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                  <text>OhiO

Sentinel

March

1992

Ohio Lottery

NCAA

Piek 3:489

action begins
today

TO THE

Pick 4: 4602

Cards!
8-H; 8-C; Q·D;

9·S

Page7

SOUTHERN HIGH SCHOOL
CHEERLE ERS
ON YOUR ACCOMPLISHMENTS

Vol, 42, No. 227

Commis_si.oners oppose proposed funding change
8 BRI
Y

Th

J REED
AN ·

S~nt.lnel ~ews s'(;rr

s

theastem area's eight counties
ou
000
of ~~~:i:io Fiuson that is 34
·
f th f odin from those
pe~~";0° rce: ~hichgfund senior
gra
u · 'ns home care nutric.enter f~~tion
u~. an
ntl ad 'usting to
We are cu~ th~ 0 Jtions for
the phase out h' h P 'ded $I
E11f.rs
~gram.•c:s for~: " Far100 10
mi ,
serv:d "This wo~ld be
son~ lette~ sa ~tback 10 ycms of
~ e~ scnous,
a vocacy: ·
, resolution
., The commiSSioners hat a new
str~ngly advocate; \e federal
~~~dm~~:rJ~~~ c~ctbfunds with
stat:rsenior block grant funds , to

.

e eJgs ounty om~IS·
~:ersd ado~~e~ a resolution
nes ay w .Ic op~ses a proposed ch~ge~ 10 Jundi~g for area
programmmg ~r e agmg.
The re~luuon was passed by
the board m response to a !etter
~romkthe ~.~1 1A~nc~?n A~ml, at
uc. eye
s oc m.g . a ey
,

props.

1

Ret~nal DeC~I':f,mf\DISD'ICLrted
. thu~tor ~n tl ar fY ~epo.
10
e etter e eve_II!' regiOn

has ~equested a populauon-ba~
funding formula for O!der Amen·
c~s ~ct ~unds :Id ~orCorm~u-

~~1ch e~~~fJ cr~e a~:~ 1~nths~

OHIO

Ingels Furniture and
Jewelry

Baum Lumber Company

Racine Dept. Store

Roses'
Excavating &amp; Trucking

RACINE,

992·6421

CHESTER, OHIO

OHIO

Chancey's Food Mart
992·6542

FURNITURE, APPLIANCES, TV's, FLOOR COVERING

992·2155

POMEROY, OHIO

K&amp;C Jewelers
POMEROY, OHIO

992·3785

Sonya's Country Kitchen
949·2324

10

2·367

O.HIO

Southern Athletic

Dr•. Doug Hunter, M.D.
949·1683

UCINE; OHIO

Kenneth R. Utt
CERTIFIED PUBLIC ACCOUNTANT

992·7559

POMEROY, OHIO

Crow

Crow

tnORNEYS IT UW

· POMEROY, OHIO

Swisher~Lohse

Pharmacy

992·2955

POMEROY, OHIO

&amp;\\l&lt;(N,~ NAJ..,..,. FOC

Dr. Margie J.lawson
D.D.S.

Home National Bank
992·6333

Syracuse, Ohio

Fruth Pharmacy
992·6491

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Mark's Auto Sales
99

11

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Ewing Funeral Home
992·2121

POMEROY, OHIO

Eber's Gulf.
949·9200

992·2556

Prescription Shop
992·6669

POMEROY, OHIO

· Quality Print Shop
992·3345 ·

992·6121

MIDDUPORY, OHIO

State Far• Insurance

.........

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO.

·FARMERS. BANK
tiS·IIIS'

Hl·l116
PM'!'T, OliO

MIDDUPORT, OHIO,

Trophies

RACINE,
. OHIO

'

Adolph's Dairy Valley

Crow's Family Restaurant
POMEROY, OHIO

Whatever it takes:

•

Racin•, Ohio

UCINE, OHIO

BANK:ONE

0

949·2210

·.

The Daily Sentinel

SYUCUSE, OHIO

Anderson's

.,,

~ il' 11!:.

Members of the Southern Cheerleading Squad are Valerie Connolly, Michelle McCoy, Amber Cumings,
Nikki Ihle, Marcy Hill, Tamara Hayman, Roberta Caldwell, Julie Hi11, Jody Hayes, Sherri Frederick,
Brandy Roush, Cristi Maidens, Tracy Pickett.

992·2342

maintain equal base funding and
increase those funding factors
which address geographic isolation
and poverty."
Commissioner Richard E. Jones
said that the Cleveland request is
just the latest in a string of attacks
on senior programs in Southeastern
Ohio.
"This (proposal) would be dev·
astatlng,' Jones said. "It's just
anothercaseofOhio'slargercoun·
ties attempting to suck up the
monies of smaller counties by
attempting to base funding on pop·
ulation rather than need."
"We can't take another hit after
the cuts in the Options for Elders ·
program," Jones continued. "I've

~THE .

GRAVELY

SVSTEM

MUIS .._,, OliiO

Gravely Tractor
992-2971

·

•

Smith· Nelson·Motors, Inc.
992·2174
I

been fighting a battle for senior
funding for 10 years. I'm going 10
continue to fight it and I thinlc this
board should fight it, too."
Bridge connector
Salisbury Township Trustees
Richard Bailey and Ed Durst met
briefly with the commissioners to
discuss the road alignment for the
first phase of the Ravenswood
Bridge CoMector.
At last week' s meeting, the
board and OOOT engineers determined lbat a private drive would
have to be upgraded and a county
road downgraded to township roads
to provide access to the new fourlane highway, due to a law that
says that a four lane highway can

only exit onto a county or township-owned road.
Those plans were discussed yesterday, and t~e b~ard agreed to
arrange a meeung time between the
engineers and the trustees.
.
Other b~siness
The board appomted the following members to the County Com·
munity Corrections Board: Crimi·
nal Bailiff Paul Gerard; Common
·Pleas Court Judge Fred W. Crow
III; Public Defender Charles H.
Knight; Prosecuting Attorneys
Steven L. Story and Linda R.
Warner; Larry Powell, George
Nessel road, Iris Payne, Donna
Boyd, Karen Wheeler and Henry
Cleland, represe;tin~ members of

the community; Pomeroy Police
Chief Gerald Rought; County
Court Judge Pauick H. O'Brien;
Adult Probation Officer Philip
McKinley and Pomeroy Mayor
Bruce J. Reed. Those members will
oversee the community corrections
grant program.
Discussion was held between
the board and County Engineer
Philip M. Roberts regarding a
request for a speed limit reduction
on Flatwoods Road near Royal Oak
Resort. The request was submitted
by the resort owner.
.
A traffic count and survey is
required, and must be conducted
and paid for by the county. Roberts
Continued on page 3

Tsongas wzthdraws
from presidential race
''

Downing·Childs
Mullen·Musser Insurance

2 Sectlono, 14 Pageo 25 _,,
A Muldmedla Inc. New popor

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, March 19, 1992

Copyrighl8d 1892

Good Luck This Weekend At The Cheerleaders
of America National Finals in Jacksonville, Fla.

Low tonight in upper 30s.
Friday, partly sunny. High In
mkl-405.

Super Lotto:
2-6-10-22-23-46
Kicker: 329292

POSTER CONTEST WINNERS • Chuck
Murray's ''Recycle Michler' poster design took
first place in a contest sponsond by Middleport
Village to promote curbside recycllnc. Here
Murray, left, displays the design which will be
used on tbe vUiage poster promoting recycling.

Other winners presented cliecks by Mayor Fred
Hoffman Wednesday afternoon were, Sandra
Young and Brandy Stevens, right. Jean Trussell,
Middleport's housing specialist, bandied the
promotion.

Volunteer recycling program
to begin April 1 in Middleport
Posters featurin~ "Recycle
Michael" with his milk jug head
will be appearing all over Middleport as the village moves toward
April I when a volunteer recycling
program gets underway.
· The poster was designed by
Middleport fourth grader, Chuck
Murray. It took fliSt place in a vii!age sponsored contest for Middle·
port and Bradbury fourth graders.
The youngster received a prize of
$25.
Other winners in the contest
were Sandra Young, Bradbury
sixth grader, second place, presented a SIS prize, and Brandy
Stevens, Middleport fourth grader,

third place, a $5 prize.
A special achievement award
was also presented to the Middle·
port fourth grades for coming up
with the ''Recycle Michael" name.
The more than 60 posterS made
by the students ~ill ~ displayed
around town. Murray s wmmng
poster desi~n will re. used in vari·
ous promouonal proJects.
Jean Trus.se!l, Midd!ep?rt's
housing spe&lt;aahst, who mmated
the poster contes~ repqrts that currently 65 households have signed
up to participate in the curbside
recycling project. At the end of the
.f111tyear, Trussell's goal is to have
SOO households participating.

Recycljng bins in sets of three
for various plastic, glass and alu·
minum will be provided to the par·
·ticipating residents. The bins will
be placed at curbside for pickup by
the village on an every-other-week
schedule. Newspapers in bundles
and placed at the curb \Viii also he
recycled by the village.
The recycling project is funded
with a grant from the Ohio Department of Natural Resources, Division of Litter Prevention and Recycling, supplemented with local
funds.

wASHINGTON (AP) - Paul ning to end. He was the first to
Tsongas will quit the Democratic tl!row his hat in the ring, and by far
presidential race this afternoon the least known. Yet it was
because of a shortage of campaign Tsongas who took advan~ge of
funds, his spokeswoman told The Clinton's winter controversies and
Associated Press today.
. emerged with a victory in New
Arkansas Gov. Bill Clinton has Hampshire.
emerged as the frontrunner jn the
Connolly said Tsongas would
Democratic campaign for the announce his withdrawal in Boston
White House and Tsongas' with· at3 p.m.
draw aI would leave only Jerry
The .reaction from the Cli~ton
Brown in the race against Clinton. campai~n w~s a surpnsed
The
Tsongas "what?! '
. ·
readied
' \SQngas was ~tle!IIJ!Ii!I~ Ill ~
as
. . . . . cC~Irils. to11~both S!!rton an Browp,focusi~g on
·
o no
,·
l'
'.
of next Tuesday's primary.
The ormer Massacn~ SCI)ll·
"It came down to not being able tor won the New HamJl$hire prima10 raise enough money to be com- ·ry Feb. 18 and got an immediate
petitive, •• · said
Tsongas fund-raising boost to propel him
spokeswoman PcggyConnolly.
through Super Tuesday and then
Tsongas' performance as a can- the first big contests in the Mid·
didate was surprising from begin· west.
.
.
.
But after bemg trol!IICCd m the

South on Super Tuesday and then
again -this week in Illinois and
Michigan, his fund-raising dropped
off substantially. Tsongas as
recently as Tuesday night said he
planned to stay in through the
Democratic National Convention in
July.
Tsongas called himself an "ceonomic Paul Revere" and ptu-rJOSed
a program many considered !"Ore
Republican than Democrauc capital gains tax cuts, business
incentives and olher measures he
··sai~..'~Q,yl~-b~I.P li~!f',!;f ::~ ~~~~~
reVive~lll~ ni811unict-.u'6
'· ·
Tsongas dismissed middle-class
tax cuts and other "goodies" his
rivals offered as "Twinlde economics" and repeatedly told votets
"I'm not running to be Santa
ClauS. I'm running 10 be jlfCSident.
There's a difference."

COLUMBUS , Ohio (AP) The Ohio Dcpanmen~ of Agncl!'ture has cut about 60 JObs from Its
payroll and could lose more
because of state bud~et problems,
State Agnculture Dlfector Fred
Dailey said.
However, the self-deseribed fiscal conservative said there were
areas where the staff reductions
needed 10 be made.
'
" I don 't thinlc we're servicing
the industry any less," Dailey said.
H~ was asked about department
funding at a news conference open·
ing the agency's ·annual Ohio Ag
Day, a celebration of an industry
billed as the state's largest with
receipts of more than $4.7 billion
and employment of 700,000.
Dailey said depanment employment was about 490 when he was
appointed director by Gov. George
Voinovich last year and the number

state's $27 billion biennial budget.
Dailey said he believ es the
agency is adequately funded.
:
"At. one point in time we had .
over 700 employees in the Depan- :
ment of Agriculture but we don't ·
have some of the si.me programs :
that we had back then, and proba-:
bly shouldn't have some of those ·
programs," he~ ·
:
"I do ihink we need to get some:
capital improvement fpnds for ren- •
·ovation of our Reynoldsburg laboratory, though," Dailey said.
Dailey said Wednesday he
opposed a bill that would let him
set minimum prices paid to fanners
for milk because it conflicted with
his belief in a free market system.
He said he had not decided
whether to ask Voinovich to veto
the measure if it clears the General
Assembly.

Agriculture agency could face more layoffs
now was about430.
He said some amusement ride
inspectors who were previously
laid off are being called back to
work, and thall)o additional layoffs
are anticipated. ·
' 'However, as you know, the
state is facing some uncertainties as ·
far as its financial future, and if
there's an executive order for all
state agencies to cut their budgets
further, then we would indeed be
looking at additional layoffs," Dai·
ley said.
. The suue faces a projeclfd $577
million deficit in the bud~et year
starling July I.
House Agriculture Chairman
Dwight Wise, D-Fremont, is secking increased state funding for agriculture-related programs. He said
the deparunent's $28 million, twoyear budget represents 0.10 of the

Ohio lawmakers must•reach a decision by
---Local briefs-----. March 27 in order to have Ju~e. 2 primary
Deputies probe complaint
Beth Theiss of Racine reponed io the Meigs County Sheriff's
Department Tuesday that her vehicle had been tampered_with some·
time overnight Monday. She reported hCIIring noises around 9 p.m.
Monday but when sho looked outside she did not see anyone. However Tuesday evenin~ when she went to her car, she said the key
would qot go into the Igni~on.

Minshall sentenced on B&amp;E charges

A Meigs County man recently received his sentence on charges
relating to the January 28 ·breaking and entering of D&amp;M Pizza of

.

s~.

Shairm Minshall was sentenCed by Common Pleas Court Judge
Fred w. Crow mto 18 months in prison. His sentence was suspended and Minshall was ordered to panicipelt in the ~!WI'A ~'~?­
gram at Nelsonville. He has been transported td that facility to begin
the program.
was Ordered to pay $350 in restitution and court
costs.
·
'
Breaking and entering, as charged against Minshall, is a fourthdegree feiD!IY·, He was not tepresenltid by legal counsel in the proceeding.

He

EMS units answer seven calls

S~ven c.lls for usfltiiiCI wete answered on Wednesday and
early Thunday by unit.l cl Melp County BmeraencY Services.
·
on Wednesday at I0:26 Lm., Pomeroy .unit went to Pon!eroy
Nuninalllll RebibiUtallon Cenler. Bllzllleth Mcintosh was trans~ to Veterw Memorial Holoital.
At 12:27 p.m~ Middleport 111ft went to Otiver Saect for Martha
Buctley who was liken to Holzer Medlr.al Center. At 3:36 p.m.,
Pomeroy sqUida IIIII CbeiW anll went to Stste Route 7 for an ·auto
Cealll1lld OIIJIIII 3
'

The House, before adjourning
for the week, decided not to act on
a Senate-approved measure creating 19 new districts for congressional candidates to run in June 2.
Riffe said the bill still lacked the
broad bipartisan support he has
demanded. But he said it is not
dead and that a compromise was
possible. He said congressional
redistricting could be resolved next
week.
But he was less optimistic about
final approval of 33 Senate and 99
House disuicts, disallowed by a
three-judge federal panel that said
they illegally dilute minority voting
sttength.
,
·
, Gov: George Voinovich and the
other Republicans on the state
Apportionment lloanl, which dlew
the legislative districts, ukOd d!e
U.S . Supreme Court ·to stay the
panel's decision • n s an appeal.
Riffe said if the court does not
resolve that dispute in time to per·
mit legislative balloling June 2, it
will not be the s1110's faulL
" If we have to have a second
]limary1it will be because of a federal decision," he said.
He said he is committOd to a

COLUMBUS, Oh io (AP) The Senate will hold hearings next
week on a bill postponing Ohio's
primary election from May 5 to
June 2, but there are new concerns
the state will have 10 hold a second
primary even later.
The House approved the switch
92·2 Wednesday, hopeful that primary liallocing for president, members of Congress and the Legislature all can take place the same
day.
But House Speaker Vern Riffe,
D-Wheelersburg, said problems in
the adoption of new districts for
state senators and representatives
could create the need for an election af1er June 2.
in Washington the U.S ,
Supreme Court delayed action in a
case blocking the use of newly
drawn Ohio Senate and House dJs.
tril:ts.
Secretary of Stale Bob Taft said
thal because of built-in deadlines
and other lefal requirements, he
must have at statutory changes in
hand no later than Marth 27 to II'C·
pare for a June 2 primary.
A second primary could co&amp;l
tallpayen an extra $6 million.
'

...

'

'

vr
'•

June 2 primary because of' the presidential primary and various issues
that school boards, local governments and others hope .to put on
ballots.
The House approved the new
primary date after Rep. Barney
Quilter, D-Toledo, said the bill was
drafted to accommodate congressional candidates and other deadlines otherwise fixed by law for
what was to have been a May 5IIi·
'
mary.
The congressional deadline is
seven days after the effective date
of the bill, or April 3, whichever
oc~urs f111L The bill also inclu~ .
new ileadlJnes for loC8I issues, such ·
as schoollavies, Quiller said.
U.S . Suprtme Court Ju.lice
John Paul SIIVCIII, wllo bad beel.i
askild fer a Slay of the •JI!dse
'

panel' a apportioamotlt dociaion,

rcfemd 1110 Jequeat 10 the elltire,
nine-mcinber 001111.
'There wu no indication when
the cOurt would ICL
Senate President Stanley
Aronoff, R-Clneinnlli, 1 member
of the ltiiiiOftlanmenc bolld, llid he
was ~ncouraaecl by die l'llfettal
because reqllllll for ltlylln IPIJOI'

tionment cases usually are routinely rejected.
"It's certainly not bad news,"
said Aronoff, who disputes the
findings of the panel. The' panel
said the Ohio plan dilutes minority
votin$ strength by "packing"
minonties into certain districas 10
lessen their overall influence.
"That's opposite the ruling that
any other state has had," Aronoff
said.
Minority Democrats on the
apportionment board challenged
ihe plan, claiming it violates minor~
ity and other constitutional guide·
lines.
The three-judge panel appointed
Lawrence Kane Ir., a Cincinnati
auomey, as a special muter to
.nw a new plan thai meets feclhJ
pidolines.
A U.S. Supreme Court stay of
the Older would prevent Kane llom
~ng on a new plan, lawyas
m t11c case said.
Kane said Tuesday he did not
know, because of the~
of redistricting, if he could I*CjiWi·
a new plan in time for a I - 2 primary. "That date probably ia
impouible," he llid. ·
·

�·-·
,'

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy. Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OP 'I1IE MEIGS-MASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETI
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Asslslant PubUsher/Controller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General M111ager

LETIERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
words. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with name,
odcbas and lelepbon&lt; number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters
· ibould be in good Wte, addressing issues, not pemmalities.

What is that
growing out there?
By JOE BIGHAM
••
Associated Press Writer
,. . FRESNO, Calif. - "What are they growing out there?"
: . Drivers often ask that question as they roar down the open road past
:· fields of crops they can't quite identify.
:: It's not that hard to figure out in places like the Midwest, where the
; crops of choice are usually wheat or corn.
:· But California's 83,000 farms grow more than 200 types of fruits, nuts
:and other produce- the San Joaquin Valley region produced more than
.- $11 billion worth of crops in 1990 - and not all are readily recognizable
; re drivers as the fields and orchards whiz by.
,
: : To satisfy curious tourists, a service club has placed signs alongside
~ major highways in the vaUey, telling people what's being grown in the
:. adjacent field or orchard.
; . "We're kind of proud of this heritage," says William Weber, who
, Jieads the project for the Fresno Kiwanis Club. " When peofle drive
·:llu'ough on the highways, we like to point out that this is pan o our cui·
~ lure here, lhe agriculture."
: Thanks mainly to Weber and Harold Gustafson, a Kiwanian in Kern'
:County, more than 160 signs have been erected along InterstaiC 5 and
' Highway 99.
: The signs leU motorists that the field they're passing grows grapes or
;~hes or some other crop lhat helps make the vaUcy the world's richest
'agricultural region.
:. Fresno has been the nation's leading fanning county in terms of rev'enue since the 1940s, followed by neighboring Tulare and Kern counties.
:; "I guess it's an educational thing, but it's mainly a courtesy for the
:.OUrists," Weber says. " We've gouen lcuers from all over the country
'ihanking us, so the project has been gratifying.''
;. Paul Albert of Columbus, Ohio, wrote Gustafson that he and his wife
~'have often wondered about, but have not been able to identify, the vari&gt;Qus crops .... This service is appreciaiCd more than the Oocal Kiwanis
might mtredilire.'h'.
., B .
. . h'1m the '"""
··- 10
. the
:-~lubs)
Gustafson
c IS IS Ia1e w11e,
etue, w1.th g1vmg
early 1970s. They were driving north toward the San Francisco Bay area
one day and sbe asked, "Wouldn't you like to know what was growing in
the fields?"
; Even though he isn't a farmer, Gustafson' s Kiwanis Club had just
assigned him to come up with a project involving farming . He got
approval from the club's leadership and permission from various farmers
tb plant signs at the edge of their fields.
• Wooden signs were used at firs~ but they've long since given way to
limger-lasling aluminum.
.
: With permanent crops like fruits and nuts, lhc same sign can stay for
~· But Gustafson, a lighting fixtures salesman, and Weber, a retired
eye doctor, have to be watchful 1.0 change the signs when farmers rotale
tl)cir fJeld crops.
• "That can be embarrassing if the sign ha~ the name of the wrong
ci'Op," Gustafson admits. "A lot offarme~s will call and mention that
!Oey're changing, and Farm Bureau wiVes will call and say, 'You've got a
sign for oats or whateva- in a wheat field.'
•. " So we getlhe heck out there and change them," he says.
•
•

•'
•

Berryls World

•
•
•

"'

°

18Ctical missiles.
SDI, however, is spending billions annually on developing ne-:v
missile interCeption systems. Saucter claimed that much of Ibis mooey
is being wasred, especially since no
potential enemy is currenUy trying
to develop a new generation of

tary Michael Stone " to defer final
action" until his office has an
~pportunily to investigate the situauon.
Army Col. James Roberts, SOC
chief of staff, notified Saucier that
his status would be. changed to
•'administrativ~ leave with pay.".
But h.e also satd that he had not
changed his mind about wanting to
fireSaucier.
.
·
.
~ rears ago, Congress_,?~er
the objCCUons of the Bush adininJS·
tration, passed lhe Whistle-Blower
Protection Act. It empowers the
Office of Special Counsel 10 in~estigate allegations of· retaliatton
towards whistle-blowers. Saucter
has filed a grievance unda- the Jaw
and may become its first maj~ test
case.
Several members of the House
aretryingtosavethcjobofaCen- 'sus Bureau p~ofessionai whose
crime was bemg obJecuve on a
subject about which the Bush
· · · wants I'tttleob'~ec tivadmmtStraUon
ity - the number of Iraqis, ·espe·
cially civilians, killed in the Gulf

J 111
ert • nagman

R b
0

missiles. The former Soviet missile
development program has largely
been abandoned with the breakup
of the Soviet Union.
To say that Saucier's report
angered his bosses would be an
understatement. The report was
rejected, and the scientist given a
job rating of "un satisfactory '"
then ftred on the basis of thai job
rating,
High-ranking members of the
House and Senate, including a
number of Republicans. have now
come to Saucier's aid, demanding
ded A
that his firing be rescin · sa
result, Defense Secretary Richard
Ch
has ordered Army Secre
eney
·
-

,......SOUND SiTeS ~ND PHoTo oF'S
eMeRGeD as 1He FJ\bNT· RuttNeR'S
ir.l YeSieR'DaY'$ VoTittG.Tife iSSUe$

a

F'iNiSifeD PiSaPPoiNTiNG THiRD,
~ND Ma'{ PRof" ouT oF THe CaMPaiGN.

be at the root ot our problem s, to the top 30 films . Looking at the
including economic ones. (Just top 30 offers a flavor of what peoconsider the costs of crime, drugs ple are seeing.
and out-of-wedlock birth.)
" Home Alone" was in first
Are we corrupting our youth? It place. "Terminator II" was sec·
is useful to try to measure first. on d. I loved its campy, stylized
Let's look at the movies.
violence; it could have starred
A.D. Murphy, box office analyst Donald Duck rather than
for "'Variety," conf11111s the perva- Schwarzenegger.
Of the remaining top 30 movies,
I saw "Dances With Wolves "
"City Slickers," " Doc Holly siveness. He says "More Ameri- wood,'' ' *Awakenings,'' ''Thelma
can s watch more movies, more and Louise," "Hook" and "Beauoften, in more ways, than ever.~' ty and the Beast.'' My 7-year-&lt;lld
When television arrived, movie daughter saw " Teenage Mutant
admissions fell from $4 billion Ninja Tunles.' '
(1946) to about a $1 billion (1961),
I still hope to see these, proba·
where it has remained. But at-home bly on cassene: "The Silence or
markets boosted total viewership the Lambs," " Robin Hood ,"
sky-high.
"Sleeping With The Enemy ,"
If movies are more pervasive " Addams Family" "Boyz N the
than ever, so what? Are they bad Hood."
stuff?
And so on . Yes. there is some
The dozen biggest hits released violence and some sex there: yes.
in the 1980s were "E.T.," " The there is some political subtext,
Return of the Jedi," "Batman," rarely conservative. But mostly
"The Empire Strikes Back," these arc enjoyable, well-made sto"Ghostbusters," three "Indiana ries,just like in the good old days.
· Jones " movi es, " Beverly Hills
Moderate problems deserve
Cop," "Back to the Future," moderate remedies. Before letting
"Tootsie" and "Rain Man." This war break out between First
is n01 exactly your run-ilf-the-mill, Amendment purists and Prohibi·
dirty dozen of pornographic vio· tionists, some distinctions ought 10
be made . There is a difference
lence.
So too in 1991. Murphy calcu· between public and private enter·
lates that half of all admissions go tainment, and between censorship

Ben Wattenberg

"The Old Man and the Sea"
•

Today in history
•

::
.
By The .-\_..led Press
·:Today is Thursday, March 19, the 79th day or 1992. There arc 287
diYs left in the year. This is the daJe the swallows traditionally return to
.. 51111• Clpistrano Million in California.
: Toclay't Higlllighl in Hittory! ·
,an 1110· on Mlldi I9, 1942, President Franklin D. R~elt
.... men between the ages of 45 and 64 regiSJer for non-military

'!l;. ddt dllc: '

•

.
' Ia 1687, Ptencll explorer Robert Cavelier, sieur de La Salle - the first
1!111; 1110 ~~~of the Mississippi Kiver- wu mwdered
~ •pdn 111m paent...ay f-.
,· IIIII", the o;n ''P_.' by ClllrleJ Goimd ~ieted in Pais.
~ Ia 1917, the U.S. Sup~eme Court upheld die e.glu-hour work day for

