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                  <text>Peal 14-The o.tly Sentinel

Pomeroy-MiddlepOrt, Ohio

Meigs EMS answers 3 calls
"Ibm) i:alls .for assistance were

Pooler, who was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital. At 12:59 p.m.
Syrac11Se squad went to John
Street. Sarah McCarty was transpaned to Veterans. At 1:15 p.m.,
Middlepon squad went to Rutlimd
Street for Gertrude Greenley. She
was taken to Veterans.

ana~ by

·

units of Meigs County
Emergency Medical Services on
Wednesday.
At 12:16 p.m., Middlepon squad
went to Walnut Street for Betty

Hospital news

Wednesday, FebrUary 20,1891

~ !?C!~.

End ....... L................ J6 318 ., ••.
Limited Inc •.:7. ..................... .23 518
tains regular office hours from
Bowlathoil Kheduled
Multimedialnc.......... :..........721/4
The Mei$s County Soapbox Monday through Friday, 9 a.m. 1D 3
· Rax Restaurant ...................... IS/16 Derby
Assoc1ation will be hosting p.m.
Robbins&amp;Myen .................. .23 1/2 a bowlathon at the Pomeroy BowlAccording to Village Clerk
Shoncy's lnc .................:...... .l4 318 ing Lanes for children aged 6-16. Brenda Morris, Tax Adm~tor
Star Bank ............................. .20 1/4
earlier
is not required. There Susan Sandy also
Wendy lnt'l. ....;............................ 8 Experience
or
later
appointments
w
neceswill be adult coaches to get particiWonhington lnd ...................23 1/4 pants started . .Registration will sary. Sandy can be reached 11992.
begin at Middlepon Village Hall 7090.
(inside police station) on Saturday,
themayorthalthenewZimmerplant March 2 from 10 a.m. to 11:30 a.m.
near Cincinnati installed Krubbers in iui proceeds will go toward the
order that they would be able to bum suppon of the Meigs County SoapAn .action for dissolution of
Ohio coal. If it could be done in that box Derby. There will be no regismarriage
has been filed in Meigs
area. it would appear thai state offi- tration fee.
County
Common
Pleas Court by E.
cinls ·cOuld lise their influence .to
Lynn
Shuler
and
George Michael
Tax ofr~ee open
assure that Ohio cOOl is used at the
Shuler,'both
of
Middleport.
.
The Pomeroy Tax Of~ce mainGavin Plant if they so desire.

Am Ele Power .................·.....

Ashland Oil .... ,.......,........... 29 7/8
AT&amp;T ................~ ..........,.............34
Bob Evans ............................ 17 1/4
Channing Shop ..................... l3 1/2
Ciry Holding ............................... 15
Federal Mogul ...................... l5 3/4
Goodyear T&amp;R ................... ,.l9 3/4
Key Centurion ............................11

using AEP'sown statistics, the use of
i()w sulfur coal would still leave the
Gavin Plant with emissions of about
70,000 tons per year which is very
close to their Phase 2limit of75,000
tons rx;r year. With .the use of Meigs
coal and scrubbers, the emissions

Gleenley. Middlepon.
MONDAY DISCHARGES Ralph 0Qrl!, Frances Foster, and
Belle Dmlap.
. ·

would be 25,000 tons per year which
would be well within any regulations
in the foreseeable future. Much more
low sulfur coal Would also be used
since the BTU of this coal is much
lower than coal from the )'deigsmines,
In addition it was pointed out by

Ohio Lottery

Copies of troop

Pick 3:698
Pick 4:0525
Cards : 3-H; S-C;

tab available
· In tonight's edition ofThe Daily
Sentinel there is a special supplement saluting the troops serving
with Opention Desert Storm in the
Gulf War. Additional copies
tabloid are available at the Sentinel
office, Ill Court SL, Pomeroy.

arranr.:

~llJ'Or... __~----~C~o~n~tin~u~ed~ho~m~p~q~e~l~----------------~----------

Veterus Memorial Hospital
MONDAY ADMISSIONS Jolin Call, Long Bottom and Margaret Elias, Racine, Gertrude

Insert

Announcements

Dissolution tiled

A-D; 6-S
Super lotto: 1, 16,

23,31,39,44

Kicker: 571971

e

•

Section•.

28 PIQH 21 centt
A llulll....... Ina. Newtpepor

3

'

Pomeroy-Middleport, OhiO, Thursday, February 21, 1991

Saddam rejects peace offer;to fight on

l.

· sites and anti-aircraft posiiipns in
By LEE STOKES
CAIRO, Egypt (UPI) ·- Iraqi ·increased cross-border attacks, U.S.
President Saddam Hussein vowed military sources in Washington and
Thursday to continue the suuggle Riyadh said..
An official at the U.S. Central
against U.S.-led coalition forces,
Command
in Riyadh said the helirejecting a Soviet peace initiative
copters
on
"cross-border aerial
~ 11CCusing Arab and allied leadmissions engqed
reconnaissance
ers of wanting to strip the Iraqi
and
destroyed
enemy
radars and
nation.
·
AAA
(anti-aircraft)
systems"
The Iraqi leader said the allied
Wednesday
night.
I~ wanted Bqhdad to sunenIt said U.S. and allied jets also
der "but of course they will be disbombed command centers of the
appbinled."
· Saddam said the allies have not elite Republican Guard, airl)elds .
felt the full f~e of the Iraqi army and Iraqi front-line troops during
I!Dd predicted victory and martyr• the night
. Discussing the helicopter
doln for his nation.
On the war front, U.S. attack assault, a senior Pentagon official
helicopters destroyed Iraqi radar in Washington who requested

Support ·
Our Troops
AD$&amp; I

I 11111 ..aui:Y-hch of t h - MlWII'tiaea itema I&amp;
required ID be r-.clly w-.bell for .... In ..en Kroget
eac.p1 • ~k:..., noted in th'- ~. If .,. do run
out af .., ~ it-.n. we wil oft• you your cholc• of •

Overseas

l

$..,..

con..,, ' item, When ave-..... f'lflec:tina the ..,.,.
....,.._ or • riMncn.ck which wil emtlte you to purct\Me
the......_ ' ad ilern 11
..Jven-.. pric:• wkhln 30 dllyl,.
~ o.- vendor eoupon wiM be ac~ed per ihwn
pure"
J,

t._

0

CONfUOHT 1181 • THE KFIOGEil CO. ITEMS AND
.-..teES GOOD SUNDAY, FEI. 17, THROUGH SATUA·
DAY, FEB. 23, 1-1 . IN 'OMDIO., 'TPf'l

••

•

Vol. 41, No. 213
Copyrighted 1H1

'

'·

•

••

&lt;

Low tonight in mid-30s.
Friday, partly cloudy. High
temperature near 50
degrees.

WI AESIA\11! THE AIGHT TO LIMIT QUA114TITIES. NONE
SOLO TO DEALEAS.

·

anonymity·deScribed Operations as
"vety active in the air, quiet on the
ground."
The official said there was "no
(direct) grQund conlaet" overnight ,
but cross-border rcconnaisance;
continued He said land foo:es were
relatively quiet "waitin' to see
what comes out of all this ' diplomatic activity.
A senior military source in
Riyadh said allied intelligence has
reported anti-government unrest in
several Iraqi towns, and at least one
had to be suppressed with fqrce.
· "What we don't 'know ... is
whether the demonstrations were
against the local Baath parry leader,
against Sliddam or wbellier they

were just hungry. It could have
been any one of those or all three
or just disgruntlement With the war
in genentl," said the source, who
requested anonymity. Baath is the
pany of Saddarn.
Baghdad Radio said, "The
ground war with the aggressors has
6ecome imminent," and said it was
prepared for a ground offensive
and "impatient for the duel with
the infidel."
"The determination and
strength of the Iraqi army has not
been weakene~." the broadcast
said. "The Iraqi army is determined more than ever now to con-· ,
front the armies of the infidels on
the battlefield."

The broad\'ast alSo said allied jet
fighters continued their round- theclock air attacks.' carrying out 328
strikes during the past 24 hours.
The commumque said 28 of
these air attacks were directed
qainst, "heavily populated areas
and bridges," while the other 300
attacks were carried out against
military llWgetS throughout Iraq and
Kuwait
·
"Our ground and air defense
batteries managed to shoot down
four enemy planes, including one
A-1 0 jet fighter," the communique
said. "Our courageous troops fired
il series of tactical missiles against
the hostile troop concentations
inside Saudi territory, inflicting

.heavy casualties."
On Wednesday, U. S ~ troops
went into enemy territory and
picked lip between 450 and 500
Iraqis who had SU!Tendered during
one of at least five stirniishes
between coalition and enemy
forces, Marine Corps Brig. Gen.
Richard I. Neal told a Riyadh briefing.
The enemy troops gave up after
U.S. attack helicopters destroyed
between 13 and 15 Iraqi bunkers in
an area that Neal described only as
being in enemy territory. He
declined event to say whether it
was in Iraq or occupied Kuwait

Communication problems
prompt' company to run ad
B MEUNDA POWERS

· Y OVP News Stan
·
·I
·
·
Lac k 0 f c ~ar commu.mcauon
betwee~ Arnef!can Electrtc Power

·,

."

·•

~~_:_......=....:.:. ·"'.:..-"
01

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And More ...
C•lifornia Iceberg lltldl A S~r:ldale 2%
Head ·Lettuce . u,:_EaP o at Milk
Each

.. ,

,•

Fl.re
de.S.t r .o. ys
. hom
'-·e

With Low Prices.

.. J

~

and . mmers m Me1gs County
promp_led the ~ompany to run an
adverusement m ~ea newspapers
lltursday.

ll.lltOGIR

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S299 .
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Pe~si

or
Cola

Fryers...................
lb.
.
GRADE A ROCKINGHAM CUT..UP FRYERS ••• LB. &amp;IC

ffi

8

4-kz.

,

LllllT 1

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IDF

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Plus ..
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Beg

ua wm cau..
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=::.,...,..T,~,:.

L-------------Save Even. More With The Buy One-Get One Free
Items Below!

•

IN THE DELl-PASTRY SHOPPE

BUY
ONE
1-LB. PKG. OSCAR MAYER

BUY ONE
1-LB. PKG. MELLWOOD

LIGHT dEEF FRANKS OR

Fischer's
Sliced Bacon

Oscar Mayer
Beef Franks

GET ONE

GE'r .ONE

BUY
ONE
12·0Z. FRENCH, BLUEBERRY
OR CHEESE

Fresh Made
Crumb Cakes

GET ONE

BUY ONE

BUYPAIRONE

One Serving
"': Vegetables
GET ONE

No Nonsense
Hosiery
GET ONE

FROZEN 2.5--6. 75-0Z. BOX GREEN
GIANT ASSORTED VARIETIES

~

•

.... r'

~t.rt.:~~~soR
8ol1an'l

BUY ONE
GET ONE

Flolltder
Fll.ll .. • 10-oz • FREE•f

.L P•r•

.

'

!'limPI &amp;.I-OZ. MINCED FISH

~·

ITlCICS OR IIIEADED

;.

BUY ONE r·
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.....

B las ~
ug . ~
Com

BUY ONE
GET ONE

32·0Z. PKG. IU"I-..rT- fMII

Kroger ~

BUY oNE
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Bilek ~
filii
Papper.. ~: FREE!
Pallwl ..""'"'
__ FR.EE.' . Snacks.
~: FREE!
KROGER
____
I'ISTACHIOS ,..t
f.OZ. I'ICG.
KROGER CHILl I'OWDI!II ..OZ. CTNR.

----.-t

IU"I-..J- fMII
REGULAR OR LOW SALT

'

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) · Gov. George Voinovich has selected Cleveland lawyer Craig Glazer
to become chairman of the Public
Utilities Commission of Ohio.
· Glazer, 35, who served as
Cleveland's chief utility counsel
wben Voinovich was mayor of the
laltefront ciry, will replace Jolynn
Barry Butler as PUCO chairman in
April.
Voinovich picked Glazer, an
inde~ndent, from a list of four
candidates submilted by the PUCO
nominating council. His appointment must be confirmed by the
Ohio Senate.
The other fmBlists were Donna
fope, a former slate representative

BUY ONE
GET ONE

FREE!

M-...r-11111
FROZEN FREEZER PLEEZER

Zips ~ GET .ONE Orange~ BUY ONE
Craclcars ~FREE! Creme ~ GET ONE
SCOTT'S TOUCH OF SCENT TOO
2·0Z. PKG.-M _ _ , . - ,_1
Pops ..... ~: FREE!.
I

• 4

•

•

Voinovich names Cleveland
lawyer new PUCO chairman

KROGER TOPPIN MAGIC PoTATO
TOPPERS I.OZ. CTNR,

~ BUY ONE

'

Bu.tler to remam on commasaon

"IN THE DAIRY CASE" BUmRMILK,
HOMEBTYLE, BUTTER FLAVOR
OR KROGER

Kroger

.

Ravenswood Aluminum Cor- been sold tluougb the remainder if tenth ofthe floor space.
poration (RAC) completed the sue- 1991. This additional pro&lt;!uction
The new computer t?Ositi~ns
cessful restart of a third potline at increases RAC's ' capac1ty by 50 RAC for plamed growth m mamits reduction plant in Ravenswood, percent, the company claims, cna- frame computer processing, comaccording to a company SlatemenL
bling it to better meet the .demands puter integrated manufacturing and
The restart was accomplished on · of its custbmers.
,
networkiQg with the company's
schedule with no significant inRAC management praised the · customer base. It runs a network of
. juries. The last pot was loaded on excellent teamwork and coopera- 350 on-line tenninals and 200
Feb. 9. The ·tine hns 157 pots in lion shown by all hourly and printers at the plant site and at more
operation, the statement said, and salaried workers in accomplishing than 20 outside locations. .
the first new metal was tapped from this major project.
· The company said the new rnait on January 31. Of 23 pots that
The company also reponed the chine is less expensive, easier to
were ten years old, 11 either failed, installation of a new IBM ES/9000 maintain and more trouble free than
were removed or were not restar· model 320 Computer, the first of its the computer it replaced. The new
ted.
.
kind in West Vltginia. The new rna- technology is litler ready and will
The company staled the potline chine, which uses the latest avail- . suppon plans for a plant-wide fiber
will be running at capacity within able technology, operates in RAC's communications network. Its
one month, 11 which urne it will be new Data Center, which opened in efficiency is expecled to produce
producing 250,000 pounds of OcL 1990. It is 57 percent more substantial cost savings in the next
primary alun\inum r day. All the powerful than the computer it several years.
metal from this potline already has replaced and ralces up to JUSt one,

IDENTICAL PAIR

Gatorade~Buv ONE SugarTwin • BUY ONE KroP.er $ B U Y ONE Taxa
SweatGET ONE
Bacn
GETONE
Light
.GET ONE
100.Ct. FREE'
...... Pkg. ·
•
Buds ..... 3c~~ FREE! Style 1o.ct.
Bevaragastl~FREE! ener
KROGER CHOCOV.TE DRINK MIX
Biscuits ¥~~KROGER STEAK SAUCE IO.OZ. BTL.
MILD OR HOT KROGER TACO SAUCE
II-OZ. JAR ... IU"I ..... - IIIII
.

.

be _the low~st cost ahe~tive for
Ob1o Power s customers, the letter
says.
The letter seems to agree with
Maloney's previous statements that
installation of scrubbers may failiO
. keep the Meigs mines open. In a
Feb. 12 United Press Inlemational
story, Maloney said that the cost of
coal from the mine may be 100 high
!0 make it's continued use economteal.
"That's basically the problem.
We have 1D mine two tuns of coal
.,and roc1c to get one ton of coal. We
are wl!ring ~me, money and cost
into it," he Said in the ~tory.
The adv~nisement also states
!"at problems with affiliated min-·
mg costs and the Public Utilities
C:ommission of Ohio has ~ade
etther opuon a costly undenating.
"... Even if there was suppon and
assumed cost recovery for the constr:u~tion of K.rubbcrs, the Meigs.
mmmg operatton faces the same
uncenainties it has faced for some ·
time,'_' the letter says. "Our affiliat.ed mmmg costs have been persistently and vigorously attacked by
various· parties in Ohio Power's
annual fuel costs proceedings
before (PUCO)."
·
Despite AEP defending the its
delivered costs of coal to PUCO;
the company was forced to put a
three-year ceiling on its deliveries
of coal, resulting in $34 million ill
unrecovered costs last year, the letter said.
Government and business lead·
ers from a fivc-counly region met
Feb. 12 to discuss the possible ceonomic ramifications of a mine ciaContinued on pap 6

p
. e

FREE! FREE! FREE! FREE! FREE!
FROZEN GORTON'S FISH MARKET

q

Ravenswood plant completes
successful start of third potline

NONRETURNABLE BOTTLE,
CAFFEINE FREE DIET PEPSI,
CAFFEINE FREE PEPSI,

12-Pek 12-oz.

firefighters hom tbe Pomeroy and Middleport
Fire Deparhilents arrived. Flrefiahters were on
· the scene approximately two and a half hours •
(Seotinel photo by David Harris)

HOME DESTROYED - This home at 114
Condor Street in Pomeroy, owned by R11nnle
Eakins, was destroyed by rrre shortly after' mi!l·
niabt. The structure was runy involv~d wben

'rhe )lome of Ronnie Eakins, .
114 Condor St. in Pomeroy, was
destroyed by fire shortly after midnight, according to Pomeroy Fire
Chief Danny Zirkle.
Zirkle reported that the department received a call at 12:16 a.m.
Thursday morning and when firefighters arrived on the scene the
structure was fully involved.
The cause of the fire is unknown
at this time, reports Zirkle, an\1 Ike
structure was said to be "a total
loss." Eakins had no insurance.
• ·In addition to destroying the
Eakins' home, the fire also damaged an unoccupied structure located next to it.
The POmeroy Fire Department
responded to the scene with 25 fire.
fighters, three trucks and an cmergmcy vehicle. The Middlepon Fire
Deparunent assisted with four firefighters and one truck. There were
no injuries ~ the fli'C dcpanmcnts
were on the scene until 2:31 a.m.

· The advertisement~ in the form
of a two-page letter wntte~ by G_eraid P. Maloney; execuuve vtce
president of AEP. The ad states
that the same letter had been sent to
Southern Ohio COal employees at
the Meigs mines last week "in an
effort to communicate openly and
fully."
The letter is another portion of
the company's attempt to mate a
decision on how best to comply
with the Clean Air Act Amendmellts of 1990. AEP aMounced on
Jan: 28 that preliminary studies
indicaled.tllat Compliance with the
recently-ratified Act at Ohio
Power's James M. Gavin plant in
Gallia County could mean switching tu coal mined outside of Meigs
County, putting miners at Meigs
Mines 2 and 31 out of work by
1994.
The coal from the mines his a
high sulfur content, .a majo~ contributor to the.acid ram and au pollution problem that the Clean Air
Act is attempting to remedy.
An alternative to the fuel
switching option is the building of
coal scrubbers at Gavin. However,
such installation would cost AEP
an estimated $800 million, a cost
that would ultimately' be passed
onto t.he power company's cus,
tomers.
According to the letter, AEP has
auempted to study all options as to
what action would be the best for
the company.
''The _P.reliminary analysis ;
which ls admittedly very rough and
which required a large number of
assumptions and estimates, indicates that fuel switching appears to

'.

•·

who has been director of the U.S. scnled the city in ali•utility rate,
Mint since 1981: Raymond Lore!· environmental and antiuust cases!
.
lo, director of public utilities and before the PUCO.
Glazer actually will replace
aviation for the city of Columbus;
arid Alan Schriber, a radio station Lenwor\11 Smith Jr. when Smith's
owner and educaiOr who senoed on conimission term expires April10.
The ~vernor, bY law, must pick a
the PUCO from 1983 10 1989.
.· "We're pleased .witb the candidale from die lisliiCOIIImend•
appoinbllenl,' said William Sprat- ed by the nomillllinJ conncil, but
Icy, Ohio consumers' counsel. be is empowered 10 n~e any or
Glazer is known to the consumer the five commissioners u chairCHURCH HONORS AND REMEMBERS •
•
agencr fpr his work in Cleveland Jl1811.
Pomeroy United Metllodllt Clnmb Lly Leader
and • will be a very fair chair- · ·Butler, a Democrat and former
Frank Vanaban prnents a c:bec:k 10 tbe Melp
state legislator from ~lis who
man," Spratley said.
County COUDCD 011 A(IIDIID llOIIor ol two IDeDI•
Glazer is an associate with the was named PUCO chatrman by
ben and Ill memory .Clf tbe late Marloa EbenCleveland law firm of Hahn Loeser former Gov. Richard Celesle, will . bae'- ne &amp;1ft ~ t11e Selllor C•eer billion Mrs.
and Parks. He served as in-house remain on the commission. Her · Dorothy DowDle, lleeOIId from left, tor loD&amp; Mr•
counsel for the Cleveland Depan· term ends in 1994.
vice u Administrative Counc:ll Secretary Of tbe
mcnt of Public Utilities and mm&gt;&lt;

.,.

