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                  <text>Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Community Calendar Items
appear two days before an event
and tbe day or tbat event. Items
must be reeeived weD in advance
to assure publication In tbe cal·
.endar.

RACINE . Southern Athletic
Boosters will meet Monday at 7
p.m. at the high school to discuss
the winter sports banquet and
upcoming activities.

REEDSVILLE - OAPSE Local
MONDAY
448, Eastern Local, will meet Mon·
. RACINE • Southern Local day at 7:30 p.m. at Eastern High
School Board will meet Monday 7 School. All members urged 10
'Jl.m. at the high school.
attend.
MIDDLEPORT - The OH KAN
Coin Club will meet on Monday at
Burkett ·Barber Shop in Middlepon.
Social hour and uading session will
precede the 8 p.m. meeting.
Refreshments. New members are
welcome.

TUESDAY
POMEROY - Ohio Eta Phi
Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi Sorority,
will have its Ritual of Jewels Tea
on Tuesday at 6:30 p.m. at the
home of Susan Clark. Bring a covered dish. Meet behind Pomeroy
Fire Station at 6:15 to park and
ride. AU members attend.
HARRISONVILLE - Har·
risonville Senior Citizens will meet
Tuesday at the townhouse. Quarter·
ly birthdays will be observed with
potluck dinner. All members urged
to auend. Bad weather will cancel
the meeting.
POMEROY - American Legion
Auxiliary Unit 39 will meet Tues·
day evening at tk post home in
Pomeroy.

ASHLEY SPENCER

First birthday
Ashley Nicole Spencer recently
celebrated her first binhday with an
open house at the home of her
paternal grandparents, Larry and
Kay Spencer.
Cake and punch were served by
her parents, Mike Spencer and Lois
Frank, to maternal grandparents
Howard Frank and Ruth Frank;
Steve and Brenda Kimes, David,
Linda and Selena Spencer; Tom,
Judy, Johnathan and Meghan Avis;
Anna, Tara, Jennifer, Vicki and
Amy Norman ; Billie and James
Cunningham; Mildred and Starling
Orr from Gahanna; great-grandmother, Dorthy Spencer, and greatgreat-grandmother, Clara Powell.

POMEROY - A planning meeting to organize a reunion of Sugar
Run School graduates will be held
Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. at the Meigs
County
Chamber
of
Commerce/Park District Office on
Second Street in Pomeroy.
MIDDLEPORT • The Middle·
pon Ans Council will hold a begin·
ners Te&lt;as-style dance class at its
chambers on Tuesday at 7 p.m .
Cost is $7 per couple. Call 9922675 for funher information.

Monday, March 23, 1992

elta Kappa
Gamma attends
joint meeting
Alpha Omicron Chapter, Delta

ter JOint meeting at Grace United
Methodist Church in Waverly on
March 14. Hostess chapter was
Beta Tau. Other chapters attending
were Beta Alpha and Delta
Epsilon.
Beta Tau president Janet Matney, welcomed the visiting chap·
ters and gave the invocation before
the crescent sandwich luncheon·.
Favors were hand·paintcd .woodeh
apples.
Jason Boothe, local eighth grade
student, san.!( four songs.
Ruth Brooks, second vicc·presi·
dent of Alpha Delta State, was the
speaker. She spoke on "Doing It
All," making these points about an
officer's work. Do paperwork fJTSt;
plan ahead for adequate preparation
time; older members help younger
members; and if possible, say yes
to assignments.
Each chapter also held an indi·
vidual business meeting.
Susan Will presided at the
Alpha
Omicron business meeting.
and Meigs will compete for tbe title at the April
SCHOLARSHIP FUNDED • The four Bank
Nellie
Parker,
secretary, read a card
4 pageant at Meigs High School. A check was
One branches, Pomeroy, Rutland, Gallipolis,
of
thanks
from
Serenity House. The
and Coolville, have funded tbe $200 scholarship
presented to Pam Newell of the Meigs County
state
meeting
in
Cincinnati, May 1to be awarded to tbe winner of the Miss Ohio
Chamber of Commerce, pageant director, Fri·
3,
was
announced.
River Valley Iitle in tbe preliminary Miss Amerday by bank representatives, Joan May, Millie
Membership chairman Fern
ica pageant. Contestants from Athens, Gallia
Midkiff, and Joan Wolfe, left to righl.
Grimm conducted voting for new
members. Margaret Benson presented the slate of officers: ~andra
Nodruff, president; Fern Grimm,
first vice-president; Carol Eberts,
will be starJ second vice-president; Nellie Parker, secretary; and Deborah Hamloser and Teri Hill the best TOPS Nellie Grover and Dottie Johnson nc&gt;t week.
loser at the recent meeting of Ohio won a charm for a si&lt;·week weight
The group meets every Tuesday mond, treasurer.
Mrs. Parker announced NecroloTOPS Club No. 570 when that loss.
at 5 p.m. for weigh-in and meeting
gy
services will be April 27 at the
group met at the Carpenter's Hall.
at 6 p.m.
Presbyterian Church in Wellston.

BernieDurstwasth~?K~~' T2~~~ ~?a~?a~:Y 'lo~::s:ontest

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY · Wildwood Gar·
den Club will meet on Wednesday
at I p.m. at the home of Evelyn
Hollon. A white elephant sale will
be the program.
RACINE - A meeting to plan
the Southern Junior High School
athletic banquet will be held on
Wednesday evening at 7 p.m. at the
junior high. Anyone wishing to
help is asked to attend.

The 1983 Social Security legis·
Wion that stabilized the long-term
financing of the Soeial Se&lt;:urity
trust funds also gradually incrtaSed
the age at which workers can
receive full retirement benefits.
BeJinning in the year 2000 (lilly a
s)lort eight years away), illorkers
bot'n af1cr 1938 wiD have to be 65
and two months to receive
full retirement benefits. And by
2027 the age for full retirement
benefits will have gradually risen

peteellt:

.

Since the 30Cial security retire·
ment options will be different for
workeu retiring after the year
2000, you may want to begin plan·
ning your retirement now. We can
help you with your plans by t"O·
viding you information on JUSt
Yo( hat you can expect 10 receive
from Social Sccunty. You ·can call
1A11p67.
.
toll-free 1-800-772·1213 and ask
(II is im~t to JIOie, howev- for a personal earnings and benefit
er, that chaibility for Medicare \ estimate staremen~ or you can call
beneftiS wur ranain at age 65.)
592~8.

'can

(

1 Section, 10 Pogn 25 ..,,.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, 1\tesday, March 24, 1992

A Multimedia Inc. Nowopoper

Solid waste district plan
available for public review

Revisions of the Solid Waste
Management Plan for the
AGHJMV District (Athens, GaUia,
Hocking, Jackson, Meigs and Vin·
ton Counties) have been completed
and the plan is now available for
public review at the Meigs County
Library and in the Meigs County
Commissioners office. .
Kenny W1ggms, a Sohd Waste
Di.strict po~cy committee member,
satd coptes of the plan arc also
available from any of the five comm1tlee members.
.Af~r a public co~ment period,
W1g~ms srud there w1U be a pubbc
heanng m Wellston, the ume and
locauon ~be announced later.
He sa1d that the plan mdudes ~n
agreement between the DIStriCt s
board of directors (three commissioners from each cou.nty) and l;lrivate landfill ope.rauons, wh1ch
guarantees waste disposal. space for
20 years at a guaranteed uppmg fee
of $13 per ton.
.
He noted that the current rate 1s
$20 and _up per ton. In addition to
the Galha County landfill, others
currently operating in the district
are Mid-America ~asu: in Vinton
County, Sands H1ll Coal Co .. m
Jackson, and the Athens-Hocking
Reclamation in Athens County.
According to Wiggins If the

By BETH J. HARPAZ
Associated Press Writer
NEW YORK (AP) - Federal
investigators are looking into why
a USAir jet that crashed on a runway and slid into a frigid bay,
kilhng }' .7 people, was not de-iced a
third time after waiting a half·hour
in a snowstorm to take off.
John Lauber, an investigator
with the National Transportation
Safety Board, said that in addition
to,loolcing into the plane's vulnerability to ice on the wings, officials
are studying whether its flaps were
lowered for takeoff.
At least 17 Ohio residents are
among those killed in the crash.
Another 14 from Ohio survived.
Witnesses said Flight 405 to
Cleveland had just climbed into the
air at La Guardia Airport Sunday
night when it crashed in flames and
skidded into Flushing Bay. Besides
the 27 killed, 24 others were
injuied.
Some people were burned, others were trapped underwater and
upside down, belled into their
seats.
" I was amazed so many people
survived," said Fire Capt. John
Kurtz. "There were bodies burnt to
a crisp and bodies cut in half, and
then there were people walking
around.''
Among the evidence the NTSB
will examine are a IIO·foot skid
mark, debris on the runway, dam,
age to the plane a11d the pattern of
deaths, Lauber said.
The NTSB also asked Canadian
officials for a recent report that

260

106

Wednesday
April

1992

Your Social Security
I believe that if 100 people were
asked what is THE reurement age
in the United States, at least 99
would say "65."
· The only problem with that
answer is that it will not be true for
the 76 million baby boomers who
will retire after the year 2000 - and
in many ways, it has never been
true that 65 is THE retirement age.

VoL 42, No. 230
Copyrighted 1192

plan is ratified, funds to operate the
district will be generated from a
three-tier district fee per ton, in
addition to the tipping fees . Fees
will be $1 .60 per ton for wasu: gencrated within the six county districl, $3.20 per ton for waste from
outside the district but within Ohio,
and $4.80 per ton for out-of·state
waste.
He. explained that the plan m~st
be raulied by government agenc1es
represe~ting si&lt;ty perc~nt of the
populauon of the d1s1nc1. If the
plan is not approved, Wiggins s:Ud
that the E~v•ronmental Protection
A.ge~cy will m~rul~te a J?lan for the
d1stnct, the d1str1CI wtll lose liS
power to. collect the d1stnct annual
fees wh1ch could total about $2
million, and the funding would
then come from an assessment on
e~ch. 1mprov.ed parcel of real estau:
w1thm the d1stnct and/or a user fee
wh1ch would also be backed by a

(Gallia/Meigs, Jackson/Vinton,
Athens/Hocking), seven curbside
pickup programs, 15 drop-off stalions, limitations on out-of-state
waste, test wells at landfills, moniloring by health departments,
money set-aside for protection of
water supplies, which if not needed
could later be used for a public
owned landfill and criteria for sit·
ing of any future landfill facilities.
In addition a transfer station is
to be built in Meigs County for use
by everyone Wiggins said
He stres~ed that no hazardous
toxic waste will be permitted and
that everything will be handled in
an environmentally safe manner.
"We believe this to be a very
workable plan and have tried to
address the concerns and have
given consideration to all of our
citizens," Wiggins said. "We are
asking Meigs Countians, individu·
als, business leaders, organizations,
pr~peny tax..
. . mayors, council members, trustees
We don I feel any of our cm- and others to wriu: letters of supzens w~ul~ be ple.a~d with lhts pon to the' AGHJMV Solid Waste
altcrnauve, srud W1ggms.
District, 213 E. Broadway WellHe went on to explain that all ston, Ohio 45692."
'
areas of proper solid waste rna~·
Meanwhile, he said that any
agement have been addressed m member of the policy committee
the plan. These mclude three pro- will be glad to answer questions or
cessing facilities for recyclables take comments about the plan.

or appreciation and plaques from Council. Here
CouncU President Dewey Horton, center, makes
the presentations. Buck did not seek re-election
to the position.
.

RECOGNIZED FOR SERVICE • Jon Buck,
Middleport village clerk-ireasurer for tbe past
12 years, and bis wife, Tami Buck, assistant to
the clerk-treasurer, were presented resolutions

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Starr

New arrival

65, 66, 67: The "aging" of the
retirement age

Page 4

Mild and sunny loday. Highs

In the 50s.

Middleport council discusses
extending
contract
with
CSP
NTSB looks at de-icing in La
.Guardia crash that killed 27

RADNOR, Pa. (AP) - The
Academy Awards ceremony is like
bobbing for apples, said new dad
Warren Beatty, one of the top nom·
inees this year.
"I go for the enjoyment of see·
in!( the people ... that I've worked
w1th and know. With the understanding that it ' s all slightly
masochistic," he said in the March
28 TV Guide.
"It's sort of enjoyable in the
way that bobbing for apples is
enjoyable. But when you bob for
apples you get wet and ruin the
party. You can't take the game too
seriously," Beatty said.
Beatty, who just had a baby
with actress Annette Bening, turns
~5 on March 30, the night ABC
JORDAN TAYLOR
uroadcasts the 64th annual Acade·
my Awards. He 'II be there.
Beatty's movie "Bugsy" is up
Chad and Becky Taylor, Racine, for 10 nominations, more than any
announce the birth of their first other film. He starred and was
child, a son , Jordan Lewis. on Jan. nominated for best actor.
.20.
DALTON, Ga. (AP) - In case
· The infant weighed eight
anyone
is awaiting word, Marla
:pounds and three ounces and was
Maples said she and the Donald are
21 inches long.
Maternal grandparents are "doing terrific."
Ms. Maples paid a visit on her
Denny and Linda Evans, Racine.
Paternal grandparents arc Larry small, Georgia hometown Saturday
night and had developer Donald
and Joyce Taylor, Syracuse.
Trump
in tow at a fund·raiser for
Great grandparents arc Henry
an
Alzheimer's
disease organiza·
and Carolyn Salser, Carl Taylor,
lion.
Anna Taylor, and Betty Taylor.
Asked whether they have set a
Great-great·grandparents are
Jackie-boy and Pearl Adams and marriage date, she groaned and
laughed.
Lillian Proffitt.

The trend since 1960 has been
toward earlier and earlier retirement. And, in fact, about 50 percent of workers now claim their
first Social Security retiremeqt
check at age 62 rather than age 65.
The option of earlier retirement
will stilT be there after the year
2000 - only changed. It, too, is
affected by the 1983 Social Security legislation. Currently, workers
who retire at age 62 receive 80 percent of the full benefit they would
have received if they wailed until
age 65 tb retire. That percentage
will be 4f11dually reduced. Workers
who reure at age '62 in the years
2005 to 2016 will receive 75 pet·
cent of !heir benefit; and by 2022,
any v.:orter retiring at age 62 will
have the percencage reduced to 70

Pick 3: 182
Pick 4: 6604
Cards:
9-H; 6-C; J-D;
4-S

KaJl.PI! Gamma, met in a four-chap·

People in the news

By Ed Peterson
Social Security
Manager in Athens

Ohio Lottery

NIT
tourney
results

m.

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(Of courSe, consult 11 tax 11dvisor to see how this coupon and mail it in to Bank One or just

specific Conditions may affect you.)

call toll-free 1-800-372-8888. We'll help you

What's more, you can spend the developyourhomeintol!shelterfrorntaxe$.
money ~ou b~rrow on anything you like. 1 To ge~ free copy of Bank Q; ibne EQuity Loa;]
And smce eqUity loons are very secure, Bank 1 Guide, send this coupon 10, BANC ONE CORPORATION, 1
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GUIDECOOER.

Well oo w~JaM it W&lt;es to help you
take ac1van1age of benefits like these. So weve

Nmle _

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hk!rtss

~twodifferentkindsofrome~ I Gt):~Zip
loans. !~eluding one that was specially
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For details, get your free copy of the
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Bank One Home Equity Loan Guide.just clip L::: __ ~ __~ D&lt;C _ _ _ _

N.J.

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1

I

I

1

_

_j
•

Meigs County Commissioner
Richard E. Jones will seek the
Republican Party's nomination for
another tenn in the commissioner's
orfice in the June 2 primary elc;ction.
Jones, who is seeking re-election to the term beginning Jan~
3, 1993, was first elected to that
office in 1977. He also serves the
county as chairman of the Melgs
County Republican Executive
. Committee.
A Meigs County native, Jones
resides in the Laurel Cliff community. He and his wife, Donna, have
three childrep: Kim, who lives in
Hartford, Conn.; Brett, of
Pomeroy; and Susan, also of
Pomeroy, a senior at Ohio University.
·
"It is my Intent to continue to
work on behalf of all the people of
Meiga County," Jones said, ''8nd to
retain tile sound financial manage-

twice, at 8:26 ·p.m . and at 8:59
p.m. , USAir President Seth
Schofield said. Flight 405 left the
gate a minute later but had to wait
in line 30 minutes to take off, the
airline said.
The flight was running two
hours behind schedule when it was
cleared for takeoff.
Asked why the captain didn't
ask for a third de-icmg , Lauber
said, "I can't respond to that, we'll
be looking at that."
The captain decides whether to
order another de-icing, the investi·
gator said. The pilot was killed; the
co-pilot survived but was injured.
Investigators sai:l they will inter·
view him as soon as possible.
The Canadian rePOrt, compiled
after an Air Ontario Fokker F28
crashed in 1989 after takeoff in a
snowstorm , killing 24 people, said
the de-icing fluid used at most air·
pons, including La Guardia, is not
very effective in wei snow.
Ice can form in as little as three
minutes after that fluid is used, the
repon said.
The half·hour between the sec(Continued on J)

· E&lt;tension of the village street
light contract with Columbus
Southern Power was discussed at
length during Monday night's
meeting of Middleport Village
Council.
Meeting to discuss the matler
with council were Ron McDade,
Gallipolis area manager, and Ron
Carmichael, customer service representative.
The current contract e&lt;pires on
May 28 . The village now pays
$1836.10 a month, but the rate
under the new proposed contract
would be $1848.76, the increase
being due to installation of new
equipment.
The new contract would be sub·
·ject to whatever rate increase is
granted by the Public Utilities
Commission of Ohio . Columbus
Southern Power has requested a
28.4 percent increase.
After the discussion, council
gave a first reading on a street light
ordinance. It passed by a vote of
live to one, with councilman Paul
Gerard votiog "no". Gerard ques·
tioned the automatic pass-through
to the village of whatever rate
increase is granted by the POCO.
Before the contract can be

rehabilitation, and two unitS which
are considered too dilapidated for
rehabilitation .
Part of the funds·, if awarded
will go for sidewalks, catch basin'
and street repair on Beech Street'
sidewalk repair on Pearl Street, and
street repa1r on Pearl from Laurel
to Lincoln .
Rental units can be included in
the rehabilitation program, Trussell
said, on a shared cost basis of 50
percent and an agreement by the
owners not to increase rent for a
period of several years. The
Department of Development
requires that the greatest amount of
grant money be spent on low and
middle income households.
Trussell also reported that the
Community Action Agency has
made a commitment of $15,000 in
weatherization funds for the hous.
ing program.
·
Council voted to adve rtise for
an experienced firm or individual
for technical assistance , inspection
services, and preparation of bidding specifications so that the ser·
vice can be listed as available on
the funding application which is
due May I.
The Betsy Ross housing project
is progressing, Trussell said, noting
that funds can be "drawn down"
(Continued on J)

Taft warns of Friday redistricting deadline

Richard ]ones seeks re-election
as Meigs County Com.missioner

you
Few loan options are
liS popula,r as home equity
loans. In f11ct, one in five
homeowners has one.Do
they know something you
don't? Could be.Here are
some.pointstoconsider.
First. illld probably most important, is
the way Uncle Sam fiMri !nne equity loans.
Changes in tax laws inrecentyearsrnel!n
you can no longer dl!im interest on most
instrumentloans.asataxdeduction.
But horne equity lo11ns are different. If
~loan is foc $JOOPOO or less, yoo can
l!!J usually deduct all the interest you pay.

concludes that the type of plane the twin-engine Fokker F28 - is
susceptible to ice forming on the
wings, Lauber said.
A plane is de-iced by spraying it
with a mixture of water and an
alcohol-based liquid. Ice on a
plane's wings can prevent it from
getting the lift needed to take off.
A light snow was falling and the
runway was slushy as the plane
took off at 9:30p.m. It was de· iced

extended, Council will have to give
1wo additional readings and then
adopt the ordinance in regular
meetings.
Housing Rehabilitation
A second public hearing on the
proposed Comprehensive Housing
Project was held in conjunction
with the regular meeting.
Council will apply for a
$600,000 grant from the Ohio
Department of Development's
Small Cities Community Development Block Grant Comprehensive
Housing,Neighbortwod Revitalization Program.
Jean Trussell, housing specialist, reported that Mike Strolh , a
consultant from Jackson County,
has been working with her on a
review of the proposed target area
where good visible impact would
be made with the use of revita)iza.
lion funds.
That area, Trussell reported ,
includes Pearl from Ash to Grant,
Beech from Ash to Grant,
Sycamore from Ash to Laurel, Lau·
rei from Pearl to Hysell, Oliver
from Beech to Grant, and Hysell
from Broadway to Oliver.
She said that a, survey of the
area shows I52 households including 138 single family units, three
multi-family units, 26 mobile
homes which are not accepted for

ment ·that the county has enjoyed
over the
few years."

I

'

By RODD AUBREY
Associated Press Wri)er
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)Secretary ~f Stale Bob Taft has
warned Ohm lawmakers that they
must ~~;pp.rove a new co~gressional
redistri~Ung plan by Fnday or the
state w1U need~ second pnmary at
a cost of $6 m1ll1on.
.
Vater~ must go ahead .w11h a
June 2 pnmary 10 ~lect pres1denual
dele~ates and dec1de local school
d1stnct bond 1ssues, Taft told law·
makers ~n a letter Monday.
But 1f the debate over bound·
aries isn't settled by the end of the

week, another will be needed for
congressional seats and state central cornmiuees, he said.
"!urge you and all members of
the Ohio House to enact a congres.
sional redistricting bill in .time for
us to stan 1mplemcnung tt by the
~h 27 *'te necessary for a June
2 pnmary, he srud.
The lelt~r w~ addressed to Gov.
George Vmnov1ch, House and Sen·
ate leaders, a~ the state Democrat1c and Republican parues.
The Legislature is responsible
for reducmg the number of congressional districts from 21 to 19

because of population shifts documented in the !990 U.S. Census.
Earlier this month, the Senate
passed a bill that redrew the districts, but it stalled in the House.
Some House members said it
dilutes minority voting strength in
Cleveland and Columbus. Republicans who opposed the plan said it
splits too many counties and is too
generous to Dqf!tocratic incum·
bents.
The political' maneuvering has
pushed back the scheduled May 5
primary. The Ho~ approved a bill .
to move the primary to June 2. The
Senate is scheduled to hold hearingsonthemovethisweek.
1'1'
Also Monday, Rep . Joan
Lawrence, R-Galena, introduced
her own congressional redistricting
plan and scolded lawmakers for
bid was .aC:cepted, despite the fact their bickering over drawing new
that it was .a higher bid. The bid districts.
She said she used "objective
from the Racine liank was a fixed
criteria"
and was11'1 drawn to prorate, while the other two banks
tect
incumbents
or keep the partiquoted variable rates, adjusted
monll!ly. The loan is for five years. san character of the Ohio delega·
Council also passed an emer· lion.
Ms. Lawrence said her plan was
gency ordinance
· the
more Republican" but
Board or Public Affairs
"that's the.way the
money to repair a well.
are ·also being asked to
water since only one well is

• councz'/ annroves
Raczne
Purchase Oif tanke.r truck
Additional money was added to
the 1992 appropriations for the purchase of a new tanker triWk when
Racine ViUage Council met in regular session last week.
· At an earlier meeting, council
had au!horizQd Mayor Frank Cle·
land and Cleric Jane Beegle to bar·
row $42,000 from the Home
Natioital Bank and to place it in the
debt service account for the pay·
ment of the tanker, which is to be
opera~on.
delivered later this month.
Repairs on t~e well should
Bank One and Piumers Bank
and Savings Company bad submit· completed early this week.
ted qootes for the Joan. ·Aftar con- adjol!flled until Monday.
sideration, Home National Bank's

.

.l

('

said
the proposal and generally

does not comment on them before
they reach the House floor.
Under Ms. Lawrence's plan, 14
counti es are split including
Delaware County, where she lives.
The Senate -pa ssed bill split 28
counties.
The new plan also divides
Columbus, Cincinnati and Cleveland, as well as II townsh ips.
Ms. Lawrence said the plan is a
good one hccause the districts arc
compact without distoned shapes
As many as four of the ne~ di;.
tricts might offer an opponunity fo
a challenger, she said.
r
The plan was devised by David
Horn. executiv e director of the
non-profit Center for Research in
Governmental Processes Inc.

�Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

1\Jesday, March 24; 1992

Commentary

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel

Tuesday, March 24

By The Associated Press
A mild and sunny day is on tap.
Highs today will be in the 40s
nonh and the 50s south .
But the sunshine will end
Wednesday. A strong cold frontal
system approaching Ohio will draw
Gulf moisture north into the Ohio
Valley. Clouds will increase
tonight and Wednesday. Showers
will develop Wednesday.
Temperatures tonight will range
from the upper 20s northeast to the
upper 30s southwest. Highs
Wednesday should be in the 50s
statewide with a few lower 60s

· Accu-Weathert' forecast for daytime conditions and high

The Daily

S~ntinel

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

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PIJ WHITEHEAD

Assistant Publisher/Controller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

LETI'ERS OF OPINION are welcome . They should be less than 300
words. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with name,
address and telephone number. No unsigned lette~&gt; will be published. Leuers
should be in good taste, addressing issues, not personalities.