'if'~a"it'is. eon.- IPIJIOVed DlyliJht·Samg Time. ·
:-111m. die O.s. Se.- for die recond lime n:jecred die Tn:aly of Ver.iiu. by 1 VI* « 49 II flvor, 3S qaillll, lilliDJ sjiOrl of the IWO-thlntl
lliladcY uldt Hou;pOtll.

;:Ia 1931,No•rt kpiiR)dpmbling.

,

;. II 1941, Jimmy Dolley IIIII OR:he&amp;tra recordtd "Green Eyes" and
.,._.. Eltlll" for Deccdeeords.
.

,·

';!111

dates, myself included, guessing as
10 what the ftnallines will be.
Until those final lines are established by the state legislature and
signed into law by the Governor,
would· be candidates can do little
more than watch and wait, hoping
in the end that the congressional

redistricting plan arrived al, permits them the option of running.
I talked a1 the outset of redis·
tricting as if il were a single process. Let me clarify and e~
on that ~int. For all states but
those wuh a single U.S. House
member, dlere is actually a two.fold constilllliOIIII requiremenL In
Ohio, we make 1be distiac:tion
~een lhele IWO requirements by
c:alling one ''"'"'""'tiOiililenl and
the oilier redliUiCiiDi~
Tile former pertains 10 the
rcaiigDJnent of ttaiC auembl cfis.
tricla, die taller 10 die

~t rear, m,preparauon for .the
pubhcauon of World P~pulauo~
!992'' - an annua e~tn~ate o
world population - t e ens us
Bureau s Cent~r For lnternauonal
Research assigned 29 ·year-old
demographe_r Beth Os~orne the
task of updatmg populauon figures
for Iraq. ·
.
Osborne reah zed that, for a

IND.

try to esumate ho~ mtera~~ ~~~~~
died m lheh wfar. So, af f th ar
stve searc. o accounts 0 e wn •
plus m~~'llii,With expe~su:,ro:it~
the wo~ •
om~ S~OOO Ira is
~~ esumate 1th~\olh 'me war !d
b as a ~fiu ~ting between Iraqis
su sequen 1~h ..
Sb f th •

Thought for Today
"History is alwayt regcatiag ~. but cadi time lite price aoea up." -

1

Showers T-storm• Rain Flurries

•AuODyPIOIII.

to jala
ifiJIUtllaflladl
c•
•
. .
. ua.
.

~-

I'&amp; abanc~ but 111 will
uhcllli•.

.

Snow

/Cfl

Sunny

Pt. Cloudy

Cloudy

' C1992 Accu-WHiher, Inc.

Vie Auodat«&lt; Prt11 GtlphctNet

Weather
South-Central Ohio
Sa!urday through Monday:
• .
.
.
Fatr on Saturday and Monday
Tontghl,
clearmg. Low m the and a chance of rain or snow Sun·
u~pe~ 30s. F~tday, partly sunny. da Hi~hs mostly in the 30s Lows
High m lhe mtd-40s.
. Y·
·
10 the 2 s.
Extended forecast:

,...---Local briefs----,
Continued l'rom page 1
accident. Vickie Abbou, Michelle Metzger, Amber Well, David
Vaninwagen and Jerrod Vaninwagen were taken to Veterans. At
5:50 p.m., Syracuse units went to an auto accident on Pine Grove
Road. Billy Jo Long was taken to Veterans.
On Thursday al 12:36 p.m., Pomeroy unit went 10 Peacock
Avenue. Carolina Wen was taken 1.0 Veterans. At7:31 a.m., Racine
unil went to County Road 35. Shirley Powell was transported to
Veterans. At 7:52a.m., Rutland squad went to Salem Street. Merle
Davis wenl to Veterans.

'Bill offers insurance
break to older drivers

and sensitivity.
Movies are seen in private theaters . Their previews are rated ;
raunchy ones are not seen when
family movies are showing. Age
ijmits are imposed. So hands off ·
the movies, although it would be
nice to see more traditional themes.
Recorded music is privately purchased in private stores. Hands off,
although the record companies
ought to voluntarily put rating
labels on their grossest material,
some or wh ich is disgusting .
(Remebcr: Boycotting and picketing are also constitutional rights.)
Television is somewhat differcOl; it comes into your home over
publicly franchised air waves .
Telcviston programmers should
keep bla18ntly sexual promos for
laiCr, adult shows off lhe air during
kiddie-time programming. Similarly, the National Endowment for lhe
Arts is also pub~c : Cui the blasphemy, or lose the NEA.
Public pressure and moderate
reform can yield a liule more beauty and a liu!e less beast.
(C)l992
NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN•
·'Ben Wallenberg, a senior rei·
low at the American Enterprise
Institute, Is author ol "The First'
Universal Nallon," publlsbed by
The Free Press.

1

I

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A
bill designed to encourage older
motorists to take refresher driving
courses by rewarding them with
Iowa- insurance premiums is head·
ing for lhe Senate after easily win·
ning House approval.
Sponsored by Rep. Mike
Stinziano, D-Columbus, the mea·
sure would force insurance compa·
nies to grant "a{lllropriate," but
unspecifted, premtum reductions to
motorists 60 or older who pass an
accident prevention course
approved by the Stale Highway
Patrol.
Rep. Jerry Krupinski, DSteubenville, who headed the subcommittee which worked on the
bill, said eligible motorists also
would have 10 maintain a clean
driving record.
"These courses help the partici·
pants to recognire the limns that
the aging process puts on our bod·
ies, and how to compensate f~ this
diminishing vision, hearing and
reaction time," Krupinski said.

In other action Wednesday, the
Senate passed a trio of education·
related bills that would:
-Allow a city which covers the
same territory as a school disuict to
seek voter approval of a municipal
income tax , the revenue from
which would be shared with
schools.
- Give II of the biggest borrowerS under the school loan pro·
gram up to 10 years 10 repay their
state-guaranteed loans, instead of
the two years now required.
-Require county boards of
education to hire and evaluate the
2,000 teachers they employ in the
same manner as local school dis·
uicts.
All three bills now go to the
Hotise.
Stinziano said the auto insur·
ance bill, approved 84·8, would
give older Ohio drivers the same
opportunity extended to seniors in
31 states and the District of
Columbia.

Investigators say trafficking
in food stamps on increase
by ' 'runners," who wait outside
WASHINGTON (AP) - Food welfare offiCes to buy the stamps at
stamps are being used 10 finance an less than face value.
underground network tbat allows
"The problem has fOtten worse
the coupons to be traded for drugs, at the street level. ' he said,
guns and e~en missiles, a congress· •'maybe because r,:ople are more
man says.
,
desperate for cash '
The Ag~culture Department s . The runners g~nerally sell the
own m~es~•gators also s~y street stamps to a retailer, who also JliiYS
~ICkingthm foodkedstamps; . : ~ less than full price but. then
nse. and at croo . re
.
redeems the coupons for lhetr face
engaged in increasmgly Iucmuve value 81 8 bank.
schem~ to defraud the~·
Nearly 25 million people Cratg L. Beaucha!RP· ~sts~t almost one in 10 Americans inspector general f~ mvesb~s now receive food s14mps. USDA
at USDA, told a conareSStonal expects 10 spend $22 billion ori
hearing ~~Y ~ more food food stamp benefits this year.
stamp ~Iptents arc bemg harassed
"Unfonunately, the food stamp
program is being abused by
unscrupulous ripoff artists who are
·The Daily Sentinel
using food stamps to hot-wire an
(llSPS 213·1110)
illegal
'underground network that
Pubtl1hed eveey tRemoon , Monday
pennits food coupons to purchase
th"""h Friday, Ill Courl St., Pomoroy,
Oht• by the Ohio Valley Publlohlnr
drugs.
and even a surrace·roCompany1Mu1Umedta lhe., PonNII'O)',
air
miSSile,'~
said Rep. Ron Wyden,
Ohio 4&amp;1611, Ph. 119'.1·21116. Second elaa
chairman of a House Small Busi·
,.tap pal4 at Pomoroy, Ohio.
ness subcommiuee.
Memlier: The Aa...U.Ie4 ~. and the
"Especially disturbing is thai
Ohio New1paper Auociation, National
these frauds involve increasingly
,wvmttina R.e~ntaUve,· Branham
Nowopaper Salea, 733 Third Avenua,
Jarge.amounts of money- $1 mil·
Now Yodl, Now Yorlt t00t7.
lion IIIII up,'' said Wyden, O.Orc. ,
POSTMASTER: Send addrua chanpalo
Wyden 's office sai~ that in
The Pally· Sentinel, Ill Court St.,
1988, police officers investipting
1\11•-·OHio 415768.
an auto theft ring in Albuquerque,
IUJIICilP1'ION IIATU
N.M., were offered IWO, shoulder·
17 Carrlar ar -lloolto
OM w...................,........................ .suo
fued Stln&amp;a' around' to:-air missiles
ODIMC!n\b ................................" ••••,..M.IiJI
In exch•ng~ for cash and food
OM \'eaf...................... ..............., ..$89.20
Tho dell, however, was not
'·
. 1111~00\'Y
·
n.117............................................2&amp; Cenla

auns

llUiriban 1101 deolriiW .. pay the oranl,
or •Y nmtl Ill ....... to The
GaiiiDiiiia DaD7 'l'rlbuoa on a -~ atx
• ·" month bUll. Cradll wm "" .....

.................
No
117

.......
..........
.-rtpllonl

mall panllllled tn
moe 11

..,. when IMne urritr ..

.

llollllllloolt......

~

~·

--- ..

' .I''

..

•.

The Dally Sent/nei-P!g~

spots along the Lake Erie shoreline.
Low temperatures overnight
were generaUy in the 30s.
The National Weather Service
said skies will have cleared by
tonight, allowing temperatures to
drop 10 20-25 degrees.
.
It will become moslly cloudy
over the north on Friday wiJ)l a
chance of flurries. Partly cloudy
slt:ies will dominate the south.
Highs will range from the mid-30s
norlh to the inid-40s south.

The recotd high temperature tor York City, Indianitpolis." Sl Louis:'
this dale at the ,Columbus weather and North Platte, Neb. Rain fell in::
station was 77 ~in 1903. The Washington, Piusburgh, PhiladeJ..:
record low was 8 m 1885. · ·
phia, Cincinnati , Cleveland and '
Sunset tonight will be al 6:43 . Louisville, Ky: It was cloudy :
p.m. Sunrise. on Friday will be at across most of lhe East.
:
6:34a.m.
Snow was forecast from north· ·
Arouacl tbe nation
east Ohio' through northern Penn· :
A storm moving east through sylvania. Rain and thunderstorms :
the Mid-Atlantic states..dumped wt:re _expected from New Jersey to ;
snow and rain on the Northeast mmoJS, lhrough the Carolinas, cen· •
today.
tral Florida, and lhrough·l
Snow fell early today in New Appalachia 10 lhe Gulf CoasL
•
-~now fell early today in Casper,;
Wyo., and flurries were forecast for :
elsewhere in Wyoming and Moo-•

Lack of time stamps on deposits
clouds overdraft resolution

•I Columbus I 42• I

m~n,

llrive··-= '
•
..
....,
......
,.
.
fl:l:r:
oat;c:!=:. !.
c••• ,_
~r5\:11'

IMansfield I 42° I• ·

~~sU:en~~~~~s_;,. in~ s~. 1 cJ.:'

39 612
n and 32 195
•
wome
•
children.
.
se and the
De~oth tDhe Wartmhlt~n~~~ve worked
. •ense ep.
the s 1_
t ~rehlessrlylhtrymg tobekseekiplled ,·npothe
r
G1g IfI oWf eThnumPentagon
•s stock
u
~r.
e
·m 1 cannot
answer IS that they 51 P Y
make an esumate.
But when an Associated Press
reporter called Osborne, she_gave
him her estimates because, 10 the
past, all work of her Center ~as
been considered public mformauon
and available to anyone who calls
and asks.
Predictably, the Center was .
lhrown into a major panic when the ·
figures became public . Osborne's
work was termed "highly inaccurate." Her superiors quickly
rewrote her report cutting her esti·
mates by more than two-thirds.
Equally predictably , she has
now been notified that she is to be
terminated.
The non-profit Government
Accountability Project is dedicaiCd ·
1.0 exposing government waste and
to protecting whistle-blowers.
According to its legal director
Thomas Devine: "'This administration has not been any more sympalhetic towards whisUe-blowers than
lhe previous administration was. It
remains very intolerant of all government cntics, especially those
who work for the government."
(C)l992
NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN.

··· -

~ -~

By Tbe Associated Press
Freezing rain and snow created
hazardous driving conditions and
caused scauered power outages
across Ohio Wednesday night.
Freezing rain turned roads into
skating rinks in central and norlh
central Ohio and ic~ buildups
knocked down tree limbs and
power lines.
Snow accumulations averaged
1-3 inches in norlhern Ohio and as
much as 6 inches was measured in.

W. VA.

11 was assumed that Lhe compro·
Lion or congressional disuicts. As
this column goes to pn:ss, neither mise arrived 11 by a Senate/House '
process has been finalized. With Conference Committee, which was :
respect to reapportionment, Ohio convened to resolve the differences :
has a rather unique panel set up to between the House and Senate · I
accomplish this rast. 1bis pwl is passed bills, would gain quick i
called the Respponionmen1 Board acceptance. It did in the Senate; I
and is made up of the State's gov· however, it got derailed on the way _
enior, secretary of 1ta1e and audi- to final passage in the House. ,
tor, along with an appoinred repre- Speaker Riffe found himself with- •
sentative from each of the two out the vOICS necessary to gain pas- :
major polilical
· s.
sage and the bill bas been put on r
Unlike : = n g , the reap- h~ld until he can round up suffi· )
portionment plan .-rived II by the cJent support. Whelher he can, now 1
Board doea not bave 10 go lbrouJh becomes the overriding question. I
the le&amp;illative process. Once And until he can, those of us lnrer- I
approved by the Board, It is pin ested in aeeking re-elcction can do :
'
into efl'ec:l unlea cba!Jqal in die little but waiL
ne inability of die Ohio lelis· :
courts. While ·such 1 rapponionmeat plan wu approved some lature 10 gain pasSage of a redis- :
montbs ago, it wa Immediately tricting bill, and dte coon's recent :
challenged in die coaru and list action overtuntinathe previously 1
week set lllde by a lbrce·judge approved reapportionment plan, 1
federll paneL ne c:oaru dei:ltioa hal r.rompted tbe resetting of ~
will dow lie lilllllted by die pllll'a Ohio •IJilTIIIY ._ from MayS to I
tjiOniOrt 10-i1le U.S. Sap\'cme Juae 2. If Ibis - . dlap 011 imucll •
Colin, 1111 Ill IIIII I I 1m 1110 COlli Jonpr, I'm lfllid would-lie candi- 1
bu IJIIN" ~ ltfllllll llllller to dates will find dlemselves with
very lillie time to make· an 1
laCarmecl
dccillon 11 10 whcdler or '
A flallw·l
c ;Ill. 011 die
not
to
run,
IIIII if they do elect to I
odler '-!, . . ,. 10 CIJII!CIIO 6om
lllko
lite
cbue,
wltb very Uule :
tbe Ollio .A•••Idr~ WJdJf dlo
OIIID&amp;. . . Il , ~ dllt• ~dlelr .,. ..... IIIII j

nl

..

Nasty conditions exist over most of state ):

•

•

,

a

remotely~curatefigure,she hadto

9

-if's:.

"

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

MICH.

i

Cong. Clarence
Miller
.
.

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

Accu·Weathe~ forecast

,A process delayed could become a process denied
Most states by now, 35 in fac~
have compleled the Iegislati ve
redistricting proceu dictared by the
results of lhe 1990 decennial cen·
sus. Not so for Ohio however. Gen·
erally, states like to have this
decennially driven requirement to
draw new stale assembly and U.S.
House of Representatives district
lines completed by no later than the
first of the year in order for
prospective candidates 10 have the
opportunity 10 weigh the pros and
cons of seeldn' elective office in
the newly deSigned districts. In
fairness to would-be candidates
they sllould be given as much lead
lime as possibiC if they aro 10 make
such canipaign plans and decisiools
in an orderly and responsible faslt.
ion.
·
Ohio, as most of you knliw, is
slaled 10 lose lWii of its current 21
seats in die u.s. House of Repn:senllliYeS. nis is a result o( the
staiAIS failwe 10 bep
with the
national population
nte.
The failme of die. liSle legis!Mun:
to tel on dlit mauer in a·timely
bu kept prospective C*ldi·

__

UIIIO Wt;it!IH:r
Friday, March ZO

Page-2- The Dally sentinel
·Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
ThL!I'Jday, March 19, 1992

More beauty, hold the beast
Have they no shame? It's
Academy Award time. And those
licentious folks in Hollywood may
choose as Best Picture a movie that
features violence and sexuality,
including potential carnality
between a lovely young lady in
bondage and a vicious animal!
Yes, the favoriiC is "Beauty and
The Beast."'
I have been sensitized, having
just moderated a conference on
" The New Global Popular Culture," sponsored by the American
Enterprise Institute (my home
base). Some learned scholars, conservatives and libemls denounced
the ugly state of American pop cuiture. Some pined for the days when
the movie industry was rigidly selfcensored. (Luckily, others disagreed.) ·
The anti-case is that movies are
worse than ever, reveling in
obscenity, nudity and brutality,
often with an anti-American, antiestablishment, anti-religious sub·
text. Television, they say, is just as
bad. Popular music may be worse
because it can al so be racist,
misogynist, satanic and druggy. All
this, it is said, is more pervasive
than ever. From VCR to MTV to
boom box, our children are being
corrupiCd.
It is a serious issue. Our cultural
situation, broadly ~· may indeed

._...._.,_.

Thursday, March 19, 1992

Whistle-blowers fare poorly under _Bu_sh
WASHINGTON (NEA) Four years ago Clllldidale George
Bush promised ihat federal whistle·
blowers - government employees
who come forward with tales of
waste and abuse - would have
nothing to fear during his administration. In fact, he vowed they
would be treared as " heroes "
Over the pasl four years howev·
er, whistle-blowers have fared no
beller - and possibly worse than in previous administrations.
The usual " reward" for coming
forward has been demotion or termination. and in a few cases threat
of prosecution for revealing classilied information.
Two current cases are typical:
Aldric Saucier. is ~ $75 ~500-a·
year physical sctenttst wtth the
Strategic Defense Command, the
U. S. Army ' s component of the
Strategic Defense Initiative . .He
was the author of a very detatled
study arguing thai an updated ver·
· of th e current p alnot
· mtSSI
· ·1 e
s1on
system is all that is needed to effectively track and shoot down the
· ·
·
f balli · and
extSung generauon
sue

--··-

WASHINGTON (AP) - House
members may have hit a roadblock
in efforts to put the best face on
embarrassing check-kiting information that soon will beeome public.
Acting ethic~ commiuee Chair·
man Matthew F. McHugb, D·N.Y..
said Wednesday it will be difficult
to verify members' claims that
deposits at the House bank were
credited late to accounts . That
could undercut the argument that
overdrafts were mainly due to the
bank's sloppy record-keeping.
"The bank didn' t put a date
stamp" on the deposit slip,
McHugh said. "The member put
on the date. We have 10 decide
whether we can verify deposits."
Many members caught up in the
overdrafts arc trying to persuade
the commiuee to lower the number
of bad checks•counred against them
on grounds thai money was in their
accounts but not immediately cred·
iled.
It is not an easy question to
answer, said McHugh, whose commiuee is soon to release lists, in
two stages, of 355 current and for·
mer House members with over·
drafts over a 39-monlh period. The
ftrst list, due for release next week,
will consist of the worst abusers
according to committee criteria.
Meanwhile, The Washington
Times reponed in today's editions
that there are suggestions some
House members turned to the
House Post Office to cash checks
after their bank was closed. The
House Post Office, like the nowdefuct House bank, is a creature of
the House. It operates as an indc·
pendent contractor to th e U.S .

Postal Service, which prohibits the
acceptance of checks at its own
post offices 10 obtain cash or pur·
chase money orders. Checks are
accepted for postage and other
postal services.
The congressional General
Accounting Office, which recon·
structed accounts for the ethics
panel, used the bank's posting
dates in deciding whether to count
checks as overdrafts.
"Everybody has stories about
when the bank posted deposits,"
McHugh said. "It never made a
difference because the checks were
not going to bounce anyway. Now
it mauers, because we're counting
bad checks."
When a check was wriuen on
insufficient funds, the bank would
honor il using other account hold·
ers' money.
" If there's an Achilles' heel in
this, it's deposits," said Rep. James
V. Hansen of Utah, the ranking

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
WEDNESDAY ADMISSIONS
- Arthur Barr, Middleport, and
Elizabeth Mcintosh, Pomeroy.
WEDNESDAY DISCHARGES
· Dale Riffie.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Discharges, Marcb 18 - Kara
Adkins, Jean Johnson, Ruby
McGhee, Mrs. Gerald Roach and
son, Mrs . Gregory Taylor and
daughter.
Births, March 18 - Mr. and
Mrs. Neil Mo(gan and son, Cot·
tageville, W.Va.

Meigs announcements
Dance set March 27
Euchre tournament
A dance will be held at the
The Tuppers Plains VFW Post
No. 9053 will hold a euchre tourna- American Legion Annex, Mill
ment on March 28 at 7 p.m. Every- Street, in Middleport on March 27
from 7-11 p.m. Music will be proone welcome.
vided by George Hall. Cost is-$5
Board to meet
Southern Local School Board per person. Food and ice will be
will meet Monday 7 p.m. at the available.
Reunion slated
high school. .
A meeting 10 plan a reunion of
Dance planned
The Southeastern Ohio Tradi- Sugar Run School graduates will
tional Dance Society will hold an be held Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. at lhe
old time square and contra dance Meigs County Chamber of Comon Saturday, 8·11 p.m., at the merce/Park D1sbict OffiCe on Sec·
Dance Factory in Athens. Cost is ond Stteel in Pomeroy. If interested
$4 per person. Lynn Frederick will in helping bul unable to auend COD·
be caller. Live music by HOI Point · tact Eleanor Smith al 992-2639,
Marvin and Lois Burt at 992-3101
String Band
or
Linda Mayer at 992·5954.
Cbili dinner
Workshop planned
The Louridge Community CenA vacation bible school workter Association will hold its annual
chili dinner Saturday 6-9:30 p.m. shop will be held March 28 11:30
Cost is S2.SO for adults and $1.25 a.m. at the parks and recreation
building in Athens, 733 East State.
for children under 12.
Companies representing lheir bible
Hymn sing
The Middleport First Bapti st school material will be present
Church will hold a hymn sing on Further information may be
Sunday at 7 p.m. with the Faith obtained by calling 592-2857.
Baptist Choir, Joy and the Faith
Baptist Youth Choir. Fellowship
will follow.
Services set
Divorces, dissolutions granted
Special services will be held at
An action for dissolution of
Mount Union Baptist Church on marriage has been filed in Meigs
Sunday at6:30 p.m. with preaching Count~ Common Pleas Coun by
by Bob Sagraves, Columbus. Bill Chrisuna Bashan, Pomeroy, and .
and Macille Price and daughter, Timothy Bashan, Jackson.
Sharon, of CarroU, will sing. Pastor
A dJSsolulion action has been
Joe Sayre invites the public.
granted to John E. Lyons IV and
Seniors to meet.
Susan D. Lyons.
The Harrisonville Senior Citi·
Divorce actions have been
zens will meet Tuesdar at the granted to Terry Lee Bell, Sr. from
townhouse. Quarterly birlhdays Carla Sue Bell; to Loreua· Joy
will be observed with a potluck France from Larry Kenneth FIIFce;
dinner. All members urged to . and to Joy King from Todd King.
attend. Bad weather will cancel the Marriage license graated
meeting.
·
A marriage license has been
granted in Meigs CowiiY Common
Pleas Court to Brian Lee
Woodgerd, 34, Pomeroy, and
Rebecca Sue Trout, 3Q, Pcmeroy.

Republican on the ethics commit·
tee.
f,feanwhile, House Speaker
Thomas S. Foley, D-Wash .,
acknowledged he could have han·
died the overdraft problem better
than he did.
"I think every member might
feel ... that things might have been
possible 10 do differenUy,'' he said.
Foley said he ordered reform of
the overdraft policy in the pasl and
"assumed the bank would carry
outlhe instructions to correct practices that had been ... subject to
criticism by the General Account·
ing Office. That didn't happen."

lana.

. :

Clear skies were forecast b lhe :
northern Great Lakes region and •
northern Plains, and also for much :
ofTexas.
!
· On Wednesday, a tornado
aged a church, downed power lines :
and broke tree limbs in Anahuac, :
Texas, No injuries were reponed. A·
tornado also was reported in
Moselle, Miss.
Lightning, 2-inch hail and wind
gusting to 63 mph were reported in
Houston. Golf ball-size hail also
fell near Bellwood, La., and Fon
Smith, Ark.
·
Highs today were forecast to lle
in the 20s in New England:

dam-:

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
446 4514

CLEVELAND (AP) - The
jackpot in the Ohio Lottery's Super
Lotto $&amp;me will grow 10 at least
$12 mtllion for Saturday night's
drawing, after no one eame up with
au six numbers IJicked Wednesday
night with $8 million at ~e.
.
Here a(e the selecuons .made
Wednesjlay night in the Ohio Lot·
tery:

· Super Loido
2-6- O::U.:23-46
(two, stx, ten, twenty-two, twenty-three, fony-sjx)
Kicker
·
3·2·9·2·9·2
(~.IWO.ntne,nvo,aine,nvo)

Pick 3 Nllllllltn
4-8·9
(four, c!Jhl, ninc)
Plck4NU1ben

4-6-0-2
' (fOill, lilt, zelo,!WQ)

en ·

u=~=

Q~)olDIIIIOIMk

9(Dine) Of Spidel

Sq'alllc......................25 5/1
Sill' Dint ...........................29 3,44

Welllly llll',l........,.. ~......,.. l:l.l/2
w:~w

..........-..

24
Stoelt I ;poi II In die 10:30

..•• qtiOIII pmtded bJ . . .
I!'JJis 1nd Loewl of 0.RJpctll

.

Continued from page 1
will suggests other options, such as
road markings and signs, wilh the
owner prior to conducting the
count.
The board also:
• Approved a request from ~n­
ty court for trav~l ~xpenses ~u~g
to a court tralntng semtnar 10
Columbus;
- Agreed 1.0 co~tinue a .h~ati~g.
ventilation and au condtuomng
maintenance contract wilh Johnson
Controls for systems at the Meigs_
County Courlhouse and the county
jail'
: Discussed progress at the new
dpartment of human services b~il~·
ing. Furniture will be moved mto
Phase II of ihe project on April 3.
·· Present were Roberts; Highway
Superintendent Ted Warner;
Garage Office Manager David
Spen~er ; Commissioners Jones,
Manning K. Roush and Davtd
Koblentz and Cleric Mary Hob stetter.

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Ashland Oil .......................30 1/4
AT&amp;T.................................39 S/8
Bank One............................46 518
BOb E~ans .............,1..........2?318
Clwnung Sllop..................JO·I/2
City Holding ...................... 19 1/4
Federal Moaul................... .lS 718
Ooodyear T&amp;:R ..................63 1/4
Key Centurion ......... ~., ....... 18
Landa End .........................36 1/2
Limlled Inc ....................... 29 318
Muldntedla Inc ..................28
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•

