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                  <text>Monday, March 16, 1992

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-10-The Dally Sentinel

Annual science fair held at MJHS

. SUPERIORS • These students received supe·
: rior ratings at tbe annual science fair at Meigs
·· Junior High School. Pictured, 1-r, l"ront, are Jay
· Gannaway, Erin Smith, Dodger Vaughan, Ryan
Smith, Roxanne Williams, Ryan Crisp and Lori

GOVERNOR'S AWARD WINNERS
Receiving Governor's Awards at the annual science fair at Meigs Junior High School on Tues-

Russell. Back, Teresa Simpson, Michael Franckowiak, Angie Hale, Matt O'Bryant, Kristen Das·
sylva, Tracy Sharrer, Suzanna Henderson and
Dorothy Leifheit. Absent from photo is Bethany
Cohee.

day evening were Jake Gannaway, Michael
Franckowiak, Matt O'Bryant and Dorothy
Leifheit. Absent is Bethany Cohee.

Celebration set
POMEROY · American Legion
Drew Webster Post No. 39,
Pomeroy, will celebrate the birthday of the American Legion with a
family dinner and special program
on Tuesday at the senior citizens
center in Pomeroy.
A special guest has been invited
and all members may bring a guest.
The ladies auxiliary is also invited.
Dinner will begin at 7 p.m. with
meeting to follow.

BEST PROJECT ·Jake Gannaway was the winner or the
John Mora Memorial Award for
the best project at Tuesday
evening's science fair at Meigs
Junior High School. Over 400
people attended the fair's open
house.

Luncheon slated
The Meigs County Retired
Teachers will have a luncheon
meeting on Saturday, March 21 at
12:30 p.m. at the American Legion
Hall opposite the post office in
Middleport. The speaker will be
from the state teachers retirement
system on health insurance. All
retired teachers are invited. Further
information may be obtained by
calling 992-3887.

Over 400 people attended the
recent annual science fair at Meigs
Junior High School under the
direction of science teacher Rusty
Bookman.
Sixteen students received superior retings and were presented special recognition awards. Those students, their projects and award presenters were: Ryan Crisp, "How
Does An Airplane Fly?" Meigs
Junior Hi~h Science Club: Rox·
anne Wilhams, "How Safe is the
Air and Water in Our Community,"
Meigs Litter Control; Ryan Smith,
"How to Locate an Earthquakes
Epicenter," Meigs Junior High Sci·
ence Club; Bethany Cohee, "How
Can Leaves Make Photographs,"
Meigs Junior High Science Club;
Angie Hale, "Do Plants Produce
More Oxygen in Stronger Sunlight," Veterans Memorial Hospital; Erin Smith, "What Ingredients
Act as Leavening Agents," Meigs
Litter Control; Kristen Dassylva,
"Can the Lack of Light Cause
Depression?" Southern Ohio Coal
Company; Suzanna Henderson ,
"Tes t the Water You Drink," Dr.
James P. Conde; Michael Franckowiak, "Which Type of Water Can
Plants Grow Best In?" Meigs
Junior High Science Club; Jake
Ganaway, "Which lOw 40 Motor
Oil Has Ideal Viscosity Characteristics?" John Mora Memorial
Award;
Teresa Simpson , "How Does
Water Temperature Affect the Respiration of GoldfiSh?" Meigs Junior
High Teachers: Dorothy Leifheit,
"How Biodegradable is Your Laundry Detergent," Meigs Junior High
Academic Boosters: Lori Russell,
"What Is the pH Level of Different
Sources of Water in Meigs County," O.A.P.S.E.; Dodger Vaughan,
"How A Hovercraft Works," Ohio
Power Company; Matt O'Bryant,
"Growing Tomatoes Using Hydroponics," M.L.T.A.; and Tracy
Shaffer, "What Is the Best Insulation," Meigs Junior High Science
Club.
Those receiving superior ratings
are now eligible to compete at District Science Day at Ohio University on April II.
Of the superior rating winners,
those receiving Governor's Awards
were Bethany Cohee for Environmental Science Research: Michael
Franckowiak for Agriculture and
Food Science Research: Jake Gannaway for Energy Research :
Dorothy Leifheit for Recycling and
Litter Prevention: and · Malt
O'Bryant for Water Resources
Research.
Students receiving excellent rat-

ings were April Childers, Candice
Walker, Susan Couerill, John Cle·
land, Deana Grover, Amber Bennett, Mindy Patterson, An~ela Fish·
er, Keawana Qualls, Nikki Bentley.
Israel Grimm, Nick Haning, Bonita
Barley, Amy Harrison, Todd Hawley, Darlene Doerr, Jennifer Carpenter, Butch Bradshaw, Nick
Mills, Palma Wiles, Corey Darst,
Jeremy Coleman, Megan Clark,
Marlene Capehart, Brent Hanson,
Terri Fife, Lee Williams, Cliff
Thomas, Amanda Brinker, Michael
Jarvis, Brandi Hysell, Tabitha
Swearingen, James White, Ricky
Metheney, Alison Gerlach, Willie
Johnson, Anne Brown, Erica
Phillips, Steven Vance, Gary Stanley, Cindi Stewart. Paul Pullins,
Sara Roush, Bobby Mash, Kenda ·
Reynolds, Dorena Hom, Jim Hens·
Icy, Daniel Russell, Tonya Phalin,
Cynthia Cotterill, Autumn Conde
Donald Goheen, Jeremy Hartson,
April Halley and Bryan C~lwell.

Good ratings went to ~tephanie
Wood, Angela Ward, Jeremy Hub·
bard, Shara McLead, Heather
Knight, Melissa Erlevine, Kim
Crites, Chad McKinney, Tim Priddy, Jonathan Keesee, Bert Mash,
Dianna Cannan, Becky Ackerman,
Shelly Sinclair, Natasha Slater,
Tanya Taylor, Ricky Curtiss, Gary
Canterbuiy, Fred Heldreth, Richie
Gilkey, Matt Gard, Tara Fitchpatrick, Heather Blanks, Phyllis
Clark, Paul Searles, Herbie Bush,
Alicia Haggy, Terri Smith. Donald
Yost, Travis Abbott, Jeremy
Honaker, Sabrina Dress. Morlty
Hunter, Ellen Lewis, Travis Lipscomb, Jason Marcum, Mark Mills,
An~ela Powell, Rana Justis, Ryan
Dailey, Stacy Amott, Chad Bunon,
Brad Swisher, Shawn Whittekind,
Deangelo Thompson, Jessica Stubart and Marla Hall.
Receiving satisfactory ratings
were Jon Mattea, David Cunningham, Michele Price, Travis Curtis,
Travis Sprowl and Travis Gilmore.

zling. Instructor was Brenessa
Phillips assisted by Amy Wright.
A court of awards was held in
February with eight girls attending.
The received the following badges:
celebrating people, Andrea Neutzling. Melissa Houser, Bethany
Cooke: arts dabbler, Jennifer Heck,
Melissa Houser, Bethany Cooke,
Andrea Neutzlin~ . Autumn
Phillips, Amanda Mtller, Jennifer
Heck, Autumn Phillips, Melissa
Houser, Andrea Neutzling, Aja
McGlothin, Bethany Cooke: theatre, Andrea Neutzling, Bethany
Cooke, Amanda Miller, Melissa
Houser; looking your best, Melissa

Houser.
Investiture and rededication was
held for Aja McGlothin and Jessica
Hensley. Guests attending were
Tana and Lacey Kennedy, Debbie
Cooke and Teme Houser.
Thinking day was held later in
February at Eastern High School.
Pomeroy Troop 1309 had the country of Ireland and served Irish Stew
and Brunies. Daisy Troop 1292 of
Pomeroy shared with the junior
troop and provided Irish Scones.
There were six juniors and six
guests for the troop. Daisy Girl
Scout auending was Angela Wilson
and co·leader Misi Neutzling.

Pfeiffer, the nerdy 16-year·old
played by Josh Saviano on television's "The Wonder Years," is
about to lose his virginity.
"I'm sure we're going to get a
lot of letters from parents,"
Saviano said in the March 21 issue
of TV Guide.
He said the episode doesn't
focus on the sex, but on the reaction of Kevin Arnold- Pa\Jl's best
friend and narrator of the ABC
seri es. Arnold is played by Fred
Savage.
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Civil
rights activist Rosa Parks met one
of her high school teachers at a
book signing here in honor of

"Sending Forth as a Service to
God" was presented at the recent
all-day work meeting of the St.
Paul United Methodist Willing
Worlcers.
Glenna Sanders, president,
opened the meeting and program
by reading from the book of Mark.
Prayer was given by Joanna
Weaver. Readings were given by
Edna Harmon, Mary Jamison, Mae
Vineyard, Evelyn Spencer, Mildred
Brooks, Glenna Sanders and Joanna Weaver.
Those attending learned how to
put together and set up the Dresden
Plate for a fuwre quilt. Each member took home two blocks to complete on their own for the May

Vol. 42, No. 220

Council will continue
talks to purchase old
junior high building
.

REPAIR WORK TO BEGIN • Tbe con·
struction signs went up Monday and work on
repair ol' the piers of the Pomeroy-Mason Bridge
by the Ohio Department or :rransporatlon was

expected to get underway tOday. During part or
the work the bridge wiD be restricted to one-way
traffic. The repair work Is scheduled for completion in early summer.

Officials say J(lney killed in line
of duty; family awarded benefits
Public Safety Officers' Benefits
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) A sheriff's deputy shot while Pro~ram of the U.S. Department of
moonlighting for an insurance Jusuce that said Janey died in the
company should be considered an line of duty. Federal officials
officer who was killed in the line of agreed.
Richard J. Condon, claims
duty, local and federal officials
officer
for tl)e. .federal benefits
said.
~. ,porelltror · Pulliam Cbunty · program, said the'Janey ~ompensa·
Officer Jonathan D. Janey were tion was justified.
"Officers have authorities that
awarded $103,890 from a special
federal compensation fund, al- transcend duty hours," Condon
though Janey was not working in said. "They are clothed with ·
his official capacity the night he authority 24 hours a day. They can
be called back to duty at any time.
was shot to death.
·
One
way is if a crime is committed
"He was off-duty for the
in
their
presence or if there is
deparunent up until he saw a felony
was ·being committed and then he's reasonable cause to believe a crime
working for me," Sheriff Delbert is being 'ommitted.
"They roven back to active
Harrison said Monday.
Janey, 32, was working for status and an action taken is con·
Nationwide Insurance Co. watching sidered an action in the line of
a house where the company duty," he said.
Condon said it was not unusual
believed arson would be committed
for
a moonlighting officer's family
when he was shot in the head and
to receive benefits. "That happens
chest Aug. 17,1989.
Harrison filed a report with the quite frequently," he said.

The $I 03,890 was the rate paid
by the fund for all officers killed in
the line of duty in 1989.
Three men were charged in the
deputy's death.
.
Robert Gray of Gallipolis, Ohio
is serving a life sentence with
parole'at·the West Virginia~ Pcniten­
tiary. He has appealed his first·de·
grcc murder conviction to the state
Supreme Court
Robel;! Bates,, also of Gallipolis,
was acquitted of first-degree mur·
der.
Raymond Huck of Hurricane
pleaded guilty to second-degree
murder and is serving up to I 0
years in prison.
Prosecutors contend Huck hired
Gray to bum down Huck's home so
he could collect the insurance.
They said Bates drove Gray to the
house, which was being watched by
Janey. Gray shot Janey when he
came upcn the deputy, prosecutors
said.

By BRIAN J, REED
Sentinel News Starr
The Village of Pomeroy may
purchase the old Pomeroy Junior
High School building .i f the Meigs
Local School District and Mayor
Bruce Reed continue ongomg
negotiations.
Mayor Reed discussed those
negotiations at Pomeroy Village
Council's regular meeting on Monday evening, and received permission from council to continue the
negotiations.
Under the current offer from the
school board, the village would pay
an unreleased price for the land and
building, and would also allow for
"additional rent concessions" on
the office space now rented by the
local school district in ·the Pomeroy
Municipal Building.

I

If tlie property is purchased agrees to provide parking for high
from the school board, n would be school football spectators, the deal
used for storage, for office space could become "less of a bargain."

for the street deparunent, and as a
facility to repair village vehicles.
The pun:hase would also allow the
village to demolish a storage building located behind City Hall, hence
providing more parking for
employees and visitors at City Hall.
However, as another condition of
the purchase, the village would be
committed to maintaining the park·
ing area behind the building as
parking for Bob Roberts Field.
Several council members
expressed their approval of the
ongoing negotiating process: however, some conditions of the offer
were less than popular.
President Larry Wehrung, for
ins1ance, said that if the village

Wehrung also expressed opposition to the proposed expenditure of
monies wilhin the village water
deparunent which could be used to
purchase the property, saying that
those funds should be used to
"improve water quality and expand
and replace water lines."
Councilman John Blaettnllf, on
the other band, opposed the propo~d rent concess1ons. . .
Council also discussed the problem of asbestos removal and other
necessary repairs at the structure.
Negotiations will continue, with
Reed representing the village.
Thacker visits
Paula Thacker, Meigs County
Continued on page 3

Construction of new
homes up in February
Bx.DAVE SKJDMORE
Associated Press Writer
WASIDNGTON - Construction of new homes and apartments
soared in February to their highest
level in nearly two years and indusuial producuon rebounded after a
three·month slide, the government
said today, providing further cvi·
dence the economy has pulled out
of its stall.
The Commerce Department said
housing starts surged 9.6 percent to
1.30 million units,. !he highest level

Meanwhile, the Labor ,Department .said oonsum.er prices rose a
moderate 0.3 pc:rcent in Fel\ruary,
pulled up by htgher food and clothing costs. The increase, although
the biggest in three months, followed a slight 0.1 percent gain in
January.
For the first two months of the
year. inflation was advancing at a
2.2 percent annual rate, well below
the 3.1 percent gain for all of 1991,
the deparunent said.

since March 19~0 . It was the
biggest gain in a year. Increases
were registered in every n:gion of
the country.
The Federal Reserve reported
that total output at the nation's factories, mines and utilities advanced
0.6 percent after declines in
November, December and January.
It was the strongest increase since
July. About 'half of it was accounted for by incn:ased activity on auto
and truck assembly lines.

Clinton, Bush aim midwestern
magic to stifle challengers

1he
may .have
up to $2,020 for youl
You may qualify for the Earned
Income Credit if in 1991 you:
• Earned less than $21,250 from a job,
and
• Had a child living witp you for more
than 6 months.
Even if you do not owe any tax, you
might still get money back.

DETROIT (AP) - Michigan
and Illinois voters rolled out to set·
tie presidential primary contests
today that seemed destined to move
Bill Clinton and President Bush
closer toward a November head-to·
head confronuttion.
But both front-runners faced the
continued pesky threats from candidates with revolt in their hearts
~Jerry Brown on Clinton's left
apd Pat Buchanan on Bush's right.
· Brown declared just as the balloting Wll$ getting under way that
he would have "a real hard time"
supporting Clinton for president
even if he wins the Democratic
nomirlation "unless he can own up
ta his own failures and stop trying
to point his finger at everybody."

·Refusing to back away from his
assertioos of the past two days that
Hillary Clinton's partnership in an
old·line Arlcansa's law firm that
raises questions of conflict of interest, Brown insisted on CBS' "This
Morning" that the MicHigan primary was "about worlcers ... losing
their jobs completely abandoned by
a governing elite like they have
down in Arkansas whete their pri·
vate business, where the people's
business gets all tangled up.''
While polls suggested Brown's
insurgency could land him a second-place finish in Michigan,
Buch.anan's Republican revolt
appeared in danger of losing
strength.
Jobs and trade were the domi·

.---Local briefs-----.
: Police probe Monday incidents
·

Two Monday night incidents on East Main Street, Pomeroy,,are
under ipvestigation by Pomeroy Police.
'
.
Police reported that a showroom window at Smith-Nelson
• Motors was broken out about 9 p.m., and that about· an hour later
the mon~y changer at the Food Shop car wash was damaged in an
• apparent auempt to remove money.
It was also reported to police that sometime between midnight
. Saturday and Monday ~~g. money wss taken ~om lhe Messen. ger newspaper rack at Rue Aid Pharmacy, East Main.

.

For more information call the
'
lntemal ).tevenue Service at

: Elections office to close
The Meigs County Board of Elei:tions will closed Friday so that
staff members may attend a district meeting.
··
·

1-8()0-8,29-1 040.

ARC'seekS volunteers'
,,.

,

1 Secllon, 10 Paget 25 conll
A Multimedia Inc. Newapaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, March 17, 1992

Copyrlghled 1992

March 25.

...

dentl durlna the Raeloe FFA aardea Jraetor
show held during FFA week.
·

Low tonight near 40.
Wednesday, rain. High In low
SOs.

March 17

SALISBURY • The Salisbury
Township Trustees will begin
clean·up of township cemeteries
and have requested that all flowers
and containers be removed by

CREDIT

•

J-S

Clean-up to begin

EARNED
INCOME

meeting. Beulah Zumbach assisted
with the material cutting.
A thank-you card was received
from Pat Hall and Mildred Caldwell was welcomed back after a
two month stay at Western Hills
Rehabilitation Center.
During the lunch hour the group
celebrated Mae Vineyard's birthday and.St. Patrick's Day greetings
were exchanged.
All day quilting will be done at
the church on Monday and Tuesday with members to bring sack
lunches. The spring bake sale will
be April IS at 9 a.m.
The next regular meeting will be
Aprill4 with an Easter theme.

Pick 3: 839
Pick 4: 6109
Cards:
8-H; 4-C; K·D;

"People were outraged that anybody as sweet and modest as love! y
as she was mistreated like that,"
Alberteen Campbell said about her
former student, now 79, whose
refusal to move to the back of a
segregated bus in Montgomery,
Ala.. in 1955 helped spark the civil
rights movemenL

FOR WORKING FAMIUES

Willing Workers to hold
spring bake sale April 18

Happy
St. Patrick's
Day

--Names
in
the
news-RADNOR, Pa. (AP) - Paul Women's History Month.

Pomeroy Junior Troop 1309 news
Donna Schmoll, Farmers Bank,
was a guest at a recent meeting of
Pomeroy Junior Girl Scout Troop
1309. She discussed various functions of the bank and what skills
are required to work in a bank. She
also talked about different ways of
saving and investing money. Mem- ·
bers then had the opportunity to ask
questions.
The troop met at the leader's
home and began work on the
Health and Fitness Badge. Girls
were measured for strength, flexibility and endurance. The girls are
then required to increase their
physical activity and also begm an
mdividual fitness program.
The members met at Pomeroy
Elementary for an aerobics class
with Debbie Haptonstall. Giris and
adults attending were Jennifer
Heck Melissa Houser, Jessica
Hensiey , Amanda Miller. Aja
McGlothin, Andrea Ncutzlmg,
Michelle Kennedy, Autumn
Phillips, Bethany Cooke, Brenes~
Phillips Terrie Houser, Debbie
Cooke mid Brenda Neutzling.
The troop met at the home of
Brenessa and Autumn Phillips for
instructions in candy making. Girls
learned how to paint the molds,
pour candy and various other pans
of candy making. After learning by
watching the girls enjoyed making
their own candy trayS. Attending
were Jennifer Heck, Melissa Houser, Bethany Cooke, Autumn
Phillips, Jessica Hensley, Amanda
Miller, Michelle Kennedy, Andrea
Neutzling and Aja McClotbin.
Adults attending were leader, Bre~­
da Neutzling, co·leader, Debbie
Cooke, and senior aid, Misi Ncut·

Ohio Lottery

'.

..

The Americln Red Cross is seeking volunteer illlj'SCS and medical lab tcclttticllns ftr Its bloodmobile 81 Meigs High School Thursday.
L~sed practical nurses, registered nurses and MLT's who are
intelelkl'd In vol~;~~~leeriJ!a on Thursday from 9 a.m. unlil2 p.JII. are
·
Coatltued 01 ,·3
·
. ,...
'
u-~

nant issues in the weeklong campaign to win the struggling Rust
Belt, although the Democretic race
was spiced at the end by the politi·
cal ann wrestling going on between
Clinton and Brown.
Clinton hoped for a Midwestern
sweep to add to last week's Super
Tuesday blowout. Well ahead in
late polls in both states, the
Arkansas governor was poised to
become the prohibitive favorite for
the Democratic nomination.
Buchanan himself established
Michigan as ~erfect proviri~
ground for his 'America First'
message, but late polls showed he
was more likely to have a tough
time matching past showings.
Buchanan abandoned his talk of
toppling Bush and returned to his
battle cry that a vote for him would
"send Washington a message to
wake up."

BUDDY &amp; HIS BUDDIES • The American
Red Cross llloodmoblle will visit Meigs High
School on Thursday from 9 a.m. until 2 p.m.,
and "Buddy Blood Drop," a mascot from the
ARC, visited with students on Monday to promote the event. Pictured with Buddy (Love
Batey) are student council members, 1-r, Yvette

Young, Robbie Wyatt, Melanie Qualls and Carrie Bartels. In addition to student and faculty
blood donors, the ARC is also seekinF. volunteer
nurses ror the eveat. Intersted R.N. s, L.P.N.'s
and M.L.T.'s can contact the ARC at (304) 422·
7527. (Sentinel Photo by Brian J, Reed) .

Check bouncers pressed to explain wrong doing
'

WASIDNGTON (AP) - They everyone was doing it, or that
don't match lhe classic simplicity members were merely borrowing
of those famous defenses - ''The from one another," he said. "That
devil made. me do ·it," "The check justdoesn'lcutit."
is in the mail" and "The dog ate
Cut it or not, feeble a: not, those
my homework."
are the explanations.
'Rep. William Ooodling, R-Pa.,
But members of Congress,
prtssed to explain their check-writ· wlio says lie wrote ooe bad check,
mg proclivities, are coming up with offered the everyone-does-it
iJusinalive combinalions of expla- defense.
.
nation, mitigation and ci)ntritlon.
"Most of us did exactly what
The corridors . of power have was SI!PJlOSe4 to have been done,
bec()QIC alibi Iilley . .
· accordmg to what wo were told ,
. No excuse will do, Rep. Jim was !he Wily lhe Cj)Opelative ~,
Kolbe, R·Ariz., said in 1 swemelit atcd," Ooodling said. ·
he put into tbe Congressional
Other oxplanatipns fall into
Record the night the House voted these broad Cllepies:
to name overdrafters at the mem-It wasn't a bank 81111.
bers' .bank in the Capitol.
"The House bank was aciUally
"The feeble defwc of this out- not a bank. but a disbursing office
ngc ltu been thai it .waan't a bank,
"

that also provided check-writing
and check-cashing services," said
Rep.aew.cu~.M tth F M H h D N...
Y
who headed the invesugation and
found himself among the misereants, for one bad check.
,
"I will not call it a bank, I will
call it a cash club," said Rep. Fred
Grandy, R-Iowa.
"We call it a bank, but it was
not a bank," said Speaker Thomas
Foley, D:Wasb. ~'lt did DOt ·pay
interest. It did not provide overtlraft
coverage. It did'not make loins. It
was not insured by the FDIC. It
was 1101 under the regulation of the
Comptroller of the Currency and
the Federal ReservC."
-.-What · ~:.~ aone bad been

and perhaps tor ~uch longer, the .
bank had a pract1ce of honoring
most . overdrafts on members'
checking accounts.''
-:-The bank was shy about
reUmg members when they were in
atrears.
.
"Too muc~ deference, not
enough overs11ht," said Rep.
Portci J. Goss, R-Fla. "Oversigltt
seemed more like overlook than
look over:'
.
- The bank was sloppy.
.McHu1h; "It's recordkeepinl
was hapltuatd, itS internal accounting controls were lax llld its Clll·
urea to promulpte and distribute
fortnal guldeHnes and lliOCedwea
10 tltosC wlto JUed the bank COG·
tribuled to the problems."

!lone for ct·cns..

McHugh: "For at •least40 yean,

... ."

,.,

.

'

.

�1\Jesday, March 17, 1992

Commentary

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
1\Jesday, March 17, 1992

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Rain forecast in Ohio through Wednesday

OH 10 Weath er
Wednesday, Marth 18
Accu-Weather~ forecast for daytime conditions

and high temperatures

MICH.

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGF:IT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller

CHARLENE HOEFLJCH
General Manager

LETI'ERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
words. All leuers are subject to editing and must be signed with name,
address and r.lepbone number. No unsigned lett&lt;rs will be published. Letters
should be in good tast&lt;, addressing issues, not personalities.

Once again, Ohio
may be spectator
By ASSOCJATED PRESS
COLUMBUS -Ohio may not be involved in the presidential nomination process and again may be left to feel like a wallflower no one asked
to dance at the high school prom.
Four years ago, Republican George Bush and Democrat Michael
Dukakis already had secured their nominations by the time Ohio voted.
This year, the Legislature - as if a May 5 primary were not late
enough - is about to change the date of Oh10's presidential primary to
June 2.
·
Ohio has to delay its balloting because of a lawsuit and some political
wrangling that stymied the drawing of new districts this year for legislative and congressional candidales.
T)le deadline for that process was Friday. The districts still have not
been finalized, and legislative leaders agreed last week that the primary
will have to be delayed a month.
By June, the nominations may be decided.
Bush, in 15 primaries and caucuses so far, has collec!ed more than half
of the 1,105 delegates he needs for the GOP nomination.
Gov. Bill Qinton of Arkansas has one-third of the 2,191 required on
the Democrafic side - more than twice the amount of Paul Tsongas, his
closest rival. There will be primaries or delegare caucuses in 22 states or
territories between now and June 2.
These include Illinois and Michigan, which have a combined 331 delegates at stake in their Democratic primaries Tuesday.
David Duffy, spokesman for the Ohio Democratic Pany, said that
unless Tsongas does well this week, Clinton probably will have clinched
the prize by the time Ohioans go to the polls.
Stare Republican Chairman Roben Bennett said "it's safe to assume"
that President Bush will have bealen back challenger Pat Buchanan by the
ni iddle of April.
Some observers believe Ohio's tare primary takes away an opponunity
to gain clout because if early support is given to the ultimare winner when
it is still needed, patronage and other favors will come from the While
House.
Others lament the fact that Ohio gets limited presidential choices.
Bennett said Republicans do not subscribe to the patronage theory.
He acknowledged that Ohio has had only one Cabinet appointment in
the last 12 years -Commerce Secretary William Verity of MiddletOwn
under Ronald Reagan.
Bennett said this probably was because the Democrats held the governor's office throughout most of the 1980s, and the Republicans lacked the
opportunity to groom government administraton.
He said Illinois has four Cabinet members whose talents were brought
to the public eye under former Gov. Jim Thompson.
. Bennett said Bush nevertheless will campaign in Ohio this spring as a
warmup for the fall when he expects the stale to be "a real battleground."
Ohio will be crucial, he said.

