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'

Page 1 0---n, Daily Sentinel

Ponwoy Midclaport. Ohio

Tuuday• .lanu.-y 22, 1991

•

Some Ohio roads~ slick with snow, ice

M'I'ICIW. WEATHER FOMCAIT.._ 7 AM 1·2M'i TO 7 AM1 ·M1

By Valted PrMa IDternaUo.Ml

Inches of snow the clly received
A· weather ~tl!m aloft that Monday upped the amount to
moved acrou Ohio durlq Monnine lnches'·~r January and 16.4
day nllht and TueadiY morning Inches tor the aeaaon.
The snow squalls that were
left mow In aome areas. Snowfall
amoiiJita were a-rally an bich over northeast Ohio Monday
or leas, but It was enoueb to cau~e
some allppery roada.
At 8 a.m. Tuetday, tbe Nattonal Weather Service reported
Six Inches of snow OD tbe ground
In · Cleveland, tbree Inches at
. Akron-Cantmt and Mansfield,
· two Inches at Findlay and Youngstown, and one Inch at Columbus, .
C!gclnnatl, Dayton, Toledo and
Zanesville.
The weather service's state
office In Cleveland said the five

Will

WEATIIER M.U" - A pair or cold froata
lirtq aowera to
parlll ol the Soaheat ud IIIIOW to l!le (;nat Lallea·nlloa. Arctic
air will pualllato lbe upper Midweat keeplq blpa Iaiiie leelll. Tbe

wealem tblrd ol tile coutry wlll aee 111oMb' 11U1111J aldN 1111d
WII'Dler tempera&amp;urea u blp pa llollll'll
(UPI) '

re1un..

decreased In Intensity after ·
midnight.
.
. Skies were partly to mostly
cloudy with overnight temperatures generally from around zero. ·
to 10 above:

High pressure will move east ·
TueSday night and that will allow
another weather system that was
over the PlaiDs to move toward
the state and cauae lacreulq ·
clouds.

"

:!

''

are

-----Area death8

•,

Brit derby, 10 be beld In June. Tb1a one Is iD8de
or ftber..... bat Ida are also availal!le for a
wooden model. (Sentinel Pboto by Brian J.
Reed)

;

..

Streets. .

c:==

Crisp pleads guilty to LCCD charges

Metgs
• LocaI sch00Is ..eh•

carpent.er_
· ·as

~urct ~

•
d
supennten .e nt

llouse Bill 703 p·asses

c3!c

AU In The Pamilyo
When the Smith children
'come home from school; Mother
isn't always there for .them. And
even when she is, .they sometimes
wish she wasn't. Because Mrs.
~mith is an alcoholic.
· Children of alcoholics suffer the
weight of adult problems on their
small shoulders. And they often
learn that the way to deal with these . .
problems is by drinking. Worse still, .
the tendency to,wards a!coholism
can be hereditary.
If you have a problem with alco·
hoi, don't le~ve your kids a legacy
that could drive them to drink. Seek
professional help now. ·

POMEROY, OHIO

.J . · ·

'

.

By .LEON.DANmL
UPI Chief Correspondent

Israel held an emergency
•
Cabinet meeting Wednesday .to
RAVENSWOOD, W.Va. - Ravenswood Alutnlnum Corporation
dlscus.s the latest and bloodiest
(RAC) will mall metal price bonus checks to members of the
Iraqi missile attack- an assault
United Steelworkers of America (USWA ), Local 5668, on
that kllled three people and
Thursday, Jan. 24.
Injured
96. Iraq said it was
These checks represent a metal pr~e bonus of $1.25 for every
suspending
fuel sales to civilians,.
hour worked In the month of October , 1990 or a total one-month
an
Indication
a!Ued bombings
payment of approximately $350,000 to striking members of the
an
economic
toll.
were
taking
USWA.
.
The
Israeli
offlcials
also
sought
This metal price bonus was based on the average "Midwest
to
'
determine.
why
tlie
U.S.Transaction Price for primary aluminum ~urlng the· fourth
manned
Patrtot
rockets
failed
to
quarter of 1990 and Is being paid within 30 days of the end of that
·
des
ti-oy
.
the
Scud
missile
thai
·
·
·
quarter.
T!Je provision for a metal price bonus payment was contained In · slammed Into a Tel Aviv neighTuesday . night. The
. .the labor agreement whiCh
. expired at midnight on Oct. 31, 1990. · borhood
attack renewed concern that
Israel would enter the ·gulf war
by striking Iraq and threaten the
fragile allled coalition. ,
"Every person In the state of
Israel ... would say to you that
(we) must hit them back so hard
that their screams.of pain will be
heard to the edges of the earth for
John Lewis Young, accused of against the ~nt and decided a long time, " Health M;lnlster
kidnapping and raping bis minor to let a jury decide his fate.
Ehud Olmert said shortly before
niece; Js e~tpccted to face a jury on
The kidnapping cluuKe against the Cabinet meeting began in Tel
. WedneSday, despite a last-ditclt ef- Young is a fiiBt degree felony, and . AVIv.
· ·. ,. ,,
fort to'plead his ~ ):es!er$y. .
stems from an August incident in
"Fight them back. the basThe Daily Sentinel yeSterday er- whil:h his under-aged niece iYIIS tards," echoed Zevl Maim on, a
roneously printed a story stating uansported from 11&lt;7 Middleport Tel A:vlv resident carrying bethat Young had pled guilty, when in home into Mason County, where longings out of a damaged office.
fact Young changed bis mind about she was allegedly raped and ihen . " I have five wars behind me, now
TEL AVIV HOMES BOMBED- Emergeooy
alter It was hl,t by an Iraqi Scud missile a short
a pmposed plea bargain agreement returned a day later.
·
.
per110nnel and local Israeli residents go through
while earller. (Reuler~
'(this Is) one more." ·
at the last mmute.
·
Youn$ was a1sn indicted on 15
reml!lns
of
a
demoHshed
!lome
In
Tel
Aviv
·
the
Continued on page 3
Meigs County Public Defender counts 1n Mason County, W.Va.,
Charles H. Knight, who was ap- where the alleged incidents occur. pointed to be Young's ancrney, and red. Young has been housed in the
Meigs County Prosecutor Steven L. Meigs COilllty Jail pending disposi~
Story had hammered out ·an agree- lion of tile Meigs County case.
ment and presented it to Meigs
This is' Youn~·s ICCOIId jury rrial
By BRIAN J, .RU.I&gt; •
· bainging to an end .one •of Jliree, . Because the charge. is one of · tinued. "I personally am glad this.
Count)' Common Pleas Court Judge on the.kilfillpping chal&gt;lt-in Meigs
Sentinel
News
StaJJ
LCCD Cases.
. ' theft · in office, Crisp is now wirch hunt is over with 'regard 10..,....
. Fred .W. Crow m yesttzclay, and aU . County • the ibsl rrial ending in a
.
James
J.
Crisp
pled
J!Uilty
on probibited by law from holding any Jim, and bUst that we can now get
indications; includi!)g Slalenlents "hung jury." Jilry selection for the
A
former
general
mllllllge1'
at
Tuesday
to
a
charge
of
theft
in plisition of public employment ftir down 10 the business of legitimate
·made .on the court m:ord, indicated second .rriaJ is e~tpected 10 be comLeading
Creek
Conservancy
Dis~ office, a first degree misdemeanor, a period of seven years. According prosecutions."
.
that Young would plead.
·•
pleted . sometime on Wednesd!ly
lrict
has
enteald
a
~ty
plea
to
a
wbile
another
felony
charge
was
to
a
coon
spokespelliOn,
Crisp
has
Knight's
apparent
reference
to
.
When jJresented with a written morning, wilh testimony to begin
reduced
criminal
c
m
Meigs
dismissed
at
the
same
time.
·
resigned
as
genetal
manager
at
plea form after yesterday's pl'eSS thereafter. .
other poasible prosecutions is apt •
County Common
eas Coun,
Crisp, who was indjc~ iii Sep- LCCD.
·
James Crisp's parents, Jack , and
time, however, Young decided
tember on felony charges of theft m
"The dismissal of all . felony Glenna Crisp, face a combined total
office and grand r.heft. entered bis charges against Jim ~ves what we of 21 felony charges resulting from
guilty plea to the misdemeanor have·said all along, Crisp's attor- a lenglhy grand jury investigation.
.
before Common Pleas Judge Val iley, Charles Knight, said Wednes·
Special prosecutor K. Robert Thy
Mowery, sitting on assignmeQt day morning; "No criminal activity of Athens was assigned to the in·
from Ross CQUDry.
. : occurred and no actions hannful 10 vestigation of the organization in
Judge Mowery sentenced Crisp · Leading Creek ever occurred." .
1989. At the time of the into a suspended jail sentence of siX
"That Meigs County has expen- dicbDeniS against the Crisps, Thy
.
was
sullmiucd
on
behalf
of
Carolyn
the
church's
pastor,
Rev.
Roland
By BRIAN J.REED
Smith, dl?ing business as Smitty's Wildman, stabng t)lat the, building montbs, placed Crisp on a two-year ded thousands of doll&amp;rs invesugat· said lhat Leading Creelc Watershed
Sentln~l News Starr
Restaurant and Bar. That license, if was in close proxiJIIity to the term of non-reponing probation, ing nothing and proving nothing is Association, a non-profit' organ~
approved,
would be assigned to the Trinity Chii!Ch, specifically a sec- fined him $1,000 (to be paicl in four a sad commentary on the use of ~on. was used increasingly in the
Pomeroy Vill~e Council is seekS~;~rk
building
(fomerly:·the Rite lion c;&gt;f the church used fc;&gt;r youth months), and ordered restitution in publiSf.unds to illiempt to prosecute 1980's as a "conduit to ftltet funds"
.· ing ·public JQCbon on two liquor
politiciJ. enemie~~ Knight conAid
pharmacy
and
the Ripley Fac- funcuons. · Such a JQCbOn has the arilount of $300 to LCCD.
Continued on page 3
permit ttansfers within the viUage.
tory
.
Outlet),
also
on
East
Maip'
prompted
council
to
tequest
the
Two applications for such
·transfers 'were presenled to council Street The license in question for written input from rcsidenrs on the
e
~e
at their re~ meeting last night that location is currently held by granting of that license.
Anna
Roush
at
the
Wbitehou$e
Bar
According
to
Village
Clerk
.1.
'
.1..1.
'
One applicatfon was submitted on
Brenda Morris, those letters should
behalf of Pearl's Bllllon, located on at Kerr's Run.
This
second
request
bas
be
mailed to Village Hall and must
East Main StreeL That establish- ·
ment is ·seeking the ttansfer of a
m:eived no later than February
license from David Reed, ' who
In·addition, council will request
op,nted a business at the same whiCh is located directly behind the
Stark
Building.
A
·
leUer
was
a
hearing
from the Ohio DepanByCHARLENE HOEFLICH tendent of the disrrict. Carpentet ln other action die board adopted
locatiOIL
·
received
by
C&lt;!UIICillast
week
from
ment
of
Liquor
·
Control
on
both
Sentinel News starr
was assistant superintendent under a job description for the Junior
The second proposed ttansfer
license tn!IISfers, and the date for
James Carpenter, superintendent Dan Morris, resigned. for five High Athletic Director and set a
,.salarY for the _position. The salary
'" "
those hearings wiU be announced.
of r.he Meigs local Sc&amp;ool District years.
·
AppOjl!iations for the 1991 for the past three years, has been
Presented at the meeting was a was set at e1ght percent of the
""'·
budget were approved Monday rehired to the position for another leuer from Rutland.VIllage request- salary for a beginning bachelor's
.
The . Meigs County Health ganizations, ·ss, and a non-profit night in
the amounr of two years.
ing that the Board ·;.;: or lease" degree.
Randy
Churilla.
qualified in
Depar1111ent announces that the pas- · yOUih group $3.'
$1,418,513.38. Speeific departmen·
By a vote of three for and two . aU p1openy in the vi e, including
physical
education
7
·
12,
was hire!~ .
sage of House Bill 703 concerning
House Bill 703 mandales that al- tal break-downs on the budget are . against, Carpenter was given a two the old Rutland
h School
fee structures for various environ- though temporary food service not yet ~ailable.
. . year conuact at the same salaJy, property and the field and area IJe.. as a substitute 1eacher for the
mental hllalth. programs has im- operations may be categorized as
Cc;&gt;uncil also held the ~ currently $54,688.27 per annum, at hind that building and !he Rutland remainder of the School years. ·
The board granted dock days to
plemenled a change in policy J ype of operations, they . can no JU4ing on . a Jli~,,::)!'!!!c Tuesday . night's meeting of the Civic Center, to the vjDage. No ac·
regarding temporary food service. longer be categorized into different 1bomZ1111ng '~d· B v-....._S~..·.-:_._.... Poard. The contract begins wir.h the · lion ~as ~ o~':'iuest last Sandy N!IPJ!el and Donna Nease. •·.
operations. ,
fee$. The fees must be uniform
. as "erry .an
ryan . ,,..... . 1991 -92 Year·
nights meetmg r.-·-:-·1 •
us- · Negotiabona with die Meigs Lo-• ·
Prior to the passafJe (If this bill, . therefore all temporary food service apm voted agamst ~ ordinance,
Voting in favor of the contract sion of options WJth the prosecuting cal Teachers Association was discussed and a negotiating ~ will,
temporary food semces opemtions licenses will be $15.
while the others voted~ favcr. ·
were Bob Barton, Larry Rupe and · attorney.
. were divided into different
Any questions concerning lhis · In '!te only o!her acbon,lllkr:" by Richard vaughan. Bob Snowden · The letter indicaled that in the be named and dates set for negotiatcategories such as regular, non· chinge 10 licellse fees may be counc1l on Mondsy, an addiuonal and Jeff Werry · voted against the event of a ttansfer or leasing of the ing sessions.
profit orgaftizations and non·profit directed to the Meigs County $3.390 was approved as a supple- contract
property, the school district could
Following the meeting die board •
youth if!-~~~PS. Tbe cost of a regular Health ~enL
ment . ~ . the temporary 1991 apPrior to being hired as superin- continue to use the area now serv- moved into an executive session to
discuss personnel.
'
licel!lse being Sl5, non-profit orpropnauon. .
in~ as a bus garage.

~&amp;ted

L---~--~~-~-.--.---~------~~~~----..,-.-----..----~----~--~--------~. ~ ~

'

2 Section•. 14 Pogo• 25 Cont1
A Multimedia Inc. Ntw11Jopor

'

THE· D·AILY ·SENTINEL

I

"

Council wants reaction on transfer
of two liquor licenses in village

Oblo

'

en tne

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday. January 23, .1991

Ji~

from Bank One prior to its eonstructlon or a new
fadlity on tbe coruer or Sec:ond and Lynn

BUILDING RAZED .• The former Bank One
drlve-tbru beside tl!e Pomeroy U"lted Metbodist.
Cburdl wu torn down Monday aftenoon by
Pulllas Excavating. BID Childs purdlased the lot

news

.

•

.Kidnapping, rape case
may be heard by jury

Iraq ...

'

•

•

'

:S·6:r

j

and 20. Chance ol snow Ia 50
percent..Mostly' cloudy Thunr
day •. wltb a chance of snow
Hurries, and highs between 20
and 25. Chance of ·snow hi 40
percent

I

RA C to mail metal
price bonus check~ ,

petVISJOD.

',.

Page 4 '

Vol.41 . No.191
Copyrighted 1991

preceded in dealh by 11&lt;7 husband,
The construction need not
Marlon Ebersbach
James R. Baxtet, in 19,50; one monopo~ the ~ months for
Marion F. Ebersbadl, 81, of 531 brotber, three sistets and one the participants, erther. If the child
grllllddaupter. .
his family spend a little lime
Mulberry Heights in Pomeroy, _died
Services will be held Thursday 81 and
each
evening on the cars, it is esSaturday, Jan. 19, 1991, 81 River- 2 p.m. at Ewing Funeral Home with timated by derby experts that the
side Methodist Hospillll in Colum- Sreve Fuchs ofliciatin". Burial will . car can be ~leted in about a
· bus. She was a retired school
. •
teacher.
be in Oteny Ridge Cemetery..
. month. In addiuon, ftbeJglas kits
She was born in Pomeroy .on . . . Friends .may c:all at the timeral ·. require less lime than the wooden .
'
June 5, 1909, the danghrer of the home on Wednesday from 2-4 p.m. kits.
7
9
Williams
reports
tiW
the spon·
late George ljiH! Laura Hobbs and · p.m.
sored cars will be assigned on a
• first come/lirst served basis. In
Ebersbach.
' in -the American Dorolh y Gil mQre
She was active
other words. afte[ tbe sponsored
Red Cross, the Meigs County
'
Senior Citizens Olnra- llld the
Dorothy L. Gilmcre, 72, Mid· cars are assigned. tboee children
Pomeroy United Methodist Church. dleport, died Monday, Jan. 21, left m~ bear the cost of their car.
Sheissurvi~~nephews, 1991 II VetaanS Mancrial This W'dliams says, em=.;zes
·the Deed for both spo1110r · lnd
Newark
Hospital.
Howard
S.
•
Cwark;
Born
July
20,
1918
at
Bladden,
early pllliclpm!t regislrlllion.
Thomas A. Ebersbach, On:hard
The rpce 11 to be beld on General
Lake, Mich.; and Lawtenee s. she was a daughter of the late John
Hartinger
Parkway the swimEbersbach, Symcuse; two nieces, Call and Margaret Cook.
Louanna Wllcox,
Unionville,
She is suavived by a. daughter ming pool, and will tate plsce on
. ptf&amp;
and Carol Jacobs, and 80D·in·laW, Mrs. . OJarles June 22 and 23.
Conn.;
Not
only.
will
the
derby
winner
· Clearwater, . Fla.; three grand (YV&lt;llllle) Wtlson, Micldl~ one
nephews. . . John L. Warner, grandson, Chlrles "Eddie Wdlon, be recognized 11 a local awards
Pomeroy; Steven R. Warner, Albu- Middleport; one p-eat gqndlon, dinner shortly after the race, but
• two will acx:anpany hiS or her family to
querque, N.M.; and Je.....
w"y J. W:ar• Harley Wilson.
Call Marietta;
Loag BouDm
ner. Pomeroy; and a gnmd niece,
Zancivme; two .;._ the AU American Race in Atron in
Unda s. Cozart, Pomeroy.
and ~
She was ~ in death by ten, Ruth Criner, Middleport;
two lwthers, Clifford and Howard, Nellie Frye, Bellaire; and seveaal
two siJtas, Edith and Lydia; and a nieces and nephews.
.
•
J
'
'
"
'
·
.
Besides
bet
)*elliS
sbe
.
ruece,
t:111 " ... ·-·
.
.._... by
Cdntinued from page 1
Services will be held on Wed- preceded in ....,..,
one Siller,
nesday at 10 a.m. at the ~ Hazel Gilmcre, and two ·llrotbas, ·Sunday and Iraq said Monday
u~•"-''· Ch h
·
Wood!ow Calli and James CalL
United ....,........,t
urc ' wt
. Services will be held Friday at 1. more thail 20 allled airmen are
aev:Don MCadows officiating.
. ., ___,
being used as human shields at
Burial will be in Beech Grove p.m. at Ewllig ""'"''.. Qome. ·
scientific
and cheJIIICal
Canetety.'
Friends tnay call on Thursday
l'
Installations.
Friends may c:a11 at the funeral from 2-4 p.m. and 7-9 p.m. . .
The Iraqi move'causeci outrage
In Wasblngton and London and
':to~~.Po:'~~, llld.z~. Hospital
the International Committee of
Donations may be made to the
the Red Cross In Geneva said the
Veterans Memorial H01pltal
American Red Cross. .
deployment
of prlaonersot war to
,
MONDAY
ADMISSIONS
•
Arnngelilents are being handlCd
stratetlc targets and appearance
Ric:ky
Jolwon,
Middiepln
.
by Ewing Funml Home.
·
MONDAY DISCHARGES • on televisiOn violated the Geneva
Yvonne ReibDire, Avanelle Bass, ConvenUons and was, In effect, a
Lena Baxter ·
war crime.
·
and Bell)' Archer.
On Monday, Iraq's ruflng ReLena L. Baxter, 98, Hemlqct
volutionary Command Counc:ll
Grove. died Mondav, Jan. 21, 1991
voted to cancel all accorda and
si•lb Cenlral
at Velr:nlns ~ Holpilal.
agreementa
with Saudi Arabia,
Becomlilg cloudy Tuesday
,Born Jill. 31, 1892 slie was a night, with a low near 15, but presumably lncludlq a non·
datqbrer of die !ale Jolm and Chloe rising In to the 20s by momlq. aaresaton pact alped when
ThomJIIOII Biftbi•l She was a Mostly cloudy Wednesday, with a Klq Fllhd.visited Baghdad last
member of the Chuadl of Ouisi.
cnance or BilOW flurries, and year. Bagbdail Radio reported.
Silo is .suavived. by JiOIIs and highs between 30 and 35. Chance
cairo Radio, meanwhile, redaugiUiers-in-law, Clyde IIIII Hazel ' of snow Is 50 percent.
ported Saddam called on Iraq Is
Baxter, Albay; Noaii6 llld Gilda
~ldwide to wage terroi'lst
Exteaded Foi'eeut
Baxlllr, Athenl; Homer and Irene
attacks against the Installations
ThluildQ llliouab &amp;a&amp;urdQ
Baxter, Pomeany; 1o1m llld Sue
A chance of snow or anow ot ·A rab and Wesla!rn countries
Baxter,
Reedlville;
lO tllll'l'ies Thuraday and Friday, allied against hbn, saying such
........biklrea,
23
pal
with mostly fair weather oil .attacks would cauae the alliance
jjiMQhiJdren llld ro. gn!81 pal
Satw-.s.y, except for a chance of to retreat from the miUtary
pa"'"i~
anow tlurrtes In tbe nortbeastern effort to oust hla troops from
&amp;elides ber p!Riltl sbe was part of the state.
Kuwait.

Weather··

nlgbt, With ICMiered IIDOW '
Hurri es and a low between 15

Cards: 6H;

at

----Meigs announcements---

'

Pick-3: 789
.Pick-4: 3102

'

·=lion

l

Marauders
•
WID one

4C; 2D; 3S ,

Middleport ...

