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10-The Deity Sentinel

annual I\'POI't to Congress on the
nation's economy.
Bush, whO signed the report at
the White House Tuesday before
leaving for CalUornla, said the
main economiC goal of his
admlnistatlon Is to achieve " the
highest poSsible rate of sustainable economic growth. •·
··r am confident that the United
States can enjoy strong, sustained economic growth and use
the fruits of that growth to raise
livl ng standards, solve longstanding pr oblemss, deal with
new challenges and make the
-most of new opportunities," Bush
said In a forward to the report.
which was prepared by ·his
Council of Economic Advisers.
The nation's economy rebounded In the 198Qs after being
bat tered by the previous decade's soaring Inflation, rising
unemployment and declining
productivity. At decade' s end,
lnflallon had been contained, 20
million jobs· were created and the
economy ad.ded another year to
its record peacetime expansion.
The focus of the administration' s economic policies will be to
" build on ihe successes" of the
previous decade by creating "an
e nvironment In which the private
sector can serve as tl)e engine ,
that powers strong, nonlnflallonary economic growth."
Bush said.
, "Despite our successes, we
cannot be satisfied with simply
sustaining the strong record of
the 1980s,'" Bush said.
The report details ·fjve policy
prln!!lples Blish . will focus on to
build a stronger economy for the

Stocks
Dally st(l!)k prices
(As oll0:34l a.m.)
Bryce and Mark SmHh
of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewl
Am Electric Power;............. 29%
AT&amp;T . .. ...... ... ..... ... .... ........ .39~
Ashland Oil .. .................. .. .. 3672
' Evans .... .. ..... .. ...... .. ...... ! 2'V.
, Bob
Charming Shoppes ........... ... . 8%
City Holding Co .. ........ ..... .. .. 14
Federal Mogul... ... .............. l9~
Goodyear T&amp;R ............. .... .. 37%
Heck"s .... ....... .. ....... .......... ... 2')!
ll;ey Centurion .... ........ .. :..... 1377
Lands' End ...... ......... .... .. .... 17'h
Limited Inc ........ .... ...........:33\-1
Multimedia !ric ....... .. .. ........ 77'h
Rax Restaurants ... .. ... .. ..... .. , 1%
Robbins &amp; Myers ................ 15~
Shoney's Inc ....................... 10%
, star Bank ... ... .. .. ............ ...... 19
Wendy's Inti. ...... ... ... .... .. .... .47i
Worthington lnd ........... ..... .. 21Y.
(AEP aad Bob ·Evans Farms
are ex dividend today.)

Shiflet receives
OVEC sen-ice award ·
Jack H. Shtflet, shift operating
engineer at the Ohio Valley
Electric Corporation's Kyger
Creek Plant, received his annl·
versary award for 35 years'
service to the company , Raymoknd H. Blowers, Jr., plant
manager, announced today . ·
Shiflet joined OVEC on Jan. 26,
1955, as a barge attendant In the
yard department. That same
year he was promoted to auxilIary equipment operator In the
operations department. In 1972
he was promoted to unit supervl·
sor; In 1979, to assistant shift
operating engineer, and this
month to shift operating
engineer.
Shiflet and his wife, Elizabeth,
resid e at Route 1, Rutland.

Tundl'tf,

Poluaov-Midclaport. Ohio

Mild weather continues .around Buckeye State

Rhonda Lynn Roush, 36, of
Middleport. who died Saturday
evening at Pleasant Valley Hospital. is also survived by a
brother and sister-In-law, Buddy

Pick 3

triumph

853
Pick 4
1233

Page 3

e

Our Service Is Worth
Cheering A.boutl
.
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zu,

S))om ·p18nt .gets $660 -million ·cteim coal unit 1992 for the Clean coil Tech·
NEW HAVEN, W.Va. &lt;UPn A joirn venture between tile Philip · no!Qgy.Program. ·
From its ,.Columbus, Ohio,
S)iom plant and the ·American
headquarters,
AEP SerVice dis·EJeclric Power Service Corp. to
closed
Tuesday
the signing of an
build a new generation of coal··
~~g~ee~~~ent
with
the
Deparnnent of
burning ~pjpment looJ)Is as. the
Energy
to
share
the
cost
of building ·
· most ambitious clean-coill under·
lhge
new
generation
of
coal-burntaking in American historY.
. "This project will be ideal tD ing equipment in West Virginia.
The $660 ~il)ion commer·
(lemonsttate the important con·
Pressurized Fluidized Bed
cialscale
·lribulions that cleari coal tech·
Combustion
unit, biggest of its kind
nology can mate to addressing the
in
the
world,
will be 'built at the
· ~ of acid rain and im~viJig
Philips~
planL
.
,
the qualitY of our air," satd Sen.
Among
the
benefits
of
PFBC
are
Robert C. Byrd. '
Byrd ..has acquired nearly $2.8 •· higher tl)~ ~fficienc&gt;: and

•Stafford, SLS, and Plus Student
LoansAvailabl~ To Qualified
Borrowers in West V~.rginia and Ohio.

iS

'

.·

\'

• No Service Charge On
Student Checking Accoun~
.. .

:1

LIS7 Dlftll

'17

"1

..

• No Service Charge,
On ·
'
.
P.;assbook' Savings Accounts

7

'

lllftRDII

i.

.

•..·Committed
To Being The Best
.
'

PliES

mnaP.D.LC.

EQUAL HOIIIINQ LBIDIR

'w)uced sulfilr !liox1de an4 mtrogen

NEW HAVEN·
882-2135

oxide emissionS:
AEP Service said the govern·
· "Our goal is 10 demonstrale that ment will uilderwrite S\85 million
PFBC is capable of helping the na- (28 percent) Of the cost of the
tion meet its environmental goals project. lhe balance is to e9me
more effectively than current teCh· fromm one or more ;AEP subnology,'' said James Markowsky, . sidiaries. .
· ·
the company's senior vice president
AEP Service is the management
and chief engineer.
and teChnology .-m of the seven-·
I
state American El~lric Power sys·
"The specific objective of this tern, which consisas of eight operat·
project is 101 demon~tate the in!! eleelric utilities serving seven
feasibility and cost effecuvencss of, nullion people.
·
using PFBC teChnology in a com· 1
"Successful completion of the
mercial-scale plant .of at least 330 contn!Ct negOtiations is a
megawatts capacity," he said. Step forward for this project, WhiCh
''This plant will be the laigest is ex~ted to cJeate 500 construcPFBC plant in the worjli"
· ·
tion JObs," Byrd said.

map

POINI' PLEAsANr

MASON

675-1121

773-55J4 .

''

"It is good news for West V!rig·
nia and for !he Clean COal Tech·
nology program."
·
DOE officials informed Byrd
that federal funding for the project
may start as soOn as Congress
completes a required 30-day
review.
"Under the agreemen~ AEP will
fund nearly three-quarters of the
cost of the project, or $472.1 million," Bytd said. "The federal
government will provide $184.8
million, and the State of Ohio wiU
conlribute $3 million."
· Byrd, who developed and won
congressional approval of the Clean

Coal Technology .Program . as a
means to promote the 11se of COal in
an envirorunentally acceptable
manner, said the COal-burning sys·
tem to be used in the Sporn plant
can remove · nearly 95 percent of
sulfur pollutants aiJd a majority of
nitrogen oxides.
Byrd said that the Sporn project
originally was chosen for funding
two years ago under the second
round of clean coal competitions.
AEP expects to begin construction
on the plant in 1993, with test runs
of the repowered .plant expected to
begin in the summer of 1996. ·

Delegation requests· skateboard facility
A petit-Ion requesting that the meeting that the village
Racine VIllage Council give solicitor had advised against a
consideration to constructing a skateboard facility because of
skateboard facility at Star Mill the potential for Injuries and
Park was presented at Monday lawsuits.
night's meeting of Council at the
Council authorized a transfer
park building.
of .money In the fire lund to the
A delegation of skateboard prlnclpsl and Interest Item to be
enthUsiasts met with council and used Jor that on. the property
presented the petition signed by purchased by the !·Ire .
85 Racine residents asking that ' depariment.
·
eouncll -give conslderailon to
.T. Bentz met with council to
such a consiructlon project.
talk about potholes In · village
lt was explained by council streets. Street Commissioner
members during the meeting Glenn Rizer . adviSed that the
that the matter had been consl- Meigs County Highway Depart. dered earller and that liability ment will haul a load of patching
Insurance was at that time a as soon as It Is made at the plant
problem. However, ' since · the at Kanauga stnce'the village now
village now· has· a different does have any good patching
-Insurance carrier, members . materials. It was also pointed out
agreed to check wit)! the new;, by c:;ouncll Member Larry Wolfe
;' ~!11P8!iY '. ·~1!. d~i!.!"ml.ne. If a: , ···that the village ,will be using
.,s)f§tel1:04~df!lf!lfl¥,:1l',IIIWI.QIIallty Issue II money. ~, YI1~~Pr hot
, for lllibh!iy hlsuraifce and . the mix paving. A five year program
cost.
·
of street repair Is planned by the
It was also pointed out during village. · .

'

.

A complaint was made by
Glenn Young, Main Street , about
trash and water billing procedures·. 11 was noted that the
billing and coUectlng procedure
used Is In compliance with the
prQCess outlined ·In the village
ordlnilnee,
·
•
A letter from Ohio Drilling of
Massllonwaspresentedadvislng
council that the pump on well 2
appearedtohavebeendamaged
by the a power surge such as a
bolt o! lightning. The Board of
Pulblc Affairs will contact the
Insurance company .
Cou!ICU approved the purchase
of two tires for the packer truck,
noting that since It Is not driven
much, the new tires should last
several years.
Mayor Frank , O,!eland ap.
PQinled and council approved the
retroactlye . appointment of
Glenn Rizer as street commlsstoner. The . mayor was au tho-

rlzed by council to obtain bids for
repair of the village dump truck
which was wrecked last summer.
Also approved was the purcha,se
o! a trailer to be used with the
tractor for various maintenance
projects.
Mayor Cleland dlstriQuted to
members of council pamphlets
on the Sunshine Law which
requires that public business be
doneatanopenmeetlngandwlth
public notice.
The meeting recessed until
Monda,y, Feb. 19 at 7 p.m.
Attending were Council
members Robert Beegle. H!!nry ·
Bentz. Ron Clark, Carroll Tealord, Jeff Thornton, and Larry
Wolle. Mayor Cleland, Clerk
,Jane Beegle, Fire Chief Robert
John~on, and Street Commts- .
solner Glenn Rizer. Als!&gt; a,t·! end·
lng were Malcolm JiarliS •. !':'a· .
tlonal on and Gas, and Oon
Riffle, Mark Theiss, and Trevor

.Ohio Se11ate approves
grandparents right .bill

-Job
oUheOIIIoBureauol
can now be checked a&amp; the Melp County
· PUblic Ubral-y. Mn. Rutb Powers, librarian, haa aecured the
aervlce throurh the OBES office In G!liiiPolls with updaies coming
· In oo a w~ekly basis. The job llstlnp cube viewed on ~(he library's
By Lt:E LEON~D
Cincinnati, and Neal Zimmers ·
: mlcrolfc,he reader, a glfllrom the Farmer's Bank -eral yean
UPI Sta&amp;ehoUBe Re[l!!rler
· Jr., D-Dayton, both lawyers,
· aro. The big advantage; according to Mrs. Powers, Is that Melp
COLUMBUS - Despfte com·
launched a sttong attack against
CouDtlans can DOW come Into lhe library and look at the job llstlnp
plaints It will clog the courts with. the bill, saying the law alre$dY
-··' ...
unnecessary paperwork, · the - allows grandparents to petition a
ra&amp;her than have to.m!lke a trip to Gallipolis. All job llsijDp have
. Ohio Senate adopted legislation court tor visitation rights.
, an order number which pat mils caa
to check with the Gallipolis
·
OB.ES to determine curre11t availability of jobs and receive ·
Tuesday . giving grandparents
"If the court wanted to do this
ulllalance In making appllca&amp;lon. Here Nonna Hawthorne, library
.- and other relatives the opportun- today ( g~ant vls~tation rights) , It
Ity ·ro vlsll ·children In divided could," said Finan. '-'All this does
asllalant, looks over .the new listings which became available this
.' week . .. ·
·
·
families and broken homes.
Is put more people In the courts
The '"gratldparents' rights" arguing abo'!l visitation rights.''
bill was ' approved 29-4 and
returned to the House, wl)ere
· Zimmers added tl\at · the
Rep. Sam Bateman, R-MIIford, change will force the custodial
the chief sponsor, said he will ask mother to lose time.with the child
for concurrence In Senate by dividing visitation with the
.
'
.
changes.
father, . the grandparents ' and
WASHINGTON iUPI)- Sales
Sen. Betty Montgomery, R· ottier relatives ~ "You're going to
a region that gradually Is turning
of existing single-family homes
Itself a.round and one that likely Perrysburg, said the bill will take more time away from her,"
rose 2.1 perc~n t during the fourth
will thrive In 1990 given Its allow ·grandparents and other he said.
quarter but posted a 4.3 percent
fundamental strength," Tuccillo relatives to petition the courts (or
Sen. Richard Pfeiffer, D·
A RECORD! - It wu Tue.day, 'eb. 6 aad t~e temperature
said.
·
decline for the year, the National
visitation rights If the [&gt;l!.rents Columbus, agreed with · Finan
reptered
68 degreea under lUDDY aklea a&amp; the comer of Court .a nd .
Association of Realtors r~ported
Resale activity strengthened are divorced, II one parent Is and Zimmers that the law
Second
Ia
Pomeroy
mid-afternoon. How nIce It was! That coupled
.. Wednesday.
In the Midwest during the quar- deceased or II ihe child Is living currently permits grandparents
with
lha&amp;
lad
thai
"PunxaUtawney Pbll" didn't aee bla abadow
Rising lnteresirates during the
ter, led by a 25.6 percent Increase with an unmarried mother.
to petition' for visitation. But he
whe~~
he
emerced
from
his home last week, Indicated an early .
first half of the year held down
In South Dakota. Ohjo posted a
Tbe visitation rights also would .said the bill '1'111 make the
.
aprlllc. That •I!Ould keep everyone In cood spirits!
housing sales, whlch.l·lnlshed the
23.3 percent. Increase for the apply during a divorce or dlssolu· process uniform throughout the·
year stronger only after rates
nation's fourth-greatest gain.
tlon situation while child support state.
.,
.
began to fall. The heightened
Tuccillo attributed the vigor of Is being contested, or If the
Pfeiffer also said the bill offers
resale activity was -not enough to
the Midwestern market to a custodial parent remarries, the- visitation rlgl\ts to "anyone :with · .
!Jr!ng the year'.s activity up to ' growing strength o! secondary senator said. ·
·
an Interest In the child's
1988's record level, the !ISSOCia- cities that offer a lower cost' of
But Sims. Richard -Finan, R· welfare.''
·
tlon said.
living anll higher qualliy Of IUe. .
Norman Flynn, , the assqclaCOLUMBUS, Ohio (UPif year, created Fleming's departThe housing -market In the
The head of the state's drug and ment and added drug and alcohol
tion's president, said (lrst-tlme Northeast continued Its sluggish
alcol\ol addiction treatment pro- .experts to the existing county
buyers continued to have trouble pace during 'the quarter, declln·
gram·
expressed concern Tues· boards of mental health.
breaking Into the market, espe- lng by 2.6 percent. Resale deday about boll! local. drug task
Fle!Ding said her agency Is
cially In the West and Northeast, clines were posted In New Jersey
forces proposed In a new stale working toward a partnership
whlcb was the only region to post and Pennsylvania. Vermont;
drug-fighting bill will mesh with with the local task forces, some
declln~ resale activity.
Connecticut and New Hampshire
of which already exist without
· California, Texas, Pennsylva· bucked the regional trend , show- ·
WASHINGTON (UPI)'-:rilrn· surprlaed If Bush vetoed -the bill
established treatment boards.
Senate
Bill 258.
,
"We
have
been
hearing
from
h
nla. Ohio and New York led the lng stronger resale activity.
tng aside objections from Presl·
.
w
.Jch
he
said
addiessed
"the
all
over
the
state
a
rlalng
chorus
But
Andy
Devine, a retired
nation In terms of units sold
The association also reported derit Bush, the Houie overwhelm·
heart
of
American
demQCraMr
"
ot
objections
to
the
content
ot
JuvenUe
Court
judge from
during the quarter . . Based on that housing prices appreciated
lngly passed· legislation to
·
"ldon'tknowhowanybodycan
Senate
8111
2M
as
·u
relates
to
Toledo, said all elements of the
percentages, the greatest gains In many areas ol .t he cOuntry, led streamline voter reglltratlon
were po11ted by Vermont, South by Honolulu, where the median acrols the country and make It argue agallllt making It easte~~ : House Bill 317," Lucellle Flem· . loc:al' communities mu•t work
for 10111~- to vote,'' noted lq, director of the Ohio Depart· together to light· drup.
Dakota, Nevada, Ohio and Utah. price for a single family home easier for more Americans to 8
o.,.e ....,..""'ratlc leader Rl· men! of Alcohol and Drug·Addlc·
'1 pray to God that you don't
· Catlfomla led the nation with a reached $280,900 during the cast ballota.
chard Gepllardt Of Mluourl.
Se
SCIIttle
these community task
resale pace of ;116,000 units quarter.
Tbe measure, approved T.ues·
'"I'hla bill wiU g"" more power • tlon rvlces, told a Route ~elect
committee on drugs.
forces," said Devine.
durlng the quarter, up 3 percent
Following Honolulu, which day on a 289·132vote, wouldaliow
"We respectfully ask for time
Seth Taft of the Sublltan~
from the third quarter. Several posted a 24.8 percent lncreaie,
citizens to register to vote wben to everyday American people
than·
~ythlng
since
the
Votlq
to
demou
...
ate
tbat
....,....
I
·
Ablate
lliiUaUve ol Greater
plher western states also poSted was the San Francllco Bay area,
they renew or apply fora driVer' a Rlgbtl Act of 1965 " added
"
r• ..,...r m
Cleveland
urred the committee
which repQfted a median price of license and to reglater by mall Democratic National Committee plement&amp;tlon of Houae 8111317
significant gains.
to
place
anyoneCODYtcted
Of drug
: ''Thla Ia by tar tbe best- · $260,000, up 12.1 percent.
and at nwnerou1 new -voter Chairman Ron Brolm argu!JII' will work without IMUq up
performing region of apy In the
Rounding out the nation's five
registration locations.
·that Republlt:ana
obJected another bureaucracy, and with· abate In a detelltiDn facility for
country right JIOW - the whole price leaders were: Oranae
The Wblte HoUle, however, hu to enDrtl to atlracl volera out lmPfllllil more mandllel on . tratllc offellderl Ul erder to •ve
area seems to be StrOnJ for County, Calif., $247,900,. up 9.5 obJected to how much tbe 11!111 traditionally aligned with your alrea~ overb!lrclened prflon space. . :
"'fbls facility II exactly what
communJtJa.
!101111111," utd Jobll Tuc~Uo, the percent; Los Angeles, 1217,000, procedures may coat the 1tltet1 Democrats
up
13.6
percent;
aJ!d
Boston,
we
need lor 1111 lbDdy wbo'a
and
has
queaUoned
wbetber·tbe
Uloclatlon'a cht.f economll t.
Sponsora. ul4 they hoped that
Senate BIU 218, under ill1ldy by
beell
UIJna bat ltm't trytq tollurt
1183.000,
up
U
percent.r
potential lor voter fraud 1¥111 1:1y reducing barriers to reglatra- . tbe ~elect commlttM, raqulrel
: Tuqclllo al111 uld surprising
anybody.''
•td Taft.
In New tYork, which tradltiQn· · lncreaae. The measure also faces · tlon, the bill would help lncreue commuDitles to set up drill tuk
lalna were made In Texas,
Tbe committee will contblue
Loulllana and Oklalloma, which a1 ly had been regarded as the
an uncertain future In the Senate. tile natlon'a dwiDdllng voter lorces,prepareplansforcombat·
But House Speaker Thornu participation. In the 1988 elec· tlq drugs, and apply for state · Its hearlqs, wltb DO outcome
traditiOnally have been housing country's moat expensive city,
anUclpated until late March.
the mediaD houalq price rose
Foley, D·Wuh., said despite tlon, (or example, roughly half grants of up to S50,000.
~uble 1pota In the South.
,
those
objectlo111,
tbe
Sou
lb.
we
are
looking
at
just
0.1
percent
to
1180~000.
he
would
be
. . "Ill
the
eligible
citizens
voted.
House
Bill
317,
enact~
last
.
'
Employme11~

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use

Home sales .post
quarterly increase

c

New drug .treatment ·chief
worries about transition·

House ·approves voter ·
registration· measure··

qn.,;

.

PIPBI
We at the Paper
Apologize For Any lnconvlence

billion .in fcileral ~ thro\Jgh

Attention Students!

and Lola Whittington, of Pome·
roy. A brother-In-law and his
wile, Johnny and Betty Roush, of
Middleport, who also survive,
were Incorrectly listed . as a
_brother and slsler-ln-law InMon·
day's Daily Sentinel.

2 Sections. 1 4 Pag .. 25 Cents
A Multimedia Inc. Nowlpoper

·Pomeroy-Middleport, OhiO, Wednesday, February 7, 1990

Public encouraged to
support law enforcem.ent

Selective
issues reminder

en tne

•·

1980

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_ _ __,. ........_Weather·------

Scouts ....

•

Vol:40. No.110
Copyright~

Low IOIII&amp;hl In mid
Thursday windy. Hllhllln
6111.

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Litter....

· CURR£17~I -ILI

......