Primary season
or open season?
By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Special Correspondent
WASHINGTON- The way things are going, Washington, D.C., may
have to get an unlisted ZIP code to hold down the hate mail.
And nobody denounces the place and its ways more vehemently than
the people campaigning hardest to get there.
OverdraWn checks and House imbalances are only the latest image
problem for a capital that has become the prime political target of 1992.
Chat with the people at presidential campaign rallies from New Hampshire to the South and Midwest and the comments are similar, no matter
the accents: they're fed up with a government they regard as remote, insular and incompelent.
Lislen to Gov. Bill Clinton, the all-but-cei'Ulin Democratic presidential
nominee:
"I'm fed up with brain-dead politicians in Washington, D.C., in both
parties.... They look like a bunch of kids in a play yard up there sometimes, pointing·the finger at each other. I don't care who's fault it is any
more, I just want it fixed."
Presidem Bush has made a re-election campaign litany of saying that
he's got the message of dissatisfaction and a progtillll to do something
about the economy, but the Democrats won't let him.
"We identify with the proleSt vote because they are saying they're fed
up with Washington, they're fed up with high taxes, they're fed up with
b1g government," says Vice President Dan Quayle.
Democrat Jerry Brown, the sole surviving challenger to Clinton,
denounces the system itself as co!TUpt, beholden to big money and special
interests. Patrick Buchanan hammered the Beltway establishment in his
campaign against Bush, now scaled back to a symbolic last stand
When there were two senators in the Democratic presidential field both quit for lack of suppon - Brown and Clinton both made an issue of
a midnight vote on a Sena1e pay raise. Before Paul Tsongas dropped out
·on Thursday, Clinton said the former Massachusetts s~nator wasn't tough
on health insurance becAuse he'd been a big money lobbyist for the industry.
Bush and Quayle are trying to capitalize on the anti-WashingtOn mood
by saying its all because of the Democratic Congress that spends its time
on perks and privileges and can't get any real work done. Democratic
-lelldcrsbllln!e intp.~!Se gi!YI!I!'I!!ftllljl on the Republican White House.
Both sides are taking a beilting in the public opinion polls. A Washington Post-ABC News survey put the job approval rating of Congress at 22
percent, lowest ever -and that was before the uproar over free checkbouncing at the now shut House bank. At the same time, Bush's approval
rating was slumping to 39 percent, lowest at this point in a White House
term since Harry S. Truman.
·
Five House Democrats have been defeated for renomination so far this
campaign; only one incumbent lost a primary in each of the previous two
election years. Democratic Sen. Alan Dixon of Illinois, defeated Tuesday,
was the ftrSt senator to lose a primary since 1980.
The voter mood has veterans trying 10 run as outsiders.
For example, when Rep. Raben S. Walker, a Pennsylvania Republican, announced his candidacy for a ninth lerm, he said;-''Washington and
big special inlerests" complain about him so he's probably doing what his
constituents want.
Sam Skinner, the While House chief of staff, said the early congressional primaries should be a wake-up buzzer for congressional
Democrats. "Enough is enough is what that message would have said on
that clock radio," he said. " ... Enough is enough."
But the frustration with Washington seems to be bipartisan. In an clec·
tion year. it can't stay that way because on Nov. 3, it comes to a choice,
one candidale or the other, one party or the other, all the way down the
ballot.
·At ftrSt, the Republicans thought they had the franchise on the latest
anti-Washington issue, the check-writing conD'Oversy. Quayle called it a
major scandal on the Democrats' doorstep. Rep. Newt Gingrich, the
deputy GOP leader, blamed it on "the Democratic machine" that has ru11
th~ House for nearly 40 years. Republicans, including Gin$fich, had overdrawn checks, too, but blamed the mess on the Democrats m charge.
Then three members of Bush's Cabinet disclosed that they had written
overdrawn checks while serving in the House. With those high-profile
Republicans on the check lis~ the edge is off the GOP attack.
Bush's appraisal:
"I think what's going to be an issue is the institution of Congress and
whether you need a change there to have more checks and balances... "

The nominations are all wrapped up
It's only midway through the
primary ·season, yet the results in
both parties are already in. Bill
Clinton is now (with one proviso,
discussed below) unstoppable for
the Democratic nomination , and
President Bush has locked up the
Republican one.
There's one thing to be said for
the primary syslem: It gives us a
chance to see the would·be nominees on the hoof. and it winnows
them with positively Darwinian
ruthlessness.
In the case of Gov . Clinton,
however, a great deal remains to be
said on certain aspects of his character, and the appalling decision
the nation's Democratic leaders
now face is whether to say it themselves and destroy his candidacy
while there is still time to pick
somebody else, or nominate him

and let tlie Republicans say it and
vaporize him during the general
election campaign.
Whalever one thinks about Clinton's war record, or rather lack of

television appearance, as a tough
babe who was probably just sore
because she didn't get enough
hush-money. When Bill and
Hillary responded by holding hands
on "60 Minules," most Americans
decided that, if a fling with Gennifer was all Clinton had to atone
for (and he flatly denied having
one, most of the facts seem to be one}, they could overlook it. Hence
out on the table now. So, too, in the his victories in the ensuing pn·
matter of his dubious financial maries.
The media, who adore Clinton
footwork, exposed recently by The
New York Times. But the swath and haled themselves for covering
Clinton cut through American Gennifer at all, eagerly took this as
womanhood, while technically evidence that American volers are
married to the long-suffering as indifferent to habitual and in vetHillary, has scarcely begun to be erate adultery as most liberal
reporters are themselves, and
explored.
He was lucky that the flfSt shoe slammed the door on any further
to drop belon~ed to his longtime revelations of that type.
That is why you almost certainflame, Genmfer Flowers. She
impressed most people, in her one ly haven't heard of the woman

William A. Rusher

VoTeRS

355 BaD

CoN6ReSSMe.N ToDaY...

ELEC

It's not "who," iCs

CENTRAL

11

What

11
;

and the answer is simple: mailing
lists. Buchanan intends, and quite
reasonably, to play a major role in
the dramatic battle over the soul of
the conservative movement and the
future of the Republican Pany that
will be waged in the years 1993- ·
1996. By amassing now the names
and addresses of voters willing to :;;
give him money and suppon, he is ~
arming himself formidably for the :
struggle ahead.
But when that hay is in the bam,
Pat will fold his tent and join President Bush on the convention platform in Houston, ready to bash the
Democrats all the way to November.
(C)1992
NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN.

Legislature mandates insurers to cover tests
Last week, the Ohio General
Assembly acted on legislation that
hopefully reduce the rate of Breast
Cancer in Ohio. After three years
of debate, it voted to join the 37
other stales that require insurance
companies to pay for or offer routine screening tes ts for breast cancer.
House Bill 142, sponsored by
Stale Representative Helen Rankin
of Cincinnati, now goes to Governor Voinovich for his expecled signature.
The warning call the statistics
sound is chilling: Breast cancer is
the number 2 cancer killer of
women (only recently surpassed y
lung cancer), striking about one in
10. Ohio has an unusually high
incidence of breast cancer deaths.
The federal Centers for Disease

Under the legislation, Ohio
health insurance policies will have
to cover diagnostic tests for breast
and cervical cancer. Starting January I, the bill would require policies to pay up to $85 for a mammography and to cover expenses
for Pap smears. The measure follows the American Cancer Socienough, breast cancer is 95% cur- ety's guidelines for periodic mamable. Mammography X-rays, while mographies.
not 100% accurale, enable doctors
Some insurance companies and
to detect cancerous lumps up to small businesses representatives
two years before they can be seen had opposed the bill 's mandated
or felt. Scientists believe breast screenings. They argued that it
cancer deaths could be reduced by would raise health-care costs and
30% a year if women, had mammo- place an unreasonable financial
grams at regular, suggested inter- burden on small employers.
vals. Clearly, regular mammograms
To address this concern, the bill
can mean the difference between was amended to permit businesses
life and death.
to avoid tacking the coverage onto
Control ranks Ohio ninth in the
nation.
Equally compelling are these
encouraging facts: If caught early

Sen. Jan M. Long

their insurance bill by providing it
as a separate bet1$Jit. As such, a
business owner cou'd simply contract directly with a mammogram
provider to screen female employees at the work site. Or the employer could directly reimburse
employees for the screening.
In the final analysis, most legislators concluded that required
insurance coverage for routine
mammography screenings will save
lives - and money - by catching
cancer early in life.
As always, please feel free to
call or write me, State Senator Jan
Michael Long, if you have any
questions or comments about these
or ally other issues My number is
(614)-466-8156, and my address is
the Statehouse, Columbus Ohio,
43215.

,
.:
· ·
· :
'
.
· ,
· · .I
.
·

Joseph Spear

Berry's World

ar

•

Tampa retiree who used his life
savings to start a group called
Throw The Hypocritical Rascals
Out, assures me that incumbents
arc on the.run. And begiMing this
summer, Jack says, he is going to
"come out with all guns blazing."
I hope you're right, Jack. If not
this year, then '96, or '00. God
willing, I'll be there. I was fortu·

.

.'

nate enough to sec sweet justice
served on Aug. 9, 1974, when
Richard Nixon de~artcd in disgrace. Hopefully, I II be on hand
when Congress is dumped and "
rcfonned.
More than that, a body just can't
ask for.
(C)l992
NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN .
"

Today in history
By.The Associated Press

~cx.lay is Tuesday, March 24, the 84th.day of 1992. There are 282 days

left m the year.
Tcx.lay's Highlight in Histll)':
~n March 24, ~882, German s~ientist Robert Koch announced in
Be~:::!ad discovered the bac1llus responsible for tuberculosis.
.'

'

In .1765, Bri!3in enacted the quartering Act, requiring American
coiomsts to proVIde .1emporary housmg to British soldiers.
~n 1883, Iong-dtstan.ce lelep~one service was inaugurated between
Ch1cago and New York.
,
In 1932, a Ne~ Y.ork radio station WABC broadcast a variety program
from a movmg tram mMaryland.
. In 1934, President ~~ D. Roosevelt signed a bill granting future
mdependence to the l'hilippmes.
In 1944, in occupied Rome, the Nazis execuled more than 300 civilians . 1
·in reprisal f&lt;!" an attack by Italian partisans the day before that killed 32 1
German soldiers.
In 1955, the Tenne.ssee Williams play "Cat on a Hot Tin Roof"
opened on Broadway w1th Bilbara Bel Geddes as Maggie Ben GIIZliiiii as
Brick and Burl Ives as Big Daddy.
'
. In 1958, rock-and-roD singer Elvis Presley was inducted into the Army
m Memplus, Tenn.
In 19'76, .~ president of Argentina, Isabel Peron, was deposed by her
country's nulitary.
• I
In 1980, on~ of El Salvldor's most respecled Roman Catholic Chulch ' I
leaders, Arthbtshop Oscar Amulfo ROIJ\ero, was shot to ·death by gwtmen
as~ celebrated Mass in San SaiYidor.
.
In 1986, U.S. !'lid Libyan ~~ clashed in the Gulf of Sidra in the
Med!!efran~. Ltbya rtred missiles that missed U.S. aircraft; the U.S. • II
n:tall'led, hillJilg twO Libyan palrol bolts and a missile biUery
•I
In 1989,tlte nation's wont cii spiU OCCurred as the~ Exxon
Valdez ran agrouad on a n:eC in Alaska's Prince William Sound and began • 'I
leaking II m1llion pllons·of crude.
,
Ten years • : ~a ~of 5.8-36, the U.S. Senate failed in its rirst
attempt to override a VCIO b~Presidelll ~eapn, upholding the president's
n:fusal to accept standby au
ty to ~bon crude oil supplies..

J

•

II

•

IToledo I 46• I
1

IMansfield I 47• I•
IND.

PA.

41°

a.

•I CokJmbus I 49° I

•

possible.
The rain threat will continue
Thursday with lelllperatures in the
SOs. Cooler air will return at the
end of the week.
Sunset tonight will be at 6:48
p.m. Sunrise Wednesday will be at
6:26a.m.
Around the nation
Bitterly cold air pushed into the
Nonheast today, making lemperatures about 10 to 20 degrees below
normal. Skies were clear across
most of the East.
Temperatures were forecast to

,
Sa.

-----Weather----

NTSB···-------

••

rn

0

Schools cutting 100 jobs

---Area deaths---

and injures 4 others

Au.ditor releases Correction
March report

Gallia/Meigs Community
Action Agency will hold free clothing day on Thursday from 9 a.m. to
12 noon at the old high school
building in Cheshire.
. Legion dinner set
Feeney Bennett Post 128 of
American Legion will celebrate the
American Legion's 74th binhday
with a dinner on Wednesday at 6
p.m. Past 8th 'District Commander
Jay Ellis will be the guest speaker.
Planning session set
A meeting to plan the Southern
I unior High School athletic banquet will be held on Wednesday.at
7 p.m. at the junior high school.
Anyone wishing to help is asked to
anend.
Auxiliary to meet
The American Legion Auxiliary
Unit #39 will meet tomorrow
evening at 7:30 p.m. at the post
home in Pomeroy.

__

.=·.w..=

~W.Va.

1/J

..

•

•

Bookmobile
· schedule. ,
aMounced
The Meigs County Bookmobile
schedule will make the following
stops this week: WEDNESDAY ~
Racine, 12 noon to S p.m., Portland, 6 p.m. to 7 p.m., THURS.
DAY - Rutland, 11 a.m. to 3 p.m;,.
Dexler, 4 p.m. to 6 p.m., Bradbury,
6:30 p.m. to 7:30p.m.; FRIDAY Tuppers Plains, 12 noon to 3 p.m.,
Success Road, 3:30p.m. to 5:30
p.m., Keno, 6 p.m.to 7 p.m.; SATURDAY - Syracuse, 9 a.m. to 2
p.m., Harrisonsville, 3 p.m. to S
p.m.

Court news

Speaker announced
Mt. Olive Community Church
in Long Bottom will have a special
speaker, Kenneth Nix of Asheville,
N.C. on Sunday at 7 p.m. Pastor
Lawrence Bush invites the public.
Free clothing day
Free Clothing Day will be held

TAX TIP OF THE WEEK

-................... . .
"$""
....,........ ......

WHAT KINDS OF INTEREST CAN
I DEDUCT THIS YEAR1

•HOM! IIOIIGAGI IITIIIIT. Y• ._
hm

ls 1•••roly toly •..t•dlWo.

llowmr, tlf IIIIIPI" 1u01 011 "'"
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llooll .. Hrorol t(flldlto WI .......

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$t00,100.
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IIcon.. lo ......... will! .
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W•tsl • low, IIIII..... 114 IIW

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...... .......
11101n"......., .......

. . . " " ' - . ...

I

on Thursday from 10 a.m. until •
noon. All area residents in need of :
clothing are welcome.

One was lined and seven others
forfeited bonds on speeding"
charges in the court of Rutland
Mayor Edward Martin last week. ·
Fined was Ronald Holter,
Racine, $54, and costs. ForfeitingGarden club to meet
The Wildwood Garden Club bonds were James Burns, Gallipowill meet on Wednesday at 1 p.m. lis, $53; Dwight James, Sherman~
at the home of Evelyn Hollon. A W.Va., $53; Blaine Friend, Wen:·
white elephant sale will be the pro- ston, $54; Rhonda Fetty, Point'
Pleasant, W.Va., $SO; Geoffrey
gram.
Cogar, Pomeroy, $52; Caner HenCoin Club meeting set
. son, Chesapeake, $49; and John ·
The OH KAN Coin Club will Glenn, Bidwell, $48.
meet on Monday at Burkett Barber
Shop in Middleport. Social hour
Divorces filed
and trading session will precede the
Divorce actions have been filed .
8 p.m. meeting. New members are in Meigs County Common PleaS .·
welcome. ·
Court by George D. Hockenbeny, .
Middlepon, against Katherine Sue
BHIHVRDD board to meet
Hockenberry, Marietta; and by .
The regular meeting of the Gregory Browning, Pomeroy,".
Buckeye Hills/Hocking Valley against Donna J. Browning, Gal-.,
Regional Development District lipolis.
. .
Executive Committee will be held
An action for dissolution of:
on Tuesday, March 31 at 7:30p.m . marriage has been granted in the ·
in the conference room of the court by Bernard D. Cole an~ .
BH/HVRDD offices, located on Shirley Marie Cole.
Washington County Road 9 in
Marieua. Combined meeting of the
. Judgments sought
audit/budget and the personnel
A judgment action has been ..
committees will be held on Tues· filed in Meigs County Common
day, March 31 at S p.m. in the Pleas Coun by BancOhio National ' ·
Rufus Putnam Room of the Bank, Columbus, against Paula K; ·
Lafayette Hotel, 100 Front Street in Bowen. Pomeroy, in the amount o{ :
$10,443.73; and by Victoria Man- ·
Marietta.
gage Company, San Antonio,
Singers to perrorm
Texas against Clyde E. Triplett, ~
The Faith Harmony Boys will Syracuse, in the amount of ·
sing at the Racine First Baptist $48,562.29.
Church on Sunday at 7 p.m.
Marriage licenses
Gardeners to meet
Marriage licenses have beer( .
The Riverview Garden Club granted in Meigs County Probate ·:
will meet on Thursday at 7:30 p.m. Coon to Orland Junior Laudermitt; at the home of Marilyn Hannum. 46, Pomeroy, and Leta Lynn Hall, .
Nola Young will be the co-hosless. 41, Pomeroy; and to Raymond :
Andrew Stcwan Ill, 28, and ChrisHymn sing set
tine Lillian Noll, 37, both of ..
A hymn sing will be held at the Pomeroy.
Freedom Gospel Mission, located
on County Road 31, on April 5 at 7
p.m ., featuring the Conqueror
Quartet. Rev. Roger Wilford, pasSPRING VALLEY CINEMA
tor, invites the pub~c.
446 4524 "" ~ .. :::
Alumni plans underway
'•
Plans are now underway for this
M&amp;actt 10 lhfu 21
year's Racine/Southern alumni
'·
rill Ol'll thr ij lHIJIISOAl l
banquet, scheduled for May 23 at 6
p.m. at the high school gymnasium .
Further information is available
from Bobbi Hill (247-4681) or
Shirley Stewan (949-2617).

Stocks

Hospital news

,......

cast to be in the 60s across most of -,
the South, the southern and cenual '
Plains and most of the Wes~ in the
70s in southern Florida aild from
western Louisiana through Texas
and into southern Arizona; in the
50s in !he mid-Atlantic stales, the
nonhem Mississippi Valley and in
the Rockies; in the 40s and SOs in
the nonhem Plains; in the 30s and
40s in the Great Lakes region; and
in the 20s and 30s in the Nonhcast.
The high temperature in the
nation Monday was 84 at Melboume,Fia.

1)

now from the funding grant to buy for the change.
A $3,146 bid on the 1946
the property and remove the
pumper of the Middleport Fire
asbestos.
The village has a Community Department from Thomas M.
W. VA
Development Block Grant in the James of Whitehall was accepted.
Council passed resolutions of
amount of $150,000 for that special
appreciation
for Jon Buck, clerkhousing project. Once the area has
ueasurer
for
the
past 12 years, and
been cleared, the plan calls for the
Tami
Buck,
his
assistant. It was
construction of six new homes for
Buck's last meeting. He did not
low and middle income families.
:
-=--:..-:..
. .·:~~
...,. ,
seek re-election. Brian Conde,
Other Business
ShoWilfS T-storms Rain Flurrlos Snow
Ice
Sunny Pt. Cloudy Cloudy
Mayor Fred Hoffman reported elected in November, will assume
that Fruth Pharmacy has donaled the duties of clerk-treasurer on
~j.!,!'tp.tr~.'l!lfW1•\III: ., r:-", ·'""''" , , , ., '1"""'-,.41-~·Woallltr. Inc. another $200 for the economic Aprill.
Atlending besides Mayor Hoff·
development fund.
It was voted at the meeting to ·man and councilman Gerard were
to low 30s. Highs in upper 30s to cancel the contract for building Dewey Honan, James Clatwonhy,
By The Associated Press
permits with Washington County Judy Crooks, William Walter, and
upper40s.
Thursday through Saturday:
and to obtain the permits through Jack Satterfield. Prayer to open the
South-Central Ohio
Thursday and Friday, a chance
Tonight, clear early. Incre8$ing the Columbus office. Fasler service meeting was by the Rev . Mark
of showers. Lows in the 30s and
at less cost was given as the reason Morrow.
highs in the ur,per 40s to mid-50s. clouds late and not as cold. Low
Saturday, coo er with a chance of 30-35. Wednesday, becoming
(Continued from 1)
showers south, a chance of showers cloudy with a chance of aflemoon
or flunies nonh. Lows in mid-20s showers. High 55-60. Chance of ond de-icing and takeoff is "a long been a factor. The safety area for
rain 40 percent
time in 31 degrees," said Christo- planes that overshoot runways is
rlii!IO:J/\L '. ':,,,I,'·,
pher Witkowski, director of the I00 feet, one-tenth of the distance
Aviation Consumer Action Project recommended by the Federal Avia"If it required de-icing in a 30- tion Administration.
In 1989, another USAir flight
minute interval, you'd think if it sat
skidded
off the opposile end of the
out there another 30 minutes , it
same
runway.
The plane, bound for
would need another de-icing.''
Charlotte,
N.C.,
slid into the East
The Airline Pilots Association
has long pressed to have de-icing River and broke into pieces in an
done near the runway, right before aboned takeoff. Two people were
takeoff, rather than at the gate. The killed.
Police divers pulled the last vicassociation also has demanded a
different type of de-icing fluid that tim of Sunday's crash- a man lasts longer than the type generally from the wreckage Monday night
Some people struggled to the
used in the Uniled States.
surface
themselves, clinging to
A quick evaluation of the cock·
pit voice recorder yielded no clues wreckage in the water. Inside the
to the cause of the crash , Lauber cabin, divers found dead passensaid. The tower cleared the plane gers head down, strapped into their
for takeoff, the crew's response noating seats. Some were charred;
was normal, and the controller others apparently drowned.
One survivor said he felt "like I
"reported the next thing he was
was born" when he staggered out
aware of was a ftreball," he said.
•
f + ••
The captain had said he was of the wreckage. "I have no time
I _!oat~ID~=~~~~~~-!.,;III~~~~~~a~·~""'~-------.....!!.!!~~!!!!!!!1!!!!:.....~ taxiing out with his flaps up so that for anger right now," said Yasser
th-.
slush would not splash ontO them, Morsi,.22, of New York.
The pilot, Wallace Majure II,
~
~ ~ EJ
e::..J. ~ but the flaps were apparently prop- ,_
......!!!!!!...!!.!!~!...!!~!!...J erly lowered for takeoff, Lauber was among the dead.
"We tried to cut him out but
said.
·
Several pilots said in today's couldn't," said diver Bill Lake.
Daily News that La Guardia's "We were working against th e
7,OOO·foot runways could have tide: '
CINCINNATI (AP)- The city trators and Supervisors, said the
school system is eliminating 100 district should have found another
administrative jobs to comply with way besides putting all eligible
a report that srud the school district contract employees on lion-renewal
Units of the Meigs County Ladonna Mintz who was taken to
was ·inefficient and bureaucratic.
status.
Emergency
Medical Service Pleasant Valley Hospital.
"It's putting them through some responded to five
About 65 administrators and
On Tuesday at 12 am. the Rutcalls for assisabout 35 clerical workers will be needless anxiety for the next tance on Monday and
land
unit went to Salem Street for
early
Tueseliminated under the plan that month," Finke said.
Melvin
Cremeans who was transday
morning.
Superintendent Michael Brandt
Tom Mooney, president of the
On Monday at 2:17 p.m. the ported to Veterans.
proposed Monday. The city Board Cincinnati Federabon of Teach=. Pomeroy
The Pomeroy unit, at 3:20 a.m.,
unit responded to Mulberof Education approved the plan said the cuts are overdue to reduce
was
called to Ann Street for Ruth
ry
Avenue
for
Helen
Miller
who
unanimously.
bureaucracy.
Francis.
She was taken to Ve1erans.
was
taken
to
Veterans
Memorial
The cuts could help save $1 0
"It may seem brutal but it is Hospital.
The
Chester
Fire Department. at
million in the next two years, necessary," Mooney said.
7:25
a.m.,
went
to New Hope Road
At
9:14
p.m.
the
Pomeroy
unit
Of the district's 276 administraBrandt said.
went
to
Welch
Town
Hill
for
on
a
transformer
fire.
Brandt said the reductions fulfLII tors, 132 work in the central office
one of the recommendations and 144 are principals and assistant
offered in September by the principals.·
Buenger Commission.
Local business executives, led Fire kills 2 children
ter, Pamela, of Plain City, and a
Melvin R. Cremeans
by banker Clement Buenger, comstep-son, Jason, of Columbus; a
piled the repon after 16 months of
Melvin Ray Cremeans, 35, of sister, Ruth A. Smith, Pomeroy;
examining the financially strapped,
Rutland
at Velerans Memorial two sisters and brothers-in·law ,
FOSTORIA, Ohio (AP) - A Hospital died
S1,000-student system.
Tuesday,
March 24, 1992. Belly and Earl Nelson of Mans"The Buenger Commission house flre this morning killed two
Born in Galha County on Aug. field, and Linda and Charles
and injured four other peo- 16, 1956, he was the son of Basil Boyles, Middlepon; and a ·brother
gave us good reason to make these children
ple.
·
cuts, and we're keeping our
aod Kathleen Buskirk Cremeans of and sister-in-law, Melvin and Carol
Fire
Capt.
Kent
Smith
said a Rutland . He was formerly Cremeans
promise to the taxpayers," Brandt
of Westerville, along
boy and g1rl were killed in the employed at the Liebert Corpora- with several
said.
aunts and uncles ,
The district is notifying admin- blaze reported at 4:20am .
tion
in
Delaware.
nieces
and
nephews.
Fostoria Community Hospital
He was a member of the Rutistrators who could lose their jobs.
Funeral services will be held at
Nursing
Supervisor Sharon Costel- land Church of the Nazarene.
Those who will lose their jobs are
1 p.m. Thursday at the Fisher
lo said Emily Cessna, 3, and Danny
Besides his parents, he is sur- Funeral Home. Burial will be in
to be notified in tale April.
Ray Finke, president of the Hayes Preble, 7, died in the fire .
vived by his wife, Patricia Fry Cre- . Miles Cemetery. Friends may call
She said the girl's mother, means; and one daughler, Melissa at the funeral home Wednesday
Cincinnati Al!soctation of AdrninisShavone Cessna, and her sons, Cremeans. at home, a step-daugh- from 2-4 p.m. and 7-9_p.m.
Kyle, 7, and Casey, S, were admit·
ted in fair condition with smoke
The Daily Sentinel
inhalation and minor bums.
IVIPIIII-1101
Preble's ·mother, Margaret
The name of a son, John Chaney
Publilbed ••Ill' ollomoon, Mondoy
Hayes, was flown to St. Vincent
•h'-'&gt; J'rido1, Ill ~ 8L P&lt;neioy,
of
Racine, was omitted from the
Medical
Center
in
Toledo,
where
Olllo lry lllo Ohio Vollll)' !r.;btilhlnr
survivors
in Monday's obituary of
she
was
admitled
in
critical
condi
•
Compuy!MaUimedia lac., Pomeroy,
The March Stale School FounSadie
Catherine
Chaney Davidson,
Ohio 457~, I'll. m-1166. Socond eiUo
tion with.bums and smoke inhala- dation Subsidy net payment to the
poolop paid at-..,, Ohio. '
80,
who
died
on
Sunday.
tion.
three districts in Meigs County
The
·state
Fire
Marshal
is
investotaled $923,287.83, aecollling to a
Mo-. 'l'llo Aloodalod - · and tile
Ohio Nowopajlft ""-iatlon, NaUonal
tigating.
report
released toclay by State
Adrll'llliq Ha,_utaH.., Brulram
Auditor
Thomas E. Ferguson.
No,.papor 8al01, 733 Tlrinl Avon••;
N"' Yen, Now 'olrrt t0017.
The Eastern Local School District
received $136,285.30; the
Am Ele Power ..................30 3/4
POSTMASTER: Sad- cha-la
'
Tbt DoiiJ llootintl, til C001rt St .•
Meigs
Local
School
District,
Ashland Oil ....................... 32 1(2
Vetera• Memorial Hospital
l'l&gt;mlnry, OHio 45188.
and
the
Southern
$374,856.58,
MONDAY ADMISSIONS - Local School District, $412.145.96, AT&amp;T................................ .40_lf2
IUIIC&amp;IPTION L\TII
.,.~ ..........to
zenia Dayo, New Haven, W.Va.; with the Meigs County Board Bank One............................47 3/8
liDo Wook. ..&lt;....... .:............................... t .IIO
Bob Evans ......................... 26 7/8
Paul Olson, Middleport; Charles receiving, $52,404.78.
liDo M•llt................................. ,........ UI
Charming
Shop ................. .31 1(2
Shamblin, Mason, W.Va.; Jack
liDo '(ur. ..................................- .. M3.20
In
addition
the
stlte
uansfemd
City
H'olding
...................... 19 1/4
IDIGLICOPY
Lance, Reedsville: Ella Dean Wat' $5,301 from Eas1em, $14,430 from
1'&amp;101
Federal
Mogul...
................. l6 7/8
naa,.......................................,_.• c.n. son, Pomeroy; and Helen Miller, Meigs and $7,393 from Southern to Goodyear T&amp;R ..................
68 5/8
Pomeroy.
the
School
Employees'
Retirement
s
]1011111-·
Key Centurion ................... 18 1/4
MONDAY DISCHARGES- System, 111d $1~,013 from Eastern,
or 11101 rollllt iD ad•u• dlroc\ Ia Tho
Lands
End........................ .36 1/4
NOlle.
SSS .058 from Meigs, and $22,897 Limiled Inc....................... 29 3/4
~ ~~i";.;ut':l.'::
Multiriledia Inc .................. 27 3/4
. HOLZER MEDJCAL CENTER from Southern for the Stale Teachers' Retirement System, as the
Rax RestauranL .................. I 5/8
DiJchlrJICS,
Marth
23
•
Luther
No '"""'"'- bJ lUll ponnllttll iD
of
the
pension
employers'
'share
anu wlloro oanjor ' oorrioo to
Robbins&amp;Myers
................ 17 1/4
Bowles, Mn. )ames CoiiCriU 111d
pQNe
program
for
Marcli,
Ferguson
Shoney's
Inc
......................
24 7/8
son, Larry Gray, DOnna Hutchinadded.
Star Bank ........................... 29
SOil, SIBOII Isaacs, Shlron Keams.
II w-.. . . - .............................m .M
Wendy Int'l.. ..................... .l2 7/8
Patricia
McCarty,
Kimberly
Van...............- ................... -...-..... .18
Ind................23 1/4
.............. _,_ .............,...__,, .11
Meter, Shelia Yeater, Frances
Jamet Meredith became ·\he first Wonhington
Stock
reports
are the 10:30
~Gollla CouCr
YOIUlg.
black student at the University of a.m. quotes provided
II w-...................-...............~.40
by Blunt,
Births, Mlrth ,23 • Mr. 'ltld MrS. MiJsisslppl, Oct. 1, 1962, after 3,000
........... ~.;................~............... .10
Ellis
and
LoeWI
of
Gallipolis.
II ................- ..............,_,_.... .40
James Powell, a tlaushter, Point troops put down rloll.
I