Continued rrom page 1in.pr ssed with the event dl81 he
acquired a copyright fer the idea
and began the ~ of a
similar
iladoiiWide.
Some~ cities" sponsor a
"maaten" level of oompedlion as
well • the ''kit-ar" contest, but at
least this y!'8f, only the "kit car"
. eport. is being planned for
' Roger Willilms, the Recreation
Dira:IDI" for the Village of Mid·
dlepolt, bas taken on the role of
Dclby Director for Meigs County,
and W!lliams has assembled a
of interested individuals to
::'!fin the event
At a prospective sponsor dinner
held on Thursday, Wtlliams IIICI IS·
DERBY EXPERT ~ Mike Rodl, pkt•ed bere, Ills been lnvalved · sistant direcllli" Jim Papc countered ·
Meigs County businesses with two
in IIDIP boX aerby lldMtin IInce be was a youDSfer, ~ u I racer,
proposed event ~ps · cortben as an lll'pllizer and eftlt promoter for .the event Ia Lallcuter.
porate spoiiSOI'Ships and car sponRotb wu tbe keynote speaker at 1 dlaner 01! Thundlly in Mid·
sorsbi
dleport, wbel'e tbe county's first -pbox derby is now being plan·
i:rj,IanS provide "perks" for
ned.
those businesses partie~ in the
SIJ(liiSOnhip program, including ad·
Vertislng. ileCaiS and deaby-.elal.ed
Meeting cancellation
on Thursda;r at 7:30 p.m. The appCarllll'el:..,__h;_ m· ~-.,
Meigs Junicr Higb Acadmtic public is inVIted to attend.
..,..._""1"..,
Boosters will not meet blllight due
will benefit the young JI8R!ClpaniS
Jnnlor Woodmea to meet " and their fatnilles, in that the $300
to wintet weadter conclilions.
The Burlingham Junior Modem
will defra
b f
Woodmen No. 7230 will have a ·SPIJIISOlShips
'I
muc 0
'
Legir permaal
Family Together meeting on Satur· die cost 01 the car ~- Witb _a
Cards and 1eum may be IICIII to day
II 7 p.m. Members will tell ljJ()iiSmd car, the ~d and his
Charles Legar, a palient at ~t hO\Y the)' help keep families parents are only required to ~­
Hospital in -Columbus, 11 Grant
toge!her: The Bedford Lodi Hlslori· ' chase the necessary ~ eqmpMedical Olnter, 111 Soutl\ Grant cal
soc~ty will also 1neet and Betty IIIC!It and the wheels for his or her
Ave., Room 326 · C.C.U.. Colum;
Milhoan will discuas the use of · car. .
,
· bus. 43215.
herbs Juniors Will Serve refrelh· , One impcrtant factor in race sucVFW Post 1o meet
ment8. The public is invited 10 at· cess is the similarity of the cars in
The Tuppeis VFW Post No. tend.
the C:OOICSI, w.bich is provided by
9053 will meet Thursday 81 7:30
·
Lodge to meet
t!Jc kits purchased for the competip.m. at the post home. ~ fiflb an·
Annilal
inspection of the Shade . bon.
.
.
niversary of the ~ will be ob- River Lodge No. 4S3 F and AM
Cars can ~ built euher of a
served with a porJuct supper. All will be held Saturday 11 the l.od8'e fiberglas ~ or of w~. and
members
urged to IIIICDd.
hall in Chester. A halnloaf dinner !he only ~~ allowed Ill ~
be served 81 6:30 p.m. l:.o;d4e m competll~ is m !he ~on
Guestspeaker
· will
will open 81 7:30 p.111 . with woalt m of the vebicles (Le. pamung,
Jerry CotttiD, Palestine, W.Va.,
Entered Apprentice Degree. All ~· ~.).
.
will be the ll!le8l speaker at the the
masons invited to atlald. AU Shade
Building a soap~x derby em: ~s
-· Stiversville Wool of Faith Church River ·members bring a homemade meant to ~ a :t'ami!Y aff8Jf •
' .
·
Parental gwdance ts not only an
.
pie.
advanraae. but. the use of power
~Is and materials iii_ the consb"ucuon .o~ the cars reqwres adult su·

Ohio Lottery

Meigs ·

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Postal rate iricrease··approved; 29-cent first class starts Feb. 3
WASHINGTON (UPI ) - The
U.S. Postal Service Board of
Governors approved Increases In
postal rates , Including a hike In
!lrst class postage from 25 cents
to 29 cents, to become effective
Feb. 3.
The board voted 8 . to 1 in· a
closed aesslon 1Tuesday to ap;
prove "under protest" the recommendations of the Postal ·
~ate CommiSsion for Increases
In all classes of mall and for
various changes in rate structure
. to allow discounts for mailers
whO help · the postal seFvice
1
streamline mailings.
Board Chairman Norma l&gt;ace
told a news conference the
approval came ''under protest" .
' becauae the governors feared the
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Independent Postal COmmls· has· correctly esUmated volume recesslonary economy and ·the
slon's recommended rates would . ape! ·revenue," Pos.tmaster Gen- Impact of the Increases themfall to provide sufficient revenue · era! Anthony Frank said . "If selves on second and third class
to.operate the Po.tai ·Servlce. . they erred, and we believe they mailings.
In seeking a rate Increase have, the recommended rates
The new 29-cent first class
more than nine months ago, the may well prove to be 'penny wise leiter rate will mean the average
Postal Service asked for a 30-cent and pound foolish," ' Frank said. consumer will pay $8 to $10 more ·
Critics of the Postal Service per year In postage, according to
first cl11ss letter rate.
"I! the commission's volume charged Its move to require more the Postal Service. The lncreaae
esdmates• are Incorrect, the Information from the Rate Com- In all rates average 18 percent,
recommended rates. ' will not million was' merely. an attempt . Including 22 percent tor regular
meet the l'ostal Service's re- togo back for the full 30-cent rate second class mall, 25 pereent for
venue requirement for the· test . It originally requested.
third class mall, 19 "percent for
year of 1992," Pace said.
But Frank said the Postal priority and "15 . percent for
The Postal Service Is required · service needa to bring In $48 express ma II.
by law to break even, or cover Its billion with the rate Increase and
Beginning Wednesday, Franlt
own operating costs, by 1992.
he .feared It would fall short ol said, · post offices will offer a
"With all of the llnanclal ' that by several hundred mllllon 4-cent "makeup" stamp to be
pressures we are facing, we dollars becaulll! the Postal Rate uaed with thecun-ent25-centflrst
cannot afford to gambll! on Commission failed to fully take class stamp, 1\S well as an "F" ,
whether the Rate CommiSsion · ,Into · accou1 the effects of a ·stamp worth 29 cents. ·

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To enhance the postal aervlce's · It could eliminate "confusion"
move. toward automation, the through consumer education. .
rates include several ways' for
But cons11mer advocate Ralph·
second and third class mailers to Nader charged lhe Postal Ser··
get discounts through u~ of vice delayed the. first class,
presorting, barcodlng a11d other discount rate because It was
means of streamlining.
un))appy that the Rate CommiSButtheboardofaovernoruald slon recommended it. .
·
it would delay "lnde!lnltely" the . The commls,slon "formally·
commission's recommendation recogniZed that fin( class uaers:
to allo~ ·a :t -cent 'discount tor subsld121! commercial and they;
pre-barcoded tint class letters. ' don't like that, " Nader said.
Thai would !lave allowed consu- '. Nader criticized the rate In-:
mer~ to pay only 27 cents to mall · creases overall as unwarranted.:·
payments of many bills, for
"They reflect the false lmpresexample, in barcoded envelopes slon coming from the Postal
provided by large mailers such Service, which Is trying to have It
as utlliUes.
both ways, " Nader said. "They
Frank said the first class say their volume Is up, their
discount would be implemented productivity-Is up,and then they
after the Postal Service was sure · ·
Contlnlled 'on page 3

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Commentary

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Pllgs 2-The Daily Senti_lel
Porroaoy-Midd'sport. Ohio
Wednesday, JanuarY 23, 1991 _

Torture·of humans continues,__Ia,...-ck_A_;_nde_r...,..-~---'n

The Daily Sentinel
nt c.rt street
Pomeny, Olllo
DEVOTED TO THE Dn"EBEiml OF TU MEIG!I-MASON .A REA

A(;b

i!o!m~
~v

I"T"'-ol ............. r"T"W!!Ic:t'""'

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KOBJi;KT L. WING.ETI'
Publllbfr

CHARLEJQ!; ROEFLICR
Geaeral Muacer

PAT WRfiERE.AD
AM'-tut P•blllller/ Colltroller
A MEMBER ofTiu! United Preulnternallonal, Inland Dally Press
Ailoclallon and the American Newtpaper Publltbert Aaoclallon.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They thould be leu than 300
wonlt lona. All letters are tublect to edit IDI and mutt be slaned with
name, addresoand telephone number. No unoliued letters wUI be pui&gt;
JI.abed. Letters should be In good taste, addreutnaluiJI!!I, not personall-

.-,_t~l~~------------------------------------------ .

·Nothing comes easy _ --

1,

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By STEVE GERSTEL ·
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Nothing, absolutely nothing, comes easy
when Congress gets Involved, not even something as simple and
rudimentary as writing a resoludon pledging support to Americans
fighting In the Persian Gulf.
·
.
Somehow, Implausible as It seems, reflex po_lttlcs Intrude and
something that could, and should, be done quickly becomes a an
hours· long project consuming the supposedly valuable time of
congressional leaders.
·
There never was a quarrel between Democrats and Republicans
over a statement showing lhat- with the !18.tlon at war- Congress
was fully united behind the U.S. forces arrayed In the i1JI1. .
But It took forever for Senste Democratic leader Geor&amp;e Mitchell ·
and Senate Republican leader-Robert Dole to find command ground
on just what to say about President Bush.
.
For a .time, on tll_e first day of the war, Mitchell and Dole were
exchanging proposed resolutions with the frequency that thei!!Wtary
alliance was dispatching cruise mlaslles over Iraq.
Although the two leaders have offices around the corner-from each
other on the second floor of the Capitol, most of the firing was at long
range as they lobbed back and forth proposed language.
Mitchell was In his bunker wit))' Speaker Thomas Foley and other
Democrats. Dole, normally one of't:he sharpest dressers In tJ1e Senate,
lounied around his headquarters warding off the chill with .a
cardigan.
The first efforts put.forth by the two parties bore ilo resemblance to
·each other, and were lmflledlately and mutually reJected.
· The Democrats liked the . phraslni, "That whl.le members of
Copgress el(pressed honest differences of opinion during tHe recent
debate on Persian Gu11 policy, there are no differences-on support of
the men and women of our armed forces."
Democrats, all but 10 of whom · voted against the resolution
aqthorlzlng Bush to start the war. wanted to put the policy dispute
behind them.
.
·
.R epublicans- all but two of whom voted for war- were Insistent
th:at the resolution also commend Bush for his "decisive leadership"
and his decision to use force to drive Iraq out of Kuwait ..
· Democrats claimed they wanted to stay away from mentioning
B~sh ~Ucy because they did not want to revisit the previous
week's divisive debate that led to the war authorization.
:Republicans, basking In the euphoria of optimistic reports on the
fltst day ofthe war, gleefully noted that pemocrats needed a "cover"
for their vote against combat that seemed to be gol!lg so well.
:Grudgingly, the· OelJlocrats put forth a revised yerston that
"commends and supports the efforts and leadership of the president .
as commander In chief to provide to out armed forces all appropriate

centers to ltlmldate othen. Othen have been shot dead simply
for fishing while a curfew was In
place."
.
Monitoring organizations have .
compiled l!undreds of reports
about architects, writers: polleemen, hOSpital workers, postal
employees, teachers and t)lelr
students being rounded up. Key
civil servants bilve been hauled
away to priSOn camps. "Every
Mauritanian I've mete an tell you
a story about somebody taken ·
away," and Africa Wat~h official
told us.
The Mauritanian government
says It Is only arresting peOple
because of a coup plot that was
uncovered last November. But
the number and nature of the
disappearances · and arrests
paint a far more shilster picture.
Ken 'Rutherford, a ·' former
Peace Corps volunteer In Mauri. tanta, told our reporter Jonathan
Ullman that black men are taken ·
from their hOmes In nlght·time
.raids, put In cattle trucks .and
taken to tile river that separates
Mauritania and Senegal. Their
captors force them to cross the
river Into Senegal and tell them .
·
not to come back. .
DeaR MoM ~ DaD,
Those captives who aren't
expelled are subject to torture.
LiFe· is exciTiNG! THi$ WeeK
We have otalned recent letters
written by ~al-pulaars and
S'oVcoTTeP CONTR£ivel?siaL PRPFeSSO~,
smuggled · out · of Mauritania.
Ptcf(eTe.D THe New~PaPeR at-ID SHOIJ1"eP
They describe atroc~tles that
Include starvation In prison aQd
PoWN ~ Vi$iri~G LeC.TUReR. BliT I PoN'T
the complete disappearance of
J&lt;tloW iF COLLeGe iS FoR Me. PoN'T
villages as large a$ 400. · Hal·
pulaar students In the United
~To Be.!.eaRNiMG atffTHiNG NeW.
States have told us that their
families have warned them not to
. come home
feat of arrest.
While the United States refrains from comment, there Is
growing speculation by human
rights groups that up to 10
percent of the Hal·pulaar people
arrested since late November 1
have already been exec\lted.
·
Athie, like all Hal·puiaai'S we
spoke to, told of the torture of his
friends and relatives. One man
~~::-.! starved to deajh In Jail after
being fed "small portions of rice
seasoned with sand," Athie said.
;c:~ "What we are experiencing Is
"":o.I{;;.:::::..C:.:::.-~:10...1 'Apartheid In Maurltanls, worse
titan In South Arlca. "'·

WASHINGTON - Saddam
Hussein taugbt the world a lesson
when he ldlled off the Kurd.l with
polson gas. lf you do It quickly,
quietly and completely, you can
get away with a massacre of your
own people and generate a
minimum of fuss from the rest of
. the world.
Sac¥am's allies, the Arab
Baathlat Moors In the north
African nation o.f Mauritania, are
playing the!i' own deadly game o_f
"now you see them, now you
don't," raising hardly a peep
from the rest of tile world.
Over tile past month, Maurita·
nla has arrested 1,000 Hal·
pulaan, the largest black ethnic
group In · the Arab dominated
country. The ·arrests have been
politically motivated; and there
have been no trials. These new
arrests come on top of the 50,000
Hal·pulaar expulsions we reported last February. Blacks are
, being driven out of the countf'Y.,
tortured aild kllled.
A former Mauritanian diplOmat, Mohamed Naclr Athie, who
defected to the United States In
1989. told us that Mauritania's

We

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~ 111111&gt;y NEA. InC. ; ,

"You just may be right this time."

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Marianas for training facilities
sla and the Republic of .the
to support Its Pacific and Asian
Marshall Islands. A fourth Juris·
operations. Other mlllt11ry Instaldiction, the Republic of Palau
lations were established In the
(also known as Belau) remains
Carollnes.
under trusteeship.
"The Blklnlans were evacuBut their Independence Is con.
ated
to Rongerlk Atoll. given a
dltional. The United States re·
two-week
supply offood and soon
mains responsible ,f or their naforgotten,"
says Glff Johnson ,
tional defense and external
editor of the Mus hall Islands
security - an arrangement that
Journal. The Enewetak people
allows this countryto establish
were resettled on UJelang, a
military facilities and conduct
desolate, rat-Infested Island that
military operations there.
had lost all of Its toj)soll In a
The United States gained that
right when It Insisted that of the · typhoon decades eaflller .. ·
The U.S. nuclear · tests and
11 post-World War · U . trust"
most of the other military opera·
established by the United Natlons have been phased,_ out, but
tions, 'only the Islands' be given a
remaining are the appalling
special "strategic" designation.
abuses spawned by the Pacific
It then Initiated an ambitious
Misslle Range. Establlslled In
military program that far ex1959,
It stretches more than 4.500
ceeded the Islands' self-defense
miles
across the Pacific.
requirements.
Transforming
the atoll Into a
Dozens of atmospheric nuclear
missile
target
In
the early 1960s .
tests were conducted on Bikini
required the Defense · Departand Enewetak Atolls In the
ment's most ambitious relocaMarshalls. Th~ Central Intellitlon effort - and produced an
gence Agency claimed large
urban slum In the midst of the
tracts of land on Salpan In the
open ocean.

..

Feminists who appear to rereviSion with Its modernization
present nobody but themselves
of that book's Incomparable
are nevertheless Influential
English. .
·
enough to be forcing unwanted
(Example: "Hear what comc~anges In the churches.
fortable words our Savior Christ
An angry edl_torlal In_ Good
salth unto all who truly_turn to
News, a United Methodist magahim" has.become In the current ·
zlne published by the Forum for
version, "Hear the Word of God
Scriptural Christianity, said In
to all whO truly turn to him.") ·
Its Dec41mber Issue: "A study by
But apparently we are In for
the United Methodist General
more changes. Under pressure
Council oa ~lnlstrles shows that
from the feminists (who Include
on lhe maJor Issues before the
inost of the Episcopal clergy)
church, latty In the pi!ws are
the demand for Inclusive o~
having views Imposed upon them
non-sexist language In the.hymns
that they · neither embrace nor
and liturgy of the church has
support."
grown apace.
The feminists were not menu- ·
Where tile currl'llt Prayer
oned by name, but surely · the
Book says, "it Is right to give him
editorial had them In mind when
thanks and praise " It Is now
It said, ."l'eople of the church
proposed that the ~pie say, "It
must be careful to mind their
Is right to give our thanks and
pronouns and language choice ...
praise" - eliminating another
In this new 'control-speak'
masculine pronoun.
environment."
Every Bible translation I know
The editorial was also thinking
of says eltller "who worship him
..• " or "his worshipers," In any
certainly of the women's rights
advocates In ~ .c hurch when It
case, the masculine pronouns for
s_ald that "students at United
God-are always there . .Not Here.
These changes appear harmMethodist seminaries are so
Intimidated by the New God·
les's enough. They are also neatly
language being forced on theni
hidden away among much tradl·
that many have stopped calling tlonal material. But the camel's
Gpd •Father."'
nose Is under the tent again and
Equallyunderthethumb ofthe
many can sense what Is
feminists Is the Episcopal .,~tappenlng.
Church. One nlighl have thouiht
The feminists base their case
that al_l the. damage to this
on the always explosive lssue of
denominations stately Book of . sex discrimination. But until the ·
Common Prayer had been ~one
women's activists mounted their
.with. the publlcatjon ,of th~ 1979•. campaign,
most
women
In the
.
.
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churcll were unaware they were
being discriminated against.
They did not feel abused ' or
damaged. Nor do most of them
now. Surveys show that the
church's membe-r ship overwhelmlngly opposes Inclusive
language tn the liturgy.
These members are used to the
.old words hallowed by usage.
Their ears are attuned · to the

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U. S. betrays Pacific trust _

Area·

The' Deily Sentinel-Peg~ ~--

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bisplaced from Kwajaleln Island and packed'lnto aghetto less
than one-tenth of a square mile In
size on Ebeye Island were almost
9,000 Indigenous ·people. Their
living conditions were described
In the report of a United Nations
mlsslo'n follow! ng a 1982
Inspection:
"The people of ·Ebeye live In
crowded, one-room houses with
substandard and Inadequate services. The sel¥er-age system
(has) never functioned properly.
... The situation appears to have
deterlora_ted (since 1980) rather
than ImprOving.· ... The hospital.
where. only one toilet In ten In
operational, Is dilapidated."
Journalist Johnson says conditlons on Ebeye now are lmprov·
lng, but tile Kwajaleln operations
remain as a reminder that this
country's military leaders have
few qualms about evicting peaceful Pacific Islanders ·from their ·
land and transforming their
home ter-ritory Into missile
targets.
· '

Pronouns offend spirited ·feminists ··

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vaded Kuwait, the State Department has been warning Ameri·
cans not to travel to Mauritania
and authorized "the compulsory
departure of non-essential dependents'' of U. S. government
pe~nnel~ because, as one official put II, ·~there are some
elements (In Mauritania) that
may harm American citizens. "
The .State Department said the
warning had nothing to do with
the porges of black Maurltan·
tans. but decllneq to say whether
the threat to Americans would
come from Iraqi sympathizers In
Mauritania.
Evldenily the systematic ellm·
!Dation of blacks In Mauritania Is
not reason enough· alone for the
Bsh administration to put Mauritania In the dog house.
Amnesty Interriatlonal and
·Africa Watch have monitored
Mauritania closely and are wor·
rled, with good reason. Blacks
from all walks of life are
disappearing. One Amnesty re·
·port says, "People taken by
· troops have had their . heads
crushed with heavy stones or cat
off and p{lraded around vUlage

t

WASHINGTON (NEA) -On a
Saturday In late December, the
United Nations Security Council
marked the .end of a long and
tragic era of the Pacific Ocean.
re,Bources."
As Is the case with virtually
IJ'aklng a thick, black pen to the latest Mitchell proposal, Dole everything that ·occun In the
tiiakered with the laniiJage.
region, almost nobody noticed or
He decided 't hat, In addition to efforts and leadership, Bush should cared.
•
· also be commended for his "decisions" and not just tor providing the
With only one dissenting vote
aimed forces with resources"bu t for his en tire role In tile Persian Gulf (cliSt by Cuba) the Security
cr,lsls.
·
Council voted to dissolve the
Finally, Mitchell-and Dole agreed on a text that said, "Congress United States trusteeship over
commends amd supports the efforts and leadership of the president more than 2,100 Islands sea tiered
as commander In chief In the Persian Gulf crisis."
· across a portion ottheocean 2.000
A.s In many other matters. Democrats and Republicans finally miles long al)d800 mlleswldejus(
cdme together..:. on what Is, In the broader context of the war., really a north· of tlle ·equator.
.
uqtnteresdng and also·unlmP&lt;&gt;rtant piece of paper.
The Trust Territories of the
And the exercise made somewhat of a mockery of the fine words of Pacific Islands; established by
Si!n. Robert Byrd, D-W.Va., who said, jjlst before tlie resolutlop the United Nations In 1947,
passed 98-0, 'Today and for the duration of this war, here In this covered most of a Pacific region
chamber, there will be no division, no separating aisle, no party line." known a$ Micronesia. (The vast
ocean's other two principal regions. Melanesia and Polynesia,
are south of the equator.)
Today, the former trust -consists of three quasi-autonomous
nations - the Commonwealth of
the Northern Marlal)a Islands, .
the Federated States of Mlcrone- .

a·erry-_'s World

hidden agenda Ia to subdue black
lnOuence and pave the way tor an
all-Baathlst Arab state, like Its
· friend Iraq.
·
Mauritania has bad extensive
economic, polltlc.al and military
ties to Iraq since 1975. It Is one of
the few countries that has taken
Iraq's side In _the Persian GUlf ·
crisis.
·
Athie told us that young Mauri·.
tanlans rou~lnely have gone to
Iraq· for their military training
and Baathls 'Indoctrination .
Those students come home to
high positions in the Mauritanian
·civil service and military. Now
reports say that Mauritanians
were offered money to light for
Iraq - $1,500 for the first month
and $1,000 a month there~er.
Athie said not only did Saddam
provide arms to tllll Mauritanian
mllllai'y, b"t he also used Mauri- ·
tanlan soli to test IraQI missiles.
During the lran·lraq war, Mauri·.
tanla was the main supplier of
fish to the Iraqi army. The
country boasts somi of the most
fertile fishing waters In the entire
African continent.
Since August, when Iraq In· .

