Document 51128

2C - Savannah Morning News, Monday, February 28,1994 * * *
SRS Plutonium Is Missing
Obituaries
Mrs. Gulia Snow
Dies At 103
BEAUFORT, S.C.
Mrs Gulia
Dix Snow, 103, died Saturday at
home.
She was born in Salt Lake City,
Utah, and was an active member of
the Beaufort community since 1942.
She completed her schooling in Paris at boarding school and the Sorbonne in 1912. During World War II,
she was active as a Grey Lady at the
Beaufort Naval Hospital. She had
been a member of Sea Island Garden Club, Historical Society of Beaufort, Adirondack League Club and
St. Helena's Episcopal Church.
Surviving are two daughters,
Nancy S. Anderson of New City,
N.Y., and Sylvia S. Bouscaren of Tequesta, Fla., and Cazenovia, N.Y.;
six grandchildren, including Margot
Rowland of Beaufort; and 10 greatgrandchildren.
Funeral: 2 p.m. Tuesday at St.
Helena's Episcopal Church, burial in
church cemetery.
Copeland Funeral Home of Beaufort.
Remembrances.
Preservation
Trust for Historical St. Helena's
Church, P.O. Box 1043, Beaufort,
S.C. 29901.
H.K. Heath Jr.
WAYCROSS Dr. H.K. Heath Jr., 63.
died Saturday at Satilla Regional Medical Center after a short illness.
Born in West Palm Beach, Fla., he
was graduated from Surrency High
School and received his bachelor's degree in biology from North Georgia College and his medical degree from the
Medical College of Georgia in 1955. He
served his internship at St. Mary's Hospital in Athens and began his medical practice in Pavo in 1956. In 1958, he began the
practice of Drs. Jacobs, Harden and
Heath in Waycross. From 1961 to 1967, he
practiced with his brother, Dr. Tim R.
Heath, and from 1970 to 1986, he practiced with his younger brother, Dr.
George S. Heath. From 1989 until 1993, he
was on the staff of Central State Hospital
in Milledgeville, returning to practice in
Waycross on November 1,1993.
He was past president of Ware County
Medical Society, past member of Okefenokee Golf Club, Elks Club and YMCA.
He was a member of Okefenokee Medical
Society and First Baptist Church of Waycross.
Surviving are his wife, Sharon L.
Heath of Waycross; two sons, Clay Heath
of Homerville and Carl Heath of Bonn,
Germany; six daughters, Carol Heath
and Laura Pittman, both of Jacksonville,
Lyn Heath of Las Cruces, N.M., Ellen
Scott, Millie Heath and Lina Harper, all
of Waycross; his mother, Elizabeth K.
Heath of Waycross: one brother, Dr. Tim
R. Heath of Atlanta; one sister, Delia
Ann Vinton of Valdosta; and 17 grandchildren.
Funeral: 3 p.m. Tuesday at Trinity
United Methodist Church, burial in Oakland Cemetery.
Miles-Odum Funeral Home of Waycross.
Glenda R. VanHoff
Mrs. Glenda Rosenberg VanHoff, 43,
died Saturday at Memorial Medical Center after a short illness.
She was born in Augusta and lived in
Savannah most of her life. She was a 1969
graduate of Savannah High School and
studied nursing at Armstrong State College. She was a nurse for the past 20
years and worked at Chatham Nursing
Home since 1986.
Surviving are one brother, Sam Rosenberg of Columbus; one sister, Rhonda
R. Silva of Milledgeville; and a lifelong
friend, Judy Taylor of Bloomingdale.
Graveside services: 1 p.m. today at
Bonaventure Cemetery.
Sipple's Mortuary of Savannah.
Remembrances: American Heart Association.
^^^^^^^^^^^^T^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^r
FUNERALS
WINN — Funeral services for Mrs.
Eudell Deloach Winn will be held
Tuesday, March 1, 1994, at 3pm,
from St. Paul CME Church, Rev. Henry R. Delaney officiating. Interment,
Evergreen Cemetery. Survivors are
Mr. Sammie Winn Sr., Mr. and Mrs.
