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Polller:y ..ddllport-Galllpolla, OH Point Pleaunt, wv

Page DB Sunday Tlmea Sentinel

Ohio agriculture briefs
COLUMBUS. Ohio (UP!) - The dollar continua to w-"en
despite expectations that war will cause invesiOIJ 10 IIIiA 10 dolill'denominated holdings. Dennis Henderson, agriculnnl ec:aiOIIIillll.
Ohio State University, says there was a pronounced dedine ia 1111
dollar's value between June and January. During that paiocl, the ·
decline against the Japanese yen was 13 percent The dolbr wu ·also
off I 1 percent against the English pound and German ..t, 10 pea:cent against the. French and Belgium francs, and 8 pci'CCIIIIIpinst
the Italian lira and Spanish peseta.
Since the outbreak of war, the dollar has wealcoac4 further.
Declines in world oil prices have probably been ~ sinsJe IK&amp;est.
· unexpected factor. Because most world oil uansacliOIII a dollardenominated, a lower-valued dollar means less spending of
"J&gt;etrodollars." Less spending due 10 the weakening U.S. eeonomy
has also added 10 the downward tug on the dollar's value. A. w:aker
dollar cuts global spending on U.S. goods and services.

'fl1e farm share of retail food costs has held steady • 30 pem:m
for the past four years. Allan Lines, agricultural CCOIIOIIIiJt Ill Ohio
Slate University, says this is down front the recent hiP of 3~ pel·
cent during 1982-84. This basically means farmers get 30 c:eats of
every dollar spent on food. Weaker grain prices, Iowa pricel for
dairy products artd stable to lower meat prices suggest lhll!M farm
share of the retail food dollar will remain at 30 percent ot less for
this calendar year.
Lower broiler prices wi!llnot cause poultry produclion ID decline
in 1991. Allan Lines, agricultural economist at Ohio s.. Uaiversity, says broilers will be down 3 10 5 cents per pound fJam Jut year.
Lower prices will merely Teduce the rate of productivity powtb to a
S percent or 6 percent increase in 1991 compared to tile 6 to 1 pel·
cent gain last year.
·
Lines says increases in domestic consumption and ~ will
keep production from dropping too Iar as prices decline. Domestic
chicken consumpti9n is expected to increase from 70 10 1) pounds
per person in I99 I. A record 1.1 bilhon pounds of broilcuxpons, 6
percent of production, is expected in 1991. !.ower prices, better
access to foreign markets, and increasing Soviet purclwes 1:011tiAue
. 10 strengthen broiler exports.
Food and agriculture account for 15 percent of Ol!io's employment and .about 10 percent of its income. And agricultural
economists at Ohio State University can tell what effect chlll&amp;es ia
the state's food and agricultwal indusuies would have onlhe Ute's
overall economy. The OHFOOD computeriz¢ model tracb pro;.
duction agriculture, food processing, food distribution IIIII food !XlDsumption. It shows how they link to various parts of the Ohio economy, Thomas Sporleder savs.
The OHFOOD model compares costs of doing burin 111 in the
farm Sector with the money generaled at all levels of die iM'"my.
Knowing the impact a new food manufacturer miJhl ~~~~ tiD tile
economy, for instance, can help officials decide what . . inqcali~~C~
io offer to convince a company 10 locate 10 Ohio. In lib •rmw, tile
OHFOOD model can $hOw the impact tax changes. price lldjlllt.
ments or Other related factors have on individual qmenll of !he
food and agriculture industry. It also indicates how tl!ole affecled
segments 'can cause changes in other parts of agriculture.

J

Livestock producers continue 10 benefit from low feed COliS IIIII
good prices. Allan Lines, agricultural economist at Ohio Stale University, says the ratio of prices received for livestock di-ridld by 1111
index of prices paid for feeds is approaching a record Ilia' ildicMing more profit in the livestock sect&lt;ir. Continued lciw pill pric:a
and favorable livestock product prices will likely keep die IIIIo at u
near a record high for most of this year. Whetber profits wiD
encourage farmers 10 raise more livestock, increasiq ,...._ _.
causing prices to drop, remains to be seen. ·
,

Farm Flashes

Certificaton training

s.ession set February 27 ·
By Edward M. Vollborn
County Extension Agent,
Agriculture &amp; CNRD

..

I
}

. '

GALLIPOLIS - People who
wantiO become certified as private
pesticide applicators will have an
opportunity in the next couple
. weeks. A training session will be
held on Wednesday ,_Feb. 27 at 7
p.m. in the Senior Citizens Meeting
Room. A testing session will be
.held on Wednesday, March 6,
between 3 and 6 p.m. at the same
location.
. Many of the pesticides used on
farms are now "restricted use".
This means that by law you must
have passed a series of tests and
earned a certification card in order
·10 purchase the product.
Th: cost of the certification is
$30 for a three year duration. This
is paid directly to the Ohio Depanment of Agriculture after passing
the test. Recently Atrazine (aurex)
was put on the restricted list.
Methyl Bromide (Brom-O -Gas
etc.) used in preparing plant beds
also continues to be restricted.
The recent USDA plan-ting
intentions report for com was a· big
surprise. Producers. reportedly plan
10 plant 77.5 million acres of com
this spring. That was considerably
above earlier estimates and about
!.S million acres more than was
planted last spring. Exports and
weather hold the key to com price.
Lower exports and increased plantings will soften prices, but historically it i~ not easy to push prices

Stocks ...

will

Continued from D-1
day lOr I.raq to gel out of Kuwait or
face a ID8SSive ground war.
But analysts for the most pari
said war concerns played a secondarY role to the market's need to
rest alter itS huge runup.
"Even if we have peace Monday morning, (if Iraq complies with
the deadline) we'll have an initial
burst of endluslasm, but the market
iJ mating every sign that it's ready
ror a real. .. said Don Hays, director
of investment straiAij!Y at Wheat,
Finl Securities Inc. m Richmond,
Va.
·
He said what's really driving
stoeb is economic news ud what
the Feel is doing on the inlorest rate·
front. "Short-term rates have
nudpd up a litdc over the lilt S 10
8 dayl. The Treasury biU rate was
Ulldrc 6 patent 1811 week but now
it's sJiabdy abOve 6 pertent. To the
nwte&amp;, any move up 11 all is a resson 111 wocry," he ~
.

.

down until the new crop is as:rured.
The University of ICentucli:y
have summarized th lesions
learned from Outbreaks of the
feared "Blue Mold". They are as
follows: I) Preplan! 11pplications of'
Ridemil are highly effective in preventing early and midseason outbreaks 2) Layby applications are
needed for full season control
under prolonged wet weather 3)
Burley toba~co develops a high
level of resistaJK:e 10 blue mold
after flowerin1 ·and topping 4)
spores produced Ia one area can
become a serious direst to other
areas 5) Blue 'mold il very unpredictable and highly Mp:ndent upon
certain weather evtn~~ ntlrey stages
of development. Reminder! The
Annual T~o Producer Meeting
will be held at Haman Tlllte High
School on the evening of March !1.
Mille prices, at die firm Jeve!R
sharply below the fa-.ble level
that prevailed fi'OIII late 1989
through last Stlllllla'. 11le Jllllllty
blend price of alouM $11.45 per,
hundred for milk 1 · 1f 'I 3.~ .. tiutterfat is considerable Mlow last
year. There has been no li&amp;nifiCIIIt
price JDOvement at the National
Cheese Exchange siAce Ncr&lt;ember
2.
The Ex tension computer pro·
gram to evaluate panicipetioa. in
the 1991 Goveml11C181 hialmreleased :arly this weelt.ICfor: we
had a chance to use it a "loftwale
bug" was discovered. The new ver·
sion should be available by midweek.
A "sheep" interell FiliP belln
meeting last month. 'l11111110aih '1
meeting
bo kid Monday,
February 25, 1 p,111. ll die Seaior
Citizens Center. AU l*i0111 iMerested in sheep pmd•rrinn n wlcorne to attend

'

February 24, 1991

Farm tractor tuneup ensures fuel efficiency
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) - · · wastilig more fuel !hail necessary.
Most can need a tuneup at least
8allasl should be adjusted for averoace a yar, The ume goes for
age soil conditions and field speeds
f - eqaipiiiDt. Fanners sl!ould
of 5 to 6 mph. The total ballast
inspect lftll!:)lillery before spring . should be in the range of 120 to
p1•q111 en11n efficient perfor140 pounds per power takeoff
horsepower for two-wheel drive
- . IIYI• Ollio State Univerlity ~ •&amp;beer.
..
lrae~rs and I 0 10 20 pounds less
·
'l'lll:liUII .. IMftlcient user8 of for four-wheel drives.
fuei,II)'S Rede'l Wood.
Ballast should be adjusted
according to wheel slippage in
•'Tile way tllcy pull in the
field is only 60 10 10 'percent effi- actual f~eld Conditions.
cient under ideal circumstances.
"Matching tractor size to the
Not maintaiaiaa equipment can , needs of the job also helps conquickly deer~ • cfficieJK:y below serve fuel ," Wood says ."If a
so·p:n:cnt."
smaller uactor is not availtfule for
Conect t.llaltina will prevent

lighter draft operations, shift

up a

gear and throule the engine back tD

save fuel and maintain the same
operating speed."
· Wood also suggests these other
important check-~ints:
·
.-Check tire mflation. Research
has shown tire pressure is usually
grossly over or under proper
amounts. Incorrect pressure
reduces tire performance and costs
money. " It's better to check the
tire's overall condition and replace
them now if necessary," Wood
says.
·
-Complete routine maintenance. Changing air and fuel ftlters

Ohio Lottery

Southern
eliminates
Eastern

· and adjusting the engine's higb idle
can dramalically improve the uac.
tor's f~ekl performance. Check the
opera&amp;or's manual for guidelines.
-Reduce trips across fields. It
will save time and fuel. It also
reduces compaction.
-Keep accurate reoords.
Record maintenance intervals and
field work. The farmer can determine the amount of fuel used .per
acre by ll:aCking fuel consumption,
speed, soil conditions and implement depth. This helps pinpoint
problems as well as production .
costs.
'

Pick 3: 131
Pick4: 7261
Cards: 4-H; 7-C;

J-D; 9~s

Super Lotto
3-8-19-23-29-47
· Kicker 71S990

Pages 3-4

.

m

Rile.''

Cluster flies make irritating
buzzing noises. But in the home,
'tlusW flies do not carry human
diiCaliC, bite people or feed on food
or funlishinp, Lyon says.
. ·:rcople find tbe flies annoym•• . he says. "Cluster flies spin
IJ'Ound on window sills and may
. fly slowly near people's faces .
When crushed, the flies leave
JIWY spotS and aive off an Odor
rcsembfina t~at of buckwheat
honey."
lit late summer 111d fall, cluster
flies move to J)I'Oltcted places to
'hibernate. They ent:r homes
tltrouah ClliCb ill windowsills ljlld
baeboards, J1P1 between vinyl or
~lumi11um sidinJ and oth~r openmp. I.iiht and liiJ!t-colored siding
saongly auract lhc flies.
From late fall 10 spring, cluster
flies may becom: active when
iadoor temperatures warm, especially if the flies art near sunny
"WiRdQws in in~requently used •~
IUOIRS sucii·IS IIUCS. ·
"The flies gat~er around the
windows blcal!• they want to get
ou~" Lyon ays. "They will leave
their hibernation sites m spring to
inate ouldoon."
While hannless indoors, once ·
cluster flies g:t outside, they
become deadly parasites of the
common eanbworm.
DIKiiiJ ltiRIJMr, female cluster
flits lay eus in 10il·cracks- and
aevica ._IWlllworm concenuationl, Lyon liyS. 11111t~gs hatch in
tliroe dayi and dllllivae peneuate
IIIII ~ in llle llodles of earthworms, :v~alually killing them .
The flies produce allout four generations a summer.
· Clus~er flies are dull gray and
are slightly IIIJer than houseflies,
but narrower. At rest, the flies
overlap their winas at the tips,
whereas bouse Olea do not.
Tbe best control for cluster flies
is to pr:vent tbem from getting
indoors.
"This sliiiiiiiCI', seal cracks in ·
and around eaves, siding, wilidowsiUs and the roof,' ~ Lyon says.

•

at

Flies start
Recession helping poultry industry
scramble for
swatters
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI)
Recent warmtb and sunlight is
·Jending some folia IICI'Ullbling for
fly swaaers. ·
. . "These large, sluggish flies
swarming at windows are called
cluster flies," says Bill Lyon, entomolopt at Ollio Stale University.
"Their name describes their behavior of clustering indoors 10 hiber-

•

1

A

·COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI)- risks. But Lines doesn' t expect the Ohio currently ranlcs 12th in proRecession's effect on meat con- trend 10 affect Ohio production- duction a.t 110 million pounds a
sumption is big news fOr the poul- expansion of the the state's large year and is expected to keep growtry industry. Sales will undoubtedly egg produce(S . will keep Ohio ing. Tighter profit margins mean
go upin 1991 as tight-fisted con- r;l!lked fourth nationally.
demand will .be the driving force
sumers buy cheav.er chicken and
The continuation of low feed behind any turkey ex)l81lsion, qain
turkey instead of beef or pork. ·prices will also help the poultry making exports a key to industry
Allan Lines, agricultural economist industry, Lines says. Meat produc- growth in 1991.
.
at Ohio State University, says that tion will again be the key 10 poultry
Ohio's paultry industry is in a
$hould help the Ohio poultry indus- profitability in I991. He. adds that good position nationally and shoukj
try continue its expansion.
broiler and turkey prices are likely continue 10 be so, Lines says. The
"Poultry meat production will to be off a bit fro{ll last year, but state's proximity to the mt\iority of ·
likely increase enougb. this year to prodljCtion wiU continqe to grow. U.S. and Canadian populations aids
cut prices one to two cents a ·Egg prices will hold steady.
. marketing. Low feed costs should
pound," Lines says. "But I would
Ohio broiler production is about also continue because of the availexpect enough increase in sales to 7~ million pounds and growing. ability of low-priced grain from the
more than make up for the price L.ines says exports and recession- Corn Belt. And with the number
change. The same can be said for driven purchasing decisions should opportunities for off-farm jobs in
the egg sector in Ohio, if not keep that expan.sion going.
·Obio, part- time producers are.
.
nationally."
Turkey IS th~ fastest growmg adding to the growth of the poultry
Consumption is the key to poul- segment in all the meat industry. . industry.
try industry growth as it has been
for more than a decade. Per capita
consumption of chicken and turkey
set· records in 1990 at .about 90
pounds per person.
Egg consumption, on the other ·
hand, continues to dec1ine due to
changing ·eating patterns and per_./·----.
ceptions of health and food safety
"li
Big bini
The Spruce Goose is the largest
plane ever built. It was designed and
made by millionaire aviator Howard
Hughes. COIIStructed of woOd. ils
wingspan is 320 .feet. The only flight
of this plane took place Nov. 2, 1~47,
when Hughes piloted it to a height of
70 feet lor a distance of one mile. Today the plane is on exhibition in Long

By DENHOLM BARNETSON
United Press International
Saddam Hussein fmally activated his crack Republican Guard
Monday. sending tanks rumbling
from their lair in southeastern Iraq
to meet allied forces driving deep
into enemy territory, and U.S .
forces closed in on Kuwait City on
the second day the massive air-seaground campaign.
As Kuwaitis marked the 30th
anniversarY of independence from
Britain, the commander of the Arab
allied forces indicated that fighting
to liberate the Kuwaiti capital had
begun and that coalition forces
were engaging better trained Iraqi
troops.
Allied casual ties remained light
and there was no word on enemy
dead and wounded, although the
coalition reported taking about
20,000 Iraqi prisoners of war, and a
Saudi commander asserted that
many enemy soldiers "will not be
fighting another day."
About 80 Republican Guard
· tanks, which had spent the first five
weeks of the war holed up in southeastern Iraq, have begun moving
south toward advancing coalition
forces. pilots flying over the battlefield told media pool reporters. ·
"They're finally flushing," said
Col . Steve Turner, 41, of
Portsmouth, Va .. who commands a
squndron of fighter bombers al the
largest U.S. air ·~ J'! S~!IJ!.i'~-

MEIGS TIRE CENTER

JOHN FULTZ - J. MARCUS FULTZ
242 W. Main
OWNERS
Pomeroy
4f92-2101

Beach, Calif.

•

GRE,G SMI'J'H . WE RAVE f) 1990.GRAND PRIX'S
AND() PO~C TRANS SPORTS

REMAINING!
Save Bil Dollars On Thes~ Units •

Oneel'llq'r• Gone, Th~'r• Cone • Bur~ JnZ

1990 GRAND

1990 GRAND PRIX

4 Door Demo

2Door

White with Sport Appearanct~ Pact~age
burgundy trim. Loaded with optlol)s

8~/1,_-"" ,fM,,.,. £!,,.

and

SPORT APPEARANCE PACKAGE

REDUCED TO
I

List '17,043

REDUCED TO

$12;888

List'16,863

$12 950

Beef. ..
Colltllllled from D·l
impossible tD let through the feeder.
MaJcc up a calviqg bucket. The
bucket should contain pulling
chains 10 assisllhc cow in delivery.
Don't overdo Ibis one, bul don't
wait too Jona. This il a hard one to
call. Plastic sleeves a nice 10 protect the cow IIIII provide for sani*Y eumination. A ralgro or other
implant gun if you are implanting
shoukl be in the bucket.
I lite 10 have two or three &amp;owcis for dryina off the calf if it is
windy or bitter cold. I would prefer
the cow lictiaa lite calf dry. Ear
IIIII and taaer should be included
if you are ear tqginJ.
·
Ran:mber ·act the calf drv and
niUiing IS soon u possible. 'rime
is critical- be ready.
. Do you let the Ohio Cattlemen?
Ia die January-February issue on
pqe 28' is 1ft exctllcnt article by
ltaillolze, O.S.U. Beef Extension
Specialiat. We all need to know
whelt we In h · •ecJ ud why with
our lnedlna JlfOIIIRIS.

PagM

Inc.

2~

oenta

Iraqi tanks on move;
allies close in on city

•BRAKE JOBS •OIL CHANGE
•WHE.L ALIGNMENT

A'JTENTION RAB&amp;AIN SHOPPERS••• .