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deaths-roy,-Sand.......
raBa......-..er
.o---fMine-r
,svl-lle,
Born .:July 14, 1904 In Ja(!lllon
'
·
lla
f h Am 1
County, she was the dauihter of Donna Bowers and NedraTarvln
WASHINGTON (UPI)- Vete- ensure adequate ca~ Is ava ·
John Han$0n o t e
er can .
Emma Lelia Ra~Wiilliam-, the late James Lackey and of • Columbus, Kay Protfltt of
rani Affairs hospitals are pre- ble, Derwin ski said.
Legion said In an Interview that ,
-·
Portla·A, Ohio, and Karen ' pared to care for casualties from
Since Jan. 10, every VA ml!dl· he was confident the VA CQuld '
70, of 1116 South . SL, Mason, Mari&amp;ret Hodpon. ·
Haines""of Milford, Del.; .three
the war with Iraq, Including any cal center director has supplled handle the load. But his organ 1za ·
W. Va., died l'uelday, Jan. 22, h Shhe was preceded In death by b.rothers, Er·-t Bowers of Papsychiatric prob
. !ems ·soklle,rs dally upda~ on the number and tlon planned to monitor the care
1991, at the Pleasant llol'er
usband, David H. WIIUams,
~
1 1 bed
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taskala, Ohio, Kenneth Bbwers,
develop from tile trauma of type of available hospta
s. tomakesureotherveteranswere
Hnmital, Point Pleasant, W. Via. ~ol- on Feb. 26, 19'n, and by three
be ad
ow!ro
tcW;G;"g a brief illness.
·
brothers and one sister.
of Massapequa, N.Y., and Joseph
combat, officials said.
Currently, 8, 053 bed ca,n m e not ~ring .
s
Bowers of Reedsville:
"We feel we are ready,"
available Within 24 hou~s and
"We really believe the VA can
, Born on Oct. 31, I920 in Buf- W urvlvlnJg warellllaa son,. AnDr.
More· recently she served In
Veterans Affairs Secretary Ed·
15,010 beds within 72 hours . dolt, "hesald."Ifltcomes tothat
•ilia, W. Va., she was the da"""ter
. llllam . · '
ms o
. n offices at the Point Pleasant
·
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ward Derwlnskl told a Senate
Derwlnskl said.
t hey w111 be a bl e to s how wh a t
of the late Walter M. Raynes and Arbor. Mich.; a daughter, Mrs. First Church of the Nazarene,
subcommittee Tuesday. "If · Derwlnsklnoted thatllkeother ' they can do. We're going 'to be
Katherine Fisher RaYnes.
Roger (Peggy) Baker of Larue, where funeral services will be
there are casualties of a subs tan·
parts of society, the VA has lost watching very carefully ."
Sheissurvivingbyherbusband Ohio: twograndchlldrenandone •COnducted Friday 11 a.m., Dr.
tial nature ... .this could be our staff thai has been called up to
,Hanson said the VA had
Rome Wtlliamson, Mason, W.Va.·,' great-granchlld; and a sister,
1
1
r·
h
DenniS
otflclat&lt;nw,
with
finest
hour
If
we.
do
our
Job
serve
In
the
gulf.
The
VA
has
ost
.
learned
many essons rom t e
JohD
a daughter
and son-in.~law, · Margaret Hunter of Leipsic,
",. Burns. . right."
1, 886 emp 1oyees, whic h c ons t1· VI e tnam w ar and had c o rre c ted
assistance by Rev. L!Jrry
Katherine (Kitty) and Robert Me· Ohio.
Burial follows In Letart Falls
Although Oerwlnskl said he
tutes about 1 percent of the staff. deficiencies In care that some
ell, ·Ceredo, W. Va. ·, and a
She w.a$ a member of Simpson Cemetery. Frlendsmaycall5to9 could notestimateofthenumber Offlcas
1 1 were mos t concerned VI e tnam ve te rans s utfered .
grandson, Gregory McDowell
. , United MethodlstChurch and the • p.m . on Thursday at Cremeens of potential casualties, be out- · a bou t a s h or ta ge o f nur ses . .he
"There are some Vietnam vets
Funeral Chapel. Tile body will-be . lined the contingency plans for
said.
.
who got really rotten care.
Chapman, W. :Va.; a grandaugther, Galli a County Farm Bureau
Karen Patrick, Ewa Betch. Hawaii; Council.
tak.en to the church one hour assessing Injuries and delivering
Oerwlnskl said care Is being There's no debating It," he said ,
two great-grandsons, Adam and
Services will be 1 p.m. on prior to services.
th·e best care.
taken to ensure that qealth care "We feel confident that the kinds
Matthew Patrick; a brother, Day1011 Saturday In the Waugh·HalleyThe VA has designated 80of Its
to other veterans ooes not suffer of problems that were faced then
Raynes, ..
u ~..
•• ~ W. Via.·, and several Wood Funeral Home, with Webs·
larger hospitals as the primary
because of the a dded bu rd en of have been a dd res sed . "
nieces and nephews.
ter G. Cox officiating. Burial will
centers to receive and treat
caring for guU war casualties.
The subcommittee chalrwo·
Besides. her parents, she was be In Calvary Cemetery. Friends Sullie Huntley
wounded soldiers, specifically
, 'While the charge before us Is man. Sen. Barbara Mikulski~
pr\leeded in death by a sister and a ·may call at the funeral home on
,
choslng those that can offer a
enormous, lamconfldentVAwlll D-Md., expressed concern about
brother.
Friday. from 5-S p.m.
Susie Huntley , 74, VInton, died
wide range of advanced special;
continue to full Its primary potential psychiatric trauma~ Through the years, Mrs. Wtl•
Monday In Holzer Medical
!zed care, Derwlnskl said.
mission to proVIde quality health referring to the possibility that
lirunson entertained at the organ at Carol
Wol~e
,
Ce
. nter.
.
· . -- ~-- Another 79 VAl ho&lt;pltals will
care services to veterans and Iraq may·use chemical weapons . ••
1
several ~taurants in 'the Pqmeroy
• ·
'
Born Sept. 8, 1916 In Gallla
serve as support ~enh!rs to back
meet Its commitment to receive · ' These weapons that could ~ '
and· Gallipolis area, She WaS a1
c
·
1J
w If "" 0 f ·•no County, the daughter of Garnet up the primary centers and and treat active duty military · used against-our troops are such '.
membe
.. r of the. G-·
a.ro ane .o e, ""•
"""
· - ~p;~~·.
~.- watson Road, Bidwell, died
Scott Welker of Galllpolls and the
·
casualties." Derwlnskl sa ld .
. a g h oulls h na·t ure th a t they w1'1
'
·.
Tu d
J
22 1991 t Ohl
late Herbert Welker. she and her
have a profound Impact on evel)
Churc:c
_;.., -~'-- ·~ill be held
es ay. an. •
a
o
h
h d ' be
I
F..~-~
-· · · - "
St
U 1 sit H ltal Sh
husband, Kelly, o_wned an«&lt; oper·
l ..~~~~~:_)_-,·~:!::..!...---------------Continued from page_· 1
t ose w o on t ar an mme·
Ept
'
sate
n
ver
Y
osp
·
e
dl
d
"
ld
Mlk
I
Fn.day at 3 g·m at the "--UJOU&gt;
ated Huntley's Grocery Store In
·
••
ate woun , sa
u s kl . • · ·
D J
H 11
th VA ' ,
Copal Churc . The Rev. Roy M....... was a florist, owner and operator
.Il
officta'
te
and
burial
will
be'"m'
."ofWolfe'sFlowersandGifts,and
VInton
from
1934
untlll988.
He
·Meanwhile,
Baghdad
Radio
AD
army
spokesman
said
20
rf.
ames
odls
nger.
eld hs·.WI
. Memorial Gardens in Point was a charter member of the prec~ed her In death on Jan. 4,
reported Wtl(lnesday that Iraq surrounding buildings and do· chle medica 1 rector, sa t ·e ·
Pleasant, W. Va.
. · Racine Firs~ Church of the 1990.
halted all sales of heating fuel zens of cars sustained varying muttary had learned bet.t er hof
.
call
the
.
Nazarene.
and gasoline to the publiC . The degrees of damage. "It was a hit. dtoevreedloupcesuthcehrdls ksotrhdaetrtsrooaspspowslt~ ..~
Fnends may
at
Ewmg
Born Jan. 27, 1940 In Meigs
In addition to her mother, she
state-run radio quoted a Ministry a very hard hit," the spokesman
Funeral
Home
Thursday
evening
c
h
d
hte
of th
Is
survived
by
a
brother,
William
nfTr
. an sport statement·as saying said.
.·
-traumkaVtlc ts.tress disorder,
whlcli ' '
'rom6to9p.~.Inlte' uofllowers
ounty,s ewasa aug r
e
v
t
1
1
"donations ·ma"y' be made 10 the . late Earnest Max and Adria Welker of McArthur: a sister ,- the action was taken ''fora short
Israel television, showed s rue
e nam ve erans.
morial
Fund
of
Grace
Ept
"
scopsl
.
·
Allee
(Eiclllnger)
·Bowers.
She
Mrs.
,John
(Verna)
Ewing
of
period
of
time,
~·
It
gave
no
reason
rescue
workers
carrying
blood"Over
tkhed lads t dec ade thde~ ·,
Me
was also precec!ed In dea.t h ·by a
Middletown: and several 'nieces
for the move !that came In the . covered victims on stretchers to l)ave w~r he! t 111tgent1Y ,t 0 e:
. Church.
brother; Elwood ·Bowers.
and nephews.
·
wake of allied ixmiblngs.
ambulances . .'·
ve 10 P psyc a r 1c earns 1..a 1 are
Surviving ilre her , husband
Services will be 11 a.m. Friday
The Guardian .newspaper re·
The latest assault came near stress-management teams that ;
Thelma L. Wifiiams
Morris M. Wolfe, whom she
In the McCoy-Moore Funeral
ported In London that Iraqi the end of the sixth day oft he war would be brought forward tQ '
married May 31, 1957; two sons,
Home, VInton, with the Rev.
security forces shot and kllled In which U.S. -led forces con' assist on thebattlefleld," hesald .
Thelma L. Williams, 86, for- Daniel E . Wo11e of UncoiD. Dl.,
Marvin Sallee officiating. Burial
two senior members of the ruling tlnued their air onslaught over
"As a result of that, we have · '
merly of Rio Grande, died and Jeffrey A. Wolfe of Long
will be In VInton Memorial Park.
Baath party. The newspaper said Iraq and Kuwait and Saddam high hopes that we will have a ·
Tuesday. Jan. 22, 1991 at ,Maple· Bottom, Ohio; two. grandchild·
Friends may call at the funeral
five other Iraqis were shot when responded with his own style of smaller percentage of lndlvldu ·
wood Nursing Home , Marlon. ren; seven sisters, Ada Rowe of
home Thursday from 2-4 and' 7-9
they tried to occupy a Baghdad war
als who might return from thf! '
She was a farmer.
p.m.
television center last week to
Lt. Col. Mike Scott, a Central Persian Gulf conflict dwlth"poHst~ ·
Racine, Joyce Sauters of Po!l)ebroadcast calls for the overthrow C9mmand spokesman In Rlyadll, traumatic stress dlsor er • ol- .
of-thegovernment.
saudiArabla,satdWednesdayno stngersatd.
· ·
. The Guard.lan, quoting exiled U.S. planes were lost In combat
But the VA has experts avalla•' .
..
· Shiite opposition leader Abdul during the past 24 hours. He said, ble to deal with sollders suffering ··
ce;
Ronald
S.
Holley,
Middleport,
AZ!z al· Hakim. said the seven one American flier died In a
from psychiatric problems If the
Five individuals forfeited bonds
$I7
only,~;
Jonathan
D.
Dunn,
.
men
had
"planned
to
broadcast
a
training
accident
and
two
planes
need arises, he said.
· .,
A Ravenswood Aluminum Corp. and IO :were fined in Tuesday
"'-'10
ani
·
stop
·
·1
1
"We
'are
moving
to
maximize
replacement worker is listed m night's ~ of Middleport Mayor ':"''""uy,
. y,_ runrung a
message to the nation blaming were lost In non-host le act on.
our efforts ... to make sure we aril ·
,
S1gn; Donald J. SteiiiiiiCtz, Colum- President Saddam Hussein for
U.S. military officials continue
stable condition toda)l after an ac- Fred Hollman.
bus, $50 lmd COSts, driving undet·- starting another war and urging · to be very optimistic about the prepared · .to care for returning ·: ·
Forfeiting bonds were Linda
cident Tuesday that resulted in the
success of their bombing raids_ psychiatric casualties," he satd: ·'
Brei:ding, Pomeroy, $460, physical FRA suspension; Huab R. Me· a general uprising."
amputation of the worker's leg.
now numbering more than ~.000
Although no official word has control onder the iDJIJiellce; Timmy DWJ11ith. l&gt;omcroy $SO and costs,
Iraq said Wedne~ay 11 shot since the war started Jan. 17 ·.
been released from the plant, unc- R. Grimm, Scot Depot, W.Va., $SS, driving under sllspensiiJII; Claud T.
McDermitt.
West
Columbia,
W.Va.,
down
four
more
allied
aerial
but
could
produce
no
hard
The
Daily
Sentinel
,
onfirmed repons state that Thomas speed; Charlie R. Geary, Mid·
$IS
only
speed;
Robert
Scarberry
targets
during
heavy
overnight
evidence
of
their
success.
·
'
Stone, 39, of SL Albans received dleport, $50, speed; Dorothy A.
bombing raids, and that the
"Operation Desert Shield con(IJ8Ps ttute)
. '·
leg injuries while manning a rolling Green, ClJeshire, $S2, speed; and Micldlepcin, $2S and COlli;
dcrly
III8IUICI':
Sa
McCloud,
Midnation
was
bracing
for
possible
tlnues
to
be
on
track,
..
Scott
said
A
111•111•
of
M
..
llmodto.loe.
. mill.
·
David Watkins, Mickllepon. $110,
PubliJhed every anernooo, Monday •
. Stone was apparently taken to consuming alcobol in a motor dleport, $2S 'and COilS disorderly Israeli retaliation for Its latest Wednesday .
·
lllld
$SO
tllld
•COllis
conattack
on
the
Jewish
state..
I
f
hed
Tu
d
throuili 'Friday. 111 Court St .. Po- •·
the Charlesto!' Area Medical Center vehicle.
manner·'~--· ll1d J
~- G
The Scud attack on Israel was· •
raq 1 orces 1aunc
es ay
meroy. Ohio, by the Ohio Valley Pub-· "'
Fined weze Linda ''S: .Breeding, ~."-:..-•~;""1- asper$10
by Health· Net, where he later unIraq's th4'd and the first to cause Scud attacks on ,saudi Arabia I
~';;.~~DY%'1:ro·:~:,u:~~::•.;is.'"s"e: '
derwent surgery. Stone's right leg Pomeroy, $10 and COliS, expired ...........,_, .._ _ .,
b ta tl I d
and casual
that were either knocked down or
cqnd ctall poolatre paid at Pomeroy, ' .
license platea; Joaeph R. Connolly. costs, running 1 stop.sign, $10 and ~r.ess T~e Sa~=~= Patriot lnls- did little or no damage, and Iraq
was :ill)putaled below the laiee.
Ohto.
·
· ·:
· set fire Tuesday to a !least two oil
Poaaoy, $16111d costs, SJ*CI, and · costs, no motorcyCle endonement,
Member: United Pre.• International,.
.
$42S and costs and dlree ~· jail, and $SO and costs conttrnpt sUes, which have performed so Installations In Kuwait.
Inland Dally PrHJ A.uoctatlon and the , '
•
. well In defending Saudi Arabia
Iraq had threatened todestroy
physical CODIIOI under the lhlluen- charge
Ohio Newspaper Auoclatlon. National ,
AdYerttllnl Representative, Branham
·
from Scuds, were launched on Kuwaiti oil fields If It came under
NewJPaper Salet, 133 Tblrd Avenue, '!
Israel's behalf, but a Scud a!Ued attack . and the fires
New York, New York 10017.
managed to get through with a seemed to back up part of thai
conventional warhead.
threat.
pqrrMASTER: S&lt;nll addreu chan,.S 1
VETERANS MEMORIAL
to
The Dally Sentinel. Ill Court St.,
One individUal was fined and Gibbs, Symcuse, $63, ~ COD·
TUESDAY ADMISSIONS
Pomeroy. Ohio &lt;!me.
nine forfeited boads in the court of rainct; Barten~ Neke, Rutland,
;lelpha Stewart, Racine; Pearl HawSVIIIICRIPTION RATI!:II
lhomt, Ponland; and Beatrice Wil- Pomeroy Mlyor Richard Seyler on $49, speed; Shannon Sayre, Kenna,
BJ Carrier or-.....,.
Va.,
$46,
apeed;
Mary
Folmer,
Tuesday night.
.
One Week ............ ..... ,.................11.&lt;0,
liamson. Hartfonl. W.Va.
One Month .......... .. .. ..... ..............16.10
Long
Botlom,
$50,
SPOed;
Beth
On
Wednesday,
at
12:21
a.m.
lhe
Fined
was
Kenny
Lunsford.
, ~rlie Jewell, Clarenee Grueser,
Units of the Mei&amp;S County
One -Year ............................. , ....m.BO " ~
Pomeroy, $63 and COlli, opaaling Gibbs, Syracuse, $63, expired Emergency
. '
Medical
Service
Rudand unit went to Meigs Mine
.
EUa Schultz, Donald Covert. Ches!liNGLE COPY
•·
reP,SIIIIion; JOICph Gilkey Jr., responded to four calls for assis· No. 31 for Donald Fuller who was
ter Coif, Sarah Yonker and Helen . under ~nsion.
PRICE .
ForfeiWig bonds were Paul . Muldlepnrt, $43, assured clear dis- tance on Tuesday and early Wed· taken 10 O'Bleness Hospital, and at'
Dally ................................... 2~ Cenll
William~.
IIIICe; NllalC Tromm, Rutland, nesclay morning.
8:16
a.m.
~
Middleport
unit
was
· .
Sublcrlbers not deilrlng to pay the car· J
. ,....
$63, expired regiStration; Pamela
rler may remit In advance dlrl'Ct tQ
On Tuesday at 10:28 a.m. lhe called to 'South Second for Earl
The Dally Sentinel on a 3, 6 or 12 month
Vaughlll, Pomeroy, $63, expired Middleport unit was called to Mill Glass who was tnmsparted 10
basts. Credit wUI bf' given carrier each " '
registration; and DMisc Bunce, Street for Mike Gibbs who was Veterans.
week.
Pomeroy, $47, speed.
taken to Veterans Memorial
No subscription• by malll)@rmltted In ·...
areas where home carrier eervtce Ia
Hospital, and at 8:21 p.m. the Tup~ERUSALEM- The Cabinet met to discuss the Iraqi missile
available.
pers Plains unit_responded 10 Roulrl
atlack on Tel Aviv that killed three people and Injured 98 and to
681 West for HelCII Hawk' who was
Mall Sobo&lt;rtplloot
pllm a response to the bloodiest assault on Its largest city since
In 1\tesday's obituary of Dorothy
lllllde Melp CouoiJ
Continued from page 1
treated but not 1t111Sp011Cd.
th~ guU war began Jan. 17. Deputy Foreign Minister Benjamin
L. Gilmore. 72, who died Monday.
13 Weei&lt;J ••.•... ....... ... ., ........... .... $19.24
Netanyahu said the response will be "not with our hearts ...
from . lhe govanmental
of
26 Weeka ................... .. .. ·........... $37.!Mi _ •
Jan. 21 at Veterans Memorial
~2 Weel&lt;s ................ .. .. .......... .... l7&lt;.34
•
(bl!t) with our heads."
LCCD 10 Jack and Glenna Crisp.
Hospital, the name of her hUSband,
O.lalde Melp C.UOIJ
.
WASHINGTON -The United States condemned Iraq's latest
The cbarges against Jack and
Harley Gilmore, was uninten·
l3 Weeki ............. ..... ... ........ .... $20.80
Scud missile attack on Israel as a ''brutalactofterror" and said
Glenna Crisp involve using rent
26 weekl ........... ..... ............. ,, ... l40.30
\ionally omiaed in the list of those
• Continued from page 1
~2 Weekl ........... ...... .. .... .......... . l75.~
t
·It was satisfied with the progress of the Persian Gulf war.
money on 1 govemmentaUy ocpreceding her in death.
say
they
need
more
money.
wASHINGTON - 'fhe Postal Service Board of Governors
CUI,lied SlrUCture 10 establish a
i
"It doesn't make sense. They
.I
approved Increases In postal rates, Including a hike In first class
rewement fund fOr Jack Crisp. ilwant more and more money from
postage from 25 cents to 29 cents, to become effeCtive Feb. 3.
legally acquirina early retirement
consumers
In return for less and
The board voted 8-1 to ' approve "under protest" the
benefits for Glenna Crisp. 11 wen less service."
recommendations of the Postal Rate Commission.
as iDipoper pay raises and bonuses
The only member of the board
WASHINGTONN - Some 25,000 anti-abortion demonstrafor Jack and Glenna Crisp and · to vote against the rate Increase
LCCD board members.
..
tors, urged on by Pres ident Bush, ifiarched to Capito\ Hill to
was governor Robert Setraklan,
prge Congress to reverse the 1973 Supreme Court decision
Thy was unavailable for com- wilD sald he was ''Incensed by the
legalizing abortion. Tuesday's March forUfe commemorated
fiiCIIt on James Crisp's guilty plea ~avaller approa~h of the Pos.tal
the 18th anniversary of the 1973 Roevs. Wade decisiOn Ietallzlng
OD Wednelday rnorrung.
Ra·te Comml&amp;slon, partlculatly
most a bortlons.
'
In
regard to third class mall.
EASTERN SAUDI ARABIA - Preparations for a much·'For
the Postal Rate Commisawaited ground assault on Iraqi forces are being Intensified.
So•lll Central Ohio
sion
to
price
elements of the third
wlth U.S ..artlllery hammering an Iraqi position Inside occupied
Mostly cloudy Wednesday
class
Into
near
bankruptcy Is
J{uwalt and allied forces bulldlng a camp to house Iraqi
night, wltli scattered· snow flur·
outrageous," he said.
prisoners of war. .
.
rles and a I between 15 and 20.
Pace sa I'd she feared Increases
NEW YORK .- AIDS actlvls ts stormed the set of the "CB!!
Chance of s · w Is 50 percent.
rovvounow yuu dttu yuUirttltllrtoors wrtn rtrena1y, safety·
In third class mall totalling at
Evening News" during a broadcast shouting "Fight AIDS. Not
Mostly cloudy
ursday, with a
teat 50 percent over ·the last two
eonscipus propane service is a Ferrellgas commitment.
Arabs," forcing the network to black out the program
chance of snow IUrrles , and
rate hikes would send many ·
temporarily. The action came on the eve of Wednesday's "Day
For 50 years, we've handled the everydav and.emergency
highs between 20 and 25. Chance
mailers to private delivery
of Desperation." an expected dayloni protest. .
of snow Ia 40 percent.
need~ of families like yours.
firms, "which Is contrary to the
:l'OKYO - Prime Minister Tosblkl Kaifu canceled a news
·
Extellded Forecast
IDten!sts of the Postal Service." .
Ferrllllgas . .. the f9lks to rely on. whether ~·s the
conference at which he was expected to announcctJ•pan would
FrNay ......... Bud&amp;)'
.'
coldest day of the year. weekands, evenings, even
il\le an additional $9,hllllon In aid to the Per,lan.G.ulfware~?rt.
Mosdy fair ,each day. Highs
"At the moment we ·nave no reason (for the cancellation), an
holidays.
will be mainly In the 20i Friday
oti!clal said. "Eventually thlrigs will be out."
and Saturday and In tile 30s
: LONDON - Iraqi security forces shot and killed two senior
about our apeclll Customer Programs:
Sunday. Overnight lows will
ml!lnbers of the ruling Baath party and five other Iraqis when
range from zero to 10 above zero
• 24 Hpur EmerQency Service
tbey tried to occupy a BagMad television center last week to
early Friday and from 10 to 20
btoadcas t calls lor the overthrow of PresldentS•ddam Hussein,
• Level Paymenl Plan • Ferrellgas Installatio-nReview
Saturday and Sunday mor~IDgs .
a f!i'!tlsh newspaper reported.
· : KARLSRUHE, Germany - 1'he·.eonstltutlonal Court Is
GOOD USID
hjlarlng arguments of .Germans seeking compenaatlon for
ptcl\)erfy seized by the Soviet Union after World War II In what
We know the lncom~ tax
oblervers believe might develop Into aieJII(hy lela! up. The
laws and th. forms inside
~urt selecti!d three teat eases among more than !10.
and out . That's
. ' our busine".
:Moscow - President Mikhail Gorbachi!V said he did not
GAS·&amp; IUC. UNGES
ord.,r the Soviet troop assaults In the Ba'IUcs that left 21 people
dead and added that renepde actions by the mWtary "are not
tolerable. " He did not say who ordered the attacks or If action
Amrlia'J T.u TNmwould be ta.ken against those responsible.
· Up to 6 Inches of snow fell on the Upper Midwest Wednesday,
l'ut us to
627 3rd A¥e., Oallpells
PM
wllile cool temperatures prevailed across the nation and a cold
Haura: ;~· ,~AM:~":"e•PMi'
snap ended In the Northeast, where the thermometer headed
Pl. 446·16" ,
lt .
• . toWards the lreezlng,mark. · ·' ·
,
· lOUIS: I Ul.-6 P.M.·

Enuna L. Williamson

~

I

Pomaby- MlddiPCI'i Ohio

Wednesday, January 23, 1991

t.

Hospital news ---P9meroy Court--

EMS responds to four .calls

w.

. News at ~ glance._ _,

Name omitted

Jim Crisp ...

aaency

Postal rate...

·

George P/ogenz

·For Dependable Home

familiar cadences and rhythms
of speech. These put them In
.touch with the Infinite Presence
when they ~re al w:orshtp:
They consider tinkering with
their majestic Book of Common
Prayer to be like adjusting Big
Ben to somebody's· own private
watch.
'

.

Weather

Today in history
By Ualted Press International
Today Is Wednesday, Jan. 23, the 23rd day ofi991 with 342 to follow .
The moon Is In Its first quarter.
The mornlpg stars are Mercury am_! Venus.
There are no evening stars.
.
Those born on this «Jate are under the sign of Aquarius. They Include
French author Stendhal, a pseudonym for Marie HenriBeyle, In 1783;
h Impressionist painter Edouard Manet In 1832; Russian film
or Sergei Eisenstein In 1898; actors Humphrey Bogart In 1899,
!ph Scott In t!loa and Dan Duryea In 1907; comedian Ernie
Kovacs In 1919, and actress-singer Chlta RlveJa In 1933
(age 58).
.

.

Heating, Water

and
Other Propane Services ...

cal Feuellgas

..

·cau

.

.

On this date In history:
In 1845, Congress decided that all national electloilS'Sl!all take place
on the first Tuesday after the first Mo!lday In November.
In 1948, Gen. Dwight Eisenhower said he could not acef1pt a
presidential nomination from either party; four years later he ran as
a Republican and was elected 34th president of the United States.
In 1971, the temperature at Prospect Creek, Alaska, dropped to 80
degrees below zero, the lowest temperature ever recorded In the
United States. .
.
In 1973, President Nixon announced that U.S. troops would cease
fighting In VIetnam at nildnlght Jan. 27.
In 1988, Sandlnlsta missiles downed a cargo plane that was
dropping U.S..tlnanced supplies to Contra rebels In southeastern
Nicaragua·. Four crewmen were kllled.
'

'

WASIIIII, IIYOS,
....IGIUTOIS, TVs,

COUNTY
APPLIANCES

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Paga

4-the Daily Sentinel

Wednesday. January 23. 1991l&gt;

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Ravenswood

~ts 81~77

By SCO'IT WOLlE

away from die hncket, and lhus
~.U.el C• • ; .,.._,
1e11t ~ 10 die line, wbeie
In "The Pit," as die 1111111. the Red DevilS quickly QpitaliMJ
Slelllly !'1W!6nc:a or the Ra'~
Also .m.;,.., credil 10 die Red
Red Devils'
'liD il kDown,
Devil a:j;s-;_ the fact lhat die
the Sou1bem
fdl vk:lim now lw:ktd-off SHS defense fired
to 111e bolt Red Devils 8t- .w dJrouah ~~we, dlree point lbots
COII!i'lhCI!y in a IIOII•Iclpe piDC
liom lhe IIIKXJDieSied perimeler,
~~
·
. Will Brldley 111111111-SIIIe condiclue
by COIIIIOVIIIY Brian ·~led tba cbqe IIJd
and bdlaysl equiVIknt 10 lbat of a brought Ra~ to a 26-18
· Sh.v..,....._ plot, an ownll score at lhe end of lhe frame.
·
good bllllpme biJbliabrcd by 110111e
Ravenswood oonlinucd to utilize
uncooventional . c:alls climaxed to its fine outside shooting al!ility in
the point of~ at lhe cod of the 1hc sec:md caniD, and capitali'ed at
game. Ravenswood bald a.:b 1hc line. Its S11QteSSful outside
Mick Ptii:e caUed back-to-beck shoolin also
lime OUIS wid! ~
·
cae aecond .
I
bact the in·
""-amm·
• g and his c: ub ,.......,., by side game, wbeie . Devils posed

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n

Pomeroy-Middepo~t.

comeback win over Southern .

play Clldl-up.
· Brian Dale really took c:ootrol
for !be Red Devils in lhe second
half IICOring 16 points in just 16
minules of play. Baer was equally
succcssfu1 f« SHS witb 15 sec:&lt;Jid·

half
w\'t~.OS left die score .SIDOd
70-70. FoDowing
. a big Bailey

lie, but was somewhat shaken on
the play. No fool was callelt with
theexc:eplionofafoul called on the
TIXIIIdoes to end lhe game. With
one aecond left, RHS called consecutive time-oulll . and SHS
wi=:;,. was led by Baer with
24 poinlll, Michael Killcaid with
17, Todd Grindstaff with l3points
and nine rebounds, Roy Lee Bliley

. SOUI'HERN (77) • Baer 5-4-2·
24, Kincaid 5-2-1-17, Orinds!lff 6O-l-13, LJsle 0-2-2, llailey 5-0-2·
12, RusseD 1-0-0-2, Role 3-0-1-7.

TOTALS. 25+9-77.