�Thursday, March 19; 1992

The Daily Sentinel

Sports

Thursday, March 19, 1992
Page-4
...

Rodman paces Detroit to win over Philly
By The Associated Press
The Detroit Pistons, coming off
a season-low 77-point perfor·
l)lance, got an offensive tuneup
f(om their defensive standouts.
Dennis Rodman, averaging 9.4
points, had 16 points and 25
rebounds, and Darrell Walker,
scoring 5.1 points per game, scored
eight of his 14 pomts in the fourth
quaner Wednesday night, lifting
the Pistons to a 91-85 victory over
the Philadelphia 76ers.
· "This was just one of those
nights," said Walker, who scored
oight of Detroit's fli'St nine points
in the fourth quaner. "We knew
we needed a win, so I was going to
the basket more. If my shot was
there, I was taking iL"
Rodman, who grabbed 20 or
more rebounds for the 33rd time in
his last 49 games, scored 12 points
oo tip-ins and helped the Pistons to
a 52-34 rebounding advanlage.
·· Elsewhere in the NBA, it was
Boston 96, Cleveland 94; Indiana
116, Miami Ill in overtime ;

.,.

Orlando 99, Atlanta 96: San Antonio 118, Sacramento 89; the Los
Angeles Clippers 117, Dallas 86;
Portland 98, the Los Angeles Lakers 93; and Golden State 123, Minnesota 120.
Clippers 117, Mavericks 86
Los Angeles moved a half-game
ahead of the crosstown rival Lakcrs
in the Western Conference playoff
race as Danny Manning scored
eight of his 23 points in a 30-19
second-quarter burst at Dallas.
A 14-2 spurt helped the Clippers
take a 55-45 lead at halftime over
the Mavericks, who were led by
Mike Iuzolino with 19 points.
Trail Blazers 98, Lakers 93
Cliff Robinson scored 18 points
to lead a balanced Portland attack
at the Forum.
Sam Perkins scored 22 points
and Sedate Threatt 20 for Los
Angeles, which ttailed by 18 points
in the third quarter before rallying
within three in the final minute.
Warriors 123, Timberwolves 120

Golden State handed Minnesota
its lOth consecutive Joss behind 23
points from Sarunas Marciulionis
and 20 by Chris Mullin.
Tony Campbell scored 30 points
and Pooh Richardson and Gerald
Glass 27 each for Minnesota.
·
Pacers 116, Heat 111, OT
Chuck Person scored 27 points,
Micheal Williams 26 and Reggie
Miller 23 for Indiana, which scored
its fmal 12 points on free throws in
overtime at Miami.
Williams, who hitl6 of 17 free
throws, missed his only shot from
the line with 13 seconds left when
he made one of two for a 114-111
lead . Brian Shaw, whose threepointer tied the score 100-100 with
9.1 seconds left in regulation,
missed a three-point attempt for the
Heat before Miller completed the
scoring with two fmal free throws.
Spurs 118, Kings 89
Sean Elliott scored eight of his
26 points during a 20-2 run as San
Antonio handed Sacramento its

IOth consecutive loss.
David Robinson, playing with a
sprained left hand, had 14 points
and 15 rebounds for the Spurs.
Celtics 96, Cavaliers 94
At Boston, Dee Brown's threepoint play put the Celtics ahead
with 32 seconds left.
Boston, which got 20 points
each from Kevin McHale and Reggie Lewis, took a 93-88 lead on
Larry Bird's 14-footer with 1: 10
left. Five consecutive points by
Larry Nance, who led Cleveland
with 24 points, tied the score 93-93
with 46 seconds to go.
Magic 99, Hawks 96
Orlando snapped a six -game
road losing streak as Scott Skiles
hit four free throws in the fmal 13
seconds at Atlanta.
Skiles' two fre e throws with
12.8 seconds left gave the Magic a
97-96 lead, their fli'St since the second quarter.
Terry Catledge Jed the Magic
with 20 points. Kevin Willis had 19
points and 22 rebounds for Atlanta.

New York's NUL teams skate to 1-1 deadlock
NEW YORK (AP) - The puck
;rs looking big these days to John
' Vanbiesbrouck. How big?
The last time it looked this big,
he was 9 years old, "playing in the
,pee-wee championship game, I
•think," he said.
: Vanbiesbrouck, the league's
)ouest goaltender. made 35 saves
&gt;as his New York Rangers skated to
1-1 tie with the New York
slanders in one of three NHL
ames Wednesday night
In the others, it was Philadelphia
!4. Montreal 3. and Vancouver 3,
:Hartford 2.
: Rangers center Sergei Nemchi·
'nov scored his 29th goal of the sea~on at 3:01 of the second period
~nd Islander defenseman Joe
eekie evened the score with his
ourth - all on the road - at 2:58
f the third.
• Mark Fitzpatrick made 30 saves
for the Islanders, who trail Pitts·
purgh by seven points in the race

I
r,

~

~

for the fourth and final playoff spot
in the Patrick Division.
The Rangers lead the league
with 95 points, six more than
Washington in the race for first in
the Patrick and five more than
Montreal in the race for flllit overall.
The subject of ttadc talks early
in the season, Vanbicsbrouck has
now allowed nine goals in his last
seven games, winning the other six.
In his last six starts, he has stopped
191 of 196 shots.
The streak is a considerable
turnaround for the veteran netminder, who splil duties with all-star
Mike Richter for most of the year,
but always with the assumption
that Richter was considered the
club's No. I goaltender.
.Vanbiesbrouck played capably
in his starts, but was consistent] y
mentioned in rumors of'offers from
other teams.
That began to change when

Richter suffered a thigh Injury on
Jan. 30, an ailment that would sideline him for 12 games, a stretch
during which Vanbiesbrouck was
7-3-2.
Richter returned Mar. I, posting
a 2-3·0 record in five straight starts
while Vanbicsbrouck sat out with
back spasms.
Since then, Vanbiesbrouck has
defeated Chicago 7·1, SL Louis 6-0
- his 12th career shutout - and
Montreal 4-1 before the tie with the
Islanders.
His play has left Ranger coach
Roger Neilson to reevaluate the
club's goaltending scenario for the
playoffs.
"There is no top guy right
now," said Vanbiesbrouck, who
won the Vezina Trophy as the
league ' s best goaltender for the
1985-86 season.
Flyers 4, Canadiens 3
Mark Freer and Rod

•

Brind'Amour scored first-period
goals as the Ayers continued their
mastery over the Canadiens at the
Montreal Forum.
The Flyers have not lost in six
games at the Forum since Nov. 7,
1987, and are 6-2-4 overall against
Montreal in the last 12 times
they' ve met.
Garry Galley and Mark Pederson also scored for Philadelphia.
Mike McPhee, Gilbert Dionne
and Stephane Lebeau scored for the
Canadiens.
Canucks 3, Whalers 2
Pavel Bure and Tom Fergus
scored power-play goals and Greg
Adams got the winner as the
Canucks broke a long-standing
home ice slump against Hartford.
The Whalers had seven wins
and two ties against Vancouver at
the Pacific Coliseum, dating back
to the 1985-86 season.
Murray Craven scored two
power-play goals for the Whalers.

P!~~!!:.,.~lso~ f~..~~.!;~,~~rg~Z!~ ~~~v~. f!~~~.. ""'"'"'
; San Francisco Gi:.uus left·hander
'frevor Wilson was scheduled for
i.urgcry today for a benign tumor
)lnarib.
• The surgery will be performed
iu Scottsdale Memorial Hospilal by
pr. John Culligan, where Califor"ia pitcher Matt Keough had emeroitency brain surgery Monday nighL
r A fracture in the lOth rib on
:Wilson's right side was discovered
in X-rays taken Monday and t~ts
jWednesday discovered the hemgn
tumor.
I "This is a routine surgical pro~edure," Giants team physician Dr.
:Will Straw said. "Trevor should
~nd just one night iq,ilc hospital,
'and we anticipate a f'GII recovery
lwith no problems."
1' Keough was moved out of the
ensive care unit and upgraded
m serious condition to fair, two
ys after a foul ball put him into a
ocomaandnearlykilledhim.
: Dr. Gordon Deen, who per1ormed the surgery on Keough,
~d
the pitcher probably would he
i~~ble to be discharged in a few days.
J)een said the injury was not
c.areer-ending and that Keough's
~very was ahead of schedule.
, California got another scare
lwhen ace reliever Bryan Harvey
:Was hit in the forearm by a fair ball
-at Tempe, Ariz. Harvey was suuck
;ust above the inside right elbow by
11 line drive off the bat of Greg Bri·

t

.

ately left the game between th e a ticbrcakin~ home run off Wilson
Angels and Seattle.
Alvarez leading off the eighth.
"I'll be ready to pitch Friday,
Reds 6, Cardinals 4
but I don't think they'll let me,"
At Plant City, Fla., rookie out·
Harvey said, his arm heavily fielder Reggie Sanders had three
wrap~~d in icc . •:' I'll be ready hits, including a horne run off Mark
when Its my tum. ,
Clark.
Rangers 8, Tigers 3
Astros 3, Braves 2
AI Port Charlotte, Fla., Nolan
At West Palm Beach, Fla.,
Ryan gave up two runs and two Eddie Tucker hit a go-ahead sacrihits in 4 2-3 innings in his third fice fly in the sixth inning and
appearance of the spring, _and Ivan Daryl Kile, Jimmy Jones and Joe
Rodrtguez homered Jead1ng off a Bocver combined on a three-hitter.
five-run seventh.
Angels S, Mariners 4
Mets 9, Dodgers 8
At Tempe, Ariz., after Harvey
At Vera Beach, Fla., three errors was taken out of the game, Jeftled to four unearned runs, mcludmg bander Tim Fortugno relieved,
the game-winner in the 12th inning. induced Jeff Schaefer to hit into a
Darryl Strawberry, Breu Butler, double play that scored Rich AmarKal Daniels and Mike Piazza al, then struck out Patrick Lennon
homered for the Dodgers.
to end the game.
Expos 10, Yankees 9 .
Brewers (ss) 9, Giants (ss) 4
At Fort Lauderdale, Fla., M01ses
At Chandler, Ariz ., Robin
Alou and Ivan Calderon h1t conscc- Yount hit three doubles, including
olive home runs 10 a three-run a two-run drive in the fourth
ninth inning against Lee Guetter- inning . Yount also singled and
man.
scored three runs..
At :!~t~xH~~e~~-~:.. Tom
AtGSiaconttstsdal(sse),1!'!a.,dthrese ~iants
Brunansky and Luis Rivera hit solo scored 10 runs on nine hits off
home runs in the eighth inning off Greg Harris in the flllit.
Mike Roesler.
Cubs 4, Brewers (ss) 3
Blue Jays 7, Royals I
At Mesa, Ariz ., Mike Morgan
At Haines City, Aa., Jack Mar- allowed two hits in five shutout
ris allowed one hit and an unearned innings.
run in five innin$S as Kansas City
Athletics 6, Indians 1
lost its fourth strai~ht.
At Tucson, Ariz., Joe Slusarski
Twills 6, Wbite Sox 3
pitched six shutou t innings and

•

By FRED GOODALL
AP Sports Writer
TAMPA, Fla. (AP)- Hal
Newhouser never gave up on his
lfream of winding up in Cooperstown. Baseball fans from around
lhe wa-ld wouldn't Jet him .
• For years, the one-time Detroit
~igers star received between 200
and 300 letters a month - many
jiosing the same question for the
1 major league ~itcher ever. to
MVP awards 1R SUCCeSSIVe
s.
· ~ "They'd come from all over and
iay something like, 'Hal, you're
._ 0 f tbe be 0 f 11 ti
Wh
""e
st a me,
't you in the Hall of Fame?' '
whower said Tuesday. "I guess
w I'U spend time now explaining
t it feels lite 10 be in the Hall
bf Fame."
[ : Newhoustl, 70, and the !ale Bill
Gowan, an Ameiican League
.a.pire for 30 years, were voted
~ CoopeniOWn TDCI!Iay by the
.. .-~ COflllllillee, a 17·mCIJiber
llhlt valele~th year 111 play·
passed over by the baNball
jliiiiCn,u well as~ execu-

r,

-:.:r' ~ f~ Nearo

•'

~.11,.10t II!M• I thought It wun' 1
•.0 happen, But 1 was railed
11ver Jive up ... IQd I didn't.
fiiiiiPPDilIt

'"*"' m.

p!IOIJII,'' Newhoaler said
11 celo one 'from bl1 !lome in

Blactmfi'itld Hilll, Midi.

-Newhouscr led the AL in victories four times and compiled a 207150recordinl7majorleagueseasons, including 15 with the Tigers.
He finished his career with the
Cleveland Indians and had a lifetime ERA of 3.06 with I ,796
strikeouts.
His best years were 1944 to
1946 when he won 80 games,
including 29 in 1944, He was the
AL 's MVP, that season as well as
1945, when he Won 25 games and
led the _lea~ue i~ EhRedA, ~~plete
games, mnmgs p1tc , su ...eouts
and shurouts.
"He had a great arm. He was a
great competitor, He had it all,"
said Hall or F•-r .,._. WiD18111S
' ,a
··~ '""'
member of the veterans commiuee.
McGowan, whose career
spanned 30 seasons, has been
detcribed as the 111011 colorful and
perhaps the best wnpire or his day.
Arter joiains the AL in 192S, he
W(XbcJ tJYerJ lnniag ol2,SOO consecutivc 11mes before neuritis
fcn:ed lliln 10 mill his fUSI assignmall 011 Sept, 3, 11140.
·
him\,~
~sl. forced

iike Phil Rizzuto, Nellie Fox, Joe
Gordon, Vic Willis and Gil
Hodges.LeoDurocherwasarnong
a tew candidates who received severa! votes, but not the 75 percent
necessary fa- election.

Football
CINCINNATI (AP)- Sam
Wyche and the Cincinnati Bengals
have settled their dispute over
whether the coach quit or was
futd.
'
While both sides confumed the
settlement at the NFL meetings in
Phoenix, neither, would say
whether it involves a parment by
. the Bengals over Wyche s Christmas Eve departure. Wyche, the.
Bengals' coach for eight years and
now the coach of the Tampa Bay
Buccaneers, said he was owed
about $1 million for two yean left

on his COIIII'IICL

• If they bad not settled, lea~t~e
rules would have had COIIImialoner Paul Tl8lilbue decide the Issue.
Wyc:hc rded lilt maath for a hearNewllaui«IIICf~an were ing with Tqllabue, cidag a lack of
.seJe4:1ed 011 the flnt blllot. Rtsults prosrca in lllb with the~pis.
of the Vlllinl wm not released. but
B..utblll
SAN DIEGO (AP) - Toay
elcclion roquiled IU(IJlOn from 12
of the 16 commiuee members in Fuller, I 10-je~r IIIIJI&amp;il CCiKb ll
UCLA and FeppenliDe, IIJeed 10 I
IIICIIdlllce,
Once •Jain the commiuce three·)'Ar contract io coach So
~ owr popula' fonner players Dieao swe.

't l::.

YOUTH BOWLING CHAMPS - Chad Dodson was the overall
winner of the Youth Bowling Tournament, sponsored by the Mid·
dleport Recreation Department. The event was held at Pomeroy
Bowling Lanes . .Pictured in front are (L-R) Amy Clonch, second;
and Jason Miller, fourth place, Behind them are Travis Sprowl,
fiRh place; Dodson, overall champion; and Jeremy Honaker, third.

Dodson captures youth bowling title
The high game prize was ·aiso
won by Chad Dodson who had a
high of 159. Jeremy Honaker won
the overall high series prize with a
406 score. The tournament was
open to all area youths eight to 15
years old.

The Middleport Recreation
Department has announced Chad
Dodson as the winner of their
recent Youth Bowling Tournament,
held this past weeke nd at the
Pomeroy Bowling Lanes.
Dodson led a field of 18 other
bowlers to become the overall
champion.
Other winners of trophies were
Amy Clonch, second place; Jeremy
Honaker, third place; Jason MiUer,
fourth; and Travis Sprowl, fifth.

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The study, titled "The SophoByJIMUTKE
AP Sports Wrlier.
more Slump. Among Professional
An assistant professor from Baseball (&gt;layers:. Real or ImagFlorida, armed with a riew study on ined," is being sub!llilted for publithe so-called "sophomore jinx," cation in the fall. "In the case of a
says you shouldn ' t wish a great !o{ of these players, you can see
where it's just a matter of time
rooltie season on anyone.
· "Starting your career at the top before the rest of the league catches
appears to be one of the· worst up 10 them," said Wbite Sox owner
things that can happen to any base- Jerry Reinsdorf, who just toOk a $4
ball player,'.' Said Jim Taylor, who million gamble on young slugger
teaches psychology at Nova Uni· Frank Thomas.
versity in Florida.
From his Fort Lauderdale offiCe
"We tracked 82 ballplayers who Tuesday, Taylor said the study
had outstanding first seasons going tracked hitters who had accumulatback over 25 years, What we found ed at least 512 at-bats and hit .300
is that the vast majority of them or drove in 100 runs, and pitchers
slumped as sophomores. And those who worli:ed 162 innings and finthat did slump, ·almost without ished with an earned run average of
exception, turned out to be just less than 3.00.
He said he could not provide
average ball~layers for the rest of
their careers. '
exact numbers on how many play-

Auto. Trana., V-6 power,
AMIFM/·Caaaette, air, pp
windows, locka, mirror•, tilt
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Bloomdtle Elmwood; Jennifer Culle, Cutalit
By RUSTY MILLER
Mora....,.: Nirok Ril=, UI'P" SUiduoky: Bob
AP Sports Writer
s........... illm1u Plorid&lt; lf""l';
Heidi lleal, Oalion Nonhmor;· Amy Ony,
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Lancuter Faidield Unioo; Julie M.ck, Granville;
Marlene Stollings, who lit up Tyler
PoaiOU. Marion Blain; Jam ie Pri.cz, Ric:h·
scoreboards around the state by av- wood North Unim;
Tc::rl Endt, Pary; Kclly llilciloock, Andover
eraging 41.6 points a game, .is the Pymatu~
Vdky; Anne Hanneman, Fairview
player of the year on the 1991-92 Park; Launc Scwud, Elyrit Cttholic; Kciaha
Derry, Lorain Clearvicw; Erin K _~mpr, Orwell
Associated Press Division lii girls Onnd
Valley; llmlaoHw,Bunon BCibhirc;
All-Ohio high school basketball
Crisn Meyer, Louisville Aquinu: Julie
Paolano, Doylestown Chippe'ln; Brandi Cope,
team announced Wednesday.
Stollings, a 5-foot-10 junior at Han~ United: Robin Matpl6, U&amp;bon AnderBeaver Eastern, wasn't a gunner, as
witnessed by her 58.7 percent
shooting from the field and 83.1
percent mark at the line. She also
averaged 5.6 rebounds for a 17-3
team.
For her career, she has scored
2,492 points, believed to be the
fifth-highest total ever by an Ohio
schoolgirl. With 497 points next
year, she can slide past state scoring champion Joanne Ineman, who
totaled 2,988 points at Olmsted
FaUs from 1978-82.
Stollings, also a fli'St-team pick
a year ago as a sophomore, was
named the player of the year based
on the recommendations of a state
panel of sports writers and broad·
casters.
Selected as the coach of the year
was Brooklyn's Jim Verba.
Joining Stollings on the first
team are: Denise Pickenpaugh or
poll champion and defending state
champion Heath, Lori Mon~omery
of East Palestine, Coldwater s Amy
Siefring and Holly J&gt;orter of
Cincinnati Wyoming.
Pickenpau~h. a 5-10 senior,
scored 23.4 pomts a game in leading Heath to a spotless 20·0 mark
and its second straight poll title.
The Bulldogs defend their state
crown starting Friday afternoon
when they play Coldwater in the
semifinals at St. John Arena.
Speaking of Coldwater,
Siefring, a 5-7 senior, scored 18.7
points a game and added 4.9 rebounds, 4.S assists and S.6 steals .a
game, · Her team's average margin
of victory during the regular season
was 36 points, limiting her to less
than 21 minutes of action each time
oul
.
Montgomery, a first-team repeater, notched 19.5 points, 9.6 rebounds, 4.2 assists and 3.8 steals a
game at East Liverpool, She is the
school's all-time scoring leader.
Porter, a 5-11 junior, had averages of 26.6 points, 11 .5 rebounds
and 4.2 assists a game for 20-0
Wyoming, She shot 53.3 percent
from -the field and 79,! percent at
the line.
Coach of the year Verba led
Brooklyn, a perennial doormat, to a
school-best 16-4 record and the
championship of the Metropolitan
Tables
Area Conference.
Named to the second team were:
Tables
~von's Sue Hollars, Christy McK·
ibben of Cadiz, Bellbrook's Lori
•Lamp Tables
Neus, Julie Stobarsky of Toronto,
•Sofa Tables
Shannon Beach of Atwater WBII:rloo, Kim.Antal of Brooklyn, Karla
Kaelber of Marion Pleasant and
Sherwood Fairview's Kacee Enflish.
.
In the other state semiftnal, Versailles (24-2) meets Loudonville
(24-2), also on Friday afternoon.
Here's the 199I -92 Associated
J&gt;ress Division III All-Ohio girls
basketball team, selected on the
recommendations· of a state panel
pf sports writers and broadcasters:
Dlvlslo11 m

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LOCAL TRADE. NICE CAR

By THOMAS J, SHEERAN
Associated Press Writer
·
CLEVELAND (AP) - The
Cleveland Browns have lured running back James Broo~ away from
the Cincinnati Bengals, who left
their all-time rushing leader unprotected rather than pay him $1.1
million next season.
But money wasn't the key factor
that
prompted Brooks to p1ck
wn; Susan Chomoc, Brookfield; Liu Beineclte,
Youilgflown Liberty;
Cleveland over two other suitors,
Jenny Conlty, COil Creve DaWIGn-Bryanl;
Minnesota and Philadelphia,
Bra~dl Roae, South Webster; Aubry Eblin,
Chillicothe Unloto; Julie HIJ&amp;Int, Richmond
Brooks said Tuesday. Playing time
Dale Southeutern;
and
making a contribution were
Dtnicllc Ha.te!lcr, West Latayctte RidH;e·
'mportan~ he said.
woodj Molly McKibben. Ncwcomcmown; Scmcr
Span, Wellsville; Angie Mumnll, B~rnuvillc ;
I "Cleveland showed they really
Kdltine L 'en, Hannibel River;
wanted me," Brooks said by phone
Beth t':11eu, CluUvillc Clinten~Mulic; len·
rtifcr &amp;tcp, SprinsfUld Kenton Ridso; Michelle
from his Cincinnati area hoine
Geph11t, dllnc:heater, ' Sam~nthl Gemu.nn, Ripley
before heading to Cleveland for his
Unlon-Lewit; Tonya Smith.. FeUcily·Franklin;
Cull S1Jei.b, Veruille~.
contract signing and physical

....... £ut.

exam.
"Cleveland really wanted me to
step in th~re and help_ them out,"
Br~~s srud. "I feel like I can do
that. .
.
Pl.aymg beh1nd quarterback
Berme Kosar also was attracuve,
Brooks S81d,
· "It's gong to be great for me
because I fee!.he takes ad_van.':lge
of the backs, ·Brooks ,s81d. He
dumps the ball off and I m loolting
fo~ard to that. Once I get the ~1.
that s whe~ my talent takes ~~er.
. According to Brooks, I felt
hke I cold hel_p them out. That's
what I kept saymg: !,want to_play."
Brooks ~ouldn ! specify the
a_mount he will be paid ~r the· d~lion of his contrac! but mdi?~ted It
would be loaded With mcenhves. .
Brooks would have been pa1d

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$1.1 million if he had played for
the Ben~als this year. However,
Bengals general manager Mike
Brown balked af paying that mucll
to Brooks, who was demoted to a
backup role last season.
.
Brooks had three t-,000-yard
seasons with the Bengals, who·
obtained him in a trade from San ·
Diego in _1984;
.
~e 581~ he s !Qoking forward to
playmg wtth the B!'Owns .un~ second·_year coach Ball Belichlck and
playmg Of! the na!uralturf at Cl~ve•.
land Stadium. Riverfront Stadium
in Cincinnati has artificial turf.
Artificial turf "is tough on youi
it wore my legs down," Brooks
said. "Now I gel a chance . to do iJ
(play on grass) the last part of tliy
career and it's going to be great." '

1987 CHEVROLET
CAVALIER

1990 NISSAN K/C
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Cleveland Browns sign Brooks

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infielder Bret Barbtlie of Montreal,
outfielder Kenny Lofton of Cleveland, and pitcher Danny Neagle of
PittSburgh - might be lempted tQ
panic if thin~s start out toO good.
And Taylor s research indicated
they might do so with some justifi.:
cauon.
.
An analysis of aU the hitters .in
the Hall of Fame through 1987
showed that only one-third had hit
.300 or better in their first seasonS':
By the same token, their rust-year
average was .288.

the pipeline as well.
Pitchers Ben McDonald of Baltimore and Chris Nabholz of Montreal are both beginning their third
years having fit the pattern of great
rookie season, followed by a letdown as sophomores. Chuck
Knoblauch of Minnesota and Jeff
Bagwell of Houston, were last season's AL and NL rookies of the
year, respectively, and might be
tempted to panic by the slightest of
slumps.
Conversely, some of this
spring's hottest prospects -

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and 17 RB!s.
After goin~ 7-3 with a 2.83
ERA in his f1rs1 full season in
1983, Jose DeLeon was on everybody's short list to become one of
the game's great pitchers. But he
dropped to 7-13, with a 3.74 ERA,
the following season and the St.
Louis Cardinals' right-hander has
been in a free-fall ever since. His
career numbers !hro~gh the 1991
season: 73-105, 3.68 ERA.
The study is fraught with implications for a number of others in

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the study did not factor in injuries
-in many cases, an integral part
of the sophomore jinx,
On tbe other hand, Taylor had
no problem providing examples
from the recent past- names like
Joe Charboneau, Ron Kiule and
Stan Bahnsen would elicit a·nod
from most baseball fans -and the
presentto support his c&lt;inclusions.
For example, Jerome Walton
was the National League Rookie of
the Year in 1989 after hiUing 293
with five home runs and 46 RBI.
The following year, the Chicago
Cubs outfielder hit .263 with two
homers and 21 RB!s. Last season,

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'

Hot · rooki~s

The Dally ·Sentinei-Page-5

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
.

�Thursday, March 19, 1992

Pomeroy.-Middleport, Ohio

NCAA
111 Round:

2nd Round :

March 19-20

March 21·22

Rll!lionalo

Semlnnals

National
Chlmpionship

/JttJW~S:T

Semifinals

Regionals

2nd Round:

1st Round:

MarCil 21 ·22

March 19-20

~s.r ·

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ng to be
more
than ever next
year " said ·
the play-byplay' man for the NFL's M?nday
night showcase. "You're gomg to
have some obviously wrong calls
that could be overturned and
they're going to make the difference in games. I think that's more
deplorable than a two-minute delay
that allers the flow of a game.
"The idea is to get it right, and
they lost sight of that.''
Finks, president of the New

Dayton, Ohio
March 27

?l .M!~.ni.QWl..~t .R\:.1}1
121S.W. MO. St
···

OrMnsboro, N.C.
March 26

..................... (23-71 -

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March 26 &amp; 28

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· ··· · ······
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MarCil 26 ...............

(28-4'

TIFFANY GARDNER

·(7) .11,.~,c:.~.~·. l2.3.:al
1QJ..i&lt;l¥1~. $t,,(~1-~l.....

Mlnnupoll1 1 Mlnneso11

?JV~. ~~~I........ )·····

Marshall's Bartrum tabbed impact player

!.~J.t:!.~ .. ~~,.[1 ~-~1. .

yards and one touchdown. He
heads a unit that includes former
Huntington East High School star
Curt Nethercut~ red-shin freshman
Allen West, who missed spring
practice after having knee surgery;
and Brian Symonette, a transfer
from Rice. First-year players Jason
Toy and Brian Robinette also will
be available in the fall.
Those players have Marshall
tight end coach Tim Billings excited.
"Inslead of adding more offense,
we're just trying to build on it,"
said Billings, who added that the
players' experience has made his
switch from defensive line coach
an easy move. "These are great
kids, and they're trying to build on
the litUe things that'll make them
betler."

Billings said that's particularly
true of Bartrum, who follows Tim
Lewis, Sean Doctor and Eric Ihnat
as standout tight ends with the
