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                  <text>Page-08-Sunday Ttmes

March 3, 1991

Pomeroy ..ddleport-Galllpolla, OH Point Pleasant, WV

Sentinel

Stocks resume advance.

{ollOwing.weekly gain
Dow hovered at little changed lev- . issuea, which ~ ~ under presBy JANICE KIRKEL
eli
through much of the rest of the sure for some ume wttb the unoerUPI BII!IIMU Writer
day.
·
tainty in the Gulf, as well as comNEW YORK - After a break
On
Tuesday
profit
taking
rook
panics ~ stood to ~nefit from
of just orie week, the stock madcet
resumed its run of weekly gains, prices down sharply even as teporiS· the rebuilding of Kuw81L
"The leaden ~!so seem. to be
posting its sixth advance in the past from the l'ersian Gulf detailed fur· ·
tber allied successes in tbe war. the stoc:b will! ~lilbly predictable
· seven weeks.
It was a week that saw a halt to Analysts said tbe market had .CJnings and dividend growth, such
. •
fighting in tbe Pc:rsian Gulf war already accounted for an early end as drug ~·" he said..
to
a
relatively
short
W!lf
so
t~o
"I
th!Jik
people
are
JUSl.
f~ling
.
and a shift in the market's focus to
good
news
Tuesday
had
little
efl'C!Ct
better
with
the
war
ern!ed.
It
tb~
. the outlook for tbe economy and
on tradin.ll.
·
confidence tbat. we may have e
interest rates.
.
But
wlien
it
became
appuent
by
economy looking bet~er by the
The Dow Jones ·industrial averWedriesday
tbat
the
allies
were
cuttbird .quarter,"Carver IBid.
·
age jumped 27:72 Friday to end the
the
,IraQi
uoops
witb
Other
~~~~
agreed.
''Stocks
ting
tbrougb
week at 2909.90. It gained 20.54
points on tbe week, or about 0.7 ease, witb massiVe surrenden by are respondmg favorably to the
·Saddam Hussein's troopS, the mar- . prospects for an economiC .reaur'perceoL
·
Broader market indexes finished .ket did rally, snapping a six-session .gence," said A.C. Moore, director
of research at Argus J.nvesUne1"
the week at recQl'd highs. Standard losing streak.
·
Indeed,
that
evening
President
Management in Santa Barb&amp;f'!l.
&amp; Poor's 500-st.ock ~rose 4.82
Bush,
satisfied
that
Baghdad's
milCalif.
·:we've had a move. up ID
to end ihe week at 370.47 and the
itary
machine
had
been
crushed,'
worldwtde
stock fR!U'kets wttb tl!e
New York Stock Exchalige comcalled
a
conditional
cease-fli'C
for
successful
concluSIOn of the war
posite index added 2.74 to end the
midnight
Eastern
time.
·
and
an
uptick
in confidence," he
. week at 202. 39.
When traden retumed to Wall said.
' . •
.
Advances led declines 1,203Street
Thwsday.
tbey
.managed
an
.
•
On
the.
tradmg
flO?'
Ibis
·week,
735 among tbe 2,185 NYSE issues·
early
advance
on
the
news
but
the
RJR
Nab1sco
.
w
~en:1ssued
s~k
traded this week. Weekly Big
rally
ran
out
of
steam.
It
did
seem
was
tbe
most
acuve
ISSue,
surgmg
'Board
voiume
.totaled
. ·
'
1,004,768,360 shares, the third though thilt traders .were regaining 2 to 9.~/8.
some
confidence
in
tbe
economy
Philip
Moms
followed,
down
I
week in the last four in which there
witlr
.
t
be
war
ended.
Economically
·
3/4
to
.66
after
surging
last
wee_k
was a billion-share turnover. That
(. . . . . . . ICntt), ne - l i q u earlier Ibis
NEW LOCATION • Bo.wman's Homecare .
figure compared witb 770,756,610 sensitive stoCks, such as the major when 11 !KK&gt;sted cash flow esumates for the~~ five Y~· Westwlldlr. (T' rs S t! d piMID). ·. •
Medi~l Supply bas tompleted 'the relocation of
a week earlier and 808,235,330 auiOIIiakers, rallied.
Finally
stocks
closed
sharply
inghouse was third. tumbling 2 7/8
its fll'm .from. 63 Pine Street to 739 Third Avenue
shares a year ago.
•
higher
Fnday,
boosted
by
a
more
to 27 3/8.. It sai~ it ~ reatruc·
The Dow had four straight los. '
.
optimist!&lt;:
outl~
for
the
economy
t~r~ its fl.nanc1al- se~1~es SU~­
ing sessions last week and foUowed
and
buymg
from
mvestors
who
had
s~ becat!"" of UIICCl'l81!l ~­
up with two more Monday and sold stocks short. ·
lions m the mdustry, parung w1tb
Tuesday.
.
Donald Carver, senior Vice pres' $3 billi~n in assets and. taking a.
· Monday's session began with a
ident
at Core States Investment $975 m!lhon charge agamst earn- ·
Ohio," a minute of silent ·prayer for the Advisors in Philadelphia, said lle jogs.
..
· . ·
allied forces in tbe Mideast. But was encourag(ld by the market's. · Ford Motor
was
also
acuve,
. · WOOSTER, Ohio (UP!) · Ellis has been deYelopina iniO..... ,
then a·Po.werful rally took hold,
jumping 3 3/4 to 33 1/4 . . It
While sttawberry fields may be for- grated pest m'amlgemcnt meOodl · 14-plll'll n:port recently publish¢ fueled by tbe·. initial allied success performance this week.
· ever, di~es always threaten the for Oh10 strawberrilll for the plllt ~d=~· Among his rec~m- · against Iraqi forces in tbe second · . "I tbink it's been, good. We got announced.a $3 billion ,cost-cutunl!
such a terrific runup on the early plan for 199l .tbat inclu~S early
: crop, but new s)'stems ·using fewer four years.
·
-...;,..-. cu1 ·
that full day ohhe ground war.
ld
Oh'
Ohio growen IJarveltlld 3,600
---mn-•1 uvars
Traders hoped fon swift end to success of the war that some were buyouts and possible layoffs for its
fungicides coul make . 10 sttaw- tons of strawbem'es frolll 1,100 R Nli • • to red llde. verticilli- .
berries botb cheaper to grow and
-'h ,_,
- A ~ ..·
the war, which could give a boost . concerned tbe: market might decline salaried workers and tbe suspen· mae appealing to consumers.
acres· ,· n 1990. Productioa vable • ,....,
spol•u
....
,.,.
unpord"
........
d' ase to consumer confidence and allow S· percent on .tbe ~ llll!'ounce- sion of merit pay for top manag~rs.
Among the other blue ch1ps,
Tho methods, part of a sttategy was $5.11 million, 8CCOJdillg 10 aM· lllltiWWI. .,,. more lse
the economy to ·begin recovering ment.". he IBid. "ConSldermg tbat,
. . IBM lost 2 1/4 to 131, General
· -•"" pest managem~nt, O.hio Agricultural SlabSII
.· ·cs Ser- resi...,...
we have
theare,"
!PM by later this. year. Stocks topped it held up quite well."
called mte~"~
proanm, tbe
betterwidrin
off we
Carver
said
the
stocks
which
led Electric eased 3/8 to 68 7/8, Boeout with a gain of about 40 points,
. emphasize the use of disease-resis- vtce.
Ellis •ys.
the
market
this
week
were
oil
ing rose I 3/8to 49 1/4 and Gener- .
tlllt plants and cultural practices in
By using fungicidoa eady ill 1M
-Use cultural practices that but the r!IIIY soon faded and the
.
al
Motors surged 3 1/8 to 39 1/'2 as
addition to minimal fungicides.
season and reducing their overall ·
spread
the
automakers benefited from tbe
Tho goal is to \:vide c~mer- use; growen can ~ or elimi- inbibit tbo dev~ent an!!
•·
res
'
dues
on
the
..
-~.u..
.a
of
diaeuc1.
Ell11's
suggestions
belter
eco~omi.c outlook.
: '
.
.
cially accepta ble eve Is of disease na... 1
- w,.. -.
· ... A. · di
free 1an ·
Elsewhere.
companies
that
stood;·
J;ontrol using as little fungicide as , key consumer WCJr?. Ellis says.. IIIC..., usmJ dSCIIICP bog·
lions wildlife plantings should be to benefit from the business .of"
By Gail DeGarmo
I t Reduc1'ng uwlecung
poSSI'ble, says Mike Ell'IS, a pan
- !1''--~...,,.,_ would cut ' IIIXlk.
....,... _,,
.o-H....plaliting· sites with
'f .
·considered.
These plantings could . rebuilding Kuwait rallied. Ollfiel&lt;i
Earth Team Volunteer
plll!ologist at Ohio Swe Univeni- how much rungicidt. ••tera .tile ....... - - - - · · !'Otallllg crops I
possibly
consist
of autumn olive, services company Baker Hughes
GAUJPOLIS ' The vast majorty's Ohio Agricultural Research environment 11nd save .rower~ lllawllelriea 8le 10 be replanted in·a
silky
dogwood,
black
chokecherry,
2 318 to 29 and construction
and Development Center at !foost- ·money, he says.
.
lield. maintainiq balanced fertili- ity of people enjoy wildlife in some or crabapple. These each provide surged
company
fluor soared 6 1/8 to 52
way
or
11110tber.
For
instance,
many
er
"lfeef that tbe fimak:iltol! we'le ty,llld C!JD801lin&amp; weeds.
·
wildlife with different benefits 5/8:
people
spend
countless
bouts
bird
. "More and more we'~ hearing using, as long anhey're used
_:.ullll early -application
On the American Stock
watching. Otb~ have the opportu- whether itlJe a good source or w.infrom grow,ers tbat they want to . according to their labelS.- safe 10 of fungicides to control fruit rots
ter
caver
as
with
the
autumn
ohve
Exchange,
the Amex Market Value
nity to observe animals in fields or
reduce their applications of fungi- consumers. But no gro- liDs 10 sucb as botrytis. Another fruit rot,
or
the
black
chokecherry
that
proindex
rose
6.13 to close Friday at
wooded areas as they 111e driving.
cides -not only from an eco!IQm- go out and buy fungicides beca•qe called leather rot, can be haid to
duces
fruit
that
stays
through
the
348.14.
AdYIIIICCS
led decli,.el 466People in rural and non-rural
i&lt;: penpective, but to create greater tbe costs are increasing rapidly," control if an epidemic develops:
winter.
337
among
tbe
991
issues traded. ,
areas can even watch various
confidence with consumers. he ·says.
·
control depends largely on using
While
some
people
are
fortunate
Am
ex
..
volume
totaled
They're hearing tbc concerns about
Results from Ellis's work have straw mulches and by keeping , wildlife around their hilmes.
with
an
abundance.
of
wildlife,
82,691,565
shares,
compared
with
For people who own a ~ed
fungicide residues and f~ safety led to "Integrated Peat Manage- _ Wiler from llllllding iii fields, Ellis
more
people
are
becoming
.aw~e
56,999,635
traded
a
week
earlier
area, large or small, they have tbe
and are trymg to tespond, he says. ment Guidelines for Control of says.
perfect opportunity to develop and of .a noticeable lack of w1ldhfe and 85,838,325 ttad.ed in the same
. Bills's guideliaes offer three
.
.
·
maintain habitat for wildlife: Many within tbeir enviromnenL There are week a year ago.
opciou tor funp:ide use: rio use,
lriany
positive
sr;ps
the
w901"11!1d
Fruit of tbe LlQm led the Amex
rel)'ill on pllllt risiltlnce and cul- ·people mistakenly believe. that owner can take to not only mcrease
I·
actives,
jumJ.ling 2 l/4to 13 3/4.
wildlife
simply
is
always
there.
llnl )IIICiica lilt dl11ease control;
wildlife in just tbeir own area but
The
Nauonal Association of
This
is
not
t:nle.
In
fact,
there
has
ml•l•aJ use, empllisizing fungithat will provide ihe wonder~ of . Securities Dealers coniposite index
. .
been
observed
a
distinct
need
for
cidea • IJioca; llld traditional use,
active participation by woodland wildlife for many peoples enJOY· rose 7. 78 to end the week at
applying lllUiine proteclanl sprays.
456.73.
owners to provide a diversity of menL
· Tbe DO-UIC oplioll should offer
habitat
to
help
witb
wildlife
stabiliacceptable I'CIUlts in dry growing
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI)- The Soviet Union isn'tlikdy to get
ty and reproduction in our world
n ... llld in 11XD8
But the
any more credit (rom tbe United States to use for grain 'pun:baaea,
opcion miJbt 110( prOvide adequate
Norman Rask, agricultural trade .specialist at Ohio Slate UJ~io.!er­
~y.
~ -j('.ound.10
Wildlife 111e very O•te
control
on a y~-to-year basis,
sity, notes .tbatthe Soviets have already used up the $1 billioll credit
these edges. Many of the things
something commercial growers
tbey were given for U.S. grain purchases through. Sepll:mber of Ibis
they
need to live are found there
oeed, Bllilsays.
·
.
, year. And give~ the ~urrent Sl!Jl8U~n m the Bat~ ~ tbe Bulb
also
such as different types of
1)lo ........... option applies
administration 1s not likely to sanc:uon mo~ crediL
cover,
··a selection of food and
The USSR received $3 ·billion in J:l'edit last year. . . .
. · ~ .IIPfBys • bloom to con- .
water.
'
Soviet peace effoita in the Persian Gulf could poaillly c:bap ' · ~~
One activity that can be done by
"'We ,.,. fCilllld IMt the boirytis
things but Rask. says the more likely scenario is tbat till USSit wW
the woodland owner to improve
fungus movea into the fruit at
shoP ~lsewhere for its ~· An~ since the ·Soviet economy II !"·
diversity
is to h~ve a small timber ·
bloom, " Ellis
"By targeting
such bad shilpe, it's going to take credit to help fill USSR pam
harvesL
This
harvest provides both
tbe fungicide daring the bloom
an
opening
within
the woodland
~fortunately for American farmen, other countrios will lik.ely period, Will a111 control the infection and edges where the
two meet.
witlloul having to 1prS:y tbe fruit
offer that credit in an attempt to take away U.S. grain sale&amp; to~
This
type
of
area
is
attractive
to ·
Uelf. We can reduce botb tbe numSoviets. Rask says the time is ripe for just that - world wheat
deer,
grouse,
and
turlceys
to
name
a
ber of sorays and the residues on
prices are comparable to U.S. com prices, so the SovieiS are able to
few.
tbe fruiL~'
..
buy wheat to replace American cem.
·
.·
While performign timber stand
That move would cut into the U.S. com market. Past Soviet purAXTPump
improvement in the woodlot, the
·- chases made up about one-fourth of U.S. com exports. ·
brush can be left in piles. Wildlife
such as rabbits and &amp;~1 and other
ground mammals u ·
tbcse areas
as cover apd nesting areas. Of
. :.. ·. '
COLUMBUS, Ohio
- ·Grain producers should p:qMe for
course,
many
different
species
of
·
an inevitable cost-price squeeze.
.·
·
·
GAU..IPOLIS - Farmers Home , birds will also enjoy these piles,
Allan Lines, agricultural economist at Ohio State Uni.cnity,
Administration personnel in the
If you have a small field or
notes tbat target prices are frozen for the next five yem· under ,tbe
GallipOlis County Office, located at ·meadow, consider leaving it as is
new farm bill and' m8rtet prices are runnin~ well below thole tar·
529 Jactson Pike, ltoom 304, Gat- especially if it adjoins a woodland.
gets. In effect, Ibis creates a lid on grain recetpts.
lipolil. will be aucndinj! a State- Bush hogging it every couple years
Inflation will increase input cost 3 percent to 5 pe1cent lllllually.
Wide ConfeRnce in Cmcinnati, will provide low, dense cover and
Rising costs and froZCI) receipts can only mean decreasing profiiL
March 6, 7,111d . ..
MON. &amp; Fll. TIL I I'.M.
replenish the food supply.
Tho COIIIty office will be closed
As a woodland owner, tree ·
TUES., WED., TH... nL 6 P.M.
c1Jai11s lbeiC dalea llld will reopen planting inany times is a consideraincr~ase
SATUIDAY Tl 5 P.M.
at I Lm. 011 Monday, Mll'ch II.
tion. As a woodland owner trying
COLUMBUS •. Ohio (UPI) - Milk production Ibis year wiU
PmHA National Offrce officials to improve bislher wildlife populaincrease modestly despite a sharp drop in the price produeers
will ~;p.ae in tbe Conference
receive.
·
· ·
·
provuliDI information on recent
Allan Lines, agricultural economist at Ohio Swe Univcrmy,saya
(IIUIJIRI llld ldministrative develavenge 1991 farm· prices are expected to be $2to $3 per ~-ecJ..
.opllllllll. ' .
.
weightless than last year.
'
•
no
COIIference will also be
· Milk production is·projected ~ rise I ~rcent to ~ ~ 11. a
_... ID .pmride {ormal ~ning .~
modest gain in per-cow producbon outweighs a sliglit dcdine 1n
JllaHA piiWiCI whlch will assiSt
cow numbers.
.
suppl. ,.~ _,..
dleln Ia 1111 performance of their
Consumen will benefit from a lower-priced larger
y "' nuu.
dulies.
.
and milk products. Retail dairy prices are expected 10 dea
u
•
E.ikigea..')' calls may lie directmuch asS percent during 1991.
ed Ill tho Stale Office, in ColumLines says those lower prices will.disc~urage milk prod~
. 614~5606.
and drive inefficient f111111s and !bose wtth h1gh debt out d ~
~ Expect prices to go back up, poss1bly by 1993, once supply 11.ader
control.

.
Strawberry IPM could cut production
.

I

~costs and boost consumer c~!~!~~~

Ohio Lottery

Buckeyes
get share of ·
BiglO title

Pick3: 186
Pick4: 4769
Cards : 3-H, J-C;
5-D; .10-S
Lotto: 2, 13, 20,
36,37,42
· Kicker: 137121

Page3

•
Vol. 41, No. JaD

Ten allied prisoners freed;, unrest .increases in Iraq
By PAUL BAS KEN
Unlted Press Internatlo"al
Iracj released 10 allied prisoners
of war, including a woman, tQ the
Intc;mational Red. Cross, Baghdad
Radio said, and there were reports
of increasing unrest in soutbeastem ·
lraq.

.

·

France said President Bush will
meet French President Francois
Miuerrand on French Soil for post"
war talks and there were indications tb81 a UN. Middle East peace
conference, much opposed by
· Isnel, could be in the works.
U.S. television broadcasts from
Baghdad showed the allied POWS,
including a woman, stepping from
a bus. ·They appeared healthy and
sOme were smiling.

The Pentagon .had no official
confirmation of the release but a
senior military offichll said, "It
appears the Iraqis have made a
good faith effon to release U.S. and
allied POWs."
There. was no early word
whether the allies had released any
Iraqi prisoners taken during the sixweek Persian Gulf war.
"Authorities Ibis morning handed over to representatives of the
International Committee of the Red
Cross in Baghdad 10 prisonen of
war. Included in the number was
one woman and a number of
pilots," said Baghdad Radio, monitored·in Cairo, Egypt.
.
Cable News. Network said .the
r.e leased POWs included three

Britons, one Italian and six Arnericans - five men and Army Spec.
Melissa Rathbun- Nealy, who was
the only. U.S. servicewoman taken
.·. prisoner by Iraq durin$ the war.
CNN said the prtsoners were
being driven to the Jordanian border Monday and would be banded
over to allied officials.
If past practices are followed,
the United States would fly the
newly freed military personnel 10
Weisbaden, Germany, where there
are military medical facilities for
physical and psychological evalualions !llld counseling.
· Iran teJlOI!ed intensified clashes
Monday m Basra, Iraq's secondlargest city, between anti-government demonstrators and loyalist

areas.

.

Pump Up Before Every
Workout. ··

"

•ys.

Cost-price squeeze projected
&lt;UPn

·

· Personnel to attend
statewide conference

1

Milk production expec1ed to

••

By Charlene Hoenich
Sentinel News Starr

GEl liNG ACQUAINTED • Peggy and Ken
Harris, left and center, along wltb many other
residents of Meigs County, had the opportunity
to meet and talk with Elizabeth Schad, Meigs
County's Economic Developer, at an open house
on Friday evening. Tbe open .bouse was conduct-

ed by tbe Meigs County Chamber or Conimerce
to allow tbe public an opportunity to meet tbe
new economic: developer and to view the Chamber's new ofllce located In the former Pomeroy
Library.

.State·and local government
commission to meet March 13
Lt. Gov. Mike DeWine and
Marietta Mayor Nancy Hollister
announced today that a regional
meeting of tbe State and Local government Commission will be held
in Marietta on March 13 at I0 a.m.
The meeting will be an open
forum for local government offi- ·
cials and is the first of five such
meetings to be held across the state.
Local officials frOm counties,
villages, cities and townships in 16
Southeastern Ohio counties, including Meigs County, are invited to
participate. .
The meeting will be held in
downtown Marieua in City Council
Chamben, City Hall, 304 Putrulm
Street. Th,e proceedings will be
open to the public.
LL Governor DeWine said, "As

the Voinovich-DeWine Administration's liaison to Ohio's local
governments, I am committed to
opening the lines of communication 'between state JOVemment and
Ohio's counties, cibes, villages and
townships. I welcome tbe inp\lt of
Ohio· s local government officials
as we continue to look at ways state
government can work better for
Ohioans by working better for fts
local governments."

The State and Local Government Commission is a bipanisan
commission which serves as a
foruni for discussion and resolution
of issues affecting all levels of gQv·
ernment. Lt. Governor DeWine is
chairman of the Commission.
Officials interested in participating in the discussion are encouraged to contact the State and Local
Government Commission office at
466-2108.

Tobacco... __

..::con=lin=·u::ec~:.:rro:..::m::.:
. 11-L1=-----

Preview Open Steer Show and the com, 1192 in hay, i:lo4 Iii cenlll
Ohio Junior Heifer Show. A trade &amp;rains, 2409 in soybeaDI and 219
ihow will be open both Friday and ' 111 miscellaneous.
. Only five farma wat cor lifted
Saturday.
. ·
- The Ohio Ecological FOod and for livesrock:· S6 llleep • I• ''·
Farm Association are reporting a 65 dairy animals, llS la,.n llld
fecord breaking year for OEFFA 190 head of beef. It app 10 dial
0rpn1c Certif!CIIion. Tho iiUIIIber there may still be a loc d. oppodllof acres cerufied totalled 6,544, nity to produce and illllkeC 01plic
including 17 acres of fruit, 196 ~ certified farm produell.
~getables, ~67 in pasture, 940 1.n
'

'

. I

•

'

....

.

C.. of Pruning Cuts ... Pruning
Cull 11114 not be covered with a
WOIIIId dre11ing. Re1earch has
llloWII that commonly used tree
WOMid illinll do HUle to prevent
doctiJ. ffii'M pilat must be used
for ca.IOlic 1'111111111, then apply
only I tllin COillfter the woUnd ~
been ICI'ibeclllld die tree treated to
in2 • or mlinlaln vigor. There is
no llled 10 recoil the wound.

.~~~---------------·

..

war, one of the aims of Iran's late
Ayatollah Ruhollah Kbomeini was
to set up a separate Shiite state in
southeastem Iraq, based in Basra.
Shiites make up a narrow majority
in Iraq.
In Riyadh, the Saudi capital, the
English-language Arab News
reported that demonstrations in
Basra, Samara, Zubeir, Najf, Fajr,
Emar and Majnun Island were
described by unidentified analysts
as a "popular uprising against Saddam Hussein and his regjlne since
he came to power 12 years ago.''
It said demonstrators were
" protesting the crimes of the Iraqi
regime, its invasion of Kuwait and
itS
. entry into the war with the. U.S.Continued on page 10

pe1cent. In the Eastern Local
School District the percentage was
27, in the Meigs Local School District it was 24 percent, and in the
Southern Local School District it
was 30 percent.
However, Riebel pointed out,
that tbe percentage of Meigs Coun- ·
ty students passing all four tests
was higher than it was in several
major cities including Cincinnati
with 20 percent, and Columbus
with 16 percent.
With a 43 state percent passage
in mathematics, Meigs students
came out.:w.ilb..a 37 percent passage
·ra'te. In rtading with a 78 percent
passage rate on the state level,
Meigs made an 81 percent: in citizenship with a 55 percent state passage rate, Meigs County students
achieved a 48 percent rate; and in
writing (comprehensive, sentence
slr\lcture, spelling, composition) 72 ·
percent of Meigs students passed,
while the state had 76 percent passing.
.
Supt. Riebel Friday released. this
summary of performance on the
Ohio Ninth Grade Proficiency Test
for Meigs County Schools:
·
EASTERN: 75 students tested.
Mathematics, 30 passing; reading,
SO passing: citizenship, 34 passing,
and writing, 40 passing.
MEIGS: 169 students tested:

Mathematics, 57 passing: reading,
145 passing; citizenship, 82 passing, and writing, 131 passing.
SOUTHERN: 67 students tested. Mathematics, 29 passing: reading, 55 passing; citizenship, 32
passing;·and writing, 52 passing.
In discussing the testing results, .
Supt. Riebel pointed out that since
results were so slow coming back
from tbe state, teachers and students have had little time to
strengthen their weaknesses in the
four areas of testing before next"
week's second testing.
.......ac..said tba.t. by next fall he
anticipates the intervention programs will be iQ full swing and the
stu!(ents shtiuld be in "bener shape"
for the proficiency testing.
He said that he had hoped for a
summer intervention program for
the some of the students who needed special help, and that, in fact, a
$10,000 grant had been approved
for that but then was scrapped due
to the financial situation of the
state.
Supt. Riebel emphasized, however, tbat he is not discouraged by
the results of the initial testing.
"It showed us some concerns
and we have some areas we need to
· do something about, but when you
compare it overall, we didn't do
bad," he concluded.

Rain, ice, snow strike Ohio
Total snow and ice accumulations. ranged from around an incli
over central Ohio to between 2 and
4 inches over tbe nonheast.
The weather service ·said weak
high pressure will build over Ohio
Monday night and then move east
of the state on Tuesday. Skies will
be partly cloudy Monday night and
. mostly sunny on Tuesday.
Lows Monday night will be
mostly in the 20s while it will be
warmer on Tuesday with highs
from the middle 40s northeast to
.near 60 southwest.
On the Monday mm:ning weather map, a deep low pressure system.
was over southern Pennsylvania.
The low will move into eastern
Ne~ York by Monday ni$ht and to
Mame by Tuesday mommg. High
pressure was over the central and
southem Plains. By Tuesday momin!! the high will extend along the
ApPalachians.

Arab-Israeli peace may take t!me

UNTIL
MONDAY, MARCH 4, ·1991
'

(OUR SPECIAL REGIONAL REBA,TB :DDS)
Charleston, W.Va., lut week to speak to West
Vlrlinla Department of HJabways Commissioner Jred Vankirk abonlthe project. Vankirk told
tbe (II'OIIP that tbe project Is at least three yesn
away.
'· ·

SECOND ALTERNATE SHADLE BRIDGE
REPLACEMENT • The above sketch sbowathe
secoad alterute for a propOied Shlldle Bridge
replacement. Tlle-arawlnti was presented to a
Mason County deleaatlon that traveled to

)
J

Intervention programs and cur•
riculum changes are being considered by Meigs County educators in
the wake of the results of the ninth
grade recently released.
John Riebel, Meigs County
superintendent of schools, advised
that interv.ention programs are
already underway in the Southern
Local School District and that work
on starting such programs .is in
progress in both tbe Eastern and
. Meigs Logs~ S!;hoo)s. . • ,. .
.
Tile secbnd round of 'tests will
be given next week to all sophomore and senior students in the
county as well as those ninth
graders who failed all or any part of
the test on mathematics, reading,
citizenship, and WJjting.
Under the current state law, all
Ohio high school students must
pass all four sections of the test in
order to receive a diploma. Stu- .
dents may take the test twice a year
during each year of high school in
order to· pass sections that they
have failed.
According 10 Riebel, ninth grade
,students who passed all four tests
the ftrSt time around were considerably below the state avenge of 33

Bad weather closes all schools in area

· oNBUIC~

C011lh ued l'rola D-1
lll'lacbes. 1'm CIN not to cut the
IWOilen collar finsh With the main

was ldlled in the clashes, according
to !RNA. There was no independent confirmation of the repon,
In Tehran, Hojatoleslam
Mohammed Baqer Hakim, a rebel
Iraqi cleric livmg in exile, was
quoted by !RNA as saying a popular uprising had begun in several
Iraqi cities and that Basra, a key
industrial city, had ·fallen into the
hands of Iraqi Muslim Mujahideen,
or holy warriors .
Haldm, who last week called on
Saddam to resign, "appealed to tbe
Iraqi army units to join tbe nation
in their popular uprising and defy
the orders which are issued to the
detriment of the nation," IRNA
reported,
·.,
During the 1980-88 lnin-Iraq

By United Press lntem11tional
first time in years as the overhead
Sunday evening's rain turned to eleclricallines became frozen.
a sheet of ice on many roads before
A winter storm warning continsnow began to develop early Mon- ued in effect Monday morning for
day morning, creating hazardous an area including Sandusky, Candriving conditions and forcing the ton, Cleveland, Mansfield -and
closing of schools across much of Cambridge, and a winter weather
Ohio.
advisory was in effect for the area
The storm also forced officials · of Columbus, Chillicothe and
to close a section of Interstate 70 in Portsmouth.
Columbus briefly Sunday night ·
·Freezing rain occurred over
because of slippery conditions . much of Ohio overnight with only
Schools in all three Meigs · underneath the snow, village streets And a massive accident on 1-480 the far western sections of the state
County districts were closed today were in good condition Monday near the intersection witb 1-71 in being spared. The ice accumulated
due to the nearly three inches of morning and officials of neither Cleveland created a major backup.
to between a half inch to an inch
Downed power lines interrupted over much of northeast Ohio. Ice
snow that fell overnight. While Pomeroy nor Middleport reported .
electrical service to about 30,000 accumulations elsewhere were
many of the back roads were any accidents.
Columbus and Southern Power Co. around a half an inch or less.
reportedly slick with some ice
customers late Sunday and early
Snow began mixing with the
Monday, and about 9,000 Cleve- freezing rain around midnight. The
. land Electric Illuminating Co. cus- National Weather Service .said that
tomers were without service for a by 5 a.m. Monday morning most
shon period.
reporting stations over the eastern
Commuter trains did not run in· two-thirds of Ohio were reporting
Cleveland Monday morning for the mostly snow and sleeL

SAVE UP TO

Now is...

forces,' with Saddam Hussein's
defeated troops . giving their
weapons to angry crowds: '
. Iran.'s slate-owned Islamic
Republic News Agency, monitored
in Athens, Greece, quoted refugees
arriving in Iran as saying at least
two top civilian officials were
killed and "Basra is now in the
control of the people."
IRN A quoted the refugees as
sayin~ tbey saw "Iraqi soldiers
retummg from Kuwaii hand over
their arms 10 people and join them
in .anti-Saddam demonstrations.
They said that only the Republican
Guards (Iraq's ehte troops) were
baclcing the Iraqi president."
The refugees also said· Udai
Hussein, a son of Saddam Hussein;

Meigs ·County p~oficiency
test results prompt changes

Ohio agriculture briefs

Extension of Soviet credit unlikely

1Sectlon, 10 Pagaa 25 cenla
A MuiUmedla Inc. Nawapapar

,Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, · Monday, March 4; 1991 ·

Copyrighted 11111

Wildlife in the woodlot
.

I

Low tonight in mid
20s.Thesday, sunny, high in
lower SOs.

WASHINGTON (UP!) - The
Persian Gulf war aligned Israelis
and Arabs against a common fcie.
But amid talk of "new thinking"
in the politics of the Middle East,
raised hopes believe realization that
peace may not be quick or easy. ·
. "It would he a mistake for us to
expect tbat jn tbe aftermath, all of
the sudden we're going to have
immediate peace, an immediate
solution to the Arab-Israeli problem ," Secretary Of State James
Baker said Sundar.
. In advance o a trip later this
week to explore the postwar Middle East with foreign leaden, Baker
said he had "a gut feeling" !bat
Arab nations still technically at war
with Israel will now be more willing to make peace.

.But shaping tbe ~e. he cau- Israeli-Palestinian dialogue, ·but
tioned, may take some time and will not, for the moment, use its
could run afoul of historical obsta- influ~nce - strengthened by the
cles. He also said he will have no war - to coerce either side.
"specific plan" on how to prod
"There wiU continue 10 be these
Israel or its Arab neighbors toward ~~ intractable ·challenges in the
accommodation when he visits the Middle East," he said. "Now. in
region.
the· aftermath of this remarkable
While expecting "evidence of victory, there may be some Qppornew goodwill on both sides" to tunities as well. And we ought to
end their state of conflict, Baker try to take advantage of those
said, "That doesn't mean it tbat it's opportunities, but we can't impose
peace.''
.
~oing to happen, because it is so
mttactable and it has been there so
U.S. officials acknowledge in
long and the issues 111e so deep that private that )Vith the war over and
divide...
· llltention refocused on the underlyInterviewed on the NBC News ing problems of the region, Israel
program "Meet the Press," Baker will face renewed pressure 10 make
said the United States will take a concessions for peace and security
"two-ttack approach" of promot- to Palestinians in the occupied
ing Arab- Israeli peace and an
Continued on ~II'! 10

�.

Commentary
•

111 Court Street

Pomeroy, Oblp

WASHINGTON - An obscure ulate their industries and dole out
White House program that Prcsi- contracts to their own companies.
dent Bush once ~ed to "a hallThe loaned executives enjoy
mark of democracy may~ be a perks, like last year's three-week,
hallmark of government sletght of all-expenses-paid trip to Europe.
hand.
Their mission was to talk to foreign
The Presiden!'S . Executiye trade and government officials.
Exchange CommiSSIIln re~rults
This is the government revolvc.orporate hot shots to work 10 top ing doo( at its most blatant. Our
federal posts for a year, and gov- associate Scott Sleek: looked into
emment bureaac~ts 11;fC placed in the executive exchange program
temporary JObs w1th pnvate compa- and found that some of the job
.nies. The goal is mutual under- placements have pushed the limits
s~ding, but the result has some- of ethics. Officials from drag comUmes ~n ~ place corporate rep- panics have gone to work for the
resentattves 10 government agen- Health and Human Services
cies wbcn their companies do busi- AmnirisJmtion. One executive with
ness with those agencies.
an aircraft manufacturer worker for
Many of the participating corpo- the Federal Aviation Administrarations over. the past _two dec~!des · lion. ·And farm pesticide makers
have been b.g campwgn contribu- have set up offices in the Agricultors to the party m power. The ture Deparunent.
executives' temporll11' duty with
Last year the federal Office of
the gov~rnment someu_mes allows Personnel Management reviewed
them to mfiltrate agenc1es that reg- the exchange program and recom-

DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA
~~~
~miii:l ~.___,..,,.......,c::;~,""'

