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                  <text>Pe e-1D-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

\bur Bank(M~...

.,~
.......

THIS
WEEK'S
GAMES

Farmers
Bank

Ohio Lottery

1990 Local Schedules

Rebels
win 34th
•
tnrow

Pick 3:343
Pick 4:1308
Cards : 6-H; 3-C;
4-D; 9- S
Low tonight in mid 40s.
Wednesday, chance of
rain 100 percent .

&gt;

Page3

MEMBER FDIC

99.2·2136
221 WEST SECOND
POMEIOY, OliO

SOUTHERN
SATURDAY, FEB. 23

STAtE ROUtt 7
TUPPERS PlAINS, OHIO

VD1.41, No.211
CctpJrlgltt..s 1 8t1

Sectional Tournament. Vs. Eostern
at Univtrsity of Rio Grandt .
(Time will be announrldlater)

''

BAUM

BOYS

-

...~

FRIDAY, FEB. 22 8: IS p.m;
SKtional Tournament vs. Fairland
at University of Rio Grandt

HARDWARf
"Your luii ..... Moter;.tiMarbt'Pioco' '

985-3301

• &lt;HESTER, OH.

GIRLS

•

-

HUNTI~G SU~UES :
j+ .. '

..

-.

&lt;

'

TUESDAY, FEB. 19
At Hannan Trace
l;ostponect from Nil. IS l

HOI:JRS: .&lt; .
Mon.
thru Ff.i.
'
7 :30 a.in. to &amp;:00 p.m.
Saturday
7:30 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.

SATURDAY, FEB. 23
Sedianal Tournament vs. Southern
at University of Rio Grandt
(Time will be announrld lattr)

GIRLS
SEASON COMPLETED

- - -......-BOYS'

..

SOUTHE~N
Nov. 27-North Gallia ............ Home
Nov. 30-Hannan Trace .......... Home
Dec. 4-Eastarn ..................... Away
Dec. 7-Southwestern ............ Away
Dec. 8-Paint Valley .............. Convo
Dec. 14-Kyger Creek ............ Home
Dec. 16-Symmes Valley ...... .. Away
·Dec. 21-0ak Hill "" .............. Away
Dec. 22-Sotitheastai'n .. ......... Home
Dec·. 28-Athena .............. .. .... Away
Jan. 4-North Galli a ...... ......... Away
Jan. 6-Gallipolis .. .. ......... .. .... Away
Jan.11-Hannan Trace ........... Away
Jan·. 18- Eastern .............. ..... . Home
Jan. 22-Ravanswood .. ..... ..... Away
Jan. 25-Southwestern .... .. .... Home
Feb. 1-Kyger Creak ........ :...... Away
Feb. 8-'-Symmes Valley .. .. ...... Home
Feb. 12-Warren .. .. .......... .. .... Avvay
Feb. 15-0ak Hiii., ................. Home

786 N. 2nd
Middleport ·'
992.6491
.f··

Crow's·· .
Family·
Restaurant
.
'

228 West Main St.~.
'
Pom•roy
992-5432

Featuring Kentucky
, Frid Chic~en

.

MEIGS

Dec. 1-Athans ............ .. ........ Home'
Dec. 4-Balpre .... .. ................. Away
Dec. 11-Millar ..... .. ...... .. ....... Home
Dec. 14-Vinton County .. ....... Home
Dec. 1 8-Aiexander ............... Away
Dec. 21 -Wellston .. .......... .... :Home
Dec. 28'-Logan .... .. ............... Away
Jan. 4-Trimble ............ .. ...... .. Away
Jan. 8-Faderal Hocking ......... Home
·· Jan. 11-Nalil4)nvllle-York:.. :.. : Away
Jan. 16-Balpre ................ ... .. Home
Jan. 22-Miller ................. ..... Away
Jan. 26'-Vinton County ... ...... Away
Jan. 29-Aiexander ... ... .. ... .. ... Home
Feb. 1-Wallston .... .. .............. Away .
Feb. 2-Athens ...................... Away
Feb. 6-Warren ...... .. .............. Home
Feb. 8-Trimble ...................... Home
Feb. 12'-Federal Hocking ...... . Away
Feb. '6-Nelaonville-York .. .... . Home

'

Nov. 12-Nelsonville-York .. .. .. Away
Nov. 19-Meigs ........... ... .. ... .. Away
Nov. 28-North Gallia ..... .... ... Away
Nov. 29-Hannan Trace .. .. .. .. .. Away
Dec. 3-Eastem ..................... Home
Dec. &amp;-Southwestern ............ Home
Dec. 10-Kyger Creek ...... ... ... Away
Dec. 13.,-Symma Valley ......... Home
Dec. 17-Waterford ., .... .. .. ..... Home
Dec. 20-0ak Hill .................. Home
Jan. 3-North Galli a .......... .. ... Home
Jan. 1 0-Hanrijln Traca .......... Home
Jan. 14-Maigs ....... :............ .. Home
Jan . 18-Nelsonville-York ....... Home
Jan . 17-Eastern .................... Away
Jan. 24-Southwestern .. ........ Away
Jan. 28-Waterford ....... ......... Away
Jan . ·3 1-Kyger Creek ... .......... Home
· Fpb . 4-0ak Hill ........ .. ..... .. .... Away
Feb . 7 -Symmes Valley .. ........ Away

EASTERN

Nov. 20-Millar ............... ....... Away
Nov. 23-Federal Hocking ... ~.. Home
Nov. 27-Kygar Creek ............ Away
Nov. 30-Southwestern ......... Home
' DEC. 4-Southerri .................. Home
· Dec . 7-Symmas Valley .......... Away
Dec. 14-North Gallia .. : .. :... .... Away
Dec. 16-0ak Hill .................. Home
Dec. 18-Waterford ............... Home
Jan. 4-Kyger Creak ............... Home
Jan. 11-Southwestern .... ...... Away
Jan. 15-Hannan Trace .......... Home
Jan. 18-Southem .... ......... .... Away
Jan. 26-Symmea Valley .. ...... Home
Jan . 26-M iller ...................... Home
Feb. 1-North Gallia .... .. ........ . Home
Feb. &amp;-Federal Hocking ......... Away
Feb. 8-0ak Hill ......... ~ .. .... ..... Away
Feb. 12-llliatarford ................ Away
Feb. 16-Hannan trace ........... Away .

OBSERVE MINE CEARING TEST • Sol·
. diers l'rom tbe First Armoured Division watch

CENTRAL'.f
APNCBANK :

''I wtJJit.,,, -.
" tJi
· ffiiJ gu •
•

YOUR

992-6661
SECOJ,ID .
MIDDLEPORT, .OHIO' •·

'lilfiiiiG·NEEDS
• • IODAY •••••

'I

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Court to rule on work-leave
rights of military reservists

EASTERN

Nov. 19-Faderal Hocking .... .. Home
Nov. 28-Kyger Creek ............ Home
Nov. 29-Southwestarn ......... Away
Dac. 3-Southern ................... Away
, Dec. 6-Trimble ..................... Home
Dac. 8-Syromes Valley .......... Home
Dec. 8-Melga ....................... Away
Oac. 1 0-North Gallia ......·...... Home
Dac. 13-0ak Hill ................... Away
Dec. 20-Hannan Trace ........ .. Away
. Jan. 3-Kyger Creak ............... : Away
Jan. 9-Trimble ............. .. ...... . Away
Jan.1 0-Southwastarn ........... Home
Jan. 14-Federal Hocking ....... Away
Jan. 17-Southem .......... .. ..... Home
Jan. 21-Malgs ...................... Home
Jan. 24-Symmaa Valley .. ...... Away
Jan. 31-North Gallia ............. Away .
Fab. 4-Hannan Trace .... ,.. ..... Home
Feb. 7-0ak Hill ................... .. Home

WASHINGTON (UPI) - The of security at a Birmingham hospiSupreme Court .Tuesday agreed to tal to Jake a top position with the
decide if private employers can Alabama National Guard.
refuS~: to grant leave for training by
Since 1960, U.S. law has
members of the military reserves or required private employers to pnt
National Guard if they believe the leave to members of the military
request is "unreasonable.;,
reserves or National Guard for
The co·un agreed to hear an most official duty, and re-employ
appeal from Wiltiam "Sky" King, · them in the same or similar posiwho in 1987 sought a three-year tion upon their return.
unpaid leave from his job as head
But officials at St. Vincent' s

Regardless of local action taken
10 comply with the Oean Air Act
of 1990, cus1omers are going to
· foot the bill, and that bill will be
substantial.
That's the word from Ohio
Power's Ernie Sisson, who discussed the Clean Air Act and ils
effects on local consumern at Monday night's regular meeting of
Pomeroy Village Council.
Sisson, the Pomeroy Area Manager for American Electric Power's
Ohio Power Division, told council
last night that both the insJallation
of coal scrubbers and ihe switch 10
a low-sulfur coal source at the General James M. Gavin Plant in Gallia
County would result in a substantial cost increase to Ohio Power
customers.
In January , American Electric
Power revealed that it was considering the switch to a low-sulfur
coal at its Gavin plant to comply
with· the Clean Air Act, which
forces AEP to reduce emission of
sulfur dioxide at Gavin by over 80
percent.
The other option involved in
compliance Wllh the act is the
installation of coal scrubbing
equipment at the Gavin plant - at
an estimated cost of $800 million.
That cost is 30 percenl over 1he
original cost of the consJruction of
the plant in the mid-1970's.
"At this time," Sisson said, "fuel
switching is definilely the low -cost
option for Ohio Power and its customern - and that cost conlainment
is utmost in our minds."
WASHINGTON (l:lPI) -There
That fuel switching would · not is no evidence that fluoride causes
come without a cost increase lo cancer in humans, but some chilt;ustomers or major modification at dren may be 'getting too much fluothe Gavin plant While the scrub- ride from improper use of toolhbers would cost AEP $800 million pastes and mouth rinses, a Public
to inslall, fuel switching would Health Service study concluded
require the insJallation of ash and Tuesday.
coal handling facilities at an unestiAssistant Health Secretary
matedcosL
·James Mason said the govern ment's yearlong investigation

that the tuel swuchmg opiion is
taken.
Kennard stated lhat the Gavin
plant had an oulput of 2.5
megawaus, makin&gt;t it one of the ·
most powerful plan!S in America,
and one of the counlry 's largest
emitters of sui fur dioxide. Gavin
currently emits 400,000 tons of sulfur dioxide per year. By the end of
the Clean Air Act's second phase
in 2000, that emission is to be
reduced to 72,000 tons per year.
According to material released
by AEP, the installation of the
scrubbing equipment would reduce
the emissions the most drainatically, but both scrubber installation
and a fuel switch would bring the
plant into compliance with the legislation.
In other action, council:
- heard a presentation from
Meigs County Chamber Direc1or
Elizabeth Schaad, who introduced
herself to council and discussed
chamber activities;
- commended' the Pomeroy
Street Department for its prompt
treatment of snowy roads during
the recen1 snowfall;
- approved unanimously the
second reading of a proposed fire
department ordinance; ··
- discussed various street
repairs and drainage problems
throughout the village. ·

Hospital denied King's request,
claiming a three-year absence for
training alone "!as excessive:
A federal district court agreed,
ruling that the ihree-year leave
request was "unreasonable" under
Section 2024 (d) of the Veterans
Re-Employment Rights Acl
The II th U.S. Circuit Court of
Appeals afflfl!led the lower court's
c;:onlinu~ c_&gt;n pa• 10

found optimal fluoridation or water
"does not pose a delectable cancer
risk to humans," and recommended water continue to be 11uoridaled
to fight denL'Ji cavities'. ·
·
The review , w.hich looked at
results of about 50 human studies
conducted over the past 40 yeats,
also uncovered no links between
fluoride and Down syndrome or
Continued c5D page 10

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Groups ·oppose health care plan

HOME

97 NORTH
'"l

Nov.19-Southern .. ..... ...... .'.. Home
Nov. 28-Trimble ............. .... .. Home
Nov. 29-Vinton County ......... Away
Dec. 3-Miller .... .... .. ..... ...... ... Away
Dec .. 8-E·aatern ..................... Home
Dac.10-Neleonville-York .: .... Away
Dec. 13-Belpra ............ .. ..... .. Home
Dec. 17-AieXllnder .... ........... Home ·
Dec. 20-Wallston :.. ...... .. .. .. .. Away
Jan. 3-Faderal Hocking ......... Home
Jan . 7-Trlmble ...... .. .............. Away
Jan. 11)-Vinton County ......... Home
Jan . 14-Southern .. .. ............. Away
Jan. 17-Miller .:.. .. .. .............. Home
Jan. 21 .... Eastern .... ................. Away
Jan . 24-Nalsonvilla-York ....... Home
·J an. 28-Belpra ..................... Away
Jan . 21-Aiexander ................ Away
Feb. 4-Wellaton .. ......... .. ....... Home
"'eb. 7-Fedaral Hocking .. .... .. , Away

durin1 a mine dearing test in Sau,di Arabia as
allied troops .continue to prepare for ground
war.(UPI)
,•

.

MEIGS

The costs. to consumers in
increased· electricity bills is Ohio
Power 's ultimal~ consideralion,
Sisson said. The Public Utilities
Commission of Ohio strictly regulates Ohio Power's activities, and
will review AEP' s deCision on Jhe
Clean Air Act modification.
According to Sisson, Ohio
Power's goal is to provide the "best
and most reliable power at the least
practicable cosl"
Despite the popular belief that
the fuel switching option insures
the continualion of operation at
Southern ,Ohio Coal Company's
Meigs Mines, Sisson said last night
' that the PUCO could deiermine it
unfair for Otlio Power customers to
absorb the entire cost of scrubbern
·u Oavin. Such a ruling by the
PUCO would force the closing or
the mines anyway.
·
Sisson confirmed what AEP
customers have known ali along:
the AEP customer will ultima1ely
bear the cost of the Clean Air.Act.
According ·to John Kennard,
Ohio Power's Portsmouth Division
Manager. time is of the essence in
the Clean Air Act decision-making
process. AEP anticipates a decision
being made by mid-1991, so that
contractors and material can be ·
lined up for the installation of
scrubbers, pr Western .coal suppliers can be. conJacted
.
. . . in the event

Study reveals jlouride
is not linked to cancer

:', .· )EWING,,:
fUNERAL

i' -.'f-.··!i ..

• FOit ALL

SCHEDULES~~------

~----GIRLS' SCHEDULES~~....._.._..........,_
SOUTHERN

Moscow that it was consisJent witli
·Bush commented on the plan to ground war or on the prospects for ·
all relevant .U.N. Security Council . reporters ru the start of a meeting Iraqi acceptance of the Gorbachev
re.solutions. ·
with congressional leaders. The proposal.
..
His mention of the word "nego- criticism was far softe~ in tone than
As White House press secretary
tiations," however, pointed to his outright rejection Friday of a Marlin Fitzwater noted just two
Ameriean concern over reported condition-laden Iraqi offer to with- hours before Buslr spoke, ''This is
Sovie( promises related to Iraq's . draw from Kuwait.
between Iraq and the Soviet
status after a full·withdrawal from
It also was not clear what effect Union." In the absence of accepKuwait, even though those assur- the mild rebuff from Bush might tance by Saddam Hussein, he said,
ances carried no official U.S. back- have on either the late' diplomatic ''The war goes on.' •
ing,
effort by Moscow to avert a bloody
Continued on page 10

By BRIAN J. REI!:D
Sentinel News Starr

BO.YS

.

•

AMultlmedlo Inc. 'N. .1p1par

Ohio Power customers will foot the bill

EAS-TERN

MUZZLE LOADING
,.

been frank with him ori this, while
stressing appreciation for his sending it to us, it falls well short of
what would be required. And I
would leave it right that for now,"
Bush said.
.
Administration officials offered
no immediate explanation of why
the Soviet offer - in its current
form - might run afoul of U.S.
~bjectives, despite assurances (fom

COMPLETED SEASON

-~,

a_nd

WASHINGTON (UPi)- Presi- lion that "there will be no conces~
dent Bush, irJ a terse rejection that sions, nothing tb give" in ending
signaled no slowdown in allied war lraq 's occupation of Kuwait
plans, said T~esday tl)at a Soviet
At the Soviets request and "in
peace plan fell "well short of what · the interest of thoroughly exploring .
would be required" to end the Per- the initiative," Bush said ,he would
sian Gulf war.
,
keep the derails of the Gorbachev
Still awaiting Iraq's response to plan - transmitted to Washington
the still-secret offer Monday by on Monday by diplomatic cable Soviet President Mikhail Gor- confidential.
bachev, Bu~h reaffirmed his posi. "But very candidly, and I've

MEI8S

· &lt;tll!!tt~
'

COMPLEtED SEASON

..

1 Sectlono, 10 Pogea · 25 Centa

Pomeroy-MiddlepOrt, Ohio, Tuesday, February 19, 1991

Bush: proposal falls short of what is requir~d

GIRLS
•

a1

BOYS

tas-nas

•

•

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) said they agree that something
Several professional and. business must be done to improve health
associations announced Tuesday care access for the 1.3 million
their opposition to a uni versa! uninsured and underinsured
health care plan proposed by State Ohioans.
Rep. Robert . Hagan, D~
However,. the groups said they
Youngs10wn.
·
·
believe the Hagan's proposed legisThe Ohio State Medical Associ- lation would not solve Ohio's
ation, the Ohio Osteopathic Associ-· health care access problems.
ation, the Ohio Chamber of ComHagan unveiled his Ohio Uni·
merce, the Ohio Farm.Bureau Fed- versa! Health Insurance Plan at a
eration, and the National Federa- news conference Monday in Wartion of Independent Business-Ohio ren.

Middleport woman has
minor injuries in accident
A Middleport woinan suffered ·
minor injuries Monday in a two-car
accidenJ on State Roule 7. ·
· Catherine M. Casto, 6S. .Middleport, was transported to Veterans
Memorial HospiJal by the Meigs
County EMS. She was tre8led and
released, a hospiJal spokeswoman
said Tuesday.
According to a report from the
Gallia-Meigs post of the State
Highway Patrol, Casto was south!Jound when she atlempted 10 pass
(t

another southbound car driven by
Anthony J. Heaton, 20, Pomeroy.
As Casto was passing Heaton,
Heaton auempted to malce a left
turn onto Chester Township Road
I 52. Casto then had to swerve to
the left 10 avoid Heaton, and Casio
ran off the left side of the roadway,
strilcing aditch.
Heaton and his -passenger,
Robert M. Bauer, 18, Long Bottom, were uninjured.

He said he wants a publicly
. financed health insurance plan for
all Ohioans with a single-paying
administrative system. Funding
would come from redistribution of
the dollars Ohioans now spend on
health care, he said.
"What we're spending right
now in the Uniled States is close to
$700 billion a year. We've broken
that down 10 $25 !VIIion here in
Ohio,'' Hagan said. "What we're
talking about is redistributing the
money we now spend.''
Under the plan, the .state's
health insurance companies would
be replaced by a health insurance
program adminislered by the state,
much like t,he federal Medicaid
program.
.
The business and professional·
groups said they believe the answ.er
to Ohio's health care access problems lies in the public and llld private sector working together to
solve the \'fOblem, not in creating a
stale- run msurance system.
They said they are commiaed to
working with state legislators to .
develop a workable plan to malce
health care accessible for all .
Ohioans.

structloa was J•st beglnnln1. Today, tbe
restoredl895 theatre Ia open aad operational
and a testllment to lJ!e bard work and detennlnalloa of tilt peoplt or lllal Gallla County commaolty.

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Ohio

Commentary
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Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS
OF THE MEJG8·MASON
AREA
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S!m~
~v

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,..,.,.__,.._.,..., ~=·"""

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publls~

''

CHABLENE BOEFI.JCH

.•

c;&lt;mer!ll Manapr

·

. PAT WlOTEIIEAD

AMIIt1111i Publloher/Conlroller
A MEMSER of The United Press Int.e rnatlonal.loland Dally Press
Association
Publishers Association.
-· and the American Newspaper
.
.
'

'

LETTERS OF OPINIONarewelconie. They should be less than300
words long. AU.letters are subject to editing anc! must be signed wit~
name; address and telephone number. No unslllned letters wUI be pub. Its bed. Letters should be Ingood taSte, addressing Issues, not ~rsonall,
ties.

I .

·. Press officers see
needs for .press, brass.

l

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.

8By BERL SCHWARTi ..
.
. ~ORMAN. Okla. ~Q - If yOu think the press is wihappy with the
military brass over resll'JCbons on coverage of the Persian Gulf war you
ough110 hear whal some military folks are saying on the subjecL
'
They only confltlll the gist of the media's btief, which is that the rop
ecllelon doesn't understand how the press WOrks and lblsn't care. .
·
. Smce hostilities broke out, the mr:dia has com!!~ that the system of
press pools the i)efense Oeparbnent has set up IS hmdet;ing coverage of
the war.
. The press proved in World Warn and Vietnani it could keep military ·
~rets. and deal w~th censorship. The .use of pools is' a tactic 10 keep ·
reporters from seemg the Wllf so that the press will not do what it is
blamed, unjustiflilbly, fordoing in Vietnam, which was turning the Amer- '
ican public against U.S. policy.
·
While generals hold daily briefmgs in Saudi Araliia and Washingron, .
some middle-level public affairs officers and specialists of the military are
gathered at the Unive!Sity of Oklahoma for an eight-week course on the
..

. ·

. Some spoke recently about the failure of the brass 10 gra,sp what th.e ·
press wanrs, needs and deserves 10 know.
.
''Our biggest job,'' one ·:.'eteran biuerly complained, "is not collecting
. information and passing it along 10 you (reponers). It's selling our S..peri.brs on the i~ of ~~ d!sclosure with minimtim delay; on the idea
tliat bad news IS not like wme. 11 doesn't get better with age." .
. : "Our generals," he added, "reaDy don't have any substantial ttaining .
jn terms of dealing with the mr:dia.' •
• • Lest the critic.ism armear 10 be one•sided, the press didn't get off easily
either.
,,-.
.
.·.
·: 'TheY b~ed· the media for turning loose on the Persian Gulf a gaggle
pf JOurnalists tll-eqwpped 10 cover the srory because they don't know
. ~uch if anything about the m_
iUtary. They don't know the terminology, for
· eumple, but mstead of making an effort 10 learn i~ they mock the mili•
~ for S)le&amp;king in "~enta¥onese."
..
·
• And displaymg lheu bebef that they don't get any respect. these public
information officers pointed out thai the press won~~ iurn to them, even
· f{iough .they ~ve been ttain~ just fQr .the. purpose of translating jargon
· mro plain English. They say the press mtslriiSts anyone connected with th!l
mililary; even those whO could help them. . .
.
.
. .
; Right now, though, even if the press would seek out their help, their
··· Jllmds are tied. "Evel}'lhing is hUI)Icy dory," said one, "so you're getting
~:~ch of name butlders running the briefings getting their picture on
. As for reporters, ·"They don't trust us, they just see us as gbphers, "
: said one. It's frustrating, added another, because "some military affairs
•.officers have better education and more exoerienc.e ~ writers th~n 1b~
~people who are calling up from newspapers, TV and radio asking the
·questions."
.
:
: ~the mr:dia itself, these public affairs offtefl$ don't see
point of
;limiting press coverage tluough the current pool method, but one unc1m•stands why it is happening.
.
,
·
:· "When the press was kept out of Greneda," she Said, "the military
;came up with a plan for runnmg press pools in the future. Well, they did it
•in Panima; and it didn't work. But the military just bad blinders on and
~ said let's try it·ligain. How many times do they hive 10 re8lize it doesn't

me

•

'.