stay in the 20s and 30s today from
Pennsylvania through Maine.
Showers were reported early
today in Salt Lake City. Rain
caused minor flooding Monday in
Santa Clara, in southwest Utah.
Snow fell early today in Great
Falls, Mont.
More rain was forecast for
Southern California.
Thunderstorms dumped more
than 2 inches of rain Monday .in
parts of southern Florida, but no
injuries or damage were repotted.
Temperatures today were fore-

-Meigs
announcements~~
nCJ"I
(Continued
from
Cou •• " ' - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Free Clotbing Day . at the Salvation Army in Pomeroy :

EMS responds to five calls

Anti-incumbent movement takes off

I discourse today on the subjects Congress be permiued ·to write
of justice and fonune and beg you major laws to regulate our lives and
to bear with me until I can pull it then exempt themselves from those
together.
very same laws, as they have done
I have a theory about justice. as a dozen times in the past 60 years?
evinced in the world of ~olitics
Why should members of
anyway: Most of the ttmc , it Congress have huge expense
doesn't happen. In a lifetime, we accounts? Cut-rate meals and hairmight get 10 sec justice served on cuts and stationery? Free travel,
perhaps two or three occasions. medical attention, parking, postage,
Bad guys do get punished, but the
retribution is seldom sufficient or
satisfyin g, rarely pure or sweet
EDITOR'S NOTE- Walter R. Mears, vice president and colum- enough.
Which brings me to fortune, as broadcasting facilities, gyms,
nist ror The Associated Press, has reported on Washington and in luck.
That's what I surely have, swimming pools, saunas, plants,
national politics ror more t
as I am in Washington at this point picture frames? Or "banks" that
in history when members of the permit free check kiting?
U.S . Congress are about to get
Thatlastonemakestheirsufferthcirs.
ing all the sweeter. Our csleemed
I speak of the anti-incumbent lawmakers have botched the budaet
sentiment that is spilling across the and forced us into. unspeakable
political landscape in diverse cor- debt and whistled while the infras·
ners of the nation. It is not a flood tructure crumbled. But they get
yet, not even a freshet, but the tide brought to the bar of justice on a
is clearly on the rise. In Maryland, scandal that is comically piddling.
scven-lerm conservative Democrat No taxpayer funds at stake. No one
Beverly Byron was -dumped by a hurl. Just a convenient, no-cost
young moderate. In Illinois, Demo- overdrafl/free loan system that us
cratic Sen. Alan Dixon and several common folks can understand and
House incumbents lost their prima- get leed-off abouL
ry battles.
Despite the rabid tantrums of
It is years overdue. The House minority whip Newt GinCongress may have been represen- grich, R-Ga., the notoriety is being
iative qf the nation when it was shared by Democrats and Republiyoung, but it is .oo longer. It is an cans alike. Because several of
msular, privileged community that George Bush's Cabinet members
is governed by technocrats. who are former lawmakers who wrote
enforce arcane rules designed to bad checks, the scandal has
preserve the syslelll. In 1989, they engulfed both the legislative and
decided that not even creature com- executive branches. It is altogether
fons and guaranteed employment filling and proper that it &gt;Should be
were enough, so they conspired to thus. Scoundrels are scoundrels,
make themselves wealthy as well. · regardless of stripe station, and
With the $35,000 pay raise, they it is way past ume for a houseelevated themselves to the top 1 cleaning.
percent income bracket Overnight,
1 tonged for an incumbent' our precious demcx;rac:y becam~ a dumping movement in 1990. I ·
plutocracy, a government of nch mumbled inQntations knOcked on
· ~&amp;--....
Ill 1tg' b, NEA. Irot. IC.
people with rich people's agendas. wood threw coins in sitoppms mall
"SA Yl How about a 1/tlltJ Skirmish In Halt/, or
. What is there ~n. our con~titu- fountims. Nothing worked. A full
~/act, 'tH ,,. ol' approval rating gOBs
u~:k:m as ongmlily destgned 96 percent of c:onjreaior!ll incumthe governors any better"' bents were returned to otrtee.
bac/c up?"
the governed? Why should
Now my friendJ~ekOirpn, the

'

BoUNCeD

MICH.

interviewed by New York Post
columnist Cindy Adams. She is a
Texas real estate broker who
roomed with Gennifcr, in Texas, .
for two years in the mid-1980s.
According to her, Clinton visited
Gennifer there on three separate
occasions.
If you hadn't heard about her,
that is because your favorile news
sources have simply made a command decision not to !ell you. And
there is plenty more of the same
son of thing, with those in possession of the,damning facts presumably just waiting for some more
propitious moment down the road
to drop them on Slick Willie.
Pat Buchanan, it now appears,
peaked in New Hampshire, and the
number of Republican primary voters willing to vole for him to "send
Bush a message" slumped steadily
thereafler from a third to about a
quaner of the total.
Yet Pat soldiers on, vowing to
challenge Bush in the primaries yet
to come in such a key bastion of •
conservatism as North Carolina,
and even in mighty California.
Who is putting the benzedrine in
Pat Buchanan's Ovaltine?

.

Temperatures well below normal in northeast"

OHIO Wt:dtiH;r

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Tuesday, March 24, 1992

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-3 .

......

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,_,Col y•loal MIIIW olttot.lott•

H&amp;R BLOCK
'

6 I I EAST IIIII

99N674

POMIIOY

�,

..

The Daily Sentinel

Sports

TUesday, March 24, 1992
Page-..4

:· Manhattan, Notre Dame post wins.in NIT's second r~und ·
By The Associated Press
The Manhattan Jas~rs don ' t
want you to believe everything you
read in the newspapers- just what
• you see on the court.
'·
And anyone who saw _t he
Jaspers defeat Rutgers 62-61 m a
second-round NIT game Monday
·'' ·· ni~ht had to believe they were
• . rclting the truth.
"We're in the NIT and doing
the best we can, " said Chris

Williams, who scored the winning
basket for Manhattan. "For a team
like this, it's a big step."
The story version in the newspapers was a little different, however.
Earlier in the day, the Jaspers took
offense t~ a story that they were
letharg~c m an opening-round win
over Wisconsin-Green Bay because
they were thinking about the
NCAA tournament. The Jaspers
missed the NCAAs due to a one-

point loss to LaSalle in the MAAC
finals.
"That's not true," said center
David Bernsley, who had 13 points
and 14 rebounds Monday night.
• 'With where this program has
been in the past, we'll take a~y
postseason. We're happy to get m
the NIT. When we read that, we
were angry. "
In other NIT action Monday
night, it was Purdue 67, Texas
Christian 51; Notre Dame 64,
Kansas State 47; Virginia 77, Tennessee 52; Florida 77, Pittsburgh
74; and New Mexico 79, Washington State 71.
The second round continues
tonight with Rhode Island at
Boston College and Utah at Arizona State.
Williams dribbled the length of
the coun and made a layup at the
buzzer 10 lift Manhattan over Rutgcrs.
It's the firsllime Manhattan (258) has ever won two NIT games
and the Jaspars' first trip to the
quarterfinals since 1965, when it
was a 16-team field.
Rutgers (15-14) hurt itself by

missing 6 of 10 free throws in the
final2:40.
Williams' effort seemed to dazzlc the Rutgers' _team.
"On a play like that you have to
play man-to-man ~nd extend the
floor," Scarlet Kmght coach Bob
Wenzel S31d.
Purdue 67, Te•as Cbristlan_ 51
Cratg Riley scored 12 of h1s 18
points in the second half as Purdue
beat Texas Christian.
The Boilermakers (18-14) broke
the game open in the second half
by hitting free throws against the
foul-plagued Horned Frogs (23 II).
Reggie Smith Jed TCU with 21
points, but his team went scoreless
for more than four minutes in the
second half and shot just 36.7 percent in the period.
Notre Dame 64, Kansas St. 47
Daimon Sweet scored 16 points
as as Notre Dame beal Kansas
State.
Kansas State (16-14) had
advanced on an 85-74 victory over
Western Kentucky. But against
Notre Dame (16-14) the Wildcats
played raggedly and ;..,re unable 10

recover after shooting 26 percent
Pndt ~adDone ~ast cha~ce dwhen
from the field in the ftrst half.
Flon a s an ross mts~e the
The Wildcats' Askia Jones second of two free _throw~ wtth four
scored 19 points and LaPhonso secon~s rcmam_mg: ut Sean
Ellis added 15 for Notre Dame.
Miller s desperatiOn Jumper from
Virginia 77, Tennessee 52.
JUSt ms•de mtdcourt clanged off the
Br~a~t Stith scored 19 pomts nm as the~uzz~ SO!IDd~.
and Vrrgtrua's defense limned Tenew_ e:um
nessee to a season-low 32 pcrt;ent
W~shmg~l?n ~t, 71
shooting rrom the field as Vrrgmta
Steve ogan II I ~ lymg and
beat the Volunteers.
go-ahead baskets late'" ~c &amp;arne
Virginia (17-13) dominated the and Ne"': Mex1cbo swurvlh~ed 10
game with its man-10-man defense three-pomters Y as mgton
and control of the backboards. Ten- State. .
.
nessee (19-15) hit only 20 of 63
The wm gave New _Mextco \20shots in the game, includmg 12 12) a school-record s•xth stra1ght
consecutivef'isscs to open the sec- 20-wln season ~nd moved the
ond half.
Lobos ~1thm a VICtory of makmg
Virginia shot just 46 percent, the NIT s semifinals for the second
but the Cavaliers picke~ off 14 ume'" three ycarsS · ( . ) . .
offens•ve rebounds. Vrrgm1a won
. Washmgton late 22-1I • m 1ts
the overnll battle on the boards43- ftrst postseason l?umament smce
33, with Stith also grabbmg e1ght 1983, got a 20-pomt effort and s"
rebounds.
three- pomtcrs from Terrence
Florida 77, Pitt74 .
Lcw1s. Tyrone Maxey added three
Craig Brown scored 17 pOints, more three-pomters and Benme
including four free throws 1~ the ScltzeroncastheCougarsh1t IOof
final minute, as Florida beat PilL
18 shots from three-pomt range, _a
Brown, a nauve of Steelton, Pa., much better percentage than then
had 13 points in the second half for 38.5 effon overall.
Florida (18-12).

Volkov's final layup helps Atlanta win
By The Associated Press
Alexander Volkov, virtually a
man without a country since the
breakup of the Soviet Union, was a
man without a role on the A~anla
Hawks until an injury to
Dominique Wilkins gave him a

th·e injury and 5.9 befoie it.
in overtime games this season. .
chance to play.
The Hawks have fallen in the
On Monday night, Volkov
Tun Hardaway, who ]Otned With
standings since the Joss of their scored !6 points, including the Chns Mulltn to score 25 pomts
All-Star forward on Jan. 28, but game-winning layup at the buzzer, ap1ece for the Wamors, gave GoldVolkov has helped keep them in as Atlanta defeated the Golden en State a 125-124 lead on a tOthe Eastern Conference playoff State Warriors 126-125, snapping foot bank shot with six seconds
race, averaging 11.9 points since the Hawks' five-game losing streak left.
With two seconds to go, Rumeal
Robinson 's 22-foot shot missed
everything, but Duane Ferrell
tipped the ball _to Volkov, who got
of( the game-wmner m ume.
"I felt like I was all alone in the
gym and I put it in," Volkov said.
"It's just a good feeling. I used to
Flnllum: Greg Simpson, Urna Senior, 6score a lot of winning baskets in
State, scored 19.M points a $ame
l, Senior,JS.J poinll per gam e; QuintOn
the Soviet Union."
and added 4.3 rebounds and su as- foot·
Drook1, Akron Firestone,&amp;-?, Sr., 21.0, Bobby
Elsewhere in the NBA, New
Sellen , Newark, 6· 1, Sr., 19.8; Keith Gregor ,
sists for a 17-3 Newark team.
W~t Cheste r Lakota , 6-5, Sr., 18.4: Malc olm
Jersey
edged Charloue 123-120,
Rey scored 30 or more!oints Sims, Shaker Heighu, 6-4, Sr.. 27.9 : Joe Rey,
seven times and average 23.8 Cl~Ciland $1. lgnatiu1, &amp;.I 112. Sr., 2A.8; Bryant Philadelphia defeated San Antonio
Canton r.kKinley. 6-8, Sr., 19.3.
105-92 and Denver tripped Minpoints and 5 rebounds a game. He Bowden,
Second lnm: Jamie f c::Jcl., Leaington, 6-8,
nesota
100-95.
has signed with Xavier of Ohio.
Sr., 22.9; Nltc WUI:Iwme, Upper Arlington, 6-10,
Sr.,
22.3;
Land111
Hu:kim,
Cuyahoga
Fal.JJ,
j.Jl,
Stacey Augmon scored a careerSims hit for 27.9 points and 10.9
Sr.. 24.5; Damon Aint, Cincinnati Woodwud, 6-S,
high
32 points for Atlanta, includrebounds a game. Soon after notch· Jr.,
20.5: Chris King1bury, Ham ilton, 6-4, Jr. ,
ing 55 points against St. Joseph, he 19.7; Kevin Ball er, toledo St. fr1ncis, 6-6, Sr., ing the NBA's 6 millionth point on
21.6.
a layup in the second quarter. Augcommitted to Indiana.
Third tum: hy Luunaga, Toled o St.
Bowden had averages of 19.8 Jahn'l, 6-4, Jr., 20 3; DameU Hahn, Dayton Rei · moo scored 12 points m the fourth
6-3, Sr., 21.0; Sha wn Snyder, Mow\1 Ver- · period, five during a 12-0 run that
points and 14 rebounds a game. mont,
non, 6-6, Sr, 22.3; Dcon hcklon, Dayton Patt.er·
tied the game 111 -lll.lt was 114Despite weighing 255 pounds, he aon,
6-6, Sr., 22.\}, Guy MeW , E11clid, 6·7, Jr.,
2
Ll;
Dean
Rlhu,
f'arm
a
HeiJ.hts
Valley
Forge,
6also was second among the Bull- J. Sr., 19.8; B~tl Llmck, Elyria, 6-1, Jr. , 23 0; 114 at the end of regulation.
In overtime, a three-point play
dogs in assists and steals. He has Robbie Egm, C11 yahogt Falls, 6-10, Jr., 21.9.
Playtr of tht year: Grta Slmp1011, Llm1 Sc·
by Atlanta's Paul Graham tied it
narrowed his college choice to Denklr.
121-121 before Robinson hit a
Paul, Providence and CinCinnati.
Coachu or lht yur: Dnr Cady, Culon
The coaches of the year took McKinley; Phil Andmora, Xenia; Dean Wuh- layup with 27 seconds to go and
Ferrell hit one of two free throws
drastically different paths to the ln&amp;lon1Columblil Matlon·F'nnklln.
Special mention
honor.
with 21 seconds left for a 124-121
Shawn SLtnford, A\latinLown Fitch; Chester
Cady had one player with varsi- llarper, Alli•nce; Duwhan Bird, lyndhum Brush; lead.
Ry•n Sooy, Medin•; MU.e McFul111t, Eut l..iV~:T·
ty experience returning, yet went pool
Billy Owens' baseline drive
Dr.d 7..ierntr, ZanCIYille; Gre&amp; Miller, Ray·
19-1 and finished No.I in the poll. land ;Budr;cyc
closed the Warriors to 124-123
Local; Scou Damh, Rayland BLICk·
Columbus Marion-Franklin had eye I.Aictl: Jim Wherley, New Philadelphia; Cwtis with 16 seconds remaining. After
Jonca, Columbus Marion-Franklin; Juon Kent,
won 21 games combined in the Columbua
Augmon missed two free throws
Ent; Duha Jonu, Sandusky; Carl
seven years since its last winning Blanton, Tr«wood-Madiaoo; Eric 8\lrrla, Logan; with 14 seconds to play, Hardaway
Ry&amp;n Brown, Chillicothe: Kevin Drown, ChiUt·
record in 1984, but Washington led «Me:
gave Golden State its one-point
Steve Polton, lAncut.er.
the Red Devils to a 17-3 mark. Xelead.
Honorable mention
nia didn't have a basketball proRobinson and Ferrell scored 22
Bnan ~blinowaki, Manillon Peny; Brun
gram last year because a levy H.iJicy, Stow; Omu Pro&gt;~ i tt , Warren Harding, points each for the Hawks and
Da&gt;~e Usoun, Nile~ McKinley; Darnell Bru:y,
failed, but Anderson led the school Younptown
Sarunas Marciulionis had 22 for
Eut; Joe DiPuqua, Youngstown
to a 10-IOmark.
BO&amp;Jdman;
the Warriors.
Kev in Brutcn, Strongsville; Brian
The second team includes is Damulewic!,
Nets 123, Hornets 120
AmbeJil Stulc; Rodney Auon ,
comprised of six more standouts: Cl~eland John. Ha)'t lame~ Cluk. Cleveland West
New Jersey won for the 14th
John Vuyancih, Euc lid: Rollnd Hock, PuMichigan State-bound Jamie Feick Tech;
lime in 16 home games and lOOk
ma HeiJhll Valley Forge; Dan Compton, West·
of Lexington, Ohio State signee lake: Jamie Lyn:n, Wadsworth ;
over the eighth and final playoff
Wa ll Long, F.an Liverpoo l; Nate Agar, New
Nate Wilbourne of Uprer Arling- Ph.iladelp_
spot in the cooference behind Derhia; Michael Lig.htfoot. Zanesville: Eric
ton, Landon Hackim o Cuyahoga Rogers, EaR
Uverpool; Malt Knuovtch, Rayland
rick Coleman's 37 points and 12
Falls, Kevin Balcer of Toledo St. Buclr.eye Local;
rebounds against Charlotte.
Dave Culin, Grove Cay; Jeremy Guycm,
Francis and a couple of highly-re- Reynoldsbu.fi;
Trailing 103-93 early in the
1Shnm McKenztc, Columbl.ll In·
cruited juniors, Damon Flint of dependence; Clarence Royal. Gmveport Madison: fourth period, the Nets got close
Scott, Reynoldlburg;
Cincinnati Woodward and Chris CarlJon
Woolley, Elida; Chns Ireland, Findlay; with a 10-3 burst that included live
Kingsbury of Hamilton.
Olad Houkcr, Ashland; Kril Mawazcwskl, Tole- points by Drazen Petrovic, who finCalholic:; Jim Dollon, Toledo SLtrt
Here's the 1991-92 Associated do Cmtnl
Teddy Adams, Mid dletown: Keith Blanken· IShed with 22.
Press Division I All-Ohio boys bas- lltip.Hubcr Hci&amp;}lll Wayne; Tom Moun, Beavct·
A jumper by Dell Curry put the
ketball team, selected on the rec- ert.el; Darid Peltz, Orcc:nville; Verdell Rawls , Hornets
ahead 110-105 with 5:57
Aiken; Dertk Shufcr, Cincinnati Col·
ommendations of a stale panel of CinciMati
main ;
to
play
before
New Jersey took the
sports writers and broadcasters:
Chid U~KC~In, Muiellt ; J oe lhnnlna, Lolead for good with a 10-0 run that
pn; Kmny Muck , LancaiLcr.
Division I
included Tate George's six free
throws.
76ers lOS, Spurs 92
Nuggets 100, Timberwolves 95
In men's events, John Miller unavailability of its track.
posted a distance of 60 feet, II
Most of the teams will travel to
inches in the hammer, and 35 fee~ Bluffton on Saturday, March 28 for
8-314 inches in the sholpul. Team- a quadrangular match with the host
mate James Johnson was 38 feet, school, Wilmington and Mount St. ·
one inch in the hammer and fin- Joseph. Other segments of the
ished at 34 feel, 10 inches in the teams are scheduled to participate
shot. Miller threw the javelin for a in a half-marathon at Walsh the
distance of 86 feet, 10 inches, and same day to qualify for the nationboth he and Johnson finished in the als.
discus. Johnson hurled the dissc
'(
130 feet, one inch and Miller
recorded a toss of 96 feet, nine
inches.
·
Slale Auto's already
low premiums can be
Cannon completed the long
·
TRAiN
I.
O
R
'ump in 20 feet, three inches, folreduced even more by
MONEY
owed by Dan Longcay at 17 feet,
ini!Uring bolh your car
six inches. Tim Murphy went 15.8
MAKING
and home with the State
seconds in the 110 meter high hur(AREER IN
Auto Companies.
dles, 58.7 seeoods in the 400 meter
COSMETOLOGY
intermediate hurdles, and six feet,
Let us tell you just
four inches in the high jump; Jason
Available
how much your savings
Weeks finished the intermediate
to
Those
Who
Qualify
can be.
hurdles in 1:01.1.
•Approved
By
Ohio
State
In medley compelilion, the distance team of Brelsford, Cline,
Board of Cos1metolo
Benson and Chris Smith finished In
10:56.2, and the two-mile relay
consistins of Smith, Marc Michigan, Rob Rld•bauah and Courtney
Hurchinson posted a time of8:22.
The 800 meter relay of Cannon,
214 EAST MAIN
Brelsford, Weeks and Bryan
Specht was t:37.8. The mile relay,
POMEROY
wilh Specht, Michigan, Hutchinson
8112·6687
and Brelsford, wasJ:~ .97 .
The competition marked the
first meet of the aeason for Rio
Orande, and wu boated by Marshall Unlvonily, wblch switcllod
the_event to CharlcslOII clue to. the

Three SE Ohio cagers named
to Division I all-state team

INSIDE BASKET -Texas Christian's Reggie Smith (center)
goes airborne to tbe hoop between Purdue's Cornelius McNary and
Brandoa Brantley during Monday night's National Invitational
To11mament second-round game in West Lafayette, Ind., which saw
tbe host Boilermakers won 67·51. (AP)

Scoreboard

I

NBAaction

Smythe Dl,blon
y · V1ncouv~ ......

