ne .

SHOE PLACE
MIDDLEPORT, OH.
'

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.,
1972,
lhefir~
24-hour banki~ machine in lhe U.S.

J'llfll.lmli:IIM to process a

pm'""lcash ~accounl.

1985, illlmduad bankwide
quality i~ system.

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By. BRIAN J, REED

. named i.n the indicttnent against
· ·, '·-Yoling, is an aggrJIYIIIed felony of
}ohn i.e~V!S Young Is ~xpected to the firs_t degree.
· ,, ·
be returned to West V11g1rua to face
TesJunony got underway on
a 15-count indicttnent following his Wednesday in Young's second trial
conviction in Meigs County Com- in lhe court;· the . first trial · in '
mon Pleas Court late Thursday December ended in a "hung jury".
evening.
·
. An attempt on Tuesday to elller into
After five and a half hours of a plea bargain agreement fell
deliberation, the 12 member jury through when Young refused to
returned to the courtroom -llt ..JJ •. Plead guilty to the charge. ..
p.m. last night with a verdict of
Sentencmi in the case has been
guilty on a charge oflcidnapping.
deferred unnl the prior conviction
Yi&gt;ung, 46, was indicted in SJ?CCification against Young can be
August by the Meigs County Grand toed before Meigs County ComJury, and accused of transporting mon Pleas Judge Fred W. Crow. ill. ·
his teenaged niece from her home Youn~ has been convicted of two
io Middleport and into Mason felomes in the past • an armed robCounty, W.Va., where she was . bery in 1970 and the murder of
raped repeatedly before being · Mason, W.Va., resident Mary Berry .
returned home. Kidnapping, as · in1977.
,

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1986, storttd 8oM an. Collegr,
a ltlldershlp tmirl~ program

1985, llffl&lt;!inred firsi

l989.pianw&lt;d dtdronic ~

&lt;flax mums.

1990,~ -4-lhe-art scfi'NW&lt;
10 lin1t all customer &lt;m&gt;m15 and llrmsaelions.

aiJd
•

Two Ohio legislators want
to regulate .automated calls
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) -At mated calls .
least two state legislators are fed
O'Brien's measure would reup with recording devices 'that quire those firms to ensure that
call yoa on the phone and won't the recording disconnects when
disconnect even after you hang . the. recipient hangs up.
up. ,
"What if someone has an
Rep. Jacquelyn O'Brien, R· emergency call to make and this
Cincinnati, ~nd Rep. Jane Camp- thing is going on and on?"
bell, D- Cleveland, have both O'Brien said. "I've had them on
introduced bills directed at com- my answe~lng machine while
panies that' make those auto- I'm away. It goes on for three

-March to honor U. S.
troops set Saturday

our laurels. Because we know hard work is the

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By JULm E. DILLON
Sentinel News Stair
A march to show support for troops serving with oPeration Desert
Stonn in the Gulf War will be held Saturday begiMing at I p.m. in ·
Pomeroy.
. The parade 11181Ch, organized by Michael Crites, son of Vivian
Miller and Don Headley, will congr,egate behind the old Pomeroy
Junior High School beside Grace 1Episcopal Chun:h. Crites, a
sophomore at Easttzn High School, organized a similar parade
march in Tuppers Plains on Monday in which -approximately 50
people participated.
.
_
- Crites reason for organizing the 11181Ch is simple. "I've got family
and relatives over the.e and it's for them. I don't agree with all of
the proteSIOI'S. I think our trQOPS sbould be :su~rted." Crites says.
"Wiien the smoke clears I thinli: America will still be standing, and I
think we·u ha~ the troopS home again. God bless the families of the
aoops. If it weren't for God, I don't !mow what I'd do riJlht now." ·
· Paulette IWTison and the Shady River Shufllers will also participate in the .Jl!U1Ide and she feels, according to Crites, that there
wid be a surpnsing turnout It has also been reported that The Mid·
nigbt Cloggers will participate. pjtes says anyone wishing to take
part in the march is weleome. "I'm hoping for a good turnout," says

Crites.

24-hour phone banking. New ways to give you find out. Simply stop by the cloSest Bank One,;
unheard Of convenience.
.
WOO kmws, yoo
.=
:
~does a bank full of thinkers justmightmakea OOnking IJAN(601E.·
to come. Watch for home computer banking and andinnovarors look like? Here's an easy way to discovery of your own.
~~take$." :

With a history of innovation like this, secret to winning your business and keeping it.
you'd think the people at Bank One would re~.
Right now we're already researching
.But we're not about to start resting on new banking services that will set trends for years

.

· According to Meigs Cou'nty
Prosecutlng· Attorney Steven L. '
Story, such' a specification could
signficantly increase the sentence
imposed against Young; but must
be tried seperately before the judge
for the purpose of sentence eoliancement
·
If the prior conviction sp:ecifica·
lion is included in the conSideration
of his sentence, Young could face
10 to 25 years in prison.
The Mason County, W.Va. grand
jury indicted Young on 15 counts
related to the incident, and Young is
expected to be exttadited to Mason
County to face those charges following sentencing here,
Story anticipates the hearing on
the prior coiwiction specification to
be held anytime.

Parade participants are to meet at 12:15 bdrind the old Pometoy
Junior High School to get organized. Crites Stated that signs and ribbons will be available but that peole may bring their own.
.
The parade will travel down Main Saeet onto Court Slreet to
Second Slreet where the marchers will disband on PoweU 's parking
Icc.

.

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days and takes up most of your
tape."
Her bill also would require that
any such recordings identify the
caller and the na ture of the call.
She said many of the devices try
to sell a product or service but
first "they make it sound like
you've definitely won so)nething.
It's almost an invasiorl of your
privacy."
.
Campbell's bill Is even more
restrictive. It would forbid automated dialing and recorded
telephone messages to nursing
homes, hospitals, emergency
service providers or anyone else ·
who does not give written consent
to the local telephone company .
Her measure also would proqiblt such calls 'between 9 p.m.
and 8:30a.m. and require that at
the', outset a live operator states
the source and nature of the call.

FIRST TO FILE • Bruce Reed (R-Pomeroy) has become tbe &amp;rat
candidate tb file (or the office of Pomeroy Mayor. Here, Meigs
Couiiijo Board or Eledlons Director Jane Frymyer processes the
pedtlons Reed filed in conjunction wltb his candidacy.

February 21 is deadline
for filing election petitions
By BRIAN J, REED
Sentinel News Starr ·
With the de8dline for filing a
month away, residents in Mid·
dleport and Pomeroy are gearing up
for the electiOn of village official&amp;.
Mayor's races in both Middleport and Pomeroy wiU be
decided in November, and accord·
ing to Board of Elections Director
Jane Frymyer, several individuals
have been in her office to pick up
the necessary paperwork to file.
The deadline for filing for those
offices, according to Frymyer, is
February 21 nt 4 p.m.
Frymyer states that Republian
Fred Hoffman. the incumbent
mayor in Middlepqrt,"has picked up
his petition, as have Pomeroy
residents Larry Wehrung, Walter
Grueser, Doaie Turner and Bruce
Recid. Wehrung, who currenUy serves on Pomeroy Village Council, is

IJI

a Democrat, and Grueser, Turner

and Reed are registered wiih the
· board as Republicans.
Reed .filed his petitions and became the first candidate to ckl so on
Thursday (see related stay, this
page).
· F9'!"yer stated that potential
candidates do not declare the
offices for which they are circulat·
ing their positions at the time they
so both Grueser apd
pick them
Turner coul teehnically be seelcing
either the mayor's job or a seat on
the village council. . ·
Reed, a Republican, is cunently
serving the village as a councilman,
and his spot on the council will be
decided in November. In addition, ll
second Pomeroy· council position,
that held by Republican Bryan
Shanlc, wiU also be decided in
November,
. as
wiU
the
cledc/treasurer : position now filled
Continued on .pag~ 10 ..