Low lOnight near 20.
Tuesday, partly cloudy. High
in lower 30s.

~~~

..

bia. " They've got 10 do something
-. either \hat; or get killed in their
holes. This is the group we've been
beating on for the last couple of
weeks, and they finally started
moving.·•
.
Allied aircraft have been pounding Saddam' s best trained and most
loyal fighting unit throughout the
war 10 lessen its ability to rcsisL
Asked about the movement of
Republican Guard tanks, Lt. Gen.
Khalid biri Sultan, commander of
the Joint Arab Forces in the
alliance, said only that there were
"lots of maneuvers over there."
According to ·allied military
officials on the battlefield .. U.S. .
Marines dug in just west of Kuwait
City. One senior military s.ourcc
said some uoops had entered the
capital city late Sunday, but did not .
say how many.
.
Khalid indicated that fighting to
retake the capital had started .
Asked if ·there was combat in
Kuwait City, he hesitated, smiled
and said, "There is combat going
on everywhere in the theater of
operations." Asked how soon they
city would be liberated, he replied,
"We will be there soon, very
soon."'

Resistance by Iraqi troops was
described as surprisingly light on
Sunday, the firSt' day of the ,ground
assault. But Khalid said 'the allies
.en.&lt;;oullte.ning•"better uained

,,,·~:·.

forces" and " might have more
resistance (Monday and Tuesday),
but Ibis has all been planned for ....
One thing (Iraqi forces) are lacking
is they don't believe what they are
fighting for right now.
.
" Many Iraqi units we faced
until now will not be fighting
another day. They are casualties or
prisoners of war."
· Khalid said Arab allied casualties inclyded five killed in action
and 20 wounded by .Monday nighL
There were no specific numbers of
overall allied casualties . Cable
News Network, quoting anonymous Pentagon sources, said 1I
Americans were killed during early
fighting .
The Arab commander could
give no precise numbers of enemy
casualties, but he said the allies had
captured about 20,000 POWs either
being held in camps in Saudi Arabia or en route there.
A senior Pentagon official said
combai units a,t the front were .
handing off the prisoners to mili- •
tary police units for uansport to the
rear because "the idea is you don't
)Vant combat uoor,s saddled with
babysitting POW s. •
Khalid said Iraqi forces in
Kuwait City have continued to execute, rape and mutilate Kuwaiti citizens and have even forced young
conscl'ipts to kill Kuwaitis their

.. •&lt;f;Ql\l;i~~~.~~ !'II~~ /,.Q.. ,,, ;•: I''

port the Troops" rally held at tbe Locomotion in
Pomeroy under the direction of Iva Sisson. A
·total ·of $291.68 was raised to purchase and send
items such as gum, lifesavers, beefs ticks and beef
jerky, newspaper clippings, Skin-so-Soft, mints,
audio tapes and. Wei Ones. Tbe coll!millee- is
sending 104 packaaes.

STAMPING PACKAGES- Tom Reuter,
Pomeroy POlltmaster, is pictured weighing packages prepared by tbe Parent's Dance Committee
of the Pomeroy Teen Center to be sent to troops
serving in the Gulf War with Operation Desert
Storm. Funding for the packages was made pos·
sible by proceeds raised from the recent "Sup·

Concerned group discusses
effects of Clean Air 4ct of 1990
.

By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Staff
A small but concerned group,
made up largely of Southern Ohio
· foal Company employees, met at
the Wilkesville Elementary-School
on Sunday to hear discussion and
ask questions about the Clean Air
Act of 1990, and its effects on the
local community.
Leading C-reek Conservancy
Disuicl organized the meeting, and
. Glen Crisp, President of the Board
of Leading Creek Conservancy
•' District, expressed his disappointment with the crowd of about 40
people.
·. That group was made up in
large part of coal miners and their
families, elected officials from several counties and an American
Electric Power spokesperson who
answered questions from the audieflCC.

The meeting is one of several
· that have been held in the area
since AEP announced that it was
considering options brought about
by the Clean Air Act ofl990.
·
· AEP will decide by mid-1991
whether to switch fuel sources at
tlie Gavin plant or to install scrubbers at the plant, which would
allow AEP to continue using coal

mined In Meigs County .
but SOCCO's Meigs Supervisor
. Meigs County coal is high in Bob Teichman, in answering quessulfur content, and the Clean Air tions from the audience, indicated
Act forces AEP to reduce its sulfur that the cost difference between the
dioxide emissions by over 80 per- fuel switching and installation of
cent. If AEP opts for the fuel scrubbers was not as large as had
switching, the coal used to fuel the first been reported.
Gavin plant would probably· come
In addition, it was estimated that
from the Western United States - the customer's electric bill would .
forcing the closing of SOCCO's be considerably higher after the
Meigs Mines.
change was in place - an estimated
Most recently, however, AEP $110 with a fuel switch compared
officials have disclosed that the to SJ 15 with scrubbers.
·future of SOCCO's Meigs operaAll elected officials who spoke
tion is shaky regardless of the deci- yesterday emphasized the imporsion made by AEP on the Clean Air tance of contacting state and federAct issue. .
al offiCials and expressing concern
According to Cris!J, LCCD and for the local economy.
its customers must do whatever is
State SenatOr Jan Michael Long
necessary to see the installation of ,(D-Circleville) indicated that the
scrubbers at the General James M. state level was the best place to
Gavin Plant in Gallia County . start.
According 10 Crisp, the closing of
Senator Long told the group that
the Southern Ohio Cnal Company's the Ohio House has had a task
mines in Meigs County would be force in place for over a year to
devastating to the water company. study the impact of the Clean Air
Water bills for LCCO customers Act on Ohio's economy. Long said
would probably double if the mines that that task force will make a recwere 10 close, Crisp said, and the ommendation to the General
future of the district itself would be Assembly, but gave no time frame
in question.
· for such a recommendation .
Very little new informatiqn was Accilrding to Long, state officials
presented 10 the group on Sunday, are still looking for answers.

OFFICIALS SPEAK - A small group of concerned citizens, moslly SOCCO miners, were
afforded the opportunity io hear from State Senator Jan Mlcbaeel Long, and county officials
frnm Meigs, Vinton and Mason County officials

concerning the Clean Air Act a: a meeting held
in Wilkesville on Sunday afternoon. The meeting was sponsored by Leading Creek Conservancy District.

SPECIAL PROJECT - Boy Scouts Jason
Roush and Joshua Witherell assisted Meigs
County Sberiff James M. Soulsby on Friday
wltb the processing or educatioaal coloring
books to be distributed lo local schools. The
books, wblcb leach sarety.. tips to primary-aged
children, J!re pr inted by the Buckeye State Sber-

iff's Association. Soulsby bls distributed the
books to studealll al Gallia-Meigs Headstart In
Pomeroy and will begin visiting elementary
sc•oots oa Mc.day. The scouts, meanwhile, are
cloln1 tbe work for a service patch. Pictured, J.r,
are Sheriff Soulsl)y, Jason Roush and Joshua
Witherell.

Eastern board fills coaching posts

•WAD MOIN.G &amp; IMPIII VENTE,.
.· AND UIIYINIU IIAIIIS
.
•COLIMA. IIAILII fUINACIS
Sa IS POl YOIIJUMI IBS

a IULK

.SMITH BUICK-PONTIAC
.1900 East.rn Avenue

(614) 446-2282

"Service Makes 1he Difference"

Gallipolis, o·hlo

Several coaching positions were
filled at the recent meeting of the
Eastern Local Board of Education
held at Eastern High School.
. Employed
were . Dennis
Eichinger, bead varsity baseball
coach; · Brent Bissell and Ed
Collins, volunteer assistant baseball
coaches; Archie Rose. boys head ·
varsity track coach, Bob Lang, girls
head varsity track coach, Pam
Douthitt, girls head varsity softball
coach, and Don Jackson and
Tammy Capehart, voluineer assiJ,
tanl softball coaches for the
remainder of the school year.
Dennis Newland, president of
'\

the Athletic Boosters Association
addressed the board on the organization's philosophy and goats and
the board authorized the group to
1'\lise money for the support of athletics through totally external donations.
Other personnel hired during the
meeting included Shelagh Wilson
and Jennings Beegle, substitute . ·
teachers for the rest of the current
school year and Gary Holter and
Anna Cremeans, substitute custodians .to be used on as needed basis
only.
The board adopted the proposed
resolution which follows the rec-

ommendation of the referee and
tenninated the teaching contract of
Robert Shaver..
.
. A report was heard from Supt.
Richard Sm~th regarding the rec:em
results of the ninth grade prof!Clency tests. Also heard at the meeting
were r~ports regarding building
assistance, senior class trip, prom
site OSBA Southeast Regions
spri~g conference, and Right to
Read Week activities for the week
of March 4-8 in all elementary
schools of the district.
The board was advised by the
superintendent that the school aged
Continued on page 10

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Monday, February 25, 1991

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-3
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Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
11 I Cour( Street

Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON .\HE.\
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~m~ ~L--.-. r"'T""'1:3c:::l•-==~v

ROBERT L. WINGETT

Publisher·

· CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General !llanager ·

·

P.\T WHIT.E HEAD
Aoulolant Publisher/ Controller
· ' A MEMBER of The United Press International. Inland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
wol'ds long. Alllettors are subject to editing and must be sighed with
name, address and tel~phone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be In good taste. addressing lss~s . not personall·
ties .
·

Bush may go down in
history as wa·r president
•

By HELEN THOMAS
UPI White House Reporter
.. W~SHINGTON - President Bush may. go down in history as the
war preSident The Unned States has been mvolved m two wars during
his two years in office.
·
But in each case, the invasion of Panama in December 1989 and the
aDied war with Iraq, starting in early 1991, he has had widespread public
support
,
The brevi~y of the Panamian conflict, with little resistance put up by
the Partarnaman army, made 11 aU a qutck venture. U.S. fatalities totaled
23 in that invasion with more than 300 wounded.
Wi~ hosti!ity. focused entirely on Iraq's Saddam Hussein, an easy
mark m the vtUam class, Amcncan backing for the Persian Gulf war is
extraordinarily strong.
Under the circumstances, the president has had a free hand to pursue
the goal of evicting Iraq from Kuwait, which it invaded last Aug. 2, and
probably to topple Saddam. Deposing the Iraqi rule is not specified as a
goal in any of the U.N. resolutions, but nevenheless appears to be a Bush
mandate. He has publicly asked the Iraqi military and the people to overthrow Saddarn.
.
As a result .of the war. Bu~ wants a "new world order." Bringing
peace and stabt~ty to the gulf IS part of the scenario. It undoubtedly will
be up to the Uruted States, under the leadershtp of Bush, 10 pick up the
pteces.
.
He.has ordered a task force to )llan the post-war era in the gulfand to
restore to the Uruted States the role of "healer," as he said in his State of
the Union address.
The presiden~ who adhered to the concept that the ill-fated unpopular
Vietnam War was a "noble cause," has told reponers he believes the
popular gulf war will wi~ out the ."Vietman syndrome" that portrayed
the Uruted States a a loser, mvolved m a war that had no public suppon.
The V1etnman syndro~e also promulgated the philosphy that the United States should not get mto a war unless the American people give it
wholehearted backing.
Presidents L~don Johnson and Richard Nixon, bolli determined •not to
be the ftrst prestdent to lose a war, could not bring the111selves to declare a
victory and leave, as Sen. George Aiken of Vermont had advised.
The administrations of both presidents were traumatically affected by
that war and thelf own personal slaturc was diminished. Johnson the consummate politician, had to forgo a chance at re-election and op~d to bow
out in 1968.
. .
Nixon was beleaguered in the White House and became its prisoner as
the war went on. To pav.e the way for his re-election in 1972. he wiped out
the draft, a sore pomt wtth the 18-year-olds, and had his secretary of state,
Henry Kissinger, declare that "peace is at hand." He was re- elected by a
landslide and the war went on.
.
With an expected massive military victory on the battlefield this time
around •. Bush is not expected to encounter any sliCh problems if he seeks
re-elecuon •. as e,xpected. in 1992. With. the war going on, no Democratic
challenger 1s. wil!mg to f:brow hts hal m the ring, although several aspi·
rants are Watling m the wmgs.
.
.
·
So the presid~nt, ri~ing a popular war, has fewer worries \han his predecessors m stmtlar cnses. HIS legacy may be a more assertive future mil·
'itary Pax ~ericana. policy as the remaining supet)l9wer in the world. · '
There IS no quesllon that he has shown the United States to be No. 1 in
the high-tech·fteld with the most innovative in advances that conceivably
could have some constructive uses in the future.·
The war has brought home the global village aspects of the modem
world with instant communications and interdependence.
.
Some colummsts have characterized the future U.S. role as a self·
appointed world policeman who is determined to smite aggressive dictators. On the other h~ the Umted States could magnamimously lend its
suppon to a more v1tal Untied Nallons by bolstering its peacekeeping
forces to do just that in the world.

Berry's World
I WISH 1
WAS A SMART

BOMB.

Page-2-The Dally Senum.t · j.
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio . ut
Monday, February 25, 1991

Gls behave, whether they want to, or not
NORTHERN SAUDI ARABIA
· Never before has America fielded
so many abstemious, clean-shaven,
church-going soldiers to a major
war. The new ·soldier may curse a
blue streak, but he· is not drunk,
high or a skirt chaser.
It's so out of character for the
few, the loud and the unseemly,
thai they have dubbed this the
"Square War."
· The big benefit from all of this
sobriety, according to U.S. and
Saudi sources, is that at least one
Islamic country may stop stereo·
typing Americans as Godless hea·
then party animals.
Very quietly, concerned and
conservative Islamic leaders and
scholars have been .escorted by
government officials to the s~ret
military bases in northern Saudi
Arabia on the Iraq and Kuwait borders where they have met with 01
Joes picked randomly from the
pack. .
It is an eye opener for both sides
. for the Muslims who are treated
with counesy and interest, and for
the soldiers who get a rare opportu·
nity to mingle with residents of
their host country. The biggest
shock to the Muslims has been to

_

The deployment last August was
an act of faith by the Saudis and the
Un ited States. The Pentagon
promised that its soldiers would
behave tl)emselves uQder the most
trying of circumstances, and then
everyone held their breath. So ·far,
so good.
Propaganda out of Baghdad has
tried to claim otherwise, and has
succeeded in inflaming Jordanians
and Palestinians. Typical of that
propaganda is the story of an
American Jew sneaking in to place
a sanitary napkin on the holy
Kaaba in Mecca. The Saudis would
not have had an easy time dispelling that and other rumors if
American troops had n01 behaved
themselves.
But they have. Disciplinary
hearings are few, prompting one
Army lawyer 10 complain to.us that
he dtdn't have enough business to
keep him busy.
· .
. The primary reason the troops
are earning a group good-conduct
medal is the lack of liquor. "What
it means is that we're running the
largest detox center in the world

.
here," one senior Army official those incidents are rare.
1
So what do the troops do with •
observed. "Any of the 500,000
their
time? A. surprising number ' '·
troops here who came as alcoholics
have
turned
to religion. The boom ~
has bCen .forced to sober up over
item
here
is
not beer but Bibles. , ;''
the last six months."
Thousands
of
special Bibles ":ith ·;;
The buzz of caffeine is also a
desert
camouflage
covers are bemg ·· ·~
coveted rush here. A couple of
shipped
in
and
may
not meet the ''' '1
combat engineers ate coffee
demand.
. '".
grounds right out of the package.
There
are
more
than
700
Ameri.
·"f
"Cooking i.t takes too long to hit
can
chaplains
serving
()le
troops,
.·;:
you," oqe young sergeant said .
"We wash it down with water and and the Saudis have·turned out to ,
be more tolerant of religious obser- ~
it keeps us squared away."
vances
than originally feared. In '".~
Vietnam had prostitutes aplenty,
fact,
some
Saudis were puzzled ~:;
but soldiers will look a long time
why
the
troops
were not more : ··
before they catch a glimpse of an
ankle in .Saudi Arabia. Not only •1 open! y religious at first. '11tis was ':'
can't the men proposition Saudi playing. right into Saddam 's · •·
women, but they also can't 1alk to hands," one Saudi official told us. , ,,
them at all. The Gls have. taken to "He has been preaching on the ':,
calling the black-v~iled Saudis the radio that the.Americans are atheis- :· ·:
tic heathens. n
' •~~
'.'Ninja Women::
The Saudis have d!'awn the line.
Hanky-panky among the men
and women soldiers is logistically at any attempt to proselytize among , •.
tough. There is little privacy. In the Muslims. but the ministry
one case a male mechanic and a · among the troops has .become more : "
female diSPatcher in one unit both open. There have been more than ·~
reponed to sick call with the same 100 &lt;;hristian baptisms among the /:
..;
sexually transmiued disease. Both troops here.
are likely to be disciplined. But
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"This is strange ordnance
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The Iraqis have many of these? ... "

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An Iraqi would be better than Arnett
William A. Rusher

What kind of energy policy should we have?
There's a joke circulating that
sure, America has an energy policy: We burn oil.
I don't think anyone seriously
doubts there's at least some truth in
the joke, and that we need to

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oil in the world and 1ha1 higher
gasolinc taxes are not ·necessary · - - - - - - - - - - - •
because economic forces will bring
• Reinstate all tax incentives for '~
consumption down naturally.
Then there's the conservation energy-conserving measures and 1
camp, which warns that we must add a few more. I remember the .!
reduce consumption or risk suffo- '70s ":hen there was much govern.' ,
ment tnlerest tn helping people ; 1
cating our cancerous lungs.
Some of these folks would even tmprove fuel efficiency in our ·;· 1
slap a stiff gasoline tax on the homes an&lt;1 businesses, and many of · :
pestilence-plagued Joads, the Olcla- us had lon~-~ngc plans for energy- '· :
homa family in "The Grapes of savtng bulldmg ,and remodeling. , l
Wrath" who nursed their furniture- . When the $Overnment's interest 'J ,
•
. , ) j
heaped truck 10 Californee in waned, so dtd ours.
search of a way to eke out a living.
• I would offer tax breaks to .i 1
The worse their I uci&lt;, got, the more those who car pool, use mass tran·
~
gas it used, the more gas it used, sit, invest in electric cars and ftnd ·~ :
the more we'd tax 'em. A brilliant other ways to restrict their gasoline· ·' l
strategy, sure to reduce gas con- usc. Think that would be tough to
'
sumption immediately once the document? When you consider the
l
family starved to death.
government has found a way for '
If we are ever to formulate a me to document every stamp I lick, .~
workable energy policy, I believe phone call I place and photocopy I
the answers Iie somewhere bet'l\'cen make as a profussional wriJer, mea1
the two ideologies. Personally, 1 sunng someone's gasoline conser· '·
. •
don't believe our solutions lie in vation should be a piece of cake.
forcing people into cars so small
• I would offer tax incentives to •' :
they come with their own wreaths, ' compan1es engaged in investigating • •
or in adding to the expenses of peo· and producing alternative-energy " . :
.•· 1
pie who arc having a hard enough products.
time just keeping the old gas hog
But what do I know? I'rn not an · · f
running so they can get to work energy expen. All I do is listen to ,, I
and stay off the welfare.rolls.
what the real experts say and
'
OK, so there are a couple of dectde what makes the most sense
things I wouldn't do.
to me, and that's exactly what PresWhat 'would I do? If 1 am tdent Bush and his advisers should .,, :
appointed Energy Czar (and you be doing right now.
1
may send your suggestions to PresI hope when the promised ener- ·. 1'
ident Bush), I will implement the gy pohcy emerges, 11 is light years
following steps immediately:
beyond, "We bum oil.''
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eliminates Eastern in Rio sectional opener, 88-71

Glouster Trimble, Hannan S:271eft to cUI Miller's lead to 't 9·
Trace, Southwestern and Southern , 18.
~vanced to the fmals of the,Divi·
Paige toOk a pass from the back·
ston IV Rt~ Grande boys' sectional court and scored on the layup 17 ,
wtth vtctones over Ironton St. Joe, seconds later to boost ihe Falcons'
Hemloc:k Miller, Kyger Creek and lead to 21-18. But Miller guard Jim
Reedsville Eastern, respectively, in Horn committed his rirst foul ·
Saturdar night'.s cagefest at the againSI Hannan Trace center Craig
Umversny of R10 Grande's Lyne Rankin with 4:29 left to send
Center.
Rankin to the line for the one-andIn the opener, Greg Holbert's one. Like Bevan before him,
Tomcats racked up a 70-57 win Rankin made No. 1 and missed No.
over !im Mains' Flyers behind a 2, but MiDer's lead was once again
2~·pomt performance from 6-S se· only two points.
mor postman Scott ·Auflick and a
WildcatBU8fdJason Blaclc who
20-point effort by 6·1 junior had two fouls oo him at this j,mn~
guard/forward Charhe Gatche!. Au· COJIIJ!littCd his third with ~: 16 ~ft.
flick and Gatchel were the pnmary sending Hom to the charity stnpe
forces m pulhng the north At!lens for the one-and-one. Hom missed
squad out of a 10-10 tie at the end it and Wildcat l'ront-liner Richie
of the fmt quarter br scoring 14 of COrneD who was held scoreless for
the Tomcats' 19 second-quarter the fii'Si time this season, gn~bbed
po!nts, whtch led. them to a five- the rebound. That set the stage for
pomt lead at halftune. A 15-for-22 Bevan's assist to Rankin who sank
effort at the line aiS? helped Trim· · a 13-foo.t jumper from the left half
ble, 8-13, earn the nght to take on of the lane with 3:58 left to tie the
':Iannan Trace in the upper-bracke.t game at 21.
IItle game on Tuesday at 6:30p.m..
After that, Trace scored 17
Sophomore point guard Chuck points to Miller's four (which came
Jones and junior cent;er Matt Smith on baseline jumpers by Gossman),
le4. St. Joe, 8:13, Wltl\18 and 13 which would have been anywhere
from seven to I 0 had the Falcons
pomts, ~lively.
Hannan Trace 86, MiUer 53
converted at least the front ends of
. Hannan Trace. used a CO!ftbina· the three one·and·ones Trace ~­
uon of double-f1gure sconng ef· vided for them from the blackjack
'forts from two starters • Todd tie to halftime. Even if Miller had
Boothe and Craig Rankin • and made all six possible shots, the
three bene~ players •. Chad Barnes, Guyan five would have been ahead
C:had ~wa!n and Enc 1;-l~yd, gel· by eight poin.ts instead of the 14
tmg Miller s towers • Willie Peyton they had at halftime.
and Eddie Paige • in foul trouble
After Gossman canned a 15-foot
early, and tough defense, especl&amp;!IY jumper from the left half of the
o~ the boards, to post a 33-pomt lane 11 seeonds into the third quar·
v1c1ory over the Falcons.
ter to cut Trace's lead to 39·27,
, The Wildcats, 16·5, started get· · Falcon c~ter WiUie Peyton, a 6-6
Ung thelf hands on the .ball ,' ~ly, ex-reserve player who was tagged
and as a result of thetr forcmg with three fouls in the first half,
t4rnovers, Wildcat forward Todd was .whistled for his fourth foul.
Boothe, who led his mates with 21 Gossman's basket counted, but
points, racked up seve~ of Trace's Iieyton, who wore ~ No. 10 jersey
ftrst 15 pomts to help g~ve the Gal· · borrowed from Trimble's Steve
lians a two-point lead at the end of Shamhart because he b:'1ht his
the first quarter.
purple road unifonn ins
of his
But Falcon frontman Chip Goss· home whites, had to sit down, mak·
man, who led all marksmen with illg it easier fQr the Wildcats to jet
23 points in spite of playing with away from the semi-mobile Paige
lower back pain, collected five on the fast brealc. In shon, why go
points (four on baseline jumpers toe to toe with a pillar of strength
and one on a bonus foul shot) in the in Paige when it's easier to leave
las.t 68 seconds of,the fmt frarn~ to him in the dust immediately after a
begill Miller's comebapk. While steal?
h~lding the Wildc~ts scorel~ss,
The Guyan squad never let the
Miller got two baskets from Pwge, Falcons get any Closer tllan they
a 6-3 sophomore center, and Joey did in those first secon!ls of act
Smith, a 6-ljunior forward. in the three; in spite of Gossman's troop·
first two mmutes of the second er-like performance, as the Wild·
quarter to take a 19·15 lead.
· cats expanded their lead 10 22 to
Wildcat point guard J.J. Bevan begin the futal frame. ·
began Trace's chipping away at the
Miller which bowed out at J.
lead when Paige's first foul sent 20 bid f~rewell to seniors Sean
him to the foul line for the one· BUtley, Gossman, Hom and Troy
and-one with 6:071eft. Bevan made Merclcle.
the ftrSt shot but missed the second, Quarter totals
and Miller's lead was trimmed to Hannan Trace 15 24 , 21 16=86
19-16. Bevan got his chance 10 Miller
13 12 13 15=53
make up for his miSs when Gossman's fallaway shot was 1101 count· HANNAN TRACE (86)
ed because of a foul away from the Player
2s Js FT
Pts. ·
ball with 5:53 lefL When Trace got Todd Boothe 9 0 3
21
the ball ~ack, Bevan took .a pass Craig Rankin 5 0 6
16
from Boothe and canned a 16-foot Chad Barnes 4 0 3
It
jumper from the left wing with Eric Lloyd
·4 0 3
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DURST GUARDS KINCAID • Eastern's Jeff Durst (30) who
scored 16 points Ia Saturday's tourney game against Souther!! at
Rio Grande, guards Michael Kincaid during first round action.
Kiacaid fmished with 14 markers. SHS won, 88·71.
Chad Swain •· 4 0 3
JJ. Bevan
2 0 2
Jason Black
3 0 0
D. Cremeans 0 0 2
Jason WatsOn , I 0 0
TOTALS . 32 1 19
From the field • 33,66
,Beyond the arc • 1-9
AI the line· 19·26
Off the gl~ • 33 (Rankin 6)
Blocked shots • 2
Assists· 17 (Swain 6)
Steals· 16
Turno~ers. 8
MILLE(t (53)
Player
2s Js FT
Chip Gossman 8 I 4
JimHorn
2 0 4
Eddie Paige
4 0 0
Joey Smith
4 0 0
Willie Peyton I 0 2
Sean Bardey
I 0 0
TOTALS
20 1 10
From the field· 21-39,
At the Hne • 10•21
Off th~ giii!:S • 20
Assists· 5
Steals· 3
Turnovers • I I

The

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6
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2
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96

Pts.
23
8
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53

Southwestern 58, Kyger Creek
54
Just as Hannan Trace did to
·North Gallia ·a team that swept the
Wildcats in their regular-season series • in last year's Rio Grande sec·
tional upper-bracket final (the
Wildcats won 65:58 to advance to
the district tournament), South·

'

In DivisiOn I Sectional Touma·
ment play at Athens High School
Saturday the Logan Chieftains
defeated ChiDicothe 67-56 and the
Marietta Tigers fell to Lancaster
46-40.
The Chiefs, who finished third
in the SEOAL race, will now face
the Golden Gales from Lancaster
Friday at 7 p.m. for a berth in the
district tournament at Ohio Univer·
sity.
In two previous meetings during
regular season play the Gales
defeated Logan by scores of 82-63
and 63-60 in overtime.

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Logan, Athens advance in
s;ectional tournamentp
lay
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-.....:·-::.:·_

Sarah Overstreet-

reduce our consumption of oil to
some degree. The disagreement
come when we discuss what kind
of energy policy we should have,
There's the free-marke: camp,
whtch assures us there tS plenty of

By United Press International ·
Today is Monday,. Feb. 25.• the 56th day o( 1991 with 309to follow.
The moon ts waxmg, movmg toward iiS full phase.
.
The morning stars are Mercury, Venus, Mars and Saturn.
The evening star is Jupiter.
Those '?&lt;Jrn on this day arc, und~r the sig~ of Pisces. They include
French pamter Auguste Renmr m 1841; ltahan operatic tenor Enrico
Caruso '!' 1873; Amencan statesman John Foster Dulles in 1888; nutriUontst Adelle Davts m 1904; actor Jim Backu&amp; in 1913· u:nnis player
Bobby Riggs in 1918 (age 73); and former Beatie George Harrison in
1943 (age 48).
On this·date in history:
In 1836, Samuel Coli patented a ''revolving gun," the first of the sixshooters.
·In 1868, President Andrew Johnson was impeached for violation of th:
Tenure of Office Act. He was acquitted of the charges the following May
In 1967, A~erican warships began shelling Vietnam.
'
