<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="11215" 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="http://host69-005.meigs.lib.oh.us/items/show/11215?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-13T22:38:58+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="42182">
      <src>http://host69-005.meigs.lib.oh.us/files/original/aa12e62d41458dc6d18fa3c2f3bf47a5.pdf</src>
      <authentication>b75939f1f26814222244048757386337</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="35363">
                  <text>'

..

.

,

Ohlo Lottery
Ptek 3
'387 '

Pomeroy

•
. se&amp;qUI•

Piek '4

·1135

.centennial .

PUur c~ '&amp;oafCII&amp;. Low
Ia mid lla. Partir cloud)'

Superuao
.. 16-18-24-32-36-38
KJeker 910886

•

We41!eeda,. Hlp laloWfl' lh.

••

&lt;

ar
.,

~

..
2 aRt lone, 12 Peg• 2il c.nu
A Multlmecilelnc. N-epep•

Porfterciy-Middi"eport. Ohio:~ TuMday. J•nuary 2. 1990

."-

1

1

;

I.

Tentative .agreement
·r eached
m
·coai
·Strike
..
.~

.

.

sticking po19ts· ;_ job security,
WASHINGTON (UPI) -After coalfields In October and then
health benefits and the retiredays of lnlense maratbdri bar· ap])Ointed former Labor Secrement plan.
""
gaining, Ptttstoa Coal·Group and tary W.J. Usery to mediate the
•
the United Mine Workers union conflict.
Miners worked 14· months
sealed their tentative agreement
Usery, wJIQ oailed the strike without a contract before strlk·
to end a bltler and costly · the most "rompJex" he had ever
lng, and an emotional point dealt
. nine-month 1trlke ~th simple been Involved lh, had hoped for a
with Pittston cutting off .health
handshake.
settlement berore the holidays. · benefits to retirees, widows 9f
Mass arrests punctuated the The agreement was approved
miners and disabled miners as a ·
walkout by 1, 700 workers In three ·tate on New Year's Eve · by
way,to pressure the union.
states since the strtke started handshake between"Trumka and
· 1'he strike began when Pittston.
April 5, and federal .and state Paul Douglas, chairman of Pitt·
stopped paying Into a financially
judges levied about $68 mllllon In ston Coal Group's parent, The alllng national fund that provides
(lnes against the UMW for Its use Pittston Co.
health benefits for miners who
of non-violent, civil disobedience
"I never guessed In my wildest
retired between 1950 and 1974,
tactics to disrupt Pittston coal dreams that his predictions of a
saying It had paid all It owed the
settlement by the holidays was
dellverles.
.
trust fund.
Speclftcs of the agreement really practical, given the depth
Pittston said It would.e.stabllsh
announced Monday. were not and the Intensity of the Issues," a different but better private
·disclosed, pending notification of Douglas. said. "We think we've program. The company, prothe striking mlj!ers. UMW Pres!· met the essential objectives of all posed In lieu of the old plan,
' ' which paid lQO percent of medl·
t'lent Richard Trumka predicted the p~tles Involved."
union members would embrace
"I can't think of a better way to cal costs, p new plan that would·
start the 1990s," Trum.ka said.
the agreement and be back to
pay only 'tl&amp; percent up to a
"Today, for us, shoul~ be, I certain amount before providing.
work within 10 days.
"Today:s settlemen.t Is a vefY guess, a ThanksgiVIng Day." ·
full coverage.
Dave Collins·, president of
· special hollcfay gift for aU parties
Pittston also sought more
in\tolved," Labor Secretary Ell· UMW Local 1971 ln.West Vlrgl·
flexible work hours, Including at"
zabeth Dole Dole told a news nls, said the UMW bargained
Continued ~n page 5
conference. Dole had viSited the successfully In all three major

a

(UoR): Pl&amp;tatoa"Cbalnnaa Paal DoaJIM, Sec. of
Labor Blllal*h Dole, UaMIMI Ml• Won-t
Preskleat Rlcbard Tramka
federal mediatOr
WIDiam Usery. (UPI)

ANNOUNCE TENTATIVE AGIU!lEMENT Wilt tllelr. ......_ lleld btp, labor aad UMW
·• "offtalaJI ·UDOaiiOe &amp;be &amp;ea&amp;a&amp;lve tet&amp;lemea&amp; of &amp;be
ellfll-mOidlt-old Pl&amp;&amp;l&amp;oa Coall&amp;rlke Moada, Ia a
•aewa cci!lfereace at tbe Department of Labor.

u.d

PoWer outages
reported
·
in
.
several areas over weekend · ·
'

- oiilo Power Company CUSto·
· mers In several areas of Meigs
County were affected by power
outages on saturday and Sullday
lllghtl. .
,
..
Alirordlhg to Ron Ash, man·

when "a New Year celebrator .' worked "to repair-an;; restore
shot a conductor In two," i'e· service to customers.
,
ported Ash.· ·
'
Ash also reported that great
Not long after, at approxl· helphw• derived from customately 1 a.m., 3;200 customers mers wbci called In on Saturday
.werewtthout$Elrviceduttoatree to·reportseeiJlgsparklorflreln
,..;fala.,.on..-~lor'olt'UIIion· ·' ~~-ttO.; - ~ , atlttA:ve. ·• near ' Ulelifelll "~ty "' aflft "
' ·ftttterl to locate
Development offk:e. ;Aft~·~ PI'Qblerns, Jl' aa(d. .
-·
this outage weri "Cill'tollll!l's In . '·~•er.."SUDday, because of
Pomeroy Mlner8vme, Syracuse,
the loeatlon of the problem and
Racine and Rutland. · .
the atteet In POmeroy, Ohio
Service was restorea to the Power' Iowa offJee wu without
Pomeroy and Rutlaad atell at radio aad telepbone lei'Vfce for a
2:24 a.m., and to tbe H•ppy short period cl time 10 tbat
HollbW-Noble Su'r nmlt areaaat 3 customers were unsble to speak
a.m.
. directly to Pomeroy employees.
Workers were attempting to During this period of time, calls
restore service to the Syracuse- were transferred to a nlgbt·
Raclne-.Minersville areas .,but answerlnB line at another Amerl·
other equipment · difficulties, . can ElectHc Power system loca·
which· were complied because of tlon, Ash said.
the cold weather, prevented the
Neither Columbus Squthern
1,193 customers In ~hose areas Power nor Buckeye Rural Elect·
from being restored to normal ric Co-Op Inc. reported any·
operation untll4:14 a.m
Meigs County outages over the
Eleven Ohio Power employees · weekend.

• .,.......Gt.OIJID, ~~oy
ot"ce;a~litd ~

.

· e

~ .at4!! ~-;Wl~I:IRPt j)o~r
8iJ;Iitdll!ay niJht dUe t6 flllled

eqUipment In aever~l locations.
Power company workers could
not 11etermlne exactly what
caulled Saturday's equipment
failUre, al~lllh llg!ltnlng Is a
~blllty ataci there was.some
utlttftlng and heavy winds that
ntrht.
Power went off shortly before
11 p.m. Saturday .and was restored about three and one-half
hours 'latet. ·
·.
Shortly after 12- midnight · on
Sunday, approximately 79 custO.
mers In the Happy Hollow-Noble
Suinrnlt Roads areas near .Ru·
tland Were left. without power
'
,

I

Southern pupils. 0uei
extra _
·
b
l
·dfJy 0 ll. d ue t o. U)(J te r pro . em
. .
. '

·

f

·

, '"""''·"

~. · :
·.

·

· ·'

Souther" Hllh. junior high and
Racine Elerrlebtjry studentS got
an unexpected day off from
clauesduetoa water problem In
Racine. Many studeats were
picked up by buses this morning
and ransported to the schools,
only to learn they were being ·
taken back home for the day.
School was In session at Por·
tland Letart Falls and Syracuse
Elem'entary Schools.
·
According to Information from
Rllclne VIllage officials, prob!ems began with a leak on New
Year's Eve. Area !iremen even
helped to walk lines on. New
Year's Eve to ·locate. the leak
which was found on ·Tyree BlVd.

Runaway barge spills .gasoline
.
.
. Jobless rate
into ice-choked Monongahela River
•
f

'

.

'

•

.t

NEW EAGLE, Pa. . (UPI) Crews worked Tuesday to clean
up 81 much as 10,000 gallons of ·
unleaded gasoline .that spewed
from a runaway petroleum
barge, creating a 3-miJe.lopg;
slick on the Ice-Choked Mononga- I
bela River.
Barp MR-16 was carrying
about 100,000 gallons of fuel when
U bolted away from Lock No.4 on
the river near New Eagle about
9: 20 a.m. Monday and began
leaking, apparently after strlk·
lag a bridge, offlclala said.
Workers were unloading the
remaining .gasoline ·from the

•

. leaking barge. ·
"The towing comp ~ny Is off·
loading the barge," Pennsylva·
nla Department of Envlronmen"'
tal Resources spokesman Rich
Thomas said. "We're antlclpat·
lng that the barge will be
off-loaded by about mid·
morning."
..
·
A second barge carrying gasoline remained stuck at Lock No. 4·
In Charleroi, but It was ~t
leaking, Thornu said. Crews 1
hoped to remove the barge from
the' lock Tuesday, he said,
All downstream wa.ter suppll·
ei's along the Ohio River and the

up m 8J'elil

Monongahela were notified as a
precaution, said Betsy Mallison,
The unemployment rate ·
DER spokeswoman, Water com·
jumped from October to Nopanles downriver from the spUI
did not report any gasoline. . vember 1989 In five of six
Solltheastern Ohio Counties, accontamination, she said.
cordlq
to figures from the Ohio
•The water .suppliers have all
Bureau of Employment Services
been alerted," Mallison said.
(OBES).
•They have been advised to fill
Only Lawrence County showed
up to their capacity so this would
a dtop In the joblesi rate while ·
not be Interrupted."
Exxon USA spokesman Philip unemployment was on the rise In
Wetz In Houston cunftrmed the Athens, Gallla, Jackson, Meigs ·
and VInton Counties.
gaiollae was an Exxnn product,
but said Exxon did not operate
Overall, the available force In
.the barge. Wetz said Exxon,
the six caJJIItY area totaled 86,000.
Continued on page 5 ·
Of that number, 80,300 were '
employed. That left 5,700' people
66
or . percent
~
Here Is the complete picture
for the six Southeastern Ohio

Pome_roy
· man - ~-cape$ iniury
.m one-car accident Sunday .
'

·J · - Q. We........r, -29, Po
. rna.
.,,_
.,...,
..roy, escaped.serlouslnjury In a
one-car •ccldeat at 8:d a.m.
Sunday In Metp Couaty, on us
33, 3.8 mlleuoutb ot tbe Melp·
Athena Couaty llae.
· .. .
M,... __n:llta Poat, State
_..,.,..
Hlpway Patal Aid Webater's
JJTr Olda Jllld "'vtt tilt road, •
poJt

. nte

'

.

•trlklali:ttDiii ""

53 l.o""' Bo.ttom weat off the

'

-

·'

road Into a ditch. Damage wu
mlaor to the car. There wu no
citation.
• · ·
The.dtlvercla~an ~jury In
another one ear accident at 7:45
Sa ......... .,.,. ..... 3 • ot
p.m. t ... ......, Ohn. .._, ·" •
·m~e e-..t ot tile Me,...VIIltoll
CouMJ llae. 'l'1llre was DD
cltatiDD.

_
SR. 7. No ont wu ·lnjured.

- :m:::j~·

co:=~S-5.7percentunem·

ploymellt In November, up 0.5 of
a plemmt .from 5.21n October .
Troo-ra aaJd Tcmda Selden8-' . GAl r.tA - 7.1 up 0.8 of a
..-u......__.
. percent from 6.5 percent.
ble, 31, _
.. wu headed
JACKSON _ o.o up 1.3 per·
1
weat when au ualdeatltled vehl·
cle failed to yield tile rllbt otway
cent1=~~~tdown of
· frCim a prlvatedrS'II'eandCOIUcled
wltb ber1&amp;Ford. Damqewu
a oercent from 4.7 pet~t • .
_ _. •- t a.- . . ,...._
MEIGS - 8.4 up 1.1 percent
· ~~~::.. ~
&amp; ..........,..
from TJ -rcent.
_

o.i

v.._...- -

'";c:·.

..-

Fire lll'cft)J d. . . a wbl·

VIN'ION - 10.0 up 1.3 percent

-.fliNt .....,.
cJe ·after acddlat at
a.m.
tr~~ a::eaciao•a uaemp-·
1
dowll."
lfHIPii"4111da
1rlll raaaldB8lvC.BIU.3'7, 8at~~ ::co~.:! ~rata for Nowaaber 1111
car Ulllll ciDn .. .,..., u. Riolll, waa llladl&amp;l eMt wba Toaou......;--t ,
:
fl'Gm a low ot u PII'C*It
could 11e eleartct. lifo 011t . . . Jtlt. Jill
weat oa. tbt ·
--r
•-.,......,. 110 lltltiDa.
road lllto a ditch. n.map . .
aald Rnald s. Rlai- In Gtaup ud • • - - COIIII-

wu

.

u.rcu.,

t

=~ bad 'mbllrlllJur-

modera&amp;edamqetotbewlll$.

HIU elalmecl au lajury but wu
.... - • d.
Wl-..a~oaSR.IN,at · -a;llftl
'
Tbe ~~ wu ealllld at f:.O
or::r:::•:ld alB Chevrolet p.m.
to lllwtatllaa a
. · Capi'IC!e onad IJ1 Melp Cowaty hlllklp aeddeat on Lladllll
aac1 drlvea by Ralpll E. Truuell, . Creek Road, 0.2 of a mile W81t o(
oae-caraceldelltat

n...,..,

tlli to aldlb ollU l)ll'eellt Ill
Rarrtloa CouatJ.
..... COhiJfNble rate for 0 blo
111
was I. p;rceat, 11P ........ ·
PII'O'Dt Ill October· Tile C!OIIlpar·
allle U.$. rate Ill Nowmber wu
5.2 pei'Cellt.

&amp;----- .

aeU,IT,AIICIDt,loltOOillloiCifbla

lt'llc:.'Mft'olitpldlliptruclt•u
..... - - .--..._ .......,. - ... _
_,

road,ov•tw'DidudeiUIIdllre.

o.mqe Wli ~

No 0111 waalilJured.'Tbere wu

no cltatloJl.

~~----~----------

•r
I

--

· ,

1

.

'

·.

·' ''

·

·

· .

·. · ·.
and repaired.
mor~lng.
However, It became apparent
· Retldents -In Racine were
that another serious problem ' uraed to conserve water today as
existed when ori Tuelday mom·
Rizer, vlllageofflclalsandothers
lng·, Glenn Rizer, water aupervl·
attempted to locate the problem.
sor, dtscovered that the village's
Meanwhile, water problems In
tank In the Oak Grove Road area
Rutland VIllage seem to have
was empty. The only water to the
been corrected. Sandy Smith,
village 'as of Tuesday morning
Rutland VIllage clerk, reported
was In the lines.
this morning that water was
Whether .or not water would restored to Rutland residents
have to be shut off to customers Friday night, as had been antlclcompletely In order to find t!le pated, and no other problems had
new problem had not determined occulTed since that time.
as · of about 9:30 Tuesday
·

-Local .news briefs---. Two weekend fir~ reported
Although . two fires were reported over the New Y.ear's
weekend, one on Saturday at the Wells residence on Wheaton
Road and the other on Sunda~~the Bass residence at l)exler,
The Dally Sentinel collld not on esday morning reach 'officials
from the respective fli"e de tments for full reports of ~he .
Incidents.
·
'

EMS has 23 holidoy rolls
Twenty-three -calls for assistance were answered over the
New Year's weekend bY Meigs County Emergency Medical
· Services units. Nine of tbe calls were on Saturday, six on Sunday
and eight on Monday.
.
·
·
Saturday at 4: 14 a.m., Pomeroy was called to ~nd St. for
Lisa Ulley who was taken "to Holzer Medical Center.
Columbia Township Fire Department wu called to an auto
fire on State Route 143.at.5:44 a.m. The vehicle wu czwne&lt;1 by
Ronald Russell.
''
Racine at 7: 14 a.m. was called to Y:ellowbush Road toroLucllle
Norris who wu taken to·Veterans Memonal Hospital.
Middleport Fire Departmeat was. called at 12t37 p.m. to a
chimney fire at the Bowera reslclence on Shady Cove Road.
At 3 p.m. Saturday, Pomeroy was caUed to Pleasant Rlctae for
Anna Greenlee to Veterans Memorial Hospital.· ·
Middleport Fire Deputment wu called to a structure Ore at
the Wells residence on Wheaton Road at 6: 44 p.m.
Rutland EMS, ualsted by Scipio To.wnahlp Fire Departmeat,
wu called.at 7:43p.m. to an auto accident on State Route • ·
John Spires wu taken from the scene to Veterans Memortaa
Hospital.
Syracuse at 9: 15 p.m. transported Burl Blevins from ~
St. to Veterans Memorlal-Hoapttal.
·
.
· The Jlaclne nre Departmeftt was calltd to a structure fire at
the Bebtz re@c(etJC!tl Qll Fifth St. at 10:53 p.m. However, the tire
~already out before·ftremea arrived.
,
.
'On su~ at T: 24 a.m., Poi.MI'Of wu called to GUkey Rldlt
Road
Mary MIUer who -.. taken to, Veblfans Memotlal .
Hospital.
•
Pomeroy EMS and ftre departmflit were calJed-.~~ aaiD •
accldeat on Route 33 at 9:09 a.m. Jim Webater. refuted
treabnlllt at tile aeeae.
·
··
. · Salem TownllllP ~ IlepU1rneat wu called to a lb,acture
fire at tbe Sua rtaldeaee at Dtxllr at t: 48 a.m.
Middleport wu C!allld to Rail .._. lt. at I p.m. for Stace.y
Smltb wbo wu takeJl to IIDIIIriiUL:al Ceater.
Rutland at 7: U p.m. tnDaP:AIId l)llfuell Owaley from Metp ,
Mine No. 2 to
lill~~~«lallfolphal.
.
At 10:2'7 p.m.,IIN1IJIIII't tiMI&amp;'II'tld June; !IISpeDc_,...... trca
Pqe it. to Ve41rualleliaorlallloipftll.
·
·
Monday at 3: a.m., Raci•WM C!8llid toRoutellfforKeYia
ConUIUid Oil pap I

for

o•aa_.
a

r

i .

�•

.

Commentary
-

.

.

.

.

•

.

.

'

i

won't help ..resolve·strike

PA1' WllrrEBEAD
CHARLENE BOEn.tCH
Aaalslanl Publlsher/ ConlroUer
Gneral Maaqt!l'
.
.·.
· A MEMBER of 1be AMoclated Pres.,
_ lPrtwaAJio.
dation and lhe American Newspap« PvN...,..~'"IihJ.,_ -....:.._
·
.,.. -...,
LETI'ERSOFOPINIONareweleome.. 'lbeyohotoldbel••lbaniOI
words long. Allletlero are 1111bJectto edHIIIr aad mull be alped wllb
name, llddreu aad lelepbo•e number. No uulped lt!Uen wm be pub-

r-.

lilhed.Letlers ....uldbelapodll.le,addrMOIDJia-.•otperooioal~
tlfs.

Backstaks ~t
the ·W hite House
.

..

His reaction may not be based
strictly In conservatlv~ IdeOlogy.
During the ~988 presidential
·' campaign, Loreaio gave $100,000
to the Republican Party. 'nJat
. means Lorenzo doesn't neejl .to
.stand outside the house with a
picket sign: ·
, '

'

~lrect comment from ·Pr~ldent Bush, White

House press secretary . Marlln Fitzwater was graCious when asked
about the decision of Time Magazine to name Soviet leader !V'Jkhall
Gorbachev the ''man of the decade."
"We certainly do congratulate b(J1l. He certainly has contributed
greatlY to the surPriSing changes olthe year. We congratulate him,"
Fitzwater said.
·
President and Mrs. Bush, who like to encourage learning; will get a
free eduCation themselves on past presidencies. They have Initiated,
at Bush's behest, a series pf lectures by historians and bldtraphers on
the former Oj:cupants of the White House.
·
The first of tile Series will be on Abraham Lincoln on Jan ..7, In the
State Dining 'Room, which Is dominated by a magnificent pensive
portrait of. a brooding Lincoln above·the mantle,
··
An aide Indicated th.ere would be no critique of the sitting president
or the Bush administratiOn. Much too early for historians to judge.
Romance has blossomed In the White House press office with two
Texans getting together. :W.ellssa Compton of Dallas and James N.
.
(Jay) AlliSon of Midland will be married In May.
The couple met on the Bush presidential campaign-and recently
became enl!aged. .
··
.
·
·
. After their marriage, Compton wlllmovetotheofflceofSigRoglch,
the White House dtrector of public events.

. '

'

I figure some of the experts can
been sworn In to bring justlc on
'splaln lt. So, I been watchln'
the sidewalk, I'm just happy to
still be here.
teleVIsion and readln' the newspapers. I (jon' t know If you agree,
For somebody w1Jo been
Lor" QUI I would call the 1980s
around since tbls wbole thing
started, Lord, these past 10 years
the "Decade of Reagan and
Gorbachev." And- check thiS
· Yo, Lord has not been one of your be~ter
You got so many people In the times. You really laid some. out, Lord .~ Reagan ·· for ·the
worldprayln' toyou,ldon'tmlnd heavy trips on.us.
·
worser ,Pt what · happened and
I'll say thiS. You did warn usGorbachev for the better. Ain't
temlndln' you that this be one of
that somethln'!
your sons Booker -Booker Lerol . · several times. You sent your
Mr. Gorbachev gave us - .I 'm
prophets and disciples - lsalalt,
Jackson.
By those names, I figure you Amos, Mathew, Mark and Luke
not sure of. the word, Lord glasnost. Make things more open
know already I be a brother, and- - to tell It like It be, that there
a BaptiSt one at that. (My daddy goa' be "famines, pestUences
and more democratic like we be.
once said, Lord, that any man and earthquakes."
That's why all them upriSings be
who ain't black and a Democrat
And you kept your promises,
happenln' with them communist'
has been tampered with. So, you too ... famln In Africa ... earth· · countries In Europe.
Mr.' Reagan ·' gave us more
know I got It all together!.)
quakes In Mexico, i\ririenla and
A lot of people be 'd&lt;iln' this In San Francisco .. . and pestUences
racism. Make things more segrethese nextfewdays, but I want to - big pestilences, bad pestilengated and more like South
Afrlca.-That's why we done had
.. thank you for brlilgln' me this far ces - like oil spill In AlasJta,
by faith. Up here In Harlem, wtth nuclear spUI at Cher)lobyl, .South
all that dumping afflrinatlve
action, racial attackS on colleges
druj( addicts runnln' around Africa massacres, stock-market
campuses', killings of youg black
crazy, kllllli' they own people and crashes, .crack, cocaine, AIDS,
dudes and a meaner, nastier
muggln' old ladl'es to feed they Manuel Antonio Noriega and
habit and cops actin' like they Ronald Wilson Reagan.
· country. His own man, George
•
Bush, knowed cit and said he
Will• the 1980• windiniJ d....n. I
OJ1umed a priori that my beiDtJed
Iandt-man in Harlem would take a
few mi""'"' to' pro,- aboui the
•ignifica"ce of the docade'• ""d. He
'hod indeed. and lmeolced a look.

.'

.

a

·--·-· -

·' '

...--111

,

•

'

wanted a kinder, gentler nation;
He Just don't want to come right
out and say his boss was a s;o,b.
If I sound like I be unhappy
about these years, Lord, I'm not.
One thing I know. You may bring
a righteous wt:!llh on us, but you ·
be a just God and a good Gocj.,
You made lots of nice things
happen. Ba bles were born. Folks
got married. People be friendtier. Neighbors be. gettln' together In cities all over tlie
country to drive the drug dealers . .
outa they communjtles.
The nicest thing that you did In
these 10 years, Lord, wu to.make
women more · equal. Women.
everywhere be helpln' to make
this world "thy kingdom come"
~ - a~ .members of Congress,.
mayors of big cities, astronauts
and preslden t of the Philippines.
And for tha!. all I can say Is
that you're a very hlp (}od, and
yQu always "do tbe right thing." '
See you In 1990. And lhat be a
r)ghteous "Amen."

r

1

1

The Red,women came back to
narrow thelead to eight when tl)e
period ended. As the bottom half
opened, the Rio· ladles scored
. ,eight unanswered points to d~ad­
lock at 32 (18: 1~) . Couch's field
goal at 17:47 pUt Rio GraQde In
charge for the ftrSt time, launch·
lng a seesaw battle 1 for
domination.
·
Blu!_rfoo ~tzed.the lead at 14: 56
(38·37) on Helt~p's foul1hots,
but the hosts didn't -regain full
commanCI unt!l 8: 30 :oviJeD Fred·
rick coitnected fqr tw~ to put Rio
Grande abe'ad . 45-#. , Kathy
Snyder", Barnltz and Fredrick
then sank baskets for a sevenpoint advantaae · (U-44) that
Bluffton sliCed to two twice as the
game wound doWn.
'
· Rio Grande was down by one

_.,..z
oue"'

Uttle,' ~

..'•

•

TVC s-~"e"'
.~~-~
:

..
\

'

'

,.
.

'

o..

'· ·11•-'*E
..
.........
w••~•
AleV•n J .

What~.
~terrain

v•

· i'.

. •
·(AIIOa-.)
• TEAM
W L F OF
Wellston ..............&amp; 1 465 381
Miller .. , ...... ... ...... 5 : 1 419 377
Alexander ...........5 4 5'13 575
VInton County ...... 3 2 311 303
Bel~ •.u ..............3 3 m 401
Trlmble ............... 3 3 383 . Melga._,.. ,:.......... ,.t 3 - m . 282 ·
• . . Fed·~;. 1.....2 · - ~ · 431
Ne..tet~Y. .• ~J'•.....
211

- --·-

. ,::.;... ....

......

,

__ ::c:t::~~

'

"J.B., the ~ - no llt»d ~
W.'w iPt to find •,., ~."

'

'

I.

,,

I, .

(rna'J
'

~-

A lllvllloa of 11-edla. .."=

every afternoon.. Monday·

Published

~ ·
·
PN&gt;ADENA, ·calif. (UPI)
!back. ''We' just hurt ourselves
History almost ' repeated Itself like we did all season."
· ·
Monday at the Rose •Bowl, but
Fortunately for Southern Cal,
Southern Cal withstood a second Michigan had Its awn problems, .
half.comeback by Michigan .to picking up eightpenalties lor 62
spot1· Bo. S&lt;c.hembe.ehi.e r •~ - fl na1 · yards. . . .
. .
· ·
gameascoachoftheWotverlnes .
The two most devastating ·
The Tr oIans, wh o squander. ed penattles occurred .with 5·· 30 left
.
a 14·3 halftime lead -last year-to · In the game, when a holding
Michigan and lost the Rose Bowl • penalty nu 11 Ifl ed a f a ke punt. an d ·
game 22·14, nearly did It again.
run by ChriS Stapleton that would
But although USC's 9ffense have given MIChigan the ball
faltered , the Trojans' vaunted !nslde thl! USC 40-yard line. ·
d f
, k tth !nth arne
Th Trojanstookadvantageot.
e en:~e s ep em
.e g
e
and allowed them to esc11pe with tl\e gifts, marclil,ng down .the
· a 17·10 victory.
field for the·wtnnlng touchdown
. ·

lht Cllllh Friday, 111 Court St ., .Po·

m..-oy, Ohio, by tho Ohio Valley ~b­
lishlitg Compaay!Multlmedla , J nc••.