1·

Bruce Reed (R-Pomeroy) has
become the first candidate to file
his petition in race for the Pomeroy
Mayor's office.
Reed, who has been a membtc of
Pomeroy ViUage COUllCil for 10
years, serves in the capacity of Vice
- President at Farmers Bank' and
· Savings Company. He has been a
life-long .esident of the village and ·
he and his wife, Rita, have two
children with twins on the way.
· Jn 8ddition to . serving, as a
councilman; · Reed is the most
~~ past president of the Meigs
County Chamber of Commerce;
being one of the moving forces behind 1990's combination of
Pomeroy Chamber and Middleport
..:hamber into a county-wide organization.
Reed was also a chief organizer
of this r.ear's Big Bend
Stemwheeler s Festival, which is
ex~ to become an annwil
event in Pomeroy each fall.
Reed sees the mayor's office as
an opportunity to take his ac~
complishment's as a councilman a
step.funher. .

,

"~ a councilman." Reed said
Thursday, "you see a lot of things.
that need to .be done, but sometimes
your hand$ are tied because you are
seving on the oouncil."
.. "The clean-up of the village is
one of the first things I would take
care of," Reed said. ''That's one
mauer where the council's wishes
have not been followed ~gh."

Flu outbreak lis
detected in Ohio
COLUMBU,S. ·Ohio (UP!) State healtll offioials say four
cases of Type B Yamagata
influenza have been confirmed In
Ohio, meaning the flu season is
officially under way.
Dr. Thomas Halpin , chief of
preventive medicine In the Ohio
Department of Health, said ·
. · Continued on page 10
'

•

'

I

RA C to restart .third pot line
at reduction .plant ..on Monday
.

.

RAVE;NSWOOD, W.Va. - Ravenswood
Aluminum Corpora'·
More S~uds hit Israel
lion
announced
Thursday that it
., ...
JERUSALEM (UPI) - Sev- will restart a third potline at its
eral .Scud-B mlsllles apparently reduction plant In Ravenswood
on Monday. thereby enabling the
fire~ lrom Iraq hlllsrael Friday,
evading U.S. Patriot mtselles plant to increase tts prlma.ry
bronght to Israel to shoot them aluminum production capacity
down, mllbry source8 said. · · by • 50 percent, a news release
·
"A fe~ ~cuds hit the ground," from the company said.
The
company
is
boosting
its
said the source, just minutes
after the mlulles landed at 8: 02 production in order to meet the
p.m. Israeil time (11:02 a.m: growing demads ofoutsldecustomers, who al'ready have p·ur·
EST).
chased
the potline's production
Officials could not Imme1991.
for
diately ._say where the mlselles ·
The company is res tar ling a
landed or detennlne how much
potllne
that has been Inactive
damare waa cauaed.
1981.
Approximately onesince
•11 waa the fourth time that the
month
after
its res tart, the
high-explosive mluUea have
potllne
will
reach
its capacity
been llred at Israel. In the Iaat
production
of
250,000
pounds per
attack, three people died ol heart
attacks, cl- to 100 were Injured day .
Ravenswood management
and conalderable properly damalso
Is studying the possibility of
age wu caull8d.
restarting the plant's fourth and

.

more al'lled aerial targets and
captured one British airman.
Britain conllrmed losing
another Tornado fighter bomber
over southern Iraq, but there
were no reports of other new
allied casualties.
Baghda(l Radio quoted a war
communique Issued by the.Iraql
high command as saying allied
hombers had struck various
targets In Iraq Including "civilian centers" in both ·the north
Continued on page 10

Reed files
p~tition for
mayors' post

EHzabetb Schaad; Emma Jane Paugh, represent·
inJ Central Trust of Soutbeasten Obio; Millie
M1dkllf and Joan Wolfe, co-managers or tbe ·
Pomeroy ofBce or Bank One, Athens, N.A.;
Chamber President, Dr. Nick Robinson; Bill
Nease or· Home National Bank or .Racine; and
Theodore T. Reed, Jr., President or Farmers
Bank and Saving~~ Company.

-;.:-_,-,.-·-;Seltf!ael Nua Stair-

••.

Chief Quality Olnrrol &lt;!f&lt;er.

can Guard units, they reported.
Allied forces registered a gulf
war-record 3,000 sorties on
Thursday, as a Saudi !ight~r pilot
downed a pair of Iraqi
warplanes .
.
At sea, U.S. forces sank an
Iraqi. minesweeper and liberated
a tiny Kuwaiti island.
Iraq .said Friday allied
bombers had launched 111 overnight raids on Iraqi territory.
Baghdad Radio said Iraqi antiaircraft batteries shot down 14

·: Young convict~.d by Meigs
·jury; sentencing deferred

The Place to _Shop for Great Values!

992-5627

2 S.ctiono. 14 Pogoo
25 Cents
A Multimedia Inc. New..,aper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio. Friday, January 25, 1991
'

OUPWOMa'S

WOMEN'S SHOES
&amp; SNOW BOOTS

Low tonight In mid teens.
Chance of snow 80 percent.
Saturday , cloudy. Hlghtnmld .
3118. Chance of precipitation 50
percent.

•

South Central Ohio
Mostly clear Thursday night ,
with a low between 10 and 15.
Increasing cloudiness Friday,
with highs between 25 and 30.
Eldended Foreeaat
Saturday through Monday
A chance of snow saturday.
with generally fair weather Sunday. and a chance of snow again
Monday.

UI.GIOW

1966,one cf lhe first banks
to cffer consumer credi! cards.

•

•

Weather

•

1950, introducedfir~
drive-in bank in the Mid..,st.

Pick-3: 901
Pick-4: 4380
Cards: Q·H; 2.C;
9-D; 9-S

Page3

NU R
R N~._.
.
..... CONTINUES
20°/o OFF ALL DEITERS ·
20°/o OFF ALL NURSEMATES
20°/o OFF AU WORK BOOTS
30°/o OFF ALL .CONNIES

N. SECOND STIEET

Ohio Lottery

Ohio State .
racks up 17th
win, 80-70

final potline, bringing the smelt·
ing operation to its full capacity
for the lirst time In nearly a
decade. The decision on the
fourth potllne will be mad_e
during the next few months,
based on market condltioRs.
"This announcement demonstrates the continuing progress
and development of our company,". said R. Emmett Boyle,
chairman ot Ravenswood Alumi-num Corp. Boyle said the potline
restart will strengthen Ravenswood's customer base and improve its flexibility In responding
to changes in the marketplace.
· "Our primary aluminum customers have shown they are
condfldent that Ravenswood can
give them a quality product at
competitive price," Boyle said.
"Their confidence Is J\lstlfled.
Despite the strike, Raven~; ~
wood's performance remains
solid.' '
·

· The expansion of Ravenswood's primary aluminum
market is an Important step
. forward, Boyle said. It will give
the plant new capacity and will
help the company broaden Its
customer base.
Traditionally, the reduction
plant produced its aluminum
solely for use by the Ravenswood
fabrication plant The fabrica··
lion pian t processes primary
aluminum into a wide range of
products.
Following their purchase from
Kaiser Aluminum, !he Ravenswood reduction and fabrication
facilities have beguri to operate
more Independently .
No llew proposals were made
by either the company or the
union, · nor were there any
changes In positions by either
side during the meeting. No
further bargaining sessiQns are
schec:!uled at this time.

