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Page-12-The Daily Sentinel

~

Ohio

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Vol.41 . No.202

Baker: IRA apparently staged mortar attack
. LONDON (ili&gt;I)- In a failed wall, pOlice said.
·
.
.
De.spite stepped-u_P. security very deep," Scotland Yard
attempt to kill Prime Minister John
"This ~kless aaack appe!Ul! to since the swt of the gull crisis, the spokesman Stewan Goodwin said.
Ma~r 11nd his ~ar cabinet, su~t- be the work of the provisional IRA, terrorists were able 10 la~h three
Three people, including two
· ' ed Irish Republican Anny terronsts " Home Secretary Kenneth Baker mortar rounds from a wh1te Ford police officers on the diplomatic
· r~ three .mOI'ta! rounds Th~y told _the House of Com~ons. ~e van on Whitehall ~I. about 200 security squad, were hospitalized
at h1s official restdence at Downmg wd 11 was an attempt to kill MaJor yards froni 10 Dowrung Slreet, the for slight wounds Goodwin said.
, Street, a government official said.
and cabinet members-meetin~ with prime miniscer's home ami office, The officers rec~ived cuts and
. At least three people were · him at Downmg Street to discuss pOlice said.
bruises while a passerby suffered a
. slightly wounded in the daring day- the Persian Gulf war.
One round landed about 4S feet twisted llllk1e, he said.
· light aaaclc in central London that
There was no immediate claim behind No. 10 in a l!llfden 11nd two
The white v11n exploded after
· poli~ said had all the hallmarks.of of responsibility from the IRA but others struck the Foreign Office the mortars were fued but it was
· an IRA strike. Three mortar rounds , Baker said there was no apparent lawn, one of which detonated.
not known if anyone was inside.
. were fired, one of which exploded link between the attack and '·. ·" There was scorching to the Goodwin said the van had been left
: in a garden behind Downing·Street, . Britain's in:volveme.nt in the gulf rear wall of No: 10 and a bit of a next to a stall!e of Lord Mountbat'·
crater ... some ·feet across and not ten, who was killed l&gt;y an IRA
: shattering windows and scorching a · conflict

a

: ~OLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) He said he hopes for as few as ilame and pic~ when new chief
. Ohio colleges and universities need poss.ible 11nd that pay increases executive enters office.
· to tighten their belts and plan to dli already negotiated with public
"I view such operations as
a more efficient job, Gov. George employee unions will be honQred. wasteful lind unwarr11nted, espe·
Voinovich said Wednesday, adding I:towever, the governor indicated . cially considering the ·severe bud·
that some state · layoffs are· his 11dmionstration will bargain getary siiuation Ohio faces," the
inevitable.
toughly with the unions in the governor silid.
Former Gov . Richard Celeste 'future.
.
Voinovich said the state has
and the Legislature cut $271 mil- · • :'It's our job to get the very best more than 300,000 maps qn-hand
lion frorn the slate budget late lasi ·deal that we Clln for the people," with the fonner governor's picture
year and Voinovich slashed another · he said. .
·
on .them.
$127 million in January from the · · In · another money-saving
He is also urging the -state's
$12 billion annual budget. _:chan~e. Voinov ich ordered slate
Congressional delegation to work
Voin.ovich has told higl)er educa' agencies and departments to conmore closely together and delay ·
tion officials they will have to work '-tinue usin$ literature an_d other implementation of new Medicaid
with a 5 percent to 15 percent .cut • _published mformation they dis·
mandates for at least two years.
tribute with Celest~'s pictures on
Voinovich pushed that idea at a
.in the next budget.
"The issue is how can they do ' thein. State government has tradi·
conference of the nation's govermore with the money they have," tionally thrown out literature connors in Washington earlier this
the governor said at an afternoon - :;ta::;m:,:i:.:;ng~th:e;.:p::.;r.;;ev.:.;i;;:.o.;;us:..::,go:.v..;e_rn..;o_r'_s__w_eek~.--:--~-:':'...."':':'"7:'"
press conference. while adding he
.
_
.
saw no reason for tuition increases. ~ l:lmted. :steelworkers uruon memAbout a dozen c•taUons were isHis campaign goal of decreasing •·-.hers left jobless at RaV!l!l§Woodl trafsuedfi-c_thrisothmeoriTIVI_ ingau·~ •.Jr!IS8l~g
Ohio's tuiuon to the natioDal averAluminum Corp. slowed pant
"'"' '"'
age ·may have to be delayed, he
traffic today for the fourth u~e lh1s
. "It's not a violation of the law to
Sillf!•·Ohio tuitions ·are about one- . week to protest a contract dispute, drive by that pja,nt It's a publiC"
third higher than the national aver- . authorities said.
roadway. If you've got a replace·
age.
• About 75 cars were slowl1 driv- ment worker or a tractor trader
Asked if proposed departmental
ing in a circle on a state road l~d: going toward the plant, you have a
cuts will lead to the loss of jobs,
mg to tl_le plant today, .choking lead vehicle slow down to 1 or 2
Voinovich said, "Of course there , traffic. sa1d Sgt. OJ. Manin of the mllh," Martin said.
are going 10 be layoffs.''
· ~s~tat;;.e;.:po~h-ce_d_e_ta_c_hm_e_n_t.,.m_R_•;..pl..;ey;_.- - - - - - - - - - - - : - -

0

COFFEE

~. $489

PIE FILLING

. By MELINDA POWERS
Just days before the anticipated
arrival of the revised district plan,
citizens and members of the six
county Solid Waste District are still
uying 10 iron out communication
problems with the community.
At Tuesday evening's Athens.
Gallia, Hocking, Jackson, Meigs,
Vinton District Policy Committee
meetin~ in Jackson, members of
lhe audience including four MACE
representatives, called for an
increased dissemination of information about the plan.
"The policy board is just not
getting the message across," s;Ud
Bobbie Holzer. member of MACE.
"Members of the community just
don'i lmow what's going on.v

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Accident damage( cqr
The Meigs County Sheriffs Dej)arunent investigated an auto
aq:ident at Five Points on Wednes&lt;laj'·evening.
According 10 a deplllll1lent news :release, Rhett A. Milhoan, Flatwoods 8oad, was backing at the esrablispment when he backed into
a 1990 Buick owned by William L: Wi!l of Pomeroy that was'
parked behind him.
,
.
No damage was sustained by Milhoan 's truck, and light damage
was reported to Will's car.
;_, ,'
•

"But suggestions and amendments·
to the plan from the public must be
considered by the policy committee.''
Audience members were
encouraged to stay in contact with
their respective newspapers.
In other business, the committee
voted to implement an advisory
council for the director's use. One
representative appointed by the
County Commissioners from each
county wiU meet with Wilson each

week.

Meetings with the dit~tor wi!l
begin as soon as the disUJCt plan IS
ratified.

Desert Storm
messages
sought ·

The Daily Sentinel is requesting
families of all Meigs County service men and women who are currently serving in ~ration Desert
S10nn, to either mall or bring into
the office a photograph of the service person for future publication. .
In additon to the photograph,
.. ...'
The Daily Sentinel requests infor'
mation including the person's full
name, nickname, address and par- .
The Meigs County Senior Citizens Dance Club will hold a round
ents' names. Those bringing in
and square dance on Friday at the .centc~ from 8 p.m. to II p._m. .
Music will be provided by Happy Hollow Boys of Athens. Bnng '
photographs should also include a
telephone
number in the event of
snacks for the snack table.
; •
questi(lns from the staff preparing
the supplement All photos must be
submitted by Thursday, Feb. 14, to
be included.
.
The pictures dd information
Howard Shawn Smith, Parkers· · for I988· t~ be approximately will be used· in a special supple·burg, former area resident, was $82,500 w11h a tax owing of ment 10 pay tribute to those serving
sentenced to three years imprison: approximately $26,700 from his in the Middle East. A copy of the
ment for one coWlt of failure to file marijuana sales.
supplement will th~n be. mailed
his 1988 federal tax return and one · :· Smith's three year sentence is 10 free of charge to each service m11n
count of distributing marijuana ' . run concurrently with .a state sen- or woman whose photo appears in
A b1U of lhformauon was filed , . ~nee-of two years which he is curtile supplement It will be published
on Smithm August, 1990, charging, rently serving on other charges . in February.
him with two counts. In November, -Upon completion of his imprison· The address to which photos or
he appeared before Federal Judge ment,.Smith was sentenced to an · infarmation should be mailed or
Charles H. Haden, II and pled . a~diJional three years supervised
brought is The Daily Sentinel, 111
guilty 10 both counts. An investiga~ .. probation and ordered 10 pay a $75
Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio, 457.69.
tion by IRS special agents deter- · criminal assessment
Information can not be tak:en over
minP.tl Smith'c; nnrP.TY\+tl"t1 in,.nmp ,
•L - • · ' · -\.. - - ..

.

CHASE &amp; SANBORN

COFFEE

bombin -1979.
·
.
"H was driven to the junction
and abandoned,'' . the S~otland
Yard spokesman smd, adding tllat
~Y ~onds elapsed between the
t1me 11 stopped and the mortars
~ere ~ire~. He said police were
mvesugaung reports two people
were seen running away moments
before the attacks began.
Smoke from the burning van
bUlowcd up and mixed with snow
falling in Britain's worst winter
storm in four years. The .entire
Whitehall area, the government

off~ce district, was sealed off and
Jll&gt;lice ,searched for other unexplod-

ed dev1ces._
.
. ")t the Ume of the attack, MaJOr
was meeting w~th the foreign ll;Rd
defense secretaries 11nd other sen•or
official~ ~ his War Cabinet to discuss Bnush effons to secure rm11ncia! contributions for its role in the
war agamst Iraq.
. After the blast, Major said, "I
think we'd better start 'again some. where else," according to a Downing Street spokeswoman.

Phone system approved by
Meigs County Co_mmissioners
By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Staff
Spending for a new phooe system in the Meigs County Probate
Coun was approved at Wednesday
afternoon's regular meeting of the
Meigs County Commissioners.
The purchase of the new system
for the court was approved yester·
day, following a cost-saving proposal presented to the board by.
Judge Roben Buck. Currently, the

court is paying $83.58 per month
. for phone rental. The court yester·
day granted Buck permission to
purchase five phones at a cost of. \
$109.95 each, eliminating the
monthly rent payments, and in tum
paying for the purchase in saved ·
rent in a matter of a few months.
-Meigs County Engineer Phil
Robens discussed existing wejght
limits and speed limits in the Horse
Cave area, where heavy timbering .
··now underway. Both Roberts and

the commissioners expressed concern with potential damage to
county-owned and maintained
roads due to the increased trafrlC on
those roads.
·
Commissioners also discussed
the status of Rocksprings Cemet,ery
Road; which has aaparently been
renamed since the road reverted to
the control of Salisbury Township.
The commissioners explained that
if the name of the road was
(Continued on Page 12)

Support ·.

Sunday
. scltedtile
The schedule of activities for
"Suppon Silitday: Operation Feed
besen Stonn" at the Locomotion
Dance Hall on Mechanic Street in
Pomeroy has been announced.
The event, which will be held
from noon to 6 p.m. on Sunday,
will feature a variety of entertainment which is free to the public.
However, according to Iva Sission,
organizer for the event, donations
will be accepted. All donations
given at the event will be used to
send food to personnel serving in
the. Gulf War with ' Operation
Desert Storm.
Support Sunday Schedule
NOOII· Power Ex!J'eSS. '
12:15 p.m. - The Rainbow.Cloggers.
12:30 p.m. - Virgil McClain and
the Mills Brothers. .
1 p.m. - Rap Dancers, •
1:15 P..m. - Dance routines from
Quickel s Dance Srudio. _
1:30 p.m. -Silver Wings.
2 p.m . • J11n 11nd Kathy, a gospel
group.
2:30p.m. - The Midnight Cloggers.
3 p.m. - To be announced.
3:30p.m. - Gabriel's Quartet
4 p.m. - Rarely Herd, a bluegrass group.
.
4:30p.m. -The Gallia Twirlers.
5 p.m. - The Madrigals of Gallia
Academy, a choral group.
S:30 p.m. - To be announced.
In addition to all of the entertainment, radio station 102 from
(Continued on Page 12)

lfi!Dnl:t_!r firemen were
· lale ,Tuetday nlgllt to
u electrle pole which
tarred. The firemen llllisted
~.c~·ew of-power company
jiiroble•. (Pidure lly Den-

.

Dance scheduled

90Z.$.2 99
JAI

.

Smith to.serve..three years

MT. DEW, PEPSI FREE

'

DlfT OR REG.

PEPSI COLA
•"" .

- . ·The policy committee admitted
'tO· having communication problems, pointing out lack of media
cov~rage. However. internal com'rtmnication was also lacking. One
· 'member of the policy committee
. had yet 10 receive a copy of the district plan - a document that had
sent to the Ohio Environmental ~otection Agency late last year.
· Lance Wilson, newly appomted
director of the district, told. the
-audience that pubhc heanngs
would be scheduled as soon as
reVisions on ·the plan were received
.. fium tl\e EPA. .
"We really have no idea what
revisti&gt;ns will be required or neces~ -from the EPA,"_Wilson said.

Local briefs------___,

:9. 9&lt;
INSTANT

01

Waste policy comtnittee, public lack
cQmmun}cation, MACE member says

(

~9

20-21
OZ.CANs7

2 Soctiona. 1 2 Pea•• 25 Canto
A Multimedia fne. New.eper

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Thursday, February 7, 1991

Copyrighted 1 f91

·Colleges face _tightened budgets

lUCKY LEAF

-l -

•

••

· FOODLAND

Cleari.ng tonight. Low in
• mid 20s. Friday, sunny.

99&lt;

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school biiS sent ll boxes ol food to tile troops as
well 115 reading material and numerous ltt.ten.
Pictured, 1-r, are Alliloll WUIIIIII, Laura Arlx,
Andrew Vanee, Kenton WUU11115011, Joeb Wandling, Devin Curfman, Brian Young and Jt~~t·
. DIUoo. I .
·'

PAINT A YELLOW RIBBON • The slllth
grade students of Debbie Lowery at HarrisoDvlUe Elementary painted yeUow ribbons on
all ollbt scllool windows lo show support or lhe
troops serving in Operation Desert Storm. The
1

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Thursday,

Febn.t.,Y 7, 1991

The Daily Sentinei:_Page- 3

Pomerov-Mkld' !!pOi'l. Ohio

In possible-title- deciding game,

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS·MASON AREA
A~

~ ............_.,_""T", ,...,...,., d to=o

I.
CHAR~NE

ROBERT L. WINGETT

Publisher

HOEFLICH

·· · Geoeral Manager
PAT WHITEHEAD

Aaelotant Publleher/ Controller
'
A MEMBER ol The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
A~l atlon and the American Newspaper Publishers Assoclallon.

.

. LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
words long. All letters are subJ.~o edltlnJt·and must be signed with
'name, address and telephone number. N&lt;r unslgned letters wUI be published. Letters should beln go&amp;l'\'"ufe, acfdr eoshfk;ISsues, not persona II·
ties.
H r.t&gt;lll
' iilt)f.JI H, II''
.

Southern to face exam tim~ against Symmes Valley Friday

Page- 2- The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio .
Thursday, Febru~ 7. 1991

Customs

hedg~s

on accuations_J_ac_k

WASHINGTON • There are here," one former Customs agent
weak spots in the Texas· Mexico told our associate Dean Boyd. '"!be
border big enough ~ smuJgle large other agencies don't.even trust us."
quantities of drugs lllrough. But die
Credibility is not a strong suit
U.S. Customs Service doesn't want for CUSIOIIIS offices In Texas .these
to hear about the hOIC$, especially days. Iii two prior columns we have
from whistleblowers who say those .reponed.on allegations of corrupholes are kept open by COii'upt Cus- tion among Customs workers.
, toms officials.
One Customs employee wrote to
Customs has been hearing those the Trea:rurY Department Irtspector
· complaints privately from its own General m September. The
employees and from other law employee described how Customs
enforcement agencies for months. internal affairs people reacted when
But the frustrated whistleblowers t~ey were informed of alleged
say they are harassed and the close relationships between Cus·
alleged culpriiS are tipped off.
toms workers and known drug
"No one trusts anyone down

smugglers: "I had the evidence on
the table right under their noses,
They apparently knew ·already and
I assume that either they d,idn't care
or just were not intending to do
anything about it."
'
T·he employee continued: "Is
this really a situation whete no one
Cares or are there 100 many people
who have worked their way up (in
Custollls management and·internal
affairs positions) and are in CC?llu·
sion to sabotage any investigation?"
Even an assistant U.S. attorney
in Texas has complained. In a

Exam time for Southern is com·
ing Friday ni1h1, ·when Howie
Caldwell's Tornadoes will hoSt
Terry Saunden' Symmes Valley
uad in a conlell that will decide
the Tornadoes will win the
SVAC championship that night or
drop back into a fll'St·place tie with
Hannan Trace.
Caldwell's troops know that
even though they beat the Vikings
by 18 points at Aid in December,
these Vikings aren't the same
Vikings the Racine crew played
two months ..o. Scarlet-and-gray
fever is runnmg rampant in the
northern half. of Lawreace COWity,
' and the fans from Waterloo and
Arabia to Wilgus, Aid and Willow
Wood believe that if Valley light·
ning can strike the lop of the
SVAC mountain once, it can happen again.
And why ,not? With paint god
Carl Robinson ruling inside and
forwards Chad Renfroe and Andy
Lester taking charge outside, no
wonder Symmes has gone S-2 in
· the second half of the season after
going 6-4 in the first half.
·
Robinson, a 6·3, 230-pound
senior cenll:r who is averaging 16.5
jloints per contest and has sccnd in
double figures in his last nine
games, will get one llmt chance to
redeem himself against Tornado
postman Jemny Rose after tile for·
mer' s showing in r.beir last

nde_r~_n

~

A
·
_

March 1990 memo. he describe4
his meeting with one Customs
internal affairs investigalln who
knew about die al~gations of corruption. "... be looked 'tired and
upset It was my personal opinion
that he was getting no support from
Internal Affairs, and was being
coerced into fQCgOing the investigation."
A
regional . Customs
spokeswoman. Donna Dela Torre,
10ld us that the agency encourages
its employees to report allegations
of in1Cfl181 corruption to the offiCe
of internal affairs, But, whca told
about retaliation suffend by those
who do, she offered no alternatives.
Customs has shifted some management people in· Texas
the
allegations have ~gll'lto mount ·
Oran Neck, the chief of Cus- ·
10ms investigations in Brownsville,
· Texas, was reassigned last Marth.
Originally he WlL'l 10 be demoted to
a smaller office in Oldahoma City,
but Customs said the action was
routine , not disciplinary. Then
Neck called Rep. Solomon Oniz,
D· Texas, who pulled slriniJS for
Neck in the name of consutuent
services. Ned
reassigned to bC
the Texas chief of ·Operation
Alliance, a multi-agency drug
interdiction task force on the border.
' ' ,
'
.
Neck's supervisor, Neil Lagem
. an, the former s~ial agent in
~barge of a regional Custixns office
in San Antonio, was investigated
for allegations that he. urged other
employees to falsify expense
vouchers to pay for a Customs staff
~. He was transferred to a nelJII
job as CuSIOIIls liaison to miliwy
anti-drug units along the border.
CuSIOIIls also said that transfer was
routine.
·One Texas agent !Old us, "When
the allegations involve management, internal affairs only pays lip
service to investigations. It's an ol'
boy network gone cock-eyed."
S
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Letters to the . edifor·'~·-'
~

:L

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,)(i

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·PIDN'T YOU

..::;

~RNTHAT

Patriotism·is not dead

..tfie,FRee

• ,. ·:.;._t

Dear Editor:
clear to me that patriotism Is not
Last Saturday I wentto Racine dead. It was really very heart·
to take part In the march for our warming. I firmly agree w1 th the
Troops as we have a son. Sean, In soldier who spoke on TV . "they
Saudi · Arabia . I was over· are fighting for freedom for the
w~elmed, as I entered the town,
whole world." May God Bless all
t~;~ see the hundrE!(js of ribbons, · the soldiers and their famUles
yellow and red, white &amp;·blue, and and God Bless America.
all the flags and signs. There was
Mrs. Don· Mullen
a very nice program In the high
· 583 S. Second
school after tile march. It was
Middleport, OH

~HIW.I)

LAST YeAR,

was

DeAR? .

