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14-lhe Dilly Santi1el

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

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Wedni•day. Jenui.v 10, 1110

Ohio Lottery

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Pick 3

Pemeroy

503
Pick4

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8e8q111•

. _7766

centennial
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Snow fhnTies· toaliht. Low
near 88. fl'l"lday, bleb In mid
308. Chance of snow 40 percent.

Super l.ato ·
4-5-6-24-28-29
Kicker 847973

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2 S.otlona. 12 PegM 26 Ctnto
A'Muhlmedlo Inc. Newapeper

11. 1
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COPYRIGHT 1990 - THE KROGER CO.
AND PRICES GOOD SUNDAY,
JAN. 7, THROUGH SATURD/'.Y, J/'.N. 13, .1990. IN

Fartners hnterest said

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO I.IMIT QUANTITIES . NONE SOLD .TO
OEI'LERS .

.

~ Ifill POLICY.. Each of these advertised item5 is required to be readily

availlb&amp;t for aale in uch K.rog~r Su~re, except a~ specifically noted in t~la ad. If
we do run out of an adven~ nem, we wUI offer vou vour choice ot a
comparable item, when availabte, reflecting the same savings ·or a raincheck
whW:h wiU entitle you to purchase the advertised item at the ad&gt;Jenised prlce
with~ 30 days. Only one vendor c~upon will be accepted I?Br item purchased .

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.critical in location of· ,.
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·poultry plant m area
p.m . at the Ripley High School.
can be a high school graduate or
By CJIJ\BLENE HOEFLICH·
Officials of Rockingham Poul· pre· high school graduate's proDally Senllnel Slaff
Location of a new Rockingham try, Inc. will be at that meeting to ject and might be just what Is
Poultry, Inc. complex In the explain In detail the resporlslblll· needed to keep someone In the
Ravenswood , W. Va. area would ties of the farmers who will area Instead of having to leave
have a tremendous economic "grow out'' the chickens, the here io find work" . commended
. Impact on Meigs County as well responsibility of the company, as the development director. He
as Jackson .and other surround· well as flnanclal _. requlrements. also pointed out that the com·
Rockingham President Gene pany has found women to be
lng counties In West VIrginia,
according to Jack Burlingame, · Misner has said that the com· some of the best manager.s of
executive director of the Jackson pany Is presently looking at "grow out" facUlties which reCounty Development Authorlty. several possible sites while It quire about two hours a day to
In the Initial announcement of studies the feasibility of building operate.
Burlingame said that attend·
the possible location of the firm a new complex. He emphasized
that
the
Interest
of
area
farmers
ance
at the meetl ng will be a
In
'Ravenswood,
It
was
revealed
dedication of the U·bed faelll&amp;y wlllch will botl8e
CEN'I'ER DEDICATED - Dr. David G.
Is
critical
to
the
evaluation.
determining
factor In deciding
that more than 800 jobs would be·
male leloaj offenders . who are co•ldwed
Scbroot, director of lhe Governor's Office ol
·Company
officials
have
report·
whether or not the area wants
created.
non-violent . . Carl Hysel~ juvenBe officer, and
CrlmbW Jual1ce Services, was speaker at the
edly
visited
the
proposed
Jack,,
and can · support the new
According
to
Burlingame,
who
Pauil
~
Gerard,
aaatrnmenl
commiSeloner
and
dediCIItloa ol bda· Sl.71 mUDon ~utheaatel"n
criminal balllff, Melp County Commoa Pleas · Is working with Rockingham on son County site on several Industry.
Proballoa · Treatmeal Allernallve Cealer at
He asked that Interested Meigs
Its site sel~tlon, Interest from · occasions and are sclieduled to
Court. are Melp County's representatives on the
NeiiODvllle Tuesday. The Center will serve Melp
ret
urn
and
meet
with
county
Countlans
be at that meeting. "It
farmers
located
within
35
miles
advisory board. SEPTA laacbeduled to receive lis
Coun&amp;y aloa1 wllh llx other counl¥8. Common .
.officials,
bankers
and
others
Important
to get Ohto· farmers
of
the
proposed
site
Is
critical
to
ltnit residents on March 1.
Pleas Jud1e Pl"ed, W. Crow, III who ser\'011 on the
Jan.
16
evening
prior
to
the
Involved",
he
conclUded. ·.
.
.the
final
location
selection.
Center's Judicial Correcllo• Board, allended the
So that appropriate plans can
For that reason and since meeting with farm owners.
Burlingame explained that
be made for the meeting; Burlln·
much of Meigs County Is within
farmers
should
look
at
the
game
requested that those In·
that area, B!Jrllngame Is Issuing
posslbie
new
business
as
provld·
tending to be there , contact him
an Invitation to farmers here to
attend. an. Informational meeting lng either a primary or secon· at1·304·273·5367 or send a note to
him at Box 265. Ravenswood, W.
which will be held Tuesday at 6 d ary source of Income.
"It can be a family affair. It Va. 26164.
Tbe 1990 wi!llll!~ of tile First
General Hospital In Marietta. He son will receive gift certificates
weighed nine poun~s. one ounce and merc;handlse from ~ area
Baby of the Year .Contest spon·
&amp;Qred ·by · The Da'ly Sentinel Is
and was·221nches long.
merchants. Deadline for eater·
Jam~ 1 Wllitam . N~ll;/• son Q!'
Mr. and t,trs. Nally, ~~~v.e, three lng !he contest which required . ·~
"Jam~ Gerard ;. and · Katie
other chlldJ:l:I!! ~II· ·daughters,• that the baby be born of Meigs
.McBflde N!l).ly oi .i9l70 S!tlnner
Nancy Anqe: i.4i.-Mary Jean, 12_, County parents w~~ . noonRUI) Road, ~gr'!f'f i!'tl&lt;;•flf!'':''''i and I&gt;atty Mc}'lrlde' 'iiilllll1't'ti"T::• We~neadiiY\'"''';· ,.,.,,,,,.'
~The lritant was born at 11:26
As winners In !he ~'11*t; ' Mr.l · -t:beprlzes•tiu!luiie·a: t:Jmbroller.
a.m. C!D Tuesday. Jan. 2. at Selby and Mrs: Nally and their Infant
(fold·up stroller) from Big
partment of Human Services.
processing the Home Energy
Wheel, Pomeroy, a $5glft certifl·
· ·
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By JULIE ,f:. DDLON
Commissioner Richard Jones Assistance Prbgram !HEAP)·.
ca'e and · 20 percent off all
Senllnel News Slafl
Edwards and Proffitt also
prescriptions until the child
• 'The situation Is under control stated that he had received
reaches stx at the Prescription
for the time being, .. stated s·ld several complaints fr.o m clients stated that Gallla County has no
Shop In Middleport; a SlO gift
Edwards, director of the Meigs· of the program thar When they transportation service and that
' certificate from Buttons and
-Gallla Community Action · (the clients) called to arrange for are only three people In addition
Bows In Pomeroy; three boxes of Agency, at Wednesday 's meeting transportation It was not avalla· to Edwards · and Proffitt who
Newborn Pampers from
of the Meigs Counly ble. Jones also stated that he.had transport t)lelr clients to tbe
'"the responslblllly to furnish an · larger hospitals In the area for
Swlsher-Lohse Pharmacy., Commissioners. ,
Pomeroy; J boxes of Ultra
The 'situation- Edwards was answer to people who call and various treatments. Edwards
Pampers from Foodland, referring to w~s the Enhanced want to know why they can't have and Prolfllt added I hat the
drivers had traveled 25,000 miles
Pomeroy.
Medicaid Transportation pro- the transportation service....
Edwards and Letha Profi!U , a In a six month period with the .,
A $10 savings account from the gram which makes It possible for
RaCine Home National Bank, . the transportation of low Income worker lor the community action program.
The transportation problem
Syracuse; a $25 gift certificate clients to hospitals where they agency, stated that the lack . of
transp&lt;irtat!on was due to the occurred over a period of approxfrom Powell'sSuperValu, Pome- can receive such services as
roy; an Ice cream cake from the kidney dialysis. Clients qualify fact that the Melgs-Gallla Com· lmately, three weeks, according
Dairy Queen, Middleport; a $5 for the transportation program munlty Action Agency was ex- .. fo .Edwards and Proffitt. During
Continued on page 6
Continued on page 6
tremely busy lmple[iienllng and through the Meigs County De·

Low Prices.
And More.
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J~es W~iam Nally named winner
of Fi..st Baby of · ~he Year Contest

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GO. Krogerlng For Low "Warehouse Prices".
on Items vou Buy The M-o st

Edwards tell commissioners
'sitillJt'i:bn ·ts -~~~tincler cont~ol'

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YOUNG TURKEY
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Racine council OKs
operating expenditures
U.S. GOV'T GRADED
BONELESS •

~tc"ft ~~~

Sirloin

REGULAR OR DIET WITH
NUTRASWEET

Perdue Fresh
Ground Turk~y...

Tip Roast ........... ·lb.

$J59
lb. ·.

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Big K
12-Pak $J99
Soft Drinks ........ 12~~~·

DiGS~ FmST 18111 BABY - lames WIUiam Nalb', - of
,James Gerard ud Katie McBride Nally, Ia thewlnaerof'l'heDally
Senttilel'a1aeoFirs&amp;Jahy olthe Year Conle8t. HewaabononJan.

2.

"Nu1r1SWNt ln&lt;l lhl Nuu'IIISwe.tsymbol lul:l re~l•red mtoemarks ot TM Nutrts....
to;mr-ny 10f Ill bft~~nd Uf IWhtenltlt in~nt.

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Abele candidate for.
Fourth District Court
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"
WASHINGTON .EXTRA. FANCY ,

!.J.S'. GRADE A HOLLY FARMS

Boneless ·
Chicken Breasts
Pound

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·Golden or Red
Delicious Apples ·

Rave
Shampoo .
1hz.

FROZEN PLUMP &amp; JUICY

-Swanson.
Fried Chicken

Folgers Mountain ·
· Ground Coffee ·

2-lb.

39-oz. Can

..

Pound
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FROZEN i&lt;AOGER BREAD DOUGH
5-CT. 1-LB. LOAVES ...• t1.49

"AS ADVERTIIEO 01 TV"

CONDmONER DR
-c·

HOEFLICH · nance authorizing the Board of
Public 1\ffalrs to purchase ·a
Dally Seallnel Staff
truck for the water departtnent.
An appropriations resolution
. providing for expenditures of Again Council expressed a pre!·
$282,046.for village operations for erence for a pickup truck over
1990 has been adopted by Racine the use of the old mechanics bed
from the present water truck as
VIllage Council.
areakdown In the various had been proposed by the board.
Larry Wolfe was authorized to
funds Includes $69,763:97 general
contact
Hilton Wolfe, Jr. for an
fund, $25,046.40, street mainteestimate
on repairing the village
nance and repair; $3,000 state
dump truck. Street Commls·
highway ; $60,196.43, fire;
· $18,014.23, water; $4,426, ceme· stoner Glenn jUzer was au tho·
rlzed to make purchases of
tery, and $1.600 water deposits'.
Items for the packer
needed
It was n,oted that there Is $1,000
truck
and.
the village tractor.
In the general fund left over from
Cou~llman Bob Beegle was
donations , for work on the boat
. ramp. Plans were discussed for named presl~ent pro tern .
The tire contract between the
I using that money to buy hot mix
village
and Letart Township was
for the· levee In the spring once
dlsc'ussed
and Council voted to
the danaer Is flooding Is past.
At the meeting held Monday continue fire protection to resl·
Continued on page 6
night, .council approved an ordl·
By

Kroger 1%
·Lowfat Mi•
Gll11

FROZEN

Healthy Choice·;
Dinnera.
11.5-11.7&amp;-oz.

FOLGERS l\o10UNTAIN GROWN DECAFFEINATED
COFFEE VACUUM BAO 26-0Z• .. M.79

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1b Win Unlimil~d lJM.&lt;Of A '1\\·u lit'C11,MIIII
Silvct&lt;.:l't'\~1\ Cuudu Fm· A )l.:w~
• lJcpwilt!IIU')' in :.pl.'('iuJiy lliW'J\L'()
•lfyuu'I'COW.•uffiw 11nuJiiLsdJuwn u1
t'Wid\~01 VUU 111 win llski Wl:Ckcnd (UI'
LwoW Sll\l!'''CI'-'Ck.
I ,v.•u'lll••
I

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~M'IIl

Silvcrt'rLock cunt.lo fur Wll'Jilil'c ~·cw·!
Plu• 10CiiWlt'&lt;&gt;S1b \\'In A~ llu,r

Mld·ll'l'Ck Ski lilcltllon For 'l\lo!
-"'tt

,_;______

·---· ----r-~--

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cabin Fever oatawayl

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'ft.V.--N:IIMNL

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Pete B. Abele of McArthur has County Bar Association, the
announced his candidacy for the VInton County Bar Association,
Fourth Dis trlct Court of Appeals. · the Ohio State Bar Asoclatlon,
Abele has served as Athens and 'the American Bar
Association.
City chief prosecutor, assistant
The Fourth Appellate District
prosecuting attorney of VInton
County and has bee~;~ ena4ged,.ln consists of 14 counties, Including
ll,felp and Gallla.
the prlvat~ practice of law. Abele
Is currently serv1n1 as a referee
In the Athens County Common
Pleas Court where h!J responsl·
bllltles lnclqde bearing ~- In
the Juvenile, Probate and Gen·
.
er.ai 'Oivl&amp;lons.
· In addition to beln&amp; admitted to'
·practice law Ill Ohio, Abele hal ·
alao been admitted to practice In
· the United StatH Sapreme
Court. In the Sixth Clmllt of the
United States Court of Appeals,
and Ia tile Ua lted Statei Dfa trlct
Court, Southern Dlatrlct of Ohio.
Abele Ia a fJ'BdVate of VlniOa
Counly Hlp SChool. He received
hla bachelor of ~elenc:e In bullinen admlnlltratlon wltll hoiiOI'I
from Bowllq Gren State Unlvltralty, and hlajuril doclllr-dearea
from C&amp;pltal Untwrelty .Law
SchooL
.
He Ia a member of the Athens
PETE ABELE

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C~LENE

Fire contract issue
may ·be settled soon
The fire protection contract
others attendlnl were t:ber
dispute In Letart Township may
Pickens, 'who ·II the Syracuse
,oon cdme to an end.
Fire Chief and, Mayor, Hank
The Letart Township Trustees Johnson, who Ia the Raclpe Fire
1
held a apeclal meetlne Wednes·
Departtnent Chief, and township
day night, and according to
raldents Bud Rose, MelvinForetownahlp 'raldent Gary Wolfe
ster, and BeckY Hill.
who aftellded, the trustees stated
Trustee Harry HIU and Racine
tllat lftheflreprotectloncontract
Fire Cblel Johnson when conof 15 perc:ent to Racine and 35 tacted by The Dally Sentinel
perc~ent to Syracu11e wu not
Tbunday momlna both con·
accepted l1lel! a tuB 100 percent firmed Wolfe's report about tbt!
contract woUld be awarded · to
planned action of the ti"lllteea as .
Sy.-.cuee.
·
• stated In last nlfrht's meetlne.
O.ldel Wolfe and townllllp
The Racine Flt:e Deparlment II
tnllteel, DoD Rlc1wd HIU,
~ebedu!ed to meet tonltrht at 7
Harry Hill, and Dave Graham,
Continued on page 6

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Local news briefs-RAe naw has 12 pots dawn·
RAVENSWOOD , W. Va. -Ravenswood Aluminum Corpora·
tlon !RAC) now has 12 pols out of service al Its aluminum
reduction plant due to the adverse weather conditions. This loss
Is equal to 6.5 million pounds of production anriually. No layoffs
have resulted from this production cutback.
As reported last month, RAC anticipated production cutbacks
In response to December's record-setting cold temperatures.
These conditions curtailed the alumina plant In Louisiana that
produces the alumina ore tor RAC. The Icy conditions on the
Mississippi and Ohio Rivers cau:Sed res frictions In river tra ff!c
Umltlng supplies of alumina, the· raw material used In the
productions of aluminum.
These problems, along with the overall alumina supply, have
caused a delay In the restart of the fourth potllne, which had
been originally scheduled to begin In February.
RAC officials reaffirmed the company's desire to minimize
dlstruptlon of primary aluminum production. They cautioned
that RAC's ability to prevent further reductions· and to regain
full capacity would depend on weather ~nd river coodltlons In
the weeks ahead.

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EMS has 9 Wednesday calls
Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service
responded to ntne cal" on Wednesday.
At I: SO a.m. the R!!tland unlt was called to Happy Hollow
Road for Mlchae! Richmond who · was transported to Holzer
Medical Center.
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The Sytacuee unit at 7:.t5 a.m. went to Dusky St. for Marc ·
Ouere who was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
The Pomeroy unit reapol;ldecl to !I call on Peacock Ave. at
10:13 a.m. In whleh Robert KennedY was taken to Veterans.
At 11:44 a.m. the Rulland unJt went to Route 124 for Ruby .
Lambert who was ttanaporled to Veterans. ,
·
At 2:07p.m. the Pomeroy unit waac;alled to Meigs High School
for Rita Hamrn who waa transpoorted to Yeterans, and at3 p..m.
the unit went to Block Plant Road for Lillian Napper who was
taken to Veterans. At 5:55 p:m. Napper was transported to
Holzer.
. The Syracuse unl! at 5:59p.m. responded to a call on Seven IIi
St. for Anna HIUdore who waa laken to Veterans.
At10:39 p.m. the Rutland unit was called to New Llma~d
for Cbrlltal Conkey ~hcl was taken to Veterans. ..
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Commentary
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The·
Daily·· Sentinel
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PAT WHITEHEAD

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CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

LETI"ERS OF OPINIO\'i are welcome. They should be lesolhan 300
words long. AU ll!llero are oubjectlo ediiiDJ and mutt be olped with
Dll)e, address an• telephone number. No unslrned letters wUI be pub·
llahed. Le«ero oboold be In Cood !Mie, addreoslnJ Issues, nol penonal~
ties.

Census will count
down and out·
By LEON DANlEL
VPI Senior Editor
WASHINGTON - The Census Bureau, for the !!rst time, will
search this spring for America's homeless, .but simply counting them
Is not enough.
·
·
Chronic." drug &lt;Jbusers and alcoholics, who comprise the
fastest -gtowlng segment of those living in shelters and on the streets,
.
·
desperately need help. · · •
With the decriminalization of public drunkeness, they have been
pushed out of the Jails and Into the streets.
Urban renewal has razed cheap bars, flophouses and missions.
Gentrification has claimed some skid rows, dispersing the homeless,
making them more visible elsewhere.
Among the closest neighbors of President Bush are men who sleep
on steam grates a couple of blocks from the Whfte }louse.
The advent of relatively cheap crack has accelerated drug abuse
among street people. Many of the homeless are cross-addicted- to
both alcohol and drugs.
··
Two-thirds of the nation's urban shelters, according to a recent
government survey, provide no serVices to help the homeless fight
their addictions.
Av"a ilable help often Is nothing more than a couple of days of
detoxification and no after-care. Many homeless alcoholics ·have ·
undergone "detox" dozens of times, silnply to have a place to stay.
Some shelters do not admit heavy drinkers or drug addicts because
they are dlsputive.
· The shelter on Capitol Hill operated by homeless advocate Mitch
Snyder has a separate section where the homeless can·combat their
. Here are a couple Df things to
addictions.
·
remember this year, to let
The recovery program provides rehabilitative serVices which
simmer In the back of your mind
Include not only detoxification but counseling and regular on-site
all the way until November.
meetings ol Alcoholics Anonymous ana Narcotlc.s Anonymous.
First, your FICA payroll tax
Some of those recovering from addictions have regular jobs but
rate (for ·SQCial Security arid
· conilnue to live at the shelter until they feel capable of being on their . Medicare) has Just· jumpe.d
own, free of alcohol and drugs.
again, by 2.3 percent, for the 15th
Unfortunately , there are far too few such programs. Some of the
time in 27 years. And the tax now
best are run by the Salvation Army.
tops out at $3,924.45 a year, up
Rich and famous abusers of drug and alcohol cari pay for expensive
nearly 9 percent from the prerehabi.lltatlon at the Betty Ford clinic and then talk about about it on
vious maximum . .
television to s"ympathetlc viewers.
Second, althOugh your taxes
· The media currently focuses on the plight of homeless. families,
are going up; this year is going to
seeming to dismiss the "bums" · who are always with us as
be a banner one for members of
undeserving of coverage.
Congress, now that President
A recent CBS documentary depleted the plight of a white family . Bush has signed their pay hike
that ·slipped out of the middle class Into homelessness. Often, all it
Into law. ' House saiai'les will
takes is a decent Job to get such a family back on its feet.
jump from $89,500 to $96,500, and
But an addicted homeless person is likely to stay on the streets for
to mo~e than $120,000 In 1991, plus
years. The taxpayer must bankroll his frequent trips through
a cost·of·livlng adjustment. Sedetoxification units and his occasional overnight sta~s In Jail.
nate pay will rise as well, though
Census enumerators will have a hard time finding these people,
not by as much. Senior bureau·
.many of whom sleep on street corners, in abandoned buildings , patks
crats will also enjoy a 35 percent
and elsewhere.
·
ni.ise.
The bureau has told Its people not to wake up sleepers, a practice It ·
aut that's only half of the figures would frighten both the enumerators and thOse roused from
insult. Perhaps you're among.the
sleep.
minority of Americans who be,
It has told tl)e enumerators Ju st to guess the age, sex and race of
those they find asleep, which is dismayingly indicative of the scant
notice we take of those who are-down and out.

While you

Jersey Assemblyman Alan
Karcher, Karcher sent It back.
Continental was openlDg a new
bub In Newark, and Karcher
didn't like the Implications of the
gift. Our a-.oclate Scott Sleek
bas obtained a copy of the letter
Karcher wrote to Lorenzo:
"I would never be able to look
In the eyes of the Innumerable
constituents whose lives have
been made miserable by your
unkin·bUitlng, antl·labor attl·
tude. TN1refore, I am IM!IItliq It
back to you. Perhaps If you didn't
squander your money ·on public
relations, you'd have money to
pay your employees · a ·d.e cent
wage:·
Even the archconservatlve
Rep. Newt · Gingrich, . R-Ga.,
wears an !IDII·Lorenzo button.,
There are a few who don't run
from the mention of Lorenzo's
name. ·Rep. Jack Flel!lS. R·
Texas, bas openly ru.tbed to
Lorenzo's defense. Fields critic·
!zed .legislation to restrict leveraged buyouts In the airline
industry. He thinks Congress Is
trying to push Lorenzo around.
And the congressman from:
Texas ·doesn't like to see anyone
pushed around, especially if that
, person ·controls 10,000 Jobs In
Texas.
"The first rule of politics Is you
look after the men and women
back home;'' ·a spokesman for
Fields told us.
'
.
Lorenzo is looking out for
Fields, so Fields can continue to ·
look out for th~t. folks back borne.
Fields has received at least
$4,000 In campaign contributiOns
from political action committees
and lobbyists rej&gt;reseritlngTexas
Air.
·· ·
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lleves Congress actually deserves such a blige pay hike, that
'1ien and women of such &amp;tatus
and respi&gt;nslblllty should earn
more than they do. You may not·
buy congr~slonal sob stories
about how hard It Is tp get by on a
salary three o~ four times the
national average, but you still
don't begrudge thelll an extra 30
grand.
· ·
If you are' one of these understanding souls (more under standing than I am, cenalnly),
then even your patience should
fray upon learning of the pension
riches Congress· has bestowed
upon Itself In ,(ts latest pay
package. Watchful analysts at
the National Taxpayers Union
have put on their green eye
shades and done some ·figuring.
Their conclusion: 25• members
of the House and 77 senators
could become pension mlllio·
nalres because of the pay hike,
assuming they live as long as
most men and women of their

ages.
.
.
Many could become pension
multi·mllllonalres, in fact, with .
several members of Congress
topping out at more than $3
million' in benefits.
":j'he pension perk could be
worth another $60,000 in hidden
annual inconie," says David
Keating, NTU's executive' vice
president.
·
As an example, let's say that
House _Speaker Tom Foley, D·
Wash. - one of the main
supporters of the pay hike ret Ires after another term. The
very first year he'll earn $99,199
In pension benefits, and that sum
wUI ratchet up annually with
Inflation (something few private
pensions do) .
·
Needless to say, Foley is one of
the potential pension multlrnlllionaires. But 'Bob Michel, House
minority leader from Illinois, .
does even better.llls first annual
payment would exceed $100,000.
E.ven someone with onlY 10 years

Vincent Carroll

.•

61G
·STICK
\

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·
benefit of about $25,000.
Better yet, depending on when
they were first elected_, members
of Congress can stan drawing
their pensiOn as early as·age:;Dano!ber rare deal among private
plans. ·
·
There's probably no stopping
this raid on the federal Treasury,
since It's now officially law.
Members of Congress have e!fec·
lively ensured that they will live, ;
whether workln·g or retired, a~
mandarins - pampered and
protected. Not even a future
binge of high lnOatlon can crimp
their"lifestyles..
··
Yet that doesn't mean we must
limply endure their highhanded
behavior. Come November, why
not remember wh!lt they did, and
act upon that knowledge? They
wanted a plush retirement; let's
give the one.

