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                  <text>Pomeroy-MiddlepOrt, Ohio_

1\JndaY, FebruatY 26,1881

•

Ohion· Lottery

•

Pick 3:261
Pick 4:2962

Support
our
troops

Cards : 6-H, S-C;
K-D;6·S

Partly cloudy Wednesday
and Thursday, with highs

between SS and 60.

•

'

Vol. 41, No. 217

•
2 Sectlona, 14 Pa'l:!,:s conla

AMultimedia Inc.

Pomeroy-Middleport; Ohio Wednesday, February 27, 1991

C9pyrtghted 1991

Kuwaiti troops ente·r their capital

Libby's Sliced Peaches 29 oz.......... .'.... 99~
Fireside Graham Crackers 16 oz..........89e

Libby's. Sliced Peaches 29oz..............51;49

.

By DENHOLM BARNETSON
United Press International
Allied soldiers liberated Kuwaiti
City Wednesday and Kuwaiti
troops raised the flag in their capital, while allied tankers finished off
a Republican Guard division in
southeastern Iraq ami other coalition units cut off the elite force's
escape route 10 Baghdad.
President Bush said the liberation of all of Kuwait is almost com·
plete and Iraq said its troops had
completed their withdrawal from
the oil-rich emirate it invaded Aug.
2. Bush has rejected any reference
to an enemy pullout now that Saddam Hussein has chosen 10 fight.
The U.S. Central Command in
Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. said Kuwait
City had finally been liberated
despite earlier reports of Iraqi
"pockets of resistance" thai kept
some allied units at bay even as
Kuwaiti troops raised their flag in
the emirate's capital.
Residents of Kuwait City waved
the nation's four-colored nag on
streets littered with rubble and military equipment discarded by fleeing Iraqi troops, according 10 pool
news reports from the city.
The entrance of the Kuwaiti
troops was preceded by i'econnais·
sance missions by the U.S. 1st
Marine Division, which entered a
city shrouded by black smoke from
hundreds of oil wells set ablaze by
Iraqi troops eonducting what allied
commanders say was a "scorched·
earth" campaign. ·
Just to the south of the city, a
U.S. Marine armored force defeat·
ed Iraqi. tanks at Kuwait Intemationat AltflOtt aner ll"1W9'"-dlly "!&gt;~ttie, a U. S. military source said.
The fighting had been suspended at
nightfall because the Americans
ell(;~ling the airport feared shoot-

I

Del Monte Sliced Peaches 29oz..........51.39
Na~isco Graham Crackers 16oz........52.49 Keebler Graham Crackers 16 oz. .......52.19 Keebler Graham Crackers 16 oz.......S2.69
Libby's Sliced Peaches 29oz..............51.29

Williams Gravy Mix 314 o~....................... 35¢ . McCormick Gravy Mix 314oz ....:................65¢ French's Gravy Mix .314oz....................... 65~ . Durkee Gravy Mix. 314 oz .........................62t
Fireside Marshmallows 10 112 oz..............4St Kraft Marshmallows 10112 oz ....................99e Kraft Marshmallows 10112 oz....................89e · Kraft Marshmallows 10112 oz .......,.........51.00

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Marzetti Salad Dressing 16oz............51.,15 Kraft Salad Dressing 16 oz .................$2.29 Marzetti Salad Dressing 16oz...............s2.29 , Marzetti Salad Dressing 16oz..............s2.31
Jeno's Pizza Rolls.....................................99t Jeno's Pizza Rolls...................................51.45 Jeno's Pizza Rolls ...................................51.29 Jeno's Pizza Rolls......:............................s1.40 ·

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Libby's Pineapple 20 oz ...........................65¢ Dole Pineapple 20 oz ....................:.......s1.01 Dole Pineapple 20 oz................................ 99¢ Dole Pineapple 20 oz ............................s1.08
Jack Rabbit Popcorn 32 oz.....................65t Jolly Time Popcorn 32 oz....................51.27 Pops-Rite Popcorn 32 oz....................51.39 Flayor-Rite Popcorn 32oz...................51.09
.

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$

Ralston Old Fashion Oats 42 oz...... 1.49 Quaker Old Fashion Oats 42 oz......S3.17 Quaker Old Fashion Oats 42 oz ...... s3.29 Quaker Old Fashion Oats 42 oz .......s3.26
Lipton Tea 3oz.......................................s2.49 Lipton Tea 3oz....-...........,.......................53.97 . Upton Tea 3oz.......................................S3.79 Lipton Tea 3oz.,.....................................s3.75
Creamette Hamburger Helper 1 oz ......89~ BettyCrockerHamburgerHelper7oz....s1.69 Betty Crocker Hamburger Helper 1oz ....s1. 79 Betty Crocker Hamburger Helper 7oz...S1. 75
.J3ramley's Grape Jelly 32 oz..................ggt Kraft Grape Jelly 32 oz........................52.19 SmuckersGrapeJelly 32oz..................51.69 SmuckersGrapeJelly 32oz..................s2.06

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Light and Lean Gelatin.:..........................35¢ Jello Gelatin .03 oz ............. ~ ......................57¢
Fireside Vanilla Wafers 12 oz.................
79e Nilla Vanilla Wafers 12oz...................52.39
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$
.
.4 oz ...................................................99¢
Pepper 4oz................................................. 1.89
Pf!pper
.
Creameue Lasagna 16 oz.......................99¢ Muellers Lasagna 16 oz......................51.29
;

Jello Gelatin .03 oz ....................................59¢

Jello Gelatin .03 oz ....................:...............58¢
NabiscoVanillaWafers12oz................52.29 Nabisco Vanilla Wafers 12~...............12.49
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$

.

Pepper 4oz................................................. 1.79

Pepper 4oz................................~................s1.62

Muellers Lasag!ll 16 oz.................. ~...51.39 .Muellers Lasagna 16 oz......................s1.37

Minced Onions 4oz ..................................79¢ Minced Onions 2oz.................................51.85 Minced Onions 3.5 oz..............................s2.99 Minced Onions Aoz .............................. ...S1.99
Banquet TV Dinners..................................99¢ · Banquet TV Dinners................................51.51 BanquetTV Dinnel'$................................51.69 BanquetTVDinners................................s1.62
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E~ston's Dill Slices 32 oz ........................99¢

Vlasic Dill Slices 32 oz ..........~ ............s2.19

·Ralston Snackers Crackers ..............s1.09

Ritz Crackers.: .....: ................................s2.59

Vlasic Dill Slices 32 oz ........................s1.99
$

Town House Crackers........................ 1.99

TOTAL.........S36.94

TOTAL..........*I8.96

.

Vlasic Dill Slices 32 oz........................s2.37

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Keebler Crackers................................... 2. 09

TOTAL.........S36.26

TOTAL.........836.53

This Amounts ,.. I IJ'otal Savings Of 41r/. Oa ,.hese Products!
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Iraq: will accept all U.N.
resolutions for cease fire
UNITED NATIONS (UPI)Iraq said Wednesday It is relidY'
to implement all U.N. resolutions
on the Persian Gulf crisis if the
Security CouucU adopts lmmedl·
ately a cease-fire resolution on
the war.
Iraq's U.N. Ambassador
Abdul Amlr AI·Anbari told
reporters that he bas i,nrormed
the president of the 15-natlon
council of his government's
intention to abide by the resolu·
lions.
"Weare ready, iftbe Security
CouncU an11ounces the cease-fire
resolution today, to Implement
the resolutions," AI·Anbari said.
U.N. . spokeswoman
A
announced immediately that the
· council will meet behind closed
doors early Wednesday after·
noon to discuss the new develop·
ment.
Al-Anbari said be gave the
council's president, Zimbabwe
Ambassador Slmbarasbe Slmba·
nenduku Mumbengegwl, a leiter
rrom Foreign Minister Tariq
Aziz conrll'mlng Iraq's readiness
to abide by resolutioiiS that have
not been implemented.
He said the deCision to go
along with U.N. resolutions came
from the "highest level" Ia his
country and be hopes that the

u

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Rf. 62 NORill
I

POINf PLEASANf, WV

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FLAG RAISING IN KUWAIT CITY • Gen·
eral Jaber AI·Sabab, Deputy Commander·iD·
Chief of kuwait! forces, far lett, bolsu the

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national na1 over ~uwalt &lt;.:ity on Tuesday, fol·
lowing the retreat If Iraqi troops from the city.
(Sky News) (UPI/Reuter)

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Allied warplanes also destroyed
16 11'9bable Scud missiles.or .Scud
launcHers' in a continu'lng effort 10
eliminate the one weapon that has
prQved successful for Saddam 's
forces, the Central Command said.
In the Persian Gulf, the Central
Command reported that the battleships USS Wisconsin and USS
Missouri so rar had fired more than
I, 000 rounds from their 16·inch
guns in support of ground operalions.
Despite the liberation of Kuwait
City, there was no word IO.confiilD
persistent reports or Iraqi atrocities
against civilians there. Some members of the Kuwaiti resistance said
enemy troops had taken hundredS
of hostages with them when thel
retreated from.the emirate's capita .
The Kuwaitis also said Iraqis
had commandeered cars, blown up
stoc)cpiles of munitions and torched
hotels. An allied military official
said enemy fo~ces "attempted to
destr?~. the mfr~slruclure or
Kuwa11, and th~~ Cited documents
~aptW'ed by _coal111on ttoops showmg a~ Ir_aq1 ~~~~to blow up the
Kowall ml facll11lCS before the war
began.
.
.
The death _toll for Amen cans m
grou~d f1ghtmg was_put by u,.s.
offlc1als at. four, wh1le only f1~e
Arab coahuon_ troops had dtcd m
the land campa1gn. .

Occupational Work Experience appearance, and achievement. All
is a state-sponsored vocational two are evalualed on an individual basis
year work study program offered at in the lil!ht of his or her own potenMeigs High School for juniors and tial and ability.
seniors in the three Meigs County
high schools.
With Ron Logan as the instructor, the OWE program is an effort
to bring together employers who
need unskilled or semi-skilled help
and students who are prepared to
accept the responsibiliues of a job
under school supervision.
The OWE course, requires a
Two Meigs County schools
minimum of 15 hours per week of have been selected by the U. S.
on-the-job training and two forty- Deparunent or Education 10 reprefive minute classroom sessions sent the United States in the Inlereach day with the OWE coordina· national Reading Literacy Study,
tor studying job-related subjects.
They are the Elementary School
All students under the age of eigh- and the Southern Local High
, teen are subject 10 the federal and School, both in the Southern Local
state labor laws.
School DislricL
As explained by Logan, the
Four hundred elementary
OWE program is designed to schools and two hundred junior
develop student motivation·, to high or high schools have been
change student attitudes toward selected for the ·study which is
C(lucation, and 10 develop. through . being conducted under the auspices
wort experience the necessary atti- of the International Association for
tudes and abilities 10 enable the stu· the Evaluation of Educational
dent to become gainfully Achievement, a non-sovernment
employed.
association of research institutions
The class grade is detennined by that cooperate . in the conduct of
the student's performance in the the cross-national educaticinal research.
areas of attendance, attitude,

According 10 the rules for
enrollment in the program students
m,ust be ai least 16 years of age,
have and maintain a good attendance record, be employable, pro-

vide their own means or lransportation, be willing to abide by the reg-,
ulations of the course, and be able
to meet the criteria and standards
set by the state.

Syracuse, Southern Local U.S. to
represent nation in literacy study

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, - MIKE MARNHOUI', OWNER

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OWE teaches skills to Meigs students

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MONEY-BACK
GU.ARANTEE

council would meet Wednesday
to declare the cease-fire.
Al-Anbarl said lmplementa·
lion or tlie resolutions would fol·
low the cease-tire and brushed
orr a question whether that con·
stltutes a new condition from his
government to bring the war to
an end.
The ambassador said Iraqi
troops ' bad withdrawn r~om
Kuwait by dawn Wednesday but
they were attacked by ad•ancing
American troops.
Iraq would stop launching
Scud missiles at Israel and Sandi
Arabia il there were a cease-fire,
AI·Anbari said.
There was no Immediate reac·
lion from members of the coon·
ell, who met Monday and Toes·
day to debate the war. Cuba and
·· Yemen have proposed tbe·touncil
adopt a cease-fire resolution after
uralng Iraq to withdraw lmmedl·
ately and un~;~~ndltionally from
Kuwait.
·
Tbe council did not discuss the
cease-fire proposal. Instead, a
majority or the council's mem·
bers wanted Iraqi President Sad;
dam Hussein to certify in wrltiDg
that be will abide by the resolu·
lions before they would discuss
the cease-fire.

li~ration of Kuwait City, but the · which the 9,000 French combat
liberation of Kuwai,~ lhe CPIJI!IJ'Y., is ·.--lrqpp' are.,i&amp;3igned, cut off the
·
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allnost complete,'' be said."We'~ Republican Guard's rou~ of~~~
ing each other in tlie dart, the very, very good, very, very heart· going 10 end that (war) and end 11 10 Baghdad thiou~h an enc~rthng
ening."
·
·
source said
.
right."
maneuver" camed out together.
In WashingtOn, Bush said news"
"I know all Amer.icans took
In Riyadh, the U.S. Central with the_7!h U.S. Army Co~s and
. from the war front "continues 10 be ~ heart in the beginning or the Command said the allies also ren- the Bnbsh 1st Armored Bngade,
dered five more Iraqi divisions Schmitt said.
.
"combat ineffective" overnight,
More than 33,000 enemy pns·
destroying 147 Iraqi ~ and 6() oners have been tak~n, the U_,S.
· armored personnel carriers.
. Central Command s81d, but alhed
Allied tanks fon;e pounded the~ military leaders acknowledg~ th~t
Tawakalna division or the Guard, a Iraqi troops are surrendenng m
veteran mechanized unit holed up such ~~ numbers that they have
in southeastern Iraq, a senior u.s. pracucally_lost_count. Coah11on
military sourte in Riyadh said. The losses remamed li~hL
.
.
division was left "virlually combat
Baghdad Rad1o, m&lt;?mtored !n
inerfective" during a "heavy Cairo, Egypt, S81d Iraq1 troops, m
enga11ement,' • but he added that accordance with S~dam 's orders,
fightmg continued Wednesday 10 completed theu withdrawal fr~m
complcte.ly eliminate the unit.
Kuwait early wednesday •'despite
Thousands or allied tanks under the enemy's interference."
the command of the U.S. 7th Corps
A later Baghdad Radio radio
were moving into position for a report said allied paratroopers had
final push to wipe out the elite landed behind Iraqi lines in an area
units, while some Republican near the Euphrates River, trying 10
Guard tanks were re~ fleeing encircle the Republican Guard.
·
. nonh toward the lraqt city or Basra
The radio, saying heavy fighling
before they could be hemmed in, was under way, vowed that the
U.S.officialsreportcdWednesday. allies "will feel sorry for their
A U.S.-French-British force in a11gression ... if they had the allu·
southeastern Iraq has virtually s1on that they could humiliate
trapped the Republican Guard in its Iraq.··
highly fortified positions in the
Iraq still has not used chemical
High Schools are eligible to partlelpate in the
area, said Gen. Maurice Schmitt, weapons but a senior U.S. military
protP"am which is geared to develop habits, alii·
the commander of the French allied source in Riyadh revealed thai ~'ley
tudes and competency which are necessary for
contingent.
had been found stored in Iraqi
successful job adjustment and occupational
The
18th
U.S.
Army
Corps,
to
bunkers.
,
readiness.

__
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ON-11:1E-JOB TRAINING· For many bilh school studenll on·
the-job trainin1 can be the most boeficial Ia preparing them for
employment. Tammy Starc:ber works at Middleport Trophies a
minimum of IS hours a week ill addldon to eompletlng required
classroom sessions at Meigs Hlgll School in conjunction with her
occupational work experience program.
·

I

During the spring of 1991 stu·
den·ts from !lie fourth and ninth
grades in the United States, along
with nine 8Jl(! 14 year old youngSters from 3S other nations, will be
asked 10 demonstrate how well they
read and how well they understand
what they read.
At the same time information
wilt.be sought from the participat·
ing students, teachers and schools
about the factors which influence
the teaching and learning of read·
ing,
Outcomes -of the study will
include a clear, unified definition
of reading literacy, knowledRe of
the reading capabilities of U. S.
students, comparisons of these
capabilities with those of youth in

oilier nations, and a notion or how
dirferent educational systems promote these capabilities with more
or less effect.
Further 1he study will provide
educators with hard data which
relate teaching practices and other
inflllences to the attainment of S81isfactory levels ofreadin~ literacy.
Countries participalmg in the
study include Belgium, Botswana,
Canada, Denmark, Germany, Fin·
land, Fiji, France, Greece, Hong
Kong, Hungary, Iceland, Indonesia,
Ireland, Italy, Netherlands, New
Zealand. Nigeria, Norway. Phillipines, Poland, Portugal, Singapore,
Slovenia, Spain, Sweden, Switzer·
land, Thailand. Trinidad and Tobabo, United States. Venezuela, Zam·
bia and Zimbabwe.

�Commelttary
The · Daily Sentinel
':

l ll Couri Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MElGS: MASON AREA

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~m~ ~._"""r,~

c:::l

qj~

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ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

CHARLENE ROEFI;ICR
General Mana1er

PAT WHITEHEAD
. Assls tlllll Publlaher/Controller
••
A MEMBER of The United Press lnternatlonal, lnland Da lly P ress
' Associat ion and t he Ame rican Newspaper Publishers Association.
.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcom·e. They should be less than 300
-' words long. All letters ar e subject to edltlllg and must be signed with
· na m e, address and te lephone number. No unsigned letters wUI be pub; Its hed. Leners should be In good taste. addresslnlf Issues, not per sonal!~ : ties.

:California politicians are
=~ining
up
for
1992
election
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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

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Jack Anderson

· The garbage gold rush on Indian
lands has even interested multinational heavyweights like Sechtel
Enterprises Inc., the San Franciscobased engineering and construction
fum. Our associate lim Lyncll has
seen internal Bechtel memos
spelling out the company's interest.
In one memo , Bechtel asked a
Washington, D.C., law firm . to
sound out some Indian tribes'on the
notion of some joint ventQres.
Bechtel's interest .was conveyed
to an official of the Bureau of Indian Affairs along with a memo that
listed some potential joint ventures
on reservations ·• hazardous waste
disposal facilitY, nuclear waste disposal facility and a solid waste disposal facility.
A Bechtel spokesman said the
list came from the Washington law
flim and did not refleet what Bechtel had in mind for the reservations.
He said the only deal Bechtel has

___:a=::n;;;;...;;dD;;;...;;a-'-le_Van--..;A..;.:.;:
tta

discussed so far on Indian land is a
water diversion project with a
South Dakota tribe.
Other companies have been .less
cautious in their pitches to U1bal
leaders. Mervyn Tano of the Council of Energy Resource Tribes has ·
studied many waste disoosal deals
offered to the lridians. One includ·
·ed a clause that would have made
the Indians waive their future righ~
to the land. "Some of them are so
ludicrous you just don· f feel like
dignifying them with a comment."
Tano told us.
"· And that's exactly the way
ffiliDY tribes hav_e responded.
Although impovenshed, they are
snubbing the offers of big 100~ey.
In the. past month, mul.tu~llhon­
dolloar hazardous waste·mcmerator
projects have been rejected by the
Kaibab Paiutes in Arizona and the
Kaws in Oklahoma. And a growing

environmental movement also
threatens to kill tentative deals in
Southern California and South
Dakota.
A pattern of resistance is emerst·
in~. "People should not be ;turpnsed that once they find out N!e
truth, they are not interested in poisoning their land;" sar,s Bradley
Angel of Greenpeace. ' mdians are
the originial environmentalists."
The Bureau of Indian Affaifs is
none ioo pleased about the trend. A
BIA spokesman told us. that the
agency would have to aJliX'Ove any ·
dump, and that the Environmental
Protection Agency would·review it
But even the EPA admits it has
limited power on Indian land.
The Senate Select Co!"!"ittee on
Indian Affairs is planning to look ai
environmental prQblems on reservations, and the waste merchants
will likely be scrutinized at the
same time.

.

::
ByROBERTSHEPARD
: • WASHINGTON (UP!) - A number of California politicians hilve
;lieen dazzled of late by a rare convergence of political opportunities, the
(act of two U.S. Senate seats up for grabs in the same year.
Candidates of all stripes are lining up to run for the offices in the 1992
election, and the result will dramatically alter the pol/tical landscape in
California and Washington. One effect almost certainly will be a lowering
~f the noise level in the House of Rej)R:sentatives.
; •. The situation developed with the announced retirement of Democratic
Sen. Alan Cranston, and the vulnerability of Republican Sen. John Sey~qiour, a relative unknoWII who recently was appointed to fill out the tenn
;!lf Pete Wilson, who just moved inio the governor's office.
.; Among the big names who are running for the senate seats or are con~sidering doing so are former Gov. Jerry Brown, former San Francisco
;Mayor Dianne Feinstein, and former baseball commissioner Peter Ueber,

ltagues.