.

' Like the press, t!lef.d like 10 5ee the rilr:dia given wider access 10 the
: war, but 10 do so fewer reporters could be credentialed 10 cover it They
:don't favor IUllliJ1g loose the 1,000 of so presently accredited reporters ro
&lt;wander wherever they want - in part because they fear for the reponers'
: safety. in part because they fear the damage unescorted reporters can do to
: the war effort, such as giving away a position at night by taking a flash
· picture.
.
.
: Unlike the attitude of the brass roward the press, the middle-level infor: mation .speciillists have the right all}!"l8ch. As one of them put it, the job .
·•of the press is to cover the war, 'and it's our job to facilitate it, not
:obstruct iL"
·
:~ They also think thai if and when a ground war breaks out, the brass will
:.:see ~point 100, if only because they'll realize the risk of obstructing the ·

WASHINGTON • Two men .
knock on th.e door of a family
whose son is fighting in the Pmian
Gulf. The stran~ers give the
tmpression of bemg emissaries
from the miii tary, and they are
solemn. "Your SOli has been arrested for possession o~arijuana ·in
Saudi Arabia. The courts are rough
oyer there. We ~g~t be able to get
htm off, but It .will cost about ·
$5,000."
.
. It's "Operation Desert Con" by
the opportunists who ·scurry out of
the woodwork to capitalize on
wartime fears. The drug-bust hoax
is one Of the bolder cons reported

Rutland homeowners concerned

or
..

at a recent internal briefing of
Army officials in Washington.
Families of service men and
women are .easy llll!fks. They may
not know exactly where their loved
c:&gt;ne is. Letters and phone callS are
spotty. The machinations of the
Pentagon are a mystery. Families
learn more from CNN than they do
from official sources and letters. So
when someone appears it the door
with "news," the family may act
first and ilslt questio11$later.
.. .
Const~mer watchdogs and millJar}' officials told our assOciate Jim .
Lynch about a variecy of recurring
cons. Families have been phoned

.Jl

by someope who tells them that
their soldier has retltrned to the
United States injured. "Please
come and piclc: him up." When the
family rushes out, the robbers
sneak in.
·
A few 900-number bandits have
crawled into the act. They leave
messages on a home answeripg
machine assuring the family that
their soldier is .alive and well. "If
you want more information, call
this number" • a 900 prefix toll

B,. JOHN HENDEL

.Jack Anderson
and Dale VanAtta
~. tisrn. Overni~~t Jll~d:ets have

6

'

'

.,I

Tales from the ·hardwood...

f)OHESTIC .

AlbreCht

•

warns potential donars

to ask plenty" of questions before
,. handing over lheil: money, and he
says the besl way to help soldiers is
thiough the Red CrOss or USO.
·
Even if the package service is a
bargain, it may not be the best way
to bolster the troops. Military
sources tell us that delivering gift
packages • homemade or mass produced .· is a low priority after vital
supplies. Gift packs may sit in U.U
warehouses for some time ..

Senate Bill 3 _
As the crisis in the Persian Gulf
continues, communities t!trooghout
Ohio are attempting 10 assist those
individuals currently serving overseas. The. Ohio Sen11te last week
discussed legislation that is aimed
at assisting Ohio military reservists
called up because of the war with
Iraq. . . . . '
.~
· Senate Bill 3 attempts 10 lessen
the burden of- the turmoil of a sud·
den call 10 active duty and also an
equally sudden reduction in income
and loss of health benefits. As
designed, the legislation would
grant individuals who are currently
serving overseas an exemption
from the Ohio income lall:. ll would
also allow the state's 6,000 military
reservists the .option of keeping
their health and dental insurance
and would offer employees of the
State of Ohio a pay differential of
up to $500 a month 10 make up for
the pay cut many were forced 10
take when they were ;wtivated .for

_,____-...,...--~-.:---~-.....;...__.,...-s_
. en_.J_a_nL_o_ng

Operation Desert Storm.
In Ohio, state goveriunent is the
largest Single employer, with
approxima1ely 60,000 slate
employees. Senale Bill 3 would
. pay those serving in Op·eration
Desert Storm, who are employed
br t~e state of Ohio, retroactively
begmnmg on the date that they
were called to service.
·
For .example, if an individual
was called 10 a&lt;;tive duty beginning
on September 1st, that inmvidual
would receive a retroactive. lump
sum payment for the period ·since
September I st. However., if .an
emploree' s military pay in greater
than his state salary, he would. not
receive differential payfor his·service. It ili important that we as a
state. attempt to aetas a responsible
employer in.assisting tho~ falnilies
who may be hurt finilnCtally from
their commitment to Operation
Desert Sronn.
·
·

At present. the insw'ance cover- training pay, r~ceived from the
age of s.tate employees is lost when United States for active duty in
they ~o on active duty. Once l!Cti· Operation Desert Shield or ~ra­
. vated, employees are granted insur- tion Desert·Stonn as being exempt·
· ance coverage under the federal . ed from Ohio IncOnle Tax. While
government. which only covers Senate Bill 3 is directed primarily
ei!Jergency medical needs, Senate · at state employees, this. amendment
Btll 3 proposes -to continue.insur' attempts to.assist all Ohioans, no
ance coverage for the employee's maner what their occupation, with
spouse or children 'at their request. the financial burdens that are
The employee would still be brought upon them due 10 service
nisposible for payment of the cost 10 till'S nation.
· · .
of the insurance. ·
This legislation is a fmt step in
While the l)ealth care coverage attempting 10 help lhpse men and
. and the pay differential provisions women who have made the com- ·
of Senate Bill3 relates only 10 state niitment and sacrifice 10 serve our
employees, an amendment thar was country in this time of war. .
added io Senate Bill·3 would ~limeAs always, please feel free to
fit all Oh.ioans serving in Operation call' or write me, State Senator Jan
Desert Storm by exempting them Michel Long; if you have any
from state income taxes during questions or comments about these
their wartime service.
.
or any other .issues. My number is
As written this amendment (614)-466-8156, and my address is
would include military pay and the Statehouse, Columbus, Ohio,
.
allowances, other than reserve . 43215.

•

A tale·Qf two deserts·;·.-___,__~____;_&amp;_en_.w._a_tte_nb_er-=-og
ed comic strip. It has more than tant, will have 10 be downgraded.
Economic freedom is a resOIIl'Ci.
4,000 rooms, most in the worlcl.) Kuwait had wealth. Peace and sta· Markets are more irn portant than
Headline stars performed. Soon, . bitity is in ftrst place.
minerals. Markers spur the imagiPolitical freedom is a resource. nation, which allows people ro ere.
white-collar "corporate gaming"
pushed out mobsters.
Free· peoples don't destroy them· ate wealth, 110t just use it up.
Today, blackjack dealers and selves. It's also an economic
The American Southwest had
valet parl!:~rs ':Jlake f!OOd money. · res~~rce; democracy yields real freedom and flourished. The Arab
Some live 111 atr-condiuOiled hous- pobucs, which can direct wealth desert had money and no freedom .
es 011 man-made lakes with sandy toward productive use.
Now, they need freedom, not
beaches in suburban Vegas.
·
money.
Hotel management and performing arts are taught at the University
of Nevada, Las Vegas, where they
also have a $upercomputer and play
basketball. The military, nuclear
power, and related high·tech activities play a role.
.
Other Southwestern states do it
. without gambling. Ariwna grew by
35 percent; Utal!. 18 percent: New
Mexico.; 17 percent. California is
another desert state.
The other desert is·in the Middle
East. There, the volcano is real. It
is being said that history ~as dealt
the Arabs a bad hand.
Yet that desert has oil. In the
1970s it was said that petro-plutocrats would capture all the money.
But the desert of the Mideast did
not bloom. the oil kingdoms
impaied themselves. Iran desb'Oyed
itself in revolution. Iraq further
scouraged ·Iran, as well as Kuwait,
and itscl(, by :vicious warfare.
Libya is ruled by !Iterrorist weirdo.
The merchant-state of the oil
nations; Lebanon. exploded. ot
impleided.
AstronomiCal sums were spent
on armaments. Corruption and
'
profligacy took a toll. Terrorists
were paid off. The world's largest
fortune WIS squandered.
.
. Why did the resource-rich desert
falter and the resource-poor desert
flouriSh?
'
•
As the Gulf War ends, it's lime
to reconsider the textbooks on
I .
ROGER CLEMENS .
development. What is a resource?
. What does rich and poor mean?
ON THE MOUND ..
The .rol_e of wealth, still impor·

olina, been an assis(ant aga1nst
The 58-point romp was !he .
North Carolina and been a head third-largest margin .o f victory,:
Dean Smitb created 111otber coach against North Carolina.'' behind a 129-45 decision over•
veryhighplateauMondaynigbL
said. The Citadel's&gt;coach,. "and I Manhattan in 1985 and .a 89-20tri. :
The coach of sixth-rated North think this is one or the best teams · umph over Davidson in 194~.
.
Carolina guided die tar~ 10 a I've ever seen, talelit•wise.
North Carolina led 62·21 at •
118·50 rout of The Qtadel, giving
"This may not be the best Start· intermission and opened the second ;
Smith his 21st consecutive 20-vic- ·ing five ~ver for North Carolina, balf with a 14-2 run that let the Tar :
... T Heels 20- but it's the best one ~h 12."
Heels empty ·the bench. They led ,_
And .u...
tory
season.
ar
·
•
·
N
b
.
b
·
4, posted tbeir romp in typical ' . es It got to see t e entire
y at Ieas.t 50
. pomtsmost
of -the '.
Smith .style, with 14 of.their 15 - North Carolina bench as alliS , finaiZQminutes.
. ;
Ia
·
players w~re in the game by the
North Carolina converted five '
·· P ~::=gin games involving .. 10:56 mark of the second balf and turnovers and two missed shors by :
Top 25 team: No. 1 Nevada-Las 14 o~ them .notched points. Huber:t. The Citadel, 5-20. 10 start the game ;
Vegas routed Long Beach State Davts and Clifford Rozier each with a 14-0 run. Sophomore •.
122-75; No. s Syracuse w15 • 88· scored 15 points; R.iclc. Fox added reserve center Man Wenstro.n hit a :
79 vicroroverFionlia Stale; 11th.· 13 and Eric Monb'Oss and Brian . baseline jumper with 39 seconds :
r&lt;l~ Southern Mississippi posted
Reese each had 11 points for the le~t tQ.,play .to give North Carolina ,
an 88-77 triumph at Tel!as-Pal! Tar Heels. •
its biggest lead atll6-47.
·:
American; 121h·ranked East Ten"I~m pleased we won by
At Long Beach, Calif.. Larry ;
nessee State posted a 102-78 deci- enough so we could,play a lot of 1ohnson scored 22 of his 34 points ,
sion pver Western Carolina; and. people,' ' Smith said. •'We had in the ftrst half to lead Nevada-Las :
No. 13 Nebraska ropped Northern them badly oui-manned. but we · Vegas 10 its 34th straight victory.·
lllinois 82-73.
treated them with respect."
• · The Runnin' Rebels. 23-0 overall :
. While Smith .was p~c~ng up_ ' . Smi$ seems rathe~ unimpressed and 14-Q in the Big Wes~ opened :
vtctory No. 708, the vtctlm was ..u wtJ!l. ~t another 20-v!CIOJYseason. up a 16-1 lead in the fm.t 3:35 and
again Randy Nesb.it, who has seen ··. , I mhap.py .fo.r·.the. team. but . the game was never close. AnderNorth Carolina from all the.wrong' ., we re a long way from where we . son 'Hunt scored 25 ooints an4
angles. .
. ... · . ·
, w~! 10 be: We have a long w~y 10
Stacy Augmon added 15 to help
"I've played altaipst North Car: go, he S81d.
· .
UNLV increase its record to 22-1
against Long Beach State.
·,·
UPI~Wrtter

cropped up for Cookies for Com-_
bat," "Official ~ert Srorrn ~g ·
Tags" and even Desen Shield
Cologne.»
..
. ·
The N!IW J~y attorney g~ral's office inveSII~ the Marine
.Cadet &lt;;orps; a busmess that sells
$100 gtft ~cks ro. be sent to ·th.e
troops. DeSJllte th~ name, th~ busin.ess has no official connecuon to
the Marine COJPS.
The New (York auorney general
call.
·
investigated V01ces For Fr~m
·. · Along with the scams .are the because !&gt;~ c~~umer complamts
legitimate, if npportunistic, busi- ~at the Vt~gmta company overnesses making a buck off a palricr btlled credit car4s when callers
·
ordered Desert Shield braceletl for
___..__;__--._..;.._;______;.._,_____~,__---::;.;:;::"-;-:-::::-1 $.9.95. Even first lady Barbara
· ~ e::ISI"eiN
Bush has one of them. The compa~ MtrJ.
ny now says lhe billing "glitches"
Ni!WS ·llla-3
were the IJiiStake oftefephone . .
solicitors.and lhat the Jm)blcm has .
. been taken care of. Tlie cc)mpany
says its profits paid for a voice~ .
mail center where .soldierS could
leave lhreC-mimite 10essages to be
sent 10 their families.
Ken Albrecht; presi~ent of the
National Charities Information
Bureau, 'a charities watchdog,
claitns that historically,less than 60
percent of the donations to
Chapin's umbrella organization,
"~~!P. Hospilalized Ve.terans,"
ac ly go 10 bona fide charitable
. services.

LAS VEGAS • As the public
dialogue moves roward "rebuilding
the Gulf," consider the tales of 1wo
deserts.
One desert contains the rncist
valuable of treasures. The ot!ler
holds few resources. One succeeds.
The
other fails, famously.
•~JSIOOgreat
.
'
.
.
.
Interesting. The resource-rich ·
:. . ".cmte th~~ s~ a BJ;'!"nd war and !heY don't show &gt;:c;lU the bodies
c!esert is failing. The resource-poor
·'COmmg back, S81d one, then the Amencan people are gomg to quesuon
desert
is flourishing . There are
: what the military is biding and the public is going 10 tUm against the
lessons.
:war."
-.
The, successful desert is the
•: (Scbwartz, on leave IS W1Shington bpreau chief ol United Press American
Southwest,· the most
rapidly growing part of.America.
;lntenational, is .visiting pr,ofessor of jou~lism at tbe University of
Nevada, which grew by 50 percent
;.Oklahoma.)
·
from 1980-90, is the fastest growing
state. Las Vegas grew by 60
':,
percent. .
. .
What hl!ppened to make the
American desert so livable that so
to the"grinderpump Th~?·many more people want to live
·Dear Editor:
5. Why don't we get a gravity there?
·
'
· Some of us homeowners who
Water. surely. When it's not
:reside in the Rutland Village ll!'e system thai we know will work like
· :·very concerned about the noiv haS been proven in Syracuse, OH? God-given, it can be made by tech·
nology and politics; Las Vegas gets
,.~aste water system th.at we ll!e . Which only requires, 2 or 3 large
;.abOut 10 have mstalled m our vd- pumps instead of I in every yard much of its wate,r from federal pro·
·lage. Since Mr. Johnson wrote his seems to us t!lat it .woul!l be easier jects that were pelS of generauons
:article on the system we would like · 10 maintain instead of 400 10 500 of potent Nevadalegislators.
.'
Air conditioning, a.revolution·
:10 say we know from facts tliat it pumps.
6.
Also
we
don't
wain
our
'
s
eptic
ary
machine. Coor air in the home,
•.didn't work in Chesapeake .. We
tal!ks
smashed
in
until
they
guatanoffice
Bl!d car allows life 10 pro- .
~agree wi.th ,him ·about the grinder .
lee
these
little
grinder
pumps.
·
ceed,
even
in the broiling desert.
.
..
;.pumps.
"Please
Someone
give
us
some
Proximity,
or its equivalent.
-~
I. The pumps should never be
answers."
Seventeen airlines serve Las
:installed in a flood plain area.
Concerned Homeowners: · Vegas. Interstate 15 cut the driving
2. Wbat will be the estimate
· Lillie Robinson lime from Las Angeles from inter:price monthly? Wilj it keep
.••ncreas'lng?
•
.
Ethel M. Nicholson minable to five hours. A P,lanned
Judy Denny maglev "bullet train" wtll .take.
: 3. Who will maintain the pumps
Verna Mat1in overland lravellime down to about
;when they 11-eakdown? WhiCh they .
Betty Rupe . an hour and a half.
·:'are only suppOse 10 last 2 years at
ThOmas Anderson
Access to wealth. As people
:-the mOIL Wlio will reroute our new
Jo Ann Eads became more pros~roiis, rourists
:pl1111binl and elec:tric lines that has · .:
· · Barbera A. Young came (about ·20 mtllion now visit
·wbe run from the pump to our
. James Young Vegas annually).
'
· •
:electtic boxes? Some of us ate on
Clyde
E.
Davis
But
why
do
they
come?
The
ftxed income and canncK affad this ·
L.D. ~ . Nevada Lepslature legalized gam~xpense.
.
Janet Nakamoto bling, creaung an "artifiCial" indus·
:· 4. Rutland doesn't have good
Bill Young try. When there is gambling, gam'Water lines which are always
Ray Wolfe biers follow. "The Sttip" was built,
."brealciD&amp; when we have cold ,winR.L. Bolin with huge and garish hotels. (The
)ers like in 1989 when we were out
Rutland,
Ohio new Excallbur looks like an inflat·
water fll" 3 weeks what .IJappells
.

.

Pomei'Qy-Middleport, Ohio

n.esclay, February 18, 1891

.

m~

: work?..

"

Families fall victim to opportunists

111 Court Street

North Carolina routs The Citadel; ~­
Rebels capture 34th st,raight win

Page-2-ThJ Dally Sentinel

.

.

The · Daily Sentinel
.
'.

•

..._ • • •

HARSTAD MAKES MOVE· Creigbton for·
.ward Bob Harstad (30) makes a move toward
the basket durlna rnt half action In South Bend.

Monday. G11arding Harstad Is Notre Dame for·
ward Ke~in Ellery. The Blue Jays defeated the .
.
.
.
Irisb 90-67. (UPI)

Coaches stl1l crying over changes
.

.

.

Local players named all-district;
boys'.tourney season to start tonight .::
ByG.SPEN&lt;;EROSBORNE ... Univ. of RiQ Grande- Gallia Univ. of Rio Grande • Trimble v's.
OVPStalrWriter •
• Academyvs.Jac](son,7p.m.
Ironton St. Joe, 3:30 p.m. (noon);
· Tribune Staff Writer
Wednesday
.·
Miller vs. No. 2 seed HannanTrac~
Thirteen players from Gallia and
Division III boys' sectional at (14-5), 5:15 p.m. (1:45 p . m.)~
Meigs Counties from SEOAL- and . Athens H. S . - North Ga!Ha vs. Kyger Creek (3, 17) vs. Southwest·
SV AC-member schOols were Crooksville at Athens H.S., 5:30 ern (1-16), 7 p.·m. (3 :30 p:m.) ;
named to the District 13 AU-Star p.m.; Oak Hill vs. Belpre, 7:15 R~ville Eastern (1"0·9) vs, No.: t
baslcetbal) squads recently by area p:m.; Federal Hocking vs. Nel· ·seed Racine Southern (16-4) 8:4'S
coaches.
sonville-York, 9 p.m.
p.m. (5:15p.m.). (The times ·iil
· For the Division 1-11 boys, GalDivisi~n III boys' .s.ectional at parentheses are the altern ate start
lia Academy senior center Rob . Rock HtH H.S. • Mtnford vs. limes if the Rio. Grande women's
Skidmore made the first ICim, join-. Symmes Valley, 6:30p.m.
squad completes its remaining
ing Ironron's TY Barnes; the bigDivision IV girls district at schedule without a loss. as the Red·
school Player of the Year. Fair- - . Jackson H.S. • Crooksville n. women' will participa~ in the Disland's_Nathan Hughes, W~ston's-: Kyger Creek. 6:30p.m.
trict 22 playoffs Saturday at home
Mike Potts'and Fairll!nd's Ryan
·
Thursday
at a time 10 be annouriced) ·
Ramey. On the second team, Blue . Division .IY girls' district at
Devil senior Josh Williams joined Jackson H.S. • Hannan Trace vs .
Athens' Bob Bailey, Wellston's Franklin Fumace Green, 6:30p.m.
SPRING VAllEY CI NEMA
Scott Lackey, Logan •s Trevor"
Frida!
446 4524
,' .~~· '";,' ~
Unger, Jackslkl's Clayton ValenDivision JI boys' sectional at
Sl .OO IARiiAIII MATIN££5 ~nJIOAY J StJJIIAY
tine and Willy Woodard. Rec.eiVing Univ. of Rio G~de • No. 2 seed
U .Ill BARGA I !'I NIGHT TU(SM¥
special mention were three.seniors .Wellsron vs. Gallia Academy-Jack·
• Jason Reed of Alhens. Tracy Sey• scin ~inne! for upper:bracket ·
moor of Wellsto.n an_g Shawh· champt~nslup, 6:30p.m.;. FBtrl.and
Speakman of Vinton. CoiJIIly. Fair,j., vs. Metgs for lowe.r,bl'ftcket utle,·
land chief Jack Harris was named 8:15 P·!D: '
. . .
Coach of the Year.
• Divtston III boys' secuonal at ..
On the Division III-IV squad, .a Athens . H:s .. · North Galliapair of senior backcourt scoring Crooksvtlle wmner vs. Alexander
artists . Southern's Andy Baer and for upper-bracket .ulle, 6:30 p.m.;
North Gallia's Chris Tackett- . Belpre-Oak Hill wmner :vs. Federal
joined Chesapeake's Curt Dempsey Hockimt•Nelsonville· Yor~win!l~
arid Allen Osborne (Ptarer of the for lower-.bracket champtonshtp,
Year) and Ale1[ander s Danny 8:15p.m.
·
Burke on the first team. Hannan
Saturday
Trace seniclrpostman Craig Rankin
Division IV bovs' sectional ·at
and veteran Symmes Valley center
Carl
RobiJJSon
selected
10 join . .---------.---~----------. .
Trimble's
Scottwere
Auflick,
Hemlock