~v

.

ROBERT L. WINGETT

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Mana~rer

Publlsber ·

PAT WHITEHEAD

A8818tant Publllher/Controller

A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION arew.elcome. Tbey should be less than 300
words long. All letters are subJect to edltlag and must be signed with
name, address and telephone number. No unsigned letters wUJ be published. Letters should be in good taste. addressing Issues, not personalities.

John S. Cooper: Public
servant for many purposes

Ohio College scores

·

Oblo Colleae Basketball Resaltl
By Ullited Press lnteroadonaJ
Satorclay, Mareb 2

Jack Anderson
and Dale VanAtta
___________
_
vate. Commission ~taffen wece flying business class inslead of coach
and broke other federal spending
rules. But OPM set the record
straight, saying the commission got
bad legal advice.
.
The OPM review is not the laSt
the commission will see of scrutiny. The Generill Accounting Office
is also looking at the commission,
and so is a coilgressional committee headed by Rep. Tom Lantos, D.Calif.
·
Lantos is particularly interested
in a whistleblower on the commission staff, Gordon Hamel. He is the
commission's director of placement, and Heitman tried to fire him
after he complained to sovemment
investigators about ihe way the
agency was being managed.

.

.,

.

Berry s World
.I

BARGAIN

TRAVEL INC

(Ot)

Bowling Green vs Ohio University
At Dayton .
MCC Tourney Semifinals
SATURDAY,MARCH9
Lewis (DI) at Ashland
At Detroit
~c Tourney Semifinals
.
EMU-Kent winner vs BG-OU win-

.

COULD U£BA

UTTLe RA\N ...

.

· stone'43
.
Nonon 58, Mantua Crestwood S6 .
Upper Sandusky 43, Willard 41

:I'oledo 60, Ke!U Stale 57
Bowling Green 91, Miami 79
Xavier 102, Dayton 79
•
Wright Stl17, ~ St 106
Youngstown St 80, Uberty (Va) 77

ByARNOLDSA~SLAK

UPI Seoior Editor
WASHINGTON - U.S. politicians take a lot of knoclcs, many of
them well deserved, but when someone like John Sherman Cooper dies it
is a reminder that some fli'St class people serve the American public.
During his 20 ~ in the Senate, Cooper was, as noted in his recent
obituary, a politiciBR "who talks like a Democrat, votes like an independent and runs on the Republican ticket"
·
AclUally, it makes little difference whether Cooper had R or Dafter his
natne - he usJ181ly was to be found voting for what seemed to be the
common sense and decent alternative of any proposal before the Senate,
Even though he came from a state with an intensely partisan IU!d high·
ly· competitive political environment - Cooper was defeated twice and
elected five times to the Senate from Kentucky- he was highly regarded
and trusted by presidents of both parties.
·,
He served in sensitive and highly visible posts under Democratic presidents Harry Truman and Lyndon 1ohnson and Republican presidents
Dwight Eisenhower and Gerald Ford.
Cooper was one of the fust senata'S and one of the few Republicans to
stand up against the heavy-handed communist-hunting taCtics of Wisconsin Sen. Joseph McCarthy and he was an early ~nent of the United
StaleS' increasing involvement in the undeclared V1etnam War during the
1960s.
Cooper was not unique in Washington. The country always has been
fortunjlte to.have had a corps of talertted public Service - oriented people
who were on hand to do what was needed.
.
.
Generatly, these people are members of the .moderate wing of their
chosen parues and often are not C011$idered to be political h~vy hitters.
But that very attribute permits such individuals to' work effectively with
political oppoACnts on problems and in jobs where the national interest is
at stake.
Thus Cooper (and Ford) were Republican members of the Warren
Commission, where credibility and integrity was the most vital prerequisite for membership.
· Some of tbese people were able to take on nalional duties because they
were independently wealthy: Averill Haniman anc! Bernard Batuch come
to mind. Othen, like Mike Mansfield and Cooper himself, after his oncewealthy family fell on hard times, had to live on their public salaries.
··Also like Cooper, from Kentucky, and Mansfreld, from Montana, such
people often come froin states that cannot offer major political power
bases and theref&lt;re seldom are able to win the top Jl!'ize in U.S. politics.
Thus, Kentucky has supplied the second largest number of vice presicknts to the nation -Richard Johnson under Martin Van Buren, John
Rreckinridge under James Buchanan, Adlai Stevenson under Grover
C,leveland and Alben Barkley under Harry Truman.
.
. , Only one of its natives have ever served as presidenL But that one was
Abraham LincOln and a state can rest on its laurels with a president like
that and a public servant for a number of other purposes like John Shernian Cooper.

txJN'T YOU .
iWINK?

