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                  <text>VJutmdiV, .i.nu.y 11. 1981

Some Iraq··. troops surrender

Attack sends oU, dollar higher

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, ,\ialnst the German mark the Pll'll Bourse's .movement was
Br United 1'1'81 IBtenldoaal
Oil prices soaredalona with the dpllll' !'Ole to 1.5445 German more sideways thaD up. ·
. u.s. dollll' 1n early trading marta, comPifed with 1.5410
Thursday In Tokyo, as flllllllclal IIIBlika Tuesday, and 136.85 JapaBut the New York .St'ock '
nese
yen,
up
(J'om
1311.65.
Exchallae
went Its own way to
~Ireta reglll8red !heir first
World
oil
prices
Jumped
by
post
a
respectable
gain. Its key ·
reaction to official won! that air
ajmost
$2
a
b~rrel
on
expecta·
·
Dow
.{ones
Industrial
avera1e
attacka hl!d been launched
tiOiljl
that
Wll'
WOUld
explQde.
In
rose
18.32
points
to
2,508.91.
agalnat Iraq.
.
the
New
York
market,
tbe
p~
Olllerwrs
cited
hopes
that a
Jltieey traders on the TOkyo
of
a
IJarrel
of
benchmark
West
last-dltcb pesce" fonnula might"
Stock Exchange pushed the
market sblfPiy loWer soon after Teua Intermediate euded at S32 avert a WI!'.
a barrel after touching 132.75.
Thursday's 9 a.m.· opening.
In tracll!i&amp; on the International
The Toronto stock excbanae
The Nikkel Index of 225 key
Petroleutn
Excbanae In London, also. flnlsbed higher, · by 2.M
Issues feU better than 1 percent
from Wednesday's close ot BrltJln's North Sea Brent crude, polntl at 3, ~64.49, but lacked
22,462,70 polnts .before retracing another benchmark, rOle $2.01 a direction amid very llgh~ actlv·
tty. ''It's a walt· and·- atU·
some of the loss. Trading was bll'~l to $30.20.
-· Till\ strongest equities market tude," said Fred Ketchen, chief
described as light.
The dollar, traditionally a safe reaction to the passage of the ·trader for ScodaMcJ,.eod InC.
Durilig the New York seulon
haven that lnves1Dra tum to In U.N. ~deadllne for Iraq to get 0111
times of uncertainty, gyrated, ·of Kuwait was seen on the Tokyo there wu a stoclf.bllylng •lll'le
Stoclt Exchanae. The Nikkel . on . newa frcm the Wb1te Houle
.rtslng at the opening on news of
the 4ttack past the 137 yen mark. A~e tumbled m points, or that even a belate4 lri!Ql pullout
·
could avoid war. Built fiUled on
.The dollar closed Wednesday 3.3 percent, to 22, 443.
·
~
deadline,
after
wblcb
a
further won! that U.S. forces
trading at' 136.35 yen.
But some currency traders U.N.t;resolutlon allowed the al- were gtnllng for an offenllve.
.; then moved In to take . profits llanct;'·faclng Iraq to use force to
amid rumors the Bank of JaJl!ln tree Kuwait, expired 60 minutes
Even 'so, many ·.analysts 's aid
before Tokyo closed. •'I'm so
was Intervening In the market.
tile market baa dlscounted .war,
And. oU prices advanced In pessimistic about this market · meaning that moat ot the selling
after·hQIIl'S trading on the New now','' said a Dalwa !!ecuritles
to be done because · of the
York spot market after air manager. _
situation has been•done.
Stock p~es also fell on the
attacks conducted by U.S.
Hong
Kong, Singapore, Bangkok,
tighter-bombers against posl·
Therefore, they say they don't
Seoul,
Taiwan aad Sidney ex- expect the market to plunae If·
tiona In Iraq and. occupied
changes. In Asia, only Manila' a and when bombll slll'l'lo fly. In
~uwalt were reported.
On Asian . markets, prices of bourse rose.
fact, say market Y~atchers, prl·
On the London International ces could rise, and If there Is a
crude otl advanced by some $5 a
Stock Exchange, the key Flllllll· settlement of the crisis, the
barrel from W~aday's cl.ose
clal Tlnles 100-stock Index fell market could even turn bullish.
In New York.
In New York Wednesday, In· 16.1 poJ!!ls to 2,1!14.80 amid htgb
''A lot of people are pretty
ves1ors had also scrambled Into aiudety. The big lnslltutlonal nervo111about (mlsalng a peace ·
the dollar. The :greenback's InvestorS stuck to the sidelines to rally) It there 'Is a setlli!ment,"
SW'I!'e with rising war fever .h as .· mln!m122 risk, analysts said.
commented Dale Tills, manairer
The key Condnerital stock of lnsUtutlonal equity trading at '·
diSJli:OVed clalnls that Its tradl·
" tiona!.safe haven status had lost markets! In Franldurt, Zurich Charles Schwab 1: Co. In San
and Milan slipped too, anc! the 'Francisco..
Its shine. ,
~.
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By GAYLE YOUNG
United P...a IBterutloaal
U.S.·Ied forces launched a
second wave of bombing raids
Thursday against Jraq and occupied Kuwait In a war to drive
Saddam Hussein's army ·Out of
·Kuwait. A defiant Saddam
emerged trom his bunker and
vowed to tight untU victory.
The Pentagon denied a Baghdad radio report that Iraq had
shot down 14 warplanes but
officials acknowledged an AmerIcan ,and a British plane were
downed and an unlderitlfled
American airman was killed.

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reJe~ts

Commission
;all DHS project' bids .·

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Powell:

No intent _to target. S~ddam

WASHINGTON (UPI)- U.S. - that bombing of Iraqi targets
and allled forces tracked the could be halted during the early
whereabouts ·of Iraqi President stages It Saddam agrees to
'Saddam HuSSj!ln Wednesday evacuate Kuwait, which the
'tllght, but not with the Idea of United Nations resolutions re"targeting" bini In a military quired as of Tuesday midnight.
· "We're looking principally at
strike, said Gen. Co lln Powell,
·
command
and cOntrol targets,"
chairman of the ,Joint Cblets ot
Powell
said.
Staff.
Defense secretary Dick ·ChePowell ,twice told reporters at
ney
added that alUed forces have
the Pentagon In the early hours of
attacked
Iraqi mllltary sites that
the Operation Desert Storm
·tnvas!Qn thl!t "we have not been pr.oduce chemical weapons and
· tracking Mr. Saddarn Husse)n . are developing nuclear
.
for the purpose of targeting. capablllty.
But neither Cheney nor Powell
htrn."
\
.
: Powell's comment suggested would .Indicate whether those

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headquarters in Middleport will
have to wait, following the rejection of aU general cOIIIraCiing· bids
on the project at Wedne!K!&amp;Y 's
regular meeting of the Me1gs
County Commissioners.
· Commissioner Richard Jones,
. who 'made the motion to reject the

afterwanls-that all •he could do
was to -. express his ''deep

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"After ·a u my efforts, after all
the efforts of so many countrtes
and so many perSimalltles, we
. are now facing a war.'' be said.
"As secretary,general of the
United Nations, a ,~!~lace organ!·
zatlon, I call only he saddened by
the beginning ot b!:lstllltles."
Perez de Cuellar met with ·
Iraqi President Saddam Hlisse!n
In Baghdad Jan. 13 to try to
persuade Saddam to withdraw · .
.trom Kuwait and avoid. a war.
His peace mlsllon failed. .
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Army Radio reported that the
JERUSALEM (UPI)- Due to
army general staff was belna
the oulbre11k of war In the
called for an W'l!'enl meeting, and
Persian Gulf region, the Israelis
tbe radio also said sources In
bave been asked to remain In
their homes ..and to open the . Israel ,sal" Israel was notifle:d In
advance by the United States
seale .\ packaaes containing
.
government
of Its offensive In the
gover:u.nent-liaue gas masks for
gulf.
.
.
use ·' . •lnst a possible polson gas
Streets In Jerusalem were
atlfo
an army spokesman said
generally quiet, and the public
ear l ~ · hursday .
Th• public also was lll'led to
wll'plng sirens that would be ·
activated before an attack had
mom &gt;r the ra.dlo continuously
for t•;-,,t)rgency Instructions.
not been aounded by·3 a.m. local
time (8 p.m. EST), about.an hour
E : ,orgency care and civil
·defc• PH.' workers have been In·
after hostilities beglll. ·
str.uc1pel to leave their homes and .
The radio also said Prlrrle
take up :posttlons, and to bring
Minister Yltzllalt Shamlr was at
th ~l r gas n\aska along, the · home belna brleied on ~nts.
spoltes man said,
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By J\JLIE I!',. DILLON
and BRIAN J. REED ,

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I'CIICUOII tO 'die' beainning of wsr in the Persian Gulf, Tilce

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thai across America, il miXed. But
one thing that Meigs Cotmtians
have in common is their thoughtful
concern f&lt;r ·the men and women
ebalnnu of the Joint Chiefs · of StaH, Ialka to
. REPORTS ON . OPER.\TION - Aa Defense
now serving there. •
·Secretary Rlebard C~eney looka on, Colin Powell,
reportera about the beJI.Imlnl of Ope radon Desert
Rev. ~ Meadows, pastor of
Storm, the offense against Iraq. (UPI)
the fomeroy United Melhodist
Chun:h, has two sons in the service,
and his son Joel is now
in
the U.S. Air Fm:e in Saudi Arabia.
Though-'I!Ot a ·pilot, Joel docs
Middleport Village Council haS' freedom, and included in that num· hope that all will return home safe
serve in the support slllff (grouiKt
adopted a resolution of support for ·m are sons and daughters of and victorious. ·
the 1JerviCe men and 'wOmen MeigsCunty, and
AI this weelc's meeting of Mid-. crews) a scant 150 miles from the
.
swioned in the Middle.EasL
''Whereas !hey stand wilh dleport Village Council ' several bqrder of KuwaiL
. Meadows' other son, Don, serves
_, .The resolution wiitten by courage · in hann's way 10 slay the · projects of remembrance were disCouncilmen Paul Gerard and liD· hand of a tmorist dicuuo~ and cussed and are under considellllion in lhe sullllWjne crew in the
animously pas~ by Council reads murclmr,
·
by the ~mbers. The mailing of Navy, and his whereabouts are unas foUows:
·
"Be it now resolved, that the personal 11ems and newspapers . known.
"I am c;onccmed but not worried
''Whereas, American military Council of the
of Mid· · ~ere among · ~e supestions. AC·
for
the safety of my sons,"
personnel are presently on guard m dleport expresses 11S support of aU 110~ on a special projeCt was tabled
Meadows
said Thursday moming.
the Middle East in defense of American l)lilitary personnel and its until the Jan. 28 meeting,
"I regret anytime that. human
beings &amp;nd it neceisery to aaadt

Village Council_adopts.resolution

baa allo been IMII!d In tbe 8aadl Arabia liMen
colldltlo• (llr ~~everal' · t11ova1111 · of laolllW
aeeonllq to a General ~lc.I!JIOblpenoa

(UPI)

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semng

u.s.

y111age

·ohio·Legislators hope war will end ·quickly
By United Press IDternatlonal
Ohio Gov. George Volnovlch
got down on his knees to pray,
Sen. Howard Metzenbaum
charged President Bush was
trying tQ define· his presidency
and Sen. John Glenn called for
sufficient force to bring I! quick
end to the war.

Reaction among political leaders from Ohio was· !lllxed on
whether the president should
have acted but they shared a·
common theme of praying for the
troops, lilcludlrig 3,000 reserve
and guard members from Ohio
stationed In Saudi Arabia.
·· "i prayed very hard that
· Saddam Hussein would come to
his senses and realize he had no
!Jiternatlve . but to withdraw,"
said 'Volnovlch, a .. 1\epubllc!ln.
"At thls .stage ot the game, I'm
going to continue praying. In
fact, l got down on my knees
tonight (Wednesday night) and
begged God to enlighten this
man."
Glerin and several other
members ~hlo's congressional
delegation announced the!~ support of President George Bush's

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.........
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to your family and vour loved ones.
~ illiY Jt ends ~ill · incfeecl be a
"MyJriyet is thatlhe.leaders·Of hapJ))"'lliy; We all pray · that. this
aU nations would be sei!Sitive 1D the crisis. in !he Gulf will end real soon. . ·
VQicO Of OOd to bring about a quick I !mow ·thai all the people 'in lbe
end 10 hostilities and a just settle- United' Slates are praying that the
ment of aU the iasues of the Middle same !hint! happens; that the war
East," Meadows continued. "I ends soon.
Clarice Krautter, owner of K &amp;.
believe· that the fact that inili81
C
Jewelers, has this to say about
casualties on on the ~ of the aJ•
lied fon:es were mirumal is by the !he war: "At first I was agamsl iL I
thought il was just for oil. But, now
grace of God.
"I shall continue, Meadows con· I feel like 1t's something our
eluded, "to JllliY that God willlceep government and our President had
aU penons from hann 's way."
to do."
AcCording to !he Rev. Laura
Brian Billings, Point Plea.wlt,
Shreftler of. SL Paul and SL· John W.Va., had this reaction to the war.
Lutheran Churches, tile situation in "I . wasq 't slloclced at the action
the Middle East is a sticky one. She talcen by President Bush. I just
stated, "Our . prayers. are .with . didn't lhinlt it would come this
everyone that IS out lberc." She soon, · but I knew it would evenstressed tliat "even on casualty is lllally come. My prayers for the
.not minimal in our eyes."
safety of our men and women in
For Raben Elberfeld. retired the Gulf are with them alid !heir
Pomeroy mezchant, the wsr brinf.S families. I support President Bush
back many IIIIPieasant memories. 'I IOtally."
·hale the war. f was in World warn
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· · - "George Bush has chosen this
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The Ohio Valle)' Publllblng
war to define his presidency,"
Metzenbaum
said. ''I regret he
Company was flnt on tlleslreets
felt It had to come to this. The
In tills area with the prtaled won!
concerning the start . of &amp;he
thol!ghts and prayers ot the
1111ith the courageous
nation
Penlan Gulf Wll' Wedaesday.
men and women .."
.
Eleven o()VP employees. as·
· · Rep, Chalmers Wylie, R-Ohlo, .
sembled at the company's prtnt·
lng plant In Galllpolll around
said he was not suprlsed at the
timing of the attack. '
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. 8:30p.m. 1o produce a low-page
"extra"· edition. · Special Gulf
War, ediUo• of :t'be Point Plea·
sant Rellster, Point Pleasant, W.
Va., The Dally Seatlnel,
Pomeroy-Middleport and Gall·
poll8 Dally Trlbllle, Galllpolts,
were placed on the ae~ds
· shortly after mldn(lbt.
.
Tbe "extra" edition, fin~ by .
tbe.company alaee the coDapie of
the Silver Bridge Oil· Dec. U,lH7,
aliO appear In lodq'• replu ·
edltloa. Tb- taklnl part In
WedneldaJ'• nllbt operation
were: Paul Bar•r and
.renldM, elroulatlon; Henry Rlli'·
burn and Otbo Ma&amp;lox, preuroom; Gqlaad Bull, Boa ·
Wrlpt, and 8barl Cocbna, compOIInl: advert111n1, Larrr
Boyer.(ual!lted br Ilia- .Jeft);
edllorlal, Hobart Wllloa. Tribune ... Ml-'7 am., Be.....r.
· Sob Wlnptt. publllllerandPM
RE.\DOF ATTACK-KuwaiUexllel read the IMeataewaoathe
Whitehead, aallstant publisher, · fate of tbef~ Iraqi-occupied llomelud ID a local EDIIIIIb dally In
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Dabal, u.u: today. (Reuter)
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and I know pers()lla))y what It CIOCS

decision to Invade Iraq and
Kuwait.
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''The main thing now thalli has
started Is to bring suttlcll!ntforce
to bear to bring this to an end,"
Glenq satd·. "There Is no moderation 'tn combat, moderation In
. com hat Is self defeating."
Democrats Glenn and Sen.
Howard Meizenbaum both voted
· against a resolution authorizing
Bu~h tQ use armed forces In the

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NEW T.\NK GETS WORKOUT - Tbe 11ew
MIAl IUk jUI -mbled In Warrea, Mlcb., ts
1'0811 tested on Gellel'al Dpamlclteat ~k. n 1s
tealed oa a llteep hW for a break cl!eek. Tile llllAl

ea:h other." he c:ooti.nlied. ~·apd I
. 4on) beUcve it is ip QOd's will that

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bids, cited ill8deqwlle financial in- crepancy in price. The bids ~gcd .,
formation provided to the commis- fro II\ a low of ~I ,200 to a btd of
sioners by at least one contracla, $17_,000. (submitted . by the low
and dissatisfaction with bids on cer- proJCCt bidder, Sc~).
· tain alternates on !he project as the
The alternates, whteh are made
reasoning for rejeCting the bids.
up . of "optio~ . work" on lbe
"I," Jones said ye~. "have ,P!OJCCI, are pnontizl:d, and cannot
been dissatisfied with the b1ds since be selected out of their set crdcr.
'day one'."
·
·· . The bids will no~ be re-adverOne of the alternates in par- tised,. and ~strucliDncommence­
. ticulsr - that of a specially colored men) IS proJeCted at ~h.
· .brick to match the existing struC:·
Buls on new equtpment fot t!te
ture - rellected a dralliatic dis·
Continued on page 12

Meigs Countians express
·their concerns

OVP papers fmt
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Construclion on the addition to
the Department of Human Services

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By BRIAN J. REEl&gt;
Sentinel News Staff

.
Israelis asked 'to remain
.
in their homes, ·be·ready

Ual&amp;ed Press IBternadonal
Peace activists chanting, "No
blood for oU," took to tbe streets
In San Francisco, New York City
sites had been destroyed. Nordld and the nation's capital Wednes·
they Indicate the whereabouts of · day nlgbt as the United States
unleashed Its attack on Iraq.
Saddam.
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More than 3,000 demonstrators
Saddam Hussein was reported
quickly.
gathered In doWJttown
to have. gone Into hiding Inside
San
Francisco
carrying . neatly
one of his 54 prO\eCtlve bunkers to
printed
signs
b~arlng
anti-war
avoid possible allied. action to
slogans whUe pollee stood by on
. ellnlnlnate him. ·
side streets.
''The Iraqi president Is surNo violence or arrests . were
rounding himself with an Iron
reported as the crowd assembled ·
curtain of ~recy ... In variOus
at the corner ot Market and ·
parts of the country that are not
Powell streets, the termln.u s ot
known even to bls family," said
the city's ' famed cable car
Egypt's leading newspaper, AI
system.
Abram, quoting sources In
AcrOI!S the country, about 150
Baghdad.
protesters marched In a picket
line In Lafayette Square opposite
the White House, braving a
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steady drizzle as President Bush
addressed the nation In a tele· vised I;Jroadcast trom the Oval
., ... ·•
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READY FOR .AC'I'ION - General DYJIIUIIlCs,
~ka ts su mlllloa. n~tpatlt.w,aadlakeelll
the Warren, Mlcll., oomJI!UIJ that buDcts the,
weeka lo make. More &amp;han
Ml aad llitAl
Army's MIAl Abrams Tank baa .the capaelty tli . tanka are n~w In Saudi Arabi. (tlPI)
double productloa. The cotlt of oae of these new '
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en 1ne
2 Sections, 1 li Pogeo 25 Conte
A Muhlmedie Inc. Newopoper

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-Security Cou~il called for
talk.s on Persian Gulf war
were not surprised, others said
UNlTED NA'l'IONS (UPI) they were stunned that llostilltles
Memllers ot the U.N. Security
(:ouncU' were summoned to the . broke out only 17 hours after the
deadline fdr Iraq to pull out of
U.N; headquarters late Weclnes·
·
day for urgent consultatlons ·on Kuwa 1t had expired.
There wu no Indication what
the war In the Persian Gult. ·
U.N. spokesman Francolil Glu~ the C•&gt;UDCII eould do. At least one
coun1ry, Cui!&amp;, proposed that the
llanl said the council's president,
Zaire's Ambassador Bagbent cour. .. il discuss a cease-fire.
Adelto Nzengeya; has begun Othl! ' countries appeared to be at
private talkS tor a possible . a los t as to what they should do.
· Gi'Jltanl said President Bush
common action by the council's
15 nations, which had authorized called Secretary-General Javier
Perct de Cuellar one hour before
use of force against Iraq.
Diplomats, who trickled one by the " tart of th!! war to lntonn him
one Into the council chamber, ot his decision to .launch the
expressed mixed feelings about attac ks against Iraq.
Perez de Cuellar told reporters
· the hostilltles. Sollie said they

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was a lot ot ground
In We Just have to keep the pressure
Baghdad, a lot of triple-A (antl· . on until the president says, 'L;ly
alreraft artillery). I saw at least otf' ."
one SAM (surface-to- air missile)
Amman Radio reported Iraq{
launched but I don't think 11 was ardllery bombarded olllnstalla·
meant tor us. I saw one of the· tlons In the eastern region of
most fantastic flrewo~ks demon- Saudi Arabia, and an oU re!lnery
stratlons I've seen since years on the eastern coast ol the
ago - .B aghdad lit up like a· kingdom was hit. The Jordanian
Cbtlstmas 'tree.
•
radio said "a huge on storage
"We were shooting· the .SAMs . tank" was hit In the shelling.
around the perimeter of Bagh· ·
The radio "also reported that
dad. W!! tired at two SAMs but I Iraqi gunners struck a U.S . .
don't know If we hit both. I'm .Jettlghter and that the pUot
tired. I'm pleased. I'm very; very eJected Into the Persian Gulf. A
pleasedandl'mveryproudofthe similar report was carried on
guys. Now we have to buckle Iranian state television.
Continued on page 12
down and prepare. It's not over.

