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a U cash prize from the Ohio Valley Publishing
Co. Leave your name, address and telephone
nwnber with your card or letter. No telephone
calls will be accepted. All contest entries sboald
be turned In to the newspaper office by 4p.m. each
Wednesday. In case of a lie, the winner will be
. chosen by lottery. Next week, a Gallla County
farm will be fealu~d by the GaiDa SoU and Water
Conservation District.

Multimedia reports increase
in opera.! ing .results in 1990
I

per share by $.24 In the fourth
Its long -term debt ol $718 million
GREENVILLE, S.C. :... Walter
quarter
of 1989.
and Incurred a net extraordinary
E . Bartlett, Chalrma11 of the
The
tax
adjustment was primloss of $3.1 million .related to the ·
Board and Chief Executive Of·
arily
attributable
to settlements
refinancing. This resulted .In net
fleer of Multimedia, announces
with
the
Internal
Revenue Ser·
earnings for 1990 of $45;6 mllllon
that 1990 opeta\lng profit rose by
to
contested
tax
vice
related
4% to $170.3 mUllon ..wlth operat- compared 'with $38.7 million for
·liabilities
tor
prior
years.
The
1989 and earnings per share of
Ing cash flow Increasing 4% tb
contested Items principally re$3.70 compared with $3.11 lor
$202.8 mUllon.
lated to Income tax matters
1989.
Newspaper cash flow deregarding acquisitions.
Revenues
for
the
fourth
quarcreased 2% to $49.2 mllllon:
Multimedia, Inc. Is a ·diversiter
were
$127.2
million,
up
4%.
Broadcasting cash flow de fied
media communications com- ·
profit
for
the
quarter
Operating
creased 8% to $51.0 million:
pany
which publishes 13 dail¥
was
$47.3
million,
flat
compared
Cablevlslon cash flow Increased ·
and
49
non-daUy newspapers,
to
1989
operating
profit
.
Net
11% to $60.3 mUllon and EnterIncluding,
The Gallipolis Daily
·
earnings
for
the
fourth
quarter
tainment cash flow Increased
Tribune, Pomef5)y Sentinel, and
were
$17.0
million,
compared
-21% to $49.4 million.
Point Pleasant Register and the
with $15.5 miiJ.Ion in 1989. EarnFor the year, consolidated
Sunday Times-Sentinel
weekly
Ings
per
share
for
the
quarter
· revenues wete $480.7 million, up
and
The
Tri-County News-River
were
$1.39
In
1990
versus
~
25
In
4% from $462.7 million for 1989.'
Currents,
owns and·operates five
1989.
For
the
quarter,
operating
Interest expense for 1990 totalled
television
and .eight radio stacash
flow
decreased
from
$55.0
$88.3 million, compared with
tions
and
a video production
million
to
$54.7
million.
$102.1 million for 1989. Interest
·operates
mote than
company.
Net earnings for 1989 were
expense for 1990 Included $31.8
100
cable
·
franchises
In four
.mUllon of amortization of 'origi- favorably affected by a fourth
states,
and
produces
and
syndl- .
quarter adjustment to reduce the
nal Issue discount for debentures
cates
quality
television
programannual expected Income tax
compared with $57.4 million In
rates . for financial reporting ming, Including the Phil Do1989.
.
nahue and Sally Jessy Raphael
purposes from 42% to 37%. This
The company had net earnings
shows.
adjustment Increased earnings
before extraordinary loss for
1990 of $48.7 million compared
with . $38.7 million for 1989. Net
earnings per share before · extraor\llnary loss were $3.95 compared with $3.11 for 1989. On June
29, 1990 the Company refinanced

Farm Flllshes

Dr. Day to conduct .beef
producer ~s~ion Feb. 4

Federal ...

By Edward M. VoUborn
County Extension Agent,

A specl;~l thanks to Vocational
Agriculture teachers Jim Walker
and Tom Pope for helping with
sessions this past week. Sessions
for people wanting to be certified
for the ~lrst tlme are planned on
. February '!I and March 6. Call
tor details.

0\\!P-lffi&amp;tery
Marauders
nip Bulldogs
at Athens 73-7

,

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI)
Corn, soybean and wheat prices
have been depressed since harv·
est. And Dean . Baldwin, grain
marketing speCialist at Ohio
State University, says· there Is
currently little optimism In the
market.
·
Traditionally, this Is a low ·
period In the market as many
farmers sell grain to meet cash
obligations. Those who have
open-unhedged stored grain,
hold-delayed price contracts, .or
call positions need to examine
their cash positions, storage
costs and potential marketing
costs. For some, It may be a time
to cut marketing losses.
Baldwin says those who stored
hedged grain · against March
futures contracts should watch
the basis. In Ohio, basis has
strengthened In comparison to
the harvest period. Thus, positive returns to storage may be
possible now or In the near
future. Fo.r the new crop, It may
be Important to sell some grain
for future delivery. U the pessimIsts are correct, much lower
prices could .exist at harvest for
all three grains In 1991.

•

·e ·
.

..

.

Vol.41 , No.199
Copyrighted 1991

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday. February 4. 1991

e Satellite TV System ·

C.' .

PS 1000

c($1 895)

'·

·'

2 SKtlonl. 12 PIIIM 25 Cen11
A Multimedia Inc. Nowop-

..

tbe mareb w~b rondllded wllll a .prop11111 at
the b1P tldlool where the Soulllem Cllolr - '
· Band perfm iDed. Loa! ministers all!o pll'•
.. ticlpated Ill the pJ'OII'UL

Colllpare ,Oar 'H8.28 • • Moatb
Pa,-ment On Gran~ Aa.SM'ARri.!:Ast

Fw Onl7 48 Moiatbe.

'

percent.

Iranian leader presents
ideas .for·peace talks

· .. parade II ·Rad11e 011 'Saturday to sbow 111J1P011
· of .,_..erlcan troopll senlq bl Ope11tdoiiiHeert
Stotlll. ApfroxlmatelJ aG peaple parllclpated bl

Give You A 5hoelt •••

Low In mid 48a. Chaaee of
raJ• S8 perceat. Clolldy Taet-·dar. Ch&amp;DCe of rain Is 311

ll-11-20
23-28-31
Kicker 662665

AMElliC..\N LEGION MARCHES - Tbe
: Radne Amerlcu Lea1011 Post No. ~l led tile

lf .,.., Terna Bi8h Pa_....u

Piek4: 9211
Cards: A·H; A.C;
, 6-D; 10-S
Super I.AICto .

Grain market prices
oudook gloomy

Continued from D-1
GALLIPOLIS -Dr. Mike Day,
level In more than three years.
Animal
Science Professor at the
Unusually bad weather was
Ohio State University, wlll .be the
cited as the reason for the drop of
resource person for the beef
155,000 construction jobs last
producer class on Monday, Febmonth. Since last May the
ruary
4.
construction Industry has lost
The
session which Is part. of a
450,000 jobs.
series
will focus on factors ttrat
Manufacturing employment
beef cows wUl start
affect
when
fell 70,000 last month to continue
·
cycling
following
~ajvlng.
a downward trend that has put
Numerous
research
studies
900,000 factory workers out of
Indicate
that
each
'three
week
their jobs since the beginning of
In
rebreedlng
cost
abOut
40
delay
1989.
pounds
In
weaning
weight.
At
Factory employment declines
current feeder calf prices that's
were centered In the durable
$35
or $40.
good_s ·Industries, with large
Dr.
Day has completed several
lo,ses In construction--related
research
projects In addition to
Industries, such as lumber and
his
teaching
responsibilities on
wood products, furniture and
In
bee! cattle. This
reproduction
fixtures, and other building
Is
the
first
time
Dr.
Day has came
materials.
to
Gallla
County
In
his "Profes:
. Other large job losses were
sor''
role
,
but
he
Is
familiar
with
pbsted In the auto Industry,
from
his
deer
our
agriculture
primarily. In motor vehicles,
hunting trips to Gallla County.
equipment and fabricated
The session will start at 7 p.m.,ln
metals.
·
the Columbus Southern Power
The . average .workweek for
Meeting
Room. Plan to attend!
production and noQ-supervlsory
Private
Pesticide applicators
workers on private non-farm
who
need
their cards renewed
payrolls fell by 0.5 hours In
have
another
chance. The last
January to 34.1 hours. The
planned
session
will be Wednesmanufacturing workweek also
day
evening
at
7 p.m. at the
fell half an hour to 40.2 hours.
Citizens
Center near
Senior
Factory overtime declined 0.2
Ga
lllpolls.
hour to 3.4 hours.
"The large decline in manufac, turing employme1Jtand the large
decllne In · the average hourly.
workweek was worse than expected and bad for the economy." said Mickey Levy, chief
economist at CRT Gover nment
Securities In New York.
COMPLETE SYSTEM
The grim unemployment news
-on Screlft Grephics /
was foUowed by a survey of
Mlh eJII"Itlen IIIJ.
. ..,
P.Urchaslng managers showing
•UHF ·-•• - Porftct
tbe economy slipped In January
for · - • optratlon.
for the fourth consecu llve month.
eFol Star"
The Purchasing Managers'
..llilt.Jn C/Ku or YIN Switch- ...,.,IMtalling a ~econdr'icoi•or
Index. designed to record the
ar LIN Asnap.
.
health of the manufacturing
•lllilt·ln n Filar - Helps olinllnato intorler- from torrtstrlal
economy, plummeted to 37.7
mi&lt;rownt syst..,s.
percent - Its lowest level since ·
May 1982- from 40.5 percent'ln
COMPLETE-NOT"ING ELSE TO BUY.
December.
·
~¥.;~ over 100 channels. Sea the news l,IVE as it happens When the Index falls below 44
IRD syitem includes decoder.
percent It also Indicates a cjecllne
In the nation's entire economy
CALL TODilY -FEBRUARY SPECIAL ONLY
rather than just the manufacturFr• Jacbt
Ing sector. The closely foUowed
w/Eadl
Index has been below 44 percent
Syst- Soldl
for four consecutive months .
(1A Mile
of Holzer Hospital - Rt. 36) .
The manufacturing sector of
the economy registered Its eighth
GALLIPOLIS- 446·2411
1·(100)' 365·1229
COIIsecutlve monthly · decline.

unlden

.

(Continued from Page D-1) ·
~~--~~--~~~­
From the economic perspec- producing more oUI than prior to emphasize the uncertainty as to
Furthermore, sbould
tive (as In the human cOstsotthla the Invasion and 2) worldwide oil outcomes.
the most optlmi.ltic scenario
conflict) , the shorter the war the Inventories are some 150 million unfold, a pattern or growtli will
better. However, lt'ts Important bl!rrels greater than normal.
· likely lie restored, but It wUI be
to note that no set of clrcumstan·
This price decline would have mediocre gtowtjl. Several facces In the Middle East can severai favorable effects lnclud-· tors will restrain the rebound.
prevent another poor overall lhg d~lnlsbed inflation' (a $5 per.
First, the nations economy still
economic performance In the barrel decline In oU has been
estimated to reduce Inflation by faces a number of problems to be ,
first quarter of 1991.
The economy was already 0.5%) and Increased consumer addressed - the banking Indusweak prior to the Kuwait Inva- purchasing power .(some esti· try's dltflcultles, high levels of
sion. That event served as a mates Indicate that a $10 drop In debt. and lower real estate .
.catalyst so that the economy oil prices adds S25 bUllon to valuations .
Second, limiting factors to r
exiled 1990 In a very weakened consumer spending power natlonally).
Long
term
rates
would
growth
are already In place. A
condition. THe duration of the
also
be
·reduced
as
both
the
subs!JI.ntlal
number of people are
war wUl determine whether this
1
fl
recently
unemployed
(more tharr
frailty Is exacerbated or whether
n auon and uncertainty preml· 1 mllllon In the last sill months),
the foundation for a reversal with urns were lessened. StimUlative
personal Income growth Is· sag•
modest growth can be · monetary policy moves would
also have considerably more glng and higher taxes have been
established.
A prolonged confrontation Is potential to take Effect under Implemented. •
these conditions.
· Third, politically based obstathe worst case scenario. Such a
since
October,
the
Fed
cles
will remain as well. There
Recall,
development would fUrther dam·
employed
every
easing
tool
it
·
stlll
will
be problems relative to ·
has
age the . economy. Uncertainty
possesses
(discount
rate
reducthe
"new
order" In the Middle
would rise, and as witnessed In
lions,
reserve
requirement
reEast
after
the war. This could be
the period prior to the January 15
ductions and open market opera- even further magnified by the
d~~dllne, this will have many
harmful effects. Consumer and lions) : Given the sill to nine • potential of the crisis In the
Union.
business confidence will remain month lag In effect otthese.pollcy · Soviet
(Mr. Evana Is an Investment'
poor or worsen, causing ln\llvld· choices, the timing could prove Broke.r for the Ohio Comp•ft• In
ual spending ~nd production to auspicious.
-..
Once again, It Is Important to
their GalUpolls office.)
•
suffer additionally.
011 prices would rise and
Increase til volatUity. Agreater
uncertainty premium . wQuld ,be
Incorporated Into Jongcterm Interest rates, restraining Invest·
men t and bluntlnll the stimulus of
the significant drop In short -term
rates In recent months. The
federal budget deficit - which
we already ,know will widen, no
matter what the outcome would explode.
In contrast, a relatively short
war (2·3 months) would reduce
uncertainty allowing .businesses
and Individuals to move forward
· With more "normal" levels of
~onomlc activity · as J~ome of
their confidence was resl'bred. 1
on prices would decline slgnlfl·
cantly: 1) OPEC Is currently

Money ideas ...

MYSTERY FARM - This week's mystery
farm, featured by the Meigs SoU and Water
. Co01ervatlon District, Is located somewhere In
· Meigs County. Individuals wishing to participate
. In the weekly contest may do so by guessing the
farm's owner, Just mall, or drop off your guess to
the GaiUpolls Dally Tribune, 825 Third Ave.,
Gallipolis, Ohio, 45631, or the Daily 'Sentinel, lll
Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio, 457~9,and you may win

February 3, 1991

Ponla'oy-Middeport-Gallipolis. Ohio-Point Plu a It, W.Va.

.Page D-8-Sunday Times-Sentinel

This Is A Loaded Car and No Big Cf.tu Gimmicks...
See V• For Detcdlsl

. ATHENS. Greece (UPI) Iranian President Akbar
Hasbemi·Rafsanjanl said Monday he sent "Ideas" tor peace to
Iraqi President Saddam Hussein ·
last week and Is willing to talk
With him as well as the United
· States to mediate an end to the
Persian Gulf war.
Iran has not openly held
discussions with the United
.States since the Tehran host~~ge
crisis of 1979-81, when 52 Americans were held hostage at the ·
U.S. Embassy In Tehran by
Moslem militants for 444 days.
Tehran meanwhile said ci&gt;alltlon forces carried our air and
missile attacks on Basra and Its
vicinity overnight and early
morning Monday, with the sound
of three huge explosions heard
across Iran's border In Khorram·
shahr, some 20 miles to the east.
Speaking at a news conference
In Tehran, Rafsanjanl said Iraqi
warplanes wt!lch flew to Iran
, re~ently had only five minutes of
fuel left and would have crashed
If n9t allowed to land . . He
reaffirmed Iran's nj!utral stance
and said the planes would be held
untll the war ended.
Rafsanjanl. quoted by Iran's
official Islamic Republic News
Agency, said Iran was exploring
all diplomatic channels to end the
war thai began Jan. 17 In a
U.S.-Jed bid to force Ira~ (rom
Kuwait. Ira~~; ai~Ciy~ cq~lted .
.. last week with delegations from

Iraq, Algeria and Yemen.
National SecuritY Council.
Sunday, Kuwaiti Minister of
IRNA meanwhile said coalt-'
State for Foreign At fairs Sheikh · lion forces made air and missile
Nasser Mohammad al S&amp;bah attacks on the southern Iraqi city
arrived In · Tehran carrying a
ol Basra all night Sunday, and
message for Rafsanjanl from the
the sound of the planes and the
exiled emir of Kuwait In Saudi bombardment could be heard
Arabia. AI Sabah met Foreign acrilss the border In Iran.
Minister All Akbar Velayati
''The sound of three huge
Monday, IRNA said.
explosions were heard In Khor·
Rafsanjanl said he presented ramshahr" at 12: 50 p.m. and
his Ideas on peace to Saddam In a
appeared ''llke!y to be three
message sent back' to Baghdad \ missiles · hlttlng Basra or ·subwith visiting Iraqi DepucyPrlme urbs," IRNA said. Iraq's elite
Minister Saadoun Hammadl.
Republican Guards are deployed
"If Saddam accepts our Ideas,
In the Basra region.
we might prepare a peace plan,"
Regarding the Iraqi warplanes
he said .. However, "we did not
reported last week to have
notice any flexibility" In the
landed In Iran, Rafsanjanl said
Iraqis, and what Hammadl said this "was out of our control." He
was . "the same that (Iraqi said Iran was "serious about Its
Foreign Minister) Tariq Al:iz,
neutrality In the war, and we are
and (Vice President) Ezzat Ibranot doing anything whatsoever to
him said before the w.ar."
breach this' neutrality."
Rafsanjanl said he would meet
''The Iraqis had not Informed
with Saddam "If there Is hqpe for
us or this matter In advance. In
the. Iraqi nation" through a
the early (lays too, we resisted .to
diplomatic solution. He also said
some extent and our· planes took
he would · be prepared to talk to
off (to Intercept the Iraqi airthe United States through the
erato, but It was not possible to
Swiss embassy In Tehran.
force them to retreat," he said. .
"In case It Is necessary for us
''The arrival otthe Iraqi planes
to talk to the Americans, I think It
was such that five minutes after
will be logical (to do so), but no
(entering Iranian airspace) they .
· decision has been made In this
would run out of fuel and would
regard." he said.
crash" If not permitted to land
The Iranian president said, a
the Iranian president said.
'
final decision on talking t~ the
"This was the case with three
United States would rest with of them. and one of.thll'lf.::P~¥~ ,
Splf\tllll4•J,eader Ayatollah All cras~~.,lll,-t,he runway and was •
Khamen~l and the Supreme
·
Coritlnued on· page 12

Gallia ~an charged. after ·i.Dcidelit .
Tbe Gull W1r, '111e mll'dl eDded It Soatben
School wtlll a PI'OI* • 1111 the 1Y111UIIam
whlcb was fUkd wltb supporters I# tbe troops.

1990 CADILLAC SEDAN DEVILLE&amp;

HJn

SEVERAL IN STOCK- LOAD~ WITH AMENl'l$8
Balance Of New Car Warranty - Low Miles

Ov~r 1 29,600

New

ONLY

stabbed Harrison In the torso, residence. Clilet Investigator
By. MELINDA POWERS
pollee officials said. Oliver then Mike Tucker said Monday that a
OVP News Staff
fled
the scene.
folding hunter's knife believed to
A Gallipolis man remained In
Patrolman
Mike
be
the weapon used In the attack
Gallipolis
the Gallla County Jail Monday
was
recovered .
Fulks
and
Gall!a.County
Deputy
and another was In Holzer
Greg
Eliason
caught
Oliver
hid'
Harrison
was reported In staMedical Center after a stabbing
·
lng
In
a
stairwell
behind
the
ble
condition
at Holzer, a hospital
Incident on. a Gallipolis street
reslilence and a search warra11t spokeswoman said Monday.
Sunday.
was Ol&gt;talned to search Oliver's
Lewis M. Oliver, 39; was
apprehended and charged With ·
aggravated assault soon after he
allegedly stabbed Christopher
Harrison, 22, on Grape Stl'l!t!l
Sunday afternoon. Oliver was to
be arraigned on his c barge
Monday morning.
A 65-year--old lroniOII man was were on the scCne, 8lld Raciac
~ 10 a Columbus hospital squad and' lire depiuUnent iespoil·
by Life Flight after a hunting acci- ded .to the caD for aalttlnce.
According to pollee • reports,
Mefann was JrlnspOrted to ·
Harrison was driving around dent on Saturday.
town and drove by Oliver's
Acconling 10 the Meigs County Gi111t Med&amp;:al Center from the
residence In the 100 block of Sheriff's Department. Orville Me· Southern High Seliool FoOtbaU
Grape Street when Oliver . Fam. 6S, sustained a hand injury iield shonly aft« 2 p.m. on satur~
..
shouted at Harrison to . turn when his 12 gauge shotgun CX· day afternoon.
Sherilf Soulsby J'e(IOited Monday
Harrison's stereo down. Harri- ploded while he was grouJC buntmorning that MI:Pam had reloaded
son stopped his car and got out of mg on McKenzie Ridge.
Sheriff James Sou1sby, deputies . his !IRimWli!ion when the accident
the vehicle when OliVer came
over to him In the street. A fight Robert Beegle and Harry Lyons, occured.
ensued and Oliver allegedly and Game Protector Keith '!VOod

Man flown to Collunbus ·
following hunting.accident,

$}9,900

·1991 PONTIAC SUNBIRD
4Door. Only4.000LowMtles.
.. auto., aJrcond .• AM/FM

$8,995

•
•

SOlJTHERN CHOIR PERFORMS • ~
Southern Cbolr performed ltYtrll selecdolu
durblg tbe Support tbe 1'ruopl service held It
Southern Hl&amp;h Seboal roUowlaa Salurday's
parade .Ia Rac:lae• .Tile marcb IDd service wen

PLUS
. . OVIR

By MEUNDAPOWERS
GAll.IPOUS • The push for a
new power-genellling pfant for die
Ponsmouth Queons Diffusion
Plant in Piketon could fon:e die
Kyger Creek plant 10 close by die
yw 2000, a newspaper article In
the Colu!nbus Dispatch said
recendy.
·
· The article, published Thunday,
,Jan. 31, staltld that the U.S.
Depatllilent of Energy recently aS-

CJNcfl Vs Out!

ked the Ohio Valley EICCII'ic Corp,,
which provides power for the
federal plant, for options on how to
power the Piketon plant aflcr coal-

fired generadq Sllllions are reWed
after the ytar 2llOS.

ZENIX
VIDEO
w.

Special power ~ am
needed because die Plkctcn plant,
which enriches wanium for nuclear
reactor fuel, C&lt;IIISWIICS hu,e

i

aoor

KC plant could ·close by 2000

CLEAN, ...,.E MODEL
DIED CARl IN IYOCK

~'

••lien
ne
.. m

~ bJ
llf tile ~
Medical SerY~te.
at tile 1111&amp;11
bepa wltll tbe Pledge llf Allellaac:e by RadDe
Girl Stout 'l'rooplled by Camllfa YoacbiJD.

'I

amounts of electricity. Pikewn utCS
_.......
,.

more than 1,800 racgawaua of
elcclricity • day, .cnou&amp;h to ligbt die
city of Loe Angeles, the lllicle said.
1be· article, citing Nucleonics
Week mapzinc as a sowte, said
that a nuclear power plant is one of
the options the government is COli"

sidetiD&amp;.