EASTERN CONFERENCE
Tea1n

Atlanik Dhitlot~
W L

Pet.

1J
30
37
38

.627
.565
.456
.449
.449
.319
.250

New Yot. ..............42
Boston .................... 39
New Jersey ............ 31
Miami .................... JI
Jlt!iladelpria ........... 31
WuhinJIDn ...... .... .. 22
OrWulo ............ .... .. 17

38
47
51

4022 11
.d nsAngdes ... 34 2l! 13

91 265219
81 27 1277

Winnipeg ........... 28 32 14
Calgary ............. 273610
SanJ01c .......... 17 52 S

70 222225
64265283
39 197327

cdmoo100 .......... 34 12 x 76 214m

GB
4

• ·clinched pbyoffbenh.

11 .5
12
12
21
25.l

y·woo division title

9.5
15
22S
23
2S
2B

Pitllhurgh at Oelroit, 7:35p.m.
S111Jose at New Jcney, 7.35 p.m.
N.Y. Rngm at Philadel phia, 7:35
p.m.
N.Y. IIlanders u Quebec, 7:35p.m .
Hartford at Wuhingtrrt, 7:35p.m.
Vancouver at Minnesota, 8:05p.m.
Edmonton at Calgary, 9.35 p.m.

Monday's scores
Boston 7, San Jose 6
TM)nto 3, SL Louis 2

Central Dh·b:lon
z-Chie~go ............. .Sti

13

.812

~:.Citwland --..45
0ecroiL ................. ..41
Indiana ..................34
Allan11t ................ .33

21
28
36
36

.A2
..594
.486
.478
.448
.403

M.i.lwtllkce ............. ID 37
Charlotte ................ 21 40

Tonight's games

Wednesday's games

WESTERN CONFERENCE
'·

Toronto at Buffalo, 7:35p.m.
Philadelph11 at N.Y Rangen, 7:35

Mld.,•t Dh,l&amp;lon

Team

W L

PeL

Utah ...................... .4!1 23
San Anl0nio...........42 26
H01.11trrt ................ .37 32
Dcnve: ................... 23 45
DtUu ..................... l1 S2
MinnciOLt .............. ll 57

.662
.618

3

:536

I .S

.338
.246
.162

22
28.5
34

Gil

Padtk Dlri.llora
Pon.iand ................ .48 20 .706
Golden State ..........44 23 .657

3.S

PhoaW; ..................44 25

.till

4.5

Sc.aale ................... JI 31

.551
.SJ6
.522
.319

10.5
11.5
115
26.5

L.A. Oippm ......... 37 32

L.A. Laken ........... .35 32
S1cnmmla ............ 22 47
J.-c:linched play&lt;if balh

Tonlgbl's games

Wednesday's games

~atNewJ~y, 1:30p.m.
lndW\1 a\ Wuhinaf,on, 7:30p.m.
C~..tand ol Orludo, 7:30p.m.
Sin Atlonio 1\ Ow\clue, 7:30p.m.

Oaldcn S&amp;lleat DabUt, 7:30p.m.
Miami at
p.m.
l'lll~llt UIOh,l pm.
Mil
ce at Phot:nik. 9:30p.m.

ww..oc...

NHL action
Pltrkk DhitiM

TW L T I'll OFOA
•-N.Y. ttona•- 4123 S 9930!233
91
79
79
71

3112!12

31! 2ill
U4 23.1
227:14!
?0 2622ill

Ad.-91 242!6
2!41U
-76
Ill 267 27~
51 223251
45 22S 294

CA'MPBELL CONFERENCE
N.,..Dh_

t-

W L T I'll GF.CA

a•Dalll _ ........ 3115 II
a-cw.,t .......... 33 271~
.-~~. Loilll .........

n

.........,.

r -..:.........

N~w

Mu ico 79, wishington Stste 7!
Tonlaht'•

a•mn

!Op.m.

Quarterfinals
Wedntlday'Jutlon
Manhatlln (25·8) al Nolie Dame (16f1Drida (\8·12) YJ. P'utdlle (18· 14) at

a

lndiatupolil, p.m.

Wednesday or Thunday
Vir£inia (17-1 3) va . TDA, at ctmp\11
li\.CI
N~w

Mexico (20-12) Yl. TDA , at cam·

puasir.a.

Transactions
Baseball

American Ltaaue

ClJ!VELAND INDIANS - Optioocd
Mike Chrillopher, pilchcr, to Colon do
Sprinp ot the Pacific CoUl Lague. Sent.
Jeue Levit, catcher, ltld Wtyne Kirby,
oulfiellkt, to their minor leap c1mp for
~iln_mmt.

WALES CONFERENCE

·
~--_ n
~Ill
,..·_--..
______
lito9
•·luft'olo - ..... 29 33 II
·-----·"" 23 3112
. a.-......
-..... 1745 II

Virgtnia17, Tcnnts.~oe 52

ManhatLtn 62, Rutgers 61
fl orida 11, f"ill.ibu.rRh 74

14), 7:30p.m.

OdandoaNew Yori, 7:30p.m.
lllllllflllll Clnelaad, 7:31p.m.
Dam:ralChicap, 8:30p.m.
OanuatPonland, tO p.m.
HCIUII.OtlatSeaalc, 10p.m.
Milwaukee 11 Sammano, ID:30 p.m.

422!1 1
3.1 29 9
34:1111
30 3211
30 33 10

Monday's 1cores
Purdue 67, Teus Christian 51
Notn: Dame 64 , Kansas State 47

ULth (21-10) 11 Arizona St.ate (19-13),

Atlanta 126, Goldan St•t.e 125, ar
lllmvar 100, Minncacu 95

•.w~ .. -

Second round

MINNESOTA TWINS - Sr.tt MILitO
o.u.. pildlcr. D•&gt;~• PokCotly, outfidd·
er; and Danny Sbetffer ..0 Jay Owm.s,
eak:heic, to lhelr minor t . p CIUI_lp for
t«Warunent. Optioned Shawn Gilbert,

Infielder, al\d Mikt Tto~~~bley, Ocorae

r ..ma. ~nd Rab "•ICINiu, pitchm. 1.0
PorUand of the Paciftc Cout Leap_
TOIIONrO BLUB )AYS - IJi&gt;tioocd
Dornlllao Martina, int'l&amp;l.du, AI Leiter,
phebcr, •nd Iandy Knorr, euchcr, to
SJfiCUIO of the lnklln•UDIIII Leap

Nalloftal tape
MONTREAL EXPOS - OptionM
Dave Wainhouae anrd Man Mayaey, pitch·
en, and Rob N1W, ca1d\er, to IndW!apoUc of the American Madldm..
NEW YORK METS - Optioned
Julla1 Vuqucz, pi~. &amp;1:1 Binafla:nlton of
tho Eallcm La1a11e, and Eric Hillm an ,
~her, tO TidtWitet of W lrucmuional

?J.ftsnUROII

PIRATES - Sent

17 295242
10 231230

Dtn. Cladt
O..U.,,
outfieldm, to
_
_ enll
_TJ_
r... -..,...,

lt '17 ,. 61 211i""
21 " 1 63 2lO w

IAN DIBOO PADIES - N•mod
Mario ICIIo D-'dm JqNblic IICOOiinl

n n to

.

RG teams set new.records at meet

(17-13),8 p.m

New Jmcy 123, 0\arlottc 120
Philaddphia I OS, San Antonio 92

.......... ..........
-l'l&gt;il """
·-ldr*h- ......
N.Y. ..........

NIT action

Rhode Island (21 ·9) 11 8011on CoUege

Monday's scores

..

p.m.
Mootrulat Wmrupcg. 8:35 p.m.

By RUSTY MILLER
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Greg Simpson, who scored 35.3
points a game while leading Lima
Senior to the state tournament, is
the player of the year on the 199192 Associated Press boys Division
I All-Ohio basketball team announced Monday.
Simpson, a 6-foot-1 senior
guard headed for Ohio Sta,tc ,
wasn't just a scorer. He also added
6.7 rebounds, 5.6 assists and 3.1
steals a game for the Spartans, who
will meet Canton McKinley, the
No.l-ranked team in the final reguJar-scason"JllII, in the state semifinals Friday afternoon at St. John
Arena.
Three coaches shared big-school
honors in the state: Dave Cady of
Canton McKinley, Xenia's Phil
Anderson and Dean Washington of
Columbus Marion-Franklin.
The individual honors and the
teams themselves were selected
based on recommendations made
by a state media panel.
Joining Simpson, who was
Ohio's 1991 Mr. Basketball, on the
first team were Akron Firestone's
6-7 Quinton Brooks, Newark's 6-1
Bobby Sellers, 6-5 Keith Gregor of
West Chester Lakota, 6-1 1(2 Joe
Rcy of Cleveland St. Ignatius, 6-4
Malcolm Sims of Shaker Heights
and 6-8 Bryant Bowden of Canton
McKinley. All are seniors.
Brooks scored 21 points a game
to go with 9.6 rebounds and 3
blocked shots for Firestone. The
Michigan State signee led his 24-2
team into the other semifinal bracket against Lakota (22-4). Lakota is
led by Gregor, a 6-5 Cincinnati recruit who scored 18.4 points a
game. Lakota was runner-up in the
state last year to Cleveland St.
Joseph.
Sellers, headed for Colorado

711 259l!4

=='I ...,

While both of the University of
Rio Grande's track teams finished
sixth in Saturday's Early Bird
Relays at Laidley Field in
Charleston, W.Va., several new
school records were set by the Bob
Willey-coached athletes.
Melissa Carpenter, a senior from
Patriot, set a new standard in the
hammer with a distance of 65 feet
two inches, while Renee Peck fin:
ished the 5000 meter run in 17:40,
also a new record.
The finish also qualified Peck, a
junior from Baltimore, Ohio and
recipient of two All-American honors in indoor track, for the NAIA
Outdoor Track Nationals set for
May 21 -23 at Abbotsford, British
Columbia.
The women's distance medley
team bf Peck, Bonnie Evans, Debbie Gray and Ginger Smith fmished
in 13:37.6 far a new record, as did
the sprint medley team of Peele
Smith, Crystal Patrick and Ki~
Sowers, which completed the event
in 5:14.9.
'f!le _men's sprint medley group,
constsung of Chad Cannon Chad
Benson, Brian Brelsford and Mark
Cline, also set a record &amp;13:40.4.
In other women's events, Carpenter finished the shotput with a
distance of 29 fee~ one inch. Sowers completed the long jump with
15 feet, 11-114 inches, and evans
finished 19:00.4 in the SOOO meter.
The two-milo Jelay team of Oray,·
Smith; Palric:t and Angie Creas fin·
ished in II :22.2.

_____ _

,....

AUTO

•'

.,. ,

H

E

l

~ .........

.....,-·~·

·--- - --~

TUeaday, March 24, 1992

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Toronto tabbed to win AL East again; Tribe picked last
By GEORGE ROBINSON
You don't have to be a genius to
figure_ out that if every ream in the
Amencan League West finished at
.500 or better last season, it means
they fattened up at the expense of
th~ AL I;as_L This year the East
* ''III.Oi:e;illf:«he same,-with the ··
standings looking much as they did
a year ago.
The ·projected order of finish
(and managers) in the AL East in
1992: TO
1·
RONTO BLUE JAYS
(Cito Gaston): 2. BOSTON RED
SOX (Butch Hobson) ; 3.
DETROIT TIGERS (Sparky
Anderson); 4. BALTIMORE OR!OLES (Johnny Oates); 5. MILWAUKEE BREWERS (Phil Garner); 6. NEW YORK YANKEES
(Buck Showalter); 7. CLEVELAND INDIANS (Mike Hargrove).
Here's why Toronto (91-71,
first in 1991) will finish first

Joe Carter had an unfamiliar
experience last year, playing
important games in October. It's
something he'd undoubtedly like to
try again . With this talent-rich
team, he probably will.
It starts with Carter (LF), with
his .273 average, 33 homers and
108 RBis. He has an outstanding
pair of table-setters in CF Devon
White (33 steals, 110 runs scored)
and 2B Roberto Alomar (53 steals,
.295 Avg.).
Most important, however, is a
pitching staff that led the league in
ERA, saves, hits and runs allowed.
Now it's bolstered by Jack Morris.
Here's why Boston (84-78, tied
for second in 1991) will finish second:
Regardless of what Boston does
this year under Butch Hobson, the
firing of Joe Morgan was wrong.
All Morgan did was keep the
Bosox above the 80-win mark for
three years with a pitching rotation

held together with baiting ·wire.
Hobson inherits a team with a
more stable staff, thanks to the
addition of Frank Viola and Morgan's development of young pitchers lilce Kevin Morton and Mark
Gardiner. But the bullpen needs a
decent setup man.
The middle infield could be
shaky, depending on the (status) of
phenom Tim Naehring (SS). Wade
Boggs (3B) turns 34 on June 15.
Here's why Detroit (84-78, tied
for second in 1991) will finish
third:
It doesn't pay to count . out
Sparky Anderson. But it remains to
be seen how much more he can get
out of a geriatric rotation led by
Frank Tanana, Bill Gullickson and
Wah Terrell. Tiger pitchers were
12th in the league in ERA last year.
· Still, the fencebusters- !B
Cecil Fielder (44 HRs), C Mickcv
Tctlleton (31 HRs), RF-DH Rob
Deer (25 HRs) - give the team

clout. Expect a lot of 12-10
thrillers.
Here's why Baltimore (67-95,
sixth in 1991) will finish fourth:
Having a healthy Glenn Davis
(!B) will make a big difference to
Baltimore this year. So will the
new ballpark. And a radically
revamped pitching staff.
or course, the same old Cal
Ripken wouldn ' t hurt. After all,
Rip had'a pretty good season in
1991 - 34 HRs, 114 RBI's, '.323,
an MYP award and a Gold Glove.
And, once again, he played in
every single game.
Here's why Milwaukee (83-79,
fourlh in 1991) will finish fifth:
If you can stop DH Paul Molitor
(17 HRs, 216 htts, 133 runs) and
keep the rest of the Brewers in
rehab, you can beat Milwaukee.
Maybe adding "Scrap Iron" Phil
Garner at the helm will toughen up
this oft-injured crew.

He still will need some help in and send George Steinbrenner
the bullpen (lOth among AL pens hoine? For the answer 10 these and
in ERA, eighth in saves). If pitcher other questions:...
Here's why Clevellmd (57-105,
Teddy Higuera is healthy and censeventh
in 1991) will fmish last:
ter fielder Robin Yount bounces
Well, moving the fences out
back, you can move these guys ·up
sure didn't help. This club retoOled
a notch or two.
Here's why New York (71-91, for speed last year. The result? Last
in the AL in: stolen bases, stolen
fifth in 1991) will finish sixth:
Actually, the Yankees could fin- base percentage, runs scored and
ish anywhere from second to sev- on-base percentage. Of course, they
enth. There are that many unan- were last in homers, 100.
At least the beleaguered Indian
swered questions.
Can the Yankee soap opera go pitchers (4.23 ERA, .276 oppofrom a Stump to a Buck and find nents' bauing average) didn't give
happiness? Can Danny Tartabull up many homers either.
(OF) imitate Joe DiMaggio? Can
The latest youth movement Don Mattingly (!B) come back spearheaded by CF Alex Cole, 2B
from another painfully disappoint- Carlos Baerga, C Sandy Alomar
ing season? Can Pat Kelly play sec- Jr., and OF Kenny Lofton -looks
ond base in the majors? Is Roberto promising. But we've heard that
Kelly (CF) going to be a big star?
song before. Of course, they are
Who will pitch? Are the young moving the fences back in.
starters any good? Who will play
(C)1992
NEWSPAPER
third? Will someone buy the team ENTERPRISE ASSN.

Chicago picked to pass Oakland, Minnesota in capturing AL West
By GEORGE ROBINSON
In the past seven years, AL
West teams have won six American League pennants (including the
last five in a row) and four World
Series. This season the Chicago
White Sox will become the first
team other than Oakland or Minnesota to win the ti~e in this talentrich division since 1986.
The projected order of finish
(and managers) in the AL West in
1992:
I. CHICAGO WHITE SOX
(Gene Lamont); 2. MINNESOTA
TWINS (Tom Kelly); 3. OAKLAND ATHLETICS (Tony
LaRussa); 4. KANSAS CITY
ROYALS (Hal McRae); 5. TEXAS
RANGERS (Bobby Valentine); 6.
SEATTLE MARINERS (Bill
Plummer); 7. CALIFORNIA
ANGELS (Buck Rodgers).
Here's why Chica~o (87 -75 ,
second in 1991) will fmtsh first
If Frank Thomas (!B) isn't the
best ballrlayer under 25 in the
majors, I d like to meet the guy

who's better. Put Robin Ventura
(3B) at the other comer, the perennially underrated Ozzie Guillen at
short and Steve Sax at second, and
you have one of the better infields
'"baseball.
The young pitching staff is
improving rapidly and the bullpen
(led by Bobby Thi_gpen) had the
best ERA of any rehef corps in the
AL. They'll miss Carlton Fisk, but
Ron Karkovice is an excellent
defensive catcher. The end of Bo
Jackson's career is unfortunate, but
the disappearance of the media circus surrounding him can only be a
plus for the team.
Here's why Minnesota (95-67,
first in 1991) will finish second:
It really is hard to defend a
world championship, particularly in
a division so deep that every team.
finished at .500 or better last
The Twins pitching staf (second in the league in ERA, fifth in
opponents' batting average) won it
all for them last year, and they have
added John Smiley (20-8) to

fear.

replace Jack Morris.
Shane Mack (RF) and Chuck
Knoblauch (2B) give them a
formidable top of the order. Kirby
Puckett (CF), Chili Davis (DH) and
Kent Hrbek (1 B) can knock in the
runs. The defense is excellent, second in the league in errors.
Here's why Oakland (84-78,
fourth in 1991) will fmish th:ird:
This is not the feared powerhouse of two or three years ago.
Bob Welch was gettin_g cortisone
shots during spring trruning. Dave
Stewart is 35, Dennis Eckersley 37.
Tbe young pitching is a year or two
away.
Third baseman Carney Lansford, who came back too soon from
his skimobile accident, is a question mark at 35. Mark McGwire
(!B) hit .201 with only 22 HRs last
year . Jose Canseco (RF) is a
volatile slugger.
Here's why Kansas City (8280, sixth in 1991) will finish
fourth:
When George Brett (DH), the

Royals' senior citizen, arrived for
spring training, he didn't know
anybody in the clubhouse. Well,
almost. This is a radically-changed
Royals ream, with a lot of unhappy
faces departed.
Some ex-New Yorkers are looking forward to the change in
scenery. Hal McRae won't have
any trouble motivating Keith Miller
(2B) - the manager is the kind of
guy for whom even Greg Jefferies
(3B) and Kevin McReynolds (RF)
might play tough. But pitching is
the big question.
Here's why Texas (85-77, third
in 1991) will fmish fifth:
The most explosive offense in
baseball is yoked to the wildest
pitching staff in the league. Well,
the Rangers are never dull. Adding
Dickie Thon at shortsrop in the offseason means the Rangers have a
hauing order that is solid from top
- ageless Brian Downing (DH),
Julio Franco (2B), Rafael Palmeiro

rN SQ

By The Associated Press
Dave Winfield is starting to
warm up for the season.
This year, Winfield has moved
on to Toronto to perhaps finish a
career that will land him in the Hall
of Fame someday.
At Dunedin, Fla., on Monday,
Winfield drove in a pair of runs,
including a homer, and Todd Stoltlemyrc became the first Toronto
starter to go six innings this spring
as the Blue Jays outlasted the St.
Louis Cardinals 11-10.
Winfield, 40, enters his 19th
major league season with 406
home runs and 2,697 hits. Playing
in the SkyDome should help him to
add to those numbers.
"I'm looking forward to this
year," Winfield said. "I think this
team has a great chance to go all
the way."
Last year, Winfield hit .262 with
28 homers and 86 RBis in 150
games for the last-place California
Angels.
Winfield, Devon White and
Roberto Alomar hit home runs for
the Blue Jays, while Stottlemyre
blanked the Cardinals on five hits.
St. Louis made things close with 10
runs in the final three innings off
left-handers Ken Dayley and Bob
MacDonald.
Tracy Woodson drove in three
runs with a double and a homer for
the Cardinals, who outhit Toronto
15-13, but made four errors.
Royals 6, Dodgers 2
At Vera Beach, Fla., George
Brett drove in four runs with a double and a three-run homer as
Kansas City beat Los Angeles and
Ramon Martinez.
Expos 8, Mets S
At Port St. Lucie, Fla., Chris
Nabh!llz pitched six strong innings
for Montreal and Bret Barberie and
Arci Cianfroceo hit home runs.
Red So• 21 Reds 2 (13)
At Winter Haven,' Fla., Boston
starter Frank Viola shut out Cincinnati on two hits over five innings
and the teams ended in a tie after
13 innings.
Orioles 51 Yankees (ss) 2
At St. Petersburg, Fla., Juan
Bell and Brady Anderson each
drove in two runs and Storm Davis
allowed-one run in four innings as
Baltimore defeated a New York
Yankees split squad.
Yankees 10 (ss), White Sox 2
At Sarasota, Fla., Scon Sander. son pitched five shutout innings
and Jesse Barfield had three hits ;
and three RBis as aNew York split
squad routed Chicago.
Raneers 4, Twtas 3
.
AI Fori Myers, · Fla., Kevm
Reimer hit a two-run homer in the
ninth inning-to cap a four-run rally,
lifting Texas past Minnesota.
T[Jen 7, Pirated
At Lakeland, fla,, Cecil Fielder
drove in tl!rcle runs as Detroit edged
Piltsburah. ·
·
Atbledcs4, Indians 3, (12)
At Tucson, Ariz. Oni~o Hill's
solo homer off Jeff Shaw In tho
12th inning lif~ Oakland over
Cleveland.
.
Giants T, Allpll4·
At Palm Springs, ca)[f., Chris

LIFORNIA
•
•
••

L.A. GETS BID-John Bryson, chairman of
the Los Angeles-Pasadena bid committee, speaks
to a Los Angeles audience Monday aher learnIn~ that Pasadena's Rose Bowl would be one of

nine sites In the United States selected for the
1994 World Cup. The venue for the finals wiD be
announced later. (AP)

Pontiac Silverdome, Rose Bowl
among 1994 World Cup sites picked
By RONALD BLUM
AP Sports Wri.ter
NEW YORK (AP)- Nine U.S.
cities were selected Monday as
sites for soccer's 1994 World Cup,
including the Pontiac Silverdome
in Michigan, the ftrst iadoor stadium in the history of the tournament.
Foxboro Stadium outside
Boston and the Citrus Bowl in
Orlando, Aa., were picked, as were
Solider Field in Chicago, the Cotton Bowl in Dallas, the Rose Bowl ·
in f'asldena, Calif.•~iants Stadium
in East Rlltherforil, NJ., Stanford
Stadium outside Sat\ Francisco and
RFK Stadium in Washington.
"The decision in ·the Florida
cities was the toughest we had to
make," World Cup .USA chairman
Alan Rothenberg said
.
Orlando won cut over Joe Robbie Stadium and the Orange Bowl
in Miam'l, and Tampa Stadium,
partly because of the facilities
available to tourists in the Disney
World area.

