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•

•

Monday• .hwlu-v 2s. 1991

Poma-ov-Middlaport. Ohio

l'llgl

THIS

&lt;

&lt;

Kyger Creek

1990 Local Schedules

Ohio

girls defeat
Eastern 52- 39

WEEK'S
GAMES

'
Lottety

•

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

Page 7

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

•

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

GilLS

1 Section, 10 Pogo•

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

1,258 jobs hinge

MEIGS
BOYS

.

.

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

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

EASTERN
&lt;

&lt;

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

Meip

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

SOUTHERN

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

SOUTHERN

Farmers

· j.,., ~ ·Bank

I

.

~opti':;::~;

C

"l

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

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

SCHEDULE~$~~~-MEIGS

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

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

Middle

coal supply. Gavin COIISUIIICI1 about

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

..,'lt;'\"'iil_.., ·"

'

on AEP decision

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

.BOYS

26 Canto

A Muhlmedla Inc. Newapopor

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

MEIGS

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

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

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

·,

f p • ls
OlJ,nty OJJ lCUl

f. •
• t
~Jtve·por,n

lQ.

p .- n

· •·

·
d
·are presente

By ~RIAN J, REED

8eatlael News Staff

clan

E~~=~~;:·=r~

EASTERN

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

·

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

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

.'

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

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

c.

•
M

EASTERN

~orne

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

Treasurer.

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

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

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

is destroyed

by ftre in Syracuse

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

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

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

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

Southern board hires two
substitute teachers Monday

ir , ~

,~ ·

Two substitute teachers, SheUy

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

Police probe wreck

..

.'

·-

&lt;

I,

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

'

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

·-·

.

,.,.
&lt;

MI'.

·-

"'

-

..,M :0

.

.~'

~·

:

- - ·1&lt;.'!!

�.

Commentary .

.. '

W~SHING10N

:
. AraiJ. anti-Semitism, or bigotry . against
Amencanr can be fOQPven if they · anyOhe.
.
•
'
slam
their
doon
when
the
FBI
•
The
FBI
has
coodUCied
more
DEVOTED TO THE JNTERE8T8 OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA
comes knocking. The ~vemment than
200
inlerVicws
with
A~
.
says it is gathering ·infmnaliori Alnericans of Arab ~t The
l!l!m~ ~....
'"T" • .....--r:=~.o= ,
.•
about potential acts of . terrorism .agents have been polite, as ordered.
~v
.
.
and at the same time offering to But there is such a thing as polite
pro,tect ~-Americans against hlli1ISSID~L H you knew .a suspecJtOBERT L. WINGETT
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
raciSt hate cnmcs. .
ted terronst, the FBI nught have
Publisher
General Ma. .pr
But where was the FBI in 1985 cause to come knocking at your
when an Arab-American was killed · door. If you yourself had ·been enPAT WlDTEBEAD
in a terrorist bombing in Los An- gag!ng in som~ pecnli~r behavior •
AuiMam PubiiB..,r/Conlraller
geles? The ~uspect;_ thought to be buymg dynanute, making threatenI
wolking for the militant Jewish ing calls, to the White HOIISII • the
A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
Defense League, fled to Israel. But FBI would have even more reason
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
in six years the federal government to come knocking on your door.
has done little to bring him to ac- · ~ would not have 1!1 bo~ with
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
counL
'POliteness. ,~ul the mterv:tews of
words long. AII.Jetters are subject to editing aqd must'be signed wlth
Now Arab-A!Rericans are sup- Arab-~encans have~ conducname, addressandJelepbone number. No unsigned letters wUI be pubIts bed. Letters should be In good taste, &gt;!ddresslng Issues, not.personall·
posed to believe. the . federal • ted wnhout prob&amp;ble ~use. The
government has therr best mtcrests only cause haS been unprobably
ttes.
at hean when the FBI ~ them race-based.
.
· The unwiiJ1llllted mten)ment of
as a "suspect class" and stans asking questions. .
Japanese-Americans (luring World
All Americans are _s:oncerncc!, War II began with polite questions
and · many are feart:ul about Iraqi· too.
.
sponsored terrorism at bollle and
In 1986, the FBI and the lmabroad. It is a time to be more migration and Naturalizatioo Servigilant about where we go and vice drew up a contingency plan to
w~at we do. But ~- also makes it q~tine Arab-A1nez!ams at a
NAIROBI, Kenya (UPI) -A U.N. environmental agency appealed
ume to be more VIgilant about lhe camp m Oaltdale, La., m the event
a
Monday to the combatants ln the Persian Gulf war t.o provide
violat!or-of
civil_libelties of ofa war with Arab. states. When the
Information, on damage being caused by a massive on spUI and to ·
·
Amencans
who
are SIDgled out for plan was exposed m 1987, the INS
allow U.N. environmental experts Into the area.
reasons
of
race,
creed or ethnic denounced It and threw il in ·the
The Kenya·based tJ.N. Environment Program also called for
origin.
trash can. 'But government garbage
International action to prevent massive environmental damage in the
Despi~ the . cllll'CIIt war with cans have a way of equghing up
gulf as a result of last week's oil spill and other factors.
Iraq, anu-ArabiSIII .. should be as such trash.
,
.
The agency 'said It was not just worried about 011 spills, but also
In the cunent campaign, the FBI
about about potential hazardous releases from the bombing of . repugnant in the l)niled StaleS 8S
'
.
J
'chemical and nuclear facilities In Iraq.
.
The Kenya ·based agency called on parties Involved In the war In the
' .
~If to allow Its experts·into the area and to supply ful) Information on
WELL ,9Af.K TO
environmental damage as a result of the war.
.,
In a news release, UNEP said It understood the o!l slick released
~e
from a Kuwaiti on terminal was now 240 square miles In size and
90~~
growing.
"To date, oil equal to ·several million barrels Is floating on the
waters of the gulf- probably making It the world's largest spill, The
effects will ·go far beyond today and tomorrow," said execu live
UNEP director Mostafa Tolba.
The spill, which allied forces In the gulf have said was deliberately
started by Iraqi forces, threatens large amounts of marine life In the
area, Including birds, dolphins, endangered sea turtles and dugongs,
an endlingered sea mammal similar to Florida's manatees, It also
threatens to wreck desal'lnatlon plants along the coast of Saudi
Arabia, on which the Kingdom relies up to 90 percent for Its water.
Some on pollution experts, however, say the effects oflbe spill may
be limited by the fact the gulf's warm water temperatures In the 90s
Fahrenheit wili evaporate the most toxic compounds In the oiL They
also hope oil-eating bacteria .In the warm shallow gulf could help
break the oil down faster than normal.
Meanwhile, Tolba said, "although no Information Is available on
possible releases from nuclear, biological and chemical weapons
facilities that may bave been destroyed, the environmental Impacts
of such releases could \II! as disastrous as the·oil spilL"
·
He appealed to both sides "to resist the temptatiOn to resort to
horrifying weapons of mass destruction."
•'UNEP does . not address the political components or the
confrOntation. OUr business Is the environment And over that we are
veriY worried," he said.
Ill Court S*ree*
Pomeroy, Oblo

U.N. enVironment ·
agency seeks help.

PRAWIHG

Pomeloy-Middaput, Ohio

has been something in ilddilion_to
polite. It has been helpful, otfenng
to protect Arab-Americans against
hate crimes. It is the kind of nicety
that is calculated to soften up a subjccL But lhe offer is hollow.
Arab-Ainericans remember two
incidents in Octdbei 198~ that
taught them that 'the FBI considers
them a sub-class. One. was the ferrorist attack on the Achille Lauro
cruise ship in tlt6 Meditemnean.
The tcrronsts mwdered Leon Klinghoffer, a Jewish
. -American from
New York. 1n that case, the counlly
reacted as it should have. Media
coverage was extraordinary and the
government swung inro action. The
U.S. military forced down an Egyptian plane with some suspects on
board.
Several days after Klinghoffer
was killed, Alex Odeh the balding,
respected regional
of the.
American-Arab Anli-Discriminalion Committee in Los Angeles,
was killed in a bombing.
The lir1ltal and cowanlly act
received a smidgen of media .auenlion. The FBI fiDgeted a member of
the Jewish Defense League as a
prime suspect. He fted to 1sme1
where he now lives in the occupied
territories. Although the evidence
against him is ·substantial the
Uniled States has not put slgnifi·
cant pressure on Israel to extradite
him for trial.
·

-ror

.

.

Bf JOHN HENDEL
cause of the pressure that1ets on
UPI Sporls Writer
kids wben they 'Jose. And when
The stress of play In the Big theydon'tplayparUcularlywell,
East Conference Is beginning to It makes them afraid," said
show on some of Its hlgh·proflle Syracuse Coach Jim Boebelm.
members.
·
Dave Johnson ICOred Z7 points
The elghth·rated Syracuse and Billy Owens contrlbulej115
Orangemen overcame their own points and 16 rebounds to the
tentative . play Monday night · Orangemen's cause as Syracuse
while handing Conneetlcut, Improved to 18-3 overall and 6-3
which just dropped outofthe UPI In the Big East. Tlie Huskies are
top 25, a 68-66 loss.
·12·7 and 3-6.
The spotlight has been beamThe score was 33:33 at half·
lng on Connecticut because of a ·time. Despite scoring only seven
losing streak and Syracuse was field goals In the second balf, the
drawing heat after Its 10-polnt Huskies were able to pull within
loss to Providence, which was 67-66 on Chris Smith's foul .shot
next· to-last In the conference, with 13 seconds left. Syracuse's.'
over the weekend..
Lefton Ellis hit the first !If two
" Both teams were afraid to foulsbots .witl!sevensecondsleft
play basketball tonight - be- and missed the second but

Jack Anderson

Qdeh's boss. Dr. Omar Kadez,
reminded FBI Director William
Sessioos of that unsolved murder in
a lcuet in early Jllllllll'Y when Sessions' agents were busy ·knocking Ill
the dOors of Afab.Americ:aoa.
·
Kader told Sessions be has been
'interviewed by the FBI several
times ostensibly for .bis ·Own ·
~tion, "If you are intmsted in
protecting' Arab-Americans raJhec
than intimidating us, why don't you
demonstrate it by making a genuine
effort to apprehend and prosecute
the assassins of Alex Oddl?" Kac:b'
wrote.
He reminded Sessions that
"Arab-Americans have no jJIIIIml
of in.volvement in tc~ ac- .,
tlvity." And ~ added, ''Until
the FBI shows more concern about
violence directed &amp;gainst our community, all effons will be ~
as nothing more than a conUIIII8bOn
of its historic policy of misueating
. .. "
.
mmonues.
, .
'1bese are," as Thomas Paine·
said . and President Bush echoed,
''the times that 11y men's souls."
Bush meant lhe souls at the war
front But be and all fair-minded
Americans should remember the
souls on the home front ·War is no
excuse to ignore the principles of
freedom for which soldien fight.
.·

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.;/

Press International Board of
Coaches' Top 25coUegebasketball
ratings, with first-place votes .and

•

recOrds thrCligh 'Jan. 27 In parenthEH-.s, total points t based on 15

I

'•

pdnts for first place, 14 for second,

I

etc.) and previous week's ranking:

'

Team

••

.
•
'

I

•
'

••
I

•

.

•

-

,·•'

'

aligtmtent

'

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Robert.
Walters

NR - Dot ranked
Others receiving votes: Ala·
bama, Connecllcut, Michigan
State, PrJncetoo, Purdue, Set(l1

~·

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was arrested.
assault' on the vital interests of the · integra!ed package of top-Of·the- , ,
Those . contrasting outcomes United States of America, and such line military technology" while •
vividly illustrate why die Saudis • an 8SS;Iult will be repelled bY. any "Saudi Arabia will build and pa · :
uncertain about their ability to means necessary, including mditary for a massive netwodc co:::::..':r.
naval and air defense facilities 1atge
defenlt themselves even after pur- force."
chasing billions of dollars worth of
That ''Carter Doctrine" never at- enough to sustain U.S. forces in inthe world's most sophisticliled tracted much public interest • and tensiveregional Combat."
military weaponry • rduc18Dtly even less attention was paiil IQ the
The presumed likely aggressor at '·'
sought this counlly's military assis- extensive measures taken to im- the time was the Soviet UniCn, but '
tance after Iraq invaded Kuwait
plement it throughout the 1980s. both the proclamation and im• •
They also ~bly foreteU a Indeed, the two principal {!Bf· plemenlalion of the Carter Dottrine . '• .
postwar future m which the United ticipants in the ~· the Uruted took into account the possibility of
States will commit a ·subs18Dtial States and Saudi Arabia, conducted other conllicts, ranging from local . ,
military forte to the re~ on an much of their work in secret be- insurgencies to regiooal clashes.
~ ·
i~finitc ~s · .to l'l?tect ~ria- . cause of tJt.e ~li.tically delicate na- ·
Saudi Arabia's new command
uonal SCCIDll}' of Saudi .Arabl8 and . tore of the mlllatlve.
·
and control system "could be the ·
other countnes unable to defend
It
involved
what
Scott· nerve center for U.S. forces fi~t- . i .
themselves and to insure the in- Annstrong, a highly regarded in- ing in defense" of that nauon,
tegrityoftheircrudeoilsupply,
vestigative journalist, described in Armstrong reported. "It is undet!J~ugh that poli~y is ~:( !low a prescient, !981 newspaper story stood that the Saudis would seek
bemg _unple~nted, .11 was ':ftl~ly as "an amb1U.ous pia!J to build sur- American ilssistance in the crisis." ·
enuncl8ted m a map pr_e&amp;~dential rogate bases m Saudi Arabia, equi·
That is precisely what bas
address 11 years ago. In his Jan. 23, pped and waiting foc American for- transpired, with the arrangemept
1980 State of the .Union Address, ces to use."
.
now being tested roc the first time . : ·
In
an
all-but-forgotten in a war. Suceess in dealing witll l
President J.imD!y Carter announced:
''Let our position be absol~ly Washington
~ Post
account, • tliat challenge almost certainly will
clear: An atrempt by any ouiSlde Annstrong explained the essence of lead to this counlly's assumption of
forte to ~airi e:ontrol of the Persian the bilateral arrangement
larger longer term military responGulf reg~on w1U be regarded as an
"America will sell the Saudis an · sibilities in tlie region.
,

o'

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On this date In history:
In 1861, Kansas became the 34th state-of the Union as a free or non·
sl!i'very state at a time when Southern states were seceding from the
Uriton.

Berry's World

I

In 1945 and 1991: U.S. is No.

..
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€J
one tt?
1991 by NEA .

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"Sorry, tel/a. No bailouts for LITTLE
banks! NEXT!"

In his book "In Search of , United States was the world's
History" the late, great, Ameri- premier power. Later· on, after
can chronicler Theodore H. Vietnam., Teddy White (and
White wrote about what hap- many others) thought American
pened In Tokyo Bay In 1945 .Influence had waned. Maybe so.
aboard the U.S.S. Missouri:
And maybe not,
.
Japanese officials approached
Now, In another tlnie, at
a table to sign documents of another place, the sun, and this
· surrender, ending World War II. time the stars too, are again
The overcast skies began clear· blotted out iis American planes
lng. Then there was a hum, then a roar through the sky. Another
thrum, then a roar. Four hundred remarkable naval armada had
American B29s, coming from been assembled.
Guam and Salpan, flew low
By showlne Intellectual ~Igor
• overhead. 1'bey were ,Joined by along with military virtuosity,
1,500 planes from the · fleet, America's coalition should be
darkening the sun.
able to make It's points to the
. The Incredible fly·by was de- Gulf with only light casualties.
signed to remind the Japanese Air power bas already shown
wbo waa boss. In the bay, White · that aggression does not go
saw a maulve naval armada.
unpunllhed. Iraq's nuclear opWhite bellevlid that the Paclllc tion Is oft the table.
had become an American lake. ·
Kuwait' can be reatored, hope·
He said American power and fully sooner, but possibly later,
Influence was at It's zenith. The without high-casualty ground .

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action. Air war and sanctions are
complementary, · not In
opposition,
Such a low·casualty result.
would save American Uvea. It
would yield greater domestic
political support for future asser·
tlveness. That provides more
International credibility to keep ·
dictators from breaking the
crockery . All that works In the '
service of a new, more peaceful
world order.
With so much now In motion,
the old geopolitical speculation
should be raised ·again, as Teddy
White and so many others have
raised It: Is there a greatest
·
nation of them all?
It Is not a speculation of vanity,
or gloating, It Is a part of the
games that nations play, . a
traditiOn going back to antiquity,
It Is a way to try to understand
how the world works.

'.

} Ben Wattenberg '
The world doesn't work In the
old way. In 1945, Just over the · •
horizon from Tokyo Bay, was the \..v.,
Soviet Union, a maulve military
and ldologlcal competitor. But
'
tod11y the Soviets are writhing In
Internal agony, and gone as a
/,
global power. Only America Is
now a bJg.Jeague player.
•·
In the first shar!!d experienced
of the Cable Age, the human race
.Is seeing, In real ume, that
America Is the preeminent mil·
ltary and political power.
But there Is so much more. A
global language ts emerging: It's
Amerlc11n, or, If you prefer the
•
archaic term, English. America
owns the universal culture movies, television, VC!b and
music. Our unlversltlea are the
heat In the. world; we wln the
Nobel Prizes. Immigrants ffom
everywhere flock to America. ,

r:-

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PoiDh

UNLV 141) (1;.()) ... ......... ...6151
2. Arkansas' 20-1) ................. 564 2
3. Ohio State 117-&lt;11................ 538 4
4. Indiana 118·21 ................. .. .472 3
5. St. John's 115-2) ....... ...... ....381 9
6. Arlzooa 116-31 ... ................. 3575
1. Duke (154) ................ ..... .. 354 6
8. Syracuoe 117-31 .................. 299 7
9. North Carolina &lt;U-31.r ... ..289 8
10. N£&gt;braska 117·2) .. ...... ..... 21512
II. UCLA· 115-41 .......... .. ....... 159 10
12. Utah 119·11 .................... 10717
13. East Tenncuee Si. 115-2110613
H. Louisiana Slate 113-41 ..... .95 H
15. S. Mississippi 112·21 ...... ... 6915
16. Georgetowrr 112·5) .. .......... 60 20
17. New orleans 111·21 ..... ,....43 23
18, New Mexico State 11521. ..39 22
19. Virginia (14-41 .................33 21
20. Oklahoma 114-5) .. ... .. .......2911
21. Kansas Ul-4 1........ ........... 24 24
22. (·tie) Pl1tsburgh 115·5) ......16 16
22. !tie) Georgia Teoh 112·5! ..16 25
24. SW Louisiana (14·5) .......10 NR
. 25. Houstm 112·61 ........... ...... 6 NR
1.

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lucky because we're not playing The Runnln ' Rebels sprinted to a
well right now."
20·2 lead and held a 64-37
InolhergamesMondaylnvolv· advantage at the half.
Ing ranked teams, No. 1 UNLV
At Johnson aty, Tenn., Rod·
routed Utah State 126-83; 13th· · · ney English scored 24 points and
rated East Tennessee State CalVin Talfc:&gt;rd added 23 tn
stopped Marshall 99-88; No. 17 leading East Tennessee State to
New Orleans dropped an 84·83 the 11-polnt Southern Conference
double-overtlme .declslon at Tu· triumph .. Marshall opened the
lane; and 24th-ranked Southwest· second half with an 8-2 run and
ern Louisiana needed an over· was within 60·59 with 11:41 to
time pertoo to top Sam Houston play before East Tennessee
State 84-79.
started to pull away . ,Keith
At Logan, Utah, Larry Johnson Jennings had 15 points and nine
scored · 24 . points and Stacey • assists for East Tennessee State,
Augmon added 20 to lead the 16-2 overall and 6·11n the league,
Runnin' Rebels to the Big West .Marshall ts 9· 12 and 2·5.
Conference triumph. UNLV, 16·0
At New Orleans, David Whit·
overall and 9.0 In conference, has more hit a three-pointer shot at
won26stralght. Kenda11Youngb- the buzzer ~ the second over·
loodledtheAggleswith28!X&gt;lnts. time, glyln~ lulane the upset or

Hall, Temple, Texas, Wym~lng.
·Ohio eooO.e jj;.t;jball-dlop
(Tiorwrh ram• oi.Jaa. rl) .
MID-OHIO CONFERENCE
Conf
All
Team
WL PcU\1 LPel
Tllfln
4 1 .80015 5 .750
Rio Grande
4 2 .66719 I .826
Mt Vernm Naz 4 2 .66716 6 .727
Cedarville
3 2 .800 15 6 ,714
Waioh
33 .50015 6 .714
Ohio Domncan I 5 .1&amp;7 8 13 .381
Urbana
I 5 .1671210 .545
Moooday CoDqellukelballlleoda •

Urbana University's Blue
Knights possess only one win out
of six starts · In the Mld·Ohlo
Conference, with that win being
over the University qf Rio
Grande•.It's a sore point with the
Redmen, who look for a victory
over Urbana Tuesday, 7:30 p.m.
at Urbana.
Rio Grande enters the contest
at 19-4 and 4·21n the MOC, tied for
second place with Mount V.•rnon
Nazarene (16-6, 4-2). As of today,

lOTI

Tr~

Benedlcttne_lOO, Kan11s Wesleyan
• 9(

Crnlghtm 78, Soutllern Ill. 75
OePaul84, Marquet~ 5$
Eastern Dl. 68. DI.-Chlca&amp;o 44
Evangel82, Mla...,rt Valley 65
Evansville 79, Loyola 64
nllnoiJ 53, Iowa 50
Marymount 77, Gallaudet 58
Northern Ill. 59, Ceveland St 44
Quincy 90, Kentucky St. 88!01 )
Trinity 86, liT 76
w. llllnolsl09, Alcom State 99 ·
Wlohita St. 73, Dllnoll St. 60
Soulloweol
Arkansas-Monticello 61, S. Arkan·

Charles ten 79, Salem Tetkyo 74

Colgate 77, Rider 74

Daemen 80, Houghtm 7S
Dlcklnsm 74, Susquehanna 73
Drew sa ; Wilkes 78 ~OTl ·

sas56

-.

