<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="11230" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/11230?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-10T18:46:52+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="42197">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/1f8b609200e30c58192b4f90d88a5509.pdf</src>
      <authentication>ec48902dde7b76eedf67c9561a56c15d</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="35408">
                  <text>12-The DalY Sutinel

,

Beat of the ·Bend

Ohio Lottery

A little update
By BOB HOEFLICH
Let me update you on some of
our friends.
SCott Lucllli,
long-time ad·
mlntstrator at
Veterans Memorial Hospital,
apparently got
along beaut!·
tully with his
heart surgery at Riverside Meth·
odlst Hospital In Columbus. He
was returned to ' his home In
Cheshpre Wednesday and will be
recuperating there. "The address
Is P.O. Box 144, Cheshire, Ohio
45620.
•
Charles (Larry) Harris would
Jove to hear from you. He Is In St.
Joseph Hospital at Parkersburg,
W. Va. , where he underwent
major surgery Friday. He will be
confined to the hospital for about
three weeks. The room number
Is 312.
Long-time Pomeroy resident,
.Helen Neutzllng, a fanner em- ·
ployee of the Swlsher·Lohse
Drug Store, underwent major
surgery last week "In Columbus ·
and she'd like to hear from
(rlends. The address Is Room
722, St. Anthony Hospital; 1492 E .
BroadSt.,Columbus,Ohlo,43205.

King's Island, the theme park
11ear Mason, Ohio, will be holding
auditions for some 200 per·
formers needed to the' 1990
.season. The closest location for
anyone from Meigs County Inter~
ested In trying out for some ox the
King's Island shows Is Hughes
Hall at Ohio State University and
the date Is Monday, Feb. 12.
Singers, dancers, Instrumental·
Is ts and s peclal acts will bz
auditioning In that location.
For more Information, contact
the park's entertainment and
attractions department at" "513·
398-5600.

--------

thriDer
Michigan

that prObably means no customers In New York, rJiht off and the other Is Country America
- not too appealing to a lot of us
who were country before country
was In style.
Frankly, I have dlfflcul!f In
eyen In get ling any mileage o tat
the Readers' Dlaest - excep , of
course, for the advice artlcl on
rules to follow In leading a hap ,
happy . existence. We had
relative who must have gotte
wrapped uP In a sweepstakes
venture- hesubscrlbedforusas
a gift until somewhere In the mid
1990's. I don't think he won the
sweepstak~. but maybe he can
gain something from the happy,
happy ex,l stence articles. ·
And the "Son Of Heaven"
exhibit In Columbus over the past
summer lost well over a mUllon
and a half.
Now my understanding Is that
the City of Qhlo wlll pay $670,000
on tbeloss.whlletheState-o fOhlo
wlllbeaskedtopayonemilllon...:
you got Is -six zeros -on the
loss . .
. How about them apples1 Is
this an example of how our state
tax money Is spent? Apparently
so. Frankly, I'd like my part
spent on Route 33 In Athens
County for some centerline reflectors so that drivers can see
where that miserable road Is
going - and especially on rainy
evenings. You've probably noticed - In · Meigs County those
reflectors are right there to help
you ·cope with tbe problem -get
to the Athens County line and
nothing. I have a little difficulty
understanding that. But, I can
understand that the State should
pay the mllllon on the Son of
Heaven loss.
After all, the
exhibit was good for Columbusand that's Important to us -Isn't
It?

•
....
-

· -·~

·

.

..

~ ·

Potr~eroy-Middlepo~ O~lo• .Friday, January .19. 1990

2 li..:tiOno, 14 Pog• 25 Cent•
A Multlmedlo Inc. N_.,IPor

Pillsbury ·planning to
·expand ·Wellston plant
SALE UPCOMING - The tlleme ·ror thla Jelll''a uDUI Girl
Scout Cookie Bale ilt "Diacover &amp;be Treu-.'" Starbl Frld., .
aad coaiDtdDI ·throup Feb. 4, Girl 8coilta tbrOUCIII!a&amp; Me_lp

• •
&lt;.

LINCOLN
a luxury
What

car should be ..

.,;

rr

PROBE . WRECKAGE - Rescue worken
lnvestlltlte the wrecka1e ol a twln-en&amp;lne
• Bechcrafl Xlngalr after lUI Eastern Airlines '727

1988

Defense harrimers .away
at AIDS-afflicted doctor

Slinderella meets

252
Pkk4

9484

What this country nEeds Is
Barbara Bush -and you know
more magazines and · a good who she .Is - gives a "qualified
10-cent greeting card.
yes"
.on women servjng In
. ·
mUitary combat. Fine- and "the·
Two new slicks are about to · people who decide we should go
make their appearance on the , to war are tbe ones who don't
American scene- why do I have have to go. Great plan, eh? I
a feeling they will be short lived? know It's difficult- but do keep
smiling.
One ls called Midwest Living -

NEW YORK (UPI) , - A often .Interrupted by objections
defense lawyer, calling the. tesfrom Prego's lawyers who said
timony of a doctor who claims
he was being repetitive. Most of
she contracted AIDS In a public
the objections were sustained
hospital "Incredible," said she
and Friedman was forced to
only remembers Incidents from
rephrase his questions.
her medical hlstdry that bolster
After a · series of objections,
her story.
Bernstein snapped at Friedman,
Stanley Friedman, a defense
"We've already heard that." ·
attorney In the $175 million
· Ou tslde the courtroom, Fi-led·
negllgence lawsuit !lled by Dr.
man said he was pleased with his
Veronica Prego, hammered
cross-examination · and denied
away at the doctor on Wednes·
suggestions·he Is buUylng Prego.
day's fourth day of cross·
"It's not the first time·· (Preexamination In state Supreme
go's) attorneys have made
Court ln Brooklyn.
claims that are unfounded," he
Prego was expected to take the
said. "As far as buUylngher, I've
stand again Thursday tor cross- never raised my voice In all the
exa mination by•lawyers from the
days; never shouted, never ac·
state of New Yor)uepresentlng a
cused, never raised a finger.''
doctor Prego accuses of breach·
Friedman asked Prego If was
ing her confidentiality by dlsclos·
ever given the option of taking
lng to hospital personnel that she
the experbnental AIDS drug
had AIDS.
. suramIn, known to have danger·
" Her story Is Incredible,"
ous side effects, before she was
Friedman said. "She vacillates
diagnosed as having the disease.
back and forth and only re"We never got to that point,"
members what It Is convenlentto
the doctor replied.
remember."
· Friedman . then displayed a .
Prego's attorneys, though, dis·
deposition Prego gave In 1988,
missed Friedman's allegations,
lndlcatlni the woman said she
saying Prego had no motivation
had ' discussed the dru&amp; and Its
to lie.
effects with one of her doctors.
" Let's remember something- -Prego," though, countered that
we've got a woman here who's
she never actually was given the
dying," said attorney Diane
"option" of taking t!le drug.
Wilner. "There's no . question
Friedman also asked questions
she's dying. She has no motlva·
to buttress his claim that PreJIO
tlon to lle."
knew she had contracted AIDS
The Argentine doctor claims
before 1987 and thereto~ should
negligence by others caused her
have tiled her suit earller.
to prick herself with an AII)S. I Because she did not, he contends;
contaminated needle she said
the statute of limitations had
was left ln a pile of waste by a
expired.
careless Intern.
Prego Is suing the Intern, Dr.
Joyce Fogel, Klhgs County Has·
pita!, where the Incident oc·
curred, and the city's Health and
Cindy Lambert lost the most
Hospitals Corp., which oversees weight and Barbara Hudson was
the Brooklyn medical facility.
the "runner up In Monday nights
The case before Justice Aaron class of Slinderella held at Five
Bernstein· Is believed to be the Points.
first trial In which a doctor has
In the Tuesday nJaht Mason
claimed hospital negligence class Lois Ann Relbnlre lost the
caused her to get AIDS.
most weight and the runner up
Before the afternoon's testlm· was Kate Stone.
ony began, Prego' s lawyers
NeW members are now being
revealed the young woman, who accepted In both class wlilch
Us appeared gaunt though acted begin at 6 .p.m. ,..
feisty on the stand, was suffering
trom a ser lous deterioratiOn of
ber lei muscles caused by A~.
Friedman questioned PreJIO
about her medical history from
1983, when abe saye •b~ was
Infected IVIth the AIDS virus,
until sbe was dlapOied as
llavlng tbe dlseue In 1987.
·
Friedman repeatedly asked
the 32-year·old woman about
meetlnp with doclai'l and advice she wu etvea during the
!our-year spall.
, j'rledman's QUI!Itlonlng was

Pleir. 3

'Two die

MINNEAPOLIS (UPH Pillsbury· Inc. . a subsidiary of
Grand Metropolitan PLC, Thurs·
day ·announced a $140 mllllon
program that will result In the
loss of lip to 1,300 jobs across the
country, but an expansion In
Wellston, Ohio.
· Company officials said 800 new
jobs will 1&gt;e created during the
program's 18-month ~rlod.
The program of Investment In
product quality, customer ser·
vice and cost reduct-Ion Is designed to strengthen Plllsbury's
three grocery businesses, Bak·
ery Products, .Green Giant and
Pizza. .
·
The program Is the latest step
hi&amp; It wblle laadlag ThundQ a&amp; lllll'talleld
In a strategy to reshape Pillsbury
laternatloa Airport near Atlaata, GL Acconlln1 · as a key competitor In the 1990s.
to olflclals, one penon was killed In tile cruh.
The Investment plan will fl.
(UP I)
nance the expansion lind moder·
nliatlon of some plan 1s and
dlstrlbu lion centers, the realign,

ment and consolidation of sevThere will be a significant
eral leading product lines and the expansion at the Wellston plant
closing of some facllltles.
In southern'Ohlo. Wellston also
Paul Walsh, chll!f operating will receive new pizza capability
officer of Pillsbury, called the for · Its Jeno's and Totino's
program "a continuation of ef· brands , as well as new vegetable
forts to make Pillsbury even processing lines lor Its Green
better equipped to compete suc· Giant brands. Frozen dlstrlbu·
cessfully In the fast-changing tlon capablllty In Belvidere, Ill., :
global "food lnclustry. These ac- also will be created.
·
tions . will create a stronger
Vegetable processing at the
company lor the 1990s, and Wlll Watsonville, Calif., plant wlll
enable us to make more progr'ass shift to Wellston and other
In meeting our objectives of even existing facllltles over the next
higher quality and freshness ."
year, while the long-tenn status
Walsh said grocery product of Watsonville Is reviewed.
lines In the Springfield, Ill., plant
Plans are to close the Fridley,
and dry grocery activities In Minn., plant no earlier than ·
Terre Haute. Ind., will be trans· mid-summer of 1990. Fridley
ferred to a facility In Murfrees· manufacturing will be shifted to
bora, Tenn. A dlstrlliutlon center Wellston.
In Chattanooga, Tenn., will be
A coupon redemption process·
closed and the activity taken · lng operation In Golden Valley ,
over by the Murfreesboro dlstrl·
Minn ., will be transferred to an
outside firm. ·
bu tlon center.

..
I

THEY'RE HEKEl

*SPECIAL FACfORY RE.PYRCHASE

'

..

'

LOWMILESI
*SPECIAL FACTORY RE,ptJRCHASE
•

..
.

.'

May(Jr .IJ,arry is .arrested. by
police, FBI on ·drug charges

,.

'
*SPECIAL FACTORY RE-PURCHASE

1
CUTLASS SUPREME
SliockfSIIN2, 2dooll, hMIIDp,coupe,
Y~. lir, ..111., PS, PB, Clli.., AMFM
raclo, ....... buc1!81-.ge· ....

WAS

'3895

LOWMILESI

1984 FORD T·BIRD
Slackt2832, 2!1D«s. aoupe,lcyl., air,
111111., PS, PB, fiOiiW w'•lllaioa, po-.
-~ fiOiiW IDc:U, ~k w!IMI, AMIFM .
raclo,
~ whllll!llla.

cna..

NOW

1988 MAZDA 82200
Sliock , 3561, 2 doorl, .. cyl., • JPMCI,
AIWMIIIIMIIpe,,...,l:ucMt....,
lhortwida Mel,,.. IIIIP'binpir.

RIVE RIA

Slack • 1111182, 2 cbh, fn:nl .....
diM, v.a 350. atr.auto....... PI, P8,
j:oMrwi:dawa,ILCMi!r-.....,IDc:U,
till whell; onne, AM1FM 1111M-.
. ....... whillwalll, - - ........

. WAS

'.5G5

. 1989 PROBE GL

WAS .

'1a

...

.

NOW

1987 DODGE COLT

1-

...,.,.....

_1989 FORD TEMPO
Slack I 1$340, 173IICI. mill, I doorl,
coupe, 4 oyl., llr, 111111., PS, P8, ,_..
IDc:U, tit """'· ...... buc:MI ~
- wi:dauu defog.
·

...

....

WAS

WAS

HOW

WASHINGTON (UP!)
after being processed at FBI
Mayor Marlon Barry, arrested In . headquarters.
Accompanied by FBI agents,
an FBI-pollee sting operation
Barry was taken by motorcade
while reportedly smoking crack
coealne, faced arraignment Frl·
early :Friday to his home In
Southeast Washington, where he
day on "federal drug charges
lives with his wife, Effl, and their
while city . leaders met to deal
young son, Christopher.
with the' 'trsglc moment'· facing
. He had beer! under · federal
the nation's capital.
Barry, who has dodged persist·
lnves ligation for a year, ever
ent rumors of drug use In recent since visiting CharleS Lewis - a
years,· was arrested Thursday friend and former city worker ·
later convicted of drug dealingevenlna at a downtown Washing·
ton hotel on unspecified "narcot· at a downtown Ramada Inn In
lcs charges," U.S. Attorney Jay
December 1988.
Stephens .salilln a statement.
Barry bas repeatedly denied
The arrest was part of an ever using llle&amp;al drugs, and has
held blmlelf up as a role model
undercover operation by the FBI
and the Internal Attain Dlvl8ion lor the yOuth of a city wracked by
of the DIJtrlct of Columbia drill-related violence that has
pollee, Steplleu said.
given It the nation's hlahest per
Barry, 53, who became the capita m11tder ~ate. ·
Hours befOre hll arrest, Barry
secoad elected mayor of llle
District ot Columbia In 19'18, was a tlenclecl a memorial aervlce for
schedllll!d to be arralped Friday a bJiblchoolathlete•bottodeath
Satuntay alibi· Pollee have said
In U.S. DIJ II'let Court .
The WU~CIII Post; cltlq they beU.V. thllhoodqwu the
ulllllftltd 10utcea, aald Barry result ot a drul deal&amp;Qne bad or a ·
wu vldloteped smolllnl crack drul·related rDbbtliy.
D.C. City ~111dl Chairman .
cocaine after he wu lured to the
David' Clara called Barno's
Vtata Internattoaal Hotel by •
fellllle friend who wu working · arreet "a traatc moment In our
city's blatono." Collnclll'llan
with the FBI.
Barry, 1 lonner civil rJibll Harry 'l'bomU called It a "aad
actlvlat and IJu'N.term mayor 1tate of aff81rs tor the city."
Clarke, an aniiOUIICf!d caadl·
wbo · had. planned to offtclalJy
launeh a bid tor a fourth term on date for mayor In tllta year's
Suaday, wu releuecl on 1111 own race, lild be would meet wltb the
recoanlzance ' by, a magistrate council ·F riday to determine

' .
Slack utl8oe t, oe dooll, . . . , v.a. llir,
mylrooi,-.,PS,PB,tlltwhHI,CIIiM,
AM/Fiol raclo, rlllllt.
WAS

. ..

1880FORD
SSCORTLX
ESC~RTLX
~·-· . . . . .., . . . 1 IICI. ~I elDen,
rrar. .... tltlw, ... *"" .....
~,IIWWIIIII!cfiW,'""'
,...,PB,AMFM,.._
· *·IIIID''
••. \ P8,PI,AM'FM.IIIIM . .,rldlall.
. ~ !~

........ --· ......
.

.

---~-·--.--...:...~;:_;;:,.__~.J....~"........----_;-=.....:~:!1&gt;%==•~·~·-=.,~·=rr~~-~-==::r·-* ==r' ..., -..,.~er£...,,~...,. •~...!:-!· ~-..-•:::..:~....:;. . .~i=~•c~&lt;'O!i'"'-"o.o.G"-=...af

.

4

• •

•

•
_.,;J.. , .. ,... .... __.. ,.........,._,. _.- .... ·' . .....

what direction the city government .wouid take. Other city
leaders and members of Barry's
staff met to d.e termlne how to
deal with the bloasomlng polltl·
cal crisis.
"He has my prayers and the
city has my prayers tonight,"
Clarke said.
Clarke also said the.· city
Charter Indicates that a mayor
.cannot be forced to step down,
but can appoint another official
tocjll'ryollhlsdutles. lfheshould
resign, bls Immediate successor
wolild be City Administrator
Carol ThompiOn.
Barry's spolteawoman, Lurina
Rackley, said the mayor's ca·
blnet would meet Friday morri·
lng, at which Ume Thompson
may announce she Ia taking over
the day-to-day operattou of the
city.
Barry has been dogg\!11 by
allqattou of drill Ull tor at
lealt five yean, but amoaa thl
most dama11na alleaauou
stemmed from bla Ylllta to

Lewta.
Lut Nov. &amp;, Lewla teet11111d be
sold crack c:ocallle to Barry frCim

tbe 1\Unada Inn In Dlell1l._
1988. Tbe atatement came dlam,

a plla·barpln llevllla at willCh
Lewta pleaded . pllty to · two
cocaine dlatrlbudon cbarp~.
Barry later acculled . federal
Continued on page 10

fiLUEFIELD , W.Va. (UPI)Prosecutors and defense attar·
neys gathered In Bluefield on
Thursday, In hopes of picking an
unbiased Jury to hear the retrial
ot Bobby Dean Stacy .
·
Cabell County Circuit Circuit
Judge Alfred Ferguson halted
attempts Wednesday In Hunting·
ton, after It became clear there
were riot enough people In the

area unfamiliar with the Stacy
case to gather an Impartial jury.
Stacy, 38, of Columbus, Ohlo, ls
accuse.d In the 1981 slaying of
Huntington city pollee officer
Pau I Harmon. Harmon was ·
beaten and shot to death.

Ferguson has set aside two
days for jury selection. He said
the jurors are to be brought to
Huntington on Monday for openIng arguments In the case.
· Going to .~nother circuit to
select a jury Is rare, though not
unique. A Kanawha County jury
Is scheduled to travel to Fair·
mont this month to hear charges _
against a man accused of plant·
lng a car bomb that InJured a
deputy sheriff.
In that case, as In the Stacy
trial, the judge ordered that the
jury be Imported because of
extensive pretrial publicity.
Harmon's wile - Twyla Harmon - attended both days ol the
stunted proceedings In Huntjngton. She said she Intended to
watch all of Stacy's second trial.

Stacy was convicted In the
killing In 1982, but the state
Supreme Court overturned the
verdict, saying there were sev·
eral errors In the trial.
After stopping .the trial Wed·
nesday, Ferguson told the rejected candidates for the jury
that he did not want to give the
high court reason to overturn the
case a second time.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) The judge and attorneys In·
Gov. Richard Celeste sent to volved In the case began proceed·
state legislative leaders Thurs· · , lags about 9:30a.m. Thursday
day his agenda for 1990, strongly
flavored with proposals to belp
children, women, the elderly and
the disadvantaged.
Among the two dozen recommendations In a letter sent to
.
House Speaker Vernal Riffe,
Meigs Sheriff a deputies lnves tlg'ated a two-car accident
D·Wheelel'lbU!'i, and Senate ·
Tbunday afternoon In Racine.
President Stanley. Aronoff, R·
Acconlllll to the report from SberiH Jamea M. Soulsby , as
Cl~lnnall, were proposals to
16-year-old
Gre&amp;Qry A. Sellers, Portland, pulled Into the Eller's
enforce child support, .raise the
Gulf
Station
parkm.lot from Route l.U, hll vehicle alld Into the
minimum wase, protect battered
side
of
a
stopped
veblcle operated by 16-year-old Michael Hill,
wives, ·reduce teen preanancy
Racine.
·
and limit nJiht work Ina hours for
There
was
no
damaae
to Seller's 1978 Plymouth but light
teenas~s.
damaae
to
Hill's
1M
Plymouth.
.
• The 110vernor also"prqpiJiel! tbe
Sellers
wu
cited
to
Melp
Juvenne
Court
for
failure
to
creation ilf an Ohio Women's
maintain an usurad clftr distance.
Cornmllalon as a permanent
state qency to focus attention.on
·-·
Issues of concern to womell.
Celeste delivered h'- ''State·o f
A Jury trial IIepa 'l'llanclay In Melp Common Plea Court In
the !State" ·~• to. 1 Jolat
tbecueoftbeStateoiOIIIovw-Davld"Per-.Personawu
sliOII of tlla Gen al AuemlllY
ladlcted Marcil 7, U.la Melp Couaty on a cllarp ot escape.
Jut 'l'Uelilay. lome lawmallen
A Jury o1 JJ .,. •llad 111 !lear t11a caa, aloaa with two
~llld hll addrea1 lacked
alternate
jlll'lft.
.·
·
I
.
, 'J'IIe le~Je!' to the
.commonPI_J.~CrowtDIIprealdlngO\It!rthecue
lel4enlllp · eoatallli!cl apectflc
whlcll wu 1111-10111 rn..y.
·
recCIIIIIIIIIIIUOnl.
The 1tate Ia tiPIIIIRtld by Malp Pr-IDr ~IeVen Story
''WI muat bulltl oa thlprorz'lll
and AuiiUIUit PrUIIllliOI'Liada Warner.
of tbe Jlllt yelll'l "and
The deJ'W tut'l .._.are D. Michael Mullen, Po._uy,
effec:U\Iel)' deal with the arloua
and
James Bennett, Galllpolla.
.
~~- tbat f - Ul,.. said the
In
ancither
eourt
matter
,netra!DID&amp;
orclera
have
been lll1lld
iOWI'IIOl'·
..
1
Coaunuecl
on
pace
10
·
Amoq tbe prime lls11111 Ge- ·

Gov. Cele8te
sends agenda
to legislature

I..oeal news· briefs---.

Deputie~ probe areident ·
.

Jury trial underway·

Contln\·ed on page 10

a...--------------------.1

'

.

�......

... ., , ·.

,

'

.

,-·.

;.

.

. .,..

-.

.

,.

.

Ohio

.
.
me·
n•nry·
Com
. .
. Ul:·.__,_

•

PEa

Jordan
siriks club-record 7
.
3~point goals in 13~-107 rQut.·

2-..... DIIfllt.sal:

_
=n~.=;. ~· ~ ~~.~ ,...:: .
·~==~====~~~~
- ~~~~~~~~.
HHS head

·The · Daily Sentinel
111 Coart Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVO'I'ED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

.
~~ ~'--""T"_•~=-~lb

..

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
. PAT WHrfEHEAD
A8$18lanl Publlsher/ ControUer

CHARLENE HOEI!LICH
General Manager .

LETTE~ OF OPINION are welcome. They should be tess than 300
wonls lon1. AU letters are oubjoct to editing' and must be sl)!lled with
name, adctre.. and telepho11e number. No uno11ned letters wut be pub·
ttshed. Letters lhoull;l be Ia pod taste, addreoolnll!lllues, not penonal~

lies.

.

·

'------------------...:...------li:'

Bush ends fkst year in
office with high _popularity

to get sea I •

Jack Anderson and Dale Van. Atta

•

'

WALKER. PRESSURED- Wasblqtoa~s DJi'l'rell Walker (It') 11 presiiUI'ed by Milwaukee's Jay
·Humphries (24) and .Jack Slllma (43) under the
'

,: · · By GENE CADDts

...

,
.
Berry s Wor~d
.

GROSSl~G $300
MILL.\ON ANt&gt; T\'\E.Y

SKOW

.'

NO NET

PROFIT?!
HEtMAN,
THAT'S

Sl:fOWBIZ! I
I.
I

I!

I

II

WASHINGTON jNEA)'- The wretched e11cess, the '90s some- amounts of money lnvolved: take
headline appeared atop a story ln . how wm be different. MaterialiSm a look at what arguably was the
one of the nation's leading new- and selfishness, we're told, will most memorable failed deal of .
spapers on the yery last day of disappear along with such leading the '80s - the proposed buy out
the 19lKls. but II clearly was a por.- practitioners as Ivan Boesky and by management and the pilots
tent for the 1990s: "Wall Street Michael Mllken.
union or the UAL' Corp., the paPrepares for a Failure Boom".
Don't bet ori •it. There probably rent company of United Ajrlines,
What Is a ··· failure boom?" The wUI be some moderation ...,. espe-. for almost $6.8 bllllon.
story explained that It's the clally with the' retirement from
Two of New York's largest
forthcoming bonanzjl for Invest· public life or President Reilgan,' banks, Cttlbank and Chase Manment banks, brokerage houses, leading get-yours-whUe-you-can
hattan, were engaged solely to
law firms and others who will de- proponent. But human nature reraise from a coDSOrtlum of other
mand and receive huge fees for mains fundamentally unchanged. . blinks the money 'r equired for the
dlsmantlln&amp; the collapsed merg(After he left the White House,
purchase. Cltlbank declared that
ers, buyouts and other deals tliey
Reagan closed the '805 with a
It was "highly confldent'·'ll could
artangt'd - tor equally la.r ge dazzling demonstration of his
perform the task. .
feel - .In earlier years.
Tliey failed to do the Job, sendamoral peddlln&amp; of tbe pres!·
"Failure", one Wall Street de- dency: ln a whirlwind tour of JaIng U~ Stock Into a free fall and
rllzen waa quoted aa saying, "la a
pan, he picked up a Q\llck $2 mil· · touching off the worst stoc\Unar·
growth buslnesL'' The New York lion for a series of cameo apperket panic In two years. Notwltbtimes aecount described a com· ances.)
. standing the humlllatlnl colpetition so frenzied among !Inns
. Moreover, the "failure boom"
lapae of their efforta, however,
. anxious to clean up thelf lndllll· offers new opportwtltles for exthe two banka shared S8 mUllan
try's mess that It was "aettlne off perts In corporate restructurtag,
In fees.
blddlnr wars for_bankruptcy spe- · reorganization and bankruptcy
Two of New York'sleadlna In·
clallats."
to collect bloated f - for undo·
vestment banken,
That news comes at a tbne when lng In tile 19901 the mlltakes they
~res and Salomon Br!llhera,
It' 1 fashionable lor pundlti to pro. made In the 19801. ·
·
divided another 116.5 mWion In
claim that llllhougb the '801 were _ , To comprehend the enormous
_fees. They, of course, required
adecade of ahameleu lfeed and

Lazaro

I

I

I

•

o, N l

'

i

•

..

I;

~
,1

~·

M . ..... .

So•

Pet~&amp; St. 7t, M_c.._la11
J,thUa. PhannaCJ •• Wllmlapeall
R*rt Moni117~ Fair. Dk:klaeo• 81
OT
.

'· ......... Fr..... 111-1)

............. ...
8. Muti'IM li:a!Gr (It: I} ..... ,.: .........'ttl
· ·tl , M•• V..,_a (I.J) ....~ ..................11 '
ll.l:llljllt_.l W. .yd ('NI)U

••~"O..IIeW_...

llflfll ~ a.-. ..
!ll. Frucll ~ M•lili 71

. Lc.-0.. Will II. M'MtOioa Per171U II;

lt. Dt¥elaad 8t.'~ 1li: ·Uroa ~ Sh
Ceatnl-&amp;.nrD; Jf.S.io... ttlle«UII: ..
U. To~ II. .lo'-'• .; II. •ama1111 tl: "'
11. C.,.lltp hill I)'; II . .C.I•r.•
Noralud IS; Jt. O.t•!i&amp;*) INer l .l i • • ,
Lorain AdmkSIIUa, II.
·' 1

2.

~fe\l. ue- ,(1}

.

I. ,UIIiboro {1) I 11-0) .... ,................. . 1M
7.-CGiumbl.a WllMIIOI!Il' (J) (lt-1) ..... 138
A. Caaleld (I, ~8-11 " .. ,.... .'.............. : HUI
• • Naptlft• CWI
~ 't''"'"" "'""·... ...ft:

McNe~ 91. tt. 8W Tnaa St. II
Miami (P1a. t&gt;llt, ..,ort• st. I
N. Cu-oll• St. II, WW Fo
57
Ne.w Orleu•ltf, SW lA. I
17 OT
RUIIoi... ·Mue•tt,W•I oni 'Le~

•, ......... (1-1) _, ....... : ....... , ..... : ..........

8eet.. •Wft: II . Nrt.n1.... 11; ILOak

' Harbtrl4; II. Norllae.ITa.vl..-11: ,14. '·'
Clad••ll Gn-elllllll zt; n . AllleM tl;
hi . c~ r.a.n . ~...... , 17; 17.
Plll.vllle 8U"7 It; II. 01..-edFal ..
.

rr.w-.1 .

.,
Sam
8hephrNI11. Salem-Tt11Qto •
So.., Ala._.. 11. 81••
Flori.. 'It
D...-t•• Sl
lord 71, O.Ortll St. 11

17i J• • M_,IVIIIe' JI; •. JlellrlinUIIII! U .
1. v ....,..., .. i:Uil'rtr (!1)11-t) .. ,... zu,

so •• . ,

t ult
l,.olllsoAite Itt, hUtM

M .....

T•am

-

.U.b.....BII'IMI ....... AI, YCU II
IWII•• Coolllnu '71. llow..-4 "
CeaR...,.JIIt, 8td-11
Ceal... Coa•clleutll, 71. Uberty11
florida Aall 'It, Mortu st. 77
Fannuii,Welo•ll
Bampi...Srd•tiJ H, E•ter a M•a_.
ab II
•·
• LDIUI- Tech til, Teicu·PIII Amert-

oi.'Sile.hnwihe IH f'-U ............... :.... u1

'

1

s. ..............,. (!M) ... ...l'""''" ' "

UNC-WUmiiiJloa'lt,
·Yfrtlala RIIIIWJ II. a.... It
Ylrtlllla Teet! 11. 01• IJrtpllalo11 83
WiMbrop It, Cam ;tell U
MI-l

7~

Clacl..-111. MerdltMSI II

t. St. Hury il} Ill-f) ,; .. .................. UI

3. Or n-O .. ,,, lt'-0) .......... .... :.......... lSI
... Ol*tr .. (It-t) ............ .... !.............. lSI

I. IIUcllWOOtll (I) (IM) ...... ;............ 111

Ho••I. KD S.ulllle....-a (II-II ............ ,...... .

"ttt-1)'.......... ..... ••• : ............ 112

I . EMIC..Iolt(l ..l) _..., ...................1f 1· (.
lt.Colo. .,Crawfol'll (•II _.............. .It o"

!Ht'OIII le•: 11 ,

Co...,..._

A

lknltJ

~:

I t Dl'b l!J; Jl, ....... )1; If. .illllcYllle

Uf 11,' (Ue) W... llllliM Ne ........
ud Weat Mllllll••· I e.-; 11, EMt

r ......,.••. .,........ v..,,; tt.

(Oiel ..... ..,..!I• _
t...OI'fA. Ker*O•, I Ut:IL

Te.n •

. DhililniV ....

.......

~ ·. .....

1.

eot~mr.owe_., (Ill ~IJ-tl ....... ua
l. Sp....,netd Catb I ~I (It- I) .....: . .. .... lSI
a~ v...._ 111 111-t1 .......................... 1•1

•..v...... (11-11 ... ................:..... .. .

~Atria

,\a:WUdtl,

E.va~~a.Uire '11, 'lavler (Ohle) II

,.

Grace II, St. l"'encla M
~
DIIMII 71. Mlc..apall. It
la. . . . IJ.Iowa1t
WAM . .._.II. .. ._ Wl'lle)'. . II
a - ut.EI.. II()oCMrll&lt;. tl

...·hrn.w.,.M

a, . ~a.~eta.

U"*•

~

Mlciii.-Tecii11.LW8u~rs.rsa.a

Mla...ea 1'1', NorltweMera '75

MIC--

Mt.

'*'II. W.._llll. . . .e II

Y••• N_,_ It, La~ &amp;rle 11

.,......., Ctllt~t,
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.

II. . . . . . llr; II.

So... a..-... .

So ... e..... •lt; U .•UlllltHi!t.Pdlr' a
11: II.~ ........... U: II. MIIIHita
IMal Jf; 11,• (AIIanlfle I; · 18. (tie•
Mil .,.....,.... a..., a
Utill tl. {lit) . . . . Cetller ........
Raerw Mil \lfllfl'aet.le v...,,1 neiL

M•l•"

,.

edIt, Oai&amp;IIM ·(I... ) OIJ'II

- ·W,
...Olllle8t.
Detnl 81
"
Mldll,_

I. Mlwmrp (I..Sl .... ........................ .....M
II.As...... a St. ...._., t•l) .............. .ll
81!00 .. te111 II. Coii'WJ' CnltftN • :

DAVEJLURIS

Gruf ...... BapMIItt, 8prta1Arber .

N. liteM . . . ., l~&amp;~aW Valley.
.Ne.DHIIIIaM,VII,....Iell

1....... Hila. . (1-1) .......................... .
It Miller Cll J tN.) .......................... .. .It

·Meigs frosh edge "Jackson .

(Ill.) tl

I. 'h. . . . . . Cull 111 &lt;t•n .....-... :..It

I . Trf.VIIIlll' (IJ.f) .......................... lll

1

W. Y• W..teyanlli.Pel•Parlllt

S. Wst Ge ...1 (I} ( l ..t) .............. ... lll

IMvlllniD

.

W...I ... H U. II, f.ar.eate trltel.lell II

(1.1) ....................·...1118
3. ~-· Colllllll'l Willie (7) '( ..1) ..... I til

·
'
gress is expected to take an over- · ,
ride vote shortly after It ri!con- ·:
venes on the President's veto of "
the bill passed la!f last Fall al ~
lowing Chinese ' students · study- .•
lng !nth U.S. the option to remain ;
in or country beyond their sche· 1
duled departure.
.
1
0\her Congressional Initiatives •
that are bound to fly In the face of
, the President Include: protectionisteffortswith res~ to trade; soclalleglslatiOn such as the FamUy
and Medial , Leave bill, whose ;
mandatory provisions, It Is feared, 1
couldcausemajormanpowerres- t
tructuring within the workplace; 1
and some envlrorunental lnltla- l
lives such as global warming that :
administration . analysts contend •
are either counter prOductive or
prematurely conceived to address .
perceived problems, the fuU extent of which are not yet knoWn. ·
Allin all, theSecond Session of
the 101st Congress should be a 11vely and challenging one, a sesslon which In the wake of tbe
upheaval In Eastern EurOpe and
the restructuring of world relatlonshlps could set the tone for
budgetary ~pending and lnternaNona! affairs for years to come,

~

' . ~ ,
U. New ....... IN..tclaadcU•IHU

.
Poillta
till !IJ.l} ..... : ...... ttl

~r

.....
tt
.

T-llt11.~.-•41

IMvllloall

Tum
I. Kr:tlltrln~r

., lt'

M~treyhulll 11, ee. .i. ~
Mrr'N. ~I'I'J 14 tOTJ
Moll'nO. . 1!, St. Frudl (N.Y . )I!
Mt. 81. M...,'ll1, Lru-•MIIba!:f

2. CaaionMcKia~y (tl ( ...U
:ua
:J. lkawrtrull(l) (IM) ·" '"""""·: ·· 211
I. 8 ....1111 (I) ( 11·1) ...................... 108
:1. Newad. ( 11 ~ 1) .............................. 181
· 1. Wea•~Ilr!
(tl-tJ -.. .............. 13~

'

their own ·legal counsel, and the
law firm they engaged got $2 million for Its work. ·
The two'Jaw firms that advised
the ,pilots unlo~t received a com- ·
blned total o~ 11lmost $8.2 million, ·
while the two law firms that ad· ·
vised company management got
a combined total of $5.0 million.
Another $19 million In assorted
fees brought the total to almost
$58.7 mlllln In fees paid tor a deal
·"
that collapsed.
.
The UAL deal hardly set a re- .
cord, however. Last year's $25 1
billion levf'l"ged buyout of RJR
Nabisco Inc. ge~~erated $'156 rilll·
llon In fees -Including a $75 million advllory fee taken by Kohl~
berg J&lt;raviJ Roberta 1: Co., the .
purehaser.
Meanwhile, ilmo.ne the collapsed deals of the 'Ill awaiting
the 111gb priced clean-up llei'VIcea
of ~financial experb are
banlu'uptl:les Involving department stpres, gambling culnol,
di'UI atoes and • boat o1 other •.
ventures.
· •-

Pel.tl

I. 'h~kclll(•j til-1 1 " ........... ... 111

•no~•
OMIMII11, .....
!&amp;Itt 11'

-

... "

tt

_

w•....- u._... u

11.81. . . 11.

_ ...ell

'

.................
.. " .
"'......................... .

·li&lt;. IA. . .

U.eott

VJ•n• 'II. LMe l.MIIII .
Ark.._ ..... .._.,.

M:ll..... a.lt,lt.Uadiii.U

llanisor:t, Damitz _apaong .case l~ders

In '90s, failu•·e may strike it· ricbi-Ro_be_rt_~_a_lte__;,rs :

HOW ABOUT THE MOVIE
"GOMIKG TO AMERICA'' .

.;-

.Armr II, Fatrti.W II ..
aano.ttl. Mllt:rlclnltatt
Bartwlck It:. ill .....-l6•tfl•on 'Z
IJIIp Collep 111, Bard Col~ 55
M•ac.._.l ..a..&amp;HI.,.J, N...-eae

Dlvll .. nl

TeMJ

Cong. Clarence Miller ;

.

llr Unlled Pre.. lakr'•IO . .

• 0111 .. HIP Seltoal Btanl af CtachcA'
bon b~al raUnp (wtlk flnt.. '-ce
•atn · and •••·hat retordfll Ia
.-r.nu.e.etl:

'•

·

College

COLUMBUS. Ohio ·ct1PI) Thla
WI!H'I U•lltd' Pl'f!lill Inter_. .....

'

· from 'fourth to sixth and WI!S ·
UPI Sparta Writer
foUowed In order by Toledo St.
Francis, · Mansfield Senior,
COLU!dBUS, OhiQ (UPI)
Toledo ScOtt ·despite a loss to one' Mount Vernon and C!nclnnat \In a
of the t(,p.r~nked teams In the major shakeup amonj! the bot·. nation, had little trouble holding tom five teams. .
·on to it~No .' 1 spot tn this week's .
Last week's other three leadUnlted,Pfj!ss International Ohio ers - Alter In Division II,
High School Board of Coaches' Youngstown Lll!erty In Dlv.lslon
boys Qtvlslon I' bas~tetball · III and Columbus Wehrle In
ratlngi ,'l :p
Division IV - also remained In
The Bulldogs, who droppec! a . place.
.
.
67-65 ·overtime decision su~ay
Alter, now 11·1, bad a 291-198
to All Hallows of Bronx, ·N ..Y. ,'' 1 margin over No. 2 Bellevue In
lost oniy two points of Its lead'of a Dlv~to.n II. The Knights also
week ago over runnerup Canton attracted 16 first place votes to
McKinley :
·
' tour for Bellevue (1Q·1). Dayton
Scott, 11-1, received ·29 of· 4i Colonel White (9-2) was a close
first plaee votes·. and . 383 poll' third with 196 points and seven
points, while Mcklnle)', I0-1, got firsts, followed by Steubenville
two firsts and 323 points from the wltli 184 points and West Geauga
big school coaches across the with 156.
state.
,
Rounding out the Division II
Unbeaten Be'a vercreek, 12·0, _ top IO were H111slloro, Columbus
advanced from ' filth a week•ago Whetstone, Canfield, Napoleon
to third with six firsts and 27I· and Fostoria.
Liberty, 9-0, had a 280-2561ead
points: while Sandusky (11-0) and
· Newark (11-1) alsonieived up two over St. Henry In DivisiOn ·m,
posltiQns Into fourth and fifth, with a· 21-6 edge In first place
votes. St. Henry, 11-0, advanced
respectively , with 20ll and 188.
Westerville South Whlchlostto one notch · th.ls week, dropping
Kettering Alter (No: lin Division Orrville, last week's No. 2 team,
!I) over the weekend, slipped down to third with 236 points and
· ..
·
thre firs I place votes.

Scores ··
" (olJeplu.edlrallh.ll
...,

Boys ratings

i.

Curtain time ·for · second session

Toledo Scott No~ I in
·Divisio~ I .despite loss

Scoreboard ....

.

John Bentley hit two technical
foul shots with : 05 seconds
remalitlng . to give the Meigs
Marauder ' freshmeri a thrilling
come from behind 39-38 victory
over the Jackson lronmenTbursday night.
The win left the Marauders
with a perfect 12·0 record on the
year.
Tom· Hill of tlje Ironmen gave
Jackson Its onll( lel!d of the night
at 38-3:1 when he bit two foul shots
with : 08 seconds ~malnlng.
Meigs quickly threw the ball
. In bounds and called a time out ·
with 5 ·tlcka lett oJt the clock.
Ironmen Coach Steve Little was
slapped with a technical after he.
protested that the clock didn't
start 011 time. That aet the scene
for Ben!Wy's heroics.

Rio Grande cagers Gary Harriassists (72, or4.S/game), while In
son and Ann Bar.nltz were among
the sane mumber of games
their teams'-statlstlcalleaders In
Renee Ward, a 5-5 sophomore
the NAIA:s' District 22· .as of
guard, Is fifth from irom beyond
Monday.
'
·,
·
the arc (·19·46, .413);
In 14 games Harrison, a, 5'11
junior, led In assists (115, or
8.2/pme) and Is third. In scoring
(19.7 piA./IIame).
In 14,games Jeff Brown, a 6-5
freshmu forward, Is fifth In
· · reboiiJICI,._: averare (127, or .
'
9.t&lt;game) . and sjxth In threeKANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI) point ahootlnll (~76, or .t61), ' The Kansas ,City Royals said
while Mlltk Eralan, a 6-3 sopho- Th11rsclay shortstop Kurt Stll·
more l\lard. 1.1 ftrth rrom threelwei) and pltcber BUl Wilkinson
point land (38'19, or .4111).
signed one·year, non-guaranteed
In :15
Brad Schubert, a contrac:ta for tbe 1990 • - ·
6-3
~.IJ1al
. Stlllnll. ~.
season

lloyals sip
two playen

1

.

By IE)i-r 8JLUN
total of 72JIOints, appeared to be flipped Minnesota 113-96 and tbe
trying a new defensive strateeY LA Clippers ripped Seattle 105- ,
UPI'Sperta Writer
i
Michael Jordan, wbo opted to on Jordan ;... not Covering him 95.
B(lcks
111,
lluUeta
111
!
enter the three-point shooting oulslde.
At
Landover.
Md.,
.
Ricky
·.
Golden State Coach Don Nel·
contest Ina tead of the dunkatbon
Pierce
scored
25
points
and
Alvin
'
at the NBA'a All-Star Weekend, son; rebuffed again for his 600th
used the Golden State Warriors Cllfeer coaching win, took the Robertson hit two tree throws
blame for the defensive design with 29 seconds left to lift the • .
as a tuneup for the contest.
Bucks. · Milwaukee watched a '
Jordan cOnnected on a club- and Its failure;
"Anyway, I thought It was a 14-polnt halftime iead dwindle to
record 7 three-point shQis and
finished wlth"U points Th\lrsday nice aame plan. It was mine," one point beforeemerglngvictor· ..
night, leading the' Chic&amp;&amp;o BuUs Nelson said. "l decided to stick lous. Milwaukee won despite ·
to thel.r club-recof414th straight with It and It didn't work. I stayed fa!Ung to hit a field goal In the
home victory with a 132·107 rout with It even In the second half final 3:55.
Hornets 1}0, Nuneta 118
over theW arriors.
whel! we were 14 (points) down. I
At
Denver, Kelly Trlpucka ·
"Our game plan tonight was to stayed with It a little longer, and
scored
28 points as the Hornets '
let Michael shoot the tiQ-ee," when a little longer went by. It ·
won
their
first road game of the
became a garbage game."
Golden State's Rod Higgins said.
season.
Tripucka
sank two free·
Jol'\lan needs just 139 points to
"He really made us choke on
throws
with
three
!;eCOnils
left as
. that."
become the Bulls' all-time lead·
as
trlng
ofl6 .
the
Hornets
snapped
A grinning Jordan said the Ina scorer. Bob Love set the
consecu
live
road
lo8$e&amp;.
Armon
Warriors " were almost giving record with 12,623 points from
Gilliam added 22 points and Dell :
me the &gt;'hot. I haven't seen a 1968 to 1976.
Curry
chipped ln20forCharlotte.
Chicago connected on a clubteam do that to me In almost five
Suna
US, Tlmberwolves 18 •
years."
record 11 three-pointers for the
At
'
Phoenix,
Tom Chamberst,
Jordan, held io 28 and 26 points game. Four other Bulls finished
scored
27
points
and Kevin
In the last' two games, both In double figures as the team
added
20
points
and lh
Johnson
losses, broke team records for posted Its highest point total this
assists
to
lead
theSuns
.-Phoi!nlx
•
boll) three-pointers made' and season.
hit
a
season-best
61
percent
of
attempted (12) .
Horace Grant contributed 19
points, Scottie Pippen 15, Stacey their shots In winning Its fifth
"It seems that everybody was
figuring I would continue with King 12 and Bill Cartwright 10. . straight 11ame. Rookie Sam Mti•
Sarunas Marcluilonls paced chell came off the bench to lead
my slump and give me the
"'
outside shOt;" Jordan said. Golden State, 16-20, with 27 Minnesota with 22 points.
Clippers !OJ, SuperSonlCII 9$ ,
"Early In the game, I was points, while Mitch Richmond
At
Los Angeles, Ken Norman ·
hesitant because I hadn't really added 23. The Warriors hlt6 of18
scored
35 points and the Clippers ,.
been hitting the outside shot. But ·three-pointers of their own. setovercame
a 17-polnt third quar· .
ting a new combined Chicago
I think I hit one 'three' and that
ter
to
defeat
Seattle. Charles ·
Stadium record · · for threekind of gave me confidence."
Smith
added
21
points as the .
Jordan scored 31 of his 44 pointers made (17) and attempClippers
won
their
first game·:·
.
points In the first half and added ted (39).
without
star
guard
Ron
Harper( '
Bull~' buket In flrst period action at Capllal
Elsewhere Thursday night In
a game-high 12 rebounds and 8
tl)e
season
with
a
sever~··;
out
for
Centre Thursday. (\)'PI)
the NBA, Milwaukee clipped
assists.
··
knee
Injury.
Xayler
McDaniel"
The Warriors, who have lost Washington 115·112, Charlotte ·
three straight by a combined nipped Denver 110-108, Phoenix led Seattle with 30 points.

•

WASHINGTON - Louis St.:UI· with Conares• or the Wblte lklule.
van. M.D., was a respected doc· On Capitol Hill he II¥ lrbd even
••
tor _and college dean. But Louis RepubliC&amp;~)$ by se~ lnexperl-· acknowledged that Sullivan felt 1eneral and gave It to tile Justice ,
Sullivan, secretary of Health and · enced staffers to speak tor him or
"burned" by the media In the Departinent. Some members of ·
Human Services, found himself do his bidding and by not showing . abortion nap. But James Insisted · Congri!IB lblnk Sullivan caved In :
up In penon for crucial congress!- . that the baptqm by . fire didn't to preuure from Attorney GeIn over his head.
..,
When President Bush picked onal hearings.
send Sullivan running for cover. neral Richard 'ntornburgh. The
"Sullivan has no connection to
Sullivan forhls Cabinet, he got a·
She says he Is not ''the lnvllllble Incident shliw1 that Sullivan and
mlld·mannered Georgian with the Hill.'' satd one veteran HHS
secreary" that some accuse him Conaress are stDI out of sync.
One or· SuUivan's moat ObVIous
no govefnment experience. Sulli- staffer. "He's never had io sell
of being a,nclthat he Is accessible
·.
van has the management -skills anything up there." 1
to the media, on the road and In problema Is . . Inability to fill key '
Most political .rookies -have a
Washington. ·
· posts. Four or his ftve to Public
to run the department and the
mind to make policy. But the trip hard landing In Washington. SulSuUivan's supporters say he }lealtb Service jobs were empty
from sea level to te summit or livan landed harder than most
has come a long way In a year. most of. last year. Sources ~I us :
Washington politics has left him when, before he was confirmed,
Getald Olson, assistant secre, · that Sullivan has suggested poUt~ '
he had to warne on ·his abortion
dizzy frQin the altitude.
tary tor legislation at HHS, cone· cally absurd nominees, lncl\ldlng •
At the Morehouse School of Med- stance so It would match Bush's eded that Sullivan Is "just now a fonner health advller to Michael
1 1 In Alta
S
ded opinion.
·
getting his sea legs" tn W$Shlng- Dukaklll' pl'!!Sid!!ntlil campalp.
c ne
nta, ulllvan presl
of
SuUivan's
handlers
dur·
One
ton politics. Olson predicted that
Sullivan has fallen Into the
over a S:in mUllan budget. As HHS
lng that period described him as SuUivan will eventually shine Busl! pattern of _goyernment by
secretary, he looks over a department that devours $400 bllllon a naive In the beginning. While Sul- and said be has worked out the conef!nsus. He has .a rule that
HHS speak with one voice. That. •
year - ihe largest single domestic livan was still fuMbling, thl1 Is- snags with Congress.
sue wa.s taken out of his hanils by
budget In the world.
Not so, ji.Ccording to our con- means some of the.more cpdld •
Our associate Jim Lynch talked White House Chief of-S,taff Jobn gressional sources . Su111van re- veterans In the department, In- •
to people who have watched Su!ll· Sununu who told hln\ what to say cently outraged Republican and eluding Surgeon General C. Ev- :
van up close. They say the erudite ancl how to say It:
· ·
Democratic lawmakers when he erett Koop, had to go.
Kay Ja111es. Sullivan's assist- . .took away some · Investigative
doctor's style has not translated
That leaves Sullivan, quiet anct •
hito Washington savvy In dealing ant secretary for public affairs, power from the HHS Inspector dlplfled by nature, as the focus .
. of attention. -Like a grandpa with •
a hotrod, "He doesn't know how .
much power he has yet," orie ·:
source said.
.
ALMOST HOMEI,ESS - Rural •
poverty wUI re-emerge as a major .'
social welfare Issue In this decade.
Large numbers of rural household
pay high percentages of their., In- ·
come for housing. Studies being ,
prepared for the federal 'govern- ·
ment sbow that three'of every four
poor rural houaeholds pay more
for ·housing than Is considered atfordable under federal standards:
The result Is an emerlllng class ·.
caUed the "near homeless" - · ':,
famUies for whom the slllhtest . 1
disruption In InCOme can result In !
an unpaid mortgage. rent dr utUity· ·
bill. These famllles pay for housing only by sacrlf!clpgotherbas!Cs ;
such as food, clothing and medlc!il
care.
MINI·EDITORlAL - What's
the world corrilng to? The New ;
· York State Education Depart·
ment- has announced that stu·. . dents will be allow to use calcula·
tors on their college entrance ,
exams. There are plenty of rea- :
sons not to allow calculators. We
won't bort- you with them. The
. bottom llnets this: Whatklndofa
society will we be when no one ,
"Why, we're bound for glory, son- just as soon as we can find the
knows how to count on fingers ' -•
1'
" .
and toes ~~ymo~e! .'. ~ . r\'~ ' . "
on-ramp."
· ·

By HEI EN THOMAS
,
UPI Wbtte Houae Reporter
.
WASHINGTON - President Bush ·Is heading-Into his second year In
office with ali nap fiylng.
He sailed thrpugh the Invasion of Panama with the bonus of a boost
In t,he popularity poUs, running 63 percent. accon)lng to USA Today .
'And he has found a passivity In the public on many fronts th.at
makes It possible for him to operate at his own pace with no pressure
points.
:
·
The Democratic and 'Republican congressional leaders' gave him
almost unarilmous back.lng for his Panamanian Intervention. His new
rapprochement to Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev also has cuI the
g~ound out from criticism of hiS go-slow, super-cautious attitude
toward the dramatic changes In Eas!ern Europe:
.
Alter Panama, the president believes he has now quieted critics
who called his policies timid.
On the other side oft he coin, Latin American leaders are wondering
whether he will continue a macho foreign policy. so they·are biding
· their time and putting a little distance between their countries and the
United States.
.
.-Oddly, he was given only a 25 percent approval rating In the same
poU for his handling of the deficit problem.