Each site will ~et four firstround games and ~tght of the Qine
are likely to get second-round
games, according to Scott LeTellier, chief operating Qfficer of World
Cup USA 1994 . FIFA will
announce in July which cities get
specific games. Dallas, Detroit, Los
Angeles and New York are bidding
for the final, the most-watched
sporting event in the world.
Giants Stadium, the Silverdome
and possibly Foxboro Stadium may
require fields narrower than the
110 yards-by-75 yards required by
World Cup rules. FIFA general
secretary
Joseph
Blauer
sidestepped questions about dimensions, saying only that the fields
would conform wath soccer's more
liberal overall rules, which allow
fields as narrow as 70 yards for
international matches.
"For FIFA, it was a must to
play in New York," Blatter said.
'We could nol bring .the World
Cup to the United States and not
play in New York."

: Unavailable specialist delays DibJ&gt;Ie's exam
PLANT CITY Aa. (AP)-The
Cincinnati Reds hope to gel~ better
idea today whether Rob Otbble's
. sore shoulder is just a minor injury
. or a major problem.
· The rcbever was Scheduled to
have an MRl of his rjght shoulder
Monday at a Tampellospital, but
the eum was pushed baclt to todal
because an anesthesiologilt wasn 1
, available.
. Manager Lou Piniella said Dibble has to be scdllfNI for the exam
· because he's c~bobic: Ma$netic resonance imagmg is done m
a chamber.
.
"Ho'a been scheduled for two
' othen In the ~ and never showed
" for tbom, • Plnlella Slid,_n:fcr' filii to OXIIIIIIhll-had been scheduletllast lllf(Rg.

Piniella said that the club
doesn't think th~'s .anrd!ing serio~sly wron$ wtth Dibbles shoulder. The nghl-hander has complained of tightness this spring, and
· his statistics indicate something's
wrong.
·
Dibble has an 8.10 earned run
average and has walked seven in 6
213 innings. He's also struck out
seven over that 1{11111·
The Philadelphia Phillies scored
four runs off Dibble in I 2/3
innings lut.Thunday, prompting
Dibble to sec Los Angeles team Dr.
Frank Jobo in Vero Beach on Sunday. JoborecommendotltheMRt
Dibblo lllled orr in the ICCOIId
half of 1991, PI 3-S with a S.l3
ERA.
·

!'!&gt;"··-

-

Y~

---. - -

(!B), Ruben Sierra (RF)- io bottom.
Texas is barely mediocre on
defense (13th in the league in
errors), except for brilliant young
catcher Ivan Rodriguez. The
Rangers have the added disadvantage of a staff that gave up 662
walks and allowed opponents to hit
.262. When these guys play
Detroit, the final scores will look
an NBA game.
Here's why Seattle (83-79, fifth
in 1991) will finish sixth:
In the AL West logjam, unfortunately, the young Mariner talent
goes unrewarded. If Kevin Mitchell
(LF) stays out of trouble in the
clubhouse and off the field, his big
bat should help protect Ken Griffey
Jr. (CF).
The Mitchell deal was a calculated risk, of course. It leaves Seattle a little thin in the pitching
department. If young arms like
Dave Fleming and Mike Remlinger

emerge, theM's could finish a couple of notches higher.
Here's why California (81-81,
seventh in 1991) will finish seventh;
If you were expecting miracles
from the Whitey Herzog-Buck
Rodgers connection, then the winter meetings were almost as disappointing for you as they were for
Whitey. With Wally Joyner and
Dave Winfield gone, the Angels
will have even more trouble scoring runs than they did last year,
when they were 13th in the leagUe.
A great rol8tion (Chuck Finley,
Mark Langston, Jim Abbott) and
bullpen (Bryan Harvey) will keep
them in a lot of games. But the
Angels arc the opposite of the
Rangers. Put their pitching with the
Texas offense and you have l)le '27
Yankees; reverse the combination
here and it's the '62 Mets.
(C) 1992
NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN.

New Blue Jay Winfield helps push
Toronto to 11-10 win over St. Louis

.

.

••

The Dally Sentinel-Page 5

Giants Stadium and the Conon
Bowl will conven from artificial
turf to grass for the World Cup. In
addition, grass will be put over the
field in the Silverdome; an exhibition game probably will be played
there next summer to test the surface, LeTeJUer said.
U.S. organizers originally preferred 12 sites, the most allowed
under World Cup rules. Using only
nine sites will save at least $10 million, LeTellier said.
Twenty-six communities originally applied for the 52-game tournament, which will be played from
June 17-July 17, 1994. Eight were
ruled out in December. The othe(S
who were not selected included
Atlanta, Columbus, Denver,
Kansas City, Miami, New Haven,
New Orleans, Philadelphia, Seat~e
and Tampa.
Denver, Miami and Philadelphia
were eliminated from consideration
because the National League would
not permit the baseball teams in
those stadiums to make road nips
of lon$0' than 17 days. Denver and
Miama were awarded NL expansion franchises last June.
"There's no question our
thought processes underwent different thmking after major league
baseball made its expansion decisions," LeTellier said.
There is a possibility the games
in Washinron may be moved from
RFK Stadium to th,e new stadium.
the Redskins are planning to construct. If the stadium gets a goahead by June, LeTellier said
Washington would be allowed to
bid for the final.
The World Cup's opening round
is -divided iilto stx ·groups, of four
reams. Two groups will be assigned
to lhRo-city cluster~ and ettch team
will play its tJuee llrll-round games
in at leaat two cities. Teama will
not be assigned to apeeific areas
until the draw in December 1993.

,..

James had tliree hits and drove in
four runs to help San Francisco
beat Jim Abbolt and California.
Cubs 4, Padres 2

At Yuma, Ariz., Jose Vizcaino
singled home the winning run in a
three-run eighth as Chicago rallied
to defeat San Diego.

Jacoby returns to Indians
When Lansford returned,. the4 &lt;\thlctics had no more need for 1ac06y.
Jacobr said his agent, Joe Bil:Jc,
was talkmg to Hart about anotlter
player when Jacoby's name caine
up.
:
"I was kind of surprised, being
that they were committing themselves to a young ream," said Ja¢oby.
.
'
The infielder said he had no
guarantees of any playing lime litis
year, but said he should know
something by March 31.
:
"''d like to hang on a couple ;of
more years, but I never try to g~
what management would do," ~e
said.
:

. TOCSON, Ariz. (AP)- Veteran infielder Brook Jacoby is back,
and the Cleveland Indians are
happy about it.
·
With injuries hindering the
development of rookies Jim Thome
at third base and Reggie Jefferson
at first base, it appears Cleveland
will count heavily on Jacoby when
the season opens.
On July 26, the Indians traded
him to the Oakland Athletics for
two minor-leaguers - outfielder
Lee Tinsley and pitcher Apolinar
Garcia.
However, the Indians signed the
32-ycar-old Jacoby on Jan. 24 as
insurance al ftrst and third.
"You never know how things
are going to work out, do you?"
said Jacoby.
The Indians open the season in
Baltimore on April6.
''The injuries certainly make us
look hard to Jalcc," said Indians
general manager John Hart. "It's
obviously to his advantage. With
his experience, if he has a good
spring, he can help us."
Jacoby is hitting .350 (7-20) in
10 spring games. The .271 career
hitter only batted .213 with no
homers and 20 RBI when he was
with Oakland.
Jacoby attributed some of his
past problems to a sore right elbow
that had been bothering him since
1990.
"When I extended my arm to
throw it hurt, and when I swung at
a pitch away I could feel it," said
Jacoby.
He had surgery on the elbow
this winter to remove bone spurs
and repair a loose ligament.
Oakland had acquired Jacoby to
flU in for Carney Lansford while he
was recovering from knee surgery.

Pirates cut Clark, ~
Gainey from roster;

. L'
FORT MYERS, Fla . (AP)
The Pittsburgh Pirates cut two !or
their hottest spring hillers, Daile
Clark and Ty Gainey, leaving lhtpn
with 34 players in major league

camp.

:

The outfielders went sent M~­
day to the Pirates' minor leag!e
camp for reassignment. Both afe
likely to start the seasoo with CIIIIS
AAA Buffalo.
:
Clark, who signed as a minor
league free agent in January, was
hitting .263 and was lied (or ~
team lead with two homers. Hiss~
RBis were second on the team tb
Orlando Merced's nine.
~
Gainey was hitting .500- 4 fer
8 -. with one RBI in limited pla~­
mgume.
•
Gainey, 31, last played in the
majors for Houston in 1987. C~
29, played part of last season foj'
Kansas City after spending th~
entire 1990 season with the Chicll,'goCubs.
~

'

NEED TO LOSE INCHES, OR JUST TONE UP?
HAVING TROUBLE EXERCI$1NG ON
YOUR OWN?
HERE'S YOUR ANSWERI
.We have seven toning tllbles working to trim
away i~ches, relieve stiff bones and muscles,
or just tone up that winter body.
ARTHRITIS SUFFERERS find great relief after
just one visit.

Spring into Shape! ·

FIT&amp; TRIM ·
,

Comer of Main &amp; Butternut
POMEROY, OHIO
992-3033
(We have extendld ow hours to MrVt you blaw)
Mondly thN FrldiY, 8:00 A.M. to 7:00 P.M.

-

.

·~

'

�The

By The Bend

The Daily Sentinel

•The Area's Number I
Marketplace

'

Tuesday, March 24, 1992

Page-6

Ill children should be left a home Tornado Safety Awareness Week;
Dear Ann Landers: I can't
·to;····--·;
...........
tell you how many times my husband and I have gone to a family
galhering with our two children only
to find that other family members
have shown up with children who
ANN LANDERS
:re ,j ;J.
"1891, Loll A.qelfA
are iU.
'Jim,. Syadlcale
•
The parents stand there and tell
ere-.
Syadlcale."
me how ill their child has been and
how much tlley spent on medicine.
While they're telling me this, I see
What you can do is
"::
their sick child toddle up to my your children are inoculated against
daughter and plant a big kiss on her measles, whooping co.ugh and
mouth. Two days later -- surpnse! anything else that might be
My daughter comes down with tlle going around. In this day and age, it
exact same illness and my doctor is inexcusable not to protect your
prescribes the same medic me.
children against communicable
The last time we got together, d.
JSeases.
two families showed up with the1r
Call you local board of health for
glassy-eyed kids -- one runntng a more information. In many places
fever and the other scratchtng the inoculations are free.
himself like crazy. You guessed it.
Dear Ann Landers: What do you
The ,fQ!lpwing day, tllose children think? A guest dropped in unexi&gt;ectwere diagnosed with chicken pox edly and said he had just eaten. It
and a few days later my child had tt. was near dinner time and I asked
I realize that chtldren eventually my husband to put some pork chops
are going to come down wtth on the grill for the two of us.
illnesses but why anyone would
The last time this guest dropped
knowingly expose other people's in, he drank 15 cans of beer. This
children to their sick kids ts a time he brought a case of beer with
mystery to me. Why don't they stay him. 1 was pretty sure he wasn't
home and take care of them? Right going to leave until the case was
now I'm so mad I can't see straight. finished, and 1was geuing hungry. 1
Am I being unreasonable? -- SICK served some cheese and crackers and
OF SICKNESS !N MISSISSIPPI
asked my husband again 10 Slart the
DEAR MISS.: When inconsider- grill.
ate relatives or fnends brin~ sock
At tllat pomt the guest left and 1
kids to family functions, there's not was told by my husband that! had
much you can do to protect your insulted him. He hasn't spoken to

Ann
Landers

:~

"

m-, since and that was four days ago.
Was I real! y rude? Please print
this letter. My husband reads
your column every da~ and thinks
you're a smart woman. -- E.H. IN
DEERFIELD BEACH, FLA
DEAR DEERFIELD: You did
the right thing. When guests drop
in unexpecredly at mealtime and
BMounce that they have e&amp;WI, it's
perfectly OK to proceed with
your own dinner. The cheese and
crackers were quite enough for him
to nibble on.
The case of beer was a tip-{)ffthat
the guzzler had planned to make a
night of it. You were not in the least
bit rude to suggest that your
h
·•·
usband slart ""' griD. Four days
of silence suggests that "Mr.
Wonderful" has a serious attitude
problem. I hope you will hand him
this column when it appears in the
paper and ask him if he recognizes
anyone he knows.
Gem of the Day: Those who nee
temptation often manage to leave a
forwardmg address.
Planning a wedding? Whar's
right 1 What's wrong? "Tht Ann
Lande rs Guide for Brides" will
rel~eve your anxiety. Send a selfaddressed, long , business-size
envelope and a check /Jr money
order for $3 .65 (this tncludes
postage and handling) to : Bridu,
cto Ann Landers, P.O. Box 11562,
Chicago , Ill . 606/ I -0562 . (In
Canada, send $4.45 .)

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - Wildwood Garden Club will meet on Wednesday
at I p.m. at the home of Evelyn
Hollon. A white elephant sale will
be the program.

TUESDAY
· POMEROY - Ohio Eta Phi
Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi Sorority,
will have its Ritual of Jewels Tea
jjn Tuesday at 6:30 p.m . at the
1\l&gt;me of Susan Clatlc. Bring a cov·
ered dish. Meet behind Pomeroy
.Fire Station at 6: 15 to park and
ride. All members attend.

RACINE - A meeting to plan
the Southern Junior High School
athletic banquet will be held on
Wednesday evening at 7 p.m. at the
junior high. Anyone wishing to
help is asked to attend.

HARRISONVILLE • HarlisonviUe Senior Citizens will meet
Tuesday at the townhouse. Quarterly birthdays will be observed with
potluck dinner. All members urged
to attend. Bad weather will cancel
the meeting.

MIDDLEPORT - Feeney Bennett Post 128 of American Legion
will celebrate the American
Legion's 74th birthday with a dinner on Wednesday at 6 p.m. Past
President Commander Jay Ellis
will be the guest speaker.

THURSDAY
CHESHIRE - Gallia/Mei~s
Community Action Agency woll
POMEROY - American Legion hold its free clothing day on ThursAuxiliary Unit 39 will meet Tues- day from 9 a.m. to 12 noon at tlle
day evening at the post home in old high school building in
:Pomeroy.
Cheshire.
: POMEROY - A planning mcet:ing to organize a reunion of Sugar
Run School graduates wiU be held
,Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. at the Meigs
·County
Chamber
of
:commen:e/Park District Office on
:Seoond Sueet in Pomeroy.

LONG BOTTOM - The
Riverview Garden Club will meet
on Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at the
home of Marilyn Hannum . Nola
Young will be the co-hostess.

POMEROY - Preceptor Beta
Beta chapter of Beta Sigma Phi
: MIDDLEPORT - The Middle- sorority will meet on Thursday at
:port Arts Council will hold a begin- the Episcopal Parish House for a
:liers Texas-style dance class at its lasagna dinner. All members are
chambers on Tuesday at 7 p.m. urged to attend.
1€ost is $7 per couple. Call 992·2675 for further information.
CHESTER - The Chester Township trustees will hold a special
: POMEROY - Free clothing day meeting on Thursday at 7 p.m. at
·will be held at the Salvation Army the town hall: Appropriations for
:iii Pomeroy on Thursday from 10 1992 will be made at this time.
,a.m. until noon. All area residents
·in
need of clothing are welcome.
POMEROY - The Meigs CounI
ty Women's Fellowship will hold
: RACfNE - Racine Ruritans will its monthly meeting at Pomeroy
:hold their meetin~ on Tuesday at 7 Church of Christ on Thursday at
:p.m. at Star Mtll Park . Dtnner 7:30 p.m. Janet Bolin will be
spealung about AmeriF!ora '92.
: ~erved.
The public is invited:

.

Auxiliary discusses benefits
'

' ' A ssoo donation to the Middle~IIOd Fire Department to go towards
the purchase of fireworks for the
.,July 4 celebration was made by
:~y-Benneu POll 128, Ameri·
Logioballn,at a recent meeting

and midget wrestlers.

Delegates and alternates to
Buckeye Boys State were selected
by the post The delegates are Tim
Baker and Bill Glaze of Meigs
EHigtetnh
SchAoo1, and Pat BKe&amp;rr!ngerLamof
aalbe .
as . 1tematesare vm
[ The post has for· many years bert and Charles King. 'Orientation
~
ihe rll'Mlen and Middleport was announced for May 3 at 1 p.m.
I illiF Council in sponsoring the
Henry Clatworthy announced
! ftmlolb display.
that he is worlting on a bus tour to
l 1be .u~aal Poll Everlasting Jel'• , a Cincinnati Reds game in late
I Vi* were held in remanbrance of June. He said that the cost includ·
I dec:elled pollt members over the ing transportation and tickets will
;.lt _year. Ia the 1roup wete be about $40 8 person, and asked
. Qulilll Bndbury, RoiCOe Rou1h, that anyone interested contact him '
&amp;vereu Bachner, Hugh Hanson, sinceonly40_scatsareavailable..
Walw Men:cr,1ohn A. Bryan, and
Changes 10 veterans' beneftts
•es.tel Hotrman,
was discussed. It was noted that
Recopition wu alv~~ to Jay . eve markers which have beeri
IIlia 'MIG w11 praenied UIC gold
will now cost $88.
ward for child welfare, the 100

·C

=

l

Spring is a time for new begin·
nings. Maybe it is time to commit
yourself to the completion of the
degree you've been thinldng about
for so long. You may be closer to
completion than you think.
Ohio University, through the
Office of Adult Learning Services,

Harrisonville area happenings
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Cotterill
and daughter, Barbara Cremeans,
recenOy visited their daughter and
sister, Catherine Domigan and family of Woodbridge, Va., near
Washington, D.C.
Mrs. Russell Eshelman has
received word of the death of her
brother-in-law Joseph Casteel
Columbus.
'
'
Mrs. Nellie Lowe, Ruth, Jeremy
and Alicia visited Mrs. Lowe's sister, Helen Young and husband,
Elkview, W.Va.
Sue King is recuperating at
home from surgery at Holzer Medical Center.
Nancy Phillips has reopened her
store in Pageville.
The Harrisonville Senior Citizens are announcing they have
quilts for sale or will do quilting
for individuals.
Duane and Hazel Stanley
recently visited his brothers, Dale
and Denzle, and wives, in Albany

:W.• hiJh In atate membership
~lllle diatricl commander. The
,_, from Pist ~bnent

~iii....-ilii
. ill s.n Bamey:vr-

Curiel Carr reponed that
==-~ 11M been !lllde for a
~ llllldJ 10 be
• die Lellan annex 01 April
~ 'Jlle piOJIIDI include lady

will

. Kathy Amott was chosen Assoi:tate of the Store for March at
Fisher's Big Wheel in Pomeroy.
Arnott worki at t'iie service
dealt. Her name will be added to
the Alsocialcl of lhe Sm plaque in
the 1101e.
She bu been employed with
Big Wbeel for six and one-half

brochures will be provided to Ohio
elementary schools," Kelso said.
"In addition, 011 will distribute
copies to adults thrqugh local
insurance companies and agents,
community groups, local Emergency Management Agencies, and the
news media. Distributing the
brochures is one segment of the
statewide tornado safety program
launched by public and private
organizations.'
In conjunction with the
brochure, elementary school students are encouraged to participate
in a Tornado Safely Poster Contest
sponsored by the Ohio Committee
for Severe Weather Awareness.
Ohio has enjoyed a relatively
low number of tornado occurrences
in recent years. according to the
011. The brochure suggests safe
shelter areas in homes. schools,
cars, mobile homes, or large shopping facilities. "During past Oh10
tornadoes, many elementary school

and were dinner guests of Steve,
Julie and Emily Stanley, Albany.
Bessie Graham and Emma
Chapman are residents of Overbrook Center.
Greg Taylor has moved to Florida and the Taylor property 1s for
sale.
Joey King and family have
moved to Corn Hollow Road in
Rutland.

News notes
Long-dormant Mount Vesuvius
erupted in A.D. 79, burying the
Roman cities of Pompeii and Hercu!aneum in volcanic ash, with a
loss of some 20,000 lives.
Soviet dancer Alexander
Godunov defected in 1979 while
the Bolshoi Ballet was on tour in
New York.
Broadway librettist Oscar Hammerstein II died in 1960 in
Doylestown, Pa
.

makes it possible for students to get
college credits for learning they
have acquired in jobs, in volunteer
activities or in hobbies, through the
creation and presentation of a portfolio. This credit, which is both
more time and cost effective than
credits earned in the classroom, can
be applied to a degree, shortening
the time and expense necessary.
A four-hour course, EDCE !02,
that will help adult students compile a portfolio of their learning
will be held on the Athens campus
beginning Saturday, April II. The
class will also be held in other
locations this spring in Lancaster,
in Belmont and in Cambridge.
Over 1,100 adult students from
southeastern Ohio, perhaps friends,

children directed their parents to
safe shelter, recalling information
contained in the tornado safety
brochure," Kelso continued.
The brochure also explains
weather terminology, such as the
difference between a tornado
"watch" and a tornado "warning".
Copies of the brochure are provided as a public service and are available free by writing the 011, P.O.
Box 632, Columbus, Ohio 43216.
Members of the Ohio Commitee
for Severe Weather Awareness
include : American Red Cross,
National Weather Service, Ohio
Departments of Education and
Health, State and Local Emergency
Management Agencies, and Oil.
The 011 is a trade association
representing insurance companies
and agents groups for tlle propertycasualty insurance industry. Its
objective is to help Ohioans
achieve a better understanding of
insurance.