. In 1986, wtth throngs m the streets demanding he qui~ Philippine Pres!~ent Ferdmand Marcos left hts Manila palace for Hawaii, ending 20 years
m power. The Untied States recogmzed Corazon Aquino as president of
the Philippines.
,
In 1990, U.S.-backed opposiiion presidential candidate Violeta
Chamorro won a stunnin¥ upset victory over President Daniel Onega
leader of the leftist Sandimsta Liberation Fronl
·
'
A thought for the day: French painter Auguste Renoir once said "I
have a predilection for painting that lends joyousness to a wall."
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f

·~ !

cally assume? Not, I think, that he
is saying these things under duress.
He is not under duress; as far as I - : - - - - - - - -:1
Reportedly, its advertising rates ~·
know, he can leave Ir~q any day he
have already gone up several hunwants to. No, we assume, however
dred percent • and rightly so conreluctaritly, that the statements
Stdenng the f!Udience CNN has ·4,
must bc ·true, or Arnell wouldn't be
commanded smcc the crisis in the ~ ,
making them.
Gulf broke out. Its owner Ted ·
H what we instinctively accept,
since it comes from Ameu, is true, J.urner won:! have to,rely on the
Junk bonds he once offered for
only one of two explanations is
CBS,
tf he wants to give his . 'J'
possible: Either our military leaders
f•ancce,
Jane Fonda (of all peo- ..(
arc a bumbling bunch of Mortimer
pie!),
a
reaDy
memorable wedding. _,.,
Snerds, bombing schools and
As
for
Peter
Arneu, his agent .'/.
mosques like some modern Don
Quixote attacking windmills, or m~s~ a.lread)' be sifting_ through a .:· .
\hey arc a smooth clique of system- mtle htgh ptle of speakmg mvitaatic liars who are deliberately tmns, book offers, TV proposals ,.;
killing women and children for its etc. ~hat ~uarantce to milke Amett ~ .., :(
presumed negative effect on civil- mtlltonatre .when he finally gets ;1
hom~ from hts labors in Baghdad
.,
ian morale.
Hts sponsor, Saddam Hussein ~·;~
can be proud'Of him
'

Is there anything Peter Arnett is ments are identicaL
saying or doing, in his CNN broad·
If Americans we're shown TV
casts from Baghdad, that couldn't scenes of a bombed building and
be said and done equaUy well by a wounded children, accompanied by
paid agent of Saddarn Hussein?
the declaration of some Iraqi
And if, as I contend, the answer announcer that the building was a
to that question is "No," shouldn't purely civilian structure in a wholly
CNN order Arnett home, and there- civilian neighborhood with no miliafter . if il wi.shes, broadcast the tary target nearby, and that the chi!·
re(Xirts of some Iraqi stooge?
dren were wounded when Ameri· For there is one vital and can bombers attacked it, we would
inescapable difference between automatically remember to doubt
Arnett's reports and those of an these assertions. Above all, we
Iraq: No matter how often CNN would reject the implication that
precedes or follows Arnett's trans- American bombers were deliber·
missions with the warning that they ately targeting purely ~ivilian struc·
are being "monitored" by Iraqi cen- tures and innocent civilians.
sors , Arnett is perceived by his
But when Arnett broadcasts
viewers in the United States as "our from the scene, with the wreckage
man" in Baghdad, and therefore as in the background, and says prevastly more credible than some ctsely what I have imagined an
Iraqi spokesman, even if their state· Iraqi saying, what do we automati·

Today ~n history

~~
I hy NEA h1r
'

Jack Anderson and Dale VanAtta ::~. '

find so many of their own faith
among the American troops.

S~uthern

'

BAILEY DRIVES • Southern's Roy Lee Bailey (31) drives in
for layup against Eastern as Eagles' Randy.Moore (44) attempts to
block shot. Bailey talUed 10 points In Southern's 88·71 tourney win
at Rio. Moore fmished with 18.

western survived allowing Kyger Southwestern stayed afloat with a scored only two points, his presCreek to melt,down the seven-point five-point lead at. halftime. In the ence kept three pairs· of tong arms
leads it owned on four occasions third movement, the Highlanders' on the frontline and maintained the
(one in the second quarter, three in lead averaged six points in the fii'SI Highl!mders' height advantage.
the third) by eliminating the Bob· three min,utes, but the shooting of
With the Highlanders' lead havcats with a four-point victory.
the Bobcats• Phil Bradbury, a 5·1 o. ing melted to two With 2:14 left,
"What turned it around for us junior forward, netted ha!'f of the Bobcats took advantage of Sites
was that we kept them off the line," Kyger's 16 points in the period. and McCarty's missing one-andsaid Highlander chief Bob Dunlap, With a jumper from the right base· ones just before the three-minute
line following his reception of a mark when Bradbury found iunior
Tuesday at 8:15p.m.
. "It's hard to beat a team that Sean Denney pass, KC cut the guard Craig Kingery open mside
shoots 68% from the field," said Highlanders' lead to 40-39 with and tossed him a pass that led to
K{ger Creek skipper Tom Riccardi 1:31 left. Missed shots by South· the layup that tied the game at 50.
o the Highlanders' field-goal western's Adam Simpson, Hall,' But eight seconds later Kingery's
shooting, which emphasized get· Metzger lind Kyger's Shane Swish· fourth foul, which resulted from a
ling the ball in the paint 10 front· er carne and went in the remaining steal attempt, sent Simpson to the
men Chris Metzger, John Sites and seconds of the third quarter: as did line for the one-and-one. Simpson
Richard Haney. The Highlanders incessant scrambling for loose made the f~tst shot but missed the
second, and Southwestern's lead
·
needed such shooting from the balls.
.
Ten seconds had come off the stayed at 51· 50.
field, because they shot' 44.4% at
With 1:36 left, Denney's basethe line . ."We faltered here," said clock 10 start the fourth quarter
Dunlap, who kf\Q.WS that such an when Simpson gave the·Hilthlander line jumper was blocked by Sites,
effon at the line can '1 be repeated faithful a thrill. His shot from the and with I: I0 left, Hall's baseline
against Southern if victory is on the left half of the lane, whiCh Swisher drive took him to the boundary
Highlanders' Tuesday night agen· slightly tipped, went in and was line, where he tteaded it That set
followed with a pass ~ the snipe, the stage for McCarty's assist to
da.
Tite Highlanders, 2·16 and vic· as Swisher committed his fourth Metzger for the fevers~ layup
tims of a regular-season sweep by foul on the play. Simpson missed, (1:02) and Pope's layup (:36), with
the Bobcats (KC beat them 65·61 and Southwestern's lead remained the latter proving later to score the
winning points and giving the
at Gage and 58-57 at Cheshire), at42-39.
Highlanders
II 55,50 lead. By this
managed to limit the Bobcats, 3-18,
With 7:'35 left, D'enney, the
time,
Swisher
had fouled out, an1
10 four chances at the roulline (two Bobcats' point ~uard, ~ook a pass
with
21
seconds
left, Kingery
in each half, with sophomore center from feDow guard Marc ViUanueva
joined
him.
Bryan Hall hiuing the bull's eyes) and driiiCd a 14-foot jumper from
Kyger Creek's fans bid farewell
and hold KC's lead to no more than the right wing 10 ·cut ihe Highfive • which came at the 3:05 mark fanders' lead to 4241. But after a to Denney and Swisher, the Bobwhen Hall canned a foul shot after pair of pivotal missed by Denney . cats. remaining seniors.
hitting a stretch layup • in the ftrSt and HaU in the succeeding 19 sec' Quarter totals
quarter.
onds, Simpson got the roll on a Southwestern 17 II 12 18=58
The Bobcat shooters were silent jumper from the right comer of the Kyger Creek 13 10 16 15=54 .
.
for the next 3:02 • a period that saw lop of the key with 7:00 to go.
Continued on page 4
So.uthwestern transform a five- Southwestern then led 4441.
point deficit into a six-point lead
With 5:30 left and the High·
with six points from sophomore landers ahead 48-44, Haney injured
SPRIN6 VALLEY CINEMA
point guard Aaron McCarty (a his right' ankle and was taken off
446 4m
· · · ··
baseline jumper and two layups) the court An injury of this propor·
' ' '
and layups by Metzger and Sites. lion would have had a severe im·
$:1.00 IMUIIN *TUI[ES lATVROA1 &amp; SUIIOAf
13.00 Ml&amp;AJN NIGHT TUESMY ,
McCarty was responsible for the pact on the prosecution of the in·
latter assists.
side game for Southwestern, but
Kyger Creek tied the game Dunlap sent in 6-2 SOphomore Jeff
twice in the second quarter, but Pope in his place. Though Pope
7:00,9: 20 tl'. !L'

LOGAN 67 CWLLICOTHE 56
McKittick 2-04; Jeff Smith 3-1·0·
As they have done several times 9; Jeremy Stutler 2-04. TOTALS
during the season Logan used the 13-3·5·40.
free throw to stave off defeat by
LANCASTER (46) • Kenny
making 17 in a row in tlie fourth Much 1·4-6; Bucky Triplette 5-0·
quarter, and converting 19 of 20 at 10; Bill Dilley 1~·2; Bob Spieth Q.
Ohio High School Basketball
the line in that period.
2-2; Tim Henwood 2-3· 7; Greg By United Press International
The Chiefs shot 51 percent (22 Cave 6-8-20. TOTALS 15·16-46.
Saturday, Feb. 23
of 43) and hit 20 of 22 freebies in
Score by quarters:
Nonh Union 56, Highland 52
raising their record to 10.11 enter· Marietta4-13·12·11-40
Tournaments
ing the championship game against LanClisler 9-14-8-15-46
Divison I
Lancasler(174).
ATHENS 58 NEW LEXING·
Pickerington 72, Walnute Ridge 44
Chad Shuttlewprth swished a . ,
TON 48
Mount Vernon 52, Northland 51
pair of three-poiitt goals enroute to
At CrooksyiUe the Athens Bull· Lancaster 46, Marietta 40
a 16 point perfonnance. Chillicothe ·a ogs defeated New Lexin~ton's Logan 67, Chillicothe 56
was led by Shawn Smith's 22 ' Panthers 58-48 10 earn theIf first Division II
poin.ts as they go to the sidelines sectional championship since the . Briggs 65, Mifflin 60
with a 3·18 record.
1982·83 season.
St. Charles 69, Independence 49
The box score:
Tlie Panthers built a 30-22 half. Columbus Linden 80, Lakewood
CHILLICOTHE (56) • Jamie time lead before AHS tallied the 60
Tanner 3-0-6; Andy Puffer 2-2-6; last seven points of the third quar- Col DeSales 85, Marion-Franlclin
Mau Trainer 1-2-4; Shawn Smith ter to knot the score at37-37.
55
10-2-22; Nathan Scekatz 2-2~·10;
Athens then went on a 10-0 Greenfield McClain 48, Washing·
Kooly Winfield I ·0·2; Marcio scoring binge in the fourth quarter ton Courthouse 47 .
Wright 3-0-6. TOTALS 22·2-6·56. and owned a 47-37 lead before the Athens 58, New Lexington 48
LOGAN (67) • Bob Swackham- Panthers broke a six minute scoring Portsmouth liS, Portsmouth NW
mer 0-1·2-5; Joe Hanning 2·2-6; drought. Th~ Panthers were ~uilty 42
Briall Carmen 1-24; Torn Smith J. of 13 of theu 18 turnovers 10 the Division Ill
0-2; Shawn Halley 1-2-4; Lance second half as they conclude the South Webster 60, Portsmouth East
53
.
BeD t-6-8; Chad Shuttleworth 4-2· season at 6-15.
.
Athens will take an. 8-14 record West Union 75, Beaver Eastern 64
2-16; Eric Burris 5-0· 10; Trevor
Unger 4-4-12. TOTALS 19·3·20- against the Portsmouth Trojans Division IV
67,
(19·2) Saturday at 3:30 p.m. at East Kno~ 56, Nonhmor 47
Score by quarters:
Ohio University's Convocation Worthington Christian 54,
Riqgedale 51
.
ChiUicothe 14·9·10.23-56
Center.
Fisher
Cath
70,
Canal
W
mchester
Logan 13-12-12-30.67
Bob Bailey scored 22 points to
pace Athens with Scou Hillkirk 6720T
adding 18. Brad Agriesti'§ 13 Grandview 71, Berge Union 50
LANCASTER 46 MARIETf A
40
markers led three New Lex players Franklin Furnace Green 78,
Portsmouth Nolte Dame 53
Jeff Smith's goal with two min· in double figure scoring.
Latham Western 79, Whiteoak 65
utes left gave Marietta a 39·
The box score:
OT
38 lead, but the Gales hit six of six
ATHENS .(S8) ·Jason Reed Q.
free throws in the fmal 33 seconds 1-3-6; Matt Jollick \·24; Bob Bai- New Boston 79, Ponsmouth Clay
.
to down the sblbbom Tigers.
ley 10-2·22: John Harmon 1·2-4; 63
93, Leesburg Fairfield ·
Manchester
Marietta is now out of further Scott Hillkirk 8·2·18; Brent Hart(2
, play with a 10-11 record while · man 044. TOTALS 20-1·15·58.
Lancaster takes a 174 mark into
NEW LEX (48),· Eric Harris J. Girls Ohio ·Hi~b School Basket·
the sectional championship contest. 0-2; Jason Gabbard 1-0-2; Brian ball
Doug ZOCUer's II points paced Fisher 5·2-12; Brad Agriesti 1·2·5·
By United Press International
the Tigers with Chad Lincoln t:~; Mike King 2-1-5; Todd Shiplett Saturday, Feb. 23
~g 10~ while Greg Cave poured 1·0-2; Travis Safess 1-0-2; Luke
Tournaments
m22for~.
Patterson 5·0-10. TOTALS 17·2· Division I
·s-48.
The box score:
Franklin Heights 46; Col DeSales
MARIETTA (40) • Matt
Score by quarters:
40 .
McKcma 1-0-2; Chad Lincolrt4·2· Athens t2=tO-tS-21·58
Delaware 39, Upper Arlington 38
I O: Doug Zoeller I· 2·3·11 ; Josh New Lexington 12-18;-7-1148
Gahanna 51, Mount Vernon 45

,.

•,
"

"

"
''

SAT/SIJfl ""TUllES
I :OO,l :W

Saturday's.cage scores

..

"

MTtD II•Gl

Dublin 51, Newark 43
Worthington 67, Mifflin 52
Reynoldsburg 72, Brookhaven 43
Pickerin~ton 87, Grove City 31 '
Westervtlle North 44, Hilliard 39
Lancaster 47, Chillicothe 41

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Located 5 Miles East of At. 33
On Rt. 50. Athens~ 592·1972

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

-·

�.

Page 4 The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Monday, February 25, 1991

J.,.

'

Rio nets top seed in district; .
faces Findlay in playoff game
· The regular season came to an
end and the playoff jouJney began
Saturday fer the Un\venity of Rio

BAER SCORES· Soutberu's Andy Baer
(13) pops in jumper lflaiust Eastera.-io sectiooal
tournament opener 111 Rio Grande Saturday

night. Tbe Tornadoes eUmluted the Eaales, 8871. Eastern defeoders are Jeff Durst (30) aod
, Tim HisseD (24).

Southern eliminates... _c..:....08_11D...,..~ed_rro_m-=-p..:..•e_3

_ _ _ __

lion, Bailey grabbed an errant pass,
"Not to take anytbinf from
gave a quick stuuer step to elude Eastem,.. they played wei early,
the defense, and layed one off the but 1 think our boys really wanted
glass 10 pull Southern within one,
this game. We just plar,ed an exMurphy worked,the paint for ceptional second quart!)r. '
·
1
E~tern and dro~e the score !0 ~- . Southern bit 26-56 for 47 per·
9, ~~a three-pouuer from Kiocaid cent, and Eastern bit a near identiIgmted the prev1ously stagnated cal 27.57 for 46 percent The dif·
SHS offense. The trey knotted ~ ference was in lhc three point range
score at 12-12 atl~unched an au
here SHS excelled at 9-18 and
assault of four stnught SHS three w
.
pointers - two by Baer and one EHS. was 0.10. SHS h1t 9-20 from
from reserve guard Jeremy Roush. the hoe and EHS 18-31.
Squeezed around a Bissell layup,
South~ hac! ~5 r~bo)Ulds, led
Assists-9
th 1s gave SHS a 21-14 lead with by. Rose s 12, ~ailey s seven and
Steals· 5
1: 1O·left
Michael Russell s five. EHS !Jad 34
Turnovers· 19
EHS could not
on its next }rebo~nds, led by M~ore s II,
KYGER CREEK (54)
possession, then ~
·gp .~ ~~ ~ seven, Murphy s five and
Player
2s 3s FI'
Pts. mitted a turnover each, allowmg BISSCU s fiv~,
Phil Bradbury . 7 0 0
14 Grindstaff to close the scoring at
Southern ha~ 10 steals, 15
Sean Denney 6 0 0
I J2
23-14
with
17
seconds
left
turnovers,
14 ass1sts 1111d 25 fouls,
Bryan Hall
5 0 2 . 12
The closest Eastern wouid come Eastern had f~ur steals, 15
Craig Kingery 3 0 .0
6
2 was seven points- 23-16,25-18, Q:'::~t=ass1SISandl9fouls.
· Matt Rhodes
I 0 0
Eastern
14 15 18 24=71
54 and 27-20,
TOTALS
26 0 2
.southern then unlaun.che~ a Southern
23 30 16 19=88
From the field • 26-59
stnng of 15 unanswered pomts, m~
At the nne • 24
a stretcn of 5-S from the SOUTHERN (88)
orr the glass • 16 (Swisher 5) eluding
field
and
hitting ,7-8 in one three
Assists· 17
2s 3s FT
Pts.
minute
stretch.
That burst pushed Player
Steals · 10
AndyBaer
3
6
0
24
the score to 42-20 at the 4:07 marlc
Turnovers • 15
Todd
Grindstaff
7
0
3
17
in the second round, Bailey, Baer,
FoUled out · .Kingery, Swisher
Michael
Kincaid4
2
0
14
Grindstaff and Russell had multiple 'R. L. Bailey
4 0 2
10
Southern 88, Eastern 71
goals in the stretch.
Jeremy Rose 3 0 3
9
In tbe finale, the SVAC cham· The Eastern lapse was unchiUliC- Michael Russell 3 0 1
7
pion Southern Tornadoes took ad- teristic of its capabilities, but in Jeremy Roush · 1 1 o
5
' vantage of a second-quarter out· line with !he play that led to their . John Hoback 1 0 0
2
:. burst to roll to a convincing 88-71 .demise in the last six regular sea- TOTALS
26 9 9
88
Division IV Sectional Tournament son games. Eastern, who had
victory here late Saturday evening played hard and well in the opening EASTERN (71)
at the University of Rio Gmnde's minutes, made a complete about Player
2s
Pis.
Lyne Cenler.
face, The Eagles went from conlrOI Mark Murphy 8 3sFI'
0
5
21
to unsureness. 'then 10 frustration.
Randy
Moore
7
0
4
18
Southern is now 17-4 and adSouthern, meanwhile waS confi- JeffDurst
6 0 4
16
vances 10 the finals, while Eastern dent and. in control, and used its MauFinlaw
3 0 3
9
.. ends the season at 10-11.
bench wisely in masterminding a Tim Bissen
3 0 I
7
. Southern was led by the 24 - 53·29 halftime advant;lge. Baer had TOTALS
27 0 17
71
point effort of Andy Baer, who de- 19 at the half. ·
spite not being 100 percent because
The last two and one half minof an injury, played as though he utes, with SHS leading 50-22,
(The HaoDID Trace-Miller
were 100 percenl in leading the Southern's entire bench emptied and Soutbwestern-Kyaer Creek
, Southern charges in several aspects· and cleaned-up before intermission. 11ames were wrltteo b{.
of the game,
.
Here SHS was to lose some meOsbone of the Tr •
Behind the senior southpaw's mentum, but not enough that would G.Spencer
buoe
staff,
while the Southern·
scoring came a brilliant 17:point endanger the outcome oC the game. Eastern pme
b7 Seotinel
charge from senior Todd GrindSHS outscored EHS 30-15 in correspondeotwritten
Scott
Wolfe)
staff, a 14-point effort from senior that frame.
Michael Kincaid, and a 10-point
In the second half Southern was
performance from Roy Lee Bailey. never as sharp, plus Eastern, he. Jeremy Rose coupled a game-high hind its starting five of Murphy,
, 12 rebounds with nine points, ju- Finlaw, Bissell, Durst and Moore,
(OveraU)
: nior Michael Russell dropped in picked up the pace in an effort 10 TEAM ..............W L PF PA
seven, Jeremy Roush five, and not only salvage some pride, but Southern .........;.l7 4 1565 1306
John Hoback two as all Tornadoes also 10 stage an heroic comeback.
HaoDaD Trace••16 5 1477 1176
wntributed 10 the win.
Eastern ran out of steam howev- Symmes Valley .11 9 1272 1281
• Eastern senior Mark Murphy er, as three of the five starters went North Gallia ..... .10 10 1663 1638
'~ closed out his career on the top of aU 32 minuies of the game and the
Eastern .............. 10 10 1357 1489
·; his game with a team-leading 21 others saw over 30 minutes of ac- Oak HiD ,, ;, ........7 14 1397 1522
,. points and five rebounds. The de- lion.
Kyger Creek ... ,:, ..3 17 1203 1486
;: termined senior, who always gives
EHS did comeback. somewhat Southwestern .....2 16 1027 1279
· 100 percent, continued to give it in a determined fashion(to within
; that little extra effort late in the IS at 79-64 and 85-70), but did not ·
(Confereoce-flolil)
~ game, io help keep the door open
have the steam to puU it out. After Southem .... ,.. ,.... l3 I 1074 855
· for an EHS comeback. Among the three frames SHS led 69-4, then
Hannan Trace ... .l2 2 1122 821
:; other starters closing out their ca- ended with a 88-71 finale. With North Gallia ........9 5 1197 1052
,.• reers were Randl Moore and Mau 2:58 left in the game a frustrated Symmes VaHey .. ,8 6 886 892
: Fin law, both o which have en- EHS bench went to the locker Eastern ................7 "l 1028 1107
•: joyed fine seasons.
room, leaving Calaway as the lone Oak HiD .......... ,...5 9 916 1016
;
Non-starters Chris Adams, Tom substirute.
Kyger
2 12 830 1053
• Hunter and Jason Hager also closed .
Southern head coach Howie Southwestem.......o 14 757 1014
; their cage carrers as seniors,
Caldwell, who took the first step TOTALS
56 56 7810 7810
:
Moore, one of the most natural towards his second 100 victories
·: shooters in recent years from East- (101), said, "I thought \ve played
(Reserves • fioal)
:• em lofted in 18 points and grabbed very, very weD in the fll1lt half, es·
(SVAC ooly)
:: a t~m-high 11 rebounds. Finlaw pecially the 'second quarter, We TEAM .....- ......W L PF PA
· tossed in nine points, while junior had the defensive inteusity and pro- Hannan Trace,.. .l2 2 809 609
; Jeff Durst added 16. and Tim Bis- tected lhc ball well offensively. In North Gallia ...... 11 3 837 603
• sell seven. Robbie Calaway and the second halfwe were the exact Southern ............ ll 3 797 605
Oak Hill .........,....9 5 753 686
• Chad Savor saw action, but did not opposite.
' hit the sconng column.
"That's understandable though. Eastern ................6 8 632 761
:: Eastern grabbed the opening lip. It's natural for a team to lose its In- Symmes Valley .. .3 11 644 800
•. but was denied the score, setun tensity when your up by so many Southwestern.......] 11 532 • 702
:- gthe stage for an Andy Baer goal·at points, The fll'St tournament game Kyger Creek ........ I 13 S38 n6
•• 7:01 for a 2-0 score. Durst then re· IS like the first game of the year. TOTALS
56 56 5542 5542
: taliated with a twisting drive 10 tie.
Your playing before a full house,
:
Kincaid swished a short range the adrenalin is flowing, and you bold • stOliD toumameot
: jumper for a 4-2 SHS lead, but have the nerves to deal with; the
Saturday's tourlley scores
~ 'Durst canned consecuuve goals for '8Jixiety is something you can't deal
:· 8 6-4 EHS lead.
with in practice. It's just nice to
At Univ. of Rio Grande • Trim·
·: Kincaid again tied the score at win the first game in the touma- ble 70, Ironton St. Joe 57; Hannan
Trace 86, Hemlock Miller S3; Pa·
:· 6-6 at the S:08 mark, but Moore ment..
'
·~ drove the lane and laid a perfect . "I've never seen a club improve
triol Southwestern 58, Kyger Cn:ek
;· finger roll into the . hoop to put . so much as a team in my six years S4; Racine Southern 88, Reeclsville
: Eallan ahead 8-6.
as head coach. I've seen five play~ Eulem 71 ,.
• The seriptll this point was a ers improve, but never a whole
:: vintaae E"fD!I.Southem rivalry. team. I meao all twelve players
T~'tllate
At Univ. of Rio Grande- Trim:· Rose hit the JeCOIId ~ of.a two have come farlhcr than any poup
: shot foul, but 1 bueh~e drive by I' ve had, from day one to now. I ble vs. Hannan Trace, 6:30 p.m.:
:: Finlaw g1ve Eastern 1ts b1gge~t told the boys ·if we do what we are Racine Southern vs. Patriot South·
' lead at 10.7. On lhc next trans1- capable of we could win.
western, 8:15p.m.
SOUTHWESTERN (58)
PIS.
Player
2s 3s Fl'
17
Chris Metzger 8 · 0 1
12
John Sites
6 0 0
10
Aaron McCarty ~ 0 4
.4
Richard Haney .I 0 2
Melvin Massie 1 0 I
3
2
JeffPope
I 0 0
. TOTALS
23 0 ll
58
From the field • 23-34
Attbe nne - 12-27
orr the glass • 30 (Metzger 11)

.L

1

• Grande men' s basketball team
wben it defeated host Walsh Col·
lege 79-66 to cinch the championship of lhc Mid.Qbio Cooference
at 10-2 and solidify lcs hold on fll1lt
place in District 22 at 28-4. .
With its defeat of Wilmington
Saturday, the University of Fincn.y
earned eighth tJlaCe in the district
and will 6e paQed off IIJiainst the
Redmen for lhc first playoff game,
set for Wednesday night at Lyne
Cenrer. First place wiD allow Rio
Grande to maintain a home court
~vanliiJie for the second playoff
game, set for March 1, and the
cllllnPiousbip round March 4 if the
Redmen continue to win.
In other District 22 scores from
Saturday, Cedarville edgtid Mount
Vem90 Nazarene 109·103; Tiffin
put away Urbana 81-67; Findlay
dumped Wilmington 102-87;
Shawnee State crushed Dyke 9957; Bluffton slipped past Defiance
67-60; and .Waynesburg State (Pa.)
escaped with an 88·87 win over
Lake Erie,
Filial MOC standings show Rio

Grande first followed by Tiffm, 9· attempts from the line. ~~ tel\'0
3 and 22-8; Mount Vernon, 6-6 and was also hei!Jed when It lim•ted tiS
19-10· Cedarville 6-6 and 20-10; turnovers to SIX. . ·
' U~ 5-7 and IS-12· Walsh 3-9
Walsh. was h1ghhghted by the
'
. ' .. ·
double-f1gure performances by
and 16-13; and Oh10 Domm1can, 2- Appline and center Greg Geig, who
10 an4 ~0-20.
· had 17 points and 10 rebounds. The
· Agamst Walsh, the ~edmen ~ ,Cavaliers finished the game at44.8
emerged from a'! early ue at 10 ,perceiu on field goal shooting (30thanks to a 17-pomt fll1lt half per. . , ·
.
formance by sturting guard Mark 67, mcluding _one of .five from the
Erslan, who had 25 for the game, three) and htt on fiVe of sev.en
Walsh' s main offensive weapon, attempts (four of the!~~ by Ge1g)
Corry Appline, pour¢ in 14 of his · from the free lh1'ov.: nne for 71.4
2S rnartcers during the opening par- , ~rcent. The Cavaliers kept pace
lion of' the contest, but the Cava· w1th t~e Redll)en on the .boards,
liers found themselves behind by recordmg 33, and committed 13
II points as the teams headed into turnovers.
the halftime.
Box score:
.
With Troy Donaldson bringing
WALSH (66) - Jason F~nck,
down 13 of Rio Grande's 34. 1·0-2; EU1oU DeVan, 2· 1·5, T1m
rebounds, the Redmeuernained in Debevec, 3.().6; Todd Brown, 4~·
control for the rest of the game, 8; Shawn Jackson, 0-1.().3; Corry
shooting a total of 49.2 percent Appline, 12·1·25; Greg Getg, 7-3from the floor on 31 of63 auempts, 17. TOTALS 29·1·516.
· including eight ofl7 from the
R.IO GRA~D~ (7!1)- Gary
three-point range, five of them sup- Harrison, 5·2·12. Ma!ic Erslan, 3·5·
, plied by Erslan. In addition, the 4-25; Brad Schubert,. 5-2-1-17; Jeff
Redmen connected on nine of 13 Brown, 2-1-5; Troy Pooaldson, 3tries from the free throw line for 1-7; Jawanza Childs, 1- 1-0-S;
69.2 percent, again led by Erslan, a Lesle( Smith, 4.().8. TOTALS 23·
6-2 junior from West Alexandria, 8·9·79. .
. .
Ohio who hit all four of his
Halftime score: Rio Grande 43,
'
Walsh 32.

By United Press loternatiooal
.RYAN PASSES ON '60S: At
11J1C 27,~Meg ayu .was too ~oung
for the '60s, so ~!•rector Oliver
Stooe had her do 50111e research f,or
·her role in "The Doors." " Oliver
suggested book:s to read,'' Ryan,
wlio plays Pamela Courson, girlfriend of singer Jim Morrlsoo,
told The New York Times, "The ·
Beat poets , Huxley, Kerouac. It
was about six weeks of solid read,
ing before anythin¥ started, just
trying to get acquamted with the
psychology of the times and that
' movement." After flnall y getting
in tune with the hedonistic nature
of the times, as well as Morrison's,
Ryan was reliev~d that she had
missed the '60s. "I kept saying to
· Oliver, 'This is a cautionary tale,
· isn't it?' " ·

hwt.' '

Four Blue Devils fouled out ~ .
did Williams and Mills for An-

zona.

The Wildcats committed an
uncharacteristic 16 turnovers in the
first half, one above their per-game
average, but adjpsted to Duke's
defensive pressure and committed
IJ!IIY eight turnovers the rest of the
way.
"I don't think there was just one
factor to the game," said Duke
Coach Mike Krzyzewski. ''We

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--------------------------------------------·
THE DAILY SENTINEL
1.

"Your S.ource For Local News"
i .

'

'
b
. O

GLIMPSES: Connecticut Gov.
Lowell P. Welcker Jr., an opera
buff, wiD take the stage next month
in a HartfQrd production of
"Madame Butterfly." The former
Republican senator, who was elected governor as an independent. will
play an American naval officer
1, · who serves as an attendant at the
l wedding of Lt. Benjamin Franklin
' Pinkerton and Madsme Butterfly ...
; Peter Horton's character was killed
·.l off on "tllirtysomething" but the
actor. was seen alive and well at a
Los Angeles restaurant with Rosan' na Arqueue recently.
1

' Evangeline group
' meeting conducted
•

,
Projects for the year were dis• cussed at the recent meeting of the
~ Evangeline Missionary Group of
; the Pomeroy Church of Christ held
' at the borne of Eileen Bowers,
'
The meeting opened with prayer
by Pat Thoma and Betty Spencer
conducted the meeting with devotions form John on love. She also
' . read "From the Heart" from the
I .Daily Word devotioo.
:
Officers reports were given and
• collections taken. Cards were sent
: 10 shut-ins.
'
It was decided for the mission
study this year to sponsor Livek
LaD, a recent graduate of Kentucky
Christian College, who will represent Mid India Christian Mission.
Eileen Bowers will continue to
head the sunshine box project
,
Receiving a birthday gift from
her secret prayer partner was
Pauline Kennedy.
,
Refreshments were served by
the hostess with Elaine Kelly giving the grace,
Attending with those mentioned
were Kathy Haley, Janet Yenoy
and Eva Deasauer.

Perfect attendance
recorded at Sunday School
Perfect aucndance awards were
•. distributed recently at the Rutland
' Church of God.
Awards were given to those that
did not miss any days for Sunday
' school.
;
They were Nellie Haggy, Rutland, Lelia Haggy, Pomeroy; and
John Hauy, Pomeroy . Nellie
, Higy was especially honored during this time, as she had not missed
any days for Sunday school in five
years.

.
'

Calendar
Community Calendar Items
appear two days before ao eveot
and the day of that enoL Items
must be received lo ad vaoce to
assure publication ht tbe calen·
dar.
· MONDAY
PORTLAND • The Portland
PTO will hold a special meeting
Monday at 1 p.m.
RACINE • The ~uthem Athletic Boosters will meet Monday at
7:30p.m. at the bigh school to discuss the winter banquet
RUTLAND • The.Rutland Gar·
den Club will meet Monday at 1:30
p.m. at the home of Mrs, Karl
Denison with Mrs. Dave Parsons as
assislin¥, hostess. The program will
be oil '.Birds at Our Feeder" and
.
·