Such a plant would replace die
Kyger Croek plant in OaUipolis and
the Clifty Creek P1ant near

Madilon, Ind. Both Dllnts generate
power exclusively (or the gaseous
diffulion planL

'Ihllncwa camea in the wair.e of
the .ecent - t of
American Eloclrlc Power ~ poesibly c....., fael for the J1111e1
· M. Ol¥in eleCalcity plant, also in
Oallipo(jJ, ..\EP ll8led that they
may be forced to IWitch 10 low suf-

. fur coal mined out-of-llai.O. in light
of Cean Aiz ActleJiJIItion. Such a

move could poaibly fon:e the lay
off of I ,258 millen in the

southelllem Ohio area.

Ralph

Dunlevy, OVEC eUJCulive vli:e
)llaiclent, said the elcclricil)'
generatins options the CCilllj)llly .
outlined to the fedeml apacy inelude I ~ plant, I new a.I·
fired plant, or buyinJ power from
other IIOUI'CCI.
Utilities natianwide have '*toe!
away
from
nuclear-powered
g~f plants Iince the diu•
11 Chctnobyl in tbe SO¥ie« Union ill
i986 IIIII die 1979 ICCidenl • the ·
nuee.Mile Island Dlant _. Hlr·
ns=PL Anodier l'lctt was
COIIIIIIIIIJuildina deJavtt
for n
-Diant CCIIIICIUCilon JJC:
cause or 6allooning tlllfety re- .
quirements, the lll'licle aid.
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~Commentary
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2-Tlw Dilly IUilliill

tops A~-1 in oved•.rne·:-~
tltAiNs •
ear.
-away P9i!n 1:.

PomerOY-Mi ct'tport. Ohio
MondaY, ftbru8IY 4, 1911

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The Daily ·Sentinel
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DEVOTED TO TRB INTDEIITI

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THE IIEIOI.'MABON ABilA

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ROBERT L. WINGETT
. Pabllllllel:

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CHARLENE HOEFLICH

Ge.eraiM-..aler

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. PAT WBI1EBEAD
.u.a.t. . Pllblllller/Colltreller

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A MEMBER of Tile Unlle&lt;l Press International, Inland Dally Prl;.a
ADOCiallon and the American Newspaper Publllhers Association.

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LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. Tiley should be leu than 300
"" ; wordllona. AU letters are aubJect'to edltlnl and must be llaned with
- • name, adclr•sand telephone number. No unolped letters wUI be pubIll !led. Letters sllo•ld be In aood taste, addreuiJIIIJIIIel, not personall·
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~Backstairs at
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By HELEN THOMAS

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UPI Whl&amp;e Ho,_ Repilner
~ WASHINGTON -"Tile Persian Gulf war Is beginning to take Its toll
:: on President Bush.
His face Is beginning to look gaunt and his press secretary, Marlin
:: F!tzwater,acknowledges Ihe president Is preoccupied with the war
. • and does not have time for play animtore.
: He also has been grumpy at times. He obviously Is not gettiJ!g a full
- night's sleep in view Of the eight-hour time difference between
.~. Washington and the gulf.
•
: · "I think It's fair to say that the president has 11ad a very serious
•,.attitude toward the situation In the 1gulf," said Fitzwater. Since the.
- start of the war, he said, "there hasn't beim quite as much
:; lighthearted banter In many of the meetings as there was'before that.
• "I think tills Is a matter that's on h!s-nitnd, that he does have some
: preoccupation with. And He's pretty much all business these days."
•· . Tbe president's appointments also reflect the change In the news. A
: president goes through a variety of public appointments In his dally
- routine. But these have been cut to a minimum.

'1$
Sbawn Haw~
hit I 111111 ( MNO from deep iD dii:
riglit
wi11i IIW! llectllds left
in regulldtllto b'C:O .. overtime,
and ~. aariODnll Alai7·S in
the exn period 11 die Mliauden
ptl·~::e-..:.tr:' 73-7l vic~ cana out of' thf blocks
fast, tV"ina up a 6-2. lead tine
·minutes into tbc game on a layup
by Hawley olf a 111011 Wrigbl reed.
But Athenl came ~ 10 lie the
score at 8-8 ou a jiiiiPer from Matt·
JolliJ:k. Trevu Haaisoa pve
Meigs a 10.8 lead on a bucket iD
the paint, then Juon Wright' bit a
CQUJJ1e of three pointers from the
rigbt wing the last OOQJing with
four seconds 1elt as.the Marauden
opened up a 1~8 lead at the end of
tbc first quanu.
Me!aa 'llllted up wbae tbey left
oft iD ihe sOconcl period u Harrison
hit a Jluee pointer froiD the comet
to open 'Up the period. The
Miuauden reel~ off nine of tbc
first 11 POints to&gt;open 11{1 a 25-10
lead widiJiist over four nunuJes left
in the hall.
. Reid Schaller came off the bench
to hit a three r:::ter lo start a
Athens come~ cuaiag the lead
to ~-13 at the 3:03 mark. After a
. TeiJy McGuire free tbtow made it
13, !he Bolldogs acored the last
&amp;even poinll of the half by cutting
it to 26-20 11 int.cnnission .on a
.bucket by Scott Hillkirt with 35
seconds left.
.
Athens continued their comeback in the third .od takiDg the
lead (31-30) on a rudret off an offensive rebound by Kyle Lonu
with 4:011eft in tbc period. Hillkirk
pve die Bulldogs a 41-38 heading
Ulto the final period with twO free
duows with 21 seconds left.

Smugglers usmg BroWilsville for
lack Anderson
·safe entry
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WASHINGTON-The border IIJd inteml) docwnenJS oblaincd by .
10Wt1 rlBrliwllsYille, Texa, is 11dle our ""'Ciate I&gt;een BoYd. polru a
front in America'• IO-QIJJcd ''war" linaer 11 the BJOWDSYillc Cusloms
on~.Some~thoritalivesowces ofiJCerllnlpection.
say itiJ aJao a sieve for c:ocaine and . '1nanullildi,iiiOsim•tioniscompletely_DtllofCOIIIIOldown tbere.Not
m:uemployeeswbohaveob- onlyaietheylclaiqdrup~,bul
.~edtheBrowilsvillcscenefor)'e8l's an sorts of othel contraband, says
have tried in Yaill to alert ihe u.s. Mille Busby, a fonner.Cusioms in·
CualmsService tbatill Brownsville spector at die Brownsville port.
We n:pcJ.ItCd. lilt I1IOIIIh on the
illlpeClioo Opmalions are Oawocl and
case
of twil ~"~··
,............., Texas'
possibly even corrupt. .
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· Last ysa sisllir qenc:y, the Drug Customs ~~~ who claim~ ~
Enfon:ernentAmliDillllllioo, warned found evi~ of ~ m
Customs dill it had rcce.i¥cd infor. ~ustom~ while ~Y were iJiveSl!88l·
mation that an av~ or dJrce. IDgamajOI'drugnng.Thetwoclaimed
fourths of a ton of cocame a day was !hat once ~y began to press for an
crossing iniO the United swes at intanal mvest1ptlon, they ~
BrownsviJJc, in~ equi~nt ~ and tllreitened by thell'
or cattle tructs. But Customs Insists ~ors. &lt;;?l!e of the agenu was
itdoesn'thaveanemployeeproblem ~cared m a federal personnel
in Brownsville.
documents we have
Interviews with Customs soun:es, ~":s:;nill
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echo die ClaimS Of those IWO

agenlll.

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lnaSeplemberl990memo10the
InspeciOr General's off'ICC of the
TICUUl)' Depulmellt, which

oversees

CUSIOIIls one employee complained
that B r o - bonier employees
.
with the wrong
w':rtcblower refertcd
.
f . ina!
.
f!&gt; "the ¥cJup o .cnm assocJa·
bonsllld~~eenCustoolS penonnel and organized drug
runners," and said there was "gratu·
itytakingonalargescale."Thememo
told of Custoo~s officials ''passirlg
loads of cocaine and marijuana in
return fOI' large monetary payoffs. n
Last April, in a repon to Soulh·
west Regional Customs Commis·
sioner James C. Piatt, the'same whis·
tleblower documented some of lhe
tiesbetweenCustomse'!lployeesand
dnag smugglers, and Slid

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that some of die informaiion was
obtained fiom jki!illlllllmowledge
and "informants in MexicO••
In a sworn affidavit to tbc CurtomSOffJCCofintrmalallilirsinMcAIlen, TClUIS. fmner in spc!!:U!t BUiby
said he also had seen Brownsville
employees let conaabancl into the ..
Uruted StareS.
.
Another Customs agent in Texas
tolcl us that the situalionis bamperiilg
the drug war. ''We ~ 10 mach
timecoveringforOIJ1'5Clvea,ttcdon't
have time 10 iipt any war on drugs.
You can imagme bow effective we

are."

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AltboughtheBrownsvillePuthas
some management changes in
the past year, Busby said "many of
the same gangs continue to wOJk
down tbeze." Another former Customs agentiOid us ~~~e·chaniea were
"largely cosmetic."
9ee11

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VoU''/a Ctlat-tGeD,

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University of Rio Grande
men's basketball 'coach John
Lawhorn feels that by February,
With the regular season winding
down; a ·team either gets better
or gets worse. In the case of the
Redmen, Improvement Is contln·
u!ng by leaps and bOunds.
Tbe Redmen defeated Tiffin
University's Dragons 84-61 at
T!ff!il Saturday. taking Rio
Grande to 21-4 overall and 6-2 In
the Mid-Ohio Conference. As the ·
)lleek opens, the Redmen remain
In the No. 2 spot III District 22
beli!nd former , MOC member
Malone;.whlcli'wenno 22·3 with a
134-120 victory over' Wilmington
Saturday. , .•
At Tiffin, Gary Harrison broke
out for 23 Points and Jeff Brown
fired In 13 points and 15 rebounds

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White House Marlin Fitzwater halls from Kansas and once in a
;;. while his Midwestern accent comes Into play.
·
: When he referred to "Centcom," the Central Command Center In
.; Saud! Arabia, It came out ~·sttcom."
, ·,, ·n r
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"Sitcom." evoked loud laughter from those privy to situation
, comedies In the alternoon on televlsloq. Reporters knew Fitzwater
• was not talking about make believe, but about the-real thing.

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President Bush, albeit a Republican, made a sent!meqtal journey

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: to Capitol Hill to speak at the 50th anniversary· of Franklin D.
. Roosevelt's Four F~ms speech that Inspired the world at a
: desperate time In history. .
• FDR laid down the four freedoms In an eloquent State of tile Union
. ; address one month after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor In 194~.
.! • At a ceremony heralding the event, the freedoms were cited as:
~ "Freedom otspeech; freedom of religion; freedom from want; and
~ freedom from fear"- the same Ideals that prevail today and In many
• areas of the world are yet to be achieved.
' When Anne Roosevelt spoke at the ceremony, she particularly
; referred to one paragraph In President Bush's State of the Union
!: address that had been delivered the night before to·a joint session of
~ Congress. It had a First Amendment ring.
·
~ . Tile president said:
• "Democracy brings the undeniable value of thoughtful dissent ~ -and we have helird some dissenting voices here at home, some
~ reckless, most responsible. But the !act that all voices have the right
~tQ· speak out Is one of the reasons we've been united In purpose and
j " principle lor 200 years."
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·A (p.estion of ·pride and prejudice _R_us_he_r
The savage batlle between Dart·
mouth Collqe llld the DaWIOUth
Revicw,anindependcqt(andconser. vative) colleBe paper, snarls on, and
one recent clevdoprnent ~eveals the
college and its defenders pi~~,
ever deeper into rant intell
dishonesty.
·The 1ateat flan bcpl when 111 an-

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WASHING"I:QN (NEA)-Pen~
IOIIIIOIIICCS report that lrlq has been
able 10 contlilue firing sctJD.B
missiles lllsnld and Saudi Ambia
partly becese of new launch tactics
cbigned br Sovietmilillry advisers.
The United StaleS tnows this !»
·CRUSe the Soviets have told the United
Swes what these new taclil:s are.
'l1le United States does not believe that lily Soviet militlry adVis·
en or tecbnicilns still remain in lrlq.
State Deplranent and Pentagon
sp+• IIIII •Y the United Stites
bdievesKtetnlin!ZI z•JCelgiveain
November-bytbciHIIJMmnto
tbc Unilcd States (now fcxeip minilfl:r)AJekswM\rB
16iblyth--lhat
tbc Jut of some 8,SOO Soviet advisenllld leclulicilu hid left lrlq.
A ~p~+ePJAJ 11 the Sovic:t embilly ill Wullin&amp;ton uys that, at the
timerl tbc flntilliedair llllek, only
112 Soviet dlplom•, adler penoiJnclllld
Meilltlen lalllined in
BIPd'd
haw aiace been ·
lemovedbyCII'viaJonlln. 'llleSoviet
~ ill Bqliiled -ina open,
bul wlli Gilly low-leWII mffi"'
But 1'1• '*'•tMJWca repon dill,
belen the si¥iet ldviletlleft, they
deviled aew IIClicl for the lriQis lhll
haWIIIIIde itCGUienbly lllliler for
lbe lilies 111 uncover the SCUDs before they a fiml.

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HARRISON SHOOTS- Melp Marauder Trevor Harr!Aon (35)
shoota In the pllllltln front of Athena Bulldog Kyle Lonas during
'saturday's non-league game at the PlaiDS. Harrison scored 20
points to help push the Marauders to a 7S.71 victory In -overtime.
Hawley layup. Lon8s cut the lead
back to olie hilling one of two free
throws wilb 1:10 left. Frank Blake
was fouled with 43 seconds left and
the junior calmly hit bolb . free
throws to make it 72-69. Jolliclc hit
a IS footer with 33 seconds left to
make it 72-71. Jason Wrigbt made
it 73·71 Jlitting one of two free
throws with 22 seconds left giving
the Bulldogs one last chance. But
Hartman and Reed missed shoiS as
time t'llll out giving the Mmauders
the hard earned victory.

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Previously, as part of a SCUD
firing sequence a large lwlloon wu
launchecl to tea\ hiah-altilude wind
conditions.Theballoon'sC:ounewas
followcd ~ al!lllll ladar unit in die
launch vehicle dial Weatem mili..-y
offiCials have cocle-named "lindTray." F'IJIII adjusanenJS were made
to ihe missile's pllllned course bucd
on wind clhcction and speed.
During the rr.-lraq
the Iranians lelmcd to how 10 teeogllize the
SCUDradlrwbr:aitwasiiiCkingdle
higb-aldtllde lwlloons Tiley knew
" thllamiuileluiChwucomingllld
could take cover and, at times, ay to
fn their own missiles at the SCUD
launcher.
The United Stales, with its much
more8CCU1811DAWACSllllarplanes
and spy lllellita, - poOjMiid 10 ·
teadl!nd-Tra}'lldlr.......,_"llld
to immeclia1ely lltiiC1: SCUD siiDS
based on tbis illfOI'IUiion. But the
Iraqishaven:ponecllynotbeenusing
the lJeiioona ilnd ili'Wd haw been
using 1 new Soviel-delipioclllwich
ay111111 thllliu lllllleclcle ction muc:b

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lilrdc:r.
·
Tlie Soviell -=~have
bel]icd die lmqla
aaew ny
of l'aellna the SCUDa Ill J1NW11i1
prelluacbr' 1 don. 'llleSCODaare
propelled
liquid facil that

=tQe

Clllonlybe

· intoibeminilesat

the last m0111ent. 11 is a pocess that
takes about 90 minutes and makes
the missile deteclable by infrareil
scannersaboardspyplanesandsatel·
litel.illtelligence ~perts believe the
Iraqis ha~ developed some mobile
SCOD launch sites with hidden con· .
cme barrienthat~efuelin&amp;
difficult to detect.
Moreover, the mobile SCUD.
launchers previouslv received their .
COIIImand orders via flldio. These
sigDils are easily intercepicd and
llliCed.ButU.S.intelligeocebelieves
that, in the final months before .the
Jan. IS war deadline, theltaqis riged
dozensofsiJes inKuwaitandineast·
em and southern Iraq with telephone
lines.ltwudonesothatSCUDliwnch
onlc:racouldbetransmiaedbyphone
IIIII not OWl' Ojltilllllio channels.
T1ie1e "sites" are iiOihin.R more
than clclnd area with I'OICfIICCCIS
andburicdpllonelinea. They are vir·
nwUyimpoesibleiOdelectbeforethe
SCUJ:)s drive up for launch.
Another I8CtiC: Jhat Iraq is using is
to 8Cli¥Jre ndar units IOtiiC distlnce
frorn 8CCUl SCUD sites to thiOw off
lllied cDavaL This ilaiiCiic that
thelmqllflntlrledln tbelllllr~~~ge~
rl 111- wllb 11'111. Hanover, witb
Soviet belp, they haw refined iL It
was just IIUCh a cJec6r that c•neecl the

more

to stymie the Dragons' offense
'l'he Rel!men, who hold a
throughout the game. Jim Harri· 9.2-po!nt margin of victory over
mond's club stayed In through their conference opponents and
· the first half but trailed · the 22 over. all rivals this season.
fired In 27 of 49 field goal
Redmen by 14' at the half,
Rio Grande's defense, cap- attempts for 55.1 percent, !nclud·
tained by Harrison and Mark lng eight of 19 from the threepoint range for42.1 percent. They
Erslan with support frQlll Ja·
netted 22 of 'J:1 tries from 'the free
wanza Childs, succeeded In hold·
tng Tiffin's high scoring to 13 throw line for 81.5 percent, with
Erslan hitting all six of his
points from Jeff Ward and 12
attempts.
The team committed
from Thad• Patrick. who had 25
20
turnovers
and posted 30
pOints when Tiffin lost to Rio
rebounds to Tiffin's 32.
Grande 92-87 at Lyne Center on
Tiffin fell short on Its shooting
Jan. 16.
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. with 38.1 percent (24-63), lnclud·
The Dragons tried· to take" ·• !ng threetof 11 from·the three for
advantage of the seven-rebound
27.3 percent, and netted 10 of 21
performances by Ward and Dale
fror the fpulllne for 47.6 percent.
Kuhl, but their game sputtered
The Dragons held their turnovers
to 19.
out as the Redmen tookcontrolln
the latter part of the contest.·
The Redmen are at Cincinnati
'
Bible Monday· at 7: 30 p.m., and
return to conference action
Thursday at 7:30p.m. at Mount
Vernon Nazarene. Tiffin (16·7,
5·2) goes to Findlay Wednesday .

conference wins Included an
earlier victory over · OD In
Columbus, but the Lady Panth·
ers mounted a stUbborn attack
that kept the Redwomen on their
toes despite a 16-po!nt halftime
cushion.
Karl R!ebesell hit 21 points and
seven boards for the visitors to
keep OD In the game, but the
double-figure scoring efforts
shown by her and Lisa Janusz
were countered by Snyder and
forward Kerr! Kidwell, who had
16 points and seven rebounds.
Ann Barn!tz also offered five
boards and five assists to. Rio
Grande's game.
:'ltephan!e Gudorf had nine
rebounds for Rio Grande, which
shot 41.7 percent from the floor
on 30 of 72"field goal attempts,
Including three of nine from the
The Daily Sentine~
three-point range supplied by
(UIPIIttf.HI)
Jenn! Couch and •.Gena Norris.
A Jlh&gt;- ef Molllmorila. Joe., •
Tl\e Redwomen were deail-on
Pulrlllllal owry afternoon. Monday . from the free throw line with 94
tbrou1b Friday, 1U C&lt;lurt St., Popercent (15-16), Including Snyd·
meroy, Ohio, by tilo Ohio Valley Pub- , er's 10 of 10 performance. .The
IIIIIIDf Company!Multlml!llla, Inc. ,
Redwomen , outreboundi!IJ· the
Pomoroy, Ohio f5T•. Ph. 1112·:11!!6. Second cwo pootare paid at Pomeroy.
Lady Panthers 42-38 and held
Ohio.
their turnovers to 17.
Member: Unllell Pnu Internall011ol,
00 was also helped by a
Inland O.Uy Prou Aaaolatloallld the
nine-rebound
showing by M!·
ObloNtwopali.......,latloa. Natlollal
chelle
Sims
and
shot30.6 percent
_...IDI
eoestatlve, Branham
Ntwapapor sa •· m Tlllr&lt;l Avenue,
(22-66). The visitors netted 10 of
New York, New Yod&lt; 10011.
·
16 attempts from the foul line for
&amp;2
percent and committed 23
pqmwTEII: - - ........ .
turnovers.
to 'i!lt Dally - · w Court St.,
Potneroy, Oldo 4SNI •
Rio Grande travels to Urbana
II1JIICIUP'I'ION UTili
Tuesday for another MOC con·
BJCorrMr•-test, set for 5: 15 p.m. OD travels
OneWeek ......... .......................... SUO
to 'w.alsh Tuesday, also for a
OneMOIIIh ...... .,................. ....... ,IUO
One Year ........ ......................... ~.80
conference game.
IINOUCOPY
BOx aeon:
I'Uc:&amp; •
RIO "GRANDE ('78) - Marlo
Dolly .............. ............... ...... :Ia Ceato
Kistler, 4-1-9; Jenn! Couch, 1·2-1·
SuiHcrlllonaot dlllriDftopay tbecar9; Michelle Crouse, 2-0-4; Kerr!
rta' 8:{. romtt Ia advu.. d1red to
Kidwell, 8-D-16; Ann Barn!tz,
Tile
y lltlltiDel on a 3, 6 or U mooth
-bUll. O.Ut wUt bert-..rr:er ..&lt;h
~; Stephanie Gudorf, 3·3-9;
Kathy Snyder, 5·10-20. TOTAlS
No oubiCrtpltC+Il by moD .,.. milled In
2'7-3-11-78.
.
ara• wllere borne carrier IM'VIce ..
OHIO
DOMINICAN
(M)
.
available.
Karl Rlebesell, 10-1-21; Jackie
lltlllll ......
Reynoldl, 1·0-2; Ussa Latina,
~ aue 2·2-S; lJia Janusz, 3-4·10; Ml·
uw-..................................
A'I.M
chelle Sima, J.0-6; Elaine Clay,
111
rrue 1·0-2;
Mary Tressler, 2·3-'7. TO-

The wlnntrig streak posted In
the last few weeks by the
University of Rio Grande
women's baskeiball team was
stretched to · seven Saturday
when forward Kathy Snyder
poured In 20 points and three
rebounds to hand Ohio Domini·
can a 78-54 loss at Lyne Center.
Snyder, who hit a-career high
of 22 points In last week's home
court defeat of Wilmington, also
had five assists to boost the
Redwomen o!fense. Doug
Foote's team Improved Its re·
cord to 16-8 and 5·2 In the
Mld.OhJo Conference. where It
remains In contention with for
firSt place.
One of Rio Grande's 1five