The daytime air strikes fol- lose. '' .
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Marlin Fitzwater said Bush had
lowed a nlgbt of massive bomb- · The radio, monitored In Cairo,
"aaonlzed over the possible .Joss
Ing attackS by hundreds ot sald Sad,d am also visited Iraq's
of lite and was gratified that the
·otlrcraft against mWtary targets . radio and television ·buUdlng
cUIIIltles were apparently low."
In Iraq and Kuwait. U.S. officials be(ore retiring to one of his
"In tlui first 10 hours of the
were pleased with the lnltl,al ·bunkers ·to continue his eom·
operatlpn, the United States lost
, phase of the .Operation Desert mand of the Iraqi armed forc~s.
one aircraft," a PentagonoUiclal
Storm and Iraq's response to It
Earlier; th.e govertur)entasked
said without revealing the tate of
seemed limited.
.all able-bodied Iraq!!~ to report
the crew or the ~ of plaJ!e.
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tor combat duty by Sat\ll'day. It
British Defense SecretaryTom
Baghdad ·.Radio said Saddam said foreign volunteers could
J9ng said a Tornado Jet fighter
visited the headquarters of the report to conscription centers
with a two-man crew was miss·
Iraqi air force and alrdetenses In within 15 days.
·
lng The Bahrain-based plane
Baglldad Thursday, chatted with
· reported an engine tire, King
officers and toured the capital to ·
President Bush was to discuss -said.
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boost morale.
the operation with congressional
An American pUot, Col. "John
"VIctory Is great," Saddam leaders and his Ca blnet ThursBoy" Walton, returned trom a
said. " Those who attacked .us will day. White House spokesman
bombing raid and said, ''There

•

PRESENTED PLAQUES
Hup CUBter wbo retired oa Jan.
1 after hariDI 1t1 •'eel as tile
Melp County nlerans Hnlce
ofllcer for1Uo:'-'llt 12 yean r algllt by the
hOnored

Melp Coaaty Vetenu Commls-

sloa and Drew Webster Polt 39,

American J.etioD. On beblf ol
the ~merlcan Leaton, a pllque

oalllalldlq ~ to
vetenna Pl'llllllted to Casler,
c:enl8', by Rlclalrd
c:caminder, ud a-u Moon, p01t
acllulant. -.. .... picture left,
Mickey WIUI••1, 011 llellalf of tile

lor

a-o.

Vetenu c -.... llbde 1111
praealltloa to c.... RtiiCIDd•na· to the 11o11on,' Cuter

dtltilbed llla.12 ,_. ol....nlq
wltll veterans • a '1abor ~

loYe."

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__..; JII-..- - ---- - ;-

~

-- - - - --- --------~L-----.~- -~~:--4-~~--~~
f

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Page 2- The Daily Sentinoal · · ·

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Thursday. January 17, 1991

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Customs agents harassed

.•

Jack Amlerson ·

Thursday, J811Uery 17, 1991

Today in history .

By G. 8PENcEJl OSBC)RNE
• OVP S&amp;aff .,.._

N•

""·

Not one .· of them·
.- then,·. not one
of them now
.·

'

.

·

tD Decembei'.

.

Cong. Clarence 'Miller

.

·v

Golden State · hands
.
Boston .110-105.
defe8t W~esday ·
.

. " JEWfLRY CHEST
Ofi.Y S24995

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Hannan Trace .. .. . 8
Southern .... ......... , 8
Eastern ............... 6
symmes Valley ... 6
.. North Gallla ·........ 5
Oak Hill .... ... .. .. .. . 2
KYier Creek .. :..... 1
Southwet~tern ......-. b

TO'l'.u.s ............ se

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Ohio Nft.pa~ A•octat • . National , ;
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S•blcrlberl not d•lrlnll to pay ll~ecar­
rter may remit tn· advuce dlrfct to .,

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The.DaUy Sentinel on a 3, 6 or 12 month
bull. credit wtll be liven carrter eoch

NO aublcrlptlons by man

DIU'VE TO .BASKET-:-- Orlaado MaJics Gre1 Kite (M) foull
Cblc8JO Bulla~ Bill Cartwright (2$) on a drive to the baAkelln early
first quarter adlod. Ill OrlandO Wedaelday. (UP/)

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North Gallla at Maysville (Ky.)
Frlllay'a adlon
Southwestern at Hannan Trace
Eastern at Southern
Kyger Creek at North Gallla
Symmes Valley at Oak Hill
Saiurd"aj'•June
·
Oak Hill at Minford

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1 703 497
1 693 558
3 631 637
3 · 535 522
4 721 676,
7 561 671
8 523 . 653
9 499 652
st 48e8 t866

(SVACoaly)
.TBAM
W L PF PA
North Gallla. .. .. .... 7 2 532 389
Hannan Ti-ace .... , 7 2 504 387 .
Southern .............. 6 3 491 398
· Eastern ............... 5 4 414. 453
Oak Hill .. ..... .. .. . .. 5 4 495 469
Symmes Valley ... 3 6 415 508
Southmtern ..... .. 2 7 316 : 437
Kyger Cree)! ........ 1 8 355 481
TOTALS ............ 38 38 11121 SGZ!

·w

a

tbr,..rh Friday, 111 COUrt !II., POmer"oy, Ohio~ by the. Ollto Valley Pub- • '
lllhllll Company/Multimedia, Inc.,
Pomeroy. Ohio 457611, ·Ph. 992-21116. Se·
coad cl&amp;oo poolafe paid at Pomeroy, ·

(Collfe~)

1••

Berr:y s World

'

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ONlY

NO PAYMENTS TILL.

'·

•

A,t Richfield, . Ohio, Brad
UPI8pol1&amp; Writer
. Daugherty had 22 .p oints and 14
Fans sitting In luxury boxes at rebollllds a11 Cleveland snapped
Boston Garden often turned their an 11-game losing streak. Miami.•
backs to the court Wednesday which has never beaten the Cavs
night .to watch reports on the . In elghttrlefl, got19 potntsandlO
outbreak of war In · the Persian reboundS from Wrule Burton.
Tbitberwol'vert liS, KDieks 8e
Gulf.
· Wilen they were facllig the
At New York,· TYrone 'Corbin
parqUet, chances are they had 22 polnta and 16 reboundBBnd
. couldn't keep their eyes off Tim · Sam Mitchell scored. 12 of Ills 20
. Hardaway, who poured In a · points hi the fourth quarter for
career-l!lgh 37 points to send thll! . . Minnesota. ~ Knlcks ~re 8-1~
-Golden State Warriors to a at Madison Square Garden 110-105 victory over the Celtlcs.
'tied With New Jersey for -most
The sllpjlery 6-0 guard sank 13 home losses ln. the league.
·
of 23 field-goal attempts, all nine ·
Buill 99, Mali~ 88
.foul shot$ and two three-pointers.
At Orlando, Fla., Michael
· He said the Mlddl!! East conflict Jord•n ~orecs 29 points and Bill
!'lade concentration a problem- .Cartwright and Scottie Pippen
. but you couldn't · telL by his . each converted three-point plllys
performance.
In the last three minutes as
"1t was hard at the beginning," Chicago won for the 15th time In .
Hardaway S!!-ld. "But once yo'u · 17 games.
get out there between the Jines
)iou've Just got to.do your Job." ··
T(\e Celtlcs, 29-7, entered with
the NBA's bellt record buthltJust
39 percent of their shOts and had
their 18-game home winning
streak stopped. BOston has now
lost two straight, lhf first time ,
thilt's happened this season.
.
The Warriors led 107'105 after
TYrone Hill's free throw with 32.1
seconds left. After a Celtics'
timeout with 16..7 seconds
maining, Kevin Gamble failed to
Inbound wltblp five seconds.
Golden State took possession, ·
then sealed the victory with three
foul shot$. · : ·
The · Warriors, who scored
eight of the game's !lillil 10.
points, won · lor ·. the second
·straight year at' Boston. Mitch
Richmond added 26 points and
Clirls Mullin had 16.
· The Celtics, limited to one field
goal over the final 6: 15, were led
Gamble with 26 iJOin.ts and
Kevin McHale wtlll 22. Bps !On Is
3-2 with tao-YBird sidelined with ·
a back Injury. ·
l'ofeanwhlle, It was fuU apeed
ahead . for Ollvld . Roblnlon ·and
the San Al)tonlo Spun.
ca, a
graduate of the U.S. Naval
Academy and a member of the
'58-'111 Chryaior•
Naval Reserve, Robinson col- ·
8 t:yl. 14-8380-8
lected 30 points and 10 rebounds
as San .Antonio ra.llled !rom a
19-polnt deficit at ho.me for a
·
100-94 victory over tbe Dalll!s
Mavericks.
·.
·
"Before the · game we were
. watChing TV and nof thinking
about basketball," said Robin. son. "I really waan't In a
basketball mood. These things
show how Insignificant basket. ball really fs."
.
.
, ,, Robinson has. said, he would
· report for duty .1( necesaary, but
Officials say jt Is ' unllk~ly the .
seven-footer would lit called. ·
The NBA .said .It
decide
Thursday wliether, 4ue to the
_~~C:Iora."
. wai', upcoming games will be.
played aa acheduled.
73-tiCiher.
Elsewhere Wedm!lday night,
Cleveland beat Miami 108-94;
· ' M!DileiOIB defeated NI!W York
93-89, Chleqo downed Orlando
99-88, Mllwt!Ukee outlasted lndl- .
&amp;!Ill 126-U9, Denver ed&amp;ed Char· ·
lotte 111-10. and Washington
nipped the Loll AnpJn.CIIppera

re-

ONLY $'44995

.

SVAC standings

. By MJKE BARNES

Fl

.

cald may get tbe Eagles' Ml!rk held to fewer than.10 wtnta only · Pirates from takiD&amp; borne the
ter (16.6 piS .Igame) has scored
In doable figures · In his last 1~ .,.
.Murphy, and Tornado Junior Roy · twt~e (llx vs. Hannan Trace and boOty, tho\llh It may take a while
Lee Bailey should shadow Fin- nine vs. North Gallla, b!&gt;th In .- for their otteue to get started
games, and 6-6 sophomore Cbrls
(depending on how hard thcr.;law, while Moore ftaures out a December road games) In tJie
Slmplon Is continuing to learn
have to play Maysville Thuraday
way to maneuver In the .paint · HlghlaDd,er~· 11 games.
.
the nuances of. post play wltb · ·
against Racine postman Jeremy
The Wildcats have a balaaced ·. night).
each game. But losing by an .
. Bobcat guards ~an Denney
Rpse, a 6-1 senior.who outscored · atta.ck, as the ayerages qf their
average of 23 points In one's last
Moore 20-13 In · their last senior stJrters ~ center Craig and Craig Kingery will have their
five games Is noway to Instill \he :
llands full Of the Pirates' back.
Rankin (14.1 pts./game), · forencounter.
confidence necessary 1o provoke
.SMIS 'va. Banaaa 'tracel
wuds Riehle ·Cornell (11.5 court of €brls · Tackett (25.8
peak efforts. In two of the Hill's
Overconfidence, the thing that pts./game; has a ·nve-game · pts./game) and Brian Stout (18.2
three wins - against Kyger
pts.lg~). but even If the latter
brought · down Goliath In his . ·dOuble-figure scoring · streak)
Creek (90-61) and _McDermqtt
pair tall ·short of their lls~l
Northwest (87-53), the Oaks had
showdown with a shepherd boy · and Todd Boothe (11.2
four men In double figures, and
named Davll:l. Is some\hlng the ptJ.Igainej, a~d guard~ Jason doing~. North Gallla postman
Shane Smith (11.7 pts.lgame) · the Oaks had three In doubles In
WUdcats . must ncit have· when' _B lack (11.2 pts.lgame) and J •.J.
they host Southwestern.
·
Bevan (10.5 pts.lgame) - dem- has the moves aM the height to
their last victory, a 59-5o decision :
effectively deal . with Bobcat .. over Southwestern.
Trace will have two tough · onstrate: With an of!ense that
.
,
c.u stomers In ~nlor frontmen · prombes surprises as to who will · forward/center Bryan Hall (5-10,
Symmes Valley, which Is tied
so.) or 6-2. ptvotman Jamie Bush,
Chr-Is Metzger 11nd Richard Ha· . answer the call to bum nylon,
with Eastern for second In the
who racked up 14 In KC's 76'70 conference . with Identical 84 ·
ney, WhO have pi'ovlded approxi- Southwestern's defense will be
·
mately 60% ot the Hlgblllnders' stretched to . the limit, and · loss to Wahama.
recoi-ds, will need continued
Sy~~U~~S Valley VI. OaJiHIU
offense In the five games. . H11nnan Trace should"walk away
strong play from 6,3 senior
Doug Hale's Oak HIU squad,
Metzger, who had his third with the victory.
postman Carl 'Robinson (14.4
·
the
pre-season pick to be the ptsJgame) In the paint and fi'oni
20-polnt-plus game of the season
J[CHS vs. No111l .G alla
In Tuesday nteht's 69·59 loss to _ Regardless o( the result ot 1oter In .tbe middle of the . 6-2 ·s enlot forward Chad Renfroe
conference deck, has abdlc!lted
New Boston (he hl!d 23 points and tonight's . voyage to Maysville,
(12. 7 pts./game In 13. games)
··
that role to Symmes Valley. outside.
10 rebounds) , has' beeJi made Ky., Roll Twyinan~s North Gallia
more effective by the presence Of . crew will be a tired ·b unch of . That's what happens ,when fol- .
In their previous meeting, the
tile 6-foot-2 Haney, a former young men when they return . lowing up tl\ree wins In a
VIkings won 64-51
follr•game span with. five
North GaiHa forward who aver- . home to take on Kyger Creek.
On SaturdiiY night's agenda, ·
straight losses can do.
'agesl4.6pts.liameandliasbeen
But that. shouldn't keep the
. the Oaks will play at Minford,
True;· Junior forward Bill PotWlldcatl, Mldslilpmen tied
With
a 6741 win over Eas ter11 .
..
Tuesday night, Don Saunders'
Hannan Trace squad tied Gregg
De!!l's North Ga111a Midshipmen
(Overall)
for first In the SVAC reserve :
TBAM ·
W L PF PA ranks. Bot!) teams hi!Ve 7,2
HAnnan Trace .... ... 10 3 946 736 league records . .
blhern.:........ ...... 10 3 945 798
Ealtern .. ............... 8 4 807 829
Symmes Valley : .... 8 5 793 781
The Daily Sentinel
North Ga~lla ..... : .... 5. 7 953 978
Oak Hlll ..... :.:........ 3 9 787 889
(V8Ps 14Mtl)
4 -.111.. oiJI!Illllmedla, 1...
Kyger Creek .......... 2 11 775 932
'
Southwestern .... ..... 1 10 647 790
Publllhed every alternO&lt;lll, Monday . .

.

.

CH

The Daily Sentinel-"-ga 3 -

-

.

After rackln&amp; up four straight
. By virtue of Hannan Trii.Ce's games In which be scon!d 2Q or
86-67 vtctocy·over Eastern Tues- more point&amp;, Eagle center Randy
aay night at Tul)liera Plains, Moore (15.6.pta.lgi.me) felllntoa
Mike Jenkins' Wildcats share slngle-cllglt slump which sawhlm
llrst .pl!lce In the SVAC with take two games · - against
aowle Caldwell's SOuthern · cellar-dwellers Kyger Creek and
Tornadoes.
Southwestern ~ to score 10
N ·
points before coming l!ack to life
.. · ow for. \he burning question. ·· with a 20-.point effort agalft•t
Are Hannan Trace and Southern
....
beaded for a co:.champlonshlp? · Hannan Trace. ~d for the eighth
May~ . .Before we say yes or no; time In the E!!gles • 12-game
let'
.season, Moore and juntor guards
s consider a few things.
Tim
. Bissell (17.7 p!$./game' and .
In their remaining . seven
'
games, tile Wildcats have only Jeff Durst (17.4 pts./game)
three . learns _ Fairland (9.1 · ~ored In doqble figures ,In the
tte th I)
• --• ·
R
same game.
·
a r . ~ ragons ...nover ock .
When that happe
· ns, Eastern Is
Hlll Tuesday ntehth S)'mmes
Valley (8-5) and Eastern (84 ) _ 6-3. But one must note that .the
with winning records, and Trace , teams the · Eagles lost to when
gets to play host to Fairland and lhla triumVirate hits the doubleEastern. 1be Tornadoes', wh9 .dlgtt groove wete .run-liappy
also have seven games. left . on Federal Hocking ·(116;72), North
their schedule, have .no more Gallla(89-n)andHannanTrace:
Against Southern, the trlo was
th. an three .teams - Eastern, heldto40polnts,butthesmother.
Symmes Valley and Ravenswood lng defense the TCll'l!ad&lt;ieS put on
(the Red Devils' record Is· un- . these t)lree gents alloWed Eagle ·
known) - with winning records, !orward Matt Flnlaw to sink 12 ..
and Southern will play the Eagles So caldwell will be preaching
containment on all fronts.
and the Vlklhgs at home.
· · · With .all or this In mind, It
Matebupa: Tornado point
seems to be a question of wh.Jch guard Andy .Baer (21.1
learn blinks first.
pts./gall)e) -who will put on the '
Euten va. Soulhll'll
line his streak o! 16 games ·In
. RememberlngwhatlheTorna- which . he has scored In double
d()E!S did to them at Tuppers figUreS and drllled at least ,one ·
. Plains (Southern walked away . three-pointer ~ will probably
' with a 94-68 vlctoi'y), L&amp;rry draw B.Jssell, and off-guards
Bunger's Eastern squad Wllllook Jayson Codner or TOdd Grindto do to Southern Friday night start shquld get purst. On the ·
wj!at the Tornadoes did to ·them wings, Southern's Michael Kln- ··,

a

•

··

-Eastern hM chance 'to drop SVAC OO.Ie8der Southern'

an

•

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

In second Meigs County matchup,

state. He would later testify In
tember. ruled thatl he ha~ been
·. · By UliU.,d Prl!llol .lnleraatlonal
Smlt's 'grtevarice hearing that
retaliated agalnat for wblstlebToday Is Thursday, Jan. 17, the 17th day of 1991 with :US to follow.
higher up. In Customs iold him · lowing. Customs has appealed
The moon Is waxing; moving-toward Its first 9uarter.
Ills own "job was on the llne"·&amp;nd
that ruling~ .
• ·
The morning star Is Mercury.
.
that "tbe political hammer
. Our auoclate Dean Boyd has•" · The eventng ·stars are Venus and Jupiter.
·
·
· .
would fall If ~bese twp gentlemen learned that tbe or,tce of Speclel · ' Those oorn. on thiS date are ·under the sign .of Capricorn. They
were not shut down from lnvestl- Counsel IU!d the .Tr~asury ~- tnciude American . statesman, scientist •nd author BenJamin
. gating corruption:"
partment Inspector General
Franklin In 1706; British statesman David Uoyd George In 1863; '
· .. Smlttookseveralmonthsoffto have now Jall1icbed lny~JiaRussian actor and dlri!ctar.Konstantin StanlsJavskl!n'1863; Mack
J'1!C!Iperate from
on-the• Job lions . Into . the allegations f":
Sennett, director of slapstick films, In 18lll; gangster ·Al Capone ln.
InJury, and whlle he was 119ne, his corruption In customs. Tlillt ·1899; )i:ngl!sh novelist Nevil Shute In 1899; actor James Earl Jones lri
superiors tried to stack the deck came !Iller prom~tttnirsfromSen. ' 1931 (age 60); · puppeteer Shari Lewis In 19~ (age . 57)', and
agalnat him. They ac£Uifed .hlm Harry Reld, . D-Nev.
·
hel!vy.,elght boxing champion MuhammadAUinl942 (age 49). " ·
of misusing his government
JaramUJo .and .13 o\her suscredl_t and ust,ng· the Cuatoms pects. · In the . drug ring were . On 'this date In history: · .. ·
· 1111806, ,tbe ·first babY was bor!l Ill ~e White House, the grandson of
exprl!llol man account to send his .Indicted last August by a federal
President
Thomas Jefferson.
·
whlstleblowtng Information to a
grand Jury In Houston on . 57
In
1893,
Queen
Lllluokalanl
of
Haw!lll
·was
deposed
In
a
bloodless
senator. WhenSmltcamebackto counts. It was a vlctorytorSmlt
revolution and ·a pr9vlslonal government established, With
·wm-k. he was denied overtime and Graham, but the ordeal
. · pay .and ·not allowed to do. proved .tQ be too much tor one of annexation by the United States as Its atm. .
Investigative work.
·
· thi!m. Last week In a Jetter to . · In 19~7. the United States bought 50 ofthe Vltgln Islands In theWest
· Fed ·up, Smlt took ' hlscase to . ~ customs Commissioner Carol Indies from .Denmark 'for $25 mliUOn. '
In 1950; nine bandl~ staged a $1.5 million robbery of Brink's .
the federal Merit Systems Pro'
Hallet, Smlt announced his
·
armored car In ·Boston.
tectlon Board, whlc;h last Sep- · resignation. ·