Spor111 brief8

·The Daily Sentinel

'
(UIPsl-1
" lf·llohlonello, ....
Publllhed every attom0111, Monday .

throurh Friday, 111 Court Sl., Pomeroy, Oldo, by tile Oldo.YaUey Put&gt;
llahllll Company!Muttlmeolta-'·.J""··
Pinner~, Oldo '""· Pb. lfJ·ruo. Seeond
clua poota&amp;e pald at Pomoroy,
Ohio.

Member: Uolted l'lao lateraat1111al,
Inlalld Dally Pr..aA•IJ&lt;!alloo ud the
Ohio Newapa~~~auoa. National
Advertlalaa
tallve, llruham
Newii(Niper sa eo, 733 Tlllrd Aveaue,
New Yort, Ill.,. Yortt 10017.

~--~
to
'11lo Dally senttnel, Ill Court St.,

Pomeroy, Dido 4578.

SWMJIIIPTION UTili

By CUTler or _ _ . Oae Weet ...................... ............. tt..O

Oae Month ................. ................ fi.IO
One Year ................................. m.BU
.

DaOy ........... ~ .....................t~'25 Cent•
Sublcrlben not detlrtna to pay tt~car·
rler may ....,.It tn advlllft direct lo
The Dally 5antlnel on aJ,Ior l2month

buia. Credit will bert,.. earrter N&lt;b

No aublcrlptiOOII by. mall permltlell In
area• wbere borne carrier Jtrylce II
avaDabl~.

=

llolll
-·llelp
13 w..u .................................. m.24
I

.._.

Wake Fooest 72, Mlaml66

CaniStus 79, Vermont 64

-·

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St. 72, Uvtngstm 64

VIrginia Commmwealth 85, Jack·
smv1Ue67

American Inti. 132, StooehU112t

SJNQLII COPY
PIIICII

.

SW Loutslilna 84, San Housr:on ~t 1 79

Alderson-Broaddus 105, Bluefield
·st. 78

. • w..u.................................. .•

52 W..U ..... ............................. Ul

-·!Kelp c.al7
13 W..U .................................. AIJ.IO
216 Weeki ..... ........ .. ..... ........... ,.•SIO.I)

52 w..u .................................. m.co

· ·. . · · · ~~;arii~r~rinthg~~~~k~~~en~

Rio men bound for Urbana ·tonight

man 72

Eul

0

Grange began his career as a
Officials ordered flags flown at player who not only electrified
half-staff.. at Grange's former . ·high school and coUege crowds · star athlete at Wheaton Central
high school. The university but went on to virtually create High School, where the football
planned a moment of silence In the fledg\lng · game of profes· field bears his name. Lettering In
Grange'smemory at the start of slonal football, saldeollegeclass· football, baseball, basketball and
track, Grange also ti!ld an
Its Monday night basketball mate SeelY Johnston.
"I think he'll be remembered after·schoo!Job delivering Ice. It
game agalns t Iowa at Assembly
as the greatest football player of earned hlin the nickname ''The
Hall.
was
a
pioneering
all time," Johnston said.
•
Continued on page 7
Grange

Elmira 79: Lycoming 72
.
Falnnmt St. 86, GlmvUie St . 82
GetiYsb\011176, Juniata 63
Green Mountain 114, Lyndon St. 112
John Jay 67, Lehman 65
Latayene- 83, PenasylvanLa 72
Marls! 81, Wagner 62
'
Masachulf'tts 98, Holy CrC81 94
Mtllersvllle83, PennS!. Harrlsbell!
61
New England 0&gt;11. :/8, Gordon 65
Phil Pbarmacy 65, Alvernla 60
Plymouth Sl . 72, SUNY·Aibony 69
Rutgen ·79, Penn St. 711
Slippery Rock &amp;1, Gannm 73
Sprlnglleld 85, Bryant 76
St. An,.lm 72. St. Mldlaels 68
Staten Island 75. Barue:h 69
Syracuoel8. Connecticut 66
Urslnus64. Moravian 62 (0T)
W. New En&amp;land 76, Atlantic Union
68
, ......
W.Va. St. 93, Shephenl86
Widener 78, Allentown 66 12 OT•
So...
Belhaven 77, Mobile 72 '
Bluefield 9l, Tuicu Ilim 85
Bridgewater 76, VIrginia Wnieyan
68
.
E Kentucky 87, Murray St. 82
Fern11Tl100. Lynch bur&amp; 84
Frootboorg State 85, Wesley 18
James Madlsm 70, Wllllsm It Mary
56
Longwood 69, Elon 63
Loyola (Md. 163, Sima 57
Old Domlnloo 62, North Carolina·
WllmlnSlilo
16 .
Radlord 66. Campbell IS .
s. Carolina St. 8.1. Bethune Co(j&lt;·

NEW YORK IUPii-TheUnlted

~

B)' United Press InternatiOnal
~oday Is Tuesday, Jan. 29, the 29th day of.1991 with 336 to follow.
'l:he moon Is waxing, moving toward Its full phase.
The morning stars are Mercury and Venus.
·
·
There are no evening stars.
those born on this date are under the signor Aquarius. They Include
S~edlsh scientist and philosopher Emanuel SwedenbOrg In 1688;
American colonial political philosopher Thomas Paine In 1737;
William McKinley, 25th president of the Unlled States, In 1843;
R11sslan dramatist Anton Chekhov ·ln 1860; comic film actor W.C.
Fields .In 1880; dramatist Paddy Chayevsky In 1923; a~tress
Katharine Ross In 1943 (age 48), and actor Tom Selleck In 1945 (age

CHAMPAIGN, nt. (UPI) . Football figures Monday remem- ·
bered legend Harold "Red"
Grange as personifying not only
the . University of muiots but
perhaps the game Itself.
"For over 60 yeats, his name
has been synonymous with foot·
ball, certainly llllnols football,"
said University or llilnols Athletic Director John Mackovic.
Grange, known as the Gallop·
lng Ghost of the llilnl, died
Monday of complications from
pneumonia In Lake Wales, Fla.
He was 87.
"We've been fortunaie to call
him one of our own," Mackovic
said. I think the whole football
world has been fortunate to call
Red Grange one Of our own.''
Grange was a 20·year-old so· .
phomore at the University of
llilnols when he soared to fame In
1923, scoring 12 touchdowns and
gaining 1,260 yards rushing.

College resultS

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4Q.

•'

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Connecticut failed to .get .a shot
off.
'
' The Huskies were paced by
·Smith's 25 points and Rod
Sellers' · 15 · pcilnts and 10 rebounds. Connecticut struggled
from the foulllne, hitting only 23
of 37 atll!mpts.
lloehelm downplayed the Huskles' six-game losing streak,
which has dropped Connecticut
from a No.9 ranking three weeks ·
ago to, the ''Others receiving
votes" listing In the latest
ratings.
The Syracuse coach said,
"They're a good basketball
team, they should have beaten
us. We were . very fortunate
tonight.".
' 'We had to have been a little

Grange recalled as one of. f~tball's ·best

Scoreboard ...

'foday in history

Th8 Deily Sentinel-Page 3

.,.••·~

Syracuse outlasts .Connecticut 68-66; Dlinois trips Iowa'

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomerov-Middleport. Ohio
Tuesday. January 29. 1991 .

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Are Arab~Americans ~being harassed? · ..

The Daily Sentinel

...

te conference Is led by Tiffin at
15-5 and 4·1, with Cedarville In
fourth place at 15·6 and 3-2.
Following Its 76-71 loss to Rio
Grande Saturday, Walsh rl!·
maiDs In flftli place at '15·6 and
3-3, while Ohio Dominican ls
sixth with an 8-13, 1-5 standing.
Urbana · (12·10), Is last after . a
97-93 loss to Tiffin Saturday.
The Redmen also opened the
week at second place In District
22 behind Malone (19·3).
Gary Harrison (6-0, senior) ,
the Redmen's starting point
guard, Is currently averaging
19.6 points !lml6.2 assists and will
help lead his fellow Redmen
starters Into battle with the Blue
Knights . .Mark Erslan (6-2, jun·
lor, 15 points, 4.2 retlounds) Joins
him as !be shooting guard.
Brad Schubert, ,Rio Grande's
· 6-3 Junior small forward who
scored 19 points over Walsh
during the weekend, brings an
average of 13.7 points and 4.7
boards Into the game. Power ·
forward Jeff Brown' (6·5, sophomore) added to his laurels with a
24-polnt, 17-rebound performance over Dyke last week and

'. '

Rio's Damitz
named MOC's
leading player
(or the week

Hoelle,
Right wing Rick Toc.chet, the
Flyers' top scorer, will miss at
Ann Barnltz, 5-11 center for the
least the next three to four weeks UniVersity of Rio Grande
,
tM:cause of a tqrn tendon In his women's basketball team, was
groin. . .. Rangers lett wine Jan named the Mid-Ohio Confere:nce
.
, Erlxon relnJured his right knee Player or the Week for her efforts .
Friday at Edmonton. He will fly In two victories last week.
home and be examined by the
Barnltz, a Junior from Belpre,
team doctor Tuesday or · scored 39 points as the Redwo· Wednesday. .
men defeated defending MOC
,·champion Urbina and Notre
Dame of Ohio. For the week, she
HoBan
.
Michael, Adams of the Denver was l,8 of 28 on field goal shooting
Nuggets, '\who averaged 30.7 for 64.2 percent and netted three
points, 10.7 assists and 5.7 re- of five attempts from the free
bounds In three victories, was throw line for 60 percent. In
named NBA Player or the Week. addition, she had 21 rebounds,
three assiSts, four blocks and
... College Players of the Week:
Georgia Tech's Malcolm Mackey three steals.
Barnltz had 12 points and 12
(Atlantic Coast Conference),
rebounds
In Rio Grande's 101·79
South Alabam1i bei!Ch (Sun Belt
· · Conference)., ... Former NFL defeat of Urbana on Jan. 22 and
Commissioner Pete Rozelle will · posted 27 points and nine boards
'be honored by tlie New York In the team's· 86-66 victory over
Notre Dame on Saturday.
Sporlll Hall of Fame Feb. 11.
A business major at · Rio .
Media
Grande, Barnltz Is leading the
USA Today plans to publllh a
Redwomen. this week In per·
weekly tabloid titled USA Today game.ICOrlng average (12.9) and
BaaebaiiWeekly. ThenewlpiiJII!r . In rebounding (8.3) .· She also
will concentrate on statlstlca and leada the team In Individual field
begin publication April 5 with a goal percentage (57.3, 114-199) .
cover price of St. It'WIII appear
A 1988 graduate of Warren
weekly during the baseball sea· Local High School, Barnltz Is the
son, and every other w~k during daughter of Gary Barnltz apd
the off·season.
Ann Alloway.

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By RICK VAN SANT
CINCINNATI (UPI) - Cincln·
nat! Reds manager Lou Plnlella
predicted Monday his club will
repeat as world chaMpions this
season.
"I like our chances, 1 really
do," said Plnlella. •'I'm thrilled
about our prospects for this year.
I think the coqtlde.nce we built
last year will pay big dlvtdepds
for us this year,"
Plnlella's Reds led the Na·
tiona! League West from begin·
·nlng to end last season, then
~hipped Pittsburgh In the league
playoffs and went on to shock the
baseball world by sweeping
Oakland In the World Series.
"We enjoye&lt;) doing It so much
last year, we're going to do It
again this year," vowed Reds'
pitcher Tom Browning. ' 'It takes
a lot of work to .win. It !lll, but it
was run, too. The rewards are
great."
·
Still, some are skeptical about
the Reds' chances of repeating.
"I see where some people are
picking us for third this year,"
noted Plnlella. "They didn 't
quite believe after last year.
Well, they'll believe after this

brought his average scoring to
14.2 points and 9.1 rebounds
game. Close behind Is center
Troy Donaldsol) (6·7, sopho·
more 1 at 11.8 points and eight
rebounds a game. Donaldson
also had a productive night last
Tuesday In the Redmen's victory ·
over Ohio Dominican, where he
poured In 17 points and 12boards.
Urbana Coach Bob Ronal will
look for defensive strenglh from
guards and brothers Wade Goins
(5·11, freshman, 5.1 points, three
rebounds) and Wyatt Goins (5·11,
sophomore, 5.7 points, three
rebounds), Set for the forward
slots are Greg Harris (6·0,
freshman;four points) and Todd
Charles (6·5, junior, 9.3 points,
four rebounds) .
Center Greg Davis (6·6, senior)
leads the team with 21.6 polnis
and 9.3 rebounds per outing.
The Redmen ope11ed action this
week with a per·game average of
98.4 points, while opponents are
scoring 76.2 a game. Rio
Grande's scoring and defensive
margins have been nationally
ranked by the NAIA for most of season is over."
the season.
While the Reds didn't make
many post-season player moves,
division rivals Los Angeles, San
Francisco, Atlanta, San Diego
and Houston have made plenty of
changes · to try to knock off
Clnclrinatl.
"It's the toughest division In all
for Tiffin.
Miller (5•10 , sophomore), now . of baseball," said Plntella. "The
averaging 17 points and 1o Dodgers have added (Darryl)
rebounds per game, Is expected Strawberry _and (Brett) Butler.
(Giants manager) Roger Craig
to return.to the starting lineup, a always gets the best out of his
virtual repeat of Its earlier talent like (Kevlnl Mitchell,
matchup at Rio Grande. On the
Sports brief8
guard positions will be Lisa Witt
(5-6, freshman) and Jenny Kane
Auto Racing
(5-6,' sophomore), with Krishna
Francois Delecour of France
Myers (5-10, freshman) taking was on the verge of giving Ford
·the other forward slot. At center Its first . victory In the Monte
will · be Jane Winters (6·0, Carlo rally. He was only nine
senior).
seconds behind world champion
Foote will counter with his Carlos Sainz of Spain entering
experienced set of starters, be- . the final overnight stage.
ginning with Jennl Couch (5-4,
Baseball
senior, 7.2 points, 3.5 rebounds,
American League President
four assists _per game) and Bobby Brown met with Roger
Debbie Fredrick (5·7, sopho- aemens for 5 ~ hours Monday
more, 12.1 points, 3.1 rebounds) concerni-ng the Boston pitcher's
as the guards . Kathy Snyder .• suspension ·from -last season.
(5·10, Junior, 8.2 points, 5.3 Clemens now plans to have the
rebounds) Is at the small forward Players Association file a bi'lef
position and Kerr! Kidwell (5·11, with the AL. Clemens received a
sophomore, 11.8 points, 7.7. re· five-game suspension and $10,000
bQunds) as the power forward. fine for his heated exchange with
Ann Barnltz, the Mld·Ohto Con.· umpire Terry Cooney during ·
terence player of the ~e,ek, Is at Game 4 of the AL playoffs .... The
center. The 5·11 jUnior leads the Phlllles avoided arbitration with
team with 12.9 points and 8.3 first baseman John Kruk . by
rebounds a game.
stgntitg him to a 1-year contract
Currently, the Redwomen are worth$1.175mtlllon. Hewaspa!d
averaging 75 points a game and $680,000 In last season when he hit
are surrendering 66.4 to their .291 with seven home runs and 67
opponents.
RBI.

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Redwomen. c~llenge Tiffin
tonight in conferen(:e .game
The University of Rio Grande
Redwomen, 13·8 and 4·2 In the
Mid-OhiO Conference, will look to
break a tie between Tiffin and
Mount Vernon Nazarene for first
place In the conference when
they travel to Tiffin Tuesday for
a 5:15p.m. game. ·
Both Tiffin and the Mount
Vernon hold 4·1 recotds In MOC
play , and even thoug~ the Lady
Dragons have been on a· twogame slide, they still possess one
of the better records In District 22
at 13·5:
.
. .
The game will also be In the
nature of · a comeback for the
Redwomen, who fell 73·68 to
Tiffin at Lyne Center on Jan. 15,
In ·spite of a massive Rio Grande
rally In the second half which put
Doug Foote's team to within two
points of the visitors, who ad·
vanced on to · the win on free
throws and Susaii Miller's 27·
point, 12-reboun,d performance

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Tulane's Michael Christian
forced overtime with a three:-. ...
pointer at that buzzer. New ' 1
Orleans led by five with 29 1
second·s left but G.J . Hunter hit a
;
three-point shot with 16 seconds ·- '
to go and Christi an stole the , •
lnbounds pass and fed Whitmore .
for the game-winner.
At Lafayette, La., Aa ron Mit.'
Chell forced overtime with a
three- pointer at ttie buzzer and
Kevin Brooks scored five points •
·In the extra period, giving the
Ragin' Cajuns th e non ·
conference victory , The Cajuns,
15·5, trailed by as many as 11 ·:
points In the final seven minutes
before rallying, and Mitchell's
desperation 30-foot shot tied the
score at 72· 72 as regulation
ended .

p;n; nlla predlC• ts
Re· ds w; ll repea·t
·
as· ' rld. champs
II ·

·.~~
·.r
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(Will) Clark and (Matt) WilD· ~'
ams . And I think Atlanta will be
the most Improved teatn In the ·.,
. .. ~

dlvision.

"Everybody , Is going to be ,:
gunning for us because we're the
world chamP,lons. They've got ·l
extra IncentiVe to beat us . .,,·
They 're loading up for us. But, I
don't think you can buy a ... .
pennant. .I like what we 'already ·,'
hav.e. I feel ·very· comfortable ·
with this club. We're going to be .. •.•1
alright. "
, ,One of the few additions to ·
Cincinnati's roster Is pitcher Ted .. •'.
Power, who signed as a free , ••
agent after playing ,for the · ·
Pirates last season.
, ;
"The Reds have already got a ..'
lot of good arms," said Power. . •'·
"The surprising thing to me was ,
that the Reds thought enough of ....
me to add me to the staff."
. J.
Last year's Reds got off to a· - ~
running start by winning their . ,!;
first nine games and Ptnlella Is •. ;.,
pointing toward another fa~t :·
start this season.
,
"Yqu can tell the Importance of ,
a great start, " he said. "That's ·•e
why we're going to work the, , '·
players very hard In spring·,
tral :g. It 's up to the manager .. ,.
to &gt;ake sure complacency ....;
doesu't set ln. I know this club .·,,
has the talent to getltdoneagaln . .:
I'm anxious to get It started , ~
again."

STATE AU10

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Tua1day, January 29. 1991

The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

Gas masks: . don~t leave

Tuesday, January 29, 1991
Page 4

m-

The hooor roiHor the third
wcct period 11 Southen! Junior
High Sdioollils been Mlllllllnced

• Kara King celebralt:d II« lOih
birthday recently wjlh a patty at II«
hOme in Racipe.
.
She ~eived many cards and
~u.

.

Helping her celebrate. wen: II«
parents, Sam and. Diana Carpentt:r,
Mary Port«, Mark Porter, ·Jolm
Porter, Shelagh Ptlrtt.t, Anita, Paige
and Wyau Musser. ChariJse
Knight, Craig Kriight, Joshua Ervin, Hilda Frectcr and Jobn Card.
Cake and ice cream were served
to diose attending.'

Preceptor Beta Beta meets

KARAKING

OU fall graduates announced

In pageant.

CRYSTAL POWELL

OU deans list released

:Syracuse honor·roll announced
: The honor roll for Syracuse
· :Elementary has been IIIIJIOIIIIced.
: First grade • Cody Wallace, all
'J's; Matt Ash, Brice Hill, Jonathan
Lewis Nalhan Manin, Stacey
'Mills, 'Aaron Ohlinger, Chris Rupe,
Mary Schultz and Jamie Smilh.
Second grade - Samh Ball and
:Joshua Larsen, all A's; Cata Ash,
•Jason Cundiff, Jen:my FISher, Ryan
:Hill, Stephanie Pullins, Erin Struble
and Matthew Warner.