Iraq's SCUDs use new Soviet -tactics

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R edWomen exten
win strf!ak . to 7

dard editorial policy. At a huge pro- day the Anti-~ League is- done by someone outside the
test flllly on Cllllpul, FmedWM IC·
Sllcd the report on the incident that
DIIIU,"and the
editor, who ·
cuscd the Review rl baviDa "consis- tbc RevieW itself ha4 requesaed. My r.Siid from the ~g. and retendy attacbd biiCb becau&amp;e they , local office of the ADL has been un· pelllcd today, that 90IIICODe inside
are blacks. women bra•• they are able, for OYer a week, 10 provide me was clearly JeSIJOIISible." The ADL
women, homollexuals bece- they wilh a copy, but it is app81endy
report endorsed the latter view.
are homosexuals and Jews bec•nse heavily critical of the Review.
But the paper's consa-vative sup
they are Jews."
According tonewspaperaccounts,:
~and ! am one, serving on its
· Now, die Review bas occasion- the'repon accuses the paper of hav·
o ad~w never entiSemitic~fromAdolfHiller any been oophomolic in its behaviOI' ina '"been grossly insensitive for the
"
thel!r7-Myown
was slipped into the paper's mast· · (as sophomores 80IIICiimes will), but past decade" (which, for liberals, is mer column on the subject, dated
head~)'-~ ill·wisher, ~hl:e of the Fleedman chirge W. a flat lie. ~itmildly),andchargesitwith Occ. 30,explici~= !Ia the
an upllfling q1IQCe from ~e The Review bas been III'OIIgly pro- 'lhecreationofanenvirorunentwhich maleflK:r.or Was
y a lll8ffc:r
inseltingtheHiderquotercquireclinRooseve!L As 10011 as the 1111111t was Israel and not only Jews but bJacb, condoned and even encouraged a
discovered, dJe paper's officers did women and Indians have served in memberoftheReviewtoincludothe . side knowledge of the ~·s com.
their best 111 mr1eve llld desaoy an higb positions on ill lll8ff. At this offensiveHiderquoce.• But it signal- pulllr.
copiesofthatissue, toe* (and passed) moment theediror is blact. llld the lyomitsiOtindthattheReviewitself ' . S~ the ADL's repon, a most
••
lie-detec:t« G!8ts in defense of their paper's president is111 Asian-Ameri- is anti-Semitic, or that insenion of mltleSllng further development has
:;: :Former President and Mrs. Ro.nald Reagan will return to · iJmo.ceoce, IIICI asbd various out·
the Hitler qoote was official Review oc-curred. Police have amsred a
can.
' !I;)Vashlnglon for ceremonies March . 28 at George Washington
side bodies, iDcluding local prceecu- .
.
former Review lll8ffer, PID&amp;&lt;hun
In viewrllhese facts, Freedmln 's policy.
;-university. Reagan will receive the honorary degree 'of Doctor of
torlandtheAnti·l)eQ!ml'iooLcaguc. h..-N•IIIIIICt his 10 dilcrediJCCI
AtlhatpointFoxBuaerf~eld,Bos- Chen,ouchargesrlmakingafiarass.
; ~bile Service at a special convocation.
·
·
·
tolan!M:b~identinvestiptions.
~~ iD liberal circles. that it bu. ton com:sponclent of The New Yilt ina pbone call to a faculty member
·:: . Mrs; Reagan will receive a special plaque for "courage and
None of thiS, however, iJnpl,aaed 1eponeclly dellroyclll his chance of Times, barged into the liay. Mr. But- who Sll'OIIgly defenda the Review.
&lt;slrength" after her husband was shot In an assassination attempt on
Daltmoutll President JMDel Fleed· rqiiiCinl Deft:t Bok u president of terfleld'soonbibulion was to invent a
. The pajki's cditon suspect Chen
' 'March 30, 1981. The plaque will be placed Inside tbe emergency room
'
man. who lelpcd 10 the conclusion Hamrd.
diffC!eiii:C of opinion between un·
ofhavingplantecltheHitler?..~too,
_h't George Washtnaton University Hospital.
that the Hider quotation had been de·
, unBut tbc :O.UiiOUth Review's enc- named "supponen of the Review in · but he c:teilies it. He also ~e
,"'~ ' The Reagans, and other former first couples, do not show up In the
liberatdy inaertr:d by the jlllpet'S mieiiiiCII'~ lhroulh yet. The Other
consetVIIive cildes" around die
like them, to 1alce a lie detector test.
·:hatlon's capital very often. Not that II Is off limits to those who once
offJCen in plil1uallce of thelf Slim· wilb a JlUd&amp;e.• It elmost bad to been counay;wbo"'l'flllQtcdly iilsistcd
What will FR:edman,'Buttcrfield Ill.
: ruled the roost, but most of them give the White House a wide berth
that lhC insenion wu sabotage and Co. say now7
, u,nless they are Invited back to the!tformer )lome, which ts not often.
'
.

..

• duec DOialer to . . . it »48
with 4:211eft. But Athena wu able
· to build the leiid 11M* to llix (S9-S3)
with 2:0S left on lay-up· by Bob
Bailey. To compoUnd problems for
the Manuden, Harri80n llld,Mike
Vail Meter had fouled out.
'
But the Maraudrn, tdusing to
die, swled their comebKit wben
Wdghtllrecl iD - tbree pointer fronl
the right wing with 1:31 left to cut
the lead to S9-S6: Juon Reed and
Jobn Bentley traded 1 plit of free
·throWS 10 make it 61·S8 witb 1: IS
left to set die stage for Hawleys
heriocs.
The Marauders lied it up wilb
secondS left on a driving layup by
Hawley while cbwing the foul.
Tbc junior hit the free duow llld
the pmo was tied 1161. Jolm Harmon ~ve the Bulldols a 63-61
lead Wllb 41 SCCOIMIJ ielt with a 15
footer, only to have Hawley .tie it
with a jumper of his own with 30
seconds left. Jol1ick bit one of two
free throws with 19 seconds left w
give Athens the lead once apin.
After a missed Marauder free duow
Brent Haranan hit two more free .
throws to make it 66-63 Athens
with 13 ticks left oa the clock.
After a Manludet limo out with
seven seconds left, the inbounds
pass came in to Hawley and he hit
'nothing but net from deep in the
comer with five secondS left to
fon:e the exlrll period
·
· Hawley and Hartman traded
buckets to. open die overtime, but
the Marauders wok the lead for
good (7()..68) with 1:25 left on a

'

·· giving reporters the $Up, she has been willing to talk to them aboutthe
.,. gulf war and to o!fer her views.
· . ·.
·
: The f!J;St lady says parents should g\ilde their children In watch'!hg
I television these days with the saturation ofwar news. She said that
: their fears should he al~yed by noting that the war Is far away.
~ He also chided reporters, contending that they have pushed the Idea
: that the war would be over In a feW. days and !lave escalated the
: timetable.
·
": In her undel'Statetl fashtoli, .she commented recently: "War Is not
·~ nice."
·
: Mrs. Bush, meanwhile, Is going about her business and not letting
the hostilities that so absorb her husband to get her dO\fll.
·

-~

from HDIIdrt widi 6:58 left,
•
riJa1 Cut the alf IJict Ill twO witb

Redmen whip Dragons, 84-61

.: . Barbara Bush Is her husband's strongest cheerleader. Instead of '

.
::

Athens 011111 IIIII in dill bd
qiiiiWIIId looted me...,~
to Jllil tile
open
48;,ow '-1 Cil • .._

Hawley scored a career-high 26
points to lead three Marauders in
double figures, with Hanison ad·
din¥ 20 and Wright scoring12.
Meigs hit 25 of 53 (18 of 37· two
pointers and 7 of 16 from three'
pointl'llllge) for 47 pCr-cenL Meigs
shot 51 percent from tbe line hitting
16 of 31 shots. The Mmauders had
32 rebounds with Hawley gmbbing
12 and Harrison eight. · Meigs had
12 turnovers, two steals and 14 as·
sists (led by Blake and Wright with
five each). The Mariluders were cal·
led for 27 fouls.
Hartman led Athens with 18
points, followed by Jollick's 14 and
Bailey's I 0. Athens was 23 of 61
from the lloor for 31 percent. The

•

wsming on· the ,second riight of the
war that sent Jsradis saambliJig 10
shelters.
'
These new tactics were IIOl unex·
peeled. In the months before the Jan.
15 deadline, the Soviet Union shared
with the United Swes informllion
about lrlqi Sllalllhs liiCl taclil:s.
Includedintheacbriefingswuinfor·
mationaboutt'-newlraqiSCUD
launch procedures.
However, it is possible dill the
United States did not receive com·
pletll iilformation from the Soviets.
U.S. military plannen DOW belleWitbaube Iraqis~
. more SCUDs
thaDoriginallylflou&amp;hi,lildthallhey
haw modified more iniD wlill the
lraqiscaBihe"AI·Abbes.·Thesehave
a much longer l'lllge, but carry a
much smaller warhead.
·

-·

-

......
•w-.
.
.
.
.
.
w-.. . . . ............ .. .. .. .. .. .. ..

-·-CouiJ
w-..... . ..,. . . . . . . . . . .

, ....................10
•111PW-..............
w-..................................
MC1.30
m.to

UnitedSwes10issuea~missile

Bulldogs hit21 of 32 from the line
for 6! percent. Athens had 42
rebounds, with Hartman getting II.
The Bulldogs had IS turnovers and
weni called for 26 fouls.
The Little Manluden made it a
clean sweep with a 65-S4 .win over
Athens in the reserve game. 1ohn
Bentley, who led four Marauden in
double figures with 19, was fol·
lowed by Todd Dill's 15, Shawn
Hamon'sl3. and Bobby Jolmson's
10.

Seore by quarters
Meigs . 16-10-12-28-7=73
Athens 8-12-21-25-5=71
MEIGS (73) • Frank Blake fM.
2=2, Jason Wright 0-3·3= 12, Terry
McGuire 1,0.2=4, Shavm Hawley ,
9·2,2=26, · Trevor Harrison 5-24-20, Mike Van Meter· 3-0-0=6,
John Bendey 0,0.3=3. TOTALS •
18.7-16=73 ,
ATHENS (71) ·Jason Reed 2~03=7, Matt Jolliclc S,l-1=14, Bob
The Maraudtls, now 6-10 on the Bailey 5-0-0=10, John Harmon 3year, win 11ost the Warren Local 0-1=7, Scott Hillkirlc 2..0·3=7,
Warriors in IIIIOther non-conference Brent Hartman 4..0-10=18, Kyle
game oq Tuesday night. Athens, 5- . Lonas 1-0-1=3. TOTALS • 22·1·
12 on the year, will travel to Nel- 19=71

.

.Suodaf Coll&lt;le iluketball R..ulh
B:r United Preasln&amp;eraatloaal

Ball St. 84, Toledo 66
Bethany 91, SterUng 82
Bowling Green•76, w. ~.lchlgan 64
BpUer 76, Marquette 65

Albany Pha,rmacy 73. New York
Poly tech 72

Calv'n 73. Alma 62
Capltal7'.2, Baldwin-Wallace 60

EM..

CrelghtM' 85, Siena 78

DePaul72, Georgetown 63

FDU-Madlson 57~ Juniata 55
GeorgeWashtngrm 80, Penn Sr. 70
St. Peter's 77. F•lrlleld 57
South
Emory &amp; Henry 62. RandolphMacon 47 ·
Kentucky 96, Georgia 84
N.C. Stale 79. Georgia Tech 73
Mldwett
Indiana 77, Minnesota 66
Mlchl&amp;a.n Tech 89, CarrOll rWts) . 75
Ohio St. ~66. PurdU8.~9_-· J':' • •
Rochester 72; Chicago 58
Washlngtm 71, Brandeis M
Southwe~t
·
Texas 83, TfXBS A&amp;:M 74

We1l
Nevada-Las Vegas 115, Rutgers 73
Oregon 74, Callfomia 71
Wyoming 84, San Diego Sl . 87 20T

Box acore:
TIFFIN (61) - Jetr Ward,
6-1-13,; Don Williams, · 2·1·0-7; ·
Mike Clark, 0·2·1-7; Larry BaJ&gt;.
tcs, 1·0-2; Thad Patrick, 5·2·12;
Grant Weaver, 0-2-2; David Den·
n!s, 1-1-3; Brian Bicknell, 3·1-7;
Dale Kuhl, 3·2·8. TOTALS 21-3-10·
61.
RIO GRANDE (84) - Gary
Harrison. 6-2-S-23; · Jawanza
Childs, 3-2-8; Mark Erslan,1·6-8;
Brad Schubert, 0-5·2-17; Lester
Smith, 1·0·2; Jeff Brown, 3·1·4·
13; Tim Christian, 1·0·2; Troy
Donaldson, 4-3·11. TOTAlS 19-82U4.
Halflbne score - Rio· Grande
46, TUfln 32.'

Saturday Collere
Basketball Reslf,lt a
South
Ala .·Birmingham 92, Jacksoovllle
72
Alabama 8&amp; Auburn 80
New Orleans 69. SW Louisiana 60
No. car dina A&amp;T95, DelawAre St .
82

Rlchffiond 75, GeorgE' Masoo 62
So. CArol. ina St . 94 , Md.·Eas t Sholl?

86
SE Louisiana 69, NlchoUs Sl . 66
Samford 75, Georgia Southern 72
So. Mississippi ?r, Loulsvillo 66
Soutll Carolina 58. Clemsoo 53
Tennenef"-Chat. 98. Western Card·
Ina 67
Tulane 79, Florida St . 8~
Va. Commonwealth 60, Old Domin·
ton :58
Va . Military 85. Clladel67
Vanderblll 63. LSU 59
Virginia 83, Wake Forest 80
W. VIJ'ilnla Wesleyan 95, Glenville •
st. 88

SW Missouri St. 63. Wichita St. 38
. Sputhem 01. 84, llllnolll St. 57
St . Louis 95, Xavier 74
TCU 79, orake69

Urbana 73, Ohio Dominican 65
Washburn 76, NE Mlssourl67

cardinal Strltch 65, Marion 62

Western Michigan 85, BowUng ·

Cent. Missouri Sl. 92, MJssourl

Creen 75

W(OS~rn 66

,

W!s.-GrPen Bay 77, Western Illinois

Chicago St. 109. Central Sl. !Ohio!
93
Cincinnati 73, Memphis St. 59
Defiance 74, Cedarville 72

50
Wls.·MIIwauk"' 112. NE Illln~s 72
Wittenberg 63, Denlsoo 46
Wrtghl Si . 62, Kenl 61

netrott 94 , Dayton 75

Soutllwest

Duke 90, Notre Dame 77 1
Eureka 90. MacMur ray 55 ·
Evansville 77, Loyola !111.!65
Ferrts State 66, Wayne State 58

Findlay 91 , Blutrtm 66 ·
Heidelberg 79, Marletta 57
Hope 62, Albion 60
DUnois 70, Wisconsin 62
Illinois COl. 98, Cornell (Iowa I 7S
Illinois-Chicago~. Cleveland St. 76
Indiana St. 77, Tulsa 60
lowa 82, Nonhwestern 66
John Carroll 51. Ohio Northern 46
Kansas 85, Iowa Sl. 78
. •
Kansas St. 73, Colorado 72
Lake Erie 92, Wllberlorce 82
Malone 134. Wllmtngtm 120
Mankato St. 1081 St . l:loud St . 106
lOTI
Miami Ohio 70, EaStern Mich 63
Millikin 79, North Central 58
Missouri Vall. 86, Grayson 78
MI. Vernon Na zarene 94 , Walsh 79
Muskingum 74, Hiram 61
Nebraska 68. Oklahana St 81
Northern Ill. 77, Northern Iowa 51
Northern Michigan 90. Hlllsdale67
Northern Si. 93, BemidJI Sl. 74
Northwood Institute 85, Concordia
77
Oakland Un iversity 81, Grand
Valley St . 70
Oberlin 72, Earlham 50
Ohio 63, Central Mldl. 53
OhloWeslf.yan 104i. Case Reserve 93
Oil vel 91, lllln~s Tee~ 70
Onrrbeln 119, Mount Union 81
Rio Grande 84, Tl!lln 61
S. Illinois 84, Illinois St . 57
SE Missouri 70; Mlss&lt;a~rl RoDa ~9
Southwest St. 64, Winona Sl. ~

Brigham Young 69,"Texas -EI Paso
65
Dallas 88. McMurry Coil. 83
. Houston 86. Baylor 76
New Mexico 68, Utah 62
Oklahcma 95, Missouri 87
SW Texas St . 81, sam Houston 62
Stephen F. Austin 68, McNeese St . ,
62 OT
'
Texas Tech 80.. SMU 77 20T
We~t

Air Fore~ 54, Colorado St. 49
Arizona 85. Washlngtm 56
Cal. SL ·Bakerslleld 111 . Cal. Sl. · ·

San
Bernardino 72
Cal St.-Dominguez Hills 53, Chap- ·
man
College48
.
yota, Mnrymount 97, St . Mary's 93 '
New Meld co 68. Ulah 62
·
New Mexlro ,St . 66. Long Beach St . .
64
'.
Northern ArizOna 71, Nevada 66
Pacific 75, Cal -Irvine 65
Pepptrdlne 72, San Fr&amp;nci.!IC'O 17
Son Diego 108, Portland 70
San Diego 108. Portland 70
Santa Clara 69, Gonz.aga 61
Stanlortf64. Oregoo Sr. 59
UCLA 112, Plttsburah 85
Utah St 88, San Jo.e St. 71
Washln!lllll St. 74. Arlzolljl St .

SPRINf.

r r.t NFMA

V~ll I

446 4074

Midwest

Adrian 98, Kalamazoo j.Q
· Akrm 7Q, Valparaiso 53
Ashland 99, Northern Kentucky 84

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,---College scores-----------....;._ _ _ _. - - - - .

-

Robert. Wagman

RESPONSmLE FOR OVERTIME - Melp Marauder Shaw!i .
Hawley (33) takes a vertical leap above Athens Bulldog Brent
Hartman during Saturday alght's non·leape affair at Tbe Plains;
)lawley canned a tbree-polnler that tied the r;B~J~e at 66-68 at the
end of regulation and forced an overtime, which Melp prevailed
7-5 to win '73-71.

____....,__

........................... ..,-......
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i

I

�Page-4-The Daily Seutii•el

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

•••
•
•••••

Bucks outlas~ Purdue, .66-59
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) - II
Jackson tied It at 51·51 with a
you've got a big gun, shoot it.
basket and broke a 53-53 tie with a.
That's an old ti\E:Qry, butoneOhlo ·pair of free throws, followed by
State's 34:year·old coacll Randy another basket for a 57-53 Ohio
Ayers lives by .
State lead with 3: 18 to play. Hit
Ayers turned his big· gun had two more baskets in the final
sophomore forward Jim Jackson
1: 55 of the game to keep the
-loose In thesecondhalfSunday Buckeyes ahead. ·
afternoon and pulled out a tough
"Jim Jackson Is one of the top .
66·59 win · over Purdue In a five players In the nation," said
nationally televised Big Ten Purdue coach Gene Keady.
basketball game.
"With five minutes to go, I was
"Down the stretch, Jimmy thtnktog 'I hope Jackson takes a
took over," said Ayers. "He vacation for the next five min·
came through like be has for us utes.' He didn't. He ·stepped up
the last two years."
and knocked them Into the hole.
Jackson scored 16 .of his 22 .
"You've got to have a.guy like
points In the second half and 10 of that It you're gotng to get Into the
those the final 5:52 as the final four. He certainly Is a great
3rd·ranked Buckeyes came from player, especla lly for a
behind to up their record to 18·1 sophomore."
overall and S.11n the Big Ten.
Purdue l!)ayed 12 mlnu tes of
"We tried to keep him fresh," the first half without 6-foot-7
Ayers said of the 6-foot-6 Jack· Chuckle White, who picked up his
son, who · struggled with his third Iolli with 11: 16 remaining.
shooting and was just four of 12
"We hung In there good," said
from the neld when he began his the flesty Keady, "but he should
late heroics. "We took him out not have been out (of the game)
somewhere around the ll·rrilnute In the first place. I didn't see any
mark because we knew we would fouls. That's the referees.
have to make a run at It.
"White Is themalnguy, the guy
·"I'm n.ever concerned . about . who gives us that fighting atti·
Jimmy." Ayers Said when asked tude. He's a gr~ta·t ccimpetltqr and
about Jackson's shooting woes when he's not In there. we seem
early In the game. "He always to ·lose the edge of being real
helps this team win."
tough. You've got to adjust to the
Ohio State appeared on the officials and we didn't do a very
verge of a blowout when It good job of that." •
mounted a 27-1'4 lead with 6:33 · Jimmy Oliver led Purdue with
left In the ha)f. But Purdue, with 22 points, 13 coming In the ftrst
the help of a switch to a zone half when he hit all three of his
defense, cut ' the lead to four · 3-polnt attempts. White had 15
points and eventually trailed points, 13 of his coming In the
second half.
36-28 at halftime.
- At Fayetteville, Afk., Oliver
"Give Purdue a lot or credit,"
said Ayers. "They came In here Miller scored 26 points to help the
and played hard and did a great Razorbacks extend thelr_wlnntng
job of controlling tempo. I streak to 19 games. Arkansas,
thought our defense really turned 22·1 overall and 9.0 In the
Southwest Conference: 'has not
It up a notch down the stretch.
We've got to play our tempo to be lost since falling to Arizona In the
successful."
finals of the preseason NIT.
Purdue. whlc h sllpped to 11·8 Miller made 10 of 15 shots from
and 3-6, ·began the second half the field . Todd Day added 16
wllh a 13·4 run to take a 41-40 lead while guard Arlyn Bowers and
and was ' up 5H8 with 8: 33 guard Ron Huery had 15 each for
remaining.
Arkansas. Chase Maag led Rice

with a career-high 35 points.
At Tucson, Ariz., freshman
Khalkl Reeves scored 15 points to
help the Wildcats extend thelt
natlon's-best home winning
streak to 58 games. Arizona
avenged an earlier loss to the
Huskies to Improve - to 18·3
overall and 7·2 In the Pac-10.
.Washlngton Is 12·7 and 3-6.
At South Bend, Ind. Christian
Laetbter scored,20 points and Bill ·
McCaffrey added 18 to help the
Blue DevHs defeat the Fighting
Irish for the second time this ·
season. In the prese,(ISOn NIT.
Duke downed Notre Dilme 85·77.
Duke Is 18-4 whHe Notre ·Dame
dropped to 8·13.
, ·
At Syracuse, N.Y,, B1lly0wens
matched his career high with 36
points and LeRon Ellis tled ' a
school record with 8 blocked
shots to pace the Orangemen.
Owens had 22 points In the second
half to help the Orangemen, 19·3
overall and 7-3 In the league,
buHd a 29-polnt lead before the
Eagles, 10-10 and 1-7, battled
back to make the score respecta·
ble. Owens added 14 rebounds,
five blocks and five stealS.
· At Lincoln, - Neb., Darwyn
Alexander scored 9 of his 18
points In the final three minutes
to help the Cowboys pull off the
Big Eight upset. Oklahoma State
made ·12 of 16 free throws In th.e
flnall: 46 to seal the win. Byron
Houston scored 22 points for
OSU, which . Improved . to 15-4
overall and 4·2 In the Big Eight.
Nebraska fell to 18-4 and 4·2.
At Los Angeles, Don MacLean
had 39 points and Tracy Murray
added 29 as the Bruins routed the
Panthers. Maclean, was held to a
season-low 11. point~ In a loss to
Southern Cal earlier In the week,
scored 8 In the first 4:53 and the
Bruins, 16-5, coasted to the win.
Darrick Martin set a UCLA
record with 15 assists. Pitts·
burgh, 15·7, bas lost three
straight.
At Boone, N.C., Keith "Mister"
Jennings scored 18 points and set

Suns roll .over Pistons, 112-97
'

.
Sunday, leading the Minnesota
Tlmberwolves to a 110-102 vic·
tory over the Philadelphia 76ers.
.