Frank Winn, Sr., Walthourville, Ga.,
Mr. Glen Winn, Phil., Pa., Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Scott, Savannah, Ga.,
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Dixon, Stone
Mountain, Ga., Mr. and Mrs. Sammie
Winn, Jr., Westlake, Calif., Mr. and
Mrs. Silas E. Winn, AikerCSC; Mr.
and Mrs. Fred C. Evans, Savannah,
Ga., Ms. Helen W. Waring, Savannah, Ga., Mr. and Mrs. Paul Hudson,
Savannah, Ga., Ms. Jeanette W.
Glover, Savannah, Ga., Mr. Larry
Benjamin, Macon, Ga., Mr. Willie Edward Benjamin, Savannah, Ga., Maj.
and Mrs. David Miller, Forestville,
Md., Mr. and Mrs. James Benjamin,
Sr., Atlanta, Ga., Mr. and Mrs, Gregory Stewart, Atlanta, Ga., S/Sgt. and
Mrs. Lenoxxi L Smith, Fort Gordon,
Ga.( Ms. Sophornia L. Winn, Hopewall, Va., Mr. James Deloach Sr., Mr.
and Mrs. Wallace (W.B.) Detoach,
Phil., Pa., Mrs. Agnes D. Thomas,
Springfield, Pa., 30 grands, 33 greatgrands, 12 great-great-grands, other
relatives and friends. Reposing at the
church 2pm until the hour of services. Sidney A, Jones.
CEMETERIES & CRYPTS
8 Graves at Laurel Grove Cemetery, $450
each. Sell all or part C*H collect
813-686-1504
Jackie R. James
Charle§ A. Harper
DARIEN - Mrs. Jackie Rozier
James, 31, died Sunday at home after a
long illness.
She was born in Wayne County and
lived in Darien most of her life.
Surviving are her husband, Mark
James of Darien; one son, Cade James of
Darien; two daughters, Erin Corlette and
Brianna James, both of Darien; her parents, Clifton and Helen J. Rozier of Darien; one brother, David Rozier of Darien;
her maternal grandparents, Harry and
Anna Jackson of Townsend; and several
nieces and nephews.
Graveside services. 11 a.m Tuesday
at Plum Orchard Cemetery in Mclntosh
County.
Gordon-Harrison Funeral Home of
Jesup.
Charles A. Harper, 74, died Sunday at
Memorial Medical Center.
A native of Savannah, he was employed with EM Securities and retired
from Certainteed Products Corp. He also
was retired from the U.S. Air Force in
1968 as master sergeant, serving 23 years
of active duty. During his military career, he was awarded three Purple
Hearts, four Bronze Stars in World War
II and two in Vietnam. He served as a
diplomatic adviser to the Vietnamese Air
Force, operated the Key West Naval Marina and was a boat captain. He was a
member of St. Michael's Episcopal
Church.
Surviving are his wife, Faith C. Harper of Savannah; a daughter and son-inlaw, Pamela and Parker Chapman of
Richmond Hill; one sister, Margaret H.
Dowdy of Jacksonville, Fla.; five grandchildren; and two great-grandchildren.
Funeral: 1 p.m. Tuesday at Sipple's
Mortuary chapel, burial in Forest Lawn
Cemetery.
Routine O. Noisworthy
AIKEN, S.C.
Romine
0.
Noisworthy, 77, died Sunday at Aiken Regional Medical Center.
He was born in Clarkton, Mo., and
was a retired insurance salesman. He
was a Methodist and a U.S. Army veteran of World War II.
Surviving are his wife, Virginia M.
Noisworthy; two sons,
John P.
Noisworthy of Aiken and Jimmy Hunn of
Paragould, Ark.; one daughter, Martha
Anne Calvi of Baton Rouge, La.; one
brother, Robert Noisworthy of Memphis,
Tenn.; two sisters, Rowene Dail and
Rosmond Thomas, both of Memphis;
three grandchildren; and two greatgrandchildren.
Graveside services: 2 p.m. Tuesday
at Memphis Memorial Park in Memphis,
Tenn.
George Funeral Homes of Aiken, S.C.
Remembrances: American Heart Association, 1003 Hammond Road, Aiken,
S.C. 29801.
Harry G. Beebe
Harry G. Beebe, 86, died Sunday at
Chatham Nursing Home after a long illness.
He was born in Marshall County,
W.Va., and lived in Savannah for a long
time.
Surviving are his wife, Gertrude C.