Rio Grande bench hanuners Ohio·Dominican in home tilt

'
,&lt;\n Improving Oblo Dominican
club their best game since Feb.
points at the most throughout the
Control of the rebounding was
mea's baske!ba!l team swept 14, 1989 when OD neatly upset the
opening half, but the Panthers · akeytoRioGrande'soffense and
Into Lyne CenJer Tuesday to do
Redmen in Columbus. However, · stayed In the game to trail by 13 !he team delivered, posting 50 to
battle "With the Rio Grande
with JeH Brown and Troy Do·
OD's 34, &lt;IS well as playing well .
at halftime.
.R.edrnen, but Panthers Coach Ed
naldson each hlttlng17 points and
DIGenova felt OD had oppor;. defensively by boldlng It$ tumovDIGenova summetJ up his team's
Donaldson contr!bu tlng 12 re·
tunltles to gain ground wl!en tbe ers to 10. OD committed 13.
9()o63 Mld·OhiO Conference loss In
bounds, the game went solidly
ball was In Its possession and
RloGrandesho!51.5percenton
one word: outmanned . .
back Into Rio Grande' s hands.
Derrick Johnson inade the most field · goals (35·68, seven of 24
"I'm a big believer In giving
"Our bench played well and we
ol them by scoring 21 points. But from the three· point range) and
credil where credit Is due , " said
moved the baiL We dominated
even with Kevin Shea· bringing connected on 13 of 18 free throw
DIGenova, who Is helming OD for
the boa(Qs and we didn't turn It
down nine rebounds to lead his attempts for 72.2 percent. The
the first time. "Rio Grande was over, and that makes for a great
teammates, OD couldn't with· Panthers were 38.3 percent from .
more experienced, more skilled
combination," Lawhorn stand tbe consls!ent press from the floor (23:60, seven of 21 from
remarked. \
· and played bet!er than we did."
the hosts' offense, aided. by the three) .and collecte!J 52.6
But lor the first hall, · the · Rio Grande took control early contributions from the bench perce11t (~0-19) on lt.s foul
Panthers ,gave John Lawhorn's .. and · maintained a lead of 11
lhat heljled the Redmen build a shooting.
.
.
The Joss took OD to H2 and 1-5
20-polnt lead In the last 10
mlriutes. ·
In the · MOC as It en!ers action
'There are always ·posltlves In Thursday at Findlay. The Red·
something llke ' thls," DIGenova men , 174 and 3-2, play the Dyke
said. ·'We got Into a huge hole at College Demons tonight at 7: 30 In
the beginning, but our kids didn' t Cleveland. The. game· will be
heard on·wGTR·FM (101.5) with
quit and didn't. get down."

RAVENSWOOD (81) . • ·Dale
Varney
3..()..5-11, ·
Moc:yunas 4-1-4-15, Michael 3-0·&lt;'
2-8,lbadley l-5-3-20, Williams 2·' '
0-0-4. TOTALS· 23-6-17-81.
•"
:::
10.0.3-23,

SVAC 8tandings ____. _..,.,"

(0Verllll) ,
(Relerves)
' '"
(SVAC only)
TEAM
W L PF PA
.
W L PF PA '
70 with 2:25 left. Jason Mocy1DJBS
Hannan Trace ... 11 3 1031 772 TEAM
bit a drving lay-up and c:om~leted · witb 12 poinlll and 10 rebounds, Soilthern. ~ .... ,... ,.11 4 1112 950 North GalUa ........ 8 . 2 597 427' l
the Jbrce.point play f« a 3-72 and Jeremy Role wi!IJ seven points Eastern .. ........ ;.. 8· 5 878 919 Hannan Trace ..... 8 2 570 431'' '
RHS lead, with lbat play sending · and a team bigb 11 rebounds. ·
Symmes Valley . 8 6 848 845 Southern ... : .......... 7 3 5!!8 445 "
Jeremy Rose ID the bencb with bis
Dale led his club witb 23 ~IS, .North Gallla: ...... 6 8 1143 1143 ' Oak Hlll ..... ... ...... 6 4 · 540 511 ' ~
fiftb fool. On .lhe next posseerion · followed by Bladley with . and Oak Hill ....: ...... 5 10 990 1078 EasJern ............... 5 5 461 520
Baer missed a lluee poin!er and a · Mocy1D!IS With 15.
Kyger Creek..... 2 12 . 835 1041 Symmes Valley ... 3 7 457 553 ' \
golden
opportunity,
Varney
Soulhtm bit 25-53 IIJd 6-14 - · SouthwesJern ... .. 1 11 683 875 Southwes!ern ....... 2 8 360 50:1.
Kyger Creek... ..... 1 9 393 5411:•
•wu
-..
a duelllueat to 1hc somewhat timid rebounded lild Dale hit a double- 11uee pointers, wbile billing 9-14 at
the final 81-TI, pOIIJIXinlan en- 'l'llr1lldoes.
TOTAL!! ............ 38 38 SS22 SS22~
pumper . !ian !he lane ID put the the line. SHS bad seven steals, only
core of 1Dijust hmassment to lhe
Tbe half ended with SHS slill oo Red Devils abald75-72.
.eijbt turnovers, 16 assists, and ll
(Conference)
Tuesday's finals
Southern beocb. Soudiem bald lOp 43-37, as SHS held a six 1D
Anochel Grindstaff drive pulled whopping T1 fouls, compared ID 13 Hannan Trace .. ... 9 1 788 533 Oak Hlll77, McDermott Northw ~
coach Howie Caldwell pomptly ei&amp;ht point lead most !he way. SHS 10 within one, IIIJ(I·SHS called f« Ravenswood.
Southel"ll ...... ........ 9 1 783 629 est 66 (OT)
.
•
mnoved his team liom the court Andy Barr and an evtt-lmproviag timeat1:0411111it.
Rose bad a good defensive game Eastern ............ ... 6 4 702 727 Ravenswood 81, Southern 77
much to the ddigbt of the Soulhem Michael Kincaid paced lhe anack,
Twice SHS miased golden ~- wilh !hree steals and Grindstaff a Symmes Valley ... 6 4 590 586 ·
Friday's IJlate
; _
Tmllldo fans.
wbile Ro Lee Bailey anc1 1bdd tunities when Ravenswood missed great ftoor game with seven assists. N"orth Gallla ..... ... 6 4 830 736
Hannan
Trace
at
North
&lt;l!lllia
:~
Southern is now 11-4 ovaall, ~ I'OUIIdOd out !he list of the first of bonus situations, lhus
Ravenswood hit 23-38 from the Dak Hill .. .. . .. .. . .... 3 7 625 726
SoutbwesJern
at
Southern
,
,
and Ra¥ellSWOOd is !1-2.
Southern's heavy bitten.
not hdping their
cause. SHS ftoor and 6-16 from !Me-point Kyger Creek ..... ... 1 9 583 762
Symmes
Valley
at
Eastern
,
••
.·A somewhat dismayed and an·
Southern ·!'1W!tinued to hold' the got the rebound twice but WIIS once l'llllge, and was 17-27 at the line. SouthwesJern .;..... 0 ·10 535 737
Rered Caldwell said. "In the first advantqe until die end of 111e third Unable 10 score and anothtt lime They bad 36 rebolDids to T()TAUL .......... 40 40. 1!438 5438 . Oak Hlll at Ky.g er Creek
Saturday's f)ontest
lew minuJeS of the game we played frame, when their lead dwindled. los! tbC ball on a Dale steal tbat put Southern's 35. lUIS had 11 steals,
at
Ells ter'!
Miller
as weD as we could ~bly play; With five seconds remaining and the score at 77-74.
'
14 turnovers, 10 assists, and 13
': ~ ,' ';
. Aftu a SHS foul witb 31 fouls. Moc}'lll)liS had a good inside
blil after we got that ell'ly lead SHs leading by seven points, Baez
there was jus! oo way wwe going hid proceeded 10 the fool line in an seconds left, Dale missed a bonus, game with 15 rebOunds. ·
Mark Allen led Southern's reserto wiD...
elfoit quickly puah !he biiD upc:owt but could not get the carom. SHS
Sout.hml grabbed lhe opening tip f« a quick final scoce. Tbe buzzer. fouled again and Mocyunas bit the ves 10 a 77-69 win and Michael
and !'ICed 10 one of its belt 111111 of !ll)l•mt and the rd"c;l:C blew the first of a bonus f« a 78-74 score. Evans bad 19. Jasi&gt;n Balis of
Mason, WV
Rt. 33
the season, laking • bup advanllge baD dead 10 anow subslilllleS 10 Baer quickly bit lhe second of two Ravenswood had a game hi~h 38
in what would eventull1y turn illto come 01110 ibe court. Tbe 111111t cali tbree-poin~ lllCIIIplS after a ·B.Uey points,. including five three-pom!ers
a bambumer f« the ICII:ood half of was indeed costly as SHS in- rebouDd, an4 ensuing J111S11 from
to lead his club.
the game.
bounded the ball 00 !be side, bad it Michael Russell made the score 78- o'nSFouthn'dsemy. wiD host SoutbwesJem
Thc.T~. pedoimlng lilre a stolen, then was whistled f« fQUls 77. Aoothtt fool wi!b tens seconds
well-oiled macbine, llllldled 10 a !bit resul!ed in four Ravenswood left was s~ on bolh eeds by
20-4 advan.lqD ell'ly in lhe first ·
and a lnucb natroWtt 62-5!1 Dale; !be score 80-77, bu! SHS bad Score by quarters
period wbm the IIIOillellllml and
.
·
· achanc:e.
Southern 26-17-19-15=77
the tanpo of the Sllllle soon chan·
Ravenswood gained iJS first bid
Ravenswood . called lime and Ravenswood 18-19-:22-22=81
geds·~.. ~ · hisded ~ ...... 64-62 with 6:30 to go in die ~ SHS set up lhe play. Baer got the
uuu...... W8 w
&lt;X" • .,.. ' as the IIIOIIICii!Um bad now swayed call and had !be lluee-point shot to
nge of fools, most of wbicb were ID lhe host 1111c1 SHS was forced )0
rebowld,GrindslalfputSHSup72~

brou.f:t

I

Debbie Fredrick star!ed her
·Pili-Ying career for the University
of Rio Grande women's basket·
ball team Impressively as a
starJer last year. The 5·7 sopho·
. more guard !rom South Charles·
ton, Ohio . looks to make her
·second season one of her best,Jf ··
Tuesday's 101·79 home vlcto'ry
.over Ur.bana Is any Indication.
;Fredrick !Jumed the basketfor
a l'car.e er high of 31 points and
received capable assistance
f~om sophomore forward Kerr!
Kidwell with 22 points to lead the
Redwomen to a 3·2 standing In
the Mld·Ohlo Conference af!er
ule win over the Lady Blue
~nights, the def(!ndlng confet,
ence chain pion.
· .
•
\,It took that kind of effort to turn
b~ck the abilities of Urbana
center. Cindy Frere, who poured
hi 29 points and brought down 22 .
of ·her Jearn's 39 rebounds.
•But Rio Grande's Improving
defense and a 45 percentshowlng
from the tlooron36of80fleldgoal
at!empts (Including six of 14
f~om the . three) did the trick
against the scrappy visitors.
f'.redr!ck bit 23 of her points and
Ann · Barnltz net led six of her
te.am-leadlng 12 rebounds In the
fh;st half to advance. Kidwell bad
1~ points and Gena Norris added
12: to bu~d a 21-polnt lead at
halftime.
:Angle · Shiveley had 12 points
and Frere 11 markers and 10
bOards to lead Urbana's offense ·
lri the opening 20 mlnuJes.
•The second half saw both
tl)jlms continue an Intense battle,
bu't the Redwomen held turnov·
ers to 12 and posted 34 total
rebounds and kept the lead.
o,ther scoring opportunities
opened up when Rio Grande
e~plolied a number of Urbana's ,
24;turnovers.
'Overall, Urbana · was 31 per·
cent (rom the field (30·73, two of
lour on ou!$lde Sh9Qtlng) and
netted 15 of 22 tries !rom the free
throw line for 6S percent. The
~dwomen were 78 percent from
the foul line on 21 ol 27.
~ ·we feel very good about this,
a Jot bet!er than we did a few
weeks ago," Redwomen mentor
DOug Foote commented. "Debbl~ shot the ball extremely well
and displayed terrific leader·
ship. She was 'the Debbie Fred·
rl~k of a year ago.
"Sarita Brown IS Urbana's

SENIOR ~ITIZENS. SPECIAL

A•·•··YoiJ-C..mE·T~·EAT

THE SNOW
HAS FALLEN

Meigs hands Miller 58-39 defeat
81 DAVE IIAIUIIli

ovllllll.
."
Mlllcr
jumpec!
out
to
an early 15. Seatillel (::•:"-•
81ead at the end of the first qlllrter,
Meigs OllliCCnd
~12 in
the founb quurer 10 blow open a as Mi1ler COiUrOIIed the rcmpo f«
one point pme and · ~ the Fll- mucb of the 1lnt tbree quarters. Jj.m
cons SS-39 in . nt-Valley Coo- Hom wbo led lhe way witb six
. fttence action on n-lay night at points · for lhe .Falcons in !he
qlllt'kl', Sbawn Hawley le4 Meigs
}lemlock .
.
· Jason Wright, Sbawn Hawley, wilh foUr. ·
1nc1
Hilrriloa' i:Oiilblned t« · A bllanced scoring ~ led by
26 fourtb.qlllrter poinls to lead the lellion Mille Vm Met« and Wright
Malauders to !he win. Meip led a 13-5 cbarge in .the second
Played without !he ~ of lheir period 10 put the Malaudm on IVP
$CCOIId leading scent L. J. Mill:h, at !he half21-20. Van Meru tossed
Yiho wiD miss the I'CIIIIIinder of the in four points in !he period wbile
Wrigbllilded 1 Jbreo. · let.
IC8SOII.
llodllelmS
suqgJe in
The win was the !bini in I lOW
f« the Mliauden, and the faurtb in the third period as they ouly JCOml
five pmes With the win, the seVe!\ JlOIIIts eacb. Hav(ley led ·the
Mailudfn l1lile !heir leCOid 10 5-7 maroon llld gold in the !bird period
·
0ver1111 anc1 s-5 in die TVC. Miller with five points
went to a 111111-to-111811
' . fallB 1D 1-10 in the 1VC IIJd 1·13

nevor

:::r.:;n

MeiP

Scoreboard ...
·Girls

SlrykOI' 53, Uberty Center 33 ·
Tol Macunber 116, Wau ..on 51
Up Slndulky 48, 1'11 Columbian 36
Van Wert 61, Paulding 43
VmnUton 49. N Rtdgevtlle 26
VOI'utlles 43, Mllloo Unloo 38
Wadlwonh 59, Tallmadge 35

lleGI'el

Olrll Olrlallp lldloGI BMUiileli

., v..... ..... ...,....._

,......,.-.u .

Akr Buchtel 55, Loullvle Aqulnao 35
Akr VInCent n, Akr F1rntcme 29
Borea Mldplrk 40, lndepond011ce28
Blodt Rlvor 62. CoiUnaWonRes53
C.nlerbu11178. Worth Chr .57
.
Cln Cnll)• Day 55. Clennmt NE 39
Cln r;w 7l.Cin Won HU1&amp;35
Cln O.k Hl.llo 82, Taft 31
Cln Setm 71, Cln Pu rrell 28
Cln Woodward 69, Norwood 55
Cln Wyrilolnl 69, Flnllt!)llown 43
Cle E 65, Cle Rhodeo 51
Cle E .Tedl 48; Cle Hay 39
Cle Hathawoy ar .... 21k Cle Bapt

Warl@n Chr 33, Atwater Chr 8
Watldas Mem ~i. Hebrcn LakeWOOd 35

Weotland 47, Dublin 43 •
Wllloughby S 62, Bedlon! 46
Wo-r 66, C.n GlenOak 30
Worthlngtm 58. Chllllcotlle 35
Wynlonl63. Fredericktown 43

Boys scores
Olllo Hlp Schaal BMUiboli
., u..... Prell ..............

25 ·

·1WodaJ,Iu.!!

Cle Holy Name 6i, Akr Hoban 56
Cle Joel!, Chanin ND.C.th !9
Cle Macnltlcot 90, Cle RO(Ina 19
CleW Tedl67, ae Adamo 50
Cllntcm Muole 60, Woyllftvtlle44
Col S.ochcroll 68. Col BrkllaWn 57
Col Cenlennlal48. 0&gt;1 Whet•me37
Col EAttmOOI" 47, Cl W 34
Col Unden 48. Co.l No r1blaad 41 ·
Col Mar-Frank CJ, 0&gt;1 BI"IJp 37
Col Maranatha 55, O&gt;ITreeLIIetl
Col Mlf!ltn 69, Col E 44
Col Ready 49, Blocin Corroll27
Col S 65, Col Hartley 43
·
Col Wal Ridge 31. 0.1 llldpndnc: 28
Col WelllnRtm 56. Ohio Deal IS
Col mol Crawford 43, llolc:ky ~nt40
CuyahOila Falls 61, Kenl 48
Danville 65, 1: Knox31
De nan"" 53. llryan 50
Delplros Jeff 47, Wayne Troce 45
Delplroo Jolul48, .Uma Both'"
· Dixie 70, TWin Val s 36
.
Eastloke N 65. Euolld 56'
Elmwood 60. Glblmbura 51
Elyrta Cath 57, Cle CC 38
Elyria Door 33. Cle Lulh E 17
Fairview 67, Brooltlyn 49
Fremoot 62. Clyde 49

Akr Eut 92, Minerva 61
Akr Hobon66, LollilvU!eAQulnas 56
Akr ~anchllr80, Navare Fairlss60
Akr Vlneenl13, Akr Garlleld 62
Amelia 69, Glen Este 57
Atwater Cbr 51, Warren Chr 44
Aunn 80. l!o!dlonl Chanel76
Aymvtlle 72. Evergreen 60
BarneovUle77. Union Local 55
Barbertm 69, Stow 58
lloallovU!e 91, Wood,lll!ld 19
Bon Lopn 10. Trlld 37
!lor Ctr wan Rei 58, McDonald 41
llorlln Hiland 89, Jowett Sclo '8
Brooltlleld 82, Labree 78i20tl
Brooltvllle73. Franklin Mon..., 61
-ke)'l' Valley 19, Cardlngtm 48
Cambl"ldae 59, Steubenville CC 52
Campl&gt;eU 67, Nil.. 59
C.tiDeld 68, Stnrlhrrs 57
C.rey 82, Arllnitm 56
.Cia Alkea 82, Cia Xavier 58
_
Cia Beraard 6L Cln Seven .Hilla 60
Cia Country 90.

an Landmark 61

Cln Elder 68. Cln PrlacetCII 56
Cia LaSOIIel07, Mt Healthy 61
Cln SUmmit 45, Batavia 42
Cln Taft 60, HarriSon 64
Cln WlntJHIUs58, On Anclersm. ~7
Cle Hay '19. Oe Soutll 64
·
Cle Heritage 71, Akr Chr 53
Cle Luth E 70 Cle SW Cbr 58
Cle Lutll W 77, Loratn'Oeorvlew64
Cle Rhodeo 67, ae Collinwood 56
Col Bl"tas 73. Col Mar· Franklin 65 ·
Col Broolthaven ~. Collloecllcr&lt;tt .

Genoa U ,'Eastwocxi 20
Gilmore Aca 65, Cuy Val Chi 38
GreensbUJ'I! Gr~ 33, Copley 32
Heat• 63, Ut lea 28
Hld&lt;tvUie 71. PetUsvllle 61
Howland Chr 3!, You C.lvary 17
Hu1111 96. Bollevur u
J'toMr N'rlclge 87. Mlll01"sp&lt;J"t36
K.tlldo 53, Ada 23
Koll Alter 48, Oakwood 60 ,
Lan-Ier :14, Col Watlenm 48
Ledaemool 55, MldOd Corcllnol 40
Liberty Bontm 55, Pot Henry 44
Lid&lt; Voll&amp;t Jobnot... n 50
Lodl a ...riHf 51, Orrville 43
Lor Kine 18, Lor Southview 641011
Lonln 68. Groltar Mldvlew 38
Maple Hts6!, Lyndhurst Brush 39
Mariemont 63, Cln Deer Park 25
Mal !liD Hardlna 56, Nework 48
Mu,.. 42, N Collfle HilliS
lolullllal f3, Smltbvllle48
~ Bopl4t Kl"llll.&lt;l 36

59

..

Col C.nll!nnlal71, Col Whetllme65
Col Eaatmoor 89, Col West 74
Col Faltll 117, ZanMvllle Chr 87
Col Uaden 87, 0&gt;1 Nor1bland 84
Col RNdy 79, Lill&lt;altor Fllller 64
Col Tree tile 80, Delaware Chr 57
Col Wal Ridge 78, Olllndpndnc:e64
Cohunllla 57, Chardon ND·C.th 37
Conneout76. ~tuolq Valley 55
lllee IICOIII:BOAIID

run~ pressure defense in the
fourth quarJer and caused the FalCOlis problems, as lhe Marauders
blew ihe Falcons out in lhe CJ.Iwta"
10 take the win. Jason Wrigllt led
. the Marauder scoring in tbe period
with 10 poinm, wbile Hawley and
Hanison poured in eigbt points
each. ·
Hawley played his best game of
lhe Y.est 10 take scoring honors for
the ganle with 19, Wright added 13
and Hmison added 12'. Yan Meter
added six. The Manuder bench
pia-' well, Frank Blake came off
!herpj;.e to !IC(ft six poin!S, wbile
Pllil Hovalrtr added a big bucket in
!he third
•
U•l- ~Of 56 from the ftoor

(18.;«9 two pointers, 2 of 1 ~
pointtts) f« 36 percenL Meigs was
outstanding froril the foul line bit, ling 16 of 17 for !14 J)erce.-. The
. Malaudm ~tabbed 37 rebounds led
by Wright witb eigbt, Hawley and
Hanison added seven eacb. Meigs
had 15 !UmOvm, seven sicals led
by Blake wilh two, 10 assists led by
Van Me!er wilh t1uee and were c:alled f« I !lfouli. .
.
Hom led die Falcons in sc:«ing
with 13 points, The Falcons were
ice cold liom the foul line biiting
dilly !I of 23 f« 35 percenL No
other s!alistic:s were available for

SEE US FOR
YOUR RUBBER
BOOT NEEDS•••
•4 BUCKlE

AICTICS

·~

I
[

ONLY

•IU.EI SLIP-ON

WOIIC BOOTS

*2.99 .

Mason Family Restaurant
Rt. 33

HARDWARE
MASON, WY.

•

'

(304) 173-5321
(NEXT TO MASON EXXON)

FINAL

.'

· the Falc:oos.
In the reserve IJIIIle Meigs carrie
back from a 18-poin! first half defi·
cii ID defeat lhe Falc:ons 50-47. The
Marauckn were behind the. entire

1•

'

game including a six point deficit
beading iniAl lhe final period. Jobn
Ben!ley se«ed nine of his gilme
bigb 20 points in the fOUIIh q..-ter
10 l,ead the Marauder c:barge, 10dd
Dill added 18. Bruce Lanning led
the Falcons witb 19. .
In other 1VC action NelsonvilleYork upset Belpre for their second
win in a row 77-75. Federal Hock·
ing ouiSCOI'ed 1iiinble !19-92 and
Vinton County defeated Wells!OII
73-69. Alexandtz had tbe night off.
Meigs , will travel 10 Vmton
Comuy to play !he· VIkings on

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::S~~bile .die Fak:oos wiD

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~byq.arten

Meigs 8-13-7:30=58
.· Millet '15-5-7-12z3!1
. MEIGS (58)· Jason Wrigbt 1-25-13, Shawn Hawley 8..()..3-19,
Mike Van Meier 3-0-0-6, Trevor
Harrison 3-0-6-12, Fllllllc Blake 2()..2-6,

Phil

Hovauer

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IISIIAtiCE
111 SeCid St. P-.;

Rlwrdale41, Olltarto38
,
Rooky Rjwr 49, Cle A..,.odile 42

YOIIIIDIPIIIMNI
AGDISSRV.G

RD•III: H. W•••ue

Sonduolty 28, EJ:rlla 24
Sonduolty Maryo n, Lontn Cath 42
SIJI!II&gt;:r 86, Manll)eld Mod 41
Sidney 52. Tlpp City jJ

-scoum
•c1 1161.

. ---~'·
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1-0-0-2.