Herd.
"Bart has gained more confidence this spring," Billings said.
"He knows the system, he's just
learning on the linle things like
doing what Brian Dowler di.d to get
open."
Bartrum has been one of Payton's favorite targets during the
spring. He appears quicker than in
previous seasons, and rarely has
dropped passes, while malcing several Cine catches in spring driUs.
"Barnum can be an impact player for us," Billings said. "He catches as good, or better, than Ihnat,
and he's a good blocker."

15J.C).ICIJ1!!rl\1!!io.~ (_1~1

C//;\MPION

Minneapolis,

Mlnnoota

WEST

MJnneso1a
April4

4pr11 4

ClnclnNU, Ohio

.~J.~I~.l?!i.:~L,

Ttmpe, Az.
March 26

Mard127

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L•xlngton, Ktntucky
'-"'rch 27 &amp; 29

- -~.~I..~R~!. M!?!!.l!.l!.~:!. !l

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·······················I
1_2].~1~..(1~:_1~1

· By SCOIT WOLFE
Sentinel Correspondent
Eastern's Shelly Metzger and
Tiffany Gardner, members of Eastem's 16-7 sectional championship
basketball team, were recently
nominated for all-Southeast Dis•trict honors.
Metzger, a 5-foot-9 junior
guard, earned second-team all-district honor~ with a 15.8 points-pergame sconng average. Gardner, a
5-foot-11 senior forward, earned
honorable mention honors with a
9.2 points-per-game scoring average and a 13.1 rebounds-per-game
average.
Metzger, was crucial in boosting
Dawn Heideman's Eagles to a second-place tie with Symmes Valley
in the Southern Valley Athletic
Conference and the sectional championship. Metzger tallied 255
points in just 16 games, having 43
steals,ll5 assists and 47 rebounds.
The junior sharpsh001er earned the
Most Assists and Most Points
Scored awards at the Eastern High
School winter sports banquet.
Metzger went 97 for ·159 at the
line and 79 for 279 from the field.

1.1 L~~J,A.J2.5.-.~L ......... .

.

ALL-AMERICAN CANDIDATE - Marshall University tight
end Mike Bartrum, a 1988 graduate of Meigs High Sch~l, Is be~g
tabbed as an All-American candidate by the Thundenng Herd s
footbaU coaching starr. The 6-5, 235-pound senior, the Herd's Ie~d­
ing returning receiver shown In last season's Brown Unl!ersity
game puUing in a pass f'rom quarterback Michael Payton, Mil play
in the annual spring game Saturday at 1 p.m. at the Herd's new
football stadium in downtown Huntington, W.Va. Tickets for. the
Green and White game are $S and can be purchased at the stadtum
the day of tbe game.

Metzger, Gardner chpsen
for all-SE District honors

· (2) Kenlllc;i&lt;Y(2.6.:6)........

AprilS
Mlnnnpall•,

(This article was y;ritten by
Huntington Herald-Dispatch
starr writer Tim Stephens and
appeared in the March 16 issue
of the Herald-Dispatch)
When Marshall quarterback
Michael Payton drops back to pass
next season, he'll be able to throw
to an All-American candidate and
the Thundering Herd' s leading
reruming receiver.
Troy Brown? No, Mike
Barnum.
Bartrum heads a deep, impressive squad at tight end, one of the
Thundering Herd's strongest positions heading into Saturday's
Green-White football game at I
p.m. at the MU stadium.
Bartrum, a 6-foot-5, 235-pound
senior, caught 40 passes - second
to Brian Dowler's 62- for 435

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Boise, Idaho
MarctJ 26

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didn't have much good to say about
By The Associated Press
Afler losing a big game ll!ld then his team, but he insisted he didn't
hearing they would lose a banquet, cancel an awards banquet to punish
the Indiana Hoosiers are hungry.
his players.
"If I were going to use that as a
"We need to stan listening to
the coach and communicating tool wid! my players, I would have
among ourselves," said guard Greg added a banquet or two, rather than
Graham as the Hoosiers prepared take one away," he said. ''My
to meet Eastern Illinois tonight in players are so happy they don't
an opening-round game of the have this banqueL The coaches are
happy. The banquet has become a
NCCA basketball toumamenL
The fifth-ranked Hoosiers passe thing."
appeared ready to vindica1e themThe day after the loss to Purdue,
selves following a disheartening Knight canceled the team's annual
61·59 loss to Purdue on Sunday. awards dinner scheduled next
The loss not only cost the Hoosiers month. The dinner had been spona share of the Big Ten title, it likely sored. by ihe Kiwanis Club of
knocked them out of lhe No. 1 seed Blcomington for 4 I years. .
· in the NCAA Midwest Regional.
Knight said t.e had been trying
.Instead,· they ,were sent to the to get rid of the banquer for eight
West, 'where they are the No. 2 years, and it just happened to be
announced on Monday.
seed behind UCLA.
If both Indiana arid Louisiana
Indiana cqach Bobby Knight

onship - something that hasn 't
been done since 1973 when the
UCLA Bruins won their seventh
consecutive title and ninth in I0
years.
The Blue Devils, who beat
Kansas in the I991 title game, open
defense of their title against CampbeD in lhe East Regional at Greensboro, N.C.
Duke has reached lhe Final Four
in five of the past six years, including losses in the title games to
Louisville in 1986 and UNLV in
1990.
.
The Duke-Campbell game is the
third of four games at the Greensboro Coliseum. It will be preceded
by Seton Hall (21 -8) vs. La Salle
(20-1 0) and Missouri (20-8) vs.
West Virginia (20-11) and followed by Texas (23-11) vs. Iowa
(18-10).
In the Southeast Regional at
Cincinnati, it's North Carolina (219) vs. Miami, Ohio (23-1), Alabama (25-8) vs. Stanford (18-1 0),
Ohio State (23-5) vs. Mississippi
Valley State (16-13) and Nebraska
(19-9) vs. Connecticut (19-9).
In the Midwest Regional at Mil·
waukee, the pairings are Arkansas
(25-7) vs. Murray State (17'12),
Memphis State (20-10) vs. Pepperdine (24-6), Georgia Tech (21 -11)
vs. Houston (25·5) and Southern
Cal (23-5) vs. Northeast Louisiana
(19-9).
The tournament's first round
will be completed Friday with four
games each at Worcester, Mass.;
Atlanta; Dayton, Ohio, and Tempe,
Ariz.
In the 18 years since the end of
UCLA's domination, only three
teams have won the NCAA title
more than once - Indiana in 1976,
1981 and 1987, North Carolina
State in 1974 and 1983, and
LouisviUe in 1980 and 1986.
Other than UCLA, only four
learns have repeated as champions
since the toiD'Ilament began in 1939
-Oklahoma State in 1945-46,
Kenwclcy in 1948-49, San Francisco in 1955-56 and Cincinnati in
1961-62.

State win their first-round games
tonight in Boise, Idaho, Knight will
. face LSU coach Dale Brown for
the first time since their memorable
confrontation in the final of the
1987 Midwest Regional.
In that game, Knight's telephone-slamming tantJum at the
scorer's table triggered an Indiana
comeback that beat LSU 77-76.
After the game, Brown called
Knight "a bully." Indiana went on
to win the national championship,
its third under Knight.
hi the other West Regional
games at Boise, the matchups are
Georgetown (21-9) vs. South Florida (19-9), Florida State (20-9) vs.
Montana (27-3) and LSU (20-9) vs.
Brigham Young.(25-6).
~
Meanwhile, the top-ranked
Duke Blue Devils are going after a
second straight national champi-

'

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StocU1•6920 2doors,sedan,6eyl..
auto., PS, PB, power windows,
saat, ~ iocl&lt;s, tin whoel,
, AMIFM ste1e0 tape, radials,
defog.

Slack' 16950, 4 doors,l8dan,
whee! drive, 6 eyi.. air, aulD., trans.,

WAS'12,995

WAS'12,995

PS, PB,powerwindowa, ~seat,
power lod&lt;s, till wheel, cruise, rodi·
ala, AMIFM radio, rear win. delog.

-..tan!

Slllckt 193l2, 4 daln,
whtal
drive, 6Cyl .. air, auta., PS, P8, powo1 win. dows, powo1 101\ power loc:b, lilt whtal,
cnise, radials,

delog.

b

•' £

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I

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.441

. II

.446

11

Ctntl'll Dlvlllon
12 .121
CltYoland.--....4.1 ll .17l
JlooviL ...................41 :!6 612
Indilnl ................... 32 36 .471
Alllml ................... 31 35 .470
Milwlube .............29 35 .453
Ow1oac ................25 31 .3'17

•.oucaao ..............ss

Omillc7l, Youn~ Libaty49

NomoDI•IIIoo

Sportilli&amp;hJ.....r 39, Bclhile 37
W1yncTnce 64, Colwnbia 4S
WhHimburt II, P1ktfAIII 79

T..,.
•·llMIII ............
Cficap..............
Sli...W. ............
Minn..... ..........
Toronto ..............

61 216 263

12 :!63261

(if 215222
Colpry ........ .... .. 26 35 10 62 260 211

SanJ01e ............. 16 SO S
x&lt;linched ployol!bcnh

37 185313

2A.S
28

Reelonot polrlngs
Dloblool
AI Akroll Unlvtnlty

Cllamptoouhlp
S1turda11 Tolodo St. John's (21-4)
" · Al:mn f ' - (22-2), 7:Jll p.m.
ft.1 Cantan Cl•lc Center
Cloamplonlhlp
Saturdt)'l Stow (23·2) va . Ca nton

McKinley (23-1), 7:30p.m.
At Columbus Falrvoundl
Chlmplonshlp
S11urd1y: Lim• Semor (19·.5) vs.
New•ti. (22-3), 7:30p.m.

Philoclolphil4, Mantoa13
N.Y. Illandml,N.Y. Ranaen I, tie

¥'fll·-··

WAS'5995

fell win.

Mktwat Ol'illon
W L PeL

T1am

· SID&lt;:k t 2t551, 4clocf,hlrd lllj),
wheel &lt;lrive, 4 cyl .. lir, aulD .. PS,
AMIFM radio, bucket seall.

WAS'2995

Ullh .......................43 23

GB

.652

San Anklnio ...........41 2.5

.621

2

H""ton ................. 37
na. .....................22
D.UU ..................... l1
Mionelall ............. 11

.5!2
.338
.2!4
.169

6!
2Q.l
26.l
31.!

30
43 .
SO
!4

P1dlk Dlvtlloo
PonliOd ................. 41 19 .716
Ooldool S~IC ..........44 20 .681
2!
Ph...U ..................43 24 .642
!
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13
L.A. 01- ......... 3! 32 .l22
L.A. J.Um ............ 34 32 .lll !3.l
s -............ 20 41 .299 21

a..noa. "Phllldelphii, 7:30 p.DL
Oiclao 1t Wul'llqtle, 1:30 P•!'L
lelale 11 Hcutat.l:30 p.m.
Don. . " Ullh,·9;30 p.m.

.

Frlda)'

11JimH

w~ .. - -1• 7:30~m.

,..

Alllllll " Cllidmo, 7:30 p.m.
Gold• Stitt 1t Cltwtllad, 7:31

•.M!I..-uiNIIInl. 7:30p.m.
-

IID&lt;uoil, l p.m.

s-otDIIW,t!O~m.

L.A.Oi-lll't.Da,9i30p.m.

~lll.JI.LIUn,10:30p.m. '

In theNHL ...

--

. WALES CONFERENCE
'II' L T rta. GFGA
a-N.Y. " - '• 45 2J 5 9.! 293221
' a-W H p. ... 41 :14 7 19 21111 Z41
T-

,.... ....., -·- "' :M to
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90 25111.5

S1turchy: Ctncinnni Aiken (21-4)
vs. Wen Chaltc:r LU.ou (21-4), 7:30p.m.

Toalgbt.'s aames

SL LauilatBodGn, 7:3S p.m.
Edmonton 1tNew Jcncy, 7:35p.m.
~-atl'l!llburJII, 7:3! p.m.
Minni:IICU It ChiCI&amp;O. 8:35p.m.
Sonloo.,t Colpl}',9:35 p.m.
Buffalo atLc. Aap,l0:3S p.m.

Friday's 1ames

Dl•biiiiiU
AI YounplOtrn Slate Unlvtl'llltf_
Thunday: Cevclond Colhollc (20-3)
" · OOYel.....r Villi AngeloSL loocph (149), 6:15 p.m.; Beloit w.., 8""!11 (21· 2)
VI . YounJitOwn R1ym (20-3), I p.m.
Chlmpi(IMhlp: S1tutd1y, 4 p.m.
At Un1,.nl1y ol Toledo
Thundlfl Tlllmi~JCI (li·S) v1.
W'illonl (ll).4), 6:30 p.m.; Olml1od Polll
(11· 13) •L Van Wcit (20-3),1;!5 p.m.
Clwnplondllp: Satu.ft:lly, .. p.m.
AI Ohio Un1oonlly

•

N.Y. R~~·~Daboit. 7:U p.m.
Pbiladdphil 1t WuhinJI.CII., 7:35 p.m.
WiMipeaatVanCCJUvc, tO:~ p.m.

'

NIT action
WednNCiaf'lltGHI

Trm11110 71,

Allblm~ ·BirminaJwn

61

Noae Dome 6!, w.... Mio:hipn 56
. Viopoiii3,V.u.-ol0
·
lana• SUta 1!1 WONm Jtermu:iy
74

P\IUbOIIII
(if' s.... 65
Wu!Unpa SL 72. ..._.. 70

'

T~ntaht'a II"*

AI CIAlon Pltklltoule

Wilconli~Hlroen

Bar (1S_.) 1t Man·
"'"" (23-1), 7:30p.m.
.
Bllller (21·9)ul'ludue (16-141 7:30

p.m.lii~• (22-7)11 Fl..Wo (16-1:),
7:30pm.
Rhode bl1nd (20-9) at V1ndcrbih
(1!-14),1 p.m.
.
Sou\hem Illinoia (22·7) 11 Boaton
CoiJole ltli-13),1 p.m
'Lana BAch St.l&amp;.e (11· 11) 1t Teu1
· Olllatilli (22-lll),I::IC!p.m.
~ Toch (03-7) 11 New MW-

DltklooiY

Fridop
(19·!)
w. Mind'..WIL_.:JIIo61,7:30p.m.
AtU•I.....,tiTIIIIdo
ctu.~lp
·
Frt••r• Umo C•lhol!o (20·3) " ·

Ohio bleb school

basketball scores

c-.,c..r=:r:~PA
AI
,.....,. ltl- (16-1) "·
Balin- (23-1), 7:30 ......

__,.,_lllo.61
'
~ldiOII

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c.- IIDiloiiJ 8, Yollo)&lt; Porp

AI Wrilitlllo!i

tc••a

c-.,

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l)

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r.tdOJt
aoeumol
l)vt. Yollowlpdop(lt-5),7~p.m.

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•dill '11
-fl.
.Y -41 ·
w. C.WLotooo 64, ss.lltal Jl

e

...

~:~&amp;......

' !om• MHliGII (21-!0l '' .Rutaen

.

y....,,.s,

Atc...... FieMt

(ll-14), 7:lG p.m. .

62

Saturdl)'l OrMlJe (lAo 1) w. Akron
SL
MlrJ (ts..CJ,!2:30p.m.
At \lniYtnllJ tJI 'toledo
. • Cllomplonohlp
Soturdoy&lt; llornlor Potrldo Henry (116) n . Hniland W1yno Trac1 Cl1 ·3),
!2:30p.m.
AI Ohio ~O!YonllJ
Clloniptoruhlp
SaturdiJI,'Whcclenbura (16·9) vt.

,...,..._

--·

Chl.........lp

SpoN lii&amp;hJind (20-41, I 2:30p.m.
AtVondola
Cllomploool&gt;~
Satwrd1y1 Cincinnt McNichol11
(16-9) v1. Custown Miami Eut (19.,.),
!2:30p.m.

oo(ll·l2), 9:30~JIL
BoU Stoll (24-1) 11 U11h (20·t0),
9:3l p.m.
Ariloea Stt\1 (11-13) n UC S1n\l
Boiloon (»I), tO:lO p.oa.

..'

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------Sports shorts-....,..:,___ __
Basketball
tives of the Jal!anese-Ied group
INGLEWOOD, Calif. (AP) attempting to :buy the Seattle
Los Angeles Lakers forward James Mariners met with baseball offiWorthy will undergo arthroscopic cials for the seel!nd til!le in eight
surgery on his left knee within a days. The grou!fi whiclr is 60-perfew days. The team said a cent finance~ by Hiroshi
timetable for Worthy's return to Yamauchi, presl~ent of Ninlendo
action will be deteimined following Co. Ltd. of Kyo,ID, has been aSked
the surgery, which will be per- by baseball officjals to restructure
formed by team physician Dr. its offer, but it remains unclear if it
Steve Lombardo at the Kerlan-Jobe is willing to do oo. Baseball ownas
Orthopaedic Clinic. Wonhy , 31. have objected to:pon-North Amenhas averaged 19.9 points in 54 can ownership abd ~ssed their
games this season.
ideas during a m!kting last week in
DALLAS (AP) - Representa- Tampa, Fla.
··

..

~----~--

MEN'S DEPARTMENT
Is Offering
An Excellent Selection of
Men's Knit Shirts
by ]antzen-Arrow aml
Dlock Sportswear

BAHR CLOTHI
2ND AVE.

MIDDLEPORT,
.., OH.

992·235J

.,

•

SIIMIIIR

Instant replay ...

DlwlllooW

'

.•.

~

Thurtdly: Columbu1 Linden·
McKinley (21·1) VI. Waahin&amp;ton Court
H0111o (19-4), 6:1l p.m.;!""''"" (16-7)
" · Combrid~ (22·2), i p.m.
Chom rulllp! S.nmloy, 4 p.m.
Al rlaht Stitt Unlvtnfly
11tunday: Do)'IIXI Dunba1 (16-7) " ·
Cincinnati Turpin {16·7). 6:1S p.m.;
, Columbu&lt; SL Chuloo (22-1) VI. Koaorir!&amp;
· Ah"' (17-6), Bp.m.
Chomploriolljp; S.nmloy, 4 p.m.

First round
.

. ............. 122tl0 141S7J43
a1 1r · - · :r1 11
asu?O
" - -·---- 2111 11, fl2171.51

r

At Wrlaht State Unlnnlty

Vmcouvcr 3, Hanford 2

Mll-uNow Yadt. 7:30p.m.

·==--

7

Edmonton .......... 32 31 i
WMipea ........... 2732 13

Toal&amp;bt'apmH

GALLIPOIJ8

!

76 22121?
73 250247
(if 222241

t...An1c1......... 33 21 13 79 264267

Golden Statel231 Mianalca120

1:10 &amp;lii.ID 7 p.m. IIII. .W.11141t 0.111. lit I pJil. luncliy

9

Smyllle DI.Uloo

l'vnlllllf91. L.A.I.Abn 93

,.,

14

215
21!

._..., 9f,CioYtl..,dM
lndiln• 116. )tiimi 111, or
Od.tlldo 99, Alllall 96
Doua1191, Philldolphill!
· SID - I l l , 5..,......, 89
LA. Ci.- 117, Dlllu 86

..._...........

GFGA

90 262212

Wednesday's Kores

OPEN SEVEN ,.....-..
DAYS ........
A WEEK

3t :!6
32 31
31 3l
'11 31

Pilricl: Henry 61, New London 49

11 m234

1·VIftCOUVer ...... 40 21 10

•..tiftdlodpllyalfbonh

Price OOOd .... ·~

rta.

W L T
38 2l 11

IIJ
14

WESTERN CONFERENCE

/,&amp;¥'

3915
............
....,.,'-_

4

.455

CAMPBELL CONFERENCE

Wednesday's scores

tOH-12-FC

fill

GB

Gardner was a.v.ital offensive
component of the I;:aslem offense,
but was best known for her 291
rebounds. She set a sehool record
with consecutive 24- and 26rebound nights, the ~Ingle game
record at Eastern. . .
Gardner had 203 ~ints, and
was 90 for 211 from the field
Jeimifer Rousb. a 6-foot-2
senior center, luld 172 rebounds
and 118 points qn the Season. She
also had 32 stc;als·. S'enior Ruby
Burke, the defen~ive specialist, hsd
21 steals, IOTreboul)d and 54
points scored.
Senior guar&lt;l Tabby Phillips,
who hit 10 of. 17 tllree-point
attempts, had 214 poi~ts for a9.8
pomt \s-per-game sconng average,
including one 28-point game. She
had 61 rebo.unds, 54 stelils, and was
73 of 252 from the field.
Senior Lee Gillilan had 129
points for a 6.3•points-per-game
average, had 79 ' rebounds and was
59 of 125 from thb floor,
Point guard J)lime Wilson had
93 markers, 2 :pf 4 three point
attempts and w~33 of 142 overall.
She also regislerql 53 sieals.

,

tOOl

(Continued from P~e 6)
Cowboys and Finks' predecessor as
head of the competition committee.
"It's a sad mistake," Schramm
said of Wednesday's action.
It was approved then for a year
by the bare minimum - 21 votes.
It was not to be used on penalties,
only on in-bou.nds calls, fumbles
and other spots.
But calls were uneven, panicularly early. In some cases, there
was a delay of several min~tes,
then an obvious fumble woul4 be
negated because officials on the
field would rule that a whisde had .
blown. In another C!lSC, a touch·
down was overturned, but !be communications line was bad and the
offteials 011 the field tliought it hsd
been upheld.
.
So replay barely survive4 ·
through five more yean as first ,
Schramm and the~ the commis·
sionen, f111t Pele RozeUe and then
·Tagliabuc, twisted enOuah arms to
renew it for a year. Only in 1989
was it ~ved by a decent margin ·
- it got 24 votes in tribute to
Rozelle, who hsd announced his
resignation a day earlier.

tOIIIOBIAIIU
CASUAL

SUMIIIR

•

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IS

"•
.,

COlli.

.

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••
I

Black or White
Letitbet

'•

Nlf.
. .
I

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SHOE PLAC

. N. WAve.

992-5627

••

..

' ••

'

�March 19, 1992

Ohio

Poison Prevention Week continues
In conjunctioo with Poison Prevention Week, March 15-21, as
designated by Gov. George V.
Voinovich , the Meigs County
Health Department is asking that
parents be alen to potential problems . ·
The most frequent victims of
poisonings in the home are children, said Norma Torres, R. N.,
nu'rsing director. She joins Dr.
Edward G. Kilroy, state health
director. in recommending that all

medicines and household chemi··
cals be kept out of the .reach of
children, that only child:resistant
paclc!iging be used for medicines.
that the telephone number of the
nearest poison control center be in
a visible place by the telephone,
and that. a one-ounce bottle of
syrup of ipecac be on hand in case
of poisoning.
However, she cautioned, that
the syrup of ipecac should not be

used until the parent is instructed lO
do so by a poison control center
specialist
According to sratistics, one million children nationally ate, drank
or inhaled a poisonous sul!srance
last year. Along with children, people 64 years old and older are also
· susceptible to unintended poisonings. According to figures from the
state health director, deaths related
to household poisonings have doubled during the past 30 years.

TO SAVINGS

DIRECT FROM THE

Closet is open on the last two Thursdays or each
month from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Auyoue iu ueed or
food is invited to visit the racility which operates
in the church hasemeut.

STOCtQNq:VP ·Teresa Varian stocked the
shelves or 1'1ie Care Closet at the Rutland
Cllurcb or .God Tuesday afternoon in prepara·
.tJoo ror pulti1Ja:out rood ror the needy. The Care

Serta Gentle Firm

Serta Medium Firm

$59

$79

•

•

By CHARLE!fE HOEFUCH
Sentinel t~ews Staff
RUTLAND .• Teresa Varian
can't stand the thought of anyone
going to bed hungry.
That's why s)t is so involved in
The Care .Cios~ . a food pantry
which operates QUI of a basement
room at the Rl(Jiand Church of
God. The pantry;is funded by the
church and o~ by church vol·
'
unreers.
Over the pa;t year 140 families
and 762 indi~uals have been provided with ~
boxes through The
Care Closet wlKch is open from 10
a.m. to 2 p.n!. on the last two
Thursdays of ea:h month.
"Near the end of the month is
the time when ~seems to be the
most need," V~ said.
While stoci¢N the pantry and
distributing the:l!!od is a time consuming job, V=says lhe church
women who v
r get satisfac·
lion from help· !hers.
The food co1!f from the South·

,...

eastern Ohio Foodbank in Nelsonville, an affiliate of Second Harv~t, a national foodbank network.
Second Harvest is the biggest
food bank in the nation. It was
founded in 1979 and today serves
40,000 charitable agencies across
the nation who provide !telp to the
needy.
It has been described as an organization which is a "stopgap and
band·aid to help people who would
normally slip lhrough the cracks to
get the assistance they need to he
able to put food on the rabie".
L~rge wholesale and retail
food suppliers donate surplus food
to Second Harvest that would otherwise go to waste. That food is
then distributed to Foodbanks like
the one at Nelsonville, and finally
reaches the shelves of community
food pantries, like The Care Closet
Varian says that her church can
purchase all kinds of food, canned
and frozen, plus paper and personal
products, for 14 cents a pound.

"Sometimes the caris are dent·
ed, the plastic tops are cracked, the
packagmg has been tom, but the
products haven't been damaged
and the food is still good," she
explained. "It's just that people
won't buy it off the shelf at grocery
stores."
The Rutland church has just one
of numerous food pantries in a nine
county area of Southeastern Ohio,
who purchase from the Foodbank
to replenish their shelves.
It all started out as a holiday
project The women were preparing
boxes for needy families at
Thanksgiving and Christmas and
the project made then so aware of
the needs of the community, that
they opened The Care Closet.
Many have come, but Varian
says there is food for more.
Family size, finances and
expenses are taken into consideration on food requests. but no one
goes away if some need is shown,
she sairl

Reg.
S179

Full. Ea. Pc.

Sale

sat

Full. Ea. Pc.
Queen. 2 Pc. Set
King, 3 Pc.Set

Reg.
S229
$519
$549

Sale
$119

S28t
$389

Serta Comfort Firm

Sertapedic Ultra Firm

$119

$139
Sale
$159
$319
$489

Full. Ea. Pc.
Queen, 2 Pc. Set
King, 3 Pc. Set

Reg.

Sale

$299
$699
S799

$169
S43t
$579

FREE

Delivery &amp;Set Up!
SAU sum roMr.

Dow~~oming
.•

,•

NEW Yo!fK· (AP) - Dow
Coming Corp!,':Uie leading maker
of silicone-get ~reast implants, is
reportedly ge!(lng out of the troubled business for good.
The company stopped making
and selling lh~ implants on Jan. 6
after lhe Food:.and Drug Administration asked•for a moratorium
because of health concerns, but it
didn't announte whether it would
exit the marke, permanently.
Dow ComiJIB Chairman Keith
McKennon w~ scheduled to hold a
news confereate in Washington
today.
i.
A compPny spokesman
wouldn't com~nt on lhe newspaper and broadCast reports, which
also said Oo~¢oming would set
aside SIO.I!Iill!JO f~ research into
the heal.th c~cts of devices
already implanil in an estimated I
million Americi!S women.
CNN, NBC~ The New York
Times. Sl!i~ ·~ Coming will in
some mstanc01 pay women who
want their .imi!l'nts removed but
•

AUM:IG.V..........._

&amp;DESIGN

ONNDM.Y, H
niL. .. 7 CLOUD lUNDAY

'BRAND NAME FtlRNITtlRE AT DISCOUNT PRICES'

RT.l.
WI'WIFBIIY
WY2551S

The company and other breastimplant manu'facturers and many
plastic surgeons say the implants
are safe.
Dow Coming controls about 30
percent of the national implant
market. Bristol-Myers Squibb Co.
quit the business last fall. and last
week Bioplasty Inc. said it would
also stop making gel implants.
Dow Corning said last month it
might quit the business, after a
panel advised the FDA to limit
sharply the use of implants. The
FDA is expected 10 issue its final
decision br April20.
The Midland, Mich., company
is a joint venture of Dow Chemical
Corp. and Coming Inc. It alread}
has closed down its implant facto·
ries in Arlington, Tenn., and Hemlock, Mich., laying off and reassigning about 100 workers.
Sales of silicone-gel breast
implaniS account for only I percent
of Dow Coming's annual sales of
$1.84 billion.
·

can't afford the operation. The
Times reported today that Dow
Corning agreed to offer women
$1.200 toward such operations.
Dow Corning previously
required women to agree not 10 sue
the company in exchange for the
financial help. But The Times, cit·
ing unidentified sources, said Dow
Coming would drop that require·
ment
Critics say leaking implants
cause cancer and other immune·
system diseases, but a link has not
been proved.
Dow Comi n~. which has $250
million in liability insurance, faces
hundreds of million of dollars in
lawsuits filed by women who
blame the implants for various
health problems.
In December, the company was
ordered to pay $7 million to a California woman who also· accused
Dow Coming of covering up studtes that found adverse reacuons in
implant patients. Dow Coming is
appealing that verdict

activists take arms against a
cartoijz cat; organizations file petition

Telev~ion

By STEPJIAME SCHOROW . looldng to base cartoon shows on
~~~~11!1-ess Writer
characters created to prom01e prod"
- Chester ucts. And while adults may be able
Cheetah, a
who hawks to malce a distinction between procheese snacks, ;~euil1g some tele- motion and programming, kick will
vision
the collar. not, she said.
Seven
including
"Think of the CBS eye. If CBS
for put legs on it and turned it into an
filed a peti- adult program, we'd say, 'What a
~ ~ ~•ith the Federal
promotion.'
Commission to
"I'm not making this into a
lO create a quality debate. Any cartoon is OK,
featuring is legal, as long as it isn't an ad,"
spolcescat for she said.
FCC rules call for a separation
Frito-Lay says between commercial and pro~the Chester ming material. The petiuon, sup'
:)n(p! r ' have been ported by the Center for Science in
activist Peggy the Public Interest, Black Citizens
as an exam· for Fair Mediund four other orp·
Chlrren '
nizations, asb for 1 declaratory
pie of how
R aoss·
masquerading as ruling t1!a' a OeM' ~ show
mftheliile
chii&lt;Rn'r ;I'Y
wouldB YIOF.late lhe pul?Jic mtaeat.
Instead
ut nto:l.ay may·nevet ~h
White
such a show. to_d M~e~eaz1e, a
spolcesman for Friro-Lay m Dlllis,
Charren
said the idea show hu been dis·