; Pomm-.ay, Ohlp 45781,' Pn . 992·2156..80-.
cond class postaa:e paid. at Pomeroy,
Ohio.
,
Member: Unital Preas lnternattoaal ,
Inland Dolly Preo Aoioctallon and t h•
Ohio Newapo~Auoctatlon. National.
Adverttitng
Keotattvo, Branllan\ ·
Newspaper
ea, 133 Third Avettu•.
'New York, New York 10017.

·

POS'I'MidiT'ER:· !end addrma cll•p
to '1'11• Dolly SentinEl. 111 Court st. ,
Pomeroy; Ohio C571!1.
. SUBSCRIPriON RATES
· By Carrtor 01'1\lol.,. - ·
~.w.~
•1 ••
vn
- ..... .. , .. ........ .... .. ... ......... - ~
0 0
~ Month ............... .. .. .... .. .. ......$6.10

ape Year .. SIN
.. ....G
.. LE
..... .co
.....PY
........ :... $'!2.11!

Dally ...... ........~~ ... ....... 2:1Cents
USC led only 10·3 at the half,
1~
despite ou-atnlng Mich'"'
In
··
·"'
.,....
Teanls
- ' 'Subocrtben aotdMII'InJtopoy lhecar-· .
yards, 239·127, and racking up 15
Ulrlke PrUier, a 16-year-old , rter may rl!llllt 1n advanee direct 10
first downs to nve tor the Austrian playing her first match
Tho Dally Sentinel ona3, lor12month
Wolverines.
·
. on the professional women's
=~/redtt ww botllveocarrtereach
After allowing Michigan to tie circuit, staged ·a slt·down strike
No·subscriptions by mao permitted Jn
the score 10,10 In the third and burst Into- tears · bef\lre
areaa where home carrier service lJ
·quarter, the Trojans marched 75 upsetting Australian Dianne Ba·
av~Uable.
yardsonllptayst?winthegame le$trat, 1.6, 7.5, 7. 6 (8·6), In an
·
MaD Sublcrtpf;lo•
on Ricky Ervlns 14-yard run opening round match of the
~
IDIIde Melp Coull&amp;)'
with 1:10 left In the game.
Australian Women's Hardcourt
13 Weei&lt;J ............. .. .......... .. ....... ,l9.:U
26 Weokl ......................... .. ....... $37.96
' 'There was a lot of things that
t B 11b
Th
52 Weeks ............... ............. ...... $74.36
·
Championship
a
r
ane.
·
e
went wrong:. but the key thlnats tantrum staged by PrUierearned
·
CotiiiJ $20.M!
.......
.. ..Melp
.. .. .. .................
. tile result, said USC Coach her a reprieve of a point penalty-- 13 W..U· 26 Weella ..................., .. ............ U0.30
J.,arry Smith, who won hiS first as~esseq during the final set
!2 WNI!a .................. ,................ $75.40
Rose Bowl-In three at~mpts.
tie-break In 117 dearee beat.
The Tro!ans outaalned Michl·
gan, 359 yards to 234 and ran 26
more plays, but were pel!allzed
eight times for 87 yards. ·
.
''We did everything we wanted
to do In the first l)al!," said Leroy
Holt, USC's brulslhg senior ful;

-Sports briefs- ;

A SPECIAL 6
ONTH -C.D.
,.

..

'

STilTS TUESDAY,~ JAN. .31D, 1910
'

.

-30°/o.orF

OFF

·FROM ··

CENTRAL TRUST
'

.

'

•All Winter Boot•
eGroUp Connie
&amp; Casuals

In••
•ll••••d·
lingo loots ·

,.,.., .....

•ALL Co'anie .
·&amp; Cas•l.
' Dreu
.

S101EWIDE
ctlltJ
.. SAY.,' JAil. 6

•ALL·I•xtlr

•••·•
•••ten
•ALL Athletic

·sa....

•W Go. . &amp;,Poll

. Wom.• '•
ShHI

... C:llllll•'
•

\

•

'

.

•

.

"'

(UIII'8 lfl'. .)

Micftig~n eleven~ 22~14 _

.Janqary Claar~nc.e . Sala

'

he1•ifatt ho~t:---:-mr.
.
SHOE PLACE ,..
&gt;

•

The Daily Sentinel

' Sho•sl . '
•ALL .Apparel

........,

.... . -----~- -· -

-- ..' 1- .

•.
- '-- _ .... -

.

·.

.

If you've-been
holding back wait- .
ing for a great rate.

is avail•ble for a
limited time only.
For more infor•

, _ . flan

c-.•111 T.,. ofb
.. i t 4 a t.ea.allf.

,

W. lilt. ~ you've . ma.tlon cont~ .
- to .a flit.
your ,.,...

\

~Truet ~

VIatoD Couaty at Nel.-viiJe.
Yark
,
Trimble - OSJIII
:
.
I
I
.'
.. • ... at Trimble
p)
.

........

THE BIG

m

,

Aleu!!4er at aa,Jp

'

Trojans rally to edge

·•

.
.
·
THE ctNrRAl TRIBtaNBWY

awrl)' 5I

Eawa ~ r.tleraiiJocJrlaa

........;;-

Orange Bowlin Mlunl. The Irish turned back the
GOAL LINE STAND - -Colorado tailback Eric
Blentemy (lop) atlempljl to dive over a h011l of . Buffaloea' acorlnr attempt aiad ended up with a
21-6 victory. (UPI)
.
.
Notre Dame defen._. on a , touchdown attempt
tram the Irish one Ia the rtnt half oi. Mond~'s,

~ ··-

Be_rry's World

that ran tbroqb .
that HrmOa wu "Clear lMadl
cboole what? Not cal~!" Be
polDted out tbat till hlllbolrd
"doela't IIB:V $ t blpp"l to
yqur ele.rllead once calvert bu
bleD. cbcilh!"
There 1ru a time Ill Claulin'1
life wbell .. accident deprived
blm of the uie of bll tollpe aDd
·!breal¥ to leave blm IJ*'Cb:

SVAC standings

""

And 1 would did a little deeper · less thiiOugh tbe years. "Out of
GeorP"e ~l...
Into my pocket before the plate those anxious days of silence,"
~
he said later, "Itook a vow that If ~ _ _ _ _ _.;;...._ _...,;._ _
got to. me. .
ever the precious gift of speech
that vow.
•
were
given
back
to
me,
I
should
But
some.where
along
the
IIDe,
. It was Clausen's sermons,
he must also have-taken another
thouab. ttiat people talked about try ~o speak. ao untrue, unfair,
unkind
word
so
long
as
I
live."
vow
- never to spesk a dull
the most. I recall the first one ·1
I was _acquainted wtlh Clausen
word. That' Is what made him
beard blm preach. ;His toplc·was ·
the last 20 years of bls life and I
unusual in his day. ·
"I Hope You Fall."
It would have made him even•
"I mean you," Clausen said. never knew him to go back · on .
more unusual today.
·
"JIIot my enemleil, but my closest
partners In the human enter·
prise. I want you to.be known as .
failures · because you try too
.,
much, because you set your
hopes too high, 'because your
reach exceeds your-grasp. H you
sue4;eed you have attempted too
'·'
Walking to work these days, 40
years .latel', I often repeat to
myselfoDeofCiausen'smemora·
ble benedictions: "God, our
Fath~r, grant us couraae for the.
conntct, patience ror the long
striving, and long enCJUih to
forgive and•to begin aaaln."
If no one Ia arouad, I lillY It
aloud the way ~ re~ber bl!n
eaying lt. '
' . . . ·~ · . ·•
A teetotaler, Clauaen was
·dla lreiAed one morntna: to' aee on
~a billboard acr01_
1 the street from
the church a wbllke;v ad procl~ '"Clear Headl Cboole
C&amp;lvert. • The Dext Sunday bll
topic wa1 "Clear Headl C)loOie

-·

·
·
(All Jami!S)
A pair 91 free throws by Jennl (56-55) with 1:01 left when TEA!il ~
· w L PF PA
Couch With four ,seconds· left. ~reibick, a 5-~ freshmal) !rom
~
helPed lift the Rio G~ande ' South Charleston, O)ljo, netted Eastern ..... ........ .. &amp; 2 619 · 564
Rectwomentoa59-56victoryover two pblnts. Offlclalr whistled NorthGallla ........S 3 556 · 519
Bluf,ton Saturday at -'Lyne · Halpin with elght seconds left, ~mnan Trace ' "" 5 4 537 . ~
.,
1.
allowing Couch to post theSouthern .. _. ... .... .... 43 34 4748 4
Center.
. .. .
51 484
Debbie Fredrick. scared a , game·wlnnlnl fo u1 shots.
s 11thwestern
~
y 11 ....
·
2 3 308 344
·
''Ourshootlngcoutdhavebeen 0Y~es .a ey .. .
·
·
g.amehtahof'2l'polntstoleadRfo
"'
6 431 512
Grandelnalatespurtwhlchgave
better," Bluffton ·mentor Klm Ka&amp;· nlll
c ...... .. ·...... 11 8
496 71 2
yger reek .... ....
the hos•· a small margln ' o'ver F!Jcher noted. ''Of course, we
Bluffton. The win boosted the Rio lost our head at the end, but we're
(SVAC games)
ladles' overall record to 7·6, .the young."
. '
· ,
TEAM
, W L PF PA
first time tbe team has been · · Batnltz supplied 12 points to So th
4 0
317 239
.
•
G
' d bl
U ern...........
.
above .500 since the first three_ complete Rio randes Cou e· Eastern .......... ..4 o 291 245
g1q11es of the campaign.
figure scoring, whllepln-on1eyd Nortll Gallla , .. .. 4 2. 423 384
· · '~e bad to-win a aam.e Aaalnst . scored 15 markers, Hal , 12 an
Hannan Trace .. • 2 319 .., 5
-..
· 0
••
. a gOOd' team Uke" thiS,"
Rio Heitkamp 10 for the visitors. · , Southwestern .... 2 4 429 441
Prande Coach ~llg Foote com- · The Redwornen return to ac-- Symmes Valley 2 3 308 344
mented. "I think the k~s were tlon at ·eu
. mberland. (Ky.) on · OakHtll .....-.. .·.·..1· 4
...,. _ ........,
!lev
d ho N tre 0
"' •.,., ••o
beginning, to be e that In_the Thursday aD.
st o
ame Kyg~ Cl'eek..... O t6 321 - · 447
last five D:~IDUtes we- weren't (Obit;~) oil Saturday at •2 p.m . TOT~ ·......... %0 20' %6'13 28?3
• golllg to win, but Debbie Fred• . Bluffton travels to Indiana yYes' ·'
·
rick hit a clutch shot and the ley¥ on Thursday.
·, (R~rves)
ladlesdldn't!oldup.Debbledlda Box -re: ·
TEAM
w L PF PA
lot of tHa1, and wehlidsomegreat
IUO GRANDE (59) - Jennl Southern ........... 4 o 212 136
contributions from Jennl, Ann Couch, 2·2-6; ~= ~df~f;i" NorthGallla .... ,4 1 304 217
BarnltzandC!ndyRidg!!way,tf's 2·0-4; Debbie
c • ·Ba· ; Oak Hill :.......... 3 1 193 177
beglnnlhg to come tOgether 10r Kerr! Kldwel~ 1-0-2; Ann
r· Hannan Trace .. 3 2 · 223 169
us."
nltz, 6-0-12; Angle Packard, Symmes Valley 2' 3 212 227
Katliy. So u thw~s~nt..
· Bluffton, .entering the contest 1-0-2; tlenee Ward,)-1·3;
297
._...
.. 2 4 240
with a 4•5 standlllj!, took cqntrol snr_er, ~- .TOT~U M •
Eastern ........ ... :1 3 149 177
1
of the game early- as Krlatle .
UF
N~ ) - , arl:
Kyger Creek ..... G. '~'6 156 289
Conley, Sllndy Heitkamp and Miller, 1·5-7;
lly Hdalpln, n
TOTALS .....: .. . III to 1688 1688
Kelly Halpin and a stron~ re- 12; Becky Nllh5wan er, 1"":2.; ,
bounding game put the vjaltors Krlst,le Cpnley, 7·1-15; O&amp;ane ·.
satvti!Q''s ftna1
ahead throughOut !be first pe- Kempf, 3·1-7; Taml Naumann, • Jacjsson 70, bak Hill 50
rlod. ColdshootlngbytheRedw~ 1:1.3; Sand)' Heitkamp, 4-2-10.
Tonight's rames
men put Bluffton ahead by as . TOTALS •1.....
·
North Gallla at Oak Hill
much as 10 points· during the
Halttlme acore: Bl~ftoa 32, OVCS at Southwestern
nalrs latter portion.
· Rio Gr1111de 14, ..
Eastern at Fed~ral Hocking

What .mad~ Bernard (:~ausen special

.

--

Redwomen t()pple Bluffton ·

Booker wraps up'.the .decade_
,. __ch__ire__
k s___
ron_
.e

Bernard Clausen had pastorates In Syracuse and Pittsburgh
before .he came , to Cleveland,
where I met him. ~ was a college
student. For three years, I sat
under the wing of hiS gown,
Sunday after Sunday, until I left
for divinity ilchool. And I have
never forgotten ' this beloved
111entor. ·
There have been other great
.
'
'
preachers,
but at least one -t hing
'
set
Clausen
apart ·lrom all of
11 he tra vels around the United States a bit after the superpower
them.
HIS
coilgreaatlons
Dot only
summit, Gorbacbel( would be expected to pay a call on former
looked·
forward
to
his
sermons,
President Ronald Reagan at hili Bel Air home In Los Angeles. It was
Reagan's wish to show 'America to Gorbachev, Including the wide · tbe)i even looked forward to the
open spacee In the West, but mostly to give ~tm a picture of the colll!etton.
Clausen had a speciaL way of
farmlands , and capitaliSt prosperity.
.
softening people up for the
offering.
·
.
Once be told the atory of the
church usher who passed the
partially filled collection plate to
'
·
a
man who said: "I don't think
''
I1l contribute today. I don't
·
.
.By Ualled Prese International
. .
' ' . belteve In mtaAtons."
Today Is tuesday, Jan. 2, the second day or'1990, with 363 to follow .
The usher - as Clausen told
The moon Is waxing, moving toward Its first quarter.
the story - had the quick wit to
The morning star Is Mars.
.
_
reply: "Take aome,out then. It's.
The evening stars are Mercury, Venus, Jupiter and Satlll'1'.
.
for h~theaa."
.• .
Those borq on thiS d'a te are U:Diler the .sign of Capricorn. 'l'bey
On anotber occulon, as the ·
Include Vli'JIInla patriot Nathaniel S,ton In 1647; British Gen. James
uallers stood at till front of the
• Wolfe,, hero ot the·battle of Quebec In 1727; fan ilancer Sally Rand In church waltlnl to take up the
190C; author llaac Allmov In 1$20 (aae '10); singer Julius La Rosa In offering, Cla\1111!11 told the atory of
1930 (age 60) a11d slnger-~angwJ:(ter Ro~r Miller In 1936 (age M).
two m1111 standlq:by the casket
-~
,
, of • rk:b man wllo had dlld.
- On Utls date In blltory:
"I WOIIder boll' mud~ he left?"
,.... ln 1788, Geo111la ratified the Conatitutton, the fourth of the ortatnal one. man aslled. The lither ans13 colonies to do 10, and waa acllnJtled to the union. '
~ wmed, "He 111ft tta!L"
In · ~;"'Japan~ forcl!l occupied ManDa, fore~ O.s. and · Tbat
a~ that we
Philippine forces under Gen. .Douilu MacArthur to wltbdtaw to the ~ can afford to be.
our
Bataan peallllula.
··
pvtq tor we are liCit p1q to be
In 1959, the $avlllt Unloa laUDCbed Lunlk·1; the flnt u11111811111d able to ta11e our llouaty with a spacecraft.to travel to the moon.
wbell we cro11 OYIJ',
.
In 1974, Prl!lldent Ricbard NIX~ lllped a bill requtrlq I !atal to
I ilWB:VI COMiderld tb411e Uttle
limit htgbway 1peedl to 511 mph or ~ fedtiral tupway talldl.
~~ IIebe till eo1Ject1oa to be
811 impiOWJMDt Oft till CieriY·
A tllouPt tor tile cla:v: Autllor Ilaac Allmov laid, ''Our lifetime man'• ltalldanl. ''It Ia mare
ma:v be the lalt that will be ltwd out' Ia a teebaoloiiCiliOCiety."
blel.ed to atve than 'to receive."

..

.

..OiWal«:~~-~HI~.,~
~

f
a

The-president, who far exceeded his travel budget In 1989, plans to
hit the road often In tile coming months. But with an unprecedented
cold spell freezing the Ells t Coast during the month of December, he Is
looking to F1ortda and Georgia for trips In January.
Bush may turn out to be the most expensive president In modern
history If his pen~bant for travel continues. 1le made five trips O\lt of
the country 'In 1~ .and there are reports that he will make several
journeys overseas In the comtrig year. Bush will travel to
violence-wracked Colombia In February to attend the drug summit.
Australia and Mrlca ' are frequently mentioned as continents that
Bush wants to visit In 1990. .
.
But he also wlll .travel within the United States thiS spring when he
·hosts the economic summit In May In Houston, Texas, .bis adopted ·
home state. And·he hosts the summit In the United States·wlth Soviet
President Mikhail Gorbachev during the last two weeks In June.
That superpower summit Is expected tD be held In Washlngton, but
there are Indications that;Bush also plans to Invite Gorbachev to his .
seaside summer home In Kennebunkport, Maine.

Today_in.~istory

.1(

-

.
.
' --. BOth Richard 'Nt:x;on and ·Gerald Ford visited Bucharest and met

with Ceausescu during 'their presidential days.
·
It Is well known that Ceausescu was Nixon's Intermediary when the
White House made secret contacts with Mao Tze Tung for Nixon's
breakthrough trip to China In 1972.
·
Nixon had become acquainted with the Romanl.an Marxist dlcl&lt;!.t or
during Nixon's eight year hiatus out of power- between 1961 when he
ended hiS vice presidency and 1969 when he was elected president. At
that time, the split between China and the Soviet Union was beeoming
deeper · and NIX OJ) saw a way to expl,o lfihe schism - dlylde and
conquer- and to gal nan ilily of 1 bllllon.Chlnese In the global politics
of the superpowers.

a

-

NM/IA .COMAt*Cl

. . ~y HELEN TBOiiiAS .
UPI Wblle u - Reporler
WASHINGTON- President Bush says he had a "great:' Christmas
at Camp David with his entire .family, Including, 11 grandchildren
who.found the coil! snQWY weather P,erf~t for sleigh riding at the
Maryland mountaintop,
Bush said that he was on the phonE: a fair amount of ttme during the
holiday, fielding callS on (levelopinents In Panama where Gen.
Manuel Antonio Norleg!J. had asked forpoUtlc~ asylum In the Vatican
Emb~ssy .and also moliltorlng_the uprising In Romania. .
Within an hour after repressive President Nlcolae Ceausescu and
his wife Elena, also a power, during 24 years of brutal rule, were
executed by a firing squad, l;lush extended diplomatic recognition of
the new government of Romania.
. .
. The dramatic changes In the final days otl989 were predicted by no
one and especially not by the astrologlsts and year end
prognosticators who are resurrected every New Year's Day to
forecast .the political future of the world.

While there was no

tan Hapn, who ru tOr 106 Yanb year.
.
but completed juaUof13pann.
tiPIItarii'WIII•
Ken Culbert.IOD, who mla&amp;ed a
MIAMI (UPI) ""' Notre Dame "JIIotre Darile · had- ~at ball 23-yard field aoalattempt-ln the
coacb Lou HQJtz l'l!lled bll case controllil the fourlh quarter and second q~r, had his streak ol
for the natl61111 Clla!PJIIOuhlp we couldll't aet It back.''
• : 66 consecutive polnt·afler ill· ·
with a penuaalve awrilnatlolf.' "'·
AnthOny Johnaon's aecond ·temp!J broken when his klclt bit
"I llon't kDow wbat :vou · touchdowD run of tl!e tame, a the left uprlaht,leevlnl Colorado
cu do - ·we ,lult beat the No.1 leVell·,ard bunt with 92~eC~~Dd8 behind 14-8.
team lnthecountrybylliPolDtl," left, comp~ an bls~ce.
The Ii:lsh broke a scoreless tie
he eald -MolldJlf nla'ht after lbe drive that co01umed 8: 55 and did with a P.tr of thlrd~uarter
No. t Irllh beafCOloraclo 21-llln riot feature a ltnate pa... NOtre touchdowns. !!llllveri(ng the
the Orange BoWl ..
Da~ pbbed a 1~ advantaae
crowd of 81,191. Johnson's tw~
"We did what we had to do In tbetblrdperl~gna2-yardrun · yard buntoffrtghlflllardcapped
when we bad to do lt. I've eat IQ . by JolmloD and IG:ab.lb Ilm!J.II's . a 69-yard drtve. Rice sustained .
vote .for UB. We _played wltb 35-yard flan'ller reverse:
·;
· · ' the ieven·pllly niarcll with a .
IsmAil, who did not catch a · 27-yard pass to Tony Smith on
pressure all year loq ~4 we just
beat an awful good football Jlass, shook oft a m~·and-11. Johllson ran 29
shoulder Injury to run fQr
yards up the mll!dle before
team."
Tile trish,l2-1, (!owned eight of ' career·hlgb 108 yards In 16 putting Notre Dame ahetd 7..0·at
nine bowl teams · thiS seuoll', carrll!l 'and e!U'n Moat Valuable 3:12 of the third quarter, .
·
their perfectloa marred onlY by a · Player honol'l. a'lle Irlsb ran for
Tlgllt et!d Johl\ Perak then
27-10 lou' at Mlan'lt Nov. 25.lllat 279 yarcla and did not coQimlt a ' tipped Hagan's arching -pus
1118pped a · · 23-game winning turnover, maintaining · posses· . twice before Ned -BOicar ln~r­
slon ~or ~:43.
, . ~epted , at the Colorado 46. After .
··- . streak.
, .
· With no undefeated team r:e"I was very concerned about Johnson's 13-yal'd eatcll on third·
matnlng, the Irish await Tues· Rocket's Injury because 01;1r . and·nlne, two peua\_ties 'ireated a
day's fillli ratlnp by the Urilted game plan called for blm to play flrst-and-32 for NQtre Dame at Its
'
Press Jnternatlonal Board of tailback predominantly · to· ' 47.
Rice. found Pat Ellers for 18
Coaches wl~ hoPes of becoming !JIIht,,'' Holtz said. "fllhey had
the first repeat champion since four different ch11nces In the first yards, and followlna an lncom·
Texas In 1969 and 19'10, Their half to jump on to\). but our . pletton, Ismail showcased the
challenge will ~ome from No. 2 . goal - line defense was speedthathumadehlmoneof
Miami, which. beat AlablllliJI . 1remendous. .
.
.
the nation's most feared return
· ''We did not play well a11111nst ·men. He~pokRice'shandoffdeep
33-251n the Suaar,Bowl.
Colorado, 11.;1;'\vas Pii!Yihl for · Miami Nov, 25; but when you play In th~ backfield, spun away frQill
Its first natloQ81 tlt.le In 100 years · nine bowl teams, that's going to star linebacker KanavlsMcGhee&lt;
of college footballrT.be Buffaloell happen. The one week we were at the 40 and sped down the right
'
pulled wllllln 1«:6 enterlna the out o~ the No. 1 SPQt, we come , sidelines to complete l\ 35-yard
final-quarter, bu 1c~uldn't hamlle back and beat the No. 1 team by , TD .run with 7: 191eft lnihe third
.
.
Notre D!lme's poWl!rflll otfeilsiVe 15. It
.
.
.
, , q\larter. .
,
..
line IJj · a wltbe'rlng 82-yard;
''The Jinx Is over, " said Rice
Trailing 14-0; C(!lorado broke .
i 7-play march that sealed Col~ through on the final play, cif the after Notre Dame ended a
rado's _seventh strl!lghl bowl third period. On a first-down live-game lo§lng atreak at Ml·
option keeper from the Irish 39, · amf. "They said we couldn't win
setback.
,
"We beat t}lem up, but they Hagan avOided stepping O.\lt of here. We'd better be No, 1, no
came away wltb the victory," bounds before cutting across the questions asked. I'm not brag·
said Coiorado quarterback Dar· middle lor hiS 18th TD of the . !ling, but that's the way I feel."

'f(ASHINGTON - ~ pickets at Eastern.
outside President Buab'.S KanneThey had come to the wrong
bunkport' bouse ·l ast I..abor Day place. Neither the pilots nor
whispering. tbe Lorenzo line Into
weekend weren't typical demon- Eastern's striking machinists airline empire and tbe federal
the president's ear?
strators. These men wore tbe alid fllgbt attendants got the eai . sovernment Is an understate-~UBb's top lobbyist to Coqreu
uniforms of pUots.
of the president. Frank Loremo, ment. It Ia a vtrtual jet stream.
Is Frederick McClure, the
Lorenzo runs Texaa. Air Corp.,
The10formerNavyaviitora- the owner of Eaatern ·Atrllnes,
six of · them Ni!val Academy already has theBuabadmlnl.atrli· which Includes C9nttDeatal Air· .former viCe president and lobbYlines &gt;"&amp;nd Eastern. 'Fhe Airline Ist for Texas Air. McClure pulled
graduates...., were on·~ from tton .aa a captive audience.
the perfect job switch with
PUots
Association b81 'plllpolnled
their JobS as commercial pOols
BUBb bas stubbornly. stayed out
Rebecca Range, wbo was as
about
about
30
Texas
Air
officialS
lor Eastern Airlines. Nothing In of tile Eutern strike, a.nd be
public liaison for President Reawho
have
moved
Into
jobs
with
their rigid mUitary training had claims Congress has no business.
gan
before taking McClure's job ,
the
Bush
administration,
and
prep!U'ed them to set up a picket get tina Involved either, even
at
Texas
Atr.
·
line at the home of the president though a bitter strike. can affect forme!:'·federal bureaucrats who
of the- United · States, the an airline's safety. ·
· have ifabbed lucrative jobs with
··
commander-In-chief ·of the
Tbe president may be taklhl the airline.
Elliot Selden, once a t~
armed forces. ·
hl.a cues from people who don't
Tbat raises troubling ques- federal antJ.truAt attorney at tbe
But th"" felt they had·to take have to stand outside bls hOuse tions: ·Are federal regulators · Justice · Department, Is · now a
~,
extreme measures to get Bush's . with a picket sign to get his reluctant to tangle with a com- lawyer for Texas Air.
attention, Tl.!ey wanlfd him to · attention. To say that a revolving · paey that may some day offer
McClure and RobsOn say they
steplnandhelpc~mtbe.turmoll
door exists between Lorenzo's them a job? Are BuJih staffers stay out of Eutern's business
with the federaleovernment, l!Ut
earlier thl.a yeat,McCIIIre algned
· a letter to Congress saying that
BUBII would · not appoint an
emergency panel to tnvestiPte
Eastern. The White .House told
our associate Scott · steel! that ·
McClure's name ended up on the
letter by accident.
.
The White Kouse lulats that .
the Qonnectlons have not. lnfiu·
enced the way the Eastern strike
has been handled by the govern·
ment.
But thos who have tried to
.'
get the president to lnfervene.In
the Eastern , la'!Xlr dlapute have
'run 'up against a wall: '
'·'
Congress has tried to settle the
dispute al)d.reln In Lor~o. but
when the House and Senate
agreed · to set up .a panel to
'i
Investigate the strl)re, Bush ve-.
toed the .Idea.