Berry's World
OH YEH?
WELL. YOU LOOK LIKE.
t&gt;OC.TOR. CECIL J"AC06SON,
TOOl'

I

Here's a test George Bush can't pass
do not believe that Bush would recognize a principle if somebody
grated it and spread it on his baked
potato. I have a suspicion that his
soliloquy on his ethical self has
something to do with it being the

I have devised a test for the
president of the Unired States, but
I'm not sure he reads the column so
you could do me a favor by clip·
ping it and sending it to him.
It has to do with princi ple s.
Over the. past three years I have
come to believe that George Bush
has but two: Get re-elected, and
never relax your guard against the
demon broccoli.
It thus came as a complete surprise when I read what he said the
other day in South Carolina: " Life
means nothing without fidelity to
principles, " and "So often, politi ·
cians do the easy things. the popu·
Jar things, but it is the tough things
that tell you something about char·
acler and honor and leadership."
I hope you don't think I'm being
too disrespectful, but I fell over
laughing when I read that. I truly

Joseph Spear
political season, and that's why I
devised this test
I would like for Mr. Bu sh to
review this panial list of unprincipled actions he has taken in the
past. If he will repudiate just three
of them, I will conclude he is not
the moral cipher I believe he is and
will readily say so.
. Take your time, George:
I. As vice president in 1981,
you attended the despot Ferdinand
Marcos' inauguration after he
"won" the first election he had

The plight of children in America
A crisis is occurring in Ohio
and across the country. The quality
or life for America' s children is
steadily decreasing.
There arc 30% more Ohio famili es receiv ing Aid to Dependen t
Children (ADC) today than in
1980, yet the total population of
children in the stare has decreased.
In fiscal year 1990, children made
up 38% of the total number of
Medicaid recipients, but only
18.6% of the stare's total expenditures were spent on children.
Clearly, children are faced with
difficult obstacles to hurdle beyond
the "typical'" challenges of growing
~p . Children who do not receive
the proper preparation for school
are at a disadvantage when it
comes to school readiness. They
have difficulty identifying colors,
shapes, numbers and symbols. Our
schools and our reachers arc given
a student population with vastly
different pre-school experiences for

which they are expected to com- increase funding by $38 per child
pensate and to improve.
in 1992 and 1993 to schools disPresident Bush and the nation's tricts with 20% or more ADC chilgovernors have established six dren, and to increase the funding
National Goals for Education. The for the Head Start programs .
focus of the goals is on school Unfonunatcly. this amendmenr. was
readiness, high school completion, defeated.
student achievement and citizen Governor Voinovich's goal is to
enroll 50% of the eligible children
in the Head Stan program. Whereas this goal is laudable across Ohio
ship, science and mathematics only 35.6• of the eligible children
accomplishment, adult literacy and arc enrolled in Head Start. To
lifelong learning, and disciplined, achieve the Governor's goal to
drug free schools. These goals pro- enroll 50% of the eligible children
vide an excellent blueprint for suc- in Head Start, the state and federal
cess. To tran sform this blueprint governments must continue to
into action requires a commitment increase their financial support.
to invest in America's children.
Some may argue the country or
Along with my colleagues in the state cannot afford to invest in
the Senate, I attempted to make . our children, yet investment in our
good on this commitment during children produces a yield which
last spring's debate on Ohio's $25 cannot be matched, even on Wall
billion biennial budget. Attempts Street. For example, spending one
were made to increase the school dollar for quality preschool educafoundation ba sic allowance. to

Sen. Jan M. Long

tion, such as Head Stan, will save
S4.75 in future expenditures for
special education , crime, welfare,
and other costs. For every dollar
spent on childhood immunizations,
society saves ten dollars in future
medical costs; every dollar spent
on prenatal care says three dollars
in future health care costs. As these
figures demonstrate, early invest·
mcnt in our children serves as preventative medicine. It is this type
of preventative action which can
improve the quality of life and the
economic conditions for the chil dren of our state.
The children of America and
Ohio cannot help themselves. They
need financial and educational support to level the playing field and
give them equal footing with more
fortunate children. We must not
cement the feet of our children in
place before they are even able to
run towards the hurdles which lie
ahead.

Will the Flipper parrot the Gipper?
writer of speeches. There seems to
be a message problem, the high
command decided. No wonder the
boss has fallen behind even the
much-troubled Bill Clinton and the
untelegenic Paul Tsongas - the

Polls are in free fall , strategy is
in disarray, policy is inconsistent,
but don't despair - President Bush
has called in the Gipperizer.
Peggy Noonan is back.
This master speecbwriter who gave Ronald Reagan his gift
of gab and then, in 1988, helped
make Bush what he was but no
longer is - was summooed to the
headquarters of Bush/Quayle '92
by an urgent S.O.S. from 1600
Pennsylvania Avenue.
The president was unhappy, yet
again , with the quality of the
speeches he's been giving, and the
wise beads figured what he needs
- pronto! - is yet another chief

Martin Schram
president's message just hasn't
been getting out JO the public.
So, as they say at B/Q '92, they
tasked Noonan with "message
development." Just develop the
message that somehow never got
developed in the three years of the
Bush presidency - then figure out
a way for this Un-Great Communi-

Today in history_______________
which had fallen from an American bomber into the Meiliremmean off
Spain.
In 1969, Golda Meir became prime minis~rofisrael.
In 1989, the Senale unanimously coilfumed U.S. Rep. Dick Cheney of
Wyoming to be secretary of defense, following the failed nomination of
former Sen. John Tower.
Ten years ago: Four members of a Dutch relevision crew were shot to
deatll in northern EI Salvador; the Salvadoran government said they were
slain during a~ banle between rebels and army troops, but the Dutch
government wd it had evidence security forces were responsible.
Five years ago: A federal appeals coun cleared the way for the perjury
indictinent of former While House aide Michael Deaver. ('The following
December, a federal jury in WashingtOn convicted Deaver of three of five
perjury c:eunll.)
.
One year ago: Allied commanders from the Gulf War held a second
round of cease-fire taiks with Iraqi officers; the Iraqis we~ told they
could 1101 move their warplanes inside IIIQ for any reason. Millions of
JliiOPie VOied in a landmarlc referendum on whether to preserve the splinieriilg Soviet Union.
. ,
Today's Binhdllya: Acln:ss Mercedes McCambridge is 74. Ballet star
Rudolf Nureyev is S4 . Singer-songwriter John Sebastian is 48. Actor
theilllr clul1nJ World W11 D.
·
·
In 1950, aclentisJJ at the University of California at Berkeley Patrick Duffy iJ 43. AciOr Kun RuSICII is 41. Actress Lesley-Anne Down
··
II!IIIIUIIIlelllhey bad CJelled a new llldioacave elemem, which they named is 38. Actor Rob Lowe is 28.
Thouf!lt
for
Today:
"I
don't
think
there's
anY
Jlllint
in
being
Irish if
"rtllfanium."
.
you
don
tlmow
thai
the
world
is
going
to
breat
your
heart
eventually."
• Jn 1958, the U.S. Navy launched the Vanguard I sareUire.
· In 1966, a U.S. midget submariJ!e localrd a missing hydrogen !lo~b -U.S. Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan, D-N.Y., (1927-).
By The Associated Press
Today is Tuesday, March 17, the 77th day of 1992. There are 289 days
left in the year. This is SL Patrick's Day.
Todayls Hlghligbl in HlSIJlry: . ·
On March 17, A.D. 461, according to tradition, St. Patrick - the
patron saint of Ireland - died in Saul.
On this date:
In 1776, British forces evacuated Boston during the Revoluiionary
War.
In 1870, the Massachusens legislature auth&lt;Jrized the incorporation or
Wellesley Female Seminary. (It later became Wellesley College.)
In 190S, Eleanor Roosevelt manied Fianklin D. Roosevelt in New
YOit.
·
.
·
In 1906, Presidelll TheocSole Roolevelt used the 1tm1 ".muclaakc" Ia a
speecb to 1bc OridiJOn Club in W8111inftor!. •
·
In 1910, the ClmpFire Oirll orpaizllion was fmned. (11 wufonnal·
PRSCJ~ted to !he public eucdy two yean later.) .
,
:ln 1941, the Nllioul Oallery of Art opened ill WMbln&amp;!'JI.
In 1942, 50 )'CII'IIIO, Oen. Doullas Mlt:Anhwllrived m AUIIralia 10
became.~ cCrnminder of Allied forces in the 10Utllwest Plclfic

ty

l

allowed in nine years and you instant credibility and a jlhotograph
shamelessly praised his "adherence to prove it.
to democratic principles and to the
3. In the summer of 1988, you
democratic process." Apparently examined the records of 245 milunable to contain yourself, you gur- lion Americans and somehow congled on : "We stand with the cluded that an obscure, second-rate
Phi,'_ippines. We stand with you , politician from Indiana named J.
Slf.
Danfonh Quayle was best qualified
2. In further demonstration of to lead us in the event of your
your affection for autocrats, you untimely demise. It was a craven
refused to gel tough with the Chi· choice by an insecure candidate
nese tyrants who butchered ·pro· who never wanted to be one-upped
democracy demonstrators in 1989. by his No. 2, and it left the nation
Indeed, you wailed but a scant six facing the frightening prospect of
months before dispatching your being presided over by a pol who
national security adviser to Beijing reached his level of incomperence
to lift glasses and lick boots. And the day he wiggled his way into
in late 1990, while lobbying for law school.
suppon for your Persian Gulf strat·
4. You once supponed Planned
egy, you personally met with S¥fi· Parenthood, switched to a pro-life
an president Hafez Assad in a position to buy your way onto
Geneva hotel, thereby providing Ronald Reagan's ticket, became a
this succorer of terrorists with . " big-tent" guy when pro-choice
sentiment seemed to be prevailing,
and now that you need the religious
right's votes have once again
become a dyed-in-the-snakeskin
anti-abonionist.
5. While we're on that subject,
your pandering of fundamentalists
is nauseating. Do you really believe
the government should proscribe
everything these wowsers find
offensive? And why do you demagogue so on the subject of school
prayer? When the Supreme Coun
outlawed it in 1962, President
Kennedy hailed it as a timely
reminder that we should pray more
at home. If only you had half the
class of JFK.
6. You have such meap;er
respect for the Constitution that
you propose an amendment for
every thorny issue that comes
along. You are on record in suppon
of six. Why not 10? Hell, go for a
dozen. Maybe we can finally repeal
the 22nd and make you prez-forlife.
Send your clips to The White
House , Washington, DC 20500.
Tell you what : If Bush even
approximates probity by disavowing but two of these lowly acts, I'll
stamp him Curmudgeon-approved.
(C)I992
NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN.

(

.

~

cator to communicate it.
Indeed, that might work. Unless,
or course, the president and his
brain trust arc wrong about this
message mess.
Maybe Bush's problem is not
that his message isn't getting out.
Maybe his problem is that it is. For
we seem to have been getting the
real message of the Bush presidency all along. .
Three years of the Bush presidency has taught us that this is the
Bush Message:
Economic Crisis - There is no
recession. Oops, so there is a mild
recession, but it can be fixed by
turning on another trickle-down
spigot for the rich and well-to-do.
What do you mean, "voodoo economics"?
Health Crisis- There's no
urgent need for a national health
plan. Oops, now that I see the polls,
OK, here's half-a-plan.
Crime Crisis - .I'll be your
tough law-and-order president But
I won't do anything tough to get
the assault weapons out of the
hands of drug gangs.
Abortion - I'm pro-choice.
Oops, I'm anti-choice.
Environment- I'll be your ·
Environmental .President. Oops,
I've got to scrap a highly qualified
Jt~stfce Department appointee
because right-win•ers don'tlike
the fact thai be wa once a trustee
for an environmental group.
The Arts - I'm your National
Endowment for the Ans PresidenL
Oops, Pat Buchanan is ttying to
frame me for funding porno arL
Well, I'll fire back -"- by fuing the
Endowment's John Frohnmayer.
Taxes - No new taxes; I
romise, no mauer what. Oops,
've go! to raise taxes; but they
made me do it. Oops, • apologize
v

f

for raising your taxes. It was a mistake.
And, just the other day, Bush's
message soared even higher than
mere politics and policy, as he
waxed philosophic for an audience
of home builders in South Carolina:
"Life means nothing without
fidelity to principles."
Suddenly, Bush .has his own
special brand of fideliiy crisis. At a
press conference the other day,
Bush made it seem that he, too, is
searching for his lon~-lost principles. ·In words thai m1ght work for
a neophyte campaigner but hardly
for a three-year president, Bush
said people will vote for him
"vlhen we get through defining
clearly my objectives for this country."

But just when it seems Noonan
has been saddled with an impossi·
ble task - rewriting three years of
messagery to make the Flipper
sound like the Gipper - there ·
comes a hint of hope: Bush rejected
the advice of hotter heads who
urged him to blame Congress for
all our economic woes. He accepted blame himself, added there's
enough to go around _fer all parties
- and looked downnght presidential for the first time in a lon' time
Noonan's old col~ue m Reagan message-malcing, RO(Ier Ailes,
once made clear thai then: are limits to wha~ a super wrirer can do
with mere words. In a bOolc telling
the ''secrets of the master communicators," Ailes chose his title
from an enduring one-liner he '
employed to cowlsel RCapn before
'the final presidential debate of
1984:
"My advice to the president wu
simJIIc: 'You are the messqe •''

(C)U9Z

NEWSPAPER

ENTERPRISE ASSN.

·

lr

•

PA.

IMansfield I 42• I•
IND.

~
•

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-3

~~
•I Columbus I 43' I

By The Associated Press
More . wet . weather ~an be
expected m Oh10 - especially the
s th
t f h
ou ern par o t e state through Wednesday, forecaste~s
said. Thundentorms are possible m
the southern half of the stale.
Temperatures will be slightly
below nonnal, with highs ranging
from the mid-30s in the nonb to the
50s in the south.
Rain, snow, sleet and hail, along
with thunderstorms, were reported
in pans of north and central ohio
Monday night and early this moining.
Temperatures overnight ranged

fairly widely from the 30s _north
and central to the lower 40s m the
extreme south.
Th
rd h'gb
,
. e reco 1 temperature .or
thts. date at the Colum~us weather
stauon was 74 degrees m 1889. The
record low was 0 in 1900.
Sunset tonight will be at 6:41
p.m. Sunrise on Wednesday will be
at6:38 a.m.
Around lbe nation
A cold front moving out of the
Great Lakes region dropped snow
on parts of the Northeast today. A
storm sysrem brought rain to the
Nonhwest.
Snow fell early today in Pitts-