It's time for electric cars

Nuclear policy has

pol~t~cal

fallout

and JOIIC.IIId be hiiiCcnd in clou- Vlklna fans, •• they 'need a Lewis, who burned the nets for a home vs. Hannan Trace) aU year.
Tackett, North Gallia '1 6- I
which the Tomacloea won 66-48, blc fiprel in 1111 d tbom.
Syaullel VaUey YiciOiy tD Jet r.:k game·higb 23 points against SouthRose, a 6-1, 215-pOUnd senior,
But Baer's 1101 die wbolo IIOry Into 1 fint"place tic after those western last Friday, showed. B111 senior playrnalrer who is avenging ·
ICOI1Id 12 ........ and 1lld u - y in the Laton' c118p, •• .Rose is 11111e Vlldags pulled out a 67-64 which Benji Lewis will show up? 2.5.7 points per game, should more
rebounds;";hiie Robinson had averqing 10.9 )IOiMa per pme and v~ In ovenime at Aid againlt Will it be the one who seored 66 deeply anchor his claim to being
·. \
'nts in three games aplnst South the SVAC's secretary of offense
more rcbounda (10) thall poinu is malatlinlna bls UMI CXJIIIIOI o1 lheW"«k:Mt
Four of Trace.s ltarters - Craig ~bster, McDermott Northwest against a Southwestern squad that
(three).
the board&amp;. fhougb seaior ·p ant
Renfroe, a 6-3 senior who aver- Todd GrindJtaff hal alternated Rankia (14.1 pts./same), Todd and Southwestern in Decembet (the has d10pped its last six contests by
ages 13.6 points per outin1, is Val- between double figures and lliagle Boothe (12 pts./pme), Jason Black Oaks beat Nonhwest ~d South- an average of 17 .S points per game.
In addition to Tackett and his
ley's outside lbreat, but that pan of digits offensively in the second (11.8 pts./game) and Richie Cornell weStern), or will it be the one who
his game hasn't seen much action half, be is avcraging about 10.9 (11 .1 pts./game) - have scored at scored eight points in three games fast-break attack, senior guard
until the SCCOIKl half of lbe IICUOil points .per game. Junior forward least 200 points this season, and (none against Jackson). in late Brian Stout (17 . 7 pts./JJame),
began. In the Vikings' first 10 Roy Lee Bailey (10.1 pts./Jame) , Rat!kin·needs 46 points to reaCh ~ December and early January? God . whose team-high 21 potnts in
games, Renfroe shot eight three- • has connected for doublo ligula in . 300-point mark. Such balance, only knows.
North's 92-90 victory ove~ Trimble · ·
As has been seen in the Eagles' Tuesday night made him onlY the :
· pointers, but since then be ·has his 18st five games llld contributed which cvea frolit•rwming Southern
drilled 13. And tbel'e's junior for- sigaificantlt;!!J!'' Tornadoes' doesn't have among its top four last two games, the Meigs crew third eager in the SV AC to score ·
wafd An!ly Lester, whose 12.4 yrort on the
dJrou&amp;bout the scorers, may be the one thing that isn't exactly lacking in fmpower, .300 points this season &lt;Tat!tett and
points-per-game averqe hillel die seuon, eapoc;ially in the second . will make the Wildcats' trip as the shooting of junior point Baer are the others), provides the
fact that he is Cllllblo oliCOring in half. Senior fuwllll Mir• I Kin- through tourneyland a little longer . ~d Tim Bissell (17.4 ~./game zone·busti~g outside attack •. as
the 20s (he hid 21 in Valley's 75- caid (10.1 pu.Jpme). who 1111 u · than ihe three-game stint they had tn 17 games), who like •Potter ~ shown by h!s conference-leadmg ,
should cross the 300-point mark: 45 three·polnters. But by far the
71 overtiine victory over &amp;stem many J&amp;mea ID which be hu last year.
.
sometime In the first quan.er.Junior biggest surprise of late has been the
two weeks qo) u well u the fact score4 m double lipm (nine) u
Eaten n. Oak HW
guard
Jeff Durst, who sat out the · offense provided by seniOr forward
that at. times he can be practically Bailey, is a hidden duelt, hec:ause
After postjng a 7-3 record in the
invisible in the scarlet and .gray' s he is jUit ulibly to IICift 14 10 18 first half of the season, Larry North Gallia game in service p~ ~ }eff Ratliff•. a 5 ~ 11 senior, who
offense.'
,
points u he is·libly to a:ore two to Bunger's Eastern squad has taken a one-game suspension but reiUiaed , W8lcd 29 pomiS. m the Bucs fiiSI
The Tomaddes and the Vikings six. ·
nosedive in the second .half, losing 10 action Tuesday night 1Q .~il;li .;J.().,Jillmes, but m the las~ seve~
the nylon for a game.-hig)l 2.8 .. Jl~.~ has racked up 81 pomts pn·
have one thing in common: they
H•aaaa Trace n. Kypr Cmt
live of their last seven games.
pointS
against Federal Hocking, manly on the sttenglh of four dou•
can scOIC inside or ouiSide. But one
Friday night will probably see
Just to show bow beartacbe time
thing Racine has in its favor, Hannan Trace fans tuning their has gone for the Eagles recently, averqes 17.4 points~- ~ aftl!r- ble·fi~ efforts. . .
.
Ch~is Metz11er\ the H1gh · ,;
besides the home-court advantage, . radios to WMPO. which thould be. they would .have only won· one · 16 11ames. Aitd. let s not forgeJ ~.
is point guard~ Baer. The S-9 . at !he Charles W. Hayman G~­ more game (remember that 7S-71 semor center Randy Mooref ,WMJU-Ianders 6·.2 semor forward, has
senior has i
20.5 points per sium in Raciae for the ~mes overtime loss to Symmes Valley will put his 14.9 points-per·pbtt aferaged 1~.9 points per;game !0 '
game and hasn't scored fewer than Valloy-Southern game, w
they twO weeks ago) had they,scoml 80 average on the hne agaiost 6':6.. ntad the Highlanders, thiS year s
10 points since he scored nine in sit back and WIICb their Wilckats oolnts (as they did in their 3S·)ioint sophomore Chris SiDJppon, 9(~1!'~ ~- in the conference ba;seme111.
Ex-Pirate RIChard Haney. his front·
the TOIIIIOdes' 79-47 victory over take care or business aaainst a loss to Federal Hocking Tuesday averages 14 points per contest.
- Kyger Creek in the first round of Kyaer Creek squad that hu loet its niKht) or even 84 (as they did in
North Gallla n. Southwestel')l · court partner, averages 13 points
list year's Meigs sectional. Since last seven contests.
Professor Chris Tackett has per game, while sophomore point
Jut Friday's 30-pointloss to North
that game, 20 games have come
The Wildcats will be staunch Gallia) in any contest before last been On the lecture circuit all sea- guard Aaron McCarty, who is aver-.
son, and his ~tion, "How to aging 10.4 points per game, will ·.
Friday's Joss to the Pirates.
Anyway, what's next for the Score 20 Pomts Per Game," has need to continue turning his game •
l!jlgles is a night to Oak Hill to been interrupted only three times up a-few notches if the High- ·
race Doug Hale's Oaks, who have (19 on the road vs. Unioto, 14 at landers are to continue cutting ·,
done a little bit belt« (4-4 overall) home vs. Chesapeake and 15 at down their loss maJgin and eventu· .
ally pick up their fust conference .·
in the second half of the season
win of the season. which isn't like- :
after a 3·7 showing in the flfSt half.
ly
to C()!De Frid:!y night.
Junior forward Bill Pott«, who
.'
·
(OvtraU)
averqes 16.6 points per game and
PF PA
is twO points away from becoming TEAM -"···-·W L
one of the next pl_ayers in the S0uthem ............ l3 4 1254 1047
The Daily Sentinel
SVAC to CIOIS the 300-point barri- Hannan Trace •...l3 S 1303 1051
!USPSUII-Ht)
er this season: Look for him to get Symmes Valley .II 6 lOSS 1035
A
Dlvllloa
of Multimedia, l•e.
what he's looking for in the first Eastern ................9 8 11821289
Nonb Gallia ........8 9 1423 1396
twa minalel of die first quarter.
Publl.lbed every afternoon, Monday &gt;
through Friday. 111 Court St., Po· .
. But to be truthful, he's looking Oak Hill ..............7 11 11841275
Ohio, by the Ohio Valley Pub- '10 do more than set milestones ·for
Kyget Creelt ........2 15 10141266 ., meroy,
llsblni Company IMulllmt'dla. Inc.. :
himself, u he will motivate the rest Southwestem...... J 14 851 1081
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Ph. 992-2156. ~-. 'cond class postage paid at Pomeroy;
of the Oats tq stan ,thinki';'S, about
Ohio.
getting ready for the Div1s1on III
(Conrereac:e)
.
MembE-r: United Presl International, ~­
secti()jla) ~ament at Ohio Uni- Southem ............ ll 1 92S 1U
Inland Dally Pren Auoclatton and tbP
versity, wtiich according to the Hannan Trace ...JO 2 · 930 674
Ohio Newspape·r Association. National •·
grapevine wiH feature North Gallia Symmes Valley •..8 4 732 720
Advertising-Representative, Branham ~ •
Newspaper Salet, '133 Thtrd Avenue, ., 1
NonbGallia ..... ...7 . 5 1018 899
llrid Trim"'e, among Others.
New York, New York 10017.
'
The Hill'l fortunes don ' t rest Eastern ................6 6 857 916
.,
completely on Potter's shoulders, Oak Hill .............. 5 7 762 850
I'Qin'MASTER: Send a&lt;ldreu oh._ ,
to The Dally Sentinel . Ill Court St..
as sophomore point 1tiard Benji Kyger Cree.k ....... .l 11 700 908
Pomeroy. Ohio 45769.
Southwestem .......O 12 639 870

encounler at Aid. In thlt IIIIICIIup,

SVAC standings

law saying tf gas Is· sold In one
Part of Ohio' lor one price then It
will have to sell lor that price all
across Ohlotor that price. This in
my book Is unfair pricing In the
State of Ohio and the people of
Ohio should swamp our elected
officials to that fact today. So my
WQrd to the big oil company Is bye
bye and come on with the electric.
car. Detroit America Is waiting
,
.
and the time Is now because we
can no longer trust our Big on
compan~s here In America, the
land of the free and honest.
Yours truly, .
JOHNSTON ISLAND (NEA) . capability to quickly resume almO- . periphery.
.
Floyd H. Cleland
The United States was widely spheric nucle81' tests "should they
The· SafeguaJd C budget was and environmental programs in the
Box 144·F
assumed to have forever renounced be deemed essential to our national about $10 million annually until Marshall Islands had been inexpliMiddleport. Ohio 45760
the atmospheric testing of nuclear security or should the treaty or any President·Ronald Reagan entered cably shifted from thedepanment's
weapons when it, the Soviet Union of its terms be abrogated by the the White House in 1981 and sue· Office of Environment, Safety and
and Britain endorsed a JandmaJk • Soviet Union."
cessfullv uressed for a massive mil- Health' to its Defense· Programs
trealy disavowing the practice more
DOE headqUlll'lers in. Washing· itary buildup. Spending on the con- operation.
than a quarter of a century ago.
ton, .D.C.• has delegated manage- tingency program .soared 111 $17
A detailed response to Anjean's
Dear Editor:
of definitions and p.urpose. The
Indeed, the most impoi'tant pro- ment responsibility for the Safe- million m 1982 and pealced at $29 complaint was written by Ray,
The grim realities of war have solution to · the International vision of Pania1 Nuclear Test Ban guard C program to the depart· million in 1985. Funding reported- summarily transfonned into offiCial
begun to weigh heavy on the problem does not lie in the Treaty of 1963 • this country's first ment's Nevada Operations Office ly has subsequently been reduced government policy and dissemihatminds of Americans. A war Is not · regulation or curtailment of arms control agreement with the in Las Vegas, Nev .• then to its to the earlier level of $10 million ed to 'political I~ and joumaia football game. And even the weapons nor yet the restraints of Soviets and the only one signed by Pacific Area Support Office in yearly.
ists in the Marshall Islands by the
most resounding victory in the men ... It lies in the establishment President John F. Kennedy • for- Honolulu.
The Jotmston Island operation U.S. Em~y there.
Middle East wUI echo with the of rational goals toward which bade the three Dations to ever again
The operation on Johnston probably woullfhave continued
"I do not make or write policy
tragedy of the human lives lost.
societies can collectively and engage in the diseredited practice Island is so secret that passen11ers · unnoticed if a membcl" of the legis- for DOE or any other government
The famous German strate- Individually work; and It lies In of conducting atmospheric nuclear on the five Continental Airhnes 1ature in the Marshall Islands, Sen. agency," Ray insisted after a probe
gist, Karl Von Clausewltz, said an Intersoctal competition of tests.
nights that stop her briefly each Jeton Anjean, had not complained of his activities was launched by
"War can never be separated gains so great that ·npne become
~the ensuring decades, howev· week are ~t allowed to leave the last year that continuing' DOE Glenn, "nor have I done so on any
from political Intercourse."
dispensable to any other: ·
er, lhe departments of Defense and planes dunng the layovers unless efforts to deal wilh the flealth and occasion since my retirement five
But It Is lncreaslilgly clear to
We must remember that the Energy have spent millions of dol· they possess DOD or DOE clear· safety problems caused by radioac- years ago."
Americans that bullets, bombs ordinary people of Iraq are not Iars annually to maintain a secret ances.
..
tivity deposited during the l!bnoBut that denial was refuted ~ a
and missiles are an expensive our enemy. They ·were the ones · launching focility here on Johnston
About two mlles long, Johnston spheric weapons tests had been DOE spokesman. "His ties with
last resort to enforce what is Just first terrortzfid by Hussein's Island in the }&gt;acific Ocean. The Island is shaped like.an. ailcraft car- improperly incoiporated into the DOE aJen't completely severed,"
and rlght. ·
ruthless regime.
isolated US. aioll is located about . rier with the 9,60().foot·long run· Safeguard C program.
·
said public affairs officer Chris
Widely acclaimed author L.
Sincerely, 800miles southwest'ofHonolulu.
way traversing almost its entire
A subsequent investigation con- West. "He's been intimately
Ron Hubbard writes In his
Unda McCarthy
The purpose of that "Safeguard length. Housing units, offices, mis· dueled by Sen. John H. Glenn Jr., involved even after he relillld. He
bestseller Dlanetics, "Insanity
5165 Fountain Ave. 406• C" program, which remains in sile launch pads and other focilities D-Ohio, confirmed that in 1982, seems to have kept a han"d in it
does not exist wlthou t a contusion
Los Angeles. CA 90027 place today, is to maintain the are situated along the runway' s responsibility ror lhe DOE medical after aU these years."

Dear Editor:
Boy as we·have seen the price
of a barrel of oU come falling like
a rock we don't see are gas pump
pr)ces dropping that fast. So 1
along with many Americans say .
the time has come tor the electric
car and'to push our Congress and
Senate to pass laws to make big
on compan~s prove that gaso·
line prices should be this high.
Myself, I feel that local suppliers
ari&gt; ripping us off be~ause In
outer parts of Ohio prices are
tw.enty cents cheaper. But this
has always been this way her In
southern Ohio. All the more
reason lor our state senators and
. Representatives to pas_s a state

1

··

Robert Walters

Pirates sign
LaValliere ·

War is not a football game

More answers sought
•
Dear Editor:
VIllage guarantee that the
The VIllage of Rutland Is
monthly cost will not exceed this
preparing to spend hundred of figure? What about subsequent
tbQusands of dollars on a new
years as the malnteance cost
increases?
waste water system. Most of us
reCeived an Information handout
5. Does the plants locations
which failed to answer some of comply .With the Federal Flood
our questions. As homeowners of Insurance . program ~htch re.
the area to·be served I'd like to · quires public facilities to be
ask questions.
•
1oc tea outside the flood plain?
1. Is there no alternative to t~ :;. 6 Since. many homeowners
Installation of a grinder system? 1. ll{tii!Jitly have good systems. Is
2. Why was a grinder system ' tti~ village being fair when they
selected when Chesapeake,. Ohio ask homeowners to give up a
Installed a similar system with perpetual easement and their
such poor results that It was a right to be paid damages caused
subject of a news story 01} . bY. th'e' Installation of a system
channel 3.
• tliaf they neither want or need.
· S. The handoul states that th~ ' ~: Slnte the village has Its own
s~tem ·requires more malnte•
legal counsel, can we depend on
alice then a gravity system wtll. our elected officials to protect the
This results lri higher and higher right of the homeowners who live
and higher bills · for the ho· outside the corporation?
Roy Johnson
meowners as this system ages.
4. How was this monthly ·
35174 Leading Creek
Rutland, OH
estimate arrived at? Can the

PITTSBURGH (UPI) - The
Pittsb11rgb 'Pirl!tes Wednesday
sipod CIICher Mike LaValliere to
· a one-yw contract; avoiding Salary

arbitration. .

I

I

I

''

• j

'

Financial terms or the contract
weren't announced. LaValliere wu
uklng· for $1.14 million and the
Pifllel were offerint,.SJ,?J ,000.
LaValliem, 30,
.258 last
seam wilb tine home nms and 31
RBI while ~latooning with rightFIRST PLACE CHAMPIONS • The Tup·
Saaclen ud A,be Racb. Bact, Ni:~rloek,
handed hitting catcher Don
pen Plaias Flftb.ud Sixth Grade "Blue Devils"
Jeremy Kelll, Steve Dunt, Lamar IIGIGJt 81111
Slaught. LaValllere has a five·year
captured nrst place ill tbe Eastera Athletic
Coacll Gary Dunt. Steve Dunt was awarded r.be
career batting average of .U7 with
Boosters Fifth and Sixth Grade Basketball Tour·
trophy for most points scored Ia the fifth aad
11 homers and 173 RBI.
nament held this past weekend. Members or the
sixth grade division whUe Adam Sanden eaned
The Pirates also signed right. winninli team are, 1-r, f'ront, Joey Weeks, rAdJ!m
tbe trophy for the bt$1 f'ree throw percentage.
handed pi~her Roger Mason and
placed him on dieir 40-man rost«.
Mason, 32, was 3-S with a 2.10
eamed-nm average 111d three .saves
in 29 games laSt season with Buffa- .
lo of the Class AAA American
Auociation •.
1be PiJIIes also named Douglas
Burcman u ICIIior vice president
"Things are gradually falling . Murdock limped throqgb the for businus operations.
By PAUL WALSH
iniO place for me," said Mourning, game •s final minutes with a sore
UPI Sports Writer
Bmanu, -43, has been director
LANDOVER, Md. (UPI) - It who missed nine games this season hip, but said he would practice of the Slloomaker Center, a 13,0(10took 20 games, bu\ the Hoya wjth a strained left arch. Thursday.
seat arena and recreaclion facility
Marques Bragg added 15 points on the campus of the University of
, "Twin Towers" finally came "Mutombo is helping me a lot and
for the Friars, who are 0-9 vs . Cincinnati, since November 1987.
toBether _IO place Georgetown. with· the team support is a big plus.''
Hoya
freshman
guard
Joey
GeorgetOwn
at the Capital Centre.
in a wh1sker of fust place m the
He was buainess manager of the
Brown sccnd t7 points and .sank 7 · . Afll:r breezil)g throuJh the first Cincinnati Reds from October 1982
' BigEast
.
Seven·foot-2
Dikembe of 8 free throws in the closing min- half, Mu10mbo scored SIX points in to Decembcl" 1986.
Mutombo scored 20 points and utes to protect the Georgetown a ' 10·2 surge that swelled the
Hoylll!' lead to 58·34 with 16:08 to Sabo signs contract
blocked eight shots and 6-foot-10 lead.
All-America candidate !;!ric go.
• teammale Alonzo Mourning added
Providence sresscd the
1S points and six blocks Wednes· Mwdoct topped the Friars with 25
CINCINNATI (UPI) -World
day night, pacing No. 19 George· points, buf his 7-point first half inbounds pass an narrowed its
Series
aw Cbri1 Sabo avoided
doomed
Providence.
Murdock
shot
def'ICit to 60- 47 with 12:30 to go
10wn to a 79-65 conference victory
lllbiaadoli
Wednesday and silned a
just
3
of
n
from
the
floor
in
the
on Murdock's basket and free
over Providence.
contract
with the' Cincinopening
20
minures.
.
throw, but tile Friars could not
The Hoyas, with the nation's
nati
Reds.
.
.
'
The
senior
guard
cracked
the
maintain the rally.
best field·goal percentage defense
Sabo,
who
hit
.563
in
the
Reds'
!,()()().point
mart
in
Big
East
scorThe Hoyas led for all but nine
thanks to the inside dominance of.
World
Series
sweep
over
Oaldand
Mutombo and Mourning, held the ing, moving into sixth place on the ·seconds early in the fust half en
route to a 44·27 lead at intermis- and belted two homers in '-arne
Friars to 32. 1 percent shooting conference list with 1,015.
three, had sought $1.395 million
"Once you get past one, you sion.
from the freld. .
.
while
tbe Reds had offered
The win moved Georgetown, have to deal with the next," Mur·
$11SO,OOO.
Terms of Wednesday's
Nielsen Media l_tesearch showed In
14·6 overall and 6·3 in the Big dock said of Mutoinbo and Mourn·
compromise
were iiot diaclosed. .·
East to within a half-game of fll'St· ing. "They're so big, they make February 1990 that female teens a;cd
.
T1uee
Reds
remain ~ible far
plac~ Syracuse. Providence fell to you change your shot.. I think I'd 12·17 watch an averaae.of elx houn,
utritration
BJI!IJ
Larkin, Billy
13-8 overall and 4-6 in the confer· have an easy layup, but then lhere 27 minute• of television eacb week
Hatcher
and
Joee
Rijo.
between 8 and 11 p.m.
was a big ann to block the shot."
ence.
..
'

Meigs to host TVC wrestling ~eet
ROCKSPRINGS - Meigs HiBh
School will host the Tri-Valley
Conference wrestling tourna~ent
this Saturday at Larry R. ~lll?n
Gymnasium. Wrestling will hegm
at 10:00 a.m. ·
.
.
TVC learns taking part will ~
· Belpre. Nelsonville·York, Vinton
County, Federal Hocklrig, and the
host Meigs team.
Senior Aaron Sheets will lead
the Marauders into the 10U1'118111e111,
the heavyweight has a record rL 160 with 13 pins. Also havlq out·
.~- , ona for lbe Marladters
8111 seruors-Burt Kennedy llld Brie
Heck. ~ 1111 compilod I JeCQid
of 15 and 0 with with IO ,P.ins,
while Kennedy is 17 and 2 wtth 13
,.

PomeroJ

~.~rseniorO~ffC~ar

will be taking part in bii first
match.
Mei&amp;s will have a full team with ,
all 13 weight classes being filled.
Other wrestlerS for the Marailders
will be juniors David Swanson, Joe
McElroy, and Frank. Blake. Sophomaes hittina the mat will be Chris
Swanson, Richard StewaJt, and
Mike Cremeans and freshman Jake
Kennedy.
.
Admisalon for all five iounds is
$3.00 for adu1u and $2.00 for stu·
dents. P1aenty of seats are still
avlilablo and .efreahments will be
available by the Meigs Athletic

Boosters.

992-2i24

Reun:
U am to Mid. Sun ..Thurs.
11 am to 1 am Fri. 6 Sat.

WillOW
ItA VI
liT PISI.

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Mall Suboerlpllooa
loolde Motp Couol}

Friday's adloa
Symmes Valley at Southern
Kyger Creek at Hannan Trace
Nonh Gallia at Southwestern
Eastern at Oak Hill
Saturday's game
Kyger Creek. at Ironton St. Joe

13 wee~ts· .................................. 119.:U
26 Weeks ......................... ......... $37.96
52

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O.lolde Melp Counl}
I! Weeks ................................. 120.80
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one-,_

Humans must be challenged
near Edttor:
been concerned for several years
On Tuesday. Jan. 29 your front
that an occasional pupil transfer·
pap carried a brief account o! a ring from Meigs or Eastern to
Southern Local Board meeting . • Southern Junior High had been In
1}e third paragraph stated "that ·algebra class and that my
till! math program at the junior curriculum offered n&lt;f'such ac·
h~ will be Improved and that
commodatlons. F~thermore. I
!If! general math program will had watched my own son and
I» rel.wtated."
·
daughter elect to ta,ke seventh·
Havlag terved as principal of grade pre·algebra and eighth·
that acbool for the past 20 years, grade algebra at Meigs Junior
uatU my retirement In June 1990, High. This head start In algebra
I fUure you that general mathe- had given my children· the
metlel wu never deleted from opportunity to pursue an extra
thi! curriCUlum and remained year of advanced math at Meigs
InJaCidurtnJmYentlretenure. It High School. Unfortunately,
would llel!fll, therefOre, supertlu· Southern pupUs_weredeprlv.edof
ou1 to relnlta~ that which had
tha~ opportunity.
alwayl remained . an Integral
I saw the disadvantage for
part of the currleuluin.
.
Southern students, and I trl.ed to
However, as ,principal, I had
11

.