ROBERT L. WINGETT ..
• Pul!llaber

.

, B:v 1M IL\VFIIIAN

Jack Ander.son, and Dale VanAtta

.. ---"--4"
111 CourUI&amp;ree&amp;
FomerO)', Obio .
DEVOTEI&gt; TO TilE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGs-MASON AREA

.

'

'

•

NOtre Dame handS Colorado
21-61o8&amp; in
Bowl

Tuesllar. J.....ry 2, 1180
.

The Dsl-

........,2,1180

Pigs 2-The ~ ~Ttl·li?l
.~ Pomllov M' t•lllllt. Ohio

•

Bus~

..... .

-~

•

.

·;-rhe Daiiy
Se.
n
tinel
.
....
..
-

-':

'

••••~art tft-6661...

· 11rs..t,_,MM7Tii!ws•'iiC

'·'

' I

L

•

�•

'

4 The o.ily Salti,..

Tuu lat. J....-y 2, 1180

T•

SecO~d half com~back giv~ Aubw.":D 31-14 win over OSU
"L,.

•

•

•

ByO~CADDES

UPISporil Wrller
r
TAMPA, Fla. ~ Reggie
Slack's 11-yard touchdown pass
tp Gret Taylor planted the seeds
for an Auburn comeback and the
lOth-ranked Tigers wore down
Ohjo State In the second half:
Slacl\ added two more touchdown pa'Sses al!d a ~&gt;.yard scoring
run In the second halt, lltljng the
Tleers to a 31-14 Hall of Fame
Bowl vtctory.
' "The second half, they started
to w.e ar down,": said Taylor, who
caught two TD passes. "That's
because we do a lot of substltut- .
Ing. We also do· a lot of .
·conditioning the year around.
And, I guess It pays off."
Auburn Coach Pat Dye said the
game went about like he thought,

•

except "i didn't expect us to give
up 14 points so early."
•
Slack completed 16 of 22 paues
for 141 yards, hu:ludllll all nine
second-half attempts. He
brought the Tigers back from a
14-3 deficit atter they were
unable .. to eet their offense
untracked most of the flrlt half. '
Slack moved the Tigers 33
yards 111.. the filial 48 seconds of
the bait, hlttlng Taylor from tile
11 to pull Auburn within 14-10.
':Tile touchdown there gave us
a blel!Oost," Slack said. "It gave
mea boost, too. We thought about
It at halftime and we came out
fired up the second.half."
The Tigers we11t ahead to stay .
on their first PQSSeSslon of the
third quarter, eoing 49 yards In

Auburn put the game out of
reach with- two foilrth-quarter
touchdowns COIJIIng just over two
minutes apart. The ftrst carne on
an !D-ylird, 16-pllly drtv,e that
lasted 8: 33. Slack scored that
touchdown on a 5-yard quarterbac.k draw with 9: 2;l remaining,
making It 24-14. Atter the Buckeyes failed to make a first dowq
on a fake punt, Auburn took over
at the., Ohio State 32 and scored

.

three plays taler on Slaek' a quarler.
,
_
2-yard pass to Herbe1J Caley
Sllow'a TD, w111c11 wu aet up by
with 7:20 lett.
.·
a 68-yard pall from FftY to Jeff
' :The drive that put them up by Grahtia to the 12. came 8: 10 Into
10pijtntswaaablgfact01',"0hlo the rame. Aubum'a Al•nn~»r
· State Coach John Cooper said. Wrtpt returDid the IDI\IIDg
"After that, we had to
out klckott 45 yanla to the Oblo State
and throw more and q.ey knew - ~.and tben&amp;era mowcl to a fltat
we would be throwl111."
•
down at lhe 3 before "'tllq for •
"When we went up 17-14, I said 19-yard Win Lyle field goal . to
that It was over," AuburnleDior make It 7-3.
linebacker Quentin Rluln.laald. · Frellunaa walk-on Stableln's
''J could see In their offeailve fiJ1t college catch made It 14·2
linemen's eyes that tbey were 1:24 Into the aecond quarter,
.finished. Each play I wu able to capping an 81-yard, 10-pllly
make a tackle a little euler."
, driVe. Frey co"'pleted five of llx
Ohio State controlled the' flrlt pas- for 62 Yards In the marciL
half, until the final second&amp;, and
Buc:keyt!ll Afety Mark Pellnl
led 14-3 on Carlos Snow's 1-yard helped fruatrate Aubu11t In the
first quarter · TD and a 9-yard flrlt half with lwo lnte~tloDI.
pass from Greg Frey to -Brian But Shayne Wasden's 35-yard
Stableln ,J!IIrly In the second punt return put Auburn at the

come

Ohio State 33 with 48 aecondlleft.
Slack bit Wrtaht wllh a 111-yanl
PUI to tbe Oblo State 11 and then
found Taylor In the end zone to
tnajle It 14-10 with 11 aecondlleft.
':The big play, In my opllilon,
wu the punt retiua," Cooper
said: ''We bad !Heal nice ldl:k (52
yarcll) and they hac! the guy to do
· .
something with lt.
':The IIIC~ game has been a
thbralnoursldeallyearlong. We
.
dlcln' 1 cowr very well."
O~lo State' 1 only aertoua scor- ,
lng opportUnity In the second halt
ended wlieq Rlgglna Intercepted
t Frey pass at the Tleers.'9 with ,
2: 161eft.
• .
Frey completed 16 of 31
passes for 232 yards; but hit
only 8 of 21 In the second half.

Then Sunday ·ln the Astrodome, rlval'ly between the teams has score,glvtngtheRamsa14-0ieadtn .
Gary :Andliraon kiCked a 50-yard heated up. although Houston had the iltst quarter. ,
· '·
~ld goal ill overtime to give the
won ' five of the last six regularSteele!:s a :16-23 viCtory ln·the AFC III!UCJt meetlnp, lncludl'*' two
Greg Bel~ who had 124 yards on
wildcard playoff, ending Houston's straight thla season.
'1:7 carries, added a .seven· yard
seasoo With three straltlht loues.
But•the Oilers COUld not make It toucJlCiown r.un In "the fourth
Noll Wlls aslaed · If knocking three In a row. '
quarter.
Glanvtlle out ot. the playdfs mac;le
''The third time Is the charm,"
Philadelphia, which lost Its third
the win more special.
said Noll, whole teams beat .straight playoff game, acored 0?5 a
"'Anytlme you get ln1D the · Houston bt the 19'18 and '79 AFC one-yard run by AnthOny Toney, ·
playoffs and win. It's special," said champlonlhlp gamea. 'We like
The Rams took a 14-0 lead by
a gracious NoD. ''It'sa big thing." · charml. It was a ' vecy emotional scoring on their first two poues· The Noll-Gianvllle rlvarJ.v bega:n · thing for !his team." ··
slons. They did. most of their
In 1987 when Noll gave Glanville a
The Steele!'s, only the II!COIId damage through the·atr, vlctlmlzflnger-pojntlng lecture at midfield . NFL te&amp;;m to Joe to an opponent lng cornerback Erlc ·Everett, who
· atter a garrl'e, accusing the Oilers of · twice during . the, 111!81011 and then st,arb!d 1n place o1. Eric Allen.
' playing dirty. stnce then, t)le beat them In the playl1fa, have
Everett !brew to Bj!ll tor23 yards
become a '"Cindi!.rellll" team by on Los Allleles' first offensive play
winning four stralibt and six of of the game, bit Robert DelpinO for ,
their lsst seven. Thla frcm a team 16 yards oothe third play and .found •
·that was outarored 11:/rlO bt Its •lrst Ellarcl'for a 39-yard touchdown on
two games. ·
the fifth.
.
'"lbey"regoqtocometohateus
Iz.el Jenkins, who was covering
. In Houlton, but I IU. that," said Ellard, went for the Interception
quarterback Bubby Brister. and missed It, allowing· Ellard to
NEW ORLEANS (UPI) - It's
Craig Erickson, who missed "We're playing Steekir football ... catch the ball at the Phlladelphla 21
· all very clear· to the Miami . three games with a broken we're p~·liard, dirty foolbaJl. ' and , race Into' the end , zone
"We're a confident team right lintouched with 12:35 tO play tn.the ~
Hurricanes- they're No. 1.
lqtuckle; threwfor250yards. and
now.
The ofrenle and defense are ftrst quarter.
"Our team deserved what It three touchdowns -an18-yarder
playbig ~· We care about'
After Philadelphia lost 13 yards
got and deserves , the national , to Wesley Carroll hi tbe 'iecond
~:
We've
got
tha!,
tas~
In
our
·
.
on
Its first posses•on, a OO.yard
championship," Miami coach quarter, an 11-yarder to Bud
mouthS
and
we
IIJ!e
tt.
punt
'by Rick Tuten gave lhe Rams
Dennis Erickson sale!. ''It was Chudzinski midway through the
The
Steelers
advaJK.oe
to'
the
the
ball
on the Eagles' 46. ·
·'
our best ofenslve performance of third QUllrter and a 12-yarder to
dlvlskmal
playoff
next
Sunday
Seve.
n
plays
later,
Everett
the year."
Randy J;lethel early In the fourth
against Denver, a team that beat hodcecl up with Johns:&gt;n for a
The Hurricanes, ranked No. '2 quarter.
;:
.,.ltabuJll'h
34-7 earlier tills aeasoo. four·yard twchdown and a .14-0
In the natlon, made a bid for their
"We played a tough schedul~,
_
~'The
real
difference Is we beUeve Rams' lead.
third national .championship In wonwhenweneededtoandcame
·IIJ
ourselves,"
said nQIIIIng back
On tile first play ot that possesseven years Monday night, beat· out on top," Craig Erickson said.
Merrtl
Hoae,
wllo
rwlled
for
100
silli,
Everett hit Ellard for a
lng Alabama 33-25 In the Sugar ·•we deserve the national cham·
yards
and
a
1-yard
tQIIChdown
w.lth
3().yard
gain In front of Everett and
Bowl behind three touchdown plonsblp. I feel we won It
46 seconds left In regulation ·that later, Bell ran seven yards for a
passes by Craig Erl~n.
tonight."
·
forCed
the overtime.
ftrst dowll mj a thlrd·and-7 play
The triumph, coupled with No.
The Hurricanes also had a
''We're
aolnl
to go all )he. way. . frcin the 13.
··
1 Colorado's loss to No·. 4 Not~ three-yard · TD run by fullback
Dame In the Orange Bowl, left · Slephen j't'IcGulre In the first What makes It sweet Is that they . . . On the touchdown Eve~t
the Hurricanes In position to be quarter and a three-yard TD run beat us. twice and they're· a good threaded the:b311 to Jobhson at ·the·
goliJ Une and he made the reception
·vote(! No. 1 Tuesday by the by halfback Ale11' Jo~on In the football team... '
TheolherheroforPiltabuJll'h~
tn .front !lfllnebacker Byron Evans
United Press International second quarter .
Board of Coaches.
~
"It doesn't' takJ! an expel'! to , defensive back (and Pro~ with i:40 left In the 'first quarter.
returner) Rod w~:.~~
Miami, 11-1, defeatlid Notre see what happened," Alabama OVI!rtlme
knocked the ' ball fnjj\
'
.
Dame 27-10 Nov. 25. The Hum- coach Bill Curry said. "Miami Is Houston l'UIIIIIng bitck Lorenm
canes' only loss came to No. 5 a great football team. They ran
Wblte and recovered. aettlng up the
Florida Staie at mldseailon.
thelr ·offense ,(227 yards rushing, winning ~eore•
Miami won the national cham- 250 passing) and beat us. I guess
''Rigid now, we're Juit a bunch of
plonshlp In 1983 and 1987 and Miami IS No.1."
kids hi.vlng fun," Woodsonald "A
wound up No. 2 In 1986 and 1988. · . Th .Crimson Tide had an
dream~ wtuld be going to the ·
YOUR FIRST
The Hurricanes contend they · excellent chance just before Super Bowl and we've 1t111 got two
should finish ahead of Notre . ' lfalftlme. Lee Ozmlnt returned more gan\elm.ao."
· Dame, 12-1, because of their an Interception to the Mlarn119,
Bamall,f4pe7
'
victory over the Irish.
but Philip Doyle milled a 40-yard
.............
"c..
....
.
At Plllllldelpbla, PL, Jim Eve.
"People stUI have to vote," field goal attempt with three rett .tbrfto for 281 yardl and two'
.... u ,...."- ....... Dennis Erickson said. "I think . ~conds left, Ieavtng the Hurrl- touchOOwns in the ' rain Sund!Q',
7J
.
we are the best, but that's up to
canes ahead 20-17.
I. . . the 1.0?1 Angi!II!II·Rams over
'e
the people to decide."
Doyle, who missed a 51-yarder the Plllladelphla Eagles 21-7 In the
No. 7 Alabama finished at 't0-2,
In the first quarter, connected on NFC wild-card playoff game.
_;
,
·• · f•
Its lone regular-season loss to No.
a school record 22 of25durlng tlie
• •b·
The Rami. wllo lirdre a ~
10 Auburn.
season.
Mf'_7_ _ ,
.
game poats eum losing streak by
1111winning their first playl1f game
since 19111, will play the New York
Giants ned SUnday at Giants
__
... ter ........ ;..pt....
11o
Stadium.
'
Everett, who Compleled 18 11 33
pasa, bit Heney Ellard for a
'
39-yard tOIIChmwn and found Da·
7
. mone olohn&amp;OII for a four-yard
ATHENS - With four player3, points. ·
.... ,, •C•r I 7
.·
The winners dominated the
scoring In double figures the"
'
'
CIS
"• I ....
lll?e' 'AI I b IIi
Athens Bulldogs defeated vlslt- statistics hitting 21 of 4hhoiB for
·'
.
IN
_ . . .. . . . . . .
1111 Marietta 66-~2 In an SEOAL 47 J1 percent, maklng23 of 31 tree .
games played Saturday night In throws, and grabbing 23 reAthens.
bo'!nds, seven by Scott
Originally scheduled for Dec. Decamlnada.
,
15 the came had been postponed , Marfletta connected on 18 of 41
TEMPE, Arlz . .(UPI) ~There
and reset three tlnles because of Shota or 43.9 percent, converted may be only one way for
weather Conditions In the area.
13 of 20 at the llqe, and claimed 22 Nebruka to beat Floiida State In
~14 EAST MAIN
Saturday's win · enabled th~ rebounds, nine by Seurken.
the Fl ta Bow.l
the
POMIIlOY
MABIET'l'A' (U"'
- Cbrll game toessnow country.
- 1r10ve
Bulldogs to grab top spot !n
'
..
1121117
league atandtngs with a 3-0 mark Tornea 1-0-2; Malt McKenu
PIIQ'IngonnaturalRJ'asllndln
while Increasing tbE!Ir overal~ n -2-12; Josh McKitrick 1·1-f-9; weatber to which they're accUa·
record to 8-0. Marietta Is now Jeff Smith 346; Rich SUey 1-0-2;
tomed, the No . . 5 Seminoles
winless In three ieague ou lings · Jeff Hunsaker 2-2·6; Pete . puled their way ·· to a .41-17
and owns a 1·6 overall mark.
Seurken 5-3·13; Jeremy Stutler . pounding of the sixth· ranked
After taking an 11-91ead In the 0.2-2. TOTALS 11-(1)·11-U. .
Cornhuskera ,Mond!Q' at IUIIII)'
. first' period the Bulldogs saw
ATIIEJ'ti8 (..) - ~on ~ $un DeVIl Stadium.
.
their lead evaporate midway In 2-1-11-18; Matt Jollck 1-4h-2;
the second as the Tigers creeped Brock Toadvtne . 4·2-10; Jolla
past lhem Into a 22:19 lead.
Harmon0-2-2; ScottDecamluda
· Following an AHS timeout the 5'4·14; Scott Stricklin 2-2-6; Shad
host team clawed to a 29-28 Patlerson 5-0-10; Nate Schaller
haltllme lead, and then acored 1-0-2.
1)-u.et.
the first eight points of the th~ TOTALS
ScOre
by
•aarten:
, qUarter for a 37-28 spread.
Athena was led In acorlng by Marietta ...... 9 19 10 . 14 -52 ·
Jon Reed's 18 points, Including 11 Atbelis ......... 11 18 21 16 - 66
Relerve score; Marietta 59
of 17 free throws. Senior Seurken
.
·
·
topped "the MHS offe111e with 13 Aihena 41.

........
_
..
a...... .
.. _,..,..,....,.von.,•
New•tc::..•••-••erusa
On . . . . . . . ....,. Lab II

. . . · ·· "'"·· c.&amp;-.p . . . . .hall

r·

"_,.....

BJ V•IWd Pl'ftl• ..IH.u ....a
O.Oc. •

Orntnel~.

lh&amp;e,.

Pftiltlt ..........
Oldp \l H. Oll'la-1151
llfttl•k)'NI.I)q._U

M
Po..........
. Prr..r ~~~-~If. 'l'rl Co•IIIJ N l'r

lhllld...m 17, Mate• II

. . _ II, ftlfl M

rn•ftl··llrn· ~ Oh«.. II

..

............... *-WI.....
II_, hlrlawa II. 8t Part. Or.U ....

·~

,

8mlklllleU. c.,. ......
S,.IIID...... 71. Cr•I•M
S,ll'vhw 11,8JIN''vl. . .
Til w... 11. Oft l..'IIQ If
.
1'118t
II. Nft'IU'. f Dell •
'hl0evfth•1'4. TloiWIIIIliiWI'.

n..aq. .w

I••

0.1111 Ce~toPKe. ...... ,. ... Wh.lll8t-oft'!l
o.~•

Ill. . . . . . Gr.81J
Mr••.A.IW.-B
Clrft'l . . stalrlf.t 8"' u-.1- II

.l{aw&amp;ft'

Tr._VItlltaetl. Vn.tllelrto..
fto1M14.Fa&amp;a• ....
Tr...._••.._ ft. 0., a....rw1

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

...........1. ,, •

ts

· - · 81 S1

Urh-IIL mMt fMkiL)

'IW .. Va1Melllt1'1. N.t .. -.ITnllll

v,..,
v........... -. . . .v.....n

n

V•lt. . .• Lllbk NN P•lllll II
Ar.._..a, 111111_. tl

.MVPBtiW.,Oa~~sk·

.4.1 ,......

Mr.,...__,.

Ptt~~•••. ·urtt

... o .... u ....... ..
--~rtlttor.'n, Ollwt (MidL) 1.t
r...,.. ~~a.~en. ~..... til,.)U

" ' •... Kt 11.

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

NewLeat.IM•NJ'alrtiMUat. . .

~-~~

~

.

Ol.mpiii. .IJ
Nf.WII.......... 1&amp;, TftM-"-'IIn_.: .. l4

war.c:t.71.W........,.,
wu .... ll,..., ... . ,.........

w. .diD, .....~1'7
w.,.
IAe.r • Fro.._ '71 ,

''"

WoOIIIrr 11, ............ 1R

Wortlll ... o• Qr It, ("...lerhi.,.'Jt

This week•a 8ames
TMIWHII'•

....... ,.. .

. . . Cellrp ......... St. ...

a, u.w r ........., .... .

N•·--~--le•

~-~'·'
...,..............
X...-ler .
&lt;........... , . . .

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

c.,...

Alii' .... Clewlu• M
-klllll It

OUerWa.aM..•u••• ..

m
.............. c. ...

....... tlllllic...........

IDram ..... "-rlter•

Wtllt.........., .

Karu.n

•

U••&gt; ., ... WeeiiJu

.

WllollatoPe

CntMIItatW.......

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

· llal. . • ,.,... Padftc

....,.,_do
,...................
... _

.. OliN_

Lolllnll-.
aCl~·-··
.
(N\') • • • • et

Wfllllll. . . . atlltv ..... N•
Olralo U..We• at ........ 81

"'*•

(•ell) M

'nina

·"

·

un_ ....,...

.......... , . . 1

&lt;»llllnMit•DJl•

c.e..............~.,.,

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

Lalle ...... at a.rin CNJ Tllr .
............._.~Caii)Tny
'

'

......
-·--..
-........._...............,..._
.
..................... .
...,.. ......................
. .
-··(:HBI·dll--11&amp;10...