Athen·s, ·Logan are eliminated
' ATHENS- And then there were ton 70-56, Miami Trace took out Points each with Henwood also
· II rebo unds . .
none. With the defeat of Athens Vinton County 65-48, and in the grabbing a game h1gh
Chad Shuttleworth Jed all scarinc! Logan in tournament competi-. nig~tcap Fairland defeated Well• ers with 18 points for Logan as £!1e
lion over the weekend ~n At;&amp;ens ston 92·90.
l..ANCASTER
59
LOGAN
50
the six-member SEOAL IS finished
Chiefs retire from the season With
Lancaster broke open a tight
for the 1990-91 baskeiball camgame with • strong third quaner .
paign.
LANCASTER (59) • Bucky
· On Friday at Athens high school effort and earned a lrip to the Divithe Logan Chieftains were defeated . sion I district tournamenL
The Gales (18-4) held a 22-21 Triplett
by ~ S9-SO in the fmals of
Bob Spieth
24-8:
Henwood
62-2-6;
BillTim
Dilley
2-8-12:
Division I Sectional Tournament lead at the half, then outscored the 0-12; Greg Ca~~3-2-8; J.1. Searls
action before Athens was sidelined Chieftains 19-10 in the third period 2-0-4; Kenny Muck 2-1-0-7: Matt
by Portsmouth 91-53 in Division n to open a 10-Jll!int lead, and then MauUer 1-0-2. .TOTALS 10-1-16capped it by·b1tting eight of 13 free . 59.
District action at Obio University.
In other Saturday tourney action throws in the fourth quarter.
LOGAN 50) -1oe Hanning 1-0at Ohio O.U.' s Convocation Center
Bill Dilley and Tim flenwood 2; Brian Carmen 0-1-1; Shawn
Greenfield McClain whipped Iron- led the Gales in scoring with 12
Cootlaued oo page 4

~~~:s:~:

..

I, 0 I ''I

r'" '

Split government is a U. S. blunder · .
· d
A s we a II k now, t he U mte
States is a democracy. (I know, I.
know - there are those who argue
that it isn't a democracy, it's a
republic; but spare me such pointless chop-logic, which leads
nowhere and proves nothing.) So
we defer, at least in many cases, to
the wishes of the majority.
Being aware of this prin~iple,
thoughtless people someumes
make the mistake of assuming that
the majority is always right. But
that, of course, is nonsense.
Although it is nowhere so stated,
our political syste~ seems to be
based on the propoSJUon that, while
the majority isn't always right, it
has a better right than anyone else
to call the shots anyway. Since
everybody makes m_istakes, at least
let_of.!rs be the mistakes of the
ma)onty.
That is about the only consolation I can ~g up for a blunder that
the Amen can people have been
making for most of the last 50

· e1ecung
. . a congress of one
years:
party and .a president of the other.
That was ihe state of affairs from
1946 to 1948, when the Con~ess
was Republican and the pres1dent
was a Democrat. And it was the
case again (with the parties' roles
reversed) from 1952 to 1960, from
1968 to 1976, and from 1980 right
down to date (with the excepti9n
that from 1980 to 1986 the
Democrats controlled only the
House, not the Senate, under a
Republican president). That adds
up to 29 yesrs of divided governmenL . ,
.
It 1sn 1 altogether fau 10 conelude that 1he American people
have deliberately made this sUite of
affairs the chronic condition of the
federal ~ovemmenL Shrewd gerrymandenng by Demo_crat-&lt;:ontroUed
leg1slatures, back m the party's
heyday, has made it all but impossible for the Republicans to win
control ?f ~e ~ou~, . even. when
the pollucal ude IS gomg the1r way.

,
.
But there
is recent 'l111d. . d'1smaymg
evidence that most people think
that dividing the executive and leg,
islative branches of the federal
government between the Republicans and the Democrats is actually
a pretty clever idea.
Even aUowing for the tendency
of many people to think that the .
status quo - even, in this case,
divided government - is always
best those are appalling figures.
App'arently a great many people
have, stored away in the bseks of
their minds, a fuzzy recollection,
acquired in some ~igh-scho&lt;?l
civ1cs course, that th1s country IS
constitutionally based on something called "the separation of
powers.'' If so, then giving
Congress and the presidency to
rival political parties is a pretty
nifty contribution to that high llrinciple isn't it?
1)1~. it isn '1. Traditionally in this
country, the president and majori-

William A. Rusher

.

~
b' NEA. Inc .

.l',r

"This Is your lucky day. We just had a cancellation to the Middle East ... "

What do you s:ay to a glum and
frightened world?
Take your choice of one of the
following: Hang in there. All we
can do i,s pray. Look on the bright
side. (Gabriel Heatter was able to
do this through the dark days of
World War II when he would often
begin his nightly newscast with
"There's good news tonighL") We
must never give up hoping. Things
will get better. Life goes on.
Or we can say nothing and just
be there for j:JeOple who are afraid
and disheartened. Tfiis can probably do more good than all our
words put together.

A recovered alcoholic once said
of the man who helped him most in
his hours of deepest despair: "He
never counseled or criticized me.
He just stood by me, a silent, affectionate reminder of better things.
You will never know how much
that meant to me." ,
We underestimate the good
done in this world by those .who
just stand by us and are.there when
we need them.
Words of course are important
We cling - for our very lives sometimes -to the sayings of Jesus. Yet
Jesus was a man of few words.
It isn't so much what he said as

Today in history _________________
By United Press IDtei'DIItiollal
'

:;Today is Monday, March4, the 63rd day o0991 with 302 tb follow.
; The moon is waning, moving toward its last quarter.
• The morning Sill'S are Mettury, Venus, Mars and Satum.
=·The eveniDI• is 1upiter.
: 'lbo8e born on ibis date are-under the sign of fisces. They include comp&lt;~eer ~ Vivaldi in 1678; Polish-born American patriot Casimir
~ in 1747: Notn: DDme fOOiball coach Knute Rockne in 1888: actor
Oilfield in 1913; Eoglish auto racing champion Jimmy Clatk in
1936: uho:aeaa Paula Prmtiss in 1939 &lt;aae 52).
.

1•

:' Oo this dlle in history:
.
· In 1789, die U.S. Congreaa met for the flfSI time, in New York City.
:.Jn 1801, ~ Jeffenon became the first president to be inlugwated
•{

f..

'

in Washington, D.C.
In 1917, 1eanette Rankin, a Montana Republican, was sworn in as a
member of the House of Representatives and became the first woman to
serve in Congress.
·
.
•
.
In 1958, the U.S. atomiC submarine Nautilus reached the North Pole by
passibg beneath the Arctic ice cap.
. In 1987, in a nationwide addreu, President Reagan acknowledged his
adminiSll'llion swapped arms to Iran for U.S. hostages and said "it WliS a
. mistake."
In 1990, the shuttle Atlantis landed safely after depositing in orbit a
secret miliauy sateUite that was laltr reported to have failed.
A thought fir the day: Nocre Dame football coach Knute Rockne once
said, ''Show me a good and gracious loser and I'll show you a failure."

who he is that has been the secret
of his appeal. The hearts of his disciples were captured and won by
the radiance of his face. They felt
better when 1esus was around.
They liked his company:
So do we. But we have let ourselves be drawn away by the lords
· of babble who have come to rule
our society. "We have to talk" is
the byword of our times. Life is
one bi$ "Oprah Win frey Show."
The 'cnsis in the Persian Gulf has
exacerabated our difficulty.
Our ears are being assaulted
round-the-clock by ex-generals and
armchair generals who, said Mike
Royko the other day, "seem·to be
sleeping on cots in the TV studios."
Two ways in which the churches can carry out this role are by
!'C8toring the midweek prayer 11\CCt·
mg and the church supper. ·
Most churches long ago abandoned the custom of the prayer
meeting and substituted instead the
adult study group. The difference
between the two IS the wide difference between thought and feeling.
The intimate prayer meeting,
even more than the Sunday worship service, is the bean and soul of
the church. n is the feeling side of
religion.

JAC~SON FOULEI) • Oblo State's Jim
Jacksoo Is fouled by Matt Stei•eoga
as be
..
attempts to shoot baD durlog Suoday's Big Ten
acUon lo St. Joho Arena, Columbus. Tbe sec'

f

party . .

lnstesd, for nesrly half a century
we have repeatedly hurled the two
parties at each other like 1111cient
gladiators, differently bui equally
armed: the Republicans with the
presidential sword and shield, the
Democrats with. Congress' net and
tridenL
.
Then we sit around and bellyache to each other because they
can't (or won't) agree on a budget,
or much of anything else. My
friends, we are asking for chaos and, since this is (remember?) a
democracy, we will probably get iL

George R. Plagenz
A typical prayer meeting may
open with the singing (to piano
accompaniment) of such songs as
"Shall We Gather at the River?"
and "When the Saints Go Marching
ln." Then the pastor will lead the
gr.oup through an exposition or
some Bible passage. That will be
followed by extemporaneous
prayers by those present
In such a setting God can come
very near, and it is the nearness of
God ihat we miss in religion today.
The church supfer is the
church's strong arm o fellowship.
It warms with its victuals from the
oven and with its hearty welcome
to all.
When words fail us, as they ultimately do, this is how the church
can "be there" for us in troubled
times.

aad bil crew eelellrate vlc::::J;. at tile Good·
7· (UPI)
wreoell 500 ID RoekiDaham S

. DISPLAYS TROPHY • Kyle Petty of Rill·
dleman,. N. C., holds bls trophy
blah Ia air • he
.
.

Petty captures second straight Goodwrench 500.

.

"In God We Trust," desipted aa
the U.S. motto by Congress in IJ56,
originated during the Civil War u 1111
Inscription for U.S. coina. It wu used
by Francis Scott Key in a aUI(Itly dlf,
ferent form when he wrote "'i'he Star
Spangled Banner" in 1814.

·'
·-:-~:-:

~-~.:.

~

·- - ~.--~

.

'

ROCKINGHAM, N.C. (UPI) Kyle Petty used a caution flag 15
laps from the finish Sunday to
close ground on Ken Schrader and
take his second ·straight Oood\vrench SOO Nascar stock-at race
at North Carolina Motor Speedway.
· Pe!ir was dominating the fJrst
two-thuds or the race but found
rumself 20 seconds behind Scluader with 15 laps to go. A spin by

DiviDe trust

..

'

......

,

____ ,_,.,

ori lap 478 brought out
the seventh yellow caution flag.
Petty was able 10 move his Pontiac Gr111d Prix past Schrade('s
Chevrolel Lumina easily when the
green flag wu waved with 11 laps
to go. He Slayed in front the rest of
the way and finished 1/1} secondS
in front of Schrader.
. The win was tbe fourth of
· Petty's career. He won $131,450
and also toOk $68,400 in the UnoHany Gant

......
-.

••

.·

cal Challenge bonus for winning
from the pole.
The Unocal bonus of $7,600
rolls over each race until someone
wins iL Petty also won the Unocal
bonus last year in the Ooodwrench
500 to the tune of $228,000.
He averaaed 124.083 miles per
hour in the win.
Gant wu able to recover to finish third and was followed by
Ricky Rudel and Bill Elliott.
•l"'' . :-

·~'"'""'•,

- ·..

-~

.....

... ~::··

~.~

ood-raoked Boeks beld oo toed~ MSU 65-'4 to . .
clinch at least·a share or tbe 1990-91 conrereoc:e
title. (UPI)
•
1
•

· h

· •

·

·Brow_n s · ree .t row gives
osu 65-64 WI·n over·'MSU
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) Jamaat Brown has been through a
few Big Ten wars, so he was able
to shake off a little last-second
pressure Sunday.
.
Brown, a 6-foot-4 junior g~d
who has started all 90 games since
coming to Ohio State, looked pressure straight in the eye Sunday
afternoon and came away the winner.
.
Brown made the second of two
free throws. with a second left to
provide No. 2 Ohio State with 65;
64 victory over Michigan State and
clinch at least a lie for the Buckeyes' fust Big Ten title since 1971. .
The Buckeyes, 25-1 overall, are
and 15-1 in the the Big Ten, two
games ahead of second place Indiana. They also avenJtr: their only
loss of the !;CBSOn at
t Lansing.
"It was drl!Malic and I lil!:e it
like that," said Brown, who also
hit the game-winning jumper with
32 seconds. left in a 63-62· win over
Minnesota a week aso. "I knew I
was going to make the shot. It's
something we wmt on every day in
practice.''
Brown was fouled by Michigan
State's Steve Smith as he tried to
follow his own missed shot with
the score tied 64-64. The clock .
showed time had expired, but officials. after viewinll a television
replay, ruled there was one second
left. He missed the first shot but
made the second.
"I liked the situation where I
had a free throw with no seconds
left on the clock," Brown said.
"That's something you dream
abo'ut in the back yard - no seconds left on the clock, you miss the
. fli'St one and inake the second and
win the game.
•
"The first one hit the front of
the rim and bounced ou~"
Michigan State head coach 1ud
Heathcote called his. final timeout
after the miss. in an attempt to
increase the pressUre on Brown.
. "I hljd to use the rim on the second one to keep everybody on thelf
toes," Brown said. "It felt good.''
Michigan State had rallied
behind Smith and Matt Steigenga
to cut a 63-54 defiCit with 2:04 left
and pull even at 64-64. Steigenga
hit two thiec-Jl(&gt;intera durin~ that
run, including lhe tying one wtth 39
seconds remaining.
· Smith led both teams with 23
points, but hit just 9 of 25 field goal

a

ties in both Houses of Congress
have belonged to the same party.
That encourages them to work
together for a common set of poli-cies, and if these tum out badly the
voters can always replace them
with the politicians of the other

Churches shoq.ld radiate strengths
~1

Ohio

DIVISIONID
Av01162, Sherwood Fairview 37
Brookfield S6, Pymatoning Valley
48
ner
.
Lisbon 52, East Palestine 32
Ball St-CMU winner vs MiamiMedina Highland 62, Rootstown Toledo winner
.48
.
AtDaytoo
(ot)
·
MCC
Tourney F'mals .
~
MusldngUm
55,
Shenandoah
·west
Indianapolis us. Ash1Mcl99 .
35
.
SUNDAY,MAR.
C
lllO
Division m NCAA Tournameot
· Wynford 54, Milan Edison 39
Ohio State at Iowa
Otterbein 88, Wittepbcrg 62
---.NE
Dlinois ill Wright St
NAIA Distrlet 22 Pblyoll's
DIVISIONIV
At
Detroit
Rio Grande 8~. Tiffin 80
Buckeye Central 56, New Riegel MAC Tourney Finals
Malone 116, Cedarville I01
40
Kidron Academy 54, Gilmour Boys tourney scores
Giiis tourney scores
Academy45
·
Ohio Hlgb School Tourni!DleDt
Zanes
Rosecrans
45,
Tusky
Cath
Ohio High Sehoel Tournameot
Results
42.
Scores
By Uoited Press lotemlltlonal
By Uolted.Press Internatlooal
Boys .
Sato relay, Mareh 2
This week's games
.
Satorday, March 2
Girls ·
TblsWeek's
.
· DIVISIOND
DIVISION I
Ohio College Basketball Sched, Cols Briggs (f), Cots StCharles 66
·Boardman 63, Ravenna 49
. ule'
.
· Celina 53, Mansfield 52 (2 ot)
. By Uolted Press IDtematlooal
I)IVISION m . ,
Cleve Hgts '49, Grfld Hgts Trinity
Bloom-Carroll 70, Heath 52
47
MONDAY, MARCH 4
Cols Hartey 57, Marion Pleasant41
~uyahoga Falls 66, Aleron North
Chicago Stat Toledo
Jonathan Alder 59, Cots Academy
32
TUESDAY, MARCH 5
54
fickerington 78, Cols Frnkln Hgts Youngstown Stat Wright St
Olentangy 61, Granville 58
26
NAIA District 22 Tourney Finals
RR Magnificat 76, Westlake 74
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 6
Transactions
Reynoldsburg.75, Gahanna 61
No games scheduled
:Wooster 48, N Canton Hoover 40
THURSDAY,MARCH7
Suoclay Sports Tnnsactloos
StJoseph (Ind) at Ashland
By Uoited l'ress Iotemlltlonal
DIVISION D.
At DaytuD
Canfield 74, Sttuthers 58
Mldwestero Collealate Coorer- Bll!ltball .
Philadelphia - Signed otitfieldCols Beechcrft 5~. Whitehall 52 (3 ·eoce ToUI'IIey ftnt roaod
er Julio Peguero to a 1-year conpt)
.·
.
. . FRIDAY, MARCH 8
tracL
· Jefferson Area 64; Cleve VA-St At Detroit ·
·
San Francisco - Signed pitcher
Joe 57
·
\Wd-Amerlcao Coofereoee TourTreVor Wilson to a 1-year contracL
Louisville 63, Orrville 39
ney
· .
Texas- Signed infielder Gary .
Medina Buckeye 54, Oberlin Fire- Ball State vs Central Michigan
Green and pitchers Gmlld Alexanlands 42
Miami YS Toledo
No Royalton 44, LaGrange Key- EaStern Michigan YS Kent SUite
der and John ~arfield.

_:...--~=-=-:.:.~....:_

mended that the commission pa~
closer attCntion to the ethics question. OPM cited one questionable
case: Jolm Healy, a Chicago public
relations exeeutive, was imtially,
assigned to the Enerw. Department,
but when that job didn't work out,
he Wl!S given another post. The
salary was $12,000 lower, but
Healy got the hi~her salary l!"d ~d
some extra duues to earn II, hke
setting up photos on the European
trip.
.
The commission, run by Elizabeth Heiunan, has an annual budget
of $1.4 million, with about onethird of that paid by participating
companies.
'The commission made the mistake of thinking that it didn't have
to obey all federal spending rul~s
because some of its money was pn-

Pomeroy~lddleport,

--Sports .s coreboard---

· Monday, March 4, 1991

Exchange program fraught with ills

· The Daily Sentinel

Mo~y. March 4, 1991

· Page 2-The Dally SenUnet
· Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

DOWNING CHILDS
MUlLEN MUSSER

INSURANCE

Ill Slcllllll St.. Pomeroy

YOUI lfiDEPEfiDENT
. .
AGENTS SIIVIfiG
.. EGSCOUm
SlfiCf 1161

auempts. Steigenga finished with
IS.
Michigan State, 17-10 overall
and 10-7 ill 1\le Big Ten, led much
of the game. The Spartans were
ahead 33-32 at halftime. .
Ohio Stale used a 9-0 run midway through the, second half to lake
a 58-50 lead and its 63-54 margin
was the largest by either ieam.
Jim Jackson led Ohio State with
20 points, 14 coming in the second ·
half, Treg Lee added 14 and Perry
Carter scored 10 points and
grabbed 14 rebouncjs.
.
.
"I thought the run we made
toward the .end of ihe second half
which stretched it to eight points
was the difference in the gl!Me,"
Ohio State head coach Randy
Ayers.said.
"I'm just happy to get a snare of
the title. We have tq get ready for
Purdue (Wednesday night) and try
to win it 011tright."
"It's been a long time coming.
It's been 20 years and .I'm just
happy for all the people associated
with the program."
Ayers described Brown as
"pretty-clutch."
"It's the second game in a row
that Jamaal has had the winning
shot, " Ayers said. "He did a great
job of following up the shot and got
fouled."
.
Heathcote felt the foul called
against Smith at the end was
"questionable."
"The deciding factor in close
games is that you let the kids will it
and not the officials," Heathcote
said. "I wasn't privy til what went
on, but certainly a missed shot and
a tip in the air is not usuaUy a foul,
. especially at the end of the game.

.

"What Ohio State likes to do is' ·
up and dOwn, up and down and the
first one to 100 wins. I think ·the ·.
fact 'lit slowed the game down a loi .
. of times and tried to work for a'
good.percenta8e shot seemed to..
work in our favor.''
•;
The Daily Sentinel
(l18P81f. . . )
A Dtvloloa ol Mdlmedla, Joe•
PubUshed every afternoon, Monday

through Friday, 111 Court St., Po- ~ ' 1
.meroy. Ohio. by the Ohio Valley Publishing Company/ Multimedia, Inc.,
Pomeroy, Ohio 4!5769, Pb. 992-21116. Second class poe:t.qe paid at Pomeroy,
Ohio.
Member: United

Pre~ a

International,

Inland Dally Pre&amp;a Aaoclatlon and the

OhiO News~per AltOCiatlon. Natlollll
Advertlllntl Representative, Branham
Newapaper Sales, 133 Third Avenue,

New York, New York 10017.

POSI'MASI'ER: Sellll addr... chan..,.
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areas where home carrier aervlce lJ
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Mltlllaltoortplloao
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13 Weeks ..................... ........., ... $2.1.10
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SECOND ANNUAL

MEIGS COUNTY
CHAMBER OF COMMERCE·

Spring
Dinner and Dance
SATURDAY, M.A RCH 9, 1991
ROYAL OAK RESORT ·
STEAK DINNER-7 PM
DANCE...:...8 .PM-MIDNIGHT
/
TICKETS: '30 Couple; '15 Single

Tickets available at the Chamber
Office, Farmers Bank,' Home Natrona!
Bank or any Chamber Board Member.
RESERVATIONS MUST BE IN BY
MARCH 6, 1991
Will Reserve Tables For Parties
of Four or More Couples

,,

.

..
'

�•

Page

4 The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-lllddlepor"., Ohio

Clll!e iniO the game with fue in its