Today

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ON TO LITHUANIA

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' J!'leld 71. . . . . . . . 71

OOLUMBUI- Tbe ftn,t 1. . ua-.d

Pr•• &amp;.ter•lil-'
Olalo Ill p &amp;!Mel
Dl Cctacllll' llor• b..r...e.u

rat...

Beven u.

IJolrtl ·

(with 11,.-place

. ,

hi••

1. Toledo Seou (I'll &lt;...1 ............ ...... su

t. c.a... Mcllnief (8-1) ... ; ...... , ...... 11'7
3. Oevelan481. "owp.b(l ) (14) ....... 114
I. Wener-.tne 8oudl (IJ {IM) .. ........ Itt
S. 1Jelt'¥ t~reek(l) (lUI
IU
•.sandu.lrJ (I) fi .. J- ........ .... .......... 11!
7. Newark (f.l) .... .... ...................... ,...t4
IL M••l&amp;e. Perey(lt-1) ............ , ...... .~!
t . AkroaCeatr.a-Hown- Cl ) (1·t) ........81
li .Manllll!lld (8-1) .............. ................11
8;eculll ten: II. Mou• Ver.On (1} 51;
12, lit Met..,. 41; IS. ('tie) Chxluatl
Woodw•d ud Taledll &amp; . f'l'ucla, II
eaeh: 115. Clacln-*1 WHhr.... 11; 11.
,.,..~lieD; 17 . To~81 . .1••••m:
18. a.tsu•a me tl; tt. Ute) fA&amp;.n·
bu Nerthl&amp;n d and Pr lncet oft, n ucb.

.'

DlviBkln II

Tum

Ulne1¥1118t II, Ye ......,all n
Wr._. S&amp;Me llf Olk:ap State 71
.......apm 14. MM'IMia tl
11. . . Uaao• •81, W4WI•Wallace 8!
htl
.
HelllelberJ H , cap1a1151 •
Ohio Norther all.,_._ Cui'DII U
Hiram 11. Otterbein 11 ·
Obto Wm.,.._ . , TIHimu MCire If·
W.OSier II, Oberlo IS
Allepn, 1tt, C... Jtaerw II

Z.

Slet~ben..tlle

Wllll!nbtrJ '77, DeaiNa 11
Tlmo 14. s . .w•e M 11
. W.aM '74, Urb- 7~
DefiiiiHle 71, Wllmln.. oa 11

roi.t.

Glr .. Ollie HIJIIIeiiDal._.elhall

We__.,.., .....

(S) (7-8) ........ .. .......... UI
121

Alldaliula SI. Jotll 41, Oe•ila t1

~la.,..allarbor l-It .w.&amp;abuil
lar-~ne 11. w.-..e~d n ·

M ...

.1. West Oe~~&amp;&amp;a (S) (8-tJ ..... .... ....... .. 115
I.COI ...... sWIMtllloa(IJ (tl·l) ....... lll

Ceattr1111._M. 0., ltelllll•'tt

{Uel -'l~•• (l.f) ... ;,,............ ......: ..se
8. U.le) Lnii!'JIIa• (II (8-t) .... ., ... , .. ,, .. .sn
IO.Hie) Caalltlld (i·ll .................. ... ~.. .11
II.( tie) c.a.J P . .oe Nw•t (7·1) ..... .11 ,...-Seoo• DI~R: IL (tie) Cambrldp: lllld
Porumodl (l},llle~~ 14.(tle) Nappo
leon &amp;nd Oak H....,.r, 31 Uth; II.
Ont:lan&amp;tJ Green ..lla ill 28; I,., (tiel
W.aldu Memortal ud Bl!llefolltat•. 21
eM:h; II. (tie l Solon and PalnenUit
Hane)', II u c b.
Dlvbkln 111

Ma.... ft, Pal-ttlle IUwrtWe H
Pal-_..le ..,.._ . . Oo-•i a
•llet'leo8,S.IHII,..ro41
WeiU..... 41.11brta W 17

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

Wo . . ldp II. MD . . . re U ·

· Sports resu liS
• 1'hunMI1Q' Sporh Calendar

Team
Polnl&amp;
1. l'oupiOWn Ubert)' ( 111 tR-t J ... .. 1tt1
' · OfrvUie (J) (10 .. ) ......................... 111
l.Rt. Beary(IJ(I-1) ........................ 1:11 ·

""--~·--·

1: a.rtonBerlllhlre (ll~) ............... ,..n
" · Ellllt Canton (t-1) ................. : .. : ..... .111
7•. Coloatl Cra'Niord .(f. I) ................. .51
8. RD Solllhe.-tern Cl l ( INJ ............ .13
t. lleachwoo«tiH) ...........................n
ll.£ohlnbll!t Hartle)' ( lt-1 ) 1...............ts

·

Wlillltlrwtolla4 Ml1111t,

uo...

Bl~tP

NHL

Quthrc Ill BoMo&amp; 7: :II p.m.
('hi(! Mji;O. PbUadelphla, "'':n p.m.
, NY blandf'rs al Mla~Uo A: 35 p.m.
llufflllo II C•lpry, I :!IS p.m .
t-:dmonlo• at LIIM M IIW'iet~ , IU: 15 p.m.

......

nftelaa41&amp;1 TacorM. 11: 3J p.m.

Teaah1
!l)'dney, AaMtralla Soul! Widell ()pH

·•

We*-4..-RNdt

· Ka.....,.cttyl , lt . Lout• :I

ThU.nwiiQI Gamf'
Ca.Yel•d M Ta~ 11: II p .m .
Frida)' GafT\8

BaiUmort ~Wichita . alalll
._;

~scores

Kllll~ Cttyu ~ ll llilllo •IPI

Ch~Yf'land &amp;d Su Dlf'p,

nllhl
1\'i\TION.t.L HO('KE\' LEAGUE

,.

Ohio Colte1e WO•n'a ... kl!tball

\\'e-...,ae~

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JIIIL II

..t.

NY ldd.rll J, To .-...to I
rhlcap t. NY lluprA %, df'
New .lrrl!l'Y I, Pll...,.fl'b 3
WIDIIIP"'« I, M' ........ on I ..1
Hardol'd 3. V.co•wr I
'l'lllllrod.,- GllnMS
qw..,. Ill llollton. ,.: 11 p.m.

MIIIJll 'lt, lewlaJ GreeD II

'.

Allf'lhnJ St, Cae WetRrn$1

We

, .

CllllcallU .. Pt......l'lfhl11, ,.: JJp.m .

l'o'otlll&amp;l!r It, Oberlla 51

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Foodland Night on tap
at Rio Grande ]an. 15

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,We Apologize For Any; Inconvenience
711is ·May Have Caused The Customer,
· . A1 Well. As,.. The Advertiser.
THIS AD CONTAINS THE CORRECfiON

'F~I. ILT LARIAT 412

Rio Grande. Contributions are
Foodland Night will be obused
to create scholarships for
served at the University of Rio
promising
student-athletes.
Gtande's Lyne Center when the
Redmen
Coach John Lawhorn
Rio Grande Redmen host the
balled
the
support
shown over the
Dyke Demons in a Dis trlct 22
years by Robert Easanan, owner
contest set for Monday, Jan.15at
ol Ohio Valley Supermarkets, his
7:30 p.Jll.
'
family and e:catt.
.
. J:'ree tickets are available at
"An athletiC program lives by
area Foodland states : OhiO Val·
the lnlm'eat ud enthusiasm of
ley Supermarkets Inc. operates
1urroundlnc comm11Dity,"
the
sb( FoodlandA - two In GalUpons
.Lawhorn
commented. "The area
and one each Ill '' Pomeroy,
Foodllnd
lkireS have been an
Wellston, Point Pleasant and
active
frltnd
ot athletlct at Rio
Ripley, W.Va.
·
Throqb
Its flnanclaJ
Grande.
During halftime, FDodland
help,
OhiO
Valley
Supermarketl
staff will choose a participant for
bu bad a hand In creetlng oDe of
a 90-second shopping spree, draw
the more well-res~ 11111all
for parUclpants In . the cash
scramble and give away bags of ·university a&amp;blr~lc proerams In
the state.
·
groceries.
"I'he
assistance
lbown by OhiO
Food land Night will be the first ;
Valley
Supermarketl
Ia deeply
sponsored game of the season.'
appreciated
at
tile
uiliverllty
and
The nights are named ·for area
theatudentl
who
beneftt
frall.
!be
bualnelles that have contrllniled
linn's
support,"
Lawhorn
added.
to the Aihletlc Booster Cl)lb at

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MA,OR INOOOI: SOCCER t..I:AGUE

·

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-Spo118 briefs-

·Miljor Indoor SCK·(',t'f' Lt-II&amp;W

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NCAA f'onvendon

Hock?'

t. C..W ·Wiae•ater (H) ,. .,,,., ...........f8

__ _

V!l. OR11k' &lt;kMio.1D. beavywt'IKflt•·
Colte~~:~

~ . Ol'nwr L'r"t~ew (NA) ..................n
II. Miller Ch)' 48·21 ...... .. .... ... ..............U

Ill, Ohio Unt\'enll)' ~~
l' llllbu ra:h 71. Kfnt ~U•It&gt; U
Kenyoal1, Earlham (bid.) 51
WIUraberr 17, Dl!atloa II

&amp;Kin~

D~tlial&amp;-

4. \'lUll lie (I) CIG.fl ,, ........ ..................81
~. Tu~ ...• • Cath (N) ..................St
1. Al1tMrp ( l) (8-t) ... ........... .. ...... .....73

To~•

"'': ~) . m .

MlonUc Cil)·, N..J. - T1m Wlthf1'•poon
VII. -lefl Sin~~~, II, heavywel-a; Ty~ll

Tum
Polat1
1. eol'wnt.• Wehrle tztl (1·2) .......... ttl
'l1 (Ue) Vaa &amp;.fta (I) (1·1) .............. IU
2. (lleJ !iipnt(tld Calk C!l (III-I J ........ 112

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Portlullll Mla-..u. II p.m . .
OrandD .a P,Pnlft, 1:31 p.m.
DaiiM a1 l\t&gt;llltlt, II p.m.·
·
un .. ~llC11111lt!nlo. 10; 341 p.m.

WbeelertbuJI 28; IS. lamlllon BadlaU:
II. UGranp KeJII••U; 17. (tle)Della
ud Hum. 18 eaetl; 11. Ule) Eut
Pal•iine IUid Peterlllhllrw;Sprln1Utlld (I),
li eac: IL
,
Divis ion IV

e~k

NBA

c;h wlcNk'-MI N~w ·fe~'" ,•1: S8 p.nl~

Sew• lea: 11. Broo.,.Uie S7; U .

II .TrJ.VIIIaJe (ll.fl) .... ..... :...........'......IS
Sece• tn: II. M•lan Luc.&amp; tf; 12.
Uma CatboJic 18; IS, M&amp;lltfleld st.
Pe&amp;er's Jt; U . krl1 Rlkad U: II .
Holple !7; 11. Lodtltad tl; 11. 8olllh
Cllarlelton 8oudl ~ •ern ( I) tl: JR.
Mulllleld O.rldM 215 ; 19. (tie ) Wqan·
fiM GeMea aiMII Allllat.la 8L ,. ... It ,

B&amp;llf'hllll

Brad-.. at st. IMdf', 7:11p.m .
GaldCoMiai.St . Peaer-.rw. 7:11p.m.
BMIII&amp;etball

i I) ( 11-0) ......................... 111

l")tmai•IIW " ..ley31; II. Hou .. onil; U .

...

&amp;.ehilll
Profealloaal

S~nlor"

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TVC standings

.leUeroonll, Mllli.biii .J:d...,...Jt

~

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U

eo.•et•• u. •uere 1'rallll
CreotWOOII 7L Dlam... IE II

.!........ ......... ...... 118
7. llllilloro (N)... .........................·... u

.' \ • •' " ' . (J) (1·1)

~- On &amp;ado

Reeves is upset with
-:oiJllllissioner's ruling

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

1

I. Ketll!rllll Aller (I) (I· I) .. ............. 111

· a. D~;Ytoa Calonel W'le !8) (8-1)

,.....

Mlllfll . . lktw . .l Grees~1t ··
'l:ole.. 81, 011 .. U II
Ablli II, Wlaoeali.ot-eea o., u

· DMikln I·

Te11111

c.lW&amp;rr rr

01111 .. C.llitp .......... .

we&amp;M dd

"•""' ... co..... pu'flllhetet):

fifth-ranked 'I;lgers over the
Jaguan. Mllaouri aco~ · the
game's flrst17 pOint&amp; and led 20-2
with live minuW. goile. Mllaouri
Anla tant CoacheS ·R lcb Daly and
Bob Sundvold filled In for )lead
coach N.onn Stewart whD nilsled
the game because of the nu.
Anthony Peeler added 13 points
and llpssists for the Tigers, whO
Improved to 14-1. Joe Faulk!lt!r
led Southern with 27 Points.
At Fayetteville, Ark., To4d
Day And Ron Huery acored 19
points apiece to help the Razor·
backs Improve to 11·2. The Bears
pulled to within fDur points with
15 minutes left before tile Razorbacks puned away. Lee Mayber·
ry's 3-pointer with 8: 33 left g~ve
¥kansaa a 71-61 lead. Oliver
Miller added 17 points fpr Arkan·
sas while KelVin Chalmers led
Baylor. 7·6 and 0-3; with 18.
At Raleigh, N.C., Rodney Mon·
rQ!! scored 11 ofhls29polntsln the
first half to power the Wolfpack.
N.C. State led by as much aa 95·86
with 1: 04 lei(. Brian Howard
contrlbu ted 20 points and Chris
Corchlanl added 13 for Nortli ·.
Caronna State, 12·2.
Reggie
Stewart led the Terriers, 5-~. with
27 points.
•.
:
At College Park, Md .. Walt
Williams scored 21 of his careerbest 33 points In the second half
and Maryland snapped a ninegame loslngstreakagalnstNorth
Carolina, hOlding Dff a late Tar
Heel rally. Maryland improved
to 10-4 and 2·11n the ACC.
In other games, It was: Bucknell100, Colgate 94; · \;'ermont 77, .
Maine 74; Auburn 93, Mississippi
State 71; James .Madison 87,
William &amp; Mary 65; Kentucky 89, .
Florida 81; N.C. State !15. Boston
University 70; Vanderbilt" 86,
Mississippi 79; Wake Forest 73,
Eut Tennesaee State 6'; Ball
State 85, Eastern Michigan 67;
Central Michigan 92, Western
Michigan 82; Cleveland State 83,
Youngstown State 67; Miami :
(Ohio) 96, Bowling Green 76; ·
Toledo 86, Ohio University 66;
Houston 83, Iowa State· 82;
Oklahoma State 73, New Orleans
61; Rice 74, Texas Tech 71;
Southern Methodist 67, Texas
A&amp;M 54 and Texas 83, TCU 80.

first quarter lea &lt;I and went on to Alexande~ .
By·DAVE ~RIS ·
The Meigs Marauder girls defeat the Spartans. Kelly Sm"lth
In the loss to Federal Hocking
recently split two league contest . led the way lor Meigs with 14 the Lancers.spotled the Maraud·
with Alexander • and · Federal points ud Trlcla Baer added 12. ers- a 12·11 first quarter lead and
H,ocklng. Last Thu,nday • Jilght Other scorers for the maroon and · pulled even at the half at 27, but
Meigs bailded the Lady Spartan• gold wereJennlferTaylorwlth 9, the Marauder ·defense broke
Mlny Nel10n and Shannon New- doWII In the third quarter 'a • the
a loss in the "Pit" In Albany tiy 1
score of 45-~7, and on Monday son\e with 4. each and Kim Lady Lancers oulleored Coach
night the Marauders JOlt to the Hannhll ·had 2. Alexander was Roger Foster's crew "15-8 for a
42·36 le1Jd and go on to gain the
undefeated Federal Hocking led by Tether South with 11.
,
In the reserve conlelt Meigs Victory.
Lancers 57-47. The Marauders
The Marauders had a balanced
record now stands at 9-2. ·
. defeated Alex by a score of 37-27.
In the wtn over Alexander the Verna Compston led Melp with ICOring attacked led once again
Marauders Jumped out to a 12·8 13. Misty Llewellyn had 10 for by Kelly Smith with 17, Jennifer
Taylor added 9; foUowed by
Trlcia Baer, Missy Nelson and
Kim Hanning with leach. Stacie
"G lass took game high scoring
honors with 20, Cbrlslt Tate bad
16, and Mary M~well added 10.
The · little Marauders under
The Daily Sentinel
Coach Kim Adkins raised their
By DAVE RAFFO
to avoid Denver's mile-higl) -record to 11·0 with a 50-24 Victory.
(U8P81tli-HI)
VPI Sltbrll Wrller
altitude.
·' • Verllil Compitlm eontinued her
A 111&gt;- ol
la, ,lac.
Denver Elrimcos Coach , Dan
"One of the things you fl&amp;ht lor red-hot llqlrlDI with 16, Mary'
Publtahed t"Very afternoon, ·Monday
Reeves Wednesday said NFL · very hard In this business II the
Crem- addad 12.
thr~h F'rlday, 111 Court St. , PoCommissioner Paul Tagllabue
homefleld advantage, . Which
meroy, Ohio, by the Ohio Va11ey Pub·
Melp wm travel to Miller on
ll1hlna Company / Multimedia, 1nc.,
has .lessened his team's lrome- means that you do not bne to Thursday night to play the
Pomeroy. Ohio 4~7119. Ph. 992-2156. Sefleld advantage by allowing the" travel," Reeves told repor~rs Falcons.
·
cond class postage paid at Pomeroy,
Cleveland Browns to fly to
befprf the ,Broncos began prepaOhio.
•
Denver on Saturdil)' for the AFC
rations for Sunday's ga111e at
Member : United Press International,
Championhlp Game. . .
Mile lllgh Stadium. "In partlcu·
. Inland Dally Press Asaoctation and the
· Teams are usually required to lar, the cb~plonshlp game,
·
Ohio Newspaper·Assoclallon. National
Advertising Representatlveo, Branham
where you have to travel · O!l
(All G..-)
arrive In the city ol the confer·
Newspaper Salea, 733 Ttltrd Avenue,
Friday.
You
don't
do
that
all
TEAM
,
W.
L
p
·
·
OP
ence ·championship games on
New York. New York 10017 .
' .
season, and It . Is · definitely Mlllet .... &gt;...... , .. ....1 3 682 630
Friday; but the flrst·yelr com·
POSTMAS'I'ER~ Send address changes
·
.
Wellaton ...............6 .3 651 555
m isstoner gave BrOwns owner disruptive."
to The Dally Sentinel, Ill Cour1 St ..
Reeves
Sljld
three
years.
ago,.,
Trlmble
.........
,
..
...
6
3
577.
556
Art Modell perm lsslon to fly his
Pomeroy,
Ohio 4.'1789. •
·
..
when the Broncos traveled to· Alexander' .., .. ,; ....7 4 ,722 682
team In later. . ,
9UUCRIPTION RATB8
Tliere was no such controversy CII!Veland for theAFCchampion· ·FM·Hocklilg ..... ...6 t · 7'SI 701
Byc.rrterorMot«RNie
'One w-...................................$1.40
In the NFC Championship Game, ·ship game, they were unablt to VInton County, ..... J • 406 410
Bel~ ........... .. ..... 3 5 ·570 482
One Month .. ............... .. ..............$6.1Q
rest beca
f
d
B
. becau11e the boJlle field has been fans
One Year: ... :.. .. ... .. .. ................. .. $72:M
.
uar , 0 row Y rowns ·, Neii-York .... .. .... .. 2 7 · 461 704
no advaptage In the season series.
·SINOU: COPV
· between San Franclaco and the · · "They drove around the hotel ' Melp .... ; ... .......... l 6 373 512
PRICE
THHay'1 rellllll&amp;:
Dally .. .... ........... ...... ..... .... ... ~Cents
Los Ang~les Rems. Both cham· honking horns and barked· like
plonshlp games are Sunday, with dogs rall night, so .. we couldn't Alexander 76 NelsonVille· York 52
Subscribers notdestrtng to pay thecarMiller 88 Belpre 76
rl~ may remit -In advance direct to
the winners advancing to Super s(eep " Reeves said . ·
'
. ,
Federal Hocking 84 r,telgs 70
The Dally Sentinel on a 3, 6or Umonth
Bowl ~XIV Jan. 28 in New
basis. Credit wlll be gtven carrier each
He said the u;am also had to Trimble 64 Trimble 59
wrek.
Orleans .
hold team meetings at the hotel · Vinton County - .open
Browns publicist Kevin Byrne · on Satl!rday, and practice at an
NO subscriptions. by matl permUted In
Friday's rames:
areas where home carrier service Ls
said the team asked to arrive latP u~amlliar f~clllty.
VInton County at Alexander
available.
·I think the commls~!oner Is a Nelsonville-York at .Federal
'
•
'
' ' ' •I
Mall SubaCrlpt. . .-;i.;~--" -.'
rookie ·commissioner, Reeves Hocking
. : .. ·.."_ · .. tftslde
Melp Qouniy .' :. ·
said. '.'And Just like . rookie Miller at Meigs '
· · · 13 Weeks ......... .. .. .. .... ... .: ... ;..... . $19.24
26 Weeks ... ........ ........ .. .., ....... .. . $37.96
Collqe
cqaches they try to take advan· Trimble' at Belpre
52 Weoks .... ...... .. ............ .. ...... ... 174.36
tage of, they tried to take Welilton, open •
S~nford has the best athletic
O..hlde Melp Coollly
' program, accordlbg to a poll In advantage ot a rookie com.mla, · · Sll&amp;u'ilay's gp\ee:
13 Weeks ................................. . m .80
2li WeekS ..... .. ........................... 140.JO
the Janhary laiue of Sport· sloner, and he fell lor it." .
Nelsonville-York at Trimble
S2 Weeks ..... .... .......... .... .... ....... $75.40
sTravel ma11az1ne. The criteria . Byrne said Cleveland team
(makeup)
were graduation rates, athletic doctor John Bergfeld belieNe&amp;
Melp at Wellston (makeup)
that players suffer most when·
~rfotmance, lacllltles, total
sports, athletic budget and they arrive In high altitude 2·5
coaches. StanfDnt was followed days before competing.
The Rams are hardly worried
by North Carolina, Notre Dame,"
Harvard, Duke, UCLA, Michl· about travel this week. After
In 1\lesday, Jan. 9th, 1\J.mpike's Ad,
gjin, California, VIrginia and flying to the East Coast the past
Vanderbilt. ... Roy Kramer, three weeks, · playing In San
Mistakenly Inserted The Wrong Picture
Vanderbilt's athletic director, Francisco must seem like a home
was named commlasloner. of the game. Especially since they
For The F-150 XLT Lariat 4x2.
Southeastern Conference. He defeated . the 49ers 13·12 't
suceeed.s Harvey SchUler, who Candlestick Park Oct. 1 alld lost
became executive director o! the 30.27 Dec. 11 at home.
U.S . .OlympiC Committee.
•
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history