ow.v .............

~~~~·

... -Car..._ Ill CIIN!I. . .I

. . ..,..... aw.eu...

...... ............
OMit,..
c.,w .. oo-..

c.. . . . . . o.....

DJaiiiiiiV.,..aNIIii

•C!,..iltiiW-tr(Pa)
n
..... ..,.... ,
,

....................... ...,
.. ru..._

-··-'-

.

.

.... lr... a_..• .,.,.

:t -

. .

Truck and bus driver test~, begins

!"argaret

·...-u....,...,
-·,,....;....,
.....·;__
...
..,.,
..
.:,,.,.•·
PI::,.........
=
...........
............... ............··•=·--txFLP
• _,,.....-*"... _.,

- ...... ' P::ki:!-t
:-:ra:........
.

M.
·
eJ88 announcements

,

IIGilT

••au

. . .

V.I. '8uena

lOSE I THIOAi
ALL-GIST

·"wtiiM-AIDSH

..

,

.

· 430'.16 to be used for reaearcb for ' ,..
. ----"'!"'~~~~~-~~~~---1111\"
Lou Gerbig'• dlse.,.

Nlllle L. lflalea, 92, 'IWin
. - . 'lbi-MI, Pal?lt P11 5I, .~
~· p~',Del:. 31, l!IIIP, In l!!ir I M
. . .~2, 1197, .. ColHaasS LOI!Io, 111e wt~adMIIIIIet
"' .. - Jeay . .
leDe
Hlnllt'1\f I •
.
Sill - .• IIICIIIIetl II tltd
by 1111' hut H:J:ev. Ja. 'WiJ.

v

.

,

.t\NNU~

• •..,~

,.

.,_
2 5, . Off

'

OfF

$999
Domino's Pizza

a..

..

,,

•

16 .INCI .LIII PillA
e r•n, '16 OL

·JAil. J, 11-J- 7·10 ·MI. 4, 10·1

NtUie HaiOa

(30.) '675-12•• '

.

.
.

Driven Education
ClaiHI '

PIIAWn Y•••n IOIPIIAL

. ___
G

.

JOHN ~A. WIDE,·MD., .Inc.: ·
-------

PU1•7• • -

H08pitaJ DeWS.

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

•&lt;

....._J(WVI)M .........

-

.

TUISDAY

-•u...... , ... c• ..u

·w .,.. ....... ... i

m"

ACCIDENT

Florida rips
Nebraska, 41-17

Dr....... c... ~~nnw

"- -ea· d-eathS

WE'LL'
OVERLOOl(

Athens still. unbeaten
with 66-52 ·makeup win

o...e...
.. II. ,.._dll CPa)
........... o....
........ ....v. ..... ,
....... lrit ........

Yo•apl"'!..a

'

.

Po••.ov M'tlclapon. OHo

M'ld·e. r weather j ore· '
fior .Oh w rema•nd e'r .0 1 week

Miami edges Alabama
33-~5 in Sugar Bowl

.,...... n .. u .... wtJ

2, 1810'

•.
contlnui!d from pap 1 .
.
.
'(:onunlied from page 1
Dopn who was treated but not transported.
which wu widely criticized for
Tlapper' Plalaa wu ealled at 12: 28 p.m. IIIReedsvtl~forJohn ' Ita ?'llpoa&amp;e to liatyear' • Valclez,
., .Bfewer
whO wu taken to St. Joaepb'slkJipltar.
Wuka, oU aplll, contracted wl!h
Mlddleport went to Culler st. at 12:55 p.m. lor Mlldred ,
Moo River Towlnc to haul the
Mllbllme Who WU treated but DOt tralllported.
fuel.
})oanet oy at 2:06p.m. went to State st. for John McKemie to
The U.S. Envlroameatal ProVelerlas Melitorlal Hoapttal'.
·
tectlon Apacy coordinated the
At 5:38p.m., Tuppers PlaiDI went to Route 1for RIChard Fink
spill cleanup effort. The Cout
whb wu taken to Holzer Medical Center.
~Guarc! notified lbfi Weat Vlrgtnla
Racine at 6: 50 p.m. traDiportecl Aer,o May Young from
Dlvillon of Natural Reiources
BUhan Road to Veterans Memortal Hospital.
and Ohio aatborltlel.
Racine at 8: 05 p.m . wu called to Trouble Creek Road for
J\nother petroleUm barge In
Zelia Mae Copplck to Holzer Medical -Center.
the same atea aliO broke away,
tiiit It was empty, officials said.
And at 10::16 p.m., RuU.nd was ~led to CQuntyRoad 10 for
. Roulee Sayre whO was taken to Ho~r Medical Center.
All three bargl!trwere owned by
Mon River Towing, officials aald.
The leaking barge was dellver~entative
Continued from page 1
i
lng guollne to an Exxon term!" •••----.....:-:-=-;~~---- nalln Wes1Dver, W.Va., he Ald.
'
· Aulhorltlea did not know exleast one shift on Sunday, a arreated soriie·. 3,~ UMW
actly, how the three Mon River
traditional day of1 for miners. members who tried to , block
·
Vlrgtllla's largeu coal producer PitPol! trucks or ·d~pt Its
To'Wing'bargea bad broken free.
Tbe barges were among some 53
said It needed the concesllons to miJtlq operation~.
'
barges to .break 1oqae from their
Ohio River to swell from II• normal channel dept!)
Ill!:, FOG MIXTURE - This OvP pbolo was
compete In the International coal
PlltltO??, meanwhile', kept Its ' moorings Monday at ·three lites
of lz.tl u theGaiiJpolll Dam In Eureaka tol6.9on .
iakea on New Year'a D!Q' aloar ~park froa&amp; In
market. Plttaton Is the cpuntry's VIrginia, Weat VIrginia and
along the Monongabelll .
the
upper gau1e and 38.4 on lhe lower gauge as of ·
Gallpolll, alllowtnr ~IIJI tlle'backpound andice
·largest exporter of metallurgical KentUcky mlnel .. running with
10·
a.m.
lodq A city worker anchored lhe n~ :
ID lhe forelf'OIInd. A spokeamllli' at tile GalUpoJIII
coal .to ;Japim.
supervisors and ·replacement
bee
. At least! 25 ooaledbargllea aunt kt'bo.r
portable GalBpolll boa&amp; docb Ill a guard rail on
f;Ocka and Dam llald lee wMIIII ftoallar don the
0 ce a
The 1trlke balloO!II!d ilnd at one workers. Coal ·severimce tax
arne arnm
e
the
Upstream PubliC Use. Area ~unday so ·It
river
Ibis
morabt1.
We!*e•d
ral01
cauled
the
·
Maxwell Lock lind Barn In North
woaldn't float away. ·
Charleroi, the Coast Guard said.
point lait SIUI\mer 46,000 miners records suggest productJo~,to be
were off thJ! Job In 10 states In a third .to a. half of pre.atrlke - -·More than 200 people were
0
SYJllpathystrlkes. ·
levels, and financial analysts
evacuatedtromtheareabecause
Shoi'tlyafterfederalandstate suggest the strike has cost
ofthethreatoffloodlngfromlce
I
I~
~ast .
judges Issued orders lbnltlng Pittston $60 mUIIon In . lost · jams, but they were allowed 10
.· II
~
'-''
pk:ketsatstrlkeslteslnAprll, the earnings.
.
return home, offlclall uld.
..
•
UMW starfel:J massive, peaceful
The S68 mUllon In contempt
LTV Corp. reported '·tbat be1
1
sit-down protestll In front of fines, among ·the largeat ever
tween 10 and 15 open hopper
.
Plttaton coal trucks.
levied In a strike, are under
barges broke l01e near the 22nd
11
The union followed that tactic appeal, and Usery sJid Monday
St. Bridge In Plttaburgh, the
·
·
,
with long, slow-movtng convoys that federal offlctals may seek to · Coast Guard said. PoncetemporOhio's weather through most of
· Friday looks dry but cold, with . developing over southwest Can ·
In front of coal trucks, and then In have the fines dropped or reUy 1
p
.
.
highs between 25 and 35. A ada with a cold front Into the
September Invaded and briefly . duced as part of the settlement. . ~rgh ~oo:_edoldbrldeldees !~I lilts· Decembet seemed designed ~o
chance of snow. will exist Satur- Rockies.
occupied · Pittston's massive
Dole •nnounced that wl!lle the
·
v
ace · n ... nvo v- · · satls!y the skiers; Janullry s
--•
.
·
lngemptycoal barges. · · .
weat.herseemsdeslgnedlomake
day with highs statewide staying
By early Wednesday, the high
Moss No. 3 """'pre~at
1on p1ant pension
and retirement ~eflts .
No Injuries were reported and
· f . th t
'wht
below freezing.
will . be on the Middle Atlantic
Issue ·was settled In ·the Pl•tston ·
·
·
. ·
~
up or a o~ers..,. ·
· n·ear Carbo Va for four days
'
·•
·
·dl
te h
Jd•
fede' 1 there was no structural damage
Skles ·· acros$ the state were
On the current weather map, ·coast. The. Iow pressure system
During tlie strike, Vtrglnlll
spu ,s ewou .orma
ra · toanybrld.....
In Tu d
·
ltlgh pressure was fr.om Ken- will be Into the northern Plains
....
. c1ear or c1ear g es ay morn·
·state troopers, In the coalfields at commission to make recommen- · ·
tucky to Texas and moving with one front to the southern
.a co~t of $1 l)lllllon a month, . ,datlons on bbw to head off fut11 re
The Monongahela was awollen lng as a high presaure system to
and tl'le current faster . than the south took control of the
dis utes ·ovet such IM!neflts.
slOwly east. Low pressure was Rockies and another front across
P
.
normal becauae river Ice melted weather. Sunshine was to be
the northern Rockies.
recently 81 temperatures plentiful, with temperatures.rls·
------ ~
warmed, officials uld. Ice jams tng Into the 40s.
caused m!nor ftoodllll on some
Skies wiere to be mostly clear ------Weather-----~
stretches
ofthe
river,
which
was
Tuesda
litgbt over northern Ohio,
liam Hatlon,,. died 1980.
Seldon Baker,'
South Central Ohio
highs In the lower 50s.
the
National
Weather
but
a
weak
upper level system
faiHng,
Sbe was a niember of tbe l.elart- ·
Partly
cloudy
Tuesday,
night,
Ser~ce said.
. moving- northeast through the
Seldon E. Baker, Sr., 82, of Asbury l!ni~ t-felbodist Cluln:h. '
with a low In the middle 30s.
Extended Forecast
Two
fuel
compar!ments
on·.
Ohio ValJey will bring partly
Racine clled Suriday morning at · SllrviVIIII are two sons, Forest E.
Partly cloudy Wednesday, with
Thursday
through Sa&amp;urday
.
barge
MR-16
were
damaged,
·
cloudy
skies
to
southern
Ohio.
·
'
Vetera~s Memorfal Hospital, ,lfa!llO??. Kensington, Mel, lames
Coast G~ard Cmdr. Robert ~go- Temperatures will drop Into the
Pomeroy. · ·
.
~ Hanlon, Letart; one dauptel,
Rain changing to snow Thurs~~
~~~·
Born op May lO, 1907, Meigs B~ E.. W"mkler Messmger,
.
day,
With fair weather Friday,
A typical compartment on a ·
County, Alfred Community, he DaVISVWe.
W.Va.;
10 l fuel
and
a chance of snow on
barge holds 42,000 gallons pf
The warmth will continue Into
was the son of the late Jeff and ~ and 15
great·
Saturday
. Highs will be In I he 40s
petroleum product, he sold. State WednesdaY as -southwest winds
V eterana Memortal
Addle Tlltim Baker. He was ..--·~~··
two S?tp-greatThursday,
between 25 arid 35
authorities estimated the spUI at continue to pump warm air from
Saturday admissions - Eva
employed at Excelsior ·Salt grande~.
Frida)'
and
between 25 and 30 ~
·8,000 to 10,000 gallons. :
the Gulf of Mexico Into Ohio.
Norris, Racine; Juanita ChapWorks •' as superintendent , for
Services will be.conducted WedThe Coast Guard also ct.osed Highs Wednesday will reach the
man, CllttO??, W.Va.; Anna Saturday. Overnight lows w111 be
many years.
nesday, 1:30 p.m., at the F~g
In the 30s early Thursday, In the
the Monongahela to commercial . mld-40s In northern ohio the low
Greenlee,
Pomeroy. .
Mr. Baker Is survtved by three Funeral Home, Mason, Wllh t1!e
20s
Friday morning and between ·
traffic
between
Lock
No.
3
near
50s
In
southern
ohio.
&lt;;touds
will
Saturday discharges - None.
Rev. Rex YOWIR and Rev. CleUie
SODS Selda Bak
15
and
20 early Saturday.
West Elizabeth, Allegheny . Increase late In the day, as the
,
n
er, J r., an d R-• ...:..~ flic' P B·""-' ·"n •-•
~nday admissions Otis
Larry D. Baker, Pomeroy, and
-~ o 1111111. .. .... ww ,.,..
County, and Lock No. 4, official• next cold front closes In on Ohio.
McClintock; Racine; Loverlca
Waller E. Baker, Long BOttom, low m the EveagJeen Cemetery, • sold.
'
This front will bring rain to
Evans, Middleport.
and a daughter, Carol Jett, Lcf81:1.
.The MR-16 · spUI occurred . Ohio late Wednesday night and
Sunday discharges - PauHile
Racine, along with 14 grandchild·
~nds may call at tbe funcnll
nearly two years to the day after 1 then It will change· over tp snow
Rose.
'
I
~n. . ~2 · p-eat.,p,andchl!c;lre!l. ~ today, 2 .to 4 PJ!'I· ·and 7 1D ~
a lllilsslve Jan. 2,1988, oil spUiat :Thursday as temperatyres : fall -. · Monday admissions - None.
and a sister, C. Ella Hayes, !!.iii·
an Aiihland 011 refinery located. behind the front. This will be the ' Monday dlschatges ;_ Otis
Ostander.
John Sewell
upriver. of Pittsburgh on the , start to colder temperatures as
McClintock, Anna Greenlee,
Funeral services will be held
John w. sewell, 11, "Marietta,
Mon!)ngahela.
we move toward the weekend.
Gene Yost.
Wednesday at 1 p.m. at tile White formerly of Meigs County,, died
Funeral Home, Coolvtlle. The Saturd
t theM !etta Me
Rev. Bill Wlltams will officiate
ay a
ar
· mortal Hospital.
and bilrlal will be In the Coolville
Born ij ., Oct. · 23, 1918 at
Cemetery. Friends may call l!t Middleport, he was the son oft he
the funeral home 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 late Joseph and N.,tta Searls
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) Warren, Usbon, Wapakofteta, and traffic · violations, will be
p.m. Tuesday at the White Sewell. He was il retired barOhio
begins
testing
the
~nowl­
·Ashland,
and Medway.
.
presented to a driver examiner
Funeral Home.
tender In Marietta. A veteran of
edal!
and
skill
of
Its
heavy
truck
After
Jan.
31,
chauffeur's
IIat
the time of knowledge testing,
World War II, he was a member
Christy
and
bus
drivers
Tuesday
when
censes
no
longer
will
be
Issued
In
along
with a statement of preoi the American Legion Post 64,
·
the
.Commercial
Driver
License
Ohio.
The
Bureau
of
Motor
vtous
employment . and the.
Forty and Eight, Loyal Order of .
Margaret E. Christy, 70, Ches·
program
begins
operations.
Vehicles
already
has
notified
all
proper
medical
card.
the Moose, Eagles and Elks
ter, died Sunday at the HQizer
!i)hto
Is
the
third
state
to
begin
cove~ by the law
chauffeur
license
holders
with
Drivers
Clu!ls.
,
·
Medical Center following a brief
He was reared In the hOme of · tesdng under new 'federal stand· .e xpiration dates In January, operate the following vehicles: a
mness.
,
Char Jes Warner of Melp County, ards designed to Insure that Feburary and March that a \ vehicle or combination.· of vehl·
Born on Nov. 6, 1919 at
operators of vehlclei weighing change In license will be re- ' cles with a gross weight rating of
Mr. Sewell Is survtved by his
Syracuae, she was the daughter · wife, Lucille Clift Sewell, I) • more than 26,000 pounds are qulred, Den Ulan said.
more than 26,000 pounds; school
of Marlon · Wood . and Letha
qilallfled
belore
licensing,
said
He
sold
drivers
may
,
e
ither
buses; vehicles designed . to
daughter, Mrs. Bradley (Dixie}
BetZ\IIg Wood. She was a
William
Den
Ulan,
state
highway
upgrade
to
a
COL,
or
downgrade
transport
manufactured homes;
Schiller, Dover, Pa.; a son, Paul
homemaker.
safety
director.
to
an
operator's
license,
dependvehicles
designed
to transport 16
W., Marietta; two grandsons and
Mrs. ChrJst:Y Is survtved by her two granddaughters.
':Today w~ return the trucking 1111 on whether. the CDL law Qr more passengers, lncludllll
husband; Roy R. Christy, Cheslnduatey to the position of trust appHes to them.
the driver; vehicles triiJisportlng
Funeral servtces will be held at
ter; a sister and brother-In-law,
and
respect
It
Uled
to
enjoy,"
hazardous materials which re11 a.m. Wednesday at the Hadley
Jeraldine and Harold Hawk,
OenUtan
said.
"The
drivers
who
Some
drivers
currently
operquire
placarding; and smaller
Funeral Home, Marietta. .The
Tuppers P!alns; a brother and
pass the new tests will stand as ate vehicles covered by the law
combination
vehicles, called
sister-In-law, Robert and Edna Rev. Donald Shuler will officiate
shlnlng·
e
x•mples
of
the
direction
but
have
never
been
required
by
"hot
shots,"
which
operate under
and burial will be In Oak Grove
Wood, Chester; a sis ter-ln-law, Cemetery with mUiiaryser'(lces .
the lnd"stry Is headed In the 1990&amp; their employers to have a
the au thorlty of the Public
. ; Roberta ·Wood, Columbus; a
and beyond."
·
chauffer's · license. They may
Utllltles Commission of Ohio.
slsler-ln-law and brother-In-law, Friends mi!Y call at the funeral
Denthan
said
knowledge
tests
Include
vehicle
mechanics,
':The Intent of this historic
home 7 to 9 tonight and until the
Don and Mildred Matlack, Lal\e time of services on Wednesday.
will be admlnlltered by appoint' drlver,salespeople, government
program Is to Improve driver
Worth, Fla.; aunts afld uncles,
ment at the ·Olllo Highway · empioyees and utility workers.
quality 11nd elbnbtate problem
'
, Freda Miller, ·Lenora Betzlng,
Patrol's 94 driver examination
All drivers affected by the law
drivers,'·' said Col. Thomas Rice,
station~ acrCllla the state, and at must be tested and licensed by superintendent of the Ohio High- .
Don and Ruth Betzlng, and Roy Bonney -Shaffer
Betzlng, all of Pomeroy, and
•
'
other location~ within communi- April 1, 1992. Ohio Is taking 27
way. Patrol. ":Tills will make the
several nieces and nephews and
Graveside servtces for Bonney
ties to groups of 25 or more:
months to accomplish this ,behighways safer for all of us."
at -ateCes and nephews.
L. Shaffer, 11 of Dark Hollow · · SkUls testa will be admlnllted cause the number of affected
Drivers with questions about
he was preceded In death by Road, Pomeroy, who died Christth!! ·program may telephone the
at a model faclllty In Columbus drivers - more than 300,000 parenta and a brother, VIrgil. mas Day at Veterans Memorial
and at 14 other testing ·sites· will require that much time to
COL Hotline at ~235. .
Hospital, wiU be held at 2 p.m. on
around the state. Those altes are · bring Into the program, Denlhan
She was a membl!r of the Thursday at the Rock Springs 'locateil In Toledo, Monroe, Mid- said.
Cheste.r United Methodist Cemetery. The Rev. JessleMor-· dletown, Attlca, Akrlm, Warsaw,
He said experienced drivers
Church and 'a charter inember of rls willpfflctat4:.
I{ent, Zanesville, WUmlngton, with ,e ither iype of license and a
the Ladles Auxiliary of the
driving record . tree of serious
j:hester Fire Department.
traffic. violations for tWb years
. Funeral services will be held at
before applying are ,candidates
POMEROY
1: 30' p.m. Wednesday 'at the Lodge mee&amp;IDJ w••dll¥
. alld Mta. Carl Horky, ''Santanlc for "grandfathetlng'' of the skills
Ewing FuDeral Home. The Rev.
Pomeroy Lodge No. 164 wiU Yer-. ••
'
teat only.
·
Don Archer will otflclate and have Its regular monthly meelng Plali ........, • - '
~Iiglblllty for ''grandfatherburiBl will 'be In the Chester on Wednead!Q' .a t 7:30p.m. at the
'rbeLottrldaeCommunltyCeo· lng" can only be determined by
STAlliNG JAN. lth
Cemetery.
Middleport Temple: Muter matei at· Lot1ridge will have a reQIII!IIting a "CDL abstract" In
chlckell diDDer Sunday frCllll writing from theBureauofMotor
• Frlenillm!Q'callat the funeral SODI are welcome.
. W1 446..o699
home Tllelday afternoon and
noon to 2 p.lil at a cost of 15 for ._ Veblctes at a cost of $3. Tile
GAWPOUS, OliO
ev,enlng and ' untll time of tlie ·Qab to melt
,
adults and $2.50 for cblldreq, age abltract, wblch Is a two-year
servtceaonWednellday.IDUeuof . The~lddleport Uterary Club J2 and uncler. The menu will aummaryofthedrlver'acrashea
noWe.&lt;s. friends may contribute wtllmeetat7:30p.m. Wednei&amp;day . tnelude ""ked chlcllea, mulled
~ ~ the Wea~rn Ohio Chapter,
at the home of Mra. Carl Horky.
poiatcjel,,tavy; homemade 7100Amyotrophlc ~terat Scleroals ,Mrs. Richard Slack will revtew dlei, Jreell beant, ial~ de~aert,
·· AUocatlon, BOx 833, Hilliard, · ''Treuurer of Ast,Pl U!!etature" · roll II?CI drll?lr.t.
·
·

HOUS'ION(UPI)-Iftheycoukl
get together, Plttsbulll'h's Chuck
Noll and ClncUmatl's Sam WYche
would 'probably )oVe t&lt;) .share a
laugh about their ''budey" Jeny
Glanville ot Houston.
Noll ;. and Wyche both have
ex1111!saed their dislike for their ·
AFC Central Division rival, and
\lOth played a major role In ending
Houston's seuon on a hunilllatlng
note. ·
·
Three weeks ago,. the Bengals
!IIIUI.Ihed Houston 61-7 and. aftetwards, Wyche said he Intentionally
ran up the score because 11 ·
Glanville.
_

Coli¥ scores

~

·•

Steelers,. Rams win wild-card· gmnes

ANDERSON, ,GAME'S HERO - PI&amp;CIIburch pllaeeldcker ·Gary
Anderson - • lhe.ballllallng tllrouih lhe uprtghta for blllhlrd
. field goal In Sund!Q''&amp; AFC ·wild c~ rune araJ•I lhe host
Boualon Ollera. A!lderaon'• fourlh aadflnal fteld roal, wblch came
bt overlbne, gave the SteeJera a 5-Z3 vtclory and the right Ill face
the Denver Broncos In the AFC playoffl Sand!Q'. (UPI)

Jay,

r---Local news briefs.~.-....._ ·Runaway... ·

•

nine plllya after a abort. Oblo
Statepunt.SlackhltTayloragaln
with a 4-yarll TD pass. : .
Auburn "tbtllhed 10-2 and lm·
Proved to 5-3 · 1n bowls under
coach Pat Dye. Oblo State
flnlalted 8-f ~ lost Its first bow•
appearance !lilder , aecond-year .
coach John Cooper. .
,

I

,,

.

.

,.

""' •.•

ttt-1114

,_.,,

.........

'·

.•.

End

,.

�'

· _ Pon•oY..:..M~aport,

~

I

'

'

•!

'

'

.. "DIGNITY AND
. ALWAYS"
·. IeitH. Ewillf~~*tor
, PH•.992.;2121

.r

I

Ohio

"
•

EEI('_S·
·lA ES .
IOYS ·

''TODAY.... ·. : '.'~

''

...