A stonn system t.hat produced a
tornado Monday near Lubbock,
Texas, and hail elsewhere in the

~~~i~~a~~c~aJ~re~o~~~~s~~

age was reponed.
Fair skies prevailed from sout.hem Arizona through western Texas
and along the southern Atlantic
Coast

Temperatures tpda were
expected to be in the 2ds in the •
tr
th
PI ·
h 30 •
ex eme nor em ams; t e s •
and 40s from the Great Lakes ·
region through New York and into :
th
N E 1 d· h SO ·
sou ern ew ng an. • t e s :
alon~the10northern Pacific
Coast; ·
the s ~ahfom 1 a. and central ;
New Mextco, .the 70s m the South, ,
southern Plams, and from west
Texas throu~h southern Anzona; .
and the 80s 10 s~th-central Texas ·
an~~e UJ&gt; of Flonda.
.
·
. e high temperature tn the :
nauon Monday was 87 at Presidio, •
Texas.

Suit claims welfare cuts unconstitutional
W. VA.

~
Showers T·stonns Rain
Via AHOcisted Press Gr11ph'csNet

01992 Aecu·Weather, Inc.

------Weather-----

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)Advocates for the homele ss say
state leaders won't listen to them,
so they are taking legal action to try
to block cuts in state aid to the
poor.
People who work with the poor
say I hey have tried to convince
lawmakers and the governor that
cutting $100 a month from state
checks to more than 100,000 General Assistance recipients will
mean increases in poverty and
crime.
Their pleas were met with
"opposition or closed ears," said
Jim Cain, associate director of the
Ohio Coalition of the Homeless.

Gov. &lt;;leorgeVoinovichhassaid tance cuts violate the state's constihe understands the problems of tutional obligation to provide safety
General Assistance recipients, but to ctuzens.
doesn't have the money to offer
"It's not like what we're askin~
help.
the coun to do is radical,'' said the
The Ohio Coalition for tbe groups' lawyer, Col Owens. He
Homeless and the Legal Aid Soci- said the state has been assisting the
cties of Cincinnati an4 Dayton fi~ poor for 190 years.
suit Monday in Montgomery Co •
James H. Bu~er, director of the
ty Common Pleas Coun and as
St. Vincent Hotel Shelter in Dayfor a declaration that the Gene
ton, said in an affidavit that the cuts
Assistance cuts are unconstitution- would put more people in the
al.
Streets.
The cuts, which would take
"When the GA cuts go into
effect April I, would affect people effect in April 1992, it is only reawho have been getting aid for six sonable to anticipare that some formonths of the past year.
The suit says General Assis-

South-Central Ohio
Thursday, tain likely south with
Tonight, rain likely. Low near snow possible north. Lows 20s
40. Chance of precipitation is 60 nonh with 30s south. Highs in 40s
percent. Wednesday, occasional to near SO south with mainly 30s
rain and possible thunderstorms. nonh. Friday, cold with a chance of
High in the low 50s. Chance of pre- · snow. Lows in the 20s. Highs in
Continued from page 1
cipitation is near 100 percent
the 30s. Saturday, fair and cold,
except a chance of flurries nonh· Chamber of Commerce Executive to pay old fines as agreed upon.
Extended rorecast:
east. Lows IS-2S. Highs 25-3S.
Thursday throu~h Saturday:
Council also:
Director/Economic Development
· held the second reading on a
Director, introduced herself to
council, and offered her support resolution setting cemetery fees at
and that of the chamber of the vil- Beech Grove Cemetery, with Bill
Young dissenting;
lage's development efforts.
· discussed a possible buzzer
Accompanied
by
Executive
Secconlinued l'rom page 1
security system for City Hall;
retary
Pamela
Newell,
Thacker
said
asked to call Meigs County Blood Program Chairman Brian Reed at
. voted to raise the village
that she planned to visit all village
378-6338 (afrer 6 p.m.), or the ARC at (304) 422-7527.
mileage
allowance from 20 cents to
councils and township trustees in
the county to introduce herself and 25 cents per mile;
- voted to waive their right to a
to offer her assistance.
hearing
on the relocation of the
Thacker
briefly
discu
ssed
the
Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service respondSJale
Liquor
Store to within the Big
county's
recent
effons
to
attract
a
ed to six calls for assistance Monday and early Tuesday morning.
Bend
Foodland;
medium-security
state
prison
to
At 9:19 am. the Pomeroy unit went to Mt. Olive Road for Lovel• agreed to modify the list of
Salem Township.
la Driggs who was transponed to Veterans Memorial Hospital. At
holidays
for village employees to
Thacker
said
that
a
Meigs
Coun12 noon the Pomeroy squad took Goldie Krackonburger from her
include
the
Friday after Thanksgivty delegation was making plans to
home on Scout Camp Road to SL Joseph Hospital in Parkersburg,
ing
and
the
day before or the day
visit the Ohio Depanment of RehaW. Va, and at 1:43 p.m. the Tuppen Plains unit transponed Home
bilitation and Corrections in after Christmas, to be left to the
Delong from 41318 Coolville Road to Camden Clark Hospital in
Columbus
again, stating that fre- discretion of the mayor.
Parkersburg. At 3:31 p.m. the Racine squad transported Vickie
Present were Reed, Wehrung,
quent
visits
by Meigs County offiBoso from Elmwood Terrace Apanments in Racine to Veterans
Blactlnar,
Young and Baronick,
cials
and
citizenry
have
been
effecMemorial.
Councilmen
Scott Dillon and
tive to date.
At 7:39 a.m. Tuesday morning, the Syracuse squad went to
Thomas
Werry
and Clerk Brenda
Thacker also reponed that no
Kingsbury Road for David Reed who was taken to Vererans Memoopposition to the proposal had been Morris.
rial Hospital.
received since the chamber
announced that it was conccntral· ,
ing an its errorts on promoting the
salem Center site.
Mayor Reed commended SARlo meet
Thacker
and the chamber member·
The Ewings Chapter OSSAR
Joseph Guthrie
William Swatzel
shiP.
for
its
efforts.
will
meet March 26 at the Meigs
Joseph W. Guthrie, 77, Route 2,
William Swatzel, Centerville,
'Over
the
past
year,
the
chamCounty
Museum in Pomeroy. DinBethany Ridge Road, Guysville, formerly of Pomeroy, died early
ber
has
taken
great
strides,"
Reed
ncr
is
served
at 6:30 p.m. and busidied early this morning, Tuesday, this morning, Tuesday, March 17,
said.
"Thanks
to
the
efforts
of
the
ness
meeting
begins at 7:30 p.m.
March 17, 1992 al Camden Clark 1992, at St. Leonard's Nursing chamber, Meigs County now has a
Dinner
reservations
must be made
Memorial Hospital in Parkersburg, Home in Cenrerville following an
positive
image
statewide.
Paula
is
a
by Monday.
W.Va., after an extended illness.
extended
illness.
regional
person,
who
knows
the
Dance
planned
. Born in Alfred, be was a son of
Arrangements
will
be area, and who can get things done."
The
Gallia Twirlers We.stern
the late Frank and Luera Story announ~ed by Ewing Funeral
Reed
also
commended
council
Square
Dance Club will hold a
Guthrie. He was a farmer and Home.
for
their
support
of
the
chamber
dance
Saturday
from 8-11 p.m. at
worked at Ohio University for 13
and
its
objectives.
The
village
the
Henderson
Community
Center
years as a groundskeeper. An army Louise Templeton
recently
made
its
second
payment
in
Henderson
,
W.Va.
Webb
Mills
veteran of World War II, he served
Louise Templeton, 85, of Lake to fund the office.
will
be
the.
caller.
The
dance
is
as a corporal in the American and Placid, Fla., died on Thursday,
"All of the other communities in open to all western style square
EAME theaters . He received a March 12, 1992 in Lake Placid fol· Meigs County need to suppon the
dancers.
good conduct medal, a victory lowing an extended illness. .
chamber
like
Pomeroy
has."
DAR to meet
medal and a meritorious unit
She was a retired school teacher
Other business
The Return Jonathan Meigs
award.
in systems in Cabell and Putnam
A bid for ftre equipment submit- Chapter, Daughters of the AmeriCounty, W.Va. She was a former ted by Rick's Fire and Safety in can Revolution, will hold its annual
He is survived by his wife, resident of Hurricane, W.Va. and a Pomeroy was approved last night, chaner day luncheon on Friday at
Blanche 1..ake Guthrie; two sisrers, retired employee of Sears Roebuck contingent upon the approval of 12:30 p.m. at Overbrook Center in
Helen Williams, Middleport, and Company of Huntington.
Fire Chief Danny Zirkle. The bid Middleport. lunch is by reservaSurvtving are one daughter, was the only bid received by the tion only.
Sarah Aliee, Columbus; two brothers, George and Ralph, both of Floy Ann Wolford of Lake Placid; advertised deadline, and is for the
Alfred.
three sisrers: June Doutha~ Tampa, purchase or turnout gear and
Besides his parents he was pre- Fla., Derma Dean Utterback of optional items such as gloves,
ceded in death by one brother, Carl Flemingsburg, Ky.. and Clara Jean boots, and hoods. The bid was subGuthrie and two sisrers, Mabel Ris- France of Middlepon; a brother, mined in the amount of$10,242.
Lyle France of Middleport; a
ley and Eva Babcock.
Plans for a spring clean-up in
Services will be Friday at I p.m. granddaughter, and a great-grand- the village were staned last night,
at White Funeral Home in daughter.
upon the request of Council memServices were held on Monday ber Betty Baronick. Specific
Coolville with Rev . Harold
Alloway-Priddy officiating. Burial at Allen Funeral Home in Hurri- details, such as dates and guidecane, W.Va., with burial in Valley lines will be announced at coun will be m Coolville Cemerery.
Friends may call at the funeral View Memorial Park in Hurricane. cil's ne&lt;t meeting.
Credit Terms
home on Thursday from 2-4 and 7Mayor Reed reported that he
9p.m.
and the Police Depanm~nt had collected over $12,000 in old fines
Frigidaire Two Door
VETERANS MEMORJAL
since January, and that one defenFrost Free
Monday Admissions: Ellen dant had been jailed for his failure
•
Prince, Lakin, W.Va.
The Dally Sentinel
Monday ·Discharges: James Sut·
(liSPS 313·960)
95
5
tle.
Publilhed every af\ernoon, Monday
NOW
thro"'h Friday. Ill Court St. Pomeroy,
HOLZER MEDJCAL CENTER
Ohio by the Ohio Valley PUbllohlnr
Discharges, March 16 • Mrs.
Am Ele Power ................. .31 5/8
Company/Multimedia Inc:., Ponieroy,
Mike
Coy and daughrer, Anthony
Ohio 45769, Ph. 992·3156. s..,.nd •!au ·
Ashland Oil ...................... .30 7/8
poolop poid at PomeTV)'. Ohio.
Daniels, Olive Kemper, Marie
AT&amp;T.. .............................. .38 3/8
Marks, Mary Montgomery, Lauren
Bank One............................47 1/8
Member: The A11odal.ed Pre~a. and the
Ohio Newtpaper Allaoetation, National
Swisher, Mrs. Bedford Wright and
Bob Evans .........................27 1/4
Advertising Repre1entalive , Branham
son.
Charming Shop...................29
Newapaper Sales, 733 Third Avenue,
Binhs, March IS· Mr. and Mrs.
Now York, New York 10017,
City Holding ...................... 19
Gregory Taylor, a daughter, Mt.
Federal Mogul.................... IS 7/8
I'OSTMAB'I'ER S.noladdmo changq to
Alto. Mr. and Mrs. Randy Filkins,
Goodyear T&amp;R ..................62
The Dailr Sentinel, 111 Court St. ,
adaughez, Point Pleasan~ W.Va.
Pomeroy, OHio 45769.
Key Centurion ................... 17 3/4
Binhs, March 16.· Mr. and Mrs.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
Lands End........................ .35 7/8
By CU'I'ier or Motor Route
Gerald Roach, a son, Gallipolis.
Limited Inc....................... 28 1/8
Remote • Cable Ready
One Wetll ............... ............................$1.60
Multimedia Inc.................. 27 3/4
One MIWith .........................................$6.95
95
5
One Year. ................................. - .... .$83.20
Rax Restaurant. .................. ! 5/8
IIINGLE COPY
·plead~
Robbins&amp;Myers ................ I7 1/4
PRICE
,LOOAN, Ohio (AP) - A Shoney's Inc ....:................. 2S 5/8
Da0y................... .............. ............25 Cento
Hocldns County Human Services Star Bank ...........................29 5!8
Sublcrlben 1101 d..trtnc ., poy tho oaniIlCpartment employee 1tu pltPd
Wendy lnt'l........................ l2 3/8
er m~;y remU in advance direct to The
CaUipalia Daily Tribune on a thru, 1ix
guilty to one count of pant! theft.
Wonhington 'Ind................ 25
or I~ moalh baalo. Credit will be &amp;iven
.
Lm
Clark,
29,
an
account
clerk
· Stock reports are the 10:30
carrlor eoc:ll wetll.
for the depanment, signed a bill of a.m. quotes provided by Blunt,
No oubocrlptlona by ,.n permitted In
information Monday in Hocking
Ellis and Loewl or Gallipolis.
areu when home canier nnic:e il
County Common Pleas Coun. That
available.
.means her case wasn '1 referred to a
~~a~•••bo
IaAie OaWa Oo•nb'
aran&lt;ljury.
. ' .
FANTASIA
,
13 weeli ......................................... t21.114
Department DilcciDf Bob Smith
28Woob ..........................................k!.l8
The Ultli!IIM .._.. Rev ..w
112 w..u .......................................... $114. 76
said state auditors had been in the
THURSDAY, MARCH 19
O.tatdo a.w. c-11 ,
·county
for tho . .t month invcsti-~~- .. 1:00 p.m.
tJ w.b .......................................... as.40
8tllllylar---auyen•oyour
,
aatina the dllappcarance of an
H
MS.ao
t\l'fl, l
112 w..u ......................................... .$88.40
undi'sclosed sum from the depan·
ARNIE'S SPORTS LOUNQE
. ..
ment.
'
Gllllpotla Ferry, W. VL

Council...

r--Local briefs...- Units respond to six calls

Hospital news

REFRIGERATOR

•

Stocks

399

MEMOREXVCR

Clark

. . .......,

.

.

guiitf.

NOW. 239

mer GA recipients, in desperation, :
may tum to burglary, robbery drug :
trafficking, prostitution and other
illegal activities in order to obtain :
money to survive," he said.
The suit names state Human '
Services Director Terry Wallace as
the defendant. Human Services
Department spokeswoman Sue·
Moning said the agency was study·
ing the mauer and would commen~
later.
The legislature last year
approved the cuts, which
Voinovich proposed as one way to
help balance the stare's budget

Parades highlight .
St. Patrick~ Day

By PAUL GEITNER
Associated Press Writer
Gay Irish-Americans, barred
from today's St. Patrick 's Day
Parade in New York, worked to
hold their own march. Meanwhile,
the woman mayor of Savannah,
Ga., was snubbed by the all-male
organizers of a post-parade feasL
Elsewhere today, St. Patrick ~s
Day parades were planned in
Kansas City, Mo., and Des Moines,
Iowa . In Massachusetts, Gov.
William Weld planned to atrend a
corned beef luncheon in Lawrence,
about 30 miles nonh of Boston.
New York 's parade - the
nation's largest - was scheduled
to stan at II a.m. Police expected
120,000 marchen, 200 bands and 2
million spectators,
The Iri sh lesbian and Gay

--Meigs announcements--

--Area deaths--

w-.. . .. .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

burgh and Buffalo, and clouds
exrended over the rest of the Northeast and lower Great Lakes
·
It rained in Portland, Ore., and
cloud cover extended over the coast
to southern Oregon.

~-

Good citizenship awards for
area high schools will be vresentcd
along with county fifth and sixth
grade American History Month
essay winners.
Hostesses are Mrs. Arthur Skinncr, Mrs. John T. Cook, Mrs.
Edward Foster, Mrs. Harold Hager,
Mrs. James Werry and Mrs. Gene
Yost.
Trustees to meet
The Scipio Township Trustees
will meet Friday at 7 p.m. at the
Pageville Township Building to
consider bids received on equipment.

Organization planned its own .
march past reviewing stands an
hour before thestaning time.
"We will do something visual
and symbolic," said spokeswoman
Eileen Clancy . "But we're not
planning anything disruptive."
The protest was announced after
U.S. District Judge Pierre Leval on .
Monday refused to order the
Ancient Order of Hibernians to let :
the homose&lt;uals march.
·
The Roman Catholic fraternal ·
group has argued it has the constitutional right of freedom of associ- :
ation to exclude homosexuals. The
homosexuals sued for the righiiQ.
march on the grounds that the :
parade is a public forum.
'
Leval didn 'I address the constitutional issue, ruling instead thai :
the gay group was not entitled to
jump ahead of othen on the parade ·
waiting list.
Monday's ruling set the stage
for a number of city officials - .
including Mayor David Dinkins .....: ·
to boycott the traditional venue fot'
politicians.
·,

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
446 ·4524

" .. "'" ' .. ,

qoon ,, wt '&gt;'

aA~IOA I~ MATIJ(EU So\TUROAY A ~!IUMf .
BAA~IN NICHT TIJ£SDAl .

MARCH 13 thru 11
fRIO"Y

t~ r~ THURS~Y!

ST. PATRICK'S DAY PAITY
Games, Prll11 and FHd
IHAMROCI aatl ROLL
Wllh Randr Smith

TUES., MARCH 17
AT ARNIE'S SPOirS lOUNGE
GollleaHolorn. W.Ve.

FURNITURE &amp;
JEWELRY STORE

106 Nortl! Secolll AvaH
Mlddle~rt, OIIIo 45760

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'

�The Daily Sentinel

Sports

Tuesday, March 17, 1992
Page--4

Indiana hands L.A. Lakers 114-871oss
By The Associated Press
The Indiana Pacers used to be
just another notch in lhe Los Angeles Lakers' schedule, which usually
ended with a 60-victory season or
appearance in the NBA Fmals.
Today, the Lakers are struggling
to make the playoffs and lhe Pacers

are usmg them as a springboard to
stay close in a similar scramble in
the Eastern Conference.
Indiana completed the rrrst 2-0
sweep over the Lakers in its 16year NBA htstory Monday night,
following up a 114-87 victory at
the Forum on Jan. 3 with a 98-85

Scoreboard
NCAA men's
tournament pairings

In the NBA ...
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Ttam
New York

Atlantk DI¥Ldnn
W L PtL

..

39 2S

609

Banm .... ... , 36 29

554

30 36

455
4S3
333
23 1

Philoddphi• .... 30 3l
MiaJnj

•

New Jcney
29 35
WuhingtOn ..... 22 44
Orlando .... ...... IS 50

Ce:nb'al Dhlslon
54 12
118
Cle~eland.---"4l 20
.683
DeumL .... .. , ... 40 26
606
AU.nta ..
31 34
477
lndJlJll
31 36
463
Milwaukee , ... 28 35 .444
... ... 2S 38

397

9l

10

10
18
245

W L
Uuh ... .. ... ... 43 23
S&amp;n Antoruo.
40 25
...36

llouoton

Denver .

30

...21 43
Dallas ...... .. .. .17 48
Minncscu ........ 11 52

22.5
23 5

24 5
27 5

LA. l..&amp;kcn .........34 31

Sacrama\\o ........ .20 45
J. -&lt;:linchcd pb yoff berth

Pel.
652
615

54l

25

Southeast Regional

21

F1rsl round
Thun;day, 1\bnh 19

7

305

708
677
636
554

25
45
10

523
308

12
1h

25.5

m

12

Atl~r~ta,

Midwest Regional
t1nl round
Thursday, March U
Bradlty Ct nlcr
Mllwauket, Wis.
Arhnsu (25·7) vs Murray Su.L.C: (17-

12),12 3l ~m
Memph~

Wednesday's games
Cle.-eland at Bolton; 7:38pm.
[ndana 1t Mi.lm1, 7:30 p m
Orlando at AtlanLI, 7:30pm
Philadelphia at Dewit, 8 p m.
L.A. Qippen at Dallu, 8 30 p m
Sacnmcnto 11 San Antoruo, 8:30pm.

Pottland at LA l...a.km, 10 30 p m
M1nneaota at Golden State, 10 30

In the NHL ...
WALES CONFERENCE

2l9 277

Adanu Dlvlllon
l·M'Mtmal .... , 41 24 8 90 248 181
l ·BOfLOI'I .. . .... 32 29 10 74 237 242
a·BW'hlo . ... 'IJ 3'2 II 6S 252 267

23 36 II l7 21l248
. 16 43 II 43 218 282

CAMPBELL CONFERENCE
N•rll D1vllion
W L T PlL GFGA

T1 23 Jl
Chicago.... .. 31 26 14
St. LouiJ .
32 30 9
Minn..... ...... 30 3l l
Toronto ..... 26 3S 7
,. ,

Smythe Oivb1on
39 21 10
t.oo Ao&amp;d" . . 32 21 11
Edmontm
.. 32 JO 8
Wtnnt.pes; . . . 7:13113
Calgary ...... ... 26 35 10
16 49 5
SanJ.xe ..
a-clinched playoffbenh

,..vancouver

15 285 230
76 228 212
73 246241
6l 219240
59 '2 12 260
88 259210

n 2l9 263

n

258 255
67 211217
62 260277
l7 lSI 30&amp;

Monday's srores
NY . Ranam4,Montreai l

Ha.Uord 4, Calguy 3

Tonlgbt's games
Edmonton at PiiUburJh, 7.35 p m
Quebec It Taront.o,7.35 p m.
St. Louia: at Wuhington, 7 35 p m
Buffalo at Mistneloll, 8 M p m
WIM!pe&amp; at Llll Angeltt, 10 35 p m
DcttoU at San J01e, 10:35 p m.

Wednesday's games
Philadelphia II Montreal,7·35 p m
N.Y. 11\andcn 1t NY Rangcn, 1 3S
p.m.
IIanftlrd at Vancouver, 10:35 p m.

AP Top 25 college

basketball poll
The Top Twenty five tc.ama in The
Auoc ia l~

Prcu 1991 -92 final colle4e
btllkethall poU, with fllll.·place vota m
parcnU.... recorda Woufh March 1.5,
101.11 po~t~tl buod on 25 pcnnta for a ft111.
1'!-ICC V0411hroop arte point tor I 25U'\
j&gt;laoe VGO and lall. week•a ranking~ :

Ttnl

W.L

Loot
Pia. Week

I. !:&gt;Ike (64) •..•••. .•• ••..21-2 1,624
2 Kuwu ...............16-1 1_143
~ Olllo 5&lt;.----lJ.I 1-"1
~ UCl.A •...•.......•.•...25-&lt; 1,3911
l . lndilna ...•....... ..... 23-6 I,266
6
26-6 1.242

Klllulqor-·············
)................U-2

7. UNLV!

l,tl2

1. SouohemC~ ...........23-l 1,164
' ·...............23- 7 1,011
10 AIWIM ................24-6 I ,04!
11 Oklahoma SL ..........:z6.7 9l7
II. Clndoood.---2!-4 Mil
13. Abltomo ........•.......:z3.1 61l
• 14. MidUp&lt; s.. ...........ll-7 6411

I
3

l
I

~

79
10
6
2

11

U
17

tUildllp• ·-············20-1
16. -.n ............. .20-l
• J7. MIIIr I "• ........11-t
', II.NoolltCuollna .......21·9

6:34
!!?

16
14
t3

S33

22

211

• 21). P1ooWa k. -·--··-··20-9

416
471

427

II

_......... 21·9 32l
···--·····..11·1 243

21

. " ·-llall.............21·1
. 21. =

i' ll.

--·--·······21·9 363

:13.
' :14. l)olloul .................. 20-1
; :zu.su ..- . ................,20-9

.:

119
t6t

ll

t'

24
21

--·~~~-·-122.

'' ~ ... N.C. Cllari..,. 63, Bri&amp;hon

: y- 5;1, '' J•'a.~ r.....ErPuo

:IS, 8- 6
~-~-~11
;.~~ILl ,,~-• ,
1J0r J, Oooop.-Todll, Tow

- 42,1!..: ,

•
•

State (20 10) vs Pepper

dine (1A 6), JO mmute.'l after

Georg1a Tec h (.21·11) vs Houston
(25-5), 8 03 p m
Southern Cllifomu (23 5) vs North·
e.ut Lowmna (19 9), 30 mmutes after
Friday, March 20
Unlv. of Dayton Arena
D•yton, Ohio
Michtgan S11tc (2 1·?) vs Sotnhwc.n
Missoun Su.lC (23 7), 12 25 p m.
CuiC!noaii (25·4) vs Del aware (27·
3), 30 mmutes •f\er
Kan~As (26 4) vs Jlowa rd (17 13),

8 Ol pm

GFCA
292 2'I1
293 239
256 222
301 270

Philodelphil. .. 2732 It 65212233

l •Od.roLI

Tulane (21 · 8),

0 lahoma State (26-7) vs Gcorg11
Soulhcm (25- 5), JO muu.1t.es after
Michigan (20 8) vs Temple (1712).
7 35 p m
Anzona (:24 -6) vs [HI Tennessee
State (23- 6), 30 mumlC5 after

New Yori. at Orlando, 7 30 p m
Bmtm 11 Milwaukee. 8:30pm
LA. Oippm at Houston, S 30 p m
Stcramen\0 tt Denver, 9 p m
Dtll.ls 11 PhocruJ., 9 30 p m
Minncaou at Panland, I 0 p m
Cioldt:n State 11 Seattle, I 0 p m

Team

Ga.
d

12 llrm

Tonight's ll;&amp;mes

~-

Coliseum

CJnrlnnatl, Ohio
r-l nrth C1rollna (2 1-?) vs Mum1 ,
Ohio(237),121Spm
Alabam• (25 · 8) vs Su.niord (18 10),
30 mmutes after
Ohio Su.te (23-S) n M1ll1Wippl Va l·
ley Stile (16 13), 7 35 p m
Nebmka (19 9) vs Cormecucut (19
9), 30 mmutcs after

St John' s (19 10)

Chict&amp;D uNew Jcney, 7 30 p m

llortla&lt;d

Rl~(!rfrolll

Friday, March 20
The Omni

Monday's scores

Patrick Dlvition
W L T Pts.
~t·N.Y Rangers 45 23 4 94
J.-Wuhlnpn ... 40 24 1 37
New Jersey ....... 34 26 10 78
Pi&lt;llburJh ·····-·· l3 29 8 74
N.Y. bbnd&lt;n ... 30 33 8 68

io' rl41a), Much 20
The Centrum
Worc£Sicr, Mass.
Kcnlud:;y (26 6) \ '5. Old Dominion
(1.5 14), 12 35 p m
N C Charlotte (23·8) vs Iowa State
(20- 12), 30 mmu~ after
Massaehusens (28 4) vs Ford ham
Syncuse (21 9) vs Princeton (22-5),
30 mmu tes a ftcr

32H
262
175

Tum

Tcus (23· 11 ) vs Iowa (18-10), 30

mmutes 1fter

GB

Cleveland 111, Wuhlnatonl02
OUcaso 116. Miam1 100
Atlanta 89, Detroit 11
lndWu 98, LA Lakos 85
Chulottc 117, San AnlOtuO 112

pm

N.C.

(1812),740 pm

Ptclfk Division

""""""
..46 19
GoldenSt.au: ....... 42 lO
Phoenix .... ......42 2A
Suttle ....
. .36 29
LA ruppen .. :34 31

G r~ru:boro,

Seton Hall (21 ·8 ) vs La Salle (20·
10), 12 25 pm.
M1 uoun (20-8) vs West V1rginta
(21).11), 30 minUte.'! after
Duke (28 -2) vs Campbell (19·11),

740 pm.
9.5
14

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Team

Firs! round
Thursday, March 19
Gretruboro Coliseum

35

1-ChiCigtl

Owlon.c

East Regional

GB

462

'

•• 7 _,..4,Doll_!,_3,
': ~ ')leailo k. 1,1. T - - St. 2.
•, IL 2, _ , Ollio 2.
'IL l.

w..,...,..

Ennmllc (24·5) vs Tens El Pu o

(2S 6), 30 rrunutcs after

West Regional
•ln l round
Thursday, Marth 19
Unlwenlly Pavilion
Dolse,ldahD
Georgetown (21 ·9) VI Soulh nonda

(t99).245pm

FI Dnd a Sute (20-9) vs Monlllna ('ll·
3), 30 mmu\CI af\cr
Louts!ana Sta le (20-9) vs DnghJm
Youn8 (25·6), 8 I 0 p m
lnduna (23 -6) .,., East em ll h nms
(17 13), 30 mmutes aflcr
Friday, March 20
Unlvcnlty Actlvlly Ctntn
Tcm~, Ariz.
DePaul (20·8) vs. New Meuco St..1te
(23·7),24S pm.
Oklahoma (21 ·8) vs Southwestern
l.nullian1 (20-10), 30 rrunutes alter
Louimlle {18 10) vs Wake Forest
(17-1 1),8 10pm
UCLA (254) vs Raben Moms {19
II). 30 rtW1\rtet al\er

Transactions

wm at Market Square Arena.
Reggie Miller scored 24 points
and Detlef Schremp[ had 21 points
and 12 rebounds for lndtana, which
has won just seven of 38 games
against !he Lakers.
In other NBA games, it was
Cleveland Ill , Washington 102;
Chicago 116, Miami 100; Atlanta
89, Detrmt 77; and Charlotte 117,
San Antonio 112.
The Lakers have struggled without Magic Johnson, who retired
after testing positive for the AIDS
vtrus. Veteran forward James Worthy is on the mjured list with a
strained left knee.
Despite the loss, the Lakers finished 3-2 on therr eastern road trip.
Reserve Vlade Divac led Los
Angeles with a season-high 23
points and a career-high six steals.
Indiana led 56-43 at halftime
before the Lakers opened the third
quarter with a 15-8 burst to pull to
64-58 with 5:5lleft.
The Pacers then regamcd con·
trol by sconng 14 straight points,
including six by M•llcr, for a 20·
po10t lead, their largest of the
game.
Divac carried the Lakers m the
fourth penod w1th 12 points, but
they never got closer than 12.
Hornets 117, Spurs 112
Charlotte, trying to scramble
into the tight Eastern Conference
playoff race, won for the eighth
time in 10 games and snapped San
Antonio's 10-game home winning
streak.
Larry Johnson scored 27 points,
Tyrone Bogues 22 and Kendall Gill
20 for the Hornets, who led 80·56
in the third quarter, but had to fend
off a fourth-quarter rally by the
Spurs.
San Antonio closed to 106-103
with 2.20 left before Charlotte held
on for Its eighth VICtory m 32 road
games.
Bulls 116, Heat 100
Michael Jordan had 37 points
and 13 assists as Chicago won at
Miami for its sixth straight victory.
The Bulls led 96-81 before two
baskets by Willie Burton, a three-

Duke finishes season
as wire-to-wire No. I

By JIM O'CONNELL
AP Basketball Wriler
There was only one answer all
season to the oft-asked "Who's
No. !?"
Duke became the second team
in as many years to run the season
as the top-ranked team when the
Blue Devils remained atop the
rankmgs m Monday's final poll.
Now Duke has to hope that what
happened to UNL V, which was a
wire-to-wire No. 1 last season,
doesn't happen to 11. UNLV lost in
the nauonal semifinals - to Duke,
which went on to beat Kansas for
the t1tle.
The Blue Devils (28-2) rece1ved
64 of the 65 first-place votes cast
by the nationwide panel of wnters
and broadcasters and I,624 pomts
to easily outdistance Kansas (26-4),
which had 1,543. The next two
teams were also No. 1 seeds for lhe
upcoming NCAA tournamentOhio State (23-5) and UCLA (254).

Baseball
American League
CLEVELAND INDIANS- Sen t
Tcrr) Clark, Victor Garcu and Greg
Roscoe, p1tchcn, Ron Jones, ou tfielder:
Luu Lopez, 1nf1elder; Kelly St1nnett,
cau:her to mtnor lc•guc ca mp for rcu·
stgnrnent.Scrn Jerry DiPoto, Tom Knmc!r
1nd Jeff Mutu, patchen, Lee Tutalcy, out·
fielder lo Colondo Spnngs of the Pacific
Cout League. Placed Fred Tolivet, JHtch·
cr, Cll1 Wllvet'l for lhe putpo~e of granuna
his unconditional rdcasc.
OAKLAND ATHLETICS - Sent
Tod d V1n Poppe!, Regae Hams, John
Bmcoe. 1nd O.vtd Zancanaro, ptlchcn,
Gus Polidor tnd Brent Gate~~, inficlden;
Ene Helfand tnd Kurt Brown, catchcn, lO
thw minor lc.apc camp !or rcullgnment.

TEXAS RANGERS - S•J"'d Soevo

Balbol'li, (ml bueman, to a mtnOr-lcaguc
con11'let.lnvtt.cd Glenn Wilsm, outfielder,
to their nunor lu~e camp
National Leaaue
CHICAGO CUBS - Sent Elv1n
Paulino, faut bueman, 10 Iowa of lhe
American A110t11Uon and Pedro Cut.el·
la no, third baKJJ\In, to Chulott.e of the
Soo&lt;hom !.ape.

CINCINNATI REDS - Son&lt;

Bobby

AyW, TmDr Hof'f'man, Tun Push, Jason
Sa~R, R011 Powell and Tun Dru.nunuld,
patehen, OleM Sutko tnd Joe Szekely,
catchen, Jeff Branaon, Bnan Lane, Gary
Citro~ and Ruu Morman, infieldcn; Cellf Hormndcz, Oeronimo Bcnoa, Ntck
Ca~ra, and Jeff Sth11lz, out.ficldcn, to
\heirminor·l~ocamp for rcut~L
Plaocd Boh Geren, eatc:her, on wuvcn for
lhe pwpo10 of &amp;nllina hia uncand.itional

......

HOUSTON ASTROS - Opt1oned
Tony Ewebio, catcht1, to Jackson ol the
Tout Leasuo. Smt Mickey Brantley and
Joo Mikuli.k , Dlltrielden; Seolt
Makmw1e:r. and 1ohn Mauardli, catch·
en, aod Dave Ric:huda, pilChtr; to Lhcu
mh&lt;or_!oa.JI'O ""'P for u"'!"' ...·

PmSBUROH PIRATES - Soot
Joto TolCiltino and Joe RedfJdd. infield·
en; Keith Nillor, outfielder, to their mi·
.........e ....
SAN fRANCSCO OIANrS - S..U
Don Ao....., 1olmay Ani, l'lol McCld·
ltn, Rudy Vere•, and ltafao.l Novoa,

pf"'-"''

pitch&amp;n; Mark Bailey, ellchcr; Andre~
S1nW11,
1nd 5~ H01e' and
Ttd Wood, oulfieldor, to lht1r minor

in&amp;ld•,

leap camp for n~UtiFnatL
F~tbaU

I I - Foolbaii!M&amp;uo
MINNliSOTA VJKIIIGS - Apood
&lt;o _ , okll R,.. C..IJ, ,.,.., bock.
IIEW YOU JETS"- Slanod Rob
c~. wick ~vc:r.

Indiana was fifth and was followed by Kentucky, UNLV, Southem Cal, Arkansas and Arizona.
UNL V (26-2), which received
the other first·place vote, is the
only member of tlie fmal poll not
participating in the NCAA tournament. The Runnin' Rebels were
banned from postseason this season
by sancuons agreed to as settlement for the 12-year battle between
resigned coach 1erry Tarkanian and
the NCAA.
Oklahoma State led the Second
Ten and was followed by Cincinnati, Alabama, Michigan State,
Michigan, Missouri, Massachusetts, North Carolina, Seton
Hall and Aorida State.
The final five were Syracuse,
Georgetown, Oklahoma, DePaul