~~~oS::~e~:t~!~~~~ ~~be~~e!~~~;~e~u~~o: - SAR meeting

.

IT'S BEEN 21/t YEARS SINCE THE
LAST INCHASE IN OUR HOME
DEUVERY PRICE.

'

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an

Heard about

YOUR CARRIER
,IS GETTING
A RAISE

Creek:...,...

University hotlirte aids.those
with grammar questions

Doctors hail new stroke treatment

needed to execute and sometimes
we just didn 'I do it when we needed to. Overall, we played good
defense I;Jut not in those key situations at the end of lhc ~arne and at
the ·end of the fll1lt overume.''
Elsewhere in the Top 25 Sunday, No, 4 Indiana routed Michigan
112-79, No. 5 Syracuse ripped
Piusburgh 89-68 and No. 15 Oklahoma stopped Colorado 79.{;7.
At Bloomington, Ind,, Calben
Cheaney scored 30 points and
Damon Bailey added 16 to pace
Indiana in a Big Ten game. The
Hoosiers, 23-4·, had lost their previous two games. Indiana committed
. just six turnovers to 22 for Michigan. For the Wolverines, Demetrius
Calip tossed in 28 points.
At Syracuse, N.Y., Billy Owens
scored 33 points and grJllibed 16
rebounds as the Orangernen ruled
inside 10 crush Pitt in the Big East.

Put America's Tax Team to work for you!

Monday, February 25, 1991
Page--5 .·

By CHERYL HORWATH
center usually provides Enalish having uble writing a leuer,
United Press IDteroatlooal
. tutoring for EIU students but also
" Our procedure when we get a
· People needing help with their provides ihe hodine as a public ser- can is that we try to write it (the
written "P's• • and . .Q's" or with a vice to callers from ,around the question) down fu:st, then ask t)le
mind-boggling grammar trivia country.
·
caller to call back in however much
question have a new place to tum:
The writing center was founded time we think we'Dneed 10 fmd the
an Ells~ Dlino:is University hot- in 1981 by EIU English Professor answer," Coleman said in an inter·
line.
Jeanne Simpson, who now is assis- view last week. "Then we look in
Organizations like General tan! for academic affairs at the col- grammar handboolcs, dictionaries
MiUs Corp. in Minnesot;l, the Fed- lege. The hotline took its first caD or other sources and try to get some
eral Bureau of Land Management in 1982.
explanation to answer their quesin Alaska and .others are taking
Linda Coleman, an En¥1ish pro- lion when lhcy call back. "
·
advantage of a hotline at EIU ~s fessor who difej;ts the wnting ceo" Last week we had this guy
English Writing Center to get ter, said most calls to the hodine who wanted to know what you call
~swers 10 gl'ammatical questions
come from proCessionals, including it when a person answers a questhat inClude anything from comma business executives, secretaries, lion with a question.'' said Jennifer
splices to improper traJ\sitions.
writers and copy editors. Most Berksh~:.an ElU gniduat.C EngliSh
The "hotline" is actually just come from cities like Washington, . student. We looked and looked
one telephone in the Charleston Chicago and Minneapolis, . . . for the answe~ but couldn't fmd it,
school's writing center, staffed by
THEY. DON'T MAKE 'EM . -nine graduate English students. The ·to
with·another question,'
LIKE THEY USED TO: Chari·
ton Hestoo, who rode a chariot to
fame in "Ben Hur" and parted the
Red Sea as Moses in "The Ten
Commandments," · says the high
ATLANTA (UP I) - Doctors
· "No drug or, doctor will ever he help victims of burst vessels but
cost of making movies today pre~the fu:st potentially effective
said
able to help if a person does not may help the 80 percent of victims
vents the production of movies on
such a grand scale. Heston, who treatment for sii'Okes, which could recognize stroke symptoms,'' he whose slrO~s are caused by clots.
In the fU"St phase of the study in
was in Boston Friday for the spe- help as many as 80 percent of those said. " People must leam these and
suffering
strokes
caused
by
blood
get
imriledwte,
medical
at~nlion
so
other
cities, almost SO percent of
cial showing of a newly restored
clots,
becomes
available
Monday
we
have
a
c~ce
to
help.'
'
th!l
patients
who rece1ved t-PA
70mm print of "Ben Hur," said,
on
experimental
basis.
The
earlier
doctors
can
open
a
improved
substantially,
Mackay
"We've seen the end of thpse epic
Emory
University
Hospital
•.
blood
vessel
with
the
t-PA
agent,
said.
films and the big movies. Why,
· "This study could lead to the
' Home Alone' cost more - much wbich announced availability of the "the more brain we are able to pre·
treatment,
said
Sunday
Atlanta
is
serve.''
fu:st est;iblished treatment for vic·
more - than 'Ben Hur.' " As for
Barch said stroke symptoms tims of stroke," Barch said. " For
his Oscar-winning role ·in "Ben one of nine U.S. cities approved for
Hur" and his famous chariot race participation in a study of tissue include severe dizziness, dimness those who may suffer from this
with Stepbeo Boyd, Heston said, plasminogen activator or t-PA, a or loss of vision in one or both devastating disease in the future, 1"I learned to drive a chariot with clot·dissolvin~ substance that eyes, severe headache, a sudden PA may offer some hope."
severe headache, difficulty in
She said the treatment is not recsome difficulty and some danger.'' occurs naturally m the body.
Carol Barch, a member ·of the speaking or understanding the ommended for people who already
YO, STALLONE: A relatively team studying 1-PA, said the exper- speech of others, and numbness or have suffered sttokes. but could be
unknown actress, Joycelyo iments with the treabllent were ini- weakness on one side of the body. used as a treatment of a second
O'Brien, ·thoroughly enjoyed get- tially carried 'out in Cincinnati, All of the symptoms occur sudden- sttoke.
ly. ting to yell at one of lhc most pow' . where it was ''very successful.' '
There will be no charge to
" This is the first time a treat.The t·PA stroke study is spon- p~tients who are enrolled in th.e
erful actors · in Hollywood,
Sylvester Stallone. O'Brien plays ment lias beeil available for victims . sored by the National Institutes of treatrilent study, she said.
a ·maid to Stallone's Mafia don in of sii'Oke," she said. "Previously, Health . Emory University and
An estimated 500,000 strokes
the upcoming movie "Oscar." 1 'I doctors could only treat the symp- other hospitals m Atlanta will par· occurred annuaUy in the U.S, and a
ticipate in the 'investigation of the third of the victims die, Barch said.
get to give him lots of lip in 'the toms."
Dr. Bruce Mackay of .Grady treatment on blood clot-induced The cost of strokes was estimated
script," she said, "The fU'St day I
met him I told Sylvester the best · Memorial Hospital said.that if cer- sttoke. .
at $12.8 billion a year.
A s1r0ke can be caused either by ·
· part of playing the role was that I tain stroke victims receive t-PA
"We'd like to give t-PA to all
got to scream at him." O'Brien within 90 to 180 minutes of a a clot blocking a vessel in the brain victims of clot-induced sttokes,"
says Stallone wasn't intimidating sii'Oke, it can dissolve potentially or by a blood vessel in !he brain said Mackay, "but this (study) is
once she got to know him a bit. lethal blood clots, save lives and bursting. Mackay said t-PA cannot the only way we can learn just how
"When Syjvester ,fir~t .walked on minimize damage to the brain.
effective it is."
the set I was taken aback by his
presence," . she said. "He carries
• himself like a prizefighter, a cham·
pion, aloof and reserved, He w~
like a king. He presents himself as
' Hollywood royalty."
· '

\

Conference-leading Wildcats led
the rest of the way. Muehlebach
added four free lhrows and finished
wid) 14 points,
"I was thinking, ' My God,
there's got to be a way to keep the
streak going,"' said Williams, a
junior. "There were so many times
that we could have lost the game.
And if we had, it reaDy would have

SVAC stc11idings

j'

People in
the news

A,rizona stops Duke, 103-~6
By Uoited Press lotematiooal .
The hero label could have been
liberally. applied among the Arizona Wildcats roster Sunday Brian Williams, Mau Muehlebach,
Chris Mills and Sean Rooks can all
lay claim to indespensability.
WiUiams scored 24 points and
Muehlebach's 3-point basket early
in the second overtime gave No. 8
Arizona a lead it would preserve in
a 103-96 victory against seventh·
ranked Duke.
The win kept alive the nation's
longest current home-rourt winning
sueakat61 games.
Rooks' !_ayin with three seconds
remaining knotted the score at 7878 for Arizona, 22-5, and sent the
game into its fU'SI overtime.
"We were down two points and
I knew we just had 10 run the floor
and get down there and somehow
lay it in," said .Rooks. "They got ·
me the ball and I did."
Mills' baseline jumper with 15
seconds left tied it 88-88, and
forced a second overtime.
''I ~ew I had a good shot at the
basket and I just barely got it over
(Christian) Laeaner's hands," said
Mills. who fmished with 21 points.
"This was such a big game for the
NCAA (tournament) seedings, We
should move ahead of (Duke) in
the ratings now.''
Laettner scored 26 points and
Grant Hill added 19 points for the
Blue Devils, 23-{;.
Muehlebach's 3-point basket
opened the scoring in the second
extra period and the Pacific 10

The Paily: Sentinel

By
The
Bend
.

.

George Gobel, 71, ·Veteran
actor and comedian, dies

HOLLYWOOD (UP!) George Gobel, the folksy, flattopped comedian whose 60-year
entertainment career spanned
Broadway, feature films and TV.
died Sunday from complications
stemming from arterial bypass
surgery. He was 71. ·
·.
Gobel was perhaps best known
for hosting several TV variety
comedy. shows during the early .
days of the medium.
In his later years he was a fixture on the syndicated "Hollywood
Squares" game show and made
several appearances on the
"Tonight Show," where his laconic wisecracks made him an audi·
·ence favorite.
Although his fU'St aspiration was
to become a professional baseball
player, Gobel traded his bat for a
guitar in his early teens, joining a '
group of country a'nd western
entertainers on the WLS' "Bam
Dance" in Gobel's home town of
Chicago.
,
Comedy did not become part of
Gobel's repertoire until his Air

Force days during World War II.
Although he wanted 10 be a fighter,
pilot, he was assigned as a B-26
pilot instructor in Frederic, Okla.
As Gobel recaUed, "You might
laugh at that, but we must have
done a good job down there
because not one enemy plane got
past Tulsa."
During his Air Force career,
Gobel was pressed into .service by
his fellow officers as an entertainer.
He augmented his song and guitar
sessions with off-beat stories about
fictional mishaps that always
seemed to plague him. It was a rou·
tine he later would adapt for his
nightclub and TV act.
After leaving the service Gobel
played small clubs, hotels and
county fairs, slowly rising to top
supper clubs and hotel engagements.
His fU'SI TV appearanc,e in 1952
was followed by guest appearances
on virtually every var1ety show,
including 40 guest shots on "The
Garry Moore Show.'.'
.After seven consecutive appear·

ances on NBC's "Saturday Night
Revue" in 1954, the network gave
him his own vehicle, "The George
Gobel Show."
Now considered a classic, the
program was the top-rated comedy
show for the next three years.
· In the mid 1950s, he starred in
two feature films, "The Birds and
the Bees" and "I .Married a
Woman."
Gobel made his Broadway debut
in 1961 in a musical adaptation of
George Abbot's "Three Men on a
Horse." He also toured the United
States in two Neil Simon comedies,
"The Odd Couple" and "The J Jl~t
of the Red Hot Lovers.''
Even though he won Emmy and
Peabody awards, Gobel also did
many voice-overs for TV commercials.
Gobel summed up his self-deprecating approach to comedy when
he once asked Johnny Carson during a guest appearance on the
"Tonight Show," " Did you ever
feel as if the whole world was a
tuxedo , and you were a pair of
brown shoes?"

"Success with Cuttings and Starlings" by Mrs. Raben Kennedy and
Mrs. Albert Woodard.
POMEROY • The Meigs County Veterans Service Commission
will meet Monday at 7:30 p.m. in
the veterans serv ice office in
Pomeroy.
TUESDAY
MIDDLEPORT • The Meigs
Junior High Academic Boosters
will meet Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. in
the junior high audi tQrium . The
eight!! grade band wiD have a special presentation. The public is
invited to auend.
MIDDLEPORT • The Middlepurt Lodge No. 363 F and AM will
meet Tuesday at 7 p.m. for work in
tbe E A Degree
. ' ·
·

set in Pomeroy

The next regular meeting of
Ewings Chapter Sons of the American Revolunon wiD be held Thurs·
day at the Meigs County Museum
on Buuernut Avenue in Pomeroy,
Dinner, by reservation only, will
begin at 6:30 p,m. foDowed by the
business meeting and program at
7:30p.m. Prospective members and
.guests ilre welcome to .attend .

Reservations must he recieved no
later than Tuesday by calling 9927874. , ·
The tentative speaker for the
evening wi II be Capt. Ch arl es
Stone, Point Pleasant, W.Va, He
will speak on river boats. Discussion will he held on the progress of
having local schools recognize
President's Day as a holiday.

Rutland church has teaching seminar
The Rutland Church of God
recently held a training course entitled "This Way to Better Teaching.,.
. Awarded ere certificates were
John and Julie Corcoran, David and
Darlene Wilkes, Dianne Walker,

Reva Walker, Mary Lamber.t,
Rhonda Mozingo, and Jay ·
McGhee, all fro~utland; Rhonda
Haggy, Lelia ,aggy , Delores
Long, Pomeroy; , udrey Gillcerson,
Middleport; and Louise London
and Maxine Varian, Syracuse.

Ohio Army Reserve
hospital ready for duty .·
By United Press loternatiolial
The Army Reserve's 350th
Evacuation Hospital unit, based in
Canton and including members pri·
marily from northern Ohio, is ready
for duty in Saudi Arabia.
They've been in Saudi Arabia,
6,000 miles from borne, since Jan-·
uary preparing to help injured soldiers. Througfi, Sunday their hospi.tal remained quiet but fears
remained about what might be
ahead,
"I thir!k it is geUing harder and
harder to sleep every night for all
of us," Sgt. Carla Musarra, a pharmacy technician from Lakewood,
told a Cleveland Plain Dealer
reporter in Saudi Arabia.
"I never really had the feelings
of being scared except when the
Scuds would hit," Musarra said.
"Now it is a nightly thing ... the
~round war is coming, the waitmg.''
The main worry seemed to be
fear for having 100 many patients to
handle. The unit recently went
through a drill in which soldiers
were sent 10 the hospital with tags
describing make-believe injuries,
"The problem is there is no way
to handle a situation when there are
,too many people needing critical
auention at one time," said Lt. Col.
Howard Katz, a surgeon who asked
that his Ohio hometown pot he disclosed,
Another fear is the psychological impact· of confronting a steady

flow of people with horrible
wounds.
"Every physician here has made
it clear they are concerned ... about
the potential nature of the injuries
- high-velocity weapons being, I
think the most significant, " Katz
said.
" Very few people have seen, in
pmctice, any high-velocity missile
injuries," he said. "The degree of
damage one missile is able to
impart: is much more severe than
the typical Saturday night special
we are more used to seeing.''
The hospital set up in the desert
includes everything from a pharma·
cy to an X-ray room.
"We are not limited because we
are sitting out here on a speck of
dust in Saudi Arabia," said Capt.
Henery Prijatel, a nurse-anesthetist
from Cleveland. "This is stuff you
would find in any civilian hOspital.

..

DOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER

INSURANCE

111 ,Second St., Pomeroy

.

YOUR INDEPENDENT
AGENTS SERVING
MEIGS COUNTY
SINCE 1R68
•

.

MASON FAMILY RESTAURANT
WEDNESDAY NIGHT IS

Families of soldiers cope·with war ·
By United Press Internatlooal
A North Royalton, Ohio, restaurant offered' free meals for soliders'
~ses but, probably unlike families of many of the soldiers sta· .
tioned in the Middle East, eating
wasn't easy once the ground war
started in Iraq and Kuwait
"I think the appetite is there,"
said Chris Davidson, whose husband , Sgt. James Davidson of
North Olmsted, is in the Mideast.
"It's getting it down your thr9at
that's difficult"
About 100 people showed up at
Tonight Tonight restaurant near
Cleveland Sunday· for the special
meal sponsored by a support group
called Operation Homefront. The
resta!U'8ftt was prepared for 1,000,
·'I guess everybody's kind of on...
edge now," said Chef Lennis Gracie.
. Dreama Mecklenburg of Cleveland Heights, wife of flight medic
S$1. Je~y MecklenbW"g, said she
tned 10 treat the dinner as a night
awav from her worries.
1
' Part of it's guilt," she said.
"We have hot showers, a soft bed.
. and we're sittina here getting a
good meal. And they've only got
MREs (meab ready to eat.)"
.

'

Elsewhere in Ohio, Lonnie offensive could have been delayed.
Comfon, Colllmbus, whose son "I was hoping they would give it
Sgt. .Charles Comfort is with the two more weeks to let the air cam.
82nd Airborne on the ground war, paigns work more."
said : ''We've been anticipating
Launi Wilson, Columi1us, sister
getting this whole thing rolling. I of Marine Lance CpL Michael
truly did not expect a peaceful Zschunke, said the family is unhapsolution. It sure has sounded good PY with the coming of the ground
So fat, but it almost seems like tOO war but resigned to it
"From the beginning, most of
much of a good thing."
our
family dido 't want the problem
Phyllis Sipes of Centerbur,g,
·solved
this way, with a war."
mother of Army Pvt. Damn
Perkins, said she hoped the ground

4 PM-9 PM ·

•TACO
DINNER
•BURinO
DINNER
DINNERS SERVED .WITH SPANISH
RICE, REFRIED BEANS, ALL YOU
CAN EAT SOUP. FRUIT
AND SALAD BAR.
\

Mason Family Restaurant

n. 33
j l

(30.) 773·5311
MASON, WY.
t•IT TO MASCMII DIONl
.

.,

I,

•

�-.
Page

•

Monday, February 25, 1991

6 The Dally Sentinel

Monday, February 25, 1891

~ongressionalleaders

want u.s. troops out
of gulf after war

: ;WASHINGTON (UPI)- Con- alljes might occupy a portion of
gi'essional leaders say the United southern Iraq in order--19. pressure
States will have a major post-war lraq to ne&amp;Qilate a peace treatyrpje to play in the Perstan Gulf "Not a big-deal part of Iraq, but
r~pon·. but some object to a peace- just enough pan ol Iraq to make the
Iraqis want 10 get thau back."
~ping fQrCe that includes a large
"At the end of this I expect that
number of American troops.
the
allied forces will be totally in
: As lawmakers contemplated a
control
of Kuwait, .piUI some part
f§Pid end to the war that escalated
of Iraq which is right ncar Kuwait.
Ill' !I ground offensive during the
weeend, the possibility thai allied We're riot going just to stop riaht at
ti'6ops would occupy a part of the Kuwaiti border, but reallv taking all of Iraq 90Uih of Basra, per· sopthem Iraq also was raised.
.
·
· -Rep. Les Aspin, D-Wis., chair- haps." ·
By occupying a portion of Iraq ·
niin of the House Armed Services
Committee, sajd the fighting could and maintaining economic sancbe brought to an en~ "in three or tions against Iraq, the· allies would
foJlr days." Senate Democrati.c be in "a strong negotiating posileader George Mitchell said he tion," Aspin said.
hoPed the "efforts will be succeSs- . ''So our price at that point is
'Let's sign a p~ace treaty.' The
ful with the minimum loss of life."
: .House Speaker Thomas Foley, peace treaty would include Iraq's
0-Wash :, interviewed on ABC, recognition of Kuwait, tbc Kuwait
said the United States "should borders, the Kuwait g0¥C111111C11t ...
CJ!PCCt more help and suppon from (\lso some pledges by the Iraqi
governmE:nt about what they're
ot~cr countries in maintaining
p'O&amp;cekeeping forces .... and we going to do with nuclear, chemical
sbiiuldn 't maintain very large num- and biological weapons in ihe
bers of (U.S.) troops in the region J:Uture."
·
House Republican leader Robert
(Qr'JI long time."
·
:--_'Rep. Lee Hamilton, D-Ind., Michel of Illinois, said, "We may
chairman of the House Foreign very well be on Iraqi soil for the
~airs subcommittee on the Midtime being," but primarily "for the
dle East, said the administration purpose of protecting our backside
aPPears to be planning to maintain of our troops out there on the line.''
Michel, appearing with Foley on
a~ U.S. presence in the region with
l¥r and naval forces, not substantial ABC, said he did not fotesec an
aUied drive all the way to B~!fhdad~mbers of ground troops.
"1 think we'll want cenaanly to
' "I think a large ground presence
"'ould not play well with Congress. consolidate our position o"ce
I! don't think it would play well we've achieved the initial objec!fth the American people,'; tive, and then maybe there will be a
respite here, but we want to be sure
~ilton said on NBC.
• "A more expansive naval and th.at there's as much damage done
a'lr presence than we have had in to the kind of' (Iraqi) military
tJ!e past probably will be accept· equipment that could be used
against -us sometime aaain or in
~e. It's not as visible. I think u's
that area," he said.
~robably also more acceptable to
t~countries in the regiOn," he
Hamilton said tl)e post-war
security
problcll)l in the rcaion so
~d.
: Hamilton said the United Slates beyond Kuwaitlnd even Iraq.
'ti~ going to be in a very strong
"We have a lot of !lations ~
pbsition after the war to shape and that have missile capability, have
.tdefine the Middle Ea$1. My great chemical capability, some are getJtope is that we will be up to the ting nuclear capability. So we have
to think jn security terms much
oh~llenge of uanslating what I
~ink is ~oing to be a clear military beyon\1 JUSt Kuwait and even
-?ctory mto a political triumph as beyond Iraq. We've got pl~iy of
room for troublcmaken there and
weD. ''
; Aspin, appearing on CBS's the secUrity regime has to take that
into account"
·
'I Face the Nation," suggested the
•'

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d.
•
t
bl
d
•
S
i IX I e ID roo
e
• t G'
•
•

S' ovte .. eorgta region
•

.
MOSCOW (UPI) - Six people'
were killed and eight wounded in
weekend gun battles in the troubled
~th Ossetia region of the Geor·
~an republic, where more than 30
~lc have died this year in ethnic
c-lashes, Soviet news agencies
rtpbrtcd Monday.
.
: '!'he official Tass news agency
spid in addition to the killings Sunday, attackers sprayed the local
Ihterior· Ministry headquarters with
machine-gun fue, but there were no
casualties in thai attack.
Tass and the independent Interfix agency ~id the new violence
bi:gan ill the Georgian village of
~vi in South Ossetia when ethmc Ossetians opened fire on Gebrglan police with automatic
weapons and unspecified types 'of
missiles.
~ A policeman and three other
~pic were killed in that attack,
~agencies said. Eight Georgians
1
~re wounded.
• Two more Georgiails were laler
kllled in their car in the nearby vii·
laic of Did Mukha, the reports
said.
~ Tass said Soviet Interior Min-

!

n. o.lly Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Classifie

• The Area's Nu111ber 1 Marketplace

I

RATES

TO PLACE AN AD &lt;ALL 9U-21S6
MONDAY thru FRIDAY I A.M. to S P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY

Days

:r"

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15
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11 00 AM . SATURDAY
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2 :00PM THURSDAY
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Mason Co . wv

A,.a Code 6l4

992 Mtddltp011

Galhpohs

Ch•hwe
Vinlon
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379. Wolnuo

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81 Homelm,ro-wemenl 1i..
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•

Public Notice

BULLETIN-- BOARD
.

'-

TIME OUT FOR REST - United States Ariny Stb MASH unit
nurse. Amy Stuart sleeps with her teddy bear in a tent tlear tbe front

lines on Friday. Tbe unit advanced to the front lines after the start of ·
the grouad offensive on Saturdily. (Reuter/pool photo)

DESERT STORM
SUPPORT MEETINGS
THURSDAYS - 7:00 P.M.