WASHINGTON - Wbell U.S. Texaa.
Customs Service 'agents Louts
The drug ring that Smlt ~d
Smll and John Graham stopped e
Gr~am Investigated led tbem to
small fishing boat near Port accused trafficker Manuel "PanMansrteld, Texas, In 1988, tbey cho" Jaramillo. On .the supPly
confiscated 591 pounds of mart- side of the ring were Mflclcans
Juana and Inherited a ooatload of tied to the notorious cult murders
· trbuble.
. .
of 15 people near . Matamoros,
Smlt and Grahall\ had
Mexico, _In 1989. Among Jhe
· stumbled onto one of the largest · victims was a 21-year-old Unlverdrug·smuggltng operations In the
slty of Texas student. On tl\e
United States. They could l!andle distribution end .Q( the_drug ring
... that. But what theydldll;texpect
was the Chicago .mob.
was that their ' Investigation
Soon. after Smlt and Graham
plunged'lnto the Jaramillo lnveswould lead them to allegations
tl)at some Customs co-workers In
tteatlon, ~ they began getting
.
reporu from other federa1 agenTexas were dirt)'.
For two years, Smlt and
ctesthatCUstomsmayhavedlriy
Graham say, they suffered relaundry. The report$ came from
pealed har&amp;Ssmentfrom some of
the FBI. which had toJd'Ciistoms
their superiors whenever they
Qf possible Internal corruption
ralsed'theal!egatlonsofcottupmore than a ye11r earlier; and
tloil. Smlt was vindicated In a
from tbe Drug , Enforcement
personnel grievance as a victim
Administration and the U.S.
qf on-the-Job harassment beAttorney's Office tn Texas. · ·
capse he blew the whistle. Now
Smlt and Graham reported the
federal Investigators are looking
allegatiOns to their Immediate
Into the allegations of corruption. . supervisor. That supervisor
But the Customs Service still · . backed them. untu.he was forced
.to accept a transfer to another
claims It has no problems In

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�llunc:ley, January 17, 1991

~==~~~~~Ohio~~· -::----:-""":"---:-_:·:_·~~--~Thurldev~~!:·.:!.~a~~-!!··~.,~v!17~·,!199!!!!1 '"
After EUis'•dunk foroos overtime,

-No, 8 Syracuse hands No. 1·2
Connecticut 81-79 defeat

Cqngress says 'time .now to unite' rally behind p1 esident

••

~·

.
.
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Con- stand behind our soldters. "
SUI1Cestul conclusion to this
pllance with the U.N. Security
gressional leaders, shaklug off
Top Democrats fought giving war...
.
CouncU reitoluUons .. . had been
last weekend's divisive debate Bush 511Ch authorization while
Assistant Houle Demoeratlc
uuuceeslful, " a s tatement fr001
over .au~orlzlng the use ot pushing a resoluUon to extend leader, Rep. WU!Iam Gray, D ·
Foley's office ald.
mUitary force against Iraq, are economic anctlons against Iraq, Pa., called tbe war "the armed · The certltlcatlon. required by
rallyiDgbehlnd President Bush's but Immediately supported the conflict tha.t all of us hoped could
the autborlxat lon resoluUon apdeclsloli to pull the trigger on ' president upon learning of the be avoided,'' but said, " I bopefor
proved Thursday, was delivered
Operation Desert Storm.
attack.
a swift and unambiguous victory.
to Capitol am at about 6:30p.m.
Within hours of the massive
Most of all, I hope that our brave
"We must now pmy for a
Gates !n"lefell Senate Republl·
U.S.·!!!(\ air strike · Weclne!lday confilct thaI ends quicklY, decl·
troops can come home unh..-nted · can leader Robert Dole of Kan·
n!ght, ltey members of the House slvely arid with a minimum loss as soon as posslbl~ "
sa~ . House Republican leader
and Senate expressed praytul of life, " House Speaker Thomas
Busb began makiDg . fateful
BOb Michel , R·lll., and Mitchell
Wishes for the safety of American Fol~ said In a state~nt. ''We · calls to .. Qongresslonal leaders
In Dole's office on the second
flabtln&amp; men and women In the must now stand united In ~upport . from ·the White HOuse Oval · fioor of the capitol. Foley al)d
Persian ,Gulf and a q ulck victory of our armed forces In the Gulf Office at twlllaht of a rainy day In
Gephardt a l so received ptellml·
In the war.
·
who have embraced the duty and the nation's capital and · dis·
nary briefings from Gates.
"The thoughtful, but divisive
patched. Robert Gates, the depburden of conducting the war.".
'.'We all now pray fervently for
deba,t e of last weekend Is be bind
"We· have an overwhelming uty national security adviser and
the protection of our men and
us," said Sen. Joseph Ueber·
advantage In our aircraft, our former CIA director, to brief the women In unlfonn who are laying
man, ~nn., referrlngtoSatur·
smart weapons, our lntelllaence congressional leaders.
their lives on the line In the
day's narrow votes of 52-471n the
An aide satd Senate Demoand communications," said Sen.
Persian Gulf," Michel said. " We
Senate and 25()..183 In the House to
sam Nunn, D-Ga., chairman of cratic leader George Mitchell ·o f hope that their superlor charac·
back Bush's request•for author·
the Armed Services Committee. Maine was called at 5: 35 p.m .
ter and perfonnance will bring
• lty to wage war against Iraq and
"Our service men and women and told by Bush that he had ·Saddam to his knees just as
dr've saddam Hussein out of
will be given all the resources to ordered mU!tary action. Foley
quickly and as s uredly as
Kuwait. ,
do the jpb. I believe that.we will received a call about five min·
possible."
"And llils.ls really the time now
prevail In a matter of da:ys or utes earlier and was asked tocall
"We join united . - not as
to unite all. of us In support of the
weeks"
Bush back on a secure line.
RepUbUcans or Democrats, bli t
president a,nd support of our
"The president Informed the as l\merlcans - · behind our
Hou~ De~ocratlc leader Rl·
t~ps,' : Ueberman added. "We
speaker
-that. he was dispatching president, behind our young men
chard Gephardt added, "My
are In battle. And the trumpet
an
official
to deliver the pres!·
prayers and thoughts are with
must be sounded With all cer·
the soldiers and their famUies , dent's cerUflcatlon that efforts to .
talnty that tbe American people
and my hopes are for a swift and secure peaceful Iraq I com·

•''

"',.
"

bla for them, and was a blf h:•
American."
.
By lralted Presa IDier-*loUJ
dlfferencelnthegame,"Calboua
;'
CoDDeCtlcut
bead
coach
Jim
Lefton Ellis took matters Into
satd.
,
...
Calbowl
ap-eed.
.
his own hands - both of them In
otl!!r
games
1hvolv1Da
to give No. 8 Syracuse an 81·79 · ''I thlnlr. we should tend to more
ranked teams Wednesday nlaht, ,
overUme victory over No. 12 Important thiDgs than buketball
No. 9 Duke routed the Citadel " ''
Conl)eetlcut In the Carrier Dome games," he ald.
83-50,
15th-ranked VIrginia l!eld : ~
Wedneaday night.
Ellis arabbed a mlased layup
off
Maryland
· 76-62 and No. 22 ' 1'
Elll.f dUnked With less than a by Dave ·Johnson and dunlr:ed It .
second left In regulation to Ue the . with 0.3 Reoodl lett to Ue the · South Carollna romped over ·.q
VIrginia Tecb 83-67. The a arne ' ~
score and then jammed aaaln to score 71· 71 and send the game
between No. 5 North Carolina '''
,
finish a fast brealt With 30 lniD overUme.
and Nortb Caronna State was
Billy Owens, who suffered
seconds to play. . glvlllg the
Orangemen a four-point advan· . back spaslill Saturday ID a 119-67 cancelled after the outbreak of ."· r.
war In the Persian Gulf.
'"
tage the , Huskies could not victory at Seton Hall. scorect 19
At Chartesron, S.C .. ChrlaUan ".,: .
points and grabbed nine r eo~rcome .
Laettnerscoredl8polntsandBIIl ·•·•
Gllad Katz, a junior from Tel . bounds to pace Syracu~e. Elll8
McCaffl'ey added 15 to lead 'the :~
Aviv, Israel, sank a three-pointer had 16 points and 12 rebounds,
Blue Devil rout. Ted"'Moaay I
with 21 seconds remaining to c11t and Johnaon added 14 points.
scored a BBJ~le·hlah 19 .points for ' ~l
Smith, wbo led the Huskies
the Syracuse edge to 80-79, but
·•'
Syracuse freshman Adrian Au· with 20 points, hit a three-pointer the BuUdop. • ,
At College Park, Md., Bryant '" :·:
try sank a free throw With 4.1 with 12.3 seconds left In reauta·
seronds left.
,.
tlon to
the Huskies a 71-69 Stith IICOred 16 points and the
Cavaliers went on a 10.2 run to \"
. ,
.
·
Huskies guard · Chris . Smith lead.
Tbe.Huskles
led
again
as
start the second half to blow tiN! '"
d~ove fora final shotbutUmeran
out.
·
game
open. • The VlraJDia lesd '1 ~
OWens sank four unanswered
tree throws In the opening 1: 03 of reached as mucb as 22 points late ··'1
The victory heiJI!!d Syracuse,
· In .the aame. Tbe Terrapins were " 1
.. 15-2 overall and .3·2 In the Big overtime.
Syracuse scored the first seven without 6-foot-3 point guard Walt 1"'
East, avenge a 78-75 loas to
Connecticut, 12-3 and 3-2, In the
points of the second half to take Williams, who bas a fractured
the blgges t lead of the period at fibula suffered In Saturday's loss ~ ·
champlonablp aame of last sea·
toDuke.
).
son's conference tournament.
46-39.
At Columbia, s.c,. Barry Man;
Syracuse head coach Jim Bo- · Syracuse freshman Scott
McCorkle, who scored 12 points, nlug and Jo Jo English eacb ,
eh~lrn put the victory, which
leaves Pittsburgh, 14·3 and 3-l,ln
hit a three-poiDter to spark a 13-3 scored 20 points and all five ...,.l
run that gave Syracu~e a 28-26 Gamecock starters scored ' In :,:.
first place In the Big East, In
perspective.
. ..
lead With 5: llleft In the lialf.
double flprea. The Hokles were ,, "'
Immediately before the run, led by a season·hlah 29 points ";
. "What . Is going on (In·' the ·
l{atz, who scored 8 "polnts, sank~ from Antony Moses •.South cal-ol· , .~!
Middle Ell$!) Is the only tblng
layup to give Connecticut the Ina outscored Virginia Tech 16-6 "",..
that matters as far as I am
biggest lead of the game at 23-15 over a four-minute stretch late In .· ·~ ~
concerned," Boehelm said. ''We
the second half to put the pme ,,,,
wltb 8: 19 left In the period.
could win 1,000 basketball games
away.
·
"Scott
(McCorkle)
came
up
In a row and that Isn't worth .one

give

never

Financial cost of UJar may be huge

A pair , of Mark Erslan free
throws on a lOth team foul from
Tiffin With one second lett lifted
the University of Rio Grande to a
92-87 victory over ' the Dragons
Wednesday before a McDonald's
Night crowd at Lyne Center.
OFF BALANCE SHOT - ~NCIIIe pan~ .
Colllledtput forw~ 'l'oralao Wall!er (L)· and
The two free throws, allowed
Adrian Autry pull up aa off-ballDce lbot atu-1
eeuter Bed Sellen Wedaeaday ID tile Carrier
on
a new rule, capped off a tense
•· DoJ_De. (UPI) ·
secOnd
half hi which Tiffin, the
.•
defending • Mld·Ohlo Conference
champion, and the Reclmen ex·
· changed leads. by a single point
six Urnes In the lastfourmlnutes.
Gary Harrison, tbe Dis trlcl 22
and MOC player of the week.
exploded for 26 points and played
·. ·
the ~nure 40 minutes.
The Redlilen seized the lead
early and held a lO·polnt advan·
By United Press IDter..Uoual
when be put a 55-foot wrist shot the DevOs to the tte. The draw
tage for most of the first half.
While many athletes wOrried past Hanlon's stick. Tim Chevel· ended New Jersey's six-game
Hll.rrlson netted 17 points and
about .family members with the daetben replaced Hanlon In goal. losing streak, but extended tile
Troy Donaldson · had five reoutbi'ealt of war In Iraq Wednes·
Dale Hawerchuk gave the club'swlnlessstreakto10games
bounds for the period, while
·day night, Alexander MogUny ·Sabres a tJJree.aoal lead at 6: 33 at !J-6.4. Michel Goulet scored a
Tiffin's
offensive effort was led
finally had his parents with him. when he went In alone and beat goal In each of the first two
by freshman forward JeH Ward
Mogllny, a 20-year-old Soviet Cheveldae with a 20-foot wrlst periods for the Black Hawks, who
with
10 markers. With nearly all
whose parents are maklug their sbot.
remained unbeaten In tlielr last
of
his
bench scoring, Jim Ham·
first visit to the United States he
Rick Valve made the score 5·1 four games (3-0-1) .
mood's Dragons trailed by eight
defected last season, scored at 5: 07 of the third period.
· Whalen 4, Klnp 3
at the half. .
Buffalo's first two goals oil the Statlolll!d at· the edge of the·
At Hartford, Conn., Peter
The bright spot for Tiffin came
way to a 5-3 victory over the crease, ValvesbOveledlnHawer- Sldorklewlcz stopped· 30 shots
In
the second halt as guard Thad
Detroit Red Wings.
c~·s pa&amp;a from behllld the net'. 1 and Paul Cyr capped a three-goal
Patrie\(,
who had three points In
"The guy's got an abundance
'Buffalo came out and played · barrage In the second period
tbe
first
20
minutes, broke loose
of talent," Buffalo's Rick Valve well early In the game;: Dehelping the Wbalers break ~
for
another
22 points and Grant
said. "When he goes out and ~It's Steve Yzerman said.
seven-game Los Angeles Winning
Weaver
brought
down nine reworks hard, he's scary. He just
streak. Cyt scored at 15: 13
They eapltal!zed on a couple of
bounds
to
cut
·~
deftclt to two
doesn't take any shlfts of!. . Up our turnovers and were able to
following power-play ta!Ues by
(76-74)
at
7:54.
.
unUI recently there were some open thescoreupandwecouldn't
Pat Verbeek and Ron Francis to
games when maybe Alex wasn't aet back In lt."
Rio Grande slipped ahead on
finish Hartford's uprising.
quite Into It, but I thlllk be's
Dave Barr drew theRedWinp
foul ' shooUng and a bucket from
feelJDg a lot more comfortable Within 5·2 at 7:01 when he put
Jeff Brown, but Dale Kuhl's goal
here. His parents are here and 5Q.foot screened wrist shot past ·
at 4: 38 brought Tiffin to Within
Outdeon
that's helped a lot."
goaltender Daren Puppa. Bob
one (81-80). A Mike Clark basket
A
record
80 sled dog racers 26 seconds later gave the visitors
With Detroit leading HI, Mo- Probert provided the final mar·
IJIIDY tied the score 7:35 Into the gin with a power-play goal at have slglled up for the 1,150-mUe their first lead (82-81) . From
g~e when he went around
11:45, putUng·m the rebound of a Anchorage-to-Nome Idltarod
there, the score ~~ In favor
Sled DoaRace. TbegrueiJDgtrek . of both teams unUI ·goals from
Detroit's Yves Racine and put a John Chabot sbot.
25-foot wrllt'shot past the glove of
Paul Ysebaert ,ope.~ , the across the Alaskan wilderness Erslan and Harrison put the
goaltender Glen Hanlon.
scoring three minutes ,Into· the begins Marc!!.,L_
Redmen ahead In the last minute
Moallny's goal, bls 16th, Is one game wben he tipped In a Marc
and set the stage for Erslan's two
Austria's
Walllnger foul shots.
more than he scored last year as Habscheld pass from the edge of
was
the
fastest
In
tbe first
a rookie and came with his thecrease.
·
"Our kids played a gutsy half
parents In attendance at their
EJ,aewhere In the NHL Wednes· training run for saturday's In the stretch, and It's a credit to
first NHL game.
day night, Winnipeg stifled Van· women's World CliP downhUI on them: they were tired, but they
~ ·I'm happy for ~lrn In both
~ver 2-1, New Jersey and
the eP:~~lb~!l~l992
Olympic· didn't show It, " Rec!men 'Coach
France.
respects," Buffalo's Mike Hart· Chicago skated to ·a 2-2 tte and
man said. "How many people Hartford edaed LoB Angeles 4-3.
can leave . their country a•
·l eU I, E:aaackll
chance never seeing their family '
At VIIICOuver, BriUih Colwn·
again? ~ '
·
bla, PhD Housley smacked In a .
MqaUny, who has nine goals 60-foot slap shot two.minutes Into
and seven assists In the last elahl the third period, lilting Win·
games, put Buffalo on top with a nlpeg. Ho~ aot the Wilin!ni
shorthanded goal" at 17:00 of the aoal, blll4th of the season, whtle
period. Detroit's Per Djooa the Jets were a rrlaD lbort. Jeta
tripped over his own skates, goaltendeP Bob Eaiena faced :H
a!Jowinl Mogllny to go In alone shots In the game.
and put a 35-foot slap shot In the
DeYIIa I, lllleldlawb I
short side.,
·
AI East Rutherford, N.J., Kirk
Hartman put tbe Sabres ahead Muller scored his SOOth career
· 3-1 at· 3:37 of the second period point with the tylJii aoaJ, rallylna
.
.

,_ MogiiDy's twQ goals push Buffalo
·to 5-3 win over DetrOit Wednesday

a

Spo118 briefs

&amp;o:UU

l fAcTORY ·

1•1•••

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Srulttdp
Zrlllth

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Sllintelll ' ..• .:

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Phllco

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WE liPAll ILL MilES ·.
'

992-1524 .

