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                  <text>Page-:-14-The Dally Sentinel
• .lo' •

WHITNEY
SALMON

'

14'1• QZ. CANS .

$199

STORE HOURS '
Monday tbw Sunday
8 AM-10 PM

Ohio Lottery

·Meigs ·
wrestlers
advance

Pick 3: 770 '
Pick 4: 1072
Cards : A·H, K-C;
3-0;3-S

Super Lotto: 12-27.
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Kicker:417569

Page4

POMEROY, OH.

COUNTRY
STYLE

SAT.; MAR. 2, 1991

a1
.e n 1ne
Guns fall silen.t in war-torn Kuwait

RIBS

$129
$ 79
Chuck Roast •••.•~•• 1
·U.S~D.A. CHOICE BONELESS BEEF ta. $
29
U.S.D.A. CHOICE ·BONELESS .BEEF

'

.

PARKAY
SPREAD

~ump Roast ••••••••. 2
'$129
$l 79
·Bologna •••••••••••• ~B~.
ECKRICH .

.

,

(
Leg Q
. uarters ••••.L:.•• 4,9
$l 29

Wieners ••••••••••••• ~B~ 99~
••

Euphrates River
Basra

ZEST A
·CRACKERS

Tu~leey .!:·.

Flavor1te

6.·9

.

'

·APPLE
SAUCE
16 OZ~ CAN

3/$1
II

$ 99
Potatoes •••••••••• ~.~~ 1

•

RUSSET

•
"

.

FLAVORITE

.

2°/o Milk •••••••••••••• $1 59

"

.

Cheese Shces ••••
DEL MONTE

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$

109

Squeeze Catsup ••~•• 99 &lt; TV ·Dinners .... ~:-~!~!·•• 99~
BANQUET
·
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KGRArna. pe
9
9
(
29
Jelly •• ~ •••3;.~z••
Fried Chicken •••!. $2
2 0
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OIL

or WATER

TUNA

•~-~~z·2J$ ·1
Good Only At ....... Solpor .Valu
Good f.. 24 lhr• M.rdl (. " "
linllt 2 ,.,_ (~IN!

' I.

DOMINO SUGAR

DETERGENT
136

oz.

HI.

$ 79~

Good Clloly " .......

lAG

a-1 Onlr At ,...... •
v11u
Geell fell. 24 lllru .... 2, 1991

s.,. ••.

111111,... 24 tin .... 2,.1991

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----

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DUNCAN HINES

CAKE MIXES

l~i.' '3 f$2
Good 0n1J At l'ew.U's S.. Valu
Good fill. 24 thru MDr. 2, 1991
llnllt

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3/$1
CHARMIN
TOILET
TISSUE
12 ROLL PKG.

BANQUET

SEA

15.5 OZ. CANS

PLASTIC GALLON

FLAVORITE IND. W~APPED

j

CEASE FIRE POSITIONS · These were the
positions of AIHed coalition forces in the Kuwaiti
theater or operations just pri.or to the implemen-

..

HANOVER LIGHT RED

KIDNEY
BEANS

$299
RHODES

WHITE
'

~BR-EAD
5 PAK 1-LI. LOAVES

$159

.

Bids on an addition to the.Meigs
County Department of Human Services headquarters in Middleport
were opened at Wednesday's regu• · . · . lar meeting of the Meigs County
French Defensive
Commissioners.
Flank Position
This is the second tinle thai bids
were received on the $1 million
project • the commissioners voted
IRAQ
to reject the fJTSt bids in December.
The apparent low bidder on the
u.s. 7th
general construction bid was
Corps
Wesam Construction of Pomeroy,
with a bid of $669,887. Parkersburg Heating and Cooling submit·
ted the apparent low bid on the
. plumbing contract in an amount of
$39,000. The apparent low bid on
the mechanical ponion of'the con.Persian Gulf
tract was submitted by·Singer Sheet
Metal in the amount of $110,556.
Finally, the apparent low bidder 011
the electrical subcontract was
Advance Electric, who submitted a
bidof$129,900. .
Commissioner Richard Jones
SAUDI ARABIA
pointed out that the apparent low
Kuwai!Cily
bids the second time around were
.; .o_______,;;so
over $43,000 below the total
L __...:::.Mi:::'le::s~----------'---------------..:::lo.:~~:::::~ amounts on the fJTSt bids: Action on

LUCKY LEAF

(

By BRIAN J, REED
Sentinel News Staff

IRAN

CJ

I-LB. BOX

$]89
Colby Cheese •••••••••
.

more than a haU'·million.
But Bush emphasize4 that a "against any other country" as it retreated with defeat."
The broadcast did not mention
Addressing the nation Wednes- · complete end to hostilities could . had dozens of times at Israel and
day night from the Oval Office, not come unless Iraq stops fighting, Saudi Arabia during the war. ·
the liberation of Kuwait.
Hours later, Baghdad Radio
A senior U.S ..military source in
Bush declared victory and effec· accepts all 12 U.N. resolutions
broadcast
a
statement
by
an
Iraqi
·
Riyadh,
Saudi Arabia, said it
tively ended the war. "Kuwait is against Baghdad since the Aug. 2
liberated. Iraq's army is defeated. invasion of Kuwait, releases all military spokesman ordering Sad- appeared the guns on the battlefield
Our military objectives are met. prisoners of war and the remains of dam Hussein's military to stop had fallen silent in a war that lcilled
This war is now behind us."
all slain allied troops, and notifies fighting and saying Bush's hand 79 Americans. "We've received no
The president ordered allied the allies of the location of all had been forced because "our reports of any cease-fire violatroops had managed to inflict lions,'' he said. "We are going into
offensive maneuvers to siop by mines.
midnight EST (8 a.m . Thursday
Bush also insisted that Iraq must heavy casualties with the enemy defensive positions. We wiU not go
Kuwait time).
not fire any more Scud missiles troops, while the remai!ling troops
. Continued on page 5

open bids for
addition to DHS headquarters

LONGHORN

GRA·DE A - •Avg. 1\1)~ 14 lb.

By ANTHONY 0. MILLER , the Iraqi milital'y said to have beei1
left nearly impotent, the United
United Press Iaternatlonal
Fighting in the Pe:rsi81! Gulf war Nations prepared a formal cease·
virtually stopped Thursday six fire declaration and the allies dis·
weeks after it began, with President cussed a postwar plan for the
·
Bush declaring victory over Iraq region.
But a senior Pentagon official
and orderinl! an end to allied offen·
sive operations. Baghdad caUed a cautioned that Americans should
cease- fire. saying its forces had not expect their ttoops home soon .
because of the work that lay ahead
"taught the enemies a Jesson."
With Kuwait liberated after to clean up the battleground and the
seven months of occupation and logistics of moying out a force of

2 SIICtlono, 12 Pogeo 25 canto

A MUIUmeclla Inc. Newopoper

Commissione~s

..

LB.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday; February 28, 1991

I

FRESH BUTTS, ROASTS, or

Pork Steaks ••••••. ~B.

"

Vol. 41, No. 218
CoPJtlghl8d 1981

.

FLAVORITE

CHICKEN

LB.

JUMBO

3 LB. TUB

•

•

298 SECOND ST.

Low tonight in mid-40s.
Friday, chance of rain 70
·percent.

'

\

UPIGtaphic

tation of the cease-fire announced by Preside11t
Bush Wednesday night. (UPI)

Troop return to be slow
patched to the desert kingdom from
its base at Fort Bragg, N.C.
Additionally, from a logistical
standpoint iJ will be easier to get
the "lightest" Of the forces home
first because they have the least
gear to take back wilh them.
The Anny has said that its German-based units will go back to
Germany (lrst and authorities were
thinking of bringing some of those
units back to the United States
sometime after their return from
Saudi Arabia. But their eventual
return to the United States may
depend upon Soviet compliance
with the conventional forces treaty.
The U.S. military transport system was so taxed that the Mililal;)h
Airlift Command ordered up the
second of three stages of activation
of civil reserve air fleet progialll, a
system in which the Pentagon can
effectively commanaeer passen~er
and cargo aircraft for its use dunng
a national emergency.
·
Many of those planes and oihers
charted by the military - planes
that lined up at an airbase in Saudi
Arabia in numbers so Iar~e it
looked lilce an international auport
without tile passenger lounges 'Plans for an informational meeting on the Clean Air Act were made
are
lilcely to be used 10 get the units
when an advisory committee on the act met on Monday evening.
home.
According to Meigs County Chamber Executive Director Elizabeth
A spokesman at the Military
Schaad, who serves o.n the committee, the meeting will be held on
March 20 at the Ohio University Inn in Athens at 7 p.m.
. Airlift Command in Illinois said
Four presenters representing the Public Utilities Commission of. that so far the operation had flown
14,800 missions and hauled .
Ohio, American Electric Power, United Mine Wmlcers and the legisla.481,000
passengers to Saudi Arative commiitee currently focsuing on the Ohio coal situation will give a
bia.
Some
513,000 tons of cargo·
brief overvieew of the cumnt situation from their perspectives. Folwas
airlifted
in.
·lowing the presentations, a panel and moderator will handle questions
Although
the amount of cargo is
and responses from those assembled. The moderator, the presenters
smaller
than
the
lilnnage flown diD"·
and the makeup of the panel will be announced later.
ing
the
Bellin
Airlift.
with the dis·
Arnoog those invited to auend this March 20 meeting will be cham·
tances
involved
the
effort
to get
bar members, CIC's, economic developers, public officials and school
materiel
to
the
gulf
region
dwarfed
administrators.
the 1948 airlift. In comparison, a
spokesman said, so far Operation
Desert Storm bas involved 3.72 bil·
lion ton-miles of flyi1111 while the
· Two subjectS are being held in the Meigs County Jail, charged
Berlin operation involved 697.5
with the alleged Fclinlary 17 assault and robber of Marvin Randolph
mUlion ton-miles.
·
at Racine.
Nearly two thirds of the troops
Acconlintl 10 Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby, Jasper
flown to the gulf were carried on
ColltiNud oa page 5
.
commercial aircraft

WASHINGTON (UP I) AdditionaUy, he said, it will take .
Although troops may slart coming time to a5semble aU the U.S. equiph~ from the gulf war relatively
ment, clean the tanks and other
soon, it will take longer to bring . material, prepare it for shipping
them all back than the five and a ~ and get it loaded. Troops, particuhalf months it took to put them in larly reservists who played a vital
place, a Pentagon official said role at Saudi pons, will be needed
Thursday.
for that.
The official, who asked that his
" .You may even see additional
name not be used, 11oted that the U. reservists called up .to aid in the
S. transportation system was return of the troops," said the. offistrained to put the 537,000 U.S. cia!, noting that in addition to helpforces in the region, not to mention ing at the ports they have been
the millions of tons of war materiel . deeply involved in transporting the
that was flown and sh1pped to the men and materiel throughout the
gulf; , .
.
theater and in providing air traffic
It s gomg to take us longer to control se!Vices.
·
bring the troops home than it took
"The waging of war is flat out
us to get over. t~ere. We really simple. The restoration of peace is
stretched the arrlift system to get a challenge " said the official.
the troops over,'' said the official."
Although the order of the rerum
"We can be a !itt!~ bit more has not been set, most expect the
measured and method1cal about first troops in to get to go home
bringing the troops ho~ ~or, .'!-eir first. That would be good lle~s for
safety and to ease our 8U'ltft, he the 82nd Airborne Division. Its
said.
. "ready brigade" was the first dis-

..--LOC3f

news briefs-

clean Air Act committee meets

2 face assault, robbery charges

the bids were tabled yesterday
pending review by the architect,
Burgess and Niple of Parkersburg,
W.Va.
The project will add a threestory addition to the DHS' existing
R.ace Street office~ allowing the
operation to consolidate its divisions under one roof. The cost of
the addition will be reimbursed to
the county Qy the Stale Department
of Human Services.
In related action, the co.mmis·
sioners approved the purchase of
several pieces of computer equip·
ment for the DHS. The equipment•.
to be purchased from Computer
Communications Concepts, will
cost $2,375.95, and as with the
consbUCtion project, the c~t of the
system will be reimbursed by the
state.
The commissioners'will sell ~wo
county-owned vehicles at public
auction on Wednesday. The com'
missioners are going to sell a van
and jeep that were formerly used
by the Meigs County Sheriff's
Office. The auction will be held at
11:30a.m.
The commissioners made plans
.to attend a public meeting regarding the Clean Air Act of 1990 in

Athens in mid-March. The meeting
will be held at the Ohio Univers(ty
Inn on March 20 at7:30 ):. ..m.
Representatives from American
Electric Power, the Public Utilities
Commission of Ohio, the United
Mine Workers aml the legislature
are expected to be on the scene.
The meeting will include a panel
discussion and an opportunity for
questions fro~ those attending.
The commossooners approved ii
bid on a telemetry system for the
Village of Pomeroy at their meet·
ing yesterday. The bid was opened
at last week 's meeting and was
approved earlier thi s week by
Pomeroy Village Administrator
John Anderson. The system, which
will provide a remote-control .monitoring system for the village water
system-,Will cost $14,871. $14,000
of that amount will be paid by
Community Development Slock
Grant funds approved last year by
.the commissioners.
~
Present at the meeting were
Commissioners Jones, Manning
Roush, David Koblentz, Clerk
Mary Hobstetter, County Engineer
Phil Roberts, and Superintendent
Ted Warner.

Leaders from around world
welcome
gulf
cease-fire
vro
By I)A
CRAIG
United Press Interaational

forces in the gulf under the resolute labor opposition leader, was more
le;Kienhip of President Bush,'' said enthusiastic about the war's' end.
Philippine President Corazon "In this situation, President Bush
World leaders Thursday cele" Aquino, who five years ago led a played the whole piano of political,
brated the liberation of Kuwait people's rebellion that toppled the economic and operational options.
from Iraqi occupation, and wei- dictator Ferdinand Marcos.
He did this all without making one
corned the cease-fore put into effect
She called the victory over Sad· mistake,' ' he said. "On the other
by President Bush after U.S.-Ied dam "truly a triumph of the forces hand, I don't think there was one
forces defeated Saddam Hussein's of peace and of those principles , inistake that Saddam could have
army. ·
that all humanity regard as right made and didn' t."
·
·
A suspension of allied offensive and just" and said Filipinos "stand
The commander of French
OIJCrations went into effect at mid- ready to help in the difficult work forces in the gulf expressed satismght EST Wednesday, ending a . of (Kuwait's) reconstruction."
faction with the suspension of
campaign that Jed to the defeat of
Opinion was divided in Israel. fightinl!. Gen. Michel Roquejeo[fre
Iraqi troops and the return of "I regret that Saddam Hussein was said hts troops ''welcomed with
Kuwait to its citizens.
not personally elimi~tated.'' said satisfaction the cease-fire, for we
"The comprehensive defeat of · extreme right-wing Cabinet mem- have come here so that the rule of
Saddam Hussein in Kuwait will ber Yuval Ne'eman.
international law could be re-estab·
standasawamingbeacon,foryears
But Shimon Peres, the fonmer lished. That has been accomto come to anyone. who would con- ~l~sr!!ae:!liLI!!:!!!!!~!!!!l~.!!l!!.£!~:!JL...1P~Iis~h~ed~·~"..­
sider aggression," Australian
Prime Minister Bob Hawke said.
"President Bush and the people
of the United Slates have our admi·
ration for their conduct and for
their leadership and our thanks for
their commiunent and their willingness to sacrifice in a cause we all
share,'' Hawke said.
Arrangements were in the worlcs ·
for a permanent cease-fire. but
Bush set several conditions for Iraq
to meet, including the release of
prisoners of war and Iraqi captives
and the return of dead soldiers.
Bush also said Iraq must reveal the
location of land and sea mines,
comply with u :N. resolutions on
Kuwait and agree .to compensate
for the losses, damage and injuries
resulting from the aggression.
In a communique from Baghdad, Iraq ordered its troops to
observe the cease-fire and not·
begin shooting at allied forces.
Iraqi Foreign Minister Tariq
Aziz sent a message to U.N. lead·
ers saying "the Iraqi government
accepts officially to conform itself
entirely to Resolution 660 and all
other resolutions of the organiza·
tim."
·
Leaders worldwide reacted with
nearly unani{llous praise for the
. multinational coalition tllat freed
the tiny, oil-rich emirate from the
l)eal'!y 7-month-old oc:c:upation.
PRESIDENT BUSH
" We felicitate the multinatiOnal
1/

..

·- -·........,--'-_ .......

- "'f~·-----·-----'--- .4 ·•-..:..·

�I

')

.

1891

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court

stree&amp;