�.

..

. Friday, January 25, 1991

111 Court S&amp;reel
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE JNTERI!STS OF TR.,; ME108:1\lASON AREA
A~

f!i!m~

qj~

.· .

,......_. 4 -ro .......,..c::~,.,. .

.

ROBERT.L . WINGETT
Publisher
·

CHARLENE HOEFLICH

. General Mana1er

PAT WHITEHEAD

Aulslaal Publllher/Coalreller
A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Pub!~ her• Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They shquld be less than 300
.. words tong. All letters are subject to editing and must be sterted with
name, address and telephone numbel'. No unsigned letters wUI be published. Letters should heln good taste, addressing Issues, not personall·

lies.

•White House getting
uptight over war

Could.~ U. S. have ammo shortage?
.

WASHINGTON - It has been
so long illl!ce U.S. troops engaged
In massive combat that the am·
munition buyers Inside the Pen·
tagon feared before they went
Into Operation Desert Storm that
prolonged combat would strip
the cupboards bare.
Pentagon Insiders were con·
cerned In mld·January that the
operation could exhaust much of
Its crucial ammunition before .
the mission was over. In fact,
much of the ammunition sent to
the Gulf was used up In practice
firings.
A top Pentagon official re·
cently confided that the ammunl·
tion reserves are at such a low
that U.S. forces almost ran out of
crucial Mark 66 2. 75-lnch rockets
In the 10-day Invasion of Panama .
In December 1989. The rockets
are needed to provide a mass lve
spray of firepower from helicopt·
ers. The Pentagon Is still short on
those rockets even now, more
than a year after the Panama
invasion. The Air Force has
some In stock. But typical Inter·

service Infighting Is getting In
the way. The Air Force Isn't .,
s h ar Ing wlth ·the A~Y un Iess the
Army · buys replacements !rom
Canada to replenish th.e Air
Force inventory .
U.S. troops also are reportedly
s· hor t on M791 s, a 25 mm armor· ·
p IereIng roun d II re d Irom the
Bradley and the Marines' ar·
mored vehicles. That shOrtage
resu lied .f rom a 1986 ·dec.s
I io n by
the Pentagon to build a better
mousetrap. The new
rounds
were developed and ordered, but
will not be delivered for several
weeks. To fill the gap, the Dutch
government has offered to sell
the United · States 2.5 million
M791 rounds. Buf so far the Pen·
tagon Is In slow motion and.
hasn't bought the Dutch ammo·
·
nition.
The M791 armor plercers are
cruclal to front -line fighting. Sol·
dlers are carried Into battle In
the armored vehicles that rely
heavily on the 25 mm ground lire
to protect their assaults. ,
Despite the known shortages,

~lR JOi4N

TWIN ~A~

Anderson

DIFF~T WORL.O .

Recasting makeup of the Peoples llouse
Cla!ence Miller

letters to the editor

.
I

...

Democratic leaders lost war vote William Rusher

56).
On thll date In history:
.
In 1890, Nellie Bly, a young New York reporter, completed a trip
around the world In the as toundlng time of 72 days, six hours and 11
mlnutel.
.
:In 1915, transcontinental phone service was Inaugurated In a
boolnlp between New York and San Francisco.
In 1971, Cbarll!l Manson and three wom(!n were found guilty In the
murders of actretl Sharon Tate and six other ~·pie In Los Angelea.
In lJIIl, 52 AmeriCans held holtage In Ii·an for 444 days returned to
the United States.

..

I

In voting to authorize President
Bush to commit the armed forces
of tbe United States to battle
against Iraq on the terms . laid .
down In tbe resolution of the U.N.
Security Council, Congress hand·
ed the Democratic leadership of
txith Houses a resounding defeat.
Nothing cari erase the memory
of the way those same leaders
jerked Bush around during the disgraceful "budget negotiations"
last Slimmer - refusing to make
any projlosals of their own, luring
him into the repudiation d. his solumn pledge ("No new taXes").
and then denying him eVen the ex·
pi!Cted benefits of his costly compromise. But every .dog has his
day, and Mr. Bush Is certainly entitled to chuckle over his opponents' !allure to block the war re-

solution.
the power to declare war, many
What makes the victory· so be honored largely In the breach
sweet Is what the Democratlc ' and be broadly unsuited, In add!·
leaders were actually s¢heming lion, to 20th century conditions.
to bring about, If ony they could But It has never been repealed,
deny Mr. Bush the congressional and If Congress could have
authorization he soug)lt. Senate avoided passing any act of au tho· .
Republic leader Bob Dole was rlzation, and If a war aiJalnst
criticized for excessive partisan· Iraq were then to be launched
ship when he wisecracked that and drag on until AmeriCan pubsome Democrats seemed less In· lic opinion turned against Mr.
terested In getting Saddam Hus· Bush, the ·Democratic leaders
seln out of Kuwait than In getting wouldn't have hesitated to try to
George Bush out of the White •Impeach .him and remove him
House; but that l.s precisely what from office lor violating the plain
Speaker Tom Foley; Senate rna· wordJ ol the Constitution.
jorlty .leader George Mitchell,
Happily, that possibility i.~. ~
and a m~t~orlty'llf the Democrats eliminated by the resolution ConIn both Houses had In mind.
gress adopted. Things may ~o
Article I, Seeton 8 of the Con· badly for Mr. Bush In Iraq, and
stttutlon, which grants Congress the Democrats may benefit poll!·
lcaliy from his distress. But the

sword of Impeachment, which
tbey managed to poise over
Richard Nixon's head. ·and which
tbey labored so long (and unsuc·
cessfuliY) to swing Into position
over Mr. Reagan's In the Iran·
contra hearings, no longer poses
any threat to Mr. Bush.
If anyone doubts that Impeach·
ment was on the hands of thJ Democratic leadership, let them
contemplate the highly partisan
nature of the vote for authortza.
lion. Almost every Republican In
both Houses voted for It; almost
every vote against It was cast by
a Democrat. The winning margin was provided by a distinct
minority of House · Demacrats
and a bare handful of Denio:
cratlc senators.