.,

SOUTHERN.

~~~der-J'Oif t

BOYS .

taiaiM • APPU,ANciS

Jan. S--Oak Hill--Away
Jan. 6-Gallipolis--Hame

1Y'S • fliRCOYIIING
tft-3671

Jan. 2-Nelson.-York--Away

.

~

'

Jan. 4--0ak

'

,.

'..' Yollr
'. ·' It'!....Financial
;a.~"''
..,
. ' ... " """'~~··
-l' .
..I;'

~

'

~~
&gt;~

;.~·).f
.. &lt;

._,

'

•

,.

.' ., NOJ1H SiCOND
...........0110.
.,' H2-6661 ·. ·
}

f,

'

i

ltSTAIIMINT .
'LOANS ·
'

992-3077

'

~·

The Forest Run United Methodlst Women m-et at the holiday
dec~~rated home of Faye
Wiggins.
Mary Nease presided at the
buslnessmee!lngln wblcho!flcers reports were given. Thank
you cards were read tromLeah
Nease, Helen Nease, and David
Nease.
·
· .
. · New pl'i$'am dati!' hooks' were
dlstrlbuied 'to· D)embera and .a
donation was sen no Good Works
. In Athens. Forty sick and shut In
calls were reported.
·
Carolyn Salser was the .program leader and her toplc was
••He Touc bed M
. e. " The program
was about Jesus' birth· and his
death on the cross.s and also
·

--~~------------~~-BOYS SCHEDULE--~-----~~~-----------

{-·

.VAlLEJ·.·

'

EASTERN LOCAL HIGH SCHOOL.
1989-90 BOYS BASKETBALL

'Nov. 21-Miller: ...............:.... .. ..... :Away
Nov. 24-Federal Hocking .. :......... Home
Nov. 28- North Gallia ............. .... Home
. Dec. 1-Hannan Trace ................~. Away
Dec. 5- Kyger Creek ....: .. ............. Home.
Dec.-&amp;-Southwestern ..... , ....... ;.. ,. A,way
Dec . 15~ Sopthern .................... :.. Away
Dec. 16-Symmes Valley .... :......... Home
Dec. 22-0ak Hill .. :, ., ...... ............. Away
Dec.29-30-Holiday Toum .. al Pt. Pleasant
Jan. 2- Federal Hocking ............... Away
Jan.· 5- Hannan T~ce .................. Home
Jan. 12-North Gallia ................... Away ·
· Jan. 19-Southwestern :............... Home
Jan.26-Kyger Creek.'. ................ .. : Away
Jan . 27-Miller .... ,.:.................... Home
Feb. 3-Southern ............... ...... ;.. Home
Feb. 9-Symmes Valley ................. Away
Feb. 1600ak Hill ..........................Home

''

SOUTHERN H,IGI'! !iCI:IQOL

1989-90 BOYS BASKETBALL

Nov. 25-Southwestern .......... ;.... :. Home

Nov .. zB .....Kyger Creek ................... Awly
Dec. 1-0ak Hill ;............. ........... Home
Dec. 5-North Gallia .................... Away
Dec. 8-Hannan Trace .... .. .:.......... Away
~- Qec. 15-Eastern ................. ....... Home
Dec .. 1~-Eastem Pjke ....... :;;:;r:-.... at ~!U.
Dec. 22-Symmes Valley.............. Home
Dec. 23-Southeastern ............... .. Away
Dec. 29-Atheos , ........................ Home
Jan. 5-0ak Hill ........................... Away
Jan. 6-Gallipolis ......... ,....... :.... Home
Jan. 12-Kyger Creek .................. Home
Jan. 19- Hannan Trace ................ Home
Jan. 26-North Gallia ...... :........... Home
Jan. 27-Ravenswood .................. Home
Feb. 2-Eastern ........................... Away
Feb. 3-Federat Hocking ............... Away
. Feb. 9- Southwestern ........ ...:....... Away
Feb. 16 ~Symmes. Valley .. :...........
. . Away.

•

LUMBER

Nov. 20-Southem ........:.................... Away
Nov. 30-liller ................... :............ Home
Dec. 2-Eastern .................................. Away
Dec. 7-Trimble .................., ............. Home
Dec. 11-Nelsonville-York .................. Away
Dec. 14-V.:ellsto~ ........... ,................ Home
Dec. 18-Vtnton Co.. ,..... :................... Away
Dec . .fl-Qelpree ..................... ;........ Home ·
Jan. 4-Aiexinder .............................. Away
Jan. 8- Federal Hocking ..................... Away
Jan. 11- Miller .................................. Away
Jan. 15-Eastern ............................... Home
Jan. 18-Trimble ................................ Away
Ja. 22- Nelsonville-York ................... Home
Jan. 5-Wellston ...... :........................ Home
. Jan. 29-Vinton Co.........................:. Home
Feb. 1-Belpre ................................... Away ·
Feb. 5-Aiexander ....................... ...... Home
Feb. 8-Federal Hocking....... ~ ........... Home
Feb. 10-Soulhem ............................ Home

555 PARI( ST.
• ·. • DDLEPORT
992-6611

..

'

·.

·A catered dinner and Christ·
mas . party · was held when
members of the Racine United
Methodist Women met recently
at the church.
Twenty:slx members and gu·
es IS sat around a Christmas tree
tor the prograiJl which was led by
Sharon Hubbard.
' The scripture was read by Lois
Bell, and Margaret West had a
reading.
Several Christmas carols were
sung ·by the group.
· Sue Grace and Ruth Smith led
the group In prayer, and Etta
'

EASTERN LOCAL HIGH SCHOOL
· 1989-90 GIRLS BASKETBALL

Nov. 27- North Gallia ...................... Away
Nov. 30- Hannan Trace .... ................. Home
Dec~ 2- Meigs ........, .................. ,...... Home .
Dec. 4-K~ger Creek ............ ............... Away .
Dec. 6~Tnmble ................................. Away "
Dec. 7-Southwestern ., ..................... Home
Dec.:11-Souihern ............................ Home
Dec. 14-Symllles Valley .................... AWBJ
Dec.. 16-Feder~l Hocking ................... Away
Dec. 21 - 0ak Htll ............................. Home
.Jan. 4-Ha~nan Trace ......................... Away •
Jan. 10-Tnmble ................................ Home
Jan. ll-North Gallia ........................ Home
Jan. 15-Meies .•................................. Away
Jan. 18-Southweslern, ..., ....:.............. Any
Jan. 20-.-Federal Hocktnc .................. Home
Jan. 25-Kypr Creek ........................ Holle
Feb. 1-Soulh~rn :.............................. Away
feb. 5- 0ak Htll ................... :............ Away
Feb. 8-.-Symmes Valley ..,.................. Home
A

.

SOUTHERI')I 'HIGH SCHOOL
1989-90 GIRLS BASKETBALL

Nov. 20-Meigs .................. :......... ,... Home
Nov. 27-Kypr Creek.. ...................... Home
Nov. 30-0ak Hill .............................. Away
Dec. 4-North Gallii..,.............,......... Home
Dec. 7-Hannan Trace ................... ::.. Home
Dec. 11-Eastern .............. :.............:.. Away
Deo. 14-Southwestern ................ ,..:.. Away
Dec. 18-Walerford ........................... Home
· Dec. 21- SJIIImes Valley .................... Away
Jan. 2-Nelsonville·York ....... ............. Away
Jan. 4-0ak Hill... ............................ . Home
Jan. 11- llypr Creek ......................... Away
Jin. 18-Hannan Trece ....................... Away
Jan. 20-Nelsonville York ......... ......... Home
Ja. 25-North Glllia .......:.:.... ~ ............ Away
Ja~. 29-Witerfoid ....................: ....... Awa, .
Feb. 1-Eastem ..............,................. Home
Feb. 5-Symmes Valle' ..................... Home
Feb. 8-Soulhwestern ....................... Home
. Feb. 10-Mei~s ................................... Away
'

.

'

:~

'

st··-J.11
uu:,

--·

To The Clinic Staff

'

f.

Ia-

Tbe -n1. .. 111 "lo lmpm,"
zece!Wd the ~t . .l•lloM
.... blldld the .... at., .11'111.
Allldllor'anoteattacllldtotlle
lilt, wblt!b II eomplled bJ the
.publle relaUou clepar1111eDt at
Lake Superior S1atll Unlverllty,
added: "Perbapt tbt Impact ot a

'-..ot

~· aall ,. llolln a

daY." ·

Now you kOOw

The Purplllleart, Jllllltld to
U.S. IC'M•a W\llldlllllactlt*.
wu the ant mllllar)' mldll
liVft to eallltld ..._ Tbe mad8l
wu Cl'Mted In 1782 by O.Orae
Wulllqtaa.

••

l

\

I

'

, •• .,., . . . . . . . . . . auullllttiiiii•I'I .. •Taul ' '
ftt£ at t• _. Sulw•11J ...oz I 1 'lllilal :'lint na ~If ftr
lziifa 11111 ., • 1pt ..la.Lllnll .t Vtlaza II ftt·I6U.

•
,.....,.___ ..
•

~-

.

Maliolin W. Ltnt1, ll.D., Board Certified Gtneral, Thoracic,
. and Othoptdlc Surgeon wllloln the Clink Staff 011 .._....,
3, 1990, ~Ying previously •••• In private practice at 111crtd CWC. Dr. 141111 tamed his 1111dlcal Mg~ from tht
Ulllvenlty of Pennsylvania ·In 19'51. His lllt~shlp was at
the Unlwenlty of Pennsylvania H..Pital. He has had stparatt
surgical and orthopedic rtlidtndes ·at the University of Cln·
dn.-.all hospital, completing Ortheptlla In 1971. Dr. ~tz ·
Is a fellow of the AIMrlcan Col•• tf Surgttns and a 1111&amp; •
ber of tht American C. . .e of Cllest Phy•ldilns. It has •·
loytd a .ver; ·succenful .practlce • ~Galla, ~1011, . _
lOIIi. aM lli1s Co•nly areas.
Patients who have an appolntmtnt with Dr. Lt11t~ at lis•·
crtlf ........ afl• January 1, 1990 lhould k..... thtlr ap. polllrnltnt date _. tlllle at hi• •• office In the Orthopedic •
Dtpa tuint of Holur CWc. For _,, lllf• a alion or to
scfc.dalt • 1pellllaant, cal tht llehtr Clnlc OriiNpt•c
Dtpilaant.at-4t6·~1~·
·
Dr. lut1's path sis et Yetenn lailarl.. laaplt.. In

Mens' •·~"!!¥11ar·
auaaeror~.ll'lal-,or.,....
........
aot wone ad4l :.. 118,1111U.o 1- · u ...uu1 llt..JI ' n • Redtltld&amp;aey alertl were
tbalt ~eyu. ud , _ ru
·-n.- wt.o - tt ....,._. ...... tar •-eta. ~·"
Chrllttne.
· ·
· doa't . . _ Ute n!'nu• 11!1But lt'a only 500 to 1 that the !wftDIIffectaadatllot,"bellid.

.

"

Orthopedic
General Surgeon

recognize UFO.,' though, It will good slap In the head would
-be going out on a limb, lind curtail such ·Irritating mlsuae or
The Brltauclthelr lieU
possibly risking Its "apeclal lanpaae."
. LONDON·(UPl) -The British relationship" with the United
'l1le MlchiJu school hu been
hilve always had a mania for . States.
publllblli&amp; ltl word banishment
eccenaric: lllnbllq.. And the
For Hill IIAI given odds of list eaeh New Year's DaY Iince
olllet ot tbt 19801 brought IIOIDe of 10,000 to lliralnlt President Bullh 1976. SUgre~tlou • for banned
'the crazier ramblers out of the aiUIIIUDCiug that he's met an words and phruel come ftom
woodwwk.
.
allen from another planet tills people.acrou tbe country.
The bookmaking fli'IJI .or WI!- year. But Alan Cokayne of · . ·Two other nouns Uled u verbs,
!Jam :Hill say this New Year Derbyshire Is so eonfldent of his fax and mesllinaer. allo received
they've given out odds on some,of prediction that he's bet $16.
a good number or n~lnatlons.
• the ·r1101t bizarre · bets ever
Dan Quayle doesn!t qualify,
"I ~tate to hesr some one ask,
'Fu me a conv,
.placed•
'
Hill said.
r• will va
~. ?'" aald
The Duc:b- of York- better
--Ronald Watcke of Detroit, who
knoWn u "Ferp"- Ia to give' Impad, u verb, Jeadl bmll~ Install thewordlsnotaverbbuta
birth to twllllud call them Kylle word lilt ·
diminutive of tllf IIOQII facallnlle.
and Jason. after Allltrallan pop
SA1JLT STE . MARIE, Mich.
Thole complllq the lilt aug·
- stars Kylle Ml.nope and Juon (UPJ) .:.. It upsets Dave gested that sucb
·"IOIIndl
bonoYall. Tbat'l If a woman Summen when he hears the llkewiiAtJa~kWe~ ualwaya
called Chrlltlne II to be believed. Wont llllpact Ull!d aa a verb,ID he seeltlng on· the til
allow
At odds o!lO,OOO to oae, abe bet deetdej to take action.
Dragllet, u In 'JUtt the '!X•
$1.60011 the ~~Vent. At thQaeodds, _, ·~ . a aledge hammer ma'am."'
•
she ean afford to be wroag, but CSO. to• brick wall, ora car to a
AI tor 1111111 __,.. a:a a
ihe wu too ally to 'JIW her .utility ·" !e.," laid the HollY, verb, CUob'tt a,aaz laid:
. s11rname, ·
Mlcll.,lllaJIID ldlletter nomlnat- ''$ornr, but you ii!UIIIIt 'mes.A •11-year-old fllmmall•r . In&amp; the word far '"l'be .11190 NeW liapr' · aaylblq, aan'llere.
•nairte!d .liD YOUIII ilaead JdiD. Ylllll''l Dl•bpwp Llat oC Wordl - ~IIIIIOIIIL "-!lOt IIIII
aelt to ...
wiD lht WtndMtlo• ..._
~ a.........
llmPie
Be Baallbld ..._
....... the
__ ... verb, 'Nnd' or

, Brltllb rowr-t w111 recor· nile the l!llltence oC unldllltlfled
tJ,Iq ob~ tllll )'Ill'• BlmoD
. Carnell otLotldoa blllald$110 '
with Hllii . . IultlbiJ blek aail
waltlq for a ol- eDCOIIIIIaf of
tbe n•..,.lal kind. .
Utile Brltllll JOVerllllleDt doel

held· 'at

Is ·Pleased.
To Welcome
.
MALCOLM W. LENTZ. M.D.

'
. By UDIIet!
Prea lnteriiUional

'

. Gaskey said he keeps the car
running d!~rlng the 10-20 mln11te
romp In the water.
. ''Then 1 bl'lng a second set or
clothes and change In the car ·
· before we· get to the tavern," be
said.
'
.
·
:

.HOLZER CLINIC.

·Quirks in the news_·______.;.___

~

.

te~~'!~~~~~~~;~rn~

.. ...., t.. .....

Cbuck IIJ!d Daisy Jlljikeslee
·returned recently from a trip to.
Australia an.d ~ew,atand
taken In observance o
52nd
wedding anniversary. · ,

=·

-~

t!~

•
n-o s,.,p- oo4
were no ba~rlers to 150 bathing·
It'ssoeaaytolll'lsjudgt!thespeed
C..• - !lfodl...
· sult-cladNewYear's celebrants,
o! a train In the dlt tance. I have ~t;;;r;;r:;d;;r,;ir.~~~;;t who decided to start ort 1990 with
stopped at cri111lnp and nlted
•·
a dlp In ICy Lake Michigan.
· whll.e other cars paaled me and ·... ·
iOt
another
With about 1,000 people looking
went QVer the tracks. Some .or . bill for $1,200 - the coat of doing on, the Mllwaukee Polar Bear
thole cars misled being hli by the Itemization. I had to PaY lt.
Club took Its annual New Year's
· secoada.
Since t)l&amp;t Incident, I frame8 · Day dip In the lake, where the _
Rarely can a traln atop In time and bung above my pbol\e the water temperature was about 38 ·
to prevent ·an acclclenL What' s quote !r om Shakespeare's degrees, the air temperature 29
more, a small car that gets hlt " Henry VI" - "Tbe first thing degrees and winds at 14 mph.
can derall a train and Injure or wedo,let' sklllalltheJawyers."l
"I don't think the weather Is
kill the crew.
look at that quote every time I going to change.anyone's.mlnd,"
I know tht8 letter Ia too late to talk to a lawyer. - E.B., Fori saldGarth Gaskey, the president
help the people who died yeeter- Liladenble.
of the Club who was making his •
day, butlbopeyou will prlntlt!or
Dear E.R.: llpoke with Philip 37th stralrht New Year's Day dip
the aake or thoae who are still · H. Corboy, one or the nat.lon's lilto Lake Michigan.
tailing such foolish chances. most · dlsill\gulshed personal·
.Wlten they wiJ1, they win only a Injury attorneys, and this Is ~hat
He remembered taking . the
rew mtnutes. When they Joae, he said:
·
they loae their uves. - Ra1Jroa4Unless an attorney Is on a plunge.ln 1969 when the wi.nd chill
er• 1 Wile
retald'er, the client should re- . reading was 75 below zero on
-, Dear Wile: In all tbeyearsl've quest an Itemized blll. In the New Year's Day.
"I bave plct~~res of that and It's
years· I've been wrttln&amp; this absence of.such an .arreemeat,
like a mist," he said , "It looked
column, yours Is the flnt letter the client has the right to request like something from outer space
I've ever received on this sub- an ltamlzatlon, Indicating bow
with the steam coming out or the
ject, Thank YOII for taklnl the many hours were spent on the water."
time to write lt. I'm ·sure you case. To aend a blll for the
saved some lives today.
Itemization Is outrageous. The
DearAnnLaDden: IIIAve read client sbould)lave refused to pay
He has a simple answer lor
witb Interest the letters In your lt.
people. who say he' Is crazy to
·column from ·readers ,who have . An alcohol priJblemP H.,.. can enter the frlgld water.
complain~ about some" of the
you help yourtelf
orH•omeone
·
R you · "I just say to them, when you
·
outrageoua charges made by love? ·"Aicoho1ilm: owco •col' go to the dentist It hurts lor a
hospitals. I would like you to ni:lelc6 HowaoDeiJIWiah/a,How .co half.bour," he said. "Wh_en you
· know that lawyers are just as Conquer lc" will sive you. che go Into the lake It hu rtsfor15 to20
bad.
a"""'""· Send a Jftj..,ddre..ed, minutes because your number
A few years ·ai&lt;l I asked a long. bu•inu ..•ill• enHiope and a than heck and when you go back
lawyerroranltemlzatlonofwhat checlc or money order forl3.65co : home Its gone. . ,
I considered an excessively high Alcohol, c/ o Ann Landert, P.O: Bos
"So the hurt' s-gone. So If you
blll. Wlten I received hls ltemlza· 11562, Chi...,o, Ill. 60611-0562.
can go to the dentist you can go :
Into the lake. "
-

Racine UMW meets ·

----~------~---GIRLS SCHEDULE;----------~~-MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL
1989-90 GIRLS BASKETBALL

Ann

The IDakesl~ returned home. stopped at Rockport, Ind. tor
for two days before t11klnr offtor, visits with their daughter and
Cl\ristmas, with their daughter, son:lll·law, Jennifer and )ames
Patricia and her husband, Mel Butcher and children, Jeff, Julle,
different people he had touched.
Clrele, as well as their grand· Jessica, and Joanna.,
Mary Nease read serlpture
children, Marianne and Mark, In
Accompanying the Blakeslees
. '
· from Luke and~ther readers _ makesleenotedthat the co pie .Wichita, Kan.
to Rockport tor the Christmas
read parts abou oiher people, '
·
. u
Enroute ' both ways they holiday was Mrs. Ira Butcher.
Carrie Grueser ' 'ShePhC~rd! " found Australia to be a. huge
·
.
.
SPRING VAll Fi CINEMA
146 ·1'o/.1
Hilda Yeauger, " a meditation; " ' country as large as the United }[.'.(.fSJ_;O'nary
ChUN''Ch
Edith Sisson, "Healing a States, and In two weeks they . .t lU. "
Woman;"FayWlgglns, "APros· onlytollchedatlnyportl~mofthe
The December Missionary "Christmas Paat and Present"
tltute·" Evelyn HoUon, "Zac- country. He also stated that
J
h
cha~s; .. Kathleen Scott, "Thief
Australia, In many places, Is Study or the First Church of the by Mellsaa us 11s, as we11 as ow
on a Cross; .. and Mary K. Roush, more British than England, and Nazarene was held recently.
ChJ"Istmas Is different fpr eve. '' Ma..Y.Magdalene...
. . ' In New Zealand,the couple.tound
Tile rroup· also held a Christ·. eybed)! alld·...clltterent· .. P.ICIPie
The rroup sang "Silent Night" places , that were even more · mas study with the sont. "Hark!
celebrate II ,
· .
and each member read 'a short. English.
The Herald Angels SIJ1i," "Away
A poem, "They CrY Alone" was
prayer.
,
..
..
In a Manger," and "Little Town read by Marilyn• Cooper.
·
· of Bethlehem."
'
There were 1d present and In
Refreshments · were senled
One Interesting experience
The Christmas istorv was read clOIIIng a play was performed by
from a decorated table with they encountered was punting on
'
Marilyn c
d Ch lltl
basket favors. A gift eXChllllge the Avon River. With the normal !rom the book o! Luke by Sue
ooper an
r
G
Engle.
.
,
Cooper
ca!~· "A ThougbUUl
closed the meeting. ues!S' at· river s~ about &lt;light Inches,
"Christmas In France" was Chrlstmaa . ..
•
tending were Sandi and Sarah the boatman had dlrtuculty tum· read by Bill Justis, "Keeping
Tbe next meeting will be held
Hawley.
-lng the boat In the river and Watch" ..,, Nancy E. : ullnt·, Wedneeday.
·
moving along as heshoved onhls ;:;:~:u~~;;;._;;;_;"'~~-------------~-~-~--~:J
pole.
..
.
.
Another experience ilasaed
Mae 1:1111 welcomed everyone and along by Blakeslee occurred In
thanked them for their support -, the high Southern Alps til New
durl,ng her term as p.resldent. She Zealand and the table laftda
was presented a gift by Allee abOve Cairns, He noted that In
Wolfe, and a gift ~xchange was both countries, agriculture and
enjoyed. .
' ·
mining are very Important. He
Prayer partners for . the past stated that in New Zealand, there
,,
· year were revealed and new ones are over 16 sheep for every
selected lor the new year.
person Uvlngln the country.
Allee Wolle was In charge or
the games with door prize tor the
The makes lees noted that they
evening going to Lee Lee.
had the prlviledre of dining In the
And
.Tbe UMW purchased poinset- home of one·or the New Zealand
tia plants and members dell· · famUles. This too, ·they .noted,
vered them to .sick and shut In has become a tourist
people In the C0111Jl1Unlty.
development.

·Forest Run UMW meets

-&lt;,,

Nov. 24.-Athel$ ..................:...... Home
Dec. 1-Miller ............................. Away
Dec. B- ·Trimble ....... ,..: ................ Away
Dec. 12-Nelsonville-York ........... Horne .
Dec. 15-\Vellston ....................;.. Away
Dec .. 19~.iAlon,Co......... ,........ ,.. ~o111e .
Dec. 22-Belpre ............. ;............. Away
Dec. 29-Logan ................. .......... Home
Jan. 5'-Aiexander ..... ,.. ........ :... .. Home
. Jan. 9-Federal Hocking .............. Home
Jan. 12~Miller ............... ............ Home
Jan. 16-Warren .......................... Away
JJn. 19-Trimble .... :.................... Home ·
Jan. 23-Nelsonville-York ............: Away ·~
Jan. 26-Wellston ....................... Jlome
Jan: 30-Vinton Co. ..................... Away
Feb. 2-Belpre ........... ;................ Home
Feb. 3-Athens , ..,....... ..................Away
Feb. 6-Aiaxal)der ....·..................... Away
Feb. 9-Federal Hocking .... ,........:. Away

\

.

Hiii~Home ·

MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL
19B9-90 BOYS BASKETBALL

Po/4-r Bears
take a dip

Blakeslees visit New Zealand, Australia

·GIRLS

'

at 7:31 p.m. All
members are urged to attend.

TUelday

•
.
·n
.
h
ppenl•ngs
.
H
,e a
.

· fOIALL YOUI
. Jan. 4--Hannait .Trace--Away
DIMG NEbS SEE US· . !an.l 0--Trimble..:..Ho!IMI

~

poi1 M&amp;lonlc Loclae363FUM on

-nre

Jan. 2--F..t. Hodcing-Away
Jan. 5--Ha!INIII Trace-Home

....

·Rac.iag·.. a train is
a foolish gamble

V.".

BOYS

GIRlS

· Tu11dly, .lanurf 2. 1990
..
· ~·7 ·

'

POMEROY - 'l'he Ladles
Dear AIID l.udera: We at
Auxiliary Of the F.O.E. will meet . Wisconsin Central Ltd. are
TUesday· Pizza will "lie served. lteeply concerned abOut the
LETAAT TOWNSHIP - The
If# • WEDNESDAY
number of near miiMs at ·rail· ·.
'Letart T~hlp rtuatees will
1'9Ad croulnp. I'm referrlnl to
hold an organizatiOnal meettnr
POMEROY - Fluger ·stick tlloae people who trY to beat the
on TUesday at 6 p.m. at the office cholesterol · ~~~;reenlnp will be · train.
building. ·
adminiStered on Wednesday
You wrote a column a whlle
'from 12:30-3 p.m., Thursday beck 011 tht8 subject. n was
-RACINE - The Southern Lo- from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m; and Friday excellent. Would you consider
clll School Board organizational from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Call runlllng ..that column again for
meettngwllll;le beld TUesday at 7 · m-fi67,6 between the hours or thole who may not have aeen It
p.m. ·at the bleb school. This will · 9-11 a.m. and 1-3 p.m. Mot\day the llrit time? -I.L. Bndl._w,
also be the budlll!l meeting.
,. thr&lt;i~~&amp;h Friday, to schedule an
ud Gnenl llluarer,
appointment. ·
•
W..Oula Ceatral Ltd.
·
REEDSviLLE
Olive
•·.
· Dear Mr. Bradahaw: I'm
ToWDIIhlp Trustees will have im
TIIUR8DAY
pie~ tiiAt. you thourht. so
• organizational meeting dn 'l'UesPOMJ;:ROY - The. Pomeroy ·· hlgbly of that · col~UT~n. I arree
day at 6 p.m: lit the Reedsville groli!l of AA and · AIAnon wm . that It's worth a rerun. Thanks
Fire Station.
meet Thu~ay, 7 p.m. at the for asking. Here It Is.
.
Dear ADa Lailde!'ll I am
Sacred Heart CBtbollc Church.
MIDDLEPORT.- Tbere wlll, For lll'ore lntonnatlon call married to a rafiroad engineer.
.be regular meeting oftHe Middle- ,1-800-'133--5051.
My husband loves hla job,' except
wralhelrnoadher~s h~~owa lt~sar.0 ft~sat
"''
~~
arJ:~flVl
mabappentter ofaltllmo!et,bembecsooaunaeer 1rt
8 10
0
T -,
Mr. 'and Mrs. arle Wood, party at thehomeofMr.andMrs . latMer. h b d' 1m · •
lslted Mr and Raymond Cotterill.
Y us an s t e came yes·
Robin d Erl
Mrs. ~II Klc;~~: and Mr.' .and
Mr. .and Mrs. Robert Alkire terday. He Ia sick at heart, but
Mrs. Weber Wood on Wednesday spent ChriStmas with Ray AI' there was no way he could have
,.. ~
avoided that accident.herwod pe&lt;l'
..evening. ·
· klre, .Col
· umbus.
1
·- Christmas dinner guests of Mr.
Mr. an.d Mrs. Howard Day pie died because t . rver
and Mrs. Bill Chapman were Gllkey,Mi'.andMrs.JoeyGl!key lgnorecfthe fiashlng signals and
Leaha Williams and Mr. and and' daughter, Columbus, called thewblstles: Hetookthegamble
Mrs. Lance Chapman and SOl\, onMr..andMrs.RobertAlklreon and lost.
Dakota.
'
· Satlll'day.
I hope every person who reads
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Jewell;
Nonna Lee was the dinner thiswlllaskhlmseltlfhehasever
and Cheryl Lynn, were ChriSt· guest or Frances Young on done the aame foolllh thin&amp;. Hhe
mas dinner guests of Mrs. Chrlstnias day.
bas, I hope It will be the last time.
Pauline Atkins.
Mrs. NeiUe Lowe Is In O'Bie'lle&amp;S Hospital where she bad two
H'arrlsonvllle Grange
knee replacements. She is report·
members held their Christmas edly Improving. , - 11

Jan. 4-Aitxandt'r--Away
·Jan. 8--Fed. Hocking-Away

THE
CENTRAL ;·
TRUST . ·
COMPANY.

•

TVBBD.tY'
CHESTER- Tbere Will be an
• . organblat!Onal meetlug tor the
Cheeter Township Trustees on
TUeedJI)', at 7: 30 p.m. at the
. townhall.
.

·EASTERN

·fr···

.

..

.'

,~: ·,-~'t:

.

Community .C4/endar . ·

GIRLS

.

.The Daily ·. Sentinel'

.

'

-~~~-:~~~·.~-~.
~ ~--~~:~·~:~-~~--~~~~--~~~~~.;~~----~~--~~~~~--.-----.~. ~j~·~~--,,r-~~~------~~~~----------~~~--~------~

(MAlE·..,)

.

.

:~

101 .MULIEIIY AYE.
Jan. 5--A~xa~--Ho~
POMEIOY, OH.
Jan: 6-Trimb~Away
..__ __ _ _ _.....,. Jan.9-Fed. Hocking-Home

•

··r

.

'

'

...., .ttY
•

'

THIS

'

.fUNERAL·.

-

•

•

_ - -- ________

•••

-

'
---......... -~ -· --· -- -·--·--'--·"""";..__

•

�'

..

'

-----------------------. ...

&gt;..1

_____

~--

'

Paga 8-The Deily Sa11tinal

•

Pomeeov Midd'lpeft. Ohio

Tumt.y,

~

2. 1980

Tundav. ~ 2.1110 ·

America welcomes the 1990s. New· disor~r may.' point ·
.
.to" bet'ter AIDS ·outcome.
.

•
By JEFF REYNOLDS
th~ could have had with deliver· · until Saturday · the traditional
· U•lled Preu IDterllll&amp;loll&amp;l
les a few sewnds earlier: $2,000 Mummers parajle In Phlladel·
Americans . welcomed a new tax exel!li&gt;tlons for 1989..
phla because of Predicted high
decade by making resolutions,
Jellyfish, known locally as winds, Houston ·whOOped It up
watching parades and fOQiball PortiiiUese inen-ot·war, cele- with a free downiOWD party tor
games, greetiDg an end to strife brated by Invading South Flori· 50,000 people and the last show
In Eastern coal fields and, for a da's Atlantic beacheS and sting· ·ever was held at the Venetian
few, experiencing the thrtll of . lnr more than 1,200 Fort Room at the Fairmont Hotel In
parenthood.
· .
Lauderdale area bathers . San Francisco,
Hundreds of thousands aed Farlller nortll, 300 contestants , The room clOied becaulled for
tb~ streets of Pasad,ena, cailt.,
braved tbe Jellyfish armada to lack of affordable entertainers .
