St. Thomas attorney Tom Bolt was recently honored with the President's Award at the Annual Meeting of the Virgin Islands Bar Association on St. Croix.
The annual award was presented by Bar Association President Patricia Welcome. In making the presentation, Welcome noted that Bolt had served as a member of the Bar Association Board of Governors for the past 13 years and as the Territory's American Bar Association Delegate for the past 11 years.
Bolt, who is the President of the St. Thomas firm, Tom Bolt & Associates, P.C. was recognized for his support and encouragement of local bar activities.
"You can always count on Tom Bolt no matter the task. He has consistently worked toward bringing benefits to our local attorneys, including affordable insurance and continuing legal education," Welcome said.
In accepting the award Bolt said, "We have accomplished much over the past decade, but many important tasks remain ahead to bring our Virgin Islands bar and its attorneys into the 21st century."
BOLT HONORED BY LOCAL BAR ASSOCIATION
TIME FOR TOURISM-ORIENTED ACTION IS NOW
I am a Virgin Islander who lives in the states for five months out of the year. I was just flipping around the TV and saw a really nice "Come to St. Lucia" commercial. On other national networks, I have seen Puerto Rico, Jamaica, Cayman Islands, Aruba and Bahamas commercials. What I haven't seen in years … is a Virgin Islands commercial.
If V.I. commercials do air where? I understand the V.I. government is broke, but can't the Tourism Department air commercials in smaller cable markets where it's much cheaper?
Look around the Caribbean; other islands are in the same financial crisis and are starting to compete harder for tourist dollars. Where are the "Tim Duncan spots"? Also, what are the Tourism offices in several cities doing to promote tourism? Are they waiting for someone to call, and then giving info? Or are they actively going out to promote the islands?
The Virgin Islands has a great product going to waste. Look at the other islands nipping on our heels. Yes, we do have a lot of ships coming during "high season." What is the West Indian Company doing to keep them coming during the summer months?
Yes, more airlines are coming to the V.I., and government officials say they have been "negotiating" to get more flights in. I am skeptical about what they consider negotiating. Other islands already have had U.S. carriers flying regularly. If you look around the Caribbean, airlines are moving in everywhere. St. Croix is losing Delta. St. Martin is gaining Delta. Actually, it has American, Continental, US Air, TWA, Air France, ALM, and Lufthansa flying.
The time for talking has come and gone; when is the implementation of all the "plans" going to happen? Several deals have fallen apart because of politicians. We have to stop thinking about yesterday and 2020, and start thinking about right now.
Dee Lappy
TIME FOR ACTION
I am a Virgin Islander who lives in the states for five months out of the year. I was just flipping around the TV and saw a really nice "Come to St. Lucia" commercial. On other national networks, I have seen several Puerto Rico, Jamaica, Cayman Islands, Aruba, and Bahamas commercials. What I haven't
seen in YEARS….is a Virgin Islands commercial.
If VI commercials do air where? I understand the V.I. government is broke, but can't the Tourism Department air commercials in smaller cable markets. It is much cheaper in smaller markets.
Look around the Caribbean; other islands are in the same financial crisis and are starting to compete harder for tourist dollars. Where are the "Tim Duncan spots?"
Also what are the Tourism Offices in several cities doing to promote Tourism? Are they waiting for someone to call and then give info? Or are they actively going out to promote the islands? The V.I. has a great product going to waste. Look at the other islands nipping on our heels. Yes, we do have a lot of ships coming during "high season." What is WICO doing to keep
them coming during the summer months?
Yes, more airlines are coming to the V.I. and government officials say they have been "negotiating" to get more flights in. I am skeptical about what they consider negotiating.
Other islands already have had U.S. carriers flying regularly. If you look around the Caribbean, airlines are moving in everywhere. St. Croix is losing Delta. St. Maartin is gaining Delta. Actually, they have American, Continental, US Air, TWA, Air France, ALM, and Lufthansa flying.
Time for talking has come and gone; when is the implementation of all the "plans" going to happen? Several deals have fallen apart because of politicians. WE have to stop thinking about yesterday and 2020, and start thinking about right now.
Dee Lappy
CHRISTMAS EVE A SEMI-SILENT NIGHT ON ST. JOHN
St. John police enjoyed a mostly silent night for Christmas Eve, although they had to remind some citizens forcibly about peace on Earth and goodwill toward all.