Pomeroy, Oblo

.DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS
OF THE MEIGS-MASON
AREA
..
.
~~~

i!!o!m~

,....,_,._..,..,........,c::J,,.. .

'q!v
ROBERT L. WINGETT

Publisher

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Muager

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant hbllllber/Can&amp;roller
A MEMBER o!The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
Association and the A_!"erlcan Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less !!tan 300
long. All letters are subject to edlttng and must be signed with
name, addresund telephone number. No unsigned letters will be pufi.
Oshe d. Letters should be In good tute, addressing Issues, not personal!·
ties.
·
~ords

Food·outlook bleak;
needs may be serious

•

•

..

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio ·
'n'ILI~day, February 28, 1891

RIYADH, Saudi Mbia - U.S. to be deliberaiely conservative in
military officals and intelligence what we tell you and the American
sources have confided that the people. We don't want.a credibility
biggest. secret of the air campaign gap to generate. We don't ever
in the Persian Gulf war is the want to· lead the AmerillaD people
extraOrdinary e;l!tent of the damage to be1ieve something is going on
inflicted on- the Iraqi army and the that isn't going on. And therefore,
we are very, very deliberately maicelite Republican Guards.
"The damage is much greater ing sure that what we provide you
than we're willing to admit." one is something we can back up if
top military official said. Other ever challenged."
Another hint that the destruction
sources agreed that the damage
estimates given in official briefings exceeds the published statistics is
· the increasing number ·of planes
are "extremely conservative."
In a wide-ranging interview returning to allied bases in Saudi
with
us,
Gen.
Norman Arabia with full bomb racks
Schwarzkopf hinted at this, saying because they could not find a target
that the kinds of damage reports that hadn't already been hiL.
talcen for fact in Viemam would not
One knowledgeable military
fly here. The military learned intelligence source here said that
lessons about credibility in the last key units of the Republican Guards
have lost as much as half of their
war.
"I would tell you that we are troops and equipment. He caunow and we are going 10 continue

tioned, though. ihat a few units
have nOl been touched at all.
The Republican Guards, nl,lmbering ·from 108,000 to llO,OOO,
are the beSt fed, best trained and
most highly motivated units in Saddam Hussein's army. Classified
military maps show Saddam has
spre&amp;!l them far back from the front
- most in a crescent alona the IraqKuwait border. Some are in southern Iraq along the border'with
Saudi Arabia and others are guarding Saddam in Baghdad.
, Aside from the destruction of
the Republican Guards, involving
thousands of deaths, the air strikes
have been more effective than
acknowledged against Iraq's. estimared 4,000 tanlcs. 2, 700 artillery
pieces !IRd 2,500 armored fighting
vehicles. That success has encour-.
aged the allied cornmandei's to
press on with the war in the skies.

Jack Anderson
While ackilowledging thlt the·
damalJe estimates are on the conservanve side, Gen. Schwarzkopf is
careful not to underestimate his
enemy. "There has been a lot of
spec:ulation that 'cracks are startina
to appear' in the Repu~lican Guard.
OK, and that's prollllbly the case.
But I would hate to define how big
the cracks are, how critical the
craclcs are, what the result of the
craclcs are, etcetera. ...
"I just think that when someone
says, 'Cracks are beginning to
appear,' everybody says, 'Hey,
golly, that's great.' They expect
that subsequently a major fissure
will come up and the whole thing
will fall down around itself. I say
we are only_(several) weelcs into a
very, very major militi!IY enterprise
(and would) caution against false
enthusiasm."

We'Ve DeCiDeD TJ{i$ TiMe
We'Re &amp;lYiNG aN ~iC3N CaR

ByCHARLESJ.ABBOTT

saot.t

--du$T as
as
We FiND WoRK!

WASHI!"GTON (UPI) - Food s~pplies in Ira~ and Kuwait are
~xtremely .light and Iraq could face '·sen~us food needs • thiS year despite
tts attempts to boost farm output, a Ltbrary of Con~ess report said
Wednesclay. ·
.
. 'The administration is assessing the post;war needs of.the two nations
the report said. There have belen indications since late January that food
ai~ was likely for Kuwait.
In the pas~ Iraq and Kuwait relied on imports to supply most of their
food; The Ltbrary of Congress report cited spiraling prices and evertighter food-rationing rules as evidence of severe food shortages in Iraq.

The Agriculture Deparunent has estimated· the trade embargo would
allow Iraq to acqire only 500,000 tons of foreign wheat and rice this marketing ,Year- one-tenth of its grain, rice and soybean meal imports in the
precedmg year.
Even if Iraq's wheat and barley harvest is abundant this summer, the
report said, damage to roads, bridges and processing plants could interfere
with delivery of bread and other grain products to the cities.

r----:-------------------.

~- Berry's World

,.,.

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Even when lucid, Quayle
appears stiff and stagestruck; n's
hard to believe he could win the
nomination in 1996 even afta" eight
years at the president's side. If nOl,
Bush wiU have bequeathed chaos
to his pany.
·
Powell, on the other hand, confronts the' cameras with an ease
bome of·healthy self-confidence,
and he adlibs and fences with
reponers as Quayle clearly cannot
In one stroke, the nation's leading lilact politician would cease to
be a glib leftist with no disc:emable
career except public 81'8Rd-standing
and instesd become a man whO had
risen to the pinnacle of his profession. Jesse Jaclcson specializes in
demands and, grievances, not to
mention in running down the U!lited States: Powell's standing rests
on personal accomplishments and
in a lifetime of defending his coun-

Vincent Ca"oll
try.
The elUtmple for minority youth

could not be healthier. Currently,
.they hear a vinually unchallenged
message from many leaders in their
community tb8t the United Stales is
a horribly bigoted society that will
do anything to keep them down.
With Powell in the White House,
they would see through this fraud.
They'd witness someone who'd
succeeded on his own terms, his
dignity intact, and not by stamping
his feet and calling the whole world
racist
Of course there iS a downside to
~his dream; Having Powell as a
running mate will malce Bush so
.invulnerable in '92 that he could
slide by another elcx:tioil without a
serious domestic agenda. Yet come
to think of it, he'll probably try to
do~anyway.

Robert Walters
Politicians face the music on ethics --~--------------AUSTIN. Texas (NEA)- If misery loves company, Texas House of
Representatives S)leaker Gib Lewis
ought to be a very happy man these
days in his new role as a criminal
defendant
But Lewis' current prr.dicament
is hardly a cause for joy - and the
companionship of other state and
local politicians throughout the
country provides lillie solace while
he is awaiting trial on charges
stemming from alleged ethical

'

VVedaesday Collese Basketball
-Realts
By UDited Press Jatenlatloul
East
Adelphi 84, Queens 54
DIVISION I
Bloomfield S2, Caldwell SO
action.
.
Akr Firestone 90, Akr Buchtil81
Bloomsburg SL 89, Kutztown St.
Tbe Rcdmen will face Tiffin
Draaoos SIIUiday 11
~v=N:S';i.~~fs
~i~ifomia (Pa.) 72, Shippens- University's
7;3~_p.m. at Lyne Center. Tiffin
Celina 82, Ull)8 77 · .
Clarion 85, Lock Haven 78 .
(23-8) lalc:ic:ked out Mount Vernon
Cin Aiken 65, Milford 39
Connecticut 62, Seton Hall60 (01) Nua"'Jnc ~-56 Wednesday to con•
Cin Elder 67, Cin Taft49.
Dowling9l,NY Teclt 73 .
. · linue in the playoffs, whl!e aecoodDay Wayne 51, Troy40
Gannon S3, Buffalo 44
·
seeded Malone (29-4) defeated
Oenew 68, Cle Glenville 66
Hamilton 79, Utica 48 '
Urbaaa 96-88. Malone will boat
Grove City 66, Col East 51
'Hanford~. Central Coon. S3
Cccluvillo (21-10), which defated
Groveport 65, Westland 60
HariWi 89
Central
Slale 121-105 Tueaday, on
73
~ Perry 46, Uniontown Lake 30 · Massachuaeas
c:1 ' Olieonta
82, Rhode Islancl70
Saturday Jli&amp;bL
Maumee 84, To! Woodward 49
Millersville 88, E. Stroudsbura 81
The winners of the Rio GrandeStow Walsh 72, Hudson 64
Philadelphia Textile '106, Mercy- Tiffin and Malone-Cedarville
Stronasville 67. Lorain King 64
hurst 63
pmes will adYIIICe to the eblmpiTol Central 52, Syl Northview 41
Pousdam 85, Nazareth 73
onsbip round on Tuesday, March S.
TolJolms 81, Ore Clay 65
Rutgers 92, Penn SL 70
· At Rio Gl'lllde, Findlay bad a 4.,, To! Waire 67, To! Macomober 61
Slippery Rock 105, Indiana (Pa,) 0 lead OYCr the Redmea eatiy and
Wapakoneta 62, Tol Rogers Sl
103
·
took off for a 16-7 run, aaribulable
in
pan to the IICCUIIte t!Jree-p&lt;&gt;int
DIVISION D
South
sbootina
of Brad Morrison; Tim
Canfield 80, You Clianey 49
Bethune Cookman ill, Md.-E.
Nichols
and
Rod Role. ·
Cin Bacon 77, Goshen 54
Shore 71 ··
·
· Rio Grande, liamperecl' by foul
Cin Turpin 6!, Forest Parle 59
Duke 79, Clemson 62 '
troubles and 1 disappoin · shootCle cc 6l,l&lt;eystone 53
Oeo. Wash. 84, St Bonaventure 71
Georgia 62, Vanderbilt 59
ina performance, fou':cf itself
Copley 68, Akron Hoban 48
LSU79, Florida 66
behind by 16 jiOints (29-13) with
Field 74, Canal Fulton NW 63
Mississippi 93, Tennessee 88·
8;40 lfmainin in the llllf.
Girard 56, Champion 54
Mississippi SL 94, Auburn 76
But with ~ary Harrison, who
HARRISON SHOOTS- Rio Grack fill t1 IIIIPI'• Dlllrlct 22 pla)'Oir pile at L,.e Cellter,
Hubbard 58, Cortland Lakeview Sl No. Carolina St 114, Maryland 91
had 31 points for the same, and
Gary
Harrlsoa (10) 1et1 tills 1bot
Louisville 75, Canton CC 40
s. Alabama 130, Prairie View 93
wlllelltlle
'IIW 93-73 to tan tile rlaht
Ieff Brown, who netfiCd 21, hiains
before FIDdlay's '111111 Nlcbolll (14) c.
tile
·Norwallc S5, Bowling Green S2
Virginia Tech 50, South Carolina some key baskets the Redmim
Ill flee 11ll'la • a A-56 wiMer ....- MODllt VerParma Padua 66, Elyria W 40
block early In tbe ReODd llalf of VVedaaday .- N . ut • S.tw ..1 It 7:30 p.a (Piloto by
41
caught up in a five-minure period
83
67
K-llwiR)
..
Pon Clinton • Milan Edison
Walce Forest 65, New Hampshire to llilil by eight on ~ occasions.
Revere 82, Medina Buckeye 43
.
49
A pair of Mark EnJan
throws from the three-point range (three
W Geauga 55, Chardon 52
Midwest
lllriiiMrl ~ eiP&amp;.
· . ·ll!lot 7 u for 70.8 percent and
II
1;34
CUI the !ieficitto fi¥e (38apiece scored by Schubert aad
1)e Oilera wert I!ICC~flll 011 . c s p I 10 -..uvcn.
Ball St. 63, Bowiing Green 55
you East SQ. You South 49
33), and Harriaon'·s two-pointer Brown). At the foul line, the ~ 24 of 61 l&amp;tewptl rro. the ftoor · F'lllcllay deputecl with a 14-13 ·
DIVISION m
Cent Missouri 80, Missouri South- with 42 seconds left .put Rio men connected on 13 of 18 trieifor (39.3 p•m•). illc:l8di11i eilllt of n-.t. ·
Grande behind the Oilers by three 72.2 percent, notched.40 rebounds i! froll 1111 tiRe for 31.1 peltiCIIL ' iol - ;
Beachwood 78, Pytnauming Val 60 ern 55
headed into the halftime.
Bellbrook S9, East ClintOn 44
Central Mich. 86, Miami 85 (OT)
to .Findlay's 37, .and held ita Fllllllay allo hit ca 17 of Ia Z. foul
· UO GRANDI (9l) - Gary ..
Brad Schaben's two points at
Bloom Carroll 75, Johnstown 63
Chadron SL 91, Doane 88
•
Hamson, 10-1-8-31; Iawanza
18;13 in the second halfknoUed the
Campbell 73, Sandy Valley 36
E. Mich. 65, Kent46
OillJI, 1.()..2;
score at 40 and a Brown field goal
CleLuth W 51, Columbia43
Easrem Michipn65, Kent SL 46
Mlrt Enllll, 1-1-2-7: Brad Schuat 16:SO again tied tbinp up at 42.
Colonel Crawford 73, Ontario 50
Eurelca 89, Rosary 70
bert, 1-3-0-11; 1.-r Smith, 3-2-8;
Both teams exchan&amp;ed the lead by
Colunib Crestview 66. United Loc Malone 96, Urbana 88
1clf Iron, 6-3-0-21; Tim Chrisone or two pointa until Greg
50 Missouri 84, Kansas SL 75
tilll, 1-0-2; Troy Douild1011, S-1·
Hamilton Badin 64, Dixie 57
Northwestern (Ia). 97, Teilcyo Denecker's two free throws for
11. TOTALS ZW-13'-93. .
·
Findlay tied the score at46 (15;32).
Marion Pleasant 73, NUnion 62
Wesbnar 78
PINDLA Y ('73) - Tim Nkhols,
Harriso11 connected on a threeNorwayrie 58, W Salem Nwestem Rio Grand 93, Findlay 73
2-3-l·I4; Rod Jlose, 2-1-0-7; Stc¥e
pointer 22 !ICICOnds later to put the
By Ualted Preas Ioteraatloaal
43
Tiffin 68, Mt Vernon Nazare~~e 56
But John Potter hit a fnle du'ow, liM. 0-1.()..3; Otq Delecker, 6-6- ..
Redmen ahead 49-46.
Eddie Sutton reached rock bol- AiexlildCt I ll'e 'IWay layup and 11; Brad MQI rlsoot, 1-1-4-9; Brian
Oak Harbor 82, Genoa 65
.
Wesrem Mich. 63, Ohio 61 '
Oalcwood 879-, Day Jefferson 63 ·
Southwest
,_
. From there, Rio Grande never tom when he was forced out at Corey WilliMII I lut~bnik dullk Vont, 5·2-6-22. TOTALS 16-8- ·
Smithville 65, Rittman 55
· Houston 85, SMU 58
looked back, ~nd despite Brian Kentucky a few yean aao. but now to ICial tlae lriulllpll with SI !ICICOIIdS 17-73.
Wellington 70. Oberlin 59
Oklahoma·SL 80, Nebraska 69
Vorst's 22-point, seven-rebound the ~ c~h is back II the lOP
Halfllllt ICOrt: Findlay 38, Rio
Wickliffe 75, Middlefield Card 55
Rice•72, Texas A&amp;M 55
finish to lead for Findlay, the Red- m the B1g Eight with Oklahoma ~ 14-0II~this . Or1Jide 35.
.
Wynford n. Crestline 55
TCU 78, Texas 70
season, won dapite playinJ moll
men went on a !'On that put them State.
• rtabl y ahead .or
• the res 1 of
With
VVest
of the !ICICORd bllf without Jcading
c:Qm.o
. Darwyn
h NAlexander
C scorins
b
the game.
. 16 pomts, t e o. 12 ow oys scorer .S ..,..,~. Jyron HoulDIVISION IV
Montana St. 74, S. Ulah 71
The Dally Sentinel
Ashtabula John 67, Bristol42
"We were so tentative early in defeated _13th-ranked Nebraska BO- ton. Hou11011 wu in foal trouble
Beallsville 57, Caldwell 56
the game, and weren't aggressive · 6~ at Sullwater, Okla., to m~ve nl fmillled wid! Gilly 13 pailll.
_'fi'ansactions
IDprlln, No. I ~:luke
Ber- Ctr Wan Res SS, Lordstown 29
on either end," Redmen Coach .c~ to their first conference title
A . . . . ef •
• ... liM!.
Berlin Hiland 76, Garaway 52
VVedaesday Sports TnDSICtioos
Iohn Lawhom said. "You can't Since 1965.
CleltfOll ~ 17 IQdliMI
PloW- _ , . .,._ _ Maadoy
Cuyahogs Hts 56, Elyria Dooi' 4 7
79-66, CaltBy Ualted Press lnternatioaal
play to keep from losins, you have
. Oklah!lma S~te, .21-5 oven! I State c:lippld
....... . 2"1111.oy. 111 Cooort St.. f'o.
DaltQp 6~; Cliya Va!'Chr 49
Baaebal.l . ,
J
to play to win, ind we were just and 10-3 m the Big EIBht. can grab nectieut edpd NO. ~ Setoli Hall
. . . , , Olllo, .., lit Oll1o Vol.IIt)' Pub- '
llnla1 ~-oy/Multlml!dla, Inc., .
Fon.Loramie 49, RusSia 34
Baltimore - Signed third' base- &gt;:, getting buried. But we were a lot at.~ a ~ rl lhe crown Satur- 62-60 in owrtlllle. Tew Christian
, . _:-otdo 4!1111, PI!. ~·21118. ~·
Frailk fllr Green 58, Lllham West- lJUill ·Craig Wortbinaton to ·1-year more 8ft!e8Sive in the second half · ~Y with a victorY ~~ Iowa State. downed No. 23 Texas 78-70 and
eond
cilia JIGIIAJ• pAid ot Pomoroy, ·
ern SS · ·
mao.
poundcootrac:L
•
·
because we didn't panic and we ~ - Cowboys~ ued at ~e top No. Z. Nonh Carolina
New Boston 91, Manchester 83
.
Chicago (AL) - Sigoed piich- kept our poise, which I really with Kansas, whi~h closes Its sea- ed Maryland 114-91 ,
Mlll'lber: Uatttd Prell International
Sebring 48, Howland Chr 33
. At Durham, N.C., Christian
ers Mario Brito, Jeff Caner, Brian liked;"
son Sunday • Nebraska.
lnlond Dolly PrNo Auoclotlon oad th~
. Southington 59, Fairpon 54 (Ot)
Drahman, Ramon Garcia, Brian
"I thoUght we caupt Rio a lillie
Sutton, who also l!~fDed around · Laetmer SCOied 17 points in only
Oll!oN.,.opo.c:r;~:'~otloo. Notlollol
.w..ruoa..
-.Bruhom
Harrison and Rich Scheid, infielder lisdess. They weren't ready to lay programs at Cre1gbton and 21 minutu u O.U improved to
- - lo
UITillnl Avenue,
Yoi:tr,- orl&lt; IG?.
Girls scores
• Findla Coach 00 ~~· has done ~ remarkable 24-6. Tile 111111 Devils IIIII No. 4
Nobeno Martin and catcher Matt and e
""erull
'
w
were,
at hu alma mala' JUSI two yean North Clrolilla will billie Sunde
.
. ••• o to one-yesr conttacts. . Nie.. •mp- commented.Y"Rio came , job
f h 1f K
L
'th h
Pqll1oiA!ID: - - Cllonaoo '
Montreal - Invited pitcher out ~th more inrensity in the sec- a ter e e I entuc..y WI t e in Chapel Hill for t-he Atlanti~
Ohio High Scbool Tournament
to 'lllo Dolly· - · Ill Court ~t..
P1D&amp;WOJ,OIIID...
'.'
Rick Mahler to training camp as a ond half hich £&lt; ed
school abo~t to be slammed by Coast Confenace Nplar-season
Scores
free
ent
.
•
w
ore
us
~
make
.
NCAA
sancbOIIs.
He
spent
last
seaBy United Press International
~IIATI:II
, Nag y· L (AL)
A
d
mistakes. and we couldn 1 stop son as a consultant for a shoe com- tide IJid a fli'BI-nJUIId bye ia Q8
11Fw ?lolwlVed,esday,Feb.27
leape~
ew. or.. · gree to Harrison and Brown."
Ole w......................................suo
Girls
tenns with outfielder Hensle~ McuOverall Rio Grande shot S6 3 panyN. b L 23 6 d 8 5
0.. - .. ............ ... ................. .suo
. '
1ens. andp1tc
' bers AlaM'Is
·
eras
..a 'after-Cl'fford
a n · sCales•
was
Oile Yeor ................... , ........... .. ~. 80
At Gainesville:, Fla., LSU's
n. 1 an d percent on• 3.6 of 64 field goal
'thin·
67-63
1
.
IINULII:COPY
DIVISION I
Shaquille O'Neal had 19 points and
Kevm Mmahat on 1-year cOnlnlc!S.
attempts, including ei1ht of 16 ~--po·nter 'th 2·1 8
· ·
.
PmCil
Texas
Agreed
to
tenns
wtth
.
'"'""
1
WI
.
remmmg.
Franklin fits 38, Delaware 32
19 ~ deiplle Dlaylill with a
Dolly ..,., ........... .. .... .. ........... 25 C..to
Pickerington 64, Westerville N 23 pitchers Scott Chiampilino and Jim .
bruised left knee lllfreRil earty .in
SulloerRIOn loot doolrtq to poy tloecar. ·
Poole and putfielc!er Kevin Belcher
.
the second balf. 1'111 Tiaen. 20-7,
r1« may ,..,.It In '""'••oe o11reet to •
DIVISIOND
n. Dolly Soot- ooa3, 6or 12 month
on one-year colllracts; agreed to
MIAMI (UPI) - Phil Mickel- son, Paul Azinser and Mark Cal· can win the Soachentstern COIIferColl\eechcroft 55, Bexley 47
· cndlt wtll bo IIIYell eorrlor eocll
atCe reiiJiaJ nn 1;e tide db a vietenns ~th piteher David Chavarria son, amareur golf's cheerful addi- cavc:cchia for the Dora! tide.
DreSden Tri Val 39, Dover 35
tory 11M' lin~ Stile Sattll'iay.
on Toronto
a mmor league
pact.up the option uon
. to the PGA Tour, tnes
. the: pros
_Picked
AI I wt'II be back this year in
"" 1Ulll&lt;r1ptlollo Ill' moll permitted In
Riverview 47, BeUaire4S (Ot)
"I'll be aD ri&amp;Jtt," O'Neal said.
, anu w11... llaaN r&amp;l'lifr •rvtoe tJ
for 1991 season on pllcher Dave again this week at the $1.4 million addition to fonner champions Jack "I'll problllly IIIIe IOIIiOIJOW oft',
Whitehall 56, Circleville 51
avdablt.
Stieb's contrac:L
Dorai-Ryder Open.
Nicklaus, Lee Trevino, Ben Cren- but I'll ba llldy 10 10 $..-day...
·
M.UiaiN:eal,ttwa
BuketbaD
Mickelson, a junior at Arizona shaw, Lanny Wadkins, Tom Kite
DIVISIONm
AI Hartl'old. Conn., Chril S111itb
-llotp~
Cin Wyomins 62, Valley View, 53 . Sacramento _ Activated suard State, won the Nortbem Telecom and Raymond Floyd. Spain's Se¥8
uw..u .............................. ...Sit.:u
up a 10011 ball and llit a
26 Woob ... ........ ., ..................... S3'1.96
Steve Colter; placed forward Open at Tucson by a stroke over Ballesteros is makins a rare tour
Grandview 66, Liberty Union 47
.
.
I*
•
die
buzzer
10
lift
~~- .. ... ............................. $7U6
Anthon B
· ·
Bob Tway and Torn Purtzer in Ian- appearance, but British Open Conaoctieut, 17-9. ne lou
Jonathan Alder49, Mt Gilead 27
00 mJured list
Y
onner
uary,
and
tied
ret
32nd
at
Phoenix
pion
Nick
Faldo
is
absent
Kenton Ridge S3, BellbroOk 47
13 Wftb-~~~·~
..... .. .. ...... ................... l20.80
snapped a five-Jame winnins
Collese
• w..u .................................. uo.:M
· Army_ Named Tim Mingey and 4 2 nd at Sin Diego. In 12
The course, known as the "Blue sna1t for Seton Hall, 18-7.
Versailles 57, Cin CAPE 43
u w...................................... m.fO ,
assistant athletic direc:tor and foot- rounds on the tour he has failed to ·Monster" because of all the likes
ball recroiting coonlinator.
breakP! only once.
and canals, usually plays a peale!
DIVISION IV
.
Bendey - Tennis coach Larry
'.'I ve had a Bood time playing than usual role in die IOID'IIIIIlCIIL •
E Canton 70, Lordstown 53
Weiss resisned.
the last ~10 of months,' Mic:l- The 18th bole on the par-12 6,939McDonald 63, Ashtabula John 3S
'
Georgia Tech - Named Shel- . elson said. 'The 8UY1 ha¥e really yard layout was ranked second
ton Collier head of women's vol- fee~~:~=·way ,to malce me amons the tour's finishing h.oles
Ohio college scores
leyball program. .
...
Mickelson, 20, jqins a field ~~·course is in peat shape,''
Southeastern Louisiana
filled with golf's stars includins Mickelson said. "It's a beautiful
Obio College Basketball Results
Named Greg Martin interim base- Greg Norman, who'cbloPed in for layout. You can see how playen
By Uaited Press lntemallonal
ball ca.:h.
an eagle on the fmt sUdden-death want to come back here aad play
VVednesday,Feb.l7
.
y•... "
Tennessee- Named Randy hole last year to defeat Tim Simp- eunv
•-, Ball State 63, Bowling Green S5
Sanders assistant football coach.
Central Michigan 86, Miami 85 Football
• .
SECOND ANNUAL
(OT)
.
Dallas - Signed offensive lineEastern Michigan 65, Kent State 46 man Freddie Childress.
Western Michisan 63. Ohio Univ
Detroi 1 - Signed offensive
61
lineman Shawn BouwCIIIS.
.
NAJA District 2l Playoffs
NFL - Named Neil Austrian
Malone96,U~88
president
Tiffin 68, Mt Vemon Nuarene 56
Phoenix - Signed defensive
Rio Grande 93, Findlay 73
end Jeff Faulkiler.

•::z,Jut

w-

II'

Specifically, Lewis has been
indicted by a Travis County arand
jury here on misdemeanor counts
of improperly acceptillg and tailing
to publicly disclose a gift from a
Texas law firm whose business he
was in a position ' to enhance
because he is one of the state's
most powerful p6liticians. He says
he iS innocent of both charges.
As noted above, Lewis' problems are hard! y unusual at a time
when the number of state and local
elected officials indicted on - and
often convicted of- corruption
charges is climbing at an extraordinary rate.
Some example!;:
• In Californiar, two former state
sanators were convicted last year
on charges of engagina in corru~Jl
conducL Assemblr Speaker Willie
Brown repo1 tedly IS the subject of a
federal investigation focusing on
his role in the passase of legislation
that
lice. aided a .client of his law prac- ·
r~

• In New York, Assembly
Speaker Mel Miller was indicted
last year by a federal arand jury on
19 charges of document falsification, mail fraud and conspiracy
relating to ~ allegedly fraudulent