and LSU.
St. John's, which had been 25111,
was the only team to drop from the
rankings. The Redmen, who were
eliminated in the Big East semifinals, were replaced by the conference champion, Syracuse.
Arizona had the week's biggest
drop as the Wildcats plunged from

Jtoiolo,......

EACKLES DRIVES- Washington's Ledell Eackles (21) drives
to the hoop in front of Cleveland center John (Hot Rod) Williams
during the second quarter of Monday night's NBA game al Landover, Md., which the Cavaliers won 111-102. (AP)

0 'Neal, Laettner,
Jackson among repeat
All- America honorees

By JIM O'CONNELL
AP Basketball Writer
Shaqmlle O'Neal of LSU wasn't
second to e1ghth after closing the a surpnse on The Associated Press
season wilh a lost weekend in Cali- All· America team since he was on
fornia, losing to UCLA and Soulh- u last season.
emCal.
Duke's Chnstian Laettner, the
Massachusetts, which decisively only unanimou s se lection, and
won the Atlantic-10 tournament Ohio State's Jimmy Jackson both
last week, made the biggest leap, made the Jump from last year's secmovmg from 22nd to 17th.
team, so there was no shock
Forty teams were ranked at ond
there.
some point in the season and 12
Alonzo Mournmg of Georgestayed in the poll from preseason to town had been a second -team
final voting. Only St. John's among selection as a sophomore two years
the preseason Top Ten (No. 10) ago before an injury set him back
didn't make the last poll.
last season, so h1s presence when
The highest-ranked teams in the the team was announced Monday
final poll which weren't m the pre- was no upscL
season Top 25 were No. 7 UNL V
Then there's Harold Miner, the
and No. 8 Southern Cal.
guard from Southern Cal who is
Even though Duke, wh1ch was a known as much for hi s resem unanimous No. 1 five times in the blance to Michael Jordan and his
18 voungs, dominated the top spot, superstitious on-court antics as he
six different teams held the runner- is for his remarkable talent.
up position throughout the season
The 6-fool-5 junior ha s the
- Indiana, Arkansas, UCLA, Ari- highest scoring average among the
zona, Oklahoma State and Kansas.
five first-learners - 26.7- and
The Big East and Big Eight ued few can claim the number of oohs,
among the conferences for brag- · aahs and opened mouths Miner can
ging rights as each has six teams after one of his performances.
ranked at some pomt during the
"This honor is consistent with
season. Seton Hall, St. John's, his performance all year. He's done
Connecticut, Georgetown, Pitts- so much for th1s program," Southburgh and Syracuse were chosen ern Cal coach George Raveling
from the Big East, while the Big said.
Eight was represented by Kansas,
The Trojans have returned to the
Oklahoma State, Oklahoma, Mis- Top Ten, let alone the rankings,
souri, Iowa State and Nebraska.
and with Miner ¥iving clinics on
slick ball-handling, off-balance
Sports shorts
jumpers and crowd charisma, they
KEY BISCAYNE, Aa. (AP) have become a No. 2 seed in the
Qualifier Robbie Weiss upset sec- NCAA tournament.
ond-seeded Stefan Edberg 6-3, 3-6,
O'Neal, the 43rd player to
6-4 and John McEnroe beat fifth- repeat as an All-American, and
seeded Goran Ivanisevic 5-7, 7-5, Jackson are also juniors, while
7-5 in the lhird round of the Inter- Laettner and Mourning are seniors.
national Players Championships,
Maryland guard Walt Williams
In other third-round matches, led the second team and was joined
top-seeded Jim Courier led Andres
Gomez 6-4, 6-7 (6-&amp;) 4-3 when
Gomez retired with an anlde injury
and fourth-seeded Pete Sampras
defealed Jimmy Connors 6-3,6-2.
In women's third-round matches, lop-seeded Monica Seles beat
Larisa Savchenko-Neiland 6-0, 6-4
and second-seeded Steff! Graf·
defeated Raffaella Reggi-Concato
6-2,6-2.

OF THE WEEK

...

WHAT KINDS 'Of RICOIDS SHOUlD I
KEEP lOR EASY fU RETURN
PIEPARAnON?

, ....,

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of ,,.. ~~- (IOH~

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114 ......... ,., .......

CARPENIERS'
·LOCAL UNION 650
100 YEARS IN PO.MEROY
MARCH.16
1892-1992
Wish You Many More.
HENRY C. PEERY
B•ss Repre~t~talht
1954-1979, .....

.

SAN PRANCISCO 49ERS - Nomed
Mike Solui tiaJ&lt;t •do ..,ell ""' olfen·

•iveliniiiUtanL

..:::: ...... ,_.,"' ., ....,

........ ol ,.,:-, ..... - ...
$500 ...... I 1st illl ... iWII. . .L
•lhtrl ......

IHWJW~

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---- - -·-.....,..----

o.,....,tlu~-

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loop Jl!ll' 111 r««&lt;t for 11 !on:
P.IR ~ '!"' ............

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Uso 1 TUSAYiliiYQOP 11 o U.IKOlD ............III•J NU W ....
'" .. - · ~ ............ olllorlofnotloo ...... ,.,.., ....... 'flo . . . .
wool to ... • ol,.. ~·Ill I I • lllp!IIOIIw
Do JW ~" ~soWot lilw 1M lu Iowa illocl yw I'Wil Cll r-loail.lW

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H&amp;R BLOCK

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in the backcourt by Missouri's
Anthony Peeler. The frontcourt
was Byron Houston of Oklahoma
State, Don MacLean of UCLA and
Adam Keefe of Stanford.
Arkansas teammates Todd Day,
a forward, and Lee Mayberry, a
guard, highlighted the third team.
They were JOined by Duke guard
Bobby Hurley and forwards Malik
Sealy of St. John's and Calbert
Cheaney of Indiana. Day was a
second-team pick last season and
Cheaney was on lhe th1rd team.
O'Neal averaged 23.6 points,
was the nation's second-leading
rcboundcr (14.1) and Ued for the
top spot in blocked shots with
Mourning (5.0). H1s appearance as
a sophomore last season followed
the consecutive years of Tigers.
guard Chris Jackson as a first-team
selection. The 7-2 O'Neal was four
votes shy of being unanimous.
Lacttncr has been to the Final
Four each of his lhrce seasons and
was named tournament MVP when
the Blue Devils won the title last
season.
The 6-11 Laettner, who was
named to the first team on all 63
ballots cast by the nationwide panel
of writers and broadcasters which
votes for the weekly rankmgs,
averaged 21.9 points and 7.9
rebounds for the Blue Devils, the
wire-to-wire No. 1 team this season. His game has been augmented
of late with a new weapon -the 3pointer. Laelbter has made 47 of 82
attempts, 57 percent.
Jackson, a 6-6 swingman, averaged 23 points, 6.8 rebounds and
4.1 assists per game while shooting
45 percent from 3-poinl range.
Mourning, 6-10, averaged 21.5
points and 11 reboonds ond was the
only player above the sophomore
class on the Hoyas' roster.

IIJII!II.

PmSBUROH STEELBRS Duval Lon, auard, and Mark

Si~

pointer by Steve Smith and a threepoint play by Rony Seikaly closed
the Heat within five with 6: 17 left
m lhe game.
Then Jordan hit a 17-footer,
passed to B.J. Armstrong for a
three-point basket and scored on a
dunk to rebuild the margin to 10391 at the 3:53 mark.
After three Miami baskets, Jordan sandwiched a dunk and two
free throws around a jumper by
John Paxson , giving Chicago a
109-97 advantage with 1:31
remaining.
Hawks 89, Pistons 77
At Auburn Hills, Mich., backup
forward Duane Ferrell scored 22
pomts as Atlanta snapped Detroit's
seven-game winning streak and
ended the Pistons' nine-game winning streak against the Hawks.
The Hawks, who won their second straight after breaking a sevengame losing streak Saturday night,
led 55-39 at halftime and increased
the margin to 62-42 early in the
thrrd quarter.
Detroit closed within 10 points
w1th a 12-2 burst, but Atlanta
responded with stx consccut1ve
points and led 73-59 after three.
The Pistons, who got 13 points
from John Salley and 17 rebounds
from Dennis Rodman, narrowed
the gap to 87-77 wilh 3:10 left, but
got no closer.
Cavaliers 111, Bullets 102
John Battle scored 12 points in
the fourth quarter as Cleveland
won at Washington despite losing
center Brad Daugherty to a stomach VJrus.
Daugherty, the Cavaliers' leading scorer and rebounder, left the
game late in the rlfSt half and finished with three points, ending his
string of 169 consccuhve games in
double figures.
The Bullets took an 84-80 lead
into lhe fourth quarter, but Bailie
opened the period with three
straight baskets and John Williams
followed with a three-point play.
Danny Ferry then capped the 11-0
run, making it 91-84 with 9:20 left.

·--"----.----- ·--

'"!"'!'·

•

992-6674

,

Tunc:l"y, March 17, 1992

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel-Page-S

Meigs athletes receive awards
at winter sports banquet
The annual winter sports banquet was held on Monday night in
the Meigs High School cafeteria.
The event was sponsored by the
. Meigs High School Athletic boosters. The master of ceremonies for
the evening was booster president
Jim Soulsby, and school board
president Bob Barton gave the
mvocation and the benediction.
WresUing coach Jim Sheets presented awards to his wrestling team
that finished with a 31 ·43 dual
meet record. Team members
include Phillip Edmonds, Brent
Smith, Jerod Cook, Adam Sheets,
Pat Young, Matt Gatrell, Chris
Swanson, David Swanson, Joe
McElroy, Scott Barton, Dennis
Edminston, Bill Anderson, Paul
Sharp and Jason George.
Cheerleader advisor Kathy
Doidge introduced members of the
cheerleading squads.
Freshman cheerleaders included
Misty Birchfield, Janna Dailey,
Kelly Grueser, Rebecca Meier,
Crystal Vaughan and Amanda
Well. Special awards went to Jana
Dailey for most improved and
Kelly Grueser for the best allaround.
Reserve cheerleaders include
Cassie Hubbard, Dawn Hockman,
Tracy Fife, Crystal Donohue and
Melissa Pooler. Special awards
went to Pooler for the most
improved and Fife for the best allaround.
Varsity cheerleader awards went
to Abby Blake, Kelly Doidge,
Michelle Young, Lorena Young,
Megan Bartels, Kyla Sellers,
Danielle Crow and Danielle Gray.
Best all-around awards went to
Blake and Michelle Young, while
the congeniality award went to
Donohue,
Freshman basketball coach
Gene Wise introduced members off
his team that finished with a 11-7

mark . Team members include
Adam Krawsczyn, Benny Ewing,
Reggie Prat~ Frank Dickens, Ryan
Dodson, J?avid Fetty, Jarrod
Folmer, Travis Grate, Dean Hankla, Adam Hendrix, Jered Hill,
Todd Mitch, Brett Newsome and
manager Tyler Wolfe.
Reserve basketball coach Rick
Edwards introduced members of
his Tri-Valley Conference champion reserve team. The team finished
with a 17-3 record and had a 17game winning streak. Team members include Aaron Drummer, Jim
Pullins, Heath Hudson, Jerrod Douglas, Eric Wagner, Jeremy Grimm,
Jack Stanley, Kyle Simpson, Chris
Knight, Brad Anderson and Jared
Stewart
Members of the Marauder boys
varsity basketball team was introduced by head coach Phil Harrison.
Team members included Frank
Blake, John Bentley, Phil Hovatter,
Todd Dill, Carlton Drummer, L.J.
Mitch, Jay Cremeans, Shawn Hawley, Trevor Harrison, Booby Johnson and manager Chris Neal. Th1s
year's team finished with a 12-9
record and 10-6 in the TVC, with
six of those losses coming by a
total of 15 points.
Special awards went to Trevor
Harrison for leading free throw
shooter and scorer, and Blake for
defensive award. Mitch and Harrison were named to the coaches'
District .l3 honorable-mention
team. Harrison was named to second team all-Southeast District by
the AP, while John Bentley was
named honorable mention. Bentley
and Harrison were named first
team all-TVC.
Girls reserve coach Beth
Schneider introduced members of
her TVC champion team that fintshed with a 13-1 mark . Team
members include Amber Blackwell, Billie Butcher, Bobbie Butch-

er, Melissa Clifford, Vanessa
Compston, Mindy Findley, Ginger
Holcomb, Heather Hudson, Joy
O'Brien, Erica Robie, Danielle
Scott and Jaclyn Swartz.
The TVC champion girls varsity
team was introduced by head coach
Ron Logan. Team members
include Tricia Baer, Mary Cremeans, Kim Hanning, Verna
Compston, Ginger Findley, Lori
Kelly, Reva Mullen, Missy Sisson,
Katarina Turner, and Lee Henderson. The team fmished with a 19-2
record. Special awards went to Tricia Baer (leading rebounder and
offensive award}, Vema Compston
(leading free throw percentage),
Reva Mullen (most assists and
defensive award), Kim Hanning
(coaches award) and Lori Kelly
(most improved). Senior awards
went to Cremeans, Baer and Hanning.
Other awards went to Baer (allTVC, second team AP all-Southeast District and District 13 coaches all-star team), Hanning (aiiTVC, and honorable mention District 13 coaches all-star team),
Mullen (honorable mention AP allSoutheast District and District 13
coaches all-star team) and Compston (honorable mention aii-TVC
and District 13 coaches all-star
team).
Soulsby then presented Logan
with the Tri-Valley Conference's
Coach of the Year Award, and
Baer and Hanning presented the
school with the TVC championship
trophy.
Assistant basketball coach Rick
Ash presented awards to the allTVC academic team. Team members include Frank Blake (boys
basketball), Joe McElroy
(wrestling), Baer, Kelly and Turner
(girls basketball) and Michelle
Young, DOidge, Oiler and Crow
(cheerleaders).

GIRLS BASKETBALL HONOREES These five members of the TVC girls baketball
champion Marauders were presented awards
during Monday night's sports banquet at Meigs
High Scbool. In front are (L-R) Kim Hanning
(aii-TVC, honorable-mention Districl13 coacbes
all-star team and coaches award), Tricia Baer
(aii-TVC, second-team AP all-Southeast District,

all-District 13 coaches all-star team, rebouading
and offensive awards) and Reva Mullen (honorable mention AP all-Southeast District, assist
and defensive awards). Rebind them are Vema
Compston (honorable mention all-TVC, all-District 13 coaches all-star team and Free tbrow
awards) and Lori Kelly (most improved).

BOYS BASKETBALL HONOREES These three young men received awards from
Meigs boys head basketball coach Phil Harrison
at Monday evening's win:er sports banquet at
Meigs High School. From left to right ~re John

Beniley (aii-Tri-Valley Conference and honor,
able mention aii-Dislrict 13), Trevor Harrison
(aii-TVC, second team all district, leading Free
throw percentage and leading scorer) and Frank
Dlake (defensive award).

District 13 all-star doubleheader
slated for Sunday at Rio Grande
The annual District 13 Coaches
All-Star senior basketball games
between Division I and II boys and
girls and Division III and IV boys
and girls will be held Sunday.
MtuCh 22, at the University of R1o
Grande's Lync Center.
Activities will begin at I :45
p.m. with the girls three-point
shooting contest. The girls game
begins at 2 p.m . Coach for the
Division I girls will be Ralph Taylor, Logan, who was the coaches'
choioc for district coach of the year
in lhat division. North Gallia's
David Moore, the Division IV
coach of the year, will head the IV
squad.
The Division I squad will be led
by Logan's All-American Katie
Smith, who has guided the Chieftain ladies into the state tournament
finals for the second straight year.

Gallia and Meigs senior players to
participate are Dena Greene and
Tandra Adams, Gallipolis; Tricta
Baer and Kim Hanning, Meigs.
Gallia and Meigs senior representatives on the Division lii-IV
team arc Angie Bush, Kyger Creek;
Renee Hale, Southwestern; Tina
Myers, North Gallia; and Tammy
Thomas, Hannan Trace. This squad
will be led by Jeni Pierson, Federal
Hocking's Division IV Southeast
District player of the year.
The boys slam dunk contest will
be held during halftime of the girls
game.
Tipoff time for the boys game is
4 p.m. Senior representatives from
Gallia and Meigs counties on the
Division I-11 squad are Scott Jividen, Gallipolis and L.J. Mitch,
Meigs. The Division 1-11 squad will
be coached by Blue Devil head
coach Jim Osborne, the district

coach of the year. This squad will
be led by Fairland's Nathan Hughes, the Division II player of the
year.
Gallia and Meigs senior representatives for the Division 111-!V
squads are Roy Lee Bailey and
Jeremy Roush, Southern; Chad
Swain and Brian Unroe, Hannan
Trace; Marc Villanueva and Phil
Bradbury, Kyger Creek; and Darin
Smith, North Gallia. This squad
will be led by Chesapeake's Rick
Edwards, the Division III player of
the year.
The Division III-IV coach will
be Chesapeake's Norm Persin.
During halftime ceremonies of
the boys game, T-shirts will be presented to all senior participants.
Admission per person will be
$3. Tickets will be available at the
gate.

Logan's Smith heads Division I
girls all-state basketball team
By RUSTY MIL,LER
AP Sports Writer
COLUMBUS Ohio (AP) Katl·e Sml'th , wh' 0 scored 30 •2
points per game while lej~ding Logan to the state tournament ' is the
player of the year on the 1991-92
Associated
Press girls All-Ohio Di..
vmon I basketball team released
Monday.
Smith a 5-fool·ll senior who
has sign~d to play at Ohio State,
shot 57 percent from lhe field and
80 percent at the line for Logan
(24-2}, which plays Vandalia Butler ~t 4 p.m. Thursday in a state
semtfmal.
The coach of the year, based on
recommendations from a state panel of spof!S w~ters an~ b~casters, Wl!S Stdney s Maggl.Wtlliams.
Smtth started her h1gh school
career as a center, but .moved .to
forward last year and thts year has
been a shooting guard· Shealsoav•
el)tges seven rebounds and 7.2 asSistsrcr game
All
· h. d
S c was a t If -team
Ohioan as a freshman and was
named fmt-tearn the past two years
in Division II before Logan movllQ
· • ·
up m SIZC.
· Joining her on Jhe fiTS! team are
MtuCie Alberts of Wooster, Kelly
,.
f B
. k A h
rergus o runsw1c , m erst
Steele's Sheri Horvath Lisa
Howard of Reynoldsburg, Dayton
:Ounbar's Alina Harris and Carey
P,oorofCetina.
.
" Poor scored 19.5 pomts a game
t!ltleis year and led CeHarrili~ toaddedlheswe
7•9
U ORe year lgO.
S
rebounds and 5 steals a gti!I!C to so
with her 20 3 points ner C:ontes1
• •
~
•
Howard hn for 18.7 po:nts a game,
while Horvlllh had averages of 24
pPints. 13.5 rebounds, 4 assists and
4isteals per game.
.
Fergus, 1 Jhird-team Ali-Ohto
choice last year scated 22 6 points
and added 16 .:0b0unds, (; bloc:ks ·
and 4 aceals 1 aame. She also is
headed for Ohio s~. Alberts, the
lone junior on the ouot team, scored
18.2 poinb a game while lcadins
WQOIUI' to its scccnd snight 20-0
reautar-eeuonreconl.
• WUIWIIa wu named coach of

thhe Y.ear fodedrgoing 15-5 witfrh a team
t at me1u . IWO starters om 1ast
year and wtth no one taller than 57.
•
The . sefond team Jncluded
s RaShaunda
Horton,
JZanesvtlle
W J .
f V d 1'
enny enc ew1cz o an a 1aButler,
of
c·.mcmnall
. Tricia
. Moth erPenderghast
fM
N
o ercy. adme Moschella of Youngstown
Boardman, Amy Yurik of Garfield
Heights Trinity Bl!d Ki.m Van Kannel ~f poll. champ10n Pickenn!Jton:
Ptckenngton m~ts Tnmty m
the other state semifmal Thursday
at St. Jo~n Arena.
.
Here. s t!Je 1991-92 .As~oclated
Press DmstOn I AII-Oh•o guls basketball team, selected on the rccommend~uons of a state pan~l of
sports wnters and broadcasters.
Fino ,,.,., f.~~~~~ Lo ••·. Hooo·ll.
s.,..;.., 30 2 poinu po• 1am•: ~..,., Albort•,
w-... l·l, 1•., 18.2: KoUr f"JJ". oru.....ck.
22 6 5
6-J,S•.,
.....ReynoldJbu,.,
m.Amhcn&lt;S&lt;eo~e,6-l,
s•.. 24.0, u..' ""'n
How•nl,
l·7, s...
18 7: Auna Ha'!'J.
n... t.o•• l·8, s•.• 211.3:
c...y!'oM, Celina, 6- 'S•.,l9.!.
Stmnd team: RaSbaunda Horton, Zanclville.
S·I,S•.. 22.1:1cm1 w.,clowioo,v.,d•li•·B•tl",
l-7, 1•·· 2LO: Trici• Pondorat&lt;u&lt;, c'"' 1"""'

o.o.s;

~~..:,!:':·i.;!:.t~;~,';~tt,~4~;

Yorik, Guflotd Heiot&gt;u TrW&lt;y. l·7. s•.. 17.5:
Kim v.. Kannel, Pickorinpn, l-1. Sr, 10.4.

Third, ..... o.. nna Kreide!, Sylvania

NMhvi•w, s-u 112. s•.. 16.9: t..&lt;rioelohn•on,
Cotombuo lnd~~.., s.s, s.., 22•6• Moouca
8"'""'• Lonm Sww, 6-0, S•., 19.1: 1oMif"

s.s,

Flood, Younp...,. Witaon,
s,, 117: Tony•
Kuk, Cincinoaol Aikm, 6· 1• s, · 20 l : sonya

~=-~-: ti~:-s:.:l9s{, 21 '6' Tamny
rta... ai ... ,...Koaos..llll,t.opn.

c.f~";~1'::'t::",.._'Y·
Anno o.ualhor, Toledo So. Uraula; Amy

:;~~b:i ~,:;;::;t;::i\'!::

ool, Balllob NoM; loU Sh•w, M"'&lt;or. t.aun
...... Con&lt;on McKinloy: Connie two ..., Cuya·
=~: Showna O.oih"'7· Madouo: 1•li•
, o,nu...... h!ai Tammil seau. t..ancaur;
Nolllla Cooper, L•l••• B•••d• t..mb, New
Mondf Nut~ ood&lt;r:;:

=

~ld~ 11

· Midi.U. ...

Honorable mention
lllcbolo M:Paddoll. Aoblood: Tnci .........
o.~~~noo: 1ona ARh, Bowlloa.o-: Amy Kopc=zt~~·: 8.:0~ 1 Ca&lt;bollo: Shaunda
o~ Battanl, Picbrlnl""'' a.a.toao

..

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· Aayilok.-.. v ~~~~~:'li~
o-a; A-loiN*. Outt.WHcllh• TrWtr;
Calionbul

Amr•;:~a;r:::,tu: ·r,_.ll'~

NGII!I:

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r,::'w:~"'~~· Lodi Clomloar, Suoh wu.
S&lt;of•ru• w~"'·

Mu•illoo hoboo; M•s••

Willi.,., Wamnllowland: c..., B""''"'· At·
!Janet; K.ueyFenton, Younplown Boardman;
Dataha P.a*rton, Akron Ccn\RI·Howcr; Debb1c

McKinnoy.AUonHorth.
.
R'Y ,r'.'.'Y
~·sbncaw
_!"'_r
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N,
Si&amp;norin•.
lnu 8 u".c:ya; uun 1 unnacn, ew ~adel·
phw:lolliJonr......,Euouv..,..a;
Kim Doorin• New Carlialot"""""': Mono·
na Dillard, Da,ton Dunbu; Valene Ocorgc,
Cmcmn•u Ail&lt;"': a... MonUn1.wr, c..,...,,.
Moun&lt; Hoahhr: Lori Penrod, Vandali•·Butlor. Iu·
li•Reel, Tmy.

Sports shorts

BasebaU
SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. (AP) _
California Angels pitcher Matt
Keough underwent emergency
brain surgery and was in critical
condition after being hit in the head
by a foul ball during an exhibition
game.
''The doctors have given the
A~gels no ~cason to bel~eve ,t!t&amp;t the
mJury IS hfe-threatemng, team
spokesman Tim Mead said. "He is
· tn
· mtenstve
·
· care an d tes ts
resung
have been scheduled ~or tomorrow."
Keough, 36, underwent a craniotomy al Scottsdale Memorial
Hospital to relieve pressure caused
by a blood clot on the bmin.
Dr. Gordon Deen performed the
surgery after a brain scan revealed
an epidural hematoma, a blood clot
or pool of blood inside the skull.
The initial repon immediately after
the game belween Californta and
San Francisco said Keough
appeared to be recovering, but
complications developed. Keough
is to undergo further brain scans
today.

ALL-ACADEMIC HONOREES - Meigs
athletes named to the all-TVC academic team
are (front row, L·R) Lorena Oiler, Danielle

BoxiD{
NEW YORK ( P)
WBC
super welterweight champion Terry
Norris will fight WBA wellerweight champ Meldrict Taylor for
Norris' crown on May 9 at the
Mirage in LIS Vegas. Taylor, 29-1I wiih 15 knockouts, is seeking his
Jhird world title in three different
weight classes. Norril. 31-3 with
17linockouts, won the WBC crown
with a rn1-round knockout or John
"The Beast" Mugabi in March
1990 and has has successfully
defended it six times.

v
·--~~~--------------

~-

--- ... --'

---- -- -·.......-

Cro.w, Kelly Doidge and Michelle Young.
Behmd them are Frank Blake, Joe McElroy
Lori Kelly and Tricia Baer.
'

�By The Bend

t

Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

•The Area's N'umber 1
Marketplace

Tuesday, March 17, 1992

Page-6

·ELCA spring gathering March 28

representative, left, presented the award to
Sheets. Also piclurf!~ is Sheets' raculty advisor,
Dr. Karla L. Roehng, who received the Teaching Award of Merit.

AWARD OF MERIT • Jared Sheets was
named recipient or the Outstanding Sophomore
Award or Merit given by Gamma Sigma Delta,
an honor society or Agriculture at Ohio State
University. Ray Miller, College or Agriculture

Sheets named outstanding sophomore
Jmd Sheets, a. pre·!fled student
at 0~10 State Umversuy, was the
rec1p1ent of the Outstandm~ Sophomore A~ard of Ment g1ven by
Gamma Sigma Delta, honor SOCiety
of agnculture •. at a recent awards
banquet held 10 the Oh10 Umon
~allroom . .
.
. So~ of J1m and Jenmfer Sheets,
Jmd IS .enrolled 10 the bache)or of
SCience m nutnhon program 10 the

Department of Food Science and
Technology. He intends to enter
medical school in the autumn of
1993.
Only one student is selected for
the award which has been presented to the outstanding sophomore
each year since 1975.
In addition to a rigorous course
work program at Ohio State, Sheets
finds time to coach wrestling on

weekends and during holiday
breaks. He is a 4-H club advisor,
specializing in steer projects, and
plays in Sweet Mountain Sound, an
Appalachian folk band which per·
fonns at fairs and festivals.
Sheets is a graduate of Meigs
High School.
Attending the awards banquet
were Mrs. Sheets and son, Adam.

---Names in the news-LOS ANGELES (AP) - Garth
Brooks won yet another nomination for an Academy of Country
Music Award - this time in the
~ideo category.
· Brooks was nominaled Monday
lor the video ''The Thunder
Rolls." He's already up for enter·
tainer of the year: best male singer;
best single, "Shameless"; and best
album, "No Fences" and "Ropin'
the Wind."
. The other nominees in the video
¢ategory are Travis Tritt's "Anylllore"; Reba McEntire's "Is There
Life Out There?"; K.T. Oslin's
:: ~ &amp; Willi"; and "Brotherly
J,.ove' by Keith Whitley and Earl
~mas Conley.
: Winners will be announ ced
April29.
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Six
new episodes of "The Trials of
Rosie O'Neill" - including three
featuring Robert Wagner as Sharon
Gless' love interest - will air this
spring.
The series, starring Glcss as a
~metimes abrasive public defender, will return to prime time April
II, CBS announced Monda y.
The show ha s had numerou s
time changes and low ratings since
its debut two seasons ago. It last
appeared Dec. I9.
: Gless' husband, producer BarOey Rosenzweig, launc~cd a public
~elations campaign to save the

The fourih annual Spring Gathering of the Scioto Conference
Women of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America (ELCA) will
be held on Saturday, March 28, at
St. Peter's Lutheran Church, 105
East Mulberry Street in Lancaster.
Women representing nearly 30
congregations in the Scioto Confer·
ence will come together under the
theme of "God's Promise of Blessing."
The day begins with a coffee
hour and registration from 9 a.m.
until 9:40 a.m. The Rev. James
Heil, pastor of SL Peter's Lutheran
Church (the host church), will offer
devotions at 9:45 a.m. Janet
Grueser, President of Scioto Conference of Women of the ECLA
and member of St. Matthew,
Logan, conducts the business session and presides over the day's
events.
The morning program presents
Mona ~aughlin, a church-wide

Environmental issues and energy technologies will be the focus of
the first-ever Ohio Energy and
Environment Workshop for Teachers, a two-week program to give
teachers first-hand experience,
materials and insi~hts they can use
in classroom activtties.
The workshop for 24 middle.
junior and senior high school
teachers will be held June 14-26 on
site with sponsors Columbus
Southern Power Company and the
Ohio University School of Curriculum and Instruction. Activities will
include tours, presentations and
hand~-on experience.

Ll•brary ll'nes
·
:

By Rutb Powers
There arc several interesting
programs being offered at the
Meigs County Public libraries in
the next few weeks.
: Laubach volunteer tutor training
c)asses win he held March 25 and
27 and April I and 3, at the
Pomeroy Library 6-9 p.m. This is a
12 hour course which is broken
down to four, three hour classes.
the classes are free. For more
i~formation and registration call or
come to the Pomeroy library.
~ Free law seminars for landowners, individuals and families will be
presented at the Pomeroy library by
the law firm of Porter, Little,
Sheets, and Lentcs. These proarams will be held on Mondays,
March 23-and 30, and April6, at 7
g.m.
• April S-11, is National Library
Week. The Meigs County Library
~ould appreciate it if children of
gs·County would make them
e posters for this occasion.
t111 come into the library and
!let their poster paper. The posters
wjU be displayed in the Blue Streak
llbe and in patrons vehicles.
"": March is Fine Free Month at the
lllnries, in a monetary sense. We
life asking our patrons who have
overdue materials from the library
lo pay their fine with a donation of
non·perishable food to be collect~d and given to the Metltodist
(:burch Food Cooperative. This
tine free month does not apply to
~ :~· There will still be the
~ay Cine for the overdue

=

*

~

CWU meets at Trinity Church
Church Women United of
Meigs County held their World
Day of Prayer at the Pomeroy Trinity Church on March 6. The theme
was "Living Wisely with Creation." The key woman from the
church Mary Kaurz was the leader.
The President of the Church
Women United, Edith Sisson weicorned the ladie$ at the beginning
ofth~
meeting.
.
•
Ladies taking part in the program were as foUows: Mary Kautz,
Edith Sisson, Dorothy Downey,
Rachael Downie, Lula Hampton,
Doris Grueser, Florence Richards,

Ada Titus, Martha L~u Beegle,
Glenna Rummell, Jane Aanestad,
and Faye Wallace.
The meditation speaker was
Rev. Sharon Hausman who pastors
at churches at Tuppers Plains,
Chester and Alfred. She spoke on
the response to God and the envi- ,
ronment with God's help, also the
hazards to creation in our commun'ty
I • •
Several songs ·were sung with
Lois Burt as organisL Dianne Hawley 'passcdout the programs. There ·
were approximately 40 ladies presenL
.
.

How deep is the ocean? .
HONOLULU (AP) - The
PacifiC Ocean i~ the world's hqcst
and deepeJI body ofwarer.
It coven 63.8 million 1quare
miles1 or mORI than a third of the
Earth 1 aurfiiCO. At the equator, it

measwa 11,(100 mileiiCIOII, half
the.diaanco lnllllll Jhe world.

.

The average depth oC the Pacific
is 14,000 feet, with four ,"trenches" at depths of more than six
miles.
Below the Pacific's wavea are
two mountain IJDIICS, with underwatcr peaks rlslJIII 10 10,000 fliet.

To place an

Call992-2156
MoN. thru FRI. 8,\.M.-SP.M •• SAT.8-12
CLOSED SUNDAY

POLICIES