•,

•

•
c:lllll'd, _. 0.11 It~=~
or MrYice 10 tbe SeDlar ~
• ..._,.. ad

for many years work u Snclay Sc:lilool Sec:re.
llry aDd Treuarer. Ebenllaeb- Khe at tile
Sealor Ceater ud .. ...time Red
tabla.
teer lllld taltlltul cbrci mllllber. A_,... tile :
c:beck on bellatr ol tbe eeater are C!lldt Olherl,
Board of Trustees President, and Eleaaor
TbomM, Direc:IGI'.
•
I
4·
•••

c,_

•

�Crooksville ·wrecks North Gallia 89-61 .

An
unfed
force
is
a
p~~.c~~~~n!!~~~~-_.,..
....
-~·:;:-toe;;~.
~
·~ri~ am'~:.1:~~'m! ~ ~'!:t ~ &amp;~
*
0111

. pOaibilily dill die .,.. • die o.;r
woald be brouptto • .., ad
Jbtt farth« biOodiiiMd -w M
!JI*CIIL lui,.• wta
po,_ ~outofla&amp;M"Iblt
i6iiial1y railed hopei for • Ktqll·
alJie 10 the allied c:oalilioo.
Now that we are back to lbe
unpalatlble reality of coalinllflll
conflicl, I would liU Ill . . . 1 few
obler¥ltionl a11out bow diiJ _. il

Od. Sa 77

lriella die

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. - . . llllillctr and •u•la to 10 _ . • IIi u.de S. _, 1111
,die s.. lflall.
1
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So wllil8 wt ill Mai1:a appw
lll'ecfl of 1
1 ~ anif... m- ~JIJ Cor· W-will.;..,
dMI, _. willillllll 1M_. Pili1 11e~oa 1111
otdlullied WJ dlt diDe iuiiBIOJIIl die .Jab
c:o.liliOII diu It II N oa 1H doae, 0111 CPT readil~
,.·: e ofdle.4 "-JIIbllc.
dlt
• • • expeai-

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or BIJPl ..s Pi ' w1 in thf1 reaard, bat wbatever the
Oal Ill n.a,, wto -.By ~ calC, the measaae that comes
Jllll llllir Joblll10t dlllr lhw oa duoufb is dill we a~e ~ _..
dlo U.. liJ filly illlpi!Cii1i11 die rion indifl'eaeut 10 the mii~IUDill
111117 c1 ilh•
• of i• uatlnqiuaclllUP 11 lbe
Ae!OIIeiflelorplaYilatooor caiOic:aofwar.
.
delrilBeat in 1M c:Oadac:t of tbiJ
Tatina tbese concer~s mto
- . il die civi1i10 "• IF beinl account, oae can apprec•~te the
diJplayecl on the niptly aews. pre11area that are mo!'nungfl~n
0• d-do!l'tmow fouarethe Oeorae Bash to get thil c~n •ct •
filii !IXtent of the damqe beial over quietly. AI lbe lime, I
done, orforlhll-"hcdlrrthO
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orange
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Midll1

wbetba like Hinlbito, be will real· · in mach Ill the
wor7d. ·
ize the miabt or bia opponent'•
ID Norda Altlca Mid .lllroulbDut

a ""I
vidad.....,
,_.after

rC:::'..... , _
Why ut our 110111111 r - to
overrun their derCIIIIel w7Ma our
Air Force~ do die job._ dliciently by sappia&amp; !MU' fipling
fon:esinawarof•iiicaa'
By denying them die food to
keep their fon:et fed and. fit, we
will be denyiag lbem lbe nerewithalliO figbt lad to c:arry on die
.....

wrtl.

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may be resolved
·
.
·
.
. v·
· . Robert Walters

quickly. or die
IJIIJlk:'a liW ., ·•' , ·
for Ibis coatlicl will liel, die AlalriCMT po;flt will be
WASHINGTON (NI!A) • A82'l ·a leiiJil of their Cll.ik*DO to Apnl
J take 111'0111 exceptioa widl dial
· ihc.
·
·
. Bl• Mid AlaK W1Ji1e hliltli· Oraaae. an oily defoliant l.ced
pOint of view in that I feel w
opea c:oaU•pl for lbe
cldela..l la die 19601 _. 19'101 widl can:inopllic: c!jcwjn
America~~ poople fully llllira i7lt piOf-.. aldla 0 •• Col: •
by dlis
ay•11emt.y ,_,. to
Dioxin ... bec:o Ilion 111 caue
"size IIICI scope or the II&amp; r'r 1 lioa ud by 1111 _ . , ladltfer- dca1rOy
life cJar7aa dla- in cancer and birth det'etll in,animala
They realize lhat .we ue detli111 10 die pl&amp;llt of 1111 owe pcoSod 11 Alil-llut they ,.....uy duriaa laboratory exJI!Irimenu.
with a very lizable, well liiDed · pie. Sw'd iJU.ia ... exb.lNd t.... bela loalbjliiEIL
MOieOYer, there 11 ev1~ that ·
"and well duC.in f01te, 'UN by a to tile world hialofuaollni-like
·Aprl.ar.. 11 JliD ,ay much the .compaaies productng AJent·
most unpredictable ud UJoaic:a1 iilllllalitv.
remcm~'however. by lbon- Orlllse !mew of ill adverae bealtb
man, a man c:llllll:lerUel by lllili·
Ria prloc:cu.JIItioa wilb his · Plldl of 1100p1 wbo ta.pt in del effecU • arty • die 19501.
,lilY briefcn • one
iTiiDI widl ·
_. · his
'I*' vision war Indeed, 4 rem•ns die object
Nevertheless, the Defense .
.. mental Slate
or I lllld
Ne~ui:bilaezzar or biaer
20 ., . . . , . It Depanmeni conducted an ambi'dog.
.inca• u, i*JI 1 1 ~lib CIOIITIIl war ftnt eaapkr)ld to d toy die tious aerial spraying program in
You can~tJXedia bil Dell move. Ill dloar MIDad 111m, bM ,.._.. a c1enae fol,... Mid junpelblt pi!)- Soutbeall AJia liom 1961 to 1971
You can't prldlc:t wllclber ll"e'U pic:tare to tile worl• ol 1 •••
p1M:e1 for the eaaemy that c:Oillilllled 20 million pllons
stand defilaliO die ard lib Geoqe HYOid of p,riaeiple, of a •an and 10
ill use - ball· of it IIIII other beatlicldal.
Custer, Mlelber he'll let bil coun- J
~otllll w0dit'1 «
ed.
Amona lhoae who vigorously
iiiipp01t

ett and Stout from starting up
Jy G. SPENCER OSBORNE
lor.
ovP Staff Writer
Taylor, an ex.- crou country 11111· North's fast-break aaact.
"Because we couldn't run wih
North Gallia's 89-61 loss 10 ner who rUled the floor. not to menlhem,ltold
these guys our key was
Crooksville in the fint jllme of tion the pl!int, with 38 poinu and
the
half
court
game." said L.cy,
Wednesday night's Division III 15 rebounds, scored 22 poiniB in
ii'OOpS
boosted
their record
whose
sectional trirleheader at Athens the second half in spite of riding
·
t
o
8·
13
aruf
Will
take
on
A!CliBIIder
High School s McAfee Gymnasi- · the pine for al).out live minutes in
on
Friday
for
the
upper-bracket
tium can be reduced 10 three fac10n: the third quarter. And if tbat
tie.
"Cqntrol.ling
Tackett
put
them
the scoring of Ceramic posli1UII Ja- weren •t enough to keep the game
son Taylor, the marksmanship of out of the Pirates' reach, Fusner's (the Pirates) in ·a situauon ih!'Y
teammate Eric Fusner and the of- shooting - inside Mid outside - net- weren't used io and that created
' •
fensive silence of Pirate scoring ted 30 poinrs, foar more than senior problems."
What that meant Willi that.Tack·
guard Brian Stout, North's lone
professor Olris Tackeu.
.
ett, who finished the regular season
"We couldn't stop them inside, double-figure scorer.
and we never did loosen up and get
The longest periolf of. time . with a 23.4 .pts./game average,
into the flow," said North Gallia North stayed on top came m the scored a mere six points - the fiist
skipper Ron Twyman, who wit· first quarter, stretching from the time this season any. ream has held
nessed two different games - the time Stout s10le the ball from Fus- him to single digiiS. Twenty-nine
. fust half and me second half.
ner and scored .on a layup to give games had come and gone between
The fust half was more or less the sailors a 7-6 lead w1th 4:35 left a mid-January road contest against
an exhibition of "I score, you to the time. taylor grabbed a pass .. Rock Hill last yell (be scored eight
score," as shown by the 13 lead ex- ftom senior forward 1oe Allen and in the Buc:s' SS-52 loss) and this
changes and three ties in !bat time scored on a layup to give the Ce- encounter with Crooksville before
frame. But in spite of being down ramics a 12-11 lead with J:l6left. a quintet found a way .to captain
.
,
by only two a1 halftime, there were But the facl thai the Ceramics set him. .
The Ceramics expanded their
s1gns of lrouble for the Pirates, as up their balfcourt offense and
Shane Smith, Jlfortb's 6-3, 180, slowed the game down to their lead 10 10 by the end of the third
pound senior center, scored all of needs indiciited the patience that quartel primarily on the stteagth of
his
in that half and had head coach Tim Lacy. said was nec- a 13-pomt effort by Fusner, but 4.his
full on both ends of the essary 19 ~ept thoroughbreds T~~tk- for-8 foul shooting by the Pirates in
that frame and ih!' exit of. Pirate
forward Darin Smith following an
re-injury of his right knee m a
scramble in the paint also served to
keep the Pirates out or serious contention. That the Gallians weren't
able 10 ~ut the lead closer tban six
the rest of the way after Tactett's
recepiion of an inbounds pass and
tbe resulting layup ivith 3:31 left in
. acl three (his last prep field goal)
demonstrates this fact.
In the games d!at followed; Belpre thumped Oak Hill 81 • 59 to
send Doug Hale's crew home with
a 7-14 record, and Federal Hocking
beat Nelsonville-York 68:58. In

thiJ coanay - t to fiabt in iet·
nam. 1n 1988, Elmo R. Zumwalt m
died of a lll'C form of cancer .his
faiber now beliewl - Cllll"'4 by
txposwetoAptOIMip.
Other Vjemem Wlll!l'llll believe
thll the skin--. fi!er dylfunc·
lion, ner.cu l)lfllll diJordcn and
other effJictlcm ~have c:oniiiCteel • weD• the birth dcfecll tbat
p1ape tbeir cldJchn .., linted to
Agent Oruae exposUre and thus
qualify • ••ice-coonocled mcdital.cliabilidel·for "bicb they are
eatlded 10 compealllion from the
fedml aovernnent.
In 1984, ma• lftt Qiitii of

the herbicide but, di4 not reqnire
any acknow=ent of harm
caused by the
An even less

ICJIW!IUI fl'lleral

govei!IIIICDl bas beea willina to pey

benefiu to victims or IOf't-tiJSUe
sarcoma and non-Hoi!Pin'• 1ym:
pboma. two rare formj of c:ancer,
and chloracne, a severe lkiil dis-

ease.
Throughout Preli~nt Ronald
Regan's tenllle in office 4arillllbe
1980s. a White Ho- lilt rorce
obs~ted and suppreacd lepti-

the~~~=:~ ~r:!.~=~·;: ~2:::!'~1t::.:.~~: ::e~~i:~~~:e~tb~

devullllinJ medical JIIOblrn ~
afflicted dlean Mid tbeir childreD •

Zumwalt Jr. HiJ 100 was amoni
the 3.1 million men and women

suirs lhat c:ommitted lbemto pay
$180 million to lboiiC exposed to

limit the government's liability 10
Viemam veterans.

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other action, Minford 1moclrcd off
Symmes 'Valley 74-63 in die Rllc:k
Hill sectional to end the season for
Terry Sa~· Nlln!'menat11·9.
North,Oalha; wh1tb ended irs
season ill I 0-10, bid farewell to
Terry Farley, Jeff Ratliff, Shane
. Smith. Stout, Tackett and Brandon
Twyman.
·
Quilrter ~Is
Nortb Oallia - 15 19 14 13s61
Crootsvi11e · 14 22 22 ' 31 ..89
CROQKSVILL.E (89)
Pis.
Player
2s 3s VI'
.' 38
· Jason Taylor 18· 0 2
Eric Posner
11 · 0 8
30
· JoeAllen
5 0 3
13
4
Curt Miller
.I 0 2
Darrin Rambo I 0 . 0
2
2
N. Worthington I 0 0
89
TOTALs
37 0 15
From lbe field· 37-59
From the line • I 5-16
On the boards • ·26 (Taylor 15)
Asslstl· 23 (Fusner 10)
.s... -9
' Turnovers • 17

.

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. NOR'i'H GALLIA (61)
Player
· ls 3s Ff
Pts.
SE•W •
Terry Farley (20) splits
26
Brian Stout
7 3 3
seam
provided
by
Crooksville's
Jason
Taylor (left) and Joe
7
Jeff Ratliff
3 0 I
before sc;oring two or his six points in the lhlrd quarter or
Terry Farley
2 0 2
6 ~::~~:e~~le~nigbt's Division m sectional game at The Plains, as
Shan,e Smith
3 0 0
6 Pirate
Shane Smith looks on at far left; The Ceramics sank c
Ouis Tackett 2 0 2
6 . the _Pirates 89-!11 to advance to Friday's upper-bracket ti!le game
B. Twyman
2 0 2
6 agamst Alexander. (OVP photo by G. Spencer Osborne)
.. •
Darin Smith
2 0 0
4
. 61
TOtals
21 3 10
From lbe field • 24-52
.
H~ness racing
day was "embarrassing to ~ and
E1ght dnvers who raced last Buffalo Raceway." The drivers
From lbe line • 10-17 .
On lbe boards - 19 (Farley &amp; weekend at Buffalo (N.Y;) Race- suspended are Rod Laframboise, ,
Tackett,
4 each)
way have been suspended for five Don Rothfuss, Sam Schillaci, Ron
·
Asslsta. 10 (Ratliff 4)
days because of what track officials Wittenberg,, Gary Pafk, John
called a "suspicious" race. Bruce Mongillo and apprentices Nonnan
Steals· 6
Muon, 11eneral manager of the Anderson and Daryl Webster.
Tunovers-9
track, said the third race last Sarur-

Sports briefs

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TO HOOP· North GaDla guard Brian Stout ~U) drives
to the hoop between Crooksville cagers Jason Nichols (20) and Erk
Fusner for two of his team-high 26 points in the final minutes or
· Wednesday night's.Division III sectional tournament opener at
A,.ens High Scbonl,..wbich...lhe Ceramks won 89-61. (OVP photo
by G, Spencer Osborne)

Feflniary 14, 1991

.... ,_....,

E..... Viol Pl'loldont

Dear Meigs Division

t;mpl~:

0

'

R~dwo~ecn

Durtns the past two - • · 1 have had more contact with the press than in my
entire life. Generally, lhe reporten ~-done •IOOCI job coverinleuch a complex
aubject. However, neww storte.10met11nea leave out lnformallon we think Is
Important. Therefore, I want to be lUre that you hl!ili' d~ from me what I

end season with win;
. enter postseason play Saturday ·

hllftbeen..,tna.

15 from the three-point range) and
~acked by a 17-point, II- conn«lfl¢ on 14 of its 26 tries from
r~bound showing by forward Kerri the free throw line for .53.8 percent.
Kidwell, the Universily of Rio The Redwomen also led the way in
· Grande women's basketball 1eam rebounding, posting 45 to Fmdlay's
ended its regular season on a win- 36. ,,
ning note and heads intO postsea- ' Findlay , which placed three ·
son action after defeating the Uni- players,,in double fi~~~ for the
versity of Findlay Tuesday in Find- game (led by Lorton s 14 points)
' lay:
stepped to the foul line seven times
The Redwomen's $6-44 victory and hit on four occasions for 57.1
over the Lady Oilers brought Rio pen:ent. '·
Gnmde's season record to 22-9, the Box scote:
best finish for a Rio Grande
FINDLAY (44) - Joelle Gotwomen's team ~ince the 1979-80 tfried, 1-2:4; Tammy ·Graham, 6-0Redwomen edmon posted a 20-5 12; Michelle Lorton, 1-0-2;
season . The game ended a four- Tammy -Lorton, 6-2-14; Darla
J~Dle nip for the Rio ladies. start- Baker, 5..().10; Jennia Jenkins, 1-0·
mg with a 79-58 defeat of Malone 2. TOTALS 20-4-44;
on Friday, followed by a 75-54 win
RIO GRANDE (56) • Debbie
· over Lake Erie Saturday. At Fredrick, 0-2-0-6; Kathy Snyder, 1.Biuffton Monday night, the Red- 2-4; Ann Barnitz, 3-1-7; Jenni
women lost the Beavers, 67-63.
Couch, 0-2-3-9; Gena Norris, 0-2Doug Foote's club also finished 3-9; Kerri Kidwell, 7-3-17;
in third place in Disb'ict 22, accord- Stephanie Gudorf, 1-1-3; Marlo
inj! to the power·rating syslem, and Kisder, 0-1'•1. TOTAJ.;S 12-6-14wtll face fourth place Mount St: 56,
~
Joseph Saturday at 2 p.m. in Lyne
Halftime score: Rio Grande 28,
Center for their first encounter in Findlay 14.
~ disb'ict playoffs.
-.:-:::-_..:....._;........:-.At Findlay, Kidwell, a 5-11 . . The Daily Sentinel
sophomore from Hamersville,
Ohio, scored eight points and net·
(~PIUHtl)
ted four rebounds to lead her team· ·
A Dlvioioe ,ollllllllimeolla, IH,
mates to a 14-point halftime lead.
Publ11hed rvery aftemom Monday ,
The Redwomen defense held Findthrough Friday, 111 Court St., Po·
lay's high scoring for the half to
meroy, Ohio, by rhe Oblo Valley PubIIJhlng Company/ Multimedia, lac.,
four points each from Joelle GotPomeroy, Oblo 45769, Ph. 992·21!16. Se·
tfried and Tammy Lorton. From
cond clan PQitaae paid at Pomeroy,
there, the Redwomeri never looked
Ohio.
back, although Findlay, shooting
Member: United Pres• International,
31.7 percent (20-63) from the floor,
Inland Daily~res• AuoctatiOn and the
Ohio Newapaper A.aoelatlon. National
·remained in the game and
Advertlllnr RepreMatatlve, Branham
out.seored the visitors 30-28 for the
Newspaper Sales, 733 Third Awnuo,
remaining half
New York, Now York 1IJ917.
Rio Grande was 39.I percent on
pqn'MASTER:
Sead •lll
-Court
ell .....
its shooting (18-46, including six of
to
The Dolly Sentinel,
St.,

I am painfully aware or the Biixletlee and Wlc:ertalntlel you are fac:ing lbout the
future. While I cannot do much to be helplul, I can at leut try to explain the
altuatlon in thialetter.
·
'

.

.

Ohio Power Company II trapped bl!cw een two powerful forces. One Is the &lt;lean
Air Act Amendmenll oll990, which lm..,..ltrlnlmt demands for reduction of
sulfur dlolllde emllolona in the very nl!ili' tutun. The ~erond Ia our obllgat!Qn as a
public utility to determine and Implement the lowest coat compliance plan'ao
that our cuatomen are not penall:ied by an Imprudent dec:laion on our part. The
preliminary anfllyaill, which ill adm~ very rough and requlnd •larle
number ol-umptionl and eltlina&amp;ee, indlellel that fuel awltA:hlnlappears to
be the 1owe1t c01t alternatlft for Ohio " - ' 1 cuatomen. Whatever Is done, "e
be~ that initial steps must be taken around the middle of this. year In order to
be in compUance on time.
·

,.

We have had to point out that, even If there was support and -umed coet
recovery for the coDilruc:tion of ICJ'IIbben, the Melli mlninl operation faces the
same uncertaintlellt has faced for 1010e tlllle. Our aMIIated mlninl costa have
been penlstently and vl&amp;oroully.atliCicecl byvarioua Jllf'tlel in Ohio Power's
annual flael cOlt P,oceedlnp before the Public Utilities Coinmlaalon ol Ohio. We
have stro!IIIY defended thOle COlli, polntln&amp; out th.t the mine Ia well manqed,
that we hiM! a line work force which has lt.eelllly lmpruwd Ita prudu~ and
that we have had excellent aafety performance. We have -'town th.t lb~
delivered costa of coal, which haw been c:omln&amp; down, Mre reaaollallle and
should be recovered. In aplle of thla, lt WM nee mary for Ohio Power to agree
last year to a three year •cap," or ceWn&amp; on Ita dellwrlee of coaJ·from Ita

to

gg~.

Sports briefs .

SkUng .
Nathalie Bouvier of France, the
downhill silver medalist in last
month's World Championships,
broke both legs in !raining fot Saturday's World 'Cup race at Furano,

I '

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&lt; • ' •• • '

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J8JNU1.