Third gnlde - Autumn Thomas
and Steve Tackett, all A's; Gene
Bing, Adam CQIIIings, Joshua
Davis and Jon Smilh. ·
Fourth grade - Ashli Davis, all

A's; Bridget Cross and Kim Sayre.
Fifth grade - Cynthia Caldwell
and Evan Struble, all A's; and Billy
Young.
Sixdi gmde - Jason Lawrence,
Amber Thomas, all A's: Brian AI- ·
len, Hillery Harris and Travis Lisle.

Jones birth
Beuy and Bmt Jones, Pomeroy,
an: announcing die bin!l of 1 son,
Crilg Anlhony, 011 Dec. 23.
The infant weighed eight pounds
and was21 inches long.
GranclparenU an: Rich and
Donna Jones. alld.Nonna and Hugh

Great grandmolher

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Mary

IS,

·

~ · There is another child at home,

·. ~ily, age eight

..

CRAIG A. JONES

Renee

With the five wins, Hammer
has the second highest number of
American Music Awards presented to a single artist in a year.
Michael Jackson won a record
seven awards In 1984.
Based on votes cast by a
. national sampling of 20.000 record buyers, the American Music
Awards are· more a measure of
:popularity and cornrnerclal suc·
. cess than tile more establiShed
and respected Grarnmy Awards.
.which are chosen by members of
the music Industry.
Nominees were selected based
on year-end sa~ charts from the
music ln!lustry trade publication
· Cash Box.
Hammer tried to explain his
overwhelming success . .
"I present myself against the
stereotype of a rap arttSt and

~ Nancy Lynn Saker,
'Pomeroy; Matty Lee Cline,
Pomeroy; Jodi AM Harrison,
Pomeroy.
Maureen
Ella
Hennessy,
Pomeroy; Kevin Donald King,
Pomeroy; Kristin . M King,
Pomeroy; lMissa Lee Long,
· Pomeroy; Judilh L. Meta,
Pomeroy; Sandra L. Carleton '
Needs, Pomeroy;. Jackie . Ryan

Racine; Shelqh Wllsolt Porter,
ti:ine; Greta t:ynn Riflle. Racine;
Robyn Gail Barnett, Reedsville;
Kitk bean Reed, Reedsville:
'Illmmy Sue Roberts, Reedsville;
Todd Allen Wllsolt, Reedsville;
Angela Yvonne Young. Reedsville;
Lisa Oail Miller; Rutland; Kathy
Alana Jones. .New Marshfield; and
David Kent Ramey, Shade.

Movies to be shown
"Country Coyote Goes Hollywood" and "Puppy Saves die
Circus• will be shown aldie Meigs
County Public LibrarY in Pomeroy
on Satwday at 2 p.m. for area
children .

'

some people rnigtit find that and In a surprlslng·twtst, won as
refreshing ," he told reporters favorite band In the pop-rock
. category, topplngBeliBivDeVoe
backstage.
Hammer. a former Navy sea- and ·the heavily marketed New
man from Oakland, Calif., was Kids On The Block.
among several artists who v()- · Bell Blv DeVoe, In what was
iced opinions a bout the war In the perhap~ the first acceptance
speech ever pertonnl!d ·to rap
Persian Gulf.
·
"I. believe In giving peace a music, took top honors for
chance, but once they're over favorite new artist In the dance
there defending us, I s;~y, 'Do &lt;ill and souiR&amp;B categories.
McEntire, a frequent victor In
you c;~n to stand and win,' " he
country music award ceremoS&lt;lid.
Janet Jackson was the next nies, was named favorite female
highest award winner wiih three, country artist for the fourth year
followed by Aerosn:ilth, Collins, In a row aild "Reba Live" was
Reba McEntire, Bell Biv DeVoe favorite country album.
Coul)try musician Merle Hag·
and Vl\nUla Ice, all with two
gard
was presented with Lifeeach.
time Achievement Award, join·
Vanilla Ice. whose album "To lng the ranks of Michael Jackson
·
The Extreme" ~rrently tops and Prince.
"Blaze or Glory," the hit from
Hammer's on the sales charts,
was voted favorite new artist In the soundtrack of "Youn&amp; Guns
the pop-rock and rap categories. ·II" thai singer-writer Jon Bon
Vanilla Ice, appearing Mollllay Jovi called a fluke, took the prize
in a flashy two-piece red, white for favorite pop-rock single.
The priZe 'for favorite heavy·
and blue outfit, defended himself
metal
new artls t went to
against reporu that he did not
Slaughter.
have the rough ' street-oriented
Madonna. who managed to .
youth he has claimed.
''To the people that try to hold dominate ·the scandal sheets
me down, kJss my white butt,'' he. again thiS year wlthhervoyeurls·
said during the tape-delayed tic "Justify My Love" video,
bounced back from last year's
ceremony.
Backsta·ge, squaring off with shut-out by winning favorite
reporters who questioned him on dance-music single for her styl·
discrepancies In'hls promotional Ish "Vogue."
Madonna was unable·to accept ·
biography material, Ice added,
''People don't believe a white guy her award In person tiecause she
like me can grow .up In the was in New York shoollria: a film .
streets. Don't believe the hype,
Tony! toni! Tone! was chosen
''The bottom line Is It's not as favorite souiR&amp;B band.
.Garth Brooks, who took the
where you're from, It's where
you're at," he said.
·
country music scene by siOnn
Janet Jackson won honors as last year. won the country sln&amp;:le
the · favorite female artist In
award for "If Tomorrow Never
pop-rock and sou!R&amp;B genres Comes."
and as favorite ·dance artist.
"It's a lola! shock," Brooks
' Aerosmlth received favorite said. "I'm just starling to come
heavy-metal album for "Pump," around."

.

· Mr.

and

Mrs. Jon Scott, Worlanan, Mr. and Mrs•.Jim Dillon
Mansfield, were weetend guests of and Mr. and Mrs. Clai!' Giles.
their parents .Mr. and Mrs. Vugil
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Mahr and
Gary Joe Foley visi~ a few days
and Mrs. Bob Gibson, in Columbus wilh Mr. and Mrs.
ColumbuS: Mr. and Mrs. Weltt:r Francis Foley and Debbie Foley
BUrke, Pomeroy, wen: n:cent and sons.
visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Dill and sons
Alkire. .
have moved to Pomeroy.
Millard Christian is home from
Mrs. Eslher Brandau, Jackson,
~ hospital and slowly m:uperat-' was a weekend visitor of Mrs. Lola
ing. Recent visitors were Mr. and Clatk.
Mrs. Joe Sayn:, Mr. and Mrs. T.K.

~-

women's Fellowship has meeting

Welker, Poolerot. susan .
Ylllllli•. ~eroy; Ic:mWer Jayne
Nora Rice was \he guest speaker
Amold Racine Christopher Wll- at die ~t meeting of.the Meigs
1iam B~ ~ David Jenninp COIDity Women's Fellowship held
Beegle Racine; Maahew ScOtt at die Rutland Chllitb of ChrisL
Hanis,'Racinc: Paul Bryan Harris, . ·. ~bers an: _planning a .W&lt;?rk
Racine· Debbie Lyon HOlter SCSSJon at the Ohio Valley Chrislllll
Racine; 1immy · Dawn Holtt:r: ~bly Camp. Flll1.her p~s will
Racine; Katbtyn Louise Ihle, be discussed atlhe next meeting on

Area sludcnu at Ohio University
named to the Dean's List for fall
qww.r ha~ been announced.
Named 10 die list wete Christina
Ann Roush, Cheshi!e; Emilie Ann
Sisson, ChesJUre; Joy Ann COulson,
Coolville; Jill Krislina Ethridge,
Coolville; Amy JOimllC Penick,
Coolville; Gina Snnettc West,
Coolville; Amy Louks Rice, Long
Bottom; Headier Camillc· Shuler,
Long Bottom; Trisha Anne SPCQ·
cer, Long Bouoni; Shel1y R.
Thompson DuBose, MiddlePort;
Sharon K. Wllsmi ~ley, Middleport; Mark Randall Smilh, Middleport; Kimba_ly M. Van Matte,
Middlepon; Jemey Joo Arnold,

Hammer time: M.C. Hammer cleans
up at the American Music Awards
LOS ANGELES (UP!) Rapper M.C . Hammer, on the
heels of five Grammy nominations, swept five categories Monday at the 18th annual American
Music Awards In a ceremony
tinged with concerns over war in
the Persian Gulf.
Hammer, whose album
"Please Hammer Don't Hurt
'Em· '1 has sold 8 mi!Uon copies,
won for favorite album In soulrhythm and blues and rap
categories . .
His break-through hit off the
allium, . "U Can't Touch Tl)ts. ~·
won favorite ·souiR&amp;B single.
Hammer also was named favor•
ite soulR&amp;B artist and favorite
rap artist.
Nominated seven times, .he
was outdistanced in only two
areas, both by Phil Collins, who
won for (avorlte male artist and
whose album " ... But Seriously"
took the favorite album prize in
the pop-rock sector.

Harrisonville happenings

Ann Harrison, Pomeroy, Bachelor
of Science in Eilucation: and Judilh
L Mees, "Pomeroy, Bachelor of
Business Administration.
·
Gtlduating with, bonon WeR:
Jobn Alan Coen, Coolville,
Bacllelor of Science · in Com·
munication; and Angela Yvonne
Young, Reedsvillc, Bachelor of
Science in Education.

Six l'deigs Countians wen:
among die S99 students from the
Alhcns campUS who were can·
didatcs for degrees . from Ohio
Univenity at the end of fall qi8'TCI'.
Receiving degrees and graduating widi high honotl were Sbellcy
R. Thompson DuBose, MiddlqiOrt,
Bachelor of Science in Education;
Sharon K. Wilson Hawley, Middlcpon, Bachelor of MusiC; Jodi

~ Crystal L. Powell. 11. daughter

r•WeUs, Middleport

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Mrs. Everett Hayes reviewed die Agamemon. The battle episodes
book "The !Iliad" by Homer at die reveal the true characters of the
recent meeting of lhe Middlepon · waniors, their s~ngth and lheir
Uitt:rary Club held at lhc home of . w~. These figw-es step out
of~ hi$tory as .human
·Mrs. Roheit Fisher.
Mrs. Hayes stated dial die book beings for all lime.
Mrs. Richard Owen conducted
was a heroic ·epic story about die
die
meeting and Mrs. Fisher gave a
Trojan war in Troy. She Slated dial
bric;f
insight of her life so members
Homer is hailed as lhe father of all
could
learn more about her. Roll
poetry and lhat "The Illiad" has
was
answered by each membc:f
call
survived for all time. The book,.
within a three day period of the making a comment on die book.
Rcfreslune~~u wen: served by the
Trojan War, tells the story of die
wrath of the Achilles against King ooa-.

r..

grade - Randy Bing,

Dcmst:.

Literary Club has meeting

• ~USICr, Pomcioy.

EiJblh

JERUSALEM (UP!} - Bob·
bing up and down along the
boulevards, the cardboard boxes
· are on everybody's shoulder.
First they were-all pretty uglyplain brown containers wrap~d
In plastic to protect against the
lnevltllble cold rain.
·
. But as skies brigi)tened Monday across a country grown
accustomed to almost nightly
Iraqi Scud attacks, so did the
strange boxes In which Israelis
tote theircgas masks every time
· they leave home. ·
Bright, yellow happy face
stickers, crocl:leted blue slipcovers, gray newspaper headlines.
pink polka dQts, even the Sunday
Doonesberry comics material·
lzed to disguiSe the grim contents. The duUy black plastic
·shoulder straps gave way to
funky macrame bands In all the
coiors of the rainbow.
The spontaneous fashion ·s!low
. on the streets has been nurtured
and encouraged by the Israeli
government, which Is making a
deliberate effort to keep daily llfe
as normal as possible despiiJ! the
Persian Gulf War.
With every new lauchlng of the
Iraqi warheads, fears grow particularly In Tel Aviv and
Halla - that one's own home
might be obliterated by the
notoriously Inaccurate Scuds .
Even though there was no new
attack ·on Sunday night, · the
following days · news was !llled
w!Pt the usual foreboding.
-Prime Minister Yllzhak
;Shamlr once more warned Iraq· s

C-UDitr Caletldlr lteiU
"THURSDAY
Mucu Fiiber, Milt Morrow,
appear
1W0
dl}'l
befOft
an
event
POMEROY
- The Pomeroy
Kendra N&lt;xris and Couttney
SevCIIIh pade: Paul lhle, Jen- Roush, an A:s; Jaon Ervin, Willy . and tbe diiY rl tllat eveat. Itemt Group of AA and AlAnon will meet
nifer Lawtwce, Nick Smidi and Cbildma, Eddie Friend, Bridget mlllt lie received Ia IICIVIlll(t! 10 ThursdaY at _7 p.m. at the Sacred
Rayan )'oung, .all A!s; John Card. Powell, Brian Andenon, Gnmt IJIIIIfe publleatlon ill tbe ellen- . Hean Catholic Oturcll. For· mon:
Robby Crow, CJ. Hattis, Rochelle Circle, Andrea Mom:, Shannon dar.
information caii992-S763.
Jenkins, Ctai Knight, Jonna Monrity, David Pickens, Thluy'
Manuel, Jay ~Kelvey,
TUESDAY
POMEROY - Revival at die
PicXeU, Jim Raildolph. Jenny
· ROIBh, J&amp;!IOII Shuler .and. Sanmu Stewart, Amy Weaver and Ryan
MIDDLEPORT - Revival widi · Hysell Run Holincsa Chapel will be
Nonnan 'lllylor · will be held held Thursday through Feb. 2 81 7
Sisson.
Wllliams.
through Saturday at the Ash SIR:CI pin. nightly. Dave Canfield. Ash·
FteC Will Baptist Chllitb in Mid- land, Ky., will be the -gelist
dleport at 7:30 p.m. nightly. Special Joy Sizemlft on Thunday; GaiJriel
singing
will be held each night
Quane! on Friday and Dan Hayman
The city COIIICil meeting of Bela and Vebua Rue; lrelllllim.
and the Faidi Trio 011 SIIUrday.
Sigma Phi · was diiClllsed at theMemben taninded to bring
OIESTER
Thd
Otestt:r
PUblic
is invited to auend.
'recent meeting of die PtecepCDr_ somelhing homemllde for die Heart
'Ibwnship
will
meet
Thesday
81
Beta Bela Cbapl«, Bela Sigma Pbi 10 Hlilds ·project at die next meetPOINT PLEASANT - The 3664
Sorority he
. ld Ill the
. Gtace Epison Feb. 14. An anction will be 7:30p.m. at the town ~WVARNG Point Pleasilnt unit
eopa1 Ot~tycouncil group,·· •..,,_
d foUowiDa the meeting.
·
WEDNESDAY
family suppon meeting will be held
The
...·The groUp . ·will I!CfVC die
POMEROY
The
Wildwood
Thursday
at 6 p,m. in the Annory
Bend City Council," willmcet .the · Bloodmobile canreen on Oct 23:
OBRien
Club
will
meet.
Wednesday
day room.
second Monday of each montb. • It was nod dial die group is still
at
1
p.m.
at
die
home
of
Doris
J;:very year, a new altanalc will be recYding cans.
.
MIDDLEPORT - The OAPSE
chosen and eiCh chapter will have a
the ifoup Was aSked to donate Gruescr.
Chapta
No. 11 will meet Thursday
rqJte~CQtative IX alll:matc plus twin size bed clothes and lhrow
POMEROY
Annual
inspection
ai
1:30
p.m. at the Meigs Junior
presidents of each chapla'. OfliClers ~ These items can bc taken to
of
the
Bosworlh
Council
46
Royal
High
School.
elected were Becky 1iipletl, prcsi- Sue Mlilson at die License Bweau
and Select Masons will be held
dent; Sandi llnnnlli, vice prcsi- 011 Mulberry Avenue.
Wednesday
at 7:30 p.m. There will
LEBANON TOWNSIUP - The
dent; Darla SIIIIIS, recording
Refresluncots'were served 10 die
be
work
in
the
Royal
Master
DcLebanon
Township Trustees will
secretary; Suaan Clark, carespald· nine membets pteSellt by Velma
P.·
Refreshments
will
be
served.
meet
ThUtSday
81 7 p.m. 81 the
ing secrCwy; and Belly Ohlinger Rue and R~ SiSSOII.
township building.

.

of Mr. and Mrs. Jerry F. Powell,
~acme, will be panicipating in die
Miss Ohio Coed Stale Finals
Pagent held at die Ohio Regency
!fotel in Columbus on May 31 and
June 1.
' She is • sponsoml by Racine
Home National Bank, Rose's Exeavating, J.D. Drilling, Valley
t.wn~~«. Shear musicns and Millie's Restaurant

Community calendar

Southern honor roll announced

~

List of
•
wtnners:
'

The following . Is a list of
winners at the the annual American Music Awards Monday
night:

Swallow hard

Dear Ann ••nden: Our 35-year- . If you liave aconfrontation widi ~ .
old son died 18 months qo after a lll9lhtr she could cut you out. and
long iiiqeSs His wife, "Laurie" was that would be a uagedy. So,
a faithful caregiver llld we loved swallow hard, deat, and close
her
for iL Aft« "John's' dealh we one eye. It's in your own best intt:rSaddarn l{usseln ttiat if he used
"I wondered whatcould I make
thanked
her for being so wonderful est ·
chemical weapons, Israel " has
for my girlS so that they could
to
our
son.
She his never acknowlDear Ann Landen: I'm an old
the appropriate means at Its continue with normal activities,
edged
oilr
fl11811Ci11
help
which
was
fogie
in my SOs and was never
disposal" to respond.
as Ills Impossible that they will
considerable
and
slill.!
lives
R:nt-frec
concerned
about the effect rock
. ~Qefepse Minister Moshe Ar· not go out. of their houses, and
groups hail&amp;\ kids until my "new to
ens said the Israel Defense Force then it occured to me to design a' ' in a house we own.
Lesa than a year aftt:r John died, me' 1987 Cadillac Seville hood and
has prepared P.lans for action Ifit fashionable protective gar is "forced to get Involved" In the ment," Brurla Dekel told the Laurie Started 10 dale a married man trunk ornaments wen: stolen. The
IS years her senior. }!e is now replacemeniS will cost more lhan
"gUlf war.
. newspaper Yedlot Aharonot.
divorced
and has moved in with her $100.
'
-A rnUitarycurtewrestrlcting
. "I took a pair of overallS mad.e
the movements of Arabs In the of completely impermeable pal · and our two granddaughtt:rs. This . I've_since learned lhat lhe ~
Israel·· occupied Gaza Strip en· ent leather and added the neces· man broughi nolhing Ill lhe telation- ·hen:, m a suburb of 01811~ Rap1ds,
tered Its 13th day , which Palest!· · sary paraphernalia," she said ~ip except a hearty appetite and a have caught ?n to wcanng lhese
nlans said was the longestcurtew . 'pointing to her ultra-hlp black p1ck-up truck. He has a job but most ornaments ups1de-down as nee~
since the 1967 Six Day War. The and white fashion statement.
of his checb go fcir alimony and or belt buckles, 115 a symbol ngam~t
Gaza Arabshavenotbeenlssued ·
"My girls, fashionably child support
. ·
· die CSiablishment, just like cenam ·
gas masks, though many head dressed, are functioning norOne of our granddaughtt:rs is IS rock groups do.
.
.
for rooms sealed with plastic and mally and are fully protected, '' andknowswhatisgoinaon. Weare . I've worlced hard.for 16 years m
tape over the windows during she said.
not happy about die example !heir real estate ~cs and fi~ly_ w~ able
Scud attacks.
o_.:..
·
1
niolher is ~g . We also feel lhat to buy my dream car. Wulun four
So as unsettling headlines c n~perty transtei'S
Laurie is taking advantage of us by weeks, some kid ripped off the
continue to flow from the gulf and
living in our home rent-free allhough m:nameniS while I was at die County
Frank C. Clark, by executor,
nearer to home, Israeli officials
to
Kenneth
Young,
Betty
L.
lot,
we don't need the money: Do we Fair w~hing our 12-~-old ~have tried tQ keep the people as
Young,
Gregory
Winebrenner
have any right to say or do son wm . Grand ChampiOn for h1s
calm as possible. One aspect of
Paige
Winebrenner,
Pome·
and
something?
·- WORRIED IN- steer.
.
the Informal campalgn ·is enco,u· roy Village.
,,
.
LAWS
IN
KANSAS
·
·
·
·
Get
the
picture,
Anri? Dutch
raging . children to personaliZe
.Phyllis
Haley,
parcels
113 Int. ,
· DEAR KANSAS: 1 can under- · Reform area, County Fair, 4-H
their gas masks. so they don't ·to Linda J{aley, Betty Swick,
stand
why you disapprove of achievers,andkidsstcalingemblerns
seem so ugly and frightening.
Janet
Sigman,
Barbara
Jewett,
Laurie's
lifestyle. I wouldn't be crazy off a car because some rock star
For more than a week, schools
Sharon
Ferrell,
Salisbury.
about it either. But she is under no staned a fad. .
.
-have been closed because authorHelen Lyons, dec'd, by exec., obligation to answer to you.
I hope all molhers who read thiS
Ities fear the nightmare specta· .2101
A, to Leroy Hendrix and
cle of a teacher, for Instance,
You were generous to allow her will check dieir kids' jewelry and
Judy
E ." Hendrix, Pomeroy
having to outfit a whole class of
to
live rent-free in your home. 1hope dresser dra:";ers. If lhey fm_d lhese
6-year-olds in their anti-chemical VIllage.
that
you will continue to do so, if ornaments 11 s a cmch die kid IS up
Paul Michael Nunley and Ell·
warfare gear . Instead the kids zabeth
A. Nunley, parcel, · to not for her sake, for your son's chil- '? no gD&lt;_XJ. You should waste no
· stay horne with their parents, or
.drcn. They neeii you in their lives. ume fmding out exactly where the
Anna Maude Hatffeld, Rutland.
often, go to work with them .
stuff came from, when lhcy wen:
The imminent danger. ·how·
ever, has been an insplra\ion for
a Tel Aviv fashion designer who
WNAI !OUIICIS OF INCOME All TAX
worried about her models getting
Filii TO PEOPlE 6S 01 OtDIH AlE
spooked by the nightly eplsoHes
TAX um lOWII Wllllii'IOPII
of violence.
UACH AGE 651
.