POW surge invites problems of its own
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Early
Sunday morning, many allied
troops heading north throu~h
Kuwait. and Iraq wc;re greeted wtth
whire flags, not pointed guns.
More than 5,500 Iraqi troops
tluew down their rilles, abandoned
their entrenched tanks and called ii
quits.
'
Oddly, the _pleasant allied surprise, though not totally unexpected, has brought unique problems of
its own.
"On the 0 ne hand, you don't
have to fight \hem, but on the.
other, it could slow you down,''
one U.S. mililary official said.
De(ense Secretary' Dick Cheney
went so far as to characterize the

~~~:~!~~::~of~~~!g
A big problem, or an inconve-

niew::ile mjlllary oftl~~~; SSIY ~~I
. · 11very captured troop represents one
istry units that have been deployed less CQmbatant, they contend that a
in South Ossetia 1o try to stop tbe massive defection or surrender can
clas'hes between Ossetians and create logistics problems for troOpS
Georgians found two missiles, · who are forced to alter their attack
seven ~uns and arenades and plans to remporarily guard prisonammunition in the area of the' · ers. ·
attacks.
"Every time you have a prisoner surrender it does stop the action
to a ·certain extent because they
Interfax reponed that after the ' have to go through the safety proattacks, Georgian police began cedures," said Army Lt. Col.
inspecting cars and trucks, includ- Joseph Allred.
in~ a column escorted by a Soviet
A.llred stopped short of calling
military unit, and took 30 Ossetians · the situation hazardous to allied
hoslage after finding ammunition troops, but said delays in offensive
in one of the vehicles.
missions could diminish the eleIn apparent relaliation, Ossc- ment of surprise to opposition
tians took 17 Georgians hostage in forces.
two separate groups, Interfax quotAllred said captives must be dised the Soviet commander in the armed, searched and tied, a process
area as saying.
that can lake some time.
In additi.on, attacking troops
More than 30 people have been often must hold the prisoners for
killed in ethnic violence since the · several ho.urs while awaiting the
beginni~g of the year in South arrival of some of the 1,SOO, to
Ossetia, ·a region of Georgia that is 2,000 military police reservists .
attempting to break-from the repub- deployed in Operation Desert
lie because of fears ~ia would Storm.
.
break from the Soviel Umon after a
The reservists, who process and
new nationalist-controlled govern- transpon the troops to one of the
ment was elected late last year.
prison camps, travel well behind
the rear lines.

The cards are mailed 10 famiBut processing and transponing lines to canips in Saudi Arabia, lions.
ly
members.
·
S.SOO troops can put a strain on the which arc far ·removed from the
Military
officials say they
limited number of military fighting and are equipped to hold expect a steadily increasing number
reservists, Pentagon officials con- up to 100,000 prisoners.
The prisOners are interviewed, of Iraqis to become dispirited and
cede.
. Officials_ say the ~ntirc proccss- fingerpnnred and receive a medicaf surrender and are confident that
mg operat19n req utres about 24 inspection. They also complete temporary camps wiU hold all pris- ·
hours. During that time, prisoners identification cards; which are oners: If not, the camps could easiare moved by truck &amp;om the front required by the Geneva Conven- 19 be enlarged.
Penlagon officers say they may
move reservists closer to the ,fight. ing 10 reduce the amount of time it
takes to process prisoners.
. Logistics problems aside, PenlagO!I orficials say a massive surrender, like the one that occurred
early in the ground war on Sunday,
has its advantages.
'
'Clearly,
we
are
concerned
that
"Those 5,500. (troops) who
PHlL,-\DELPHIA (UPI) - The
fight over Pennsylvania's abortion any abortion case that would reach 'have surrendered are not iii front of
law, .one of the most 1C$trictive in the Supreme Coun would give this you now,'' Allred said. ''They
the nation, tak;es another step more conservative court a ,chance came from somewhere and now
toward a Supreme Coun test Mon- -· to change •or overrule Roe vs. , that pos1tion has opened·up."
·
.
day with arguments before a feder- Wade,'' Kolben said.
But Robert Gensel, a spokesman
.----------....,
al appeals court.
The state is appealing a lower . for th~ st8te Attorney Ociteral' s
LEIAL NOTICE
court decision last August that office, said commonwealih offi·
cials•
believe
the
law
is
constituoverturned provisions of the law
The Public Utilities Comrequiring a 24-hour waiting period tional according to se.veral
mission of Ohio has set for
and parental consent or spousal Supreme Court decisions * r Roe
.vs.
Wade,
especially
the
1989
·
public hearing Case No. ·
notification before women can
91-02-El-EFC,
to review
Webster
deciston
that
Cleared
the
obtain abortions.
the
fuel
procurement
pracway
for
states
to
enact
abortion
Slate officials contend. the law
tices
and
policies
of
Columrestrictions.
breaks no new constitutional
bus Southern Power Com"There has been some suggesgroun!J, but abonlon rights advopany. the operation of its
cates see it as the latest threat to the tion that this was just a stalking
Electric
Fuel Component
I 973 Roe vs. Wade decisiOn by the horse for overturning Roe vs.
and
related
matters. This
Supreme Court that legalized abor- Wade, but we don 'I see that,''
hearing
is
scheduled
to
Gensel said.
tion.
begin
at
10:00a.m.
on
"We think the case is exttemely , "It is not the attorney general's
March 25, 1991 , at the ofsignificant because it is one of two .view that it's necessary 10 ovenum
fices of the Public Utilities
cases in the pipeline (before the ,Roe vs. Wade or otherwise achieve
Commission, 180 · East
courts) and it would give the court any major change in the Supreme
Broad Str.eet. Columbus,
a funher opponunity to cut back on Court's position to have this slatute
Ohio 43266-0573.
the rights of women." .said Kather- held constitutional," Gensel said.
All interested parties will be
Most of the contested provisions
ine Kolben, director of the .Ameri·
given
an opportunity to be
can Civil Liberties Union's Nation- in the law, enacted in 1988 and
heard.
Further information
1989, are similar to ones in an earal Reproductive Freedom Project.
may
be
obtained by conTlie other c&amp;Se now in the oourts lier Pennsylvania law struck down
tacling
the
Commission at
is a Guam law that would prohibit by the Supreme Court in 1986,
the above address.·
abortions e:u;ept when the mother's Kolber! said.
THE PUBliC UTiliTIES
"It would be very difficult for
health or life is threatened. Kolbert,
COMMISSION
OF OHIO
who will argue against the Pennsyl- the coun to resolve this elise with'
By:
Gary
E.
Vigorito,
vania law. said abortion rights out evaluating the continuing validSecretary.
advocates are also preparing to ity of Roe vs. Wade," Kolben said.
·'
appeal a Utah ban on almost all !
'
abortions passed in 1anuary.

Legion Annex, Middleport

Call 992-7057 ·

.

!'Wile Notice

Business Services. .
Now '"
!#Ilk//
20S N. S.MIIl Sfralt

fiiiOUPOIT, otiiO 45760
OfRct 614-ttl-2116

HilMI 614-ft2-S.92
110T111.s. 1IIINII, ......

HOUIII•LOTinAIIM
COMMIRCIAL
'We Need Uetl•p!

.

J&amp;L
•Vtnyl llcllnt

Wlnclowt
· •Rooting ·
•lneullltlon

ftr-SUS • tiS-lUI
Act.- ,,.. ..... Oflle
POIIIIOY, OliO

2. EIIICtrlclll. Archltoct'a
Elll'll••
t1 21.11 ~.00.
·.
,,JQ.I ,I ''t\1 ,, ~·~
Sopar•to tooled blda for . ,. 3. tniAC. A~ltoet'o Eatlmato t1 42,778 .00
the conetructktn of an .cldi·
4. Plumbktg. A.rchitect•e
tion to and the renovetlon of
tho Molgo County Otpert· Eotlmeto *31.880.00 .
The Contrect O_,monto
ment of HumM SerViatla
located et 17S.Rece B,_, may be eJI:emln.d .t;
Tho Office of the Melgo
Middleport, Ohio, will be reC-mltlionora.
County
ceived •t tho office of the
Molga County Comll'italon- M-.1 County Courthouao,
on. Mlllgo County Court- Pomeroy, Ohio 411781.
Burt••• • Nlpltt, Umhed.
houae, Po,..,.oy,
Ohio
45789 ,..til 2:00PM 11-1 4424 Em......, Av-e. Portime) on Fob'I'I'Y '1:7.1991. keroburg, Welt Vlrtlnia
21104.
and then at 11id office pubCoPiot of tho Contract
. tlcly opened ond - d aloud.
Documentl nwy be obWork aovonod by tho Contract DaaurMnta inckJde t he telnod ot the office of
following Items for which lu..-• • Nipltt, Umltecl.
locetod et 4424 En.aon
bid a wHI be IICcopted: AD 01Avonue, Porloer-re. WHI
TION TO AND RENOVAVlrtlnill 28 t 04 upon payTION OF THE
MEIOS
Oolillre
COUNTY DEPARTMENT mont of Fifty
(tiO.OO]. NONE OF WHICH
OF HUMAN S!RVICES. '
WILL IE REfliND,ED.
A now buHdlng eddltlon to
The Meigs County Comtho exlttlng Oepllrtmont of
mlalio-• ,...,. l!f!M.I" the
Humen lorvlcoi with Into·
- I l l bid,
the bnt
rlor .renovation• to the eJtiat·
bid lor the Intended purIna buHdlng togtther whh
poae. •nd ,...,.,. tho right
the necaury eppertaining
to accept or ,.ject eny or 1111
work.
blda ond/or ony pert thereSopareto Contnocta For:
of.
1. Generel. Architect' a ••·
Mory Hobttetter, Cltrk
tlmoto tllll1.852.00.
Melt• County

•VINYL IIDINO
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•.
.. .LOWNIH ~
INIULAnON

Real Estate General

Commlnionr1

(2)4, 11. 18, 21. 4tc

in

.

'VOU

POMEROY, OHIO
992-2259

-Miylloloc.,.IIO !OOitel hom lhtho"'r'

SIGNS
b y tl&amp;.
JU\11 1 lllllt ...,.,... C1M1 fMiu•

.,. •loltl

"'"..,In... .

""'"""f

rby

OWNER WANTS A SALE AND HAS REDUCED THE PRICE
FOR A. QUIC~ SALE - 2 unol apartmenl buolding on
Moddleport. Good rental oncome. in a good neighborhood.
Was $24.900.00. NOW ONLY $18.000.00.

IIOBERT J.
''Bob" lAUER

WllhH toTu..,.,,
- •l'lolno
our
lhenkato

e.... .,...,...,.,

POMEROY - Bnck mnch home on a great locatoon! 3
bedrooms. 2 baths. nice carpet in&amp; !root sotting porch lookong
over a beautiful landscaped pond. Heat pump, garage door
opener. Really nice home Ihat was welllolken care ol. ASKING

YOUNG'S
CARPEN1ER SERVICE

.........
_,......
-1-•1•,_...
-fteeM A:Jdldaoa

cauw

MIDDLEPORT - No.ce starter home lor young couple. Som e
remodelin g completed. 3 bedroom s. I bath. Fon 1sh it lhe way
yoo want ''ONLY $16,000.00.
.
'
LETART- Mobile home sole or bu•ld your dream home on
this one acre landscaped sote. A STEAL AT $3,500.00 MAKE
OFFER.
·
TWP. RD. 348 - Appro• . 93 acre vacant ~nd woth a 2 story
barn, stocked pond, old house sote wrth well. Appro•. 25 acre
tillable with the balance l•mber. Get a return on your
mvestment from the sale of timber' $60.000.00.

·

-·.......- .......... ~1111

-c ..... ....

ut "fo ~rirve.

IFR!E !ITIMATESI

Y. t YOUNG Ul
992·6215

,_.,,Ollie

11-14-10 tfn

DAN'S

11ANSMISSIOI
•1111 AUTO liP All
Speclellrlng In

Aut-atic
Tronemlulono, lrekn .
Tuneup. 011 Chengo.
Clutch Ropelr.
fiiiE EITIMATII
IY""b"'""N

,....__

..J.JSI7

."
'

Ill AClEAT DEAl

.."
.-

Sfell. l C11111pare
,,... llfl•at••

EIIILEE MERINAo-&amp;

o,. ...

'I

915-4473
"7·6179

614-992-6120

,.,.,.,,ow. '

~

5-31·'10 Hn

- ·11·11

,, lfiMiftHI

..CIOWAVI :
OVIII IIPAII

UPIIOLSTIIY

lrlllt" .. or

AIL IUDS

tn•. s.....

.t

lUll

·~ ;

Plclllp.

..
w. -~'

'

DN'S APPLIANCE

t
' HifldTuftlftt
CUIIOIII Drapn

SIIVICI
HJ.IJU or
ttl-1561

a:.,.......

614,;tft-JJJI

. . . . . _ .... 0Hic8
117 ••
POMIOY, 01110 •

,_..St. .'

W.loly-W.De.

w.o.-w.a..,.

10-lt-1 ...

3/&amp;/10/tfn

.....

L MASH
CAIPINTIY

I

••

. •e.., •• ·

•"oom Addition•

•Kitchen• • Bathe
· •VInyl Siding .

IIU SlACK

•Rettoration
eRepalrWork

992-2269

992-5526

USED RWOAD TIES

POIROY, OliO

1·12-10-tflt

'

..----~·

IISSIU

••dtl¢111111-

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

I l l - RIUt I

.IDEIS

CUSTOII•r
IIGIIIS &amp; GAUGEs: ,

:-..:~oiiiAU

-·

"At luu ' u Pri " ·
PIL t4t.JI01 . '

fiR EITIIA1ll

CDAI
COIISTM110N
ttt-6MI er,.

........

882·2268
nmnmD lltl A CAIDIIIII HAL ISTA11?
CALL CLILAIIID lEALn1

....

•,

..........

IIIOVAL ,
•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD

'J...... ....

OFFICE,_~ .... .. ............... .::.........

i' - ' · -

.........
ec••, ••._

. . . . lilt II

Allr~

SIIIUI ,&amp; Till

HENRY E. CLEtAND .......... .. .. 882-8181
JEAN TRUSSELL ................... 848-2880
JO HILL ............. ........ ............ 9815·4418

I,'

MSSB&amp; i lUilE
COISIIIICnON ' ·~

n•

- -~ - GROOM

36\'. . .

ITS THE 'tlnLE BIT MORE " THAT COUIITSI- Certainly,
realty is a service business. But we like to think we jive you ,.
more than ;ust ordtnary service. Apraising, financing,
idvertosing, neaotiating, closin~ - all that goes without
say on g. So we strove to do MORE. Come'" and let us show you
how our "little bit more" in effort, courtesy and know-how
can give you so much more'

.

~~~

,'&lt;1

~

A r~d m.okt! our C011ra~e
fainr or foil?
Nay. lei u• faith and
hoptJ receivt:
The rOJ(&gt; tflill 1frOw3
b•vond rhe wall.
Wlho Suun; Chliclren:
MlchHI, Rellecc••
Hlfllie, lrien, Troy;
o ..ndchldrllrl: Little
Herbie, ond DNn

$69.500.00.

PO.IOY, 01.

,

••""""-" ........ Goo.. W'IIS!l&gt;l

For

The Femlly Of

fiDMrt .cl broulht
food.
Shall rlaim of dea1h

·· CRGW'S FAMILY RESTAURANT

CALL

VICKER'S WOOl) HEATINC( '

c........ Groemilll

1 Card ot Thlnkl

Funerel Home, Rev. elld
Mrt.l .. bettO.... ...
p •
• .. 1he Ienior

NOW FEATURING HOMEMADE DINNER ROLL

LCIIID E\IIIY 12 HOURS •

~~ROOM

WANT ADS

-

Served wllh wlllpped polllt-. chl«*en
gravy, cote •'-· hot roll end 11uner.
Soroy, no aublttt- except bewerage
· with eddltlo1181 pr~.

----

-v- JW,..,. ctntrtl kt sy~t'm

1

cteAtlllt

m.One,·?

. (Dittillg · - Dilly)

.... 10-indllong-

-1*1111-HIIIotSp....

-

614-992-.2156

- " " ""-""'&gt;~! ....

-

-

NO SllfiiU CAW
3-ll·H•

Melp Coo nty EMI.
Vet~n~ne Mlmoeilll
Holpltol,
the dociDno
....,...__
E..itng

''

y

_......, ........,ns"ftJIC'II!I'I)u~
...... " . ,..lftm .....r WOOl'!

Pl. t4t·JI01
, er l~~o t4t-IIM

'\'OUr

•

i!Wffil.............,

..,,.. Eltllthlt•"

house that can tum into

•
..\
•

ta 11"1 121•• WIIIIUIIER

.... ._ ....

llr-

•INNER ONLY

I

.

74J·2U1

10/JI

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

POMEROY - Cute little house that needs fo•ing up. 3
bedroom s. 2 baths, N.G.f .A. turn ace. In town location. MAKE
AN OFFER' $14.000.00.

'I

'

,

Mel I IighLDUwha

•

nm.

otllgh Gtoaa on Tits ·
l'loor Flnlah
.u tiWIS. Ownor
II. I, lvilenil, OH. '

Public Notice

ADVERTISEMENT FOR

TUESDAY
NIGHT
SPECIAL

•R•eonellte R•t•• ·· •
oOuathy Worlc
• '
• • - Eetlmete•
oCerpet H11 Felli Drj '

. IIIII 'S APPliANCE
SEIYICE

·14-

..Wl'EKTISE IT

F.aturlntl lltttudcy f~ Chldcn

III'IIS-S""'

11&lt;10 OWIIS-SJt .,.

Mltklleport; Ohle

GENERAL ALLERGIST

PH. 992·5432

IWIIIIS-SIM .,

MWIJ-$125.,

1131 lrytn ..._

PubliC Notice

. . .. . . .JIT
CAIIPIT CUAIIIS
... ftU FLOOI CAll '

teNYw..-m

-IUTOIS-S IM .,
ltfiiiS---$115 ..

•pjepiiDitnent

JAIIIS mill
t92·2772.
742-2251

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
'
E~l, NOSE &amp; THROAT

• THUMBS UP FOR TAD 0" • Service crews &amp;1ft 1111 Ill 'r
.; to plloll ~U.S. Mlrllll CCII'JII AVIB Harrier jell• tMJ '"I 1
ce like oil from die USS N. . .lf 011 Saturday. Tbe N-• 111- f1

&amp;a•••• 0. WfMI U;uiU. eH lt. 141
lSD APPUAIIGS

;INSULATION

CletaofE-High
Schwl.·II our frilndl

(304) 675-1244

IEINm'S MOilLE IIOME
HIA'nNG &amp; COOLING

t-5--

the City of Merlette and lht
. vllilgea of Clerlngton ond
Billie Velley, In Gollill. HockIng, Meigs, Monroe. Mor·
gan, Noble and Wethington
herbicidal
Counties. by
oproying .
Work lengttr - 414.14
mil••

THIS l"xl"
BULLETIN BOARD
SPACE AVAILABLE
1
AT 15.00 PER DAY..

.

\\WE HAVE HEAR.INC AIDS"

MOilLE HOME FUINAUS- HEAT PUMPS
· AU FUIMACE PAm

varloua routes 1nd MCtlona.

'

State abortion law takes
step toward· high court

Public NOtice

NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OH 10
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANIPOIITATION
Columlluo.Ohio
Februery 1. 1111
ContriiCt Slllea Leglll Copy
No. 91-187
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
IHied propO•I• wHI be
riiCIII.ved et tho office of lht
Director of the Ohio Deportof Tronaportotlon. Co~
umbua, Ohio, untl 10:00 A.
M.. Ohio Sl8nderd Timo.
T - y . Merchli.1191.1or
Improvement• ·Jn:
011U11.
Hocldng, Meigs, Monroe,
Mor1111n. N - end Wuhlngton CounliM. Ohio. on

-- --

$ULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE
4:30P.M. DAY BEFORE
PUBLICATION

JOHN A. WADE, M.D., Inc.

·-

Page 7

., .... ····!160

\

, It·

f.•~.

t

.,

--r

•

•

. ,,

'

'·'

,.• A ~·. J~ j, .• • !

. • I .,

. '·

Dey .....,
NO SUNDAY CAUS

"

4-1

I

·.

'

I('

~·

'·

'

�Monday, February 25, .1991

LAFF-A-DAY

Announcemen ts

21

lnvtmory, No A•nt, No
OwttuM,
Direct
From

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

No;rr.-

tlrnl
loll
M.iici R

w_,.,._..,._,_,.,.
~~-

4

Giveaway

Coin

Optraled

-..r "lleohf-. Fufl.
, _ 1'co Pen~ime n

Wroter

Noc-ry.

red. C.H UOO 840-

--

deDo81land ,.,.,.. mtt Coritect
EllA Town 1~7.:-'

n-

50 gol. 11ot wotor -or,
-1"11 - · · · 114-lll2-:r7154.
Iold pupploo, pool boogloil
30W75-1m Of l'lf-21t3 otter
pm. ·

A..._ I Dopool, 1114-4412143.

VENDING ROUTE: Fol' Salo.
Stoqng, oalld buolnMo.
Hftlr l,.lflc, locollacatlont. -

HoUM For Rent. Call .............

-

22 Money to Loan

able, refwr.nce • depoelt , .

oqul_,_ t-100-21c.nl3.

~

"' mo -

Avo.1

- 'eon
- ......
wv. "'oWoulcl
Soo'
thon
lt4-43e-t241.
phononu-..

IIIIo puPI!I\ wormed ond _._
7-ooa...... udog. 3~

s... n

brMd, malo, cc&gt;ltlo,
llolalbrokon a _.. With
chndron, 114-tt2-17ft.

7

Yard Sale

23

"No, · no, Duke! This is the

Go. out and find me
a Gazette!"

Bulletl'nl•

Gallipolis

Help Wanted

Help

""

-;;~=...,.,"=V._,IC..,.I,.n..,lty:,.."'""',.,.,..l AVON
w

•a~··All 1,_::zi4ca11 lllrllyn
·
oovor ~ · 1·
ATTENTioN·
EUPLOYEIIfi:
We hlvo - b l o . 1011o
motlmed u - County
om~ lor your_._._

:0...

:=...

.,

'

·

o~onted

tlnlnelli MrVIeea nrm nted1
Pomerormlndtd
bntdgrowth
carMr
Individual. To
lind out ~unhy"
mooo 11bout tend
thla
"Ooldtn

2br untumlahed, I rnllal from

~=- ~=~~~ ~~~ 51

831t, - -·

2br, 2 bath llobMo - · llr7
W.toon
Rood,
1221/mo,
Reloronco l Security Depoon
Roqulrod. No aoto eiiOWed.
WIHmln Rill &amp;toto, 1114-441-

58

Pits for Sale
Good
nd lu""'" ,_ 1
""''
op-~
-Ina. All · An ltytoo.
0000 USIED APPUANCU r.mo Pol Food Doolor. Julio
Wrolhorl, drytno. ooll1g4!rllloro, -.Colll14ol4fi.QI3t.
.._ . llloir- Aail-, MC Cill........ .,_,__ 2
Household

a

4

...

Do•••

=·== :u:n

-·=•·

·--7'111.

""'·

. . . ., .

I

= ...:...::o.u.

t.':

ADS

~CPSIOOO

U&amp;-7323Jor lnlorvlow.

I
_..
ICondldato
•nona ..., ohould
occountlng oklllo

unlden

Pltnt Accounltnt n•dld In
~ct I
I
menu.. ur ng
onv ronmont.

.

. $1.895

En!oy ovor 100 chonnelo. Boo tho newo LIVE
u II hoppen1 - 24

,., ,....... .,....tt....

houra. IRD IY'Itlm ln-

tf.. SlerH

cludeo docodor.
CALL TODAY
FEIRUAR.Y.SPECIAL
ONLY

COMI'I.fT(-

NOIHING l!SIIO IUYI

ZEN I X VIDEO

11/r Milo W•. af ilelror Hospital - .,_ 35, GallipoHs

446-2411 -

••

BEAT THE RUSHI
Gtt pur lawn and gar·
den equip..m tullld up
and biCNits sharportetl
fw the cooning 11010nl

DUIIIG fDIUARY
- frH pickup and
· dtlivtry in Pomtray
and Middleport city

limits.

WE ALSO SERVICE
CHAIN SAWS

DAVE'S SMAll
ENGINE IEPAII

,53 W~t Main St.
, .......y, 011.

PH. 992·3922

2-4-11

....~.&amp;.c.;". . ." ' - - - - '

TII..COUNn
IICYCLING

OPEN 7 DAYS
A WEEK
9 A.M. 'TIL 7 P.M.
If
d•n up yywr on wtektnds .... w•

1•u

llu_y_ 011 WIMindl.

Til-COUNTY
IECYCUNG

l.ocotlll Off tlo1 lypats On
lho ,.,.., ol .
II. 7 &amp; II. 143
,.,...,, Ol!lo
PI'Yinl cMh for ltlumlnum.
Cop$Mlt', tQ11. .Wnln tttlf,
metn•ium. redietorL 111rt·
.,., .. ttrnatora and all non·

,..,..,mM81a.

::...ro:::::;,:::::~.

N.C., partlelly fumlahed. Phone
304·713-62U.
·
yororo work oxporlonco In Froe: Shlngll Rool 1 Vinyl
ot rololed 11111 no-• SidinG On Any SchuM Homo.
·
OrdoMIOiwNn Feb let 6 Fib
qui . $5.8t Hourty, Coli 614- 211h. 11t1, French City llobno

Lflo":1.''

DELUXE SATELLITE TV SYSTEM

•UHF IMtttt - Perfect

-14!-11?1
100-135Part~lme poeftlon avall1ble In
now rollronco doportmtnt ot
lloooord Llbrory. AI foul 2

ond ~. y1111 ••poriOnco In
:!~~~lhng to""lncvlronluJ~Ifllln:
....,...._ l4oo
vontory menogomolil •nd ...,.
ti'Dij ._.llly•mDrMhly operaUna
ropcno;
ouporvlolon
ol occcunf.
lng otoff,
ohlpplngr.._lnvolclng
onCI
P"Y"'"· M · Euo:. - . .
tend rBUIIII
and Ullry
roqlr_,o to Amorlcon Altovo,
Inc., VP Oporotlono1.~~- IJo•
211, New Haven, WV ~.

Ro,.o Sileo O.llvory
Wo Hood An Emoogotlc In·
dlvlduol Wllh A Good D~vlng
~ecord,
For Routt Sal•
o.nv.-y Pooftlon. Good lonotH
Pocklal. Wo Aro An Eq•l Op(IOOiuoit~ IEFFII!:':or. All lnaui~M
Aro To So
To: OolliDOilo
Job ..,..., Locoted At 41 Cllvo
St- Or can ..-s-1113.
lolot - NIOd money r.ot?
12,000 por -;::•
No noorlonco
Buying
CIUICJ heme at Oov•nmenl
-ion on our bohlll. 1-100-

.&amp;':"ntood.