Beebe of Savannah; his sister-in-law,
Dorothy C. Proudfit of Atlanta; and one
nephew, Jerald N. Proudfit of Atlanta.
Graveside service. 11 a.m. Tuesday
at Forest Lawn Mausoleum.
Fox and Weeks Funeral Home, Drayton chapel.
Marie J. Stewart
Elizabeth B. Hatcher
HARLEM - Mrs. Elizabeth B. Hatcher, 94, died Saturday at St. Joseph's Hospital in Savannah.
Born in Harlem, she was a homemaker and the oldest member of Harlem
United Methodist Church. She was an
honorary administrative board member,
member of United Methodist Women
since 1915 and charter member and former president of the Harlem Woman's
Club and Pioneer Garden Club.
Surviving are one son, Jack Hatcher
of Augusta; one daughter, Betty Davenport of Savannah; three grandchildren;
and seven great-grandchildren.
Funeral: 2 p.m. today at Harlem
United Methodist Church, burial in Harlem Memorial Cemetery.
Remembrances: Harlem United
Methodist Church, P.O. Box 63, or Harlem Memorial Cemetery, P.O. Box 742,
Harlem, Ga. 30814.
Starling Funeral Home of Harlem,
Audrey M. Kiggius
JESUP - Mrs. Audrey M. Riggms,
64, died Sunday at St. Joseph's Hospital
in Savannah after a long illness.
She was born in Coffee County and
lived in Wayne County most of her life.
She was a member of Calvary Baptist
Church.
Surviving are two daughters, Pat
Read of Jesup and Sherry Cothern of
Alma; two brothers, J.E. Medders of Jesup and J.L. Medders of Jacksonville,
Fla,; four sisters, Melba Long of Jesup,
Sue Crews of Waycross and Bernice Reddish and Cora Lee Hilton, both of Alma;
seven grandchildren; eight great-grandchildren; and several nieces and nephews.
Funeral. 11 a.m. Tuesday at Rinehart
and Sons Funeral Home chapel, burial in
Big Creek Cemetery in Bacon County.
STATESBORO Mrs. Marie Jackson
Stewart, 76, died Wednesday at Bulloch
Memorial Hospital after a long illness.
She was born in Jenkins County and
was a member of St. Mary's Missionary
Baptist Church.
Surviving are four sons, George Stewart of Hillcrest, Md., Alfred and Hamilton Stewart, both of Statesboro, and William Stewart of Columbus; four daughRinehart and Sons Funeral Home of
ters, Pauline Key, Almarita Lewis,
Jesup.
.
Frances Parker and Shirley Anderson,
all of Statesboro; one brother, Woodrow
Lorenn F. Bishop
Jackson of Jamaica, N.Y.; four sisters,
STATESBORO - Mrs. Lorena Futch
Annie Mae Johnson of Orlando, Fla.,
Mattie Lee Drummer of Syracuse, N.Y., Bishop, 72, died Sunday at a local nursing
Lillie Bell Brady of Statesboro and Ber- "home after a long illness.
Born in Bulloch County, she lived
tha Lee of Sylvania; 16 grandchildren;
most
of her life in Statesboro, moved to
and four great-grandchildren.
Claxton two years ago and returned to
Funeral: 11 a.m. today at St. Mary's
Statesboro two weeks ago. She was reMissionary Baptist Church, burial in
tired
after 26 years as a nurses aide at
Johnson Grove Baptist Church Cemetery.
Bulloch Memorial Hospital and was a
James R. Barnes Mortuary of Statesmember of Pembroke United Methodist
boro.
Church.
Surviving are one son, Larry Bishop
Eunice N. Strickland
of
Statesboro;
one daughter, Cora Lee
Mrs. Eunice N. Strickland, 85, died
Owens of Pembroke; one sister, Jean F.
Sunday at Savannah Convalescent Center
Gay of Pembroke; six grandchildren;
after a long illness.
and seven great-grandchildren.
She was born in Arcola and was a
Funeral: 11 a.m. Tuesday at Hodgeslongtime resident of Savannah. She was a
Tumer
Funeral Home chapel, burial in
member of Ardsley Park Baptist Church
Northside Cemetery in Pembroke.
and a charter member of the Dependable
Hodges-Turner Funeral Home of
Sunday School Class.