Cardinals

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.,
BOGG·8

Ohio Lottery

Huskies,

1990s.
The principles Include reducBy traltecl Preu lliteraailonal
As the low moves east ot the Anothl!r low was over Oklaboma.
A band Of thundentorlnS
Ing the federal budget deficit;
Early
this
morning
temperastate
Wednesday
momlng
the
moved
!brough ·tbe . Midwest
The
blah
pressure
will
continue
supporting a "credible, systehovered
around
the
30tures
threat
of
rain
will
end.
Clouds
early
Tuesday,
movlq out of
to
move
east
Into
tbe
Atlantic
u
matic monetary poUcy" to susdegree
mark
over
the
entire
decrease
In
the
afternoon
Mlasourl
and
betided
for DUnola
will
the
cold
front
moves
1011tb
acro11
.
·
. taln growth while curbing Jnfia·
clear
skies
as
state,
with
mostly
wltb
l!ighs
45
to
50.
Ohio,
.weakena
and
and
southern
Iowa,
wbere
northern
lion; avoiding unnecessary
Ohioans
were
treated
to
another
Flood
warJIIni8
continue
lor
dlu!Jiates.
The
low
over
Ollla·
temperatures
~i-e
In
the
•
aad
regulation; opening markets to
mUd
winter
day
.
part
of
Scioto
·
~
~
Great
move
up
the
Mlalls·
homa
will
405.
.
tree trade and removing tax ,
Temperatures were expected Miami rivers In southern Ohio. sippi Valley to sou!bern, Olllo- by
A low-pressure system llrjlufllt ·
legal and regulatory barriers to
to rise Into the upper 40s over the Both rivers bave reached . thetr Wednesday morn~. .
cloudl and light rain to P*rtl of '
"Innovation, lnves.tment, work
near
60
over
southern
north
to
·
crest
and
should
continue
to
falL
tbe Southwest, with Isolated
and savings."
Ohio. .
slowly
Wednesday.
showers reported from Mt. VerArotlnd:the Nailon
Bush targeted a reduction of
The
National
Weather
Service
,
On
tills
mornings
weather
non,
Texas, to Broken Bow, Okla.
A cold front stretcblng along
·the capital gains tax as one ofhls
said
a
weather
system
over
map, a high pressure center was the Pacific Coast brought cbUiy Forecasters said Increasing
highest legislative priorities this
Oklahoma
wiU.
spread
rain
Into
over
the North CaroUna Coast. A temperatures, ri\ID and snow to ~loudlness would bring scattered
year. He relterat~ his position
with
the best chanOhio
tonight
cold
front
extended from a low much Of the west TueSday 'while showers and thundersionns to
that such a cut " woqld promote
ces
over
the
southern
hall
of
the
over
Hudson
Bay across north- thunderstorms rumbled Into the Oklahoma and Loul.s lana
· riSk-taking and entrepreneur·
state.
ern
lower
Michigan
to Iowa. nation's midsection and light Tuesday.
ship" by lowering the cost of
showers • sprinkled parts . of
capital.
J£ast year's effort to push a
_c_o~nt~ln_ue_d_f_ro_m_pa;_
. _g_e...;.1_ _ _ _ _ _ _"!" Texas.
High pressure kept skies clear
The front moving east from the over . most of the South but
capital gains tax cut through
Alkire, of Syracuse Elementary county SoUd ·waster ManagC: ocean brought heavy swells of up temperatures were chilly. Tbe
Congress stalled In the Senate
(Southern).
ment
District
to 30 feet to the Oregon and NWS laid It was 35 degrees
where opponents said It favored
The Utter control program also (Athens-Gallla-Hocklng-JI\ck Washington shores and the Na· Knoxville, Tenn. , 40 In Charles·
the weal thy.
·
tlonal Weather Service warned ton, S.C., 431n JacksOnville, Fla ..
took part In the Meigs SoU and s.on-Melgs-VInton) are working
Another legislative priority Is
required
small
boats to take precautions 45 In Atlanta and 70 In Miami.
toward
completing
a
Water
Conservation
District's
to Improve the Clean Air Act "In
against
stormy cpndltlons.
solid
waste
manager11elit
plan
"Day On the Farm,'' an all-day
a way that preserves both a
A wellic cold front moved liuo .
The
weather
service Issued New Englaild, bringing cleat but
healthy environment and a ·sound· · outing for fifth graders of the which must be submitted to the
county. Tbe Day On the Farm Environmental Protection snow advisories for the Coast frigid weather across the region.
economy," Bush said.
event was held at the farm of Agency ·llr June· of this year. Range, the Cascades, and the Temperatures dropped , \Rio th,e
Despite recent signs o! slug·
Mejgs County representatives on Slsklyous, with up to a halt-foot of single digits In Maine and New
Wallace and Muriel Bradford.
glshness, Bush said the economy
,•
. Th~ litter control program-s· the comn\lttees Include Commls· new snow expected.
will expand at a slightly -faster
Hampshire.
ponsored "Recycle Days" were · sloner Manning Roush; Richard , . In California, forecasters 1 Clear skies stretched across
pace this year, assuming his
held on the Kroger parking lot In Bailey, represenUng the town· warned of light rain and possible most of Pennsylvania, New Jer·
fiscal 1991 budget Is approved
Pomeroy and Wiggins says he ship trustees' association; Jon snow from ' the state's northern sey, Delaware, Maryla~d and
·and the Federal Reserve cori·
hopes til continue the Recycle Jacobs of the Meigs County border as far south· as the San West VIrginia, where temperatinues Its support . of non·
Days
on a quarterly schedule, If Health Department; Middleport Francisco Bay area.
Inflationary growth.
tures ranged In the 20s and 30s.
possible. "We have experienced Councilman Paul Gerard; and
'.
a notable Increase In recycling In Wiggins.
:. .
There are three landfills operour county,'.' he says, "and much
credit can be attributed to the ating within the district, Wiggins
Continued from page 1
, Soulb Central Olllo.
Fair Thursday and a chance ot
Scramble tor Scouting golf tour- two recycling businesses In our reports, near Kyger In Gallla
Occasional rain and a chance rain or .snow Friday, witb lair
nament, May 3, Clutslde Golf county. Tri·County Recycling Is County; MCArthur In VInton
of thunderstorms Tuesday night, weather again Saturday . Highs
Course; the DistriCt recognition loci! ted on. the Route 7 bypass at County; and Wellston In Jackson
with a low near 40. Chance otraln. will range from the mid 40s to the
banquet, May 3, Gallipolis; Cub the junction of. Route 143 near County. "Our progr.am uses the
Is 90 percent. RalnllkelyWednes· mid 50s Thursday, and from _the
Olympics, June 23; and day Pomeroy. Manley's Recycling Gal Ua County facility, whlcl!ls a
day morning, with decreasing upper 30s to the mid 40s Friday
Center Is located In Middleport at distance of 15 mUes eacil way. As
camps In June and July.
cloudiness during the afternoon ., and Satuiday. Overnight lows
Anyone who would like to help the Intersection of Pa~k and of last September, landfill
and highs near 50. Chance of rain · will be In tbe 30s Thursday and
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charges Increased !rom $5.10 to
In any way with tl)ls year's · Beech Streets."
il; 60 percent.
Friday. mornings, and ranging ·
Wiggins reports that commit· $18.35 per ton, m~anlng that ·
Sustaining Membership Enrol·
Exteaded Forecut
from the upper teens to the upper
lment campaign In the three tees of the newly formed six. households have probably expeThul'!lday throegb Sa&amp;urday
20s early Saturday.
rienced an Increase In the
county area should contact one of
charges
by their hauler," he
the county chairmen, Pinkerman
·
notes.
says.
"We live In probably the most
~nice
naturally-beautiful part of the
Judgment sought
state, and we urge all citizens to
In the Meigs County Court o!
take pride lri the community and ·
Common Pleas; the Chrysler
"Public support and Involve- and staying alert and repOrting
Young men who will turn 261n work toward a cleaner, healthier
Credit Corporation, Dayton, Is 1990 will be reaching ari Impor- and more. beautiful Meigs . mentlsonel&gt;fthemostlmporta~t all crimes to the law enforcement
seeking $4,618.10 from Linda tant milestone, according to the C:ounty. we encourage you to sort . crlmeflghtlng tools ,?f today s ag!'ncJi.
':
Powell, Pomeroy.
Sheriff
your waste materhils and recy- ·. law enforcement,
Selective Service System.
In other- cgurt news , Timothy
James M, Soulsby reports. ' 'In · Citizens are also encouraged to
This year men who were cle as much as possible. It's the
Davidson, while released on a required .to register wllh Selec· best alternative we have. It's
Meigs County and throughout the get Involved. "Th,e Buckey ~tate .
previous boild, was charged and tlve Service In 1982 will be easy, and takes only a . few , state, the public m11st be on the · Sheriffs Association works . to
plead guilty to several offenses In turning 26 and will no longer be minutes a day," Wiggins says. · side. o! the law In the· fig~~ for upgrade law enforceil)ent and
the Village of Pomeroy. The bond eligible for Induction should a
Many special .events are
effective law enforcement.
. ensure public safety throughout
previously posted has been re- draft be reinstated.
planned for 1990, he continues,
Actordlng to the sheriff, hi~- the state," the sherUI added.
leased and a ,new bond In the
department IT1USI work· In an
"Our gol!lls to·professlonalqe
Selective Service does not have ''and we Invite all citizens and
amount of $20,000 has been the authority to ac~ept . late groups or organiZations to take · extremely complex environment sher.lffs' departments statewlcle
ordered. He Is In the custody of registrations after a man part. In addition to the many and deal with a growing, highly through ~tter train~ and to
the Meigs &lt;;oun ty. SherUf s reaches his 26th birthday.
Sesqulcentennla,l events sche- soph~tlcated criminal eleme~! Increase public awarenesa.of tbe
Department.
In the war.against drugs, orga
problems which we Jace 111 _our
A warning has been Issued by duled In Pomeroy: we have
Cas~ dismissed ln. the court
Recycle
Month
In
April;
Earth
lzed
crime
and
commercial
vice.
everyday
-work," 'be said.
the agency that with few excepare Jim Hayes, Pomeroy,_and tions, a man who falls to register Day on Sunday, AprU 22; Clean
''There are many things which
_.
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Cindy Hayes, Pomeroy, versus before turning 26· Will perinan- Up Rural Ohio In April and May;
the con~~rned cltlzefl can do to
"The Buckey State Sh~rlffs
Carol Smith, Syracuse; Christy er\tly forfeit his eligibility tor the Ohio River sweep on Satur-' help us, the sheriff added. For
.
·
In 5 ta
simple precautions can Assoclatlong has been a strong
L. McKnabb versus James E. · certain benefits, such as federal
day, June 16; as well as quarterly
nee,
advocate for more advanced
McKnabb; and Brady Gilbert, student aid, jQb ·training, and Recycle Days.
help protect people and thel~ .
.
For·schools conducting science
property, such as burglar proof- lnstructloiiS for.Ohio peace Ofllcdba Gilbert's Exxon versus Dan most federal employment In
Srhitli, db)l D.J.'s Trading Post.
lng the home, knowing where ers, because we W!lnl to proVIde
addition to facing possible prose· falrs the program has materials
which
would
be
helpful
for
a
your children are a• '111 times, the kind of protection to our
cutlon as a felon.
Ueense issued
citizens · that they need and
Some states also require regis· student planning a project' re- Hospital .new
deserve."
.Sheriff · ·Soulsby
8
tratlon
tor
state
student
aid,
la_ted
.to'
proper
waste
disposal,
·
concluded.
A marriage license has been
Issued In the Meigs County entrance to state-supported col· recycllpg, compostlng, resource
·
·
·
Monday admissions- Bernice
Probate Court to Jamf15 Dallas leges and universities, state conservation, etc.
Fry, Pomeroy; William cars:J,'he sheriff emphasized; ''With·.·
Any grO!IP .or club wishing a
Atkinson, 47, Mldclleport, and employment and permission to
well, Pomeroy; Dale Smith, the Increasing crllile rates .abd
practice
law.
Short'
preSentation· on proper Pomeroy; Arthur Barr, Middle- 1lltflcult economic llliles, the
Nena M. Baxter, 29; Cllllrleston;
waste disposal and recycling
It was further pointed out that
W.Va.
1
men age 18 through ;5 who have should contact Wiggins .. To vo- port; Lloyd Johnson, Middleport. public 'Cannot afford to look the.
Monday dlseps:rges .•- Rose · ot~Wr way and leave Jaw enforce- ·•
not yet registered can avoid the lunteer to help on apy project, or
Dissolution actio~ .
Lee, Helen Kennedy.
ment to only a handful of people
irtsk of prosecution and •loss of
to report lnclldents of Illegal
In our state. The support and
filed by couples
dumping and roadside littering, Divorce granted .
~eneflts by registering promptly
concern of each and every
13t any local past office.
or tor other types of assistance,
.
.
law-abiding citizen ot Meigs
. The following have filed for
Failure to regls"ter Is a felony
phone the litter control program
A divorce has been granted In Counly and every oilier county Is
dissolutions In the Meigs County punishable by ' a tine of up to · at 992-6360, or stop by the office at · the Meigs County Court of . ·needed In lhe tight for _good,
Court of Common Pleas, Valerie $250,000 and up to five years In
the Intersection of Union Ave. Common Pleas to Martha L. Ord professional law enforcement In
Roble, Middleport, and Kenneth prison, or both.
and Route 7, Pomeroy.
O!Jio." '
from John H. Ord.
Roble, Middleport ; and Vo'oda K.
Burney, Pomeroy, and Floyd L.
Burney, Pomeroy.

--Area deathst-.--_
Rhonda Rou8h

febru-Y I, 1880

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! .~ Collllllentary
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The Daily Sent.inel

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DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF TilE MEIG!I-MASON AKI:A

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ltOBERT L WINGE'IT
Publisher

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CHARLENE••oEn.ICH
Geeetal lllal!qer

PAT wHITEHEAD
Aulstanl Publlaher/Conlnller
A MEMBER of The United R'aslnternatlonal, Inland Dally Ptess
Asooctatlon and lbe American Newspaper Publlsbers AJ&amp;oclatlon.

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LETTERS OF OPINION are l"elcome. They should be Ieos til an 300
words long. All INters are .subject to editing and must be s~ed with
name. address and telephon.. numberc No unsigned Jolters will be published. Letters should be In good taste, addressing Issues, not penonall·

ttes.

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;~;. They

love leader8
·[::.. on Capitol Hill

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P.-2-'J'M Dilly 8enllnel

Pomeroy-MiddlltPilft. 0Ho • ·
w.ctneMay, '-bn.IIIY 7. 1110

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NIS tactics questioned Jack Ande.r.ron and Dale VanAtta
·WASHINGTON - Last year,

111 Court Slreel
Pemeroy, Ohio

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the Naval Investigative Service
spent 'Six months and $4 million to

reach the dubious conclusion that
a gunners mate blew up the gun
turret on the USS [owa In an
apparent slate of homosexual
melancholia.
Wbere does the NIS come up
with this stuff?
The answer may be In the NIS
Interrogation technique, whlcll ls
coercive enough to 111ake Colum·
bus copfess lhat t.he earth Is flal.
NIS · agents are · ttatned to
"attack the suspeilt psychologl·
cally and tn'vade the . defensive
· zones and get right up In the
suspect's face," according to the
·Interrogation manual obtained
by our associate Jim I,.ynch.
It Is a manual that the N!Sonce
claimed did not exist.- Now the
NIS admits It exists, but prefers
tb call it "Interview technique."
We call it overklll by agents who
have seen too many episodes of
"Miami Vice."
The NIS has gained a reputa·
tlon as a cowboy agency. Time

and araln Its findings and over·
A year ago we reported on the·
zealous tactics catch heat. In NIS witch hunt for lesbians at a
1985, !lep. Jim Bates, D·Callf., Marine boot camp In South
pro~l! that the NIS be abo!·
'carolina. Manv of the women ·
!shed · and Its duties shifted to Marines later iestlfled that the
other agenc,les.
NIS forced them to sign false
More recently, Cqngress was statements or twisted their
angered by the to the USS to~ a · words. One woman told us she
. lnvestlgl)tion. The explosion last signed a false statement just to
April, which killed 47 sailors, was end more than seven hours of
blamed by the NJS on gunners Interrogation.
mate Clayton Hartwig. Maybe
Similar recanting. or stories
the NIS Is rlgbt, but the FBI occurred In the USS Iowa tnvestl·
dlsarreed with the bizarre con· gallon. AnNIS spokesman told us
elusion, and Navy accident lnves· that the agency Is not aware that
tlgators !lave prlvitely Indicated It has more-suspects 'r etracting
that the explosion may have been their. statements than other law .
caused by poor training enforcement agencies.
procedures.
The JliiS claims It doesn 't
That explanation lacks the coerce statements or threaten
tabloid Intrigue that the NIS witnesses. At a 1988 hearing into
seems to crave. Homosexuality the North Carolina lesbian alleIs far more exciting than pocir ·gatlons. When pressed as to
training procedures. No govern· whether the NIS manual encour·
ment agency has shown such a aged ihose tactics. a top NIS
passion for scandals with homo- official said there was no. such
sexual themes as the NIS. An manual. ' ·
agency spokesman said the NJS
In fact. fi is a chapter In a·
only Investigates allegations of larger N!S 'procedures manual
homosexualltv when there Is and here are some e)\cerpts:
reason to suspect something.

By STEVE GERSTEL
WASHINGTON (UPI ~ -Senior congressional aides. often branded
: : · the real powers on Capitol Hill. give high marks to most Senate and
· House leaders but not all of them.
..
. For lhe fifth year in a row, lhe public relations film of F1elshman
. Hillard Inc. surveyed .veteran aides In 292 congressional offices, and
for the third year-Speaker Thomas Foley ranks at the top.
. .
The survey polled 236 House and 56 Senate offices and 157
YotJ~ &amp;.;F~
cocai~e.
.
Democratic and .129 Republtcan aides.
Asked to name l)le most re~pected member of the House. I lie aides.
I.~C~U•
from both sides of the Capitol and both parties, named Foley, who
·
asce11ded to speaker after Jim Wright was driven out of office.
Foley' s respect goes accross the board: 59.2 percent overall; 55.,
percent In the Senate; 60.2 percent In the House; 69.4 percent among
Democrats and 48.1 percent among Republicans .
.,.
The veteran Washington representative was such an overwhelming
winner that "don't knowrelused" finished second with 6.8 percent,
ahead of any House member.
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Surprisingly, the seniOr aides llstl!d lillie-known Rep. William
. ;. . Nate her, D-Ky. , as the House member they respect most next to
Foley, allhough he finishes lar behind with 5.5 percent with almost all
: ·: his backing from the House and mote from Republicans than
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Democrats.
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Rep. Robert Michel, R· lll., Is next, with U percent although
.• disdained by every Democratic aide, and other members of the
. leadership. Rep. R·lchard Gephardt, D·Mo., the Democratic leader,'
1'
Rep. William Gray , D-Pa. : the Democratic whip, and Rep. Nt"Wt
Gingrich, R·Ga., the Republican whip. barely rated a mention.
, . . The senior aides rated DemocratiC leader George Mitchell a!llhe·
. : • senator they most res peel lor the second year In a row. but not by the
r : ; , wide margin enjoyed by Foley. ·He rated a 39.4 percent . ·
:;;~;=;~
~ · • · · Mitchell was followed by Senate Rep11bllcan,leader Robert Dole or
• · · ~ansas. 13.7 · percent; assistant Senate Republican leader Alan · . .
• · Simpson, R-Wyo., 8.2 percent, alter which the aides rated'Uaree major
committee chairmen. Sen. Sam Nunn. D.Ca., Amiecl Services, Sen.
Lloyd Benlsen, D·Texas, Finance, and Sen. Robert Byrd; D-W.Va. ,
, . . Appropriations.
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Conspiclous
by
his
absence
was
Assistant
Senate
Democratic
.''
• · leader Alan Cranston. D·Callf., ,who is. . under preliminary
investigation by the Senate ethics committee on allegations Involving
· ·' the failed Lincoln thrift.
•; : ·
But the senior aides, when asked to rate the legislative
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effectiveness of the leaders, gave Cranston the poorest nurks, a . •
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majority, 52 percent, saying he did a fair to poor jo'!. O,nly Jl percent ·
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rated Cranston as excellent-very good, ani! 27 percent rated him
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good . The rest, 12 percent, said they did riot know.
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Foley also led the effecttvenesssweepstakes wlth-?1 percent olthe
At a time when freedom is
Witness this statement of last
aides rallng him either excellent or very good, Oaly 4 percent
bursting Into floWer around the
June from Rep. Lee Hamilton.
conskiered his work poor.
• world. it Is Indeed Ironic that we
D-Ind.. an otherwise estimable
Ranking behind Foley In the excellent-very good category were .. may be slowly losing ours. Look
lawmaket: "We In c;ongress
Mitchell, 66 percent, Dole, 58 perceHt, Michel, 41 perc~nt, Gepllardt,
anywhere - ·Capitol Hill. state
need to stop bad-mouthing Ihe
40percent, Simpson, 36 percent and Glnerlch, 32pecerit. Although the
legislatures. college campuses.
tnst ltut Ion· of Congress....
, :. others had relatively few falr·poor .ratings, !Jiagrlch totalled 31
high schools - .and you'll find
Members who make distorted.
percent.
·someone ·trying to restrict our demeaning statem'ents about
,
··
· · '·COIIStltulional righlto read. hear.
Congrt-ss should face dlsclpil· .
write and say what we pie,ase.
nary action."
The First Amendment Is the .
With leaders who display such
bedrock principle.. I believe. a woeful lack or appreciation for
tlllled PNulllt.rlla&amp;leMI
.
upon which this nation rests. fundamental rights. Is, It any
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With
It, we remain Informed and
wonder we have raised a genera·h
Today Is Wednesday Feb. 7,the38thdayofl990wttll .... tofo 0ow.
are
thus
able
to
participate
lion
of puddlngheads on sue1
The moon 11 waxing, moving .toward full.
.
In
our·
own
gomatters?
That legislators n
knowledgeablv
.
The morning stars are Mercury, Venus, Man and Sat urn.
Marvland
enacted a Ia\'{
The evening star is Jupltu.
·
,vernlng. The people remain
·
f mak
" 11n!(h
1110se born on this date are under lhe&amp;lgnof Aquarius. They \IIC!ude sovereign. Without it. we become It Illegal to "Inter ere w t
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elitists. Ideohunters by speaking to them?
Englllh statesman a.nd writer . Slr T homas Mo~ In 1"11
• ; far
. m prey to ~ogooders.
·
1
.,.. ; E nclllb ~lis t · IO""es.
puritans.. radicals, refor·
That · parents across t11 ebnat on
equipment manufacturer John .....
ur~e In 1......
e•
h
Charles Dickens In 1812 ; Russian chemist Dm!lri Mendeleyev, who flliSts and even charismatic
harass school svstems to ant e
·: · devised the periodic table. 1n 1834; Austrian psycholOI'IIt Alfred megalomaniacs who are con· works of John · Steinbeck? That
such bastions of higher learning
Adler In 1870; ragtbne composer and plano player Euble Blake In vlnced their superior knowledge
.
as the Universities of California.
1w; novelist Sinclair Lewis In 1885 and Olympic swlmnier'Aftd actor and Intellects endow them with
Buster Crabbe In 1908.
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the right to conduct our affairs.
Michigan and Pennsylvania and
What's most surprising In that
Tufts and Brown- to name but a
assaults on the· fundamental •few - have issued rules that
On this date In history:
· freedoms of speech and press
punish students who utter state·
In 1UO, British railroads were natlonallzrd.
,
ments deemed offensive on the
In 1956. Aulherine Lucy, the fint black admitted to the University frequently seem to come from
people
who
ought
to
know
better.
·
of
Alabama,
was
expelled
after
she
accused
scllool
official&amp;
of
'
'
. basis of race. ethnic or national
~
coMplrlng In riots that accompanied her court-orderf4 enrolbnent.