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Tennis
Magnus Gustafsson upset
Andrei Chesilokov 4-6, 6-3, 6-3 to
. advance 10 the quarterfinals of the
$1 millio.n Stuttgart Classic. Also
reaching the quarters was Goran
lvanisevic, who defea.ted Eric Jelen
6-4, 6-4• ... Boris Becker has split
wilh coach, Bob Brett of Australia.
· No reason was given. Niki Pilic,
·Germany's Davis Cull coach, says
Becker has asted h1m 10 be his
coach at major tournaments.

••

----

Uf\S
~weakhatdl·

•

, \'\JfVI..tioodOt''ear

~

5W30
or20W51J
Motor Oil

'

Uml12

11.999
Edelbrock
ManifoldS
Zer8X .
or
Peak

__
-·

1899

soo

4999

...
Anti1re8Z8

Mr.Gaske1
Rear End
covers

-·-

Grant
steering
Wheels

Purolator
011 Filters

:::::r"-

)

.

---

Keneo
Running
aoards

;

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•'

.11700.11763
fH7R. 11781

f

''
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'

Kenco
Tube
GrillS

1

:

Dorman
Steady

Marvel .
MYstef'YOII

.•

The attached letter was sent to Southern ·
Ohio Coal e-mployees at the Meigs mines
last week in an effort to communicate
openly and fully. The·issue of
compliance with the Clean Air Act is
complex and we wanted them - and
you -to have their company's
position·in detail.

•

129
WD4&gt;

279·

castro!
10W30,
10W40,

•

:
:
:

495

3499

ArfOWheBd
Premium .
Starters and
Altemators
~~W-'~
~QOOC)wen e,;d\MQB

Pomel'oy, Oido ~-

!

Wells
starter
Solenoids

.
'•
.'

""'"

649
WellS
Voltage
Regulators

81J118CBIPTION RATER

ayc....., •• ..,... -

one Week ... ,.•.•. ,.. ;....... ,•.•••....,....St •.o

One Month ............ .. ........ ... ........16.10

One Year .......... ....................... 172.110
81NGU:' COPY

PUVII
Dally .... .......... ., .................. . 2~ Cenu

DAYS A WEEK

Sublcrlben not deslrtna to pay the-carrier may remit In advance dirt«' to

QPEN SEVEN""'
MondaythroughSaturdaY
, a·30 a.m. to 7 p.m,
sunday

The D.tUy Sentlhet on a 3, &amp;or 12 m0111h
baala. Credit wDI be fiven carr'er eech

week.

..
··...
.'

. .•

.-..••
·&gt;. ....

Store hours. "and 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.

N~

IUblcrtptton• by matl pie' mltted tn
area• where hOme carrier ~ervlce II

avallable.

GALLIPOLIS

Moii8a...,...,_.
IMideMoipCoiaoiJ
13 Weelu .:..... ........... .... ...... ...... SJ9.24

209 Upper Rtvar Rjad

•
•'

(614) 44&amp;-380

26 Weeki ............,. ..................... S37.96
~2 Weeki ........... ... .................... S14.36

•
•

· a.ioNeMelp~

••.

13 Weeki ..... ...... .................. ..... 1211.10
26 w..u .................................. U0.30
!12 Woello ... .. ...... ................ .. .. ... m.co

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Ohio

•

No.16 St. John's hands No. 5 ~
Syracuse 77-72 Big Eastlo~ . ·:..
'

~Y TOM WITHERS

1.IPI Sporta Wrller
SL JG1111'1 entmid Wednesday
night's showdown apinst No. s
_Syracuse willl a dlecrpat plan: get
off to a good 8l8lt, coocentrale on
shutting down those Orangemen
not named Billy Owens or David
Johnson and; most importantly,
_es..blish itself as one of the B1g
East's frOnt namers.
'
No~.
,
·
Ma it Scaly scored 23 points
and added a ' career-high 16
rebounds to lead the 16th-ranked
Redmen to a 77-72 victory over
Syracuse, tightening
Btg Bast

from among the ~eiders in the

con-

ference beftn eadlhg the slump.

They did so by_.fWlllinf off the
pme's first 15 JlO!nts, w1thstand·
mg a Sym:use comeback, llld executing down the stretch.
"We came out like gangbusters,'.' Carnesecca said. '"We
stwfCd to lose i~ but we were able
to withstand because everybody
contributed.'·
St. John's came .out flying .
Robert Werdann ~ened the game
with a tip-in and Bill)'' Sinjlleton bit
two Iayups. Chucky Sprolmg added
alayup,astealandadunkfora 100 St. John's lead. Singleton tben bit
race.
a free throw, Sealy n8iled a jump
·"This was a must win for us. shot and Jason Buchiman's layup
Things bave been looking real gave the Redmen a 15-0 lead with
bleak," SL John's heid coach Lou. six minutes gone. Symcuse didn't
Camesecca said
know what had hit them.
The Redmen, 18-6 overall and
"We got off 10 as b.t a start as I
9-6 in tho BiB East, had dropped can remember,'' Syracu.se head
four Of their last six gatneS to fall . coach Jim Boeheim wd, 1

the

.

But tbe Orangemen l)a~tled 1 :
back. Tbey trailed 2l·S befote;.
finaUy getting untracked ~ 80\ ~ .
back in it with a lS-2 run, includ~
ing a 12-0 burst capped by John- .
son's fourth three-pointer of the:: .~--fll'St-balfto pull withili 24-20.
· .~
Johnson tied the sc:ore· with a,
basket with 1:53 to go bef!)re_;
Owens gave the Orangemen theii..
first lead at 28-26 by foUowing
David Edwards miss with 1':2!1~
remaining.
. . .
.,;
St. John's retook the lead with
three free throws but Syracuse,.
holding the ball for a final slio(;_
,threw the ball away and Sealy,',
nailed a three nointer at the buzzer ·
to put SL J~fs- up by fotir at half·,;.·
time..
·
"

a.::

·~

: '
·~
''We cut it to four and I f~lt thaf ;
was -like a victory for us, bitt thaf,;
three-pointer
Boeheim saidat the half killeiJ .us,',~.;
,,;
Werdsnn added 11 poin\5 and.;
13 rebounds, lluchan_an had 12,,
points and seven assiSts and Single-,~ ·
I
1
ton
chipped in with 12 points.
gooc!playoffoutbench: •
Symcuse,
23-4 and 9-4, wbiclb .
The IDini were playing without
had
won
six
straight !!allies, w~.;
Deon Thomas, who sprained his .
led
by
Owens'
28 pomts and 25,"
ankle last week and tried to watm
from
Johnson.
'• ' ·
with the
prior Wednes
up
team
to
•
day's gatne. However, lie decided
.
...
:)
to st't out the
and"~" ~-- x
''This win was such an emo-~
~e
""" ,,..• ., •f tionallifl for us,' • Sl1'd l"'n~~-"
'-""'~'- .!.. -rays
....
en
ursdny.
Tile loss
o
1bomas the second leading
scorer
"We beat an outsta!ld.mg .team,, .,--·
'
• 15 7 · t " We knew 0 wens an d. Johnsoq.;·
th n"~'
'th
on e · wu
team WI
· pom . would get thetr
· pomts
· so we JUS~·
pename
average,
didn'ta help.
.
, •~"we'd get the offense going, wantedto·stoptbeothers." .;. ·.
and. then we had some crucial · Elsewher~ in UPI's ~\&gt;P 19.~ .·.
turnovers down the stretch, .. Hen- Wednesda7 mght, No. 2 Ohio s_~.&lt;- son said. "I ibought we ,pl~yed beat IUino1s 73'~. No.3 Arltansah ~ ..
hard. I thought we played good · topped Southern Methodist 79-7Ck ·
defense. Offensively we dido 't play No. 17 Duke beld offco;No. 2~q
well, but what Clse is new? we North Carolina State 72-65 ancl, ·
usually don't we did the&gt;bdsx we Colorado shocked No. 9 K1111sas
could"
79·71.
"

Qhio State tops Illinois 73-64
.

•

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;
KISSES BALL ~ Detroit forward De11nis
Domlalque WilkiDi Ia the first quarter of .·
: · Rodmu (left) kisses the baD after gettill11 up for · · Wtdn'*':~niRht's NBA pme at Auburu Hills,
: a slam duak again 51 Atlanta frontman
Micll.,.w
P.latoas won 97,.89. (UPI)

Cav~liers

*

.

CHAMPAIGN, Ill. (UP!)IUinois lost both its home court
advantage and its first game to
. Ohio State in nine ye1n Wednesday night .
.
.
Treg Lee scored 14 point$ ani?
,_,.._. to _ _, No.
Jamaal BlOwn """"" 13 1,_.
- - 2 Oh1'o S-··
. a 73..,..
.,. B1'g "'en
- theto
'ctory
over
Dlini.'
_ •'
\'l
· The w1'n gave ·the Buc"eres
.. ·
their
first
victory_
in
Champ111gn
9 and
f th
·
SIDce 1 82'
asweepo eseason series. Ohio State won 89-55
on Jan. 19 in Columbus, and no"' is
23-1 overaU and 12-1 in the Big
Ton.
.
''It was frustrating beclluse ~e
th~ught we h,~d ~ c~ance to wmthis ballpne, !Jii'!?'l ~coach
Lou Henson Satd. Anyume you .

beat Kings 118-104:
a

able
to beat at
people.
were be
in
are playing
home,and
yonwe
should
a good pcllibOIIto do that.''
"If we had taken -the lead it
would have given us a big J!&amp;'F.OOIogical advuta~e," lllino1s forward Andy Kaufmann said.. "They
might have felt they had their backs
to the wa11 then with us being at
home, but ilillelld they had the lead

By JEFF SHAIN
"The·thild quarter made big dif: Phoenix topped lhe L.A. Cup""""
"'erence."
, 113•93.
.,__.._,
UPI Sports Wrlkr
Sacramento- bead coach Dick
The Cavaliers scOred 10 str8ight
Pistons 9'7,_Hawks.89 ·
~olll! decided not to hang around
ints
to
start
a
J4.
third'
uarter
At
Auburn H1lls.• M~ch., ~oe
2
10 see his team crash yet again on po
.
'&lt;!
Dumars scored 25 potnts including
the road.
· .
spun that gave them COIIb'OI o~ the . six free throws in the ~ 35 sec1 Brad Daugherty scored 24
game. They folll_lwed that With a onds, to lead the Pistons. Bill
points and pulled. down 11 14·5 spun at the start of the fourth Laimbeer added 19 points and 14 aU the lime.''
rebounds Wednesday night, help- quarter,
rebounds as Delroit won its fourth
Illinois, 18-8 overall and 8-5 in
ing the Cleveland Cavaliers hand
"We got a preny good rhythm game in as
this seathe
Big Ten, pulled within one
Sacramento its 21st straight loss there," Daugherty
said.
'""'e
'--·
,
.
"' ...
..,,. son against the wks. tlanta lost paint on three occasions, the last
'way from home with a 118-104 they lll!eren t playmg well on the for the 11th time in its last 12 road time with seven minutes JaDaining.
lriumph over the Kings.
fD1!4 ~d we tried to take advantage games.
Ohio State put tOgether a 9-4
: The Kings have won only once of IL
.
.
Pacers ll2, Magic 120 (01')
run
in the final 2:16, including
away from home in 25 outings this
The. Cavali~, wmners of four
At Indian11polis, Detlef seven free throws,to_seal the vjcto-.
~.coming - Nov. 20 at Washof. thetr last s1x games, _got 19 ·· Scltrempf went 8round two Orlani)lgton. However, they still have 13 pomts from Darnell Valennne and 11o players for a n:verse layup with -ry. Jamie Skelton added 12 points
lOsses to go before they can tie the IS from Chucky Browt_t;
. Jess than a s«;ond left in ovenime and Chris Jent 10 for Ohio State.
,NBA record of 34 straight road
. Sacr~mentq, pla:ymg w1th011t 1o lift the Pacers to their fourth Andy Kaufmann scored 1!1111 pace
rpsses set last season by New Jer- L1onel Sm~ and _Antllony ~on-r , ' 's_trl!i4~t victory. Miller ted the J&gt;x. Illinois, while Andy Kpedi added
ner, got a..career-h1gh 41 po1nts · ers with 34 points, while Orlando . 13 and'Larry Smith had 12.
fY:Motta ducked out between the from Antome Carr
_ and 19 pomts got 25 points from Nick Anderson . . Kaufmann sccired 10 of his 12
third and fourth quarters, receiving from R~Wf Spanow.
and 24 from Dennis Scott.
first-half points in the opening
~wo technical fouls after heatedly
. Carr keilt ~ Kings in the game Warriors 108, Tlmberwolves 105
eight minutes of the game llld IUiljrguing with refelee s~ Javie.
With 23 pomts lD the ftrst half, also . At Minnelpolis. Tim Hardawa
nois opened a 26-22 lead with nine
"I did this," Motta said, mak- grabbi.ng n.ine rebounds. _Carr, · sank a three-pointer with liRe
minutes left in the half. Ohio State
~g a sign of the cross. "I crossed embrotle~ m a contra~t d1s~ute • oDds remaining, sending Golden then suddenly came to life, going
myself and I'm not even c.tho.lk. wtth _Kings, lOpped IJis previOUS State to victory. Hardaway's 25. ' on a 17-6 run, to rally fa a 39-32
There was a foul in front of me and ~-bi~ of 35 pomts, set Sun- foot shot from the top of the key halftime
lead.
.
I said 'You've got to call it.' He da~ !n Indiana.
.
catne as the shot clock expired. It
"They (Illinois) had a couple of
said, 'You've got to go back to
I ~out ~d.~y hard every was his secor.d three- pojnt goal in opportu~ities either to tie or go
Y,our (seat).'"
·
game, Carr Sllid. Some days are the fmal 78 seconds. .
.
ahead, and we never let them gel
: As it turneil out, Motta's seat good, eome days are -bad. :You can
Suni 113 COppers 93
the lead," Ohio State head coach
wasn't good enough fa Javie. That guanullee tha~ the f~ i,n Sac!&amp;At Los Angeies, Tom Chambers Randy Ayers said. "That was a big
set the tone for a technical-filled men1111 - believe !'tat.-I m gomg scored 11 of his 26 points in the .key, especially witb them playing
f'llllll.quarter in which Sacramento to come out every mght and play as third quarter and Dan Majerie . at home. . · · ·
'
assistant Rex Hughes was whistled hard as I can, dive on the floor for added 14 of his 24 in the founh
' "We had a little nouble shoot·
f~~ ~lmical and Cleveland head IOOIC 111111~. do wha.te~ I can to try
quarter to lead the Suns. Xavier . ing the basketball tonight,'' Ayers
ccl,ach ~Ji Wilkens got one for to help Ibis team WID.
McDaniel contributed 18 points
"I'm just really proud that
' ·ng a
with his lealllleading • In .other NB~ games Wednes- and Jell HOI'IliiCelt 16 for Phoenix, said.
our ball team played IQugh down
day mgh~ ~bolt pounded ~m· which has won eight of its last 10 the StreiCh. We got good play out
;1 "We played a lot better ill the 97-89, !~diana ~tlasted Orlando
games. Ron Harper scored a seatltird and the beginning of the 122-120 m. ovemme, Golden State . son-high 26 points and Danny of our front line. We also got some
f(iurth quarter," Wilkens sai&lt;t. Dipped Mmnesota 108-105 and. Manning adc!ed 17 to lead the Clippers.
~

.,

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·-------------------~

21 '1981

By scon WOLF!
.
lights at a job many ~ Would · Till Melli Mine ten under the 10...,.,. :MeiJI i. ...,,., et1
It's tournament time again for long 10 have. Riley 11 one of live di!ectioo or rn ..,.. be.d COICh ~this ..... .,., IDIIft.
· liMiadal ll'llld iiiCGt·
area ~· bldJtbell fans .with the observers of oflici1Is in the Phil Harrison, will boatl into the
COIIIIIY s two Division IV IIChools, ACC(Atlantic C0811 Coofauce)
soc:oad ••on Pridly niPt ll the . insllld ..,"''ha by TmGr lflr:
" - · The taiii!Ud lOp.. I I a II
Southern aad E 11111 piUcd against where be cririque~ ollicllla 10 belp Uni'IIISity oflloo..!e,
each oilier in die~~· round
The Muauders i-ill have a averap,l7.1 pcilts a
ide for a better pme 11111 10 ·
JOUgb task alleld of them as they is pllbbing 7.1 rebowtdl a CDIIIII
Till pme is lenlllivoly lOt for
the
on their 10111.
are
marched up apiac top-see1ed
an 8:4S p.m. atart. This time is
or to coacbin1 Riley spe11t
pending whether or not the Rio nearly 30 years ofl'tciadnJ in the
Grande Redwomen pls' basket- . . and Silled that - Ill be bas
ball team enters the Distrcit 22 10 do il let his "eyes do the rua&lt;OY.-.1)
playofiL Sbould dlia happen, the ning" up llld down the c:outt. Riley
have both been 011 the IUid to JUf. TEAM
W L l't' PA
Eastern-Southern tilt would be someday hopes to retnm to the
falo (W.Va.) 87-78 and Cbes1- Soatban.L-....... 16 4 1477 lm
Jllayed • S:IS. See Friday's Daily area, but for DOw enjoys llil walt
peakc s.c~so. Cberapeau·iJ cur· H•
1Trace .... 14 s 1391 1123 '
Seiitinel for details or contact a wid) die ACC. ,
IIChool official to vaify 1iri1es.
·
Riley guided EastCm 10 1 23-3 . rently 17-2 and= . . .thin . •-S·V~--...--11 !I U72 1211
' Southern's all-star point guard SVAC reconljn two yemllld was
1
NrtJy Bla' wa still doubtful as of once SVAC COICb of the year.
.,.1ed ....
• ..__
"-'-Hill
Tuclday, bowe\w, be waS Wlllting
Skyline Speedway in Stewart, StrOnJ lnSt e 'HilDe.
,.7 6·
'"""""7 14 1397 1
,_
to attempt to practice either Ohio wiD
the tbird Frida In ~uniorNathlll
~Creelt"."".311
1~1~
WedJ-Iay a Thursday. · ·
· II aYir- ·
ww 1Han." .... I 1 """ 1-..
April and
fellure.the ~­ Junior Ryill Rally.
~to Coach Howie
Star Circuit of Cbampi0111 Sprint aging 21.5 points I . . . . lllld 7.8
(Cciallb wa4111111)
Caldwell for-his 100tb caieer vicro- · Cars on July 2, 1991 during Ohio rebounds wbile Remy ia ICOring
15.9 poin&amp;a 1 contlat 111d 6.6 Southetn ........ ".. 13 1 70741 155
~outbem 'a head mentor.
S~weck. Tho national event
reboundsacontelllftheluteis Haniw!Trace ....l2 21121 121 ·
•
1111 COillinued Southern's wiD pay $4,000 10_win. .
on the line rile ~ Will Dot North 0a11ia "......9 5 1197 1052
long strin~of balketball success
wut to put Hulhea 11 die line as S)'IIID* VaUcy ...8 6 816 892
and has
IDC5 a seed 10 continue
the rich Southern tradition. Also
lm
CIJ!IIOfiiO Coach Caldwell and the .
_ · Hockey
·
throws
jn
_
a
row.
Both
Huaha
llld
KyprCreet.~
.....
.2
52
130 ·1053
team. for another SVAC champi·
Philiidel~ia Flyers defensemen
Ramey
were
seleciDC!
to
c?ilaict
Southwestan
.......
o
1•
757 101•
onsbip. . .
Jiri Laral wiD miss at least amonth
13
all-district
tint
team
bY
theTOTALS
56
56
7110
'rl'iO
Meils' l!o)'S play 10UJb Fairland following arthroscopic knee
in the bivis1on II tournament on surgery .... Compuwll'l, a Deaoit coacheS, while Drlaon COICh Hat(ReMntl • 111111)
Friday. Good Luck to the Mmud- firm, IS interested· in buying the ris was named the coaeh 'of ....
(SVAC
as on their IOUIIIIIIIeDt encoun&amp;er.
Pittsbur&amp;h Penauins, acconlinB 10 I y-. Joining the jU in ilae
will
be
will
be
6-~
junior
for-d
TEAM
---W
L PP PA
Soutltorn 's girls coach David repcxt by Bob McKenziC, edita of
JordanNelson.~'isiiCOiin&amp;ll
U.U.Trace
....
12
2 80!1 609
Gaul was forced to eat his words the ijockey News.
·
a
5.5
poinis
a
pme
c:1iP
aliil
aWl'North
Gallia
......
11
3 837 603
recendy, something he learned to
Law
do fiOm yours truly as one of my
Commentator Jimmy "the aging 7 Jdlounds I c:ciDial Com·
bench for the Dnaons
students .. Easaem. Gaul souaht to Greek'' ~nyder says he will sue ing off
inspire his 'winieaS team during the
CBS for S20 million over his firing in tbe paint wiD be 6-3 aeniCr berroad hip to Symmes Valley tor the more than three years ago for his ric:k Jones, Jones averages 6.3
..
last regular seasQD game. In doing
controversial remarks about blacb. pomts a contest and 3 'rebounds a
')!
'
so Gaul vowed to gei a crew cut if Wedneaday's news conference in poe.
The guards wiD be a Jllir of s-8
his girls won. Southern's girls won New Yode·cOncerning the suit was
senion Bi'ent Nrace and llnlle HaD.
in a big upset victay for their onty. called off because Snyder is ill.
Neice
scOres at a 6.8 points I J1111!C
.·
Olympics
.
\'Qn of the year and Gaul held to his
clip
while
Hall is a S. 7 poinu 1 ·
There are now seven C81ldidates
words, ucl now has a new .hair
siyle. '
for the tennis venue at the 1996 game scorer.
Former Eastern Coach Charles Adanta Olympics. The latest two · Meigs is goi~~g into the ~
Riley has found a new teachinJ job are Keswick Park and Avondale- season with 1 7-13 I8COid IIIII lTC
only four poinrlflom hlvinl a 10Y! North Carolina, but now moon- Dunaire Park.
I

the

tifw.
:..
.,

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.