TOTALS ·11-2-16·58
MILLER (3!1) • Eddie Paige 20-0-4, Jim Hom S..()..3-13, Chip
Gossman 4..()..1-!1, Thly Merclde 02-0-6, Sean Bartley ,{)..()..!-1, Joey .
Smitb 0..()..1-1, Rich West 0..()..1-1,
Sbad Waddns 0-0-2-2. TOTALS •
12-2-ll-»

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•

::PH IN[, '1Al if Y r.INEMA
~~h

-

.uannan·Trace .bea'ts· Eastern'

leading· scorer this season, and
Kathy Snyder held her to 12
fli
points, so you don't jlave to look
John Lusher's Hannan Trace
at the stats to know who the
girls' basketball team put onlY
leapers are," he added.
three play(!rs In the scoring
Rio Grande (12·8) ret.u rns to
column. but this latest episode of.
the road this weekend, facing . the Lucy Show saw sophomore
Cleveland Notre Dame Saturday · . guard Lucy Mullens rack up 31
at 3. p.m. Urbana (7·9, 1·4) plays
points- her second 30-polnt-plus
at home against Walsh onJan ..29.
effort of the seasbn- toguldethe
Box $Core:
host Wildcats to a 54·41 SVAC
RIO GRANDE (101) - Jennl
victory over Eastern Tuesday
Couch, 2-2·0·10; Gena Norris,
night.
3·1·5·14; Michelle Crouse, 0·1·2·5:
The victory pushes the Wild·
Debbie Fredrick, 9·2·7·31; Ann
cats' record to10·3 overalland8·2
Barnltz, 5·2·12; Steplian'!e Gtl·
In the conference. Eastern suf·
dorf, 1-1-3;' Kathy Snyder, 2·0-4;
fered Its first league loss and
Kerrl Kidwell, 9+22. TOTAL!!
dropped Into a flrst·place tie with
31-6·21-101.
.
,
Kyger Creek, .whom the Eagles
URBANA (79) -Cindy Frere,
·wm play at Cheshire on Monday.
11·1·4·29; Kim Fields, · 6·5·17;
The Wlld&lt;;ats jumjled out to a
Sarita Brown, 4-4' 12; Chris Ro· . 14-polntlead at the end of the first
blnson, 1·0;2; Tanya . Perunko,
quarJer and traded baskets ivlth
1-1·0·5; Angle Shiveley, 3·2·0,12;
the Eagles to maintain that ·
Jennifer Jennings, ·1-0·2. TO·
margin at halftime. The Eagles
TALS 264~15·79.
edged the Guyan squad 26·25 In
Halltlme .score - Rlo .Grande
the second half, but Dawn
63. Urbana 42.
Heideman's crew ran out of time
for countering their first-half

offensive drought, as the offense.
of Mullens and the boardwork of
junior center Tammy Thomas
drove the Wildcats to victory.
Sophomore front-liner Ste·
phanle Otto led the Eagles with 16
points.
·
Hanna11 Trace will host North
Gallla on Thursday.
Quarter totals
.
Eastern .............. 7 8 12 14-41
Hannan Trac!:' .... 21 8 14 ll-54
Hannan Trace (54) - Mu liens
12·0· 7,31; Thomas 8·0·2-18; Trl·
plett 1·1·0·5. Tolals- 21·1·9·54
Field goals - 22·62 (35.5%)
Foul shots- 9·18 (50%)
Rebounds- 30 (Thomas 14) .: .
Blocked shots - 6
Assists- 6
Steals -13
Turnovers 8 14
Eas!ern ( U) - Otto 4·0·8·16;
Clay 3·0·3·9 ; Gardner 3·0·0-6;
Metzger 2·0·2·6; Gillilan 1:0.0-2;
Wilson 1-0·0-2. Tolals- 14·0-13-41
Foul shots - 13·24 (54.2%)

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MoND~Y·Flu:o~Y,

17; Tim Chris tian; 2.0·4: Troy
Donaldson, 6-5·17. TOTALS 28·7·
13-90.
.
OHIO DOMINICAN (63) Sam Egglesto n, 0·1·0·3; J ohn
Padgelt, 3·1-1·10; De rrick Jo hn·
son, 8·5·21; .Jim Nagy, 2-4·1-17;
Kevi n Shea , 3· 1·0·9; Mike
Wharff, 0·2·2: Rusty Earles,
0·1·1. TOTALS 16-H0-63.
Halltlme score - Rio Gra nde
48, Ohio Dominican 35.

•
•

Urbana five at home ·

Mason Family Restaurant

=IS

Chris Justice doing the play-byplay a11d Matt Moss providing the
color commentary.
llox score:
RIO GRANDE (90)
Cliad
Shumate, 1·0·2; Gary Harrison,
} 0·6; Jawanza Childs , 1·0·2;
Mark Erslan, 6·1-1·16; Brad
Schubert, 0-3,0-9; Terry Farley ,
0·2·2; Clifford Brown; 0-2·2: Les·
ter Smith, 2.0-4; Darius Willi·
ams, 2·1·2-9: Jeff Brown. 5·2·1·

Redwomen top

own

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The Daily Sentinei-:- Page- 5

Ohio

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OH.IO RIVER PLAZA
..GALLIPOLIS/ OHIO

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(Contlnuecl fr'IITI Pare41
' Conottoo Valley 81, C.dlz 64
· Crod&lt;svtlle70, Morgan 54
•Cuy Val Chr !01, Independence 84
fuyahcp Falls 99, Kent 64
JJIIY Belmmt 71, Sprtng N 68
Dey Northridge 109, Trl County N

38
Dey Patlerson 101. WllmlngtC1168
Weslervllle S 63
JJIIm'"'d SE 79, Woodrldge '11 (Oil
·Dresden Trl Valley 7j, Sheridan 42
E Cantm 55, Tuslaw 50
l: ae Shaw 98, Cle E Tedl 85
Falmanks 66, Mechanlcoburg 57
· Fahllom 67, Day Wayne 66
Federal Hocklnlf 99. Trimble 92
Field 88, Cret twoocl 59
Fort Frye 73, Skyvue 57
,Franklin 65, Mlamloburg 57
Frmtler 84, Shenandoah 77
Gahan111 68, Whllehall 57
Garaway 711. Rld&amp;ewood 64
Garfield Hts 57, Rlcbmmd Hts 74
GarOd Trinity 77, Cle Kennedy 66
P.oJ'I!etoWn 85, Bot hOI Tate 62
· Girard 65, Salem.56
Gosll"' 59, Millon! 47
Green Hlll88, On NW 61
Hillsboro 76. Wsn Brown•70
Hllltq&gt; 87, Archbold 70
lloUand Spring 81, Millbury Lake$
:E!'law~re73,

Howland 75, &amp;ar:dman 72

. Hubtiard 73, Cortland Lakeview ~2
lndlon Lake82. Degra!Rivenlde63
Indian Val 67, Bucke)'l' Trall62
Kings Acad 73. Modlna Bapt 61
Lakeland 87. Newcomtrs1.own 52
Lancasler 60. Chillicothe 37
.
Ltbanm 70. Trentm Edg""ood 49
·Lemoo Monrot 55, Day Carroll 50
Liberty 91, Champlm ~
Lima CC 81, Day Jeflersm 63
Madlam Plains 73, W Jefferson 5::i
Malvern 66. Tulky Coth 6!
Maache~ler U Gre011field 53
MaploWood 62, Bristol 38
Marietta 64. Zan01vUie 54
Marttns Ferry 75, Sl Oalrsvllle 70
Maumee 61, BowUng Gref!n 42
May!\'llle 75, New Lexlnatm 54
Meadowbroolt 63, Unsly iWVl 57
Meadvl (Pal Chr 50, Howland Chr
48
•
Melp 58. Hemlock Miller 39
Mldt""n Chr 91. Cln Hillcrest 52
Millersport 61, UbertY Union 52
Morado~ i7. Wolerloo 60
Mt Gll•d 74, NiriOII Elaln 58
Ntlomyljlr Yortt '11, Bel pro 7!
· N..,. Con&lt;OJ'II41. PbUo 51
New PhUedl!lpbla !1. Dovtr 47
NOwtm Folllll. Bldaer 57
North Union 711. Motltll P I - t
Norwood 14. Qn llldll- 51

'1

Otk JUII7'1, McDennDII NW MIOI I
Dellwood 76. Preble Sllawnee 58
Ottawa Hilla n. Tol Em Bapt 10
OxldTal..- 92, lolldtWDh""k 50
Parma Normudy Q, .,... 58
Peroy 55, ModlaGI CC

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v.'ednaedly, Jenuay 23, 1991