:home -w ithout them close·by

'·

:King birthday

Pomeroy-·Middleport. Ohio

Feb. ~8 at die Zion. Church of
Christ.
Zion membets will be presenting
a fashion show at die pext meetin$.
Members are to bring a iucst if
possible.
Refreshmenu were served.

Boys state se1ectton
· to beg1n
·

TIP OF THE WEEK

lal.WO ..... • 1M....,. of lhot it- - . ............. _ . otlw
,.. .... Sociol ""'rily loonoliti,

INDIANAPQLIS (UPI) - A omy, which ha s been depressed
proposal for casino gambling' in ever since the once-prosperous
Gary would add French Llc.k as a steel industry first dwindled and
casino resort and prepare the then began a comeback Involving
way for riverboat gambling on far fewer employees than under·
the Ohio River.
previous steel technology.
Casino gambling proposals
''I do think that there's a public
have failed at leas I twice In the perception thaI we have· moved
Legislature In the past two years. ·too far, too fast in the area of
· "They always say the third gambling,'' said Rep. Vaneta ·
time Is a charm," Rep. Charlie · Becker, R· Evansville. She and
Brown, D- Gary, author of the other Evansville'area legislators
bill, said.
were checking with constituents
about their view of the
He and other Gary legislators legislation.
have been pushing proposals for
"I can take. It or leave it," said
casino resort hotels to be estalr Rep. Jerry L. Denbo , D-French
llshed at Gary as a shOt in the Lick. What hlsconstitutents want
arm to northwest Indiana's econ· Is what counts with hlin, he said.

fio- .........., .. 10 10 """""' of

tlwt IIIMfitl ................... ...
l h t - of olloor r..,teol orr

.

lho ............... .... "'""'
- Tapayonogo 65 ......... ..
............. 'Is. lltort, - - · of
$100, or $650 N rrrorriMI • • Biro•
wWowlorl. .... N yoo • ,_ .,... is
• 65 1r ...,, 11rt
tho 11o1or1r

c..-""

...,_,,.. .. ...um.sl.tn...,..

y•- ·

.

KARL .KElLER, EA .
ing 111
s-..1 of tax-1. 11 inc- irrdudt moll munidpal llorrol i-nt, lht porHon of

i••

your rttlnment
that r.,..tnh a rer:~y ef your contributi.,. to o retin·
-~ ......... gift• olllll"""ltan• yeu "'•"·
Whono"r you ha.. q001ll.,. atoo.t how tho 101 laws oiled your rotum. cal your
local H&amp;RIIock offko. lotllr yot, slop loy lho ono . . - t you. Wo'rt hortlo holp yoo.

H&amp;R BLOCK
618 EAST J!lAIN

992-6674 .

Racine Post 602 will again be in city, county 1111d state governselecting delegate$ to attend die menL
·
American Legion Buckeye Boys
During lhe nine day stay. each
Stale. · The purpose · of this citizen experiences all "facets of a
"Workshop in Government" is to mydiical Stale which will include '
provide die young men. of Ohio die election of City, county and .
widi a deeper undcrswtding of his Stale officials and will establish a
righu and !'rivileges as an Supreme Coun and Legislature.
American citiZen. The 1991 Qualified professionals such as
American · Legion Buckeye Boys judges, educators, elected and apStale will he held at Bowling Gn:cn pointed public oflicials, serve· as
Stale University, June IS -June 23. volunreers throughout die program.
This American Legion . program
The American Legion Buckeye
is conducted for high school juniors Boys State was founded in 1936.
and provides a practical experience

PO MElOY

c....... §yncfiUif'

ac:quiR:d and wby.
I grew up in this town and there

was none of this garbage going on
when I w115 • kid. Please, Ann, priRI

this lcuttandgivemeahand. Things
are chailging 100 fast for me. -- LIFE

IS LESS GRAND IN GRAND
RAPIDS
DEAR LIFE: 'Jbe changes you
n:fer to are taking place far beyond
the city limiu of Gi811d Rapids. I(E
happening all over.
According_ Ill Marion Jelks at
Grossinger's Village Cadillac in
Chicago, stealing crest emblems is
very common. Cadillacs and
Mercedes are the prime targets. The
chrome emblems cost $35 to $SS.
The gold ones run about $90. Kids
· use lhem on hell buckles, w~g
canes, gym bag zippers, necklaces
and even as earrings. Whoever said,
"There's nothing new under !he sun;
ought to check around.
P Ianning a wedding? What's
right? What's wrong? "The Ann
Landers Guitk for Brides" will reliew: your anzitty. Send a self-addressed, long, business-size enw:lope
and a check. 9r moMy order for
$3.65 (this i~~el!Uies postage and
handling) to: Brides, c/o Ann Landers, P.O. Boz 11562, Chicago, II/.
. 6061 I -0562. (In Canada, send
$4 .45.)

1991 TRAILER TAX &amp;
DOG TAGS MUST BE
PURCHASED BY
JANUARY 3·1 ·TO
"AVOID PAYING A
PENALTY

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

lhtir--.......

ANN L,\NDERS .

""1989, ............. fill
·T im .. Syt~dlf'Mft and

NOTICE

No ta II !no Hilly ~Mea.
,.....,..,6S.Whlltww,.,_il

Casino gambling proposed again

Ann
Landers

WILLIAM WICKLINE
MEIGS COUNTY AUDITOR

'

Chtirch groups reorganizing
Groups I and II of tlie Mid-

dlepon Presbyterian Church met

recendy to reorganize as die Pres· .
byterian Women's Circle.
The meeting opened widi prayer
by Kris nentong. Elizabelh Bwkett
gave die secretary's n:port and
Man:ella Coleman gave · die
tR:asurcr's repon.
It was noted lhat the co-chair
persons, Catherine Brown and
Dorolhy Morris will serve another

year.
Beuy

Horky

was ·elected

secretary and Marcella Coleman,

treasurer. ·

Meetings will be held· die fourth
Tuesday ofeach mondi at 7:30p.m.
at die chllitb.
Closing prayer was give~~ by
Catherine Brown.
Mrs. Brown, hostess, served
calce and coffee 10 die group.

Pop-rook

Male artist: Phil Collins.
Female artist: Janet Jackson.
Band, duo or group :
Aerosmlth .
Single: "Blaze or Glory," Jon
.
Bon Jovi.
Album: " ...But Seriously,' '
·Phil Collins.
New artist: Vanilla Ice. ·
8oul,RAB

Male artist: M.C. Hammer.
Female artist: Janet Jackson.
Band, duo or ·group: Tony!
Toni!' Tone!
. Sl!!ile: " U Can't Touch This,"
M.C . Hammer.
Album: · "Please Hammer
Don't Hurt 'Em,'' M.C: Hainmer.
New Artist: Bell Blv DeVoe. •
Counlry
,
Male artist: George Strait.
Female artist : · Reba
McEntire. ·
.
Band, duo or group: Alabama.
Single: "If Tomorrow Never
Comes,'' Gardi Brooks.
Album: "Reba Live," Reba
.McEntire.
New Artist: The Kentucky
HeadHunters.
·
Heavy Metal
Artist: Motley Crue.
Album: "Pump," Aerosmltil.
New ar~ t: .SlaUghter.
Rap
Artist: M.C. Hammer.
.-,Album: "Please Hammer
DOn't Hurt 'Em," M.C. Hammer.
New Artist Vanll·la tee.
Dance
Ar:tlst Janet Jackson.
Single: "Vogue," Madonna.
New Artist Bell Blv DeVoe.

Mas9n Family Restaurant
Rt. 33

Mason,

WV

S~OR CJTIZENS.SPE(;JAL
i\IJ .•You~ARE·To·EAT

Mo~mA.v-FRmAY,

8 AM-II

AM

(

eaturing: Fresh Scrambled Eggs,
Homestyle Biscuits, Danish,
Muffins, Pancakes, and
Much, Much More!

ONLY$2.99
Mason Family Restaurant
Rt. 33

(304) 773-5321

Mason,

WV

(NEXT TO MASON EXXON)

..

have held in common. A
Becoming one
oo-non.sellse approach
of the most talked
to doing their jobs,
about banks in the
based on a pretty
industry ha;; taken
simple idea.
:·a lot of bar~ work
The idea that in
&amp;om lots of different
order to live up to our name,
people at Bank One .
wehaveto~orkalitdeharderanda
Am~ theyears,tre:reS
•
•
·always been something those people little smarter We have to do whatever

ittakes to make sure customers are
pleased with ou\ bank.
If this is sounding like atypical
'• .
\
th~ng, we plead guilty.
. Because along with new products
·and services, and the convenience
and stability of one of the nation's most
successfulbmks,thisunusualattitude
is what sets us apart.

It's one of the most important
benefits you receive as a Bank One ·
customer. Absolurely free of char~. ·
To find out exactlywhatwemean,
conwctthenearest Bank One. Our
. bankers are ready to do something
that's extremely rare ~ days.
. Whatever BANKEONE
it takes. · ~~takes:-

..

' .

\.

I•

••

.•

�~-

¥age

8~The

...

....

..

-

...

.

' ..

EMS responds to 12 calls
residence.

At 10!22 LDI., Racine squad

Knight

.

.

Garden dub to meet
Middlepon Garden Club
will have an ·open meeting on
Monday at 7:30 p.m. at the Middleport Presby!Miin Chwch; A
slide program on llowers ind planiB
or Thailand and Indonesia will be
presented by Rev. O'Quin KeUy.
AU garden club members and other
intaesltd persons arc invited.

The

.
. _••.,;\r ~-j,~;-, ( rl:l
p.m., Syracuse ~ went to Thus
RAVENSWOOD , W. 'Va. - · fiilct. At that time, Judge Fox
Road for Allen Dill,. wbo wullkeo
llrrilted to six the number of
to VCitlllns. At 3:58 p.m., Mid- . RavensWOO!I Aluminum Corpopicketers the union may have at
d1epolt squad went to Mill Slreet ration has petitioned-the Circuit
foc Gerttudc Edwards, who was Court of Jackson County, W. Va., the plant entrances.
taken 10 Holz.cr. At 7:29 p.m., Tup- to take action to stop an lncreaspers Plains squad toot Homer Cole lng wave of violence related to'
The lnjunetlon also prohibited
to VCitlllns. At 1:10 LDI., Racine the strike by members of the all threats, acts of.coerclon and
squad went to Letart· for Courtney United Steelworkers of Amerl~a harassment, caiTylng of wea·
Jooes, who was taltal to Holzer. At Local5668. ·
pons, obstruction. of vehicles and
The t;equest was made · by other acts aimed at Inciting
5:41 a.m., Pomeroy squad went 10
Lamcl Cliff Rolld roc Balha company attorneys before Judge v tole n c e or c rea t 1n g
Intimidation.
Parter. Sbe was transpor1cd 10 . Fred L, Fox, II.
Vetmms.
The company Intends to pres·
The company also announced
It Is Increasing to $20,000 the en\ Judge Fox with evidence of
reward being offered In the case several acts of violence and
of a security guard who was shot vandalism caused by Individuals
at the plant December 24. The on the piCket lines at . the plant
The Southern Boosters will meet guardhadbeenseatedlnavanon since the Injunction Dec. 7.
Among the Incidents listed by
Wedilcsday at 7:30 p,m. to finish company proper_ty near the conJU.C were 24 cases of vehicle
plans for a bam aDil cbicten dinner struction entrance.•
RAC asked Judge Fox to hold bodies belngdamaged,10vehlcle
!hal will be beld Sunday at 11:30
a.m. AU parents, roacbel and ad- the union In con~mpt for nurner· windshields being destroyed and
vis&lt;Jrs arc urged to aaend.
ous violations !If Its Injunction, )28 tires damaged from Dec. 11
Issued Dec. 7, that was aimed at through Jan, 23.
'
"Ravenswood Aluminum Corpreventing strike-related via.
GosPel coacert
There will be a iospci COIICCJt
Saturday at 7 p.m. 81 the Laue!
Continued tram page1
Cliff Free Mcihodist Cbon:h in

Middleport ... _

Pomeroy. Sinaen will be "Tbe Unroc Family" liom Crown City. Pasta' Bill Williams invites 1bc public.

8JliiiiOUSiy passed . a ~ution census infonnation did not include
pledging financial support for 1bc those people living in the area of
stage constructioo. The amount or annexation below Hobson.

financial support from council will
Mayor Hoffman also asked
Daace
be
decided
when fund-raising er- authorization for the sale of two or
There will be a round and square foriS by the Middleport Canmunity tbe village's firelrucks. Trucks to be
Letart trusleeS to meet
dance oo Friday from 8-11:30 p.m.
arc completed.
sold include a 1962 model and a
The l..elart Township Trustees at the Tuppers Plains VFW Build· Association
The
sc~
of
a
bid
will
be
1946 model. Councilman Paul
will meet Monday at 6 p.m. at the ing featuring Rocky MountliD
·office building. This is subject to · Blocgrus. Anhur Conaat will be detemlined b~ J*!ies involved ar- Genud stated that if im inadequate
ter more JeVIew IS com.Picted or bid waa ~eceived for the 1946
change.
··
the caller. The pol)lic is invited.
· those bids aln:ady submitted. The model that perhaps it sboulll be
option to obtain ~bids waa kept sinlply for ill- his1Drica1 value.
· C0111m'811cy District to meet '
Smorpsbord·
~
left 10 the ~bon of ~ Council voted unanimously to ad·· The Lading Creek Conservancy
There will be a SliiOipSbonl Middlqwwt
· Commllllity Assocm- venisc for bids.
District will meet in special session dinner at the Lottridge Conimuni
A campaign to raise money for
·on Wednesday at 9 am. at the Center oo Swlday from 110011 to~ tion.
Gilmore
8llllOIIIICed
!hal
the
the
local sbarc or the 1cvec p:oject
p.m. Cost is $5 adult and $2.50
-office.
Community
Associatioo
will
be
was
discusacd by May~W Hoft'nian.
children •.The center is b:aled on holdina a Sweetheart D1mce on He Silled
that 4() letlers bave been
Boosters to meet
Athens Counlf. Road 53 five mi1ea Feb. 14 from 8 p.m. to mic!nigbt 81 sent to people or orpnizarioos who·
west or Coolville.
the Americao Legion Feeney Ben- may want to 11ooa1e aod !hal
ncn Post Annex on Mill SueeL The Centtal Trust has agreed 10 donate
cost orlickcts_will be llctetm~ 81 • $1,000.
·
the neltl mecung of the 8SSOCI8llon
Finally, Councilman Ger.d
rqJ01tD11 on his ctiorts in mganizing
He was preceded in death by his on Dunclay.
Hickman
wife, Cha!:lo~ Marie (Gray) Pierce
At
of Gilmore, a "Desert Storm Homefront CompmnisSion 10 hold miucc" which would povlde the
in 1983. one son, four grandsons, .connell
:· ' Irene Blaettnar Hiclanan, of three brotbers and two sisters.
. a candl ·ght service in support of troops with items such as
Columbus and
formerly or
A graveside service wiU be held troops in Operalion Dcsen Storm. nc~ and other lrticlcs
,Polncroy, died Sunday, Jan. 27, Wednesday, 1:30 p.m., at 1bc Letart G~orc ~ !hal plans. fl! the whlch might be needed
)991, 8l Riversille Methodist Falls Cemetery, with the Rev. SClVlce are IIICOOiplelc at Ibis time.
Gerard staled that he is compil~
'Hospital in Columbus. Sbe was 'Kenny Barker officiaiJ,ng.
In other matters. Middleport ing a list of lhosC men and women
the daughter or the late John F. and·
Friends JIUIY call at 1bc Mayor Fled Hoffnwl dislributed from Meigs County that are serving
Lelia Blleaner.
Funeral Home In Mason information from the 1990 t:ensUS in the Gulf War. After the list is
! Surviving arc her husbarul, Earl Foglesong
this evening, 7 to 9 p.m.
to all council members. He stated compiled it will he ciR:ulatcd to as~Jickman. a daughter Estella Hickthat census shoWs a loss in the VII- sure that nobody has been cx- ; and two J!1'811dso11s, Shane
lage .o r Micldlepol'l of eight percenL clndcd.
Weather
Smith and Shawn (HoUy) Smith.
.
f t -; ' -!
HoWever, he went on 10 say that the
· , Besides her parents she was
South Central_Ohio
~:
contin11e!J tr~in page 1
iireccded .in death by bcr brothet, Occasional
rain
or
freezing
1
--.:J...
--------...,...-~---ICed, S Blact1nar.
we burn low-sulfur coal or ins!all ·
: .cGroveside srsvices will be on rain Tuesday ·night, possibly year to comply.
mixing
with
sleet,
and
a
low
near
"Wc'Je
punuing
an
open
8$
·
scrubbers
and continue buming
· Thursday momillg 81 11:30 am. at
35.
Chance
of
precipitation
Is
reach
answers
by
wei~the
Ohio
coal,"
Maloney said. ''There
Beech Grove Cemetery.
·
10
near 100 percent. Rain likely COSIS to our customers the coal · •
considemtions and con•
1D
arc many I
•
• •
Wednesday, ' possibly mixing
.
with snow late In the· day, with dustty, OuriiiJ!Ie"em~ycesand the ~:Many ~aulations e~g
•• • James Elmer Pic:n:e, 79, of highs between 35 and 40. Chance J!COPie of Ohio, . Said AEP Execu- map parts or die law are _stiliiO be
uve Vice President Gerald P. ~llt,D. The purpose of this~
Racine, Ohio, died Mroday, Jan. of preclpltstlon Is 70 percent. ·
Maloney.
IS to make sure that the best deci:28,1991,inPaneroy;Ohio.
He pointed out that AEP tom- sion is made after economic,
I
Born May 24, 1911, in Rutlanll,
panics
arc caught between two socie!al anc1 public policy factors."
!he was a aon or the late Austill Bar- Little recognized
powerful
forces - the 1990 Clean · Ameri&amp;:an Electric Power is the
/1011 l!1d Maucle Ann Elizabelb
Midd!qnt auer oe Police Sid- Air Act AmcndmeniS and the com~ parent holding comi,II!DY of eiJ'It
! (Conkle) Pierce.
ney UUie bas been aelcc!ed bf .the
'roles as ~egulatcd public operating eleclric utilities providing
i• He was a coal miner. 8nd mem- cxccotlve board or the International panies'
utili~
oblipd ~ provide ldiable service 10 7 -million llCOJ)]c in Ohio,
:ber of the Pomeroy Eagles C111b.
Police Managcma~t Association for t;lectric ~ at the ~ prac- . Indianil, Michigan, i&lt;.eiitucky, Vrr: Surviving are five sons, James inclusion in the list of Outstanding
COSL 'Boeh forces mvolved ginia, West·Vuginia and Tennessee.
'Milton of Rutlanll, Donald Eugene Law Enforcement Professionals of ticable
sanctions,
including civil and
iand Oavid Michael, both of Mid- America for 1990. Annouaccment criminal penalties
under the Clean
~
IdlCpoJt. George William Qf of his selectio'l for the honor was Air Act and vigorous
0
:Pomeroy, Roy Lee or l..elart Falls, made Tuesday by the Corsicana, oversight of tcy utility regnlatory
company
'Ohio; three daughters._ Catherine Thus Management Association.
decisions llld the 1lltimate cost to
. 1
:Sue Gibbs of New Haven, Mary
~borne by clistaners." ~
·Alice Newlun or .Long Bouom,
~hio, Ruth Marie Congo or Letart
"We '~e meeting with interested
;Falls; four sistets.. Ncuie Goble of
Gallla County has generated
parties
so that all will' have an opRiver Valley Hcrbalisls will meet
-Cleveland, Flossie Alice Hysell of
llnother
Super Lotto winner In
portUnity 10 understand these issues
iLangsville, Florence Ellen . Barter on Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the home of and
.Thomas
Osborne, according ' to
uncertainties in ·the broadest
~or Columbus, Connie Norene Mash Janet Theiss ncar Racine. Anyone
regional
lottery
officials.
· ' of Rutland; a brother, Everett wishing to join the group for the context and contribute to !be best
Osborne, of Rio Grande, purdecision," he said.
:Pierce or Rutland; 28 grandchildren new year, beginning in March. possible
chased
the winning $8 million
The Clean · Air Act ~equires
sbould conllll:t Connie Hill at 247' and 15 greal-grandchildren.
ticket
at
Rio Mini Mart, and
electriC utilities to cut sulfur
•
4035 or 992-7669.
presented
himself to lottery
dioxide (S02) emissions nationally
officials
bright
and early Mon·
by 40 to 50 percent on avcmge o~
;Vinton woman injured in accident
day
morning.
He
was accompanthe DCXt 10 years. The pc:rtenllge
•
by
Wins
ton
and
Toilya Sheets,
Ied
reduction requirecl for Ohio Power
· A Vinton woman suffered ml- ·· Highway Patrol, King was a
owners
of
the
Mlill
Mart.
; nor Injuries Saturday after the passenger In a car driven by exceeds · 80 pc:n:ent. To comply
The
62-year-old
protesor
will
with 1bc first step tequired by the
' car she was riding ln was William M. King, 25, of Vinton.
take
his
winnings
In
a
lump
sum.
. :-Involved In a two-car ·crash on WU!Iam was northbound on State federal law, AEP soon must dcciclc rather than In lnslilllments, and
, State Route 7.
·
Route 7 when a &amp;econd car, bow 10 reduce cmissioos at a num- . Is the first to lake that option,
: Michael A. King, 21, was driven by CarlL. Hubbard, 78, of ber of iiS coal-burning power according to lottery officials.
plants.
.
'
; transported to Veterans Memor- Racine, turned Into King's path.
He could have taken the $8
The
U.S.
Environmental
Protec; tal Hospital by 1\'lelgs County King hit the right side of
mWioD prize from Ssturday's
tion
Agency
estimates
that
1bc
total
.
: EMS after the accident at the Hubbard's car travell!lg at ap·
drawing In 26 annual Instal• Cntersectlon of Meigs County proximately 50-55 miles per hour. clean-up ·law will cost 1bc U.S.
lments. But lottery ·officials said
economy
$25
billion
a
year.
The
;.Road 5. She was treated for
Hubbard was cited tor failure
Monday he elected to be paid
;:dlntuslons and was later re- · to yield. William King was not portion that re• 10 acid rain $2,54'7,468, after mandatory fed·
• lfiased, a hospital spokeswoman Injured. Hubbard and his pas· reAuJadon is cstima!e4 b 1bc EPA
era! and state withholding taxes . .
J said Monday.
senger, William 0 . Whitlock, 59, lit $4 to S billioo. ~ esOsborne, who Is not married,
; According to a report from the of Syracuse, were also uninjured. timiiCS have been even higher.
said
he would help pay ott his
The coal Industry· in Ohio, In• Gatua-MeliS . post of the State
children's
bills . He has three
diana and other Sllles ricb in high•
and
six grandchildren.
children
sulfur coa1 is likely to be seriously
Bottom
hurt in wreck
affecte4 as a result or the Clean Air