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•
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..John Lawhorn said. "Patrick TOTM.IJ ai+lut.
...
had the~ of his life and we
t'Di!IN (8'7)' - jeff Ward,
didn't guard 'th~m that well. but · 9-0-18; Don Williams, 3·2·2·14; ,..
give us some. credit. They didn't . Mike Clark, 3-1·2-11; Thad Pa- ' '"
guard ua either."
trick, 12-1-25; Grant Weaver, · ~"
''It was a typical Rio-Tiffin 3-0-6; David Dennis, 3-1-7; Dale •
,game," Hammond commented.
KUbl, 3-0-6. TOTALS Mil
"We let them aet Into a qUick
Halftime ICGre: RloGrudef'7,
flow, whlcb you can't do against TlfiiD •·
. ·•·'
Rio Grande. I'm a little disappointed In our effort, becau11e you
can Win at borne, but In this
conference you have to Win on the
road, too. We'll have to under·
(All Games)
standthatlfwewanttobeoneof Tesun
.. ·.
• W L .: ,J
the five In the huntfor the tttle." Fed. Hocking ...................11 1 · " 1
Rio Grande suraed ahead on Wellston .: ........................10 3 · "l
field p i shootiDg of59.3 percent Vlnto!l COunty ...... ............ 7 4 "·''
(35-59), With comparatively little Belpre ........ ............ ......... 6 5 ''
three-point sbooUng (4-16 for 25 Trimble .................... ..... .... 6 5 .. , i
percent). Tiffin was 51.3 percent Alexander .. ,.................... 5 7 • I ~
(39·76) and three oHO from the MeigS ....... :...... .......... ... ,.. 4 7 "'
oui!Jidei tor 30 percent. From the Miller .................., ........... 2. 11 ..r
foul line, the Redmen were 81.8 Nei.-York ............... ......... 1 10 •. i
-percent (J.8.22) and Tiffin was 50 ~
. percent (6-12) .
TVC Gimes Ouly ·
NetUna 29 rebounds, the Red· Team
·w L "
l ~ .:.
men were again led by Donald· Fed. Hocking ...... .......... .. .8
2
son, whO had seven, and by six
Wellston ................... .......7
2
from Brown. Tiffin snatched 42 VInton County ..................&amp;
4 'I
rebounds, with Weaver account·
~lpre ....... ............. :. .......5 ·
,.
lng for nine of them. Both teams
Trlmble ..........................
_5 .''11·
lleld turnovers to . the lowest Alexander ................. :.. ,..4
5 ,1~!
· possible level: Tiffin bad elaht . MeigS .. :.. :............ ............4
8 I !I
and
Grande committed' MIUer ................... , ..........1
9 .. :
seven.
Nel. ·York . ............ .... .......0
Now 15-3 and 2·1 In the MOC, Tuw'ay'a naulta: •
Rio Grande prepares for another
WeUston·73 Alexander 64
battle Sat~y at 7: 30 p.m. at
VInton County 60 Greenfield «
Cedarville. Tiffin (12·5, H) Is at
Fed·HockJDg 80 Nels-York 68
Ohio Dominican saturday.
. MeigS 64 Belpre 50 ·
Box IClGre:
Trimble 95 Miller 50
",
RIO GRANDE (ft) r- Gary
Fri41ay'a asunes:
"_I I
Harrison, 9·1·5·26; · Jawanza
MeigS -open . .
ChUds, 1-0-2; Mark Erslan, 5-1•3Nels-York at Alexander
16; Brad Schubert, 1-1-ll-5; Da·
VInton County at Federal ' \
rlus Wllllaml, 1·1·1·6: Jef1
Hocking
·1
Brown, 5-6-16; Tim" Christian,
Miller at Wellston
•,
Troy Donaldson, 8-1·17.
Trimble at Belpre
.i•
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:s

"

.

The CBO esUmates are consld·
erably lower than the $130 bll!lon
figure given to Congress earlier
this year by the General Account·
lng Office -because It does not
Include costs ·that would · have
been Incurred In ·absence of the
o~»eratlon.

,,.

..

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...

For Instance, the GAO In·
eluded the cost of paying, equipplug an4 maintaining the forces
of Operation Desert Shield while
the CBO lnporporated only the
expense of reservlsi!J called up
for active duty.
"In this memorandum, (the)
CBO has made every effort to
exclude ·from the Incremental
costs of Operation Desert Shield
!bose expenses that would have
beep,. II).Curre!l anyway," the
report said."
.
.
In the absenceofhosUlltles, the
COO e'iltlmated the cost at
between $15 billion and $25 billion
a ·tear If deployment Is kept at
th~current level In 1991 or In any
·year after that.
ll · w'ar, the CBO IncludeS
in&lt;;lia!JI!d expenses for person· ·
ne(; added · wartllne operation
anli maintenance costs forequlpmdnt, a small part of the cost for
expended ammunition, part of
the' ' cost" for medical care ·and
pofUons for basic support costs
fo~ . S. forces.
·
·1·ne lower range of$17 billion In
19!!J.'Is based on assumptions of a
sh$rter war that would last less
than a month, waged In the air
wlfli. some limited ground at·
taqks. Casualties, tJte CBO said,
might tollll 3,000 dead and
w~nded. the loss of. 200 tanks
anillOO flxed·wlng planes.
·
the hlahest estimate tor 199lls
b~ on assumpUons of a longer
wal\that Involve alrcombat and
repeated ground attacks over a
six'-month period. In tha case,
th!!,:CBO said, casuaiUes could
reach 45,000 and eq ulpment
lospes of 900 tanks and 600
flxi!d·wlng aircraft .
.
'lihe CBO said some mUitary
allflysts see a shorter war
co.ung more than $17 billion and
a loqer war less than S35 billion.
The post-1991 figures of $11
billion for a shorter war to $51
billion for a longer war are for
~Ia~I of supplies · and
mii!IIUoua not replaced 1rt 1991.

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992-2124

Startl. . Wllttor Quarter

WASHINGTON (UPI) - The
The desert mission could also
weapons, In ·light 'of a smaller.
cost of I! war against Iraq could
lead .to a postponement of
mUltary.
add from $28 billion to $86 billion
planned cuts In forces and some
TheCBOsaldltdldnotattempt
to the mU!tary budget, accordlilg · of the costs, such as medical care
to esUniate the added cost If the
to a congressional analysis, and
and disability benefits; could go
United States keeps a mlllta.ry
Senate . Democr,a tlc leader
on for a long time.. .
force In the area after a war, nor
George Mitchell predicted Con·
The. J)ost-1991 estimate would
an•. Increase In costs of recruit·
gress would consider promptly
bereducelfthePenl;lg"ndecldes
ment If a war cuts down on the
any request for more flinds.
not to replace some or all of the · number of volunteers.
·
The Congressional Budget Of.
·
flee, In a staff report, said that
added costs for Operation Desert
Sword would total between· $17
biUion and $35 billion In the
current fiscal year that ends
Sept. 30.
'
.
. The report , also said there ·
would be "large additional
costs"ln later years for replacement of equipment, adding thatlf '
the Pentagol\ wanted to replace
all lost major weapons systems
and munltlqns, the cost could
skyrocket to between $28 billion
and $86 bUllon.
The Whl te House announced
last Friday· that the cost of the
operation was about $10 blillon
through the end of last year and
thlit.'L!JSJ alUes are on target to
pick up 80 percent of that cost.
In compillng Its study, the CBO
, TANDJ/
said the costs are "hlahly uncer· .• ·
lOQOTL ~
taln" and cautioned that the
WITH COLOR
figures are only "rough guides"
_ MONITOR
to the .price of a war agalnstlraq.
. Mitchell 'predicted Congress
would· "consider proJ!!ptly" any
request from the administration
for additional funds. But the
Maine Democrat said he has
heard a "Wide range of est!·
mates" and added that any
decision depends on a " deflnl·
live'' request from the
administration.

,.

of people have d ied as a result of
bls •actions. He should be trled
and, If convicted, · s hould be
executed."
Sen. John Glenn, D.Ohlo, a •
former Mar ine fighter pUot, called for the use of ''overwhelm .
lng power ... arid not piecemeal
,as In VIetnam."
Rep. .Dante Fascell, D-Fla.:
chairman of the Foreign Affairs
Committee, commented that the
· war " wasastepwhlchnoneofus,
Including the president, wanted
arid which Saddam Hussein
caused and for whlcli h e must be
held accoun Ia ble."
·

. Pomeroy

KARATE CLASSES

... ., f

1 I I•

and women of the a r med forces,
behind our cause - to repel
aagresslon, to deny It any reward
and to re-establish peace and
stability In this vital rejJion of the
world, " Dole said.
Sen. AlfonaeD 'Amato, R-N.Y.,
who faDed In spring to marshall
the Senate to take action against
Iraq, added, ~ 'I tbink Saddam
Hussein should be wiped from the
face of tbe earth. If • he Is
captured, he shOuld be brought to
trial as the International butcher
that he Is, as a war criminalbecause be Is a war criminal.
Countless hundreds of thousands

r-----------1

...

HarriSon .~cores ·26 points in
Rio's 92-87 defeat of Tifrm

The Deily Santi•ei- Pega 6 · .

Pomeloy-Middhlpo;-.. Ohio

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..

Page-6-The Deily Sentinel
FINAL
EDITION

&lt;lht &lt;folumbus Jilispatdt

lhuio.dey. J......., 17, 1991,

.

~ _Anti~war protests mushroom

u.s.,

Trnn ,...,..J

d
air
forces
hit
.
• . ...
V
-

~--

• . A

~

Tholl8ands of peace activists,
many cbaDUng "No blood forotl"
and In one case bbumlng the
Ame!1cantJaa. took totheatreets
In cities from coast to coast
Wednesday af&amp;'ht as the United
States unleashed Its attack on
...Iraq.
As word spread of U.S. bombIng raids, expressions of dtsseat
that were largely mute for much
of the day gave way to renewed
demoastratiolll in several dUes,
Including San Francisco; Los
,.. Angeles; Seattle; Iowa City,
Iowa; Washington, D.C.; New
York; and Phlladephla. · ·

.

~

war
-

. :- ~-..... ~..:,.: .,_ ·..

-

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.r .....,-

-.

- .,_- - .

I

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- ·,

. ss

fast."
president's metorlc.
Dissent was reeJstered In
"During the VIetnam War, I
.
America's
heartland. as . 500
.w as one of the deceived, butl'ma
little older now and I under- people marched thr9111h the ·
stand," be said. "It's another University of Iowa campus ' In .
case of rich old men telling poor Iowa City to the · Federal
Butldlng.
YOIIJII men to go die."
, AnU-war protesters In Seattle . At least :liO people staged a
flocked to the Federal Building sit-In at the Texas slate Caplllll ·building In Austin, and another
and blocked a major avenue,
group
held a pe8'Ce vigil ln.tront ·
whtle organizers of earlier pro- .
of
City
Hallin Dallas.
~
.testll promised to stage a "major
.
Meaawhlle,
about
350
people
~
act of civ!l resistance" at 7:30,
marched
1!1
the
damp
ntaht
air
In
•
a .m . nurlday.
.
.
front
of
the
Uberty
Bell
on
.
Acr01s .the country, about 150
protesters rallied In Lafayette historic Independence Mall In ,
Square opposite the White House, Philadelphia, chanting, · ~ ·No ~
braving a steady drizzle during blood for 8uah," anq "No blood .
, Bus)I' s televised address. About for oil."
Po )Ice and U.S. park rangers .
lOll" helmeted U.S. Park Pollee
officers stood shoulder-to- were forced to divert traffic as
shoulder on P.ennsylvanla the demonstrators poured onto ·
Avenue, blocking the street to all Market Street.
In New York, pollee said 200
traffic.
The protesters, ,anglng In age activists ,b egan a march from ·
from children to ~nlor cl~ns, Times Square to the United.
banged pots and ·pans . and Nations for a mass peace rally. ·.'
'We feel only the people In the
chanted slogans such as, "No
.
streets
can . stop this," said,:;: .
blood for oil," alid ''Why should
Monica
Moorehea(j,
a spokeswo- • ·
the poorflghtll rlchnian'swar?"
man
for
the
CoallUon
to StoP U.S. .'
The marchers circled an area
IntervenUon
In
the
Mlddle
.East, ..
of th~ park In front of a banrler
a
group
tba
t
has
been
orgaillzlng
,
that read, "Respect our troops protests
across
the
·
a
nti-war
don'l klllandrnalmourtroopsfor
country for several days.
Arab oiL"·
A car slammed Into the demon· .
' Many of the protesters Dashed
strators on the Brooklyn Bridge ·•.
the two-fl~l'ed peace sign.
''It's a · criminal attack by a early Thursday after the protest.
criminal .. government," said Eight people were hurt, lnclud·
Jerry Goldberg, · 40, an 11uto lng two critically, pollee said.
Frantic and screaming, protes·
worker !rom Deti'Qit. ·
Bryce -Sud.erow, 40, Washing·. ters who believed the car In ten~ .• ton, predicted anti-war senti- tlonally plowed Into the group:ment would' spread when Ameri- . attacked the driver, smashing ' ·
can casualties started to mount. his car.' s 'wtndo.ws. The driver "
"The (anti-war) movement was not reported Injured but ,
. will gr~ as the body bags start pollee arrested hlm for driving •
·•
coml_ng back. It will build really whll!! Intoxicated.

·Ohio's temperatures · expected to
·. stay above -nonnal ·for couple days
.

'

•

REMEMBERING - Beth Lyllcb, pN.Ident of
tile ·Mlcldleport Elementary PTO, condllc:ted a
service Wednesday a(lernoon at &amp;be school In
booor of &amp;bose men and women serving Ia.

.

'

.

AREA HEADLINES - Teday'a area neWBpapers proclaimed the attaek on Iraq wl&amp;b large
headllaell, the bl11eat b!llng &amp;be Columbus
Dispatch's "War!" Tile Oblo Valley Pub1181dog
Compuy was on lbe stre~1 ahorlly ~

John Pulskamp said be thought
'Bush sounded "very calm, rehearsed and reassuring" but said
. he was not swayed bY the

,,

Iraq,
but pray for ear~y conclusion
.
anger," be said.
By United Press International
The committee Issued a stateMany Ohioans Sl!pported the
ment condemning the Invasion.
Invasion of Iraq, but prayed for
"We call oil every citizen of
anearlyend to the conflict, while
Columbus
and every citizen of
anti-war activists could not bethe
world
to
take' Immediate and
lieve President George Bush
continuous
action
to opPose and
.
'launched the attack.
thiS
destructive
and
obstruct
In addition, at least one coUege
war,"
the
stateunnecessary
canceled most classes Thursday
,
and udlltles and federal agencies ·men! said.
l\'lany
utUltles
have
taken
extra
tightened security.
precautions
because
of
security
Dan Hogan, North Olmsted;
the
war
with
Itaq.
whose son Tim,. 21, Is a Marine
Marshall Julien, spokesman
serving lri the Persian Gult, said
for'
American Electric Power,
he Is afraid·for ai.J the. troops In
said
themostsensltlveforAEPis
that area.
"My heart and prayers go out a nuclear power- plant near St.
to all o! them," he said. . "It's Joseph, Mich.
"At the nuclea~ plant, 1 would
scary. To tell you the truth, I
like
to think we have tight
really don't know what to think."
security,"
said Julien. "We have
Donald O' Connor, whose son
very
tight
security
under normal
Michael, 33, Is In the Navy and·
conditions."
·
stationed only 15 mUes from the
"Prlmartly, we are Increasing
Kuwait border, said he Is "just
awareness of those responsl·
the
numb"
by events
In the Middle
.
....... ...- ...
'
ble
for security," h'i! said of all
East.
·
AEP
operations, which Include
.
O'Connor · said he , spoke with
23
power
plants. "·There have'
his son on Tuesday and Michael
~n
notl~;es
to the management
said "they were ready, and. be
groups,
prlmarUy
just to be.
fully, ·expected that something
niuch more cautious.''
would happen."
·
Colwnbla Gas of Ohio lhc., has
VIctor King, Columbus, a
peace activist, said be learned of Increased S),lrvelllance and security, said spokesman Alan
the Invasion while attend!ng a
Crockett.
.
meeting at a church to plot more
"By
the
very
nature
of Olll'
anU-war demonstrations. .. '
business,
we
have
to
'flormally
He said the atmosphere Inside
take the extra precautions to
the church was one of disbelief.
make sure that everybody re' 'The mood of the group right
ceives
safe natural gas service,"
now Is one of a great deal of
be
said.
"As a company , we are.
sadness and a great deal of
~

rwJ

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knit shirts. Selected conluroy pants, sladt sets,
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fleeCewear, warm·l!(l suits, short sleeW! knit &amp;
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Per._ All fall sweaters &amp;hunting clothing.
Selectecllleece tops, WOYell tops, knit tops,
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Selected boots &amp; slippel'li for the family.
rw ne a..e Selected dinnerware, gifts
fumiture, pictures, table lamps.&amp;fireplace '.

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ti a dI'll.,. Selected Stereos,

boootboxes, keyboirds, video game software,
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costume jewelry &amp; children's jewelry. Selected
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items.Selected tools &amp; hardware items. Selected
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..

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1'

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......

1fi"27. "--ll
w- ~
PfOfll
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Calli

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·-

-

.

front tralllng south jusl off the
East Coast to south Florida. High
pressure was located over east
Texas. A, cold front was located
!rom Lake Superior, northeast to
a low over Hudson Bay.
The low and cold front to Ohio's
northeast and east will continue
to move away from Ohio. The
high over Texas w\11 move east to
the Georgia Coast by Friday. Th,e
cold fropt over the northern lakes

~

t-o-

'·

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•

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0TI '""""

T~a~GP.~

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.....--- .... N

$ ..:_
f[\ ...

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'

will move southeast and wea·ken
as It moves through Ohio Thursday night. Another cold front will
drop Into the upper lakes on
Friday.
·

50°/o• 75°/o ,
OFF SALE ·
·STILL GOING ·oN!
YOU'LL FIND A

GOOD SEI.ECnON

mLL AVAILAaE.
SPIING
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DAILY,

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Buttons &amp; Bows :
991·5177
110 EAn MAUl

,OMEIOY, OHIO

1990·SIMMONS BEAUTYREST®
AND MAXIPEDIC®SLEEP SETS

'

JERUSALEM . (UPI) - Is- seln threatened to strike first !f
rael's two largest cities were
attacked by allied forces, was at
transformed into virtual ghost a standstill.
"From my window you caa
towns Thursday, with citizens
ordered to remain at borne and only see trees swaying In the
pollee units patrolling empty wind;" said Ariel Laor, 30, a city
streets.
resident. "All the shops are
, Usually bustling Tel Aviv, the, closed."
dt:r Iraqi leader "Saddam Hils- " ·
'

S.nnt

WEATHER MAP - A quiet weathtlr pattern will prevail acr01s
the nation late Ibis week, wl&amp;b dry condlllons expected mmoat
areas. However, exceptio• will .Include the northern and central
Rockla where snow squalla will depollt locally heavy snow•, and
part. of the Greal Lake., which will also receive aome snowfall. A
weakening dllturbance will bring scattered 1howers to south
Texas. Clear 1o partly cloudy llkleli and seasonallemper!lotures are .
expected from the mld·Mlsalaslppl Valle.Y Into the Southeast. · .

-·-.. -

·Israeli ~ities ghost towns

Ohio liver Pla1a, It. 7 ·
Store Hours:
9:30·.9:00 Monday-Saturday I 11·6 S•nday

DIJCeV£R

.L.&amp;..JI

•· fully aware of the sensitive · '
· circumstances that we are In as a
nation."
At the main federal office
building In Cleveland, the
number of entrances was cut
from slli to four and security was
reported to have been tripled.
Capital University plaqned to
'dismiss some classes today so
students could attend workshops
· !lnd·a prayer session.
"We recognize that to try to ·
conduct clas ses torporrow
(Thursday) would not be wise,"
said Laur!l Ecklar, a Capital
spokeswoman.
Ohio State University Presldent Gordon Gee did not call off
classes bu.t asked for tolerance o!
students during the war.
''This Is a tense and terrible
time for all Americans," he said .
"It Is also the first reality of war
that most of our students have
ever known . '' ··
'
CORONER SWORN·IN • Dr. Donglu Hunter, right, Meigs
A.. peace rally was scheduled
County
cOnil.,, Is pictured at a swearlng·ln ceremony In tbe
'for Thursday evening on the
chamber
of Melas County Camm011 Pleas Judge F~d W. Crow ID
campus:
on Wednescla7 afternoon.
.
·

uttle longer."
The master sergeant said be
was Jiot to ·worrled about breakIng through the ·sand berms,
ditches, mlneflelds and other
fortifications that Iraq has
erected along the border between .
Kuwait and Saudi Arabia since
President Saddam Husseln~s lor.- ,
ces Invaded the tiny emirate
Aug. 2.
"We'll dance througb that
obstacle course. That's the.least
Of our problems," Zelenlak said.
"We've been training for that
very probleqt for four months.". _
'
'
."
. '
The sergeant 5ald he was more
good. "
concerned
about how to tell the
He said the difficulty was qot
difference
between Arabs beonly penetrating the barricades
longing
lo
the
multlnatlonaUorce ·
but avoiding the pltfalls .as tl)e
and
those
who
make up the l~aql
Iraqi defe11ders try to meet their
armed
forces.
objective, which "Is to slow your
"My main worry Is to lell the
,.. movements and channe.l them
good
guys from the bad guys," be
Into klUin~ zones."
said.
''The Saudis, Iraqis and
"Our effort to counter that will
Syrians
all look the same to me."
be .to get through the obstacle as
Ful!ord,
Interviewed just
quickly as possible," )"ultord
hours
before
the U.S. -led multisaid. Marines will attempt to do
national
forces
opened their air
that with truck-mounted folding
:
attAck
against
Iraq, sa!d his
bridges, shovel tractors and line
task
force
was wellMarine
explosives used to blast a path
and
as
ready
to
do Its job
trained
'through mlneflelds.
..
'
as
It
would
ever
be.
,
"It'll. take us . a couple of
hoped
there
would
be
a
"We
months to clear Kuwait out,"
peaceful resolution," · he said.
. said Master Sgt. Michael Zele·
•
niak, 36, o! Cbula VIsta, Calif. ''It · 'Now this task force Is prepared ·
to do what we' re asked to do they want us to make Iraq ,the
retake
Kuwait."
51st state, then that will ta!Ce a

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·

GALLI~OLIS:

~

WITH U.S. MARINES, Eastern Saudi Arabia (UPI) - As
multinational warplanes opened
the war against Iraq Thursday,
U.S. Marines were studying the
sand niounds, ditches, barbed
wire and mlneflelds they will
hav~ to cross If the alrbattlefalls
to brtilg ·Baghdad to Its knees.
"Ii's going to be tough," Col.
Carl Fulford, the commander of
Marine T.a sk Force Ripper, said
of the !ortlflcatlons along the
Kuwaiti border. "Iraq's main
strength is defending from prepar.ed positions and those fortlfl·
cations In · KIIWalt are very

. Somelntatm ~ maybaft bceo1akea already.
'

·

~

-.;t;' ...