115f5.204f.

iDT8 FOR BALE In Cllllllpcllo
Fony. Will occopl lrlf~
ovolllblo. Phone
"'2722.

:MY

41 HoUiea for Rem

Qurgea Pottable llwmlll, don't, 2 bod"""" llcmo In N.. Hovon,
304-'7'1UIIt.
houl JOU' to lho mill luet

wv.

No -

tMI-7PI-7hnoW...
2-11:•1.!-

49

Fo( LeaSII
"-:;;;;;;;;;;;-ip;;:Tnew.j;;;n;:
W.rollouoo • - In Oollpollt.
' - " "· ttoO Sq. ft. lncludfnCI
ofllco. omplo porlllll(l, ,.......,..,.
lociiMIOo. 114 4441 otll, ti:'""'"

Merchandi se
51

Household
Goods

C~letNotlon.ll lrond
W.tor Out
FIKrotion
Syot-o. DJocounted ~ Dom'o Ootoy,
814-llt2.f302.

o,....so.,.
Mon .-Fri. 8-e

1.!,•!!!,__1 -

. We Haft Cha.... O.r lieD!..., To
JI!J Milts Ealt Ill lt. 241 , .....
a...t•• Oh.

SPECIALIZING IN .. ..

eCulltom Bent Exhalllt Syatoma
•Complete Uno of Exhoullt Supplioa
•Hondlo •nd lnat•ll Monroe Shockl
Came ud See Us For A Free J..pectllln
aad Eatlmate
PH. 614·915·3949 IOMIY 11U11
47269 St. lt. 24.
leftt loH~~t~, Olr. 45743 •
1/3/1111 ...

---------58
Fruits &amp;
Vegetables
CAESS OAEENS • WATER
CRESS 14 to II 1 ..11o1. 114·
4441-8442.

F.ill'l Siippi•,'S
!\

1 l'.d""H,tock

lin

!~.••,naD~:.'ii::..orriAP, '~~!!f.on'
Alklnl

P-. IZ50

Drtvoro', _

,..,.. • _

Running
_.,.,..

-.

-...
Flntoh

• Coonflloto UINI ol P.,.o 1 sor;

Conclt-.

" ' -· .......
lhlctOI, Tlioo, Hoy

0on1on

'

onao.

... " "

~ •~~I'

~

_ ..h,......,..=..,_
_ ...I,.., _ _ ...

Ntn.,...lhlt~dobdl­

lltd
....

............
_ . . . . _p_,_

--~
1•1tiiU4. ·

WAliA CIIWIANTIID• . , . _

mt

r.,.T::!'..::~.=
a' t

.........

=·L

;;;;;;;;;...._ _ _ _ _ __

63

Livestock

:-:---::-:--;,.;.;....;,_,.=~ 1'01 - . ' 1171 AOHA

WartrJng "' HomeNo lxJMillnle NICIF ry. For
F- lriiDv 11wo lend A lASE
To IIAQ- llollorl, P.O. -

::.=Rna

Complote oet
~o
lnoln.MI00-00. - -1

55

BUIICIIn"
•

" I hele working in manholes when the
snow plow comes!"

.....
64

Hay &amp; On1ln

!!or lor ao;; I Tlnrotllv.
lleirntl S.loo In lire ......
'

I

... llooloo, .. 00

_.,w.w ••.-·not-

.
...,
111!10
t1-oo
...
balj,
0..""'
fUIlor
a,4-~.

-. ....... -

-

-241112L
lUii Clrondo, OH Col

114-

TOO
FA$T "J"t)
Ufol{)f~$iANP
IT.

-ln. . . . . . .

2-2)

· "f,_,.... ve: S
.... ,

lion,
- . ae
· ·tfter
-·
t3.tiD lOW
Finn ....
• IMW
4p.m., lleoglo Calc.
ttll Co- 8odon Dovlllo. oil
.......... 20,000
111,800.
Col -1112 oftor p.m.

• (l 1M1 t:r, NEA , lnG

ALLEY OOP

..,,...i

""-Ill: ---"''"

lion, M.IOO. eM.iii-1021.

(2:~)

({) Munier, She Wrota Q
121 On Sligo
a PrlrFIIINewa
fllliiMuty •nd lho Baell 1;1
8:05 (JJ Peter lhe o...t (PI 1 ol
4) (2:00)
8:30 ~ II IOl Blaooam Blossom
is tricked into dating the
school geek. Stereo. C
1111 CD Major Dod The
Major and his fellow officers

•

••
'

ning - - · 114-llli:lI
72 Trucks for 9818
ttlll' Ford F-150 Plck"'P '
Rod I • - with 3to Enalne ·"·
Rune Oocd 1500 Ceolo. I~

I~

..

'

organi ze a talent show.

BWJ US1ffi rr

Stereo. Q
On

a

1l-\E: S~VU3S &amp; I.OPIJ

d-. totoll'lllulld nol Moclwd

-

..., lllti 'IIIIIJ -

-

•4071 btlt 11n 1 a.m.-12

'

,
'

,.

human rights stories of

fellow journalists who put
lhair lives on lhe \ina lo
report lhe truth. (1 :00)
1111 C • Murphy lrawn
Murphy and Frank lear lor
their lives duriRva plane
llight. Stereo. ·
({) Prime Tlmt1 roodlng
Tugboat vs 'Million Dollar
Man · Ted Dibiase (T)
Ql Nealwllle 'Now
a Larry King Uval
fllliiMuty end lhe s...ti;J
9:30 (!) Evan lhe Huvane WMp:
The "!· Yl111lnla MIFIII W•ro
G:l COIIgl Baekelbllll
10:00(1) Hawa
(l) Moyano/Projeel Cenoorod
The 10 under-reported news
stories of the year are
examined. and the
coneequences ol news that
isn'tco-ed are explored.
(1 :00) g
.
iiiJ lOlii Deolgnlng Women
Suzanne accidentally 2_1ues
her lips &amp;hut. Stereo. Q
a CNN Evtnlng Newl
fill 700 Club With Pet

"

~·•

MOFF.

1H7210Ka-idllojllvo,ucollint oondlllon, 1100 ftrm. 11+
448 1720, boloro 2:30p.m.

Will-I A eEN6E

OF HLWQR.'"

·i
'I

•i
,I

'
'

tm · 11112 ft. 1100. can
lftlf
7 .,. ... 114-441-8243.

..'
\
..'

Auto Partl &amp;

,'

Accessories
i::d;;c:i,;;;;;;!~;;;':i'j;;j''i

-4

lludaot T...,nflllont, UOOd 1
robulft, olootlng et '"; 114-241-

BARNEY

1177. 114o371-2213.

c.npers&amp; .
Motor Homes

•'

. I

,.,_...,_Ntll.

ME AN'
MY WAGGIN'
TONGUE!!

OFF AN' JOINED TH'

OTHEI
SAWHDSS? ·

'

111,111 RoclcWoocl Conopor 32 II

MAYBE IT TROTTED

WHAR IS MY

'I

79

'HA AAHA!
.Wli 1.-1 KE A
CONTE5TANT

YaJ PReFER,
YOO CA-N KAvt= IT. IN
WARM.1 SOFr CASH!

'lOU MAY HAVE AL.R&amp;'-DY
IAON TEN M I1.-L.ICJI.l OOL.LARS
IN COU1 HARD CASH!

· •'

for Sale

78

1
. ' OR, IF-

1

·:"

75 Boats &amp; Motors

flED RYDER
RODEO II

""
'I
,,I
.,

loll ot ...... 112,00 Olllko--

Serv1ces

. ..., ._ e.ao

~~--Tim
11oc1t
,
,· .

f

s..u•

9:00 ~ II 4Jl MOYIE: 'Long
Roed Holllll' NBC Monday
Nlghl 81 lhe Mtwlet (2:00)
Stereo. g
·
(I) (I) II MOYIE: 'The O..d
Pool' ABC Monday Night
Movie {A) (2:00)
mDenge,_ Aoslgnmt1nto
Five news anchors get
together to report on the

6USIIJE.S')

~::]~~·:=v~r:v-~~~
,1171 Honda Golfwtng. fui-

floller1lon
10:05 (JJ Peter lhe

4) (2:00)

'I
'I

lmprovernom1

a c•

-·--.... Rorr'o

Toni!,_ ':AtlEI,
Co. liON ·-11111

~

.... -.,0111~37-1128.
Dowie
-Vee lorvloe,
ou .... CrMII: Rei. p.........
plloo,~kup, and dollllfY, 114.41
.

Plumbing&amp;

'lOur
'Birthday

Coottr'o ..........
andHoetlnrr

...-ondPilo
Ooillp lr Ohio

44ewf

'

=- . . . . . .
, ...,. - Ua11-

.....

f1l

or

OOiftlftMjlal

I

GEMINI (M•r 21-June 20) An endeavor
' in which you 're presently Involved is

You could lie extremely lucky In the luilillment of ywr ambitions in the year
ahaacl. especially lhose that are ol a
material. rather Ihan an esthetic,

'··· ~

01I illkWn.
........
304-471-

Upllolst!rz

M'
"'••.;.sr'o Upt 1••~• biil ~-,....The
~

be an excellent strategist today , partie·
ularly when confronted by competitive
developments . Success is likety it you
rely upon your mind and nol your
muscle.

favora ble trend where your f.inances are
concerned. You could be lucky in generating a greater yield from something
that is already producing quite
handsomely .

· Feb. :ze, 1911

84

!!.,.......,

.whicli signs are romantically perfect for

TAURUS (Ap;il2fi.M•y 20) You're in a

Helling

eM

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22) You should

knack today for improving upon the
ideas and suggestions of others in ways
that make them more beneficial for all
parties concerned . 11 will be used
cqnstructlvely.
,

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

Qofllo

82

Graph Matchmaker instantly reveals

you . Mail $2 to Matchmaker .. c/o this
newspaper , P.O. Box 91428. Cleveland.
OH 44101-3428.
ARIES (M•rch 21•April19) You have a

TV ........ ~ ....
In Z'onltll .. •tclnt moot

Saptlo

o...r (PI 2 ol

10:30 (!) Landm1rtt1 and LAgenda
· Bryson Rash 181fs Intriguing
stones behind Wa3hlnoton.
D.C. landmarks, inciudTng tile
· house where Lincoln died
and tile Washington
Monument. (0:30)

Home

-·. . -=-~--- ·-Supplies

'"''
,...

-11121.1170, I'M
. Sll 1041, 114-246-

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

~por~
lloo~lo~,114'~~JI!!IW:!G~It4!:_.~:,:._:
'

011t

..... lit •

1711. Poilemault. OH ....._
T - I Cop l o - PriMina.

--lilly

ltoglot- 'fF I I I .... 12
t171.00
1100.00

lox ot , _ bulbi In
t
12,500. 10H71-71111 01 .,......,. ~ -

•

fuT' IT' TAI.JtS

lllorU Corio Super llpol!,

Wronl to lluy -11111 llmbor. ................. wv
Loa1ilna, . . ""'., taa aDM1'I4ill Ollie ..........4.
~
....

torn-lo.I141U...._
=..:-;,::~.:= Utility lu~ IPL: 30'14G'd'
DIIIM. I'lL ........ · -, 1:30 ..... ,.,................ 14'
door: ...... !haled · Pll. WM1N4III.
-lu-11441MM
WATIII WITCH WILL DAILUIIO

YAL.1'4!il!.-CO.