real estate operation.
• In Arizona, seven prominent
members of the legislature and
seven other political figures have
becin indicted on cbarges of money
laundering, filing false financial
disclosure statements and acceptins
tens of thousands of dollars in cash
bribes.
··In Oklahoma, more than 150
county commissioners were imprisoned during the 1980s after being
convicted of defraudina taxpayers
of millions of doUan through elaborate kickback schemes. In Mississippi, 60 county supervisors were
found guilty of similar crimes.
The U.S. Justice Department's
statistics on federal indictments
returned in go¥emment corruption
cases conlinns the presence 9f a
marked trend. In 1970, 10 stare and
26 local officials faced such
charges. By 1990, both ligures had
increased .en-fold - and those numbers do not include non-federal
prosecutions.
. In addition, law enforcement
agencies have placed greater
emphasis on probing white-collar
crime - and have developed new
technical skills and devices to
detect it Enatz aiminal enteillrises used to lure those predi~ to
wrongdoing into "sting opera· ·

lions, for instance, are a relatively
new phenomenon.
None of that pr9vides much
comfort to Lewis, who faces a continuing investisation. PrQsecutors
say that in addition to charging him
with soliciting an imprOper $5,000
gift from his Jaw firm benefactors,
they are probing his reported par-

•

ticipation in the attorneys' junkets
to Mexican and Caribbean beach
resorts.
Sevml young women, one of
them a former topless dancer,
joined the pany in Mexico, according to the prosecutors. Lewis says
he cannot remember the ladies'
occupations.

....

, ._,

...

k

MIC
• keJSOn trieS
• ano· ther pro event .

-·

t:ti!

ch
. am

Mason Family Restaurant
FIIDAY NIGHT IS

MEIGS COUNTY
CHAMBER OF COMMERCE

Today ht history ·
By United Preas JoteraatloDal

:
Today is 'f!lursday, Feb. 28, the Slltb day of 1991 with 306to follow.
The moon IS full .
The morning stars are Men:ury, Venus, Mars and Saturn
The eveni118 star is Jupiter.
·
Those born on ~is day are .unc:Jer the sign of Pisces. They include
French ~.~ytst .Mtchel de Monuu.gne in JS33; Russian ballet dancer
yaslav NtJmsky m 1890; Amencan JOurnalist and screenwriter Ben Hecht
m.189~; chemist and physicist L!Jlus Pauling, twice winner of the Nobel
Prize, m .1901 (age 90); mov~e ~ Vincenre Minnelli in 1910; Svetlana Stalin, daughter.of SoVIet dictator Ioaef Stalin, in 1926 (qe 6~);
~ Tommy fune m 1939 (11811 52); and - . r driver Mario Anclretti
m 1940 (age 51).
.
·
On this date in history;
- . .
In 1849, tbe first shipload of gold seekers arri¥ed in San Francisco aftec
a fi¥e-month journey from New York City.
.
In 1942, Japanese forces landed in Java, the last Allied bastion in tbe
Dutch East Indies.
In 1983, the concludint::* of the 1ona-numing series "M.A.S.H
" !lrew what was then lhe
1television llldience in U S bistory
·
In 1986, Swedish Prime Minister Olof Palme was
on a
street in Stockholm. The crime remains unsolved.
In 1990, lhe Soviet Parliammt )IU8ed a law penniains the ~ea~~n 1 -or
land to individuals for housins and farmins. It was another flllical dlanJ!e
in the Stalinist acheme of a state-run economy.
.

I

IOIIlp&gt;lnu (bU&lt;d'"' Upoinu!orftmpU.,
14 for IOCOI1d, etc.)ondpmi'*• - · · nnl:·

1.

3. Aobnooo ('27·2) 488
3
4. Nonloea.otiou (21-4) 390 6
Arizonl (22·'J
348
8
6. $ynK:ule (2A-4) 340
1. lndiollo (23-4)
334
4
a. Duke (23-6)
306
1

16. S. Mladnlppl (20-4)
' . '"•
~

'

'

"·tlcerbe'

N--

10 II
~~

....

l5
23
l5
22

Vondodiilt.
NGie: By ......,_ willt the NlliCIIIII
Astodlllon ~
Cmdr1 of diD
Uniled Slo!oo, 1111111 ... ,..abdloo by the
NCAA md ineli&amp;iblo lor the NCAA TOIIIIII·
m- on inollaible far Top 25 01ld nuiaao1
c:hompioaoiUpCillllidonlioa by tbo UPIIIaonl
ol Cciod.. Thooo lldlooiiiiOIIJioola,""""
aoc:ty;
Monholl; Molylmd, ~.
....._. l.11111p_, IIIII Raben Mania.

17

..'

l'IR

Olhon ,_ivlna vCIIel: Mic:hi&amp;., Slllc,
· Miloiablloi SW., Rlqeri, Wa!uo F - ond

9.1CJnool (20-'J
246
9
10. Ullh (25-2)
234
10
ll. New Maioo Slole (21·3)100 14
12. Oldabomo Slole ('20-S) 97 15
13. Nebmllo (23-5) 94
13
14. St. Jola"o (19-6) IS
16
13

18
12
20
23

NR-IIOiraMid

s.

15. UCLA ('20-7)

17. Louioi... Slllc (19-7) 61
18. But TeMOIIOO S.. (24-4)35
19. Princorat ('20-2) 14
20. Alobomo •(l7-1) 13
21. Qeooaio Toob (16-9)
13
22. Sola! HaU (18-7) 12
23. T - (11-6)
7
24. N.C. SIIUI (16-8) 5
25.
(16-9)
4

a-a-

2

s.

···---- -----.. ··----- -·-·· ,_,_:-..~~-----tllJ __.....
-- -

(25~)

f.tm.v

(3&amp;)
570
2. Ohio Slale (24·1) 524

-

'

CoUege ratings

NEW YORK (UPI)- The United Pnou
lnremllionollloonl d Owheo' Top 15 col·
tea• bublboll ......... wlllt fll'll.,t- ..,..,
,IJld ........ lhRIIJio Feb, 24 in~.

UsUsmateci

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s._

Ho.w does President Powell sound?

:In response to the intcmational ttade embargo, Iraq is trying to double
Franklin Roosevelt, who never
To be sure, Quayle is not nearly
the amount of land devoted to wheat. With average or above- average
wasted
time on puny achievements, the stone-brained dolt that his
rainfall through harvest time, the crop could total from 1.5 million to 2
shed two vice presidents on the worst detraCtors preiend. Yet he is
million metric tons, close to record levels.
way to plucking Harry Truman hardly the second coining of Peri'By comparison, the 1990 harvest was about 800,000 tons.
from
obscurity. George Bush is cles, either. Too oftcn he still pitch•'It appears the food situation in Iraq could be increasingly bleak in the
luckier.
He must only dump a run, es headlong into blank incohermonths preceding the next wheat and barley harvest. And Kuwait's popuning
mate
once in order to make an ence, as in this pronouncement last
lation is in an even more desperate·situation as the Iraqi army looted the
even
more
historic choice.
year from the Paciftc:.
'
food supplies,'' the repon said.
Once
on
his own as president,
·"Hawaii," he inexplicably
'"The wheat supply (in .Iraq) deteriorated dramatically since last fall ·
and some experts now predict that severe wheat shortages will occur. par- Truman integrated the armed declal'ed, "has always been a very
forces, a large step on the long pivotal role in the Pacific. It is :in
'ticularly in urban centers, befbre the May-June har¥est."
.Early this weelc, there were published repons the United States would journey toward racial equality. the Pacific. It is a Jl!l11 of the United
prQvide millions of dollars in food and humanitarian aid to Kuwait once it Now consider how a President States that is right here."
Colin Powell (savor the sound of
Duriiig the same trip, he assured
was liberated.
that, please) could consummate a grouP. of Samoans that "you all
that historic uek of 133 years - ,look hke happy campers to me.
1863 to 1996 - just by being him- Happy campers you are, happy
self.
.
campers you have been, and as far
A thought for the day: French essayist Michel de Montaigne once
But fust things fust There is the as I am concerned, happy campers
wrote, "Man is certainly crazy. He could nOl malce a mite, and he makes matter of J. Danforth Quayle to you will always be."
gqds by the dozen."
overcome. Dumping a vice presi·•By comparison, George Bush is
dent iS hardly a trivial decision, and Churchill, and Gen. Colin Powell, .
Bush must have good reasons to chairman of the Ioint Chiefs of
proceed.
Staff, a virt~ Den:tos~nes_.

....
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Iobed Ill inllllail:y by 1 thmilll
tint balf perfonunce by lhe UDIvasity of F'llldla • lhe Rio OriiiCie
men' 1 buketbalt team reaaincd
domination of ill own floor
Wcdnemy to hand lhe Oilers a 9373 defeat and adVBBCe to lhe !ICICond round of District 22 playoff

College results

2

" So, while the yield may be ·aRiple in the fields, the people now seem
likely to face serious food needs·this year due to logistical problems," the

'

Oblo Blab ·School Toul'llllment
Resultl
By United Press lnter11atloaal
Boys
VVednesday,Feb.Z7

:

Cowboys move closer
to first title since 1965

Priv;~te an8lysts also have said the new grain crop will re important but
they noted Iraq will draw some benefit from lhe winter potato crop and
larger plantings of fruits and vegetables. Most of the vegetable crops,
however, will not be ready for harvest until May.
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Wednesday's scores

me

.Some U.S. sources estimated that by March, the average Iraqi would
be eating half as many calories a day than before the embargo that followed Iraq's invasion of Kuwait, the repon said
"Since the beginning of the coalitions air-war campaign on Ian. 16 . ..
the food situation in Iraq and Kuwait has continued to deteriorare," it
said. ''Current food stocks are thoupt to be at record lows in both countries but, without external assistance, will have 10 suppon the population
until the next grain harvest in May and June."

::~~~ssr:~~·=~~·~nS:d.slyirnpedefood

-Sports scoreboard- Redmen shake off Oilers for 93-73

Page-2-,_ Dally Sentinel

Damage to Iraqi army greater than ad~itted

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Spring
Dinner and Dance

SATURDAY, MARCH 9, 1991 ·
ROYAL OAK RESORT

'F.ISH DINNO ••• S579
•SHIMP DINNEI•••••••••• $699

STEAK DINNER-7 PM
DANCE..-8 PM-MIDNIGHT
TICKETS: sao Couple; S15 Single

AI • •ar• -.111 wttll •••••• aenlca," rice, ••len
.Itt. . . . ,.. ........, fnlt .............

Tickets available at the Chamber
Office, Farmers Bank, Home National
Bank or any Chamber Board Member.
RESERVATIONS MUST BE IN BY
MARCH 6, 1991
W111 Reserve Tables For Parties
· of Four or Mo~e Couples
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Mason Family Restaurant
lt. JS
. -M

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(304) 773·1121
....... wv.
(Nftt to Maeon IJUCOn) ,.

to. '
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Sentinel

1991. .

Ohio

Thursday, February 28, 1991

Jackson arrives in Royals camp
By Unhd Press International
He swims too.
Bo Jackson arrived at Royals
camp in Haines City, Fla., on
cnnches Wednesday becllllle of the
hip injury he sustained playing
football and beaded straight f« the
pool.
"Everything is fine," Jackson
"said. "I'm loins swimming."
Jackson, who had lillie else to
say, joined the Royals one day
before the position players are due.
The Royals will know, in about two
weeks if Jackson can play Opening

D8y.

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Jackson, an All-Pro running
bact with the Los An~ Raidm,
injured his hip in. an AFC playoff

pme Jan. 13 against the Cincinnati
Bcnpls. Dr. Steve Joyce, the Roy·

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BRADBURY MORRISON
SAT , MARCil
10: 15 AM
POMEROY

ll

Blocked sliots • 3 (by Auflick)
Assists • 12 (Curt Moore 5)
Steals • 4 (Leeper 2)
Turnovers • 11

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This is the complete box score
for Southern's victory over South·
western Tuesday nighL
Quarter totals
.
Southern
22 29 15 35=101
Southwestern 13 8 17 17=55

SALISBURY

TUJ;S, MARCH 5
SAT, MARCH 9

BRADBURY

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SAT. MARCH
n,4s ?M

POMEROY

SALISBURY

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il

SAT, MARCH
2:00 PM

POMEROY

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BRADBURY ROUSH

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SAT, MJ~&gt;Rcil 9
12:00, NOON

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BRA!;!BURY DODSON
SAT, MARCH 21
HARRISONVILLE 3,15 PM :

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RUTLAND

WED, 'MARCil 6
7' 15 PM

25
20
13
12
9

-------Weather-------

Saturday tbroup Mooday
Showers likely and a chance of
thunderstorms Saturday, with a
chance of showers Sunday and
Monday. Highs will range from the
mid 50s to the mid 60s Satorday
and Sunday, and mostly in the 50s
Monday. Ovetnigbt lows will be in
the 40s early Saturday, and ranging Mi1dredGi1es McDaniel
from the mid 30s to the mid 40s . Mildred Giles McDaniel; 94,
Sunday and Monday mornings.
formerly of Middleport, died
Wcdnesday,Feb.20,1991,atBristol Village Coovalescent Center in
Waverly.
The daughter of W.A. and Elva
Colltill~~edfrom ptJgt 1
Morton Giles of Middleport, she
Bonecutter was arrested on Wednesday mornins on aggravated robspent most of her adult life in
bery and felonious assault charges for the incidenL He appeared in
Francisco, Calif., and her later
Meigs County Co!lfl and was ordered to be held under $10,000
years at Bristol Village.
boJid.
.
.
She was a member of the Heath
Aiso arrested on Wednesday was 22 year old Charles G. ·
United Methodist Church in Mid.Williatns, of Portland Road near Rac:inc, who will appear in Meigs
dlepon..
.
.
County Court to answer the same charges.
She IS sumved by her son and
daughter-in-law, Judfe and Mrs.
Dol!glas M&lt;:Daniel o El C~ntrO,
Cal1f.; two brothers and five SISten.
She was preceded in death by
Eight calls for assistapee were answered by the units of Meigs
he~ husband and a younger so.n,
County Emergency Medical Services on Wcdncdsday and early on
W11liatn McDamel, Modesto, Cal1f.
Thursday .
Interment was in California.
At 8:52 a.m. oo Wednesday. Rutland squad went to Mud Fork
Road for Woodrow Hannon, who was bansported IQ Holzer Medi·
Gary D. Hart
cal Center. At 8:37 a.m., Pomeroy squad went .to East State R~te
681. Grace Smith was taken to SL Joseph Hospilal. At 11:36 a.m.,
· Gary Dewaine Hart, 38, former
Rutland squad went to Painttr Ridge for !'lstelle Johnson. Johnson
Racine resident, died on ThurSday,
' was taken to Holzer.
. ·
February 27, 1991, in Belgardens,
At 4:32 p.m., Pomeroy squad was called to Chester for ~uri
;
Calif.
; Ours. Ours was taken to Holzer. At 6:26 ~m . , Pomeroy squad went
Details ·and arrangements will
· to Laura! CUff Road for Maxine Micb~. She was transported to
be announced later by Ewing
' Holzer. At 9:05 p.m., Middleport squad went-to Third Avenue for
Funeral Home in Pomeroy.
: Charles Stewart. Stewart went to Veterans Memorial H~tal. At
1 9:53 p.m., Middleport squad went to Hobson Drive for Vickie Har·
ris, who was taken to Veterans. ·
1
. At 8:54 a.m. on Thursday, Pomeroy squad went to Mulberry
Avenue for Duel Ridenour, who was transpOrted to Veterans.

South Central Ohio Partly cloudy and wiridy Thurs·
day night, with a low in the mid
40s. Chance of rain is 20 percenl,
Continued windy Friday, with
·showers likely and a chance of
thunderstorms, and highs between
60 and 65. Ch;mce of rain is 70
percent . .
' Extended forecast ·

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FACTORY AUTHORIZED SERVICE
Gol•l•
Samsung
Soundesign .
Zenith

Flllllli
Syllphonic

Em~non

Sylwaftia

Shintom

: Ma~nx

Phiko

MUhi
Scott

m

TeCh

(H

RCA

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.: WE
REPAIR ALL MAlES
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Meigs EMS answers 8 calls

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NeweR's Ashland at Chester reponed to the Meigs County Sher·
iff's Deparbnent that $15 worth of gasoline was stolen oo Wednesday. According to Sheriff James Soulsby, a newer py Aerostar .van
with several young people in it drove off after filling up with gaso. line. The vehicle then fled at a high rate of speed and went east on
Srate Route 248.
Sheriff Soulsby also repOrts that deputies are investigating the
breaking and entering pf the Don Betzing residence iln Rose Hill. It
was reponed that an antique table and jewelry were stolen.

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Clarification

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1n a civil case flled in Meigs County Common Pleas Court last .
week, Linda Crites of Pomeroy alleges tiiat Point Pleasant, W.Va.
Attorney James M. Casey represented her in a child support case in
the.court.
.
According to Crites' complaint, Casey Jailed to file a timely
appeal, causing her case to be dismissed. She is suing for $25,000 in .
damages.
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POMEROY, OHIO

992-3524

Continued from paae 1
Guns. .. -----=--=-------

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BUY FROM
AN L.P. GAS
.·
DEALER W,ITH EXPERIENCE
BUY FROM•••
.

THURs,

6:00 PM

§RAQBIIRY

7

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RUTLAND
. HARR£S .C .

MARCH

SAT. MARCH
5,45 ~~~

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THURS. MARCH
7 ' 15 PH

POMEROY WRIGHT

7

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Pomeroy

11 am to Mid. Sun.-Thurs.
11 am to 1 am Fri. &amp; Sat.

$1299
WITH 4 PEPSI'S

Hone Racing
Aqueduet canceled ill racing
card after the flfSI race because of
unsafe track conditions stemming
from snow and cold.

WI NQW

HAVE
DIET PIPS!

RUTLAN'D F

LARGE DELUXE

PIZZA

.

WITH 4 PEPSI'S .

NOW CJIIILL

I

Sl 099

RE

and BOTTLE GAS

GEORGE GRATE-MANAGER
STATE ROUTE 124

.,J
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Billie Butcher of Meigs Junior
High School.has been named to the
all-tournament team selected by the
Miller Junior High eighth grade
girls basketball tournament coach·

es.

Besides Butcher, others selected
were Sandy Hem and Jenny Plant,
Miller; Jamie Schaumleffel and
Kristi Wade. Zanesville St .
Nicholas; Jill Shafer and Lindsay
Shumway, Nelsonville-York; and
Kelly Snider, New Lexington St.
Rose. Jenny Plant was voted this
year's most valuable player.

Hospital news

RUTLAND

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BY YOUR
SWISHER LOHSE
PHARMISTS

Hlgh-reeolution ultrasound can detect ovarian cancer early.
·s ay doctor~ at King's College School of Medicine 1nd
D.nti8try in London. Vaginal probe Ia being uaed on high·riak
p.tienta. tho.. with a family history of the dlaNae.

***

Eerly preventive treatment egalnat stress syndromes aeema
to help people handle trauma b.ttlr and more quickly. The
Army haa given troops pr1111entlve treatment for combat
atre~ . Othe!'lln ttreaefulaltuatlona might benefit, saya a doctor in Boulder. Colorado.
1·

***

In a new procedure - autolymphocyte therapy - a patient'•
immune cell• are removed, "trained" to recognize tumor til·
eue •• being foreign. and then retumed. Doctor~ at Boaton
Univerelty uy the therapy ia helping kidney cancer patient•
live longer and better.

***

Vitamin A 1upplementa 1eem to offer protection again1t serlou• complication• and death in children with savere me11le1.
South African ltudy echo81 the recommendation• of the
World Health Organization.

**•.

. Wh.t'a new In medicina7 We keep up with the lat&amp;lt·davelopmentl. the better to eerve you at
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SWISH(~LOHSE

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Ph;J1macy
Konn•h Mo-... 11.1'11.
Ch.t•lllflla 11. Ph.
ll0111ld - g . 11 .1'11
Man. dwu let. 1:00 e .m. to 1 :00 p.m.
lundiW' 10:00 e.m. 'o 4;00 p.m.
PIIE&amp;CIIIPTION&amp;

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Pit. 112·2111
Pam•~· OH .

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Charles A. Bradbury is a medical patient at Holzer Medical Cen·
t.er, Gallipolis. His room number is . • • • •
430. .

E..Moln

' frionclly &amp;oovlco

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ATTENTION TRI-COUNY AREA!
We A~e . Not Going Out. Of.
Business As Has Been Rumored.
Our Plans Are to Continue
·Selling Quality Merchandise and
Giving Quality .Service Which
This Store Has Done· Since 1912.
'

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(SMITH CLOTHING CO. 1912 to 1961
BAHR CLOTHIERS 1961 'TIL ???)

Quality Merchandise F~r Men
and Women and Excellent
Alterations.
101m:

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BAHR ·CLOTHIERS

~~g the allied strate~

145 NORTH SECOND AYI.

: during a briefing Wednesday 1n

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PHARMACY
TOPICS

Hospitalized

White Houle apokesrnan Marlin
Fitzwater llid the coalition has no
territorial designs on Iraq in tile

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VeteraliS Memorial Hospital ·
WEDNESDAY ADMISSIONS
• Mildred Hauber, Long Bottom.
WEDNESDAY DISCHARGES
• Odgin Perkins.

. . , . _ ilrUCture.

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Application for the transfer of
the liqua- pennit held by Jay Hall,
Jr., dba Jaymar Golf Club, to Paul
Simon and Pat O'Brien, dba as the
Meigs County Golf Club, has been
filed with the Ohio Deparunent of
Liquor Control, John R. Hall,
direCtor, advised' today.
Under the department's review
process, city councils or county
commissioners and township
trustees are notified of applications
within their jurisdictions. These
local legislative authorities have
the right to request a hearing upon
the advisability of issuing the permit or bansfer.
·
"Citizens with concerns or evi·
dence that would suppon a denial
of a permit bansfer application can
ask their legislative authorities to
request a hearing. Questions con·
cerning the appropiate type of evi·
dence should be directed to the
community's law director or the
Department of Liquor Control's
Permit Divisioo at 614-644-2431,"
Director Hall said.
Applications are proeessed in
about six to eiaht weeks. The
department conducts a thorough
investigation of both the applieant
and the illtcndcd premises beftre a
decision is made to issue or deny a
permit

Stocks

and sells ~
Am Ele Power ......................28 1/l
square eet . bl f or 52th50· .1
Ashland Oil.;...................... 31 7/8
1
. Also~~ a p:./2~/$/ ~!~h AT&amp;L ............................... .33 3/4
~ary~S/$7tec · J· H. 1 k
BobEvans ............................ l75/8
I OJS·6 . C ; ana ~an I e~ .lc • Charming Shop..................... I3 3/8
I0/$ 5. ·w~m~on .urp~~· City Holding .............................. .14
IO/$S: Bl: Locowennfs/$7 S • Federal Mogul ........................... .15
•.a
ust,
• weet Goodyear T&amp;~ .....................20 S/8
Gum, 10/$6; and ~he fruit tree KeyCenturioo ...................... II 1/8
packet wh1ch contams two apple Lan¢1' End ...........................17 3/8
trees and two pelf trees for $20. .
Limited Inc. ......................... .23 l/1.
In ground co~er, the group IS. Multimedia lnc .....................70 1/l
offering Crown Vetch 12 plants for RM Restaurant. .....................31/32
$20, English Ivy, 50 plants for $15, Robbins&amp;Myers ...................23 1/l ·
and Pachysandra. 50 plants for $15. Shoney's Inc ..................... :.. .14 1/l
To order, contact Meigs SWCD Star Bank ..............................22 314
office at 33101 Hiland Road in Wendylnt'l.. ..........................7 3/4
Pomeroy, or call 9.92-6647. All Worthington lnd. .................. 22 5/8
orders must be prep&amp;ld.
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •. .

All-tournament