Statesboro.
Surviving are one daughter, Audrey
B. Peterson of Savannah: one brother,
Jesse Spence of Savannah; and four
Caesar H. Jenkins Sr.
grandchildren, Charles F. Barnwell Jr.,
Caesar H. Jenkins Sr., 82, died SaturCam, Katherine and Lawrence J. Bullis
day at home.
Jr., all of Savannah.
He was born in Burton, S.C., and was
Fox and Weeks Funeral Home, Hodgretired from Alexander Brothers, a clothson chapel.
ing manufacturer. He was a member and
secretary of Ezekiel Lodge No. 1, York
Mason, and was a deacon at First PilArthur H. Kilroy Jr.
grim Baptist Church, where he served as
Arthur H. Kilroy Jr., 73, died Satursuperintendent of the Sunday School,
day at Memorial Medical Center after a
church
clerk, adviser to No. 2 choir and
short illness.
church historian.
A native of Savannah, he attended the
Surviving are three sons, Claude and
public schools of Chatham County, was a
Caesar H. Jenkins Jr., both of Savannah,
1940 graduate of Alfred E. Beach High
and Alex Jenkins of Washington, D.C.:
School and attended Savannah State Colone daughter, Mercedes Grant of Savanlege. He was a U.S. Army veteran of
nah; one sister, Annie Mae Holmes of
World War II and was retired after 34
Brooklyn, N . Y . ; 13 grandchildren; and
years as a roofer with Union Camp Corp ,
five great-grandchildren.
where he was a former president of his
Sexton-Hall Mortuary of Savannah.
local union. A communicant of St. Matthew's Episcopal Church, he was a member of the Men's Club and a Boy Scout
leader.
Surviving are his wife, Shirley C. Kilroy of Savannah: two sons, Kenneth Roberts of Boone, N C., and Steve V. Colbert
of Jacksonville, Fla , one daughter, Avis
C Gordon of Jacksonville; four sisters,
Mae A. Denis and Helena K Assendio.
both of New York City. Bettye A Mason
and Georgette K. Smith, both of Hemstead Long Island, N Y . : one aunt; six
grandchildren; one great-grandchild;
Staff Report
and several other relatives
Wayne County authorities are
Williams and Williams Funeral Home
trying to identify the partially deof Savannah.
Wayne Police
Try To ID
Found Body
Lillie Patterson
Mrs. Lillie Patterson, 69, died Saturday at Candler Hospital after a short illness
A native of Chatham County, she was
a homemaker and a member of Mount
Carmel Baptist Church and the Order of
the Eastern Star
Surviving are her husband, Johnnie
Lee Patterson of Savannah; two daughters. Ruby Frazter of Philadelphia and
Carolyn Ann King of Savannah; one
brother Ernest Edwards of Savannah,
nine grandchildren, five great-grandchildren and two grpat-great-grandchildrrn
Sidney A Jones Funeral Home of Sa
vannah
To Honor ad Remember
OGIJETHORPE MARBLE
A GRANITE CO.
PfOfXrt
Plant A Dtsptay * E. Broad at Watdburg St. * Savannah, GA • 232-5571
composed body of a black woman
found about 1.20 p m Sunday in a
ditch in a sparsely populated area of
Jesup.
"We feel sure, although we are
not positive, that it is possibly the
body of a black female, Pamela
Floyd, reported missing about two
weeks ago," police chief Richard M
Deal said
Wayne County authorities, working in conjunction w i t h the GBI.
hope to have a positive identity on
the body today
No indications of hou the woman
died have been released Police said
a 911 call alerted them to the bodv
Officials Say There Is No Reason For Alarm
The Associated Press
GREENVILLE, S.C. - More
than 530 pounds of weapons-grade
plutonium produced at the Savannah
River Site since the 1950s cannot be
accounted for, though officials say
the shortage may exist only on paper.
But SRS watchdog groups say the
lack of precision in monitoring the
material is alarming. "Having 30
nuclear bombs' worth of material
missjng within the Savannah River
Site shouldn't make anybody who
lives in the local area very happy,"
said William Arkin, an analyst with
Greenpeace.
Arkin, who is author of a book,
"Nuclear Battlefield," said between
12 and 22 pounds of plutonium could
make a bomb as large as any in the
U.S. arsenal.