·

: · When Californians vote in next year's Senate primaries, they will have
a wide range of talent to choose from, and it shoulil not be diffiCult for
ihem to figure out which candidates will or will not serve them effectively
in the U.S, Senate.
·

\Today in history
.
'

·
:By United Press Intesnatiooal
. Today is Wednesdiy, Feb. 27, the 58th day of 1991 with 307 to follow.
: . The moon is waxing. moving toward i~ full phase.
' :: The morning stars are Mercury, Venus, Mars and Saturn.
The evening star is Jupiter.
Those born on this day are under the sign of Pisces. They include poet
:i;Ienry Wadsworth Longfellow in 1807; Supreme Coun Justice Hugo
Biack in 1886; David Sarnoff, RCA board chairman and father of Ameri·can television, in 1891; novelist John Steinbeck in 1902; former Texas
Governor John Connally in 1917 (age 74); actresses Joanne Woodward in
}930 (age 61) and Elizabeth Taylor in 1932 (age 59); and consumer
.'activist Ralph Nader in I 934 (age 57).
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Berry's World

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"I can't talk now. Another briefing is on."
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:::Jl•d

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£\:C::
I

Recasting Our Merchant Fleet
Discussions have repeatedly
surfaced in Congress regarcijng the
necessity ofmaintaining a strong U.S.
merchant fleet. Tbe vitality pf America's shipping industry and the overall strength of the U.S. economy- as
well as our military preparedness are closely interwmed. Peace and
economic prosperity unfortunately
lull Americans into a false sense of
securitywidirespecttoourcounuy's
niaritime industry.
We tend to take the reliable
movement of goods, sUpplies and
equipment by ~ for granted.
That all changes when an iriternational crisis engulfs us. After 40
years of steady decline from being
the world's greatest maritime power
to a vinual hOn-entity, the U.S. is
today facing the consequences of a
p-eally reduced domestic shipbuildmgcapacity,asluggishsteelindustry
and an aggressive foreign maritime
subsidization program on the pan of
many of our free world ttading partners.Knowledgeable maritime officials repon that a continuation of the
present rate of decline in the u.s.
merchant marine fleet will leave
America frighteningly unprepared 10
y~ from now to meet the Shipping
requlreltlcntsdemandedbysuchlarge
sea-lift operations as Desen Shield
and Desen Sronn.
The Military Sealift Command
(MSC) is the managerial agency

Con. Clarence Miller

within the Depanment of Defense around the world; and U.S. flag liner
resp6nsiblefor.them~ivelogistical companies which are used in peaceand aansponauon reqwrements sup. time to move the vast miljority of
porting U.S. forces now in the Gulf. DoD t:argQ in suppon ofU.S. forces
The MSC charters both U.S. IWld abroad
foreign carriers. io move militaiy
One month after the President's
supplies around the globe. ItopernteS order to deploy forces to the Middle
both in jieacetime and during con- East, MSC I!Ctivated a sizable~
flic~..
·
·
·
of its "*rve fleet and the strateg1c
· Straiegic shipments by sea con- sealift force grew to 132 dry cargo
stitule a vital component of our na- ships, 27 tantors and 2 hospital ships,
tional defense strategy with nearly 95 (a 168% increase.)
percent of all equipment and sustainIn a crisis · environment, the
ment supplies being moved by sea. government's strategic sealift misThere is simply no other practical sion is brpken into two categories:
way to transport the vast quantities of (I) surge shipping during initial
goods needed by our forces. If we mobilization, and (2) resupPly (suscannot get supphes and equipment to tainment) shipping to Rlaintain our
the right place at the right time, we forces.
severely cripple our military capaBecause of the lrend toward
bilities,
.
containerization, which started in the
The importance of a strategic late 1960s, our merchant Deet expesealift capability was given special rienced a decline in surge capacity.
recognition in 1984, wben it was Military strategists voiced concern
designated as one of four major func- about this situation, particularly after
tions of the Navy, along with sea the Iran hostage crisis, the lraniiraq
control. power projection and strate- war the Soviet invasion of Afghanigic deterrence,
stan.
. .
Prior to the cunent Middle East
While it is the assessment of the
crisis, MSC's strategic sealift force commander of the Military Sealift
included: 11 chartered U,S. flag dry Command, Vice Admiral Francis
cargo ships and 26 chanered U.S. Donovan, that the current sealift
flag tankers engaged .in the routine assets available to MSC are· "adetrasponation of DoD cargo; 23 U.S. quate 10 satisfy Operation Desert
flag chartered ships dedicated to Shield surge and sustainment shipcontingency opcrallons and preposi- pingrequiremen~." the important and
tioned in potential trouble spots pressing question is: "Do we have
enough sealift capability?

·Theanswer,accore!ingfoAdmiral Donovan, depends on where we
are deploying forces and whether we
can count onourallies and friends for
help . .
The current Gulf crisis has again
broughtAmerica'smaritime situation
into focus. There are too many ·ifs
and maybes tied to the future of the
maritime indusuy to leave its future
to chance. By the end of this century,
it is expected that the number ofU.S.
dry cargp vessels will drop by half from 200 to 100. Tbe Dag tanker fleet
is expected to shrink from 200 to 97.
lbe high cost of domestic ship .
building and the comparative low
labor costs experienced by foreign
shippers are singled out as the two
primary reasons for the decline of
our merchant marine industry. ·Tbe
industry is urging the government to
allow n to purchase foreign-built
ships and provide subsidies to cover
expanded crew cos~. The Gulf crisis
has increased the likelihood of Congressional debate on both items.
The bottom line in any discussion involving our economic competitiveness and our ability to support .:\merican forces around the
globe is simply this: ships are critically necessary to deliver goods
worldwide and our nation has an
obligation to maintain a responsive
and adequate men:hant Deet both in
peacetime and during a crisis.

CAVE CREEK, Ariz. (NEA) •
The name of the plant is jo.f!'a:•.·but
it'sprpnounced"flo-ho-ba Itgrows
wild and in abundance here in Cave
Cleek, but it's carefully,cultivated in
controlled quantities elsewhere in
Arizona. Its versatile oil is used in
consumer products ranging from hair
shampoo to automotive lubril;ants.
Pemaps most important, jojoba
is typical of the non-traditional crops
that offer the nation's farmers the
prospect of diversifying their output,
enhancing their productivity, competing more effectively in the international agricultural market and increasing their income;
·
Those opportunities could be
~ially timely because President
Bush no IS pmposing- and Congress
might well accept. subslantial reductions in many of the subsidies the
federal government long has paid
fanners who grow traditional crops.
A recent and striking success
with non-traditional production in·
volves a crop with the unfortunate
name of the rape plant. Although

ancl Asia, it was long raised in North

•

crops the Agriculture Department
says have similar growth potential:
• Kenaf, a fiber plant grown in
siateS with wann climateS, from florida to California, can be used to produce newsprint, carpet backing,
chicken litter, fue logs and roofmg
material.
• Lasqucrella, a small, bushy
plant that grows wild in the Southwest has seeds whose oil can be used
in lubricants. plastics and pharmaceuticals.
• Guayule, a shrub native to the
Southwest desen, is a source of natu·
raJ rubber that can be used in the
manufacture of numerous products.
It also produces wax, cork and fiber.
Other such crops range from
crambe, .a plant grown in limited
quantities in Indiana that can be a
source of high-protein meal for beef
cattle, to meadowfoam, a plant especially suited lathe Northwest whose

011 is similar to that of the jojoba
America primarily as a forage and
shrub.
covetcrop.
'
The annual domestic production
Canadian fanners realized that
of oil from the jojoba plant, native to
flii!Cseed oil appealed to ~th-con·
the Mojave and Sonoran Deserts of
sctous consumers concerned abOut
Arizona and California, was only 5
theirbloodcholesterollevelsbec•nsc
metric tons as recently as the mid
it had the lowest level of saturated
1970s, but now it is approaching 600
fats but the highest level of unsatumetric tons.
rated fats of any edible vegetable oil.
Ioj&lt;iba farming boomed in the
Renamed canola and formally
early 1980s when it was promoted as
designated as safe for human cona tax sheller and the oil sold for $200
sumption br the Food and Drug
per gallon. Today, withnowuidvanAdrninistrabon in 1985, the oil
tages available, the oil's price ranges
quicldybecameapopularimportitem
from $25 to S40 per gallon.
in this counuy. By 1988, more than
·The valuable oil -very similar in
152,000 metric_tons valued at $64
composition to spenn whale oil of an
million- abnos!!hreC times u high as
earlier era • is pressed from acornin 1987 - were imponed, piimarily
sized, coffee-colored bean&amp; About
from Canada.
90 p,crcent of it goes into shampc)o,
Domestic acreage planted in
skin care and cosmetics P,OCfucts, but
canola then soared, from SO,OOO in
it also is used as an additive in auto1988toasmuchas200,000in 1989.
IOOtive motor oil and transmission
Produced from crops now grown in
Duids.
the Northwest, Great Plains and
Southeast.canolaoilhaspinedwide
A thought for '!'.e day: In a _1964 ~ision, Supreme Coun Justice Hugo
consumer acceptance in less than a ·Black wrote that an uncondibonal nght to say what one pleaSes about
decade. .
public affairs is what I consider 10 be the minimum guarantee of the First
A ~ong the othernon·traditional Amendment"

- - -- ----

gro_~~or!tsoil"!ichseedsinEurope

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lead the north Athens squad found cfrot • tile llripe ill
tine, not lhoolin~d Melvin Massie to Ill 30 at blltlime. And u 1111. Hllll-~
..,:;.
t-llncn 01r1a Mctzp, htkalwely made a c1at 111 k
difficult to shriot.
to mention a tbno·poilter by we
111011 llla&amp;:t
one Jo~l~itla and Richard Haney. lead by the~ of the tlllrd 411!1*. •
Another key to the Wildcats'
win was the play of freshman point
left in tho frlme, he1Ded . While Metzaer collected 16 pojnlll all that remamed ror tho ltadtle
Consistent foul shooting and guard Chad Bunes, who on Slim· CCIUJIIS Trimblo'a CUIIiDI tbc W"dd- and nine re6ounds, and Sites ~~~~ caravan for ellcite~olit wu 1M
high-pressure defeni e were the day niaht collected his fint dou~ caa' lead to two~~ lbo cr--· 10 poinu. they MR 1neffective in IIIIIII1CI r1 tile bench 1110 die PliO
main i~ents in Hannan Trace's digit acoring effon of hia vamty ter on two or AuftK:k 1 layups ltOWinl tbe inside lliack of Torn. and ita dri•o toward die en~
86-71 VICtory over Glouster Trim- career. Barnes,.who had 11 points between the lix- and .fiYO-IIIlllute do pt111111an Jeremy Roac and his mart. T01nado .~nrer Ruaell ~mble in the Division IV uppet·lirack- in Trace's win over Miller, outdid m1rks and keep the Tollcats 25-point sill· tebound asuult, or gleton; who fm11hod wltb nntt Lill
.
et sectional championship 11ame himself by sinking 12 and running , behind by double diiiiS tho flllt of the 20-pcimt, 1ill-rebound effort of . points and coulci be the heir appar' ® 11 a
.,
•
Tuesday ni'ht at the UniverSlly of the floor in place of senior traffic the way.
Tarnado fprward Roy Lee Bailey.
entto Rose_in. the post next year ·
.
·. · · , • ,· ~
Rio Grande s Lyne Center.
cop JJ. Bevan, who 111 out for 1
Trimble, wltich bowed out II 8HelclinJ into the second quan.er • (unlels .6-:4 JUruor Micbcl. Ruaell , • ,:; , ~ · • .
. . . . , ,F, ,
The Wildcats. 17-5, earned the major portion of th~ first half 14, bid ~U to ill~ loleler· with • nine-point ad~antqe, the JC11 teli&amp;ioua !JII the welpiS afla .•. ·,
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.f _
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· , ,- !'\' } :•::~
right to take .on archrival Racine because of what some said wu a 101 • Auflick, Rapt I~ Sua Lalten outsCOred the1t hos~ 29-8 ~ Toruloel final P.JIC). sank •
C!"AC ·~·~·· : ;.Jt
· Southern • a 101-55 winner over cheese sandwiCh m.t objected to Leeper, Cun ~oore. Shlmban, ia lhat fnme to belloon their llad Pllr of he lhrows wilh lliPt aec· (llP-"· . ~~~ . ,,.,.,, ··
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P!ltriot Southweslem in the follow- bis playing b!lskotball.
IIIIICI Sbonborn and John Tvler.
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ing lower-bracket title game • in
And if that weren't enough, Qurter tualll
the second game of the D-IV dis- Trimble, which deflated the 0.11. · Hannan Tn!ce 21-19-23-23-86
trict first-round doubleheader on tians' lead from 12 points to five at- Trimble ;
1-4-21·16-20-71
Wednesday, March 6 at 8:1S P,.m. halftime primarily on the suenglh
·
at Ohio University's Convocation of Auflick's 11 poinll in tho ICCOIId
Solltllenl101, SWHS 55
Cen tee .
•-·• "-In the lower·brw:ket title
quarter, had IIOUblc II the ,....,
w.....
...,, COli·
.
Offense, something Greg Hoi- The Tomcats' 11-f&lt;r-20 showing in test. Southwestern - cau.," m a
ben's Tomcats found out the lwd the first hal( made lhat obviowt, u purple hazufter Solltzm'a Toma·way ,\he Wildcats were far from the missed free throws, had they docs, who saw tho Hl&amp;fallllden.cut
lacking, was missing from both been made, would have resulted in their lead to two on ,two OCCIIIOIIS
teams in the game's fllS~tw
. min- a four-point Trimble load 11 half. in the f111t tWO minutel of tho lint
uies bCfote. Wildcat fo
· Todd · time. Meanwhile, the Wildcats quarter went to tho run-and-au•
·Boothe racked up 13 ofT ·~ 21 made each of their 10 ihots • the . iltaek ind proceeded to put tht
first-quarter . points, including the charity stripe in the fllSt 16 min- entire roster on the ICOteboard in
Wildcats' first siJI. And even uteS.
·
their-46-pomh
· t rouL
lan
to
though Trimble tied it twice (at 2-2
"That was the glaring differ"Our w o1e game P wu
and 4-4 On baslte~ by senior post- encc," said Holbert. "We had run,M said Tornado head coach
man Si:ou Aufliclc and senior guard enough shots, but we didn't con- Howie Caldwell, whose crew
Steve Shamhart, respectively, in . centrale M
boosted ill JOCOid to 111-4. "In the
the game's first four min~tes) in
·
first quarter they (the Hiplandas)
the opening frame, Trace ~
The tliird uarter saw the return wae fresh. and in the - i d ql*'·
the Tomcats 17-IOafter the. last ue of Bevan to
lineup llld 1 con- ter, they wen tired. In the tiUrd
to take a seven-pomt lead mto the tinuation of the consecutive free. quancr, they got their legs back,
second quaner.
.
throw shooting streak, which ended reallbutin d'::{~ quarter they - .
··The Wildl:atli kept semor center ·t 15 hen Rankin who led Trace
.y 1
h
Craig Raf!kil!• Boothe and scn~or ~ith 2~ pom·IS, missed the second
"We &amp;ot away fro1R w at we
. forw~!fd Riehle Cornell on ~ufli~k free throw after malting the fllst ~~~to~~,!!!f!'a
a\1 mght, but the 6-5 Auflt~k, m7 . . with 2:18 left. But Rankin lllllde up to tho oftiensiVo flow chlrt that runs
sp~te of leading the co~ With 2 , for it b cannin his Jut twO free
pomts, was hel~ to five ~n the ~IJ'St . throws ~f the n~ght with 1: 12 left ffom tiie bllckcourt of sophomore
quarter • a cructal factor m 'keepmg ti n.....nft .. Justin f&gt;ay'siCCOIId fouL point guard Aaron McCarty 111d
the taller Tomcats at bay !ong :u~u;id.,.Hannan Traco's 9-for-1 0
'
enoui.IJ to allow Trace to build a
.By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
OVP StafF Writer

LET'S DO IT AGAIN • 11lat'1 wllat Soutlaern pn1te•a ......, .
ltOR (wltll ball) tee• 141 lie 11J111 to
. teul-te Aid)', ..... (13)
after RON -es up wltll OH ot 1111 llx nbotPida IBd
ee
pau to Bier Iii the flnt qnrter ot Tuesday •laht'l.
rv
lower·bncket aectloul Ullt plllt qaJut SoutbwesterD II tile Ual·
v.,alty of Rio Grnde'l L:JIIe Ceilter. ltose led tile fllor wttll, 21
JOillllto Wp pace tile T~nlllae1 lo 1 101·55 whitewlllhlal fl tile
hl&amp;l!ltwlera. (OVP p11oto lly G. Speacer OUane)

New crops help American farmers_:__R_ob..._e_rt_m_alt_er_'S

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a::

'foUR lN'Je;TMeNT
FoRTFOLIO'S VeRY
IMPRe;stve, THIS C;eASON.

-rjlth.

• And then there are the House members who would like to be senators.
Among those announced or said to be contemplating are Democratic
Reps. Roben Matsui, BBibara Boxer, and Mel Levine, and Republicans
William Dannemeyer, Roben Doman, and Tom Campbell.
. Matsui, Levine and Campbell are low-key congressmen whose depar·
.'uire from the ·House would barely cause a ripple. But a House without
) ).annemeyer, Doman and Boxer would be a different place indeed.
Doman and Dannemeyer are probably the two most conservative mem·
bers of the House, while Boxer is fmnly encamped at the far other end of
the political spectrum. The three are rigidly dogmatic and because of that
they are largely ineffective legis\ators, often unable to negotiate or com.; promise witli their adversaries.
. ·
Doman, 57, is a passionate advocate for his anti-abortion and prodefense causes, and his passion often leads to rhetorical excess during
. House debates. During one episode Doman got so wound up that he
·refused to stop talking after giimg beyond his alloted time and the acting
; speaker was compelled to order Doman's microphone turned off, which in
:tum caused a mini-crisis.
•
·
: In 1982 Doman made .a bid roc the Senate, but lost the primary race
·and was sidelined for two years until he won re-election to the House.
: · Dannemeyer, 61, has represemed his Orange County district since
; 1979, devoting much of his energy to his twin crusades of returning the
·counuy to the gold standard and stamping out homosexuality.
: He warns of a homosexual conspiracy to undermine Anierican culture
:SOd would like to see everyone in the country teSted for AIDS.
' · Dannemeyer wanted the GOP senate nomination in 1986, but bowed
:Out before the primary when it became apparent he could not generate the
money or support needed to win. ·
.
• · Boxer's stridency regularly raises hackles on the Republican side and
even occasionally discomforts her Democratic colleagues. During the
:t989 debate on a congressional pay raise, she railed against .those who
would vote against it but would take the money if it passed Then she confounded her colleaglles by voting again~ the measure.
i Boxer's outspoken, activist approach to legislating has not produced
the kind of record of achievment enjoyed by her more deliberative col-

. .

In D-W Rio sectional finals Tuesday,

Wednesday, FebrUIU'y 27, 1991

Companies want to dump waste~_
WASHINGTON - As the
nation's landftlls overflow, waste
merchants are ·Jooldntl for ways to
dump unwanted garbage on the
land where Amaica once dumped
i~ unwanted people • Indian reac:tvations.
•
Indian tribes have been bo!llbarded with slick proposals and
tempted with big advance pal'·
ments, and all they have to do 1S
turn their cherished land into
dumps for household trash, and in
some cases, toxic waste. So111e
trash firms offer as much as
$500.000 up front. The money
stokes conflict on the res«vations
where unemployment runs higher
than 50 pen:enL
Indian land appeals to the waste
. merchants because the environmental regulations are less rigid.
Indian land is usually exempt frQm
state law, and federaJ oversight is
minimal.
·

b S th -· (~-, )~ ..· ·
Hannan Trace beats Trimble; Southern born s . ou . ~eL~~· · • . . ~ :J .