·MHS ·girls split pair of cage tilts

Scoreboard ...

r

. , , WASHINGTON (NEA)- Prc&gt;members during the Pittston also dther· coal mining firms.
visional resolutiOn of a rancorous
dispute. The often violent strike "Pittston Is simply trying to
Kentucky went on strike in April
and protracted labor dispute In
produced almost 3;000 arrests by dump Its unfunded employee · 1989.
the coal Industry provides only
the Virginia State Pollee.
liabilities on the rest of the
Three months later, the· retemporary respite for the Appal· . In 1950, UMW President John
industry," said one· angry coal
gional office of the National
achian workers whose Jobs are
L. Lewis negotiated a landmark ~ompany executive.
Labor· Relations Board with
d I r t y , d a n·g e r o u s a n d
Industry-wide contract that rePittston also Insisted upon
jurisdiction over the dispute
debllitating.
quired employers to provide authority to require miners to
ruled that "Pittston's unfair
Notwithstanding the euphoria
CO!llplete health care coverage work nights and Sundays, sought
labor practices" provoked the
surrounding the tentative settle- • not only for active miners but
to strip Jobs from the unlon·s
strike ani:l that the · company
ment ol the United Mine Workers
also for retired and disabled
jurisdiction and attempted·to cut
"failed and refused ... to bargain
i
of America strike against the
workers : and their widows and medical benefits, holidays and
collectively and In good faith."
1 Pittston Coal Co., despair and
orphans.
sick days for active miners.
But that order Is can be
• depression remain hallmarks of
In return, the union allowed the
The miners worked without a
company Is
appealed
:l an occupation notorious· lor Its coal companies to Introduce contract for 14 months while 1101 likely- toandbethe
penalized for
mechanized equipment to in· attempting to bargain to good
high rates otdeathanddlsablllty.
allegedly violating federal labor ...
1, .
Indeed, the high proportion of
crease productivity. As a result, faith with the company. Finally,
laws now that a special mediator
• coal miners who are forced to
the average amount of coal the 1,900 UMW members ern·
designated by the Labor DepartI retire prematurely after con· nilned annually per worker has played at Pittston mines In . ment apparently has settled the
tractlng black lung disease and
grown more than four-fold dur- VIrginia, West. VIrginia and
strike.
other occupational affiletlons
lng the·past 40 years. ·
UMW active membership
I was an important factor In the
labor dls.pute that led to· the
peaked at approximately ~.000
·strike.
In the mld·1940s but today Is
. I nine-month
About 55 miners are killed
below 65,000- and those miners
By United Presl lnlernallonal
'
produce only about one third ot
every year, and another 10,000 to
Today Is Thursday , Jan. 11, the 11th day of 1990 with 354 io follow. :
15,000 are Injured as a result of
the natiOn's coal.
The moon Is lull.
explosions, cavelns and other
When an lndustry·wlde labor
The morning stars are Mercury, Mars and Saturn.
workplace accidents. Another . agreement expired In February
The evening stars are Venus and Jupiter.
4,000 die annually from lung
1988, Pittston moved · aggresThose born orr this date are under the sign of Capricorn. 'I)Iey
dlseases caused by prolonged
slvely' against the · weakened
Include American statesman Alexander Hamilton, first secretary of
Inhalation ol coal dust.
union and Its demoralized
the treasury, In 1757; Ezra Cornell, fouilder ol the Western Union
· Moreover, !lie Industry has few • members, summarUy stripping
lelegraph company and Cornell University, In 1807; Sir John
Incentives to Improve health and . away medical and other benefits
MacDonald, first prime minister of Canada, In 1815; psychologist and
safety conditions for Its em·
miners had struailled to obtain . pbllosopller William James In 1842; feminist lawyer Allee Paulin
ployees. In 1983, for example,
decades earlier. •
11185; and South AfriCan novelist Al!ln Paton ("Cry the Beloved
"Pittston was fined a nominal
PltlltOn cut off health insu·· Country") in 1903.
·
,
"$47 ,50() by the federal governranee held by 1,500 of Its retired
ment'a Mine 8afety and Health
or disabled workers and their
On this date In history:
.
AdmiDiatratlon after a spark
windows. In addition, the com·
In 1785, the Continental Colllfi!Ss convened In New York City.
Ignited a methane gas buDdup.
pany halted Its colltrlbution, the
In 1881, 'Aiabama seceded from the Union.
·
Seven miners were killed In the
company halted Ita contributions
,In 1935, American aviator Amelia Earhart 'Pulnam became the .
explosion.
..to a trust fund that provides
flnt woman.'to Oy across tbe Paclftc from Hawaii to California.
That penalty of less than $7,000
benefits to 130,000 retired miners
In~. Surgeon General Lulher Terry rel~._ed a report laying
a life contrasts with the $63.5 from throughout the lnduatry,
smoldq cigarettes Is a deftnlte "health hazar'd.' '
million In fines Imposed upon the
Plttson's UIIUataral abroeatlon
In 1981, the Supreme Court nlaatatecl 1 $10 million award to the
lJMW fDr alleged unlawful acts of Its commitment angered ·not
family of Oklahoma nuclear worker Karen Silkwood, who died In
committed by Its officers and
only thousands of workers, but
1974.
'
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I

CLEANSBOARD8-N.C.Ma&amp;e'lllrlaDD'Amlco(M)cleantlle
. ballouha a rebound away tram Bo.tendefenderaBIInMou (00),
BID Brigham (112), aad David JUne (11) during fln4llalf action lit
Reyaolcls Coliseum In RaJeiP. The Wolfpaek eleared out BMten
· lor the gune as well, comiDJ away wllll a IJ-'18 wiD. (UPI)

o! service will receive an Initial

Robert Walters

Berry's World

a

Congress gets rich

Pittston chipped · .away at·miner's pay

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shots In the team's flrlt two
Tile RHmall trailed 67""' beVl'lllusa..._
coatereac:e 1amea. He scorwd 17 fore Colemall 18Dk two free
Comilll. ott twDJllb.pm- perfor· ~&amp;llnlt the Redmen, blttill ' ot. tbron and eMe!l a basket off a
mancet, tlle No. 6 Syracuw U from tile DUtllde.
rebolllltl aad the Redman
0r8JIIIIMII nirt llllck to baalet
un (aJ!notl"a) Will come ~ aever claler tllu t po1n taln the
to 111... said Oweaa, ''aad the final •:29.
We111•11Q' allllt.
After" wall:hllllllll team make l'eltrlctlon will be llttecl."
"D.C. Is deflnlt&amp;ly the belt
Juat 2$ percent of tbeir sllotllaJt .
player In the country, aild he
Colemu hit 8 ot 11 •holf from
week In e 93-76 W.. to VlllaDova, the field and dominated proved It tonight , " said
Syncuae Coacb Jim Boebelm under~~eath .
Buchanan.
.
laid aown the law.
\
ElMWhere In the Top Tw~nty,
"He (Coleman) came out toNo more bombiD&amp; from the night, put the t&amp;am on bla back No. l Kanau w~ioped Miami
outalde, PDUJI4 the bAll clown low . · and wutedtolhowtheSyracuse.• (Fla.) ·100.73; No. 5 Missouri
Tbe OraJ111111811 heeded their fana we're still here," Owen• waxed Southem1~; and No.
coach'• advtee ad ted Derrick said of his teammate.
14 doWIIecl Baylor 99-81.
Coleman, wbo · re~JII)IIdecl by
''I think tilat we can do a better
In lither action; Maryland
tylq a c-.blp)l'lth 21 points Job offensively ,'I said Boehetm,
silenced North Caronna 98-88 and
,and addlq 17 ~ tllr the "but after what we liad the 'las\ · Nor.tll Carolina State routed
OranpmaD ID aa 11·72 'triumph two · games you have to :114! Bolton·U; 95·70. ,
over No. i5 St. Jolla"'a.
happy."
·
At Miami, Fla., Rick Calloway
'"'l'he 3-poiDt IIDe hal vanllhed
Boehetm expects Coleman,
led III!Yen Jaybawks In double
,from the Syncule ll'tl!llal until who will be one of the first fi(lum with 16 points and topwe're clown about' poiDtl With 10 player's selected by · the NBA ruked KaniU rolled over the
· after the season, to look to score . HurriCanes. Kansas, which lm·
seconds left," Boebelm Aiel. .
·
Syral;!llse, whlell relpi!d as the more oftel).
proved to 17.0, dropped an 87·86
"He's got to do what be did upset to Miami last year. The
nation's top t&amp;am for six stralibt
tonight. he bas got to look for his HurriCanes dropped to 4-6. CaiJo.
wee~~&amp; before )Qalq to VIllanova,
made 56 percent of their 1hot1, offense," .n ld Boehelm. ''He's way scored six of his 17 points
without attempting a •Ingle sbQt got' to look for his shot · little during ·a l7-2 spurt early Iii the
more for us to be effective."
from 3-polilt' laDd.
•
second half which extended Kan''We were relying too mucb on
sas' lead to 86-41. Kevin Prlt·
the 3-point shot, so much It waa
Stephen Thompson added 20 chard bad U points and Jeff
· burti111 us," Aid Owe111. ''We're pc)lnts for Syracuse, 11-1 overall Gueldner added 13 tor the Jay·
hawk•. JOe Wylie topped Miami
· ·
.not a good 3-point lbootlng team. and 2·lln the Big East.
We're more run·and·IJUn," be
Malik Sealy, Jason Bucbiinan . With 20.po1Dtl.
.
At Colwnbla, Mo., Doug Smith
. said.
and Boo Harvey eacb ICltll'l!4 13
Owens Should know. The aopho- , · polnta, and Jason Wllllama scored :U pol!lll and Nathan
more had been !he coldest of the · added 12 polntl and 10 reboundl Buntin added 2I to lead the
Orangeman, 'makinljust 5 Of 35 for St. John' I, 13-3, 2-1.

Jack Anderson pnd Dale VanAtta

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publis her ·
Assistant Publisher/ Controner

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Syracuse retums to basics in 81-72 win

Page 2-'The Dilly Sullilwl
Mlcldhp lilt. Olllo
1hurlcley, ~ 11, 1110

WASHINGTON - Frank .LoTexas Air, and a slater alriiDe,
renzo Is one of , the people
Continental. Hla cr!tiCI charge
Americans love to bate,in a class
that he stripped East&amp;rn of Its major Amerlcen corporation
with Leona Helms ley and Morton
asseti after he bought It 1n 1986 without lining up support in
Downey Jr. ·Heav.e n knows, the
and then funneled money to build C9ngress. Political actiOn com:
president o.f Eastern Airlines has
up the non-Ulllon Continental as
mlttees representing Lorenzo's
tried his best to mak!! friends,
his pet alriiDe.
companies gave at least $147,000
and when that doesn't work, to
Last March, Eastern filed for In campaign contributions to
buy friends .
protection from creditors In
members of Congress last year,
· While flying Eastern Airlines
federal bankruptcy court, five · and more than twice that amount
into bankruptcy · court, Loren~o days after the airline's mac hi- In 1987 and 1988. Lorenzo also
threw plenty of . money out the
nlsts, pilots and flight attendants gave $100,000 to the _Rep1,1bllcan
window and much of It landed In
went on strike. The pilots and Party - money that belped~o put
the campaign chests of members flight attendants came back Iii GeQrge Bush In the White House.
of Congress are. still trying to pull November, but Lorenzo had
Lorenzo bas even tried to
the reins on his management · ·alreadystuffedEasternwltbnew bestow his largess · ori state
style, and Lorenzc&gt;-bashlng is
hires and unlc&gt;n defectors, Ieav- lawmakers. But he Is meeting
lasblonable on Capitol Hill.
lng few jobs open for the naughty re.s lstance.
f!
Lorenzo's kl!lgdom Includes strikers,
When Lorenzo sent a fancy
Eastern's parent company,
'One doesa' t tamper ·with a . Tiffany's · pa~~e~"Well!bt to New ·

- r:s:m~ ...,_,._..,...,~c::~ .=.

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;·LorenZo's.money can't buy him love

Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERDTS OF THE MEIGS.MASON AREA

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S'fOCI(

NO. 112

•XLT Llriol Trim
""'- Lft llnL Ill,_,
-llngPIIfl.
. . . . . . . and lnlul8tlan Pkg.
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Puen•ur· Mlffapotl. Ohio.

4 The Deily.Seatiuet

If Pirates can beat Eaglest

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naat•r. ...._., 11. 1110
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senior, shouldn't have much
trouble pushing Mike Frost, the
Eagles' 64 senior postman,
wherever he needs him to · be,
which Is anywhere away from
the Iron. But because the Eagles
can dO more than just get the ball
to Frost, Hammel is undoubtedly
gratefUl that the rest of the
starting cast - forward Shane
Smith, guard/forwards Darin
Smith and Brian Sto{lt, and point
guard Chris Tackett -,- stand no
shorter than S.O and are strong
enough to take positions Inside;
grab rebounds and close ott tbe
driving Janes that Eastern
guards Shaun Savoy and Kenny
Caldwt;!IJ and forward Scott Fitch
relish putting to use for scoring a
substantial . portion of their
points.
The Eagles run the ball more
often than not, but because their
players don't possess lhe fast·
break speed of teams such as.
Southern or Southwestern, they
are likely to settle Into a · ·
halfcourt offense upon passing
the mldcourt stripe and find a
seam In their opponents' de-

fensse'before the opposition gets P.ffiODal season-high 16 points,
time tp set up.
three beblnd team scoring.leader
,
The Eagles Deed to get the Hayes.
Pirates, espec!lally Hamniel,
· The Norsemen, who racked up
Stout and Tackett in foul trouble : a 35-polnt win over Ohio Valley
·early (read: three fouls "n each ChrlstlaJ! Tuesday night after
In the first halt) while spreading dropping their previous thJ'ee
out the Bucs' defense by connect- games, .must face a Hannan
lng tor three-pouters. In the last Trace team with a Craig Rankin ·
that has ripped the net for double .
three games. Eastern has con·
nected for nine such shots, which ·figures In the Wlldcilta' last five
games. If that weren't enough,
Is consistent with Its season
average of three per game.
they must play .a Wildcat squad .
Vllilnp-Wildell&amp;e
with an Eric Lloyd primed to
Hannan Trace must put the explode offensively after scoring
clamps on Symmes Valley point four points In the Wildcats' 7H9
guard Paul Hayes.
·
win over Southwestern · last
Hayes, a 5·8 senior, has only · Saturday.
.
Symmes Valley can be dangerbeen held to single ~lglts once
this season, and that was In the ous (ask some of the current
Wildcats, who Were snakebltten
Vl.k es' 67-56 win over Kyger
Creek, when he scored five. Since by these :lame Vlkes In last
then, he has racked up double year's Chesapeake sectlonals) ,
figures .In the Valley's last four bil t the Wildcats have the defense
contests.
and the other tools necesQcy to
send Valley to Its fourth losslnlts
In addition to Hayes, fellow
guard Shawn Mootz and forward
last five James.
Chad Renfroe, the Wildcats can't
IDihJ1111den-Qakl
afford to take senior forward ·
Heading Into this game,
Danny Justice lightly. Against Southwestern needs to reOVCS, the 5-11 Justice scored a , member three things: by committing -a season-low 12. turnovers (1) , Oak Hill beat Kyger

Mldd'aport. OHo

96-76 for third straight win .

downs Bowling G

North ·Gallia wiU stay .in the thick of .SVAC title··race
By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
• O.VP staff Writer
· Mlndlul of their 73·68· toss to·
Eastern on Nov, 28 at Tuppers
Plains, payback· Is foremost on
the minds of the North Gallla
· Pirates, who will host the Eagles
Friday night In a contest that
could rttake or break the Bucs'
chances for the svAC IItle.
" I can't get that loss oul of my
head," said North Gallla skipper
Tom Riccardi, whose troops are
7·3 oVerall and are third In the
conference wlt.h a 6·2 mark. He
and his sailors must control the
paint, stall the Eagles' transition
attack · and play turnover·
oriented defense that will Ignite.
their own fast-break offense,
. Which !(,SUCCeSSfUl WIJl give the
Eagles their first le,gue loss of
the season and put the third·
place Pirates a few percentage
p6ints closer to second·place
Eastern and front·runner South·
ern, who should continue to hold
the' top spot after Friday night's
·game against Kyger Creek. ·
· North's D.J. Hammel, a 6·5
cienter and the Pirates' only

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cl01er tban nine pointa the mtot
Wbell you're bot. you're hot the way.
and Miamt'a Redsklnl definitely
"In the lecond half, we did a
are bot.
very good job of &amp;'ettlll&amp;' In !he
FIOIIIIderiD&amp;' aloag with a fl~ ­ pullq 18111!1,.. said Pelnon.
aame las1D1 streak just over a "(BG polntguardCIIDton) Vena·
week aao. the ftedstlnl have· ble did not &amp;'el .Into any kind of
bolted out of tbe Mld-Amertc-" rhythm lllld tbat was a key for
Conf~ce starting blocks with
us.••
three stralpt wlnl.
Pelnon alngled out sopho!'llore
The tasteat Cl!ftle Wednesday guard llerek Walton for keep
n._.,J at Bowling Gl'l!en, when the Venable oft-balance.
]lldlklns shOt 72 pereent In the
· "When· you play Bowling
secolld halt en route to a 96-76 Green, you bave to key on
plucking of the Falcons. It gave Venable and Derek did a fantai·
Miami a 3-0 MAC record and a tic job of It," added Peirson,
shate of tint place with preseaTim Stewart led .Miami In
son favorite Ball State.
scoring with 33polnts,lncludlng5
'.' It was a iOod win," under- of 8 trorri three-point range. Jim
stated Miami coach Jerry Peir- Pli\11, The Sedsktns' 6-10 junior
son. "We've 110t two ·road wins center, added 19 points and 12
now and that's verY Important In rebounds.
tbe early part of teaaue play."
"I felt It was.Important that we
Miami trailed 41-39 after a flnt
play well detenllvely and the
half which saw 15 lea4 changes.
first half we did," said BG COI\Ch
But a 13-0 run gave the Redstlns Jim Larranaga. •'In the second
a 59-49 lead and BG iiever got half, we made some critical

not put the ball on the floor, or be
Creek 14-511 Tullday llllbt for Ill
II!COIIfl wtn ar the •uoa (2), and wtll bav. to deal with the
the Oakl will be pllyiiiJ at borne Highlanders' pe1ky delltl•,
(3). 'J'boee tblllp ibollld make · wblcb abouJtl make a comeback
the HlaiJ!aD4er• forpt !bat !bey after SW'1 leVMI-pDiilt loll to
·
beat tbe Oakl by IeVen in their Hannan Tuetclay Dflbt.
Initial meeting.
~llcat•Ton.. II
Kyjer Creek dropped Its lith
, Amatchup ibat lllould provide •tralpt co!lflireoce tame wbell
they la.t to' .oak . am Tuelday
the fana with 8D bbibltion of
shootlni lkWfouad
else night, and there Is ·utile doubt ·
In 'the coaterence Ia the one tbat · at ~· Charlll· W. ·
Hayman Gymaaaium Frt~
between ICOtiD&amp;' ai:el. John Eh·
man (Soulb-lerl)) and Silane nlibt, Southern wtll setid
Maynard (Oak Hill). ~nt Bobcat• to No. 17.
fi&amp;'Uret allow Ehman, Who QWIIlla
24.5 . polnts·per·same averl&amp;'e. ' Southern boll Howle Caldwell
with a Jeague-IHcltbt 261 points,
will probably tell hia playen tllat
73 ahead , of Maynard, who Is
the KC game Is nota preparatory
second In total polntl but leads scrimmage for Sat:ur4ay ntpt's
the SVAC In thJ'et;.polnters with
home game With arehrlv•l East·
35, seven more than Ebman.
ern, crlttCalu the lat11er iame ... '
Both have coiiJiected for at least' butbellillkel)o!toptayhisstarters,
one three-pointer rn each of their
just long enough to keep them In
team's gamea thll seuon (Eh·
rhythm and establish a lead his
man 11, Maynard 10).
reserves won't blow, As many of
. Tbe Oakl may have the edge
tllemerveshavegrownuplnthe
here, as 64 pivot Chad Smith has . Caldwell system, they're likely
the height and the muscle to
to keep the 'B obcat• at baY toil&amp;'
aslll!rt himself In tile paint
enough to score a 10!11e points for
against !1-2 }l9Biman . Chris
themselves and extend the BobMet:qfer or 6-1 center/forward
cats' lease on the balemenl for
John Sites, but Smith had better
yet another Kame.

_..ere

the

errora by tambllq. It opeiled up
their jump lhota for them. Once
they rot It roUtq, we coulda't
cblmge it."
.
·
In other MAC prlletl Wednea· ·
day nllht, ,...... nled "er
Olllo. u......, ....., Ball State
whipped Euter:l Mlc:bllan 85-67
and Central: Mlchlian downed
Western Mlc;blpn 92-82.
At Toledo, CralgSuttera scored
· 22 polnta IIIII IJ'Ibbed 13 rebounds to pace bot·shooUng
. Toledo to Its wJn over Ohio
University.
·
The RoCkets zoomed out to a
22-6 lead and were on top 42-27 at
the end of a first balf In which
. they shot 76 percent lrorn the
field, making 19 of 25 lhots.
OU cut the Toledo lea4 to 47-38
with 16: 20 to play. bUt the
Rockets aJowly rebuilt their
margin to 116-63 with 32 seconds

Todd Lark ~eored j8 points and nl&amp;'ht's action tied with the
Tim Jackson added 17 polntsand Muskles, both l011t B·W dropped
an 84.S2 overtime dectalon 111 ·
.17 rebo~U~dl tor the Penguins.
Mount Union and Otterbein lost
~~Dayton, Marcus Mumphrey
scol:ed 22 points to help Wright at Hiram, 83-76 . .
In other OAC contests, Ohio.
State to a ~72 win over Chicago
Northern downed John Carroll ·
State.
Tbe Raiders, trailing 28·161ate · 83·58 and }leldeiWrg edged Capi·
In the first half, went ana 264run tal 59-58.
1n the North Coast .Athletic
to take 11 42·32 lead and were up
eonterence,
Wittenberg won Its
44-38 at the Intermission.
14th
game
without
a .Joss with a
Wright State then opened the
77-57
rout
of
Denlsoll.
In oth,er
second halfwlth a 2S4 run to take
games,
Wooster
beat
Oberlin
a 68-46.1ead with 13 minutes left.
66-53,
1\llegheny
(Pa.)
outscored
Bill Edwards added 19 and
Sean Hammonds 18 for Wrlglit Case Reserve 109·91 and Kenyon
State. Gerald Collins topped beat Earlham (Ind) 68-45.
Ro ud lng o .u t Wednesday
.
Chicago State with 20.
Iii the Ohio Athletic Confer· night's Ohio college schedule, It
ence, MlllkiiiiWII regained 10Je· was Akron over Wlsconsln·Greeh
peerenlon .o f ftm place with a Bay 66-52, Tiffin over Shawnee
71·•• wla over Marietta. . State 74-59, Walsh over Urbana
Baldwin-Wallace and Otterbein, 74-72 and Defiance over Wllmlng·
who had gone Into Wednesday ton 73-67.

malnlng.
,.
·
aledo lbot59percent(29ofG) ·
to percent for the Bobcata (30
of
and the Rockets aiiO had a
big edge at the free throw line,
making 22 of 25 to only 3 of 5 tor
OU. .
·
Dave Jamerson led OU wllb 18
points, but that waa nearly 15
below· lila MAC-leading mark of ·
32.8 per game. He lilt 8 of 23 from
the field, lncludlll&amp;' 2 of 8 from
three-pol!lt range.
Cleveland State uaed a ~
first-halt acortng' run to beat
Youngstown State 83-67. The
VIkings trailed 20-U with 10:41
remaining In the first half when
the run beian and tliey ltd M'20
when It ended at the 5: OS"mark.Youngstown State nevj!l' lhrea·
tened again.'
Btian Parker led four Vlklnga
In double figures with 17 points.