Girls scores -~~-~ College scores

.

lty United Press International
Wednesday, Feb; 20
iiVISIONI
~ · Medina 41, Graflon Midview 36
·~ Brunswick 67, Berea 22
~ Paines Riversidt 49, Cle
collinwood 37
~ Eastlake 79, Geneva 39 ·
'i; Barberton 50, Akr Cent-Rower

.7)• Akron E 60, Akron Kenmore 49
• 'Massillon 59, Mass Jackson 57

:~

W0011er 47, Uniontown Late 32
:Wirren Harding 43, Stow 41
,:, ~venna 37, Warren Howland
~I

Falls 63
Nordonia 73, Wan'ensville 47
North Royalton 52, Orange 39
Naton 51, Akr Copley 49 .
Mantua Crestwood 48, Champion44
Beaver Local79, Young Chaney
48
Salem 68, Youngs South 64
Bexley 48, Hebron LakewOOd
36
Ciltleville 67, Col East 49
Licking Val 53, Col Linden 36 ·
Walkins Mem 55, Buckeye Val
31

~ .,,,

DMSIONID
I)MsiONU
- ·.
Khts Badger ,42, Vienna
;rr'~lin Ftrelands 56, Keystone Matthews 32
,
,, rr&gt;~
Grand
Valley
59,
MaplewoOd
!;~.l,;Orain Southview 75, Olmsted 24 '
.
f '•lo •
· Columbia 56, Lorain Clearview
}lip
43
Cle Lutheran W 35, Brooklyn
29
.
Qltlo Hlp Sdlool Basketball
Woodridge 66, Wateiloo 55
VIII'*' Preas lltenallonal
Rootstown
45, Windham 32
1k lldllJ, Feb. 20

.,, .

...
'.

school scores

1
'

Wednesday College Basketball
Results . ·
·
By United Press Internatiilnal
East
American Int'l 102, Quinnipiac 94
(OT)

Assumption 97, SL Michael's 90
Brandeis 87, Clark 83
BJidseport 86, Lowell 8I
Buclmell 70, Colgate 67
Delaware 75, Towson St. 74
Dowling 102, Melcy 68
Hamilton 117, Utica Tech 110
Holr Cross 75, Fordham 12
Lehigh 97, Lafayette 7S
Mansfield 65, E. Stroudsburg 62
MillcrsviUe 110, Columbia Union
. 63
ML Mercy 80, Monmouth 76
NevdJaven 87, Keene SL 78
Pbila. Textile 63, Adelphi 49
Piasburgh 78, Georgetown 65
Rochester 82, Carnegie MeDon 69
Sbippensllun 99, Indiana (Pa.) 96
Siena 93, L8 Salle 76
S~Rock 115, Calif. (Pa.) 113

~L

'.

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lllllrw 4 · 1. . . 'Va-.
Hultf .. lllr'PI t t . r .

~:=~==:

•,r:;.:l!ll6-4.

::'abo

Sports briefs

;:. .~.::1&amp; nr,~ ~=
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the

~

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clip

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Ilk 10 of dleir
II Clfl4 hm die
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·a....-•

Itt-IS . . It I 7114.llui?lea
::llllwi~ Z7
_ IIIII(* a t ldi, Ramey
~ li allle figares