' Adt out.lide GaUia, Muon or Meip countica mUll be prepaid
' Receive dilcounl for adi paid in adnDee.
• Free Ad.: Giveaway and Found ad. under 15 word• will be
ru3 day• at no charse.
1 Prtce ol ad for aU capitalletten it double priee of ad c01t
• 7 point line type only uted
1 Tribue il not raponail»le for error• after f'ir•t day (check

are

for er~n fll'lt day ad runt in paper}. Call before 2:00p.m.
day alU!r publication to make correction
1 Ade that mutt be paKI in adnnce are:
Card of Thaolu
Happy Ado
ln Memoriam
Yard Sale~
• A eiUiitted adwertieement placed ln the GallipoU. Daily
TribuDe (o:eept Cla .. U»ed Duplay, Bw&amp;ne.. Cud or l.e8al
Notice.) will alto •ppear in the Point Plea1anl Regiltu and
the Daily Sentioel, reachif18 over 18,000 bomet

The progi-am is open 10 teachers
living and teaching within the
Columbus Southern Power service
area. Participants may earn three
graduate credits from Ohio University at no cost.
The workshop will provide
teachers with first-hand experiences and information on new
energy technologies and methods
of incorporating energy and environmental studies into their curricula. The program will emphasize
Ohio energy sources, the environment, power production and energy
economics.
Instructors will include special-

ists from industry, universities and
governmental agencies.
Participants will prepare an
energy and environment study unit·.
for their classrooms and a fall pre- ~
sentation for other teachers in their;
home disaicts.
For applications or more infor- ,
mation, contact: Dr. Ray Skinner, ·
Emeritus Professor, OU School of ·
Curriculum and Instruction, (614) :
593-4425 or 593-5153 (home), or
Mary K. Walsh, Programs Manag- ·
er, Columbus Southern Power, 1- .,
800-282-9222 ext. 7291. DEAD- ·
LINE FOR APPLICATIONS IS .
MARCH31.

BULLETIN BOARD
BULLETIN BOARD DEA~LINE
4:30 P. M. DAY BEFORE
PUBLICATION

t--~=========::::::;:---1
PRICE millblo.
REOUCEDI
l'aolii _, lioa•ig
Til pri&lt;t las bolo

meeting. A products party will be
held after the meeting with proceeds to go to the miscellaneous
committee.
WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT • Middleport
Arts Council will sponsor ballroom
dance classes beginning Wednesday . Cost is $7 per session.
Advanced dancers at 7:30 p.m.
with beginners at 8:30 p.m. Call
992-2675 for information.
POMEROY • The Middleport
Literary Club will meet Wednesday
at 2 p.m. at the Meigs County Pub·
lie Library in Pomeroy. Mrs. Eileen
Buck will review "Fortune's Children" by Arthur T. Vanderbilt II.
Roll call is to tell about a mansion
worth a visit.
SYRACUSE · Syracuse Youth
League will hold final sign-up on
Wednesday 5-7 p.m . at Syracuse
Elementary. Registration is $12
and a birth certificate is needed if
this is the first sign-up.
SYRACUSE - Syracuse Homemakers will meet Wednesday at the
municipal building. Bring a sweat
shirt to make a cardigan.
THURSDAY
POMEROY • The Meigs County Democratic Executive Committee will meet Thursday at 7:30p.m.
at the Carpenter's Hall.
RACINE • The Racine American Legion Post 602 will meet
Thursday at 7:30p.m. at the post

«"

"""jy

MIDDLEPORT- Evangeline
Chapter No. 172, Order of the Eastern Star, will hold its annual
inspection on Thursday at 7:30
p.m. at the Middleport Masonic
Temple. Deputy Grand Matron
Kay Spencer will be inspecting
officer.

MIDDLEPORT • The Middle- '
port Youth League will hold a.:
coaches meeting on Thursday at
6:30p.m. at Middleport Village .·
Hall . Anyone interested may
attend.
RACINE • OAPSE No. 453,
Southern Local, will meet Thurs- .
day at 7 p.m . at Southern High ·
School. Everyone urged to attend. .,
MIDDLEPORT • Meigs Local .'
OAPSE will meet Thursday at 1·.
p.m. at the junior high school.
Karen Klass, school employee•
retirement system, will be guest
speaker.

373-3155

~ ...........

IIIIW•IIce C011111•1t1o•

f
t

8

¥

423-7516

896-2369

MlddlePQrt

NelsOnville

TheP~lns

992-6661

753-1955

797-4547

'

.

.

937-BufTalo

NOnCE FOR
APPUCATION
UNDER lllE UNIFROM
DEPOSITORY ACT

Co..,ty Tr...uror during tha
naxl two yeara lo One
Hundred Thounnd Dol11n
($100,000.00).

BE

MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO

NoUca lo heroby atvan
that appllcatlono will h
,_wee~ I1Y the undlrllgned
.t the oltiCa of the a-d of
Malge County Collllllll·
elonora, Courthouoa, Poroy, Ohio 457&amp;t until 12
noon on lha 25th ..., of
Ilardi, 1tt2, and opened
and rucl aloud II 1 p.m. on
thal ...ll from .,, ftnancllll
lnelltullon legally lllalbla
which 11ay daolra to eubmlt
a wrtntn lppllcllllon to ba·a
Publlo Depoellory ol lha
Active, Inactive and lnllrim
depoellll ol publlo 111oney1
of Hid Board 11 provided
by tha UnHpr111 Dapoaltory
Act, 8acllon 131 of tha Ohio
llevloed Code.
8eld 1ppMoalon ahllll ba
Ill. . In oonlormlty with the
folowlng raaolulloll ldop&amp;eel II I r111Uior IIIHllng Of
tha llalge County Board ol
Commllalonre hald llorch 4,
11112:
BE IT RESOLVED, thallha
Hlmated agoregall muJ..
IliUM AIIIOUnl of public
lundiiUbJact to tha control
of Hid board "' be Ada
clepollll 81 !IllY 111111
during the lllltltwo ,_.Ia
Two Million Dollare
($2,000,000.00~ The Mtl•
tnalld 11111'9• - n t of
~MIIyt fundi lor IMMO
-,., • 11ontha or 1 , _ II
Thr10 Million Dollere
($3,000,000.00~ The aotl·
Mallei~ -unt of

IT

RESOLVED, that
alven to all banka In 111ld
County and euch other
IJnMCIIIIMIIIuiiOIII 11 may
ba n-eory 11 provided
~Y law. All ~ppllcanll ehll
1ubmlt, In writing, thllr
lnelllullon'a poUcy co""'""'
lng tha loRowlng: 1) Ctwga
for ohecb; 2) S.nlca
oharga; 3) Minimum blllnca
raqufred; 4) Tha amount ol
lha U,OOO,OOO.OO quallfled
for uncfor 3ft of total non·public IINII, (10% Blvtnga
&amp;LaM, non-public - ) .
Said Board ol County
CoMIIIIoolonare raoarvaa
lhl right to ra1act any or all
~lela. Awordl far lha Acllva,
tnaotl¥1, and InteriM
clapoalll ol publlo fun•
·eublact to lha control of
nld ltolrd wll ba 111. . on
...,.,h 2J 1tl2 for I pariod
oflme oO.nmancfng on the
1et day of Aprl~ 11112. Elllh
appiiRnl ehall lurnloh a
copy ol It'1 11101t recent
etatomenl of condlllon
algned by II'• Cllhler or
other euthorlracl ofOcer.
Applloellone ehould bo
eulad and · 11erkad
"Application under lha
Unllonn Dapoaltory Aat."
Mary Hobl..lllr, Clark
llalgo County
Comllllaalorwa
(3) 10, 17 210
'

lnMemory

DAVIDARIX

In Memory

Dlddy, lod1y'1 only
my aecond blrthdlly
but my flrat one
without you.
I told ,_ui to whleper
In your .., lhllllov.

Ifill mill you.
I'm 11111 too young to
undtret•nd why
you'r1 not coming

. CHARLES R. HYSEU
who,.... ...,.
·~· of
SoftlyMlr.17,
the leev11
llllfllllfY filii:
Gently I llllh•r 1nd

n tr; ta lllllnNtg 111c1

un-n, unh11rd, you

You'l .._,, be In my
h•rt and I will
,.,._ be o.ddy't

W.UfltMmll~

'
'

9- Wanted to Buy

18- Wanted To Do

........ ner.
&amp;Ill loVId IIIII mlratcl
IIIII wry ...

Yotlr loYint ....
ICIIIIIryn

.

•

\~

bMIItDIIII.

ll- Help Wanted

.

11d br pur
wtglht,f'...,

.' 1 I;\ II I "
•

"""

52- Sporlins Good.
53-Anliquu
54- Mi1c. MerchandYe
55- Building Supplie.

g:,e~J!!.~~o~=

82- PlumhinB &amp; H'"ll"'
Excavatins
Eltclri&lt;al &amp; Refriipralio~.
General H.uliq;
Mobile Home Repair
87- Upholllory

Quality ·
Stone Co.
SIZED LIMESTONE
FOR SALE

F. Enelen,
&amp;111
Roed,
Alh-,
OhioRodlord
45701
I
lid
E
appo n
xacutor of

Call614-m-6637
St. Rt. 7
Cheshke, OH.

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

Bashan Building

SAT. NIGHT
6:30P.M.
Starting Sept. 28

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

BISSELL &amp; BURKE
CONSTRUCTION
•New Homes
•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

985·4473
667·6179

RT. 62 N of POINT PLEASANT, WV
SATURDAY, MARCH 21, 1992
10:00 A.M.·??

TEAFORD'S
COUNTRY CLUB

R&amp;C EXCAVATING
BULLDOZING

- No motorized tilled vehicles
-No animals
• All farm related consignmenls welcome
·Consignments accepted Friday, March 20, 1992,
12 noon-6 pm or
Salurday, March 21, 8 am- Sale Time
• For more inlormalion call (304) 675-5463
or (304) n3-5696
·Must present tax exempt number or pay 'tax No Exceplionsl
·Cash or check with proper 1.0 .
• Nol responsible for accidents
· Auctioneers: Rick Pearson and Edwin Winters
·All commissions go to the Mason County Fair

Ki ~:--··
\:, q ......
' :\ \"'*-aett
.~~:
I
_. w.KI&lt;I

67

aGolf liiiHI

I

&amp;
4"'..,l!l"'i:~·llstothll
• ~
S.C.. Tnplito

46387 Scout camp Rolld
Cheatlr, Oh.

PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER&amp;
SEWER LINES
BASEMENTS &amp;
HOME SITES
HAULING: Limestone,
Dirt, Gravel and Coal
Uctnttd and Bonded

12-5-lfn

PARTS

frame Repolr

•.

TR1Jf-Bl£T

FOR.AU MAKES

•FIREWOOD

&amp;MODUS

BILL SLACK
992·2269

992·7013 or
992-5553
OR TOLL FltEE

1-100·848·0070

DARWIN, OHIO
7131f91/lfn

T&amp;M BUILDERS

r•.,~fnti&amp;'lf"
II. SO Wost,llloor, Olio •lfl-311 S

Choloa of 1Z oolara •
lldlng at ro... cloora

Barna
tanclortlto unHIIIIted •I-

Uiylaa .

T&amp;T LAWN SIRYKt

MdO••alld fof

..,T~..,~=~~loll
~0::,5'"'
........

lolalarlalll.abor .

nMIInt..,..,..
~

"HHI~lJ'!ttr~a ......

(1111372-1697 ..

1-100-53&amp;-1440

lnlpiCIIon

Pit. l::is:'Sitlll
742-2072

3-111-1 mo pel

TRDY-BI£f'
11111111 I

REDUCED : Two slory homewill14 BR's 2 baths, enclosed
porch, well insulated, original wooct.vork, new paint &amp;
outside repairs . Located in Racine.
$41,900 A GOOD DEAL!

MYSTIQUE'
TANNING

Hri. 1-10 lot. lin Sat.
NlW sa WOI.ff •D 2451.

ot=f~C:E.__•••• - ......_,,_.. ,, ...........~"\"''''"'''-''-"2-2251

.
!.

2·1•

~nsulallon

JAMES KEESEE
. 992·2772 or
742·2097

539 Bcyon Placa
Mlddlopori, Ohio
11/14/11

HAULING:
COAL
LIMESTONE
AGRICULTURAL

LIME
REASONABLE RATES

742·2138
3-15-'12·11110, pd.

6·12·90-lfn

'1\.'a.tli.ryn
Meadows
"SPECIAUZING IN SlATE

OR CANVAS"
39815 Gold Rltlp ROIICI
Pomeroy, Ohio 45711

Welcome Slates

$20.00

Cue tom P.tlnge
614-112-2242

TROLLEY SUI'ION
CUFIS .

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

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER SERVICE

MAR. 2S, 7:00 pm - tala
~::;!.:,obbll Fnlly

-Room AddllkHII

MAR. 24, 1:00 pm - BMMI
Claa
MAR. 30, 7:00 pm - IIHlh

-Rooll""

Sh=t=:eQIITEA

HRS: MOCI.""-10 om-lpn
Sllndar1-&amp;pa

For -Info Clll

614-992-2541

-Gullar Wortt

~calencl Plutnblng

fll SISSIOII WIIH
IDIWAl

s-.lltWitiW.s

,SCA WOUIIIDS

,

-lnllrt07. Exlorlor

c='11111ATESI
V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Poateroy, Oltlo

314/t2/l 1110.

3-13-QZ-tln

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.
lew Ho•es • Vityl Sidltil
New GDral'• • Replace•••• Wiatlowt
Roo• Additi011 • Roofltg

21121112

15 Sessions.- '25
Plusl FREE

. tllr.t"kl ••

•Vinyl Siding
•Replacement
Window
•Roofing

(lo S...dty C..lsl

742·2341

TRACYBAINAGEFI..--,,..,,,,,,., .. ,.,"'f'''''''''''''"""'2431

'J&amp;L .
INSULATION·

614a949·2101 or 949·2160

1Y. Ml~ HI ltw
u-•~
Rutl•••, o•lo

......_flU
MJ'.!I9-' llo &amp;a;

992-3838

COMMERCIAL aad RI'.SIDENTIAt
FREE ES'I'IMA'ft'.S

"OW OPE"

. . . .,.,... 'lh

USED RAILROAD TIES

ESTI~IATES

•

1\-oy.BIIt 'IUien Now I• Saoek.

V2M213mo.

FREE

S-6-'12·11110, pd.

•LIGHT HAULING

NEW &amp; USED PARTS

S.t PrieM 6 StMca lor
Poll F.-a Gor~go~ 6

o.rs,....sw,..... or

.I!ANTRliii&amp;LL:..-.... _, __ .,,,,,.......................14..2180

IYas, • •• It tdLI
ALSO COWIITI AUIO
R£PAIR SIRVICE .! 24
HOUR TOWING,

Speclallzltig In Custom

IT or

To Flati3_.~U',~

HINRYE.CLILAN0.-·- ·-·····-··-·-··-··..112-1111

Specl•llzi•g It
Co•pltte Auto
Upltolstery.

IIEEuiT

EMilY'S Ante

AN EXCEPTIONAL HoME IN MIDDLEPORT· 2 story
frame will1 ·10 rooms including carpet &amp; drapeo. 6 BR's,
fireplace, I car anadled gaiage, patio wlfumiture. Many
•tema !do numerout to mention.
ASKING S'lt,900
COME SEE I Thialla real beauty I

IWOI.WY.

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAl

Wt tum your naw and
good uolii.Uclaa Inlll
cuh and uve YOUIIICIHY
on what you liNd.

CREW RD.· Pomerny, 1976 Barrington Sectional 3-4 .
BR's, 2 ballla, F.A. electric heat, WBFP . lull basement
Pallo &amp; 811Piancet 1 1/2 acre, nice I~ _11round .pool .
WONOERFUt LOCATION I
·
$57,000

A&amp;BAUIO

WHALEY'S AUTO

YH'IIWitt.

One'floorframe home that's both in and outoiiOwn, 3 BR's
natural gas fumance, central air, WBFP. New roof, ,...;
deck, 1 car garage, full basement on 2.13 acres w/garden
space.
$31,900

311192/1 mo. pd.

IF YOU WEAl n: IlEAl
I~ IDMIIE 1.!.. WATCII
lr, PLAY IT'- uSE

REDUCED : Rigg Crest Subdivision- one floor ranch style
home 3 BR'f 2 baths. anached garage. electric FA heat.
.
$39,900

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

1·304·773·9560

Potat~, Ohio

REDUCED: Two story frame home with 21/2baths 3 BR's
1cargaragewlthworkshop,shed,2+acreswlgard0narea
built in shelvet, deck, fireplace, full basement A VERY
NICE HOME.
$2!1,900

NEW-REPAIR

PH. 614·992-5591

CALl 992-6120
Or Sttt 1r
I 02 E. Main StrNt

992-2259
608 rASlMAIN
POMEROY, OHIO

ROOFING

949·2168

7-7·92-tln

1111M/Imo.

Real Estate General

Howard L Wrllesel

FREE ESTIMAm

Faclory Choke
12 Gauge Sholgun Only
Strhtly Enforced
9-13-'91-lfn

.....

--

Sale ·

Au101 for

APPOINliiENT
OF FI&gt;UCIARY
On October 28, 1ttl, In

try to Ill -rythlng
dill you wantld me

flllr ttd

Live~t.oek

Hay &amp; Cr•in
Sood &amp; Fe.,;liaer

Business Services

NOnCE OF

SPRING MACHINERY AUOION

In Memory Of

,I

14- Bwineaa Training
15- School• &amp; lnttruction
16- Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair
17- Milcellaneoua

Public Notice

Public Notice

8

Public Notice

2

'''

l'tdolll '1'1"laU0111 "'((Il,. Nboianllaloulftd 1...... penakfea for Olflr wilhdtlwal c/ I
IAA otapooJ•.
,
.

742-Rudand

667-CoolvUie

.~

12- Situation~ Wanted
13-- ln1W"anee

EVERY

be d01lgnatad by tho

•

992-6687

895-l.el•rl

992-2156

ln!or!m fiincll lor a a.... to

...the IRA Exper,ts.
lowell

949-Racine

2-ln Memory
3- Announcemerlll
4-- Giveaway
S- Happy Ado
6- Lott aad Found
1- Lo.t•nd Found
8- Publio Sale &amp;
Auction

GUN SHOOT

Public Notice

In Loving Memory of

Belpre'

773- Muon·
882- New Haven

at MASON COUNTY FAIRGROUNDS

2

Athens
593-n6I

F.u.

qu p.oal
Wanted to BYJ

Trude• for Sale
42- Mobile Ho....,. lor Rent 73-- Vau &amp; 4 WD'•
74- M.oLo~yelu
43- F•rm• !or Renl
75- &amp;aLl &amp; Moton for Salt
44-- Apartment lor Rent
71&gt;-- Auto Paru &amp; Aoeo,...oiloal
45- Fumilhed Room•
Auto Repair
46-- Sp•ce !or Reftt
47- Wanted to Renl
78- Campiitc Equipoooat

.

Homes, Farms,
Business, Other
Day (614) 446-9814
Night (614) 446-4406

ing IRA's simple to understand and easy to open. In fact,
we'll take your application by phone and have the
paperwork ready for your signature at the Peoples Bank
office most convenient to you.

Marietta ·

675-PI . Ple•..nl
458-I..on
57~Apple Grove

843-Porlland ·
247-Lelart

643-Arabia Ditl.
379-Walnu&amp;

M&amp;M Fleet

POMEROY • A dinner at the
senior citizens center in Pomeroy
will be held Thursday 5-6:30 p.m.
Cost is $3 per person. Pie will be
available for 75 cents. Music by ·
The Classics. Public invited.
•

. l

388-VInaon

24S-Rio Grande
256-Guyan Olot.

By

ROCK SPRINGS - The Rock ;
Springs Better Health Club will ,
meet Thursday at I p.m. at the '
Rock Springs United Methodist,'
Church. Lenora Leifheit will be
hostess and Dorothy Jeffers will
present the program. Nancy
Grueser will have the contcsL

.

Pomeroy
985-Chctter

I \li\1 "i 1'1'1 II,
.\ I I\ I ' II II 1,

41- Howe. (or Reat

«jil &lt;

Coi614-9!HI04for

Call the IRA Experts at Peoples Bank today! We're mak-

214 EAST MAIN ·
PO..,EROY

GET RESlJLTS • FAST!

v..etabloa

&amp;

For Sale or Trade

Ill \ I' \I

Gallia County Mei@s County Maoon Co., WV
Area Code 614 Area Code 614 Area Code 3 04
992"Mldd1eportl

Mw;tcal ln•ltuaenLI
Fn~ita

34- Bl.llloet• Buildinp
3S- l..&gt;ta &amp; Aorease
f------=:;-::-:::====-=--~---1 36- R..I Eotato Wanted

Classified pages cover the
foUowing telephone exchanges ...

446-GoiUpoUo
367-Cheahire

Pell for S.le

Rates are for consecutive runs, broken up days will be
charg"'C' for each day as separate ads.

Aerial
Photography

You have until April 15 to open your Individual
Retirement Account and you may qualify for a
1991 taX shelter.

Let us tell you just
how much your savings
can be.

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
1:00 p.m. Saturday
1:00 p.m. Monday
tOO p.m. Tuesday
UXl p.m. Wednesday
100 p.m. Thursday
1:00 p.m. Friday

•
Rate
Over 15 Words
$4.00
$ .20
$6.00
$ .30
$9.00
$ .42
$13.00
$ .60
$1.30/day $.05/day

IMt for .... - " bw lilY . . . ,. 3'1111•
II ....... 4ll, 3hollt,l ~·IIIII II"'·
idtdot 4,!00 .... ~... .

home.

You can write a
check to the IRS •••
or to your IRA.

Stale Auto's already
low premiums can be
reduced even more by
insuring both your car
· and home with the State
Auto Companies.

COPY DEADLINE
Monday Paper
Tuesday Paper
Wednesday Paper
Thwsday Paper
Friday Paper
SWlday·Paper

Days Words
1S
1
IS
3
IS
6
10
15
Monthly 15

~&lt;Od lo ~ ~ S73.900 IIIII ow11r
...[llilg
lo ...
last -·~~~~~lio poat

Community calendar

Riyerview area gardeners hold meeting
. The. February mcetmg of the
R•verv•ew Garden Club .was held at
t~c home of Mrs. Jan1cc Young

RAtES

field of music . The chorus is under
the direction of Mark Severence
and accompanied by May Jane
Appel and Jeanne Innis.
Other conference officers assisting with the day's events are Vice
President Vivian Frieshner, Lancaster; Secretary Doris Cloud, Circleville; Treasurer Jane Hart, Lancaster; Action Chairperson Shirley
Gleim, Wheelersburg; Community
Chairperson, Jane Wilson,
Ashville; Growth Chairperson
Edith Bateson, Pleasantville; and
the Southern Ohio Board Representative Helen Marldey, Chillicothe.
Information and reservations
available by calling Jane Hart of
(614) 653-5129 or the reservations
chairperson of each local ELCA
congregation. All areas of the
church are handicapped accessible
and all women of Lutheran congregations and guests are most cordially welcome.

Seminar to focus on environmental issues

the British-owned record company.
He estimated that several hunl'UESDAY
dred anists would be affected by
POMEROY
· American Legion
the decision and that EMI Music
Drew
Webster
Post No . 39,
would pay several million dollars
Pomeroy,
will
celebrate the
in higher royalty payments to the
legion's
birthday
Tuesday
at the
artists each year.
INDIANAPOLIS (AP)
senior citizens center, Pomeroy.
Singer Dionne Warwick is organiz-Dinner
at 7 p.m. followed by meet·
NEW YORK (AP) - The Irish
ing a concert here to raise money
in
g.
group The Commiunents had a rolfor education about AIDS.
The July 10 concert at Butler licking reunion at a bar in a scene
POMEROY · There will be a
University is part of a series of that could have been from their hit
meeting
of all 1952 Pomeroy High
shows planned for Washington , movie.
School
alumni
on Tuesday at 7:30
A packed house at Lilly's
Los Angeles, New York and
p.m.
at
Pleaser's.
Plans will be
danced and swayed Friday night to
Atlanta.
Part of the proceeds from the such hits as "Mustang Sally ," finalized for the class 40th reunion.
Indianapolis concert will go toward "Try a Little Tenderness" and
POMEROY • A swine selection,
a video program for several schools ''The Midnight Hour.''
care
and feeding clinic will be held
The rock and soul band made its
and health education centers in
Tuesday
from 6:30-8 .m. at the
international debut in Alan P:trker's
Indiana, Warwick said Monday.
Meigs
High
School cafeteria. Dave
"The Commitments."
Gerber,
district
swine specialist,
These days, said drummer Dick
NEW YORK (AP) - EM!
will
be
guest
speaker.
Music is making old music sweeter Massey, The Commitments perfor Fats Domino and hundreds of form only a few engagements and
POMEROY· Veterans Memoriother artists who haven't cut new charity benefits - including a
al
Hospital ladies auxiliary will
recordings on its labels for more show today at the Ritz in New meet Tuesday at 2:30 p.m. in the
York. Massey now plays with the
than two decades.
conference room of the hospital.
The company said Monday it is band Sindicate.
"I think it's great," he said There will be a pig-in-a-poke sale.
boosting royalty rates to 10 percent
of sales for hundreds of artists from about being here for St. Patrick's
CHESTER · Chester Baseball
the 1940s, '50s and '60s. Royalty Day. "I've never been abroad for Association will meet Tuesday at
rates for some artists are said to be St. Paddy's day. I've heard they the Chester Elementary at 7:30
really dye the city green ."
as low as I percenL
p.m. All parents of Chester baseBeneficiaries are expected to
ball
and softball players urged to
BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (AP)include Domino, Peggy Lee, the
attend.
Andrews Sisters, The Kingston Former Gov. George Wallace was
reported in satisfactory condition at
Trio and Ella Firzgerald.
ROCK SPRINGS - The Middlea
hospiJal after being admitted for
"It seemed like the right thing
port
Child Conservation League
to do," said Jim Fifield, head of tests.
will meet Tuesday at the Rock
Springs United Methodist Church.
Husband's night will be held with a
potluck dinner at 6:30 p.m. The
"Baffoon
Clowns" will be the
with Phyllis Larkins and Kila was read from Bob Taft, Secretary
entenainmenL
Young as co-hostesses. Devotions of State, concerning the fanner vot·
were presented by Ella Osborne, ing precinct at Reedsville.
CHESTER • Chester Council
consisted of readings "Everyone
An auction was held with Mary
Needs Someone" and "The Golden Ahce B1se as auctiOneer. Mrs. CJ{lal No. 323, Daughters of America,
Chain of Friendship", concluded Harris was honored at a surpnse will meet Tuesday at 7 p.m. Quarwith a prayer.
birthday card shower and presented terly birthdays will be observed.
Potluck refreshments after the
Roll call was answered by mem- with a gift from the club.
bers telling "What My Country
The hostesses served refreshMeans to Me." Business session ments to the above named and
was conducted by President Ruth Pauline Myers, Nola Young, MaxAnne Balderson. Nancy Wachter is ine Whitehead, Frances Reed, Marto take care of the mowing around garet Grossnickle, Delores Frank,
the Riverview Elementary School. Janet Connolly, and Betty Boggs.
A thank you was read from the Mrs. Harris received the door prize.
Pomeroy Nursing and Rehabilita- Hostesses for the March meeting
lion Center for the club's help dur- are are Marilyn Hannum and Nola
ing the holiday season. Also a letter Young.
show, including fuil-page newspaper ads.
He used similar tactics to revive
"Cagney &amp; Lacey," a police series
staning Gless and Tync Daly.

board meml)er of Women of the
ELCA and member of St. Paul
Lutheran Church in Lancaster as
the keynote speaker. She has
served for several years in various
leadership positions of the church
women's organization. The women
of the ELCA serves and is supported by women in more than II ,000
congregations of the ELCA in the
United States and the Caribbean.
The highlight of the afternoon
session is the appearance of the
Lancaster Men's Chorus. The chorus was founded some 23 years ago
by a group of men who got together for the pure enjoyment of
singing. In a short time, new
singers were added and some good
hr.rmonious sounds evolved. In
May, the cliorus stages its 21st production of "Ham and Eggs," which
has provided over 20,000 in music
scholarships to Fairfield County
students seeking a career in the

The Dally

�ruesday, March

Ohio
44

Annou nee mr.nls

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

Apartment
tor Rent

71

111800, 114-tll2.ea71i 8112·21TI
tHI lontro S.E., Air, Aulo, EIC,
Qaroaod. 2,100 IIMII, $10,100
Ply Ott. l14-441·1312, 1:11().7:00.
Evon Flo car Sol~ E I Condlllon, US. 114 Ul 4428.

2-blthl, wid hook-up,

klfchono.
roquiiOd.
814-815-4441
lfllr

Aoft,.nco/Oot&gt;OIIh

Phono
8:00pm.·
Nlco l Clean 2 llodroom

8~1NQ.

Flatwood Artt, Pomeroy, LJ1rg1

Country Home, New Kitchen,
Both &amp; Corpollng. Low 130'1,

1004, U .lllmln. Mull I• Ovtr

11, Fonp~lelrwlne CA .
AtdYCt: .Bum off f11 whiM you

lltopl Tlkt OPA!:J. IVIIIIbll

Ouatltlod Buyo~. 114-441-2358.
Mo~lng

Muet StU, 2 btdroom
homt1 newly remodeled, 8/10

II

Fruth Phermaoy, 1111 N. Second

St, Middleport.
REDUCE: lum Oil Fot While

aero, low utrlllloJ1 112,000. 304·
451·1084 obor S:uuPM.

You SIN~ Tiki OPAl. Avllllblt
At : Fruth Phlrmacr.

4

32 Mobile Homes
tor Sale

Giveaway

10155 trllltr, mutt bt moved,

1 Yallaw Malo Cot, Frlondt,. 614·
388..711 ·

"I'm worried about the ract that worrying
about my ulcer might make It worsel"

good homo, 5tH15-31:!7

One bltck, mt .. dog; one Collie,
mtll dog, bolh nlt:t, frltndly

uogo,IIH4Hti4

Lost &amp; Found

.found: maltJ. black, long haired
dog, Wolfl l"tn r01d ar11, 614·

&amp;92·288!

'

Los~ :

Famale Oog On O.J. White
Ro•d.l QalllpoUt, 112 Nonnlgn,
112 , uerman Shephard, Shott
And Fat; Very Friendly. &amp;14-446·
2713.

11

11

Help Wanted

ApplletUona

Taken

Yard Sale

- - --

~

Sunday ediUon · 2:00 p.m.
Frldty. Mondty edlllon · 2:00
p.m.•Saturd.ly.

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Rick Pearson AucUon Company,

lull tlma aucllonHr, complete
auction aar~ict. LlctnMCI Ohio,

CAREER

OPPORTUNITY McCiurt'l Family Alltturant In

AVAI~ABLE

Sttklng An Energetic Individual
With Good Educational Back·
ground And Communlcatlw
Sklllt To Marktl OHict Automa·
tlon Equlpmant. II Salectad The
Candid tit Will Aecelwa Training,
A Salary, Commlulon, Car Al·
lowanct, Proltcted Territory
And Much Mora. Ctll 606-327·

5536 Or 1&lt;100-826-3755 For
Interview

Wnt VIrginia, 304·7n-5115.

9 • Wanted to Buy

Cosmetologlll Nllded: Gaurln•
tttd $170 Ptr W111l Ptld

VCR't, Powtr Toolt, Etc . 614·

216 ·1238.
U11d Mobllt Homat, Call 614·
446.0176.
Wanltd To Buy: Junk Au101
Wllh Or Without Moton. Call

Larry l.lvety, 614·388·1303.

And

Vacotlono, Calllt4-MI-i217.

Driwerw
now acctpllnG appllcatlont,
Oomlno'e PIZZI, Pomeroy It'll,
614 -992-2124
Euy Work! EIICtlltnt Pay! At·

ttmblt Products At Home. Call
Toll Free, 1·600-467·5566, Er1 .
313 .

S.rvlct Worklfl Mldtd :
and pr01par with one ol
Colnt, Gold Rings, Silwer Colnt,
nation 1 largttt food or·
Gold Coins. M.T.S. Coin Shop, fht
ganlzatlontl Morris Cuttom
151 Second Awtnut, Gallipolis.
Mtnlgt~mtnt 11 !hi Unlwtrally of
Rio Grtndt. p,.vlout IX•
perltnct dtllrlblt but not ••
Employment Services Mnllal.
Work can lud to att.r
obe In othlf' arut. FUll or part·
lmt nHdad. Apply In pertOn
to: Richard Haft or QJtnna Dawlt
11 . Help wanled
from 1-3 p.m. Mondly lhru
$2!0.$47! par wookl 33 million Friday at the Unlvt,.lty of Ala
Am.tlcanl (up 22% ower 1111 Grandt Center 11 thl Ctflttrlt.
y••r~ work full or part tlma at Equal Opponunlty Emplov-r.
hOil!f ttmlng IXCIIIIInl pay.
HurldrfKit ol compiiNtt nHd HVACIR StNICt Man Netdld.
homework"' Howl Call lor Mutt Have Etpertenc• In Com·
recorded mntagt. I04·718·81TJ. merclal And Rttlct.ntltl Rtpalr.
3 Years Experltnct RequlrM To
$350.00/Diy Procnelng Phone Apply, Stnd Rnumt And Pty
Orden! Ptoptl Call You. No Ex· ~tqulremenlt To: Box CLA 108,
parlance Ntcattary. 1.ao0-255- eta Oalllpolla Dally Tribune, 825
Third Awtnut, Gtlllpollt, OH
0242.

Top Prien Pold: All Old U.S.

Food
grow

l

45631.
AVON • All ar..},. call Mllllyn lmmldlato Opening For

WilY.,

3041.U2·itM5.

A"" tchool lkltr nlldld tor 1
I 11 yr. old, Cheattr area, 814-

881•1141

A!JON Qllln on lht ground UOOf
ol Awant new timing llruclUft.
1 ·8DO.i112·13~ ._
. ----

LIYI In Care For Eldtr1y Ptrton
In Bidwell Aru. U lnllf'Mtld

Cllt: 114-388-85i1

Sp11r1, 304-675-1-421.

Conlldtnllal
Otllllt.

Don't Junk 111 Stll U1 Your Non·
Working AppUanc:tt, Color TY't,

1176 Concord, 12xl0, tumlthtd
Wlntw twnltur_!1 Wllhtr • dry.,,
tlr cond, $7,9uu. Days 304·875-

Wo-doy: 10:00 $80,000 Per V•r With A PIDnNr
A.M. To Noon. Full·Time Fuml- ~111 Now York Stock Exchongo
turo DoiiWII')' • carpet lnotollor1 Comj:lany Wllh 85 , ..,. £x- 7870.
erienct In Industry. FuH·Traln·
Pr~vlout Ex~rlenc. Pr.ltrrta
But Not Roqulrod. Tope Fum~ r.ng 01 Producto. Fmh ~1d1, 1987 Mobile Homt wtnpando,
turt: 1S1 Second Avtnut, 011· Y11 Frnhl Top Poy Out In In· hill pump'- deck, late at 111r11,
llpollo, Ohio 45&amp;31, No Colle duotrr Which Mnno 200% Ad· 304.&amp;75-27o9 or 675·74!53 sner
vancad On Monthly Pllmlum Or 5:00.
Pill H .
26% Aa Eamod. It You AN ATop 18111 Excottanl Condlllonl t4x80
AUSTRALIA WANTS VOU
Profttalontl We Art LooWng To
Excallont
Pay,
BonoiH'!! Expend lWo New Agontoln Tour Sunohlno llobllo Homo, 3 Btd·
Tranaportallon,
407·292-4'JIIr. ArU. If You Think You Quollly roomo, 2 Bolho, 814-441-8325.
Ext 571. 8a.m..t0p.m. Toll Call Mr. TIYfOf, IM-131-1271.
3 btdroom, 14k70 mobile home,
Tuoodo1,

AVON I All Araoo I Shlrtoy

ALL Yard Sal11 Muat Be Paldln
Adw"nct. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
tht dt)' bttort lha ad It to run.

Etno Homo Ctn1tr, t~0·50e.
8710.

Help Wanted

INSURANCE SALES

Mandl)',

Relundtd.

7

$1,500. ., boot oHar. ' 304-175·
1001
: ::-::-'= =.,-.,:--:----c

Mobllt
UN PrtownfKI
Your Tax
~=========1-=========:1 Tu
AndHomu,
Tille Down.
Refund. 10 Home• To Ctlooat.

brown/ Ba
whitt,
good dog,
wltli
Ftmalt
... tt Hound
chlld11n, apprm. 3 ,-rw. eNd, lo 1 1

6

Apt~·

Po~·

Tlmt AN Bupe'"-ltor, Mull 81
A~alltbltlo Work AlllhiHt And

Mlddlaport It now tcceptlng
applications.
Medical Bllllnw'Pharmacv Tech
Wanted. Blltlng Experience
Ntctstary. Sand Anum• To:

Strttt, Oak Hill, OH 45858,

Phone: 6t4-682.e480.
Naodod: Englloh lnllructor.
Mull Hove BS Dogroo In
Engllth, Send Rnumolo: P.O.
Box 213, Qalllpollo, OH 45&amp;31.
RN'o TO $31.00JHOUR: ~PH '1 TQ

CA0H?!!

11140 tor an lntarvln.

Surrog111 Mother wanted, fr11
plut txpenHI tor carrying 1
couplt'l child, mutt be 1• 35
yrs. of agt &amp; prevloely hid a
child, cont1ct SttYI Lltz. Alty.

Situation
wanted

child, unborn or lnlant,
ctll 814-742·1302

14