AUBURN HILLS, Mich. (UP!)
- Kevin Johnson poured In 28
points Sunday afternoon, lnclud·
lng 20 In the first halt, to help the
Phoenix Suns to a 112·97 victory
over the Detroit Pistons . .
this year.

.

'BOSTON (UP!) - Reggie
Lewis scored 30 points Sunday
and the Boston Celtics owned the
fourth quarter' with a 17·2 run on
their way to a il9- 101 victory.
-~-

MIT..WAUKE.E tUPI) - Jay
Humphries scored 27 points
Sunday and the Milwaukee
Bucks used a 46-point third
quarter to post a 120·111 victory
over the Charlotte Hornets.
MINNEAPOLIS (UPI)- Sam
Mltchelf. scored a cal'l!l!r·hlgh 37
points and played all 5lJ minutes
and
rone · Corbin scored 6

..

'

'

kicked In the'flead by Chicago's
Horace Grant.
·
But Los Angeles, which led
76-74 at the time of Johnson's
HOUSTON (UPI) Eric Injury, never surrendered the
"Sleepy" Floyd scored 27 of his lead. In the fourth period, the
30 points In the flnal16 inlnutes, Lakers limited the Bulls to 12
Including seven free throws In points and none In the final 4:32.
Chicago missed Its last eight
the second overtime Sunday shots.
,
night, leading the Houston
Michael
Jordan
of
the Bulls
Rockets ~ to a 143-135 double·
l!ad
jusf.23
points
-almost
nine
overtime victory over•the Golden
be1ow
''li'ls
league-leading
aver·
State Warriors.
age - and only four In tlie final
.
.
.
quarter.
INGLEWOOD, Calif. (UP!) playmaker
Tony
Smith
·
Rookie
The Los Angeles · Lakers turned
. to defense to offset the loss of stepped In for JohM.On and had
· Magic Johnson to a concussion eight points. Byron Scott led the
Sunday. winning their 15th Lakers with 18 and reserve Terry
straight game with a 99-86 Teagle added 15 of his 16 points In
.the second quarter.
victory over the Chicago Bulls.
Scottie Pippen had 24 points for
Johnson was helped from the
Chicago
- the first time In 21
court with 19 seconds left In the
games
and
only the fourth time
third quarter and .taken to a .
this
season
Jordan did not lead
hospital after he was apparently
the club.

••
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,;

••
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••

•''

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,,'

•

•••
•
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feb. 4-0ak Hil~ Away
feb. 7-Sy!iim11 Valley, Away

MEIGS
BOYS

'

·'

•
M

BUCKEYES APPLY PRESSURE- 0... State
Oliver ta· the
baH of Sunday's Big Ten
cagers Treg Lee (left) and Jamul BrOWD (rl&amp;ld)
matcbup at St. Jobn's Arena In Colwnbus, where
apply defensive pressure ,to Purdue's JIJ\tmy · the Buckeyes won 66-59: (UPI)

Feb. 5-Warren local, Home

.,
'·''·
•••'

Fib. I-Trimble, Haml

GIRLS

feb. 4-WIIIston, Home
Feb. 7-Fedtrol Hacking, Away

•

•

·,'

EASTERN
BOYS •

'•

a Southern Conference record
At Hattiesburg, Miss., Daron scored 12 of his ·game-high 19 ••
with . 19 assists for the Bu~ca· Jenkins scored a season-high 25 · points In the second half to keep ~
neers. Calvin Talford :scored 21 points and added acareer·htgh 16 the · Privateers unbeaten in t~e •·
points to pace ETSU, w'hlch rebounds as the Golden Eagles American South Conlerence. ~
Improved to 18-2 overall and 7.·1 . swept Loulsvtlle· this season for . New ·Orleans Is 19-3 overall and :·
In the conference. Jennings the first time. Southern Miss ran 7-0 In the league. The Ragin' :·
broke the assist record of 18 set Its record to 14·2overalland 7·lln Cajuns ·a're 15-7 and 2·5. Dwight •'
by Marshall's Greg White In 1980. the Metro. Louisville tell to 7-11 Myvett and Melvin Simon scored ~
Appalachian State Is 11·9 and 4·4. and 1·7. Clarence Weatherspoon 17 points'each for New Orleans. •
which won for the 15th consecu- ::
added 24 for the Golden Eagles.
At Nashville, Tenn. , LSU cen·
•••
At New Orleans, Tank .Collins tlve time on at home.
ter Sbaq ullle O'Ne~l and Coach
Dale Brown each were whistled
for techlllcal fouls with four
.,
seconds left and Scott Draud hit
,.
the tour free throws to give the
Commodores the , upset. The
PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
.,
score was tled 59-59 when O'Neal
"
was called for a foul on Steve
' '
-· E~I,
. .•,'•
Grant. He argued the call and
drew the technical and Brown
••
was callell for another when he
t
continued to badger the officials.
••
Vanderbilt raised Its record to
•
•
13·7 overall and 7-3 In the SEC.
'
Louisiana State fell 13·6 and &amp;:4.
O'Neal had 21 points and 10
~
'
rebounds.
·'•'
•'•

.

1

Feb. 5-Federal Hocking, Away
Feb. 1-~ Hill, Away

GIRLS

Feb. 4-Hannan Trace, Home
Feb. 7-Galt Hill, HolM

'

JOHN A. WADE, M.D., Inc.

-

NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST

..
:·

..•

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---

•••

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'

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'

•••

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'

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25'~ 27'~ 31~ Jj'~
ow;aw.
or P1wjeetion 1}' ·
-

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DIAiiCI'iAL

SOUTHERN

Nov. 12-NIIIIOnvllle-York ...... Away
Nov. 19-Melge ..................... Away
Nov. 26-North Gallie......... .... Away
Nov. 29-Hennen Trace .......... Away
Dec. 3-Ealtern ................ ... .. Home
Dec. 6-Scluthwaltern ... ......... Home
Dec. 1 0-Kyger CI'Mk ............ ·Away
Dec. 13-Symme Velley ......... Home
Daci. 17-Weterford ............... Horne
Dec. 20-0ek Hill .................. Home
• Jen. 3-North _Gellla ............... Horne
Jen. 10-Hennen Treca .......... Home
Jan. 14-Melgl ...................... Home
Jen. 18-NeiiOnville· York ....... Home
Jan. 17-Eeatern .................... Avyay
Jen. 24-Southweatern .......... Away
Jen. 28-Wetarford, ............... Away
Jen. 31-Kyger Clllllk ............. Home 1
Feb. 4-0ak Hill ..................... Away
Feb. 7-Symma• Valley .......... Away

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Manufltruren

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SOUTHER~
.
Nov. 27-North Oellle ............ Home
Nov. 30-Hannan Trace .......... Home
Dec. 4-Eeltam ..................... Away
·Dec.,. 7-Southwest•n,,,,,,,,,.,,,..Away
Dec. 8-Pelnt Velley ....... ;,. .... Convo
Dec. 14'-K'tgar CI'Mk .......... ,.Home
Dec. 16-Symma•Valley........ Away .
Dec. 21-0ek Hill ..........-........ Away
Dec. 22-Southalltern ........... Home
Dec. 28-Athana, .................... Away
Jan. 4-North Gellia ............... Away
Jen. &amp;-Oalllpolil .......... : ........ Away
Jan.11-Hennen Trace ........... Away
Jen. 18-EIItern .................... Horne
Jen. 22-Revenswood ............ Away
Jan. 25-Southweatern .......... Horne ·
Fab. 1-Kyger Creek ......... ... .... Away
Fab. 8-Symma• Valley .......... Home
Feb. 12-Werran .................... Away
Feb. 15-0ak Hill ................... Home

MEIGS

.

Dec. 1 -Athena ...................... Home

Dec. 4_:Belpre ........................ Away
Dec. 1 1-MIIIer ... ............. : ..... Home
Dec ..14-Vlnton County ......... Home
Dec. 18-Aieunder ............ ; .. Away
Dec. 21-Wellaton ................. Home
Dec. 28-Logen .................... . Away
Jan. 4-Trimble ...................... Away
· Jan. 8-Fadaral Hocking ......... Home
Jen. 11-NeiiOnvllle-York ....... .Away
Jan. 1 &amp;-Belpre ..................... Home
Jen. 22-MIIIer ...................... Away
Jen. 26-VInton County ......... Away
Jan. 29-Aiexandar ............ : ... Home
Feb. 1-Welllton .................... Away
Feb. 2-Athena ...................... Away
Feb. &amp;-Warren ... ........ ........... Home
Feb. 'a-Trimble ...................... Home
Feb. 12.- Faderal Hocking ..... , . Away
Feb. 1&amp;-NIIIsonville-York ....... Home

.

$59.95

CREDIT TEAMS

•

·--;,;,.,..---~BOYS' SCHEDULE~S- - - - - - EASTERN
Nov. 20-MIIIer .............•... ..... Away

Nov. 23-Federai'Hocklng ...... Home
Nov. 27-Kygar C1110k ............ Away
Nov. 30-.,Southwntern •......... Home
DEC. 4-Southern .................. Home
Dec. 7-Symmea Velley .......... Away
Dec:. 14-North Gallle ............ Away
Dec. 1 &amp;-Oak Hill .................. Home
Dec. 18-Waterford .............. . Home
Jan. 4-Kyger Creek ............... Home
Jen. 11-Southwettern .......... Away
Jan. 16-Hannan Trace .. ........ Home
Jan. 18-Southam ............ ..... Away
Jen, 25-Symmea Valley ........ Home ,
Jan. 26-M iller ...................... Hqme
Feb. 1-North Gellla .... ........... Home
Feb. 6-Faderel Hocking ......... Awey
Feb. 8-0ak Hill ..................... Away
Feb.12-Waterford ................ Away
Feb. 16-Hannan trace ........... Away

~,~----~'........GIRLS' SCHEDULES~'----------

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Milwaukee; Wll., wbk:h the Bucb won 120-111.
(UPIJ
•

SOUTHERN
.BOYS
GIRLS

''j'
I

•

Feb. 2-Symmts Valley, HolM
Feb. 12-Worren Loca~ Away

l

SliiPPIIGj!IMIDLIIIII

, ABM LOCK- Mllwaalr.ee'l D•Scilayes (left)
ret• an arm lock from Charlotte'• Kelb' Trlpucka
durtnr the lint quarter of Sunday'• NBA game In

1990 Local Schedule.s

•
••

"WE HAVE HEARINQ AID$'.:

f

THIS.
.WEEK'S
GAMES

OHIO

'",1,

MEIGS

.,

Nov. 19-Southern ................ Home
Nov. 28-Trimbla .. ...... ..... ...... Home
Nov. 29-VInton County ......... Away
Dec. 3-Miller .......... ...... ........ Away
Dec. 8-Ealtarn ..................... Home
Dec. 10-NeiiOnvllle·York .... ,. Away
Dec. 13-Belpre..................... Home
Dec. 17 -Aieunder ............... Home
Dec. 20-Wellaton ................. Awey
Jim. 3-Fedttr~l Hocking ......... Home
Jan. 7-Trimble ...................... Awey
Jan. 10-Vinton County ......... Home
Jen. 14-Sou,hem ........ ......... Away
Jan. 17-MIIIer ...................... Home .
Jan. 21-Eeatern .................... Away ·
Jan. 24-NeiiOnvilla·York ....... Home
Jan. 28-BIIpre ..................... Awey
Jan. 21-Aieunder ................ Awey
Feb. 4-Wellatori ................. ;.. Home
"lib. 7-Faderal Hocking ......... Away

.

EASTERN

Nov. 19-Federal Hocking ..... . Home
Nov. 26-Kyger Creek ............ Home
Nov. 29-Southwaltern ,., ...... Awey
Dee. 3-Southern ................... Awey
Dec. &amp;-Trimble ..................... HolM
Dec. 6-Svmme• Vallay .......... Home
Dec. 8-Malg• ....................... Awey
Dec. 10-North Gellia ... ......... . Home
Dec. 13-Dek Hill .................. Awey
Dec. 20-Hennan Trece .. , ....... Away
Jan. 3-Kyger Creek ............... Away
Jilin. 8-Trimble ...•... .•.•• •..•....•• AWiy
Jen.1 0-Southweltern ........... Home
Jan. 14-Federat Hocking ....... Away
Jen. 17-Southem ................. Home
Jen. 21-Meigl ...................... Home
Jen. 24-Symmea Valley ........ Awey
Jen. 31 -'North Gallia ....,......... Awey
Feb. 4-Hannan Trace ............ Home
Feb. 7-0ak Hill ......... ~ ........... Home

�,,
~-6-The

Daily S8 ttinel

Pomeroy-MklrJ'epOrt, Ohio

Monday, fetJrur( 4, 1991

Letart Falls
students, agea 16-17, for a duration . honor roll
of four or
weeks in the upcom-

Host families needed
The Amaican lntemalional
'(outh Student Excbuae J&gt;rosram
is a non-profit high acliool r&lt;ieip
oxcluinge JX08f8lll in the United
States, Europe IIIII other pans· of
the world.. AIYSEP believes a
p-ester intemational llllderMiding
IS .a:omplisbed 111110111 people IIIII
countries tlirouah cufbril. IBI
home study pograms. It offers
qualified lillldenls 1 clwn to spend
a summer, scmes~t.r or achool year
with a host fanlily in America or
alluad,.

•
American

At present,
bost
families are be~ sought for 25
students from high schOols in
Europe and other fuelgn COIDltries
for the coming achool year.
Students will anive jn the United
States in late August, 8llald the local school and re1m0 home in late
June next year. The students, all
fluent in ~lish, have been
screened by tlicu school counselorS
in their home country and will
receive medical insurance and
'spending money.
.
Host families are also . being
sought for 25 European and foreign
DRIVE UNDERWAY • Witb il goal of
$5,000 voluuteers will begill a door-to-door cam·
paign to collect toads for the American Heart
Association this week. Here Nora Rice, left,
~

I

Mothers who relilm r0 work can
still breastfeed their babies, accml·
ing 10 a retent swvey of S61
employt!l nusing modl(:rs.
The · survey, · done by Kathleen
Auerbach, a sociologist, .lactation
consultant, and La Leche League
leader, asked wO!king mothelll
about problems they encountered
with breastfeeding as weD as
whether . or not ; they would do it
again. Despite many obstacles, the
survey respondents said overwhelmingly that it is possible to
breaslfccd while worting outside
lhe home. Many IIOitd that they
would breadfeed again regardless
of their employment swus.
Most of the problems the women
encountered were similar io those
shared by mothers who are home
with their babies full lime. Fatigue
· headed the list, followed by
problems with finding time 10 express milk and worry aboui milk

Denison UniveiSity sophomore
Nathaniel Karr Beegle, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Theodore Beegle of 259

Dickens
personal
~Ri;:td:,~f ·~~~r
,_
.
f
Syracuse and Mrs. Loreaa Beegle

Faye Die ~ens, an as~late o the of Pomeroy, was recendy named to
. Supply. Dr. Auerbach notes that
many of these problems can be SupcrAmenca S!Ofe m Pomeroy, membership in Denison Univerprevented if a mother is well in- !'as been recognized for o.utstand- sity's chapter of tbe Phi Society
mg performance concenung the academic honorary
formed about breastfccding.
company's
Customer Service
Phi Society V.:as founded at
.The La Leche League meetings
Awaren~
Program.
.
Denison
under the asuspices of the
are one possible souce of both inCandidate:&gt;
.
are
observed.
and
University's
chapler of Phi Beta
formation and support from workev~ua~
w•th
respect
10
friendly
·
Ka.
p
pa
national
honmuy society in
ing breastfeeding mothers. Mothe!ll
~UIDIJ:e,
~e.
JD:Ores"1926.
Denison's
·chaplet of Phi
at group ~gs share breastfccdSlonaiiSm,
efficiei)Cy
use
of
inlerBeta
Kappa
was
the
first chapter 10
1
ing information as weD as ways of
eom
IIIli!
telephone;:
enquette.
.
org&amp;l)ize
a
Phi
Socie.
t
y; 'but the idea
coping with the demands of .
For
her
co,mm•anent
.to
sernce
has
Since
been
adopted
by chapters
motherhood.
~xceUence,
D1c~ns.
received
a
cer·
at
many
other
universities.
It
Anyone interested in · more information on breastfeecling is wel- tificate of apprecli!JOII:. a m'?netary derives its name from the first
come 10 attend and young children ~~;ward" ~ a ~ial ServiCe At· Greek letter of the parent society,
phi (meaning phi1osophia. "the love
are always welcome. La · Leche btude pm.
League of Point Pleasant meets
1
monthly at the Presbyterian
academic exceUence during their ·
Church, Eighth and Main Street.
freshman
year, Phi Society honors
Point Pleasant, W.Va
•
those
who
have taken their first _srep
More infonnation may be obtoward
'elettion
into the parent orUiined by caUing Elaine at .675Post membelll met recendy with · ganization, accordiQg to .Associate
4439, or Angie at 675-5142.
February's roeeting will held parents and students interested in Professor of Religion Joan Novak,
starting a Junior Cadet Explorer faculty adviser.
·
ThUillday at 7 p.m.
PoSL Approximately 12 parents and
20 students were in attendance for a
questioa and answer session conducted by Lisa Roush of the Meigs
County
Sheriff's Depm bnent
We as a nation sounded our vtice
When we cast our ballots and ~lecfed our
Members
present, who wanted to
chol~ .
becom'e active as a post im·
And while there are those whO wUI never
m~ly, voteil to meet every
. fly MARK R. HOROWJTZ .
· agree,
other
Thursday
at
6:30
p.m.
The
For
United Press International
Our democracy Is sun, th~st W&amp;¥ th~ 1
see.
.·
next regular group meeting wiD be
held Feb. 14 at the Meigs County ' There are fre(!uent stories In
Whatever Our feellags, the war has ~n
Court House.
• ·'
' · ·
And thousands of this nation's daughtt:!ris
the media about female business
and !H:Ils
Post members are reminded that ~xecutives. their rise to the top,
registration fees for the year 1991 rand the barriers and obstacles
Are orr In a distant, foreign land
Fighting and ready to take their stand.
in the atnount of $8.50 .are due and l,presented along the way, notably
should be paid at the next meeting. the male of the species. ·
To do the Job they we~ sent there to do
And to do It well, and to see It through.
.All young men · and women of : Moreover, 1t can be difficult for
Meigs County, ages 11-20, and women and men allke who are
Yellow ribbons abound In the air
parents
who want to find out more dependenl on male mentors for
evervwbere
To show tht pr ide and the Jove that we
about
what
Exploring can do, their rise to be able to sustain a
share.
.
should plan 10 attend this meeting.
power base once the mentor has
For those are our slsters and brothers out
The.
meeting
agenda discussion left the compani or moved on to
there.
of visiting other area t;xplorer posts 'support other rising stars.
And our job here Is t o shOw them~ care.
such as · Gallipolis, Madison
Eleanor of Aqultalne 11122·
An~ while we are sorry they had to be sent.
Township
Cadet
Program
and
1204)
was perhaps . the most
We all stand behind them two hundred
Ravenswood. Discussion was held tenacious of .queens. She married
perce-nt.
about attending a BSA Approved her first husband, King Louis VII
And l~t us never forget fQr on~ day, for one
Gun Shoot for Explorer Post sPQn- of France, at the · age of 15,
mlnut~
'
That when Americans tight In a war, trs t(l
sored by the Athens County Shelif- bearing him two daughters.
win lt.
f's DepanmenL Post members also
SO as we- watch anxiously. we walt and we
expressed an interest in touring an
pray
adult or juvenile correctional in·
Its all for thl:'lr safe Home Coming Day!
stitute.
·
Carol,. L. RIJp
The lrick-()ff meeting of the new
More information may be obMeigs
County Golf Club, formerly
Uiined by contacting Lisa Roush at
992-3486 or Thresa M. TYson, JayMar Golf Club, will be held
The honor roll at Eastern High Drummer of ,Meigs County Com- Feb. 10 at the course club house.
School and Junior High for the mon Pleas Court at 992-6784 after All members and potential new
members are urged to attend.
second nine weeks has been an- 5p.m.
nounced.
Seventh grade - Rebecca Evans,
Jennifer Mora, Brandi Reeves, all
A's; Mike Barnett, Brian Bowen,
Jeanette Cline, Melissa Dempsey,
Jessica Frederick, Brian. Hoffman,
Jess1ca Ka!r, Robe:!'\ Laughery,
Robe~ Murphy, Nacole Nelson,
. Conrue Pooler, Hea!b« WeD .J!D.d
Lauren Young. Special recogruuon
goes to Kyle Ord.
Eighth grade; Jamie Ord. J~ca
Radford, all As; Charles BISSt:'ll,
Julie B~n, Ryan Buckley, Jess•~
Cheval.•t;r and Jeff Stethem. Special
DOWNTOWN POMEROY, OUIO
recogru110n goes I? Susan Brewer,
Tara. Congo, Elizabeth Hysell,
UPLN MONDAY Nlt;H 1 1 I t. I' !•,i
Davt~ Johnson, Joe ~hnik,
Heidi Nelson, Amy Redovtan and
Stacey Woolard.
FrCshman class • Andy Wolf, all
A's; Kathy Bernard, Olarlene
TUESDAY
Dailey, Shelly Hendrieb, ~y
Kaylor, Wendy RIK:h, 'JYIOII Rose,
Anita Thomas and Jaime Wilson.
SPECIAL
Sophomcre ca- Jm:my Buck·
ley, Nancy Gaddis, Lisa HolfiiWI,
Nleole Kanawalsty, Kim Michael,
Matt Michael, Karen Moms, Carrie
Morrisey, Tracy Murphy, Jennifei
Proffitt, Aubrey West and Bobbi
White.

Lands

.

.