Poma'O'i-Midcleport. Ohio

Page- 6- The Daily Sentinel

~~~~~----~~--~~
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The Daily Sentinei-Page- 7

25,000 prO-lifers rally in Washfugton against legal abortions

···~~"··-······"··-

l

WASHINGTON (UPI) -Some
25,000 anti·abortlon demonstrators, urged on by President Bush,
rallied and marched to Capitol
HIU to urge Congress to reverse
the 1973 Supreme Court decision
legalizing abortion.
Tuesday's March for Lire commemorated the 18th annlverpry
of the 1973 Roe vs. Wade decision
legalizing most abOrtions.
Bush,' turnina lllomentarlly
from the war In the Persian Gull,
told deme~nstrators through a .
telephone hook-up, to "keep this
Issue· alive and predominant In
the halls of Congress, the courts
and In the minds of the American
people."
The demonstrators came from
as far ' ·away as Kansas and
Michigan. They gathered on the
Mall near the Smithsonian Instl·
, tution ratber than their normal
.. site o.n the Ellipse behind ·the
White House to shorten the walk
to Capitol Hill.

•

u.s. Park Pollee estimated
25,000 people marched to the
capitol peacefully before dlspers·
lag for an afternoon of lobbying
Coniress for a "paramount human · life" law jlanning most
abOrtions.

be done. AbOrtion on demand
continues unabated In this country. And as Ihavesald In the past,
this prevalence calls Into question our respect for the lunda·
mental right to ltfe. ••
"And you, the thousands of
tireless volunteers wbo have
But organizer Nellie Gray
gathered here from across the
ridiculed the Park SerVIce est!· · United States, must make it your
.mate and claimed "well over goal to keep this Issue alive and
50,000" people braved the sharp predominant In ' the halls of
winds and sub-freezing tempera·
Congress, the courts and In the
tures to bear speaker after , minds of the American people,"
spealter condemnlegal abOrtion.
Bush S&amp;ld.
·
Abol!t 50 . counter - ·
demonstrators from the National
The t.heme of this year's march
Organization tor Women . dis- was "no '·waffilng on the life
played an 8-by-100-foot paste·
principles," · Gray said, a refer.
board wall of petition signatures ence ·to politicians' - mostly
from supporters of legal abOr· Democrats - who abandoned
!ion. There were no Incidents.
. their opposition to abortion durIn his comments, Bush hailed ing last year's elec'tion
progress made toward making campaign.
a oortion illegal.
As bOth opponents and suppor"Despite these suc.c esses," ters of legal abortion marked the
Bush added, "much remains to 1973 Roe vs. Wade anniversary,

•

"

t~e Persian Gulf war was never
far from anyone's mind.
" We all find It very.dlfflcult to
·steer olir thougbts and emotions
away from the volatUe eVents In
the Persian Gulf," acltnowledged Rep. Chris Smith, R·N.J.,
one of Capitol Hili's most ardent
a110rtlon foes.

been taking bis sign to the almost
dally anti·war demonstrations at
LaFayette Square, across the
from the White House "and I've
gotten a very positive reaction
from the peace protesters ."
The Knlgbts of Columbus, the
Roman Catholic men's organization, distributed hundreds or
signs to marchers that declared,
Smith referred to the air raids "The natural choiCe Is life. "
against Ir~q and urged abOrtion
Supporters of legal abordon
protesters to make the same kind . also used the day to have their
of. ~omniitme11t. "~ we willing say.
,
to pay whatever it takes? Our
"At stake In this debate ts the
pUots who today are fiytng right to privacy, religious. free· missi\)ns In the gulf know what dom and freedom of speech,"
that is all about. They bravely said Kate Mlchelman, executive
risk au."
d!rector of thl) Na.tlorull Abortlon
A handful of demonstrators Rights Action League.
carried signs opposing both the
But Michelman noted abOrtion
war and legal a~rtion.
opponents were making strides
Daniel Nichols, 37, of Warren·
toward passilig more restrictive
ton, Va. , carried a sign declar- abortion laws in a number of
ing, "Choose life: Say no to war states, including Utah, South
and a bortlon."
.
Dakota and Wyoming.
Nichols- said that he has also
'1t is clear that pro-choice

Americans must work state by
state, legislature by legislature,
year after year. if we are to
protect our right to choose ," she
said.
In Rhode Island, supporters of
legal abortion introduced a package of bills des igned to expand
abortion rights.
Earlier Tuesday, officials
from the Religious Coalition for
Abortion Rights, made up of 35 .
national Jewish and Protestant
groups, accused abortlon opponents of distorting the debate
with misused language, especially the phrase "unborn child'•
as a designation for tlie fetus.
"It is wrong and unfair to turn
the abortion debate Into a battle
between the God·fearing a nd
godless," said Patricia Tyson,
RCAR's executive director.' 'Opponents of abortion ar~ skilled at
peppering the debate with words
that mislead the public."

·Court.extends.rights. of grand·juries to issue subpoenas
.

RlGULAR • HOMESTYLE

.

WASHINGTON (UPI) -The' stipulated stringent requireThe ·National lntrafraternlty express their feelings to the jury
Supreme Court r.uled that the
ments for a trial subpoena,
Conference, which represents 59 before sentencing.
government has broad powers to
disagreed.
fraternities with 5,600chapters in
The high court admitted It had
Issue grand jury subpoenas even
"In short, the government colleges and universities across improperly agreed to decide the
without probable cause.
. cannot be req ulred to justlfy the
the nation, claimed the high case Involving Ediberto Huertas,
The court, In a unanbnous
Issuance of· a grarid jury subpo- court's action could lead to and let the ruling of the Supreme
decision Tuesday, reversed a
ena by presenting evidence suffi·
challenges to all- male fraternity Court of Ohio • stand. Huertas,
ruUng of the 4th u:s. Circuit
clent to establish probable cause membersh·IP on the same convicted of murderilig Air
Court of Appeals that had
because the very purpose of grounds .
Force Sgt. Ralph Harris In
quashed the subpoena of busirequesting the Information is td
Lorain, Ohio, in 1986, will now be
In other action Tuesday. the
ness records Involving (Wo New
ascertain whether . probable court:
sentenced to life in prtson Instead
York . adult book· stores selling
cause exists," wrote O'.Connor.
-Ordered the Florida courts to of death.
their goods In Virginia.
The court also let stand a
reconsider the death sentenced
-Affirmed a lower court's
· The high court, in an opinion
decision that a 101-year-old din- , Imposed on a convicted triple- decision to free a woman who
written by Justice ·Sandra Day
Ing club for male students at murderer. In a 54 decision, It shot her husband, because her
O'Connor, said grand Juries are
Princeton Unlver$ity must admit ruled the Florida Supreme Court jury selection was conducted by
"not licensed · to engage In
women.
failed to consideF all mitigating a magistrate Instead of a fuUarbitrary fishing expeditions,"
circumstances when It upheld fledged judge.
The court refused to review a
but ruled that their power Is
The court, divided evenly 4-4,
the death sentence of Robert
broader than the 4th Circuit had
decision by New Jersey's highest Lacy Parker.
lei) stand the decision of the 9th
held in strtkilig down the busicourt, which tJad found that the
A jury had recommended a life U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals to
ness record·subpoenas.
Tiger Inn is a public acco!Dmoda· sentence, but Parker's trial throw out the conviction of a
In this case, a grand jury
lion and therefore violated state judge overrode the jury and Haw a II woman. At the same
lnves ligating the interstate
anti·dlscrlmiliation laws by ref· sentenced him to death for one of time, however, the court agreed
transportation of obscene mateusing to allow females to beeome the three murders he committed to hear a different case out of
members.
rials had issued the subpoenas.
Feb. 7, 1982, In Duval County, New York Involving essentially
But the 4th Circuit, silting In
The Tiger Inn, located off Fla, A judge can overrule a jury the same Issue.
Rlchm6nd, Va., saidagrandjury
university property In Princeton, In Flortda, but only after consid·
Justice David Souter, wbo was
N.J., .clalmed It Is a private club erlng mitigating circumstances .
subpoena has the same respansinot yet on the bench when the
billty as a trial subpoena to show with no real liliks to the school,
-Let stand a decision over- Hawaii case was argued atid
probable cause before Informa- and therefore should not be held turning an Ohio murderer's
therefore took no part In the
tion can be demanded.
to the standards of a public place . death sentence because the vic- decision, could cast the deciding
The high court, which in 1974 of accommodation.
tim's family was allowed to . vote In the New York case.

•

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WASHINGTON (UPI) - Fed~
eral Reserve Chairinan Alan
Greenspan 5ays increased spendtng on . domestically produced
goods to supply U.S. forces in the
Persian Gulf will boost the
nation's sagging gross national
product.
,Greenspan, ·in a briefing for
members of the House Budget
Committee, also said Tuesday
rising oil prices stemming from ·
Iraq's Aug. 2 Invasion of Kuwait
helped push the U.S. economy
Into recession. But he added
there Is no evidence "at the
moment" to show the recession
will be deep and prolonged.
"One can't rewind his to~,''
Greenspan said when asked If the
economy would have entered
recesslo11 ,with or jVIthout the
impact of higher oU prices.
·
"My reeollectlon was that
prior to Aug. 2, Ithought!t was a
close call; maybe with the
expectailon we'd work our way . out without recession...
Recession Is generally descrlbed as two consecutive quarters ' of negative economic
growth. Greenspan said the
chances of akfrlllll · receellon
were ·better lhan 50-!10 Without ·
'
,
war In the Middle East.

•''

, r

l

Soldiers were waiUn&lt; lo move out. The lsi Annored Dlvlalon Is
allached to the VII Corp. (Reuler/UPI)

war costs niay boost GNP

The Fed chairman said he
expects the upeomlng forecasts
of the Congressional Budget
Office and the Bush admililstration to show declines In the GNP
for the fourth and first quarters.
Such a revelation would require the Senate, and give the ·
House an option, to consider a
joint resolution to suspend enforcing provisions of the hard·
fought budget ·agreement ·
reached last fail. Approving the
resolution "would be a mistake,"
Greenspan said without evidence
that the recession will be deep
and prolonged.
Although the financial cOsts of
war will be high, Greenspan ~id
the U.s. GNP will be boosted by
increased defense spending for
Operation Desert Storm, whiCh Is
not subject to budgetary con·
stralnts. The increased defense
spending, however, Is likely to
add to the · nation's growing
budget deficit.
"Otber nations are expect to
share In the cost of the war, and
their contributions will help to
cushion the effect on the budget
deficit,'' Greenspan .sal}!. · "But
regardless of who Is paying (or it,
Desert Storm spendilig on newly

'

.

produced · domestic Ite ms will
boost U.S. GNP."
The costs of war could be
. greater, Greenspan said , should
Iraq! President Saddam Hussein
gain control of a majority of the
world's known oil reserves.
"There's i10 question !he imp IF
cations of having the current
Iraqi ·regime control 60 percent
or more of the proven oil reserves
would create some .very major
long-term disruptions in the
world's economic environment,"
Greenspan said.
•
"Under those conditions, Sad·
i.lam Hussei!l . would be able to
dictate the amount of oil that
goes around the wqrkl," he said.
"That would have ap extraordinary e Heel on the world In
general:"
· Green~pan also told the com·
mittee that economic Indicators
show business activity In the .
United States "declined appreciably"ln the fourth qilarter of last
year.
,
Rising oil prices during the
early months of the Persian Gulf
· crisis were a "key factor" In the
weakening of the u.s. economy,
Greenspan said.
.
"Specifically, the jump · tn ·
prices for . petroleum products

~Let stand a decision that
states are prohibited from regulating much of the railroad
transportation of hazardous
materials through their own
communities.
The court refused to review a
decision by the 6th U.S. Circuit
'

No global environmental
impact seen from oil fires
In a phone Interview, Turco ·
WASHINGTON (UPI)
Energy Department scientists said the same type of threat
conceivably could arise if Iraq
· and oil Industry experts dis·
systematically torched hundreds
counted warnings tliat massive
of Kuwaiti oil wells, stprage
smoke plumes from torched
Kuwaiti on fields could block out tanks and refinery facilities and
they burned for at least two or
enough sunlight to cool Earth.
Even . if Iraqi President Sad: three months as firefighters
battled to put them out.
dam Hussein carried out his
Turco said that extended con·
tbreat to blow up hundreds of
fiagrat!on could send up soot Into
Kuwaiti oil facilities, it Is "u11·
the upper atmosphere, where it
likely" the resultilig fires would
produce smoke plumes capable could stabilize and persist for up
to four weeks.
of causing major global climate
In that worst-case scenario, he
changes, concluded an Energy
said,
"It's possible enough soot
Department study.
could
be
produced from these 200
"You won't have any global
producing
Kuwaiti wells to affect
effects," Michael · MacCracken,
the
spring
weather in such a way
division leader for atmospheric
make
agriculture difficult
to
and geophysical sciences at the
over large regions."
Energy Department's Lawrence
But MacCracken said the
Livermore National LabOratory
In Callfornta, said Tuesday In a Energy Department's analysis
clearly indicated the smok~: and
telephone interview. "We don't
see how tbe smoke Is goilig to soot produced by torched Kuproduce any persistent anomal- . walt! oilflelds would not be
extensive or long-lastlng enough
ous condition."
to affect global clbnate.
However. MacCracken- part
of a team of federal scientists
who conducted the .Energy De·
partment study - said smoke
from torched Kuwaiti wells could
cause measurable climate
changes in the Persian Gulf area,
depending on how long it take for
plumes to dlsslpa te. ·
The Energy Department disclosed its study following predic·
!Ions by a · few atmospheric
scientists that huge amounts of
smoke from an extended oilfield
inferno could block out enough
sunlight to significantly lower
surface temperatures
worldwide.
That scenario was put forward
by astronomer Car I Sagan of
Cornell University and Richard
Tureo, professor of atmospheric
sciences at the University of
California at Los Angeles, the
team that warned in the early
1980s of "nuclear winter."
Sagan and Turcb said an
exchange of nuclear warheads
between the superpowers would
1~ raging flrestorms that
could ·send up enough smoke and
soot to virtually blot o~t the sun.
. The result, they said, would bean
extended period of cold and
darkness that eQuid cause catastrophic agricultural !allure.

cui Into the real disposable
income of households and thus
contributed to the softness in
spending for a wide range of
goods and services," he said..
But more damaging than rls·
lng oU prices was the steady
bombardment on the national
consumer psyche. Greenspan
said the enormous uncertainty
about the crisis.eroded consumer
and business confidence.
"Faced with such uncertainty,
producers and consumers tend to
withdraw from their normal
activities while they wait for
clearer signals Ql economic developments and avoid makilig
·commitments t)lat might be
costly to reverse," he said.

~~:r::,~:a
r.d.............
••d. _.,.n,.
~

..........
POMEIOY

Ui

St ,..., ....

FLOWEI SHOP
"Tito l'!r A,.._.,;.,.,..,.,_.
PH. 992· 454

Court of Appeals, which . found
that Ohio's efforts to ensure
safety in the state by regulating
the transport of hazardous materials by rail was pre-empted by
federal Jaw, even though the
state regulations· were virtually
the same as federal guidelines.

WINTER
SAVINGS
r•u
NOW

•

JAN. 26 AT DAN'S

3 0°/o OFF LADIES' TOPS

.

SWEATERS &amp; DRESS PANTS

20°/o OFF ALL CARHARR
.20°/o OFF ALL·
INSUUTED BOOTS

MANY OTHER SPECilLS
UP TO
OFF

40°/o

z

•!iil1

.
'

-"-

290
North
SKond
Middleport

•

�•

•

Wednaeday, Janu.-y 23, 19,1

Wednesday, Januawy

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

~3.

..

DOUBLE Manufac~urer's
Whole Ham: COUPON S~\9~GS
7 to 9 lb.
Avg.

. ' surgery requtres
months of rehabilitation

i

49 '

•

~Bo~u:o:::~c:c~~~
•or ..... ,_,. -m·····.

-=·

dleport aniiOUIICed , ''World Peace
Tluough Praytz" ICIVices every
" u"" '"" - ~"'-A--A-y
at 1·1" p m
10 be named 10 the list srudents """'""""' Y•Y·~· '
'-7&lt;1 · •
must achieve a ......... 8:'::
.
t average The public is In . 10 help~ a
,.._
difference through prayer and felof 3.5 or better on a 4. ·scale.
lowship.

CLEAN SWEEP
SALE

.

Fresh Chicken

COIIIDUIIity CaleDdar Items willhofd-..iaJserviceaonFriday
ap- two cia
tays be•oilre an event at 7p.m. ·..Thete will also be soccial
..of t
I
Oailev
~
~-~~---~lnt
e!!!~-~to
Fsi_?~~g
fesSturing,~.
.
"leyll
m.... ""' ·~ ~ -·~
"''wy. Rev. teve"""" anvtteS IC
IISllft publlt:ation Ia lhe calen· public.

'

Coupona. Free Cau~n~,,., Purchnltd. Add.ltional Coupon

aver so• Will

Melanie Jane Beegle. Racine,

Chtm:h looiiiM at tlleyccrllll' of
Third and Main SII'CCIS in Mid·

QUESTION • My son injured surgery involve and how long will
his knee . d~ a teeent high be be sidelined?
school baste ·
game. He was
ANSWER • There are Several
'
driving toward the basket and .said surgical options available. ACC«d· dar.
POMEROY • The Pomtroy
he heard somethin~ 'pop' in his ing to 1\mQthy Duffey, D.O., or·
WEDNESDAY
Senior Citizens Dance Oub will
knee when his leg hit the floor. The thooedic surgeon at SportMed in .
BEDFORD TOWNSHIP • The have a dance Friday from 8-11 p.m.
pfiysiciait we took him to said he Cofwnbus, Ohio, tile most com.
Bedford
Township 'liustees will with music by the Happy Hollow
had tom. his anterior cun:iate liga- monly Uled and most effective
Thursday
meet
Wednesday
at 7 p.m. for an Boys of Atllens. Those .attending
ment. and !hat it may require sur- ligament replacement is the patellar
friday
bring snacks. Public is inviled to atgery, How setious is this injury, and (kneecap) bone and tendon graft. organizalional meeling.
and
tend.
.
is surgery really n~
The patellar tendon • sometimes
Saturday
ANSWER • Yoor son s injury is · refened to as the "Cadillac of ten·
WELLSTON • The Southeastern
seri.ous and relatively common. Let . ·dons" bec4use of its strength • is Ohio Hobnes Safety Association
. me lilke a moment and try IQ ex· wide enough that one·diird can be District Council will m~ WedncsSATURDAY
, p~ lhe purpose of ligaments .in cut away with small piece$ of bone day at 7 p.m. B1 the Royale Rei!·
. BURLINGHAM • The Budin·
· GROUP OF
the knee ..The knee is fotnled by the on each end and used as a graft. taurant an Wellston.
gham Junior Modem · Woodmen
upper leg bone, tile femur, and the This piece of tendon is reconnected
THURSDAY
. No. 7230 will have ' a Family
WOMEN'S
lower leg bone, the tibia. The lower where the dam~ied lipment once
POMEROY • The Porn~ Togetller meeting on S81UI'day at 7
leg also ha$ a second maj!»" bone, was. If the smgeon is unable to use · Group of A.A. and AIAnon will p.m. Members will tell how they
~•DRESS
the fibula, but we don't need to talk a tendon from tile patient's knee, he meet Thursday at ? p.m. at tile help keep families together. The
about it in this discussion. The sur- or she may use a tendon taken from S~ Heart ~c Otun:h. For Bedford Lodi Historical Society
face where the upper leg bone and a cadaver. As a last resort, tile syn, more informauon call992·5763.
will also meet and Betty Milhoan
lower leg bones meet is shaped in thetic material Gore-Tex may be
m,.,,.... VILLE . The Riverview wili discuss ' the use of herbs.
something lite tile knuckles of a. used.
"'""""'5
Juniors will serve refreshments'.
clenched fist of one hand I!&gt;UChing
Surgery for' a 10m ACL is rela- GardCn Club will meet Thursday at The public is invited to aaend.
the open palm of the other hand.
lively" routine, but tile rehabilitalion 7:30 p.m. al tile ·bome of MrS.
PAll
The mechanic arrangement is tons. and .requires a~ deal of · Grace Weber. Gladys Thomas will
CHESTER ~ Annual inspection
01
makes the knee very flexible but discipline and self-monvation from serve as co-bostess.
·
of the Shade River Lodge No. 453
also WISI8ble. What I mean by un- the patient. Acconling to James
RtJi'LAND : The Meigs County F and AM will be held Saturday at
PAIRS
stable is that the two bones can · Boes, D.O;, ISSOCiate professor of
FeU shi
.ll
the lodge hall in Chester. A hamloaf
FINAL
.
'
easily be pulled or pushed apart.· orthopedic Sllll!I"ZY at Ohio Univer- Women's · ow P WI meet dinner will be served at 6:30 p.m.
Leg muscles control the motioo of sity, it takes 9 10 12 months of Thursday at tile Rutland Chtm:h of Lodge will open at 7:30 p.m. with
CLEARANCE
the leg, but the ligaments of the · rehabilitation to get the leg back to Christ at 7:30 p.m. Nonl Rice will wOik in the Entered Apprentice
knee are responsible for defining fuU stn:ngtb.
present the program.
Degree. All masons invired to a~the maximum allowable movement
If you son has surgery, his leg
POMEROY • The Preceptor Beta . tend. All Shade ~ver members
GROUP CHILDREN'S
GIOUP MEN'S
between the pans. They keep the will be pul into a brace which Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi bring a homemade piC.
bones in JXI&gt;per relationship to one reslrictS the leg's range of motion,
DRESS SHOES
another regardless of tile amount of and he'll have 10 use crull:hes for Sorority will meet Thursday at 7
POMEROY • · "Cougar" and
TENNIS SHOES
being in the knee.
several weeks 10 get around. A p.m. at the Grace _Episcopal "Goliath II" will be presented at the
There ire suong ligaments, lis· rehabilitation schedule is set up by Chtm:h. Refreshments will ~ ser- . Meigs County Public Library on
.S15PI.OR
sue which is10ugh and non-stretch· the surgeon and carried out by tile ved by Velma Rue and Rose SISson. $allll:day at 2 p.m. All children are
0
PRS.
ing like a rope, on the right an~ left physicQJ therapist. A daily regimen '. ..,. mPERS PLAIN
. S . • The Tup- invited.
. sit(es of the knee (medial and · of exercises will sttengthen the
lv..'
lateral collateral ligaments). These muscles in the weakened leg. A pers VFW Post No. 9053 will meet
BURLINGHAM • The Bedford
keep .the knee bone from sliding variety of exereises will Slrengthen Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at the post Lodi Historical Society will meet
sideways off one another. Another the muscles in the weakened leg. A home. The fifth anniversary of the Saturday at 7 p.m: at the !&gt;fudetn
ligament (the posterior cruciate) varie.'y Jlf treaunents including group will be observed with a pot· WOOiinen Hall m Burlmgham.
runs from the front of the femur to whirlpodl and knee bends will im· luck supper. All members are urged Betty Milhoan, River Valley Hertile back edge of the tibia. The an- prove the knee joint's range of mo- to attend.
balists, will present a. program on
terior cruciate ligament • or ACL • tion. Over time, he'll move on to
"'Our Ancestors and Their Use of
runs from the front edge of the riding a stationary bite, doing
STIVERSVILLE • Jerry Courill, Herbs."
femur. These cruciate ligaments agility driDs in water, and even Palestine, W.Va., will be .the guest
.g · ·
__.._at the Stiversville Word of
keep the 1mee bones from 5lidin
RUTLAND • There will be a
Jogging.
•.....-h
Thursda
7 30
apan with front·to-back motions.
Your son may want to push him· Faith Oturc on
Y Bt :
Volley Ball Tournament at the Rut·
ACL injury, like your son has !!Clf to get back in playmg shape p.m. The public is invited to attend. land Civic Centec on Saturday. The
suffered, has felled many profes· more quickly than is possible, but
FRIDAY
entry fee will be $25 and !I'Ophies
sional . athletes over the past ·year, he must be careful not to rupture
Pomeroy's Quality Shoe Store
will be awarded. For. infmmation
including Mark . Price of the the graft. The fourth through the
LONG BOTIOM • The Faith . call742-2279.
Cleveland Cavaliers and lckey sixth months can be particularly Gospel_ Otun:h in Long Bottom
Woods of the Cincin!iati Bengals. difficult because by then the im- · .-:...:...~-'--------------------.--....---------------~--~­
Usually, the ACL is tom when the . proVed muscle sttength and range
person is trying 10 stop and turn at of motion in the leg may give him a
the same time.
false sense of secW')ty • but the ten·
Surgery isn't mandatory for tom don is not back to full stn:ngth yet.
ACL's, but not fixing the damage The healing process lilkes nine to
will somewhat limit mobility. Ex· 12 months after surgery to m~eh
ercises to sttengthen the muscles fuU strength.
around the lcnee can give adequate
In short, if your son has this sur·
support for. most everyday ac· gery, he should be able to play bas·
tivilies, and the patient may even ketball again. But, he won't be
resume more strenuous pursuits back in unifonn until neltt season.
like swimming, bic~cling or jog·
''Family Medicine" is a weeltly
ging. But if your son wants 10 play column. To submit questions, write
basketball • which involves twist· "to Jobn C. Wolf, D.O., Ohio
ing and ruining · he'll need to have University College of Osteopalhic
the ligament reconstructed.
Medicine, Grosvenor Hall, Athens,
QUESTION • What does the Ohio 45701.

Ill DOUBLE THE VALUE on •nYSize ttem Named On
Be•r ,sto~: 51,. tor "The Specific Brand and
do C~Garottoo, 119 But
ICoupont 0 up
01 so• Or L.a ... IIOI To tnclud Tho "Voluo 01 Thlllotll.
•011,, Limited To Manulag!u~~:_cg~-~~~ RtttUarl and ~o~!~ ~~~~~cal Jtams And C~uP.Oftl
Llmll Ono CouBpoRnod:omod At Fact Voluo.

lb.

The. Daily Sentinei-Page~9 ·

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

-i\~C:~L~~~~~---.------------S-_-e_n_ti~.~n~e~l~(?~a~l~e~n~d~a-r--~-B~~--gl-e-~-er-s-on-a~l--~P~
. ~~~~~~es~~e~~~~~e~~~se~t. .

1991

Mega

BONELESS

•

'

Sold In
5 lb. bag

SHOES
•CASUALS
•SNOW BOOTS

Sl5°0
2 $2 500

Beef Loin BONELESS
• •
IF OlD

lb.

rOO d
I:"

.food Club

L---~-------~-

CJU b

TENNIS SHOES
DRESS SHOES

2

Li mit 6 8 oxes, PIease· (exdudlnl
P,r family with additional purdJueo
Items prohlblled by law)

Macaroni
&amp;
Cheese
e
.

lf2 PIIC~

CHAPMAN ·SHOES

7.25 oz.

Box

Ground 13 oz- Can: French Roast, 12 oz. Can · Umlt I Can, Please :::;,::~~ :.':,":".!i.:J:;":!j'

· Maxwell House

Blue

$25°

z

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Your

Choice
.

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Golden

And swihh over if tomorrow's
are even better.
. '. ' ".

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•
•
•

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Family'Size

Laundry

1.50. off Label

•a•·aw.e,ftn.nt

STUDENT Of THE WEEK • Clad;r Stewart baa beell selftted a
student or the week at Meigs Junior High for ber. work msc:lence
and behavior. Preseildna tbe certlflca~ Is.Don Dlilon.
·· ·

.

Umlt, I Box, Please

1he "CMMfarter'~ 1he IWII- CD that gives YH the
COillfort of knowing H•••• .. up,vaurrate caa go up, too.

Per family ~th
additional purchuea
(excluding Items
prohibited by law)

147 oz.
Box

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goo(\ rate. And that's what you
keep on earning until they
mature, even if rates go up.
Now you can beat that dealwith our new "Comforter" CD .
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UtmDtl FOJC

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a cerdft· '
· STUDENT OP 11IE WEEK • Cllld;r Clll was
cate by Mn. Kim ,4c!ldw at Melp J.alor Hlp
fer Student
or tile Week recntl;r. Sbe W8ll seleded tor sdeace and beba"flor• .•
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Take a look at the rate you can ·
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�-~

,.. ...... -.. . . ·- · ·- --··----.. . .!. · - ----- -~

-~ - - --

.•

-··

. •·

Page-1o-The Daily Sentinel

be amoag tbe more than 900 music
• SWdcniS Jqft8CIIIiDg 9S Ohio high
scbooli will be at Ohio WesleytD
.,.. Univasity 011 Salunlay to take put
in !be 42nd ADnual High School
Music Feslival.
On die basis of aQdition ~.
Ohio Wesleyan music facuhy bave
selected the prticiplllts from
ainong those recoml"e"ded by high
school music supervisors. Going
from Meip Counn' will be Mike
Hall, comet. and Chris Hall, born,
from Meigs Local, IIIII Letilia Hoi·singer alto sax and A1idrew Wolf,
trombOne;· from Easlcm. All four
will be participating in the event's
"FeStival Band". ·

.

Wednesday. Janu.y 23, 1991

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

42nd .annual ·music festival planned
fOil{ Meigs County Sl'vlents will

•

Afr« spending lllOSl of lhc day
on CIIIIIJlUS ldlcaning, lbc siUdcnts
will ~nt a public c:onc«t at 7
p.m. in' Ohio Wesleyan's Gray
Chapel. A limited number of
general admission tictds will be on
·sale at the door for $2. ·
Most stuilent musicians will perform wilb lhe 108-picc:e Feslival
Band, led by Ohio Wesleyla music
professor Darrell Wood, and !be
6ro-voice Festival Chorus, cmcted
by Professor Robert Nims.
A select JfllUP of 98 will play .in
!be Hm!on Band, conducted by as· sociatc orofessor Larry Griffin. and
1;27 will sing in !be Honors Oloir,
led by ·guest conductor Michael
SChwanzkopf.

The suest conductor is cfuecqlr
of eboral aclivities at Illinois Slate
University. ScbwartztDpf, ali associatc professor of music, earned
bachelor's IIIII ma~ter's degrees in
music from lndilrul Univmity IIIII

a doctor's degree from die Univer-

sity of IowL

Schwanzkopf, wbo prcviously
directed VOCIII and cboral activities
at Merter University in ~.
was conductor of tbe MIK:oo C1vic
Chorale llld ...maN conductor of
the Macon Symphony Ordlestra.
He bas conducred IIIII Performed at
IJI!IIIY siltS iCJoss the United Swes.
'for ma-e information about the
music festival, call tbc Ohio Wes·
leyan music dcpanment at 368·
3700.

V!Jedn•dlw. ~ 23, 1991

ces Roush. · Carl Rosch; Emma
J..eadlie. Leoua Smith, Ann Marie
Hanenbach, Kathy Bater. Mabel
Plants, Odell Smith. ·
For devotions EWe King prcsented
a quiZ on the Bible and Dorothy
of the Middleport Chun:h of Christ
Rosch
had a poem. '1'hougJJts on
Dorothy Rosch presided at the
America;"
and "Prayer for
meeting which opened wilb prayer
by Clay Tutlle. The secretary and AJilericL"
The meeting closed with prayer
aeasufer reports were given.
The class is completing a project by Raymond Cole.
of furnishing robes. towels and · Dorothy Rosch, Dorothy Bater
other neces""-8', items for baptismal and Elsie King served refreshments
puzposes.
e installation . of of snacks during the meeting and
electrical outlets to the changing . cuStard, lemon, coc:Onut and banana
cream pies with coffee and tea after
rooms has also been completed.
Usted in need of prayer were !be meeting. Frank lhle provided
"Bill ind Flo Orueser, Clyda Al- fresh brewed sassafras tea.
lensworth, Margaret Bailey, Fran- , · Those attencJ!ng !be meeting

were Gleop and KalhryD Evans,
Bud 11111 Hud Wilsoa, Clly 11111
Geileva Tuale, Thelma Bo)er, Ellie
King,
Deble Fordie, Dorod1y
Frat lllle, Jo
and Marilyn Bishop IIIII Raymond

By DE' ANN WEIMER
UDMH P,.. r.ternailonal

Dorol,bt!:'.

and Farie Cole.

Quote of the Day
Marine Col. Ron Richard, ·
dispelling rumors that ·there
would be mass defection. of Iraqi'
troops.
"We are not looking for thou·
sands of people coming acros~ '
the border begging for rice and ,
handing us their weapons. This Is .
not an enemy that ts going to g0
easy."..,

nBI ......:Y-hoh of u,._ advertieed item• ia
requir«&lt; to tM . . . . - aveiAable for Mle in each Kroger
Sccw.. •lleePt • ~ nottd in m• H . If we do run
out of ..-ad .. ati ad Item, we Will offervouvour chOice at •

' AOI.illflt

compe,...-- tt.m, wh.n •v•l&amp;ebte •. teftecting the ume
aavinp or • reinch.ck vwhich wiM enmt. vou to purcnu.
tiM acfwntMd item at the adv..,iled pnce wt1"in 30 CIIYI.
· Ontv one vendot' coupon Will btt acceptea .,., itern ·

.,...,eft.....

COit'VAIGHT ,1.1 · THE KROGER CO. ITEMS AN.b
PRICES GOOD SUNDAY, JAN. 20, THROUGH SATUA · ·
OAV , J.AN . .21. 188,, IH fiOMIIIOYITOIIII

'
•

Super Bowl
Sun., Jan. 27th.
See Store For

'

Game Day
Favorites

Fresh
Cauliflower

. The an:est of a Florida woman
In the slaying of eight middleaged men may mark 'the emergence of a new breed of female
killer wbo enjoys violent confrontations with her victims ...: a
characteristic previously unique
to male serial killers, such as Ted

Bun4Y.

The killer who preyed on
middle-aged motorists on Inter·
state 75 not only hates men, but
thrtves on transforming 1\erself
from the ·helpless woman Into a
demon.before her victims'. eyes,
said Bill Hagmater, FBI expert
on serial killers.
Hagmater helped local offl.
Clals In Florida piece together a
profile of the man-hater who
scattered her victims along untraveled roads near I· 75 In north
Florida and south Georgia between December 1989 and No- ·
vember 1990.
Last week, Aileen Carol Wuor·
nos, 34, was charged · tn the
shooting death of the first victim,
Richard ~allory, 52, of Clear·
water. Pollee are still searching
for the remains of an eighth
victim, a mtsstng missionary.
A Volusta County grand jury
will consider In a few weeks a
first· degree murder Indictment
against Wuornos, who would face
the death penalty If convicted.
"H she Is the serial k!Uer. she
· stalked with a firearm and

'

enticed them Into her comfort Crime at the FBI Academy In
zone where they perceived her to Quantico, Va., said normally
be no physical threat. At that female serial killers are polsonpoint, she became violent on ers or arsonists.
Poisoning and arson are
• them and basically assassinated
them," Hagma)er·satd.
"much less violent, very less
"That's part of the euphoria confrontational" than the methey (serial killers) experience thod utilized by the I-75 serial
when they succeed In controlling. ktUer, who shot her victims at
They strike like a rattlesnake close range with a small-caliber
that's coiled, but the victim weapon.
"A Ted Bundy-type Is driven
doesn't realize the coli Is there or
hear the rat tie."
by a desire to totally dominate
What Is different ,about the I-75 the victtril . and the demonic
killer Is that she Is a woman, that exhilaration of power expeshe used ·a gurt and that before rienced when taking the last
she took her victims' lives, slie breath out of a person," he said.
set up ·a violent confroniatlon
Bundy's killing spree began tn
with them.
·
January 1974 In the slate of
"Behavtorly, thecasewouldbe Washington. At the start of his
considered somewhat classical serial killings, his victims; all
for a serial killer," said Hag- . female, had long, " dark hair
maier, who spent hours with Ted parted In the middle.
Bundy, ·who confessed to 28
Bundy attempting to unravel his
trail of death before Bundy was murders and was suspected In
executed· In the Florida electric three dozen, was electrocuted tn
chair -In Jan. 24, 1989. "What Is Florida for the killing of Kim·
unique Is to . have a female berly Diane Leach, 12, whose
predator like that. This_ Is the . body was found under a collapsed
first one we're aware of that's hog shecl· tn S11wannee River
· State Park. He .was also con- ·
· occurred In this manner.
"Throughout history It has · victed of the murders of two
been men who executed their Florida State l)ntverslty sorority
sisters.
.
plans, but now that women are
Investigators say the I -75 killer
taking a more aggressive role In
soctety,tt'sreflectlngtncrtmtnal
posed as a woman In distress,
behavior as well and now In
usually a motorist with car
violent murders," .he said.
trouble. Men who stopped to help
were then lured to remote areas,
Hagmaler, supervisory special
agent at the FBI's National
sometimes with the promise of
Center for the Analysts of VIolent
sex, where they were subse·

quently killed.
,
The bodies ol the serial kUler's
victims were left by the roadside,
sometimes only partially
dressed, and their cars and
personal belongings were stolen.
Pollee suspect that MallOry
was not the first person killed by
Wuornos, a drtfter"who hocked
her victims• jewelry to support
herself and her female lover of
six years. ·
"I don't think he was the first
one by the way It was done." said

• The Area's Number 1 Marketp"lace
. TO PLACE AN. AD CALL 992-2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to S P.M.

·'

lllll • 1181' A lillY 1M lilT M FREE m111

.

NONRETURNABLE B~TT
CAFFEINE FREE DIET F!
I,
CAFFEINE FREE P St,

U.S. GRADE A PERDUE

-.---·

~~ouEj11;'"HI~e:M-:,;~go!:.G~o~lli~~~Mason
••..

Diet Pe~si- or.
Cola

Pick of
the Chicken

·I
I
I
I

.

I

Gallon

2-Ltr.

'

Till • 1111' A BUY 1M lilT DIE FE ITUII

BUYO E··GET 0 E FREE SALE
BUY ONE
7. 6-0Z. PKG. FROZEN GORTON'S
cRuNcHY FisH FILLETs. cRtsPY BATTER
FISH FILLETS OR
'
.

Gorton's Crunchy
·
F•lsh s•=cks
u
. GET ONE

FREE

Fresh Step
BUY ONE
Harmel
BUY ONE
Little
GET oNE
·GET ONE
Cat
s·•zzIers .,.. ... .. .. .. 12-oz.
FREE'• Litter ........ . ~:~~-FREE!
Pkg.
SEA PAK SHRIMP
,
REYNOLD'S SURE SEAL SANDWICH BAGS
POPP~RS

&amp;-OZ. PKG • • • BUY ONE--GET ONE FREEl

Armour

BUY oNE
GET ONE

f

Hot
Dogs ................. .~-~~: FREE!

•

"IN THE DELI·PASTRY SHOPPE"

1~---1111!~~~~------~·

BUY ONE

,uroo"1:2:~1y

~~~

Kroger
Pat Pride
·
Dog
Food.......... 5-lb
Bali

BUY ONE
GET ONE

FREE'·
•

KROGER AIR
4--8-0Z. BAG--BUY

BUY ONE

'"... ·t::· FREE,

Snow's
BUY ONE
GET ONE
New England .
Clam Chowder 16-oz. FREE!
"IN THE GROCERY DEPT.'' ·MARZml SLAW
DRESSING &amp;-OZ . .. BUY ONE..GET·ONE FREEl

A.I II'
0

FROZEN

GET ONE

Rich's ·

FREE!

BUY oNE
GET ONE'

Chocolate
.
Eclairs.............. 8-oz. FREE.
FROZEN KRQGER FRENCH STYLE OR CUT GREEN •
BEANS »oz..• BUY ONE.:.GET ONE FREEl

"IN THI DAIIIY CASE" .... KROGER LITE
Dll'81e-oz. •• IUY ONI-·GET ONE FREEl

·,.•

ONE FREEl

Kroger
BUY oNE
CraCked .
. GET ONE
1
Wheat Bread .... t~~- FREE!
· KROGER APPLE JELLY
10-0Z• .• BUY ONE..GET ONE FREEl

?!:he

u ....

•

'.'

\ -..

•
I

i

.1

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
- 11 ,00 A .M . SATURDAY
. :_ 2 00 P.M . MONOAY

COPY DEADLINE MONDAY PAPER
TUESDAY PAP.ER
WEDNESDAY PAPER
THURSDAY PAPER

FRIDAY PAPER
SUNDAV PAPER

6

15

10

15

-

2 :00P.M . TUESDAY

-

2 :00PM WEDNESDAY
2 cOO P M . THURSD•"
2 ·00 P.M . FRIDAY"

14.00 '

Classified pages,tot·er the
following te{ephon'f' exchange.s...
M••on CO .. WV

Galli a Co1.1nty

Ar11 Codl.304

Area Code 614

17!-Pt. Ple1unt

992 - MiddiCIOrt

.t•I- GIIIipolls

458-Lion

Pomeroy

317- Ch•tlirt
311-Vinton

241..:..Rio Grende
2151-Guyan Oist
1·3-Artbi• Ditt

676 - Appl• Crovt
773 - M .. on

111-Chftter
143-Porta.nd

9'37 - Bufflfo '

7•2- Aulland
117- Coolville

u .oo

15

CARPENIER SERVICE

-Room Add-•
-Gutter Work

-Et.ctrlcal • Plumbing

-ConormWorl&lt;
-Roofing

-lnt- • hterlor
Pelntlng

CFREE ESTIMATES)

V. C. YOUNG II
992·6215
P01111roy, Ohio

11/14/tfn

•

fnr .ear.h d..v •• Mparate ads

Announ r.e lllt~nl s
1234&amp;-

Cifd of Then its
ln Memory
AnnouC'ements
GiV. .WI¥

..M

61 - HouHhold Gooch
12-Sporting ODOdl

53- Antiqull

HIPPY ACII
6- lolt 1nd Found
7- -V•d Salelpaid in advance)
&amp;- Public S.tile &amp; Aui::tiQn
g ..;.:. wan1«i to Buy

s•- Misc . Merehtt1di11
56-Building SuppU•
61-Pett for Slht
67 - Muticlllnsuument•
158- Frui1s &amp; Vegetabl•
59- For S111 or Trade

bnploy1111:nl

Sr!rv 1r.r!s

FMIII SI IIIPIIP.S

&amp; L1 vt:sluck

, 1 - Helo W1nted
1 2 - Situatlon Wanted
13- lnsurenee

14-Busin•s Tr1ining
tiS 16 17 18 -

School• &amp; lnstruetion
Rad io. TV &amp; CB Repe•r
Misc:ell•n.au•
Wan,ed To Do

61-Fatm IQutpment
62 - Wanted to Buy
153- Livettoc::lt
&amp;4-H•v &amp;

Transporl alum

21 - Bu ..n•• Opportunity

71 - Autotfor S•l•
72 - Tru~;:li• for S•l•

22-Monev to Loan
23 - Prot•sioall Servicts

wo ·,

Real Esta te
31 - Piom" for Sele
32- Mobile Homn for S.ele
33 '- Ftrmt for Sele
34- BusinMs Buildings

MORRIS
EQUIPMENT

. 742-2455

Sidthill Road, lutl..t
. 12·24·•1 mo.

991-5517

361 ltnt llaln

CUSJOM IUIT .
HOMES &amp; GAIAGEI
"At llaso••lt PriCes"

, ... 949·2101
,,
or Res. 949·2160
Day or Night

NO SUNDAY CAUS

•VINYL SIDING
•
•ALUMINUM SIDINO
.oBLOWN IN
INSULATION

PH. U9·2101
or ln. 949·2160
NO SUNDAY

11

Help Wanted
HELP WANTED

RETAIL SALES
PERSON

Hardwere, Lumber,
Building M..e,..le.
Muot heve ••fllllence
In theN Unet. fuH
time with beneflta.

Join 1 growing
comp1ny.

THOMAS DO-IT

CENTER

(6141446-2002
·Mr. Thomn

.