Barkley's late jumper·· gives
Philadelphia 113-111 triumph
.

'

1990 LEBARON CPE.

'

''I wanted to make sure we got
· seored 10 of hili 18 Points In the
By·JOE CIALINI
fourth quarter before bruising the last shot, " said Barkley,'who
UPI Sporls Writer
Phlladelph!&lt;l' s :nuch-mallgned both his knees In a coUislon with was 9-Qf·10 from the field and also
bench made It possll;le for Mark Jackson. "I disagree with grabbed 12 rebounds. "He went
for the steal, I reversed and got
Charles Barkley to hit the game- II.
the shot oft. We were very lucky
"It's
tough
to
deal
with
It
and
winning shot·
It
went ln."
the
only
way
to
deal
with
It
Is
to
Barkley scored 24 points and
Jackson.
who had
seasonplay
better
and
play
harder
and
sank a lHoot jumper with 2. 7
high
33
points,
missed
a
threeseconds to play Wednesday night prove you belong. The guys on
point
sbot
with
less
·than
one
to.give the 76ers a 113:111 victory the bench have pride."
second
to
play
and
.
Gerald
.The 76ers went ahead by 15
,, over the New York Knlcks.
But that shot would not have points twice In the second quar· Wilkins' tap was wide as lime
·
been meaningful without the ter but the Knlcks fought back expired.
contrlbu lions of Ron Anderson, and used a 9·2 run to tie the score · Jackson's three-point play cut
Derek Smith and Corey Gaines at 111-111 on a three-point basket the Philadelphia lead to 109·108 ,
by Jackson with 15.4 seconds to with 37.4 seconds left In the game •
off the Philadelphia bench.
but Barkley canned two from the
'
'rhe 76ers' reserves, who have play.
line for a 11H08 advantage with
away
frOm
But
Barkley
spun
heard critics blame them tor ihe
22.4,seccinds
to go·.
team's woes, · outscored ihelr defender Charles Oakley and hit
Anderson
scored
21 points and
a shot k .om just Inside the foul
New York counterparts 43·19.
Hersey
Hawkins
and
Rick Ma·
''The bench Is being blamed for line to give Philadelphia Its 12th
a lot of problems with the team. win In U home games and hand horn had 18 , each .tor the 76ers,
especially 'Oft the (recent 2·5) . New York only Its third Joss In Its who closed within five games of
the flrst·place Kntcks In the
.road trip," said Smith, who last 15 games .
Atlantic Division.
· Charles Oakley added 18 for
'
'
the Knlcks and Patrick Ewing
had 15, below his averag!! of 28,5,,
points per game.
''We have no excuses.'' Jack·
son said. "Phllly just outplayed
us."
ByDAVE~FFO
Interested In staging the fight In
In other games, Indiana
UPI Sporls Writer
Tokyo.
NEW YORK (UPI) - Mike
Donald Trump has rlghtottlrst whipped Chl,c ago 120-113, ,Mil·
Tyson hiJ agreed to defend his refusal, butw!Uprobablyhaveto waukee clubbed Cleveland 11&amp;. ·
heavyweight championship put up more than the record Sll 100, Boston top!Jed Detroit 104-97,
against top-ranked contender million be paid for the Tyson- the Los Angeles Clippers turned
Evander Holyfield June 18 for a
Michael Spinks bout In June of back Atlanta 115-109, Utah
crushed Denver 130-99, Golden •
payday of about $22 mUllan, 1987.
ALL TANGLED UP- Detroit's Bill Lalmbeer wbUe plq for a ~ ball duilnc first quarter
Holyfleld'~, prpmoter said:
"We've had preliminary talks State held oft Dallas 123-119 and
(R.) cets tangled up with Boston's Beegle Lewts action II&amp; tbe Boston Gardea Wednesday. (UPI)
· Dan Duva, who has promoted and we're definitely Interested," , the Los Angeles La!cers dumped
all of Holyfield's 23 profe$slonal said Trump Plaza President Or lando 121-106.
Pacen 120, BaUs 113
bouts, said h'e reached agree- Jack O'Donnell. "Talks are very
At Indianapolis, Reggie Miller ·
. ment with Tyson's promoter Don active."
King Wednesday night after a
Tyson Is 37-0wlth33knockouts. scored 44 points, a career,high
at
Las
Vegas,
· six-hour meeting
Holyfield Is 23-0 with 19 for the third-year guard, and ·
Indiana snapped a five-game
Nev.
knockouts.
losing
streak. Michael Jordan
"It's the best tight out tltere,"
After his knockout victory over
Duva said. ' 'It's the biggest tight Michael Dokes last March made ~ored 35 points to lead Chicago.
In history."
him the most attractive chal· Person scored 17 and Rlk Smits
By JEFF SHAIN
down a little bit. The more time
Devils .6, ·PenJillins 3
Duva said Tyson will receive . Ienger to Tyson, Holyfield pro- added 16 for the Pacers.
UPI Sports Writer
,
Bueks na;·cavallers 100
At East Rutherford, N.J:, John two- thirds ,of the purse and posed a winner-take-all m·a tcb
I'm In there the m9re confidence
·The New York Rangers, who I get."
MacLean scored a short-handed Holyfield one-third, although the against the champion. As It turns
At Richfield, Ohio, Ricky
·The Blackhawks.s now are 3.().2
vaulted straight to the top of the
goal at 11: 57 of the second period challenger bas been guaranteed out, even the loser Will make a Pierce scored 31 points and Alvin
Patrick Division standings at the In their last five matches.
that turned out to be the game- . In excess of Sll mUllon. Promo- bundle.
·
Robertson added 23, el&amp;'bt In a
beginning of the season, now are
"Richl'er played ·well tonight.
23-8
Milwaukee run to start the
winner. for the Devils. New ters project the fighters will
"Both guys are going to take a
on the verge of dropping Into the He made some big saves," said
Jersey remained atop the Pa· share between $35 mutton and $40 . lot," Duva said.
second halt, to lead the Bucks to
basement.
Chicago's Doug Wilson, who
trick Division and broke a mUllon from site tee, closed
their fourth sn-alpt wtn.
. The Rangers, who have won
returned to the lineup after
three-game Pittsburgh winning circuit, pay-per-view, · foreign
only once In their last 16 games, missing five. games with an
streak. The Devils are 10-&amp;.3 television . righ!s, sponsorship
managed a 2-2 tie Wednesday
Injury.
against Patrick Division and other Income. ·
night against the Chicago BlackBECOM~
Each team scored once In the opponents.
"It will be easy to do $35
hawks on Brian Leetch's goal
first period. Patrick notched his
''•
Jets 8, tapltals 1 .
mUUon," Duva said. "We should
with 7:45 remaining.
lOth goal on a 45-foot shot at 15: 33
At Winnipeg, Manitoba, Dave have that much in about a month,
Coupled with the New York with New York on a power play.
McLiwaln scored his league· before any tickets are sold."
CIIISI ~VINGS UP TO S60o
Islanders' victory over Toronto,
leading fifth short·handed goal · Duva said King sll(lled the
Seltcttll httl-lnduclng Air
the Rangers and Islanders a~e
The Blackhawks tied the game and Dale Hawerchuk added a contract on behalf of Tyson and
tied for last place In the Patrick at 18: 45 when Steve Larmer goal and two assists ~o pace the
Holyfield and hll managtr Ken
IAHAIIAS
Division with 40 points. The skated out of the corner to the Jets. The victory stretched WinF..- 5309 from (inci.atilnd. air, CICCOIIIIII. .tions,
Sanders are. expec;ted to sign
Rangers ar~ In the inlds t of a
right circle and beat Richter with nipeg's home unbeaten streak to within a few days. The ap-eetr-hn _. IIIUdt morel
1-li-4 tailspin that has. precipi- a 20-foot tllp shot to his short aide.
six games. The loss was the sixth men.t Wednesday capped three
tated their fall from the top to the
straight far the Injury-riddled weeks of negot1atlou by K1Dt
EUIOI'E •DDU .151 VACATIONS*
Chicago scored the only goal of
bottom.
Capitals.
Sawe
..
te
Ill" ...--Special air f - from 1670
the second · period when Steve
and Duva' s · partner Shelly
. They would have taken sole Thomas sent a 15·foot pass
Whalers 3, Can~k,s 1
Finkel.
*HAWAII* .
· possession of the cellar had It not . towards Adam .Creighton In the
At Vancouver, British ColumTrump Plaza Hotel and Casino
Son
up
to
s
SO
.
.
per1011-Aik
lilout our lpiCial air tarts
been for Leetch's late heroics, goalmouth. Cretghton did not bia, Dave Babych assisted on In AtlantiC City, N.J., Is .the
Leetch took a pass !rom Troy touch the puck, but a distracted first-period goals bY Randy Cun· leading coatender to land tbe
* ·AUmAUA * NEW ZEALAND *
Mallette In the high slot and beat Richter allowed the puck to slide neyworth and Scott Young to help fight. Caesars Palace and · tbe
TAIIII • Fl.l
goaltender Alain Chevrier to his under him for Thomas' 18th goal.
the Whalers snap a flve·game Mlra&amp;'e Hotel and Casino .In Las
SaYt.,
to
$7·5
Ill"
per•••-Aik
...,.our aptcial air ·tarts
stick side for his eighth goal of
winless strealt. The loss was the Vepa, Nev., are the other likely
"We·dtdn'tflnd a way to finish
tbe season,
the ,game,", Chicaio'~ Den~ fourth · In five games for the slfea. A &amp;'I'OIIP tram Japan, where
AUSIA
. ' "I was happy my shot wen !In," Savard said. "We 'played well,
Canucks.
SaY• .. to $710 per couple
Tyson will defend bll title agalnlt
said Leetch, who received extra but not well enough to win. We
Busler Douglu Feb. 11, Is also
STUDIIITSI Jave 10._, 01J Airline Tkkets
playing time because of Injuries dominated the &amp;'&amp;me, but didn't'
to Ron Greschner and James · score on our power play. You
011'315: Scm ~~ .. '&amp;,Ill" I Tickets
Patrick. "Because of the lnjurtes can't do that and win. "•
'·
'
to Greschner and Patrick I was
W
liCOIIII ,.,_ with yw lit .the ..Cftllt iC
Elsewbere In the NHL Wednes·
ttred, playing with just four day night, the Is~ndera topped ,
lSI AIOUT SPIOAL All PAllS S1AitiNG At
· clerensemen."
Toronto 3-1, New Jersey doubled
,
*131 IOUND IIIP
·~Patrick was forced to leave the
up Plttsbur&amp;h &amp;.3, Wlnnlpea _
4~PIPSI"S, U 01.
· · ~ with a concussion, while routed Walllngton 6-1 and Hart·
Call for D~lla Today and Let
Get
Oteechner suffered a sprained ford beat Vancouver H.
~....,..:.You Oolno Places!
.-·
lift lalee In the flrat period and ·

a

Daytona

Air Cond ., Auto. Trans., Cassetta, Cruiee, Tilt

IN DEEP TROUGBT - 0e¥elud BI'OWiia .181'111rbadl Berate
Ko1181', mttac on a bloeklllf du1111117, ap~ to be In jleep tlloqht

,

*

*

suo

..

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

* -·* •

flOW AT DOMINO'S PIZZA

16 INCH DEWIE PillA · ·

d~ !lilt mma.

llhnt .............. .

Roekle IOallender Mike Rich-

ter turned ulde 38 ,shots to help
kpep the Rangers within strlklni
dJifaDC!e,
.
"Golq Into the &amp;'&amp;me I felt
wone than In St. Loult (in his
flnt game after being called up
tram Flint)," he said. "I settled

At Toroato, NHL IOai·ICOI'Inl
leader Pat LIFon tal.. scored
twice to lea4 the lltandera.
LaFontaine'• goaJa save him a
league Jeacllng 38 u the Itlandera
atretcbld their winning atreak' to
tour games and halted the Maple
Leala' four-game streak.

,IMIIYAIIA
S99'
. Domino's Pizza
,

.I

wm011

u,

',

,....,; .•.

"1·1114 .

•417 1m•• ln. 1 lluls, 011.
. (6i4) ......... 1·100-172·2192
NEW HOURS:

Mon.-Fri. 8:30·6: Sat. 9·1
·'

1990 OMNI· 4 DR.

1990 SUNDANCE 3 DOOR

'
.
• •• ___,...,.=;;;..__-..;;......;..._ _
Reeves
(Contlnlled Frona Pace 3)

·''We haven't tared as well . Angelea secot\dary'anq will only
. down here," Rams Coach John be used In an emergency.
RObinson said from Anaheim,
"He's selilni real , estate,"
Calif., Wednesday. "I don't have Robinson said of Johnson. "*Je
any particular reasonc I grew up _ has an open house scheduled tor
about five minutes from Candles· Sunday, It he can get out ilf that
he'll play tor us,"
'
tick, maybe that's the re8191'. ...
The Rams only problem lftliht
The 49ers hope to have nose
be the Weather. Rain is forecast tackle Michael Carter back from
for San Francisco, meaning Los a foot lnjur;. Carter has not
Angeles will probably not prac- played since Oct. 29. A decision
tlce Saturday as scheduled.
will be made after Carter tries
The Rams activated 3J.year· practicing Friday.
old defensive back Johnnie John·
"It (Carter's return) give us
son and placed linebacker Paul 81\other tool," .San Francisco
Butcher on Injured re~rve .wlth Coach George Selfertsald. "He's
a groin Injury. Johnson, who a guy whose.. explosive In the
retired last .season, was signed ml(ldle of the line."
because of ·Injuries to the Los ·

Islanders tied for
basement with tie, victory

*

$12,995

',

~angers,

*

$10,375
·81 he chats wl&amp;h BI'OWIIII' owuer Art Mldell loUowt•l practice
Wn-day. Tbe Browu will play the Bro- II&amp; De•wr SaiMIIQ'
for the AFC ebamplollllliJ ~le. (UPI)
·

T-yson,' Holyfield to rtght
on June 18 for ·s22 millio~

YOUR VACATION HAS JUST
MORE AFFORDABLE THAN EYER!

V-6, Auto. Trans., Air,'Cruise, Tilt, Cassette

·Cleveland ·Browns notebook...

....

BEREA, Ohio (UPI) - Punt Steelers winning the first two and
the Raiders winning the third.
returner Gerald McNeil prom·
Each .time the winner went on to
!sed In December that he would
defeat their opponent from the
return a punt for a touchdown
NFC.
. .
before the end of the season. At
Denver, which beat Cleveland
the time, It was asaumed he was
In the · 1986 and 1987 AFC
tallilng about the regular season,
Championship
games, bas yet ~
· but the "Ice Cube" has extended
win
a
Super
Bowlin
three tries,
his deadline for as long as. the
Browns stay In the playoffs.
BEREA, Ohio (UPI) -Bernie
He liked his chances going Into
the Buffalo game; noting that he Kosar will tie Otto Graham's
record for playoff appearancetl
had · retumed a kick for a
toui:hdown against the Bills In by a Cleveland quarterback
198'1 that was called back !)e. when he plays Sunday In Denver.
cau'se of a penalty. The Bills, Graham, who led the Browns to
three ~FL championships, aphowever, did not punt very often
peJred In seven games, compilIn the 34·30 Cleveland win, and
McNeil was held to one putit Ing a H record, while Kosar Is 3-3
with the Browns. Kosar .mlsled
return for zero yards.
Asked If he could bust one loose last season's playllff · ton to
tor a touchdown against the Houston becaulll! of an Injury.
Clay Matthews·, Ozzte NewBroncos, McNeil said: "Hell yes.
some
and Cody Rlllen, meanI said through the season, right,
.
while,
will be appearing In their
Including through the Super
Bowl. I guess I have to expla.tn to lOth playoff game with the
everyone tile season Isn't over · Browns, tying them with gua,rd
Gene Hickerson for the secotid·
)'@t. H
most playoff appearances In
BEREA. Ohio • !UPI) - · The team history. The man who bas
Browns went through a normal appeared In the most Cleveland
practlce.sesalon Tuesday, ending playoff games Is Lou Groza, who
jUst before rain showera fell on played IIJ 12. .
the field at Baldwin-Wallace
College. All of the~ Injured
Browns practiced Tuesday, and
coach Bud Carson said the club Is
In aon11 physical sha~ heading
The NFL Metllap••votfl were foJ.
Into Sund~'a AFC Champion.
hlp arne at Denver
lowed about as eJCMiy u tile
•
I
• ,
, Romulallrevohalloll, aeeordlli
~llbac:k Kevin Mack (elbow
to a IIIIWY by the Gallup
and knee), cornerback TOny · . Orpnllatloll for the TIIMIBiaylock (neck). and quarter· Mirror Co. '11le poD al10 d! ::ad
back Bernie Kolllll' (fingers) are that tor Ama'lelill&amp; belw can II
the playen tbat mast coneem iuld 30 yaani old, the NI'L
Carson.
pJayoffl ranked abead af all
ltrlilli, .a.ctptltlr PM•ma, II
BEREA, Oblo (UPI) - Sun· Dlealnbar.
day'a same between Den\11!1' md .
Cltveland marks only the aeeolld
Bdtaln'l
IJopea to
time that two teama have met
raJae funds to belp reatore tile
tbfte timelln conterince cham· game in Romania. Two fonner
plr•tp
PlttlllllrP 8Jid claptaJ• of the Romudu aa08lland
three con neuUve tlonal team were killed Ill Jut
yeva frCIII J.9'N..76, wttb ~ mOIIth'a revolution.

Spor.. briefs

=-·

Auto. Trans., Air Cond., Tilt Wheel, Defroster

$6250

•$9400

··~.

'

1990 Dakota Pickup
'

'

Tax &amp;
Title Not

Included.
7-Pauenger, Air Cond., AM/FM, Auto. Trans.

V-8 Enghte, Auto. Trans., Power S.t eerlng,
Power Brakes. AM-FM

5.1 3,400

·

$1 0,300·
.19t0 AcClaim 4 Door

ort Truck

c

AM/FM/Ca...tte, Power Lock11. Po~er

, V-6, Auto. Trans., RWL
Tires

Windows, Crui.a. Tilt

S11,80G

$11,095

Monday, Wednesday end Friday Open 'Til 7:00; Tuesday &amp; Thursday «;)pen 'Til 6·:30 P.M.
I

Sat.~rday

Optn 'Til 4:00' P.M.: Cloled Sunday

.:4'tatoa

,. .,
I

1990 Voyager

DEAUR
RnAINS
REBATES

..

. :,

'

_,

.

�I

.
P 11 8 The IWy Saltiuel

Edtvards.
••
.

I

Continued from page 1 .

!IIese weeks workers at the
community action agency were
lwldllni the HEAP applications
which made It' difficult for those
who volunteer to drive the clients
for treatment to do so.
; Mike Swisher, director of the
.Meip County Department ol
Human Services, stated · that a
voucher servlcewas'madeavallable In mid-December. This
voucher system makes It posslble for clients to be transP9rted
for treatment when community
action workers are unable to
provide the service. The voucher
system works py clients telling
the Meigs County Department of .
Human Services how much It
would cost them to travel to
recleve their treatment. Accord·
jng to Swisher, a voucher will
then be Issued with an area gas
stalion where a client, or their
driver. can purchasethegasollne
to transwr t the client for
treatment.
.
· Edwards noted that iunds for
ihe transportation service have
been cut. but yet at the same time

I

j ·

I

the demand for the service has
gone up. He went on to say that
volunteerdrlversareneededand
that their mileage could be
reimbursed.
·
In other matters, the commisstoners approved the 1990 !orce
account .resolution or Meigs
County Engineer Phil RobertS .
The resalulion statw . that Ro·
bert's work shall consist of
general, butnecessary,construclion, reconstruction, Improvement, malntalnance, and repair
of roads, bridges, and culverts at
various locations and times dur·
ing the year 1990, and that work
will be directed and enacted by
Roberts.
·
Dan Gilbert, a health lnsu·
ranee administrator lor Klals
and Company, was on hand to
discuss the county workers lnsuranee plan. New cards · will be
handed out to employees on Jan.
17. The cards are to' be filled out
and picked up by· Jan. 19 or the
following Monday. and the lnsuranee policy will take effect Feb.
1.

No jackpot ~nner

.Stocks

.

'

•
~
In~.onna
1Ion

.

·...,J.,.

sou~.t

An appeal · to the public for
Information on the person or
persons 5eettlng hay bale fires In
the coun!)' has been Issued by
Meigs County SherUt James_M. .
Soulsby.
.
Over. the pa_s t several montlls,
fire bas been set to hay bales In
several sections of the county.
The sherUf asks thatanyonewlth
Information contact his office.
Two Incidents have happened
In the past week, according to the
sherur. The department received
reports that several 'bales of hay
were burned on Saturday evenln!l along County Roa~ 1, north of
Salem Center. On Monday morn·

D.

r tre
··
•••
Continued from page 1
p.m. to discuss the situation but
Johnson stated that they were
"pretty adamant against it."
Letart Township generates approximately $32,000 a year from
the one mIll fire protection levy.
If the 65-percent Racine, 35percent Syracuse contract Is
accepted it would mean that
RaCine would recelve·$19,840and
Syracuse would receive $12,160
for fire protection. If the contnict
Is not accepted Syracuse will
receive the full $32,000 for fire
protection.
·
The trustees · will meet In
regular session Monday night at
the township building, and Trus·
tee Harry Hill advised ttiat a
contract or coniracts for ·fire
protection for Letart Township
residents will be signed at that
meeting.

Hospital news .

nliht, with a chalownce
flurries and a
Chance of snow Ia : ...'!rc,::'~
Vu:fablecloudllll!ll .._,.,
a chance of snow ~~ -~
highs between 30 an
· an.,
of snow.:!J:.";!'~ ·
1
·. .
...__. ..._..__ I
Slilurda1--- .I
Fair each day, with blillll
ranging from~e ml~ ~.: ~~
low . 30s Sat ay, nfrcim th~
Sunday and .r':::ut~· MoQda 1
g!,.ld 30s to the. will be mostly~
ernlght lows .
a ..
the teens Saturday and Sulld ~
mornings
.
!

··-

lames ...
Continued from page 1
gift certificate from ih~ Fabric
Shop, Pomeroy; and a case of
'baby. milk from Vaughan's Car·
dina!, Middleport.
.
A $5 gift certificate from the
Middleport Department Store; a
baby cup from Clark's Jewelry,
Pomeroy; a case of Luv'S diapers from Fruth Pharmacy, Middleport; a three piece feeder set
from K &amp; C. Jewelers, Pomeroy;
a case of baby formula from
Krogers, Pomeroy.
A ·$10 S!lvlng account from
Central Trust, Middleport; a $10
gift certificate from Po_meroy
Flower Shop; a free mea) to the
. parents "from Crew's Family
Restaurant; a $15 gift certificate .
from Heritage House of Shoes;
and a $10 gift certificate !rom the
Food Shop.