There' Is no question where Bush's Interests lie, much a.s he says he
wants to be the ~·educjltlon president," · or the "environmental
president."
•
·
·
His domestic focus Is scattergun. Here today and gone tomorrow.
There Is no concentrated drumbeat that makes the priority Issues all
consuming:
His predecessor was In the same boat. He made the same speech on
the domestic side of the ledger for eight years, blaming big federal
government as the root of most"O~ the evils, with the exception of
national security.
But President Ronald Reagan could generate a lot of passion when
.he was talking up aid for ·the Nicaraguan rebels, called Contras. He
even said In a White House speech. "I am a Contra."
Bush has put the spotlight on clrugs an~ crime. But he has not used
the buUy pulpit as much as he perhaps could. It's not really his style.
He Is not a preacher, and he does not h_avl) ,the at ten linn span to
become positively Identified with these Issues.
He also 'Is plumping for child care legislation and a cut In the capital
gains tax, for which he Is already beating the bushes with business
groups. He has strayed from the non-confrontational fold a bit to
brand those who oppose cuts In the capital g'a lns tax as demagogues.
When he came Into office his administration goals were described
as "status quo plus." Some new Initiatives were taken In terms of the
The Second Sessionof;hel01st care should be tightly limited
Clean Air Act and the anti-drug program. · ·
Congress begins next week and and controlled by the governBut there were no major breakthroughs for the Bush agenda.
Washington watchers are eag· ment or whether parents should
the revltalizaiton .of our educaDespite the dynamiC changes in E1lstern and Central Europe,
erly awaiting .what they antiC· be given broad discretion as to tiona! system. anli-nlme and anwhich Inevitably will lead to more pressure to cut the defense budget,
lpate will be an active but pos- how and where their children re- tl-drug bills, and initiatives tostiBush Is chiding those who "naively" want to reduce military
slbly partisan session on the part ·celv~ such care: defense spend· , mulate community and volun.
spending at this time. He has said over and over again there will be
of both the legislative and execu- ing, where the controversy' re- teer service, all appear to have
"no peace dividend." ·
.
·
·
tlve branches of government.
voly~~ around the pace and manstrong bipartisan backing.
Presumably, any s~vlngs to come from Pentagon cuts will go
Though traditionally the ex- ner used to reduce our defense
For the best part, I 've talked
toward reducing tile deficit. Or will they?
·.
ecutlve branch submits a num- outlays; federal spending In ge- about legislatiOn to be consld·
The president has rejected any suggestion th~t some of the money
ber oflegislative proposals to the neral. an issue which pits Geod:e ered In the Second Session of
might go to Improving the nation's ln.f rastructure, highways and
Congress which reflect its le- Bush and his peldge for no new Congress ln the contexqlftheAd·
bridges, sadly In .need of repair, or for that matter; to tackling 'the · glslative priorities, the reception taxes. against a Congressional ministration and Its priorities.
social problems.
·
·
. those' proposals are given Is ·ge- leadership prone to call for nt!)V Given the 'polltlcal makeup of the
Jbere Is a plan afoot from the Transportation Department to let the
nerally dependent on the ur- taxes and new programs to meet House and Senate. it Is safe to asstates and localities carry the hod on raising revenue through user
gency of the measures and on the what they view as the need for an s11me that the majority leaderfees, or a tax by any other name.
Ideological makeup of the Con- expanded federal role In the ship in both these bodies will conThe 1991 budget will run $1.2 trillion in federal spending . There will
gress to which they have been managementolourcountry'saf- tlnue to aggressively pursue an
be moves to raise the gasoljne tax. But in an electionye~r that may be . submitted.
··
fairs; and lastly on regulatory Is- agenda of their own. which likehard for the supporters to sell. The president also would probably veto
In the case of the Bush Admin· sues where such Issues as re- w!$e is sure to generate a lot of
such a move.
istratlon, Its. priority list Is a · source recovery, the Fairness heartburn and hand wringing at
His "read my !Ips'' no taxes message seems to be sticking. And the
mixed bag containing a number Doctrine. and pesticide control 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue.
president Is adamant on the subject.
:
· of measures deemed essential on pit free enterprise concerns
One of tlie mo'st apparent areas
Both the president and Congress will have to come to grips at some· both sides of the aisle. At the against those in Congress who in which such confrontation can
po_lnt on how to solve the social problems besetting the country. A
same time this list contains a feel that the private sector is sel- be expec(ed Is in ·the are~ of fo"thousand points of light" wlll help but cannot put a dent in taking 3
series of proposals which are ling America.short.
. reign affairs, where Congress
mUilon homeless off the streets, providing low cost housing for the
sure to be challenged by a Con·
Some of the above Issues are · continues to demand a )irger
needy and care fo·r the boarder babies.
gress, whose majority member- . sure to generate a lot of hand to policy role. Such Issues as in.
shlp Is philosophically at odds hand combat in· the months creased aid to Eastern Europe,
wlth the President.
ahead. However. there exists a the Mideast peace process. and
•
Some of these Issues are: the number of Issues on which both ..our country's Central America
need for a capital gains tax re- the President and the Congress policy are sure to command
duction to help stimulate econ- appear In close agreement. Such close Congressional scrutiny.
.
omlc expansion: social issues Administration priorities as the
' This confrontation on foreign
such as child care, with the main Clean' Air Act. a comprehensive ppllcy issues will be evidenced
debate focusing on whether such bill to regulate oil-spill cleanups. a\ !!lost Immediately. a.s Con-

•

.

wltlftllomel•

. . , . with the

He
tiled for ubltnUOD OD Tuesday. .
WllklniOD, a left·butler, apUt
lhel911t•uonlletwllllc;alpry,
whlcb-11 Seattlela Triple A olub,

an48uffalo, U..Pireta"l'rlpleA
cl.._. He was a cotnbllled 4-lwlth
a 1.87 ERA In botll
Wllki!IIO!IIIllli

by~ll

at the recent bUeball

. For most of the game It looked
like the Marauders would win In
a walk away. Meigs jumped out
to a 9-0 lead, after leading 15-6 at
the end of the first quarter tl\e
Marauders went Into the locker
room at the half with a 21-111ead.
In the third quarter Jackson
started the comeback-narrowing
the lead to 8 at the end of the
quatter. then with Hill leading
the way .w ith 10 fourth quarter
points Jackson stQrmed back to
take the brief lead al the end.
Jay Cremeans. led the way for
Meigs with 16 polnll, Shawn
Hanlon ·added 8 'and Bentley 7.
Other. scorers for Meigs we_re
Botiby 'J ohniOn and Mike Welch
wpth 3 each and B!Uy Glaze with

2.

. Hill took the games scoring
honors with 18, while Brian
Blackmon gettln~rll.

..
.

·

' FIIDAY, JAN. 19

FISHTAIL ~-W"H ....ml '"""-'"""""' 12.11

011' .... lsuwwt MI•Sw alii• a Sti11t ,., .... Ga II holtll
0• 0.. Iii h• t.t. S.., let I I' fnMII .... _. , _
CIMice ef 11
I c.ti llllw, 'I 111M • ........... Ceflw,
• ..... • l•tfe... tetl, .... f...W, ....... lA s-lt!WI, let
' • · II' . . . . . . . ............

SUIIDAY, JAN. 21

:

.'

SlUFFED G-R N .. EIS~-".~....- - SJ,t9

U 1 1-(1 " l... efl..-lhlfHtWIIIfelllelfll~illltez
• 1-IIIP zan ... ll I llllole ... fla loS.. ... S.i..
wltllletlaltftll
ltet ••• ~ . . .

c...

_.,_a.. ...

Stllioiy ... W er ....,, Ia
1.1 IIIMIII, Cefhe,IIJIIn w ...
w(fllaqtetl, 11161 f...W,Itezlll lA ............ ho,er-lltr;

.7S_nJ.I.YO 'PA 1 ••~s ~ wiil

Ford steps down ·as
: ~:
Clemson football coach~:

•

lion Is likely with.l n a week to 1~ •.
CLEMSON, S.C. (UPl)
days.
Those considered possible •
Clemson head football coach
candidates
to succeed Ford In-" •
Danny Ford, who led the Tigers
elude
Georgia
. Tech's .l!obby ,,
to a national title but came under
Ross,
John
Mackovlc
of Ullnols,, ,
fire for the second NCAA Inquiry
Dick
Sheridan
of
North
Carqllna
Into the f()()tball program within
State
·
and
Furman's
Jimmy :·
a decade, submitted his i'eslgna,
.,s;;;a;;;tte=rf;;;le;;.;l.:.d_
. - - - - - - - t••:•
t1011 Thursday .
"Clemson University and I
The Daily Sentinel
have reached full agreement as
to the terms of my resignation
(USPSIU-111)
.. ,
and compensation," Ford said in
A Dtvlalaa of Mdbnedla. ,Inc.
a letter to athletic director Bobby
Publlshed every afternoon~ Monday
Robinson.
tbrOUih Friday. 111 Court St .~ P&lt;t !
"I shall cooperate and particimeroy, Oblo. by tbe Oblo Valley Pu~- '"
llsh.IDI Cornpaay / Multlmldl•.t Inc.; . .:•
pate with · Clemson In the rePomeroy, Olllo 4~7611...Ph. 992-215&amp;. Sesponses to the NCAA Investigacond dus pottale paid at ·Pomeroy,
tion. I deny any wrongdoin&amp; on . OhiO.
'
my part, and I· am confident that
Merp.ber: United Press InlernatJonaJ,
an Impartial review of the facts
,I nland Dally Prets AuodaUon and the
will so prove."
-Ohio Newtpa~ Aaodatlon. f'!JaUonal
Adverllllnl
retentatlve, Branham , ,~
Under terms of his agreement
Newspaper Sa et. 733 Third Avenue, ·;
with the school, Ford will receive
New York, New York 10017.
• •
$1!10,000 a year for three to five .
~ send addreu cbanl'l
years, depending on whether he
to 'lbe Daily 5entlnel, Ill Court St. . .
takes another NCAA DivisiOn I
Pomeroy. Ohlo e'lt'8.
, ··•
head coaching job. The school
8UIISCRJI'TION &amp;ATEII
also will pay off the $100,000
ByC-..-orMolor ...le
.
One Week.. ................................. fUO
mortgage on his South Carolina
One Month ...... ,.. ...... ,................. f6.10
farm.
One Year . ................................ $72.IKI
"The decision to accept Coach
SINGLE COPY
c'
Ford' s resignation Is one that I
PRICE
~lly ................................... 25 Cents ••
apprQve," said Clemson Pres I·
dent Max Lennon. "As president
Sub5Crtbe-rs notdeslrlng1 opay the car- r· •
rler may remit In advance direct to 1.:-..
of Clemson University, my priorThe Daily sentinel on a 3, 6or 12 month
Ity In all matters mustbetoaci In
basta. Credit wOI be given carrier each
•.·
week.
·
the best interest of the
c'
university."
No subscrlpltons by mall permhted In
arees where home carrier service ll
Historically. tbe NCAA has
available.
reacted favorably when schools
'
under Investigation for rules
M.llt~loeo
lnokle Melp l;oonly' .
violations have fired coaches In
13 Weeks ................... ............... f!9.24
targeted programs or persuaded
26 Weelts .................... , ...~ ... ...... f37.96
~2 w.,u .................................. f!U6
them .to resign.
Clalolde Melp CooniJ' .
Clemson offtclals said the
13 Weeki .................................. PI.IKI
search for a new coach would
26 Weeks ..... .... .... .. ................. .. UQ;Jl
52 Weeki ......... .... .... ..... :.......... . m.40
begin Immediately, and a selec·
•

·.

..

1

I

...

GRAND RENTAL .STATION
AUTHORIZED SERVICE DEALER
FOR
KOHLER
BRIGGS &amp; STRAnoN
TECUMSEH
WISCONSIN ROBIN
WISC~SIN
KUBOTA
SENCO. AIR POWERED FASTENERS .
WE CARiY PAm FOR MOST IUMDS
.OF IQIIPMENT.

OUR SERVICE DEPT. OFFERS QUICK AND
REASONAILY PRICED REPAIR ON MOST
ANY IRAND OF GASOUNE POWERED
LAWN
I GARDEN .EQliPMENT.
'
SEE US TODAY FOI AFIR 1511MATE.
'

RENTAL
..
STATION
431 ,.. ST.
UNAUGA, o•o
PH. 446·9556 ·

•

�The Deily S 1

Ilin II

18,1880

Ohio

.

By The. Bend

Michigan holds on to ·edge
upset-minded Ohio State
.

.

.

.The Daily Sentinel
Friltey, january 19, 1880
-.f.tagl I

•

Peop~

.
.
..
.
B,- 'l'()M Wl'l'IIEB8.
3-potpter with live secoDda to go 103-67; No. 10 Louisville stopped'
. UPI&amp;po$·Wrrter
that would· have tied the lcore,. Tulane 109-96; No. 14 Indiana •
RobiDSOn, MUla, Higgins and
but he wu wblltled for an ., clipped Iowa 83-'19; No. 15 UCLA '
Va~~gbt are llousehold names In
offensive foul. Alter Michigan was upset by Stanford 87·'19 and
the Big :I"en, . but It was an
made two
throws, Davis . co.No. 19 ·Xavier (Ohio) was
unknown 1tflchtaan Wolverine
made a 3-polnt shot from just ui!Set by Evansville !59·51.
that led the defending NCAA
Inside half-court as dme expired .
At Lawrence, Kan., 'lbe Jaychampions to a Big Ten victory.
for the final score.
. .
hawks, 19-0 scored the first 18 · .
Reser.v e guard Demetrius
Michigan improved .to 13·2 points of the gameand tuned up
Callp came off the bench and
overall and 3-1 In the Big Ten for their Saturday meellna with
sparke4 the seventh-ranked Wolwhile Ohio State, 8-6 overall, Missouri with an easy triumph
verines, scoring 12 olhll 19 points
dropped to 3-2 in the conference. over Division II Ellz!lbetb City
in the second.hall Thursday night ·
'lbeBuckeyesscciredfiveearJY State, Tony Brown \ed Kansas '
and Michigan held on to post a
points as a result of turnovers · with 19 points, ·Rick Calloway •
90-88 victory over stubborn Ohio
cause4 by their press but from added 18 and Mark Randall had •
State.
_
. th~n on just two more as Callp 16.
..
.
.
"He did a · great job for us,' '
. At Champaign, · ni .. · Mrcus
played a great deal of the time.
Michigan coach Steve Fisher
"He (Callp) did a nice job. He Liberty scored 26 points to lead
said. ''He provided a spark for us
was soll4 for them, " said Ayers. the Fighting llllnl. Illinots went
both physically and mentally.
"You nee4 that .type of play oft . on a 14-2 nin In the secolld haltto
Callp gave Michigan offensive " your bench !I you're golng•to win . seal the win. Kimdall Gin added .
help and . his ··ball-handling In this league." ·
14 points as the llllnlimproved Jo '
against Ohio State's pressing
Perry Carter scored a caree~- 13·2 overall and 3-2 In the
defenses was a key. His 19.points· hlgb 29 points "for Ohio State, conference. Michigan State: 14.3
were· just one shy of his career mainly on layups and shprt and ·3-.1, was led by Steve Smith's •
best. ·
·
turnaround jumpers over Terry 18 points.
:
"His reverse layup off a drive Mills and Eric Riley . Freshman
At Las Vegas, Nev., Larry :
and basket on an offensive Jimmy Jackson got 18, Davis 15 Johnson scored 20 points and .
rebound came at key times. He and Chris Jent 12 tor the · David Butler added 17 to power
played like you like all your kids Buckeyes. .
1
the' Runnln' Rebels. UNLV, 12·3 •
to play all of the time."
Mills scored 18 points tor the and 6·1, made 14 3-polnters and :
With the Buckeyes leading, · Wolverines, Loy Vaught added Je&lt;l by as many as 49 points.
~
Callp's reverse layup tied the ·17, Rumeal Robinson 16 and Sean
At New Orleans, LaBradlord ·
score, 68-68, with 9:47 to play. He Higgins 13.
Smith scored 1~ pi&gt;lnts . and..
put back an offensive rebound .:...
The· Buckeyes, who ' posted Cornelius Holden and Jerome
a rebound he got despite being upsets of Indiana and Iowa Harmonadded17eachtoleadthe
boxed out - to make It 82·73 with earlier this year, haven't won at Cardinals In a Metro Conference
· 3:34 left. He also had a 3-polnt Michigan in 6 years.
victory. Louisville, 13-2 and 3-1
basket' to make It 78-71 with 5:23
took a 15-13 lead and never
to play.
trailed. Tulane dropped to 3-11
The victory was not secured
".I didn 't come up here for any and H . ·
until Sean Higgins sank an moral victories, " Ayers said.
At Iowa City, Iowa, Eric
. off-balance 3-polnter with three ''We told our kids coming out of Anderson scored 18 points and
seconds on the shot clock to give the locker room we weren't the Hoosiers raised their record
the Wolverines an 85-79 margin in teres ted in any moral to 13-2 'overall and 3·2 In the Big
with 1: 03 left.
.victories."
.
.
Ten. Anderson's two free throws
"That was a great shot," Ohio
Elsewhere In ihe Top.Twenty;
wltp 2: 41 left pui lndll!na ahead
State coach Randy ·Ayers said. No. 1 Kansas obliterated Eliza· for good. Todd Leary had 14
"Down the road he's going to be beth City State 132·65; )l!o. 6 . points and Pat Graham added 13
one Of the premier players In the flllnols downed co. No. 19 Michl· , points for the Hoosiers. The '
league." ·
gan State 74-63; No. 9 Nevada· Hawkeyes, 8-6 and 0-4, were led
Freshman Alex Davis drilled a Las Vegas housed Cal-Irvine by Les Jepsen's 21 points.
.

tree

DlVES FOR LO()SE BALL - Ohio State's
Jarmlal Brown dives alter a loose ball during the

first hall of Thursday's game agal•t Michigan.
The Wolverines held on to win, 90-38. (1!1'1)

Three tied for Hope Classic lead
LA QUINTA, Calif. (UPI) Peter Jacobsen ignored chilly
and wet weather Thursday to
shoot a 6-under par 66 and share
the second-round lead at the $1
million Bob Hope Classic.
' Jacobsen's round at Indian
Wells put hlin at.l1-under133. He
. was tied with first-round coleaders Dave Stockton, who
c,a rded a 68 on the same course,
and John Cook, Who had the same
score at PGA West.
Mike Reid posted a 66 at
Bermuda Dunes to reach 10·
under, one stroke off the pace.
. T.he . flye-day event, worth
$180,000 to the winner, Is con·
tested on four d'e sert courses, .all
par-72s. Sunday's flnalf9und will
be played at the Arnold Palmer
Course at PGA West.
• "I'm an ·Oregon Duck, so I'm
psed to·cold weather," Jacobsen

Stockton, whose 65 at Tamasaid of the round, played In
risk on Wednesday gave him a
temperatures In the low 50s.
share of the lead, hit into four
"When we made the turn, It
bunkers at In.d lan Wei~ but sdll
started to rain. I thought It Would
managed
a 68. He birdied three of
be a cold back nine, but it blew
his first four holes, then slowed
out as fast as It blew ln." .
when the weather turned chilly.
Jacobsen, who has three victo. "I p laye4 g9(ld tor a while and
ries in nine years on the· PGA
ragged
going In," said Stoekton,
Tour, carded a first-round 67 at
48, who is winleSs since 1976. "I
Tamarisk. Beginning on the back
could blame It on the weather,
side on Thursday, he got to
but I don't think that was it.
8•-under with short birdie putts oil
Nos. 11, 16 and 18.
"I'm going In the right dlrecFine putting produce4 lour . tton. I would like to get the
weather · warmer. I've never
birdies on the front side, but he
been a cold-weather player. I
fell to ll·under at No.9 when ·his
thought It was going to snow at
approach shot went into a bunker
·
the end of the back nine. "
and he missed a 6-foot putt from
Cook. battling the flu as well as
above the hole.
PGA West, carded a bogey-free·
''For years, putting wasn't the
68. He grabbed a share of the top
best part of my game, but I
spot with his fourth birdie, which
started watching the go&lt;-:1' put·
ters," he said. "We all steal il . came when he dropped a 6-foot
·
putt at No. 18.
little bit from each other."

Juniors confuse

•
.By DAVID MOFFIT .
UPI Spol18 Writer "
' MOBtLE, Ala. IUPI)· - San
Diego coach Dan Henning sees
"The Bruins l~e to take a lot of . contusion ahead It coUege juniors
shots and If you're ready for that, jump Into the NFL draft In
you'll be In for a good game," ever-Increasing numbers.
said Vernon.
"That .would throw your preThe .Flames snapped a 1·1 tie draft -planning Into. turmoil,"
when defenseman AI Macinnis Henning said while In Mobile to
fired a 50-foot slapshot past view prospects during this
Lemelin on the power play at week's p(actice sessiOns for
13: 19 of the second period.
Saturday's' Senior Bowl coUege
Calgary jumped in front 1·0 ol all-star game. "You make up
Its first shot of the game at 6: 29of your list based on who will be
the openlpg period. Winger Ser· available. When a trulyoutstand·
gel Makarov stole detenseman lng junior shows on the board, It
Gord Kluzak's attempted cfear- can .really change the pecking
hig pass just Inside the Bruins· · order."
bluellne and ted center Joe
The topic ,.-as moot until last
Nleuwendyk, who finished oft a · season when Barry Sanders, who
3-on-1 play by slipping a .20-foot set NCAA rushing and scoring
wrist shot between Lemelin's records as a true junior at
pads.
Oklahoma State In 1988; gave up
Boston, which held the Flames his final yeRofcollegeellglbllity
to one shot in the opening 13
minutes of the first ·period and
owned a 10-4 shot advanlage, tied
the game on Neely's score at ·
10: 39. Hawgood sent a cross-Ice GAIHpolis at Marietta
pass from the right wing to Logan at Warren Local
Neely. The Bruins' leading Jackson at Athens
scorer unloaded a 15-foot wrist VInton County at Federal ,
shotthat caromed In off Vernon's Hocking
right arm tor his 33rd goal of the South Point&amp;! Chesapeake
.Hillsboro at Greenfield
season.
Elsewhere In the NHL,.the New Portsmouth at Ashland
York Rangers and Pittsburgh Huntington East at Pt. Pleasant
skated to a ·3·3 tie, Vancouver Valley at Waverly
nipped Philadelphia 3-2 In over· Wheelersburg-at Northwest
time, Toronto topped St. Louis Hannan Trace at Southern
4·1, Minnesota beat Quebec 7-4, Southwestern at Eastern
and I:os Angeles bombed Detroit Oak Hill 'at North Gallia
Symmes Valley at Kyger Creek
9-4.
Alexander - •Qpen
Rangers 3, Peogul1111 3, lie
At Pittsburgh, Marlo Lemieux Nelsonville-Yorlut Miller
scored twice, including the Trimble at Meigs ·
game-tying ~oal with 2:57·Jelt In Vinton County at Federal
regulation time, to pull the Hocking
Penguins· Into the overdme de. , Welllton at Belpre
Lemieux's goals extended his Saturday'• gamn:
scoring streak, third longest In Waverly at Ga!Upolis
NHL history, to 35 games. Los . Wheelersburg at Vinton County
Angeles' Wayne Gretzy hold!\tile Buffalo at South Point
record with a 51-game streak for Greenview at Greenfield
Edmonton In 1983-84. Gretzky Southern at Hannan Trace
•
also had a 39-game streak for the (makeup)
Kyger
~reek
at
Portsmouth
East
01 iers In 1985-86.
Minford
at
Oak
Hill
Canucka I, Flyers 2, ()'I'
At Philadelphia, Dan Quinn Walnut Ridge at Athens
scored with 1: 2llelt In overdme (makeup)
Thursday night to snap Vancouv- Federal Hocking at Alexander
(makeup)
er's five-game losing streak
Meigs at Bel~ (makeup)

:1. Jruins, Flames ·. ba'ttle to deadlock
lot of chances," said Bruins
Coach Mike Mllbury. "I was
thinking about moving him back
to defense for the third period.
He's made a lot of things happen
for us."
Milbu ry· was gl,.d he left
Hawgood up front when the wing
set up Janney 's game-tying goal
on the first shift of the third
period. Hawgood· fed a perfect
pass to olanney at the bottom of
the right circle and · Janney
(lipped a wrist shot past · netmlnder Mike Vernon. at the
40-second mark.

By JOHN SWENSON
UPI Sports Writer
Greg Hawgood was an unlikely
hero In the Boston Bruins' 2-2 tie
with the Clagary Flames Thursday night, assisting on both goals
to lift the Bruins Into their second
tie In two nights.
The Bruins showed the'defend·
ing Sianley 'Cup Champions why
they've amassed the largest
point total in the NHL this season
with an aggressive, disciplined
game highlighted by the versatile Haw good's performance.
After being used as a center,
right wing and defenseman ear"It was a good solld game,"
Her In the season, Hawgood was
'placed on the left wing of the said Calgary coach Terry Crisp.
team's (op unit, and respondect "Nothing fancy or stupid." · .
With the tie, Boston improved
by set ling up linemates Cam
Its overall point total to 59, tops in
Neely and Craig Janney.
"I've been playing left wing, the NHL. The Bruins have lost .
center, right wing, and' liack to only twice in their last 14 games,
·
defense," said Hawgood. "I've going 10·2·2.
''We don't have any disappointgotten prepared to play all four
positions . . I've kind of been an ments at this point of the
all-purpose player.
season," said Mllbury. "When
"We've had a lot of different · your on top of the standings, not
guys try it on that line," he only in your division but in the
continued. "Hopefully, we'll find league, It's a good feeling."
Vernon, who has won nine of
the chemistry and It'll stick."
The Bruins had tried six left his last 15 starts with three ties,
wlngers on the first line before stopped 28 shots for Calgary.
Hawgood.·
Rejean Lemelin, a former .
"When you play with (Janney member of the Flames, had 22
and Neely) , you're going to get a saves for Boston.

Tonight's gaines:

SilRING VAl t FY r.INfMA
~.;G

.,

•&gt;)74

.

,
,
.

.

.

RATING MENi The· February_ Issue of Mademoiselle
magazine otters women a few tips o'n how to tell the -difference
between Mr. Right 11nd Mr. Right for Now. The keys are
manners, communication skills, 'helping with housework,
attitude toward .kids . and ·personal appearance and the
magazine offers Michael J. Fox, David B)'l'lle, Tom Cndse
!who, nonetheiess, Is splitting with wife Mimi Rogers) ,'}'Jince
Andrew, Jell Bridges, John F. Kennedy Jr., Tom Banks' and
JeH Goldblum as examples of ''men who'll wear well." On the
other hand, the "men who'll wear .out" Include Sean Penn,
Eddie Murphy, ~Bio Estevez ,' Judd Nelaon, JAJ MciDerney,
Bruce Wlllls, Keq Olin and Johnny Depp. The magazine also has
· a "good men who went bad" category tor Elvis Presley, Marlon
Brando, . Bryant , Gumbel, Jim Bakker, Jackie M~n. Dan
Rather, Bill Cosby and David Le&amp;tenmm and a ''good men who
staye4 good" class tor Paul Newman. Woody Allen, Robert
Redford , Gregory Peck, Walter Cronkite, George Burns, Sean
Conaery, Mikhail Baryshnlkov.
·
ROLLING VIDEO: The RoWq Sto11e11' video biQgraphy, ''25
x 5," features film shot on their recent "Steel Wheels" tour as
well as footage going as . far I! liCk -as their appearances ' on