eye.s and treated John Lawhorn's
club 10 a tense encmmter, holding
the Redmen advuuage to as much
as seven (14-7) at 14:02 in lhe first
half. The Dragons, advancing on
scoring by Tliad Patrick, Mike
Clark and Brian Bicknell also tied
the game at 17 (10:21);
The Oragons gained their fJtSt
tilL
lead at 7: 19 on Don Williams
· The Redmen (30-4) will host layup and maintained a narrow lead
Maklne CoBege (30-4) Tuesday at until Troy Donaldson's basket at
7:30p.m. 81 Lyne Center. The PiQ- - 1:02 put the Redmen ahead by .one .
DeetS, second seeded in lhe district,
(38-37) going into halftime.
defealed ~e 116-101 Satur·
Harrison, who outdistanced his
day in Canton to challenge the season high of 35 points, posted .
Redmen for the Ohio NAJA title.
Nov. 17 over Malone iii the chamTiffin, a.twQ-lime victim of Rio pionship game or lhe Bevo Francis
Grande during the regular season, Classic, wiRed in concert with fel-

Gary Harrison •s three free
·• throws ill lhe last 20 seconds S81ur. · day - dllee oldie 40 points made
by lhe seni«point_guard from Gal!!folis - lifted lhe University of
Rio Grande men's bllsketball ream
~ to an 83-80 viciOiy over Tiffin Univenity in lhe second round or the
District 22 Playolfs and ca~apulled
lhe Redmen into lhe championship ·

low starters Donaldson, Mart
Ers1an, Brad Schubert and Jeff
Brown to shake off anotber deadlock with mrm at ss (10:55) and
hold a slim lead·for the mnainder
olthe game.
WiUi110s' pair of free throws
with 58 seconds left put the Dmgons behind the bosts by two (8078). Harrison was fouled 11 20 sec·
onds and stepped forward to sink
one foul shot ·(81· 78) and hit anoth·
er free throw ati811CJC011ds.
Jeff Ward's layul.' with nine
seconds remaining agam put Tiffin
in danger or tying, but another Tiffin foul on Hamson aUowed lhe 60 product ofGallia Academy High
School 's basketball progr110 to
sink another poinL Following one

Monday, March 4, 1991 .

•

timeout each b both beaches Tif.
fin went for a~~ shot \n an
attempt 10 lie lhe game and send it
into overtime, but the shot was
blocked by Brown as lime ran ouL
. In addition to Harrison, Brow'n
poured in 12 ·points· and seven
rebounds, Schubert scored 10
poillts and Donaldson anotbec 10 to
complete Rio Grande's high scoring. The Redmeo sbot ·54.4 pen:ent
on. field goals (31-57), including
28.6 percent from the three-point
ranse on four oll4 altempts. !'rom
lhe line, Rio Grande was 81 percent
(17-21), but were outboardcd by
the Dragons 33-28. The hosts held
their IUinOvers to 10.
Tiffin drew 21 points from ··

Willialfts, 20 from Ward and l2
apiece from Patrick and BictneD to
remain a threat to Rio Grande's
superiooty. The Dragons connected
· on 33 of 60 field goal auernpts for
SS percent and netted three of
seven tries from the three fir 42.9
percent. At the foul line, Tiffin
rcconled 73.3 pcn;ent (11-15), with
Williams · hitting six of seven
attcmpis, rivalling Harrison '.s scv~
of eight performance for _Rao
Grande. The Dragons commttted
14 tUrnovers.
·
·· Tiffin left with a season finish
of23-9.
Tuesday's championship battle
with Malone wil.l be .the ftrSt on the
Redmen court since Much 1988,

The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

when John Lawhorn's club lost 10
Deftanee 81-80.

..

Monday, March 4, 1S$1
Pagi 5 · ·

Box score:

RIO GRANDE (83) -Gary
Harrison, 15·1-7-40; Marl: Erslari,
2-3-7; Brad Schubert, 2-1·3·10;
Lester Smith, 244; Jeff Brown, 22-2-12; Troy Don~dson, 4-2-10.
TOTALS 27-4-17-83.

Calendar
.

Community Calendar Items
appear two days before an event
and the day of that event. Items
must-he received weD I• advance
to IIISure publication In the cal··
endar.
·
•.

TIFFIN (80) - Jeff Ward, 100-20; Don Williams, 6-t-6:21 ;
Mike Clark, 1..0.2; ~ Hcrnct, 01-0-3; Thad -Patrick; 4-1-1-12;
Gmnt Weaver, ·2~-4; Brian Bicknell, 4-4-1 2; Dale 'Kubl, 3·0-6.
TOTALS 30-3-11-30.
Halftime i!j:ore: Rio Grande 38,
Tiffin·37.

MONDAY
FOREST RUN • The. Forest
Run United Methodist Church will
have a rummage sale on Monday
and Tuesday from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.
each day.

Road teams win five of six NBA games Sunday
By DAVE RAFFO
VPI Sports Writer
Life on the road was a lot sweet·
er tban usua) in the NBA Sunday
when five of the six games were
won by the visiting teams. ·
·Five of six.marks a great day for
road warriors, considering NBA
home teams are 503-267 for a .653
winning
this season. A
few more days like Su11day, and
· players might wonder why they
play so hard for home court·advantage in the playoffs.
Here's what happened Sunday:
- The Houston Rockets, with
Alcccm Olajuwon back for lhe second P.Me after missing 25 with an
eye mjury, snapped a l~e losing streak at the Forum wath a 10494 victory over the Lr,s Angeles
Lakers.
- The Utah Jazz won their second straight 81 the start of a sevengame road trip, edging the 76ers
95-92 to snap a seven-same
Philadelphia winning streak. It was
Utah's first win in Philadelphia
since 1986. ·
- The Stru8Jiing Portland Trail
Blazers ~a four-game losing
streak, thear longest in three seasons, with a 116-107 victory in

perccn•

T'
,..,

· r .,""'

round postponed .at Doral
were

: . course.

~:Athens,
'

·:chad Shuttleworth 5-1-S-18; Eric
:: Burris 2-2-6; Trevor Unaer 2-5-9.
. ·TOTALS 14-3-15-50.
: : Score by quarters:
• : . Lancaster 12-10-19-18-59
: · Logan 10-ll-10-19-50
.
:' J'()RTSMOUTH 91 ATHENS 53
· Five players scored in double
.. -figures as the Trojans hit 54 per;:;' :cent of their sho!s and forced
' Athens into 33 turnovers.
"
Of the 33 turnovers committed
~ by Athens 21 were outright steals
~ by the quick-handed Trojans who
~ need to a 10-0 lead, which eventu~ ally grew 10 4P points in the second ·
~ half.
. . .
:·
Phil Whitehead's 18 markers
~· and 16 by D' Aamond Mannon
"' sparked the 'winners while Scott
~ Hillkirk was the only Athens player
" in double digits with 15.
~ The victory sends Portsmouth
:. (20-2) against the Greenfield
•: McClain Tigers (15-7) next Satur: day at6:15 p.m. in the uppcrbrack·
: , et championship game, while
:;: Athens hangs it up with an 8-15
:: record.
••
The box score:
.
10:
ATHENS (53) • Kyle Lonas 0·
1-1; Jason Reed 3-3-9; Matt JoDick
•• 4-0-8; Reid Schaller 1-3-5; Bob
: ' Bailey 4-0-8; Scott Hillkirk 7-l-15;
" Brent Hartman 0-7-7 . TOTALS
••
•• 1!1-15-53.
::
PORTSMOUTH (91) • Bill
0: Esham 1-0-2; Matt Ape! 3-0-6;
~ Todd SkagJs 2-2..0-10; D' Amond
~ Mannon 5·1-3-16; Phil Whitellead ,
:: 7-4-18; Mike Parker 4-3-11; Jay .
•1 White 5-S-15; Brian Kelly 2-0:4;
: • Eric MiDer 3-2-8; Mike Estep 0-1·
0: 1 TOTALS 32-3-111-'ill.
k GREENFIELD 70 IRON'fON 56
~
In' the second g8IRC Saturday the
~ Tigers had to scratch ~11,1 behind
•• in the second half to ehmmatc the
:: 1-Tiscn after Ironton had posted
•· quartet leads of 16-)2, and 30-29
:. tiefore futally slipping iniO a 47-44
~. lead entering the final period.

!:

At Milwaukee, Dominique
· Wilkins scored 25 poillts and John
Battle added 19 10 lift the Hawks,
who ()ave won 21 straight at l)orne
but are I0- 19 on lhe road and won
for ooly the third time in their last
15 road games. Dale Ellis scored a
season-high 32 for the BuCks, who
won their ftrSt 18 home games but
are 7-5 at lhe Bradley Center since
' '
then.
.
"NOt only is it a road win, but
it's against ti ream we're trying to
catch up to," Hawks guard Glenn
Rivers said. "So we got two wins

SYRACUSE CHEERLEADERS • Kneeling
· are Lisa Wiles and Keri CaldweD. Stalrstepped,

today.''

At Landover, Md., David,
Robinson made nil six of his facld
goal aitempts in a third-quarter,
including three consecutive dunks,
and fmished with 26 points to lift
the Spurs. Bernard King scored 19
for the Bullets, who have lost 12 of
their last 14 games.
·
At Auburn Hills, Mich., Joe
Dumars scored 26 points, including
14 in· the final quartet, and Mark
Aguim: chipped in 22 to help the
Pistons avoid losing six straighl for
the first time in five seasons.
Danny Manning scored 31 for the
Clippers.

bottom to. top, are HUiery Harris, Mary Ward;
. Tricia Richards and Jessica Counts.

1

Women's church circle meets
1be Presbyterian Women's Circle met rccentlr at the church for
the ftrst time smce its reorganization. Rev. Kris Treintong opened
the meeting with prayer and
requested members to (lillY for her
native country of lltailand because
of political unrest thcie now.

POMEROY • There will- be a
CHESTER • Chester Council
special meeling of the Meigs Coun- No. 323 DaughterS of America will
· SYRACUSE • Thee Sutton ty Garden Clubs ·on Monday at meel Tuesday at 7:30p.m. InitiaTownship Trustees will meet Mon- ... 7:30p.m. at the Extension Office in tion scheduled for that night has
dliy at 7:30 p.m. at the Syracuse Pomeroy to finalize plans and been postponed until the district
Municipal Building.
appoint commiuees for the regional meeting. That district meeting is to
meeting to be held April 27 at ~al- be held Saturday at I p.m. at the
CHESTER - The Chester PTO isbury Elementary. Representanves Chester Lod~e Hall. Members weu
will meet at Chester Elementary from each club are urged 10 attend. · white and bnng gifts for prizes. .
School on Monday at 7 p.m. All
parents and teachers are invited
RACINE • The Racine Chapter,
MIDDLEPORT • The Middle·
Order of the Eastern Star, No. 134, port Lodge No. 363 F and AM will
meet Tuesday at 7:30p.m. for work
RACINE • Racine Village wiD meet Monday at 7;30 p.m..
in the fellowcraft degree. Refresh·
Council will mee.t Monday at 7
TUESDAY
ments will be served.
p.m. IU Star Mill Park.
WELLSTON • The •Executiye
• WEDNESDAY
CHESHIRE • Women Alive Committee of the Policy CommitTUPPERS PLAINS • There
wlU meet Monday 81 7 p.m. at the tee of the six•county AGHJMV will be an officer's meeting of both
Kyger Creek Clubhouse. in Solid Waste -District will meet on VFW and Ladies' Auxiliary of Post
Cheshire. There will be a devonon- Tuesdtiy at 10 a.ll! . at the District 9053 on Wednesday at 7:30 p.m.
al speaker and Carla Kimes will Office, located at 213 East Broad- at the post hall in Tuppers Plains.
demonstrate crocheting cloth bas- way in Wellston.
kets. Refreshments and a soup bar
POMEROY - Salisbury TownWELLSTON • The Board of ship Trustees will meet Wednesday
wiD be available.
Directors of the AGHJMV Solid at 7 p.m. at the home of Sarah
WDDLEPORT - Cheerleadlng Waste District will meet on Tues- Oibbs.

The Least Coin collectabn was the new Bible study books to be
·
taken while Mrs. Paul Hap10nstall used felr the year's programs.
.
Mrs.
William
Morris
preaided
at
read "Jesus Came to Save People,
Not DestrQy Them.". A devotional · the meeting which was closed by
reading about the ·Bable was read prayer by Rev. Treintong. Mrs.
by Mrs. Harley Btown and Mrs. Morris and Mrs. Myron Miller
and coff~ at the
Tom Rue led a discussion on the served
Introduction of Tongues of

.

...

By United Press International
While Nolan Ryan prepares to
start Opening Day next month at
the age of 44, a 45-year-old Jim
Palmer is happy just to make it
through 15 minutes of batting practice. .
.· , Ryan is already thinking abont
returning for 1992 as a 45-ycar-old.
He was expected to make 1991 his. ·
flllil year, but his agCI)t is cx~ted
. to visit the Texas Rangers Port
Charlotte, Fla., training ·c110p this
week to discuss the possibility of a
contract extension for baseball's
nil-time strikeout leader.
"I'm not ruling it (1992) out,"
Ryan said. "I'll have to mate thai
determination six months from

He said he and Bean "glanced
at each other, about-faced, and ran
for the house."
'
"I was just getting ready to tee
it up on the 14th hole when I saw
· the flash," said Nicklaus, who is
two stroke&amp; back with five holes to
play. "I said it was time to go to
the clubhouse."
· Curtis Strange, one stroke off
the· pace, was oo the 13th tee. He
mn to a nearby van and jumped in.
Play was ftrst susperided at 4:10 ·
p.m. EST with 22 play~rs still on .
the course. After considera\ion of .
resuming play, the round was
called for the day at5:20 p.m.
·
~

•

now.

· "I enjoy pitching. I enjoy being
!n sbai?C. I enjoy my teammates.
I'm gomg 10 continue to pitch until
I reach a point I don't feel It's
worth the effon or I can't compete
on this level."
Rangers General Manager Tom

Grieve said he would welcome first time this spring and he
"But the question is whclher or
talks With agent Dick Moss. ·
appeared to be as strong as always.
not this is nil I've got. Wbere do we
"I wouldn't be surprised if Dick
"I'm relieved to' see him throw go from here? I have no way of
wants to talk about next year," like he did," said Texas manager answering that and no else does
Grieve said. "We'd be glad to talk Bobby Valentine. "One of these ' either~"
to him."
years he's not going 10 be able to
On a sunny and breezy Saturday
Ryan last spring agreed to his. · do that. I'm relieved to see this morning ~t Twin Lakes Park,
$3.3 million 1991 contracL
.
isn't the year."
.
threw -to some of Balti·
"It's something ol a spring Ira·
At Sarasota, Fla., Palmer also Palmer
more's better hitters, including
dition," Moss said. "Tom and I gel threw batting practire s-.rurday for Dwight Evans, Cal Ripten, Bill
together 1111d discuss what's.next his comeback attelllpt with the Bal· Ripken and Bob Me!van. Palmer
for Nolan. I !Old Tom last year that timore Orioles. Palmer wants to got Melvin to swing and miss.
he and I wiD probably stiD be doing beco.me the first player in the Ha:ll
"Write that one down," the
this 20 years from now.
of Fllll!e to come back and play m three-time Cy Young Award win·
"As long as it works for Nolan, the,t;naJOrs;
. ,
ner said :'I may never get another
he wants to keep pitching. It's stiU .. · I don l kno~ af I m dead,_or one.••
working for him •
what," Palmer Slld after tbrowmg
Cal Ripkcn, one of baseball's
Ryan, who w~nt over 300 career for 15 minutes. "llcnow that it has 10p hitting infielders, reminded that
victories last Season, is expected to been fine so far. I've been able to . batting practice is far different from
be Texas' opening day pitcher next do all the stuff we're supposed to game conditions. · ·
month at age 44.
do down here. My legs are stronger
''It would be unfair to make any
Ryan threw 16 minutes of bat·
d!ey were four days ago and kind of judgment off what you see
ling practice last Saturday for the I m gomg to get them stronger.
out there," he said.

SEVENTH GRADE FIRST TEAM • Five
students make up the nrst· seventh grade team
· on the Southern JliDior Higb Scbool's quiz bowl ·
team. Pleturecl, J.r, are Paul lble, Craig Knight,

t!Wt

EIGHT GRADERS • These eight graders
· comreted In a computerized .nationwide q'!lz
bow on Thursday at Southern Junior High
School. Front row, 1-r, are Amber Lyons,.

.

'

Jason Shuler, Kelly Swisher, and Jennifer
Lawrence. Tbls group WBll among those participating in the Thinking Cap Quiz Bowl' on
Thursday.

MAUMEE , Ohio (UPI) Anglers planning to fish for walleye in · the Maumee Rive'\ this
Continuedfrompage3
spring will again receive help from
McClain had slowly built a five left but clawed back to within three the Toledo Area Meuoparlcs, which
to seven point lead ~ the fourth points (90-87) with just 12 seconds is providing a telephone number
for updateS on ftShing conditions.
quarter, triggering a barrage of remaining.
The annual walleye run into
three-point goal attempts by IronSenior Scou Lackey, who led all
ton and quick fouls in order to stop scorers with 36 points, drained a rivers that empty into Lake Erie
the clock .
three-point goal with 12 seconds attracts thousands of anglers from
In that fmal canto Ironton man- showing to knot the score at 90, across the country.
.The telephone line (419-893aged to hit just two of II from and it looked like overtime.
-9740)
hliS been provided for severthree point mnge and finished the
However, Ramey t~ok the in
al
years
for . conditions on the
game with a honible 3 for 23 effort bounds yass and dribbled the
Maumee
River.
The spawning runs
outside tlie $tripe. The G-Tigers length o the floor through the
also
attract
fishermen
to the
were hitting free throws down the Golden Rocket defense to score the
Portage
arid'
Sandusky
Rivers
east
stretch (II of 13) to maintain the lay.up just before the final two ticks
Toledo.
of
slowly growing lead.
on lhe clock.
·
The Walleye Hotline offers
Marcus Coleman fired in 32
The victory sends Fairland (20- updates
on levels, temperature, and
points for the winners with Ritchie 2) into the lower bracket champiwater
clarity
in the river, as well as
Bw\ner adding 12 and Doug Moon onship next Saturday against
where
the
fish
are biting, what
getting II. Bunner and Moon each · Miami 'fnlce at 8:15p.m.
types
of
lures
they're
hitting, and
swished a pair of trifcctas for the
Wellston (17-5) had led after . the status of the spring spawn.
winners.
one tjuarter before falling behind
On Saturday the recording said
Kevin McCoy led Ironton with 43-37 at intermission, and saw the
1·8 points and high scoring Ty Dragons holding a 66-58 lead after there was little walleye activity. in
the Maumee River, where the water
Barnes finished with 14 points-.
three quarters.
.
was
39 degrees and fairly clear. For
MmAMITRACE65~0N
Derek Jones, 6-3 senior, and
ansJers
who still wanted to try their
COUNTY48
Ramey paced· the winners with 26
luck,
callers
were told that northern
The Panthers ran their record to points each, while Mike Potts
pike
were
be,ing
~aught near the
18-4 by uiking a 15-13 lead after ·added 24 for Wellston.
Providence
d8IR
farther
up river..
one quarter and never stumblillg as
they converted eight of 10 free
throws in the fourth quarter, and
shot 54 percent from the floor (26
of 48).
·
Coached by Kirk Hardman, former Logan high school mentor, the
Panthers were led by Todd Henry's
18 points while the Vikings had 6-4
junior center Jason Caudill
accounting for 17 points and nine
of his ream's 30 rebounds.
While '!)'ing for a quick catch·
up in the fmal period the Vikings
went 0 for 9 on three point field
goal aacmpts, and close the season
with a 16-6 record.
.
FAIRLAND 'ill WELLSTON 90
. · The final game of lhe day was a
real nail-biter which saw the score
tied II times and had IS lead
changes before Ryan Ramey'.s
layup with two seconds left 1."1' the
Fairland Dragons into lhe WID column.
Wellston had trailed by seven
points with just over .one minute

TUESDAY
IIIGHT
SPECIAL

One chapge 'in the eveni this
year is a smaller bag limit.
The Ohio Dcpanment of Natural
Resources said anglers are now
permitcd to keep one less·walleye
each day.with the new bag limit of
five.
The Ohio Division of Wildlife
said it expects the 1991 run to be at
least as good as last year's, with
most of the walleye caught measuring 17 to 20 inches.
Aquatic biologist Larry Goedde
said fisherman sltould also catch a
number of larger fish, mostly
female, between 20 and 25 inches
long.
·
.
· Goedile said the 1990 spawning

The Mei$s County Soap Box
Derby Assocaation will be spo~sor­
ing a pancake breakfast from 9 a.m.
to noon on March 16 at the Middl~­
port American Legion Hall on
South Fourth Avenue.
·
Proceeds riom the breakfast will
he used to help fmance the Meigs .

class was excellent, so fishennen
can look forward to even better
prospects beginning in 1993 when
those 6sh are mature. .
The wtllleye run, which generally begins around the first of March,
tapers off by mid-May. The peak
generally comes during the first
two weeks of April. .
Much of the activity centers in
the strctcl) of river between lhe city
of Maumee and the village of
WaterVille.
'
Side Cut Park Manager Rich
Cherry said the Walleye Hotline
will continue throtagh the white
bass spawn, which generally_overlaps the end of the walleye spawn.

SEVENTH GRADE SECOND TEAM
Tbese &amp;eventh graders from Southern Junior
Hig• School participated in the Thinking Cap

Per Mo.

: RACINE • Members of s·outh- cQmpelition, 1he slUdents were·
ern Junior High School's Quiz . treated to pizza and soft drinks. .
Seventh graders panicipaling
Bowl team were afforded the
'opponunily to compete with their were: Craig Knight, Paullhle, Jen·
.peers across the country on Tburs- nifer Lawrence, ·Jason Shuler,
· da