42-39 at hal1t1me and had to Jiold
off tile Cardinali In the final

the win.
played without freshman Damon head coach Randy Ayers. "We ball with 34 -seconds left ,. but
Elsewhere In the UPI Top 25,
Bailey, who was out with a thigh always have a tough time at Grant came up, with a steal at
seccinds.
.No. 3 Indiana topped Michigan bruise. Demetrius Callp paced Williams Arena. "
mldcourt and dunked to seal the
Daron Jenklll&amp; added 17 points 70-60; FourtiJ..ranked Ohio State Michigan, 9-8 and 2·5, with 21
At Stanford, Calif., Sean Rooks victory. Utah Is 18·1 overall and
-.,
points. · ' ·
for the Golden Eagles, Bernard downed Minnesota 80-70; No. ~
.
banked In a turn-around jumper 7-0 In the league. Colorado State
..o,
Haslett, who started In place of Arizona edged Stanford 78-76;
the
with
one
second
left
give
At MlnneapoUs, Jamaal Brown
•'
fell to 9·8 and 1·5. Walter Watts
•',.
Chancellor, had 13, Johnson 12 No. 10 UCLA was upset by scored seven of his team-high 17 Wildcats the Paclfic·10 victory. added 13 points lor Utah. Doug
,.,,
and Ron Rembert 11.
Oregon State 97·96 tn · double points during a decisive 2l:S run Cllris Mills had 18 points and Larson led Colorado State, 9·8
Everlck Sullivan's 26 points overtime; No. 17 Utah nipped · In the first half that helped the Brian WIIUams eight of his 13 In and 1·5, with 1.6.
,,••
paceed Louisville, which Colorado State 55-51; No. 22 New Buc!(eyes remain unbeaten.
tbe second half for the Wildcats,
At Las Cruces, N.M., Reggie
"•I
dropped to 7-8 overall and 1·5 In Mexico State tripped San Jose
"Ohio Sta)e, 17-0 overall and 7·0 who Improved to 16-2 overall and Jordan scored 16 points and Chris
'I
the conference. LaBradford State 88-58 and Georgia Tech In conference, Is off to Us best retained a share of the confer· Small added 15 - all via
~:,.
Smith added 18 and Cornelius thumped Clemson 89.QI.
ence lead with a 5·1 mark. The 3-polnters - ·to lead the Aggles to
suo~t since the 1962 season when
Holde~ 16.
·
At Ann Arbor, Mlcl)., Greg . the Buckeyes went 22-0. Mark Cardinal, who. received 29 points a Big Wesl vlctorx. New Mexico .
,,,,,I•'
Louisville trailed by two, 81-79, Graham scored 19 points and the .Baker and Perry Carter added 15 from Adam Keefe, dropped to 3·4 State, 14·2, 6·1, too"k the l~ad for
with 47 seconds remaining but Hoosiers put tbe game away In each for Ohio State. Minnesota,
and 10-7.
· ·
good midway through the first
••
Smith missed a pair of jumpers the second half with a 17·6 run. 9-7 and 2-4, was PIICed by Kevjn
At Corvallls, Ore., Teo Allbe- halt. Chad Higginbotham paced ·
".,"
and committed an Intentional Calbert Cheaney added 17 PQlnts Lynch's career-high 27 points.
, govlc scored a career-high 34 San ·J ose State, 4-13 and 2·6, with
..,,
foul with 14 seconds to play. and 12 rebounds lor Indiana,
"We're just happy to get out of pOints and sophomore Charles 12 points.
'•
Jenkins then made two . free
which Improved to 17·2 overall here wit)! a win," said Ohio State McKinney hit a 12-foot jumper
At Atlanta, Kenny An~erson
. ··.
•
,.
throwswith14secoildslefttoseal and 5·11n the Big Ten, Indiana
with seven seconds remaining In scored 32 points and the Yellow
,.,.
double overtime to · lift ·the Jackets went on an 8·0 early In
In the NBA Thursday night,
.
. .
Beavers. Oregon State Improved the. second half and nev,gr looked .~ ::
to 11·5 overall' and 5·1 In the back. ~rgla Tech, 11·5 overall
••
Paclfic-10. TheBrulns4ropped to and 3·2 In the ACC, got 20 points
,,""
14-4 and 3-3. Tracy Murray led from guard Jon Barry and
..
rebounds.
UCLA
with
28
points.
,,'•
Malcolm Mackey hauled down 15
By United Press International
. ·
"Larry
Smith
Is
strong
and
smart,"
said
Minnesota
forward
At
Salt
Lake
City,
Josh
Grant
rebounds and blocked four shots. . . :!
Larry Smith might be just filling In, but he's grabbing everything
Tyrone Corbin. "He ~oesn't stand around and waltfor the ball to come
scored 17 points and grabbed six Clemson, 9·8 and 0·5, got16polnts
he can while he's there.
.
-·
to him. He goes.and get it."
. ,
. rebounds to power . ttie Utes to . off the bench from junior guard .
Larry Smith, sw.rtlng at center for Houston In place of the Injured
Kenny Smith and Maxwell combined for 30 points to help Houston
their 15th straight triumph. The David Young. Dale Davis added :.;.:-·
Akeem Oiajuwon, snagged 23 rebounds Thursday night and Otis
Rams
trailed ·53·51 and ·had the 14 points and nine rebounds.
57-46
halftime
lead
.
·
·
build
•' ; ,
Thorpe scored 23 points, leading the Rockets to a 118·94 rout of the
The
Ttmberwolves
closed
within
65·58
on
a
jumper
by
Richardson
Minnesota Timberwolves.
with 8:03 left In tb,e third quarter.
.
Larry Sm lth has been relen tiess on the boar~. He now has grabbed
But
Maxwell's
tiiree-polnt
shot
he
was
3
01 3 from three·polnt
at least 20 rebounds In three of his last five games . .
range
and
had
a
season-high
10
assiStsstarted
a 14-3 run that gave
"I can't recall w.here I've played this well in this short a span," said
the
Rockets
a
79·6i
advantage
with
less
than
four
minutes to play In
Smith, who also scored 10 points. ''They Jet me run around tonight.."
the
quarter.
.
·
Kenny Smith scored 22 PQints, marking his fourth straight game
The
Rockets
ted
by
as
many
as
·24
points
In
the
final
period.
with at least 20 points.
·
&lt;
''The boards ·were the keY to this game," said Minnesota he~d
•'Our theory this year Is ,to come out extremely hard In ·the first
MINNEAPOLIS (UPI) -Jam· sota outscored Ohio State 19-8
coach
Bill
Musselman.
''Larry
Smith
had
an
unbelievable
game.
quarter," said Kenny Smith. "When we play hard defensively, It
aal Brown scored · 14 of his 17 over the next five minutes to pull
In other games Thursday night , Denver edged New York 120-117,
triggers a lot of easy baskets for us."
.
.
points In the decisive first hall to within six points at 74-68. But .
San Antonio held off Cleveland 111·103, the Los Angeles Lakers
Vernon Maxwell and Buck Johnson each finished with 19 lor the
lead No. 4 Ohio State to an 80·70 with only a minute togo, that was . .. ,.,
romped over Charlotte 113-93.
Rockets, who Improved to4·71ngameswithout01ajuwon. He suffered
victory over Minnesota Thurs- as close as the Gophers could get. , •.
. a fracture of the right orbit, which houses the eyeball, Jan. 4 against
. day night.
Minnesota , head coach Clem ., .
ChiCago.
·
·
Perry Carter and Mark Baker HaskinS was encouraged despite .
The Rockets also ended a two-game losing streak and won for only
added 15 points apiece and Jim the loss.
the second time In their last eight games.
" When you're rebuilding like ' ··~
Jackson had 13 for the Buckeyes.
"He (Larry Smith) is the key," said Houston head coach Don
17-0 overall and 7-0 In the BlgTen. we are, you don't worry so much
Chaney. "He sets the level of I!Ow we play . I think he's moved his
Kevin Lynch scored a career· about wins and losses ," he sa id., , . _.
game up several notches"since Akeem went out." ·
high 27 points for the Gophers,' "You want to see effort. This was
Jerome "Pooh" Rlchardspn ·scored 23 points and Sam Mitchell
ByROBERTJ.MURPHY
point to give the surging Sabres who fell fo 9-7 overall and 2·4 In the first time all season that
finished with 22 for the Tlmberwolves, who are 0-4 In The Summit and
UPJ Sports Writer
we've played hard for the whole ·. · ·~
their fifth straight win.
the Big Ten.
.,
have lost four straight overall to Houston.
The ·Buffalo Sabres came back
"Sometimes when a guy gets
The Buckeyes rode Brown's 40 minutes. (Ohio State) Is a
•
The Rockets dominated the boards, 53-32, and scored 30 points off from two goals and two goalies