-'A~y \

~~~:,..qui~.L.c~!!O,
•
lind

~_aid, ..., o-n11o ,. -

- ~ ...

Cf!OJ;EP A MIC:.f!OWAVi WITH A
•. ·, ·( \ .
TA'-~ING ~VEN,

-

82 Wanted to Buy

Q

DEnter181,_..1
Tonight Stereo.
(I) D Menre'e Femtly
· llllD Thfft'l Cornpeny
tD College Baaketball
aCrollllrt
7:35 (JJ Sctnlonl end San
8:00 ~ D IIJl Froah Prince ol
Bel Air Philip tries to even
lhe score with pool hustlers
who bemboozled WilL
,,
Stereo. C
(I) MDYIE: Feel Tlnree at
Ridgemont High tR) (2:00)
{l) (I) 11 Amtllc8'a Beet
Kept Sctcrell Actor James
Dean'.s Deatll: UFO Sightings
in Florida: Winning Se&lt;:reiS ol
Super Mario 3 Stereo. Q
(l) Mlrllcle Pllnet Stereo. Q
(!) Ou1 ol Darline..: The
Mine Worker's Story
1111 IOl !Evening Shade
Slerao.
lllliD M VIE: 'Willow' FOX
Night 81 lhe Mtwleo (PG)

•m u ...-:

......... - · Tho
Dryor
2144.

'""'C.::.""·•-fnt.
roo1111,

FRANK AND ERNEST

~14-~M-'1270.

1q 1

Aloo -_...
Avel-. er.. I Bono,' Jllcli'
_., OH • - 1111.
,

Ql) 10) J~rdjl

Cll

=..,~-=-~~,:
F
·
-N

11!

®N htCounQ

4 whMI drive, fi,!OO; 11NM
T. .pc 4 cylndor, ............

.ro
12.150. 10 HP 2UO - · .m
W!CIIIo M!io. Owner wtn lin- 81
114

jOUii~FIIIy~;·11~4~1~4;l~ll;l;l·j;;;;-~

~rrop~..,

7:30~

,

1-...;;;.-------

aeeaa~
RoUnd 1111
Feiderl,
lole l!lrJd!!nll
Foodlna
..,_
Fead
lunlla; aCllt
(:rMpt.
Autornollc U..ooll wet. . .,
o.t-. CllrntI p.....• ~·
Hlllchoo~
· · Trollofli,
- · · . .Truokbodo,
.
Coil
Cnlnl1..._lpfll.,. PIAtlo Tlnlla, ltacl•re~ DfM, Pi.;;:
lu-ro, Poteto p-l.Earth
' " - · .... llodoo, Wider
,..,_ 1oom Polle Poet

.

7:05 (JJ Happy Deye

'

vans a

AI 00 . ._ .........
G-ood
-... DrYI!t· lor

-hor

'
::

F- flo with -h new oow 1. . FOld 110 XLT lrlrlol, . - .
choln .,....,._, wo •llo hlvo lent oondlll!lfl, f14.241 1117.
·- n modo oholn' irriWI In
MociL Slclorl Equlprnont Co, 0CDilfiCh 20ft. TtHxlt Trlller,
-...... :IOW7S-lll2t.
lllro --· Sl,7110.;_ 111ft.. .......
lroltr, - - polnltl.lll: 2 hOfiO
trdtr,
.... 114-218-1122.
Jim._ F... Equl-n1LB~ 7 ~~·
Wool OatMDOIII, 114,..1;
Wide -lon ._a UIOd linn
4 WD's
tnoctOfl l lmplomonto. Buy, 73
011~ lrldo, I:OOoi:OO - y o , 1110 CIIIC Truett, hoovy hiiNon,
loL ti11-.
4 - drive, 4 epood, n JMDI!N'S I'ARII EQUIPMENT
oltopo. fl14.211 1003
Lana, 2olorr.. I Kloll Troctaro, 1111 FOld F-110 4K4, 114-314Looti'ooo, ...- . Rotouy · 4431.
TUioro,- a K - Hoy I•
qul_..., A C..plolo Uno or 74
Mofo_,.r...

81-.
and ,..,ChoNt ·~-•
lrlngth Troln, V- Uno, With Lloj I
Soquoneo,

1;1

'II Iuick .......... Good run-

U

..,.._or~ng _

sorely In Fl!llld ol leadership. This role is
1allored lo your capabilities. so don't
leave decisions up to others.

·

CANCER (JuFIII 21-.luly 22) Don't be
hesil&amp;rll to play your hunches today, especlally In your commercial 'allairs evcm il they Induce you to do something

nature.

daring that yo~'va never previous!~

PISCES (Feb. 20-Morch 20) You mlgh1
not gel oul ol the starting ga1e aslaalas

1rled.
LEO (July 23-AIFI- 22) Even though de-

your competitors do today. but you're a

Yelopments niay not have lived up to

good runner down the stretch. When
the final so::ooe is tallied , you 3hould be
ahead ollhom. Know where to look lor
romance and you'll lind it The Aatro- .

what you had anliclpated. do no1 lower
your hopes and expec1ations at 1his
11me. Things will get better il you're
persistent

- -~1410rlrl0-

LI8RA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) The same taclies and procedures that worked effectively for you recently could work for

... •

"

spon.

Bobby makes an
embarrassing comment while
on the air. Slereo. Q
llllD M'A'S'H
Ql Croak end Chaoe
11 :00 ~ D Cll &lt;ll II 1111 112lD
IIJ) New•
'
®Night eoun Q

SCR•M Lm ANSWIU
Hl.
Scarce - Plush- Lunch- Quench- CHANCES
"If I've learned anything from years of backpacking in
the wilderness.'' lectured .the old gent, • it's that
· necessity is the reason for taking CHANCES." , .

BRIDGE
New York Times bridge editor Alan
Trusco\t has a WiiiiM!r with his latest
boOk, "Intermediate Bridge' in Three
Weeks" (Perigee Books). The book de-.
scribes how a vacationing bridge player visits ·his uncle Sam, an expert at
the game, to get some hints on improving his play. Sam's instructions on theory are interspersed with exciting
deals like this one.
·
Yoo hold the South cards and arrive
at six hearts after Sam hits shown a
maximum no-trump wilh heart support by cue-bidding four clubs over
three hearts. When tbe queen of spades
is led, you play low from dummy and
then ruff the second spade. You play
two rounds of hearts ending in dummy
and ruff another spade. But the · ace
does not faD, and you go down one. .
Sam points out how you should have
made the contract. After rolling the
second spade, it's fine· to play two
rounds of trump3 ending in dummy.
Bu.t now ruff a spade, go to the ace of
diamonds and ruff the last spade. Get
back to dummy wilh the ace of clubs
and pitch your queen of clubs on the

({) Miami VIce Stereo.
QIOnStqe
Maneyllrre
sc.rec- and Mro. King

a

8

situation aboul which you've been sus-

picious. The Information thai has been
eluding you can noW be uncovered.
SACinARIUI (No¥. 23-0ec. 21) Conditions in general look rolher encouragIng lor you today. but things you do wllh
the aid ol partners could really be lhe.
big standouts. It mlghl be wise to give
them priority.
CAPIICOIIN (Dec. 22-Jen. 11)
Changes you've been hoping lor-e
your car- is concerned could slltrt
taking place today. H's a favorable tide
and you'll do well rldlnglhe waves.
AQUAIIIUI (Jen. ~- 11) Someone
who.has been lucky for you In lhe paet
could be equally as fortunate lor you In
lhe present This Individual may lalk lo
you loday aboul an arrangement In
which you may be Invited lo participate.

11:30~11 !IJ)

TonlgltiShoW

Stereo.

&lt;IJE~I

:1GJ f!.lo~ti8n
Q
D An*tce Tonight

GI Spolia Tonight
11:31 {l) Clllerl Q
12:00(1)Dinto lhe Nlghi Stareo. ·
. llllD Parly Mnltllte Wlllt .
NIIPMPiel

GJ ...... Copy

({) The Equlll•ar

.Naill... Now
G:1 College leal&lt;etbaH
Gl NewtNiglrt

.

.,

1-U -11

.-

•'

.KQ 10
• t.J 7
+UI

.,.

WEST
+QJ 101

,,
'.

EAST

'•

•s

+A 9 7 4
2
+642
+K 10 7 3

•u3

.J95 2

,,
'•·'
~.

SOU'MI

·~

.t.J871

.

+KQI053
+QI

' .. ' (!.

_,

.....'

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: North
~~

Soot..

3.

Nort~

INT

Pus 1+
Pus s•
All poos

6.

4 NT

Eaot
Pass

Pass
Paos

..'

-:

. ·-

Opening lead: • Q

1...----------_...J... ~..'·...
king ol hearts as you draw the oppo- ·•· ..
nent's last trpmp. The diamonds :are ·: ·
now all good and you make your al&amp;FII. 7~ :.

. "·•

by THOMAS JOSEPH
lions
ACROSS
40 Leo's cry
1 Wizard
5 Sleeping 41 Regis1er
section
9 Easy
DOWN
gaits
1 Esprit de
10 Long corps
distance
2 Pinnacles
copies
3
Sollie
12 "-we
all?'
spiri1
Yesterday'• Answer
4
Villa d'13 School
Back
type
26 Salty
paper
19
CutUng
27 Spies
end
14 Prepared
6 Scrooge's
tools •
28 Polishes,
lor takeoff
20
Singer
as cars
cry
16 Formal
7 Devon Ritter
29 Highwear
22
Hit
the
tailed it
shire
ciiy
17 Robert bottle
30 Iberian
8 Makes
18 Greasy
objections 23 ~owing
nalion
spoon,
9 Paint
team
33 Plotling
e .g .
ingradienl
member
35 Actress
21 Crosses
11 Volup 24 Magic
Thompoul
potion •
son
22 Revenue
tuovs
15 Street
25 Hispanic 36 Go awry
workers
23 Ancien!
book
24 Weds
secretly
26 Visited
29 Pale
yellow
30 Heroic
tale

s

31 lllumi-

.,

38

-

&gt;

....

..
- :•
'

~·

- ·''
'
'

'

,~
'
.;'
•'_,
-:

''

&lt;

'•
•'
J'

''.
i

••'
..
. '.
'

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'-: I

:I
I

nated
32 Apart ment
type .
34 Banish
37 Noled
pamphle teer

•
'

1'

Greas~

spoon,
e.g .
39 Colora DAILY CRVPTOQUOTES - llere·s how

to work it:

2/25

....

AXVDLBAA-XR

Is LONGFELLOW

•,
..
" 1
I

One letter stands for another. In this sampll' 1\ is u~rrl
for the three LJs, X.for the two O's, ek. Single letters,

ajlostrophes, the length and fonnation of lhc words arr all
hinls. Each day lhe cope letters are different.

wThe loam•

:t..=-

..,

CROSSWORD

llllD Aroonlo Hall

you again today. even though you mighl
have to deal wilh a new set ol players.
SCORPIO (Del. 24-Nov. 22) Do a bil
more detecttv., work today regartUng a

NORTH

+ K 63 2

By James Jacoby

(l)tmnwalell

I,
, I

Goad

UNSCRAMBlE ABOVE lETT!RS
TO GET ANSWER

',

aMonoyline
fill Scarecrow end Mro. King

. ··

1181Fotd

A

D llpartsCenter

:

w-.

a:311p.m. -131~ ·
F0&lt; S.lo1 Fulll'lgurod, -

::

&amp;1 Fann Equlpmem . ·

Dol11 aolndorlllllxor; HoiFor - : t - n - IMd 1l1r Forego H. .ootor. All
ltond, 101 &lt;11 .."":.~ tobloo a 1 good eond-lan: 104.a73-4211.
_ , - · ool
4 cholro. IIF 1715 OioiOI Tooctor ..,_,
Good
AI olio• ....... 1111Q
Dfllll

-lorr.

''

ttll T-, 17;000 mllot, 4
oyllnder, outornatlo, . wnh •lr,
12,500; 111711ronco, eutom~!!'1

-

••

Cion
1:31 (JJ Andy Orllflth
7:00~11 IILIIJIWhHI o1
,
F-Q
® I Doeem ol ,..nnle
(I) (I) D lnakle Edition Q
(l) (!) Mltt:Heii/Lelrnrr

3012-

I11H11D.

..__.,u•

1101'10--1

..

81
A~ce:.~::.t~' Q
al Up
==•~ng
lt.=AHalrQ

___....-·V'le

- - oondnion, 11.200- ,,..

Rillllot•ld blootr cookor
opllnlle1 .'!. wlco old coli Alndy
•--tloove m1011go.
Uln-IIY Fine Konnot. 114-4413177. AKC Cockor Spaniol P~~P­
ploe, foi!IIIJ -flnzed. liking
i!ePoollo ,._, Tho Ulnmoto
EHI.,OIItt

. . ..

I'

.,

=:."1:1r:;.·:::~- ~
FEED. SUPPI: 114412-2114.

.

,.

4tH.

with elr, high mlloogo, 11,000.

............... 1Mo AOHA Dorio
~;;;ii;~iw;;;;;;;;;:-D;;;;;: lloy lortillorr, , _ ACIHA Aed

Buslnees

ttll Buick A• umned Edf.
lion, V.f, outo., f1200, 304-f7S.

quid- .............. _ , " '

- • 1 nut-• to ollmlnato

Coblnet: 304- •. - . 0..1 1217 7 ft. hlylllnd;

,(304) llN'IU.

tltlfl

KIWI'S CUnOM aNDING

lui Uno Trcplcol ::. blrdo,
11 .
-llonfllletoendo
For loll: AKC C1oow CIDW Pup-~
V....
Adullo,ci&gt;l011,
lloln
lo
1 oloo.
1rrutouo
~!:1-,_,_1\led, uaolfonlaoto.
•
'0117.
.
HAPPY JACK TONEKOTE: Lf·

. . ........ 1171.

=:."C;

Opponunlty

I'

111-llp - ·

=

Ul-7140.

OHiO

~2013,

lloctrlc " - (2 Yol. ~ht 1 - . . Co-loner. 11~-

q-.

21

..• -

--lerorrny-.....
,., ...... -.,
-

Clll304-6'111-1tll
o;;;;;t:k;;;;;;t:diieij;;;;;;;;:l•~l'MO. t
3 br d _ . - · Paint Coucll, lov-1:1 dlolla-. 1 fat
P
I
•
Rola01roUloa
Nowl PhoiNI 04-11'111-2024.
ed 43
111011(10 von.
..... Pouil'l O.y caro Conlor.
0.-'L PheiNI ~.,._
Plokup - · Foo:!!, • .Jl.!IOV•
.....
-·
11-F 1234 ollor 8 pn,
.
Cou!IIY Applloneo, Inc. Good . Dodgo. no Filet, tol.f........,.
I 1.111.·• 1:30'
p.m,oltlldcoro.
A~· 2-10.
opplloneoe, T.V. •••· Oaon Pitt~ Frolh
oftor ochool. Drop-lno I """" - · both, 111 KnNiol 1uood
Lm. to • p.m. Ucn.4at. II+
~ n.t lllox
w111·
a me. 114--441-1214.
Plok, roloroncoo " - " · U&amp;-111!1. 127 3rd. - - 011- ,......
10 grot.
eli - r
- b l o - wUI do brobyolt• ~;-~·~lnod~-~Ph~IOI~-;10~30~4~112~-3~1111~--;;J~IIpoU~o~,~""~::::::::::~ - - · 30 to
ott book
ling In own ..__ Coil onor 7
prloO. Point Ptoa, - -·
PIOo 304o8'11-4011.
Potloblo Kllcllen Aid Aivtorolclo Auto Dorolllng. . 814SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie
- · but- top,
441-ttto
=~~
W1U brobyl!H In my hcmo loeoted
llr -ion, AIIIPII - · ·
ln.Oollaeflo, In City LfmKI. 114noOIIo- ....... 1100. Phorrl

Cloud S8t. • Sun.
546 u,,.. • .., IlL I r"; rill
a,t. 614-446-0002
Ow•

'!!:f.

dolve, fooded, ExCIIIont condition, 12,1t1. PhcM 304 •~
.
33li.

ow-

-rot.

~

. ..
:-

a-Putiillot. 1 _,., 1 -'"· AI&amp;'FII .. 12000. 1 bnod, tii'O, ..... •~- :10M7W712 ••• • prn. Dno(IOIIWind Coft.-y Pooolln; ... lulok Century CIIIIO&lt;n,
ond Hlmoflyon ldltono. Alrlo., __ olr,
tin,
oruloe,
11 _
114 UUIU oltor 7 p.m.
AIIIF-- •-·~ FIIW tlrw,
1
115,000 m Joe. 14500.
l'lell Tonk, Mil ....- . Avo. 114 441 Jill or U&amp;-71104. .
-

..

"'""olioM,a.:4':!1:'':.··~

• .,...._
1MI POfd en: 11,000
1 cheN» ml'- on oomall8 rebuHI .,..
loto' ••·
- . 1. IMckllan,
$110 irrooh. 114-317- gino $1,500 lnUIZ-1012
71M.
'
·
'
AKC Regilt- Red cr- 1114 Conllor Typo 10, •uto., elr,

vleoiUoed Eau11C'il:
Tract ora,"Round h
DIIC 1
Drum
-.
icktobror
- . Roko1E, lolly - .
Buolohog, T-ee loti.,,
' - - • Corn Plontor, Corn
Pl..,, Gn.tttty w~. Grinder
lor ,.~,..uo-olothol lll~or CUfthiat"!'1 Cullpocloar,

4

. IAIIII SlOP

.._,... Ni

'*

_,M

Wi fOIPIIUS
614·tt2-5114

•I

Cll (I) D ABC News Q
(l) Wild Amertce g .
(!) 3-2·1 Contloct Q .

,

Ia

!!PI•-.
c-...-.
::-,':'.,I::::'on!.r~no~": =·011~= E=ont":

Buslneu
Training
17W331.
Aolroln
-IIISouthololom
luolnooo Collogo, B!Hina Volley
Rental s
Plua. can Todoy, 114-441-43170
Aoglot-ion tiO-OS-127111.

18 Wanted to Do

autlto
pro 1140 -

"'-'::S -

Routo 2 Aohlon, 1 ocro lololo 3
mllot ICUih Oolllpcllo Loo o,
public - · · nc -rlctlono,
001110 with ""' front- 304-

14

Phonl ;JUtH,..1311o
9tonlbsaade Aplt. 1100 Powell
St lllddloport 1 t1~
.,
~~ ronto

oondllion.
jlhotoo onil -riDiion to
olllllleotlono,
1 P - . Athorlo, Ohio 4S7D1 or
F'rfday t:OOAII • 3: II.
C:Off I14IDI2-II5'1 01 1141112phone colo, ~011
clu II ol ..-I'Thlo II F•rmor'o 24111.
Homoo. a14-441-834G.
Haono Appwed. 111111 bo 12
v-n or olderj handlclpped; or 54 Miscellaneous
- 1HI 141" mobllo homo In d _ , Theoo ero one ......
Merchandise
Mldd="· can Tom Ando,._ , _ oport--.
E-1
·-·~
•- ~-.
~
814- ·3348 oner 1:00 p.m.
Ina Opponunnyl
. 4ft • ..,, m. niiFFid . ground pco1 wnh 3011Z4ft. dooll.
No ~!':/mont On Uood Or 45
FurniShed
off troollll IIOFibor. Putchooo
Rep nut
Mobile Homet. All
You Poy 1o Tox And Tltlo Fool.
Rooms
~- ttl(), UIOd 2 112 rnconlhl.
Eo-Ell oondllion. 11 yeor
LJoo Your To• Rotund. No Who••
EIH But ElaN Home Ctntrr, 1· Room. tor rant • wtk or mon:h.
wo:::::.Ji.,-·
ond
· ;;.:.;..;;;;.;..;;.;:;....
814414-3112. _ _ _ __
Mlr-1
. FStirling at $1201mc. Oolllo HOIII. 'wt'"-blo
olt-lond1 011. ft,OOO. In·~~0.
.
FUlled, o14 4410311, or 114-441;. 33 Fanns for Sale
WMh --••-. 11MIIIIIIIIod.
_,..
--..
20
loncod with hfgll ton- Aleo 1 er apece. AH he ctc-upt.
lilo, nice 1 1!.11 otory hom•, ca11 .... 2:oo p.m., 304·7'13- s.~ 111a-1211.oo
hardwood ttoon, run~l water. ;;11181=·.;;
...
.;;-=.;;wv.;;·: .....----l t112
•
Coil oltor I prn, 304-fTI-1315.
46 Space for Rem
-rod n Pooc.MO
Big 31H O.kolo Form Homt BulK
On Your Lot. S25,K5 l up. 614· Country Homo Pook, a l A. obillly, gomoo. 1 ~,...
- · 7311
Aouto 33, North ol Pomoovy. 102'1.
-- ·
REDUCED •12 Acroe, 2 tobacco Lot1, ,.ntall, pMI;, ...... C.ll
.:. -'--ctll2:o'--lll:--111-=.
. :---:::---::--:...,..,~ ! Conoroto a piletlc ..P,Ic ta'*•·
bromo, trolloo h-up. Dwnor 114-'
llnonce. Rt. 17. 304-'lll3-IIH. ·
F0&lt; Rent: Office Or Aotoll Pur· Ron Evone Enll......... Jock·
· 13 Court Streol, 614-353- oon, 0H 1~:17-ti2L
"-~~ .. ...__
11118, lt4-4411-4~•
35 Lots &amp; Acreage
.,....
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fill Our HouM Q
6:05 (JJ Beverly Hllllllllel
6:30 1)111 @ NBC Nlghlly lie. .

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01
1111 Buick Portt Avonuo, -

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Business Services

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ccnd. too lor Info eoll ·

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Professional
Services ·

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=op.,.

8:00 ~. (I) (I) •

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- , · ucliloM eonoltion, ottO
........ 114-1112.:12112-

Houoo For Ront: Upper Routl 7.
Nowly d-ated1 etblo 'lVII~

.• lour
a.ar......
...,... of
ocramblod wordo

EVENING

1171 Llnooln ·Town Car, Looka ~ ·

your rnumo
P.o . Bo•
729F
. Job -Ina
· cor•
or thl to Dolly
Sontlnol,
ALL: Yord loiooi tluot Bo Paid In
SoU1hollt•JI Proboflqn Tnool- Pomeroy OH 45'1119.
.
Advoneo. DEADLINE: 2:110 p.m.
Aftoinotln (SEPTA) Con•
3144.
U - ·IIi. IMiolot lt..,.
tho cloy bo""' tho ld lo to run.
lorfntoloar Oilloor
Real Estate
'fttiimiOiiiii.iiiirdoimit;;;ii~
CNit llalel. CtM 114 441 nee.
SUncloJ edMion • 2:00 P;m'
Al&gt;f)(lootlono rnoy only bro of!.
Unlurnloholl,
2br dowo-n1..!!."
Frldoy. lllondoy edMion • 2.00
toloiod lrcFFI and rorumod to
pete, 8~1111, t14..zii..1IUOJ. Ill assn a.t,
p.m. Saturdey.
Ollfo a..eou ot
,.... a - hood, a dlolt31 Homes for Sale
o.mpciJo
llaoko~:I Jct.110
a
ne:k~l'..'~ 1 1'"=-"'"no:"'l: _,.,....
=~om::.;
.44
Apartmem
- .· - 35,,
Optn !'IN
Soturdoy
Burfdoy,
,.._,.
for Rem
llollohln c:.rpeo. Rt. n North.
Spoto Avolloblo, lnoldo a· out Flf .,. PIT ootlol. 1-100-243- ovolflblo lor rovtow at tho OIES 3 bodi'OOIIIO, 2 balho, full lin·
•14-•••·~
17'111 EOEIIIIFIH
·QIIIeo. Doodllne lor oDDicotlon leh~ biMtMnt, new furnace .,.-::"'""'=c--:-::o::-:-:=-1 114-441-11144. lrt12 ...;
• ~· ••·
.
lo Fobr,.ry 22, tMi.Poetlng and central air, aa,.g,, fenced · 1 BR, 5300/mo.; 2 lA, l4001mo. - Kitchin Corpot ·" yord. C.IJIII
yard, 2414 Mt. Vimon Avenut, 2 roomo I bathbo!',;'· AI1 :M.::·;;;IO=yo~nl;;;;,Condy::;;;:•::lrl:po.=.:-Public sale
~,::oz:. Sit'~"' =:rr:n:,·~r::~'il~~ Pclnt Plo101nt. Prlood On ln- utllltloo Included.
8
h ,..
qulrod. Coll !i:~lofto II oil 114.
PICK~IIITURE
&amp; AuctiOn
BE ON T.V. 111- noodld tor Coordinate
tho
ln- opoctlon. 304-81'f5.17lll.
o1 • 314 BR home Z atory, ba..ment, 448-7733 or
zz,
Houuhokl ............... 1!.11 mi.
COR.,MICJIIa. NoW hlrtng all 42 bod -~·• m1 , c-munlfy
Alck Poorom Auction Company - - l'or oootlna Into. Coil 111-·
_ ..
~ ~~o~'"''PL'""'...-..
~
OH. EKe. ccnd. Wook: 2 bod,_ bJ.Iovo~ you poy _.,....
now booking ouctlona, 01• 7'11-7111 Eot. T-e4'2.
boiOd
loolllty, Chnhlr'!!.,
•
- · "'•
104-832-~t7V or Homo 804-932~.,.-olai:lric,
we
PlY
oil
othoiutllllloo
aorlonco ... koo .,. clllortnco. ~:..:..:.:,:..=~:...:,.:~.,....,,......,~ luni:1lonlng •• U•'- - - 61189.
{cobltl and phDno not Included). R d
Li-ood Ohio, Komucky, Wool Clrculotion Dook !:*' Pool1lon tho Center •nd Common Pleoo
II I
0111
Vlrglnlo, 304-773-117811.
ovolleblo. Ubrory upoo~._ Collrlo ond low onlorooment In For Sale By OWner, Houat &amp; Cl.,rn juet painted, play ground, COUGh
0 "',."- ·dro- r.bloo Ito ,._,
pro-. HiGII-oolgrHuate tho ooven CCMIFity roglon; lntor- Comar Lot, In Crown Clly, 111 hollcloy octlvHiot, c l - to
ochaol, bronko ond ehcppfl'lfl. Coli 814-441,1104 lor •-""•
9 ' wamed to Buy
roqulred .. lf'..t 'IIIIo - · vlowtna ond ·-011"11 •p. bo0k1, 1: bll cornpul« Qterite. proprll tn•• of rettrrale for electric, 3br, HNmtnl, 2 ct-r lluet- to ooarlotdo. ~Iii' mont to-·
g1rage, vlnyt ald!no. excellent
WANTED IICCd condhion. Coo 11-lt hcuol¥. Coli -ard lho _,.m, .Educotlon- flAilS Conclltlon, 8t4-256-lll20, 814- and 11k tboul .._reh rftovlnlln
opoclol. EHO, --3718.
RENT 2 OWN
..a;, owfll(l, ptoypon, ..m.r lor Ll~- 114-141-7323 loi' lntor· or -lor'o Dogroo In IOCifol 441.f117.
.,
bodroom lumlohod In ,_,...
T_.Piront Clou 11 ~·~·-..:....--:-::.,........,.--,.,.---=~Or =~o~~J: OOYERNIIENT HOliES 1rom $1 2Hoven,
WV. s-lty dopooll Solo and Choir, St.ll por -k.
C,:.U niY Vocollonol School, 304- C11A or LPN with ollleo
Prior Worll EKporloo- Flvo (5) (U ropelol. 0.11=1 1u
• ·~7101.
71
1nd
,.,•rena•
r.qulr.d.
304-·
I
Pe1oe
Wo~tm~ .. t'M.G'I p1r
oronted lor
yororo ol roloted _.. ••- ~r· Aepa••· Your 882
·..... l4".,;.,:;,.pid lunll - ·
W.- to buy: Floh oquorl- ollleo, porl~l· Sand aorfoneo. Spoclollzod Bkllto ond Inti
(I) 805-.2-8000 Ext. QH..
~-··
lleddlntr ond Clrnt II
»15 pion. 'Twin ola bod In R - to cJo
lly lfot!tlnol
k-dgo. Knowledge ol 11101 to; cunront ropo lfol.
BEAUTIFUL APAIITIIENTS AT IIICIItrdot ,111.14 por -k.
good oiondMion. tt4-111-et03 elo P.O. Bo1 72tH POftiOfOI', OH ocroonl"ll ov•llallon, -rch,
,., 4pn.
411'1111
·
ond orientation tochnlaueo; Hou• for .... 2811 O.rfltld BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON - 1 - , ...44 por -k.
arlmlnal jultlct and oorrwailona Av.. mid 20'1, 304-e75--1371 tfttr EST,\TE!,., 1131 Joclooon ' Pfloa - - tl'll ~ - ' - Di-1
$1,...mo. Wolk to oitoD I wlh 4 Cltrllro, 17.10 P!" ·4
Wonted To Buy: Junll Autoo Domlnc'o PIDo now toklna op- oyotomo; '""""" and public 4:00PM.
· from
movloo. CoN 114 441 2118. EOII. · - . .._ IIOd, 112.211 por
wMh or Wlthcul 11101010. Coil olleotlono P-ooy. OH 114't112· rofatfonl• llclucflry Fot Solo by owner. 31
ol
lrii'!Y Lively. 114 3111111.
:':212~4·-=---:--:-=---- olbilty, Ability to Wool&lt; uhclor Houoo
2 """" opt., ell uUOOoo ~- 4.. -10
- Cheet
Rl 141
acrn with two hO\IMe. Phone Fum'ed.
••
both
~'Ill/
...
~-....
~
.
ld
Wro~ed To luy: UOOd IIIOblfo Hon 1oi' -.oy man or Mroulul oondltlorro, hondlo 304o87f5.2408.
C,:"'"
~me.
4 lllloo 011 Rl. 7 In ca-.ory.'
Avo. I
5,
HOURS: llondoy tilnl Sltunlly,
hOfnoo
H8-'111
-•
in
my
- · -tlvo to loco oontooto,
REPOSSESSED HOliES
'Cll
'
Alllhal....,. ICCipl&amp;d, TupFumlohtd
Elllclonoy, $150. to.m..ep.m.; Sundoy, 12 Noon- ·
Wood Source~ Inc. WANTED porpielno, 114.f17.ftl3.
ft polfeo
Homee a Ac-go. $500 down,
lot:'Q wood 11 dtarneter ••·
oourt
•
1, ~~~~~:-r
llral poymont June ol tHI. 10'14 UtllniH Pold, Shiro '*h. 107 :,lip:;;"";:;;,·-:c=-.,.,--:--:--::1211 or longer, de no1 wonl
Inn at Clolllpollo, mil, end 101 to. APA. Eooy crodll. John Solley, Soccnd Avenue, Oolllpoilo, 114- lolo lln All Corpotln - . Get
4411-4411 oftor 7p.m.
· our Price lotore You Buy. You
IOC&lt;III, opplo or pine.
011111 ooalleotlono lor. front Ability lo
por- t-800-4411-1110.
L.OCMed US lit. 33 ooot -ol oleiiL ljoply In pmon. NO form roooo,.h
, ond
Oroclouo
Hvl"!!.
1
ond
2
bodCOUld lovo Ita - r lloJ.
Hovtn ebo¥1 Amorlcon Allop PHOIIE CALLSI
molnlllln - .. .
In wrlften
room opootmonll ot Vllflae Corpoto, II n Nortll 114...... .o..ht - and oto1 _ . . , ,..uon. Volld 32 Mobile Homes
~---on.,. ·
~·-·
ICC Aoaullllel Coni• noodlng State II Ohio mor01 vohfclo
llonO&lt;
ond
Rlvorllao
.:.•411.::..::11.:4:.:4·:..._==---for Sale
Aportmonto In lllddlopaot. Frorn
SWAIN
Would llkl to de ho-nl"!!. driver fo hlul lumbror. Throo _.tor'o ilconoo.
Hovo ........_. -~. yorono • • - roqulrod. Coli
UO NCE
lltl.
Coli
EOH.
AUCTION
a
FURNITURE. 12
12&lt;115 3 BR mobile home with
114 4111211114-211-11130, C.W. Snydoo ·INTEL E
.lOBS.
All txpando
&amp; CA1 1&amp;x32 gu1gt,
How tbr ,,...,. &amp; ,.lrlgenrlor Olin • · Oatllpcllo. - I Uood
Trui:kl"!!, .,..,
bronchel. US Cuotome, DEA, 32x34
atoragt oulldlng on 1 1 1\lmlohod. Eooncmlcol' gu fur- lumn~n, - - . • - 1
ole. Now Hlrlng. Coli (1) 1105ocro lot. P~ced 11 $21,000. lt4- noeo, llr condHionfng. II2351FF10. Worll_._ 1114-44141itt.
.._,nglor
Bo"'"!,
Styllato.
114112.f000
Ell.
K·l01H.
Employment Serv1ces ....... 114-441..SII. " . I.
2illlo8- or 44f5.8981.
114-441-21187.
52 Sporting Goods
LPN - l'll'l~lmo, eoll 1~1 coodeet Hood tlonoy For T•-' Do you 1417V tlobllo Home, f4 ,950· Nlcelylurnlohod- heme, 1
IIIIo
to
lllk
to
....,..,
WOuld
lllnnle
Wlnnobego,
S3,ttl:
tN7
Soroh lllrcumc.C::O.!!!'!!!~ ot
Ykl to meu 1100 ot FFIOII R-un OTA, (2,150. 814-2415- ml'- ...., tawn'or~':'·aaklng 12" Alumln- - · 1112
11 HelpWemed
Pclnl P f -• .....,......,,
~
Ref.
-,500 CREDIT ~•RDf
l,.l 20 hcuno ._.. dolna 5125,
114 441 u;;J;JI.
..
IIIII
that?
Coil
..
11NI0.11H4Hf1t.
aua,_nt..., eeme dey approvatf
4107 bill un 10 allt-12 noon ·1111 141C85 Clerton Mobile
bodn&gt;om lurnlohed oport·
AJ.o CI_UIIIfy
NO depoiH_
n~ Me buntn' to lht'
and U Pill Mondoy thru Frldoy H-, 2br 1 broth, •II oloctrlc, One
VISAIIIC
ond - tor FHivo.-.
ment located outlldrta HMder·
1
Amlqun
1100-2'11-2000 e.1. 02§4.
'.~'.ANT
.lor • _.,ltntorvlow.
· $12,000. 814-416-7211 •ftor 5p.m. · ecn. Roeonlly romocle;'-ls. off 53
utllltlot
Included.
00 luy or Hll. Rlvwlnt Antlq-,
Poot~fmrl llonol
- · only
bedroom
polio tum
In Syroc
..o, month, 304-f7S.'/144.
.
1114 E. lleln It,.., -"'1'·
•=:::::::::::::::::::.+.-.:..::.::..:.:.::.:::.::..~ uporloncod
need-to·'oflllly.
Hor- 2
now
co!Jill,wlvinyl,
l •Pr.'·
rlol'lrmo Florll _p,.Poi11ond, Incl-. hook-up on rented 101 Small furnlahed .ertmtnt, Houro: ti.T.W. 10:001.111. to 1:00
p.miu
... ~ 1:00 to 1:00 p.m.
01
114
utllltfot_l!".!!!.. ....... -trlc. tt4
jill

c&lt;MMPlEii SYST(Ni
•O" lcrllft Gr.,Wu -

304-

••
_.,

lUI

1

Plano Tuning-21th yur of • •r·

=========1
:==~~~~===1~=~;~~~;:::=
1
11
11
want....
.

·

Novo, $225.00. -

-

....

WOLFLE

2515.

qulrod. 814-441-3710.

MON., FEB. 25

Al21

LOANS BY MAIL .
Up to M,OOO In 7-2 houro. Wo
can htlp you get 1 elgnaturt
Loon By "Moll. 1-800.246-M60
$14.911...
.
.

tho poofiiO who coiiOd Mf&lt;lnl,
coli ogoln? 1 mlopl- tho

4211.

--·

..

14,500. PHONE 1-.n-7005.

•

,-~~....
.........
Rune a Drtvl
-~.'=-1'14 •

boll-

Television '
Viewing

~

71 Autos for 981e

tata, Brok•,
..
IIISExt.
.
T-IIGIIT a CAP SCREEN PAINT- FOf Rent: Fumlohtd ono ......
INQ EOUIPIIENT. co..-LETE. 1'00111 oen•, niDii tDr . . '*"
SET UP. WIWNO TO TRAIN. 110n ot Couple, no pilL ·

tOOih,

,

---·
.- --.-

:;,':1. :: .,.':.";; 4='J,l
1-IOp.m.
Bu_,o A-ion • 2
,_. ........
.....
115

BORN LOSER

•

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wrl&amp;hl

I ri&gt;om -louo-1• ,...,

No

"SingiH _,
~
F01
llanlftoonl
Aolalloftohlpe.
Conlldonttol.
Wofto:
-·
P.O. lloK
1043, Qolllpolle. OH 4IISI.
.,-oo coli. ~'IS-IOU.

41 Houses for Rem

Buslneu

OpponunHy

3 Announcements

, ldlton wtth .,.

Mondiy, February 25, 1991

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Pag&amp;"-3--The Dally Sentinel

The Dally Sentinel-Page I

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.-

CRVPTOQUQTE8

2-25

I Q P R II
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PNQT

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TRAW :- BQWSYB~IlJ

Ve•terd•l''' Cl'Jptoq•ote: NO GOOl&gt; SENSIBLF
WORKING BEE LISTENS TO TI-lE ADVICE OF 1\
BEDBUG ON THE SUBJECT OF BUSINESS. -ElBERT HUBBARD

•

•

'

'

�Page-10-The Dally Sentinel

Monday, February 25, 1991

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

--Local briefs----. Cold fr~rtt ~~ves a~ross
Man charged by police

.

.

Robert W. Jordan, Apple Grove, W. Va. has been charged with
leaving the scene of an ~idem. operating under suspension, driv·
ing under the mflucnce of alcohol, anlllack of maintaining assured
clear distance as the result of an auto accident on East Main Street
late Friday afternoon.
According to Pomeroy Police, Jordan struck the rear of a car
driven by Ronald Hanning, Pomeroy, which was stopped in traffic.
Both were !J'aveling east on East Main near the intersection cif
Spring Ave. After striking the Hanning vehicle, Jordan fled the
scene. He was apprehended about ten minutes larer.
·.
There was moderate damage to the rear and passenger side door
of 'the Hanning vehicle, and heavy damage 10 the front end of the
Jordan car. Jordan is confined to the Meigs County jail, police
report.
·

Breaking and entering probed
Charges of breaking and enrering have been filed against Troy
Qualls, 20, of Middleport.
Pomeroy police repprred that Qualls enrered the former White