team named

Southe.rn Ohio Coal

992-2124

Houra:

.2 LARGE
PEPPERONI PIZZAS

.
The Mei$S Soil and Waw Conservation District Ladies Auxiliary
areofferingtwotypesofwildflower seed packeu, trees and ground
covers for sale this year.
. The seed eackets include the
American Wild Flower mixture,
which includes White Yarrow,
Cornflower, Bachelor Button,
Wallflower, ~e-leaf Coreopsis,
Plains Coreopsis Rocket Larkspur
Sweet William, Foxglove, Ameri~
can Daisy, Purple Prairie Coneflower, Blanket Flower Indian
Blanket Baby's Breath 'Dame's
Rocli:et.'Globe Dandytuft. Roadflax. Scarlet Flax, Perennial
Lupine, Baby Blue Eyes, Evening
Pnmrose, Corn Poppy, Prarie
ConeDower Black-eyed SuSan and
Catchfly. Aiso available is the Bird
and Butterfly mixture whieh coo·
. tains Sweet AlySSillll, Annual Candytuft, Dwarf Catchfly, Plains
Coreopsis, Dwarf Cornflower,
Scarlet Flax, Com Poppy, Spurred
Snapdragon, Black-eyed Susan,
Putple Coneflower, Ox-eye or
Shasta Daisy, Sweet William
Pinks, California Popfy, Siberian
Wallflower, Perennia Sweet Pea
and Dame's RockeL
Each packet will plant $250

CHAMBER OPEN HOUSE

- - Sports briefs-Hockey
· Defen~man Peter Taglianetti
has rejoined the Penguins afru suf.
fering a coiiapsed lung D! a ~· II
game in ~ton. T8JI!-Ill Wll
eleared to resume contact, but
Coach Bob Jolinson said he is not
sure when Tqlianetti wiD play in a
game. The Penguins also
announced f.oalie wendell y ouna
disJocated hiS right shoulder in the
second period of Tuesday night's .
loss at Los Angeles.

~

Miri~ D~··

Auxzlzary offers seet~:s

The Meigs County
Chamber of Commerce

&lt;

SAT, MARCH 9
l:JO• PM

21

Liquor
permit
sought

into offensive positions unless Riyadh, Gen . H. Norman
attaclced."
..
Schwarzkopf, the U.S. commander
But there. were reports of isolat· of the allied forces, said if the
ed incidents, most apparently coalition had warlled 10 OCCUP.Y
because the bombing of Iraqi com- Iraq it could have done so eas1ly
munications lines may have left because his forces got ·to ISO miles
.some uniu unaware that hoatilities from Baghdad with no enemy force
had ended. In those cues, he said, to IIOp them.
,
the aUies "will do whatever they ' "If it had been our intentioo to
can to prvtect themselves.''
talce Iraq, we could have done it
The list major battle of the war unopposed.'' he said.
was fought in southeastern Iraq,
west of the industrial city of Basra.
w~ tanks of the U.S. Army 7th
Corps, with strong air support,
hammered Republican Guard
armored and moclwlized divisions
!Pnl 10 escape over the. Euphrates
R1ver, according to a pool report
from the area.
~
' The guns roared for 16 hours in
· and
what Col. Paul Murtha of Lansing,
. Kan., called "a classic tank·aii bat·
tie, from the textbooks, a tabletop ·
battle." They fell ·silent at6 a.m.
. lcX:al time Thursday (10 p.m. EST
invite you to attend ·
Wednesday), two hours before the
allied offensive actioo was to have
ended.
.
At the new chamber office
Mttt a day of mixed messages,
Iraqi Foreign Mini~ter Tariq ~
200 East Second Street
notified the Umted Nauons
Pomeroy, Ohio
Wedne~=~ night that Baghdad
y 8IX:eptel all 12 ~u·
unequiv
Friday, March 1, 1991
rity Couneil resolution~ dealing
with its invasion of Kuwait, and the
4:00 until 7:00
cquncil called a meetina Thursday
Please take this opportunity to visit
to worlc out a formal-fire.
· Secrelllry of State J~ B~
our new location and meet our
began a series of talks w1th all1es
Executive Director, Elizabeth Schaad.
designed to put together an agreed
Lighc refreshments will be ser.ved.
plan on how and when to end the
gulf war. Baker will leave early
next week on a trip 110 the Middle
But 10 help build a consensuB on a

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POMEROY KENNEDY
.SAT, MAJ!CH
4d0 PM
SALISBURY

ga$ theft investigated

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HOME ENTERTAINMENT-CENTER

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1-Area deaths .

Local briefs·...

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WID, MARCil 6
6:00 PM

Pis.

ta.undentorms wiD develop in the lower Millilllppl Valley u 1
Siron&amp; upper level low prasure syslielll movea over. Cold ~pera·
turea will move IDto the nortllern Plains llld Grat Lallea. (UI!I)

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SOUTHERN (101) .
Planr
2s 3s Ff
Jeremy Rose 11 ·0 3
8 0 4
R.L. Bailey
Andy Baer
2 3 0
T. Grindstaff 5 0 2
3 0 3
R. Singleton

· 8:00 PM

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SAT. _QIICH: z
HARRISONVILLE 11:30 AM .

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MARCH

TUES, MARCH S
6:45 PM •

RUTLAND

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WEATHER MAP • Widely scattered showers wll COIItinae to
· develop iD Calllanla. Show a a wW be more orpailed Ia Utah llld
ArizGu where they could receive Ioc:ally heavy rain. Sbowen llld

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·th hi""• near 60
and some thunderstorms may
h1gh pressure system IS not gome
By U:al~ Prea I~~tloul
·W1 BQ:i; the ~th Fridlly will occur.
·
10 move much for the ~~ couple
Spnnghte con~l11ons are also bring Ohio some' other corn·
The Thursday morning weather · of daya. ~ warm front IS flnCIIII
expected ~ replace wmtry weather mon
· gti.me weather. Showers map showed a high (Xessure system to move Just ~ of the BUCkeye
across Obro.
.
are
to become widespread, over the East Coast and a warm
~tate Thursday n1ght and then far
going to be quite strong front from Missouri to Ohio. The
mto Canada Fnday.
Snow occurr~d at ll!Des ov.er winds
most of north Ohio overnight while
·
,
the soudl tended to be cloudy but
dry. Whtre snow did fall Wednesday night there was· generally litde
or no accumulation, but isolated
spou in the east lakeshore got a
couple fl. inchea.
. .
Early morning temperatures
were fairly close to seasonal as t
they wen; mainly in the 20s and the
lower30s. .•
·
Despite the somewhat wintry
start, the National Weather Savicc
said a shift to more springlike · f
'
weather will begin in Ohio.
...,.....~
The warming lleDd should con'
tinue Thursday night and Friday.
Thursday night lows should be
from the upper 30s to the mid 40s
along with dry, panly cloudy con·
ditions. Friday is goi!lgto '?C like.! '
normal da)l 10 early to m•d April
, . KUWAITIS CELEBRJir TE- Kuwaitis
throuj_b tbe outskirts of Kuwait City Weclneaclle.er and wave Kuwait Rap as memben or tbe
day. (UPI)
.
.
First
T!ISk Fqrc:eRipper, drive
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VCR-TV
Repair Center

March expected to come in like. a la~b .
·

drills.

·Tuesday's D·IV Rio Grande
tournament box scores
Because of a computtr program
malfunction
Wejlne~y. the box
. DISTRICT QUALIPIERS • Tile followlllg
right are Scott Barton (135 lbs), Eric Heck (US
scores
were
not
available for Han·
Meigs Marauderi wrestlers have advanced to
lbs), and David Swinson (llllbs).pack row are .
nan
Trace's
86·
71 victory over
the district tournament Friday and Saturday at
. Joe McElroy (130 lbs), Aaron Sheets (heavy·
·an4 Racine
Glouster
Trimble
St. ClalrsviUe. Pictured In front rO'iv, left to
wei&amp;ht) and Burt Kennedy (189).
· ·
Southern's 101-55 win over Patriot
Southwestern in Tuesday ni~ht's
Six Meigs Marauders ·
seCtional fmals at the University of
advance in tournament Rio Grande's Lyne Centtr.
Here is the box score for Han·
nan
Trace's win over Trimble.
Six Meigs Marauder have .
Quarter
totals
advanced to district competition
Hannan
Trace
21 19 23 i13..S6
afttr placins in the sectional comTrimble
14 21 16 20=71
petition last Saturday at Warren
Local High School. Eric Heck
HANNAN TRACE (86)
raised his record to 25-0 on the sea·
Player
ls 3s Ff
Pis.
· son by claiming the championship
Craig
Rankin
7
0
7
21
in the 125 pound weight class.
Jason
Black
1
1
14
19
while Aaron Sheets won the cham·
15
todd
Boothe
6
1
·
0
pionship in the heavyweight divi·
Chad
names
'
2
o
8
12 ·
sion, Sheets is now 28-0 oo the sea·
EricLiod ·· 1 1 2
7
son.
Richie ~omell 1 1 0
AJ®,advancing to the districts
J.J.
Bevatr
1 0 0
2
this Friday and Saturday at St.
Jason
Watson
0
0
2
2
Clairsville are Scott Banon at 135
Chris
Strow
0
0
2
2
lbs, David Swanson at 112 lbs, Joe
Chad
Swalii
0
0
I
·
1
McElroy at .l30 lbs, and Burt
19.
4
36
TOTALS
86
Kennedy at 189 lbs.
From the field - 23-46
Beyond tbe arc • 4-10
- - Sports briefs-At
the line • 36-41
Law
On
the blll!rdS - 22 (Rankin 5)
The former girlfriend of the Oil·
Assists
• 16 (Cornell6)
ers' Lamar Lathon has filed a
Steals13
paternity lawsuit, claiming the
Turnovers\2
Houston linebacker has failed to
- SECTIONAL CHAMPS • Eric Heck and Aaroa Sheets will take
provide adequately for their 5-year·
: unbeaten records llito dlstrlc.t compedton Friday and Saturday at
old
daughter. Andrea Gail Taylor, TRIMBLE (71)
· St. Clairsville. Claim ina sectional titles iD their weight c1as1es last
ls 3s Ff
Pis.
27, seeks to establish Lathon, 22, Player
Saturday at Warren Local were Heck at 125 ponnds and heavy·
Scott
Auflict
11
0
5
27
as the father of Octavia Javante
weight Sheets. Heck is now lS-0 on the season while Sheela Is 28..0
Charlie
Gatchel
3
0
.5
II
Lathon-Taylor to force him to pay
on the year . .
Roger Bingman 4 0 0
8
Child SU!.'PO"·
Sun Leeper
2 0 3
7
· Justin Day
3 0· I
7
-.
Steve Shamhart 2 0 2
6
1991 MEIGS ELEMENTARY TOURNAMENT
Reuben Killle 0 1 0
3
•
Justin Antle
0 0 2
2
TOTALS
25 1 Ill
71
I
BRADBURY MCCLURE
From the f~eld - 26-54
• SA:: MARC" &lt;
Beyond the arc -1-S., , .
RUTLAND
9s00 AM
1
·TUJ;s • MARCH 5
At the line· 18-32 ·
.
5' JO PM0
On
the
boards
•
33
(Auflict
HARIUSONVILLE
I

Nl'l'IONI LWEATHER FORECAST FFIOI!t 7Afll '· 1·91 TO l AM l-2·~1

At Sarasota, Fla., White Sox
Manager Jeff Torborg said he
ab' tcu1 physician, put Jackson on wanu to wait before officially
crutdles Feb. 15.
·
announcing Jaclt Ml:Dowell u the
"Do said his bit&gt; was causing no Opening Day starter. Melido Perez
discomfort/' said loyce, who start· started Opening Day 1990 but .
ed Jackson on an exercise prognm McDowell poS!Cd better numbers
Wednesday. ·"He's spcndin{ 20 last season, fmishing 14·9 with a
minutes in the Swimmmg poo 20 3.82 ERA in 33 starts. Perez was
minutes on the bite, and there will 13-14 with a4.61 ERA in 35 starts.
be some isometrics lllld wOrk on The White Sox open on the road
the Nordic track. There will be no April 8 in Baltimore, and don't
"asebaU for a while."
.
christen, their new ballpark until
Jackson's flrst day in the out· April IS against DetroiL
door pool at the RoyaiJ' minor- . Also ai Sarasota, Baltimore Ori·
league complex was not the most oles Manager Frank Robinson is
pleasant. It was .a eool day with implementing an on.·field d'ess
temperatures in the SOs, and pool code for sJring trajning. Ev~onc ·
temperatures at 50 degrees.
must be in full uniform at all ~es
with caps optional only during
post· workout ru'nning
Robinson said the dress code .
will improve discipline and help
create lean\ harmony.
.
ln other Orioles news, Robinson
a repon that45-year-old Jim
Michael Kincaid2 0 I
5 denied
Palmer
39-year-old Mite FJana..
scoa Lisle
1. 1 o
5 gan willorstart
the first exHibition •
Billy Davis
2 0 0
. 4 . game and said Ben McDonald ,:.,
Jayson Codner · 0 0 2
· 2
2 would start March 7 agains1 the ,
John Hoback 0 0 2
Jeremy Roush 1 0 0
2 White Sox. Robinson said he wantS ,,
Michael RusseU I 0 0
2 Palmer to start the March II game •;
36 4 17
101 against the Boston Red Sox.
TOTALS
At Vern Beach, Fla., Los Ange- ..
From the field • 4().71
les
Dodgers ri~t-hander Orel HerBe:JOnd the arc , 4-14
shiser,
attempung a comeback from
At the IIDe-17-28
.
e
xtensive
shoulder surgery, threw
On the boards - 34 (Bailey.
~atting
practice
for the second ...
Kincaid &amp; Rose, 6 each)
nme.
Aulsts - 17 (Kincaid 6)
Hershiser, the 1988 Cy Young
Steals - 14 (Rose 7)
Award
winner who has not pill:hed 1
Turnovers • 8
since last April, was on the llolman :
Stadium mound for 10 minutes, •
SOUTHWESTERN (SS)
Player
2s 31 Ff
Pts. throwing ,62 pitches and six
16 . warmups.
·
Chris Metzger 7 0 2 ·
John Sites
4 0 2
10
10
Richard Haney .4 0 2
"I felt good," HerShiser said. ,
Aaron McCarty 3 I 0
9
"This
outing was progress com· !
Melvin Massie I I 0
5
pared
to
the last outing (last Sun- :
Jeff Pope
I 0 I
3
day
when
he threw 51 pitches). I :
2
Eli Latnbert · I 0 0
hope
they
all
feel this good."
·
•
2
· Adam Simpson I 0 0
San
Diego
catcher
Benito
Santii
TOTALS
lO l 9
ss
ago reported to eamp in Yuma,
From the field • 22-42
Ariz., .and says he will miss first
Atthe fine· 9-12
baseman Jack Clart;, who was )
On the boards • 20 (Metzger 9)
branded a "cancer" for his person· ·I
Aaslsta • 4 (McCarty 2)
ality clash with Tony Gwynn last ;
. Steals - 5 (Metzger 3)
season:
i
Turnovers - 19

The Dally Sentlnei-Pag~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

'

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-·~·

9:30 AJI-5:00 ,.
Monday-Satw..y

MIDDLEPORT OHIO
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Page 6 The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middle.Port, Ohio

Thursday, February 28, 1991

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Senate Ethics committee ·faults Cr.anston's conduct
I

WASHINGTON (UPI) - The linked," the committee said.
Senate Ethics Committee charged
The committee found that
We&lt;,lnesday that Sen. Alan McCain and Glenn showed "poor
Cranston, D-Calif., engaged in an judgment" in their activities relat"impermissible pattern of con- ed to Keating and charged Riegle
duct'' and rebuked four other sena- and DeConcini with "insensitivity
tors for pressuring a federal agency and poor judgment"
on behalf of an S&amp;L kingpin who
Not only was the committee
gave $1.3 million to their cam- struggling to judge eacll of the senpaigns and causes.
ators, often in face of conflicting
testimony, some lack of facts and
The committee found fault but did not recommend additional waning memories, the panel wa$
action - with the.conduct of the also seeking to provide the Senate
.four other senators: Dennis with new, strict guidelines in a
DeConcini, D-Ariz., Donald murkey area.
Riegle, 0-Mich., John Glenn 0Although the Senate in its rules
0hio, and John McCain, R-Arlz., has clear standards of improper
and their efforts to aid Charles conduct, special counsel Roben
Keating, the wbeeler-dealer head of Bennett asked the committee to go
now-failed .Lincoln Savings arid even further and mete out punish· Loan of Irvine, Calif.
ment even if there was only the
The six-member, bipartisan appearance of improper conduct
panel concluded its complex 17- lhat brought discredit to the Senate.
mon~ investigation during which
Although all five senators
all f1ve senators protested their declared they did no wrong - no .
innocence, arguing they did no more, no less than they would do
more for Keating than they would for any constituent - there was no
have done for any constituent and queSiion that all of the senators
that llis heavy financial contribu- lried, in some fashion, to hei,P
tions played no role.
. Keating and that they and theu
In the case of Cranston , the causes received ·large contributions
committee left tl1e California senafrom the S&amp;L wheeler- dealer.
tor .tl!e option of asking for a new
In all. Keating, now under
heanng onntroducmg new evi- indictment on a number of charges
.dence before the panel makes a recconnected w1th the failure of Linommendation of punishment to the
coln Savings and Loan, gave S1.3
Senate. Cranston could also let the . minion in contributions to the five
record stand.
senators' political campaigns and
their political causes.
The committee said Cranston
Cranston, always known as an
who has announced he will noi
seek re- election, "may have able and aggressive fund-raiser
engaged in improper conduct that received more than any of the oth:
mar, reflect on the Senare." . · ers: $49,000 for his White House
'There is credible evidence that and re-electi~ campaigns: $85,000
provides substantial cause for the for the California Democratic .
commitee to conclude, based upon Pany: $850,000 for three non-Partithe totality of the circumstances ... san voter edu?tion programs: and
that Sen. Cranston engaged in an a $300,000 hne-of-credit for his
impermissible pattern of conduct in Senate·campaign that he did not
which fund-raising and official use.
activities were substantially
Keating gave $80,100 to
DeConcini iii two re-election cam-

Akron defends spending
AKRON, Ohio (UPI) - University of Akron President WiUiam
Muse. sent a letter to Gov. George Voinovich Thursday in an effort
to prove the school operates efficiently.
And, in ·an indirect challenge of allegations made by the new
governor that state ~ernment, including schools, is inefficient, the
school plans to open Its books to business executives during the next
three months.
Voinovich, ~bile mayor of Cleveland for I0 years, often used
~pec1al commmees of busmess executives to look at ways to
1mprove City government
"He is usin¥ a very broad brush to paint all of state government
as i~flcient,' .school '-:ice .President Kathy Stafford said. "He's
malting assumpbons lhatjustaren't true."
. The Yniversity of Akron is now ~Tying to cope with $2.5 million
m budget cuts Imposed by the VoinOVJcb administration.

Ohio Senate· passes ··
Desert Storm legislation
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) After two hours of debate on
expanding the proposal, the Senate
Wednesday passed legislation giving compensation to 188 Ohio state
employees called to tbe combat
zone for Operation Desen ShieldDesert Storm, while giving all
other reservists more time to file
• stare taxes, among other benefits.
The legislation also requires private and public retirement systems
to give credit for military time
served by reservists, mandates state
licensing boards that require continuing education to extend the
time reservists have to complete
them, requires public and private
employers 10 extend health benefits
at the reservists' costs and allows
survivors and spouses to receive
benefits and be .employed by coun·
ty vererans semce commiSSIOns.
Three weeks ago, practically the
same legislation was sent back to
committee after Democrats successfully included an amendment
exempting the military pay of the
activated reservists from the state

No one claims
Super Lotto
CLEVELAND (UPI)- Ohio's
Super Lotto jackpot was boosted 10
$8 million Wednesday night after
no one claimed the top prize in the
midweek drawing.
None of the tickets sold for ·
Wednesday's drawing listed the six
winning numbers- 12, 27, 32, J8,
39 and 40, a Jotrery Spokesman said
Thurdsay. That means the S4 million jackpot will be doubled for
Sarurday's game.
Sixty-four players picked five of
the numbers to win $1,291 each
and 3,149 players chose four of th~
numbers to win $83 apiece.
Super Lotto ticket sales totaled
$3,004,504 and the total prize payout ,..as $340,842.
The $100,000 grand prize in the
accompanying Kicker game also
went unclaimed. The winning
Kicker combinllion was 417569.
Although no tickets listed the
six Kiclctz numbas in exact order
five had the first five numbers:
which pays $5,000; 3S had the firSt
four, wbich pays $1,000; 441 had
the first three, which pays $100;
and 4,407 had the fiTSt two, which
pays $10.
Kicker ticket sales touiled
$490,693 while the prize payout
total was $248,170.
'

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income tax. This time Republicans
got around voting on that by inlroducing a substiture amendment that
incorproated President Bush's
executi.ve order e~c!udin~ the pay
for acuvated reservists smce January and up to $500 of officer's
pay.
Sen. Roben L, Burch, D-New
Philadelphia, proposed his amendment again, saying the state should
do something for all reservists
called up, not just those that are
state employees. His amendment
would have excluded au their military pay from state income taxes
back to August, when the first
reserves were activated.
"In a time of war our soldiers
should be our top priority," he
said, adding all families' "bills
continue, but their income is sub·
stanlially reduced."
His amendemnt was expected to
cost $3 .5-$4 million and failed
after ~nators voted to endorse the
substitute amendment incorporat·
ing Bush's executive order on a 1911 vote.
Anot!'ef Democratic amendment
would .ha.te given the remaining
sr,ate employees - those called to
active duty, but not stationed in a
combat zone - the same pay differenlial offered combat zone state
employees. It failed on a 12-18
vote.
"There is a difference between
combat service and non-combat
service," said Sen. Charles F.
Hom, R-Dayton.
While exact numbers were hard
10 ascertain, sena10rs believed there
were only another 30-40 state
employees called up but not in a
combat zone.
·
Mtcr the hours of debate, Sen.
Dick Schafrath, R-Loudonville, .
warned the Senate could be "segregatin~ out 2.9 percent of our soldiers. ' He noted that while some
large Ohio industries are paying
differential compensation to
employees called to the Gulf
region, small businesses haven't
done that and their emplorees will
"think twice next time ' about
joining the reserves.
The former NFL star said the
legislalion "pulls ream unity apart
from the seams."
·
"Team players don't care who's
on the front line or the back line "
he said.
'
The legislation passed on a 30-0
vOte and wiD riow go to the House
of Representatives.

,,

.pai~s and $1,000 for his political
acuon committee. or the total,
$57,100 WI$ returned.
Glenn received $34,100 for his
presidential and re-election campaigns and $200,000 for his nonfederal political action committee.

. · Keating gave McCain $112,000
for two House and one Senate cam•

paign and donated $78,250 to
Riegle for his re-eleclion campaign. ·
Riegle returned the money in 1988.
Keating sought the help of the
five senators to aid him with the
Federal Home Loan Bant Board
and its examiners in San Francisco
·who wanled to im~ stricrer regulatioo on Lincoln s operations.
Although other politicians '

0

Sen. Jal(e ·Gam, R·Utah, ud former Arizona Gov. Bruce Babbitt
turned their backs on Keating ~
the five senators who were invealigated did IIOl
A crucial event came April 2.
1987, when four of the IICIIIIIIlnRiegle was not PfCSCDI- met with
Home Loan Bank Board Cbainnan
Edwin Gray, who tes!ified that he .

was asked 10 refniin from enforcing ..
a tough restriction on Lincoln's .
investments.
,,
Some of the senators denied that
Gray was asked not to impose me.;.
touih restrictions: otben said they:.
could not remember. Nobody Wlftt· ·
ed to take credit for the meeting at
which no aides were ptsent - ye
all agreed that it was proper.

By .The Bend

Thursday, February 28, 1991 :

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·Page-7

Announcements