-

cussed since 1986, most recently
with the Fox Network, but now
"it's as cold as ice."
" Since Chester came out in
1986, he's been wildly popular,"
MacKenzie said. So popular, in
fact, that the company doesn' t want
to risk losing its Cheetos cheetah:
"We don't want to jeopardize the
job he's doin$ there."
· MacKenz.Ie said the company
was not bowmg 10 pressure and he
said it had. not yet been conlacted
by either the FCC or any of the
groups which filed the petition.
Still, MacKenzie says lhat pre·
venting commercial characters
from becoming children's cattoon
characters would be a great loss.
"Some of the world •s best•
loved trademarb and characters
come from advmislng," MacKen·
zie said, cit ins the California
·Raisins and even Santa Claus, ivho
he said began as an advertising
device
· ·
·

says sh~ married two in·;two days. ·
Colrt Jlljlp Joe N. Pijou 8lted 'ill'

(AP)- A

IIIII. yea. she

court Malday.

nbt heeD pWpealypatllmCd. ·
. •'Whea she foulld out Jt wu

"Nei!Mr 0110," Jepllod Bullock · . (Jepl), lbo rm..,..tljtely IOUiht 10
"It lblt
Y11U
hl¥0 dlo IOCOIIChllllllaju IIIIIM)kd,
body elte Ia mllld?" uted tbe wbicll slle 1111 u.ly done." lhe
j""""·
.
aaomey ald. She lito II sepnted
10 be -w." from Pownlu, he Slid.
llid Bullorlr, 21, OIWau rl=4
Scnteacill wa1 jeudiDJ.
Her llwyer, Bruce 1'boaiJ11011, Blpmy caD Rllult ID 10 yem m
llid 1111 cllelll did Dill t . ""wwly ~. bat p!OIIOCDIOn llld lhoy
viaiMt llleljlw Jw••
illd not expect 10 J11U1 for a priloa
enly dlouJIIt die fint . . . . hid Iaiii..
.

men in two
want either

""'**' -IQIIIOo

By DANIEL Q. HANEY
AP Scleuce Writer
BOSTON (AP) .-- An aerosol
:spray made from genetically engi·neered protems helps clear the
infected mucus that clogs and
·eventually destroys the lungs of
cystic (jbrosis patients, according
to a study published today.
"It's not a cure, but there is no
question it works," said Dr.
Ronald G. Crystal, who directed
the study reponed in the New England Journal of Medicine.
Trouble breathing is a key prob'
lem of cystic fibrosis, which fills
the lungs with thick mucus. Doct~rs say t~e .new treatment is the
fmt medicme to break up the
mucus.,
.
About 50,000 Amencans have
the m
· hen'ted disease.. wh'1ch.IS
· often
fatal by age 30. Until now. 11 mamly has been treated with antibiotics
to preventinf~tions and by poundmg on pauents chests to loosen the
mucus..

.

The n~w medicine, called human protein, produced in quanti·
deoxyribonuclease, qr DNase~ is ty by gene sp~icing, ~hat breaks
made by Genentech Inc., which down the geneuc matenal DNA.
plans to seek appr~¥al to ~ell it
In people with cystic fibrosis,
early next year. U.nul then, 11 w1ll the'cells linmg the lungs absorb 100
be available only for limited stud- much water. This dries OJJl the
ies.
'
· mucus, making it thick and hard to
Among the first to use the cough up. Bacteria grow in the
inhaled spray was lan Ferguson, mucus.
27. of Rockville, Md., who particiWhite blood cells fight the
paled in a study at the National infection. When these cells die,
Heart, Lung and Blood Institute.
they release their DNA into the
"This is something everybody mucus. This malccs the mucus even
with CF would like co be able to thicker and more stringy, severely
take," he said.
hindering breathing. Eventually the
Before using the medicine , he lungs are desD'Oyed.
became winded running up a flight
DNase attacks the leftover
of stairs.. While raldng i~ he could DNA, thinning lhe mucus.
!Jouod up three fltg~ts wtlhout losIn the study, patients saw a 10
mg hts breath, he S8td. , , .
percent to 20 percent improvement
Crystal directed the mtuai study in their lung function with no
·
DNase IS
· now be'.mg apparent side effects.
on 16 pauents.
tested on 900 people at 50 hospttals
"Two-thirds of the patients tell
around the country.
you ihey feel beuer " said Crystal.
" This is very exciting," tom· " Their chests feell~ss heavy. "
men ted _Dr. Robert B~all , ?f the
The patients took DNase or a
Cysuc Ftbrosts Foun~uon. There placebo spray for six days. Neither
was a very stgmficantlmprovement the doctors nor the patients knew
in pulmonary function. We think which was administered, but the
this could have an impact on lhe quick improvement in their breathdisease."
ing leftliUle doubt when they got
The new treatment is a natural the real drug, Crystal said.

· BAHR,CLOTHIERS
2ND AVE.

later this year.

LOS ANGELES (AP) - Fasll-

MIDDLEPORT, OH.

PRESENTS
Tropica l shores beckon from

NIAGARA FALLS, On.tario
(1\P) --: Maharishi Mahesh ·Yogi,
spmtual adviser 10 the Beatles, and
magician Doug Henning are plan·
ning a $1.5 billion amusement park
devoted to spiritual enlightenmeriL
The 33 attractions would
include a building lhat· appears to
levitate above water, Henning said.
There also would be hotels, apanments and a conference center.
"The purpose of our parks is to
give enlightenment, knowledge and
entertainment to the people," Henning said from Toronto on
Wednesday.
Construction should begin this
year, but no o~ning date has been
set, he said. •
Mayor Wayne Thomson said the
two have bought the land and are
applying for building permits.

Tomght Show host hurt his reputation by joldng that Mother Teresa made Blackwell's worst-dressed
listillackwell never mentioned
Mother Teresa in his annual list of
the 10 worst-dressed women. He
fiiled
seeks $11 million in a lawsuit
Tuesday.
.
NBC said the lawsuit IS
frivolous.
"It's quite obvious that Mr.
Carson's joice was in no way
defamatory and no one could have
understood il as anrthing other
than the joke it was.' the network
sai~arson made the joke the day
after Blackwell released his 32nd
annual list on Jan. 14: "Did you
'd b
M h
see what he sat a out 01 er
Teresa?
'MissCome
NerdyonNun
is athat's
fashion no-no.·
now,

In Today's Sears Insert the:
Washer With The Statement
II America's Largest Usable
Capacity" Does Not Pertain To 71~~
The Model Washer Shown.

just toO much."
BOSTON_(_A_P-) - Cardinal
Bernard F. Law says the Roman
Catholic Church considers Sen .
d
· d
Edward M : Kenne Y marne 10
Joan Kennedy, and he needs an
annulment before he can wed
·
1
v· · R
Washmgton awyer Ictona eg-.
gie in the church.
The Kennedys divorced in 1982.
Law said Tuesday he has met
with the senator and Mrs. Kennedy,
but he would not say whether they
applied for an annulment of their
22-year marriage.
Without an annulment, Law
said, Kennedy would be considered
e s tran~ed from the church if he
remamed.
Kennedy plans to marry Reggie

SEARS
788 N. 2nd

lantzen's patchwork "vacation" pnnt
of cottony cool pastels
Camps h1 ~ .

53800

Pul l·on short 529 00

Pill kits replaced
with stationery

ro Mrs Olll.'fl

r '

reportedly quitting
siliccf11e-gel breast implant business

,C

LONDON (AP) - Rock singer
David Bowie is buying his future
bride a $3.4 million home in a
secluded Irish village, his agent
said Wednesday.
Bowie, 46, will move to the
640-acre estate in the County ·
Wickiow hills with Somalia-born
model !man, 36, said Alan
Edwards.
The couple, who marry in June,
will be residents of Kiltegan vii·
!age, population 200, 45 miles
southwest of Dublin.
The estate, Homewood, includes
a house with ornate battlements.
and turrets, cavernous rooms and a
wide marble staircase.

Tw1n. Ea. Pc. A19- S2Ct

Twin. Ea. Pc. Al9- $2lt

Full. Ea. Pc.
Queen. 2 Pc. Set
King, 3 Pc. Set

;oene splicers f. promising ---Names in the news-~..;.:.
'trea·. t.ment.· 1 or cys·t1c
• t• b •
-.1. ro~1s .)~~~~~cc~s~~~c~~~~:~;u:~~

Bowie spends
$3.4 millon
on future wife

'

Reg.
$259
$599
$649

Ohio

Twm. Ea. Pt. Reg. S179

Twm. Ea. Pc. A19- S111

More ~han 140 families have received
food frpm The Care Closet during past year

I

March.1

HAMILTON, Ohio (AP) - The
sale of safety ldts containing medication will not he allowed in the
city school dislric~ which suspend·
ed two girls last monlh for sharing
Tylenol capsules at school.
,
Buchanan Elementary School
students were planning to sell safety kits that contained bandages,
adhesive tape and a flrst·aid book·
let. But school district officials
learned that the kits contained .
Tylenol and stopped the fund-raiser
Tuesday.
"They frankly did not realize
that Tylenol was in the first-aid
lei~" school Superintendent Jeffrey
Sittason said.
The sale began Monday, but no
kits had 00en delivered. The district
stopped the sales because the
Tylenol could have ended up in the
hands of children;Sitrason said . ~
. Bill Brown, president of the
Buchanan Boosters, said the safety
Jcit sale will be switched to a safer
item -stationery.
Two Wilson 1unior High School
students were suspended for five
days last month after they were
caught with Tylenol. Th~ board
,said they violated school policy
that requires school office approval
•and adult supervision for students
' to rake medicine at school.
The girls said they did not know
•the policy applied to non-prescription products such as Tylenol.

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�~~g_.___,o_-_Th~e~o_a~lly~S~e~n~tln~e~I----------~------------~P~o:m;e~ro~y::M:Id~d~le~po~rt~,~O~h~lo~----------------------------~Th~u~~~d~ay~,!Ma~~~h~19~,~1~99~2

Daughtery~~should patch things up Judge to Leona: check-in time Aprill5 ·

:Dear Ann La-..-rs·. Two
"""
f- ·
11$0 my father moved out 0 the
~ because he drank 100 much,
IS second marriage broke up. and
hecouldn'taffordtolivehere.
One day he called and asked me
1r he could put his car insurance
uoder my name. He admitled that
h~ had been cited lhree times for
driving while intoxicated and
couldn't afford the $1,400. The
insurance would only be S300
under my name. He asked for my
license number, and I couldn't say
nQ, so I gave it to him. I told him 1
W)lnted to talk his agent before
10
anything was done. He said, "No
problem."
A few phone calls and a couple of
months went by and there was no
mention of lite inc 1den L Finally 1
called and said, "Dad, I haven't heard
from you r agent- Wh at's gomg on.?"
"Qh, I took care of it," he said.
:ro make a long stor..· short, he
not only forged my name with his
agent. he had one of h1s bar girls
pose as me at lite Depanmcnt of
Mmor Vehicles and she regislered
hiS car m my name. I found Ill is out
~ough his agent. Needless to say, 1
was outraged.
After numerous calls putting a
stop w everything, he made me
feel like the bad guy, sayutg 1was a
lousydaughteranddidn'tcareabout
h1m .
:It's been over a year now and it
bOthers me that he has no interest in
spealcing.IO me. My siblings keep in
touch w1th hun and tell me he is

By PAUL GEITNER
Associated Press Writer
NEW YORK (AP)- Hotel
queen Leona Helmsley, convicted
of evadin~ $1.7 million in taxes,
lost her bid 10 stay out of prison
and was ordered Wednesday to
begin servinf her four-year sentence on Apri IS.
The 71-year-old wife of billionaire Harry Helmsley was dressed in
black for her resentencing.
She begged for mercy from U.S.
District Judge Thomas Gries a,
maintaining that separating her
from her siclcly, 83-year-old busband would lcill them botll.
- "He has nobody in the world,"
she sobbed. "All he's got is me."
She sat stoically, shaking her
head, as lhe judge refused 10 elimi·
nate or reduce the prison term
imposed after her 1989 conviction.
almost collapsed
as she
left
liteShe
Manhattan
federal court
build-.

place."
Please, Ann, printlhis for !hose
who believe nursing homes are for
the disabled and incompetent. It
makes me sad that people think
my aunt is in a miserable place and

Ann
Landers

ANN LANDERS

.. 1111, Loo ""'"''"

11meo Syntl..te ODd

er..w.synolcoto."
drinking more lhan ever and is in
poor health.

Should I make the first move?
I don't want to feel guilty if
something should happen 10 him
before the rift between us is healed.
How should I handle litis, Ann? 1
value your advice._ FORGED, J.B.,
NORlHPORT, N.Y.
DEAR J.B.: Forgive him •• if
not for his sake, for yours. Wait
unnl the next family occasion •. a
birlhday, his or yours, or some other
family event. Easter or July 4_ Reach
out to h1m and patch things up.
What he did was preny rotten, not
to mention illegal, but holding a
grudge till the grave profits no one.
Dear Ann Landers: I recently
placed my aunt in a nursing home.
Her husband L' dead, she has no
ch1ldren and she wanted to go mere.
"Aunt Molly" has rece1ved leucrs
from well-meanmg friends who say,
"So sorry to hear you're in a home. I
hope lite food is good." She was
offended by these comments and
said, "Don't they know 1 need this
care and I'm happy here? I still
make my own decislons and when 1
no longer can, I'll be in lite right

that she has been "wanehoused." ••
BOSTON
DEAR BOSTON: Many seniors
who are in nursing homes are in
pretty good physical condition and
enjoying lire. Some have written to
say they are happy to be free of the
burden of keeping house and tile
social life is a godsend.
Not long ago, an 84-year-old
woman wrote to tell me she had met
a lovely 86-year-old man in the
home and they plan to be married as
soon as they can get their children's
consent Is that sweet or what?
Gem of tile Day:
People of high intelhgence talk
about1deas.
p 1 f
· ·
eop co average mtelhgence talk
about things.
People with no mtel hgence talk
about oilier pecple.
Where are you in the hneup?
Is alcohol ruimng your life or I he
life of a loved one? "AlcoholiSm:
How lo Recogmze lr. How ro Deal
Wirh II , How lo Conquer lr'' can r
urn lhings around Send a selfaddressed, long, business-me
envelope and a check or money
order for $3 65 (lhas includes
poslage and hllndling) 10 : Alcohol,
c/o Ann Landers, P.O. Box 11562,
Chicago, 111. 60611-0562 . (In
Canada, send $4.45.)

ing
side door.
cau~ht
her by
anda helped
her An
intoaide
a waitmg
limousine.
Throughout the hearing, the
judge stressed lhat Mrs. Helmsley
was not being ueated more favorably because of her weal til.
''This is not class warfare,'' he
said. "The poor arc treated the
same as lhe rich."
Defense lawyers argued lhat the
suess of life behind bars could lcill
Mrs . Helmsley, whose ailments
include hardening of lhe arteries
andscverehighbloodpressure.
She has had two or lhree small
suokes since her 1989 conviction,
attorney Sandor Frankel said. Her
life expectancy was estimated at
only four 10 six years, he said.
Griesa called her "quite a vigorous woman.''
Any medical problems could be
ucated in prison, he said.
The judge showed little patience
for defense arguments lhat only
Mrs. Helmsley could care for her
husband. Helmsley was indicted
wilh his wife but judged incompetent to stand Uial.
"To say Mr. Helmsley's ill
heallh is such as to allow him to
escape prosecution and also 10
allow his wife, who was prosecuted
and convicted, to avoid serving a
sentence ... is going too far," the
judge said.
Mrs. Helmsley was convicted of
evading taxes from 1983 lhrough
1985. She was sentenced to four
years in prison, fined $7 million
and ordered to pay nearly $2 million in restitution. She has
remained free on $25 miUion bail.
Prosecutors charged the Helmsleys billed millions of dollars 10
personal expenses to companies
they owned. A former housekeeper
testified Mrs. Helmsley told her,
"We don't pay taxes. Only the little people pay taxes.··
Last July, an appeals court

•The Area's N·umber 1
Marketplace

has allegeJ misconduct by Helmsley accountants and federal prosecutors. Assistant U.S . Attorney
Mark Hellerer called lhe charges
groundless.
Griesa said he would rule on
lhat motion before she sw:rende!'S.
The U.S. Bureau of Prisons IS to
decide where Mrs. Helmsley serves
her time.
The government has asked she
be sent to the Federal Medical Ceoter in Lexington, Ky., a minimumsecurity women's prison with an
85-bed hospital.
.
Defense lawyers s_atd Tues~y
she mtght prefer a pnson camp m
Danbury, Conn.

RATES
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3

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2 pt. tw

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111

Cilt Box

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Corner of Second at Grape St.

: A;LL EYES • Sbawn Hubbard, 3, a pediatric
.pat1ent at MetroHealth Medical Center in
;Cleveland, checks out a visitor Wednesday. The
:_~wland some more cuddly critters were brought

-.. --People in the news--: ·PAPEETE, French Polynesia
(AP)- Marlon Branda's daughter,

Cheyenne, got court permission
Wednesday to enter a French clinic
while awaning a ruling on whether
she will be aied in connection wilh
the murder of her child's father.
; Her half-brother, Christian
Branda, is serving a 10-year prison
s~tence for _voluntary manslaughter for shooung Dag Drollet, 26. at
Marlon Brando's Hollywood Hills
mansion in May 1990.
' Miss Brando, 21, a resident of
French Polynesia, was arrested last
November in France, where she
\lias receiving ueatment for depression following two suicide
attempts. She was then nown to
t~is French territory in lhe South
l'llcifte, where a judge is investigating her connection to lite shooting.
Miss Branda left the United
States before prosecutors could
subpoena her 10 testify at her halfltother's aial. She was considered
~ key witness because she had
dined with him hours before the
sLooting and reportedly told him
qrollet ~d been abusing her.

l• STANFORD, Calif. (AP) Mikhail Gorbachcv, president of
t4e former Soviet Union, is slated
t4 speak on lhe rule of law at Stan~Ed University.

r.The visit is pan of a seven-city
t r, May 1-16, for the former
Soviet leader and his wife, Raisa.
TI!FY will be house guests of rorec:retary of State George
.ad his wile, Obie; Shultz is
c:'J:'~ow at Stanford's

E

?;.~~ov wiD speak on May 9,

dlt ICitoOIIIIIIOIIICCd Tueaday.

Shultz said he wu ..... and
tlonored 10 welcome J'Jesldent and
Jn. Gorbachev back 10 Stanford
· thi exciting and challensina
ld War era for which he
111 much of the credit"
~

-

'

BURBANK, Calif. (AP) Johnny Carson, who made "beautiful downtown Burbank" a catch
phrase, now has a city plllk named
after him .
The City Council voted unanimously Tuesday to rename Buena
Vista Park in honor of the
"Tonight Show" host
"Some people feel Johnny Carson denigrated litis city, bull think
we're talking about a man who,
even though he slapped us on occasion, has given us more notoriety
than we could have gotten from the
best public relations firm," said
Councilman Tim Murphy.
The 65-year-old entertainer will
retire May 22 after 30 years as host
of the "Tonight Show," which has
been produced at NBC's Burbank
lot for the last 20 years. Comedian
Jay Lena, 41, will become lite new
host.
Carson has had no comment on
lhe renaming of the park.
ST. LOUIS (AP) - Undersea
explorer Jacques-Yves Cousteau
says the Unit9d Nations should
adopt gllidehnes to ensure a
healthy planet for future generations.
·
Cousteau, here Tuesday to
accept an environmental award
from lhe University of Missouri-SL
Louis, said he hoped soon to have
two heads of state JnSCIII an environmental "Bill of Rights for
PUIUle Oenellltions"as a~
amendment to the U.N.'s
r. .
"Hum1111 have divorced !hemselves from nature," he saicl. "If
we reject the l)'lfl:lll tblt bas been
proven succeuful in nature, then
we must as a matter ·or survival
artificially proteCt nature, even
though " are no longer a pan of
it. '
"The divorce has tremendous
conseq_,. We' must fiJht 1111d
control IL"
·

Cousteau, 82, has explored lite
world's oceans for more lhan 50
years and created the Cousteau
Society, a group of 350,000 members dedicated to lite protection and
improvement of life.
WAYCROSS, Ga. (AP)- The
Pogo comic strip on Monday will
carry lhe new byline of Peter and
Carolyn Kelly, the son and daughter of the suip's creator.
And on March 29, a special
series of originals by thetr late
father, Walt Kelly, w~l begin running on Sundays.
The suip about lhe creatures of
lite Okefenokee Swamp was creat·
ed by Walt Kelly in the 1940s.
When he died in 1973,lhere was an
unsuccessful auempt to keep the
strip going using olher artists.
Pogo reappeared in 1989 using a
Chicago wnter-artist team. ·
"Throughout Pogo's history,
the creatures that populate lhe OkeJenolcee bave evoked a strong sense
of family, both among themselves
and wilh their readers," said Los
Angeles Times Syndicate.president
Jesse Levine. "Pete and Carolyn's
particiP.alion reinforces lhat sense
of family on every level.''
Pete Kelly, a professional writer, will write the striP. while his sister - a designer, illustrator and
cartoonist - assumes artistic
duties.

Only

5

3- Allllouncemenll
4- Giveaway
5- Happy Ado
6- Loat and Found
7- LoaL ud Found
8- Puhlic Sale &amp;
Auction
9- Wanted to Buy

11- Holp Want..!
12- Situationt Wanted
13-- lnaurance
14- Bwine•• Trainirtt;
15- School. &amp; lrulruclJon
16-- Radio, TV &amp; CB Repa1r

17- Miacellaneow
18- W•nled To Do

Ads

Licensed and Bonded

PH. 614·992-5591

WAlfflfLD'$

II SO Will, Atlu!, Olio •SII-3115

TROLLEY STJI'ION
CRAFTS

10111-·lt~MW·......

MAR. 23, 7:00 pm - 'Tole

~=!•b&amp;ll Family

MAR. 30, 7:00 pm - &amp;.lith

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL
•FIREWOOD

6-1

Shlfll Pl.ctue

YOUNG'S

IIUST PRE-REGISTER
HAS: llcn..S.t 10 am-&amp; ...
Sundly1-&amp; ...

CARPENTER SERVICE

For lloro Info COli

-Room AddtUona
-GuiWWork
~llolrlcllllld Plumbing
-Roonng
-lnt.rlor • EDrior

P1lnHilll_

V. C. YOUNG Ill·

992-6215

Pomeroy, OWo
3·13-92-tfn

.
•
''

l
(

,,. .

• Free Financing
'

Appliances imd Telefllio111 Ate Reduced, But Excluded From
Special Balloon Diae~unte
-

1\fttliryn
tMeaiows

At 43, you're a
lot older than
me, Tink T. ·
Happy Birthday

LIMESTONE

AGRICULTURAL

"SPECIAUZING IN SLATE
OR CANVAS"
39815 Gold Aldg.

LIME
REASONABLE RATES

742-2138
3-15-'92·1

mo. pd.

Road

. Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Welcome Slates
$20.00

Cuatom Plinlfnva

614-992-2242

992-2259
608 rASlMAIN
POMEROY, OHIO
REDUCED: Two story frame home wilh 2112 balhs, 3 BR's,

1 car ~arage with woll&lt;shop, shed, 2+aaes wlgarden area,
buill In shelves, deck, lireplace, full basement A VERY
NICE HOME.
$28,900
REDUCED: Rigg Crest Subdivision- one ftoor ranch style
home 3 BR's, 2'oolhs, attached garage, electric FA heal.
$39,900

REDUCED: Two story home with 4 BR's, 2 baths, endosed
porch, well insulalod, original woodwork, new paint &amp;
outside repairs. Localed in Racine.
$41,800

AGOOD DEALI

One floor frame homelhafs bolh in and oul of town,3BR'o,
naiUral gas tumance, central air, WBFP. New roof, new
deck, 1car garage, full basement on 2.13 aaes wlgarden
space.

$31,900

CREW RD.· Pomeroy, 1976 Barrington SectiOnal, 3-&lt;1
BR's, 2 baths, F.A. electric heat, WBFP. tun basemen!,
- Patio &amp; a!)pliances 1 112 acre, nice in ground pool •
WONDERFUL LOCATION I
$57,000
AN EXCEPTIONAL HOME IN MIDDLEPORT· 2 story
~ame. wilh 10 roomi lnduding catpet &amp; drapes. 5 BR'a.
fireplace, 1 Clll attached garage, patio wlfumilllle. ~
items too n\lmerouo 10 mention.
ASKING $71,100
COME SEE! Thlo iaa real beauty!
TO

t mnst ABargain...
Reap The Rewar~...
When You Turn To
The Classfieds,
Ml The Boun~ Is Yours!

POIItrC!J1 Ohio
To Jlnll,_'l;!l~'~o.

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

ROOFING

NEW -REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

FREE ESTIMATES

949·2168

316/t2/1 mo. pd.

- " •

~ I · H\111. :8
p
82- Plumbing &amp; H..ling
~ Excnatinr;
84- Ele&lt;trical &amp; Ror,;gen•lio~l ..
8~ General HauliniiJ
86- Mob1le Home Repair
Upholtter~

1&amp;HAWN SERVIa

Quality
Stone Co.

SIZED LIMESTONE
FOR SALE

ADd, fOU WI put that ellra
cu11 to sood ne by c:hedl•s
the Clutlfteds ror lec:alptaBe
sales, Ret~ markets lllll blrplns
In pur neck or the .....

To pal the

cru,JRe4t to nrk r., yeu,

. call HI' .....,., Mnday-rrWay at

•NO.-·-·

mplolo lanclocoplng
Top Soli&amp; llulchlng
mmon:lol I Rooldanllal

o... s....., sw,..... or
Troy.Bill 1Uien N•w In
Yt~ur

-FREE OlliUTES"..u-IMII . . . . .

WAiffflflJ'$

C«J 372-8697 •
I-80G-SD·I440

It SO Will, Atlu!, Olio •S!I-311 S

~mo.

T&amp;M BUILDERS

J&amp;l
-INSULATION:-

Beat Prlcea &amp; Servlc. lor
Poat Frame GM1ge1 &amp;
Berne
ol 12 colore.