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (!JPI)- .for c:Oaches or for athletic directcirs lege athletics and we do that Consequently it costs mOI!Cy.
·
Coaches, ·in general, ~omprise a or for administrators."
body resistant to change so when
While none of the coaches were ·
... These. are things that maybe
the NCAA voted to slice inro their ready 10 argue thtit point. they were hurt a program like Kansas Stat.;
·very livelihood, the CJCpeCted cry still on the defensive about the more so thall others."
'- . ._: ~ arose and &lt;:antiJwed·tbiough Mon- changes. They apparently don't · J1,1st as the NCAA takes away,
. day's College Football J'orum.
like to have to make the tough · however, it seems ·to ·give back.
In January the ·NCAA. at the choices, eith!lf. Apart from the staff • Nearly every measure passed in
ihsistence of the Presidents Com· reduction, the item that stung t1Je January will not be enacted for sevmission, shOved through a series of head coaches the mosl was the eral years and will likely undergo
measures thai. among other things, . limit. going off campus to recruit, legislative tinkering.
restticted the number of coaches meaning they would have to tell
"The buzz word at the convenwho could recruit off-campus to two cir three eoaches that they are lion was fme tuning," Sliger said.
seven and lopped off one fulllime out.of the recruiting loop.
. "I think every time a proposition
· coaching postUon.
·
.
Tennessee· Coach Johnny came up 11 would he prefaced by,
"These are poly-skilled opera- Majors said, "It's going .ro aff~t ·. 'Now don't vote this down, but
tions and there'd soon be a coach theu futures.' They'll say, 'I'm not · let's get it passed-\nd we~ll come
for every positiQn," said Bernard a recruiter.on the road. how is lhatl back and fine-tune it' I think some
Sliger, ·president of Florida State going 19 affect me if somebody ·of it will he looked at the next con,
·
and one of the adminisD:atOrs at the wants to interview to be a head vention. "
Miller's Jeff Gossman and Coal
NCAA forum. "There was a feel- coaching job.' And do you pay the ·
Edwards said the coaches are
ing that this had 10 be checked. The ones on the road more then those often their own worse enemies · Grove's J.D. Humphries ·on the
one (cut) thai most of us queslione4 not? This are things that have 10 be since they don't - with a few second team, and North Gallia
guard Brian Stout joined Coal
was the one in football, but the · considered."
.
exceptions such as Edwards, Penn
Steve Carey, Alexander's
Grove's
feeling was that unless we cut footSeveral coaches suggested that a State's Joe Paterno alld Nebraska's
Roy
Johnson
and Chesapeake's
ball we were goin~ 10 have trouble rotation of all the coaches on the Tom Osborne -attend the NCAA
Mike
Williafl)S
in receiving special
cuatiitg the others.'
.
staff with a limit of seven out on · convention.
mention,
wbile
Wiliams' menror,
While the NCAA was passing any one week would be a viable
He added that even the coaches'
Norm
.
P
ersin,
was
named Coach of
the legislation, the football coaches compromise and would help · presence would probably have little
the
Year.
.
·
were baving their own convention morale.
.
effect this YCI!f·
For
the
big-school
girls,
the_
at New Orleans where, Brigham
. They agreed that either way it
"I'd just as soon go against
Academy
was
represented
on
the
Young Coach Lavell Edwards said, was a rich~get-richer scenario, Hawaii (a 59-38 loss) or Texas
first
team
by
junior
guard
Dena
they participated in a favorite pas- since fewer coaches would be out , A&amp;M (a 65-14 defeat) as get run
time where they "sit !lown there selling the schools, the high-profile over by that ttain," he said. "This Greene, while Jackson's Kellina ·
and gripe and whatever." .
teams would benefit from the lack · particular convention was wired Cooper and Tiffany Reasor joined
The coaches were angry because of competition.
,
right from Day One. I don't think . Logan scoring ace Katie Smith, the
of the Year in Division I and 1
some·of them would be forced 10
"It's going to be more of an there was anything we could have ·Player
II,
and
teammate Tiffany Ogg oil
let some of their friends go.
advantage for those peOple already done 1or would have done that
the
starting
.five. Blne Angel senior
"Nobody appreciates the con- in good recruiting spots and the .would have made any difference pivot Jennifer
Young joined Jackcerns of the coaches more .than I schools with the good teputa· whatsoever. (The Presidents Com- son's Julie Coffey, Vinron Coundo,'' said Southeastern Conference lions," said Majors. "It will affect mission) did a nice job." ·
ly's Melodie Graves, Rock Hill's
Commissioner Roy Kramer. ''I ·the Texas-EI ' Paso, Texas Techs,
Ironically the way for the coach-· Kerrie Haas and Logan's Jenny .
coached for a long time. But all of people who are more isolated."
es 10 assert themselves would be 10 McCallister on the second team,
us have to realize that intercolleNot many schools qualify more to take the same tack as the college while special mention went to
giate athletics do not exist for the in that category than Kansas State, presidents and get directly South Point's Michelle Cains,
sake of creating job opportunities as Coacli Bill Snyder pointed out
involved. ·
Wellston's Laura Canter, Rock"He said, "If we cut anything at
"I do think it's very important . Hill's Kim Dillow; Vinron Coun- ·
!&lt;::msas State, we're in some seri- for us to get right back in and get ty's Linda Dixon and Athens' ·
ous trouble. Staying up with the involved with our people," Becky Sostarich. Logan boss Ralph
The Daily ~entinel
Joneses is .certainly a must in col- Edwards said.
Taylor was named Coach of the

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~

K
d A pp1me
small-school bench featured
. IWOThe
Th ompson,-.. G"b
1 son, enyon an
Gallians. Southwestern senior .
.

.

earn 'Player-of-Week' awards
TOLEDO. Ohio (UPI)- Ball
State junior Chandler Thompson,
who led the Cardinals 10 a pair of
wins last week, has been selected
the Mid- American Conference
player of the week. ·
. Thompson, a 6-foot-4 swingman
from Muncie, Ind., had 42 points,
17 rebounds and five assists in the
two games.
He had 20 points and I 0
rebounds in a 11-68 wil) over firSt
place MU.ni OJi Wednesday and 22
points and seven rebounds in a 67·
64 win at Western Michigan on
Saturday.
Heidelberg junior Tom Gibson
has been selected the Ohio Athletic
Conference player of the week.
Gibson, a· 6-foot-2 wing from
~loomington, Ill., totaled 56 points,
14 re~ and six assist m two
games last week.
He had 22 points in an 83-81
loss to Otterbein on Wednesday
and 34 points in 111 86-71 win ovr
Hiram on Saturday. He made 16 of
3S field goal attempts and 19 of 20

.

guard Lisa Hall and Hannan Trace

guard Lucy Mullens.• one of two
sophomores to recetve D·III-IV
1988 PONTIAC
free throws in the "two games.
honors· on the fJrSt team, and they
Tilt, Rear D,.togger, Automatic,
•
were joined by Trimble's Teresa
Air, Two Tone Pelnt.
Kenyon forward B,J. Kenyon · Fouts, Nelsonville-York's Barri .
has been selected the North Coast Fuller and Federal Hocking's St8-·
SALE PRICED
Athletic Conference player of the ~~?~S::i!.~:~J=or~d:.
'
week.
·
Coal Grove's. Jenny ~onley,
Kenyon, a 6-foot•6 senior from Miller's Jami Hanning, NelWorthingron, scored 52 points in son ville· York's Mistie Pancake
two games last week, including 25 and Fairland's Meli.ssa Topping on
in a 97•76win over Ohio Wesleyan the second team, while Oak Hill's
· Saturday .that assured the Lords the M 1 da Galliam
N 1son ·11
fifth seed in lhe NCAC roumament.
LeiY!'
.
ore. e
v•. e. .
. York's Kelli McDonald and Trim1
27
H
also
h
d
. e.
a
pomts m a oss ble 's Char Peart received special
10 Demson on Wednesday.
' mention. Hannan Trace's John
·
Lusher garnered COach of the Year \Yalsh College forward C~ honors for his team's ascent 10 an
AJlllline has been selected the Mid-.,_.. SVAC co-championship- with
Oil change (up to fill• quarte)
Ohio Conference player of the ~ Kyger Creek. '
-·-- ·
uelng GM Goodwrench Motor
week. .
.
. · Tour11ey elates ·
·on, ·genuine GM OH Filter end
Appl!"e, a 6:foot-6 sophom!Jre
The regular season will end for
Lube Job.
·
GM CARS Ofi.Y - EIP. 3/15/91
, from Philadelphia, scored 45.pomts t1fe SVAC tonight when Eastern
and grabbed 16 rebounds m two will head south 10 take on Hannan · a...::.:=:.:=---=~~.:_:..:_~ ~~!!!!!!!~~~..:J
.games last week. .
·Trace in the filial tune-ups for both
He h~d 23 pomts and 11
teams before they begin the second
rebounds 111 a 79-68 lqss 10 Malone season on Saturdiy
and 22 J!Oints an~ 5 rellowJds in an
This week's totimament sched991-2174
85-81 W!Jl ov~r Fmdlay.
ule nms as follows:
Appline hit 18 of 24 field goal
Today
.. _
attemP';S ~d 9 of 12 from the free
Division II boys'- sectiona) at
throw line 111 the two games.
·
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. ·The·Dally sentinel-Page 5

~eedlry, February 19,1991

Bulls capture sixth win in
row; defeat Cavs, 110-95_

Breast feeding encouraged

Palace, a ·streak that dates back to and help the Timbctwolves snap a
By United Press International
The Chicago Bulls needed a half Feb. 3, 1986. San Antonio's David fi ve-game losing streak. It was
Minnesota's founh Sllligbt win at
of play to get into step and once Robin110n finished with 26 points.
home and the 128 points were a
they hit stride.their winning streak
Pistons 85, SuperSonics 83
At Auburn Hills, Mich., Joe franchise .record. The Timberhad grown to six games.
The Bulls were sluggish in Dumars made a layup with two wolves shot 49 percent. from the
shooting just 42 percent in the ftrst seconds left and Dennis Rodman field, roUed up a 55-44 rebounding
11a1t: Monday but were just 4 points scored 19 points to rally the Pis- edge, and had six players finish in
behmd the Cleveland Cavaliers. By tons, breakmg a lwcr game losing double flgufCS.
the third period Chicago's shooting streak at home Detroit was coming Mavericks107, Warriors 101
At Oakland, Calif.,.Derelc Harp- ·
touch had returned and the Bulls off its worst loss of the season,
er
scored
13 foUrth-quarter points •
ran away with a 110-95 victory.
116-88, Sund.iy at New York. The
and
the
Dallas
bench outscored the
Michael Jordan scored 32 SuperSonics ~t for the third time
Warriors
bench
by 32_poillts, leadpoints, II in a 24-7 third-quarter in their last four games. Dumars. .
run, and helped key a late 23-6 run who had 15 points, took a pass ing the Mavericks. Harper made
with hi~ de(en.se, to give the Bulls from Bill Laim~ and drove the eight of 15 shots and tied Alex
their ninth consecutive viciory left side of the lane for the winning English for Dallas scoring honors
against the Cavs.
·
shot after Derrick McKey's hook with 24 pbints. Harper hit a 3The Cav.aliers led 56-48 with shot with 22.4 seconds remaining pointer to put the Mavs up 97-95
with 3:15 left. After' a Rodney
10:121eft in the third quaner on a had tied the score.
McCray
steal, Harper hit another
Ti~b~olves 128, Nuggets 114
b_as.ket by ~rad Daugherty, who
jumper
for
a 99-95 lead with 2:12
ftmShed wuh 30 points . From
At Minneapolis. Minn., Sam
left
and
the
Warriors couldn't get
there, Jordan took over, scoring 10 Mitchell scored 6 points in the fmal
closer
than
2
points after that.
of the fl!'St 14 points in Chicago's five minutes to spark a 14-2 run
24-7 run that .was worth a 72-63
lead with 2:491eft in the period.
.
Cleveland cut the lead to four
twice, the second time on John
Morton's steal and dunk with 7:15
to play, but Jordan found Stacey
King for a dunk to ignite the 23-6
NEW YORK (UPI) - Nevada- win total in the nation at 24·2 and
run that iced the game. Jordan had
1..&amp;'1 Vegas was the undi~uted No. has won 21 of its last 22 games.
four steals and a blocked shot in
I choice for the lOth stratght week The last time the Utes made the
the run, all of which resulted in
Monday in the United Press Inter- Top 10 was at the end of the 1980Chicago dunks. With all the easy
national college basketbaU ratings, 81 season, when they finished 25· baskets, the Bulls hit 13 of 19 shots
while Utah cracked the Top 10 for 5.
in the final quarter.
the forst time in 10 years.
With their 81 -74 victory Satur"I think in the past, they used to
The Runnin' Rebels, who have day night over Brigham Y0tu1g, the
lise (Jordan) a Jot more, " said
received every ftrst-place vote from · Utes clinched sofe possessiQn of ·
Craig Ehl6, who draws die. task of the. UPI Board of Coaches since the Western Athletic Conference
defending the NBA's leading scorDec. 17, was at the top of all 40 regular- season title for the first
er much of the time. "I think that's
ballots cast Monday by the 42; time since 1977.
. why they're leading the division. member board and finished with
"'This team is the little engine
Their whole team is contributing.''
600 points.
that could," Utah Coach Rick
The Bulls also play good
UNL V ran its record to 22-0 on Majerus said. •'These guys have
defense, and demonstrated that on
the season last week with victories played so well together for so long.
Daugherty, holding him to 2 points . over Santa Barbara and New Mexi- · I'm just as happy as I can be for
in the fourth quaner.
co Sra1e, though its 86-74 triumph them. "
"We gave a little more help,"
over the Aggies was its secondBy winning its fmal two re$UlarChicago Coach Phil Jackson said smallest margin of victory this sea- season ~· the Utes can ue the
of containing Daugherty . "Bill son.'
school s single-season victory
(Cartwright) has done such a great
Ohio State maintained its hold mark of 26 set in 1960.
jOb on him the last couple of years on second place with 553 point
No. II Southern Mississippi
.with no help, we haven 't had to after beating Indiana 97-95 in dou- slipped one place and No. 12· ~~
double and compromise our ble overtime on Sunday. Treg Lee T~nnessee Srare fell three. Nebrasdefense . ..
hit a baseline jumper with foitr sec- ka moved liP three spots to I 3th ·
''(Daugherty) got on a roll in onds left in the second overtime to and No. 14 New Mexico Stille
the ftrst half and had great game. give the Buckeyes, 22-1, the inside improved one despite its .loss to
But we slllrted doubling in the sec- track to the Big Ten title.
UNLV.
·
ond half and doing some things and
' 'It was one of the greatest bas-.
No. 15 Oldahoma Stare vaulted :
I thought it changed the game.··
ketball games I've ever been a part four positions, No. 16 St. John's
In other NBA games Monday, of," Ohio State Coach Randy fell four ~pots and No. 17 UCLA :
Utah topped San Antonio 104-81, Ayers said. "We just kept clawing dropped three. No. 18 louisiana :
Detroit nipped Seattle 85-83, Min- llway, especially in the second half. State jumped six places after beat· •
nesota outshot Denver 128-1 14 and The intensity we showed was ing Alabama 88-81 on Sunday.
'
Dallas traveled to Golden State in tremendous. I don ' t see this as
Virginia slipped one place to :
late games.
cliching the title, but 'it's a huge 19th and No. .20 Princeton entered ;
Jazz 104, Spurs 81
win for this program."
the ratings for the second time this
At Salt Lake City, Utah's Karl
No. 3 Arlcansas and No. 4 Indi- se~s_on. No. 21 Mississippi, Stale
Malone scored 2(i points and puUed ana retained their positions from rejomed the list after a one-week
down 16 rebounds and John Stock- last week, while No. 5 Syracuse hiatus and 'No. 22 Georgetown ·'
ton scored 18 points, dished out 18
and No. 6 North Carolina both slumped five places following lossassists and had sill steals while San moved up two places.
es to Connecticut and Seton Hall. ·
Antonio shot just 39 pereent. San
No. 7 Duke and No. 8 Arizona
Texas and Alabama were tied
Antonio was within 26-25 early in both fell two postilions after sufferfor 23rd and there was another tie
the second quarter but the Jaz~ ing losses over the weekend while · for 25th between newcomers Sewn
went on a~ run and led 5)-39 at Kansas improved two places into Hall and North Carolina State.
halftime. The Spurs, who convened n·inth and Utah jumped three to
Dropping out of the ratings this
just 30 of 77 shots from the field, lOth.
week were Michigan State, Wake
have dropPed 15 slfolight in the Salt
Utah owns the second-highest
Forest and New Or1eans.

G~

TO BOMB
SADDAM'S· ~~

Ohio State remains second
in UPI cage basketball poll

•

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DUMARS DRIVES • Detroit Pistons' Joe
Dumars (L) drives around Seattle Supersonics

'

Gary Payton (2) .with some help from teammate
Bill Lalmbeer (rear), during first quarter play at
the Palace. (UPI)

--Scoreboard--- I

NCAC Tourney Quarterfinals
. Monday Sports Transactions
Oberlin or Earlham (lnd) at Woost,.: ' By United Press International
er
; Baseball
·
Atlanta - Signed outfi'elder Ohio Wesleyan at Kenyon
Oddibe McDowell to !-year con- . Denison at Allegheny (Pa)
Case Reserve at Wittenberg ,
,, tract.
: Chicago (AL) - Agreed on WEDNESDAY; FEB 20
terms with outfielder Dan Pasqua Ohio State at Illinois
Western Michigan at Miami
on !-year contract
Central
Michigan at Kent State
Cleveland - Signed pitchers
Ohio
University
at Ball State
Eric King and John Farrell to J.
Bowling
Green
at
Toledo
year contracts.
Kansas City - Outfielder Bo Findlay at Central State
Jackson and pitcher Victor Cole OAC Tourney Quarterfinals
ONU-JCU winner at Capital
· agreed to !-year contracts.
··
Tororito - Signed third base- · Hiram at Muslcingum
.,. man Tom Quinlan and pitchers Mount Union-Marietta winner at
·
Nate Cromwell, Ricky Rhodes and Otlerbein
Heidelberg at Baldwin-Wallace
Alex Sanchez to 1-yearcontracts.
THURSDAY, FEB 21
Basketball ·
,
:.•
Philadelphia- Released guard Wisconsin-Green Bay at Akron
Tony Harris; activated center Dave Southern Mississippi at Cincinnati
Butler at Dayton
Hoppen.
Bethany (W Va) at Lake Erie
College
New Mexico - Named Dave FRIDAY, FEB 22
OAC Tourney Semifinals
Kragthorpe of{ensive line coach.
NCAC Tourney Semifinals
Football
Cleveland - Named Ernie At Wooster
Adams and Gaty Tranquill assis- SATURDAY, FEB 23
Minnesota at Ohio State
tant offensive coaches.
Detroit - Named Dave Levy Toledo at Eastern Michigan
offensive coordinator, Charlie Miami at Ohio University
Kent State at Bqwling Green
~ Sanders receivers coordinator and
Tulane
at Cincinnati
~ - · Raymond Berry quarterbacks
Cleveland
Stale at Nor Illinois
,.;; coach.
Dayton vs Fordham (Madison
..'••
,. H oc key
: ·: Los Angeles- Signed left wing Square)
•; Nicolas Beaulieu and assigned him . Xavier at Butler
.
&gt; to Phoenix of International Hockey Youngstown at Towson State (Md)
·'
Central State at Wright State
.• League.
•;
Philadelphia - Recalled for- Cedarville at Mt Vernon Nazarene
;: . ·ward Bill Armstrong from Hersey Central State ai Ohio Dominican
Rio Grande at Walsh
: ~, of American Hockey League.
Urbana at Tiffin
•
Ashland
atiUPU-Ft Wayne
~ :' High
Deftanee
at Bluffton
•
•' Boys Ohio High School BasketDyke at Shawnee State
•'•• ball
Wilmington at Findlay
•'
Lake
Erie.at Waynesburg (Pa)
,. By United Press International
Wilberforce
at IU-Kokorilo
:: Monday, Feb. 18
OAC
Tourney
.,-inaJs·
, . Plymouth fD, Black River 5.1
At Wooster NCAC Tournament
:: Shelby 64, Bucyrus 62
Finals
~ Willard 87, Upper Sandusky 50
SUNDAY, FEB 24
;: Milan Edison 87, Margareua 77
Central State at Ohio Dominican
-· Huron 76, Pon Clinton 73
;: South Centra191 , Monroeville 74
:: Fredericktown 72, Riverdale 70

I

school scores

•
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•

Girls scores
Tournaments
DIVISION D
Washington CH 51 , Hillsboro 30
Greenfield McClain 65 , Miami
Trace43

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This week's games

Collqe Basketball schedule
"..••• Ollio
BLUalted Press lnternationll
T ESDAY, FEB 19

·..•.:
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Xavier at Wright State
Defiance at Dyke
Malone at Lake Eric
Shawnee St at Wilberforce
Walsh at Cedarville
Mt vernon Nazarene at Tiffin
Rio Gnnle 11 Ohio Dominican
Urbana at WilmingtDD

......

-

Browns hire two
offensive coaches ·

CLEVELAND (UPI) - The
Cleveland Browns.· Monday
announced the hiring of Gary Tranquill and Ernie Adams as asslslant
offensive coaches.
Tranqllill, 50, who will serve as
quarterback coach , was most
recently the quarlerback coach at
the University of Virginia where he
worked with Shawn Moore.
Adams, 37, has not worked in
football since serving as the New
York Giants' director of pro personnel from 1982-85. He was an
assi~tant wilh the New England
PatnOIS from 1975-78 and with the
Giants from 1979-81.

Sports briefs

Tennis
Boris Becker withdrew from
this ~eek ' s $1 million Stuttgart
Classtc because of a thigh injury
and will miss at least four weeks.
The injury likely will cost the German sw in his effort to regain the
No. I ranlcing from S1efan Edberg.
The ~wede moved back into No. I
when Becker retired during the
semifinals of last weekend's tournament in Belgium. . .. Steffi Graf
says _she will remain in Germany
desptte the mtense scrutiny that
hun her play last season. She also
told the German newspaper Bild
that her father, Peter Graf will
remain her manager: ... In an 'effon
to keep the U.S. Open in New
York, Mayor David Dinkins and
the U.S . Tennis Association will
release a proposal Tuesday to
upgrade and expand the National
Tennis Center.

. EAGAN, Minn. (UJ&gt;I) - . Northwest Airlin~s said Monday it has
reduced domestic fares as part of a
coupon promotion . for travel
involving flights originating in 14
Southern states.
Northwest said coupons appearing this week in daily newspapers
are good for $150 off round-trip
fares of $500 or more, $100 off
round-trip fares of $350 to $499,
and $50 off round-trip fares of
$175 to$349.
To qualify for the discounts,

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A RAISE

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GOT liAISE.

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--------------------------------------------·
THE DAILY SENTINEL

.