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel

•

IWIIJ

.. STRIPPED! • Soother•'• Roy Lee Bailey
(center) lias tbe ball stripped away from h!JD by
Soutbwesterll center Chifl Metzger (reachll!l In
and to lhe left ot teammate Richard Haney (34)
imd te1mmate Aaron McCarty In the Rnt quar·
ter or Tuesday night'stournunenll~ at Lyoe
Center. However,tbe Highlanders dldn t strip It

etloulh tbne1 to keep die T....alllel " -

a 101·55 cakewalk and the rlpt to t1ke 01
· a'rl:brlvlll Hauu Trace Ia the dlattict loilrlli•
ment onWedallday, March 6 81 Ohio Villmil·
ty's Couocatlou Center. (OVP 'photo b7 G.
Spencer Olbone)

Thesday's boys' prep.results
SHOT • Soathera
iostoria Wendelin 76, New Riegel to; BLOCKS
ward
Roy
1M
lalle7 (31, wldl
Holland Spnng 57, Anthony 66
.
oaly.
3
.wblt)
aJvtl
W. alllentf.
Wyane53
.
Fremont Joe 75, Norwalk Paul 59
·
ntd
Soatllwmera
lbOIIIIr
a Ilia
Kenton Ridge 70, Tipp Ctty 62
Gat Mil Gilmour 61, Clo Lulh B 48 hlad u he .lockl tile Hl1ll·
Milbury Lake 68. Swanron 65
Hopeweii-J,.oudon 85, Monrolvillo luder'l llaGC Ia die lalt • ••
N Royalton 64, Oberlin Firelands 72
.01 tile tint qu..ur or T1ilday
49
Houston 62, Boktisn 52
al1hl'1 lpwer-llracket HCtlo1al
Navarre Fairless 80, Minerva 74
Independence 7S, Richmond Hts Cll.I•PIOIIIaip 1a•e 111111t
Tournament
Nordonia 56, Crestwood S1
73
DIVISION·I
Soutllwntera at LJ'Ilt Ceater,
Olmsted Falls 57, Brookside 55
Kidron 66, canton Heli• II S4
Akr Kenmore 64, Akr Ellet41
Orrville Triway 61, Can South 55
Kirllaad 66, Ledpmoot 21
Alliance 71, Akr Springfield 42
Lima Perry 79, Mendon Union S4
Austintown-Fitch 55 Boardman 51 Salem S6, Struthen 53
Vcmlilion 75, Clyde 69
. Loclrland l9, Cin SUIImit31
Berea Midparlc fD, Cle Rhodes 44
Branch
81,
You
Unulinc
S2
W
Mansfield Chr 71, Buc:klye Cent
Clc E 71, Paines Riverside 70
61
.
Day Belmont 68, Centerville 6!i
DMSIONm
Marion Local 87, Ridpmont 32
Day Patterson 70. Clayton N'Mont
Eastwood 7g, Elmwood 69
. McComb 70, N Blltimcft 68
40
·Evergreen
66, Oucao 52
Minlter 59, New II'CIIIIIII 53
Elyria 63, Grafton Midview 51
Gat Mil Hawken 53, Perry 43
Nortbwood 78, Dlllbilry 1 ebtjde .;
Findlay 63, Deftance SO
·
Hanilibal
River
74,
Bat'I)CSVille
S4
59
&lt;
Franklin 68, Trotwood Mad 64 (Ot)
Hicksville
69,
Tinora
58
Old Fort 62, Seneca B 43
Gahanna 66, Westerville N 60
Liberty 47, .Brookfield ~
Ottoville Uncolmlew 58
Mansfield 75, Mansfield 51
Lorain Clcarview 71, Brooklyn 67
Petiisville 70, ..._Val Cd 43
Mentor 68, Mayfield 49
Mapleton 38, Blaclc River 35
Shadyside 80, ZaRN l~ens 72
N Canton 56, Can GlanOilt 62
Minen1 Riclae 70, G'Vill Gll'lld S9 (Ot)
N Ridgeville 66,l..orlin 34
Orrville 69, 'tualaw 40
Speneerville 53, FoR aec-1 46
New Phila 84, E Liverpool 76
Ottawa Glandoif 83, Montpelier 63 iol Chr 47, To! Em llpt 41
Newark 72, Col Franklin Hts 45
P'Burg Spring 69, Lou'VI Aquinas Vanlue 72, Arcldia 61 (01)
Niles 57, You Wilson 55
The qulck,euy
Parma 68, Berea 57
,
58
. 65
way to colorful
Tiffin Columbian 62, Fremont Shenandoah I 00, Fronuer
Tusky
Val6S,
W
Muskin(lllm
62
decorltlng
Ross 59
,
ICflemll
Tol Bowsher 91, Syl Southview 59 , Waterloo 67, S Ranae 43
Waynodll,e 73, Louilonville 58
. Tol Francis 70, Tol Whitmer 43
wllfiOUt obTo! Scou 66, Tot Devilbiss 63
wellsville 62, Cadiz 60 (Ot)
IIC!IOn.Tol Swt8S, Tot Libbey 46
paint odorl.
Wadsworth 76, Lodi Cloverleaf 44
DIVISION IV
For all lntlflor
Warren Harding 100, Kent44
Ada 66, Cor}'·RaWIOII 61
Willi.
An:bbold 63, N Cenlnl S6 .
Wllhlbll.
DIVISIONU
Ayenvllle 75, Uberty Ctr '12 (01)
Akr Cent Hower 64, Medina High- Bloomfield 63, Newbury 46
.
land 58
Bluffton 59, ArlinBton SS
Ashtab Hbr6l, Jefferson Area44
Cin Ctry ~ 68, Waynesville 58
Ashtabula 84. Madison 72
Co1umbu•· G.rove 68, Pandoa
Bellefontaine 71, Day Northridge Gilboa6.5
46
Comineotal S I, Lolpsic 49
Bellevue 15, Sandusky Perkins 69
Delphos John 76. ICilida 64
Fostoria 91, Shelby 84
Edgerton 69, Stryker 64
Ohio ~1gb Scbool Basketball
By United Press Intemllloul
Tuesday, Feb. 23
Regular Season
•
Chagrin Falls 58, Kenston 56

Galion76,Buc~s65

PICKENS
HARDWARE

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P&amp;Qe 4 The Dally Sentinel

...

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0

wec:tneeday, February 27, 1991

PoiMroy-lllcklleport, Ohio

•,

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.

By DEAN SCII.UNIR
UPI Sports Wrlfao
The Chicago Bulls left no doubt Tuesday night
they wanted the best record in the Eastern Confer·

•
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~HARGES
Dissolutions, divorces processed

.sm·

Judgm(!nts granted

i~

Tanner and Mary Elizabedl Wright
Tanne.r. He was a self-employed
painter
· H •. ·
· db h'
'f
,e
ts
survtve
Y
ts
WI
Euruce Ferrell Tanner: one daughe •
· .C
.
'0o
·
ll:r•. Mitzi ummmp, ylestown,
Ohm; a son, John Tanner, Akron;
eight sr!lndchildren, five Jreatgrandchtl~en; and three s•sters,
Monad Wilson, Long Bottom anlf
Dixie Shaffer and Edna Tanner',
both of Cleveland.
Memorial services will be held
Friday at 7 p.m . at the White-Blow~
er Funeral Home in CoolviUe with
the Rev. Don Seaver officiating.
B
. ·1 w1'Jib e m
, t h.e Spencet.
. una
Cemetery m Spencer, W. Va.
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Three charged for
DUI

Theft, vandalism investigated

Syracuse beats.Villanova 77-63.

Pomeroy court
news
w.

=,·

HOLZER CLINIC

l

Weather

EMS answers calls

sec:·

St. Louis .hands Chicago 3-lloss

Samuel E. Wilson

Announcements

Snowy roads cause accidents

l

&amp;?::

---:---Area deaths----·~:

Samuel Edward Wilson; 87, of
Route 1, 901 State Route 124,
Coolville, died Tuesday, Feb. 26,
1991 at his residence after an
extended illness
He was ~ in Reedsville, the
sori of the late samuel and Nancy
Actions for dissolution of marriage have been filed in Meigs County
.
·
S 'th
. Wil
F 27
he
C'?mmon Pleas Cou,rt by Charles E. Michael, Jr., and Mary K.
. ..
. mt
son. or . years was
'!·.
Mic~. both of Racme; and by Jerry Eugene Fields · Jr ,•nd Teresa
GaiUa·TWirlers
e_mpl~_&gt;yed at the Vtscose Corpora·
~~
. Red Cross Bloodmobile
Marie Fields, both of Shade.
·
' ., - •
The American Red Cross
The Gallia Twirlers Western !tOR m Parkersburg, and af~ retlr·
Divorces have been granted Ill James Walter Bland from Virginia
' 1
BlOodmobile will be in the Eastern Square Dance Club will hold a mg from the~ had a mall route
M. Bland; Sandra S. Peyton from Richard A. Peyton; and \0 Melody
ftigh School gym on March 11 dance on Saturday frOm 8 p.m. to from the Coolville Post Office. .
Rose Ramsburg from Robert Edward Boring.
from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Should lhe 11 p.m. at 'lhe Henderson C0mmuHe attend~d the Reedsvtlle
.~.'
, Center ..m ..
ud
WV
ChwthofChrisL
·need fqr blopd in the Gulf War nny
e erson, . a.
He is survived by ·his wife of 64
,.&lt;
' escalate, eac;h Red Cross unit will The caller will be John Waugh. ·. years,. Inez Randolph Wilson, a
have to selld.blOO&lt;! there. In addi· The dance will be open to all West· daughter and san-in-law, Betty and Robert D. Jarrell
A default judgment has been awarded in Meigs County Common
tion. service men and wqmen need em
style square dancers. .
Pleas Court to }iome National Bank of Racine against Lonnie McOel- 'blOod every day, Every 12 seconds,
Charles Buckley ·of Parker~urg, '
Robert D. Jarrell, 49, of Patter;
land, and others. in the amount of $25,347.25.
someone needs blood.
W.Va.; two grandsons, Richard son, N.J., formerly of Danville;
SporiSBanquet
. Judgments have also been filed in the court granting judgment to '
The Winer Sporu Banquet will . Buckley of Patask_ala! and GregDr&gt;: died unexpectedly on Friday. Feb.
"'
.
Home National Bank against Clarence Hill, and others, in the ameunt · Columbia ToWllship Trustees
be held on ThQI'Sday, February 28 Buckley of Davtsvllle, W.Va. , 22, 1991,athisresidence.
of $61,237.96; and to City Loan Financial Services, Inc., against
. Columbia Township Board of at 6:30 p.m. at Eastern High three gr~randsons, Allam and ·· . He was the son of Kate Hobbs
Thomas Serey, and others; in the amount of$35,699.91.
Trustees ~ill meet on Monday at School. Bring a meat dish, ·a veg- ~ B . ey_ Pa.taskala! and ~t- Jarrell, of Pomeroy aitd tlie late
A judgment action has been filed in the court by BancOhio National
7:30p.m. at the ftre station.
etable dish and a salad or dessen. h~ of DaviSville, 0 ~ Sister, VII· William P. Jarrell . He was a "{
··
~ank of C~_&gt;lumbus against Paul D. Hensley of Tuppers Plains regard·
Table service an!l drinks will be gmta Walton, ReedsVIlle, ll!"d two machinist for the Alfred Heller • ·.:
mg a promiSSory note m the amount of $5,854.48. provided. ·
b~thers, C:harles of Reedsville and Heat Treating Company of
··.
Sutton Township Trustees
The Su~n Township Trustees
Millard ~ilson: address unknown.
Cliffton, NJ . He was a veteran of
l(
will meet on Monday at 7:30 p.m.
, Preceding hun m death was an lhe U.S. Navy and a member of the
i'
·~fant son, two brothers, and four Metal Polishers Union Local SA·
at the Syracuse Municipal Build·
Patchy ~ of snow caused trouble for some local motorists on
ing.
SistersF' I
..
. b h ld 28A in New York, N.Y.
.
·• .
Wednesday morning, according to the Meigs County Sherifrs DepanBesides his mother, he is sur: ;;;-·
. unera servtces WI 11 e ~
Three were fined on charges of .Fnday at 1 P•!"· at t~e Wh!te vived by a brother, Terry M. Jar·
menL
·
Racine council
ft
physical
control of a motor vehicle Funeral .home. 1~ Coolvtlle, .":•lh rell, of Pomeroy; a sister, Kate M.
Details on the fender benders were not available at press lime, but a
.•
Racine Village Council will while. under
the influence of alco· !"vang~hst Philhp Stenn offtctat· Potter, Goose Creek, S.C.; fou r
department spokesperson indicated that three accidents were being
meet on Monday at 7 p.m. at the
•1•·.
hoi
or
drugs
in
the
court
of
Middle·
investigated on the Route 7 bypass along with another on State Route
mg.
Fnends
mpy
call
at
the
funeral
nieces,
a
nephew
and
two
great·
Star Mill Park.
port Mayor Fred Hoffman Tuesday home Thursday fro"\ 2 t~ 4 P·~· nephews.
681. All four accidents are being blamed on this morning's snowy
roads.
.
.
night.
.,
Revival slated
and ·7 to 9_p.m. Burial will be 10
Besides his father, he was pre'i
Fined
$425
and
costs
and
sen·
,.
ceded in death by a brother, Bill
The Moun! Moriah Church of tenced to three days in jail on the the ReedsVIlle Cemetery.
God on Mile Hill Road in Racine charge were Dale R. Herman of Edward L. Tanner
Jarrell.
~·
will bold a revival March 4 through Middleport; Edward T. Holcomb of
Funeral
services
will
be
on
Frl·
Edward L. Tanner, 79, of day at 11 a.m. at the Birchfield ·!
The Meigs Cmmty Sheriffs Department investigated two !hefts and
10 with Evangelist Donald Stacey Ewington, and Charles H. Burton
&lt;'
a vandalism incident earlier this week.
39311
State Route 7. Reedsville, Funeral Home in Rutland with AI
at 7 p.m. nightly. Special singing of Middleport.
\I r
.
died Tuesday, Feb. 26, 199 i, at Hartson officiating.
Deputies took a repon on Saturday evening from Wendy Halar of
will be featured. Pastor Jim Satter·
;
·'
Others fined in the court were , Camden Clark Memorial Hospital
Cook R~ in Pomeroy, who reponed that lhe rear passenger,glass of
field
welcomes
everyolle.
Burial
will
be
in
Danville
~.t
r·
,
Dawna R. Grueser, ~acine, $10 in Parkersburg after an extended Cemetery.
her vehicle was broken out on Saturday afternoon, Halar reported that
'
.: '
and
costs , running a stop sign; illness.
·
.
she was parked at EaStern High School for a girl scciut meeting when
Friends
may
call
at
the
funeral
.
.
·
,..
Donald Steinmetz, Middleport, $50
the incident occured.
·
Born in Spencer, W. Va., he was home from 6 to 8 p.m. on Thurs''·
and costs, disorderly manner, and the son of the late Bowman W.
Nancy Young of King Ridge Road in Pomeroy rep&lt;irted on SaturRoben Scarberry, Middleport, $25
day.
~~
day afternoon tliat S(tilletime recently, a chain saw and various hand
and
costs,
no
operat6r:s
license.
tools were taken,
Robert Jordan, Apple Grove,
Dennis R. Hysell, Pomeroy, forSteven Barnett of Myers Road reponed that he had more 'copper
W. Va. was fmed on four charses feited
a $53 bond on a charge of
wire stolen from his property. He is tile operator of the Meigs Electric
when he appeared in the court of speeding.
·
Service and the win: stolen was old house wire that he had removed
Pomeroy Mayor 'Richard Seyler
' from some residences that he was re-wiring.
·
Tuesday nigh~
Jordan was fined $43 and costs
on a charge of assured clear dis·
· .tance, $63 and costs, driving lRider
Five calls for assistance were answered by units of Meigs County ' suspension, $375 and eosts. driving
Extended forecast
Emergency Medical Services on Tuesday.
·
·
Ullller the influence of alcohol, and
Mostly
fair Friday, and a chance
At 5:48 p.m., Racine squad went to Bucktown Jl.oad for Courtney
$263 and costs, leaving the scene of rain Sawrday
and Sunday. Highs
·]ones, who was taken to Holzer Medical Ce~ter. At 8:39 p.in,, Rutland
of an accident. Also fined in the will be in the 50s Friday, and rangsquad went to Main Street for Bernice Nelson. Nelson was taken to
court was Beverly Baylor, Gallipo· ing from the middle 40s to the
Holzer. At 8:43 p.m., Racine squad was sent ,.to State Route 338 for
lis, $47 and costs, speeding.
Marie Hayman. Hayman was taken to Vetersns Memorial HoSJli~. At
Forfeiting bonds on speeding upper 50s Satw;day, and Sunday.
10:04 p.m., Syracuse squads went to Pine Grove and Forest Run Roads'" '1 ' Cliarges..Were Harold Sargent, Mid· Overnight lows will be mostly in
.
for David Ferry, who refused treatment. At 10:28 p.m., Middll pbrt ' dleprot, $44; Dayid Gregg, Cam- the 3!1s through the period.
South
Central
Obio
,
squad went to Page Street for Ella Schultz, who was transported to
bridge, $47 ; Michelle Taylor,
Partly cloudy Wednesday nigh~
Vetelilns..
Pomeroy·, $48; Marie Mulforo,
with
a low between 25...and 30.
On Wednesday at 12:58 a.m., Chester f11e department went to
Gallilpolis, $43; Melvin Morris,
Partly cloudy Thlll'Sday, with highs
County Road 28 for a structure fire at lhe Hess residence, and returned
Pomeroy, $46, and Tony L. Wat· · between
55 apd 60.
at 1:59 a.m.
.,:
son, Gallipolis, $49. ·

.