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StiLL ~y iT'S CRa-z.V TQ. 1\'iSK
.
it-1 a
C:aflTaL WiTt4 .

- "It Is considerably easler·to
successfully Interrogate the anxIous subject whom ... Is on the
verge of losing control, than the
calm, collected Individual whO Is
In excellent self conlrol."
- "The suspect''s chair shouicl '
be stralghtbacked with a hard ' ,
sear and no arm rests or casters. ·. .
It should be located beside th,e
ageni's desk. and far eaourh
removed from It · so that the
suspect will be unable to lean hll
elbow on the desk ... To generate
anxiety. ~gin the Interview at a
comfortable distante (then)
slowly close the dlltance to the
suspect."
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- NIS agents are trained In
bddy language. Pursed lips mean
the suspect Is "close to a
confession." Elbows close to the
body mean the suspect Is tense. If
the suspect raises his head ,and•
turns, It Is "a sign of arroaance,
dislike for the interroga,t or." . '
In Its own defense, the NIS
manual says the tactics may
seem "unfair," but are not ·
designed to wring a confession
out of an Innocent person.

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Berry's World

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I am left wondering whether.: • :·"
this educated person ever Mard•:; · ·•
of the Bill of Rights.
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Incof!lmunlstNorthKorea, the ; :·
people are not !Jermltted to own , ,•,
radios and television sets. ln · ..
each home there Is only ·the ·).:·: · '
"vsPperakwehrl,c'h' acoanne-cbehanhneealrddevtlhcee : .· ·.i
0

wisdom of President Kim II , .··~
Sung. "People don't feel the n!!ed ... ·:,"
'"
!or radios." explained a party ~ ,
member to a Washington · Post
reporter. ''They prefer the , ·
speaker."
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At Stanford University , a stu·
dent leader explained why she · · · ...
favored speech restrictions:·, . • "),,
"You have to set up .somethln"&amp; . '. ·"'' r·.
that tells students
what the limits . • , ,
.
ar~. what they can do and what ; . ''
tht.'y can't. We don't put as many .
restrictions on freedom of speech .
as we should."
Tell me .. educators. admlnls· . ,
tr~tors. social engineers: Where . • ··
tht- hclils the difference?

FAA and industry go ·slow on air
safety
Robert Walters

I

SEATTI.E (NEA~ - Some
nine passengers and the Injury of
to Its airline customers, showing ·
'
.
knowledeeable but skeptical ob·
27 others.
them how to Inspect 747 cargo maintenance bases.
servers of the aviation Industry
The accident occurred In Feb·
doors. By August 1987; that
At the hearings here. NTSB
long have argued that the na·
ruary 1989, about 20 minutes
advice was upgraded ·to 8 "ser· Investigators cited another UD· • ' ' ·
lion's airlines, aircraft manufac·
after 'the plane with 336 pas· ·vice bulletin" but It also sug· nerving precedent: ln 1972, tht , . .r.
turers and eovernment regula·
sengers and crew of. 18 took off
gested no particular. urtency In cargo bay door of a McDonn.ell ' '
tors share an amazingly casual from · Honolulu lor Auckland,
dealing with the situation.
Douglas . DC-10 operated by '
attitude toward the safety of the New Zealand. A cargo bay door
·-rn February 1988, the F!!(leral AmFrlcan Airlines ruptured In • r
millions of passengers who fiy
bunt open and flew off at an
Aviation Administration belat· !IlCht. Although the plane landed
~ery year In commercial jets.
altitude of 2~.000 feet. · Thai
edly acknowledged that 747 sar.ly, It was serlouslydamaaed,
,.
Although that criticism Is ripped open a 10-by·20·foot hole In
cargo doors were not closing and anCS the need to strengthen the
rejected by those at whom It is the aircraft fuselage.
latching properly. It ·Issued an door latches was apparent .
directed, a National Trans porta·
ThoiN! killed were sue~ Into
"airworthiness directive" cal·
Instead of exercli!ng Its autlon Safety Board lnvestleatlon the sky by the rapid decompres·
ling tor mandatory repairs and · th 11 t 1 1st
thai h
lends credence to the allea~atlons ston that followed. Although two
modifications of the locking ho0!e~e~, n~he u';~A acll~!rti · . ' :
:that llfe·threatenlnl h~ards of the plane's four engines were
mechanisms - but that order did McDonnell Dougla.s to SUJiest :
aometlmes are dealt with at an disabled, a heroic effort on the
not take effect until July 1988.
modifications to Its customers.
'
amazingly lelsu~ly pace. And, part of tbe flight crew brougM
Moreover, the FAA then gave
In 1974, an unmocllfted DC·lO
while there IIIIo reuon to believe the crippled aircraft back to : the domestic operators of the operated by Turkish Alrllnea lost
..
the causes are related, the Jan. Hawall.
more than l!!'o 747s then In servlc! a cargo bay door after It took off
· 25 ~lh of a Boeint707 on Lolli
The hearlnis on that 'c alamity
181o 24 months to comply with the from Paris. The sudden decog~o
bland, N.Y., llluatrates the lm· ·produced a dlsturl&gt;lng chronol·
order.
·
·
preaslon led to the collapse of the
portance of aafety precautions.
DIY of events on a sbnllar
It Boeing and the FAA were
cabin floor and the severlna of
The NTSB hu not yet lallllld Its Incident - the unintended open·
unenthusiastiC about making the crucial control cables. All 3d
!lui report on a tleTloul accident 1111 of a carao door at 20,000 feet
needed changes In a tbnely people aboard were kUled whlll
laat year lavoMq !l Boelaa7~7 on anothar Boelna 7~7. Tbat
matter, United hardly covered lhe plane crulled.
,
operated by United Alrllnl!l. But plane, operated by Pan Amerl·
Itself with glory. Tbe airline
A final note: After tbe 'United 1l ,
llearlnp on that lnctdt!nt, held In · can, bad taken off from l-ondon,
failed to make mandatory reins· accident, lhe FAA demoutrated r ; ·,
Seattle last year, were Oiled wllh where It returned safely without
pecUons of the careo b•y doors how quickly and forc,tully It cu ·
testbnoll)t and documentation, ·any cuualtlel.
because a clerlcaierror led to the • act when . property laspJre4, tt
about lona delaya and sloppy
The Pan Am epJaode occul'red omission of six. crucial words ordered .that CaJ'IO bay~
procedures In handllaaa safety In Marchlll87. Three weeki later, when the Instructions were sent all 7•l7s be modified and ret•
1
' "" '
.:
,
tolls forced within 30 daya.

'

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.

'

origin. religion and sexual
orientation?
Until recently. universities
considered it their solemn duty to
promote " free thought." They
relied on such "non, speech reme·
dies" as superior speech. robust
debate, repudiation and, yes.
education. to defeat obnoxious
behavior and offenstv'e rema'rks.
No longer. Now the higher
priority Is to protect feelings.
Now campuses swarm with Sen·
sitlvltv. Police who go by such
euphemisms as "student ..life
administrators" an.d are
charged with determining what
Is "allowable speech." At the
Universltv· of Pennsvlvanta.
ac·
·
cordlna~ to hlstorv, professor Alan
Charles Kors. one such admlnls·
trator criticized the word " lndl·
vidual" as "a 'RED FLAG'
phrase... which Is considered by
many to be RACIST." The
reason: " Arguments tha) cham·
pion the Individual over the
group ultimately prlvlle!(es rslcl
the 'Individuals' belonging to the
largest or dominant group."

., •

1

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•

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mn
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"I don't know anything about f11, IHit 1know
wlllt:h NAMES Nil for t1lt1

bur:lr•. ".

1~~·M· ~-~:l ot'IJi' J...· ~'====~zc=;;::======~=w==J:~..___._:. .pro_b.,l.-~ ~~~ ~~~h~ ~de~~b ~~ . ,!.':l~l~ls•~. a~".S::~ .l~t~r" :~om-~:ted's~e1clquarters

on

.

Tue.day'e result•

Ea~tern 85, Oak Hill 66

.
·· Faltland !10, Hannan Trace 43

W~85. ~c:r-·

..

....
~
·~·b-Jil a .

~'·J:t;;

I,

·WOI'tll Oidia at Rall!lllt Trace
Kypr Creek at Oak Hlll
·E8$tern at Symmes Valley
•

Sa&amp;uria)''a all&amp;e

. Jtbdr llllht Nortll Oallla.
l)rlmlfi

,.;·
....

•

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V~ley

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....

at Southern
.. . . .

�Ohio

I .akers· nip

Scoreboard ...
'

". ~Ida nUns-

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

Sf . Mol1ti.O.tlal

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~

boosted the NBA '1 be8t reeord to
~11. PortJand lllpped tO 33-13.
Wltll a balt-MCOIId · lift Ia
· It took more than 40 11me1 and replalloa, the B!nzrt' Terry
three months for tile Portland Pol1er - an •Jifi ceet foul
Trail Blazera and Los Anplel abooter entJrrlac the 1ame Lakera to meet tbll season. For made Ollly the IIC!OIIdoltwofrrH
the Labrs, the walt wu worth throws to to~ OYMIIme. Tile
it.
Blaara wOWid up only 211 ot ~
Tumllit ulde - at leut for from the llae.
now .... the latest challeneers to
''They bad aa opportwlltY to
their longtime Pacific Division win It but they dldft't," Los
rule, I,os Angela piaytd over· Ailplel Coacb Pat ftt~ said.
time without Magic Jolmson but "We aot the 17-polatleadbutlllell
11111 outlasted the Blaara·12t-119. · we aotllloppy, ran die cloell down
before another aellout crowd at too far IUid tben started to flllb
_Memorial Collleum.
_
tblqa. we l.t th"" bac:llln It, but
·The Lakera, division Cham· we pthered OIU'Mlves."
pions the last eight years,
Jolmson, ,wbo llad 24 poblta,10

tJPJip.na Wrller

....t

... jor lDdoor ~
T~

t.e.,.

It Cl~. 7:3S p.m.

BllltiJnON II Su Dl-., 10; 3S p.m.

. . . . . . . . . rut. . . . . . . . . . . . . . ):

.,

NATJONAL BASICETBALL ASSX"
1\nd Ill RaWt.
•
Mll•utH lit, 8DitNlOI
NIPW Yorll: 111. Orin*' no
Wubllfii:Oalll, Mhml 100
Dttrott 105, OIW'landM
Hov•atOL Mla ... or.a 101
$u Antonio 10$. Atlutl. tt
Indian~ at De•wr. •lctu
Dl.lllu 100. SacnmatoiO

LA Lallert 121, Por1 .. nd Ut. OT
Wfdn!ld.,-y Gttn.fl

Ll1al'l It NfW hi'.,y , T : ~ p.m .

Cllll"k&gt;lle- 11 Boston, 7 ~ 3() p.m. .
Golden Sttte at PbUidelll!'la. I p.m.

: Pb0Pnlx at Sun». 10 p.m.
t

.,....

.......

'Dh·W.•II

Goidt&gt;!l S1ate at NeW YQrk, nllht
LA Cllpprn 11 ¥.'11hii!IIO&amp; alpt

I. W•t . ..._. Ul l {IW)
tll
L CMitM (t) ~ n.fJ ...: .................... 111

s.

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U!lh II 01 ariOfte, niP!
Ptllllldelpidllt Orlando, ntrtu
Millmlat Clevt'ltnd, nllftl
DefroU II "IIWIUi.ee. nlafl

rtJclWJ - ........................ UI

i. Oala H.,.._r (I} C11.. ) ................. .. JU
I . WIIIN ~JI.tJ ........................... ... Itt
t. GarlleW •• TrWiy ( IWJ ............. .11
1. w-.u tll-ll ·............................... ,
L"elleht•Anall) (1... ~ ............ 1...11
I . Ntrtll.,..u. (II {11·11 _., ........,,.JI

... M•• Cl'ftl..-, a tac~ 11.
GMII.ea It; 14. (tt.) . . . . . . Tr ..Valtey

.....

(Ill I.JI.·H - ...m

W~IYCIIMII

Montl'l'alat Buffalo, 7 : 3~p. m .
St. Louis at 1'01'01110. 7:35p.m.
Hartford at Mtaii!IGI.I. 8:1'\ p.m .
'Miul"'d._y Games
qu.bec at Botton. alldlt
NY ltiiiiUIPn at P~Utllt'lplata. nlaht
Washllllfoaat PlniiiLt !11'1. ntatM

1

•

0\IC.a«&lt; II DH rott, niPt

tot AR-'rs, IIIJIII

1\lftd1131 Spun Tnn•rtiOftl
8aHbali

C.llfOrftlt .- los lilt lrbltmtJOn ca.,
with flrtn b_.man Walt)' JoyMr,. wlto.
Will Ul'll 11.75 mUUon In ltwJ; llpril
PITcher Scot! •tleiiOal·)@M'COntraci ,
California - · Slpd PITCher kOlt ,
Ballft ro l · ~ar contnct.
;
.Molltl't'tl -'- A.«rt'!Pd to ttrms with
pltrller ZaN&gt; SmJth.
·
J
NfW York INL 't -SI ... dNIIfovfrJotm
F'rartco ro a.,.ar oollll'llct; llir-od mii'IOf·
lf,... plrcl'ler 0.\'t TqyfMin to l · !'f•
COftl'ICf .
St Lolil~' -

SAIIII!d o\llfleld!r Ml.ft
Bltta.MIIa.ll

WBL-Awa..Wd franchllf to S.U·
IO.n. S.ukltC'bfWin for Htt 1!110
LA OlppPrs-Sipe~.-.rd Jim Les '111

•uoa.

llkl-.vcol'tfrart.
Or .. ndD - Slpd prcl Sam Vlnc611
to .l-~at l'Dntrlct.
Callftl!'
Utatl - Announct'd quarttrback Sc011
Mltclw"-1 wHI JMISI up. flllll Y.ar of
f'll-~llryto~nter NFL Dull .
.
Football
1

· NYJPTii-Sipd~
. Uft.Cotletashe~ .
rOtrh.
·
."' !
Phll.ilddpttla - Nanv~ Rich Kolllt
OtfPnS!Vf' tootdi .. Tor.
)
Pltotnbl - Namtd Ja. Bu.-~1 ft~M
C'OICh..
I ' .
Hoc~·

PhlllcletJilia - Named Chlt-o Rtch
•tlllltnclna lnslructor to r?pllcr ln'Mr

Pmnt. who was named Jp!cla! to,..J.
rant ro thP rum.
'
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Tuesday's cage scores
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DorPol-ll,lolfotlll

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the Detenden were wltbout tbe
llnllces of VanMatre, wllo
: 'twll~ hiS ankle a little btl, aad
I had to Ill him down," ..ld Ohio
Valley, coach WIUlam Albury.
, Without theW VIJIMatre, whom
Albury Aid "was Ullltoppable
when - could let him u.e ball,"
on the floor, Southwesllel'll 101
IOIIIe .OIId paulag prtmartly

II

Dtpaft &amp;lw....,. 11, II

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o-awtr.OOiov-arlil l
Gor ... ,.,. . . · - - - - .

Ool 1111111-tf. - · , . . -

'

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FOR THAT·
EXTRA
COMFORT OF
HEAT•••

'SEE US. ,ON
.

•BICIIIC

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IIATIIS

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DAIIC I'IMI FIIISH

••
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l.aftda' End ...................... ...l7% : t·
Unllted IIIC, ................ .'......33% :.,'(;;
Mulllmedlli Inc.................... T5~ e ,•
Rail R.nUiuraata .............. :... l% :. ' •
Jlt.obblns 6 Myers ................. 16
Slloney's Inc.............. .........10*
Star Bank ..........................19%
Wendy's Inti....................... .4%
Worthlng1on Ind ............... , .. 21%

SHOES &amp; ,UISES

Wllitt/G.W trilll
let. S11U5.

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luCie~' bywol;'d In let three, aa

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Httll'a ................................. 2"-.-r : , . ~-~
Key Centurion ,,.,_ ... , ....... .. 13~ • ! .

SPECIALS

:~~·~-~~~·="~,._

•
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•

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prtcea

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

year

---Area d·e aths--

The fut break was the Hlp· •

ca..... - c..... ...~~~!1"
a~-"
c.......
..
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be awarded

,, · The
Bryan~ (bl8 IICOIId), lallk a pair • ••• •

of one~oandoOIII!I to give OVCS a
31·28 tad. Slit the Hllhlaad!trs
cutth t lead to oae when seniOr
forwa d Ja~ Ehman, who fin·
Ished ~th 10 POints for bls sixth
doubl.flp.,e acorlq · effoM of
the Niasoa, bit a 10na Jumper
from ~" ll!ft wlilf to· alull the
l)@fenferJ' ~- 1031-30 With 1:04
' left .
..
.
; ri.'* Hli1, playllll[ tor tile
Dtfenden' ~ast shot of the half,
I m~ Jrorii llle.rlght wtng, and
1
Jobn Ehman took the rebound,
' John Ebma.n then passed down·
' COliN to BIJ'ant, wbO put In the
layup at ~ blwer to give SWHS
a 32-ali leadi

...

~k

20°/o

..

· ··

..,_..,

Weather ·

• .awo

I opportualty
the Defellders
cashe4
In on the
when
HIU, foullcl
by

ChiT.. M,OaNW'P
11. Allntlll

c........... Cal ..

:Seh~~rships
· for fout1h

*'•ca•a ....:.....

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....

EMS .....
searen

c:o-•.

·. ' (304) 675-3400 ,~·~·

,

.,......,.,.. u.... a..r•

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.widl I IIJII If
reb
Ia Ill'

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'thempaon 10 J..)Par COIIIAct; llp!!d
plll'hff Scott Tf'l'ry to I · )If . . COnll"'ct.

.••a
.....