Four men were arrested in Cruz Bay from Christmas Eve into the early hours of Christmas Day, among them Daryl Ward, alleged to have given a reverse impersonation of Santa Claus. Shortly after 2:30 a.m. Saturday, Zone D Police Command in Cruz Bay got the first of four burglary calls from the Contant-Enighed area. Police arrested Ward at 6:30 a.m. after he was identified by two of the four callers as the man they had seen breaking into their homes.
The others arrested, "Bushio" Bell, Kenneth Smalls and Felix Olivieri, were apprehended in the daylight hours of Friday, Dec. 24, and charged with decking not the halls but their fellow men. Bell was charged with assault, resisting arrest, and possession of a controlled substance with attempt to distribute. Smalls was charged with third-degree assault after a St. Thomas man told authorities Smalls assaulted him with a gun. Oliveri was charged with simple assault. Smalls and Oliveri were released on bail.
WHERE DOES THE MILLENNIUM BEGIN?
Journalists and most of their readers know that the last days of the year produce little in the way of hard news. Governments, which originate most of the news, gradually shut off their faucets of information. The media consequently gets so thirsty for stories that it will print information and discussion of less than top drawer significance and soundness.
The St. Thomas Source is just short of its first birthday. It is a mark of this paper's new maturity that the Source feels it can indulge in some of this end-of-the-year frivolity.
Case in point: Where does the Millennium start?
This is not as simple a question as it might appear.
There actually are three questions. Prepare to see a lot of stories about them between now and Dec. 31. Ignore all those stories in other publications; you are getting the authoritative word here. We're mature enough to know we're right.
The first question is not where, but when? Five years ago this became a controversial question when the bean counters insisted—not without some justification—that a millennium of 1,000 years begins with the first of those 1,000 years; in other words, in 2001, not 2000. With rare unanimity, world opinion ignored that hidebound approach and decided that if we're advancing all four dials on the odometer of years, that's a new millennium.
The second question is where in the world will the new Millennium first display itself? There's a raging argument about this; a lot of tourist money is involved.
Way out in the Western Pacific, there's something called the International Dateline. All you need to know about it is that it's a line on the map of the world that separates today from tomorrow. If you step across the line in a westward direction at, say, 11 p.m. on Dec. 30, the time of the day doesn't change but the date sure does. For you, it is now 11 p.m. on Dec 31 and the new year is only one hour away.
Some nice countries just to the west of the Dateline, such as New Zealand and Australia, are proudly asserting their belief that the new Millennium is coming first to them. Cruise ships have marketed packages that promise passengers they will be the first in the world to usher in the Millennium from their floating pleasure palaces just a mile west of the Dateline.
Television personality Geraldo Rivera will be on one of those cruise ships and thinks he will be the first to broadcast live in the new Millennium.
Not so fast there, Geraldo.
Half a world away from Geraldo, on the south bank of the Thames River, in the middle of a verdant park in the town of Greenwich, is the Royal Observatory of Great Britain and through this charming building runs another line far more important than that dippy International Dateline. It is the zero line of Longitude running from the North Pole to the South Pole. We call it the Prime Meridian. By worldwide agreement, official time is measured from the Prime Meridian; the time on the line itself is the reassuring worldwide standard, Greenwich Mean Time (GMT). (Our Atlantic Standard Time, or AST, is four hours behind GMT.)
The Brits are old hands at this sort of pomp and circumstance. So with hardly a nod to their former colonies in the Southwest Pacific and no gesture of any kind toward Geraldo and the milling thousands on the cruise ships, Her Majesty's government observes that by international agreement they were commissioned to keep the world's official time, and to do so not at any old place but on the Prime Meridian at Greenwich.
Therefore, declare the British, the world's new Millennium officially will arrive at one second after midnight on Saturday, January 1, on the Prime Meridian at Greenwich.
It's hard to disagree with Great Britain's stand. After all, they've got the meridian. And they've already spent all that money on their giant Millennium Dome and other tourist attractions.
Support for the British position was swift in coming from an old adversary. The city of Boston will kick off its Millennium celebration at 7 p.m., five hours early, because that's when the new age will dawn at the Prime Meridian five hours away across the Atlantic.
Now, the third question is really interesting. Forget about the world. Where in the United States will the Millennium make its first appearance?