~ " ~~of

7

.
Pri_day niJ!Ilts
.
~
p111t, wlt·:411hWM! 111 dlliriet ~Y
· J t f1111"iM
.
..-~ .. OMo Ullhenity's
AI. Uihr, of lUI 0 I ~ - .. C:.•ull ·a-c... Tip-off for
~~~ va. rr.tot~II.. IM. ~.sc;
016Pt'l .... will be II
H · .,_ 5 I Jf
1:15. 'Wd tWI ...., cwr lis
~:45 ,.._ ;
OllliiWL MJul Ill Jill=
·
l•l'-1 tni p1e
Soudlwe111n, 'J:st p•.; U d i a @. Tlla two win·
Reednllle Iuten Yl'.
lfiii1IIIIIIIMM:512nddis,

W'yrS;
. .

v
11
M5
II " 1' .........
·
•"
•.- ' .
....... lila I

Ia ·

•H.S.·Q lt!llkl!'.

:s·.

.:'!.:t'!-:'.,the
.

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Nclldl Odia 61; I 71 l 11,1*
Hil !9
•

~Aft . s,.:' ~-=

-"&gt;

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""
_
' ..

1" 3 797 liltS
k•:t-:::lt'l ...
t ' 15! 8i · C
lila
E t --·-".6 I 6» ·'Jtl ......... an 54 :tuior Frank
Sy ' ,,.,..., ...3 n ~-, 100 111111, 5~ Jaior Phil Hovatter,
.Sa:ilrllll I ,--J 11
'101 · =~
Jli Jolllleadey.

It,;

Sc&gt;id"' m. t:JS p.a.

..

JUST ARRIVED!

1

U

,

SVAC standings

is18-2onthe=t'~~
the4:"o.~.~~::r...~ever~

....... IIIMiJtl U

• _.,.. ._........

·.....

tim

I

a-. ...

Ilia ..... 111:4!1.

.

;'

I

l

j

FRID'J Y NIGHT IS · . .

WHO: MAIN. STREET PIZZA 992-2228
216 East llahi
WHAT: SUPER SAVINGS
Pomeroy~ Ohio
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..

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.
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All dinners served with potato service~ rice, onion
rings, all you ca_n eat soup, fruit and salad bar,

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Rt. 33

' (304) 713-5321
(N~xt

Mason; WY.

to Mason Exxon)

t

·CARPET SA.L El

1

BUY FROM AN L.P. GAS
DEAlER Willi. EXPERIENCE.
·BUY FR6M•••
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~~ ~9~.!
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and BOTTLE. GAS
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79
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GEORGE GRATE-MANAGER ·
STATE ROm 124

l

,

Mason ·Family Restauranj

'l

I

. I

1~.

Anselm
Springfield 84
E Pai!Jstine 44, Springfield LOt Sll John's 77, Syracuse 72
llpi.-St 1111
.
rancastet FiJber 72, New Albany - 43
SL Peter'1 64, Canisius 52 ~
.
.
~ 38, Norwayne 34
· SL ~ 90, LeMoyqe 82
"
Smithville SI, Loudonville 40
Qe John Hay 74, Cle Olenv!Ue' 71
Sillily Brook 92, New Jersey Tech .
Toronto 72. Cadiz 69 (or)
Hawken 74, Cuyahoga Hill 47
79
{•
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.
Union Local 46, Buckey~ Trail W. Virginill89, SL Bonaventure 84 ·
38
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DlVISJONI
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Washington .t Jcffa1011 85, 1bici
~w.t '2. Upper Arlingtoo 49
63
.
~lie N 15, Wsnille S 68 (2
Williams 74, Middlebury 70 '
DIVISION IV
South
Elyria Open Door S2. Akron Coastal Carolina 59, Winthrop46
mVISIOND
Elms24
~ 48, Hebron Lakewood 36
Davidson 73, Campbell 58
Richmond Hts 52, Ledgemont Dub 72, N. Camlfna SL 6S
~67,Colsllasl49
40
qnmm
Florida A&amp;M 96, Oecqja SL 94
EM Cantm 76 Csl Hsitagc 30 Gecqia 73, Alebeme 61
..... ~ 13, Pailfteld'(JIIaa
~
.
Berlin W Reserve 63, Low- ln1iej- SL 89, MJ.P. 78·
eUville 39
Marion PI 2 N 60, Mt Gileld 41
Lcuilvil1e 104, SW Louisuma T1
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6 1he Dally Sentinel

Bertha Wolfe .
Berlha (Ma) Wolfe, 87, d Tuppers Plains, died on Wedncsda~,
Feb. 20, 1991, at Vetaans Memoli·
a1 Hospiw following an cx~ended

Modred Blankensbi?o

. Mildred Blankenship, 0, of
dleport, died Wednesday evenin~,
Gallipolis, died Tuesday, Feb. 19,
Feb. 21,1991, at VeteranS Memoli·
1991 at University Hos,Pital,
· a1 Hospital in Pomeroy following
Columbus, following an extended
:an exlalded illness.
·
·n-tw
......
illness.
: Born in Pomeroy on Nov. lZ,
Born on October 2, 1903 in
She was born April29, 1930 in
· 1905, he was lhe son of the lace Leon, W.Va., sbe was the dlilgluer Gallipolis, daughter of lhe late
: Charles and Ella J. YOODg. He was of the late Sullivan Asbury and Chester and Goldie Smith Blanken·
:an educator, teaching for several Ma~y Frances Stover. She was ship.
.
years in Galliaand Meigs Counties. employed by the West Virginia
Sh~ is survived by one brother,
, He wu lhe principal of lhe Silver On)nance Plant during World War LorenBiankensbipofProctorville.
· Run School and a Math teacher at II. She was also a seamstreSS.
Funeral services will be con·
.: Middleport High School.
. ·
She is.survived by four daugh· dueled I p.m. Friday at the MCCoy: He was a graduate of Rto · ters, Mrs. Isaac (Doris) Jackson, Moore F~al Home, Welherholt
·Grande College, a loyal mcmber.of Tuppers Plains (with whom Mrs. Chapel, Gallipolis, with Rev.
:the Heath United Me.thodist Church WQife made her horne), Betty lf8r. 'Everett Delancy officiating. Burial
and a Sunday Schoo•Jeacher lhere. ris, Reedsville, · Mrs. David will be in theRidgclawn Cemetery,
He was ~so a telegraph operator (Dorothy) Sayre, Antiquity, and Mercerville.
.
. for the -~
. . .
Mrs. Avery (Ftances) ~.Fort
Friends may call at the funeral
: . He IS sumved by his wife, l-et- Myers, Fla.; a daughter-in-law, horne today from 6 to 8 p.m.
• ue Young;· a brother Edgar Xoung, Lucille Pickens, Memphis, Tenn.; a
:of East Bank. W.Va.; two siSters, sister Peggy Levin ·Columbus· a
,._~"td
: Jwmita Bard!· ~t. Ohio. and broth~. Howard (Fiances) Stover,
"'.,J
AniettaJenkins,Aonda.
Middleport· two sisters-hi-law
. Services !"ill be on SBillrday at Jane Stover, Middleport. and
J
"' ir'A'
"J
. l .p.rn. at Ftsher F'!nera1 f!:o!"c• belh Sharpnack, Columbus; five . A. bam belonging to a
. wtth Rev. Fnmk Smith offtellllllg. grandchildren, Patricia Ingram, Ravenswood AltBDinum Corpora: Burial will be iii Gravel Hill Ceme· Reedsville, PegS&gt;: Dosky,_~!urn· lion salaried emglohee . was
· tery.
.
bus, Jo Anne Schiller, ,Otillicolhe; des-yed m
· a fire w te' occurred
: Friends may call at the funeral Joseph Glenn, Racine, and Michael
"u
·
: home on Friday from 2 p.m. to 4 Pickens, Memphis, Tenn.; several at approximately 3:15 a.m. on
· ·
nieces and nephews, great-grand- Monday, Feb. 18, according to a
p.m. WId.7 P.rn. to 9 p.m.
ildren
hil company release..
.
Ona Arix
ch ·
and great·great grande •
The bam was destroyed in the
: The calling hours were ommit- ~~side.s :::tgarents, .she was fire, as well as several head of
: ted from lhe obituary for 0na Arix preceded in
by her husliMid, sheep and a great deal of equipment
: in The Daily Sentinel 011 Wednes- lUchard Wolfe in 1963; her son, :em:~!:~ th~~~~on::Y~}
: day.
· · John; a son-in-law, Bryan Hurls;
• Friends may can today from 2 to her sister, Calherlne Ireland; two suspicious origin and was the
: 4 p.m. and 7 to 9 p.m. at Fisher brothers Hury and Buness Stover: second one since lhe beginning of
: Funeral Home in Middlepon.
a grancldaugbter, Delores Crouch; ~ the strike by the USWA lll)d its Lo.
grandson, Steven Pickens, and a cal5668 against RAC, Oct. 31.
great-great grandson, . Jeremy
On Dec. 20, at approximately
: Marie G. Sheets
. Guinther.
~~ plim .• a ~lon"ur:da
: Marie G.. Sheets, 78, of 1204.
Funeral services ·will be held o~
.· .our1~.~0
was d •• .:
: Second Ave.. formerly of Middle· Saturday at Ewing Funeral Horne desuoymg ""' struct1Jr8, ·an ""'
'.port, died Thursday at Holzer med- with Rev. Earl Shuler officiating. equiJeO:~ipannsidey~d th
. e second~­
: ical Center. She retired from Gal· Burial will be in Lelart Falls Cernc·
: lipolis Developmental Center in tery.
t-~!;~sF~~ to the West
· 1972 as a psychiatric aide.
Friends may can atlhe funeral
- ....: Born Much 25, 1912 in oama . home from 2 to 4 p.m. and 1 to ~
· coun~, she was a ~hter of lhe p.m. on Friday.
:late harles Cleve!
and Ethic paul J h
Am Ble Power ...................... 28 5/8
: JIUIC Donohue Cochran.
9 IISOII
Ashland Oil ........................ 30 518
Survivin•
... are six sisten, Rulh · Paul Johnson 70 of Mason died ATa.T
"' ........................................ .34
Burnette, Juanira Tackett and Doris W".~........y, Februuy•
' 20, JCJ9t, at BCobharrn
. E~ansS.h.....................:...... ..... 17
. Jean Beck of Gallipolis, Mildred Pinecreat
""'""""'Care Center in Gallipolis,
'"I
op .................... . 13 114
K•
: Davis of Huntington, W.Va., Dlr· OH
C~lding ................ ,........ l41/4
·
F
Mogul .......................... .. 16
- lene Wright anlf Hoope Bum.en of
Bom January 16, 1921 in Clif· .
: Pa!riot; two ;.brothers, Charles W. ton, he was a son of the laiC James Goodyear T&amp;R ..,........................20
. Cochran of ScOIIOWD llld Raymond and Allie ("~--)John·-~. He w•• Key Centurion ............................ 11
· Cochran ofWi"'·-- Ohio.
.,...,...
""''
"" Lands' End
16 3'4
A sister H~~:;;;'d" two bus- also preceded in death by a brother,
·
........................... 1
ForreSt Jolmson.
.
Limilcd Inc: ...........~ ..............23 1/4
'bands, StcwuSt .~!_~kins •n 1958
He n-• a 1_,_ ___ 'or.,.. years Multimedia Inc.. :.................. 72 l/2
·and
Garral
'"""" in 19·87 , pre- at lhew"'""''""""' "
D·-··-t .. ....................... .3/4
ceded
her inV.dealb.
Racine
Locks and &lt;10
Dun, a Rax ~....
Robbins&amp;Myers ..........;........23 1/2
Us • ArmYvettnn of u'--'d"'arll
She is a rnern ber of Heath
"' • Shoney •s Inc......................... 14 I/4
'
·
bert of the S """
'th_....,.........
:~=~*'~~ET!i
Legion
Star Bank.;..,........................ .l9 3/4
'Past Mstron of that cJuwtcr, The Haven and the Stewart Johnson · 'Wend~ Inti .......................,....7 7/8
White Shrii!C of Gallipolis and was VFW Post 9926 in Mason. ·
Worthington Ind...................22 114
. appointed Supreme Page in 1957, . Survivon include his wife, A~ Special meeting held
.the Ohio .State White ShriDe Also- E. (McD!IIiel) Johnson and two SIS- •
·ciation and the Thea COID1 of the ten, Mrs. Lola Kovalchik of " It wu voted to plllce-a five-mill
:Ladies Orienw Shrine of Colum· Pomeroy and Mrs. Mabel Cain of continuin~ levy on the baDot in lhe
•bus. She w.S also a member of Saruota, FL.
·
May 7 .pnmary by the Meigs Local
;Ohio Civil Service Asaocillion.
Sc:rvicc will be at I p.m. pn Board of Education in a special
: Services will be Sunclay, 10 a.m. Saturday, February 23, 1991, at · meeting held Tuesday evening. The
'at Patriot United Methodist FoaJeaong Funclal Home with the continuing levy would generate
Church. lhe Rev. Jane Ann Miller Rev. . Rankin Roach officiating. approximately SSlS,OOO, according.
officiating. Burial follows in Patti- Graveaide military rights w.i11 be to SuperinJCqdent James ~ter.
• ot Churtb Cemetety.
held at Graham Cemetery.
Olher lll8llas discussed mclud~ Friends may can at Waugh·Hal·
Friends may can at the funeral · ed the adoption of appiopiialions.
; ley-Wood Funer'al Home, 2 to 4 home on Friday from 24 p.m. and
The next meeting, whicb was
.P:m. and 7to 9 p.m. on Saturday.
7-9 p.m.
scheduled for March 12, will be
held March 11.

Stocks

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Support decals for sale
The American Leaton Feeney

~ttPotiNo.

j28111dAudllry

rn Middleport will be seUJna ltJJvi.

lean Oaa sticker decals wllh the
insignia, "We Support Our
Troops," at McDonald's ' In
Pornuoy on Friday. Salllrdly IIIII
Sunday from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. end
. 4 to 8 p.m.
McDonald's RllaunniJ nadon·
wide are selling tile decals but
Pomeroy's resa.arant hQ ~ted
its 1,000 decals to'the AJDerlcan
Legioq Post in Middlel'l'fl to be
used as a fund-raising project ·
which will beqeflt the troops In lhe
Middle EaSt.
··
·
Members of the Middleport
American Legion Support Group
will be selling the decals at .
McDonald's in Pomeroy on the
deslanated days for S1 a piece.
Altholilh hours ue 10 a.m. to 2
p.m . and 4 to 8 p.m., it has been
reported lhat lhe decals will most
likely be available au day long. .

Name contest•~winner ,
. Mike Van Meter, Racine, was
last Sunday's winner of the rnys·
tery farm contest. He correctly
identified lhe Meigs County rarm
as lhat of Steve and J!lflice Webel',
Eagle Ridge Road.
·· ·

Voinovicb names
two cabinet members

- - -·Local briefs--"'!-~ :
Jur;y trial cancelled

'!be crimillal jury lriai achednled for Tuesday, February 26 in
Me.iaJ County Cclurt bas beea .cancelled. Jurors need not report.

- .. .

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servina an lS..oonlh prison aentence fQr hiS involve-

ger,
.
··. .
.
· While at the facility, Meigs County Sheriff's deputies retl!l1JI:d
Eddie Pllii!:k to Meigs County to appear in Common Pleas Court to
face an indicaueut fCI' escape.
Patrick's trial is set for February 25.

Theft, accident investigated

Meigs County sheriff's deputies are investigating a lheft from a
rental railer in mra1 Meigs County.
·
··
Roy Bivens of Baker Road in Athens reported Wednesday lhat
sornetm~ on Sunday .tor early Monday morning, a rental~
that he owns on Colbuin Road was enJCred, and a kerosene heater,
50 feet of wile and IS feet of plastic pipe were stolen.
On Tuesday evening, dePuties investigated a truck/deer accident
on Gold Ridge Road at its intersection with Devenny·Road.
According to the report, the accident took place at 7;40 p.m.
when John M. Davis of Gold Ridge Road hild just turned onto Gold
~idge in his 1987 Ford pictup. A deer ran into the right front of lhe
truck.
.
The deer was killed and light damage was listed to lhe front of
the vehicle.

•
Community Calendar Items
appear two days before an evnt
and tile day or that event. llema
must be received in advance to
aS&amp;ure piablicadon In tbe ealen·
.dar. .
·

EMS Runs

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COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) Gov. Gccqe Voinovich has named
Nine csUs for assisa.nce were answered by units of Meigs COWl·
new directors for •the Department
ty Emergency Medical Services.
of Rehabilitation and Correction
At 11:48 a.m., Middleport squad went to Cole Street for John
and the Department of Mental
Hess Ill. who was taken to Holzer Medical CenJCr. At 12:32 p.m.,
Retardation and Developmental
~inc squad went 10 Matthew Friend from Basban Road to Holzer.
Disabilities.
.
At 7:32p.m., Raciqe squad tran8p(J'Uid Pearl Hawtholl)e from Wells
Reginald Wilson, 40, an 18-year
Run Road to Vc1Cr8DS Memorial Hospital. At 8:57 p.m. Pomeroy
employee of the corrections depart·
squad went to Main Street for Jaines :Aannan. Hannan·wu taken to
rnent and a native of Cleveland, has
Veterans. At .9:48 p.m., MiddlepM squad transported Shirley Fra·
been named the state's new c~­
zicr from Village Manor to Vetaans. At 11:22 p.m., Racine squad
tions chief. Jerome Manuel, a vet·
went to State Route 338 for Timolhy Ray Powell l:"owell was taken
eran employee of the department of
to Veterans.
Mental Retardation, was named lhe
At 12:16 a.m. this 1110111in11. Pomeroy and Middleport fire depart·
department's new director.
.
mcnts went to Condor Street to the Eakins residence for a structlue
Wilkinson has been south
fire. Units returned to stations at 2:31 a.m. At 6:33 a.m., Tuppen
regional director fCI' lhc depanment
Plains squad went tO East State Roore 681 for Bill Anderson, who
since 1988 and previously served
was tlteD to Vecaans.
as warden of the Dayton Correc·
tional Institution, superintendent of'
the Corrections Training Academy
Continued fro~n Pile f
at Orient and.adntlnis1rative assis·
tant at Lebanon Correctionallnsti- sure and the loss or 1,258 jobs at · AEP was ordered by PUCO on
. tution. ' ·
the mines. The ~~&amp;ull Feb. 15 to 1U1]1 over plans, studies
together state and
o · at and
analySIS of how the compaa public meeting on Wednesday; ny proposed to clean the Gavin
March 20 to answer questions and planL 'The utility had until Feb. 25
PJck·J
discuss options as to the coal to tum the plans over to PUCO.
648 . .
dilemma.
· Ticket sales: $1,313,548.00.
Payoff: $574,696.~.
Pkk-4
•&gt;'1.
0525.
Two m~ candidates have fllee the first to file petitions for' lhe
Ticket ·sales: $.259,767.50. Pay· for lhe office of Ppmeroy, may&lt;!f.
office.
off: $79,100.00: ' .r
· ·
Dott!e. Turn~r,
a R ublifBn,
Pomeroy l!'.$ident Scott Dillon, a
Cards
.. -'
and 4nY Webrung,
mocrat, Republican, filed his petition for
~iotblMs.~~ ·.
have fikd their
·
petitions I'OnletOY' Vill9 CounCil.orf.!l'lies·
Five of clubS. '" .,, ·
. 'with dle 'Meigs County Board of day, miiking ~the~ candidate
Ace of diamoru~&amp;.
Electlou, placing theil' names on for lhat off~ !o far lhJS year.
Six of spades. ;,..:;·
tlJe ~ 7 primary Eleclion beiiOt.
Ticket sales: $61·,065.00. Pay- ' we'hrung is currently serving 011
1H
off: $23,850.
l'' ~·
Pomeroy Village Council .as a
0Splla
HeWS
Super Lotto
~::&lt;
councilman, although his seat on
1·16-23·31-3944.
the council is IIOl up for re-election
Vetmms Memcirlal Hospital
Ticket sales: $4,465,295.00.
this year. He is lhe only Democrat
Kicker
WEDNESDAY ADMISSIONS
to have filed for the Pomeroy
S-7·1-9·7·1.
·None.
Mayor's offiCe. ·
WEDNESDAY DISCHARGES
Ticket sales: $653,299.
Turner, so far, is opposed by
Dorothy
Higgins.
Councilman Bruce Reed, who was

communication, ••

Commu!)ity Calendar

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rnCnt in lhe 1unc, 1990 death .of Victor Will of Cans! Winchester,
who was slnlck Bllll killed by a truck in which Hanis was a passen-

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STOCK I 11343

I

Act before March 3, 1981 end you a.l) poltpone ttlil incr•• for up to 1 year
end.your carrier will nlll r _ , . hll'/her·lncr•• In profit: ,'· ·
.
I

-

Become 1 PAID IN OFFICE aublcrlber or EXTEND YOUR CURRENT PAID IN
OFFICE SUBSCRIPTION at the·CURRElvT RENEWAL RATE for 3. 6 or 12
. months.

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Sub*criptlon

Plriod
3 Months
6 Months
12 Montha

Current
Ren-al

B•M

SAVE

.17.81
U4.84

$2.99
$6.76
$16 .64

$16.&amp;6

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---------------------------------------------·
THE DAILY SENTINEL
"Your Source For Local New•"

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The Middleport Arts Council is
now offering the following classes
to the interested public: "Porce·
lainizing Silk Aowers", a class to
tum silk Dowers into procelain, to
be held March 4 and II at a cost of
$22. includes all supplies except
paint brushes. Michelle Garrison
will be the insttuctor. For information, call 742-2157 or 992-2675.
"Slate Paintin~" on April 1, also
taught by Gamson, will be offered
at a cost of S11. The cost includes
au supplies. Call 742-2157 or 992·
7733. "Easter Bunny Class" will~
offered on March 16, at I :00, at a
cost of $20. The fee ncludes all
supplies. Instructor is Susan Baker.
For informaion, call 992· 7733.
Fin lillY, the coun.cil is offering
"Hand-painted collar", at a cost of
$15. Marilyn Meier will be the
instruction and pre-registration is
required by April 5, . For more
information, call 992-5983 or 9922675.
According to Arts Council
Director, examples of all of the
projects are now on display in the
council window.

•

DAILY SENTINEL PRESENTATION·
Roscoe and Sandee Mills, owners or tbe
Pomeroy McDonald's rranc:bise, presented Tbe
Dally Sentinel wllh a limited edition print jr lbe
Pomeroy Freight Station on Wednesdai.' Tile
orglnal painting by Thomas H. Stab! of, lttle
Hocking banas in lbe dlnlnt= room of M on·

1991 FORD

RANGER

1991 FORD
FESTIVA

The Spelling Bee Champion at
Letart Falls Elementary is Jessica
Saylre, a sixth grader. Jessica is the
d!lughter of Aaron and Shirley
Sayre. Runner-up champion is Har·
many Jane llill, a fourth grader and
daughter of Dean and Lori Hill.

Steering
Defrost
Transmission
Conditioning
Cossette
More

Only

STOCK I 11411

Step Bumper
More

STOCK i 11337

Only

mune.

•••

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Firtal alcohol syndrome may be caused by the fllthar'a alcohol
abuse, a Chicago res•rcher has found. The atudy was dona on
mice· rMulta Included smaller little size and f4!tal mortality.

.

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Dl'!t low In aatur•ted fllta '"m• to slow .multiple aclerosla. The
Brltlah journal Lancet reported on a 34-year atudy.

·• * *

Want to know If your doctor Ia board-certified In his or her apacllllty7 Cai11 ·800·ni·CERT batwMn 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. Service Ia
aponaored ·by the American Board of Medical 8peclaltlea.

***

New program for aethmatlca at Bellevue H011pltal In Naw Yorlt
enabled patients to spend lall dma In the ~spital . Patlanu w.,.
encouraged to participate In their own care, ualng peak flow mat- to monitor the air In their lunga. and laamlng when medlcatlona
were nec••at:Y·

***

Sprays, Inhalers, pills - uthmatica find everything for their ongo·
lng care et ·

5 WISH Eff"'IDH 5E
Phc;,macy

w.•

Pom-.

ould You Rather Have A "Warm Fuzzy"
Or
A
Cool
Five
·
P
ercent?
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ONLY FROM

BANK•••
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THE "GI

LOAN REBATE

I•C)ve.rdrlve Transmission

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Cossette
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we believe that our good loan customers de9erve more than a pat on the back. That's why we wanttq gtve you something no other lender does: five percent
of your to,t allnterest amount back • In cash - just for paying off your loan without nliSslng a due.date.
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Only

•Payment Bald On 3.9% A.P.R. for 48 Months.
.
Tax, nua, Not Included. Offer Enclt Completion otlualnea on Feb. 28, 1111

Did you have m•aln .. a chlld71f nat, and If you ware bom before
1 957, consider vecciMtlon. Dacton at the Ban Bernardino
County Medlcel Center In California found many adults not lm·

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

I• Cloth Interior

•• .ll&lt;nl'l

SWISHER LOHSE
PHARMISTS

aid's In Pomeioy. Mr.and 1\.ln. MDls made the
presentadon Ia appreciation for publicity aJven
to lbe new .bllllaeas wileD It OJM'ned lilt ran. Pic·
lured, left to right, are Brian ~· Reed, Ddy SeD·
tiael staff writer, Sandee Mllll, Roscoe MDis 1nd
Julie E. Dillon, DaHy Sentinel stair writer: (Sen·
tinel Photo by Brian Billings)

EFI

Transmission
Steering

PHARMACY
TOPICS
BY YOUR

Konn ... lllc~.... II.PII. Cll ..•llllll~ II . Pll.
llonold """""'"' 11.1'11 .
Mon. t1wu lit. 1:00 1.m. to 1:00 p.m.
lun.S., 10:00 •·•· 10 4:00p.m.
PIIEICIIII'TIONI
'" · 112·1811
E. Moln
' f•lonoly lonlloo
OH .

,.

WYAIT M. BALL

Birth

You can earn a "Gbnme rtve" LoeD Rebate 01i. any kind of consumer loan we offer by applying before Ap~ 30. 1991.
.
. Take out a conventionallnstallmenlloan for a new or used car, Investments. or a vacation. Or usc your ·h ome equity for tax-deductible buying power.•

.

Then all you have to do Is make the p11yments on time. And we'll give you more than a handshake, We'll give you five .

announced

• Mr. and Mrs. Larry (Ri18) Ball,
Danville, are anoouncing the birth
of their frrst child, a son, Wyatt
Marshall, on Dec. 23, at Pleasant
Valley Hospital.
The . infant weighed eight
pounds six ounces and was 21

' inches lOng.

Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Oarol Ball, Racine; and Mr. and
Mrs. WUliarn Bailey• Middleport.
Great grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Carf BamH,'jey, Middleport, .and .
_Mrs. Ice! Ball, Zanesville.
:
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BOY
SCOUT
WEEK
OBSERVED • Tbe display win·
dow at the Middleport Depart·
ment Store has been decorated
by tbe Middleport Pack 245 of
tile Boy ScOutS In observance !)f
Boy Scout Week. The window
contains .Items pertaining to boy
seoulinl•

. l

$24 1OO* MONTH $212oo• MONTH $18 200* MONTH

I~-------------------------------------------1
Y11, I would like to taka advantate of this P..I.A. IVIIICFiptiOn offer.
· 1
I
I
I NaI
I
,
I
~~I
I
.' I
I ~
~~n
I
· I
I
I C N- P.I.A. lubacrlber
CJ Cufrant ·P.I.A .. Subscriber I
CJ 3 Month8 t17.81
0 6 Montha t34.84
[l 12 Months $11.58
I
Mall to: The Dally Sentinel, 1 1 1 Court St., POIMfD\1, Ohio .Q711
.
I

REEDSVILLE • North Eastern
League Tournament at Riverview
Elementary will be held Satunlay
and Sunday and March 2 and 3.
Tournament times arc 9 a.m. to
4:30 p.m. on Saturday and on SundaY from 14:30 p.m. Schools par·
ticipating are Coolville, Chester,
Tuppers Plains and Riverview.
Refreshments will be available and
· door prizes awilrded.

•I

·•

POMEROY • "Lorax" by Dr.
Suess, and "Corderoy~ are the
movies .to be shown Saturday at 2
p._rn . at the Meigs ~ounty I'!Jb~c
Ltbrary. All area children are mvltedtoattend

Classes to be held

YIAIS SINCE YOUI CAHill
GOT liAISE.

.

SATURDAY
LO'ITRIDGE • Country Mitsic
Night .at lhe Lottridge Community
Center will be held Saturday from
6 p.m. ·to midnight. All bands are
welcome and refreshments will be
available. The public is invited to
attend.

Mot:e fllndidales file for mayor spot

1991 .FORD
ESCORT LX

WHICH .AilS IT'S IBN 21/t

.

an

Lottery numbers

&lt;

DIUVIIY ..Ia.

special seSsiOn on Thunday.at 6:30
TUPPERS PLAINS , Round
p.m. at the Rutland Fue Slation.
· and square dance Friday from 8·
11:30 p.m. at the Tu~ Plains
RACINE .;The Racine Amcri· VFW building featunng Rocky
can Legion No. 602 will meet Mountain Bluegrass. Ronnie Wood
Thursday
will be lhe cancr.'Public invited• .
. . !117:30 p.m..

THURSDAY
RlJTLAND • The Rutland ViiPOMEROY • The Mason Gal- lage will have oqe last information
lia Meigs Crusade for Christ will and easement meeting on Thursday
be held at lhe Old Bethel Church at 6:30 p.m . 'at lh~ civic center.
located off Route 7 on Story's Run Anyone with questions or probleqts
Road through Saturday ~ 7:30p.m. is encouraged to attend.
Special speakers and singers ni$ht·
FRIDAY
.ly. Rev. Clyde Henderson invnes
PORTLAND • Red, white and
the public.
blue week will be observed at Port·
POMEROY • 'l'he Meigs Coun· land Elementary on Friday from 2·
ty Democratic Executive Commit- · 3: 15 p.m. The public is mvited to
*will meet Thunday !I' 7:30 Jl.m. . attend and see what the classes
at the Cal:pentcr's Hall m Pomeroy. . have done. ;• .
Public invited.
MIDDLEPORT • The Meigs
RACINE • A support group County Church Women United will