Kelly Swisher, Bea Lisle, Denise
group, under the leadership Roush, Jennifer Cummins, CJ Harof Southern Junior High School rls,and Ryan Hill.
'Teacher Charisse Knight, partici· .
Participating from the eighth
.pated in Thinking Cap's 1991 . grade were: Matt Morrow, Ryan
· Great Lakes Quiz Bowl on Tbtm!- Williams, Susan Rose,- Donald
·:day , the only' drstrict in Meigs Sliaffer, Courtney Roush, Kendra
:County 10 do so.
,
Norris, David Pickens, Amber
Seventh and eighth graders .from Lyons and Eric Jones:· .
.
across America participated·in the
Accorditi~ to Knight~ the school .
'program, which allowed school wiD he permttted 10 retain the comdistricts to usc ·the school's Apple puler software for use in the
.computers to test their skills on school's intriiRural progran) ..
sever8l academic subjects. 19 stu·
All three school districts m the
dents participated in the program county have quiz bowl teams. In
from Southern Junior f(igh Meigs Local School Di$triCl, the
SchooL.
team· is at Meigs High School. In
• The groups competed in two lhe Eastern Local School Disttict,
sections from each grade, and the the progriiR is under the direction
eight sn!lcrs tried their hand at the of Guidance Counsellor·Thomas
competidon only after th~ seventh · Kelly.
~graders had fmishcd. Following the

·

1

'The

$9,995

*10% down, 180 months 12.2% APR
.
••Price Includes set· up &amp; , delivery with skirting. set of
ltaps, 4x4 deck, .utility material, heat tape. tia downs .&amp;
concrete block.
·
·

'

See John Smith or Dick Cole Today
YOU'LL BE GLAD YOU DIDI

CO.LE'S
MOBILE HOMES
Locited 6 Miles East OfRt. 33
On Rt. 60. Athens 692-1972

s· . .

Commerce will have its annual
spring banquet dinner and dance on
.Saturday at the Royal Oak Reson
Club. Advanced reservations are
required and more information .may
be obtained by contacting the.
Chamber of Commerce Office at
992-5005.

The Scipio Townshtp Trustees
wiD meet March 12 at 6 a.m . at the
PageviUe townhouse.

'
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.

'·

446 4524

•.

SJ.aa IMIAIII MJIIIEIS

SATUIM't' I SUNDA•
U .OO MIMI" IIIGttT T\JESDA¥

I
7:Q0 .•9:20 DAILY
IIATINErS
l :OO,l ::ZO

SAT/SU~

Mtm !Kl

MASON FAMILY RESTAURANT.
WEDNESDAY NIGHT IS

I I

Built by Thomas Jellerson in 1772,
Monlicello is a ~.000-acre estate located on a little mountain {"monlicello" in Italian) in Charlottesville, Va. It
is listed by The Kids' World Almanac
as one of the world's 10 most notable
homes.

Quiz Bowl on Thursday. Pictured, l·r, are
Denise Roush, Bea Lisle, Jennifer Cummins,
Ryan Hill, and CJ Harrb.

·southern quiz bowl team
·~ competes- nationwide .

•

$13 459 **

NEW 2 BEDROOM ·l4 WIDES
(Only 2 Left) Starting At ...
.

Spring Banquet
set by chamber

Moaticello

LIST
.................................... $16,500
. . PRICE
.
SALE PRICE
THRU MARCH 9 ..

County Soap Box Derby which
wiD be held June 22 and 23.
Advanced tickets may be purchased from members of the Soap
Box Derby Association or from the
Recreation Department in Middleport. Prices are $3 for adults and
$1.50 for children ages five and
under.

SPRING VAllEY CINEMA

ctpto trustee.s .
.plan for meetmg
The Meigs County Chamber of
.

3 bedrooms. plumbed &amp; wired for washer and
dryer, house~type door with storma. 100 amp
service, 30" gallon water heater, detachable
hitch, bench bay window and much, much more.

$15627*
.

.

.

NEW l991 14X70

AS .
LOW AS .. ..

Kendra Norris and Eric Jones. Back row, 1-r,
are Courtney Roush, Ryaa Williams, Donald
Sharrer, Matt Morrow, David Pickens, and
Susan Rose.

Pancake breakfast planned

Walleye hotline provides fishing s~crets

Logan eliminated..

.: •Halley 3-2..0.12; Lance Bell 0-2-2;

RACINE- Revivall!l ML Moriah Church of God wiU be held
Monday through Sunday at 7 p.m.
nightly with Donald Stacey, evangelist. Special sillging. Pastor Jim
Sauerlield invites lhe public.

.

tryouts for seventh and eighth · day at 2 p.m. at City Council
graders for 1991 and 92 will be Chambers m Wellston City Ijuildheld March 8 at 5:30 p.m. A work· ing.
·
shop will be conducted Monday
through Friday from 6-8 p.m.
CHESTER • The River . Valley
Herbalists will meet Tuesday at 7
COLUMBIA TOWNSHIP • P·'!l· 1!1 the home of Lila Ridenour
Columbia Township Trustees will on Route 248. D11es for the year
meet Monday at 7:30 .p.m. at the should he paid,
fire station.
POMEROY · The Pomeroy
MIDDLEPORT • The Middle- Chapter, Order of the Eastern Star,
pon Garden Club will meet Mon· will meet Tuesdsy at 7:30p.m.
day at 1:30 p.m. at the home of
Mrs. Paul Nease. The program on
REEDSVILLE • The Olive
growing vegetables for beginnings Township Trustees will meet Tues·
will be given by Mrs . William day at 6:30 p.m. at the Reedsville
· Morris.
·
Fire House.

Ryan not ruling out 1992 baseball campaign, yet

.

MIAMI (UP!)- The $1.4 million Dora! Open . ~olf tournament
was headed for.a bag finish Sunday:
The leader board was filled with
big names, including Jack Nick·
. laus, and winds
gusting over
SO mph, guarantceinJ sonac of th\1
disasters television vaewers love to ·
-watch.
,
•: ~ Then, in a flash of lightning, it
:.-: was over for the day.
~ • Russ Cochran, tied with Andy
· : Bean for the lead going into the
; , fmal nine holes of lhe tournament,
; . was holding his umbrella by the
7: metal shaft and felt a little shock
:: when lightning struck near the

Boston.
.
Vlade Divac scored a sea§on. - The Atlanta Hawks won for high 23 points, James Worthy had
the third time in their last IS road 21 points and Magic Johnson 18
games, dumping the Milwaukee for the Lakers, who dropped 2 1-2
Bucks 115-106.
~110es behind first-place Ponland
- the San Antonio Spurs an the Pacific Division.
crushed Washillgton 107-85, as not
At Philadelphia, John Siockton
even playing at home could help sank a free throw with 1;121eft and
the Bullets avoid their sixth straight Karl Malone scored 35 points with
loss.
.
12 rebounds to lead the Jazz to
- In the only night game, the their' first victory in Philadelphia
home Detroit Pistons snapped a since 1986. Hersey Hawkins scored
five- game losing streak· with a 31 for the 76ers.
107-98 viciOI)' over the Los Ange"We're just doing so many
les Clippers.
things well right now," Malone
At Inglewo.od, Calif., Kenny said. "Last year, we peaked too
Smith scored 27 of his 34 points ill early. We still have a long· way to
the second half 10 help the Rockets go. We turned this game around
, finish a road trip 3, I. The loss when we started ~!'Cuting."
eatne Thursday mght when Hous-.
At Boston, Clyde Drexler
ton scored a season-low 80 against · scored 12 of his 29 points in the
the Clippers in Olajuwon's return fourth quarter while taking control
from a fractured orbit of the right of Portland's playmaking and
eye.
rebounding. Drexler, a 6-foQt· 7
"With all the hoopla the other guard, finished with 13 rebounds
night, we lost our focus," Smith and eight assists.
said. "(Oiajuwon) was way more
"He was everywhere. He was
relmted than we were. But we wete , going to the beards, pushing the
OK once we got two days of (JiliC· ball and mating steals, •• Trail
lice time ill."
·
Blazers head coach Rick Adelman
Olajuwon eatne off the bench to said of Drexler.
score 13 points with eight rebounds
Larry Bird hit five three-pointin 24 minutes.
ers to pace the Celtics.with 28.
.

~,

TOOLSON SCORES • Andy Toolson (5) jumps over the bead of
· PbDadelpbla 's Hersey Hawkins (33) to IICOre two points In Sunday's NBA action at Philadelphia. The Jazz won, Sllapplng the Six·
en 7"IBJI!e wlnnln.: streak. (UPI)

Fi~al

•

INGELS
FURNITURE.
.
.

.

'

.

..!_

TONIGHT'S SPRING
VAlUE FLYER LISTED 2-7"
ZENITH IN MTS STEREO.
.T"IS UNIT IS NOT STEREO.
·soRRY FOR ANY

INCONVENIENCE.

INGELS FURNITURE
'

.

_.c.

.
•

\

.

4 PM•9 PM

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

Mason Family· Restaurant.

n. 33

(304) 773·5321

IIASOI, WV.

(MIT fO MASOIIIDOIII .·.

.

�·.
P

a• a

The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Monclay, MlrCh 4, 1fi1

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

No signs of greenhouse warmirig yet in central U.S

Arthur Murray, famed dance
instru~tor, dead at age 95

WASHINOTON (UPI)- There
are no conclusive signs of greenhouse warming in the heartland of
the United States, and it may take
~ IS 10 40 years 10 delamine
tf such problems may arise, sciennsts ~Thursday.
·
•
National Oceanic and Atniospheric Adminislnltion researchers
said
thev found
_
..... f
"ther "no significant
m ei
average tempera·
tore, preclpi!Jition or the ratio of
summer-to-winter precipitalioo in
the central United States from 189S
10 1989.
During the perind, the average
summer temperature increased

0

HONOLULU (UPI) - Famed "f~ts" dance cOrrespondence grossing $20 millioo a year. After
dance instructor Anhur Murray, course that taught some 750,000 selling their inlel'eSt in the studios
who taught Ametica to do the people, 10 the 11-year television in 1952, they retained executive
..
waltz, foxtrot and ruml)a ·for more run of the popular ;·Arthur Murray positions untill961.
.
In
1950.
Murray
IIII1ICd
10
telethall 50 years, ha$ died at his home. Dance Party, •• Murray P.ioneered
vision.
Although
Kathryn
c:alled
it
He was 95.
-· new business steps along with his
"the
worst
show
oo
the
air,"
"1be
Jerry Vandermark, manager of dance routines.
•
Borthwick MDI"IUI1Ify in Honolulu · His flair for publicity alltacted Arthur Murray Dance Party" wilh
said Murray died Sunday morning society and show business celebri· its celebrity dance cootesis was a
·
at his posh hQme on the islaiJd of ties 10 his studio in the 1920s. It hit b more than a decade. ·
By
1958,
the
Trendex
ratings
Oahu.. Vandeimmt said he had 110 also atlf&amp;\:ted Kathryn Kolinfelder,
informationonthecauseofdeadl.
18, who went to a radio studio gave the program a 33.6 percent
Murray's prominence 'as the dance with a friend to meet the sha!'C of the viewing audience. But
by t960,the Twisi and rock roll
titan of Terpsichore was secure as ·'man with the footprints."
far bact as 1934 but It was not until
Kathryn said she accepted a were on the scene ami Murray
tbe World War II years that his dance wilh him so sbe could "tell asked his sponsors 10 let him quit
.
.
name became a household world. It her grandchildren" she had danced while he was ahead
happened when Betty fiuUon, then , widl Arthur Murray.
.
one of the nation's mo~ papular
He reportedly responded, "Our
· Murray fQUnd litde elegance and
-singm, recorded a Johnny Mercer grandchildren, my dear." · .
less body contact in the dances of
tune, "Arthur Murray Taught Me
They were married within three the '60s.
Dancing in a Hurry."
•
months.
"What's the use of dancing if
Long after his retire01ent and
Amoog lhe notables ofKnicker- you ~an't put your lfJIIS ·around a
separatioo l'ro01 his chain of dane· bocker society !hat took dancing wo01an?"
· I'
ing studios, Murray remained ftom Arthur Murray in that period
Later, the Murrays found diemactive in handling a SIS million ·were the Duke of Windsor, selves back in lhe swing ·as judges
· investment portfolio for relatives Katharine . Hepburn, Tallulah on Merv Griffin's "Dalice Fever."
and friends.
Bankhead and John D. RockerMurray's lifelong passion for
He lived wilh his wife and life- feller who insisted oil private the stock marlcet was underlined by
his tendency for going again~ the
· time dancing partner, Kathryn, i.n a home iessons.
The siOck market crash of 1929 · lideoftheEastembrokers.
penthouse aerie overlooking
Waikiki Beach in Honolulu.
brought an end to that glittering · "What do investors do wrong
Murray! who ":IS born Anhur world, but Murray recouped by roday? Everything," he said.
Mw:ray TeiChman m New Y!&gt;rk on ,organizing dance academies under "They don't invest, they lreat lhe
Apnl 4, 1895, recalled a pamfqlly the National Rerovery Act. .
stock Jll8fketas a place in whicl\ to
shy childhot?&lt;' that was remedied
After World War II, Murray gamble, and they haven't got half
when he. dtsc~vered h~ could arranged with the Veterans Admin- the chance they would in Las
dance. This parti8lly explained the istration to include dance lessons in Vegas."
·
social club atmosphere lhat was 10 the GI Bill for education benefits.
. Murray wrote about his popular
permeate his dance studios and The program was stopped after dance techniques in "How to
help bashful dan~ers overcome more than 100 000 lessons were Beco01e a Good Dancer," pub·
'
doled out and ii was credited with lished in 1938. "Arlllur Murray's
!heir self-consciousness.
His k.nack for advertisi_ng almost.single-handedly bringing a Dance Secrets" appeared in 1947.
brought hiS box-step dance rounne new generalion·of foxtrouers onto
The Murrays had twin daugh. into living rooms coast to coast. lhe dance floor.
·
. ters, Phyllis and 'Jane. Funeral !!III·
Fron:' d!e fii'St Arthur Murray dance
The Murrays incorporated in · vices were pending.
studio m Adanta, to a mail-order 1946, when th~y had 72 studios

u......

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PROl!ING CRASH • Searcb crews walk past
,: 811 eualne. squeezed Uke an accord loa dur1D11 an
:•. hwpedlon ol the Uaikd Fllebt 585 crasb site in
Wakefield, Colo. The eagille WjiS one of tbe few

large pieces left on the grouad after ·the Ualted
737 nose-dived iato aa El Paso County Park
betweea two residenlial areas. (UPl)

Airliner.crashes in Colorado; 25 dead
• COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. spokeswoman. said the child,
(UPI} .:_A United Airlines jetliner Micllelle SuDlinerson, 8, appeared
crashed·about 2 miles short of its to be in good and stable condition.
4estiution, killing all 25 people "She was standing in the doorway
aboard but n~~frowly missing a of her home not far from where the
farge apartment building and sever- crash occurred and was blown back
~homes, authorities.said.
by force of the explosion and
, "It was banldng real sharp and injured her head," Burns said.
nose-dived ... straight into the
A spokesman for the Nation!'~
JiOUnd," said Leo Martinez, who Transportallo_n Safety Board I.n
'tiilDCSSed lhe plane crash Sunday Waslungton Said a1 team of mvesti·
!J!cmlng. "I don'tlcnow if the pilot gator's woold be a~sigtied tlnlle \
did it on nurpose, but he saved a lot crash.
.. . . .
oflives.'r'
Aulhonnes SBid It was 100 early
: ,Flight 58S, a Boeing 737-200 en to tell what caused the crash.
route from Denver to Colorado . Allhough, sJties were clear, police
$prings Municipal Airport with 20 said there had been strong winds
passengers and a crew of five, through the area earlier in the day.
crashed about 9:40a.m. on its fmal Craig Martin, ·spokesman for
ch, United spokesman Joe
SeatJle..based Boeing, the manufac. said.
· turer of the 737, said the jet that
,
lice said the' plane slammed crashed was first delivered in May
U.ui a drained pond just behind a· 1982 to Frontier Airlines and !hen
l~ge apartment building and in
acquired by United in Augustl985.
qont of several houses in an unin·~It was a relatively new airwporated area called Widefield. plane.'' Martin said.
lJio crash site was in a park about2
The Boeing 737, which has been
$ilea short of the jetliner's intend- in service since the 1960s; is the
c$1 destination.
.
'
most popular jetliner in lhe world,
• WitnesseS said the crash shonk although it has been involved in
nearby homes, in;ttring a small sOme high-profile crashes.
l;llild, and launched a plume o(
On April 28, 1988, an Aloha
thick. black smoke high into the Airlines Boeing 737 was en route
sit&gt;' as the jet's fuselage exploded fr001 Hilo to Honolulu when the
if flames.
top of the fuselage blew away a~
, Mlrlinez said die jelliner "just 24,000 feet, sending a woman
d'isintearated" when it hit the flight attendant to her death. The
IIJOUIId.
plane lan4ed IS minutes later at
• A few boun af1er die crasb, gri- Kahului Airport on Maui. Of the 90
macing nei&amp;hbon wateiJcd from JliiiC "VIS abollrd, 61 were ueated
c(ver backyard feacu as ae••· for iDJarieJ. Meutl fatisue was
ti!IJan steppinJ
die pny.. · bl- d f« tJJe nritbilp,
Jiri lia: to inrprt die PO ' I 1 -.f ' A US.W W abo - illvolved
~WI'*' • A larJt piece . . . . . . ..Sfltry a-.pbnerun~the flel'f" coald be- a - 'W1lJ ~ a LM A lJI a Jnicnu..
«hh of the ate IIJd a w!Jed a Ole tioluJ Airpm., nlrty.fOIIr ptOple
qlher.
.
. dledilla.ifdl. 1 mtiiiJ.t.67 - • The airline' said all 20 of the YimL 11le illitlal ilmlltiJ.IIion Jw
p.ssengers on tile jetliner had foc clfC'II OIJ., aiJ lllllf.c
lfO&amp;rded in Denver. Airline offi- directing two planes to tile same
llials, including UAL chairman runway.
Stephen Wolf, reached the scene
One wi111CSS to the United crash
If!: Sunday. .
Sunday _morning told Cable News
• SJI. Dean Kelsey said after sur- NetWork that the plai;lc appeared to
~~eying the lite, "One of two things scrape the roof of an apartment
1~: Either (the pilot) could bui= on the way down and ,
..ve piloted that plane right there "fli
over lhree limes."
161owms that he was going down,
Another resident, Tanya Olsen,
di we just had a tremendous told CNN, ''We heard a big boom
ablount of luck o.. here."
and went outside and saw all Ibis
; A child liv.ing near the crash site. black smoke iii the air.'' .
wu knocked to the ground ~nd
She said !here v.·ere body parts
iiljured by the force of the jet's in lhe park, as well as "pieces of
iOJpacL
metal from lhe plane and all Ibis
' "Rita Burns, a hospital . black Sliloli:e. I doubt there are any

dead in mili(ary plan~
crash near Chicago suburb ·

~

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...
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••

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•.

6

Monlhly

tor e.:tl

•dv•mca.
Gweaway and Found ads undllf 1 &amp; worch wtll be

(.'/as.o;ijil'd

Thank ~

HiiPPV Ad ~&gt;
Y ill tl S ilfL'S

G•lli• County
Are•Code614

446
367
388
24&amp;

GaNtpohs
Ch•hWe
Vtnton
Rio Granda
256 Guvan Dial.
643 AratM• Qiat.

DAY BEFORE PUBLICAHON.
11 .00 A .M SATURDAY ·

2 00 PM MONDAY

TUESDAY PAPER
W(ONFSOAY PAPER
THURSDAY PAPER

tHIOAV PAPER
SUNDAY PAPER

2 .00 PM TUESDAY

2 .00 PM . WEONISDAY
2 :00P.M THUASOAY
2 00 PM . FRIDAY

379 Walnut

BULLETIN .BOARD
.

~

~

992 MuldltpOrt
986 , Ch•ler

843
247
949
742
667

812 New HIVen
89&amp; Let ~HI
937 Butlalo

LAYNE FURNITURE

.JOHN A. ·wADE, M.D., Inc•.
PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL

E~l, NOSE &amp; THROAT

GENERAL ALLERGIST

\\WE NAVE HEAR.INQ AIDS"
(304) 675-1244 ,.
...,. ..

--

·-

-

Hay &amp; Gf11n

Su• • Fahhler

Apar1menl to1 Aunl

71

Au101 lOt S.tu

SIHILe'

45

f urpiahed Roonu;

for Aenl

72 ' Trudu lor S•ltl

46 S..-cv fqr Rent

12

Situalton Wanted

48

Equipment for Runt

14 Busin•s Tratnntg
15 Schools&amp; lnthucttun ·
16 Ra"'o, TV &amp; CB Rupuu
17 Mllcell•noous

51

18

62 - Sp111ting Goods

Molorcvcl•·

53

81 Home lnlprn~H~•nenh
82 P1umbmg a He•mu
83 f"'llfiUng
84 Elec:lrtc.a a AelugflfMIIou

AnltqUfll

54 Misc . ftl'etchand•ae
55 Building Supplie~

lihfiliiifill

56 Pet• lor S.le

Monev to Loan . .

23 Ptof•SIOnll S11victtS

87

. . . .......Inch-··....... . . , torhouiiMid UM

·-- -

105 N. Soc... Street
IIDDUPOif, OliO 45"0

-

Starting At
FREE DELIVERY
HOURS: Mon. thru Sat. 9-5
PH. 446-0322
3 Miles Out Bulav1lle

W. loy Whet W. Oo.
W. Oo Whot Wo Bay.

614·992-2321

.....

-·
lOAD EVERY 12 HOUIIS

HOUSES•LOTIIIFARMS
COMMERCIAL

CALL
VICKER'S WOOD HEATING

We Need Uollnf!ll

JI•I'1~1111

10-19-l •o.

..

Ph.-{»tJ 171-2211- 5 PJII. ·

llllliiiiNIAI

THE

-·-·---

I;;

•
...............
Would you llkt to purchase a SOxlOO ft. buildIng lot In a good locati~n for only '3500?
Would you ·like to build a new home and pay
·.
no ·rtal tstatt taxts for 15 ytcir.s?
Would you llkt to have. up to ssooo FREE
for sltt impronmtnts on jour building loti

'•

'
"
~

'I

·'

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,,

If y~u do, Contact Jean Trussell, Housing '
Specialist, for further information.
Phont (614) 992-6712

"_,
u
'I

,

~

237 lace Str11t; Mllllhport Y. . . Offktt

,.,,
I

Tllla.HI't1ee .. pnvldtif tlllrHp tile Jot.t efflltll •• " ' 'ftDap
of Middleport u• tile