--Area deaths--

:e::uest

lrene

.

Dec; 0n ...

;james Pierce

ftj

pro..essor
Lo
wms
ttery

Herbalists to meet

l

.

~ l.ong

wo~

'. A

I:
:
•
:
:

oruo

·••

·•

. I

.

.

portion deplores these senseless
acts of strike-related violence,"
said Don Worlledge, president of
RAC. " We urge alllndJviduals
Involved hi this strike to act with
respect tor the law."
Judge Fox has set a bearing
da~ tor the end of January on the
contempt charges.
A reward .Is being offered for
lntormatlonleadlngtothearrest,
prosecutiOn and conviction of the
person(s) responalble tor ~
shooting of a security guard. The
company Increased the reward
from $10,000 to $20,000, partly
through donations made by
RAC's hourly and salaried
workers, as well as other concerned Individuals. ·
A toU-tree hotllne has ' been
established to receive contldeotlallnformation about the case at
1' 800-245-5295 . The guard, who
has been released from the
hospital, was treated tor wounds
to the ltnee and eye, and subsequently lost his left eye.

,.

or

'iPRING
44!)

o~IIEY CINEM~

4~14

Pomeroy~Midclepon,

.Kyger Creek clai1ns· sole ownership of S VA C _summit

s.......

CO!Irt prusure defense and exe-

By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
OVP Slalt Wrl&amp;er
Trlbane Staff Wrller

point guard Bobble Je•n Shaver
drove quickly downcourt, pulled
up In the paint and sank a jumper
"That was as ageress!ve as tram the lett half of tbe lane 10
we've been all year. We left a lot seconds later. The game was tied
of skin out there," said Kyger at 2·2.
Creek mentor Tom Weaver of his
Shaver overcame the Eagles'
Bobcatst performance In their ever-pesky, turnover -oriented
52-39 victory over visiting East- defense to become the recipient
ern Monday night.
of a Yon Ragland assist that
The decision earned the Bob- Shaver turned Into a layup with
cats (14 -2, 10-1) sole possession of 5: 02left. At that point, KC led 4-2
first place In the SVAC and a split - the smallest lead the hosts
In their series with Dawn Heide- · would have until early In tJJe
man's Eagles, who fell to 9-7 third quarter.
:
''B!&gt;bble Jean played a good
overall and 9-2 In the conference.
The Eagles, who scored the floor .game, offensively and def· .
first and last points of the game, ' enslvely," said Weaver of his 5·5
opened the scoring with a layup senior playmaker, who finished
by sophomore forward/center with 10 points, seven assiSts and
Stephanie Otto 44 seconds after four steals.
tlp.oft.. That
Eastern's only
While the. Eagles were having
one of
night,
like trouble gettilll shots to fall, the
Bobcats
to
fu II·

lJoanl honors
· Eason for service
Ou~idai~ RobertBMon
al a rec~11t ltiCCtiog of
the ~ County Boenl of Malta!
Rerardalion . and Devclopt!llllltal
. Disabilities.
Eaaon wbo has served oo the .
bcllld for six yean. holding the
office of lftSidcDt ir. the 1ut two
yean and vice pmi:tm -in the
-w.... year, - preeemed a pla,..~..iil
'tioa of bis service
~ ~ In rerpmse to the
prescDiation Eaaon !bRed the
bol1ld and itatf for lhc:ir IDjlpOit
and prailed them ror the qency's
ICCOIIlplish!Jient during bis ~·
· In other business 81the meotillg,
the · board elected, new olllcers.
They are John Lentis, ~

wal

cute bold offensive drives to the
paint,. with Raetand 'sonlythreepointer otthe game (1: 55) adding
the Icing on the cake known as a
13-3 lead before ·a pair of free .
throws by Eagle· point guard
Suzanne Clay with 24 seconds lett
In the opening quarter cui KC's
lel!d to 13-5.
·
In the second quarter Eastern
outacored Kyger Creek 11·8, but
the Bobcats, who witnessed
Shaver score six of their 13
first-quarter points, saw senior
forward Joy Skidmore help keep
the BobCats afloat In the second
stanza by providing hall of the
GalUana'otfense. Meanwhile, for
\he Eagles; sophomore foiWard
Shelly Metzger scored five of her
seven points to help draw the
visitors to within five points at
halftime. But even the Eagles '•
modest tltst·half foul shooting
(f-8) wasn't enoUgh to counter
their mtsJing several shots from
· the field and Kyger's control of
, the boards, elements Which
·helped Cheshire survive Eastern's run of the table In act two.
Eagle forward Tiffany
Gardner, a 5--~ Junior who had
more reboundS' (10) than points
(nine), sank a turnaround
Jumper from 'the right baseline
wlth 6:30 len In the third quarter
to cut Kyger's lead to 21·18, but
Bo~at forward Amy Glndlesberger took a Skidmore pass 40
seconds later and putln a jumper
In the lane to pad KC's lead to
23·18. It took 16 seconds Into the
Eactes' neXt posses$1on when
Shaver stote· Oay's pass to a
teammate and ri!Ced downcourt
for the layup that further balloaned the hosta' lead to 25-18. ·
· But even though the Eagles
were controUlng the offensive
boards, playing tighter defense
(with the latter one of. the
raptors' few positive constants In
the game) and taking control of
off·target passes In the paint by
tbe B4¥&gt;eats to heavily covered
tront-lfners In this frame, Kyger
Creek saw Its starters...,. Ragland
(four), Gindlesberger, Shaver,
Skidmore and center Lisa
Swisher (two ea.c h)- expand Its
,l ead to eight by the end of the
period. ·
In the first 2:30 of the final
. quarter, both teams traded

Ion ~ vice presideD~; ~
Nora Rice, secreii!Y· 1be board
also welcomed a new ll1CIIIba',
David Weber.
In additioo the bolnl adopted a
''mission llalllllent" as a part or the
program's
Sllllegic
planning
Dally atock prices
poccss.
The
stalanenl
was
(As of 10:30 a.m.)
developed
in
respect
to
the
agenBryce and Mark Smltb
cy~
original swcment · of
of Blunt, Elllll a. Loewl
philosophy and goals SIIIUnenL
The star.ement mills: "To ~
Am Electric Power ............. 27%
the
availability .of ·~ams, serAshland on ......... :..............28~
vices,
and support !hal assist
·AT&amp;T ... ,............. ................31%
eligible
individuiWI
who ba~ men:Bob Evans .....•..••..•..••. \...•. .. 15% ··
tal and/or developmental disCharming Shoppes ..............10%
abilities
in choosing and achieving
City Holding Co..................14%
Federal Mogul. ............... ....14% a life of ll1CI'CI1S1I1I!
·
· ~
· play
such
.
that they cao live.
· aDCI
m
Goodyear T&amp;R ............ .......19%
Key Centurion , .......... .........10~ 1bc community 1!1111 to assist anc1
Lands' End ......................... 16% ......... 1bc f8nlilics or tbese inUmlted Inc.........................2034 ~~ in acllicving this objec·' '
Multimedia Inc ....... ,, ..........62% · tive."

Stocks

Rax Restaurants .............. . 7/16
Robbins &amp; Myers ........... , .... 21%
Shoney's Inc..... ,., ................ 13
Star Bank ............................ 11
Wendy's lnt'l. .: .................... 6%
Worthington lnd .................. 22%

•

Tbe average annual snowfall ·In
Mount Washlngtoo, N.H., Is 253.5
inches.

-Meigs County Court-. Twenty ~ bave been m:endy
processed by MeW County Cowt
Judae Mk H. O'~Brien.
F'med were: 'Illny Good, Palasbla, sar~"' violaaioo, $50 8lld
~,J&lt;. Partlow, Pomeroy,
, costs; Alan
·taking a &amp; wiih a' gun"clluing
primitive weapons season, $100
and COSIS; Bobby R. Stewart, Bidwell, DWI, $350 and costs, 60 days
in jail suspended to 10, 120 day
liccnsc suspension, one ,ear PIOilelion, alcohill counseling, faifurc to
coolrol, $30 an4 costs; Robert
Bays, Portland, DWI, $300 and
costs, three clays in jail, 60 day

license suspeni!OIJ, failure 10 stop,
$75 and cosiS, restitution, lhJec
days in jail tonc:wtent with DWI
ch•-e, failure to control, cosiS ontY,-famcs E. Oeineans, Rutland,
assured clear distance, $10 llld
cosiS;
John L. Richatds, Reedsvillc, 110
operstor's license, 30 days in jail
suspended to five, $100 anc1 costs;
probation of one year, failure 10

.license I1IISplllded for 60 elm:
Comic Capliqa', ~ DOl, I
$300 and COlli, lic:cnee IIMJ •e4 ,
foc 60 days, upon emollmenl and:
canplction of Jm&gt; sdlool, $150 orthe. 6nc and jail' SCIItaiCC will be
sosponded; no_ opaator's license,:
three days in jail cOactDI'CIIt with;
DWI charge, $100 IIIII costs; David •
MU!J!by. Rcedsvillc. . improper;
becking, $40; Jesse Stof)', Oat• ..
lipolis, speeding, $20 and costs;,:
Clndy Jlaycs, Pomeroy, Ul1SIIfe •
vehicle, $5 and costs; Billy 1.;
Tbompeon. Columbus, discanled ~
trash along roadway, $75 and costs, ·
c:curt finds dump SIIC has been res-·
uml; Cina L. UmlJIIgcr, Shldc,
pasing bed checks, line chllgcs,
$25 llld COlli, court fiods thaliCStitution hu been IJIIIlc; Robert K.
Kcntledy, Rudanc1, cnving under
suspcliSIOII. costs, six months in
jail, IIIISJICIIded to time aervcd,
IX!IIJadon of two yean, lleeing,
coSis, six monlhs ,in jail suspended
10 time served, probetloo of lhJec
yean; cor•conent with DWI cluqe,
failiR 10 CODtrol, costs; Dale E.
Stelaier, Urlchsvllle, . overload,
$290 IIKl costs; pmni! viollltioo,
$25 and costs; Doaald Russcll,
Pomeroy, overload, $50 and cosiS;
. Pearl Hull:hinson, WcUston, OVCI'·
load, $210 and costs.
Forfeiting bond was Dean
Pauley,
881boursvillc, -w.va,

cootrol, S20 and costs; no -valid
rcgisltation, $20 and C0S1S; Ricky
HUlller, Nelsonvillc, leaving the
scene, $100 and costs, 60 days
suspen4ed to IS, failure to control,
$25 anc1 costs, no. operator's
license, 60 days in jail suspcncled 10
30, $100 and costs; Shawn E.
Bater, Racine, DWI
$300 and costs, three days in jail,
credit for time served. opcrator's SliCed. $60,

· (Jassifie
TO PLACE AN AD CALL 992-2156
MONDAY thr.u FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
CLOSED SU.NDAY

....

'Rctt!Htt $ .50 ~hiCOUnl lor

·'

•Spaghetti
•Lasagna

Mason Family Restaurant
Rt.33

(3(M) .T13-5321
(NIIXT 10 MASON IXXON)

MIIOn,WV

.• 2

.60
t13.00
.06
/
diiV
'
t1
.30/.S.y
Monlhly
.
.
R•••• lot con ....... ,"-. lllfot.n..,.o.,• ....N Mch•tted

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

JtOI rHpOnt ..I•IDr enou •htH llffl dw . !Check
tOr •nurs fus1 dw lid ru rt~ tn paJMHI C•ll belore 2 :00 p .n•
rl.., atuu publ•c•Ktn 10 maktt correctw"
'Ads 1ha. must be ~»td '" advancu •• ~
C..-d of Th .... kli

.Grange ... _____;C::;o;.:;n;;:tl:.:.nue::;.::d;..;f;:..ro;.;.m:,:...o:.p.:;;ag::ce:..3;___ _ __
Wheaton Iceman."
Gr;inae's athletic prowess
helped him outshine other Wheaton Central grads like John .
Belushl, Bob Woodward and
astronomer Edwin Hubble. The
sehool Is still a football powerhouse partially because of his
memory, said principal Chuck
Baker.
''There's sort of the expects·
tlon that Grange went there, so
they'd better be good," said
Baker, whose team took second
place In the 1990 state football ,
playoff.
·
Grange's oran~~:e-and-blue II·
lint j!!l'sey bearing his number 77,
Is enshrined at the University of
llllnols athletic office. Grange
and linebacker Dick Butkus are
the only DUn! football players
with numbers retired by the
school.
The university l)onored the
Galloping Ghost throughout 1990
as part of celebrations observing
the 100th anniversary of the

.

lootball team . Grange's picture
was featured on all llllnl programs last year .
Grange himSelf was humbled
by the . praise lavished on him
dUring his career. In a 1987 Jetter
to the llllnl team. he suggested
others were responsible for his
success.
''My thanks goes to the other 10
men who made me look good,"
Grange wrote.
But Dllni fullback Howard
Griffith, who broke Grange's
scoring record last year, said
he's still amazed at the form that
earned Grange his most famous
· nickname-, "The Galloping
Ghost.''
·
''To watch htli'i on film anQ see
some of the things he did Is just
unbeUeveable. To see him run
!rom one side of the field to the
other and then run 80 yards up the
field Is something you don't see
any more ," Griffith said. "Just
to be mtntioned with a guy like
that Is a thrill for me."

Scott named MAC player of the week
TOLEDO, Ohio (UPI) - Ml·
ami forward David Scott has
been selected the Mid-American
Conference player or the week.
Scott, a 6-foot -7 ·junior from
New Albany, Ind., scored 48
points and had 12 rebounds In two
Miami wins last week. He scored

31 points In an 86-80 victory over
. Western Michigan on Wednesday
and 17 points In a 70- 57 win over
Ohio U on Saturday, 15 of those
coming in the second half.
Scott made 15 of 25 field goal
attempts, including five of seve_n
3· pointers .

In loving memory
of
LLOYD WRIGHT
(died Jan. 2!1,

.

Cla.~i;i.fi('(l flnl{l'~ t'IH't•r

H•PPV Ad!&gt;

1919)
He is aone from us,
but never foqotten.
His love of family and
friends will alilllys bt
remi11beml .

..

'A cl•a•hed ad¥tlriiMRUtn1 plitC\tll m The Oatlv St~nl•nwiiP

_
Gal-·
... -..
......
.....
.
·-·

G .. &amp;laCownly

MetpCountv
fue• Code IU

.. c•• .,.

c;wp1
cl•sa•h.t drspl.,. , Bu~oin•• Card t.nd 1"911 I'KthC:"I
Wlll ;rlsu OIPP .., 1n thv Pt Plt~•anl R~ffktr and ltle Geth
pulls Oa•!~ Tubuli~.:. n:.ilclung ow, 18 .000 hOmes

COPY DEADLINE
MONOAV PAPER
lUESDAY PAPER
WEDNESDAY PAPE"
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rltt•

.followilll{ I 1'/t•tlhtillt' I'XI'IIUIIJWS ...

l' iM'd $ahrs

lu Mumou.,.,

~,

1 1 :00AM SAIUROAY
2 00 P.M MONDAY
2 ,oo PM TUESDAY
2 :00PM WEDNESDAY
2 '00 PM THURSOAT
2 00 PM . f"IDAY

Pollft•ov

916

2•1 ·Rt.Ci•__.

2H G..,...Dtat

143 Arlbi•Dr.l.
319

c .....

143
247 LMM1felh
t4t
742 A v -

Pt ,,...,.,

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((Cl"SSIFi!D ADS ~ure to gat ra~ul!.~))
PubliC Notice

-v

'

BULLETIN
BOARD
·---

be to detorrniM - r 01

Notlcelo
gl,... thot
on the !,3th day of Februory.
1991, ot 11:00 A.M . the
Board 1 of Molgo County

-

notthev-lorioiCR 11404
u d•oc- II lor tlwl publ!c'o oonvenllnoe ond wei·

,.,..

o-.

at 0

po~

In

tlwl

The Petition. to •-to,

-"-&lt;.llf:iJ'
.
· ,..

tony for their cointoning word• IIIII
the . Flllher Fu....,..
Home for their ll!nd-

.....

Alto 1peci1l thlliit•l
to Dr. Lentz end Dr.
V118neWe, .. the

of tha . _
Melvo County Commlulontlwl

,l_ilc:fUIIGEHO!II£0UI'PIIOl 3!1 '
Ill, 3!oolllo, 2....... nolld I

Memotiel Ha .. h:al
end the ICU nuntt

pr01. 4,100 sq. fl. llr10iodllal
Ill• ond
•Iloilo
. .,. • • '
h -. Arill bl1111n IISM,JOO.

ero, Courthouao, a.oond
str-., l'o&lt;!llroy. Ohio

for ... their klndn Ill.
Alto tpeailll tha'*l
to Berbllrt1 PIIWton
of 1ht
Room Unit for

CALL 614·992·7104 FOR APPT.

417. ..

MoltoC-ty
Comrna.laner•
Mary Hohl 1181. Clefll
11122. 28.210

food-

... ,,

" "'" ~-

'

'

~·

w•:

Since I've known yell - leis ol llin&amp;S

have chJneid.You've llelped me in fiiiiiY
ways. I• to ar,"Thri You". You'ru
Sjl8l:ial ~- Alriend lor life- H8ll
I Love You,

lnd praytlf'l txttnd·
lid to u1.
Thenk You,
Wife: Dorll Wit;
Chlldr1111: Dottle,
Lindt, Ktthy, Rlcll
&amp; Kenny end all
the grandchildren.