night. missed a c1um&lt;:e to 'Win after time expired in '
regulation wllen Buck Williams missed a free lhrow. :
Knleu 112, Bullell 109 (20T) • At New Yorlc, ~
Palrick Ewing snatched a rebound from Pervis Elli· '
ence. . . . ,
son with 1eaa than lS ~ )eft and Gerald Wilkins :
Michael Jordan I!:Qred 39 poinu and lbe Bulla'
naileciiWO liee lhrows momenll latu to improve the :
Knil:ts' record to S-0 in overtime games. Ewing fin. :
SWIIDiiDJ defense limited the Booton Celtica, who
were a hllf-pme ahead or Oic:ago coming iillo lbe
ished with 30 points and 20 rebounds and Wilkins ·
game, to a dozen first-quarter points In a 129·99 . added 26 points. Bernard King Jed Washington with :
blowout.
44 points and 12 rebmmds. ·
,
Tlmbirwolves 100, Mavericks 94 • At Min- •
"We collapsed them physically," .Jordan said.
"We stole the ball; we blocked shots; we limited
Minn., Tyrone Corbin matched his season- ;
hi with 31 points and pulled down 11 re~nds_ to :
them 10 one sbot and made t!Jem take ),ump shOIS.
p the Timberwolves end a three- game skid. Min··,
.What more can you ask of your defease? '
nesota hit nine of its last 11 field goals over the fmal ~
The Bulls won their lOth IIJ!Iight overall and 19th
6:47,lellding Dallas to its fourth straight loss.
:
In a row at home, and at the lime m0¥ed oneNell
129,
Pacers
104
•
At
East
Rutherford,
N
J
.,
•
half ahead of the Celtics
for lint place in the·
EasLv--·
Derrick Col.eman scored 21 points, grabbed 13 j
"I think the BuDs treated this like. it was a playoff , rebounds and added seven. assists to stop Indiana's ,
six-game winning streak. Reggie Theus, playing in 1
game," Cellics head coach Chris Ford said. "They
his l,QOOih NBA game, and Sam Bowie each scored •
wanted to be Nn. 1 in tbe Bast, alid we were not
20 points for the NelS. Detlef Schrempf scored 21 :
ready to meet the challenge."
poiniS for the Pacers.
.
·
;
Scottie Pippen added 33 poiniS, including 13 in
the decisive and·lopaided opening c}uarter, which
CavaUers 106, Pistons 103 • At Richfield, Ohio, :
ended with Oticago ahead 33-12.
Larry Nance scored 2S points and Brad Daugherty '
"They 'ust set the tone from the beginning," said
added 20 to send the Pistons their third straight i
LarrY B~ wbo was held 10 12 poi.Jits and on)y five
defcal, The Cavalier$ converted 12 of 18 foul shots in
in the first half. "They hustled and got .all the loose
the fmal 2:24 to hold off Detroit. which got three .
balls. It just seemed as if everything was going their
sll'aight three-pointers from Dennis Rodman in the :
final S3 seconds.
:
Celtics, oni or the best road teams the
Bueki
119,
Heat
106
•
At
Miami,
Danny
Schayes
&lt;
ENTERING STATE TOURNAMENT. Ohio .
Beekley at AppalaeMan Bible Colep. The will·
league this season, dropped their third straigl)t away
scored
29
~ts
to
lead
the
Bucks,
who
buili
a
22l.
Valley Cluistlaa'a basketball team, ander the ·
aer will ad?uee to the 1t111e ~P'-Iblp game
game. Their offense was led by Kevin Gamble and
point lead m the seeond quarter that the Heat cut to I
.tutelaJe of Grell Atkins, the sueeesaor to
on Saturday at 1:30 p.m. Players oa thla year's
Dee Brown with 16 points apiece.
four in the third period before Milwaukee gradually :
WUHam Asbury (seeond from left In the bac:k
team ll'f '(L·R) Beaton Hall, G~ Wny,·Cbrls
Boston hit five of 20 field·&amp;oal attempts in the
pulled
away. Rony Seikaly, matched up against!
row), will beala WVCEA state tournament
Grallam, Du HID, Mike McCleese, Jelr Peavley, 1 first qualter, was outrebounded 11-9.and committed
Schayes
most of the night, fouled out with 6:14 to go, •
actloa oa Thursday at 8 p.m. a1a1Dst Greater
Jonatbaa Tuner, Jerry Baek, Matt Swain and
9
turnovers.
The
Bulls
harrassed
Boston
with
six
his
first
disqualification
of the season.
;
•
Matt Little. ,
steals and three blocks.
Soules 93, Clippers 81 • At Seattle, Sedale;
·~we just backed down," Ford said.
Threatt scored a season-high 31 points - including ·
Jordan scored 18 of his 28 fint.half poiniS in the
27 in the IWO middle period$ - to lead the SuJier · )
second qua11er, helping the BuDs increase their mar·
Sonics. Threatt made 12 of 20 field goal a,ttempts, '
gin to 28 seve!al times before halflinie.
··
'
most off his pull-up jumper from 15 feet The Clip- l
By llillled Preas IateraatiODal
its 62nd stiaight home triumph. Mi•oi•.m..i, 20-5, was led by Rus"It~as
a - t effort for our team because lhey
· pers had cut the lead to 76-69 with 6:35 to pl~y. but ~
Sixth·lllllked Syracuse has had The Wildcats, corning off Sunday's · sell-Johnson's
rr
were
.anCl hnn""',"
20 points.
- .... , Bulls "--'"
......,., Phil J·-'"·
two bllskets by Michael Cage and one by Eddie John- :
to con~Md witb more problems off double-overtime victory over
At Prinoerqn, NJ., Sean Jackson son said. "This team~ quick at home. They realSOD en&lt;Jed the threat
1
~court than on it this 11•an.
Duke, improved 10 23-S ovmill.
scored nine ofbis 13 poinls durin
ly eame out of the pre.
.
.
Roc:ketl 129, Nu111ets 99 ·• At Denver, Sleepy j
• Plagued by clwge1 of NCAA
At Lawrence, Kan., Mark Ran- 1 14-4 run that opened the
In oth.er gam~s, San Antomon mpped Portland
Floyd scored 40 poiniS to lead Houstoo to its third 1
tale• violations, the Orangemen dall, playins bis final game in half to pace.Prlnceton to Its 13th 102-101 !" overume..New York held off Washington
. strsight victory. Kenny Smith added 20 poipiS and ~
&lt;have battled many distractions, .Allen Field House, scored 2~ stralgbt vi:'tteKit Mueller added 112-109m twooverumes,Minraota~Dallas
Vernon Max"'ell 19 for the Roclcets, who have won •
deluding the liempoiay suspensioli pom
. ts for the J yha ks
·
16 poin •
·I r -.,;y ham · 100-94, New Jersey pounded Indianapolis 129·104,
12 of their last 15. Orlando Woolridge scored 30;
~r seva~ players earlier this season.
. . . I m!t m; ~thcr at the pious. IS •or
vy - - c
• Clevelan~ n!pped •Detrolt 106-103', Milwallltee
points and Michael Adams 25 for Denver, which has ; .
But they have succeeded in comer tunnel after the game, it hit
At Lexinston, Ky., Richie ~Miami 119·106, Seattle knDcted oft the L.A. , lost nino of iiS last 10.
remaining unaffected on the bas- me that this was my last~ after Farmer scored 16· points to help
93-81, Housron crushed Denver 129·99 and
Magie 13~, Warriors 119 • At Oakland, Calif., 1
j[etball eourt. Tuesday nipt. they bein~ here ·nve years,' Randall Kentucky become the second·
topped Golden Stile 131·119.
.
Dennis Scou matched his season-high with 35 points •
captured their first outright Big said 'It was the greatest live years school in NCAA history to win
Spurs 1~2, B~ ~01 (OT) • At 8,an AniOIIio,
and JeffJurner scored a career-high 28 to pace!
East regular-season championship of my life."
·
t,SOO games with its~ . Texas, Dayt~ R~l!ISOD s free throw wtth two
Orlando its fo)lllh road victory pf th~ year: Chris:
~th a 77-63 victory over ,VillanoDoug Collins had 26 points for Conference victory over Alabama. onds remJI!RIDI m overtime ~ tJM: Spun to tbeii:
Mullin, Tim Hardaway and Mitch Richmond scored:
va.
tbe Cyclones but center Victor North Carolina became the rust l,OOOth victory. Portland, which did not lead all
all the Warriors'IX&gt;iniS in the final quarter.
•
"With everything that's ~= Alexander, who averaged 23 .8 team to reach l,SOO wins with a
••
outside of basketball, we
e pcMnts a game, was limited to a sea- victory Saturday over Clemson.
it." said Billy Owens, who scored son-low 10.
,
Kentucky, 21-6 and 13-4, took a
~points and grabbed 11 rebounds.
At Tallaliassee, Fla•• Micliaer 70-61 lead oh a three-pointer by
f'We over-achieved in the regular Polite collected 21 points and 14 John P e = with 4:31 left.
By LISA HARRIS
St. Louis defense man Tom
~ets _5, Whalers_4
:
ieason.
.
rebQlRids q the Seminoles rallied Alabama
to 17-9111d 11-6.
·
UPI SporiS Writer
Tilley pulled doWn Chicago forAt Wmmpeg, Mamtoba, Ed •
' "People said we couldli't win it from a 16-point deficil Soutlierri
The St. Louis Blues relied on ward Michel Goulet on a break- Olczyk scored his 200th-career :
because we lost a couple of good
the usual scoring soun:e and the away and Goulet was awarded a goal and a:dded an. assist and the :
players. But we accomplished
unexpected goaltender Tuesday penalty shot at 3:10 of the first Jets held on agamst Hartf~rd. •
!IOIIIelhing. In the JliSt. we ve been
night to. claim a 3-1 lriumph ~ver period but miaaedjust wide left
Olczyk's ~3r~ g~al of the seasQ.n J
co- champions and we wanted to
the.
Chtcago
Blackhawks
1D
a
·
In
other
pmes,
Bulfalo
tied
the
cappe!_1 Wmmpeg s !Jtree·goal rirSt
&lt;
win it ourselves.''
showdown between the NHL's top New York fslancleq 1·1, Minneso- penod and t~e Jets.never tratled
Syracuse, which has shared the
IWO teams.
ta drew even 2·2 with PlliladeiDhia after Hanford s opemng goal.
regulilr-season crown four times,
Breu Hull scored his NHI..Iesd· Winnipeg held off Hartford 5-4 and
Klnp II, Pengulm l
improved to 2S-4 overall and 1J -4
TAMPA, Fla. (UPI)- Bill gotfreeorangejuiceandcereai.Hc ing69thgoalandrookieplteoder LosAngeleswhippedPitraburgh8At lnglewood • .Calif., Mike
in the Big East.
Veeck,
the
trailblazins
O'Miel' who 1\ired clowns and bestowed orchids
Pat
Jablonski
stopped 31 llhots in 2
Donnelly
fued in his second and
Villanova had. won three of the ·brought exvlodlng sc:orebollds and on female fans. '
an emeraency appearance and his
·
Sabres 1, Islallders 1
third goals of the sus on and
past four meeti~gs with the
a midf!:;:_ter to. baseball, and · His most famous antic came tint pme apinst the Blackhawts.
At Uniondale, N.Y., Dale Haw· Wayne GreiZiry added three asthesisl}
Orangemen, handing them their Tony
·
the
seeond
1Jucmu
Aug.
19,
1951,
when
be
aeai
Eddie
Jablonsld
entered
only
1:57
into
en:hut
scored a power-play goal to power Los Angeles. With
first loss of the year on Jan. S. But on the greatr~ew York Yankees Gaede! to pinch-hit for the St. the game after Curtis J.OIC))b hurt with 4911CC011ds
remaining in 11119• fifth straight victory, the Kings
s~ eame OUl 51rong Tuesday
teams
of
the
1920s
and
'30s,
Tues·
Louis
Browns.
Gaede!,
all
of
43
himSelf
llrek:hing
a
·le&amp;
to
block
a
lation
to
lift
B11ffalo
into a tie clinched a Stanley Cup playoff
mght. jiJ!I:IP.!ng to an early lead and day were elected to the Hall of inches and 65 po!!Dds, wore uni- sho~ Jablonslti.made ·several spec- against the Islanders. The
Sabres berih.
·
. Ion:ing VIllanova to junk iiS zone
·Fame
by
the
Veterans
Commiuee.
fonn
No.
1111
wbell
he
came
10
bat
tacular
includinJ
two point·
hive
fashioned
a
three·aame
··
rll'efense.
The IWO, both deceaaed, will be in 'the rust innins of the second ~~t!hlaots .b~..!JIOfined~y
~eremy unbeatea streak since a five-game
:!: "They had to play us man-to· inducted
July
21
in
Cooperstown,
game
of
a
do!lble-beader.
"""".....
m
u"'
t
·
win1els llkid. The Wanclm, whose
m11,n and when a team plays us
·N.Y.
,
the
site
of
the
Hall
of
Fame.
.
The
umpires
hailed
play
but
SL
Jablonski
had
an
·4.
NHL
ownen
put the team up for sale
6aan·to-man, if we're patient, we
They will enll:r .the shrine with .Rod Louis Manaaer Zack Taylor · record ~ had not played With the Tuesday, fell to 0-3·1 in their last
G'jlll get som~ easy shots," said
Carew, Gaylord Perry and Fersu~ showe4 lhCm an American League Blues smce Dee, 18, 1989. He was four games while blowing Glenn
Owens.
son
Jenkins, who were elected last contract Oaedel signed the clay · C!illed up Ill! Feb. 19 from the.Peo- Healfs shutout bid.
Villanova head coach Rollie month
by the Baseball Writers' before. Gaede! drew a walk, but ~ (Ill.) Rtverme.n when Vt.cent
Nortlt Stars-2, Flyers 2
Massimino said be was impressed
Association
of~erica.
that
was
biJlone
plare
IJipeii'IIICC
Riendeau
suffered
a
pulled
grom.
At
Bloomington, Minn., Neal
with Owens.
We guaranlee your saris·
Among
those
who
were
consid·
AL
Prelident
Will
HmiiJie
St.
Louis
Is
_12,-3'
in
its,
last
lS
Broten
acored with 69 seconds left
"Billy Owens had to get 11s
faction . And our experi7
2
once," he said. "I watched Billy ered by the VetaaDJ Committe but the contract, asying Gaede! was games and • m •ts last_mne. ~ in regulalion to lift the North Stars
ence
in prepa.rin~ complete
play 30 or 40 limes in high school, failed to receive 7S ~t of the "pot in the best lateresu of base· Blues, who have won their las!-I\UIC into a tie against Philadelphia,
and
ar.curate
ta x returns will
"~:Otes were Wes Ferrell, Nellie Fox; ball "
home games, lead the NHL wtth 8S despite Flyers goalie Ken
going up and down the turnpike.
give
you
peace
of mind.
Veeck enjoyed his greateSt sue- points, !h- more.duu! ~Black· Wregget's 42 saves. The tie
· "I even found a (_ood Italian JoeGordonandLeoOurocher.
of the 18 members of cess in Cleveland from 1946·49. hawks In .th~ N~s DiVISIOn. ~ extended MinnesOta's unbeaten
restawant in Carlisle (Pa.). He's a theSeventeen
Veterans
Commitcce voted. A The Indians, who hadn't won a Blu~s trailtn thetr season. sertes slrelk at horne to eight games (6-0HIRBLOC!
wonderful young man and he's
playerneeded
13\'0ieS'forelection.
pennant
since
1920,
captured
the
aguuth
Ch_iC!Igo,
3·2-l
wtth
two
2).
Wregget
has
allowed
only
lS
Amerlea'• Tu THm -:-- Pw1 u• 10
going to be I great player IOIIIeday,
The
cornmitcce
is
made
up
of
forWorld
Series
In
1948
and
let
a
club
games
remammg.
The
Blackhawk&amp;
goals
in
his
last
six
games.
He
worlt for you!
not that he's not a great collegian
2 last Sunday blocked three shots each from ex·
HOURS:
Mon.
thru Fri. 91m·8 pm
mer
players,
executives
and
media
attendance
record
of
2.6
.nillion
'
m
~~
·
Blues
6now." .
Silt,
8
om·ll pm
~·-v·
Flyer Brian Propp and three from
Syrae• head cu.ch Jim Boe· members. The full vote was not that llilllll!ldl
POMEROY
818 E. MAIN ST.
!lisc!OIIed. ·.
.
Veeck leMd with the Mari!les
The Bladchawks are 3·2·2 in~ Briln Bellows. For the IJI!IIle, ~n·
beiJD llid
is improving.
992-8&amp;74
layers-on the commit· In the P1cif1c AnoiA. World W• u las~ seven games and are 0-4·1 m nesota OUIIhot Philadelphia 44-21.
"Billy's been consistent all •-The "'e~-W'lliam
S M'"'"'"'
!hell' last five road games.
1
ear," be said. "The ball comc:a to ""'are ''
· s, tan - · H_o ~~~ severely lnjtlred ,and had
Hull and Cliff Ronning scored
~im even if lie missea a shot or Billy Herman, Monte Irvin, AI Ju~htleg amputa!ed m 1946, fll'St·period power-play aoa1s and ~.,......,..,..l'oll...,...,...,..,...~.....,ll-'l5"'oolio4".,...,.1A:-.I.A',....~
IWO. He's hiUing the 'J' this year.
sh
y after llyndtcate led by Geoff Courtnalladded ibe insurLast year, be wasn't getting that
Veeck, who was born in Hins- Veeck ~t the Indllns. He IOld ance score midway thrnush the
1
many 1hots. He gets better every dal nl and died .
the IndiaN after the 1949 season, third pen'od
year. "
e, .,
m 1986 at age purchased .the Browns in 1~1 and
In the seConcl -""' the BlackThe loss eroded Villanova's
sold than m 1953.
hawks outshot
13-3.
chances of making the NCAA
the
soul
of
a
circus
pitchman.
Tournamenl The WildcaiS·fell to
"There - • time the establish·
14·12 overall and 7·8 in the Big ment
wasn't very happy with Bill
East. with one game remainina, at because
some of his innovations
Providence on Satprday, before were ahead
time," said
next :week's conference tourna- Allen Lewis,ofatheir
toM
former
baseball
ment
writer
and
a
Veterans
Co111mittee
·
and
"I still feel we have an oppcrtu· · member. "But this is a great many
nity," Musilpino said. "nils is a years later."
difficult league. We played the
man with an aversion to neckcountry's sixth-ranted team tough ties,A Veeck
his stunts to
infJite you to 11ttend
and goa a loa. We've beaten aome Milwaukee, brought
Cleveland, St. Louis
and we're going to and Chicago. He employed brass
IIIII have a c'-ce to be bands, shot fireworks and held
8-8 in the Jeague...
mornins games at which spectaton
At the new chamber office
In other top 2S aames, No. 3
200 Ea!t Second Street··
Arkansas belted Baylor 106-74,
No. S Arizona clobliered Stanford
Pomeroy, Ohio
',DR INI, v~tliY [INIMA
.19-51, No. 9
pummelled
~ 1: .'l
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Iowa StaleU- 57, Florida State
Friday, March 1, 1991
. . . . No.l6. ¢ I tofte h i&amp;'Jii
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6 or hla 22 points 10 lift Arizona to

The Dally SenUnet-Page 5

A Shade woman was ~ited for -ofeenll:rintothepalhofacrossing
driving left of center Tuesday f~· car. The second car, driven by
Vetel'IDS Memorial Hospital
nJBSDAY ADMISSIONS • v;"""ne Elberfeld Racine' and Loshia ' lowing an I!CCident Cll State Route Roger J. SJ?aun, Jr., 4!1, of Vine
Mitchell, MidcD
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~treet, Rac10e, was struck in the
. Pamela D. Wbaley, 18. of SR Jeft,lUIIltingin lightdatnage.
nJBSDAY
: Marie Norris and John W. Call.
N 'lherdri
· ·.......
68 1, was ct'ted after she polled
e1
ver was mJ ..uu.
from ,a private drive and drove left

•

Chicago pounds Boston 129-99

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Local news briefs---, Woman cited after wreck
Hospital news

Wedneeday, February 27, 1991..

In the NBA Tuesday night,

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: WASHINGTON (UPI)- Mole immediate decimation, only to
!han 11ere dlttrust, President figbt another day or in another war.
Blish 's icy rejection of Iraq's
Rcftal. Bush and othen noted,
promise to leave Kuwait reflected a was not surrender. And U.S. omkey Sllalegy of destroying • much cials had fully expected Sadd!MI\ to
of Saddam Huaeln's -.machine · try any number of diplomatic and
as possible before he cries uncle. .
miliwy gambits to escape with
First and,foremost.. the ~ SOII)ething short of the hwnilialiul
of Operation Desert .Stoi'Jil has '·and total capitulation demlnded by
been to reverse lhe lraqa OCCIIPIIion the United States. .
and restore tlic ruling al-Sabah .
But Bush and his senior advisers
family 10 power in KuwaiL
also cited compelling strategic rea.. But neuttalization of the Iraqi sons - projected beyond the CJII'·
military threat, now and ~or the rent fiShting - to stay on the
·tuiUre, bas been an. equally unpor- auack until a decisiVe end cementtant, if sometimes unstated, objlc- ' ed in full Imqi compliance.witll the
·tive of lhe UQiled States and some . demands of a dozen U.N. resoluof its coalition allies sil)ce Iraq's dons.
.1\ug. 2 invasion of Kuwait.
. For one, lhe fonnidable Rq&gt;ub; While an 'allied victory seemed IU:an Guard, -which numbered
Assured if not immiQe"'t. there were lSO,OOO troops before almost six
valid tactical considerations behind weeks of pounding by B-52
the early U.S. skepticism, not the bombers, had been posiuoned iii
least of which was baltlefaeld cau- southern Iraq and therefore unaf- .
lion.
.
fected by anr pullout from Kuwait.
•: Without conclusive evidence of The unceruun ·future of about 150
· Jraqi motives, the allies WCI): )eft to Iraqi warplanes that fled to Iran
wonder whether the Iraqis were also raised questions about how
leaving Kuwait in crue defeat, as a much of Saddam's military might
tuse to regroup or mere,IY to avoid escape ~tiim.

COLA
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r----------r·=-~

•I

27 1991 '

The

U.S. policy: Destroy Iraq's army

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Bush bas drawn legal Justification for hill broader _. 811111 from
aU. N. mandale thai aulhorized lhe
usc of forte not only to eject IQq
from Kuwait, builD "restom international peace and security in lhe

area."

Secretary of. State 1ames Baker..
said ·sunday that fulfillment of all
lhe U.N. objectives "would be a
heck of a lot easier" if Saddam,
·.whose megalomaniacal aims at
regional domination sparked the
crisis, was removed from pOwer.
Though the means were left unstated, Bush exhorted lhe Iraqi IJe&lt;lple
to ovenhrow Saddam while echoing the view of British Prime Minister John Major that he "would
not weep" if Saddam became a
casualty of war. ,
·
Given Saddam 's ruthlessness
and cunning, Bush and Co. recognize those outcomes, however
desirable to the West and to Iraq's
neighbors, may be wishful thinking. As a result, the war bas been
prosecuted - to use the adminislnllion' s term of choice - to leave
Saddam militarily emasculated in

the event of his pOlitical slll"iival.
That was the impetalive behind
early attacks on Iraq's nuclear,
chemical and biological weapons
facilities and its industrial base: to
suip Saddam of the ability to
recover and rearm in the aftermath
of military defeat.
·
As the war progressed Tuesday
toward what most foresaw as an
·allied roqt, con~sional leaders,
'even some origmally reluctant to ·
give Bush a green light for war,
agreed thar Saddam. if not
removed. would have to be left ·
weakeoed for the long lerm.
.
"Saddam Hussein will be p!'tsiding over a country whose infrastructure is destroyed, whose mili•
tary capacity has been ruined,
whose capacity to wage offensive
war is over," said House Speaker
Tom J:oley, D-Wash.
,
."It is largely over now," he told
~eporters after meeting with Bush
at lhe Whire House. "And perhaps
the most severe treatment of Sad118m Hussein might be to ask him
to explain to his own people what
the policies were that brought them
IIi this ruinous part and condition."