mor'e Oflloe of A,..ae.la. ·
.

..'

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•
~-~OM

__ _

'

'

i

-·

Stop &amp; Compll'l

FrH EstiMIIftl

985·CC73
667·6179

P-oy,

S.J1.'90 lin

;.,.;;,,;,;;o;,~:::: liffiii iiiDvti:TORIIAN DE:COR?- Well,

lOVING INTO THIS HOlE IS LIKE IOVJiiG INTO AIIAIID
NEW HOlE- THAT'S JUST HOW WELL IAIIITAIIIED THIS
PLACE lSI - lfs 10 years old but just hke new! Nice
carpeting also adds to th1s 4 bedroom home wiltll Datns (an .
t!SSelllial for alllamilies todayJ _Well landscaped yard with a
blacktop driveway, 2 car gerage and many more great
futures: located on SR 7. The price has been reduced from
$80,000 to a baraain price ol $69,900.
.

Public NotiCe

J&amp;L

USED APPUAIICES

INSULADON

irASIIIIS-S 100 .,
DniS-$.. .,
...UTOIS-$100.
IMIGIS---$125 .•
rnmiS-$125 .,

91UYWAIUm

•Vinyl Siding
•Roplaoomcoilt
Wlndowl

•Roofing
•lnaulotlon
. JAMES IIESEE
992~2772

.no oms-stt .,
lEN'S APPUANCE
SEIYICE

or

992-SUS w 915-3561
Au. . frM Pill Offlto
POMEIOY, OliO
lOISOI'1t tift

742-2251
1131 Bryan Piece

Middleport. Ohio
.
ll·l4-lfn

SR 338 -SMALL HOUSE AT ASMALL PRIC£111 that's what
you are looking lor here d is! This place needs work but it
would make a nice little home ora grut hunlin,cabin for the
deerhunte~! Anothe1 added leature Is the nver view Would make a nice place Jor the avd fisherman, too! ONLY
$5,900.

Howard L Wrlteul

IIEW LISTIIIG- Located on Landaker Rd .. this pro~erty has
~all! 49 acres ol ground with a !98714'JC80' mobtle home.
Here are just a few ollhe added fel!ures to this "'"''""•
dishwasher, refrig., range, fireplace, air
furniture includin~ TV, VCR. You can have
POSSESSION of thts extra-ordinary place! So call
showing TODAY! ASKING $54,900.

Downspouts

FOIIYII IIGIII
I'IOM TANNING
SJIECIAL

ROOFING
NEW -IIPAII

ht 50 High Schaol
Stu.nts

Gutters

c...

Gutter Cleaning
Painting

For Appt.

FREE ESTIMATES

FOIEYII 110111

····2161
1-4-11-I ... ,._

IASIAIU., UCM
-4·'9J.IIIIO.

DUSt

1DD" DOLLARS
TO Wilt POCKET
WITH A
AD

JO HILL ............................ ..... · 9811-4488

..

:., •.

"

0

•

'.

OPEN 7 DAYS
A WEEK
9 A.M. 'TIL 7 P.M.
cl11n up ytur
pr .................. .

"1"

buy_• WHhndt.

TRI·COUNTY

•cvcUNG

'-loci Off ...., .... On

n..c- ot

..

•

0

......ipllllllt
and 111111•.· tiharp•••ll

'• .... ,..... -111111
DUIIf6 FDIUAIY
- Fr11 pldt-. anti
Mli•ery In P-oy
111111 Mllltlllport city
limits.

WE ALSO SERVICE

Pllflng Ulh for alumlftum.

DAVE'S SMAU.
ENGINE IEPAII

,_,,,Ohio

....-.lbrl•e.
....ntwltell.
fNII"•Ium, rtdiMort. ~·
tn. 81Wnttofl and Ill not!·

'"""''WIFOIHKIS
.......'·

614-H2-S114

t IM-7 I'M-7 Dars1Wooii
1·11 'tiJ ...

I. L MASH
CAl PENRY
•Garagea

•Room Additions
•Kitchen• • Baths
. •Vinyl Siding
•R ..toratlon
•Repair Work

992-5526

.

RUSIII
Gel,_ ........

lt. 7 &amp; lt. 143

CHAIN BAWl

253 . . . . . . , ••
••••,.,, 0111.

PH.

SIMON'S
PICK·
A·PAII
'
SAME
LOCATION , ·
' I

'

u.. Court StrHt ·
lntrm~ee

1

, . .10,I OliO

PO.IIOT.(_ OHIO. :

BISSELL·
BUILDEIS

SOUl &amp; TIEl . :

CUSTOM llllT
HOMES' I GAUGES
.., , ••

1 ..1.

PrieM"

... 949·1111
er leL 949·2160
lhly or Night
NO SUNDAY

MltiOWAVI-

HENRY E. CLELAND .............. 992· 8191
JEAN TRUSSELL ... , .. ., ...... .. ... 949-2880

..

$10
949-2126

10 SESSIONS -

BUSINESS IS SO GOOD . . . WE'I£ RUNNING OUT OF
STOCK! WE NEED LISTliiGS. If you want to sell, caU us riaht
now. Our ads atlrlct attention. Our sales stall ij experienced.
For best results call 992·2259!
IIITEIEST lATE AS LOW AS U75'1fo V•tlbll and 1,&amp;25'11
fixed - We e~n Hll your proporty IIIII we hlw bufln.

I ulntlll.

,.

ec-pl•te

614-992-6820

.

'

eGarapt

Dwntr &amp;' Operator

LarryWIIWUng
bualnrn, ...,....,.., ..,...
....... lnd pulllla - ;
wt~~~~"':'r~': L....:O:.;F,;.F,;.;IC:.;E:.;.:.;
.. ·,;.;"",;. ;"",;. ;"":.;
·..,;..;
.. ;.;.""·;.;."","..;.
;. ; "" ;.;.""·..;.;•:.;.;.
.. .;.;.""·;..;9;.;9;,;;2;..;·2;.;2;.;15;.;;9.....1
providing lor adoqumlltlhl.
COUNCIL
MIMIERI
oil' lftd, _
..iencte of IC· ATTUT:
0111 to prap rrty by ....,a.tA ...... Morrlo. Ciofll
=the••oflaoodand Yillge of P o . . . . . . . . . . . bull of
MoiM County, Ohio
-_
In
relatlonohlp
110
(31
'· Ita
:
...... piOporty; ......

..

···. _.."'•

Complata Groomi..
For All lriiCis
EMILEE MERINAR

pow-..., offl-•

deveiOPIMnt al

IISSELL &amp; 1•0
CONSTIUC'IIOI

GROOM
ROOM

w.....

0

.... 30·1nch .... -

o\Jtll,... - - · .. "'"""
olliJbe-.10
IOOioiii!OIIIIhe

Office 614,H2·2116
HOME 614-992-S.92
DOmE S. TUIND, 11010

36 ¥ear• Experlenre

$795

•

'rill I'"" 11n1•

·~·····"

ORDINANCE 113
Thlo DrdJMnCo oholl be
.
of way; -==~
.... _
.. tho ''Zoning Ordl· . competiltlllty of 'c
the moll
nonco of P o - . Ohio" land • - •d
- o f land;
..oetec~ on the 4th doy of ...............
prDVIdlng fot the 1dmlnloh-o·
febtuary, 1111 by tho
tlon
of lhll Orllnonao. doftn·
, _ , . , YNiop COIIIICH.
lng the
ciutlel of
Thlto pultl-n Ia -purou·
tho
odmlnl-lvo
.,t 110 the outhorlty arantod u provicNd ..._lllr, In
In
731.21 of the
pr~Kriblng ponoltlel far the
Ohio RewiNd Code w .....ln
~of provl... oln tllhl
a oummery of on onll- Ordinance or ony 1-.od·
con be publlohod ..,.,. IIIIo
mont • - · ell for tho
the lctuol
Sootlan
.,.,_ of proCICitng till
ar...._ Ia volumlnouo and
public hoalth, ut.ty, com·
t - 1 0 - - ... pub·
fort •d ....... ...tfoN
llohod In Ito .,tliOty.
within tho Ylllogo of
Tho aonlng onllnonao of
the VIII.. of · PoiMfDY Ia POIIIIIO\'.
For elllntiiOIIocl poroono.
MI8Cted In ecwtdMtae witll
co-11• ar portiH. 1
o co._.,......,. pion ond
comploto tot of the Zoning
undof .the 111thorlty of tho
Onlnan"" for the Vllllto of
poovlolonl of Soatlon 713 of
P-rov may be olttalnod
the Ohio R..lood Code,
Tho .,..,_ of thloaonlng
by copy
-Ciofll
- · of
II tho
tho
oflloo
ofortho
-Yllltl-II _to cilvldl
tho
........ Vlllqo of .._yd ol ...
Pomoroy Ylllo.. H1H, 302
lltcto. _ , . . ,.... ...,~o~.
E. . Main S - "-'""·
lng ..........- . tMIOin Ohlo41711.
tho loaatlon, aonotructlon.
4, 1H1
Naonotruallon, oltoratlon PAlaEO: Fib.lruaeJ.Rood
.,d •• of llrUCIUIOI ond
a..,..s.She..
land; DtOmOilna the - l y
1-.y A. llronlofl

r;;

Uphollht"ry

Business Services
••••••a
...···-,.........,.
•I Mlillt,.,

Hand Tufting
Custom Drape•

SURPRISE BIRTHDAY CARD
SHOWER,
MARCH 9
FOR VIRGINIA OVERTURF

'

Hauln1y

86 Mobile Hunte Rt:Pilll

RECYCLING

.:

G~ 1 nttr•l

85

57 Mutic:allnstmmenu
58 frulls &amp; Veg..t•bl•
59 For S•leor Trarle

Busin•• Opportuntty

Mulor HOIIlL"S

S~rVICeS

Household Gooct. ·

"''

t ....... _

c..mp..lli.

79

Merchand1se

Wanted To Oo

Sofa &amp; Chair

.~

Bo~tl l &amp; Mol on lor St~lu
Auto P.-h &amp; Ac cts50fi4JI
A\110 Repotlf
Camp1nu Equ1pmun1

76
77
78

49 fur L•••

13 Insurance

V~tns.-4WO ' s

714
75

47 Wtnted to Rent

HetD Wanted

73

III..COUfm

MEIGS COUN1'Y RESIDEN1'S

••-·-..---.-:-'--&amp;-•

h~ma

44

11

22

&amp;4

65

HouMa lor R.nl
Mobile Hom• luf A.mt

43

213 lo. Second

Sofa &amp;Chair - $450
,, , , ,., . GOOD SELECTION-BUSHLINE

s··-

_..

,I;MII

EII! ;J illy II II: Il l

fat"m Equtpmunl

62 IJV""ed to a .. v
63 Uwestock

loh • Acr•~~g•
Aeal htlle Wanted

Wan1ed 1o 8uv

21

61

UPHOLSIEIY

SPECIAL PURCHASE

Pubic NotiCe

..

Mobile tiom.. for Sill I:!

'•

RACJII£ - Cute 111 story home w~h 3 bedrooms, Ill baths,
nice hardwood floors and some carpeting. Sitting on a nice
lot close to town! ONLY $29,500.00.
.

I

Honuts tor Sale

32
35
36

6 loal tnd Found.
7 Y•d Sale (JYid tn artdul c; el
8 Public Sale &amp; Auchon

Su[J:rlies

,\ LIVI',IJI,k

31

33 F•m• tor S-'e
3 I Bu•in•s Buildings

Giveaway
H1ppy Ad•

773 M••on

Por111Ad
Letan falls.
R•cin•
Rud.,d
Cooldle

you
older
home with
oriainal woodwork and several unique fireplaces. It also has
3 bedrooms, equipped k~chen, central air and a lot o!
storage to add to lhts great buy! $39,900.00.

-

3 Annoucemenu
4
5

67&amp; Pt. , .......
4 •• loon
&amp;76 Appl• Grove

Pomnoy

POMEROY, OHIO
992-2259

Annual Membership Dues S290

down slightly from $9ti.3 billion
the monlh before.
Public construction also fell
about6 percentiO an annual rate of
$104.7 billion from $Ul.3 billion
in December: . •
.
T~e greatest mont~ly decline
was posted in the value of new·
housing units, which feU 6 percent
from December. The value of
office construction was down 2
percent while other commercial
conslrUction was down 4 percent.
The value of hotel construction
rose 5 percent last month atid was 2
percent greater than y~-ago levels.
:
The value of new housing con·
' struclion fell 23 percent
.

. --

AntJ! Code 304

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

comrol-

·I

M1aun Co , WV

Aru Codei14

..

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0

WASHINGTON (UP!) - The
Yllae of new construction fell 2.5
~t Ia January 10 an an~ual rate
01 $396.6 billion, the lowest level
of ~lion spending in four
ydars, ~ Commerce Department
ieptllbld Prlday. · .
In Dec:ember. the value of new
COiilllueiton was a revised $407 .I
billion. January's construction
valae -die lowest since an annu~late -or $396 billion in Decen)ber
1986.
.
.
: Sp:ndias on new res•denual.
hOulinl unill fell 6 percent 10 an
l"'a'1 ra1e of $107.7 billion from
Sll4.5 billioD in December. Non1111Jidendll consauctlon - valued
It .. mDJI) ...., or $96.1 billion,

Me1ga County

Real Estate General

dli.,..,.

Construction spending aown

1i11•

••xcltall!{l',~, ..

follm•'i"K 11•l••l'hom•

;nlv~:~rtiJemttnl pllli!tllllll ltle Dally Sttllllllel (11• .
c cp•
clanthud &amp;hsplay , B~ts lni.!SS Cowd .-nd teuill nohcftll
wtll ot~lsu olppl!ilf tn th e Pt Pltmsant R•!llliiUr and lh~~r Qalh
p1oh~ D.1•lv Trtbu•ut. rca(:hmn o~r 18.000 hom~

COPY DEADLINE
MONDAY PAPER

/HIJ{I' .~ I'OI 'I'r

FOR SALE
MEMBERSHIP IN DEERLAND
RESORT, JACKSON, OHIO
$1000 or Best Offer
Call 992-3169

_.._.._~_

C•rd ot th..-.ks
In MemOfy

42

•,4 tl l•~tllt."'-1

,

f ,rr •'I

41

203 Bastlani Drive
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

____
... ...,...._. _

1
2

9

1r1 adv&lt;Jm;:ll aJI !

In Mult\Oflilttl

.'

PROBJNG CRASH • A mUltary T·39 aircraft came to rest ID
the l'ronl yard or this boUH In a resldentiiii area of Cbica11o on
Sunday. Tbe tail section just came short or tbe l'roat door. Allthree people oa board the-aircraft died. (UPI)

.

no ch•ge.

Coud nl

'

A111101111 r:e me 11s

of ad for all capitallt!thr.rs •s doublu pnca ol ad cos.l

'Ads that must btl patd

.

d., as uparate ads .

1n

"1 pomt lml! lyptl ontw used
"Svnltnul 15 1101 responsible lor euou 01her first d iii , tCht."Ck
tor t!HOrs fir" day .ad runs 111 p.-purl . Call before 2 00 p m
difW alhtr pubhcuclon 10 maW t! c:orrecuun

.
•
••
"

15

.20
. 30
.42
.60
.06/day

Ratn ilfa lot con~ecutw• runs. btotwn up d"awtll be c:h•ged

piHd

•

86.00
$9.00
. 813.00
. ··' $1 .30/ dlty

16
16
16- .

10

'Ads outside Metgs. Gallla or Mason counJtes must bu pre

'Pr~ctt

0

• The Area• s Number l Marketplace

Ov!Jr 16 Word5

s4.oo

15

1
3

POLICif.S

"f ren a!,Is
mn' 3 di!W li at

adiP'ias. " the NOM team Wf01P. ·
in a study published in the journll
Science.
Kenneth Potter, a profeaor of ·
environmental engineering at lhe
Univeni(1 of WiSCOIIJin·Madison,
called the NOAA ·study "well~
',.
done .,
"It shows what people havo
pretty much known all alon11 that the ye~t"'I-year 10 variability
of climale mikes it bud 10 find the
chan11es projected by the 'lobal
wummg models," Pouer said. "It
al10 Indicates that for some of the
things for which we should have
already seen a change, we
haven't."

overpredicting the region's sensitivity 10 greenhouse warming," he
said
·Due 10 wide natural swings in
the region's climate, Karl estimated
it will take atleut another 40 ~
before scientistB could determmc if
there is any precipitation change in
the cenlnll United States related 10
global warming.
Any rise in iem~ should
show up a bit quieter, perhaps in
about 15 10 30 yean, Karl said.
"If the projected climate
(change) occurs, il would certainly
have a deleterious impact, and die
regioo would have 11 ilifficult time

.

•

Rate

Words

Days

ClOSED SUNDAY
'Ruc""'tl $ .&amp;0 dt~count for ;~elf JNid

than - I percent, the NOAA
researchers found.
"The trends aren't in 8i'IICJIICDt
wilh what the (computer) models
are projecting, butlhat doesn't necessarily imply lhe models incorrect.
It just shows !here is lalJe llllural
variability," in the regton's climate, said Thonias Karl, who headed the study.
However, Karl added that if the
higher projections of temperature
changes were comet, some major
warming shQuld have been
detectable by now. The lack of
such substantial increases "would
seem 10 suggestlhat the models are

RATES

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

pointing. out the proxi01ity of the left intact was lhe !ail assembly, ~:
debris 10 houses in the heavily pop- lodged against a tree less than 20';
ulated area, said, "As you can sec feet from a brick, Cape Cod-style
l'rom the debris, it's a miracle tha"t house.
~
An engine wound up in a nearby~
no ooe else was hurt.!.'
Neighbors said the plane appar- driveway;
• '
:
. endy was trying 10 land at nearby
· "It came down .vertieaJly," said •
Glenview Naval Air Station,' norlh Mary Ann Henley, a restaurant:.
of Chicago, when it experienced employee working just south of lhe '
problems. It spun over houses on .Naval Air Station. "There ·was lots
.
one side of Dewes Street, then of black smoke."
plunge!) nose-first into lhe paveCapL Walt Vanvivon. comman. der f)f Glenv.iew, confirmed the·t
JilenL
'
.'
· The small, twin-jet aircraft vir- death of the plane's three occu-•
tually disintegrated on iDlpilct. The pants and said die names of the vic· :
only recognizable part of the·craft .tims would not be released until the ';
ne~l of ltin were notified ..

-·~

Many scientists lhink pollutants,
like car exhaust, will aggravate the
greenhouse effect, and come:::
models bave forecast it could
temperatures OYCt the cenll:al United State~ anywhere from 4 degrees
to 7 degrees Fahrenheit by the year
2030.
.
Computer calculations also project that by 2030 die region's precipitation will fall anywhere from 5
percent to 10 percent during the
summer, and increase by up 10 14
percent in the winter. From 189S 10
1989, winter precipitation IJClually
dropped about 4 percent while
summer precipitation dipped less

Classifie

T~ree

GLENVIEW, Ill. (UP!)- A,
military aircraft carrying three peosuwivors looking at iL"
Olsen said it was "a miracle" ple crashed on a city street while
lhe airliner did not hit any houses approaching the Glenview Naval
Air Station, killing all aboard but
or apartments.
.
·
apparently
causing no civilian
The flight originated in Peoria,
injuries,
offiCials
said.
.
Ill., flew 10 Moline, Ill., and then
said
the
pilot
appar·
Witnesses
on 10 Denver before talcing off on
Jhe 70-m ile leg to Colorado ently. steered the careening T-39
iniO lhe pavement Sunday, avoidSprings Airport, officials said.
Airline officials said the jel's ing houses and averting additional
loss of life.
C!JI1~n an~ first orgcer WWE l'rom
f!lt! San FranCisco a~ea;· a'lid' ihe • "The pilOt of this plihe; in my
flight attendants were based in mind, is a hero," said Mart Vogel,
New York. The names of the vic- who lives a block from ~ crash
lims wiD not be released untiHami- site. "HC saved all our lives." ,
Navy Cmdr. Sam Falcon a,
lies have been notified.

about .75 degree Fahrenheit and the
average winter temperatwe rose·
about ,41 degree F~L How·
ever, that increaae was aot stalistically significant and was below
previous predictions of potential
warming from emissions of socalled Jl'eenhouse gases, iaid the
researchers from NOM's National
Climatic Data Center in
Ashveville, N.C.
The greenhouse effect occurs
whim carbon dioxide and other
gases, acting like the glass win·
dows of a greenhouse, lnlp heat in
Earth's atmosphere and prevent it
ftom escaping back iniO space.

.......
.,
•.
-.......
OVIN•a

aN'S APPUAIIa
SIIVICI

HI·SIII er
tii·JI6t

,,. n.-

............. OHica
JUL .......
ltW/Ifl

. .....

'·

~

ZIZ7111111to.

tiiMancl
IIMOYAL
•LIGHT HAULING

•FIREWOOD

IILL SLACK

.

'

·'

992-2269
USED IAiliOAD TIES
1·12·80·tfn '1

•VINYL IIOING
&gt;ALUMINUM SIDING

•ILOWNIN
INIUI.ATION

IISSELL
SIDING CO. ·

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

..,,.. Eatlrnata"

... t4t-2101
...... t4t·2160
NOSUNIAY

�Page. 8

•

The Dally Sentinel

•
•••
MondaY. U.Ch 4, 1911

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

LAFF-A-DAY

Ann ou nee mer: Is

31 Homll for Sale

71

42 IIDblle Homll

~. Mlrch 4, 1991

Porneroy-llldd

.,BORN LOSER
~toltT IE ~.J:l
, WlliU..MS ~IWfJIIJO

torRent

........

Television
Viewing

~

Autoe for s.Je

Page 8

·' _()hlo

TO~bAIOitMA

M

O lour
t..,rrona- letters of
111:ramblad wardo

~ lo• form lour ~mpla word&amp;.

MON .. MARCH 4 •

S HE I S T

II
1

l:ao(J)e Ill ~• a11 o e
IIJ .....
(IJChalfetln~Q
CD 3-2·1 eom.ct
(]) aqu.. 01111 Q

TO SAARE 'fOUR
WITH HER?

. . ,AI':"',K..-r..,..NI-jll

T HI .I IF Gl~ ,;, ~ _ , .I
I~=====~:..

.='11-x.

D lchoiMic-=

8A6 UPSIDE -DOWN ..

.

.

DOurHouMQ
1:05 Cll llevOify Hlllbllho
1:30 (J) e Q)l NSC Nightly .....

CD Wild AmM1c1

eom.ct

.

,...,

.

1£(]) Allllolt
- Cootello
~ e AIC Nnio Q
(]) 3-2·1

1 I I I .

.....
1 ..,...lc

..

B~'i

6UT DOt-iT 1-lOLD TI-lE

r

5

.

.

0

Nl

•

8

It/
00 I Drum of Jeannie

. ~an~~~~~~~~~~41~m.~~~--i 6 LOst &amp; Found

JOBS IN ALASKMf!'i~ Entry
LAYII. 1100.00 +
. Con-

: ,...Loot-.-::Dog. -, -::.:::.-.
• •:-:-i.ooi-.-:ArDWid=:-.
· Charolala Lou, II lb. lnallall

ltructlon, C.w•;..

CALL

; Sono&lt;, Uhr Bladl &amp; WhMa.
, Family Po&lt;. - . . C.ll 114-M41•JtH.

Ell.

Ml17111.

._______

ID Ma
Stereo. Q
7:05 Cll Happy Daye
7:30 (2). IIIJ olaopoldyl Q

CIJ Night Court Q

Woat ltlgh SC-, Piqua, 011

. ~~~----------:,.:.,__..;,.:;....;...:..;;;.:......
1
~Yard Sale

AND .ERNEST
SHUitlon
Wanted

Ganlpolls

LPN • P""-11-

VIcinity

.....,,.30011,

;tha dar balof'O tile ad Ia to run.
. Sundar ad Ilion • 2:00 p,m.
· •Frlclar. Monday odlllon • 2:00
•p.m. Sllurday.

.

1147-'1171

Yard Slla: Monday, Tuaaclay.
1:30-2:30, Rt. 110 to WNia Road,

Hilla,

Wolch

--·-~
An 1n1

F«

Wa
diYiduol With A

;Signa.

Public Sale

:8

wa m An ~qw1 ap.
E.,.._, AIII~:C
lW To Ia lanl To: Oa

&amp;

Pa=

Wanted to Buy

·9

wa ..acllo buy: Junk - - with
··or without &amp;

-mat·

.11. 114-371J.282t.
W.,.acl To Buy: Junk Autoa
wlh ., without motorw. C.H
Larry Uvoly. 814 311 1303.
W.ntacl To Buy: Uaad mollllo
ttomM, • • 114 ue a111.

Employmenl Serv1ces
11

Buelnesa
Training

18 wanted to Do

Jobhrvloe,.._..,AIII
~~- Or Coll114-441o-.

Ouaranlaad aama clay appnmll
A1ao ..,..Hty tor NO " - "
VISAIIIC- _ . , - 1~1111. 02124.
AvoN • All • - Cloll llartlyn

t

laloa·Naad-fut?
par -::.,~,&amp;':'•daacl.

::.=·= . ~
1-

Oood motor tor 1178 Pl.... 4
cyl. Milo, DilliN 3110.

Solaa-Tro-. 100 year old

ear. Contar.
-·
ll.f
I a.M.a-...a.
• 5:30 p.m.ohlldcl
Af1a!...2 ·10.

AuctJon on our bahalf,
111:10111, ..

•

__.....

lu--·0.. lltartlng • ...,. up

I

pR9111L

plua. 2 -

EIC

!

Q

(1 :00jSte&lt;eo. Q

wv .,..,

..._, oflar - · ~~n~po~,.

WllllmLI~224.

lap

tV. . . . . . . .

ho!n.

.....~

Flllallclal

!.,__________...;...___
21

Bus11111ss

Lar1io lot on Paa- Avo.
11,11111.00. ~ on Uncoln
Hta. Con Ire fiO~Iollv !l.....atl.
Guido Qlralan\1. 114412 21121.
LDTI FDA 8ALI In Clolllpola

=::J
..:·~~~'
zr.a.

OpponunHy

- a Aahlon, 1 1ora
...... - h Oolllpoll&amp;

.,.. Wile a:me

piHe " '
.,..lone. U42l Plllw:cda
Rd.

t::L:,

-.~~a-.wv.

114-JIMIIla.

46 Space for Rent

- -; -

-·

Country

,~ ul RI. I· ~:·m:~~ ~~~h:h~~~l:gq::

.
-

:11, -

ol - . . . , .

~--- ....... - · Coli

1fT Wanted to Rent

::=..~~·

. rr-

5I

Dahl arlt ... ihtlxar; -

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

~··...... Pit • 211 ..
~-10

.,..,....

Rr11l.ils

Am "

Goods

l-Ion.--

41 HOUUI fOr Rent

Eaar Wo&lt;ltl E...uant Payl Aa-

aamblo Product• 11 home. Coli

4411·111!., 127
llpollt, ....

Mon.-.
3rd. Ave. Qal.

for
111. 313.

-

---.~

~ J~

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

~

Rl.

n

74

.....

Moto-Jel

,.... ....., ...,._.+.,..
_•.

;e: ~ . '=':z

Kllw

UvHtock

•·