CLEVELAND (UPI) - Ohio
Lottery officials said Thursday
there was no jackpot winner In
Wednesday night's drawing of
the Super Lotto, pushing the top
prize to at least $6 million for
Am Electric Power ......... .. .. . 32
Saturday night.
·
AT&amp;T .................... ........... . .44Y,
The numbers drawn were 4, 5,
i\shland Oil ,.. .. .... .......... ...... 39
6, 24, 28 and 29.
;Bob Ev~tns .. .. ........ ....... ...... .13 ~
Some 124 tickets sold matched
Charming Shoppes ............... 10
five of the numbers for $1,000
:City Holding C{) . .. .... .. .. .:.. .. .. 14
each and 5, 766 tickets matched
Federal Mogul .................... 2074
four or the numbers for $75 each.
'c;oodyear T&amp;R ........ ...........43%
Super Lotto sales toialed ·
Heck's ... ........... ..... ... .... ..... .. 3% $3,427,913.
..
Key Centurion .. , ......... : .... ... 13~ .
There was also no top-prize
Veterans Memorial
Lands' End ........ .. ...... ..... .. .. 20\i . winner In the Kicker game. The
· Umlted Inc ..................... ...35Y,
Kicker combination was 847975.
Wednesday . admissions.
Multimedia Inc... ........ ..... .. .. 91
Eight -tickets matched the first
Anna
Hllldore, Syracuse. ·
._ ~ttery
Rax Res'taurants ............... ... 1%
five digits for $5,000 each, 58
Wednesday
discharges
'Robbins &amp; Myers ................ 15~
PICK·3
matched the first four for $1,000
Mary
Hlndy,
Juanita
Chapman,
-&amp;honey's Inc. ·:.................... :11';4
503.
each, 552 matched the first three
John Stahl, and Esther Harden.
Star Bank ............... ... ...... ... 20\l\
PICK, 3 ticket sales totaled
for $iOO each and 5,525 matched
'Wendy's Inti........... ... .. :....... 4~
$1,303,306.5(), with a payoff due of
the first two for $10'each,
·Correction
Worthington Ind ...... ............ 23\i
$528,732 . . .
- Klclj:er sales were $611,161.
'
.
The Olive Township Trustees
PICK-4
will meet Monday at 6:30p.m. at
' 7766.
the Reedsville Fire House to
PICK-4 ticket sales totaled
discuss appropriations.
$252,044.50.
late Edward and Edna Burns
ltuby Lambert
Duffy. She was a member of ~he
Ruby Fay Lambert, 66, Rt. 1, Sacred Heart CathOlic Churcli
Langsville, died unexpectedly and the Middleport Garden Club.
Mrs. Hamm was an employee
Wednesday afternoon 1!1. Veteof
the Meigs schools for over 30
rans Memorial Hospital In
years, working In recent years in
'Pomeroy.
. She was born April 9; 1923 In the Meigs High School office.
She is survived by two daughByesville, Ohio to the late Frank
ters and . sons-In-law, AmY. and
and Sophia Farley.
She was a member of the Star Charles Legar, •Pomeroy; and
Grange' 778, Pomona Grange, Julie and Jim Slezak, · PortsFriendly Neighbors Club, Jolly mouth; . foqr grandchildren,
Homemakers or Wilkesville, the Chuck, field! and Kirk Legar.
Fireballs, Salem Center, and the Pomeroy, and Autumn Hysell,
Portsmouth; a sister-in-law,
• ·Meigs County Senior Citl~ens .
Janet
Duffy, Pomeroy, and two
She was preceded In death by
nieces,
Tina Nelgler, Racine, adn ·
)ler husband Torn Lambert in
Patricia
Taylor, Ripley.
November, 1986.
Besides
her parents she was
' She js survived by two sons,
William R. Lambert and Richard preceded In death by a brother.
·
L. Lambert. both of Langsville; Edward P. Duffy. ·
A Mass of Christian Burial will
three daughters, Mrs. Dan (Sue)
. Quigley of Columbus. Mrs. be held at 10 a,m. Saturday at the
James &lt;Judi!h) Petry of Colum- Sacred Heart Church, Pomeroy,
bus, and Mrs. Richard !Nancy) the Rev . Fr. Robert Borer
Haddox or Athens; 10 grandchild- officiating. Burial will be in
Sacred Heart Cemetery. Friends
. ren-, and one great -grandson.
She was also preceded In death may call at the Rawlings-Coatspy one son, Robert Lambert. . Fisher Funeral Home Iii Middle· ·
5-speed
. Funeral services will be 1 p.m. port from 2 to4 and7'to9Frlday.
Sunday at the McCoy-Moore Prayer services will be held at
transmission. air
Funeral Home, Vinton. with Rev. 7:30 Friday at the funeral home.
Katherine Rlley·orrtciating. Burconditioner,
ial will be in the Salem Center
power seats,
Cemetery.
·
-: Friends may call the funeral
Continued fr9rn page 1
power lpcks, tilt
home !rom 2 to 4 p.m. and 7 to 9 dents ofLetartTownshipwlthout
wheat. speed .
p.m. Saturday. '
a contract until midnight Jan, 25,
. In lieu of flowers, contributions if the insurance coverage on the
control, P'remium
Deale! Retains Rebate
may be macje to the Salem trucks and men is effective
Sound System.
Towns_hlp Volunteer Fl~e during the non-contract period.
Tax and Title Not Included
Department.
It was emphasized that 'counell's concern Is that the .firemen
.•
:;Raymond Kerns
be protected should they be hurt
.·
. while answering a call. and also
• · Raymond L. Kerns, 81, Por- that the village equipment be
: iland, died Tuesday at Pleasant protected In the event of an
:· Yalley Hospital In Point Plea- accident wnlle responding to a
. sant, W.Va. ·following a brief call In Letart Township.
: Illness.
Plans were made for Mayor
Born Oct. 31, 19~ In Gilmer Frank Cleland to contact the
Gounty, W.Va., he was the son of village solicitor about the legalthe late Homer and Florence tty of serving the area without a
Sponaugle Kerns. He was a contract and the village's tnsuretlred construction worker and ranee carrier regarding
• llttended the Mount Olive Com- coverage.
· ·
. !"unity Church.
It was pointed out by the mayor
. 'Mr. Kerns Is survived by h'i.s With council concurring that the
!Yife, Mary Ann Kerns, two firemen ·,a re volunteers and as
sllters, Madagllene Rice, Par- such cannot be mandated.
kersburg, W.Va., and Sara Sona, The meeting recessed until 7
Interior Conversion •
Coolville; one half-sister. Vlrgl- p.m. on Monday at which time
Jfta Blake; one half-brother, Mayor Cleland will announced
By Lol'air'i .Motor Coach
~(!arroll Burns, Gilmer County, committees forthe year and give
"W.Va.; three step-children, Do- a "state or the village' • message.
ria Haynes, Middleport, Lella Attending the meeting were
haler letains Rebate
Copplck, Portland, and Okey Mayor Cleland, Clerk Ja~e BeeTax &amp; Title Not lricluded
pack, Columbus; 18 grandchild- gte, Councll members, Bob Bee!en, and several great and great gle, Henry Bentz, Ron Clark,
Carroll Teaford, Jeff Thor11ton
:great grandchUdren.
Services will. be held Friday, 1 and Larry Wolfe, a Ions with
p.m, at the Ewing Funeral Home Street Commissioner Glenn ·
, :with the Rev. I,awrence'Glusen- Rizer, Fire Chief Robert Joohn~amp officiating. Burial will be son and a delegation of firemen. ·
!~J Bald Knob Cemetery.
Prior to the meetlne the oath of
- ;J'rlelldl may call at the funeral office was administered by the
'
~ on .Thursday from 2-4 and ma¥or to
Beegle, Clark,
.
'
7.~ p.m.
Teafor'd, and Thornton.
• ,._ H ·
uquor oiuce 10 cl~
amm
The Ohio Department of
.
.
quor Control announced today
• Bl.t a Duffy Hamm, 66, Middle- .that all state., liquor stores,
iJdrt, died unexpectedly Wednes- agencies and departmental otfl·
dO at Veterans Memorial ces will be _cloeed Monday In
_.,_pllal.
observance of Martin Lulller
•• &amp;rn In Pomeroy on Aug. 15,
Kl ""'s bl thd · 8 1 1 h0 Bd
she was the daughter of the
r
ay'
ega
ay
,_ .
.
,.
for state employees.
Dally stock prices
(As of 10: 30 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Sm Jth
of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewl

roy. was confined to the coUilty
jail pendlfti
hearing In the
Meigs County Court on a domestic violence charse.
. Tuesday deputies transported
Ronald Coats,.Pomeroy, charged
with receiving stolen property;
Charles Canter, Syracuse,
charged with two counts of
assault and two counts of driving
under the lnfillence; and Ja111es
Sellers, Jr. , Portland, charged
with cultivation, to Orient Receplion Center to begin serving the
terms recently Imposed by the
Court after· they pled guilty
tohthelr respective charges.

'
~-··ti'

~

i~··~

lurrr ••• 11'1 cold -!del But, th;s .
"hot" ·sale on thr8e o! the most popular
R. Johns, l td. girls' fashion rirlgs ...
Dynasty, Tiorro and Srordusl will worm

your linger. Order lodoy and get vp lo
JQ poin!S0! dia mondS, 0!1 included 1n
this

in cre~ib ! y

hot j:lrice! ,

.JJarra &amp;

'ln lOK and 14K
yellow gold. ·
.

·

• _~..... encl1lanuary 31, 1990• . ·

R. JOHNS, LTD.

numbers

I'

iI
'

--Area·deaths--

NEW 19&amp;:9 TEMPO G15

Racine...

.

EXTENDED VAN

LOllED

.

-u-

:D£1,

i

i

I·

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--;·

.. --··r

Tluldey, J~ 11, 1180

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Page 7

-1 ':;;· .. "'

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":.t t

~People ·

-Chester news notes
B:r CLAB~JtUUE"l

in the news___.:.__.;,...:;,.__ ____:__ _.;...___,

. • , WILLIAM: c. TaOTI'

bookeveq Includes a fonn letter for readers· to fill oui and send
to Quayle urelng him to take the challenge for the sake of ' 'the
future of our family and the fate of the nation."
BEBIJN REMEMBERED: The late lrvla1 ~rBn will be
remembered at a memorial concert Feb. 6 at New York's Music
Box Theater. Those taking part In honor of Berlin, who died In
September at aee 101, 'Include Mai!tJy PMinldn, Roberta Flack,
Tony Benae&amp;t, Roaemary Cl-:r. Jerome Bobbllll, Kitty
Carllale Bart, DoroQiy Loudoa and Sammy Cahn.
·
BONNER TO FULFILL ENGAGEMENT: Yeleaa Boaaer,
wife of the late Soviet dissident Andrei Sakharov, will speak
Feb. 17 at the Peace Prize Forum at Augsburg College In
Mlnneapoils. Bonner and Sakharov were both scheduled to
appear but he died days after accepting the Invitation. The
forum also will Include fonner President Jimmy Carter and his
vice president, Walter Mondale, who personally Invited
Sakharov 11,11d , Bonner. Organizers are awaiting word on
whether the 1989 Nobel Peace Prize winner, the dalal lama, will
attend.
r
'ALWAYS' AIRPORT GETS ENCORE: The alrportln Moses
Lake, Wash., Ll becoming the hardest working airport In show
business: Bruce Willis will be filming his cataclysmic airport
scene' for "Die Hard 2" there Instead of Denver. 20th Century
Fox had wanted to film a scene featuring terrorists and a crash .
at Denver's Stapleton Airport but airlines had complained that
such a scene would be bad for their Image and that the movie
lights would Interfere with air traffic.

Ualted Preu lllter-*loaal
_.
Mr. and Mrs. Hobart Newell
REI.M81.RYBJRI!'.811ARVARDBBLP: LeGaaBelnulleybaa
frtendl attending the tuaeral of and Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Newell
hired Alu Dea •wtb, the ijarvlird law profesiiOr who helped
Marearet Cllrlllty 'held at the and Jeanie Mae, have returned
clear
voli BaiDw of attempted murder, to handle the
Ewtq Funeral Home were home after a weeka vacation In
appeal of her tax eYaslon conviction. The,appeal team also will
Mlldre!S Matf~k. Lake worth, Florida. They vlllted Disney
Include 'k=e• El&amp;rlck, who headed Michael l)Ualda'&amp;
Fla.; _Donna kay ' ~mple, au·r· WorldandalaowlthMr.andMrs.
'unsucceuful prealdl!lltlal 'campaign. Dershowltz says Helms·
llniton, N.J.: Mr. and Mrs. Scott Justice at Orlando.
ley has been ""very pleasant" durtnll their 8os ton meetlnp and
Edward Roberta and dauehter,
Thursday evening diMer au·
he says her lmaie aa a tempettuous shrew Ll undeserved.
of Akron; Sandra Wood, Nash- · ests of .. Mr. and Mrs. ·Kirk
''She II demandlni hut I like wor)dng for demanding peopll!,"
vOle, Tenn.; Roberta Wood, Chevalier were Betty Chevalier,
he sale!. ''She wants to be sure no stone II untumed. Were shea
Coli!Dlbus; Mr. and Mrs. WOllam ' 'Npperi Plains, and Mr. and
man, she'd be reprdect as exacting and demandlnl.''
Beegle and ch~n. of Galllpo- Mrs. Rodney Chevalier, Adam
'I telms!ey, 69, was sentenced to four years In prison and fined
Ill; Robert Lynn Wood !Uid and Abbie.
.
$7.1 million for cheating on her taxes but Dershowitz says his
ChriStmas weekend guests of
family, o! Racine; Mr. and Mrs.
review of her records probably will show that the government
Harold Hawk, 'I'lippers Plains; Lucille Smith were George
owes 1\er. "Thll 'Is a woman who paid over $300 million a year In
Mr. and Mrs . . James Swain, Reuter, Akron: and Kathy Frle'
taxes and she hal probably· overpaid her taxes," he said.
·
CooMlle; Mr. and · Mrs. Don tae and daughters; Mary and
QUAYLE B.4.ITING:· Just how smart Is Dea Ql!liyle? The
Betzlne, Roy and Brian Betzlng, Susan, North Canton.
authors of a new book, "Scandal Annual1990- Who Got Caught
Mr.' and Mrs. Mark Hawk and
Jeff and Laura Horton, WarDoing What In 1989," a compendium of last year's silly
son,, all· of Pomeroy. The Rev. . thlngton, were weekend guests of
wrongdoings, have Included a chapter 'IItle!! "How Dumb Is
Don Archer officiated and pall Opal Eichinger . . Chrliltmas
Danny?" The book say, determining QuayJe'.s Intellectual
bearers were David· Koblentz . dinner guests were Mr. and Mrs.
ablllty Is a matter of national secilrity and that the question
Richard Gaul, Harold Newell: · Charles Eichinger and Susie,
could be settled once apd for all by having the vice president be a
Clayton . Allen, 'Ho)llirt Newell, Plckerlnglon; Mr. and Mrs. Don
contestant on " _Jeopaf'dy" for a week In competition against
and SCott Smith. Burial was In Eichinger, Tltfany and Justin,
Henry Klalle~r and lui year's "Jeopardy" champion. The
the Cheeter cemetecy.
Vincent; and Mr. and Mrs.
The Ladles Auxiliary of the fire Dennis Eichinger and Dane and ·
department met Wednesday ev- Krls Wilson, Reedsvilll!.'
enbli at the firehOuse. The
CJ(r!Jtmas dinner guests of Mr.
meeting OJll!ned prayer an,d ahd Mrs. B.K. R,ldenour and
pledge. The secretary's report Thel!na were Opal Wickham, ·
was given by Susan Cleland and Mr. and Mrs. James Ridenour,
"We have to look at things a
The Syracuse Asbury United
By United Prese Internatloul
A poem entitled, "Leftovers"
the treasurer's repOrt was given John and _Janet, Lowell Ridenour
little closer. We'll have to have
Methodist Women celebrated was read by Beulah Ward. Mary
by Betty Newell. Committee and sons, Kristen Black an~ ·J .B.
Christmas with a meeting at the Cundiff closed the meeting with a
Norlep poeter dartboard JOe8 Potarolds taken right away,"
· reports were given and bills were Ridenour, ·
_, .
. . on sale
McQuade_sald.
.
(lome of the Buelah Ward, With a reading from Guideposts en·
paid. Roll call was answered by . . Chrtst:ltias eve dinner guests of
The escape, which occurred
carry In dinner.
.
CHICAGO (UPI) -Now that
titled, "Imagine This."
Bonnie Landers, Paula Wood, . Mr. and Mrs. Kirk. Chevalier, . Panama's Manuel . Antonio No- one day after Vasquez and Pagan .
Ann Sauvage suggested that
The gifts for the chllbren were
Dorothy Hawk, Lora Damewood, ' Jessica and Kristen were Mr.
the group send money to but sent to the Meigs Methodist
riega has been rous ted from h!S were brought to the Franklin
Ethel Orr Opal Hollon, "Erma and Mrs. Wayne Beal, Mr. and
Christmas presents for the boys Cooperative Parlllh to dlstrlbheadquarters, ridiculed as a County lockup on Jan. 4, became
Cleland, Clara Conroy, Susan Mrs: Roger Young, Wesley and
at Sine Cera.
"pineapple face" and assaulted public after an Inmate at the
llted to tlie needy children.
Cleland, BeckY Edwards, Clar· Yvette, Beth Ewing, Pomeroy;
Greenfield
jail
notified
the
local
The money raised by the
with rock music, ordinary citiAttending were .Hope Moore,
Ice Allen, Inzy Newell, Betty Sandra and Mary Perdas, Mr.
bazaar at the church will be used Linda Farrell, Irene Parker,
zens are getting the chance to media of the Incident.
Newell.
and Mrs. Russell Well, Leah,
Vasquez was char11ed with a
to buy somethln'g for the church. Kathleen Fryar, Addle Norris, ·
take shots at him.
Loll Perdas, . Chambersburg, Heather and Ashton, all local.
firearm
violation and his ball
Starting. next week, angry
Secret pal names were, Ann Sauvage, Mary Cundiff,
Pa., spent a few days here with
Mrs. Don Matlack returned to
exchanged.
Americans will be able to vent was set at $15,000. Pagan reMary Lisle; Marie Houdashelt,
her mother and sllter, Sandra her home In Lake Worth, Fla.
some of their emotions on a mained held on $200 ball on a
Mary Lisle gave the program Bernice Winebrenner, Helen
and Mary Perdas.
.
after spending .*WO weeks here
dartboard poster of the smiling charge of receiving stolen prop- from Isalh, the ninth chapter. Teaford, Harriet Sinclair, Bu·
Sandra Wood returned Sunday with her brother, Roy Christy.
deposed dlc!alor, for only $6 er ty; McQuade said.
The group sang' 'Oh Come All Ye elah Ward, and April Harmon,
to her home In Nashville, Tn.
Donna Kay Semple returned
apiece. . .
.
Faithful" and other Christmas secretary.
having JJeen called here by the home after spend!~ several
Chicago · Publisher Michael
h.vmns.
death . of her aunt, Margaret days with her uncle, Roy Christy.
McCormack predicts the poster
of the deposed Panamanian
dictator wlil outsell a poster he
created years ago of Iran's
Ayatollah Khomelnl.
"People could kind bt justify
the Ayatollah, because they
on Friday from 11 a.m. to 7 p.rl\. realized he was · a religious
TKUitSDAY
BEDFORD TOWNSHIP -The The menu will Include spaghetti, . fanatic," said McCormick,
Bedford .Township, Trustees will french bread, jello, coffee, or tea owner of ACBA Publishing. "Nomeet,Thursday at 5: 30 p.m at tlie . for $2. 75. Orders will be available riega Is just a lligh-clasa drug
I 11. WAIIANTY
for. eat ln. or carry O\lt. .
pusher. They are otte~ed by hts
.
town hall.,
drug dealbli and. the way ·he's·
1
POMEROY -The· Pomeroy treate4 thla coUII1ry,
sPRrnGs .:..·The Rock ,
'
''They're looking for a scapeSpriJIIIS Granie will meet Thurs. Senior Citizens will have a round
day at 7: 3!1 p.m. at the ·Grange and sqUare dance on Friday from goat and he flUS those shoes. to
.
. 8-11 p.m. at the center. Music say the least."
Hill!.
10 11. WMIAIIIY · ·
will be provided by True Country
Consumers will find the posIIIIIA.PL SJ-44
RACINE -There wtll 'be ·a Ramblers and the admission Is $2 ters being sold anywhere from
QIIIIM liT S344
.: specll\1 m~lng of the Southern ·per person. The public Ia Invited department stores to eunshops,
Local School Board on Thursday to attend and those attending are McCormack said.
to bring snacks for the snack
"You'll be able to find them
at 7 p.m. at the high school.
table. ·
lining biJCd cages, In pollee target
DlSCQ,VII WHY
j.,;'
practice courts, In dart bars tllld
BURLINGHAM -The Word of
PEOPU
gu~·
SATURDAY
barber shop walls," McCormack
Litle Church In Burlingham will
PORTLAND- There wtll be a
said.
have revlv111 Thursday through
Sunday at 7 p.m. nlptly. The byffin sing at the Morrill Chapel
WrODJ 1amate II balled out
evangelist will be James Branch Church on Saturday at 7:30p.m.
The
Grubb
Family
will
sing.
GREENFIELD, Mass. (UPI)
from Huntlnglon, W.Va. There
County Jail officials have
will 'be s~tal singing nightly.
BURLINGHAM
-The
Modern
decided to Invest In a Polaroid
• . Pastor Ray Laudermllt lilvltes
Woodmen of America Camp 7230 camera to avoid the mlx·up that
the public.
will be havlni a soup dinner on allowed an Inmate to escape by
'
_ TUPPERS PLAINS - The Saturday at 6: 30 · p.m. at the ·.posing tis a friend In a nelghbpr·
Mo~ern Woodmen Hall. ~ups
lng cell.
Tuppers Plains VFW. Post 9053
available
Include
vegetable,
.oys·
Jail guarda mistakenly freed
will meet Thunday at 7: 30 p.m.
ter,
and
clilll.
There
Is
no
charge
Antonio
Vasquez, 19, who was
at the hall.
•
hut those attendlne are to brine
being held on $5,000 ball, after he
CHESTER -The Shade River
something
they
like
to
eat
with
switched Identities with Inmate
LOdge will have . Its regular
soup.
Ruben Pagan, who was being
meeting on Thursday at 7:30p.m.
held on only $200 bal~ said
All master masons are Invited to
. 'P OMEROY -The Meigs
Franklin County Sheriff Donald
attend.
County Association of Township McQuade. .
.
OAK, PINE incl CHERRY SUITES
Tru•tees
and
clerka
will
hold
Its
Palail'a
familY,
apparently
FRIDAY
.....
._
O.k Contemporory
annual
_
meetlnll
on
Saturday
at
7
cooperating
In
the
scam,
paid
the
MIDDLEPORT- The MiddleI
Pc.
Butte
......................................,......SALE 1477
p.m.
at
the
Senior
Citizens
ball
and
took
Vasquez
home
with
..
part Order of the Eastern Star
Reg.- Pine or Ook Elrtr AIMI'Ioln
.
Center.
. them, leaving their relative In
will be havbig a spaghet II dinner
1
4Pc
.............................................
......
SALE
777'
jail.
1
Reg. '1411 0111 Cllllntry
·
.
McQu!lde· said the escape apI Pc. iult...............................................SALE 11177
parently worked because jail·
Reg. '1M 0111 Contempor~ry
guards did not have a pbofOiraph
.
.
.
I Pc ......................- ...,••. I:• ..,..........SALE ~1.077
of
Vasquez,
who fit Paean's
A aeries 'of alx·week clarPei fqr
Melp County resldenta may Written description: The Incident
wetght control, •ponaored by the
regt.ter by calllal the Melp
Metp County. Health Depart- · County Heelth Department at prompted the aherlff to lmpJe. ,
ment a new ~~&lt;?Hey that calli for ,
ment, will belln .Mo!lday and
992-6626. When reetsterlng, a Instant photqp'apha to be taken ;
Tuesday at 6: 30 p.m.
.
preference of Monday or Tues- of alllncomtnc Inmates.
There will be a cbolce of nights
day evenbli muat be stated.
for the cluaes, either Monday or
Tuesday, and classes are free to
' Metp County residents.
Eacb dali will be of two hours
duration. Atteadance Ill required
' - IJ7t.N.., W. $299
at only one two !lour -lion
-kfY.
wt11 llldude
.
.
' '
nutrition educatlcm. atrea manapllllllt. weeklY weigh-Ina; relaXation lilciWqtlll, redpel. diet .
recalllbeetP exerclie tecbnlquea.
' ' c .................... ...., .aiel
and Olh• pu.. ot wetaht
...., wtlll Nbsi: lrlt IUihlol•.
....... _
.. _ I l l ¥
conttol.
·
. There will be a lbnlt to the
'
number of people Wbo can be

0)11 of town relatives an!l

' Chrillty.

a-

SERTA PREMIER COMFORt

~saa
.
.

ioek

NEW 1989 FORD ~ANGER

SEITA SUPREME UlTRA

SUPER CAB

••, rD,t.1."

s;y

XLT Trim. Deluxe
Tutone Paint, V-6
Engine, 5-speed
transmission,
clear coat paint.