(Reserves)
(SVAC only)
TEAM -·~-......W L
Hannan Trace .... IO 2
NonhGallia ........9 3
Southem ..............9 3
Oak Hill ........ :.....8 4
Eastern ................6 . 6
SYJI.lmes Valley .. .3 9
Southwestem,......2 10
Kyget Creelt ....... .1 II

· Georgetow~ quintet outlasts
:·Providence Friar~, 79-65

Bush, Congress unlikely to fight tax cuts
By STEVE GERSTEL
ing two years, said, "One of our hignest priorities will be to demand
greater ~~ess for everyone ... irJ our tax system."
WASHINGTON (UPI) - President Bush and Congressiona.l
Democrats have the arms in place but neither side seems to be spoiling for
. " Building !lpoll our efforts in the lOlst Congress, Senate Democrats
a battle on the divisive issue of taxes. They may settle for a waJ of long.
m!C"d to le~n tjle tax bwden on working families while ·asking those
range rhetoric.'
w1th the ab1hty to pay to pay a greater share of the income and Social
Security tax responsibilities," the agenda said.
·
The While House and the Democrats have elaborate, sharply conflicting, ideas on raxes but, so far, neither side shows any inclinalion of repeat·
The big weapon in the Democrats' ~e!!al is a proposed 10 percent
ing last year's turmoil that produced near paralysis in government and
Sur1alt on those who ~ more than $1 million annually. This top tax had
$137 billion in new revenues.
·
so much appeal that 11 was approved by the House befilre being dumped in
the conference agreement on the budget last year. ·
In fact, the two sides seem to be in a counterattack mode, each waiting
for the other to make the flfSt move.
.Senate Democratic leader George Mitchell, at a news conference, again
Almost perfunctorily, Bush included in his budget a proposal to cut the · satd that under the Reagan·Bush administrations taxes on the wealthy
have gone down and Uqes on middle-income and working Americans
capital gains tax - a proposal rejected by Democrats last year - that, if
have gone up.
'
pushed again will run into a barrage of retaliatory tax legislation.
"Certainly, if it were to go forward, I think it would almost certainly
"The president wants to continue that trend," Mitchell said. "We want
to reverse 1L"
·
invite other kinds -of tax changes," House Speaker Thomas Foley said
afler the budget was issued early this week.
• Aldiou~h neither side appears anxious to unleash th~ir major weapons
In fact, many feel Bush's proposal that the White House and Congress
...:.. !he capital gams tax cut vs. th~ millionaires surtax - there may be tin·
kennJ around the edges.
get IOgeliler under the direction of Fejleral Reserve Board Chairman Alan
.
Greenspan to work out "technical" differences precludes any action this
M1tchell and Sen. Tom Dascble, D·N.D., co-chairmen of die Senate
year.
.
Democratic Policy Committee. said at the news conference that they have
For their pan, Senate Democra!S, presenting the.ir ·agenda for the com·
a number of tax eroposals to shift the burden away from the middle-class
and working families.
·
·
·
One of them. pushed for several years by Sen. Daniel Mo~ihan D·
N.Y. , would cut lhe pa~U tax for Social Security that goes into effec't on
the,flfSt doiJaJ earned. It IS part of the Senate Democratic a~
~~-~d proceed to reduce payroll tax deductions, Mitchell said,
and ......,..
correct the Inequity. Finally. We educators do out youth, our
manthey other Senate Democrats feel the same way. But he
did not 5peCIl!'atfi
after more than a decade of community. our world, an lnjus·
tcy amount of the CUL
opposition and thwarted at· ttce and a disservice If we accept
.In fact, Senate. and ~ DemocraiS appear divided on the issue and
tempts. l was permitted to offer mediocrity and minimum stand·
Mi!';~ll P~. no ~canon that he would move on the proposal this w.
pre·algebra to advanced seventh ards when we are entrusted with ,
It s.a divided~~ !lyer here.:· Foley said of the House. "I hale hacl
graders as an option, the . final . pupils of much greater . reserv~s about tt.. _ctung the difftculty of cutting taxes in wartime and
decision always resting with the' capabllltles.
.
the esumated S168 blllio!l cost over five years
·
family . In the eighth grade, these
Southern Junior High SChool
For his pan, Bush Jll'?e!sed about $2 bill~n in net revenue increases
pupils again had the option .of has a iledlcat.ed, capable teach·
over five years - $1.7 b1ll~ coming from imposing Medi~ payroll
electing algebra or general lng staff whO have every right to
taxes on 5b!te 8IIC! local gov~ment employes - and $12 billion in till
math.
be proud of their achievements,
breaks, not tncluding the capilli gains tax.
The algebra program offered a past and present; and I am
Among Bush's JIOpoS8ls is to exempt from taxation interest the
' · fi
special challenge to those bright confident the school will continue
$2,500 put in a savings account, elim· · the
.
on
ust
ptJplls who elected to accept that to .live up to Its reputation.
for first-time bcimebuyen who dip into-:':rgiRAsearly witbdrawal penalty
tiOrt for ~lea who adollt children;
and 1 $3,000 tax deductougher challenge . Of the However. in this Instance of
hundreds recommended lor thf! killing ·the algebra program, I
The lie~ .to any till bill is Rep. Dan Rostcnkowslti, 0.111., chairman or
program, only three chose the believe a window of light has
:::..tax-wnnng Ways IIIII Means Committee that has to originate 111y tax
easy road.
been darkened, a door of oppor·
Human beings perform their
tunlty has been closed.
"It is not my iln)li-ession that Mr. Rostenkowslti intends to initiate 111
best when tbey are challenged.
·
.Sincerely,
new taxes," Foley said. "My conservations with him indicate that he ~
Jennln ~s Beef!'le
reluctan~ That would be a rather ~~ word." .
,, ·

.-.

NOW CIN[Y••

Sl 099

.• , . ., O..lllo'• .........., ...... ..,., ............. .. a.IINry- . . . . . ..

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SERVING THE AREA 24 YEARS .

"PRAY FOR OUR TROOPS"

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.\

�Paga • 4-The Daily Sentinel

Celtics trip Hol\nets 1~3-117;
Larry·Bird retnrn·s to action

Charklu.e.

Hornets ·coach Gene U"1-• illill

ofBird'srewm: "Whatbe'jj;/JM\
to come back than aga.ibst'~
expansion team?"
• ! (
The Celtics medical stlllff
announced before Wednesday
night's game that to spare Bird.'s
biiCt, he would not play in Thursday's conlest against lhe New York
Kniclcs and will also miss Sunday's
All-Star game. Bird was elected to
a Slarling SJfot on the Eatem ConfC~eRCC SCJuad.

,ter.

11,.

s-.

.,

*footer

POMEROY PANTHERS - The Pomeroy
''Pantbers" Sixth Grade (:heerleading s~uad
won first place lit the cbeerleadlng compet1tion ·
held during the Eastern Athletic Boosters Fifth
and Slxtb Grade Basketball Tournament. Pic.
lured, 1-r, 'front, Whitney Hliptonstall, Jessie"

McElroy, Slllcie Reed, )odie Sisson and Stacey
Price. Back, Advisor Kathy Price, Tara Grueser, ~
Erla Krawsczyn, l,eigb Mash, Heather 1\:fe,Lain =
. and Julie King. Tbis squad has taken first p~ "'
awards three years In a row.
•••

"' I •

C::

.

, : For· the Celtics, who shot 61 ·
.' percent ·from the noor, Kevin
, ~· McHale s~ored a game-h.igh 28
: ·. points, including 20 points in the
' second half after the game had
I been decided. Kevin Gamble con, . ·tnhuted 23 pomts and Regg1e
'I Lewis had 18.
.

· ~ Redwom,en

or

**

•:=r.r,:

·

. "Piaymg in the All-Star' 11ame;
· to me, is an honor and I'm ga.!lll to
miss it," said Bird, a 12th-year pro.
~I'm disappointed. It might be my
last one - you never lcnow. ·
On Wednesday night, the
·Celtics had no t~ouble gaining
:revenge. They took the-lead for
·good with a 24-6 run midway
. \!UOUgh the second quaner and the
Hornets were never again closer
than si~ points. Bosfon led by as
IJian)' as 25 points in the third quar-

149

Pennzoll
10W30,
10W40 '

· . The ,UmverSily of Rio Grande made for Rio G,_., by 'Gena N«·
women s basketball team ·connect· ris witfi 13 poil'* ad .10 fro11 • '
ed on 21 of 22 free throw attempts Debbie Frederic:t. 'Die ~ '! , ·
and placed fou~ of its lt111etes ln netted 24 of 79 r'll.(lallr of 13..- :
double figures Tuesday to hand from the lhree-poil!l)·rr.a fie field
Urbana UmverSJiy a .65-56 ~efeat for 30.3 perceAt _.luld 34 iotal
at Urbana and advance w1thin the rebounds to Urbana's 43 . Douc
Mid Ohto Conference.
Foote's club held ill wmovers 10
. The Redwomen, ranked fift.h 17.
th!s week .in Disbict 22, were ~ed ·
Sarita Brown, with 14 poi1ts
with T1ff10 Umversuy for fust and nine rebou1d1, and Algie
-place m the conference as they Shiveley with 10 poinll _ . lhe
:entered the Lady Blue Knights ' only other UrbaniJIIa,.n., lllkc
~oun.
.
the double fiautt· colu•1. The
· Urban!l, ~e defending confer- hosts shot 34.9 I*Ciiit (25.:6!1, two
ence champton, mounted a strong of six from the ..,...) on itJ fiehl
offeasiv~; and defensive effon in goals and clai... 10 df IS
the r~ half 10 te.J the Redwomen throw attempll fcrt6.2 pa'*'L
by aevea ll halftime, Bllributable in
Both teallll IIIia ta. coaterruindt10cthe wodhoo!._Y~. cefntel8r ence foes thit uu I
un.a il
y .-rere, w ,.., a """' o
at Mt. Vernon N 1 · 1 wllilllbc .
polo~ and .23 rebounds. In her last Redwomen holt-WM S:lS p.m.
meeting With lhe Redwomen, Jan.
Sawrdsy for AUMi Nillit
22 II Lyne Center, scored 20 points
Box scores:
and 22 boards, but Urbana lost
URBANA (56)
Shivo:.
101-?1. ·
.
·
ley, 1-2-2 10; ICll!a •
2-0-4;
_Rto Grande, benefilllla from a Tanya Perunko,· l- -4; Sarita
p11r of 17-pomt performances by Brown 6-2-14· Jeillir., ]r 1 11
Je~ni Couch a~d Kerri Kidwell, 1-4-6;' Cindy . ftert
seazed I)OIItrol m tbe second half ·TOTALS: 20.2''
'
and K1dwell also _poated 15 , RIP GRAND (63)- Jtflal
~ fll' lhe pme, one .of her Couch, 6-5· 17; (1-. Naais, 2-2--3beat mghts on lhe bo1n1s this 11!1 ·~13: Debbie Frederict, Q-2-4-10·:
9011.
.
Kerri Kidwell, 6-5-17; Anll Bar·
The Redwomen ~~e now 17-8'
\IIi"· 2-2-6; KatJ:y • • 0-2-2·
the season and 6-2 in conference 'tOTALS· 16-4-2{-65
' · '
play, while Urbana went 10 II• I!
Nltuifte·ICOR: u.t.a 29, Rio ,
and 2-5.
_,
8t&amp;ldc 22
...
Impressive showings were .al
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bell1111ea thai 1111 till ..,.
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c-:~:.~: ~~nc: ~:::o:s::
&lt;AEPI SyMMI, ol which Ohio downl and 1oa1ng ___ ,._
•
'

Among the eight OhiOMS signing Wednesday with Ohio State
were quarterblclc Bob HOying and
ti~ht end Kevin Niekamp from
Division V 118te champ SL Henry.
The 6·foot-4, 210-~d ~·
• ing was the UPI Divis1011 V
of-the- year, passing for 2,43S
yards and 27 touchdowns tl)e past
· son ~ini record 1IISt year with season.
4,226 yards and 48 touchdowns.
Another all-Ohio quarterback
· The coaches who took ~ in who signed was New Lexiqton' s
the hectic: activity of signing Dal! Finck, a 6-foot. 180-pounder .
p1ospects Wednesday were perhaps who was recruited by Cooper as a ·
doing ao for the last time.

State, for instance,
grabbed runnina back Kijana
Carter, a hifhly touted running
back from 1 e Columbus, Ohio
area. wide recei- Bobby Engmm
· of Camden, S.C., and huge oJfensive linemen Keith Conlin of·Gienside, Pa., and Andre Johnson .o r
Southampton,l'I.Y.
.
The Nittany Lions si.gned a
divme group similar to that usual- ·
ly claimed by Nocre Dame.
The highlights of Michigan's
class, meanwhile, were defensive
lineman 1iml Zenlcewicz of aeveland IIIII qliii1Cibaclc Cllig Randall
of Grand Rapids, Mich.
Further south, the Miami_Hurricane appeared to be outrecrwted by
in-state rivals Florida State and
Florida. Adverse poblicity concernilig Miadli's penaity-piaped Cotton· Bowl.appearanc:e, tncluding
criticism from the school's own .
president, could hllve had ... effect
on the HurricaneS' nalional recruiting efforts. ·
In general, lllllSI of lhe nation's
leading high school football playen
chose to stay in their own regions.
Eric Zeier of Mlrieaa, Ga., tout·
. ed by IIIMlY as the best Q!Wie~k
l&gt;fllSI!OCt in the coun
. · try, Signed With
tilt Georgia BuUclogs. Outstanding
linebackec JamirMillerofEI Cerri·
to, Calif., chose to go to UCLA,
and 280-pound defensive lineman
Clint Moore of Longmont. Colo.,
will-go to CoiOIIIdo.
Colorado appeared to get the
best of recruiting in the Big Eight,
with the Oklahoma Sooners suffering another less-than-spectacular
signing effort.
Brigham Young continued its
tradition of signing top quarterbacks by luring John Walsh, who
set the California s~te single-sea-

SALE

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Generating r \
vide reliable electric Nt'Vice to are required In on11r 10 lit CIIIIOI!Itra. During 11110, ' unexpected
exetudlng temporary power load, 10 Prov141e tor
IIIII to Olhar utility tyllamo, program of

fu

of ~~~:h ~
Holtz hurt the Fighting Irish and
h lped both M'ch'
1 Igan an d Penn
e Wednesday
State
on the first day
high school football players could
sign scholarship agreements with
the coDege of their choice. '
Holtz admitted his school's
efforts this year bad been hampered
by rumors spread through the
recruiting gra~vine.
''There is no doubt about it.•'
Holtz said during a stopover in
Dallas for a spealcing engagement
earlier this week. .. All the people
who say I'm going ro •.eave, I
would like them to write a
$100,000 check to charity . I'll
write a $100,000 check to charity.
If 1 stsy,l casb their check. If 1 go,
they can c:uh mine.' •
-Notre Dame has also been burt
by speculation concerning the 21
allegations of NCAA violalions by
the University of Min~ while
Holtz was coach of the Goph~rsc
HoiiZ appeared before the NCAA
lilfractions Committee last week.
• ''I can't wait until we are full!,
able 10 say our side of the story, '
Holtz said. "I feel very comfonable with the things I've done. I've
never done anything to gain a
• ac1v
· 31
f
r:i.i!"tg.. antage m years 0
c F:~ rust time in at least four
years; Notre Dame was not the
dominant school on Signing Day.
. Although the Irish gathered a class
of recruits that most schools would
love 10 hllve, it was still not up to
reeent Notre Dame standards.
" Normally Notre Dame will
llllce 20 players who are ready to
, play," said Allen Wallace, "':'ho
publishes one of the leadmg
recruitin~ magazines in the country. "ThiS year they wiD be lucky

to' get six or seven. Michigan and
Penn Staie 11e really taldna advan-

California

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Kina, Jason Frec:ker, Jared Werner, Cllad
l'olller IIICl Vlncnt Broderick. Baclc, Arh'a•\
Dan Dodson, Tom Bllllnasley, Steve Hysell,
Mlck Barr, Jessy'&lt;Eutman, Lacy Dlckeu ud
Cosdl Mark Friend.

Possible skeletons in Holtz's closet
·cast shadow on.Irish recruiting
•

99~~

.,~~onference pppo~en~ : ·

SECOND PLACE WINNERS • Tbe Salls- .
bury Flflb Grade "Blue Streaks" took second
place at tbe Eastern Athletic Boosten Fll'tll alld
Sixth Grade BIISketbaU Tournment held this
past weekend. Members of tile team are, l·r,
front, Josh Dodson, Brad Davenport, Jeremy

By MIKE RABUN
UPI Sports Writer

:J

defeat

Paul or Kissimmee.
defensive biiCt•
The. other out of state players
The other Buckeye State play ers, mOSIIy from smaller schools, included linebacker Ken Green and
were Roben Dllvis of Twinsburg defensive back Girmar Johnson,
Chamberlin and Marlon Kerner of both of Sylmar, Calif; running back
Columbus Brookhaven, high Will Hill of SL Louis; lineman CJ.
school quarterbacks eltpected to Kelly of Rowley, Mass.; defensive
switch positions at OSU, lineman back Jason Louis of HyattSville.
Greg Kuszmaul of Warren Md.; lineman Therone McQueen of
Kennedy, OQtside linebacker Craig Bostoo; and Walter Taylor of Dal·
PoweU of Youngstown Rayen and las, who played quanerback, tail·
inside linebacker Brian Stoughton back and wide receiver the past two
seasons at Carter High School.
of Madison Plains.
Cooper was asked about some
Among the out-of-staten signd
of
the state's top players who said
by Ohio State were wide receiver
DeWayne Carter of St. Mary ' s no to Ohio State.
"I don't think we should coolin- ·
Prep 1R Orchard Lake, Mich.
ually
hive to defend our progrem ·
C1rter, however, grew up in
and that's what we do," said an •
Younptpwn, Ohio,
work hard bec•t•ae we did. But we
The Buckeyes signed three play- · inc:rea!ingly irriiated Cooper. "We
were able to ao out of state and en from Florida - punter Mike weren ' I as much selling the pro- .
sign, what we think, are some very Crisay of Coral Springs: lineman Jl8l1! this year liS we were defend·
fine football players."
Roderick Christopher of Jack- mg it. There's a lot of negative
Cooper's recruitina this w1s sonville; and defensive baclc Tito DUblic~ out there.
affected by a number of things,
includina a controversial .loss to
Michipl, the failure of ~ to
receive an extension to his fiveyesr contract. now in its third year,
and a dismal showing in a 23-11
loss to ~avy in the Uberty Bowl.
"Any time you ioiiC one player,
you're a little bit disappointed,"
said Cooper. "I wish we could
hJive kept them aiL ~ut that WIISR 't
the case this year. For whatever
reuD!I ~left. I can't answer that

. By GENE CADDES '
UPI Sports Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) Ohio State coach John Cooper
wrap_ped U,P "the toufhest year
recrwting I ve ever had ' Wcilnesday by signina 19 players, including 11 from out of Sllte, to national
fOOiballlelterB· of-intenL
The recruiting class is consid ~
ered the worst of four since Cooper
took over the Ohio State job, with
many Ohio's top prospects electing 10 leave lhe stale.
"We're a liUie disappointed that
we weren't able ·to keep all the
gre8l talent in the State of Obio this
year," Cooper told a press conference. "It isn't because we didn't

Charlotte' a o&lt;ft n
by a pair of re u-. DeU
conbibuting 24 ..... llld
Gill 2~. The lfomeu• fiilt fiYO

a,.._

The Daily Sentinel- Page- S :

Ohio State recruits 19 players

-=

Hut 134, Nets 119 .
At But Rutherford, NJ., Sher- .
Douailland Glen Rice scored
30 JDiDa lpiece IUid lhe Heat set a
totaledJust30p . . , IIIIMof.._ ~ 1111c:0rd for points in a game.
reacbeddoublefc w.
· Doqlaa added 10 assists for
. " ":~e SWt,eft . llad I tODJb lolillll, which surpassed its previmgl)t, said UUS... who saw bit •IIIP- pme of 131 set in a dousubstiwtes nearly l'lple bia ltldll•' .1111 0\•lime game in 1989. Willie
output. "The '-II ia c:hMit die Bunon added 19 poin Is for the
team that is aoina•llelp • -.·~
liNt and Rony Seikaly had 18.
J.R. Reier lcl'f ...... -'1. ja DlllltdtColeiJWI bad 29 points and
the fourth q~ afllr aprailllDJ 13 ,..,._...., ., power the Nets.
his left anlde.
.·
Jaa 103, Sus 99
The Celtica
an 811'ly 15-2
At Sail Lalce City, Karl Malone.
lead. fueled by a ..a. dille urilll axnd 29 poilllllllld Joho SlllCicton
and a 3-pointc:r lir Iiiii.
_ , 22 and IS IISSists and the
Charlotte raOIM widl ·1 20-5 Jaz re1liecl in tile third quaner fot
surge! tapped by.OiiJ'a dne-poiat 1111 will. Ullb ll'liled by five at the
ptay alt1S ofllll •
qu1111r ·Mif but made 10 of14 tietci goals
rora~,'!2,6 ~ lW.
IIICillit 13 of IS free throws 10 talce
AfttF the !e.- I ' h• I ~ 111!1· CODIIOI of the glll!le in the third
ketS, Bolltori bela ill docilivt 1111, guaner. Kevin Johnson led the
which included
-* lly ·
with 30 points and Jeff Horrenrve aur4 Doe · 11Cihdded25.
.
1 5~36 Cdtlcs
, SliperSolllcs 107,
LA COppers 104
At Scaa'o. Eddie Johnson made
waukee 11
a
lVilh 14 seconds 'to go
~~-shiaaiOI
~nd the Clippers their fi.'fth
~NeW JeheJ
.
loss IIIII their lOth in their
•
tab~ .. ,.,..., I~ IIIII 3 pmea. Johnson scored }8
by Ilia LA CJiiJDiri tA Ilia pme.high 27 points in th!l
p..:.f.._ ... Jlid. S.••
10 IIIOCbd
_ . .
· flllrdl fluarter. Jeff Martin paced
... , _ 9~
1111 Qgrjleu with 21 points.
·• locke1111U,e .... .,
·
KJiiPt?, Trd Blazers93 ·
At. Milwaukee, ltna)' S•IUI
At S~~~:ramento, Calif., Travis
made a drivin:o:lup with till- MM sc:ORd 27. points, m~ng 17
tenths of a so . IOCijlnd till ar fl l'ne throws, including nine in
Rockets sent the k b ., just dMir IN fiRII minute to enable the Kings
third loss in 25 .~· ~ liil lll·llllp a foqr-game losing strealc.
season. Smith'a .......... Jllllli..,, Anlbine Carr added 18 points for
tol) overcome a
dltlcit . ille l'ina.•. who handed Ponland
in the final threl
. Slllltli lull their nintb lou of the season.
scored ·25 of lik -~ iln.. · ·
second balf 81111 ll61ld 10 1tilb. ,
Otis Thorpe '*I !S
111111 11
rebounds for the I •
wiiUe Jay
Humphries pBCOIIIbo loeb will
30 points.
Sixers 101, hltll 100
At Philadelplli1, Hene7
Hawkins scored 1 caroer-bip 3'
points and Philadllpllia poste11 its
seventh s1r8ight vic:Gy- Wiihington. C)larles _ . . , llld 14 of
his 25 points in 1111 foulth q1lfler
and the Sixers weal oa an 18-21'1111
in the final perjcld u , 11M Bllilets
lost their lOth
III,IW 11 tile SIJIC·
n:um. Manute
llilded a seasonhigh I r rebounds Ud blocked five
sholS for Philadelphia. Bernard
King was held to 12 points for the
Bullets.