~~~u~~~ttreo. Q

A~CESSIOO ...

8:011 (2) e MOVIE: 'Hall Ha.. No

==.,....-:-·~·•,......·,...,...-,...'!!""Hartay
otalj~

Kitc.pat .. ,...,
---·--eo:~

14.10 yard, CMdy 1llrlpa.

. ~CPS1000

e

~-

zr.a.
76 Auto Pans &amp;

t•

.,

~•r

.AccUIDrlll

'•

..... Choir, 114 . . - ·

)'
~:.!!.!..!....!:~~~A~N~D WINTHROP
r .APR:liNTED
1\'.YSELF.

e

"C,'!I',.,'::ilJ:n

=

,,.,

campere&amp;
MolorHomss

!':,'-blo
101 of ,... ...._ "aludad.
• • . lfM.ell.'llll .. ......,.
lltll.

.,

t~Me·tnllaNow

'I

La"'

a
KII1IJ Uval
ID 11aauty and lha llaaat Q

HIS

ALL NISHT

-

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

Porft&lt;l

Ofol Sloroo

(OMPUJE -

NOTHING ElSE TO iuYI

S1,895

Mi"' W. olllober

e

42 Moblll Home•
torRent

a

Ralaartton

10:30 Ia CIOoll and ChaH
10:31 Cll MOVIE: P10ttt Ruesla
With Love (2:30)

am.t J.....-.
*" wa.,
. .. month
IOWll-11:117 bal-

-·:GO-.
.
.
=''. ..

NIW/1
ltHk/1

11:00(2). II) ~· Ill
@ .....

Total olactrto mobile homo no
pala, no 11oo1tot. · P.........
- · · 114-381''11431.
.
,

_ _ ..,... _ _ J

~ J . . . . ltotth, _...
~
............

"

• IOh

I

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

1m . . . A INI 11100 Coro
~outo._alr,- ol opt-

SNAFU~ by Bruce

114-1111tou.

2 oily

«) '\

Paint

. . . . . .. . . .

'p ................... ildll

~'*'···-

Merch 5, 1.1

•

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVI(E
-"oom
- outt.r
Addition•
wartr:

- Eiectrlcol ond Plumbing
- ConCNUI 'IIW.Irtc
- Rooflntl
- lnt•ior a E•*lot
P-Ing

(FREE ESTIMATES!

V. (. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
P-oy, Ohio

11 ·14-'90 lin

•Remodeling aild
Home Repalra
•Roofing
•Siding
•P•Intlng

.-. . . ---=·
-·-ftwJJ llzl

110 JOB TOO SIIALL
FRtE miiiATES

CEDAR
CONSTIUCnON
992-6641 or

llilllii

IF • • •

d

111

1711.

.---. .-·- -~~

-..... ~

Uur

•

n

knowledge lhal you've acquired
through penonal experience could be
pool 10 vwy constructive UH In the year
llheed. In lurn, an unusual HI of circum·
atances might open unique posalbllltles.
PilCH (Feb• ......,h 20) Having a
viSionary bent, you are likely to ... a 111·
tie c1earar and a bH further than your
contemporaries today. What you envision could \urn out to be lntplrttlonalto
them, u ,..II tui youraelf. Know where
to look for romance and you'll find 11.
The Aatro-Graph Matchmaker Instantly
r-Ia which ligna are romantically
pertacllor you,' Mall $2 to Matchmaker,
c/o thla .-apapar, P.O. Box 91428,
Cleveland, OH 44101·3428.
~~ (Marcil 21-Aprll 11) In several

=·

~~=·ildeaoQ

ASTRO·GRAPH

Lecatwd 0. Saff81'4 Schal 1111. eff lt. 14 I

1614 r4U·t4" 11r

i

Colega llaakllball
10:011(IJ ....

anacked by a ~man on t~a
street. Stereo..Q
!lD 118r Trek: The Next
OIMtatiOII Q
CNN Evaritng News
~ 700 Club With ....

O.p. ..... 114-111'

BENNm'S MOIIU HOME
HEAnNG &amp; COOLING

New Orieane, Mary Jo
·
decides to go wild. Stereo.

ill aJ e WIOU Lucy Is

-1:00
21Amobllthcrna.1adull

All FURNACE PAm

Daalgnlng

-.o. ..,OHIIWIIII-.

- lt. 35, Gallipolis

MOBIL£ HOME FURNACES- HEAT PUMPS

iWhile1121on• a conventiOnwoinen
In

NOPE--ANOTHER
ONE OF HIS
ALL NI.HT
INS II

- - ... Y . - 1. . .
- - . :lind ancllnlaulllna
11.21! Jill
Kllrr Cllai!

EnJoy iwar 100 chan·
nola. IM tho nawa LIVE
•• It happana - 24
houra. IRD ayatom In·
cludeod•od•.
CAll TODAY
FEIIhiAitUPECIAL
ONLY

ZENIX VIDEO

. Tlh

QUTS?

l'lnrl 0111 hOY lw - · Sl.oo.tt.IO
a-'JQ-.

..

8:30 (J) Civil War President
LinCOln laaues the
Emanclpetlon Proclamation.

•

unlden

.... _.lloo .....

IT TAKES ONE
'TO KNONONE.

E_.::'..:r'...: ~

DElUXE SATEli.JtE tv SYSTEM

~c

·Fury' NIC Monday Night o1
lha Movtee 12:001 Stereo. Q
(I) ~
MOVII!: 'Earth
Angel' AIC Monday Night
Movie (2:011) Stereo. 1;1
CD Pllw, Paul and Milrr'•
25th An ............ The
enduring folk trio gatl)ers to
celebrete their anniversary
wllh renditions of clastiCs
llka Ill Had a Hammer and
Btowln ' In the Wind. (A)
(1 :50)
. 91 @ Mu'flltr lnlwn The
FYIIIIam.drl- each alhar
crazy when they car pool.
Slereo. Q
QJI Collaga llalkotboll
0 Prime Tlmo w..otllng (T)

" 1 • KDX 10, luzull

1110 OuMI..._,, 4 wlllllllr, Ill
Ill Golf Club'lr wlbag, __,

DIICID

7111.

North,

by THOMAS JOSEPH

e

W&amp;TIII WITCH WILL DRILUNQ
W&amp;TIIICIUARAHTIIO• . _
MoR;otw;

CROSSWORD

e

Off A 500-BILLIOJ·:

~F&gt;d.. ... UJE!IC£ FIGHTI~
• A lOAf&lt; ... WE.'~ GOIOO 1'HF?LJ

AVIIIaltla. &amp; . . ..
-,011 , _ . ,

63

W6.ARE

slluallons loday, you may feel aslhough
t~e reins are being yanked out of your esl exchange.
hands, but don't lellhls disturb you. All LIIRA (lepl. 23-0cl. 23) Pro~ilable
!ypes of changes tend 10 work In your poaalbllltles are prevalent In your In·
favor.
.
volvements today. You could be fortuTAUIIUS (April ZO.May 20) you usually nate In generallng gains from morelhan
prefer to do thlngalndependenlly, how· one IICIUfce. Therofore, gel to work.
•-· you may encourage a leam effort ICOIII'IO(Oct.:M-No¥.22)Thlacan be
today. You'll eslabllsh cohorts. and a YWY r-tltdlng cycle lor you, provided
they'll atrenglhen you.
you don'l put material objeell- o OEMINI (..., 21.,uno 211) You will have your non-worldly ones. Good things
it all logether today, especially where could como 10 you clrcultously at this
your cer- Ia concerned. Follow your lime.
logical, preconeetved game plan· and IAoiTTARIUI (Nov. 23-Dee. 21) In
lhe end reeuna should be dealrable.
. 'fOVI buiiMN dealings today, don't disCANCER (Juno 21-.IUIJ 22) Friends count the edvlee of competent ....,_
WII~ helpful connections, w11o wouldn't clatea. By lha oame token, don't tune
lift a finger for you yesterday, should be out your hunches or parCIIflllona, either.
supportive of you today. Even It you The blend Will make a dynamile learn.
were rejected, r•tate your request
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.,on. 11): You
LEO {Julr 23-Autl. 22)11 you have contl- could Ire In lor an lntorestlng exparl·
null}' of purpoae, II.Will graally enhance epco today: You might learn aomelhlng
your probebiMIIel for auc:ceaa today, es- ol great V1llue !rom a laaat IIUIP8CIIng
peclally In your fln8ndal allalra. Know ·· - · Ba rapectful of the meaaage,
what you wanl and don'lsellle for leas. II not lha ~ .
VIRGO (Aut!· 23-lepl. 221 In order to AGU~ (.,_, 20-Feb. 11) You are
gel another to rBYMI Information lhal praor~tly In a good achlev••*~~ ~.
you ara In need of at IIIII IIme, you mull 10 lry not to - • lime on lnalgnlflcant
flrll be equallyaa,lrank With this lndlvld- obJecttws. Keep all your priorities In
ual. Mutual tru81 \Mil engender an hon· P"-.perspectlve.

.

liD. ArwniO HaN Stereo. Q
0 Miami Vlca Slareo.

.JI043
IAKI09876

L---------------------....J

llaai!IY and lha loaot Q
1:05 (J) MOVIE: Dr. No (2:30)
8:30 (2), lloaaom Nick gives
Anthony an ultimatum to get
a jOb or move out. Stereo. Q
Ill @
MajOr Dad The
Major depends on Gunny
and Halowachuk alter he Is

{)lll.AR DEBt: ~ 1JJ£ S&amp;.L

-~~

~.,:-...,: 62 wanted to Buy
Dryerlhap1n Itt 1411M4.
• mtCsuu:aa
• ..., ' '
Wutl lo bur .......... tlmbar.

M?M ..._, -

l&lt;· ~'t'IOO

~~=.~;.:!

oil -

[

County
.-app~ra;-,
T.V. lno.
aata. -DDon
I a.m. to I p.tw.
ew.

~

-and Uaad fum Equl-':
OVo&lt; 110 Uaad ~- to

a drnr. ' - . 1 year
old.tiiO. .......iltl
IICIIII: PMtoLI•=:ad lhill
nDnl-·sd
Fn.

Houaehold

1217 7 • . haylllntl;

1111
l'onlllf!3114.m.1211
- · · •All
.......
·-len.

... ...... D-Iu.... , ......

,

-

...
-. .' S:·':r-r
... _,......

-·~-

We-to - : 211 Ill -In ....... Palftl ...... . . . . _ _.

..,._,

AVON I AU Araaa I lhl~
Spauo, 304-t71-1421.
IE ON T.V. llany , _ t o r
com. . . lala. hlrlna II
For cntlna lnlo. call l1f.
7'19-7111 Eltl. T..U.

........ ~

-

.

1-f.tt

Each year Bob Royal Distilleries of .
.. Holland sponsors an unusual bridgeEAST
tips competltloa. Eight well-known WEST
+Q&amp;
bridge Rperts are each invited to sub- +AKIOf
'U87
mit a short article oa tbe game, with •Qs s
.Qf2
+J
empbasis on advice that can prove +J83
+KI097652
useful to eilber an Intermediate or an
expert player. Tbe articles are' then
SOUTH
+H753
rated by vote of the entire member• AK2
ship of the International Bridge Press
•ss
Association (IBPA). Prizes are award+AQ4
ed, but tile preatige of victory is more
Important than.actual financial reimVulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South
bursement Today's tip wu submitted
by my good ·friend Gabriel Chagu,
Soatlt
Weat
Nortlt Elll
many times world champion. It is:
I+
Pass
2+
Pass
Don't Spoil Your Partner's Brilliancy.
2NT
Pass
3+
Pass
On partner's club lead you play the
NT
All
pass
3
tillg, taken by declarer's ace. South
plays a low diamond, and suddenly
Opening lead: • 3 .
your partner puts up the queen. Declarer duc:ks iD dummy. Now West
Ieaiia the four of spades to your queen.
What now?
If you woodenly return the 10 of tricks, two clubs and two hearts. West ·
clubs. you·bave spoiled a briiUant play knew tbe only chance to beat three nOby partner. He could tell that declarer trump was If you held the spad~ queen,
was going to duck a dlalllOIId Into your so he made the exclttng play of the·dihand. Of course you would then return amond queen at· trick twa. What a
a club, and declarer would quickly ·shame if you neglected .to cooperate
,
scamper home with six diamond by continuing spades!

~

. . . . . 30

NORTII

• 82

By Jainea Jaeelly

a .............

Rd.

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

BRIDGE ·

liOn Stage

- liliii. - ...._ ....
H - Pin, ... Ilea na4 O!llklut!, 2 1f!llqtio

-

pultllo wot•, no tMitlotlotro,
IOft'll wlh rl¥11"' ....... ...

J:laciN, 0H C5771

---·--

-Conba-•Ra.~~o. - m -

with -""'~~·
Alaotrollar - · M-..o.
c.u
afto&lt; 2:00 p.m.. 304-m

....... -

; Awe,

.......... 304-77U1121.
... _ .. Ia .... tor _ . ,
lady durlngtha clay.~
lion and
llaqulrod.

purpoea shifts to
emanciJ)8tiOn ol slaves. Q
Ill aJ
Evening Shade
Wood creales havoc when
he brings homa an aid frland,
Kenny Rogers. Stereo. C
liD • MOVIE: 'hllh Glda
Ale Eaar' Pox Night lllha .
Movtn !l'Ol 12:oor
0 Munier, Sha WIOta Q

e

-PI-,WY-.

=··-lla-....

MllcCJyvttr

(!) C vii War T~e war's

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SCRAM-I.m ANSWIIS
•·•
Ninety - Uncle- Doily - Omelet - MEDICINE
"My husband Is such a hypochondriac." sighed my
neighbor. "He gels a call every 111011th from our druggist
to find out what's naw in MEDICINE."

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11

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bacon,· he grumbled, "and my
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7:011 8 111J W..... Of FoliUM

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6 AI who
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1 "Gat losll"
10 Packing
2 Singing
syllables
box
3 Delirious
11 Worship
13 Poe bird
talker '
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4
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14 Tooth
type
29 Crone
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15 Brnish
player
20 Binding
31 EKtend a
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5 Cite
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6 "Ship of
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32 Arrested
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24 Rang up 33 Rendez19 Judo,
7 Bolher
25 Pseud·
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8 North Star · onyms
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34 Theater
26 Tend the
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22 Took the
talk
lots
39 Environ·
12 Pencil
27 Notorious
gold
ment
medal
part
cocklall
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23 CIEtO17 Wrher
type
41 Fruh quail
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river
24 Rustic
home
27 Stingy
fellow

28 Aclor Aida
29 Stolen
30 College
study
35 Minstrel's
song
36Concek
37 "BillSRinging•
38German
Industrial

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40 Singer

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42 Thaw out
43 Po1t
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OPTIMISTIC ~UGHTS HAS NO ROOM FOR
PESSIMISM. - E.F. GERARD

69B-6jl6.
"I've bought you raincoats lo sleep ln .. .lor
when the place starts to melt this spring."
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Monday, March 4, 198l

Pomeroy--Middleport, Ohio

Page 1G-The Dally Sentinel

Ten prisoners...

ollege
earns earn
CAA berths

COIItbtlled tro. page 1 ,
led caalltioa fon:es. They all called
for die removal of Iraq1 President

Saddam Hussein."
In Paris, Foreign Minister
Roland Dumas said in an interview
on Europe 1 radio !hal Busb, "very
eager" to involve france in t.he
postwar process, will meet wtth
Mittcrrand on an unspecified date
in mid-March. French diplomatic
sources said lhe meeting probably ·
will take place on a French
Caribbean island.
.
DUmas said that with the fighting stopped in the Persian Gulf
WEATHER MAP • A few snow showers will develop with a region, lhc United States intends to
mqve quickly to resolve lhe !'ales,
warm rront In the northern Plains, nortbern Rockies, and In
linian
problem, which called "lhc
northun Maine. Tile Southeast wUl be mild uciiiiOStly nnny. A . most difficult
and most urgent'' of
few showers will develop In Southml CaUfornla. The Plains will be
alllhe
issues
in
lhe region.
windy and Wlll'lll • (UPI) .
. .
.
And lhe foreign minister said
Mitterrand's suggestion Sunday
~------Weather------ that the heads of state of the U.N.
Security Council nations meet to
Friday.
Highs
willn~~ge
from
the
ref.liate future arms sales to lhe
South Central Ohio
.
50s
to
lhe
lower
60s
Wednesday,
Middle East could evolve into an
Partly cloudy Monday night,
from
lhe
mid
40s
l()
lh~
mid
50s
overall
peace conference on the
with a low between 20 and 25.
an~
mostly
m.
the
40s
region.
The
Security Council has
Thursday,
• Mostly sunny Tuesday, with highs
Friday.
Overn1ght
lows
willn11ge
never
met
at
the
head-of-state level.
·in the lowc:r 50s. ·
from
lhc
mid
30s
to
the
mi~
40s
Israel
has
opposed
an internaOhio extended forecat
early
Wednesday,
and
mostly~
the
tiona!
Middle
East
peace
conferWednesday throa111 Friday
30s
Thursday
and
Friday
mornmgs.
ence;
saying
the
only
way
to ·
A chance of rain Wednesday
. resolve the Arab-Israeli conflict is
and Thursday, with fair weather
to conduct direct negotiations
between the nations involv~
The release of the prisoners was
worked
out Sunday during ceaserted
.
Units of the Meigs County
file talks betw.ccn Saddam 's high
Emergency Medical Service po At4:22 p.m. the Middleport unit command and coalilioin military
responded to 11 cillls for assislance was called to South Fourth for Bur· leaders in a heavily ~tent on
over the weekend and early Mon- well McKinney who was taken to a stretch of desert m allied-occu·
day morning.
·
·
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Iraq.
.
.
The Rutland unit, at 5 p.m .. piedAfter
On Saturday at 12:33 p.m. the
the mcctmg, Gen. H. NorRutland Fire Department was rransported Roger Utley from the man Schwarzkopf. ·the U.S. comcalled to Leading Creek Road f&lt;&gt;r a stalioo io Holzer.
mander of the allied forces, said, ''I
downed electrical line at the Mar- · At 10:16 p.m. the Middleport. am very happy to tell you that we
unitll1llS(l011ed Doris Haynes from agreed on all matters. We. have
shall residence.
the
station to Veterans:
· At 2 p.m . the Pomeroy Fire
made a major step forward m the
The
Racine unit went to Broad· cause of peace."
Department wont to Kingsbury
Road for a brush fire at the Dias way Street at 10:33 p.m. for Lois
The agreement. the general said.
residence. While thete the depart· Frank who was taken to Holzer.
meant the signing of a formal
This morning at 3:58a.m. the cease- ftrc was not far away.
mcnt had to extinguish a fire on a
Syracuse
unit was cillled to Buck·
truck belongillg to a fireman.
Schwarzkopf said the Iraqis also
town
Road
in Letart for Courtney agreed
· The Middleport· unit, at 6:17
to identify the location of
p.m., went to Laurel Street for Jones who was rransported to Holzland and sea mines and that both
Kenny Sec who was transported Ill er.
sides agreed to a line of demarca- ·
·
At
4:28
a.m.
the
Pomeroy
unit
Holzer Medical Center.
On Sunday at 2:42 a.m. the Rut- went to Morning Star Road for tion tli separate allied forces and
defeated Iraqi military.
land Fire Department responded to l..isha Linn Buck who was taken to theIraq's
U.N. ambassador, Abdul
Veterans,
and
at
8:02
a.m.
the
Mida call on Hysell Run Road for an .
Amir
Al-Anbari,
said his governelectrical problem a! the Ste"!8f! dleport unit went to South Second ment also accepted U.N. Security
residence in wh1ch Chnst1 Av.enue for Frances Martin who Council Resolution 686 setting up
Barcswilt was treated but not rrans- was treated but not transported.
the terms for a cease-ftrc. The measure, fassed Saturday, included a
Jist o demands, including. those
agree4 to at the 'military meeting
Movies to be shown
5005.
Sunday.
"Pevil and D8niel Mousefl and
Pespite the persistent repons of
. "Fisherman and His Wifefl will be
unrest, Saddam appeared to be
· Uterary club to meet
· holding on to power. Baghdad
shown at the Meigs County Public
·The Middlepon Literary Club Radio said he presided Sunday
Library in Pom~y on Sa~y at
2 p.m. All area children arc mVIted will meet Wednesday at I:30 p.m. over a joint meeting of the ruling
Mrs. Sibley Slack will review
to anend. Admission is free.
Command Coun~il
"Genghis Khanfl and Mrs. Roy Revolutionary
and the ruling Baath Party to disHolter will review "The Emporer's cuss political developments in the
Winding Sheet Mrs. Wilson Car· . gulf area. It said he was in conttOI
Fish fry
The Cliester Fire House will (JC!Iter will be the bosteSS. Roll call of the country and that Iraq would
have a fish fry ori April6 from 4 to will be answered with a custom of start reconstruction soon.
the Middle East.
7 p.m. at the tue house.