thrown Into a fire like that, he can pair of three-pointers and 4-for-4 team capable of beating you by 40
second-chance opportunltes. Larry Smith grabbed 10 offensive . down Thursday night.
..
really shine," Ramsey said of free throw shooting to break out points.''. ·
1
'
With top goal tender Darren Wakaluk. "He was definitely of a !lrst·half cold spell. In the
Puppa · out with the flu and
nervous, bl!t he shined when he second half, Ohio State led by as
The Daily Sentinel
veteran Clint Malarchuk back In had to."
many as 17 points and withstood
;
.,'
Buftalo with a stiff neck, just
Ramsey also registered three a late rally by the Gophers to
(USPs 14J.t80)
.
.' .
called up Darcy Wakaluk shook assists on the night.
remain undefeated.
A Dl~lelon of Multimedia, Inc.
., "'i.
off
some
early
jitters
to
l!elp
the
."We're
just
happy
to
get
out
of
"Ramsey
was
outstanding
..
.
oWomo Jllvlolooi
'Published . every afternoon, Monday ' : ~ ·""
In the NBA...
Sabres rally past the Chicago and Darcy·played a great game, here with a Wilt," said Ohio State
Bostm ...............27 16 8 62 183 164
throusb Friday, 111 Court St., PoMontreaL .......... .2718 5 59168 149
meroy, Ohio, ·by the Ohio Valley Pub- . ·, ~··
mackhawks 5·4 at Chicago especially considering the clr·
head coach Randy Ayers. "We
Eascer• Conference
Buffalo .......... .... 2117 10 52 174157
llshlna Company/Multlmt'dla, Inc..
~
Stadium.
cumstances/' . Dudley said, "It
always have a tough time at .
Atlantic IMvlsh•.
Hardonl .......... ..11 23 5 47 142 164
Pomeroy, Ohio 415789, Ph. 992-21!56. Se.
,.J
Team
W L Pel . GB
"For us, In this building, ,to was his first full game, and he Williams Arena."
Quebec .. ........ ....10 31 9 29140 222
cond clall pc»tage paid at Pomeroy,
· ·•!
Boston .. .... ......... .. 30 9 .769
Ohio.
., .....,·
come
back like that, down two had to play In this building."
The Gophers led throughout
Ph lladelphla ........ 22 18 .550 8\&gt;
CampbelrConl.,.nce
goals, It's pretty gratifying,"
Wakaluk couldn't recall the most of the game's early going.
Washlngton ....... ... l8 %1 .462 12
Member: United Press lnternatlonaJ,
Norris Dl~•lua
New York ............ 18 22 .450 12\&gt;
Sabres
head
coach
Rick
Dudley
Inland DallyPrNa AuoclaUon and the
last penalty shot he faced , and It They took a 6·5 lead on Walter
Tam
W LTPto.GF.:lA
New Jersey .......... 13 26 .333 17
Ohio Newapaper Auoclatlon. National
Chicago .......... .... 321H 681n 133
,Bond's 1ay-ln and led until
said.
was Manson's first ever.
Miami. ... ....... ....... ll29 .275 19\&gt;
Advertising Representative, Branham
St. Louis ...... .. ..... 2615 7 59175146
A late second-period g~l by
"I feel a .little emotionally Jackson' s jumper put Oliio State
Newspaper Sale., 733 Third Avenue, ' •· u.r
.Detrolt..., ...... ...... 22 22 ~ 49161172
' .
Central Division
New York. New Yort 10017.
· Dale Hawerchuk and another by drained right now, but I feel
up 23·22 with 7:..40 to go In the half.
Minnesota ........... 14 29 8 361:1317'J
'
Chicago .. .. ........... 2812 .700 Tormlo ............... l2 32 ~ 29142 207
Pierre Turgeon 38 seconds Into good, " said the 24-year-old roo'1 ...•
DetroiL ... ........... 2813 .683
I&gt;
PQSTMASTER: · Send address changes
Minnesota's biggest lead came
the final period tied the score 4·4. kie, who was called uP from
to The Dally Sentinel. Ill Coun St.,
Mllwaukee ..... .. .. .. 2715 .643
2
8my81ellh1with
10: 45 to go when Lynch, who ·
Pomeroy, Oblo 45769.
Atlanta .... .... ........ 2416 .600 4
The key play then came when Rochester and didn't learn until
Los Angeles ........ 2617 5 571941!16
Indiana ... .. ........... 16 24 .400 12
Calgary ...... ........ 2519 5 55 201.160
referee Paul Stewart awarded tight before game time he would had 17 first-half points, stole an
SV1181JBIPTION RATI!S
Cl eveland ......... .... 13 27 .325 IS
Edmmlm ... .. ...... 23 21 3 49l!le m
Ohio State pass and drove for a
Chicago
a
penalty
shot
with
10:
30
start
.
Br
Curler or Molor
' . ...... 1
Charlotle .. ... ........ 12 27 .308 15\&gt;
Vancouver ..... .:... 19 2li 4 421!16184
One ~eek... ..... .. ....... .... ..............$1.40
basket,
giving
the
Gophers
a
Winnipeg .... ........ 15 28 8 40160 181
left after defenseman Dave ManBelfour, who pulled a hamst·
' "'l •
One Month ................... ..............S6.10
Western C'o•l~•~
22-16 edge.
~ ·
son was puUed down bn a
One '!fear ........ ............ .. ........... 172.80
ring
late
In
the
third
period
and
Midwest DIYIIIon
• 1bunday'1 MllMI
But from that pol t t.tle Buck·
breakaway.
Team
.
W L Pel. GB
SINGLE COPY
had to leave the game, mIssed
Bostm 3. Hardo"' 0
.' '
eyes went on an 11-~ :d'ii to take.
.San Anlrnio .... ..... 2810 .737 -'PRICE
Manson tried to go up top wl th a
Philadelphia 6, Washlngtm I
out
on
his
bid
for
his
30th
win
of
·
Dally ........... ... ............ .. ....... 25 Cent•
Uiah .:..... ............. 2614 .650 3
New Jenoey 6, Quebec 1
wrist shot, but Wakall!k got a
• ,, I~
the season. Chicago, which had the lead. Jackson and Brown
Houston ....... ........ 21 20 .512 8\&gt;
Bul!alo5, Cbicago4
each
had
four
pOints
during
the
SubSCribers
not
deslrtng
to
pay
the
carstick
on
It
to
quiet
the
noisy
Mlnnesota ............ l3 25 .342 15
. ...: ;
Its five-game unbeaten streak
rier may remit In advanC'e direct to
Da llas. . . ........... 13 25 .342 15
Stadium crowd. That set the snapped, received a pair of goals spurt.
ToaiJht'• aamea
The
Dally
Senttnel
on
a
3,
6
o~l2m'onlh
Denver .. ,... .......... 10 30.250 19
After Lynch canned a put-back
St. LoW. al Detroll, 7: 35p.m.
basil. Credit wUI be gtYen carrier each
stage for veteran defenseman
' ,,""1
from Jei'emy Roenlck and three
Orlando .. .... ......... 10 3) .244 19 \1
Minnesota ·B_I Washlngtm. 8:05
week.
shot
to
tie
the
game'
at
27-27,
the
Mike
Ramsey,
who
banged
In
the
assists from Michel Goulet.
'" l
p.m.
Paelftc IMviAion
No subscriptions by maU permitted In
go-ahead goal with 7:39 .remaln·
N.Y. Islanders at Winnipeg, 9:35
"When you get a two-goal lead Buckeyes went on a 10·3 tear .
. Ponland .:............ 35 7 .833
area.a where home carrier service 1J
p.m.
L.A . Lakers ....... .. 2811 .718 5\1
lng, beating goalie Ed Belfour on like that, you have to put the · highlighted by Brown's three·
available.
N.Y.
Rangers
at
Edm(lltm.
9:35
Ph~nlx ... ..........~. 2513 .658
8
pointer to give Oh to State ~ 32-27
a rising slap shot from the far left qther tea m .away," Goulet said.
' . \.,.
p.m .
Golden State .. .... .. 2217 .564 11\1
edge. They led by as many as
Mall Sublcrtptlon•
Los Angeles at Va~ou~r , 10:35
' '' 1 ;:
Seartle ... ., .......... .. l819 .486 14\1
'
Julde Melp Count)'
p.m .
seven points during the half.
L.A. Clippers ....... 14 27 .341 20 \1
u
w..u
.................................. $19.24
Sacra"lenro ......... 1126 .297 21\1
•'In the first half, we did a good
26 WeekJ .............. ........... ......... $37. ~
Sahardv'• -AIMI
52 Weells ........................... ....... S74.MI
job establishing our tempo,"
Buffalo at Montreal. l :m p.m.
' I r:
Thunday's resuks
Oolalde Molp Counl)'
Ayers
said.
"We
felt
good
about
Calgary
al
Bost~.1
:
~
p.m.
L.A. Lakffs 113. Otarlotte 93
13Weells .. ,... ........ ......... .... ....... $20.80
• '! : •
Philadelphia at Hardonl, 7:35
Houstoo 118, Minnesota 94
scoring 44 ·polnts by the hall." .
26 Weelll ... ..... ................. ......... $40.30
' '1.\
p.m.
.
San Antmlo 111. Qeveland 103
52 Weeko .................. :........... .... $75.10
The
Buckeyes
led
66-49
with
PIIISbu!lh
at
Quebec,
7:
35p.m
.
Denver 120, New York 117
seven minutes to go, but Mlnne·
Minnesota at N'ew Jersey, 7:45
. ' '.),•