and Grafton Wine and Berea College s~ler Loyal Jones will be

~~~ur c=~:~ ~~~ga

W h'
'hO A .I h'
ors 1P wu
ur ppa ac tan
Heritage: Giorifyinl and Enjoying
GodDainteAspapalacreAhpiart'l 21 and 22 at
Cd L k C f
C
e ':!'- lea ew Von erence enter
near '-'1~ y, • a. .
'fl!e.conference IS ~.bY
Coaltuon for Appalachtan Mm-

MON. thru FRI.

• Ad• outlide CaUia., Muon or Meifl;l counties muat be prepaid
• Reeei.,.e dUcount for ad• paid in advance.
1 Free Ad.: CiYe.away and Found ad. under 15 word1 will be
run 3 daya a&amp; rw charge.
1 Price of ad for aU capital letter• U double prK:e of ad coal
• 1 point liM type only uted
• Tribune ia DOl rapontible for erron after fir~t day (check
for errort f~rtl. day ad runt in paper). Call before 2:00p.m.
day afler publication t.o make correction
1 Adt that mut be paid in a.dvan~:e are:
Con! of Thonb
Happy Ado
In Memoriam
Yud Sale.
1 A clu.ifted ad•ertitement pia~ in lhe Gallipolil Daily
Tribune (exeepl Clutified Dilplay, Bwine.t1 Card or Legal
Nolicet) will abo appear in the Point Pleatant Regitter and
lhe Daily Sentinel, reachins onr 18,000 home.

relatives and neighbors.of yours,
have taken advantage of this program since its inception 13 years
ago.
They have earned an average of
30 credits each, and some have
earned the maximum of 48 credits-lin entire year of college work.
Many have now graduated and
some have gone on to graduate
school.
Credits earned tllrough tllis program do not necessarily have to be
in the your major field. To find out;-.
more about tllis program and to dis-::
cover if it wijl work for you, ask ":
for our free brochure or contact Sue
Boyd in Adult Learning Services. ;
Ca!l593-2J50 in Athens. or 1-800- ;
444-2420.
"•

Public Notice
CASH BASIS COMBINED
ANNUAL FINANCIAL .
REPORT
For tho Ftacol Yoor Ended
December 31, 1181
COUNTY OF MEIGS
"Thlolo on unaudlled
Ananclol Slalamonf'
GOVERNMENTAL FUNO
REVENUE RECEIPTS;

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

Monday Paper
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Wednesday Paper
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67 5-Pt. Plea1ant

367-Cb..hi•e

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985-Chetter

458-Leon
576-A.pple Grove

843-Porllond

773- Muon

247-Letart Fall•
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BlfLIJETIN BOARD
BUllEnN,BOARD DEADLINE
4:30 P. M. DAY BEFORE
PUBLICATION

•

clerk then told the officers he!
wasn't sure of his identification. •
Gregory began cursing the offi-f
cers, police reports showed, andi
continued even after Sgt. Larryl
Richards arrived and told Gregory:
he was free to go.
•
Lt. Russell Smith said a sman:
crowd began to gather while Gre-:
gory berated the officer who picked'
him up, contending that the onl~
reason he had been detained was.
because he was black,
;
Gregory "was shouting and!
cursing at us - we had no choiceo
but to arrest him," Smith said.:
' 'Then we told him he could be:
released on a city court summons.:
but he refused to accept the sum ~
mons.''
•
Gregory, issued a summons on:
charges of disturbing the peace,:
was held for more than six hours;
before being released early Sundayf
police said.
.:
•

937- Bufl'alo

Servlcoa.............. 4,588,348
ConaervalionRecrealion ............ ...37,488

Aerial
Photography

ftOWOPE"
MYSTIQUE'
TANNING

By

M&amp;M Fleet
Homes, Farms,
Business, Other
Day (614) 446·9814
Night (614) 446-4406

1Yz Mi. out New

Ll•a·Rd.

Nol Repaid.............. 54, 139
Advanceo-Oul
Not Repaid............ 198,124
Other Financing
SourCBI ............... 1,864, 111

Other Financing

u..........................170.093

TOTAL OTHER FIN.
SOURCES........... ! ,828,420
Exc. Rcpts.ISourcea Over

(Under) Diob. and
Other Uooo ............887,071
Fund Caah Balance
Jan. 1, 1991 ........1,648,787

41- Howe. for Rent

Trudu for Sale

42-

Vant &amp; 4 WD'•

Mobile Homet for Rent
43- Far•• for Real
44- Apartment for Rent
45- FurnUh.ed. Rooma
46-- Spaee for Rent
47- Wanted lo Rent
~EquipMent for Rent
49- For Leate

\11 1\( .11 \\111.,1·.
St- Ho.... bold Good.
52- Sportins Good.
53- Antique.
~

Mite. Merchandi.te

'.

Motorcydet
Boall &amp; Molon for Sale

Auto

p.,,. &amp; A.,.,.,oriOII

1\.ut.o Repair
C.mpinA: Equipaent

po
Plumbing&amp;: Heatias
EKc.. atins
Electrical &amp; Relt·~•n•lio~
General Hauling
Mobile Home Re~ir
87- Uphobtery

al oi ~fiMII.

bedroom a, aome carpel &amp; paneing ,gess
fiXOI'..UJl1181'.
$8,000

I

••
••
••
•'

•
••

••
I•
•••

'o{itr'-7

I

••'

_
~

fll

,

,··

,..,

.

1;

-

$45,000

'

llobUo Ho011 DnlJ"IG75 14 x 70 Naahua home with 3
bedrooms, corpel a paneling, tolal electric heal. lndudea
• 10' deck. .
.
Aoldna S7.000
.
MAKE AN OFFER I .

2/20ml3mo.

'l(atfiryn

Meatf.ows
"SPIECIIlUZING IN SLATE
OR CANVAS"
39815 Gold RlclgoRood
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Welcome Slates

$20.00

742-2138

Custom Pointing•
614-182-2242

BISSELL &amp;BURKE

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS

CONSTRUCTION

Specializing In' C.uslom
Frame Re~air

·•New Homes
•Garages

· NEW &amp; USED ARTS
FOR All MAKES
&amp; MODELS

.fiEQISTER
Hill: ......- 10- pm
Fe&lt;-lnloCIIl

1·800·848.0070

114112/t

I I

REASONABLE RATES

992·7013 or
992·5553
OR TOLL BEE

•Complete

Remodeling
Stop &amp; Comp•re
flEE ESTIMAtES

985·4473
667·6179

DARWIN, OHIO
7/3tf91/lfn

mo.

,,,

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

614-985-4180 Lot ........
Alt1r 6 p.nL
Call 985-4192
1-1..1 mo pel

REMOVAl

2-7·92-tfn

AUTO

•UGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD

BILL SLACK

'

IWOII,wr.
Speclalhl•t Ia

,...........
E•LY'S Ante

We tum

goOII

NDI Ropald............118,58!1&gt;

Other Financing

Revanua .............. S,B06,B11

Sourceo............21,793,797
Other Financing
·~
Uoeo .................. 19,153,&amp;21
TOTAL OTHER FIN.
,,
SOURCES........... 1,1167,988
Exc. Rcpii.ISollrCM Over
(Under) Diab. and
-·I
other uaoa... __ , 1,061;&amp;93,
Fund Cuh Bolonco
·:
Jon.1,1tt1 ........ 2,113,03to
Fund Cooh Bolanco ,
. .,
Dec. 31 ' 1181......3, 174,732
Rea. for Encumb.
Dec. 31, 1991.........319,231
FundCuh
"
Bolllflde...............3, 101 .o:tt
Caah on Hond........3,252,8;
Lou Out.landing.....151,
TOTAL
'
BALANCE...........3, 101,032
I certily thlo report to be
correcland true, to the belt
of my knowledge.
1
William R. Wlcldlqe

TOTAL
RECEIPTS ........10,932,015
DISBURSEMENTS:
l.ogiolotivo ond

Ex.cutive ............ 1,2B0,021

Aud«Qr

County of llekll

Boxs~.

Pomeroy, Oh, 457U
614-1192-26.
(3) 24, lie
:a

MICROWAVE OVEN
•nd VCR REP.AIR ·.:

WANTED
Old Currency Deted
Between t861·1929.
Especially Netional
Bank Currency from
any atete. Paying
$300.00 and up for
apeciflc pleee• from
Racine, Pomeroy,
Middleport and
Ravenawood.
PETE SIMPSON
Evening•
1~14-764·21 01

TEAFORD'S
COUNTRY CLUB
6,...;. otloll lossoos

ALLUIIS
:
Iring II I• Or We
Plclt !!!•_
:

KEN'S APPUANCE'

SERVICE
992·5335 or
985·3561

Acrtaa ,,.. Peot Oftlco
217 E. loco.. Sf.
POMEIOT, OliO

3fl3l9

.~ '

'· ;'\ ~-

,£::···'
GQt,_•c.oo

'&lt; \ \

.a.h •••14
I ' "*'..Iw.KI4
· ·'="'i:~·loslolhll &amp;

-::~~-

Staor Tr......

46387 Scout Camp Rood
C'-tlr, Oh.
:111111211 mo.

Co•pltttA8to

up•ollttry.

and

lniO

!Yt~, .. ihlt ..LI

••h

ALSO COIIPLEII AUTO
REPAII SEIYICI ~ 24
HOIII'IOWIII.

992-2269
USED RAILROAD TIES

1·304-773·9560

U.'t2;1- pd.

6·1

SUN'S UP
TANNING

TROMM
BUILDERS

II•• U•• loatl
In htlalHI

-New Conatrucllon
-Remodeling
-Cablnel Wort
-Commercial·
Re•ldential
FREE ESTIMATES
20 Yeara Experience

IS Snllolls.'25.00'
12 Snlloll..___ _ _'20,ot
6I Stsoloos..---'12.011'
,151)o

s,,....____

fRU SESSION WitH MRT·;

RIN£WAL

St••ai k!Hs of iatltls
SCA WOlff lfDS
.•
t/1711 - ·

2·28-1 mo.

T&amp;M BUILDERS

Haward LWrltesel ::

Boat Pr• a Sorvl.. for
Poat Frame Gorogn a
Borne

ROOFING

NEW - REPAIR ·•1

Chalcaol12colora •
eliclng or rolup .,_

1llndord:8u~tlled

'

CALL 742·2771

614·742·2328

'
Gutters
"''
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

IIIII

30tdi0 /lrOIMd for

II~.:.~~~
Gowll,!f¥d

FREE ESnMATES

"· Local
Salesma•
742-2012

949·2168
3Nt2lt mo. pd.

3-16-1 mo pd

•

&amp; TREE
TRIM and

.~.

AdvM'icea-Out

Receipll .............2,564, 715
All Other

"'

'

.\TTE:\ TIO \

E,XCAVATING

\ l i dlll l ,\ l) l tlthl ·

\ l lt l t

BUUUDOZER,BACKHOE
ond TRACKHOE WORK
·
AVAILABLE.
'
SEPnC SYSTEMs,
HOME SITES ond
TRAILER SITES,
LANOCLEARING
DRIVEWAYS INSTALLED
UMESTONE-TRUCKING
FREE ESTI~Ii\TES

ll il llll

( hlllll"

I iT".·

'

992-3838
•

'

EXCAVATING
BUUDOZING

Quall'y
. Stont Co.
SIZED LIMESTONE
FOR SALE

WE'RE THE HOMETOWN CONHECnON FOR OUT OF
TOWN IUY!IIS AND LOCAL 111!108 COUNTY SELL·
ER8. IF YOU WANT TO OET THE WORD OUT... UST
WI1H IIIII
.

I:

•I

•

REDUCE)). Middleport• An elegant home on a level lot
whh a 2.. aoreae, large Iron! porch, attic atucio with sky
· light V81Y weU lnaulalod. OWNER ANXiOUS TO SEll!

I

•

1

"

!•
I

service

NEW USnNG· A 2 unit aparlmenl ooildl~ . Great rental
in-lmenl both unlla cumonlly rented. GOOd mcnthly in~ , 1 ·:r r:·
Aeldfta
tt•:n000, ,
~~
1..,. .fr
· ' ~lnii.OcK QAO'i£. '1 112 aiDry log loot'r home. 3 bedrooma, corpel, equipped ki!Cheri, llQi'ch a deck on 100 x
200 loL
$21,10o llollun atml .

II

••
•

For mo"' inlor1JWion call the
lnternJI Jleftnue
at
1-800-8:19-10&lt;60.

4 roorite, 2
heat:Anice

BEAUTIFUL SPUT LEVEL, frame oonsl!UCI8d hamel 9
room I , 5 bedroom1, 2 baths. Includes deck, garage, woodbumer .45 ocre In Riggs Crest Subdivision. ·
'
$88,500

••

Even if you do not owe any tax, you
might still get money back.

=·

POMER~t OHIO

NEW usnNG- 1floor tranie cabin type

I

You may qualify for the Earned
Income Credit1f in 1991 you:
• Earned less than $21 ,250 from a job,
and
• Had a child living with you for more
than 6 months .

Family
BMUI

-y1-4ipm

•I

I

Ole

614-892·2549

Call372-1697.,
1-800-531-1440

II. lOWosl, A...... Olio •lll·31ll

~T

•
I•

•

INTERIOR &amp; EXTERIOR

-·-Ill

3-15-'92-1 mo. pd.

MAR. 24, 1:00 pm Cfooo
MAR.=-- Jla.lllh

608 EAST. f4AIN

LINDA'S
PAINBNG &amp; CO.

ll. lO West, Alit,.. Olio •S93-311l

"fREf fllii&amp;ITEr~ ........

Public Notice

Public Notice

Jucicial......... .,,.,, .......427,354
5oUrCII ............ 19,929,686 Public Saloty............. 482,230
Other Financing
Public Worko ...-....2,061,5tt
Uooo ..................19,781,383 Hoofth .....................l ,561,247
TOTAL OTHER FIN.
Hum•n
SOURCES .............. 148,303
Servicea..............4,588,398
Exc. Rcpii.ISourceo Onr
Conoorvotion- .
(Under) Diab. ond Other
Recroation,, .............37,488
uaoo ....................... 148,303 Miacollanoous.......... 413,331
Fund Cnh Balance
Capit.l
Jon. 1, 1991-......... 411 ,146
OuUoy....................919,214
Fund Cuh Balance
Bond Principal
Dec. 31, 1991......... 559,449
Poym.. l.. ....-......... 17,400
Reo. for Encumb.
Nolo Principal
Dec. 31, 1991................-0Paym.. l.. ...............50,000
' TOTALS
TOTAL DlSBURSEREVENUE RECEIPTS:
MENTS .............. 11 ,838,2t0
Taxn ................. ..... 1,980,032 EKe. Recpll. Ov•(Under)
Chargeo for
Oiob.....................(906,275)
Servicet ................. 500,598 Operoting Tranofera
Licenaooand
ln ............................665,433
Permlt.......................3, 148 Operating Tranofera
Fineo and
OuL ........................ 393, 195
Foofellureo...............76,711 Advonco-.-!n
lntergovarnmental
Not Repald .............. 54, 139

Yoor~fiJt~'Jt.,

•olot• Londlcaplng
Top Solllllulc!Ong

WAKE Ell'S

Plus I FREE

M{trc"" Ta....U.,..

•
•'

'

Public Notice
Uaes........................... 1,849
Fund Cuh Bllanco
Jon. 1, 1991..-...........3,876
Fund Cuh Balance
Dec. 31, 1181.. ...........5,725
Reo. for Encumb.
Dec. 31, 1181................ -4AGENCY FUNDS- ·
Other Financing

•rah J111 Paltt Oo!t 01 Pllntlng
-lot Us 0.11 for y.,•

awn M1lntenanoe

Your Lotal Tril"BiU DHler

COAL
LIMESTONE
AGRICULTURAL
LIME

74~·2341
15 Sessions.... ~S

Exporioneo llao
'in

992-2259

OW' Sprine: Slalpmen• Of
Troy.Udt 111en Now Ia Sleek.

Ow- Spring Sblpm"'l Of
Troy- Blii'IUien Now In S.oek.

HAULING

Hrs. 8-10 MoL tlr• Sat.

•••
•

TROY-BI£1'

TBOY-BI£T

•••I•••· o111o

7:00
~:.,.!ob It

----......

~

55- Building Supplie~

37637 Wesl Shade Road

CWTS
................
MAR. 21,
fl., - r"

I

Oul ............................6,16V
Other Financing
Uaeo ...........................2, 144
TOTAL OTHER
AN. SOURCES.......(8,293)
Exc. Rcpii.JSourcoo Over
(Under) Dlob. llfld Other
uaea .........................24,470
Fund C•h Balance
Jan. t, 1991 ............. 49,230
Fund Cooh Balance
Dec. 31, 1181...........73,700
Ru for Encumb.
Dec. 31' 1991 ................901
NON-EXPEND. TRUST
FUNDS
OPERAnNG RECEIPTS:
All Other Rovenue........ 2,311
TOTAL
RECEIPTS .................. 2,311
OPERATING
DISBURSEMENTS:
Exc. Rocpll. Over (Und•)
Dlob.....- .................... 2,311
NON-OPERATING
REV. (EXP.) ·
Advonceo-Out
Not Replld.....:.............462
TOTAL OTHER
AN. SOURCES..........(462)
Ellc. Rcpt.JSourCM Ovor
(Under) Dlob. and Other

Miacellaneoua ..........413,331
Copllal
Fund Cash Balance
Oullay.... ,................919,214
Dec. 31 , 1991. ..... 2,535,858
Bond Principal
Roo. for Encumb.
PaymenL .................17,400
Dec. 31, 1181 ......:!'318,329
Note Principal
FIDUCIARY EXPENDABLE
TRUST FUNDS
Paymenl ..................50,000 RECEIPTS:
TOTAL OISBURSE·
All Other Revonuo......32,763
MENTS ..............11 ,838,290 TOTAL
Exc_ Recpla. Over( Under)
RECEIPTS ...............32,763
DISBURSEMENTS:
Dlob......................(941 ,349) Ex c. Recpta. Over (Under)
OTHER FINANCING
Disb............... ,,.........32,763
SOURCES (USES):
OTHER FINANCING
Operating Transfers
SOURCES (Utes)
ln ............................665,413 Operating TranoferaOperating Tranafera
ln ..................................... 20

IROLLIY SIII'ION

1he IRS lltUf have
• lo $2,020 fcir .,.ul

Operating Tranafer•-

Advancal-ln

us1ness
Services

FOR WORKING FAI'AIUES

...... Dl I

18- Waa...tToDo

Public Notice

Public Notice
Oul ........................387,026

•

•

'

ll- Help Wono.d
12- Situation~ Wanted
13-- Inaurance
14- Buinul Trainill@
15- Schoolt &amp; ln~truction
16- Rad)o , TV &amp; CB Repair
17- Mitcellaneow

3-- Announcemcm~
4- Giveaway
5- Hoppy Ado
6- Loat and Found
7- Lotl and Found
8- Public Sale &amp;
1\uclion
9- Wanted to Buy

89$- Letan

2·1•

~~.:!~~~i;:~~=·~~

34-- Bwintll Buildinfi
35- Loll &amp; Acrease

I\ I \ 'I \1

GET RESULTS· FASl't

667-CootviUe

Human

Real Estate

basement.
Table spacei, llx 10, are available for $10. for anyone who wants

:B- Farm• for Sale

.

446-C olllpollo

388-Vinton
~45-Rio Grande
256-Guyan Dilt.

'

f------:;::;::--=-:=====,----~ 36- R..J E.tllte Wonted

GaUia Counly Melgo County Ma110n Co., WV
Area Code 614 Area Code 614 Area Code 304

NEW SCl WOlFF lED 2451
..._ l'ndtldslvailaltlt

Ciom 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the church

15

••

.,

I· \1;\l 'l 1'1'1 II '
,\ I I\ I :-. I t I !.I'

Rales are for consecu!ive runs, broken up days will be
charged for each day as separ;ole ads.

Clossified pages cover !he
following telephone e:~tchanges ...

Public Notice
Public Notice
Revenue.............S,n1,737
Taxes...................... I ,980,032
TOTAL
.
Charges for
Serviceo................. 500,598
RECEtPTS ........10,896,941
EXPENDITURE
Licenoes and
OlSBURSEMENTS:
Permit....................... 3,148
Leglalativo ond
Fine• and
Executive ............ 1,280,029
Foofeitureo...............76,71 I
Judiclal ...................... 427,354
lnlefgovernment.l
Recelpt. ............. 2,5&amp;1,715 Public Safety.............482,230
Public Worko .........2,061 ,518
All Other
Health ..................... 1,561,247

•

ST. LOUIS (AP) - Activist
Dick Gregory was arrested for
cursing out a police officer after a
grocery clerk tentatively identified
him as a shoplifter who had made
off with a $! 0 jar of bee-pollen
tablets, autllorities said.
The clerk called police to report
that a man had walked out of the
store without paying for the tablets
and had then dropPed the jar on the
sidewalk, authoritoes said.
The clerk described the suspect
as age about SO, with a salt and
pepper beard and wearing a base·
ball cap with a red and green Malcolm X on it, police said.
Officers spotted a man matching
the description about a half block
away and picked up Gregory, who
was initially identified by the clerk
as the shoplifter.
Police said Gregory, a nutritionist and civil rights activist, called
the clert closer to him and asked,
"Do you know who I am?" The

COPY DEADLINE

$ .20
$ .30
$ .42
$ .60
$.05/day

$4.00
$6.00
$9.00
$13.00
$qO/day

IS

10
Monthly

Pet. for Salo
Mu.tic:allnllru. .ltll
FruiLI &amp; VqetahiM
for Sale or Trade: ·

·"

•

istry 1 the Presbyterian, Reformed
and Cumberland Church's
Appalachian Ministry and Educalion organization.
Attendanceisopentoallinter·
ested persons and the cost is $75
per person,
b Further ~nformRatioKanis available
Y contacung ev. y Puckett,
202 West High, McArthur, Ohio
456Sl (614)596·5562 or Frank
Hate, AmesvtUe, (614)448-4041.

!t

SAT.8-12

Dick Gregory detained •
after shoplifting incident .•j

month and made off with more
than $17,000.
Police said the robbers' operating method also was similar: One
robber vaulted over the counter and
cleared out the cash drawers, while
the other guarded the lobby, bank
officials and one·customer.

years.
.
tion is Aprlll.
Accordmg to Jon ·campbell,
Additional information may be
manaau, she exempliriCI • above
· ed b 111 · 949 289l
standard level of job performance, . ~3J26. ~ ea ng
•
or
and maintain• 80od cllltOIIIer IW·
Tbete will be bomemaclo aoovice lkllll ·and a posllive aailude dlea and bated Joodl alaia wllh
toward the company.
'
,................... ~~ · .,..... will
·
""' •• ...,.. ..,.., ...,..._ .._
· ~lea lhe.pabllc illavlt·

8A.M.-5P.M. -

CLOSED SUNDAY

POLICIES

,,

Lad.leS erarfit Clrcle
, bazaar Slated

The Ladies Craft Circle of
Sacred Heart Catholic Cltwth will
sponsor a craft buur on April 4

6

Over 15 Words

•)

West Virginia fiddlers to perfonn
West Virginia fiddlers Melvin

3

.,...""'"" an ad
Call992-2156

Rate

Words
15
15
15

I

,.

Robbers hit bank second time in six weeks
DARIEN, Conn. (AP) -'--Two
robbers taunted tellers with the
words, "Remember me?" as a
bank branch was robbed for the
second time in six weeks.
Tellers told police that Thursday's robbers were the same men
who stormed into the' bank last

Days

Ohio University offers portfolio assistance

The American Legion Lewis- American fears if Washington recManley Auxiliary Unit 263 met ognizes Vietnam, all hopes for
recently at the home of Helen Cui- resolving the POW-MIA issue will
mor, Point Pleasant, W.Va. with be lost
Edith Ross, hostess.
Lula Hampton, legislative chairLorrene Goggins presided at the man, stated the veterans support the
meeting in which bulk mailing new legislation against treaung non
from headquarters was given to dif- veterans in the veterans adminisiraferent chairmen.
tion facilities . They want health
A letter was read by Dorothy care benefits named the national
Casey, emergency fund chairman, priority and are pushing for
explaining the assistance one could research on agent orange.
receive from this fund.
Remarks by the president and
Reporting from the Firing Line. prayer for peace by the chaplain,
Florence Richards noted a part of Annette Johnson, closed the meetthe testimony given by John F. ing.
Sommers Jr., executive director of
A salad course was se)'Ved by
the American Legion, before the Mrs. Ross.
selecl committee on POW -MIA
Margaret Bowles will host the
issue will be lost. She stated the next meeting.

Am
•
•• ·
tc:=.':fc:!:"f::: . _ott recetves recognrtton

.,

Ohio Governor George V.
Voinovich has proclaimed March
22-28 as Tornado Safety Awareness Week in Ohio.
Meigs County public elementary school students have received
approximately 4,000 "What you
Should Know about Tornadoes"
safety brochures from the Ohio
Insurance Institute, in conjunction
with the campaign. The 011
donates and distributes the
brochures in an effort to educate
the public regarding action to take
before, during, and after severe
storms.
"This year marks the 15th year
the 011 has distributed tornado
safety brochures to students in
Ohio," according to Daniel J.
Kelso, 011 president "011 support
this program each year, encouraging students to talce the brochure
home to shase the vital tornado
safety information with their families."
"This year, over a million

Legion makes contribution
to July 4 fireworks display

Community Calendar items
appear two days before an event
and the day or that event. Items
must be received weD in advance
to assure publication iu tbe calendar.

=

area students receive brochures

Call 614·992-6637 .
51. Rl.7
Ches•lr•, 01.

.

J&amp;l
INSULATION

BISSELL BUILDERS,

•VInyl Siding

Ntw

·R~lacement

indow

•Rooflnfc
.Jnaulet~ ·

o.,..., •

Ntw Ho••• • Vlayl

leplactlteat
10011 Allllhlo•• • loofl•t

COMMDlaAL aM USmEN'lUL
,· . ..... ES'I1III.\'ID

JAMI EESEE
912· 72or
74 ·2097

614·949·2101 or 949·21'0

13t Bry~n Pilot

Mlddtljlort, Ohio
111 4/lln

•'

,........,c••,
.

'

' ?

II"

'

'

w

�Ohio
,._rch 24,1992

Sentinel

SNAFU® by Bl'!ice Beattie

KIT 'N' CARLVLE® by Lirry Wright

31 Homes lor Sate

Television
Viewing

..

71 Autos for sate
1116 Monlo Corio SS; 11110 ......

Comlncho, ZW&lt;I, 8t,..119241011
at Ford Thundor Bird Shonl.
32,000 milo .PS PB AC Fully E·
qulppod _!8,100 oHor 5:30 PM
61...251-1,..

MAKE A F~IEND -· FOR LIFEI
Scondl!llwlon, Europoon, S&lt;Mh
Amwlcln,
YuaoMtvtan,
Japonooo Hlth Scfioc!l Ex·
c"StudOnto .• .lnlvlnt
Auguot .... HOST FAIIILIES
NEEDED!Amorlcan lnlorcUitwol
Stude,.- Elllchange. can Blllndl
814-IM!I-:1794 Ot' Col! 1-8QO..SI.
BLING.

Tax And Tltlt Down. P111ownld
Mobil• Homts, Use Your Tax
Rthmd. 50 Homtl To ChOOH.
£1111 Home Ctnetr, 1-800.58g..

•

1977 Chevrolet Huvy Htlf Pick·

6:00 C2lll ())II !ll II 9111
112118 0 Nawo
ID VIdeo Powar
~ Square On.• TV sweo.
1Ji Malh Looming Hour

,

Up, Full Silt, 350 Automatic, . _.
New Tirn, Brakes, Timing ... ~

Chain, Paint. Exctllfnt Condf.

5710.

.,,

tlonl S2,500. 614-446-4!114.

1977 Chevy Cmw Cab 314 lon,
auto, S850. 304-675~941.

LOOK, I GOT A QUARTER
FROM TI-lE TOOTH FAIRY ..

1165 Ford Rangtr 4x4 PU lr';1Ck1
llt,100MI, tlr, amllm radio, DICI
llntr, fiber gt1atopper, V.Siong
btd wllh bed lln1r, I"'IW tune up,
shockt, brakn, S4700, 014-H2·
0689 until 3pm, M·F, OM-9482935 llttr 8pm.

arTiving AugUst, HOlt

Families NltdldJ Amtr. lnttr·
cultur~l Sludtnt Exchange, call
Ballndt at 814-949-2794 or call 1·
800-sibllng.
1, •

"1

~54

MAYBE 1M SUPPOSED
TO MAIL IT IN ..

1987 OodQ!I 1).50 PAck•u_p good

~~~;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~ conclhlon
$2,100.
Ford Bronco
4 1113
whNIFutloklo
Drive,

Merchandise

Experienced
housekttptr:
Friday• onl~, 5 hours, $5ibour.

614·446-067'1

att~r 5

p.m.

Ofd Hot Point rtf., run• good.

Wtntlld: S1lft po~ltlon lor kx:al
ar•
butln....
Offering
btntfttt, mU.I be aggriUivt
and tblt to wcwk wfth public.
Send complete rttumt: Box B·

Pt.

18 CIIN

Fret

Calico

OIICIIWid,

House

Cot.

&amp;

Litter

Spldt

Lost &amp; Found

6

Glblon Chllt type fretzer, IX·
-cloo blllo, oolllft• lpm, 114-

537-11528.

oriWlltd nur.lng flclltty. A•

mtnt, caHwork and lnttrper·
tonll aklllt; abllhy_ to work Whh

84 Schullt 14165, 2BR, 1 1f2

both. CA, $10,000. 304-675-3104

or 675-3276 after&amp;:30 .

ler5P.M!

7 .

Building sHu for tale: 1 to 5
ICrft on Bkfwell Mount OiiYI

Yard Sate

Rood. 614,388-8794.