"TA"

,,
,

~

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

•

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',·. ---·C. -.···'·-~--· • . · •' "• ·• ••

• II. ·~ · '

~ .~

.. ~-

pr.,..

tlte hOepltel,
appreciate all
the 1ct1 of klndn-

jjSQuirrtl.''

t ............... lalol point Not!ae II haNioy - - tMt
of tormlnlltlon being at tho onJanuory 17. tft1. GrMI
Inter_...., of o - . CR lend Elecrlrlc, 1110., lllecl I
11•04 and old Molgo c-ty Canlllaata rll ~
• Road 1!78.
with tho - - . ol tho
The purpoll of tho 1 - ol Ohio. '
..ld vllwlng and hearing will . · (1 1 22, 21, 2tc

v........

. . , . . It

..··'*'-·""""'

•

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.

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•Arry

-"oom Addltiona
- Quftlf wert
-l!lectric•l and Plumbing

Jengt!l

c!lelna •'ld

NW
act~~~sao­

rlea

-Concrete wrortl

-Roolint
-lnterkM • bter5or

•Kerouna Stovn •
WI ella

.........

We Do Wiek Repair

CFR EE ElnMATESl

. MORRIS

V. C. YOUNG Ill ·.

EQUIP,MENT ·

992-6215

..~.·:
-· l
~

Sidahill .......,...
12-24-

""'

.;

ll-W90 tfn

1110.

MICIOWAYE
OYDIIIPAII ·

DAN'S
TIAIISMISSION
alld AlTO IIPlll

COMPI.ITE

AU IUDS

lrillllt .. OrWt ·

S,.olallllnl bl
AutornM!c

ELECTRICAl SERVICE

Pldr lip.

ON'S APPLIANCE

Trentmlulollll, lrakM,

Rtsitllntilll ond

Tuneup, OM Challl•·

c__.dal

SEIYICI

Clutoh Repair.

REWIIING AND
1ROUILE SHOOTING

FREIIITIMATEI
• v.... Ea ...rlen..

9tJ-S3JS or

CartHiell ltcla ld••
..... ltliRIII•

992·5517

Acre1t ,,_ '-" OHkt

Jtllllf . .
• t ID 01.

117 I. s-.1 $1,
PMIIOY, OliO
311/90/tln

Mlurw..mD

Banks ·
Construction .

IANIS

·. CONS11UCTION
992-SOOt

911-3161

lltETAil IALES
PERSON
Hardw.,., Lu!Mer.
luHdlfto Mtterlala. ·
Mual h•w ••perlenca
In theM linea. FuR
tlma with benallto.
Join 1 growing
oomp•ny.
THOMAS DO-If
CENTER

•Remodeling atl4
Home Rep1lra .
•Roofing
·•Siding
•Pelntlng

NO JOB TOO SIALL
FREE ESTIMATES

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

Mr.

RI!Gutter

~Helmet'
NEVh ClEAN YOUR
GUTTEIS AGAIN
OUAIIANTI!EDI
I'RIE ElnMATES .
2-11·'10-1

1

THI HARDY

WOODIURNING
HEATER WITH INSIDE THERMOSTAT

·-------.......t-11:11---·-.,....,...._ ....,.. '
................
.. ------

(PATENT!D)

tZ-31 -10-lln

.......-~'""'

.

oilri"-~ID-100iloll ..... _

'CONSTIUmON

.,ec••....., ...... .

....11! •••••

LOAD EVriY 12 HOlliS
CALL

VICKER'S WOOD HEATING

1

·'

,,.....ltli....
915-UU
667-6179

,._ (31Mli'IMIIIIilwl J1.11L

J.JI.'IO ~~~

.......'

,.,

..

........ 3l&gt;ftll . .. .

IISSIU &amp; •110

._
•....•
Step &amp; C1 p

992-5009

(114)441-2002

CDAI
COtiSIIICIIGtlt

... ........ • ', ..

~··' \ ,

.

P-oy, Ohio

2-1 10-

Special tha'*- to
tlte Rev. Oulnn Kelly
and Rev. Krl1 TIWI-

.. ,~·~~SALE IN RACINE

...... . . - o1 aslillo4 Cll
1!404. Hid ..... bel... 0.07
Dl o mill, mora 01 1111, 11
,...lour~d ooulh-alitly 1--P::-ub~I-IC~Not--IC--~
along ...-. .... CR 11404 '- - - - - - . . , - from Ito ~--ton with ,old Moita Caunty Road
1171; lhenoe, In 1 _..,uo
PUBLIC NOTICE
CR
In IDGOrd- with ....
lot
..
dl
• .,.,
...._
....
llonl 1701.~ -~ 1702.••
tl4041or • cliei81M ol 0.07
•• .,.
Dl 1 ..... mora or liN. and 1111 tho OIIID R...., Cclde.

- - .....:

money.

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

,

Commlool-o witt • - · 't"P'· dr-lngo, ond
the propaoed ••..UOn of pertinent In-lion wll Ill
0.07 rnlleo of County Road ..... . . . . . . . . . 10 tlwl pullllc
#40• (Old Stete Route 124) .for vl-lng 11 the affJoe Ill
and oald loanl wiM hold a the loord Ill Molfl County
helflng on t1w1 llfOIICieed ••· Cornmt--.
' cation oiNid rood It 1 :00 P.
Anyone wlol•lnt 10 -~~
M .• F....U-v 13. 1111. In • Wlttten
lllblt

beginning

I

'

. "

card ot Thanks
CARD OF
THANKS
The fllmlly of Kenneth Wilt wllhet. to
expreu their llnCIIIII
thenkl llld gmltudt
to the. meny friende,
fllmHy end nelghbonl
who helped In any
-v during t1tt loll
of our lowd one.
The'*- ' to .. . . _
,.who - " nouu•a.
~..
faod end

137

Caat ltle

•

•

CARPENm SEIYICE

ECHO DEALER

742-2455

Loon
516 ANMeGrovt
773
812 ·N..., Htwen

, ""'"•- '"

YOUNG'S

YARDMAN &amp;

Sadly missed by wife
and family.

MnonCo.. WV
CDde 304

_, "'*•
67&amp;

912

446
367 CllwiWe
' 388

DAV BEFORE PUBLICATION

'· · mort fuHy d•wllud 11 totlowe: Bllnga -nent veeellcm of • portion of CR
1!404101d 8tal8 Route 1241

'

Bradbury
1-0.0·2:. Gindlesherger 1·0-0·2.
Totals- 22-t-S-SZ
.
From 111e field - 23-49 (46.9'i!)
Beyond the arc- 1-1
From the stripe- 5-12 (41.7\'+- )
Off the &amp;lass- 33 (Ragland 8)
Blocked llhots - 11
Asslllta- 26 (Shaver 7)
Sle&amp;Ja - 17 (Ragland, Shaver
&amp; Skidmore 4 each)
Tilrnovera- 20
Eastern (39) - Otto 5·0·5-15:
Gardner 4.0-1·9: Metzger 3-0-1-7:
Clay 1·0-2-4: Gillilan 1-0·1·3:
Wilson 0-0-1 -1. Totals- Jf-0-11~39
From the field - 14-49 ( 28.6~ )
From thestrlpe -11-27 (40.7'1!)
Off the &amp;lass- 35 (Otto 13)
Steals - 10 (Otto 4)
TUrnovers- 24

Busines-s Services .

.30

ti.OO.

...oo

16
IIi

In Memory

.20

IS

Courdlou-..
,.,.,.,,
r.\, ·' Ohkt.
·
*'· .. Ptopooed VOCition being

All Diimers Served With Om all-U-care-To-Eat
Soup,- F~t &amp;t Salad-Bar &amp;Garlic Bread,
Or Try One Of The Other Fine Menu Selections.
Take Out.Ort(m Available.
"Senior Otizens Receives lO'K, Discount

.

16

-County
- · Comm•l••ra.
"' tlwl .....

•Chicken
CacciatQrie

15
15 .

10

1ft adviRC4l.
•free eds
G..,...,ay •nd fo.-nd .cit und• 1 !t w~ wtM k
run 3 diiJa 11 no ch•ge .
ap 11 C11 of M1 lot 111 CatM'•IItUif'l 1$ double pnce O! ld COil
"1 potn1 ""e 1YfN Oil~ uNCI

"Stlftllll ..

o.,.. 16 Words

Rlto '
••. 00

Wordl

3
6

.4 ,.,d

LEGAL NOTICE

;, ',(, t'

4: · Swisher 2-0-0-4;

• The Areci' s Number 1 Marketplace

. RATES

o.,..
,

POLICIES
"Ads outSfde Me1gs. Glilli1 or M•son c;ounh• must btl Pf8

PubliC Notice

4 P.M.· 9 P.M.

Tlluney aoW - North Gall~~!
and Symmes Valley wlll open the
Division IV Galllpolls sectional
at Gallla Academy on Feb. 12 at 7
p.m. The winner of that game
will play second·seeded Hannan
Trace on Feb. 14 at 6:30 p.m .,
with lhe winner of that game
claiming the upper-bracket title
and advancing to the district
tournament at Jackson H.S. on
Feb. 23. Top-seeded Kyger Creek
and, SoUthwestern 'will play tor
the lower-bracket championship
and the chance to go to the
Jackson district tournamen t.
Quarter totals
Eastern .. ............ 5 11 9 14-39
Kyger Creek ....... l3 8 12 19-52
J.ycer Creek ( U) - Ragland
6+5-20: Shaver 5-0.0-10: Skidmore 5-0-0-10: Drummond 2-0-0- ·

baskets, and In that frame the
Bobcats saw their 10-polnt leadcreated by a modified altey-oop
pass from Shaver to Ragland
that gave KC a 37-27 lead with
6: 15 left - cut for the last time
when Otto, sent to the line
~a use of G!ndlesberger's third
foul, canned both one-and-ones to
drop the lynxes' lead to 37·29.
Following a Hor-2 effort at the
Une by the Eagles' Jamie Wilson
(5: 01), Eastern suffered scoring
drought that lasted 4:11 and
featured seven missed tree
throws while KC scored lO points
(four by Ragland, who finished
with a game·hlgh 20 polnts·and a
team-high eight rebounds) to
lead 50·30.
·'"They tried so hard, they
stiffened up and missed thelr!oul
shots, " Heideman said. "They
were so close to victory , and they
wanted It so bad that they
weren't relaxed, and they
. stressed themselves out."
But wh~l) Weaver sat down his
starters, It was oasis tlrile for
Eastern. as In the game's last
minute, Otto had two lay ups (:50
and :34) sandwiching one by ·
Gardner that came following a
steal of a KC lnbounds pass with
45 seconds left. And though the
perpetually hustling Eagles followed Heideman's advice to
"take It hard to the hole, and
when they lnbounds, slap at the
ball," Kyger Creek managed to
get a court·length pass from
fre,shman Alicia Ward (younger
sister of Bobcat-assistant coach
·and ex-Rio Grande eager Renee
Ward) to fellow freshman Tanya
Drummond, who scored on the
layup with ' 27 seconds left The
Eagles fleshed out the final score
when Otto, who finished with a
team-high 15 points and 13
rebounds, scored on a layup with
eight seconds lett and was fouled.
She missed the bonus foul shot.
In the junior high preliminary,
Eastern won 22-16. The Eaglets'
MlchelleShultzledthecourtwith
11 points. Rachael Polcyn paced
the Bobcats with nine.
.Uilcomln&amp; attractions Kyger Creek Will take on South·
ernatRaclneonThursday, while
Eastern will travel north to face
Trlmble on Wednesday before
heading south to Vinton to play
North Gallla on Thursday.

'

,

Mason family Restaurant
Thursday ·Night i~ :

The Daily Sentini!-Page-7

Ohio

With 52· 39 win over Eastern,

Vderalll Meawlll Halpllll
MONDAY ADMISSIONS Ien:myCrem ~~­
Dis
Lois
Pauley, Pome10y; aDd Blllky
Leach, Qwbirc.
MONDAY DISCHARGES Mabel Shields, Frlnces f'olla',
Joan Keys, and Bertricc W'llliamJDn.

Act provisions.

Long Bottom woman was road and overturned.
To meet lower emissions stanInjured In a one-car wreck
A Middleport man was Injured dards, AEP is ~ to consider
Monday at 9: 57 a.m. In Chester In a one-car crash Monday at 8: 35 several options, mcluding installaTownship on C.R. 28, 1.8 miles a.m: lnMorganTownshlponS.R. tion. or emiaaion control equii;"DCCIt
south of the Junction of S.R. 248, 325, .3 of a mOe south of the cal1Cd "acrubbcrs" or swirching to
according to the Gallla-Melgs Gallla·Melgs County line, ac- low-sulfur coal to fuel 1bc Gavin .
Post otthe State Highway Patrol. cording to the Gallla·Melgs Post Plant, located in Gallia County.
Pauline Riley, 59, of 33467 of the State Highway Patrol.
Gavin is operated by Ohio Powa- ·
Basham Rd., was taken by the
Ryan W. Harper,l8,ot394Ash . Company, a 111bsidiary of AEP.
Meigs County EMS to Veterans St., was taken by the Gallla Gavin reprelellts allout 25 pcitel1t
Memorial Hospital, where she County EMS to Holzer Mecttcal or the sulfur dimide emissions
was admltll!d tor obiii!J'Vatlon. At Center. where he was treated and rel•eecl by the AEP Sysrem and
last report her condition remaJns · released for multiple bruises.
alloot 44 ~t emissions from
unknown, as her Injuries have
Harper. driving a 1984 Renault
Po.;::.elaniS.
AEP
' acknowledged that
yet to be determined.
Alliance, was heading south
Riley, driving a 1981 Buick when he lost control on the Icy diflcult deciaioos must be made in
Skylark, was heading north when road In a right-handed curve. the lllOI1Ibl alai
she lost control of her car on the went ott the riglit sldeof the road
''There ~n: ua:a&amp;l COlli and 10cial COlli ., ei!bor opcion, whether
tce, ran off the right side ot the and Into a ditch.

Tuaad..,, JanU.y' 29, 1991

Hospital news

..-Meigs announcements-Past MatrOIIS to meet
, Th~: Past Matrons of Evangeline
- Chapter will meet Thesday at 7:30
·p_jn. at . the home of Kathryn

'

Tuntley, J....v 29, 1991

Ravenswood Alut11inu•n ups
i-eward in .shooting incident

·

a.m., went 10 Mouat Olive Rolld for
Pomeroy squad went 10 Mulbelry E = German, wbo W&amp;'l1111teo 10
Avenue for James Pic:n:e. At 8:58 · H
Medical CeniCt At 2:19

p.m., Pomeroy squad went to Lincoln Heights for Edith Rizer, who
was taken 10 Holzer Medical Center. At 9:29 a.m., Middleport sqwid
was dispatched to Powell and' Ash
Streets. Matthew MaYs W&amp;'l 'taken
to Vetenms Memoriaf Hospital. At
9:51 a.m., Racine squad was sent to
Bashan Road for Pauline Rowley,
who was taken to Vetmms. At
10:01 a.m., Pomeroy squad went 10
Spring Avenue. Charlene Goodman
was 'transported 10 Holzer. At 11:02
a.m.. Syracuse and Racine fire

..,.

Increased violence brings legal action

dqiublleniS went to CarroU Stteet
for a SII'IICture fire at 1bc SinipSOII

·on~nday M 3:23

.

Pon•ov~Midclap(wt. OhkJ

Dally Sentinel •

Meigs County Emergency Medical Services respooded 10 12 calls
for assistance oo Monday and early

-~

'
~

\'
·~

.

...'

....,., .,

.

. ~:· ; .... '. ·~

.::

.

�'
~P~age~~a;:Th~e~o~..~-~~y~Sel~n~t~in~el~"""'"':-~--------r:==;Pomer~~oy~.~-~M~iddl=eport.=~Oh~io~iiiiiii-~----~-~-.....~~~~~~2§9;·;1~9~91~ ·'"'="
LAFF-A-DAY

An nouncemen ts

-

KIT 'N' CAJU.YLEfJ lty 1Mry WfiPt

Help Wanted

11

..........
~.-· ,......,,.
prlood to oolt,

1171

3 Announcemama

=

:='7o ~..:":

r

•••'

4•n•.

••

GOlD CREDIT CARD, , _ op-

~

",500. ....
-book .....,..-torpnwod,

• • Info .....

112S. Ioo.

•

,•••

lo • - · .......... Elipold. CoN Toro ond !10Uo
oollocl inyllmo tM

EVENING

,.•

e:oo ONavn
l1l • (})

"
c

,,

(J) Chlllae In

=
;!,~~~~~~~~~ ..
•
.

B~'L...

a;:"ooo~~ • , .

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...,.,,

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110,000 mlloo, t1,1100. 30W711-

•

Chftde

1111

Situation

12

wamec1

141170 2 IR, Ewlngtoil • -· 114388-IOM.
.
·
141170
d
- SBR,
- 2 b4hLPI
WB - wlo=ndO
....t.'on10 ac. Hinnon Troco
ochoolo 114-211-tlll oft.- I.
2 -room tumlohod, 111
_..,, air condHion, wo-1
.dryer, non omokor. UtllltiM
pold. Roloroooooo l DopRII.
Phonii3Q4.812~3117.
2 boidroom, rumllhod, Uocl.
pluo utiiHioo. flOG.

r

• l04-171.f•2 . or I'll-

o ,.., " - "'·

r====::===:r=========i
54 Mlscellai'IIOUI ·

Fumlahlcl
Roome

45

Coro lor · lklorty In my homo,

6

1104-7"1W241.

FOUND, 1Wo tono b&lt;GWit pu,_,
anap on ehovlder...no paper~!~ or
· To clolm :IOW7HIM.

koyo, In

FOUND: Sot of -

FumNift -hlng and repair,
~and

1·--------..;;,.

Found: YO!lntl molo ~~ pltbull

-cklnlloohln Rd ......

Hoa on coltor. 114-Mfl.a:M.

LD8T ~. :lOth lt.
aroo Pt. Pit. Homo Cooor lng togo, ...,
goftllo. 1104-171--4311 •1111-40111.

Yard Sale

7

-lloo.

~LUOENCE

ALL Yorcl- . . .-. .Paid Iii
Advo,_, DEADUNE: 2:00 p.m.
tho day bOioro tho od lo lo ""'·
odlllon - 2:00 p.m.
Frldoy. ~ ooltion • 2:00
p.m. Satunloy.

su'"""

Geo~ Portlbll' SlwmiiiJ_.cton,
lllut roW loGO to tho. mno luot
collliCMofll-1157.

=

ucto at homo,
Ext.ll214. :M -

ltortlngol · - - -

baoldng

EXCELLENT INCOIIEI

noodod.

TYPIIITS,

w •....., otntna"' mr -

-.ooo

- - •·

Dilallo. Coli (I) 101 Ext. ~112.
~na
Ba- Styttoto.114-

Buslnau ·
OpportunHy

National C...... c-kor IMok

ICII!IPtlna

lor tho pcl!lltlon Of
..... l'ept'IIIJIIIUitwi. c.. dill ...
ehould hi'M I MJ CCIll lui bee*-.
gro&lt;mcl In ...... ondlor tho

Ylrttlnlo, 1104-n;JoOfOO.

1 Ill,..,_; 2 IR, . - . ;

I NOTICE I
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
JICOmmt. . thai yo~!~ do btMI-

-

--------....ti...--------~--------1

Business Services

.........

Nool, .14 311 -

•VINYL 5 IDING

GROOM
ROOM
Con.,eAtell ~~=ing

BISSELL
SIDING C01o

EMILEE MERINAR

!lew ...... hilt
"Free Eatimot.."

614-992-6120

. PH. 949·2101
or 1-. 949-2160

Owner &amp; Operotor

SaiVIcel

I Ml.w
I ,.,, llllfl,ltf
UPHOLSTERY

•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

d
21 ..• flo • •-·
- 011

H=~=~g

=.:.""11.':."'=To

~-;1'
mlnldocl

IndiVIdual.
_ . about thll

..._, 2 ....... old, 10 ,_,

W• Soy What Wo Do.
We Do Whot

NO SUIIDA Y CAW

•

-01

J&amp;L

INSULATION
•VInyl Siding
•Repl•cement
Windows
•Roofing

•LIGHT lfAULING

•FIREWOOD

•lnau..tion

BILL SLACK

JAMES KEESEi
992-2772 or
742-2251

992-2269

&amp;39 Brv•n Pl•ce

USED IAILROAD TIES

Middleport. Ohio

J,, ~
""J:U'ii'H c ll Rc k l T y

Goods

!:'
,".:. ae!!. '=-~
- . ·1 moto'il,... 101~
·
llt2 CllpOI . . . . • · ~~~CllpOI
llallohln ,.,..
h-Rn
h---

tiJ:i
·- ·
•• •
Colllltr
•nn•-.
tno.
...e.,....... T.V. o.n
-llpotlo,1-oli

~

205 N. Second Str•f
IIIDDLEPOIT, OHIO 45760
Offko 614-"2-2116
HOME 614-"2-5692
Domt S. TUINEI, 1101£1
HOUSES•LOTSIIFARMS
COMMEIICIAL
We Need Uollnp l
11·5·11).tflo

11-14-tln

Now /11
S#odi/1

USED APPUAICES
90 DAY WAIIANn

WASIIIIS-$1 00 .,

DIYIS-U9 up
• fiiGIUIOIS-S 100 .,
IAIIGES-Gol-~-$125

FIHZUS-$125 .,

.CIO

O~S-$7'

.,

.