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

By G. SfENCU OIBORNE
from theEhmaaboynadBryant Defj~dtn G·I8, Adal Blair led
AI
'
OVP ~fl W1'1tat
'
to II~ the OVCS defensci Pels· tilt Gap, 18111-Witll 1t pafllta, Dt=·.. .
. Southwestetn's Hllhlinder1 1111 and IJ'op!Jil at air. ·the while .Jaklln Lullr llcl 1111 11o1ta
got a flrst~er double·fllllre niault: a U·polat South-ten· WltlllO. '
.
,
J llllt? •
scortngeffort .from their backup lead headiDC · Into tilt filial
la PJI1ay'a•ltstnll, louefto.
center and weathered a late Ohio quarter.
·, •'llnl. ·r.n 0¥1n11, wtU IIIII ,
''We Uled the wliotecourt'tOurt Seudllnl,"WWill 0\ICS, •10 ..,....
Valley Cbrlltlan rally to band the
host Defenders a 73-68 loss In tile third 'quarter." ,Aid all,. wlllllalt IIIJIID Cbrlltu.
Tuesday night.
Soutllwestern bead coach Jim llwrw .., :lj Ma
John Sites. theHiglllandera'6·1 Walker.
·
lf U 21 1$-73
jUlllor postman who played In
Soutl!wes~~ern let ,tbelr'leaci iUp
OVCS ................ 11!' 211• 21place of !1-1 junior Cbrts Metqer to 12·wlth3:301eft, IIVJby tr~ · : .~; ADI pw ('Ill ..,.
(who was sick and dldll'-t play), bafkets, tbe,Y.boucllt tliemlelvlil _ . H-1·1T} .JOIIa·Dmla 'f.OO.
led bls team with 17 polnta In , ibe time theY needed to IIOtd oft ' 116 ~~.......21; ~
addition to. collecttniJ six re- ~ Ohio Val~ ella~ lllat ~lll'; Ra~aa.l N+!O; POl·
bclllllds to.become only the third WOUld ... come ·' after Site~!~ ,fllllll ' ...,. M&gt;~. I¥fAU - &amp;+.?-'11 .·
~rson ot!ler than senior forward bul!ef (a, ~layup) -at '' !lle; •.3:05 . .l'ltltl,....
(ll.M) . ·
Jolm Ehman to lead the teanHn mark:
' .
,.. ·
· ,
: ,._IIi sua- 7·1J ·t5J.K)
scoria&amp; this season, (Met:rcer
Wltlr the Hl~llden allftd
·•h J'l ...131 (8ryaat ~)
and sophOmore pard Bill POt· 61-55, tii~Defe!ldei'lproi:etdltdte
A I II -lt ·(Ji!rYuU)
ter. the other Hll[blanders to runthefut!inaklntandemwttb
'ltnla - l t
have . accomplished tills teat VanMat~·• atroq·lnalde PJM,
,.._,•• -17 ·
.
before Sites, have done so a VanMat~ ·sanhpaJrof'-Ud·
· Olllt
Hill
combined tolal of five times)
ones and alaYlqltoeut SW'IIead t·Z...:It; Vlllllatre 8-0-3-lt;
The HllhiaDders took an ellbl· to 10 Wit~ l: n left, aad laYIIPI by · Wqy ~lt; Jlall 0.0.2-2; ~la­
point 'lead headllll lnlo the Rawllnp and Wray ~ 11 trl!lllll~2. 'I'OTAU- ....Y.
second quarter, butfunlor guard secol)ds apart, followed by VM· ' • ' ,, • ,
Dax Hill IICOred ellbt of bla Mat~~e's layup 'fltil U MCOilCb
I'Ne ......... -1&amp;-20 111m)·
pme·hllh 26 POints In aet two' to le~. pvt SOutii.,.IIU'a Ill ~re , ~t---- ~.;...-----.;..,._,""''l~ifllo!i~
helP, OhiO Valley _fight Ill way J~llf,. lt, .djdtl~.t lltolP'''IIIt, ·
•
vi"biaftdl!t..~ !q,
· ~•. .~t-...,a•
,tilr(Ngb SW's sutfocatlnt lte- , '':'!'
, , .:-e,o: . ~
fenae and start chlpplllaaway at · Jolin: Ji:hmiUI&gt; .,P'Qt!er .lll\CJ::$fet , :
the vtallors' lead, Followln1 a eacb bad four foiils &gt; 1 •· ·· "·· '
· layup by seniOr center E.T. . "We dldn'f (loubie-team.'' hbn
VanMatre that cut .Southwest· (VanMatre) !lice .we sbeiuld
ern's lead to 26-2• With 3:57 left, have," said Walur of the DeHill took a pass from senior polllt fenders' postman, who fllllsbed
111ard Tom Rawllnp and burled With 19 points.
·
1 three-pointer from the left
But the Patriot faithful
...~
comer to give the Defenders a breathed a bit easter after Hill,
. Complete Pre-Natal Servi~
27-26 lead with 3: 211eft.
wbo pk:ked off, a bounce palt by
Annual Gynecologic £hecx-Up ·
· The hosts expanded their ad· Bryant and drove dowllcourt,
vantage to 29-26 when junior lost the ball out ofbouncta willie · ,
Pap Smears + Breast Examinations
guard/forward Greg Wray con· headllll.for the left baseline with
'·
· · Family Planning .
,
nected on a pair-of one·and-ones 19 seconds lett. Three second• ,
fOllowing fillhlander gUard Joe · !liter the Def~ers fouled Pot·
, , &amp;t Other 08/GYN Procedures
Hammond's third (oul. But a ter, and after he made bls
•
'·
charging foul . called &amp;IJ&amp;IIUit one-and-one· shots, be ato~ the
Wray jlave the ball to the ball tram OVCS anclacored oil a
'
'
Hllhlanders, who ciOied the I•P layup With Jle¥eR tlckl 011 tile
to one point when· aenlor pard clock. !J'be Defetldertllleatot the
Brad Bryant scored on a layup ball to Hill, who dropped In a .
followlnl a rebound of a missed three-spot from the top of the !leY
The family oF profa»lonoiJ .
shot by John Ehman,
at the final buzzer.
'
The Highlanders finished their
• · With 2:15 left before halftime,
Potter was called for cbarllna, season atalnat non-leiiJIIe teUIII
his third foul of tile conlelt, lllld at 3-3.
,

!10 c!rlvet'a Uceue; Jerry Ru·

nyoa; Pomeroy, 148 and c:Oats, (.blflt:M Lm.)
apeedlq; Garry . Black, Jlprtlalld, ~ aad
10 luv· If ..... 11:1111 .I IIAewl
111nce, ud M3 aad coats, traftk Am Electric Power ............. 29~
llaht violation; Benj.lmla Car· ATaT .................................39%
roll; Racllle, U3 and coas, .o\lblaad 'OII .................. ..... ~
asaiiNd clear distance; aN Mille Bob Evans .......................... 12~
Pierce, Pomeroy. $113 and COlli, Cbannlng·Sboppn .. ... : .. ., ..... 8%
public Intoxication, alld $213 aad City Holdllll Co . .................. 14
coats, trespassing.
Federal Mogul. ......... ,......... 19%
Forfeiting bonds In the court Goodyear T&amp;R .. ,................36'1{,
w~re Reldun Ovrevo Welker,
Otherll fined In the court were - Pomeroy. $46, sll!!l!dllll; Cllarles , ·
Dwayne Qualis, Pomeory, $113 M. Smith, Rutland, M3, stop alp
and costs, public Intoxication;
violation; BewrJy Bailey, Redl·
Donald Casto. New Haven, W,
viQe, Ul, Improper baeklnf;
Va., $213 'And costs, petty theft;
Edwll'l! Cooa. New HaY-. $i3.
· Kim Herdman, Pomeroy, $313 expired vellk:le Ntlltrallon.
and costs, reslsdng arrest, and
David Vlnceat Flower&amp;, Clair·
$113 and cost; public Intoxication. mont, N. c., $53, tpeedllll;
Batley Dugan, Rutland, $375 Robert Robsoa, Atheu, $63,
' ~EIWOFTIJE WEEK- Eric Waper,- tile recl ...... ef
and
COlli, DUI,al!d$63andcosts; drMq ullder auapeulon; Wll·
the ll&amp;adent of tile Week award at Melp .Jualor Hlp llctullaat
!lam Jan Durst, Middleport, $i3.
wee... ln.llelectloa .... the &amp;waH -IIUMie by_ ...... taa n&gt; . . .
Raaty Boobnu oa the huleol aeademleexeelle-IDectweeu4
u .. ..~..
expired ree~stratloa: Jett
. "'1llwn, Coolville, $44, lpeoediftl,
bebaYior u well u cla18rooin cclllluet.
·
Tu--~-y
oaaald Frymyer, Shade, 148.
..
~ · · ~ speediDI; Patrick Cleland,
to
Seven ca.lls were answered on POmeroy, ~. assured cleilr
TUesday by units of the Meigs distance; and Robert HoUiday • .
eon~utiv~
·
Rutland, 148, speedllll.'
Emeraency Medical Services.
At 8:22 a.m., MlddlepoM went
'
For the fourth consecu dve CommiSsion, where they will be 1o Rutland for Ketchel Hatfield to
year, Rollert C. Byrd Ho110rs forwu;ded to the Ohio Depart·
Veterans Memorial HospitaL
So.alll Ceatral Ollie
Scholarships will be awarded to ment of Education.
Middleport was called at 3: 44
Clear
Wednetday n!lht, with a
graduating seniOrs throughout
Applications must be post· p.m. to Cole St. for Laura Scott,
low
between
35 and 40. Sunny and
the ,country, including. those In marked on or before March 23.
alao to Veterans Memorial
Windy
Tbunday.
with hllhs
Oblo, , State Superintendent of
Applications are reviewed by · HospitaL
between
60
and
65.
J&gt;ubllc' Instruction Franklin B. panels, cbalred by State Board of
Pomeroy was called at 6:26
Extaaded Fare~
Walter announced today.
p,m:to West.Maln St. forToinmy
Edcuatlon members, In each
Fl-1~-..........,
·' Scholarship recipients are se- . congressional district. Included
Crow who was taken to Veterans
A
cbance
of rain Friday, with
... lec;ted for their demoiiStration or · In the criteria for evaluating · Memorial Hospital.
fair
weat!ler
Saturday, and a 1(1,.,·.,..
· outs)andlng academic acbleli~· applications are high school
· Racine ' at 9:56 p.m. trans·
chance
of
rain
or snow Saturday
ment and promise of· continued grade-point average, Scholastic . ported Jamie JohiUion from
night
and
early
Sunday, Hllhs
achievement.
· Aptitude il'es I" and · Ainerlcan Third St. to Holzer Medical
will
be
range
,
from
the 40s to tile
l\jlplicatlons ror ,the federally College Test scores, and aca·
Center.
low
50s
Friday
and
In the 40s
funded scholarships can be ob- demlc honors and awards. An·
TUppers Plains was called at ·
Saturday
and
Sunday,
Overnilht
tained at high schools, which are nouncen:teilt of the scholarship• 10: 24 p.m. to Route 7 for Homer
lows
will
be
in
the
30s early
eligible to submit one application winners Is planned tor May,
Cole to · Veterans Memorial
Friday, and In the upper 20s or
. for each 200 seniOr class stu·
Hospital.
Students will use the scholar·
the 30s Saturday and Sullllay
. ' dents. Schools should send appll· ships In the 1990·91 academic
Pomeroy at 11:16 p.m. trans·
mornlnes.
cations to the Ohio Student Loan year.
ported John McKenzie from
State St. to Veterans Memorial
Hospital. ,
. At 1:43 p,in., Rutland was
two brothers, Paul Hayes, Bel· called to Route 325 for John
CLEVEl.ANO !lJPI) - Tues·
. .Jeannett.e ·Butcher
pre; and Charle~ Hayes', Clncln· Caldwell who was taken to Holzer day's Wlnnlns Ohio I.ottery
nutnbl!rs:
'
nat!; five grandchildren, and two Medical Center.
: ·. Jeannette L. Butcher, 66, Sara·
'
PICK-3
great·
gran~children.
. ·~ sofu, Fla., died Saturday at her
Lieense
'Issued
Graveside
memdrial
services
1153:
:'home following an extended
PICK-3 ticket sales totaled .
will be held at the Coolville
Illness.
A marriage license ha,s been . $1,327,120,00, with a payoff due of
a
later
date,
,
Cemetery
at
Formerly or the Coolville·
issued In Meigs Probate Court to $702,007,00.
·.
Belpre area, she was the daugh·
Brad K. Robinson. 21, and Serena
PICK-4
ter of the late Vernon N. and
White, 19, both of Lo111 Bottom.
1233.
Mildred Hayes.
•
H~pital
PICK·t ticket sales totaled
Mrs. Butcher is survived by
Corredion
'
1246,265.50. with a payoff due of
Tuesday admlssioiiS - Lau~a
her husband, John Rex Butcher,
110,500.00..
Scott, )lotlddlepoM; Ann Williams,
two daughters, Twlla Holbert,
The Meigs Girls' Basketball
Clifton, W.Va.
Barlow; and Dianne Trammell,
player. pictured In Tuesday's
Tuesday discharges - Carlos Dally Sentinel was incorrectly
WOOdstock, Ga.; a son, Jim
•
Snowden,, Lenora I;&gt;avls, Ted lndentlfled! The player Is Ti'lcla
Blftcher, Sarasota, Fla.; a sister,
Mary (Maida) Mora, Pomeroy;
Sparks. "
.• Baer, not Barr,
.
...
' '

--

p.m.

Ed moNon ar NY Ran~tra. 7: 35

Wlnnl~l at

Charlotte Tatterson, Pomeroy,
was fined on three charges
resulting from an automobile
accident when abe appeared
Tuesday nllht In the court of
Pomeroy Mayor Richard Seyler.
She was filled $:!63 and costs for
leavlnl the accident scene, $43
and cOsts for failure to maintain
asslll'ed clear distance, and $50
and costs for not having Insurance on her vehicle,

'

NATIONAL HOCKEY LEAGUE
1\tetd,.y Ra Ills
Boston 2, Drf rolt 0
Wllhii'WI'IOft 12, Qufbfc 2
NY lalandirs8, PfltiiNTJb 7, OT
tdmontoe 2. New Jer.y 2. He
St. Loult 6. Toro~~to o1 ·
Loa Anaelet5, Cl.illlry 3
VantG\twr s. WlaNpeoa:3

. ... Wl,lt.nl, lhadt II. Rll\'ea .. ll; l'f,
~,...er. II; Ill lA• .tiie .. It ~ (tiel
' .M r• llob• alld Rock Hill. t eariL

Pomeroy Court neWs

reboullda aad lS '!"IIIII tor 1111
11xt11 b lp II da lillie IIIII nu•,
l&amp;ak a J par 1Mr Bllell WJUI.
una wttll 2.2 It I 1Ift Ia
Ntulatlla for a UJ.112 liaaiL Jill
fouloaPotlti- PPtalattrwu
ldllllldl.
£1-......
Portlud 101 tile tint tour
points Ill owrtlme, but c:oulda't
1e0re the - t 3 ~ mllnltes, York
James W01'111y, Wllo fla~ wttll Illdlala
25 polall. palit.t .,.,.lc!ott'l
alrball ud KOred w1111 e aecoada 11ft for a 1»117 leed.
'
"I dan't ~ ....... It wu
tlllm IWimllllll or 011nel- ,
IIDitq) ," 1814 Por1lucl Ceacll
Rlc:II .AdelmaJL "I'd lllre to llaw
tb:at tllllatiDa at !lie ftd wltll

·Southwestern hands O¥CS
.
Defenders 73-68 cage loss

AI Dill II HOil.OL nipf
Mlnnnat• 11 O.U1a, nllftl
lflcHana II San Antonlo. Bill!!
,Ctllcqo 11 Dfnwr, nlahl

.... . . . . L"'I ....... ,.J.l) ..................
Sec».. I..; 11. Ulel aleldltlll a.w ...

Dlvt•.-ani

Chlt'qo 11 LA Laker1, lO:lOp.rn.
TbWnd-r cam~~

Ohio

Blazers 121-119 in

IIJII~au.Na

n._...... hrhllf·

1ud- World ~t!:~~l&amp;lllpl

·ClOUIMMJ'
OOit (UPI) - .' ~,.....
v.... ,._
.......... ....

February 7. 1890

t

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'

I

~.

.J . I'
• ~ ;. il
·~

' .\

�•

The Daily Sentinei-Pega 7

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Par6fltmg class o!J~d

. ~ nt••••• .. . .

ii:·~

On dean's list

Communicy calendar
=============================

Qll •••• tri.t l\uld.

"

JedSharon
Hatt\1111.
len ofl Edgar
J. .
t Ritchie
Hartung,
alld
7:30p.m. at the Grace Ep?Jeopal p.m. A, dinner will be serve4 at • ;
wu aamed to the dean's list at
WEDNESDAY
6: 30 p.m. and all masons are :: :
Oblo University.
POMEROY - The Red Cross Church.
inv?ted to attend.
Hartwli Is a treslunan maJor· Bloodmobile wUI be at the SeniOr
·
Inc In electrical engineering.
Citizens Center In . Pomeroy on
CHESTER -The Shade River
POMEROY -The Ladles Aux· :
Hartun&amp; and a friend from Wednesday from 2 to 5:30 p.m.
Lodge will have Its regular
lllary
Fraternal Order of Eagles :
.Cleveland recently spent a wee- Me?gs County needs 80-100 meetlngor1Thursdayat7: 30p.m .
2171
wtll
have a dlstr?ct meeting ·
kend with Mr. and Mrs . Tom donors to meet quota. The · All-master masons are Invited to
on
Saturday
at 5 p .m . at the ·
Chester United Methodist attend.
Nice.
carpenter's
hall
In Pomeroy. All ~
Women will serve the bloodmomembers
are
urged
to attend. :
TUPPERS PLAINS -The
-bile canteen.
VFW Post 9053 will meet Thurs·
PAGEVILLE
Th
s
I I0 day at 7:30p.m. at the post home.
.
.
,
e .meet
cP .
Township Trustel!S
will
FRIDAY
Wednesday at 6 p.m . at the
clinic'~
MIDDLJ::PORT.
-The
Middletownship building In Pagevllle. ·
&gt;
port United Pentecostal Church
The students In vpcatlonal . POMEROY -The Pomeroy will be serving ·chicken-noodle
soup on Friday from 11 a.m. to 2
The Harrisonville Sen lot Cltl :
Tile Dally Senl?ael, ?a -11:1111
Eaela photo Otl'ller will ~w trallllnS at Meigs High School Lodge 11!4 will meet Wednesday
p.m.
·zens
will have a free blood :
old pletures pertalnlnJ to ana ered?t 51 bll or her plloto Is will present an OJII.'n house on at the Middleport Masonic Tem·
Meals
can
be
eaten
at
the
pressure
clinic on Tuesday from ;
actlvltlellllrllushOut !be putl:IO . ~?I:Md.
·
.
Th=ay 6-10 p.m . at the high ple. There will be work In the EA
church
or
delivered.
The
cost
Is
10
a.m;
to
noon at the town house. ·
yeara,
·
~ tllat are sulimlt· .i!C
•
·
.
. • Degreeandallmasonsare\lrged
$4.
tall992-3824
for
delivery.
.
The
public
Is Invited to attend . :
Aeeeplable pbolotl will lie pub- 1111 for die 15lltb Ul\lverary . Tile public Is Invited to attend to attend . Refreshments will be
will meet following ·
The
club
· llsbed 1n tile IH4]uicelllftllial edllloa. .,adeh will aerw u a · uul the stpdents perform served.
MIDDLEPORT - The Return the clinic..
.
tab, a auppleme~~t to tbe paper, h!Mftal llil!rPIUe Will be re- • tlletr sklllsln prepar.t?on for the
POMEROY- Rev . and Mrs . Jonathan Meigs Chapter. Daugh·
whleh wlllbdlstrlbut.cllaAprll. t!IJ'MII • . - ... t1Jey are ReS(onal VICA'Sklll Contests.
ters of the American·Revolution,
Photos may llielude ?ildtvldv· p•oc:aled. PhotC!I. can be . · Skill co,ntestl will be held In Donavon DeLong, missionaries,
• .
meet Friday at 1 p.m. at the
will
w.lll
be
speaking
at
the
Calv11ry
.als of hlstortcai Inter"I. Pome- bro!11J1t Jn or mailed 111 1o the· · a.uto mecbanlcs, co~e(ology •
roy .JilullneHn . mllltcal or at· Seradael ottlce
electronics, ha,nd calculator, . Pilgrim Chapel on jloute 143, on · Heath United Methodist Church
..' "' '
. 11 ,~
. '" •
·
:
·• .
nuraJili, and weldlrig. . •
In Middleport. Mrs, Elmer '
'1'
·
·
·
We.dnesday
at
7:
30
p.m.
Rev.
""te eveBf4, aoelalactlvltl",or,
Par _acldllklllal lllfOrmatton,
Tbe voca.tlonal projram
Grueser will be the guest speaker . · UXI~tary
natural d?laaters. Ally P?ctlli! COIIlaet Julie Dillon
Naacy serves students in all three Victor Roush invites the publiC. and hostesses .are Mrs. Roscoe
submitted, ao matter wtaat tile Yoaelllm at tile SendDil offlee,
.
Wise, Mrs. Wilson Carpenter, · The Ladles Auxiliary Frater:.
THURSDAY
subject matter, wlll be revl~ . 112·2155, 111 Court Street, school districts In Meigs Coun~~ · ·
Mrs.
Nan Moore, Mrs. ·Pearl nal Order of Eagles 2171 will have ·
POMEROY
-The
Pomeroy
, tor possible publlcat?on.
.Pomeroy,
· Eastern, Southern, and Meigs. ,
Group of AA and Al-Anon will Mora, and Mrs. Dan.lel Thomas. a district meeting on Saturday at :·
5 p.m. at the carpenter's hall hi ·
meet Thursday, 7 p,m. , at the
POMEROY ..;.There wlll .be a Pomeroy. All -members are.-~
Sacred HeaFt Catholic Church:
For more Information call free blood pressure clinic on urged to attend .
· Friday from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. at
Th~ u.l£1 Couaty Cooperative · ter wllleb dlJeUSHI biiUdin&amp; will be mailed this month. The 1-800-333-5051. .
Rite Aid In Pomeroy. The public
Extebllla Service II dwelopllll famUy ltreJIS!hs, COIIIJftunlcat- newsletter Is free of charge. To
ROCK
SPRINGS
-There
will
Is
encouraged to take advantage
a - • t • especial))' for par' Inc wltb cblldml, d!Kipllne and · be' placed ·on the mailing list,
1
be
a
meeting
of
the,
Rock
Springs
of
this free service .
.ents of YOUIII clllldrell.'
l. · " t apeclal features. AIIQilll!lllde!d In contact the Meigs County Coop·
~ •
on
Thun;day
at
7:30p.m.
Grange
The proJ«t, Is fulllled by!~ each aew$1etter Is a. 15.111111 ot.. eratlve Extension Service at
.·.. SATURDAY
.Oillo Chlldreu Trlllt
p~ ·oH~ by •t• Exte~· 992·6696 or write to Box ' 32,
The Veterans of Foreign' Wars , . •
POMEROY
'-The
Preceptor
CHESTER
-The Shad.e River Post 9053' will meet Thursday at.
will adntlnue_tbrouah Jv~ 1$10.. · slon Service on the topic ot Pomeroy, 45769 and request to be
Beta Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma Lodge will have Its annual
·
·.
.. p&amp;natlllg.
.
. Included In Family.Focus .
I!'
:· :
Phi Sorority will meet Thursday, inspection on Saturday at 7:30 7_:30 p.m. at the post home.
"Family Focus•: Ia a -aiel· . Theflntlsaueofthenewsletter