All Yard Sll11 Must It Paid In
Advanee. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.

Lots lor eaJI, tf"'lt.. aeceplabll. 304-875-2722.

lht dlly btfo111 the ad 11 to run:
Sundly edhlon • 2:00 p.m.
Friday. Monday ldlllon • 2:00

Situation
Wanted

p.m. S1turdly.

Public Sate
&amp; Auction

Immediate Opening For Ptrl·
Time RN Supervisor, Day Shift.
Rick Pearson Auction Company, Competitive Wages, Dlfttrtntlal
tuu llrnt euclionHr, complete With Experience, Equal Qppor·
IUCIIon SerYict. LicanYCf Ohio, tunlty Employtr. Contact DfrK·
Wtst Virginia, 304·773-5785.
lor 01 Nurt:ing, PiMCflolt Cart
C.nttr, 170 Plnecrett Drlvt, Gal·

llpolls. 614-448-7112.

Wanted to Buy

Oon1 Junk hi Sell Us Your Non-

Working Appliances, Color TV's,
VCR). MicrOWIYft, Power
Tool,, Etc. 51c-256·1238.

Need someone IO IIYt In: lrH
room I bolrd, mull be c111n I
trustworthy. 814-441-3419.

Lots In GaNipolls Ferry • 100%
own1r flnandng It $98.84 per
month, any OM of four lott
IVIIIIbll, 304-675-2722.

41 Houses for Rent
3 BA house, Flltroek area. $260

mo. Reltrence &amp; deposit re-

G110rgn Portable Sawmill, don't
haul your loga 10 the mJII just
call304-67!i·1157.

qulrod. 31M.a75-3911
8:30pm.

Mill Pa~o~la't Dly Cl11 tamer.
Salt, affordable, chlldcl11. M-F
6 a.m.;-' 5:30 p.m. AQI! 2'1i--10.

3 BR, 1·V2 beth, family room, no

boloro

pets. Point PlNsll"'l. 1350 per

Av1llable April 1st : 2 BR mobllt
home, Gran schoot .,.... :1! BR
houae city school ar11. 8M-256-

Will prcwlde Iewing child care,
txptrlenc.d, any shift, preler
Galllpollt Ferry aru. 304-875-

Famll~

Grocery Est, 1915, phone
614·985--3300 or 814-N5-3M5
Private Pay Phonn.SI For,. ..
Cheap $$ Must Call 1-600.."JJI1·
3333
·
AHtaurant EquiprNnl For S.lt:

GATHERING DUST

Tay~r

CL\&amp;H?!!

Soft Serve FretZ.,., 2

New commlf'dai-Rome unlla,

from tln.oo, Limps, lotions,
ICCfi:IOriN, monthfy pi)'lnlnll

'

$125:\li otpclnt Rolrigorotor, 595;

Kelv nator Relrlgtrllor, Frost
FrM, Almond, S17Si Admlrll
Rolrlaorotor, Coppo"ono, $150;
WtiiTnghoust Smell Wahar

.•

~~r~ :~.

clrivont .._,

$~

Anguo And Chi·Anguo

Bloc~

Buflaj:. RNsontbly Prlcld. S1111
Run arms, Jackson, Ohio, 614·

Frl, Sat, Sun; noon-t:DO PM.

tu~ sueon. Oray GrMn Lui
TrMN"'- Army piltem clothing.

ulld 2 horN Bumper Trailer

614·268-6522

6t4-94!1-

1m Ford Branc:o, newty r~bulll
460 engine, lift kit, many txtr11,
must 111, 614-992-6909

1980 S-10 BIIIZtr, V-6, A'-lto, AC,
&amp;5,000 Mll11, $4,100. 814·:1!56-

$4199 27132xh .-.o99, Presl·
slon P01t Fr1m1 luilde,., 614·

992-3541

Utility Building, 30140110 1GX12

olldlng doot $56111.00, 24x40xt0
tlllltO slldlnv $4100.00,

Precision Poil Frtml Builders,
IM-62·3541.

614-592·2322.

="64.;__H;..::;:ay::.,.::&amp;:..:G::,:r.:a:::ln:.,....,.,.,..
Squ•• baln hay for ult: Call
Gordon Htjchllk. 814-381-f720.
'

Transportation

!
E
!

niW' bttltry, 304-895-3021 after

1:00.

•

••
lI

'

-~

1972 Sllverllnt bolt, 18ft.,
120hp., inbolrd
men:ruMr

.'

tryhut
Wllk·
through
windshield, very nice cond.,
$2000, 614-843-5366 onytlmo

'

Stereo.

Services
Home
Improvements
BASEMENT
WATERPROOfiNG

AL'NA.'!5 HAVEi
e.A.D DR~S.

1184 Ford Eo-. 4dr., 4 Olllld
lltndard, aood cond., make of.

Farm Suppl•e s

42 Mobile Homes

&amp;L•ve stock

.lor Rent
:1! BR tr~lltr for rsnl on
ntlghbofhood r01d. 814-4418755anytlmt.
3 bdrm., portly tumlohod,
Haven, 304-882-2W

Now

3bdrm. double wklt In Racine,

Otposh 114 441 3817

2 bedroom · apl, utiiiiiM paid,
low 11 tta.oo, Cllll lodoy, ~~~ Hud approved, SQ4.871..21'22.
new c.,.or cattlog, 1-800-221- 2 bdrm. opt. In Mlddtopon,
1212
'
utiHtill tunillhtd, $27SJ mo.,

114-IM!I-2217

Rea l Esta te

81

'lhm Jlllll" ..tullt'l" i11111 t! ll~h,
S!JJ.J: it tlw t!tl.~\' llltiJ... /Iy Jllwnc,
~

'"' ,,.,., tu ,,,,.,,, yoru· f,,,.,~ .

l'fuj:c y111rr dtr~.~itit~tl nd tmltul.
.15 /lltlrtl~ ,,. ,,.... . , .1 dt"Y~,
:J lltljll!l"8, $6.(1(1

Roducod To Selt: •41,~,
Chooltlro, Ohio. 1104-132....,1,
IQ4.g:l2·1810, 114-3e7.0041.
2 bedroom home, 3acrH, Along

Ohio River, Rl. 33, IAtart, 304"-

1111-3488.

Sot-llpo.
Ae t1; Commerlcal, AHidln
lit l~emen11. lnctudlng:
Plwnbht:g. Elllclrk:al. lnauranct
Clolmo kcopeod. 114-256·1111.

~!

YEP·· BUT I

HAD TO PUT

Curti~;

Monte lmprovernenlls:
Ylll'l Erptt IIIICI On Older I
Homoo. Room Adi!Hiono,

HIM IN TH'

•

LOWER

..1

'

follndltlon
· Fru
Rooll!!g,
K
- And Iotito.
EatlmstHI Refetanctl, No Job To
~lg o; Stniii!IM-441-0225.
Hlcll'o Aoof!ne, -lng l Dock ·

Building. Froo lllltoiteo. 111
,_,.,.,....a.
114-311 1114.

• I

JET

~ 1

Altollon llotoro, ropolrod. Now ._ :
a re-buM motot'l In stock, RON 1'1 I
EVANS, JACkSON, OH.

1.- •. •

5S'J.I521.

.t'

•

~~

Somelhlng tlllortunate-and
which you're responsible
may oa:ur a1 work today. instead
of ttyil)g to cover i .up, bring i
into the light where olhers can
help you resolve i.
BERNICE
SAGnTARIUS (Nov.23-Dec.21)
BEDE OSOL
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22.1 Con· Chances lor gralilying your
sider the long-range aspecls ot malarial ambitions ·look hopelul
mailing $1.25 pius a long, &amp;ell• something ycu'ra presently In· today, but you mlghl nol get
addlessad, s1ampid envelope to volved In, and you won't find eve~Y~hing you desire. Just be
~:=~-·~:~~~:hi, P.O. Box 91428, your lask so distaslelul. Your gralefut lor being on lhe plus
YOUR BlllHDAY
44101·3428. Be awareness of the project's side ot the ledger.
Wedn11d~y, March 25, 1992 sure to stale your zodiac sign;
benefits will Inspire effective el· CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jan. 19)
,
,
lod.
If yotl do not take yowsalf or
Improved coll!IIIIOna In your TAURUS (Apr. 20.·M$y 20)
.
.
avenls loo serious!y taday, you'll
chonn· flald ol lnduvor are .Conditions in gen6181 ara bettar VIRGO (Aug. 23.S.pL 22) You . avoid needless prcibl11111. Relax,
likely In tht ,y ur lhead. than you niay .think they .are ''could be Iaiiier llcky today in and ycu'l 1)01 only aCcomplish
Bllfort lhla cycle Ia lkllahld, today, so doni let negalive most areas, wlh the exoepti:ln of more W have tun doing it.
you may clltn~ nvera! IUnga t!loughiS or sell-doubt paint an ~· Sulldue lilchllons AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
.up tht tadd11.
. , ' utvnlsllo ~~~~~ lnd Induce IO'IIWd extravagance *lid lis!\· Guard against the lncinallon
'
· fal~re.,,
' taMtil.
today to look a gift horse in the
ARIES (MIIr. 21•Apr, 18) U .
.
.
, mouth. Alack ol graiHude might
1011110111 . trltl to 11M Clldl OEMIN {MIJ 21.Julll 201 Your UBRA (S.pL 23-0I:L 23) You make som11011e who. want• to
today lor l,omettq )'OU' did, poslllllllel lor pe!Sonal galn mlgfll be lei a polllon lodly to ~ you wii\Jd18W the ollll.
don1 be Oiirly _,..,, This iook
11100Uragfng
Ieday, . "'!PIll old llleqd wMh whom you PISCES (Fib. 20-Mir. 20) In
~ wihventulily bt !den- provided you don1 d~ute your .- priMI'IIIy II odds. Doni be agreements you enter Into today,
tiled • allcond4ilnaw. Ariel, Hnlf of dilly Wltl,llndllleiiiiCII. vlnilctiYI; Ill your nobler in.,u~ 'lht more geni!OUI you a11, lhe
lrllt YQU1H1 to ·a bll1hdar gil. T...
. nolhllllf IGr g11111tld.
Mlllrect your behavior. ·
more yo&lt;~'ra fiklly to IICe!vt in
Sllld lol Arlit' All~ ,
relllm. Subdue tendencies 10 be
pftdktionllor lit rt-lhud by CAtiCER (Juna 2hluly 22) You SCORPIO (OcL 24-HoY, 22) loo s.U,.II'IIng.
might be ollelad some sound
suggeStions laday by someone
whose judgment you revere. Unlodunately, p might nol' appraciale hs valle unlil it's too
tale.

TV Sorvlco, opoclollzlna
In lanlth olio llfYiclng mool
Ron~

· -Olllo
- 114-448-:M$4.
ropolro. wv
SIM-6714111
Sopelc To•k Pumolna •10 Golllo l
Co. RON EVANS ENTIAPhiSES,
Jockoon, OH 1-100-SS7-9521.
1;'

Dovlo

G goo

2.- - - - - lt/. _ _ _ _ _ 11

:!. ______ "·- - - - -11
/2., _ _ __;_--11
"·-~---'--"·~------- I ."'------11

Sow-Voc
BoMco,
Crook Rd. Porto, oup.

=~~up,

ond dollvory. 114-

WII
IMtlkl polio - · cloCks,
~ltd rooms, put Up vi"YI
otcllna or lrollor lklrtlng. IM2454152.

82

1.-- - - - - 9- - - - - -11

Plumbing &amp;
Heating

..._

•'

Cort·~~

f-ondPino

. Qollpollo Ohio
1M ••• ;.••

Electrlcll &amp;

6. _______ ./ ''·----,----11
i, _______ .I ;,,___....;___ 11

'"'

l ib(

II.

l'&gt;!b

446-2342 675-1333 '
992-2156

THE UPPER
WAS TOOKEN

l l~~~~~~;

...";,
, 4"M"
'6'!
'~

~"'

,.

;'

'I

·~ I ~ ~

. :.•
...~ :..

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South

.

Soutb
I+

. &gt;

EaR

West

Pass
Pass

....

.-'

.. ,

Pass
Pass

Pass

Opening lead: +Q

.

L---~---__j

...... .
...

·~

and 10, is ideal for an endplay.
South woo trick one with the club ';
ace, the hooor from the short sid~· -first. He drew trumps, cashed the cluJ&gt;.~;;
king and ruffed a club, eliminating'···;
that sutt. Fmally South extted with a •· ·
heart.
:.•~
The defenders cashed thm three"""''
heart tricks, ending in the West hand: ·· '
· West defended well, switching to the ,.T
· diamood queen, but South knew tha t'~~
the odds favored playing for split bon• '"'
ors. He won witlt dummy's ace, led a...
· low diamood and finessed his nin~· ;:,.
successfully.
• :.=.:
West said that next time he wocc ·•- lead a heart, killing the thro:.v-jn,
··•
@1~~:~,....,.vn•••=t~ua ....

'"

·~

, ,. ,~

--------------------------=~-~·-------------------- ... ..,

The World Almanac® Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS

Answer lo Prevtout Puute

36 Compua pl.

37 Everyone
38 Small piece
of gr.,.nd
39 lntarn81
organs
42 Anclonl
wriUng
45 Novelist

1 Ouarrolaome
woman

7 Babaau11 Inventor

Thomao12 Purple
14 Calllornla'a
netvhbor
15 Slow to
underatand
16 llao - lung
17 Lallie Caron
role
19 Comfort
20 Songlko
22 Actrua-

Ferber

46 Ovar (poat.)
49 - Brolhora:
· alngers
51 Thinly
ICIIItrtd
53 SUCCIIIIOn
54 Overturns
" Flrat-rala

Perlman

(2 wilt.)

25 Place to

56 Small hole

IIHP
26 llarcltero'
word
29 Egg parto
31 Bulldlnv
33 Weapon·
llOrlllt
place
35Ftts

OOWN

6 Walking- (letllng
llalod)
7 Sktlaton pari
B Locl{llng

1 Emil

2 - or March
3 Tear apart
4 Light--

10 Untidy atalt
12 E1pr1111d

13 ptpa llltlftg
unit

.18 Pulllltlted

houH

loalltet

.....

"''about

9 Hawaiian

5 Devoul

20 Body or
water

rood llah

21111nt

who killed her husband.
sweo. l;l

anlranct

22 Actor-

IJ)Newl
()) Cl (I) D

O'Neal
23 Anllar
24•01htr
26 Over 1111 - '
27 w.Coutcon.

Civil Wara Trish
and lral!elkin lighl over a
plush apart:!. Stereo. 1;1
I!J) II Huntar
a world N
Qll 700 Club With Pat
Roberllon
10:05 (I) MOYIE: Gentleman Jim
(2:15)
10;30 (!) I!) Ton Tltouund Eyaa
Alook altha W&lt;Xk of
prolesslonal pl\ol~rapl\ers
on a variety ol ass nmenls
all around lhe wo~ . (0:30)
Stereo.
12!1 (:rook end Chile
ID Bloebllll Tonlgltl
11:00(2)11 "(J)CI !llD aiD
d2111 IIJI1)) Night Court 1;1
(!) Newowatdl
ljlllll Aroenlo HaD Slereo.

28 Nulllra

30 Break
-ly
32 Vain peopr,

..,....
:3 =·ftnch
.,.
34 Narrow

!

•I
I

4t Slltggy
42 Thing lti IIW
43 Part orlltt

I

\

'

:'

...-+--1--1-~ 44 ROllin tyrant

I
I

41 Saatb ..'tr
--Mr
4Hnclonlllallan ramlly
48 StOP wQrl&lt;lnv
50 Actor-

''

l

lltjora

~M~CGrMrQ

521boen

r

chlrtcltr

Gil On II'- Stereo.
Sporta 'tonight
QJ1 ~wn Slerao. E;J

a

I

I

11;30~~:L

I

(I) II Nlgllllltw 1:1
Gill 'llcoM ~"tit Clime'
CrttM Time Altlt Prtmo
TitMSiariO. C
Gil CIMcll """' S1ltlon

. ..... fj

' ., Q p

IVMYP,

(PO) (2:QO)

01

' 11:31 C2lll 0 TontghlllhoW
llllrlftg Johnny c.(I) II

OE

y GP

cr-. Stenao. 1;1

a~~ 'AntnrO Hlill ~.

..

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F X E N

xw

.

C K E,

:~I
.. I

AXVJXIOE!II
I YK M C Y

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V 0 F F •

24

SIIIIO.
'

YQP

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: '"You can ,._ VMt up. Giving up lo lhO ;,o,.1
lhlng y&lt;iU oen do." - (Cancer pllltnl lncl tX·Aoiderl Lyle AIZido. .

gI.~ Collltllllaft .
~-

Z XC Y G

II )( · Q !

0 Y , '

12:00 (I) II Dtilnll ....

'

v .o p

·olSOUOIKMF.

·

·•Na==

xw

ZXCYO

!Ecnat
. .Sitnao.

!l
"

• • Jl

Noftlltttlll, Mlnnt- Raid

'
{

..,,
. '

•·.11,&gt;
~,

+u

prosecute an abused wife

,

.•

tJU2
+8732

'I' 8 6 I
tK91

sq-.

daughter. Slereo. Iii
10:00 C2lll t1J1 Reas-blo
D011bla Tess Is assigned 1o

_,

, ...:. ~

'I'KQIO

• Q7 6
+QJIOI

For some years, books have been
produced by desktop publishing: a
computer and a laser printer are used
for typesetting them. Now the video
business is feeling the effect of lhese
home-grown systems. In lll90, l.,.dirig
teacher Bill Root joined forces with
Henry Hahn to produce videotapes of
Root's lessons. Their second two-hour
tape covers three topics:
throw·in plays and duplicate-bridge
strategy. it is available (as is tbe first
tape) for $39.9~ from Root-Hahn En·
terprises, P.O. Box 7205, Heights Sta·
tion, Concord, NH 03301.
Today·s deal is the first from the
second lesson. Cover tlte East·West
cards and plan the play in four spades.
West leads the club queen.
North made a limit raise, and South
hid aggressively by moving on to
game. At first, it looks as though declarer must lose four red·suit lricks.
Tbe chances ol playing the diamond
suit for no loser are remote. But that
diamond suit, with its lifesaving nine

new life with her Q£2Wn

eornrs· Mobil•-

·- ·~

+76

'I'A933

By Pbltlip Alder

(2:00)

llnli.

,,,.r

EAST

• 8'

to better bridge

12!1 Naahwlllo Now Slereo.
a Leny King Llvel
Ql) Fat~~tt.Dowllng Mytleriel
Slereo. 1;1
9:30 ()) Cl (I) D Room lor Two
(Premiere) A widow begins e

IM-ZI7.-, doy or night.
RGglf'l BIHment Waterproo-

3 Bedroom Home On 1 Acrt Of

Lond. CoU lt4·ZH-t128.

CAFETERIA .

Unc:ondttlonll lflllm1 guaran·
' "· Local rtt.fwnc:N fumllhed.
F,.. lllhnaln. Cal coHtd 1·

other brands. HouH call, llao

31 Homes for sate

IN 11-IE 501001...

WEST

Watch your way

accused ol raping • female
student. (A) Slereo. C
()) Cl !ll 11 Rouanne
Roseanne Is apprehensive
aboullaking a lle-deleciOr
tesl. Stereo. C
(!) Ill Frontline c
llll aD 0 II MOVfE; 'Quiet
Killer' CBS Tuttday Movie
(2:00) Slereo. E;!
1111 MOYIE: Tlte ProltCIOr tRI

T~T rM &amp;\TlJ-16-

~ ~.i

.:.,\)

+KQJ32

Several fraternity boys are

AFTE!l 1 &amp;.T IN
THE 6CHOOL.
CAFETEI&lt; lA, I.

-:~

SOUTH

teacll the older boys a
lesson a~ul lying. (R)
Slereo.
12!1 Churc Stnoet.StaUon
Qll Wltnou to Survival E;J
9:00 IIJG I() Law l Order

campers&amp;
Motor Homes

... .oJ:l
' h i\ ~

+A109f

ALDER

Improvement Tim decides to

torod, $100. 304·773-5332.

- • i:1

~14-lt

NOIITH

PHILLIP

Slereo. E;J
8;05 (I) MOVIE: Lall Train From
Gun HMI (2:00)
8:30 ()) Q (I) D Homo

Red I Red Marte, double regls-

··:-.:;

+K 9 6

aP~tMNtwoC
• ·QJI Rln Tin Tin, ·K-1 Cop

.· ·,

J-tl

., J 7 2
t A 10 3

. II: Your Sloler

Aullrlllan Shepherd puppies,

'"'· 114-94f:214t

• ~ · •f

BRIDGE

llllll M IE: Tlte Howling
loa W-olf
tR) (2:00)
1!J Murder, She Wrote 1;1
12!1 On Stage Slereo.

BOATERS

Gulnns Utrcury U.rine S~r~k:e.
Mln:wy, Mlrinlr, Mercruiur
lf*lllilt. lhrc:ury cenlfied.
71 AutOS lor sale
:=:-;;:::::::;;::::~~~­ Mobile, W• come to you. 614·
1978 Cadillac Eldtrtido, tully • 251-59711.
qlllpped, low mileage, very nlct

.

·9

Reac:uo: 911

®JGD
S"tereo.

'

"Why did you pierce your ear?' Granny yelled to her
grandson. "You should be a leader lor the others!' "I
was,' grinned the grandson, ~It w~s MY IDEA!'

about the sun revealed
during ~6clipse of 1991.

1989 Pro C111H 11 h, f11h &amp; tkl,
exc Cond, 304-675·7988 lhtr

....

... '1

.,.,..,,;

ANSWERS
Zephyr· Harem· Fluid- Memoir- MY IDEA

have a mom. lA) Stereo. Q
Nova New secrels

5:00.

.

G

SC~m

(!) I!)

,f ~·· ,

• ,•J 3

UNSCRAM8l! ABOV! l!TT!R$
TO GH ANSWER

wife for Danny so she can

~. :

car1 wilt oocrlllco, 114-911:1-3657 76 Auto Pans&amp;
56 Pets lor Sate
or ot4·992-Ztlll
Accessories
SWAIN
1171
Dodgo Dlplomot 2 dr.
AUCTION &amp; RIRNITURE. 12 Groom ond Suppl~ Shop-Pot
$1,200. 614-446-7833 or 4 new chroma directiontl rims
Olivo St., Golllpolll. Now&amp; Uood Groom!ng. All tnedl, l'lyles. Sodan,
with 225·14 Flreston.. 250 miiM
tumiiUt'e, hut.,., Wnttm I lams Ptt Food ONIIr. Julie 446·1833.
IMI Ford. $450.00 614-446-4462
WM boott. 814-446-3151.
Wlbb. CIIII14-446-QZ31.
1981 Buick Rlvltfl, runs &amp; looks
1---:::=====--4
new chrome directional rims
VI"RA FURNITURE
AKC
regllltred
Cocktr good, high mlloogo, St,ZOO. 304· with
225·14 Flrntonea 250 mUM
195-3014.
BARGAINS GALORE!
Spanltll, had shot1 tnd wor·
llo Ford.$450.00 &amp;14-448-4412
mod, 30WTS.2193.

•nd tuppl n

I

.............."

A PRINr NUMBERED lEHERS IN
W
THESE SQUARES

7:35 (I) sanford and Son
8:00 (2)11 0 lrt the Hut or Ute
Night Tibbs and Chlel
Gillespie try lo proleCI a
high·SChOOI leacher. (R)
Stereo.[]
Ill MOVIT: The T~al or Lto
Harvey Oswald (PI 2 of 2)
(2:00)
(J)CI ())II Full Houoe
Micllelle sats oullo find a

,

HPM $1,400 ·after 5:PM 614256·
1754

Fish TIM, 2413 Jtc:llson AYI.

~

"' ' I ,\

by filling in the missing words
1.-.1..._.L.-.1...-L.-.1...-1. you de¥elop
from step No. 3 below.

a Cntoollno

ptNIInl, WV,

l14-441-3t51
LIVING ROOM: Solo And Choir
$'119 And Up; Coffw And End
Teblet $71 And Up; Swivel
Rockers$79.
..

.~. . .. ~

. I:;~

I

aD WhHI or Fortune !;I
1121111 Family Feud
12!1 Be a SMr Stereo.
ID Major League Bauball
Los Angeles Dodgers vs.
New York Mats al Port St.
Lucie, Fla. (L)

l

Etr com &amp; straw tor 1111, 304· 1974 15Ft bolrd Ski Boat BS.

1175-2443 after 6:00PM .

I

i

~tJ7,JI.-· $25 load, Reglslared Llmoualnt Halters, Honda 250X 4 Wheel•, Have
614'992-6190
- . . . . Excollont Condl·
Wlnltd: lhlck cetoract lena Special Ftedtt Calf Sa .. l tlonl 12,500. 814-448-1644.
glut!. Will rttum,
mint Athono Llvootock Soloo, US 50 Yamaha Yl-400 dirl blkl
dntroyed In tire. 814-367·7611.
Wnt Albtny, Ohio. Selurday wlextras, powerfUl, 304-17528, 1992'At 1:00 P.M. Wo 5086.
WATER WELLS DRILLED: Morch
Wilt So Hoving A Spoclol Rod
WATER GAURANTEED. 614-8116- Cow
Calf Stll. All COwl Will B1
7311.
Prognoncy Chockod, And TH· 75 Boats &amp; Motors
Woodbumer, $35; coffq table, ltd. All Conll;ffmtntl Wtl·
for Sate
come! Livntock Accepted Sllrt·
lng At 4 P.M. Enry Friday. Htul·
lng Available. 114-698-3531, Or

'!""'
"' ~·1

I ....:.,.,.....jll 1

;,..;..;...;.;.!