•Vinyl Siding
•Replacement
Window
•Rooflnp
ofnsulat1on

rollup doora
to unUmllad

UlyiM
30x50 woclld lor
ln.....lion
lbl8rial ' Llbor

GuorMIMd

539 Bryan Place

Middleport, Ohio

3-1&amp;-1 mo

11114/tfn

A&amp;BAUIO
IIUOII, WY.

Speci•lili11 I•
Co•pleto&amp;1to ••"
!&gt;
Upllolltory.
•

CALL 742·2778

2/1711 mo. d.

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS
Specializing In Custom
Frame Repair
NEW &amp; USED PARTS
FOR All MAKES
r. MODELS
992·7013 or
992-5553
OR TOll FREE
1-800-848·0070
DARWIN, OHIO

7131f91/lfn

TROMM
BUILDERS
-New Conttructlon
-Remodeling
-Cabinet Work
-CommercialResidential
FREE ESTIMATES
20 Yeara Experience

614·742·23'28
2-28-1 mo.

;•

JAMES KEESEE
992·2772 or ; :
742-2097

P~. local Salesma•

IS Sessions.---"'25.00
12 StSsiOIL----'20.00
6 Stssltos..---*'12.00
I StssiN. - - -'3.50
FREE SESSION WITH MRY
RENEWAL
Sn•al Wads of lotl01s
SCA WOUEIEDS

S.ee~

Local ~-Bill DtoW

(fll, . . tie H •LI
~
ALSO COIIPim AllfO :
REPAII SIRYKE . . 24 ~•
IIOUITOWIIG.
,

1·304-773·9560 ~

3-6-'12-1 mo.
~
L----------,;.;:.:J·
..•
pd.

1r--:;T;;;-;EAFo=O-.:-:R::-::D:-::'S=-'

COUNTRY
CLUB :
,,...
~/

oGoll lo1101i

;:::•u6

~

.'I ~

.. \ \
'I

t.o:L llfll!oi
·'C.OQ

"*' .........

'-'.Ai__~·llsklthll &amp;
-~ .--- s-r..,w.
46387 Seoul Cnp Rolli , ;

4

Cha1w,Oh.

:·

LINDA'S
PAINTING &amp; CO.

"

-

•falo Tit• Pllil Orr 01 Mlilf
-Ill Us Do ltf.,. y.,•

,,

3ft111211 mo.

,

INTERIOR &amp; EXTERIOR- "
37632 West Shade Rood ~
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
614-98S-4110 ~oa.. - . .:
Aft• 6p.&amp;

c.a 985-4192

. ,:
' ;,

a.t ..t ma JICI

;

New Hom11 • Viayl Sidiag
,
New Garates • Replacttntal Wi1dows .
Roo11 Addltlo•s • Rooflag
COMMERCI.U and RESWENTIAL

Call 614·992-6637
St. Rt.7

614·949·2801 or 949·2860

Cheshire, OH.

(No Sunday Calls)

112/~n

.

:992~21'5"6-:

IF

---"H111

1RDY-BI£1

1wn Mllnlenanct

..-

t.JAYMAR BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.:

the CIIUIRedsr

-.-----"---~-~-----·------.,--"--·--------·-:- - · ~- ---·-

•

Truck• for Sale
VarUI &amp; 4 WO'a
Moton:yelea
Boau &amp;. Moton for Sale
to-1\uLO Parll &amp;: Acet,...riooj •:
1·••LO Repair
78- Campinp; Equip11ent
,I

'

New that lhe weather hu tooled
don, whr 1101 heat thi•«S up a bit
by dearlnR your closets, IItie or
basement or those urmnted Items
and adn:rtlslnslhem ror sale In

TRAOVIRINACIEIL.--·······----.......2. .
JIAHTRUIIIILL----··-·-····"•21t0
QIIIIIC:I;_.~.....- ••'""'""-""""""'f•·--···tla
. :-:'1!' .

,.

Au tot for Sale

•
•

New Lima Road
In R1tland

Howard L Wrltesel

•·•- 1• 11

..'

I B \\'1'1 IIi I I I II 1\

~

2-7·92-tfn

H!IIRYI.CUI

q p
62- Wanted to Bay
63- Liveatook
64-- Hay&amp;. Cralrt.
65- Seed &amp; FertiliJcr

-.

NEEu IY
y..•un.. HI•
EMILY'S AnJC
Wo turn your new and
good uoed articlea Into

985·4473
667·6179

Real Estate General

.l

ffenry Hudson discovered
Delaware Bay in 1609.
Gorman author Johann Wolfgana von Goethe' was born in
Frankfurt in 1749..

5~ Anliquea
54- Miac. Merchandiae
55- Buildi~ Supplie1

SUN'S UP
TANNING

F.EE ESTIMATES

Thank you friend•
and neighbors who
called, cared lor our
dogt, eent llowert,
food and cardt, during
theloaa ol our ton.
Spacial thank•
MEIGS CO. BIKERS.
Your love, 1upport and
1he megnolla rrae will
remind Ul of Chrl• and
true lrlendthlp. Wordt
tomellmet tall 1o
expreaa ont'tr torrow,
Chrl•' alator found
them.
I can aen11 a feeling
of eadneu all
around,
I can IHI tha hoi teart
rolling down the elde
or my f.:a.
·
Hie 1rm I• cold and
hard,
! aenat love and
-mth
Even thaugh thlre It
til around.
I can heir the plano
P'-Ying In my aer.
I Cllll aM hla l.ca and
body atlll and
motloniMa.
I can feel hie eoft,
brown hair on my
flngar tlpa.
Moat af all, out of
aeelng, hearing,
touching and leellng.
I cen I'MIIIrnblr.
Thlllededlcaledlll '
Chrlltap.'Mir llnfiW8.
:Dtatlelf, ltalluyn, Erla
111111 II td:Jw UntlaW8

51- Houaehold CoodJ
52- Sporting Goode

IF YOU WIAR IT HEAR
l!i ADMIRE "· WATCH

CALL 992•6120
Or 11., ly
102 E. Main Street

COAL

Memory

\~1!1!"1 :

614-992-2549

Jr, PUT ITl USE IY or

HAULING

Your Younger
Sisler

In

m :I\CII

742·7072

caoh and aav. you moM)'
on what you need.

M&amp;M Fleet

2

46- Space for Rent
47- Wanted lo Renl
48- Equipment for Renl
49-- For Leaae

31411211 mo.

(FREE ESnMATES)

By

•

s..n.

0111'
Shlpn~en• or
'lroJ.&amp;dt 1\Uen Now In Stoek.
Your Local ~· Bill Deoler

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

cr-

Aerial
Photography

I

1RDY-BI£1'

R&amp;C EXCAVATING
BULLDOZING

MAR. 24, &amp;:00 pm - Bllkot

USED RAILROAD TIES

Homes, Farms,
Business, Other
Day (614) 446-9814
Night (614) 446-44,'6

41- Howf!l for Rent
42- Mobile Homea for Rent

45- Furnithed Roome

12·5-lfn

•LIGHT HAULING

.
•

• Free Delivery

·

-3-2·1•

lid-•

A 1938 hurricane that swept
over parts of New YOlk, New Jersey and New England killed nearly

12 Gauge
Strictly

Choke

•

•'
•
.,•

News note's
700 people.

MtJir;·A.:a~:-

'

'

Bashan Building
EVERY
SAt NIGHT
6:30P.M.
Starting Sept. 28

•

.•

•90 Day• Same AI Cuh . .

Tlltling Products AvaWit

.

5 BIG DAYS- MARCH 20, 21, 23, 24, 25
Storewide Savings On All Furniture,
Appliances and Televisions
•LARGE DISCOUNTS
•LOWEST PRICES IN THE AREA
With Every FURNITURE Purchase At Our
Already Discounted Prices, Bust ABalloon
and Receive An Additional Discount From
50% to 100% or Free Gifts Such As
Televisions, Clocks, Mirrors, Etc•••

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

BILL SLACK
992·2269

RUTLAND
FURNITURE

to the hospital by the Lake Erie Nature and Science Center. Such visits are organized once a
month by tbe hospital's Department of Child
Life. (AP)

937-Bulfolo

H 1·: NT\ I.!'

43- Farma for Rent
44- Apartment for Rent

NEW SCA WOLfF BED 24SL
Ezperienc• the

'•

GET RESULTS • FAST!

Hrs. 8·1 0 Mon. thru Sat.

••

AT

4

949-Radne
742-Rudand
667-Coot.!Ue

IS Sessions.... ,S
Plus I FREE

''I•
,,

Gallipolis •446-2842
•Seiko Watches
Open Daily 9-5 Visa/MC/Discover •Quality for Less!

1

985-a......
843-Pordond
247-Leta" Folia

742·2341

)

•Diamonds
•Gold Chains

(Tope Furniture Bldg.)

458-l..eon
576-Apple Grove
773-Muon
882-New Haven
895-Letart

Lima Rd.
Rutla1d, Ohio

••
•
''

- MTS RARE COINS-

Pomeroy

1~ Mi. out Ntw

•

.9Lcquisitions J'ine Jewe{ry

367-Cheahire
388-Vinton
245-Rio Gunde
256-Guyan Dill.
643-Arabia Dilt.
l79-Walnul

tiOW OPEtl
MYSTIQUE'
TANNING

APPLICATIONS BEING
ACCEPTED FOR LONDON
POOL POSITIONS
Applications lor the pos~ions of
Manager and lifeguards at
london Pool will be accepted until
April1, 1992. Resumes are to be
submitted to Janice Lawson,
Clerk-Treasurer, \llllage of
Syracuse, Syracuse, Ohio 45779,
and are to Include training
background and references.

•'

32- Mob1le Home. for Sale
33-- Farm• for Sale
up days will be
34- Bua1neaa Bu1ldings
35- Lou &amp; Acreage
:-;::----~ 36-- Real ~all.te Wanted

Business· Service·s

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

'

NOW$9 95

~~--

Yard Salm

67S-Pt. Pleaunl

BULLETIN BOARD

'

Cross Pens Chrome
and Pencils
Pen Reg. $14.50
·~

In Memoriam.

Tribune (except Cla11ifled Dlaplay, 8U1inea1 Card or U!gal
Notice~) will alto appear in the Point Pkaaant Regiiter and
the Daily Sentinel, reachifl@l over 18,000 home~

•

--·=-'
~

Happy Ad.

992-Middlcport/

I \1{\1 ~I 1'1' 1 II,
S l l\l , ltllh

$ .60
$.05/day

2- In Memory

446-G.Jllpollo

"

For Sale or TraM

Galli a County Meigs County Mason Co., WV
Area Code 614 Area Code 614 Area Code 304

• A elu1ifled advertiaement placed in the Callipolia Daily

FAMOUS

fliilii;'· ·

Cord ofThanlu

Mwicallnalr...eDLI
FruiLI &amp; V~etahiea

$ .20
$ .30
$ .42

Rates are for consecutive runs, broken
charged for each day as separate ads.

Classified pages cover the
foUowing 1e/ephone exchanges ...

run 3 day• al no charge.
• PrN:e of ad for aU capitalle:tkr• i• double pr1ce of .d cott
• 7 poinlline
type only uaed
.,
• Trinune it not reeponalble for erroraaher f'int day (chec k
(or erron fll"lt day ad r1.1n1 in paper). Call be(ore 2:00 p.m.
day after publiealion to make correction
• Acb that. mUll be paid in advance ue:

~

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION .
1.00 p.m. Saturday
1-00 p m. Monday
1.00 p m. Tuesday
t-OO p.m. Wednesday
tOO p.m. Thursday
t :OO p.m. Friday

10
Monthly

1-----'-------:_-'-_:_--~-1

• Fr.. Ad" Gi•oaway and Found ad. und .. 15 word• wat be

WATCHES
30 01&lt;0 OFF SUGGESTED
RETAILPRICE ~

"

CLOSED SUNDAY

POLICIES

"'

-Compare Our Prices in 14K Gold!
(Save 50% to 70% Off)
• Rope Chains and Bracelets
• Diamond Cut Rope • Herringbone

~

COPY DEADLINE
Monday Paper
Tuesday Paper
Wednesday Paper
Thursday Paper
Friday Paper
Sunday Paper

$ 4.00
$ 6.00
$ 9.00
$13.00
$1.30/day

15
15
15
15
15

6

Balloon Sale

.,

1

upheld the ·conviction but said
some of the counts should have
been combined in sentencing. The
U.S. Supreme Court last month
refusediOhearthecase.
Asdirectedbylheappealscourt,
Griesa reduced Mrs. Helmsley's
fines by $850,000.
She must serve at least a lhird of
lite prison sentence before becoming eligible for parole.
Before leaving the courtroom by
a back door, Mrs. Helmsley told
reporters she was confident she
w_ould win her request for a new
tnal.
Her attorney, Alan Dershowitz,

HOME SITES
mAIU!R SITES,
I:ANDCU!ARING
DRIVEWAYS INSTALlED
UIESTONE-mUCKING

FREE ESmiATES

992·3838
--· ------·-

FREE ESTIMA.'IES

'

-

�2-The Dal

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

31

3

AnnOI.!nce.m ents
MAKE A FRIEND ... FOR LIFE!
Yugotlntan,

Jopaneoo High Scl\ool Ex·

changt Students ·- _Arrtvlng

NEEDED! AtMrican lnttn:ultural

8

School Rd., Nur Contonory,
Elementary SchoOl,

Student EKchongo. Coli Botlndo
614·!1411-2794 Di Coli 1o8DO-SI·
BLIND.

o,..n

Make a trlend ... For Lilt! Sctn·

3 Unit Apartment Rental, Excel·
lent Cond,tlon, Bulnlllt f)tke

European,

Television

Apanmimt
for Rent

South

dollchld gorogo kull 11111,

YOU DIDN'T EAT ALL OF YOUR
DINNER SO I 6UESS YOU DON'T
6ET ANY DESSERT.:

hardwood floors. fun bastmtnl,

Cllhon, W.Vo., 304·mo5354
B~ck Homo, 3 Aero Lot, 1 112
Ml/11 From New Symnwt Valley

AND YOU CAN 'T ROAST MARSHMALLOWS
IN THE BACK YARD AT TWO O'CLOCK
IN
MORN IN6!

"These yard statues don't look tacky enough.
Let's rip out the lawn and put in astroturfl"

Diuretic At Fruth Pharmacy.

11

gor Spaniel mix, 304-4511-1904.

7 mo old ltmall nHdl good 11

Help Wanted

::::-=,.,....-::-..:....--,....,..-..,..,...,...
$1,000 Thouund ImmediatelY

hom•, Huskey &amp; Bug/a mix,
good with clllldren, 304-6755300·
Famala Basutt Hound dog,
brown/
whitt,
good witlt

Envolapea.
Ruah
""" Addreslid 110 En·
St amt-W

Stuffing

valopt To: DIA Suppllll, Box

chlld,.n, approx. 3 yrs. old, to a 1443, Fairborn, OH 4S324.

good homo, 614·985-3527

$2!0..$475 par weeki 33 million
Female California Rtx, gray &amp; Amtrlcane (up 22% ovtr ialt
~ttr) work tull or part tlrM at
whitt rabbit, 304-675-693l

home ••mlng excelllent pay.
Puppies To Giveaway: 112 Collie, Hundreds ol compenltt nted
112 Black lab. 614·388·9033, Af.. homeworkars Now! Call tor
ter 6p.m.
rtcordtd mtssagt. 804·'768-8173 .
S3SO.OO/Diy
Procnslng Phone
Puppitl : 6 W11kl Old, 5 Black,
2 Tan, Mixed B,.ed. 614·446- 0 rd1rs! Peoplo Call Vou. No Ex·
8670.
perltnct Nteessary. 1-t00-255·

0242.

Lost &amp; Found

AVON • All areas, Call Marilyn
Weaver
304-882-2645.
Found: male, black, long haired
: dog, Wolfe Pen road area, 614AUSTRALIA WANTS YOU
. 992-28ti5
Exctlltnt
Pay,
Btntfits,
Transpor1allon,
407·292-4147,
lost : Female Dog On O.J. White Ext. 571. 9a.m.·10p.m. Toll
RoadJ. Gallipolis, 112 Norwelgn,
112 Ulrman Shephard, Short Refunded.
And Fat; Very Friendly. 614-446- AVON I All Areas ! Shlr1ey
2713.
Spears, 304-675-1429.
Lost: Shih-Tzu, Whitt With AVON gel in on tht ground lloor
· Blaek Spots. On lincoln Plkt, of Avons new taming struclurt.
: Gallipolis, Has Blue Collar, Has 1·800..992-6356.
. License, Has BHn Shaved. 614·

CANNERY WORKERS/ALASKA

446.0819.

Hiring $600+ Wkly, Ovtr 8000
Optn1ngs.
Maltlftmalt.
TranspJHouslng. Call E.I.C.

Yard Sale

Gallipolis

&amp; VIcinity
ALL Yard Sal.s Must St Paid In
Advance. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
~he dar befort the ad Is to run.
Sunday edition • 2:00 p.m.

Friday. Monday edition · 2;00
p.m. Saturday.

8

Country Mobile Home Park Is
now under naw managtment.
We have uvaral nice mobila
home sltlt available. To quality
ou mutt have 1 mobllt homt
n good condhlon &amp; hova aood

HVACIR S.rvict Man NHCitd.
Mutt Have Experience In Com·
mtreial And Roldlnllal Repair.
"
Requ 1rt d •10
3 ytars Exptnence
Apply. Sand Resume And Pay
Requl11ments To: Box CLA 108,
c/o Gallipolis Daily Tribune, 825
Third Avenue, Gallipolis, OH

- - - - - - - - - tobsln olhor 11011. Full or part·
9 Wanted to Buy
lima nlldtd. Apply In - n
:-.,-,.....,...,.,...,..,.,....,..;:-,:Don't Junk HI Soli Us YOUI Non·
Working Appllancn, Color TV's,
VCR's, Powtr Tools, El.c. 6M·
256·1238.

to: Richard Haft or CStnna Davis
from l-3 p.m. Mondty thru
Friday at the University of Alo
Grandt Cantil' at the Caftlarla.
Equal Opportunity Employer.

Usad Mobile Homes, Call 614·
446..0175.
Wan1ed To Buy: Junk AU1os
Wit h Or Without Motors. Call
Larry lively. 614-388·9303.

Full time position open tor food
service employee, tXptrltnct
helpful lbutB will 211rasln, send
resuma 0 01 1 • yr~cuse ,

OH , 45779

JOBS! Now Hiring
Top Prlcu Paid: All Old U.S. GOVERMENT
In Your Alu, BDih Skllltd Ana

Colnl, Gold Alnga, Sliver Coins, Unskilled. For A Curr.rd List Of
Gold Coins. U.T.S. Coin Shop, Jobs And Application, Csll 1·

600-167-1567 Ext. M·129.

lqutf'l 0n1

32 Mobile Homes
lor Sale

'1.

Immediate Opening For Part·
Time AN Supervisor, D1y ShiH. Acre land, trailer, di ck, porch,
Comptti1ive Wagea, Oltferentlal well, city water, 2 bedrooms,
Wit h Experience, Equal Oppor- Jerrys Run, Apple Grove, 304576-2145.
!unity Employtl. Contact Dlrec·
tor Of Nursing, Pinecrest Cert Tu And Titla Down. Praowntd
Center, 170 Pinecrest Drive, Gal· Mobile Homes, Use Your Tax
llpolie. 614......,6-7112.
Rtlund. 50 Homes To Choose.
Elsta Home Center, 1-800-5ag..
McClure's Family Restaurant In 5110.
Middleport Ia now accepting
applications.
1g76 Concord, l2x60, rumlshed
wlntw furniture, washer &amp;: dryer,
Medical Blillna/Pharmacy T.ch air
cond, $7,900. Days 304-875Wanttd. BIIITng Experience

7870.

PINIInt upstairs Apt, 508112 S.

3rd SlrHI Middtoport,Ohloo
living rm 2-bdrm, kMchon, both,
lg yord, l300mo &amp; utllllleo, 814915-1231

Wedge Apts, 506 Burdtnt S1
Polnf Pleaunt, no Piltz] and 2
304-67~20n:

bedrooms,

afttr

5:00.

45

Furnished
Rooms

Manelon

14x52, 2BR.
S!ovt, rtfrig. Included. Utility
NaH Babysitter, Flexible Houn, closet, gas fumact, naw carpel,
Gallipolis OH Arta. 614-446·1012. gr•at condlllon. Must Sell. 614-

Secrelary Position

needed for a ctmetary offk:t In
Pomero~. Ohio, 3~rs . prewious

1983

169-5245.

1987 Mobile Homt wtexpando,

heat pump, dtck, lots of tX1ras,

Rooms for rent • wttk or mo~h.
Starting at S120/mo. Gallla Hotel.

814-1411'9580.

SIHplng rooms wllh cooking.

Stevtlltz, All~.• 317-996-2000.

Telemarkettr
It you hsvt prevlousletemarktl·
lng experitnct or It you art a
dtpendablt person with an out·
going personality, we may have
fhe opportunlly you are tookln&amp;
tor. ~ .50 per hour with bonus

Incentive, pl~a~er.hol"'l614·992·
'M40 tor an lnterv ew.

For Salt: 1989 Redman Danville,
14172, Total Elactrlc, Sei.Up On
Prlvatt Rtnted Lot. Excellent

Condition, Coli ti14·367.ot39 AI·
tar 5 P.M.

Situation
Wanted

Desperately wanting to adopt a
child, unbom or lnlsnl, pla111

100X150 Dobbla O~va, Gal·
llpolla. 114-146-7231, Ahar 5p.m.

avallablt, :J04.67S.2722. ·

Lots In Ntw Havtn • 100%

owner llnancing at $'101.46 per
month buv- alllhrM lois, &amp;304-

675-2722.
NNd someone to live In: tr11 Lola joining Point • 100~ owner
financing at $'101.46 per momh

coii61H42·1302

room I board, must be clean I

lruatworthy. 614-146-3418.

Space for Rent

Prlvatt trailer tptct In Point
Pltuant1 lraa water &amp; uwagt,

all oloctnc, 304~75·1ti99 .
For Lease

Ralalr Commercial Space 1,600
Sq . Fl. In Ohio Rlvar Plm.
Phon•: 814-446-8157 After 5:00

P.M.

Stcond Floor Apartment For
L.aasa: LA., Ont B.A., Bath,
Kitchin W/ S1ov1 &amp; Raklg.
Wattr Furnl1hld. No Ptta. Cor·
nor Second &amp; Pine, Golllpotla.

$230. Par Mon1h: Dopoall 111qulrtd. Colt 614-146-4249, 114·
44&amp;-2325, Or 514-4411-4425.

Merchandise
51

bU)'I all thrH lOll. 304..&amp;75-

367·'N56.

36JI.7NT.

For

cleaning, WJIIIpapering,
painting, tmafl dry wall rtpalrt.
IM-446'0101 ot 388o8111.

Wanllo:

Goorgn Po~olllo Sowmlll don'
haul

PIN down EXl1lA

z,:_:75·1157.
logs to the m(u Just

coli 3

Mitt Paula't Day Clrt C.ntar.

Ci\c~ll?!l

3bdrm. house In Pomeroy,
atovlirtfrigerator,
S2001mon.,

rwt..tnCM

r.

qulred, 814-192-1741 after Spm,

814·141-2471111VI mHIIQI
5 Rooma And Both, A1 44 Oliva
StrOll, Dolllpotlo. Inquire AI 818

Solo, aHordoblt, chlldcoro. M·F Second Avenue, Galllpolla.
6 a.m. • 5:30 p.m. Agoa 2!'.-10.
BefoiW, tfttr achool. Drop-Ins E. Second St., Pomorol, 3bdrm.,
welcomo. 614-14N224. Now In· 1 V2 both, 11r;4 llv ng-m,
dlnlng.room, l kMchori1 fully
lant Toddltr c... 114-445-1227.
carpeted, no pitt, rtf. 6 dep.
Mothor ol 3 will boby aM In my roqu 1red, $3001 mon., 814·05home, have ret.!'WJI'tCie, 304..ft5.. 3561

:1131 oH"" Jonlco.

Ftnanctal
'liu·u ... ,,,. ,.[ultt•r· inl•t t ' tndr ~

42

Mobile Homes
lor Rent

2
Btdrooml,
Fumlshtd,
located: On State Route 7, 114·

21

Business
2111·1107.
Opponunlty
2 Btdrooma, Flnctd For HOfM.
1, \.lrgo VOid, $250/mo. Dopoall
IHOTICE!
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO. Raqullod. l14-386-121t.
recommend• lhll rou do buol- 2 BA mobile homo,laf rant, 1826
n- with ptOplo rou k.-1and Choolnut St .. .t\71 1111' monlh.
NOT lo Nnd""""' througn tho Ct1&gt;ofH.8~.
moll uniH rou hawt ln-lglllll
2 lA tr- for rant on
tho ollotlng.
neklhbortt aaII road. 114-441AIA'P llodlcll Billing. Oppor- 111A onyllmo.
tunltr to q111Niv 11 1 ..._ tn

,'i,·/1 it ''"' !.1!.1'! u•uy••• h.J&gt;frm,.,,
,.., ,,., .,[ lo

pets. Point PluaanL $350 per
month &amp; d-H. &amp;14-146-9278.

J,.,,,,. _ruul' /,.,,,.,

f'lun• nrur ..!u.&lt;.&lt;ili••r/ '"' lmlt!Ji
I ;; ,.,.,,.,/.~ ttl''' '·"·"~ ."1 '''' Y·• ~

:1 1"'1"',.~ ,$6.(1!1
I ·- - - - - - ''-----~ 11
2. _ _ _ _ _ _ 111 . _ _ _ _ _ 11

"·- - - - ·11

.1.
·1.
12. - - --11
:;, _ _ __ _ _ I .'1.______

11

li. _ _ _ _ _ _ ~-~·----- 11
i·---:-· - ' - - - l !i.,______ ll
II.

--rour -

--

2 Oontlo Klda ~o:&amp;• For Solo. 1181 Yamaha 350'Four Wheeler,
614-146-2222, 61 . 75g7,
011 Cooled, Excolllnt COndition!
114-258-11164.
882·2688.
Angu1 And Chi-Angus Black
Litle girls clothn. large Buns, Roooonobly Prlctd. Slota 75 Boats &amp; Motors
Run Farme, Jackson, Ohio, 614·
transmllllon. 304-675·1484.
286-5395.
for Sale
maple tablt, 4 captain chairs;
whbt teWing machine, cabinet; AQHA 1990 roglalarod Rtd Dun, 1172 Sllvorllno, 18ft., 120hp., Inracing ~oodlfn11 , 1980 regis·
L.lk1 ntw L..P. gas heater, 25,000
btu, COlt $400. Mil $285. 304·

rowing macfilnt; anUque chtrry
desk wtlh leather top. 6714-446· tertd"Sorrel Gelding, Show In 4·

H, 304-885-3318.
Plastic And Mtdal Culvert 61nch Folr Pigs, $40 Eoch. 614-2!16Thru 60 Inch In Stock . Ron 1945 Bolw11n 7 A.M. &amp; 8 P.M.
Evans, Jackson, Ohio. 1-800:- Good lair plga, 145 to S50 eoch.
537-9528.
614·388·96U
0431.

Portable changeable letter slgn
$299. Free lellersfdtllvery. Plas·
tic ltttarw $47.50 box. 1-800-533·
3453, anytime.

I

wmoll, 0111 m.sn.
U48(24 hrt).

$200. 61+441-1707.
PICKENS FURNITURE

•

64

: t&gt;Pwi .,· :

anytime

1170 15' Starcrafl Trlhull, 90 HP
OB Motor, Some Aecnsorltt,
$2,000. 614-446·1012.
.

-1
I

/AM/'·

"

feN~}~

o

I

'
.

Hay &amp; Grain

ti'l5-2443oftar 1:00PM.

llloguord pkg, raody to go, prlco

6!14-7842.