God will be wiih you and in your
hands,

The Gulf War what a challenge
life it has been
Exposure of. die war ll!id blood
shed within,
Wat a profound, affection and
devotions
With Saddam. Hussein and his
motions,
Yes they are fighting day and
night
It's sad, sorrow and a bloocJy
sight,
· They are fighting for our eountry
and there's a lot of hailed and pain
Alot has come back, some missing after Hussein ~ shot there
plane,
They fight in terrorism and fear
Don't have time to shed a tear.
Yes our people

. De9Cft Storm

are

fighting at

The nights over there is sure not

warm,

But they go on fighting and take
it with stride
Wilh the COUISC, they take it with
pride,
J
All of them fighting and wOIIcing
hard
Th save our countty 1 know they
get very tired,
So many fighting on land, sea,
air so high
·
Leaving there loved ones behind
and hate to say Good Bye,
.
Men in the Gulf is captive, missile, explosions, blood and dealh
Just watching Desen S101111 almost takes your breath,
· So just wishing war in lhe Gulf
would cease
.J-et's all pray to the Good Lord
for peace,
So he can bring you all back safe
and sound
Be on yotJr way 10 your loved
ones and honieward bound,
With all the days passed and
years
.
·
· Yes this is bad for the's alot of
sorrow
and a lot of tears.
Written alld Submitted by
Wanda a..dotpb
HOME COMING DAY