~~~~~

Business
Training

unfuml1hld,
clean, no ~11, d1po1h required,

Mitt Ptula'l Dey Cart Center.

Sale, aHordablt, chlldcara . M-F

6 a.m. • 1:30 p.m. Ago•

2~10.

Bttare, ahtr tehOOI . Drop-In•
welcome. 614-441-8224. New In·

fant Toddlor Caro, 814-44H227.
Mothtf of S will blby ah In my

hom1, htwtl'lll,.nc.. , 304·815--

31st aak for Jonlco,

Financial
21

Business
Opportunity
!NOTICE!

OHIO VA~~EY

"·-----' ·----446-2342 675·1333
992•2156

PUI~ISHINQ

CQ.

recommtndt thll you do bu1l·

=.=
...=·=====r~~=~~==~~

C
~=c:·:":'..

~~V~,:::n..S: ;~~~~:,:~ 54
bodroomo, 304-87~2
5:00.

45

after

Miscellaneous
Merchandise
,--..:.;.:.:.;..:;.;....____

eonc.... a

Furnished
Rooms

Ploolic Sot&gt;tic
Tonko, Jot Amtlon Tanko. Aon
Eva~o Entorprl111, Jockoon, OH
Roams tor rent. week or month. t-100.537-9$21.
Sto~ atll201mo. Qallil Hotot. a __ ,1 NutrHion Producla
.,_
,51_4__851
_ 0_· --,-,....---,.,.-- flltu~ng Amino Acid Bod!
51Hplng rooma wMh oocklng.
!~
1
Alao trollor opaao. All hook·upo.
Call lfttr Z:OO p.m., 304·Tr35&amp;St,
Maaon WV.

47 Wanted to Rent
Wonlod To Ronl: 3 Or 4 Bod·

room Houtt Or Tralllr In The

Country. Aellrenct Available.

Call An,llmo: 114-441·2138.

Retail Commercial Space 1,100

S&lt;!. A. In Ohio Rlvar Plazo.

Phone: 814-448-8151 After 5:00

P.M.

Stcond Floor Apartment For
L1111 : L.A., One B.A., Btth,
Kllchon WI SIOVI &amp; Rt!rfo.
Waltr Fumlthtd. No Pelt. Cor·
nor Socond &amp; Pin'!!, Qalllt&gt;olll.

=:,::e.,:.r.. =,::

cluelvely .t Rita Aid PharmiCJ.
Tho oofo woy to dlol.

a.....

61

Fann Equipment
tUt John o.... Modot a, Alii•
Chlllmoro, H.D. 1 llour1 Hrotor
Eloctrfo Fork ~1ft. f14-44o·2359.
Formoll-11 ond Farmatt-11, 304·
l'll:t452.
Jlm'o Form Equlpmon11 .SR. 35,
WHI aanlt&gt;Otlo, 114...1-9m;
WJde 1111ctlon ntw &amp; ueld ltrm
frociOfl 1 lmplomonlo. Buy,
=~: .:r,or.a::fl0.5:oo -kd•y•.
Ntw Hollond 7 ft hllvl&gt;lnd. Naw
Mollond 8 ft hoy bind. Now Ho~

wnh oliver '"""' land Super 717 Forage Harws·
ol~~. bllck Pfom dNH olu tar. aohl85 grlndar·mlxor. All ox
10, DOUI w/acctt~toriel, 304-IH38141 or 304-e'IS-1308 ooll fOf cond, 304-273-1215.
J11111fo.
Qllvor lroclor &amp; form machlnory
porto, If na1 In olock will got.
Hundrodo of popor blo:k boolll can
"Tho Olio Man". 614-31111·
lor ~~~~~,,..1 lor Flu Mlrktt, llfl4
oiC.I1
-3129.
•
All Qllch Wllcll TNnchor wllh
I.B.M. Comp. Comi!Uior, Color hoo
oHaclunonl. can 1740
Monnor, Loto Of SohwaN, teOO. Unllolldor
ollld IIHr. 114-894·
cattl14-441-4471.
7842.
King 8111 Wolorbod, Foncy Wtnllc:l: U1td ltrm equipment,
Hndboord Wllh Mlnv Now onrthlng
IOU want to Hll. Call
Hnlor (Low EMF).I14-44e..iiM. 114-2M-t304,
25H040 thor I
Llko - L.P. goo hn1!~ lS,OOO p.m.
blu, COli 54()0. 1111 tD5.

, 814--

ACTUALLV, VOU'RE ONLV 601N6
TO BE STAVING WITH US
FOR A FEW DAYS ..

rongoo. SkoHI Apptloncoo,
Upper Rlvtr

Ra.

Bnldl Stone

Croat Molal. call 5M-44e-7388,
1·800-488-3488.
~AYNE'S FURNITURE

Complete

home

tumlehlnge.

Houro: Mol&gt;lol, 8-8. 114-4430322, 3 mlloo out lulavlllo Rd.
Fr11Dollvtl')'.

Ntw!Ustd
Hous•hotd furnishing. 112 mi.
Jtrrlcho Rd. Pt. Plaaaant, WV,

plr·

RHiouranl Equipment, leo M•
chino, 111 Woll In Cooler, Goo
Orlddto, 2 Complllmonl Sink,
Tabtn And Choirs, Hotco FWlrmor, Hood I Sprfnktar Syo.
lem, •Plu1 Other h1m1. 114-4411157 ~n•llp.m.

lltctronlo I'I'MICIIoal

tn.ur~nae

Them

D~nl

WI--

With

.....,. FOf :lint Inch ROIIIh
llponi... 114-S7NUI.

Super llnglo wot•bod wtth
hlldboo~l $110. 304-e7&amp;.48Q2
or f'III-11MIIk for Jorry.
su.tt~ua, ,.,..~ dlntm ormy
clolhl~ F~, Sot Sun, NOOn •
1:00 PM. 5aln ltOmlrvlllt'o, 5
mltoo Elot of ~77, Ravonowood,
WV. II¥ Sondyvfllo Pool Olllc_o1
other houro-doyt, 304-273-5&amp;..
Union
made
ldvtrtlolng
opocloftloo and matchto.
Tandy - TX; 20 - HD oxp.
40 fM1 w/ltacktr, "'3.5 &amp;:25
Poppy, CQA monMor, 1200
mOdem,

over

$1,000.

Fr11

ooflwora lncludod. 304·511-2033
(Qrog~

Wanted To Buy: Large Round

Transportation
71

Autos for Sale

,__.:..:..:..:....;.;;.;...:;.;;;,;:___
'N

catobrlty.

2.1L-F1100.

Loadld. $2,400. 114-317-0122 .~

:.:
'"':..:S:::pm:.:::....- - - - - 1811 lluola'!e Rogulor 288 3
!lDHd FUI Bilek. 1111Muoto302 4 Spood, 114./1'19-2645. :·•
111'18 Elelmlno, Super Sport,
Good Condlllon, $1,100. SM-2561841, llolw..., 7 A.M. I 10 P.M.
11112 Pontile lonnovlllo alation
waaon. PS, PB, I cyt, $1,200.
:Joc-.e7U782.

CD Wild Antertca

~-~:rc/Lelni
&lt;lleea
ea-.