Heart Association
begins fund raiser
Over 150 volunteers have been leers, several area busiltesses have
going door-to-door in Meigs Coun- . donated coupons to them for their
ty soliciting contributions to the community involvement. Crow's .
American Heart Association and Steak House and The Subway have
distributing information on heart joined with McDonalds, Dairy
disease. The f1md raising campaign Queen Brazier, and Pleasers in giv·
is now nearly half over, accooling ing coupons.
The American Heart Associato Donna Carr, residential chairman, for the Meigs County Divi- tion is the nation's largest voluntary health organization dedicated
sion of the Association.
"It is a lime consuming task we · to the reduction of disability and
ask of these volunteers," said Carr, death from heart and blood vessel
"but With their help and the suppon diseases. These diseases kill almost
of the generous people. of Meigs a million Americans every year.
"This is not just a disease of the
County, we can· help fight heart
elderly,''
. commented
. Carr. Aho~t
disease which is the number one
L/CPL. ROBERT S. MAISON
175,000
American
under
age 65 die
killer here and across the United
from cardiovascular .diseases each
States."
The volunteerS' goal is· 10 raise year, she said, in callihg for gener$5,000 with the money to be used . ous gifts when a voluntee~. co~es
LIQ)I. Roben S. Malson, Son of
for research, education and com- knocking at your door. We re Sue and Rol)en Maison, Jr., Tup"
fighling for your life," commented pers Plains, bas been in Saudi Aram~mity service programs.
In appreciation to the volun- Carr.
bia since late January.
A graduate of Eastern High
School in 1984, Maison attended
Ohio University where he majored
in chemical engineering. He
Yomeroy Bowing Lanes and t!te over average, no winner, and men's , entered the U. S. Marine Corp!l as a
American Heart Association 160 and under average, Paul chemical warfare specialist in April
team.ed up for a tournament, "Bowl . Michaels.
1988. He was permanently stafor Your Heart". The event was
The money raised will help the tioned at \he U. S. .Marine Corps
chaired by- Pat Carson of Middle' Association in its mission 10 reduce Air.Station in Beauford, S. c: until
port and ·raised $46.12 for.tbe disability and death from cardio- he was sent to the Middle East. ·
AHA.
·
vascular disease. This year as many
L/Cpl. Maison has a son, Darren
Those participatinfl were divid- as 1,500,000 American will have a Scott, who resides in Tuppers
ed into two categones, high and bean attack and more than 500,000 Plains. His wife, JiU, and daughter,
low accordinj! 10 their league aver- of them will die. These figures Keisha, and son, Karneron, are in
· ages. The wmners were women· s added 10 other cardiovascular dis- Beauford, S. C.
141 and over average, Shirley Sim- ·eases make bean disease the numThe address of 1../Cpl. Roben S.
mons: women's 140 and under · b~r one killer across the United Maison is 152-60-1307, HQ Bn.
average, Lois Burt;' men's 161 and States.
HQ Co. Div. NBC (G-3) lst MAR
Div., FPO N.Y .. N.Y. 09503-5502.

In Saudi Arabia

QuOted swelltsblrt class
A quilted sweatshirt class will
begin on Man:h 12 at First Southern Baptist Church. Registration
deadline is March 8. For more
infonnation, contact Bunny Kuhl at
992-7537 .
Trustees to meet
Letart Township Trustees will ·
meet on Monday at 6 p.m. at the
office buildi!lg.
·
Softball meeting
There will be an organizational.
meeting for any women II! or older
interested in playing softball at
Eastern High School on March 9 at
I p.m.

Correction
The mimes of Alice Kitchen and
Loui_se l..ondon were pnintentionally omitted in the recent article
regarding Sunday School petfect
attendance awards at the Rutland
Church of God. Both had perfect
attendance for the 1990 year.

Laurel Cliff News Notes
Those allending the dinner were.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Mash, Kristi and
The Rev. and Mrs. William Bobby, and Mr. and Mrs. Wayne ·
Williams spent several days recent- Pullins and son, Jesse. ,
Recent visitors of Mr. and Mrs.
ly visiting her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Ray Maehlman of Lima, and Clifford Jacobs were Mrs. Barbara
in Michjgan with their son, Jam~ · Sargent, Mr. and Mrs. Denver Nelson, Lawrence Eblin, Mr. and Mrs.
Williams.
Mr. and Mrs. James Gilmore Herman Michaels, Mr. and Mrs.
were recent visitors of their daugh- Ernest Van Jnwagen, Mrs. Ann
rer, Mrs. Sandra Gilmore and her Mash, Mrs. Wayne Pullins and son,
family in Amlin.
Jesse, and Mr. and Mrs. Keith Van
Larry Jacobs of Longview, Inwagen and son, Dustin, of
Texas is here visiting his parents, Cincinnati.
Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Jacobs.
Guests at the home of the Rev.
Mrs. June Soulsby was a recent and Mrs. William Williams over
visitor of her sister, Mrs. Jean - the weekend were Mr. and Mrs.
Carter, Logan.
Richard Gladwell and Mr. and Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Pat Johnson and John Gladwell and daughter,
daughter of Columbus were the Amelia, of Columbus Grove.
weekend guests of her grandmoth·
.Mr. and Mrs. D.anny Dorst and
er, Mrs. Ann Mash. A dinner_was sons have now moved in to their ·
given in honor of Mr. Johnson who new home on the Laurel Cliff
wiD be leaving for t11e Navy Soon. Road.
By Mildred Jacobs

Tournament raises money

LIVING ROOM SALE
Here are iust a few af the great buys
we have for you.
Reg. S749
Country Pillow Arm Sofa &amp; Chair ............'Sale $599
Reg. S1109
~ountry Print Sofa &amp; Loveseat ................. Sale 5889
Reg. S7.19
Country Plaid Sofa &amp; Chair ...................... Sale S579
Reg. 51519
Pillow Arm Sofa, Loveseat &amp; Chair .••••.•• Sale 51219
Reg •.5919
Sofa &amp; Loveseat, blue plaid ...................... Sale 5739
Reg. S679
Sofa &amp; Chair •.•••...•.•••.••.•...••.••.......•..•.••••.••• Sale $54 9
Reg. S1079
Blue Window Puna Sofa &amp; Chair .............. Sale S869
Reg. S899
Sofa &amp; Chair ..•.•..•.••••••••••••••••••.•••••••••••••••••• Sale ·s449
Reg. S599
Floral Print Sofa &amp; Chair"........................ Sale S499

I)INING.·ROOM' SALE ·
Stop in and check out the new styles. Greet country
looks.

1989

Table, 4 solid oak chairs.". Sale 1799
Sale

aide ch•lra, 2 aolid oak arm chairs

CUAIANCE

or·COUNTIY WHITE HUTCHES

1 Only .... 1499 Con~u Hlltdi .."""""'CIHra- IH9
1 Only .... 1179 hffat I H•tch.-."··CIHra- 1529
1 Only .... 1659 hffat I H•tch'"""'""Ciaarance 1395

§Y.LVANIA

COLOR

TV

SALE
2S" REMOTE OAK CONSOLE
SALE$49900
REG. SU9.00

BEDROOM SALE

25" REMOTE
PECAN OR PINE CONSOLE
.

SPECIAL LOW SAL£ PRICES
ON QUAUTY BEDROOM FURNITURE

lEG. S669.00

Reg. S1679 Fnitwood Firish on Maple Solid &amp; V.-n ........i1299
Triple dresser. queen•s mirror, .Croll top bed. chest and night
~~.

.

~

R... SJ3 99 Pine· Suite ..........................................~.............. fi 109 9
Tl'fple dresser. hutch mirror. Gentleman"• chest., headboard.
footboard. and night.stand.
·
'
·~· SJ72' Oak Suite ......................................................... s1299
Chest-on-chest, poster neaaboara, footboard. triple dreaer,
mirror and night stend.
Reg. S1959 Maple Solids and Cherry Y11111rs Suite ......... S1499
Door bureau, gellery mirror, panel head and footboard, nighttable 1nd door chest..
·

leg. S2799 Oak Suite ......................................................... S2199
Sleigh bea. cl)e111r. tllt storage mirror, wardrobe with oval mirror, night stand.
R~g. s1439 Oak Sllitt ......................................................... s 1099 .
Door dr-•, hutch mirror. li drtwer chest. panel head &amp; footbolrd, riight st1nd.
· ,
·
leg. s1999 Cherry Suite .........................................~............ S1549 ,
Chest. dresser. mirror, padlment hNdboard and footbo•rd,
night atand.

. SAu$56900

27" REMOTE TABLE MODEL

REG. S649.00

SAU $59 900

25" REMOTE TABLE MODEL

lEG. S499.00 ·

SALE$43900

46" BIG ·sCREEN

lEG. 52295.00

·. SALESl799.00

MANY MORE TV'S IN STOCK
AND ON SALE!

Scholarships available

Scholarships of $1,000 are
available from the OhioAns Council for Ohio high school seniors
who plan to continue their arts
training and education at an Ohio
college or. university in dance,
media arts, music, theatre, visual
arts, including design arts or writing.
Deadline ,for applications is
April 15. Application forms and
additional mformation may be
obtained by contacting the Arts in
Education Program at the 'Ohio
Ans Council 727 EaSI Main St.,
Columbus.
, . The scholarship program is
designed to recognize and encour-

STORE~

~-...., And Other

Merchandise.
Hurry .In-Sale Ends 312/91

Facemyer birth

age outstanding young artists in
Ohio. Applicants must be recommended by aPJ!ropriate arts specialists from thC!I' high schools. Where
there are no appropriate specialists,
. recommendaboris may come from
arts faculty membePS who have
worked closely with the students.
As many as three applications will
be accepted from each Ohio high
school.
Final selections will be, based on
the students' artistic accomplishmlillls lind potential. Represeiltalion
of the vartous arts disciplines and
· geographic areas of the state will
be considered in the review process.

· Bill and Cheryl Facemyer,
Pomeroy, are announcing the birth
of their first child,,a son, Charles
William Action Faceq~yer, Feb. 6,
at S~ Joseph's Hospital in Parkersburg, W.Va.
The infant weighed eight
pounds, two ounces and, w:1:'&gt;21
inches long.
Grandparents are Dennis and
Donna Facemy¢r, Albany, and
Charles and Ruth Ann Riffle, Middleport. Great-grandparents are
Jane Carsey, Athens: Leora
Christy, Florida: Bernice Riffle and
.George and Gladys Brothers,
Pomeroy.

Chester Council meeting held
'

Two applications for member- held for receiving national and
ship were presented and initiation state officers.
was set for Tuesday's meeting
The meeting opened in ritualiswhen Chester Council 323, Daugh- · tic form with the pledges to the
ters of America, met recently at the Christian and American flags, the
hall.
Lord's Prayer, and scripture readJoAnn Baum, councilor, presid· ing.
·
·
ed at the meeting and reminded
It was noted that Sandy White
members to wear white for the ini- and Ethel Orr are ill, and that
tiatory work. It was also noted that ·Goldie frederick and Laura Nice
the good of the order committee are now home from the hospital.
will serve refreshments and games Also noted was a new grandaughter
will be played that evening. Those for Velma White. Esther Smith
allending are asked to take prizes read an article about Thelma
for game winners. Disaict praclice McManis, written by lila Faye
was announced for I p.m on March Kimes entitled "A Tribute to Thel9 at Chester, and a practice was rna." Portions of a letter which

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Betty Young had received from her
nephew in Saudi Arabia was read
and refreshments were served by
Mary Holter, Thelma White, and
Faye Kirkhart.
.
,
· Esther and Bob Harden of Guid·
ing Star Council 124 were guests. ·
Other members attending were
Bulah Maxey, Alta BaDard, Everett
Grant; Charlotte Grant, Lora
Damewood, Opal Hollon, Doris
Grueser, Helen Wolf, Jo Ann
· Baum, Ada Bissell, Kathem Baum,
Enna Cleland, Inzy Newell, Doris
Koenig, Marcia Keller, Mae
McPeek, Esther Smith.

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CCL makes safety seat donation
A donati'on was made to the car
baby seat project of the Meigs
County Heath Department at a
recent meeting of the Middleport
. Child Conservation League.
The League has been active in
various projects of the Department
as they relate to children. Every
several months ~ baby layette is
contributed to the pre-natal clinic
program.
Plans for hosting the April 19
district ,spring conference of the
CCL were made. Entertainment
will be ~rovided by the "Buffons
for Chnst", and dinner will be
catered. by Millies.
Reservations
.,

are to be made not later than April
I. A household ~roduciS party was
held in conjuncuon with the meeting to raise money to assist with
the expenses of hosting the conference. Fonda Thomas was the
demonstrator.
Arrangements were made for
the group to serve the cameen at
the American Red Cross bloodmobile visit to Meigs County on April
17.
Husbands night will)!e observed
at the March meeting with a
potluck dinner at the Rock Springs
Church.
Kitty Darst, Helen Blackston

and Tammi Mash were named to
the nominating committee and will
report at the April meeting. A letter
was read from Cathy Bostic, Gallipolis, aslcing for a representative
from the Middlepon unit to serve
on the nominating committee for
the South Central District for 199 I92. Linda Broderick was appointed
as the representative.
·
Linda Broderick, vice president,
conducted the meeting in the
absence of Becky Steele.
A homemade auction was
planned for the May meeting. Kitty
Darst and Bonnie Scott served
refreshments.

Methodist Women have meeting ·
A total of 83 shuun calls were
reported by members of the
Reedsville United Methodist
Women during roll call at a recent
meeting of the group"held at the
church.
Mrs. Diane Jones was hostess
for the meeting witlt Mrs. Nina
Boston conducting the. program.
Scripture was taken from Luke 6
and readings included "Our Broth·
er' s Keeper", "Children Imaginations" and "Sheep Dogs" with Mrs.
Sandy West giving the prayer.
During the meeting conducred
by Mrs. Frances Reed, cards were ·
signed for several friends. Letters
from outside the church were discussed and three new members
were added to the group, Mrs.
Sandy Cowdery, Mrs. Pearl Baker,
and Mrs. Jenny Nutter.
Games were played with prizes
. being awarded to the w.inners.
Refreshments using the valentine
theme were served to those named
'I

,•

The Daily Sentinel

and Mrs Mamie Buckley Mrs
•
·
G
·
.
ladys Thomas, Mrs. 0 race
We~r. Mrs. Tammy Cowdery and
Chnstopher, Mrs. Nancy Buckley,
Mrs. Sally Brown, Mrs. Pearl

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
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Osborne and Mrs Lillian Pickens
•·
·.
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Mrs. Nutter re.ce1v~d the door
pnze. Next m~ung will be held at
the church wnh Mrs ..Osbome as
hostess.

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�'

Page 8 The Dally Sentinel

111ursday; February 28, 1991

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

..---People in the news-----:---. -------., Community Builders ~eet
cemetery.
: .BASINGER'S NEEDS MORE. SEWERS: Kim BISiDger's ambi;. tious plans to develop Braselton, the small Georgia town sli bought a
;year ago, are down the sewer. The actress's brother, Mlck Basinger,
; said her dream to make Braselton into a tourist village with a recording .
• and fibn srudio have been stymied by a lack of sewage capacity. ''The
: basic problem we've encountered is infrastrocture is poor here," said
: Mick Basinger, chief operating offiCer of the Braselton-Basi~er Lid.
:· .Partnership. "Our hope was to walk right in and start developmg. The
·· ·town's people are going to have to be patient" City officials are work:::: ing on the problem and hope to sell bonds soon to triple ~e capacity of
'. a 100,000- gallon-a-day sewerage treatment plant, according to Mayor
: Henry Edward Braselton, a member of the family that founded the
· town in 1887. "We are talking about a year io two-year project,"
: Braselton said.
GERALDO AS MANAGING EDITOR: Taboid TV star Geraldo

LOVE MA. TCHES: Ret:ired· tennis ace Cbris Evert is expecting
her first child, according The National. The daily sports newspaper
says Evert won't confmn the pregnancy but that her busband, And;!'
Mill, is telling friends that she's due in the fall. In another tennis family, Jobn McEnroe and acaress Tatum O'Neal are expect:ing their third
child in May.
·
'

Older Americans face nursing home ·stays
BOSTON (UPI) - Older
The "likelihood of spending a
Americans face a "substantial" large amount of time in a nursing
risk they will somedar have to home is substantial;" he said, notreceive e~tended nurstng home ing that a five-year stay costing
care at considerable possible $125,000 or more is "enough to
expense, researchers said Wednes- exhaust the financial resources of
all bui the wealthiest elderly per·
day.
,
Of the 2.2 m1'II'10n A mencaos
sons.''
·
• who IUmed 65 in I 99(), more than '
The srudy found a " much hlgh500,000 are expected to spend at er proportion" of older women
least a year in nursing homes th11n older men likely will spend
before they die and 195,000 will time in nursing homes. Of those
likely spend at least five years in currendy 6S, one out of every three
such facilities, said Christopher women but only one out of seven
Murtaugh of the Agency for Health · men are expected to spend at least
Care Policy and Research in a year in such homes, said MurR:ockviUe, Md.
taugh.
·
.
· • 'With the elderly population
In addition, considembly more
gi-owing, this has important impli- whites than blacks receive nursing
cations for both medical practice home care, he said. Among people
and the financing of long-term who died in 1986, 38 percent of
care," Murtaugh and a coUeague at whites but only 27 percent of
tbe agency, which is part of the blacks had experienced at least one
Qepartment of Health and H~man nursing hOme stay, the study found.
~rvices, reported in The New
Murtauglj said women may be
!'lngland Journal of Medicine.
more likely to wind up in nursing
. Based 'on projections formed homes because "they generally
ftom a national survey of adults outlive their spouses. Wbile huswho died in 1986, Murtaugh said bands are alive, their wives are
one out of I I Americans who turn often available to take care of
6.5 can expect currently to spend at them. But later on, the wives must
least five years in a nursing home rely on nursing homes for. their
at an annual average cost of own care...
$25,000 a year.
He said it is not known why

.
ted .f th
New offiCers were elec a . e
recent meeting of the Reedsvtlle
Community Buildets Club bel~ at
the home of Ernest and Maxme
Whitehead.
,
.
Elected were Whltehc:mJ. preS!·
dent; Denver Weber, v1ce presld
dent; Ella Osborne, secretary, an
Pauline Myers, treasurer.
Grace Weber gave a report from
a recent trustee meeting on recolds .

Rivera has a new venture - a weekly paper in Red Bank, N.J. A
spokesman says Rivera paid $400,000 for a 7S percent share of The
Two River Times and plans to be a WQ'king managing editor, in addition to hosting his daily ' 'Geraldo'' show and his planned news magazine " Now It Can Be Told." Rivera, who recently moved to the Red
Bank area. says he wants "to chronicle the ebb and flow of life in the
communities that embrace the breathtakingly beautiful rivm of centtal
coastal New Jersey." He also hopes to double the p&amp;JIC:r's cin::ulalion
to 20,()(X).

blacks use nursing homes le$8 than
whites. Possible reasons i'!clude
discrimination on the part of health
care providers _or i,nsurers, fewer
available beds m areas w1th large
black populations or a better system of family-provided care, Mur-

taut~~ated 1.5 million Am~­

cans currently reside in nursing
homes -a figure expected to double within the next 30 years. Annu·
al inflation-adjusted expenditures
for nursing home care rose from
$4.2 billion in 1964to $34.7 billion
in 1985, Murtaugh said.
In an editorial accompanying
the study, .Dr. Robert Kane and
Rosalie Kane of the University of
Minnesota School of Public Health
in Minneapolis said it is unclear
who will pay the future costs of
nursing home care.
. At present, "we rei~ heavily on
a public welfare model .' to foot the
bill, with fc4eral Medicaid paying
44 percent of nursing home costs in
1988, they SBid. ·
By combining current cost estimates with Murtaugh's stlstistics.
they said it is possible to "forecast
that roughly 12 percent of the population now 65 years old wiD need
Medicaid coverage for nursing
home care at some time.''

But while public opinion polls
show support for higher taxes to
provide such care; they noted many
Americans are uncomfortable
about IISiog public funds to provide
care for wealthy older PQOple, especially if it then allows them to
leave inheritances.
Additionally, the Kanes said
questions need to be considered
about what constitutes a nursing
home and what varying needs it
should ftll.
.
They suggested that efforts be
made to separate the housing functions of nursing homes from the
medical and personal care functions.
Under the model the Kanes foresee, universal coverage would be
provided for medical needs of the
elderly, but "the housing component would be. financed primll\ily
according to a person's ability to
pay."
.
A "critical first step" in dealing
with the nursing home situation
might be to set guals aimed both at
improving the furJCtional abilities
of the elderly and compensaling for
debilities while allowing them to
"be reasonably satisfied with the
quality and cost of what they
receive," they said.

'

'

Literary club meets

• •
: Mrs. Eileen Buck reviewed the
l:look "The Maharajahs" by John
Lord at the recent meeting of the
Middleport Literary Club lleld at
the home of Mrs. Chester Erwin.
Guests attending were Mrs. AI
Hartson and Mrs. Frank Regan.
· In Iter review, Mrs. Buck stated
'that this book draws intimate pictures of the most famous of these
fabulous princes in their golden age
; when they gave to India il.!i aura of
• n)agnificence. She went on to say
that they were the wealthiest, most
, pbwerful and fascinating group of
ruling princes left in the modern
world. They were called big
· sj,endors and one of them managed
tQ go through 10 million dollars in
a·six week period while visiling in
die United States. Mrs. Buck concluded by saying their wealth was
stagBering and they had their own
ainues, jewels, valued in the mil·
lipns, concubines by the hundreds,
· private jungles where they had
tigers, elephants and leopards.
Mrs. George Hackett Jr. pres_ided at the meeting and roll call as
Mswered with each member and
guesl.!i telting of a favorite food of
Iridia.
.
: Refreshments were served by
the hostess.

is a $20,000 study of reptile ~ies
in two Illinois counties for the state
Departmen1 of Conservalion•.
He hopes to catalog and count
spe&lt;:ies and numbers, look for parucularly rare ones, summarize previously published information on
...catalogued species, and teach division staff membm how to seek and
identify reptiles and amphibians on
their own.
Many of the snake specimens
that line the walls of Brandon's
university office have an oddly
two-dimensional look, proof that
!hey met their end at the hands or rather, the wheels- of a driver.
He said it is not unusual for herpetologists and even some mammalian biologists to look for specimens along the side of the road.