Round Hay Baln, 18.00. 814- 18,1115. 304-1571-2150.
Rtd uquln prom gown size a 448-2109.
BOATERS
compltlt outfit, t:l50. 304·675Guinn• Mtrcury Marine Strvlct.•
5292.
Mercury, Mariner, Morcrulur
Transportal1on
apoclollll. Mercury clllllltd.
Restaurant Equipment, lea M•
Mobllt, We com• to you. 114·
chine, Blcl Walk In Cooler, Gas
251-Sm.
Grlddlt, 2 Compal1ment Sink,

71

Autos for Sale

Houuhold tumlahlng. 112 mi.

Jarricho Rd. Pl. PIIIUnt, WV,
coli 304o875·14!0.
SWAIN
AUCTION ~ FURNITURE. 02
Olivo 51., Oolllpolla. Now &amp; Ulld
lumhuro, hootllt, Wntorn I
Work boola. 114-141-3159.

53

Antiques

,.---o-:::-'--:--:-=--

Buy or 1111. Rlvorlno Anllquaa,
112"• E· MI 1n Sl ~It, Pomeroy.
Hou11: M.T.W. tO:OO o.m. to 1:00
p.m., Sundoy 1:00 to 1:00 p.m.
&amp;14-IIZ.zm.
~lng lo&lt;rla dining 111: toblo, 1
cholra. Bullot 111111 6 chine

coblnat. 1~70fl.

54 Miscellaneous

-

Merchandise

"L"· ahlplll trunk bolla wllh
drilttr, 1250 080, 814oft2.

2 , _ Goornl, 1111 l!l, $78,
IIOh. 304-llWIJ24.
olpo.. llvlna

room .. n,

-..110d; l14-lt24217

ttr, 614-141-ZM't

t•. Local retar.ncn tumlshtd.

1984 HONDA ACCORO 4Dr
Automolla/Ciroy. 0111 Owner
Llko Now Not A Sc111ch. Very
Roltoblo i'ronaportollon • 14.51111
614-256-14281o.m. ·I p.m. only.
1884 Pontile Sunblrtl, 1.1 .,.

114-237o0416, dly

glne, IOOOi 1887 Nlttan 200SX,

14100, 114-IIZ-3&amp;&amp;3
1885 Chryator Loeoron Spo~a
Coupe,_ ·"N1000 Mil".!,_ Turbo
Good o.;onoHion, $2,wu: 1183

clal Futura Panuomlc Sound
With Slat, Excellent Condition,

Ka~a.18 Note Podoll
Boon!( ONII ,.., Church Or
Homo $100, &amp;14-388-11113.
Ford

a - RLmS Good,
12,000: 1117 bod.;l Q.IO PU,

Good COndh!Ori, -12,900; 1m
Dodgo Alpen, Runt Good, 1475.
114-25f.e251.

Suppl1es
&amp; L1ves1ock

Farm

1185 ~4dr., etaUonwagan,
11110,
I, 11-, 1-go
rae\~: llrt1, biUII btutlftttr·

:.So,t14·~~:"s,!

61 Farm Equipment

'EEK AND MEEK
flME-":&gt; CHANGE. I
1:JDA.'~ AM~tCMJ

IS1H6. GlllD
A IUE:l.f~
GIUtt ..

mPM ...

1111

=.mwaJ;I

MORTY MEE.KLE AND WINTHROP
SA.)!:&gt;
eETll:R
00 ~E:."Il'IINGf AI5Q.IT

c:jRADUAT&amp; ee.Fi:lRE' I 00.

MY qAAOBS. HE:. SA.'I5...

night.

I

I

to bulld~lldont:e. (R)
liD.
H... I0210
a mall. Stereo. C

Clolma AccoP4td . 114-356·1&amp;11. •

ye11r1 trptrience.I1WII

~~'·

~ Lally Klnl u..t

BARNEY

•

!!lrlnl........ *I
llllllir Unrud
PII w

1711.

llootrtoo~

WF$1'

EAST

+KJH
.KQ98
• AJ 9
+83

•s • a
.Q86S 2
+A 10

+10 9 2

+A 7 4 3
.107 ~2

Accurate defense
kills ..overbidding

• 10 4 3

+K1

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: West

\I

By P•lllip Alder

1.

West

Sot11b

Today's hand is our third from the

1991 Gold Flake Bridge Federation of
Asia and Middle East Open Bridge
Championship. It is from the match
between the teams that finished ficst
and second : Pakistan and Egypt.
· An aggressive contract ol three notrump was reached. South couldn't be
criticized for passing three clubs, but
his lilting club honor and spade ace
suggested that. if they had a hear(
stopper, he could run nine tricks.
Dummy's aceless clubs must have
been a disappointment.
At first glance, though. it looks as if
declarer can . maneuver nine tricks:
one spade, one heart. one diamond and
six clubs. However, the Egyptian defenders, Adel Kordy. West, and ~mir
Salib, found the way to defeat three
no-trump. Kordy led the heart king..
Declarer won with dummy's ace,
played a club to his king and led a club
to the queen and ace. Now Saltb did
well, switching to the spade 10. De·
clarer ducked and West won with the

Pass
3 NT

Nor1b

24•

3+
Pass

Pass
Pass

2.
East

Pass
Pass

Opening lead: • K

king. And Kordy found the right continuation. He cashed the heart queen
and exited with a low spade.
Declarer was !ell somewhere beo.
tween Satan and the Indian Ocean. If
he had won the trick with dummy's
spade queen, he could have cashed the
club suit. But then he would have had
to lead away from the diamond king at
trick 12, losing the last two tricks and
finishing one ddwn. So South overtook
dummy 's spade queen with his ace and
led a diamond toward dummy's king,
hoping West was out of spades. How·
ever, West won with the diamond ac:e
and cashed two spade tricks lor two
down.
@till. ..WU'ANR IENIEUNN AIIN.

Tbe World AlmanaciPICrossword Puzzle
ACROSS

Anowor to Pre•teu• Puuto

36 Lewtlof
command
38 Remowtd
dtaclleaYtl
from
38- Vegaa
40 Walklln
water
41tmpalr
4tl- Chlnay
45 Airline Info
47 Europeltl
50 Footltu
51 Female
'"nclplper
52 Dtllal
53 R4rpalr
54 Map
allllrewlatton
55 ltymn'a flnalt
56 Llncl
m...Urt ·

t - Clinic

5 8anbalter

WlllllV Pltdet
12 Flrn (at./
t3 Malarial ever
14 Ear (comb.
form)
15 Cairo'• river
18 OM ol tho
WlnMtn
18 Tht ..n

19 Fair grade

20 - flxe

(abHUionl
21 Stcred oong
23 - dtmer
25 Talked (al.l
26 Congeal

30 Public

HMCII

32 Flrtarm

ltmonCOIOIId
4 Gravel rklgt
6 PlaJWrlehf
Dnld6 AWIJ
7 Aclar
8rynn11

DOWN

ownera' org.

33 Allallwt at un
M-ol
flll-ealalt

1 Lt - ·auto

raca

2 Sell-ewldtnl
3 Sorlllwhlt

UUI

1:30 (I) •

111 Winge Lowll'e

glrltrllnd k!Cita him oil tht

bolt.( =. D
Will,._,

!]) .....

LtX,

' BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

liM

I

'

PHILLIP
ALDER

w• a

YOu COII!d do rather well In tho yoar
llteed wlllt aide -turtl Or lnYIItJn,nte, provtdtd you ttay In your areu
,/!1 IJIIIIrtlle, where you know ao much
Clf'lltore llwllltf ~ guy.
MCII (Pelt. • 'II 1111 •1 Your In·
&gt;MIIgaU,. IMUQta .,. your grealllt

•
.

+QJ96~42

Olhn wltlt tht London
S~y On:ltllba. (2:00)
10:00
L.A. ...., 8eCker
trill to 111111 tltumo1oua
~olaf'IPOI1II .

....,.

-. Alii

~lf.IZ

NORTH
+Q6
.AJ
.K 1

BRIDGE

Wllallie~ Moon ~lve&lt;.
Daya ol Wlnl aild ROIH and

=

Ill I

NOT TO.

WIIITI Taped II LondOn'S
Royal Nt-t HIM, MtJr

Retrlgerallon
•

As newly weds my husband and I made investments
wilhout knowing what we were doirig. A relative said we
believed In things even when common sense told us

(l)M

..

ft11I.Ntll

J ·1 8

1:-o~Dolllllng MtMir"'tlltlfri'IIHI

HE WOULDN'T
MISS IT FER
TH' WORLD!!

Electrical &amp;

bodl

ra

h. . Now SIMO.
DllcDGiltld'alnllmltlonll
Gr••••aa Mllcecl pain ·
cltamplanthlp from Atlanta

.... •

J£T

ded ta developing

0 MOYI!: D.U (R) (2:00)

f8

lmprovtmtma~:
Exporlonco On Oldor

Homl

Vooro
'i
Hamoo. Room AddHionti
Foundo11on Worl1, Rool~,'
K - And Bothe. FM Ei-'
llmot111 Aafarii1CII, No Job :ro
Big 0.. Bmllll114-441o0221.
'
Hlck'a Aooflng, Pointing I Doell,
BUilding. Froo Hltmot.. 10'

~

girl

Plumbing &amp;
· Hutlng
Clrtw'a PluluM'I
"-•ndCIIIIIoollt. Oltlo

'

0 You Aall lor It, Again
Stereo.
t:OO (I) • 01 CIIHtl Norm and
Cllll uaa tltlir own metltods

Plumbing, Electrical. lnsvrance

lor PI!ICft' Astro-Grapl1 predictions to·
day by mailing $1.25 plus a long, HH·
addreued, swnped envelope to AstroGraph, c/o this - -· P.C'l . Bo•
91428, Ct-..nd, OH 44101·3428. Be
surelo atate your zodiac Sign.
Allt!8 (MIIrcll 21·April 11) You might
be approached today to participate In
an endoavor with a gung·ho friend ol
yours wtto always has lots of Interesting
Involvements. Thi8 one could be
exceptional.
TAURUS (April ..._, 20) YO&lt;Ar ambl·
ttono and Initiative thOUid bo in high
gear today. This CO&lt;Aid enable- you to
achieVe an oOjectlvelt1at was previous·
ty unattal.. ble. Be bold In situations
- · C011rl(l8 II required.
.
QIIIINI (May 21-.lufll 201 Your lmagl, nation Ia your grutollauet today, end
the aecret to betn(la•tcc:e~llulllto envlalon youi'Hif succeulul bolore tho
event II completed.
CoUICIR (.IUM 11-.lulr 21) Circum- ·
eta,_ you have tlttlt control over
could precipitate I tlllft In condltiOIII
today lor wltiCII you'.. be.~ hoping. Go.
wltlt till flOW ol-"8.
.

. . . . . . . tiiii.OIIIbtlllldll· ' LIO(-ao'J~II),_.,)'Gif_.
til • ll"ljlal lhltt f'lqul a ,. ' elate wttlltodarili 11i1111 aelfa'4lttlluIIIII flaloflncltng. Get a jump on enct your ~ patterna. If

'I

2

llntndOII IIIIa tor a collagl

good

.

(R) Stereo.

Repairs; Commerlcal, Rnlden-

:M5-t112.

llnd'-71
...
Cltlll·•
IOnd.

Wltln a hurriCane hill
Hillman College. everybotlt_
ltlkt lhelter. (R) Stereo. GJ
liD. IIN1II't Clloa
DN•att'a dlrn talcea 1 trip to
Dlartayland
Lat Vagn.

Sterto.

1111 lmp&lt;Ovomtnla. Including:

......... r-.

=-~=

446-2342 675-1333
992-2156

~----~--------------~
IT \\OUL.D 6E eMSARAA€61N61Z:l Ko\\JE; MY SAANDSCN

I'P

MY 00\D

Rogtrl BIHmtnt Wotarproo.
ling.
·
Comploltloblla Homo Sot·Upo,

Curtis

SCRAM-I.US ANSWIRS
Offend- Jolly· Pitch - Debate • NOT TO

• On 818111 s-.

a Nltlonil Aer able

12-=:, n....

LIMr- CIA 114448 1117.

Apanment
torRent

a

0 Thlft'a My Doll Stereo.
1:01 Cll MOVIE: Till 8ont ol
Ketlll!ldtr (2:30)
1:10 (I). Ill DIII'Stldl World

Atrstlon lotoro, ropotrlll. 6 ro-buln .,...,. ln ·otock, 1!9!1
19!1 Jol1n DMrt llodol B AINI 1885 Ford ·Crown Vlctorlt, uc EVANS, JACKSON, OH. 1 53JI.III2a.
Chi-., H.D, I 0:~~ Hyotar cond, 204·7'73-5811 lltor 1:00.
Electric Fork Lift. 11
.aD.
1185 Monto Corio, 4.3 lltor1 T·
1pr 1&amp;.41134 T&lt;~ll du1lo $350. =-.e.Lood cond, 83000, 1141pr 20.8K36 Ural &amp; lubol
auhobla lor dulla $100. 304.a75198&amp; Ford LTD, VlrY Good Con4308.
dHion,
lllllo, Air',
814 John 0..~ rak•, Suntlowtr Automotl~\..
$2,850.
ro:sJ: buahllaoyboona, 304· 114-:zse.a:m.
&amp;
•
1816 lincoln Town Cor Ca~lor.
Cua Turf Tractor Ute Modal, :13,000 mi. Now 11111, t\2,900.
40 HP, S3,850l MF 285 011111, 114 Ul 40111.
17,850: lnl'l ""b - , _ Dllc,
llldo &amp; Buah Hog, $1,ho. 814·
2Mo8522.
Wll bullrf polio - · dtcllt,
Farmall_.. and Farmeii-M, 304pul .. vlnvt
&amp;7U4112.
lldtng "' traitor •t~tng. .,..

- ...,_,

and terror begins.

Champ Ianalllp From Loa

F"' llllmotn. Coli colloct 1·
or

I,. ..Plllllly
FIUCI
a 8W Stereo.

Tournament, 1at round:
Regional coverage from
Greensboro, N.C. (Eaet):
Cincinnati (Soutltlall);
Mllwlukio (MidwMI); Boise,
ldlho lWMt) (LI C .
liD • 'l'hlllrit;lclilllllrt
and u.. !lam Kniaty tht
Clown's lathtr dlalnltlrlted
him. (RJ Stereo. C
0 ....... 8llt irrvte I;l

81

Home
Improvements
haust, 814·192·7231, evenings
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFINQ
1\lM Ford Ellcort, o41dr., 4 apacl
etandard, good cond., make ol· Uncondltlonol lllotlme guoron-

7

~.· WhHIMIMtitirli1ltlti.IICI.~.=-

I•
o•ca1t1a•
lla!lkiWNCM

Services

1984 Dodga Arloo, 4 d001, block,
AMIFM, easHtto, 4 cyl, new ex-

Ef!!pt81nMnt Tanlght
Siereo ..GJ. .

~

Alklng: $400. &amp;14·245-5829. .

1\114 Clarra SE, ercelltnt condl·
lion, auto, 114-182·5170 leave
m111a;t

(I).

Bulla at Wuhlngton Bullets

Time (1 :301 Stereo.
(f) Myetwy! A web ol

For Sola: 14 Ft. John Boot, With,

1138.

mo lflL,_"::':l'ci.go

Special (2:001 D
Cll IIMirl: Tltl""i'otce at 0...

Trailer. Hilda Minor Rtpalrt.

IIIIIIII

TO

SOUTH

Ql Cralalh
7:35(1) lenlotd and &amp;on
1:00(%). Ill Co1t1r SMw Cllll
and 1111 lllltlhbor accompany
Olivia ~~altetd trip. (R)
Stereo.
IIi •
• IIQVIE: 'My
Flrlt Love' AIC Movie

0

ALLEYOOP .

1990 Muum 18 ft, Inboard/outboard, low hl'l, garage
Ear corn I straw for saJt, 304- k1pf, alalnleu IIIII prop,

R65 Ditch Witch Trencher Witt!
Hot At1achment &amp; Case 1740
Unlloadtr Sktd StHr. Call 614·

f) g~fC:~~~i~ LETTERS

• Molllytlrtl
Ill Till Wattont
7:06 (J) Addamt PlmiiJ

(LI

,,oo,

Two

NawAJsed

.......

lh If ·,l.r1•

•

It-

WHAcFI'

through wlndlhlald, vory nlco
cond., $200, 614-1143-5316

Registered Llmo.,.lne Htlflre_ 19&amp;9 Pro CroH 16 H, llsh &amp; akl,
exc cond, 304-675·7988 after
614·99H190

Rtmgtralor, Copper1ont, $'150; Groomlna. All brMdt, tfyltt.
Wnt[nghoutt Small Wast.r lamt Pill Food O..ler. Jullt

'-'lito· IIIII fllllll -

44

• 'I"HAMI _

-""

top/

walk~

board mercruur tryhut,

76 Auto Parts &amp;
Splll,_!lry llrowood, $25 load,
1961 Mustang Regular 281 3
304·lr.l·5312.
Accessories
llrm. 304-675-1725.
Spotd" Fool Bock, 11116 Mullong
WATER WELLS DRILLEO: 302 4 ~petd, 114-371-2M5.
Budgot Tronamlollono, Uaod I
Big Sovlnga On All Corpot In WATER OAURANTEED. 614·68111878 Codllloc Elclorodo, tully • robull, oto~lng 11 lll'._)ront
Stock. Coah And Corry, Mo~ 7311,
quipped. low mlleagt1 very niCII whlol d~vo otonlng ot , ..8.00
lohan carpets, 614-446--.,..4.
car,
will sacrifice, "114-112·3657 &amp;14-245-5677, &amp;14-1112o82113.
Wood
burning
11011o
2
yrs.
old,
.
1
Double oven ttovt, 11 cu n side $200, &amp;14-992'166&amp; onar
or 614·992-21'N
Spm
Dtoon1moblld 350 Lt·1 motor,
by aide retrlgerator, 5115. NCh
1978 Elcamino, Super Sport, onglo olug hoodo. AutC&lt;nltiC
or $300. both. 18,000 btu win· 55
Building
Good Condition, S1,500. 814--256- ha~nd ihlfttr, 12 boh GM 5:11
dow alr/cond $375. 304-175-55;3
1945, BotwHn 7 A.M. 6 10 P.M. goor. 1117 Comlro after 5:00.
·
I l&gt;olh
Supplies
- . , 1118 Chevy PU hood,
G.E. Heavyduty Gat Dryer, Call Block. brick, ltWar olpos, win· 19711 Dodgo Dlptomot 2 d1.
· grllll. &amp;14-44e-3t72 ·~
Sodon, $1,200. 614-141-7633 or Ahar I P.M. 614-368-11033.
tari:OO.
dows, llnttll, tic. Claude Win· 446·1833.
tarw,
Rio
Grandt,
OH
Call
614·
G.E. Waohor, $95: Whlnpool
u.d alllo parts for salt: aver
1983 Flrolblrtl, v.a, s apotd, 40 can, too many pans to lilt.
Washer,
$1SO;
Ktlvlnator 245-512\
aharp cor, 79,000MI, $2200 080,
Refrigerator: 2 Doo,, Whitt,
No ""~" oold
614-1112·2357 after 6pm
$1:ZS'"Hotp;;{nt Rtlrlgorotor, $95: 56 Pets for Sale
R-onobly
prlctd.-r·:~r·
614
Ktlvlnalor Rtfrigsrator, Frott ~--~~-~:--:­ 1914 Codllloc COupe Deville, 3172ohr 5:00.
F~1 Almond, $175; Admlrol Groom and Supply Shoo-Pat
good cond, loldod, 304-875-

~":i~"'-,;~m:

Fomlly car-y Ill. 1111.1111ono

l'Vf INVfNTfP 'T'tiE 'rHfJAIJ/lVJ'/

11f14841N

-Ion

Comp lete the chuckle quoted
by Idling in the mi$5ing word~
vou develop from step No. 3 below.

Stereo.

Spectat.

&amp;:00.

1 natlonol
_ ,.
Da

11411111DD•I.........

Motorcycles

t968 Kowoookl 650, good ahlpo,

rw

to ....,
000. - tlrM. cpany tro nina! 1-1 oopl111 , .
qulrlll 11,111. plul PC, Fot In-

I
1--rl..;;.r:l''"-'lr-;;.1,..;.....,1.,1--l O

~m=
~At!Wi.
~T-=I=:iNCM

new banery, 304..S:95-3021 aft11

6157 After 5p.m.

Llkt ntwl Love seat and chair

both, lomlly room, no

$200/depoih,

.,.
r..

2 female hogt, 304-882·29'72.

Call 614-446--4479.

·r.

1·~2

My old maid aunt always
had something kind .to say
about other people. She said
. - - - - - - - - - . , that people wilh tact always
ME R R 0 T
havelessto ........

_,.o,;;_c

~ I Drum of olunnll

mull .... CS14-902..etol

Hundreds of paper back books 1986 AOHA Mart, $1,250; Big ~.,....,.,....,-,.....;:....,,..,...-=
tor salt: great tor Flea Market, 1QDO AOHA Gtldl~, $850; 1tt2 1SI81 Harley Low Rider, good
etc . 614-4(6~129.
Hoi'H I Stock Trelltr, $1,115; cond, 14,500. 304·773..SS34.

2122.

3 BR,

11'78 Ford Bronco, newly rtbuln

clualvtly at RUt Aid Pharmacy. 18 cowt, 8 calvn. I bull. 814· - -·- - - - - - - -

Thnalt woy to dlot.

And Dryer, Llkt Naw, ~50, O.E. Wabb. Colll14-1411-0231.
Oryar, Whitt, Uko now, $150: • II
Sh h rtf
pi
Skogga Appllancn, u- Rim ~ullr Ion
I
pup •••
14
Business
Rooit, Golllpolle. 814-146-7398.
Rtd &amp; Rod Mor;!,_double rogl•
Rentals
Training
tartd, $100. 304·77&gt;-5332.
GOOD USED APPUANCES
Ratraln
Now!IISouthusttm
Wuhn, dryers, rtlrlgtratort, l?og Houata For Sale: Stvtral
Bualntll College, Sprlnl Valley 41 Houses for Rent
rongn. Skogga Appllonooo, Slzaa. 1 112 Mila Out Rt.141, Go~
Plaza. C.ll Todoy, l14-14 -136711
Upper Rlvtr Rd. Bnldt Slont llpolla. Wayne SHoomohr. &amp;14Roglatarotlon 1110-05-1274B.
l bdrm. apt. In PCHMroy, 11501 Crest Motel. Call 614-446-730, 44&amp;.0593.
month; 3 bcfrm. houH In 1-800-tllll-3489.
Flail Tank, 2413 Jackson Avt.
18 Wanted to Do
Pomoroy, $2001 month, 614·992· GrMn Early American eytleaofa Point Ptooson1, 304-875-2063,
3085
lull llna Troplcol lloh blrtla,
ond gold choir, 304~75-1942 .
Will Babyall In My Homt. Rod·
tmallanlmlll anclaupplltt.
nty Artt. Rtttrtnctt Available. 2 BR, Point Pl11unl area, 2&amp;3
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Coif 614-245-5687.
BR· Comp Conley aroo. Call Complete
homt tumlshingl. 57
Musical
304o875-3812.
Hours : Mon-Sat, 1-5. 114-448Automotive pain ting and body
Instruments
3 bedroom home Flatrock arwa, 0322, 3 mlloa out Bulavlllo Rd.
work. Bob, 614-441o66l9.
1300. month, HCurlty deposit, Froo Dollvory.
Orgon Botdwln O&lt;goaonlc Spo.
E &amp; RTREE SERVICE. Topping, 304o875-31111 boloro 8:30PM.
Trimming, TrM Removal, Hedge
Trimming. F'M Eatlmat11! 614·

. 3Q4-882·2131.

luturlng Amino Acid Body 63
Livestock
11• S·10 Btozar, V-8, Auto, AC,
Bulldlng weight loao ond lal -,...--....,......,-...,....,....,,..,.,.,. 65,000 Mlln, 14,600. 614-256bumer 1rormufas. Available IX·
5434

Tablll And Chairs, Hatco Food
Wtrmt,, Hood &amp; Sprinkler System, Plua Other htms. 614-446-

Household
Goods

J:C. with hard top,

2 year old Kirby With attchments
and shampootr, exc eond, $300.

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

For eal• ~ntal property,
Wanted: Saln poehlon lor local SyracuH,.~ 4 rentals, large 101 ,
aru
buslnns.
Offering $23,500, o14·1m·5732
btnttltt, must be aggrHslvt
and ablt to work with public. Lola for talt, tralltrs accepa
Stnd complete resume: Box B· table. 304-675-2722.
18 care Pt. Pltaant Atgltler, lola In OaHipolla Fer~ · 100%
200 Moln Sl, Pt. Pit, WV 25550.
owner llnanclng at 198.64 ~r
month, any ont of four Iota

12

5651, Mason WV.

49

Cali

p.m.

Monitor, lois 01 Software, $800.

46

Phont: 614-682·6480.

anything you want to ttll.

Big Ulld Sliver Royol ShoW

Slrool, Oak Hill, OH 45656,

aryar, 18,000. 304~75·7294 .

,~Nr 1 AT-R~I'!
1 1 ... ~

Qlllj!Cioll
llllllw ZOII'O Stereo. I;l
1:31 (J) Andr Glllltlll
7:00 'jij• Ill Wheel ol Porlufll

614-256-1308, 251.a040 ohar e 460 englnt, un kH, mony a&gt;&lt;troa,

I.B.M . Comp. Compuler, Color Solkflt. 614-286o8522.

Alao trailer spaee. Alt hook-upt.
Call after 2;00 p.m., 304·7'13-

E. Main

1m CJ7
Wonttd' Uatd lonm oqulllmont now 11m,

Salt : 8 Ntw Eltclrlc
Baaeboard
Hultrs
And
Elac:trical Hardwa111 Etc. For
More Information: 614-448-0458.
Gentsia Nutrition Products
For

Neceaury. Sena Rtsume To:
P.O. Box 116, O.k Hill, OH 45656 1m Clairmont, 3 bedrooms,
Or Pick Up Application At : gil heat &amp; central air, washer &amp;
Jenkins Pharmacy,

TIDOT ~~
t-rl__;;,r,r-T--1
, "T-Il ~

a• CIS Newt I;l
I
Andr Glllltlll
08DDDbJ Doo

OuoiHied Buyer. 614·446-2359.

Moving Must S.ll, 2 bedroom
homt,low
newly
6t10
acre,
utfiltieremodeled,
$12,000. 304·
001
458 ·1084 attar 5: PM.

ill .....

I

...-'-·-'-·-L·-'-·'"-'-L-..J.

FlolwOod ArN, Pomeroy, \.lrga
Country Home, Ntw Khchen.
Both, &amp; Corpa11ng. Low $30'a,

4563

And Provlo..ly Hod A Child.

Food Sarvlct Workers nHded:
grow and ~rotptr wllh on1 of
the nation a largett food or•Rick Pearson Auction Company, ganizations! Morris Custom
lull lime auc:tlonHr, compltte Management at tht Unlvtrtlty or
·auction service. Lle.,.std Ohio, Rio Grsndt. Prtvloua tX•
West VIrginia, 304·773-5785.
perlenct dnlrable but not . .
Hntlal. Work can lead to other

151 Second Avenue, Galllpallt.

anted

ncretartal axptrlence prefer· 304~75-2759 "' 675-7453 ahar
Nowl
1·206-736-7000 E&gt;&lt;l. rtd, llllng1 typing skills a must, s,oo.
$4.50 per nour, 30hn. a WHk to
1594B4.
start 1 plllle phone, 614·992· 199'1 Excellent Condition! 14x80
Cosmttologlst NHdld: Gauran- ?440 tor an ln1trvltw.
Sunshlno Mobllt Homo, 3 Bod·
lead $170 Per Wnk, Paid
rooms, 2 Baths, 614-446-t325.
Surrogtle Moth1r wsntMI kH
Vacations, Call614-446-7267.
plua 11pen111 lor carry ng a 3 btdroom home &amp; garage, 1 11'2
Drivers
couple's child, must bo 18· 35 acre rlvertront property, Letart,
now aeetpling apptlcaliMs, ~ra. or age I prtvlosly had a 1304-882-3121.
Domino's Pizza, Pomaroy araa, child, contsct Steve Lhz. An~.
3 bedroom, 14170 mobile homa,
614·992·2124
317o99fl.2000
1 aeculated acrt, extra room
Easy Work! Excellent Pay! As· Surrogate Mother. Wanted, FH wiWOOdbumer, covered porch, 2
semble Products At Home. Call Plus Expens11 For Carrying A ltvel decks In back, woodshed,
Toll Free, 1·800-467-5566, Ext. Couple't Child. Mull Be ll-35 g,..t cond, 304·576-2783.