A: .. Wd:l:i¥tfp

n.clunllld' allletople
~ Cup:a:tM I! 1P ?:r 111 wuow lllt•liMIII ?a ellfld·
Sel"¥tl!e 11 a•JN 1ar Jl'ell. 21
.u part or t~~e prc~~r&amp;~~~,
from l.J]t.m. at tile Melfi Cftaty (IU1iclputa wtU make a IINit ot
~ ~.
.
. . . . taiW ..... ud 4afe
~~~!-~11c
:
lwl;,
Jllelllllln.
.
by ~......,. ~..... " 11111111 CCiallty .-Wilily
Clll,lllrn u4 parnll are IJt.
Kome l!co-?ei .., fH ._.... • vtW ., ~clpate Ia tbe pro~ Will locu .. f IW I 3 l!'ql. IIUIVIII' ~ctatratloa ?a
Ia_, CD bUD¥ bs11ae ... WillJlllltlecL 'nit CIW $a offered frft
Ins stroq famlll".
or cbarp aad realltralloll cube
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llle MeiSS Couaty
, Tbele .,...,.IIIIa
are filii~ I~ ll •-"'·a
u t - at 192-669i .by
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part ~ · a Jl'lll fl'olll tile OJUo l"eb. U, .
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Open house set
a·r·. schoo·l

Blood pressure
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· Row O.r'EveJ7da~ Low Priees
Saved Jou .Non~ Over·· rwo
.: I.oeal Stores ·•··:·
And Now·lt's Tfme.To Include

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'VAUGHAN'S CARDINAL
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Pepper 4 oz........................;..............................99•
P8pper • oz.......·................~..... ~·····················'2.99 · epp.er.4 oz...~·:·············-·····················-'··t-~·... , . . . !
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.Chill
Powder 5oz...............~...........................79'
ChIll Powder 25 oz....................................'1.99 . Chill Powder 2oz....;............................:.'1.99
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:.:Sa
It 26 oz................................................
:...... ~-....19'
Salt 2&amp; oz........... ~ ..................:..................... ~ ......37• Salt ·2&amp; oZ•••••••.••••••.•;.•••••..••.••••••••••••••••••••••••••~•••• 99• · :;
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::Cinnamon 4 oz. ~..•.•........~ ••.•.........•...••..•....•.•~79' · · Cinpamon 2.37o~. ;,............. ~..............:.......'1.99 Clnnamon 4 oz..•...•.....•..•.•...
. 'Post Fruit &amp;·fiber Cereal 14 oz: .....;'1.79
Post Fruit &amp; Fiber Cereal 15 oz.......'2,81 · Post Fruit &amp;Fiber Cereal ·15 oz.....~.'2.99 ·:
Batman Cereal 14 oz..........:...................'2.49
Batman Cereal 14 oz...........~............~ .....•3.49 .· Batman Cereal 14 oz......................,.......'2.99 . :~
Pancake Syrup 24 oz...:..............................89'
Pancake Syrup 24 oi................................'2.89 .Pancake·syrup 24ck. ......~.................... ~.:'2.49 i~
Martha White Blueberry Muffin Mix 1 oz......57' Martha White. Blueberry Muffin Mix 1 oz..
Martha White Blueberry Muffin
Mix 1 .oz. .....39'
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Flour SibS...... ~ ...•.....•.......•.....•..••.......•·.•.•.......•1.59 Flour Sibs. ·········································-·····;:...•1.3.9 .;1
Flour Sibs,. ........~~ .•.•••..•••..•.••. ~~---···~··········-~-·.••·.~.·...79'
Quick Oats 42oz.......................................'1.59
Quick Oats 42oz..........................:............'2.79 Quick Oats 42o~...............................;.......'3.81 ··~I:J
::·Moist Tuna Cut Food 12 oz............::........59'
Moist Tuna Cat Food 12oi.................}1.35 Moist Tuna Cat Food 12 oz....................99' '
Gat Litter 25 ibs......:.:..............................:~'1. 79
Cat Litter 251bs....................... ~.................'4.01
Cat Litter 20 lbs•.~ ...... \:.........~ ....;,........... .'3.85 t~•I
,· Cheese Topping 16oi..:...:........................•1.99
Cheese Topping 1&amp;.oz..............................'3.05 . : Cheese Topping 16oz.......................;......'3.85 ••,1
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Cooked Ham1&amp;oz. ...................................:...'2.79
Cooked Ham12oz.......................................'4.19 .Cooked Ham 16oz.........~........................'3.99 ••'•,
:. ·Buddlg Meats 2'12 oz..:.................................49'
Kahn's Meats 2'12 oz ..:.................~ .................69' Buddlg Meats 2'11 oz................ -..........:........-69• ••' .•
:: ·fleinz Steak Sauce 10 o~..................:.....'1.59
Heinz Steak Sauce 10 oz.......................'3.03 Heinz Steak 9auce 10 oz..............;.,......'2.69 ••
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~:· Fleischmann's Egg Beaters 16 oz:_
...'1.89
Fleischmann's Egg Beaters 1&amp;oz....'2.49 Fleischmann's Egg Beaters 16 oz....'2.39 ·'••
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: Yellow Popcorn 32oz...........................:........65' · Yellow Popcorn 32oz................................'1.27 Yellow Popcorn 32oz................................'1.29 ••
.Bramley's Strawberry Preserves 32 oz. ..;..'1.49
Smucker's Strawberry Preserves 18 oz......'2.49 Smucker's Strawberry Preserves 18 oz.:....'3.19 '•.••
·~~:.Grape Jelly 32 oz...................,..............;........99'
Grape Jelly 32oz...................;...............;....'1.79, Grape Jelly 32oz.......................;................'1.55 :w•
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FOOD STAMP CUSTOMERS DO NOT PAY 6°'o WEST VIRGINIA FOOD TAX!

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7 1910

:P8Qa

8-The Daily Sentinel

_.Noted priest hit with more allegations of sexual misconduct ·
-. NEW YORK &lt;UP!) -The Rev .
: Bruce Ritter, acclaimed founder
-of the nation's largest shelter
: program for runaway youths.
: said he has "no way of proving"
-fils Innocence of charges he lured
: several ex-reSidents Into sexual
-flalsons.
:: Buthesaldhisaccuserscannot
: back up their claims either and
- maintained he " never. never.
: never" had any sexual relation: ships With you ths a I Covenan I
-·House.
Ritter was ordered by officials
of the Franciscan order Tuesday
· to take a leave of absence amid
allegations that have reportedly

undermined support for Covenant House.
The Franciscan order made
the announcement the day The
New York Times reported on Its
front page that the CathOUc
Church was lnves ligating Ritter
for alleged sexual misconduct
with a former Covenant .Hou.s e
youth·l7 years ago.
"(We) have directed Father
Bruce to begin a period of rest
and recuperationwlthoutresponsiblllty for Covenant House until
this inquiry is completed, " Conail McHugh, the minister provincial of the order, said In a
statement.

The allegations marked the my life," Ritter said.
third time Ritter has been
The priest said he Would take
accused of luring fonner shelter " several weekS off to rest and
residents Into a sexual relation· recuperate (and) deal with the
ship - charges the priest has personal s.t ress caused by this
consistently dented. .
· controversy as well as Its Impact
"I am profoundly Addened by on Convenant House."
It was unclear bow long · the
the alJeaatlons against me and
the need tQ deny them con- leave of absence woUld last.
stantly," Ritter said, In a state- · 1n the past three months,
ment released by Covenant Ritter's embarrassing problems
have reportedly led to a serious
House.
.
"I have no way of proving my erosion of financial support for
Innocence. My accusers cannot Covenant Hou.se, the nation's
establish my guUt. I devoutly largest shelter program for
hOpe the Inquiries currently troublec;l · yoqths which Ritter
underway will bring an end to founded more than 20 years ago.
The allegations also marred
this Incredibly painful chapter In

the repu,tatlon of tbe 62-year-old · misappropriation of · CoveliAIIt
priest, wbo was cited as :an Ho\114! flui(W.
"unsling hero" by President
In January, the VUJage VoiCe
Reagan In hill 1984 State of the publtabed a ·1986 Interview with
Union address and Wbo received another former COvenJn t House
a visit In Manhattan from Presl· resident, John Mellcan, then 30,
dent Bush last fall.
who claimed be had carried on an
The first llllegatlons about lnterrnltll!llt, 13-year relation·
Ritter appeared In the New York ship with iutter. ·
Post In December when Kevin
The third accu~atloli was made
Lee Kite, a former male prilstl· by Darryl Basslle, who claimed
tute and Ccivenant House resl·
Ritter lured him Into a sexual
dent. charged Ritter provided relatiOnship when he was a
him with gifts In return for sexual 14:year-old runaway staying at
favors last year.
an Intake center for c;ovenant
Those accusations touched off House In Greenwich• VIllage In
an Investigation by the Manhat- 1973.
tan district llttomey's office Into

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Beat of the bend

Pomaroy-Midclaport. Ohio

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Girl Scout TPinkirig
Day ~slated Feb. .24

Livin' high off the hog

BJ 808 BOEPLicB
me If good COOks become a loat
Hey, Bunk):, we're llvln' high breed. We'll milia that because
Meigs County area, many other
on the hog aren't~!
·
Malp COunty baa some (ll'eat
Girl Scout troops around Me!gs
countries
will also be represSure, It's nice
ones, However, with the !roan County are very much Involved
ented
during
Tlllllkllli Day . The
lD think ·of the
dinners and the microwave ov- In preparations for their annual
girls thrrnselves selected the •
,IOOd, old daya
ens- probably no one Is goJII&amp; to . Thinking Day celebration to be
countries wlllch they wanted to
•and reflect upoa
lellfll to do much cookln'. Tile . held ~aturday, Feb. 24, s.tarUng
study as troops.
· hOw green our
friendly grocer who delivered · at 4 p.m .. at Pomeroy Elemen·
The public Is Invited to attend
valley was-the
our(ood right Into the kitchen:- · tary SchooL
this year's Girl Scout Thinking
ageoflnnocence
God Bleas Dude Glbbl, the lutof
This year's Thinking Day is
Day · .program. In addition to
-and the age of
the Motueans- ba' gone down somewhat different than Think··;, befDa poor wbleb probably the shoot, blrttbat'aOIC~ ..,Iteaa · lng Days of past -years. as tbe enjoying 10111e special entertJ•inment, guests ·will be· able
wasn't very fas!llonable, but -at telepholle and h&amp;ve toad, at~ - ~ntIs being held In conjunction
browse talile dtaptays which will
least It wal preity common. .
prepared, detlvered to the~- With Pomeroy's Sesqlcentennial
prepared ~each different troop ,
Mostofuswereln the same boat.
In less than a bait hour yet or It's (OO!h anniversary ). Five troops
and will repr~Hnt the r.espectlve
-· · -·•. Good !bing It was • big one.
free.
In the county will be representing
, ·' But that's past us now· end
· Sbucka, we ·ain't Meil !lOth in' 'tt!e countries from which bnmtcountry whlell • troop ~ been
studYing. Also; troops will !He to
.YI&gt;U've' got to admit, we've coin.'! yet. We' have tbl! vitamin tablet'!. ,gants mainlY set tied the
the stage where they wUI present
a long way, Baby.
now,to take-eareoUlledeftct~ Pomeroy-Meigs County area ·There's "Ice cream In the · 1!1&amp;1 mtaht ,J;Ie p~t ' In - ciur. Germany , Wales, England, Ire- · shott programs drwcrlblng what
they have learned as they have ·
freezer, soft drinks in the fridge, · · diets. One day, tbere'llbea pill to land and Scotland. By studying
studied the people and culture of
and even a box of tlisues on the takecareotlllewho~IJII!al. It'll · these countries and learning
another country.
bal:koftbecommode. Now.thlsls be a slmplleJ!IattettobaveiCads about their significance to the
llvln'\
.
otfi1elldatnfor_dllmer: Wewon'f local area, the girls will be- . .Pirl Scouts IS a worJa wide
proifam. although · In many·
, We hardly have to think of evf!i !lave(9..8et the table. After gaining a better understanding of
countries of the world, mimbers
make do anymore although It's a all, how many dishes will It ·take · the ''Ties That Bind" the United
are called Girl Guides. ThlnllinK
little difficult to break the habit JusttoroUapUJ_ouUoreveryone?;, States with other countr ies, both
Day. Is a l q ,ltme Girl Scout . ·
after such thorough early . You ask .how abo!lt the _water to c culturally and hlslflrlcally. Ties
tradition tn· whiCh scouts learn
- .. training:..
·
go with the pill; Dldn'tl'tellyou? That Bind will be the theme of the
about
all . the countries which
Today we have clothing. It's These are going to becbewables . • Thinking Day event.
belong to llle World AtiOClatlon
Remember when we ·used to
In.addltlon to the five countries
not Just a case of one of anything
of Girl Scouts and Girl Guldea.
- a lot of us have ·several of " struggle•fo get bold ora c:O\apleof which helped settle the PomeroyAlso on 'MIInktq Day. money
everything. We liave CIJIIIS and packets·of flower aeeda 'and In a '- - - - - ' - - - - - - - donations are ratl!ered wblcb
trousers that match · and soine good yeat-.. IOme
bulbs? •
aresenttotheJuUetteLowWol'ld .
that don't- however. the latter Wedon'thaw.todothatanymore wishes, plans. oplntons, dreams
Friendship Fund. Juliette ·Low Is .
· ., lsplalinedthesedayssothatthey do we? Naw '-In ·our new life - aild it 's only on the· rarest
the 'founder· of tile Glr.l Scout
· do coordinate. Women have style· we let the greenhouses do · · occasions that many of us bother
movement. Tile World Friend·
dresses, Jump suits, pant suits the &lt;Struggling and when the to take time to smell the roses.
. ship Fund helps provldeflnilnclaJ·~ ,
. ·. l!.'!d shor!s and mf!ICll!ng acces.- ·- p~n~ get nlcti,.aJ:!d healthy, we ' ~ But we're llvln' good, Bunky.
means for Girl SCouli ftoni the:·
.. sogles - ·the shoes, ,the bag, .tire buy em already In bloom. With a • Too bad, we can' t Just stop t~e
United Statrs to visit with host
·'cosmetics, also designed to Utile- lucll - that Is, If we time mac.hlne right here and now
famUies In 9tber C:OI!IItrles, and
· matcli, an&lt;! topping 1! all off· a!"' remember toglvet~rll\.a.drlnkqf - and let' the good times roll
G!rl..Guldes '
· the goJd . chaln~ .wl)lch _,re"popu• ;:::watef'!l'ow~llild apln; they last . !~rever and ever, But that's the · for·:Girl ScOuts·
from other co\mtrles to visit. the
-- Jar with both genders.·
thrObgh the summer .~ , And we . impossible dream. Ypu and I
Umlted States.
Much , of the cl_o_thlng Is .• --bra~~:"about our green thumbs". , both know that time d()l,'s march
designer labeled. Thill means · · Of course, you recall when all on. But hang In there with the
that we walk around, wlt!J the ol us envied that one atnueut thought that one day someone
name of someone else tagftd to .• -person we knew who had a home ( will say:
ClfM.IIIM ,
our rear, acroes the cheat or ·with genuine hardwood floon? .
"He was a great person."
l:tASSiiV. \ '
underthearmpii. ·Wbenthlstlrst Well, thedayciJlll!whenwefOtlt ! And I repeat. How could they
star)ed happeJ11Djl I had dlffl·_ toeether, Bunq.· We .tiVt our : possibly know that?
culty with lt. l just couldn't - •.!rdwood noors, too. And what . , Meantime, it'll be easier to
believe that many· women we_re . dtd we do? Vou know. We mark time, if you'll Just keep
named Calvin Klein. .
covered them J!'.ith' wall to wall .smiling.
· AnddoweeverhaveshOes?! It · carpeting .. Less work what with _
used ·to be work shoes and dress that ni!W' vacuum cleaner that
•
"!' up shoes. Now It.'s shoes, .shoes, I !lSI about l'UI!S , I~lf, huh·!
'
shoes- even special ones lor
Yep,webavecomealongway;
: 149.95
running and exercising. They're Bunky. We ride In vehicles in ,
4 DI&amp;Wa
4eslgner too and cost consldera· whiCh we can be warm or cool,
CHEST .
bly •.m ore than the $1.98 that ':"e depending on the weather; W!l ~ 13.50
wk.
used to lay down for the dress . have at thr flick of a swilch, J
IN
shoes back when we had that entertainment built right Into our r
liDS
green valley . .We had running homes. We don't know anymore
139.10 mo.
shoes too, of.course. We called wltat our nelihbor thinks about : •DaOOII
them tennis shoes and by the end the price of a dozen eggs - what t
SimS
·, oftlre'summertheyweresplltout listen to that and miss "John 1
. and smj!lledsobad they had to be Faces Mary '' - no·way. The art .
. kept oilb;lde the house. .
_ .of communication just seems to
' At any tate, tobaY:sworksboes . be sUpping away as we ~llde
seem to look better than yester· more into our sweet luxuries of
day's dress shoes. ' And don't · life.
.
,
ever lOok. the boots - , we got~
·Our famous. las.t words -that
··iuive boots to fully enjoy the we learned well way back when '
pr01perlty toourday,don'twe?
- 'however, keep .comlng back
There are boots made for every. like a song. They are, of course,:
occasion.
.
·
"Ue was a great person."
What with all_thls footwear. It
Now bow do we knowtbat- we
seems like we should· be able to practically hadn't heard a word •
· ,!"'a~e some pretty deep . fl&gt;ot- he said In lite past 20 years.
prlllts I!I the sands of time If we -Wr've bad so much to do. How ,
ever feel sil Inclined.
: _.:
-co.ukl·w poul~ take time out .
·6 'to"ILL av&amp;. IL. ·
......................
While we're living .In this fast fr9rn the TV or the VCR to llsteli
lape .of. II!XUcy, It won't lprprlse '· t.;i - anyone .,.. to hea~ about
·A

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CO PYRIGHT 1990 - THE KROGER CO.
FEB . 4, THROUGH SATURDAY, FEB . 10,
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES. NONE SOLD TO
DEA LERS.

'

ADV~RTISEO ITEM ~OLICY·Each of these advertised items is required to be readily
available for uta '" each Kroger Sto;e, eKcept as sp"ecifically noted In this ad. If
we do run !'ut of an adve.rtisecl item, we will offer vou

vour

Help Kroger Support Your
Local Second Harvest
Canned Goods Drive

sHorteninG

See Store For Details .

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And More.

Go Krogeringfor low uwarehouse Prices" on t iteins you
buy the most! Look for the special usave More Than A Lot!"
signs-throughout
the
store
and
stock
up
on
the
savings.
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ECKRICH

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·MEAT SALAD..................
a...-..89"
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IEAV'!I VAllE'f GlAD! A ,

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HOIIEM.DE

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FICE. or.EYANI. MECIIWAIIT. MAMiliTON 6 TIL·
TON, INC .. Z7 NOIITH COWGII1'MIW; ATMINI,
OHI0-41701 .
Copleo of
QONTIIACT DOCUMINTI lillY btl
obtoinod ot die ~· of IVANI, MECHWART,
HAMBL!TON 6 TILTON. INC. lacnul if27 ,N oM
·.••eoaI.,._; Att.n.. Ollio ·peps o t ef
IO.IJO,for ..... MI. .
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A1JJ ltDDU. ~ -.littatg 1t1e CONTMCT
'' 00GUMUITS,_pdr ..... llfl~'ilolidltloa:,wtlllle .

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Sl. 19

JUMBO BOLOGNA •••••••••a.. S2.09

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e~!WrDl

..... It 1M falgw*"'ag _

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hporoto ...... 1101 ter tile oo-..ctlon of
RURAL WATI;R IXf'ANIION ·PHAIE IV, VWATER
MAINS. IERVICEI AND 6PPURTENANCU wllbt
.-111 by . ..WAftft DiilftiCht 'MifDIITI!JCT
OI'FICE. 31111 lafr 30 ..... RIIIIIIIVJIIt. ~Until'
2:00P.M. .._..TtnteanF·-· 21, 1tio.-t-

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ADVEIIISIMENT FOIIIDS

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LARGE EGGS ......!!9/,, S1.39
COUNTRY CROCK
MARGARINE ..: ...\t.PJ,. S1.09
PWLVAUEY

lfOT PfPPER
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CIIIESE"........... JP;... '2.99

. r.tun••'IM--.-.~uitineo•
~ · ·=r :~~-ONTfiACT
r.'!!.

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btl :w- :_
-n.. Ens;n.r' o ~- ter the Pi'III ot to
....7.000.
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JANUIIAY 17, 1810
• .
li,INarold .._ . ,, , _ _

'HEAD
LETTUCE ---·-·".l!.£1.._69•
CAUfOINIA
CELIO _,, __J.tg-....ftc

SW&amp;T POTAYO .
YAMS.:.

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NONRETURNABLE BOTTLE, CAFFEINE FREE PEPSI,
CAFFEINE FREE DIET PEPSI,
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U.S. INSPECTED
ISOLD IN 10-LB. PKGS'.)

Ribeye Steak

Chicken Leg
Quarters

Pound

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KROGER SHERIIT • , , " ·GAL. 2 FOR t3.00

SCOTT WASH-A-IVIIAIY WIPES

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~etergent

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88
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•1 GROUP IUDtER JAWIS"•• 30°/o
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ARI_(IVING DAILY -···

Complete Chopped Steak Dinner Offer!
Clip coupon below &amp; save. ·

IAIIQUIT 21 oz.

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!iET PEPSI OR CAFFEINE FREE DIET PEPSI
15-PAK 12-0Z. CANS •.. $3.29

U.S . GOV'T GRADED CHOICE
GRAIN FED BEEF

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WITH COUPON

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1!11 preaeilted an. e~cellent program on Yugoslavia during Girl
Seoallac'a annuai .Thlnkinll: Day. These troop member1, from left ·
to rlpt, Mol'll:an Mathews, Marjorie Halar and Kim Peavley,
elllluced their procram by wearing Yu~~:oslavlandresM. Tlllayear,
tile 8allabary troop, and all othu Girl Seoul lroopa In Meigs
Coull&amp;)&gt;, are aplnstudylnll: other couutrles and will gather.on Feb.
M, ·a t 4 p.m., at Pomeroy Elementary, for thel1190 Thinking Day
celebratlea. Tills year's event Is be ing held In conjunction wllh the
Pomeroy S...qulcentennlal and Is open to the public.
'

.......

'

®

•

IANOTHER
. CULTURE -. Las! year's Salisbury Brownie
, Troop

.,.d

choice of a

CDf!~PBra~le 1t~m. when •vallahle. reUecti ng the same savings or a raincheck
w~1~h will entitle v-ou to pu~.;hase the advertised item at the advertised price
w1thm 30 days. Ontv one ·oJendor coupon will be accepted per item purchued.

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�P Dl

Pomeroy-Middaport. Ohio

North seeks to overturn conviction in·Iran-Contra scandal . ·
WASHINGTON (UPI)
Oliver North asked a federal
appeals court . to throw out his
Iran-Contra convictions because
his Indictment and trial were
Improperly Influenced by his
nationally televised testimony to
Congress.
North, a principal figure in the
secret arms sales to Iran and
covert Nicaraguan rebel aid
operation, listened Intently to 2 ¥.!
hours of legalistic arguments
Tuesday In the same federal
court building where he was
convlc)ed last year. His wife,
Betsy, and his trial · lawyer.
Brendan Sullivan, were with

his personal diaries and give
tes tlmony on videotape for the
trial of his former national
security adviser, John Poindexter, who was North's boss at the
White House. Reagan immediately Invoked executive privl·
lege In an effort to shield his

hbn.

BIG BEND

North's legal case was argued
by Barry Simon, who complained
to the three-judge panel about the
"unprecedented. pervasive publicity" surround!Dg the fired ,
White House aide's congres· .
slonal testimony in .J uly 1987.
North, a Marine lieutenant