"Shindig," ''The Ed Sullivan Show" and ''Hollywood Palace."
The 40-song tape is more than two hours long and also Includes
Interviews and footage shot In the studio, at news conference,
during business · meetings. The tape was put together by
"Saturday )'l!lght Live" chief J,orne Michaels and will be
released Feb. 13. ·
INSTRUMENTAL NAMES IN ROCK: Virtually anyone who
plays the piano knows the name Stelnway but they don't know
Henry stelnway . . VIrtually every singer ·knows of Shure
. miCrophones, but not the fou11der of Shure Bros., S.N. Shure.
, The same goes for electronic keyboards and Harold Rhodes and
Harlley Peavey · on electronic amplifiers. On WedneSday. a
measure was taken to rectify that situation as all four big names
were Immortalized with handprints In cement along Holly·
wood's Rock Walk.
AUS11N'S WRECK SUIT: Tennis pro Tracy Austin has
served a legal suit' because of an auto accldel!t In Short Hills,
N.J., that' she says hAs derailed her comeback attempt. She Is
seeking unspeclfle4 damages from the Boss Glass ·Co. of
Victory, N.J., and'Stev'en Reynolls, the driver of a Boss Glass
van that .collided wttli Austin's car as she !efta hotel parking lo.t.
The suit says Austin, 26, suffered a br~en leg In the cras~.and
has undergone a bone graft In an attempt to re11air it. She
sulfered a broken right leg \}Dd Is still recuperating and
undergoing therapy in Cal(fornla," said her lawyer, Wlllla~
O'I)ay. "We don't know yell! this was a career-endlnglnjury.

"A player like Keith McCants
Is ready to play In the NFL,'' · ·

Schottenheimer said. "But there
are a lot of kids out there who
aren't. · I'm concerned about
those who might not make it after
leaving school early and wind up.
losing_ everything, Including; .
their education."
· ~:
'

.. '

For this reason, Schottenhei·
m.e r feels the NFL is ·light in
opposing McCants' request to
play In this year's Senior Bowl. · '

Mock named Reds'
director of scouting

· ''That would rj!ally be·a green ·
light' for others,'' he said. "For
the NFL to allow Keith to play In
this game would be tacit permls- ·
slon to his coming out (otcoUege)
and that Is something that's still
being debated."

r----------.

CINCINNATI (UPI) - Julian
Mock, a Cincinnati Reds scout
lor the past 21 years, has been
named director of scoudng by
Reds Vice President and General
Manager Bob Quinn.
Mock, 60, who llves'in Daphne,
Ala., has been Qnclnnatt's east- ,
ern U.S. scouting coordinator for
the past year and will retain
those res ponslbilitles while also
heading the scouting
department.

GRAVELY TRACTOR
·SALES &amp; SERVICE

I'DITI•oy. OH.

204 Condor St.

Foil &amp; Wl•ter Ho1rs
OPEN TUESDAY THRU FRIDAY
8 A.M .-II P.M.
SATURDAY 9 A.M .-1 P.M.
CLOSED MONDAYS

~THE

GRAVELY
SYSTEM·

New paint, 6 cyl. engine •.raiHCI white lette~ tires, tpoke
wheels. RUf.11 &amp; -drives Uke new.
· ·- s·

..

lOAD lEIDY AND

~NLY

2 500

1986 FORD ESCORT QIESEL 2 Dl.
5 sp..

AiC. nereo,

SO m.p.g.

SW PIKED

1984 .RENAULT ALLIANCE

4 Dr.. auto., AM/FM nereo,
A/C. New Arrival.

$2950

$

1990

. 1.915 CHEV. CELDIIIY C.L. 4 DR.

V -6 engine. cloth
Interior, nic,.

SALE PIICED

$

3450

1977 MERCURY COUGA. BROUGHAM 4 Dl.
V-8 engine, A/C. niCe old car.

$899

1977 .RCUIY (OUGAR IR7 2 DR.
Local owner, lttle Nff. 96.000 mllat.

'

$599

'
By Ual&amp;ed Preu lnterna&amp;loaal
··
BIUiONAIRE WALTON GE'~"~'mG TRBATMENTi Billionaire retailer Sam Waltoo Is undergoing cbemotherapy and·
radiation. treatment as . an out-patient In Houston tor - a
cancerous bone disease. Walton, 71, 1he Bentonvll~, Ark ..
resident. whose empire Includes the Wal-Mart and Sam's
Wholesale Club stores, .c onfirmed the disease In a memo to
company associates but Wal-Mart of~ials say doctors are
encouraged ·by the early detection and treatment and are
expecting a ' full recovery. Walton, who was declared to be the
nation's richest man In 1985 and 1986, also had a bout with
leukemia In 1982 and h~ says that's In remission.
CARLIN THROWS DICE: Comei:\ian Geol'Je Carlbl, wnose
routine about the seven words you can't say on television made
him highly controVersial In the 1960s, dOesn't thlnlt much of the
foul-mouthed Arulrew "Dice" C1AJ, the current comedic bad·
boy. "His acts are hardly comedy shows,'' Car Uri told 'lbe
Washington Times. "There's very little wit. They're like fascist
rallies. They're celebrations tot people who perceive
themselves. to be disenfranchised."

NFI.,, draft--Hennfug

to jpln the I)etroit !,.Ions. Now
Alabama linebacker Keith
McCants, another true junior,
figures to be theNo.l pick In this
year's draft.
"If these people would declare
early so they could be Included In
our early planning, there would
be no problem," Henning said.
''But that'snotthecase. As It now
stands, there could be some
really outstand)ng playevs who
reach that declsJon · on draft
day."
Kansas . Oty coach Marty
Scholten helmer, the North coach
In this year's Senior Bowl, would
like to keep this issue out of the
courts, but he does feel "we need
some sort of' guidelines." .

in the news---.

Community ·calendar
FJtiDAY
POMEROY -The BelleS and
Beaus Dance Club will have an
open dance on Friday at the
senior citizens center from 8-:'-11
p.m. The caller will be Joltn
Waugh from Gallipolis. Refresh·
ments will be served.

a

CHESTER ..., There -will be
special meeting of the Chester
Township Tru~tees on Friday at
7: 30 p.m. at the town hall.

. SATURDAY'
BURLINGHAM - The . Bed·
ford Lodl History Group will
meet on Saturday at 6:30p.m. at
the Modern Woodman Hall In
Burlingham. Anyone Interes tee)
In history or having pictures a11d
so forth Is Invited to attend 'the
meeting.
"
SALEM CENTER -The Star
Grange wlll hold Its regular fun
'night and pqtluck supper at 6: 30
p.m . on Saturday at the Salem
Center Fire Station.
POMEROY -There will be a
hymn sing on Saturday at file
Laurel. Clllt Free · Methodist
Church at 7 p.m. The featured
group will be "Fellowship."
Pastor Bill Williams Invites the
public.
·

HENDERSON - The Gallla
Twirlers Square Dane~ Club will
hold .a dance on Saturday from
8-11 p.m. at the Henderson
Community Center In Hender·
son, W.Va. The caller wl.ll be
Herb ·shelton and the dance Is
open . to all western sq1,1ar~
dancers.
SUNDAY
MIDDLEPORT -The Fellowship Singers will be at the
Mlddli!port Christian Union · on
'Sunday. Services begin at 7:30
p.m.
APPLE GROVE -'.Rev. David
Harris will hold services Sunday
at ' tbe Apple Grove Methodist
Church at the 10 a .m. service.
Rev . Carl Hicks Invites the
public. A covered dish dinner will
follow the serylce.
HARTFORD -The Gallia Ma·
son Meigs Crusade tor Christ will
be holding a revival at the
Hartford Christian Union Church
In Hartford, W.Va. this Sunday
through next l!unday with services at 7 p.m. nightly. There will
be $peCial singers and speakers
nightly. Rev . Clyde V. Henderson, crusade president, Invites
the public.

Jarvis birthday
Corey Jarvis. son of Frank and
Tammy Jarvis, recently cele·
bra ted his birthday with a party
at his home. •
·
A clown theme was carried out'
with a clown cake and other
refreshments .being served.
Attending the party were Co,
rey's brother, Mike Jarvis,
grandparents, Frank and Helen
' Ebersbach, Pam, Bryan, Scotty,
and Ashley Colwell, and Carrie·
and Mary Ann Myers.
Otheu sending gifts and cards
were great grandparents Tom
and Marte Autherson anii , Ron
and Linda Pridemore.
·•

Syracuse· PTO saving receipts
Parents w.e re encouraged to
save Kroger receipts at the
recent meeting of the Syracuse
PTO.
Rose Ann Jenkins, president,
noted that there are receipt
boxes In the Syracuse churches,
post office, and Home National ·
Bank.
·
The Syr,.cuse teachers were
· thanked for the work they had put
Into the Christmas program.
A group requested that the
meetings be held on the second
Monday of each month so they
can attend the mee.t ings. After a
short discussion, it was voted to
change the meetln~ date to. the

l

BALTIMORE (UP!)
A ·
stranger dressed in black upheld
a 41-year tradition Friday, visit·
lng the grave of Edgar Allan Poe
and leaving a bottle of cognac
and three red roses In a birthday
tribute to the author. ·
· .. Jeff Jerome, curator of the
Edgar Allan Poe House, said tbe ·
stranger. wearing a black hat
and black suit, arrived at 3 a.m.
"on the nose."
Of the six' people celebrating
Poe's 181st birthday, waiting
near the grave at Westminster
Hall, ail six gave different
. descriptions of the stranger, who
walked with a cane.
: "I saw white hair and another
· person saw dark hair;;· Jerome
: said. ·"It appears a different
• person who · was spotted in
: previous years, . giving more
: credence to the theory It Is a
: father and son tradition. Maybe
~ the father has passed away or Is

The Chester Council 323
Daughters of America met re.
cently at the . lodge hail with
Bulah Maxey as councilor.
Pledges to the Christian and
American flag were given along
With the · Lord's' Prayer 'IDd
verses from Matthew, chapter
four.
The first stanza of the Star
Spangled Banner was sung and
the minutes from the previous
meeting ·were read and
approved.
·
Hele.n Woii was reported to
have had eye surgery and Esther
. Harden and Sylvl;l Brown are in
the hospital. Margaret Kissler is
In a Nelsonville Hospital and

Goldie Fredrick Is not well. Ada
Morris who Is In Amerlcare hu a
cold.
The .district meeting will be
held Jan. 27, at 10 a.m. Erma
Cleland urged members to at·
tend and to bring gifts lor the
rally tables .
The meeting closed in regular
form and refreshments were
served by Mary Holter, Thelma
White, Faye Kirkhart, and Sadie,
Trussell.
Others atte'nding were BettY
Young, Sandy White, Virginia,
Lee, Brenda Cunningham, Mar·
garet Amberger, Betty Roush,
Lora Damewood, Dons Grueser,
Katheryn Baum, Elizabeth
Hayes, Ethel Orr, Doris Koenig,
Inzy Newell, Marcia Keller, Opal
Hollon, Charlotte Grant, Dorothy.
Th'e lunch menu for the East· Ritchie, Esther Smith, and Jean,
ern Local School District bps Fredrick.
been announced for the week of
Jan·. 22.
·
Monday: pizza, lettuce salad,
fruit , and milk.
M,ryl Stnp .and
Tuesday: grUied cheese sand·
Ro11anne larr In
wich, ·tomato soup with crackers,
pickle spears, fruited jello. and
milk.
Wednesday: spaghetti with
cheese, homemade roll and 'but·
ter, green beans. applesauce,
and mUk.
·
Thursday: chicken patty sand·
wlch, baked beans, fruit, and
mUk.
Friday:· cook's choice.

Menu·set

COREY JARVIS

•

Crusade Revival set Monday
The Gallla Mason Meigs Cru- Singers on Tuesday; Rev . Bob
sade tor Ch~lst will be having a Wiseman and the Shamml on
crusade revival begl!lnlng Mon- Wednesday; Rev. James Blinn
day . through Jan. · 28 at the and Sister Margaret Fellure on
Hartford Christian Union Church. Thursday; ('tev. Bob Grubb and
1n Hartford, W.Va. With services the Jouneymenson Friday; Rev.
nightly at 7 p.m. .
Bill Banks and the Reflections on
There will be special speakers Saturday; and Rev. Paul Chapand singers each night. They are man on Sunday.
Rev. Miles Trout and the Bledso
Rev. Clyde Hel)derson, cru·
Family on Monday; Rev. Clyde sade president, Invites the public
Henderson and the New Life to at tend.

Benjamin

too Ill to continue."
to (\now but I've asked people not Pit and the Pendulum."
Poe scholars theorize t~Jat his
to try to· identify him. It's
The stranger put a half-full
ye1us
of poverty and grief In
.
bottle of cognac and the three red
obviously a very private tribute.
Baltimore,
the city where he
roses at the base of Poe's grave.
Who are we to come along. ;. and
wrote his first horror story,
Interfere?" Jerome said. · ·
then kneeled ·"as· II to say a
prayer," Jerome said.
" After all these years, It stlll "Berenice," may have led to
. "He put his hand on the
holds a thrill to be a witness to fevers and hallucinations that
tombstone. As he walked out he
this kind of tribute," the curator contributed to the h&lt;juntlng qual·
tipped his hat in the dlrectloh o.f " ' said. ''It's a public re-enactment tty of his work. .
Poe was found semi-conscious
the Poe grave. He was walking
of a tribute. I t~Jink Edgar would
on
a Baltimore street Oct. 3, 1849,
wlth.a cane and hobbled down a
approve."
.
and
died four days later.
"
set of steps," Jerome said.
Poe was born Jan. 19, 1809, in
'
Since 1949, a mysterious Boston , where his mother
stranger has lett liquor and
worked as an actresss. After her
flowers qn the grave of the death three years later, Poe was
master of the macabre on his shuttled froni family to family
birthday.
until he arrived In Baltimore
Jerome, who has watched tor where he Jived with . his cousin,
the stranger since 1977, said the VIrginia Clemm, who he later
people waiting this year made no married.
attempt to Identify the man or
His most widely read works
interfere wllh his tribute out of include "The Raven" and ''The
respect fQr the mystery man's
privacy.
"Actually, it's none of our
· business who Is doing it. I'd ' 'ke

't frl\
....

~

(Childbirth and Women's Health)
Complete Pre-Natal Services
Annual Gynecologic Check-Up
Pap Smears + Breast Examinations
Family Planning
&amp; Other OB/GYN Procedures

(304) 675-3400

IJJJ PLEASANT

IV'l

HOME

.

Pleasant Valley Hospital: Medical Office Building + Suite 215
Valley Drive, Point Pleasant; WV 25550

The flu Season Is
Here!!

TheraFid

I RENTitG I

YOU HAVE SPENT S4S,OOODI
AND DON'T EVEN OWN TilE
KITCHEN SINK.

S4.19
SALE $379
MAlliN
RRATE Sl.OO
REG.
'

Only Flu and Cold Medicine
a Hot Liquid ·Drink

•

~eilie your ~hd anticipation loan in a matter

ofdays
,
• no cash needed~all ree.scan be withheld from

your check

S1.00 Refund Offer
See Inside for Details

~:::S279

'
··
• available wl'lell tel' INI! prepaie }QJf' retum

a nat

PIESCIImON SHOP
992·6669
271 North Second
, Middleport, Ohio

p ....... IN~ MIIIIINOIII Nordl Star wlnl Brian Bellaw1 (LI

'i a. little&amp; oul olllle lflp o1 Qaebee Nordl.- de..,_man Steve
~·)

.. ,.._&amp; of the Nontl.- net durlal adlon
In tile fin&amp;
• .
.

TlnlnclaJ. (1!1'1)

,

I

f,.

'

Medicine

11 5 YEAU LATEll

OWII YOUI

VALLEY HOSPITAL

The family of professionals

Flu, Cold &amp;Cough

1990 3 ........ 70•14
s...n Apartmtllf
H- Paymtnt
s17 394 Canlll'vativt Rlllt ·•
lot lent
S7000 Payment P«
TOTAl
$243" . Month
' $250H
,.

J. Sol, M.D.

Obstetrics &amp; Gynecology

ATTENTION RENTERS DON'T
MAKE THE 45.000 M!STAKE.
PROTECT YOUR F-Y WITH THE ltYESTMENT OF A
NEW HOML LET U$ SHOW YOU HOW EASY IT ISII

!,owNERSHIP I

t

Chester Council·meets ·

Stranger visits ·macabre master .Poe's.grave
I

second Monday.
A basketball comn)lttee w81
announced with the lollowlni.
sixth grade team, Eleanor
McKelvy and Reeta Day; fifth
grade team, JaniCe Lisle and
Jean Buckley; fol!l'th grade
team, Stephanie Ash aild Linda
Friend ; girls team, Barbara
Lawrence and D!Jme Ash; . and
cheerleaders, Joyce Sisson an.d
Cindy Swisher.
All mothers are encouraied to
help decorate after !lie plans are
finalized. The date tor the ban·
que! Is set for March 8. The fourth grade class won the
room count and the next mi!e.tlng
will be Feb. 12 at 7 p.m.

__ __
.,...

,

�.·

-

. ....

•

:

F.ut...

·-•· "*""-'

·18, 1880

Page 7

Industry: Clean
This Message and Church Directory Sporumred Rv The Interested

_Ru.•rnesses Listed ;On This Page.

El

SWISHER &amp;LOHSE

RACINE PlANING MILL
c.:~~~·~~~ina (&amp;r'~~·IOJ'I
Syracuse
992)971
j

Veterans
pu••M~~~'Y
•
I
Ho
'
I
""" ,.,
il.
M111110na sptta
wo F '" oocto"'
"}(.
p
Pre•cnphon•
11 S l ....._ __ . 1 ,._
· -.:2.iio4 emorey m 7tU
Pom•roy
r-~SN~OU~FF~EI~
. ------+-8-r-oga--n--W-a-rn-er--~~
FIIIE &amp; SAFETY
992-7075
172 Ntrtll StcOIIII Avt.
llilltlltport, Ohio

..

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

fC!I MIY G&lt;CASION
16141"2-H!t ar

Nationwide Ins. Co. "
ol Columbus, 0 .

104W. M~1n

tt2 2JII Pom•rov

'
TRJNriY OONGREGATIONAL CHURCH,
Oluroh School ~15 am , Woo;!'p Se!Vke
ID: Jla.m 010~ rehearsal, 'l'ue!ld~ 6 45 p.m
Und!r dlredlon cl Lois Burt
I'OMD!OY CIII!RCH Of' TilE NAZI!·
RENE, Corll!l' llnlon and Mulberry, Rtov.
1llonws Glal McOnv. paSicr Nonnan Presloy, S S. &amp;lp., &amp;I~ SCINloL 9: ll a.m,
momngwcntip 10: ll am., evenlng.~ri"'Vke6
p.m.; mld-oervtce, w-~· 7p.m.
GRACE EPISOOPAL CHURCH, ll6 E.
MID St., """""'"'· &amp;ind.ly oervloes: Holy
ootlo!ftrst &amp;I!Woy &lt;leach modlt,
and comiUed with f!l(rftllg prayer on tile
llinllllnd.ly. Mcr.U.g)rllyer and sermon on
all ether lllnd.lys cl tn. month. Olurch Schod
atd Nunery c•e II'OVided. Cotree OOur tnt~
Pdh Hall mnedlafeJY following
POMEROY CHURCH Of' CHRIST, 212 W
Main St., Leo Lash. evanfll'llst. BlUe School
9:.'D a.m.: MorringwcnNp, JO:l)a.m., Youth
meettnat. 6:00 p.m., Evening ..,..hlp, 7. 00 p
m. We&lt;NodaynlaltprayermeetlngandBible
SIUif. 7:00p.m.
TilE SALVATION ARMY, 115 Butternut
A~, PtttiEICJPf Mrs Dora Wining 1n charge
!llndly meellnlt lD am. , SulllaY
School. 10: Jl a m Sund.ly School. YPSM
Eloloe Adanw. .._. 7::11 p.m. Salvation
met'ltng, various speakers and music specials.
Thu~. U 3.l am to 2 ll m Ladles Home
l..e"'"!, members in charw all wanen
bMial; 6:~ p.m. Thunod~. Q,rpa Cad«
a - IY'"'IV l'l!oP.,.BIUet 7·ll p.m Bible
SIUIY and Prayer~ op&lt;n to tho public
POMEROY WES
E CHUROl OF
OlRIST, 332260tll&lt;km'sllorncRriad !County
~Wad 'Ml 992-.1M"/'. Vocal music. Sunday Worsldp 1Da.m.; IIUeShlly 11 am., WorsH.p, 6p
m W-IlY· Bible Stuly, 7 p.m Speaker.
Lancl&gt;n Hooe. evanfll'llsl.

file"""""'

O!Jl 'DEX'I'ER BIBLE CIIRISTIAN
CHURCH. Jock Cleland pastcr, Auby G~.
91!1- !llnd.ly School 11:00 am, Yooth rru'.et
Ina. 7 p.m. C!ver'f Wedneod'l\'.

SACRED HEART CATHOLIC CHURCH
-Pomeroy. MsfCJ", Michael Hellmer. ·Ph.
992-~ Saturday evening Mass. 5.lJ p m.
, Sunda)l Mass, 8 a m. and 10 a m CCD
daues, 9 a m. 1st and 3rd Sunday of each
month. Confessions: Onf'ohalf hour before

each Mass..
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST APOS·
TOLIC FAITH- Nf'W Lima Road. next to
Fort Metp Park Robert W Richards,
pastor Sunday service$. 10 a m and ~ p
m.: Wednesday worship, 7 p m
UNITED ME11!0DIST
GRAHAM
Pr:eachJng 9· ~a m. first and second Sundays of each montH, third and four1h Sun-

day eat'h month worship servlresat7 30p
m.: Wednesday evenings at 7 30 p m

Prayer and Bible Study
SEVENTH DAY ADVENTIST. Mul
berry Heights Road Pomeroy Past or Bob
Snyder, sabbath School Sup£&gt;rlntendent ,

Rodney Spires. Sabbath SChool begins at 2
p.m. on saturday arteornoon wllh warship

servlct' following at 3 00 p m Evervone

•

(6141"2-5721

.

" ' ........1 •••• , _ . , , •
'

~

l

MEIGS nRE
~~ ' CENTER, INC.
')lC
\

216 S. Second
Pomeroy

992·3325

ROWIIS

214 E. Main
992·5130 Pomeroy

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT

welcome.

--=--

INSURANCE
1 SERVICES

SAliS' SERVKE

204 Condor St.
~. . .,.,. (II. -

JohnF . Fui!I.Mqr
Ph "2 2101

. 992-2975

Pomeroy

PO.IOY, OHI0-992-6677
BILL QUICKEL

Crow's family lllfatl'lllt
"Ftllllltf ltullllt FtW C414h•"
221 W.
St., Pomtroy.

•i•

992-5432

K&amp;C JEWELERS
.)lrul

212 E. lla1n Strnl
992·3715. Po~t~eroy

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

"He tlw boll..ah llhallnol

ll61NOITH SEC'*D AYE.
riiDDlEPOIT. CillO

·laiah 28.16
dies' Auxiliary Wednesday, 1 p m Fam
lly Worship
HAZEL COMMUNITY CHURCH Of!
Rt 124, 3 miles fr001 Portland Long Bot·
t001. Edsel Hart. pastor. Sunday School,
9.ll a.m., Sunday morrUng preaching
10. 30 a.m., Sunday evening services, 7 30
pm.
MIDDLEPORT FREEWILL BAPTIST
CHURCH. ~orner Ash and Plum. Noel
Herrmann, pastor. Sunday School10:00 a
m ; Morning Worship, 11 00 a.m.; Wed·
nesday and Saturday Evening Services at
~

7·30pm

APPLE GROVE UNITED METHO·
DIST CHURCH - Pastor, ReV Carl
Hicks, 10 miles above Racine on Rt 388
Sunday School 9 a m w.orship service 10
a m Sunday evening St"rvlre 6·00, p.m ,
Pra~·er meellng and Bible Study Thurs·
day , 6 JJ p m
MT OLIVE UNITED METHODIST Off 124 behind Wilkesville Charles Jones.
pastor. Sunday School, 9 30 a m : momlng
worship 10. 30, Sunday and Thursday
fi'\ enlng services, 7 00 p m
. •
MEIGS
COOPERATIVE PJUIISH
UNITED MI!THODIST CHURCH
NORTHEAST CLUSTER

'""""
THE FOllOWING MERC~TS URGE YOU
TO ATIEND YOUR CHOSEN HOUSE OF
WORSHIP TillS SABBATII. ,

-··Prayer -•

ship Ua.m.; UMW ilurtll Molloloy at7· :1lp.

W...,iiii'IV, B

10race1 .
..
KENO CHURCH OF' CHRIST, Roll.,.
Sprilla. milllltor; Starllaa - t a r a.ndbl·
lver Swain, Suadoy ll&lt;hod Sliplt. Pr•cblna9::1la.m. each&amp;lllday, &amp;ulldllySchool

IO:JOa m.

HOBSON CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
CHRrSTi.\N UNION, 1ber111 Durllam,

a.star. Sanclay

lti'VIt'f',

9.:tla m.: even·

•'

'\
f•
•'
•
•
'•'.,

992-51'41
264 South 21111

Middhp11t
)

EWING FUNERAL HOME

m. Prayer meetiDI' and Bible Study WE'd·
nesday, 7 p.m.
'
FOREST RUN BAPTIST Rev, Nyle
..D.ptity and Mr•·itf' Alway,.••
Borden, pastor COrnelius Bunch, supt. "
Established 1913
Sunday School 9· 39 a m ; Se('Ond and
fourth Sundays worship servlce at 2 · 30 p
992-2121
m
106 Mullt A
P-oy'
MT. MORIAH BAPTIST.' Fourth and ;
._,__ _ _rry
__'."--~---.. Main St., Middleport, Rev. Gllhert Craig, ''
.•
Jt.. pastor. Mrs ' Ervin Baumgardner, ;
•.
Sunday School Supt SundaY Schoo19:30 a
..,
m: Worship Servi~. 10·4.\a m
I
E."VPnlng, 7·3() p m: Wednesdav Prayer
SUCCESS ROAD CHURCH OF CHRIST ;
Meeting, Bible Study and Youth Fellow·
- Joseph 8 Hoskins, evangelist. Sund~y 1
ship. 7· 30 p m
Bible Study 9 a.m , Worship, tO a m.: Sun
~
CHURCH OF GOD OF PROPHECY
day evening service 6 p.m.; Wednesday •
Located on 0 J WhitE&gt; Road of Hl~hway
'
eovenln~ service, 7 p.m.
160 Pat Henson, pastor Sunday School10
PENTEOOSTAL ASSEMBLY, Radne. 1
a.m
Classes
Jor
all
;~.ges Junior Church 11
Sunday sChooiiO::Ila 'm Bible Study and
Rt 124. William Hoback, pastoc. Sunday
a.m : Morning worship 11 a m Adult
prayer tervtce Thursday, 7: 30p.m .
School10 a.m.; Sunday evening servi~ 7
Choir pra('tlce6 p m Sunday. Young Peo·
CARLETON INTERDENOMINATION
p m. Wednesday evening service 7 p m
t
pie's, Chtltlren's Chureh and Adult Bible
AL CHIIRCH, Klngsblry ' Road Rev
Studv. Wednesdav at 7·:1) p.m
CARPENTER BAPTIST. Don Cheadle,
Clyde W Hendenm, ~ past&lt;r Sundav
Supt. Sunday SChool 9:30 a rn Morning
HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEL. 570 Grant
School9:ao am., Ralph Carl, Supt . Even·
Worship 10 30a.m. Prayer service, altern
S1 , Middleport. Affiliated wllh Southern
lng worship 7 00 p.m. Prayer meeting.
ate Sundays
,
Bapll~t ConVt&gt;nllon. David Bryan. Sr , Mi
Wednilday 7 00 p m
THE CHURCH OF JESUS OlRIST.
nlstt&gt;r, Sunday Sr'hool 10 a m., Mornin~ot
OLD BETHEL FREE WILL BAPTIST
APOSTOLIC FAITH - N•w Lima Rd.. , ,
worship 11 am. F.Nenlnli( wocsh1p7 p.m. ,
CHURCH , 211601 State RoulP 7, Mlddlenext to Fon r,tetp Park, Rutland. Robert
,.
Wednesda)' evening • Bible studv and
poi1. Sunday SchoollO a.m.: Sunday even·
Richards. pas1or services at 7 p.m on
prayer meettnK 7 p.m.
tn~ sefviCe 7:
p~m. , Tuesday service.
Wednesd•y• and Sl,lndays
,.,,
, r,
BRADFORD CHURCH Of' CHRIST. St.
7: p.m.
,· • .
HARRISONVILLE HOLINESS, CHAP·
I•
Rt 124andCo Rd 5 Derek Stump, pastor
11
TER of the Wesleyan Holiness Chureh
HYSELL RUN HOLINESS CHURCH
William Amb«ger, S S SuP1 , Sunday
Rev Earl Fields, pastor Henry Eblin, ?'
Bob Grimm. pastor Sulldlly Sch0ol9· 30 a
School9:JO a m : Morning Worship tO· 30
Sunda) School Supt ; Sunday School 10 a
m: Worship 10· 45 a m.: Sundav evening
a m · Evening worship 7• 3(1 p m Wednes·
m.: Morning Worship 11 a tit., Evening
service, 7 p.m
~day worship 7: 30 p.m
service 7. 30 p.m. Wednesday evening ser
"
FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION at Bald
ST
PAUL LU11!ERAN CHURCH ,
vi('(&gt; 7:30 p m.
&gt;'~
Knob, located on County Road 31 Rt&gt;V.
Corner Sycamore and Second Sts , Po-'
STIVERSVILLE wORD OF FAITH ,
Roger Willford. pastor Sunday SChool
merov The Rev Laura A Leach, pastor.
9,30 a.m., Morning Worshi 10· 45 am ;
Sunda,.vSchool9 45a.m ChurchserviC£"11 I Gary Holter, pastor Sunday s~rvices 9 30
Sunday
evening
wonhlp
7·00
p
m.;
Wed·
am and7p.m.; MldWeekservlce,7·~p
am.
•
:.m. Thursday.
nesday evenlaeBibleStudy 7·00 p,m
SACRED
HEART CHURCH Msgr
WHITE'S
CHAPEL
WESLEY AN
Anthony Glannamore Ph 992·5898 Satur
MIDDLEPORT PENTECOSTAL, 1blrd ;
CHURCH - Coolville RD Rev Phillip RIday EvenlnJl Mass 7 ~ p m ; Sunday
Ave. Rev Clark' Bakft', pastor. Carl Not·
denour: pastc:r. Sunday School9· 30 a.m : , Moss, 8 a.m. and 10 am. Confessions gne
tingham. s-.nday School Supt Sunday
worship service- 10,:1) am. , Bible study ' half hour befon&gt; ea('h Mass. CCD classes.
School 10 a m. with classes for all ages.
11 a rri Sunday. _
and worship s@rvlce, Wednaday. 7 p.m ,
Evening services at 6 p.m. Wednesday BIRUTLAND CHURCH 01' CHRIST,
VICTORY BAPTIST. 525 N 2nd Si&lt;
ble study at 7: ~p.m . Youth services Fri·
Roy W Car.ter. pastor Sunday Mornln~
Middleport. James E K.:!esee, pastor
dayat7 . .:Klp.m.
_.
Worship, 10.00 a.m., Sunday Bible School
Sunday morning worship 10 a.m ; Even
·ECCLESIA FELLOWSHII', 128MIIISI ..
,6:00p.m., Wednesday BlbleSIIidy 7 00 p.
lng servJce 7 p.m.; Wednesday evening
Middleport, Brother Chuck McPhersoo.
m .
worship 7 p.m. VIs nation Thursday 6.30 p.
pastor. Sunday School 10 a.m , Sunday
RUTLAND BIBLE METHODIST. Amos
m.
evening services a17 p.m and Wednesday
Tillis, past or Sonny Hudson. supt. Sunday
MORSE CHAPEL CHUROl: David
services at 7 p.m.
'
J,
SChool 9· 30 a.m.; Morning worship. 10. 30
Curfman. pastor. Sunday School, 10 a.m ;
ANTIQUITY
BAPTIST.
Kenneth
Smith.
a m.; Sunday evening service 7•00 p.m.
worship serviCe 11 a.m., Sunday night
pastor Sunday School 9:30 a.m ; church
Wednesday JerYice 7 p.m. WMPO proworshJp service 7:30. p.m., Midweek
servlce7:30 p m., youth fellowship 6:30 p.
gri.m 9 a m each Sunday,
prayer service Wedaasday 7 p.·m