. By FREDf:RICK WATERMAN
UPI Sports Writer
Larry Bird's bac:k, which was
the IIIOble!n. is now lhe lllllution. '
the Boston Celtics forward ;
recovering from a back problem ,
Wednesday night retumed from a
' 14-game absence to !ICOJ'e }8 points
. 8lld hand out 13 IISSists in a 133117 viciDry over the helpless Char·
loae Hornets.
'Boston, which had the NBA's
best record before Bird left the .
lineup a inonth qo, was 7-7 wjth·
out lhe lhree-time MVP.
Bird, who bad not played since
Jan. 6 due to an inflamJned disc in
his lower baclc, played 38 minutes
against Charlotte. The Celtic:s' 34year- old leader hit 8 of 17 shots,
connected on a pair of 3-pointers
and also grabbed 9 rebounds.
·
"I .bad fu!l," said Bird. " I wasu··
worried abOut my wind a little biL I
doli'hnow how I'm soing
tomorrow. I'm sure I'm
feel stiff and sore." ·
Among the Celtics'
· es was last week's rust-ever loss to

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QUESTION • I'm going skiing ponant to get to ·a lower altitude .
in the mountains with some friends irnmediarely. Delays for weather or
in a few weeks. They usually take . convenience can lead II) needless
some medication befQre the trip so death.
.
·
they don't get so short of breath.
QUESTION • The people who
What is this medication, and does it
live in · the mountains don't take
worlc?
·
Diamox. all the tl!ne. HOW do they
ANSWER • The medicatioo that avoid mountain sickness?
Y9W' friends take is probably
ANSWER • The bumari body is
acetazolamide, which is sold undtr
the brand name of Diamox. It is a a marvelous creation that has the
fairly safe medication that can deli· capacity to adapt to · many
nitely bel~ reduce mountain sick- situations, including altitude. These
De$S, but 11 won't help with short· adaptations are truly ljlscinating if
ness of breath. That's because it's you a student of physiology, bill
not a miracle pill that can improve understanding the physiqlogy isn't
your physical eoilditioning or your necessary to understand simple
lung capacity. Physical exetlion mOiltaineering rules • go slow and
WHAT A SHOPPER • Shirley Coen or Point Pleasant, center, was that makes you short of breath at don't give your body a chance to
recently liven a 90-second shopping spree at Foodland on Jell'erson home will certainly make you short adapt to the alti.tude. Plan a day or
Boulevard after her name was drawn during Foodland Night at a of breath in the mountains. ·
University or Rio Grande basketball game. During her shopping
Rl!ther than delve into the comspree, Coen man&amp;~ed to load up $163.20 '!'Orth or groceries ror her plex way that Diamox works, ·rD
prize. Shown are Brent Eastman, Director of Sales and Promotions, give you some ~tical infonnaCoen and Jim Carpenter, Manager. (Register photo by1Dan Adkins).
tion about the kincls of symptoms
of mountain sickness , like
headache and pulmonary edema •
that the medication can help to
prevent. First. though, let me ex.. A.altJ· ·
plain why people get mountain
By Ed Peterson
Failure .to balance individual sickness in the first place.
Socilll Security
wage repons with summary totals
Most of us live at or ncar sea
Branch Manager in Athens
sent to Social . Security or. with level. The amount of oxygen avail·
quarterly wage reports sent to the able to your lungs with each breath
Mistakes madC by employers in Inremal Revenue Service (IRS);
is considerably more where you
reponing their employees' wages
Sending wage reports to the live than what you'd experience on
cause processing delays for Social wrong government agency - some a tall mountain, and it is this differSecurity and could eventually af- employers send repons to the State ence in oxygen concentration that
fect benefit amounts. ·
or to IRS, instead of to Social causes mountain sickness. On .a
Many of the errors could easily Security; and
mountain that is less than 8,000
be avoided. According 19 Social
Submitting repons that can't be feet high, climbing aU the way to
Security records, the most common processed by ·machine because they the top or engapng in physical acerrors are:
are fonnatted incorrectly.
tivities lilte slciing are unlikely to
Leaving out the E_m_ployer IdenPeterson said employees can produce moutain sickness. But
tification Number (EIN) or ~ing an . checlc their Social Security record rapid assent to elevations of 18,000
1
,
· invalid number;
to be sure all their employers repor- feet or . more produce mountain
Omitting an employee's name or · ted their wages correctly by send.. sickness in nearly everyone.
reporting a .name which doesn't ing for a ''Personal Earnings and
Headache is the most common
maiCh the employee's Social Benefit Estimate Stalelllen~" The complaint
associated
with
Security card; .
request fonns are available by can- mountain sickness. It may begin
. Failure.to submit wage repons - ing Social Security at 1-800-2345- immediately or develop after 24
some employers that go out of SSA (1·800-234-5772). Or, .if they hours at a high altitude. The
business during the year dOl) 't wish, people can write or come to headache is often thrObbing and
supply W-2 infonnation about their the office, located at 221 If). may vary from a mild nuisance to a
employees;
.
. Columbus Road in Athens. ·
"world-class" ~ain.• Wcakncss, diz·
Submitting duplicare reports •
Employers who have questions ziness and fatJgue usually accomone on paper and one on magnetic can also.£9ntact SSA aL592-4448,
pany it. Altitl!de sickness has been
media;
known for some time, dating back
to the Chinese, who recorded their
recognition of the problem between
37 and 32 B.C; The Chinese
described it as a common occurrence in Kilik Pass (now in Pakistan) which is 15,837 feeL
Community Calendar items valentine and a red dessert for
In fact, they named the
appear two days before an event refreshments. Officers wear street mountains of this high pass Great
and the day or that event. Items dress.
Headache Mountain and . Little
must be receivecl in advance to
Headache Moun\llin. .
assure publication in the calen·
POMEROY · The Meigs Band
An add' ·"nal
bl
0 f h· h
pro
em
lg
Boosters will have a chicken and altitude is lhv
dar.
pulmOnary edema. You
noodle dinner on Thursday begin- can think of this as a more serious
ning at 4:30 p.m . in conjunciion · addition to mountain sickness. In
·THURSDAY
RACINE • Post 602, American with Vocational Open House from this condition the lungs begin to liD
Legion will meet at 7:30 p.m. 6to 9 p.m. Cost is $3.
with body fluid. This reduces their
Thursday at the hall in Rl)cine.
ability to gather the already scarce
FRIDAY
oxygen from the air. This condition
TUPPERS PLAINS • There can be recognized early - before it
MIDDLEPORT • Support
group for the families of those in will be a round and square dance at becomes life threatening • by
the Middle East will be held at 7 the Tuppers Plains VFW Building noting an in~ of the resting
p.m Thursday at the American on Friday from 8-11:30 p.m. fea- heart rate to I00 or more and in inturing Specks of Bluegrass. Ronnie crease of the ·lx'eathing rate while at
Legion Hall Annex on Mill St
Wood will be the caller. Public rest above 16 per minute. It is im4-piece
POMEROY • The Pomeroy invited.
assonmem
Group of AA and AIAnon will
POMEROY • The Senior Citimeet Thursday at 7 p.m. at the
Sacred Heart Catholic Omrch. For zens Dance Club wiD have a round
and square dance on Friday from 8
more infonnation call992-5763.
to II p.m. at the Senior Citizens
Center.
Music wiD be provided by
POMEROY • The PERI group
Happy
Hollow Boys of Athens.
will meet Thursday at I p.m, at the
Bring
snacks
for the snack iable.
Senior Citizens Room. All members are urged to attend.
MIDDLEPORT • The Return
Jonathan
Meigs Chapter Daughter
POINT PLEASANT - The
of
the
American
Revolution will
Point Pleasant La Leche League
will meet Thursday at 7 p.m, at the . meet Friday at 1:30 p.m . at the
Point Pleasant Presbyterian Heath United Methodist Church in
Middlepon. Genealogical workChurch.
shop by Mrs . Roben D. Ashley.
POMEROY • The First Baptist Hostesses Mrs. Wilson Carpenrer, .
Church of Pomeroy will hold a Mrs. John T . Cook, Mrs. Nan
prayer service for the troops from Moore, Mrs. Daniel Thomas and
the United States serving in the Mrs. Roscoe Wise.
Middle East on Thursday at 7 p.m.
SATURDAY
POMEROY
·''There's SomeRUTL"ND • The Rutland
get
thing
in
My
Attic"
and "The Dog
Township Trustees will meet
Thursday at 6:30 p.m. at the Rut· Days of Arthur Cane" will be presented Saturday at 2 p.m! ,at the
,,Jllnd Fire Station. '
Meigs County Public ulfr~rY in
STIVERSVILLE • David Car· .Pomeroy for all area children.
penter will 'speak at the Stiversville Admission is free.
.
Word of Faith Church on Thursday
at 7:30p.m. The public.is invited to
· BURLINGHAM • · Modern
attend.
~ ,,
WOodmen of America Camp 7230,
,
. potluck dinner, Saturday at 6:30
. MIDDLEPORT· The Evan~e- · p.m. at the Burlingham Hall.
hne Chapter No. 172, OES, M1d· Chtcken and noodles provided.
dleport, wiD meet Thursday at 7:30 Bring a covered dish. Family door
p.m. Everyone bring a homemade prize will be awarded.
.

FamilY.
Medicine
Jolin C. Wolf, D.O.
Associate Professor
of Family Medicine

two of rest before vigorous activity Tylenol, and.oxy11en wiD help mild
at the new altitude, especially if cases of mounwn sickness. nice
you are going above 8,000 feet . .In · the day to re,st and give your body a
Vail, Colorado, which is 8,200 feet, chance to adapt to the altitude. In
about one skier out of 1,000 more severe cases the only good
develops pulmonary edema be- ~nt is moving to a lower al- .
.cause he or she dciesn' t take the .eilicle.
.
sensible precaution. .
,..,:'Family Medicine" is a weekly '
The .altit,ude at which you S!f;ep,..~ umn. To subtltit questions, write .
has more 1mpact on tho ~ to--· John C. Wolf, D.O., Ohio ·
ment of mountain sictneU" that ~~:Ulli.versity CoDege of Osteopathic
altiiude at which you play ~~. Grosvenor Hall, Athens
the day • within reason. Rest, :(Jiilo 45701.
'

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give twice thelove~

Your Social Security

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In Desert Storm
Ronald W. Martin, son of
Ronald Manin, MetrOPOlis. IU., and
Mary Stover, Gallipolis, is serving
With Operation Desert Storm in the
Middle Bast His sister, Kimberly
Clay resides in Ironton.
His wife, Tenia. and son, Jamie,
and daughter, Teria, are living with
her parents in Middlebourne,

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Medicine helps sickness, not shortness of breath·

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The ·Daily .Sentinel

By The Bend

HeO: 110 ••or

•ottor Llmllod To lllonuf~•t:,'!. Of Othlt' Rotal*- ond· MotTo t':nttcoot llollll And eoupono
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S.S.G. Ronald W. Manin. 351-666344, D. Co. 701-S.PT. BN., 1st
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�Thursday, February 7, 1991

'

Page-S- The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-M~aport.

Thursday. Febru.-y 7, 1991

Ohio

Leifheit_

-Meigs school honor rolls.-

Sixth grade - Chelsie Dodson,
Betsy Houdashelt, Jared King, Tim
Peavley, Chris Roush, Meliss•
Joshua Bass, Erin Bush, Je$sica · Whaley.
Lucas, Kristy Pucketl, Mary Ann
Junior Hip .
Schuler, Jessica Schuler.
Seventh grade - Travis Abbott,
Second mde - Kendra Cleland,
Amber
Bennett, Nikki Bentley,
Robert Johnson, all A's; Eric
Ann
Brown,
Chris Chapman, PhylMontgomery.
lis
Clark,
John
Cleland, Bethany
Third grade - Orion Barren, all
Cohee,
Bryan
Colwell,
Cynthia
A' s: Scott Colwell, Stephanie
C\)llaill,
Ryan
Crisp,
Corey
Darst,
Kopec, Lama Payne,
Fourth grade - Andrea Dunfee, Melissa Ertewine; Michael FranckLori Kinnison , Jessica Priddy , owiak, Jake Gannaway, Allison
Rehekiab Smith, Bridget Vaughan, · Gerlach, Israel Grimm, April Halall A's; Michelle Grant, Dwight ley, Dorothy Leifheit, Jason MarIcenhower, JQspeh Maines, Kim- cum, Ben Mash, Nickie Mills, Matt
O'Bryant, Tanya Phalin, Kenda
berly Rillelbeck. . .
Fifth grade - Leigh Ann Canter- Reynolds, Joey Roher1S, Lori RUssell, Tracy Shaffer, Gary Stanley,
bury, Amanda Napper.
Sixth grade - Adam Barrett, .Cindi Stewart, Dodger Vaughan,
Amy Cleland, Jenny Ervin, Tim James D. White.
Eighth lrade - Sarah AndersOn,
Lewis, Andy Myers, Cynthia
Sandy, all A's; Shaye Bare, Matt Joey Barren, Keith Darst, Ben
Baireu, Carrie Harmon, Kimberly Ewing, Jarrod Folmer, Kelly
Grueser, Heidi Huffman, Kim
Riuabeck.
Jamey, Emily Johnson, Erika
Salisbury Elementary
Meadows, Becky Meier, Todd
First grade - Nicole Black, Bob- Mitch, Shilo Moore, Brent Smith,
bie Burson, Zach Pavis, CJ. Estep, Kelly Smith, Jason Taylor, Crystal
Levi Gillette, Zach GlaZe, Ashley Vaughan, Amanda Well, Melissa
Hoschar, Justin Hoschar, Marisa . Wilfong, Tanya Will, Lisa
Mowrey, Mindy O'Dell, Elizabelh Yeauger.
·
RusseU, Marc Smith, Man Snyder, .
u· b School
·
Allison Story, John WithereD.
Second grade , April Blanken'l!reshman class - Lori Ann
ship, Sarah Clifrord, Sandi Gilkey, Bumem, James Ryan Conde, Traci
Abby Hubbard, Grace Kitchen, Danielle Crow, Tracy Loriane Fife,
Carson Midkiff, Heather Whaley.
Danelle Rae Gray, Dawn Michelle
Third grade - Kim Conde, Mar- Hockman, Melissa Dawn Jeffers,
jorie Halar, Beverly Burdette, Mor- Brad A. Knous, Andrea Marie
gan Mathews, Leeann Dill, Tiffany McDonald, JBSOI} Dean MiUcr, Joy
Harder, Daniel Hysell, Anna SIOry. Renee O' Brien, Rhonda Jo RayFourth grade - Lacy Banks, Tri- mond, Ann Marie Riffle, Denise
cia Davis, Becky Johnson, Tamra Marie Shenefield, Michael John
0 'Dell, Ryan Ramsburg, Crystal Sloan, Jason Muir Witherell.
Salser, Bobbi StewarL
i
Sophomore class - Debbie Ann
Fifth grade - MiciC Barr, Billi Jo Alkire, Linda Louise Chapman,
Bentley, Jason Frecker, Myca . Wendy Jaylene Clark, Kelly PatriHaynes, Heidi Legar, Michael cia Doidge, Elizabeth A. Downie,

The honor rolls for Meigs Local Gray, S1ephen Grueser.
Schools for the second nine-weeks . D.H. II - Jessica Burton, Kiin Bush,
have been 3JIJIOUJlCe!L
Erick Johnson, Brooke Hart.
Bradbury Elementary
L.D.- Andrew Kitchen and RusseU
· Fifth grade - Rachel Ashley, Robinson.
Ginger Darst, Collin. Roush, Jennifer Vinning, David Grimm, Chad Rutland Elementary
Hanson , Jenny Hayman , Matt
First grade - Justin Cantrell,
Williams, Nancy Whaley and San- Jimmy Childers, Amber Ellis, Ryan
dra Young.
Kauff, Slllesha Kennedy, John ·
Sixth grade -Libby King, Amber Lentes, Melissa Richmond, Amber
Slaven, Darrick St. Clair, Amy Snowden, all A's: Lana Barre'u,
· Clonch, Anna Fink and Brandi Gabriel Jenkins, Darrick Knapp;
Meadows.
Cassandra Tolley, Krisropher Van
L.D: - Tim Althouse. .
Meter, Kathy W~.
D.H. - Gary Reil!Oire.
Second grade - Derrick Bolin,
Zachary Bolin, Justin Cleland, Skip
Harrisonville Elementary
Dodson, Alison Hays, Billy
First grade - Marie Boggs, Ash- · Kennedy, Bethany McMillan,
ley Burbridge, Samuel Canlerbury, · Beatrice Morgan, all A's; Jennifer
Amber Haning, William Haning, Allen, James Conley, George TalJennifer Reeves, Cindy Six, John ley, Justin Gilmore, Tiffany Priddy,
Stanley, Daryl Walker and Rees Elizabeth Smith, Mall Stewart,
WyanL
Zachary Williams.
Second grade - Johnni Barley,
Third grade - Tiffany Halfhill,
Adam Bullington, Benji Call, Joshua Sorden, all A's; Heather
Christopher Dodson, .Michael Lam, ,. Ferr-ell, Amy Hysell, Sara Ihle,
bert, John Mace, Jonathan M!lll~ " ~Uer, Shawn Wortcman.
Dustin Smyers, Steve Sigmon. ,,.,t.. Fow. grad'e- Jamie Barrell,
Albert Sreams, Palricia Walker and · KotJelt iddle, Mati!tew Justice, aU
Dawn YosL
· · ·_':(•s; Kiiiten. Brown, Ben Fowler,
Third grade - Raina Bennett{'' 71illlin Jeffers, Amos Miller, Alyson
Jason Miller, Tiffany Richmond, Pauerson, Shannon Stevers, ClayKyle Smiddie, James Stanley, JOn Tromm.
Adam Walker and Gillian WilL '";" ·~f#th ,grade - Emily Fowler, all
Fourth grade- Erin Dillon, Randy A-' s; 'Jill Lemley, Sheila Neace,
Haning, Clinton Hendricks, Jason Danielle Peckham, A.J. Vaughan,
Preast and. Franco Rom uno.
Melissa Williams.
Firth grade - Michelle Bissell,
Sixth grade - Michelle Miller,
Robin Dono~ue, Cortney Haley, Beverly S1ewan and Morgan VanaGeorge Miller 8nd Melissa Reeves. man. aU A's; Chad Banium, Casey
Booth, Jamie Williamson.
Middleport Elementary .
First grade - Andrew Baker, Salem Center Elementary
Trevor Buck.• Delana Eichinger,
.First grade - Jameson Johnson,
Michelle French, Heather Fry, Cor- Chelsea Montgomery, Jarrod
rie Hoover, Tyson Lee,loshua Ogdin, Emili Payne, all A's;
Lynch Tyler Stewan, Connie Willet, Rebecca Cundiff, Heather
Felly, Andy France, Nicholas
McLaughlin, Erin Ralston, Monica
Moon, Sarah Reynolds, Clay Russell, Jacob Smith, Clayton Taylor,
Rebecca Smith, Tara Wyatt
Second grade - Britni Bevan,
Marjorie Bratton, Jessica Chapman, Bryan Cowdery; Jessica Cundiff, Jeremy Jones, Chritophel' Meldan, Leah Morrow, Amy Sarver,
Brandi Smith, Ian Story, Kathy
Taylor, Whitney Ashley, Melissa
Brewer, June Cremeans , Sabra
Davidson, Abby Harris, Michael
Hawkins, Derel!: Johnson, Jason
Knight, Carrie Lightfoot, Lee
Reynolds, Debby Searls, Brooke
Smith, Rachel Taylor, Cassie
Vaughan, Amber Vining.
Third grade - William Bra110n,
Brant Dixon, Jamye Hudson, Scott
Johnson . .Jennifer Nease, Renee
S Iewan, Ashlee Vallghan, Cassandra Will, Seth Baker, Bethany
Boyles, Stacey Brewer, Charla
·Burge, Janie Compton, Mindy Hal. ley, Kevin Harris, Bridget Johnson,
Crystal Leach, Zach ·Meadows,
Nicholas Michael, Seth Rawson,
Tommy Roush.
TANDY®.
Fourth grade - Jeniti Howerton,
T.J . King , Jonathan Roberts,
1000TL12
William Scanlon, Rusty Stewart,
Computer
Melisha Swisher, Sara Williams,
With Color
Austin Carr, John Davfdson, JessiMonitor
ca Johnson. Sarah Larkins, Joshua
Lynch, Patrick Martin, Joshua
Price and Josiah Rawson.