meeting for those affected by lhe meet Friday at the First Baptist
Gulf war will meet Thursdsy at 7 Church in Middleport .to plan for
p.m. at the Racine United World Day of Prayer to be held
Methrvt;•t Church.
March 1. All key women from
-.Meigs County churches are invited
ROCK SPRINGS • The Mid· to attend.
dleport Child Conservation League
LONG BOTTOM • The Faith
will meet Thursday at 7 p.m·. at the
Rock Springs United Methodist Gospel Church in Long Bottom
will have preaching and singing on
Church.
Friday at 7 p.m. with the Dailey
RUTLAND • The Rutland Family. Rev. Steve Reed will invite
Township Trustees will111eet in the public.

Spellh\g Bee
champion named

IT'S-· 2'1111AIS SINaiHE
WT INCIIASI • OUI. HOME

Thul'8day, February 21, 1991' •
Page 7:

..•

· Ha"is returned
l;)ouJlas H.ris llu been returned to ChilliCothe Correclioaal
Fltility-to 'fr m10 bls r"'ace 111m: after Mei&amp;s County Commoo
Plea Coan Jll!lae Fred w. Crow mrel'used to p t his motion for

The Daily Sentinef

By The Bend

.··

YOUR :c;.ARRIER
IS GnTING.
... A RAISE

.

•

Pomeroy----NIIddlef2!1, Ohio

Barn des·
Eliza: b'vfirf&gt; •"onda•v

l

•

Ill' ..

.

:c.
Edward Youni · .
• C. Edward Young, 8S, of Mid·

I

....

., 1

.:- ---Area deaths----

I

-

Member F.D.I.C. ~
Equal Houaln• Lender 1::1

MASON

NEW HAVEN

POINT~

773·5514

882·2135

875-1121

Not OYillable for commerc:Ullouw.extotlng conoumcr loano
-·•
oblle homeo
or lomo to pun:hue - ...... or m
.

'Conoult your,.. odvtOor rep.,. the
•
dedueablllty ol home equity loan ..,.......

I...:::~::·~~~......~..........~....~R=dw==a~~=l~~~~d~~==~~k:~:cr~your:·~ftM~I~~::m~t~~~::::·. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .~. . . . . . . . . .~

�21,1991

Quincy Jones, Phil Collins
·big winners ·a t 'G rammys

.Manley ~Auxiliary · meeting held
, ConlribuDonS JUde to the
{l,D. Gifl Pack, P1eedom's Foun·
:&lt;Jation, U.S.O. , Failla of Our
· Jlllhcn, AJG Tell Trip, H.n IIIII
: Canter Fulld whoa die ~
• Lqion Lewil ~ Ullit No. 263
• met at the home of Plorenee
Ricblrds ill MMQ IJQil
: ' M.trpm Bowles poe tided • die
mcetiDJ which 4 Will ill ri'""illic
form.
~
·
A bulletin rrom MuiJie a-.
: Eigluh Disrric:t prr r'dem. Wlneld
: S18lin&amp; dial the clillrict WIS In flnl
: place in membenllip. Girl's Slate
• O~lllion will be held MIJy 5 in
; Wellslon lild May 19 in l.i!hapolia
' Summer Con-vention will bo bekl
; June 6 in l.ancutcr.
'
The bulletin Silled t1w Pmi·
dent Gecqe Bush bad sipld iDio
•

De~ iaemlfenbip olipbillo/..
~ Bowr. 'w ·~ o.&amp; bllllt llllil·
tng from ~ Depulnlent to the
laW

in-

cbairmell. Alia of nniclllllllt eu

*'

14, 1m. 11lis J1Me is DOW
o'.erved u flaj day lhrougboul
~
.
S.~ the na1ea for disjJiaying . .
ht IIIII lila Nd of die
IIIla.

be 1111t to
~
MdcRe
ElK WIS Nld. A n-.1 ..... a- ·, fila
fDr ftlar, 8111 1811 fet·
CIId WISiipal b IIIII .IJowa ot: V~Ky; 1111 wllill for !lope, purity
OaDipotio.
•
' IJJd
'I ... of 1111;•die blue b
. Rc!lon
sent ID the Pw· lhe cokr'oltrh•'l'w
10.
-Gulf ns ..re. .
Ood; die - . for lofty apiJntioa.
Lula~. ~ep~rw clllir- Sbe llao said the Gulf War hu
!ftlll· f
Ill . . . . oldie tiu,
lliDI4 dllllellllle 10 rllow dleir 1rue
111~ by lbt 1m.! ~ COIO\'I •llnia fty iil wappon o(
to 111111 men .aiJd woinOfl Ia ul• • Oelea Stlnl.
.
forJ!I. Mrs, Bowlea, Ailllricalaltm . ·· Tile 1inJin1 til America. prayer
cbairmu, P¥C bet RP«t 011 lbe for pe~ee lild J'edlllt:a by die Jll'li·
HiJIOry o~ die fila .. Slilllid ~ dentcloleddlemertul ·
th~ Ame~~u Lopon Auxiliary
·. Edilh Rows, Point Pleuant,
~ lhlt II IS die lhlrcl Oldllt ol die W. VL, will be the boaeu for die
-nalional lllildanls of die wortd..It next mr "•· Mn.llichlnb avec~
wu flllt aaGcrized by Coapu, ~ in Uep1JJ1 die Valen-

of._.

•••aw

I

'

linlllei80D.

·Fernwoo~ gardeners m~et-recently
f:he
ftlrlbod·%!E'.

=

• ·. An open mee1ing was lle.ld ' Unlvenity showing lbe four diJ. IIIII dlllri-.s -...-nllout herbs
recenlly by
Jlernwoocl 0~ tinct cateJ(Iriel of 1~: lpicu llldltdpa
Club at the Zion.Cborcb of Chrilt.
from bark, root, fruit or berry· · 'I'M gtOap bad a ·
of heJb
•
Id!i Mqrphy presided at tho herbs from •·•~.. !Jf -11uals M · boob llld a
driilll t*bs
meeung and
the club perennial•: atom•. de ieedi of !bey had _.
frain lhejr gar- .
lowing the meetlll&amp; an, trout row; left 18 rlpt,
. ,COMMITI'EE MEEt'S ·The Advilory Com·
, )llld ~ Mn..._1"'7 had dovo- ~ ill;y ~ an4 If j I J!l- • ~
.
.
,
oltlle
Melp
HIP
boo!
Markett.g
EduCGIDIIllttet
memben CaroiJD Ollllll&amp;er lllltl Jon
llllttee
:ti~ usin( "Aiiiaham.Lincoln, Hit uap which are 11111141 of lpiees.
J1c!r ~etJUiulcau J1!ere were .a
Wolfe.
Sei:ond
row ne eomaktee a .. ben
cation
Protnm
met
lor
Ita
-...~
........
mu'IDI
SIJIIIIIUC, "Sow a PeldMred Olr· hlitlllld lleiCia. · ·
·
v..Uty of llerb cookJCs, cates,
Natnlle Tromm, Bob MeCian, jim HW, JlHI7
at Pleuer's Rntawmt Ia l'llmeroy • Wedll11
: den," an4 uvalontino Poocl for
MMy OUJIIples of llerbt were anebla, JllllY mix llld drinb.
4ny. The eommlttee Is Ia tile proca~ of ~ Speaeer,allCl K-a. Tile JII'IIII'IIW lac. . IIIII.
'fhoulbL"
· · allowa by tlllllldel ani lisu of
Mrs. Murp':6:troduce4 the
deatl marketing prladpk!t ud olren stadefta
Proaram Coordlutor David K·aesma write a
·
Marjorie Purtell announced the family membm ud Dill given put; r 'J 11
. die llll1in&amp; of
on-lite
work experteuc:e iD the secoad Jelli'.
new
ea~lam
.
plan
for
stadeiltr.
Pktm
e4
fol;
• birthday of Mn. Binda Diehl and both for food IJid cleeontion. The die Club in 1!1711.
all Slll8 "Happy Birthday" 10 her. 8JOUP lhiR ad.ioumecl10 die IIOcial
Others preaent were Binda
• Mrs. Purtell iDJrodnr-4 die speaker, room where Mrs. Oliveri 'ave a Dial! I, Neva Nichol lOR, Pauline
Cindy Oliveri; Meig1 Counly clemonatration of the maltmg of Adkins, ·Stella Adkins, Marcia
• Extension Alent to ,the ~p W!'b . herb be~te"ts which w~r,e later , DamiJoa, all Jqi'CIIIIIting Rudand
Adam Wesley Geyer, son of C. AIChison.
bid lhe propllll 011 'Cookini With served~~~~ heJb bread suw. She and Slar Garden Clubs, Carrie Roben and Rebecca Geyer, cele- · Sending gifts were Norman and
The Soutbem AlhiCtic BOOIIIers
• Spice and ~erbs . " Mrs. Oliveri ilso bad IWo·conterts about herbs Wean, Evelyn Thoma. Wilovene ()rated his first birthday recently Betty l:.ue Snodgrass, Jerry Pullen, will meet Monday at 7:30 p.m. at
: showed a slide wet (rom Ohio Stale
&amp;iley, Kathryn John'!&gt;n, Suzanoe with a party at lbe home of his Tom Sc!JuiiZ, Terri Beaman and the hi,lh achool to dilc:uss plans for .
'
Warner, Helen Bblln and Thelma maternal grandparents, John and Don, Tam,my .and Michael Wog- lbe Wll)ter ~uet.
Corrine Ambrose.
Giles.
amon.
A "WinniiHhe-Pooh" theme
was carried OUL
Attending were Janet and Jolm
Three students from Mei1s · Ambroae, Norman Jlld Ancill Van
County have been named 10 lbe Matre, Audrey Gaffney, Rosanna
· The Rutland Church of Cbrlll pre~enled n short p1ogr.1m wbicb .honor
roll at Obio SIIIC Univenil}' Manley, Vicky, Angie and Ray
hosted a wedding shower for rel8lcd to love lild rnarriqe. This
Shirley McDonald_ and GregC?ry wu fo~ by die opening of die for
j,om1 IIYCIIIC Russell, Steve, Cindy and Anna
2nd Street
Mason, WV
Marie Harlenbacb, Megan and
. Van Meter who w1ll be marned many pf'tl presented the honored
f 1 1 111 3 3 are Jami Andre
Caitlin Berry, Randi Pepp, Becky
, M.treh 9, on S~y evening..
couple,~ IJid Shirley.
~I!u cas~.
. Carol Lynn
Frank, Anne and Anthony Bearbs,
;
The carry-•n dinner ns M'ved
Allalding 'Mft Greg's mother,
.....!:••• - A ' • E
Ri
by candleliglll due to power faillllt. iarblra V111Meter, Iiiier, Teresa , er, _._':'"'•,....
ugene ce, Pam and Daniel Bucldey, Glenna
Riebel, Jim ·s chaekel and Ca~~"
• A large deeoraled cake was pre· · Houdasbelt, grandpnreau, Richard lteedlville.
.
: sented to the honored couple 'and IJ!d Jessie Grueser, uncle, Chattes' ' 1
: was served to the guests.
·
Richanl Grucaer, Euaene 1114 ltutb 1.
: B' AldasoDi.~eblh II the ~an~ ~~~·oodBob
. , ~~- andEdi~ildred . Tile Noid nllem'l.eelue Tour·
• 1D .
w o wu ....,....,.. I .-.... IJIS,
..........,.,
w LamniiiiCilt will be held at lillerYiew
• her 92 birthday. She WIS Jl r 1mlcd krt, 1t~n and Judy .Snowden, Eiletllea_, School on Saturday
\ '
.
: a conage. 1 Dower arranpmen1 J~ne. Wt.., Jane&amp; ud Joe B_olin, and Suadiy IIIII on Maldll and 3.
• and a dec:o"ilcd take.
. ,
Vickie ~'*JdY· ~ ~alliams, Participatiag will be Coolville,
: · Eugeae U~. die miUII· ~- .•ay, Biada Diebl,ltay, Cheater, Tuppers Plains and
• Je!', WI celelinlini 1 blr1llday and K1m, Janulhl ai1Cl Cundy WiD· Riwl"iew
·
: ~ ~ preiClllcd a decorated cake ford~ Kalby and Beverly SteWIJ't,
f~ limes will be 9 Lm.
• and a IICIIC. .
. ,
Lorn, Tyler and Jake Baroes, and to 4:30 p.m. on Saturday and 1• After lbe dmner, the mtntsler J0111 and Bruce May.
4:30p.m. on Sunday.
We Will Resume Regular Hours
:
Refreshmenll will be aYiilable
On Saturday, Feb. 23
1
and door prizes will be aWarded.
Proceeds from lbe touritllllent
9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
will
purthasing a new
d.
: The Hemlock Orange met for by. lhe group. A readin1; "1'he SUJi
ADAMW.GDEA
~ the February meeting ,wilb Ziba
Americlli Cned" by Helen Quiv• Midkirf, muttll', collhctila ~ ~~lltaow nree ninga," bv
' mcelingwilh 15inramh ~
J=t=M; "True Gie8tnc1s"
•
: : The legislative repM wu given by NuN Reed .
• b)' Hilber Qui-vey.
.
; · An apple crisp baking contelt
Two JIRSideats conwu were
• was befcf with Muriel Bradford won by Sylvia Midkiff and Helen
.
· ~ winning b. Leota Smith, ICPOild, Quivey..
'
and ROIIIIic S • tllird.
Thrift tips were given ~a
• On the
Hat is Homer Robson, Leola Smith, Zilla · 'If
- Willard and Alice SIOCittoo.
and Roland Easlman.
~ . The lecturer's progra~ was
directed by Roaahe Story, Her
ltelre8bments of ~le crisp and
11'1eme wu "America." The' 1001 ice aeam wae serWdM lbe con"America The '-tiful" WIS - · clulioil Of die !MIIing:

"''J..C:O.!t"

Geyer birthday is celebrated

~ Rutland Church of Christ

· hosts recent wedding shower

..

Booster meeting set

On OSU dean's list

Mason Furniture Co.

.e'J!:"a':'

Fis;

TOUrDamen·t Set

NEW YORK (UPI) - RCcording veterans including Quincy
Jones, Pbil Collins and lbe lale Roy
OrbiJon dominated lbe 33rd Annual Grammy Awards, but relative
newcomen Mariab Carey and M.C.
' Hammer walked home with tro·
phies of their own.
Irish songstress Sinead O'Con·
nor, who boycotted the ceremonies
Wednesday nighl because they
"respect mostly material gain,"
, won for ,best alternative perfor• mance wtth her album "I Do Not
Want Wball Haven't Got.' '
Jones, winner of lbe album of
the year for ''!lack On The
Block," beat Collins, Hammer, ·
Carey and Wilson Phillips, He also
won in five other categories,
including best instrumental
anangement far •'Birdiand.' •
"You never get used 10 it," said
Jones, the all-time non-classical
Grammy wiimer. "I've won 25
Grammys but lost 57 times. ··' I
· , hope I 9ever get jaded by it."
Collms,. who won best record of .
the year for "Another Day in Par·
!ldise," said he sees lbe honor "as
a pat or our backs from our peers,
saying, 'Well done, lads. What
. · you're doing is good."'
"If lbe song says anylblng, it's '
if you see somebody on the street
think about it,' • Colliris said.
Orbison, who died in 19,88 and
won a posthumous Grammy last
year for.his work wilb lbe Travel·
ing Wilbucys, won again Wednesday for ben vocal performance
with "Pretty Woman," which rust
topped the Billl)oard charts in
1964.
. ..
· Carey, who stormed onto the
·music scene in 1990 wilb a self·
Jitled debut album lbat showcases
her seven-octave vocal range, won

., """"'

~Carmel -area happenings

•
: Mr. and Mrs. Roben Wauon, ored• bet binbday Sunday.
: Kent; Lisa Y011111 ~ 1011 of SidMr. and Mn. Doyle Multi,
ney. vitlled with Mary lllotllb 0\'el' Mr fWd. lll4 ottw relali'Vel met
• the weetead.
at 1M Harden home ia die after.
! Lula Cin:le wu a dinner pest IIOGii to honor Lilla on 1.- ~of Mr. 111d Mrs. Roben Harden,
'l'lllre ~54 pi GUill for SundayiCbool.
.
· Morning Sw Road
Lu1a' - bon·
,
•II
, I

an

'·

MUOENSDOAAYV PPAAPPEE'!
T
"

•

SUNDAY

I

•
•

MIDDLEPORT • Tile Mi4cllo-

BIG WINNER · Compaeer Quine,. Joaes wu tile big winner at
the ADDWil Grammy Awards, prnerill&amp; ftve Grammys, lndacllng
Album of the Year and Prodncer of the Year. Jones now bU 24
lifetime Grarnmys, putting 111m close be~d naolber composer Sir
Georg Sold, who bas 28. (UPI)
Grammys ror best new artist and
best female pop vocal performance
for her single "Vision Of Love."
Hammer won· for best rap solo
performance and lbe writer's award
for best R&amp;B song .with. "ll Can't
Touch. This. "Please Hammer
Don't Hurt
. 'Em The Movie " also
receive4 the Grammy for best longform music video.
.
Wilson Phillips, the chart-topping trio formed by the daughlers.

.

COOL V'ILLI • Tile Coo!Yilk
Lions Club will 8pOiiiOr a f11 pal
dinner on s~ fronl 110011 10 3
p.m. Cost is $3 for ldultlllld $1.50
for children. Proceeds willao 10
the Coolville United Melhodill
Churdl.

·Will Be Closed
Friday, February 22nd

COOLV'ILLE-A.-g~

will be held at the Arcadia NursinJ
Home in Coolville on Sunday a 3
p.m. by lhe Coolville United

A Cenb'ILine Revolving Line offers a wide

r111p of credit linea, all with incredibly
low rates.

.•

.

MA'ITEA WINS- Kathy Mattea pall the Gramm,. lhe WOD on
her head alter taking the Best Country Vocal Perform•nee,
Female category for ber slqle, "Where've You Been.'' (UPI)
'

Ar11 Code 614

7 1 - Autos for Sale
72 - Truc:ks for $111
73- VInS &amp; 4 WO "s

, 22 - Mont¥ to loan
23 - Prof•tlontl Serv1ces

Rea I Eslate

Meson Co .. WV

Aree Code 304

74- Motorcycles
76 - Boltl &amp; Mot o rs for S1l1
76 - Auto Parts &amp; Ac c••orill
77 -- Auto Repair
78 - Camp lng EQuipment
79 - Campers &amp; Motor Homes

31 - Piomft for Stle
32 - Mobill Homes f9r Stle
33 - Ftrms for Sate
34..-ButinMs Building!
:l5 - Lots &amp; Acr11g1
,

&amp;7!t - Pt . Pleasent
of Beach Boy Brian Wilson and
44&amp;-Gallipolit
992 - Middiii)Or1
458 - Leon
Pomlt'ay
367-Ch•tlire
JQhn and Michelle Phillips or lbe
676 - A~ple Grove
988 - 'C hfttlr
311- Vinton
773 - Mason .
Mamas and lbe Pappas, was nomi·
3&amp;- Real Est111 W1nted ·
241- Rio Grtnde 843-Port'-ni!l
261-Guyen Dill. 2•'7- Ltllrt F1Us 882-Ntw Hel.ten
nated for three awards including
l;tijUI{Itl
896-- LIIIrl
l.t3-Arebi• Oi1t . 9.l9 -' At~cine
best new artisl but went home
937 - Buffalo
'742 - Rutlend
379- W•Inat
Services
41 - Houses for Rent
,
66~ - Coolville
e,ty-handed. .
·
42 - Mobile Homes for Rent
81 - · Horfte lmprovemctntl
·
ohn Lennon was. awarded a
43 - Farms tor Rent
82 - Piumblng &amp; Heat ing
44 - Aptrtment for Rent
special Lifelime Ac!Jievement
83-E•cwetinQ
t6 - Furnished Raoms
84 - Eiectric•l S. R1 frigeration
•
Grammy by actor Richard Gere,
46 - Spue for Rent
85 - Gen~ttl l H1u llng
.•n - Wtnted to Renl
who praised the late Beatie as "a
86 - Mobile Home Repel•
48 - Equipment for Rent
8 7 - UptlolltlfV
divine madman.' '
49 - t:or l•••
Yoko Ono, who accepted the
award for her slain husband, urged
the audience 10 ''take this oppPrtU·
nity to pray for the safety and
heallb of Ibis beauliful planeL John
Lennon would have liked that."
And actor Jilek Nicholson pre·
senled Bob pylan with a lifetime
achievement awarl!. Nicholson
called tbe durable son~Jer "tbe
voice of his generatton" and a
Public Notice
PubliC Notice
Public Notice
Public Notice .
•'disturber of tbe peace.''
Singer Kiuy Wells, whose
music was praised as "pure coon·
PUBLIC NOTICE
cylinder, 4·whHI drive;
ThaN are vohlclaa formTho Commiaaionora rea· .
try," won the third lifetime'
On Waclnnclay. MiliCh I. 1-1978 Ford Van. 300
orly ..eel by tho Moiga ""'"the right to reject ony
h 1981.11 11:30 A.M: on the cu. ln .. I cyllndorenglno;
County SharHf'a D-rt· and 1 11 blda.
.
.
d Th f
ac hICVell)ent awar • e ourt hont atep1 of tho M.oiga 1-1981 Chavrolot.Jmpolo mont, ond ora being oold u
Terma: Cuh or cortHiod
lifetime achievement award went 10 County Commllllonoro wlll 4-door 3110 cu. ln. V-8
Ia. with no worronty ••· Check, doy of 1111.
diva Marian Anderson, who made offwr for Ill• to lhl hlghoat engine:
pre- or lmpMod. Vehlcloa
'Meiga County
his•nrv in 1955 when she became bidder the following de- 1-1987 Chevrolot Coprlce moy be vlawaclohor March
Commlaalonora
_,
ocdbacl vehlcloo;
4·door 3110 cu. In V·8
1,attheMelgoCountySherMary Hobatottor, Cleric '
lbe first black singer to be a pen1!8· 1 1183 J - CJ 7 t1
angina.
Hf'o Dooort.mont.
121 21, 28, '2tc
· nent'member of lbe MetropOlitan 1-----.· _._.---'-----~--....J._
Opera.
'
Trustees Awards went 10
Motown Records found~r Berry
•Remodeling and
Gordy, Sarn Phillips, wl!o started
Home Repairs
Sun Records in Nashville, "lhe
•RDofing
firsi recording home of Elvis Pres·
•Siding
ley," and Milt Gabler, who began
. •Painting
the jazz label Connnodole.
NO JOB TOO SMALL
Legendary guitarist Eric Clap· l--.-----~r---------,.--------:oo1
FREE ESTIMATES
ron won best rock performance by
CEDAR
a ·male for "Bad Love," while the
•
veteran band Aerosmith took lbe
CONSIRUCIION
·best rock r._ecormance bT a group
cttatlllt
992-6648 or
for "Janie s Got A Gun.'
698-6164
,. · But in the jazz ca1egory, a relative youngsier. Harry Connick Jr.,
beat out established artists such as
by tick mo111'letf
CUSTOM BUILT
THE
Tony Bennen and George Benson
205 N. Socond Str•l
for best jazz perfronance by a male
H()MES &amp; GARAGES
B~rby .
IIIDDlEPOIT, OHIO 45 760
wilb "We Asc in Love.''
"At lea-bit Prien"
~UALITY
Offko 614-992·2116
Gospel legend and previous
PH.
949·2101
HOME
614-992-S.U
Grammy d~ient James ClevePoint Pleasant • 675-6925
DOTnE
IIOKEI
land, who ' in Los Angeles Feb.
or le1. 949·2860
Complete Grooming
·9, won an award for best gospel
~ Doy or Night
- For All Breeds
•VINYL SIDING
album with "Having Church,"
W~
Need
NO SUNDAY CALLS
•ALUMINUM SIDING
EMILEE MERINAR
recorded with lbe Southern Califor4-16-16-ttn
nia Community Choir.
•BLOWN IN
Owner &amp;· Opttrotor
INSULATION
Among the other Grammy
6J4-99
20
recipients were Julie Gold, who
Pomeroy,
won best song for "From A DisJ&amp;L
tance," perfamed by Belle Midler,
',, MIMII,IH
and Ella Fitzgerald, who won for
llow H-luilt
DAN'S
•VInyl
Siding
best~ perfronance by a female
"Free
Eotlmatea"
UPHOLStERY
•Replacement
for ' All That Jazz."
TRANSMISSION
213 .... S.CMJtl
PH. 949-2101
Wlndowo
."I'm 35 years old. 1· was raised
and AUTO IEPAII
•Roofing
or Its. 949-2860
in the 60s. I lived tbrou~ tlie VietSpoclollzlng In
•lneuletlon
Hand Tufting
NO SUNDAY UUS
. nam War and the civil nghts moveAutomatic
3·11·«•
Custom Drepew
JAMES KEESEE
Tranamlulono, Brokeo,
. ment. They are wilb me every day
36 r .... ~a,.....,
Tunaup, 011 Change,
992-2772. or
of my life," Gold said "I feel I've
Clutch Repair,
614·992·23!1
been writing that song every day of
742-2251
FREE
ESTIMATES
'•
We
Soy
Whet
We
Do.
my life."
1139 Bry•n Piece
8 v....
W.Oo
Middleport,
CARPENTER SERVICE
Gold called the award "the
992-5517
- Room Addition•
dream of a 1ifetime."
IL----.....;;;.;;;;:..:::::;J
- Gutter ,work
361 l•t llaln
- Eioctrlcol ond Plun•blng I
.....,.., 011•
O'Connor, norninated for four
- Concrete won
54 MI8C8lla1110U8
r'/1!91/1 mo.
- Rooflng
Grammys, told the National Acade·
Merchllndlu
-lrn.rior • Ext•lor
my of Recording Arts and Sciences
Pointing
the awards "respect mostly maleri·
(FREE ESTIMATES!
al gain, since thai is the main reaY. C. YOUNG Ill
son for their existence," and
promised she would not accept a
992-6215
'
Gramrn y if she won. Her assessPomroy, Ohio
11-14-'90
ment renects that of critics who
claim tbe Grammys reward commercial success al the expense of
musical boldness and innovation.
TII-COUNn
Till
•
Get , _ lawn anti gar.
RECYCLING
Rap music was entered as a Cat·
OPEN 7 DAYS
tlen II(Uipmut tuned up •
A WEEK
egory two {!:;s ago, but Rush
•
ontl bladn sharflltlld
9 A.M. 'TIL 7 P.M.
1
fot the cllllli.. IIGIOII(
top
If ru clean up your
=
• ·'
DUIItG FEIRUAR\' :-!
yar
on Wftllends.... we
drew its support of the Grammys
- Free pidcup ond ...•..
Tuesday. Russell Simmons of Rush
buB on w11bntls.
deiiYiry in Pomeroy •
rapPed the National Academy of
I·COUNTY
RECYCUNG
Recording Arts and Sciences for
and Mitldllport city •••
"demolion or rap
to second·
1-1oo1 Off tho IJpalll 011
'. .
limits.
The c.m. ol
· class recognition."
'
WE ALSO SERVICE
It, 1 &amp; lt. 143
•'
CHAIN SAWS
Rush noted that the Grammy for
'
·
Best Rap Group performance, for
Ohio
P8YinO cull
llumlnum,
DAVE'S SMAll •'
which Rush recording artists Public
oopper, brae., ..-...........
tMgn.-ium. redletore. ttertENGINE IEPAII
Enemy was nominated, was not
... eiiWMtorl end • nonpesenled during the televised por253 Witt ....... St.
tion of lbe lbow but in die earlier
2
CAll POl I'IKD
, ••.,.y, Oh. ·'·
pre-telecast ceremonies and the
90 WEST MAIN ST•
614·"2-5114
only rap stars on the show were
POMIIOY, OHIO
PH. 992-3922
,Do~··
2·2 'I I
1-4- ·
Hammer and Vanilla Ice.

8et Recuftc fut

SIGNS

,

.

'

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

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

..

YOUNG'S

Ex_,.,.,.

DESERT STORM ,
ITEMS

,.

IIAT

RISHI

Watches, Patches, Pins,
:OS:C~~be ~PW:!'u~t. Yellow Ribbons, ·Buttons,
T-Sh,l'rts &amp; P•'cture.s,
Support Our Troops Signs
music

·~

,.,d\

Meig1 County

Transporl aIion

21 ~ susin•• Opponunltv

INSULATION

CENTRAL TRlBf

'-

c

ROOM

• CMfllll 1t1W MX MlltN.

...

66 - S ..d &amp; Fenili.ztr

2 :00P .M . FRIDAY

GRuunu

It's easy to see why the CentraLine Home Equity Loan is now
an even better way to borrow. So act now.
·

Mtlllbtr FDIC

-

62 ...- Wanted 10 Buy
·63 :- Uvenock
64 - H•v &amp; Grtin

2 :00P .M . Ti.JESOAY

BISSELL
BUILDERS

The interest charges on secured CentraLines
may be tax deductible. The tax law allows
for deduction of 110111e.or ~I ol the inte.rest
on loans secured by a personal residence. •

APMCBANK

81 - Ftrm Equipment

Bu·s iness Services

·we can design a CentraLine Home Equity
Loan to meet your specific needs ... with
variable rates and flexible repayment plans.
And you can use your CentraLine to finance
anything you need like col\ege tuition, a
home improvement or even a new car.

GREAT RATES

W1nted ·

_______-+--------

.,

TAX SAVINGS

11 - Help Wtntect

following telephon:e exchanges ...
G1lli1 County

Farm Supulies
l'r LIVCSIUL:k

~~. . . SIFIED RDS

For a limited time only, you can get a
CentraLine Home Equity Loan with
substantially reduced closing costs.

HEXIBDJ'I'Y

Ser111ces

Classified pafleS ,corer 1he
Ar.. Codo 614

REDUCED
CLOSING cosrs

port Clnrch of Olrist's Teen Clloir'
POMDOV • A closed 12-step
will present "Let's Go to die Roc:t" A.A. IIUtingwill be beld S181day
at 7 p.m. on Sundly. The pablic Ia nt 7 p.m. a! the 1TPA office in
invilelfiiUI!ftNl
Pomaoy. '

- 2 '00 p ,M.•WEDNESDAV
- 2 '00 P.M. THURSDAY

59 -"For S.le or Trlde

Read the Best Seller

Now An Even Better Way To Bon'Ow

Methodist ........

THURSDAY PAPER
PAPEA

54 - M ist. Mer ch1ndtlt
55 - Building Supplt•
&amp;6...-.. Pttl for S1l11
57 - Mulie• lnstrumenu
58- Fn.llll &amp; Ve g .. lbl•

~muluyrnenl

. . .~ I I '00 A.M. SATURD/1 Y
- 2 '00 P.M . MONDAY
-

SUNDAY PAPER

Lott tnd Found
Vard Sale (ptid in advlnce)
Public S1le &amp; Auctio n
Wtnted to Buy

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION

WEDNESDAY PAPER '
FAIDA~

'

------------ -------- ------

1

&amp;2 - Spontng Ooodt
53- Anhque•

6 - Heppy Ad•

678• 9-

cept - c:l•sifild diapl-v. Busin•• Card and legtl noficesJ
w6tl 1110 IIIPtlr In the Pt. Ple•ent Regitttr end the Gttl• ·
p~il Daily Tribune. rlletling over 18.000 ho~n

COPV DEADLINE -

M~rch a ml1 se

2 - In M-.nory

•A clnsified tdv111iMm.,t piK"' i n TheOaltv Sent in .. I•• ·

.

·The CentraLine
Home Equity Loan
from·Central Trust

. ~ CommunitY
Calendar
---

Ytrcl Sal•

.eo ·
.05/ dey

51 - HauHhold Good•

3 - Annoucementt
4 - GiveMNI'r'

•Actt ti'\M mull be Plld In advance tre

cwarda

s'f:l

A1111 uu 11 ceme nl s

aft• "ublic:wtion to m•t correction.
Hsppy Ads

' .42

, b;oken uPd..,twill bec:k1rgttd

1 - Citd of Th.,.ks

for enon tirtl d., ad runs tn papet) . Ctll before 2 :00pm
Card at Th..,ks

,30

$9.00

, e1r.h dMI II MPMI11

is double priu of ad coil.

In Memoriam

15

Ret• ere tor conMC:tJtlYe

•sentinlll is not rftponsible ior errors atte.r first dflf. !Ch i de
cj.,

86 .00

e13.oo
$1 ,30/ doy

16

10

dltcounl1'or adt JMid in edYence.

I

15

Monthly

-~:··~t.~~j·~~ndj.ff,~ound 1d1 undw 16 words will bt

•Prict

15

3
6

~ti9f. ·Qallia or M .. on counti.i must be pre·

.'.1

Rote
Ov'r 16 Worda
t4.00
.20

16'

I

8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
y

run

Words

Oavs

MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.

Brother of Herman Grate

'

RATES

TO PLACE AN AD CALL 992-2156

.· Wendell Grate,

'

Classifie
• .·The Area's . Number 1 Marketplace

Due To The Death Of

:·H
.· ·em,ock. grange meets

The Dally Sentinel-Page-s

Ohio

GRAMMY TIME • MC Hammer balds up the three Gnmmy
: Awartlr be WilD Wednrrday ulgbt. Hammer woa for Bell Rap Solo
· Perfonlanee llild Bat R&amp;B SOuiJ'Iter, u weD a Best Mlilk: VIdeo
: • LoDg Form. (UPI)

.,.

'•

-·~

.....
~.

-..--.

MEIGs
FARM MARKET

. ..
.......

'-•Z;,

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

•, 1

,.......

IL-------------...1

..,
:·
.

,....
..
...

...

• ••

•I

•

�21,1881

sentinel

LAFF-A-DAY

Television

,..~,1&lt;+0_

• !!~"':.~~'.

MilS-~ TRIW
1'1a.LNB~sr~

c!OI"Qie Ill

11WJl.1, my

~c;e~

!)tAR, I

==-.. . .

boN'r 41~
1172_

D IUdwtlaa:Cau .... ed

Coor ..... !1111

Dlglal

ANAl' ON

WITH YOUif(; I
SHOES ON ..

.. ; ..., ..... 814417...,... '

' - - . . 100 011- ft . .. -

10 good -

OOur"-1!;11

1:01(1) BavlffY III.IMirr
8:30~· «JNKfllahiiJ .....

.

ltnortroJnod. - - '
Pvlllll-: aww
to

&amp; Aucllo

...
n

Com~"
..,.,_- ,,_....

oolllll- give

- ....,_, _...,

· ,..._1711.
· GaHipolls
,_ t 1
- - . .,.
Smaft Doa. Goad pot, I -loo
&amp; VIcinity
Llaolln ~ 0f1!!,_ ~. Gill Pa~ lllor:llltan llo&lt;!giL IMYlrglnlt,
· 24U042.
ALL Yanl ...... llllll Be Pokf In
Acfv.,_, ~E: z:ao P·"'· 9
wanted tO Buy
'""
daJ
.......
,,.
...
lo
to
...
n.
~..,.;..
- ;.;,;;.~;;:.·~....;..,:__....,.
6 LOst &amp; Found
adltfan • 2:00 p.m.
Frlcfoy. lllondlJ oc1111on • 2:00
p.m. htuniiJ,
-

..... Q

~£·A11C