SRS Inventory Differences Reports show 243 kilograms of plutonium unaccounted for from 1955
through 1990, The Greenville News
Ford pointed to an apparent gain
of about 770 pounds ot Uranium 235
since 1955. "That shows you there's
a (measuring) bias either way," he
said.
Williams said the amount of material represent only a small percentage of what SRS has handled in
its nearly 40 years of operation.
"Their claims may be true," Arkin said. "But it's kind of hollow
when one thinks about the commotion that the U.S. government raises
when it's faced with gram-quantity
diversions of nuclear materials in
the case of proliferation by Iraq or
North Korea."
The Associated Press
Gun purchasers throughout Georgia face a 5-day waiting period starting Monday, when the Brady gun
law goes into effect.
Before they can get a gun, buyers
will have to undergo a background
check for felony convictions by the
sheriffs department or chief law enforcement office in the county where
they reside. The checks will cost $15
in Georgia. Those with valid gun
permits are not subject to the background checks.
But Georgia may not remain under the restrictions of the law for
long. The House and Senate have
passed
instant-background-check
bills. A conference committee meets
this week to try work out the differences between the bills. The Senate
bill covers handguns, rifles and assault weapons, while the House bill
covers only for handguns.
Georgia is one of 27 states covered by the Brady law; 23 states are
exempt from the law because they
have background checks in place.
If the conferees in Georgia reach
an agreement and Gov. Zell Miller
signs the bill, it would set up an instant background check that would
be done by the GBI, not a local agency, said John Bankhead, spokesman
for the Georgia Bureau of Investigation.
The legislation would cost an
about $1.8 million, require the hiring
of 23 new employees and the purchase of new computers and telephones, Bankhead said. It would
also reduce the background check
fee from $15 to $10, he said.
"It would takex us at least six
months to be up and running with it,
once it passed," he said.
Seeking to avoid the new law,
some buyers rushed to stores over
the weekend. At the Arrowhead
Knlght-Ridder Tribune
Pawn and Gun Shop in Jonesboro,
located about 12 miles south of Atlanta, manager Arthur Banks hung
a sign saying, "This is it! Last day
to buy a handgun.'1
"It's good to have some type of
waiting period, but I didn't want to
deal with it," said Richard Campisi,
who bought an eight-shot semiautomatic gun at Arrowhead on SaturSeveral local governments - including the cities of Columbus and
Atlanta, and DeKalb and Fulton
counties - already have waiting periods ranging from three to 15 days.
Those that don't may feel a strain
on their staffing.
"Realistically, each sheriffs department may not have the personnel or resources" to do the background checks, said Robert Browning, spokesman for the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms office
in Atlanta.
In Harris County in middle Geor-
Georgia Citizen Action, a consumer
group. "The whole system is the loser because this makes it much more
difficult, if not impossible, for managed care systems to hold down
Continued From Page 1C
costs.
cials and other groups administer
"It's not to pre-empt President
and manage the network of physi- Clinton, it's the doctors' effort to decians and facilities to which patients rail managed care. If managed care
are sent for treatment.
is not effective in holding down
Opponents of the legislation ar- costs, what good is it?"
gue it's much harder, and more
Dr. Roy Vandiver, president of
costly, to administer health care MAG, the doctor's lobby, said the
plans if there is a potentially unlim- legislation is not an attempt to "tear
ited number of doctors involved.
down" managed care.
They say it would be impossible
He said it's simply a question of a
to negotiate discounts with a group patient's right to choose their docof doctors based on promises of a tor.
specific volume of patients if other
"There are some medical probdoctors could be part of the plans.
lems in someone having to all of a
Increases in costs, they say, sudden see someone else," he said.
would price employers and employMany patients build relationships
ees out of the health insurance mar- with their doctors over the course of
ket.
years.
Backers of the legislation say
"They are good for medicine,
those concerns are overstated.
they are good for patients, they are
But even those normally not sym- good for health care," Vandiver
pathetic to their cause agree the said.
bills could increase costs for manHe noted that under the legislaaged care plans.
tion, managed care networks still
"Managed care companies hold would be able to set prices for docdown costs by limiting physicians tors who want to take part in the
and care," said Marc Wetherhorn of plans.