"Yow'Source For'Local News"
I

CI,.EVELAND (UPI) - Cyn thia McCabe spends a lot of her
time working with companies interes.led in developing programs to
involve their employees in change,
and she senses a growing interest.
McCabe, an employee of the
Ohio Bell Telephone Co. in Cleve.!.'!"d and the 1991 president of the
National Association of Suggestion
Systems, is in a position to judge
such trends because the association
is nearly a half a century old
"Our organization has beCII
around for49 years now," McCabe
said. "We've been in the employee
involvement business longer than
the term has been coined.
"Over the years, particularly in
the last dec.ade, you have seen
more and more growlh," said
McCabe, who lives in Twinsburg.
"Employers have recognized that
to be successful, you ·have to have
input from everyone in the organization."
Among the 25 active members
in the Lower Great Lakes Chapter
are L1V Steel, the Cleveland Ctinic, Akron City Hospital, the NASA
Lewis Research Center, Ohio BeU,
American Greetings and Nationwide Insurance.
''When we get together, we talk
abou~ issues, concerns," McCabe

I

America West offered a 50 per~
cent discount on its domestic
round-trip flights during a three·
day period 'during the fmt week of
the month. Several other carriers
matched that promotion. .
Troubled Pan American then
offered a $238 round-trip fare on
domestic flights and several of its
international routes on the condition that a passenger make a sepa·
rate flight before March 1. Northwest and American matched that
promopon.

said. "We have an overview of a
· S~e 800 lmplemented sugges:
member's progralii. Then we usual- lions at Ohio Bell are credited with
ly bring in a speaker who will help saving the company $3.5 million in
in our 11rofessional development. .. 1990. In turn, the company made
NASS JS a resource for developing cash payments totaling $250,000
'or enhancing these kinds of pro- for tl)e suggestions.
grams. We offer various formal
NASS said that in 1989 member
education programs."
· 'companies reponed savin$ $2 biiNASS, which is headquartered lion, and those compames paid
in Chicago and has a national $194 million in awards to employmembership of 900 companies ees for the suggestions.
employing 13 million people, will
"With proper guidelines a sughave its 1991 national conference gestion system can be very usein Nashville, Tenn., Sept. 10·13. ful;" McCabe said. "It is a very
Companies involved across the viable employment involvement
country include American·Airlines, cpncept. We're always willing to
Walt Disney World and the Navy.
help other organizations get .
"We learn from each other how involved with this.
.
to start up a quality suggestion sys"There are some old perceptem or how to improve or enhance tio.ns that a su~gestion is dropped
one. Many of ·us today are chal· in a box and 11 is never seen or
lenged with integrating a sugges- heard of again . We recommend a
tion system with other programs systematic approach. We stress
feedback, staying on top of the
that are out," McCabe said. .
She explained the idea is to talce progress."
advantage of employee ideas.
· While many companies have
At Ohio Bell, for example, she caught on to the idea only recently,
said two employees suggested an others have been running such proaltematiye to moving manholes !n gr~~~~~s for years.
street wtdemng proJects. She satd
NASS said the oldest employee
the old method of moving man- suggestion program in the United
holes could cost up to $50,000, but States still in operation today was
a "movable curb" proposed by established in 1898 by the Eastman
twq workers costs less than $2,000.
Kodak Co., a member of NASS.

our national interest' '
Democratic congressional leaders
Gephardt said that if the coaliwooed labor chiefs with pledges to tion nations share the cost of the
support health care reform and job . Persian Gulf war, the United States
protections and said domestic pro- will not need to cut domestic programs should not be sacrificed to grams to pay the bill.
The congressional leaders
finance the Persian Gulf war.
· Senate Majority Leader George promised support for health care
Mitchell, D-Maine; House Speaker restructuring that would provide
Tom Foley, D-Wash., and Rep. medical insurance for the 37 milRichard Gephardt, D-Mo .. lion Americans who lack it, and
addressed the executive council of reduce the sup cost of loog-terrn
the AFL-CIO labor federatio i1- care by emphasiZing prevention.
Monday.
· "We're spending more and
The meeting 'Vas closed to the more for long-term care than we
public. But in statements af1erward, need to," Mitchell said. "Almost
aU thtee said oil-rich nations in the all the $650 billion we spend on
Middle East, and not U.S. taXpay· health care in the United States is
ers, should help foot the bill for the curative care, afler people become
war and for post-war rebuilding.
ill."
"This is a rich region. Other
Foley also said he would introcountries in the region should bear duce a family leave bill similar to
the overwhelming cost," said the one President Bush vetoed last
Foley.
year.
''Our allies have to do their part
All three pledged support for an
both in the war and in reconstruc- "anti-recession'' bill that would.
tion. This is a world coalition," spend more money to improve
Gephardt said.
.
roads, bridges and mass transit sys'The United States should also tems. The program would create
resist pressure to keep a large land flew jobs for the nation's 7.7 milforce m the Middle East once the lion unemployed workers while
war ends, Mitchell said.
improving decaying transportation
"We've-had a military presence ~ :t-CIO president Lane
in the Perisan Olllf for a half a century in the form of a naval force
All three politicians also.
and air power. I think that has been pledged support for a bill that
and should be sufficient to protect would prevent ~mployers from hir· BAL HARBOUR, Fla. (UPI) -

· And jf you .,. mlddlo·.....
141. you'll get ,.,. bill 11 -

-kofoll.

passengers must purchase tickets
before April 19 and travel before
June 9.
Spokesmen for American Air·
lines and United Airlines said
Monday that the carriers were
studying the Northwest cuts and
whether to match them.
· The Northwest promotion is the
latest in a round of fare cuts from
carriers seeking to overcome a dismal winter travel season, brought
about by the slowing economy and
fears of terrorism.

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CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. - the Hight would face a signifi- . day by a quality inspector, and
engineers currently are trying to
(UPI) - A cracked hinge in a fuel cant setback.
"It's pretty bad. We've. ¥ot a determine whether the flaw was
line door could force NASA to
delay the shuttle Discovery's piece of metal that',s cracked,' said present in earlier flights and
planned March. 9 talceoff, but agen· a shuttle manager who requested whether it might be safe to launch
cy offteials say they are hopeful the anonymity. "I think it's a potential Discovery as is. Another repair
option would be to .bolt the cracked
ship cari he repaired at the pad and rollback."
NASA spokeswoman Lisa M!ll· hinge mechanism together.
launched on schedule.
An official launch date will not
In the meantime, eilgineer_s at one said Discovery's crew was told
the Kennedy Space Center pressed about the crack and that the prac- be set until after a two-day flight
on with plans to start a two-day tice countdown would continue readiness review later this month.
The goal of. the mission is to
practice countdown Tuesday, a while engineers studied the probmajor milestone in a shuttle's Jem. No decisions on how to pro- carry out experiments to learn more
ceed were expected for several about how to detect enemy missiles
launch processing .
in flight, research critical to the
Discovery's seven-man crew days, she said.
The erack is in the hinge mecha- Strategic Defense Initiative missile
reviewed emergency procedures
Monday·and planned to strap in nism of a door in the belly of the defense program, commonly
aboard the shuttle Wednesday for shuttle where a 17-inch-wide liquid known as "SIIir Wars."
"This is a big milestone for
the final hours of the mock count- oxygen propellant line from the
down. Vice President Dan Quayle, external fuel tank enters the ship's us," commander Michael Coats, a
·
Navy captain, said of the countchairman of the National Space engine room.
Afler
the
shuttle
reaches
orbit,
down
test. "Once we get this over
Council, was scheduled to be on
the external tank is jettisoned and with, it seems like the launch is just
· ~and for lhe test.
.
Discovery is teniatively sched·- the door closes like the gas cap lid right around the comer."
Coats' crewmates are co-pilot
uled to take off at 3:49 a.m. EST on a car. Another door closes over
March 9 to kick off an eight-day an adjacent 17-inch liquid hydro- Blaine Hammond; 39, a lieutenant
colonel in the Air Force, Gregory
•'Star Wars" research mission, the gen line.
Failure of either door to close Harbaugh, 34, Charles Lacy Veach,
ftrst of seven flights on tap in 1991.
But a quality inspector Monday tighdy could prove disastrous dur- · 46, Air Force Col. Guion Bluford,
discovered a l-inch L-shaped crack · ing re-entry, when the shuttle's 48 , Richard Hieb, 35, and Air
in the hinge of a critical fuel line belly is subjected to extreme heat Force Lt Col. Donald McMon~gle,
38.
door located in the belly of the from atmospheric friction.
"We have a crack. It's in the
Working around the clock in
shuttle that threatens to delay the ·
attach point for the hinge mecha- two shifts, Discovery's crew plans
launch.
Jf Discovery has to be hauled nism," the source said. "The link- to launch and retrieve one salellite
off the launch pad and taken back age of those doors is a pretty big arid to de~loy three small • 'subto the Vehicle Assembly Building deal. The failure mode would be if satellites ' before landing at
Edwards Air Force Bose, Calif., to
for repairs - ·a worst-case scenario the door wouldn't close."
The crack was discovered Mon- close out the 39th shuttle mission.

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ing permanent replacements for
striking workers. The measure
would still allow employers to hire
temporary workers during a strike.
Kirkland indicated that suppo'f
for that bill would be crucial to
candidates seeking labor endorsements during the next elections.

Abortion bill beco·mes law

ANNAPOLIS, Md. (UPI) Gov. William Donald Schaefer
signed into law an abortion-rights
bill considered one of the most liberal in the nation and denounced by
opponents as "a tragedy for the
women and unborn children of
Maryland."
The House of Delegates
approved the legislation on an 84·
52 vote Monday night, despite a
flurry of lobbying led by the
Roman Catholic Church against the
measure.
The new law is aimed at protect·
ing the right to abortion in Maryland even if the Supreme Court
overturns its 1973 Rpe vs. Wade
decision that guaranteed the right
to abortion.
"What the bill says, I think, is
right," Schaefer said when he
signed the bill 35 minutes after it
cleared the House.
Delegate Lawrence LaMotte,
who helped steer the bill through
the House, said he cast his vote
"for my two daughters, that they
will have the right to privacy in the
years ahead."
.
But Ann Philbum of the Nation·
al Right to Life Committee said,
"We feel this is a tragedy for the
women and unborn children of the
state of Maryland.''
• "This would be the most proabortion measure in the country,"
said David O'Steen, ellecuiive
director of the National Right to

IP OF THE WEEK

- ....,.VJ

WHAT EXPENSES CAN
I DEDUCT ON MY
INCOME TAX RETURN?
You ,., ...,.., ., 11ko 1

crlllit r.. lllltll hunolriOiaJqlltllll
lnclucli,. tho cllf Mil ••• M 1 lll·
int tyt Ht and ucolfer.,. rotJUirlll
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llrpnloali.,, ••p•on af ..n.ct.
loa rttttel lnc0111o, work-ulatiOI M· .
fict·in-hOCIIt • .,....., J.ynf.
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1ltl11, anol chiW cart IIJIIIIHL
To Ja.tt whkh af pw ,.,.,.... ,., Joe ...,., ltllk with your H&amp;l
KAIIL KEILEII, EA

llock • - to• rtlurn .,. .,.,.
ko .fact, ...,..., you lint .,ntlw ....,. •• tJ. 111 laws offlct
JM.I H&amp;l liNk tHice. ltttw yet, stop ~, fht tHico

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611 EASY MAIN

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may need dielllry supplements, the
reoon said.
·
Lactating women should eat at
least 1,800 calories a day and no
less than 1,500 calories daily and
should be discouraged from \iquid
diets and weight loss medications,
the report said.
Women who breast-feed should
avo id substance s that could be
detrimental to babies, such as caffeine, alcohol, cigarettes, certain
·prescription drugs and illegal· substances such as marijuana, heroin
and cocaine. the report said.
Although b(ell.$tcfeeding is often
touted as a good method for losing
weight gained during pregnancy,
the report cautioned that such
weight loss !loes not always occur.
"Not all women who breastfeed lose weight; some women
gain weight postpa11Um, whether or
not they breast-feed," it said.
The report urged more research
to examine the health of the mother.
and infant and such issues as the.
relationship of physical' activity,
stress, illness and .other factor s
affect breast milk. The report also
recommended more research into
whether the AIDS virus is transmit~ed through breast milk.

Crack found in Discovery fuel line door

Labor leaders win support
for health reform, strike law

•

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More companies listening
to employee suggestions

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Arabian pennillusla on Tuesday. Tbe plane had
just returned from a bombing mission in Iraq
and occupied Kuwait. (UPI/Reuter)

N()rthwest cuts some domestic fares

a

Auto Racing
Sweden' s Kenneth Eriksson
braved a snow-bound course to win
the World Championship rally in
Karlstad, Swedjln. Eriksson won
six of the ftnal day's eight special
stages. ... Pioneer Electronic Corp.
ofJapan signed a 5-year sponsorshtp contract with FCIT!lli's Formula One team.

..
__ __

GETTING DIRECTIONS • An growund
crewman from the 388th Tactical Fighter Wlna,
. HUI AFB, Utah, directs an F-16 into a refueling
area called tbe Hot Pit, at a U.S. alrbase in the

report said.
·
WASHINOTON (UPI) The report ret;ommehded that
Healthy women who have normal
babies should breast-feed because under normal circumstanc es,
of benefits Ill their babies and pos- women should be encouraged to
sibly themselves. a National breast;feed their babies exclusively
~ademy of Sciences reponed said for the frrst four to six months of
their lives.
Tuesday.
Breast-feeding is believed to
Babies who are breast-fed have
a lower overall death rate and are protect babies against infections
less lilcely io develop a variety of because breast milk contains subhealth problems, includin~ diges- . stances that help ward off infec·
tive and respiRatory infections and tions.
The
report
noted,
however, that
.
aUergics, the report said.
.
· Although the evidence is weak- women who breast-feed may
er, there are also indications tl)at become vulnerable to nutritional
women who breast-feed may be deficiencies. such as in calcium.
less likely to develop breast cancer magnesium, ~inc, folate and vitaand the bone-thinning disease min B-6.
Women who breast-feed, thereosleOjlorosis, the report said.
fore,
should be encouraged to try to
The report was prepared by a
avoid
such deficiencies through
panel of ellperts.,Jed by Margi t
varied
, well-balanced diets, as
Hamosh of the Georgetown Uniopposed
to taking vitamin and minversity Medical Center in Washingera!
supplements,
the report said.
IOn for the academy's Institute of
"Selected
groups
of lactating
Medicine as the second repon_in a,
women
may
need
special
attention
project on nutrition during pregin
to
avoid
nutritional
problems
nancy and lactation.
Breast-feeding declined in the eiiher themselves or their infants,"
United States during the 1950s and the report said.
1960s but increased in the 1970s, ... Teenagers , poor women and
peaking in the early I 980s and · those who diet to lose weight or do
declining steadily since then, the not eat meat are among those who

Tlie Roman Catholic Church 's
Life Commitlee. ' 'It has a absolurelobbying against the measure
ly no restrictions built iniO it."
The law allows abortion without focused on the "'conscience
government interference until the clause,'' a provision in the bill that
point when the fetus might be able protects doctors, nurses and other
to survive outside the womb or health-care workers who do not
afler that point if it is necessary to believe in abortions from having to
save the life or health of the participate in or perform them.
woman or if the fetus has abnorThe legislation's OPJ!_onents
malities.
maintained that the new bill would
The law also would require a no longer offer legal protections to
doctor to notify a parent before a health-care workers who choose
minor has an abortion. But the doc- not to refer patients for abortions.
tor would not be required to notify · Schaefer said he would support,
the parents if he concluded that or even introduce, a new measure
telling a parent would not be in the to clarify the "conscience cause"
girl's best inlerest, that notification in the new law.
might lead to emotional or physical
''The people i~ the Catholic
abuse or that the girl was mature failh feel very strongly about this,"
enough to make her own decision.
the governor said.

TIRES ARE OUR BUSINFSS
Quality Service Before, During n•ttli
the Sale.

M ~ l(&gt;•

fcoiiroN':"cou'PoN"-coiiroN-:wu'Po"N-:couF&gt;oN'I
CHECK ALL BRAKES
ROTATE &amp; BALANCE 4 TIRES

I.

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$16 • 00

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OFFER GOOD THRU FEB. 28. 1991
•J
___________________________
,
COUPO~
CO UPON ~

:COUPON. COUPON ·

· COUPON ·

POMEROY
HOME
AND AUTO
600 Eln MAIN
POMEROY, oH.
99~·2094

SIIYIIIG , .

a•a POl 25 fillS

Pray For Our Troops •.
POMEIOY
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f Space jQ.nk, light, radio signals blocking view of umye~se
•. Page

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6 The Daily Sentinel

POmeroy-MiddlePort, Ohio

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1\Jalday, Feb!UI'Y 18,1881

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WASHINGTON (UP!) telescopes on Earth and in space to places gone up exponentially, will
.•·, Humanity's view of the universe is ·detect faint energy in such forms as remove fQrever our view of t!lis
: - being obscured by increasing visible light, X-rays ud infrared · natural wonder - the universe,"
- ~ amounts ol space junk, glare from signals.
he said, speaking at the ·annual .
l: city lighiS and radio signals, endan"This means that asuonomers meeting of the American Associa·
1..: gering astronomers' ability to study
took to place their instruments in tion for the Advancement of Sci·
~,;; the cosmos scientisiS warned.
many pisces. On the surface of the ence.
~ • "Asuotiomy addresses the fun- Eanh, we search for high. mountain
The problem Slli:ms from ineffi::·. damental questions that many of us tops or we search for qlllet valleys cient use of light, !Vhich·produces
~~ wonder abouc Where do we come and w~ search for deserted plains," · glare and often wastefully illumi•' from? What's going to happen to she said.
.
· nates the sky above the ground,
; ~ our sun? What is the evolution of
. David Crawford of the KiU Peak costing money and energy without
~: the universe?" Andrea Dupree of Observatory in Tucson, Ariz., said improving safety, he said.
~ the Harvard- Smithsonian Center light po~lution alieady has. made it
'' ~stronomy is not saying~ for ·Astrophysics in Cambridge impossible for people m most absolutely not saying - 'Tum off
~ Mass., said Monday. :·nus is a sci: plJ!c~s to simply enj oy !he stars1 your lights.' What (we're) saying
., ence that we really can't afford to and 1s threatenmg astronomers is, 'Use good lighting,"' he said. ·
:·:· lose.''
ability to work.
The problem could be allevinted
; ~ · Astronomers depend on their
• "Light pollution, which. contin- by using improved types of light'· ability to use a variety of types of ues getting worse and has m many ing, he said, adding, "We must do ·

caie _effectively from any spot on
Earth, •• he soid. •'That means if
you have radio telescope at any
spot on Earth you will see these

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tests
run
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·Ethics committee
\,nears verdicts

!

Antiwar demonstrator
dies in 'immolation

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resources within a large company,
Baron's study found.
A third test showed that people
in a fragrant environment were
more likely to advocate compromise, coUaboralion or accommodation in resolving interpersonal conflicts than those in a non-scented
setting.
"Given the ease with which
pleasant fragrances can be introduced into various settings, these
findings suggest that artifiCial fra.
grance may provide one useful
means of generating positive affect
among individuals at wm:t:' Baron
wrote.
In addition to their original
work, the Cincinnati team also conducted a study of 64 college students to sec if self-admini$tration
of scents was more helpful than
when the researchers controlled the
exposure.
Among women, self-administration of fragrances seemed to
improve. work performance about
as. much as researcher-administered
sceniS. However, self-administered
scents did not appear to help men
on the vigilance task, researchers
said.

WEDNESDAY NIGHT IS

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MEXICAN NIGHT

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DINNER
•BURITTO
DINNER

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DINNERS SERVED-WITH. SPANISH
RICE, REFRIED BEANS. ALL YOU
·' CAN EAT SOUP. FRUIT
AND SALAD BAR.

Mason Family Restaurant
IT. 33

(304) 773·5321
I.XT TO MASH IDOIII

MASON, WY.