0

Pomeroy Elementary
Firs! grade - Carrie Abbott, Garnett Bon~utter, Nicholas Bowles,
Danny Buffington, Caleb Ellis,.
Stephanie Chapell, Michael
Hoover, Kristopher Jenkins, Kimberly McDaniel, Christopher
Neece, Shannon Soulsby, Matthew
Williamson, Jonathan Wilson,
Heather Baxter, Bret Bush, Eliz4beth Bush, Ashley Eblin, A~ldey
Hamilton, Sarah Kines, Crystal
Lemley, Sara Moon, Sonya Powell,
Amber Proffitt, Maggie Roseberty,
Jessica Roush, Nichole Runyon,
Michelle Stahl, John Wilson.
·
Second grade - Joshua Bls,ck,
April Large, Aja McGlothin, Shannon Price, Justin Robson, Adam
Shank, Emily Stivers, Belly Wilson, Christopher Yeauger,
Barton, Andy Davis, Nicholas IJel- , , ,.
twiller, Ashley Hannahs, Curtis
Hanstine, Christina Hir~h.
Kennedy, Andrea
Christopher
Pickens, K,~;~:i~~~te~:$~~~
Alex
Brenna Sisson, Michael Stacy,
April Still, Euva Stumbo, Ashley
Thomas, Christopher Ward. ·
Third Reade - Amber Blackston,
MeliSsa Davis, Sara Fife, Jennifer
Shrimplin, Julie Spaun, Wesley
Thoene, Adam Thomas, .Ryan
Well, Michael Williamson, Jackie
Buck, Tad Danie)s. C.D. (Charles)
Ellis, PJ . (Patrick) Erwin, Andrea
Neutzling, Michelle Painter,
Amber l'crklns', Ryan Pratt, Whitney Thomas, Christian Welker.
Fourth grade - Kristina
Kennedy, Sterani Pickens, Bonne
Smith, Jennifer Heck , Jennifer
Lambert, Sean Powell , Conney
. Scarberry. .
Fifth grade - David Anderson,
Lauren Anderson, Wayne Barnhart,
Jerica Clark, Crystal Coati, Wendi
Daniels, Sttven McCullough, Amy
see, Wendy Shrimplin, Danielle
Grueser, Ronnie Hirth, Stacey
Hubbard, Michelle Ramsburg, Man
Riffie, Lisa Russell, Scou Sellars,
Amy Smith, Adam Thomas.
Sixth srade - Paul Epperson,
Shaun Fife, Whibley HapiOnstall,
Erin Krawsczyn, Jessica McElroy,
Stacey Price and St1cie Reed,
Taryn Doidge, ~11'1 G~~ Julie
King, Shawn Kmg, ~odie S1sson,

Nile SisJOn.

Eva Shields•.Syracuse, celebrated her 90th birthday recently with a
party attended by relatives and
friends.
.
Celebrating the event were her
children, Mr. and Mrs . Henry
Salser, Nial Salser, Raymond and
Jeanelle Salser and 'sons; Mr_ and
Mrs. Charles Salser, llene' Hayes of
Montana, Dorothy Harderi, Shirley

Wedding _set

=-

Roland "Gene" King, Middleport, and Sharon Pooler, Cltester,
announce the open church wedding
or their daughter. Lisa and Dawn
King, to John thomas RobiiiSOII on
Feb. 14 at 6:30 p.m. 81 dte Christian Brethren ChUJCh, West Center
Street, Mason, W.Va.
.
Robinson is the son of Mr. and
John Robinson, Stubenville.
Rev. Iimniy Lewjs will officiate.
.
A reception will he held immediately following the ceremony at
the church recreation building.

Mrs:

I MARRIED A DAMP SQUID: Rollins SIOIIC Bill Wymu says
his failed 18- month marriage 10 a teenage Mandy Smith was "a bit or
a damp squid" and that his real sexual fantasy is an ol~r "'01118!'·
Wyman was 52 and Smith, who he reponedly had been dalm&amp; for 'I!'
years, only 19 When they married in 1989 and .Wyman blames tbetr
troubles on the Stones' tour, Mandy's bad health and her "family relationship.'' He says he wouldn 'I mind gelling married for a third time in
abotit30 years but in the meantime he waniS to fulfill a fantasy. "Since
I was a leenager I always wanted to be &amp;educed·by an older woman ·and
it never happened," Wyman says in an interview ''!lped for ''A C~t
Affair," ."ralways wanted my music teaCher to stduce me.... ~d 11 s
getting harder to (fulfiU the rantasy) now because ypu are runnmg out
or older women who find you atttactive."
·

pa~ft

·AI!C~t!

768K Laptop With
20MB Hard Drive

Save '185 .

$1199

COPY OEAOliNE
MONDAY PAPER
tUES DAY PAPE~
WEONFSOAY PAPl:.R
THURSDAY PAPER

S399*

WnU4Htn

3&amp;-Watt Under-Dash CD

PAPER
SUNDAY PAPEfl

tHIOAV

Wnh AC adapter, charging
stand. 117-1060/602/273•1653

· Public Notice
. IN THE

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Low A&amp;l11 P e r - ·

PRO.BATE. COURT
OF
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
ESTATE OF
. GLENN W. WOLFE
DECEASED
CeH No. 211,887
Docket 13, Pogo 303
NOTICE
Notlco iolleroby given thot
on the 28th dey_of JMUOry,

100.Watt Stereo Receiver

24915

Save '120

Reg. 34U5

1 · card or Thanks

21915

The HOWARD LAWRENCE FAMILY would

Reg.33U5 .
131-3004

Use alone or w~h exlsting·syatem. 112·1941

1
.2
3
4
5
6
7

Th• FOIIOWI,"JJ~For ~~c Auctlo?:

Stereos, stove,.,,;,t,#JI§.';~~tor 11~e~room su_Hes,
haH beds, Vieti'Q.~; ~e~s~,rs. a1shes, old books,
lafl1lS, gas heaters! lhdDIJ ro.om suHes, televisions, lawnmowers&lt;, "dlstM, Glothlng and other
merchandise too',(IUrrie.~aus to 111$nllon.
SALE WILL BE lf!ISIDE;i' NJCe,AND WARM

·J

'l:erme Of &amp;.te: C..h ClfoCheak wllh·propet J.D.
Nolllelpollllble for AockiMIIa or Lou of Property

MAllY CASTO CASIIa: MELODY MOONEY
AUCTIONEERS: GOLDEN CASTO
JASPER CASTO

CUIJ(:

(304)937·2276

(304) 937·2126

11431

11742

CIITO'IIUCTIOI SERVICE
Buffalo, West VIrginia 25033

for e.eh

d~

.s •eta•r••• ads .

~11l1n

31

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33
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like to lha.. Deputlee

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13915

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6915

Reg. 131.t5

Reg. f?.t5

....

153-ch. cabte·eompetlbte tuner. 118-522

Save

9911

_.

lowAol15

H•r pollee, fire, more. 120-139

Thr&amp;e-memoJY. 143-557

· We would like ·to
thank everyone for
their kindness ehown
us during the illneu
end death of our
loved one. Thank you
for thiJ Cllrde, food,
hll
donltlone In
memory, the phone
e1118 offering help,
etc. Special thenketo
the Recine Unit of
the EMS, Dr. Mansfield. Or. Brown, ell
of the nurs. . end entire 1taff of Veterans Mamorlel Hosplt81. Home He1lth
ServiCI,
StraightTucker Funerel Home
and RIIV.
Kenny
Baker who's contollng mNiego touahld
ue 1nd Jllldo It , ..llr
to give him up.
The FemiiY of

I,

•

'
Ultrallghtwelght 8mm Carncorcter

can

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- wllol wo ... Ooey" LMw. .loO LiCIMOO Clip. AT/Hog. Ill 18M Clip. Malt~ oquip11'n- ·

.

PRICES APPLY AT PARTICIPATING
'

?99~

~Aoaa.,.,.......,.

IICQIIIIOIOiril'leell. HI-ll mono BOund, l18-&amp;53

Check Your Phone Book for the Aiello Shick Store or Del'- NMI'III You
SWITCHAIJ,~ TOUQH~/PUUiE
11010 ,.. .., poriOI- · in .,..11!'&lt;11111 Dilly- (r&lt;Jiory dill inoo, ,..

--an

1/u•

11
t2

Galli"' Counly
Area Codllt 614

Me1gs Countv
Ar~a Code 614

MtsunCo.. WV

13
14
15
16

Area Cude 304

17

446 GallipoliS'

992

67&amp; Pt Ple..a.nt
458
57&amp; Appi•Grow•

2 00 PM MONDAY

2.00 PM TUESDAY

643

Arebie 01al.

l79 w•nut

2.00 PM WEDNESDAY
2.00 PM THURSDAY

Mukllepor1
Pomlllf"Dy

188 Vinton
245 Rio Grinde
266 Guvan Din

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
11 00 AM . SAJU .. OAV

985
843
247
949
742

Ch•Mr

Pane.nd

Letan Falls
Reane
Rullaind

66 7 · Coolville

Situ•tion W~nt•
lnsuranc•

35

36

Redio. TV &amp; CB R•p111r
To Do

lilifiifill

... tt.

773 Mea Oft
112 New H•nn

21

. e ....... OppotiUnlly

22 Maner tolnn
23 Prof•tional Serv1ct11

Letilfl

a ..

Tran s ortation

Hou ..s tor Rant

42 Mobile Homn.fur
43 Farm a tor Renl

Rt~nt

71 Autos tor Sale
72 Trucks for Si.llu

44 . Ap~~rlment tor Ram"t
45 Furn11hod Raom!ll

73

1•

46

Spice for Ae'''

47

Wented to Rent

48

Equ1pmen1 tor Runt

49

For Le.Me

79

ftl

81

5l Antiques
ft4 ·Misc. Merch1nd-, ,e ·
55 Budding Supph•
51 Pe11 tor Slle

82
93

59

For Seht 01 Tr•de

Home ln\pmvu mant s
Plt~mb•ng flo H111 111mu
EIICwilltllllJ
.

84 Electm:al &amp; Ruft.gt:tu11on

57 Mulie.e lntlf\HnBnll
frutll &amp; Vegut1bl•

Campers.&amp;. Motor H1hnc!&gt;

Services

HouMhold Ooods

'2 · Sporling Goods

58

wo ·~

V1tni &amp; 4

MotOfcyclcs
75 But~ts &amp; Mol on hu 5;~111
76 Aut o Parts &amp; Ac tUS!iOFIW
11 Aut u Ropa lf
78 Campmg £qt11pnu~ nt

Mer cha ndrse

Schools &amp; lnlluiCIIUn
MIIC:elll'l.ou I

64 Hay &amp; Grttm
65 .S l!cd !I fl:rllhl llf

1;1)111

Busin"a Tram1ng

18 Wanled

.....

937

HelaWant.t

Farm Equ•pmcnl
62 Wanlt.dt o Buy
63 l•vt!stock

61

F,.rms lot Sale
8usin85s 8uild•n91
lois • Acre~e
Real hlltt, Warnud

86

Gtmt!fa l Haulm!J

86

Mobiltt Hume
Upholsttuy

87

Rt~po~~n

2 1)0 PM . fRIDAY

PubliC Notice

PubliC NOtice
1 981, outhentlcoted c!IPY of
Lenore of Ap!lolntnwnt of
Georgie W. Bolle, u peroonal repre•ntatlve of the ••·
toteofGionnW. Wolhl. wore
filed In the P..-lo Cour:t of
Molgo County, Ohio.
Ro'-1 E. Buok. Juda•
(1)31; (2)' 7, 14, 3tc ·

Public Notice
FINANCIAL REPORT
OF TOWNSHIPS
For Fitc81 v«r Ending
Docombtot!~:. 1t80
ORANGE wwNSHIP
County of Moigo
"Thil il 1ft URIUdtted

Flnonclel

Bolinco .... : .....2&amp;, n1. 14
L111 Outot•ndlng
Chacko ............. 6,522 .1 1
TOTAL
BALANCE ...... 20.255.03
SUMMARY OF
INDEBtEDNESS '
Outllandlr19
1/1/80 ............. .. . 724.47
Retl....t .. .. ..... ....... a. 724.47
Outotandlng
12/31/80 ................ -o1 awtlfy thlo Npan to btl
correct ""d t.ue, to the btoot
at my knowledge.
Dorothy Celew1y, 2/4/91
Townohlp Clork
428112 Mudeock Rd.•
Coohlllle. Dh.411723
614·9811-41l3
(2)7, 1tc

PubliC Notice
NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
The Molp County Com-

o.,..n-

..... 211.115

Dialing
Cordless
Phone

'40

~,,."'

Ao 111 ,., - .

2&amp;91S

Speed

Save
2-Way Speaker With
M...lve 15" Woofer

Sheriff'•

end ell our Friencll and
NllighbOrl for their help
end concern during lha
time of the J8CIInl burgt-v ot our ltore. Your
efforts ... IJPPieciated.

' '

' . ,

l'lll'l'r

fulluwill~ I t•lt•flllllllt' t~.l:dtarr~t•s ...

Si!lus

ment. Mllip E.M.S.,

Cut '80

HonluS tor Sale
32 'Mabile Homes lor Sdlc

41

t lll!liiiYI"t:l' i
S··· v IC'~S

Farm Supplies
&amp; Ltveslock

Real [slate

C•d olth. .ks
'In Memory

Givaaw•v
Htppy Ads
lott •nd Found
V•d Stlt(INid 1n alfvancttJ
I) Public S.lt • Aucuon
9 WMitld to Buy

R•les a1o tor conMtWt~e runs . tMOkenuPdiV&amp;wtllbechalg_.

11te, the Mllip Coun-

Handheld
Portabie
Action
Scanner

•

10
Monthly

DMinV Leonard, Relph
Tru-'L end Bob 8ee-

Dubs \K)th lape sides at once. 114·650

D.H. I - Howard Eblin, Jessica

Going Out Of Bwlnn• Md Will Offer

Rog. so.,...."- sseuo

1110CW!at

T lPd; ,1 '~1i0 ~I 1MO RAM VGA Color Mon1tor, 52MB HD Mou'.t'

100-wan capiCily. t&lt;I0-1125

6

•A d,ISlitlft:d aal\ll!rUsunlltlll tJI.ar..: •ld 111 lht!' O;uly Sm1hn~ ICII
t:•~l
tlil!iSIIIud da~l)liiV. 8uSIII!l!iS Card omd h.-uiil noh~~~
w1ll ,11\o •'PIII~i!r II\ the PI Plc&lt;lliillll Rtt{IIIOIUr and the Gilllt
pulls Q,~1ly lrohum1. lllilt:hiiiH ovm 18 .000 honteiO

Handheld Portable
Cellular Phone

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AT -CLASS BUSINESS SYSTEM ONLY 1999

Low A. 111 ,_ - ·

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"Ads th&lt;~lllluSt bu paid 111 .ld\liln t::c •• ~
Co.ul of Thank!&gt;
tl&lt;tppv Ad"' · ,

~USI power and run-M8-00SO'

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.GOING our OF BpSINESS

~llllllll 'l c l:!llCiliS

,s·,;o,

Superb System for Home or.SJMII Office

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'70
....;;...;;;._

121 Mill Strht, Middleport, Ohio

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

Owtr 16 Worclt
Rate
.
.20
84.00
.30
$6 .00
.42
$9 .00
.60
813.00
.05/doy
. $1 .30/ day

Words

'3

adw ;mcu
•t- 1 m~ ads
Gtvt!'&lt;~W;ty ~nd FoUnd ·a,ds undtlf 1&amp; wor,ds w1tl bv
run 3 diltS at no ch•gv.
.
• Pr•Ct! ot ad fOI ;~II capd"l letter5 "doublu puc• ol ad cas I
• 7 ~ftlt lt•J.: type only usttd
1 .
•
'St!h1'n1i!l
rt!sponslbl l! t01 tJffufS ;~hur hnt•l., ' l~t.O
tor ~~trrors hrst day ad rm.s 111 papurl Call hctore 2 00 p m
d.rt allm pubh cat•o••lo 11111ke d urHChun
·

..... ...... Jtorno

I

.. IO:llla.DI.
118111 f IIIRT

retained

Days

POLICII:S
.
·
'Atls oulstdl! Mci{JS. Galt1a0r Mason count•• musl bt= prt!

$1188·-··5

,

81 I URDIY, nB. 8, 1811

•

There is more than fur
"They were doina their busiflying in Saratoga County these ness when Mr. Buller made a c:oudays over the controversial search pie of direct ~asses 81 them with
for a new landfiU. ·
the lp'Cidcr,' said Michael Pratt
In the latest of .several incideniS, county landfill project supervisor',
a group of surveyors Bltemplinsto "and then he covered them with
evaluate sites this week found minure."
themselves .covered with cow
Buder might alsO face conte~pl
manure.
.
of court charge&amp; for allcgcdl
. y VJo- .
Farmer Edwin Butler of · 1a1iJ1a 1 1ta1t -supn;me COurt order ·
Northuniberland, 35 miles north of issued last year prohibiting
Albany, faces criminal charges landownen from interfering with

RATES

TO PLACE AN AD CAll 992-2156 ,
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.
8 A.M.. until NOON. SATURDAY
CLOSED SUNDAY

286-Based Home/Office PC Compatible
. With 20MB SmartDrlve"' Hard Drive

I

• Public Sale
&amp;Auction

IUCTIO

(UP!) -

Classifie

-·

:·=.

8

uterheing~cusedofinten~Y
. . . .·. .~~~. . . . . . . . . . . .::::::::::::::::::::;;;;;;;;;i~....
~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;i;i;i;ii;i;i;~~-===~the=-man;::ure~on~~==
· :::..the~
.

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Save
1 511

But ·"it is now recognized that should be administered, especially
asthma il more than a bronchospas- . for patients with moderate or
tic event" and broncbodilalors do severe asthma.
"With afpropriate treatment,
not alleviate the "underlying
infla.mmltion of the airways," virtually al asthma patients can
become free of symptoms," said
Sbelfer said.
DJup such as cmmolyn sodium Dr. Allan Luskin, an associate pro·and corticosteroids can counter fessor of immunology, microbiolosuch intlanunaiion, he said, and the gy and medicine at Rush MediCI!
guidelines provide specific recom- Center in Des Plaines, Ill., and
mendations for how such drugs another panel member.

The guidelines reflect new
~bt toscther in one com{'CCbelui¥1 dcx:wn!mt tbe 1*1Pf£11ves
of llletliiU ltld cbeat piiYtlclans
oa tbe tmhMII! and IIIIOI&amp;ematt
of lltbma." Dr. Claude Leafant,
director of the NatioDil lleart,
L111110d Bloocl lllltitllle, which
orpni""' the panel
An Cltin I d 10 miD ion Amelicans suffer from uduna, a disease
uncler1taDdiiJg lhat iritlammation of
tbe bre8lbin&amp; puii8CW8ys plays a
sillJiificant role in ast1una and antiiDllammatcry 8I«&lt;ids are effective ·
in reversinalhe reaction, Sheffer
said.
·
'"It's.I c~ in tbintini as far
as lhcnpy,"lllid Sheffer, a pofessor of medicine 81 HaMn1 MediMI
School in Bos1011. "The primary
1011 ror ~ manageman and diagnoeis ~I was to CIIIJihasize the
euiy mslitution of anll-inflammatary lbenpy,"
Clim:niiy, many )lllientl alleviate asthma auacks with drugs
known as bronchodilaton, which
c:onllin inhalable drup called beta2-antasonists and iheophylline,
which can alleviate the constriction
of muscles IIR)UJid airways.

Farmer spreads manure on
surveyors
working
on
landfill
NORTHUMBERLAND, N.Y.
byt!Jecounty.

-

Tipton, Mr. and Mrs. Victor
Counts; grandchildren, Mr. and
Mrs. John Nelson and sons, John
and Heath, Mr. and Mrs. Bobby
Williams and daughters, Holly and
Hannah, Shannon and Jason
Counts. Others celebrating wl)re
Many W~ and Shay Meeks. .
Mrs. Shields recieved several
cards and giftS.

.

'

BETHESDA, Mel. (UPI) _The
sovemment Tuelday iallled ill fint
By WILLIAM C, TR01T
guidelines for trellina a•lvM, ret:·
United Press IDierllatiooal
om
mending wider u1e or antiHFLL N_O, HUNTER WON'T GO: Hotel' TbtlmJIIOII IJillde a
·
inflammaiOry
c1ntp to comblllhe
name for himself covering the Vieblam W~~t but says the Persian Gulf
gJQwing
number
of~ llric:kcn
:ovar doesn't fit his gonzo lifestyle. 'Tve had trouble .with peopJe • and
killed
by
the
breaduna
di n•.
IDJ me why I'm not in Saudi Arabia covering the war," Thompson
·
"~
deathl
are
penllllble
sai,d during a speaking e~~P~C~~~ent in Baltimore. "There's a reason no beer. And you get your hands cut off for talking w a woman in · because many pBiients don't blve
access to 1pproprilte therapy,"
Saudi Arabia. That's enou~h ." In addition ·to a bottle of scotch,
said Dr. Albert Sheffer, who
Thompson jlroughta Bible ·With him to the podium. saying, "It's berter
chaired
the Natiooal Astbma Edu10 read the Bible than the newspapers, "but he denied he'd round relication
Prognun's
expert panel that
gion. "Hell, no, I'm an invesiJI&amp;Iive journalist," Thompson said: "I
issued
the
guidelines..
' have not turned to God in my dotage.''
The report is aimed 81 increasing
.- the
diagnosis of astbma and mat•
ing sure patienu receive die most ·
ANOTHER HEFNER HEIR: Hop and Kimberley HefDer Ire
appropriate treallllellt, which tiluld
planning on a playmate ror their young son, Manton. Kimberly. who
significantly reduce .tbe I)'IIIJIIOIIIS
was PlaybOy magazine's playmate of_ the~ in 1!189 ~~marrying
ancl deaths from the diaeue
Hefner mJuly of that year, IS expectmg thetr second child m Septem- · '·'This ~ is very lipificant
ber. Marston was born on his father's biflhday, Apri19, 1990.
and even btstoric because It bas'
in which the brcatbllll
ways become constricted,
SINEAD IN' A SNIT: 'Not much pleases singer SIDead O'Coanor
wheezing, shonDesa of bre8lb
these days. Sbe's angry about the war in the Persian Gulf, she's
even death. In 1988, about 4,580
adaniant about boycolling the Feb. 20 Grammy Awards show and she's
Amaicans died from lllhma.
red up with the·music business·in general. "I can' t sleep ll night, I feel
Expert$ have become concerned
so strongly al!out this (the war)," the Irish singer says in an inteview
because the number of new cues
airing Thuts&lt;lay on "Entertainment Tonight." She also said she
of asthma has been inc:Raslng, risdoesn't care if her ~litical stands jeopardize her C8!IICt because she's
ing by onences University and a
tired of it anyway. 'I don't wlll!lto be in this busin!lss any longer anyoanel member. .
.
·
way," O'Connor-says. "II makes .me sick. Everythina about it makes
me sick. It's the most offensive business that I could possibly imagine
haviJJg 10 be involved with."