Readers of the Source know a strong claim has been put forth by our own island of St. Croix on behalf of Point Udall, the eastern tip of the big island, as the first location in the United States to herald the Millennium.
Not so fast, writes Bob Pedersen of Florida in an e-mail to the St. Croix Source. He points out the state of Alaska straddles the 180 degree line of longtitude, location of the International Dateline and exactly half way around the globe from Britain's Prime Meridian. Mr. Pedersen's point presumably is that parts of Alaska are going to get that crucial 24-hour jump on the Millennium.
Not so fast, Mr. Pedersen. The Dateline is out there, sure, but it zigs and zags like crazy to avoid carving up any country or state. And Alaska, Mr. Pedersen, is entirely on the eastern side, our side, of the Dateline.
In addition, Alaska doesn't meet the standard of the Prime Meridian Principle (PMP) which we will explain shortly. Furthermore, it's too cold up there. You don't see Geraldo Rivera heading up toward the Arctic Circle, do you?
Then there is the island of Guam, whose most vocal supporter is, oddly enough, a resident of St. Croix, Herb Schoenbohm. He isn't so much in favor of Guam, as he is against bestowing the honor on his own island. Schoenbohm doesn't think much of the festivities scheduled for Point Udall that night.
With or without Schoenbohm, Guam has a strong case. It meets all the qualifications except one. Guam is part of the United States and is on the correct side, the west side, of the Dateline. Its slogan is "Where the Nation's Day Begins." The people of Guam are proclaiming that if the nation's day begins there, the nation's Millennium begins there, too. A powerful argument and it almost carries the day—until you apply the PMP.
This principle states that the Millennium must arrive first at Greenwich and then sweep in a stately manner westward, hour by hour, time zone by time zone, until it encircles the earth. In other words, it matters not which side of the dateline you're on, but how many time zones west of Greenwich you are. Rome, the eternal city—one hour east of GMT, thus will be the last major city to welcome the Millennium, according to the PMP.
Bad news for Guam, Alaska and Schoenbohm. Good news for St. Croix. It took the application of the Prime Meridian Principle to do it, but Point Udall is going to be the first location in the United States to welcome the Millennium.
We must, however, stand firm with the British on the Prime Meridian Principle. If the Brits fall, the Geraldo Rivera cruise ship fleet heading for the International Dateline will take over. That means Guam will snatch away the distinction that is truly St. Croix's.
If that happens, don't blame the Source. In line with the sound journalism so typical at this time of the year, we've given you a tightly reasoned case for St. Croix's ascendancy.
Editor's Note: When he isn't consulting maps, charts and globes, Frank Jordan is an editor for The Source, a local radio commentator, and former journalism professor at UVI.
WHERE DOES THE MILLENNIUM BEGIN?
Journalists and most of their readers know that the last days of the year produce little in the way of hard news. Governments, which originate most of the news, gradually shut off their faucets of information. The media consequently gets so thirsty for stories that it will print information and discussion of less than top drawer significance and soundness.
The St. Thomas Source is just short of its first birthday. It is a mark of this paper's new maturity that the Source feels it can indulge in some of this end-of-the-year frivolity.
Case in point: Where does the Millennium start?
This is not as simple a question as it might appear.
There actually are three questions. Prepare to see a lot of stories about them between now and Dec. 31. Ignore all those stories in other publications; you are getting the authoritative word here. We're mature enough to know we're right.
The first question is not where, but when? Five years ago this became a controversial question when the bean counters insisted—not without some justification—that a millennium of 1,000 years begins with the first of those 1,000 years; in other words, in 2001, not 2000. With rare unanimity, world opinion ignored that hidebound approach and decided that if we're advancing all four dials on the odometer of years, that's a new millennium.
The second question is where in the world will the new Millennium first display itself? There's a raging argument about this; a lot of tourist money is involved.
Way out in the Western Pacific, there's something called the International Dateline. All you need to know about it is that it's a line on the map of the world that separates today from tomorrow. If you step across the line in a westward direction at, say, 11 p.m. on Dec. 30, the time of the day doesn't change but the date sure does. For you, it is now 11 p.m. on Dec 31 and the new year is only one hour away.