wrm

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Business Services
INSUU

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SIGNS

: Garden club meets

I'"'
·

cimtlatim mlgbt l1lfb for a few iL
RATES
hours, but I would be b1lppy 10 make
CoiJiweling to be goinl
· TO PlAC£ AN AD CALL 992-2156
this small DCrificc 10 sbow support nowhere becauae be preiCIIIS a
o1 yo
Words
Aate
Over 16 Wordt
1
15
14.00
,'
.20
MONDAY thru FRIDAY I A.M. to 5 P.M.
for my overweight sisters and cltannitl&amp; 1111ilble 1aee 10 die !hera3
15
16,00
.30
brothers. - ~SKINNY"
A pist llld lllllrelmc kx* lib a witcll.
I A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
1
15
•9.00
.U
CONSCIENCE IN OAICLAND
Part ol bis pipe i1 that I in1i1t
10
11
113.oo
.eo
Monthly
1_6
11 .30/ dov
.06/ doy
DEAR SKINNY: TlwW far -an ,tbat he bMt wilh die boulewcrlt IIIII
..... ere lor con•cutlve "'"'· broktn updr-tt wilt be ch.,ged
insightful and compuaioliat.e tetw. PlY part of the bourehlc! bllll. He
,,., ·~h
•• ...,.,•• • tdtl
Your thin sisters ·l lld brothen would Worb a half-time job, IIIII I have
do weD to ta1te a peac out ol Your WOibd as 111111y as " -,iolll• once
paf{es ,corer I e
book.
to support ua. llhint die main
is double pric. ol 1d cott.
Dear Au I.a"CCrn: My husband re~n he wants to keep our
follmdlll{ lt&gt;lephon'f' exdtOIIfZ&lt;'.~ ...
~OII'!~''.ibl_o for errortlftet fif'st 'd., . ICheck
and I are bavina BiouJ problems .......;.,- fDiether is berMIIC rm the
Malon Co . WV
GtMitCounty
M•lgi Countr
ad tuM W. P81*1 Cell be10•• 2 ·00 ~ . m
widt our III8JTil&amp;e. He is unfaithful qpix~winner in the family_and
AoooCodo t14 . Ate a Code 614 Aree Code 304
to mall t CO"tclion .
in 1dv1nce .,,
and has been from the beginning.
be would not make it finlncillly
192 - Middleoon 171 - Pt Pl•tunt
441 - Gellio.,.,
Cerd of Th.nk•
H..,py Adl
1
We Bill cunendy in c:ounteling but without me. What do ,ou lldvile? 458- Leon
Pam•ov
317Ch•hit•
In Menioriem
Y•d S81•
576 ~ Apple "Cttnot•
311 - Yinton
118 - Ct-.~te'
he insisla that IlleR.is IIOihiBa wrong HOPELESS, COLUMBUS. OIUO
773 - M .. nn
241-" .. Ortftdt 143 -. POftLtnd
•A
ci•••Kitd
a4v•rtiMm.nt
pi.:H
in
Th'
e
D•ltv
S~t;n
..
fe.,
.
and that the problem is~ my
DEAR OIUO: What ~ you
211- Gu'll" Dist 247 - lolon Folio 882 - New Htven ,
cePt --: cl••ttw dlsplary. lu•ln•• Card 1nd I.. II nefk: .. )
14J - A~.o~t
895 - Lttllr1
149 - AICIMt
ears. In addition 10 his chelldDg, he advise a womu to do if she was
witt llto "''"• .,. the fit . Pl•••nt flleflttlr ..,tllh• Dell i·
937 - Buthlo
371 - WIInot
742'- Autl..,d
_.,Deity Tribune. reaching..,... 11.000 horn"
accuses me ol being too controlling married to 1 liar and a cheat who
887- Coolviio -~~~":':"~--because I question his frequent was 1110 1bualve, doinineering,
PubliC
Notice
Public Notice
PUbliC ,Notice '
visits to cocktail lounges where he insulting and a bit ol a lieelo8det7 , ..,..._P_u_b_llc_Not_,_Ice_._,.
dances with women and makes dates' How about, "Throw the bum QUl." 1 •
IN THE
• - .. d wile t. 1..ev1 ..;, IIDunder! liM Of the VII· County rood 3 which lloo .
.... Of llutlllnd corporation north of tho northern bOUndfor "later." I know this is UUC
Allokoltol~tm! Howt:tiii'JOU COMMON PLEAS COURT T - br dltM J lmllo. tar rolorMM uld ory Uno oft he VIII... of Rut·
Z7th, A. D. 1114.
lllltll ,._
because he takes no )JIIins 10 hide iL help yow•lf or sOIIWOIII youloiiC?
OF
.
bOUndary line Inter- lond corporotlon llmlti:
co.In
Vol.
111,
P
...
He says, "What's the big deal? My "IJcoltolism: How 10 R~oglllzt It,
MEIOI COUNTY, OHIO
ltMI Route 1U at tp· thonco In 1 ooutllorly dlroc· •
214, ~hip County, OhiD, prerel:neteiY 120 loot from tlon following the won
father did it and my 10other never · How to Deal Willi It, How 10 Con- ~'rc!;~t..,..,
Dlldreoont.
Mid
101ltt4111t ODmM' of th1 boundery line of the CGrPO·
Poroet "'o. 3 beint tho Nil
divorced him."
,
qiiD' It" wiU glw you tire IIIUIIIUS.
. P181ntlff
,...
•• lbod •• tho rotlon llmlto to tho pleeo of
by Levi
He accuses me of boinl iiiUIIIIIIre Seltd a ulf-ad!Veswl, lmag, bu.si...
.. T·
- 1D_...,.,.
lhrtho Temll by IWII eed lonltllry Dletrlct. beGinning.
For 1 moro dllelled deand OYCrly sensitive because I ref- ness-size tltWllopt tw1 a clwct or ~.:' :;:::
- - - M e y t , 1111. ..W -•n boupdery line Of
the
rM1
oltlltll
eoltulled
IICriptlon
of
ootote
InDeed
I
No.
117
......
use 10 tolerate his abusive behaviQJ. MOIIe'J oi'IUr for $3.65 (litis ilecllldts Mlddt.part, Ohla 41710
the oold propooed contolnod In tho prvpoood
10,
Deed
11-rdo.
Melli
When I told him I was considering jloSUJgt tw1 Mndlillg) 10: Alcoltol,
·
· Defendant County, Ohio.
. . . , Dlltrlct conttlino Rutland Areo Sonltory Dlo·
·
llivon:e he said tbal sioc:e he asked c/o Alllll..lulikrs. P.O. Box 11562; 1-+--C:':;T~~;, ~,;':f1J1
....................troct opploll-ioly 1020 fHt Of ' tTiot end thO ICtUtl pnll*fY
'"" k - 11 Stile ownoro offoctod, oil Interme to marry him, Ire WiD end the Cllicogo,/11. 60611-0562. (In C1111~•. · Judtment hoo hll INUed the Pai'OIII the
,._
124 which llonoot Of oltod people con view tho
No. 14-00Sit.OOO br the the -NN
marriage if and when he feels ·like ada, seltd $4.45 .)
""" ,........,. ........ - · Melgo
n boundary llno of plot mopo of oold Sonltory
County
TrMeurer'e
tlln
poroete
Of
reel
prol*fY
.
.
.
the
VI'Of Rutlond cor· Dletrlct In tho Clark Of Comfor, tuee, ••
0111011 end:
·
poretlan Urnlte: t.,.nce fol· mon Pie"' Court . Of Melg1
w...r..o. ouch Judt- IDwinlthe-nboundory
County, Mo.lgo County
ordlre euch roel property 10 line or t... VII!Ne of Rutland Courthoull.
end com 11 lollowe:
Pomeroy, Ohio
Poroet No. 1: 1'111 follow- be lOki by the und....ned co.,.,lllon
illlllto to tho bel-nthohourooii:30•.
ingiNI
...
atelllu-lnt.,.
to
Ntlely
t.,.
totolomount
Of
Contributions to the National nurses' schOlarship 'fund. She stat- Westerville on March 8 and 9 are
northHtt corner of Aid VII· m. to· 4:30 p.m. Mondoy
0:,.~1111'- In tho ouch judgrMnt; And lloo .... corporetlon llmlto; t~rough Frldoy.
Jewish Hospital in Denver, Colo., ed that $100 has been sent to the Pearl Knapp, Loretta TICIIIeyer and County
thll
,.,.,
...
be
eold
to•-of
.-lnthe
. continuing In I
131 Thot o public ._ring
TOWIIehlp Of IIIWoury, end _.-;
were made at the recent meeting of Department of Ohio toward a Mary Martin. be'
d
. .
_tl..,ly cllnotlon, • dlo·
on
•ld potltlon wHI be htclln
Plans are mg ma e to mv1te boundld - -.......
the Meigs County Salon No. 710 $2,500 scholarship. This scholarpultllcnoOf
-rooli'CIIItely
uld
on tho 8th dey Of
ifoll...,,e: l11lnnlng no-. tiOII II - y glvM thet I, 1120!Hitoopolntwhlchlo Aprft,Court
1891 ot the hour Of
EiJiht and Forty held at the home of ship is open to any nurse, 23 years Departmental Chapeau Delores fifty
!HI north of the
JeenH M. loulolly, lhellff
of age or older, who would like 10 Kilgore of Mansfield to a luncheon Juila HyseD.
Of Mllgo County, Ohio, wll the -'.,."' - - of the 9 :00 o.m. by the Court of
Wilt line (mlddlol
rool - • deocrlbed within Cammon Plo11 Of Mllgo
Of lleotlon I . To- 2, Rill.. 1111 ouch .... property est the
Marjorie Fetty opened the meet- have training in respiratory dis- onMay6.
pnopoeed lonlt.lry Dlo- County. ot the Coulthouoe
public
ouotlon,
lor
ceeh,
tD
13
ol
the
Ohio
eo-·e
RefreshmeniS were served by
ing in ritualistic form and Pearl esses. Anyone interested should
trlot;
• - l y dl·
In tho Cltv of Pem-y.
... th- NOrih 221
the hlghlll bid•• the 1 - - n.....,_In
Julia Hysell and Pearl Knapp using Purcllo...........
• dlot.,.oeOfepproo- Melgo County, Ohio.
Knapp lead the prayer and pledge contaCt Mrs. Hysell.
100 !HI. 0f tho loll-tornounto:
lrnotllly 4120 !HI to • point
AN peroono ond public corIt was announced that the group a Valentine theme.
·
to the flag.
I~= Iouth 221 fell, AI A ftllr merkll vlluo of be... the northiullt corner por1tlon1 owning or inter~
111
w-..100!Hitothe
-hporel
.
is
participating
in
a
fundraiser
with
Hostesses
for
the
next.
meeting
Nine members were present and
Of tho rool deoarlbod elted In rool eototll wltllln
....Inning, Eaoept 14'00311.000-· 100.00
Will be Veda Davis and Loretta
it was announced that the group has Rncla~ives.
within t.,. projooeed eonltory the territory hortlnbelore
14·00318.000·11.
110.00
of! Of the Iouth
tar reference oold doocribed wPI be giVon on
Partners planning to attend the Tiemeyer.
met it's goal for 1991.
14-00317.000-*2,030.00 dlotrlot,
-'horn
line of tho pro- opportunltv to be
at
Marche Pouvoir at Ramilda Inn at
tar 1 total Of t8.2IO.OO. po..., 11n1tory
Julia Hysell reported on the
dlltrict Inter· the time ond piece obou.•
II T.,. total emount Of,.,.
Rood 3 knewn opeclfted.
flndlntl ..br the -·County
N- Limo flood II IP· Dotod : 1/31191 .
Court, Including ell IIIKOI, II
proalmotely 1720 loet·from
Lerry E. lponcor.
. 1$W181Mntl, Chi,..., penltlld ...,..,.,.. comer: uld
Clerk
of tho Court of
eoltlot. ond lnt-11 -ble
boundary line of
Common Plooe of
oublequent to the delivery IIO!Ihern
,.1 · totate -rlbod
Molgo County, Ohio
to Ill• CoUnty p-Ing thl
_t.,.propoeedoonlt.lry
By Dione Lynch, Dtputy
T-1.·c:~;:t~~~
1111, 1D
TerOf
the
delinquent
Community Calendar Items
dlltrlct aonlelno opproolme- (2) 6, 1~· 19, 3tc
POMEROY • The Veterans specia) meetinll of the Chester ,..1 by ..,. dloorcled oct. lend tu .nlflolle or
appear two clays berore an eveat Memorial Hospital Auxiliary will Township Trustees on Wednesday 11. 1•32.1nD-IooloNo. Het Of dellnq_,. t-end to1v 1710 !HI of ,.,. r..d
137. Pqe 311 of the ,... prior tD t ... entry Of the DOn· ltn_. • ~~~- LIC'illl Road or
and the day of tbat event. Items meet Tuesday at 1:30 p.m. in the at 7:30p.m. at the town~aonfo
of Deede In the R• flrmatlon of "'•· being t.,.
nlilst be received in advance to ~onference room of the Hospital. A
POMEROY - . A workshop, ~~~ ~fflae, Melge oum of 13,H1 .72.
assure publication in tbe eaten- white elephant sale wiD be held and ·
JomH M. loullbr.
"Working Together," will be preThe IIHive delortbed ti'tlct
dar.
hostesses
are
Carrie
Kennedy
and
8Mrlfl0f
•.
sented by the Me;.s County Parle hi• INUed t.,. Parcel
Mllgo County, Ohl!&gt;
Louise Bearhs. ·
·
lED HI LEY
'
District on Wednesday at 6 p.m. at No. 14-00387.000 by the (211.12.11,3tc
J&amp;L
TUESDAY
IAIIEI SHOP
' Open 5 Ooye
· POMEROY - The Meigs Local the Camcgie Building, formerly the ~~. County T,.ourer'e
Mon.-Fri. 1-1
,,,.,.. No. 2: T.,. fallow·
PubliC Notice
I
POMEROY - The Mason Gallia Board Qf Educalion will hold a spe- Pomeroy Library, next to the post
Cloeod Sot. • Sun.
Meigs Crusade for Christ will be cial meeting on Tuesday at 5:30 office. Ron Milfs, StltC Naturalist, lng roe1 - • lltu- In
•VInyl Siding
546 u,,. livor ... Goli1:11
Division ODNR, Colum- the To-ehlo Of lelllloury,
NOTICE OF IALE
oRepllcament
held at the Old Bethel Church · p.m. to discuss personnel, to con- F,_....,
Appl. 6, 4·446·0002
--~~
County of liel.. 111d ltote TO AU PERIONI
Wlndoon
located off Route 7 on Story's Run sider placiD~ a levy on the ballot bus, will speak.
hftwtr Hi
Owntr tJI!t1
Of Ohio. Of
I , ToINT!IIEITED
oRooflng
Road Monday through Feb. 23 at and to conSider permanent appro2. " - 13 end •ecrlbed
c.. No. 11·CV·22
oln..,lltiDn
7:30 p.m. Special speakers and priations.
JAIIIS IIISIE
POMEROY _ The Syracuse 11 folia-: lolnt~ollovt Ton Public Notlcelo H•rMv
.
Hundreclthe
(1011001
Of
en
Olv.,:
singers ni~htly. Rev. Clyde HenHomemakers Club WI 11 meet ..,.. an the E..eerty 11111 Of
111 Thet on t.,. 31et drt Of
992·2712 or
WEDNESDAY
derson invttes the public.
ctzeatlllt
Wednesday 11 10 a.m. 81 tlie Syra- Lot No. 20 Of ~~-·· Jonuory, 1881, pu""em to
742·2251
cusc Municipal Building. Project: lurwy. ~ the •m• · the lenltory DIOblot low Of
lryon
Place
131
RUTI.AND - The Rutland Fire- grapevine wreaths and finishing PI'O!*IY
POMEROY - The Xi Gamma
aonv-ved to Ohio. - · ••• flied In the
Mldtlfeport. Ohio
,._,.t ..... by Robert oflloe Of the Cllt1t Of t...
,
man's Auxiliary wiD meet Wednes-. Chairs. ,
Mu Chapter, Bela Sigma Phi Soror111'11
DyQ
and
,
.
_
R.
Ru•
Court
of
c-mon
..,_.
Of
·
~==:;;;::
· :"~
by tzlck HtDitJ#ttlf
ity will meet Tuesday at 7 p.m. at· .day at 7 p.m. at the foe house.
THURSDAY
Nil, OevloM of 0. A. Ruoeoll Mile• County, Ohio, the',..
the home _of A.R. Knight in
by deed . . _ April 1 1th. tltlon Of the VHIIite Of llutD&amp;II'S .
1114 ond ~-In Vol. londtart.,.llt8toll.....,.nt0f
Rn
B~rby
CHESTER - There will be a
Ptnneroy.
.
,
POMEROY - The Meigs Cqun- 111. ,... 204 of the ,.. 1 lonltery Dlltrlot to be
TIANSIIISSION
ty Democratic Executive Commit- aonto Of Deed• of M"'g' known .. The Rutlond A,.
~UALITY
tee wiD meet Thursday at 7:30p.m. County, Ohio. . .
Sonltliry Dl-. leld Dl•
and AUTO liPIll
• Hall 10
• Porn
Percel No. 2 beintl tho rut trlat le to be ntollllolled lor
Speciellalng In
Polnl Ple.asant • 67WI25
at the Carpen
. ter S
eroy. ootatll conv-ved by E. II. t... folla-1 ·_ . . , Te
· Pauline Eynon presented a prowith snow, and cotton; accented Public invited.
ltelly, 11e1. to llertho Ter- pr-t .,d _ _.the pol·
Tr-!=~rak••·
'th lass dee and birds
tra
'
rell by - - Oa- lutlon Of Loodlng Crolll end
T
011 c...
gram on the alOe vera plant at the
r
on a y
RACINE - A support group ::: ~!: 11:/2 ,:._
~::..:-.:::.::..:::
u'C':U...11~ol~...
recent meeting of the Wildwood ~.g
•VINYL SIDING
A contest conducted by Mrs. meeling for those affected by the. D-R-.. Melp Coun· Arw: end to ptOVIdetar the
FIIIE 18TI ATES
Garden Club held at the home of
•ALUM INUM SIDINO
• .,..,. bperlence
Doris Grueser.
.
· Grueser was won by Pauline Gulf War wiD meet Thursday at 1 ty, Ohio. end tu.- -••• collection and uriltllry ell•
•BLOWN IN
Mrs. Eynon noted that ihe plant Eynon. Thehostessdoorprizewas p.m. at the Racine United ,-:!=ao:jni••!ev:•:~by~
R.
poooiOf•-•ndotherl·
992-5517
INSULATION
Methodist Church.
end
quid
produoed within
161 1_. ...n
is like cacti in its irregular, pointy
on;.:b~y;Juanita;:;
· ;.W;;;iU;·---------------,
the ,...,_ lenltllry Dl•
, _ , . , OIL
and jagged formations. Aloes are
-ArH.
f~/1/1 mo.
121 'Thet the Iondo -oht
smooth, soft and waxy. They conto be lftolllded In eold Dl•
tain a sopthing gel that is used as a
trlot comprl11 Iondo In Tho
llow • - ltrllt
sk(n moisturizer, and one of the
dllieorlleedtloot Vllloge a1 Rut~nd 1111t11 llut".F r" Eltlmo1ae"
lond TOWIIehlp In M....
best. kitchen -burn and sunburn
No. 14-00:Iti.OOO by the County, Ohla. ...,lbed
relievers. Aloes, being heavy, tend
PH. 949·2101
Melp
County T-urer'e oubltontlolly
11 followl:
........ the_.
__
to lean over easily on the rim of the
or les. 949-2160
Ollt011.
CUSTOM IW.T
pot. This .may bruise the outer
Peroet No. 3: The follow· iiltuetlld within the VIllage Of
NO SUNDAY CAW
.
Bl.'LLETLllli
BOARD
DEADLI:!\"E
lhrtlllnd end that portion ol
leaves, turning them brown and
3·11·11•
lng
.....
t
•
HOMES
&amp;
GARAGES
llltuOtlld In lol.....,ry Town• ,... ...... ..tjaunt to the
flattening them. She advised to cut
4: 30 P.M. DAY BEFORE
"At ltrMna~h Pric•"
olllp. ond being Lot Ne. 20 In VII.... or Rut- co-•·
off those lesves at their base. Aloes
Rodford'o I!HftY, Town- tiDn 11m1t1 eltuOtllll within
I'lL 949-1101
THE
may also be used for poison ivy,
lhlp Ne. 21n llonge 1 3, lao- the TOWIIehlp Of llutlond
•• Ohio c-poeey·. end ,..,llulorly Hbtitns and bee stings, according to
It .... 949.1160
l'urch•• - ..Wiot being 10 ICI'IIIelloefol-o:
GROOM
Mrs. Eynog.
...........
etthe'
Day
or
Night
'"'
br
100
..
d
...
Ill
' Devolions, sent by Dorothy
portoftherool-de·
Oft... Vllloge ol
ROOM
The Daily Sentinel has
NO SUNDAY CAlLS
. . - ley the Court of Com- Smith, were read, "Both Glad and
RutlllndCOl ......lon Nllllto:
4·11-16-lln
_.,. In • eoutherly diNG·
mon Plooe In ond for oold
Complete Grooming
Sad," from Our Daily Bread,
an
enormous
amount
of
..
County
It
Ito!
NovemtiDn
•
dlotor
.
.,....1.
"There ' s Peace and Calm in !he ,
ber tonn ·A.D. 1117 to
for All lrllds
mlltlly 1'700
tMt
111 • _
J1e1!1t
Happy Ads, In Memory
.........
IOUifl
_
23rd Psalm," by Helen Steiner
Moll... DINIII In o oult for
EMILEE MERINAR
dhDIIO ...... Jelln Dlillnll .. the .... ~:~:and a poem. "I Sat in .the Gar0111111111011
Of, Etc., dating back at
CAIPEN111
SUYICE
within
the
prop
•••
..,.
...
Owntr I Operator
~
_,.. . . AJP'IWI
_,. Dllllllrl, fer ter.. IIlii
least 1988. Pictures
For roll call members brought a
t8id Nne lntwfMota Lll ..ftl
IOld lrid eonw11od II¥ Joilllh
614-992-6120
Valentine they had made.
must be picked up at
Crelk e1
1ppraKifll.lteiW
- · · lllwl end
Pomeroy,
-cen..,..woftl
Invitations were read from the
1210 '"' from t ... ,..,. Of
5
The
Daily
Sen~nel
office
Roofltot
.,.._g; ...._.., .. ~·
Middlepon Presbyterian Church.
,
....., . , . . ,.... 1 dlata we ef
The Fernwood Garden Club's open
before March 30th
IPpruliMIII¥ HIOt.lltl
(filii IITIMATEII
meeting will be held Tu~y at 1
1 point beillll the IOOIIIIUit
avoid being destroyed.
-Oft.,.roel-oon·
p.m . .at the Zion ChiD'Ch of Chrisl
Gtt your lawn 111111 . ..
V. C. YOUNG Ill
tltlnecl within Nld pftl . . . . .
Cindr. Oliveri will be demonstrat"" ltJUipmtnt tullllll 11p
lonltllry ...
Dllltrlot,
for ·
992-6215
ing 'Creative Use of Herbs. M'
_Hid
mwnlne._·
and blade~ thariNIIIII
P-oy, OIH
Thank you notes were read from
-County llolil 13 oleo
FOR SALE IN RACINE
for tht corning llltllll
·
11-14-'90 tfn
Dorothy Smith ani! Hilda Yeat1ger. .
VERY NICE lARGE HOME ON APPROX. 3\1
luiOwn
U
Deilet
·
II
DUliNG FEIRUAIY
lflpNIIIWbllf , 1120 fMt
ACRE5-4 BR, 3 bothl. 21•11es; rented I
For show-and-reD. Peggy Moore
fnH1'1
tht
ID'Ittlu:tell....,
BR tporlmenl. PeoPIIIY lndodes pond, IP·
- F'" pickup alld
....omodlllng anil
displayed a coffee plant. Hilda
Of the .... .......
prox. 41800 sq. ft. llriil bide ond mob~•
HOlM. Rtpall'l
dtliwery in Pan.ey
Yeauger had "Now is the Time"
..
the ......
- .....
IH!me. • ral barpln 1118UOO.
Dl8lrlot.
uld ............
•Roofing
noting to sharpen pruning tools and
and Middleport city
CALL614-992-7104 FOR APPT.
lloundory . . .
trim plants and trees before the sap
•lldlng
. limits.
- ........ within the,...
•ltalntlno .
comes up. She noted to visit gM'den
...... lonltllry . , . . . ....
WE ALSO SERVICE
stores to purchase early seeds and
.... tppm•l•181t 1040
CHAIN SAWS '
10 JOI TfiO SMAll
!Hiofthe...,...,_IO
to increase humidity in your house
FlEE EITIIATES
THIS l"xl"
DAVE'S SMA~
Depot • - or County
and spray mist on flower plants.
How ti~:M fllea
110011 J which Ill llltuotlltl
CIIAI
BULLETIN BOARD
EIIGINE IEPAII
Plants put off oxygen and spider
- h or the -him
Look who Is "40"1
COimumGN
bOUndlry .... "'the ,....
plants put off more oxygen t.bat any
ISS
West .... St.
. SPACE AVAILABLE ,
ofR..-...-po;ullssslhft..
HAPPY
otherplanL
ttt..MI er
' '
Ito; ....... Ill • ... ... , ..
Po~t~~ny, ... ·.
Mrs. Yeauger also had the
BIRTHDAYII
. . , ...otlon ......... ..
_ AP5.00PER DAY,
PH. 992·3922 ·
arrangement of the month "Snow
-lmetoly 1120 .... .
11·11 ·10-lfn
Mom
2+1t
o point oltUIItolf an die • •
Bound," using ~vergreen, sprayed

......

.,

MASON FAMILY RESTAURANT ·

• ·The Area's Number 1 ·Marketplace

er..e.. . s, ......

Sentinel Calendar

President Hosnl Mubarek, right. On eaeb card, Ia written In
Arable Allah Akbar (GciCils Great) and VIctory lsl!l'eai wllb God'•
help. (UPI/Reuter)

meeting.
Follow-up studies are now
. . under way to determine exactly
how fragran~es act to improve
. work performance and to look at
whether neutral or unpleasant odors .
- such as skunk or rotting fish - .
might have a beneficial effect, the
researchers said.
Similar research by Raja Parasuraman of The Catholic University of America in Washington also''
found that peppermint boosted
accuracy on vigilance tests. In
addition, Parasuraman sa~ he
detected unique brain wave patterns associated with alenness in
people who received whiffs of fragrance.
Also Tuesday, Robert Baron of
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in
Troy, N.Y.. said his laboratory
work found commercially produced air fresheners, such as those
that smell like pine or flowers,
appeared to improve peoples' efficiency on a clerical coding job .
Exposure to pleasant artificial
fragrances also increased the likelihood a subject would win a good
outcome in simulated face-to-face
negotiations over division of

Classifie

.,..,d

f ·. 11

may .make sense for .high-stress job~

Ann
Landers
. ANNUNDD8
n..........
.... s,.."
_.......
_.

..."'r'.... Eight and'Forty. ·collects 'contributions · .........
~t• •

! t;t

..

Scen~s

'

' !w1,

-\ooi.