colonel who testified In his
beribboned uniform, ap(ieared
before the special Iran-Contra
lnvesugatlrig committee after
receiving a court-approved grant
of Immunity, meaning what he
said could not be used against
him during his trlai.
Simon argued that North's
convictions on three felony
counts should , be thrown out
because Congress allowed the
hearings to be televised, tainting
witnesses who appeared before
the grand jury and at North's
trial. Those people, he said, could
not "put out of their minds"
eh:iments of wha·t ·they saw, ·h eard
1. or read about North's
appearance. .
.
North's testimony to Congress
amounted to "a C!lerced confession" about his activities In the
Reagan White House, Simon
argued.
Simon also contended that
Iran-Contra special pr-osecutor
Lawrence Walsh did not take
adequate precautions to shield
I
grand Jurors from exposure to
the Immunized testlmonyj which
was broadcast live on television
and radio and covered exten. slvely by newspapers and
magazines. ·
The appeals panel .:... three
members of the U.S Circuit Court
of Appeals for the Dis trlct or
Columbia - sat In the large
ceremonial courtroom In tile
federal court bulldiDg a~ the foot
of Capitol Hill, where the Water·
gate trials were held.
,
The. panel consists of Chll!f·
Judge Patricia Wald, named by
President Jimmy Carter, and
judges La11rence Silberman and
David Sentell, both named by
President Ronald Reagan . ..
There was no Immediate lndl·
cation when the panel would rule.
In any case, the panel's decision
can be appealed to the full
appeals court and, ultimately, to
the Supreme Court. ·
North was convicted May 4,
1989. of aiding and. abetting the
obs tructlon of Congress, destroy·
lng government documents lind
accepting an Illegal gr,,atulty -a •
$14,000 security fence at his
·
home.
He was sentenced July. ·5, 1989;
to two years of probation, 1,200
hours of comrt)unlty service at an
lnner·clty drug rehabilitation
center and fined $150,000. Despite
his appeal, North has begun
doing the community service
work.
In his presentation, Simon also
argued that trial Judge Gerhard
Gesell had allowed other "funda·
mental violations of the defend·
ant's rights;'' including giving
Improper Jury Instructions.
The special prosecutor was
represented by Gerald Lynch,
who countered that Gesell had
been "diligent" )JJ handling ques·
tlons before and during .the trial
about the possible Influence of
l\lorth's Immunized testimony.
North"s argument, Lynch said,
essentially Is that once a person
testifies under Immunity at na·
tlonally televised proceedings,
he cannot be tried for ariy crime.
That contention Is al;lsurd, Lynch
said.
,.
.
,
North failed In his efforts to
require Reagan to testify at his
.trial. During questioning, Judge
Silberman said he was · troubled
' about whether Reagan should
have been forced to appear to ald.
North's defense.
.
There was no question Reagan
would have been called as a
witness If he were not president,
·Silberman added.
·
Simon said Reagan's tettlm·
ony·was vital to North's defeDJe
and Gesell was wroll81n.denyill8
efforU ·to compel 'Reagan's
appeFanc.:
.
Silberman also Jndlcated that
4 ·walah'• ottrce should · have
turned over to North the Reagan
I
"Interrogatories" - Rea1an's
written anawen to written qtlel·
tiODI poled by the special

I

diaries and also is expected to
appeal the order for testimony.
The arguments lasted much
longer than scheduled and most
of the questions from the judges
were directed at Lynch.
Another of North's arguments
was that prosecutors made a

"particularly egregious" mls·
take during closing arguments In
mentioning that two North asso·
elates In the iran-Contra opera·
tlon - Richard Secord and
Albert Hakim - made "a kll·
ling" In profits from the arms
sales.

· There was no evidence at trial
of the amount of profits , Simon
said, only that Secord and Hakim
had earned a "fair and reasonable profit."
Silberman sald, ''I round It
·v ery hard to consider a fustlflca· ·
tlon for. that" remark: But Lynch

characterized It as a minor "sld~
Issue. tt •

!'

"'Lots 'of side Issues get dis· ;
cussed at summation," Lynch
told the judges. ac)mowleilglng
only that .the comment "may
have been a rhetorical excess."

..

~y

offe.-s
eoun8eling·
to soldiers

..

mares. feellnp of guilt, exlreme
"To thor,e VIetnam-era vets
sensitivity to loud noises and · who question doing this now
Irritability. Psychiatrists say the because Panama seemed so
symptoms are normal reactions much milder, my ans.,..er to them
to combat stress.
Is: 'So we screwed up with you
. Dr. Harry Holloway, chairman guys. Why should we continue to
of the Psychiatry Department at screw up?"' said Holloway.
the Uniformed Services UniverFairchild . said a typical team
sity or Health Sciences In Be- lncl.udeil an enlisted man, an
thesda. Mel., said· the counseling officer and a chaplain or mental·
IS long overdue.
health specialist.

" We realize that there will be
the whole range of strealll!ll and
tolerance to the stresses and that
there will be those who stuffthose
emotions without dealing wjth
them," Fairchild said.
"But our brains bring them
back t us an~. like !he commer·
clal says. 'Pay me now or pay me
later,"' Fairchild said.

• .The Area's Number. 1 Marketplace
'

RATE$

TO .PlACE AN AD CALl 992·;21511 .
MONDAY thru' FRIDAY I A.M. to· 5 P.M.
, ·a A.M. untii'NOON SATURDAY

D•v•
1
3
6
10
Monthly

. CLOSED SUNill Y

I'OUCIES
"Adt outside Me•g~. &lt;Milia or M•on coltlli• must be pre·
, ..d.
. ·'
~AeciMt f .&amp;O diteount tor Ids p1id in 1dltanee. "'
"FrHMII
GNe.way and Founda'dt und• t&amp;wordswill ba
run~ d.,t •• no ch•oe.
·
,
.
"Pria of M for 111 CIP-.IIetters is doutMii 'pr:ice ot ad cost,
"7 point tinetYP, onty used .
·
·
·
"58f"llinel tS not rftponsibte lor errott attar fir•t d~ IChec:k
fDrtuonflttld8y ad runt in
,Ctll before2 OOp.m .
da¥ 1her publiAIKtn to make cortect1on. ' ,
•
'. •AdtthM mu.at ba '. ,.id In adva.,ce ..,.
Card ·ot Th~t~kt
• Happv Ads

p_.,,

In Memoriam
"A cl•

c.-

Vlfd s...

clatlifitd difpl..-. lutin•• C.-d and lea-' notic•)
wtllalao ap_pe• in the Pt. Ple.aant Aetdt.• and the G-'kpotit Daily Tribune. ~eaehing over 18.000 hom•.
,

COPV DEADLINE -

. MONO.AY PAPER
TUESDAY PAPER
W£0NESOAV PAPER
THURSDAY PAPER
1-HIDAV PAPER.
SUNDAY PAPER
.,

'

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
- · 11:00 A.M . SATURDAY
2 '00 P.M . MONDAY
· 2;00 P.t.l . ~UESDAY
- 2 :00P .M . WE[!NESOAY
- 200 P.M . THURSDAY
- 2 00 P-"11 · FRIDAY

.

'

"/!:.
....._....
.~

.

.

ol Timothy Eugene Hirrio.
ESTATE NO. 23224 Fifth Partial Account of
John T. Wolfe, Tru- ol
the Trull CrHiod Under
Item V of the ~~ WHI and
Teotamon~ ot Creed Jan•.
Doca81....
ESTATE NO. 21276 Twotfth Annual Account
of Willi.., J. Hobotettllt',
Trutloe of the Truot Created
by itorn· ElghJh .ot the Laot
Will and T•tamant of l,lnnie
B, Taylor. Deceoted.
ESTATE NO. 21442 :::!.,:.~~~~ii(;e-'--1 Flrtt and Final Account of
Public
!'undo Klein. Guordlon of
------,....;,..----.1 Leater.ttert, an Incompetent
. NOTICE OF.
Prrrooo.
ESTATE NO. 26267- Fl· ,
APPOINTMENT OF
·
nalandDiotrlbutivoAccount
FIDUCIARY
of Cart Wolfe. Exeo:Utor of"
On January 1!1, 19,0. In the Et..t• of Dolly )Not...
1M Malgo County Probate o.c-od.
,.
Court. C..a No. 21410. tell·
unt 111 axceptiono. · are
thryn Knight. - h ltrMI. Iliaci . thereto. Hid accounts
Middlepart. Ohio 41760. w_ ill bl tor. hearine befqre
•Ppolntad Euoutrla of laid Court on thO 13th day
of F-e. Clwe· of• Marcil. ·1810, er· which
tend Wlloon. .._od, tote
d
of .877 Oliver StrOll. Mid• .time ttl accounto will be
· dlepoit. Ohio 411780. ,
conoldorecl •I'd continued
·,
.
, lli&gt;Mrt E. Buck, from doy to doy untl finally
.
dilpoood of.
.
.
l!rabate J u •
Any paftOI&gt; lnterntad

G
d" f
. 'UUAIL, ee
a·

·

·

.

. ;

NOT

lntroduetor,
Speelall

L.JSS

. THAN
80%

LEAN

tlr•-

Great For All Coffft·makers
· · CHASE &amp; SANBORN

1% MllKFAT

HERITAGE HOUSE

(11 24, 31; (2) 7, 3tc: .
Lone K. N•lllroad. Ct•k

Public Notice

MILK

COFFEE·

· NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT DF
FIDUCIAllY
On Januory 17, 18110. In
the Meitll County Probl!ta
Court. C..o No. 28483. Jil
cob E. 8chular,t1801161tato
IIPuta 124, Poi11and, Ohio
48770,- appolntad ·E~e·
cutorof,thellta.. ofPauiM.
Schuler, d-•ad. late of
1160111, State Route 124.
Partland, Ohio, ~11770.
Robert E. luok,
P.obate Judge
Loria K. N•oolfood, Cltrk
.
11124. 31; 1217. -3tc

9

P~blic

PIIG.

limit 1 Por family Wit• This C...., ~~~~~
AololitiOIIal Porct.•

ASSORTED

ORANGE JUICE

64 OZ. CARTON .....,•• S1.79

PwcMH

IIAWNY PAPER TOWRS .......... rolt

FROZEN. TROPICANA

99·(·

~11

!

MORTON DINNERS
10·11

I

oz.

99(

79&lt;

R~E.tluck,

Problte.Jutl9a
Lone K. N•Miroacl. Clerk
(11 24, 31; (21_7•• 3tc

DOUGHTON'S

Public N atice ,

PREr.tUM ICE CREAM

IN THE COMMON
PLEAI COURT,
' PROlATE DIVISION
MEIGI COUNTY. OHIO
IN THE MATT!II OF
SmLEM!NTOF
ACCOUNTS
PIIOIATE COURT.
MEIGI COUNTY, OHIO.
AcCC!u~ ~nd vouch ore of
the lott-Ing nomad ftduci,
arloo h ... bHn fM.., In the
P•-••
Court.
-~~~
County, Ohio, for epprCMII
..d Httlomont: ,
. ESTATE NO. '11101 ~--lh Annuli +caount
ot Loulo 1. v_,_, GuardiMI ot the !lt8ta of Willian
11-. on .!,_pet_

DELUXE PJZZA .......... 79C ltox

'

5

VRUSSEUT POTATOES
oz.

For Schools Part.c•oaloi'IO 11'1 lilt!
C.mpWII to L•belt 101 Ed~Ca1 •on Proljlram

lAG

N atice .

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
~ On Janirary 18, 1990, In
the Mlllfll County F!roblte
Court, Cooo No. 2148"1;
Olite F. Heighton. 811 Hiilh
MlddiiPDrll Ohio
Stteot.
4&amp;760, w11 eppolirtod e...
cut"" · of tho aolale ' of
Fran- J. Lawla. dace•ad.
l..o ·ot 118 Iouth 810011d
Itt..,;
Mlddloport/ .Ohlo
;41?60.

4 ROLL

15

•

.

M.OpC-y

Are•Codel14

Artl Code 304

44a- GattiP&lt;&gt;Iio

912~-Midcl~rt

175 - Pt . ,,.......

M11onCo.. WV

-.....,

311-Virlllon ...
245- Rio OrMde

458 - LIICin

571 - Apple Grove .

985-Ch•IOt

143-Potta.nd

251-Gu.,.n Oi...

24 7 - Lei art FaUs
141-Recine

64J...:. Arlbi • Dill.
379-.WIInut

742-Ruttand
16 7 - CDOtville

3- Annoucemtnta

61 - F~rm

Equipment
62 - Wanted to Buy
63- liveslaek
64 - Hay &amp; Grain

lot Sale

4 - Give....,ey
5- H•ppy Ada ·

3

8uildinga

35- Lots

8 ··Lost •nd Found
7 ·- V•d s ..elpeid in adv1nce)
8- Pubtic Sal1&amp; AuctiOn
9- W.. ted to &amp;uy . ·

31- ·Roil

65 - Seed &amp; Fertilizer

Trans~ortat10n

41 - HouNI for Rent
42·- Mobile Ham• for Rent
43- Farma fo r Aent

71 - Autos for Sth
72. - lrucks for S1l e
73 - VIns&amp; 4 wo·,
74 ·· Motorcycleil
75 - Boatl ·.. MotGfl (or Sale
76 - Auto Plflt &amp; Acc•MJtilli
77 - Auto Repair '
78 '-Cimpihe Equipmem
79 :- Cimpers &amp; Motor Homea

. 44-·Aplrtment lor Rent
4&amp; .... Furniahed

Ro~m •

46- Splce tor Rent
4:7 - Wai1ted to Rertt
48 - Equi9ment tor Ren1
49-For

L•••

13- lnaur•ncl
14-Businell Traininv

.21 - Buainees Opponunny
22 - Monll¥' 10 Lo1n

Services

61-Hou•hold Gooch

12- Sport!ng Go..ro
53 ..... Anliques

81 - Home lmpro.,.men1s
82 - Piumbine &amp; He•lng
83 ·--.fXC:I'i'lting
84 - Eiecuic• &amp; 'Rehtgera1ion
85 - Guneral Hauling
86 -· Mobile Home Rep11r
87-: UphOIIIIUV

54 - Misc. Merch.,.diu
55 - Building Suppli•
56- Pat, for S1le

ljhijhiiiil

195 - Letar-t

'·

Merchandise

15- Schoolt &amp; Instruction
11- R.C.O. TV &amp; C8 Rep•il'
17-Mitcellan.ous
18 .w.,..ted To Do

773 - Meton
182 - N.., H..,an

5.7 - Muaicllln"rumitlnts
58 - Fruits &amp; Veget1be•
59- For Sale Gf trade

23 - Prof•tionll Servtces

937 - Buffalo

II. Livestock

31-Hom• lor S.le
32 - Mobit•Han'IH far S1le

11 - Hela W1nttd
12-,iiiU.tion W1nt ..

Ga&amp;lia Coun1y
AtWCodee14,

· 317- Chilhiu

1- C..-d of lhan"•
2 - ln Memory

Scrv1~es

Cla.~sifi(•d pagt&gt;.~ c~Wt'!' I h(•

Far:n Suppl 1es

Red I Esl ale

Empioynwnt

.

.

Anno u11 wne nls

·'

' Public
.. Notice
'.

Public Notice

Public Notice

.,

FOODUND

-

AMU .. IIOf'CGnMQIIWe runs. brd...... upd81tlwtllbech•ged
fot •-*' d.,- • ....-••• . ..
"

Public N atice

AT

~A~z.

Rata . Dvfl' 1 t Wptdo
. • 4.00
•
.2D
••. 00
.30
18.00
.42
t13.j)O
.60
t1 . 30/day
.06/day

··"

ONi.Y

1

Wordo •
16
111
111
- 16
. .1&amp;

following tel(•ph(lnc! (lXchanJw., ... ·

ifi~ •dvar1i•mn pllc~ in TheD•ity Sinlinell•··

"ENTIII TO WIN I'RU LAIILS ~-

.........

P"OGRAM DIPIIEtTOfll: Fdl WI ll'l t$10rm
[pi. .Y C)I'•III ],I"CC lAke 1IIO VOUI "'fares!

..
NO. 218011 -

' EITATl!
locond Plnlol " - n t of

Miry """ Manit, a-...,
3 AnnOUIICIIMfttl
'
'

___

PEPPER

log homes·
.d.Wshlp .
...,..

$299

tn•~tm&lt;nt 11ft ~q.&lt;.J ~

2 OZ. C-ANS

~I

h.-. ~lnirw IIIS1!.17~.

R~aii1 )"OUI'~urf\11.1 jOh." • .
Can Don H~n ·

Toll Free l-llllN.l;l.lltl70 or
C1~!011:t M ~·

m.
,.

.,

!'

r.

•

•

,,,__ _

may fHe written excepUon•
to taid eccounta or to mat·
tort .,....lnlng tQ"tho axocu·
tion of the trult. not leta
than five dayo prior. to tho
date .., for h•ring.
·
Robert E. luck, Judge
Common Ple81 Court.
, ' ·
Probate Dlvitlcin.
··
Molfll County. Ohio

the lllbonor 1M execution
Md conttruction,of:
Projaol No. 770·88-019
~too Abatam.,t and
tnoulollon lleplacM~ant
S t a t - Health and
Safety Prooram
Dlotrlct 10. Ph•ell
Olilo O.partmont of
Tranopcwtatlon
(2) 7. 1tc:
•
Soparoto bl• wll be
........... for:
EST.
PubliC N otlce
CONTRACT 1
Of COST
AobottOI Abatement
Md lnoullltlon II•
PUBLIC BID
p i - t ....... t83,2~1 .oo
ADVERTISEMENT
. 4 PIIE ,~Id conference will
Pur. .nt to the Jirovlllono of
""
hold at 10:00 o.m. on
llection 153.0tland 1113.07
of the Ohio lloviHd Code, February 21. 1880, O.D.D .
public notice lo given th8t T. Dl.otrlct 10 Hoadquart""
Mutldn- Drive, Marietta,
~ prfl41DIIill wl INt r'•
Ohio.
- b y the O.,.abuwrtof
of the Not lea to
Admlnlatratlva . .
Dl·
Biddllro.
•orm
ot P r - t .
vlolon of Public
Of.
fico of Slota Ar-act Md Form of lond. FGnn of Con·
EEO Sid CCH~ditlont,
Engineior, 30 ~... Broad
lnatNctlclnt to
Bltfdara, ·
3tlth Floor. Colum· ·
buo. Ohio 432tla.0403 uoitl Gon... Conditione.· "'"""'
Thuroday, M•ch 1. 18110, at. Speclflcatlono .and other
3:00 p.m. Eaat•n ltancWd
Tlma, .a nd o....,.. 'lmriledl• fila anci moy "" uamlnad 11
oHI-: • •.
taly
for fllmlthlng the folowlnli
Deportment
of
the ......,let and P«lonninv
Admlnlotra1ivli lerviceo,
Dlltiolon of Public Worlro,
. Office ol • - Architect
and Engtn30 E11t Broao .,,_, 35th Floor
Cotum ...o. OH. 43216-0403

"Immediate .,Panlngs are available for
• regiltarect nurse• to work in tha Special
Care Unit and tha.Oparatlng Room : Sa:
lar~ commensurate with experience.
Exeellant frjnge benefits.
.
· Contact:
Rhonda dailey, R.N., B.S.N.
Director of Nursing
· . Veterans Memorial Hospital
116 IE. Memorial Drive
Pomeroy, OH. 4&amp;789 ·
(814)992-2104, Extension 213
.,
ATTENT~ON

OHIO WOMEN AND
OTHER MINO~ITIES
Hocking Technical Colle&amp;• Ia currently re·
cruitlng Ohio women 11nd other tnlnorltl81,
, for · 1 apaeially clallgn4111 cooperative. bet- n the United Statee Dept. of Agriculture/Fore« Servlcia and HTC. Tltlalel! two
y..r program with paid practlcutna, tuition
flMnclal alllatance end guaranteed placement upqn completion ofthe program. Ap-.
pllaetite mutt demonstrate; an lnt-lt In
the outdoors, natural reaourcea. e,nd-the
environment. Succeuful cendldetea· wll
be trained to be Forest Service Techni·
·

Far ·lfl!ll'8 lnfomta.tlon

piiel8 contact Mre.

Myra Bolden by February 12, 1990, from •

.~·&amp;, e.t 1-800-282-41 &amp;3. ext. 28&amp;7.
Thil to ~n Afltnnatlva ~ion "'-•"' with tho · .
. thame of work "for.. diWfatty.
.

.
54 MlllceiiiiiiOUI
Merchlndll8

••

ntlne

. . AMBROSIA .&amp; MERICINS
CHOCOLATE ILOCIC &amp; DISKINS
WHm· • Mill CHOCOLATE • '
SEMt SWEEl. RED.·IIkf· PINK

'oxes, • Coke Pans .:. .Cookie 'Cutten· Molds'· Mini Gifi
loxts, 3oc- to s1.25 ." foil•

$1DY:. Suckers, ··
.Gocelltt
. (httriti
... .
.
FO_ODS
.

'

'

, Each bid must be accom·

fH1nlad by .•

BID .GUI\·

RANTY m•tlngthoroqulre·
menta of Sec)lon 1 63.64 ol
the Ohio Revised Code.
Tire Bid Guaranty and
Contrect Bond muat be is·
ouod by .a Surety Companv
mHting the r~uirem..,ta of
Article 2 of thelnttruction to
biddoro.
Bid• that! ·bo uatad and
... dre111ed to: DEPART·
MENT OF ADMINiSTIIA·
TIVE SERVICES. DIVISION
OF PUBLIC WORKS, Of·
FICE OF STATE AIICHI·
TECT AND ENGINEER. 30
EAST BROAD STREET.
36TH FLOOR, COLUMBUS,
OH. 432118·0403.
The Minimum Wage Rote
Requirements Of Reviled
Codo Chaptlf 41 111 end thoi
·equal Emplovm ..t Opportunity Bid ·c ondltiono of Ro·
vt ..d Coda llectiono 1 63.69
and 1 &amp;3. Ill and the Gover· .
·nor's Executive Order of
January 27. 1972 are eppll·
cabte to thil bid invitation.
THE MINORITY
SET

--'::--:-::-'7."'"-:--~ -

Public Notice

ASIDE REQUIREMENTS of
Amended Subltitute Houoo ·
.Ifill 684 ol tho 1 13th Regular Session of tht~~ Gentrel
Aooombly, and apecificolly
the roquirornonto of flovlaed
Code Section 123. 1611c)
(2) and (3), nt!oting to minor- .
ity Buaineu Enterprill Sub·
contn~cts
end
meterl81 •
purchase 1nd •ervice supply
contr11cta, Ire eppiiCible to
·this invitation to bid .
No bidder may withdraw
hio bid within oixty .180) doyo
otter tl&gt;e octuol dote ql the .
opening thereof. The De·
puty Director, Dlvlolon of .
Public Works. reaervtt the
right to wolve eny lnlormoll·
tiea or to reject any or all
bids.
THE DEPARTMENT OF
ADMINISTRATIVE '
SERVICES .
DIV!S!DN OF PUBLIC •
WORKS
Cerole J. Olehavlky.
Deputy Director
111 31; 1217, 14, 21. 4tc

Co~D~.rt••reon ~--------. .--~---~---~-----------~--+------------­

-eaftor.

REGISTERED NURSES

ollne.

good conditiog within te'n
(1 0) dllyo after recalpt of
biclt. The coot of· roploca·
ment of 'lny 'mitaing ,or damaged document• wlli be
deducted frontthe dopooh.
The tow bidder niay retain
the plano and opeciflcetlona
and the depot~ will be refunded .. · ,
.'
Subcontractors and ml·
terial tUPP,Iierl may· acquire
foNholr convitnloncio. Plana
and Speclfic;atio'na or por·
tlono thereof by paying fbr
the coot of reproduction and
handling.
·
Contmctora, requiring n·
olotance In oecurlng bldo
from Certified MBE subcon·

tracton and ,luppliers may
contact tho State Equol Em·
ploym..t .Coordinotor by
calling (8 141 486-8380 or
tho Minority 8ullin111 D•·
valopmont Dlvlolon by cat•
ling (114) 481.-5702 or Toll
Fr• on 1 ·B00-282· 1085.

t-.

s-.

;...~~~~~~~~~~---11

Buldtra Exch..,ge, Inc .
ct..etand, Ohio 44131

Copt•,.

•laia.
w-.

..

".....,.

· .!"1 1 M!lrh\:t.a.u't'
·\nlio,· h ,. lcnl'll.""'"''~' .11n1 1

• . ..

prevent or detect ll)'lllptoms of
post traumatic stresa dlaorder,
The New York Times reported
Wednesday.
"Our ·aim here 11 to take a
pre-emptive strike against the
Impact tha( the stress might
•ve on our aoldlers," said Maj.
Scott Fairchild, of Womack
Army Cotnll'\lllllty HQspltal.
:•=••Include ·•ft·h•.

. '

The Juclletl mentioned Reqan
- and former president Rlchard
Nixon - JeVeral Urnes In Qtlel·
tiona allout the doctrine of
"executive privilege."
On Monday, U.S. Dlatrlct
Judae Harold Greene ·ordered
Requ 10 turn over exeerpta of

-

NEW YORK (UPJI . - The
Army Is offering mental health
counseling. for soldiers who
fought In Panama and apolollel
to Vl~tllm-era veterau who did
• not receive s.lm11ar attention
when they retumed home.
.
Specially trained teams of
mental-health professlotllls· are
at Fort Bragg, N.C., the home of
the 82ncl Airborne
to

'

' ):ri'JUCUfDi'.

- · .....-. ~·

The Daily Sentinel-Page 11

..

I

j

Wadi •d~~J, February 7, 1980

.Wednlfday, February 7, 1890

1

8\illdirro Exchanp of
Central Ohio
Colum'"'o. Ohio 4321 II

---

DOdge Reporto/ SCAN'
CIOYOiand, OH. 441111 .

·•nalnM

SER~ICE

Stra~on.

PH. 992·3922

992·6717

t-tl-'90· 1

i-11·"1""•

DOZER
SITEWORK
. • .ROADS

COUNTRY
MOB'U
HOME PARK

NEWLAND
ENTERPRISES

•Mobile Home
Parts
•Mobile Home
Renlllla
•Lot Rentalo

"(6141 667-327.1 .
Grant ·A, N•wland.·

lt. 33 North of
,_trey, Ohio

-i

JJftl!ft·

ClEARING

Middleport,

POMEROY. OH.
.92·22159

DUMP TRUCK
Sand-Stone-Dirt

"•·

MIDOLEPORT -

This 4 room. 2. bedroom
home ne• town would make
a good rental or starter
hoine. Sttuated on approx. \1
acre lot $11,500.00. ·

992-7479

1-12-' U·~n

•· 7-11·'19-~n

R. L HOLLON
TRUCKING

CMPEIITEI - DYESVIW:
1IOAil - Are ~ou boiling tr a
f•m 1nd llt:iusion? Here is a
45 kre Fwm wilh appr111. 22

CHESTII, OliO

aaes cl111ed, and a 3 bel}

•GRAVEL
•LIMESTONE
•FILL DIRT
•ANYTHING
A'fALL

room, 2 sttry house. A l•m

pottd 11td all minnls including COli rigtG. $26.000.00.

IAIIGSVILLE - In excellllt
condiiion. you can move into

this . 2 bett0t111t home nett
away, r,u.o. Bea~till mo-

985·4422
1· 1

dern , Wen with

rlll(l!, IMf1 llld .,;,;.;;;;...,;.
Mso a sallllle dish
range oilY receplion
on two Ids wilt!.stm••• tllli.i
in&amp; $25.000.00. ·

POIIUDY - Abusiness for
sale w~h eiJ-.Iillures. A
ch111ee ·Jo owriJ.our very

owntusineu. Ju takeover
where present owner INVes

on. cau for more.~ellils.

.

POIEIDY - · 5 Acre, v•·

Clnl ground Dn IIIII of 1 hill

n• town:Grell location lor
hou• or trliler. $3.900.00.

111tttJ E. Clll•• IIHlil
Jt• liii..I-IQ-2110
JoHHI-·5-*1

llftl-••un

ALLEN S
HAULING ·

BiSSELL
BUILDERS

UMESTONE
AND DIRT
SPREAD
10 Ton Minimum

.....
..,
991·5275

CUSTqM MT

HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"At lnut. .le Prkes"
PH. 949-2101
., .... 949·2160
D~ w ·Night

1600GallonW..W

1·24· '90'1/11

. ..
'

•••

COISidaiOII
CIISIII, Ollto

~·~-

.G..,.,SHOOT

16619 517

.........
I••
UOIIE

Cuetom Iaiit
Homef,
R. . . . .lng&amp;
Repelr WCI!'k

915-3365

....

NO ulllalY CAW •

.

I

.

Slf. .. .IT

6aJO P.M. - ·

CWrt .
12 .... Sltetttlta Ottly
.

PIICtlry

S~tfy...,_.

.

LOW GUll OAI

SAW LOGS
$160 fle~':.ll.

. IIUVDm 10 .
.OHIO PALLET
c.._o.8·M10P7a:•'

18·t-tltt

OH.

rut1

CIIIPWOOD .
WAN111
w; , .. CZl ~"llttc.
•

lsllln1

' MIIY

·

Stbdr l'orto for
.Homelltt, Woado•ter,
Tocumootr, Briggo •

St. MitWI)epo1rtl
For Appt. Celli

We can rapair and recore radiators and
heater cores, We can
also acid bail and rod
aut radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.
992-~ 11...

NEW "..,. ... ~ - ~r.

L. .teclat Y. .y L.....

.............. otr.

E .M.

124 -

SMALL ENGINE
REPAIR
PARTS AND SERVICE
For Moot 2 and 4-cyclo

PAY HILL

-

s·erviee~

BUsiness

DAVE'S

I

:

, P1111r.,, IItie

PH. 992·3561

115•

tea

Buying f:'!ure;

7:30··:00

Mon. thru Fri.

7:30.4:00 letllnlli

H·'•l•o.

•VINYL SIDING
•ALU!IIIINUM SIDING
•BLOWN lN
INSULATION

BISSELL
SIDING CO. ..
llew " - t hilt
"Free Eatimot•"

PH. 949.·2101
or las. 949·2160
NO SUNDAY CAW
4-16·1&amp;-tfn

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

-Room Addltlono
-GutterWdrk
-Eiactricot • Plumbing
-ConCNto Work
-Roofing
- Interior • Exterior
Painting
!FREE ESTIMATES)

V. C. YOUNG Ill

. 992-6215
.

Pomtroy,. Ohio
•

•30-'19-2 mo.

*SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM end REMOVAL
•LJqHT HAULING
"FIREWOOD

BILL SLACI
992-2269
EYDINGS
Haw...tLWrlt..e

ROOFING

NEW--Gutta

ng
~
Palntlhg

G~C

FREE EmMATES

. 949~1161
I-VIO-I

_,

�.

,.

.

~

J

..

. ..

'~

... ~~

..

..

.

,r.., ..

•

The Dally Sentinti-Pagl

'ii•'cdrludsv. Feusry 7. 1880

·-.--1011-

....... ,

' ' p ......... .........