.,

· KEN'S APPLIANCE
' SERVKE ·
992-5335 or 985-3561
Acrou from Post Offlco ·
POMEIDT, ONO
10/30tlt tin

BISSELL
BUILDERS
CUSTOM BUILT

HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"At 1-nabh Prien"

, ... 949-2101
or
949·2160
Day or Night
NO SUNDAY ULLS

1".

Chick Out Our Low
l'rios .,. "New" Z.tor

Tract•• 111111 flluipiMnt
Now Itt Stecld

MOll IS
EQUIPMENT
742-2455 '
Sldehlll ..... htlolld
12-24-91).1 ....

Building

•. 1100 - . ,

32 Mobile Homas
for S81e
PI~

IIIII.

Air,

on-ond ouppt-.

or S-on Hil!ky

I'Aialcal
lnatrumema

=:'tt

._ • - d

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

k:'i.:

~ IJ"'

I

oym-

1400,

. Men::handl..

We Howe Choagid Our L.cati011 To

~2-3tH.

....,..711l

AquariuM,
• 40
- ..
fllhpi
......
bh ?hNi, wJII8nd.
lfll

rt..

ltg 4llr
"""
C"';
,.....
, up.

lor
loot. -- -

--.m

IGINIY 11U11
long leHont._ ,..,._,.~

'"' '

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1

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(2:00) Stereo.

eNaahvtiiONow
ill LMy King Llvel
1:30 G Coll1g1 BlllittbaH
10:00 we
Lew " 0n1ar A
sell-dtfenll subwey
1hOoUng promptS ~al
Chaos. (A) Stereo. 1;1 ·

',.

(J)Ntwl
.
(I) I)) • thlftJIIOIIIOIItlng

' ::

. atory

orHeR PEOPLe.

Budget T,.nomloolono, Uood &amp; , , ••I
robulft, olo~lntl o1 ••; 114-241i

::
~

(!))

•

'"~

0 700 Club With , ••

llllbellaOn
10:30 ill CIOOk and Cltlure
10:31 W MOVIE: Wilking Tal, Pall
2' (PG)(2:15)

BARNEY

: .. i'

n:oo ONawa
we. Cll

~·

PARSON II

for Solo. Clovor I Ttmcthy.
I I - loloo In tho Flild. 114-

Hor ,_ _, Round a • ..._ 82
Dollvooy'o - · 114-4411012.

Hoy: ~-and ~N-.

Cortor'ol'tullllllng

Loitlo .,_. - · 114-2M1'1'11
-lp.m. ,

ondllooth10
- a n d Pi&gt;o
Oolllpollo, Ohio

ltr8W •nd

hoy, good - - · -

Transport~t1on

-:

84

World

1

!.:\':l:.'lterao.Q
e Amertca Tonight
ill Cltulch StrHt Stallan

ASTRO-GRAPH

:1.
...•

Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration

,,

~--·

BERNICE
. BEDE OSOL

\

',

= ';

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~-•ntlll
• · oonm•olal ...
J I'

:.":;!•rnow
"'u -. . . -

•

Klnll .

CZJ Adlm lmltlt'a Money

...i

11111~1~U~I~I~II!I_.:.__ ___

1;1

Stereo.
® IIIIer ·

._.,.,

Plumbing &amp;
HMtlng

.

Hall,!~tereo.
VIce Star«~.

ArMnlo

D Bpo:teCanter

Creak Rd. P1rt1, . 1~
~kup. ond dollvory. 114- "' .•

34141111

.

11:3ciwe o Tonight Sttow

_.r-J

.lac-, DH 1-100-617-8121.
Sow-Voc

llll -112l•

&amp;ceNCFOW_. and Mrs.

Ron'• TV Slrvtol, II:Utllllzina , " " ~
In Zenith aloo oorvtci:J. moil ·
:
~~,.,:..: ·~ ,. ' '

Dovto
G1 F

.

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.
8

,
,/ ... t

Hoy lor Sole, llrll out "·00
II!' oquoro ball, ContociHorloy R..., -Ville, 114-aaJI.

taa•: ~'

(!)) •

0 Mllml

Tonk Pu- 'I!La.tllo
wat· S.pllc
Co. -EVANS l~RI'RISES,

'

I)) •

!11.::1;1

FINE AN' DANDY,

,HOW WAS YORE
TRIP TO
TH' FLATLANDS,
LOWEEZ:Y?

Wot- ;

Ohio,,.__.

e ltlr Trek: The Next

G•••tton
ill CNN Evening lleWI

•

. -

.

Squad deluaa1 a bomb. (R)

,

•

114--1111.
'

1;1

(J) KlneWka C..ty on lila
Una
1111 Top Copa Paulflagonese
of the New York Bomb

=toe

-

·

...........

: - • Eloctrtcol, IOU711-

Involvements you'll wltlo lndlvlduelswlthwhomVOU',..VIO&lt;kacloo CCIII
tully In ttte pall could prowo luc:l&lt;y In the
yaer ehead. The same might not be true
of,_ oaodtnlono, though.
ACIUARIUI (..... ID Pill, 111 An ...
anca In wltlcfl you're .,._tty InVOlved
lln'lllkalyto be verytlfeCIIVetode)', un' - thorelo harmony of purJICII. Clarity object!- before mlklng dlclaloua.
Aquorlul treat youl'lllf to a IIJrthday
gtft. Send lor your Aatro-Greph prtdlc-

Sl'/liNG VALLEY PROFESSIONAL BUILDING
J06 /.t CXSON rfKE - SUITE 20J
GAW101.JJ, OHIO 4~JI

446-6000

i

NOeooY .SHOui..D
LOCK r::owN ON

1-1S'lil' 8lldlnl Door, 1-3' llan CoMplole llobllo Homo 014 upo ·· •· :
~- Cloolco or 1s Col.,.., 1 -"'"· olio ptu111111na 1 .
,
14.444 a-od. Iron H.,... -rtcot, - · romodollng,
c
hlldoro, ~14-UHl~~.
I - · iiC. REMODE~&lt;
.
·
Hay
&amp;
Grain
NOI
Roloooo
••·
Eollmotoo.
'-"'
~
64

-

'ON-SITE SERVICE(REPAIR
'CUSTOM PROGRAMMING
'SAI.ES .
'ON-SITE CUSTOM TRAINING

Hope is stunned when lhl
leama of a frl•nd's unethical
lctlets._(R) Stereo. D
Vtatnem: A'Televtlfon

MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

"- ~

w.==.NO

•

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f

"I keep hiMitg thiS nlghtmlre that I'm trying to
do_my juggling act In zero gravity."

-

;.
'

lions lor the year ahead . by mailing
$1.25 to Aolro-Graph. c/o this ntiWIIfl8·
per, P.O. Box 91428, Cleveland, OH
44101-3428. Be sure to state your zodlac IIQn.
PISCES (Feb. 20 "r Ch 201 You may
!&gt;8 10 busy· checking on the qul!flly .of
your co-VIO&lt;kers' today that yoo/'11 neglect your own produc:llvlty. Focus on
your 11181gnmentl, not • -ARII!I Clllorch 21·Aprll11111 poealble,
try to avoid speculall,.. Involvements
today, IIP'Cially lltuatlons that are
controlled b)' someone other than yoursell. There could be a conflict of
lnt..,..ts. ,
.
TAUIIUI (Aprii:INIIJ 201 An old, unresolved laaue that cauoed you and your
mate to tika oppoelng JK*tlons might
be •-rrectecl lodly. Unfortunately,
both of you moy 11111 be polee apart .
GE. . C...,21-.IUM201You'reavery
k - obtlrYer of hllltllrl neture today,
but your locus m~ be on the neg111,..
....,.cts of ot!Mn J)ltiOnllllt._ lnllelld
ol their - •· A b181ed · &gt;lewpolnt
could -confrontation. ,
CAIICIII (~ 21.....,11) Your ftnsnclal trends .,. • trilla uncarteln at this
limo, 10 be axtre oera1u1 regarding the
menagenwtt of your ....,..,..., An orror In judgment could prOWl eaSily.
LIO (.ltflr 21-Atlf. :Ill Demands lm-

.

.,

pooed upon you by others could preo
vent you from doing what you had
planned today. II you treat 1-lmpositlons emotionally, retltor than tpleran tty, It could cause trouble.
'
. YIRQO(Aug.D-Iept.221Thlslloneof
thoee doya you could be tM aulhor ol yout own dlfftcully; you might do
thlngl In woya lh•t do not your
belt Interests. Think, think, think.
LIIIIA (lept. D-OcL :DI When sociellzlng with trlenclsloday, don't be lllreld
to say "No" If they wont you to l*llclpataln something you feet you can't •I·
ford . Be bold, not brotce.
ICDRPIO COoL :M llov. :Ill Upon occoolon, you someltmea pulh · you1'8111
beyond reuon~~ble lmltatlone. Thlo ·
could be the CIN today, wherelhe.,.
of
excelllve ef1ort might be
. counterProdul:ltve.
· IAGITTAMII (llo¥.22 Deo. 211 Don't
pUI IOO rmuch coeclauce In a lip you
· miQht get frOm an "lnalder" today. Thll
lndlvldUII's lntormetlon mey be captl· vatlng, but of Httle ...,...,_,
CIJ1IICONI (Daa. 22 ,_ ttl Taka
nothing for granted today II you- to
do 11u11.- .with ., lndlvlduel or ftrm
with whom you . . unfllltllllr. Mlkalt •
point to doubla ~heck oil the llels end
figures .

Avand slam would be a aOocl bet on
the North-South cards. U either oppoaem beld the lone queen oltrum(l!l, II
the 1pades were 2-2, or even if East
ltekl all lour outstandinl trumps,
South would make all the tricks. In a
c.;tmd slam, South would ruff the open-'
Ina leaa and play a spade to the ace.
That way be would make all the tricks
when East held all ·four trumps. U
· West ltekl all four trumps, as In today's band, the defeltlt! would alway&gt;
be eatitled to a trump trick. But what
does au this theorizlna have to do with
today's contract, which was CMtly six

tJU
+KJS

...
EAST

WEST
• Q972
.,0 8 4

•en

tAUI32
+1017%

IKQI07

+16

..

SOIJTH

.KJIOI4
.KQJI .

-.

ill llportl Ton(gltt
11:31 (ll Chaera 1;1 '
12:00 (J)
I

e College laalcttbiiH

Wall VIrginia at George
Wuhington (T}
(!)). Party Mlleltil\0 With
Nil Peeplee
.

Vulnerable; Both ·
Dealer: South
W..t

spades?

PPoa
Puo

Simple. South want! to guarantee
the cootract. The approach 10 such apparently ea8¥ problems Is for declarer

s•

Norlll

••
1+

All pall

.,

Opellinglead: t K
~-._...,..

·.
'
·.

_ _ _ _ _ _ _ __.

with which 10 trump a diamond continuation. And If East boldl all four
trumps.Jieclarer can play the jack of
spades aiiOgive up a trick to Ellt with
the same ultimate result. 01 coune
it's unusual for either defender to bold
all four trumpe, but a reiOUI'telul declarer will provide for the ~billty.

•I

..•

oer.non~~~~~e~

ACROSS
lilrturas
1. Comedi- 47 Pracipi·
anna '
lous
Radner
DOWN
6 Slabla
1 Jokes
boolh
2 Tennis
11 E.T., e.g .
great
12 'Wast
Nastasa
Side
3 Like most
Story•
· sports
heroine
lalecasts
Yesterday's Answer
13 'Slop
4 Actress
20 Angora,
aparttalkin!iJl"
Wallace
e.g.
menls
15 Enviston
5 Beasl
21 Ac1n1ss
33 Honolulu
16 Son of
6 -Kissing
MacGraw
souvenir
(Irish)
sounds
22 Yank's
34 Mocked
17 Chowed
7 SailOr
foe
35 Heal
down
8 Scope
24 Free (of) 36 Greek
18 River's
9 Incline
25 Olympics
vowels
bounds
10 Recenl
jersey
38 Writer
20 Seasonal 14 Earth
monoRice
_ song
colOr
gram
39 Craps
23 Anl~oxin 18 Emulates 26 Damage
need
27 "Family
Tyson ~ 30 Reslau·
40 Rung
Ties" role 19 Common
rani ·
42 lnvlle
28 Traveler's
39-Down
lixtures
43 Ump's
document
roll
31 .Soma
cry
29 lama's
rr-"111"'-r.-'""'12--.:r-land
,.
·31 Closel '
wood
32 Beauly
parlor
34Untouched
serve
37 "Willard"
sequel .
38 Madison
Avenue
· outpul
41 "Slop .
talking I"
44 Clear the ·
board
45 Pound
part
46 Schoolroom
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES -Here's how to work It ; 1128

0 MOVIE: Wlngl

of. FIN
.

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1~:30
Ll!' Nlglll With
.
Devld~

.

(J) MDVII:~ 12:001
g Plfly MIICitlne 'Milt Nil

~.r:.ll of.-

a•-ColiiiiCiton
Ceil..atiOn

12:11 (I)~
12:10 (ll IIIOVIE: Yow Cltettln'
. liMit (2:001
1!00 G1 Cunarll Affelr'l;l
o•~awttlde

·

.

~FIE:
GIMt Wllclo
(PGI'1111
j2:00)

· G

Melli Pro lid TFrom Mt. lllcheiOr, Ore. (I'll

t e~~~owai&amp;.Toclar

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AXYDLBAAXR
lsLONGFELLOW

ea-t~nE­

(2:00)
12:011 (I) Nlgltlllne 1;1

--

CROSSWORD

(ll'lllaf....... .
.. NniWfll Now •

eN••••

.

.

+AQSI

by THOMAS JOSEPH

~~'ill!: Deeclly Dallte'

• ,

•n. 11W71-22U.

a• ·

NtwaHour Spaclel Edition
State of the Union· Address
and Democratic ReaponH

, , .

., ,..,

Auto Parts &amp;
Acceuorlas

!Ill

(!) MecNellfl.8hrer

, .... Foid ... ~. 14,000 lllllel, . .__.. •.
Jib MW, 4 whiel drtve, tl,500 • .~: ' :
104~.
"'.'
·.~~
1111 Chivy Aatnt, .........,tie,
PS, PI, Ql/fll CHUIII, ttl ~,..!..'
""!!'~ -~"- cruloo control. , .,.,.

• ....... 51Wlli-21ZI.

I)) •

CZJ Frontline r;l

I'

1113 CMvy 112 ton 4 WD, 4 opel.,
S3100. 114-371-2241.

Cll

(L) •

·-.....I

73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's

we

• St8te ol the Union Adtlreaa

r

ling.

~

O.C.L. COMPUTER SOLU170NS, INC.

·~ oJ•·

+AIU

S'tereo. C

e Churc'h Streat S~

~.

Utllty lulld"'l SPL: 27'1131'11',

Hoy

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

PH. 614·985-3949

'

lol 1111-..

-·

KELLER'S CUSTOM BENDIN(i

47269 St. II. 241

!C

·

--~------------~
81
Home

=6 ..

•Cuatom Bent Exhaust Syatema
•Complete Uno of Exhlutt Suppllee
•Handle anillnltall Monroe 8hocka
Come ud See Ue For A Free lupedloa
ud Eatlmate

(2:00)
1:05 (ll MOVIE: Wilking Til IRI
(2:30)
1:30 (I) Cl). Davll llutee'

•·~ ioo!
.

Uncondlllonll lllltlme guenn- ' ~ ~
•- Local roloroncoo lurillohod.
,.
F- ootlmotM. Coli cOIIocl I· , r &lt;
1114-2!17-0111, . day or nl(lflt. '
&gt;
Rogero -mont

,114 4414141.

SPECIALIZING IN ....

AIIIFII

l'rlmaHtws .
MOVIE: Wlngl of Fire

-.

l-11-tt

.A 52

declarer fails to answer.this question,
be might just rull the king of dll·
moods and play a spade to the ace.
UJ!h! Now when he gives up a spade to
West, a diamond continuation will promote a second trump trick for ~
defense . .
The answer is for declarer to plunk
down the spade king. When ll:ut shc!ws
out, he can play the jack and let West
bold the trick when he covers with the
queen. _South still has a _small spade

.

Steieo. Q
iliOn Stave

8
0

NORTH

to uk himself bow he might go set. Il

(II Murder, She Wrote

·

,

. .1.

-Hoy, 100 oq. bOioo, Novor
.25 par bolo, l14-44e-

161

e

(R) (2;00) ·
0 COllege a.lkaiiHII

,....

to Bur , , onglno •
.,.."1'1 Dodge
Dlplomot ln runnina oond lor porta. ,..,..711-

,.,.. .......... rMtlng hay,
~-

Locat.tl 0. Saffenl Sdleol 14. eH lt. 141

chen-playing comj)U!Or.l;l
!Ill C
R - :·111 A~
• elderly woman is s-pt out
MOVIE: ~ ol !Ita

:.':'.~too.
W.nt ~
' 114-1112.,j- ;

-

Jim's Fonn Equl-nt1 .8R. 35,.
W... O.IIDolill, IM"'"I-I777i
- - i o n . , . . a uood finn
t - - I lmplomonte. Buy,
Mil, trodo, I:DN:OO -doyl,

54 MIICII~naoua

I

liD.
c-.,...

-=:-.d..":ko.m.

30WN-33M.

~!

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to Ha. Stereo. 1;1 .