'

kindnesa by one of niy more selfish
cousins. I may bave to use the
pmon's bip 11.111 IIIIUelt llld my

"-:·
De.- Ana I•Dden: I have a dif" ferent point ol view than "Squashed
• on Anival," the man who -aealed
;., , IICXlto the fat woman on a plane.
· I 1111 one of the lucky ones; rm
&lt;:. - thin. But I can't help notice that the
~ wllole world seems to be deaigned
_" for people like me. I don't ·have 10
• •. worry about 6nding myself loclcing
horns_- or any other part of my
•" 1111110111y -- with atunlltile. Nor do I
need to be COIICCI'IIed about the arm
, of a chair putting dela in my legs.
fiJ
Most thin people take things for
granred. They don't -"'Il 10 think
· about the obstacles they would face
if they were fat. The purveyors of
transportation are _so hungry for
profits that they skimp whmver they
can and then atlist tile support of us
thin people by relling us that those
who take up less space are somehow superior.
The answ~ is not to require a fat
J)Cr59n· to pui'chase two seats on a
plane. I opt ·for a more hui1U1De,
.though expensive solution. I Would
· be willing to pay a few extra dollars
to have one or two rows on planeS
fitted with extra-wide seats. If they
are not occupied by fat.passengers,
,.. we thin ones, who can fit anywhere,
'!l could use them.
Until such a plan is implemented,
I not only wiD allow a fat person to
sit next to me will) the arm bar raised
•· but wiD offer to change seats should
'•• I see a fat person denied this

§ First gene therapy .
WASHINGTON (UP!) - The afflicted David, the famed Texas
- - .- fwt official attempt at·ge11e !hera" bubble boy,". is ~:a used by a
: ·. . py appears to be accomplishing its genelic defect that prevents produc~ ·mission -· boosting the immune lion of an enzyme called adenosine
system of a 4- year-old girl suicken deaminase, or ADA.
•· ·with a rare, inherited immune disThe di~ affects no more than
.•. order, scienlists reported.
20 children worldwide at any given
•
The National Institutes of time. In the past, ·some affected
Health researchers said Monday youngsters lived in plastic bubbles
they continue .to be heartened by to guard against life-threatening
:.: :.the progress of the girl who under- infections, but now many can be
- · went the historic procedure five
helped by bone marrow uaD!ij&gt;luts
· •···months ago for a condition known or injections of enzyme replace~ ·as ADA defiCiency.
ment drugs.
: ..
Preliminary results show the
The ultimate goal of the NIH
·" . gene therapy appear~ to have pro- work; is to reconstitute such chit' "· duced "an ·enhancement of the dren's 'immune systems without
r :·:,immune system" in the child, said inarrow uansplants or drugs.
.~ ": Dr. Michael Blaese of the National
Every human has about 100,000
· ·-- Cancer Institute, who led the genes that carry the blueprint from .
research with Dr. W. French everything fromeyecolortoriskof
;.~ .. Anderson.
. .
cancer. The gene therapy involved
•·. · Tests found the Ohio gut, whose drawing blood, stimulaling immune
i ' . name has not been released, had a
cells to multiply in the laboratory, r
1
inserting correct copi~ of the ADA
' : "strilciilg increase" in her ability to
; ; make antibodies after her founh .· gene in the cells using a crippled
: ·• ueabncnt, Blaese said. Antibodies . mouse virus and lben infusing the
are proteins the immune system genetically altered cells bsck into
·" ·proauces to fend off disease-caus- the patients' bodies.
r'i ·• mg microbes and other foreign sub- .
So far, no serious side effects
' . · stanceS.
·
have been seen in the girl, a 9-year'" · In addition, the child's level of old girl with the same disorder who
•·. · key immune ceDs called T lympho- began the therapy at the NIH Jan.
' " 'cytes rose to about normal for the 31 or in two cancer patients underfirst time in her life, Blaese told a going the first effort to use gene
·•· ·meeting of the American Associa- therapy for cancer.
DVEUNG PRESIDENTS - Two picture montaaes on sale In
Ammaa on Tuesday, depict Iraqi President Sjlddam Hussein
~ ': lion for the Advancement of Sci·
Dr. Steven Rosenberg of the
wreatUng with V· S. President Georae Bush, left, and Egyptian
, ... · .ence.
National Cancer Institute said it is
,, . - Tests also show the child's too early to tell if the gene therapy
genetically corrected cells are pro- experiment is working in the canducing a vital missing enzyme for ceqiatients.
up to 40 days after each treatment,
The patients, a 29-year-old
, he said.
woman and a 42-year-old man with
WASHINGTON (0PI) - A cent,accuracy for people who simThe link between the gene !hera- a deadly type of skin cancer called whiff of peppermint or other fra- ply g6t a whiff of filtered air.
. _ .py and the girl's immune improve- advanced melanoma, underwent grances may improve a worker's
·.The performance for both the
~
ment was underscored in December their first treaunent session on Jan. performance on demanding jobs fragrance and non-ftagrance group
r ·and January, when researchers had 29.
such as air traffic controlling or dropped over time. But the
: to skip trea1ment. for. 60_&lt;!ays
In that experiment, Rosenberg's long-distance truck driving, researchers, whose wQrk was funded by the fragrance indusuy, said
·because of contammauon ·m·the team inserted a gene that carries research indicated TueSday.
• !llbontorY-grown cells intended for codes for production of a natural,
In a study of 16 young adults, the fragrance group still signifi. treatment. During the break in tumor-shrinlting chemical into spe- . University
of
Cincinnati cantly outperformed the air group.
No major difference was found
'·· · Uesbnent, indicators of the girl's cialtumor-fighting im.mune cells ' researchers foun.d exposure to
immune function dropped sharply, removed from the patients' bodies. scents of peppermint or lily-of-the- between the effectiveness of pepvalley flowers boosted the subjects' pcnnint or lily-of-the-valley. which
Blaese said.
The cells are then multiplied in the
'
ADA deficiency, which is simi- test tube and infused back into the accuracy on a 40-minute high-vigi- is called muguet in the p_erfume
I Jar to the immune problem that pauents.
lance task.
tra4e, m eilhancmg work skills.
The subjects were either given a
puff of fragrance or unscented air
The Cincinnati researchers cauthrough a face mask every 5 min- doned that until more work is done,
utes while they conducted the employers should not rush to fill
I
stressful chore - carefully watch- workplaces with -pleasant scents. ·
ing a computer screen to detect a
"It's a dramatic effect. It's a
subtle, infrequent pattem change.
novel effect, but we can't say you
During the first 10 minutes of should do i( yet'' said Joel Wann, a
the test, the subjects receiving fra- psychology professor and coWASHJNGTON (UP!) - The
In effect. the commiuee acts like grances could detect the pattern author of the study presented at the
Senate Ethics Committee appears a grand jury returning indicunents change accurately about 85 percent American Association for the
.• close to reaching verdicts on five and then presses the cases in the of the time compared to a 65 per- Advancement
of Science's annual
senators alleged to have pressured Senate. The jurors, after a trial pro·
. a federal agency on behalf of S&amp;L ceeding, would be the 95 other sen·
kingpin Charles Keating, who con- ators.
tributed $1.3 miUion to their camThe case against the Keating
paigns and causes.
Five is unlike any faced before by
Waiting for the committee's the committee and is -expected to
, ,decision are the ~led Keating lesd to reforms and standards gov' Five - Sens. Alan Cranston, D- erning what a senator can dO. Pre·
Calif., Deimis DeConcini, D-Ariz., vious investigalions have dealt with
AMHERST,'Mass. (UP!) - A immolation, said he could hardly
Donald Rie~le, D-Mich .. John the personal and political money peace demonstrator set himself on believe his eyes.
: Glenn, D-Oiuo, and John McCain, deals of senators.
·
.
fire with paint thi1111er and burned
"This blew my mind, seeing
• · R·Ariz.
· In one way or the other, the sen- to death in an apparent protest someone l)ght themselves on ftre,"
:
The outcome is crucial for the ators, during the public hesrings, against the Persian Gulf war, police said Gelbach. "It j)uts things in
: · political futures of the senators, contended what they did on behalf said.
perspective. It really makes rally-although Cranston, suffering from of Keating and Lmcoln was no
Stunned bystanders rushed to mg (against) the war look insignifi; prostate cancer, has already more than they would do for any the man's aid and uied to smother cant""
· amounced he wiD not seck re-elec- constituent - that the contribu- the flames with coats and a blanket
Witnesses told police and
~ •. lion.
lions played no role in their moments after he set himself aftre reporters the man appeared on the
• · • The other four are inclined to actions.
Monday, authorities said. A police Amherst Common about 2 p.m.
·run again but no senators found
They contended that a meeting officer sprayed the burning man and doused himself with two cans
' guilty by the Senate in the past with Federal Home, Loan Bank moments later With a fire extin- of liquid, later identified as paint
• ~ have won re-election.
Board Chairman Edwin Gray and guisher.
thinner.
1
From the outset, Cranston and another tileeiing with regulators in
The victim left a MassachuseiiS
"The man theri lit a match
I DeCoilcini appeared the most wl- San Francisco were just to gather driver's license taped to a sign which went out and then lit another
; nerable to some form of punish- - information and that telephone readin' "Peace, .. which was found one, which resulted in a fireball
J ment. with Riegle only slightly less calls were to solicit status reports.
near hu body. but police refused to engulfin$ him in flames;" Amherst
1 .so.
The committee, which began release the name until relatives police S81d in a slatemenl
' · Although the committee's spe- closed deliberations Jan. 30, must couid be notified.
The two empty one-gaUon cans
: cial counsel, Roben Bennett, pro- balance the senators • pleas of in noPolice said he apparent) y was of thinner were found near the
: . 'posed that charges against Glenn cence ~st rules that now govern not a student at any of the several body, police said.
; ·and McCain be dropped, the ethics SCP&amp;toriaJ conducl The tas1c has not colleges in the Amherst ares, which
· "What struck me was coming
' ptmel plsced them on Uial with the been made easier by some conflict- include the University of Mas - back to the campus and people
three..
.
.
ing testimony and, mostly in the sachusetts and Amherst and Hamp- were just wallcing around and they
!, .,other
The Eth1cs Committee, wh1ch case of Riegle, an inability to shire colleges.
.
.
had no clue as to what had hap• has conducted the longest, most , remember.
Witnesses said he appeared to pened a half mile away," said
; .PI)!Dplex and costliest investigation · . Bennett has urged the commit- be acling alone.
Jason George, another University
' of Senate members in history, has tee to move one step farther by
The victim, w~o was found cov- of Massachusetts sophomore, who
l scbeduled several meetings this deciding that the appearance of . ered with two coats apparently arrived at the scene shortly after dte
Wert thlll are expected _-. barring a improper con~uct -; not just used in·the attempt to put out the incident occurred. "I've never seen
IIIII- to produce deciSJOIIS.
WJ'OIIIdOing - IS SuffiCient to seek fire, was pronounced dead at the anybody die."
·
; · The five veteran senators are punishment because it brings dis- scene by a medical examiner. The
The head of Amherst's govern~ iueaed to bave applied presswe on credit on the Scnale.
body was later taken to a mortuary ing Select Board, EliBil Camr,beU,
; t.be Fodoral Home Loan Bank
The committee has a wide range in Springfield where an autopsy called the iacidont "appalling ' and
I Bo.d, • die Y«y highest level, to of opcions ia making its recommen- was to be performed Tuesday,~ predicted it would have a signifij illue taw:alllt ~ for KeatiJ!g dalions thai ....
exoneration . 'police said.
cant impact on antiwar activists on
IIDd ldJ Lincoln Savings and Loan to expulsion.
"We have not made positive ares campuses.
~ Jrville, Cllif,, In return for the
In mOll recent limes, the c:om- identification on the individual at
"This is -really appalling and
1Con1ri1JutionL
.
mittee hM ~ e•pulsion this time," said state Trooper distressing that someoJJe felt the
; · Lincoln even...Uy failed and for only Sen. Harrison WiUiams, Michael Habel:
need to do this.. If this was for the
' the coetiO die fedeoll .,vemment D·N.J .. involved in tile Abscarn
Johan Gelbach, a sophomore at cause of peace, I don't understand
the university, who witnessed the it," Campbell said. ·
~ expecllld 10 ~ $2 biiHon.
scandal.

Skinny ca11
have a conscience

•-.

neen~ and ScienCeS Co.inm Houston ~ ~ h~m =~Ysu~h)::
debns or . h.
. . b t' .
pos~s a maJOr threa\~~ ~ubi:l~
satelli~Cs. "
equipment, sue as
.
Silte~lite~ already in orb~t u~ S~~~el~bTt of damage
for nav1gauon and commurucat1on .
he ~~!s 1 ~ 1~y a"*
O)&gt;erate in a band that interferes ~.. co.. on 1.5 .
w1th asuonomers, as do telephones possl~lty, he~ 6 700 objecti
on !'}rl&gt;lanes, he said.
rb' . re~ lar~e ~noqh to be
1
It seems like a~ trade not 1;0
~.::f b the US Space Com - .
be able to sec the umverse at th1s trac Toy
.d About 95 per
frequency in return for being able mand, alent 881 ·..
sh~ ,;
to telep'!One home !'"d ~Y· 'I !Jet cent of those arc. pur:C ::~ts
you can t guess were I m calbng such ~ lefto~r pt:es 'd
.
from.'': he said. _
·
and dead~ tea. 111!1 ha
3S
, An mternauona\ conference . . In add~tion,thatthere per
scheduled for 1992 IS .Planned.to mill1011 obJCClS · are too
. to .
protect ~n frequencies, he 881~. be tracked.
· Davtd Talent of Locldleed Engt-.

what we can now to P.rotect the
nighuime environmenl. '
Paul Vanden Bout, director of
the National Radioastronomy
Observatory in CharlottesviDe, Va.,
said astronom~· study~g ll!e cosmos by detecting r.ad1o s1gnals
_already must w.~ in remote areas
to escape the electromc bttzz"
fr!Jm such household Items as
m1crowave ovens, electnc razors
8l!d garage door openers.
But even those areas are being
threa~ning by ll!e ~liferati~ of
satellite commurucalions, he srud.
· " If you took B:t the plans _for
some of the satellite commumcations systems being discussed you
see. that they propose to cover the
enbre Eanh so you can communi-

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1\lelday, February 19, 1991

Sentinel

Ohio

LAFF-A-DAY

11

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2127.

Television
Viewin.r

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•

35 Loti &amp; Aci'Mgl

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. TI-IE'r' SA'r' 'mAT TloiE FIRST Tloi1N6 A WOMAN
NOTICES ABOUT A MAN IS lollS E'I'ES ...

Point

homo,

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"for Rent

LOST An:ort0an ,.,_ ~In with
rlllnotonaoii REWARD, :104'41713817 aftor :00 Pit.

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..... lfferd t I I ohlldo8N. M-F
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POX lilY, OliO

3/1110/IIR

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TIIM and ·
IEMOYAL
bLIIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD .

· IH.L SLACK
992-2269
USED IAiliOAD nES

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CliPII CIURIIS
ntlft&amp;IROOICA.
oiiNa-ble Alit• .
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Floor Flnilh . ·

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CARPENTRY

22 Money to Loan

1 811, $300/mo.; 2 811,·1400/mo.;
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KEN'S APPLIANCE
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. "THE WITTIE6T",
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..
WHAT CAN I ·
DO FER YOU,

11111.

YOU LOW-DOWN,
6000-FER-NOTHIN',

I JEST WENT TO SEE
DOC HAWKINS AN'
l COME TO 61T
A SECONT
OPINION

SNUFFY?

olw I p..,_

SHIFLISS
SICONIC tl

AIIYw (2:00)

THAT'S

10:30 121 Crook end Chile

TH' SAMI

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OPINION
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4574J

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81 Film Equipment

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ASTRO-GRAPH

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84

" vour poulbll!tlea lor atrengthenlng
y(Jur mattrlll poll110n In :he year ahead
look encouraging. Thlo may not be ac, ; COII\pllllced lmrnedlalely bUt will be
act:leve&lt;l ovw a petlod of time .
,PIICII (Fell. 211 " oh 211) You might
have to cfea1 wt:h aornoone who haa a
,fiUrlydlllpoeltlon todar. Don't let thr.lndlvldual puoh you around, but. br the
.aan:e token, don't p r - t an openi"'J
.for an argument Pleew, trwt yourHif
1o a birthday gift. Sercd lor your Altro-

Graph predictions lor the year ahead by
maiMng $1.25 tp Astro-Graph, c/o this
newspaper, P.O. Box 91428, ,Cievetand,
OH 44101-3428. Be sure to stale your
zodlec lign.
ARIEl (Marcie 21-Aprll1t) Time can be
spent conolr"!''lwty today by analyzing
your flnancl .. or commercial objectives
for the coml"'l · Determine your
prlorltloo and stick to them.
TAUIIUI jAprll 20-lllaJ 20) . Guard
ag.. nat lncllnatlone lo overernphaal1e
your Hlf-lntereeta today. In order . to
work well with olhera, you mull be both
phiiOaoplilcal and cooperative.
GEMINI lllleJ 21-.IUM 20) Let your
compuolonate lnotlr:c:1s govern your
behaviOr today ao that you won't be unduly truatrate&lt;l If you have lo IMJifer lnconver~lenoao lmpooed ,upon you by
companiOns.
CANCI!II IJune 21-.IIIIJ 22) Tacl and
diplomacy can act:leve lt:lnga for you
today that flexi"G your muac:lee or rar•
lng your voice cannol. Nice guys won't
flnlllc IMI.
LEO lrltllr 21-ACIII. 22) If you -ate
within the high standards you estabtlllc
lor JOIIIM1f today, aueceaa ia likely. But,
If you uN the same devious 1actrcs
practiced by oome, ·rt could be another

atory. '

0

'

VIIIOO lAIII. Dolept. 22) Don't let

your· ago gel in the way tOday, causing
you to pretend that you are knowledgeable about oomelhlno you 're not . Aaaoclatea will lhlnk more or you If you honN11y uy, "I don't know."
LIIIIA jlepl. D-Oct. 23) A need for Inslant grotlflCI:tlon mlghl Induce you to
buy IOIYI4Itlii"G now which your prudent
ser:ee eeya you can't alford until later. It
might be wlee to walt.
ICCIIIP10 (Oct. 24 Now. 22) Others may
find you a bll 100 domlneori"G and • • ·
_,lve today, though not by deelgn. To
be on the ule aide. be ••tremety conoc:loua oll:ow you deel with lrlercds.

12!11 Chun:h Street Station
ID &amp;pomCenter
Sporte Tonight

,\

e

(]]) •

'

ce

Hard copv
II) The EquaMur
a-..trteNow
0 OP Pro Snowbaardlnfl
NatiOnals frqm Copper
Mountain, Colo. (R)
121 NewaNight ,
illl MOVIE: Tt:. 11-.in~J Tkll

(I)IIOVIE: Thw Octllgon (A)
(2:30)
'
ill PeriJ Macl:lne Wltll N1l:

Paapl11

I!DIIIatoiLoft
Colw~~eetiOn

ACROSS .
supper
1 One of ·
3 "Sanford
lhe Magi
and - ·
7 Singer
4 Think
· McEntire ·
about
11 "Becket•
5 Pseudactor
onym
12 Actor
6 Remain· '
SharH
der ·
13 A9,assi's
7 Boardingmilieu
house
15 Bit ol inlo
resident
16 Hive
8 Earthresidents
bound
18 Ray type
bird
21 Calendar · 9 Prohibit
d
10 c
22
24 Flip
14 Boxln9,redient
shaped
25 Mrlburn
16 Started
Stone
17 Patriot's
played one
bird
26 Bashful
27 Food fish
29 "Encore I"
30 In
·
proximity
. 31 Slood up
32Cab
· passenger
34 Case- '
deciding
place
40 Kiln, e.g.
41 Sadat's
· predecessor
42 See
socially
43 Swill

'ra~rum

c~~~~~s

0

'

. tr.. .

.
'

Clllmplonal:lp USA va.
Germany 'from Lake Ptac:lcl,

.

.

.•
.

' '
•

•

'

.
Yeaterday's Anawer
19 Mexican
humored
l!nacks
31 Sports
20 Cherish
summary
21 Pleasing 33 Lairs
answer
34 Pea's
22 Cargo
place
weight
35 Eggs to
23 Ogle ·
Ovid
25 Pillar lype 36 Allow
28 Gomer
37 Exploit
Pyle, e.g. 38'Scarlet
29 Ill39 Essay

•

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0

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,

•

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I

•'

•

••

DAILY CRYP'OOQUOTES - Here's bow to work It :

2/11

.' .•

AXYDLBAAXR

'•

One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
, for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and fonnation of the words are all
hints. Each day I he code letters are different.
CRYPTOQUOTE

2·19
J

K R

FJK

ZTCCGK

FJCCGI

JK'TFJO
TN

JDC

TN

ZA

J

HXGCXGI

FJ Q
CR

•

XTFNGOY . - V . W

aID •lpMd
l'etloMtltlet
IUt1nll

'

by THOMAS JOSEPH

(2:00)

12:05 (]) fhw' Voloe Dl tlie PleMt
IPI 2 Dl II (2:00)
IJ) Nlghtllne Q
12:30 (})II II]) Late N!ght With
DIML-

N.Y. (R)

0

Is LONG FE I, J.OW

Into the Night Stereo.
PeriJ Mechlne With

Nll Paeplll

7 .,.V1dae,
... - - .......
(

CROSSWORD

11 :35 (I) Ct:eere Q

IAarrTAIDUI(NoV.~.21)Your

earni"G pottf11111 11 quite good al preeent, bjll you might not be fully prepored to work for - t you hope to gat.
·unfortunately, It won't be hitnde&lt;l to
you on a plattai.
CAPIIICOIIII jDec. 22-.len. 11) Partie!·
pati"G In a Iorge group octlvlty could
make you fwl a trtftlt uneomlorlable to·dor, eapec:r.Py If 11 l n . - a subllan1111 numbw of pwopte you don't k . -.
AQUAIIIUI .............. 1t) II your
objective Ia not well-def!nod today •
ll:ere'o a poulbiHty that.you rnlgl:t go to
a lOt of trouble to act:leva -'hlng
only lo dloc:o.- that attar you gol n. It
wun't worth lice ellort.

by--

a

12:00 (J)

tH2

+J 108
You readers can shake your beads in + Qt
wonderment at the defense of three!
SOUTH
no-trump put up by Forquet (West)
+KQH
and Gat'OZZI) (East) in the 1.965 Italian :
.KQ7
Championships. West led the five of 1
tA,7
hearts, declarer winning the king.!
+A K~4
Next ·came the ace of diamonds. For·
Vulnerable: Both
quet threw the king away. Now declar·
Dealer:
South
er could not ·establish diamond tricks
without letting East on lead. So de· Sootk
clarer played a spade to dummy's aee 2 NT
and led a low club. If East played the 3 NT
eipt, South would of course play low,
Opening lead: • ~
and West would have to win the trick.
Bul Garouo played the jack of clubs.
South won tbe ace and West threw !he
queen.
.
.
The deal was not over yet. Declarer of hearts.
,
next played to dummy's queen of dia'
Remarkable defense. Any time tha!
moods and played yet another club you or I try to play as well as that, defrom dummy. GaroJZO was still up to clarer winds up holding A-K-t-4 of .
Ute rlpt play. He put up the 10 of clubs, and we g:ve up overtricks. Cht·
clubs. That smothered his partner's sara, sara.
''
nine-spot, but more tban that, it guarJ•ma JIO&lt;Oby• _ , "JI&gt;&lt;'OIIr,., .,.....• •
anteed that declarer would not devel- •JlltOby., C.ni a.,_· '"'Ill"" .,,. .,.,.....,
op extra club tricks without letting the late O.w•ld Jacoby) a N M'lf •rMIIUI If!
East on lead to come through the Q-7 - ·..... - ,,. f"'bb/6bed

1.Barracks
bed
2Had

(J) ill Nlthttlno C
1111 Arnrilo HtH Stereo. Q
@Ill AmtriCI Tonlglll

'

••ou

.AJ6542

DOWN

World

MOIRE HOME FUINACES - HEAT PUMPS
ALL FUINACE PAm

. .