ONLY

AM/~M/Cassett,

TAC. Chrome
step bumper.

,

January Sale
BEDROOM SUITES

AUTOMAT1C WASHEA AND DRYER

Dealer RetaiM Rebate
Tax and Title Not lncl'*d

NEW 1989 FESTIVA
L·PLUS

, Weight ·control ·class set

'

'10.95°/o·

QUALITY PRESCRIPTION
SERVICE AT
COMPETITIVE PRICES.

a._

FINANCING
ANiual Ptrontage late

GUDEIIOCIEI SAL£

--

UIEE REGIStERED PHARMACISTS TO

flxllllate Up to 60 l1nths

SEIVE YOU ·

admitted to eacll PerleP of ClaaMI .
Whlcb are · to be beld Ia tbe :
· coarereace room ot the multi
purpo111 ~.

In Pomeroy:
Relldenta lbould rqllter u

- · U poalble due .to Claal llze,
llmltatl_olll.

PAT HILL· FORD INC •

Grange meeting

•amau "' sn, •

.......... 1 ........ c.i'

IIJal..

The Star Gl'lllp will holll Its
rep1ar fila llllbt. aDd poUuck
npper at 8:30p.m. OD Jan. :Ill at
tbe Salelll Oitl.., J'lre Statton.

'.

MIDDLEPORT
_....._

•I

_By ~he . Bend

Community cale'I'Zll4r .

·sEE: RICK TOLLIVER,
JAY HILL
or PAT HILL
.
.

461 S. ·3RD

The Daily Sentinel

Quirks in the news,_ .Asbury UMW mrets.

on

,

..

I,

b:y.sheriff on
· ha:y b umel8 Weadwtr
·, l
van::•.:.;:,..,~J
:!r'U:1
a

ing at 5 a .m.' the department was
notified that hay bales were
burning on the Bentz Cemetery
Road.
The Salem Town
_ ship Fire
Deparmtnet responded to the
Saturday evening 'flre. while the
Orange Township Fire Depart·
ment went to the Monday mornlng fire.
·
James Bland, · Sycamore
Grove, Racine, reported Tuesday even big that around 5:45
!).m. a piece of auto trim was
thrown tliroug!1 his front storm
doorgtass.Hesaldthatthemetal
came from a vehicle traveling
east towards Ravenswood. He
was unsure whether the metal
was flipped from the roadway or
thrown Intentionally.
.
The department also reported
thai Marvin Randolph, Pome-

I

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"-(1141111-Mn
'ToOoooi!IN.._

'.:

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..

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..

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't

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Peg

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White House welcomes end
of martial law; sanctions stay
WASHINGTON ~UPI) -Pres- bloCk , World · Bank loans to
Ident Bulb welcomed Cbtna'a Beijing, Popadluk said, "The
announcement that · It w!U end United States wtll take a cl01e
seven months of mardal law, a look at loans that meet. human
spokesman said, but economic needs on a case-by-ease baaiJ;"
sanctioll!llmposed by the United
He said humantlarlaD loans did
States agalnit BeiJing remain In not repfe!~t!nt a lOOII!niDg of the
place.
blllll Imposed by Bullll following
Roman Popadluk, a deputy the bloody craclulown on demonWhite Houae spokesman; said strator~ lasts~. and insisted
Wednesday that ·B ush viewed the there was no policy chanae.
The State Department said tbe
move as a "PDIIIIve step" along
with ' other gestures by the United States WOUld favor World
Chinese government to ease Bank loans to China for "humanrepression since the maasacre or Itarian" purposes, but would not
pro-democracy d~onstrators support financial assistance for
~nomic development. ·
lastJune.
·
State Department spolceswoMarilallaw Is scheduled to end
man
Margaret Tu twller &amp;aid the
In eight Beijing districts
change of sentiment toward •
Thursday.
VIce President Dan Quayle China on certain World Bank
said the llftlng of mar\lal law loans had nothing to dO wtth
proved . the preslden,t's 1J9llcles BeiJing's decision to end martial
toward China are working. "We law. ''It Is pure coincidence," she
.
view China' s decision to lift said.
mardal law as a step forward," · Tbe White House said It would
watch the situation In China
Quayle said.
'
carefully
before re-evaluating II~
Beijing hopes the move.. will
pos
11Jre
toward
BeiJing.
help reYerse declines In foreign
"We
welcome
this action,"
Investment, trade and tourism.
China has suffered a drop In said Popadluk. ''We are pleased
foreign exchange earnlnp and wi~h tbe lifting of martlal law and
faces repayment of more .than · see It as a positive step. Ob$40 billion In foreign debt begin- viously we muat assess the full
scope or this action after observning this year.
Asked about reports that the Ing Its Implementation, T)lls Is .
United States will continue to another In .a Sl!rles of positive .

.•

~chool
'

FLOOD WATERS RAGE -A four-wheel-drive
;vehicle aepu.tee llle flood w.tera of Cea&amp;nlla,
WMIL, yeate~, M abaado!led velllclee ID llle
backarouad are pulled arouad 111e s~ bJ llle

w.ter. Beceaiheavyrai•ID llle NorlllwMthave
· ca.ed floodln(, mudslides and other stonnrela&amp;ed damare. (UI'I)

Lead's _severe effect on-chlldren
lasts into adulthood,'researchers say
•
'

'

'

ALBANY, N.Y. (UP!) - A£countablllty for the conapae of a
school cafeteria wall that kUled
nine children In November was
unclear, even though a state
GQmmlsslon said the wall was not
braced properly to withstand
high winds.
The. state Disaster Prepared·
ness· COmmission blamed a ·'design fiaw" Wednesday for the
weakness of the · wall that
crumbled In winds of 90 mph to
100 mph at the' EastCOldenbam
Elementa~y School,' about 65
. · mUes north or New York City.
The commission also found
four other schools In neighbOring
districts, all bunt by the same
architect, had slmjlar naws In
conatruction and recommended
that they be reinforced. ·
commission did . not
. aut
explain why the school, built In
1959, was exempted 1rom state
building codes from that year
that would have required . more
support to protect against such
strong wind gusts.
The schOol's architect, John
Clark, was also reported to be
under Investigation by the state
Education Department, but It
was unclear exactly what he
could be held accountable 'or 30
years after the school was built.
The wall collapsed Nov. 16
when struck by a severe Wind
gust, although not a tornado as
· was originally 1-eported by the·
National Weather· Service, the
commission round.
·
•'The masonry port!on of the
collapsed wall was structurally
flawed by a design error that left
It unsupported by lateral or
vertical bracing," said a letter ·
submitted to Gov. Marlo.Cuorno
from commission chairman

the

BOSTON (UPI) - 'Low-level · by Dr. HerbEirtNeedleman of the. alld soider. Lead In soli Is a very
lead exposure during chUdhood University of Pittsburgh and tough nut to crack. .
''The lead In soil and In older
has permanent effecis that fol- colleagues at Harvard Unlverlow Its victims Into adulthood, slty and Children's Hospital, In houses Is pervasive. Any house
Including a high school dropout .Boston was the first to prove it. · built before the mld·lii!IOS · by
rate seven times the national · .- "We found that It Is perman- definition .h as lead paint In It,"
average, researchers said.
ent, and that It reflects Itself In the CDC official said. "Eating
In. a follow -up of a landmark real-life success, not just IQ lead paint Is still a problem.
1979 study which prompted remo- numbers. The victims are not Surprisingly enough the picture
val or . lead . from America's graduating fl'OI'(l high school and . ,people have or a child peelllig
gasoline supply and r~sirlcted they have .reading dlsabllltles;'' . paint ofrtbewallls not the prime
the use of lead In paint products, Needleman said.
·
problem. It is soU, dust, air and
rese~chers foupd those same
''Tbedarksldeofthlsproblem water that we ali- live around
Is what It means In job opportunl- every day."
chlldrenn - now young adults are plagued by_serious academic ties lind earning capacity for
,The original s.tudy, researched
these people. The good side Is between 1975 and 1978 Involved
ahd socloecononllc problems.
Besodes ·t he high d,ropout rate, that this Is a totally preventable · 270 first- and second-ar'ade childthe lead-exposed subjects dis- disease."
ren In Chelsea and Somerville
The main causes of · lead Mass. It found their neurobehav:
played poorer reading, vocabulary and motor skills, weaker exposure are paint chip$ and !oral functioning was Inversely
hand-eye coordination and more · paint dust from houses built related to the lead levels found In
behavioral problems than non- before the mld-1950s, household , their teeth. They were deficient
exposed Individuals, researchers water supplies that now through In IQ, speech and language skills
· lead pipes and lead solder, and and attention allan.
,.
said.
"The practical Importance of soli.
Re-examination of 132 or
earlydetectlonandabatementof
Last sunimer, the federal original studenls;wbonowbave
leadlntheenvlronment,beforelt Centers for Disease Control In an average age or 19, found a
enters the bodies of children, Is Atlanta estimated thatl7percent seven-fold Increase In the high
borne out by these long-term of the children In the United school dropout rate reading
'
findings In young adults," said States under age 5 had elevated levels two grades bel~ normal,
the researchers, who reported blood lead levels. 1n Its report to lower cl- standing, Increased
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The
their findings Wednesday In the Congress, the agency estlrnated · absenteeism, lower vocabulary, Food and Drug Administration
New England Journal of the figure jumped to 55 percent poor band-eye coordination and has recalled tbe J arvlk artlflclal
'Medicine.
for poor black children.
longer· reaction times
heart, cltlng problems In Its
Lead exposure, to which the
The CDC's Dr. Frank Mitchell
Had all original subjects been manufacturing and reporm · of
developing central nervous sys- said the Needleman study "con- located and re:tested, the magnladverse reactlons, It was reterns of young children are most firms that we are _paylnga high tude or the lead exposure effect ported Thursday,
su~eeptlble, can cause brain
price for lead-polsol!ed children. would have been even greater
The makers or the famed
daq~age and Impair mental
"Obviously getting the lead out .- because thole ·not re-tested devtce, Symbion IJ!C. , were, notidevelopment.
of gasoline has reduced the tended to have had higher lead fied by lettl!r that, the FDA
Experts had suspected that amount or lead In the air," levels lower socioeconomic sta- · withdrew Its approval of luflher
lead exposure would have long- Mitchell said. "We .'have made tus ~d l!IWE!r IQ scores and use ofthe device, the Washington
term effects, but the new study someslgnlflcantprogresslnfood teachers ratlilp, researchers Post reported.
N
said.
aftet Its Inventor, Utah
pby Ia Robert · Jarvlk, the
ar al heart hal been lm·
· nted In more than 1!50 patlenta
WAS-HINGTON (UPI)
lnce It was first placed Ina dying
animal model," said Schechter, said It was able to create t
SCientls1S report they have , who added that flirther Improve- transgeiiiC mice containing rela·
SeatUe dentist seven years ago,
crelted miCe with a disorder ments are probal!ly needed In the tlvely Jar,e amounta of human
It commonly bas ~n used as,a
reMmbllng llckle cell disease, genetically engineered mice be- llckle cell hemoglobin In their
temporary measure untlla heart
en advance that may remove a fore they can be used to test red blood cella.
donor could be found.
major obstacle to developing potentlal sickle cell drup.
In withd.rawlnglta approvalfor
In test-tube experlmenta, blllod
treatments for the disorder afthe device, the FDA cited defiSchechter estimated that cells taken frcm the tranaaentc
.feeling up to 1011;(100 Amertcans. !50,000 to 100,000 Americana, moat mice were "sickled" under conciencies In manufacturbig qualor them black, suffer from sickle dltlona tbat Would cau1e llmllar Ity control, morittortng ·or . ~
A British research team said cell disease.
deformities In cella takell from search sites, training or
Wednelday 1\ has genetically
personnel and reporUJIII ot adIn people who have the lnher- · humans wttb llckle cell dlaeiH,
eqtneeled a strain or mice .to lied disorder, hemoglobin tencla
verae
reactlona tQ the FDA.
contain tile detectlve hemoglobin to clump lOiether and dlatort r,c1 retearcherl ..td. Other telta
•
'Tbe
FDA bellevel that, on
found In blood Cf'lla of humans blood cella Into sickle sba~. showed sickllnJ aiJo appeared to · balance, the cldC1ellcla In the
wtth sickle cell disease. Hemo- The damapd blood cella die be occurrlna naturallywlthlll oDe Symbion atudl• great
the tran~~enic mice.
globin Ia a complex compound more quickly than healthy oilel, ofI'Jo
llekle cella _.. found In IDough that the rlakl to patleatl
re~pollllble for carrylnfl oxygen
leadlq to anemia, and can also normal 1111ce or a aeaetlcally were outwelgblng the beneflta."
tJiroUCbOUt the body;
clog small blood VI!IRIJ. Tile qlwacl mo- that did not u apacy spokemum told the
Dr. Alan Sobechter, a sickle dlleue aliO may cau1e IIIQIIIZ·
Poll.
'
. cell dlleue a pert with the U.S. · lng . bOne pain .and llfa- - ' " ' till cldctlve ~
Since
alterllatlve
llbort·tenn
lklbla. Nlftl'tlllrllllhl.
.
Natloaal ~tltutft of Health, threatenlne lnfectlona.
Bo.-.v..-,
the l'lllaroll..-. · lmplutl are 1vallabla for P&amp;·
called tile Brltllh •chlevement
polllttd out a majoFprobllm wtOI tlenta *walliDI beart tl'llll·
~Una In the journal Natheir
"llcldl cell" mlee II t11e1r plants, the deciiJoD does not
....
lmpC11'1111t
"ODe
ot tile·--"
major factors ture, a te1111 led · by FrUk failure to develop die 11111111&amp; 1114 mean the end to allar!Uical heart
JlmJIIDI reaeareb In sickle cell Groawld ot Britain's Natlollal other symptoms characterlltlc Procedul'll.
dllease .. . IJ the lack or a good Inatltute for Medical Reaeareb of the human dlaorder.
The flst-llzed, electrically po-

the

stl!ps !hat we have wltlll!llllldln
the palt few weeks." .
Popadlut, uallke Quayle,
would not credit BUlb policies
with the chaqe. "We would like
to believe 11. We would like to
think that General Scowcroft1i
trip played a part," 1le ~ld. ·, '.
National ~rity adviser
Brent Scowcroft ud Dep11ty
Secretary of State Law.-ence
Eagleburger had .m ade two secret trips to Bellini In &amp;II effort to
keep the lines or communication
open and to menjl relations. .
Popadluk said other algns of
Improved relattoris were noted '
with BeiJing's visa renewal for a ·
Voice of America reporter; China's ronwearlng the . .sale of
Silkworm missiles In the-Middle
East, and the •'reduced critical.
com!llentarles'' agalnat th~ United States In the Chinese state- ..
wide media.
Chinese Premier U ~~~~
lsaued 't he mart!al law decree
last May 20.
•
. After months or repression In
which tena ot thousandl of peOple
have , been · arrested, Chinese
sources and Western diplomats
said the change_will be largely
cosmetic. The capital remains
under tight security with reinforcements to the Beljlq army·
'
·
garrison.
·

buil~ing

Davtd Axelrod. the state health commissioner.
'
The commission has tecom·
mended the building code be·,
updated with ~ougher windstrength design stanclards.
·.
The East Coldenham, finding
also revealed that part of the wall
was replaced In 1984, bu lit was
not determln~ If therf was a
bracing system within 'Its con- ·
structlon. No blame tor the
collapse has. been placed on that
procedure.
' ·
· Richard. TOmasetd, a consultlpg engineer hired by the commission, said the 12-foot-hlgh
"freestanding" masonry structure, surrounded ,by a 25-foot
aluminum and glass "curtain,"
fell as a "rigid body."
Tomasetti estimated that the
wall, as biUit, could have withstood a maximum gustofBOmph. .
Without bracing, the wall could
wit!lstand a '45-mph gust. The
commission estimated the critical wind gust at between 90 mph
and 100 mph.
''Tbe. curtain gave som~ additional support as It started to
fall," Tomasetti said.
· The 1959 state building Code
stlpulated that walla must with- ·
stand a minimum or 75-mph
winds. With addltlonal bracing or
the use or building materials
exceeding mlnintum standards,
such walls have resisted winds of
120 mph.
.
The commission said the glass
and aluminum curtain was built
In 191M to replace the original
wood and glass curtain that had
begun to rot. The commission
declined to place responsibility
on the firm or Flemming and
Silverman, which designed tlie
rep lacetnen t curtain.

.

'

'

'

I

''In 191M an engineer could see
(the center masonry wall) was
not braced, but could not see If It
had a structural system wtthln It,
which was another ·. way to
reinforce it," Tomasetti said.
· Educatlon Commissioner Thomas Sobol said his department
does not have the resources to see

:=th=~~~:~:'~s !~u~~ ~~

arcllltect submits a safe design.
"We simply accept the professional seal of a~ architect the
way a hospital would not check
the operation tba,t a surgeon
performs," Sobol said,
Besl&lt;!es the design flaw. tbf
commission Identified weaknesses In severe weather warnIng systems. The . notlflcation
system "broke down with respect to the· East Co!denham
scliool," Axelrod said.
Commission recommends- . ,
!Ions io avert futUre disasters
Included:
-The Education Department
shOuld alert all schools to the
' 1deslgn flaw" at East 'Coldenham and make sure reviews of
each building are completed.
-State agencies should require a checklist or key design
Items io be evaluated and vt!rlfled by the architect.
-The state building cOde
should be amended to InclUde
wind strenith reqwrements or
the American NatiOnal Stand-'
ards Insdtute.
-state and county governments and school districts should
take lntmedlate steps to upgrade
and streamUne severe weather
notification systems. SCbool
emergency plans should be tailored to tornadoes and Involve
training for school . starr and
students.
'

Advance made·in sickk cell battle

. .;

o I'

f .

.

wered J arvlk heart - made or
Jarvlk, who founded Symbion,
graphite, polyurethane, dacron, sold his stock two years ago alld
velcro and metal - caul!ed a
left the company.
·
sensation IJ! 1982 when ,It was ·
Implanted In Barney Clark.
Clark, who was near death
when the seven-hour operation
began, lived 112 days on the
device. However, three subse-,
quent attempta to make the
Jarvtk device a perrnuent heart
substitute re11uHed In ~erioua
.,
medical compllcatlona.
-~

.

STOREWIDE JANUARY

outra(e,

wtntl!r.
.. propolld. tile shipl ftUid
111e survellliDce equlpmeat .ad
mllllt llav.- 10 IIY later.
aircraft to deteCt lhlljleCt.IHldrUJ
011 Monday 1114 Tuelday, abipmeDtl, by air and sea, and · .
White Houae and Stall~~- alart Colamblan or U.S. IJ'aund
met1Hpokes'"llft llld there were torcea who could make IU'l'eim
nci plans for any "lachd,, but and HlzUJW, officials laid.
that the . United States was
The Untied Statea currntb'
'seeking expanded drug- patrol&amp; theCertlbean with abortInterdiction eftlrfl. They also range plaDI!I and bolita. A
said the Kennedy ·and , VIrginia permanently assigned naval taak
were on rou11nt! training exer- force would streqtMn end excises orr'Ftorlda.
tend the druJ·aweeplng net.
Popadluk ..td Widnesday that
Clllornbla Is the primary
Bush and /3B!CO "agreed that It . source or cocaine smuu~ tnto
was most Unfortunate tliat lnac- the United States. Buah plana to
curate and coldulln&amp; reporta of . join leaderl from Colombia,
tentative U.S. propolllsforcoop- . Bolivia and Peru at a Feb. 15
eratlon wtth the Colombian go- drug aummlt In Carta1ena,
.
vernrnent had created such a Colombia.
fa~ lm~slon."
· During the weekend, the PenThe admlniltr*tlon offlctar tagon said the J(en~ and the
who spoke oa the condition of Virginia bad left port on routine ·
anonymity said U.S. authorities exercises In the Atlantic 'Ocean
·stlll hope to Ul8 the Kennedy and but would not dlaclose the destlVirglnla In drug monitoring nation of the slllps.
efforis In International waters elf
Top Colombian officials had
Colombia, hopefully later this not been consulted llEifore reports

.... ~- '*'""t He told
~· t11at tllefdmiDJIItratloa

lll11a&amp;led tbat tile two ships were
n rw• to Colllllbla and the

angry reaction wu ~cerbated
by c:oncerna abllut U.S. " 11\lnboat
diploQiacy" created by the ipVI•
alon of PIIIBIM.
.
Busli, ac~ldttnclhatrela­
tlona · with Latill America have
become a trained, announced last
week that Vice President Dan
Quayle wtll go on a · fence-

Classi
TO PLACE AN AD CALL 992-2156,
MONDAY thru FRIDAY' 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.
8-A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
CLOSED SUNDAY
'

-DUSt

1WIMMIUS
TO Will POCKET
WITH A
CI.ASSIID AD·

.

.

MONDAY PAPER
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992-2156

PLAINTIFF

Y~d

Cla!i~ifit•ll pO/{f'-~

Gllllia Coun1v

388 - Vinton

- 11 :00 A.M . SATURDAY
2 ·00 P.M . MONDAY
• 2 :00P .M . TUESDAY
- 2 .00 P.M'. WEDNESDAY
- 2 .00 P.M . THUR~OA,Y
-' 2 00 PM . FRIDAY

245- Rio

.

1

Gr~nde

261 -- Gu~n

.P om•ov
985

4!t8 - Leon

Ch•JII• ,

843 ~ Ponland

Oitt

247 -·-letart Fallt

643 - At~biaDill.