.

-

...

Ohio State posts 80-70
win over Minnesota

·'

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Buffalo slips· past
Chicago with 5-4 win

..

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Scoreboard ...

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BostM at Philadelphia. 7:30p.m.

•

Indiana at Washlngtoo, 8 p.m•

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......~....

p.m .
Tormto at Cbicago. 8: OS p.m .
Detroit at St. Louis. 8: 35p.m .

Milwaukee at Goklen State, 10; 30

. p.m .

.

Seattle at Phoenix. 11 p.m.
Saturday's 1ame8

.

Dallas at Washlni'!'ICIJ, 7: 30p.m.
Philadelphia al Charlotte, 7:30
p.m .
DetrOit at Orlando, 7:30p.m.
New Jersey at Miam i. 7:30p.m. ~
Cleveland at Houston. 8: 30 p,rri.
Minnesota at San Antmio, 8:30 .
.

u tah at benver , 9:30p.m .
Atlanta at Sea ttle, 10 p.m .
NE&gt;wYork a t PhOenlx,10:30p.m .
Milwaukee at L.A. Clippers,
10:30 p.m.
·
·
Sacramento at Portland. 10:30

••
p.m.

In the NHLWalel CGnfereace
Patrick DlviTeam
W L T Pto. GFOA
N y Rangcrs .....2617 8 60 1861!16
Philadelphia ......26 21 6 :lllll'J 165
Plt&lt;sburgh ....... :.26 21 3 ~5 2~
New ·J er,.y ....... .20 2010 501
WashlngiM ........ 22 2li 2 46 )57169
N.Y.I slanders .. .17 25 ~ 40135\68

m

WHY WAIT TILL SPRING?
Winter Clearance Prices
ON ALL HOMES!

.·.&gt;.., .

Vancouver at t..os An~eles,10: 35

p.m.

., ' l

Dallas at Detroit , 8 p.m . .
Miam i at Chicago, 8:30p.m.
Sacratnento at Utah, 9:: 30 p.m.

p.m .

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L.A . Lakers at New JerEy, 7:30

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Smith.leads Rockets to 118-94 ~n over Wolves

Support our troops in Desert Stonn .

By United Press Interna&amp;lonal
Today Is Friday, Jan. 25, the 25th day of 1991 with 340 to follow.
The moon Is waxing, moving toward Its full phase.
The morning stars are Mercury and Venus.
There are no evening stars.
.
'lbo.e born on this date are und~ the sign of Aquarius. They Include
lrllb aatural phllosopher Robert Boyle, a founder of modern
cbemlatry, In 1627; Scottish poet Robert Burns In 1759; soapmaker
and phllantbroptst WJlllam Colgate In 1783; novelists W. Somerset
Maupam In 1874 and Virginia Woolf In 1882; news commentator
Edwin Newman In 1919 (age 72), and actor Dean Jones In 1935 (age

By United Preu lntenuJenet
Southern Mississippi had
never won In LouiSville's Freedom Hall, and with their leading
scorer out with an Injury, the
Golden Eagles chances looked
sUm against the Cardinals.
But No. 18 Southern Mlssls·
sippi got 25 points and 12 .
rebounds from Clarence Wea:
therspoon Thursday night to post
an 84-81 victory over Louisville In
a Metro Conference matchup.
. The win was the 11th In 12
.games for the Golden Eagles,
now 6-0 In conference play, and
was their first In 12 trips to
Freedom Hall.
·
Southern Miss, playing without
leading scorer Darrln Chancel·
. lor, out with an ankle Injury, led

lack ..