~~~-

...............
....... i

-

1

......

,.,

. .. . .

111111 , _ PI

• eNid. Ell·
• flealo!.'!!,
lloln, Palnl P-nf, '"•

21110

I

'=~::' ~"\QllA-4"Ef/IS· · : .,.

T.e levision
Viewing ·
• uo.l F!l. 7 •

l

I

!

-

.. QAT L I'CIWIII

. . . ,.......... of !he
• four..,......... -.!1 boo
low 10 forift lour lilftPio -.Is.

I· {i I~ I I I
0

IWNING

I

Glveawa~

4

I\ORNLOSER

.,

13

I

I'

I
I I I I I~
I
I 1 I' ·1 1 :;:
LARYL

I

~

Yard Sale.

DOES A 6RA111MA AA'JE TI-lE
RIOI:IT TO CRITICIZE AGRAWCHILD,
Oil 5110\JLD SI:IE CRITICIZ.;.:E, THtES E.
KID'S MOTHER WHO,OF .., 101
· .IS 1-!Etr. OWN CHILD 7

'- •t

"1\ II right., so · I apologizP! I
wa~ wrong an(l you wen'
rig hi - -· Pveryouf' ·If; oul lo
g('t you ."
·

I:

IN MV OPINION, I DON'T
THINK SIIE DOES, ANI' 1TIIINK
I'M 601N6 TO TEll:. HER ... .

CUT HH

VNLE55, OF COUR!iE,
. '(OU WANT TO ..

5.

.

.

.

.

.

.-

I

"Why, • stormed the woman,
"does everyone else ge! a
warning and I get a tickill? Is
it my face?" "No,• smiles the
cop, "it's .... ·---!"

Ie

0 0 ft H I T
1---.l''"""li-.;.;_,;1;.:. . ; 11:'1,;..,Tl--i

Complete tho chucldo quoted

by fiiU ng In lila missing -d•
1..-I........JL-..L• .......J.I,-..1..--' you d..,olop
from Slap No. 3 below.

1"'

SCIIAM-I.nS ANSWW
·
Rotary- Oxide - Fancy - Cancer - AN EXTRA

WOman to man at garage sale: "Too bad. there's not an
go with this see "Lady,• the man retorted,
it's a set of six with AN EXT;.:. :.;RA:.::.. I"_ _ __ _ _ ___,

8th·goblet to

•

BRIDGE

NORTH

•Au
•eu

•u

:Playing
logically

.Qt7U

.7-1
.JIDI7
EAST

WEST
.KQUS

••n
writer-expert Mike Law· : : ~ ~ •
I

ByJIUIIeiJaceby

,

F,Hfll :;up~!,

&amp; LIVC·--Jrt_~,

Employment Serv1ces

7:011
7:30

11

AYOH I All -

e (J) FlnliiJ Feud

• • E - - . . Tonlgllt
e til M1111111'1 Family_

Help Wanted

Spoo ... 304-175-14211.'

wJeflenonl

I Slll~oy

IIIA'~!ftUiyl r;J

Elec:trtcal &amp; ·
Refrtgeratlen

.t.YOH • All arua, ean Marlyn
J04.182-2145.

w•••

1D Night Coull
7:31 lenfonl Ancllon

llercuty Eleclrto, 40 yn
'' r loi100, lleo- Waol VJr.
~nla;
...- , . p It .u...
DlnrMI'Clal • IIIIIMtrlal. watt

Business Services

•

•

..

•

•

0

I:GO(J) l'1gllt Agalnllll...,.,v,..,ryy
• (J)
llnaalvecl
repon of

e
.,..,._A

•

nga of a large f!9uatlc
monster In Canada. Q
D.
(I) Growing Plllil
s
.
i
• g h t t

e

Television
. Dependible Hurinc Aid Sllils·&amp; .Servic4
Hearing Evaluations For ~II
·

Tral..,, 2

.n

teaelllr at hla Okl high

bed~. t21U,
~71-1782

.-~·LI Oeoarallhk:

"

lppllar'ICII,

eve~•-

M•a~aaaa~~

LIS.A M. KOCH; M.S. ·

lp ulll The Island

ol Ball Is

the beeutlful home to •
unique civillzalion. r;J
1111
~ 11M! ·
Hardball and Gomez'a fl111t

Licensed .Clinical Audiologist

ea

CIH II

to find

I doQ.

r;J

e all MOVIE: Reel Orin
:,

(1'013) (2:00( r;J

Will dit ballnlnll!llln my homo.
- ·112
"'"'
Fri.
only. CaU
114
tlliot.

Di,.

""'*"•••

7.

POMEROY. OHIO ; Pi.
S .R. 143
ALBANY. OHIO; At. B0. S . R. 143
HENDERSON. WV.; Rt. 36 Adj.toSidoroEquipment
NEWHOUAS;
'·
POMEROY; 9 o.in.-7 p.m. 7 Days
ALBANY; 10 o.m.·5 P-"1· 6 Doya. Claaod Sur1dey
HENDERSON; 10 o.m.·S p.m. 6Deyo. Cloaed 5url. •ljllon.J

1:011 • CJl

Call ...,.....

lor-.-...-.

114-T~.

WIOWod; 3 10,5 ..... wllft Mil(

e Night Court

Upholltery

lllctrld

...llablo. 114-441-27M, oftor 1
p.rn.
.

Full llaure alze Ianna! P!&lt;!!":
(IIG) &amp;' wedding gaM~ 15311111• 0 - - " " " '

l14-44&amp;-TI40.

M.D. Shortly alter a biiiW
argument. VInnie's did has a
heart attack.
ill ·~ !xpeolencl

·

a

ee.y, 100

~=-~-:t.:
~~·-

...':l:.

. . . . . .,.. tDr ..... '314471--

(!) AIMricln

FUNNY'
PLACe TO

. '

f1eniJ Is

, Exlllllnt America'a love
•
affelr with Y . - Nalional
Park. r;J

..

lm.

1· .!"·sport.·! It'' 1

PllrM-

new

Wandal views hla
family
and the town 11 hOpaleaaly

combll. 12:001 a
And Tha,

PUTA

111

·MENU.

ea ......

Plinian Jeke diiCOIIeR hla
l!ttar'olutura hulblnelllllly

71 Autol for Sale.

have mob connactioo•. r;J

liJ LMry Kina Lhlll
.
(!J MOVIE: Munlef 1J Night
(2:00) s.reo.

•NalhYIIIHow
1:30. (J) • Dear Jahn "018
11 unenthUIIUtiC about
vllitad by I l*cAiad

c:g

kllltr.; (I) .An,-. lut '

• •

I NEED SOME STICK-ON,

PLASTICAL
FINGERNAILS,
SILAS-- .

Lave
'
10:00 ()) 7110 Club Willi Pat

l

Rabi-

D CJl

e Quenlum IMP

Sam leapl Into the lila of a
Hlmlnly IMPI FBI ~-a
••
(I) CIIN laMit Of.
Dark and Tha Wizard UM

IJtTIY

LDN•H

plrlle rlldic) to anflOUnce the

war !lover. a
• (l) Nawaacdo
,
Ill Dill Wlaegory Vlnnil
takes a wall down ..-y
lana wtt11 two high school
buCICIIM r;J
• all NeW Twllgllt z• · aJEvenlngNeWI

IUTUND TilE
SAUS imd
SEIYICE
742~3011

•Tire IelBa
•Front End
Alignment
•OH Chitnge • Lube
•lr.b Wartc

IUIN

n.,
IIIUIID
.
HS-'10-tfll

'

14-19-tfn

~'l&gt; 111 e111

.

I

I

S FV

EJAV

TOP SOIL

:•

'

Q Ut H V Q Q . X IJ
XQ

TXQEVCV~

SN

SN

J V

OXSFNLS •

, JVXUV ' TXQEVCYYEJAY . - ELSFNC

FOR SALE

.........

Q V II C V S . N P

IINUDV .C QESXNU

&amp;IIIC.._

····2493

.

c•YPTOQUOn

ROSES'
· EXCAVATING

w Slrtet, ..... .,.,

'·

One letter stands for another. In this sample A is ll.'led
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the Jeftllh and fonnatlon of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.

~
IC.

AXYDLBAAXR
ls.LONGFELLOW

..

BERNICE
' BIIDE~L
.
'

Starts at 1:0.0 P.M.

••

.?.7

11:001=:=,~ And

EVElY SUIIIDAY
Factory Choked
12 Gauge Only

DOWN

43War or
rain
44tH. city
4!1 Register

.On ....
a!Jl • •

'

~2SUnder

10:30il!Hopl:a:
·
Of~
Puthw.tcl
·
D all
Tanlgllt

.

All J1111

40 Set right

tDNewa

RACINE
-GUN CLUB
GUN SHOOT
.

Eosl

1 High-strung 1 Turklc
8 Tyke's game language
9 Service
2 Circumvent
10 So be It
3 Respiratory
12 Undergo
4 Perch
13 Basic
5 Strauss
concept
opera
15 Dean Martin 8 Soho
· 111m
"so long"
Ye•terday'l Answer
18 Sumatran 7 Wood
23 Yeast
21 Greek
ape
core
24 One of
·letter
18 Personality 8 Nonspecific
lhe
32 Calkin
11 Disprove ·
Baileys 33 For the - ·
problem
19 Pertain
14 Babel
25 Notwith- 34 Duck
21 Coarse
structure
standing 38 Bog
22 Catchword 17 Alejandro 28 Woody 39 RlicDm 23 Snack
Allen
pense
(coli.)
20 Things
film
41 "The Music
24 Trattoria
. done
27 Dtum -roll
•
specialty
_27 Unser, e.g.
28 She (II.)
2t "Quincy",
e.g. (abbr.) '
,
30 Presidential b ·· l- + - ·
nickname
31 Merciful
3!1 Caddoan
Indian ·
· 38 Wire
measure
37 Me (Fr.)
38 Florentine
painter.