Marines studying
fortifications .as· war
with . Iraq gets un~erway:

already

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.

'

LONDON (UPI) - Ubyan lrrespo)nslbl~ actions and to
leader Colonel Moammar Gad- prevent \he expansion of the
baH said Thursday the U.S.·Ied battlefield of the war, duty and
offensive ln the Persian Gulf International responsibility die· .~
sholild not extend be,Yoad the tate the need for efforts to be ·
recovery ot Kuwait.
made so that the operation does
He made the appeal In an not go beyond the recovery of
urgent message sent at dawn to Kuwait, which Is precisely what
U.N. Secretary-General Javier - the Security Council resolutlo!lll
Perez de Cuellar and the pres!· provided for," Gadhafl said.
c:jent of the U.N. Security Council,
'The United Nations and the
the Libyan news agency JANA Security Council should shoulder
reported, according to a monitor their resporuilblllttes so that the
by the · Brltlsb Broadcasting situation Is not exploited (or
.
Corporation. .
private obj!!¢tlves, so that the
"In order to preserve world ,,mDitary operations do not go
peace and save the peqple of Il-aq beyond the borders of Kuwait
from the consequences ·of any and the raids on Iraq stop."
.,.
••
' "

Now is your chance to save den :m~ on mns
low prices.
We've cut ow prices an additional20% to 40% on selected items.
With savings this big, it won't last long! So hurry in,
.
because when these gOods are gone, they're gone for good.

COATS &amp; JACKETS

.

NAT10tAL WU.THEA F(!AEcAsl FROM7 Pll1·17-l1 T07 PM 1·11-f1

•

By United Pfe..lllteraatloaal
Although colder air baa moved
Into Ohio, temperatures the next
couple days will still average
sUghtly above normal.
The rata changed to snow
· ~ Wednesday night over much of
Ohio as colder air moved Into the
. region. However, little or no
acCumulation or snow occurred.
• The e~epUon .Is In ex.ti'eme
northeast Ohio where 1 or 2
Incites of snow may accumulate.
Temperatures early Wednesday
morning were generally In the
lower to middle 30s. ·
At 5 a.m., the snow had ended
over all but the extreme northeast part o! the state. In Its
wake, some areas of light snow
and drizzle remained.
Snow Is likely agalh Thursday
night over the northeast portion
of the state With scattered
flurries possible elsewhere.
Snow accumulations will again
be light or npn-exlStent. Lows
Thursday hlght wlll.be In the 20s.
A few flurries co)lld linger In
eastern Ohio Friday morning.
Operation Desert Storm In the Middle Easl. She Is
Otherwise, variable cloudiness
pletiU'ecl placing a red, wblte and blue ribbon.iiD
Is In the forecast. Ll ttle change In
the windows al tbe froDI of lhe school.
temperature I~ expected with
highs again from 35 to 40. The
relatively mUd weather will
continue through Saturday before much colder air arrives on
·
S
unday.
.
On the Thursday morning
weather map, low pressure was
over southern Maine
with a cold
.
.

Many Ohioans support .invasion of

recover, not exploit, Kuwait

)

.

I

Gadhaji says assault should

u~s.

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 7

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

"'•

.

B:rDAVIDE.ANDEB80N
United Presa lllteraadoaal

•

Thursday, January 17, 1991

.

COIID OP 31D I OUVI

GAlLIPOliS

446·3045

FREE DELIVERY
.
OPEN
MONDAY-SATURDAY 9·6
FRIDAY TIL 8
.

�Q •

,.

..,..,...

Page-8-The DailY Sentinel

11Hndlly,. Janu-v 17, 1991

50-year grange .membe~s recognized . ··
&lt;

&lt;

Past eouncilor's Club meets
. B~ Maxey and Mary Jo
ringer were intiatcd inJo the Past

·aar-

SHEENA FIELDs

· U!Iebrates 'binhday
Sheena Fields, dauBI!ter of Russ

Community CaJendv ._, COOant will be the caller. Public in'
appear two daJJ before u --• Yiled.
and tile day o1 aut eveat. 1-.
•·
must be nc:eiftd. In IICIYIDte to
; . SATURDAY
assure pallllcatloa In tile calenHENDI!RSON · - Tile Gillia
ilar.
'I)virlers Weatem Square Dlilnce
THURSDAY
Club will hold a dance Saluidly
. . POMEROY - 'I'Iie Meigs County from 8-11 p.m. at !he Hendenon
De1110Cl'81ic Excculive Commiaee Co9rinunity Cerm in Hmdel1011,
wiU r11eet Thursday at ·7:30 p.m~ Ill. W.VL Thm Poe will be the caller. ·
lhe Car)lellter's Hall in Pomeroy. .
The pJiblic is invited 10 8amd.
POMEROY - The Belles and
Bei!us Western Square lDani:e Club
· POMEROY - The Trinity Youth will IIJlOIIStt an open danCe at the
F~llowmip will .meet Thursday al Senior Citizens Center in pomeroy
4:30 p.m. at the church, The meet; on Satunlay fiom 8-11 p.m. Homer
&lt;

6

~~COIICh!dell :30following

was

.

~

CHEsri!R •

The Di8lrict (3,
Daughters of Americi, will meet
Saturday 81. 1 p.m. at lhe Qlestcr
Lodge Hall. Practice for !he rally in. ·
April will be beld. All members ufgcc1 10 attend.
·

.--~

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

•

TUPPERS PLAINS - There will

Eblin Sr., and Mr. and Mrs. Russell . Universal Home Video .
3. To tat Recall .1. Carolco
from 8-11:30 p.m. at the Tuppers
Harper.
.
,•
5. Pretty, Woman - TouchHome Video · - ·
Plains VFW Building featuring
Other guesls included Thad ·stone Horne VIdeo . ·
4. Madonna: Justtty My Love
Rocky Mountain Bluegrass. Arlhur
Fiefds, Mike Eblin, Dlt8111a Bell, ·
6. Total Recall - Carolco . - Warner Reprise VIdeo .
Brandon and JI!Stin, Mr. and Mrs. Home Vldeci
5. Teenage !'1utant Ntitja Tur• · VIdeo
Dana Bentz and Dawn, Mr, and , 7. The Hun !for Red October- ties: The Movie -:- .Famlly Home
8. AU Dogs go to Heaven - .·
·Mrs. Ronnie Eblin -and Travis, Har· Paramount Home·VldeO
Entertainment
,
· MGM-UA Home VIdeo
ley : Eblin, Mr. and Mrs: ;Rick·'
8. Gremlins 2: The New Batch
. 6, the Little Mermaid_ .\lya_lt
9. Th,!! Sound of Music
Cmwley, Kreslia Ann and Lisa, Mr. -Warner Home Vldeb ·
Disney Home VIdeo
CBS-Fox Video
an&lt;J: Mrs. RoMie Broob, Rhondl!
9. Back to the- Future III 7. Madonna: 'The Immaculate
· 10. Star - Wars Trilogy - ·
and; Tommy, Mr. .and Mrs. Silnny MCA-Unlversal Home VIdeo
· Collection - .Warner · ~prise
CBS-Fox
Video ·. ,
HudsOn, Kenny Klein, :Mr. and

......hlloC~~~-..... R.PII.

C.

Mon. """ lol. 1:00 a.m. to ii:OO p.m.
.

,luftdiiW' 10:00 e.m. to 4:00p.m.

1

•

PRESCAIPTIONI
PH . 882• 29&amp;6
E. Main
Friandly lefyiCo
Pom•ov. OH.
~., W.oll NiVhll 'Iii 9

ARY SALE-A-

&lt;

medal:

•

UDIIS

···

lI

conservation issues.

·~

program

I

. ganization, writing and Mlalysis
· skills," said Dyer. "It also offers
5ome llllniCtive cash incentives
whiCh could, for eumple, · help
wiih coUege expenses."
Essays are judged at lhe CQunty,
area and state level. Tile stale levd
firsrplace winner will receive $800,
secOnd place will receive $500 and
lhir&lt;l place will receive $200. Stale
level awards will be presented 81
lhe bFSWCD's summer !DCC~ing in
. Day,ton in July. These cash awards
· are made possible by the SUPIJ!ld of
the: :Ohio Fanner's Union, kobert
W. Teater, Cecil and Eloise Robin~
son; and Emerson Marting.
'Die Mei$5 Soil and Water Consernalion DiSirlct is offering $25 10 '
the: linqilace winner in JhQ'county, ·
$15 to die aecond place winner IN
$10 10 lhc third place winner.
This )'ear'• essay contest topic
ge&amp;s back 10 CIWlh science "basics."
Participating Sllldents will be ilstcd
10 discuss soil composition and •
formation. and delaibe ~ local
-soil's uses and llmitltiorts.
- CoUcrviDon essay COIIIeSt ennt
forms and compleJe details can be .
obfaincd fJon1 !he Moigs Soil and
WaliCr ConlerYalion Dislrict, 33101

Hila.nd · Road, Ponoeaoy, 4S769,

poo.c. 992-6647:

...

Deadline Cor enaies ii Feb, IS.

UDIIS

. UDIU ·

Blouses

Skirts

·30°/o
UDIES

30°/o

20°/o OFF STOREWIDE
-

''

.

'

.

•'

•ONE LARGE GROUP OF
.(SHOES &amp; SIIOW lOOTS)

1

CONNIE$ •

.. SJ s 2 $2 s
PR. OR

·• 1/2. PRICE ON All

..

FOR

'~SALE ROOM"

IIDUCII

30°/o

. ,THIU SAIUIDAY ONLY!

••·s
Corduroy·

Pa.nts

... Pants
.

· IEDICID

IIDUCID

20°/o

DIIIIM

20°/o

Chore
(oats .

Dress
.Gloves

IIIUOD

U.eatller nd lnltl

CARDIGANS.AND VESTS ·.

1/2 PRICE .·

400fo

Bib
Overall•

2.00fo
OPEN·
9:30·5&amp;00, .

118.114.95

SAU

IIDICID

Flute" was rich In falrytale Guus Mostart, a Dutch director
· UPI Seallcir EditOr
fantasy, whereas Hockney views · making his Met debut.
.
NEw YORK (UPI) - The Mozart's magic kingdom with
Mostart' s direction Is fairly
Metropolitan Opera has jumped · the Innocent eYe of a child who·ts ba,nalln that he moves his forces
tl)e gun on the la,rgest of- the fascmated by geometric design.
about the stage as mechaniCally
worldWide Mozart bicentennial ·
The sets cona~t el)tlrely of as the figures that perform on the
observances by II!Oillltlng 11 new painted drops, a departure from. hour on those famlllar Swiss
productlon.ot "The,Mailc Flute" the Met's longtime addiction to· clocks. Fortunately. this "Magic
j:leslgned by fashionable artist massive, reallsticsets:'rhereare Flute" has a an extraordinary
David Hockney:
·
charmlq, light-hearted deptc- - cast, which Is able to overcome
The components of Lincoln tlons of EgypdBII-tnsplred tern· consldera ble ·directorial cl urnslCenter ·for the Pertormbllf Atta, · pies, pyramids, obelisks and · neu, a!ld Mozart's winning score
lnclud!illl the Met, will salute the formalJardens In sunny crayola bouyantly conducted by James
'200th Bllnlversary:., of Mozar.t 's colors In piquant combinations Levine.
death by pertonnlng all835 of his .. that dispels the usual gloom of
musical wor!(J . and examining Met staelngs.
Soprano Kathleen · Battle,
every aspect of lils )lfe through
Wit Is pervasive fn sets, coslectures, s)'mposlums and tnrns. tomes, and especla)ly themenag- whose voice Is small but exqui,
The 20-month celebration Is even . erie of adorable animals whose site throughout Its range and
more even1fu I than the one savage breasts are soothed by handled wl th supreme artistry ,Is
'planned In Vienna, where Mozart · Tamlno's-tlute. This Is a produc- as lovely _a Pamtna as one ts
tlon that Is sure to Win maqy · likely to find anywhere these
dled In 1791 at 35.
. It will be opened officially Jan. hearts In seasons to come, even days. Francisco Araiza Is nicely
27, Mozart's blrlhday; by a joint though a · surprisingly large · matched with he!'.a~ Tamtno, a
concert otthe' New York Phllhar- number o~ the ,opening· night handsome young hero with a
monic and Jui)IJ.ilrd Orchestra, ·audience last weekend booed competent tenor and a sense of
recreating a program ·Mpzart Hockney roundly when he took a acting style.
conducted In VIenna In ' 1783. curtain call.
'Me1111whlle "Malle Flute" c1111
Thll. "Magic Flute" Is .essenBaritone Manfred Hemm of
be enjoyed a:t the Met . and on 'tlally the John Cox staging that . the VleQIIa State Opera Is making
nat!9nal television on PBS sta' wu cteated for the Glyndehis Met debut as Papageno, the
ttons June 19. .
, . · bourne Fesllval In England 13 bird vendor, and Is almost up to
The ·production's sets and years ago and travelled .to San the ,standards of Theodor Upcostumes· by Hockney, • Britts)!' Francisco. Jean-Pierre Ponnelle pman, the Met's most delightful
artist who calls CalUornla home, was to have been the director, but Papageno In recent memory,
· are totally different from those he died and was replaced by Barbara Kilduff scores · with a
·Marc Chagall created for the Met movie director Werner Herzoe. deft portrayal of his other half,
· In the· 19708. Chaeall's "Magic ·who withdrew, to be replaced by . Papagena.
·

-

$1800

•o•Ai
· IIIIOIGH -

Of

6

•
' ·
MnQn countl• m'!ltt _be P~•·

:~-"~! I .50 ditcount for • • "id irt •dll•nce.
_,, - Qhteewav lftd founcl .adl lind•
run 3 d*tt at no eh.,l.

,

·

11wordtW~~"ill

•Price of tid for all dtlllaii.U•• ill, double price ot lei COlt . .

•7 point ~n• type only latH.
.
·
•&amp;entinll il .not Nlpontibll f(k ttfOII 1ft11 firet ·d... . I Cheek

fOr errors flnt d., 841, runt in p..,...l. C•ll bflf9r• 2 :00p .m .
d_. aft• pUbl~ution 1.o m""e co,rectiOn. '·
•A• thlt mutt be Plid in.Mv1nce . .
Card Of ThMkl
In Mt_m orllrn-

Ctastifitd act.'trtilemeni ltlac..S in The Oaltv Senttntl Ill·
cept 7 cl•lifi-' ditP'frr. Butin•• C.rd and leglll noficell
will alto ·app.., ,In 1he Pt. ll'le..-nt ......., tncl the Oelli·
polis Deity Tribune, reaching owr 11.000 hoM.,. :

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
COPY OEAOLINE ~
. .~ 11 , 00 A.M. SATURDAY
MONDAY, PAPER ·
- z,oo ~ . M . MONOAV
. TUESDAY PAP.ER
- 2 :00P.M . t1JEI0AY
WIDNUDAY PAPER
- Z:QO P.l'&gt;t . WEONESD.t.Y
THUR80AY PAPER
- 2 '00 P:M. THURSDAY
FRID.t.Y P.t.PEA
- 2•00 P.M. F~IOAY
SUNDAY P.t.PER

Classified pal{es ,qm·er the.

follewing telephon-e exchanges ...

,.

·uiUIQA'

'

.M IDDLEP9RT, OH • .

etven two of •!Pt defeQdallta
cOavlcflld Ill tbe raelalllaytq o1
·a' )'O!IIIIlllack tMII ·ID tilt same ·
neJIIlborlload ID Aupat 1189.
Tlledllc:rlmlutloncharaecon- · .
· tallied ID the flve~ount Indict. ment apllllt Riccardi acculed
him ,ol. atlackllll SJiarpton ''liec . - al ,.._ llOilll', re1Mial or
nattoaal Di'llf!ll."
·
Rlcc.a rdlll white. .
;

,,

From. Join us tor our
Open House on Moitday,
January 21 from 9 AM to 7 PM.

PLACES TO.GO
TRAVEL AGENCY

417 SECOND AVENUE
GALLIPOLIS

CALL 44U446 or 1-800..72-2292
L..-~'·- · ..::DON:.::-:.'T.:l:M::::ISS:.:I.:.:.n.;.....__,

.

'

A.-t•arefotco"•OYUvt runs. brollenupd..,twillbechtii'g..:l
thW 11
acft .
'

'"""1-----.. . ..,...;-

,n, eer:h

Mer chdlllil st•

1- C.rd of Th-'kt

11 - HOYtehold GooCh

2-ln ~•mory

IJ2-IH«"'a OoocM
IIi 3-AnliqUtl

~-~nnouc:ttm_entt

4 ~GiYIIWIY

s.t_:Misc. Merch.ndite

6-Htppy 4dt
t-Lott tnd FDuncl
Stlll~aid in ad'.ltnc•l
e ~ Pwl»&gt;ic Stlt • Auct;on ·

7 -.- Y•d

9 - WII'It.,to Buy .

,

65-ButldinQ SuDDii•
&amp;6 - Pett for Salt
57-Mutie* Instruments
!)1-Frultt &amp; Vilg . .bl•

59-Foi Sale or ·Trtde

I lllllii·YIIII'III
S1 r'l./11 f~'~

Fm:.

1

1 · 1 - HIIp-·Wanf~ , .·
· 12"':"' 1ttult'on Wenttd
, 3-lnturtnet

StiPIIilt'~

t'&gt; ! IVI':,IIII.k
11 - ftrm Equlpmtnt

62- Wtnted to luV
63-.Livetto'* ·

14-•usir,•• Training
11.,... 1choolt • lnttruetion
11 _; "•dio, TV CJ ,Repefr

a

e• :....H•v

&amp; Grtin

a

&amp;&amp;·-Sled

17- MilcelllftiOUI

·

Fe;tii;ttr

18-W.,ttd To Oo

Tr ~n,porl aIHill

2, ..... luiNnws Opportunity
22-Montv ID LOtn
.2 3- Pro,.lioul Sll'vicet

72-Ttuck• for S•l•
73-VInl 6 4 VVD 't
-74-Motorcycl•
7&amp; .... 1oatt • .M oton for Stlt '
71-Auto Pan• • Acc•eori•

4f8-Gallipolit

982-Mid~ .•

871-Pt. Plt811RI

7.7 -- Auto Repair
71 - Cimplni Equipn,enl

458- ltoi'l ·.

79-Cimperl

ort

Pomeroy

387-+Ch•hirt
388-YiftlDI'!

Z4D-Rio Grande
2&amp;6":"'GUyln Ditt.
143- Areblt Ditt .
379 ..o.WIMnot

91i - Ch•Wr
843- Por"'llnd

"

7, - ·Auto• for' Stl•

A,rta Code 304

31

.

f'i Motor Homft

11t-Apple Grdvllli

'173-Mno~

2·t1,...letart Falll , · 882-Ntw Heven
949-Aactne
7.t2-Autlend

. 8915-Utlrl
937-luffiiO

817-Coolvilo

•

41-Houtts for Rent
4;2 - Mobili HOm11 forA ant ·
43 -Ftrm• for Atnt
44- ApM"tment tor Rtnt
4!-Furnithed Aoomt
41 - •p•c• for Rent

G·et RecuJtt Fief

47-Wanttd to Rent
48-Equipment for Rent
41-For

h••

Services
81 - - ttomelmprowin~W~il

82- PiumDing·• Htalng

83-Eac.,atina

1• -EI.c:tric .. L Refrig ..•tton
115- 011'1 . .1 Hluling
11-Mobile Hom• A•p•W
-

17-Uphotfttty

IUILDEIS -cUs:ro. IUir·

•Remodeling end
1-1 cima Repelra
•Roofing ·
•Siding
. •Painting

HOMES &amp;GAIAGEt

"At laienllllla PriCes"
.... 949·2101
••
....... 949·2160

BISSElL &amp; lUilE ... .

CONSTIUCDON
OllewH-es·
' •'

'

Banks
Construction

Stop I C-para · · ··
Fr14! Estlntata
•

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667-6179.

992·6641 or
698·6164

0

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u-:n ·IO·Ifn

SHRUB I TREE

TRIM....
REMOVAL
•uGHT HAULING

*FIREWOra

~Gutter
~Helmet·

.·

BILLS CK
992-_2269 .

USED RAILROAD liES .
&amp;-12·10

992·5009

NfYEI CUAN YOUI .
, GUMIS AGAII

.