j

I
I

~~~~~f{.?"• ukerl me. "What 11 your
My r.,ply WQ\IId ha"" been. " Ito not our
warto be louaht.'"

No•onodld,- and maybothoy~rerlght.
Bul 1 11111 don' t - that this wu our llaht.
One group says, " We must take a stand
to aa~ our ou - ~n though 1t1 their
land.''

Othen say, ' 'Thil war 11 fOr humanlty•s
take."

Even thou&amp;h a war eountiNI mot'f lives

will take.
And

I V~

never understood what Jlwt u

the rtpt
To dictate t oothtn how Iolive or tottahl.
But all of this can waif tUJ II(IIM tuture
date.
For nCM' the ''Whys' · a rt eattrely too late.

Women hang
onto top roles

HlllarY

Note to veterans
Vererans iii need of financial as·
sistance for tranSJ101181ion 10 a V.A,
Medical Center should apply at the
Veteram Service Office · at 114
Mulberry Ave. in Pomtroy at least'
one week prior 10 their appoint·
ment. Any new applicant will need
10 bring a copy of their discharge
from militaiy service (DD-214).

Beegle, a graduate of Worthington High School and a physics
major at Denison, is a member of
the Honors Program and is a
Dean's list sllldenL He also plays
football and is a member of the
Beta Theta Phi fralemity.

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.. ·. 1·-- .- ......, ,.

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·· ·- · · - --~.

· -·· ··· ~- -

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~.r-rr~ -

-·--

I ~-

• --Iiiii

.

• .3.1'-«*HP"-

• c-•IOOIIIorage

-~--bMIIed
ec~ge~ntnoon - .-

Save s7o

NIGHT ,

Junior class • Sieve Barnett, Tina
COIUIOUy, Pat Gibbs, Lee Gillilan,
Tony Grate, David Gumpf, Danny
Lawrence, Eli'lllwJI Lawson, 'lbny
Maxey, Patty I'll SOIII, Julie Riflle,
Keith Spmcer, Chrissy Summers,
Amy Wollllld Sherri Wolf.
Senior clasa • Andrea Clet•nct all
'
As; Alysaa Eddy, Billy JohnJon,
Mary Ann Kibble and Leigh Ann
Redovian.

.

(Dining loom Onlyl

ONlY

F~l

JUST

Served with whipped potitt-. chicken
grevy, cole alew, hot roll end lluttar.
Sorry, no aubetlt- ••cept ......,age
with eddltlonel prtcea.

NOW FEATURING HOMEMADE DINNER ROLL

.. (

.

f

PH. 991·5432

YliSTAUIANT
PO•IOY, OH.

, ....,,... llentiNIIr Fried Chlck111

royalty. "Thhe . couple have
reached an accommodation .
Their affection now Is channeled ·
through their chlidren."

•••

0,........ ..

1111• •1.

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• Egau eta~. top.ftll bag
• -eclge-..goni&gt;OIII!Idls
• lnct'

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toot-

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Hoover Bags llo
Balta Harel

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• Easily emptlea dust
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• Full·width agitator
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• Deluxe ruQ and floor
nozzle
• Easy.empty. see·thru
dirt Cup
• eaoe cleaning on

r

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0 - - ....
o.4.0'-«*lf"-

0

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~··rma~c· ftoiM wtth
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JEWELRY '&amp; RADIO SHACK

MIDDUPOil

HEART

ILB. ASST.
CHOCOLATES

~89c

SNICKERS, MILKY
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8.2 OZ.

KING
SIZE

f99

992·1635

RACINE • The Racine Village
Council will meet Monday at 7
· p.m. in Council Chambers at Star
MiDPark.

. LETAKI' - The Letan ToWnship
Trustees will meet Monday at 6
p.m. at the office building.

township office. Equipment pur·
chases will be discussed.

MIDDLEPORT - The Middleport Masonic Lodge No. 363 F
&amp; AM will meet Tuesday at 7:30
p.m. Work in the E.A. degree.
Refreshments will be served.

River

RACINE •
Valley Her·
balists will meet Tuesday, 7 p.m., at
l,hc borne of Janet Theisa near
Racine. Anyone wishing 10 join the
~ for the new year, beginning
m March, should contact Connie
HiD 2474035 or 992·7669.

MIDDLEPORT - The Middleport Garden Club will bave 1m .
open meeting on Monday at 7:30
POMEROY - The Past Malrorls
p.m. at the Middlepon Plestlytt:rila of Evangeline Chapter will meet
Church. A slide pogram oa 4owers Tuesday at the home of Katluyn
and plants of 1bailand and In· . Knight at 7:30 p.m.
· donesia ~I be presented by Rev.
POMEROY • The Pomeroy
O'Quin Kelly.
Chapter No. 186 Order of the
CHESHIRE -·Women Alive will Eastern Sl&amp;r will be held Tuesday at
mee1 Monday ll 7 p.m. at the 7:30 pm. Membem are 10 WC!II'
·
.
Kyger Creek Clubhouse. There will chapter dresles.
WEDNESDAY
be a mini-cake . deCorating
demonstration. There will also be a
POMEROY - The Salisbury
devotional . speaker. There will be Township Trustees will meet Wed·
refreshments and salad bar.
nesday ll 7:30 p.m. 11 the home or
the clerk, Sarah Gibbs, Ball Run
COLUMBiA TOWNSHIP - Road.
Board of WlteeS of Columbia
MIDDLEPORT • Meigs Junior
Township will meet Monday at
High wiD have a donkey basketball
7;30 p.m. at the fire station.
game on Wednesday at 7 pm.
POMEROY • Meigs Local Band
POMEROY • The Middleport
Boostelll will meet Monday at 7
p.m. in the high school band room. Literat)' Club will meet Wednesday
Parents are urged to aaend to final- at · 1:30 p.m. at Pomeroy·
ize plans for the chicken noodle Americare. Btoilla euseu will be
dinner which will be hel(l Thursday i1ie hosless. ''The Empom's W'Uiding Sheet" will be reviewed. RoU
at the high school. ·
I
call will be "A custom of the MidRACINE • The Racine Outpler dkBasL"
No. 134. Qrder.of the Bastem Sw,
will Jlleet Mllttd!~ 7:30pm.
CHESTER· Tho ClleiW Garden
fUBSDAY
Club will meet Wedneaday at 8
REEDSVILLB • The Olive pm. at Jbe home of Maurita Miller.
lbwnship 1\i"t P will meet Memben bring articles for-a misTuesdaY at 6:30 p.m. It the cellaneous auction.

--

·-- .... --

Rocot~-.

Mldd1tport, Ohio, wiH IHt rt·
tt the office of the
Mtlga Cou!lly Comml-n·
.,., Melgo County Court·
houtt, Perneroy,
Ohio
41711 ,.. .. 2:00 .PM (loCal
ti!Ml on FtbNery 'Z'/, 1111.
.,d fllen tt Mid office pub- ·
llcly op- enri!Nd •ud.
Work coortrtd II¥ the Controct Docurntntolncludt tht
llillowln1 llemo for which
bldt wMI bt ocoepltd: ADDI·
TION TO AND RENOVATION OF THE MEIGS
COUNTY DEPARTMENT
OF HUMAN SERVICES.
A new bulldlllfl oddltlon to

tilt ul8ttng Deptrtrntnt of
Humtn llervlcel Willi lntt·
rlor ..,avatlont to thrr alit·
lnt bulldlnt togothtr with
tile •OMMrY tpptrtelntno

.......
._rote ContriCII For:
1. Oentrtl. Arclolttct' . . .

tlrntM tlll,ll2.00. ,
z. Electrtcel. Archit..,.' •
Eltl- .t1ZI,I12.00.

c

99
99c

2

FOR

·

BARBASOL
SHAVING CREAM

VASELINE .
INTENSIVE CARE
LOTION
IOOZ. SIZE

199

IIOZ.

.

MENNEN
SPEEDSncK

MoTRINIB
TABLETS

ANTI-PI!RSI'IRANT

179

2.25~Z

OR CAPLETS
50'S

ULTRA SLIIII•FAST
SINGLE·SERVE
PKG. OFBOR
WATER·MIXABL.E
PKG. OF6
.

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399

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20'S :

VISINE EYE DROPS

199

I~OZ.
METAMUCIL
LAXATIVE

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REG. 21 OZ. OR SUGAR·FREE
REG. 11.1
OR ORANGE ·
12.90Z.

oz.·

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IDCd811 11171

299

COLGATE
TOOTHPASTE

'

899

W~F

·

249
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• SENIOR CITIZENS •

• ·.PRESCRIPTIONS •

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Yours is tht most importtmt
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COKE

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Ettill'lllte '11.110.00.

The Cont- Docunwntt

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Avtnue, .,.,......,,.,

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tht Mei11t County Depert·

-of

ZACHARY
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BOZ.

499

.' MARRIAGE IN A ROYAL
RUT: A palace source says the·
"I got calls from people all
marriage of Prince Charles and ·
over
the country saying there
Prlnceq Diana Is a loveless one.
DUNCAN'S WORKOUT:
were
a
lot of things on the tape
"I believe that the marriage .Is Sudy Duucaa has come up with ·
their
doctors
never told t~em,"
stone dead,,. the source told an exercise video lor couch
he
said.
People magazine.
. potatoes. "It's no·lmpact," she
"Making Room for Baby" was
:· "I don't thlnlc there ts anlmos· says. -"What It does · Is ease
recently
dubbed In Spanish and is ·
lty between .them - It's wor!e arthritic Joints and reduce stress
now
available
In South America.
than that. T~tey just don't care for people whose Idea of exercise
.
David
said
It
could
be available .
anymore. It's just Indifference.'' Is readlngabookorpourtngacup
In
Europe
soon
.
Aath.ny Holden, Author of two Of cottee." Duncan's workout
books on Charles, says Brltahi's . takesonlyflvemtnutesadayand
future king has been behaving · she·says u:s a good starling point · In addition to his private
strangely In recent years. "He for people who want to move on to practice, David Is assistant
withdrew from society for an tougher video exercise pro- clinical professor at the
abnormally. long time," Holden grains. "People shouldn't rush Unverslty of California at
S&amp;ys. ''What Charles has done Into a .Jaae Fonda or Raquel Irvine and has been featured on
amounts to an Indifference to Welch workout," she says. "It's nationally televised talk shows
, public opinion that 1 regard as a great beginning for older Including KABC-TV's Home
irresponsible. Politicians have women whohopetodotheAnaela Show.
lost their careers for Jess." Lansbury workout." As for her·
Despite It all, no one expects 8 self, Duncan lifts weights, .runs
royal divorce. "Legal and ethical and works out with a personal
Public Notice
quesdons· aside, I don't think he · tra1ner three times a week. On
wants a divorce," says Brian olf-days she ticks with · her
. ADVERTISEMENT FOR
1108 .
Hoey. who also writes a bout five· minute workout.
•-•••• .....,. blrl8 lor
1ht conotruotlon Or en eddl·
tlcn to ond tile - t l o n of
MONDAY
SYRACUSE - The Sutton
Township Trustees will meet Mon·
day at 7:30 p.m. in the Syracuse
Municipal Building.

a IS

. FARLEY'S
JUJU
HEARTS

LACE EDGE

nant women. In It, David walks
mothers·to-be through the stages
Qf pregnancy, labor imd delivery. ·
.The video offers expectant
mothers some do's and don'ts
and explains various procedures
such as ultrasound and amniOr
centesis, a surgical technique
used to detect genetic defects or .
disease In the unborn chtld.
Tile tape was modeled after a
homemade video David provided
for expectant mothers under his
care.
"I had so much Information to
give my clients, so I made a
homemade tape they could take
home. They liked It and sug· gested I do something profes·
slonal," David said : , ·
Response to the tape has been
encouraging.

.

'

Say that you care with Valentine
gifts and greetings from Rite Aid!

••Ibbom

Calendar

II{

Valentine's Day
sentiments come in all
shapes &amp;t sizes

..

SAVE

••allfll
Modll Mtl1 tOO

Sweeton
Rite Aid

knew

.By Untied Press .lnlernattomil

EHS honor roll

ANOERSONIS

'

The boy's father, Garry Boy·
NAPOLEON, Ohio (UPIJ - A
S.year-old boy Is being credited Ian, was transported 10 an'are.a
with making a life-saving call to hospital by the N•poleon Rescue
a re~ue squad after his fa ther Squad and released later that
night.
suffered 'an lnaulln reaction.
Josh's mother was at work
Josh Boylan dlall!ll .911 and
summoned an ambulance Friday when the father became IU. ·
night, calmly telling a dispatcher
that his tather bad an insulin
The Penian Gulf Is 88,800 1111uare
reaction and needed help, authqr·
mllea and 321 feet (leep.
Illes said.

.._

""*'

--People in the .news·-.·- -

HOOVEAo e-.··Limitad Edilion

Kick-off meeting set

UNTIL 8:00 P.M.
AT

Ann
Landers
... ...............
,._"'
r..r...... .,...,....

' ~ear ~u Lallden: 1 know life. I JP81iject ... 1 -'1 llooe tQday. S~. 1 che~ltupdoesn't
you ve wna. a lnt about baled wliell1 met Giber JOIIIIIPJa.ID 1111 gUIIWIIee anytltinJ. Bver;one has
. ANNLANDU9
Wlllllal, but~pett•lle-'t~WR ation. No one WOIIld have gueued
heard of 1 person who left the
,..~
,._ leal-age Jirls caa be bBtla1!d. such 1 lhinll - PI on in my ·doclol's otrJCC with 1 clean bill of
100.
.
•
IU)IIJOit ·poUp wbo julllib
' I began daling 1 lmif'IC·loatina me. - WCKY TO BB OtrrOfl rr
health IDd dlopped dead oa the
guy when I
16.
He
whal about the people aNl lraitdli!lg} to: TetiiS, c/o AM
~
wu ftlllly
DEAR LUCKY: 11tia ilnot 1111 wbose But
phyaicel
pro
. blem1 were
l.,mrMrs, P.O. Bm: 11562, Clricago,
cool llld had his own car. A r- flntlcar:r rw prinled rram a leell·
·
laler'II wu ICIIed to deaJh of him. 1 ager who wu baiiOred by 11u caught in lime? You rarely bear IU. 6061 UJS62. (Ill Clllllldil, send
didn dare toll my family for fear boyfricad. My advice baa been Ill about them becw•r they are liYiag $4.45.)
the:Y'd oWe me SlOp ICCin&amp; him IIIII 8« 011111 once. No 1UY il wonb iL
happy' healthy lives. .
There is IIQ 'll'k-'1Alp11Cl11f011p
It's nsclea 10 look back, but we
I didn't want 10. Ifl brote ane ofhia
'!fles, he would beat me up. Once, for baamd 1ee11-1ge pta, but they can't help but believe lhal if Dad
when I. won: !"Y jeans 100 tight can call the Don uM: Violmce Hot- had gone for regular checkups he
. (~g 10h1m) be locked me in line for help. The number ia 1..&amp;00- . couldha~ hadmny mue yean of
thetrualtofhiscar. I lbought I would 33J.SAFE.
good health arid luipplac8s. - R.W.
~~· 10 !Ieath. It was 1 horribtC
De.- AD' 1.aDclen: My falher IN WARREN, MICH.
expencnce:
.
. died on Monday. His visit to the
DEAR R.W.: Of course an
My fam•ly
nothing of the eaae~ge11cy .room wu the flnl tii.Ae annual checkup is time&lt;OIISUIIIing.
1\ell he put me through. He made •
he had seen 1 doctor in more t1w1 inc:onvmient llld bochenome but it's
e_lfort 10 put the bruiaes where no 2.S yean. He was 56 and died from the best inW~~~nent I know of.IO hrAid
one ~d see lhem. On the rare a massive hellt enacJr
'
off aerious IIOIIble IIIII ensure ~
occ;8Sion when they were visible
Aan, for yan family 11111 friends of mind. The time 10 • 1 cloc:lor il
(lilre a black eye), I would leU people had been alter Dad to go to the when you 8i'c feeling weU. Tltanks
lhad had an accident.
doctor for 1 limple clledmp. lfil. ·· for reminding us.
·,
I .was the ideal child -- I had stoc:t: Jqlly was. "If it ain't brote
Gem of the Day. There was an
straight As, got home on time, did ~Y lry to fix it?" He never· imq~ old woman who. lived in alhoe, she
• aD my household chores and .IJCver Ined what it would do 10 his wife., had so 111811y chddR!II she ran out of
gave, my parents any trouble. II and family when he finally "broke." .names to call her husband.
wasn I unbl I ltlempted suicide at - If any of your readers • them· ··
·
·
· .
the age · of I~ and then 101 iiOiiiC selves in.this letter, it's time 10 do
Do ypu 1um questliJIIS about sa•
great counselmg, that I began to something about iL If the one you
but 110 OM w ralk to? AM Lalukrs'
understand .how he had taken eon- love ius
as Dad-. keep boolcfet, "Su Olld tM Tee11-Ager."
!'01 of my life. .
nagging. Maybe you'll gc:t through
is frwrk twJ to the poilll. Send a
Aan, please prillt this lcuer and SOillebow and savcalife.
:self-addressed, l011g, busiltus-siu
alert leen-age girls and their perents
And if you happen 10 be the erwtlope twJ a check or rr!DMJ or·
1!1 this potentially dangerous situ- Sblbbom one, make an appointmeot tier for $3.65 (tlri.r btcludu postag~
EUlER'S

~. "It's quite IroniC. I alway's used
LOS ANGELES (UPI) - As
to
llulgh about It, but I found
an obstetrician, Dave David Is
myseltsleeplng
more hours·and I ·
u~d to hearing expectant
tended to eat more," said David,
woth(!rs talk about inonijng
39, who practices out of Newpori
sickness, lnsomnta· and bizarre
Beach and Laguna lfllls.
fOod cravings.
It Is among the more sgrprls·
When David's patients re·
ported their busbands·experienc· Ing things David has came to
know since devoting his practice .
lng the same symptoms, the good
to the medical needs of women.
doctor was a btl skepdcal.
David Is the · producer of
That changed when David's
wife became pregnant with their "Making Room For Baby," a
first child earlier lhls year. videotape that became a national
During the pregnancy, David bestseller soon after Its release In
found he tired easily and often. 1990 . •
The video features David offer·
He slept poorly and gained
, In~ practical guidelines for preg·
weight.

WIN! aneor:u • ..,;.d p,.., .

1

SHOP MONDAY NIGHT

6-year-old calls .911 for father

His medical bag is delivering kabys

~pho= · wt!Y ~:::

Junior cadet
explorers begin

Poet's Corner
DesenStorm
Flying high across the Sea and

year with a E~ family or 10
participate in a four or six week
family stay abrolld in the summer.
Students. screened by i\IYSEP
schOOl couilseloi• and educators in
the local 11Chool6. Candidates who
have evidence of IQalllrity, superior
character and know ledge of English
and a foreign languag
. e can be
finalists and become AIYSEP
students. .
Interested students and families
should contact the AIYSEP Interna·
tiona! HeadqiJIII1ers: Office of the
Direclllr, 200 Round Hill Road,
Tiburon, Calif. 94920 or caD 1-soo; .
347-7575..

Battery can include teenagers ···

The honor roll for Letart Falls'
Elementary has been~First glllde - Janet Craig, Robert
Forrester, Robena Fonesler, Lori ·.
SaYJC, Crystal South, Jan Wiae and
Nichole Wolfe.
Second gl8de - James AUey, Karl
Cummins, Holly Hannan, Garret
I(lscr, Jessica Nance and Fallon
Rousb. .
ThUd grade • Jessica Alley, Alex
Chaffee, Alex Dowler, Brawn
Herman, Autumn Hill, ChrislDpher
Jones and Amanda Spaun.
.
FOUith grade - Jane Hill, Mike
Johnson. Jertl!iflll'- Moms. Jody
Wolfe, Rebecca Wcilfe.
.
Fifth lll'llde • Amber Aikins •
Dean Hilf, Jennifel' Roush,
Turley, Ranetta Wheeler. .
Sixth grade -.Trudy Juslis, Brian
Kimes, Jeremy Lyons, Dee Jay
Richards, Adam Roush, Kimberly
Roush, Jessica Sayre, Lcira SaYJC,
Vanessa ShJI(er and MicheUc
Snider. .

~EP is also aeeking
American High School Studellts,
ages 15-19, who would like 10
spend a high school semester or

Beegle receives membership

· p~ts a worker's packet to Lois McElhinney,
Middleport co-cbairnlan. Nora and Denver Rice, ·
.~~~ured, are members or the Meigs County

·IAL.ache League meets .

six

illjl summet. American families
WIIh small chiidren are welcome 10
participale in both JliOSIIIIIS. AU
families hosting a student for the
summer, semestet and year can
deduct $SO a month for income lax

The Deily Sentinel- Page 7

Pom•oy-Mkldhport. Otio

Monday. February 4, 1991

�..

.

...,_.,_

•

1ft; 1 ' 8-lhe o.tY Sentinel

Pomeroy-MkH'epo~t.

Monday.

I

-

NATIONAL
BOY SCOUTS
WEEK
FEBRUARY
3-10

•
18

Classi

CELEBRATING
(

OUR

•

POUCif.S
.
"Ads outsteht Me1gs, Gell1a or Mason counti• 1nus1 be

.,..d.

.

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

.
$4.00
te.OO
S9.00
$13.00 .
. ' 11 .30 / day

15
16
15
15
15

1

3
6

. to·
Monthly

o~,,

Rete

Wordl

Days

Hi Words
.20
. 30
.42
.60
.05 / day

Ratnaro fof conwauweruns. brokenupd-ws w.n bech•ged
for eKh d., u. 181Nratelds.

pte·

'Rttt:IIWtl $ .50 d•scounl -for adf .-id 1n Mlvance.
·free ads
Giveaway a11d fovnd ads under 15 Words w1ll btl

~ llllcrun CP. ments
31
32

3&amp;

'

p~cud 1n TheO;a1~

"A chalidlod a dveniacm•'"n

S••111nllll• ·

GaUia County

Arn Co ... 614

w111 ahu appeiN .. , thtt Pt PleHunt Reg•st~i ~111d the Gall
polls.O.;uly T11bune. ru •c:hmg O\'Vf l8. Ooo hontd

446
·J67
388
245
251
643

DAY BEFORE PU,8 liCATt0N
11 ,gg A .M . S~TURO.t.Y
' 2 ·00 P .M ., MONOAV
·
2 '00 P.M . TUESO ...Y__,
Z .OO PM . WEDNfSDAY
2 '00 PM . THURSO~V
2 QO P M . FRIO"'I'

COPY OEAOLINE
MOND~Y PAPER
TUESDAY PAPER
WEDNESDAY PAPER
THURSDAY P.t.PER

tHIUAY PAPER
SUNDAY PAPER

.

followilll{ I t•lt'llhclm• t•xdwn~c·s-...

clau•liud diSI)Iilv . Busihun C•d aitd IUU!it nOIICH)

Ct:pt

379

Mt1gt Counly ,

Mason Co .. WV

, Area 'Code 614

Artt a c;u,de 304

Qallpolia
Ch•hir•
Vmtun
Aiel Grande
Gup.n Oiat.
Arabia Oi.-

912 M•dd•..,ort

· Pom•ov

981 Ch••r
843 Ponlancl
247 letllf1 fall•

941 Aacil1e
742 Aut'-d

w.....

·-""

St:rvr1.es
11
1,2

Help W11n•
Situatton Wanled

1J

lniUIIIICe

14
15
16
17
18

Butln•s Tr&lt;~im ng,
Schools &amp; lnsuuct~em
Radio. TV a. CB Rcplur
MllcellanYGus
WantedTo Oo

196 let.,,

21
22

Rusin•• Opportunity
Monll'f lo Loan

937 Buttllo

23

Prot•tienal

167 Coolville

Rell Esllte Wanted

Tr~nsportation

Houses tor Rent

4 2 MoiMie Homes lot A~:~11
43 Farma lOt Rent
f4 . A p111""ent fo r Ru,l1
45 Furnished Rooms.
46 ·space tor Rent
47

Wanted to Rant

48
49

Equipment t o r Runt
Fo•le•e

51

Hou ..hold Goods

71

1-

M o tou:yc;:1•
Bu•ts &amp; M~:~ton toi Siil e
Auto P.,u &amp; Acc•50f•Oii
17 Auto RepiMI'
78 C.•nptng Equ1pmunt
79 C•mp.. a &amp; Motor Horntts

7&amp;
1&amp;

Serv1ces
81

Fnu11 •

69

For Sale or Tracte

Homelntprowtment _,

Plumbtn~ &amp; Heamu ·
E-u:w11 ing
Electucal lo Re tngH!'•t1on
Gun•al H•uhng
86 Mobile Humo AttPIIf
17 Upholstery

12
8)
84
85

Vegt~tabe•

58

Situ .

AUIOt lot

72 Trudu tot hie
73 ..,..,, &amp; 4 wo·s

62 - SporUng Goods
53 Ant1q1.1et
54 M is c. Mirchand.se
55 · Building Suppliea
56 Pet t lor Sale
57 Mu• cll lnauumenu

s ... ~ .Ct!S

flrm Equ.,mont
Want t d 1o Buy
ltvestock •
Hay &amp; Gnun

65 · S•• • Feml1zer

Merchandise

675 Pt Ple•Mnt .
458 leon
57&amp; ~pte Grove
773 Mason
882 PWw Hi!ven

61 62
63
64

1;111'1

E111ployment

c·twt•r rill'

•

35 Lou• Acre...

41

Cl~ifit•tllw~t·s

Hon1111 liM' S.ae
Mobile Homes tOr S'illltt

33 F.-tmt lor Sale
3' 8us•n•n Bulldtngs

run 3 d., s a1 no ch•ge.

'7 pcunt kn• typtr only uMd
_ -.
.
"Sent•• lit IS 1101 nisponslbl*'tot 4Ift OII attVr tint .tll'f' . ·iChttdl
tor ttrrors1''" d~ ad nmt"' PIIM'fl . C011ll botort 2 .00 p .n••
rt~ illtm publrcalion lo mHe c:::orrectton
"Adt that"",." be ~d 1n Ml\lilnc~ •"
Ciltd o1 Tbanklli
Happy Ads
In Mumoo•n
YiWd Sah~

~tJil',,llt!S
1'. l: 11 sl.t!.k

Fttrn 1

Aeol Estate

1 Card of Th.nks
2 In Merli01y
J Annouc:..,.ents
4 G iweaway
5 Happy Ads
6 Loll 1nd found.
'J Y•d S81elpa•d 1n alhance)
8 Pub11c Slle &amp; Auc:llon
9 W-'1..t to Bur

'Puc:w of ad fOI all cap~tati•III!Js 11 doublu P'•ett ot ad cos.l

•-·

•

RATES

TO PlACE AN AD CAll 992-2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY I A.M. to 5 P.M.
I A.M. until ,-.DON SATURDAY .
. CLO$ED SUNDAY

8lst YEAR!

Ohio

---~---~~--~---~---P.==j~~~~~~~
~~==:r==j~~~llc~N~~~Ice~==r=~P~ub~llc~~~~ce~==r===P~u~b~ll~c~N~~~ka~==r=~P~u~b~ll~c~Nm~ka~==rllill~~::~•::::~::~~
...
I.
u
81 n e 8 8 ~
s
..

Ohlo, wllo .... lnllltuted I
proo1ulng In f t C-mon
...... Court of
Molgo
CO&lt;tnty, Ohio. 10 opproprl·

IN THE COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS OF
MIIGI COUNTY. OHIO
. _... I. Hunt

== ~hro-""""otiO"

:-rlbed-..!:...r.0':~hl:=:

o.v.....

VI.
Unk- Holn,
~-. Admlnlobilaro,
or Atolgns Dl theE- Dl
Mollie Wl!liemo. Do:oo~.
ot el.
DEFENDANTS
CoM No. .80·CV·Z811
AFFIDAVIT

noy a-···

Scouts are
-

Scouts Of All Ages Are
The Pride Of Our
Community.

4

.This Page Sponsored By
These many Fine·
Businesse'S.

.

'

"2-6617

Rloherd A. 8zllo1JYI,
AMIIIMI Attolnoy Generol
Sworn to - . . me ond
..-bod In my ..........
this 13th
of Deember,
1tlo.
Amy R. G!&gt;ldotoln, Eoq.
Notory Public, IIIII of Ohio
LEGAL NOTICE
FOR PUBLICATION
Unknown Holro, Dtvt-o.
~-. Admlrrltlnttoro.
or Asolgno of the E - of
. Mollie Wllllems. Doo""n1,
•d Unknown Holn. 0...·
•-•· Exocutore, Ad ministr8ton or Alllano-DI thll Es·
1ote of Mnie AcloH Royllor, ·
o-tod, end Unknown
Heirs. Dov'-. l!xocutoro.
' PubliC N~l~ '
Admlnlotrotors, or Aulgno
D1 thtr Eototo of Acloll Royo· FINANCIAL REPORT OF
tor. Doonud. will ~noTOWNIHlPI
thtrt thor ..... ....,
Far Flocel Yoor Entllng
oueclbythoDirectorofTron·
Deoember 31.11110
oportt*n of tho ltoto of
Rl)nANO TOWNSHIP

.y

HONE.

Eighteen ~Peop/s Who CRM.
BANK ONE, A THEN$, NAtA

AIINtm. Ol1lo

PRESCRIPTION SHOP

DAIRY QUEEN

Oairt~

Queen

WDDLEPORT, OliO

992-6669

POMEROY, OHIO

992-2174'

VELY TRACTOR

GRAVELY
SYSTEM

992-3322 .

MIDDLEPORT, 0110_

992-2975 .
POlliiOI, OliO

1burBankjYrJ+.. .
Fo J Farmers

I·

Bank

~ ~ ~-

-4F

"Alf7 1)11 7H11 CA- r.AIIf
Mombw FDIC

DOWNING-CHILDS ,
MULLEN-MUSSER INSURANCE

·POMEROY, OHIO

992-2342

~

l'aiiOY, OliO

H2-2U6
915-3315

IUI'PIIS rlAINS, OHIO

MEMBER FDIC

SWISHER-LOHSE PHARMACY
992-2955

ADOLPH'S DAIRY VALLEY

POMEROY, OHIO

POMEROY, OHIO.

992-2556

CHESTER, OHIO

992-2115

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

I

MIDDLEPORT, OliO

THE QUALITY PRINT SHOP

VETERANS MEMORIAL
HOSPITAL

.DDLEPOIT, OliO

'

'

I

\

I

,, '

1"1

992-5432

POMEROY, OHIO

MIDDLEORT TROPHIES &amp;TE·ES
992-6121

IIIDDLEPORT, OHIO

INGELS FURNITURE and
JEWELRY
WDDLEPORT, OliO

992-2635

992-2121 :

POMEROY, OliO

GAWPOUS ·
OHIO

992-2057

I

•

VALENTINE'S DAY SPECIAL
VERA'S NATURAL IMAGES
6 Martin St.. Mason. WV.
$5.00 OFF PERMS Feb. 1-9

304-773-5937
MIDDLEPORT'S
CANDLELIGHT SERVICE
FEB. 14 - 7:00 P.M.
AT CITY HALL
Brin Your Own Candle
LEGION VALENTINE DANCE
•. FEB. 8 - 8 to 12
COUNTRY DELIGHTS
CALL 992-7627

POMEROY, OHIO

'

I

111-

MIDDLEPORT FtRE
DEPARTMENT
Monday Nights 7:00P.M.
SUPPORT MEETINGS
THURSDAYS - 7:00 P.M.
Legion
Middleport

2

rn Memory

RIDENOUR SUPPLY
915-3301

•

CHESTER, OliO

MIDDlEPORT~

..

..;......:.;;.-..;....
'
'I

l

A PUNCH!•

Roco St., Middleport, Ohio, r:========-rr=======~
lor the following oxctoo It
1810 ltogro.. llntomo·
tlonal Horv-r triple combinotlon .fiN ........ Pump
coptcity: 760 BPM. Tonk
coptcity: IIOOgollons. $orne
~ulpment Included. Minimum bid: *'0.000.
111411 Seogrovo 100 OPM
open cob llro englno. ....
fl&gt;rod ln. 181&amp;.
For comploto equipment
lloto or more lnlonnotlon,
contoct:ChlotJotiDorotet
1-814·192·7332 ""1-1114982-7388 .
Th VIII ogo rooervoo tho
riiJhl to roject MY or all bldt
ond to wolvo ony lnformolltiel In r.::~::~ Meyor
Vlllege of Middleport
1214. 11, 2tc

..___

...._..__

ARr·
frte pickup ond

dtlit~ry

-Room &amp;ddlrion1
-ounoi worto
- Eioctrlcol end Plu•nbt"tr,'l
- c....,..o work