IIIID Current Affair C

1044.

ae E

7:05 (J) Bonanza
7:30C2le
® NIA l!alk
Cillcago
Bulls at New Jersey Nett (L)
(I) D EIJ!!IIalnmanl Tonight
S"tereo..Ill.
~
lllirttd...WIIh Chlklren

o:=•c

e

Gra
Whet! of Fortune [;I
112 e Family FIUCI

S

txe cond, 304-&amp;75·7'G88 after

Mercury Marine Strvlct.
Mercury, Marlntr, Mercrulaer
specialist. MaJCury certltlld.
Mobllo....._We como to you. IM·
OUIMt

2111-lvnr.
F01 Solo: 14 A. Jolvl Boot, Wllh
Trollor. Noodo Minot Ropolro.
Aoklng: ~. 114-241-5129.

76

"'
*
'
"
'
"
"'
·
.
&amp;'!h.:....

az•

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

aJle Family Workl

Serv1ces

Wrote Q
Q!l Talle ot hwnd Willi
John MacNelly St. Patrick's
Day special realurtng the
Irish singer performing at llle
Victorian Theater on baird
Opryland's General Jecl&lt;son
ShOwboat in Nashvlllo, Tenn.
(0:30) Stereo.
tD Amltzlng Clemea

(!J Murder, •

EEKANDMEEK

Bud!tol Tronom-. UHd a
10bulft, otartlng ol $DIIJ.. Jront
whHf drlvo I I = 11 mt.OO
114-241-5177, I
-8281
Dlnmmoblod 3tiG Ll·1 motOf,
llllfllo plug hndo. w-tlo
hUIII ihiRor, 12 boll aM I:N
g..r. tN7 camoro nooo a bolh
llooro, 11111 Chovy . PU hood,
,.,_, grltto. 114-441-3m .~
tori:OO.

l'M A

1 HAV£ 1/Wr'

~(

~I[VILS .. .

l(:tAU5f...

IBPrlnteNeWIC
11!1 Rln Tin Tin. K-9 Cop

irtereo. Q
1:05 (J) MOVIE: T1ll Quill Mlln
(2;45)
1:30 (J). ()). " Improvement Jill sets up a
pottery ctaaa in Tim's
gar~. Stereo. C
(!]) • MOVIE: Tlii Nemo ol
the ROM (Rl (2:30)
ta On Biage Stereo.
11!1 Wllneu to SuiYI¥el Q
t:OO (2)
«J ReaiOtllltle
llouiiW The raaaon lor
DiCky's ex-wife's
reappearance Is discovered.
(PI 2) Stereo. C

'

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP
WHEN MRe. I/.OI..LoeY
CAL.l.ED ATTE&lt;NcAINCE
THIS MORNIN&amp;, 1 ~I D •••

1

MY BODY's HE~e, 8/..IT
M'( 9QAIN-IS6TIL.L.
HCW.e IN BED."

e

~!

(I) D

()). ROMenne

Roseanne and Jackla try to
wort&lt; out their problemS ~
seeing a shrink. Stereo. Q
(!) NOYI Whether or not
birds are the deSCendants of
dinosaurs. Stereo. C

111e G. lith AMull

I'Hpla'l Cltolce Awanll
From Los Angeles, lllevla
viewers' tavortte showa,ln
categories Including top
comedy and dra~ lllie
receive awards. Hoal: K111

BARNEY
I'M HOME,

AUNT LOWE ElY!!

l'M HOME II

I

LOVE YOU

GOODER'N

ARY ANGEL!!

WHAR'S
TH'REPORT
CARD?

U2

PHILLIP
ALDER

WEST
+J&amp;3

EAST

. '.. . '.

'1106&amp;2

., 9 7

+K6

tJt07H3

... ..,

+z

+J 10 76

The Catch-22
of the tax collector .
By Phillip Alder
Henry VII of England had the ideal
Chancellor of the Exchequer: John
Morton. He operated under the princi·
pie that if a noble had a high standard
of living, obviously he could afford to
pay taxes to the king ..Whereas if a noble lived frugally. clearly he was
hoarding his money and so had cash to
spare for the king. It was the perfect
Catch-22, and , in memory of the Chan·
cellor, there is a bridge play known as
Morton's Fork.
Cover the East-West cards in the di·
agram and plan the play in six spades.
West leads a trump from jack·lhird.
The band was played during the
1991 Cold Flake Asia and Middle East
Bridge Championships in New Delhi.
Tahir Masood, who was helping Paki·
stan win the Open event, was the only
player to make six spades on this deal.
North used the Jacoby forcing raise .
South's rebid showed a balanced hand
with extra values. Two cue·bids were
followed by Roman Key Card Black·
wood, South showing the trump queen

••

SOUTH
+KQ1075
'IQ13

·' .

+AQB

..•.•

.,u;

tQ2
Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: South
Nort~

Sootb

W.n

5+

Pass 2NT
Pass I+
Pass · INT
Pass 6 +

I+
3 NT
u

Opening lead:

-

~ ~::

., ,

and two key cards (two aces, or one ···
ace and the trump king).
· ·:··
If the diamond finesse was workin&amp;.c"'i
the contract would be easy. So Masood ~
assumed it was wrong. He drew ""~
trumps ending in I he dummy and theft" led the club three , impaling East on ; :
Morton's Fork. If East went in witn ..:;
the ace, declarer could discard his two diamond losers on the fourth heart and ·'.
the club king. But when East playejj;,: ;
low, Masood won with the club que•"··· ·
discarded his second club on the lr · ~ •
heart a~d took the diamond fines&amp; "". :
an unsuccessful quest for an overtricw: "

-----------------------~"'
•

Plumbing &amp;
· Heating
COrtor'l Pluml.&gt;"'t
FOWII1ondPine
Qallfpollo Ohio
114 utblt

I 'I Ill ';lll'l''ltt ,
,!\ h

Eleclrtcal &amp;
Refrigeration

1

ACROSS

36 Formar Rua·

1 What cows
chew
s tee9 unclose

37 Speckling
39 Track evonls
40- to Joy
41 Medical

Answer to Previou1 Puzzle

sian ruler

(poet,~

suffix

12 Actraas -

42
45
49
52

Perlman

13 Employs
14 Pearl, e.g .
15- Lang
Synt
16 Tht Boston

Pick
- ·talre
Howls
Leave-Beaver

53 Annapolis
grad
54 llovla
55 Western d•
ftnlt org.
56 Occupied 1
bench
5711aket lact
58 Antolopoo

18 Beard pari
20 Coarse grass
21 - ~lngut
{airline)
22 Make a
choice
24 Holy till of
Islam
27 Supple
31 Glvo olf •
lumeo
32 Young horee
33 Oflr fpoet.l
34 Aquatic bird
35 Robbll (var.)

DOWN
1 Animal'•
11omacn
2 No
3 Food thop
4 Inept oarvlce·
man (2 wdo.l

5 More
altroctlvt
6 Addlcl
1 Actro11Arthur ·
8 Slllh s1n11
labbr.l
9 Evil glont
10 Footltsll'a -

N111hvll~ Now Stereo.

alarming news about her
~::mlrer. (PI 31 Stereo.

........ . -.-·=_.....
87

Upholltery

II IOJ'i UptJ , , •• _ . .

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

11lo

Colt*"""- ...... ...

(I) D (I) • CIYII wars

Charita lncl Sydney go on a
data; a couple hla lhalr
dlvoroe ~·
CD Ntlln Stereo.
(!) Nova The Ia
I
unearthing o1 the first T. rex
Jli,tlaiOn Ia txptorad. Stereo.

:l.,Q

ISt. RHCI"ollhl Monlll
Patrlck't Day I Ok ~om
Torrance, Calli. (T)

Ill Wadel NtWI

0 100 Club Wllh Pal
lllltrtaoft
10:311. Cnlalt and CIIIM
• AIMII9i'l Cup 't2
10:10(1) MOVII: lllo car.. (2:15)

11:00 (J). Ill. (I). • •

• • liNin

21.,.,.,

wa,..

,,

I!Wtl~£ Stareo.

G

uGJv•C '

•

=

••• ,..., a Pllrlck'a

IPICiillilllmli ': lht

v.:r~

~··InOlnentl
Jaokton
$I\OWbOit
illtlrvlllt,
T11111.
.(0:31011111reo.
II

'C

FH

HJWIOMF

UVOJWM
C F H

DC

IZC

C F H

DYDMF.
I D PH

IQJWZGWH

CFHA

UHMC

DJ

I I Z YC

UHGZCDKZI

G

·

,....oiiNirlltdWIII

1 '

~~-------------------- ·:

@ ....-~~~~
Doubll Tess llama aome

'

•

Tbe World Almanac® Crossword Puzzle .;;

10:00(2).

Witt build polio - . doc~ko
~
olliltlnil
.......... -,·_
""
' up .•

:·: '.:l

@-....,UP liniN Nil AIM

and Luther are disproved
when they Claim to be
unsentimental. Stereo. Q

ASTRO-GRAPH

•'

L _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___J - •

irtereo. Q

Graph predictions lor the year ahead by VIRGO fAug. 23-S.pl. 221 Do nothing
mailing $1.25 plus a long , self-ad· out of the ordinar, today that could
dressed, stamped envelope to Astro· alienate allies or partners. These key
Graph, c/o this newspaper, P.O. Bo• people ~re more important to your pre·
91428, Cleveland, OH H101 ·3428. Be sent success than you may realize.
S&lt;Jre to state 1our zodiac sign.
LIBRA fllepl. 23·0ct. 231 Mismanaging
BERNICE .
ARIES fMorch 21-AprH 191 Ego might others could be your undoing today.
BEDEOSOL cause
you lo feel inclined to attempt an · There's a chance you may have a pen.
endeavor today thai's beyond your chant tor rubbing the wrong people the
knowledge and ability. You··u know wrong way. Be thoughtful.
you're in over your head . yet you may SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov. 221 There's a
disregard this fact.
possibility you might encounter someTAURUSfApril20oMIJ20lTheremlghl one socially today who is as equally
be some polllical stirrings within your strong-willed as you are. It's better to
peer group today and. If this IS !rue, pack Ofllfld'glve .a bit rather than eredon't get Involved. Whichever side i&gt;r is· ate an unpleasant incident.
sue you support will be the wrong one. 8AGinARtU8 (No¥ .. 23!Dec:. 211 Un·
GEMINI (lily 21-.lun. 20) Someone deresfimatlng your oppolitlon could
you hold In high regard might turn a,utlo diiiJI"Ive you of succesa todar. Evaklate
be a - • dlaappointrnent to you to- anyone who contests you realistically,
MarCh 11,1112
day. Thlal~becauseyou'llp~tmorecre- and thin handle' that Individual
dence In this peraon'a ability than this approprlltlly.
·
It could prove highly aclvantageOUI In ·individual actually PQIIIItes:
CAPIIICOIIN (Dec. 22.Ju. 18) Guard
the year ..,..d to get more deeply In· CANCeR (.hiM
22) YOU .may agalnlt the tendency today 10 be hyper·
volvedlnyourclubororganllatlonalac· n01 be u o:onlld111111 menial maneu- .critical o1 others' Ideas wltnout giving
tlvlllel. Contacts you'll eetablloh could vanng today aa you 111111k you are. You 'll them a fair hearing. a. attentive to all
provenetplulln many
have ·1he other requijlitll, such u en· lhe pertlnlfll facta before arriving at a
PIICII (1'111. 20 • 111 ill) Your eval· thulilltll1 and initiative, bul you may conduolon.
·
uatlont of de\'IIIJPIIllllll .,. Ukily to be . lacll vision.
AQUARIUI (.1M. 20-Fell. 11) l n . more ~titan your matt' I today. LIG (.IIIIJ ZloAUf. 22) lie doubly care- menlo wlllllhe wrong people could coot
but 11 ~ trit 100 IIIQI'IIIive or lorcelul, lui today In your commercial lind finan· you money today. Be wery ollndlvlduall
lhll9 may end ·~p In 1 11and-oH rather clal dalinga. Tne ground you're aland· who try 19 profit In aome manner tram
lhltlllnluccua Placas,treatyoursellto lng on Ia notaa firm u n ap-llo be, the resourc:oa YC1" p011811 .
a 111rt1tt11y gill. 1111c1 tor Pttc:oa' Altro- and ~ might gel mlrtd d~ .

-

·" "

+3

t:30 (I) D (I) • Coecll Hayden

1144SM211.

...
,,,

Eut
Pass
Pass
Pass
All pass

tD Atnlllcln MuiiCII Bpeclal

tiiU CJ:r ~~~""' St&gt;oot1
Coupo.
000
Good
Mlon, -S2,00o; 'turbo
INS
Ford a - Runo Clood,
12,000; 1887 bo.iiiO D-10 PU,
Good CondM,.;. -121100· 18'111
Qodgo Alliin, GOOd, $4'111.

'

+Au~

~,.:~~~(L

Qll

••

'.

:·~Uvel

ljUfrld. 114-441-1111.

f'umlol1od
t Itt! htll,
noxt
lo
Ulttory, .,........ oon110
n• 111 ue ma,
7p.ot•

shunli mls8lon and a view 01
Earth irom space. Stereo. Q
(I) D FuM HouM The family
reVOII1 against Danny's
obsession with cleanliness.
Stereo. C
(!) Nove"lialeontologlsls visit
one of llle most lertfle
dinosaur field&amp;. Stereo. C
1111•
Reecue: t1f A
hoart·aHack vfctlm Is rushed
to the hospital by
paramedics. Stereo. Q

$9,995. 304·578-21150.
BOATERS

QM24t

I,'

CIJD NCAA--roumament
Prellitw
CD Nova What llle Is like on a

I OON'T MIN[) TEWiol'
YOU KRAG, I'M TIRED
OF Pl~'o'lfol' SOLDIER!

botrdloutbotrd,low hre, garage
ktpt, 11tlnlttl IIIII top,
lifeguard pkg, raady to go, price

tiiU .... .
- , olwrp. 1M4-·~1000
Qfdo
•
ctoro 'H, - . 304"'11-4tS3 or

\

Night The arrest ol a drug
pusher tears apa~ a family.
(R) Stereo. C

ALLEYOOP

In·

lnqulrloo Ollly. ,

4241 (24 hrol.

·.

""
•' ; .

~t'J.tz

11!1 Flllltlllolvllntl Mrltlt!IM

.Cinbotoon~

'

'

&amp; tkl,

5:00.

tt,

.:' .

Tournament Special
18 Croaafire
1:00(2)D «J In Ill Heat of Ill

-'!8·

-·~-s.
7-Mii-

quiiOd "·"'·
pluo PC. for lnformollon
by mall, call 102o35So

Eltro Nloo 1 llodroom Clrpol·
lng, W.lor And Trooh PUI'I\111\od,
l)jpotf\ AICIUired.tM-44.......
_ , _ _ Andlolh
\llloloill, QIMn. No Polo,
........ And~ ...

Q!l Be • Star Stereo.

Ill Collgl Balkefl&gt;lll

...r

__ ,

+Kil

11!1 T1ll Waltont

$2,500. 614-441·7844.
MototCrcto 11180 RM 280 Suzuki
For Salt. IM·388-835i.

18

BRIDGE

!ES

Honda 250 4 WhHIII', Hav1 Ac·
cttoriH. Excellent Condhlon!

-"

;&gt;

NORTII
+A 984
'IAKJ8

Tonight

Stereo.

74
_...,..M.....;.ot;_;o_rc...:y...,c,.le,.;.s_.....,
1111 Horloy Low Ride&lt; good
cond, $4,500. 304-77.1-1834.
1982 Yamohll" XT 280 Dirt like,
Now Tlroo, oxholuol And Tuno
Up. ExcoUonl CondHion, 3,100
Mltn, $550. GM-441-3485.

-.'

,;. . . .:. .;_. :. .;__________,,·-I

~·~

304-I'IS-

IIIIIIII

...

Q

1887 AlrOMar Ford Mini Ven,
Takt Over Payments. 814-387-

LETTERS TO

.The art of co~versation is not only saying the ri~ht
thing at the nght ttme, but leaving unsaid the wrong lh1ng
at the TEMPTING moment.

Fortune

(I) D lnllde Edlllctn

1988 5·10 Blazer, V-6, Auto, AC,

6!,000 Mlln , $4,100. 814-2516434.

'

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS .
3 _1"
Mildew • Lapel · Theft · Jingle • TEMPTING

~ 1Dmm or .JIIIMia

73 vans &amp; 4 wo·s

Marum

e ~~ic:~~~~ER

8:35 (J) Andy lllllftth

7:00 \ljD «J Wheel of

..- .

PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS 1
IN THESE SQUARES

11!1 Ntw Zctml Stereo. 1;1

3117·7013.

1990

8

ljiUpCioH

For Salt: 1010 Ford Bronco, Air,
Till Whnl, Automatic, Power
SIHrlng, 6 Brtkll, $2,000. 814-

n, fish

1;1

Scooby Doo

(!J

per, $10,500, 814·i112·71'11

I' 1 I I I
7

Ill Square 0no Stereo.
Ia
az•cn~~ew~Q
(!]) • Andy Qrllfttlt

hubs, 52000MI, new tlrM, top-

1883 Flroblrd, ""'· 5 ..,...,, 81
Home
..,lrp Ctr, 71,000111, 12200 bBO,
114-11124357 oAorlpm
Improvements
1883 Z.lll, Nice car, AC, CC,
BASEMENT
Foclory Prom. Sound Syo. Awo
WATERPROOANG
00, T·Topo, Tift, WhKo Wllh Uncondh~n11
llflllmt guar~n­
81,_ Int. P,IOO. Call 114-446·
tll. Local rtftrencH tumllhtd.
1111.
F101 ootimiiM. con cotlocl 1·
1884 Dodge A~oo. 4 -·block, 114-237-0411, doy or night
AM/FM1 CIDitll, 41 cyl, MW II· Rogoro llooomont WollfP'ootlng.
hlu", t14·112·7331, tvtnlnp
1884 Floro BE Rod-Tinlod Win- Compiolollobllo Homo Soi.U,..
dow, 4~1!!!:1 ieyl., Sunroof, AC, Rlf)IIN; Commorlcol, Rookfon.
PW, AMit'M cau, $2,500. &amp;14- llal lmprvvomonto. lnakldlng:
PlumbinG, Etoctrlcol. lnMonoor
25e·!771 Ewonlngo.
ctolmo '"""fllod. t14-251·1111.
1884 FOfd Eocort, 4clt., 4 opood
lllndtrd, aaocl cond., make of. CUrtlo Homo lmprv-nlo:
Yooro Expo- On Otdor &amp;
lor, 114-M§;2Mt
Homtl. Room Addftlono,
1884 HONDA ACCORD 40. Foundollon Work, ·
AutotnlllciCINY. Qno OWnor KMahono And litho. F10o Ei·
Uko HII!J Hoi A Scrolch. VII')' llmotool Rotor.,..., No Job To
Rllilblo trsnopoolotlon • $4 500 Big Or Smaiii114-4'11.Q225.
114411-Mllllt a.m. ·I p.m. OOiy.
JET
1884
ll. .ury
Couaor, Alrotlon llalon, rapoiiOd. HPIIIIIIAC, am'trM:....tta, v... I ..-111 motors In otock, RON
11'1011 drlvor, oxo. lni.IN1.,opooly EVANS, JACKSON, Ott 1 whoolo. taw mltooge,$2685, 114- 537-1821.
M84045 or 114-148-2879

Homo
f o r ....
with
good oredll end omoU .....,
1.

_..-...

ofolmo _ _
. . ... - · '
ao;~. paotllme
to ovor 110,000. , . limo. ComPonY tralnlngl lnlllol aaphol ,.

64 Hay &amp; Grain
.,.....,.._,,:...._..,.,..._____
Good quoiHI round boloo (1,000
tbol otorod lntldo. $30. ooch,
1 ~
•-1 ••• ·110
4308...," ICII.IIrt.,. "· .N"I'"V,.,..

(I) • ABC

(I) •

llont, 4Wd, I1,000MI, IXC. cond.,

Baloo at Ha,. l14-441-1052.

Ex•-

7 Rottyoan Wllllo Aluminum

nn.

call after Spm 614-8112·5283
18119 Ford F·150 XLT LoriOI 4x4,
302 engine, hp. 00, lock out

1989 Pro Cr1fl t8

My yDung11r sister and 1
had many raasans lor not
linishing our dally chores,
but Granny would . hear
none of them. "Excuses;
she scolded, ·are the nails
used to build a house ol

i:NBATr,
8WaddTodly
11!1 Rln TJ!!.
K·l Cop
Stereo. Q
1:05 (J) lleveo1J llllll.laa

8:30(2).
@NIC~§
(I) laved
by ... Bell

Horoa I Stock Traliof, $1,H5;

Wuhtrs, dryera, retrlgeraton,

SO VOU DON'T HAVE TO
SEND OUT ''C~AN6E OF
ADDRESS'' CARDS ..

304~

dllk with lulhor lop. 17f4-44f. Big Uood Silver Royal Show
0431.
Soddlo.I14-21H522.
51
Household
Plaotlc And Modal Culwo~ linch 21omalo hogo, 304-A24tm.
Goods
Thru 10 Inch In Stock. Ron
Ewane, Jac:kaon, Ohio. 1-800- Anguo And Chi-Anauo Black
3 pltct ll~lng room suite, wery 537-8528.
Bunoj: Rnoonobly Prlcod. Stall
good cond., 1150. After 4:30,
Run anne, Jackeon, Ohio, 614·
614-441.0S47.
Prom drut 1Im 7 with ICC... 286-1381.
oortoo, 304-175-2401.
Big Savings On All Carpet In
Folr Pfao. S40 Eoch. 114-251Stock. Caoh And Corry, Mol· Rll DHch Witch T...,chtf Wllh tMS llllw"-7 A.M. I I P.M.
lohan carpolt, 514-441-llf44.
Hoi Aftocllnonl &amp; CoN 17'0
Unllolldor Skid 11-. can 114- Good folr
148 lo $50 ooch.
G.E. Waohor, $95; Whirlpool HH842.
814-388168~.

'

(I)VIdeo-

IZl Sq..,. Ono TV Stereo.
ieRaln~Q

tor

1880 Ood~trkL~-1'111-2711
"""' 5:00
7S·l053.
1985 Chevy 314Ton 3tiG PS, PB,
AT, Dual Tonko, Dual ~1hlluol,
AMIFM Cuootlo, 13,1100. Coli
8:A·11 :o\814-44&amp;.4153.
19M Fotd 3tiG DloMI, duol
tonkl, tift. mldwoot bod wtth
3ft. Ncko. Clood cond. 114-2811335.
1887 S.tO Btour, l .. yt, oil op-

71150, 614-3711·21108,

..

1111.

(I). (I).

aze «»New•

8124188.

WATER WELLS DRI~~ED:
coil S04·67S·1450.
WATER QAURANTEED. 614-8111o
SWAIN
T311.
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE. 82
Olivo St., Qolllpolla. Now I Uaod WHITE'S IIETA~ DETECTORS
furni1Urt, hMitrl, W... em I Ron Alii- 1210 Sooond
Avon,., aon1po~to, Ohio, 114Work bootL 614-443-3158.
441-4331.
52 Sporting Goods
Wood burning otov11t a y10. otd,
$200,114-8112'1111
I Of 5pm
SOio-tlu txercl~t m~~chlne,
good ohopo, ocaopto all ofloch·
homt. EJ:aell1nt condition.
55
Building
Socurltr d-H &amp; rofaroncH ments, 614·H2-IIn
Supplies
~'f.l~":ti. 304.e7s.e7lll or 304· ,:.5:.3--::A:-n:::tl.;:qu-.e~s~=::- Biocll, brick, - l!lpo1, wtn3bdrm. houoo In Pomeroy, Buy or nil. Rlvarlno Anllq,.o, dowa\..Mnl..l, ala. Claud• WinslovtJrtfrlgerltor, 1200/mon., 1124 E. Mtln Strtlll, Pomeroy. lora, •lo Qrandol, OH can 114$2001depoel1, rtftrtnctt r•· Hour~ : M.T.W. 10:00 a.m. to 1:00 245-1121.
quiNd, 614·H2·Tl'l7 onor Spm, p.m., Sundty 1:00 to 1:00 p.m.
8t4·848-24781uvo mlllago
514·992-2&amp;21.
56 Pets tor Sale
e Room• And aotn, At 44 Ottvo 54 Miscellaneous
.:.a.:.,....--•.:.nd.,:..,Su-,pp.....;.t•-s"'"h-.,."'"'Ptl,...,
Stroll, Qalllpolla. Inquire AI 918
aroomlng. All br., lltyla1.
Second Avenue, Gatllpollt.
Merchandise
1om1 Pel Food Dootor. Julio
Webb. Cllll14-4411-4231.
" ~". ohopod bunk bodo wllh
42 Mobile Homes
drotoar, 1250 080, 114-8112· Dog lfouMo For Solo: Soworol
for Rent
2508
81-. 1 112 IIIIo Out AI.MI, a ...
llpollo. Woyno Shotmollor. 1142 bedroom mobile homo 1 Ynr Old 115 Oat. Flth Tonk, 441.0111
Southoldo, $250. mo $100. Wllh cablnol c:omptotly Equlp1
_ Qochthund, omall, lull
dopoolt or will 1111 18,500. 304· pldl $200.1....
'11+112.
' ,
67S·5502.
'
~ 14 month• old, $100.
2 btdroomt, trllltr nttda .arne 2 Qao Cook Stvvoo FOf lolL ;304~.a71-101:;,:.;~'::,·c-:-..,-,:--:-Floh Tonk, 2413 Joakoon Avo.
work can do work for depo1lt, l14-441-07l2.
prlnte, 1115. mo. 304·1'11-5252. 2 Rolli Of carpot, Good Cond~ Point PINnnl, 304-e'114013,
11115 I ttxtt. 114-4411- lull· llno Troplcot nan blrdo,
2 BR, lllddloport, Ohio. tionl
omall onlmalo •nd ouppt1n.
RtJtrtnce 1 •pot;lt required. NU.
304-IB2·326l
S prvm gawno, olzo 7ft, STI. fi1
Musical
2br Mobllt Home, Aeterenctl!l, nch. 304-e'IMS24.
Instruments
And DopooH Noodad. 114·311'7- I rollo 1112" lndUIIMI lnoutollon
7811.
$150. cador knit. dloploy .... Orgon Boldwln Or.._., Spo.
w/4 dro,..,. 11110. CitdM cord Nl FNturw Panaromic Sound
44
lmprlnl• for atoro ,_ 120. With .....
Apartment
Condlllon,
• ..., ... S.8X ~~~~ lWo Koylloonlo. 11 Nolo -11
for Rent
will,..tlndor 110. to4-l'lll-1071. loordl QMI For Church Or

wllh poopto you know and
NOT to lind monty through tho
111111 unlit , .. hiVO lnvoatfgatod
tho ott.rtng.
AIII'P llodiool lilting. ()ppot. 2 bdrm. opl. In SyiOOUII, $151
tunlly to quaiiiY II I lloon- In lnalud11 • - utiiHI11, cltpooft,
lfOIIf orn lot 1 natton-.t 114-H2-72H
-hoaro
DOIIIPI"Y·
Qo

_____

3 ...,..,- - - - - 1 1 . - - -4, _ _ _ __
12 . _ _ _ __
5.._______ 1.1.._ _ _ __
14. _ _ _ __
7._· _ _ _ __ 15,___ _ __

1

~~'::1
utiiMioo,bllh,
114!lYing rmJ.o300mo
2-bdrm,&amp;kitchen,

814-882-3080
Rttraln
Nowii!Southtatttm
Butln111 Colltgt , Spring Vallty 2 BR, Point Ploooant 1101, 2&amp;3
Plazo. Call Today, 814-446-438711 BR· Camp Conltl oroa. Coli
304-17&amp;.3812.
RtgltteraUon 190·05-12748.
2 or S bdrm. 2 both houoo In
18 Wanted to Do
countrr, lull l.i~tmonl wlfamlly
room I fiNtlflao, carpo~. $350,
Will Sab11H In My Hotnt. Rod· 114·381-122?
nty Aru . Rtlertncu Awalllblt.
Calllt4·24S.&amp;887.
3 BR ronch, 112 ..,. lown. New

ca11304-675·1957.