"This is one of the more common ways of fmding out what's out
there because (snakes) are such
secretive animals," be said. "Herpetologists are generally consid·
ered to be a sttange lot, so maybe
that's one of the reasons.''
Tlie practice even extends to

Library·lines
The month of March in normal!~ fin~-free at the Meigs County
L1braries. However, this year overdue books will cost you the price of
a postage stamp.
When an overdue book is
re~ed, a card will be given along
.wuh an envelope addressed to a
service person·serving in Operation
Desert Storm. The libraries are
requesting that those with overdue
books supply the 29 cent stamp to
mail this card.

universiiy museums, where labels
on specimens often read "OOR"
- shorthand for "dead on road."
The joys of road-kill research
were celebrated in a recent book
called "Flattened Fauna." The
book took a semi-humorous tone
but Brandon said it served a legitimate purpose as a field guide to
common animals that city dwellers
may only see as a fleeting image in
their rear-view mirror.
"It was valuable because it recognized roads as babitat and lielped
make people aware of animals," he

said.
'

'

Orioles' McDonald packs a durfel bag with bite
SARASOTA, Fla. (UP!) When word was out that an alligator was in the Baltimore Orioles'
clubhouse, the search was on for
one man- Ben McDonald.
"! caught it on a fishinR line

I

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I

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.
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.

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Classi II

.. ,

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ff*f ..,. .. ff--

• The Area's Nu:uala•r 1 Marketplace
TO PLACE AN AD ClU 992·2156

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

I A.M. until NOON SATURDAY .

'

Middleport First Baptist Chur~h .
Forty•one sick and shutin cails
were reported. Officers gave ·
reports. Edith Sisson presided at
the meeting opening with a reading "Forgiving Others." Devotions
by Evelyn HoUon included a sermonette for Lent taken from Rev. 3
and John 3 and gave a prayer.
· Refreshments were $erved to
eight members and guests, Marcia
Arnold and Jane Harris.
.

BULLETIN BOARD
BULLETiN BOAIID DEADLINE
. 4:311 P.M. DAY BEFORE
PUBLICATION

Fund
raiser
set
.
·

and brought it to tlie clubhouie in a
duffel bag," said McDonald.
whose alligator wrestling days as a
youngster in Denham Springs, La..
are legendary. "I was fishing right
at dark .(Monday night) and I
hooked it accidentally. Then the
fight was on."
The alligator measured about 30
inches long, bw McDonald claimed
it was followed out of ~e water by
a much bigger one.
·
"Must have been its mama,"
McDonald said. "I had to run up
the hill to get away.''
He·kept the smaller alligator in
his car trunk overnight and brought
it to the balllliiJ'k. where he used it
to startle a lew ieammates before
releasing it in one of the ponds at
Twin Lakes Park.
"It was just a little itty bitty
thing," McDonald said. "It wasn't
big enough to hun anybody."

''W. .e IQ Kawlllt" sip at the ea1ruce oftbe
Kuwait City IaterutioDal Airport on Wedaaday. (Reater/UPI)

WELCOME TO KUWAIT, SOLDIERS •
·Marines from Task Force Ripper of tbe Firat
1\'farlae Division dil'isloa ride a Hnmvee under a

' '

.
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.TRACK SPIKES ·
·.AL· ·s.·o.·. I·N s·T,.·&gt;.O~"TL''
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Comtllett Grooming
'For All lrteds

EMILEE MERIHAR
Owner &amp; o,traiDr

614-992-6120

REMOVAL
•LIGHT HAULING

..

an abaadoned K•walti towa o• Feb. 14.
(Reuter/UPI)

SEARCHING FOR IRAQIS • A member of
· tbe Flrst Marine Division searches • section of

."

992-2~69
USED IWOAD nES

R. L. MASH

'

CARPENtRY
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Act before March 3, 1991 and you can postpone this increase for up to 1 year
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Y. C. YOUNG Ul

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"2-2772 Dr
742·2251

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IISSILL
IUILDIIS .

'fii.COINit

HCYCIIIG

OPEN 7 DAYS

A WEEK
I A.M. 'T1L 7 P.M.

110 Jll
SIALL
Fill llniATES

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COIISIIICIION
MI-6Mier

•

CUSTOIMT
HOMES I GAUIES
I ._._.,

I.

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0 s Months t34.84
1
Mtill to: The Deily Sentinel. 111 Court 8t.. Pomeroy. Ohio 41718
1I
----------~---------- .-------------------.-----·

'

IISSILL &amp; JUliE

992·5526

I
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1

"Your Source For Local New,''

by

and

l'ftiiSTIMATUI

1~-------------------------------------------~
Yes, ·I would like to take advantage of thia P.I.A. auDscnpt1on offer.
·
1
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1

THE DAILY SENTINEL

C. D.

llldly .
your

•Repair Work

131 lryan
MlddllfiOrt.

0 Current P.I.A. 'ubiCflber
0 12 Monthless.se
.

lllitMII.

11101

et111011

•Replaeemlnt
Win do-

$2.99
e6.7e
$16.64

Phon

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...

111-Mertllncl our

rby

..........

J&amp;L

liAVt;

City

""'·"you're
c-

........... ltrlll

Cu"ent
Renewal

·Addreu

I will otltl r-ber
you.
A!llll ,..,.,. too cloH
to the trountl.
"GeM llut net forgot·

by tklc lftDitltG(

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

INSULA
nON
•VInyl lldlnG

Bill
817.81
$34.84
866.66

lo IMIII- me. If you
1111411 to.

SIGNS

1'0GIS I -~~~~~~

POMROY, OMO

Become a PAID IN OFFICE subscriber or EXTENQ YOUR CURRENT PAID IN
OFFICE SUBSCRIPTION at the CURRENT RENEWAL RATE for 3, 6 or 12
months.

yeu down.

ThMt·-

. autl.,e

•0Jiafl Wltcfl .CoceBWi. .
.CO""""t
I! II '$ ::s;;&amp;
llllii~IMrlt elMn • . . , . .

•FIREWOOD

BILL SLACK

IT'S BEEN 2'12 YEARS SINa T..
LAST INCIIASI IN OUR HOME
• DELIVERY Plla.

S!lblcription
~-iRd

SHIUI &amp; :rtEE
TIIM and

~ ~ I ·,

IIUncf.

I'd rtlthar- you up,

i IHll fit Ni &lt;II

THE

GROOM
ROOM

awey

lllcll, fie.
l'ty on, fir iln
PNt the a...-ct of

--·~····

Business
Services

. -.,. .

11-ld

MINII J, 1111 .. ring
like WMit In DIYtOna

. '

'

Middleport1 01,

Who

........ tr•4ut.llds:iia,

!III BLACK OR WHITE

.

u••· Cllltl

In 11111101,

0 NIKE SLASHER - Metal Spikes .............. S44.9S
GREAT FOR SOFTBALL!

.

IN MIIIIOIIY OF MOM.

•

0 NIKE KEYSTONE- Rubber Oeat .......... S31.9S

w .......

"1111.01'1-....-. V1tlli111

RITE AID PHARMACY
·
SAVE$$$$ · ·

In Memory Of
CHAIIUE FRYE

a lfrs .,..,...

·-lladuod....,.....,

I

Let us pnce your ne~ prescription
or your refills from another store.
WE CAN SAVE YOU MONEY.
We Will Beat Any
Competitor's Pnce!
GIVE US A CALL TODAY!
1 David Morgan, 675-1624
John Guinther, 992·2586
$10.00 Off Transfers
$3.00 Off New

YOUR CARRIER
IS GETTING
A RAISE

0 New P.I.A. Sublcrlber
0 3 Month• e11.t1

,_, ......... CJ-7, • ~ . ',

II, . . . . . .

'

WHICH MEANS IT'S BIEN 2'/t
YEARS SINCE YO. CAHIO
,. GOT A IAISE.

=·will

I ,_,.
trly ...... ..., . . . . . .

-~

'-i!

0 NIKE AIR SLIDER- Metal Spikes •••••••••• S67.95

The coaches involved in the
Miller Junior High Seventh Grade
Girls Basketball Tournament have
selected nine players to the alltournament team.
Selected were Cynthia Cotterill
and Alicia Haggy, Meigs Local;
Laurie Ward and Haley Berry,
Miller; Angie Phillips and Sara
Ogg, Nelsonville· York; Jamie Sorg
and AdrieMe Nash, Somerset Holy
Trinity; and Lisa Mahorney, Federal Hocking.
Alicia Haggy was also selected
as tournament most valuable player.

'!

..... flrllll•lhat\' II
.......... ~· I I ....

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14M

Months
6 Monthe
12 Months

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·992·5627

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1-1117 Cluucckt C• lee

CAll 614·992·7104 FOR APPT.

Po-~y.

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. . . . . . . . . . llo.Y·S

/' !.

Players Selected

recent visitor of Dorothy Reeves.
Donald Russell, Harrisonville,
was a Friday visitor of Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Ritssell.
Robbie Reeves, Chester, was a
weekend visitor of D01'0thy Reeves
and Mr. and Mrs. Paul Darnell, Jeff
and Melissa.

FOR SALE IN RACINE

VER'f NICE LAAGE HOllE ON AI'PIIOX. 3!1
~E$-4 BR, 3 blltls, 2anae. rontod I
BR IPolllmenl. Propllly iftdudtl po!MI, IP'
p!OII . 4,800 !q. ft llrrn bld,.llld rnellile
llome. " reol blrpin II $14,!1110.

'

••
.. "_-,;:

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NOW IN STOCI( .

219 N. Sec-.d -

.......

flU8UC 11onc1
Wad1 ~ &lt;' MINII I.
,lit, II 11:i0 A.M. • tile
Oft

....
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•

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BASEBALL SHOES

'

1ft llllllo;y

2

~~-----------·----t·l ,_,.,.feN v. . . ..

As a fund raiser for the Locomotion Teen Center.located in the
old Elberfeld warehouse on
Mecbanic Street, Pomeroy, a flea
market and yard sale will be held in
the building Monday, Tuesday and
Wednesday. Six-by-six foot spaces
are being rented for $S. Reservetions are to be made with either
Barbara Wilson, 992-5524 or Slierri Davis, 992-3456. '

'

State," Truan said.
Truan introduced a resolution
In August 1989, the Texas commending the Highway ComHighway Commission proposed mission for honoring the public 's
the motto "Friendship State" for ourcry in 1989 and deciding against
Texas license plates, prompting the "Friendship State" motto, and
complaints from almost 2.5,000 cit- recommending that the commission
izens who said it was too generic, adopt "The Lone Star State"
too bland and downright motto.
••wimpy."
.
The commission said two years.
Opposition was so strong that ago that it hoped the Legislature
commiSSioners decided to do away would adopt a resolution recomwith a motto llltogethcr.
mending what it should do.
'"The Friendship State' raised
Lt Gov. Bob Bullock endorsed
my ire and that of others because it the resolution, saying that other
was too wimpy. It sounded too proposed mottos - including the
wimpy," Truan said. "You kno)IV, ''Wildflower State - do not symevecybody is for .friendship, moth- bolize Texas as does "The Lone
erhood and country and apple pie, Star State."
but we are, very distincL ·
"It is known throughout not
"We bavc been and we are the only this country but througbout
Lone Star State of this country," the world," Bullock said of the
he said.
. ·
.
motto.
I

....

~

. IN BLACKONLY ,

;Lawmaker proposes HLone Star State"
motto over wimpy HFriendship State"
AUSTIN, Texas (UPI) - Tex·
ans may bave a reputation fll' being
friendly, but one state lawmaker
doesn' t want that "wimpy" im113e
splashed across automobile license
plates.
Reviving a two-year-old spat
o¥er auto license tags and the
state's macho image, state Sen.
Carlos Truan, D-Corpus Christi;
Wednesday proposed a new motto
ftlr Texas plates..,.. "The Lone Star·
State."
·
: "I think the people of Te;w, in
pOll after poll, bavc indicated their
preference for 'The Lone Star
Siate' and for the other states to
know that we arc very distinct
among the SO staleS in the United
SlateS, that we bave been.a republic, that we won our independence,
that we have been a Lone Star

.....

' .

Wolf Pen personal notes
Sunday evening visitors of Mr.
and Mrs. Kevin Knapp and family
were Mr. and Mrs. Doyle Knapp,
Langsville. Also visiting were Mr.
and Mrs. Mike Lavender.
Brad Haggy was a Sunday Visir,or ofJeff Darnell.
.
Robert Reeves, Chester, was a

thefc'ti~~· president for the meet:ing
was Ronald Osjlome, with Gmce
Weber as acting aecretary. Refreshments were served to Pauline and
Donald Myers, Ella and Ronald
Osborne and Grace and Denver
Weber Next JWeling will be at the
· . borne.
Balderson
·
·

I'

+-Quriks in the,news------------.-: CARBONDALE, Ill. (UPI) -It
tlikes more than the occasional collision with an 80,000-pound ttac·
tor-trailer truck to ruin a scientific
specimen for Ronald Brandon.
: The Southern Illinois University
biologist is a man with a missi1_1n ~
he roams the roads of Amenca s
heartland seeking his prey: the
" road- killed" remnants of reptiles.
" There's nothing I won't scrape
up if I can identify it as a reptile or
·amphibian," he said. "Our best
collecting method so far has been
tg walk along the road with plast:ic
b)l s."
.
• gBrandon is a herpetologist, a
zoologist who specializes in studyi~g snakes, salamanders and other
creepie-crawlies. His latest project

·Scenes of liberation
,-

of lots at the Reedsville
The projeet is still under study by

UMW·meeting ~~nducted
"S~ons of a Woman's Life"
was the theme of the program presented by Mary Nease at a recent
meeting of the Forest Run United
Methodist Women lleld at the
home of Canie Grueser.
Purpose of the program, as
explained by Mrs. Nease, was to
identify and explore the challenges
of different stages of a wo~en 's
life and examine each stage m the
development toward maturity and
fulfillment
Scripture for the program was
taken from Ruth 2 and Cor. 4, 7-10.
the story of Ruth and Naomi was
used lei introduce the image of sea·
sons aqd new life at any age.
Assist:ing Mrs. NeaSe with the )1'0gram were Kathleen Scott, Hilda
Yeauger and Carolyn Salser. A
reading on Ash We.dttcsday was
given by Kathleen Sell£(
Members were reminded of
World Day of Prayer services to be
held on Friday at 1:30 p.m at the

"

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

•
•
"Atuu.l
..-

.....

Pl. 949·1101

lnd Force Reco•utuaace Co••s•y wblcla
HAPPY GREETING • U.S. Mlrlle Cpt. Mitt
tecared tile ealla11y tile •sy before.
Robbl• , _ llalowell, MaiM, left, II peeied •
(Re•ter/UPI)
byKIIWIItls oatlllk tile ~· llln.y oa
Wednesdey. Robblaa terves wilb tbe Mlrlae
•
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'

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erlet.t4t·2160

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�•
Thursday, February 28, 1991

Ohio
31 Homet tor Slit

LAFF·A·DAY

Announc.:menh

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Dol · - lu
1'a na. Your

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For Sole . b)' -

Apartment

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A PRINT NUMBfRED
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SCR• M LITS AN SWill

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Define- Grant- Shirt- Paunch - ATTACHEO
· My mom was making a lot of long distance calls on her
cordless phone.Being e frugal person I asked her abo~!
the calls, 'Why not?" she asked. "The phone lsn t
ATIACHED to anything."

' flcaeHa• .~

lf!eAn9Q
sec·-.. . . . .

by filling In the missing

I' 1 I I' I' I' I' 11 I' I

UNSCRAMBLE FORI
ANSWER
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(I) I Drelin ol Je1nw

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Compte,. the cllucklo quoted
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32 Mobile Homes ' ·
for Sale

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THURL, FEB. C M

1:00 &lt;Jl •

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REP0811ESIED -Ell
Horn. • ....... 1100 daWn,
fl.. P'!5~Juico ol 11111. .10%
APR. _ _"~ · oloM 8olfor,
1400
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lloo.-ltutly oltuilod
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Old ..... blond Qor..
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Television

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Poplor Holgl:lo, S · ltocl,_,

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fOr Rent

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4:00PM.

G~Weway

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property. R p: u

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For

Ani

42 Mobile Homes

GO'IIIIHIIIIIIT HOMEI ..... t1

3 Announcements

m

Page 11

The Dally Sentinel

Pomero,-lddleport, Ohio

111 ca•••• llelltelblll

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FurniShed

45

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UIDO.I14-IJI.Z'm,

46 Space for Rent

1M QIIC "'!c_V-1, oula, olr, ;
'fOOd oond, t2.11V. 114 ... IIOIS. I
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114-laDM

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HOUIIhOid

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Dwi
and Whitley raHnt
being aaked to bOycott men.

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112 mi.
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c•~~g~~~ Our l.wali011 To
1'/t. Milts East 011 lt. 241 through

IOIIIIY-

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......

Bual....
Opportunity

Cllt. 45743

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iolth poaple you kr»w=ond
NOr to ..... 111'
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ur:t8
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WATE" CIUARAHTUD. ,,......

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wool:. 4
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Dnwon, IUO PI!'-. Rt.141,

4 1111• ot1 Rl. 7 In Coonllll• I·
HOURI: ......, thru Solcnoy,
lo.m.-ep.rn.; au. .y, 12 -

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Campenl &amp;

MotorHomas ·

·:

-- ........
--. . . , -,.tnt,- ..
1171 ' Unaaln Town

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IDDAt:IDUS FltlfD
t:HICICEN

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10:30 (!) Weal Yllglnll LeglllltiYI

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1111- · - 1- I . . . . Tini:I'....... IIO OoiHo
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an,OH1.eoo.e17-1111.

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DELUXE SATEli.ifE tv SYSTEM

ASTRO-GRAPH

Ran~

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BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

.....

t.

·unlden

Mualcal
lnetrumantll

7104.

.

82

:3"~ M, .,.,, Phano-

58

Plumbing &amp;
Hlltlng
Cal1or"' ............

Frultla
VegetabiM

............ Ph

....... =""Ottlo

*1,195

o- '" ........

Greeter MIH:onlldenee In yaur abllltlee
and idea lllllttiJ to come about In the

!njay
nelo. l•llle-LIY!

year allelld.

"Put lhle out 10 your ·rather will have a
park)ng place when he gets home."

-· .... ---

...C:.I (Pelt. 10 Ml 011111) You mlgllt
IMm of the IOyllty of • friend whOM ...
leclion you thought lied bean wavering
• bll o11a11. n aiiOUid t:e1p ret1tore your
llltlt In humlil-.Get 1 Jump on lila
b)' uttdet •tending the lnlluenctl whiCh

CIIIIItl fiUial\ I I Iii. WI hloo
........... tlllll-ln

·•

o.- you tlttltl to truly uee

. " .your lelenll, you could attrect compe.
1et11 partntn lot' vertoua endlevore.

81 Fll'lll Equ..,..,.

.

=.~~CD,

(
I

go-n you In the year - d. s-1or than uauel, eopecletoy it the people In·
your Astra-Graph ~ today by vollled with you are alrllld to apem. up
milling $1.25 to Altro-Graph, clo thla tiMy ol:auld.
.
newapeper, P.O. Box 91428, Clevelond. LaRA C8epL D-OoL D) You have two
OH 44101-3428. Be eure to stele your ellectllll attrlbut• today that could be
uoed to yaur advanlege. They .,. your
Zodiac olgn.
.--e CIIIM-olt tt·Aprll'll) Condhlona ablllllee to - .-nlng and Intuitive
are a trltlo unueue1 lodly In thll you lethlee to MMt allngular purpooe.
might prollt In eome mall- lram the ICOIIPIO (~ 1M Noo. Ill) Involve·labOr• of othert. You'll do your bH, but menta you hive todl:y grouptl or
orgenlzatlona llcould work out benefl.
t~'re likely to do rnore.
TAURUS CAprtt21 . . , 211 You tend to c:1811y. T h l a l l - you'llln.unctlvely
emulate the attltudee ol people with k-l:ow to do wllet'a belt lor the )argo
Whom you"l be InvolVed todiiY. Try to elloomber.
allodllta- peopte- •• pooltlve IAQITTAIIIUI Cllow. Ill Dec 21) Keep
yaur o~l- to JOUr"ll todiY, at
and - · expectations.
11
211 You'll be ..... umu rou·r• llbeolutttly cw~.rn
able to tltep In and Mlp w11ere needed YIIU'vt got ti'IWYflllng unct. control.
tCMIIIY, and thla will lllllke you an .,.... P.......,• IIMOUhCII:tenta could Invite
- - tootllere. Milking 118111ook un cC'fl'led lnt• rw euce.
CAI'NCOIIN CDM. :aw-. 11) Keep en
goOd reflect• 18vwably on you. · .
CAliCO C,.,. .,......, Ill) Your lnftu· open mind todly H you get Into • con- ·
Wl . .lan- _,_ .. :ohc:ee peciDII·
yaur eocl8l Circle .. muall
1tr0ng1r 1111n you INIY ,..... at 11111 -you cllollke, but :ohc:ee mind you ...
be
tlmll. lhtn " you
of your ..,.:!. s-t:lr:g ol value
lmpect, yaur .,... will be.
llamed.
LaO ,...., »AIIg. II) Be on the look· AQUAIIIUI
:!!HelL 111 SotMout lOr an opponunny today tlllt COUld tlmei, you can rely upon yaur Ingenuity
en11111e you to reep reward1lrom..,.,.. 10 get you CMrllle rOUQIIepota. But. II
lltlng you~ do lOr MOther. you hope to IUCCMd tOdey, tenacity
YIMIO CAlli- II e1pL 12) In order to and reeoNe Will be lila 10011 nee IUiry
edv•a a ciiiHIM ·I nt-1 today, you to do the Job,
.. might-. to be a. trltlo.. more
.-ttve
'.

oar

ond......,. .

llercll1, 1111

.. " .......... - 24
l:oura, IRD I Y - lncluNotleo....
CALL ToDAY
FEIIIIUAI\UI!fCIAL

a

Chl••llort Q
8CNNiveoilngllewl
D 7GO Club Wltlt Pel

~· doy ar niGht...._.. -mont Wol-~mvw--.a.e flng.
.

l'r".metlme Live
(D 1,.. an the PIIH:
"-'Ca'l Civil Algltll y. . .

MICk end Kate dlaccwer
Jason II In the holpital.
~e
Trait: Thl Ned

.,.._ 1117 Dadtio 11400,10M114Mf.

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~-~-••alltd
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JI!J.Ie W.eiiW• .....al-11. 35, • .., ...

UH-- DO
YOU FOLKS
DELIVER?

1171 . . . . ...........
'
11,4100 mlloo, alii oft• 7p.m. - - - - - - - - - ,(

:;......-ret

ZENIX VIDEO •

Mk:lllll Jorden, Gloria
E•ttlan and AI Sharpton.

COME ON OVER FER
SOME OF MAW'S

·•
Rocl Gild Cllilpor 12 ft ·· •
loCo al • - . olr,

ca.- 112.000.00.114-14N111.

s_,_1:n1.

ing Ddd

13J
t
part
141n
agree·

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S..tl:
1•
2•
4•

Ea11
PBIO

Welt
Nard:
Pass
2+
Pass
All pass

s•

PUB

Opening lead: t Q

account that letting We8t win a trick.
with the trump queen allows c!eclarer;
to guarantee his contract whenever
West holds lour clubs, South's play in
the trump suit becomes tbe wlnalrtfl
line.

~~

1 Some
aurreal

paintings
2 European

5 Kodiak,

f::.m
summer
drinks

23 Disencumber
24 Ray type
:!&amp;Olympics
weapon
28Dance
slap
28 Capone
lealura
31 Catchall
abbr.
32 Bouquets
36 Sacred
beetles
\ 38 Beamaor
· Vigoda
40 Candle
41 Homer
classic
43 Happen·
ing
44 Washer
cycle

o
·• Arlenlo Hell Stereo r:;a
i1J PQA Clolf Dorll Ryder

e.g.

II For fear

kin
17 Give the

28 Harass
30 Truck

boac .

part
33"0own

18-for
tat
22 Lanar

East•

34 Lower
that
opener
35 Passover
7 Hematite, 24 Comic
taut
· 37Taar·
for one
book
8 Withoul
hideout
iaunder
Hfting a 25 Con on
38 Garfunkel
date
the run
and
8Fume
27 Con's
Tatum
11 Llamas'
opposer 42Cap

••
•

.