- Raollno

_,_. btwlol

Pointing
.jFREE EITIMATESI

YOU

andMicldltportcity

Y.(.
NG
992·6215

limits.
WE AL·S O SERVICE
CHAIN SAWS

•lnWGIY.
.,

Ohio

DAVE'S SMALL

ENGINE REPAII
25 •• West

to.:.!-'

-

St.

PONNJ Oh

PH.

QtQ'!ilt~''to•',,

BISSELL &amp;
CONSTIUCTION

ea.,...

lllew Ho-·

. _.....,

-~~­

HOUSES•LOTSIIFARMI
COMMERCIAL
We Need Uotlnp!
11·5'10.1111

J&amp;L
....

INSULATION
•VInyl Siding

'•

SUMNER ROAD - CHESTER -Owner wanls toseii"NOW".
counlry home, large living room, stone fireplac., 4
bedrooms, 2 baths, 2 car garage, large deck. 24'x24' , on approx. 1.485 acres. All in excellenl condition. Call for your ap·
poinlmenl!
·

•Replecement
Wlndowa
oRoof1119
•Insulation

JAMES DISEE
992·2772 or
742-2251

6 3t Bryan Ploca
Middleport. Ohio
11·14-lfn

Ctl4tlllt

SIGNS

ROUT£ 7 - NEW IODULA!I- This
home. II! baths, carpeled, insulated,
large Ieveii acre lot. Ea; tern Districi.ASIHNCf i4~(9rio:OO:
NEW LISTING - POMEROY- Thts neal home is ready for
immediate occupancy. 3 bedrooms, large lot and many olher
fealures, and_it's only $11,500.00.

Compare
FrH Estl111ates

Stop &amp;

'"TUinu: wRc '·" r

by ttdc HIDitlttlf

8~~ -

985·4473
667·6179
.USID APPUAIIaS :
HDATWAIIAm •
WASIIIIS-$100.,
:
DI!Yfl-$ .. up
•
miiDIUTOIS-$100 up :

IAIIIIES-&amp;os-lllr.-$125
FIIUIIS-$115 up
1100 DVIIH-$79 "'

10/30fl9"

BI$SELL ·
- BUILDERS .

CUSTOM IUILT • :
HOMlS &amp; GARAGES~ ·

.

Pric"''

Pl. 949-2101 :
or 1... 949-2160 :
Day or_flight :
NO SUNDAr CALlS :

.'

..

,•

ol Ml~fi,.H ·

..•.,_.
___

213 ........

Hend Tufting
Cuatom Dl'llpei
36 't' ear• Ex perlen 1!\.

•
~

614·992·2321
Wo loy Whet We Do. ;
Wo Do Whot We Soy. •
10-11-1 mo'

,.......

_.,...-~

•VINYL SIDING
:
•ALUMINUM SIDING •
•
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION '"r

All THIS HOUSE NEEDS IS TLC- This older.! I! story home
needs some work by an enthusiastic handyman! lots of po·
tenlial. 4 bedrooms, part basement and a nice large lot in
town . MAKE AN OFFER. $.12,000.00.

BISSELL •
SIDING CO.

Lordy!!
Look Who's

........ lllllt
"Free htlmatel"

Pll. 949·210 1 ::
., .... 949-2160 ::
1

NO SUNIAY CAW

c.rc1 or Tll8nka
I wllh to tflenk all
who 1111t cerd1,
flowere, food end

helped In

the

kltch• at the time
of the death of my
'hulbend.

LIWII MtLLIR .

3·11·

SIIUI &amp;
111M and
IEMOYAL
•LIGHT HAULI

•FIREWOOD

Alia. for the many

klnd-rdalftd
prl\'lfl· It wu
epprecillted grHtly.

-·---- . . _.;.,..__ ------,,

RUIY MILLIR,

Wife

I

4-16·16·11•

UPHOLSIDI .

MIDDLEPORT- 2 story brick home on 2 lots, wtth 4-5 bed·
rooms, 21! balhs for lhe larfe family. Olher ft:atures include
a garage and carport, a IS x25' storage shed, N.G.F.A. furnace. And lor a little touch ol coontry it has wood floors.
Owner wants a sell and has reduced lhe price to $47,900.00.

...,._

laasonallll

"At'

CO. RD. 35- Ranch style home w~h 7 rooms, 3 bedrooms,
recreation room w/lireplace, large living room. Very neatly
landscaped . 7 miles from lhe Ravenswood Bridge. MAKE 4N'
OFFER. $45,900.00.

,.._

'

·'•

992-5315 • 91S-JS6t
Acrou F.- r.t Offk1 •
POMROY, OHO
~

RACINE- AHUNTERS PARADISE! Approx. 321! acres w~h
2 bedroom mobile home with a porch plus a 14'x18' lot and
pole building. cellar house, utiily building, and an B'x35'
New Moon trailer. Beouliful sile and very PRIVATE!
$26,500.00.
.

JO HILL ........................................................Ms-4481

up

KEN'S APPLIANCE :
SERVICE
:

Polnt l'lllllnt • 675-6925

OFFlCE .............. , ... ,.............. ,......................."2-2251

•

CARPENTER

in P - o y

205 N. Socond S1rMI
IIDOlEPOIT, OliO 45760
Offlco "4-H2·2116
HOME 614·992-S6ft ,

___...,.. __________ __

:;...

and....

DURING FOIU

POMEROY. OHIO
992-2259

HENRY E. CLELAIID ........,............................:.n2-tltl
JEAN TRUSSELL ............................................. MI·ZMO

-~--~

wil

ec:ornplete

FEB. 4,1990

........

Ia

for t"' coming NGIOIII

Real Eetate General

GWENDOLYN

..,

your

den IIJUiprMnt tulllll..
and blades fharptlllll

..

Call 992-612

_____ ·-

Get

°

You'll h1Yt 1 wondtrfuiiMiinl ..tn you pvt yourstlf In
aurlllnd1. Wlltlll• JOII'rt 11ou11 hllntinl. llllin&amp; 01 both
- JQrlntlndl an "OU I" lllltnltsl Our blcq,o.llll of
t.,.,...CiiltdlnliW ... end II tlldy to I-JIII- IIIII·
ftod clltniiiiiYt IIIII• oar rljllltltiOI. So wiiJnot c-. In
snd 1111t your hollln1 Jllllllllllll In 01r Unlfsl

AdVInce Tickets: $8.00 single;
$15.00 Couple
•to Per Person It Door

YOUNG'S

BEAT TilE RUSII

~ulpment:

FIRST TillE OFFERED - This listing has just come in; you
can be first to see H! However, w"h oil rt's gOI, this listing
won't list lone- so call now ind arran1eto see all this! fu.
lures as to home wilh royantes, carpet lhroucout most ol the
honle, all diapes and plenty of closets()lce. So much, this~
a must see! Call for yoot appointment immediately!

SAVAGE

0110.

r111.1f\
DIO
Dill

e rv Ice 8 ·'

:h:·m,;,~~:rvo~~ 9~3~

MIDDLEPORT COMMUNITY
ASSOCIATION VALENTINE
DANCE
FEB. 15 - 8 to 12
CROSSOVER BAND

VALLE.Y LUMBER CO•
992-6611

Dftl'l/

~
~
;

e

·

LONG HOLLOW 10. -If you want country scenery but still
be close to town. lhis is it. Apptoximalely 133 acres wtth
older country home on it lhat needs some repair, or build
your dream home in the·country with plenly ol room to growl
ASKING $45,000.00.

IN MEMORY OF

I ,

I

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
The Ohio Doportment ol
llfoturol Reoourceo. through
the Dlvlolon of Porkt ond ,..
creetlon, purouont to 111d In
oecordonce wllh the provl•lont of lecllon 1101 . 1 0 of
tho Ohio Revltod code pro·
pout to leaH for the opera.
tlon of the. boot rentol ot
Forked Run Stall Pork.
Molgt County, Ohio.
Olllclol bid pr-oel• will
be rtcolvecl In the olllco of.
the Dlvlllon Dll'lrllo llld Ro·
.,..lion until 2:00 p.m.
Tuoodoy, Morolt 8, 1881 .
lido will be publicly openod
theroofllr by tho Chief or hi1
outho•l•od ogont. The right
lo r..,ecl to roject ony 111a
ell bldo.
The INN will bo lor o torm
of aPI'roxl...-ly lour 141
yMra from •ooutlon ol
IHIO to
Dooember 31,
1894. Sold INoo moy be ••
newod 1t the option Dl the
Dlroctor tor 1 porlod not to
excood lour (41 yurt.
·
The Dlvlolon Dl Porllo 1nd
Recroatlon wHI lumlsh ono
concntlon building IPIIrGX·
lmotoly 32'x20', otorago

In tho
bid opoolflcltlono,
111
wmer end welll• wet•
treot- -tory lor tho
concnslon -otlon.
Tho Con-oloMIN wiH
lumloh oil o"'- ~ulpment
meroltondloe, motorlelt, ... ,.
pilot, utiHIOI ond iebor . .
_..., to oporote thtr boot
ror!lll --olon to · epprovod ............ during thO
- o f - I l i o n ontl dolly
houro defined In tho lo•P oclflcetlons.
II lhall be the 11111111 Dl tho
• ·I - tholtho minimum - )
SOli of-Ilion for the COli·
ctoolon be frorn M1y 1
. t!YDUIIh leptombor 30.
. RoquHtt lor 'bid propoul
lormo ohould bo mode to the
Ohio Deportment of Netural
Reoour-. Dlvlolon ofl'lrko

BINGO

SMALL
WANT A0S

PUBLIC NOTICE
Tho Vlllego of Mlddl-rt
wlll.-ve ooolod bldt until

Public Nmlce

...a.1doollforrentolbooiL

BOARD DEADLI~"'E
4: 30 P.M. DAY BEFORE
PUBLIQATIO:!'

Lagton Annexl.rMiddleport
$3.00 Single; ~.00 Couple

PLEASER'S

446-2691

mont .... ......... :22.2119.116

".,

•

EWING FUNERAL HOME

POMEIOY, OHIO

POMEIOY
OHIO

~(E)

.,

POOEIIOY, OliO

--

992-2104
992-2054

I

POMEROY .
FLOWER SHOP

. -POMEROY, OHIO

992-3761

:HERITAGE HOUSE/LOCKER 219
992-5627 '.

POMEROY, OliO

TWIN CITY
MACHINE AND WELDING

FRUTH PHARMACY
992•6491

POMEROY, OHIO

O•~r~IGovom·

lftd llecreotlon. Con....
slono Socllon. 1912 Belcher
Omoo C-3, Columbuo. OH .
43224-13811, Tolephone:
11141 2111 1111
' 1RANCESB.
BUCHHOLZER,
DIRECTOR
1214. 11, 18, 21, 4tc

DOTTif S. TIIINR, 11010

OIIIURIE~~NTI:

Co 1111
:futlay .............. Z.700.00
TOTAL DISBURSE·
MENTI ............ 2, 700,00
Totol Rooelptt 0-1
IUndorl 01111.. ....... 1138.07
Totol of Reo. - Other
Sourceo o- IUnderl Dlsll.
• Other u- ......... ue.o7
Fund Cooh lelonce
1/1/90 ..............8.141.11
Fund Cooh Bo!onco
12/31/80 .......... 8.1179.18
TOTALS. FUND
BALANCE
R!CEIP1'8:
Toxn ...... ... ....... 37,230.43
lntorgov.,montol
Roaolpto ...... , .. 44.882.08
lntoltol .. , ............... 884.31
0Htt ...... ......... ....... 311.41
All Othor
Rovonue ......... 38,380.94
TOTAL
RECEIPTS .... 121,813.27
OIIBURSEMENTI:

B'CLLETL~

CROW'S FAMILY RESTAURANT

SUGAR RUN FLOUR MILLS

BAUM LUMBER ·
915-3301

..

. 992-3715

Poyment ..... ....... . 402.11&amp;
TOTAL DISBURSEMENT8 .. ...... 112.434.82
Totol Rocelpto 0-/IUn·
derl Dlsll ......... .8,218.36
Other Sou.-1
R-lpts .......... .... .. IIZ.&amp;O .
TOTAL OTHER FINANC·
lNG SOUI!CE!I
.
IUSESI •. . : .... ..........SZ.IO
Total of Roc. • Other
lourceo o- IUndolrl Dlab.
• Other u... ......8 .320.86
Fund Cuh lelonco
1/1/80 ............ 31 , 18&amp;.n
!'undCuhlelonoe
12/31/80 ........ 40,108.82
o.:,ooltory
·
·
olance .......... 38,008.34
lnvoltmonto ........ 2. 700.00
Totol tr. .aury
...::~:~~di~jj40. 708.34
Chocko ...... ..........,201.72
TOTAL
BALANCE ......40,1101.82
SUMM.t.RY OF
INDEBTEDNESS
Outotandlng
1/1/10 ........... 1,721.00
N - • · - ....... 11s.ooo.oo
Retlrtd .. .................812.110
Outotondlng '
12/31/90 ........ 11.112.10
I cortlly thlt _,.. .. bo
conoat ond true, to thll bOot
of my kno,.,..dge.
Opol L. Dyer, Clerk,
1/28/80
P. 0. Box 321
Rutlend, ~hlo 41n&amp;
742·2806
1214. 1tc

~~:~~~:.;.;

~ulpment·ooltomlzed

'

K&amp;C JEWELERS

GOVERNMENTAL FUNOS
RECEIPt'S:
T - ........... ...... 37.230.43
llltlfll.....,mentol
Reoolpts ......... 44.882.08
lntoreot .................. 811.71
All Othor
· R..onue ......... 35.1180.94
TOTAL
RECEIPTS : ... 11'8,411.20
OISIURIEMENT8:
G - ' Governmont ............ .. 22.2111.11
Public 8tfety ... .. 11,741 .111
Public Worko·.....el;81111.111
HNith ..... .... ........ 4,721.71
Ctpllol Outlay .. ...... 148.12
Dollt ServiceNoto Prlnolpol
Peyment ............. 402.11
TOTAL DISBURSE·
o:!'t~...-..~i 109.734.~2
Roctlpts ................ 82.&amp;0
TOTAL OTHER FINANC·
lNG SOURCES
(U8E81 .................. 112:&amp;0
Totol of Reo. • Other
Souroeo o- IUndolrlDltb. • Olhor
u- ................8,782.78
Fund Ctth lellllce
1/1/10 ............ 211.044.11
·
Fund Cooh Btlonce
12/31(80 ........ 33,821.94
NON-EXPENDABLE
•
TRUST FUNDI
,RECEIPJS:
1 - t .................. 222.111
GHto ...................... 311.411
AH Other
RMnue ........... 2. 700.00
TOTAL
RECEIPTS ........ 3, 238.07

0

BULLETIN BOARD .

Jr

--

noy,

'

~THE

the o.d Rec,ardi
County, Ohio.
.
leld -no notod obove
ohjoll lurthW toko thot
unlnl they, or their ottorfile., An- NO LA·
TER THAN 28 DAYS oltor
the cornplotlon of .,. lor·
vloo by Publlcotlon,lheywll
1111 du.- to hive Wtlvod
tholrrlgllttoon-.ondn
Petition will bo tilton
111d Juclt- wNI
be
- - -rdlngly; ClvH
Rule 1ZIAJ(11.
BERNAIID I. HURIT,
Dlroctar of Tron-rtotlon
III 7, 14, 2 1. 28;
(21 4, 11, Ito
.:.•.:.••.:.·.:.1.;,1.:.20;_-----

Uith

oo-

SMITH-NELSON MOTORS, INC.

POMEROY, OHIO

'~' ~.::"':...~

not.

-

BROGAN-WARNER
INSURANCE

Slluot8d In .... VI .... of
Po_,, C•my of Molgo
llldlt... ofOhlo,Ond""""
tully liou..- ond dotertofal-s: .
PARCEL NO. 11-WD
(HIGHWAYI
AU RIGHT, TITLE AND
. INTEREST IN FEE
SIMPLE, EXCWDINO
li~:J~~~ON OF ACCEII.

OWl-•·

Scoutini;
helps make our
.
community a better
pla~e . We're proud to offer our
· whole-hearted support and thanks to
our area's Boy Scouts and Scout leaders!

do--it-you~lfers.

They take pride in
the little things, as wefl as
important situations happening around
them. We congratulate our area Scouts!

-o: ·

AMIIIIIIt ·Anorof tho ltote Dl
Ohio; t11ot the Plolntlll, Ber·
Mrd B. Hum. DINctor Dl
TrMoportotiOn, ltoto Dl
Ohio....... by 1141 . . . -••
to lflpr...lote thll property
d·scr'btd therein end to fix
the vol.. lher.ot; thot 11..,.
....,. lhlt the Unknown
extcutoll,
jielra,
Admlnlotrotlln, or Aoolgn•
- of:
Mollie Wllllorns orld .
MUle Adell Royotttrlftd'Ad·
ell Rov••· dn
c'. •N
11aa 11sary partiM ta thl8 praceMing IIIII M lul1hllr oppeere !hot lllelr no- Md
...... of reoldMoe .,. ....
known to Plllntlll Md cenno.t with I'MOonoble dll~
glllce bo •-rtelnod: end
thot It Is --ry"'-efore
to glvo notice of thllllllntl Dl
the Petition herein by Publ~
, cellon, I n - · - wHh '
- ......... 2703·14; 183.07;
2'703.24: end Clvl Rule

•

Public Sofety ..... 11, 741 .18
Public'WGr'ko .. , .. H.BIIII. 111
Heo1111 ................. 4,728.78
Copltll Outlay ..... 3,3411.12

·~~~~~N~w~~~:

woy fill~· nimely 1ho
mold111, cOIISirUCIIon ar lm·
pr1Nelllllll of:
-·
• . _ R - 33/12'lntlcift 12.11,
2:1.71,
Mello County, Ohio, and to
lla i!le vlilu• of i,ld prop-"Y·. 'The property oought to
~IPfii'Oprletld lo more IPI·
olflully dolllll- oo lol·

PLA(NTIFF

CO&lt;tnty "' Milgo
'1'hlols 811 unoudltod
Fln-ielll-rt"
SUMMARY OF CASH

t:U $LACI
992-2269

•.,

UUD IAUOAD

..

~

�.

Page 10-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Mickla~.

LAFF-A-DAY
.,_ ......_..._....

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OIJ nolollo tt. 73"......
M,ICIO....,,...,,cuaJ.

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For ...... 1..-tlo .......1... alvtna lo .........
Portlltlcook , ........ n: I lA,
rancll, 1 112 111111, lomlly - .
-1011 on I!Oft!lt, tiiOI'OQO
bull!lnlo IIIII 110'8. . _ .

on-lnoo~.Con-01Lol
"-"· oolllo - ..... - 1
I1Uir7 .... :00 Pll.
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Em ploy·nrnt Sr1 v1ces

&amp;

52 Sporting Goodl
GuM:: •

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For Solo: 10 - · Aouoh Ho~
low A. .d, lloclrtC!P Ad, AlKol
A ip nlblt dependable lady Wotor, .-r-mt
.-tooorolorl~ LDT8 FOR IlL£ 1ft Ololllpollo
Forry. Will trai~Hy
m
JS.
~o.llr',.;..
lollv wotor ........... , . _
r - . - Third ....... o.r.. 2722.
11po11o, CH 4111St.

Business Services ·

----------------~----------------~ ~~
Now /11
lto~k/1

MOBILE HOME FURNACES - HEAT PUMPS
AU FURNACE PAm

--job

wv. -77NIII.

l••droorh .........
......
..... --.aa27.
1ft.

To:I -

-.----·

.KELLER'S CUSTOM BENDING

Wan ot11 a·-ame a TlllrapeutiO
porontlng
c:tall&amp;tl-.
Poronl. C:OH .,..._

We Ha11 Changed Our location To
11/J Miles East an Rt. 248 tlnugh
'
Chttttr, Oh.

14

•Cu.tom Bent Exhau.t Syttama
•Complete Line of EXhauat Supplies
•Handle end Install Monroe Shock•
Come and See Ua For A Free lupecllon
and Elllmate •
PH. 614·915-3949 IODftR DWI
. LOlli

Oh. 45743

Atllralft
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""""'Vollov
- · c:011 Tacliy, ......a a11n
n a' -lortf110.01-1ZU.

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.._ ono A H - Away

. Con Oloo lloll1ro1~
-"""" a-IJaonH.
114-UN!U.

.,, , . 1:1111.

•Remodeling and
Hom• Repair•
•Roofing
•Siding
•Painting

DAN'S
TIANSMISSION
anti AUTO IEPAII
Specltollllng In
Aut0111811c

NO JOB TOO SIIAll
FREE ESTIMATES

Trommlulona. lrelo•.
Tuneup. 011 Cluonge,
Clutch Ropolr.
FREE ESTIMATES

CEDAR .
CONSQUCnON
992·'6.. or

9 Vooro Experience

992-5517

Ullalf lilt!
, ......,, 01.

691·6164

12· 31-IIO·tfn

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..,., ltloldttrr, ch. . . . . lloF
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· Dnlp-lno
me.l14
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Need 1 ciapher'P Lelve I to uef
One (-.. !'ut lullon'a. Mlea
......,_aocllo,..,homo
ao1t 1114-l!N2, •••

a:aa Lm.

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hoo!fl lar 1ouoo1ho..

INDIPIIIDIIY
CAIPI1 CUA.U
anti nu FLOOI caa
•Reeeoneble R•t•

AU IUDS

5t

lrilll It IR Or We

OpportunHy

•FreaEetlmetee

DI'S APPliANCE
SIIYICE

•Cerpe1 H11 Fin Dry
Time
•High Olou on Tile

HJ-5335 or

tiJ-1561

Floor Flnleh

OHice

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flOG . .UII£11.114-

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a.-c. horMa.

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,., Old~ I , . , old

75 Boals &amp; Motors

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AuiOP8111 &amp;

71

AcceiSOrles

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Ill LMy ICing Llftl
D 11Mutr nd the Iaiii !;I
1:3118 !De Dulll'loll w. Bernice gall 1 'bid IIQit Job
l h a t - her to memble

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Serv 1ces

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10:00())Nawl
Tubreall '11: llalelng
,._ Tu IQ 10:59)
I)) l!,.a on the Prl&amp;e:
~·· ClviiJithlo , ....
Char... Atthe

BARNEY
IT LOOKS UKE

IUIILI DAY

IN TH' HOLLER !!

iMnge
a•The linger performo

COME ON AN'
JOIN IN T.H'

a mualclil arid 11l1u11
(1:00)

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O.Mntlon
Ill CNH Evening Nawl •
D 7110 Clull With Pet
ROblriMn
, tO:OI(J) MOVII!:

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aupond cltlllnry. 114-

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Cortor'
a Plu!nlllng
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Oelllp cIll, Ohio

111 1·-·

Ellctrtcal &amp;
Alfrlglratloil

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Club meeting will be. How quickly do you
ell gat over pneumonia?"

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BERNICE .
BEDEOSOL

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Col
- - upllalotootng,
thnlloo.1D4-471-1114 tor lroo -

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Untea IOI'n84ftl Oller'l you • deftntte
propoeel, par!MIIIIIp anangementl
might nol be VOUI' cup of ... In the , . .

=·I
II!!Pt

llhillld. You may be
mono tortu- .
..... In MlcltptiiCIIIII
OIL
•QII~·tl)ltll­
..... 16
Jl liB ll . . apl ~011101
Ill Clllel, bull! you ~ julllllc8Uan
lor bellailng you .,. right IIIII lhay .,.
wrong lodly, be yow - peraon.
K!10W ..._ to .look lot IIIII

••

Hcult lo pr.aMIOday, peQplewith Whom
you'll be tnvot.ed might looo hNrt and
gtve up trying. lt'a lmponanl you proper1y ICknowteqge lhelt ettorla.
VIRGO (Aug. D-lepl. 22) You're a
good lhlnker tOday IIIII whot you con·.
ceiVe will how good - l o r euc;.
C8811. ay the aame Ioken, you're alao a
analyllo.
good 1111&lt;• and you could repl- dis~• (Marah 11·Aprl11) You might cuulonl with productivity.
baco1ne lnYoiWd In on llldelll()( thll L1111A (lepl. D-Oot. II) Uody Luck
hal promlellog potentlol todly, but It tendl to 1.- you In 111011 o1 your In·
could be ~led In • ,..,_ which ~today.
In flnanclol
dragw. ~ IM wonto. Don'llllcel8rl· , matiere lhe may lnlllt thot you .earn
out llllllter8 II , _ Vllue.
what you get .
TNJIIIIS (April ....., Ill) o.clalon1 ICOIII'IO (Oct. .......... 22) It all . .
you 11011ce today lhol!kl be predlclted pendl oo whit yqu conllder a good
on their long..,... beroellto rother lhan doy. 11 you think mattii111L'&lt;CIIO loiU·
.an thllr lmmedltota probabllillel. The per10r to aocioleuccuo, you ilhould be
Iarmer will liDo grMier, illgnlllcanee pteiiMd with _.11.
than tloe .
·SAGITTAIIIUS (Now. 2H)ac, :11) H
1*J 11-.luM Ill) Your ldeU there 1a 1 c1avar ICIIalooa you wtalno
llhaulcl prow good todly Hthay.,. etr· : COfllidaf lmplemlllting, H II bel1 you
rl8d tl!rough to lrulllon, but don'l ct. , keep H to you...n belora you dO IQ. n
ce1ve youqell Into lhlnklng t1oey ere yO.. don't, there 1o 1 c:henounolhtr will
IJI•Idlo then lhay ectuolly .... a. a ...
Nllllt.
C... IICONI (Dto. II oltP 11) ProCAIICIII (.... 11. . 8) You ilhould CMd c:aut10U11Y todly In mattera that
·do rather well In vour ~ 11tolrl could becoiM COitly
1101 llandlod
today, provided you do nolloke undo property. If you oct withOUt thinking.
i1ak1. Operlle along tredHioNI, prown your flnancllol pOiitiOn may get brulled.

rzz·•

"llrlt.

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lines Instead ol gambling.
LEO (JII!Y D-Aug. ~~II you are too dlf·

H-•,

811 Glnlrlll Hauling
- . - 1_.11..1,000 or
J,oat ..........

you"ll find 11. The Astro.Graph Match·
maker lnltantly revella Which illgnl are
romantiCally pet!ecf for you. Mall $2 lo
Metchinaker,,clo thla
P.O.
80~ 91428, Cla\lelend. OH 44101s3428.
PISCI!I CF• :Ill " ah 201 H'llrnpot·
,..., lloat ~ -.orately gauge the In·
tent of a lrtiond:WIIa requeell yow oplnton tOday. :note lndiYICNII may want 111
ondoolliloan' rather lhon on -

._Ill*.

oonun•cW

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lid IW IIKhiM~ 3CM-I'PIlllllii'

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"I'm not aura wnan our next Polar Bear

or

II) llleml VIet

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..,_.Hill Stereo. Q

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Plumbing&amp;
Heating

0

Building

'

lopda Tri PuOIIIIIna tiO._Oolllo
C.. 1-lNTEAPIIliES,
.loo'-". OH 1-IOHI7.f121.

71 Autos for Sail

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

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10:30. Cnook end Chua
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Stereo.

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lcBracrow IIIII MN. ICing

11:30~· 0 TonlgiiiShow

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()) The ""'""

(l)la=.sCao.

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.On .....

eeptllt6nler

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+10876
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SOUTII

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A42

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Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South

s•

S..llo

Welt

I.
It
INT

P18
Pua ••
Pua s•
Pua s•
Allpua

~NT

7.

Norllo

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P. .
P. .
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Opening lead: • Q

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play a diamond, flnesiing to dummy's
jack. Tbe grand slam wUI make when·
ever the spade queen falls or the dta·
mond 'qioeen 18 With West. Occali.al·
ly declarer will l011e two trkb rather
than one. That's a small price to pay
for a much better cbanc:e of maldng
the contract. .

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limber
29 Greek
tetter
31 Used up
32 Subject:
theme
33 Medii.
Island
34 Swiss
cheese
trademark
39 Wrestling
win
41 tn the
manner Ql

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salesman·
ship
35 Dessert
choice
36 Litter
member
:17 Span·
lard's gold
38Wed In
secret
40 Jackel
leature

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DAILY CRYPI'OQUOTE8- Here'1 lltntlo wort II:

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214

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AXYDLBAAXR
IILONGFELLOW

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One letter slands for {lnotller. In this aample A is used

ZPKKQUFX

t2:20(J)III.IIlll Ougr.......

WF

t2:311 ~. 0 Ult Night Wilt
Dawltl ........
()) MOVII: ....art ..,...,

XKPZUPF

Plrtr I' rhlnl With Nlll

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PFQWFG

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Patp'll

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EAST
.IOIU

WEST

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Tll8 lqutllitr

.: ==~elball

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II])."""" IIRDIIII18 Wllh
Hill Puplll

(PGI (2:301

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. Ill. Hint CopJ

Ill lpalta Tonight

11 :Sa (I) a-s 1;1
12:00(J).IntD Itt NI8M Stereo.

a

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'

for the three L's, X lor the two 0'1, etc. Single letters,
apoetrophes, the length and f011111Uon of the words are 1111
hints. Each day the code letters are dlffetent.
CR\'PTOQIJOIEI
.
2·4

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llijtachenlc .

11:00~· (I) (J). Ill
IIJNawl

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retri[llll ol her c:~reer.
•
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TNII: The Nell

PARTY, PAW

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l.eiJion ol Doorn wltll

Brllilh Bulldog (Davey Boy .

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742-2451

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I!J P111M Tillie Wraatllng Six

far Sale

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con~erera.sttreo.a

Man Tag T•m Metch;
Power &amp; GlorY wllh Warlord

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before a pralldtntill news

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Tub
with .~·. _ , . .........
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MulphJ '"""'
voice

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til.lolel her

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Ftll, dolt I I DIE U... ....
M
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llooolclo
and ...... ....,.._,
~-~-~- -PICKU.
-PURNITURE
· - -· OuR111 a· • • -~
1 J ............... tor
Naw1'r11f
II .............. ,........,
lloo Olholcl lllm'"'*'t. Ill! mi. Dryer I~ PPI 1111 .. 1111.
Jonlcha Rd. Pt. PI
·~. WY, • - - ,._ ....,_ - . .

taoo.
ttaa.

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ACROSS
42 Red
1 Pillow
Square
covers.
na.me
6 Vampire · 43 Type of
leature
type
10 Apartme.nt 44 Cat scar
· window
451ndy
sign · · · evertts
\ • ·11 Ofd
DOWN
'&lt;; market
1 Blizzard,
13 Missouri
e.g.
Indian
2 Bible
Cheshire
14 Day In
book
Cat
Hollywood 3 Alas and 12 Evaluate
15- room
-1
17 Stable
(play
4 Actress
particle
area)
Ryan
20 French
16 "The Gotil 5 Ttamptas
school
Bug"
6 Turns
21 Desert
wr~er
pale·
plants ·
18 Office·
7 Past
24 Force
holders
8 Noted
25 Benefited
19 Goes Into
Panama· 28 Store
a tantrum
nian
sample
' 22 Barracks
9 Emulated
Inscription
sack
the
27 Mora ·
2.3 Matures n-.,.-..r--nr-1..24 ·-a Hoi
Tin Roof"
270odtes
28.Track
29 Scolding
word
30 Engages

MOIIIIIII SW (PI 2 of 2)'
ABC Jlanclar Nlaht Movie

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lt. I, lutiiM, OH.

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11110

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MilE LIWIS, Ow""'

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' ? io""'i:oiiii.!i.~
r SNAFU® by 8111Ce Beattie

•Ou1llty Work

Pldl Up.

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rol,