2.- - - - -

2053 or 675-1100.
Ploaoonl upotoill Atll, 50tJI2 B.
3rd Slr11t lllddloport,QMo.

1 bdrm. opt. In Pomoroy, $1501 Llkt n.wl Lowe INt end chair
month; 3 bdrm. houn In $200. 114-441-1707.
Pomeroy, $2001 month, 114-i112·
PICKENS FURNITURE
3085
.

2 bclrm. howe,

Otorg•• Portablt Sawmill, don't
haul your logt to lhe mill juat

](}

Ont
and
two
bedroom
apartm1n11 hH rent. 304-475-

1

41 Houses for Rent

3117-71151.

1 ~-----

For Hlfo rental prop.erty,
Syracun1 4 rtnlllt, large lot,

lng tllptflanct or II you art • ·
dtpendtblt perton with an out· Loti joining Point • 100% owntr
going ptraontllty, we may hive tlnonclng ot llctt.48 par month
buyt 111 thr11 tott . 304·675111o oppo&lt;tunlll IOU oro looking am.
·
fotj . ..50 per hour wtth bonut
lnc1nllva, plu••r.hon. 814·62·
~40 tor an lnterv tw.
Rentals

Trimming, TrH Removal, Htdgt
Trimming. Fru Etllmttlll 6fc.

9, _ _ _ __

445~335.

123,500, o14·Hz.5732
Wathar,
$150;
K1lvlnllor
Loll tar 8111 IPIIllrt acclp· Refrigerator 2 Door, Whitt,
toblt. 304-175-2722.
1125·-Holpolnl Rolrfgorotor):$81;
1nttor Rtfrlgar~tor,
317-GM-2000
rat
Loll In aolllpollo Fori')' • 100% Kelv
Almond, $175; Admlrtl
Surrogate Mothlrt Wanlld, F• ownsr financing at $lli8.64 ~r Fl'll
Roti/goralor, Copparton~ 1 • $150:
Plus ExpeniM For Carrying A month, any one of tour lots Was1Tnghou11 Small washer
Couplo'l Child. Mull Ba 11-35 nollobto, 30H75·2n2.
And Dl')'lr, ~lkt Now,~280, G.E.
And ProvloYIIy Had A Child. lott In Naw H•~•n · 100% Dryer,
White, Uk1 NeW, t150;
SltVI ~hz. Att,., 317·He-2000.
owntr tlnanclng at $101.46 per Skoggo Appllancoa, Upper Rlvor
month buy• til Uutt Iota, a304· Rod, Galllpolll, 814-1411-73N.
Ttttmarktltr
It you htw• previous ttMmarkll· 11s.zm.
GOOD USED APP~IANCES

Automotlwt painting tnd body

r.

Pond, Born, Silo And Unloodor,

otort, ploaoo phone, 114-HZ· HZ-1141

work. Bob, 814·441-1118 .
E l RTREE SERVICE. Topping,

111m your clutier into cas/1,
StHJ. it the £l!!!llVay... by tJhone,
rto rteed to leave your l1ome.
Place your cla1111(fied (Jd today!
15 words or less, 3 days,
3 Jmpers,$6. 00
t:n/1 "'" ..!Jir.• r trnul in mlvnnr.~ '""''!

14,000 + lb. Toblcco Batt,

nMCI.ct lor a ctmetary oftlc1 In 1001150 Dtbblt Dri~1, Qal·
Pom.,oy, Ohio, 3yrt. pravloue llpollo. 814-448·n3t, Allor 5p.m.
atc:rltlarlal experlanca prtlarrod,JIIIng1 11plng oklllo 1 mull, Far 1ale, 2.388 ecre11, wooded,
$4.&amp;0 per nour, !Ohr1. 1 WMk to on Ftotwoodo Rd., $5000, 614·

Qat/ipotla, Ottperat1ly wanting to ldopl a

.Want to:
PIN down EXTRA

Ftrm For Sale: J. Dawld Atha,
115 AcrH, 7e Acr11 Tllltblt.

t8, 8 A.M. To 12 Noon Call For Shown By Appointment Only,
An Appointment. 114-841·83118, 114·378-2118.
WESTERN MEDICA~ SERVICES.
35 Lots &amp; Acreage
S.cralery Potlllon

Dlrtc:tor Of Nurefngf
Plnecrllt Cart C.rltlr 110
Ohio. 614-4•6·7112.

home, 1 milt bllow town ovtr·
looking river. No Pttt, Cl. 814·

'. .

bt·
Jow to form four simple words.

.,

849·2045

Antwtr Plllll ltavt MHIIQI.

0 four
Rearrange letters of
scrambled words

TUE., MARCH 17 •
1:00 (2).

75 Boats &amp; Motors
63
Livestock
Bunk Feldtr, Ntw Ftnclng, 8 1230. Par Month: uopooH R•
.:.:..__:::.:.:.:.::.:;;:__
for Sale
floam HouM, Large N1w Family qulrod. Call 614-1441-4248, 114- ~Hio glrlo ctothoo. Llrgo tl cowo, 8 catvoo, a bull. 114·
t211HOUAi Atxlblt Hours, AI· Room With Sali:on,, 2 Full 448·2325, Or 514-441-4421.
lrantmloolon. 304-e7S·1414.
387·'1115&amp;. _ _ __
=..:.:.:.::...__
1888 11.111 Trockor TX·17, lllhp
tlgnmonto In SOUthern And Bathe, Ntw Fumoea Wllh CA,
map• gble, 4 c::•ptaln ct\tlrs; 1811 AOHA Mort, $1,250; Big Evlnrudt, plus 8hp Evlnrudt,
C.ntrtl Ohio. Local lnttrYIIWI, Localtd On St1t1 Highway, Per·
whito oowlng mochlno, cabinet: 1810 AQHA Ooldl'!e, 1550; 1882 many txlrtl, garage ktpt, $1000
Merchandise
Morch 17, 2 P.M. To 8 P.M. Mori:h lect Pltct To Atlll Children!
firm, 6M-D112·77lll
rowing mtctilne; entlqut chlrrv

Conl~et :

Drive,

33 Farms tor Sale

engine, txc. cond.,
bolh work &amp; sport,

~.

•

EVENING

tm Chevy 112 ton pi~ S50

Open Showing Monday From
5:30. 7.
Compltlll Fumlahod mobllo

CortdHion, Coli 814·387-0139 AI·
'"' 5 P.M.
49
For Lease
.;.:__....:._....:._:..:..__

Salt: 5 Room Trailer In
P.O. Sox 1711, Oak Hill, OH 45ell For
Florida,
1 112 Mile From ~1. 75,
Or Pick Up Apptlcotlon At: Calll14·448·2855.
Jenklna Pharmacy, E. Mlln

Bo On Call. CompoiHivo Wlgoa,
OIHoronllat With Exporlonco, E· 12
qual Opponunhy Emptorar.
Plnocrool

1 ltculaltd lc:l'l, exira room
wfwoodbumer, covered porch, 2
level dtcke In beck, woOdshed,
great cond, 304-m-2713.
For Sale: 1088 Redman Danville,
14x72, Total Electric, Stt·Up On
Prlw1t1 Renlld Lot. Exc1111nt

tlpollo. All Appllonooro Provldod.
Rent to $280 Por Month.
Dopoth, Roforoncoo Roqui!Od.
Phone 614-441-8450. If No

.... .

TIIAT DAILT
PUULII

'

•

12 Trucks for Sale

ment, 122 Fourth Avenue, 011·

IIEET IINQLE GIRLI
In Your locol Aroo. 1·100-407·

Television
Viewing

Autos lor Sale

euto, around tttli:tt, k»&gt;ddd,

Hud
Modem 2-l&gt;drm oport. In llfd.

oqulppld

Ohio

1888 . Pontile Clrond Prix,
30,000MI, whlto wigNY lnlorlor,

2 bldroom

dlt~rt.

1992

~

Dally Sentinel

OBLGJ.'
C.H .
PGtHL.
PREVIOUS SO~UTtON: "There ort bad peopta Who would be
donger- If lhty hed no good In
Lo ~.

''*"·" -

C)

'

ltlllly-. ....

�\

Tuesday, March 17, 1992

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

P&amp;ge-10-The Dally Sentinel

Reader feels there should be a war Law students aid Haitian boat
'on TV violence; not entertaining people in asylum process
Dear ADD Landers: I am still
upset about something I read in
the ~ several weeks ago. At a
charity b.asketball game fealllring
celebrity lap starS at City College in
New York, young people stampeded
into the gymnasium, crushing each
other. SeveraJ people, trapped at the
bottom of a stairweU, suffocated to
death. Insensitive to the dead and
dying, fans made a mad rush to get
autographs from celebrities. Later
they robbed the dead. Eight people
were killed and 29 were injured.
Mayor Dinkins has ordered an
invesdgation . 1
Tomght I sat down to enjoy a
good TV program", and what was I
offered? "Murder Without Motive,"
"Lynch Town," "Bad Influence,"
"Hostile Takeover" and "Last Days
of John Dillinger." There was
nothing beautiful. notjling uplifting,
nothing wholesome dr educational
-- just violence and junk.
·
Do you see a connection here•
What is supposed to be entenainment ends up as headline news tn
the paper. Where are the censors?
Are they us? If so, what is wrong?
We are deep into nuuition, fighting
a war against junk food. Why
shouldn't we also fight against
garbage for the mind? .. HEART·
SICK IN ALABAMA
DEAR ALABAMA: We've gone
ova this tenitory before, but I'm
game to go again. The majority of
people must want garbage because
we're getting a lot of iL Teen-agers
who grow up watching TV knif~ngs,
shootings and rapes can become
immune to violence. They don't care

Ann
Landers

ANN LANDERS

"1991, Loa An~:eleti
'nmel Synclca&amp;e and

rirfaton Syndjcale."

who they have 10 kill or crush 10 get
what they want
The ratings are king. I've said it
before and ru say it again. People
who want high-level, no-smut TV
can get it on public broadcasting.
Dear Ann Landers: I'm caught
in the middle of a family dispute. I
think I'm the innocent vicdm but
everyone else acts as if it's all my
fauiL
My mother noticed my S-year-old
raincoat was looking a bit shabby
and I said I was looking for a new
one. She went on a senior citizens'
bus uip to one of those big discount
malls. spotted what she thought
was the most beautiful raincoat she'd
ever seen and bought it, assuming
that I would reimburse her for the
$200.
The coat is burnt orange and
incredibly ugly -- I hate it. Also, it
is the wrong style forme. My mother
cried and said she meant well. She's
on a limited budget and can't afford
to throw away $200. My husband
and I have a much higher income
and I think we should give Mom the
$200 and 11y to sell the coaL My
husband is very thrifty and says I
have to wear the coat if we pay for
it He claims the color is irrelevant

and that the coat will keep the rain
military coup last September, sayBy MICHAEL WARREN
off.
ing
they were economic refugees
Associated Press Writer
The whole family is taking sides.
MIAMI (AP) - Law school who failed to show a well-founded
What do you think? They wiU listen was never this good for Mike fear of persecution.
to you. Please help. -- CRYING IN Ryan.
About 6,300 others had stories
THE RAIN, ROCHESTER. N.Y
While other students spent 'deemed credible enough to merit
DEAR CRYING: TeD The Last Spring Break skiing or soaking up more thorough consideration inside
of the Big Spenders that you are sun, Ryan huddled in a crowded the United States. Now they 're
going to give your mother the storefront with Creole-speaking arriving in Miami at the rate of 300
$200, donate the coat to charity translators and Haitian refugees a week and have just three months
and take a tax deduction. Then do desperate to win their political asy- to prepare for crucial immigration
interviews.
iL It sounds to me as if you bave a lum claims.
"The numbers are overwhelmbigger problem than an ugly
" It's the most important thing
ing,"
said Cheryl Little, a lawyer
I've ever done. I wish I didn't have
raincoaL
Dear Ann Landers: Something to go back to law school," said for the refugee center. "There's
has been bothering me for years and Ryan, who attends Case Western just no way that without lots of volI have decided to unload it on you. Reserve University in Cleveland. unteers to help, we'll be able to
the refugees we need to."
My birthday is on Chrisunas. Every " I wish I could do this ail the reach
Thanks
to Ryan, Ms. Little
year I get Chrisunas cards and gifts time.''
one such case
found
out
about
Ryan is one of 37 students who
from frie&lt;~ds and relatives with a
Monday:
a
26-year-old
supporter of
message added-- "Happy Birthday." volunteered for a baRds-on crash- ousted Haitian President JeanI know you have a twin and must course in immigration law at Bertrand Aristide whose first
always share your special day with Miami's Haitian Refugee Center on request for asylum was denied in
somecne else . but to share it with Monday.
Advocates for the refugees say November.
the whole world is another matter. they need help from hundreds of
The so-called "double-backer,"
What can I do about this minor auorneys and law students in the who did· not want his name
annoyance• -- LONG BEACH, weeks ahead to document evidence revealed out of concern for his
CALIF
of persecution they might miss oth- family in Haiti, said he was repatriated after a brief interview on a
DEAR LB.: Be thankful you don't erwise.
have anything more imporlllllt to
The government has repatriated Coast Guard cutter and beaten by
write abouL A gift is what people 65 percent of the 16,000 Haitians soldiers the same day.
"They said, 'We're going to
want to give you. End of sermon.
who ned their homeland since a,
Feelin g pressured to have sex1
How well-informed are you? Write
for Ann Landers' boo/del "Sa and
the Teen-ager." Send a selfPreceptor Beta Beta Chapter of Velma Rue.
addressed, long, business-size Beta Sigma Phi met in the social
Cindy Oliveri presented a very
envelope and a check or money roo m of the Episcopal Church informative program on Diet,
order for $3.65 (this includes recently. Meeting opened with the Nutrition and Cancer Prevention.
City Council have tentative
postage and handling) 10 : Teens, opening ritual led by the President,
plans for a dance to be held during
c/o Ann Landers, P.O. Box 11562. Velma Rue.
Roil call as taken, with members Heritage Weekend in June.
Chicago. Ill. 60611-0562. (In
Velma Rue, Jane Walton. Joan
Several members are planning
Canadll, send $4.45.)
Corder, Ann Rupe, Clarice Kraut- to allend the Ohio Stale Sorority
ter, Charlolle Elberfeld, Donna Convention May I,2 and 3.
Jones, Nora Cusll!r, Rose Sisson,
The meeting was closed by
Shirley Beegle and Vera Crow repeating rituals. The next meeting
will be a lasagna dinner on March
selves. I hope we caii make it easier being prescnL
Refreshments were served by 26 at the church meeting room.
for them by doing better in this
Jane Walton. Joan Corder and
time slot."
"Civil Wars" stars Marie!
Hemingway and Peter Onorati
(another graduate of "Cop Rock")
A Long Bouom res ident wi II p.m. except th e Sunday perforas divorce auomeys with eclectic
clients whose ranks have included perform in the Cumberland College mance, which will begin at 2 p.m.
an Elvis impersonator. The King's Theater's upcoming production of
"The Curious Savage" is a commimic was played by Denni s "The Curious Savage", written by edy about a widow who, because of
Franz, yet another Bochco alumnus John Patrick and directed by Daniel her step-children's greed for her
(he was the profane, polyester-clad K. Nazworth, Director of the Cum- $10 million inheritance, has heen
placed in a sanitarium. While in the
Lt. Norman Buntz of "Hili Street berland College Theater.
Terre
Wood,
daughter
of
Raben
saniwium. the widow. Mrs. SavBlues'' ).
Tonight's in stallment, which and Cathie Wood, will play the role age, is delighted by acceptance and
marks the series first episode after of Miss Wilhelmina, a nurse at a unconditional love given her by the
sanitarium's misfit inmates . This
four weeks of pre-emptions, sanitarium.
The production opens Thursday, sets the stage for a delightful comepromises to show a date between
the lawyers played by Hemingway April 9 and will run through Sun- dy with a heart-tugging twist.
day. April 12. All shows begin at8
and Onorati.
·
With six episodes left to save
his series, Finkelstein was asked
how he planned to end its honeymoon season.
Coming events in the life of the port Church on April I, 2 and 3. A
"I ain't gon na tell you ," he church were noted at a recent meet- sale of baked goods and crafts will
replied.
ing of the Middleport Presbyterian be held at Sears in Middleport on
Arc there going to be any big Women's Circle. Rev. Treintong is April 3 and 4.
surprises?
to review duties and responsibiliKate Brown read "Struggling
"Yeah, but I ain't gonna tell ties of the offices of Deacon and with Hope" as the Least Coin
you."
Eider at the March meeting of Offering was taken. Elizabeth BurDespite Finkelstein's reluctance those officers.
ketl used Viewpoint of Life as the
to divul ge his closing arguments,
A potluck dinner will be held at topic of her devotions. Lennie Hapthe form er lawyer forthrightly the church on March 22 to greet tonstaii 's book study topic was
admits he has a tough case to plead. Rev. Treintong's mother, aunt and "Springs of Our Discipleship."
"There's two separate areas of nephew who are coming from
Hostess Kay Brown served
attention." he said. "One is doing Thailand to visit her.
refreshments to eight members at
the show and one is worrying about
The Lenten Bible Study will be the close of the meeting.
the show."
conducted at 1 p.m. at tha Middle-

Preceptor Beta Beta holds meeting

ABC's 'Civil Wars' gets reprieve
By DEBORAH HASTINGS
. AP Television Writer
LOS ANGELES (AP)- Beginning tonight, ABC mo~~s. its
divorce lawyer drama Ctvll
Wars" to Tuesdays. hoping to
avoid a pamanent separation.
The low-rated series from "L.A.
Law" co-creator Steven Bochco
debuted last November to mixed
reviews. Since then, its existence
has mirrored the bumpy relationship between Bochco and parent
network ABC.
"Too dark," complained critics
when "Civil Wars" premiered.
"Too much," said ABC when
Bochco let slip a few weeks back
that he was readying a new, Rrated series - replete with nudity
and profanity - as the next installment in his 10-series deal with the
network.
For Bochco, who masterminded
such hits as "Hill Street Blues," it
has not been smooth sailing of late.
Last season, his operatic "Cop
Rock" came to 3!l abrupt finish
after ABC and ll!ievision viewers
issued a collective "Huh?"
-When work on "Civil Wars"
began, several "Cop Rock" alum-

ni were aboard. Most nolilble was
William Finkelstein, co-creator of
"Cop Rock," a former co-executive producer of "L.A. Law," and
current holder of the executive producer title at "Civil Wars."
He has shepherded the divorce
lawyers of the latter series through
"minor changes," as he puts it,
designed to inject humor and
humanity into a profession noted
for neither.
"I'm not doctoring 'Civil
Wars,"' said Finkelstein. 37, a
Brooklyn native and former
lawyer, roofer, drywall hanger,
house painter, commercial fisherman and cab driver.
"I've never panicked on this
show. My faith is that if you create
good drama. you get an audience.
If you don't. you pack up your suitcase and do something else.''
Which is precisely what ABC is
hoping to avoid. By moving the
series to Tuesdays at 10 p.m. - its
prime drama slot - the network is
hoping for a second chance at connubial bliss with "Civil Wars."
"They like the show." said
Finkelstein. "They're under a significant amount of pressure them-

-People in the news
BERLIN (AP)- Germany's
largest-circulation newspaper
claims to have former East German
skater Katarina Wiu's secret police
files, revealing a sw who made
plenty of demands on her .Communist state and had most of them fulfilled.
Among the favors the two-time
Olympic figure-skating champion
requested from the now-defunct
East German state, the tabloid Bild
listed: cars for herself and her family an apartment and a vacation
h~me, travel permission for her
parents, and repairs of her television set
· Ms. Win paid for everything
herself, Bild said Monday in what
it claimed was the first detailed
repon on her privileges.
"I am not surprised that such
.files were kept," Ms . Win was
quoted as saring. "I always knew
that everythmg was being regis·

teted. ,, •
Ms. Witt made her demands to

the local Communist Party leadership in her native Chemnitz, then
known as Kari-Marx-Stadt, which
then informed the Stasi secret
police, Bild said.
The· 2S-year-old skarer is now
n:tired from competition. She was a
commentator for CBS-TV during
dte recent Winter Olympics.
SAO P.AULO, Brazil (AP) Prince Philip; president of the
World Wildlife Fund, favors con·
trolled hunting in the Amazon rain
fon:st of artimals not in danger of
extinction. a newspaper reponed

From Manaus. capital of the
jungle state of Amazonas, Philip
left on a river boat trip to the Anaviihanas Archipelago on the Rio
Negro.
The wildlife fund is sponsoring
an environmental project in the
world's largest river archipelago 200 islands covering almost
900,000 acres.
On Wednesday, the prince will
meet with President Fernando Collor de Mello and visit Congress in
Brasilia.

Terre Wood to perform in CC play

Presbyterian Women's Circle meets

make an example of you,"· the
man told Ryan and Ms. Lillie.
"They told me these people would
be arrested, beaten, killed and their
bodies hidden out of anybody's
awareness.''
Duke Austin, a spokesman for
the U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service in Washington,
maintained on Monday that there's
never been a documented case of a
repatriated Haitian suffering persecution.

First birthday
Hailey Marie Ebersbach, daughter of Tim and Jcrrena Ebersbach
of Middleport celebrated her first
birthday recently. A party was held
in her honor at Pizza Hut in
Pomeroy. Attending, in addition to
her parents, were brothers Justin
and Trey; Lou and Shaun Roush;
Chris, Courtney and Nichole Varian; Lisa Hayes, Ashley and Amher
Ebersbach; and Misty Ebersbach.
Sending cards and gifts were
Jerry and Irene Dill, maternal
grandparents; Bonnie and Eli
Ebersbach, paternal grandparents;
Vicky, Dave and David Michael
Camp; Dorothy Riebel; and Jimmer. Connie, Shannon and Devan
Souls by.

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LONDON (AP) - David
Bowie, Elton John and George
Michael will headline a sw-studded charity tribute to Queen singer
Freddie Mercury , who died of '
AIDS last year, organizers said.
The April 20 concert at Wembler, Stadium, already sold ou~ also
wtll feature Annie Lennox, Seal,
Roger Daltrey. lan Hunll!r, Raben
Plant, Paul Young, and U2 playing
live via satellite from California.
Mercury's Queen colleagues,
Brian May. John Deacon and
Roger Taylor, wiU sw in the show.
Mercury died Nov. 24 at the age of
45, the day after he anounced he
had AJDS.
The tribute show will raise
money for AJDS research.
It is to be broadcast live on
British Broadcasting Corp. televi·
sion. and radio. Fox Broadcasting
Co. will show two hours of the
show on the same day, and MTV
will broadcast the endre show the
following wee)&lt;end.

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Monday.

LOS ANGELES (AP) - Rock:
'n' roD ~ionecr Carl Perkins credits
his family, friends and fans with
pulling him out of a depression
lfter he was diagnosed w1th throat
cancer last year.
·
"Everybodr, gathered around
me;" he said. ' I got a lot of love. I
got a lot of great get-well cards
from all over. It was ti combination
of
things that made me say, 'I can't
~~azonas state Gov. Gilberto leave
here."'
)l(estrinbo, a pro-development
After
37 cobalt radiation treat.._..... llld No. I Oj)jlOOCilt of ments, Perkins'
cancer hu slipped
en~b011111011tali... halldvocared a into remission, but the after-effects
lieW liTo' 10 allow alliptor hunting
remain.
in the Amlzoli.
. The husband of Britain's Queen
Elizabeth II arrived in Brazil on
Sunday for a five-day visit
· The Folha de Sao Paulo newsquoted Philip as saying he
faVored elllblishiag hunllllg tea·
iOIII 10 contrQI populations r:A anitUII not in danger of extinction dte subject of a heated debate in

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DETERGENT

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