the Pentagon didn't rouse Itself ·give our troops the best. chance
out of business·as-usual until. al· Ol&lt;l !here." ·
Parfoi theced
blamethe
for politics
shortages
most the eve 'of the deadline •or
' ·
of
Iraq to pull out of Kuwait. Even must be P1a ·on
after troops were deployed to the Pentagon · spending. In recent
Gulf by the hundreds of tho~· · years, tbe sexy, high-tech weasands, the head of the Army s pons systems have received more
Munition Command told Con· . attention
and money than bland
·
he
gres·s that. 11 be had more money , Items such as bullets.
hewouldn'tknowbowtospendlt .
Congress has compounded t
Maj. Gen. Paul Greenberg told shortages by deciding !hat am· a controversial
Congress that the Arm.y had all . munition was not
the ammunition It needed.
line Item and could therefore be
Pentagon Insiders told our as· •. cut with a minimum of fuss from
soclate Jim Lynch that the Army anyone. As recently as Septem· ·
doesn't know what ammunition ber, the Genera~ Accounting Of.
It has: or where It Is.
flee, an arm of Congress, augSources ten · us that those In gested a $434 million cut In I~
charge of procuring ammunition ammunition budget. This year s
have focused ·on affordabillty budget for ammunition. is $2 bllrather than need during a time of lion. Just six peaceful Years ago
budget belt tightening. It wasn't !twas $4 billion.
until Jan. 11 that Pentagon plan·
.RE~EATING HISTORY ·~ The
ners began to study combat nations commercial banks apsurge capabilities - the abillW pear ~med to relive the savings
to expand production to meet and loan scandal. Even our largest
wartime demands.
· banks have only about half the
As one Pentagon veteran told loan-Joss reserves that their tous, "I'm concerned that they 're reign counterparts consider resnot doing everything possible to ponslble. So the buck will pass to
the government whose.guarantees
stand behind a variety of loans to
home owners, students, farmers
and small businesses. The govern·
ment's losses on bad loans are al·
readY huge. President Bush's only
remedy for this crisiS-In-tiJe.rnlik·
lng may be to .ask Congress to
create a super regulator to consolidate the functions of the Federal
Reserve Board, Federal Deposit
Insurance Corp. and Comptroller
of the Currency. .
MINI-EDITORIAL
- The
United States has some strong
purse strings that It Cl!R use to
manipulate the dangerous hard·
lines In the Soviet Government
who seek a return to the bad old
days. Americanald to the Soviet
Union could buy time for the
hardliners who want to restore
authoritarian rule. Soviet Pres!·
dent Mikhail Gorbachev Is close
to losing control of those forces,
as evidenced by the decision of
military commanders to strike ·
out against Lithuania earlier this
month. The. Soviets should know
that U.S. Aid was promised to
help perestroika, not to restore
tyranny.

'l!

Southern Mississippi posts 84-81 road ·win over Louisville

Page 2-The Daily Santintl
Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio
Friday. Janu~r~ 2&amp;, 1991