~~~~­

l;;;.;iM'"'

King .

11:30(J)ti iiJ Tonight Bilow
&amp;.reo.
(J) Min UltdltCOYir
(D Jolin MIIIMghlln'l One
011 Onl

1
• Ill AIMII
I
11:.CI)a-.Q

(1)~~--Q
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n Millie lllop

CIIgtllllkelblll

2/28

AXYDLBAAXR
II LONGFELLOW

Open, 111 round 1rom Mllrlll

8lae-ow and Mre.

+KH
Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: South

DAILY CR YPTOQU&lt;rri!'S- Here'• how to wort II:

(l)rllaaw-=ta
(R)

.7

•Kat

oot\t

boot
3 U.S. ski
resort
4CSA
general

21

.Nitti. . Now
ill Co4llge llelltiiiiiH
a Lany 1ang Uvet

BARNEY

I

.,.......

lulorCIIftl

44 . 411-

Trw••

happiness
1Q Confused
12F~hlen·

i1J MOYII: WlreCI tRI (2:00)

inttrvlews Deml Moore,

~

8177, 11447N2U.

...__.Ioria nlwM•

ONLY

J

SOUTH
.AJ9643

needs ·
468ambi,

1 Watch
part
5 Pertect

••••t~':l,
Stereo.
a
0
.
Hill, 1111'210

1:30 Cfle o DowntlotM Kata
helpa I VlltnlmiH COOl&lt;
who Ia lacing depoitatlon. 1;1
10:00 (J). iiJ FJret , _ With
Mella llllrl¥er Maria Shriver

ludalt Tw••utlwlo;a. Uwd i ~
nbullt, llorllfta • hi; 114-241- •.

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+to 2

45 ObDist's

111 Business
aharer
18Grammar
concern
20 Pastoral

Brandon Ia dl1100vered on 1
·hit show, but his lame Ia
shorl~lved. Starao. Q

EAT.,.

11100.

Auto• for Bile

1112 NIOO I illt IMOO

Jap 1 At ..,, The -......

.

•

1IJO ...,..,..h Raod -

.

COMPUI'f - .
NOI'IM ElSE 1'0 IIUYI

..... 11.21

with -~~~ aa HP 1
-.1114-446-'1244.

-..

Pl:ano (3041 fiMHIIIIIf 5p.m.

l•r--o-

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79

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por-r
114111

.JLJeT NE, AND M-t
PET FJ',RROT: ••
NOTHING "TO

CitE nMe I Wlt6
SNOWea.JND IN
At-J 1eDLATED
MaJNt.t.CN CABIN ••.

.

.

CALL
VICKER'S WOOD HEATING

...............
................
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•

....... - · ·-

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

LOAD EVElY 12 HOlliS

srstri
,_

111011011. Al-

2011.

71
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llntole.
oto. DH
CloUcle
,_
Cbndo,
Cd WinIM-

""'' bo - · 0·1110 ............ -

tC~Mm

~-

EAST

+7 2
.QJI03

by THOMAS JOSEPH

menl
15-da

plana.
Ill ae Thl Filth Berry Is
pitted against a professional

1'11111: 120. 11araon Form, RL H.
1:00.12:00, ll"on-sot. 304-qJ.

-·=00-1:00-r:lngo.

--

a

a

Hay &amp; Grain

• A 10~

+AQB

CROSSWORD

recovering stolen eubt)'tarine

Tr c~nspo 11&lt;111011

...........
-·
- · ........P!uo
-·.tntol:
ln-

e

asalate Inspector Japp in

- -1. -·-·
64

Suppllal
241.at21.

l

(0:301 Stereo.
ill AmlltCM ole Shop
1:00 (J)
iiJ Cl1e«&lt; Rabeeell
helpS vere get a jab working
· et !hi rntaurent above the
ber. Stereo.
(I) (1). Cla6rlel'l Fire
Gabriel diiCOYirl I ~
is killed lot' hll trtncly ·
MyMeryl

Building

llaal:, ........ -

• • On All Corpot In lllaalc. Clot
Yau luv. Yau
2 b d 0M1 ......., tal. monlh OUr Ptloe lla luol:of llolm. ......... IDW'/8-1117 1111· CCiulcl
Cotpoto, I 117 ·114441-lll44.
2 IR In _....,, V1n1on - .

Persian Gun. Entertainers

Include KeYin Coltner,
Warrant end
Bunny.

-•kera. ~RI Stereo.
Q
t1J (!)
Polrot

-"EI :tria-llodol
lllnnlna
bod
lun"
111'24-81.

.................
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~7111 ar _ , .
with 4 Cl:olnl, 117.10 por wool:. 4 12.100.
al --·
0111.

w-u .... -

•Cu.tom Bent Exhau.t Syatams
•Complete Uno of Exheust Suppllee
•Handle end lnetell MDnroe Shocka
Come ... See U1 I'• A ll'ree '"J ecttoa

472" ~·- ••. 241 .

~aa=-·~~=~
Roell- 17.7'11 .....
-·

42 Mobile HOIIIM
OHIO YALLIY PUILIIHING CO.
for Rent

,

Pl. 614-ti5•Jt49

21

Wa adgriUP, "'-01 per

lloddlnaL-811op41d
ond eMil·al-Dra...,
wool:.
-·

IHCmCEI

Chtstw, Oh.

SPECIALIZING IN....

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lllor ttl
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446-9416

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KELLU'S CUSTOM BENDING

lHS

~106RI~
~ "THIS SPE.CIAL

Qaa,._,..,.... ......,.LdOn't
tho mfiiiUII

- ... 1110

IENNm'S MOBILE HOME
HEATING &amp; COOLING .

I~TERJ&lt;!UPI

.JUST AS .
AS \.1£
KWI.V HI'S lOOJTrrY .

.712

North and South were using the .two- ·
over-one game force. (Responding to
partner's opeoirlc bid in a new, lowerranking suit 011 the two-level forces to
pone.) Norib could tben!fore quietly
raise two spadel to lbree spades to in·
vjte a cue-bid II South had anything resembUng slam values. With only II
· blp-card points South was quick to
sign off in lour spaclea.
Declarer won tbe openirl&amp; diamond
lead in dummy llld ruffed a dlamortd.
ThaD be played a spade 10 dummy's
king and a sprlde back 10 his jack, looingiO West's doubleton queea. Technically this wu not the best play in the
trump suit, but declarer was cOOcemed with the deal u a whole. West
played another diamCIIId, ruffed. Soutt
ne1t played three rounds ol clubs, end·
ing in dumt~~y. West held the master
club, but .declarer now played dummy's last club, discarding a heart.
West had to win the club and lead
away from the ace of hearts to give.
South bls CODtrac:t.
The finesse in trumps was only a •
slightly Inferior play with this partlcular suit combinltlon. H you take Into

ACROSS

llln g•tt:er together to
· Sllule !hi troops In the ,

·

'"""

ca...

varc. Tltet
Neerlv 100 -•In'"""'

llpolio, ....

I«OBILE HOME FURNACES -HEAT PUMPS
All FlltNACE PAm

iiJ Murdir, 1M Wrote Q
IIIOIIIUige

. tile RNw ~2:00)

CDuah, - -...
Uill- P '11-2024.
Count, ~ Ina. Goad
.-~T.V.- Ottoft
I o.m. Ia 1 11-111. - - · 814441-181!.. 127 lnl. A... Qol.

Poulo'a Doy c.n: Contw.
..... afladabta, chllctciN. M-F
I Llll. • 1:10 p.n:. Ali! 2 •10.

(RI

8 Pii114Naa1
0 MOYif: .,.... ,._.

Goode

N1w I•

dla~ng stunt.
Sle~.Q

1·11-tl

NORTII
tK 10~

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Thllltnpeon• Bart
plan• to pet1orm •

304-77M121.
:
0a
t 20ft. TrMxt• Trllllr,\"
lll:o - . t1,710.;_ 11ft. -~
traitor, point t1.1M.J.,Z llata;
lralter, .... l14'd'l' .
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lnjootlan,
plpu.,j;; ·
ch...... rtn:a, _ , -ian. '

Renin Is

e Fetlllr Dowling

.,,..,.. Fllhlr Dowling
battln ,.,. devil when Sister

n1:e:ut.• o ........,., Ml ,.,..,.

Wllntacl to Rent

49

jc.f\.k)W lj?

- :t .rflEA/C OV'J:'. II"
Oil.

e

'llnl'e Catnpeny
8CaMalll•
7:31(1) a.ntonl end San
• ... (J) • iiJ Coebr Show
Thea's plans to ptepere a
din-lot' hla gl~ go ·
awry. S\8re0. Q
(I) MOYII; llltint liege (R)

J: JIAVE
• A t&gt;ATf WITH V!Nt/1 ~NIGfft AN()

1

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yov

·. VJOIJI-PN'T

t1,1G0. 104·171-2133.
i
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al P-C"Jj

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IIMI flat bod, low mlleogo,

Port,

-

Tonltlllt Stareo. Q
· (1) • ....,.•• feiftlr

,_ 1111,- -nuo.

with OQ!IIdng.