· •Aiquim newiCtivltiOn and ~m
stMct commilment...., ~~Radio
wrior (price-

. il'

Government
issues first asthma treatment guide
.

People 'in the news

Teresa Deem. Raena Eblin, Tracy
Eblin, Tracy Ellis, Kim Ewing,
Raben Fields, fam Ha.Qy, Resa
Harris, Mandi HaiTi$, Candy Harrison, Edna M . Hensley, Tara
Humphreys, Kelly R. Johnson ,
Cathy Lamben, Sandy I anctaker,
Bronson Laudermilt. Missy ·Leach,
James David 48ter, Amy Might,
Jessie Morris, Mary Morton,
Jeanette'McDonald, Tina McGralh, •
Chris Neece, Missy Nelson, Nina
Overhageboeck, Spril)g Reed,
Aaron Sheets, Kristen Slawter,
Kelly Smith, Joseph Smith, Jennifer Taylor Ken VanMatre, Amy
Wagner, St~phanie Walk.er, ~my
Warth, Jenm Werry; Teresa Wmes,
Oarci Wolfe.
·

Shields birthday is noted

Low A. $37 Por Monlh •

'

•

Allison Nicoe Gannaway, Mary A.
Grueser, Randall Curtis Johnston,
Lori Jean Kelly, Kevi'n Andrew
Lambert, Courtney C. Midkiff,
Lorma Lynn Oiler, S~tphanie Lynn
Price, Amy Elizabeth Reynolds,
Steve Priode Swatzel, Rusty
Eugene Triplett, Katrina Ruth
TurQer, Michelle Lynn Youog.
Junior class - BarWII Anderson.
Josh Jones Bartels, John David
Bechtel, Frank Edward Blake, Kim
Ann Bunon, Beth Ann Clark. Sharla Kly Cooper, Ryan Keith Cowan,
Mary Beth Cremeans, Heather C.
Davenport, Christian Die~l. Kyle
FIIUSIIIIIgb, T1r1 Michelle Gerlach,
Angie Dawn Goody, Stephanie
· Kay Haggy, John Martin Harrison,
Mary Ann Hawk, Shawn Michael
Hawley, Mallhew Brooks Haynes,
Jeremy Edward Heck, April Lynn
Hudson, Lisa M 1ones, Sheila Lattimer, Darin Paul Logan; Shawn
Charles Marcinko, Jennifer Masten, Tammy Jo MiUer, Teresa Ann
Molden, Joseph Paul McElroy,
AmyL. McKinney, R~ Pllrtlow,
Jason Todd Reynolds, Melissa
Rena Rollins, Connie Lucille
Sautcrs, Phil Matlhew Smith,
Darcy Lynn Stone, David Gean
Swanson, Mark Theiss, Michael
Todd Thomas, Bobby Lee Vance,
Christina Gail Weaver, Kathy
Renee Williams, Bobby Wyau.
Senior class - Lorrie Baker,
Randy Corsi, Michelle A. Curtis,

The Daily Sentinel- Page 9

Pomllfoy-MiddapDrt. Ohio

I

!:dlt
-~
C•rdaW.Icome .

Moat M.,

J1nie1 8. (Jim)
Plttii'IOn

::...... 14,381 .05
........ U,It2.84
''" " "' "" " ...801 . 88
RECEIPTS . ..... 79.178 .87
DISBURSEMENTS :
General
Gowornmont ... 14,443.37
Public Worlco ..... 48;737 . 10
Hell1h ........... ,.... :1 .31i 2. 38
C•pltll Outley .....8,724.47
TOTAL DISBURSE- .
..
MENTS ... ,.... ,, 73,287.33
Totel Recelp1o 0 - /
tUnderl Dleb ........ 11.822.114
Fund c..h Bot-•
1/1180 ....... :.....14,332.48
Fund Ceoh Bol•nce
12/31/110 ........ 20,21!1.03

-

In ..... offiOIIocMIII In

Cou_..,

the
Pomeroy.
ONo 411711. until noon on
flbruory 22. 1111. The bldl
will bo _.... 11 1 P.M. on
dote Md re..t oloud lar

PubliC Notice

PubliC Notice

tho loloWing Community Dewetop,,.nt 1 - Grent project:
R..,.Jr at ollp on Woloh·
town Rd. (T-8041. Sutton
T-il&gt;· Fumlohlng .at ell
niCIIJI!l tebof, IQUipmlnt.
IIIII mot1r1111 to ln. . . 18
pa HP12.U .... ~
. . _ 1'0" on eetlmllld 11nt111o: IIINII I

pulelion of bid ..
The 8 - of County Co""

-bid or ooloct
bid
for N Intended
and
I'IIIIVH the right to 11CC01Jt or

mln'an.. IIIIIY IIDCIIP1 1Mb-

Tolll T-rv

'

3 Announcements
NOnCE
The Rutllnd Volunt - Fire Depertment
will be tolclnOIJidlifllf ell
or pen• ofthe old Buell
hou• on corner of
Meln ond Llrldn Sir-.•
In Rutllnd by februory
21, 11181 ot 7:00 P.M.

c:.n- OIIVkl Divis

ot 742; 3182,
Keith
Mokl111 ot 742·2041 or
Todd •nowdon ot 7423077 ta lnepecl houoe.

the-

pu,.,_

PubliC Notice

wood boelling 10....., the II.
It
le
theu...
lolpro•imltely
480 thll
lq. fl,
-lng optlone lillY or lillY
noi be _..,. • .,. . .~.....
by thl Boercl ot Mligl C..ty
CommiloiDn- Dtldon 1: InotaU -Oldmllli&gt;t 100' at
QUI- 12'1" _.,.., Option 2: Perform becktl 11111
boo onwodc.

unoteo•-

Projoat -~- II PIIH

R - • · Moitl C:.Unty In·
glnHr. lid.... 10
own bid
Pront of envolo.,. conteinlnt 11M ~
mull btl' mer1&lt;14 "lid for
W.tilhtown Rd. lllp Rl·
pelr" . Dewl•locon w... ·
r - muot be.u ... ln com-

*-·

u• _,

Mory Hootottor, Cieri&lt;

IIIDIPDMIIT
CAIPU CIIAIID5

(217. 14 2tc

'

lED HIGliY'S
UBII SHOP

Open I Deyo
Mon.·Frl. 1 · 1
CloHd Set. a Sun.
546 u,or "'• ~
Aootn. 614·446-0002

Gol",,w,

IStit~wtr HI

o...,

and

TRIM and .
. REMOVAL
•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD

alltl till PLOOI CAll
•RHoonoble Ratu

•Ouollty Work

HS 11. Sec111f1 Sir..
-..olf, 0110 45760
Offlct 614-"1-1116.
- "4.ftt.J6t2
1101111 s. lUIMI, 110111

HOUIII•LOTUfARMa
COMMERCIAL
We Neeol Uellnp!
ll-f'10.11o

TIAIISMISSION
and AUTO IEPAII
•peelelillng 1ft

AU10m0tlc

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

Melgo couniv

ln~i~===~nr=~=~:=~~~w~~~~~:~] ·SHRUB &amp; TREE

DAN'S

BULLETIN BOARD

'v

CommlaMonara

Business
Services
dlod--

ping
the-wftllleOOIIIII·
_....to ..........: . . . . . . .

PubliC Notice

reject any or oil bldo ond/ or

•nv port t h - .

:ii"o"

Tr-mlolloftl, Brekee,

T_,, 01 Chen...
ClutGh IIIIIJIJir'
PRIIHnMATII

•F- l!otlmeteo
•C.rpet Hoe F11t Dry
Tl11111
Q
Til
•High
lOll on
e
Floor Flnloh •
. .IUWJS. Owow

•ttt-5517

FOR SALE IN RACINE

. •

VERY NIC( LARGE HOME ON APPROX. 3~
ACIIES-4 BR, 3 baths, 2 uraa-. rtnlld I
BR apartmerrt. Property includes pond, IP·
prox . 4,800 sq. ft. firm bid&amp; MOd .molllle
home. A retl blrpin ill $84,900.

01.

1/1 •.

CAll6f4-992·7104 FOR APPT.

BIG KIDS &amp; BABY PROGRAM
WED., FEB. 13-6:30 P.M.

.MICIOWAYE
OVEN IEPAII

au.uas ·

lrillt It Ill Or We
Pkltllp.

liN'S APPLIAIIIG
.SIIYKE
HJ-SIJS ar-tiS..JS61 .
I AI

It,

USED APPUANCES

ol MINiep1H
UPHOLSTEIY

· !U Ill.

SeCond

MI.....,.

Hencl Tufting
Culltom Dr1pa1
S6 Yooro Eapertenee

614-ttJ-2121

W. ley Whet We Do.

ley. •
IO.If.l 110.

We Do Whet We

311/10/lfn

YOUNG'S .

CUSTOM llllT
HOMES &amp; GAUGES

· - ..... l'lu. .,..
-conoretework

I

n¢h ,._,

NO SUNDAY CAW

..

USED RAILROAD TIES

742·2451

CARPINTEI SERVICE

PIL 949·1111
., l•,f4t-JI60
Day or Nltlht .

Pleasant Valley Hospital
Call 675-4340 for More
lnformatton

992-2269

BISSELL
BUILDERS
"At 1

Downstairs Conference Room

BILL SLACK

II. 1, lolioM, 1111.

,........ ...............
::.!,:z:
'·-

IY.... II......101

0.::.~......... 21.777. 14

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

.•

--.w._ONiod

PubliC Notice

-"oom Additions

- Quntr walk

-Rooflnll

-1-·btorlor
Pllinllng

(fiiiiiiTIMATHI

Y. C. YOUNG Ill
.,2-6215

90 DAY WAIIANn

WASIIEIS-$100 "'
DIYIS-$69-u'

•FIIGUAIOIS-$1011 .,
IANIIR-Got·llt&lt;.-$125.,

fllllUS-SUI .,
11&lt;10 0¥1111-$7. . .

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
992-SJJS • tiS-356 I
Acrtll fr1111 ..... Offkt
I'CIMIIOT, OliO

10130/'it tin

BISSElL I lUilE .
CONSTIUCnON

........
._.....
. . . . . NOIIIII

•c..., ••,,

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

Step&amp;C011pan
'

.

915-4U3
667-6179

5-31-'90 t '

·'

..

�•

LAFF·A-DAY

- _,

.... .....

Cl••··-·--.. _,....._..

3 Annoui'ICIIIIII'Itl

::::r--'h_ =:."·
. . ._

ttnn ......
...., 111lnl~•• lftclhi•tal. To
11n11 . . ~ ohio

......
,.,
ll.....nt
RellttiOI.,.. .,.
Confw.ntlet.
Ho...- . .~.0. ...
100, OolllpOiio, OH 4SQI,

G0L11 CIWIIT CARD, 11,100. CNdil

·a tJn a nn•l"" . - ~ - - .,., - h •
uiiiiiiM,
monlh - • · no
?2IF ..,. Dl ,.,.,
...1 114-NI-7101
.... •
""11o1r - . -or OH. p.m.
•

-·

•

......
- .""""""
,.....
-llock...
,1
-o

Ul. loe.

--·twndoMdatiW!

Tlalloi-A·Taollol

-

tN baaMI: with I Gtl

~

a l J cues:, m liM~ Nnch
wllo-NiofandZcir- • ............. »&gt;--JS.
'Ill? or~.

·Giveaway

~.~::=~~~
loegla. l
.

•

.

-~

T.HURS., FEB. 7
EVENING

.

~-

-·-

~- _doll..,-­
an-IM~. CM-MU
y-.oa11o - - '"""' aA• :00 PIL

4

•I

.... _..1111-• lllddllporl 114-tJI:I.

fir:JI Estate

-

· - - . . ..~
-1100.
-ur~~r
UI_II_I!Mo
Oallipall' .....,, ~

-

Un~•• #'.::...!21

ll!E'I USED TO WAIT
FOR 'TilE SCIIOOL BUS
LIKE WE'RE DOIN6 ...

1:30

low 10 form

•

w• a N8C

L 1 G0

.

l

.

.

•

Complete 1ho chuckle quoted
by fillin; In tho missin; ""'rda
you develop lrom step No. 3 below.

.

1:31 Ill Andr llflllllh
(I) I .,.... of Jaanolle

SCIIAA\-I,In, ANJWIIS

lENawaHour~
!Ill.=~~ 0
·

.ae

,_,. Old.

o

A,9g_

Jr. performs classic big-bind
love bllloda and dlocusaes
hil feelings about music and •

1.011':-·--ln
....-,If
.... 114 ttl OC''

romance. (1 :00) Stereo.
7:05 (J) HappJ .,.,.

...,

7:30 (2)
Cll

II

%.~ ~f~E

t-- .
I

ALL Yard iiiM'Ii1111 lo Paid In
.Wu••· DEADUNI: 2:01 ...._
, . . day ...... ""' ....... -

. . . . . . , - . 2:00 ,....
· _ , _ ·1:00

I$N'T'-

,.... ..,_,,

i

.. .

&amp;Auction

........,

!Ill• TI!IW'a CotttpanJ

a

Paid P~ogramm~ng
erout~te

a

7:31 ([) lanfonl and 8on
8:00 aJ • a eo.~~r

._ Rudy

blby-lltl Olivia wltllt the
Huxt8bln play pinochle .

Stereo. C
Cll MOVIe: ling, lloilgiiU&lt;,

~

i

Public Sale

Tanlahl·!~
Slei'IIO. Q

(I)

llng(1 :00)

•

.

Cll ClleFalherDowllog
· ,.,......_ Falher Dowling's
life Is put in danger becaull
of a DhO~~ Stereo. Q
(%) war •
In 111e

1tt~~Q
ae op Cope
Colomblllt drug dtlllera are

llll

arresled alter an Intensive
surveillance. St.reo. C

Farm Supplies

!llle Tile limp eon• Oaa

&amp; Livestock

convinCes Homer o1 the evilS
of pirating cable. Stereo. Q
0 MIIIIMr, 8he WIOII
Stereo. Q

_...,......., J... _ _

61 Farm Equipment

orwlhoul..-. • - 11.114411-212L

.On .....

OUIIO

II, RL 7, Th,.. Mllaa

2-

':ti,~
- · --- · ..... lot . . . . . lid I I 11,
104-t7HtM-

.....

2-·
1 aora loloL3
-_
OlllllpOIII
.h
h _
_Loa..,
_ ·
pulollo .wat•,
no_
Natotctlont,

.... aoocl - i o n .
pholoa anil -rlollon to
1 Patton, At-. Ottlo 45'ltll or
0011 IM/112....., or h41HZ•

ar. z- ·

:c·~·~m01~
flint, . ., ot
IM-317·1110.

::r.

Mlrchllndlll

TIIIW bedroom d!!lel In .excel-

21" - 110.00.
-~·
T.V. - u
aoocl
Wota&lt;bad with
fiaadMard $110.00. 114-tiiZ·

IJ'5.17111 ot I

1101.
210 }"lion fuel oil, lltganon,
.,.... 1104,
114-251-1317,

-w
....
-

po.»&gt;""~t'11. t u
lt-

Unlum- Z loadroom apt 1

u holM In NN Hlven,
W¥ -mall

1 Ill J

BEAT TilE RISHI

4

Fumllhld

•

11118'1111
W.l II

..,. .._.. sl!.pellllll
coni~~~

....

!i ~

Li· .:)
••:... 1 •
n4IL

DUliNG FDIUAIT
- Frtt pickup and
dlliwery in
and MWdllport city
limits.

~

I ,

,_1,

IIIII- I

WE ALSO IEfiVIC!
CHAIN IAWI

I

Rooma"" ront · - ot month.
81ortlna
at SI2Dfmo.Hotat.

!11~•:!•~·~-~a·:.___.,o---.-::':'

m104-171-IIM.

- · 30WI2-31411.

---·""'
·
449

For 1.1181

'

-=;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;~ijiii~j;

W.ralto- · - In OIINpdlo.
A-1. 11100 lla. ft. lncliJcl!ng
olloiHioaa
:::'~ •tolload
..._ lnjj
111
-

1.1111=

flitenYw H*t

~aw.~ .

42 MObile Homll
for Rent ·

at - · a t ltM.WI, 114-Slt-

51

HOUIIhold
Goodl

tx12 oaJpal Nnw. 110. KHdlan
..rpo! (I
Mollohan fum!tuN R n
h 1•• · - 1· 11..

.:-=··===:::::;::;:;.L::;;;;;·

I
lo

-

J:i

~-::;;;;;;:;·::;~;:::;;-:;;;
· ~

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

MOilLE HOME FUINAUS- HEAT PUMPS
All FURNACE PARTS .

eon, OH t-..37.tul.

Jack-

For BolO: I - · 1 Bull COif,
30 ChlckaM. 3 tioga. Phone:

l14417-7llll.
UtMity luldlng BPL: 30'JI40'xl'
Ea.., 1-111'11' illldlng - · 1-S'

110-·-·-·1441.
tw-. -· w.,...-

Ooool """"" - · haf. .10 por
Rouah Ad.

me.ploaddati-:ICM-

Fl--. - -

Roclna-•2111.

IBII
Parunal
Cornpular
Wtprlntar and lOCI orloe, than .,. - • old, ,.,._773-IIIOt

245a81

•~'"'~ood.!J'.;. ::!t ~~~o•oo,;
•••

Ot

c~lmnay kl. S300. 1M~~

DoR

~y

1011.

•

R-hloned Wnlwos. DJYtrO. Mix... haY "" ula ...,.,. llal•
Guarantaod p1oonp1 . . ,... klr $1.00 parllalo 114-111-4113.
al •U.. mad Ia t Till Wuher

Trcns portatlo 11

..

Sur!ll&amp;aft..~·
danlm, - ·
, """'""
alolhlna.
WA11R

Wt tine 0

.

Ran'o TV
1n

:rante~ aoao -

;

.,.-olzlno-

o

111001 •

after Brian reports UFO
htingt 1o the FM. S!ereo.

tl

'

!,.a .. ,...
.-.-.c.··
111

ondHutlna
F-andPTile
O.lllpollo, Oltlo

111 . . . . . .

84

" Wouldn'l il be eaaier to just skip lhe salt
· and pepper on windy days?"
·

.... latte111, 011. 4570

1/319111 ...
' .

.-. ......
IllS,

'!Ito - ·

24UI21.

ll!lrlfll!: Q

..
I

..

•

'

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

a :IIINIII
""""''
,_,
or .......,.,
......, Unnnd .....W..
R..._. Elaotrloal, 104-1711111.

''

CALL

Feb. I , 1111

........

,r

.'
. ...,
'

..

.

Clenaralon

or

•

'

conalder

!Uie ltar TM: Tilt Next

Refrigeration

ClaUde WinOH Col 114-

~Cnot~l..lndlntl

bec:OminQJaeon'a lOiter

EIBCtrlcal &amp;

- -

...,.... oto.

a•

MaCk end K8ren

Plumbing &amp;
,H
In
. eat D

eart...·o-blna

Pille:
Civil ........ y . . .

~Under,.,.

Davlo · -Yac
.-e.·~
Qaorgoo C- Ad. POlio, ...._~ "'"kup, and
, . dal"'l· 114...- .&amp;::

82 .

.

f~,,IIIPiollln,...llllllnllltoll Live
(%)

loptlo Tank Pulnplftl 110._011.. '
Co. RON EVANS EIIIERPKISU, ;
JacUon,OH1~4AI.
,

Building
Supplies

55

(I)Hewa

o

0311.

•Hendll end IIIIUilt Monroe Shook•

with mui!!Pit parwonolllles.
Stereo. Q
..

I

$2,100. 304-fll-ntl ., 114-3117-

c-e ... llea111 Jw A Free llllpedton
. . . nu•e
PIL "il-tls-Jtft ••11n aua

11J L.A. Law Kuzak II
conluaed by a murder aupocl

10:00 (2) e

olhtr lnnct. . ..... •Ill, · - :

_ .._
........ wv
304.a7142M 01t1o 114441-2414.

011.OoocllpcMta .

lei'IIO. Q

MADE OUT PLAYIN'
CHECKERS WITH
. OL' DOC
PRITCHART
TODAY

-~~~~ tanning· load
•EiiCtrto Sun" lloclol IIF24_.1.
lox ol , _ bu.. lnoludad.

UM .tlxhautt SuPI!IIe•

i

I WONDER HOW PAW

wau.

•Cuatom a.il lllhl111t Sytteme

...

llnj. .

BARNEY

DRILLED,

PIIOIIPT
SERVICE.
ANYTIMI: 11WII-:7311.

.

;.,.;..,

WILLS

Wid:
-oa.

R- - -

Alllldlftllll

g::~~~Sun, - : 3 0

DUll'S CUnOM BENDING·

•

e . . . - , doJ or night. '

to.a,l14 4411030.

Drr• 8hoppt. ,,. ue 2144.

o

U-lllonll. • - 1111- l·
,.................... _fumlahed . •
F- . .lonotaa. Cal 1• •

-....~,~·--~---:=-:---:::
.
Lai!IO ""'nd bolaa 110 Mia, will

-~-··
'" .......
r¥111a'L lanclyvllla
.......