Ohio Lottery
Pick 3:269
Pick 4:6816

Cards : 8-li, to~c;
Q-D; 3-S

: VoL 41, No. 221
Coprrtp!'ad 11111. .

DISCUSS PERMANENT .CEASE FIRE·
AIJied· Forces Commander General Norman
Scbarzkopf (left) aad Sandi Arabian Comman·
der of Pan Arab forces General KbaUd Bin Sui

-----

tan (second from left) IDeet wltb unidentified
Iraqi military commaaden (rJaht) to.dlsc:a_, a
· penaanent cease ftre at Safwln air base In aiDed
occupJed southera Iraq Sunday. (UPI)

.:

....·

•
·
.
.
.
·
'
·
'
·.

By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Starr·
'
Plans for the SecQ~ AnnUl!~ Big
Bend Stem wheelers Festival are ·
underway, and were discussed at
Mondsy ni~t's. regular meeting of
Pomeroy V1Uage Council.
· According to .Councilman Bruce
Reed. who helped to head up last
fall's festival on behalf of the
Meigs County Chamber of Commerce, the festival has been tentalively set for October 11 and 12.
The numberofboutsexpected to
be on hand for this year's festival is

almost double lhe number on hand prOposed ordinance, which updates would be in town lor an extended
last year. Accll'ding to :Reed, near- the bylaws and regulations of the period of time while widening the
ly 20 stemwheelers arc anticipated department, with fu-emen who had intersection at Nye Avenue, and
· exoreSsed coricern with the word- suggested that the department be .
for the festival.
ing surrounding the department's contacted about the resurfacing
Minersville-area residents Jim
age r~ctions.
wtl'k. According to Seyler, the road
and Donna Davis, who conceived
Mayor Richard Seyler voiced has not been resurfaced for at least
the idea for s·uch a festival last
year', arc also involved in the plan- his interest in contaCting the Ohio 1-Jfl years.
Department of Transportation to . Reed told council that he would
ning stages f&lt;ir this year's event.
discuss
blacktopping Main Street contact ODOT Deputy Director
The third reading of a proposed
from
the
Nye Avenue intersecti&lt;&gt;n ·John Dowler to discuss the possifire department ordinance was
to
the
Middleport/Pomeroy
bound- . bility of resurfacing !\lid to arrange
tabled last night, pending at least
ary.
a meeting time for the same.
two minor changes. Councilmen
'
Seyler
pointed
out
that
ODOT
Council also entertained discusBryan Shank and Larry Wehrung
'
reponed that they had discussed the

By MINDY KEARNS
OVP News Starr

Contiaued l'rom page 1
West Bank and Gaza Strip.
· Hope also abounds lhat the convergence of interests forged by the
war will cause Saudi Arabia,
Kuw~t and other moderate Arab
states to formally make peace with
Israel. To date, Egypt is the only
Anlb country that has done so.
Participation in the anti-Iraq
alliance helped nurtured a glimmer
of improvement in U.S. relations
with Syria, an avowed enemy of
Israel and longtime pariah to the
United States as a hsvcn for terror·
ists. Baker credited the Syrians
with taking "some action" to stem
tenorism against U.S. and Western
wgets to gain favor with the West.
A Kuwaiti pfficial said Sunday
that his country, in conjunction
Sarah Irvine O'Conn~ a daughter, with t)le Arab Gulf Cooperation
Maureen O'Connor of the borne; a Council, may review its relationdaughter, Mrs. Robert (Sally Ann) ship with Israel. The Kuwaitis and
Woodford of Lucasville; and three others also will be consulted on
creation of an Arab-led peacekeepgiandchildren.
·
Services will be held Wednes- ing fm:e backed by a strengthened
day at 11 Lm. at the White Funeral Jongterm presence of American
Home in Coolville with the Rev. naval and air forces and pre-posiGeorge Horner officiating. Burial · tioned war supplies.
Bilker will be seeking input on
wiD be in the Coolville Cemetery
where military graveside services all these issues when he leaves
will be conducted. Friends may call Wednesday on a trip that includes a
at the White Funeral Home Tues- stop in MoscoW to thank the Soviday from 2 to 4 p.m. and 7 to 9 ets - whose influence lhe United
States for years sought io curb - ·
p.m.
for supporting the U.S.-led stand
.
against Iraq and recQgnize their
desire to remain ~ngaged in the
Satuiday night'~ winning num- Middle East
bers were 2, 3, 20, 36, 37 and 42.
There were 95 people with five
correct numbers and they will
CLEVELAND (UPI) - Saturreceive $1,218 each. There were
4,374 people with f~ur correct day's winning Ohio Lottery numnumbers, worth $85 ap1ece.
No one had all sill Kicker num- ';Pc~.3
186.
bers - 137121 - Saturday night.
Ticket sales: S I ,65 I, 771.00.
Eight people had. five numbers,
worth .$5,000 each. Four num~ Payoff: $578,755.50.
were picked by 52 people, who will Plck-4
4769.
receive S1,000 apiece.
Ticket sales: $308,217.50. Payoff: S2627oo.oo.
Cardi
Thtee of hearts.
Veterau Memorial
Jack eX clubs.
Saturday admissions: Bobby .
Five eX diamonds.
Stanley, Racine.
Ten of spllles.
Saturday discharges: Reva John·
. Ticket sales: .$78,982. Payoff:
son, Wayne Gilliand.
$31,680.
Sunday admissions: Mary Saper Lotto
·
Hawk, Rutland; ·Iamca Perkins,
2, 13, 20, 36, 37, 42.
Poma-oy; Laura SC&lt;JII, Middleport;
Ticket sales: $4,250,799.00.
and Burwell McKinney, Middle- Kldler
137121.
""'§unday discharges: None.
Ticket sales: $668,743.

-

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CARPET.
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eAdvanced Generation Olefin
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•Easy Care
SQ.

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'FOR
AND·.rrius"! Appi'Oxlma~ly 100 petlple li'om Mason, Gallla IUid Meigs counties attended a meetl!ig Monday nlpt at tbe Mason Cou!lty Public Library, In an effort to bring jobs and industry to the trl-county areL Speaken for the evening were Frank Lee, director of the Mason County
Development Authority; JJ, Wedge, who orgaalzed the meeting and served as emcee; Rlcb Jones, Meigs
County Commissioner; and T001my Meadows, business development officer for Star Bank in Gallia
County. Pictured a hove, left to right, Lee, Wedge and Meadows. (OVP photo by Mindy Kearns.)

'24 Colors
•Zoftron Nylon Pll~ _,
•stain lolease
•continuous. Heat Set Yarn
•Good HousokHping Seal .

Collins named to ODOT post
Meigs' County Treasurer George
Collins will be going to Marietta to
serve with the Ohio Peparunent of
Transportation.
Collins, a Republican, con finned his appointment to the District IOollice on Tuesday morning.
Collins' appointment to the
position of District 10 AdmiiJislrative Assistant comes afler nearly
two months of controversy and
waiting. Both Col!ins and Meigs

SQ. YD.

Y~.

ltSTlWD
W1111PlD

INSTAUID

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"NYLON PROTECTION PLUS
*10 YR. LIMITED WARRANTY
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.

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---Area deaths-Arthur S. O'Conner

Arthur S. 0 'Connor, 69, of 53
Rock St., Coolville, died early ~1!­
urdsy March 2, 1991 at the Chilli·
cothi Veterans Administration
Hospital following an extended ill-

ness.

Born in Jersey City, N. J., he
was the son of the late Claude and
Elizabeth Hilton O'Connor. He
was a U.S. Air Force veteran of
World Warn where he was~ B-17
pilot. Hew~ as a mac~.
Survivors uiclude h1s w1fe,

.

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No
one wins. Ohio Super Lotto jack pot
.

TEXTURED LEVEL LOOP CARPET

CLEVELAND (UPI) - Ohio
Lottery officials reported Sunday
there were no winners of Saturday
night's $8 million Super Lotto
jack~ot. meaning Wednesday
night s Super Lotto jackpot will be
worth $12 minion.

•7 COLORS
•oUPIN/NYLON PILE
•10 Yl. UMinD WEll WllllNTY

'

Stocks
Am Elc Power ......................28 S/8

Ashland oil ..........................33 3/4

AT&amp;T .................................. .33 S/8

Bob Bvans ............................I8 1/8

Chlrlllina Sbop..................... t3 7/8

City Holdina.........................J4 1fl
Federal MoJiui ......................,..... J6
Goodyear 'f.u .....................22 1/4
Key CaiiiJiilll ............................ 11
LaiKII' Eflld •••.•... ~.................. 18 518
Limited Inc. ..........................23 3/4
Multimedia Inc. ....................71 l(l
Ral Jteaaurllll .................,....... 1/8
Robbini&amp;MyeB ...................26 lfl
. Sholle)''alnc......................... 14 3/4
s.. Bink ....:......................... 23 1/4
WerJIJy lnt'l..................................8
WorthingiOII Ind...................22 3/4

·''

Lottery numbers

Hospital news

SQ. YD.

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County Engineer Philip Roberts
received the approval of a majority
of the lOth District's Republican
Party chairmen in January for
ODOT positions. Collins was .recommended for the administrative
assistant position to which he has
now been appointed, and Roberts
was believed to have been a sttOng
candidate for the Deputy Direc1or
position.
The party's endorsement of

Roberts was ajlparently ignored Athens native John Dowler was
appointed to the top position in the
Marietta office in late January.
.Dowler was unavailable for
comment on the appointment on
Tuesday morning, and Collins
refused to ·comment on the matter
until Dowler made a statement,
other than to confll'm the appointment. ·

Meigs County teenagers have
one of state's .highest birth rates

INSTAWD

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentlael News Starr
Meigs County .teenagers continue to record one of the highest birth
rates in the SIBle or Ohio. according to Nonna Torres, nursing director for the Meigs County Health
Department.
She said that according to figutes recently released by the Ohio
Department of Health , Meig s
County recorded 60 or 30.7 percent
of live births per 1,000 females
ages 10-19 in 1989.
Meigs County teenagers was
below Pike County which recorded
the highest rate of 88 births or 43.1
percent, followed by Jackson with
102 births or 38 percent; Vinton
with 37 births for 35.9 percent;
Scioto with 253 or 35.5 percent;
and Gallia with 63 or 24.9 percent.
Adjacent Athens County had
102 births for 18.4 percent per
1,000 Jive births with Washington
County reporting 99 births for 17.8
percent. The figures indicated that
Southeastern Ohio Counties led the
state in 1eenage births for the year.
The Ohio Oepartment of Health
noted thai once every 23 minutes a
baby was born to an Ohio teenager
dlJI'IIIg the year. The total of 22,469
Jive births to Ohio teens in 1989
showed a 3.S percent increase over
1988.
According to James F. Quilty,
Jr., MD., Chief, Division of Maternal and Child Health, Ohio Department of Health, more than 400 of
the births were to children 14 years
of age and under.
,
State wide, 10 of 14 Ohio teen
births were' to unwed mothers ,
although the Department of Health

sion on purchasing a new police
departm ent cruiser last nigh!.
Money has !&gt;een appropriated for
the purchase of the vehicle.
According to Councilman Thomas
Werry, a new radio is needed in ·
one of lhe cruisers, and a
lightbar should be purchased for the
other cruiser.
.
.
Werry said that he would investigate possible dealers for such a
cruiser and assist the police de ~­
ment i~ writing out a bid advertisement.

new

In other action, council:
- disc ussed various stree t
repairs in need of auention, as well
as
needed repairs to stonn se~ers and
catch basins within the village;
· - heard discussion or a property
dispute on High Street;
- accepted the mayor's repon of
fines collected in the amount of
$3,167.
Also present were Councilman
Bill .Young and Clerk Brenda Morris.

B.usiness leaders say
area exports its b_est
resource -young people

'' ,.,

HEAVY SAXONY
CARPET

A Uultln\edle Inc. Newopeper

Tentative dates .set for Sternwheelers Festival

.

,

,.

1 Socllon, 10 PlgH 25 ...,,,

. Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, ·TUesday, March 5, 1991

----Announcements

Cemeteries to be cleaned
Quilted sweatsll!" class .
Lebanon Township will be
A quilted sweatshll't class w1U
begin March 12 at the First South· cleaning cemetery grounds after
em Baptist Church near the Meigs April I and those wanting to save
County Fair Grounda. Rcgisuation flowers and other items should
deadline is Friday. For more infor- remove them by April I .
mation contact Bunny Kuhl at 9927537.
Dance to be held
The Pomeroy· Senior Citizens
Dance Club will be .having a dance
SfriD&amp; banquet
The Me1gs, Count)' C.hamber of on FridaY. from 8 to 11 p.m. at the
Commerce will have 1ts annual Senior Citizens Center in Pomeroy.
spring banquet dinner and dance on Music will be by the Happy HolSaturday at the Royal Oak Resort low Boys of Athens. Those attend·
Club. Advanced reservations are ing bring snacks for the snack
required. For .more information table.
contaCt the chamber office at 992-

Low tonight in mid 40s.
Wednesday, high near 60.
Chance or rain 30 percent.

•

Meigs EMS responds to ~1 calls

Arab•..

\

noted that metiopolitan counties
had the highest rate of births to
unwed teens while Southern Ohio
counties had the lowest reported
rate. This, Quilty said, clearly
shows the danger of premature sexual activity.
Torres expressed the concern or
the local health department about
the lack of prenatal care for
teenagers during the fU'St trimeste•
She said that teenagers because
their bodies are not mature arc at a
higher health risk for anemia. pregnancy-induced hypenension, cervical trauma, and premature delivery.
She also pointed out that one oul
of every 10 live births to teens are
of low birth weight and that
between eight and I 9 percent of
very low birth weight babies may
be severely handicapped. Another
15 to 20 percent may be moderately and mildly disabled, she said. It
was further pointed out that low
birth weight accounts for twothirds of the infant deaths within
the fU'St 28 days of life.
Other health concerns center on
sexually transmitted diseases, Tot-

res noted.
Numerous services to teenagers
who arc pregnant as well as older
women are available through the
Meigs County Health Oepartment
which has a prenatal·clinic program
as well as services of WIC
(women, infants and children).
ln. addition to health related
issues of teenage pregnancy, it was
pointed out that there is a definite
economic impact on .the individual
as well as society at large.
Twenty-five pm:ent of unmarried teen mothers drop out of

school as do 75 percent of high
school women who marry and have
a child. The result is that teen
·mothers generally find themselves
in low paying jobs or become
dependent on welfare for support.
Statistics from the Pepartment
of Human Services show at least60
percent of Ohio's teen mothers
become
dependent upon public
111
assistanCe at some lime. This created an increase of nine percent in ·
· government spending for teen
Continued on page 10

"I'm concerned about the
exporting of natural resources. People say that West Virginia is shipping limber and coal out-of-state.
But our most valuable resource
we're shipping out isn't timber or
coal, it's our young people."
This was the statement of
Mason County Economic Pevelopment Authority Director Frank Lee,
when approximately 100 people
from three counties joined Monday
evehirg in a bic;l f9r imlu~try and
jobs.
.
'
•·
Commissioners from Mason,
Meigs and Gallia counties. as well
as·blmkers, businessmen and union
• officials turned out at the Mason
County Public Library to see what
they could do, both individually
and as a group, to bring jobs to the
Iii-county area.
Moderator J.J. Wedge introduced the speakers for the eveni!lg,
Frank Lee; Ri ch Jones, Me1gs
County Commissioner; and
Tommy Meadows, business development officer for Star Bank from
Gallia County.
In addition to Jones. fi ve other
commissioners represeiJting Mason
and Gallia counties attended, Sadie
Bailes , Larry Sayre and Tucker
Mayes of Mason, and Harold
Montgomery and George Pope or
Gallia County.

Wedge noted at the beginning of
the session that although he is 100
percent in support of Pyrochem, the
meeting had absolutely nothing to
do wilh the company.
Wedge served as the Mason
County liaiwn for Pyrochem a few
years ago when they attempted to
locate an incenemtor in the county.
"I ' m here for jobs in Mason
County, Meigs and Gallia counties.
The purpose of this organi,zalional
meeung is to lend suppon to industries. This group can be productive
if we keep one goal in mind •
,
jobs," Wedge said.
Lee was fttst county represenlative to speak. telling those attending of three projects that are ongoing at lhe present lime, each thai
ha s a direct impact on Mason
County.
McArthur Lumber and Post Co.,
located on U.S. 35 at Southside, is
a small, employee-owned operation, Lee said, but is rock solid
financially and is a good corpomtc
citizen. Lee stated the company
buys logs from farmers and other
local people, which provides them
with extra money.
The second project J.ee .spoke of
was General Dynamics. "Senator
Byrd brought us General Dynamics;" the authority director said.
General Dynamics. located in
Apple Grove. is a hi-tech resean:h
center thai will also bring jobs and
money into the region.

The third project Lee talked
about was Alabama River Pulp
(ARP). Lee dispelled rumors that
are circulat ing concerning the
plant, saying he was sick and tired
of reading nonsense such as ARP
would clear cut all SU\nding limber
in !he county.
l.ee said in Alabama, the company does not buy timber land. but
contracts with individuals. They
have their own forest management
people, he added, ilfld arc not going
to use the large veneer logs, but
scrap material and crooked trees.
The authority director went on
to say the company would provide ·
about 1,000 jobs. "They want to ·
come here. and will come here, if
we don't shoot 'ourselves in the
· foot," Lee said.
Lee also stated the county is
being considered for a new power
plant instead of the repowenng of
the Sporn Plant that was announced
a few years ago.
Byrd announced lhatlhe projec1
would be in Mason Counly,
according 10 Lee. The nexllhing he
knew, he continued, was there was
a consul !ant knocking on his door,
and th en he found out Mas on
County was competing wilh another community for the new plant.
"And we still arc," he said.
"It was announced for Mason
County. And, it can burn the coal
that is produced in the Meigs Mine.
Continued on page 10

c ·a r overturns; woman slightly injured .;'
A Hamilton woman suffered
minor injuries Monday after the car
she was riding in turned over on its
right side on State Route 338. ..
Edith Smith, 77, was transported
to Veterans Memorial Hospital by
the Meigs County EMS following
the accident in Letart Township.
She was treated and released for
her injuries, a hospital spokeswom an said Tuesday.
According to a report from the
Gailia-Meigs post of the State
Highway Patrol, Smith was a pas-

seng er in a car driven by Elva
Corbin, 46, of Racine. Corbin was
southbound on State Route 338
when she apparently lost control of
her car on the snowy roadway and
slid off the right side of the road.
Her 1988 Ford Aerostar then
Uirned over on ils righl side, and
then tqrned back over onto its
wheels.
Corbin was not treated for her
injuries.
A Middleport man was cited for

·-

failure to control after the car' he
was driving flipped over off of
Meigs County Road 5 Monday.
Christopher M. George, 18, was
cited after he apparently lost control of his 1975 Chevrolet Impala
in the eastbound lane of CR 5. The
vehicle slid off the right side of the
roadway and struck a power pole.
Geor~e 's vehicl e then rolled over
onto 1ts top where it came to rest
George was not injured in the
crash.

ODOTfunds
received for

new van
Purchase of a new van with a
wheelcllajr tift for tlle Meigs County Council on Aging has been funded ~n the amount of $16,93.6 by the
9h1o Depanment of Transportauon.
Cost of the van which will
replace a 1983. vehicle with nearly
100,000 miles pn it is $21,170. All
of that amount with the exception
of 20 percent or $4 ,234 will be
paid by the state.
Delivery Of the new van is
expected within eight weeks.
Meanwhile, the Council is soliciting' donations ~d will begin several fund raising projects to get
together the local share.
Eleanor Thomas, Council d·irec- .
tor, is asking churches, organizations and individuals' to contribute
Continued on page 10

TO BE REPLACED • This 1983 van which
bas traveled aboat 100,000 miles over the bumpy

backroads ot Meigs County to traasJ)ort senior
citizens will be replaced Ibis spring. Cost of lhe
~an is $21,170 with all bqt $4,234 to come

through I grant from the Ohio Department of
Transportation. Wanda Vining is transportation
coord10ator for the Meigs County Council on
Aging. ·

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