949 - Racine

379 - WMnut

742 - Autlend

be fUlly . determinld, adjuoted ond prota:tad and
t~at t~e Plointiff be outho·
rlzedtobefulyoelzedolthe
ontiraiHinter..t inthuubject·raaiH)ate.
You .. ora r"!!uirad to -n- .
awer the complaint within
28 daya 11tor the lilt publication of thia notice which
will be publiohed once each
for tix

IUCCIItive

The Unknown Heira, De-

rendered agein•t you for the
relief demanded in the com-

773 - rtbson .
882 - New Haven

''

'

•

"SHAUB &amp; tR

· T~IM and ~E~
MOVAL

uary,

Atteot:

P. Buck. Clerk
Dewey M . Harton,

"LI~HT

Pr81ident of Council
11)11, 18, 21c

"FIREWOOD

r-Fi;;b;ucii,iitf.ie--:-:OA91NANCE NO.
. 1218-89
An Ordinance to Eitablilh
the FH for Varioua Permit1

plaint.
Dated: January ,2, 1990
Larry E. Spencer,

HAULING

-lA ClNE
GUN CLUB ·
GUN SHOOT

BIU SLACK
. 992·2269

EYEIY·SINDAY
Stwts at 1:00 P.a
FactOry Chpked
12 Gauge Oit!y
' 9-&amp;-at-tlll

EVENINGS

1I.1~=======~

Roger Hysell
Garage

COUNTIY
MOBILE
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AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

•Moblla Homo
Pana
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Rantala
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PH. 992-5612 .
., .992-7121 .

tt2-7479

4-Z5-tftt
SIDING

48- Equ•ment for Rent
49 - For Le•e
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q

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••• II'CIIf, -

..
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77 - Auto

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52 - Sparling Oooda

81 - Homelmprovem(W'Its

~3 - Antiqult
•
!14 - Mitt:. Mert:hW~dill!·
56 - Building Suppli•
58 - Peh tor Sale
57 - Mutic.t lnttrumentt
58 - Fru iu &amp; V•t••bl•
59 - Fot Sllle or Tr1de

82 - Piumbing &amp; Hellling
83 - hcavaling
'
84 - Eit&lt;:tritel &amp; Reft ii;l~ta l•o n
85 - Gun•al Hauling
86 -Mobile Home Repa.r
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u

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• 1 - Hou•• for Rent
42 --Mobile Hom•. tot Rent
43 ~ farma for Rent
1 !
44- AI*tment r.r Rtnt

ljhhhllfill

571 - Apple Grove

64 -d 1av &amp; Grain
65 - s ..d &amp; Fertilizer

667 - CootviHa

Belooued
it ordained
by tho Vlllogo
by the
C&lt;iuncll of tho Vlllogo ·of
Micldlaport os lotlowtt
SEC. I. That a lee of
gatees an.d Assigns of David
Clerk of Courts, $10.00 be cflorged loroach
'Radford, Doceued; LOLA
Meiga County Common of the following permits il·
CLARK, Route 4, Pomaroy ,
Pleu Court suad by the Village of MidOh . 45769; The Unknown (114 , 11 . 18, 25!
dleport:
Heirs. Dovi•-· Legatee• 121 1, 8
ioning permit (trailer)
. and Assigns of John Jewell, I---:--:--:-::---:-:-:7""-- demolltlon permit
0ecaaaild; CLIFFORD H.
Public
remodeling permit
BRYSON. 419 eaacomo
carport permit
Avenue, Pittlbu;gh, PA.
roof permit
16214;
BETTY BLACKporch p•mit
ORDINANCE NO .
WOOD, 31946 MinarovMio
deck p•mit ,,
12.17-89
'
Road, Racine, Oh. 46771 ;
pool pormh
An Ordinance to Eltlblioh
· DEFENDANTS
Court Coate for Mayor"•
sidewlillkk:.:;-it
To the unknown heire.
Court
lid!!IP~D=Iit
devlaees. and ne•t of kin of
Bo it ordained by !flo patiO
John l . Clortc. David Rod- Council of the VHiogo of sign
lord,
and John Jewell Midci!IPOrt 11 fcillowa:
., whoae namn and addraaSEC. L Thlt the amount 1,li'll~ciiO 11. ,That 1 foe of
are unknown and 'Cannot charged
lor each caa pro- I· •
lhall be charged for
with rea~onable diligence be -oad through tho Mldcl•
permit.
ucerteined. you are hereby port Moyor', Court lor court
. Thlo Ordln.. ce
notified that you have been coati shill be t3tl.oo.
ohell tlko effect and be in
named dafendentt in a legal
SEC . 11. That the required lorcafrom and oflarthe uraction ontHiod Tho Vinto\1 amount of thMecourtcoata II_. d . • provict.clbyl.w.
County Notional Bank vo. shoH be aubmlttod to the
Puoed tha It~ day of JonClatia Dolton. otll. Defend- Tre81urar of 1~0 Stlta of uory. 1980.
onto. Thla octlon hed beon Ohio and t~at tha balonce of Atteot: Jon P. Buck, Clltk
aosigned Cuo Number 89- thaoe court oooto - 1 be
D - M. Horton,
CV-147 ond io pending In depo•Hed in the mayor' oocPraoldent of Council
th\8 Court Of Common Plea• count
ond
tron-red 11)11 , 18, 2tc
, of Meiga County, Pomeroy,
'·
Ohio 45789.
Tho object of thio complaint ia to glva the above
named Plllintiff the outhor·
lty to qulot•titlo and poo-s
the ontira lntor811 In the d•
ocribed raal - q , and the
prayer Is !hit tha rlghto. inof all portloo
teraot ond

CONTINUES!

I' ,

63 -'- Liw ellock

1;1@1111

675 - Pt . Ple. .nt

Public Nat ice

W.eko. The l"t publlcotlon
will be modo on theBth day
·of Fabruory, 1990.
In CliO of your llilura to
ono-r or otharwilo raopond 01 required by theOhi9,
Rulao of ClvU -Procedure,
judg"'!tnt by dofMIH wMI be

u.,,

Muon Co .. WV
Area Coda 30•

'
'
992 - Mtddl..,ort

••&amp; - Gallipolis
367 - Ch•hite

~· I j

11 - Hell Want ..
12- SitUition Want.t
13 - lnturant:e
1 • - lutin•• Tr•intftg
1&amp; - Sehoolt&amp; lnttritctton
1&amp;- Aadio. TV &amp; CB Aepa~t
1 7 - MiKitltnii!OUS
18 - W«ttad To Do

l!xchange.\~ ..

• Meigt Countv
AFGaCoda614

Area Code &amp;14

t

61 - Farm Equipment
62 - Want ed to Buy

3 l -,.. Busin•• 8uildin91
35- lots &amp; Acrqge
36- -Aelll Enete Wanted

6 ·- lost tnd Found
.
7 -... Vwd Sale IP••d in ad'&lt;ltntel
8 - Public Sale It Auction
t - Wiflttd to Buv

Cllt'l'r r ht•

following .fl'l1•ph1lnt•

, DAV ,BEFORE .PUBLICATION

week

4 - GiVIMI¥
6 - H~ppy Ads

ldt.

fMm SuppiiP.o
Iii L1vestuck

Reo I f stole
31 - Hom• 101 &amp;ale
32 - Mobile ttomes for Sale
33 - F-arms tor Sale

3·- Annouc:em-'''

'•!

Salas

..
- VS. . ' 'cLETIS DALTON , P. 0 . Box
324, Albany, Dh. 46710;
IVA JANE DALTON, P. 0 .
Box 324, Albany,
0~ .
46710; DANIEL E. WIL·
LIAMS. Box 972 A.P .O.,
san Francisco, CA. 96566;
vis._, Legat... and At·
aigno of John L. Clark, Docoaoed in 1949; .The Unknown Heirs, Devisees, La-

•.~t~Mrate

..

1 ....;. Cerd of Thlftkl
2 -' ln Mtmory

I "lllinyn''' nl

Public Notice
IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT
OF
M!IGS COUNTY, OHIO
· NOTICE BY
PUBLICATION
CASE NO. 89 -CV-147
THE VINTON COUN'IY
NATIONAL BANK
1 1 2 West Main Street
· McArthur, 0~. 46651

15

for each d.,.. as

'A cl•s•fied ad\lert i!lement placed In The Daily Sentinlll(u cept
t:1ass1UEW1 displav. Business Card and legal not ices!
will also apptlat in the Pt . Ple•ilnt Regisier and the Galli·
polis Daily Tribune, reaching o\ot_er 18.000 homes.
COPY OE'A DUNE -

S4 . ~

tn advance.

'free ads
GiiJe away and Found ads under 1 6 words will be
run 3 d~1 at no ch•ge.
'Price of ad lor all upit.tlletters' is double price of ad cost.
'7 potnt line lype onty used :·
•Sen·tinel •• rtot respot\sib18 lot errors after first d-v . (Check
tor e1rors first d.., ad run a ln papert. Call before 2 :00p.m •
day aft•r publication to make cone~;lion .
• Ads thai must be paid In advanQt arfl
'
Card of.Thanks
.
HIPPY Ads
In Memori.am

Rata

~5

Mont~ly

An nnu nceill en ts

Ovtr 10 · W~rd•
'
.20
U ,OO
.30
$9 .00
:42 •
S13,00
.60
· $1.30/ doy · .05 1day

WOrdt
16
16
16

Ret~l ar•lor 'c on•Qitive runs, bfokonupdayswill be cha1ed

•.
~id

'•

• The Ar;ea'• Number. 1· Marketpla~e

Oovo
1
3
6
10

•

mending trip to the region. A date
hal not )'It heeD 1et.
Quayle Kid Wednelday , "We
have many atronc frlencla al!d
supporters In our hemllpbere
and we' re going to go ·and vlllt
witli them on a mlnton ·or
d!!fllocracy and freedom, a mla&amp;lon cl conaultatlonand a mlsalon ·
or l!B~nlng."
·

·- .ucr TillE

-,

paid.

'

"

otftell1s ex~

WASHINGTON (UPI)- Pl'f!l· expr-eas ,..set over tile NOeDt
Ideal Buill, eeekllll toeue Latlll m launderataadlq re. .lttq
American concerns about u .S. · from eri'QM!OUI Pl'lll afllrlll
mWtary muacle, bu uaured about a proposed U.S. coaDtlr-Colornblan President VIrgilio narcotlca _o peration," Popadlak
Barco that be plans ao naval said In a statement.
"blockade" of hi&amp; South Ameri- ' The spokesman ..td, ''Tbe.
can nation.
president assured Barco that the
But an admiJIII tratllln official U -~- never Intended to conduct
• said the United States atlll wants any activities within Colombian
to use warships to monitor and territorial ·waters,, that no U.S.
help Intercept drllir shipments actions would be taken without
from Cojombla, where the the. full cooperation and consent
world's blaest cocaine cartels of the Colombian ,government,
reign.
that no 'blockade' was ever
"Right now, tl)e operation Is on · contemplated."
hold until we. have our; j:anaultaBusb reacted to weekend news
tlons with the Colombians," said reports that the aircraft carrier
the official, speaking on the USS John F , Kennedy and the
conditiOn or anonymity. "But we crulaer USS VJ.rglnla were
.are confident that we will get It steaming toward Colombia tp
back on track."monitor drug smuggling.
Bush, seeking to reaffirm close
According to the reports, the
relations with ColOmbia In the ships were to remain In lnternadrug war, telephoned Barco tlonal waters, h\11 Colombian
Wedn~ay, said Deputy White news accounts, and some earlier
House press secretary Roman U.S. ones, described the operaPopadluk.
• tton as a "blockade."
.
' 'Tile president called ... to
On Sunday, as Colombian

'Re cE!IVP. $ bO discount lot ads

.

'

operation 'on hold;' no blockade planned

"Ads outside Me•gs. Galha or Mason (;OU "'iee must be pre·

FDA ~Us Jarvik· artifical heart

,.

U.S. ·anti

POlfCIES

'designs

9

Pomaot MklfiPCiiiL Ohio

.

wal( collapS.e ·investigat_
i
on
.

reveaLs fau~ty

'

~• ......Y '1 1,1990

~

nu.ct.y, Jeniilry 11' 1910

8 The D!ly Sentillotl

---- -----

~---·---=------ --~---

.,

.., .

�-·-

-TUM

·-'
.,.,

....
'=~=' ~~lX-4~~s· ".

Television
.V iewin.g

LOAHI

LQANI. DeiT
Aloo . . -

• THQM;. J6N. 11

_lod_.,..,_..,

~TIOH.

Wlo4 liy ClAY I. POU.UI

I:OOi~=ltAnd

--Your~~~~·
l oE·VAP
bSllapo
Dlol Plan and

.......

.

Wltar
Pilla. Avlllll&gt;ia
Fruih .
-....oy.
.

!aw

• .

tllg(Mal 11 MIJiml .. .

....
i
M.,_

I• II

I WASN'T .
l HEARD
, A DOUOMNUT; CALLIN6 ME.,.
.

..

TIIIMI ..... Q

... NOne:rY,.

0~
CMM1
. ·.
World In

'I

'

.

'.

JtHn

I. s

ia

Coi!IUI Q

W

· ··C81Ntwl Q '
0 ·11ifM•e Comf;any
a....•~•

D HI "sn

•
PR INT NUMBeReD
9 . LETT·ERS IN SQUARES

..

.....

•

e c.-

LOST mala Boagla ..,aring red ·

Loti : Januaoy lin Mlddlapatt or
Pomeroyk ladlu gold watch.
Suoan . night, 114-112-5181.
Reward.
LOll: black and wldta .mala

..._., .......,
.OM'A'I'H

. IIJCroulft

:r~=nlyiQ
7:35 (J) . .ntonl And Son

.oo~r.J:;-=Q
(I)

.

(!)
Olcl HouN
Richard Trethewey tours a
high Itch bollet' factory In '

=li-2

Yard Sale

Do•lll• .
Mywl8oiel Father Dowling
lookl Into llle blfflllmurtler
of an tltOIIc dancer.

Newt gotll !*IIIllS llle
- . o f 111e Mill Clllfornla
USA PlgHnt, where llle
winner gt11 not only a crown
but a a - to be Mlaa
USA•. (I :00)
.,

the da~ tw.rore the ,IICII• to run.

Sunday ocUtlon • 2:00 p.m.
Friday. Monday edition • 2:00
p.m. SatLitday.

Wanted to Buy

•

caah Paid. Col 014'8112-5657 or

Wonted To Buy: Pine POll, O,.r GET PAID FOR TAKING SNAP8101. 814-44&amp;-1107 ea.m. to SHOTS! NO EXP. WAITE:
PASSE, 33W, 111 S. Unoolnway,
4p.m.
'

Nollh A-IL 801142.

Help Wanted

OEPIIT'( DlRECTOA POSITION.
diction and lltntal H.;jij," Sar•

· Tht Soard o1 Aloohol ""- Ad-

ot

HAIRSTVUST· • PIIOIWt
Hair Styling. Would you llka to
lOin our alai!? lnqlilrlaa, 11.._

-z.
LPN

t-_. t-

=

wanlad

lor

=-:~~= :.M~

.dl-or.
oountiH Ia
-!dna
dat&gt;Uiy ·
~
Dutloa
wlll a lncluda:
and Title XX - - .

RN

.......,_, S.."a11Z.
• ...,...~,
"

Oallla-Jackaon-Malga Lady

II!OIIItorlng
lmplamtntatlon
of oonltactand
•OI'ncY
Mldlcald

or

anytlma.

auppot'l tor lha

Soan( and agoncy Manago.lnlonllallon Syatam. COnclldataa

mOll...,._.. a Mallar'a t!ograa

and ralovant axparlat ... In lha
f - of h'"""n ...,1. ., ,...
. tot haallh, .-tal rotardotlon or
drug alcohol. Mrvlcaa.
Poaltlon Ia claaalflacl u 1 tal HNnh Admlniab'atar II wllh a
aalaoy ,.naa ln&gt;m 1121;451 lo
P!,IIIO. Quallllacl applloanta
art aakod to aubmh 1halr
,...,_ to: Dr. A - Hopkina,
Oallla-Jac-Boud ol Alcohol, Drua Addfc.
tion and Manta! HNI!IIS.rvlcta
P. 0 . lox 514, Oalllpotla, Oil

45131. AppllcaUon
Januaoy 21 , 1110.

........

......

~~(!cad.
1144~73.

allloa,
..••

Call

a.:

lllioila, CIH 4101.
·
MLT Part-lima --•ion, MLT
, • ....,.
_..., . . 1
, _ . , or ...,...alanl, paM-ion, doy lhlft, llooiday tllfu
Friday. Excallant banella, COli&gt;DOihNa aalary. Sand to
P
o
DOol. Clinic.
P.O. lol :!oM, Oaltlpotla, 0H
4101 ·

lroii.I14-31U1H.

r 'tfn

ot aldlfly In lhalr

homa.l14.e82-7.

Nice
2 atory,
- to · · &amp;2
bedroolftl,
new·Clrpef,
llOVI
Nfrla.,..tor fuml•hed, S286.

42 Mobile Homes
lor~nt

IIMut lui rlvtt vlaw In Kanauga.

!:;:::. ~~·

Foatar'a Moblla . _ Pari&lt;, 114-

-11102.
21r.,ln 8 -. 114-44..-.

· AVON I All A,..o I Shlnoy
Owner, Oparatcra, Wllh T~­
Spoaro, 304-875-14211.
ort-or!NIIarmuat be lramod
· AVON • All ar-. Call MarUyn I control now lor local - w..... 304-1112·:1145.
work. 1400 tM1285.

CALL TODAY lllleul --.:u' I . . . tlrrtlory for ... IRkllve
pllolographar&amp; lllmnt ....... .

;s;:"" (Iota)

,..,..,.., toya, .. -

-

lor -. ,...

----

r.1erch,JildhC

-.-oanoahv-latooaa·

Household

plual ..... lia ibfa .. ....
ilor doacHino ..,_,., 7lklro
or 1.0 315-0MI. MONDAY

Goodl

ONLY.

••lwr

Read the Best 5eler'
. '\

1. . . Cuatom - · 2br, gao
furnaoe, nnge, Nfrig.
dryor, VOIY Qi&gt;od 14,300,
1144IIW25r.
'

iiAMI OF THUO'a
Solid SlOta - . , ll!lwlna, ALL
CASH IUt _...,, ' • linma
Loolltonl. , - t 1fl141',

«

loll. "'--na Anllq-,
1124 E. Main III'NI. - . . . ,.
- : II.T.W. 10:00 a.m. to 1:00
t,"'~ 1 :00 lo 1:00 p.m.
I.,Y

2 lr.\ callla. - n !lnd qulat,

dl 1" ..:

1011

Amlques

2 bldroam t,.lt.r tor -=~~­

-

-~··4.

31 HOIIIII for Sale

'

410 John DeliN ll~titoe, good
CICWHI. 114 441 1044.

'J~ butlllloail ..~

. 114 au.l-22.
FoNI Dlaaal tractw, wllh
111 J mount ~ ll'aft8POft
~lac. 4 , _ no'INI ........ anao.
. . . .Ill w/.10 ..... UIIO.

.:104.f:ll 1311, ..

54 Ml8callaneous
Merchandlll
__
ol_.., __ _

- - . --Jon-.
114··=

....... , _ Eaufpma:'~ =~ II,
. Waal OaNt...r., 11 4 . m;
uaad !ann
:,.,~,·
I Co, WV,
- - I lmpla-a. luy,
aal~-. I:ON:IO - P o
lat. IN!-.
Nf!'IIO!IIor,- he,l\4-

DleAPPE,ARED.

FReD's L05T H15 ··
uoe.WAL.ieR te

e.RAMISINA
IQANITAAIUM ...

STEP!-W"IE " '· •

MORRIS l-IAS

Home

81

lmprovemems

.......

.•

waia._nng. .

~~=~~~~~.

I:~ whan....

s-'~u:.~: pllol. Q

)' ·:

IIIIIIOVII:

I '

'

1:30~•

·'

alngfl

11ll.c-.r_..,_

::;.._':'",..:W~.S:::

13

Llv81t0Ck

:0:11d~1W~~~~.i:ed~Qo::::,...
=.,~Hor=aa~

M!L ·

-

1171, 2 p. old ....ed
I!IJ uoo. 1182

c;r-a:r.:o:..t.~·e

n
-"'""' DllfaNinl.l11110.-l.............., . . . l ' r
,.................. lid II II Mil
Tacll, :IOM7S-40M.

bod,_,.,

.

84

or aabla

Pump -

-2102

e (lJ

::l;

Rllflltll'can RIIPI.IIM To
IIMcOfThallalaUIIII

(!)

=
g;·•
I :::" ,._

• eo._ L.lld1a Tht

"

.