By HELEN THOMAS
UPI White House Reporter
WASHINGTON - Th~ White House Is beginning tO' show a mood
swing.
President Bush, elated himself over the preliminary successes
after launching a war against Iraq, warned several times against
euphoria and over optimism In Immediate aftermath ofday-oneofthe
war.
But soon the sobering news was enough to car~y out his cavea1. Not
that there IS any doubt In Washington that the war .can be won
decisively and over weeks perhaps, not months, cerlainly not a
.
·
protracted Vietnam style conflict.
StU! every day that goes by when the air war goes on and a ground
war may be needed to achieve victory, worry and concern grows over
the possibility of larger casualties.
The obviously coerced statements by captured allied pilots aroused
great anger In the :&gt;\'bite House and for the first time Bush called It
SWDI~HING
" the war a~alnst Saddam," the Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein.
The capture of the airmen brought home the human side of the war
and cast a pall of sadness over the nation.
.
A new tension Is apparent In the White House. The president and his
top aides are tight lipped, watc)\l~geveryword, every step so as not to
jeopardize Operation Desert Storm or to spread any anxiety.
But the certain macho exemplified by Bush's. bravado statements
about where he wanted to kick the Iraqi president Is no longer
dominant theme.
The usually affable White House press secretary Marlin Fitzwater
Is visibly uptight and less patl~nt with questions, many often
repetitive. He also has considered an extraordinary closed door
policy for the press office to keep reporters from running to his
bailiwick with their Inquiries when news l:!reaks on the war front.
Instead he wants to dispense the news on his own terms and when he
decides It Is time to come Into the press room.
Closed doors have always signified a White House under siege: The
administration does not have a builker mentality yet, and It has not
yl't circled the wagons. But ques ttons that seek deeper explanations;
questions about the number of casualties on either side; questions
about Bush's plans f11r the Middle East In the future are quickly
brushed off.
the colder cllmets for an environ·
With war ranting In the Middle
The current war Is already a longer confliCt that the Grenada
ment more conducive and con- boring states of Michigan andCong.
East, it Is hard to focus on the
Invasion during the Re11gan era or last yl.'ar's bombing of Panama, a
sistent with the type of lifestyle Pennsylvania suffered a similar
other·aspects of governme'\t pol·
proximately 20%. Other winners
two- day affair, to depose strongman Manuel Noriega.
they would like to live. More and . fate and likewiSe will experience
Icy and change that are t~klng
were Arizona, North Carolina,
The quicker the· victory, the more successful with the public.
more Americans are turning a loss of two seats, while our
place as the new year and the
Georgia
, Virginia and WashingBut It may be a little more difficult to rootout the thousands of Iraq I
frQm a city seftlng to the su· neighbors to the south, Kentucky
new Congress get underway.
ton
which
ea,ch gained a seat.
forces dug In In Kuwait, although they could be demoralized under
Her haps one of the most sign I·
burbs. to an environment they and West Virginia will suffer a
·
In
the
current
Congress each
bombardment and as they are more and more cut off from their
flcant political happenings to
deem more conducive and more loss of one seat each , The big
House
member
from
Ohio repre·
commanders and supplies.
. 'take place this year will be there·
consistent with their fuilfillment loser was New York state which · sents an average of 514,000 con·
So far the public Is being Saturated with war news on television, but
of the American dream.
casting of House Congressional
will lose a total of three seats.
stltuents. That number Is slated
not sometimes the' dazzling fourth of July firepower In the sky looks
From the played-out lands to Other states negatively affected
Districts as mandated by the tal·
to rise to 572,000 once redistrict·
more like a nlntendo game.
.
· ·
lies resulting from the recently . the played-In lands, from the Include Massachusetts and Jl.
tng Is completed nationwide.
It's a stocy that Is concentrating the mind all over the world. The
completed decennial census. As
rust·belt to the sun-belt,, Is how . linols, which will Jose two seats
Getting back to Ohio, the lar·
war along with the Baltic upheaval threatening to break Into a civil
many demographers define lt. each, and Montana, Minnesota,
we all know, It Is this every ten
gest
population shifts within the
war In the USSR appear to be causing a postponement of the · year monitoring of our·'natlon's
Americans In search of the Ideal· Iowa and Louisiana ,which will
state
have taken place In Norpresident's best laid plans for another summit meeting with Soviet
!zed good·llfe as personified on loseone. The big winner, as It wapopula lion patterns that forms
theastern
and Central Ohio, with
President Mikhail Gorbach.V next month In Moscow.
·
our nation's television and movie sin the 1980 decennial census, Is
·the buls for the allocation of pol·
Cleveland
and environs being the
White House press secretary Marlin Fitzwater said surnmlt plans
screens are moving In droves Californian which will gain a to·
!tical representation In the U.S.
blg
loser
and
the Columbus area
are "up In the atr" and there are Indications that unless the gulf war
from the Northeast and the Mid· tal of seven new seats, bringing
House of Representatives, the
showing
the
largest
growth. If
ends quickly a superpower meeting, Feb. 11-13 would be out of the
so-called "Peoples House." The
west to the South, Southwest, and to 52 the number of seats It will
redistricting
could
be
done ob·
question.
.
Western regions of our great have In the U.S. House. of ~epremakeup of the House of Repre·
jectlvely, free of political consld·
Other planning for journeys abroad, Including a spring trip to
country. The political and policy sentatlves. Rough,ly one out of
sentatlves In turn can Slgnlfl·
erations,
tbe two seats Ohio. Is
Japan and Australia, also appears to have been put on the shelf.
ramifications of these shifts are every eight seats In this 435 seat
cantly shape or alter the policies
slated
to
lose
would come out of
The president's domestic program also will take on a low priority,
significant. with a dwindling chamber Is going to be occupied
emanating from our nation's capl·
the
northeast
corner
of the State . .
and the w~r Inevitably will move to the forefront, surpassing the
population and tax base, with de- by a Californian In the 103rd Con·
tal. Therefore, what changes reHowever,
Inasmuch
as politics
administration's deepening concern ove~ the recession and condition
sult from this decennial census
caying Infrastructures,
with gress. Also, In as much as the to·
will
and
almost
always
'does
of the nation's banks.
spiraling crime rates, a good tal number of a state's House
should be of great Interest to an·
play
a
role
in
our
state's
and
So everything Is on hold, depending on the outcome of the war, and
number of our country's major seats plus Its two Senate seats,
yone concerned with the phUosomost
other
states'
approach
to
Bush Is expected to walk a tight rope In· the days to come until it's all
cities In the Midwest and East constitutes thl! number ol electo·
phlcal makeup and policy dlrec·
rt:dlstrlctlng,
It
appears
likely
over.
tlons of the federal government. In
are facing Insoluble budget pro· ral v,otes a state Is permitted to
that because ofthe present politi·
pure numbers, the new numbers
blems. Conversely, the burgeon· cast In a Presidential election,
cal Impasse that exists between
·also mean more or less federal dol·
lng populations of many of our · all a candidate has to do Is win
the Republican controlled state ·
sun-belt clUes 11re such that they · California and he or she has Y.
Iars for the respective state goSenate and tbe Democrat con·
are having a hard time keeping the total number of electoral
vernments, as the dollar dlstrlbu·
trolled House that each party
up with the Influx of new res!· votes they need for election. One
. tlonfor many of the federal gowill be asked to sacrifice a seat
vernment's social services prodents. Water shortages, housing could conclud~ that a presiden·
that they presently hold.
grams are tied directly to a state's
shortages, and service shortages tlal candidate s success will no
Though 1 have long maintained
Let's turn the lights on for our again and put them In the population count.
In general are the order of the Ionge~ be dependent on how he or
that the redrafting of Congress!·
service people serving In Opera· windows! Let's let them know
The ·results of this most recent . day in mi)ny these '.' promised she plays.l.n Peoria, but rather on
onal House seats should be left to
lands." ~
lion Desert Storm! Why not show . ihat they'll be .welcomed back ·. decennial . cenSUS are, as ·(!X·
how h'e or she plays in "Leisure
Independent panels and be free
thele fine people that we love and with open arms! Let's leave a
Ohio, as most by now know, Is . Land." Th~ other major sun
peeled, a continuation and accel·
of political considerations I'm ·
respect them? Let's show them light on for them!!!
Slated to lose two. seats In the meccas of Florida and Texas
eration of trends firmly set In
afraid that the process
Ohio
Thank you again for printing motion at the end of World War
that we want them home as soon
House of Representatives. AI· fared well also . Florida will In·
and In most ·of the other states
a1 possible. Whether or not you this.
II. Call It a pursuit of lelsure.llv· ·though we as a state did not suf· crease Its present delegation by
that will be gaining or losing
believe In the cause, please show
Sister of a Marine, lng; call us i' nation of sun seek·
fer a population loss during the four , based on an Increase In
seats as a result of the just
that you care for the,m.
Linda Montgomery ers and fun. seekers; however
last ten years our state's growth population of ~orne 33%. Texas
completed decennial census, will
· Get out those electric candles
I..,a.ngsvllle, OH. 45741
lagged far behind many of the will go from 27 seats to 30, l&gt;ased
you define It, Increasing numb·
once again be more political than
nation's other states. Our neigh· ·on a population Increase of ap·
ers of Americans are glvlng up
practical.

..Today in history

The Daily Sentiriai- Page-3 . ·
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Comment
The Daily Sentinel

POfna'oy-Middleport. Ohio

· , 1-1.

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The road to the
Super Bowl ·

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. Wild C&amp;r4 Ro....
~

.SU•N.,-, Ju. 5

NFC- Woshlngtoo 20, Phlladel·
phla6
·
AFC- Mtamt17, Kanoas Clly 16
8uodoJ, Jsa. l
AFC- Cincinnati 41. Hou11on 14
NFC- Chlcaao J&amp;; New Orleans
. .6..
.
DlvloionaJ Ptl)'oflo
SoololdQ, J111. I!
~FC ~ Bullalof4, Mlaml34
NFC - San Franclaco 28. Wa·
shlng1m 10
8uodQ,Joa.1S
NFC- N.Y. Glants3L Cblcagoa
AFC- L.A. Raiders 20. Clnctn·
natl 10

8uodQ,Jsa.ll
AF(J c•ampiGallttp
.Buffalo 51, L.A. Ito idOl's 3
NF(J ctoamp._llllp
N.Y. Glaalsl5. S•n Francisco 13
Ioper Bow! XXV
......,. 1111.17
Buffalp VI. N.Y. Giants at
Tampa, Fla., 6: 20p.m .

. ..,.,.,..' ..... 1.

. o·..
"'".""""

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Every home has been marked ,down to
mak.e room for new spring stock.
•

~~~~~~E~T .~ ~~.~~~ .. : sg, 99 5

SPRING VALl FY CINEMA

See John Smith or Dick Cole Today
YOU'LL BE GLAD YOU DID!

446 4524

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IS YOUR OLD BOX SPRING
•TOO HARD? •WORN OUT?

..

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· GOOD NIGHrS SLEEP
COME SEE US AT...

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MOBI.LE .HOMES
Located 5 Miles East Of At. 33

On Rt. 50; Athens 592-1972

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PEA RIDGE PLAZA
HUNIINGJON. WY.
(3Q4) 736-1501

232 RUSSEll RD.
ASHLAND, ICY.

(606) 324-2337

OHIO RIVER PLAZA
GAWPOUS, OH.
(614) 446-2337

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