m., Blblesludy, Thurlday, 7.30p.m .
WESLEY AN ' BIBlE
RUTLAND CHURCH OF THE NAZA·
HOLINESS
FVLL GOSPEL LIGHTHOUSE. 3.'1145
RENE. Samuel Basye, pastcr. Sunday
CHURCH or Middleport. Inc.. 75 Pearl Sl ..
Hiland Road, Pomeroy. Tom Kelly, pas- • •
School9:30a m, WorshlpaervtcelO.:Ila .
Rev Ivan Myer,_ pastor, Roger Manley.
tor. Danny Lambert. S. S. Supt. Sunday
m: Young p(l()ple's service 6 p.m.
Sr , Sunday School Supt Sunday SChool
morning
servicE&gt; at 10 a.m.; Sunday evenEvangelistic servtce 6, JO p.m. Wednesday
9 30 am .. Mornlna Worship 10:30 a .m;
In(~
service
7.30 p.m Tuesday and Thurs
serviCe 7 p.m.
Evening W..orsNp 7: 30 p.m. Wednesday
day Services at 7: l) p.m
MASON OlURCH OF CHRIST. Mill..,.
evening Bible study, praver and praise
NEW HAVEN CHURCH OF THE NA ..,
St • Mason, W Va. Sunday Bible Study 10
service, 7.30 p.m.
ZARENE, Rev. GlenOOn StrouH, pastor.
a m ; Worship 11 a m. and 7 p.m. WednesFAITH FULLGOSPELOlURCH. Long
Sunday
School 9 30 a.m., WorshiP service,
Bottm'f.' $unday SChool. 9 30 a.m.; Morn·
day Bible Study. vocal music. 7 p.m.
10·30 a.m: Youth service Sunday 6 15 p.
LIBERTY ASSEMBLY OF GOD, Dud·
ing Worship 10 45
Sunday evening
m Sundayevenlngservice7. 00p m. Wedding Lane, Mason. W. Va J. N Thacker.
700pm. l summer7·:J&gt;pm.), Wednes·
nesday Prayer Meetlng and Bible Study
pastor. Evenina tervtce 7:JO p m., Woday nighl 7 00 p.m (summer 7 l&gt; p m )
1 OOpm
men's Ministry, Thursday, 9:30 a.m.:
LIVING WORD CHESTER CHURCH
NEASE SETTLEMENT CHURCH, Sun
Wedn~ay Prayer and Bible Study 7 15
OF GOD -: Gary Htnes, pastor Sunday
da v ahernoon servl~ at 2.30~ Thurs(fay
pm
'
SC"ooJ 9 ~ to 10. 20 a .m , Worship srvlet&gt;
evenln~ services at 7:JO.
-'
10.30 to n .:KJ am. , Sunday eventn~ ser
HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH , Mason, W.
vice. 7 p.m .; Midweek Prayer &amp;&gt;rvlce
CHRISTIAN UNION. Hart!on!, W. Va.
Va Pastor, Bill Murphy Sunday SchoollO
Rev. David McManlti. pastor Church
Wed. 7·p.m
am : Sunday ever,tng 7:30 p.m Preyer
MT. OLIVE COMMUNITY OlURCH . meet IRR and Bl ble study Wednesday. 7: 30
School 9.30 a .m. ; S\lnday morning ser
Lawrena&gt; Buth. pastor Sundey School
vice, 11 a.m., Sunday evening SPrviCE",
p m Every me wet come
•
9 :m a m., Sunday and WednesdaY. pven
7 JOp.m. Wednesdaypr.ayermeetlng, 7 111
Rtrrl.AND FiE WILL BAPTIST, Sa • '
p.m.
IRiil: worship service. 7·00 p m
l!!m St. Rev. Pa Taylor, pastor. Sunday
UNITED f'Airn CHUROl, Rt. 7on Po·
f' AIR VIEW BIBLE CHURCH, Letart ,
School lOam:
ndayevening7 OOp.m.. t!
merov By·Pass Rev. Robt'rl E Smll h, Sr,
w va., Rt. I, Jaml!l Lewll. putU'. Wor·
Wednesday evc"tn~ prayer meel!ng 7.00 J \
pastOr. Melvtn Drake, S S. Supt Sunday
shlp terVIcos 9:Jla.m ; Sulldlly Schoolll
pm
•
School9:~a m; MomlngWorshlpl0::\0,
a.m .; Evening worship 7: Jl p.m. Tuesday
SOUTH BETHEL NEW TESTAMENT ' ·
EvenlnK WorthlP' 7•00 p.m. : Wednl!lday
cottage pnyer meet lng and Btblt Study
CHURCH, Silver Rtd~e. Duane Syden 1 ...
9: Jl a.m .: Worlhlp Mryl~. Wodnelday
·Prayer Service, 7·00 p.m 1
strlckcr, pastor, Sunday School 9 am ,
FAI'l'H BAPTIST CHURCH, Rallr&lt;Bd
7
·Worship Service, 10 a.m.: Sun&amp;y eVening
CHURCH,
Sl , Mason. Sundoy SchooiiO a.m ; Mornservice, 7:00p.m, Wodneoday night Bible .
Ina worshiP 11 a.m.; Evon!"" -.tee I p.
Wain~! and 1lonl')l Stt , RaVOIIIWood, W.
stw:ly 7l00 p m
Va . The Rev Geortl• C Wolrtdt, paotcr.
Sunday SChool9:30 a.m., Sunday wcnhtp
lla.m
'
1 ,
CALVARY BIBLE CHURCH,Ioc:atoCton
Pomeroy Pike, County Road 25 aeorF'Iat·
w....,. KeY Blacllwond, putor Scrvt&lt;es
m Sundiy at 10:30•.m. and?·~ p.m. with
Sunday School 9:30a.m. Bible Study, Wed·
l'lumber Yo•r 81•
,
,j,
neoday, 7:111 p.m.
'
'Till he begins to reform, no one can number his sins." Have
f' AITH FELLOWSHIP CRUSADE FOR
CHRIST, !H. Rt. 338, Antlqull)l KeY.
you numbered your sins lately? Mark them down one by one and'
Fraaldin Dlckent, putor...Suaday morn·
see how long lhe list., .
Ina 10 a.m.; ~~ evening 7 30 p.m. ' :
To so many,olhe llitluhorl. To many, the ltstls long. What ts
7: ID p.m.
1buratlaY lVIII
MIDDLEPORT NDEPENDENT HOLI· . •
the difference? Thai Is euy lo tell. He who has a list Ihat ts long
NEBS CHUROl., Inc., 75 Pearl St. Rev.
bu beaun to reform. He has looked at his life aild found 11
Jvu Myera.lctlqputor, Ro&amp;erManley,
lacking.
Jus I whalls lacking he could not lell. Then he looked al
~r .. Sunday !lchool SUperlnlmdont. Sun·
day School 9; 30 •• m., Morning wonhlp
his life as If he were God. Well now he beaan to tell he needed
10::11 a.m.; tvtDiq wlll'llllp 7:111 p.m.,
reform. As he began to reform his ll!e, the list of sins grew
•
Wedlleoday ....111 Bible lludy, prayer
and Prall• tervlce. 7:30p.m.
longer. He !ouod lhat the more he reformed, lhe longer the Uslof
CHURCH OF , JESUS CHRISt APOS·
sins grew a~ the better he saw.and lhe nicer his life grew.
• TOLIC - Va.nZalldt and Waid Rd. Elder
'I
You
uniU he bepln to reform, he had JIO slh. He was
Jame Mill•. putll'. Sunday School,
)
10:30 a.m.; Wortblp Sorvice, !ltmday, 7. 30
saltsfled that he was
He had no sin. The world .alld his
p.m ; Bible Sludy, Wednllday, 7: :ll p.m.
neighbors lmew .better. As he began to reform, his eyes were
CALVARY PILGRIM CHAPEL, HarrJ.
opened and as he saw more of his God saw lhls and bleSIIed'hlm
ICJIVUIO Road. KeY. VI«or Roulll. pUt or;
ClilltCJI F'aalk. Suoda)l School SUpt.; Sua·
more thai he bad rea1011 to hope lor. .
· _ ",
· day S.hodt:•a.m.; ...-aaw~,ll
He
w•
bleued
by
God,
a11d
his
ne,.hbors
and
all
who'
touched
a.m.; S.~IIIVklt 7:30p.m.
his life. eould · and did share In his joy and baak in hiS
~~
!!IIOII'•_7:30p.m.

f

.'

•
•'

'

ing service 7:00 p.m. Praver meeting,
Wednesday, 7:00p.m . .
BEARWALLOW RIDGE CHURCH OF
CHRIST, Josepb B Hotklns. pallor. Bible
Class. 9:30am.: MornlngWorsblp10 30a .
m , Eventn1 Worship, 6· ll p.m. Thursday
Bible Study, 6· :11 p.m
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST, Pomeroy·
HarrlsCI\vUie Rd (Rt 1431 Robert E Pur·
rell, mintsfer; Steve Stanley, Bible School
Supt: Rodney Howery, Asst Supl. SUN·
DAY Bible School 9· 30 a m ; Worship
10· 30 A M an~ 7• 30 P M · Wednesdav BIble Siudy.7·008 m
•
ST. JOHN L THERAN CHURCH, Pine
Grove. The~ Laura A Leach. past (I".
Church service 9 30 a1 m.. Sunday SChool
10 30 a.m.
BRADBURY CHURCH Of' CHRIST.
Tom Runyoo, pastor Sunday Sehod 9 30
a .m ; Larry Haynes. S S. Supt. Morning
worship 10. 30 a.m. '
RACINE CHURCH OF rnE NAZARENE, Reov. John Vance. paatoc; Ora
Bass. Chairman of the Board of Christian
Life. Sunday School 9 30 a m., Morning
Worshl10:30 a.m.: Evanl(ellcal service.
7 00 p.m: Wednesday servlcP. 7:00p.m.
LIBERTY CHRISTIAN CHURCH, Dex·
ter Woody Call. pastor Sfrvlces Sunday
10 a .m and 7 p.m . Wedneaday, 7 p.m
DYESVILLE COMMUNITY CHURCH,
Lloyd Sayre. Supt Sunday School9· 30 a.
m : morning worship lO::lt a m Sunday
evenin~t service 7 p.m.
RAt:INE FIRST BAPTIST, Steve
' Deaver. Pastor. Mike Swiger. Sunday
SChOol Supt. , Sunday School 9:30 a m :
Morning worahlp 10·40 am : Sunday
evening worship 7, 30 p.m , Wednesday
evenh1K Bible study_ 7:~ p.m.
BURUNGI!AM COMMIJNITY CHURCH.
BurUngh.am. Ray LauclermOt, pulor. Robert Cozart, astl&amp;lant pastiJ' SunciiiY School
!0 am, w&lt;n ..p 7 p .m.; Wedneod/IY, 6 p m
yoothmeetlng; Wed.. 7pm chureiiPINE GROVE HOLINESSCHURCH , )2
mlleotfRt 325. Rev. BenJ Watts.~stor
Robert Searles, S s. Supt Sunday ~hool
9 XI a .m , Mornlng Worship 10·]} a.m ;
Sunday evenlnt service 7 30 p m., Wed·
nesda~· service. 7.30 p.m
SILVER RUN BAPTIST. Bill Lillie,
pastor. Steve Little. S S Supl Sunday
School 10 a m.:' Morning worslp, 11 a .m :
Sunday evenln~t worst.lp 7, 30 p.m. Prayer
meeting and Bible study Wednesday, 7 30
pm, YoutbmeretlnJWednesdayat7pm
REJOICING LIFE BAPTIST CHURCH
- 383 N 2nd AVf!., Middleport Sunday
School10 am Sunday evening 7.00p,m.
Mid week service. Wed , 7 p.m.
LANGSVILLE CHRISTIAN OlURCH,
Sunday Scbool 9· 30 a .m .; Jert Pattenoo
supt.; Morning worshJp 10·~ a m .. Sun·
day evening lft'VIce. 7:30 p m.; Wednes·
dav eYening snvlce, 7:30pm
EDEN UNITED BRETHREN IN
CHRIST. Eldea II. Blake, pallor. Suaday
School 10 a.m.; Gary Reed, Lay l•der.
Mornlna ltl'mon, 11 a m.; Sullday night
tervleil. Chrlltlaa Endeavor 7:30 p~ m.•
Sona ~m~tce I p.m. Preachlnal: :ll p [II.
Mld·wook prayer meeting, Wednt!lday, 7

..•.

m.:
a .m

CHUII,CH IUPPLIEI • IIILEI

.''

FUNERAL HOME

....
·~·-···"·

.

RUTLAND FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
Rev. Arthur Crabtree
- Sister Harriett Warner. Supt. Sunday
Rev. Robert Steele •
School9:30 am., Morning Worship. 10 45
ASBURY (Syracuse} -Worship 11 a.m .
am.
Church SChool 9·45 am. Char~te Bible
POMEROY' FIRST BAPI'IST. EaOI
Study, Wednesday, 7·30pm ., UMW,first
Main St Steve Fuller. pastor George
Tuesday. 1·30 pm, Choir Rehearsal,
Skinn«. Sunday School SuperintendE'III .
Wednesday 6· 30 p m (Thatcher!
Sunday SChool, 9· 30 a.m., Morning Wor
ENTERPRISE - Worship 9 a m ,
ship 10 30 a m., Wednesday evening
Church School10 am: Bible Study, Tuesprayer and BJbl.e study, 7 XI p m
day. 7 OOp m ; UMW FtrstMondav, 7:30
FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST, Po
p m UMYF Sunday, 6 p.m Choir Re·
meroy Ptke E Lamar O ' Bryant. pastor,
hearsal Children's at 6·30 p m AdJJ.lt fol ·
Jack Needs, Sunday School Director Sun
lowing; Wednesday tRll'll't
day School, 9 30 a.m ; Morning Worship.
FLATWOODS - Chul't'h School, 10 a.m
10:45; £'Venlngworsh1p, 7:00p.m. 10 S.T 1
, Worship, 11 am; Btble Study, Thurs·
6: 7 30 (E.S T 1 Wednesday Praypr Ser·
day, 7 p m, UMYF Sundav, 6 p m. IRI·
vice. 7:00pm !D S T I &amp; 7 30 P .M. IE S
ley I.
T . l; Mission Friends taaes 2·61. Royal
FOREST RUN - Wo rship 9 a m
AmbaSsadors 1boys ages' 6-181 and Girls
Church School 10 AM .. Choir practice,
tn Action {ages 6-181 on Wednesday s. 7 p
Thursday, 6 :Jlp.m, UMWthlrdMondav
m . (DSTI&amp;7·30pm iEST I:Tuesday
iThatChE"rl
Vllltallon, ~· Jl p m
HEATH IMlddleportl -Church School,
F'AITH TABERNACLE CHURCH. Bal
9 .:Kl a m .. Morning Worship 10 30 a m .,
ley Run Road, Rrv Emmett Rawson pas
Youth Group, 4 p m , Wednesda\, Bible
tor Handley Dunn, supt. Sundav School
studv 6·00 p.m Choir rPht"arsal7 00 p.m.
10a.m; Sundayevenln~service, 7 lOp m
IRindOelschJ
: Bible tea chin!{ 7 30 p m Thursday
MINERSVILLE - Church School 9.00
SYRACUSE MISSION Cherrv Sl Sv
a m : Worship serviCE&gt; 10 00 a.m., UMW
racu~e. Mark Morf'cM·. pastor Servll"E"S 10
third Wednesdav. 1 p.m. (Thatcher)
am Sunday. Evening services Sunday
PEARL CHAPEL- Church SChool9:00
and Wednesdav at 6 00 p.m
a m : Worship Service 10 00 a.m !Mar~
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHR 1ST
!In\
IN • OlRISTIAN UNION. Dwight Hal"'
POMEROY- Church School, 9 15 a.m.
flrlt elder. Wanda Mohler Sunclav School
Worship 10· :.l a m ; Choir rehearsal
SUpt. Sunday SChool 9, :K) am .. Mor ninJZ
Wednesday 7· 30 p m: UMW. second
Wontip 10.30 a.m , EveninJZ Worship 7 :KJ
Tuesday 7 30pm, UMYFSundaV,6p.m.
p.m .. Wednesday prayer mt'E'tlng7 JO p.m
(M£&gt;adowsJ
MT MORIAH CHURCll Of' GOD
ROCK SPRINGS- Church SChool, 9: 15
Rarlnt" Rev James Sartt"tfleld. pastor
am, Worship 10 am: Bible Study, Wed·
FrHman Williams, Supt . Sunday School
nesdav, 7::rl p m: UMYF tSentors), Sun·
9.4:5 am., Sunday and Wt"dnesday ~en
day. 6 p m : I Juniors) every other Sun·
tnJ JBYices, 7 p m.
day. tip m IRiley ).
MIDDLEPORT f'IRST BAPTIST
RUTLAND- Church Schooi,.IO am;
Con« Sixth and Palmer James Seddon,
Worship. 11 a l1'l , UMW First Monday,
Plltor Edna Wllsm , S S Supt : Ca thy
7 :ll p.m tCrablrft")
Rtaas. Assf Supt Sunday School. 9 15 a
SALEM CENTER - Chureh SchoolS: 15
P m.
. ,.,
m .)" Morninlii:Worshlp, 10 15a m Sunday
a .m. Morning Wor.ship ' 10·15 a . m.
Ev•nlng sen. lee. 7 p m Prayer meetln~
'
(Steele)
'*
and Bible Study Wednesday evening. 7 p
HEMLOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN, David
SNOWVILLE- Morning Worship, 9:00 m.: Children's ('holr pra('tlct', Wednes
Preritlce. pastor. Olarla Domla:an, Suna m . Church School10 00 a m (Martini
day~ 7 p.m
Adult ('hotr practltt', Wed 8
d/IY School &amp;ipt. Morn!nt Woralilp 9.:11 a.
!10\miERN
CWII'ni:R
•
p m ,: Radio pr~am WMPO. Sunday,
m.; Sunda,y ll&lt;hool10:30a.m.; Ewonllltoer·
He\', lltnaelh Jlaker
8·30 am
viet. 7:00p.m.
,
"
R.n. Roa:• Oraee'
MT. UNION BAP-TIST, Put or: Joe N.
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST.
Rov. CII'Iftleb
Sayre, Sunday School9 t~ a.m., Evenln&amp;
5Ut and Main, AI Hartsoo. mlnlstf"r
APPLE GROVE - Church School 9:00
w&lt;nhlp 6::1) p.m; PraY« Meetln(l. 6::1)
Richard DuBose Asscx-iale Pastor; Mike
a m , Morning Wonblp 10.00 a.m, Bible
p m. Wodneoday
.
GPrl8ch, Sunda}~ School Superintendent
Study Sunday 7·00 p.m.; Prayer meeting
niPPERS
PLAINS
CHURCH
OF
Bl)lpSebool9 ~am. : Morning Worship
7 00 p.m Thurlday. (Hiclul
CHRIST. Robert Fotter, puler, Howard
10:10 a m Evening Worship 7·00 p m
BETHANY - Worship 9 a.m , Chureh
Caldwell, Sup&lt;nnterident; Clturch tchoal
WeOnesd•y. 7:00pm Prayer mfl'{'tlng
SchooliO am : Bible Study Wednelday 10
9 a.m.; Worahtp aervlce9· t5 a.m.IIHS 6: l)
-- IIIDDLEPORTCHURCH OFrnE NAZ·
a.m , Dorcas Women's Fellowllhlp Wed·
p m. Every me welcome.
' ,
ARI:NE, PASTOR Rev. Lloyd D Grimm.
nesday 11 a m 1l)aker) ,
OlESTER CHURCH Of' '\'HE NAZA·
Jr. ~ pulc:r. Jean Klme. Sunday School Su
CARMEL - Church Schooi9.Jl a .m.,
RENE. KeY. Herbert Grot&amp;, pUICl'.
.........,drnt. Sunday School 9 :II a m ,
Wonhip 10 :45 am. Second and Fourth
Fr111k Rime. tupt. Sunday lld1oolt:JO a.
MorJUgWora~Servlce,10·3()a m , Sun
Sundays, Fellowship dinner with Sutton
m ; Worship terVtce. 11 a .m. ,ad 7 p.m.
dJI)" ewnlng H"''VIce. 6 p m , Wednw.day
thlrdThunday. 6•l)pm !Baker),
Sunday. Wednild,y, 7 p.m Prayor ..-.
..,.,~q aorvlce, 7 p.m.
.
MORNING STAR- Church School9 45
SVIIACIJSE' CHURCH OF THE NAZA
'
a.m., Worlldp 10· 30 a.m., Bible Study.
LAUREL CLIFF FREE METHODIST
RENE. Rev. Glenn McMUian, pastoc
Thursday, 7· 30 p.m I Baker)
CHURCII. William WWiamt, pastor; RoMark Mlltton. Superlntendtnt Sundav
SUTTON - Church SChool, 9:30a.m .;
berl E. Bart111, J:llrector ilf Cltrlltlan £du.
Scllball: :1) a .m : Morning Worship. 10. ll
MornlngWorsblp 10:45a.m. llrttandthtrd
cation; Steve Eblin, alalllant. Sianday
servire 6 p.m ,
Sundays, FellowJhtp dtnnll' wltb Clrmt"'.
School 9: Jl a.m. : Mornlna worship 10: :1)
, 7 p.m .,
lhlrd Thui'lday, 6 JJ p m . (Bak~r) .
a.m.j Teint In A.cliDD. I p.m.j £veala1
EAST LETART- Moriiiii&amp;Wonhlp9:00
Worlldp, 7.00 p.m. Choir ptacllce 8 p.m.
a.m.; OlurdllchooiiO:OOo.m.: UMWI!rit
SUadoy. Wedlleoday IWllllnr proyer and
Tuetdl,l/7.:1! p.m (Grace).
Big:~~~ CHUJICII OF' CHRaT,
LETART FALLS - Wonltlp 9 a.m.;
Chureb ll&lt;hod Ill a.m. (Groce).

RACINE- 0101&lt;11-. lllo.m.: w....

13 MMrltreet
Mldcl...ort. Ohio 41710
(1141 912·1117- CIII·OOKII

ftSHER

!71 .....
Stc...

Rev. Doa Archer

Rev. Frank Crofoot
Rev. Seldon .-.hnsm~
ALFRED - C~urch School 9. 30 a.m.,
Worship, II a m , UMYF 6 ll p.m ; UMW
Third Tuesday, 7.30 p.m . Communion
first Sunday. ! Archer~
CHESTER - Worship 9 a .m., Church
Schoo\10 a m ; Biblt-Study, Thursday, 7p
m : UMW, first Thursday, 1 p.m.; Com·
munion, first Sunday (Archer\
JOPPA - Wor!ihlp 9 30 a m., Church
Sc-hoollO 30 a m Bible Study Wednesday,
7 :II p m (Johnsool
LONG BOTTOM - Church SChool 9: 30
am , Worship 10. 30 a.m, Bible Study.
Wednesday, 7, 30 p m , Communion First
Su,nday of Month 1Rev. Charles Eatm1
REEDSVILLE- Church School9 :I! a
m, Worship Service 11.00a rn
TUPPERS PLAINS ST PAUL Church School 9 a.m .• Worship 10 a .m •
Bible Study, Tuesday, 7.30p.m, Commu
nlon First Sunday 1Arche-r\
CENTRAL CLU!n'EII
Rev . Don MeHows
Rev. Wet ley Tillie her
Rev. Harvey Rl•dflleech
Rev. KalhrynKUe,
fte\', Paul Martin

(.B..,~s '

IAWUNGS.COATS \

•

WASHINGTON (UPI) -Clean biUIOJI a year, followed by Texas,
alr ieglslallon likely will cos I tlle $10.4 blllloa; Louisiana, $2.7
nation S54 bllllnn annually over biDIOJI; Dllnoll, S2.6 biUion; New
tit~ nex1 2tJ years and cleanup
York, S2.1 billion; and Tennesexpenditures could go u hl&amp;b as see, $2 billion.
$104 billion under a pending
Tbe study said the overall S54
S.,nate bill. an industry group biDion coal esllmale COI&amp;ld dram·
said Thursday,
allcally lncreue or decreue,
The Buslneu Roundlable, depending mainly on how slrlct ly
wltlch represents more than 200 Congresa decldel to llmll loxlc
major corporallons such as Get!· and. caacer~aualng emissions
eral Motors, Amoco and AT&amp;T, from a wide range of Industries,
s~ld Its "besl es11mate" of $54
ranging from steel mills lo
b!Ulon In yearly cleanup costs petrochemical plants lopharm&amp;·
represenled a "middle IP'ound of ceuUcal facilities.
pOSsible : requirements" uDder
PbUip Masclantonlo, spokes·
v"rlous clean-air bills now mov- man for lhe roundtable and vice
ing lhrough Congress_
pl'l!§ldeat of environmental ar.
The $54 billion es llmate In- , fairs for USX Corp., expressed
cludes $25 billion tb conlrol toxic
strong concern a bout the Ioxic
alr emissions, $24 billion for air pollution controls In leglsla·
urban srnog and $5 billion for acid Uoa to be tak&lt;en up by the Senate
rain.
next week.
The $54 bllUon es llmale came
Masclantonlo said thOse provl·
from a sludy done for the stons were so slrlngent thai
roundtable thai also specified enUre Industries mlghl be forced
pollution control costs for each out of business, either becauoe
stale. The sillily said Callfomla emissions controls would be
raced th~ blggesl costs al $11 prohibitively expensive ilr tech·

IIAifer
w.u"\.:'~"'llt:
Normu wm.
tupl. SUD!IIIY
t:il a.m,;
Wonltlp
,...... JO; 30 a. no. BIIU llutiYc Yfoda•
dq, 7:00p.m,
REORGANIZED CHURCH OF' JESUS
CHIUSTOF'LA~DAYfWNTS.Port·

lald-JIIdllt

Ro.s. - · Dubl.

puler,

JUice Dona•. JO
cburdl
-··
Cburdltcllool9:
a.m.; M'!)rlllllawenlllp

IO:JO a.m.; Wedlleodq
-.7::1lp.m.

evllllll prayer

IIETIILEIIEM BAPTIST. Re¥. J:arl

Shuler, pater. WonldD III'VIOI!, 1: IOa.m.

l

!

ao

t

l

a.m ,

'~JR~VI&lt;iJR L~ERAN

,..-;--S-e_r_rn____· o-n~et_t__e~ ;~:

....
••

....

see,

-fen-.
IIYRAC!Jlij:

CHUIICH OF OOD.

Wonlllp lti'Yiot iuoda)l
' 11 a.11.; lltutday lellool 11 a.m. Ewalq
wonltlp T:OO p.m. Wldlleoday
ptoyer -~~~~7:00p.m.

lilT. HJ:ItiiON UNITED METIIREN

IN allliiT CHURCH, ~In 1'eua
Conanlllllly off CL RL D. lilY. ~
Jeff Bolter~ lq 1 - ;
Ed Rou
lullday School llllpt. &amp;ullday'
S.hod 1: a.m.; - • wonlllp aad
cburclt 10;30 a.m.; .......

... ....M. .
eldl-'•

r:::30......... lint·- ·~
p.m.; &amp;pedal _,..,.

lbu~ 8uatla)l

.

IJOOCI.

rlghteoulnesa. We learn lhls one Jltlle !blna, "no one can
number Ills sins, '111 he begins to reform." What a blessing bla
lite becamt. Yoar llfe can be as good when you number your
II~. but first y'ou lnUJI besln lo reform. Firat you must see !hat
you are not u JOOtl ia you can be. Looll at your life u God does
pd ~ee· wbal _will happen.
• j

,.

!au tor William Mlddleswarlh,

to ~~ $54 bffiion a year
•

nically lmposalble to achieve.
He said Industry supported
e!forts 10 reduce toxic air emil·
stons- esUmaled ala·minimum
of 2.7 billion ~uadll per year
nallonwlde- but said the Senate
bill would lmlllll" extraordinary
costs to achieve •'trivial" lmprovements In air quallly.
'The real arpmeolls do you
want 10 speitd lens or !)llllons to
chue the lui little bit of air
poUullon," MuclantoniO said.
"This Is a mulllbiWon-doUar
mUlstone being hung around
industry's neck."
•
MasclaniOitio noted . lhe $54
billion esllmate ·waa almost dou·
ble I he $32 biWonnow being spent
by U.S. lndiiStry to comply with
current federal air poUutl.on,
control requirements, according
to Commerce Oepa~ttnenl fig·
ures. WIUiam Rosenberg, assiStant Environmental Prolectlon
Agency admtntstralor for air and
radiation, echoed the roundta·
bie's cr!Uclsm of lhe Senate bill
and said the industry sludy

'
shoWed tbeadmlniltratlon'splan
was much more cosl.effecttve.
"Aitl)ough we qree wllb the
envlroomen'-1 ·goals embodied
tn the' Senate Clean Air Act
proposal, we strongly agree with
the BUJiness Roundtable concluslon that the P,resldent's propost!l
will acllleve lhe same environ·
mental beneflls at sublltandally
less than half the cost of the
Senate b\ll." Rosenbelll said In a
statement.
Rosenberg said the EPA soon
would release Its own cosl
es dmale for the Senate bill.
Sen. Max Baucus, D·Mont., a
prime +!ionsor of the Senate bill,
rejecte,il cha111es that the Senate
bill w~
' , needlessly expensive,
,saying the cos I of reducing air
pollud1 n bad lo be balanced
agalns its harmful health
e!tectsl '
·
. "The cost of cleaning the air Is
hlah. but tbe cost or not' cleaning
the air~ higher," Baucus said In
a prepared stalement. "In 1990.
Amerl~~ faces :a clear choice:

•

We can prescribe clean air for tlon and. to a lesser degree.
our smog-ridden clUes or we can smog-related emissions.
The siUdy es llmated tlt.eSenate
condnue to add bllllou In ex·
penses to the nation's health care bill's toxic air emission controls
alone could cost up to S62 billion - ~
bill."
.
The $54 billion esdmale was annually. compared with $25 ~
calculated by Denny Technical biU!Qn for air toxlcs In the $54 - ,
Services or Raleigh, N.C., a billion " middle ground" ;
•
private research company hired scenario.
The Senate bill's toxic air ;
by the roundtable. The com·
pany's study is based on an pollution program "could result t
analysis of clean air cosl studies In shuldown or slgnlflcanUy '" .•
done tor the EnvlronmE&gt;ntal reduced production In United ~
Prolecllon• Agency and lhe uti!· Stales Industries whose total ~
lty, chemical and on Industries, revenueS" exceed $100 billion •
annually," the sludy said.
among others.
·
The Senate blll's toxic air •
The study said the Bush
admlnlstrallon's clean air prop- program Is slmllar to lhe admln·
osal, senl to Capitol Hill last !stratton's btu in that II Initially :
summer, would cost $22 billion a calls for Industry to Install lbe • :
year, sllghUy higher 1han the bes 1 available pollution control
administration's esdmate of $14 technology to Umt some 200
hazardous pollutanls.
billion lo $19 billion.
However. the Senale blll is •
The )ludy said lhe Senate bill
could boosl the annual emission much tougher In regard lo •
control cost to $104 bllllon, • "residual risk" - lhe heallh •
mainly due to its tough limits on risks left after the Improved ••
toxic and cancer·causlng poilu· technology is Installed.

1

ALBANY, N.Y. (UPI) -In a precedent-setting c~, New
York's highest court Thursday said a parenl's right to rejed
life-saving medical procedures outweighs lhe child's need for a
mothPI' ot father .
The Courl of Appeals also ruled that the state cannol prohibit
parents from l!llgaglng 1.n dangerous sctlvllles because of a risk
their children might be lefl orphans.
, The decision expanded patlenls' rights, religious rights and
women's rights and may affect other stales, lawyers said.
The ruling uplleld lhe right ol a J~hovah' s Wllncs~ to rP.jPCt a
blood transfusion even though she might die and leave her
newborn child motherless.
.
The court said the case was the first It has ever decldP.d hl
which a parent's comti!utlonal rights were pttled against lh£
welfare of her child.
In a decision wrillen by Chief ,Judge Sol Wachtler, the court
said, ' There ts no question that the state has an interest In
protecting the welfare of children."
But, the court added, "The state does not pro~lblt parents
from engaging in dangerous acttvllles because therE' Is a risk
thai their children will be felt orphans."
·
The ruling comes 1:1 months arter Brookhaven Memorial
Medical Center on Long Island obtained a stale St1j1reme Court
order forcing J:renlse Nlcoleau to have a blood transfusion after
hemouhaglng during a Cesarean section. Nlcoleau had jus&lt;
deilve1ed a heallhy baby boy.
·
Nlcoleau and her husband are Jehovah's WUnesses and
believe a biblical order In the l!ook of Acts to ''abi;taln ... from
blood" prohibits blood trimsfusions.
.
' The couple also are medical professionals and maintained the
hospllal could have staunched her bleeding wltl!out giving her
blood, which, she noted, m11y contain diseases such as hepatitis
or AIDS.
'
"
The lilgh court said ihe. lower court erred in deciding the
child's need for a mother outweighed the"mother's religious
beliefS'. ' '

MOSCOW (UPil - Presldenl
Mikhail Gorbachev said Friday
lila! Azerbaijani extremists have
called for the republic to ~ede
and become an IslamiC state but
\•owed he would not allow the
situation to deteriorate, the offl·
cia! Tass news agency said.
Tass, however, said "large
numbers'· of Azerbaijani mllllants had massed around the
blockad ~d Nagorno-Karabakh
enclave, which is running short
of food and fuel. One·lhlrd of the
disputed enclave's capltai Is
without waler after a reservoir
was blown up, II said.
"Tile siluatton in Azerbaijan
and Armenia has aggravated
during lhe past 24 hours," Tass
'a\&lt;l "The leaders oflhe Azerbal·
1anl People's Front Ignore the
appeals ~e cenlral and
republican leadership to stop Its
•mlawful actions and seek a way
out of the confitcl."
The dealh toll from the !lghtitlg
In the neighboring republics of
Arm~nla and Azerbaijan was
reporled at 76 and raised to more
than 270 the number of those
killed smce the violent dispute
over Nagomo-Kar.abakh - an
Armenian enclave In AzerbaiJan
·- erupted nearly two years aro.
fhe first depuly chief of lhe
lnterlor Ministry troops, ldentl·
lied as B. Smyslov said bolh the

I

~

plan," co-pilot James Wetherh!'e proper runway on the flrsl
allempt.
,
replied from orbll.
The &lt;'rew's revised !llghl plan
Shullle skipper Daniel Brandens leln, 41, Wetherbee, 37, Friday called for Brandensleln
Bonnie DUnbar, 40, Marsha and Wetherbee to exercise on the ·
Ivins, 38, and G. David Low, 33, shuttle' s treadmlll · lo keep in