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'' SACRAMENTO, Calif. (UPI) the north Sacramento neighbor- been slow since the pizza parlor you? Do you need help? Are _you
:... A "thrill killer" who struck on hood where lhe victims
shot . murders several doors away.
enjoying killing people? If no~ let
·successive Tuesdays broke off the tO death, elleculion style, during
"Every time someone you don't us help you stop. You·~ destroying
'string of 10urders after the Sberiff's robberies.
know comes in, you wonder, is this the lives of irincx:ent people. You
·Department mounted a massive
LL Ray Biondi, who is heading the one?" she said.
can't hide. You will be caughL An
·
manhunt and appealed to him to the manhunt, said the deputies were
of investigators are even now
Barbara Knapschafer, a clerk at
stop the execution-Style slayings.
assigned to the area ''to be pre- the Deli Yogurt, said she was getung closer and closer to you.''
! The killer shot six people to pared" for 1111other auack.
Biondi said more than 30 possirobbed a couple of months ago "so
~eath during robberies on the same
The .Guardian Angels also. I've been paranoid"
ble suspects have been checked out
night of lhe week at the same hour patrolled the areawhere tile slayStandmg beneath a video imd 15 of them were cleared.
- until Tuesday nighL
. mg8 occurred 10 look for anylhmg surveillance camera in the shop, ·
The first three victims, two
"The so-called thrill killer did suspicious and help ease the jitters she said, •'I hope he does try some- clerks and a customer, were slain at
not strike (Tuesday),'' sheriff's of local biiSiness people.
. thing tonight, and they're right on a Quik-Stop market Feb. 12. A
Sgt. Lena Derheim Slid. ·
.
week later, two college students
"Every business we've checked hisbuu." '
• But neilher did he surrender, as with, they're frighlened. Their cusNo witoesses survived the slay- and a 30- year-old woman were
authorities appealed to him to do, tomers are frightened,'' said ings, but detectives believe the gunned down at the Round Table
l)erheim said.·
Christopher Ford of th~ Guardian killer is a man 20 to 40 years old Pizza parlor where they aU worked.
• "No suspcc!S were developed or Angels.
I
Investigators believe they are
who lives in the neighborhood.
lrrested," she said.
· ·
The Angels· disuibuted 1,000
All six victims were shot wilh hunting for someone who kills for a
; Gov. Pete Wilson on Tuesday fliers saying, "Warning: Thrill the same weapon, a small caliber thrill, rather than just for money.
added $50,000 to a reward fund for killer beware. The Guardian handgun.
BOth robberies and all six murinfonnation leading 10 the arrest of · Angels have a thrill for you. You
B1ondi issued an appeal Tues- ders occurred about II o'clock on
jhe killer, boosting lhe total reward better hope the police catch you day to the killer to end the slayings. Tuesday nights in businesses about
to $75,000.
before we do. ••
"Have we misunderstood your a mile apart. Each had only three
, Investigators "in immense
people on the premises and the
Carol Rogers, a bartender at The . actions? Was there something
force"· Tues~y were assigned to Glacier Lounge, said business has about these people that threatened
amounts of money taken were
small.

2LB.

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla.
(UPI) - NASA managers appear
split over whether to launch the
shuttle Discovery without fliSI fixing cracks in critical hinges and
sources say a rollback to the hangar
for repairs re~ns a strong possibility.
.
Discovery and its seven-man
crew are tentatively schedqled 10
blast off on the year's fust shuttle
mission at 3:49 am. EST on March
9 to kick off an eight-day "Sw
Wars" research mission.
• A final decision on whether to
clear Discovery for takeoff as is or
whether to roll the shuttle back to
the hangar for time-consuming
iepairs is expected Friday at the
~onclusion of a two-day flight
readiness review at the Kennedy
Space Center.
• Despite optimism earlier'this
Week that Discovery could be safefy Iauncbed with911t liking lime to
(ix tbe cracks, sources said engiaeers and manaaers appeared 10 be
lplit over lhe issue at a teleconference Tucaday. .
·
·
, Only two options are available:
launching Discovery as is or haulillg it off the lail!q pad. National
A-eronautics and Space Administrallon IJI8IIII&amp;CI1 ruled out aaanpting
an on-the-launch-llad replir job.
• One agency olficial who tUtend-

ed the meeting said he thought the Shaw, chainnan of NASA's 'misBut the crack issue remained an
decision uliimately would be to roll sion management team, inspected open item at the teleconference
Disc!)vcry back to the hangar, a the cmcks and agreed Tuesday that Tuesday with engineers and man- ·
move that would delay launch until it appeared Discovery could be agers asking for additional data to
after. an earl~ April flight by .the launched on schedule, sources said resolve lhe matter once and for all.
shuttle Atlanus.
"I wouldn't think the system
would be ~trong or confident
enough 10 go ahead and go for
launch over the objections of a reasonably large number of people,"
COLUMBUS. Ohio (UPI)- against women's health clinics
he said.
·
The president of the Ohio National being waged in our stale capital,"
But lhe issue is far from' clear Organization for Women has called she said.
"With two .clinics having been
cut and in any case. No final deci- on Gov. George Voinovich to consions were expected until after lhe demn the "anti-abortion war" born bed, it is time for Gov.
flight readiness review.
Voioovich' ID speak out against terbeing waged in Columbus.
"I think we're kind of on the
Phyllis Carlson-Riehm of Cuya- rorist tactics on the home front,"
fence righr now," chief asttonaut hoga Falls. in a statement released she said.
Daniel Brandenstein told United Tuesday,'called on lhe governor's
Carlson-Riehm said women
Press International. "It'll JIIOI!ebly office to ait;l in the solution to the have the legal right to.obtain birth
come down to lhe (flight readlness . bombing&amp; of two women's health control, abortion and other reproreview) where all the data really clinics in two weeks.
ductive health care procedures and
comes together."
· ·
"Reproductive health care ser- the only ones without the rights 10
The concerl! centers on two ·vicell are not only legal, they are act are anti-abortion forces.
cracks found in lhe hinge assem- needed on a daily basis by thou"It is clear by the actions of ,
blies of two SO-square-inch fuel sands of women," she said. "The these anti-abortion activists that~
line doors in the beDy of the shuUie professionals who operate clinics anti-abortion movement is 1)01 ~­
that must close properly after have the right to provide services fident that abOrtion will be elimilaunch to permit a life ~ntry into and to conduct business like any nated by using Jepl channels," she
Earth's atmosphere.
said. •'it is clear ihat they will go to
other health care facility."
Dan Germany, a shuUie project
any
lengths to reach their $081 of
wOn behalf of the ~o National
no
choice
for Ohio's women."
ofllcial. laid
wilh the · Organization for Women and ,its
shuttle Colambia in
Discov- 7,000 memben, I call on Governor
~while, three fedelal ~·
ery could be llfely lauached with- Oeorge Voinovich to condemn cies have ol'fcred their asaiJtance in
out fUll fixing the cracks.
publicly the anti-abortion war solving the bombings (!f the two
Former astronaut Brewster
clinics.
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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

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- My husband gets
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for tbese'IIOI'es? J
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ANSWER - It is hard to pve
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~Ylipsou S&amp;Jand
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The Daily Sentinel
The Gallia Twirlers· Western
Square Dance Club will hold a
dance Salurday rrom 810 ,, p.m .•
the Hencknon Community Center
in Henderson, w. Va., Caller will
be John Waugh. All WCSICm style
square dancers are invited to
anend.
Johf\ C. Wolf, D.O.
.
1
~ssociate Professor
The Royal Oak o.te Club will
of Family Med1.·cine
bold its fint dance the. ·,, .... Saturday night from ~ 10 1{~-in. at
Royal Oak Ruqn. Mll&amp;ic~.will be
by the Gcy Stewart Quintet:.
necessary to study the cells The capsule form II the medication .
Al!ld..'7
, ·
obtained from a sore u!lder a Clll be taken by mouth or 1he ointThe Wcmen'a Auxililry Vetmicroscope or to perform a cui~ matt form can be applied diRctly enos Memorial Haspililliu taken
to establish the diagnosis. Cuilllres to the infected stin."i suggest that on the ptoject of pw•t Pna emerare usually reserved for the occa- your husband see his doctor and genc:y TOCID and lniiii!Shecqn unit
sions when the other methoda doa't aak about :Wvirax if he hal more equipment COllin&amp; $6,800. · . ·
give your doctor enough informa- than an episode or two of HSV
"lltm'ng recendy in' the hosjlilll
lion to mate an adeql!lte diagnosis. infectiOns each year.
conference rooln, the group vpled
QUESTION - What can be
·
to ··'"eon· the ""'"""t after Scott
done to hesl the SOI'CJ? · · · . '
· "FU!Uy M~ 1!1.1 ......
.... ·
.--r.
AII!SwER • The prescription·'; .col•mn. To submit q•estlo;'i,
medication acyclovir- markf:ted ' wrlteto.JoluiC. Wolf,D.O.,Oblo ·theneedforthecquipnenL
under the brand name Zovirax - is Uuwnlty ColleBe or Osteopatlak:
In memory of Bertha Parker, a
effective at reducing the severity Medldne, Gronenor Hall, chartcrmemberofthe-ni,.,;,
and frequency of HSV infections. Atlaens, Oblo 45701.
$25 was tn.nsfcrred

•1v
amt
F
J_
Me'dt' ct'ne

.
episodes of cold sores and fever
blisters each year. These often
seem to be brought about by such
factors as emotional stress, irritatioli to the lips, certitin foods, and
conditions that weaken the imnnine
syllmt. A bumins or,ik:hing sensalion usually pux-ads the development of the blisters.
QUESTION - How can my
husblnd find out for sme wlw kind
of infection he has?
ANSWER • If it is in HS V
infection, the fluid from a ~lister
conlains the virus. Doing a culture
of this blister fluid can prove that
the infection is caused by HSV.
Unfortunately, these cultures are
expensive and take three to seven
days 10 grow. In many cases, your
· doctor can make a fairly adequate
diagnosis from the history of tbe
sore and the appearance of tbe
affected skin, but occasionally it is

or

or

•· J;:fJ:;, =~~~=

rn;"ihe-;;;:

, ~ Depression boosts risk of dying Middleport Arts Council ~;gr~~:~!
among elderly, study shows
~~pelain~~ ss~lkFlo f1ower cl~s.ses -~~~:.::~=

I
. Gnx:ery .20

Frozen 30

'

•

4 Roll Pkg.

•

¥2 Ga.l. Carton

Bathroom
·Tissue,

.Mega
•

Your Choice of Varietilei

arm

WASHINGTON (IJI,&gt;I) ~ palien!S also tended to i!c
Depressed nursing home patients Sl.....,r
·
. awe- more likely.'ll·llie tltim ~
" The biologiCal processes that
who arc not depresSed, indicating · account for th'lslare unknown,"
· m&lt;l'e needs to be done to ctiqnooe tbey wrote in the Journal of .the
and treat such patieOts, n rrdlers American Medical AssociatiOn.
reponed Tuesday.
But "immune function in elderly
A study involving 4S4 patients deplasive -tients is known to be
admitted ID eiglll nursing homes in altered and may predispose to
the BllliJn&lt;n mea ;from February infection IIIII death." ·
1987 10 March 1988 found those
The findings are importlnt
·- who were suffcrin1 from ....._._ becaUIC depression is a trea11ble
sion were 11t01e ~Y ID die-~ibin condition, and therefore the death
one year.
1
'
I
rate of nursing h,orne patients
Among the: S1 Jpatienta diag· ·. potentially co. ul.d be reduced if
· nosed -"""
· .......
A,........_"
WWI ....._
-1"-SIVe
._,
DIOI'C pllicnts with ~ssion wm
47.4 plltelltc~ within I~ . di~P'S"4 and treateiJ, they IBid.
. - comJ!ared to a : percent 1
Currendy, there arc an estimated ·.
rate linong the 82 patienu with 1:5 million Americans in nursing
depressive S)'l1ltii.Qiils IIIII 29.8 per· · borne, and thai number is exiJ!!Cted
cent death lllle 1,t11ong the ~- to c!ouble in the next 30 ycus.
ing 3JS subjects with no~ Based on the findings, the
sym~ the reaeardlers ll8id. 1
resean:hers estimated that 450,000
l1te death rate remained higher nursing home·patients suffer from
even after Dr. Barry·Rovner fL the depression or have: symptoms of
Jofhns HoJ.*ins University SChOOl depressioo.
·
o Medicme and his colleasues
Men research is needed 10 conadjosted for the fact that t~e

M(lrshall

bi~tth

Mr.' and Mrs. Charles (Pam)
Marshall, Reynoldsburg, are
announcing the birth of their fint
child, a daughter. Ashley J.orden,
on Feb. 19 at SL Ann's Hospital in
Westerville.

Dairy 29

64 oz. Btl.
Liquid Laundry

Detergent

•
IS

64·oz. Ctn.

Food Club·

Orpng¢

18 oz. Box

IJh·Box

Breakfast of Champions

Nabisco
Saltine

General Mills

The infant weighed five pounds
and 13 ounces and was 19 inches
long.

Maternal grandparents are Frank
and Ruth Powers, Middleport.
Paternal grandparents are
Charles and Ruby Marshall, Hemlock Grove.
Maternal great grandmother is
Grace Pratt, Middleport.

Harrisonville happenings

·Johnson in OSU
nursmg program

Right to Read Week set

Women in Mining conference
set for April in Columbus

From Concentrate

Juice .:.·

announced

• orre 1zmg
wers, ll . 'SUSIIII Saker willmstruct a class ees visitors and any or the patients
firm the results "and to fin'd the class offe~d by the ¥iddlepon . at the arts council on maldng Eaijer · w~ arc abl~ 10 attend
. ·
best ways· to treat these patients, " ' Arts Counctl •.to IUf!l sdk flQ1Vers • Bunnies on March.16 at 1 P:m ,
A r mrilage saie was planned
the lae&amp;I'Chcrs said.
mto porcelam, Will be l~ught ~Qst of the clas• !S $20 wh1ch for ear~ sPring and thc .next meek
March 4 a~~ 11 at 7 p.m. m the . mcludea all supphcs. Call. Ms. lng was set for March 19 at 1:30
Arts Counctl s chamber.
, Baker at 992-7733 for more inforat the hospital
·
Michelle Garretson will be the mation.
·
p.m.
· '
.
instnJC!Ilr and the cost is $22 which
On April 10 a hand painted colStar Gnnse . ·
includes all supplies except paint lar class will be .held at 7 p.m. with
Slat Grange 778 and Slat Junior
brushes. For more information call Marilyn Meier, instructor. The cost Grange 878 will meet in regular
742-2157 or 992-2675.
of this class is $15 and preregistra- session on Saturday, '7:30p.m. at
Ms. Garretson will also be tion is required by April 5. For the Gnmge llalllocaiCd on County
teaching slate painting on April I more information call 992-5983 oc Road 1 near Salem ~enter. Vegand the cost of this class will be 992·2675.
etable soup and chili will be SCI'Yed
$11.
- following the. meetins: Members
~ ISked to take ingredients to mix
into the soup.
. .
Clliellen noodle dinner
A chicken and noodle dinner.
will be served by the ways and
Mts. Russ Eshelman 'visited the liouse she vacated is now occumeans committee of Evangeline
Nellie Lowe at O'Bleness Hospital pied by Rev. Earl Fields and fami~
Chapter 172, Ordet of the Eastern
when she had her recent knee ly. The house was owned for many
years by Bud and Pes Douglas.
~lat. Friday from II ~· io 7 p.m.
surgery.
'
KELLY R. JOHNSON
Mrs. Lori Pattersoo and infant
m the basement of·the Masonic
Mr. and Mrs. Ronnie Wilt. Lancaster, visited Orville and Mildred son, of Rutland, spent a recent Temple.. The menu will include
chicken·and noodles,,.green beans
Phillips and attended the funeral of afternoon at the home of Duane
•
and Hazel Stanley.
I!!L
· cole slaw, rolls, pic ,ind beverage$
an uncle.
Mr. and Mrs. Orville-Phillips at $3 a plate. Tbe dOter is open to
Ron and Rhonda ~ Whittaker
and ,daughter, of Otway, visitor her attend~d a wedding shower for · the public for either'eat·in or~­
Kelly Renee Johnson, daughter graric!mothcr, Lula Belle Eshelman. Greg VanMeter and Shirley OUL
of V.Kay Burney and granddaughrlrs. Helen Boggs has moved McDonald at the Rutland Church
ter of Goldie Ingles, has been into her new trailer m Pageville and ofChriSL
·
accepted' into the Ohio State Universuy for a four year !enn in nursing.
.
She .is currently employed at
Veterans Memorial Hospital in the
DI.VERS
Meigs County schools next schools participating. This year's ·
Extended Care Facility.
of Honor Award ceremony
EDUCAnou
· After graduation from Meigs weelc will join children from over Medical
will
be
May
14.
·
n
Ohio
in
!he
celebmtion
of
the
Ohio
High School in May, her fall quarIn 1.990 over one million stuCUSSS STAlnNG
ter at O.S.U. will begin in Septem- Department of Education's 14th
annual
Ohio
Righi
to
Read
Week,
dents
from
2,300
schools
in
all
MARCH 4, 1991
ber and she will specialize in
March4-8.
school
districts
representing
all
of
neonatal nursing.
·
GAWPOUS I POMIIOY
While schools constantly rein' Ohio's 88 counties participate in
' force .!he value of reading, special the Right to Read program, accord- . .. ·
446·0699.
acttvtttes are planned for Ohio ing'to the s!a!e superintendenL
Right to Read Week to give read·
ing added emphasis.
"Reading 18 a basic, yet critical,
skill necessary 10 succeed in life1950 regarding the ~ific realities long learning •and employment,"
said State Superin!endent of Public
of coal town women s lives.
Theme for the Saturday sessions Instruction Franklin B. Walter.
will be "The Ohio Connection" and "This,program emphasizes the
featlired will be several presenta- value of reading skills, while
tions including a panel on clean demonstrating that reading can be
coal technology. Presenters will fun." Walter said.
•
Special reading activities will
include Michael J. Mudd, Principal
Engineer, AEP Service Corp. , include read-a-thons, bookmaking,
Howard Couch, manager of Envi- book fairs, young author confer•
ronmenlal Affails and Special Pro- ences, and classroom visits frotn
WITH FIIES-••••$2.24
jects, Ohio Edison Co., and John famous authors. Many schools wUI
Jones, vice president, ProJect Man- be inviting parents and communit)'
agement and Construction, AEP residents to participation in aclivJ·
Service Corp. The luncheon speak- ties with students and the school
,
er will be James F. McAvoy, exec- staff.
The Ohio Depanment of Educa·
utive director, National Coal Coun- ·
lion
gives a Reading Hall of Fame
cil and fonner Ohio EPA director.
certifiCate
10 schools that particiInformation on registering ' for
pate
in
a
minimum
of three reading
the convention is available from B.
activities
and
give
a Medal of
Pike, 34S4 Shell CL, W., Columbus
Honor
Award
to
districts
with all
'Oh., 43213, (Phone ~14-864-2430).

\ The fint annUal national

con~

vention of Women in Mining will
be held Aprill8-21, at the Quality
Hotel City Centre in CQ,Iumbus
with the Southern Ohio Coal Co. to
. be prominent on the program of

Busy Bee class
has recent meeting

tours and seminars.
·
"Colli and Electricity - The Ohio

Conneclion" is the overall !heme of
the ,convention. Several field trips
aa 'fell as educational seminars
Freda Edw~ hosted t h e - hive been sc:heduled. lni:luded in
meeting of the Busy Bee Class of the field trips are a tour of the
the Middleport First Baptist Coilelville Generaling Sration and
Church.
Pooch Brewer presided at the Prep Plant hosted by Columbus
Sou)hem l'o'fCI' Co., and a 10ur of
meeting with opening J,IT&amp;Yer by an
underground mine in Meigs
Elizabeth Slaven. Devotions were ·
County,
hosted by the Southern
by Freda Edwards and scripture
OhioCoa!Co.
.
was from Matthew with subject,
J.
F.
Tompkins,
vice
president
"With 111 Eye on Humor."
and
general
manager,
Southern
Roll call waa responded with a
Ohio Coal Co., Meiss Division,
bible verse.
Refreshments were served by will be on the WIM-Ohio panel,
Freda Edwards to the following along with Shaune Skinner, presimembers: Elizabeth Searles, Pooch
Brewer, Beulah White, Dorothy
Evans, Ruth ~bach, Nora Jor- ~"'"i"ICurator, Ohio Historidan, Elizabeth Slaven, Lillian cal Society. The panel discussion
will lite place on April21.
Demosky and Betty Gilkey .
11111 evCning thae will be banquet with ·:a presentation entitled
"The Othtt Half Speaks: ReminisWigals return West
cences of Athens County Coal '
- Town Women· from 1900 ro 1950."
Tech. 'sgt. and Mrs. Chester
paenution is the result of a
Wigal Jr. and cbildren, Mrs. This
project by the Ohio University
Richard Berry and' S.Sgt. Daniel Women's
Program to
Berry have returned to Air Force expm 1oca1Studies
history
from
1900 to
bases in Utah and Tucson, Ariz.
after visitins with telatives during
the death of their mother, Thelma
• Berry.

Special of the Week!