Monday to watch thl!" 10Jst compete In tbe Lake Worth Tony Bennett was the Iaiit name
Tournament of Roses Parade. Ocean Mile Swim, but 50 dr'opped act, bu I l!e lett before New Year's
The parade was disrupted briefly out because ot jellyfish stings Eve for a - more rewarding
by more . than a dozen AlPS . and two were treated for shock. booking In Las Vegas. . . · ·
activists 'Who chained them·
In Milwaukee, about 150
selves together and carried a members of Po!8r Bear Club
banner saying; "Emergency. braved tr-lgtd 't emjleratures and
Stop the parade. 70,0()0 dead of a steady wind . to take their ·
AIDS."
an.nual New Year's swim In Icy
The crowd booed the short· Lake Michigan. The water
By Unlled Preu ble~Jo.al
lived, sit-down protest before temperature was about 38 ·deQavld Dlnklnl; New. York
sheriff's . deputies and parade grees, the air temperature 29
City's
first black mayor, deliverofficials restored order. Cheers degrees and the winds 14 mph.
Ing his Inaugural address to a
rang out as the mounted Marine
"When you go to the dentist, It crowd of tho!I$8Dds outside City
Corps Color Guard moved up one hurts tor a half-hour," said Garth
Hall:
position to help . .
Gaskey, president of the club,
"I stand before you· tOday. as
- The 1990 celebration, dedi· who was making his 37th straight
the
elected leader of tbe greatest
cated to ''A World of Harmony," New Year's dip. ",
city
of a great nation, to which
was expected to be watched by
'.'When you go Into the lake, It my . ancestors were brought,
' 350 mlllloli television viewers In · hurts for · 15 to 2() minutes,
chained and W·hlpped In the.hold
90 countries. ·
.
because You're number than ot . a staveshlp. We have not
Millions more . watched other heck, · and when you go back
bowl parades and televised foot· home, It's gone. So If you can go finished the journey toward
ball games with such names as to the dentist. you can go Into the liberty and justice, but surely we
have come a long )Vay."
·
Orange, Citrus; Cotton, Fiesta et lake."
at. - a seemingly unending
Hooliganism took no !)oHday In
schedule to sate the appetite of Atlanta, where New Year's rethe most dedicated fan until velers went wild In the Marriott
college football resumes next Marquis Hotel, spraying hotel
fall.
guests with tire extinguishers
Labor Secretary Elizabeth and tossing furniture oft balcoBOSTON (UFI) - Thinning
DQle ushered In 1990 with a news nies before pollee movecj In to bones, ~ a condition most · com· ·
conferel!ce announcing a tenta· arrest at least 50 of them. Pollee monty assoclateci with women,
Uve settlement to an S.month·old said 15 people were lnjiU'ed. two .appears to also atlect · men,
strike against the PlttstQJt Coal seriously.
,
Increasing .their chances of suf·
Co. that triggered massflfe un·
"We just had a whole bunch of ferlng debilitating bone fracrest In the co.a l fields of VIrginia, dr'unk people get out of hand," tures, researchers say.
West VIrginia and Kentucky.
A new study Involving 77 men
said Steve Clanton, the 1,60().
DQle, Pittston Chairman Paul room hotel's marketing director. showed, tor the first time. that
DQuglas, United Mine Workers Clanton said guesta who com- males experience a slgnlflcant
President Richard Trumka and plained were offered either a loss of bone as th~ age, refederal mediator William Usery second night's lodging free or searchers said Monday.
made the 'announcement In Wa· were not c barged for their New
"Bone loss . clearly occurs In
shlngton. The settlement af· Year1s Eve stay.
men and It's a significant prob·
fected about 1, 7()0 miners and
New Year's Eve, about 200,000 lem," said Dr. Eric Orwoll, an
cUmaxed negotiations that be- rain-soaked revelers jammed . associa!e professor of medicine
gan the week before Christmas Times· Square to watch the at the Oregon Health Sciences
and ground through the hollday · traditional ball "'"gllde dowti a University In Portland, who led
season.
flagpole on the roof of 1 Times the study. '
Thinning bones; a condition
Two girls, born Into separate Square. A New York City tradl·
Chicago-area families one · se- . lion since 1908, It was the natlon'.s known as osteoporosis, Is a
cond past midnight. apparently biggest New Year's Eve party, common problem among
shared honors as the flrst·bables /Shared by television viewers women, causing millions of bone
fractures each year. Although
of 1990. Slobhan and John Haran around the world.
Thousands weathered rain and there have been numerous stu·
• and Sue and Salvadore Grulla•
dauro no d~ubt found the bjrths fog at the First Night celebration dies of the problem In women,
far more Important than wli~t In Boston, organizers P,OSiponed little Is known about men.

Quote of the day ·

.

.

__., . . _

'

M••••Port.
Ohio
.

. Polneiov

Havel: B_iggest task·ah,e.ad free elections

•

:n. Duv a.nti1ai-Pig•

8

RonWUan Corhmunlat ·Party
will ldlve right to ·exist ·.

'
.
. '
.,
.
PRAGUE, C:aechoslovakta .afflcted by the U~,~M~ty.
lovak democracy will seem less . other groupa not as well off as the
·'There was no preparation for
BUCHAREST, Romania
,_ Havel, the playwright and- horrible.''
(UPI)- PrealdentVaclavHavel
general population, and toea~ure
,
this
revolution. It was a span·
aayiat couldered 1"-' moral
declared a New Year's anuiesty
·Havel-• elected president by
that the mUitary service Is (UPI) - Romania' s Interim taneous explosion," said Sergu .
. · forirotnmOD crlmln.ta and aald coiiiCie~~ee of the nation and the the par11ame11t last week as part "humanized" to altoW.. alterna· government said Tuesday the Nlcolaescu, a weH-kno~ Ro·
have ' the
flnt pott World War II DOD·
his biaeat task Ia to lead
of a round·table agt:eement dve service and shocter draft Communis~ Party
right
·
to
exls
t
In
elections
sche· . man ian lllmmaker and member
Czecholtovakla toward free elec- comiiiUIIlat pretldent of Czechos-' amollll o)Jpl)8ltlon aroupa led by
periods.
duled
for
April
and
defended
Its of the National Salvation Front.
l(IVB)rla, said the enure popula- CiVIc Fonun and the government
tions without vlolent."i!.
Havel, who Tuesday· made l'"The revolution was made by
jleclslon
to
keep
party
members
tion shared tlie bur4en of and the Communlli Party.
1n the tradlucinal New Year's
one-day visit to East Germany
young
people . I mean really
In
their
posts.
atlowlng totalll!lrlan rule for as
Day p!'lllldeatlal addreu, Havel
and West Germany, said he
At. part of. the . agreement,
you11g
people
- 15 years old, " •' •
A
member
of
the
Interim
former Communist Party chief hopes to strengthen Czechoslova·
also called 011 Pope John Paul II loJII .. It lasted.
Ntrolaescu said. "The next day
gover
nment
!!!lid
he
expected
the
and the dalai lama to visit
Alexander Dubee!&lt;. prchltect of kta's prestige In theinternational
National Salvation Front ""&lt; the . (alter CeauSA!scu 's ouster and
• CzechQJIOvakla. He cautlolleil
"W~ have to ac_
c ept this berlt· the · "Prague .Sprl,ng" reforms community.
I
145·member governing body capture), the older pople cam~
that Czeeha.lovaks cannot ex·
age aasomethlng which we have crushed ~ the 1968lnvaslon, was
He ; aid he would appreciate · formed stnci!lhe Dec. 22 ouster of · out. "
(l4!ct ali the 111;1 'of the pUt fo)lr · tntllcted upon our~elves," , l!e •named chairman of the
••
vlslls from the pope and the dalal . President N~,Wlae ee,usescu ~
'
decades of commulllst r.ule to bl! ~d. ''If we accept It In this w~, pU!Iament.
;
· healed promptly.
Havel listed his first task as, lama of Tibet to his country would beeome· a political party. ,
we will understand that It de:2 In Memo.r illm ·
before
the
ele!:tlons;
and
would
No
political
organization
·has
Czechoslovak Justice Mlnlater · !l'nds on all of liS to do somethblg •':I'o use all my au thorlty and
'Dagmar Buresovuatd In a radio · about lt."
Influence to enable us to come like to see diplomatic reli~tlons . registered with the Roman tan
'
address Monday that -the am.s.oon
and (with} dlfiiiiiY to the with the Vallcan and Iarael.
Under the mask of apathy,
.c 9~~~Ps were cl(lsed tn Buchar-IN MEMORY OF
nea ty would be extensive, be- particularly since the 19&amp;8 War- polls In free elections, and that
Havelsald without the changes est for the third day of the
HAROLD D.
cause many prisoner• In ·Cze. . IBW Pact Invasion, there was our way toward this historical in the Soviet Uriton, Poland, e~ttended New Years holiday but
• BRANNON'S
choslovakta were serving "JI'I!at human, moral and spirit· mlieltone will be fair and Hungary and East Germany • the many Romanians were out on the
'BIRTHDAY
excessively harsh ~ntences. But ualstrengtb and civil culture" in pe&amp;eeful."
changes of the past six weeks In streeis.' strolling and visiting
JAN. 1, 199(!
I!avel, a Czech. said his second Czechoslovakia would have been makeshift memorials to · the
she said corrupt public officials society, said Havel, who was
Hwelt do we . retask Is to ensure that Czechs and lmposalble.
would be excluded tram the j!llled tor his human rights
·
d kUl d b
1 • Remember
CzecbosiDvakia's
"Ve~vet
demonstrators
shot
an
e
y
amnesty.
.
'
$1ovaks ilRproach the election as
a!1Mtles, .
,, .
Your many happy
secret pollel1 during
"What we .want, again, Is to
'.'Freedom and democracy sovereign nations bonorlng their volution. .. began Nov. 17 with a ·ee.ausescu's
blrthdfiyo.
last
month's
revolution.
. Introduce equal opportunities for mean ,shared action, pArticipa- "mutual Interests and promised to · pollee attack engtniitftd by .the
At a' briefing for reporters, .two
Your voice 10 aoft'ilnd
all 11nd pn!Vent · the abuse of tion and ~esponslblllty of all," h~ -holidr Slovak lnteresta. ,,,
former : hard·line regime on leadersoftheNationalSalvation
tender .
· He also -prom~ special care • peacefully demonstrating stu· Front also denied reports the
, .'power," ~uresova said.
.. said. "If, we become aware of
Will remain with u1 al·
for the concer~ of the elderly, d\'nts In which dozens were uprising that toppled Ceausescu
It was ilot Immediately clear this, all'the horrors which were
wayt.
·children,
the Ul, women and Wounded.'
how many prisoners would be Inherited by the new CzechosLavina and famltt"
was planned in advance.

.

'

will

'

WASHINGTON · (UPI) -, A
newly d!Jcovered dlaonler af·
feeling some AIDS-Infected pa·
tlenta m.y Indicate they have a
stroager
abtuty to fend off the
.
deadly disease than inost people.

Although the Immune reaction '
·Tbe NYU researcher emPiJascaWJeS dlacomfort and can . lzed the flndlnp are prellmlaary
trigger serious ret~PJrltory trou- and that larger, controlled stu·
bles, researcherssaldltmayalso dies are nl!t!ded to determine If
signal an HIV-lnfected per1011's 1 the dlaorder .concllllively points
body Is mounting a better-than· to better AIDS retllltance.
~
averaee battle- agalnst the
Butheadded, "Maybewba~we
Monday In deadly virus.
are seeing Is that some people
Annals .of Internal Ml!dlcllll!l
Only one Of the · 17 patlenta are generally capable of retllst· ·
·doctors tram New York Unlver&amp;l· developed full·blown acquired , llljf at leaslaome aspecta of HIV
ty's Hospital for Joint Dlle~ Immune deficiency syndrome Infection." ·
described 11 disorder Ill AAIDS- andnolll!dled troniAIDS-re!ated
Such a scenario WO!ild not be
lnfected people that causes , Infections or cancers during · a .surprising, Wlnchelter said, not·
swollen salivary glands, lievl!re fofii&gt;w·up period averaging more lng peopleahowdltterlng-.uscep- .
· dryness of mouth and eyes and than two years, researchers said. tlbllltles to most diseases. _
difficulty lit breathing.
Two people died of Oth!!f' causes.
The ~5 patlents,.wlth the dis·
The symptoms resemble thoae ·
One patient has not developed order who are still alive are
of a chronic lliflammatory dis· any · slens ot AIDS after nearly "healthy-looking, working peoe~. c ailed Sjogren syndrome,
seven years, they· added.
p le," Winchester said·. He said
thai .Is found In people who are
"It's probably a beneficial several were unaware that th~
not,~ted with the AIDS- syndrome," said . Dr: Robert
were HIV Infected until th~
caus
human lmmlinodetl· Winchester a medical professor sought treatment tor swollen
cien virus (HIV), researchers. at NYU ~d ~o·author of the salivary glands.
. ,
•
said:
. ,.
.
· study. . ·.
. . .
,
· . · The prevaleiiC!! Qf the Immune
After studylng.17 HIV•lnfected
, ''There Is a generalteeilngthat : res ponS!! In HIV·lnfected people
~pte with the. new disorder,
developnient ·of diffuse lnflltra· Is notknown,-butdoes not appear
re$earchers concluded the prob- live lymphocytic disorder (the rare,.resejll'chers said.
lems appear to stem from a new syndrome) Is associated , "It can't be all that common U
genetically-determined tmmune with a more benign course" of It had to walt this long to be
response to the AIDS virus.
HIV Infection, Winchester said.
recognlze1t· but sometimes we
are so concerned with the catastrophic asPects of AIDS we may
not be directing attention to
people ·that are doing better,"
Winchester said.
In the new study, the first of Its been expected based bn previous
The New York' researchers
kind, Orwoll and his colleagues' reseal'ch, Orwoll·sald.
identified an apparent genetic
followed .77 normal healthy men
The findings Indicate ettner the predisposition to the Immune
ages 30 to 87 for tliree years, amount of bone loss men 'expe- . '. respon$e·IJfblacks,wbo,m adeup
measuring the bones In · their rtence Is greater than previously 12 ' of the 17 patients studied. A
spines and !orearl'os.
appreciated ·or Is Increasing, stmuar Inherited tendency likely ·
The .men also either took which may explain why frac- atsoexfstslnwhltesbutlthasnot
calcium and vitamin D supple- lures have become Increasingly . yet been found, researchers said.
ments or useless substitutes - . common among men, he sail!.
Thelmmuneresponseunderly·
each without kno~ng which he
The researchers also found · tng the disorder Involves the
was given - to determine calcium and vitamin D supple· multiplication ot white blood
whether the supplementation re-' mentation a,~&gt;parently does not cells, called T·S lymphocytes,
duced bone loss.
prevent bone loss In men, he said. which then collect In the salivary
In findings published In the There was no slgnficant differ· glands, lungs, liver and . other
Annals of Internal Medicine, the ence between the men who took organs. T·S cell.s are not the usual
researchers found the mep lost the supplements and those who target of the AIDS virus, and are
about 2 percent of the bone in did n'cil, he said.
thought to play a k~ role In
their spine and about 1 percent of
More research Is needed to killing vlrus·lnfected cells, Win·
the bone In their forearms each explal!l the bone loss and deter· chester said.
·
,
''
year.
mine the best. way to prevent It,
Levels of T-4 lymphocytes - ·
While the amount of hone loss Orwoll said. ·But in mean.t1111e, the Immune cell H'IV usually
· was much .less than that lost by Orwoll recommended that men preys ·upon - remained generpostmenopausal women, the lev- try to exercise regularly and eat ally constant In the 15 patients
els were much gr.e ater tllan had w~ll to try to minimize bone loss. during the two-year study .

r~~= ;:r.~ed

Bone loss affect$ men too: study

• The lrea'-s Number 1 Marketplace
•

TO PLACE
.AN AD CAll 992-21-56 ,
.
MON.DA Y thru FRII)AY I A.M. to 5 P.M.
I A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
CLOSED SUNDAY
.

\'

Dov•

•

3

e·
!Won tilly

o,.r 1~ Weirdo ·
.20

e&amp;.DD

111 :
111
16.

10

POUCIES .
•Ads Ou11Mie Meigs. o.tlia or M•• counli• nK.IIt be pre·

I Rote
t4.00 .

wo.cll
15
1&amp;

1 .

1 ..:... cerd ot Th..ka
2- ln ,._.eMory

.30

t9.00

.42

$13.00
· t1.30/dtv

'Fr. . tdl ·• Give~Way .nd Found HI under 18wordtwiM be
tun 3 d.,s M no eh•ge.
·
'Price of ad fOf' •• eapilallentn is do~o~ble price of ad c::oat.
..: 7 point line type onty VMd.
··
.
'Sentinel is not rt1JtOM6blelor ertOI'tafter firscd., . tChedr.
for erron firtl dl¥ ad nma in p~l . C.. l betore .~ ; OO p.m.

d., attar publicltion to m•• correction.
•.Ad• 1h11 mull bt pMtl in etN•nc:e •1!1
;,
..,
Clfd ~f ,T'h~lla
HepPf Ada
•
~, ·., In Meomoriam
Y•d S.i ll•

Cla.~sifi••d

'

pages covPr 1he

jo/lowini{ lelPphoiw PXf:hange.~ ...
.', Oallie
- County
Co,.nty
'M•on CO .• WV ·
• MeiQI

elntUitd ditphl'f._8usin . . Card and ltgll not leal
will •l•o ~P•• in lh• Pt. Plamm R•tiltllr. end the Qelliputn Daily lribune. re.c.:hin9 over 18.00J) hem•.

Area Cade 614,

• ... ~o.n;polil .
317- CI'I•IW•
311- Vintan ·
24&amp;-Rio Gr•de
211.--'Gvva• Dt.t.
143-Arabia Diet.
379 - Walnut

04Y BEFO!IE PUIUCATION •
- ·11 '00 A.M. SATURDAY
- z,oo P .M. MONDAY
.. 2 o00 P .M. TUESDAY
WEDNESDAY PAPER
.. z,oo PM . WEDNESDAY
THURSDAY PAPEA
- z,oo P.M. THURIDA~
.. HIDAY PAPER
- 2 00 P .M. fRIDAY
SUNDAY PAPER

COPY DEADLINE MONDAY PAPER
TUESDAY PAPER

-....

Area Code 114

992 - Midcll~

.

., 49"""7 For La••

16.-Aactlo, TV. CB R4H)air

• ·

AreeCode 304 ·

1J...:. Milcall....ouJ

51 - Houtehold ·Goods

&amp;2-Sporting Good•
53.:...- Antiqun
l

981- Ch•tar

676- Applie Grove
773- M•on
·

949- Racine

896- Letart

742-Rutl8nd

137 - B~fllfo

23- Prot,.sional Ser\ficw

·

81 - Homelmprowmants
82 -'Piumbing &amp; He•ing
83 - EJ:&lt;:w•ting
84 - l:lectric.. &amp; Refftgintion

c.

85 - G.,neral Hauling

57- Muaicallnnruments
58-Fruit•• V•uet•bl•
59 - For Sele or-Tflde

.2.1 - But~•• Opportumly
22 - Mon., 10 loen

882- New H!Wen

n - Auto Rtpair

Sr: vices

64- Milc:. Morc:hand11e
66- Buflding Suppli•
56-Pets tor Sale

418- L.an

s...

78-Camping Equipment
79 - Camplf'&amp; &amp; ,Motor Hom"

18 - Wanted To Do

175-Pt. Pl ....nt

843- Pon-.d
247"';"letart F..lt

71 - Autos for

72 - lrucll.s for Sele
·7 3 - Vens &amp; 4 WD's
74 - Motorcyc:l•
.
76- &amp;o.tl • Motoralor Sale
76 - Au!o flana &amp; Ac.c•...,l•

47 - Wanted to Renl
48·- Equipment tor Rent · ,

11 -' H ..D V'JMitd
,
1 2-lrhlltiOn WeniiCI •
.- 1'3-lnaW"lCt ,
14-rBulin•s Tralntne
·1 5-Schooll &amp;lnstrvc:tion

'

~

'

c:.Pt

.

Tr~ns~orl~tion

43 - Farml tor Rent ~~
44 - Aparlmfflt tor Rem .
45 - Furi'Wihed Rooma
46 - Space tor Rent

:it! I VIll

·A cl•tifild echertitemWrt pltced 1n The Oai&amp;y S.nlif1ll (!P·

I

65- Seed &amp; fertilller

41 - Hou .., for Rent
42 - MobileHomea tor Rent

-

~~

63- liveJ!ock
64- Hay • Grain

I;IQIIIII

f•llilti'VII" 111

r

61 - Farm Equipment .
-62 - Wantltd to Buy

36 - Aeal E1111te Wanted

7-- Y•d S.Jel.,.id in ach•nc:uJ
8- Pubiie Sale &amp; Auction
9 - Went_. to Buy

L vPstock

11&lt;

32 - MotlileHom• 'lor Sale
33 - Farma for Sale
3 1-B us inen Bui4dintp
36 - lo1s &amp; Aereege

&amp;-- lost and Found

for eM:h d., a ...,.••• HI.

F,urn Siilllllles

31 -Homea tor Sele

3- Annoucemern•
4- Gh"•••v
'5- Heppy Alii

•. 60
.06/ dav.

" runs. bro...,.updawswill be ch•ted
R•• ere for cen•a.tili•

.,f;!~ t .&amp;O dltcount for 1ds . .id in astwanc:e.

•

'

86 ~ · MobileHome

Aepair

87- Upholstery

117-Coohrill•·

'

I'

.•

I

~-

·~r·

•·

''

·'

Se.r vice.s

or at ·

'

·~

A recent survey &amp;om the . ,
Southeast ·lndicated almost 25\1£ .
of high school students and 6%
ohiXth to eighth graders have ·
smoked marijuana, with nearly ·
one In ten high school students
being a regular user. About 5%
of the high school students had-used cocaine, along with nearly
1'.11\ of siXth to eighth graders.
There are virtually ail infinite
number of ways to die by
acddent or dlseate. Fewer ways

..

'

to actually kill yourself Why
· deliberately risk illness-or death .
with drugs?
Obviouly, it's smarter-and
healthier-to say no to drup:

. . .ll
. P.u

•Mobile t!ome

I

Aent1!a
•Lc!t Rental•

I

'·

'iqpr ~YI!,I ·

A W~TEIIED
THAT LOOKS JUST
UIE STANDARD
liDDiNG! .

llna. ..._;,; ..."

.,.,
FlEE

· •n-IXlatOI
Rental tlsanups I
Painting

'

,111 .,.,,..,,

PARTS AND SERVICE
For Mo.t 2 end 4·cycle

aio:'~:tar

'

EVERY SUNDAY

Ia! "' • • • • , ...

laginning Sept. 17

Y8Y

,•.

a~ONA&amp;I

' ttAVI HIIIIIQS
. AFTR 6 P.M.

Homtlite, 'WoedootM,

r ......m...,,ertvlll • .

(6141 915·4110
........
~e.......

·, '

MY·T·SHOP

·TaCIIM

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

•IJf'IEITQNE
•FlU DIRT

I·

ATAU .

IOYAI.n

M.

G-. ... _ .....
.........;.•659

'

"~
Oil'S APPUAIICI

sama-

·-

tta.sm., 91HS61

clllmt, 01110

~85·4
SAUS

SUPEI SIZE
SHEOSI

•UGMT HAU\JNO

,,,.,,••.

•FIREWOOD

Twin Set -•35
Ful Set --·•40
GUIIII Set
S.t-..,S49

·

-•45

. .__
.
,...., ....

,.,.-.~-"- :""'.~.~J
O,.Dalr
ttaS
,, t ,,,

CUS10MJCIIID
PIINTING
HATS
T-SHIRTS
JACKETS

•GRAVEL

•ANYTHING

I St1..tt at 1:00 P.M.
factory Chaklcl 12
Gauge

•

· ·The DAily Sentinel
I

~

•
'~ . '' !

..
. )

Where
SanU1 Sho~~~t!
GLASS
WICKER
QUILTS
CLOCKS

,.

,,

·S&amp;ACI

..

a~

SIR~CI

742-301.
•Tire

S•l••

•F~ End
~lgnmlnt

......

oOif CIMtnge . . . .
IWftS1.,_~'M·

LAMPl
IOOKCASES · ~
OLD KNIVES CUPBOARDS •
CROCKS
IEDI
. ·:i:
DRESSEIIS
PRIMITIVES
,.
DRY liNKS
TAILES
_
;
P()CKET WATCHES

_________..,...'='......· -..,
CHAIRs

"lh
N'"' '"'
112' L . .
N IIIII
. Tt•
tft·ISI6
.

•• L.
C.EIU,-

Sh&amp;P. ·

RACINE
GUN CLUB
·GUN SHOOT

FREE ESTIMATES
loki tho , ........ poW ln.

AVAILABLE!

.The Greatest name 'i11 Bedding smc-:e
~

949•2101
..... 949·2160

.......,,...,&amp;....,
o•.

NOW

........ ""_..._
S.99~~ Sl -54
.........
.
..
Ful, •· pc,... s149
Ful,
pc'"' Si94

GI!Mft, ... _ $349

:·

lt. 114, , ••• ., Ohle

"''1·7UJ

Beautyrest
.flotation ·

..,...

UIDA'S
PAIIITIIIG &amp; CO"•

. ltrmon.

A'"''" '"'""''''t"'
99J·J612
MAXIPEDIC
-. .

'

,.,

!.

Garap .

DON'T FOIGET
• &amp;lOUT

"At ••nn.la Prlas"
•

'

.AYE'S
"SMAU. ENGINE:

CUSTOM lUll
~ . . .S I GARAGES

•Mobii1Ht11111

~I

'\

BISSIU
BUilDRS

COUIDY .~

HO. PAll

Iv••~~:~ letiiOiill Hospital
lfats, Po~t~troy, Ohio

992-2156 /.

.

I.

, lOY, 0110 .

, .-· ·.·

- .

. RACINE GUN SHOP

49t1' •ASIJIOILOW n.

'

I~ OliO

GUNS· AMMO
12

G,. DEER SLUGS ... $2.20 .lox

GUITARS &amp; (fUITAI STRINGS

OPE!\1 8 AM'-7 P~ Mo!'dey·Frldey

c»aturdey I em-5 pm .

.

,,

�•

10--lbe Daly Sa 1tiuel

'l

••

Lr~-A-.DAY

---dog.

to .. _,....
IMI1111t - - ....... IO
_..,,.
11-

4

------ -

• old - · Colllo •
floool
· lddL
To 1 .
good
l&gt;olua
• . .wlh
-.
ralu!\l a llniL 11~ atw

-

-D

-

~~·~.,._..,.

'old. Clonlle, ..... Wllcll,
Clog. 114-742-2545.

Freo kilt- uo good homo. 114tl7.e201 INVe ........, ..wUI
relumcttL
•
Freo_puoaloo •• aood-. lila
Bulle. li4-i4~ -

-----u;r
;
-;v;;;J.-::.-;- ' .,_ --

Hou

' ....go • . . - .....,..
4381.
~
Wolalut lanclu, good ~. 114-

-

mant 1o Right Woman" . .land
Dlctunu,-phont numlllr -~~~

ior to LJ.L, At. 1, boll 121,
Polnu P1eaoan1, wv 255!10. WI•
A-Alii ·
.
Lost &amp; Found
F......t : lorgo luMclo and whht

~. monlh

wl=

c-.
nPiuunluor~,1 r~~u;- -1o
..- '-"~" 1 1 • ''1

mi&gt;J.

·

1o'1ii.' 1

Houses for Rent

:llut, uniUmlehod l&gt;oliaa AI. Ill,

-¥allay, Rat. a Dot&gt;.

Req'~•·

Aodntl' • - 01 Elm 1300 • 1100 PI' -k, ~~.:..::.......,...,..,.-,...,--=-~~· 1100 Aawaud . 114- -Alidina Boob 11 ~. Colli.•, Room and boOrd In .....,...,,
!152,114-44&amp;-1781.
115-473-7440 Est. 11-303.
•
1225 - · 114-112-tiD1.
~c:-'oPizza,wtllaao- Wo care"" olderty and hanOlfl4lna oppllcOIIont llltoiltr a d..,... In ... homo. 2l yura
Wodll4i0dar, 2p.m. 1o lp.nu. "" tlplrltri&lt;:e. LPN .., 0111 . Low
7
Yard Sale
lui ar pa~-ltna, IH -"lont, •-~-- •--- ~.
•Including maMatnwol, APPir., · -- · ~
~-... n
o4
p.m. for _.. lntor811 SeCond Olive, Oolllpollo.
·
GallipoliS •
IIANACIIIIIIHT
POIITION
&amp; VI I lty
AVAII.Iollt:
en
A,....,. _ _ _ _ 15
Schools&amp;
ALL Vonl Salta lluol II Pllkf In lo
-king
1
·
Adwunct. DEADUNE: 2:00p.m. Kn-odgo o f - - f l InstructiOn
iht dar latora tht, ... 10 .. run. .. - · • woildna - . ltllgt
luilhr edition • 2:00 p.m. ollhe - . 1 lntfuolrr. M AE·TAAI&gt;INOWI
Frldn. llondtr odHion • 2:00 vlcM ond .... o4
1e IOUTNEABTEAN
BUSINESS
p.m. lalurdty.
rtqUind. IIUOI htvt allllly 10 COLlt:OE, 12t JaokMn Pitt.
lllliblloh ropport ond • - with Call 114-4-7. Rag. No. 819 Wanted to Buy ·- poi..U.I
.
'
.
and elaH.
-~ ..........
tppl'-~ . ~1-1D5II.
-~--kl 1111
-Junk _..,. _ whh
whhOI!I ~;....
lllnil cii'IOfll ,_.,.
'"'"""· Call lttoy Llvtly 114- and -lat1ar to: Bol ~ clo
311-1303.
DoiJ a:.._pal~ 1210H 18 Wanted tO Do
·llla
·
,.v.,..-,
'
45831. WI are an eqUII ~ IMulllul two lllorY hcNiM In
Ou
Pro 1MO quina. Anr oondHion. 1un11y ..,.....,., and wo do lio1 lllllgh- ood 1n
Cath Paid. CoM 114--1847 or dl-lna1t agalnat roco, - · nu.. luid..,._, 1 112 lathO,
114-112·2411.
011, ,.llglon, notional origin, dan, lui bMtmao~. I1IWir
' WANTED TO BUY. Soluwlnn El·
manphl. .••
orcycll llkl Air 0,.. or
~
.::..~.- ~- o1 121,000. 1_14...,_:104-allo-ofttrlp.m. llo141r -hanlc let cart, - 1 - ond - Pl&gt;ola 1141 -lro,
112-7310.
oarpantoy. .
EARN MONEY Alodlng 1oo1ta1
E•oallanu · , _ pottndtl. lllaa Paulo'• Dor Cart Ctnlor.
Employment Serv1ces Orllaila. (1) 106-t17..000 bt. y.. • .., llfordall ........... 11-F
4112. I Lm•• 1:111 ~-. .......,; 2\t-1D.
~· .......
·~
wtlh Tttuttt
ltlora,
· llniJHnt
11 • Help wantlld
.., ....,.,
lrolltr 111U01Ia
nl - aller
111 44112114.
flow for -190111- Will .._
In
AVON I All ..,._ I Sltklfl'
- . 1 - 4. 4211
•-~~
-~ lliJ
........ 304-171-1421.
-too-,_..,....
AVON • All . , _ Coli llalllyn tollolara ........ lull- =ond-.:."'::"'='~.·::
11iMApar1~IUM,IIIUUIU. _
_
11 .
EARN MONEY Reading Boob! And' 'Dgllf Technoloalat (All~
RT),
thll, 11-F, IIIU01
Do4aU.. 11)
Ell. v- hiM WV.., .ute We..,.. or bl
10111.
ollglbla, Qlll - . , Val~
HOODital Plraonnll 30M .
,._,, Tralltr Driver lor looal 4340.EOEIAA
8u
21
sl 8Alt:SPEASONNEEDED
·-·
.
ha
..
n
·
- - - wtth dump ......... 1- Car- ()ppottunhr a¥Oiieblo fw
OpportunHy
~111211.
100-m mall or lomale wllh
INOTICEI
-od·AIIaiiiiOrl-tr. aiioJ pawlllllly, _..,. lor a
10 OliO VALLI¥ PUIUIHIHO CO.
H _ , wlh ralall fiant irand-. •
ruamnanda ,.., do
...... .......... t o - ... ......., ltnl, llllmollna inti ontortna
, llvlldlng matorlilt. Exparltne~
~~~ '""""' the 1111111 until JOU t.n
praltrljd, Sond , . . _ 1o P.O. tiWnlng lri'ttdad.
'and - . . led 1M -rlnii·
.
Bo1 Ill I, -.u,, Ohio fw -.llulaniiOI
•45711.