-·YIIo .......,.

haad o1 Oakman lnduatriM

Davia
011~ CrMk IW. Pa11e. • •

~ ..... daiiJWy, 114-'

Jao-.,

Plumbing a
Hilling

•

10

lovlt' kill
Twllghl z-

•o

laptlo Tlnll Pllltllllna '!0-t.Galla&gt;
Co. IICN IVAHIIIIITI'P,I. . .,
CIH 1~- :

82

01 L.A. l,aw McKenzte

triea to 11g111y lilock lledter ·
trom taking the llrm'a clients.
ie(Jl !'ttn ..... Uv. Q·
lfll1iuewaloti

lool .........

and oarvloa.

mo111er and her

1D:OO(J)CIH Taleltlon •

1

llolarJ

;:~

~~~elllall

-.-·

-walla comptated-

=":'

• Nnllvllt No-.

,,

'

Alfll

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

Mr.

: ·D TlilniiiW Nlglll Flghll

TV . . . . . 11111'd:t;i:
In z.ntlh lllao - . .
.

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

·

ManU (1:00)

.

Palntlna. lnt- and Oll«&lt;or, ·
- aallinatae,104-171-2111. ;

Ron,_

-

1:
&amp;\ 'i'0111111 llldaN Tht Kk; "
Ia unjustly lhi'OWII .In jaH lltd

ORINI&lt;It-~a~:

!=====? /

IASEMINT
WATERPROOfiNG
·, ·
Uncondldanal HtltN ~
t... l.ocril Nf• II II furftlehM.
,,.. aetlmatn. Coli 1·
I144S7-G4N, llay w night.

:104..-rwtll
11._
-. -Olllo.......
wv
:Mii4•

·-~· No ...... 114-MII-

.- ...

-unt

--

-·

••:'l"l'l

2213.

with

-1122.

=-

II2DII/Ino. Raft- I
~· 114 444 ZZ31 11

3

..,

D1ow. - tran1p I cHic, IIIII;
l71Mf .,._, - · . hoa,
11.110. 0wn1r w111 11no-. m~

141 tnooler whh " ' - "
UIIIO, For4l Ju- wllh

Fumlahtd Ill olao. '21ir, 1 mila
tram CIIJ', on lira- ~... kit,

Fumlahtd,

wile IIIOCtlltd ol munllr. ·

61 Fann Equipment

304-1175-:101 .

Buelneu

famoua ar111t diM, hil young

12 apd. - . tzL.

J L,,,e-~l(h,K

Fmanc1al
21

Suppl'r ,_

WMitday: ·

· ~ ;"~When 1

'

WIN do ....,altllng In my homo,
d upar- and ral.
Will lob ..,.

.
e:ooe~ 01 ~ s.m Ia
: ~to open 1 bar ol

114-IUC4:M2 · - . .
.- atar I:OOp.m. :

•

814 . . .2841.

.i

175.

- · out llulcllng garn~~~~~~;;,;~ aWllbau
mente. ~ Okl ~erap
Locot Financial lnalhution t.
laoklrv~ for 1 to work
...
~-··

~~or~ea olse-...1 "*'"of
Yosemlta clilpmlnkllltold.

...a

gravll,
appll-.
Ole.·Alao
anyl!llng, - whl
out

~ , . _ _ Tht 111e

POOR lOY nAES, ~
3331, ...... and ... _
t11.115, 4,000 pool
tlrM, '
aaml-tf-nawtl- .
of I, 327 Mocll plalona 01141

lllnl: will haul ·~

h
........
Raaaonabla

n!QI . .11111nce to conti'Mt
.In
ion ol
Flnenclal Manlga.- part·llrile, 5 hrl. par doy, II..,.
Pt1Mi lurd lmplenwnllllon of U(1, w.dnlldly'e a Fricln'e.
qYIIHy •nunnc• actlvl•; 1nd Send ,........ alo lo• 723,

-

lor

Pl.....,p

CD llnHit'!'tavte•• Gtiea

1112 Chavrolal· I R
truck bed, no ruM, $100. 304- 1
115.21A

10:30 CD 1,.. On T11a "'"-

_ . . . , Clwllllgllll Y88nt

''

Hey a Gl'll.n

'"

'

JlOw«fuu

(!)

........

Sei1IIOr

Jr.

·
.

D. Rockefllllr,

e ([J) Cl~n.Waloti TIIIIIIM
84

lor_,_,.,..,...
..., lor-

!lor

•Country
MaoteIIIUilC
Haal•laglnd
I'll On TNCIII
....,..
"-"I pelforma In concert

EIICtrJCII a
Flllrlgntlon.

BERNICE

BBDI!; OSOL
. .

11+74140A.

=r:.:J:,~

Read the

-

.

115.,

.......- - .. =.:;
=
~~..-.~

ADS.
II

Tribune- 446-2342
.. Sentinii-

RIIistlr-675-1333

S:&amp;~i..~
......
..,..
--.......
'

-

"' .... In • ._..

l17,oao. -722.f010.

OrllndO, FL
10:40~ 110¥11: 11la lelariRl
(2:40)
.
u:Oii(J) llaod n1a And

• •o

\ 1lGowtau
.1.= ......
11 il;a'lf~

.,
71 AI*- for ....

11
btfiiN •8bill
cljlaclly
Ct'OWd
Chuldl
Station
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SOUTH ·.

.A

tQHil42
tKJ86 ,4.

+A

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: East

Nor"

Weal

••

Pass

3t .

2t
H

Pass

All pass

'ne1atlve double

Opening lead: 4 9
.
have an opportunity to promote . the
setting trick with continued club
plays. To counter this; - ~larer can·
win the day by brayely leading a low
diamond at the second trick. Although
Ibis is against the card-combination
percentages, the bidding makes it likely to succeed.
.~.

DOWN

10 Pacific
1 Box
Islands
2 American
11 largaal city poet
In Afrlce "3 Drooping
13 Corl11-'and 4 Sl&lt;:kness
14 Knock
(Fr.)
Y
, 11terday'e Anewer ·
eometl'llng ·5 Cull
I Serving 20 Sky·blue 33 Address ·
cocked hat perfectly 21 Ramble
lhe
15 Member of In
22 A Gabor
convention
the U.S:
t11nnla
23 Asian
34 Buddy
' Houu : '' 7 Newsman
holiday
35 Dry .
(abbr.)
Rather . 25 Retirement 38 Georgia ·
11 Uttte ·
I life (Lat.)
account
city
Aloriso
8 Galt ·
(abbr.)
38 Street cry
. 11 Lawyer
12 Nibble lor 21 Cymbals 38 Bitter drug
(abbr.).
dobbin
In Benares 40 Curve
19 Cuban
17 Can. · 27 O'Neill
42 Wire
·dance
province
drama
measure
21 Beat Ill
(abbr.)
29 BIUng
44 Sovll!t .
24 Cut of · 18 Snake
31 Ex Mrs.
space .
macaroni
or Sea
. Sinatra
staUon
21 Prevent
2t Style
ol palnUng
30 Information t.r-+-++-+31 Resolve
32 French
river
34 ...

excellence
. 37 Rldlellon
unit
31 Diner's

.
charges
.41 Redolence
43 "I Was
....; War '
'

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41171h U.S.
Prllhlent

47 Crull out

DAO..Y CftVD'I'nlli.JVJd
. - Kere'•llow tO work It:
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Is LONG FELLOW
One letter stands for another. In thia sample A is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, ·
epllltrophes. the lqth end form~Uon of the words are 1111
hints. Each dey the code letters are different.

, ..

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P KB G ' G D M

0 K HUM Z

OHUMZ

GDM

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"Thla vacetldn sounda llkt • a-t
change ol pace: two WMke In Buffalo
shoveling driveways.·'

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an effort

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item (abbr.)

~:~Jr:r,.t::.:~ce

-·Ida

Sill, · - - - child........,
I a.m... l:iO p.m. Aallll 2"h-1 0.
11t1ora, aftar achoof. Doop-lna
WIICamt. 114 4111224,

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Accessories

Mill Paula'a Day Co,. cantor.

1 - .pad

(2:35)
1:30 (lJ 01 Din- World

76 ' AUtO Parts &amp; ' H

EAST
tAH

WEST
t K 10 3

by THOM'AS JOSIPH
ACROSS 48 Made

8:06 (J) MOVIE: ~ Monte &lt;Rl

.

.KQ&amp;
ti07H2
+J764

CROSSWORD

~-=Stallon

Pre 1MO quiMa. Any condMion.

Employment Services

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

Valentine (1 :00)
.
(IJMI ........w....

CuiHa

.14-Git2·24et.

([J)

IIJ PrlmiNtwl
!IJl MOVII: . . , _ . , Mr.

Junk cara with or wlthaut
motor.. C.ll Larry Uvtly 11+
. 38H303.

Ylcn

s

illl • tD • HiMn

AlL Yard Still M.... It Paid In
Advance. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.

11

.......

CD

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

•

Faithful readen of Ibis column
bave 11ee11 WIUy NUly foul up some
oontracta, but 'lie all know thai Willy
bas been around a bridge table long
enoqb to understaDd bow to play the
basic card combinatloas. Sittill&amp; South
in today'a clUJ, he certaillly bid his
lwKI to the bllt. Not that he needed
mucb from North to bave a good play
for five tllamonda. U North held ace
three am11l diamonds and nothing
the play for pme would be rea•
I~~l~le. And with a singleton spade in
the North balld, as little as Q-10-x-x of
diamonda mllht be enougb.
.
·
Anyway Willy won the ace of clubs
and saw rilbt away that malting aame
simply depended upon losing only one
trump trick. And be knew be sbould be
leading up to the ·K·J of diamonds. So
be led a 1pade at trlc:k two. West won
the 10 and CODtlnued with another.
~lub, wblcb Wllly ruffed. Willy ruffed
a lp8tle in dummy and led a diamond.
Eut took tht! ace and played a third
club, ·PQOI' Willy ruffed, but West
scored the setting trick l"ith. the queen,
. of diamonds.
.
Tbills a tough band to play, but the
bidding does sugest that East holds a
siJI-aard club IIIli. n 80, the chances
are good that be will also bold a sincletou ace of diamonds, and West will

~

304-G75-MGO.

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WIIMI 01

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Cockar Spaniol. AnaMrt to
Rucal. Reward: I1...U.2134. 1
Mla1lng pllow atrip .ell with
blut collar Comp Conley .- .

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7:30 e ~ Ill FIIII!IJ FNI
(J) C alogo leirlcelllall
(I) l!itltillllt- Tonight

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SPACf IStJtT
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8 Yll;laoCountrr

collar, last ...,. Ratrock I,.L
304-G75-1751 ,

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BRIDGE

Court Q
.!IJl Abllot And ~to
(IJ Mllntl Vlot

Found: amall brvwn and whit•
malt d9ao Tuee. Jan. I on
County Rd 3. 01,..742·2889.

II I I

UNSCRAMBLE FORI
ANSWER
.

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. KIIAM l.iTS ANSWIRS
l-10
Nallion.- Owner- Quota -Immune- WOMAN
My neighbor was very Involved in the equal rights mowment
. He 8elafa lady C8fTYlng a small baby, "IS'.ha boy or WOMAN?'\

(J) lportaCanllf
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Lost &amp; Found

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someof-old·--."
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G) Complore rho chuckle quoted

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l;&gt;y filling In the missing words
'-...L--L-...L.....I--'-....1 you develop from step No. 3 }leloVT .

· 7:00~

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thin!&lt;ing Hwas still stylish. Aool·
leaQus commsnted. "Nice suit.
Makes me Want to drag out

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Ron'• Chl.-ney Sweep., ••·
...,..._ ciNnlng and relining.
Wa liMp tho 110otw I~• "'"'
nlng, no1 your 110ma. 1104-rn.
5341.

lottora of the

four oa omblod -.Ia

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UVE FOR HIMSIU ALONE; HE UVES ALSO .fOR
AU MEN ON EARTH. - MARnN LUIHER

.

C) 1110 by

Kinl FaalutH S,. 1

ala,

Inc.

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�~go 12-lhe Daily ~el
'U

.

IIASO

COMPANY
:-.

(304) 773-5592
2ND STREET
MASON, WV.

.

.
.

.

.

Ohio Lottery

.

Pomeroy
•
8e8CJUI•
centennial

Pick 3 .
281
Pick 4

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Clearb11 loill«bl. Low ID
· mid teens. 8ullll)' Sa&amp;urday)
hllh In mid 308.

•

••
. .

Vol.411'. No.172
Copyolghted 1180

•

2 Sec:1iono, !6 PagH

_Pomeroy-Middle.,ori. Ohib. Friday, January 12. 1990

,,

'

211 C.ntt

A Mulllmllilla Inc. N - I P -

'

Mason County area
residents giVe views
on U. S. 35 routi.rig .

•

"Safely is lhe most critical
Barnette contended that the shorByMARGARETCALDWELL aspect," Sheline· said. "Unless rest and safest route would be to
OVP News Staff
More than 100 Mason County you're are exposed (to the con- lake the four-lane highway through
area residents attended Wednes- ditions of U.S. 35), you ·don't and the northern end of the couniy, to
day night's public hearing In the can't· know the seriousness of this Kenna and l)len to 1-77.
county courtroom to express problem. The only thing between
. Don Greene of · Leon, agreed
views and hear Ideas on the the people in Henderson and lhe with Barnette, saying that a road is
location of routing U. S. 35.
. ·highway is a 32-inch sidewall(." . as safe- as its drivers. However,
· Shelme had proposed a new there are no major exits between .
Conclucled by members of a
county
commission-appointed route location for the four-lane the 1-77 proposal: There are at le&lt;lst
coinmiaee, lhe hearing focused on · road, a "direct" l;l8th ~W!I the (v· seven rna~ exits on 1·64 where .tile
public concerns and reactions to buckle-Clendendin dtstnct !me, four-lane hoghway would meet the
J)I'OI)09ed routes.
splitting the lower end of the interstate.
• ''We were asked to recommend county;
·
Bob Wauerson, who lives on
to
the
county
commission
the
ro~t­
Other
residents
supported
lhe
U.S.
35 marked a rebuual to that
•
ing
of
the
highwa~
most
beneficial
commissioner's
safety
con~rns.
proposed
route. He said the highCONDtJCl'ING HEARING - Tbe M the commltlee, conducted the bearln1 aad wrote
to
Mason
County,
said
Bob
Stief,
Coanty Commlulon appointed a five-member
down the varloualdeas and concei'IISofthepubllc.
mcluding fo~r sehool bus drivers way needS to buill in the most
commiaee member conducting the and truck drivers. Bul !Ill they direct route which is the county ·
committee 1to research the benefits of &amp;he
. Also on the committee are Edythe Ropn, Jimmy
liearing. "We don't have our minds looked a1 the ol)ler alremabves. tho commission's proposed route.
commlulon's propoaed I'OUtlul of lJ,S. 35.
loe Wedge, Sleven Rl~mond, and Gus Douglaa,
made up. There are so many impor- issue of a n~w bridge ac~ lhe
Wednesday night's bearing In the courthoUlle was
Watterson backed-up his opinion
cbalnnan, who was un,ble to a&amp;tend. ( OVP photo
tant tlungs to be considered by Kana.wha Bndgo was. conSistently by saying the route goes through a
a pr,oduct1of the re~~earch. Bob Stief, a member of
by Margaret Caldwellr
everyone and we want to hear your menboned as a concern. .
less populated · area and along a
ConCIII)IS."
One of the first t~ speak was ridge: If the four-lane road were to
Residents spoke on the same Grant Barnette of Pomt Pleasant. be built to 1-77, a new four-lane
concerns as the commitlee expres- Notin_g __that when Congn;ss ap· bridge would have to cross the
sed: safety and truck traffic; shor· ~atiiil fundS for ~e htghw~y. Kanawha River, which would cost
n . and surroundmg counties more.
test and most direct ro11te; industrial and agricultui'al societies were to benefit from the road. Bar"We already have 1'-64 traffic on
maintained
and
expanded
on;
and
neue pointed out that if the high- U.S. 35." Watterson said. "Route
.
costs.
way was consaucted on the com· 35 is not safe for heavy trucks."
By CHARLENE HOEFUCH
In grades 7:12 grades shall be and Diana Nelson as an accounts
Mason County Commissioner missioner's proposal, uaffic would • The highway is suppose to
recorded as percentages, not as clerk substitute. Corey CarnaKe~ Sheline, who nomin_ated the exit on 1-64, whe~ "more ~fie benefit Mason County. Jackson,
' . Dally Senllnel Staff
Tlie gqtdlng policy was mo~:lllettef•igrades, and passing or ha!l,. ~land, Eastman&amp;lJdRicky
com 1Dlp!ll;ee~,::n~ot~only remfo= · would ,be fu~neled oniQ the mter- Cabell and Putnam counties already
sllll.e, dcfeaung .the focus of safe have four-lane roads, WilttersOn .
f~ ~d. the . req~r~l!'!l!lll · for. faiU~~"'~' giyen, ~urse shall be f F1reeman were emp~ as ~
Conilnued ()n .page 12
liaffic. ·
s uauu,..w ~ ll&amp;tll~.QrUhlr\l.n,itqr t·;. ~lft~liirtil.d:iy~tlltes\'notl"" i41)1Jtlt.IU!!,''blfi; • cfrlVers·...!Jn a .• hiS
rll~e,~hangl!ifrit'W~e!ICI~Y· ' le}~IJ'a.H.I.·,.;&lt;, .,,...~ .t' , pr1111Atl0nary $ntrilet. '
·
night's meeting of the Board of
In grades 9-12 class ranking~
'It .,..as voted tp co~tlnue the
Education of the Eastern Local · shall be determined bY percen- district's llablllty Insurance palSchool District.
.
tages , not letter grades,':accord· Icy with the Natlonwille lnsuAccordlng to the new policy,
ing to the pollcy .
ranee Co. and to Join the Ohio
there Will be an academic honor
The new board policy also SchooiBoardAssocatlontor1990.·
roll for-sl!ldents In grades 3-8 and
provided that ''every effort be · . The oath of office was adminlsaJ! overall honor roll tor students · made by teachers and adminls·
tered to new member, Bill
In gralles 3-12.
trlltors to increase arid Improve Hannum, and re-elected
To be listed on the academic
prol(ldlng volunteer tutorial help member Jim Smith. Ray Karr
hol!or_roD students must make a
to marginal students." ·
was elected president and
, grade of "B" or better In all
Boththegradingandhonorroll Churck Knight as vice president
· academic subjects and achieve a . attainment policies ·took effecht a brief organization meeting.
grade no lower !~!an a "C" in the · ·uve Immediately .
Regular meetings were set for
subjects of physical education,
During the meeting a "needs" · the third Wednesday of each
art , halidwrltlng and music.
budget for fiscal year i9911n the
month at 6:30 In the high school
The overall honor roll wlllllst
amount of $3,167,763 was
cafeteria.
adopted, This "needs" budget
Next meeting, how.e ver, will be
students achieving a grade of
"B" or better In all subjects.
provides for $549.886 of expend!.
held on Feb. 12 at 6: 30p.m In the
Additionally. there shall be spetures In excess of projected
high school cafeteria in order to
clal &gt;t'ecognltlon and distinction
district revenues.
hire spring sports coaches. At·
· for those students who achieve a
The board approved a new tour iendlng were Karr, li;ntght, Hangrade of "A " In all subjects.
year contract for treasurer
num, 1. 0 . McCoy, and Smith.
As for grades, the board
Eloise Boston, and hlredDavldJ.
mOdltled the current pollcy. Now
Kaufman as a substitute teacber

Gradirig policy :. niOOified by ·
Eastern Looal School Board
'

111

Winter stotnt hits
Ohio early _tOOay

Deputies probe
theft, forgery
of two checks

Deputies of the Meigs County
Sheriffs Department are Invest!By tJnlled Press International
long as ' usual.
. gating the theft and forgery of
A' winter storm was pounding
Columbus pollee closed South
two checks that were stolen from
Ohio Friday morning with the ,Front Street In the city's Brewthe West VIrginia Chipping Mill
first taste ot season11ble weather ery District tor:. a few hours
office at Rock Springs.
in nearly two weeks.
Thursday afternoon because of
According to the report, the
Pollee reported numerous ac- concern that a scattoldlng on a
first check was stolen on Dec. 21
cidents on Icy roads lh both the construction project might
and was forged In the amount of
.Cleveland and Columbus areas, buckle and collapse as winds
$000. It was reportedly cashed at
as drivers found their morning gusted at up to 49 mph.
the Pomeroy Kroger store on
commu.tes Jasu'ng about twice as
Dec. 21.
The second check was. apparently stolen on Jan .- 6 and was
also made out In the amount of
$000. It too, was cashed at the
Pomeroy Kroger Store deputies
reported.
Two male subjects have. been
Middleport Mayor Fred Hoff·
be enough_to make all the the lmtaken Into custody and have
man stated today that boaters in
provements which the vlllage
signed confessions admitting the
the area will be given an oppor·
plans, It will p~ovide a goOd start
theft and the forgery of the two
tunlty to provide Input Into the
toward the type ot boat launch·
checks.
type ot improvemen!s which are . lng faclllty which the village anThe report stated that a 17-year
nl!eded at the Middleport boat
tlcipates having In the next few
old Middleport juvenile has also
launching faclllty on the Ohl()
years, according to Mayor Haft·
been questioned and has admitRiver:
.
man.
ted filling out the check which
A public meetingwW be held'at
· An overall plan of ·e verything
was stolen on Dec. 21. He stated
7 P.M. on Monday, January 151n thalia !IHI1ed to prcivlde service that he did not receive any of the
the Middleport council cham· :. to boaters will be develoPed and
money -.nd did not know that the
bers upatalrs at village )IIlli. All
actual c;oDitructlon of the facility
check had been cas bed.
persons ll'ho are Interested In
will tie In segments u finances
Robert Beetle, sheriffs lnvesboat lauohlng facilities In the
perrnlt.
. . tlgator, reported that the names
area are Invited to attend. ·
The vUlage wishes to obtain In·
are .belna wttllheld. peDdlng the ·
Tbe Wlage of ~eport was
put from lnterelled penons on , .filing ot cbaraes. The pair have
awarded a ll'ant from the Oblo
both an overall plan and on Items
indicated they are wtlllnr to go
Dept. ot Natural Reloureel, Dlvl·
which they feel are m01t ImpOrtbefore Common Pleas Court on a
slon at Watercraft. In the amollnt
ant for lmmedlate construction.
biD of lntormatlon. Tbe prosecut·
of $25,000 lor Improvements a&amp; the
All sunettlons will be consldlng attorney has been contacted
old levee 111 Mlddlepm't. ~ vn.
ered by vBlap ofllclala In formuregardlna the preparing of
!age wDI be pi'OVicllng local fw!ds
latlng the ute for the Initial
paperwork.
In ti!IIIIIOI!Jil of iJD4tiOO ~ wlll
137,1100 project wblcb II expected
Tpe .-eport also stated that the
make the total lmproYement pro- to be under construction In the mothet ot the juvenile hu flied
Ject IIJIIQI!nt $37,1100.
.
fall of this year.
contributing charges against the
• AlthoUJh thll· amount Will not
adults.

U~ge

..

area .boate.rs to
attend Monday hearing

't

r:::: -

'ftle ·~Ealle Exp~a" II
a&amp; Eastern Hlp School. The
atore, whlcb celebrated Its IJ'IDd opening on
Wednesday, will be run by sludenlll ,and It was
funded by lbe J.T.P.A. of the Melp Galla
Community Aellon A1ency. Plelured, 1-r, front
rOw, are Toby Curlls, Rebeeca Cl)evaller,
open for b

Michael Klein, and Tom Baalm. Back row, Sid
Edwarda, director of lhe Melp Gallla Cornman·
lty Actloa Agency, Tom Reed, Charles Moore,
school principal, Geol'le Arnott, Mike' Doullas,
LD. teacher a&amp; the school, and Don Elehlftler,
teacher.
'

Local· news briefs---. EHS pupils
Health services officers elected _
Otllcers and Board of Trustees members were elected at the

recent meeting of the Ohio Valley Health Services Foundation,

Inc., headquartered In Athens.
William H. Allen, Jr., M. D:, Athens wlll continue to serve as
president, with Bernard Fultz, vice president, representing
Meigs County; A. Burtch Pa)(ne, M.D. vice president,
Lawrence County; Merrill B . Haney. vice preSident, represent·
ing Hocking County; J . B. Yanlty, Jr. , vice president, Athens
County; Frank W. Myers, D. 0 , vice president, Athens County.
Hugh P. Custer ot Meigs County was elected treasurer, and
Elnon H. Plummer, was named to secretary-executive .
director.
Other trustees reappointed were Helen Garrlsn. Vinton
County; Meno Lovensteln, Ph.D., Ihla Fae Kimes and William
Theisen, all of Athens County; Robert Daubenmte~ and Carl
Risch, Hocking County, and Carl J. Greever, M.D., Jackson
County.
· .. ,
··
The ~oundatlorl, es tabllshed In 1966, a a health planning and
devel.o pment aeeDCY.. currently Cl)ncentrates their activities on
the development a11d marketlng·of health services, management ot medical and dental tacllltles and practices, as wen as
the recruitment ~tnd placeinent of medical · and dental
provlden, prlmarUy for the Southeu t Oblo area.

.

.

I

Fire grant money available
Melp County fire departmenls may be ellllble for matching
grant money of up to 13.000 under the 1990 Rurai Community
Fire Protection protrram of the Ohio Department of Natural

Resources.

'

Appllcatlonl ire being mailed to each
Continued on page 12

ot Ohio's 1,300 fire

open store
for training
· •· The work study students at
Eastern High School wlll now be
able to gain valuable training
experience through the opening
ot the "Eagle Express."
This " Eagle Express" Is a
store where the students at the
school may purchase such Items
as pencils, pens, erasers,
stickers, etc. , has been set up as a
retail lab experience where varIous students at the school will
learn techniQues needed to operate a small business.
,
Planning for the program
beean approldmatety one year
ago and It h., been funded by the
Job Training Partnership Act
(J.T.P.A.) which II a part of the
Melp Gallla Community Action
Agency, ·and also tbrouah the
worll of John FOIW, wilD Ia the
Metal Collllty ~Orlt Study

Coordlllator.
The

aton armrvect lti trand

opeellll 81111 rllbotl C:Ut1111i

c~

ret1IOIIl' 01 Wedlle d..,.
Tbe atore will be open durlna
school hours and there will be two
stUdent workers In the store
every period of the day.

•

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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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        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="35389">
            <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="35388">
              <text>January 11, 1990</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
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    <tag tagId="726">
      <name>duffy</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="855">
      <name>farley</name>
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    <tag tagId="466">
      <name>hamm</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1995">
      <name>kerns</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="178">
      <name>lambert</name>
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  </tagContainer>
</item>