~~~~Q

t===V.=&amp;rd=Sa=l=e==~B==;:PW~I~Ic==Sa~l~e==i 22
7

111 Undar 11 Not:,..Jidlld

Cils-2·•=8

"He's building a boat ...in .the
basement.;'
One Cot t 112 ,_,. old, opodod,

.

8 Wi11111 T'*f_
.

-

pm.

~awe

~i!~r ~

- =-h-K
-114-····
--flOOl

bo ...... ~

Cot .... 114tttMI.

c..

&lt;lleta•11t~Q

!II ,...,

0..,.114-

s .,._, "'- S04 opoyod. -

.... it,! ill••••

A·-·--·

'ayr. oldhrrurl: d llaecL
........1711.

~~-

-n--.

au"""'

Up

"g

IDUpCiole
1:31 (J) Andy Orlflllll

Money to Loan
LCWIIIY IIA!L
to 11,000 In '12 ._...

7:00~0:..

w.

:0:::,'1e U::1."':~

.!.~.;~·=-

:::.,...::::=•=-:•::::_===:----

ll=~n9Q

LCWIIIY IIAIL

Up to 11,000 In '12 ._,._ W.
oan hlfp you gol 1 ~

l.aol! By lid. ~-~·

· ·· -

23

Wheel of
Z· IO

(J) I DrHin of JilT ' 1

a

'

8

Q

lA' 1FT
. . . 8fiiiJ Rlltd·for

.

.

18 , . Wllihg day.
' .' .

.

lpartaCanw
11JilefliiMI

8 toaiiCIOW anti _Mrl. Kllilf
7:30 u C~tri.NJb~'~PIIIIOI,.IJtJI Q

Professional

I

7:01 (J) lleppJ llep

..
WI- 1a buv: Fleh ......,,...
:INS -~lon.
flollon. '!Winbod ~~
In
"!': ---..---------1..-----~-~~
. - . ..
.
•
I14-IIWIOS

r:::
iness Services :..:·

-:=======:;r;:=======:;-1......,.
SHIUB &amp; TREE
R. L. MASH

T• ....,

· ~...

wfth .. wllhoul -

t

.'

I

TRIM and
REMOVAL

CARPENTRY

•LIGHT HAULING

t:d

•

Farm Eqt!l...nl, Running or
Haltr:C:
801- We ·Bur Self
Or
t1441NIZI.

Hoo n hold turnlohlng. 112 mi. Elceflenl
Uled couchCoud1fon.
• · - "'"'
f100,
114-311'
Rd. Pt. ... wv, IMO.
WATER WITCH WELL DRILUNO
AENT20WN
WATER· GUAIIAHTIED. I , . _

Real Estate

-

__...

31 Homa for Sale
I b1d.,..._ I . . . . tull fin.

•Room Additions

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

-

•Kitchens • Baths

!101d,2414111.--.
Polni P'tlllnt. Pltold On 1ft.

=-~...=.-~!k
=~
-lnor
Dfne1to

•Vinyl Siding

apeollon. -tl'lll.

•Restoration
•Repair Work

' 992-5526

: USED RWOAD TIES

POIIIIOY, OliO

1·12·10·tfn

'.

. ... . CIOWIYE .

: ·on••a•
auuas

._..

-

•Garages

•FIREWOOD
BILL SLACK
ct92-2269

Olli--

·--GI!'I·

PICKENI FURNITURE

Au101

Unfy
3IIIIIDI.
Wllnlad:
- . ...Core.
Truob.

'Z:.""·

Two
210 ...
~
......111~
flad
' wtih
2.11.
-lor T.V. o r - . new$110.

'*- lor - 2111 Ga....
mid 20'1, ~·~~~­
•:ao Pll.
32 Mobile Homo
· ror Sale ·

and Cllllr, $11.11 por-k.
I Pea WaadgraUD, IM.01 per

7111.

•m ,.,.

: •' · ....__
- ,--·
...
~ . . . . . .d ••
.

lion,

""'

11,1110 """' • .,__ 1111 •p.m., llhrgllC..

='·.
.... -

.....~

e

illl Tlttw'e comp 1n'
1DCoM1gl ..lk.....

:
I

e Croiaftfe

.

loW.,.._,. -

.

72 Trucks for Sail

eo-..,.

55

12 - .

Building
SUpplieS

1m -

2 1on 1111 bod

and 1n old fiiGh·aohOol friend
remlniace ...,. dinner .

SttNo. C ·
·
MOYIII:: The 011141 . , .
Onea (2:00)
.
..

I!)

1/1

Ill

I

s~erea.c

'

!II War.. . - , _ 1n t!J1

Z- z.l

l

Nuclllr~Q
(J) New EIPIO...,. SIINo.

.
.
.
.
---- -"'"' -IUII·

prili0n8r lrlos 10 bum hll cell
down; a '-gel' e1temp11

~.
,

suicide. SttNo. C

(lJ •limpaona

.On.....

rMIDIS-$125 .,
11010 OVIIIS-$79 .,.

1111'S APPUMa

SEIVICE

Dwayne bill Whlltey lhl

6•
a .. al

Ster10.

(J) ,.....

dJ

..... , ......... Office
PCJMIIOY, OliO
101!0111

co••••1011
.........
.........

•"'-Eetlm•tw•

and LOUII trlvtl 10 lOI
Angelos fOr I film-nOir

Time
·
•High .Giou· an n1e
· FlOor Flnllh

rz?';ii,s:;·&amp;,. on

'""'"

l\

1

1',,.~-. .

IENNm'S MOIIUIOME
IU'RNG &amp; COOLING

2 - ... 1 ..... loll, 3
mllll lOUth 0 •'pvAI uaa.

81 ' Farm Equipment

pulllo
- · · no.......
...,-..,
-with~-

Luwlilll •• s.ffenl Sc•••l ... eff lt. 141
14 446·9416

I ..

•

'AISIJNII

llNIII.

YO'RE JEST
IN TIME FER

Rentals

VITTLES!!

YOU BEST CLEAR
THAT WITH YORE
AUNT LOWEEZY,
JUGHAID

SHE'S OFF IN
TH' FLATLANDS AN'

UNit SNU'FY II
"XIN' SU,IIt

~~'l'dn

'

_ _ .....,._WY. .

cichlo- "*'- .... ,.,_ Q

•

""*"" -. .,.~:""·

.,.., no rUII,

•

r

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

=JHIIIPoloe-1
• .,..... No """""'' 1.I
c.a '111111:,...

••
ocmc Oolller, f710.ao.
"'-(»&gt;I I1Wfao. .

&amp;2 wanted to Buy

=::

~ ':'.:Z

CS3

UVastock

!J ,fo !.;..

•••••••lin•
\_

.

AIIIU (..... 11-Aprll 11) You're not
ropl to ......... WWcM todey. In rltUIIIDnl
.....,. )'OU might o.oauefly hofcl your
lt~~~gYe, you'NIIt8fy to ... o,.ldlrlexKtly hoW you '-'·
: TAIMUS (April • IIIJ . , Try not to
pullaa much emphlrlr on 1Nngr

ot 1

mro1ertr11 11111n wt11n drlllna w1111 pate
1.... " , . •• " l!lllllf 10011 ... )'OU

VIIIQO CAlla- Jl
II) Wltan moll....... your proliablllllel "" lullllllng
I

, ..

. . exli......, IIQ9d
loclty, _ . II 11ie aondltlana you 1111)'
h8w 1a conteud wfth more cNIyour~

I

U8IIA ,...... Jl Oot. Jl) Upon -

llon,lt'IIOIMifmllett•niJII ID !eke 8
calellflleel rt11c In Otdlr to _,. ... •
Panonallnt-. Don't Ill timid 1ft allu1110111 IIIII require ~ todey.

D4••-•
comlne nw••· You mlgfllllllka a poor

nela:S.. 1he-aLIVE
It hep,..., - 24
'-rt.
fAD IJIItm In ·

11

Cfu"-a dlllOder.

c:::,--.:..::. t!!!..• ~
...............a ••

CAU TODAY
F!BIIUAurrciAL

I,

"SIM!d on balhtOOIII 10111...18111 •,...

R
a

S'

••

1

11'1- to bring the ..,..., out Into the
• open ......... . . .
In al-

--~--

liMa-·
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OIIIIN,
hoW 1111-eulllcllnl , . ..... fry 10 illlkl

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orfty lllg ....... '"*'81 you llloughl
111:=..-~~~--

lor

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i

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Mlenil Ylce s -.

J

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on 0111

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• ...... TIIIIIM.

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11:11

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,. . . . . . .,c.a-..~-.­

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n:OO&lt;Jle Ill Clle a • •

SCOIIJIO (Oat. ........ II) You'Nin •
rlllier fUCfcy CJCie lor .....,.111111 In-frOm pl.- Olhlr then ),111111' UIUIIf

~,..

........ niod&amp; T1te .......
Drylr ...... 114 •• liM.

=-~:.,,

.

. . _ . ..,IDIItiiMIIBOUI Wllll'lln It . . . _ ...... 111111. " ' . ... ~IIRITW 1llltllll ""'" ......
.
lor,. .... 11111iCIIIIIP 111111.
Kelp an.,. ou1.
(llllf .,.,... . , II ihlnga IIMITTAIIUS ...... Jl Die II) codon'l go your .., tocley, lhenl'l a poa. aparatiOn .. cellld lor IOCiey In y®r lnIIIIIII1Y you COUld
In an un!Mtw1t1i
NQirdiMI ol

'

··~ .

10:tl (I) MCMI: tile .II~ IF
(1:00)
.
10:10 (]) w.illli1Jitili Lrf ·If I"

Ienalnallt8nUM181.

lmPilllllhr on 11101111 wfiO'. . ,., I'
. . . 111111 , . - - In ..... '*1110111'
01111' will )'OUr ....._dllii latGr.
CAlle: Ill (,_.II.....,., Wliai dill- ·
h" 11)Tiillcan
lng wllfl M fndiVIclulif wliO I I I I i;ty did 111 • .-y producti,. c11r lor ,ou, prayldetl ,ou dNIIe , _ alforUto top prtIOIItllhll. ,0U fOund urr.IIM toAy,

9

deep brllllnl"?
.

rodlec-'an.

Wlliil 10 ""' ailndlng 11mbar.

Zf:NIX VIDEO.

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OH 44101-3421. Be . . . lo llt81e your

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Judge O'Brien processes 41 court cases

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· WEATHER MAP· A few sbowtn will deftiop llonga stalled
froat ID 1011t11ern Georp aDd northern Florida. Otllerwlse, the
country wW be mostly dry. A cold l'rollt will push ill to the Great
Lakes ..t DCII1herD Plliu, briD&amp;'-1 cooler air to lheae areas. High
tem~flllves will nuae from the lowers 80s in Florida to the mid·
die JOii.ln the norhtern PlaiDs. (UPI)
·

Meigs County Court Judge
. l'ltlrick H. Jut week.
Fined were: Rose Msrle Dearing, Pomeroy, assured clear distance, $20 and costs; Linda A.
'Gilkey, Middleport, failure to
yield, $10 and cotts; Jeff Grar •
Rutland, theft, $100 llld costs S1X
months in jail suspended to time
served; Tamara Nelson, Rutland,
speeding, .$20 aDd COSts; Duane T.
Kaufman, Parkersburg, W.Va., no
medical certificate, $50 and costs;
Larry S. Stat_hers, Washington,
W.Va,, speeding, $2\) and cosJS;
Carl Hubbard, Racine, failure to
yield, $10 and costs; Daniel E.
Heck, Portland, failure to display
PUCO tsx decal, $25 and costs;
George Sisson, Pomeroy, speed,
$23 and costs; Clay Fahner. Mid·

•
Sotlth Centnl
::. Partly cloudy Thunday night,
:with a low in the middle 30s. Plrtly
&lt;cloudy Friday, with highs near SO.

: .

Euended forecast

-. Saturday thi'OII&amp;h MOIIday
: Fair Salllnlay nnd Monday, and
chance of rain on s~1· Highs

?

will range from the mid 30s to the
low 40s Satunlay, from the mid 40s
to the l&lt;&gt;w 50s Sunday, and from
the mid 30s to low 40s Monday.
Overnight lows will he ill the 30s
Saturday and .Sunday mornings,
and ranging from the mid·20s to
the mid 30s early Monday.

~Nation

enjoys more
ispring-like weather
•

· By Ulllted PreaiiDtemational
Most of the United States
: basked in unseasonably warm
~weather Thursday in a return of .
:;_sj,rin~:~ntemperatures just days
":after
· g cold covered much of
·the nation.
·
: Hi&amp;h tempr.rature recpnls fell or
.:were tied in nearly 20 cities
-Wednesday, including Augusta;
; Ga.; llridaepor!, Conn.; L!ncoln,
,Neb.; San l'!Wiclsco; llld Wilming·ton, N.C.
: ·The high temperature for the
:~on was 89 deglees at Moarovia,
.Calif.
:. Snowstorms swept the Grear
~Likes reaion last week ud psty
-winds brou1ht dangerously low
·:wind chill~ to much of
·the liast, but spring weather
~returned durin&amp; the middle of this
;week. The National Westher Ser·

vice ~oted Wednesday night that
no wmter weather warnings, advi·
series or watches were in cffecL
Warninas for hi&amp;h winds were .
posted over the northern and cen·
1Jal Rockies earlier in the day, but
they had expired by evening. The
weather service ssid winds gusted
up to 58 mph at Boulder Canyon,
Colo., to 67 mph at Livingston,
Mont., and to 70 mph at several
locations in southcut Wyoming.
Rain was falling Wednesdsy
e,venlng acron central Texas,
SCiuthem LouisiaDa. southern Mississippi, the Florida panhandle,
southeast Alabama, west central
Georgia and southwest lower
~gan.

RUTLAND FURNITURE
WILL BE CLOSED FRIDAY, .
FEB. 22 DUE TO A DEATH
IN~ THE FAMILY.. .

.

AND

. ,·.

.

Vol. 41, No. 214
CopyrlghiM 1881

:
:
•
·

:

BI.G ·1

DAYS•
1991 CHEVROLET
112 TON SILVERADO

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

v

~~:g.eo

.