1111

=::..;::oo

-lion

?:1:!1"".!'

p_..,_

..

oi~i§··!"""'p~o~d~.::'~-~1!:~=-~-~·~-=-:-= .::::
,.!''I·!!~',..
Saara: ':'

=-

a_,...

W•••-·•45.

110,_,_ .._ •-Ina
--eooo

,_till

=

= 111"~~.::~: ':':i ::;..•·~--::":nr"

liM-

Real Estate

31

Homes

tor Sale

1111--,201!'CIA, waod -.lUll--In
laok, ... lllda. 1 101 In
wll
for ~ IMti!M111 1radiu
Point

- · 142,100. or

.......ntii'MIIR&amp;•••

ll'W044.

.~....

d-·-~~~- -~

OFm

=·

114 •• -113•,

--~--•·"~T''-Otutit

hmToi'~ M!n......

30M

for Rent ,
112 -

pall H.II.C. :Jbr, unturntltlitd, 12d0, WID Hool&lt;..,p,
=H~~rtd. IU Ul IMI,
1-

litd,_, ol
iiOdrio, lumlllled. b1ro nlct.
No pt41. D r M ..,.ulrat. 114742.Z14.
•
ond2a~ tum-, -hat
SIOO. par unonlh
C"r!'~~1.
304•-••

-•"j;,::,=•

. -·

2 b•*-"- f'!lmlohod, 1271.
Unlum-,
laD.,
p1ut
lllelrlc. No palt. Atlwwnct,
dtPOall. Syrac
. UM, 114-112..
219?.

llir, 1 mill qui of Cltlllpolll,
1511, 1171 ..... dlpoalt, par

own utiiHiet. 1143118104.

311r, lath, &amp;.112 lralltr, 114-2455037,114-241MI5.
.

44

Apartment
-f or Rent

2 I . . . ., Apt~ . . per moN.h,
1110 ...,_, 1114·e'l5--.

Fumftura
Chick ua out

WANT
ADS
WQRK!

ror Juollly •

Calpal?
1ow

PICKEN!I FURNIIUU
.
NtWIUiod
Houllliold fllmlthlng. 112 mi.
Jtr~,!l!_!ld. PL 'PI
•• WV,
Qlll-· ..1450..
RENT TO OWN
• 0u
I ndoop llitr ra
Llvl;'a _, ..,.._ $1DIWIL,
owlv chairo
rocktr' 17.110/Wk.,
IUOh*, dbun~
lla/4
compllla S1DIWIL, Low
coat cull prlctl availeblo. YI'Aa
Fumhwt. AI. 14,1, 4 untlll. 0pan
7 dare a wtolt. Mon. lhru .... I
1.m. • I p.m., Bun. 12 Noon. I
ll4-4,.3111
p.m.
·
,
.,
SWAIN
AUOTION &amp; FUANmiAI. 12
on...... Qallpalle. - 111• , _
lumHura, hll':':le
"" &amp;
' WOfttl&gt;oolt: l1
15t.

f

53

Antiques
8u'l or toll. AlvarfiW Antle!-.
td4 E. llaln 11-. -~

Haurw: M.T.W. 10:00 Lm. 1ct 1:

p.m., l u = 1:00 lo 1:00 p.OI.

~

!
_
1 0

~

alllf:• -

...:r:.""~·
~';.;:i;;;-''

_.llrwous

-

Fwnltliod 243 ......_
Pilla, 12M, ....... pd. 11ut, 114-

M.-chlndl.. - ,

4411-441 •~w7p.ttl.

Fumllhed alft=lanoy, 111 lllllltt•
Mid. aha.. lath, •131/_ _ t1t

5

lleld ...,. .. . t •• allad;
-

.... -

• ..., .... -

.

LP=----11

.llowr..
. . . ......
........
. ......; LP
lfll ......
...._.

11111

Call II -

Building

Supplies
IIOcll, lurlok, -

...._ "'"'

--..:':OZ,:t'=:J::
24W121 .

58

....II for Slle

•

TOll

aCompenr

•

can!

1 -olul

ltatJe ...... dlra

••tlllntl

-

1111 ·

-to...,-- .....

·

f o r -... :1114-171-1121. _
H
&amp;O I
ay
n
Ctttn 11
'
'
111111013
liar, 111

a.a

ra

hal -

.10.....

1144114177.

-

''

..

-

Ala_,

loraait.Ctii14:112-7S02.

Ktnnol.
....

' II•

114-441-1 ,

......... e r - Iaiii o4 Olraw

C:0.. Dogo lor - · lo 111111
.If. Et111a. .,..._
7311.

Ttdih(lOit,oliOil

HlnuoluuJ~o~ kilt. .. Cha. -

- · 111 4411144 ..... 7
P·nu·
·
.71 Autos lor Sill •
Flah TIM, 2411 'J ac--Avo.
Poln1 Ph='"'I,I04'17S-:ICIQ, 1D . -1171 en ti,OOO Iori.
pi Ill up 114.11 IIIII 10 pi 4opui.-1Jrtt,-,ilralln,
-.-JIItl43.25.
-lop, MW goad, 114-441nd 11:11.
iu
luppiJ
Pol ...,:,,....,.,~:-----:---,
~All....._ All•ytea, 1171,
U. ... In!,., tinted
I'll Food - - JuHt wlndlao, ...,. ~-:.,:•
W..._CIIII1~ 1111211.
N,104..71-G'r'1•
r
PURl lAID IIIEAIAN HU8K'I 1110 2IOZX, 2+21 f ilplldl
PUPPIII.I
whl1
10,000 - - · -- ~

lhop

*

=0,_,_ •· - ••-

-... Sp.uo.
- • • • 11+
1R-1144o
"
- - •01 _. •~
.,wa 01 · ~•nr
Onuill! I Whit, lwlil. · , 110.
114- I

-

:r.:::

-111

=.u ...,z-a.

~":""".':

oHir .....II II 1 14--74J.2412.
W.nuod 10 11vr ,..._

......_,-par -'=11-hl,
;;;i:;;. ~- 104-171-

7210.

-·-....

1M1 -~Cut-. Can 11• ~•
· ~r
2141. 1.-....-ion.
1M2 T - ~ 4l 'IDIId
ltan '""iio, 111+475'
11
75·
111S C.. .
101 V-1 entint, oluo wiUI ownlutYt, air,
._....., 111 PW T · - - · __.., •
• '"
~•r
ai:S.

::::,

·

57

•,

defenda one of Mtt11octc's
friends, Who's accuNd ol

murder. !:;!

:
1M3 Fot'd , ........
low
..-·- plck.qp,
oond
unlno ruat txc.
.
15.DOCJ.l14 441

~Tt,~,-&amp;. IRAS

d~
':!.D.u..¥8'1, lluiAo,...._".!!'l~
~. ~ i • r, ..,.. __,_

totelllte wiH f...-

the way we -

CMutll, bucMI ...... Exo.

Cond. 114-ZIIMm.
1MI F-110• 4

i

;:i.:U"· Ganci.

0 Prtft'leNIWI
18 MOYIE: Mother Lode (PO)
(2:00)

0

Mt.-der, 111141 Wroli A
~ Night Wort&lt;
a!1 Citurcit lllMt Station
I:Di (J) MOVIE: 11ft. ~
(1 :55)

ca.

-

75 ·eoets &amp; Motors

1:311 (I)

_

-pill· ................,.
1m 17 a. TJI.HuH- . 121 HP, Evlnrudiu lntJintu,

"'~
W£\i=
'Ctulldten
OIAL•-•
cas
Mo... (2:30) Q

Coli 114-211-1311 tfttr 7:00 p.nu.

TualidiiY

76

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories
POOR lOY TIRES, .,....,._

~.

Jell -

le-,
;enoua gulltulol,
llio1ruolor, 11 4-

=-

lfmlt.d

-Tiiura, ..L

u- ~
''
~1
-'1-.

ir.'i... t•

ap1nln....

...:'i14:44i: I

..

2

am,
1 •
or . _ _

1 • •~ Pull ~I
114-446.nlll ·

-:r- , '

1 11- 2 t

;;i/. o•:d:l.i;

•11v-li lfiOIM,· """' g::!l. 1111
traneml••kwl. needll
. For

e

.

-·

lila "'lrodo. 12 apd. ltllua, 121.
11~17lll.
.
-

&lt;

dlnn;r.

I' 1 I. 1 I. I' I' I' I
Wri:JE I I I -I I ION I I I L I

~ SNAFlJ® by Bru('e Beattie:

'""" Ouldiu (1) IOHI7

!Ell. ..1t1IL

-

oantlo:z. ....... .

PleAS&amp;.Sf

NICE TO

WHEN HE .
GITS HERE,

.5

.

tQ8 43 2

+8H

+AQIO =

SOUTH

+Q
'\Q98 76 2

Ul
+XH

Vulnerable: East-Wesl
Dealer: East

Sttudu

Weal

f•

All """'

Nor••

.t ,. ,_
Eu1
Pass

Opening lead: • 10

queen •n4 be forced to play another.:
club, or to give declarer a sluff and a
ruff If be plays a spade.
. ·
West can thwart tbis endplay If h~
plays a diamond alter winning Ute ace
of spades. Tltat deprives declarer of:
Ute communication •to eliminate tbe ·
side-salll before playing clubs: Bul:
leadlnl away from tbe killl of dia, ·
moods II oot easy.
·

1llemlngway'a chael8
rddt:na.'£11 . 31 Shamrock
'5 T~ of
lllid
dar M:lltg
31 High ,est
I Seed coat
DOWN

10 Tldlum
12 Footprl;'ll
13 Squeal
14 Part of
a min. .
15.Chefs need
1e "'n lhe

!;I

-

.

1 Oubnoded
2 Ruselan

lotde

guild
30o

carelesely 11 Show one's25 Dtlale
4 High place
27 Part of
5 Liz Taylor
(thraalen)
NOW
film
15 Kepi In
28Extemat .
8 Danube 18 Apportion .21 Frail
lrllulary 21 Genlle
34 Mldlanlte '

7 Understand22 Handcuff
I Rented · 23 Prong
10 Get up
24 Thicket

l&lt;lng .
35 Merino's
cry

w

,AWII YO'RE

ioviE: WIIIIM: 11le
Sund•nce w- (2:06)
(I) • Cll ••ttiOinellllng
MIChael bltglne to diUn

GOOOER'N

ARY ANGEL\!

..

once mQre of biting a writer.

PAWII
.
'

.;.:-,;;;;r;:.."::" ::l;!,
eo.-

tK105 .

e

MY BROTHER BUBBA

Ml
till
Pump

-Vto

•to

Cllrlstine is apoillid. Q
10:0D ()) 70D Club W1tll , ..
.
Rollii1ion
.
(J) 1111 Mldnigh1 Caller
Jack llllbUehll a deadly
connection wilh a aerial kUier.

BARNEY

... ~ __._.~

Dovlt
01
'"'

EAST
.976 f

+AJ10~2

31 L.ke line

ACROia

U!nY King ~lvel
0 Tile ,Equalizer MeCallls

laaarneut

--IINY IIIZID - - =Ao4~.,=-~C!f:-::::
.
!
01-.:;.::-:-1ool~-:. -:::-.::-ug-.
1100. Ferdiu. ll•n do a.

WEST

e&lt;ll

1m,.... -$.\.T ·- •••-·
•......
11711~
~
ltlr,
=-~~-oiuJo~•
c"::
- ...-.
11
.2414 _
-

•s u

tty T'ROMAS JOSIPH

forced to work with a former

Aon'aTYI.m..,tpaoltlllloa
In ZtnHh tleo

- - 4 1torat
4 II drlltiOL-,

t.!-M

CROSSWORD

0

Ftt1r Trfl Trlmnulna, atump

1•1 ,_, -

NORTH

lerrorisl.
_
a!l Nalhvllie Now
1:30 (I) Cclaga Baoke11Ntn .
, IJ)
Coac:lt Hayden's
romantk: woel&lt;end wilh

............ 30M711-f331.
81 FMn Equipment_

.

•xu

·Welt tlml~ly after hill part,
· ner .llll'd
and South bad pnl'
empted.
bad. A IMP: fill player
baa to rilt at~nc 1111 peck out IOIDetllbel. Altboqb all Eut baa ill cjueen, four apade$ will IIIII make. It ·
wu11111811 1-'C!IIIOiatloll tltat South milplayed four ltearta.
,
.Declater 1f0!1 diunmy's heart jack,
followq auft with the seveli-spot. ·
Next be pllyed a ipadi! to bill queen.
Welt Willi the ace and relurlled the
spade jaCk. Soltb threw a .u.monct on
dumlny'• 1pade k,ina _. led a club
Illicit to bla Jack. 'Weit-. the queea,
pl1yed 1Jiolher apade, IIIII later took
the lllttiJIIlrlcU with the ICI ~Ind 10
of clubs.
Declarer .tl1ould bftl! IIIOpped to
think .why be bad uabl~ked with the,
- o f hearts at the flrlt trick. After
be pllcbel a diamond on the apade ·
kiDg, be CID ruff a liPide with a blglt
heart, lad a dlamonc} to dwnmy's aee
and J'Uff a dlamoDd high. and thea lead
an latermedlate bort to ,chiJamy"s
IIIII ruff the 1ut diamond. 'l'be
left Ia the North and South
I' IIIIDdaant bearta and clabl. Sooth CID
the lowly two of bearta to
dumlny's lhreHpot aDd play a club
bact to hll jack. Welt will will the

Chlnese-Americ~na who

Home
Improvements
BASEMENT
WA-APAOOFI
5
"
U~hlonol IIIOIIUMNOIUiililio
111. Local - - tum-.
Fill OlllmatM. Coli oolltct 1·
1 14 ~··~.
- •••• diuy "' nlglul.

have to

tA97 -

fought to join lho
mainstream. Q

EAT. .. &amp;o.VNtt

... , ,

~-I'Udgy - EXIoi- Ratiorl-GOODTIME
~," aay8 rrtf friend, ,. a guy who doE!sn1

IIl (!) Ame~ean Expert;.A viewollhe

01-1, I GLl6e6 I'U..:

Serv•c•·s

.,~ ~~ -

eTile(J)Night
Ill) In The 01
A lormer boxer
biiiCI&lt;malls tho Malle in rotum
for his silence. Q
(I)
(I) flo-me
Roaeanne Invites her spiteful
tllilnagt&lt;l boss hOme for

ss:u
- uoail ...... .
111.~, -4,001 good
..nt-tn•, n.w tM.

t:,:c...-flna. -

lA)

a!IWeekdly

1:00

81

guHar

li (I) Tile Wonder Y...

Kevin jOins a rock blind In
order to impre8s olghtll

1

&lt;

NOeE...

Instruments

. eaA-:thufe

(R) (2:00)

1181 CMwroltt Conwreion Ven.
VI 3DO onalna, 4 Clll4aln chalra,
--In CCiltra
30,001 nulltt
on ..... ona"'!,_.,... · tlroo.

for Sale

the UillvtrH.

!!!,wanted In actual foolage.
ilo MOVIE: c . - -

1111 S-11 --up. ~CFuorultt,
....U.:JIDIIW A
....
- ··
.t14-112'1137.
73 Vans &amp; 4 WO'S • .,

.

.

ct1ftnQe

ana &lt;:IM111 allualionl tte •

114-371-

17100-114-112-7.....

Cll Who'• Tile ....?

Sam hllto decide ·whither
to grid'!lte 11rty or stay with

cob. ·-

1

·

5

.

(2:00)
- •
(J) Ill) MMIOak Michelle

(I) •

-

1

.KJ4 3

e

~~~~:.::==

•

ciJucklo. quoled
by lillil'\g in th• mitsing words
v&lt;w d" eloo from step· No. 3 below.

BlUDOE

laf""'~rdyiQ '

~.,

I

. -Complele . the
.

'leaYa a party when he stanl to have a GOOD TIME."

IIJ Cn11811N
18 NiCIIII Coan
7:35 (J) lllnfonl And Bon
l:ilo (J) MOYIE: Wo',. No ........

SO FA/ti $D _~~~· !,

..wal

Individual
laoln....

,:.

JAfoiUA(l"{ .:z.·r4f.. ·
A,;.RfAI?'I ~ ·- . ,
,,

Mu&amp;......

·

lal I'M Megultte

• YicieoCouniry .
7:05 (J) Jelleflotti .
7:311 (J) F111111Y lleucl
(I) Ccltplllflllllell
Cl) lialeitllllwMftt ToftWd
·• (I) USA Todoly
.

Oulrl• .- ·

::;..~~. \'\":..":"~~:o::· ~r ~11 -~~~ CleiW.,
hitr for r,rz:..;·~~;o.
7117L '

.,._,nd .-eaaary

•~-'

=!~~~~

I

"A

e

=

....-

-773-1111 ..,
773!1110 7• '
AKC-Ioltt La- Collie. 1e
10. ....._ - 1100. 1 .......
lor C11oap. Col 114-7422714, 114-7-.
~C ~..... lugW. ..J
hun1Jnt dol ~ ~71'
-

~

Iii SDiriU .... ' · Mn, Kine

o.-v~ce

· ·. 'fif~E I'T

.

ICIAM LITS ANSWIIS

Millie uelre

~ lngllt!t er w..
tom, rt 1 111111 pMod. 114- ,:

,...

!£1Letclt
(!) , , _ Forwn: A W041d 01 .

...... -

Co4Yop811...., Bvslnnl and

Rd. , _ , ....

-~;&amp;r- ~ Mwlr. 11+

polftlclllttlideB dllcull the
roll of American 11ut1nne
and ill ~ 10 compate In

.. ,,., .,, ,lr l\. '•·

the 1ntemat1on11 markitptace.

'

82

-

• o .... Twllgl1t z-

Plumbing 6
Hlltlng

o•--. ......-

•

lllilewl

•,

•

"

-

l ;I

441·71DL

· 0 Tile lquellnr Mc:CJU II ..
lorCid 10 work wl1h a former
lerro&lt;lll whom he Cllpl _ _

.

I On....

'.

84

..n.,...... ....

Ellelrlcsl tl'"' .
Rlfrtg....uoft'- --

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

........Ill

•

11:0DCJ)IIIrd .... And

• ••• c...

.,_
llntrhlan. •••,....

aa 011111'111

AXYDLBAAXR
IILONGJ'ELLOW

. '

••aca mllqA)
•Cil Cll e&lt;ll
• ••
'

•oAIMikiHalt

. . .-.~17M.

112

1D:30(!) To II Allnaunau
G]) Cflnii)Ynlu TOillghl

- .-·-~-

"""""
~Uru~oai!d
·

0'

IIJ it,;,r;'ii.ny A ,

1171 l'&lt;lud Ftlrmonl~oorc ..
OYI.; ..,._, oruloo,
. M.t" ••·
Jll. II,_, ~-conoRion.
83
Uvlltock
I10Gt ol raoiOIIOiult oHor. 11-.
•-·
1 tkl Polled 1l7l Ford F380. Htavy Duly
boll ' and •uulng F1111itd.Calll14-112.7302.
11._1411.
'
Palnl--hll••~~~~~- 1• 1 CIM!vv 4 - • dnvo
Tool!,18100. CoH 304-881trl

h - · . . - f1ir - ·
•hi' I:OOp.llu.

55

--~114-

45 · ·

E

• m~:.~UM&amp;EREOII

~~~~~~01
' 1~-E-Q

·

114-1121.

4.....10.

...,.av.. •u••••·

i

If~-= Cillllll

T:OO

-tM7Jato.
CJ..1:...hl11~ .1.,
11,:::w,_·
11 c
' ;u " --- ~1177 Dodo• Holl~on ~-up.
til an~. Aulo. trouamlllion.'
1110
· Fairmont, 2 - ·
11 4
OJI.,~o.
tilnlllillllon,
4. . . . , ..

;"~:;~-~:::wt:c~oa:p:o:;:1.~1:~~~-~-~ud~,~ISJ00,~~-11~4~112~1!-:!!~·=·~Ciu~ut:'~lt.:S:u:=:J·

Oraolooia U.l(lg. 1 and z bedroom opa~11~loGe
..._
and
. -..a.
Atlo~- In Mlddltparl. p,_
1114. .,_., llorch 11.
nuonlt ranllu-01 IO thoaa
qualify. Coli .14-112·7717.

'--

-

True' ks for

-

""'*' ...,, -

1Wo 387 lllan..,., ...,.
0111 I fl-. Ill

II) AIIC 11ew1 Q

m ~da:~~·Q

~~~~~
~e~~~~~~~~~
81
72

1

-

I
I
. ..J.
1..--1.-.L.-.L......L.-1..

ilewiHour

__,,DO PML. IY•r

around 37UIIL

t--

m (!) M1aliel LAint

Fenn

-

I-,ri~r::..;;-:-'--1..--l
I I -I I .e

~

·_·

llnu-rilll'l,
.lunct.
, . . - ld, AI. 21,
New ERA. WV, ullllll Clwllllia•

......... S2

Mobile Homes
for Sale

54

-

...

~:~:~::::::~.-...,
· send cards, not that I'd ---·- on
N E l G H T ~--.

. .(J) I;GnaCenlilr
.
(1) .
(I) Cunwril Afloluo

1919 by NEll . Inc

r=.":. 1~t.,~;444 ~ura. ~

!E'..?.~~ ~=·~~

1011. -

Seier

or

514.et:l
.
2Dlltd.
litdroom
lor illit.
- Cot· , Top Coah paid. Old tumHura
Nloaop40:
-Ina.
loui1drY
t.oiiHieo ovollolule: Cill114-1112' cuboanll,
quifto,
Otltnltl,
3711 EOH.
palnllnguu, 10J1, Of tmtra tlllll
call OOiiKI 304-426-3271, er
3 h d - apani!ltlil S200 304-423-1854.
- . I 1 0 0 . _ . .: I n t -.
114-8124121.
WOOd ooo11 olovo With warming
ov.n and w:ater rnrniw. c.p;
38 W. • · I llr., 1 lath, prlvole par CIOtllrand. Vary good...,_
enceo.d p8tlo. C1ole to dtUon. $14-843-14&amp;3.
~ • --&amp; thopping ...,_
for, - ~wotor,
ttwtf\ ·truh 54 MIICIIIIIWOUS
:nmdad. 1215/mo. Call 1141~2
Mere
· handlae
- 1••·
Apanmanla 1or 111'11. 1Win 1 "" old klndl- ftraPIOCI
Rivera T-ar Houtl.. lw tht inatn. Phcint 304-475-4031:
_
Etdiunr, ~ppacl and 111.. -.
-.
apa~.- 1 -2 Warnt llomlnJil Q11i - . . ,
avalloblo for non-liondlolppod,
41 OOD b1
111,000 II
3D':.US:scl0. u,...,.
u,
1'111 Oppothlftlty.
&amp;a 20o ICI'M of tr ... for tale,._ .
~
H ablo 1o llrlp cui, Yano1ro ••
ohlp waod, Jaoloun Co. WV,
IEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT !104'1n.t341.
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON Figurine
oolloollon, 100
ESTATES. 138 . . . . . Pille
trom 11~- w.•~ io thoD •
........ 11 . l14-21f.14G .....
movlee. CII11t 141 HCLEtJH. _ . I l l .
- h ...... Mkldleport, 01u1o. - , ..... -..... - ·
1 onc1 2 - - Jumlohod - -.. oak. lih,_a hiottory.
apia, alto 1 tftlolancr,
!l"'ll.oid, ·Don ,..uoh, 11441 114'ulllftleo paid, raltroncaa ,.. •--•~ 104 - .,...... -.
--·
Jell 13x3111t.... ki ..DIIIl~
Cloon. 11ut ap4., Ill 1to1t 11, .... C1 12,-· IIut R
kltohan ..,.._ &amp; rtlrlg., no • lloolt nooy ond T-,
mo. leal,
~-· prtlor- 383L
rH. t1t 141 1 1·
~ng•. W waterbld. 11.........
for_, 311r1 3 -~..uP.II•I,., ..47
apl. on 1o1 Avtnut, ""· Dop. 1u
~-~-~ -

--1-lromRullend, .... gar~~~~, lam, '
oulllul$31,000
DIM
........... 114-817·7217.

32

•1•

·
441-11M, 127 :ltd. Cillo
fllnul- t-oo, 2 bed- ..ll,p::;•H::::•·~
011.,.,:,.._-=-:,..,.,.,.,.,..,-'8mll Huntlnaton,
Gooo U8EO APPUAHCU
UnJVonllr. ~: W.....__
. . _ uolu~-..
- - - . ... ,.....,
or!"
112-2411.
,. __ l!baaa· JPP" 1011,
U - Alvor Aa. lttldo I t 42 Mobile Homll _
· Craat-1, CoN 114-441-7111.

:;:::=,=::::=:::,:::==:..

Read. the

w· ~

-..

htidbolldl
ond
lo ML
Ad. Open
to up
P.ll.
thru 111. cau 114~4~-~~Z~..
Coumy Appllonct 1no. --

HI

IM(J) I4MIIIV HI· · ··
1130 CJJ Ill) I!IIC :.-:
.30}-......
_

'

•

·!9nl AIO. 4

1,1,&amp;1Dg101.8obv-138. 141. .... ,. _ __

114~·1071.

llur- ... _

'

•

I• lw I~ rl,· I
--- ---

0 •

4.

.

-

i:311Il Andr llllfllth

..._lui
..,
t71, firm..,, - .... a...
molal

eo

-

r;t...;""'r-ll1

~.!t.....

Sliuatlon
Wantlld

.aOClO Ext.

camor

.•

-

11 00

ltn,

or

...
lll!l!oM
tr . .-

to

~p.

•

'

I

:5:!~~ ~· , ~-1-ril'. .;jr- =-v

({~­

(I)

.,... ~ .... 1 1 1 1 -or boil
.... 1271 &amp;

.

ID

'wllort
lour ocnanublad -.11 belOw 10 ' - four ~nopt. -do

~ 11 . I~ El HIH II T I*

Iii:;:;~--:.c:

.

-

· ~;)

3

~~·~ ,..
11 -r 7na~las.l.

-

'

b
te
Uti. Roon. . . 1221 1o 117L
LAmPl -121 1o I12L Dloi01!II
$1ot tpd \IP to 141L lablo
1711.
E*b.a
1141•
. ., • .- , . . 1e
.........
1400 I up. bUnk . . . ODft f' ' I
wHh 01111,.. 1281 1ft\!~ up

auhtt,

f:.':.oiiONEV~= 11 ..,_,

.

..,up

138l.to-. . ..- -to
1121. llldt •

I

·

(1)...., .... lllllhl"""

LA'INE'II'UIINITUAI
~

• _

.AiwJ

Houtehold

=:, !1~':::: 1-1-1•
~
:O=r=.u.11.
unt .:!:::..."t
11
~==:;~~=~==r-===:::====~========~
130
12
41
a Ilion, .~~~~~~~~=
Ml-'
Help Wantlld

••tt:;:,:c··
• lea!.: .f&lt;ll

GoOd I
I

TUES., JAN, 2

IVINittG

••.
'
-'
'

Merchand~Sr·

51

,.

Loll : llalllaagle, lllaCtc, whMo,

I

•

,_

"tt· eau 114-j

col wHh lang hair. Dooltwod.
Loll: rn Po~or A.... 11o1e Rod
1rr old, hutog

•

,. .i,.r

·-

"The sign has heen so effeet.ive hy itself that · we've
decided not. to hother getting
the dog.".
··

HappyAds
...._ 311, 1', 221 k, IK-1£ ..
Sttlllwoman21-401or....,.
panlollthlp. Enli&gt;ra _.,.._
opona,
dlnlna
. "'ou1. ·
music, ·.co.
"PoulbMI
C..mft-

6

)
~l

••.r-

c, ... , . .. ,_......... ~. · ·- ... -- ..... ..- ...,

5

,

HU-l' ;

.

· ~ @)~~ L

1-1/2

441~.831.

N~

'

'.•

=