then began deactivating landing shape for re·entry afler 11 days In
systems and preparJng the shut· ttiP weightlessness of space and
tie for a bonus day In space, all five astronauts were told to
facing a light schedul~ of Earth turn In an hour and a half early .
The astronauts accompUshed
photoarapby, exercise and a few
thP primary goals or lhe 33rjl
minor eXI!f'rlments.
At Columbia's original landing .shuttle mission last week wilh
lime, ground log did lndet111 the successful launch of a Navy
blanket the runways at Edwards, 3yncom • commun,!Callons sate!·
confirming NASA's forecut and · llle and the rescue of the Long
the wisdom of delaying re-entry. Durallon Exposure Facility, an
BriSCOe said lhe weather was 11-ton science satellllelhat other·
expected to lrn(lrove throughout wise would 'have crashed back to
lhe day Friday wllh goqd visibil- ~:arth in March.
Jn a long·dlstance telephone
ity and llghl winds expected
Saturday and a lowprobabllltyof, chat Thursday, P~esldenl Bush congratulated the astronauts
log.
The extra day in orhlt will "for dolnJI; this superb job up
allow Columbia's crew to claim thPre on this mission."
Columbia's touchdown Saturthe record for the longest shu~tle
Olght In 33 missions to date The day will mark the first nl~hl
previous record of 10 days, seven landing In the post·Challenrer
hours and f7 mlnules, set by era and only the third In the
Columbia In 1983 during a Spa· · nine· year history of the shullle
celab science mission, will be program . With the rescued sa tel·
surpassed Fr~ay at 3· 22 p.m. lite on board, Columbia's touchdown weight was predicted to be
EST.
All space shu Illes are launched more than 9,200 pounds heavier
with E'IIOIIih tood, water. air liM than the p~evloiiS record.
ne.plte the pr01pecls for a
rockel fuel for two extra days In
space If weathef or other prob- bonus day in orbit, the astronauts
clearly were ready lor re-entry
lems block an Qn·tlll'IE' landing.
While NASA likes to bring when awakened by mission con·
trol late Thunday.
~hutUes home on schedule, rooct
"We're ready to rock alu!
~lbiUty Is a hard-and·ft!st reqlllrement for tile powerleu roll!" Welherbee radllllid afler
spaceplane, which glides to a the crew's roustllg wakeupcalllanding and must reach l~.e "Born to Be Wild," I1Y the rock

I

.

Too polluted for fish~ swimming
TOLEDO. Ohio (UPI) - the
Toledo heBitli department said
Ihe 01 taw'a River II so polluted,
ll's u11111!e to swim Ia It or eat any
!Ish lhat may be caughl there.
The hilalth department bu
exlended a 1188 warnlllg about
using the ottawa River In Lucas
County for recreallonal

.

.

The river drains Into · Lake
Erie. Its major 1011rce ol pollution Is tile old tlura landfill,
located on the river's norlh bank.
The landfiU 11 leaktna various
chemicals. tneludlai pesticides
and cancer-cauiiDg PCBI.
The dump was Uled by manu·
facturers ~t has been elated
IInce 1,97,, The c11st of cleaulng
up lhe site Ia esUmated to be

belween $15 million

,r

and $30

million.
Greg Rucker, chief of the
health departtneat's environ·
mental and conaumer health
dlvt1ton, said Tllunday the river
nu no recreatloaal vallll! where
It fiowatllr!Juah :rolado.
Rucker uid the ~t'•
major concern 11 over flab tb~\
llwtmln the conta1nillated wate1

and lhe poiSiblllty thai people
ma:.r eat them •

band Ste)lpenwolf.
Bu 1 it was no I to he.
An hOur and a half before
Brandensteln and Wetherbee
werE' to close the ship's payload
bay doors for re-enlry, NASA
managers scheduled a last·
minute' )lleather briefing lo as·
sess th~ pos~iblllty of fog at
Iandi nit time and decided to wave
QfJ the landing lor one 90-minule
orbit lo gather more data.
•'We're extremely concerned
about log," Baker radioed Columbia. "This hour and a half
'will give us more lime to take
another look at lhe weather."
"OK, we certainly agree with
that," Brandensteln replied.
"fhls Is not a good vehicle to fly
in the fog."
For sclendsis back on Earth,
the landing delay was minor
compa'red to the 5 ~ years the
LDEF satelll1e was In orb1t. But

'

Walesa accepts
invitation to

visit.Moscow

'

REMEMBER
WITH ToFLOWERS
11md • bra~elfillly
d.. , ... ..ar.....,

•rran ,..mMI1 jullt
Ill'"....

"•II

'POMEROY
FLOWER SHOP

..'Tit.~&gt; Wov A mnica Send. LoVf&gt;"

' ' ,,
' .,
[ ·.... ~
, rt ..

1
. I

•

..,
'

Plo. ....to, .. fti·S721

."..,.

..
- - - - - - - - - - - -. .·n

Your Hometown Bank
Hires Hometown PeopJe!

"t

In our ~ommunity, wf:'re committed to offer
the kind of services and perHonal allen·
tion you want and need. When you bank
with us, you'll find that we're much more
than just a financial institution, we're ' a
hometown friend.
MEET MARY..,....,....

Mary Grover io a leller lor
at the
Formere Bank
Tuppere Plaine Office,
Mary hao been employed .
with Farmen lor 3 yeare
and hao worked in bonk·
·. inB for 28 yeare. Reeldln1
In Cheater wilh her huo•
hand, Kenneth, they have
2 dau!Jhten, Joy and Jen·
niter, and 2 pandehil·
dren, Amy ond Jeremy.
Mory lo a member of the
Zion Orurch of.Chrlol and
a paduate of !lc!lplo Hlflh
School.

•I

Tile lnvltallon wu conveyed
P11land, Vladimir Bro'tllkov, who
met wllb lhe Ia bor leader for 90 minutes Thunday In Gdansk,
Solidarity's blrlhplace.
A dale lor the vlalt was not
announced.

..

Slinderella Diet Classes.

(FuJ

Farmers
Bank
Your Community Owned Bank

MOIDII IVIIIIG-i.S POINtS ·
·CLASS
6 P.ll
. .

MEMBER FDIC

992-2136

221

915-JJIS

WEST SECOND

POIIIOY, OliO

'.
.,•

...

.,..

.

.

.,

'•
"

~

.,'·' '
'

"

, r•

.,,

.

..

.:,,...
•• , j't

"We're Committed To Our
Hom~town •••"
n. S.l•l•t u,~. 11 ••••l•t

tUESDAY· IVIIING~USON .
CLASS 6 P.M.

"

r--..;.....------. ·.,!

by the Sovlel ambauador, to

. . . ,-...

:

Yevgeni Prlmakov, alternate. , :
member of lhe Sovlel Commu .. , .....
niSI Party's Central Committee~' _
and head of one of the two ~ .!
parliament chambers, ad - ·• •
dressed the Baku rally and '·
Implored the clly's residents lo ~ '
stop lhe disorders. The Azerbal- '··~
jan! parliament also appealed for ~.
"wisdom and self-restraint,"
Tass said.
Roving bands In Baku, where
pogroms erupled last w~kend.
continued ra ids on the homes of ·;
·Armenlanr.'News reports said 56 , '
of the people dead, most of them '
Armenians, had been kllled In Ihe ,;
Baku pogroms.
...,
Mosl plan Is and trans~JDrtatlon
in the city were shut down by ',:
slrlkes.
The exodus of Armenians from
Baku quickened as overloaded
ferries carrted them across the . •o
Caspian Sea to the republic of,' .;
Turkmenia and the tolal number 1 ·
of refugees reached 10,500, ac· ·•
cording to news reporls.
"'
"

they are anxious to get the big
experlmen I package back on the
ground for analysis .
LDEF was launched In 1984 to
expose 57 experiments to !he
harsh radiation, vacuum and
lemperature extremes of the
space environment. By studying
how a variety of hlgh·tech
materials were affected during
their stay in or btl, engineers Will
learn mo1~ about how to design
longer· lived spacecrafl .

'

i.

~,

said.

Gorbac~ev.

991-3312 01 992·5052

'

-.

GDANSK, Poland (UPI)
Solidarity founder Lech Walesa
said .Thursday he has accepted
an Invitation to visit Moecow and
said he Is "desllned" lo meet
with SOviet leader Mikhail

JO All IEWSOME.

.,

federation, " he said ofthevlriUal •· ''
civil war between Christian ,
Armenians and Moslem Azerbal- , ·;.
janiS on the Soviet Union' s :
: .;
soulhern rim.
Thousands of Azerbaijanis ral- ' '•'
lied In their capllal of Baku, Tass :::·"
said.
• .,,
The demonstrators In Baku, ' '
and at similar protests
elsewhere in Azerbaijan,
' '
"demanded lhe resignation of
the republic's government and ',:
the liquidation of Sovlel powel' • •·
In Azerbaijan, " Radio Mos.
. ·'
cow's lnterfax news service
'·"

Armenians and AzerbaiJanis
It was his second comment In
were placing women In lhe front
two days on the vlrlual
ranks to confront army troops
Armenlan-Azerbatjanl civil war
and block them from getdng to
over the enclave of Nagorno·
Karabakh.
tlje !lgllt,lng to separate both
sides.
Full-scale battles raged for a
Smyslov lold the weekly news·
sixth day Thursday across much
paper Argumenty 1 Faktl lhat
of lhe Transcaucaslan region
many tanner servicemen, !amll·
wllh no signs of abaling despite
tar with modern weaponry, are
the presence of 24.000 soldiers,
partlcpatlng In lhe fighting tn
reservists and trainees and the
AzerbaiJan, which borders on
state of emergency Imposed by
Iran.
Moscow.
The Soviet leader told a meet·
The official news agency Tass
tng of workers, farmers and
said Armenian and Azerbaijani
engln~rs In lhe Kremlin that lhe
fighters were taking dvlltan and
Transcaucasus region was sUI!. mllltary hostages, and riots
tense and lhere are clashes,
broke out on the Sovlel·lranlan
pogroms and attempts to seize
border .
Azerbaijanis useddumplrucks
weapons. Tass said
"The Soviet people," he said.
to spill rocks and metal rods on
"are re.solulely demanding that
roads in persistent efforls to
block · the deployment of Soviet
measures be laken to stop tltese
negal!ve processes."
troops, who often could not
"ln , Azerbaijan, there have
respond to distress calls from
ah~ad)l appeared polltlcalforces
settlements throughout the emcalling for Azerbaijan to leave
battled republic.
the Soviet Union and become an .- "The events in Azerbaijan
Islamk: republic. butlhts linds no" cause anxlely," Gorbachev told
support among the people," he
a meeting of workers, farmers
said.
and engineers at the Kremlin.
He said although "extremist';
"We had lo resort to force by the
may resort to evety sort of
state agalnslextremlsm. vandal·
provocation and make allempls
Ism and against criminals.
to exacerbate lhe situation, we
"Bul the main quesdon of
will 11o everythl!ll possible that
lnter-et!lntc relations cAn be
the situation does nol be&lt;~me solved only by developing a
more clcu te. ••

Shuttle Columbia .landing delayed one day by fog
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla.
(UPH -The shultle Columbia's
pre-dawn California landing Fr l·
d"Y was delayed a day because of
fog over the Mojave Desert,
pushing the crew's salelllterescue . mission lo a record·
breaking 11 days ..
"! believe our concerns were
valkl and we did Ihe proper thing
today." flighl dlreclor•Lee Brls·
coe said at a news conference In
Houston. ','Tomorrow looks a
whole lot betler: Righi now, we
feel our' fog probability will be a
whole lol less for tomorrow."
Columbia, carrying an ll·ton
sclence--satelllle In Its payload
bay, had been scheduled to glide
to a touchdown al 2: M a.m. PST
on concrete runway 22 ai Ed·
wards Air Force Base, Calif.,
northeasl of Los Angeles.
But a!ler holding up re-enlry
for one 90-minule omit to assess
the prospects for fog over the
landing slle, Briscoe decided
conditions would nol Improve
enough by lhe revised louchdown
time and landing was delayed to
midnight Friday PST, or~ a.m.
EST SalurdaY. .
"It looks like the weal her Is nol
Improving so we've decided to
not come home tOday. We'll try II
agaln tomorrow (when) the
weal her looiC£ a lot better,"
astronaut Michael Baker radioed
the crew frorot mission corilrolln
Houston. ' 1'he dew pollll spreHd
is jnstloo close and log SPems to
be developing out al Edwards. So
we're golnr lo do It lomorrow."
' "OK, sounds like the bel I

.!

Gorbachev ~ttys no trlslamic republic

Court: Parent's religious
right over child's need

P~·

'

•
a:tr

STA11110111 7
IUPPEIS Plua. fMO

,.

"'
'

.'
...'

' -~

.

..
·~j

�---- -

--~

~ov

Jury·find~
·McMartin
molestation
defendantS
innoCent
..
'-·

~:

LOS ANGELES (UPI) - Ray·
• mond Buc key and his mother
were acquitted Thursday of
charges they molested 11 stu·
dents at the McMartin PreSchoolln a stunning climax to a
three-year, $15 million trial, the .
longest and costliest In U.S.
history.
A jury of eight 'm en and four
women acquitted Buckey, 31. and
his mother, Peggy McMar.tin
Buckey, 63, both 'former teachers
at the o.nce-prestlglous 5chool, ot
52 counts of child molestation.
Jurors deadlocked on 12 other
molestation counts against Ray
Buckey, prol'rlpllng Superior ·
Court Judge Williams Pounders
to declare a mistrial on !hose

age from 2- ~ to 5 ~ years, at the
now -closed Vqlnla McMartin
Pre-School In the affluent coastal
community of Manhattan \Beach
between 19.78 and 1983.
Juror Julie Peters said the
verdicts should not be considered
a victory for the defense. ·"Hhi11k
everyo1Jc· In this case was a
victim," she said. "l don't think
anyone came out oJ this
a
winner. "
Her remarks echoed the senti·
mentS of the judge,who.Jast year
said the case had " pot$oried"
everyone Involved.
•
Prosecutors said Peggy
Buckey will not be retried' on the
deadlocked · conspiracy [to\mt,
and a hearing was
for.
. scheduled
.

charges. The panel also
deadlocked on a conspiracy
~aunt against both Buckeys,
and a mistrial was declared on
that charge as well.
.
Spectators .ln the packed cour·
troom gasped ~ and SOI'rle wept
- when court clerk Stan Ferrell
read the verdicts .
The acquittals shocked the
parents of some of the 'tormer
students, and despite the acquit·
tals, several jurors said. they
believe some children were In·
deed molested; bu.t that there
was not -enough evidence for
conviction.
The c harges stemmed from the
alleged sexual assaults on 11 of
the Buckeys' pupils, ranging In

ease

Feb. 2, when the state will
announce whether It Intends to
' re-try Rayi!IOnd Buckey on the
· remaining deadlocked charees.
In all, Raymond Bllckey wu
acquitted of 40 CIIWits of child
molelltatlon. Hfs mother wai
acquitted of 12 counts of
molelltatlon·.
'
Defense lawyer Danny Davis ,
put his arm arll'Ua4... Raymbnd
Buckey's shoulder, then led11Dl\ .
from the courtrOilm as Buckey·
·wept openly: His mother dabbed
her own eyes . Both defendants,
who had spent years In jail but
have since been ffeed on ball, lett
the
courtroom wltbput speaklnJ.
.
Davis also declined comment.
but co-defense counsel Dean Glts

'

Card of Thank s

Happ._- Ads

in Memonam

Yard Sales

CO PY DEADLINE
MONDAY PAPER
·' TUESDAY PAPER
w[ONESOAY PAPER
THURSDAY PAPER
I'HIOAV PAPER
'
SUPIIOAV PAPER

16
. 16
.1 6
1'5
16

~

•

ov,r ,1 &amp; Wor~•
.
'
.20 ·
14.00
'•
1 .30 '
. ' 18.00
.42
t8.00
.60
113.00 .
t1 .30/ day .. 05/ doy

1- C•rd of Th.,kl ·

e. -lost and Found

. • ,
G111i1 Countv
Are1 Cod• .614

.

Meigl Counly

Area Code 614

E"Eif'""i!l~~~
...
s
=-::::
=t= ::u..•
- '--..-1'71fiM'e d1

· 381 - Vim on
245-- Rio Grarule
256 .. · Gu'jlln Dist.

143 ·- Arabla Di11.
J7-9 - Walnut

&amp;l ~· Li'lll\odt

'

,,,.olol..,.--·-)"!!!.
---·............
01\i.. ny .

4

,.,__,t•.

....
- • • ..,,.
eolll Coli . . .
lp.IIL11t

......,..1.-

. . .k_
and.-. . ..,._In
Cello .....
_
&amp;W ••, - '
, . fiiUI , • • .....

......
,
.
.
.
,
:::r. .c:.....r-..: .

=~·

~:and

1d.~21S

Olveaac).fll

N.-Dr.llalntPIII

•.

to

e , ·LoM &amp; Found

·-with .

.
.
I
· Mason' Co .. WV

Are• Code 304

~:t

LaM:~-· holt

·

&amp;:""~---~.:-

71 ;~ 'Autos for Sate'
'72 -· Truc:kt tOr, Sale
73 - Vansli .tWO 's
74 ,Motorcyel•

.

.,

Gallipolis

., VIcinity
~·

ALL Yeni leiH Muot le.hld In
DIAOIJNI: 1:00 fiJII.

.-

~ -

• 2:00 p.m •
~·lon· . 2:DO

81 - Hom. Improvements

,,..

( 86 ·- G.u n•al Hauhng
86 : Mobtle Home Rep•ir ·

. 58 - 'FrUjt• 6 Veg-.ab411., .
59 .:.. for Sale or Tr•de
.

23 · Prot•stonal Setvi cii!S

'"

'

Yard Sale

7
'·

82 -· Plumb1ng 6 Muting
83 -he-..ati"g
.
. 14 1- ~IICirinl &amp; ~8trigllf'llion

51 - Pal.s for Sale
57 - Musiclllnllruments

'
BuiJn .. s"OppPfh•mtv '

tQt4.

tho., ......... ed .... run.

51 - HouMhOid Goocls ·
.52 - Sportfn:g Ooodl ,
53 - Antique.
.. 54 · Mtac:. Merchand•..
·56 Building Sllppli•

22 - - Mon~ . 'to. Lo1t1

... uatottMMIMof.: : :
Hoe a ....... oollor on, It~

76 - Boats' &amp; Motors. for Sale
76 ·Auto P.,ls &amp; Acc:ciuori•
77 ·Auto R.,air
'
78 . C•mptnO Equtpmaru
79 C1mptfi &amp; Mo,t or Homes

Mt' r 1:11 d n rl1 ~ e

.•

11 ·, Wanted To Do

89&amp; - Let•rt ,,
· 937 - Butfllo

ln Ntlghbatftnll RDIHI. At. nill
LOIJT: ·-·
-·
Rl:.211 a
Ia. 11t ttl :IIIID.

Trilllopurt a!1 un

41 .:. Hou•s tar Rent
42 - Mobil.• Homn tot Aenr
11&amp;3 - F•rm• tot Rent
44- Apl!rtment for ~ent
46 Furni&amp;~ed Rpoms
46 - Sp.ace,for Aent · .
41' ~- W..,Ittd to Mtnt
48 Equipm•nt tor Rent
49 - For le•e ' .

11·· HIID Wanted
1 2- Si1UIItion Went ad
13 -· lhsurance . ·
t 4 - BUsin•• .Training
115 -· Schools 6 lnstroction
11 - fhdic;a. Jv a. ca Rep•.,
17 - M isc;eUaneoua

= ....

64 ~ Hay; &amp; Gr1in
&amp;5 ·,. Sted &amp; Ferlilir•r

Employ111ent
Ser VICP.S

175- Pt. Pie..."'
·4fi8..:.Leon
986 ~ Ch•t.r
516·":' AHie Gfove
143- Ponllnd
773- Maton (
24 7 · · L.t1rt Falls 882 -· New H~e·n

949'- Recine
742 - Rutland
66 7 - ~oolville

87 - U~holstery ·

9 · Wlnled to Buy
(ljlod . . . trilok t - lor

a..,, ... ala, -

,.

fllrMI1de. 11 t

•• 1322

bed,

NOTICE
APPLICATION FOR .
CHILDREN'&amp; TRUSt
FUND MONIES
Applicetions l&lt;!r ChHdren' 1
Plaintiff· Trust Fund molliol rond· In·
ltl'liCtions for · epplylng .,e
-VS.now avelllblo et the office of
CHERYL LYNN POWELL
1he Meigo county Superln·
.. fka Cheryl Colligan
tondent of SchoOio, MuniCI·
· -: · Kropka, et al
·. .
Defendant pal Builclng, Pomeroy. Ohio,
46789.
.
'
.NOTICE IN SUIT FOR
Grant
money
available
for
FORECLOSURE
Moigs County is • 10.000 to
. · : · OF MORTGAGE
: Cheryl Lynn Powell. fka be u•d In projects for pri.Cheryl Colligan Kr011ka. mary and aecond8ry child
whose last known address is abu• and neglect prevetl·
: 670. South Second Street, tion. Applicetlont musi be
· · Middleport, Ohio 45760, submittlld to the office of
and
the unknown heir1, tha Molg1 County Suporin·
'd8\'is881,
legat. ., IIXIICU • tendent of Schools no let••
ton, adminlstratora. apou• then 6:00P.M .. January 29,
·and autgns and the un- 1990. Late oppllcetions wUI
·known guarddi.,• of minor
and/ or incompetent heirs of

Cheryl Lynn Powell. fka
C!lervl Colligan Kroplul all of
whose residenCM are urt-

known and cannot by re•
sOnable diligence be Mcertainect will take notice that
on the 29th of November.

1989. Chemical Mortgage
Company filed Ito cortoin
Complaint in the Common
Pleas
Court
of Maig1
CoUnty, Ohio in Cue no.

89CV296 on the docl&lt;et of

said Court. and the object
and demand for relief of
which pleading is to foreclose the lien. of plaintiff' I
mortgage recorded upon the
.. following described real estate. to wit :
The follOwing real ettate
situated in the County of
Meigs, State of Ohio, and in

the Village of Middleport,

bounded and described ••

follows: 33 feet fronting on
Second Street of the Village
of Middleport. being one-

fourth

of lot No. 60

purchased by L. C. Davia
from Jennie Hlyes. Chari•
Geiger and Ella Geiger, the
same being the southwest
quarter of said Lot No. 80 .
Said one-fourth beginning
at the northwest corner of
the Cranz lot running parll·
lei with the same about 98
·feet; thence Eaat 33 feat;
thence West about 98 feet
to Second Street: thence
along Second Street in
a southwesterly direction
along Second Street 33 feet
to Cranz tot. the place of beginning.
All of the above named defendants are required to answer within twenty-eight
days after last publicttion,
which shell be published
once a week for aiJ: conaecutlv• we.. a, or they might be
denied a hetring in thiacae.

LERNER , SAMPSON l
ROTHFUSS
A Legol Profeosion1i
,

Aaaocietion

Anor11'1'11 for Plaintiff
.
(1) 12. 19. 28;
(2)2. 9, 18. 8tc

11

be autom1ticalty ditqUIIIi-

fitd.

·A public heering for re·
view of applications' wtll be

held at 7 :00 P.M . Jenuary
30, 1990, intheofflceofthe
Moigs County Suporlnten·
dent of Schoolo.
James A . Diehl, Chairman

Meigs Co. CTF Advisory Bd .
(11 12, 19, 26: 3tc

I---:--:-::-=-:--Public Notice

1---------AESOLUTION #1 · lS-90
:BE IT RESOLVED by the
CouncH of the Villege of Po·
meroy, 111 membe" thereto
concurring:

That the Village of Pom·
troy ,.iaethe r ..t on the Village owned property It the
corner of Butternut 1nd
Briel&lt; Street frqm 136.QO

per month to $110.00 per
month .
.
That thi1 reaolutton shall

be in force and effect In Ftb·
ruary 1. 1990.
PASSED: 1·11-90
APPROVED:
Rich.,d Seyler. Mayor
ATTEST:
Jane Welton, Clerk-Trea.
{1)

19. 1tc

Public Notice
ORDINANCE NO. 1223·80
An Ordinance to Eotebllsh
th~ Position of "-ion
Doractor end Eoteblithlng
the Selery.
Be it ordained by the
Council of tho VAiege of
Middleport •• foli-o;
SEC. I. Thet the poellion
of Reereetion Director - 1
be deelorod • full·tlme po 1 ~
toon offoctlve Jon. 1, 1880.
sec. n. Thet tho nlery of
Rocreetlon Dif8ctor
be 1711411 per yeer.
SEC. Ill . Thet ""Y ordi·
I na1nce In conftlct"WWth 1hls

Help Wanted

MEDICAL lABORATORY TECHNICIAN
PMrt time pos,tion ia available for 1 Medical
Laboratory Technicien to work . rotating
ahllta (ell ahlftal: Require• independent
worker with caiN!bilitln in allarHa of cllnl·
eel laboratory. Excallent fringe benefita.
Pfeue contact:
Cecelia liale, Laboratory Supervisor
Veterena Memorial Hospital
116 E. Memorial Drive
Pomeroy, OH. 46769
(6141992'-2104, Extenaion 216
~OE

,ordinance

ia

hereby re-

pelled.
SEC, IV: Thet this ordl·

shall take eHect and be in

force from i~d after Jan.' 8.
t980. .
..
·nance is hereby de(:hll'ed to
Pused the 8th day of Jon·
be an emergency in tMt aup:- uery 1990.
~
erviaory . peraonnel
1re AttMt: Jon P. Buck. ;
nellded immodlotoiy for the Cl•k
.
oP.,.tion of recreation pro- .
Dewev·M. Horton,
gramt within lhe villege.'
Preoldont of Council
SEC. V. This Ordinance 111 19. 28, 2tc

.

·Read the Best Seier~

j

Busi-ness ·Servi.c:e ·s ·..

·-

'
LEGAL NOTICE
NATIONAL FLOOD INSURANCE PROGRAM
PropoMd Flood Elev1tion DeterminatiOna
,
AGENCY: Federoi! Emergency Monegoment Agency
ACTION: l'topollld rule.
'
•
SUMMARY: . .
.
,

on the propoolld beoo 1100-year) ffooCI oievetlon•
ahown in your.community's preliminary Flood lnaur~
ance Study (FIS) end Flood Insurance Rete Map
·.ffi!'IM) . ThMe baut100·vear)floodtlevetlonsorethe
bull for the flooclpleln manegement me_,.. thot
the community itl required to either 1dopt or show tvi·
dence of being alre1dy in effect in order to qualify pr
remoin quolified for perticlpetion In the Nationol Fli&gt;od
lnaurence Progr1m.
· ·
·
DATES:
Tho period for commertt will be ninety (90) days
following the HCOnd publicetlon of this propOMd,rulo
tn 1 new•p• of local circulation in the communtty.
ADDREIBES:
,

1

"

PUtu•nt to $hi provltion.l of l tlac IOalb), 1he
Admlnlotr8tor, lo whom euthorlty ~- bNn doiegeted
by the Dl&lt;ector, Fod. .t E,.fii!'ICV Menegoment
Agency, hereby cortlfl.. thet tho P,opoelld flood tie·
vetion clotermlnetions, H promulptod,
nat havo a
signlfl-t -n'omlc lmpooat on • eubetemilol number
of mell entltleo. A flood tlovetlon dotermln-n
under lootlon 1383 fonno tho f!eoitfer -loool ordl·
· - · -""· If odopgd by, • looel community, will
. , _ fu1uf8 conoti'UC'Iion wlti!M tho ftoodpWn eree.
The olwatlon clotermf-iona, , _ . , , im- no
r•trlctlon u-• end untl the local cmtmunity vefun·
terlly odoPio flooclploin orclnonceo In eccord whh
thoH tl-iont. Ewn H - - .,. eolopt8d In
oomplf- with Federel .....,. . the tl..nlona
Pi, • lllo !low hlgll to IM!Ild In tho floodplain and do

w•

notlllollillh . . .{IIMIIL Thuo, thieaotienonlyformo

the ..... fllr fu1-loool actlone.lt ........... _ ,..,
qu...,ent;· of 111011 II II• no -nomlo llllpooat.
I a - ond - • of rwa1 prap1 In the VIII... ,
ofllu-. -go COunty, Ohloere•-rsea•l1ore- ·

=In._..

tr

-

thoprallllllrttry Pll .,d FIIIM eveflalllall thoOIII- '

droit oiled llllove.
Ill d .... tlood alaslloMe!
"::: floocltouroee
led
IIIOti:nen ""'
fl
profll• In tho ltucly. The flood ......... -lldt
In deull are:
.
Ren.JO of a.o Flood E-lona:
II Depth I n - · - fi'DIInd.
lourco of Floodfnt
•EIIWetlon In (NGYDI .

.,,,..,a,

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

Uttle LNdlna Cfllk
(1) 12, 111, 2t~ .
1

•·

~

949-2493

Card of Thank•

. The Family Of
NEVA SEYFRIED
Wishes to
extend
thanks to .all who were
10 kind to u1 during
ber llln•a end deeth.
Speclaf thanks to Dr.
Mansfield . end om·
ployeea of
Vater·
ilns Memorial Hospital
llftd EKtended CareMd
to. ell who sent food,
flawera and cards.
Myrtle·&amp; Joe Si~ton
.and Family

'

·

Business Services

3rd Str•t, l~int, Oh.
. 1·1-lt-IIIID.

Study and map•lhowing the p;opo•d baae floo1d

their content•.

0111 leg w bern to. belly O.Nipollo
_ ... I n - Co.~ ,.., lor
. night - · 2I4G c:HIIend cloon •
m-1418.

TOP ·SOIL
FOR SALE

Technical information or comments ere solicited

olwatione end their dtllnoetlon are evoilollle for r~·
vi- at tho Vlll1111e Holl, Civic Center. Rutland, Ohio.
Send commonto to The Honof8ble Jim Fink,
Meyor, VIII ego of Rutlend, Vlllego Hell. Civic Center.
·
Rutlend. Ohio 45n5 .
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
lll!r. John L. -lll!atticb
Chief, Risk Stuillu
.
Division
Feder1llnaur~~ne Adminiatration
Federal Em.,gency Menagement
Agency
•
Waslilngton, D. C. 20472
'
. (:1021 848-2787 /.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:'
The Fod..,l Emergency Menegemont Agency
glvos notlae of the propoelld doterminetions of bOle
1100-ye.,) flood oievetions, In occordllnco whh Section 110 of tho flood Dlsut• Promction Act of 1973
(Pub. L. 83-234), 87 Stet. 980. which edded Section
1383 to the Netlolllll Flood lnsu,.nce Act of t 818
(Title·XIII of.tho Houoing ""d Urben Development Act
of 1988 (Pub. L. 90-448), 42 U.S.C. 4001·4128, end
44 CFR Pert 87.4 (e).
ThOle el-iono, together with tho floodploin
monegement ..,...u,.. roqulrlld by Section 60.3 of
the proorem r11u11tlona. are thl minimum that are,..
qunct. They ahould not be conatrued to mean the
community must chengo ony oldotlng ordin0llceo1hat
oro more etrlngent In their ftoodploin mMegem.,t ,..