GUAR~NTI!EDI

oVINVL SIDING
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•ALUMINUM SIDING
f ·•IOLUnrolN

INSULATION .

BISSELL _ .
SIDING co.:.

..........

5-31-'90 ""

YOUNG'S .

(ARPENTER SERVICE ::-:

-Eiectrklel • Plumbing

-ConcreteWook
-Roofing

-Interior • Exterior ·
· Pllntlng
'

(FREE ESTIMATES!

NO SUNDAY

.

11/1.1"-

•KeroHnt Stovea •

115 EeJt Memorlel Drive
Pomeroy, ,OhiQ 41711
814 992·2104 Ext. 2,4

.

... -

UPHOLSIEIY

'

.·.

COMPI!TE
•
ElECTRICAL SERVICE .,

•Any lerigth laW
chaine and eccea·

medlete c)peningl for Regldered
NurHa to work In · lmtrgenoy
Room, . Home ·H•l1h Nutting, end
. Acute Cere (Med.·lurg.) , 8•18rv
commensurate with experience . .
Excellent fringe
btnefits.
.
.
CONTACT: .
Ahond1 D1lle~ AN, B.I.N.
Director OT Nuralng

..•

r---==~~

YARDMAN&amp;
ECHO DEAlER

·

Wick•

We Do Wlek Repair

l•idential ond

Co1111111rc!al
I!EWIRING AND

IOflel

• -

TROUILE SHOOT1NG ... .,
Certtflell Blltlldalll·

..... lsthra....

MOiiiS EQUIPMENT

.·

IAN IS
CONSTRUCnON
992-5009

742·2455 .
Sldehlll IIMd, llltlaald
12-24-!10-1

Z-19-'10- 1110 .

THE

GROOM
ROOM
Colll!l'ltfl Grooming
AI Ira•* ·

EMiliE MEIINAR
Ow- &amp; Oparator

DAN'S .
II.INSMISSION
and AUTO liP All
lpealallzlng In .
Autometla
Trlnomllllono, INk••·
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Clutch Repair.
FIII!E I!ITIMATEl

ev.... E• .,..~en ..
992·5517

614·992-6120
Pom~tov.

,• .

Y. C. YOUIIIIG II
t92·6211
P-ny, Ohle

PH. 949·2101
or IlL 949.,2160

CAIN'S
Of Ml441epe_rt

MIDDLIPOIT
. Across From
Auto·

•

-Gutter Work

11-11-'10-1

Hand Tufting
Cultom o..,.,
Ill Yean~

·:

~

-Room Addffiana

"Free Eetlinetee'' '

FREE EmMATES

'

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l,enlotlallng

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CONSTIUCnON

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NO JOB TOO SMALL
FREE ESTIMATES

Day • .Hight

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Business ·s .e rvice$ . ..

Veteran• Memoriel Hotpltll ·
:

.06/ doy

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.

,

.eo ·

e1 .301.doy

Are• Codi 814

BULLETI-N BOARD ,

' ANNOUNCES THIER 1991
MOTOR COACH TOURS!
Over 15 Tours to Choose

16

Mei.SII County

·lUCnON

~tile

.42

113.00

Gtllla ·county

.J&amp;R

:Tiie-.. .lfltlb

$9.00

111

"·

· . 20
·, . 30

Ar.. co~• 614

a

saturday ftlbb!arotSI!arptonu
'he Will let to leed a march
protHUq tbe lenitnt Hntencel

.

·~ . 00

15

'·

Ov,r 16 Words

u .oo

b"t

•1•·ttl·lJII
IU-.rti!Sec•ll
we s.., Whet w. Do.

PlACES TO GO TRAVEL AGENCY .

.

Rtto

15
15

10
Mamhly

----:o---f ..
MeiV.. GatU•

Wordt

.,
3

8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY

'

"

D.VI

MONDAY .thru FIIDAY I A.M. to 5 P.M.

·

-..

R

TO f'I.A(£ AN AD CAU 992·2156

Ironicluly,lhe attack on Sharp- attack, and kitchen knife wtth a 1 Carel of lbankl
NEW· YORK (UPI) _ A' ton occurred just blocks from the five-Inch blade was recover®.
We Do Whet Wa a..,
11-1 ..1.1&amp;
Brooklyn man was Indicted Wed· murder of young Yusut Hawkins. He has been held without batt In
"NOTE OF
nesday for the racially motivated · Since then, Sharpton had orean- protective custody since his •
bb1 of th Re AI Sh
!zed more than two do:ren protest arrest. ,
APPRECIATION" 8 . PubliC Sale
,sta: 11i
e v.
arpton, marches thi'qh the neighborSharpton on Wednesday conThe F1111ily of Buel
who ·waa slashed as he began to hood - an4 faCed a barage Cit . ttnued his recovery. from a stab
&amp; Auction
· lead a protest march thro!lih a
K.
Ridenour
would
mostly white neighborhood.
taunts and hostilities, but until wound to his left upper chest, and
likl to think: The
Michael Rk:cardl, :r, of Ben- Saturday, no violence.
was reported In stable condition
Chester U11ited Me·
sonhurst was-charged by a state .
RICC!Irdl, .who Is white, was . at Coney Island. Hospital.
thOdlst · Church; for
supreme Court gand' JutY with . tmmedlll~ly arrested atte~: the ·..
· ·
.•
the nlcil i1p robe. The
second-degree · attempted
N1urene Church 1t
murder, flrst-degee aasault,
AI
Chester. for the 11ict
third-degree criminal ~ston
of a weapon, aecond-di!IIJ'ee habasket of fruit 1nd
rassment and dlacrlmtnation.
candy. And The Ch•·
' The aecret panel beian reviewter Glrden Cl1b ftir
lne the case on Monday, 1111d
the bttt utlful fl~
vpted to IndiCt Riccardi a-bout
Western
BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE
thlt he l'ICtlved .It
12: 40 p.m., a apokelman for
Chrl1tr1111.
IVRY PIIDAY
Dl8 trlct Attorney Charles Hynes
P1uline
Ridenour
and
said.
PUBLICATION
AT 7:00P.M.
Family
Riccardi - who'was convicted
1n both 1982 and 1985 on assault
· charges, the Iaiiier lnvoMng .a
FOR SALE IN RACINE
11 Help Wlnlld
pollee ofttcer ·- faces a maxi•
VERY NIC1: lARGE HOME ON,API'ROX. 3\1
ACREs- 4 BR, 3 baths. 21111111, rented I
mum el11ht and one-third to 25
.BR a~ment. Pr..,erty includes pond, ap· • . '
years In ).all It convicted on the .
, , pr001. (BOO sq, n. rarm blclpnd mobile
attempted mUrder Chll'l'e.
home. Areal barpin at $89,900.
•
Join the Heelthc1re F1rnlly 1t
He will be arralped in atate
I
CALL 614-992-7104 FOR APPT.
· Supreme Court on Friday.
· Veterans Memorill' Hospital. ·lrn·

'

.'

145 NORTH SECOND .

.

• The ·Area's Number -l Marketplace

· REGISTERED NURSES

nOll HOUIS

MiffS

.

&amp;Socks

BAHR

.

·

4:30 P.M. DAY BEFORE

.'Underwear
••·s

: MIN'S

fwtl•idd

herita_gt hou$.t.

.· 30°/o ·· .

••·s

30°/o

REDUCED

· ' IIDICID

''

(~rew lhck, Y·lledl, . . .·Twtle ami ·

LAST WEEIENDf

·suoEPLACE
'''·5617

'

Men's Sweaters

¥

'

.

&lt;IIIII'S

Lang &amp; Short Bl"ve

30°/o

IDIOD ·

Work
Uniforms.

•20°/o OFF ALL ATHLET.k SHOEs_··
-~

IIDUCID

Winter
Jackets

' Mlfi;S ·

. ~-(Colored
shirts
Only!

Suits

20°/o

_STOC~ OF ATHLETIC. SHOES! .
.

-

Mill'S AllOW

MEirt·s

MIN'S

: IIIUCID

.

. · The (jollar opened trading at137.95 yen, up UO .
yen trom Wednesday's finish and rose as high as
138 yen. But by the noon close of the currency
market,- the dollar had sllpiJ!!d to 134.65 yen, down '·
1.70 yen from the previous day.
.
.·
. ·
· After an Initial plungefollowlngthe'outbreak of
~ war, the Tokyo .s!Ock market ra,ll!ed strongly on ·
· news reports suggesting. that the U.S. -led forces
· · were taring w~ll al\d meeting no Iraqi resistance.
· · The key Nl.kkel average of 225 shares emerged
wltb a ~.004.U pohitgaln. the tenth largest ever In
terms pf points, to clQSe at 23,446.!!1. The gain was
equivalent to a 4.5 percent jump In value.
Analysis said the comeback of the yen and stllck
prices and ·a &amp;bnll8r rally In bonds, on and gold
were due to ,early Indications the strike was
effective. But they said a chanee In the news could
change the direction ot the market.
. ·
"If we hear of massive strikes on Saudi on
fields, theQ all bets .are off," said :Brlal\ Tobin,
. · general manager ot S.G. )Varburg, a British
'securities holl!ie.
. .. .
.
. ·
-Share prices also rQse sharply on the Hong Kong
Stock r;:xchange as Investors rushed to buy' In the ·
wake of the U.S.-led air Strike.
By the end of tl)e morning session the blue-chip
Indicator Hang Seng Index roeketed 83.33 points to
stand at 3007.34 hea\llng Into afternoon trading.

BJ CATHY BURKI:

'

Jackets

eased.

Classifie

-

''Gold 1s down, oU Is down and tile dollar Is
down. Basically everybody Ia arguing, hoplnr and
praylq that the news is good," said Geoff Dennis,
chief International economiSt at James Capel Co.
·"the dollar could rally on the opposite news,that
the gound assault ·ro dislodge Saddam from
~uwalt Is actually going to be a lollg, messy
affair."
.
. ·
In Tokyo, oil prices soared along with tbe do118r
but tiJen retreated as financial markets gyrated In
reaction to the start of war.
The war In the Persian Gulf began just minutes
before the openlug bell in Tokyo and sent a sh_ock
wave through .all of Its markets .- foreign
exchange, stocks, bonds, oil and· gold.
The dollar ~ sharply, stocks and bonds were
· Off, gold and oll jumped. .
· .
.
· But as the hours passed and more news Of the
nature of the fighting reached tile trading floors,
the markets turned aro1111Q. The dollar feU, s!Ocks
and bonds rebounded and gold and oll prices

Riccardi indicted in Sharpton stabbing

· '. 30°/o

Mllll'HIYi'S

·,

· 1 GOIIDf ....a~

Llwl's lllldDwers,
Ctmllurc»Y Slacks &amp;

Sport Coats
&amp; Blazers
•uaD .

.

.

"30°/o

/2 Price'

~-·

.,

· REDUCED

SPECIAL

IIIII'S

30°/o

•30°/o OFF ALL CONNIES.

br Lewl'•
.
•

..

IIDUCED

. (INCLUDES
MIN'S DEITERS &amp;.Y(OMEN'S
.
.
. NURSEMATES)
.
.

Cotton ·Slacks

1

Flannel
Shirts

Capes .
UDIES

Slacks

20°/o .

.....

.

..· LADIES
REDUCED

,.

40°/o ·

Jackets

30°/o
.

40. /o

REDUCED

'

IEDUCiD

LADIES DENIM "

REDUCED .

'

REDUCED
0

"

P'--•ers

a

_ di'aws on the ~nt's research, or-

REDUCED .

REDUCED

contest set

'

'

40°/o-50°/o. 40°/o· 50°/o

S~CD essay

It's time for Meigs Couilty High
SchOol students til sharpen their
pencils and writing skills and dig in
for Chance 10 earn cash priz@ in
1 ' ' the )991 "Conservation Essay Contest!'
.
SPonsored by ihe btiio Federalion Qf Soil and W.u:z COIISelVation
Districts· (OFSWCD), the conrest,
now in its fourth year, is open to all
studQnts in gnllies 9-12.
·
According 10 Opal Dyer, district
- ~ adminiStrator, of lhe
Metgs Soil and Water Conservatio!l
District. tl)e essay contest is designed· 10 encourage young Jldults 10
i~~Crease lheir uriderstanding of soil,
water 'and related natural resource ·