313.

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

e p

1 I I I' I
1

1:06 (J) li'ltlly IIIM:IIIn

614-385-8227, wt alto havt usta
mobUt homtt for 1111.

H 1 W

u NRAT E

Tour

r.
4
Giveaway
,---,.,...,.o-::-:-::-=-:--. ~=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:~T""----------i crtdlt. VInyl skirting raqulrod 1
2 yr old blk &amp; white m11t cat.
Two 8 wks old ftmalt puppltt,
wormed &amp; paper tl'llntd, Sprln·

8

EVENING
Cll. (J). • •

(1).
D.

bo·

low to form four simple words.

Ql WOIICI TOday
P~.~ Tin, K-t Ccrp

School, 0hlo. 614-843·2930.
Reduce Saft And Fast Wlth
GoBasa Ctplatt And E·Vap

0 lour
Reorron;e lttten of
ICromblod words

lii~i:

3bdrm., compltttl)l remodeltd,
bath, uper.ll dining-room,

Bollndo ot &amp;14-1411-2794 "'coli 1·

l'ltloT lAlLY
Pill Ill

(J)Yidto,_

Rood. Rtducodl Coli For Appolntmonl. &amp;14-1411-8568.

aoo..tbllng.

7

THU., MARCH 19

1:00

(Golllo County); 114-146-29011.

American,
Yugotla~lanJ
&amp;
J aptntu high tchool t J CMngt
students, ·=~ Auguet, Hott
Famlllll N
Amer. lnttrcutturll Student Exctlange, ctll

6

·view~ng

3 Bedroom, 2 Bath HamtJ. Upper
$50'1, Located 2238 urabam

Auguol .... HDIIT FAMILIES

dlnavlan,

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

44

Homes for Sale

Ohio

1 · 1992

3 hrtoom Homo On 1 Aero Of
Lind. Coll614-256-152e.
3 bedroom homo on 1112 ocroa,
1112 mlto1 /rom Sporn Pllnt.
304o882·2771.

ScandiNivlan, European, South
Amtrlctn,

March

Ohio

Sentinel

n•alllllldlng tilt tnn_. tn tilt
. ........

.

a.n.

you're attgMCI ~ • productt.. part·
ner,ll(lntlleltnt mutllaltallta .,.likely.

.

\)

VIRGO (AIIII. 23-Sepl. 22) Suoordl·
nates will be more Industrious and elll·
clent today - 11 you figure O&lt;At some
way of rewarding them for thllrextraef·
forts. Try to rnakeamaterlalgesture.
LIIRA (llepl. 23-0ct. 23) All&amp;lgnments
you cannot handle yourHII today
should be delegated to competent
sides. How,_, do not share the overall
management of the operation with
anyone.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24ollo¥. 22) YO&lt;A 're a
good strercn-runntr today and, tn litua·
ttons that require staying ~. you
shOUld hive the edge over yOur com·
pet"oro.'Hang In thoro untH you get the
type of enct retUits you detlre.
IAGITTAIIIUI (Nof, D -11) TNt a
good day to dtacuu a maMr, you've
t~e.t hoping _,kl mat.n.ttze wttlt
frllnds who c:an help you. If you nlld
MlfPOI'I," Will be IVIIIallll.
· CoUIICONI (1111. It ,_ 11) There
.,. ttrono lndloatiOna you might take 1
· catcullllfl rllk tOday In a llltultton
whlnr " - II a en.. for
(llln. To 1M OMUII ot II ,., flllght
IOolt llka
IIUIII'IIIIItllllr 1101.

t'
l
lrlt,
·==--"-' ·-

11) Iaine
Jiu'wht ' '1111 lnltn a ,..
- t upetltlttce Will Ill uttllllll to your
adYIIIIOtodltY. Itmlglttnot••Jot~

.

nt0ft17, 6ut ttwlll enhlnae your tmagt.

l'llrniTintl Live

IIC~
0 .,. Clull Willi 1'81
RD~IAIIR

1Ck30. C1Do1! IIIII CltaM

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mlrtt .,r llfodiiOtel• llgltlll, I'll 111111 Wille." - Horto41 FOO!e.
:
~

�Pomeroy--Middleport, Ohio

Ohio Lottery

1992
Community ,C1lendar items
appear two days before an event
and the day .of tbat even1: llems
must be received weD in advaace
to assure publication i~ t~ cal·
endar.
.:
·
THURSDAY
POMEROY • The Meigs Coun- '
ty Democratic Executive Committee wiD meet ThursdaY at 7:30 p.m..
at lhe Ca!penters Hall.
·
POMEROY - The Ohio Young
Democrats of' America, Meigs
County, will meet at 6:30 p.m. at
Carpenters Hall in Pomeroy. All
interested DemOCI\Its, aged 18-40,
are invited 10 attend.
RACINE . The Racine American Legion Post 602 will meet
Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at the post
home.
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.
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. Pubtic invited.
MIDDLEPORT - The Middleport Youth League will hold a
coaches meetin~ on Thursday at
6:30p.m. at Middleport Village
Hall. Anyone intereste.d may
attend.
RACINE - OAPSE No . 453,
Southern Local, will meet Thursday at 7 p.m. at Southern High
School. Everyone urged to attend.

POMEROY - Men's softball
tournament Saturday and Sunday at
Meigs High School. Cost is $65
and two balls. Proceeds will go to
Meigs baseball team. Call Zane
Beegle at 247-4455 for informa-·
tion,
WILKESVILLE -The Wilkes
Grange will hold a smorgasbord
dinner at the Pythian Sisters Hall in .
Wilkesville Saturday at 4 p.m. Cost
is $5 for adults and $2.50 children
under 12,
MIDDLEPORT - Meigs County
Retired Teachers will have a luncheon meeting Saturday at 12:30
p.m. at the American Legion
Annex in Middleport, Guest speaker from state teachers' retirement
system on health insurance.
LONG BOTTOM - Spring
smorgasbord dinner at Long Bottom Community Building Saturday
at 5 p.m. Cost is $5 for adults and
$2.50 for L:hildren .

TUPPERS PLAINS - There will
be a round and square dance the
Tuppers Plains VFW Hall Friday,
8-11:30 p.m. C.J . and Country
Gentlemen will provide music.
·Everyone welcome,
SATURDAY
RUTI.AND - Rutland ball sign-

HENDERSON - The Gal!ia
Twirlers Western Square Dance
Club will hold a dance Saturday
from 8-11 p.m . at the Henderson
Community Center in Henderson,
W,Va, Webb Mills will be the
caller. The dan ce is open to all
western style square dancers.
POMEROY - "Faeries" and
"Little Prince" will be shown at the
Meigs County Public Library in
Pomeroy on Saturday and Sunday
at 2 p.m. and at the Middleport
Library on Monday at 4:30p.m.

SUNDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Hymn sing at
the M.ddleport First Baptist
Church , Sunday at 7 p.m. Groups
include Joy and the Faith Baptist
Youth Choir. Fellowship to follow.
Public invited.
POMEROY - SOLOS. a fellowship of Christian adultS, including
those who are widowed, divorced
or never married, will meet Sunday
at 4 p.m. at the Pomeroy United
Methodist Church. New members
welcome.

OSBA to hold annual meeting
· COLUMBUS - Ohio State State
Bar Association (OSBA) President
.Richard M. Markus will bring his
statewide crusade against "lawyer
bashing" to Marietta on Friday,
March 27 when he addresses local
·attorneys at the annual meeting of
OSBA District 17.
The District includes some 150

.

TAMMY BOYD

f?,eceives degree

STOREWIDE

20% 70% OFF
TO

Soper Savings
•DOOR PRIZES

Came in and register for an .Oak
· Boston Rocker~ Brass Patted
Greenery Arrange-ment, and
More.

BUY ONE • GET ONE FREE
On Lane Action Recliners
Starting at

$399

•PREMIUM BEDDING
ON SALE NOW

Some mismatched sets.
Choice of firmness
Choice of Color
Choice of Style

•PLEASE STUDY THE ITEMS
LISTED BELOW CAREFULLY. All
pieces listed are from our
regular stock of high guality .
merchandise. We at Lifestyle
work very hard at selectmg
trhe best values and
merchandise for you.
OUR ANNIVERSARY SALE
REPRESENTS TRULY FINE
SAVINGS ON THE FINEST AND
MOST UP TO DATE FURNITURE
AVAILABLE.

•ONE ONLY GLASS AND
BRASS DINETTE TABLE
AND 4 CHAIRS.
•BRASS HEADBOARDS
TWIN, Reg. $69.0
FULL, Reg. $79.00
QUEEN, Reg. $89.00

Other Stock Recliners
Starting At $198 And
Up. Some as much as
70% Off Regular Price.

SALE 555
SALE 563
SALE 569

•TWIN METAL
HEADBOARDS
IN CHOICE OF 4 COLORS

Reg. $39.00
SALE 529
Purchase ·a footboard at the
same price to make a
complete bed.

·•SAVE 20% and MOR~
On All Our In-Stock
Bedroom Groups

Reg. S899.0D-~ OFF
50
SALE$449

•WOODEN ROCKERS

-~'~IE

Welcome to Potomac

14 99~~ular ~414
Sold Only As AGroup.
(China not uactly as shown.)

The oval t.lble has your seat reserved.
On sale now - your savings are conserved!

Come Help Us Celebrate Our IIth Year At Lifestyle Fumiture
•White Iron Daybeds
Reg. $349."...SALE S199
•GUN CABINETS
Reg. $325 SALE s199
•Lay-a-way a LAN~
CEDAR CH~ST now for
that Graduate
•3 TIER SERVING TABLE

Reg. $89.00.....SALE

Rej. $179.00....SALE

•ASSORTED PICTURES

Cliurc~ with
preaching.
,.
llld ber huaband. ~.and
The community is invited to
• ~. TIYior and Kelli, reaide
observe
the Lenten seuon with tho
li Tuppeft Plllal. Mn. Boyd ilthe
churches in lheiO wonltlp ser....,._ ~ CIINiu ..ahulille . area
vice,.
.PatilllofP'ollltp!eo I I, W. VL
"

Insert

Vol. 42, No, 228

Syracuse council discusses cleanup campaign
By KATIE CROW
Sentinel Correspondent
Syracuse Mayor James Pape and
members of Syracuse Village
Council are waging a campaign to
clean up the village.
Meeting with council on Thursday evening were residents Jeff
Morris, Mrs. James Thomas. Mrs.
Archie Lee, Mrs. Bob Hysell and
Mrs. Rick Ash. The group. very
irritated over conditions 1n their
neighborhood, voiced their displeasure at the eyesores and deplorable
conditions in their area

Following a lengthy discussion,
Mayor Pape and council vowed to
execute an ordinance which calls
for the cleanup of properties that
are surrounded by garbage, paper.
old auiOmobiles, weeds and other
items 100 numerous 10 mention.
Pape asked council members
serving on the Health and Sanitation and Building Inspection commiltees to begin immediately
enforcing the ordinance against
those in violation and asked that
enforcement action begin in the
next two weeks.

All properties in violation of the
ordinance will be under scrutiny, it
was noted. A personal contact of
residents in violation will be made
in order to solve the problems fac·
ing the village. Village officials
expressed the need for cooperation
of residents, and the mayor stated
that he and council are willing to
work with residents in solving the
problems.
Other business
In other business, Councilman
Bill Roush submined the paperwork necessary for Round Four of

The mayor was given pennisIssue II monies. It was noted that it system should be. He also stated
is now the responsibility of council that it is the responsibility of coun- sion to have the ditches cleaned by
to advertise for bids for upcoming cil to notify the sewer board of the village parking lot and by Hubprojects. This year's Issue II money those who are not connected to the bard's Greenhouse.
Kathleen Fryar met with council
will be used to install additional system. Williams said that there is
culvert near the fanner Nazarene a heavy fme for those in non-com- regarding ber son doing an hour or
more of community service with
Church , plus paving and the pliance.
the
village as a part of his Boy
replacement of sewer on BridgeOnce again, council voiced conScout
requirements. Council
man Street between Second and cern for dogs running loose in the
advised
that
he could assist in the
Third near the municipal building.
village. The ordinance says that
Councilman Jack Williams dogs must be confined to owners' village parks by picking up debris.
Attending m addit1on to those
voiced his opinion regarding properties. Council again stated
sewage hookups. Williams stated that the ordinance would be named were council members Denni s Wolfe and Katie Crow , and
that residents not connected to the enforced and violators fined.
Clcrk{freasurer Janice Lawson.

Sen. Lloyd Bentsen, D-Texas, would like to recreate the 1948
WASHINGTON (AP)- A permanent middle-class tax cut and Rep. Dan Rostenkowski, D·DI., campaign, when President Truman
financed by tax increases on the negotiated the final compromise. ran against a Republican Congress.
rich is heading for the final con- The~ planned to announce details "Well, I knew Harry Truman,"
gressional votes that would send it in ume for a caucus of House Bentsen said. "I worked with
Harry Truman. And George Bush
to President Bush for a sure veto.
Democrats.
is
a decent man. But he's no Harry
"We acted in good faith and
The bill, which top Democratic
Truman.''
negotiaiOrs completed during the with a speed no one would have
major middle-income tax
·night, borrows extensively from the thought possible 30 days ago, to cutThe
in
the
is a two- step tax
seven-point plan that Bush meet the president's deadline." credit, whichbillwould
be subtracted
demanded Conpess pass by IOday Bentsen said today. He said Bush directly from taxes owed. This year
in order to sumulate economic must do more than insist on his and next, wage earners would gel a
growth. But the president oppcses own plan, which would worsen the credit
for a share of their Social
.the biD because of the tax increas- defic1t.
Sec~rity
taxes, with a maximum
Noting Bush's drop in the pools,
es, which would affect the wealthicut
of
$150
a year for single people
Bentsen suggested the president
est I percent of taxpayers.
and $300 for a couple,
ACCIDENT - Forty-eight children
eseaped.llliury ja tbis ear-bus wreck at.tbe.laterseclloa of State Ro\i'fe~ 7 ,and jJ in Safi~llury
Township Thursday afternoon. According to tbe
GaDia-Meigs Post of the State Highway Patrol,
Ruby Cornel~ 75, of Cairo, W.Va., puUed onto
State Route 7 Into the path or a Meigs Local

•LA·Z·BOY MODULAR SECTIONAL
Has 2,.. Rers - Cash 01~
Reg. $2258- 50o/o OFF SALE 1099

nos

FRIDAY
9T08

·Sales and
Service with

Low, Low
Prices!

school bus driven by Katherine Deskins, 45,
PQ.I!leroy. Cornell, ~OS !!Dd '!8 children were
transporteil to Veterans'Memor!allillllpital. The
patrol is lnvestlgalinl tbe accident. Desk)Jls and
the cbildren were aot injured, a hospital
spokesman said. Cornell was held for observation.

House members hope education
funding plan prompts debate

99

•ASSORTED FLOOR ARRANGEMENT
20% OFF Sug. Retail
•ALL LIVING ROOM TABLES

HOURS DAILY

3 Section a,~ Pogeo 25 conto
A lluldmedlo Inc. Newopoper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, March 20, 1992

Copyrighted 1992

•PROFESSIONAL SALES &amp;
FULL·LINE SERVICE

With delm IIHrsprjlg lllllftresses
. Startilg At 5598

Low tontghtln mld-20s.
Saturday, partly cloudy. High In
mld-405.

•

s5 and up

•SLEEP SOFAS

MORIALE

SSGWIIMDII'

•SOUD OAK MAGAZINE
LAMP TABLE
s

Services slated

....,I!CT TO

I

Reg_. S69.00......SALE 49

Many Styles and Colors to choose from
REGUlAR $1109.0D-CASH ONLY
StartingAt $498

ITIMt

'"

&gt;#;,., I

•BRASS 3-WAY TABLE
LAMPS ·
s

•SOFAS

...IDUPY

'

69

20o/o and More OFF REGULAR

eflll PAlliNG .

.,J8J

•BRASS 3-WAY FLOOR
LAMPS
s

-~

. \\

· Community Lenten Services in
area wlll continue
•· Tammy L. Boyd graduated Fri· , the
7:30
p.m. at Grace
'
from Hocking Technical Colwith
Rev. Kris
,
a licensed

tta._ll

'-

BUS

•PRE·SEASON SALE
On All Patio and
Pool Furniture

Cherry finish
Reg. $299 - 70% OFF
SALE s39

attorneys who live or practice in
Athens, Hocking, Meigs, Morgan,
Noble and Washington counties,
Markus, president of the 23,000member OSBA, is a past president.
of the American Trial Lawyers
Association , a former Cleveland
Common Pleas and Court of
Appeals judge and one of the
state's best-known legal scholars.
At the luncheon meeting he will
discuss current issues affecting the
justice system, with special auention to recent allegatiqns by ice
President l)an Quayle and other
negative stereotypes sometimes
applied 10 lawyers.
The ,luncheon busi~ess meeting
will also feature election of a new
District I 7 representative to the
OSBA Board of Governors to
replace Judge William A. Lavelle
of Athens, whose three-year tenn
ends this July I.
The 21-member Board of Governors meetS ,monthly 10 take positions on public policy matters,
ovenee the association's p10p111tJ
and manaae its.business l!ld finlncial affain.

.

'

Proposed tax cut
headed for final vote

Starting at s39

The well-bred, well-mannered
dining room.
$

•

Pick 3:901
Pick 4:0109
Cards:
5-H; 6-C; 9-D;
K-S

Storewide

HARRISONVILLE - Special
meeting of l,.odge 411 F and AM
Saturday noon . Work in the master
mason degree.

MIDDLEPORT - Meigs Local
OAPSE will meet Thursday at 7
p.m. at the junior high school.
Karen Klass, school employee
SALEM CENTER - Star
retirement system, will be guest
Grange
fun night and pctluck sup·
speaker.
per will be Saturday at 6:30 p.m. at
the grange hall. All members urged
FRIDAY
to
come,
MIDLEPORT- Return Jonathan
Meigs Chapter, Daughters of the
RACINE - Southern Junior
American Revolution, annual char·
ter day luncheon Friday at 12:30 High Athletic Boosters will meet
p.m. at Overbrook Center. Lunch Saturday I p.m. at the junior high.
by reservation only. Hostesses are Everyone urged 10 aucnd.
Mrs. Arthur Skinner, Mrs. John T.
KANAUGA -Hoe-down square
Cook, Mrs. Edward Foster, Mrs.
dance
at the DA V building from 8·
Harold Hager, Mrs. James Werry
II p.m .• with the Mountain Fever
and Mrs. Gene Yost.
Band; Peggey Napper, West Vir·
PAGEVILLE - The Scipio ginia's number one female fiddler.
Township Trustees will meet Fri· Callers: Don McCoy, Ken Turley,
day at 7 p.m. at the Pageville Bill Osey , Orville Fielder, Don
Township Building to consider bids Shaw and John Wright. Admission
is $4.
received on equipment.

RU11.AND -Revival at Rutland
Community Church Friday through
March 29 at 7 p.m. nightly. Rev.
Billy McCoy will be speaker. Rev,
Dewey King invites tile public.

spring home
improvement

up Saturday 9 a.m. to I
land Civic Center. Cost '
pet
child. Any child not playing last
year will need a copy ·of their birth
certificate.

STUDENT DONORS • The American Red
Cross Bloodmobile held at Meigs High School
on Thursday gave students and faculty the
chance to ''be.a buddy tor lite'', just like the slogaa for the ARC's sebool blood donor program.
Here, volunteer Tracey O'Dell, L.P.N, assists a

Red Cross nurse Ia receiving the blood donatioa
of Meigs High School jaaior Mlcbael CremeaDS.
Also pictured Is student council member
MelanH! QuaDs, one of tbe Marauder volunteers
. yesterday. (Sentinel Photo by Brian J, Reed)

---Local briefs---.
Fire ban dates are announced

A fire ban has been put in10 effect from 6 a.m. to 6 p.m. during
March, April, May, October and November by Ohio Department of
Natural Resourtes. The bill empowering the ODNR 10 enforce the
file ban was passed !&gt;Y the Ohio Legislature earlier this month,
Pomeroy Fire Ch1ef Danny Zirkle said that copies of the new
legislation were distributed at a meeting of county f11e departments
Weddesday night at the Pomeroy Fire Department
The new legislation also provides that the chief of the Division
of F~£e!ilry may e":pan_d the times and places for kindlin$ fJCes by
publishing one nOUce m a newspaper of general circqlauon in the
affected area or by giving written authorization 10 the affected person.
The times and places for kindling flieS may also be restricted or
eliminated by executive order of the governor if environment conditions warrant that actiqn, Zirlde said.

EMS units answer calls

and children in the state," said
Gardner, the House majority whip
and a former teaeher.
He said that if at least one of the
proposals is approved, it would end
the "roller coaster ride" that primary and secondary education have
been on for the past decade.
The constitutional amendment
and bill would earmark two-thirds
of the state personal income tax
and balf of corporate franchise
taxes for sc))ools.
They said the plans wouldn't
change the $8.3 billion biennial
funding for education. They also
said they wouldn't hun other parts
of the budget because more money
will be available as taXes follow a
2().year trend of growth.
Gardner said earmarking taxes is
not new to the state. Gasotine taXes
are spent on highway ftDiding, and

part ot the personal income tax is
used for libraries and local govern-

ments.
·
But he said schools have been
cheated. Money from the state lottery . for example, is used for
schools, but the Ugislawre has cut
its share of help for education, he
said.
"We're not trying to solve aU of
education's problems this morning, .. he said.
Instead, he hoped the proposals
woul.d encourage debate about education funding.
The two lawmakers said they're
willing to change the proposals to
help get either one approved.
They said they have not
approached education groups about
their plans but didn't expect opposition.

Mine blast kills four in West Virginia
BLACKSVILLE, W.Va. (AP)
- Fedetal, state and union inspectors IOday were searching for the
cause of an above-ground coal
mine explosion that kille&lt;l four
workers and injured ~ others.
"We've secured the area and
the mine's records and will begin·a
full-scale investigation," said
Kathy Snyder, spokeswoman for
the U.S. Mine Safety and Health
Administtation.

The workers were helping to
seal a shaft at Coosolidation Coal
Co.'s Blacksville No. I mine,
which was idled last June because
of poor market conditions.
Tbe Thursday morning blast
blew a wall out of a seven-story
production shaft that housed two
huge eoalladles at the mine, which
straddles the West Virginia-Pennsylvania line about 60 miles south
or Piltsburgh.
Tlu:ec of the dead were members

of a contract crew that was welding
sections of pipe used to push
methane gas from the mine,
accmding 10 a mine supplier at the
scene who declined 10 be identified.
Snyder would not identify the
three conllaet workers.
The fourth worker killed was
Kenneth R. Baird, 37, a Consolidation Coal engineer from Morgantown, said company spokesman
Thomas F. Hoffman. ·

Hoffman would not conlirm the
number of deaths, nor would he
name the contractor that was working to pe:nnanently seal the mine.
Bolts Willis of the state Office
of Mine Health, Safety and Training said M.A. Heston Inc. of Fairmont had the contract 10 seal the
mine shaft M.A. Heston offiCials
declined comment
The explosion was felt as far as
15 miles away.
f

.House post office chief resigns amid scandal

WASHINGTON (AP)- Hou8e
Six calls for assistance were answered by units answered by
Postmaster Robtrt V. Rota resigned
units of Meias Counly Emergency Medieal Services on Thursday
Thursday. becoming the ~and
and early Friday.
House official in a weelt 10 quit folOn Thursday at 10:34 a.m., Racine squad went to Stiversville
lowing
allegations ·of mismanageRoad. Violet Brewer was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital, and
mmL
. · later to Pleasant Valloy Hospital At 11:01 a.m.• toiiddleport unit
Rota. who ~ on his 57th
' ' went to Ovedxoolt Center for Dora Smith. S!te was taken to Veterbirthday, Jan a mail facility that flas
ans.
seen three former employees
At 1:13 p.m., Syracuse squad went 10 Minersville Road. Goldie
recently plead guilty to embezzleRelttnlre WIS taken to Veteri!IS, and later 10 Holzer Medical Center• .
ment and a fourth awaiting trial on
" ;Atij:57·p.m.,·J10iao unit went to HaYR!III Road. Charlel Ohlinaer
that chaqe.
W1S liken to Vetaana and later 10 Ple8Sint Valley.
u.s. J)08I8[ inspectorl also have
At 3:24 p.m .. Pomeroy squad wentiO lt1l au!Oibus acc:ident at
State R011te 7 and U.S. Route' 33. Ruby
Was taken to Vet«· . received statementl from It lout
ana. Katherine DeaPns refused ~cnL 48 children were lllso
one employee or dru.l dfteli.lltd
llll!llpOIIIOd to Veteri!IS for evalualion. (See related story.)
use by employees of dlo facility.
At 6:30a.m. on Friday, Pomeroy unit \Wilt to Peacock Ave~~ue. '
The U.S. ltiOflley's office aid ill
Carolina Wert was dead on aarival.
·
crimlnal inveatiptioa il continuing, while a Hotise AdminiJtration

ec.nen

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Two Republican lawmakers say
their proposal to help pay for education is supposed to provoke discussions about making schools a
priority.
Reps. Randall Gardner of Bowling Green and Tom Watkins of
SlOw announced a plan Thursday 10
earmark tax money for education.
They're trying a constitutional
amendment and a legislative biU to
accomplish the same thing.
They say it would provide stability, predictability and growth for
school funding.
"The current budget structure
simply hasn't worked," Watkins
said. "If we don't actiO change the
budget process, we're concerned
that schools will not reach priority
status ill Ohio."
"We can do beuer for schools

Committee task force is probing
allegatilllll of mismliiBgemenL
The Washington Times~
Thursday that there 1¥8S an Illegal
check cashing opention at the pOst
office, a cOntractor for the U.S.
Postal sCrvice: lt said eongression.
·al and law enforcement officials
found that members reponedly
cashed personal ch~ and campaign cbects a&amp; the IJQIIa) facility.
Last Tbursday,lfousc Sergeant
at Arms Jack Russ, who r1n the
chamber's former bank, resigned
after tbe etbics commiuee found he
milllled his office.
· The COIDJiliuee found that Russ
cashed 19 bad checks at the bank
and falled to make promised

reforms 10 end the facility's libetal
overdraft policies.

The no-penalty overdrafts have
en snarled House members in 8
major sca!ld&amp;J. The chamber's
ethiCs committee plans 10 · re~ease,
in two stages, the names of 355
current and former House members
who wrote bad checks at the bank
during, a 39-month period. Russ
was in charge of the now closed
bank the entire time.
Speaker Thomas s. Foley, o.
Wash., told reporters that Rota
"had been laltiDg for some lime"
about retiring. "I don't think
there's any connection .. , It all"
with the lalesi news reports,

Rota ~ve Foley a two sentence
resignauon letter that mentioned
none of the facility's problems. "It
has been an honor and pleasun: 10
serve the members of Congress and
this institution for these many
years," Rota wrote. He became
JlOSilnasler an elected position, in
1972. His current term WOI!kl have
continued through the end of the
ctirrent Congress.
'
Rep, Charles Rose, D:N.C.,
chairm8n of the House Admlilistration Committee and its task fortci
investigating the post ofllce, called
the resignation "1 very wise decl•
siordt will help us clear the liui
we lry 10 work CUI the fwwe or the
post offiCe."

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