qulrements. The communlty may ot eny time enact
stricter raquirlmorrts on Ita -n. or puf8uont to poll;
cl• eotebllahed by other Foclorel. &amp;tete, ilr Regionol
enthleo. Thue propc&gt;ood oi-lons will oleo be uH&lt;!
to ..tculote tllo tpproprlote flood lnlur8nce premium
1'81M for buldlngo end 1hoir contents end for the
•-nd leyor of lnsuronCD on existing buUdlngo ohd'

.,..,.......,wv21104.

lOSES'
EXCAVAnNG
·&amp; TlUCIING

Public' Notice

. J&amp;L.

INSULADON
Wllftr s,e.lsl Os
VINYL SIDING
VINYL REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
FREE ESTIMATES

992-2772
12·13-'19-1 mo.

'

We would lilo:e to
thank our
friendo,
noighbon. and church
family · for their love, ·
.kindneae and ovmpa·
thy ahown in the dall1h
of our wHe. sister tnd
aunt. Audrey Smith.
Thenka 'to tha Amer·
iceror-Pomerov Nun·
lng Centar, to nuroe•
end steff who cared
for her we wUI never
forget; to Dr. Manafield, Dr .. Hunter, Dr.
llelld for their cere; to
the pastor, Nonnan
Butler: the pallbearer•
and to all thou who
sent flowers end f&lt;!od;
and to White' a Fu,..lf
ttoma for thai~ kind

iervlca.

Mey God Bleas eoch
tind avarv ons.
Gerth, Dele end
Thelma Smith •nd
Inez

5.

Ada

fiiAN, ·
Altholljlh yOur pictUJS
" - ll8en omlttlld,
Hap~~r BJrthdiV h..
ll8en lubmltted.
'l'hev IIY lhootlng dloe

7 oome .1 1:

You muet be lualty to
tum27.
Wa hope 27 navar
snell.
HIPPY llrthdiJV, fl'ln·

-llllboden

81i

DAVE'S
SMAI.L ENGINE

IEPAII

lomt&amp;ll at Vally ....,..,
............. lilt• .
PARTS AND SERVICE
For Moot 2 and 4-cyoto
enaln• i.
8tGCk l'lrts for
Homtltte. ~tor,
Tecumoeh, Brlggo l
Bt,.tton.

IUTUND DIE
SALES and
SEIVICJ
742-3011 .
•Tire Sal81
•Front· End
. Alignment ·
•Oil Change 1o. lube
•Brake Work ·

MAIN ST., IITLAND
l-15·'!10-tfn

WANTED
LOW GUDI 011

SAW LOGS
S160 n.!:_.
IIUYUID TO

OHIO PALLET
COMPANY
POMIIOY, 01.

PH.

PlUMIING

Now Location:

161 North S.ond
Midoll~p~~rt, 'Ohia 45760

SALES &amp; SERVICE

We Ct"¥ Fhttun1 SuppliM

UCIIIE
FilE DIPT. ·

..............
EYDY

SAT. NIGHT
6:30P.M.
F•tery dlaltt
12 ..,. Sheflutil Onlr
Strldttly EllflrcH
lD·t-lf•

I. 1,; HOLLON
TIUCIIMG
twiiD, . . .
•GRAVEL .
. •UMEITONE

•FlU DIRT
•ANYTHING
AT ALL

915·4422
.
1·11·10-tfn

USa APPliANCES
. . IUWAIIAin'f
IIASHEII-SIOO up

omts-snu;

1/~ l l!n

·

BISSELL
BUILDERS

4-25-lfl

,.

PAT HILL FORD
992-2198

Middleport, Ohio .

18 wanted to Do

.

DOZR
SITEWORK - ROADS
CLEARING

NEWLANQ
· ENTERPRISES
DUMP 'TRUCK

Sand-Stone-Dirt

(6141 667-3271
Grant A. llewlalltl

7·11-'19-lfn

-11Q4.175.

Alfllll .oanln IIIJ',
1111.
.
lob.. 1.111m CaN. oreea cualnf,
trM
- . - trlmmlnj,
le-pll'lfl, . ' - ..........

Rrntals

11f14.1'111-2tll.

41 HOUIII for Rant ·

DllmD Truck Hauling, COol,
WOOJI, a - · Haul lri IDNed,
otorwaenvot. lt4 2111 ltl4.

ltOD clepooll, IIIU
CoH1o lid. Wat• lumlolllld, tt4-

- 1 llllntol•oce 6 . . . .
- . plumbing a co~.
lnounlncoorlt4-211-tl1t.
· - -looroil, 114317.0111,

79

44N4tiHIIIorDevlcl.

r2;:;...=,~-.=:..:::11,:;:lllo::olr:::::OOI~in~,=..,':':'!I

lief lor -114-742-

JlotiNGI,_,HUO -pltlf 304178-aOIIe•.,s fiJII.
·

Col,,...__

Mils Paula.. o.r co.. Conttr.. Ill•*-••· In llllhltpart...,
Sate, olfonlrobto, ololll o. ~
·
·
2.,._10. 2br, - . 131 - ; l'lnl
1 L'!'· • 1:30 p.m. - · oft., IICtllool: DretHns " 1

loll-........
•lot.

..... .,

Day ., Night
NO SUNDAY CAUS
4-16-l~lfn
•VINYL SIDING
•AWMINUM SIDING

•ILOWN IN

•,

INSULAliON ~

..........

Transport at 1011
71 Autos fol: Sala

Homa

RACINE
·GUN CWB
GUN SHOOT

Improvements

EVERY SUNDAY
Starts at 1:00 P...

Hot II hOld
~~

21

.4-16-H-tftl

llalnt•••·

MW/Npelr,

. .I

-flliiolr, -lllry, odJI - .
......... ltW?NaO, . . tor
IIMoh.
Polrltlna, llllortor and llltortor,

Factory Choked ,
12 Gauge Only

1-13-tfc

9-6-19-tln

" ' " . . -. . 1144'1W111.
Ron.. TV - . p I l::::::s

-~~~---·
·---Ire. WV

...,.

other-· callt,11Q4.17W:III Ohio lt4-44f.

••

1:
l·

:1414.

t'

flotory or GOIIto tool ~- .
1111111 ••aomplllad euM dri. .
::::..
and MrYioo, .

31 ttoma1 tor Sale

~

:=:r. .

-.v.o
-.
aDlwlouw er.ll
Rll. P-. ~

a n d _ ,_114-

.....lo Tonk p ........ "!LGoJJie

Co. IICINI-INTIR""I. .,
··~••

•~

n, OH ,.....,,....,

Apsl'lment
tor Rant

·~

l

r

·. Deptllillblt
Salts &amp; S....i..l
H•rina Enllllllons For Ail Aps

l

~:s

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

~+

Licensed Clinical AudioiQiist
(114~::19 of (114) 192-2104
417
Amll. IIIII 1213
1GIIMpalis, Olio 45631 '

:~

I

"1'
'•
),,

- ~

or
:vtterinsllllnorlll Hospl~!
•ulbtny Hall. Polltroy,

't

PH. 949·2101
or Its. 949·2160 ,,
NO SUNDAY CAliS

· 1m Tr pin wsa c.ns,er, 30ft.
wlh ttp out. ...... 1 1 1117.

thru

=.;12:1011no. • • depot~~,

1la ame. 114 1tl azt.

Cllmpe,.&amp;
Motor Homes

Hrov
...... ~· Uno, I'IUOII.

PH. 949·2101 · ~
, er Its. 949·2160' l:

-·
,__
...
.........
=
_,_
,., -..,

JIIIIR, .,, t til IIIIth.

~ ,.

.
Jolt· --·..,~

·"

.,.

U . .Y'S

Roger Hy11ll

PH. ttJ-5612
., ..1..7121

out r••••· We oho
r.-ir GaT.....

t;
••

10/301'0 tftl

AIM,,..........

·. t·11

HOMES I GARAGES
"At IMIOftt~ll• Prices"

"Frae Eltlmllae"
.

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

~

· ·cor-.. We. and
hitter
can
aht acid lloil ond rod

~:

Ill'S A.....AIICI
SEIYICI

Garage

~

CUSTOM IUILT

BISSELL ·'·
SIDING CO.

lt. 114, , •••..., Clitia

•

1

II
1'""--------t

llt:FIIGEIATOII-SIOO UJ
WIIIJ-tu-Eioc.-SI25 up
fiE EZEll-$125 up
IICIO OVEII-$71 up

H2-533S er tiS-3561
Acr• · - ,... Offlcs
HMIIOY, •o

•-tir and,..

Pay Your Phone
·t
and Cable Bills Here t
IU51NQHIIONE ~
fU41 H2·65!0 •
RESIDBICI PIIOHI .~ ·
1•141 992-7754

, 1/ll'lt/t mo.

GUN SHOOT

~

&amp;HEATING :

CaHar'o Plzu to -

lollill - - pooltlonll.
8101&gt; . In · any -lon or mall
- t o : "· 0. 70, .....

~

'•

Ultlo

aggrn In tndlvkluala far all

'i. '

PUBLIC NOTICE
COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
'CHEMICAL MORTGAGE
COMPANY

•

II . . _ ...

...,, ........ 11t- 1111

62 - Wanttd to luV

.9 - W.nted to Buy

992 -Midcl.-»rt
Pomeroy.

367 - Ch•hire

:._ 2 :00PM . THURSDAY
· 2 'lOP M. FRIDAY

Glrula•• ..... 1 _.. I ......,

.,.,. ........ toll, -

;.

•1 ~ Farm Equipment

7 ~ V er!f S•lelpaid In ,adva~te)
8 - Publii: Sale&amp; Auction

ful/oiving t&lt;'iephom• I'Xt~harigt•.~...

446 -- Gallipolis

2.00 PM . WEDNESDAY

...

/'} lloi'\IIIC~

31 - Hom,.. tor Sate .
32 - MobileHomn for Sate
33 ·for Bel•
·
3 ' ""
BuWdingJ

2 - ln ~oFv ·
l .... Annoueem.-ls
4 - Giv,awey
5 ..., Happy Ads

\

DAY BEFOfU PUBLICATION
- , 1:00 A .M . SATURDAY
2·00 PM . MONDAY
2 :00P.M . TUESDAY

.,

Suppllr•:;

f,&lt;r&gt;~J

A11 no 1111 r: !:lilt' nts

Rata

Clm.~ifif•fl pagf•.'l' t 'lll 'l'r 1ht• ·
.

...

71 Autoa for lillie

torRent

;.

'

'A c las s tfted arhltHtisement pl ~eed 1'n The.Oatly S~nt•net (ex·
cttpl
Classtf•ed dislllay , Bu11ness Card and legal no11ce11
w1ll also 'appear m the Pt . P l e~&amp;ant Regis ter and the Gallt·
po ll s Da•l'l Tr~bune. ructung ove r 18.000 homes .

said Peggy Buckey "wu so hIt bard at a criminal
happy, she wanted to let out of. system that would a'llow a trial to -~
here. She was teary-eyed. lfer fi'O on for three years. ,
, ..
~
•&lt;I
feellq Is to Jet away and breathe
"The
jury
has
spoken
and
It
Is
~·:.
some fresh air."
Deputy District Attorney Lael their verdict," Reiner· nld. "In ·
Rubln 1 tl!e lead pfOIIeclltor, ex- 'California we have a criminal
pressed. disappointment. '1t's justice s)'ttem that quite frllllk)y '~
not a secret to pl'l!lume thati feel does riot work. It Is a system that .;;,
':~
both of tbem ware JUIIty of Is insane."
'
molesting. ~blldren," Rubin said
The jury reacl)ed Its verdicts ~;
outside court.
after dellberatlnJ 36 days In the il ·
"This (criminal justice) sys· - 33·month trial, the longest crlml· '· '
nal trial In U.S, history: It ·also 1:
tern worked well for fthe defend·
apts) 11nd I hope to God we never
was the nation's most expensive, ~
bur or any of them molesting
having cost Los Angeles County ~
children In the future."
·
taxpayers more than $15 miiHon ··
· Dis trlct Attorney Ira Reiner
since the grand jury handed UJ) ·~
dlil
not
criticize·
the
verdict,
but
the Indictments In March 1984. "
.
'

........_......,.___ .,.._

Folal: .... ""' hllr.
~ngo.- · pot.
....
IIM1M714.
LOST bleok m1n1ture 1ctse .,.,

r

'Price of ad for all capttallsUers ts doubl e puce of ad eos1
' 1 p o mt hne type only used .
.
'Sent1n e1 1S not fe!ponSibJe tor ffrror s"atter ftr51 diV (Ch'ck
for e rr o rs fn s l d'wt ad .rl!n's in pallet ) Call befo re 2 -'00 p.m .
day after pubhcatton to mak e corre ction .
' Ads Jl'lat mun b e paid 1n adwancfl·il:ffl

' ..
justice !,:

.

Rates 'are tor conteculiveruns. brOken upd.,~will biettfr gtd
for eKh d._, •• 1eparate ads.
'
t

50 discount for a ds pot1d 1.n alfvance .
•fr ee ads
Giv eaway and Found ads undltf 15 words w11l be
run 3 day s at no ch.,. ge.
.
·

,

Words'

'

10
Monthly

p aid

,1-

f

~~

--

Day• ·
1 . '
3
6

'Ae c~v e $

:·

• .The .Area's. . Number . l .. Marketplace
.

'

RATES

POli CIE S ·
'Ads outs id e fl,4e1gs. Gallla or Mas on counties must be pre·

LAFF·A-OAY

.....

.: ::-.;.t.:z.~q,•. ~

Classi
TO PLAC~ AN AD CALL 992-21$6
MONDAY thru FRIDAy 8 A.M •. to S P.M•.
8 A,M. until NOON SATURDAY
CLOSED SUNDAY

Ohio
Aplrtment

·'

b

8-The Daily Senti1el

P~aAa
I"Ain"l AND IIIIYICE
ALLMAIC . . ,

GAl OIIILICTIIIC ·

....._

aN'S AMIAIICE

SIIYICI

HZ-SUS"
IUL

·.,

I

•

�"""•-

.

\

1G-The o.lly Sa 1tinoll

Ponaoy _Mldclapcrt. OHo

r---Local news briefs...- eon~nued from page 1

Fltdly, ...,._, 11, 1--

Snow chills Southwest; -East

:up ·~

wa11118

..
By Unlled Pr-. IDI.er•tlvnz•
A storm dumped up to a foot of'
snow Thursday In the central
mountains of- Arizona, thunderstorms soaked parll of the South
and unseasonably warm temperatures prevailed In New England
and the Middle Atlantic states.
Arizona's first major storm of
thewlnterdumpeduptolBinches
of snow on Asllfork, 10 Inches
farther south In Prescott and up
to .3 Inches In Flagstaff, the
National Weather Service said.
One mountain &lt;oad was closed.
A snow advisory was posted
Thursday afternoon lor parll of
Nevada alter 14lnches blanketed
Mt. Charleston, adding to the 22
lncl!es already o1l the ground
there. '
•
Snow- advisories also were

against both parties In the action of Jennie Bass against Br ian
E . Bass.
.
·

•

Issued for Thursday and Friday ' eusll to .0 mph we..t blamed for record Ml . ·In caribou. MJ1111,:
for the higher elevations In uprooUna about 30 trees In surpufi'I'Jtlldqzeeslletlll-,;
Arizona, Colorado llld northern Clinton, Miss., and alx light and 63 at Wlndlor Loella. Collll.,•
New Mexico, theweatherservtce atrplanea and a hanger were tylq tile mark !Or the day Ill lni
said.
damaged at i. lmall airport at · 1173.
, ·
t
Five calls lor asslstsnce Were answered on Thursday by ~nits
. Showers and thunderstorms Raymond. "Some Qi ~ air·
Lopa Iaternat10nal Airport In •
of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Services.
hit parts of TeliU, - Arkansas,
craft were turned completely Botton reaclled a reoorcl
At 12: 01 p.m., Racine went to Trouble Creek Road for James
Loulllana and Oklahoma, while upetde down, " said em~eocy decrees before noon, b~ID&amp; a ,
Hinkley who was taken to Holzer Medical Center.
heavy fog covered much of north
services spokesman Larry 1?-year-old mark. Tile tempera· I
Pomeroy at 12:13 p.m. transported Clara Custer from the
Texu, · leedlng to canceled or Etsher.
.
tur:e bad
clbnlled to
Amerlcare·Pomeroy Nursing Center to Veterans Memorial
delayed fllabts at 1 -bauas·Fort
U.l ht raiD was scattered over depeea by 12:30 p.m., but.the_'
Hospital. At 3:53p.m. , Pomeroy was called back to Americare
Worth Inter!llltlonal Airport.
northeuljern Oblo and · nortbw· weatber service said, "EII)oy It
lor Frances Adkins who was also taken to Veierans Memorial
The
weather
servt~ ' Issued
estern
Penns)(lvanta, and snow while you can becaUJe thll
Hospital.
winter sionn warnings for the sbowersllngered over Michigan, reoord. comes just prior to a cold
At 7: 59p.m ., Rutland transported Donald Orwsh !r()m Meigs
l
Texas and: OklahOma ~nban· Wisconsin, Minnesota and ihe , front ... "
Mine No. 31 to O'Bieness Memorial Hospital.
·
dies, lor the south plalnl of Texas eastern porUon of the Dakota&amp;. • The mercurY clbnlled to 68
. At 8:28 p.m., Middleport was called to Hobson for Edna
and for Kansu until Friday.
Temperatures hi the South degrees In the nation's capital at
Chrisman who was tsken to Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Flash-~lood watches were
remalbed.mlld, with Charleston, 12: 19 p.m., exceediiJI the reoord
posted for part.l of northeastern S.C., reporting 52 detrrees, ~tIn 1929 of fiT degrees.
Texas, northwe&amp;lern ·Louisiana, Atlanta 61 and Mtaml71.
Harrlaburg, PL, set 1 new
UnusuallY warm temperarures record htp for the third COIIIICU·
Mlsslsllppl and New York state.
Torrential rains and wind and foggy. cloudy Ilklei hovered tive day. The weather llervlce
over New England Thursday. said the mercury reached 65 •
Burlington, Vt., reported over- depeea Tbul'lday, breakllll the 1
Continued from page 1
cast
and temperatures as old record for the day of 64
- J ··------~----~-- high skies
as
52
degree,, It was a degtees set In 1986.
Investigators of coercing Lewis, . plas Uc bag of what appel!.red to
WASHINGToN (UPI) - An Vienna and cannot be extradited and said Lewis would "lie on the be evidence.
D11rlng Barry's tenure, at least
espionage network that recruited to the United States, the network pope" ·f or a reduced sentence.
Soutb Ce.a tral Ohio
.
Extetided Forecae&amp;
;1.
·
· Lewis was to be ·sentenced a dozen dty officials have been
accused spy Clyde Lee Conrad In• said. ·
Rain developing Friday night,
Sanday throa&amp;h Tlleeday
convicted of crimes In office.
West Germany was extensive
Investigators told ABC that Friday.
A chance ·of rain Sunday and ~
After the-Ramada Inn probe
In 1985, Kl!ren Johnson; a • · with a low between .0 and 45.
and has reached Into many Szabo's network went beyond
Chance of rahi Is 100 percent. Tuesd~tY. Fair Moriday. Highs •·
Western nations, lncliidlng the Italy, West Germany, Sweden came to light, an Indignant Barry . low-level city employee with
Occasional rain, heavy at times, mainly In the 40s. Lows In the 308 ·:
stood
before
national
television
whom
Barry
admitted
having
a
United States, ABC News re- and Austria. There are suspected
Saturday,
with highs between 50 Sunday and Tuesday and In the
cameras
and
declared
his
Inno"personal
relationship,"
·
was
ported Thursday.
spies In Spain, Britain and the
and
55.
Chance
of rain Is 100 20s Monday ..
·•
cence,
claiming
to
have
been
convtcted,ot selling cocaine. She
Conrad, a native of Sebring, United States, the network said.
-'
"tried,
convicted
and
sentenced"
percent.
'"
served an 18-month prlaon term
Ohio, who faces spy charges In
A former U.S. Army sergeant
by
the
media.
for contempt of coun after she
West Germany, was recruited by first class, Conrad was charged
Barry was arrested Thursday refused to testify to a grand jury
convicted spy Zoltan Szabo, who last year with treason for his part
also recruited spies who were In the spy ring. His arrest at the VIsta In downtown Wa· about allegations she sold CO·
Lodge to meet
.degree.
.
placed In -other alUed countries, marked the first time that a shlngton, about two blocks from caine to Barry himself. A grand
Racine
Lodge
461,
F
.
and
A.
M.
Truateea
lo
meet
jury found no evtdence agaii\St wll meet In_ special session
·ABC said, quoting unldentltled foreign citizen living In West the Ramada Inn.
The Lebanon Township' trus·
The
seventh
floor
of
the
VIsta
Barry.
sources within the spy network.
Germany had been charged with
Tuesday at 7: 30 p.m. at the tees-will holda special meeting at
Barry's liitest national con·
ABC said . Szabo recruited treason, according to Hans- was cordoned off by lawenforceMasonic Temple. There will be
ment
·
officials,
and
two
plain·
troversy-flared
Jan ..7 over a Los work In the entered apprentice 1 p.m . Saturday at the han: .
Thomas Mortati, 42, who was · Juergen Foers~r, a spokesman
·a rrested for attempted esplonfor the federal prosecutor's of· clothes law enforcement agents Angeles Times profile of him.
•a ge In Italy . Mortstl told an flee In Frankfurt , West left . that .floor, each carrying a
) tallan court he was paid $500 a
Germany.
. )nonth by tbe Hungarian Intelligence service and was sent to
Hungary for a two week training
Continued from page 1
Continued from page 1
course on spying.
Dally .l toek prlcN
leste said he would actively have been Impossible for them to (As of 11:30 Lm.)
Mortatl was looking for classipursue are the $700 mUIIon do.
fied Information on the NATO
Bryce 1111d Mark Smith
defense system, llallan prosecu· ·capital construction approprla·
"We have recently completed of Blunt, Ellls A i:oewt
lion, to be Introduced by the end the courthouse elevator which
.tors said. After confessing to
Wh!te with blue· carriage roof, PS, PB, ,
of
February, a 'c omprehensive will be of -g reat benefit to ail Am Eleclrlc Power ............. 31%
attempted espionage, Mortatl
cru11e. air. 302, fuel injection, excellent .
drug-fighting bill already under Meigs Countlans for years to AT&amp;T ..... ......... ....... ;...... .. .-.. . ~
. :-vas Imprisoned In Vlncenza,
shape, 1 owner, new car trilde, low midebate and a p)l!.n to attack the come.
Italy.
·
Ashland on .................. ,..... 38~
leage.
,, , .
lack of landfill space by recy''Additionally,
and
the
thing
of
Bob
Evans
.
...
..
,
....
....
..
...
,
....
.l3%
Szabo earlier had . u'sed two
cling solid waste.
whlc,h I _am most proud, Is my Charming Shoppes ....... , .. .. ... 10
NOW
l&gt;rothers as couriers who were
The governor · also stressed participation In a government City Holdlitg Co ... .......... .....14Y)
~ubsequently convicted ot -es·
billS to protect Ohioans' drinking that Is fiscally responsible. Dur- Federal MoguL .......... ..... .... 20')8
plonage In Sweden, ABc said. He
water, provide telephone servl· Ing the last eight years I have Goodyear T&amp;R .......... .. ... ... .39')8
h~s worked foratleast20yearstn ·
cesfor the elderly and disabled, ·endeavored to see that our Heck's ....................... ..... ... .. 3%
the Hungarian Intelligence
and a lobbying reguhitlon bill.
government In Meigs County Key Centurion ....... ... .. .. ... ... 13~
service.
On capital construction, Ce- maintains a balanced budget. I Lands' End . .. .......... .. .... ... ...18')8
. Szabo was convicted of espionleste called for buildings on . shall continue my efforts tpward Limited Inc. . ,........... .. ... .....
age last fall during a secret trial
unlversliy camp uses to support this kind of sound fiscal Multimedia Inc.................... 84
6 cyl .. ~and., PS, PB. clean,- 84.000 miles.
In Austria, but he served no tline
research, job training fac!Utles management.!'
Rax
Restauran!S.,
.........
.......
1'){,
lri prison because he cooperated
and additional classrooms and
Roush, who also operates the Robbins &amp; Myers ..... .......... .15%
with authorities: He lives In
Long bed. P&amp;, PB. 815,000 miles. ._ ~
·
laboratories.
.
Gravely Tractor Sliles In Pome-- Shoney's Inc .. .. ........ :... ....... 10~
roy, Is the son of Mary K. Roush Star Bank, .. ..... .-.:..-............. .20~ and the late H. Kerns.Roush. He Wendy's IntL ........ .......... ..... ~~
V-8, auto., PB, PS, air, 1 localowner. very· n~ cci!lditlon . .
resides In the Forest Run area Wortbll)gton Ind .... .........: ....21'!4
Ibn, Ky. Also survtvlng are with his wife, Ramona, and
;l ., ' • '.«:1 i
( Aabland Oil'I tlrli-quarter net
John Gilmore
-· '
grandchildren, Kim Taylor, Dal· daughters, Kimberly and Krista. Ul/lllare VL 11.72)
SEE RAY RIGGS
las, Texas; Kelly Taylor, Cotum·
'
(Edllor's Note -The following
bus; and Kerr! Melleck, of
was written by a former new•
Chriatian
Seh®l annountti additionaltp Mle
Mansfield, and Chris· and EI'Ik
:p aper mau, a native of Melp
Ashley, Bradenton.
The Rejoicing Ute Christian talnedbyca!Ungtheschoolofflce
County, who was never ncceu' BesIdes his wife, he was School In Middleport Is pleased to at 992-,.6249, Monday through
ful In purging the ~'printer's Ink"
precedl!\l In death by a sister, announce theaddlttonofgrade8 Thursday, from 8:15a.m. to .3
from bls blood. Tbls 18 bls (!!!~'~
Helen, In Infancy, and a brother, for the 1990-91 school year.
p.m. The sclloolls located at 333
• 'by·llne'' aud •~" to Ills career
Milton.
This will be the school's fifth
N. Second Ave., downtown
St. lt. 7
915-4200
"nd life) .
He" was a member of the year In operation.
Middleport.
The school spans kindergarten
PomerQY Lodge 165, F&amp;AM, and
the Oneco United Methodist through grade 8.
By JOHN W. GILMORE
,
Church.
·
_ lntormatlon regarding regis- .
&lt;
BRADENTON, FLA. - We
Services will be held · at . !ration procedures may be oilmust all come to the Inevitable. I
Griffith-Cline Chaj)el, In Braden·
just did. ·
ton, Monday. Interment will be In
I have ilved life to the fullest Manasota Memorial Park In
some things I might be ashamed
Veter1111i Memorial
Oneco. ·
to relate, but, most of all, It has
. Thursday' admissions- Hattie
been good. To go Into that would
Sellers, Pomeroy; Frances Adtake a biography ·a nd the follow·
John Stahl
kins, Pomeroy. l ng Is slm ply m~ obituary. How
Thursday discharges - Guy
many gel to read their obituary
John B. Stahl, 75; of 40482 Priddy, Luc!Ue Braley, George
before they depart, must less Laurel Cliff Road, Pomeray, died Molden.
write their own. This, then Is my
Tuesday at Ohio Slate University
obituary:
Hospital, Columbus, following a ·Licenses issued
John William Gilmore, former
brief Illness. ·
Meigs County resldent, .dled Jan.
Mr. Stahl was born Oct. 6, 1914
Marriage licenses have been
'
19, 1990 at Manatee Memorial · at Laurel Clplf to the late Bert Issued In Meigs Probate Court to
hospital In Bradenton~~ the age and Louella Bradshaw Stahl. He Bobby Joe. Rupe II, 17, and
of 79. He had resided In Braden- was employed as custodian at the Spring Dalane Reed, 17, both of
ton since 1960.
Meigs Couniy Courthouse for Pomeroy; and Stephen Olin
many Y!!ars. He was also an Jenkins, 35, Racine; and Eliza·
army veteran of World War II beth VIrginia Long, · 27, Point
Born June 9, 1910 In Bradbury; and a member or ·Feeney· Pleasant, W.Va.
·
he was a son of the late Fred W. Bennett Post 128 of the American
and Minnie Horden Gilmore. He Legion, Chapter 53 of the Dismay be remembered by some abled American Veterans · and Divorces grmted
through · his many years as a
Rock Springs Grange·No. 2565.
Jtvorces have been granted In .
reporter, s pprts writer and later
Survivors Include a sister, Meigs Common Pleas Court to
editOr of the now defunct Dally Clara Gilkey; and several nieces
Donlta AprU Pooler from David
Tribune. He was emprayed at a
and nephews.
-.
Elliott
Hendricks; and Ronda
Sarasota newspaper for a brief
In addition to his parents, he Green from Paul E. Green Jr.
period but for 12 years had been was preceded In death by four
employed at the Alumlcralt brothers, Harry, Fritz, Marl! and
Foundry In Bradenton from
Wallace Stahl; ' and lour sisters, Case dismi&amp;sed
which he retired In 1977.
'Ruth Geary, Edna Schaefer, • Mr. Gilmore enlisted In the Birdie Shawver and Cecile
A case of petty theft -flied
agalnit Louise Carsey In the
Army during World War II and Harrlllon.
for two years served as private,
Services for Mr. Stahl will be court of Pomeray Mayor Richard
confidential secretary to the Saturday, 1 p.m., at Ewing Seyler has now been dismissed,
Assistant Chief of Staff, G-1, AA Funeral Home, with Derek officials report. Ms. Carsey wu
Command headquartered In
Stump officiating. Burial will be fined on the charge In the court
'·
RlchmO~Jd, Va. FoUowtng serIn Rock Springs Cemetery. last week, but after. additional
vice, he was associated with his Friends may call -at the funeral evidence was submitted to offl.
father and mother·ln·law for a
home from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 on clals the former action was
For a limited time only, wren you order Shoney's famous aU-you-care-to-eat ,
rescinded - and the , charge
number of years In the Shumway
Friday.
dlsmlned.
Soup, Salad and Fruit Bar at the regular price, you c;m get one of Shoney's sizGreenhouses at Syracuse.
'
In 1933, he was married to
zling, charbroiled hamburgets for 59¢. That's one Shoney's deal that can build
I
'
.
Dorlll Shumway who preceded
up your appetite and still leave you with a triffi
budget: (AVailable
,, ·'
him In death In December, 1981.
They were the patenll of three
Monday through Friday, 11 a.rn.-3 p.m.)
·
·
chlldien, John F. Gilmore, Sara·
JOta; Jane (Robeit E.) Beegle,
HoapiUIIizetion lnaurance now availllble not only for
Racine; and Valerie (Richard)
•
hN.Ithy peopie, but qualifying people with pra-eidstAshley, of Br11denton, all
&lt;
lng
hulth
conditlona.
No
phyilcal
exam
.
or
long
surviving.
hNith hlatory. Meige County a,.. enrollment hal beHe Ia aiJO · survived ~ one
•
gun ao: _
·
brother, Arlhllr M. Gilmore of
••I
Pomeroy ,111111 four staten, Leona
Call Toll Free 1-800-462-81&amp;1
l
Eblnbaeh and Martha Childs
Malga Loctll 992-2870
Middleport; Mary 1?ur1t, Pome:
• ,
Alk for E•n• Anapech
'
"
roy, and Eather Burns, Covlng.
•

Sfluads receive five rolls

Group-sciys spy .
·n etwork extensive

..

a.:

further

a:

'--; . . _

_.,....

50\l'th
~

·Colleg~ basketball results

Celebration
oommittees
are named

Beat of the Bend:

· In Our Town:
Remember those old war cannons
in Gallipoli&amp; City
0.7

B-1

...
Gov. Celeste ... Manning
.

Stoeks

PIICE IEDUCEDI

1986 FORD
CROWN .VIaORIA