1111 0111

Q

Ntw I•

LIS

m ov e

ll)l Newa
ill Night Courl t:;J .
ID Newewetch
(]]) 18 Arsenio Hall Stereo. Q
0 Mr.ml VIce Stereo.
121 On Stage
18 Monernne
ID Scarwc:row ond Mre. King

'

Pl. 614-t15-Jt4t ••••' aua
...

allla'e

PARROT' te AL-60
f:,XTREMEL.Y
Mt.:lDEeT.

Collegl Baalcatbl:ll

10:00 (}) G ll)l Law I Order Stone
seeks revenge lor baing sel
up with Ioise testimony . (PI 2
of 2) Stereo. Q
ill Newt
(I) (J) II thii'IJOOmelhlnjj An
unexpected event causes
everyone to taka stodl 6f
their life . Stereo. r:;1
ID VIetnam: A Ttlevlolon
Hlttory E;l
.
(I) Bleck Men: Unc-ln
Futureo Organizations work
to help young black men who
have probllms sanlng goals
for themselves. (1 :00)
liD til Star Tretc: Thw Nell
o-rlltlon
18 CNN Evening Newe
Gll 700 Club With Pet
Aobertaon
10:05 (]) MOVIE: The Fattat1 Gun

1Ho layl- Coprl, 32 .. u V• llltllna. - . oor:cl,

79

OUIMo

....

twtp.m.

--

P-nt, :104-f71.2013,

lull .... ,.......... .... lllnla,
an"""la and aUflllllai.

AIIMI -

!5ECAL.ieE 'THE

' 16~1-Y

-..,.........ct
8ootl&lt;ltr.

A'IRICC:1f

·, il-IE

- .Toelc
_ awllci
1/0 4.10IIC·c-.
dooiL

+J1092

~

8:30 (I) (() II Devlo Rulea
Robbie oflers to lutor Rigo in .
dating techniques. Stereo. Q
12!11 Church Street Station
9:00 (}) G ll)lln the Hell of the
Night A blind woman claims
to have heard a murder.
Stereo. C
Ill (J)CfRononne
Roseanne finds harsell
coping with an aia_i
husband. Stereo.
ID (I) FrontiiM
1111 1!2)111 MOVIE: 'Sine of
the Mother' CIS TueldliY
Movie (2:00) Steteo. Q ·
t!J B~weloer TUMC!t:Y Night
Flghta
12!11 Naehvllla 18 Larry King Llvel
8:30 (I) (J) til Caech Hayden and
Christine learn the meaning
of being an ouiCast. Stereo.

---..

-""' "o,•-. ...:t'f

EAST

WEST

+A53

1-------------------....J

. (2:00)

c............. lui

tQIOPB63

+76 3 2

+ ·k 5

8:05 (]) The Voice of the Planet
IPI 2 at 5) (2:00) ·

73 Van1 &amp; 4 WD'I

.3

By J•mes Jacoby

Gigolo (RI (2:00)
Murder, She Wrole Q
12!11 On Stage ·
18 Prtn:wNewo
Gli MOVIE: Loot Flight (G)

·

1-lt-11

+A 7

Razzledazzle

rn a a o Jeop~~rdyl r;a
(!) Night Court Q
m 1121111 E.-rnn:wnt

l!lJ

Clan 3 - - iitlil; oi:
Mlo ltarllna II MUD k I lad
Alto "'""'Truok a
1M In
alook. Evana - . . , Eulwn A-114 Ul 1111!1.

1117 -

rn Heppr Ooyo

stereo. D
lllllll MOVIE: Amwrtcan

72 Truckl for 81111
1m

NORTH

BRIDGE

unearthing ol the first T. rex
akelelon is explored. 1;1
1111 ll2l Ill Reocue: 911

·J\LLEY OOP

=
.

.....--- - - - ---,

~ . (I) Novo The laborious

.....

"

.

Investigates the murder of an
. asslstanl D.A. (PI 1 of 2) ·
Stereo. C
'
(!) MOVI!t: The Bachelor'o
'Douilhten (2:00)
IJ) (()II Who'o the Boll?
Mona helps Tony teach a
sex-education cr.ss. Stereo.

. ~l#tY

D:"d1
Mator ol .... Incl- tiiiiiMtl,
-lon, ll:eotL .,._
concl, 110. _.,._ 11.1100. SOW7IIo7111t or 114-3111o · 1
211-1414.
'

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'

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mt

1111 lUick
. ~

MOt

,

1-

TO

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. 7:35 (]) &amp;Iinford ond Son ·
8:00 (}) G ll)l Matlock Matiock

IISSIIl &amp; IUID
COIUQimOII

Acr• , , . ..... Of&amp;t

4726t St.lt. 241

AND ERNEST

I' r I' 1
I l' I I I I I

IC:.RAM LITS ANIWIU
Exhort - Taupe- Stall - Poetry-TAXPAYER
The TV newsman asked . the fellow which of our
natural resources wauld be exhausted first. The fellow
replied, "The TAXPAYER.".
.

Colt•

Cl ' " ' "¥ NlA ...

,

.

I ~r==£\ lETTERS

Ton!ttht Stereo. t:;J
(]) llf Mamt'o Fomlly
(]]) til Three'• Company
lD
&amp;.aketbl:ll
18 ·croaoflre

1Umlahad.I14-+INMO.
2br apart...,., aN ..llltlaa paid,

.... ,,. ., ........
ec..,••••
IISIIAPPIIAIIOS

...

mlnclad -uaL To
lind ... .....
2 badluom fumt.lled In New
· ~unrtv· !lind
~ Nllllllilo P.O. 'lor 7211' Haven, WV. Soourlly · " ' - "
and !llei•:co• roqulrad. :104-

. . . ol tile

•14.· ~~Co=~-~~:
- gao rnaaka. Sam Some-

--.:tt=T:i.~
tD ~.
, bona and ·~"'I·

Sllrvlcll

~.anc~ocarrng. . _

llpotloi,UO&lt;

Apartment
for Rent

and pt10no nail

Yard - .
..._
Fl,__,
rood &lt;llllvaNCI.

appllonllt, T.V.-· Otlan
I a.111. to I p.m. llon.4at.
1
"!,. 127 :lrd. Ava. 01:~
-

:..=.,ov::,.:; ::=IJ':IrG"J
l:.,llte
1-:.=·

&lt;

aftar P.I'Oo

~ .,.._,_, 1no. 0oor1 1urp1

-7'1:13 Or 441..qzz.

-.._, halp
a alanahn
8r -- . ""'
1-.ze
1100.

Junk I

•Gereges
•Room Addition•
•Kitchens • Bath1
•VInyl Siding

-n.r- n.....- -

44

-

Ctoae Out latalllatle!IOI lrond
Wa:er l'lltn:tlon ...,_ ot.
3K 411% Doftc'o o;,.... ttl
114-81Z m2
-··

Zbt trallw at R - T....r
P.tlrk. Con Ill -n 10 mllaa out

Walil To
. . 1110.

2DS N. S.Ctllltl Slrltl

wut:ar

:n::,=
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a
5;.-'·
=: ·r....

Goocll

2 - Road, S04-111-3U4.
moblla homo, Hill

llur·-.o
-•· 114- '
.

-riJi:i'N u, ~ r- " ' r 1

o•o

.

with i ,

01

441 tltlllo;

~
20 C1uoao P-. Rib
_..,, ..3t.
114-:111-IZIII.

Hol•lhold

_.lata

11114d!o. Colob:itJotz,aoO. .,...

prom"' - .. ...,

. , . _ - - aoapa, PGO;

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

-cL

lhwultlonad WaohON, Or'fO!'I.

llwnlngton 1100 lportoman 12
Quaaa AuiOIIIOilc Rib lalral,
1271:
llartln 22 118gnum Rtfle

r:=-...
--~·­
t

POMIIOY

=·

o..,.nt....

art -~:a~, -•a. Tl:a

vtrglnll,

992-5526

7:05
7:30

Comp!ocw tho chuckla quoted
V
by li!ling in lho milling -ds
you d..,olap lrom llep No. .3 below.

A

• ~~~1rs~:f~UTERS r.r,r r

t:;J ·

*'"'

. ..... u111.

D r y w s " - · • - -·

Rick,_,_ Auction Comnow lla:kls• •UCIIIDn8. •·

w. Do""'""~··

•Repelr Work

dlah-

120411_,..,

PubliC
&amp;AUction

Not~

IIIIIPIIIIM

Aid

Ford - ·
air -ion, Alt'FII

21 · · Buslnen

Wllet We Do.

Wll

-

~o((1 c,rur.~E.

; 1113 oa-, wlt:r.h·-·
,__
1 1 0 '- ·-- ··-'-..,'!Jada.
---.1100..,._

1-ln,mclzr l

614-ttt-1321

........ ,...Office

pl.~::=

H€.~ ~o~~E- 1-\~E.
.·. fo!Eii !lf,ll

. but-- ...- h -lop,
4
MO.DOdo"::'
- ' •:J:P:J, ~ r, ... l ·~

0

36 , ....,£._......

915-3561'

point SI2.IO

WllOallliollol,
"""'". InInIll)'
homo
-t14o
In
Qr
UmMa.
-'1140.