FISH TAIL

$1 ·.54

ADOLPH'·$ DAIRY VALLEY

~t~~~:tnicesR~':i;:

.
Umlt 1 Box With Coupon 1nd Addlllonll PIA'CIIIM (excluding 1tem1 prohibited by llw)
V111d thN Slturday, Mln:h 2,,11t1
·

STUDENT SIZES 25-30
BOYS &amp; GIRLS
SIZES 0·14

. JEANS
VIIY LAIGI smc:noN
lB I LEVI
,

HEAVY

MIEIGS
ATHLETIC SOCKS
lEG. SJ,99

30°/o OFF
1 •ca SAnn 101
LAa IP

LADIES
WEAR

WORIIOOTS

SIASOIIAL

BLACK OR BROWN

USED
DIYEIS,

Sl ~·

NOW

50°/0;0FF .

30°/o OFF

117~~~!:!~
IGIISc I

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·-·

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--~_._ ... _ . _ _ _ _

Dally Sentinel

· - ·-¥ . . .

·~---

. -

..· - - - '

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

wednesday, February 27, 1991

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Community calendar

Public Notice

••

•
Commulty Calendar items
•ppqr two ~ before Ul event
ud tile dlly 't bat event. Items
mllll be received weD in lldvaiiCe
to aaure publialioo iD tbe calen-

•

lhe public.

•

THURSDAY
RACINE - A s'ffeport group
meeting for lhose a ected by the
Gulf War will meet Thursday at 7
~m. at the Racine United
elhodist Church.

, LONG BO'ITOM - Jerry Cotterill, Palestine, W.Va., will be at
ibe ML Olive Community Church
in Long Bottom on Wednesday 817
p.m. Pastor Lawrence Bush invites

MIDDLEPORT - The Middleport Youth League Organizatino
will hold its ftrst meeting to elect
officers for the 1991 ball season·on
Thursday at 6:30 p.m. in Middlepon Council Chambers. Public is
tiivited. Call Gene Wise at 9926224 for informatiOn. ··

liar.

. '

WEDNESDAY
' POMEROY - Wildwood Gar(lcrl Club will meet Wednesday at I
p.m. 81 the home of Peggy Moore.

POMEROY -The Meigs Coonty Women's FeUowship wiD meet
Thursday at 7;30 p.m. at the Zion
Church of Christ where a fashion
show ~¥ill be pr=nted on biblical
women. Bring a guesL

RACINE - The Racine Amc:rican Le11ion Aulliliary will meet
Thursday at 7:30 p.m. Girls from
the Southern Junior Class will be
guests and a Buckeye Girl's Swe
delegace Will be selected.
..
LONG BO'ITQM • Riverview
Garden Club wiU meet Thurday,
7:30 p.m. at lhe home of PbyUis

~

Larkins wilh Juice Young

as co- ·evening, wilh a SWKiay service at 2
hostess. Members bring fr\Jit bas- · p .m. Joy Sizemore will be the
evangelist. There will be special
lr.ets.
singing. The Rev. Margaret RobinI l'OMEROY • Preceptor Beta son, pastor, invites !he public.
Beta Cha[lter, Beta Stgma Phi
S&lt;rorily will meet Thursday 817:30
TUPPERS PLAINS - A round
p.m . at the Grace Episcopal
and square dance will be held Fri·
Church . Kay Cecil ·will discuss
day mght from 8 to 11;30 p.m. at
anliq~.
tbe Tuppers Plains YFW building.
Specks of Bluegrass will provide
tbe musfc and Arlhur ·Conant will
POMEROY - Revival serVices
be lhe
The public is invited
will be held 81 lhe Believers Fel- to attend,
lowship Ministry Church on Coun~ Road 18, Kingsbur~, Fridah
POMEROY • The
rough Sunday, 7: 0 eac
Pomona Grange will met

7:30 at the Rock Springs Grange·.

'

•

Hall. Star Grange will serve •
refreshments.
•:

• ·The Area's N'u mber 1 Marketplace

--

Dividend declared ·

TO PlACE AN AD CAll 992-2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.

The Board of Directors of :
National Gas and Oil Co. declared
on Feb. 22, a cash dividend of 10
cents . per share on the common
stock, payable Marclt 25: 1991, to
shareholders of re'cord on .March
11, 1991. National is a holding
company with subsidiaries~
in nawr::Jas dislribution
marketing.
oil and gas prQduetion.

caller.

· RA
Doys
1

I A.M. unlil NOON SATURDAY

3
6

10
Mon1hly

-

Words
1&amp;
16
15
18
15

M•lg~, 0.111• er M.. on c;ounti.iJ mutt be pre·

:~•·'""'~ 1 .50

dl1count tar •d• Plid in

ov., 11 Wardl
Rete
•
.20
14.00
.30
ee.oo
.42
19.00
.eo
113.00
.08/dly
11 .30/ day
broHnupdi/Vtwifl beeh•tect '

ett~t•nc•

•Free Mil .- Give...,,~ end Fo~:~nd edl undtr 11 ~ords win be
run 3d..,. 11 no c:~•ae.
·
.
'Price of ld t01 ell c~itlll•n.,, i1 double prl~ Of •d cost.

•7 point llnelype only u•d,
'Ientine! it not r•ponsibfelor lfrors eftv firil'd.., . I Check
lot errors •••• d~ td runs'kt
Ctll bet~,. 2 ·oo p.m .
dl¥ -"• DUbllcltton 10 mike eorreetlOn.
•Adl thM mutt .,_ Plid in 1dv1nce 1re

COPYRIGHT 199i · THE KROGER CO. ITEMS AND"
PRICES GOOD SUNDAY, FEB. 24, THROUGH SATUR· · .
DAY, MARCH 2, 1991, IN "'"""QH1-

Ctrd of Th.,ks

Heppy Ad•

In MerriOriim

Ylfd S•l•

•

WE.RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES. NONE ·'
SOLD TO DEALERS.
ADVE~TISED ITEM POLICY-Each of these advertised ·items is r~uired to be readily available tor

PubliC Notice

$ale •n. eac~ Krog.er Stc:~re, except as speeifK:~IIy f}Oted in this ad . If we do run out of an
advertised .jlem, we will offer you your choice of a comparable item Whefl a\lailable"

I

I'

~efler:ting the sam~ savings or a raincheck which 'w ill entltle ·you to purchise the advenised ·
~tern at the advertised price w ithin 30 days. Only one vendor coupon will be acCepted per

...........-------Fresh
1tem purchased.

.

Cauliflower

.

. -

.

. -

..

Public Notice

LEOA L NOTICE
TUPPERS
PLAINS-CHESTER
WATER DISTRICT
SHied bldo will be ro·
ond opened by the
ppero Plolno·Cheotor WI·

and Haled envelope end
muot CQntain tho full nome
of eYory poriOn, firm ond/Qo
corporotlon lntoroot In tho
limo, end muot lie OCCQm·
pan led by o 1DO% Bid Bond
In the full amount of 11ch

rite. Ohio untU 2·.00 p, M. on
Morah 11, 1911. ccwwlng
tha pointing, both lntorior
Md Eatarlor fQr one &amp;0.000
plaon elevated water stor·
Ill •
Addltlonol
lnfonnotlon
ond opociflco11ono may be

of the Dlotrlct BQord ao o
guoranty thot If tho bid lo IC·
teplod, I contriCI will be on•
tored Into and Ito porfor;
monee oocurocl. On bldo thot
1 oc1 h
are ,. ect • t • guerentee
will be promptly returned tQ
the biddoro. On the bid thot
lo occeptocl, ouch Bid Bond
will be rotumocl IQ the ouc·

ter Dl8trlct at their office.
3!!111 llor 30 RCIOd, Alldl·

Head .

"'*·

.

obtained at ttle office of the

Dlotrlc1 II 3915111 Bar 30
R-. Reodovllte, Ohio, on
Februory 28. 1191.
bid muot be ilnciQAd
.in Eoch
., op-lrotoly
~or ked

PfOpOeal to the utlsfection

·ceslful bider upon executkJn

...

BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE
4:3(1 P.M. DAY BEFORE
PUBLICATION

'.

'•

l

•

.._

~

~

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.._

- -- ''-

1,.

'

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.....

...... .._

SIMON'S
PICK-A-PAIR

.
'

SAME~OGATION

,•

Use Court Street Entrance
POMEROY, OHIO

·.

'

'I .

'

•

''••

'I
•.
•.

RITE AID PHARMACY
SAVE$$$$

•

u.s.

Let us pnce your next prescription

·· Breast

.,'•
•

••

............ :.. lb.

chaclc lor en omounf aqull
ADDEDUM TO ITEM I
toflvepor-tofhloblcl. but
SOUTHERN OHIO COAL
In no ...,. , _ , then fifty
COM ..ANY ~ Mt:IGI
thoulllld dollon. or a bond
MINE NO, 2
for ton per corn of hla bid.
Southern
Ohio Cool
poyebla to the Director.
C-ony, P.O . lo• 410,
llddMo muat opply, on tile Athena. Ohio 41701 has
pr-r farma, for quollflco- allomlt1ed - - N_.
Contr801 S - 1.oaa1 Copy
tiona ·ot IIIII ,., daya pr1o&lt; ber R·0315·23 1c , . , .
No. 91-21!1
to the date IIIII lor -nlng coal mining ponnlt D·0311,
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
blclo In aooordlnoe 1v !he Ohio Dopart.....,. of
IRZ-1303 f1)
Cheptor 5125 Ohio ROYioad Notural Ruou,_, Dlvtalon
Saslod propa•l• wll be
Code.
of Rocllmlllon. The permit
-eel 11 the oHico of the
.
Piono
oncl
opoclflcotlona
lo locoted in Mllga
Director. of tho Ohio D-rt·
IN 1111 file In the D......mont CQUnty, Colu~ ToWn·
,..nt of TronlfiOrtatlon, Co~
of Tronoportotlon Md the of· ohlp, Soctlono 11, 21. Zl
umbu.. OhiQ. untl1 10:00 A.
flee of lila Dlltrict Dopu!f Md 31. end MoiM County,
M.. Ohio ltondard Time.
Solom Townolllfl. loctlono
Thuroclay,
Fobruory 21. in conlider.. lan for en Director.
The Director Noorv•o tho 17, 23 ond 24 on the prop.
1191 , for lmpr!&gt;Ye,_1oln: ~·rd .
Molga CQUnty, OhiQ, on
"Minimum woge r...o fQr right to NjiCI ony ond all lrty of Southern Ohio Cool
c_...y, The pormll - ·
l«tlon MEG-331· o.a1. thlo projoct pre. bido.
ltato ROU1s 331 in· Iutton dotonnlnod ao -Ired by JERRY WRAY. DIRECTOR
---d
OF TRANSPORTAI.QIII. 1"1
on the Wllk..Yli"
T-nolllp, by gredlng. low ond - 11111 forth In the
121 2?; (3) e. 2tc
Mills 7~ Minuto
.
drolnfng, _povlng with e• bid propo-1.'.
"·"•"·!•·
qUaclrMglo
mope.'
"The
dot.
Mt
f•
compte·
phelt - - • on 1 bltuml··
O,proxlrnatoly
1. I mllll
-~~~-·,.
boN and by tlon ofthle wool&lt; ohell be 11 1-----'------ oOuth-ot of Pcilnt Rock.
constructing: lrlclt• No. 11111 forth 1n the IHddlng P'""
Public Notice
Ohio.
MEG-338·0018, 1 th,_ poul." .
Tha appiiCI111111 propo•e
opan aompoolto preotNo•d
EICh bidder ohell be re·
to lncorporat8 an port of Its
concreto box on copped pile qullod to file with hie bid o
NOTICE OF
parmonent pormh o blooting
ebut. .nto ond T-typo ploro centfiH a heck or caehier' 1
APPOINTMENT
pion.
(-no 15 feet · 0 lnchu.
. OF FIDUCIARY
The oppNcotlon .lo iHI fila II
. - o y 32 fell . 0 lnchot
On Februorv 15, 1811, In
bebw•n .,erdrllll), over
the Melgo County Probota tha Qfflaa .of the Melgo
RIIC-. Melgo
·Yell-buoh CrMic,
CQUrt, CoN No. 21345, County
Courthou•. 8•·
Projact longth - 4150.00 ...
J. B. O'Brian, 100'h CQUrt County
cond Strast. P - . Ohio
Street,
Po-roy.
OhiQ
2
I Mem
41789 for pilbllc viewing .
==:":· =:o:ry~=:::; . 4&amp;789
wooDeoppolntocl
mlniotNtor
BQnlo NonAd·
of Written commenu or ,..
far an lnfonnol aon·
tha eotata of Woyno Auotln
Hetzer. daau-. loto of ~~~r~moy " ...t 10 the
of Reclo-tlon,
421118 CoolvHie Rd .. Reodo·
1 card Of Thanks
Squ.ro, BuHdlng
ville, Ohio 415772.
CQiumbuo,
OhiQ
RQbort E. Iucio
P;obeto J udgo l43l!Z4. - - thirty doyo
the loot date of publico·
By Judith R. Worry, Clerk
I wish to thank
of thlo notice. ·
12)
20,
27;
(3)
II, ~tc
ROSES'
13. 20, 27; 1~1 e 4tc
NOTM;E TO
CONTRACTORI
ITATI OP OHIO
DEPARTMENT Of
TRANIPORTATION
Columbus. Ohio
Fellru...,18,1111

':===117

I

the Dlotrlct olflca.
. The Tupporo Plolno·Cheo·
~· Water District r'e•~••
the rtght to waive lnformall·
ties. to reject any and all bid a
or to accept ouch bid thll
will belt Mrve the District.

Tuppora Plalno·Cheo1or
Wotar Dlotrlct
By: Herold Blockoton.
Praoidant of the Boord of
l;)lrectorl
121 27: {31 6 3tc
Things ore buzzln' in the

MNTADS
Cerd Of Thank&amp;

CARD OF THANKS
The Family Of
THELMA M. BERRY
Wieh to extend their
1henka 1o all tho relativas. friendo, and
nelghbotS for
tha
flowara. food. end vloi1a.
Aleo
special
thanks 10 Floher Funeral Home, the pall·
bearere. and for tha
comforting words of
Rev. James Seddon.
Your kindnaoa in our
time of·loss will n1111ar
be forgotten.
'
T /Sgt. &amp; Mre.
Chaoter Wigal Jr ..
· S/Sgt. &amp; Mra.
Richard Barry. Mr.
!;lanny Barry

1 card of Thanks

EXCAVATING

and TRUCKING
CO. for their
aasistance in
removing the
huge rocks and
dirt from behind
and against my
home after the
recent landslide.
They worked long
hours in extreme
cold and then
rainy weather.
Thanks, also, to
my aon. Charlie.
for taking time
away frQm his
job to work with
Rosey and his
crew.
Had it not been
for their quick
response my
home-would have
been deatroyed.
You are all a
great bunch of
guys and I am
grateful.
Bon11ie Matthews

The Family Of
MARY O'DELL

GIBSON
Wiehes to thank all of
her many friends •nd
neighbors for the do·
nations of food, for
the beautiful flowart.
the telephone calla,
cards and
worda
of encouragement in
this time of sorrow.
Thanks to Rev . Tillie,
Rev. Durham
for
holding the aervic...
and to the Fisher Funeral Home for the
excellent way they
conduc1ed her 18r·
vlca. The family's
hearts have bHn
touched by the love
of
Mom's
many
friends and neigh·
bora. God ble.. eech
end 1111eryona of you.
Sona Calvin,
Harvey: DaiJghtanl'l
Joyce, t,;a1ro1.

POMEROY, OHIO
992-2259

Boneless Pork
Loin Chops

Kellogg's
frosted flakes

b y 'ltdc moltflel(

Po"nd

MATTRESS OR BOX SPRINGS
FULL OR TWIN SIZE

•

REGULAR ...................................... '78
FIRM .................-... ... .. ... .188
EXTRA fiRM ............... .. ......... .....'98
(XITHOPEDIC KING S~E SETS...... .'350 &amp; UP
QUEEN SIZE SETS ............ ........... $275 &amp; UP
BUNK MATTRESS........ .................. •48 &amp; UP
BEO FR!IIES

1.00 Off
The Regular Retail
This Waak

OWNER WANTS A SALE AND HAS REDUCED THE PRICE
FOR A QUICK SALE - 2 unit apartmenl building in
Middleport. Gooo renlal income. in a good neighborhooo.
Was $24,900.00 NOW ONLY $18,000.00.
'

HOURS· MON. lHRU SAl. 9-5
PH 446·0l12

U.S. GRADE A (lu-Ll':&gt;