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MICIOWAYE
OVEN IEPAII

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By James Jaceby
Today's North-South were using tra·
dltlonal bidding methods, with the
jump to three hearu ·sbowiJitl four•
c:~rd sup~rt plus openina·bid vaiuet .
After South had cue-bid four dlamOIIds
and North had shown the ace of
spades, South was off to the races .
When he dilcovered hiJ side bad all the
prime cards, he bid to take all the
tricks.
· ·
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of clubs. declarer was confronted with
a_choice of playil. He won the club
klq,.drew two rounds of trumps end·
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played another trump to dummy. Next
carne ace of clubs, on wbic:b be tbrew a
spade, and the last club was ruffed. By
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clubs and only one heart. It therefore
seemed likely that be would bold
greater length than West In spades. SO
declarer played to dummy's spade ace
and played a spade back to blB jack.
West took the· queen with a slg)l of
relief .
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was likely that be held the queen. But
declarer missed hls best psrcentace
play. Rather than rely on guesalng
wblch defender's queen. mlgbt be fa·
vorably situated, be Sbould combine
bls plays: He should draw trumpe and
then play ace and king of spades. U the
spade queen drops. be 18 borne. U the
spade qu.a does not fall, be will thea

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�Page-12- The Daily Sentinel .

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

--Area deaths-----

EMS responds to 18 calls

Kasper,' Dayton; Mrs. Gene
(Cheryl) Allrire, Columbus, and
MIS. Harold (1eanlne) 'IBiley,
Bcnha M. Parker, 92. of Laurel Commcn:e, Texas; a son, Ccderic
ClifT Road, Pomeroy. died Satur- Parker, San Antonio. Texas. and a
day, Feb. 2, · 1991, · at Veterans son and daughter-in-law, Thomas
Memorial Hospital following a and Kate Parker, Pomeroy; 11
brief illness.
grandchildren and nine greatShe was a housewife. Born on grandchildren
.
Man:h 20, 1898 at Pomeroy, she
She was preceded in death by ht7
was the daughter of the late husband, Pearl, in 1966, and three
Thomas Radford and Amanda children, Manning, Gelaldinc and
Byrne Radford. She was a member Cleo Parker.
of the Laurel Qiff Free Methodist
FuneralselVices will be held at 1
ChW'Ch, the Laurel Cfiff Better p.m. Wednesday .at the Ewing
Health Club, and a member of the Funeral Home. The Rev. William
Women's Auxiliary of Veterans. Williams will officiate and burial
. Memorial Hospital.
·
wiU be in the Rock Springs
She is survived by tJuee Cemetery. There. wiU be no calling
daughters, Mrs. Herman (Gayle) hours.
'

Bertha M. Parker

HEAP deadline extended

'
The Gallia-Meigs Community
Action Agency has been notified by
the State HEAP office that the
deadline for the regular HEAP
program has been extended from
Jan. 3lro Feb. 15, by Gov. George
Vomov1ch.
This extension provides for an
additional · 10 days to apply for
HEAP. The emergency prognim,
however, continues 10 be in effect
through Man:h 29,
Assistance is limited to once per
heating seaSon which began Oct. I.
1990. ..

Low income persons with heatrelated utilities disconnected or
threatened by disconnect, or bulk
fuel persons whose supply is less
than 10 days meets the emergency
requirements of the em~ency
HEAP prognun. For further information residents may call367-7341
in Cheshire, or 992-6629 in Meigs
County. The Gallia County outreach program telephone number is
44CHl611 and the Meigs County
outteach number is 992-5605. The
toll free. hotline number for regular
Heap inquiries is 1-800-282-0880.

Proceeds benefit ODS
Proceeds of Saturday's dance at
The Locomotion in Pomeroy will
be used in crea~g a fund which
will allow the sending of boxes of
articles to the troops serving with
Operation Desert Storm, according
to Iva Sisson.
An event, "Support Simday," is
·
·
· · ·

Search continued
Meigs County officials are on the
lookout for David M. Persons of
West Columbia, W.Va., who escaped from the Mason County Jail
on Friday evening.
· lt is believed that Persons clim·
bed up the counhouse elevator
shaft and sonro the building's roof.
Persons, 28. has charges pending
in Meigs County stemming from an
indictment from the. Common Pleas
Court here, charging that he escaped from the Meigs County Jail
in August, 1990. Persons had
refused .10 waive extradition to
Ohio 10 face those charges.
The escapee is described as
being 175 pounds, 6 feet tall, with
brown hair and brown eyes, and
tatoos on bolh arms.

being planned for this Sunday li'om
noon 10 6 p.m. Nwnerous groups
will perform and admission is free,
stated Sisson. The event will aid in
sponsoring "'peration Feed Desert
Storm."
.
·
· Si$son reported that there will be
twO radio stations providing li~ ·
remotes from the event and anyone
interested in assis · should call
Mrs. SissOn at 992~097 or 7422187 no later duin Tuesday evening.
A schedule of events sbould be
released Wednesday, according 10
Sisson.

Hospital news
Vetenns Memorial Hospital
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS •
.Charles Bissell, Long Bottom and
Thcrea Hendrix, Pomeroy. · ·
·
SATURDAY DISCHARGES ·
Zelpha SteWart.
.
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS •
William Hughes, Pomroy; and
Avanelle Bass, Pomeroy.
SUNDAY DISCHARGES
None.

Monday, Febnlarv 4. 1991

RESCUERS RESPOND • The Pomeroy Emerxency Squad and
other EmergeJICY Medical Senk:e persoonel respoaded to tbls
scene. across rrom Smith-Nelson Motors In Pomeroy oa Moaday
monliag lll'OIUld 9 a.m. Mark Mattqx, a worker for lbe. Village
PoDJeroy, was apparently working llloag the riverbank when be fell
several feet over tbe edge of tbe bank. Mattox: was tranSported to
Veteraas MeDJorlal Hospital

AHA kicks-off campaign

Units of Meigs County' Emer·
gency Medical Services ~dcd
10 18 calls for usisiiUICC over the
weetencL
.
On Saturday at 1:28 p.m., Racine
units went 10 · McKenzie Ridge
Road for Orville McFI!DII. At 2:05
p.m., Life Flight landed at Soulba'n
High School and ~ MeFhann 10 Grant Medical Center. At
3:30 p.m., Rutland squad went 10
Hill10p Road for Woodrow Kuhn.
Kuhn wu taken 10 Pleasant Valley
Hospital.
•·
At 4:35 p.m.. Middleport squad
went 10 Soulh Third Avllflue for a .
tree fire. At 4:48 p.m., Rutland
sauad went 10 New Llma ROQII for
~ey NUlL Nutt . was ~n 10
Veterans Memorial Hospital. At
5:57 p.m., Pomeroy · squads and
Chester Fire Department went to
Fllalwoods Road and Pomeroy.Pike
for an auto accident. Michelle
Friend, Leslie Gilkey and Linda
Gilkey were all taken 10 VeteranS.
At 7:39 p.m., Syracuse squad went
10 Nyc Avenue for Terry Day, who
was tteated bUt not 11'811Sp011ed· At
9:25.p.m., Pomeroy squad went 10
Pomeroy N~R and ~hab Cel;l·
ter for Thena . Hendrix. Hendrix
. Wll$ taken 10 Veterans;
. .
At. 10:08 p.m., Syracuse squad .
went 10 Srare 'Route 7. AnllCite
Pierce was taken to Veterans. At

.

IO:IS p.m.; Pomeroy squad wcnt 10
Pomeroy Nursing and Rebab Center for Bertha Palter. Parter was
traJISpOitCd 10 Veterans. At I :36
p.m., Middleport squad went 10
Oliver Street for Lena Martin. who
was taken 10 Holzer Medical Ceoter.
At 5:41 a.m. ' on Sunday,
Pomeroy squad went 10 Pomaoy
Nursing and Rehab C~ter for W'llliam Hughes, wbo wu tniJISPOI'tCd
to Veterans. At 12:37 p.JII., bcine
squad went 10 a brush lire at the
Huckwagner residence. At 3:01
p.m., Pomeroy squad went 10
Locust Street for James Ward.
Ward was taken to Veterans~ and · ·
later taken to Holzer. At. 3:52 ,p.m.,
.Pomeroy squad went 10 Liberty
Lane for Avanelle Bass.. Bass was
taken 10 Veterans. At 5:43 p.m.,
Scipio Township Fire Department
and Rudand !ire department went
to a brush fire at the Howard
property.
At 7:26 a.m., Rutland squad
went 10 Leadi!lg Creek Road for
Rena Marshall, who was trealed but
not lransporteil. At 7:41 a.m.,
Pomeroy squad went to Memorial
Drive for Sydney Woodson, who
was taken 10 Holi.¢r. At 8:57 a.m., .
Pomeroy squad and rescue went 10
East Main Street for Mark Mattox,
who was transoorted to Veterims.

Ohio Lottery

Pitt tops
Seton Hall
five, 86-80

Pick 3:845
Pick-4: 6759
Cards: 2-H; A-C;
6-D; A-S

Page.3

•

•
Vol .4 1, No .200
· Copyrighted .1991

Low tooigbt ia mid 40s.
Wednesday blgb near SO. Cbance
ofrain 50 percent.
•

1 Section, 10 Pages .26 Cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-:-Middleport. Ohio, Tuesday. February 5, 1991

USS Missouri Shells Iraqis for second day
~Y DAVID ALEXANDER
United Press 'International

The USS Missouri shelled Iraqi
positions In Kuwait for the
second straight day Tuesday , the
Pentagon said, and sources said
the historic battleship would be
joined soon by It sister ship, the
USS Wisconsin. .
Saudi Arabia said It had made
arrests In the bus attack late
Sun&lt;!ay night In which two U.S.
soldiers .were .slightly Injured,
and Pentag9n sources sald Iraq
could be preparing for another .

T:wo Middleport women hurt in wreck

Two Middleport woman suf- apparently lost contr;ol of his
The 1991 door-to-door campa!gn Phail, Syracuse; Jean Alkire. fered minor Injuries Saturday vehicle and drove off the left side
of the Ameziean Heart AssocJation Racine; Millie Midtifl, Bedford after the car they were riding ln or the roadway . His 1983 Ford
will get underway this week. The Township; Kay Proffitt, Lebanon struck another on Meigs County Thunderbird then struck.a ditch,
overturned, and came to rest on
goal for this year's campaign is Township; Thrri Shain, Letart Road 26. ·
Its top.
Township;
Grace
Weber,
Olive
Linda
A.
Gilkey,
42,
and
Leslie
ss.ooo.
Sellers was cited for driving
Toiwnsh1p;'
Karen
Baker.
Orange
Gllkey,
20,
were
both
taken
to
Nora and Denver Rice have
under
the Influence and failure to
Township;
Janet
Bolin,
Rudand
.
Veterans
Memorial
Hospital
by
~ lhc more than 200 packets
.He was Uninjured, 'accontrol.
wl!ich· will be distributed 10 area Township; Linda . Montgomery, Meigs County EMs after the
cordfng
to
a report from the State
Salem
Township;
.
Cathy.
Cooper
accident
In
Chester
.
Township.
·
chairmen. As volunt,ccrs move .
Highway
PatroL
and
Perry
Harris,
.
Salisbury
Linda
was
treated
for
a
shoulder
throu~h neighboJ'hoOds to cqllcct
conmbutions,they .will be di~bul· Township; Eva Howard, Scipio contusion and was later released,
ing information abOut bean disease. . To\vnship, and Rhonda Dailey, Sut· as was Leslie, a hospital spokes·
woman said .Monday.
Research, community, edpcation ton Township. (See phDIO page 6)
The · American Red Cross
Accord! ng to a report from tbe bloOdmobile
and professonal programs are sup-.
will be in Meigs
Gallla-Melgs post of the State County Wednesday, from 1 p.m to
ported through lhe contributions.
1 '
• ~•
Highway Patrol, · Linda Gilkey
Hean disease is the nwnber one
Continued
from
page
1
was
westbound when she ap· 5:30 p.m . .at the Senior C11izcns
killer in Meigs County, according
Mulberry
Heights,
preached the Intersection ot Center,
to latest statistics which show that set on fire. Another crashed on Its
Pomeroy.
heart disease accounts for 52 per- way and lts pilot was kllled,anda County Road 26 from County
cent of all deaths in Meigs County.. t~lrd landed on a road and was Road 25. Gilkey falled to stop for
As. a "thank you " . to the damaged ," the president said. · a stop sign at intersection.
Rafsanjanl added, "You know Gllkey's car then struck the side
volunteers who wil be going
/
throughout the county, McDonalds, that during the Second World or a crossing car. driven by
Pleasers, and Daily Queen have . War, Switzerland held about .300 Michelle L. Friend, resulting ln
South Central Ohio
donated (ood and beverage planes belonging to the warring · heavy damage to both vehicles.
Becoming cloudy Monday
Gilkey was cited for failure to
sides and kept them untll the end
coupons.
.
night, with a chance of showers,
The area chairmen in charge of of the war and thls was not . stop at a stop slgn.
seeldng volunteers to walk in their regarded a break of neutrality." · A Racine man escaped serious and a low In the middle 40s.
''The Iraqis will certainly not Injury Sunday after the car he Chance or precipitation Is 30
districts are · Susie Soulsby,
Pomeroy; Kathy Hood and Lois ask us to allow them to use these wu drl~ng fllpjled over off of percent. Cloudy Tuesday, with a
. chance of showers, and highs In
McElhinny,
Middleport;
Dee planes ' during the current war Meigs County Road 20.
Jeffrey L. Sellers, 29, was the middle 50s. Chance of rain Is
Brown, Minersville; Martha Me- and even if they ask us wewlllnot
accept," the president sal!J.
traveling eastbound when he 30 percent.

cross-border raid to probe allied
positions.
A top Soviet diplomat flew to
Tehran to discuss an Iranian
peace Initiative, and Iraq sus·
pended fuel supplies to civilians ,
indlcating that allied air strikes
against e Iraqi Infrastructure
have bee successful.
The
ssourl trained Its 16·
Inch
ns on Iraqi artillery
poslt1o11 on Kuwait's Persian.
Gulf ast and its 2,000·pound
shells found their targets, the
Pentagon said. On Monday the ·

A. senior .Pentagon officer .
Missouri opened fire for. the first positions in Kuwait and southern ston of the U.s . Central Comtime since the Korean War. Iraq, one senior mU!tary official mand in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, meanwh!le, suggested that Iraq,
targeting Iraqi conc.rete- said, "It's like poking Into a said at a ·news briefing Monday which has no air reconnaissance
reinforced bunkers In Kuwait.
rotten board. Once you poke that "a feasible explanation" for or satellites, might try another
Ready to join the Mlssourlln through, you can go like blazes ." the attack was that lt was "a foray . lnto Saudi Arabia In
the sheiUng was the Wisconsin,
Saudi Arabia said several free-lanl!f! terrprlst act ," possl- coming days to seek intelligence
which also Is equipped with . foreigners were arrested for an bly "someone upset with the on allied positions. The. Iraqi
heavy artillery, to join In the attack In the Red Sea port of situation here."
· force could approach dlvlslon
shelling of enemy targets, ac- Jeddah late Sunday night on a
Tight security has been In force strength of perhaps 10,000, said
cording !O a Pentagon official .bus carrying U.S. soldiers In In Saudi Arabia since the Iraqi the source.
who requested anonymity. Both which two of them and their invasion of Kuwait on Aug. 2, and
"It's very safe to expect in a
battleships have previously fired Saudi .guard were slightly In- Col. Ahmed AI-Robayan , a spa- few days that we will see an effort
Tomohawk cruise missiles at
jured by flying glass. The official kesman for the Joint Arab to probe o.ur lines," the official
Iraqi positions. ·
Saudi Press agency gave no · Forces of the .coalltlon, Monday said. "With no air (reconnassaDiscussing the Increased
details of the arrests.
discounted the threat of further lnce) and no satellites, he has to
do lt the old·fashloned way ."
Marine Mat . Gen. Robert John· attacks.
bombing and· shelling of enemy

Meigs County ·will lose tax
money if mines close down

Bloodmobile "Visit

I ranUJ' n

'
By BRIAN J, REED
SeDtinel News Staff

expensive equipment at the site and Wickline reponed Monday that
in the event that the mines were
Meigs County stands to lose a closed. the propeny .would
considerable amount of the $1.6 depreciate "tremendously", causing
million in taxes now paid by the taxes received to plummet.
· Southern Ohio Coal Company if
· Following an impomptu meeting
American Electric Power follow s· between AEP officials and the
through on lhe possible closing of county commissioners on WednesSOCCO-owncd mines in the . day, Commissioner Richard Jones
county.
· stated that county residents would
According 10 Meigs County see "big-lime layoffs and curtail·
Auditor William R. Wickline, real · mellt of county services" if the
estate and personal property taxes mines were indeed closed.
received last year from AEP on
Jones reported on Monday afterSOCCO property in Meigs County noon that plans were .undeiWay 10
added up 10over $1,627,000.
get county commissioners from all
~...,_,u:.i'-'1 , tf!@! $1.6 qlilliol}, $~~ P ., j(Tecf,¢ c.PII!lti.es and govemme.rual
was distnboted to tile A,lexaniler ·bodies · •toj!'clher with AEP and
Local School District in ' 1991 and SOCCO officials 10 discuss the fu$803,490 10 the · Meigs Local ture of the local mining industry.
School District.
Jones · had nothing concrele to
Wicltline said that the county report, however•.. but did anticipate
owes a lalge part of the appraised soch a meeting 10 be scheduled
value of the mines 10 the mass of

Weather

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

NEW CHAMBER OFFICE • The Meip
County Chamber or Commerce has relocated In
the Carnegie Buildilig (former Pomeroy
Library) oo East Second Street. Pictured, ten to
right, are Tom Reed of the Chamber of Com-

•

merce Board !I Directors, Chamber Director
Elizabeth Schaad, and Ruth Powers representing the Meigs CountY Public: Library. Tbe
Library's board of. directors authorized the oc- ·
cupatlon or the building by the c:bamber • free or
cllarge.

·Pomeroy Council approves
ordinance ·readings Monday ·
By BRIAN J, REED
Sentinel News Starr
The ' first reading on a fire
department ordinance and the third
reading .on the village wning or,
dinance were conducted when
Pomeroy Village Council met in
regular session on Monday evening.
. .
The lire department ordinance, if
passed. would establish a new set
- of by-laws for the department · in
compliance with the Ohio Revise&lt;)
Code. The last by-laws established
for the department were passed in
1946.
Pomeroy Fire Chief Danny
~irkle was present at the meeting
and gave his input to council on the
pro)Xlsed ordinance. The only
maJOr changes in the proposed or-

· dinancc involves-a limitation of active membership 10 40 (although
current membership would be
"grandfathered" in t)le department
if needed).
A clause regarding payment of
firemen who respond to fires was
also added at the meeting last night.
The third reading on the village
zoning ordinance resulted in the
fiJUowing vote: Betty Baronick,
yes; Bryan Shank, no; Bruce Reed,
yes; Bill Young, yes; Thomas
Werry, no; Larry Wehrung, yes.
That ·ordinance will now be
published ·in die newspaper in accordance with law before a final
vote.
Letters both in favor and in op·
position 10 an application for a liquor license transfer to a proposed
ravem and restaurant in the Starl&lt;
~uilding on East Main Street were

reviewed last night by council. Six
letters in opposition to the 11'811sfer
were nx:eived from members of the
Trinity Congregational Church
(which is located near the back
door to the proposed bar location).
In addition. a petition with over
)~ signatUres in favor of lhe bar
was presented as well.
A hearing has been requested on
the license transfer, but no date for
that hearing has been set by the
Ohio Department of Liquor Control
in Columbus.
Council also granted permission
to the Pomeroy Merchants Association 10 block off the upper and
middle parking lots for a car show
on July 20.
'
In final action, council approved
· the mayor's report of fines collect·
ed for the month of JanJUII)' in the
· amount of$3,981.

•

next week.
Jones said that AEP officials
were meeting wi lh the last two
counties affected today (Gallia and
Jackson) and that he ba&lt;! been in
contact with AEP people on a
regular basis since last week's announcement.
AEP announced a week ago that
it w.ould begin considering itS options in complying with the Clean
Air Act of 1990 - which forces AEP
10 decide between installation of
scrubbing equipment at the General
James M. Gavin Plant and fuel
switching to coal with a lower sulphur content. The Iauer, if opted
.for, .. would fo.,:e the. closing of
Meigs Mlii'CS '2 and 3 I, which
produce the high sulphur ·coal now
, being u:sed at Gavin.
,
An announcement on the fate of
SOCCO mines is expected to be
made by mid-1991.

RAC charges steelworkers
with unfair labor tactics
(

In a release February 4, · the RavensWOOd facility.
been a total ol 546 separate inciRavenswood Aluminwn Corpora"This NLRB decision along denis of violence and damage to
lion ~C) received official notifi· with the amendments Judge Fox property. Th.ere were approximatecation from the National Labor made to his injunction last week ly 110 separate incidents from
Relations Board that the NLRB has are important in helping us ensure November I, the date the strike ·
issued a complaint against the the safety of our employees," said started, to December 2i, the date
United Steelworkers of America Don Worlledge, presient of . the state.of West Virginia ruled lhat
and its Local5668 on charges that Ravenswood Aluminum Corpora- striking members of lhe union were
the USWA has engaged in unfair tion. "The increase in lhe harass- eligible for unemployment comlabor practices.
ment of our employees must be pensation benefits. Since DeCember
21, there have been approximately
The NLRB hl!S set a hearing stopped."
date of May 20 on 'two of RAC's
By scheduling a hearing, the 436 separa1e incidents.
Of all the incidents; 36 percent
five charges lhat the union. lhrough NLRB has found there is sufficient
its pickets, engaged in harassment evidence against the United Steel- have taken place at private resiof Ravenswood employees and workers of America to take the dences, 42 pencent have occurred at
damaged their propeny. These two maner to the next step in the pro- the plant's entrances and 22 per. charges have been consolidated and cess. Ultimately, this could result cent have happened at other locacite:
.
,
.
in the USWA bein~ ci!cd for unfair tions.
RAC deplores these senseless
• Blockmg employees veh1cles . labor practices agamst RAC.
acts
of violence and vandalism and
as they enter and leave work;
There has ·been a significant
urges
all indivi&lt;!uals i~volved in
· Threatening employees;
· increase in the number of incidents
this
strilce
to act with respect and
- Flattening tires and otherwise related 10 the strike by members of
damaging employees' vehicles; and the USW A Local 5668 against dignity for themselves, their families, local business, RAC employ• Shining lights into the eyes of RAC.
employees and sounding air horns
As of Janu~ry 16, there have ees and its subconuac10rs.
as these workers enter and leave

Major provision removed from bill

· What
of new services would you like to
see from Bank One?
·
'

Why would one of the most successful banks in
America ask such a thing?Simple.\\.e ~rurfuturesuc­
. (Be reasbriable now, Free samples and hot tubs cess depends on making you feci good about our bank.
don't.count.) Ifyou can think of something that gets you
So we're willing to go a little farther than the
excited about banking with Bank One, let us know.
average banker to win your business and keep it.
No fooling. \M! waru: to hear about it.
Along with new products and services, and
0&lt;991-0.""'""'"'

.

•

.

'the convenience and stability of one of the nation's strongest banks, this unusual attitude is what sets us apan.
.To see our approach
.,. · .
in action, stop by the I:JA AIV r.~:/1::!'
closest Bank One.
~wn
'-'.I"W'j;;'.
Our door's always open. \Vhatever it t'.ake{. ·

..

.

lofnnbuRJIC

__,_..,

•

·. 'I'
I

~·- __)

•'

-·

COLUMBUS, Ohlo (UPI) -A chlef sponsor.
,,
provision of a "living will" bill
~hat would have allowed lmme·
The Ohio Right to Life Society
'illaiP famlly members to make and the Ohio Catholic ConferPnce
'llfe·or·death decisions for their wanted lawmakers to remove the
terminally Ill and comatose provision that gives close relarelatives has been removed from lives authority to " pull the plug"
or ' to prevent ·someone from
.the measure.
The Senate · Reference and
being placed on l!le support
Oversight Committee heard tes· equipment, said Sen . Eugene
tltnony Monday on a substitute Watts, R-Galloway, chairman of
bill, which hicks an original the committee.
pr6vlslon giving close relatives
Gov. George Volnovlch also
the authority to remove life · had "some questions about the
support systems from hospital
language" In that section of the
patlents who have not signed b!U, said spokewoman Caryn
llvlng wills.
Candlsky, but :'he did not speclfl·
'l:he change leaves out ap cally ask that It be taken out."
estimated 85 percent of the - Watts said opposition to the
people who might be placed on language possibly endangered
life support . systems, . but the · qulckpassageolthebiU , whl!'hls
. Issue will be reconsidered In the ' a priority measure this year for
House.• said Sen~ Betty Montgo- Senate Republican leaders.
.,..ery; R-Perrysburg, the bill's
Griffith Thomas of the Amerl·
.j

-

......

----~-~-

can ~ssoclatlon of Retired Persons In Youngstown and William
Dunlap of the Ohio Hospital
Association said the provision
should be returned to the bill.
" You've taken out one of the
most Important parts of the bill,"
Thomas· told the committee.
•· We ' r e e xt r e m el y
disappointed."
The main thrust or the bill Is to
allow people to draw up living
Wills disclosing their wishes
shoul&lt;! they beocme comatose
and terminally 111. Close relalives would be able to appeal to a
probate court on narrow grounds
If they felt that medical workers
were not following the patient's
wishes.
OhlolsoneofonlylOstatesthat
do not have provisions for llvlng
wtlls.

-erlea

REGIONAL DIRECTOR • Nell ":~::!

&amp;epoD VD DIIKiui !I tile All

SoapiJCJK DerbJ,..-dY landed I mectb&amp; ol
tbe Melp COIIIItJ Soap Ia 0.111 "-dab.
He o«tml tlpl ud
ll*eiD... deriiJ
operatlolll proatl...., Tile All ~ Soap

adm

-- --~~-~~~~·---.-~,~·~~j~.~~-~~~----------·--~~7-----~~-~--------~--~~~~~----~~--~~

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