.ld••••rt .
Hand Tufting
Cullom DnPiia

992·5335 or

111LS....It.

~~~,,

113 . . s.c..tl

Plcll lip.

............,_

L.....L....JL--1-.....l.--'--...J

Newallour t:;J
(() II I n - Edition t:;J
(]]) • Night Court g
·
ll2llll Current Allelr t:;J
l!lJ MacGrver
lD Spor11Center
18 M-yllne
Gll Scarcrow and ln. Kl"'

9

UPHOLSTRY

lrl.. It .. Or WI

-·~•

111111 11_,- II• ~- , . .
Nagnlrr.lll-. • will trlia lor 1
4 - - ,_..,..
....·~- ·
-1411·
,•
:

•

IJ) lno- Recall

-=-

N E C lot.o Mov1o " - - - .
· • •
- - · In
-ollargar,Mnary.lotav~
alon
,_ •
... ...........
Gold,.._ INmad mirror tiX4Z.

Room•

•ciOWAYE
OVIIIIEPAII

S, 0 8 W E T
I-...;1;:,';.::.,1~7 :...;:1,;,..:TI,;_rl----l

1D l1l Mec:Neii/Lehrer

..,._,.., •nY ......rlli
1100. ~1441 llalwa:
8LIIL•10p...
' '
43
ll:autatad
ft .._ . '!tin. tiNIII Olda CUtlaae,
Plokup ._.., Font- CMv, . uon. ... - .. Oar., 104
uft-r,
Mlrcha~

Fumllhld

Jlusiness Service's

·I

7:00 (2) II 1111 ll)l WhHI of
Fottunet::;J
Ill I Dmom Dl Jeannie

c.ao.ollloH7NNI
-.., ~ ..._
N,
•faMaftwlrm.
- -on·rlvar, " " - • ~~~~~~~;;~:;;;;;;;;~ 1m
Pf!... 1100.
~·-,.. monlh""'" 44
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Aplr,tment
. s. IIIIC811aneoua
111!0 AMC ....... 4 .,.,,...,

BUIIJ\811

Training

--~~~~~----------~7

Auto• for Sill

71

eratB my actions were when I
heard ·this announcement :
\ "You left your lights on ----,--1"

L-~,.....L-'--""-..,j

rn Andr OrtHIU:

6:35

. . .. Dai&gt;OIIl- ~

~

..,.PI_o_,
.

(I) (() G AIC N - Q
1D Wild Amtrleo t:;J
1111 1121111 CBS News t:;J
(]]) til AndJ OriHIU:
ID Up Cion

.,.. - · " " ,..

I

~..~_. ,I.s,. .M..,.I_u . .~~~~r• "~' ~~~~,:

NBA TOlley

~ Under 11. Not Adml1twd

.

•

.

...........

i I

c.- .,. .

&amp;:05 (J) lleverlr Hllbllliel
&amp;:30 (2) G ll)l NBC Nightly Newt

wv. -77Witl.

3

1

18 World Todel_
Gll Our Houn l:jl

Z bod....,. homo In Now Ha-,

-

I 1I I I
12 HI; RI \I

(]]) II ALF
l!ll

Hlly • Ql'lln

((

41 HOUMI for Rent

0

TEPENR

11l. L•ml;}iMath

Hap-..........
- -.
_

Rentals

z lldnn Jllrlly tumlalled
on Rl. 33,
l271.01!.JIIr
monlh rluo ....,." and ulflm.,.
114-112-'11179. .
2 bodroOon COUnlty homo, :104-

•

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lm-ZIH.

-

t.Hert of rice
four tcrombled words .,..
low 1o form four ll"'fl!o _.do.
t.orraiiiJI

•

1:00(2)11 IJ) IIlii .. oa
0New8
(!)Chartnln~

R - Z Aohton, 1 • .,. lola, S
aouth Galllpolla ..........
p&lt;lllllc
-r1etloM,
w i twatar,
h _no
_
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•••••t· 114-1112-

TUES.. FEB. 19

•

__.;;,;,;;.;..,__;...,;;; W11o4 lip CU.f L I'OI&amp;AIIt

EVENING

2722·. ....111111. Phono IOW?ir-

,._port mlnla-

11.,. DOllie 1o

LOSER

... ... "'"" iiOIM-.nn.
o.r- .....

-tlftel!e-=
::JJ:,,., .,:- c:.r=. .

...
':~::' S~\\.4llA-4~b's· ....

111e Dall Sentinel . P8QI I

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

33 Flmll fOr Sill

3 Announcement•

•

-·.

Q R V. ,
CXG

..•

Rl

K R C ,

I

VGC

FJQ

.''

DIGKCTWG
Yeelerde11'1 CI'IIPICHI•ole: A LIFE THAT IS
WORTH WRITING AT ALL IS WORTH WRITING
MINUTELY AND FAilHFULLY. - LONGFELLOW .

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•

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t

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I

~P!a~ge~1~~~n.~~D:~~Iy~&amp;m~:tln~e~l--------------------------~p~~:m~~~Y=!M:Id:d~le~po~rt~,O~h:b~--------------~----------'~n.==R=a~y~,~~~b~~~-~~~-1~9~,~1"~1 !
Cold front returning to Buckeye St~t~ _ ·;..
•

By Ulllted l'ralllllteraatloul .
er, as a cold front moves acros8 the
Ohio's spring like weather is · state Tuesday night and ushers in
nearing an end
m&lt;I'C seasonal readings. ,
It will be un$C&amp;Sonably warm
Very moist air from the Gulf of
across the state Tuesday , wi tl)
Mexico was in place across the
afternoon readings ranging from
Buckeye State early Tuesday. The
the 50s to the low 60s. The warm · cold front that extended from a low
weather will be short lived, howevin Lake Michigan across the mid-

Meigs EMS answers 12 ctdls

Mississippi Valley -to Texas will
move across the siDle by' Tuesday
ni&amp;bt, lriggeringlocally heavy rain- .
rali.
A flood watch was ill.effect b
all of Ohio Tuesday and in all but
the northwestern part of the state
Tuesday nighL
The cold front will cause locally
heavy rain ll1d possibly some tbunderstonns Tuesday afternoon and
evening. There also is-a possibility

of sn~ mJXed With ~ m ~- '
· ern 9hiO Tuesday mgbt '\Dd_ram ,.
poSSibly miXed wtth anow ts likely .:

WednadaW-

.. . ,

l.o":S ~~Jomo~~ will :
be mam 1Y m. e ~· tg s on •
~~Y will_ ~~ the m;- :
mgdanl on Y reac
as the cuoplperdf onst ~
an ower 405
r
moves east or the state and a cooler ~
weak high pressure system builds_ •
into the area.

Ohio Lottery

·.

Eagles

,_.
~

..•

finale

1

Units of County ljmergency Street (Kroger) for Velma Smith.
Medical Services answered 12 calls She was treated but not transported.
for assistance on Monday.
At. l:24 p.m., Chesler Fire Depart••
At 1:49 a.m., Pomeroy squad ment and Tuppers Plains squad
•.
went to Pomeroy Nursing and · went to State Route 7 for Catherina
•
WEATHER MAP - Thunderstorms will 6kely develop along a · Rehab Center for Gladys Taylor. Casto. She was taken to Veterans. ·
..'
cold front as It mqves through the Southeast. Rala showers are
She was taken to Veterans. At 9:38 .· At 2:46p.m.. Racine squad went to
Editor's note - Following is a property taxes which curreotly pro- •
likely along the northern end or the cold front in Maine. Rain
a.m., Rutland squad went to Main State Route 124 for Tammy Claric,
vides one PQint three million dolshowers wUI develop behind a cold front In the Northwest and wiD
Street for Jack Cleland. He was who was taken to Veterans. At 3:37 complete text of a press release lars
our school systems each '
turn to snow in the Cascade and northern Rocky Monntains. The
treated but not transp.orted. At p.m.. Rudand squad went to Hysell issued this past weekend by year. to
Likewise,
the many jobs asso- •
Southwest and the Plains will be fair and mild.
10:46 a.m., Scipio Township fire
Run'Road .for Tiffany Priddy. She Gene C. Oiler, President, Local elated with the mines will disap- ·,
department went to State Route was taken to Holzer Medical Cen- Union 1886; William L. Oiler, pear.
.
Representative;
684 to the Joe King residence for a ter. At 3:51 p.m., Pomeroy squad COMPAC
Will
these
scrubbers
cost
you, as
Local
Union
1886,
George
A.
chimoey fire. Al11:03 a.m., Tupwent to East Main Street for Maria
an eleclric consumer, more·money?
Soutb Central
rain is 80 percent
Thacker,
Presldeit
of
Local
pers Plains squad went to Number FoSter, wM was lalcen to Veterans.
The answer is ''yes", however, fuel
A flood watch is in effect for
Ohio extended forecast
Nine Road fo~ Tony Boring. He ·At 7:19p.m., Middleport squad Union 1857 and Paul A. ChUds, switching will also increase your
Tuesday night
Thursday through Saturday
COMPAC
Representative,
Local
was taken to Camden Clark Memowent to Williams Street for Madi- Union 1857. ·
Occasional rain and a chance of · Fair Thursday and Saturday, rial
electric bills. What then are the
·
Hospital.
At
11:24
a.m.
Racine
line
Moore, who was taken to
thunderstorins Tuesday night, with wit)! a chance of rain or snow on squad went to C0111ty Road 35 for
pros and cons. for you as a con- •
Holzer.-At 10:13 p.m., Pomeroy
:
a low between 40 and 45. Rain may ' Friday. Highs wiD range rrom 35 to . Don Ros.e. He was taken to St.
Staiements attributed to (Jerald sumer?
station went 10 the Beacon Station
.
•
Any
savings
you
may
see
in
·
~
be heavy at times. Chance of min is . 45 Thursday and Friday; and from Joseph Hospital. At 1:14 p.m.,
P. Maloney, executive vice-presifor an auto fue.
neat 100 percent. Mostly cloudy 30 to 40 Saturday. Overnight lows· Pomeroy squad went to East Main
your
electric
bill
as
the
result
of
,
dent, American Electric Power
fuel
switching
vs.
scrubbers
will
be
·
Wednesday, with min ending, and wiD r.ange from 25 to 35 Thursday
Company, are an affront to those of
highs in the mid 40s. Chance of and Friday mornings, and from 20
us who have strived to make these consumed by the losses to Ohio's
to 30 early Saturday.
·
mines the safest and most efficient eco~omy as cited above (i.e., jobs,
Executive Committee will meet mines they can be. We haven't payroll, taxes).
Cbureb women to meet
• Fuel switching will send conThe Meigs County Church Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at the Car- been "pouring time, money, and
sumers'
doUars out of Ohio to pur- ,
cost
into"
a
dark
hole,
we
have
Women United will have a plan- penter's Hall in Pomeroy. Public
temed at the ·Charleston Area ning session on Friday to plan for invited.
been utilizing our experience and chase compliance coal while scrubWilliam R. Boring
Medical Center- Memorial Division World Day of Prayer which will be
expertise to help the company bing Gavin will result in nearly a •
Homemakers to meet
and relocated his practice and held March I at tbe First Baptist
bring
our costs down.to where they. billion dollars worth of construcThe Syracuse Homemakers
William Richard Boring, 56, or residence to Poi!lt Pleasant in 1964. Church io Middleport. All key Club
will meet Wednesday at 10 are in line with what the Public tion work in Ohio in the next five
Pearl Wood Road, Albany, died
He was a member of the Trinity · women of churches are invitee!.
a.m. at the Syracuse Municipal Utilities Commission of Ohio will years, plus give .JI8"'n opportunity
Monday afternoon, Feb. 18, 1991, United Methodist Cbiii'Ch of Point
to retain the mjliing jobs 'in Ohio.
Building. The project will be male- determine to ,be atceptable.
at Doctor's Hospital in NelsonviUe Pleasant and the First Christian
• Fuel switching will not remove •
· Furthermore, forecasts and bud. ~ocrats to meet . .
ing grapevine wreaths and fmishing
following a brief illness.
Chiii'Ch of Charleston. Grubb seras
much
sulfur from the air, scrub- ,
gets
for
the
mining
operations
are
The Me1gs County Democrauc chairs.
Born in Downington he w&amp;S a ved as Mason Coiinty Coroner for
attainable and ·should ·be in line bing will remove an additional
son of the late William Calvin and 43 years, was named the National
with what the Commission will 50,000 tons.
Continued rrom page 1
Florence Lurana Reeves Boring. Volunteer of the. Yesr for the
find acceptable when they Conduct
We understand that the installa- •
decision, ruling that Congress the Justice Department, which says their every six (6) month review or tion of scrubbers may be a more
Mr. Boring was a trUCk driver and American Cancer Society in 1985,
an Air Force Veteran.
and in 1990, a dogwood tree was never intended to grant reservists more than hal( the nation's combat- our costs.
costly method or complying with
He is survived by his wife, San; planted in his honor at the Mason the blanket right to leave their ready units are now made up of
This is why Maloney's apparent the amendments to the Clean Air
dra Kay McMullen Boring; one · Cowtty Library for a memorial of · ciyilian jobs ·indefinitely for mili- reservists and members of 'the lack of confidence in our ability to Act, and if so, the Ohio legislature
son, William Bruce Boring, 20 years or service to the WV Can- tary uaining.
National Guard.
economically survive even with' will need to react appropriately.
The Justice Department, on
Albany; two daughters, Janet Dar- cer Society. He was the past presiscru~rs is such a slap in the face
Therefore, we have been dis- ,.
lene Boring and Mary Ann Boring, dent of the West .Virginia and behalf or King, asked the high
to our membership, who continue
cussing
this with those parties who
coon to hear ihe case, claiming the.·
both of Athens: two grandchildren, Mason CountY Cancer Society.
to
do
everything
they
can
to
ensure
can
bring
about such legislation, as
five sisters, A6ce Stanley, Florence
Grubb was a member of the Min- "ressonableness" standard. applied Am Ele Po~er ......................28 3/4 our ability to be competitive in the well as those
citizens whose supWright, Sue Phelps, Goldie Boring, · 11un Lodge #19 AF&amp;AM, the Beni by the lith Circuit and used by Ashland 011. ........................ 29 1/4 marketplace. ·
pon is needed to show the legisJa. ·
all of Albariy, and Bernice McKee, Kedem Shrine, the Scottish Rite other appeals courts in similar AT&amp;T ........ ,..........................341/8
We know our jobs and will con- ture that this is what is· best for the •
cases
coilld
eviscerate
the
inient
of
Bob
Evans
............................
17
7/8
Waynesville,' Mo.: four brothers, and the Knight's Templar. He was a
tinue to do what wc·have to do to State or Ohio. However, such arti- · ,
Floyd, Harley, Leonard, all of tesm physician for the Point the reserves and ultimately harm · C~arming_Shop ..................... l3 3/4 ensure our survival.
cles damage our credibility and do
Albany, and Robert, Columbus.
Plea.!ant ijigh School Athletic nstional security by,taking away an C1ty Holding ....... ;....................... l5
One thing we know for sure is not give the wbole story and thereincentive
for
people
to
join
the
Federal
Mogul
.............
:
........
16
5/8
Services will be held Thursday Department for 25 years, a staff reserves
·
Goodyear T&amp;R .. ,................. .l9 3/4 that we cannot survive without the by reduce our effectiveness in gainat 2 p.m . at the Bigony Jordan
Funeral Home in Albany with member of Pleasant Valley Hospital
The &amp;overnment acknowledged Key C~nturion ..................... .11 1/4 installation of scrubbers at the ing the suppon we oeed to retain "
that
in 1960 members of the mili- Lands End ........................... 16 3/8 Gavin Plant Without these scrub- our iobs.
Bishop John Pollard .officiating. for 27 years and was an Air Force
Gene C. Oiler, President, Local ,
·
1
'II
be
·
Han
·
Ce
veteran
of
World
War
fl.
tary reserves nonnally had. very Limited lnc...........................24 1/8 bers being installed, the 1,258 minBurl8 WI
m
nmg meAdditional survivors include his short
Union
1886; WiUiam Oiler, COM- •
and infrequent tr;Uning obli- Multimedia Inc.............. ........73 3/4 ing jobs in Southeastern Ohio wiD
tery in Al~y.
.
PAC
Representative,
Local Union ~
gations.
Rax
Restaurant
......................
27
/32
.
Friends may call at the funeral · wife, Shirley (Simpson) Grubb or
cesse to exist and when they go,
home on Wednesday rrorri 7 to 9 . Point Pleasant; two daughters, ·
"But in response to a funda- -Robbm~&amp;Myers .........................24 they will take with them the eighty- 1886; George~· Thaclcer, Presip.m.
.
Roberta L. Corrie of South Charles- . mental shift in the structure of the' Shoney s Inc ........................ .l4 3/4 one million plus doUars in w~es dent, Local Uruon 1857 and Paul
Military gravesil!e services will ton and Mary E. Hudson of San An- nation's armed forces the land- Star Bank ..................... ...............20 and benefits, the over four million A. Childs, COMPAC Representa·
be held.
tonio; ' TX: two. ~. John M. scape has been altered dBmatically . Wend~ lnt'l. ...........................8 1/4 dollars spent on supplies locally, live, Local Union 1857. .
'
Grubb n of Phoenix, AZ and over the past. generation," wrote ·Worthmgton Ind. ,, ................23 1/4 and the over two minion dollars in
George M. Grubb of •Point
Hugh M. Clifton
Pleasant: one brother, Dr. George
Hugh M. Clifton, 83, of West Grubb of Charleston; two sisterS, ·
Columbia, S.C., died Wednesday, Jane Wlll'OOr of Charlestoo and HarFeb. 13,1991.
·
riett Blair oC Parkersburg, and eight
Born in Pomeroy, he was a son gnmdchildren.
of the late Pearl J. and Jessie Wood
The funeral will be. held a/(
Clifton. He was a graduate of Ohio Friday, Febr1!Bry 22, 1991, at the
University where he was a member Wilcoxen· Funeral Home at 1 p.m.
of Beta Theta Phi fraternity and with the Rev. Steven Dorsey
Blue Key . A retired work car~r · oftlciatil)l. Entombment will be at
employee of the Pure Union Oil the Tyler Mountain MeiiiQIY GarCompanies, he had long residen- dens in Cross Lanes. WV. Masonic
cies in Norfolk, Va.,' Charlotte, graveside rites will be conducted
N.C.. and Atlanta, Ga. He was a liy Point Pleasant Miiuum Lodge
past president of the Southeastern #19AF&amp;AM.
·
Petroleum Credit Association.
Friends
may
call
at
the
funeral
Surviving are two daughters, home on Thursday, February
21,
Judith C. Funderburk and Meredith from 2-4 p.m. and 7-9 p.m.
J. Clifton, both or Columbia; one
brother, George 0. Clifton, Littleton, Colo.; one sister, Mrs. WiUiam
F. Rossiter, St Clair ShCI'es, Mich.;
Continued from page l
six grandchildreli and seven grest
It was significant, however, that
grandchildren.
·
Bush did not slam the door on the
Services were held Friday in St. Soviet plan. An unconditional Iraqi
Mary's Episcopal Church.
retreat from Kuwait, even one
In lieu of howers, memorials induced by vague Soviet assurmay be made to the American · ances on other issues, could well
Heart Association, SL Mary's Epis- satisfy U.S. and U.N. demands.
copal Church or to the Association
In a Cable News Netwoi'k interfor Retarded Citizens.
·
view, Kremlin spokesman Vitaly
For a limited time only, you can get a
. Arrangements were handloo by lgnatenko said earlier that Bush,
the Dunbar Funeral Home, Gervais perhaps by choosing to not reject
CentraLine Home Equity Loan with
Street Chapel, Columbia, S.C.
the Gorbachev plan out of hand,
substantially reduced closing costs.
•'
'
had "responded positively" to the
Dr. John Grubb
Soviet mediation effort.
- Only a sudden and unexpected
A weD known Point Pleasant
capitulation
Saddam stood in
'
physician and cancer crusader, Dr. the way of a by
major
allied ground
John McClure . Grubb, 69, died
offensive to drive Iraq from Kuwait
Tuesday, February 19, 1991, at the as
Foreign Minister Tariq
We can design a CentraLine Home Equity
\]larleston Area Medical Center, AzizIraqi
returned to Baghdad with the
Loan to meet your specific ne~ds ... with
foDowing a long illness.
proposal in hand.
. Born April 6, 1921 in In- Soviet
variable rates and flexible repayment plans .
In pubhc and private, U.S. offi- ,
dianapolis, rN, he was a soo of Es- cials
had held out little expectation
Anfi you can use your CentraLine to finance
ter (McClure) Grubb, of Charles- or a brealcthrough
from the talks
ton, and the Isle George A. Grubb. Aziz and Gorhachev held Monday
anything you need like college tuition, a
He attended Butler University inMoscow.
·
·
home improvement or even a new car.
School of Law, Pre-Med at West
"Our ·emphasis at this point is
Virginia Wesleyan CoUege, and the . on continuing to prosecute the
Medical Collcse of Virginia. He it)- war," Fitzwater said Monday.
"We're moving ahead in the air
and we are assuming that we're
The interest charges on secured CentraLines
•
going to have to continue to
A CentraLjne Revolving Line offers a wide
may
be
tax
deductible.
The
tax law allows
Cootlaued _froiD pqe 1
• enforce the U.N. sanctions."
range of credit lines, all with incredibly ·
for deduction of some or all of the interest
The Gennan daily- Bild said the .
problems of the digesilve, urinacy plan
low rates.
.
,
on loans secured by a personal residence.*
included four points: Iraq
or respiratory systems. Conflicti!lg unconditionally withdraws from
evidence was foimd on whether Kuwait in ·exchange for Soviet
It's easy to see why the CentraLine Home Equity Loan is now
fluoride acts 10 ........,_ or weak- efforts
to assure the "state strucen bone. Mason llid.
an even better way to borrow. So act now.
'
tur~ ~d borders of Iraq" will be
:
Mason requested the study in mamtatned.
' Cmuu/t ~' ra.r mMJCr.
February 1990 after a IlDdy by the
National ToxicoloJY Program
found "equivocal" evidence of a
·tie between hilh doses of fluoride
and bone CIIICCf In iOIIIe male IBIS. t Vetei'IIU MeiiiOI'Ial Hospital
However, the Panel assembled by
MONDAY ADMISSIONS · the Public Healdl Service said it Margaret Winebrenner, Syracuse.
ronnel that raearch IIIII other llliMONDAY DISCHARGES mals ''fail to elllllliall an 1180Cia- Ella Quillen and William Ander· Ullll Membtr' FDIC
tion between Ouoride'llld cancer."
son. .

Here -is complete text of
union officials press release

Pic:k 3: 975 .
Pic:k 4: 6041
Cards: 7-H; 2-C;
7-D;J- S

lose loop

•'

Low tonight in mid 30s.
Mostly sunny Thursday.
High m mid 50s.

· Page4

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I

---Area deaths--.

cOUrt. ••

1 Secllon, , .. Pea•

Vol. 41, No. 212

Pom~y-Middleport,

Copyrlghled , . ,

----Weather forecast----

-----Announcements----

.

.

By LEON DANI!l;L
UPI Chief Corresp,ondent
The Soviet Union Wednesday
awaited Saddam Hussein's
response to its Persian Gulf peace
plan, which reportedly calls for
Iraq to withdraw unconditionally
from Kuwait,· and China joined the
diplomatic effort to end the Persian
Gulf war.
· The leader of the allied forces,
.,meanwhile, said B,aghdad's· mili,
tary machine is on the verge of col: lapse but Imq said.its troOps caused
.hesvy casualties in driving back _a
coalition wtit that Uied to breach its
lines.
.
.
In further evidence of an expect-

.

'

ed allied ground assault to dtive
Iraqi forces from Kuwait, U.S. military officials said Iraqi front-lioe
troopS appear to be solidifying their
positioas against an attack, and
ground skermishes along the SandiKuwaiti border continued. •
It was unclear whether or when
Iraqi Foreign Miilister T-ariq Aziz
would return to Moscow with Saddam's response to Soviet President
Mikhail Gorbachev's peace proposal, which was ·coolly received
by President Bush.
Soviet U.N. Ambassador Yulyi
Yorontsov said Aziz would return
Wednesday, and Soviet Foreign
Minister Alexander lljlssmertnykh

PREPARING FOR TIDNKING DAY - Amanda Tbela, 1 member or Racine Girl Scout Troop 1042, looks over a poster sign In
. Racine or a soldier In rront of an Amerlcaa nag. Amanda Is
preparing for Girl Scout Thinking Day on Saturda_y at Eastern
Higb.Sc:bool. This year's tlleme Is ''()pel'lltion Girl Scout Friendship:' Linking Hands Around the Wor(d.'' 'A panel discussion in
wbicb girl scouts can gain insight on the ,subjecl of war will be
held.

REDUCED

CWSING cosrs

-

Girls Scouts prepare for
.Thinking Day activities

-

1. ;

•

GREAT RATES

Study..•

TAX SAVINGS
,

Hospital news

CENTRAL TRIBr

tat

-

APMCBANK

.

'

,

(

.,

~

•

20, 1991

A Multlmedle Ncwepeper

saicf he would arrive soon, but both
a·spokesman for Gorbachev and
the Iraqi Embassy in Moscow said
there was no fum word on a return
lrip. .
According to the German newspaper Bild, Gorbacbev's plan, presented to Aziz on Monday,
includes an unconditional withdrawal of baqi forces from Kuwait,
linked to Soviet efforts to ensure'
Iraq's political and geogmphical
integrity and to seek an overall
solution to long-simmering Middle
East problems.
· ·
The liberal. Young Communist
J..eague newspaper Komsomolskaya Pravda, quoting anonymous

.

.

'

,.

'

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I

sources, said the plan calls for a for an unconditiortal withdrawal
withdrawal linked to a variety Of and Saddam was said.to hive wan!issues, including negotiations to ed to oegotiate details of the pullsolve broad Middle East issues. out. U.N. resolution 660 explicitly
The report did not say wbether the states that Iraq must withdraw
United Nations would be commit· "immediately and unconditionalted to such negotiations.
ly."
Whatever its wording, Bush said
In Beijing, a senior Iraqi official
Tuesday that the initiative "falls briefed China's premier on
weD shon of what is required" to Moscow's Persian Gulf pesce plan,
end the Persian Gulf war but he did and the communist government
not dismiss it outri'ght. DepQty afterWard reiterated its demand for
White House press secretary lr.\q •s _immediate withdrawal from
Roman Popadiuk said Bush sent ·Kuwait.
.
Gorbachev a "point-by-poinC'
Iraqi Deputy Prime Minister
reply to his proposal.
Saadoun Hammadi brought details
Soviet and Iranian diplomats of the Soviet plan directly from ,_
have reported that !raq was ready Moscow aboard a Jordanian jet,

By BRIAN J, REED
before judge Crow on Febrwiry 8th
Sentinel News Stllff
and 12th for a hearing on his
A ·Meigs County man jailed for motion for shock probation. The
his involvement in the death of ·a entry denying his motion was flied
Canal Winchester man has been Ia~ on Tuesday.
.
de.nied shock probation by Meigs
Aceording to both Lentes and
· County Common Pleas Court Meigs Counl)' Prosecutor Steven L.
Judge Fred W. Crow Ill, despite Story, the denial of Harris' motion
the consent of all parties involved is in direct contravention to their
to the defendant •s release.
, wishes and to the wishes of the .vic· Douglas Harris entered a guilty tim's family, the Ohio State Highplea to a charge of obstructing jus- way Patrol' and the Meigs County
tice, a fourth degree felony, last Probation Officer, all of whom
fall for his participation in Will's consented to or recommended the
deadt and the subsequent disposal granting of shock probation for
of Will's body and was semenced Hanis.
·
by~JQ 18mlllii!Jsin~
Attorney Lentes was vocally
The cluirge arose £iOjjj an mci~· 4iUPpoili~·'ll!c!ge Crow's dec!.
dent in June whcirein Will 82 was sion.
· '• ''Ju~e Crow was
sllllek and killed b~ .a pickup iruct made aware of the · agreement
driven by Jason Rilgs. Harris was between the defe~dant: the p~se~
a passenger-in the truck and was 811 cutor, an~ th,~ v1ct1m s. r~mlly,
accomplice at the scene wherein Lentes satd. No opposition was
Will's body was deposited over a v~iced ai the tim~, so I was. su~creek bank in rural Meigs County.
pnsed that the mobon was derued.
Throughoot the proceedings that
"Since (all or t~e parties
followed, Harris' cooperation with involved) did not object, t~er~
the Meigs County Prosecutor's should ~ no reason for demal,
office and law enforcement offi- Lentes state4. "Those people know
cials was brought to light, and ulti- the f~cts or the case and know of
mately played a role in the plea Douj: s remorse, and the coun does
bargain agreement. In particular, no~;,
.
.·
Harris was named as instrllmental
Hanis could hsve gone to tnal
in the recovery or the vic tim •s and received the same senlence that
bod .
· he now will se~ve, and at least
· jb represented by Pomeroy · could have been afforded the
Attoriley 'John R. Lenles, appeared , opportunity (for acquittal)", Lentes

Now An Even Better Way To Borrow

Fl .EXIBU ,I'J'f

Februa~

arriving late Tuesday and taking
off Wednesday afternoon.
· Hammadi outlined Gorbachev' s
gulf peace prop&lt;Jsal to Chinese Pre. mier Li Peng during an SO-minute
morning meeting. Afterward; Li
said, "We oppose the baqi occupation and annexation of Kuwait and
demand unconditional withdrawal
of the baqi troops from Kuwait.' '
In an interview published
Wednesday in the Los Angeles
Times, Gen . H. Norman
Schwarzkopf said in Riyadh, Saudi
Arabia, that the Iraqi military is
losing more than 100 ta,nks a day to
allied air sttikes, a rate of aurition
that no army can survive.

Harris denied shQck probation

The CentraLine
Home Equity Loan
from Central Trust

.

Ohio, Wednesday,

Soviet Union awaits HusseiD'sresponse

Stocks .

Bush ...

·.

"Operation Girl Scout Friendship: Linking Hands Around the
World" is the theme of this year's
Girl Scouting Thinking Day to be
held at Eastern High School on Saturday from 4:30 to 7:30p.m.
In preparing for Thinking DI\Y·
.each girl scout troop in Meigs
County chooses a country to study.
During the event the troops display
a booth featuring items common to
that country or culture. Countries
.chosen by the troops must belong
to the World Association of Girl
Guides and Girl Scouts.
• As well as the p8rade or nations
and special music throughout the
day's evenlS, this year's program
.will feature a panel discussion in
Which the girl SCOUIS can ask quest.ions' pertaining to war. This has
been' added because of the Gulf

War situation as well as to make
the giri scoulS aware of the suffering of the people involved with the
war.
The panel wiD consist of representatives from World War II, the
Korean Conflict, .the Vielfll1m War
and possiblr some area ministers.
In addiuon to the panel discussion, a red, white and blue chain,
symbolizing the linking or the
nations of the world, will be situated around the gymnasium, and any
girl scout may include on the chain
the name or someone they .know
involved with Operatiop' Desert
Stonn.
Thinlcing Day is an annual event
for the girl scouts and their families. Troops from all across the
county will.participate in the activities.

~Blasting scheduled next week

continued
• According to Judge Crow , the
plea bargain agreement was very
lenient, and .Hanis could have been
charged with Qther crimes in addition to obstniCting justice.
Prosecutor Story, at least in part,
disagrees.
.
·
"I feel that the plea bargain was
completely appropriate and fair;
Story said late Tuesday. "What
people need to remember is that' if
the body was hidden to such an
extent that we may very well have
not ~ve r~und i~ to date without
Hanis BSSistance;
Sto!l' explained that "dozens oC
indfvld~ and two 'State l!*trollir&gt;
'craft" liad been unsuccessfully
scouring the area for the victim's
body a~ the. time Harris came forw~ With h1s conf~1~.
•
What Mr. Harris did was obVI~usly cri111~al," S.tory. c~ntinued,
but he realized h1s cnm1nal conduct and was forthcoming in his
own culpability (i.e. J1;1il9 wi~in
less than one day of the mcident
Judge Crow contends that he.
was not fully aware of aU t1!e facts
surrowtdin~ the case at the bme the
plea bargam agreement was presented.

Crow states in his enuy denying

the shock probation that polygraph

test results indicale that Harris was
not as forthc~ming in his state-

Mayor ~offman urges local residents to
provide support for retaining mine jobs
Middleport Mayor Fred
Hoffman today aslced for the assistance of all residents of the area in
letting state officials and AEP lmow
that" area residents are d~ply concerned about the possibility of the
closingoftheminesofSouthernOhio
Coal Co.
· The mayor stated that in Middleponalone, there are 31 employees or
SOCCO with an annual p&amp;)'!OII of
$1.1 million and that area-w1de over
$81 miD ion in salaries is paid to individuals who work for the company.
Over $1.4 million is spent with vendors in Meigs county alone. The loss
of this huge payroll in our area would
certainly have a disastrous effect on
many businesses in our community
and Meigs County. .
Hoffman stated that one way to
let officials know your feelings is by
writing letters. The three areas where
contact would be most effective are
the PUCO, the Governor, and the
president or AEP. The mayor urged
all residents to take the lime to write
a short letter to each of the following
people:
Ms. Jolyn Butler, Chairperson
Public Utilities Commission
180 E. Broad SL
Columbus, Ohio 432660573

Vaughan's Cardinal SuperMarket
These letters only need to be signed
and mailed.
. Petitions urging that these mines
be kept open and iii production are
also available for signing at the same
locations. The mayor llrged all residents to sign one of these petitions
which states:
"We, the undersigned, as residents of Meigs Coumy and th~ surrounding areas, urge state and local
officials and the American Eleclric
Power Co. to take whatever steps are
necesssry to assure that the Meigs
Mines are kept in production and that

local coal is used at area power plants.
Since the Southern Ohio Coal Co.
provides an annual payroll of over
$81 million into our area, wefeelit is
vital to the economy of southeastern
Ohio that these 1260 jobs are retained at the Meigs Mines."
Any businesses in the area who
would be interested in having one of
these petitions in their place of business for signatures are asked to contact the mayors office wbere they
wiD be made available for them.
Copies of these petitions wiD be
delivered to the PUCO, the Governor'soffice, and the president of AEP.

Gov. George Voinovich
State House
Columbus, Ohio 47S69

Mr. Richard Disbrow
President and Chief Executive .
lions a- public safety requires.
:has announced blasting dates at its
. Entrances to blasting sites will
Officer
:Meigs Mine No. 2 in Columbia be posted and barricaded and a sigAmerican Electric Power Co.
·Township.
1 Riverside Plaza
' ·
nal or three long blasts will be
: . Blasting may be conducted given a minute before blasting
Columbus, Ohio 43215
:Monday through Saturday from 8 takes place. After detonation, one
If you do not have time to write
·a.m. to 5 p.m. from March 11 long blast from an air hom will siga letter yourself, letters which are
:through April 15. Unscheduled nal the aU clear.
blasts may be conduc.ted only in
The blasting is recessary to con- alreadF-are available at the
Ileplnment,at'"
ep~ergency situations where rain, struct a ventilation shaft site at the .. Mlcldl
Middl
~
Office and ~~
·lightning,
other
atmopc
condimine.
~
,,
. .

:! Southern Ohio Coal Company

...

...

.... '

~

•

:JI'l'

'

~~

ments as both Story and Lentes
allege that be was. Crow also cites
a pr11vious shoplifting conviction
and other _past charges that leave
Harris with what Crow inteqn:elS as
a questionable record. (AccOrding
to Lentes, HarriS was charged with
criminal conduct in the past, but all
cases other than the shoplifting
matter were promptly dismissed.)
Crow then liSted, by number, the
criteria set forth in the Ohio Criminal Code as it relates to shock probation, citing Harris in violation of
esch guideline.
Harris wiD be nxonveyed from
Lbj! Meigs County J!lll, where he
lliis"•bcen housed d.uring the pendency of the motion, to Ross Correctional Facility to continue his
sentence.
Riggs pled guilty to aggravated
vehicular homicide, tampering with
evidence and gross abuse of a
corpse -in late 1990, and w&amp;S senlellced 10 five to 10 y~ in prison
on the vehicular homicide CII3C, 18
months for tampering with evidence and two years for gross
abuse of a co,rpse . He was also
fmed a total of $12,500 on the three
charges.
.
._.
According to Lentes, Harris
does not have the right of appeal,
as ·are the lriaJ court has complete
jurisdiction over shock probation
matterS.

bEra

· TUNING UP - ODe ot two Grut Medical
Cealer (Colamllus) Llteftl1bl
was
parked Ia 1 ~at tile Gallla·
RIJioul
Airport MoD y for ro1ll1t
teae•ce.
Randy Felger, olumb111, (pldD~), aloDi with
.~

'f!f .

The mayor stated that the best
way to get serious attention to this
concern would be to swamp these
offic_ials with an avalanche of mail
and petitions and urged the cooperation and support of all Meigs COunty
residents i!l malting the problems of
southeastern Ohio become a primary
concern of state officials.
The mayor stated that the time to
get this attention was now before any
binding decisions are made which
would be disastrous to the economy
of southeastern Ohio.
Hoffman also tJOinted out that,
Contlnlled OD
14

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