· .FRIDAY
FEBRUARY 22

1991 CHEVROLET
S-1 0 TAHOE.

BIG

LOGAN - A minimal amount
of revisions to the district plan
were returned to the Athens-Galiia·Hocking-Jackson-Meigs-Vinton
solid waste district this week, and
members of the district's policy
commiuee were pleased at the district's meeting Thursday night.
The plan, submit~¢ to. the Ohio
Environmental Protection Agency
late last year, is a comprehensive
study on how the district ~ill manage its solid waste needs m a ten·
year period. It includes projections
for the availability of landfill space
within the district, plans for recy·
cling systems, and schedules for
fees and monetary allocations
throughout the district.
·
The Ohio EPA returned the prlh
posed plan to District Executive
Director Lance Wilson with only
· II pages of revisions - a small

DAYS•

.0Nlv .S13,500* •:'

v-e. c...-.

~;;saumpw ONLY

S8,899**

:~:~~~~

111130

.

1991 CHEVROLET 1 TON
SILVERADO 4 DR. C.REW CAl PICKUP
#454 cu. IN.
SAVE SJ 500*

$

•Automatic

ONlY$ 13,462*
.

·

••

ONLY 10 991 *
.

I

1991 CHEVROLET CAPRICES
Motor Trend's

"Car of the Year"

SAVE

6 IN STOCK

S2,000

SPECIAL PURCHASE FACTORY CARSII
1990

G£0 METRO

1990 CADILLAC
SEDAN DEVILLE

Lilt 88,874

1990 CHEVROLET
LUIMNA

1990 CHEVROLET
CORSICA

Lilt *29,701

Lilt ..,4,904

Ult t12,324

SAU
1917 m(URY 1915 -CURY
MARQUIS
MARQUIS
PI, PL. IIW,
PW, N, C
'"'· Tlh.
ca-.. Till. '!.u••l c...,_. tow Mila.
I

Llet 'I.UI

SAlE $8,495

Uat •a,ttl

SAlE 56,39$

$6,995 SALE SJ9,·990 SAL£~1.0,490

1916 MONTE · 1917 CADILAC

DEVILLE
CARLO SIS . SEDA"
Low MIIM. Front
~ow

ONLY

Mille.

Sl -495
I

w!IMI drive. Laather

UeUU,4II

SAlE '11,495

1917 CADILLA(
BROUGHAM

R- wllael clrM. One

1916 CADIUAC
BROUGHAM

.........

ownw. Onir 3:1,000

RW drlva. Loallad.

Uat •tz.ua

u.......

miM, LDadU

S11 995

SALE

S7,986

SALE$8,995

1915 .
FLEETWOOD
BROUGHAM

One-· Loadad.
Uat .7.100

SALE

•a..• ,

1911 •12 TON
PICKUP

Auto .. V·l, lteNo
U.ULIII

cabin bas been handmade by Schuler. He com·
pleted the cabin in approximately two months•
Schuler's cabin will be on display for a period or
time at the museum.

State gearing up to ~id families,
.service people in Desert Storm

I

1.991 CHEVROLET
112 TON PICKUP .

I

later by a statement in Mo ~ow that
on the face of it appears more reasonable," Bush sa1d.
The Soviet plan , which Iraqi
Foreign Minister Tariq Azi z
accepted in Moscow early Friday
morning, calls for Iraq to withdraw
from the tiny emirate it invaded
Aug. 2, but sets a number of conditions, including withdrawal two
days after a cease-fire begins.

Few revisions returned in
solid waste district plan_
By MELINDA POWERS
OVP News Staff

LOG CABIN ON DISPLAY· James Schuler,
. Middleport, has loaned to the Meigs County
Museum for display a log cabin wbich he built
from sassafras. Everything in and outside of the

'

1991 CHEVROLET
4x4 PICKUP •12 TON

Nations resolutions· that call for
Saddaril Hussein to immediately
and unconditionally leave
Kuwait."
Bush said he has received mixed
signals from Iraq concerning the
Persian Gulf war.
·
'.'Within the last 24 hours alone
we have heard a defiant uncompromising address by Saddam Hus·
sein, followed less than 10 hours

amount considering the plan contained more than 700 pages of projections and specifications.
Wilson explained the suggested
revisions to the 15 policy committee members present, and state!\.
that most of the changes suggested
were of no great importance.
"The committee did a good job
fonnulating t!le plan. as is evident
by the minimal amount of revisions
returned," Wilson said. "Some of
the things in the revisions are for
Qur consultant to iron out, but other
than that, I am· pleased."
.
The EPA reviewers questioned
the proposal of the distnct to construct and operated a transfer sta·
lion 10 he located in Meigs County.
Apparently in the plan, no mention
was· made of how much haulers
would be charged or if the district
had obtained a contract or letter of
agieement from a proposed landfill
owner.
.
This point was cleared up by

Don Graves, of Mid -Am erican
Waste Systems, Inc. who stated
that a letter in principal between
Mid-American and Meigs County
had already been wriuen and would
be sent 10 the district within a few
days.
The EPA also encouraged the
Jackson County Health Department
to regain responsibility for the local
solid waste program. The Jackson .
health department is currently not
approved by the Ohio EPA to have
responsibility · for the solid waste
program and cannot receive district
disposal fee funds.
Because there were not enough
members· of the policy co10m ittee
present to take any action, those
present were unable to approve the
district 's proposed budget. The
budget projects approximately $490,000. to be expended. by the
distric~ including $37.500 for the
director's salary and $45,000 for
legal fees.

Wintry weather returning to Ohio

SATURDAY
PEBRUARY 23 .

# 183 ~ .

Bush said the ·u.S.-Ied coalition
"will giv¢ Saddam Hussein until
noon Saturday to do what he must
do - be~in his immediate and
unconditiOnal withdrawal from
Kuwait. We must hear publicly and
authoritatively his acceptance of
these terms."
The president said the United
States "and its coalition al~es are
commined to enforcing the United

•

LOW INTEREIT
RATES ~
-.. __,. - "'

' t,

;

duction system of KuwaiL
.
· The president refused tp take
questions and ignored an inquiry
on whether the U.N. Security
Council had approved the Saturday
deadline he imposed on Iraq.
More than 700,000 allied troops
in Saudi Arabia are poised to
launch a massive ground asssult,
combined with air and naval forces,
against the Iraqi troops occupying
Kuwait.

a.-.

NOW -GOING ON AT
Chevrolet-Oldsmobile-Cadillac -Geo, Inc.'

THURSDAY '
FEBRUARY 21

cussing it with senior advisers ....
By HELEN THOMAS
And after extensive consuluiti&lt;&gt;ns ·
UPJ While House Reporter
WASHINGTON (UPI)-Presi- with our coalition partners, I've
dent Bush, bac_ked by a strong decided that the time has come to
show of solidarity on the part of . make public with specificity just
coalition partners, called on Iraq exactly what is required of Iraq if a
Friday to begin withdrawing from ground war is to be avoided."
In an emotional statement, Bush
Kuwait beginning Saturday at
disclosed that Iraq had befun a
noon.
In a statement read in the Rose "scorched earth ~olicy ' in
Garden, Bush ssid, ••After exam in- Kuwait, "seaing ftre' to oil wells
ing the Mosco~ statement and dis· in an auempt to destroy the oil pro-

,,

.

2 Sectlona, 14 Pagea 25 !'enlo
A Multimedia Inc. Newopaper

1991

.

ONLY.~ S.l 099

NOW

•

.Bush gives Iraq until noon Saturday

ashington's Birthday Sale :
Jim ·Cobb

Pomeroy·Middll!port, Ohio, Friday, February 22,

.,.., Doilllrlo'• Pllra. Inc. o.. ..,.,..., .... tt.- no.oo. DellfMY ............ ..
..._. ......... VIHII .. ,.-c l::hlleoetlollofllr.
•d .....,.. .._..
.......... ,AitTTIIII AND
ROfl OPPORTUNITIU NOW.VAJLAall •

r

DOOR
' PRIZES

4-D; 8-S

WITH 4 PEPSI'S

·

Clear Friday night, with a
low in the lower 20s. Mostly
sunny Saturday, with highs in
the upper 30s.

Cards: 2·H; 6-C;

·LARGE DELUXE
. PIZZA

CHEESE PIZZAI

'

ON THE SPOT
FINANCING

Pick 3: 190
Pick 4: 6955

992-2124

CALL ABOUT
OUR NEW
BACON

NOTICE

'

..

=

·~

A few snow showers we're
reported in Minnesota, upper
Michigan and New Ymt srate. .

r-

Support .
our
Troops .

dlepcxt, theft, $100 and COSts, 180 no los book in p- ) ' ssion, $50 nnd iion, upon wollment and comple·
days s~n~ ~ 10, three years costs: Duay D. Tobias, Middle- tion of RTP scllnol, jail and $1~
probation, restllullOQ; Michael W. port, under FRA suspension, $75 of fine will be suspended; Jetrrey
Lewis, Conna:sville, Ind., ·tng not and COlli, 10 dlys in jail suspended B. Basham, Coolville, left of ceocurrent, $50 and costs; Noah D. to three, ·one ~hi; Jason ter, .$25 and costs; Richard A.
Lamm, Crown City, consuming A. Rupe, Mi .
DWI, $300 Hamilton, Middlepon, failure to
alcohol under the age of 21, $50 and COSIS, three dayi in jail, license control, S2S and COlli, hii/skip, $75
and costs, two days in j$1.
suspended for 60 days; Robert E. and COSIS, three dayt in jail COIICDr·
Homer Welsh n, Pomeroy, fail· Hawkins, Lone Bo.ttom, Ohio, rent with other charge, drivina
ure to cootrol, $20 and costs; Roger saf~ty violation, SSO and costs; under suspen.rion, $75 and COlla,
Shelton, Pomeroy, DWI, $300 and David Bosley, Athens, speed, $22 one year probatiOn, three days in
costs, three days in jail, 60 days and costs; Jeffrey Sellon, Racine, jail, susPended upon valid license
license suspension, right side of DWI, $300 and costs, teD days in within 9!l days.
.. ·
roadway,_.:!'$:.~;2:5 and costs: Randsll jail, license suspended for 120
·Forfeiting bonds were: Marla
Musci, Meally, Ky., safety viola- . days, failure to control, $25 and " Perry, St. Albans, speed, $51;
tion, $50 and costs; Mary B~~eus, costs; Michael Ohlinaer, New Stephe~ Tracy, ~meroy, sJ!Ced, '
Crown City, speeding, $22 and Haven, W.Va., DW;I, $300 and $60; Micbael J. Griffith, PQSSessing
. costs; Muriel Walker, Portsmouth, costs, three days in jill, license sus- a deer during deer gun season l'&lt;'ith·
speed, $22-l!lld costs; Michelle t;.. pende~ for liO da)'s; David B. out Jll!lperly being taQed, $130; ·
Taylor, Pomeroy, speed, $24 and Wells, Reedaville, open container John Stumbo, Pomeroy, menacing,
costs; Roy A. Beam, Cambridge, in a motor vehicle, S:J5 nnd ~costs, 30 days in jail suspended on
Crrstal Barber; _ReedSVIlle, condition tliat the defendant seek
melUICina, three days In j$1, sus· counseling; intoxication, costs
Hindy, Syracuse, elisorpended, costs only; Richard D.
Bay,
Vincent,
open
ccintainer
in
a
conduct,
$25 and cosia; Diana
The Mei,a·County Sheriff's
On Tuesdar morning·, the
. , Shade, failure to coottol,
Department IS investigating three depanment rece1ved a report from motor vehicle, $35 nnd costs; Paula
· theft incidtO"' from. last weekend.
Brent Manley, Meigs Local School jirewer, Reedsville, i)IISSing bad $20 and costs.
. Morris Teaford of Portland District's Tran~ponation Director, checks, $25, costs and restitution -:r-~---:----'-Go.!
reported to the department that that a bus had been vandaliw! over (four charges); Josep.h Riffle,
Racine,
theft,
$100
and
costs,
10
·
_sometime over the weekend, some- . the weelcend.
A takeover 11 the puslng of control
.one s!CJle a battery from his truck
According to the report, Bus #3, days in jail suspended, two years
probation;
falsification,
$100
and
of
one company to I!IIOUier compuy .
which was parlced at his residence which was parked below MiddJe..
costs,
ten
days
in
jail
suspended,
or
lfOUP
by sale or merger. Afriendly
on Ross Road in Lebanon Town- port had the two-way radio puUed
two
years
probation,
use
of
unautakeover
oc:eun wben the acquired
ship.
off, the switchpanc:J kicked and
thorize,d
plates,
$100
and
costs:
compuy's~~~~~~o~.,c:
lla~ble
Steve Barnett of Myers Road in several switches brolcen.
Donald
Pierce,
Middleport,
passing
to
the
met
ger;
DJilii8ICIIK'III
II .
Pomeroy reported Monday that
Papers from the glove box were bad checks, $25 and costs, restitu· oppoeed to the merger It II an un.
someone had taken $200 worth of thrown onto the bus floor and a
Takeover arbl·
. ·(two c harges) ; Ken da11 A. friendly
copper wire from his bam, and AI crowbar and set of keys were t 10n
tra&amp;e 11 thetat~.
purclwe and/or llllliD&amp; of
Weaver, Tuppers Plains, DWI, tbe aecurltles of competes bmllved
Hannon of County Road I0 report· reported missing.
· ·
ed thst copper wire .was taken from
$300 and costs, three days in jail, In takeoverlltuatl-ln order to real·
Investigation is continuing. ·
between the buildings at his farm
On Tuesday morning, Clarence 60 days operator's license suspen- 1ze a profit.
there. He also reported that ·an Argarbiite of Reedsville reported
engine was taken from a gas well.
that around 1:30 or 2 a.m., h1s wife
Daniel ~iffle of Tackersville heard glass break as a car was
PomeNJ
Road in ~acine reported Sunday going by the ho(De. Latei in the
that sometime over the weekend a . morning, he discovere d that a rock
k Roun:
wtNOW
number of jacknails had been had been thrown through the
" U am to Mid. Sun.-Thurs.
HAVE
thrown into his driveway.
home's front window.
DIET IU • .
U am to 1 am Fri. 1: Sat.
'

Sheriff's department probes thefts
;.....-----Weather·
..

~.

Ohio Lottery

'

COLUMBUS (UPI)- Ohio
National Guard Master - Sgt.
'William Cartwright ssid Thursday
he has been flooded with phone
calls at his Cleveland-area armory
offtce from anxious relatives of
soldiers called to action in Opera·
lion Desert Storm.
He's dealt with problems rang·
ing from hOw to get fmancial help
for them to wanting to know if
their loved ones have been lcilled or
captureil.

Cartwright mans one of three
Ohio National Guard armories that
assist families. Four additional
armories will be manned in the
near future.
"l've .had contact with every
branch .of the service so far,". the
Mantua resident said in Columbus
where he met with the Ohio Task
Force for Operation Desert Stonn.
The group will coordm&amp;te
efforts to aid the families of mili·
·

Local news briefs- ___,

Patrick returned to facility
Eddie Patrick was return~ to Chillicothe Correctional Facility on
Thursday afternoon after entering a guilty plea on an escape charge in
Meigs County Common Pleas ~owt. _
Patrick, 22, was scheduled to go to tnal on the charge on Monday.
Meigs County Common Pleas Court Judge Fred W. Crow accepted
the plea and sentenced Patrick to a year in prison to be served con~u-.
lively with a sentence on a previous charge - wh1ch Patnck was servmg
at the time of his escape from jail.
· Patrick was indicted on the July 14 escape and arrested a day later
in a vehicle on O.S . Route 33. As charged against Patrick. escape is a
fourth-degree felony.
According to Meigs County Prosecuting Attorney Steven L. Story,
·Patrick escaped while being held on then-pending domestic violence
felony counts. He was subsequenty convicted and sentenc¢ to 10 to
16 years in prison.
,
_
Regional Public Defender's Office Supervisor J. M1chael Westfall
represented Patrick.

Be alert to phone "deal"
Meigs County Sheriff ~ames M. Soulsby reports lh~t several are_a
residents have .r~ivf:d telephon~ calls from representallves. of a ~~­
fornia com~y identified as Umted States Safety Association stallllg
· · that the res1dent has won money or several gifts.
•
According to Sheriff Soulsby, the representative explains if the
·
: . fl:(:ipient of the call will send SS99 (or "even $~99'~ th~y wi~ receiVe_ a
cashier's check in the amount of $1,000 or wm vacations m Haw111,
- Mexico, or the Bahamas.
·
.
.
Sheriff Soulsby cautions area residents to exercise good judgement
· regltrding such calls and to thoroughly investigate any offers for
authenticity.

Breaking, entering investigated

Meip County Sheriff's ~uties took a report from Melanie O'Neil
of Flatwoods Road that someume between 2:45p.m. and 7 p.m., someone entered her residence and stole a 30130 rifle, a small toolbox and
some food stamps.
Investigation is continuing.

tary personnel now and veterans
when they return home. ·
In many instances Canwright
has found the families simply don't
lrnow the military process or they
need someone to intervene with a
bill collector. The biggest problem
has been with the military payroll.
Dealing with "the civilian end of
it" has been something he said he
has learned to "adjust and adapt
to."
The Taslc Force is gearing up for

that. While, currently only the
annories at Cleveland, Colpmbus
and Dayton are manned, plans call
for 'toll-free telephones answered
by military and volunteer manpow·
er include armories in Zanesville,
Cincinnati, Toledo and Aleron.
Headed by Maj. Gen. Richard
C. Alexander, Ohio adjutant general, the taslc fo~~:e's goal is to coordinate services for families,
encourage legislation to aid the service men and women and help
them readjust to civilian life after
they are discharged.
Currently the idea is so new that
Cartwright is not even ~repared for
citizen volunteers at h19 post. But
he said he is being overrun by
about 30 to 35 calls a day seeking
help and information. He said he
frequently can explain the process
and refer callers to others, such as
volunteer counselors, to provide
aid.
"I've got 3S calls on my desk
right now !hat I haven't been able
to get to," he ssid.
Cartwright said he tells relativ.es
how they will be contacted in case
of an injuiy.
· Scams 10 take advantage of the
relatives have been found and a
representative from the state Allor·
ney General's office ssid at least
one suit will be filed in the near
future.
· "We currently are trying to
monitor what's aomg on out there·
in the market place," said Rick
Ellis, an assistant attorney general.
He urges people with questions
to contact his offiCe, which keeps a
list of chsritable organizations.

By United Press International
Wintry weather is expecte~ to
return to the Buckeye S.tate Fnday
evening.
Skies were mostly clear across
Ohio early Friday morning with
• temperatures mainly in the 40s.
Cooler air will flow into the
Buckeye State over the weeltend.
Highs on Saturday will range from
the mid 20s to upper 30s and mto
the mid 30s to mid 40s Sunday.
Temperatures will dip into the

lower teens to upper 30s Friday
night as a Canadian high pressure
system moves over the Great Lakes
and provides mainly cl~ skies.
On the Friday mornmg weather
map, a cold front extended south
across the central Great Lakes to
Indiana and Missouri. Another cold
front was from the western Great
Lakes across southem Minnesota to
the Dakotas and a large area of
high pressure was located over centra1 Canada.

· The first cold front will move
rapidly southeast across Ohio to be
over Virginia and Kentucky Frid~y
night. The secon~ cold front. w11i
pass across Oh1o early Fnday
evening and merge with the first _
cold front over the southeastern
states Saturday.
The Canadian high pressure will
drift southeast to the western Great
L:J!ces by this evening and to Lake
Ene Saturday.

Mild weather across United States ·
By United Press International
Much of the United States
enjoyed another 'day of mild Febru·
ary weather Friday after more
record-breaking temperatures and
sunny skies were reported around
the country.
·
The National Weather Service
said unseasonably warm temperatures were scattered across the ·
United States from South Carolina
to California Thursday evening,
and some parts of the country were
25 degrees warmer than normal for
mid-February.
Record-breaking tempe{atures

were reponed Thursday in Bakers- road, 8 inches at Baudette, 7 inches
field, Calif.; Charleston, S.C.; Des at International Falls and half a foot
Moines, Iowa: Flint, Mich.: and at Grand Marais.
Lincoln, Neb.
Snow flurries were expected to
The high temperature for the continue Friday over northwest
nation Thursday was 89 degrees at Minnesota, and between 4 and 5
both Borrego Springs and Mon· inches of snow were expected to
accumulate in northwest Wisconrovia, Calif.
.
The only snow advisories posted sin's snow belt overnight.
Thursday night were for parts of
Snow was reported falling
upper Michigan, the weather ser' Thursday evening over parts of
North Dakota. It was raining in
vice said.
Warnings for heavy snowfall central and eastern Texas,
across northern Minnesota expired Louisiana, Mississippi and central
after a foot of snow fell at War- Nabama.

COMMUNICATION. Communication Is a
key rector I• operatin1 with I handicap. These
fourth p-1de lltndenll of Donna Norris It RaeiDe
Elementary are leanllng about different types or
communications used by the handicapped from.
I.

I

I '

parent volunteer, Connie Little. Pictured, l·r,
Audrey Travis, Jessica Tbelss, Jessica Smith,
Chrissy Snyder, Ed Smith, Adam Williams,
Mitchell Walker and Tommy Smith.

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