·~

r

'

..

POMEROY,O.
. ~ !?2-2~59 •
RUTlAND - lilt 5H to
Apprtclltt - 3 bedrooms,
I II bath, rancfl. Beamed
ceilings. Heat pump, C/ A,
patio, g11110, carport plus
other build1ngs situated on
approx. 6 acres.
$44,000.00.
GALUA COUNTY- 3 bedroom ranch !ype house with
lull basement, 2 car garage,
silting on 2.1 acres of
around located in the country. 6 tniles lllll SR 775.
Property needs some repair
and is offered Ita Bargain
Price of $21,000.00.

POMEROY - _C.uiB little
house that netlflf ii'lme fiaing
Up, 3 bedrooms and 2 baths,
carpel. N.GJ A heal In town

TUPPERS PlAINS - Here
is 1 nice little home wilh 2
bedrooms. I bath. hardwood floors. easy to heat..
Newly repainted and filed
up. Rudy to move into. Sitling on a nice lot 150'x456'.
$23,900.00.

Real Eatlte GenBral

....

I!!,··-·~-·-

2011 NOilTH SECOND AVE.
MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

E.M.In. .

location. $14,ClCIO.OO.

110.

EQUAL ttOI I IG
, ONJOIIT"'JW1'Y

Real Estate General

BISSELL-·
BUILDERS

992-2156

frH E1tlmetn"

Motor tlomea

Sr.rv1cr.s

41-HousetforAent

• , ..... Eaperlen ..

'

79-Cempera •

35 - lot• &amp; Ac•••u•
.
36 - Rtial Elt•t• W1nted

WANT
ADS
'WORK!

Tuneup, 011 Chllnge,
Clutch R•pelr.
FREE ElTIMATEI

1

77 ·- Auto Rep•lr
78 - Campinv Equipment

4p- ,or l•••·

PI• OthM' N.M lrandi
Chedl Out Our law
Prices an "New" .lefor
Tractors and Equipment
•
Now .. Stocld

Autometlc
Tr-miMiont, Br11k11.

.... ._.hilt

73- 'Vans • •
74 - Mo1orevt:IM
75 - Boatt &amp; Motors tor S11e
76 - A~to Paru &amp; Acc::•s.o:ri•

47-Wanted to Rent

SERVICE AND REPAIR
ON ZETOR TRACTORS

lpeolallzlng In

BISSELL .
SIDING CO•

Gt~in

66 - Seed &amp; Fertili.ttr

48-Equipment for Rent

"I\

DIN'S
11AIISMISSIOII
and ana IEPAII

P•••ro,,fll/11/1
OM.

.05/ doy

A. . . .,, tor con•cutWe runs. brokenuPd-vawill becnlftM

Business Services
YOUNG'S

.eo

t1.30/ doy

46 - Furniahed Roon11
48 - Space for Rent

Oet Rttulfe Fact
.. •

.42

113.oo

42 - Mobile Momes for Rent
43 - Farml tor Plant
44 - Aplrtment for At"' I

•

~

. 20
.30

882-NIW Hl~ttn
895 - ltnn

2•7-Lelln Foils
!l•e-A'•cine

379-W .. not

•

u .oo

lih6h1Hhil

mone,·?

KROGER GRAPE JELLY
10-0Z... BUY ONE··GET ONE FREEl

COUNTAY
OR UNSALTED
.OVEN REGULAR

Deli Style

60-C'r . • . BUY ONE--GET ONE FREEl ,
BEEF FLAVOR

Y'1ri:l 511.

•A cl•nifi.d •dVertiM~~t pieced in nte Daily Senlii)Mle• ·
GICI1 - cl.lifitd display, Busin•• Card'•nd ltgal no£ ices)
Will also appelf in the Pt. Ple•ent Reg•• .. , and the Galli·
palii.Diily Tribune. ,. .~i ngover 18 ,000 homn.

'Vour
house tha,t can tum into

•

15

Ov'r 16 Wor.ci1

Rete

15

3

counti.;. must be pre·
\

•oe.

In Memoriem

Words

1

Monthly

run 3 d., 1 1t no ch
•Pfice of ad tor all c.-pitall•t•n is double price of ad cot1.
•1 poin1 line lype on~&lt;t uMd .
•s..tinll is not '"pontible to, enort 1tte.r fint da¥ . IChedl
_.:. _ fof .,ron fir•t d., •d run• in P•P•fl . Call befo;e 2 :()0 p m
d• 1f1er pyblic.tto'l to mllke t:Drrection .
•Ads 1hlt must be P8id in adVance ar~
Card of Thanks
Happy Ads

LAYNE FURNITURE

1Z.PM 1HZ. CAlli ••• t1ll
T1IEIE ARE 1111' BUY a• IIET OM: fREE ITEMS!

D•v•

Plid.
•ReceiYe t .IO discoum tor Ids ~Nid in advance .
•fret .ell - Qivuwev and Fo1md ads und., 15 words will be

BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE
4:30 P.M. DAY BEFORE
PUBUCATION

I
I
I
I
I

ATES

B. A.M. until NOON SATURDAY

Burning Kuwaiti oil fields drive
.crude prices up ·. nearly $3 a barrel
By WALTER ANDREWS
burning had a "psychological
Home heating oil for Fellruary
Unite• Press lnterna&amp;loaal
Impact" on the market but little delivery, ·helped by freezing
The psychological Impact of effect on the fundamentals of weather that has settled over the
burning oil fields In Iraqi- supply and demand,· said Tho- Northeast, ended the day up 2.65
occupied Kuwait and the landing mas makeslee of Pegasus Econo- cents to 68. 46 cents a gallon.
of another Iraqi Scud missile In metrics Group In Hoboken, N.J.
February unleaded gasoline
Israel drove oU prices up nearly.
Since Saudi Arabia has made added 4.03 cents to 63.55 cents a
$3 a barrel.
up for the oil lost from the U.N. .. g~llon.
On the European spot market,
West Texas Intermediate, the embargo of Iraqi and Kuwaiti
American benchmark crude. for exports shortly after Iraq's tnva- where crude Itself Instead of
February delivery ended Tues- ston, Kuwaiti crude has not been future delivery contracts Is
day at $24.18 a barrel, up $2.88 a factor on world markets, bought and sold for cash, Brl·
lain's North Sea 'Brent gained
from Monday's close, on the New Blakeslee said.
York Mercantile Exchange after
The market liad been esttmat- $2.30 over Monday to $21.30 a
tng II would take six to nine barrel.
tradlng as high as $25 a barrel.
The United Arab Emirates'
Tuesday was the last day of months to get the Kuwaiti oil
trading In the February contract fields back on line from the time Dubal Light - the key crude
on the Mere, and many traders the Iraqi arniy withdraws, Bla- from the Middle East shipped
were squaring their accounts.
· keslee said.
mainly to the Far East The March-delivery contract.
WTI crude had lost $12.75 last climbed $1.85 to $17.25 a barrel.
which becomes the exchange's week- 40 percent of Its valueRefiners raised the posted
spo~·month contract Wednesday,
to $19.25 a barrel In trading prices they will pay for crude at
gained $1.56 on the dilytd $21.88 a ThUrsday and Friday. reflecting the wellhead Tuesday.'
the Initial success the U.S.·led
Marathon Oil Co., the Findlay,
l:!arrel.
,
Reports that Kuwaiti oU fields allied air raids, which appeared Ohio, unit of USX, and Houston·
were burning were "what · got to remove any Iraqi air ,threat to based Conpco Inc., a Du Pont
things going and the market oil fields In Saudi Arabia.
subsidiary, both Increased their
stayed pretty strong the rest of . Blakeslee said there Is often "a jlosted price for WTI by 75 cenis
the day," •said Tom Bentz, 50 percent retracing" after such to $20.75 a barrel, while Sun Co.,
trading director at United a sharp move, which could bring of Radnor, Pa., raised Its prlce75
Energy Inc. In New York.
the prtceofWTI back up to$25.60 cents to $20.25 a barrel.
ReportsthatcameoutTuesday a barrel.
afternoon of another Iraqi Scud
missile hitting Israel "added
another 25-50 points and made
our highs on the day.," Bentz satd.
:- ·- -Traders' squaring of accounts
also added some steam to the
upward movement of the
February-delivery contract,
Bentz said. "A better gauge on
the day would be found by looking
at the March contract," he said.
Between 50 to 60 people were
'believed Injured by the latest
Scud miSsile strike, aecordtng to
BASKET WEAVING CLASSES
Israeli army spokesman apMake your own basket by caning:
pearntng on Israel Television.
The Basket Weave 992-6855.
There was no Immediate word on
Class will be Thursday, January
any deaths.
Carrying a conventional war·
31st Hurry! Umited space.
head, tlje Scud hit two buttdlngs
In a residential area In greater
Tel Aviv, a government source
said. The,army spokesman said
MATIRESS OR BOX SPRINGS
two U.S.·made Pattlot miSsiles
•
FULL OR lWIN SIZE
! were launched to defend against
REGULAR .......................................... 178
at least one Incoming Scud
FIRM ..............,..........................:........•88
missile.
EXIRA FIRM ................ ..................... '91
Israel has not retaliated for
ORTHOPEDIC lUNG SIZE SU$.......'350 &amp; UP
QUEEN SIZE SEIS ....................... $275 &amp; UP
earlier attacks but said It reSUNK MA11RESS ........................... 148 &amp; UP
served the option to do .so. An
· . BED FRAMES
Israeli retaliation could weaken
REGULAR ...........o..... .... ... ... ... , .. .. ................ 125
the- I.J.S.-Ied all1ed alltalice by ·
QUEEN .............:........... :........................... ..'35
KING .:..........................:......... :...................'50
forcing Arab members to give up
HOURS: MON. THR\J SA!. 9-5
their efforts to oust Iraq from
Ptt ..~122
3 MIUS OU1 BULAYilL E
Kuwait.
A U.S. official In Saudi Arabia
said Iraq also torched two .
•
Kuwaiti oil tnstaliatlons, possian•
m
bly to ·hinder U.S. precision•
bombing runs against the emirate, occupied since Iraq'sAug. 2
...
.
Invasion.
Iraq had threatened to deslfoy
Kuwait's oil fields If It clame
•
under allied attack, and Tues·
day's fires seemed to back up
part of that threat.
"We have evidence that (the
ftre) was caused by the Iraqis,"
said U.S. Lt. Col. Greg Pepin said
at a briefing at Central Com·
mand In Rly!lad, Saudi A{_abla.
The burning facilities were In
the AI Watra oil field In the socalled neutral zone between
Saudi Arabia and southern Kuwait. Texaco Inc. baa 'a 50
percent lnlereat In tbe field.
"What we understand Is that
the Wafra field has been IICt on
ftre. butwedon'tknowwhetherlt
Is a well or a supply tank. We
ADfEJtTISE IT ·
•
don't lulow what Ia burning,".
said Texaco spokesman David
Dixon.
Reports
of Kuwaiti oil .fields
.

crimes In areas where they are
the most comfortable. Those are
the ones you see dropplll&amp;' bodies
within a couple of mlle~oPf each
other. And the disorganized
leave a lot of evidence behind ."
HaRIJlaler satd the persona Itties ol serial killers are usually
very slmtlar , They have
chameleon-like personalities.
Their · close friends are usually
fooled by their friendly exterior
and shocked to learn of their ·
·
murderous actlvtttes.

Marlon County Sheriff's Sgt.
Robert Douglas. Marton, Vol usia
and several other county sheriff
departments took part In the
Investigation.
UnUke a Bundy, the I-75 killer
was never very neat and tidy.
"The more sophisticated
killers will commit crimes away
from where they live. not
hundreds of miles away, but In
neighborhoods where they 're not
recognized," Hagmater said.
"The disorganized commit

Classifie

BULLETIN
- BOARD
--

•

Hlld

The Daily Sentinei-Pege-11 .

Pomeov-Midclepc)ri. Ohio

.~rutaflity no longer·exclusive hallmark of male serial killers

Homebuilders Class makes .donation
A donalion of $100 was made to
the Veterans Memorial Hospital
Women's Auxiliary for use toward
a big screen lelevision at tbe recent
meeting of the Homebuilders Class

•

OFFICE 912·2888/HOME 99~·11192
DOmE 8. TURNER,
BROKER .
.

MIDDLEPORT - Alnrswantld ala&amp; bo111- This one is
approx. 10 yrs. old and has been remodeled all over. Has 2
bedrooms down 1nd I loft bedroom up. Cethedral ceiling inliving room, new l.rae front and rnr porches. Great view of
river. MUST SEE TO SEE HOW CUTE.
$29,900
FIATWOODSLROAD- Agrowing arn. Approx. 3acres with
apulllyina buildlna sill or mobile home lite . TPC wller
millble. Electric lines across the property, Farmers Home
Approved. Almost reedy to ao. j~st needs you. 18.000.

RACINE - I\! story home
with 3 bedrooms, I II baths,
cerpet and hardwood floors.

$29,500.00.

DEXTER - Here Is your
Horne in the Country - Secfuded 3 acll! wooded home
sie and 1 n- bani style
home in areat coodition. Up to

3 bedrucrns, 2\! bitlis, lull b•
-slellll
- Clfllur
J1IUf showina.
A
$56,000.00.

LOIIG IIOTTOM - Llblnon
.Twp. - 3 bedrooms, 2 bllhs,
Ioiii eleclric ranch home. Has
rtlriaeretor, renee. built-In m~
criiWllve, thennc\:[ne win- .

IIDDLENRT -Prlcad AHorable _;A I II story home with
vinyl sidinL lnsulllion, 3 bedrooms, large living room, dining
1181. HIS some newer panetine.
$22,000.

Storqe
building. Sitin1 on lpPIOII.
1.35 ICII!. _Only 10 mutS. to ·
~wood. PRIVATE AND
QUIE11! $58,000.00.

LOIICI IOTTOI- CriiPIII Corner- Appro~. 2,acre lol wijh ·
250 teet of river lrontaae. boat doc:lc,lantastiC v1ew,and •15
yr. old ranch willt 3 bedrooms, and 1 famHyroom. _A211 Cll
11111111 wlh vinyl siding and woodburntl.
$52.000

. . Catlllty ...1 Ellllt

IUTlAIID - Depot St. - Ai11gelol with • new sectiGrtll
thet is 28x52. ReeHy beautiful wijh cllhedral ceilinp, skylilht. bay windDI!! prden bath tub, 3 bedrooms, dininaroom
end 1wo batlll. 111t llitthen'has aoraeous 01k esbineiJ.

$41.100

dow1 Bea!Ailul

AntiTIOIII ATTUTIOIII

11M..,..

o-n. ..
~clMraav;rutT
liTH CUIAID IUI.mt

,_

Jt

• I

·

I

�'
Sentinel

12-lhe

Ohio

-

LAFF-A-DAY

tmplo,mr ,. ,,

1. · · '

,

21

C' _ _ .... . _...,..,_ ... _..,..._..

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• ....,...

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......., .......... 2:00 ......

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naw

'IIIII'~

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......

9 .Wintecl to Buy
W.- To ' lur. ·" " ' * .. wlhoul . 'Col
LMry L1Yo1y. 111 I I.

'

..;:.li'If..'

Nolon !IJII!
ICoil Clolllor Jr.,

--

lfllliUIMINMM.INtlt.......X:
.I-~C..hor
Jollor lleo;l, -

lminodllla~lorl- • P.C. Ploftalonor, 1 W.S. In
~amlaaoacl

lanll:lal·_ . : R.CKinGrtftlr
lr, II.C. Dlwlll.ll.a I

==II,_,.,._,
. . . . . •!.••-. =
CtHIIPMI
Mttlc•-. II.•

,....,_- ......, - ..... 2:00 --...,.
.

-·

Wlnted to Buy

9

•111111

I

. TI4ERE.5 NO 60DV
CI4ECKIN6 IN MAfl.l !!

·-·

Nmll. . . . . . . . .
•COMMI!RCIAL
'II'E NEED USTJNGS I
II·
tlii

GROOM
ROOM
Coneplatt Grooming

AUifHCh

EMILEE MERINAR
Owner &amp; Opli'oter
614-992-6120
l'a~~lllr~~r.

- •Vinyl Siding
•Repl1cament

Wlndowa

~Gutter
~Helmet ·

. 992-5009

FREE ESTIMATES

CEDAI

.

A

CtJI/~.

CftOO/C ANP
rJANNy I
'

~--""'
.:=r.:.........

(I)

~
r

i

•

chaine and accaa·
aorlea

...
Houaes fOr Rent

WY. 304-'!"'Weel.

12

Nu,)RRIS ECMJIP~T
742-2455

lxpo-

Situation
Wlntld
Haoplill '

Aide
Ninlng.

_.....,.1
....... IIIJaut..,._
_...,.. •for -

111417-'l't2S.

·-'::.;:r1-AIIolto

acfvlnard

14

="!reel,

w auana

1'J,--

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
heroine
1 Get
39 Lugged
ready, for 40 Remain
short
41 Pig's
5 Garroway
place
ofTV
DOWN
fame
1 Sacred
9 Actress
song
Braga
2 Ap·
11 Interrupt
proached,
12 Madison
as a
Avenue
Western
workers
hero
13 On lhe lefl 3 Calch in a
nel .
side
14 CSA
4 Bakery
general
buy
1$ Like good 5 Con
spaghetti
6 lmmedi·
17 Bodyalely
builder's
7 Rectitude
pride
8 Computer
19 Mongrel
key
20 Flower
10 Compavariely
21 Zuider22 Acrobatic
24 Head·
wear
26 Flings
29 Craggy
hill
30 Cereal
proofs,_
of·
purchase,
often
32 Molher-of-

_

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APPAI&lt;EIJTl.Y 'C.!

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ftllhno. S'IOO die a11 ~ nullng 1o IVOid flWI 0011
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....
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_ Training

"ON-SITE SERVICil/REPAIIl
"CUSTOM PROGRAMMING
0 SAI.ES
•ON-SITE CUSTOM TRAINING

.."

78

l ludlwda ad .... $10.001
....... W111Ed~ 7=- un. •
3:10 p.mJ.._,OIIIO , _ C:O.,
Pcuwor. umD. " ' - ttl1.

Auto Parts &amp;
Acc11aor1ea

Rm 1111- _....., D;yoro.

Q _.... ........,._..,.lor

UPHOLSTERY

•• ,...... -·The ......

Hand Tufting

D;ye; ,.._. 114 ... -

Cultom Drepea
a Ye- Bxperlenee

55

614-tft-1111
213 ._..In•••

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Serv1ccs

·

Building
Suppllea

81

Room•
_ . . . , _ _ _ ot_IL

W. Say Whit Wa Do.

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

We Da Whit Wa 88Y

,...

Home
Improvements

..-·
·'
.·';

IWIEIIENT

W.III'ERPIIOOI'INQ

IJ;-odlhnol llfltliM .........
t• l..aalll ,.,._ I fumllhed.

11~MIO.
ltlllna
.. - - - - - ·

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Fr11 .......... Coli oolloct t•
- - . illy .. night.

11
--.....
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Col ..... 2:00 ........ -'1'11-

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.ce. Space lor Rent

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_af....,_,

- a ,!_)o;;nlrr
.......
~.:.·'11171.
............. - · Coli

Complrta Mobfll Honll_. u~ ~
.......... plumblna •
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BARNEY
OYR FELL.-ERS·
ARE GLUED TO

AN' BETTIN'
HEAIIY,
TOO!!

TH' Blli
C'llf,.tt: II

IIIDII1 ··. ,

_.....__...WY
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82

,•
Ad.
diiiVIIJ••, . .: - :'

Plumbing &amp; ·
· Heating · ·

. ASTRO-GRAPH

THE HARDY OUTSIDE WOODBURNING
HEATER WITH INSIDE THERMOSTAT

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

(PATENTED)

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

.........
•••••••

.

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YIC~'S WOOD HEATJNQ

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LOAD EVfRY i21(0UilS

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rable thing 27 Heckler's
11 Bounders
projeclile
16 Dictionary 28 "Coal
18 Thunder
Miner's
stroke
Daughte,.
21 Elan
slar ·
23 Least
29 lies
. slrict
30 -fide
24 Metallic
31 Bjorn
element
Borg, e.g.
25 Law·
33 - Susan
renee's
37 Fizzy
place
drink

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34 Gullet
35 Leah's
lather
36 "The final
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38 "My Fair
Lady"·

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0.: 11011.- EN11'11PIIIII8,

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There are some variations in the use
EAST
of suit-preference signals. The slm· WEST
+11 10743%
plelt form of suit-preference occurs +5
.Q 10 5
wben a defender leads a card that be .62
tQ&amp;
tJ09742.
e.:pecls his partner lo ruff. In such +KJ732
•
,cues, a low e.ard asks partner 1o return the lower of the two remaining
SOUTH
+QJ
sulls; a hip ca!'(l asks for the higher ·
.KVSI
suit. This can get a little sticky when
.AJI3
you don't want partner 1o return el·
+AI;!&amp;
tber eull. Here is a simple example.
Soutb arrived in four hearls after
Vulnerable: Both
openinl one no-trump. West dutifully
Dealer: South
led bia singleton spade. East won tbe
Welt
North Eliot
ace and knew that be could give part· So;;t~
I
NT
Pass
2+
Pass
ner a ruff. So be played back the highPass
••
All pass
est spade be could spare, the seven- 2 •
spot, to guide West to play a diamond
Opening lead: • 5
alter ruffin&amp; a spade. Of course East
,.•
did have somethlnc in diamonds, tbe
queen, so be fell that a diamond back ' - - - - - - - - -- - - - '
could not burt the defense.
was the correct return to prevent '
Wbat is lnteresttnc is that even if West from making a miaiake. If East :
East held two worthless diamonds, he carelessly returned a lower spade,
should still play bac~ the seven of West might not be able to detei'JIIlne _
spades. Maybe West would lose a trick the Intent and might jw;t assuine tbat
by leadln11 a diamond in that circum· declarer held A-Q-J-x of diamonds and
stance, but it might not be crucial. But only the queen of clubs. In th~t event,
aU COllis East knew he did not want West might give away tbe _contract by
West to lead a club, so tbe high spade leading into South's A·Q of clubs.

1:10 Cll Ill e OIDWIIIII Pliiiii
Trouble •"'- 11tw Ben end '
~ 1 rap group.

2 llliii'MM houu $200 por
Ron · - 1-wp+;; ' RIIIOOILED with - -.011~~
month, ~ bedroom' lipt. $115 por NEWLY
to lit FlieJJ cod; A8h, .U. hlakary,
month, ~It 1nd Nftr.nce RENT- 1
....... Mlw..d.
·~
No polo Coli 114-IIU· JOUrbilclgll.1b
.
jlluo........, 2 "'llaa"

"''::5. :-"'=1. • ....

0. C.L. COMPUTER SOW170NS, INC.

•'*~'41 HIMa Stereo.

1fti
e MOVIE: ............. on
IIIII . . , _ (R) ~2:1)())

·~··

Rente Is

.AJ7 3
+10 9 s

(2:30)

2 blilroom " _- In New Hoven,

Wlcka
We Do ·Wiek Repair

1111101• Town Milling
~ lrJitO Unl&amp;n Wortii

(l)

1:01 Ill MOVIe: DNii In e-n

41

•Ktiroaane Stovn &amp;

IIIOI1itlcllllo1. ~R} s.-.

(1:001

11117. Will-

-

r;J

Kevln'a 11rat dly 11 a ninth
grldlr ,, full of

j

1·11·11

•s •

SIWIO. Q
• Clllbifllat Ollal8aa IX
LortanM Crook inllrvlewa
. DOilUiir country mualc stars
Including Rebl McEntire•

Tloltd AYWIUI, Golllpalll, 0H

•Any length • -

~-==,~

OMuldM, . . W-

Ing t o - hiinl? 9ond IIIIJOW
ondlo lox CLA Gil, c/'0
C1o11111 llo Dolly Trtbuno, . 121

YARDMAN &amp;
ECHO DEALER

llllellt

~t-:r~=r;J
TIN WGIIIIIII y..,.

'Tf'lEr t'IA l&gt; 'Til
lfA~t:/'1 EVlltY

......., Enorgot!o CIIIOntlil IMm m.nbti ; DENTAL ASSISTANT to loin our
_..,. po;t- ElipoM;-

12·24·90-1 1110.

Of Ml441tpttf

/

A8dlal gin

~ llllt 1101 n1

...........

o

· My11111M A myattrlous
. cra1h Ia l'llmOYid and dlnled

"'214. - --

EOE.

GUARANTEED I
FREE ESTIMATES

992-1772

CAIN'S

poLfc;! t:.AAC.!t:EP. A ,lfiiiL/G&lt;iLtl/6
K'fWi U/11'46 Nllft,IIMAII&gt;,I A$

.
. Ill
to
P.O.
lox 720, lllpiO)o, 'NV :11271

SWthill ..... ll!lland

11/.14/1111

THf ~l'f'lfH

•

............._aown.zm

12-lt-'•1

742-2251
131 BIVIn Place
Mldcleport, Ohio

--

aond~rt••

.f!J•!!!I•Pill
.

eeraullll
7:11()) llnlard InC! 8on
e:Oo w• 01 UniQIYad

potonulll.

time .....;.-;.
cllw thrv 'lllurliiQ, 11:00 ... 7:00
111111. ,_ !ftCin .............., or lo

NEVEl (LEAN YOUI
GUTTEISAGAIN

CONSJncnoN
992·66•1 or

992-5335 01' 'ti3•UO

•Roofing

.