Some nice countries just to the west of the Dateline, such as New Zealand and Australia, are proudly asserting their belief that the new Millennium is coming first to them. Cruise ships have marketed packages that promise passengers they will be the first in the world to usher in the Millennium from their floating pleasure palaces just a mile west of the Dateline.
Television personality Geraldo Rivera will be on one of those cruise ships and thinks he will be the first to broadcast live in the new Millennium.
Not so fast there, Geraldo.
Half a world away from Geraldo, on the south bank of the Thames River, in the middle of a verdant park in the town of Greenwich, is the Royal Observatory of Great Britain and through this charming building runs another line far more important than that dippy International Dateline. It is the zero line of Longitude running from the North Pole to the South Pole. We call it the Prime Meridian. By worldwide agreement, official time is measured from the Prime Meridian; the time on the line itself is the reassuring worldwide standard, Greenwich Mean Time (GMT). (Our Atlantic Standard Time, or AST, is four hours behind GMT.)
The Brits are old hands at this sort of pomp and circumstance. So with hardly a nod to their former colonies in the Southwest Pacific and no gesture of any kind toward Geraldo and the milling thousands on the cruise ships, Her Majesty's government observes that by international agreement they were commissioned to keep the world's official time, and to do so not at any old place but on the Prime Meridian at Greenwich.
Therefore, declare the British, the world's new Millennium officially will arrive at one second after midnight on Saturday, January 1, on the Prime Meridian at Greenwich.
It's hard to disagree with Great Britain's stand. After all, they've got the meridian. And they've already spent all that money on their giant Millennium Dome and other tourist attractions.
Support for the British position was swift in coming from an old adversary. The city of Boston will kick off its Millennium celebration at 7 p.m., five hours early, because that's when the new age will dawn at the Prime Meridian five hours away across the Atlantic.
Additional support can be found in the fact that many computer clocks around the world, the clocks that may or may not be bitten by the Y2K bug, are set not to local time but to GMT.
Now, the third question is really interesting. Forget about the world. Where in the United States will the Millennium make its first appearance?
Readers of the Source know a strong claim has been put forth by our own island of St. Croix on behalf of Point Udall, the eastern tip of the big island, as the first location in the United States to herald the Millennium.
Not so fast, writes Bob Pedersen of Florida in an e-mail to the St. Croix Source. He points out the state of Alaska straddles the 180 degree line of longtitude, location of the International Dateline and exactly half way around the globe from Britain's Prime Meridian. Mr. Pedersen's point presumably is that parts of Alaska are going to get that crucial 24-hour jump on the Millennium.
Not so fast, Mr. Pedersen. The Dateline is out there, sure, but it zigs and zags like crazy to avoid carving up any country or state. And Alaska, Mr. Pedersen, is entirely on the eastern side, our side, of the Dateline.
In addition, Alaska doesn't meet the standard of the Prime Meridian Principle (PMP) which we will explain shortly. Furthermore, it's too cold up there. You don't see Geraldo Rivera heading up toward the Arctic Circle, do you?
Then there is the island of Guam, whose most vocal supporter is, oddly enough, a resident of St. Croix, Herb Schoenbohm. He isn't so much in favor of Guam, as he is against bestowing the honor on his own island. Schoenbohm doesn't think much of the festivities scheduled for Point Udall that night.
With or without Schoenbohm, Guam has a strong case. It meets all the qualifications except one. Guam is part of the United States and is on the correct side, the west side, of the Dateline. Its slogan is "Where the Nation's Day Begins." The people of Guam are proclaiming that if the nation's day begins there, the nation's Millennium begins there, too. A powerful argument and it almost carries the day—until you apply the PMP.
This principle states that the Millennium must arrive first at Greenwich and then sweep in a stately manner westward, hour by hour, time zone by time zone, until it encircles the earth. In other words, it matters not which side of the dateline you're on, but how many time zones west of Greenwich you are. Rome, the eternal city—one hour east of GMT, thus will be the last major city to welcome the Millennium, according to the PMP.
Bad news for Guam, Alaska and Schoenbohm. Good news for St. Croix. It took the application of the Prime Meridian Principle to do it, but Point Udall is going to be the first location in the United States to welcome the Millennium.
We must, however, stand firm with the British on the Prime Meridian Principle. If the Brits fall, the Geraldo Rivera cruise ship fleet heading for the International Dateline will take over. That means Guam will snatch away the distinction that is truly St. Croix's.