Coats

REDUCED

per barrel·

B,. FREDEBICK M. WINSHIP

·'

~~~~~.'i:~bm~Y:: Ewing Chapter names winners

·Sweaters.

'

Ohio

Mozart biCentennial ·kicks off at
Metrop~litan Opera Weddnesday

lie a round and square dance Friday

.Back Street
Video relocates

0

I

FRIDAY
CHESTER • Rev. Allen Blackwood will present a slide JliiWll1ll
on his recent visit 10 RomatUa on
Friday night· at the Calvary !lib~
Church on Pomeroy Pike near
Chester. The public is invited 1p at,
tend.

die puu!hers, Mr._and Mrs. George .
:;~ ·, ,
. .
,, i:
· .
'Thai:kee and Apnl, Mr..and Mrs.
Adam M C. Reeves, 209 showing all antestors through his
l3111CS Snyder,, and Thb1!ha, and Columbia Ave., .A!hens. soo of Dr. . great graildparents aM virile-an esSt~-:e Hysell.
A!bert and Tom ~ves•. was. !lie say on a subject dealing wi!h lhe
WIJ!'Ier of d!e annual compeuuon American · Revolulion. His essay
for outsqm~ E'agte Scout con- was on patriotism.
ducted by Ewmg Chapter, Sons of
Second place winner in the con. the . Americarl Revolution, headed test was JQff Conklin of 9750 Stare
by Keiih D. Ashley, Pomeroy. • '
Route 685 of-'Giouster. His essay
Adam is a membel' of Allo!Jak eoncemC)(f the problems of long disBack Street Vi&amp;o has relocaied 61~ of !he Boy Scours of~ tance fighting. .
.
••
" its place of busilless to !he former ·which IS SJlll1ISOifP by lhe Ep1s- · Reevels entty will now go into
· localion of Simon's Pic-a-Pair on · c~ Churcb . of !he GOOd staiewidc compelilion. He will be
the · comer .of C01111 and Main . Shepherd. Th win the competilion, honored at a dinner on May 27 81
. Streets in Pomeroy. ·According 10 :Reeves had Jo submit a resume of which time he will be presented a
s~ manager, Linda Gillcey, busi- all his sclillting activilies, hobb~.o Certificate of Merit. an S.A.R.
ness hours will remain the same..
community service, civic dulies · Eagle Seoul patch and the SA R
and schoot activities. In addition he Eagle Scout
had 10 (jOtnplete an ancesiOral chart .
.
. .
.
.

IIIII .r .t n•
· · BJ~._aB.RJES
..
LONDON ( UPJ) .- Buoyed by Initial reports of
a successful offftlalve aealnat Iraq, on prl!;e•
dropped and London Stock Exchllnge prices rose
Thursday folloWing the lead of the Tokyo market
which soared 1,000 points.
'·
- ,
Gold and the·dollar, both seen as safe havens ·
during t war, fell. because the U.S.-led aiUed
atta!!k 10 recapture Kuwait from Iraqi ~Ideal
Saddam Husselnappeared to be pl'OgresJin&amp;more
quickly and better th811 expected and a short war
was hoped for, analysts said.
' '· . . . . \
on prices plummeted Thursday on the i.oll!iOn
International Petroleum Exchanee as' reports
from the Persian Gulf raised hopes of a swift
resolution . to the war agalnat Iraq ·Without
damaging key Saudi ollfleldl, analysts said.
Brent crude, the widely ttadedNorth Sea crude
· on, fetched $23.50 a barrel tor March futures,
down $6.10 a barrel on March futures from the
prevlol!s Close, lind $22.50 tor Aprn futures.
Other aJialysta said President Bush's announcement that on would be released · from the ·
government's Strateilc Petroleum Reserve
helped move· on prices down on the London
market. Officials sAid 33.75.mllllon barre!swoukl '
~put on sale iiJUnedlatelY trorn the
By mid:lllomlng, · share prices were up 40.3
points 10 2095.1.on the London International Stock .·
·· Exchange's key Financial Times 100-stock Index. ·
Chris Rowlaiid, an eqilltles analyst at Barclays
de Zbj!te Wedde, .swnined up tlie mood Cit the
market In one word: "Relief."
"The markets reacted on the tact the lilltlal
attack IQOks effective, " he said. ·
Bill ~lth, an equities strategist at Barclays de
Zoete Wedde, said most lilves!Ors saw a short and
conlalne(J.war as the best posslble.outcome to the
host111tles.
. 'rrhe fact that the news Is alonr those lines so
.far ..accounta for the market reacting the way It
has. That also tells you tbatanynews that changes ·
a bOut the likely prolonratlon of a war will dampen '
that sentiment." . - ·
1'111! Initial success of the alited attack droVe
down tile prices Cit gold, on and the dollar. all
considered sate lnvestrnentli during long, unstable periods. Gold fell sharply by $14.5 to $388.75 an
oll!lce. The doll8r tell !o $1.9260 against the pound,
2.2 cents below .the previous close.

.-rve.

Billooard,s top 10 video rentals

' ~freslunents were suved 10 . VIdeo
1. Pretty Woman - TouchgrandplfC)nts, Mr. and Mrs. Henry
3. Another 48 Hours - f&gt;ara- .sJone Horne VIdeo
Eblin Jr., Mr. and Mrs. Karl Fields, mount Home Video
..
. 2. Peter Pan - Walt D!Sll!!Y
Arzilla Fields, Mr. and Mrs. Henry
4. Bird on a Wire - MCA- · Home Video ·
,·
. ·

'

',

PoMEROY - ''Swiss FIPi!y
Robinsoli" .an4 ''Pocket for Cor.- ··
cboy" will be shown. ~ of
charge, .for cbildren ci die area .on
Saturday· at 2 pJJI. at the Meigs
County Public Library in Pomeroy. .

'

10. Cadillac · Mail - Of iOn
Horne Video
--'
LOS ANGELES (UPI) - The
top 10 videocassette sales, based
~=le~~llboard' s survey of retail

'

· · - -

-

Janu.y 11. 1991

Oil prices fall $6

u--·t .will be lhe ~er. Public
invited.

ment eommiaee tor dte mon!h is to . RACINE - The .\Ulcine Atneric:al!
get or dO Someihing for a sick per- LegiQn Post 602 will . meet
$011 or shut-ill or an elderly person
Thursday at 7:30 p.lli. for 'its
in their community.
·
· · regularmeetiJig,
· Mai:cia' Keller and ~ Jo Barringer will be having birthdays in - . · MIDDLEPORT • The MidJanuary.
dleport Child Conservation LCague
BeUy RousiJ ·read ''Pa!ient. will meet Thursday 11 7 p.m. at the
Posunaste~ ·at the conclusion ·of Rock · Springs United Melhoilist
·iM meeting. The door prize was • ChQr~:h. Guest spealcel: will be
won by Charlotte GIJliL
Wendy Halar. ~be . Will. present_a .
Attending were Goldie Frecker, program . on children wath special
Laura Nice, Charlotte Grant, ~ther needs.
Smith, Elimbelh Hayes, Lora
Damewood, Alta . Baliard, . Betty . POMEROY .
The Pomeroy
Roush, Margaret Ainberger, Inzy · Group of AJA. and AlAnon will
Newell, Marcia Keller, Ethel Orr, · meet Thorsdsy at 7 p.m. at the .
Jeari Frederick, Ernia ClelaJid, Opal Sacred Heart Catholic Ch~h. ·
HoUon, MaC McPeek, Ada Bissell,.
Betty Ymmg, Bulah Maxey and
TUPPERS PLAINS ~ The TupMary Jo Barringer.
pers Plains VFW Post 9053 and
. Ladies Auxiliary wiU hold a joint
.
meeting on Thursday. at 7:30 p.m~
All members are Qrged to attend to
. discuss· upcoming events.

Councilor's ' Club of !he Chester
CoiDI~il N_
o. 323 I!lu$hters of
.America IItts recent meeting. ·
. Erma Cleland COIIdt!Cted the
. meeting in wbich members were
insJallcd in!(&gt; ·office. Installed weie
Cl!arlotte GIJllt, Inzy Newell, Esther Smith and Op8l Hollon.
Get well Clll!ls. were sent ·to JoAnn Baurn and ~ora Beegle. A
symPathy card was sent to Mary
Holter upon the deaih of bet son,
Gary; and card was read from · !hat
family.
For !he next meeting members
are 10 wear red for Valentine's Day
and bring a Valentine card to be
· signed 10 send 10 an elderly or shut•
in.
·.
It
Voted ihat each . refresh.

and: Darlene (Eblin) Ftelds, recently
cele,brated her second bir!hday ,at
the ·~ Springs Grange Hall. A.
LOS ANGELES (UP!) - The
goidg-away party was al$0 held top 10 videocassette rentals;
honciring ihe Fields (atnily wbo is based on Billboard'S survey of
reniniin~ to Hawllii whele Fields is · retail rentals:
•
serving m the United Stales Army.
1. Dick Tracy - Touchs !One
: : stationed at Schofield Bar- H~~~~~ 2 :_ Orion Horne

.

Sentinel Calendar

&lt;

The preSelllalion of 50-year eer- ~:-~LGrueser: ·"Fun
and ted on the CbrisJmas project which
tificates to three members waHbe ~Y~ by 'Helen 91ack5100, was Christmas dinner, gifts and
)lighlight of lhe recent QJeeling of Barbara Fry and Sarab Caldwell; toys to a needy family.
.
the Rock Springs Change. Re(:eiv- "Be lhe Boss" by Bunny .KuhJ; . A thank-you note was 'I!ICeived
ing cerljficates were Roy Gruescr, "Prayer on QT' by Frances fronl · Carleton Scbool for conAda ·. Holter and W'dliam Radford. . Goeglein; '1 Remember Wilen~ by tribudons sent for their sjlecial eleeOther members who havQ received Pat Bolter, a duet, "Wbee\ the Roll lion;
. · certificates lfC) Don &amp;!zing, Ber- Is called Up Yonder" by Pat :HoiJer · Refreshments were · served by
nar!l Bruch anc:l Hugh Custer. Pat aDd Nancy Radford; and "Safety Mr. ancfMrs. Bill Radford and Mr.
Holter, lecturer, conducted the . Tips" by 1~ Fry, A legislalive and Mrs. Rollin Radford.
preSentation with officers and · report wa, given by Opal Grueser.
·Mcmben n:poned ill wen: Glace
·members participating. · .· .
Barbar Fry, CWA. IIIOCUJ1Ccd· Whaley and Maxiile Aldridge.
. Mrs. .Aolter also presented .a thai lhe toys fronl lhe OOUilty giMr · Each inembct is asked to.brfug a
progi'am on 'The New Y~ wi!h · ges would be presented Jo Vetmns homernBdc Valentine for Ole Feb.
readings, "Thoughts on. Tunc:~ by MemOrial .Hbspital. She al$0 repor- . 14 meetil1g.
'

••

Thuiwcley,

•.
,

'·. .

.

, .. last . . .

Ohio

, ....., 011.

r/t/11/i 110.

-

J&amp;L,

' '

INSIUYION
•VInyl Siding

•Replecemont ,
Wlnclowa
•Roofing •I neulatlon

. JMIS-111 · ·

9tM772 . 741-2251
131 layln PlaCe
Middleport, Ohio

11/1'4/tto

SIMJNIIPAii
ON m0111ACTCIIS.
PlaMOtlllrN.. . . . .
Clleda o.t Ow ... '
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...........
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.

74J·I.US

. 205 N. S.lllllll' StrNt
IIDUPOIT, 0t10 U76
OHict 614·9ti·IIU
. . . 614·9t2·56tJ

,,
-' .

' '

10mu.na••••
HOUIEMOTioPAtiiMI
•COMMIRCIAL
'lVI NEED USTINGSI

~;;:!·~ ···

GUN SHOOT
.

UCIJII
:••• DIPr.

•••••
•ntul
nay
SAT. "• olri
6a30P.M.

: . 111:.~~
stlldly

.,

�'·
•

Pon"•ov-Midclilpon. Ohio
A1)1

1

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SEE IF YOU CAN CATCI-1 A

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sNOWFt:AKE ON 'I'OIJR TONGUE

BUTLOOK OUT FOR

0

...._......- HEAW ONES

0
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ANSWER .

===s•c•-•lllld .......

BRJDGE

King ,

.Can you pooalbly imagine our de. WFSr
EAST
clarer . goat Willy Nilly having too • to 9 a1
tK642
a hand to make his· contract? .72
.6S3
is ,juat what happened witb to- t K 103
tAJ .
. deal. wmy:s partner had a sliSht .KJ 8 3
.10962
nrobletm after Wllly's jump to three
SOUTH
'
hearts.
didn't have the semblance
tAJ
stopope~, and the cluli short· ·
.AQJI084
a rOlling trick.lorWilly. i
f 85
I
he had seen Willy chop .
' •AQS
up many a dummy. Finally, after
. Vulnerable: Both
mentally fiippinc a coin, he bid four
Dealer: South
hearts, wbicb would be our bid with
any other declarer.
Soatb
W.ll
Norlk
Ewrl
. '
On the spade 10 lead, Wllly pul up I .
Pass . INT
Pass
dummy's queen. U that held, be could 3.
Pas.i 4.
All pa"
. .•'
take a c:,lub finesse for an overtrick.
.
Opening lead: • 10
But East covered with the king. The A·
Q of Clubs was still Uke a vision of sug.. arplllllll dancing in poor Willy's bead. '----------~...J. ,i
so he won the spade ace, went to dum·
.'
my with the king of hearts, and played no qu_een of clubs? With A·x-x of clubs, . "
a club back to bla queen. West took the Willy absolutely would have played · ' '
ki.l ll of cl!lbs and now had no trouble ace of clubs and a club altrick two and, : :
returning another heart. Tbe result? later ruffed his losing club to make the
Declarer lost four tricks in the minor game contract.
Althougb not usually recommeoded, . •
suits to io down.
What would baye happened If Willy an opening trump lead by West would •·
held fewer high cards - speci!ically, surely have set four hearts.

'

-~&gt; )oNIOHT~

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eaJ) ~::-··lllk..,..

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171-1144.
lDI'I FOR u.LE 1n a r:r ••

Business Services

:::..:.·~.::~

. • CIOWAVE ;.

IIIM"''\.ID

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monty on an txPiflllve

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revealS the klflet' through

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Prolatalonal Flgunt Slcitting
Champlonlhlpa from
Ortlnclo, Fla. (T)
Naalwlle Now
8LMJ King LIYel
1:30 (2). (IJ Winge Joe worrlel
alter Brian ,.rta UFO
· ,..LIQIIO tht FAA.

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ONpnle 10 IUCCMCI.

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•ON-SITE SERVICE/REPAIR
•cuSTOM PROGRAMMING
0 SAI.IlS
•ON-SITE CUSTOM TRAINING
SI'I.INC I'ill.I.IY H.OI'ESSIONitL BUILDING
.106 JACKSON PIKE· SUnE 20J
CitWPOUS, OHIO .UJI

1:00(2) •

wv.-nNIII.
4 ~ ....

10 Club

-~·-58
FNita&amp;

41 Houses lor Rent
at gJ cent.._. ... - Hoin.

0. C.L. COMPU'I'Eil SOW1JONS, INC.

10 kill the

Mai'IIM llld Dal1eM travel
MIMI lor I v-llon.
(R)Sino.Q
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MOilLE HOME fUINA~ES • HEAT ,PUMPS:
AU FUINA(~ PA~
. ·

EVER' TiME LOiNEElY
GOE~ OFF VISITIN'
HER S(51'ER ••
YOU IA!INO UP
· , IN 'TH'

HOOSEGOW!!

I

HOW
COME?

0Bobby
a •accldtnlelty
Good 1por11
bllma

STANO

MY OWN

COOKIN' !!

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1D:OD (2) e G LA. Law McKenzie
raillll hla troopl 10
ovlt'lllrow Shaya •• ltnkK

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a. King (PG) (2:45)

(I) ll) ._,.,.,....... 1M

!r,.,eo. Q

(!) .Hnttn; c:.tar: lpMklng

Out Jimmy cartW"a
prelidency ancl the work he's

puraUid Iince IHvtng the
White HouN a,. examined.

==-=-~­
SNAFU~ 11y' Bruce Beattie

:::.c-.:.~~~
~-:.:r.r:.~·
BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

.... 11, 1111

1•••11

enduvor~ whk:h

dktn't work·
pal ,_ ,..,.
~ tum lor lite better

out . . ..fGI' .you In the

COUld laU'a pt

··· r ~

In

..
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you're a pr.n, 80!Jd tthopplt, bllt todtllt
y.u miiJ!tl DllltlliiMd 10 pay than
nII • .,. J11r mercftaniiiM YW don't
I'Wdily need. Gel a ,Jump on life by un-

,,..,

~ ,.,

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strlvl!lll fell' llmplf, C!llldllke,
primitive form. 1 juet wanted to try
drlllllin&lt;lJatt.hOU&gt;tbMl "
I

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lite.,..-..-. The lounclallona you

talcl- nol done In ......
CAPIICGIII (.,_ INan. ft) USUally,

~

CIIolllalldlnl lite

~

Which ...

\
governing you In the year ahead. S.nd
lor yoilr Attro-Graph predlctiOQS today
by mailing $1.25 to Aolro-Graph, clo
thil ~.P.O. Box 81428, Cleveland, OH +110 1·3428. Be sure to oltile
your Zodiac llgn.
AQU.UUU.(olan. IIJ.Felt. 11) You'll be
easy to get ~ with today, prOVIded
-v&lt;inll II willing to do thlnga your
way. Your IOietence could become
qulla lrltglle II you have to deal with dltoent.... lhaugh.
PIICI!S (Fib. • 11aro11 :Ill) 11.you lind
obalac,_ bloeklng yilur path today,
kHIIIn mlncllhat you are likely to be the
obetrucllonill, not othera. Don't ·make
lhlnQJ ,..... thlin they are. ·
~~ (lllnlll 21-Aprll11) Earty In ttte
' day you may c101e • bed dul that
doean'l you' flnanclwlly. Rat,_
than IUflw In lltence, t•ke conatructlve

open-minded Wid fle•lble In your en·
deB-. today.-..,. you mlgnl hm
to contend wtlh tome chengea lnllloted
by othera. II ~·re too rigid, yoU mey
not cope wtlh Ihem elfecllo;ety.
· LEO (Julr 21-Attg. 221 h lan'l llk ..y that
you'll be 11M to 111mty1er out an optimal
w1ten negot,.llng a matter of lm~ lod8y. Both ,.,.,_ will to make cor cr alono.
VIRGO IAJIIl. 21-lepl. II) Take pride In
the~ you peo lorm lor ol'*' today,
II you make doing a good JOb your prl•
mary moliYallon. II will wnhance .your
,...lngs or Mil-worth In way( money
can't, .
LIIRA (lepl. JI..Oot. II) Don't let your
emo!lonl oo-n your 11Jt1c111 tltlnklng
today. II you do, II might 981111 you to
get uptigltUbout oomethlng o- Which
you have no control.
-Ia
arrangement.
ICOIIPIO (Oct. ::~4-~~o¥. II) You'l be
TAUIIUS (""'
311) Timing 11 . amenaltltt to lite 111111181tlonr of others
-.y lmJIMirtt 1
, eepec;ldy In de- today, bul you mlgltl not take too kindly
..... PLJMI!'II lh8l Iliaci your c:.reer. II Ia oliLIMce or.aed by your 11111te. In fac:l,
yoU play yoUr trump c.rda pr.emalurely, your,.,._ hu,Ia uy couldiMHL
H COUld lttiMn your chances for cauw a ruckua.
atCCUI.
IAGITTAIIIIS (New, 11-Deo. 21) Your
011•1 {llaJ 21~ :10) tnotead or po;;al of oba«vatlon 11t11 quite k.n
blllltlng ottta.lor your mlllak.. today, today, bill they migltl be loc:ulled In a
fry to·leam lrartt lhe expeo lencuo you · Nil-defeating manner. ,-.,. will ·_
,
WQn't make lite ume blunder egaln.
you to look al ol'*' u llabltlllel rather
CANCU (.lutw 21....,JI2) Strive to be thin - ··

aMacka and
• Knoll
LAincllng
l&lt;aNriiOolc lor the

8CNN._......_
0 700 CILIII Ppntal
O.wellc a

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11111'1" WOIIde In Conlllct
(1:00)
.111-.30 (I) w..t llltiiii* Lagl11111ve

• Croalt and a..-

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.

~~King

,11:30 ~~Tonight.._

Chat...,

on One

·

One

(1)11-::f-.
liMIInn~
lp IlCon•

Yesterday's Answer
nenl
,
comments
21 Envisions 35 Lair
22 Call9d up '36 Inter 23 Hand
37 Penn
lotion
State
lngr9dient
rival
28 On the
38 Guitarisl's
beach'
accessory
29 "M_y Blue · 311 Card
. game
30 Craze
· 40 Barracks
31 Stage
fixture

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One letter stands for another. In this sample A Is used
for the three L's, .X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes; the length and formation of the words are all
htnta. Each day the code letters are dlfrerent.

. .....

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DAILYCRYPI'OQUOTES-Here'showtowortll:

mlalreated Juon. Stno. Q

..

,'

nomadic
.2 River of
haly
.3 Become
lit
4 Draw out
5 Belligerent god
6 -Island
(Infamous
prison)
7 Knocker's
demand
· 8 Diamond
score
II HQitime
in Lyons
10 Blushing
16 Plugs of a
sort
19 Put up the
tents
20 Compo-

oe...,,....n.Hen

\

'

ACROSS
1 Track
event
5Fan
11 Using
speech
12 Notoriety
13Con
14 Flattened
1' Slip-on
shoe
17Secreted
18 Wolf
consiellalion
·
22 Flat
· . sailers
24 Book
. part •
·
25 ACiress .
.MacGraw
,26 Divide the
· honors
270ne form
of Eleanor
30 Bits ol
-data:
32 V con' stituents
33 WoOdland
tree
34 Goller's
slat
38 Niche
41 Melting
· watch
. painte.r
42 Dudley
and Mary
Tyler
43 Give forth
44 Powerful ·
45Tiff

I

DOWN

. &amp;&gt;LI'IN

"':5

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CROSSWORD
by THOMAS JOSEP11

aaccklenl
a • tuma
TIN fllail A lab
Tina Into a

36 ' Flell'e,tall
Wlntld

9tZ ·5335 • \15-i561

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10 MOVIE: King (PI 3 of 3)
(2:00)
. 1:30 (2)
0 Dl"-- World

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.,.ui O.Tpolfo l!!lbo

auuas ·

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armed ltl~cklng

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ohop, traitor · hoOk·

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as a hooker 10 find the only
wllneu 10 a murder. Stereo.
~ Raadlagalller: A LIIMIIcy.
Teat - ·

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Fanns tor Sale

~

Ill (I) e FatMr Daw111111
Mrnartae Siller s- poses

$E-VtflAL OTHttr

.. t'r-IIIIP'f'IMtNt.

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Ht~fPiiY
. V.I.

...

8CroMIIN
7:36(() Andy Grlllllh
8:00 (J). 0 Coabr lltow
Theo'a plana 10 prepare •
dinner lor hl~r go
~~~- akecl(1:001
(I) PGA Gtllf

:I.'P PUT ·MY MONIY

t-1'1-tt

+Q97642
.74

By Ja"'eo JaCGby

(I). ,..,.., I'Mtlly
v·; .

NORTH
tQ53

•,

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7:INI (I) Happr Day.

Ill GJ'i ._i;_
Totllgltt S..O. Q

..

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· Victor -- Block- Valet - Paunch - TORCH .
I love to read bumper stickers. A favorite one was seen .
on a pick up truck. ll read, "Old Welders Never Die.
They Jlist Pass The TORCH." ..

·

C::..!li!..!!DPpttllf'Linltlylfl Q

.

'

SC~ ANSWDS

~:30 1iJ 1.,!1

.

'•

PRINT NUMB~RED
LETTERS IN SQUARES

A
'1;11'

Up ClaM

IL~T:!~

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aeCIIINeWaQ

"-CI~OI

6 .,

' ,;:,j.~,.;Er.l'M;.;. .,; .,E. ;LT-1• T"l-i ·. , Complo~ "" chuckl• quoted
11-.
.
. 1
.
by filling In tho Milling -d•
L..--L..,;_ji-....t-...L-..__, you develop from rt.p No. 3 below.

3-2·1=.8

Al.

Two of life's rudest awa·

kenings I_s the alarm going off
on workdays and the sound of ·
,.____,.,--..;;''-1 rain on the roof on ........ .

Mlloll and CDIIII
~AIIC..._Q

•

L..I..,..J.E-L.__K..&amp;N-L.r......tll

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'-·.....&amp;.-.r... .....&amp;.-.r...--'· ~ •

n•NlliMir New1b
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WHAAS

5

· 10 Our HouttU;J ,
8:05 lllrvefr, I 811

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........
........
---.,
• • In
1144
•

..... .

-Television
•
Viewing ,

0 ll llCt-·111'' I)~ . . .

3 Announcements

The Deily Santiniii-Pega 11

AV
·M

GWTME

WV FA

tFVOAK

D MY K,

T J T F

B.. LWW . WTV

'
NVO ' MWVFT.--..THFLT
UNWT
Yeet•d.,'e Crypt. . .ote: WHEN YOU JUMP

FOR JOY BEWARE ntAT -NO ONE

MOVES

THE

GROUND FROM. BENEATH. YOU...... STANISLAW

.LEC

.

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'

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�.-..,.....