-lion.Q_ .
.
a'••
l Calaga
lalkelblll
eCil Daagle llo•••

Ear"""'
_ _od..., ... _ _

ace-. nnl .... a

ACROSS

Cha~te'a

Chr!stine Ia taken by surprise
When TOII}'JlOPS the

36

SNT

by THOMAS JOSEPH

• Clwl* l .CIIIIM

h. INuoh l · Jonyo Pun Peed, Apple llrovo,
tr. Re
~II WY, 304-17'1-2111.

N-

Opening lead· • K

CROSSWORD

plena to .atlae the muaieel Hair are
mel' with OllllOiillon. r;J

Ono acno land, blaek lOll rood,

PAYING AS OF TODAY; JAN. 30, 1990
111 Copper 70¢ per lb.;
·
Cl"n Dry Aluminum Cens. 36¢ per lb.
WE BUV ALL NON FERROUS SCRAP, BA"ERIES.
STARTERS.
ALTERNATORS; ETC.
1-31 ·'10-ttn

·a.-

I

Paa

·. . -

=.;..;..:o.~~

WM Wan (3;00)
I:JO • • • (I) HMd Of Tha

. ~IT~ .. :

'Ifni

I NT

...

cnt.

1:011 W MOVIE: How The Welt

OFFRS J 'LOCATIOIIS YO SaYE YOU-.. ·

'

'------------1

Ill
11J Murder, 1M Wrota
• Colweoullcln Willi Dlnllll

I (QI..X.WT HP#Jb

SOOTII

be rnHIDia delperatlanlead from'X·
·· .
· ·
x of spada. U be baa done that. be de·~~t~Cm~S.
So 111111M the lead iA T
. "'from K-Q
uchome
number af spades. . ben, wben. -c.u
... ·are played, If Eut
u West baa only three or four apadel wlna the ace, be dOa liCit beve aaotMr
the a~~~tract !A safe and decllrer'i spade to play. U ~~ willl the flrat
pily immaterial, But 11 Welt boldl club, be can lll!t up bia spade IIIII but
five spada declarer muat dlil:k tbe wUl beve IIQ quick entry to cub thoae
open1na lead Otbenrile the _.rio trieD. and South can aafeJy pil:flllllc·
w· Win the a.,ide ace, play a club. East oild club to Eut'a ace.
the ace and retar111 a ljllde. Our own pcllllcript to lhllliiUnltNow Welt clean the a~IIUlt white ' IDg deal lA that Welt wwld do better
be atUI boldl the club
for an Clll- by leading the el&amp;bt of apada at trick
try And with lbe duck'
t eanlla- lilt. Now Eut can take the flnt club
uei lplda. and declam makel .the ' ~ return a spade, and poor declarer
lotlcal play to wiD the lleCODCI trick. 11 dead In the water.

IDMovle

Til-COUNTY

.IOU II

.A.s·

• J 10 5
• AKQ
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Vulnerable: Neltlter
llealr. South

dammy'a ICe? 1'lk, tik. For atarten,
IIJIOI' the poalblUty that w.t ml&amp;bt

w

Vllloril , ollloo :J04.I7M540
-304-471-2811.
.

; Brldp
Ireuce baa a winner with "How to Play
1 Card Comblnatlolll' ~ l'nA).
Wltb bla ima~~Mry partDer Ala,
·Mite pva tbe reader iallpt Into bla
own thlnkllll at tbe table.
eo- tGclay'a But-Weal baDcla and
plan JOUI' own play wben c:oatronled
with the openinllead aplnlt three ao-

~You wiD the kina af ..,... with ·l ~~oo~~~

IIJ Cruafh•

1-'1-"

I

c LUZUNOU
"We Clft't put the fuM boll.IM!"B-11'H be too
1M)' IO 'IInd if 'the lighll 00 out."
..

•

Y.......,'e ~~PRINCIPLES HAVE NO
REAL FORCE EXCEPT WHEN ONE IS WBJ. FED. MARK 1WAIN "
••
~

1!190 by King Fut~"" Syndicate. lnr

.•.

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••

..

Pomeroy-Midd'eport. Ohio

4-The Daily Sentinel

POWEU'S

· triumphs

STORE HOURS
Monday thru Sunday
. 8 AM-10 PM

Apparently, Meigs CommiS·
stoner· Richard Jones doesn't
appreciate the attitude of certain.
emploj'ees of the Ohio Department of Development towards
Meigs County project proposals. ·
One of the employees for which
Jones expressed dissatiSfaction
with during Wednesday's regular session of the commiSsioners
was Randy Runyon, who heads
the Office of Appala.chla which

.

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ANY PIG. OF ,
1GoM Only At Powoll's Supar-'at
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$189
:$

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9 er 10

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4

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HOUSE - 12 OZ.

INSTANT COFFEE
SAJD

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$299
I OZ.
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e.l .Oily At ,._••, $~per VIII.
IIMII S.. Ja 4 tl!rv s.t. a tO
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50&lt;

OFF

ANY lUNCH

BANANAS

the timing for a bond lsslle is
Ideal since residents w!Jl experience such a small increase over
the 4-mllls which they are cur·
rently paying.
In addition to' the questions
a bout consolidation on the survey
form, it asl\s respondents to
"grade" the Board of Education,
the school adminiStration and .
teaching staff, as well as general
.accountability, communication,
curriculum. transportation and
extr acurricular activities.
It further solicits positive comments on the system, Identification of problems, and suggestions
on what can be done to correct
the problems.

Bloodmobile receives 80 pints of

'

l COLBY CHEESE
lI FROM MEAT
DEPT•. .
,

0 .OfF
lS2°
I

GLASS ·.

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GoM !Wy Ai ;.•• :; !· 111;_..1
GeM Thru Soitlordoy, ••· 10. 1fl0 I

1-LB. PIG.

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Residents .or the Meigs Local
Deadline for f!llnghwith the
Schoo! District areel!couraged to
Meigs County Board or Elections
return the survey forms on the
for the May Primary Is Feb. 22 .
proposal for elementary school
In December the 4-mlll bond
consolidation and cons.tructiom
issue which financed the con·
of'two new elementary schools .
structlon of Meigs High School
The forms were mailed out In
will go off the tax dupilcate,
late January to more than 4,000
providing ·a significant decrease
registered voters. As of Wednes· . in property taxes in the Meig~
day . morning. Superintendent
Local SChool District.
James Carpenter reported that
To raise money to construct the
less than 600 had been returned.
proposed two new schools. It will
He urged residents to take:~lme
require renewing that 4-mllls and
to fill out and return I he forms so
adding either 1.25 ml!ls for two
truit when the Meigs Local Board
new schools, one through six, or
ofEducat!on.meetsnextTuesday 2.50 m!lls for two new schools,
they will ha:ve an _adequate basis
one through ~lght, It .has been
on which to make -a dec.ls!on on
pointed out:
,
whether a bond issue should be
Supt. Carpenter has said that
put on the May primary ballot .

00 OFF

'

CAMPBELL'S-32

Urge Meigs Local District
residents to ·return sunrey

POWELL'scouPON

. 12 OZ. PIG.

I

at tltude shoulq be •'inclus!on'a~y.
not elaborate on projet;:t spec!!- . affected if. funding for the prop- pres sed an Interest In the to't , but
not exclusionary," Indicating lcs .. other than to say It Is an osal in question can not be said they could not purchase the
thatthat!snotalwayshowthlngs excellent proposal which would secured.
lot and building because of the
are when a Meigs County project . save a number of jobs in the
. In another matter, thecommiS· high costs associated with renostarts up the chain of command county.
· ·
s!oners met with Bruce Teaford, vatlngor razing the building. The
to get to Department of DevelopJones reported he has ex. of Teaford Realty, who requested building has apparently suffer~d
ment coffers.
pressed his views on the matter a meeting to again discuss the damages as a result of mine
The commissioners and
to State Sen. Jan Michael Long, posslb!l!tyofthecountypurchas· drainage In the hillside behind.
Shields had a particular project D.Chllilcothe, and that Long ing theJormer Pomeroy Masonic - Teaford said he wouid report
. In mind when they made their · agreed to do all he can to help Lodge building and lot' adjoining the commissioners' feelings to
statements In Wednesday's
save the project and in turn save the courthouse property.
· his client. the Pomeroy Masonic
meeting, however, they would
the jobs that would apparently be
The commiSsioners again ex- Lodge.

. ----------

•

~~·

•

was created for the expressed
purpose of helping those counties
In the state which are a part of
Appalachia, which Includes
Meigs County.
·
"Instead of looking for reasons
why they can't help with a
project ," Jones said, "they
should be looking lor ways that
they can help."
Meigs Development Director
Kim Shields agreed that ODOD's

'---------· --·-·----~

. .

2 Sections. 16 P•ges 2 &amp; Centl
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomerov-Middlej)oi-t; Ohio, Thursday. February s. 1990

GeM Thru Soturll!ly. , •. 10, 1"''

$

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15

·paft•1es /f.ll
f lO·Uo?z. 239
1 e s ••••••••

·l1ttle

PIG•.

'FRANKIE

LB. '

Low tonight In mid .
Chance of rain 40 'pel,centl
Hl~h Friday in mid 50s.

JOiles upset with at.itude of ODD officials·

1o.,4 111y at ,..•., s.,.,_ ..,
Gee4 '""' s.t...,. ,._ 10, 1tti

....

Kicker 994129

•

Vol.40, No.Ut

I
IGROU~D 8£EF'

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Copyrighted , 990

ANY PIG.
3 LIS. OR MOlE

·

2-7-9-14-18..39

e

I'OWELL'S COUPON '

00 OFF
iSl
I

PRICES EFFECnVE $UN., FEB. 4 THRU .SAT., FEB. -10, 1

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Page8

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I

.

.Pick 4.

Good Thru Saturday
Ftbruary 10, 1990·
I
I

-

Super Lotio

OUR EVERYDAY
LOW PIKES!.

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY. OH.

l

.Pick 3
519

SAVINGS Off

We Reserve The 'Ri&amp;ht To

.

Ohio Llttery

·_Hoyas e()p ·

COUPONS AlE
ADDmONAL ·

A. CHOICE

.

Jayh-wks,

I

Limit Quintities

.

. ,.

~lrlocl.- d~g Wediiesday's. . visi~ here
·Eighty units or' bloOd were
received during Wednesday's
•· visit of the Am~rlcan . Red Cross
B!oodmoblle to Pomeroy .
CONTEST WINNER - Four-year·okl Brandon . the Racine Gun Club. With Brandon II Eber
S!xteeQ units were given In
Pickens, , of Eller's Gun Shop, Racine, ,;.~deb
Werry Is ·. tile winner of. the Remington 8-71
appreclatl.on for blood received
Express . Co,Jilbo 12·guage. shotgun which was · supplied the !"'lnniDg gun. Brandon Is the son of . by a relative or friend . Two
Raymond and Joyce Werry, of Chester.
glyen away during a recent contest sponsored by
Meigs Cduntlans, William L.
· Bllckley and Charles W. Bush,
became three gallon donors, and
six. Henry Dalton, Ruth Karr,
Bryan Shank, Fonda G. ThOmas,
Brenda Cunningham. and John
S. Foster became two gallon
donors.
. '.
First
time
donors
were
L!m)a
, Three. Meigs County men ap- seven to 25 years In prison and a Jewell for Thursday, March 29,
Harrison.
Katby
Mora,
Connie
• peared .Wednesday morning In fine of uP to $10,000, Judge Crow at 9 a.m,
Enslen, Penny Knapp, and Ray
Bond was ordered In the
: common pleas court before · told the defendant.
Additionally, Jewell was ad- amount of $20,000. However,
Judge ,Fred W. Crow Ill, for
·: arraignments. on recent grand vised that the sentence on the according to law, the court was
: jury Indictments. Assistant .corrupting charge Is tor a termor required to permit Jewel! to be
· Prosecuting Attorney Linda actual incarceration of seven released upon hiS own recogn!z·
By United Press International
: Warner represented the State of years, which means that sent· ance because the prosecuting
High temperatures more typl·
; Ohio. Meigs County PubliC De· ence, if it were ordered, would attorney had Dill asked for an
of April10 than Feb. 8were o'n
cal
· fender ·charles H. Knight ap· have to be served . In fuJi and arrest warrant on the. charges
tap
for Ohioans Thursday, but
: peared on behalf of the Jewell would-not be eligible for but instead, had Jewell sum· colder weather was expected to
any probation or parole, accordmqned to court.
· • defendants.
move Into the Buckeye State on
Jerry Mar~ln, 36, of Darwin,
Menford Jewell, 59. of Route 1, · !ng to Paul Gerard, criminal
Friday.
Langsy!lle. was charged in a bailiff for the common pleas was charged with trafficking in
Highs Thursday were expected
drugs (sale . of marijuana 1, a
two-count indictment with drug court.
to reach the upper 50s In the .
abuse (cocaine), a fourth degree . Judge Crow also Informed third degree felony, as charged northern counties and the midfelony, and with corrupting · ·Jewell that because more than in the Indictment. . He was 60s In the south although a strong
• another with drugs 1cocaine), a one offense Is charged, any· charged In connection with an southwest bre~e will make tt
sentences might be ordered Incident which al!egedly oC- 5eem somewhat cooler
. first degree felony .
served consecutively, or onel curred in late December . last
Ju~ge Crow advised Jewell
Clouds were to beg!~ moving
.. year. Trafficking In drugs In the Into
. that count one, the drug abuse after the other.
the state late· Thursday and
Jewell was charged In connec- quantity alleged In the Indict· early Friday, bringing showers
charge, carries .a possible maxi. mum penalty or a determinate lion with an alleged Incident ment carries a possible maxi- with them. The precipitation
· sentence of 18 months in prison which occurred in September of mum penalty of a determinate should end from the west by late
last year In which he Is charged sentence of two years in priSon Frtc:lay.
: a1,1d-or a fine of up to $2,500.
_ Collnt iwo, corrupting another with possessing ani! selling co· and a fine of up to $5,000., .
Temperatures will stay on the
Judge Crow.set a jury trial lor warm side 'into Friday, but start
. · with drugs. carries a maximum caine to a person under age 18.
Judge Crow set a jury trial for Markin for Thursday, March 22, to fall off rapidly as the day ·
: possible penalty of not less than
·
at 9 a.m.
wears on. Lows Th~rsday night
b
. e
Bond was set In the amount of are foreca.t to be in the middle or

Hearings held 'for .three men
in,licted ·by Meigs Grand Jury

Williams.
Dr. James Wltherall and Dr.
Wilma Mansfield w"'re t!le doctors in charge, assisted by
.nurses, Belllah Ward, Lenora
Leifheit, Sharon Wright and
Naomi London. at the bloodmobile held at. the Senior Citizens
Center.
Clerical workers were Carolyn
Barton, ·Dee Shain. and Edward
Cozart. representative of the
Vietnam Vets Motorcycle Club.
Other volunteers assisting were
RSVP representatives. Marlon .
Ebersbach, Dorothy Long, Helen
Bod!mer, Wanda Fetty. Lula
Hampton, .Emma Clatworthy,

Peggy Harris, Gerrruce Robin·
son, Macel Barton, William and
Joyce Hobach, Florence R!chards, Vicki Morarlty, Evelyn
G 11m ore and G era I d
Wildermuth.
The canteen was served by the
United Methodist Women of the
Cheste,r Methodist Church.
·The donors by communities
are as follows:
Pomeroy: Linda HarriSon,
Don Cullums, William L. Buckley. Fonna K. Cullums, Scott A.
Eichinger, Lenora McKnight.
Janet K. Peavley, Denise D.
Mora. Kathryn Mora. Walter R.
Continued on page 6

Cold spell coming to Ohio Friday

· M. • d
·
·.:. e.gs eputies pro : Wedn
. . esd ay a·eel·dents•
.

Two accidents which oecurred
• Wednesday e"enlngwere invest!. gated by . the Meigs County
· Sheriff's Department.
__ The first accident was actually
. a fire, according to lnforlliat!oli
• from Sheriff James Souls by .
·: Brian N. Murphy, . Route 4,
GallipoliS, was traveling eas't on
~ Route 124 at Minersville when a
· fire bl-oke 0111 In the Wiring 11nder
~ 'the.dash ot his 1977 Dodge station
. wagon.
.
. · Murphy pulled off the road on
: the right and jlllrtped out. He
' struck hill head In getting out of
.the vehicle. There was an explosiOn shortly after Murphy go tout
and the vehicle was eRIUited In
names by the time deputies and
fire trucks arrived.
Syraculll Fire Department r"'
11p011ded.to the acene. Syraculll!
EMS treated Murphy for a bump

on the head.
The seco11d accident occurred
around 8: 15 p.m. on HemlOck
Grove Road just off County Road
20.
.
Sharon Werry, Hemlock
Grove, was traveling east in her
1989 Pontiac and as she rounded a
curve, saw a west bound vehicle
diagonally across the · road
driven by Rae Lynn Basham, of
Elk Run Road, Coolville.
Werry applied her brakes and
Basham cut to the right, but the
vehicles coDided. The left front
fender of the Werry vehicle
struck the lett rear fender Of the
Basham vehicle,
!:Jght to moderate damage was
listed ta both vell!cles. Beca11se
of the bad location on the road,
the vehicles were move,:! before
officers arrived,
No Injuries were reported . .
·r'·'

r~~i.b~e~~~~!~~aJrd~~~

ex~ept

from Alaska . where only
the beginning will be visible.
Overnight , the skies cleared,
_giving early risers a perfect
predawn v1ew of · v,enus. the
mornmg .star. There s quite a
crowd of planets In that part of
the sky these mornings, with
Venus, Mercury. Mars and Sa ·
turn all within about20degrees of
each other .
The early JllOrn!ng weather
map showed two features ·that
w!ll dominate Ohio's weather.
over the near future. The first
was a high pressure system that
covered the eastern quarter of
the nation . This system ought to
be over the Atlantic by liHe
Friday . The second Important
weather map feature was a cold
front .fonn Wisconsin to Ne·
braska, a front forecast to cross
Ohio Friday.

RecJ,uced emissio~ and higher
efficiency benefif~ of new facility

.request the defendant be arrested on the indictment, and the
court was required .. to permit
personal recognizance.
Sam McCloud, 21, of MkldlepQrt, wa. charged with vandal·
Ism, a felony of the fourth degree,
Rtduced emissions of nitrogen
In connection with an Incident at
oxide
and 'tulfur · dioxide, and
. the Middleport Jallln January of ·
higher
thermal eftlcienc:y will be
thlll year In which It Ill alleged
t1tc
benefiiS
of the l'nlssurized
that McCloud ~maged property
at the jail. Vandalism carrieS a fluidized Bed Combustion (PFBC)
rriaxlmum possible penalty of a unit, when COIIIIn1Ciion is comdeterminate sentence of 1.8 pleted lt tltc Philip Sporn Plant in
·
months In prison and a fine or up NewHaven.
to $2,500. .
Americln Bleclric Power Service
McCloUd wa.ln the county jail, Coipcntion llld the 'IJ.S. Depanon the charge, under the author· ment of BneraY siiDed a cooperaltyofthecountycourt,at the time Iive llleement to ibare tltc cost of
the grand jury returned Its
the commercial·ltCIIIe uniL
eaviroltmental featu~e or
Indictment la•t week.
p«• invohea SO 2
Jud&amp;e Crow continued the bond tltc
prevlouly set by County Cour.t removal, ~ Ml 90 peroent,
Judge Patrick O'Brien In the dunng combustion, and only almt:·
amount of IS,OOO.
tioa of .NO X emissions compared
A jury trial for McCIQud was witb conventional IIX:Imoi1J8Y..
set for Thursday, March 15, 9 Basically, SO 2 released when coal
is burned. reacts with a limestone
a.m.
I

-~--------

upper 40s. Friday wi!J have
morning highs from the upper 40s
to the upper 50s .
Due to the fact that tempera·
lures are expected to fa·ll sharply
as Friday goes by, there is some
possibility that In northeast Ohio
rain will be replaced with snow
as the day advances . Friday is
also expected to bring breezy
conditions to most ofthe Buckeye
State.
Looking ahead through Monday , it will lie fair Saturday and
Monday. and there's a chance of
rain or snow Sunday . HighS w!Jl
be •In the 30s throughout the
period and lows in the 20s or !ow
30s.
February's full moon, the
Hunger Moon, arrives Friday
morning. There will be a .total'
lunar eclipse, but it will not be
visible in the United States,

~

sorbent present in the 'jn'essurized proval of the program as a means t.o
combustion chamber. The resulting promote the use of coal in an en·
inert by-~roduct, a dry, granular vironmentally acceptable manner. _
material, ts collected and is paten·
Preliminary engineering and • ·
tially usable.
·
design for tltc PFBC Utility
The s~ific objeclive ·of t1tc Demonstration Project are under
project 1s to demonstratO tho way. Preliminary cagincenng in·
feasibility and cost elfeCllivencss of eludes a detailed evaluation of both
using
tecllnoloJY In a com· the Sporn Project IIIII tltc ~lion of
men:ial-ltCIIIe p~t of a least, 3~.. coosuucting a COIIIJIIetely new .
mogawaas capac11y. The plant w1ll facility.
be the 1a1pt f'FBC plant itt the
Commercial . operllion
is
world.
.
ICheduled for 1996 if the Sporn opThe cost · associated wilh the lioa is selected llld 1998 If 1 comcooperative~ is $660 mil· ~w flcility is selected. The
lion, or which tltc government
scheduiC uaociatcd with
would provide $185 million, a new flcilily is JeqUired to allow
tluough the Clean Coal Technology suftlciell dme for additional enProgram developed JlY U.S. Senator . vironmental studiel that woulll be
Robert C•.Byni.
requiled for alOIIlly new unit.
Byrd won congressional ap~ liee graphic on page SIX) •

me

...

-

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~

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  </tagContainer>
</item>