If that happens, don't blame the Source. In line with the sound journalism so typical at this time of the year, we've given you a tightly reasoned case for St. Croix's ascendancy.
Editor's Note: When he isn't consulting maps, charts and globes, Frank Jordan is an editor for The Source, a local radio commentator, and former journalism professor at UVI.
RAIN COULDN'T STOP THE CAROLING
Choirs sounded, music abounded and a waning moon peeked out from beneath a brilliant rainbow to greet Christmas Day at 6 a.m. for the annual Challenge of the Carols at Emancipation Garden.
Eleven choirs marched in singing and swinging, willing the rainy weather away. They didn't quite succeed with the weather, but they did keep several hundred people happily humming along and sharing umbrellas.
This marked the 23rd celebration of a Virgin Islands tradition that, although neglected for a while, is now heartily revived. This year's performance was dedicated to the memory of Mercyla Leerdam, an active force in the musical program over many years past.
Keeping time with the resounding choirs, several local musicians wound through the crowd. Among them: Rusty Velleck of Sax Cymbals, the inimitable Nicky "Mighty Whitey" Russell, saxophonist Ladd Richards, Polly and Fred Watts of Harmony Dem and pianist Sally Smith. Keeping things warm was Smokey Frett's little stand where hot bush tea and cheese and bread were dispensed to the damp but spirited crowd.
In probably the most innovative means of fending off the weather, Al LaBorde of the Party/Hardy Carolers was seen ducking under his tambourine.
The Salvation Army Songsters and Voices of Love got things under way with Party/Hardy hard on their heels. The V.I. Pride Boys Choir was a big hit, and received honorable mention. Among other voices heard were those of the Bethel Baptist Church Choir, Merry Carolers, WHMM, the Charlotte Amalie High School JROTC Chorus, the Lucinda Millin Choir and the Public Works Chorale.
Last, and almost abandoned when time was running out, came Celestino White's Hapless/Hopeless Carolers, hot from a night serenading the island. All but the leader tramped onto the stage amid lots of drums, palm fronds and general good cheer, to the tune of "All We Santas." The final Santa, White, was then led in on a donkey wearing flowers and large sunglasses. He was the only member of the troupe who appeared not to be having a good time — the donkey, not White.
The final massed choir performance didn't quite happen, as most folks had apparently gotten wet enough by that time. However, the Voices of Love and the Party/Hardy Carolers prevailed.
Concluding this year's program was something new. Brother and sister Olabayo and Oluwaseyi Olaniyi from Nigeria presented Yoruba dancing and storytelling, backed by local drummers. Finally, the crowd joined in a tramp to Rothschild Francis "Market" Square.
21ST CENTURY JAZZ ARTISTS BRINGING IT ALL HOME
When Virgin Islands sons and now successful New York musicians Ron Blake and Dion Parson formed their own band a couple of years ago, they picked a name with staying power: 21st Century. And they undertook its creation with the idea of promoting a kind of music that is almost certain to grow in popularity in the next hundred years — an integration of straight-ahead jazz with the calypso, reggae, soca and even scratch band rhythms of the Caribbean.
For Parson and Blake, this music comes comfortably, reflecting the roots of their Caribbean culture. ("We wanted to celebrate the richness of the Caribbean music as a vehicle for improvisation," Blake says.) Their first CD, titled simply "21st Century," and a couple of appearances the band has made in the territory are impressive evidence that they're on to something. On Tuesday, Dec. 28, they get the opportunity to bring it all home again when the New York-based group performs at Island Center.
Saxophonist Blake and drummer Parson have invited a younger St. Thomian making a name for himself internationally as a jazz musician, bassist Reuben Rogers, to play with the band for this gig — and on St. Thomas at the Reichhold Center for the Arts on Wednesday, Dec. 29 — and back here again on New Year's Eve for a private party hosted by Jeffrey Prosser.
The rest of the band for the Virgin Islands tour consists of James Weidman on piano, Alan Burroughs on guitar and Robert Thomas Jr. on percussion.
The program is bound to include a number of tracks from the CD, which features as guest artist saxophonist Gary Bartz, who met Blake and Parson in 1987 when he was a headliner at the Premier Virgin Islands Jazz Festival and the Virgin Islanders were college students sitting in on every gig at the fest that they could.