BRIDGE
By James Jecelly

Cll11'i •....£-,

....... ut~opood, f*'IOcl
-·
. Clati ...... Hfgb
-...
. 1:12.
·'
Runo •
aood. Good trn.. I . . . trane..!
2 ODd. dlh:or:tlol. OOod point. ~,

0. mar:th.

lllorUng
.. - · - Holol.
au
cg;.nu.
91-'na -

7:01 (I) Happr fiiiYa
7:30.
c!ltrt.fiJ•!!IapopalllntliiJri.Q

'14 th uta n plakup, K"" Clb,

·Room• ·

King

. One letter stands for anolher. In this ssmple A is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apol!~rllJlhes, the length and formation of the words are all
· hint:S. Each day the code letters are different.
CRYPTOQUOTE

2·28
CUGZ

cuv

GZ

EVZC

FBM

.,

CUV

RWLQF

UBZ

VTVL

ZVVP.

lpctriiTonlgllt .

12:GO(J)IInto lhellgllt Stareo.
0 ....., Meahltll With ,
Nil Pufta
• • liard Copy

. . .11114. . MOW

.B='C-,._.
111eRINr(2:00)

CWXWLLWR

EV

R G Q Q

EVCCVL.-L.B
HBXJEVQQ
· Yeetel'd•v'e Cl'vptoquote: OPPORTUNITIES
, · SHOULD NEVER BE LOST. BECAUSE ntEV CAN
., HARDLV BE REGAINED. - WILLIAM PENN

..,

.,

' ll

�..,
• •

P&amp;ge:-12-The Dally Sentinel
•

Community calendar
· Community Calendar Items
appear two da,s before u event
and tbe day of tbat event. Items
must be received weD In advaace
to ISSUre publication In the cal·
endar.
·

REEDSVILLE • The Winter
Sports Banquet will be held will be
held on Thursday at 6:30 p.m. at
Eastern High School. Bring a meat
dish, and vegetable dish and sa1a4
or dessert. Table service and drinks
will be provided.

a

RACINE · The Racine American Legion Auxiliary will meet
Thursday at 7:30. p.m. Girls from
the Southern Junior Class will be
guests and a Buckeye Girl's State
delegate will be selected.
·
LONG BOTTOM · Riverview
Garden. Club will meet Thurday,
7:30 p.m.- at the home of Phyllis
Larkins with Janice Young as cohostess. Members bring fruit baskets.

STIVERSVILLE • Shirley
Lester o-r Columbus will be the
guest speaker a the Word of Faith
Church on Thursday at 7:30p.m.
MIDDLEPORT • The Middle·
port Youth League Organizatino
will hold its first meeting to elect
officers for the 1991 ball season on
Thursday at 6:30 p.m. in Middleport Council Chambers. Public is
invited. Call Gene Wise at 9926224 for information.

POMEROY - Preceptor Beta
Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority will meet Thursday at 7:30
p.m . at the Grace Episcopal
Church. Kay Cecil will discuss
antiques. ·
The
LEBANON TWP.
Lebanon Township Trustees will

POMEROY· The Meigs Coun-

-

meet on ThurSday at 7 p.m. at the
township building.

ty Women's Fellowship will meet
Thilrsday at 7;30 p.m. at the Zion
Church of Christ where a fashion
show will lie presented on biblical
women. Bring a guest

THURSDAY
RACINE · A support group
meeting for those affected by the
Gulf War will meet Thursday at 7
p.m. at the Racine United
Methodist Church.

Pomeroy-Middlei)Ort1Ohio

FRIDAY
POMEROY • Revival services
will be held at the Believers Fel·
lowship Ministry Church on CounlY Road 18, Kingsburg, Friday
through Sunday, 7:30 each
evening, with a Sunday service at 2
p.m. Joy Sizemore will be the
evangelist. There will be special
singing. The Rev. Margaret Robin.son. pastor, invites the public.
MIDDLEPORT • A chicken ,
and noodle dinner will be served by
the ways and mean committee of
the Evangeline Chapter # 172 Order
of Eastern Slar on Friday from 11
a.m. to 7 p.m. in the basement of
the Masonic Temple. The menu
will include chicken and noodles,
green beans, cole slaw, roU, pie and
beverage for 53. Orders will be

t

available for eat-in or carryout
·
TUPPERS PLAINS - A round
and square dance will be held Friday night from 8 to 11;30 p.m. at
the Tuppers Plains VFW building.
Specks of Bluegrass will provide
the music and Arthur Conant will
be the caller. The public is invited
to attend.

Saturclty from 8 to 11 p.m. at the
Henderson Community Center in
Hendenon, W.VL The caller will
be John Waugh. The dance is open
to all Western-style square dancers.

· POMEROY · The Meigs Cunty
Pomona Grange will met Friday at
7:30 at the Rock Springs Grange
Hall. Star Grange will serve
refnlshments.

MIDDLEPORT • Registtation
for the Meigs County Soabox
Derby's BOLATHON will' be held
on·Saturday from 10 a.m. to 11:3(1
a.m. 'There will be no registration .
fee. All aged 6-16 are eligible. .

LONG BOTTOM • • faith
Gospel Church in Long Bottom ·
will hold preachin~ and singling .
with Ute Dailey Family on Fnday at
7 p.m. Steve Reed invites the pub·
lie.
MIDDLEPORT • Meigs County Church Women United will have
Wolrd Day of Prayer at 1:30 p.m.
at Middleport Baptist Church.
HENDERSON, W.VA.· The
Gallia Twirlers Western Square
Dance Club will hold a dance on

POMEROY • The Mothers of
Twins Club's annual inside yard
sale at the Grace Episcopal Church
on Saturday from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.

REEDSVILLE • Cheerleading
conipetition at Easlern High School
on Saturday. Open to varsity, IV,
and junior high squaads. Individual
competition will be held. FOrmQI'C
information, contact Debbie
Brooks 81985-4152.
POMEROY • The Royal Oak
Dance Club will hold their first
dance of the year on Saturday at
Royal Oalc Resort, from 8 p.m. to
11 p.m. Music will be by Gary
Stewart Quintet

Thursday, Februe;y 28, 199 ~
COoLVILLE • The Coolvillef.
Uniled Methodist Church at Main:.:
and Fifth Slteets will soonsor t :
so.., supper on Sanuday from 4:3u; •
· p.m. to 7 J!JD. The menu will con-::
sist of chili, bean or potato soup, :
com bread, pie and drink for 52. 75,:,
. Hot dogs will be available at a~
extta cost. Proceeds to the church:.:
building fund.
':
•'!.
SALEM CENTER • The suu;t:
Grange 11778 ·and Star Junjo .:
Grange #878 will meet in regulllf
session on Saturday at 7:30p.m. ae.:
the Grange Hall,located on Count~
Road 1 near Salem Center .i,
Refreshments will following the{
meeting of vegetable soup and.:
chili. All members are asked t9-::
bring ingredients to mix into theesoup.
...

Ohio Lottery .

Eastern
athletes
honored

Pick 3:349

Pick4:~

Cards : 6-H, 8-C;
l0-D;8-S

. Page3

Low tonight in mid-50s.
Saturday, high in.mid-60s•
Chance or rain 50 percent

.

LONG BOTtOM • Hymn sing ••
at Mt. Olive Community Church on~.
Saturday at 7 p.m. wit!t local talent.:Pastor Lawrence Bush invites lhe'";:
public.
~
.

HOIISI IIVBlROWING?
CUAN UP WITH
CI.ASSRD ADS 1. '·.'

VaL 4t, No. 211
Coprrlgllled1111 •

28~~4P_25_•

-

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, March 1, 1991

tnc.lMw•PII*

A 111u111

Saddam expected.to . seek exile in Algeria

...' ·
..-."'...

I

•

By JOHN PIDLUPS
PARIS - Saddam Hussein is
expected to go into exile in Algeria
after resigning, or being forced to
resign, as president of Iraq, Le
Monde newspaper said Friday.
Algerian leaders were negotiating assurances from the U.S.-Ied
anti· Iraqi coalition that Saddam
would not be.pursued once he goes
into exile, the newspaper said.
However, close aides. to the
Iraqi dictator were pressing him not
to abandon power,tt said.
Baghdad Radio called on Saddam "to overcome the trial" of

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

leadership· after his humiliating in the aftermath of that is a maner
defeat by the allies. .
·
t!tat·would have to discussed with
In Washinai:n, Secretary of our coalition partners."
·
State James B
was asked if the
Le Monde's report from its
coalition would leave Saddam Algiers correspondent, Georges
alone if the report is true. He .Marion, said Saddam asked Algeria
replied, ''I know nothing about that Wednesday evening if it would be
repon other than having seen the prepared to give him political asyfact pf the report. Beyond that I lum amd that "Paris was foreknow nothing as I stand here now.
wafned of the Iraqi initiative."
"Let me simply say, as we have
Algeria agreed within hours,
said before, I don't think many provided Saddam's "succcissors,"
tears would be shed if Saddam who it is presumed will be memHussein would leave power In bers of his political party, agree to
Iraq," Baker said. "The question the arrangement and that the allied
of what might or might not happen coalition will n9t try to hunt him

down for war crimes, Le Monde
said.
. ..
The report said Aljlerian President Chadli Bendjedtd's government is noi happy about giving
Saddam asylum but felt it could not
refuse because of widespread sup·
port for the Iraqi leader among the
population. :
·
The Algerian government faces
difficult nationwide elections in
June ajlainst the Moslem fundsmentaltst Islamic Salvation Front.
Giving Sad dam asylum could
secure the ruling Nauonal Liberation Front's survival in the elec-

tions, observerS said.
A spokesman for the French
Foreign Ministry said simply "no
comment" but did not deny the
report
The Le Monde report said Algeria would be far enough from Israel
to provide a safe haven and in that
sense would be safer than Yemen
or Sudan, two other locations with
Iraqi sympathies.
Algerian officials assured said
allied coalition leaders had guaran. ·
teed the deal, said the report.
The newspaper said permission
for Saddam to take up e~ile in

Algiers may have been linked to
his agreeing to a cease-fire in the
war.
Soviet leaders also were
believed to be in on the deal, arguing that "it was better to save Iraq
rather than Saddam hussein," said
the exclusive report.
Senior Iraqi officials acknow(:
edged Saddam would have to go
for the future of Iraq, said the
report.
· Le Monde said that although
Saddam wanted to arrange refuge
in Algeria, it was not clear if he
was ready to relinquish power volunrarily.

Election board throws out
Hoffman, Wehrung petition~!&gt;e
AT YO

3 ARE

FRUTH PHARMACIES

HALLS

Robitussin
CF-DM-PE-PEDIATRIC
4 oz.

30 COUNT
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PEPSI
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J9&lt;

BOOKS DISTRIBUTED • Meigs County
Sheriff James M. Soulriby has begun distribution
or a coloriag book to
elementary-aged chil·
drea. The book, pro~ by the Buckeye State
Sberlff's Association, offers safety tips to pri·
maries on a level they can understand. Here,

•rea

2

EACH

Shadle
Bridge
replacement
.
Iran wants Western troops out of
gulf area.aftef f.ormal cease fire three y·ears away: Vankirk

LITER

Free

Ear Piercing

The proposed Shadle Bridge estimated to cost $18.7 mil~on, that
term role following a formal·ceaseYazdi said Iran "will reject any replacement
project is at least three would run just adjacent to the
ftre between Iraq and the coalition security plan that includes the presyears
away.
present bridge and would cause
forces.
ence of foreiSI! forces" in the gulf.
This
was
the
report
of
West
Vir.
demolition
•• As we have said time and
Tehran ra'dio said Iran was ginia Department of Highways structure. of the McDonald's
again, the security of the Persian responding to reports that Western
The second bridge replacement
Gulf region is the responsibility of forces planned 'o stay in southern Commissioner Fred Vankirk: Wednesday
when
he
met
in
Charleston
study
suggests a span that would be
the people of the regiQn, 11nd the .Iraq for a few months to make sure
with
a
delegation
of
Mason
further
up-river and· would tie-in
presence of foreign forces will Iraq complied with U.N. Security
Countians
and
State
Senators
Oshel
with
Route
2 in Point Pleasant 81
itself be an element that will Council resolutions it accepted
Craigo
(p-Putnam)
and
Robert
Ditabout
the
end
of the Point Pleasant
destroy security in the region," before hostilities were suspended.
tmar
(D-Ravenswood.)
by-pass.
Vankirk
said the Alternate
Yazdi said.
At the United Nations, lrunian
2
study
estimates
a replacement
The cleric's remarks, as reported Ambassador Kamal Kharazi made
Point
Pleasant
Mayor
Russell
cost
of$20.1
miUion.
by Tehran radio, were monitored in similar remarks to reporters after
Vankirk said the Shadle Bridge is
Athens. Iran's ruling clerics fre· meeting Secretary-General Javier Holland pointed out after the meeting
that
Gov.
Gaston
Caperton
has
second
on the list as far as major
quenlly use the pulpit at Friday Perez de Cuallar.
not
yet
announced
any
funding
bridge
projects planned by the
prayers to make key policy
Iran's officiallslamic Republic
timetable
for
replacement
or
the
60
OOH.
He
the Shadle
announcements of the government
News Age~y quoted him as say- year-old bridge spanning the Bridge will conterids
follow
the
one at
ing: "Western forces must leave Kanawha River between Point Chelyan.
the region completely after a last· Pleasant and Henderson.
.Vankirk said an environmental
ing cease- ftre is established."
Vankirk
told
the
delegation
there
assessment.for
the proposed Shadle
Kharazi delivered a message
two proposed alternates on the · Bridge replacement will begin ·in
ftom Iranian Foreign Minister Ali are
drawing
for replacement of about three months and a public
Akbar Velayati to Perez de Cuellar the Silverboards
Bridge. He said the least hearing will be held 81 about that
dealing with security in the gulf, cosdy would
The Farm Business Planning and Analysis program in conjuncbe a four-lane span, time.
and calling also for full implemention with the Adult Basic Education Center at Tri. County Vocationtation of Security Council resolual School in Nelsonville will be conducting a one-evening program
tion 598, under which the 1980.88
on agricultural estate planning. The meeting will be held on ThursIran-Iraq
war was ended.
day, March 7 at 7:30 p.m. at the school. The session is open to the
The
Iranian
ambassador said it
public.
wasfor
the
people
of Irnq to decide
Mr. Paul Wright, retired Extension Economist for Agricultural
whether
President
Saddam
Hussein
Law and now a practicing attorney in Dublin, Ohio will be the guest
stays
in
power
in
Baghdad.
speaker. He will be assisted by Don Davis, the FBPA instructor at
In Tehran late Thursday, VelayTri County Vocational School. The insuuctors will be discussing the
ati
"called on the foreigners not to
many aspects of estate planning that will benefit your family.
interfere
with the fate of the Iraqi
The Ohio Estate Planning Handbook will be used as a text and
people,'' IRNA said. He blamed
guid_e. Each famil&gt;: will receive a copy for an $8 registration fee per
Kuwait and other gulf states for
_tQ··~ .•Lll '"';'l2,.
family. Those active members from the program will be exempt
helping Iraq build up a formidable
from the fee.
.
army, primarily to attack Iran.
1·~111 \\&gt;u 11
'14ll'l\

ATHENS, Greece {UPI)- Iran
said Friday that Western troops in
the Persian Gulf must leave the
region immediately after a formal
cease-fire agreement is reached
between Iraq and the U.S.-Ied
coalition forces, Tehran radio
reported.
The call came at Friday prayer
ceremonies where Hojatoleslam
Mohammad Yazdi, aa senior Iranian cleric, delivered a sermon out·
lining Iran's stance on the latest
developments in the gulf.
·
Yazdi said Iran would reject any
security plan for the gulf in which
Western forces were given a long-

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--Local briefs--Estate planning session slated

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Thefts investigated

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2501 JACKSON AVENUE
POINT PLEASANT, WV. 25550
(304) 675-2303

•·

Soulsby ud bls wife, Susie, give one of the books
to tbelr 11'aaddau1hter, Amanda Soulsby, at
Riverview Scbool near Reedsville. All Meigs
County cbildrea ia lliadergartea through third
grade will receive a copy of the book.
·

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Both Hoffman and Wehrung mary the contest will
between
Sentinel News Staff
have two opuons to get back into Bruce J. Reed and Dotue S. Turner
The Meigs County Board of the race.
: for their party's nomination for . ,
Elections has thrown out the candi- . They can ~o into the May Pri- may'?":
.
·
dacy petitions of Fred Hoffman, mary as write-ms or go on the fall
F1hng for the two seats on
Republican, filing for anolher term ballot as independent candidates.
Pomeroy village council were John
as mayor of Middleport, and Larry
Both HoffQian and Wehrunj( L. Amott, John W. Blaeunar, and .
Wehrung, Democrat. who filed as a when contacted stated that they Scott M. Dill.on •. all .Republicans.
candidate for mayor of Pomeroy.
plan to file as independents. The Brenda Moms, mcumbent clerkThe reason for not validating deadline for filing as an indepen- treasurer, was the only candidate to
the two petitions which would dent is May 6.
.
file for that post All are filur year
have put Hoffman and Wehrung's
The petitions of all other candi- terms.
names on the May Primary ballot dates were validated by the board
Voters in the Meigs Local
was insufficiency of valid signa- in its review this week.
School District will vote on a new
tures.
.
On the Middleport May Prima- ~ve-mill continuing operating levy
Jane Frymyer, director, cori- ry ballot will be Osby Martin, m the May Primary. The Board of
firmed Thursday afternoon that the Democrat, rruiyor: James Clatwor- Educauon v~ to put the levy on
Board of Elections composed of thy and WiUiarn G. Walters, for the the ballot in order to comply with
E:velyn .Clark, ~an, and_HeDfY . two. ~e.ats Hn ,Middleport Village its contraCt_with pte Meig~ Local
Wells, Republicans, !llld Jolin llile Council, !Kith 'Republican. incum- Teachers ASS!x:uwon. A new operand Mary H1111ter, Democrats, had bents; Brian K. COnde, clerk-trea- ating levy has been repeatedly
not validated the petitions of Hoff. surer: and · Thomas Anderson, rejected by voters over the past
man and Wehrulig.
·
Republican incumbent, Board of severill years.
The signatures on all petitions, Public Affairs.
In the Southern Local School
according to Frymyer, are verified
Jon Buck who has been the District, voters will again vote on a
through the voter registtation file clerk-treasurer for Middleport for four mill operaling levy. for three
and aU other aspects of the peti· · $everal terms did not file for re- years. The levy has twice been
defeated, the most recent being in
.lions are reviewed in the validation election.
process.
In Pomeroy's Republican Pri· the February Special Election.

364 JACISON PilE
GALUPOLIS, OH. 45631
(614) 446-6620

The Meigs County Sheriff's Depanment is investigating the theft
of a tool box full or IDols from Harris Farms in Portland.
According to Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby, tile
owner or the farm advised that he was usins the tools on Friady and
missed them on Saturday morning. He thought that maybe an
employee was using them, but upon inquiry discovered that that
was not the case.
.
'
.
S~eriff Soulsby reported that Charles Knapp of Gallipolis reported that he worts on a riverboat and when he returned, found that
somone had sto!en two of his checks and cashed one, but that the
bank had refused to cash the second check. He believed that the
checks had been taken from his truck while it was parked in Mid·
dl rL
.
kvestigation is continuing in both cases:
Coathiued on page 10

716 NOITH SECOND ST.
MIDDLEPORT, OH. 45760
(614) 992-6491

,,

~-

.

•·

.
\

'

Group to lead

·Easter hunts .
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
The traditional Easter egg hunts
which were discontinued last year
bY, the Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary
Club after more thail 40 years are
being taken over br the Middleport
Community Assoctation.
Meeting Thursday night the
Association 81 the request of Ro~er
Williams, Middleport recreation
Continued page 10 .

on

t '

In response to a question asked
by the delegation, Vanlcirlc said the
present bridge is safe.
Vankirk also told the delegation
the proposed Henderson by-pass
project, from the end of the Silver
MemOrial Bridge to probably the
vicinity of the Coast Guard Station
on Route 3S, is presently scheduled
to be~in in about two years. He said
the ·common sense" approach to
this proposed construction would
be to run tjle next section of highway "up against the hill.~
Vankirk estimated the Henderson
by-pass job would cost in the 54-5
million range.
'
Vankirk opened his remarks
during the conference by announcing the Salt Creek bridge replacement project, located on Route 2
below Hendrson, would at the conpeeled to cost over S I mtllion,
would start "in· the next couple,
(Coadnued on page 10)

' .
lllr W.r &amp;t(fl,

z a

......

.·

•

• .C.fW3tt'lllr
l'

•·

....

•
'

Peu1 BUlla aad G.E. Gulniber, moclel10me fA
the Items, lacludl•l sweallhlrta for $10.!19, t·
shirts for $6.!1!1 and llall for $4.99. Also avail·
able are bumper stickers and window decals.

ODS IT,E
. MS AVAILABLE • Kro1er's Ia
Pomeroy now bas available a variety Ill Open.
lion Desert Storm Items. Store emplO:ftel, 1-r,
Andy Miles, Carolyn 9bliDRer, Thelma Jeffers,
'~.

\J

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