.,~

'
For sa~o: Sauer• ~••·

Ho'
mlxad haf, tt ~ ~Ia. 114-211-

au~,

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

D CaMia• laallelbol

a Larrr Kina Uvel
1:30 (2) • a Wlnp Joo worries

IIIH, :::441::::::-=·:,...._____

For Sata: Round
DaO~YerY'• AvaNobla. 1114-441-

MC1 ,.rta. ~

.,

__

'

Ho'
tor sao.. etonr • Tl-hf.
Roinld llalao In lha Field. 114-

o_,..,.,
•'"-·
d
- - . ~0111
...... w
llri •
dolla onllobla. Kllnaa, ropalra

a..tH 0. s.tt.N Sdlnll.. oH lt.141

IPECI~ING IN....

1mprov111111nt1 · ' •,,

Dog ....... whh I
goON, I ~-= pioa4a and ..., - : lUll ~- Iron
fonca.t14 .......,,
l u i - . 114432-11111.
Elaotrlalol Ot&gt;aralod Hoapnal
11ao1, 0ooo1 COncUtlon,IIOO, 114-64
-~,_.;;H::ay;,:&amp;:.G~I'I:;:In.:-.--:=
~1113.
~Good ....... hay,II.OO ...... F l - - "" aalaL!-!.!! 410 or . -.

-In

IENNm'S MOilLE HOME
HEAliNG &amp; COOLING

; II Otr locatien. To
1'11 . . llilt • lt. 241 through
' a.t•. Oh.

woman. (R) Slareo. Q
o MOVIe: Tlle' lncnodlbla
.Hulk Raluml (2:00)

•
--------·.
,
c
.
•
-•
.
- Home ••

Merchand1se

.

heartbroken after
being rajeclld by an Older

Servoces

Ron Enna E"'"-"·

a elot~-ranked

£:1'i2.,.,
.... 10210
Brandon Ia

-.-.nn.

ConcNie 6 p1aa11c aalllio ,.,.0 ,

come

(%) (f) MyltorJI Poliot and
murder lr\

Livestock

PH. 992·3922
1-4-,

weird 1o the wondloful

true. (1 :00) Stereo. Q
Hastings lnvesllgala •

IIDINQ

253 Wilt Main St.
,_...,, Oh. .

471" lt. lt. 141

JUST PLAIN 0.0
CA6H WIL.L. eE
FINE._.

4lor !arm buln lor
,.... 114clll • up. 1M our ,_

11117 .....,_ Ave,IZII.

e a

Storeo.C
Cll MOd: ..........
-llooolonata (1 :00)
. Cll Clle Ftntallllt Unuaual
draama renglng from the

Bit

- . ~ .. 115-

HarniiiS-.C

takes Woody's cradlt carda
and ftles home to Sin Diego.

llaah 1Qit. o..u latalha Dloh,
Pl.... caM. I " -IIDI.

11M411041 ..• ·4:6GPM.

ae

• Antarlcan Mualc 8lloP
CltHn Rebecca

.

-Ilion."'""'

money on an ,xper.alve ,
.
btlelcaae ..Stereo. Q_
(f) Tllil Old ltouM Q
llll
TM Flllah A
hOmlcicllll maglcltn vows to .
. destroy Barry. Guest: Mark

8:00 (2)

Afto~--·-­
aatl; a...k

tant

Dln.tenl World

spends the rent

triend6hlp With Dolly Parton
Is j4!opardizad . 511reo. 0

- - J7 114 L I 32 112 W. like
now, SI25.1Mo44M517.
4411agnwn and . . bo4h wtlh

In Point

a

!Ill• ...,.. Clfarllne's

•VIN:vL SIDING .

DAVE'S SMAlL
ENGINE IEPAII

.eo...-•

MOZAi&lt;r Am ITNJAIJ
R:ro

4 White Aluminum Storm Win-

P·"'··
IISI,Maeonwv.

P1l. _ _..,_
Kat' .. ..... lot, brick •
"-llljolllaNI.IIoad,_2

-

AIJD FmlCH (UISU ...
---~ flW l LIKt TE~IJIS.

20Siori-ZI.

Slooplnlf .......,. with cOoldng.
AIM lnliM' ~· All hook1~.
can ••• z:oo
301·773-

"'-Pl.
........ _.., .........-.

Pf

Get pw hiWII llftll ...
. . . .pllllftt ,.....,

••~.-.m hanl

Whllley

, .... loW ...... , ...,... ""
....... eleotric brKM,
.
301 Ill 2111.
3-Frldl-miH.311..,.
gina. '71 Horizon "" porta. '71
Plnlo. 1110 4x4 su..- . 'JZ
Vat-gan. '10 Ford Hortlon.
'10 FonrHortzon tor polio. _,0
John U..a. lull - · 304-fli-

Rooms

,...Hoioo_n.- ·

IJOll\IIJG I

8:30 aJ •

H£ LII&lt;E.S GO!.f.JA2Z

'=

...nl....

- -·
01
~.:lnla,
UfO,
, .Cllnlo
month.
I
81ot44U171.

a .._ .,,__ 1 ~..;"

(2:00)
8:05 ([) MOVIE: Tile Octagon fRI
(2:00)

54 MIICIIIaneDUI

1!2lootlw CA. CH, - - ·

45

aP11NNawa
Ill MOVIE: Tile Joltor lo Wild

11411.

Tora TOWIIhouM Apart-.
El_,
n11 eq n. 1

There are strong indications in the vear
ahead lhal you may be able lo gel soma
olthe rnalerjal things yotl'v e - wenllng but COW!n'l alford. Gretlly yOIM' desires, but don'l wule your money.
o\QUAIIIUI (Jan. :1He1t. 11) CondiIIO!IIotlll pm81111dvlllng you 1104 lo be.
come 100 clelply InVOlved flnanc:lally

wllh lrllnda II this tlmt. Tlila lnCIUdel

In--to, kNina or '-'ding. Get a
Jump on llle by underatandlng the lt1flu-

••

ences which are go-nlng you In tho
year ahead. Send lor your A&amp;lro-Graph
predictions loday by mailing $1 .25 to
Astro-Graph, c/o this ~r. P .O.
Box91428, Cleveland , OH 44101-~28 .
Be oure to alate your zodiiC Sign.
I'IICII CFab. 20-March 20) You may
be more Inclined today lo lind reasons
why you shouldn't do aomelhlng rather
than why you shouli:l. II the Iarmer Is

more prO•lOUnc:ed. your time may not
be spent productively.
ARIIS (Merch 21·Aprll II) Mailers

about which ~ou usually exercise prudent judgment mil!hl be dillorted by
wlahlul thinking todloy. Try to focue on
lacta, nollictlon .
. "
TAIIRUI (April 2Niey 20) Even
though you may-feel thai a pal Is obll·
gated lo owe you a favor. this 11 not· an
especially good day 't o voice your request Wall until this Individual volunletralo help.
. . . . .. . , 21..,_ 20) Somoone
whO uoually- ¥.-lo-eye with you on
cm1ea1 might be an adveroary today; your lnlereala IJ)d the lnl.,.ts of
thlllndiVIdual are in competition.
CAIICU
~~II' a .-y lmportMI IIIII you diiiYW on wltat you
pron•M IOday, e.poc1111y wilton dNUng
wllh co-workers. NegligOnce· on your
behalf could cott you the retpeet of an

1-.11.,..,
'I

admirer.

LEO (JuiJ 23-AIIII. 22) Appearances
could be deceiving in regard 10 one you preaenlly lind very appealing .
Proceed slowly. II you get too deeply Involved too quickly, you may regret It
later.
VIRGO lAIII. 23-lept. 22) In order to
keep rour male happy. you might be requlreo lo pamper your portner a bll
more lhan usual lodey. This Individual
hll done the same lor you on occelion.
Ll..,... (lepl. 23-0ct. 23) Allempllng to
flatter unwilling helpers into doing your
bldt;llng today could prove counteroroducllve. You'll have better chances II
you UN linc8re and forthright IICIICS.
ICOIIPIO lOci. :M-Now. 22) It may be a
trifle hard lo live within ,your .,..,. today . •To be on the sale aide. It might be
wlae 10 avoid shops l)la1 oHer expensive
merchandlae you presently can:! alford.
IAQITTAIIIUI Clllw. 23-Dec 21) Be
corelul today that you don't eatabllah
the bad p r - o t ol r-rdlng lh01111ln
your charge lor deoclo oll~llt merit. The
next lime liMy may axpecl ...., moro.
Co\PIIICOIIIII (Die. Zl-.lall. II) You're

,_.ly a rznaollllly Hll-rallanl penon
who doea IIIII ,_, 1oo '-"'lyon othtorl.
Today, howe_, you might be ap.n.
dent rather lhan Independent
·

aIll CNN
·~ Nawa
7DD Club Wlih 1'111
Ralnrtaon
10:06 ([) MQVI!! llald an
(3:00)

!.......,_

10:30(!) Weal VIrginia L1glal ...
Report

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o\llllllo Hall "tereo. Q
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'VICI8 s-.

.On ..

D NCAA ~ Four
.lllgllllghll '78: Kentucky,
•
Duke,Atklna.a,N~ Chwnt

.
8allaMyllote
lea
In:

e

(!) Men Undl • • •
Ill o1a1111 Mol • 11 n,., 0111

an One

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Dip KCin•r
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.tAKJ 1063

I. ,.••t.
6.5•

CROSSWORD
by THOMAS JOSEPH
'ACROSS
2·Corn unit
- 1 Silent star 3 Family
palriarchs, .
Pola ,
6 Wreck
perhaps
com·
4 The
pletely
Eternal
11 Ruth's
City
successor 5 Allern_ll~
12 Ebony's
lively
6 Lama's
counler·
pan
land
Yesterday's Anaw1r
13 Baby
7 Finished ·
homer
departed
caniages
8 Young'un 21 Girl.·
souls
14 Midler is
9 Curator's . watcher, 33 Cereal
one
concern
e.g.
need
15lying
10.01d soap 22 Desiitule 34 Gen.
under
basi
24 Print
Robert 17G-man
16 Recipe
measures .35 Ctimson
19 Have
unil
25 Actress
36 Give the
lunch
17 Like
Merkel
boot
20 GeoLbndon
27 The
37 Snap
Emerald 39 American
mallie
.
often
suffiK
18 Mistake
Isle
Indian
23 Trial
20 Memo31 Place
40 Took the
25 Egg on
rable
for
prize
26 Ending for ~~---..--..-­
many
musiCals
28 Olympus
residenls
29 Slrelehed
to see
30 Ouantilies
ol mos.
31 Color
32 Parched
33 Sugar ·
sources
35 Swill
38 Lei
41 Banish
42 ·swell I"
43 Daahns'
needs

441mp
DOWN

.
'

1 Siesta

DAII.YCR YPTOQUOTES- Here'a how lo work II:

217

..
'

AXYDLBAAXR
II LONGFELLOW
One letter stands for another. In this :;ample A is used
for the three I.'s, X for the two O's, etc. Single 'tellers,
apostrophes, the length an&lt;! formation of the words are 1111
hints. Each day the code letters are different.
.

• ••

.

. CRYPJ'OQUOTE

. 2 ·7

ltlng

IIJ Tonlllli Shaw
Sler*l-

11:311 (2)

•5

When North jumped to three dia·
.A84
mcxul!o, South rebid his hearts. 1'bree
s~des by North was·a cue-bid, and afEAST
WEST
.K843
ter North finally supported hearts. .QJ762
..
• t02
South cue-bid the spade ace,and North
· ts 4
showed the ace of clubs. That was t9 52
.107632
enoulh to get South to bid six dia- .KQJ
monds, but North Corrected to what he
SOUTH
thoupt would be a better slam In
U.!09
hearts.
.AJ8653
Tbe king of clubs lead· was a surtQ7
.9 5
priSe, since the a~tlon. suggested a
more likely spade lead. Slam would
Vulnerable: East-West
then have been simple, since declarer
Dealer: North
could pve up a. trump to the king,
while any l01ing spade trick would be Soot•
Nwl~
W..t
Eool
Pau
cantrolled by a trump In dummy. But
3t
Pau
with the club lead, the contract was
Pus
Pw
clearly in jeopardy. The simple soluPw
Pus
tion to the problem was to take a heart
Pan
Pass
finesse against tbe king and then play
Allpua
Pan
the heart ace and run the diamonds,
hoping that even if the heart king did
Opening lead: + K
not fall; three diamonds could be
played before the kiD(! of bearts would
be·Uied for a ruff. ,.,eanwhile, if West .
held tbe heart king, tbe contract would c.lub . There was an un~ dividend
be set immediately.
·
when East ruffed the tbord diamond.
South. did better than that. He with the 10 of hearts. Declarer OYer-cashed the ace of hearts and then . ruffed, played ace of 1pades, ruffed a
played 9Jl diamonds. He hoped that the spade, and now cashed another bllb
defender with only two diamonds diamond, throwinf! away his little
would have to ruff witb tbe kln1 of club. The only trtck the defenden
trumps while he disrarded his losing could take was the heart king.

w lJle • o• .

IIIICI

NORTH

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By Jamea JafO!Iy

.

MIDW

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• Crook and Clllae

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CourtQ

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ANI&gt; MY .liLT'
i

Yard Sale ·

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Ill A Vldlllll'IICIIIIJ
VIIIIIIIM Willi Hlny
Caowolcll Jr. Harry Conn~

tr 'gtilloutuaad Rd. arM,-.....,..
.,.. Cllld'o pal. to:

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Crutch - N(ll)if~ H~ll~~~~lnger - BOUNCE
Customer to bal)k ~~resident: ~~r~~ like to apply for a
· credit card . l'm,tired &lt;&gt;~ IJ:~i ng my cheeks BOUNCE!"

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Nlglllly .....

l;lehind every successful
person there's someone who
will say, " I know that person ,
we went to the same------."

7:00~'\aw..e.ot

Terrier, I
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four ocrombled -d• bo-

0 Our Houle 0
1:01 ([) levwtr I'ipl"lll

"This is not what I meant by
-.,....,-.a.- .........
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a 'well-oiled team•!"

run-

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oL~n'i.D liD !:lola
a WOIIcl Todaf_

Third

c.11co C.: 1 yr. iold M••tt. AI

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awnlna ..neonorola ...........

"""'""'-

lhl Daily Sentinel-Page 11

TeleVision
Viewing

J Bedroom · ......._ ..,._ lor .

31 ttomaa for Sale

I '•

Pomau,y-Midclepoi"i. Ohio

..... . . - . 1100.
301 m 1111 or IJS.

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Thursday. Febru.-y 7. 1991

aoo.

2 llled;OOin, tum.IMid,

-

Aulot tor Sale

11

KIT ' N' CARLYLE® by Lury Wnpt

42 Mobile Homll
torRent

Prot1111ona1
Servicea

23

Trursday. February 7, 1991 ·

Oh10

Pomeroy - M ·

10- The Daily Sent in~

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L .SS . - FAFBNSW

Yee...-v"• c.,..._.otel WHAT REALLY FLATTERS A MAN IS THAT' YOU THINK HIM WORTU
FLATI'ERING. - GEORGE BERNARD SIIAW
.

..

�•

•
Page-12-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy MiddlePort. Ohio

Meigs woman hurt in wreck
A Racine woman suffered minOr
i11juries Wednesday when the car
she was driving left Meigs County
Road 34 and sauck a ll'ee.
Donita J. Manuel, 20, went to
Vctcrans Memorial Hospital wlwre
she was admitted for observation; a
hosp'ital spokesperson said Thursday. Her condition was not avail·

- -.Area deaths· --

'

Warren S. Pickens, 83 , of
Brookside Drive, Brookville, died
Thursday, Jan, 31 , 1991 at the
Good Samaritan Hospital, Dayton,
following a brief illness.
·
He was a member of the
Drookville First United Methodist
Church. He retired from McCall
COtpOration in 1970 with 42 years
of service. He was a commissioned
offlCer and Army Veteran of World
Warn and a member of VFW P.6~&gt;
3288, Brool!:ville. He was a rriem;
ber of Stil!waler 'Lodge No . .~16 ,F.
:&amp; AM, VJctQry Chapter No. 2 i~
: R.A.M., R~ Council No. 9 ~ §(
· SM, Reed Commandery No. 6
: K.T., Ancient Accepted Scottls'b
· Rite
Antioch
Te~Pie
A.A.O.N.M.S., all of DaytO!h
Knight Masons of Ireland, Buckeye
. Council No. 64, High Twelve Club
• of Dayton No. 69 and lhe Mariners
: Club for Yorlt Rite Masonry.
: He is survived by a brolher and
- sister-in-law, Mr. lind Mrs. Richard
- E. Pickens, Cheshire, nieces, Mr.
::and Mrs. Bill (Belly) Thomas.
·fdason, W.Va., and nephews. .
He was preceded in death by his ·
· wife, Jeannette, in 1975; six brolhers and one sister.
Services were held Feb. 4 at lhe
Gilben Fellers· Funeral Home in
,Brookville with Dr. Gale E. Colvin
:officiating. Interment in Arlington .
.Cemetery.

:Laura
Norris
.
: Laura Ellen Longsworth Norris,

:,s,

Funeral Home. M. E. Burkett and
Robert E. Blaine will officiate and
burial will be in the Letart Falls
Cemetery. Friends may call after 4
p.m Friday at lhe Murray Funeral
IJome. Memorial conli'ibutions
may be made to lhe United Breth·
em Church or Greenfield Area Life
Sq ua4. There will be a graveside
se~iees 11 4 p.m. Saturday 11 lhe
Letart Falls Cemetery.

Alma Allen
Alma Allen, 83, formerly of
Pom~.roy, died Wednesday. Feb, 6,
1991: at her home in Columbus
S.~r· w~ Jl!e' daughter lhe 'tate
~:.c:l'fl'~ i!~d ty1ary Wolfe, also for·
merlf of'Pom'eroy, and had worked
at Madisons in Columbus before
~er retirement. Mrs. Allen was a
tpefuber of the Emmanuel Lulheran"
Chilrch.
,
Surviving are a daughter, Mary ·
Lou Allen; two sisters, Dorothy
Heimlick and Gladys Mid·
dleswonh, and two brothers Paul
and Edward. Sybil Ebersbach and
Mar~rcn Andrews of Pomeroy are
cousms.
· Funeral services will be held at
the Graumlich and Son F'uneral
Home, 1351 South High Street •
Columbus, Friday at 10:30 a.m:
Pastors Carlton J. Sutorius and
Steven Archer will officiate and
burial will be in Forest Lawn
Cemetery. The family will receive
friends at the funeral home Thursday from 2 to 4 liJid 7 to 9 p.m.

· "u

of

Blood drive collects 99 units on Wednesday

North ·carolina
avenges cage
setback

Ph,:k 3:344 ·
Pick 4:0503
Cards:3-H;5-C;
7-D; 7-S

j

Page 4

at
Vol. 41 , No. 203

Lottery numbers·.

~

''

spo

. · SJ .oo

BARGAIN MATINEES SATURO.IY I SUNO.IY
BA~IN NIGHT TUESO.IY

COM!"' SCXIIII JOHN GOOIJIAN l o ' KING RALPH"

Low tonight near 30.
Saturday, sunny. High in
mid·50s.

•

•

. Copyrighllcl'1991

'·

2 Secttons, '4 Pages

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio Friday, February 8, 1991

25 Cents

A Ntultimedia Inc ., Newspaper

Ground war debate heightens; air attacks up

q.

By LEON DANIEL .
UPI Chief Corrtspopdent
Al.lied warplanes IK!unded· targets in Iraq and occupred Kuwait
Friday and Presid!lnt Bush's top
military advisers flew to Saudi
Arabia to help assess lhe war and
the timing of a possible ground
offensive.
Gen. H. Norman Schwarzkopf,
commander of the allied forces,
said it was "still too early to tell"
whether a ground war could be
avoided by stepping up lhe bomb. ing, while the commander of
British troops called such a bloody

Quote of the day

w:

engagemc;nt "inevitable."
.
The commander of Joint Arab
Forces Friday said any ground bat·
tie would not extend into Iraq.
... I can assure you it will end i!J
Kuwait," said Saudi Lt. Gen .
Khalid bin Sultan, who refll$cd to
discuss when .a ground offensive.
would be launched.
"It could start t~y, it could
start in a month,'' Bin Sultan said
at a briefmg in lhe Saudi capital of
Riyadh.
. Bin Sultan said 936 Iraqis had
been captured or surrendered since
war began Jan. 17. and revealed

that 418 other Ira~ is he termed
"military refugees' had deserted
their army between the time .Iraq
mvaded Kuwait Aug. 2 and war
began.
.
He also said Iraq is using its
own minefields and "execution
battalions"to curb defections.
"I pray. to God every day that
lhey will come to lheir senses and
really not follow one person," Bin
Sultan said of Iraqi President Saddam Hussein's 545,000-man army.
''And I think lhere are many peopie in lhe Iraqi armed forces who
would like to come bere, not to sur-

c~ lhe border rrom Jordan and Guards near the bord.;\rs ·of soulh-

render but because they don't
believe in what they're domg right
now. .
.
.
"Because ther don't beheve, ·
most of lhem in Ibis war, lhey don't
resist thai much," said Bin Sultan, ·
basin!! his assertion on laSt week's
ground. battle for the Saudi port
town of Khafji, in which 30 Iraqis
were killed and 429 taken prisoner.
Schwarzkopf said on ABC
Thursday night the military has
reportS thai some of the Iraqi pilOtS
defecting to Iran "tried to bomb
Saddam Hussein" in his presideD·
tial palace.
Defense Secretary Dick Cheney
and Gen. Colin Powell, chairman
of lhe Joint Chiefs of Staff, flew to
Saudi Arabia for a lhree'day trip to
be briefed by the Central Command and visit the trOOps. .
Israeli defense forces killed
three gunmen Friday after they

att~~cked

a bus· carrying soldiers, em Iraq and Kuwait.
·
authorities said.
GroiiJ! Capt Niall Irving of the
· State-run lsrael Radio said the British Royal Air Force said Iraqi
infiltrators were killed and four anti-aircraft fire to protect the
Israeli soldiers wounded after the Republican Guard had become
gunmen lhrew a hand grenade and heavier in recent days.
opened fire on the bus 56 miles
The Kurdistan Democratic
north of the Israeli port city of Patty, an Iraqi Kurdish rebel group,
Eilat.
said the Republican Guards have
Ba$hdad claimed its anti-aircraft begun taking sheller in civitian resbattenes shot. down one allied jet idential areas.
fighter during 138 overnight raids
If lhe repon is true, it could pose
on Iraq, which it' claimed killed 111 problems for the U.S.-Ied coalition ,
least 22 civilians and wounded olh· which has pledged to avoid civilian
ers.
casualties while anempting to crush
Irari's officiallsl811liC Republic the fighting unit with an aerial·
News Agency said Friday the attack spearheaded by destructive
overnight bombing caused at least .B-52 bombers. ,
20 huge explosions in southern
Just hours before Cheney and
Iraq.
Powell were scheduled to arrive, a
·.· The coalition forces have con- u.S . Patriot air defense missile
centrated r!lCent air attacks on posi- intercepted an Iraqi Scud launched
tions of S~ddam 's elite Republican at Riyadh in central Saudi.