~~~5

34*

.

S6595

Mosdy cloudy. Hlp near tO.
Chance ot rain !0 percent.

•
t
1 2 Secttono. 7&amp; Pog11
A
Inc.

Middlepoit-Pomeroy-Gellipolii---Point PleMent. Jenuay 21. 1990

-----------1V~~r----------

----Meigs announcements----;

Along the River ......... BJ.B
Bualnet1a ...................... D~l
Comb- ...•.......•.. :~... Insert
CJaasUieds,,,, ,,,,nr.uooo1)2...7
·Deathl ..••••.••.•..•..•..•.••.A.J
Edllorlal ..., ................ . A-2
Sporla . :............ ....... . C-1·1

It's all in the family•••B-5

M nv.or- ·

0

Inside

•

water system extension to gO to bid
. By NANCY YOACHAM

Tlmes-SeatlneJ·IIIafl
EAST MEIGS- Tuppers Plains· Chester Wat~r
Dis trlct will be watching the mall for a letter from
Farmers Home Administration, officially advls·
l'ng the District to go tci bid with a $828,000 water
line expansion. Don Poole, general manager of
Tup~rs Plains-Chester Water District, reported
Friday that after talking with Don Sommers, of
Fn)HA, Marietta, "It Is expected a letter w!ll be
sent Immediately frQffi FmHA advising the
Dis trlct to bid the Phase-IV Proj~ct."
The Phase IV expansion has been several years
In coming and w!ll add 140 new customers to the
Tuppers Plains-Chester system, as well as 17.1
miles of main line, Poole said. Areas to be added
to the system through Phase IV Include Silver
Ridge. West Shade, Kingsbury Road, CO!IriStreet
and Letart Falls In Meigs County, and County
Road 53 In Athens County (Lotttldge In Athens
County to Alfred In Meigs County) .

A $641,000 loan and a $187,000 grant, both from
FmHA , will fund the expansion.
PhaSe IV calls for two new tanks to be added to
the existing sys.tem to strengthen existing lines,
Poole explained. One tank will be on Gold Ridge
near Holley Road In Meigs County and the second
will be In Athens County In the New England area.
The addition of these tanks "will allow storage In
the event there are power failures at our booster
sites ," Poole s_a ld, "ancj will allow -our customers ·
to maintain water service until power Is
·restored." Presently, when power Is lost In these · areas, "both Gold Ridge and New England
customers lose water pressure Immediately," he
added.
It Is the opinion of the Tuppers Plains-Chester
Water District Board, according to Poole, that
after the Phase IV Project Is completed, no new
water lines Will be laid to large areas unless In
conjunction with an expansion of the District's
treatment p)ant facility . The District's treatment

plant , which Is located at Long Bottom, has
reached Its 20-year expansion capacity. explained
Poole. As long as yearly growth within the system
Is normal (about 70 new customers a year) the
treatment pl!lnt wUI be able to maintain Its
present level, . Poole_sald.
·
In 1988, "when the drought was so severe, " a
fifth well was added to the system's existing well
field which Is also located at Long · Bottom , he
_added.
.
. ·
Also In 1988, the Dis ttlct , asked that people
desiring tQ be considered for water service In the
future, complete a form at the District office "so
as to make It easier to plan where the Interest tor
water Is," Poole explained.
There are many areas In Meigs and Athens
Couillles where an adequate supply of water Is
sl(ll unavailable. If you wish to be considered for
water service. In the future and have not
completed one of our forms, pleaSe contact the
office," he stressed.

"There Is no guarantee that water service could
be ex_tended to your area, but !!there Is no Interest
shown by residents of certa in roads or villa ges.
you would ilot even be considered."
The District Board exte-nds a thanks to those
people who helped with the Phase IV Project by
signing customers, obtaining easements, and In
general, said Poole, "who just worked so hard In
an an ·effort to have water lines extended In these
areas." Such an effort by these.people' make " city
water''· a realltoy in our communities, he added ,
Upon receiving official notification from FmHA
to· proceed with Phase IV, the District will have 45
days to bid the project. After awarding the bid, the
contractor must have 30 days notice to proceed
and then 180 days to complete construction.
Going by that schedule, a-nd with no unforeseen
complications, the Phase IV expansion " could be
finished by September, with some new customers
possibly on line earUer than that," according to
·
Poole.

year to

eXpand.plant

1984 FOlD F-1 $0 ........................ S3495
1.983 FOID.F-1 00 414 ................ S3995
'

.

1984 CHEVY S-1 0 BI.AZEI ••••••;.•••• S6495

-......-Area ·death""s- -

•

GGS

Hospital news ·

- ~~~

the Apple Grove .
. wii(
Secure e~istinl! jobs_mo~ so . than
create new ones.
"They've worked .hard 10 make
Goodyear feel good about the
community !hey 're in, and obviously the expansion is ·a good
reflection on ihem," Caperton said
of the local boosters. '
.
. "I've always said economic
develQPment in West Virginia oc·
curs most often when you have
wople in -the community working
hard,"the
r 'd.

·~,--·~&lt;l!~rf\Ohitlon

will

be spending approximately $25
million to construct an eight-story
addition to house an operational
center and processing center.
"There will be new polyester
reactors in a brand new facility,"
said Wayne Love, manager at the
Grove
"We will be
our ·
adding

till:

you're
in West Virginia
" Capenon trild
with this
company
"TIIis investment .helps ensure.
long-term stability of Goodyear's
operatio115 in our state,'' Caperton
said of the expansion, which will
create 30 new jobs.
.
Construction on · the ope~ational
center should be~in in April and
completed late thiS year. Work on
the. proc;essing center is sch~uled
to begin this fall with the entire addition c;pected to be .iri opera.tion
liy mid-199\.
·
''There is an attitude ·that has hurt
the·economic development in West
Virginia that was asked by a repor·
ter today, 'Why West Virginia?'
Why nQt West Virginia," Caperton
said. "This is a great place to do
business. We have a great workfot·
ce; we have the resources and we
are in a good location. It's time for

development authority trello8UI'Zr; Lydia Long, HoiiH. of
Delegates; .Jack Fruth, development authority pr~dent; .John
Wiseman, "Muon Cou•ty Roundtable president; Len Harvey,
-secretary of commerce aud Frank Lee, development authority
execudve director. (OVP pholo)

- PRAISES L9CAL BOOSTERS - West VIrginia Gov. Guion
Caperton lave Maaoa County Development Authorities 1111d
officials much credit tor lnftuenclng Goodyear Tire 1111d Rubber
Compauy to Invest approximately U5 mUilon Into a new
technological addition at the Ppblt ·PJeu1111t Polyester Plant In
Apple Grove. Pictured behind Caperlon are Charles Lanham,
us 10 nQt be surprised that we can
do better."
tlie" 'p1iinl "'wnii:li opened in
1959, makes plastics used in soft
drink containers, tires, textiles and
adhesives.. The operation presenUy
employs 540 people, and produced
450 million pounds of potyesier
resin last year, Caperton said.
Love said the facility was the
first plant _10 manufacture
soft drink botUes and
foo&lt;J

trays that can be used in the
microwav~ or conventional oven.
"This
exj!Msion puiS'· us ar·
forefronl of technology again,"
Love said.
The plant has been expanded II
times over the years, most recently
in 1988 when $50 million was
spent 31 the facility.
On hand to join in the announcement were Mason County
Development Authority officials.

me

new

Frank Lee, ,executive director; Jim
Lewis, president; Jack Fruth, vice
president: and Charles Lanham,
treasurer. President of the Mason
Collnty
Roundtable,
John
Wisemen, was also present.
Others anending the conference
were United Rubber Workers Local
644 representlltives, Don Rollins,
president; Aoyd Sayre, vice president; and Howard Knopp. past
president.

Judge overturns

On other maners, the govemot
saiil that Mason County was two
brilfgeS'ilway from·fCCeiVing a new
bridge over the Kanawha River.
Caperton also said:
:
- Some parts of his -legislative ··
program will be ready for introduction next week.
·
- He will not make public his
feelings on abortion until and unless the Legislature passes legislalion related to the·issue:

part of drug law

.

.

lunch

Meigs County Health Insurance
Enrollment

,..

•

FOR LUNCH

i
1

....

-- .., .. .. · ··-

(
. - .....

.

·· ~·--- -~ ..-----·· -·· · ------ ~- • ····-. -~ .•;..i·-- ·---·-- - · - • -··'--

v

••

"'.

•

..- ·- ~-""--··- .. . - -

.............,..., ....... . . ._-...
-

••
.....--~

•-M ..._

._,.

..•.
.

_,...,

.--:.
'
··~-

TOLEDO, Ohio (UPI) - A
federal judge has ruled unconstitutional part of · an Ohio law
pasSed last May dealing with the
sale of drug paraphernalia, rulIng that a three-word phrase
made the statute too vague.
U.S. District Court Judge NIcholas Wallnskl left Intact all
other portions of the law In his

ruling Friday.
A Lima store, Papa Nick's
Specialties, sought the court's
opinion after the owner received
a warning the store would ·be
violating the new state law when
It went In to effect Nov. 2.
The paraphernalia-law prohibIts sales of Items that a "person
knows or reasonably should

know.. . will be used as drug
paraphernalia."
Wallnskl said the phrase "rea·
sonably should know " was too
vague . to make the law
enforceable.
"This court finds that the
statue, absent those thi'e.e words,
Is legally operative ," Wallnskl's
-(See .JUDGE, page A3)

.Reporters refuse coVerage deal
'*

Lod1e
dona&amp;ed
toward the Anti-Drq
Chapter Skate Part)' oa8uper Bowl8unday. Here,
Exalted Ruler Marvin Boxdorter pi'Ciellta tbe
check lo Pamela Matlira, cbalnnaa ·or tbe
chapter. Alao pictured are Chapter Flnauclal
- Officer Cheryl BuD llld lhe Elb' Doa Rumley.

aapenlsed
. wiD be 2 to 4 p.m., IIIII. 28
Ska&amp;eevllle USA, and parents c1111 pick !IP tllte
children and get l!ome Ia time for tbe football
game, Mature l!ald. All attend!"' will be served
hot dop, eoft drlnka 1111d Ice cream cake from
Dairy Queea. ( nmes.SenUnel pl!olo l

HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (UPll
- A Huntington newspaper .and
television station have refused to
let a circuit Judge screen their
coverage of pre-trial hearings In
the case against an Ohio man
accused of killing a policeman.
The Huntington Herald·
Dispatch and WSAZ-TV Friday
refused the request from ~bell
Circuit Judge Allred Ferguson In

the Bobby Dean St~cy murder
case.
Ferguson told reporters they
could only remain In the courtroom during a pre-trial hearing
If they allowed him prior approval of their coverage. Television
s tatlon WOWK accepted the
arrangement, and stayed to _
cover the hearing.
The judge said he did not want

to run t'h e risk of jurors hear!ng
some of the Information released
In the pre· trial hearing.
A jury from Mercer County,
more than 100 miles from Huntington, will be brought to Hun·
tlnglon next week and seques·
tered while It hears the case.
"There Is no way that we can
stay In the proceeding II one of
(See REPORTERS. pa1e A3)

even~ .' all year .
Pomeroy's . 15()th aDniversary offers special·
'
~-·

'

i

By .JULIE E. DJLLOIIf
TlnteHieaiiHI lilltl
POMEROY- It'llleft! -1'he
_sesquicentennial .year of
Pomeray.
The Pomeroy lelqaiceDten·
nlal Committee bll a lot In atore
forresldenllolthebladarealllld
surrounding comntullltl" .Ill
terms of events, eoateat.l, eater·
tatnment, and exhlblta.
Sub-committees have been
to~ but the committee 1tDI ..
need8 bj!Jp In all areu. So llsten-.up,and see what you could

,

get Involved wltl!.
· The flrat . big weekend ' Is
comlaguponAprll28and29. The
weekend will consist of the
Founders Day Dinner at the
Pomeroy Elementary School on
AprU 28. The Yeatured apeaker
will be Steven M. Newman,
author of "Worldwalk." He Is
Ualed In the Gulnnt!as Book of
World Recorda_u being the first
peraon to walk around the work
alone. Entertainment ror tbe
dinner will be provided by a hand
bell cbolr from Parkersburg,

.
W.Va.
The cost of the dinner' ' will
· be $10 per Jll!rson and $18 per
- couple.
On both days, April 28 and 29,
there will be Appalachian arts
and craft display,, demonatra·
tions, and aqutltshow,IJlODIOred
by the senior clttzena. A flower
and quilt show wUJ be sponsored
by the Winding Tralla Garden
Club. This will be held In the
Pomeroy City Hall Auditorium
(the fonner P.omerpy Senior
Hlgh.SChooJ.) Other garden clubS
are Invited and encouraged to

'·

'

'

.

participate. In this two day weekend will be known as .Herlt·
Also on June 8, the exhibit
event, the floral arrangements . age Days and most of .the ''Ornate - and· Simple Forms.'
will refleci the quilts being shown activities, which will pertsln to Pomeroy Furniture and Cloand the publiC will be Invited to PomerQY'S pioneer heritage, will thing, 1840--lMl" will begin at
do the jlldglng.
be carried out on Court Street.Ail the Meigs County Library. Tills
On AprD 29, the churches In entertainment for thll wei!kend exhibit will feature pieces of
downtown Pomeroy will have II free of charlie to the public.
furniture and clothing as well aa
open house with a representative
On June 8 beifnnlna at ': 30 jewelry and other Items that date
from each church providing Its p.m. the Melody Men Barber- from uiat period. The exhibit 11
history and conduct!~ that shop Qllartet will perform, fol--'" being presented by Catherine
church's tour. Also durlrig this lowed by Bob and Kendra Ward Steiner, Ph.D., and Schyuler
Ume there will be several homes Bence. The play, "Rivers of Cone, Ph.D., both of the Interior
open for tours.
, Gold' ' will take place at 8 p.m. · deslga department at Ohio UniThe next weekend of events and this will be followed by the versity. The exhibit will last
will be June 8, 9, and· 10. This Midnight Cloggers.
·
(See POMEROY'S o'! .U)
·-1

··'

'

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="293">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9566">
                <text>01. January</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="35410">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="35409">
              <text>January 19, 1990</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="371">
      <name>gilmore</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1841">
      <name>stahl</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