~~~~~@~

-GIVMWIIY

• lp.IIU-

_~-'oN~

.'

~~~----~----~----~~~~~.~~~m~·~o~t:M~'~A~'•;PT*;~~e~al:~e·~~·V~l.~8~l.~O-n---.-,--~;;;;J;;;;:;;n.~~~~~~;:~ .
'=~=' S~V-.4llA..;4£~s·
Viewing
o..a,onae
W.:;: cu' •· - ....::;..,..::_~.:..

wAV 10 fat- wHr:::a.•

oN~

·-

-~·

·'t

•

r

•

3 AnnciUnc:ernent .

.

•

•

l CSil • Ct.. '
1M::......... ·

' '

d)

•

Fumtsh8CI

,,.. !: •

I

TlflllhiSMw

;;:::·-

Rooms

.....

.
.
_
•w

~,,.

OMU
I Is

x.:

Oae lsCIIII -IIMdl for .nother. In this 111111ple A Ia uaed
for·a. a.. L'~
lbe two O'a, etc. SIIWie leUen,
1
1=11. .
llltl f011111Uan Ill the wtHds ere Ill

=
...

diJ lllleedllllt1 r1 are different.

.

•
Z'ESNBTV

,

.

CIIWPIOQUOI'I!
LTZV

DTN

WN

MSV

OSYAT,

FT

.

..

XZOEWE~t

WA

MSV

'··

--

FTNNTV

ZESNBTV

sv

LTZV

........ Mille

0\VNB - N8TT • f..:... l

_.,.w
...........
..,

-.
.....

1

--....................
............. ..,
l :llp&amp;

:! •'1n

87

Uphol......
._.._,,

"The down stuffing In our lo\tn"t quality coats
comes from geese that froze to death ..
. --

--

SDX ·

.'

- . ,.,... ... 1111111.

·-

QVZ-EX

.,,

.,

l

•

-

.

•

~··

'
~~-.

"

•

•

,.

•I

�-

'·

-

&lt; .

'

"'pr 12.,...The D!ily Senlinllll

.Be~m

. ;.r

t.

Porneroy-Midcltpo~t,

celebra~~

Ohio

'

New Year with 'world's · biggest party~

WEST BERLIN (UPI)- Thou·
lions, most of thein when· the
saiiC)I ot people \jshered In the
screen fell on the cirowd.
III!W year along and atop the
On Monday afternoon, abOut
· BerUn Wall, dancing ·and setting 30:000 people took part In the
off flreworkll as they celebrated
BerUn Run, crossing the historic ,
thearrlvalofadecadetreeofthe
Brandenburg Gate, which. was
iron Curta!Jf barriers that dl·
reopened last inonth i!l a moving
vldedthecityfornearly30years., ceremony .
But the celebrations were
overshadOwed by the de.a th of at
Thousands of people cheered
least one person · as a huge as Jonathon. Grlx from London,
outdoor screen set up by East Kemal Yazld from· Paris and
German televisiOn collapsed Ingo Pluczlni;kl arrive~;! at the
·under the weight of scores of finishing line holding hands at
peQRie who cLimbed on the the end oflhe run. the first across
scaffOlding supporting It, •
· thedlvldedcltys!ncetheerectlon ·
, City otllclals said 135 people of the Berlin Wall28 years ago. ,
were · hurt during the celebraIn a gesture symbolizing the

new spirit that has pervade(Hhe
city since the Nov. 9 opening 'Cf
tl\e Berlin Wall, the mayors ot
East and West Berlin gave the
slart signal for the 4·mlle run.
~vera! soldiers from the'Unl·
ted States. British' and French
troops stationed In West Berlin·
were among the singing and
cheering runners.
One group carried a banner
that read " Greetings from Chi·
. cago. Happy New Year," while
an East German sportsman
released eight while peace
doves.
During all-night celebrations
along the wall New Year's Eve.

about two dozen people scaled
tbe Brandenburg Gate and
planted a European Community
flag alongside a German banner.
·East German border guards
tried tobarallbutEastandWest
Germans from cro8Sirig . the
frontier, but they were QVerwhelmed by the crowds and soon
waved everyone through after
glanclng ·a t their passjloriS.
:J'ens of thousands of PeoPle
gathered along the Berlin Wall
for the celebration, with most
packed Into the eastern side near
the Brandenburg Gate. A large '
video screen set upon the eastern
side played rock videos, and not

.Ohio Lottery

far away jleople 111 candles to the country's new provisional
commemorate those who died In government.
Romania.
The West Getman dally Ex· •
•·ceausescu 15 dead. Germany press billed tbe celebration as ,
greets Romania," 11 banner said, "the world's latgest ·party," •
reterrtngtohard·llnecommunlst saying that !lfter ~ yeara of
dictator. Nlcolae CeaUJeScil, who · division. QirUn would celebrate
who ex!!Cuied Christmas Day by "a feast 1M like of which the
~
w~ld bas 'never seen."

~

,

Pick 3

.:centennial · .
•

~.

•

742

!
....

f.

.
II lllllllllllliUIIilll'h/IN/'1/III;ll

•'·

·e

~111111:.11'/JIHff

....

'

'

~missiol)e.-s adopt ·$11.8 million budget

.,.'

...

''

JUNCY · YOAC~
.ments. Ill. tile Jenera! hrnd, .
,
1
Dallf8enllnelli&amp;AIJ
Sl85,537·wu apprtipl'lated for the
·
•.
.county !1Udl~l office; $10.,720
Al $11.8 mUIIon budeet , to • ,tor'· the · treuw:er; $63,098 for
4plnte, Metp County tlfO'II!I'n· common pleas court; $136,'!01 for
,.., and liervlces In tbe coming the ·pi'OII!CIII1nl attorney • of.
• yeer wu adopted Tuesday after1 flee; a,757 t!lr the county plan·
JICII!D lly the Meigs County Coln· nlng commlillon; 152,3119 for
mlilllners. The commlaalolll!l's domestic relations - JuvenUe
held .a special meeting Tuesday ,court; ~.235 for probate court;
$120,472 for the cle~k o!-·courts;
afternoon to review and approve
the 1990 budget.
$23,2111 for the coroner, 193,832
· ·The .$11.8 ~Ilion e1'and·total ot
for county ,c ourt; $~02,784 for the
all county funds li down about board of elections, $208,150 for
, $1,000 from ltalt .ye!U';I total
maintenance services and operabudlet, Blld•l!tary . reques!S- lions ot buUdlngs,,whlch mainly
from thevM'Iousbff!Qefo~A~erecut
g~ to pay utilities; $387,620for
appraxlmately S111&amp;,11Kl to m"t
the sheriffs department; $72,957
am01111ts whlcll were certified tqr for the recorder; $5,491 for
1990 by the county budget com·
disaster S!!l''!ices; $85,794 for
mission, Commissioner Rlch•rd
agriculture; $131,663 for the
Jones rePOrted.
,"
children services board; $44,410
· Of the grand total, $2,840.~?
for soldier's relief; 535.1158 for
was appropriated to the co)llljy veterans 1erV1ces; $84,617 for the
· general fund whlj;h !s 'comprls~
county's share of public. uslstof county · offices and , ance; $22,000for.thecounty park
~· P"'Pnllllon: 138,177 for the 'plat
'lepjlrtments.
•
Among ,the offices and depart.. . ~P. office; $6,500for the blstor!·

'

Brown named.

..

VMH mediCal ·

cBisoclety.
,,,
Appropriated for the commls·
sloners' budget was $218,809.
Thii reflects a sizable lnereue
from 1111! $1'68,5!16 approprtati!d
lut yejU' for tbe commlsldoners.
The Increase comes about due to
a recommendation from state
examiners to p141ce moriey for
· s)lerlff's vehicles In the commts·
sloners' account sll!cethecounty
owns tllletoallsherlff's vehicles.
A new general fund budgetary
liem Is a $35,000contractwltb the
state public defender's office to
en8.ble Meigs County to have a
public defender to represent
Indige-nt residents • charged In
criminal matters. The contract
amount l"lll cover the expenses
of salary and office operations.
Of the $35,000 total, $17,500wlll be
reimbursed to the county
thrquah the agreement.
In other general fund Items,
~.ooo was approved to, pay the
county's cO'st for the annual state
• audit which Is mandated by law. ·

.

. . ,.

'

.

I

'

.. "''-''''

"

Marli 0. Brown baa beea
l!&amp;med pn!81dent of the Medical &amp;&amp;aft ol Veterans MemorIal Jlolpltal In Pomeroy for
1118. othe'r, officers for llle
yellir. Include Dr. Wilma
A. Manafleld, vice president;
Dr, MefP. Simon, secrelar)'; .
and Dr. E.S. Vlllaaueva,

new

lreMUrtll'.

:·11 '

Inf~rmational me~tings

.

Am Electric Power ....... .. .... 32%
AT&amp;T ...... .... .......... ,.... ...... ... 46
..Uhland Oil .... .. ................ .. 39%
· Bob Evans ...; ..... .. .. ............. l3l'8
Charming Shoppes ...... ... : .. .. 10ltj
City Holding Co. .. ...... ......... . 15
Federal Mogul.. .. ..... .. .. ...... . 21~·
Go\Jdyear T&amp;R ...... ....... .. ... .44\i,
Heck's ........ ...... ... .......... ..... .. .4
Key Centurion .. ........ .... .. ... .13%
Lands' End .. ... ...... ..... ......... 20ltj
Limited Inc . .... ............ .... ... 36\jj
Multimedia Inc..... .... ...... .. .. 91%
Rax Res.t aurants .. .... .. ....... ..... 2
Robbins &amp; Myers ...... .... .. .. .. 16~ .
Shoney's Inc... .. .. .. .... ... ... .. ... 12
Star Bank ......... ... .. .. .. ......... 21~
. Wendy's Inti. ............ ... .... .. . .4ltj
Worthington Ind .. ... .. ...... ..... 22%

-Miscellaneous j!xpen$es lotat
$217,073, .which : among ·other
· llems, reflects $40,00o which !las
been earmarked for computers
, 1n the county cO\it offices.
Computerization of'county court
something that Is long
overdue," stated Comrillisloner
Richard Jones. but was just not
affOrdable In past years; The
miscellaneouS 'ca,tell)ry also In·
eludes ·the state mandated
·. crippled children budget, the
county's share of the soli and
water budget, the counJY's share
toroperatlonsofBiueStreakCab
Company, and · t~e county
Infirmary.
under contiJ!geneles. a total of
$75,000 has been earmarked, of
which a large part may be used
for remodeling the Interior ofthe
sheriff's department.
Under capital Improvements,
$70,000 was set aside which may
beusedtocontlnuetheupgradlng
of courthouse offices, and for any
unanticipated work to coun··

.

for

· ty.....owned ,&amp;ulldlngs.
Among the special revenue
fupds Included 111 this year's
budget. $3,491 was appropriated
for the community mental health
board fund; S8.307 tor the dog and
kennel tund lot the first six
monthsoftheyear; $1,466.850for
the county board · of mental
retardation and developmental
disabilities;· $4,468,149 for publlc .
assistance; $59,475 for the litter .
. con)rol · and · recycling fund;
$67,526 tor real estate assess·
ment, w~lch reflects anticipated
co.s ts for this year's property
reap'pralsal, as required bylaw;
$21,229 . to the youll\ . service
subsidy grant fund; $390,000 for
Meigs County Emergency Medl·
cal Services; $114,822 for the
tuberculosIs clinic; $59,424 for
children services fulid~; $4,794
tor the state-required marriage
license fund; $120,346 which .Is
anticipated as the county's Com·
ill1Jnlly Development Block.
Grant alkltment for 1990; an~

·

Me~

Board OKs
school bus 'driver ·
certificates

.

,

'

'

the

Including $34,984 for state foster
care.
·
The motor vehicle and gasollpe
tax fllnd which operates the
county highway department Is up
from $1,598,483 for 1989 to
$1,868,113 this year . The lncrea·se
reflects a rise In the state' s
gasoline tax.
,
All budgetary items are certl· ·
fled by the budget commission
(the auditor, treasurer jjnd
pr 0secull.!!&amp; attorney) based
upon last year's receipts and
anticipation of tecelpts for the
new year. Should receipts fall
shortofantlclpatedamounts. the
budget commission will revise
certifications to stay In line witH
receipts.
.
"From this , point on," said
Comm lssloner Jones, '·'this
board must watch expenditures
closely. Come January 1891, we
will really be scraping for
money. With no funding In·
creases on the horizon, we don't
want to make commitments we

S44.101forallotherstatefunds, ' can'lful(lll."

&gt;

·LoW·E
.~&lt;Atl'

Meigs Lqcal School · Dis'trict
residents ~~
..
.
~~~fl Jpnuary 8 ~!dents o~ dlstr~t.
!l!", wq,~l~

staff president
'

· Dallf aiQck prices
{All ol18:30 a.m.)
BI')'Ce 111d Mark Smith
of Blunt, Ellis It Loewi ·

·

'

.

the dlstrlpt, ,

mea!!

•-lit' lu hla Cllinmeats to the 1~QI.. ·clGillll al~·th ·e\d ,tt)ile!_~en· ·

Melp Local
. "' ilven the
o!;::::.allcl:~·coat for the
P~
~two new
buildings at Informational meet·
lngs to be )leld lhli month at the
ellht elementary scbools.
·
The sessions will be held at tbe
.January ·PTO meetings of each
school and Is a ftrsta~ toward
e,J!UghteninJ resklen~ on . tbe
proposed bulklllli program priOr
to a planned survey In February
or March..
The ·Meigs Local Board of
EducatlonatitsNovembermeet·
lng passed a resolution to con·
duct asurvey ot the district to get
public opinion ori such a building
prograiJ'! on the recommendation
of Supt. James Carpenter. '
According to the superintend·
ent, all bonded Indebtedness of ·
the district will be paid olf In
December, 1990.
He said that If the four mUis
currently . being paid Is con·
tlnued, beiiDnlnglnJanuary1991
and extending for 23 years, over
S9 million will be raised toward
the proposed buildlnl program
at no ln~rease In taxes to · the.

Supt. Carpeuter said the dl,atrlct
will never &amp;lain have the oppor· ,,
tunlty to have that mucll money
·a t no Increase In taxes, but with
justa continuation of the current
rate.
The superintendent cited pupil
e11ro0ment as a factor In proPOS·
lng tile construction of two new
buildings; ·
lie said that currently tbere
are four buildings with less than
150 .students, that In th~ build·
lngs, excluding kindergarten, the
enroUment.lalesa thair130; while
lna.notber building, Uiereiu't!370
students.
The student·feacher l'llilo
ranges from 15 studenta to one
teacher one place, to 31Students
to one teacher In another: The
construction of two new build·,
lngs, which could he either
kindergarten tbrou1b sixth
grade or kindergarten through
elgbth grade, would equalize that
ratio and give more opportunity
for full-time bulldlni teachers
In specialized aress. of lnstrilc·
tlon, such as art, music and
language. .
.
If the -proposed buil~lng program li accepted by the voters of

tary schoOls and also tbe junior
~~~h school If, tbe new schools .
were kindergarten through
eighth grade.
. At the PTO Informational
ineethip, 'Car!Jenter said, the ·
emphuls will be on providing
Information to residents about
the proposed .building program
and ilve them an opportunity
ask questions. ' ..
The plan, he said, Is to have all
the meetings In January so that
when the survey·forms go out .In·
month or so, residents will be
better lntOrmed about the propOsed building program;
·
The schedule of meetings
follows:
Salem Center. 7:30 p.m.
Monday,
Ha1 rlsonvllle, 7 p.m. Tuesday .
;Bradbury, 7 p.m. Jan. 10.
Junior High, 7:30p.m. Jan. 11.
Salisbury, 2 p.m . Jan. 12 .
Middleport, 7 p.m. Jan. 16.
Rutland, 7 p:m. Jan. 18.
PomeroY, 7 p.m. Jan. 22. '
Supt. Carpenter urged res!·
dents of each community to
attend. "You are welcome to
attend whether yo.u are a P'J'O
member or. not," he concluded.

to

DUI
~=~:ae~~rreo;slard::;~ H~se approveS urug,
· sanctions
...I--

Several school bus driver cer·

'

CLEVELAND (UPI) - Satur·
day's Winning Ohio Lottery
numbers:
PICK·3

387.
PICK-3 ticket sales toialed
$1,547,360.50, with a payoff due of
$411,139.

. LOWE SOLD ~ Lowe'a Motor lan, 41h and Mlin stneia in Point
Plesnnt, lllaow under new OWINnblp • of Jaa. I, 1990. RlverPolate ·
t That prOVIsiOn was Development, s Hunthratoa torpantlon, has Biped • lease·purchu, :.,
percen ·
.
_
apeement wltlllona-dme owaer H0111er Lowe, Jr. President rl Rlverdeleted by the House.
· ·.
i&gt;olate IIIII cnnrer fA tbe Inn, Hemsn Seum (center) said be plans to
· •
hiabUpt the HtlltlltidtJ Ud hllltorlcai lllllnner of the hotel IIIII ft•
The Senate already has passed panel on tbe public lilt of the banquet and private party rooms. SetwodrUI·flghtlnibllts, but House salcl 11e IDiendl .to open up the rourtll floor ror olllcts sad/or
D
Speaker Vern Riffe,
· spartmenta, to put a new l'lc:e oa the 6ve ltoftfronts belonBIIiR.on the
- WIIeelersburg; the orlglaal au· piOJIEi t)J sad to expand tile hotel's eervil:es lo the publ~ ,vllh 1 ftlo
thorofHouseBIU~,saidheWIU
taUI'IIIIt sad caterln1 service. Plclnreclue (left to rlahl) Point Plnsant
.
·confer will\ the governor and Mayor Ru.ell Holland, Seum, uti AI AlclerFer, dinctor or Poiat
Senate 'President Stanley Aro- Pleilslnt Ma'ln StntL (OVP pboto by Marpret
noff, R-Cinclnnati, on what
'
•
should be In the f!J\al version.

lng of tbe Meigs County Board of
Education.. Driver certificates
COLUMBUS, Ohio· (UPI) WednesdaY.. II expected to reject
were approved for Fa lib varney, State representatives voted over·
the HoUle cllanges to the drunkell •
for the .::ounty. office; Max Hill whelmqly ruesctay for Ilea'
drMn1 bill and force the !slUe to
naltles a1alnst drunken driV·
a Jo!Jit conference committee.
J
Southern . Local School
· r., for
" and a comprehenilve bill to , Seli. Paul Pfeifer, R-Bucyrus,
District; and Albert Eutman, · •
Corey . Carnahan, ·R icky free. reduce the abu~e and sale of
the author, aarees with the Ohio
d Lew!8 H ph
Illegal drugs.
·
•
Deparllilent llf-HIIhway Safety
man an Local School
umDistrict.
rey, for
However, It ls•l.lltely to be
that law
. enlorc,ement officers
Eastern
weeki
before
either
ot
the
t,wo
si!Qulcl
be Jiven au~rlty to
Led M K
·
a ae raeuter was aP· biDs are sent to Gov. Richard ·su1pend on tbe SPOt the licenses
proved · by the board as a Cejeste bec&amp;use of 111sa.n..e- . of a"v motorists testlne over the
su_b stltute teacber.
•··
"'
o1
Employed as a teacher aide for ments over details. Of special
II!IRI blood alcohol level of ·
.... ·
· ·
the Severe Blibavlol'!ll Hand!· concern II how to pay for the.
capped elm was Shirley . A, IIICI'euedjallapacenecellltated ' ~.._.I
'Willis.
,
by. harsh ~~lies PfOI!OIF~
~l!JU
Continuation of liability lnsli· for drue ..am-...
. . pro''~. b~
dept~u·QQ
ranee With Nationwide Mutual
The Hou• opened Ita. l9tO
,/
~
~
Insurance Co111pany was ap- 11111lon by IJUIIna, IIU, Sena,e
proved for 1990. · •
BIIIW, wbtdllncre. . . tbefba
Two , lncldenta' 'of arson are. set ori fire. The SyraCII&amp;e Fire
. Among routine matters; a andl~nasuapenalonsJorclriVi underlnveiU.atlopbytheMelp Department sell! a truck to ·
County Shertfra Dejlartmel!t. ·
extinauJah tile flll~es lind ,to
budgetary tranllfer of 12:10 was lng while Intoxicated iad pro- approved, alonawitbtbemlnuies vldel fll~ altlrllltlvll ·to Jail.
Tile~ lnefdentoceurredat9. prevent the .flre frOm spreading
• ·or the December meeting and the lllcllldiJW llouae· . arrest, elee- p.m. at the Rlvlrvllw Elernen- to other bales.
treasurer's report. ·
tronlll IIDIUoa lodiiiUid lmmo- tlry !lohool , at Reedlvlllf. AC.
·Deputies also, lnvestililled a
During an or1anlzat1onil blllZtittft of an offellder'l Cll'.
· col'diJII · to lllfllnJiatiDn trcm deercar aceideJit on ~lA! 124,
meeting of the county board,
Sbol'tly tberealter, lb!' . Sbll'lff JUMI M. Soulaby, Jobn above Loq Bottcm. Thelma J.
which was a110 held Tuelday chamber apJIOUid,
tbl !lalltll apd Mark lm(tll were Smltll, ot Reedivllle, wu travel·
evenq, Harold Roush waa Hollleverllollof•llltlodnlrllb! lrlvellllf' 10111141 ~ lilaautonRoutt1KWI!enad4!:fr
-lected plwldent and Orll Wblcb.,_iclli)'lliiii:IMII~ wllllltJIIYiaWIIIIoUIIIIItlamel ranlato1beleftrurfentler0fber
Ylce-prealdent Qf the tlfl lor drill abun ...,trllk:lr· comlq from belilatltlle aellooL
1 • Pon'llac~ The tall )llht W,aa
,
, .
· 1111 but hu elli • •
clll'1llf
· damapcl. The deer fled,
Regular meetlnp were e~tab- "' edllcllloll uti ~•at•, nt.
Wbn tbey Wlllt to tilt .,..,
Flnall)', Sberllf Soulaby relllhecl for 7 p.m. on the II!C.'Ond
It aliO IIIla up•DvQMtllclq . tbey IIIKO\'IIId tilt 011 Ill 'tile portl till a~ of '2-year-old
Tuesday of ead montb, atart1111 Board to aniiUilijt PUJII'tl a allr1dlllly tlltllltllhlltiDGrwula WIJlllm J. KIJII, of QuyaviUe.
In February, to be beld at llbe . atat. drill palley, ad pula tile flunel. The11Nba41lelllatlrtl!d , Kllll wu ~tid_ II)' tile Ohio
county board of edqcation offtce Goverlllll"• Offb of Crtmlaal wttll 1 Iller eartoll.
lflllllftYJ'atrol tor bl~ _ .
In Pomeroy.
Juatlce service~ Ill ci~ Ill.
Tilt MC.'OIId lllcldent Qecurred no-OJiaiat'l!l'l !leaN.
waa
8alarles tor botrd members apectal ll'Utl fountl-&lt;ln4J JI'O' around 11: 2111 p.nl. onlaiNr Road a110 lf1'llllll on a bfn:ell warrbt
wereaet!1Ull0pc!!'monthand15 tram• devlaed . by lo11al jult oft COUnty Road . 21' ~~(tat fl'omtheMelpCountyCqurtfor.
ceata per
for travel aowtnmeats: .
· Raclnt. two larp balm of bay faiUDI to comply with ~ court
~·
The ~·
~- 'llelclaPII to D,elblrt Smltb were J order •

&amp;:

lottery numbers

.afson incidents
·Me:k..

PICK-4

1135.
PICK·4 ticket sales totaled
$281,646, with · a payoff due of
$245,100. ..

..

16, 18;~4. 32, 36 and 38.
Super Lotto ticket sales totaled
$6,628,026.
. .
·
. · Kicker
01«*!6. ·
Kicker ticket sales totaled

•1.

$1,023.~.

Tbere will be a drawing Mandar. New Year's Day. ·

--

.

•.

A Multwn.dlolnc, Now~

or.

~

'. '

2 S.ctlon1. 14 Pou• 2il Conte

· Stocks

...

.

!

,,

•

•.

'

..

s.,e.. Lotto

...

•·

.,'

·'

Cloudy tonJcht. Low near a.
Cb1111ee ot rain 941 · percent:
Thanday, hllh In mid SO..
Chuce of rain 941 percent.
'

.•
ar

'

/11/INHI/INifHIIHflllt!liJUIIllMJJlW.II

..

Pick4
4395

0
i'l~ '

,}

'

COLUMBUS. Ohio (UPI) , The Ohio General Assembly will
open the new decade .this week
with action on bills to· cu tb drug
abuse and drunken driving.
But as 1990 wears on, the
lawmakers will be faced with
legislation on campaign !Inane·
lng and lobbying, healJh insu- ·
ranee for those whocannotaftord
It, recycling of garbage to reduce
landfill requirements, and $600
million worth of capital
Improvements.
·: House Speaker Vernal Rlfte
Jr., D·Wheelersburg, and Senate
President Stanley Aronoff, R·
.. Cincinnati, hope to . send their
troops .home by AprU to cam·
palgn for re-election . . Sessions
will be sporadic for the rest ofthe
year.
]'be House bas scheduled a 1: 30
· p.ITJ. floor session for Tuesday to
deai with get-tough legislation on
drugs and drunken driving.
House members will be back
Wednesday to vote on bills
establishing an Ohio OWce of
Inspector General and 1tlvlng
home rule to townships.
The · Senate plans to meet
,Wednesday . and Thursday this
week.
House Bill 685, set for passage
·In the House, upgrades penaltles
for drill abusers and traffickers
and calls for the state to devise a
coordinated dtug·flglitlng plan
lnvoMng schools, communltles
other state offices ..
Titer~ , are questlon marks
about .funding !or drug educa·
tlon, who controls money and
aSIIets seized from dtug dealers
8lld bow to pay for Increased jail
s,.ce needed ·,to house drug
felons.
~
· •.• .,_.. ·ro
House Speaker Vernal Riffe
Jr.. D·Wheelersburg, the bill's
original author; said details will
have to be Ironed out before
AprU, particularly on the $2
billion-plus . cost of the
legislation.
Senate Bill 131, also being
voted In the House, was rewritten
slgolflcantly In a subcommittee
.' under the direction of Rep. Marc
Guthrie, D·Newark.

.

•

. Po~

Lawmakers open
new deeade with
cfmg, alcohol bills

.-

a

«

. "'

~-

-

...........
•'

..~-

•

_... -....

moe

•;ldl

,

... - ...... -- ··~.

.. -

Caldwell)

Local news ·briefs-;.....;.,;

No one hurt in Tuesday mishap
The Gallla·Melgs Post of the ·. State Highway Patrol ·
lnvestleated an accident at 6a.m. Tuesday on US33,1n Bedford
Township, 1.9 mUes south of the Meigs·Ai!P,lms County line.
Troopers said a soutbllouird 1988 Ford TemPO driven by Lloyd
S. Jordan, 25, ZanesviJle, went off the right side of lbe road, .
·sartklng ·an embanidnent. Dama1e was mod~rate . No one was.
·
·
Injured. There was no ciiAflon.

. -

.

EM~
•

has five Tuesday calls
•

Five calli fpr medical a
tanee were 811.1wered OD Tuesday
by units of the Melp Co ty Emergency Medical Service..
At 12;28 p.m. , Mlddl rt lftllt to HlPJand Road for Mildred
Arnold who will takett V
ana Memorial Hoapltal.
Pollll\'0}' wu called at : 36 ·p.m. ID the Amerlc:IJ'I!oPP&lt;omm,..llr..,O)"
Nura!Jii Center for Mary Joaes Wbo wu taken to Veteraaa
Memrilllolpltal,
I
· At &amp;:~p.m., Mlddlfl)9rtwent toPsatSt. torJoaephLiaclato
Veterans Memorial llolpltal and st 10:0. p.m. ID Beecb St. For
Della Roaeberry Who"WBI taken lo PI-nt Valley Jfl)lpltal.
Syracu• Fire Department wu called at 11:..0 p.m. lllal!Q
bale fire on Salser Road.
•

,·

�</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="35365">
            <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="35364">
              <text>January 2, 1990</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="214">
      <name>baker</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1901">
      <name>christy</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="694">
      <name>hanlon</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="6647">
      <name>sewell</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="258">
      <name>shaffer</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="6648">
      <name>truster</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="576">
      <name>wood</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