our RULAVILLE

Bean Coffee

Pound

1-lb. Bag

Real Estate General

•
EQUAL HOII.IIfG

. -TIJNPTf
IN THE DELl-PASTRY SHOPPE

Turkey Breast
or Roast Beef

Plus
Shampoo

Pound

'· ~

iiiii'Ntw Rc~nT
~~~-

20&amp; NORTH SECOND AVE.
MIDDLEPORT. OHIO
OFFICE 892-28B6/HOME 992-5692
DOTTIE S. TURNER, BROKER

CONTROL OR

11-0Z.

TUPPERS PLAINS - Arbaulh Addition - I slory ranch
wrth' 3 ·bedrooms, equipped kitchen, garden area, and ap·
proK. II acre of land. REDUCED - Was $32,00.
·

15-oz.

.

.

$26.900

RUTLAND - Nice fenced back yard and a 2 story lrame
home with 41o5 bedrooms, dining room, and big living room.
Low utilrties, carport, ~layhouse, and storage building. RE·
DUCED -- Was $32,000.
$27.500

'•

LONG BOTTOI - Hayman Rd. - This mini fa1m has aP·
proK .nine acres wrth a 4 year old modular. It has 3 bed·
rooms 2 balhs, family room. wet bar, garden bath tub, screened-in' porch, and central air. Also has a 2 slory new barn,
pond. and is all lenced.
.
$55.000

!
' .
'r

BAUI ADDITION - ~aut~ullaying 178xll7 lot in a ni~e
subdivision. TPC water and Columbus soolhern Electric
available. No mobile homes permitted. Great building site.

.t

Sprinpdale
.Homogemzed Milk

Use Court Street
Entrance
POMEIOY OHIO

REGULAR .. .... .....,.. ...... ....... .................... .'25

QUEEN .... .. ................. ...............'35
KING .. ........ ..............................................•so
3 .MILES

Krl)ger
Fresh Turkeys

SIMON'S
, PICK·
A·PAIR
SAME
LOCATION

LAYNE FURNITURE

'

1~Pak 12-oz. ·
Cans

Kroger
Buttermilk
Gollon

'$ 299

Gallon

'
I
I

$1,500

''

POIIEIOY - Madt for a fimily - A 2 story with 3·bed·
rooms. family room, and part basement. Has a big lol an~
some remodeling has been done. The rooms are BIG. Ooesn t
need much lo be a nice home.
MAKE AN OFFER $13,900

I

·CLOSE TO TOWN ...,. Yet Privett- This 211 acres is easy to
mow. bee~use it 1s level. Comes dh large living room and
dming room. Also has afamily room, 2 bedrooms, and central
air condrtioning.
$2&amp;,900

''

••

2-Ltr.

. ...•
(

.'

In Memory Of
CHARLIE FRYE
Who paaaed away
March 3, 19 88 during
Bike Waek In Daytona
Beach, Fla.
Fly on, fly on
Pao1 the opeed of
sound.
I'd rather Aa you up.
Than oee you down.
So leave me, If you
need to,
I will still remember
you.
Angel flying-too close
to the ground.
"Gone bu1 no1 forgot·
ten."
Cauea you're alway•
in our hearts and our
mlnda.
RIDE FREE, C. D.
Sadly
by
and
your

SIGNS

•

25-0Z. KELLOGG'S RAISIN BRAN
OR 20-0Z.

POMEROY - Brick ranch home in a great location! 3
bedroonls.2 baths, nice carpe11ng, fronl sottongporch lookong
over a beaut~ullandscaped ponij. Heat pump, garage door
opener. Really nice home that was well Ia ken care of. ASKING
$69,500.00.

21'111'91/1 rno.

IJIHPIIDIJn
CAIPIT CIUNIIS
and nU flOOI CAB
•Reoaonable Rateo
•Quality Work
•Free Eetlmlltaa
•Corpot Hao Foot Dry
Time
·
•High Glou on Tile
Floor Finlah
MillE lEWIS. Ow'*
11. 1, lutlollll, 011.

742-2451

. B~~~
Point ~nt • 675-6925

ol MINII1"'

UPHOLSTERY
213·Jio. s.c..d
Mld••port
Hand Tufting
Cullom Drapea
36 Yean F.xperlenfll

614-992-2328
We Say Whit Wo Do.
Wo Do Whet Wa Bey.
.
tO-tt-l 1110.

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL
•LIGHT HAULING

•FIREWOOD

BILL SLACK
992~2269
CSED RAilROAD nES
8·12·90-tfn

MIDDLEPORT- Nice starler home for young couple. Some
remodeling completed. 3 bedrooms. 1 balh. Finish il the way
you wanl it. ONLY $16.000.00.

MICIOWAYE
OVEN IEPIII

LETART- Mobile home site or butld your dream home on
this one acre landsc aped sile. ASTEAL AT $3,500.00. MAKE
OFFER

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

lri• It .. Or We
Plcll U,.

New"- lllilt

TWP. RD. 348- Approx. 93 acre.vacant ~nd with a 2 slory
barn, stocked pond, old house s~e with well. Approx. 25 acre ·
1illable wilh the balance timber. Gel a return on your
investment from lhe sale of timberl $1i(l,OOO.OO.

.. F.... Eltlln•tea''

PH. 949-2101
or .... 949·216~
NO SUNDAY CAUS
3-ll·lln

POMEROY - Cute little hOuse that needs fixing up. 3
bedrooms. 2 balhs, N.G.F.A. furnace. In lawn location. MAKE
AN OFFER' $14,000.00.

HENRY E. CLELAND , ........... .. 992-6191
JEAN TRUSSELL ................... 949-2660
JO HILL ................................. 986-4488
OFFICE .................................. 992-22&amp;9

OHIO VALLEY .
BULK FOODS
514 E. Main St.

..

POMEROY

fglfet Time A~gln(
EASTER SUPPLIES

200

MOLDS ....BASKEj''wiA'1Pi'ifs'""" s
COLOR SUGARS - SUGAR LAY-ONS
SUCKER STICKS - SUCKER BAGS ·
EASTER CAKE PANS

. S19S lb.
AMBROSIA' BLOCK OIOCOLATE •••••
AMBROSIA WHITE CHOC0LATE .....S215 lb•
WHilt, COLOIS

l't'ERCHENS CHOCOLATE ...............S23S

lb.

HOURS: 9-&amp;llilonday-Saturday
We Accept Food Stampa

MLIIABS

GROOM
ROOM
Complttt Grooming
For All lrttds

EMILIE MERI.NAR
Owner

I Operotor

614-992-6820

tNniEmD IN A CAlER IN lEAL ESIAn?
CAll CUWID IIALTYI

•-•r.

\

J&amp;L
INSULATION

•Garagea
•Room Additions
eKitphens • Baths
•Vinyl Siding
•Restoration
•Repair Work

JAMES KIESEl
992-2772 Ill' .
742-2251

POMEIOY, OHIO

BISSELL
BUILDERS

•VInyl Siding
•Replacement
Window•
•llooflng
•1Jtiulo11on

6 39 Bryan Pl•i:e
Middleport. Ohio ·
11-14-lfn

,,

~

1Uii'Nc10 Rc.-.1 r y

CUSTOM IUILT

HOMES .&amp; GARAGES
"At Raa-blo PrlcH"

PH. 949·2101
or Ru. 949·2160
Day or Night

NO SUNDAY CALLS

YOUNG'S

205 II. lacOIId Slnet
IIIDDLEPOIT, OHIO 45760
Office 614·9t2·21"
HOME 614-992-5692
oomr s. TUINO. uo•n

HOUSEI•LOTSIFARMS
COMMERCIAL
We Need Uodnpt
11·1'111-tto

USED APPUANCIS

CARPENTER SERVICE

tO DAY Wlllllm
WAIIIIIS-S 100 .,

-concrete work

ltlfiiOEUTOIS-$100 o,
IAIIGIS-..,_a..-$1U .,
fiiiDIS~SlU .,

-Room Addltklne
-Gutter work
-E1ectrlc1l 1nd Plumblftl

-Roofing

DIYH-S".,

IICIO OVIIIS-S7t .,

-lnter6or • Ew:ttr6or

Pointing
!fREE ESTIMATES I

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215

KEN'S APPLIANCE

SERVICE

.. r.sus "

91S·U61
Aaon 11'1111 f'ed Offltt

Pomaroy, Ohio

POMROY, OliO

BEAT THE RIISHI

Til-COUNTY
IECYCUNG

l0130flt lin

11·14-'90 tfn

KEN'S APPLIANCE

SEIIVICE

992·5335 or
985-3561

Acroa ,,.. hat Office

111 r. 1on111111.

JIOIIIIOY, OliO

1/1/!0/lln

THE

R. L. MASH
CARPENTRY

4192·5526

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

ITS THE "llnLE BIT MORE" THAT COUNTS!- Certainly,
really is a service business. Bul we like to l,hink we.give yoo
more lhan just ordinary service. Apra1smg, f1nane~ng,
adverlis1ng, negotiating, closin~ - a,ll that goes Wllhoul
saytng. So we strive lo do MOREfCome mand lei us show yoo
how our "lillie bit more" in effort, courtesy and know-how
can give yoo so much more&gt;

I

MerchandiM

C'lt4tlflt

I

"SILVER PLATTER" FRESH CENTER CUT

54 MlscellaiiiOu.

Business Services

$3.00 Off New

I

r.ot • 0.0115 mlo.
Wool&lt; langth - 870.000
Hn. ,_. • 0.127 milo .
·Pov-t ~ - 22 INt.
The OhiO D-rt-nt of
Tron..,-tlon heteby noll•
!lot Ill bi-e thott It wll af·
flrrmotlvoly_lnourethet In ony
ccm1raot - - Into purouont to thlo lclvo..--1.
minority
bu-11 orttor·
prl- will be , , _ ful
opportunity to MJbrnlt blda
In - n • to 1hla lnvllotlon
ond wtll not be dlaorl-ted
ogelnot on .,. grounclo of
natlonll origin

.-.·-·or

Real Estate General

or your refills from another store.
·: WE CAN SAVE YOU MONEY.
We Will Beat Any
Competitor~s Pnce!
GIVE US ACALL TODAY!
J. David Morgan, 675-1624
John Guinther, 992-2586
$10.00 011 Transfers

Chicken

tour will leave et 11 :00 from

r:========t

BULLE_TIN BOARD

Public Notice

;

Public Notice

of tho CQntroct.
TheN will be one tonk in·
opoctlon on
Thurocloy, 1
,_,arch 7th. Thot lnapoction 11 ,

~----------------,

Public Notice

1---------

""*"'·

.·

11

BISSEU &amp; lUilE
CONSTIUCTION

._.......

•N1wllen.s

•Gartlfll

•co..,l•tt

Stop &amp; Co11..,o

FroollfJ.alu

915-4473
667·6179

Get your lawn ond ....
ilan -..lpmtnl tulllll,.
and ltlttilas ,...,..• .,
for the,.... 1111-.l

DUliNG FEIIUAIY
- frH pickup ond
dtliwory In Po1111roy
and Mlddllport city
limits.
WE ALSO SERVICE
CHAIN SAWS

DAVE'S SMAll.
ENGINE IEPAII
253 Wid Malst St.
, •••,.,. OIL.

. PH. 99!-392!

OPEN 7 DAYS
A WEEK
9 A.M. 'nL 7 P.M.

"lou daa• • , _
'"'Til-COUNTY
-'-

...........

yar on w11bndi.M.we

RECYCLING

Loaotlll Off tile ly{llll Ooo

n..r c.r-"
I 11. 1U

- _.
-·-·
lt.

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

Poylng
' ' olllltilr-m,
- · · · Dltle
milAM hun. rMflt II&amp; lt8r't·

ln. . . . .""'" ........ noft•

I'IICD

4·tti-S114

2+11

'

I

�Announcements

21

LAFF-A-DAY
0 •• , ....... _

~

SlngiM

-

. F« ·

ll""''o 011111 -

II

LOAHIIY MAIL
Up to 11.000 In '12 houN. W.

w"h the allvtr tooth,

..•

piN81 Clll. 3()4..6"1S.38.

g

Giveaway

3 kittens 1: 2 cats, 1 black a 1
whllto151H8!1-3t07.
8 months old mall blond Gtr-

mln
Shlpherd!Collll
puppy, 304·882~582.

to

.._
4

m

27 1991

.
11'11 ~ T - Oor, ~=:
71

'N' CAilLYLE®IIy Larry Wrtpt

Al*JSIOI'Sele

Ohio

=---...... .• -?
.
7

11M lllhi100

,._ W ....._ . ..oomo.

Television
Viewing

. . . . . . . .

eqnlpnW'Il MOO • • IJIJ Now "''' ........ Dopooll .....rod.
11• • 1111 or eM • • - 22 Money to Loan
TWD Ill.._. CIDIIItby' hDine.

Quolhy

Slanlllcllnl

Would ttw portoon wllo look lht

4

•. __

41 ttcJutM for Rent

VE-.o ROUTI: l'or lolo. .........

Rolollonohlpo.
Con~ol.
Write: Hem...rch, 'P.O. Box
1043, Clolllpollto, OH 45831.
kltt1n

Buiii'IM8
Opportunity

High.-.---·I

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

3 Announcements
~-

1181

Ohio

Sentinel

Page-12- The

.

®
.

rMII

:::..
~ l:\L~4Z':e'::
SIUIIM.
23

--=.

'IIIAY NILY
PIIlLII

M WED.. FEI. 27 •

If
- ,., -~.:.=-ner

EVENING

.,.&lt;ll.

42 Mobile Homes
torRent

Cll ~•

. Qlifti

a ae

I
a!::n=.u

a~-~~~~~~~
r;J

. . . . One

•

_.lac. canning Jarw. Mu.t tab

Wt.lO KNOWS? BUT AT LEAST
IT'S .BETTE~ T~AN SITTIN6
IN A DESK ALL DAV..

all. 114-3811-80!11.

'(OU MEAN

WE WEREN'T
SUPPOSED
TO 8RIN6

OUROESKS?

8 Wootd TodaJ
DOwllotMI;I
W&lt;ll le•lllr 11•1•u
1:30 ~
Ill NIIC Nlghllr Nlwl1

e

· ~ Untllr 11Nat

&amp;-...:a

1

ur......i

NewiB 1;1

lol-1eont.al
C8l Mftll;l

I..
• ":!.c::""
1:31 &lt;II Andr Gtttlllh

A

V

8 ~~~~fRMBLE

7:1110~~~~~ WhMI of
Clll

ofllllltlle

llEA~r;J
• Calrga BlllkotbrtM
811Dneyllne
lea,_,. artc1 Mra.King

.8

ALL
Yord S.l0t1 Muat Ito Pold In
Adyonco. OEAOUNE: 2:00 p.m.
the' day betore the ad ll to run.

SUnday edHion .. 2:00 p.m.
Friday. Mondoy odhlon • 2:00

Help Wanted

11

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

8

Cll

booking

auct~a.

9

Eldllltalloment

(I). Mlmll'l Feinlly
0
Tlnl'a CornplnJ

e

. Qlc-atn
7:31 (J) NIIA lelkotbrtH

••·

perlenc:e maYa th• dlfferenct.
Licensed Ohio, K•ntuc:ky, WMt
Vlrglnlo, 304·7'73-6785.

.II"'J'T'fAI&gt; OF HAVI~G
,..., INF'-ATION, WHY
: .t&gt;OJV '1' THEY .o.lv$T
Pf?INT MONEy WITH

wanted to Buy

WANTED good .cond~lon. Car
1nt, awing, playpin, c:arrfer lor

T•n·Partnt Cl... at Maeon
County V~tlontol Sd!ool, 304675-7108.
.
Wented to buy: Junk Cl,. wllh
or without motora • ecrap met·
••• 614·3111-2829.

fLOWI-Y•I&gt;I.Jii&gt;fpe.A/liiiG
IN~

,. . .

7

e.-oo CZl e Ill Unoar.lld•

..,...,.. A aaah Is covered
.

~

1111 military. Stereo: r;J
MOVIE: Tile lnlkle StorY
by

( 00)
Cll ~

e

Tile Wonder y_,.
The l...,lly axpoocta Kevin to ·
oorrecl Bull8r the dog'a bad
behavior. Stereo. 1;1
(I) (!) Nod When ICorolllv
died, hi1 plane to land 1 man
on the moon died with him.

S o•

•

Tile 1'11111 After
Pike aftecka the Flnh, Barry
Ia ten yelrB Into the
future. Sttreo. !;II
0
MOVIE: litd lloya (R)
(2:30)

e

I

.

a•u•c

•Remodeling and
Home Repairs
•Roofing
oSiding
•Painting

a=.:.::.~
Chlrlll Cha11 Yl Country

TRANSMISSION
and AUTO REPAIR

muale 11111 bocome objecll
or· pr~ctlcll jokla. 11 :00)

Specializing In

8PtlltiiH•WJ .
Ill MOYI!: Wlto'a Mlndtng
the ....,., (2:00)

Automatic
Tren1mloaloM. Brakel.

NO JOB TOO SMAll
FREE ESTIMATES

Tunoup. Oil Clutnge.
Clutch R-lr.
FREE ESTIMATES ·

CEDAR
CONSTRUCTION
992-6648 or

36i East Main

698-6864

ACROSS

. (R) Sttreo. r;J
1:00 aJ • Ill Nlgltt Coull Judge

992-5587

Stone, alone and
heartbrOkln, conslderB

12· 31 ·90-lfn

~ml&amp;~~.

'•

M.D. tcathtrlne deCides to
Join the Eastman steff.

Sll!reo. Q

Now /11
Stod/1

(I) (!) ICiattllllc Amlfleln
'1'01111111 Segments Include

FASTEST
ftXJOIAJ

MOBILE HOME FURNACES - HEAT PUMPS
AU FURNACE PAm

the MIT. dlllgn competition
and IIIIUre vo. nurture. .
Stereo. Cl

,7l::JUMJ

a,-.._
a •A••
and ~~~e
.
mother liMa lrom
a killer alter witneUing a
munllr. Sttreo. Cl
MOYIE: Tile lluea

BENNm'S MOBILE HOME
HIAftNG &amp; COOLING

I allm (R) (2:30)

2 · 2?

NO ... WHE!N IOHE
WANTS 10 PUNISH

Me ...

·KELLER'S CUSTOM BENDING

Sltreo. r;J
1:150 &lt;II MOVI!: Tile Hunltr (PG)

We Have Changed Our Locatian To
l'h Mil~ East on Rt. 241 through ·
Chnter, Oh.

(2:00)
10:00 (J)

e

Ill Hun1w Hunter and
Novlk -rch lOr Novak's

SPECIALIZING IN ....

•Custom Bent Exhauat Systems
•Complete Une of Exhauat Supplies
•Handle and Install Monroe Shocks
Come and See Us For A Free laapeelloo
and EltlmiUe

PH. 614-915·3949
41269 Si. Rt. 241

kidnapped daughter. Stereo.

~Newl

Cll ~. lqual•Jualloe
Rogan proaec:ute~ I doctor
acculld or mercy kMIIng.

IODIIIY DWI

Stereo. Cl

long .H0111.

THANK~

JUGHAiu

_,_

0700 Clult~ Pal '

-Hosmatt.•hnorwood1tlllhinsid1Muse
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....... 1&amp;-lndl _...

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10:300. TD Ia Ano I,..Did

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11:aeCZ&gt;e Cll &lt;lle • a•
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muatc ,,.. boc:ol'ne Olljecll

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Rtor.r.n-

floe 2 bedroom houN, cloM 10

LOAD EVEW 12 HOVIIS

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CALL

71

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VICKER'S WOOD HEATING

Autos for Sale

-g.

1tN !lflovy "'!'s.Btof.Air lodan.

1011 ....... .... Thno., ,....

23101N....... IIooi,_G!"',rNSG2

Phono (304) 171-2255 • r 5 p.m.

SNAFU® lly Bruce Beattie

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"-'nlnlllo, IIIAI. Cloudto Win- Runt A Drfw uoodl
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2411121

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ASTRO-GRAPH

P~h

Rood · AunMr
with- 1113 HP I Thntomito-

PetitorSale

-.e-.'11114.

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

PS 1000

DELUXE SAtELliTE TV SYSTEM

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Enloy Over 100 chenne •· See the news liVE
It hopptono _ 2 4
houri. IRO ayttem Include• decoder,
CAlL TODIIY
FEB II UAfl.'i.SPECIAL
ONlY

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Fob.23,1tl1
Three ftlends could play e•tramely con·
structlve rolea In your affairs lrl the year
aheltd, One wlll be a new acquaintance
.willie the other two will be people you've

knoim' lOr a long ume.
· PilCH (Poll. IIHiareh 20) You may

IMI a .!hough your mate Is m~lng too
many unreuonable requnto of you today. With ctoeer analylls, h -. the
oppotlte might be true. Trying to patch
up 1 broken romance? The AltroGraph Matchmaker can help you under-

·==- ..
of pqctical joku. (1 :00)

stand what to do to make the relation- mands placed on you by others mlghl
ship work . Mall $2 to Matchmaker, c/o be a bit more heavy than uaual today.
this newspaper, P.O. Box 91428, Cleve· Try to help - e yo11 oan, bullet them
land, OH 44101-3428 .
take care of matters tluttthey'rt c.paARIES (March 21-Aprll11) This is not a ble of handUng on their own.
particularly good day to work on en· LIIIIIA (Sept. 23-0ct. Zllln ord« to exdeavors that are beyond your scope or pedlte situations today, you might be Intalents . II might be wlae to wait until you cllned to Ignore -1111 details. UniOrhave qualified help to aeslst you.
tunatety, this could make what you dG
TAURUICAprti:ZO.MaJ 20) Try to avol~ v a - ..
groups or ctlques today that contaln SCORPIO COoL M N11. 21) h'a boll
members you dltollke. There Is a PQMl- not to became Involved In aruculatW.
blllty something unpleasant could r• ventures wllh friends atthla time.
Slllt , owing to your lack of tolerance In 11 a Chance you mil)' end up r.etlng vicdealing with these people.
tlmiUd. blaming your ~1.
GEMINI (Mar 21-.IUM 20) Undesirable IAOITTARIUI (N4w. 23 Dec. 11) 1mend results are likely H you anempt to portant objec:tlvel might not be
do several Important assignments sl- ac:IIIIIYIKI 11 elllly 81 you think lodll)'.
multaneously. Usually, you 're pretty Whether you'll be ..._lui or not 11
good at balancing ae-al things at questionable becauH or a i.ctc or forti·
once. but not today.
tude on your behalf.
CANCER (June 2t-Ju1J 22) It' a beat not . CAPIIICOIIN (Dec. 22-.lan. 11) Be exto diiCUII secretive·matters today with tremely careful about llllktng ..,.,..
•someone who previously betrayed your .commitments and/or lfgnlng your
confidence. This Individual still hun't name today. These are cnuc:.1 . , . .
learned to keep a Md on certain things. where Indifference could creMe
LEO CJufr 23-Aug. 22) Due to a lack of peMitlea.
resources, you might not be able to buy AOUAIIUI (.IM. ......_ 11) H ,....,.
something you desire or do _ , l n g lnvoNed In a joint vwntu... IIIIU . . .
you want to do today. Let this..,.. as a the retpOnllbllll* and llebllltloe .,.
-rnlng: Be more prudent - • II- equally dlltrtbuted. E.., ,one mu.c pay
na,_ are concer'19d .
a lelr lhato.
YIRQO (Aug. 23-Sejll. 22) The d•

n.er.

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COMPtEfE SYSfii

.

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WlftiiiiiDJ: 'I'BIIIIUS'I'A'I'

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(I) (!) Miflllluuell CamedJ
lpiDIII Tlto lldrlal perlorms
one-liners, songa and plano
parociiDI In L.ondon. (1 :00)

Stereo.

TIE BliDY DU'I'IIDE WGDDBURIER

-

eNiah'... Now
0 Collaga lallkotbrtN
• Lany lang Uvel .
1;30 (J)
IIJ) I litatd Jarry
auapacll a aiUdlnt or
steallnQJI . - . Stereo. l;l
(I) ~ • AnJift!nlllut Lave
Hanna'a plan lor one lasl
lllght with Marty II thWII'Iad.

e

6HS IM.l&lt;E=S Me WATQ-1
11 AN!eTeRPIECE
THEATER~

. 8···-·

artcl Mit. King .· .

1 Heading
lor
70na ol
the winds
H$treet
sign
12 Crowd
sound
13 Solar
14 ConcernIng
15 Soviet ·
chess
master
17 Judge's
waar
20 Hllo hello
23 Coronado's
quest
24 AstonIshed (sl.)
26 Oxford ,
VIP
27 Supped
2Bin the
style of
29 Asked
31 Tlar•
adornment
320ne
type ol
pollution
33 D.C. VIPs
340necosmo·
naut cralt
37 Lustrous
stone
39Tooth

t:r'~L ~:;~

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11:11 Cll a-. r;J
11:150 (I) MOYIE: liCit • 1M
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11101 Cl)lflll•••l;l

11:10 !II •

a "*lfllltt Willi

Dnltf LSI

+ 'AK 72

.K4

+KQ~

+K97 3

Vulnerable: BOth
Dealer: South
West

Eut
Pass

Pass
Pass

All pass

Opening lead: • 8

but he had to come down to only two
club$. Declarer threw his last spade
away and made the last three tricks
with A,K and 9 of clubs.
Skill Is fine at brlilge, but it never
hurts to Ketluckv.

3 Unite
4 Up and

• 1.!!1-~ ~~!!.

aoom

~~~

5Pro"(proport1onately)
6 Fabric
worker
7 Red·black
bird
8 Seeing-of!
wish
' Rowing
need
10 Belore
16 Sum·
monad,
beeperstyle
17 "The Kiss"
sculptor

18 Malna
town
18 Good·l~e
· liver
21 -Gurley
Brown
22 Washington .
follower
24 lnlamous
movie
hotel
name
25 Western
Indian

30 Tristan's .

beloved
33 Emulate
Scott
Hamilton
35 Rend
36 Formerly
37 ~~s, to
38 Corral
40 Wire unit
41 Eden
evictee
42 Conducted

·.