Health
Girl Admits To Killing Baby Decade Ago
The Associated Press
CINCINNATI - A 12-year-old
girl turned herself in for the death a
decade ago of a 13-month-old cousin
and has been charged with murder
so she can get help, police said Sunday.
"This was just a mechanism to
get her into the system." police Sgt
Bob Disbennett said Sunday "We
don't anticipate her going to jail "
"They're not here to crucify a 12year-old who committed a crime
when she was 3," he said "This is a
Ren -»' Old or !ns!a! f Nev.
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G-^ W >'<•"• ;>r<ci Srvvf i ri os
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Williams said officials measure
materials twice a month to compare
them with what records say should
be on hand. The difference is then
physically tested/ he said.
SRS officials said they are confident no material has left the weapons complex. "We have in place the
physical security that assures us to
a great degree that we are not physically losing stuff," said Rick Ford, a
spokesman for the plant.
Brady Law Takes Effect In State
N BILL MORRIS PLUMBING »• BROOKS PLUMBING
F.^.-cef* f . » ! n r e s . & W.itr- -<• . - ^ - s
reported Sunday in a story written
from its Washington bureau. A kilogram is equal to 2.2 pounds.
Officials at the nuclear weapons
complex near Aiken, which opened
in 1965, said the total comes from
differences in measurements, paperwork, waste and materials stuck
somewhere in the weapons-making
complex.
"You can only measure things to
a certain degree of accuracy," said
Tom Williams, branch chief of materials control and accountability at
SRS.
But Thomas Cochran of the Natural Resources Defense Council criticized SRS accounting procedures.
The methods are not "large enough
to detect the diversion of a weapon's
worth of material (and) are not adequate to detect whether somebody's
stealing material."
925-5443
situation where they try to get this
girl the help she needs."
The girl admitted to the crime on
Friday and turned herself in on Saturday to face the murder charge,
placed under a category of juvenile
delinquency.
The girl, whose name was not released, was 3 years old at the time of
Lamar HoweM's death
Police and the Hamilton County
coroner originally had determined
that the boy accidentally drowned in
a bucket of bleach and water on July
22, 1984. while playing with his cousin
Police believe they know the motive, but would not discuss i t ,
Disbennett said He also would not
say why the girl decided to go to police
A hearing was scheduled in Hamilton County Juvenile Court on Mondav
gia. Sheriff Mike Jolley said he
doesn't expect to need another employee to handle Brady requirements.
"It depends on the volume and
how busy we are," he said. "If it
gets to be a burdensome job for the
normal staff to handle and not be
able to carry on other law enforcement activity, we'll have to reconsider our staffing,"
The law was named for former
White House press secretary James
Brady, who was wounded in the 1981
assassination attempt on President
Reagan.
The Brady law's five-day waiting
period expires under a clause that
mandates an instant background
check be phased in during the next
five years.
But states can get out of the waiting period sooner by enacting instant checks, such as the ones pending in the Legislature.
Vandiver denied the bills are
aimed at federal reforms that might
mandate the formation of managed
care systems. Besides, he said, any
national reform eventually could supersede laws passed by the General
Assembly.
"The opposition comes from people that would like to establish programs where they have a very limited panel of doctors so they can control the plan better," he said.
Many say that is the ultimate
fight being waged, over who will
control the health care system.
"There is some concern that our
entire health care system could be
controlled by a few large insurance
companies through PPOs and
HMOs," said Walker, the Augusta
lawmaker. "It's a policy issue. Do
we want to put the control of health
care providers into the hands of five
or six companies?"
Wetherhorn said the bills shift leverage over fees and service from
managed care companies to doctors.
"It puts doctors in the driver's
seat. That's what doctors want," he
said. "What doctors don't want is insurance companies and managed
care companies controlling their
practices."
Winners Announced
In Essay Contest
All readers who submitted
essays on Black History
Month d u r i n g February can
come to the main office of the
Savannah News-Press to pick
up a free cassette. "It's A
Matter of Pride: A Salute to
Or Martin Luther King Jr
and Black History Month"
produced by GRP Records
The names of all winners
w i l l be listed with the security
officer on duty in the main lobby of the News-Press building
at 111 W Bay St Pickups can
be made from 9 a . m . to 5 p m
Monday through Friday
For more information, call
Donald
V
Adderton
at
652-0331