House Bar on East Main St about 8:30 p.m. Sunday and was in the
process of moving out a gas furnace, water heatei-, counter top and
several other miscellaneous item s when he was arrested at the
scene.

Spelling bee slated tonight
The annual Meigs County spelling bee will be held at Eastern
High School tonight (Monday) at 7:30 p.m., John D. Riebel, Sr..
superintendent of Schools announced today.
Tokm Kelly, guidance counselor of Eastern High School wiU be
the pronouncer, and the judges will be the superintendent of the
three school districts, Richard Smith, Eastern, James Carpenter,
Meig Local, and Bob Ord, Southern Local.
. The champion and runner-up in the county competiton will be
ehg1ble 10 compete m the annual Herald-D1spatch Spelling Bee. The
Tri-State Bee will be held on March 26 on the MarshaiJ University
Campus in Huntington, W. Va.
_

Pomeroy man hurt in two-car crash
A Long Bonom man and a Pomeroy man were injured in a twocar crash Saturday at 4:24 p.m. in Chester Township on S.R. 7 at
the junction of C.R. 26, according 10 the Gallia-Meigs Post of the
State Highway Patrol.
·
· ·
Dale F. Riffle, 28, of 23526 Dark HoDow Rd., Pomeroy and a
passenger of Monte L. Riffle, 34, of 1523 Nye Ave., Pomeroy, was
taken by the Meigs County EMS to Veterans Memorial Hospital,
where he was trearcd and released for various scrapes.
·
Monte Riffle, driving a 1979 Chevrolet Caprice, was heading
north on S.R. 7 when he turned left to C.R. 26 in front of a 1977
Dodge Monaco driven by Richard L. Coleman, 73, of Long Bottom.
Coleman hit the Caprice in the right front side.
Monte Riffle was cired for failure to yield, not wearing a seat
belt and leaving the scene of the crash.
·

Buckeye State

By United. Press InternatiOnal
Oh10 With JUSt a chance of flumes
Partly to mostly sunny skies are New York stare .actoss Virginia to
The CC?Id front . that mo-:ed elsewhere. Temperatures Monday
on tap Tuesday, except for clouds Texas High pressure was coverin
across Ohio Sunday was ushenng were expecte~ to range from. the
~ lake_effect _flunies in northeast much. of the central part of th~
m ~colder mr early Monday.
upper 20$10 m1d 30s. Normal highs
Ohio: H1ghs will be mainly in the country The cold front will coolin·
Sk1es were mostly cloudy are 35 to 45.
20s
·
th h' h
tte
ed
f1
·
•.
the
·
ue
to
move
east
as
· ht ' th
0 vermg
WI sea r
urnes
.-u
system moves east MonTemperatures will begin to 1 1
ard Obi0 e •g moves
·
over the southern ~f of the state. day night the clouds wiD decrea$e.
warm for the end of the work week. s ow Y tow .
Temperatures durmg the nig~t However, a win~ off Lake Erie will
Highs Friday are forecast to be in
ranged from the m•d 20s to m1d te.:p some flu~es over northeast
the 50s with a chance of rain.
•• •
30s.
Ohto. Lows will range from 10 to
On the Tuesday morning weathContinued from page I
A weather syste~ aloft may pro- 20..Normal lows are in the 20s.
er map, a cold front extended from own ages, but could provide no furd~ce ~me flumes m the northeast,
·
ther details.
w1th light snow over south central
-NATIONAL WEA!liER FORECAst FROII I All 2·2f&gt;l1 10 ; AM 2•21.91 .
The Arab commander warned
that those responsible for such
atrocities would face justjce. Asked
if that meant the nllied planned 10
fight until they captured Saddam,
he said, "No, sir, Saddam Hussein
· Movies to be shown ·
- his own people, his own nation
"Ramona" and "Koko's Kinen"
will be shown Saturday at 2 p.m. at
can deal with him." .
.... '...•
Iraq launched a Silkworm misthe Meigs County Public Library in
sile at the British warship HMS
Pomeroy for area.children.
Gloucester in the northern Persian
Gulf, the British Broadcasting ·
Church Women United to
reported. The Gloucester
Corp.
meet
fired
two
Sea Dart missiles and
Meigs County Church Women
intercepted
the incoming rocket,
United will have World Day of
which exploded in a bright flash of
Prayer on Friday at 1:30 p.m. at the
flame 30 seconds before it would·
Middleport Baptist Olw:ch.
have hit the v~sel, the BBC said.
Iraq also launched its 17th Scud
Rummage Sale
·
missile attack against. Israel early
The Forest Run United
Monday, the first since the allied
Methodist Church will have a tumWEATHER MAP - A few fturries will fall in the central Plains
grou11d assault No injuries or dammage sale on March 4 and 5 from 9 · as an upJ)er level low pressure system passes over. Snow iS more
age were reported. The last such
a.m. to 3 p.m. each day at the
likely along the middle Atlantic coast. Sc;attered showers and a few
attack against Israel came Saturchurch on Forest Run Road.
thunderstorms wm develop in Florida along a cold front. Other,
day, 10 minutes before the allied
.
wise the country wiD be dry. Cold temperatures will remain in tbe
deadline for Saddam to withdraw
Message omitted
Great Lakes area as a Canadian blgb pressure system moves
his forces from Kuwait
In Thursday's edition of The
through. The Southwest wiD be cloudy and sUgbtly cooler, but dry.
Daily Sentinel, a message was
French news reports said French
(UPI)
·
unintentionally omitted from the
Foreign Legion units ~netrated as
tabloid supplement supporting the
far as I 00 miles ins1de southern
Iraq in the allied bid to encir~le
troops of Operation Desert Storm.
An address and message b S.Sgt.
Wednesday, cnance of snow or Iraqi trOOps and sever vital commu·
South Central Ohio
Patricia (Anne) Marshall should
nications and supply lines between .
Monday night, flurries likely flumes. Highs in the 20s. Lows I0 Baghdad and Kuwait. They alsQ
have appeared as 291-66-0876, 8th
Evacuation Hospital, Operation early with decreasing cloods late. A to 20.Thursday, fair. Highs mostly had captured 1,800 enemy prison·
in the 40s. Lows mainly in the 20s.
Desert Shield/Storm, APO New low near 20. Northwest winds less Friday,
chanche of rain. Highs in ers, the reports said.
than
10
mph.
Ch:ince
of
snow
is
50
York, N.Y; 09616. "We love youBacked by air and naval power,
the 50s and lows in the 30s.
and are very proud of you. Dad and percent.
the
allies began the long-awaited
ld with a low around 15. NorthTuesday, partly cloudy with a
Mom, Susan and Ray."
assault
at 4 a.m. Sunday after Iraq
west winds less than I 0 mph.
high in the lower 30s.
defied
the
allied ultimatum to begin
Tuesday, mostly sunny with a
Extended Forecast .
Women's fellowsliip to meet
withdrawing
its forces from Kuwait
high 20 to 25.
Wednesday througb Friday
The Meigs County Women's
by noon Saturday.
Fellowship will meet Thursday at
7:30 p.m. at the Zion Church of
Christ. Members of Zion will be
presenting a: f~ion show on Bibli·
cal women; Bring a guest.

Iraqi· tanks

Nellie A. Swisher
Nellie A. Swisher, 93,
Guysville, died Sunday, Feb. 24,
199), at Kimes Convalescent Center.
Born May 30, 1897 in Carthage
Township jn Athens County, she
was a daughter of the late John and
Mary Klingenburg Barnhill. She
was a school teacher and housewife
and a member of the Coolville
United Methodist Church.
Sbe is survived by two sons and
daughters-in-law, Harold B. and
Clarice Swisher, Athens; imd Glen
and Jean Swisher, Newark; three
grandchildren, Mrs . Thomas
(Martha) Kilbride, Bexley; Mrs.
Bruce Kathy Kilbride, Newark: and
Frances I. Foster
Chris Alan Swisher, Windsor,
Frances I. Foster
Calif.; a brother and sister-in-law,
Frances 1. Foster, 90, Racine, Karl and Hazel Barnhill, Tuppers
died Sunday, Feb. 24, 1991 at the Plains: a sister and brother-in-law,
Pomeroy Nursing Center following Freda and Delbert Morris, Athens;
a brief illness.
two sisters-in-law, Fannie Barnhill,
Born Aug. 28, 1900 in Racine, Guysville; a.nd Helen Barnhill,
she was the daughter of the late Cleveland: and a brother-in-law,
Isaac and Johanna Stauss Foster. Odin Johnson, Athens.
She taught and substituted in the
Besides her parents she was preRacine Southern Local School Dis- ceded in death lJ.y her husband,
trict for 65 years. She was a mem- Emmett W. Swisher in 1973, two
ber of the Dorcas United Methodist sisters, Lelia Brandeberry and
Church and the Ohio Education Clara Johnson; and two brothers,
Association. She was also an avid Clarence Barnhill and Winifrod A.
follower of the Racine Tornadoes.
Barnhill.
She is survived by numerous
Services will be held Wednesrelatives and special friends.
day at I p.m. at the White-Blower
Besides her parents she was pre- Funeral Home in Coolville with
ceded in dealh by an infant brother. Rev. Thomas E. Fisher officiating.
Services will be held Wednes- Burial will be in the Coolville
day at 1 p.m. at the Dorcas United Cemetery.
·
Methodist Church with Rev. Kenny
Friends may call at the ·funeral
Baket ofnciating. Daria! will be in home after 2 p.m. on Tuesday.
Greenwood Cemetery.
Family will receive friends from 2
Friends may call at the Ewing to 5 p.m. and 7 to 9 p.m.
Funeral Home on Monday from 79 p.m. and Tuesday from 2-4 and
Clyde Smith
7-9 p.m.
.
Clyde Smith, 73 , of Route 3,
Vinton, died at Holzer Medical
Wongga Hoffman
Center, Sattrrday,Fe~23 , 1991.
Wongga Eileen Hoffman, 70, of
He was born Feb. I, 1918 in
Point Pleasant.. died Sunday, Feb. Logan. W.Va., son of the late Jim
24, 1991, in Pleasant Valley and Susie Doss Smith. ·
Hospital.
He was a retired coal miner of
She was a retired employee of Island Creek Coal Company, Holdthe Mason Fumiuire Company.
en, W.Va .. a World War II Army
Born May 21, 1920, in Clifton, veteran and attended the Deer
she was a daughter of the · late Creek Freewill Baptist Church.
James Monroe and Maude Mae
· He is survived by his wife, Ver(Booth) Sprouse_
I.
lie Workman Smith, whom he marShe was also preceded in death ried Oct. 11,1911 in Logan, W.Va.
by hei-~tW\d, James Robert HofOther survivors include one son,
fman: an~ Sister, June Baul.
Ward Smith of Route 1, Bidwell;
Survivors include a son, Sam dau_ghter-in-law, Mrs. David (Judy
Sprouse of Point Pleasant: Sm1th) Kennedy; three grandchildaughtcr, Matjorie Saeele of Logan, dren, Robin Smith, Misty Smith
W.Va.; four brothers, James and Ashton Kenned"{; three brothSprouse of Chester, Ohio, Jack ers, Denver Smith o Hans, W.Va.,
Sprouse of Cob'ai:lo, Alfred Shade Smith of Man, W.Va. and
Sprouse of Point Plcaant. Roscoe Sherman Smith of C~mansville,
Sprouse· of Orlando, Fla.; six sis- , W.Va.; pnd two Slste~s, Zerme
terS.
Maureen Schurman. of _Smith and ~- Carl (Ltza) Hager,
California Pearleen VanOoreghem both ofHunungton, W.Va.
Point PleUam.loann Reed of Hun:
He was preceded 'in death by
tington. Beuy Knapp of Deleware, one son, Oz1e Smith, an infant son
Oh1o, Lera Price Ol Florida, Judy lJ!Id daughter, two brothers and two
Ginther of Chester, Ohio; and two SISters.
~grllldchildren.
- ··
Funeral services will be con. The funeral wiD be Tuesdiiy 2 ducted I p.m. Tuesday at the
p m at lhC Crow-Husaell FunCraJ Mr.Coy-Moore Funeral Home, VinHo,;;e with the Rev. George H.os- ~on, with Rev. Arthm: ~ry of~ciat­
char ofliciatinJ. Burial will be in mg . Bunal w11l be 1 10 Vmton

Ohio ~ottery ·
_,

Pick 3: 836
Pick 4:5180
Cards : 2·H; 10-C;

7-D; 5-S
Low tonight in mid-20s.
Chance of snow 50 percent.
Wednesday; high in mid 30s.

Page4

Announcements

1 Section, 10 Page. 25 cenls
A llulllllHldla Inc. New1p1per

Bush rejects
Saddam's speech
as an outrage

;,___...;.____ Weather-----

-_,;,._--Area deaths----___,;,_-the Kirkland Memorial Garden.
Friends may call at the funeral
home this evening. 710 9 p.m.

Rebels
•
remaan
unbeaten

. . SCHOOL CHAMPIONS • Participants in the annual Mei(!S
· County Spelling Bee were tbese school champions, seated, 1-r 10
. froat, Kresba Crawley, Harrisonville; Jessica Priddy, Salem Cen·
ter; T J. Kiag, Middleport; KeDey Grueser, Meigs Juaior High;
: Brandi Reeves, Eastern Junior High; Jennirer Lawre~~ee, Southern

Continued l'rom page 1
program at the Carleton School
will be continued for the 1991-92
school year.
A Post Secondary Options Policy was approved by the board, and•
the notice of commendation resolutions for students of the Eastern
District who. have achieved the
honor roll for the past grading periR-ANl4G
ods were adopted
.
OOINI10J
Feotures c1 ( ~Jnven 1 en t
I•·
Parent-teacher conference day
Omn•·Dre ct•QI"Ia•
Re'""tO\IdOi£ l M,K
Mu't•·Room Heater
• T··P•f' S~t t tv Sr~ut · 0"
was changed from March I 5 to
OMNI 110
• TFipot S lllt r~ Cinut ·0''
·'(no
March 22, and the board approved
H•9Mf\t CaPat•t·1
·Spt:c.atSalr t• Gwro~
Ntl Rtlt•ng 10.000 8TU1 r.
Ornn•·DI,eC:tiOna•
an ,agreement of partiCipation
Hut ltttm3. '10,000 BTlJt M
Mu1t1·Room He:att"'
between the Athens County Board
• l \ t~: r. dOj\J\ l.,OIC ..,.tCk
IVV\ ~y~t.:n • • Tnp~t: S4ltt'l'
of Education and Eastern Local
.,..,.., Snut·O!I • DoiJOie TanK
Board of Education regarding the
• Sptc:ta l Safrty Gil.vas
severe behavior handicapped uniL
114416616
Also approved was a resolution .to
join with the Ohio. Coalition for
265405
'
Equity and Adequacy of School
35,000 BTU Reddy Heater ...
IReDDY II88T6Rj
Funding.
.
Appropriation modifications
were approved, the budget for the
367045 50,000 BTU Reddy Heater ..... 16900
Class of 1996 was approved, and
bills were approved for payment.
H4395oo 100,000 BTU Reddy Heater .........
900
The board also accepted the bid of
Bobby Fitch for the purchase of an
old school bus. Wednesday, March
20, at 6:30 was set as the date and
· time for the next regular meeting.
Attending were Ray Karr, presiH440115 Nat. Gas 50,000 BTU w/Biower, Vented ..... 39900
dent; Charles Knight, vice president, and Bill Hannum, I. 0.
H4mos Nat. Gas 40,000 BTU Unvented .................... 2 3900
McCoy, and Jim Smith, members.
To~ ·

12900

S

RADIANt
Our Most Po~ v l ar Rachoht
Heater
• Tnplf: S.ttrty Sr.ut ·O ~'
• "Coo. iv1.i'
!-kat Rating: 9,000 BTU!!'I

"'"

13C)OO

2S

The Gallipolis office of Ohio
Bureau of Employmenr Services
will be offering a two day "Job
Search Wbrkshop" for area veterans.
The workshop will be held on
Friday, March 1 and Friday, March
8 at the American Legion Hall
located at the intersection of Stare
Route 588 and McCormick Road in
aauipolis_
Each session wiD begin at 9 am.
and you should attend both sessions to get the full benefit of the
workshop, a spokesman said.
·
Tbe days when you could complete an application, go home and
w.ait for a telephone ~all are long
gone. You must prepare yourself
and piD'Sue an active search for jobs
if you are to obtain suitable
employment' You must become a
competitive job seeker, the
spokesman continued.
While this workshop will not
guarantee a job, it will provide
valuable information on how to
look fa work.
The workshop will il!clude
detailed discussion on how the Job
Service operateS, application completion, resume preparation, interviewing iechniquea and other job
seeking activities.
Special employment related propatiiS available 10 veteriiiS wiD be ,
presented alon11 with local labor
market informli_IIOII.
Any veteran, whether employed
or not who would like 10 aucnd and
participate should contact Tom
White, Veterans Employment Representative at the Ohio Job Service
in Gallipolis by calling 446-1683.

H4167S4 Nat. Gas 21,000 BTU Unvented ..~.~.!!.!!~!!.i!'!~~!.16900
No. 11 LP Gas 20,000 BTU Unvented ........ !!~.~~ ... 21900
H416762 LP Gas 21,000 BTU Unventec1.!!!!!.!':'..'!.~!.~!'!~.14900
H4112S6 LP Gas 30,000 BTU Un'vented.~!!!!.!':'..!~'!.~~.~.2 3900

lr:::::=----'-'2 S /o
0

OFF

All Remaining
Electric Heaters

VALLEY
-

566 PARK ST.
MIDDLEPORT, OH.
PH. 992-6611

·, Supply Co.
M'ON.-FRI. 7 TO 6
SAT. 7 TO 3
CLOSED SUNDAY

1-800·733-3335
•

· Meigs Junior High eighth grader
-Kelley Grueser correctly spelled
the words laity and lamppost to win
the~~ig• (:o~nty Spelling Bee
held Monday night at Eastern High
School.
.
· ~unner-up in the annual bee
wa$ Btanf;li ReevCI), Eastern Junior
High seventh grader.
.
Both Grueser and Reeves
received trophies and are now eligible to compete in the Tri-State
Bee which will be held March I6 at
the Huntington Civic Center in
Huntington, W.Va.
Grueser also received a traveling plaque which will be displayed
at Meigs Junior High School for
the next year.
Over recent weeks the 17 elementary and junior high schools
throughout Meigs County's three
school districts have conducted
their own spelling bees, resulting in
one champion and one alternate
· from each school. Champioos from
each room in the schbol-level bees
Continued on page 6

.
'

~.l

few hours after Saddam said in a
Baghdad radio address, " The time
has come for a withdrawal from a
pan.of our country, which was cut
away from us in the past The time
has come to put an end to the conspiracy against Iraq and to withdraw from Kuwait" ·
Saddam said. "I say that on this
da)l, our heroic armed forces will
complete their withdrawal from
Kuwait"
·
Bush said the 33-nation coalition's campaign to oust Iraq from
Kuwait is "ahead of schedule. The
liberation of Kuwait is close at
hand." .

· The president added, '.'The
coalition will, therefore, continue
to prosecute the war with undiminished intensity."
The beleaguered Iraqi leader
apparently made the speech in
response to Bush's demand that he
Conti/lued on page 6

Middleport Council
urges that Meigs
•
•
mln(ts remt~lt:l open
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
A resolution callin~ for the Pub:
lie Utilities Comm1ssion, Gov.
George Voinovich, and American·
Electric Power to take all means
within ' their power to assure that
mines of the Southern Ohio Coal
Co. remain open and in production
was passed by Middleport Village
Council Monday nighL
The resolution presented by
· Mayor Fred Hoffman noted that the
mines employ over 1200 persons
from Southeastern Ohio with a
payroll of over $81 million, and
that about $4.3 million is spent
with vendors in this area. On the
basis of that economic ioss to
THE WINNERS ·.1o1m Riebe~ Melp County
ley Graeser, left in front, an eighth grader at
Meigs and surrounding counties,
Superintendeat of Schools, and Kitty Haaler,
Meigs Junior High School. Runner-up was
Council in the resolution calls on
coordinator oC the Meigs County program for
Brandi Reeves, a seventh grader at Eastern
American Electric Power tQ install
talented and gifts studellts, presented awards to
Junior High School. Grueser Is the daughter of
scrubbers at the Gavin Plant in
tbe winners or Monday night's annual Meigs
Mr. and Mn. DanDy Grueser, Pomeroy. Reeves
order that Ohio coal can continue
County Spelling Bee. Grand chmpion was KelIs the daughter or Mr. and Mrs. Robert Reeves,
to be used .
Petitions of support for whatev.Chester.
. ·•• er action is required to keep the
mines in operation are being circu·
lated by various organizations as a
part of, an awareness and action
program initiated by Mayor Hoff·
man last weeli:.
At last night's meeting a letter
of support was read from the Middleport Ministerial Association. In
Little has been accomplished telephone and vandalizedi' one that letter it was noted that the
The West Virginia Legislature
was scheduled to meet with top since the dispute began on Nov. I , woman told the Jackson Star News. Association will share petitions
Judge Ouu1ea McCarty will rule with the churches in the communiofficials from both Ravenswood 1990, with what the company is
on
the gun applications.
Aluminum Corporation and the calling a strike, and the union is
ty as well as provide continued
Although
50 women obtainea prayer support in the matter.
United Steelworkers today in calling a lock-out. Tempers have
Charleston, it was learned by the flared during the past milnths, with gun permit applications, only three
several incidences being reported had returned the applications by
Point Pleasant Register.
Monday, along with the $22 filing
Emmett Boyle, RAC chairman, from both sides.
This morning's Charleston fee. Jackson County Circuit Clerk
and Jim Bowen, District 23 USWA
Director, were both asked to come Gazette reported about 50 women Jean Randolph identified the
before the legislature 10 state their lined up at the Jackson County women as Frances Hendricks,
positjons in the labor dispute at the Counhouse last week to get gun ·Mary K. Hughes, and Sharon
Evans.
. 'l
penn it applications.
Ravenswood PlanL
.
Hendricks, owner of t&amp;F FurThe number of applications was
According to a secretary at the
district office, Bowen did travel to four times what is normally nled in niture in Ripley, said her permit
Charleston this morning. Mike a year, according to the circuit application had nothing 10 do with
the current labor dispure. "I have a
Reuben, RAC public relations clerk's staff.
businCIJS
and should have gotten a
The Gazetre reporred the women
director, said he did not know if
permit
years
ago," she said.
would
not
give
their
names
10
the
Boyle attended, saying the chairHendricks
continued that it just
man had not been in the media, but some said their action
happened
that
she applied at the
Ravenswood office as of 10 a.m. followed increased rension on the
same
time
as
the
other women.
this morning, bot ma~ have been in picket line outside the RAC plant.
"Mine
has
nothing
to do with that
"We're tired of being run off the
· one of the o~ off1ces owned by
the company.
road, harassed, threatened on the
.Cootlnued oa page 6

Job search
workshop set
for a~ea vets S~ate

H411159 Nat. Gas 20,000 BTU Unvented .................... 21900

Ohio jackpot
winning ticket ·
drawn
CLEVELAND (UPI) - Ohio
Lottery officials reported Sunday
there was one winner of Saturday
night's $16 million Super Lotto
jackpot.
Tbe winning numbers were 3, 8,
19, 23, 29 and 47.
· · Five numbers were picked by
137 people, who wilr receive
$1,189 each. Four numbers were
selected by 7,484 people, who will
receive S68 apiece.
. The next Ohio Super Lotto jack·
pot, Wedhesday night, will be
worth $4 miUion.

.

By JULm DILLON
Sentinel News Starr

EQStern... ,

Ashland Oil ...... :.:............... 31 1/4
AT&amp;T ...................................33 3/4
Bob Evans ........................... .16 5/8
Charming Shop ..................... 13 3/4
City Holding ............................... 14
Federal Mogul ...................... 15 718
GoodyearT&amp;R .....................20 1/2
Key Centurion ........................... .!!
Lands' End ........................... l7 1/8
Limited Inc ........................... 23 5/8
Multimedia Inc. .:........................14
Rax Restaurant ......................... .3/4
Robbins&amp;Myers ............... ....23 1/2
Shoney's Inc ........................ .14 5/8
Star Bank ........................ :.....20 3/4
Wendy Int'l. ...........................7 3/4
Worthington Ind ...................22 718
Wendys and City Holding are
ex-dividend today.

cuse.
, Emily Dub!, Portland; Jesse Maynard, R11eine;
Beverly Stewart, Rutlalld; Sberry Burke, Tuppers Plains; Jessiea
Sayre, Letart FaDs; Libby King, Bradbury; Betsy Houdaslielt, SalIsbury; and Michael Sobieski, Riverview.

:Kelley Grueser
captures Meigs
:spelling bee title -

Memorial Park. Military graveside
services will be conducted by the ·
Vinton American Legion Post.161.
Friends may call at the funeral
home today from 4 to 8 p.m.

Stocks
Am Ele Power ......................28 7/8 ·

m11•; KeUi L)'llll Bailey, Chester; and Ewn Slrllble, Syra-

By Helen Thomas
UPI White House Reporter
WASHINGTON - President
Bush, calling Saddam Hussein's
speec~ claim~ng that Iraqi troops
are w1thdrawmg from Kuwait an
"outrage," said Tuesday the coalition .forces will continue ·to "prosecute the war with undiminished
intensity. "
.
Iii a nationally broadcast state·
ment from the White House Rose
Garden, Bush said Saddam "is not
withdrawing. His defeated forces
~ .retTr:ating. H~ is trying to claim
VICtory m the midst of a rout. And
he's not voluntarily giving up
Kuwatt
. The president said Saddam is
"trying to save the remnants of'
power and control in the Middle
East by every means possible. And
here, too, Saddam Hussein will
fail.''
Bush's statement
carne within a
.

legislature calls RAC,
steelworkers in to explain

A donation of $1,000 from the
Farmers Bank to the levee
improvement project was acknowledged by Mayor Hoffman who
noted that contributions now total
$4,500. Earlier Central Trust had
contributed $1,000, Jay Hall
$2,000, and Columbus Souther~
Power, $500.
Total project cost for the proposed improvements .is $112,500
with $75,000 already made in
grants from the Ohio Department
of Natural Resources, Division of
Waterways. The remaining
$37.500 must be provided in local
funds or services, according to the
mayor.
Grants for various type~ of
housing improvement and rehabilitation which might be available to
the village were discussed with
Mayor Hoffman noting that Jean
Trussell, housing specialist for the
village, had attended a meeting on ·
~t availability and the applicatiOn process. Tbe mayor also talked
about downtown revitalization
monies which might be available if
proposed projects can come under
the job creation category.
Rental housing rehabilitation
grant availability was also discussed with Mayor l:loffnian noting
that there is a program which provides for partial payment of
impro_vements to rental properties.
He satd that the program pays half
of the cost with the propeny owner
to pay the other half for the
CODiillued OD JN11t 6

Middleport receives $1,000 check from
Central Trust for levee improvement .
Emma Jane Paugh of the Central
Trust Company in Middleport presented a check on Monday to Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman in the
amount of $1,000 as a donation
toward the local share of the funds
needed for the improvements to be
made at the levee on Walnut Street ·
The total cost of the project is

$112,500 which will inciudc river
Donations totaling $5,000 have
b~nk protection, a new launch
been received fa the project so far.
ramp, paving in the area, new steps . Anyone wishing to donate to the
and landscaping of the area.
project may do so by contacting the
Of that total, $75,000 is being mayor's office. A permanent
paid by grants from the Waterways · plaque will be erected at tbe levee
Safety Fund of the Ohio Depart- listing all those individuals or firms
ment of Natural Resources leaving who have donated $1 ,000 or more
a need of $37,500 in local funds.
to the project

MAKES DONATION· E••a Jaae Paua• nr t•e Ceatral
Trut
ill Middleport 111••tec1 1 clleek oa Mooday to
Middleport Mayor Fred HDifiDan In the a•oant or $1,000 as 1
donation toward the local sllare or " ' rands needed ror the
improvemrnll to be made at the levee on Walaut StreeL

c.,..,

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