CO'Mr

43 Sell ·
440nthego
·45 Pot
contribution

DAILY CRYFroQUOI'ES-Here's how lo work It:

2127

One letter stands fnr another.. ln this sample A is used
for the three l.'s, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
·apostrophes, the length and fonnation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.

Tonlgltt
8 lpOIII Tonlgltt

.~

SOUTH

AXYDLBAAXR
II LONGFELLOW

=-··o.•-..

Willi

+4

w~a

Stereo.

. . I.·=·lllltlilne

EAST
+QJ1096
.J2
+10
+QJ 1052

1 Voung'un
2 Lennon's

(I)GIIta••

(1:30)

WEST
+B 3
.Q7U
+J98643

46 Staggered
DOWN.

11:30CZ&gt;e dJ TDIIItlllllhow

· 11:00 ~ e lrriD lie Nlllht Stereo.

+A 72
+A86

by THOMAS JOSEPH

and Mike join a

.Plrellla Without M - club.

9 Yooro bperloneto

%-%7-tl

CROSSWORD

1:30Cil ~· Clrowtng Palna

lrddle

·~ 4
.A10983

Poor Sam! (He's the hero of "Inter·
ltn&lt;ldl.l'te Bridge II) Three Weeks,• Alan
Truscott's latest bOok.) Here ~e find
blm In an ambitious contract of si:l notrump, reached beeause his partner
let all his aces go to his head. North1'
should have raised two no-lrurnp to
only four no-trump, a gentle Invitation
to slapl. With only 18 blgh-card points,
Sam would have palled. But North did
bid six no-trump, and 'Sam bad to
wrestle with bls slim chances.
He started out right, winning his
kin&amp; of spades and playing K·A and 10
of beltrls. That established the heart
suit with only one loser. West coolin·
ued with a second spade, South win·
ning tbe ace. Sam didn't tblnk much of
his chances, but be perked up when be
played K·Q of diamonds and Eas,l
showed out on the second diamond. II
Sam could believe his eyes, It was apparent that East held both black suits.
So Sam played a third diamond to
dummy and ran the hearts, watching
closely to see if his seven of spades
might becop1e a winner. On tbe last
heart, E&amp;stkept the 9ueen of spades,

Tonllltl Sttreo. r;J

Rick Pnrto&lt;&gt;n Auctloft Comptony
now

a•

NORTH

By James JICeby'

7:30~UC:,..~ g

p.m. Saturday.

I IIII

BRIDGE

7:011 &lt;II Hippy Dlra

Employment Services

FOR

SCIIAM-I.m ANSWERS ,
1·1_,
Amoeba- Ra~ar - Knock- Brogue - BEOI'lOOM
. One cutie to another, "You can always tell a bachelor
by the condition of his living room. It looks li)&lt;e his BED·
ROOM."

lL'rl;l

Gallipolis
&amp; VlclnHy

PRINT NUMBERED
LETTERS IN SQUARES

CRYPTOQUOTE
.

2·U
,JOOJEIKUZIZFV

VPJKHS

H J VI ,

MFATKVF

UFLFE

MF

I P F'X

AT U

PTESHX

' MF

EFQTZUFS . - NZHHZTC
OFUU
Yeater.aw'• Crvpto••ota: CONTENTMENT
DOES NOT COME TO THOSE WHOSE MEANS ARE
GREAT, BUT TO THOSE WHOSE NEEDS ARE FEW.
• -MANLY HALL

.,

II

'

�Page-:-14-The Dally Sentinel
• .lo' •

WHITNEY
SALMON

'

14'1• QZ. CANS .

$199

STORE HOURS '
Monday tbw Sunday
8 AM-10 PM

Ohio Lottery

·Meigs ·
wrestlers
advance

Pick 3: 770 '
Pick 4: 1072
Cards : A·H, K-C;
3-0;3-S

Super Lotto: 12-27.
32-311-39-40
Kicker:417569

Page4

POMEROY, OH.

COUNTRY
STYLE

SAT.; MAR. 2, 1991

a1
.e n 1ne
Guns fall silen.t in war-torn Kuwait

RIBS

$129
$ 79
Chuck Roast •••.•~•• 1
·U.S~D.A. CHOICE BONELESS BEEF ta. $
29
U.S.D.A. CHOICE ·BONELESS .BEEF

'

.

PARKAY
SPREAD

~ump Roast ••••••••. 2
'$129
$l 79
·Bologna •••••••••••• ~B~.
ECKRICH .

.

,

(
Leg Q
. uarters ••••.L:.•• 4,9
$l 29

Wieners ••••••••••••• ~B~ 99~
••

Euphrates River
Basra

ZEST A
·CRACKERS

Tu~leey .!:·.

Flavor1te

6.·9

.

'

·APPLE
SAUCE
16 OZ~ CAN

3/$1
II

$ 99
Potatoes •••••••••• ~.~~ 1

•

RUSSET

•
"

.

FLAVORITE

.

2°/o Milk •••••••••••••• $1 59

"

.

Cheese Shces ••••
DEL MONTE

. ·.

·

.
~2.~~

$

109

Squeeze Catsup ••~•• 99 &lt; TV ·Dinners .... ~:-~!~!·•• 99~
BANQUET
·
·
KGRArna. pe
9
9
(
29
Jelly •• ~ •••3;.~z••
Fried Chicken •••!. $2
2 0
:;.

OIL

or WATER

TUNA

•~-~~z·2J$ ·1
Good Only At ....... Solpor .Valu
Good f.. 24 lhr• M.rdl (. " "
linllt 2 ,.,_ (~IN!

' I.

DOMINO SUGAR

DETERGENT
136

oz.

HI.

$ 79~

Good Clloly " .......

lAG

a-1 Onlr At ,...... •
v11u
Geell fell. 24 lllru .... 2, 1991

s.,. ••.

111111,... 24 tin .... 2,.1991

Ulllit 1 ,., [•lzn••

Ulllt 1 ,., ~~

----

-

$J69

DUNCAN HINES

CAKE MIXES

l~i.' '3 f$2
Good 0n1J At l'ew.U's S.. Valu
Good fill. 24 thru MDr. 2, 1991
llnllt

--...-

~- ...

..... ...-

3/$1
CHARMIN
TOILET
TISSUE
12 ROLL PKG.

BANQUET

SEA

15.5 OZ. CANS

PLASTIC GALLON

FLAVORITE IND. W~APPED

j

CEASE FIRE POSITIONS · These were the
positions of AIHed coalition forces in the Kuwaiti
theater or operations just pri.or to the implemen-

..

HANOVER LIGHT RED

KIDNEY
BEANS

$299
RHODES

WHITE
'

~BR-EAD
5 PAK 1-LI. LOAVES

$159

.

Bids on an addition to the.Meigs
County Department of Human Services headquarters in Middleport
were opened at Wednesday's regu• · . · . lar meeting of the Meigs County
French Defensive
Commissioners.
Flank Position
This is the second tinle thai bids
were received on the $1 million
project • the commissioners voted
IRAQ
to reject the fJTSt bids in December.
The apparent low bidder on the
u.s. 7th
general construction bid was
Corps
Wesam Construction of Pomeroy,
with a bid of $669,887. Parkersburg Heating and Cooling submit·
ted the apparent low bid on the
. plumbing contract in an amount of
$39,000. The apparent low bid on
the mechanical ponion of'the con.Persian Gulf
tract was submitted by·Singer Sheet
Metal in the amount of $110,556.
Finally, the apparent low bidder 011
the electrical subcontract was
Advance Electric, who submitted a
bidof$129,900. .
Commissioner Richard Jones
SAUDI ARABIA
pointed out that the apparent low
Kuwai!Cily
bids the second time around were
.; .o_______,;;so
over $43,000 below the total
L __...:::.Mi:::'le::s~----------'---------------..:::lo.:~~:::::~ amounts on the fJTSt bids: Action on

LUCKY LEAF

(

By BRIAN J, REED
Sentinel News Staff

IRAN

CJ

I-LB. BOX

$]89
Colby Cheese •••••••••
.

more than a haU'·million.
But Bush emphasize4 that a "against any other country" as it retreated with defeat."
The broadcast did not mention
Addressing the nation Wednes- · complete end to hostilities could . had dozens of times at Israel and
day night from the Oval Office, not come unless Iraq stops fighting, Saudi Arabia during the war. ·
the liberation of Kuwait.
Hours later, Baghdad Radio
A senior U.S ..military source in
Bush declared victory and effec· accepts all 12 U.N. resolutions
broadcast
a
statement
by
an
Iraqi
·
Riyadh,
Saudi Arabia, said it
tively ended the war. "Kuwait is against Baghdad since the Aug. 2
liberated. Iraq's army is defeated. invasion of Kuwait, releases all military spokesman ordering Sad- appeared the guns on the battlefield
Our military objectives are met. prisoners of war and the remains of dam Hussein's military to stop had fallen silent in a war that lcilled
This war is now behind us."
all slain allied troops, and notifies fighting and saying Bush's hand 79 Americans. "We've received no
The president ordered allied the allies of the location of all had been forced because "our reports of any cease-fire violatroops had managed to inflict lions,'' he said. "We are going into
offensive maneuvers to siop by mines.
midnight EST (8 a.m . Thursday
Bush also insisted that Iraq must heavy casualties with the enemy defensive positions. We wiU not go
Kuwait time).
not fire any more Scud missiles troops, while the remai!ling troops
. Continued on page 5

open bids for
addition to DHS headquarters

LONGHORN

GRA·DE A - •Avg. 1\1)~ 14 lb.

By ANTHONY 0. MILLER , the Iraqi milital'y said to have beei1
left nearly impotent, the United
United Press Iaternatlonal
Fighting in the Pe:rsi81! Gulf war Nations prepared a formal cease·
virtually stopped Thursday six fire declaration and the allies dis·
weeks after it began, with President cussed a postwar plan for the
·
Bush declaring victory over Iraq region.
But a senior Pentagon official
and orderinl! an end to allied offen·
sive operations. Baghdad caUed a cautioned that Americans should
cease- fire. saying its forces had not expect their ttoops home soon .
because of the work that lay ahead
"taught the enemies a Jesson."
With Kuwait liberated after to clean up the battleground and the
seven months of occupation and logistics of moying out a force of

2 SIICtlono, 12 Pogeo 25 canto

A MUIUmeclla Inc. Newopoper

Commissione~s

..

LB.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday; February 28, 1991

I

FRESH BUTTS, ROASTS, or

Pork Steaks ••••••. ~B.

"

Vol. 41, No. 218
CoPJtlghl8d 1981

.

FLAVORITE

CHICKEN

LB.

JUMBO

3 LB. TUB

•

•

298 SECOND ST.

Low tonight in mid-40s.
Friday, chance of rain 70
·percent.

'

\

UPIGtaphic

tation of the cease-fire announced by Preside11t
Bush Wednesday night. (UPI)

Troop return to be slow
patched to the desert kingdom from
its base at Fort Bragg, N.C.
Additionally, from a logistical
standpoint iJ will be easier to get
the "lightest" Of the forces home
first because they have the least
gear to take back wilh them.
The Anny has said that its German-based units will go back to
Germany (lrst and authorities were
thinking of bringing some of those
units back to the United States
sometime after their return from
Saudi Arabia. But their eventual
return to the United States may
depend upon Soviet compliance
with the conventional forces treaty.
The U.S. military transport system was so taxed that the Mililal;)h
Airlift Command ordered up the
second of three stages of activation
of civil reserve air fleet progialll, a
system in which the Pentagon can
effectively commanaeer passen~er
and cargo aircraft for its use dunng
a national emergency.
·
Many of those planes and oihers
charted by the military - planes
that lined up at an airbase in Saudi
Arabia in numbers so Iar~e it
looked lilce an international auport
without tile passenger lounges 'Plans for an informational meeting on the Clean Air Act were made
are
lilcely to be used 10 get the units
when an advisory committee on the act met on Monday evening.
home.
According to Meigs County Chamber Executive Director Elizabeth
A spokesman at the Military
Schaad, who serves o.n the committee, the meeting will be held on
March 20 at the Ohio University Inn in Athens at 7 p.m.
. Airlift Command in Illinois said
Four presenters representing the Public Utilities Commission of. that so far the operation had flown
14,800 missions and hauled .
Ohio, American Electric Power, United Mine Wmlcers and the legisla.481,000
passengers to Saudi Arative commiitee currently focsuing on the Ohio coal situation will give a
bia.
Some
513,000 tons of cargo·
brief overvieew of the cumnt situation from their perspectives. Folwas
airlifted
in.
·lowing the presentations, a panel and moderator will handle questions
Although
the amount of cargo is
and responses from those assembled. The moderator, the presenters
smaller
than
the
lilnnage flown diD"·
and the makeup of the panel will be announced later.
ing
the
Bellin
Airlift.
with the dis·
Arnoog those invited to auend this March 20 meeting will be cham·
tances
involved
the
effort
to get
bar members, CIC's, economic developers, public officials and school
materiel
to
the
gulf
region
dwarfed
administrators.
the 1948 airlift. In comparison, a
spokesman said, so far Operation
Desert Storm bas involved 3.72 bil·
lion ton-miles of flyi1111 while the
· Two subjectS are being held in the Meigs County Jail, charged
Berlin operation involved 697.5
with the alleged Fclinlary 17 assault and robber of Marvin Randolph
mUlion ton-miles.
·
at Racine.
Nearly two thirds of the troops
Acconlintl 10 Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby, Jasper
flown to the gulf were carried on
ColltiNud oa page 5
.
commercial aircraft

WASHINGTON (UP I) AdditionaUy, he said, it will take .
Although troops may slart coming time to a5semble aU the U.S. equiph~ from the gulf war relatively
ment, clean the tanks and other
soon, it will take longer to bring . material, prepare it for shipping
them all back than the five and a ~ and get it loaded. Troops, particuhalf months it took to put them in larly reservists who played a vital
place, a Pentagon official said role at Saudi pons, will be needed
Thursday.
for that.
The official, who asked that his
" .You may even see additional
name not be used, 11oted that the U. reservists called up .to aid in the
S. transportation system was return of the troops," said the. offistrained to put the 537,000 U.S. cia!, noting that in addition to helpforces in the region, not to mention ing at the ports they have been
the millions of tons of war materiel . deeply involved in transporting the
that was flown and sh1pped to the men and materiel throughout the
gulf; , .
.
theater and in providing air traffic
It s gomg to take us longer to control se!Vices.
·
bring the troops home than it took
"The waging of war is flat out
us to get over. t~ere. We really simple. The restoration of peace is
stretched the arrlift system to get a challenge " said the official.
the troops over,'' said the official."
Although the order of the rerum
"We can be a !itt!~ bit more has not been set, most expect the
measured and method1cal about first troops in to get to go home
bringing the troops ho~ ~or, .'!-eir first. That would be good lle~s for
safety and to ease our 8U'ltft, he the 82nd Airborne Division. Its
said.
. "ready brigade" was the first dis-

..--LOC3f

news briefs-

clean Air Act committee meets

2 face assault, robbery charges

the bids were tabled yesterday
pending review by the architect,
Burgess and Niple of Parkersburg,
W.Va.
The project will add a threestory addition to the DHS' existing
R.ace Street office~ allowing the
operation to consolidate its divisions under one roof. The cost of
the addition will be reimbursed to
the county Qy the Stale Department
of Human Services.
In related action, the co.mmis·
sioners approved the purchase of
several pieces of computer equip·
ment for the DHS. The equipment•.
to be purchased from Computer
Communications Concepts, will
cost $2,375.95, and as with the
consbUCtion project, the c~t of the
system will be reimbursed by the
state.
The commissioners'will sell ~wo
county-owned vehicles at public
auction on Wednesday. The com'
missioners are going to sell a van
and jeep that were formerly used
by the Meigs County Sheriff's
Office. The auction will be held at
11:30a.m.
The commissioners made plans
.to attend a public meeting regarding the Clean Air Act of 1990 in

Athens in mid-March. The meeting
will be held at the Ohio Univers(ty
Inn on March 20 at7:30 ):. ..m.
Representatives from American
Electric Power, the Public Utilities
Commission of Ohio, the United
Mine Workers aml the legislature
are expected to be on the scene.
The meeting will include a panel
discussion and an opportunity for
questions fro~ those attending.
The commossooners approved ii
bid on a telemetry system for the
Village of Pomeroy at their meet·
ing yesterday. The bid was opened
at last week 's meeting and was
approved earlier thi s week by
Pomeroy Village Administrator
John Anderson. The system, which
will provide a remote-control .monitoring system for the village water
system-,Will cost $14,871. $14,000
of that amount will be paid by
Community Development Slock
Grant funds approved last year by
.the commissioners.
~
Present at the meeting were
Commissioners Jones, Manning
Roush, David Koblentz, Clerk
Mary Hobstetter, County Engineer
Phil Roberts, and Superintendent
Ted Warner.

Leaders from around world
welcome
gulf
cease-fire
vro
By I)A
CRAIG
United Press Interaational

forces in the gulf under the resolute labor opposition leader, was more
le;Kienhip of President Bush,'' said enthusiastic about the war's' end.
Philippine President Corazon "In this situation, President Bush
World leaders Thursday cele" Aquino, who five years ago led a played the whole piano of political,
brated the liberation of Kuwait people's rebellion that toppled the economic and operational options.
from Iraqi occupation, and wei- dictator Ferdinand Marcos.
He did this all without making one
corned the cease-fore put into effect
She called the victory over Sad· mistake,' ' he said. "On the other
by President Bush after U.S.-Ied dam "truly a triumph of the forces hand, I don't think there was one
forces defeated Saddam Hussein's of peace and of those principles , inistake that Saddam could have
army. ·
that all humanity regard as right made and didn' t."
·
·
A suspension of allied offensive and just" and said Filipinos "stand
The commander of French
OIJCrations went into effect at mid- ready to help in the difficult work forces in the gulf expressed satismght EST Wednesday, ending a . of (Kuwait's) reconstruction."
faction with the suspension of
campaign that Jed to the defeat of
Opinion was divided in Israel. fightinl!. Gen. Michel Roquejeo[fre
Iraqi troops and the return of "I regret that Saddam Hussein was said hts troops ''welcomed with
Kuwait to its citizens.
not personally elimi~tated.'' said satisfaction the cease-fire, for we
"The comprehensive defeat of · extreme right-wing Cabinet mem- have come here so that the rule of
Saddam Hussein in Kuwait will ber Yuval Ne'eman.
international law could be re-estab·
standasawamingbeacon,foryears
But Shimon Peres, the fonmer lished. That has been accomto come to anyone. who would con- ~l~sr!!ae:!liLI!!:!!!!!~!!!!l~.!!l!!.£!~:!JL...1P~Iis~h~ed~·~"..­
sider aggression," Australian
Prime Minister Bob Hawke said.
"President Bush and the people
of the United Slates have our admi·
ration for their conduct and for
their leadership and our thanks for
their commiunent and their willingness to sacrifice in a cause we all
share,'' Hawke said.
Arrangements were in the worlcs ·
for a permanent cease-fire. but
Bush set several conditions for Iraq
to meet, including the release of
prisoners of war and Iraqi captives
and the return of dead soldiers.
Bush also said Iraq must reveal the
location of land and sea mines,
comply with u :N. resolutions on
Kuwait and agree .to compensate
for the losses, damage and injuries
resulting from the aggression.
In a communique from Baghdad, Iraq ordered its troops to
observe the cease-fire and not·
begin shooting at allied forces.
Iraqi Foreign Minister Tariq
Aziz sent a message to U.N. lead·
ers saying "the Iraqi government
accepts officially to conform itself
entirely to Resolution 660 and all
other resolutions of the organiza·
tim."
·
Leaders worldwide reacted with
nearly unani{llous praise for the
. multinational coalition tllat freed
the tiny, oil-rich emirate from the
l)eal'!y 7-month-old oc:c:upation.
PRESIDENT BUSH
" We felicitate the multinatiOnal
1/

..

·- -·........,--'-_ .......

- "'f~·-----·-----'--- .4 ·•-..:..·

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