The album includes three original compositions by Parson ("Down de Road," "21st Century" and "D's Blues") and three others by Blake ("Avocado," "The Appointment" and "Grace-Ann"). The audience can also look forward to some previews of music on the band's second CD, "A Promise to the Future," recently recorded but not scheduled for release until next fall.
Concert time is 8 p.m. For tickets prices, outlets and charge-card purchases, call Island Center at 889-5272.
COMMUNITY BANK IN CHRISTIANSTED ROBBED
The third bank robbery in the territory in two weeks has law enforcement officials thinking that the same man is involved.
The Virgin Islands Community Bank in downtown Christiansted was robbed of an undisclosed amount of money at about 10:25 a.m. Friday, St. Croix Deputy Police Chief Novelle Francis said.
Fridays heist was similar to two on St. Thomas earlier this month, Francis said.
On Friday, police received a call of an activated alarm from the VICB on King Street at about 10:25 and then a subsequent call confirming the robbery, Francis said.
Police responded and were given a description of the suspect by witnesses: a white male, between 5 foot 6 inches and 5 foot 8 inches tall with a slim build and weighing approximately 150 pounds. At the time of the robbery he was wearing a dark colored hat with a military insignia, white T-shirt and cream colored shorts.
Francis said the suspect walked into the bank, stood in line and then approached the next available teller.
"He then placed a plastic bag on top of the counter and handed (the teller) a note indicating he had a gun," Francis said. "He then walked out of the bank and he took off running."
Francis said no weapon was displayed and no injuries were reported.
Fridays robbery was similar to the ones that occurred on St. Thomas waterfront at Chase Manhattan Bank on Dec. 10 and at ScotiaBank on Dec. 13.
The suspect police and the Federal Bureau of Investigation are seeking in both of those cases is a white male, 5 feet 6 inches tall. He was wearing a baseball cap, sunglasses, white T-shirt and khaki shorts at the time of the ScotiaBank robbery. The ScotiaBank suspect had a beard; the suspect who robbed Chase Manhattan Bank was clean-shaven and brandished a weapon.
In those robberies the suspect got away with $4,500 from Scotia and $16,000 from Chase.
"The descriptions from the St. Thomas robberies are very similar to this one," Francis said. "And the M.O. is very similar as here."
Francis urged anyone with information to call 911 or the Criminal Investigations Bureau at 778-2211.
CHRISTIANSTED BANK ROBBED
The third bank robbery in the territory in less than a month has law enforcement officials thinking that the same man is involved.
The Virgin Islands Community Bank in downtown Christiansted was robbed of an undisclosed amount of money at approximately 10:25 a.m. Friday morning,
said St. Croix Deputy Police Chief Novelle Francis. Fridays heist was similar to two that occurred on St. Thomas earlier this month, Francis said.
On Friday, police received a call of an activated alarm from the V.I.C.B. on King Street at about 10:25 and then a subsequent call confirming the robbery, Francis said.
Police responded and were given a description of the suspect by witnesses: a white male, between 5 foot 6 inches and 5 foot 8 inches tall with a slim build and weighing approximately 150 pounds. At the time of the robbery he was wearing a dark colored hat with a military insignia, white T-shirt and cream-colored shorts.
Francis said the suspect walked into the bank, stood in line and then approached the next available teller.
"He then placed a plastic bag on top of the counter and handed (the teller) a note indicating he had a gun," Francis said. "He then walked out of the bank and he took off running."
Francis said no weapon was displayed and no injuries were reported.
Fridays robbery was similar to the ones that occurred on St. Thomas
waterfront at Chase Manhattan Bank on Dec. 10 and at Scotia Bank on Dec. 13.
The suspect police and the Federal Bureau of Investigation are seeking in both of those cases is a white male, 5 feet, 6 inches tall. He was wearing a baseball cap, sunglasses, white T-shirt and khaki shorts at the time of the Scotia Bank robbery. The Scotia Bank suspect had a beard; the suspect who robbed Chase Manhattan Bank was clean-shaven and brandished a weapon.
In those robberies the suspect got away with $4,500 from Scotia Bank and $16,000 from Chase.
"The descriptions from the St. Thomas robberies are very similar to this
one," Francis said. "And the M.O. is very similar as here."
Francis urged anyone with information to call 911 or the Criminal
Investigations Bureau at 778-2211.