...
I

Thurldav• .......,., n. 1991
~~~~g:I~1~2~The::::D:at:y~~S~a~~~··=-~--------------~~~~~--_!p~~~m~MI~OV~--~~~k~•~l~l~p~art~~~~~~--------~--------------------~~~~~~~~~~

Four teachers are
,
at
mee
·
ung•
. . ·
honored

1

Four

hen

~ · have been 1991-92 scbool yeet in order that
=~or
1:;:~~ ~';tr.::.::r.tlrllions
for a
· nacbm
by die Eastern Local
The board ll)llliOYed mcmbenhip
Board of Ed~on.
Nominaled for die honor at die
The_sday ~gbt m~nf' were J~
~ Gma Tillis, Rita Perr Wil·
Iiams, and Grace Weber. .
The board also recognized at the
meeting Rick.HoUon and C. D. Ml;In~ ror efforts 10 ·improye the '
,gym at Cbesltl Elementary. .
. It was llllliOUIICed that die annual
Meigs Cowlty SDCIIini bee will be
hdcf on Feb. tS at ,:30 p.m, at
Eastt:m High ·School in die band
room. SheUy Dubose and Dawn
Heiden!lan were employed as substitule teachen for die balance of
die 1990-91 school· year 10 be used
on an as-needed basis only. The
board also employed Dorothy
Calaway as 11 substitute seaetary
for the balance of die year and die
use or Randy Boston and Duke Pultins ill the areas of bus mechanic
and mainrenance. ' · . __
The res;~·,;ons of Susan
·Roessler as i'.tituiC teac~ lind
Glen Easterling as a substitute bus
driver were accepted The board
also panted a one ye66leave of absence for Linda Shultz for the

Two
... ~::;:=Con;;tln~ued;;trclm:;:;::paae~1~------;~=::-:==::::=:;:;:;:---=:::::::::;::-:;:::::-;-:;::::-::::-·
.
Some reports Indicated several aurreadel'ed.
forelpera In thecountrycould
lnJmedlately clear It Iraq ,was •
Iraq ' troopa have already
BaJbdadradlobroadcaitacall ao~thln15days.
draft1li&amp;'Arab81nlraqorwbether
·
Thunday for more troops.
1bere are an eatlrnated 100,000 the radio was callllli for volun- '
The radio aald "all able-bodied EIYptiW and other Arab expat- teen among the rountry's for- •
COmmission
Continued
page' , • • •
men abould report to conscrlp- rlate workers, aa well as Asians, elp commll!Qty to
for
do

trom

Dew-rt·

Meigs County Hipway
IIICIIt wae 11p1J10WC1 )Ill day.

report

in die Ohio Sehool Board Associ•
The COUDty will purclille a new
lion. A first "'*'in&amp; was giwo 111 a . Case
wheel
loader from
neW policy pertainin&amp; 10 die PuBt Southeasteril Equipment in Gal· SeconcWy Options for Studenrs. lipolint a priCe.ol
IJIII·a
Liability
. insuraoce . flilit new Intcmalionll t!athed tru4 .00
Nationwide 1nsun11ct io includo Ford dump truck from Gibson
die five boosiU orpnizations was Moton in Atbc:ns, at priccl of
approved and it was ~greed 10 ad- $S7,376 and $37,853.27, zapecvmise for buildin• insurance.
, lively.
· .
·
The ~ :,. authorized til
The board abo
a momake advanced draws against local lion yestetday
tu monies from die county audiror David Koblentz 111 Witbdraw from
this calendar year. The die commia.ee now COIIIidCrinf die
approved an agnlCIIIellt bet· consauction of a multi::J ,lliL
ween the dislrict ·and Veterans
· The n 11 .,ing
·
· die
Memorial J:loSpilal 1eb08ctive 10 ·widtdrawal. acconlins 10 Jones, is
Nov. 1 for physical thmpy services rhreefold .
for a student, . and an agreement
F'II'Sily, he said. die couitty iS not
between die dislrict and Everett finlllcially CIIPIIble of sharing die"·
Calaway for die purpoiiD of provid- cost of compfeting the inilial coning ll'll1lSp0118Ii for a student 10 struction phlise. .
·
·
the SBH 111it in AthenS, !ellOaCtive
Secondly, Jones said, die com10 Jan. 8.
.
n\issioncn do not feel that die
, It was also decided 10 mldvertise counly would be. able 10 ·slae in
· for bids on a used bus. Feb. 20 at the cost of openling the facnlty
6:30 p.m was set as die dale for die once the jail is eonslrilcled
next meeting. Altending were Ray
FinallY., Jones said, any IIIOIIies
Karr, president: Charles Kitight, available 10 die COIDIDissiollcn 10
vice president: and members, IIlli spend on jail· improvements would
Hanrium, L 0. McCoy, 11JC1 Jim be best spent on renovation of die
Smith.
East Second Str=t facililty now ill

•-,.·

'

Ohio.Lottery

Pistons
slip past .
Rockets

Pick-3: 924
Pick-4: 4662
Cards: 6-H• n ~.
' :7"\.:.'
9-0;5-S

Low tonight near 30. Cloudy
Saturday. High In mid 40&amp;.
Ch1111ce of rain 40 percent.

•

en tne

from~

·g::p

Vo!.41, No.1 as
Copyrighted 1991

CARPET SALE
LEVEL LOOP

BERBER
CARPET
oMONtlum O.uge

p.m., and on Sunday from "In no way, however," Jones
noon 10 S p.in.
said, "are ~ now .available 10 ·

Loopa ,

e18 Colora

SALE

.$12~.!

•St81n RMIH

IMtaiiM - INr.Ct ....

•8cotchgerd "

complete this work in·lite foreseeable future. •
Meigs County's wilitdrawal from
lhe ClllpDi?lltion now leaves only
two counties • Jacbon and Vmton •
considering such a facility, which is
:':·in die inilial planning Sl8geS at

. •1 00% Ny!Dn

o12

Colora .

·. . -- stoeks

SALE

$·1,8''
SQ.

· ·When Lawrence rurned ·around,
he saw the subject holding a paper
bag ~ a shotgun. The burglar, according to Lawrence, was wearing
a knee-length green overcoat and a
·gray mask.

SERTA ULTRA
SUPREME
Pillow Top •

TWIN

FULL

saa s1oa
EA. PC.

oMp Quilting

10 YNr W,.rnn11Y

TWIN -·"'"M.J.~

$1 08
· FW ""'"""'"·r.~Sl 54
QUEEN 5ET.........S354

SERTA
PERFECT
SLEEPER

•H•mpton Court
•Firm 8uppon
•111 YMr W1rranty

FULL SO

QUEEN SET

$169 $479

property

•

.,

•

-

.

Lawrence repotted thai he grabbed the subject and the two fell iniO
a cooler at die store.. During die
struggle, Lawrence was struck on
the forehead and sustained a gash
that.later
. hC$ , . • •
...
,_ req ui1'l'4
...~P,U:

but failed. The subject then threw
die telephone 10 die floor and
demanded · Lawrence's wallet,
which Lawrence surrendered.
No vehicle was identified.
Shcrtly afJer die robbery, a
nearby resident came 10 the store
and Lawrence informed him of the
incident and asked that he caD the
sheriff's department

AndBIIDn '1

BUNII.-BEO
SALE/
·YOU ·MUST SEE OUR
SELECTION!

.

By JONATHAN FERZlGER
United Press International

SYRIA

.
IRAQ
. Israel debated Its response t9 an Iraqi missile attack Friday
· that threatened to draw tM Jewish state Into the Persian Gulf
war as U.S.· led ·forces mounting thousands of air sorties a day
-Baghdad
.
destroyed
mol;&gt;Ue missile launchers .lnslde Iraq.
r--'
0
Israel! Prime Minister Yllzhak Shamlr met wllhhls Cabinet
I . . .
following the conventional missile attack that Injured 12
'1.
people. There was no Indication whether his nation woult;l
strike back .
·
. '1
I·
.
I
.
. . .
U.S. officials fear Israel! involvement In the ~ar could cause
the defection of Arab members of the coalition seeking Iraq's
ouster from Kuwait.
~~
"Israel retains the right to
Iraq said Friday Its air dedecide how · ;tnd when to re- fenses
have shot down 72 allied
r--~~-1 spond," Foreign Minister David warplanes , and has said the
Levy told reporters , alter emergKuwait
Ing from the meeting. "Should U.S.·led air raids have caused a '
we sl t down and a bandon the large number of casualties.
Schwarzkopf said the allies
security of our citizens, our
were
flying 2,000 air sorties a
·
children, In order to listen to
SAUDI ARABIA
advice? The reaction will show day, 80 percent of them successful. No ground bat ties had been
again that Israelis strong."
White House spokesman Mar- waged but a small artillery
lin FltzwaJer Issued a statement exchange left Jwo U.S. Marines
JORDAN
saying "the United States has and a Navy corpsman wounded,
EGYPT
been In touch with the govern- officials said.
The U.S. commander refused
ment of Israel to express its.
0
to
· sjleelllal~ on when· 9r, If a
outrage over !he missile ·atMiln
ground
. assault would be
!l:·:=
; =.,=··=·-=·'
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilliiiliii•---~
tacks"
and
to
urge
Israel
to
show
mounted,
saying only that Operaii
~~~ tion Desert Storm would continue
~
e
.
•
e
A senior Pentagon official said until Iraqi Preslden! Saddam
be . believed the missiles used
compiles with U.N.
~
against Israel came from mobile Hussein
resolutions and withdraws from
A Pomeroy man escaped serious Service was on !he scene and what caWed lite ca •·
li
lau,nchers In Iraq and It was Kuwait, which he Invaded Aug. 2.
injury in a C!lve-in of ground near recommended thai Phelps be taken repotted, although thev~tpo .ce "rela tlvely certain" that Uxed
Allied ground troops In Saudi
the mtersecbon of Mechanic and 10 the hospilal for elUIITiination, be and flooding in !hat area are {:ns sites in Iraq were knocked out by Arabia remained poised at the
Fourth Streets on piOpetty owned reportedly refused Jreatment and c.onsidered all 8 con!ributing f ~g bombings that started Thursday. Kuwait border.
. by Ben Ewing Thwsday evening.
was taken home by his wife.
Barriers have been erected : ~
At a Friday briefing In Riyadh, . The · missile strike against
WJ.ley L, "Buster" Phelps, 39, of
According 10 Pomeroy police, site.
Saudi Arabia, featuring vivid Israel Interrupted what had .been
196 Pleasant Ridgoe, suffered only Phelps was alone when the incident
videotape of direct hils by U.S. 24 hours of good news from the
shoulder injuries when die ground happened and was !i8pped inside
jets agalnstlraqt targets, Army allles, who reported that bomb·
C!lved in as he was unloading a lite bole for several minuJes before
Gen. Norman Schwarzkopf, u.S. lng raids begun Thursday
telephone pole from a pickup bUCk. someone heard him yelling and' ran
,
commander of Operation Desert against Iraq and occupied KuPomeroy firemen were summoned 'to the nemby file house for assisShield, said U.S. war' planes had wait bad met with little resist·
to the scene and put a ladder down Jance. Firemen rook a ladder 10 the
located 11 mobile missile ance and much success.
iniO the hole so that Phelps could si!e and reportedly encountered _no
launchers In Iraq Friday,
Seven · Scud mlsslls crashed
climb out.
difficulty in getting Phelps 'out of
Schwarzkopf said six of the Into Israel's heavily populated
While the Pomeroy unit of the the hole.
launchers were destroyed and an coastal plain shortly after 2 a.m.
Meigs County Emergency Medical
There is still 110 indication of
attack was under way against the Friday, said Schwarzkopf, who
Three motor vehicle accidents
remaining launchers. He said It said he bad no lnformallon about
were investigated on Thursday
appeared the launchers would Israel' s) •ext step.
night by Meigs County Sheriff's
have been aimed at Saudi
A Pentagon official said · one
deputies.
Arabia .
Scud missile also was Inter·
· At 4:30 p.m., Raymond L..
"Finding the !lxed missile cepted by a U.S. -made Patriot
Andrews, Long Botrom, had pulled launchers ·Is a relatively easy air defense missile Friday In
thing to do hut finding a mobile eastern Saudi Arabia, near
off County Road 25 onto State
Route 7 when his 1984 Ford stalled launcher Is like finding a needle Dhahran, the massive Saudi air
in die roadway. A nonhbound In a haystack, " he said.
base being used by the United
vehicle, driven by John T. Brown
With Operation Desert Shield States and other allies .
of Marietta, was unable 10 stop and having completed Its 36th hour,
The destruction of the Scud
hit lite bUck driven by Andrews.
Schwarzkopf said seven allied represents the first time an air
planes nadbeen lost- three u.s. defense system stopped a ballis·Allbaugh no injuries were reported, Brown's 1988 Ford was
jets, two British. one Kuwaiti and tic missile, said the official, who
moderately damaged while damage , one Italian - and all the pilots requested anonymity.
10 Andrews' auck was listed as were considered missing,
Israeli officials said the Scud
heavy.
He said eight Iraqi planes were -missiles - armed with convenAt 4:50 p.m.. Lori Louks of downed In alr-to-alr combat but tional, not chemical, warheadsLong Botrom was northbound in refused to speculate on Iraqi caused 12lnjurles and "considerher 1987 Plymou!h when sf!e sw- : casualties, saying, "We're never · able" property damage when the .
ted to rum in her 'driveway. She
going to get Into the body count
Continued on page 10
slowed and a northbound truck business."
pulling another car struck the rear

Sea

...

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

ves
•
Ground 'ca m' man escapes mlury

Deputies .
prO be th ree
accidents

of~ear.

The driver of lite uuck rold lite
sheriff's deputies that he was '
Jllepa!ing 10 pass the car so litat he
could get up speed to go up the hiD
by Eastern High School.
Moderate damage was listed to
Louks' vehicle and no damage was
listed 10 Hall's.
~ties also took a report of a
hi!/skip
accident
aJ .
lite
Ravenswood Bridge. Sometime at
around 4 p.m. on Thursday, an unknown vehicle came of Slate Route
338 at an apparent high rate of
speed and sltidded off lite roadway,
striking and breaking off one of lite
metal light posts 81 the bridge. .

'

Man cited by patrol
A Weat ~ man -

cited

for lallme to yield W!!!IJ!Miay alia'

' a two-c1r accldeal oil Sllle Roule

689 ill Meip eo..ty.
Ronlld )Jirdelle; 33, of 1.eoll;

:.r:!
·~=~71oft
.=.an:
lec!IDd car, dri¥ea by Ronda s.

' W.Va., -

ci!ed after

OUl

SleWa1. 17, of AibaJ, -

lnlvel-

~'!t't'::.":%:.mllclr· .Neidier .
s~
-

ddWir ....., ~.. ...-..

oiled for
wear a aafely belt.
· ~

'•

.

.Casualities· mount;
Israel leaders in
debate over attack

'l}'son-r:=:.

Warner.

.

'

·register
·~; Siubiect
went tO 'tlie cish !--~~-;;;~;;;~~~".
·:li~-·:~-.
and at!empled to open 'it,

Racine
squad
bansported
Lawrence to Veterans Memorial
Hospi!al, where be received ten
stitch«:.$ for lite cut on his forehead.
He was later released.
· The department indicate$ that investigation iniO die incident is continuing. .
.

In other action, the commis-

\

A Lonlj: .hottom man was
treated for mjuries following an
anned robbery of his grocery store
on Thursday nighL .

U:.,

SERTA PREMIER
·coMFORT
OulltONt Top • Firm Support
1 Y- Werr~nty
·

·. Armed
robbery
probed

Ai:cordiii~ Meigs County
ent, Howard
Sheriff's
Lawrence, 67, was alone at his
store on DeWitt's Run Road . ill
Long Botom shortly before 9 p.m.
when a male subject, 6 feet Jail,
tBpJied him on the shoulder.

sionen:

. '

fD.

•........ With 9/16 ......

ses.

- executed a new lease for
in Cbeltcr to Jbe Olestcr
~limteer Fire Depmuuent, lflirdmg a 5eVised resbiction on con·
·.· struction at the siJe from, 40 feet
from lite SQUJh llld east lines 10 10
81 lite east ·and 40 ·10 the soulit. The
Chester fire depalinlelit is curiently
planninl 10 exiJIInd dleir racillty
and will need 30 feet !)f space on
the east side;
.
- Jransfemd 1990 accumulaUld
viCIIion time for employees in die
Meigs COIJIIly Audita' 's Oflkle and
die Meigs _County EMS office 10
1991;
. • approved juvenile and probate
bonds for Probale and JuVenile Judge Robert E. Buck;
• uansfemd $40S from die
Meigs County Genml Fund 10 die
Community ComctiOIII Program,
upon die request of
un aneta' 1eresa M.
• . heard I presenlllion from
·Bryce Smith reganllug a new tempera!Uit lelllllr device for forced
air heating and cooling syiJellll;
~t Jones, Koblentz,
Commissioner Manning Roush,
C1ert ~ Hobstettcr, County En.sin= Pllil R~ and Highway
Department Supenntendent Ted

••

SELE(TION IS
GREAT!

r..,.;.

--~----· --~---

S· 1 · 3~t.

'

Ands11on
SERTA
ATTR.ES
SALE/

J~

missile launchers

.

lnlll!lt' Wl!lo 9/16 ...

PLUSH
CARPET
•DMP Rich Saxony

w;';·

·M•orr.clio.R,e HOuRs· ·

•·

8:30.8:00 '

Tueld•~·Seturdey
l:3 -&amp;:OO.
·•

Cou.-tbouse
to close '

All'V~nfD1\_,,.ON,,._, .

PUI.IUK, AI'PLIAIIal, IV'S, ROOI cova•G
992~3671
'
PO•lOY
· · DO-ow•
wn•

25 Cento
A Multimedia Inc. Newipaper

'

SALE

811leatlon
.ONylon Pile
•12 Ft. Wide .

•FHA Approved

10 6

'

SALE

2 Soetlono. 14 Pogoo

1991

Pomeroy--Middleport, Ohio, Friday, J'anuary 18,

..

CULPTURED
CARPET
,eExcellent Calor

·~t~~~ '$9 ~.!

Elizabelit Selllld, lite County
Cbamber of Commerce's new· Executive DirectortCounty DevelopIIICIIt Direcror, met wilit lite board .
yeslelday and ini!Oduced some of
her plans for lite county now that
she's on the job.
Schaad stared that one of her first
. goals is to establish a group made
up of econOmic develnnnl&lt;!nt pracyean - Rawlings, F-.7.~
litioncn, comilting oi".riii·Or thole
Chaie, Martin, Walker and Huntet.
.JAMES B"'"BF-LD
illlerested in community. de¥elopBirthfield llld hiS famil are
.-.. ...,.
me~t". .~luding governmenlal
. now compl.,;n~ 10111e minor
bodies, busmesses and ' interested
individuals.
wort (II10 the
~. and he intends
COIIIPidc
more major
The goal of sucli an Orpnlmtion,
reDOYIIions in lhe fulure.
·
Schaad said yesteulay, would be 10
Birthfield is a Rutland native, Dally •tack prices
network ideas and COiscentJaJe
die son of Howard and Marie Little (AI of 10: 30 a.m.)
~velopment effOI'\S iniO a countyBin:hfield. He has two children, Bryce and Mark Smith
wtde eftort.
·
Jeffrey C. Birchfield, 16, and Julia of Bluat, Eilll II Loewl
.Odter linmediate goais, accord, Jill'!Bln:hfield, 13, who !eSide wilb
ing 10 Schaad, are die development
'dleir mother in Glllia County.
· Am Electric Power .............. 28 · of lite Retention and ExpansiOn
Before his bainlng as a fUIIelll Ashland Otl ..... ............ :... :.. 28~ Progmm begun 110me time ago, indiieclor, 8irtb8eld worked in die AT&amp;T · ... · ··· · · ·· · · ................. ._30% liOductioo of leadenllip de¥elopcoel mines in Meigs County for 7 g:b Evans···· ...................... 14~ ment prograiiiJ, and incRasing conand a half yean. That time included
arming Shoppes ........ ......11% tact wilit Buckeye Hills Regional
thiee years au foreman.
City Holding Co .................. 14~ De¥elopment Center.
Bin:bfteld~s career as a fUIIelll Feder$! Mogul... .................l3¥t
''The key to success," Jones lOki
diieclor, in fact, began at die Rut- ~year T&amp;R ...................18¥. Schaad, :is die ability 10 tie people
land establishment • working as a
Y Centurion ..................... 11
together.
,
teenaged "lo-fer" for bodl Tom Lands' End ................. ,.......16'h
Jones refemd to "jealousies"
Marlin and Jack Walku.
·
Umlted Inc . ... ....................21&gt;,1 among villages as a ~ stum·
FoUowing biB lllduation ftom Multimedia Inc ..............:..... 62
bUng block of county-wide
colleae, wilit a B.S: degree in Mor- Rax Reslaurants ................. 'h
development
.
" tuarY Sc~• .Bircbfeld en~ SRohbbl~ &amp; ~yers .............. .. 20¥. ·
The deadline for purchasing dog
into an 8P~Rnti~ at die Biunoney s 1nc . ......................12&gt;,1 tags was extended 10 February 1.
ner Funeia1 Home in ~enlor.
~tar ~nk ..... ....................... 17. Dog tap are now available for $4
Bin:hfield will . conduct open We~ s lnt'l. ...................... 6%. and kennel licenses for $20, and
house at lite funenll borDe on
o
ngton Ind ..................22* .Jones s~ that afler the deadline,
!hose pnces would double 10 $8 for
•
dog Jags and $40 for kennel licen-

I

.. ·• ..

sn,soo.

Pomeroy.
Bin:hfield anticipateS die opera. lion of a full-service funeral home,
and will also ~ offering pre-amngement - either ihrough a bank or
through die Fo!ethough Ufe In·
sur8IICC Company, wiih which he
has"- aflllialcd for several years.
The funeral home is Jocaled on
Main Stn:et in Rudand, and has
carried several names •"-·"" the

I

·•

Page3

•

lhe

-...

. -· ·-. -. ·-·· ----·

lion centers by Saturday," and , ID Iraq and Kuwait. It was not combat duty.
, _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _..;.,.

useibat COIISiniCiion. aa:onling 10
Open house .for Birchfield
Jones, would includo ienovation of
Funeral Home ·this weekend =~~~ill~~
James Bin:hfield, a licensed Friday and Saturday lrom 10 a.m.
century-old buifdjng.
·. ·
funenll director and embalmer, haS
pW"Chased · die fofmer HUnter
FI!IICilll Home in Rutland.
Bin:hfield is a graduate of die
Cincinnari College of .Mortuary
Science and of Cincialti's Xavier
University. For die past four - - .
Bin:hfield has been employy~
.~-bydie Ewing Funeral 1ioine in

;

--·--~---.,·-----~·-·.-·-·

.

. DIRECT arr - TH nbble of a blilldiD&amp; hit by
~Iraqi mlulleTbu....ta¥,ln lbeTelAvlv; Atleut

.

'

I

1% people were llljared ID frl41 attaeka oa .eve.._l

.cltlet throualiout llrael. (UPll - .

'

The Meigs County Courthouse

will be closed on Monday in obser·
v~ of Martin Ludter King, Jr.'s
b~. a 1t11e holiday, according
10 Meigs County Common Pleas
Court Judge Fred w. Crow m.

War causes tightened
security around Ohio
By Unlteli Press ln&amp;ernallonal
Security has been Increased to
wartime levels at Ohio alrpurts
as a safeguard against terror·
Ism, and to, a lesser degree at
federal buUdings and military
Installations throughout the
BucJseye State.
Mark Courtney, a spokesman
for Cleveland Hopkl11s Alrpurt,
, said the security measures In·
eluded adding more security
personnel, Increasing patrols ,
and cbeckiDg passengers and
luggage more careluUy. ·
"The security Is certainly the
tightest I've ever seen It," said
Courtney.
The security measures also
Include:
-No. curblsde checking; baggage must be taken to the ticket
area.
-Appliances such as . hair
dryers. must be. carried In
. hand

,,

,.
'

.

,

luggage. so they can be checked.
-Levels on metal detectors
have been raised and more
passengers will ~searched with
hand wands.
. ,
-Only ticketed passen,ers
will be allowed through secunty
gates.
Similar precautions have been
taken at airports .In Cincinnati
and Columbus, where bombsniffing dogs also have been put
on call.
·
. "We want better physical
control over any checked baggage and there Is Increased
surveillance ol everything," said
Mary Ann Lynch, security chairwoman for airlines Dying In and
out of Columbus.
In Cl.nclnnatl, a scheduled
Dlght to Frankfurt, Germany, ·
was canceled Wednesday because of security concerns at the
Continued on page 10

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