&gt;

NORTH

+ K 98 6

By Juaee J1coby

(J]). ,.,..., Company

Mhoon.

110 JOB TOO SMALL

•I nau latlon
JAIIrSDISII

~

:='W:::.nll:"'e:"aZ:.

Banks
Construction

lEN'S' APPliANCE
. SIIYICE . .

.

-

11) 8115 -

o.ro
CGurtQ

7:101H

=:&amp;~·~
•

MICIOWAYE •·
OYENIEPAII

INSULAnON

Moner (2:30}

7:01 (I) . . ,

lxolllnllncamo!Euy -~...,

•Remodlllng end
Home Repelra
•Roofing
•Siding
··Painting

ALL MAIJS
lrlnt It In Or Wi
_ Pick Up.

eon

Dllllta.

992·~-~iC)Q?

Ohia

J&amp;L

PC

· -.-

Ell. 1011182.

BANKS
CONSTIUCnON

HOUIIIM.OT.. FARMI

·THE

-

TYPIIT8,

the chuckle quoted
in the missing words
you deYelop from liep No 3 _
below.

BRIDGE

D MCMt: Par Love or

lox 13.

HOllE

c~~plete
by fllling

t-n .
SCU.M LRS ANMII
.· Orient - Depth - Haven - Cygnet - EYE OPENER .
One divorced fellow to another at wedd1ng recep11on,
"Love is blind,_.but marriage is the EYE OPENER. "

s
II lull.....
• MonaiiL•

rm. ~~·~to:
' P.o. --.wv21110.

TROUILE SHOOTING
c.rtlfw
....ld_
fraa llthat•

~
•
L.-..1-~-..._...__.___.

LLt.p"o
c
1 -==~

;::::::;:::::;:;~=:~:;:::::::::jtF==:;~::;:~==;l~M 10 ~~ ~
USED APPUAJICU
COMPLETE
=.,~~ ~nc~"'::
90
wA'IIam
ElECTRICAl SERVICE ~':"...... ~
205 N. S.tntl Strllt
I.DIII'OU, OliO 4576
Office 614·H2-2116 ·
llomt 614-HJ-5692

I I I I

I, I'· I I I 0

ctla-a-1=8

Business Services

ca-cill
REWIRING
AND

Ca •••a

~MMC,._g

7-~~~=:

~~~-- ....... '-"

~IIWIII710,114-21f.

. ........ and

I

1:11 (I) Anclr ....

FEDERAL LAW ENFOACEIIENT

.w.-

~II

HYPUJ

~~;·o

.•. - . Mlllrlnae- full lo: oli I • 1157, Gll111t11y ...... 11111r r-... aa ~

1102
.
to ....,_ ....... '11

' ~ Allllotl end

- ~~

I
r.

Our young neighbor had .
watched my son try to drive a
~
s: o stick shill car. He came to me
and· asked. "Does that car
,...~-----:. ---,~drive or does it ·--·---?"
S L0 F S I
·
·

DOurltouH
1;05 (I) llevel1r IIR IIIII
~w• 01 NIC ......, ~

.

111, .,. ""
oriel In -Miori. A - Gollpc;llo, 011411a

-

G llllldtl h"'1GATaur
eWallciTOCIIr

llllw

Coli I

llllnd.

1

~rnpit

tile
b.
-do.

~-1-r-1Tr,_r~s1......;11

~~L.....

UNFAIR! TELL
14ER, MA'A.M ~
TELL 14Eit. ~

form four

I_ I I I

- ~~.:..~o
...... Ont Iii

31 Hom" tor Sale

1o

_ NELGHT

1:00(1). Ill Ill • • 0 .
Olllwi
-

AI

JOBS.

.. 1 - . EMr WCii'IL
.~~·-111111•
PtoduCte M ' Home.
14 - . . . t.etHI4·1fl5
~==~::;:~::::=1:::::::::::;::::~
~~
18
Public Sa'~Eiqpoiiiil~..iii-···fFi-~Cjil·i_;-.;.,..;;r,,

... ., ................. _
.......... DIADUNI: -

-

.....

low

I!WNING

C,~ C, ':'.:0 :'1:

lor

Roarrango lottoro af
0 lour
ocramblod wordo

M WED.. JAN. 23 M

~ II II.IOtil

I·ZJ

v...

ALL Ylid . . . . . . . . . - I n

lH~Afllli:l'! Tl)'l1.!".

-

- -· U8 CUll- DEA,
.... ........ Coli (1) IIU- Eat. K-10111.

loi ......_ . .... R1a11. lllelWft Au111on

YantSale

7

-

INTEl I , . . . .

--- ...... -••FOil

-llol~-

11!fi11r -

~~~

.GIYMny

==

I &lt;;W~?,~.R., 'f?O GCW:4j'T

lraaa;111• ...

lllvw..........

•

..... lleo;l, IOM7Sod71.

4

· Television
Viewing

TOY!&gt;

- 1w.
... ..... .....,
- ........
lidlo,-·
....
1IK.
to-.
t. .,r,_,_,
• ••. ····.. Ohio
or lhundor22 MorleV to Loin
AWIII ·1 AI I _..,
I..ClMI IY MAIL
.....,.,___
Up lo ....... In ~ ........ w.

In' llw Home.

II •

llr-~·~·;~~~=~~~~r~-~. ·~.~~~~:·~=-~:·

cr.r

3

23, 1991

-----··
qu1Nd.1-- • •
Al-llor .....t • 1111111- ~ IIOUTI: l'w ....
~ Ill' I fill 111M Ill f NOh. IINnl. ........... tM hJ

Iiiii

1

lly Llny Wrialtt

EXPf"SIVE

LOCAL IICIUTI. AI - ·

W

AWIII
• A I = Col
up.Coll(.,_
NO.- . , . .....

~T

...-.
......, ...... tiiOIBIIHt
GOLD Cllllllf CARD. -

0pportut:~~Y

"i':.,"':;

LIF[

QT 'N'CARLYLE~

BualnNI

Help Wlnlld

&amp;::' L..n:"7;

Jt'tr

lHI,_

.

Seek out groups or afllll•tlonl In the
'feM ahead _ . you can make connections !Nil COUld help utlblllh 1 net·
work COi1CiuChle to ytNt . Tllil can
be ellactlvel1 dOtW along u you lry.
AQUASIIUJ (.S. 10 Ptb. 1t)· A low
caulllc
might bl 111 that h
Ilk• to mlk&amp; rour liOoiMhOid oombal·
rllldy toe1ey You're not tiN , . , orw
who wtll haW the inetorlcal napone
locked and loaQacl. Trying 10 patch up a
brOken romenc:e? TIN AotrcMJraph

,em.ru

.

. ,.

-

,.

. _... ....

Matchmakor can netp you understand
whal to do 10 make thl . relallonlhlp
work. Mall $2.to Matchmaker, c/o thll
·newtPaper, P.O. Box 91428, Clevaland,

-

'

with your hlgheal llandardltoday, because you wlll"be closely obNIIIM bY
otherS. Even. tile smallest of lnlr'lclton1
will tie noted.'
OH 44101·3428.
"
VIRGO (AU(I. IJ-Iepl. 22) Guard
PIICEI (Filii. 20-li8n:h 211) Be ••- agllnst lncllnallona today to dilllale
tremely tacilul and diplomatic today II emotional Issues wtth peroon1 who,llke
you have to deal wtlh a person whou youriii!ll, have no poMr lo ch;;nge
feollngs are eaally hurt. This Individual lhem.
could be even more eenllllve , lhan LIIRA (hpl. IS-Oat. :D) Thent .,.,ndk:atlons you might catch It from Ill
Il
ARIEl (llwch 21-Aprll1t) Conllnue to iiklea today, .ilihough not nee 111-·r
~
think every m0'181hrough very carefully lrom som81hlng you'll dO. It may be 1
In your financial lnvolvernlnta today. retUII of eornelhlng done by aorrNOIW
Conditions could be a bit more complex with whom you ara ciOIIIy ldlnt~. .
lhan they' appear.
.
ICOflliiO (0111. It Naw. II) Don I pYI
TAURUS (Aprii»Mey 10) Peoplo who · yourlell In a polltlon thai allowl ~h­
are u..Wiy aupportlve of your endeav· • to ililke dlciiiOna for rou 1ft ,.....,_
ora may not be n IIley -your lnlen· MnCe tod8\'. Whal's good lor lhlllilcll· your belt
tlonl utoo seH-centered. Oon'llol the vtdull ml(lhl not ME ovli Whelm thl WE.
lnt-11.
Ql_. (illy 21...... 10) There are In- IAGITTAIIIUI (l!iiOW· :D.O. 11) TM
dlcaiiOns thot you may haVII a propenll- clemonda you make o1 yourMif today
1y for cn;allng unnecaaary problema' could be rather hllvy; Mlocl.._ .,.
lor yourself today. Don'hlmyourgunat -•nk,aly to' follow lUll end dO 10 u Mil.
your own big toe.
Know Your llmiiJIIOna, ltpldllly wtwn
CANCeR (.luna 11-.luiJ 22) Specula· to aay, "Nol"
·
llw, lar-out ventu,.. might, capture CAPRICORN (Deo. • • 11) Rllky
your lnterala today; thlre ila polllblll· . ventu,.., parllcularly thOM of a flnln·ty you and ·a li'llnd might be drawn Into clal nature; might lOOk ~ IllS nlng
1 actwrne - · bolh could come out lo rou lhen UIUIII today. lui, tl!t lUI'
~oaera.
who a- away IOmlthlng for nothing
LIO (.July :a-Aug. 22) 1t'1 Imperative lan'lapt to vt111 your nelghboriiOOCI.
thai you do everything In llccordance

--

•

1123

Here'• bow to work. It:
.DAILY CRYI,'TOQU&lt;ri'Es.
AXYDLBAAXR"
~a LONGFELLOW

t-

One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
for the three L's X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,

apostrophes, the iength and fonnation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.
CRYPTOQlJOTE

l·IS
I X 8 G 8

UR

BE 8

I X 8

IXGJQVX

t..av'•

I J

Z J 8 R

I X C I

- v.W .

c

IXB

·'

GJCZ
I X 8

'•

VGJD

XBCGI

v

F J I·

J

UFIBTTBPI

PX8RIBGIJF

·

Y. .
C.,.tG~W_.., A M.EMORANDUM IS
WRITIEN NOT TO INFORM THE READER BUT TO
PROTECT THE WRITER. - DEAN ACUESO.N
~·

'

·'·'~

.,.,•

....
..•••.
•

·:••

..

�KRAFT

N. C. State
upsets Duke
five, 95-89

HANDI·sNACKS

STORE HOURS

Ohio Lottery

2 CRACKERS PER PIG.

·,

·1o·51

Monday tlH:.u Sunday
8 AM-10 PM

Page 3

COCA-COLA
PRODUCTS

Vo1.41. No.192

Ll

MACARONI
or SPAGHETTI

La ··

LB. BOX

•••••••••••• •

HORMEL

By BRIAN J, REED

Sentinel News Staff

The Meigs County Commissioners approved a grant for lhe
Meigs County Local Emergency
Planning Commission at their
regular meeting on Wednesday.
The grant, totalling $23,574.87,
will enable the program's administrator, Roben Byer, to begin
the administration, development
arid implemenlation of the new
civil defense and emergency planning program.
.
The grant was broken down into
tfte following categori.es: $9,475,
personnel; $500, supplies; $5,550,
equipment; $1,200, contrlll:t services: $2,500, training; $733,
communication; ..$300, printing;
$1:!hr.'stage; $250, mileage; fire
de
ent
subsidy
training,
$2,500.
The commissio!lers also ap-

Ham Patties ••••~.~z. $J39

$ .39
Steak or Roast •. :~ .·1
COUNTRY STYLE PORK
·
$ 39
..

S-pare Ribs •.•••• ~ •••'! . 1

$

COLBY LONGHORN

Cheese ••• ~ •.•••••••.• ~~•• 189

ASSORTED
VARIETIES

APPLES

Kopec,
Luc:u ud
JobDSOD. Middle;
' at Salem Center Elementary
.
troops
Braclley Ritterback, Robe·r t Johnson, Bridget
· iD the Middle East over Christmas with
Vaughan and Brlau Bass. Back, Thomas Maine,
homemade Christmas cards and canned IIOO(Is,
Franklin Pierce, Becky SCott ud Leanne Davis.
; Pictured, 1-r, are, rront, David Lucas, StePbanle · ·· ·

3 LB. BAG

·

Second Young trial begins;
~lleged victimr-·-..-~~~JI,s ev~~ts

$129
.

9
Hot Dogs •••••••••••••• 6 (
SUPERIOR'S

.

12 OZ. PKG.

•

•

U.S.D.A. CHOICE BEEF ·

r· . ta

Round · Steak ••••••••

$2

STOKELY

39

By BRIAN J, REED
Sentinel News Stan

Mary Berry in Mason County,
W.Va. several yeaJS ago. ·
Young's first lrial in lhe court,
A second jury ttii1 is 'underway wlrich lOOk place in pecember, enbefore Meigs County C0111mon ded in a "hung jury", and an at•
Pleas Court Judge Fred W. Crow III tempt on Thesday to reach a plea
in the case of John Lewis Young, bargain agreement feU through
wbo is accused of kidnapping and when Young refused to plead guilty
,f~is teenaged niece in August to the charge.
The Victim. medical staff from
Young was indicted last fall by Veterans Memorial Hospital and
the Meigs County Grand Jury, law enforcement personnel from
·charged wilh kidnapping, an ag- both Meigs County an~ from West
gravated first degree felony. That Virginia lOOk to lhe wtmess stand
indictment also carried with it lhe on behalf of Meigs County
Specificatioq that Young had been · Prosecuting Attorney Steven L,
previously convicted of a felony .· Story on Wednesday morning, and
that felony being the murder of state's Iestimony was expected tD

TOMATO
JUICE
46 OZ. CAN

Cauliflower ••••••~~~.~ 99&lt;
FLAVORITE

PLASTIC
$1
4
9
2°/o Milk ••••••••••••
•••
GALlON.

· JUMBO

Parkay Spread ••• $129
3LB.

.. . .

DEL MONTE SQUEEZE BOTTLE
·~
28 oz.

•

KEMP'S PAIL

QU~RT PAIL$2 99
Ice Cream ••••••••••••

..
Catsu'p ••••••••••••••••••

12 PAK .12 OZ. CANS

Lotsa Pop ..........~.

$

:

1

79

···:couPON

LT. RED .
KIDNEY BEANS
JOAN Of ARC

1 ~Soz.3

j$)

FRISKIIS'

CAT FOOD

•

~A~z.

0... Only At '-all's Super Valu
0... JilL J6 tin Jan. 26, 1991
....., J ,., Cult•-

4/$)
Atr.wll'sS.,.Valu
,.,. Jill, 26, 1.. 1

(

S

B'ANQUET

ZESTA
CRACKERS

Settlement reached between
Pillsbury-Jeno's, workers
A settlement has been reached
In the labor disputE' between
members of Local 1059 of tl)e
United Food and Commercial
Workers Union and till' managE'·
ment · of Plllsbury.JI'no's in
Wellston.
.
The agreement produced a
new three-year contract grarit·
lng across-the·board pay increases for the 1,100 members
covered by the pact. The set lle·
ment aver.ts a threatened wal-·
kout · t,hat would have affected
.some 2,000 workers and contrac·
tors at lhe plan I.
The new contract givE's
workl'rs an lncrpasl' of $.30 an
hour over each of the next three
years.
· Roger VIncent, sltedlr~ct'or for
Plllsbury.Jeno's, Issued a state·

LB. BOX

99(
WHOLE

CHICKENS

I

69(18.

'DOMINO SUGAR
SLI.

lAG

Sl69

GeM Dilly At Pew••• Super Valu
0... Jan. 20 thru- 26, 1.. 1
llslllt I Plr CUlt-

HOT CO'COA ·MIX

COLUMBUS

• IO .ENV.

99(.

Gee41 o.1, At Pew••• Suptr Valu
Gee4l .len. 20 thnl ...... 26, 19il
Limit 1 Plr Cultefl\«

,I

-

Bob

Evans

Farms Inc., announced today plans

to rebuild its Gallipolis sausage
P.lanl. located on Texas Road, after
11 WBs deslroyeij by fire on Dec. 14,

1990.
The new facility will be a food·

processing plant, concentrating on
cooked products.
Since the lire, the plant's 32

LIVERS
5 LB. BUCKn

ment last Friday that calll'd thl'
pact "a good contract" for the
workers, the plant and for the
community.
.
"It was the right movl' at the
right tlml'," Vlncl'nt's statl'ment
said.
.·
Union ratification of&lt;the nl'w
contract came after all.day votIng on Friday . The w9rkl'rs had
ear ller voted to approve a
walkout after their old cont~act
expired on Tuesday, Jan. 15. · ·
.· Ratification was announced
after a n!'arly 2-1 voie In favor of ·
the company's offer. Work had
continued at the plant while
negotiations were under way,
and no production delays. were
encountered, according to com·
party officials.

provea a request nom the Emer- Health Week next week (beginning
gency Medical Services depanment January 28). Norma T~s, Nursto attend conferences and conven- ing Dtrector of the Metgs County
tionsfor 1991.
· . ·Health Department was on~ for
. In ·other action, the commis- the signing of the proclamation.
sioners granted pennission tD
The week, an annual event. has
Meigs County Sheriff James M. been established to promote health
Souls by to purchase.used cars from and awareness of lhe efforts of the
the Ohi.o Slate Highway Palrol Post local health dcpanmenL .
.
for use as sheriff's cruisers.
Meigs Cou!!ty Engmeer Phil
A sheriff's car, according tD lhe Robe~ and Highway Garage Su:
commissioners,
was
recently perintendcnt Ted ,warne~ were !&gt;n
deslroyed in an accident, and will hand 'lit yesterday ~ meeung tD disneed to be replaced.
cuss local road proJeCts.
. .
The commissioners will allow
Roberts reported that guardrail IS
Soulsby to use lhe office's $9 450 being inslalled across the county,
car allocation to pwchase lhe :.SOO having been installed to da~ on
cars
Commissioner
David County Road 25 (Pomeroy Pilce),
Koblentz reported that those used . County Road 28 (Bashan Road),
cars usually are purchased wit!~ Hiland. Road ll!'d Success Road.
85 000 to 100 000 miles on the The nul, according tD Warner, was
odOmeter, and c&amp;n often be used for purchased second hand. .
another 50 000 miles by the local
Also present at the meeung were
department
• .
Commissioners Richard Jones and
The commissioners signed a Manrung Roush.
proclamation declaring Public

Saudi fighter shoots
down two Iraqi je~s
~

:---..._.~ t'-~~ "-•

•

_.,.. ...,

,,.,

By United Press lnietnallonal
The Persian Gulf war entered
continue on Thursday.
Its second week Thursday with
That testimony was often emo- combat spreading to Ute air over
tional when. the Victim took · lhe the g\llf as a Saudi lighter pilot
stand yesterday and recounted her shot down two Iraqi planes
story. - that of Young allegedly !lPparentiy out to attack aiUed
transporting her from her ~d­ ships.
dlepon home and across state lines
While Baghdad Radio reported
iiiiO Mason County, where she was · a defiant Iraqi leader Saddam
repeatedly raped before being Hussein had Inspected his troops
Ietumed home the following day.
on thl' Kuwaiti war frontWednes·
Perhaps the most significant tes· day, allied participation In the
timony yesterday came from war effort Increased. Japanese
Trooper Howanl Brent Myers of Prime Minister Toshlkl Kaifu
the West Virginia Slate Police. announced plans to contribute an
Myers, who is slalioned at the State additional $9 billion to the U.S.Police's crime lab in South Charles- . led multinational "fol'Ce, an!(
ton, testified that Young co~l~ ~ French flghtl'r-bombers con·
the rapist, but that the VICtim s ducted their first raids Into Iraq.
boyfriend could not. That revelaIraq said Thursday aiUed
tion followed blood testing of the bombers and rockets struck
defendant .and the victim's Baghdad and other cities and
boyfriend, and comparing those ports around the country In 15
tests with the semen that was IJill(le overnight aerial assaults, and
a part of the rape kit submitted tD said aiUed jet fighters slammed
the slate police.
rockets Into two Iraq loll tankers.
Young was indicted last year on
Iraq also quoted a warcommu15 counJS relating to lhe case in nlque as saying 90 Iraqi troops
Masori County, and remains housed died during the first five days o(
in the Meigs County jail pending a the war. The allied forces have
verdict here. He was found indigent released no figures of Iraq!
at lhe commencement of lhe case, casualties. ·
and is represented by Meigs . The air battle started when two
County Public Defencler Charles H. Iraqi aircraft were detected by
Knight.
radar flying south from Iraq Into

...;,:

I

'

the gulf. T.hey were intercepted
by two Saudi fighters already In
the sky and ..A Saudi military
official said one of the two Saudi
F-15 pilots shot down boUt Iraqi
·planes, which were armed with
ship-killing Exocet missiles.
Initial reports Indicated U.s:
pilots WE're Involved In the
mission and British Secretary of .
Defense Tom King at first
Prroneously told reportersAmer·
lean planes intercepted the MIG23s. U.S. Central Command In
Riyadh said the confusion , re:
suited because both U.S. and
Saudi pianl's werl' operating In
the same area .. but tonflrined
that the Saudis did the shooting. ,
In Washington, President
Bush, who planned a morning
meeting with Republican congresslonalleaders, said aiUed air
power has dealt Iraq severe
punishment In a week of bombing
runs.
"There can be no doubt:
Operation Desert Storm Is work·
lng," Bush said Ina speech to the
Reserve Officers Association In
Washington Wednesday" night.
"There can be no pause now that
Saddam has forced the world Into
war. We will stay the course and
we will succeed all' the way. "
In Israel, Deputy' Secretary of

'

,

'"'1

'

State Lawrence Eagleburger
met Prime minister Yltzhak
Shamir Thursday for the fourth
time In five days In the U.S. effort
to keep Israel out of the war.
"Talks are being·held In a Vl'ry
friendly spirit with total trust on
both sidE's," said Avl Painer,
Shamlr's media adviser.
Iraq launched Scud missile
attacks on Saudi Arabia and
Israel Wednesday but U.S. Patrlot missiles Intercepted all the
incoming·Scuds, the U.S. Central
Command said · In Dhahran,
Saudi Arabia.
1sral'l has been hit by ·three
volleys of missile fire by Iraq, the
last successful at lack coming
Tuesday, leaving three people
dead and% Injured In Tel Aviv .
The Patriots were moved In to
protect Israel after the first two
attacks, and missed a Scud In the
Tuesday assault.
The United States has asked
for 1srapll restraint to protl'ct the
fragile U.S.·Arab coalition as.
sembled against Saddam and
keep Israel out of the war so as to
prevent an Arab-Israeli conflict.
In Cairo, Egyptian President
Hosnl Mubarak said Thu,rsday
IsraeL has the right 'to defend
Continued on page 10

..

.

Bob Evans Fanus to rebuild
sausage plant in Gallipolis

TV Dinne·rs .... ~:~!:!·.~ 9 9( CHICKEN
SWISS MISS

•

25 Cents

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Grant approved for
emergency planners

FLAVORITE ELBOW

Chicken Parts •••••••
.,. · DruRrKuEvmst· ··c· ks . ·
4·· 9(

1 Section. 1 0 Pages

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday; January 24. 1991

Copytighted 1881

12 OZ. CANS
12 PAK CTN.

MIXED FRYER

Mostly clear tonight. Low In
mid teens. Increasing cloudl·
ness Friday. High In mid 20s.

••

PIGS. FOR

298 SECOND ST.
POMERDY.
OH.
.
.
PRICES EFFECTIVE JAN. 20 THRU JAN. 26, 1991

BOSTON BUn PORK

Pick-3: 162
Pick-4: 54.77
Cards: Q-H;
IO.C;. 8.0; 7-S
Super Lotto
2-5-22-35-36-47
Kicker
. 4.84294

"

At that time, employees will be called back to work, based on
seniority.
. The Gallipolis plant produced·
smojccd sausage · products .and
Brown n' Serve products. Smce
December, 1990 the Galva, DI.,
plant added a !ICCOild shift lA) fulfill
orders for Brown n' Serve products,
· while lhe company's FL Worth,
Texas plant increased productim of
smoked sausaae.
. .
Bob EvBilll Farms owns sa

employees have been tempot .. ily
re-assigned to Galva, ru., BidweU
and Xenia, Ohio! prodoction plants
and to clean up and salvage at the ~e prod~~ plants, excl~­
site of the fire. TheY will continue ,ing the Gallipoli.l plant, and disw be employed until January 31. At !ribut.ea fresh port IIIUJIII&amp;Il.~ofts
that time 20 employeea will be laid m. 23 states and the DiBtrict
off until' the new f~K:ility is built, Columbia. Bob BvBilll Fanns &amp;!sci
which is expectcd·to be COIISirUCted owns and operateS 248 fuU,semce
approximaldy one year from now. family rest,aunmts.
·

•

.......
•

·-·. ..

~,

...
JOHN STAHL ELEVATOR - Tbe elevator at the Meigs
Cotmty Court1t0111e, lutaDed iD 1989, wla dedkated on Wednesday ·
as t1te Jolin Stahl Elmttor, In ltooor or tbe late JobD Stahl, a longtime coartbouse CUitOdlatL Here, MamtlnJ .Roush, CommlssiOa

Praldent, pretenla a plaque to haaJ at the eleVIItor entnnce to ·
Stalll'sllllter, Clara Gilkey, as elected oftiCials ud tamUy members
look on.

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