Syracuse council hires clerk

WELL.·
SALE

SP"flf Not.: ~. Jln. Ar .N..... '"rnfhiN, Jlaw B. . "11141 n"" &lt;\nd
So Bas ONr DaR31Safcs Jlqorrt N- ~'N Dol. . S_.rll..., Ahld Jrt
,4fl

JIIUGU IIQVC!Q~

ALL PRICES
LISTED
EFFECTIVE

nrst~::~~~~~Jeft~
· :-to~"~;.;;.!::·~~:~~

awarded to the winners
the iluto
mecbBnics competition during 1 recCJIIIItlc!li ~r·
emony held at Thursday night's vocatiooll! open

'

Gilkey,
Parson!! T. J. Buckley,' Ryan Fos·
,ter, Roger ~mltb, Scott Whobrey, and Ronnie
Spallin.

'

Syracuse Village Council has $400 per month was approved. Enoch .for the village's assistance
approved an annual appropriations Moore, who is an employee of lhe • in correcting a. water problem
ordinance for 1991 in the amount wafer board, in addition to his own
which has plagued the Freemans
of$170,370.
·
for
some time.
,
duties assumed lhose of Bob Smilh,
The appropriations to the vari· . a former employee.
Cauncil also discussed tlie
. ous funds include gerretal fund
Councilman Jim Hill reported problem of dogs runqing loose and
$48,150; water department, that he had attended a meeting of noted lhat owners are being watned
$60,040; street construction, the Meigs County· Commissioners and advised to keep dogs confined
$16,000; highway, $2,500; fire and lhe Washington -County Com- to their own properties.
department $21,000; pool, $20,000; missioners in regard to securing a
The mayor's report showing
guaranty meter (deposits) $2,500; building permiL Washington Coun- receipts of $536 was read and
and cemetery, $180.
ty has been issuing permits. How- approved:
At Thursday night's meeting of ever, they no long will be provid·
Jim Pape, member of council,
Council, Shelly Fonune was hired ing lhat service.
presented a list of projects which
.
,as coun clerk for the mayor. For· . Syracuse Council agreed to
must be completed before any new .
tune's duties will be to maintain secure permits through the Ohio projects arc taken on by Council.
· coun ~ockets; and attempt by let- Deparunent of Industrial Relations,
Attending were Mayor Eber
ter, to colleci old fines . She will Columbus.
Pickens,
Pape, Hill, Teresa Drum·
'
' attend all court ~earings and be
mer,
Kenny
Bucldey. Mintor Fryar
A letter of thanks was read by
available for posting of bonds.
and
Katie
Crow.
and Police Chief
Clerk Janice Lawson from Mr. and
A recommendation by lhe Board Mrs. Freeman Enoch and Doug Jim Connolly,
of Public Affairs to pay Bob Moore

Gallia man struck by.car, killed

Bring Tbla Ad Into Our Store Apd Receive
The Addltloaal Listed Dbcouata 011
Our Already Low Sal~ Prices!

If Northup man was killed off the left side of·the roadway. the accident, the report said.
Case was not injured in the acci·
Thursday when he was struck by a Case was aaveling at approximatecar on State Route 775 in Walnut ly 55 miles per hour at the time of dent. He was not Cited,
Township. ·
Joe.! D. Atha, 43 , of .Route I,
bri·e~s
Norlhup, was prounounced dead lit ...-1; ---------.
the scene after being struck by a
pick-up truck in front of his home
around 6:20 p.m. Atha was transpaned to Holzer Medical Center by
· Meigs County Sheriffs deputies are investigating damage 10 a
Willis Funefal Home.
vehicle parked along U,S. Roule 33 on Thursday mght.
According to a repon from the
According to Sheriff James Soulsby,lhe driver's door glass was
.Gallia-Meigs post of the State
broken out of lhe car,' w!)ich was owned by Joyce Ralph of Shade.
Highway Patrol, Atha was in the
The damage was discovered by deputies shortly after 10 p.m. A
northbound lane of State Route
relative of lhe owner advised thatlhe vehicle had broken down ear775., attempting to cross lhe road to
lier in lhe day and that lhe owner had not had the opportunity to
get to his mailbox at the time of lhe
remove the car.
accident. A northbound truck,
Investigation, according to Soulsby, is continuing into the cirdriven by Ronald D. Case, 28, of
cumstanceS surrounding lhe incident,
Patriot, was u~le to see Alba and
Jason Ridenour of State Route 7 reported to the department that
struck him, throwing Alba's body
someone had stolen a magnetic scanner antenna from his vehicl' on

Loca·I

Damage to vehicle investigated
.

Hospital news·

Four Meigs Countians have
Veterans Memorial Hospital
been arrested in connection with
· ·WEDNESDAY ADMIS·
lhe lhefl of gasoline at PDK Con- SIONS
. • Betty Templ6ton,
strUCtion earner lhis week.
Pomeroy;
Slella Aeshman, Racine.
According to Meigs County
WEDNESDAY
Sheriff James M. Soulsby, his CHARGES • Dora CalawayDIS·
and
off'JCe received a rcpon that a 'vehi- Pauline Riley.
cle was seen J)81king at lhe Meigs
High School rot and lhat two subjeers walked towards lhe cooscrucI
,
tion company propetty.
,
'
Deputies SlOpped the vehicle"a .,, CLtVELAND (UPI) ' shon distance &amp;Om the scene lind
ql!ll~~y's winning Ohio Lotidentification was made on' ;tfie · ry l)umbers:
·
individuals.
· · "',;.
' ,.
Pkk·3
On Wednesday morning, tit~ . !I( 40"''
.
deparlment was notified lhat ll_aso- :;,tl;~e.~~e; Sl,4t5982.5o. PayUne bad been taken from some ,of on; ~J,18~.8li.:.SO.
lhe trucks and lhat a couple ofjy'fl$
~p , "'·"' .,. llkk-4
were left 111he scene.
&lt; · ' h i04§.tJC~
· Thole two individuals who·~lt're '&gt;''Ticket kles: $271,163.50. PaySIOppCd were .-rested on Thursday off: $212,600.
morning, and following question·
Cards
ing, implicated two Olhers.
Nine of hearts.
Ch8rled llld jailed arc Joey Rif· ,
Queca of clubs.
fie, 22, Shane Engle, 21, and Clay
.Nine 6f diamonds.
Gahner, 21. In addition, a 16 year
four of spadeS. ·
old Middleport juvenile will be
Ticket sales: $73,598. Payoff:
. cU'ged in Meigs County Juvenile $38,590, '
Court in connection with lhe inci·
Super Lotto
denL
2, IS, 19, 26, 33, 38:
Charges of conUibuting to the
Ticket sales: $3,792,642.
delinquency of a minor may be
Kkker
filed later, ·accordipg to Sheriff
899336.'
Soli Ishy.
Ticket sales: $590.748.

I.IB IIIDDiftOIAL
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,safety checks by the students. Here Ro.nnie'
Spaun loolll uuer the hood to check the motor
arealor poaible defects. ,

SAFETY CHECK • As a part of the auto
mechanics competition at Thursday night's open ·
bouse at Meigs High School, vehicles were Riven

Thursday.
. Hi"gh Schoo I at lhe ume.
'
The vehicle was parlced at Me1gs
Finally, Sheriff Soulsby reports lhat Doc Burke of Albany noli ·
fied lhe office that sometime Thursday mght. he had several I0 to
12 foot sheets of aluminum roofmg laken.

Storm hampers investigation of IRA attack
.

LONDON (UPI) - A winter ·
storm hampered a search for clues
Friday to identify the Irish Republican Army terrorists who tried to
kill the British war Cabinet, while
security was intensified to prevent
a repeat monar assault in the bean
of the capital.
The attack Thursday .that lobbed
a bomb into a garden behind 10
Downing Street, where,Prirne Minister John Major was meeting wilh
top government officials, was an
embarrassing security lapse for
Britain and a propaganda coup for
lheiRA.
The outlawed guerrilla group
warned lhal the Cabinet "will have
to meet ·in bunkers,'' until Britain
wilhdraws from Norlhem Ireland,
and lhe knob of land is united with
the Irish Republic.
Detectives asked lhe public for
help to track down the men who ·
abandoned a white Ford van 81.the
intersection of Whitehall near
Horse Guards Avenue, seconds
before. three rockets were fired
lhrough the roof of the van. Two
police and two civilians were
slightly wounded.
Police said there had been a
stroRg response from lhe public to
lhe appeal for belp.
· Scotland Yard's anti-terrorism
chief Cmdr. George ChurchillColeman, appealed for information
about a workshop or garage where
die terrorist must have us¢ weld·
~l

'

Ohio Lottery

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Support ....

Announcements

1152 Greenhills Drive. Green·
DAVtomeel
Iield, died Wednesday, February 6,
The Disabled American Veter·1991, at her residence. She was a ans and Ladies·Auxiliary will meet
former Meigs County residenL
Monday at 7 p,m. at the hall on
: . Born on July 4, 1916, in Butternut Avenue in Pomeroy.
Lubeclc, W.Va. she was lhe daugh:it:r of George NelsOn Longsworlhl .. ,
. D or A. tli meet .
:Sr. and Emily Susan Ingram
Dislrict13, Daughters of Ameri-Longsworth"
ca will meet for J)ractice at the
: She is survived by two daugh· Chester Lodge Hall on Saturday at
·m, Mrs. Gene.(Emestine) Gibson I p.m. All district members are
"Of New Haven, Ind., Mrs. William urged to attend to practice for lhe
~Anne) Lightner, Hwltington, Ind.;
rally which will be held
one son, Franklin H. Norris, Indi- spring
April
13
at Meigs High School.
anapolis, Ind .• nine grandchildren
and 12 great-grandchildren; one
brother, Geroge Longsworth',
Grec:nfiCid; one sister, Pearl ·smilh,
Zanesville.
Soutii·Cenh'al Oblo .
She was preceded in death by · Decreasing clouds in the west
her husband, Franklin H. Norris, Thursday, mostly cloudy in lhe east
Sr., on Sept. 22, 1955; one infant with a chance of drizzle in the .
son and two brothers.
morning. Highs in lhe 40s.
She had retired from the Green·
Cle~!fing Thursday night with
field Area Medical Center. She was lows
mid 20s to lower 30s.
a member of the United Brethern
Mostly sunny Friday with highs ·
Church, thc WMA of lhe church mid 40s to lower 50s.
. and lhe Greenfield Bible Institute.
Extended Forecast
Funeral servcies will be held at
Saturday throop Monday
10:30 a.m Saturday at the Murray
Fair through the period. Highs
in the 40s Saiurday and the 30s
Sunday and Monday. Lows 25 to
35 Saturday and in the 20s Sunday
. and Monday.

Four a"ested in
tas theft

Thursday, Februlrv 7. 1991

(Continued from Page 1)
·
Marietta
will provide a two-hour
A total of 99 units of blood was O'Dell. Timothy N. Hall, Gary E. Couch, Gloria K. Kloes, Mary M.
J'ell!Ole
from
2:30 to 4:30p.m.
d01181ed at Wednesday's visit of lhe Snouffer, Per.ny L. Brinker, John Parker, Donald R. Smith, Albert
A
designated
area will be set up
Amencan Red Cross bloodmobile W. Moore, Opal M. Grueser, Parker, Barbltra A. Riggs, Joan L.
where
candles
may
be lighted in
to the S_cnior Citizens Center in William E. Snouffer, Celia R. Tuale, Gerald Rought, Edward M.
Pomeroy.
· .
honor of someone serving in the
Dan E. Follrod, Gregory Cozart, and P!1u1 F. Mart. _
.
Multiple doiJOYS were Geoffrey · McCoy,
Middleport: Angela S. Sellers, war.
Cunningham, Brenda S. CunMrs.
Sisson
repons
that
there
'Yilson, eight gallon; May Donald, W.
ningham, William W. Radford, Sherry L. Swisher, Ida H. Martin, will al$0 be a large Valentine Hean
SIX gallon; Edward M. Cozart, two
, Walter R. Rhonda R. Rathburn, Linda L . at the event which may be sipcd
gallon, and Brian C. Johnson and Carolyn A. Charles
•
Haley, Donia R. Will, Gerogc L .
with messages to the troops in
Anne E. Scarberry, one gallon.
Harris, Jr., Julia Qualls, Niesel E. . Desert
Storm. This large VaiCatine
.First time donors .were Jeff
Gerard,' David G. DOdson, Sr.,
will
be
sent along to lhe ~ Col·
Folmer, Scott Brinker, Tammy K.
Brian E. Johnson, Sarah J. FOwler,
(Continued from Page 1)
lowing
lhe
even!Chapman and Thomas Harris.
• Dorothy C. McCloud, Tamara J.
Refreshments,
free of charge,
Dr. James Witherall and Dr. changed, it needed to be made ' N~lson, .and Thomas R. Harris,
will
be
available,
including
cookWilma Mansfield were the doctors known to lhe .plat map· office so J~ A. Durst, Gloria J. Beavley,
ies,
coffee
and
punch.
All
refreshand Beulah Ward. Lenora I.:eifheit , that maps could reflect the name R1cbard E. Chambers, Judith K.
and Jane Brown, the nurses, who change: Robens reported that be Hunter, Resa R. Harris, and ,ments have been donated from
SuperAmerica and Kroger's. .
assisted atlhe bloodmobile.
· would investigate.
· ,
Charles P. Gerard.
O!her conrributions, such as the
Tracy O'Dell and Edward ..
No action was taken on the mat·
banners on lhe front of the buildCozart volunteered their time to • ler, but Robens i.ridicated to the
Racine: Betty V. Sayre, Virginia
ing, have ·been furnished by Jack
· assist widi lhe clerical work, as did commissioners that discussions M. Bland, Lany D: Circle, Harry
Slavin's art class at Meigs High
J!,etircd Senior Volimterzs Dorblhy with. the tim·ber company was D. Holter, Zane Beegle, Dalton W.
School.
Long, Velma Rue, Joan T·pttle, ongomg.
Henry, Frederick R. Tho,mpson,
Mrs. Sisson requests lhat those
Mary Nease, Lpla ·Hampton,
Terry WatSon of Pomeroy spoke Janet E. Greene, Anne E. Scarber·
attending bring in names and
Wanda Fetty, Peggy Harris, Helen to the commissioners regarding ry, Barbara F. Beegle, A. Marie
addresses of people serving in the
Bodimer, Jean Nease, Joyce cl.e~nmg the metal plates on the Bush, Joyce ·M. Medley, Dorolhy
war so lhat nobody will be missed
Hoback, Jeanette Lawrence, Flo- C1vll War Mp,nument in the coun- A. Parsons.
.
when food items.are sent. She
rence Richards, Mary Buck, and house yard. Watson, who offered to . Reedsville: Joseph D. Marcmko
adde,d
lhat one wall of The Loco. Gerald Wildermuth. The canteen donate his lime on lhe project if the . and F_onda Thomas.
. ·
motion
will be decOrated w.ifb picwas served by Friendly Circle of commissioners will buy the neces. Mmersvllle: Kenneth E. WlgTrinity Chllrch. .
.
tures
of
the service people and lhat
sary supplies, has experience in gms,
·
.
anyone
wanting
to display a picture
. Donors and lhe areas they repre· cleaning such plates, and the comLong BollOIII: Laura L Hawley,
should
bring
it
to
the everu.
sented were as follows:
·
missioners granted Watson permis- Bruce Hawley, Henry E. Bahr,
Pomeroy: Daniel R. Folmer, sio.n to do the work, pending Kathy McDaniel, Tammy Cham·
Lenora J. McKnight, Lawrence D. revtew of the county liability insur- pan, and Sllaro!i J. Vannoy.
Leonard, Debra D. Mora, Janet K. ance policy.
SJuw!e: J~ C. Well. . . ,
Peavley, Dale S. Thoene, Linda
In final action, lhe commission. Gallipolis Ferry: Freddie J. SunBy United Press Internlltlonal
Collums, Thomas B. Hart, Adelle ers approved the bond of Meigs · mons.
President Bush; during an
L. White, Danny R. White, Lloyd County Auditor William R. WickLangsvill~: Ellis E. Myers, Alva · appearance Wednesday in New
E. Blackwood, Tom King, Bryan S. line, whose new ~ began earlier B. Clark.
Yorlc, reiterating his confidence in
Shank, David M. King, Roben
this year.
Syracuse: Deborah A. Lowery.
a swift allied victory over Iraq:
Smith, Howard P. Logan, Linda J.
Present at the meeting were
Rutl~nd: Joe ~olin, Marta ~·
"This is not going to be a long
Foreman, Jeff Folmer.
Commissioners Richard Jones
Blackwood, Donme R. ,l audcnnilt,
drawn out situation with an illkebecca L. Qeyer, Marvin E. Manning Roush, and David Ter~sa K. Blackwood, Donna ~.
defined ending. I'm abSQiutely conTartor, Donald A. May, Virgil K. Koblentz, Roberts, and County DaVJdso~, and Mary E. Davidson.
fident of that. I've never more cerWmdon, Geoffrey A. Wilson, Htghway Department Superinten·
Coolville: Kay S. Coulson.
tain of anythimz in my li(e. We're
Patricia J. Barton, Tracey L. dent Ted Warner.
Portland: James R. Foreman.
going to win iL r. ·

able.
..
According to a report from the
Gallia-Meigs post of the State
Highway Patrol, Manuel was
southbound in Chester Township
when a deer apparently ran in li'ont
of her car. She swerved to miss the
animal and went off lhe right side
of the roadway, striking a ll'ee. ·
She was not cited in the crash.
.

Warren S. Pickens .

..

'

ing or cutting equipment to make a
.platform for lhe mortar tubes. Also,
a section was cut from lhe roof of
the van, and temporarily taped
back.
The van was bought on London
in July by three men who paid
cash; but it could have changed
hands since lhen, Churchill-Cole·
man said.
The search for clues.centered on
the van from which the mortar
attack was launched. The van was

were on their way to work along
Whitehall were quizzed by police
to dcrermine whelher they had seen
anything important connected to
the attack, and those who arrived
close to lhe 10:09 a.m. auack were
asked to ~ack their brains for
details.
Defense Secretary Tom King
sai&lt;! security had been tightened on
Whitehall, a busy thoroughfare
lined with government buildings.

badly burned, and how mJ¥1y clues
forensic scientists would find in a
methodical search depended on lhe
extent of the damage, police said.
IRA units often intentionally bum
vehicles to destroy telltale signs,
including fmgerprints.
A thick layer of snow and bitter
cold in1erfe/ocil wilh police as lhey
attempte(J to find scattered debris
on Whilehall that would help them
solve lhe crime.
Civil servants and others .who

Jury advisory announced
The defendant in Monday's jury trial in Meigs Coumy Common
Pleas Coun, Dean Young, has waived his right to a jury trial. Jurors
summonsed in the case, therefore, need not appear on Monday.
However a coun spokesperson reports that those jurors are to
report to lhe' COUF! ft 8:45 a.m. on Monday. February 25 to serve in
anolher case.

Quartet to perform
The Watchmen Quariet from Operation Evangelize will perform
a gospel concen on Sunday at 7 p.m. at the Middlcpon ChllfCh of
Christ, located at Fifth and Main in Middleport. The public is invit·
ed 10 attend. The group has traveled extensively throughout the
United States imd Mexico, having been in existence for over 20

Senate panel targets Syrian incident
By STEVE GERSTEL
·
WASHINGTON (UPI) - A
key Senator says allegations of
possible U.S. involvement in the
death of. undercover agepts who
infiltrated a terrorist group, if true,
would be a "tragic and indefensible" breach of security.
The New York Times said
Thursday that, according to admin·
isaation offJCials, lhe two or lhree
agents were exposed not long after
lhe United States gave lhe government in Damascus information
about terrorist activities in Syria.
The Times said lhe link between
lhe two eventi has not been proven,
but added that American experts
believe, acc:ordiJt&amp; 10 the administration officials, that terrorists
obtained lhe information from Syri·

'1\

an leaders and used it to track
down lhe unden:over agents.
Some officials, bowever, did not
exclude the possibility that the
death of the agents was coinciden· .
·!alto U.S. conUICis with Syria. One
said lhe terrorist organizaUon could
hilve concluded on its own that it.
had been penetrated after several
planned operations went wrong.
Sen. David Boren, D-Okla.,
chairman of the Senate Intelligence
Committee, said, "I do not have
any knowledge whatsoever regard·
ing lhe accuracy of The New York
Times report"
·
~oren said: "If lhese allegations
are true, they would represent a
tragic and indefensible compromise
of our intelligence resources and a
breach of faith with those who have ·

risked lheir lives on our behalf.
"I have consistently said that
lhe greatest weakness in our intelligence capability is in the area of
human source intelligence, particulaiily in regions like the Middle
East. And lhe Middle East has been
a source of particular weakness.
"It would be aagic, indeed, if at
a time when we arc a~pting to
rebuild our human intelligence .
capabilities, anyone in our government would hilve acted to endanger
our troops. I can only reitetate my
hope lhat these allegations arc not
true.''
The New Yorlc TimCs said lhat
by one account, the agents killed
were two or lhree Palcstiniana who
had worked their wav into lhe ter·
Contined on page 10

/'1''

•,

years.

Shade woman injured in wreck
A Shade woman suffered minor injuries Thursday when lhe car
she was driving overturned off of U.S. 33.
·
Diana M. Lemaster, 34, was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital by lhe Meigs County EMS following the accident in Salisbury
Tpwnship. She was tteated for contusions and released, a hospital
spokeswoman stated Friday.
According to a report from lhe Gallia-Meigs post of die State
Highway Patrol, Lemaster was southbound when sbe 8Jlj08ientlr lost
control of ber vehicle on wet pavemenL Her 1980 Chevrolet piCkup
lhen went off lhe left side of lhe road, striking a mail box and a
ditch. The vehicle~ went over an embanlcment and Hipped over.
Lemaster was cited for failure to control.
·

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