111 • Tlact~,ao;
1011 IIF ...110; 100
wHh
" *
Will _ _
lm..:p:-:rov=am=e,..nt_a__ :. ~·

For ule .. nd or lraller or baCh,
- o d on Rt. 2 ._ Flotrock,

~ -~

Q

~~~~~~~-~~~~~~
·
1110 Ford 414 XLT LINt, ,_:

76

81 Famt Equipment

,1140.

..... j

.

.

I]) Cl)
WhO'IIhO IOU?
Angela voluntHrs to keep
houH when '(ony beglna an
Internship. Stereo. 1;1
CZl (!) Novl The wOrld chess
champion playa agalnat a

-,,

Serv1ces

2 IR .14170 tHO Nonie. Lola of
ntrao. 114-241-ICMII or 1104-175·

BENNm'S MOBILE HOME
HEAnNG &amp; COOLING

..

tiD $161'4 • /lEAPING
.

,;

.

81 ..10 BlaZer, V..a 2.1 lltw ena,
·~· air, IUIO ·~ til, AMFII
01eollonl cond n,OOO mlloo
want PlY oil '114. 441 IZZJ or'

Suppl1c:,
&amp; L1vestock

Eloctilc, olr condftlorilna, 4 Bod·
rooma, 1 112 b.t~ Lof Of 'Ex·
tro'o. (Will . """"' ft lroo ol
~&amp;"Jl- To Still Call304·

tJO PCtG WAI-J&amp;ING :
f'l" .,,_,I&gt;IA,_I. P'AyiNfr .

(~ :00)

~

&lt; ,.

Fc~11n

Total

~

flO ti/11-F 1/t/.J. HITTIN(;
f'ID I'ITI ~ty1t"G

~
~

Ford'.::. ..

2 Add..Qn Roome, ana
Central

•

11/tl 1!'"'"'6

{)~iNIll N6

AKC -nlono, odulo ttOO. - · Dual. Tondom Aote Troller '" "
~ $171. to 1310. whh Hydr~ullc GOOM Neck a t • ~
HydNullc Wonch.·I14-288-ISZI.

d a g o r -. 30W7&amp;-1121.

--. -t:k

NO

1111
ton, 414,
:
1.1
- II· -11.
, Juot ltNiahl
put on ~ •.,
ti,OOO
INOk 14,110. Dlly8: 304-f'!l- •
3331, E-ngo: IIWI7·710t.
' II'.

-oott•
po, pb w1.1000 '·mttoo 114-11125225.

111SWAIN
AUCTIOII a FU IINITIIIIE. 12
Olhr.lt., Ollllpotlo. Now a ~
Wollam I

1'40

•

now - · I . - . 114417o
1734.

Colegi a.lkttbiiA
ill Cloaaflre
·.
7:35
Blnfonl lnd Sol!
1:00 lll'e MatlOck MaUOCk and
hli ·housekeeper sutler a
· sertes of mishaps. Stereo. 1;1
(J) MOVIE:· CcluniMfora

w

w-. !~

·CMvy Pickup

318.

Poodle pupplla, tiMJ tap,
MJ;, Mil~. 11eo., mlnlture
aufN
a •II A pepper,
eoolvlle,t14-1874404.
W.rud to buy
AllMan

MOBILE HOME FURNACES -HEAT PUMPS
AU FURNACE PARTS

ll/2 Miles Eost on Rt. 241 through .
·
(htsfw, Oh.
·

...

condition,
Poy.()lf, I

1180 loyvlow 14x71J -II•
Homo, wHh 1 71124 oxpondo1
Poroh

tm F&lt;oril F-700, "aoo. 114--4*

•
•

1---·

a

aui:OIMtiC 'trl . .ml..ton, '.
•.tl r
wheel, AIIIAII 81..., Excellent r.t1 •'

- 1144D-7117.
-'"'""· 2 ,.... old,
....

--~~

:

a"'-.

.

A1ii11 of 111111: 10%
"""· Eaor crodft. John Baltoy,
aoo 441etto.

oe Th-·· Compeny

Pol Food Dootor. Julio 1111 ~ A1m, D-110. Ao,al ,.;;.·,;. 1,
Wolob. Coii114-MM2SI.
H ""'klgo, Exc. or1alnel oonc11- , ., ~ ,
tlon.
~700. 514-241'1114, 114- ; ' ~· •
4 .,. .... Doklon llotrlvor,
· .. 1
2yr old Qermlln 8hollllecd, AKC 245 SliD. '
1111 s-10
v.a, 2.1 ,;,. ..,. •
gino, 4x4, with olr condNionlng, ... ;
rwtlolorod. - · ·

Pl-. wv,

CIOVEIINIIENT HOMES ll'om tt
ropolrl. Dolt_.t tu

. RE-sESSEO - I S

1llll - · Rood CoMmondor,

dol::tb. -llony now pocto,12000 .
or
ottWIM-111 113M.

1171 l'onl F'/00, 1211 d - . -

58 Pats for sale
a - and SUpply Shop Pol
a-Ina. AN-· AI olvtoo.

-

ON lnOI TIACTOIS
l'ftll Othlr ,._ lrends

55

Filii 'ftlnlc, 2411 JackMn Ava.
- . . . . S04-4711-2013,
lui 11M Tropical - , __blrdl,

4-11-16-tln

SEIYKE AND. IEPAII

tton.

-lolng.

{U

• Acr

:;..~d

tollot, modlalno coblnol, floucot,
noOdom ond In · - • oond~

eNol-. Cll1114-441-~.

-

Tonight Stereo.·
(J). M•me'a Family

,

~~-:.c::~ ~·

1181 S.to, 4 cyl, I 1pMd, .,.._ P-

DH

4!12fcW- -~~~~-

=
=-..=.ur:;.:;,

114 ••• . . ..

....... ..,..., . . . . . ._
~· . . . . . ApjiiiMflll,
u- ...., 11c1. llooldo -

.lorrtcho lid. Pt.

"72 lord truck v.a, -

'Di ~lnm.d

(I)

•,

ByJ-Jereby

7:30~Uc2~~~~~~nlrll;l

• • •'
bell 1n
•

_ , Dot-.

APPLIANCES

llotV-·• - -

7:011 (J) Hippy Daya

i

.·

I

UNSCRAMBLE lETTERS TO
GH ANSWER

BRJDOI

&amp;ceracrow enc1 M,., King

~~------------,- •~
72 Trucks tor S81a

PRINf NUMBERED lET1ERS

. SCIIAM-LITS ANSWERS ,
I ·I\
Evolve- Realm- Chasm- Swivel- MICROWAVE
I had attended a very poSh wedding.While at the· buffet ,.
table l overheard one guest say to another, "This mar- '
riage will never last. He's camp fire and she's MICROWAVE." ·
·

S

- . oulomollc. CIOOCI, • _•
Yard -"- 1oo1oo aood, f?OO.OO. 114'112' I'' J.
In£ ted . Oak. ·· HickorY, 1m •'14-Mt-al&amp;
~ ' ~r
145 plcli·
~
up load. Don'o Lo-ptng. 1171 Chmotol, ooc. cond, F-

A...

USED

3121.

6

. • 8oollltCenler
ill Moneyflnt •· .

•

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-

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It- ,_..,

1 e.m. lo ~.m. llon.&amp;l. 114lrd.
Qol.

31 Homes for Sa!la

~

orr-.._. h4 441 2144.

Ml&amp;

Real Estate

IIIII

--.,o.,wo.

Oo -nioclolci.
pronllll ....... lor
II
•koo,
Tho -her

_,
1-;;;;;;;;;;id--:
Houllhold

fMDFII'fio ~ Your
aroo (1) - - - Ext. QH-

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL

-

11 ''' ...

- . llrlok, ..._
wtn- . ...... ole. Cloudo Wln. _ Rio Orondo, DH CoN 114-

-•P;o. lloxn.corool

1M Dolly -lnel,
417'11.

_,...IIJ$'M114-112..2131.
~
- · -~- 4 ~.. 304-171~

Suppllal

BUDGET PRICII AT JA~
ESTATE~"- 531 , _ . , Pika 1rc&gt;m """"""· WoHI ID ohoD' I
PICKEf\8 FURNITURE
rnovt.. CIIII'M Ul aaa .Et:lt.
NnliJud
Hot ulookl
112 mi.

-"GuidonoutODDOrtunlty" - ·you

Cultom Drapea
36 Y.... Experton••

614·992·2328

·

IENunFUL APARTIIENTS AT

;:~;:::::;;;:~r,:~~;;;;::::11r===inrr~i===i123 - P~esaloMI
THE

m-.

---,-''-a.,...,.."'...,.....
--:-222.--:::c-:-:--:-

11

""'*

·.

"If there's one thing I've
learned from the past, • sighed
my co-worker, "it's that oppor~~,~!ty's favorite disguise 1s ··:·

Qlll IN 1HE SE SQUARES

(}) lnablnt llacel
CZl (!) Mllc~ahrer .
NtwiHour 1;1_ __ .
e lnaldto Edition 1;1
Coull Q
CUINnt AH•Ir Q_ ,
yver Stereo. Q ·

=

"''""

Doytona El, 7100
Y.. , :
1, air, ~ tJH whell, AIIIFII
•
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Pomeloy-MidtJapol1. Ohio

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Tuesday, Jenuay 29, 1991

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Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Wednesday, January 30. 1991

.

'

Bush: Time ·will nOt .help Saddam··

. ..,.

;!

I ..

By REI .EN THOMAS
Forelin Minister Alexander Be· government.
UPI White Roue Reporter . ssmertnykh that a cease fire
The statement was widely
.· WASHINGTON - ,President · was possible It Saddam made an Interpreted
shift or softj!nblg
Bush, declarlngalllecHorceswlll
"unequivocal commitment' ' to ot U.S. pollcy. But White Hou!!E!
be victorious In the Persian Gulf
pull out his forces a,nd took . spokesman Marlln Fftzwater In·
"concrete steps" to ,compl~ with slsted the ·s tatement represented
war, says Iraq's fighting Capilbll·
Illes are being · destroyed .arid
U.N. resoluUons demanding total no change In the U.S. position
Ume will not be Iraqi leader
withdrawal' and the restoration that Iraq must withdraw
Saddam Hussein's salvation.
of the exiled Kuwaiti completely.

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PRESIDENT BU~

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situation develops," said Bush In
Ills speech. ' 'And we will main·
.ta:tn 'our contact wlth 1.the Soviet · · leadership to encourage con- .
tlnued commitment to democrat-·
lzatlon and reform."
With concern about ter.rorlsm,
the presldenUal address was
Continued on page 5

Groun_
d tvar betri.ns; 8-1.0 M arin,es k illed

.
Congress Tuesday night at the
~ '""
Cilpltol. "And when we do, the
WAS~INGTON (UPI) ~ Penwere continuing.
wo.r,ld community will have sent tagon officials said eight to 10
"Prellmlnary reports Indicate
an enduring warning to · any U.S. Marines were killed as heavy losses of both personnel
dictator or despot, present or . aiDed ground troops repelled a ·· and equipment on the Iraqi side
future, who contemplates outlaw three-pronged ·Ir,aql a.ttack · and light losses to U.S. Marine
against Saudi Arabian border and other coalition forces ,"·the .
aggression."
Bush said that "I'm pleased to towns, but the officials refused to official said.
report that we are on course. characterize the event as the
The Pentagon official said that
Iraq's capacity to sustain war Is start of a ground war.
based on preliminary reports
being destroyed. Our Invest· . At 9:30 p.m. Saudi time Tues- eight to 10 Marines were killed
ment, our training, our planning day (1: 30p.m. EST), Iraqi forces and an unknown number of U.S.·
. all are paying off. Time will not crossed the Kuwalti-Saudl Ara- and coalition · troops were lnbe Siiddam's salvation." The blan border and engaged allied jured. Staff officers at the 1st
remark was an obvious retort to forces at Ras al Khafjl and ·two Marine Division In Saudi Arabia
~ · Saddam's boast he can outlast towns to the west, a Pentagon
told pool reporters· the .United
official said. The Iraqi forces States also lost two armored
allled forces In comb;lt.
_
Bush made no reference to a were driven backabout5 Y.i hours vehicles.
.There were Indications each of
joint statement by Secretary of lat!!r, when ground forces were
State James Baker and Soviet no longer Involved bili air strikes tbe •Iraqi battalions entering the

a

Bush also criticized the Soviet
crack!lown on the Ba!Uc republies, but reported receiving un- ·
specified assilrances from Moscow that · could lead to ·the
withdrawal of Soviet troops,
renewed dialogue "and a move
away from violence."
"We will ~atchcan!tuUyas the

•

three Saudi locations consisted of
The 1st Marine Division said at
500 troops, a Pentagon official (east 20 Iraqi T-55 battle tanks
said. About one-third of the 1,500 and armored personnel carriers
enemy .troops were 'Injured or were destroyed In the flghtlns . .
"ptherw(se lncapa.cltated; '' be
Lt. Col. Cliff Myers described
said.
.
Continued on page 5
.--.--:-:-------------------,
•.
'

•

.~.Opposes tWo current school policies

jGroup ealls for schools to honor Washington

.

- A resolution has been passed by
: EwinfS Chapter, Sons or the
: American Revolution, opposing the
current policy ol two Meigs County

=•

'

taken." He said that chapcer mem·
beis will contact other civic and
patriotic organizations to gain support.

Day.
of Pomeroy and Robert Mcinturf of
'Meeting recently at the Meip Stockport have been hosRiralized
County Museum, the chapter adop- and ·cards wem sent to them. The
ted a new membership policy. Male · chapter is c:ontinuinli with plans to

~~c~~= o:; School
O::C:~.:CDistrict
.:tar:!~
... ~:re:S::r.~O:~~~ ~o~~~:s~a::!~:!
observes themSelves or dirouil1 .. relliives. beiJ1B prinrcd. for school children

di$nlissini school. '
· .
Aceord1ng to Keith n . Ashley,
president, the .resolution calls on au
· s'chools to honor the father S&gt;f our
countiy---&lt;Spec:iaUy when other
days Qf lesser importance are being

r---Local

WashingtOO's
Birthday . ' or
President's Day. Eastern Local
School District will be out of
school on Feb. 18 for President's
'
·
·•

hn·e~s
.II ·
.

--------,

Pine Grove home leveled by fire
· The pine Grove Road home of Oary WithiOw·. has been declared a
·total loss foUowing a fire them on Tuesday mom mg.
According to Syracuse Fire Chief Eber 0 . Pickens, a total of six
fire vehicles and 25 firefighters respondql to the scene ot the fire at
8:SS a.m. and were on the scene for six and a half hours. Both
. Symcuse and Racine departments msponded to the lire.
· . The home was owned by Henry Doefer of Athens, and Picltens
· , ' reported Wednesday morning that no cause has been detemtined for
&lt;
the blaze.

Massillon 'WOman arrested
A Massillon woman was arrested there on Sunday on Meigs
County felooy charges.
,
·
According to Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby, Renee J.
Sago was arrested in Massiloo oo a 1987 felony the(l of ~apes and a
videocassette player from the Video Touch.
Sago was reiUmed to Meigs County on Monday by Deputy Man·
ning Mohler, and 'is being held in the Gallia County Jail pending a
hearing on Wednesday in Meigs County Coun.
.
Another arrest was made !ale Thesday by sheriff's deputies. .
.
Deputies Jeff Miller and Robert Jacks arrested William Keel of
·Rutland foUowing a foot chase on federal charges of failure to ap·
pear on drug chares. Keel was released to agents of. the United States
Auorney's Organized Crim and .Drug Task Foce in Parkersburg,
W.Va.
,.. ·

Deputies probe B &amp; E complaints

Undet .the plan a membenhip application is submiued for the child.
IJben the life membership must be ·
Jlllid either in a lump sum or $25
payments. This will allow families
to insw'e the c:ontinuancc of mcmbership in the SAR for 'the family.
The adult submitting the applicalion need not be a member of the
SAR or the Daughters of the
American Revolutioo.
Michael Struble of S)TIII:use
pve a slide preSelltatioo on Welsh
uon fiii1)8Ces in southeastern Ohio.
He discussed the importilnce of
these f~ to the economy,
espcciaUy the Civil War. The iron
for the iron-clad boat, the monitor,
was made in southeas~ Ohio.
.
II was noted that V1ctor Brown

who · memorize the first ten
amendments.
Ashley emphasized the need 10
publicize this year's D.O. High His·.
torical Oration CooleSt for lOth,
lith llld 12th graders. 'Ibis is alive
to six minute speech on a klpic of
the American · Rcvolutiol) then
relaled to today's events.
The chapter concluded a successful Easie Scout Scholarship conleSt
again With three entries. The win·
ner will be llonored at a dinlier in ·
May. Dues for I~ I are now pay·
able. Nomilu!tions for the good
citizenship medal and the law en-forcement medal are now needed, it
was noted. Nexi meeting will be
Feb. 28 with a colonial knife maker ·
·a5 the speaker.

Meigs Countians invited to
take part in rally on- Saturday
~gs Countians are being in·
Athens
Middle
School on
vited to join in,a rally supporting U, WashingtOO Street and will move
S. lroOpS fighting in Operation south on Congress Street, east 'Oil
Desert Storm to be held Satunlay at Union Street and south on Court
10a.m. in downiOwnAihcns. ·
Street 10 the Courthouse where a
The rally has been planned by rally is planned, Couladis ~the Athens County Support Our
SeVC1111 pauiotic orgaruzations
Soldim Committee with Athens including units from Veterans of
Co1111ty_Auditor Pete Couladis as Foreign Wars posts around
· Southeaslem Ohio and local and
the orpniztt,
.
The ~Marth to SuppM Our ·swe ofllcials are expected to par·
Troops" will orpnize behind the ticipale in the pulllle and rally.

..

'

:
:·

'

•

':

~ - ~----~--------------------------~--------~
'·

~

Cadlolle
Tile work II bel•l per·
Jollllllmnl, Pa. Tbe 1teep1e, ap-

formed bJ Sliaw 1 Steeple Jl!eb
proximateiJ 150 feet abcm MullleiTf Aveaue, IDcumdiiOIIIe llOnil
damlp lalt lllliiiMI' wlildlll pmeatiJ belal re.un.ID addiiioa •
to ordlurJ malalellol!e, lite wor~~... an dea•lnl, ncnlklaa,
npalatlill ud npalrlq aaytltq aDOdated witli tile dniDaae aDd·
guttlaa. A material ta0wu as "at claw" 11 ...., beia1 IDStalled
wblcb preveats platou traD moedDIID the steeple.

'

No one hurt in. 2 accidents
Two accidents were reported to the Meigs County Sheriff's
Dcpertmtnt on Tuesday.
On Tuesday morning, Emerson Johnson ol ·Eagte Ridge Road in
Racine was northbound on State Route '1 when he Slruck and killed a
deer that ran into the _l!!th or his 1981 Chevrolet.
,
. Acc:ording to Sheriff James Soulsby, moderate damage was repor- .
led to the front or the car.
·
·
· .
On 'I'uesdaYcvening, the dc:panment invellitatcd an accident on
Swe Rour.e 7. According 10 the report, ROle Marie Dearing,
Pomeroy, was travdling north whcin Jhe r.iled to 110p, ~ the
Jar rl I ·1988 Pcrd pickt., driven by Ricky Lee 't ce.nl of Clifton,
W.VL Xelml was_llpped. Wlilinl on IIIOCher vehicle to malte !l left
tum.
.
IJ&amp;bt denJal'l was reponed to Kearn 'a pickup tniCk, IIIII damage
to the Daing vehic:le was listed as moderale.
·
Continued on .page 5

Cllurcllllu~ a bit ol

Bush's. war remarks get
support •of m~t congressmen .

Three incidents of brealcing and entering are 1111der invll$tigation
by the Meigs County Sheriff's DcpartmenL
·
·
The first brealti~ and entering reponed was at Gilbert's near
Hobson. The ~ was receved at 12:44 a.m. on Monday. The
owner, Sieve Little, reported that he had left the establish!nent
around I 0:40 p.m. and was notified at 12:~0 a.m. that the front glass ·
door had been broken oul A large number of video tapes were repor· ·
ted taken.
,.
Roger Hawk at the Tuppers Plains 76 statiOn i'eportcd 81 S:19 a.m.
on Monday that his business had been W.tcred through the front door
. 8nd a large quantity of cigarette~ were /Djssing. ·
Tun Jenkins of the C&amp;D Pennzoil station at Five Points reported
to the dcpuUnent that his establishment had been entered late Monday or early Tuesday by prying the has!) off the front door. A larp
number of video tapes and SO cartons ot cigarettes were reported as
stolen.
'

·,

•

. NEW OPFICER IN CHARGE· ADtllllaJ Max "RRii7" S : : ··
'rlpt, II tae - olllcer Ia eltarle at die Tappen PlaiU l'lllt
•
SamJIIOfl worlled pmioCIIIJ wlila tile postal •• tlee • a PI'JI elerk
Ia Atbellllild MarletD ud aa a Stllr Route drlttr aut fll AtlleM.
SaiDJIIOII rnldes Ia Tuppers Plalill 'wltll 1111 wife, KJmberiJ, aail
110a, ADtllonJ. He lakes over ror MariiJD Burke, left, at the poll
olllee wlao will move OD to tbe Waterford Post Ofllce.
·

tJ. '

•

By United Preaa latematlonal
presld~nt's . domes tic. proposals, .
Ohio's conareaetonal delesa- Including a cut In the capital·
tlonwaslargelysupportlveofthe gains tax. He also ~ndorsed ..
actions :of President Bush In the Bush's proposal · for a Federal
Middle East but divided on some. Reserve-led commission to study,
of the domesUc proposals he the capital gains tax Issue. . .
outlined In hll State of the Union · Sen. Howard · Metzenbaum,
address Tuesday nlghi.
· who bas bitterly opposed a
. Sen. John Glenn, D·Ohlo, said • capital gains ~ax. cut, .said the
there Is no difference between forming of sucb a commission to
Democrats or Republicans when stuCiy tha Issue "Is an Insult to our
It comes to supporting President
lntelllgence:"
''Theapeechevldencedthefact·
BusbIn the Persian Gulf.
However, Glenn said on the that the president Is solldly
domesUc front Bush was lacking behind the troops In the Middle'
In ·specific proposals. ·
Eut, alld the Congress Ia united
"The things that he said he . In l~saupport tor the troops," said
WOuld put Into effect .,. I don't Metlenbaum.
know who Is going to J&gt;IIY for
lfowever, Met:~~enbaum , said
the crowning blow In the speech
some of those things," Glann
said. •
·
aad ''a great dlsappolntinent"
"What was lackJna wu a well wu when the president " talked
defined energy pollcy, wblch I about the lllabiUty to help tbe
bad hoped the -president would local sovernmenta to help IIIMI
put In his speech,". said Glenn. some of OlD' do!fl81tlc need&amp;."
"The best way to make aure
' 'To t1ten add a propG1a1 of
there's not a next time ~eilaiY cuttlna tile capttalgallll tax wu
crlsll) II to addl81 an ellti'IY aa lnault to tbe vut majortty of
pollcy tills time."
the American people and a 10p to
Rep. Chalmers Wylie, R·Oblo,
the wealtblettt lndlvidualsln this
said he supports several of the country," said Met:~~enbaum.
'

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    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
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      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
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            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
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    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
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        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="34505">
              <text>January 29, 1991</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
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  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="277">
      <name>blaettnar</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="762">
      <name>hickman</name>
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    <tag tagId="837">
      <name>pierce</name>
    </tag>
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</item>