1111 MecGyver Q
1D SportaConMr
aMoneylne
Qll Tlto Wallono
7:05 (I) I Love Lucy
7:30 C2lll tiJI Jeopanlyl c
Ill Now II Can Be Tol!
()) Cl Enlenalnmonl Tonight
Slereo. E;J .
1Jt II Mamtd .•.WIIh ChUdron

.:.6;;;3;-;:;;;L;;"I:-Vest;;=:::..Ock7.=-::::: 2600, l-6pm
1988 AOHA M ~ ••• Bl
are, •••&amp;ON;
mo AOHA Gokll!'ll,
mo· 1192g 73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's
HorH 6 Slock TroiiO&lt;, St,995;
Big Ustd Sllvlf' Royal Show
Saddle. 6144118-1522.

.,./'i')

Stereo.~

811D AU'IO SIIH, Highway 1au
Nonh, 814 411 eaes.
1en Chevy C-1500, Y-6, nteds

Othtf doyo houro. 304·m.se115,

~mall tnlmalt

vood nolg-ood, $3001
mon., water MWIQI, a g~rblgt
lncludod, dopooh roqulrOd, 11"4Tobloo And Cholro, And Misc. IMI-2217
Equlpmont.IM-248-103S.
44
Apanment
Vending Rollte: Local. We Have
for Rent
The Newettl..chlnll, Making A
Nice Stood~ Cooh lncomo. 1· t BR unlulnlohod opt. with otovo
ooo.g55-0354.
l Rolrla. no polo $181/por
WoiH Tonnlng Bodo
month w..., lncluclod ttOO

.PIN down KX.11CA

Kei&gt;Anator
2 Door, Whitt,

$150;

anything you want 10 1111. Call
8M·:1!~1308, 251-6040 titer 6
p.m.

Point Ptoounl, 304-678-20113,
tuft. lint Tropk:al tlshl birds,

Door F,..zel'lj Olsplly Fretzeri
Stop-In Coclor, let Mochlno,
Monu Boonl· S Bowl Sink,

Want to:

RelriQtrator

Wontod: Uood lorm oqulpmont, $1141111; 111110 Ford 4x4 PU tt~i

.,

....1 1&gt; "

I was always in a hurry and
very Impatient with those who
seemed to be going slower
0
~~~===~than t wanted. Awisechaptoid
..me to be patient with everyone
S A Y MUL
especially----.
1--T;~s,.:-:TI.:...:,:I....:crl=-.-r.lG,.-i
Complete lho chuckle quoted

MICNolljLahro
NewaHourC
t1l Cl Candi! Camtrt
lllliD Currenl Alftlr C
llll II Star T~k: Tlte llrext
Cfontf81ion
1121111 E'!lfrll nmonl Tonlghl

$2,1115· 1117 ....... PU

21

NOT to und money lhrough thl
mall until you hive lnvMITglftd
the otttrlng.

·uTRACr THOSE THINGS

PU

.......,?. .".

II

RORWY

0 I XEN

·''

• -"•II

ALICAF

1---rl:....;l,..:.:....;::,l'...:.:,.l-l.;j

(!) ' I!)

Financial

Business
steve Lllz, Any.• 317-tll-2000.
Opponunlty
Wonlod: Oplomocrlc Aoolotont
INDrlCE!
experience prwftnld, bu!C
bualnen oH&amp;ce educltlon ,.. OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
qulnd. Send rtsUmH by March rtcommtnda that you do butt30, 11192 to: Dolly Sontrnol, PO ntH wtlh peop~ you know, and
Box 721J, Pouttro,, OH. 45789

14lll.

6486.

317.g9s-zooo

AVON I AH A1111 I Shlrtey
Spt111, 304-&amp;75-1429.

Waatter,

$95;

Eori'J. Arnoricon, 6rown1 .'!!'1ngo,
367-7264.
PICKENS RIRNITURE
Now/UIId
Houoohold tumll~. 112 m1.

month l doposh ..114-441-9278.
Bolon, oftor ochool. Drop-lno 3br, 2 B1th1, Doubto Wldo.
w.lcornt. 114-446-8224. NltW In· Southwestern School District .
&amp;14·245-5588.
fant Toddler Cal'f, 614-44&amp;.622l

AUSTRALIA WANTS YOU
Excollont
Poy,
Bonofho
Tro~otlon,
40T·21Hlll7,
Exl. , 17'1. h .m.-10p.m. Toll
Rotun&lt;lod.

G.E. Wisher,

gal . $225; AKihw ~. 114-

367·T95T.

Accounting lnetNCior HMdtd, Surrog1te Mothlr1 Wanltd, Fw
Mull HtYI 1.9 . Oegr. In At&gt; Ph• Expensn For Clnylng A
ccunUng. Sond Rlllimo To: P.O.
Couplo~ Child. Muot 8o 18-35
Box 213, GoUipolll, OH 411831.
And Pmlouoty Hod A Child.

11109.

Nlct 8 pc:. living room IUHI:

Rentals

Trimming, TrH Remov11, Hedge
Trimming. FrM Ettlmatul 6i4·

Surrogtlt Mottttr wantld, lr11
plut txpen ..s tor carrying 1
couple's child, mutt bl 18- 35
yrs. of age &amp; prevlosly htd a
AVON "' All trNI, Clll Mtrllyn child, conlact Sltvt Lftt, Ally.

9864.

.

®
Tlte Jelfe,..,.• ~
()) Cllnoldo Edition

64,...
288-5395.
live mUH Eoot ~77 Floohy 1181 Gr•r AOHA FIHy by 74 Motorcycles
Aovo...-, WV. By Sondyvltlo Reynold• Rap. Fl11hy Sorrell -,:-:.,.,-.:...:.,...,;;:._;.:.::,.__
Whlripool Poot on1co. Goer up lor wild 1990
filly by ttte Intimidator 1: I 1988 Ktwnaki65D, good shape,

=·

For c111nlng, wallpapering,
p1inting. smen dry wall nopalra.
81~1011 or381-B711.

$5,&amp;95; 1987 Ford PU~,_$3,095;
19• Nhlun PU $2,9~; 1918
Sam uri 414, 13,995; 1911 Ford

Sam !l,omervlllt's Army Surplus;

And 0r)tr, Llko - · $250, O.E.
Dryer, Whitt, Ukt Nlw, tl50i
Skoggs Applloncoo, Upper Rlvor
Will take care ol elderly lady In 878-27ZZ.
Roo~. Golllpollo. 114-446-T.IIIII.
m! home, experltnelld, htvt
rt ., reaeonable, 304·773-11185
Loll jolmng Point • 100% owner GOOD USED APPLIANCES
linanc:ing et $101.48 per month Wuhert, dryert, l'llrlgerllorl,
rongn. Skaggo APplloncoo, t10i 814-192-7'102
Business
14
Ill lhr" lots. 304.fmt. Upper River Aa. BHldt Slone
Crost Mottl, Cotl 614-448-7:19a, 55
Training
Building
1·800-1!19-3499.
Retrain
Nowt!!Southtllltm
Supplies
LAYNE'S
Buol-o Coltogo, Spring Volloy 36
Reat
Estate
Complllt home
Block, brick, _., olpoo, win·
Plozo. Col! Todliy, 614-446-436711
Hours: Mon-Sat,
Regllltrallon IG0-05-1274B.
dowt._llnt ..., etc. Claude Win·
Wanted
0322, 3 mlltt out
ters, Hlo Grandt, OH Call 614•
FrM Dlllvtry.
W.nltd:
Rntdenll1l
Building
24s.st2t
Wanted to Do
Lot o; Acroogo fo&lt; Ouollt~ Like new! Love IHt and chair
Spec:lat- Two cer garages,
Homn. Mutt Bi Within 5 Mllea $200.114-446-1707.
24x24xb lm51.. 24xZTx9:
Of Holur Hospital On Blacktop
E&amp; A TREE SERVICE. Topplnt,

Employment Services

Orlg. Prke $450, SKrtflct For
$150; Emerson Smtll Microwavt
$35, All In Excellent Condlllon!
Gaurantttd To Work! &amp;14-367·

Lote In New Htven • 1011%
owner flnancklg 11 1101.46 per
month buyt all th'" lott, 1304·

Road. 1..oo4-27'3-2MO.

WNYif 304-882·2845.

Alfrlgtt'llor, Washer l Dryer,
Cofo; T.V.,
VCR, Eltc:lrk:

Top $125; l'lhl"pool Dloltwuhor Typowri1or, et4·ZH-t2311.

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

9

dow alr/cond $375. 304-675-5593

G.E. RefrkJtrator Fl'llltr On

2713.

8

Double OYen stove, 19 CU ft tkll
by 1idt l'llrlatrltor, S175. NCh
or $300. boll!. 18,000 blu win-

Portabll changeable Iauer algn
me. FrH ttttlrtldtllvwy. Pia•
tic lltle11 $47.50 box. 1-100..5333453, lnjtlmo.
R65 Dhch Witch Tronchor With
Hoo Aftlehmonl l C11o 1740
Unllotdw Skid St11r. Cotl 614·

ntodo ol MRIDD ond Ml
after 5:00.
Cosmatologlst NHdtd: Gaur.n· opoclol
rltldentl; cunent WY llcanse. For Salt: 1e89 Aidman Danville,
tMd $110 Per WHk, Paid Pol p
14172,
Total
Eltclric,
SII.Up
On
Elrty American htnd-mtdt
Vacallons, Call 614-446-72&amp;7,
nt ,.... nt, WV II'H. 304675-3230, tXt 28.
Private Rtntld Lot. Excellenl china ceblnel. $100. 304-175- 894·7142.
Condhlon, Coli &amp;t4·36T.ot39 AI· 7209 or 304-67§..7554.

Losl : Female Dog On O.J. Wttltt
Road, Gtlllpolls, 112 Norwelgn,
112 German Shtphlrd, Sho,
And Fat; Very Frltndly. 614-446-

Oliver 1ractor 1 lann machlntr)'
pan1, 11 nOI· 1n stock will get.
Call "'Tht Olle Man"· 614-188-

1iif Ford Rongo&lt; PU
R65 Dhch Witch Tronchor with ~41111;
5115., 11184 l~oPU $1,41!;
hoe attachment. C11t 1740
tnch In ••-·k. Ron Unlto.dtr skid ltHr. 614-694· 1984 .IMP
II 414,
Thru ••
~
7642.
·
$2,51!; 111115 PU e c,lln·
Evono, Jackoon, Ohio. 1.8CJO.
dor, Aulomotlc; 11171 Ford PU

:a.=er,

qulrM atrong CIM mlnag•

Runo good; $1,1100. 814-258-QSt
1167 GMc v.a, Automotlc, Lod·
ct. Rocko And .TOOl BOIH, Nlcl

!MI-3014
Plllllo And Medel CuiYMt linch

200 Moln s~ Pt. Pn, wv
.
WANTED; asw lor cuework
posMion In 131 bod progrom·

Tr1lnld. 614-448-7644.
Full blooded Collltl ltmtlt, 6
months old· lo g1ve1way to
goocittomt. 3o.t-&amp;7S.2797.

PINAnl

61 Farm Equipment

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

I

1--T-1

1D NBA T:.:il:y
a world Tod!Y
Qll Madeline l:jll
6:05 (I) Beverly HHibllllea ,
6:30 C2lll tiJ) NBC NIWI§
1D Saved 11J lite llell
()) C1 t1l II ABC Ne 1;1
(!) Wild .A ntlra C
lllliD Gill cas llrewl 1;1
llllll Andy Grtllilll
1111 Scooby Doo
1D UpClooe
Qll Modellnol;l
6:35 (I) Andy Grlflllh
7:00 \ijll tiJI Wheel of Fortune

1

BUT SHE DIDN'T TAKE
THE TOOTH ...

814-448-1lll0.

II 1H211r HEA. 1111:.

- ... ")

I

~ fm::t:~" Q

1887 Chivy 314 Ton 4x4~,.AUio,
Duel Tanks, Tool Box, 10,800.

!-Ae;01.1
Wi?!Wr

law to form four limpl• words.

EVENING

'·
'·

72 Trucks tor Sale

0 four
Rearrange lentra ef
ocromblod word1' be-

TUE .. MARCH 24 •

.,

dition, 304-773-5412

Makt I tritnd ... For Ufll Sclncllrtlvlan, Europe~n, South
Amorlcon, Yug-vlon, l
Jap~nne hklh tChool txchlngt
slt.~denla,

•

Pontiac Fl"blrd, uctllenl con-

111A1 lAlLY
PUULII

�TUesday, March 24,1992

Pege-..10-The Dally Sentinel

Move over coffee brewer, here
comes the tabletop Coke machine
By MARC RICE
AP Business Writer
ATI.ANTA (AP)- Move over,
coffee brewers. A rival is moving
into the office.
The Coca-Cola Co. is marketing
tabletop soft drink dispensers,
aimed mainly at offices too small
to support a vending machine .
Introduced relatively quietly five
years ago, about 30,000 of the
"Brealanale" machines now are in
use across the country.
A company that prides itself on
ubiquity, Coke had its eyes on the
small-office market for yealli. After
some false starts, Coke got the
technology fine-tuned and now is
advertising the machines in office
management publications and
through direct mail solicitations.
"It's a big market," says Mur·
ray M. Cohen, president of CocaCola Refreshment Systems, the
Coke subsidiary that markets the
machines.
Cohen says there are l million
ofrices in the United States with
~'&lt;w~r than 50 workers, the Break·
nl!ur~et. '"Wherever there's a
=offee brewer, a Breakmate ought
to go right with it," he says.
Coke's pitch is that no matter
how well equipped an office may
be with personal computers, high·
tech telephones and fancy desks,
the place is incomplete if there's no
way to get a cold drink.
A brochure for the machines
tells managers that without a

Breakmate, employees "are forced
to spend valuable business time
leaving their immediate work area
... to find the nearest available soft
drink source."
At the real estate appraisal ftrm
Schultz Carr &amp; Bissette, workers
used to lug in cases of soft drinks
and stock the office refrigerator.
"You'd have to lift the cases
around and all that business," says
office manager Virginia Hawkins.
"It became a real burden."
The firm got a Breakmate
machine two years ago, making
break time more convenient and
sparking what passes in orftces for
a minor cultural revolution .
Employees there now get their
Cokes for free, a perk long provided to coffee drinkers.
"They wanted us to pay for
Coke but not coffee," Ms .
Hawkins says. "I'm not a coffee
drinker. I say if you've got to pay
for Coke, you've got to pay for coffee. 1'
Coke began trying to penetrate
the small office market about 20
years ago with a succession of
machines that proved to be too
clunky or inefficient until the
Brcakmate was developed.
One mid-'70s version, which
was counter-high and sat on the
floor, was equipped with stainless
steel holding tanks that had to be
refilled with syrup every few
weeks.
"It became a messy proposition," Cohen says. "There were

.,

about 5,000 of ·those machines
placed, but it never took off
because it didn't deliver the type of
convenience (of Brealanate)."
Breal&lt;male, which takes coins or
dispenses for free, mixes drinks
from snap-in packages of concentrate. Sligh~y bigger than a Stan·
dard orfice coffee machine, it holds
enough packages for 30 6 1/2·
ounce servin$S.
The machines are made in Ger·
many by Siemens. Offices can
either lease one or buy a machine
for as much as $1,799.
Coke's main competitor,
Somers, N.Y.-based Pepsi-Cola
Co., also is going after the office
market with a miniature vending
machine called the ''Compacvendor.' Pepsi spokesman Andrew
Giangola says the machine holds
two cases of pop.
"We certainly see the work·
place as an important channel," he
says.
Jesse Meyers, who publishes the
Greenwich, Conn., industry journal
Beverage Digest, says the office
machines are a step toward soft
drink machines for the home.
"The inevitability of a home
soft drink dispenser is as sure as
the su~ coming up in the morning,·' Meyers sar.s.
Cohen doesn t rule out the pos·
sibility of a home version, but for
now he says it's impractical.
"Today this is far too expensive
forthe home," Cohen says.

'

NEW YORK (AP) - Take me
out to the ... concert hall?
Forget the baseball-card collection. Make way for a lmeup of
"All Stars" cards featuring 38
instrumentalists, signers, conduc·
tors and ensembles, from ltzhak
Perlman to Placido Domingo to the
Emerson String Quarlet.
The Deutsche Grammophon
recording company o~ Mond~y
issued a set of 38 classtcal-mustc
cards to record retailers and radio
stations. Lisled on the back of the
color photographs arc the artists'
binh dale, hometown, where they
studied and highlights of their

career.

A section titled "Did You
Know?'' contains quirky facts.
Did you know the Emerson
String Quartet was named after

.

JUSTIN EBLIN

New arrival

The Kafkaesque "Shadows and
Fog" takes place sometime in the
earl part of the century in a generic ~uropean town where gloomy
shadows and a monstrous killer
stalk unknowing victims.
Allen a clerk named Kleinman,
is awakened from a deep sleep by a
group of men who want him to join
their "plan" to apprehend the
strangler.
The vigilantes _ one of several
groups who have "plans" -leave
before telling Kleinman his assignment. No matter, the little clerk
enters tl)e nigh~ stopping by to sip
sherry with the local doctor (who
becomes the stran~tler's next victim) and running toto lrmy (Mia
Farrow), a sword swallower who
has left the circus and her philan- · · -·
·

Y

C

f

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Columbus Southern Power Co.
customers still don't know if or
when they will have to pay more
for electricity, althoug~ a state
appeals court cleared the way for a
28.4 percent rale increase.
The ruling Tuesday by the lOth
Ohio District Court of Appeals
would allow the utility to impose
the $202.5 million rale increase.
"We're pleased with the general
nature of the decision . Our attorneys are reviewing it," company

(John
Malkovtch).
Kleinman tries to protect her
during the night, taking her to the
woman he once jilted (Julie Kavner), and stopping by a church to
tum over $700 Irmy was paid by a
student (John Cusack) for having
sex wi!It him.
Pollee fmd the sherr~ glass at
the murder scene and dectdc tt was
used by the Jcil_ler. Kleinman spots
th.e glass at pollee headquarters and
hides it in his pocket. Of course, ;
the glass is discove~ later and the
mob sets upon the little clerk, who
makes his escape at the circus.
Don't look for any deep meanin)( here and don't expect the
!f10vie. to tie up all loose ends mcludmg the fate of the strangler:
"Shadows and Fog" is rated
PG-13
·

Island has received approval to the ride's restraining bar and fell.
reopen the Aight Commander ride Ms. Taylor contribuled to ber death
from the Ohio Department of Agri· by being intoxicated when she got
culture, the state agency responsi- on the ride, state Agriculture Direcble for inspecting amusement park tor Fred Dailey said.
rides.
The ride has 20 two-seat gondo·
Candy Taylor, 32, of Toledo, las that pivot on metal arms ex lenddied June 9 when she slipped under ing from a central column. Passen·
gers use a joystick to make the
gondolas climb, dive and roll.
The ride began operating in
1990. Its manufacturer, lntamin
Co. AG of Zurich, Switzerland,
inspecled the ride last summer and
recommended chan~es, including
an 8-inch high by 3-mch wide cenThe Ewinss Cbapler of the Sons tral dividing wall to prevent single
of the Amertcan Revolution held passengers from slipping from the
its February meeting at the Meigs ride.
County Museum.
John R. Kauff presided and
Roben Mayer presenled a program
on "Functions of the FBI."
LEW. NOnCE
Clyde Jimmy King, Baruen, and
The Public Utilities Commission of
David Curtis, Racine, were nomi·
Ohio has sat for public hearillll Case
nated for the SAR Good Citizen·
No. 92·02-EL·EFC, to review the
ship Awards. David L. White,
McConnellsville, was nominated fuel procurement practices and
policies of Columbus Southam
for the law enforcement award.
Power
Company, the operation of
Kauff reminded· all members to
its
Electric
Fuel Component and
make plans to attend the state meet·
related
matters.
This hearing is
ing May J.3 in Springfteld.
scheduled
to
begin
at 10:00 a.m. on
The next meeting will be held
March
30,
1992,
at
the offices of the
March 26 at the same location.
Public Utilities Commission, 180
East Broad. Street. Columbus. Ohio

*12995

WELCOME • President Bush gestures
toward reporters as he welcomes Jamaican
Prime Minister Michael Manley to the White
House Tuesday evening for a private dinner ..

COLUMBUS- House Speaker
Vern Riffe says he intends to call
for a vole on a congressional redistricting bill in advance of a deadline Friday to avoid an extra, $6
million primary.
However, Senate President
Stanley Aronoff, R-Cincinnati ,
indicated Tuesday that a second
primary, in addition to the one now
expected June 2, might be unavoidable even if redistricting is resolved
this week.
A continuing court battle over
the separale drawing of new stale
legislative districts could force a
second election.
Aronoff lentatively scheduled a
Senate ~ote today on a Hous~ passed btll movmg the May S pn·
mary to June 2.
That change was prompted by
an order from a three-judge federal
court panel requiring the remapping of legislative districts drawn

-- ~-

·-- -·--- $·- - -

""""""

cantumthe
hidden value in your home
into low interest cash.

extending GA benefits

tor'"'

low. We'll 8VIIl charge the oost for opening your
Equllne to your acoour\1.
.,.,.. ... -/nlnltklgll.r ~~~~nn,.,.
Equillne interwt payml111a may be tax
dlductiblt up to the purct.e price or your home
plus home lmp10Y8ID1nll, or the lair mllket
valut or your hou... whichever Ia lower. Qur
Equlline sper;lallats are rvady to prtJYlcM you with
more .detailed Inlormllllon. h's lbtolutltt ""· 10
call today.

All Equi.lnt approvals are made right here, at
Peop!es.Bank. EqUI.ile 11 a low Inter-'
revolving line or·credlt MCUred ~ lht equly ln
·your home. cal our Equlllne apaclafllll today for
details. Homeowllll'l Equlllne credh miY be the
lallloan you rver need.
·

'

.... - EqflLine,.., )'IU' tMII.

area.

...,.

Mlmblr FDIC

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'

"The poor and disadvantaged
people of o~r region, and of the
entire state, deserve more human
treatment than the cuts innicted
upon them." Abel said. ''It has fall·
en upon us in the legislature to proiCE! these individuals from a plan
' that they had no control over, and
that we in the House disagreed

II

753-1115

42!1-7511

....,.--------,.........t

State Representative Mary Abel
(D-Athens) was among a group of
Democratic members of the Ohio
House of Representatives that held
a press conf~rence today at the
Statehouse lo gatl!er support for a
bill extending General Assistance
benefits past the curtent April I
cut-off date.
Abel said she co-sponsored
House Bill 697 because she
believes those affecled by the cuts
will 'have nowhere else to turn for
help. She provided examples of
~ow thc•euts would impact her

.

Imagine the advantages. Ready cash for the
things you need right now, and Interest pay·
ments may be tax deductible. Just one simple
application • the last time you may ever have to
apply. long term, low lnlerest payments. And,
the opponunhy to pay off your more expansive
loans.

by the State Apportionment Board. number of U.S. House districts
The case is on appeal to the U.S. from 21 to 19 were put on alert for
Supreme Court, which has not yet the possibility of meetings to draw
said whether it will intervene.
an alternate plan.
"Unless by some chance the
The existing conference comUniled States Supreme Court rules, mittee recommendation hit a roadand upholds the lines of the State block in the House.
Apportionme~t Board, there is still
Minority Republicans failed to
that brooding issue that is totally produce the minimum 15 votes
and completely out of the control Riffe said he wanled to pass i~ and
of the state Legislature,'' Aronoff II black Democrats in the House
said.
withheld their support.
Riffe, D-Wheelersburg, said the
Riffe said representatives might
House would vote this week on a vote on the same conference report
stalled congressional redistricting that cleared the Senate, but so far
plan already approved by the Sen- has not reached the House noor.
ale, or on a revised plan that might
Secretary of Stale Bob Taft said
be developed by a House- Senate the state faces the prospect or two
conference commitlee.
primaries if a redistricting bill is
"lmlend to take a vote on some not passed by Friday.
conference committee report ... this
Ohio is losing two of its U.S.
week,'' Riffe said.
House seats because of national
Senale members of the confer- population shifts reflecled by the
encc committee that drew up the 1990.U.S. Census.
pending measure for cutting the

Abel speaks out for bill

Now,
.,n pmt
The 0081 or estabishing homeownefs EquiUne is

youtNit lollll Mlrt/nlll,lll~, for
lllylll/ng.

Mr. and Mrs. Roger. Eblin
The senior yoijth gr®p of Hill- All interested parties will be given an
announce the birth of thetr first
side
Baptist Churcb went bowling opportunitY to be heard. Further in·
child. a10n, Justin Ira, on Man:h 6
recently
at Pomeroy Bowling formation may be obtained by con•
at St. Ann's Hospital in Wester· Lanes.
·
· tacuno the ComntiSSIOII at the above
Ville.
.
The event was enjoyed by sever· address.
He weighed seven poundl and
OIIC ounce and was 19 inchca long.
al teens of the church as well as . THE PUBLIC UTILITIES COMMIS.
Grandparents are.Mr. and Mrs. manSy ~u1ts. th ·cade
Mr d SION OF OHIO By: Gary E. Vigorito,
e111or you 1 rs are . an
Secrelary.
Paul Morgan, Thurman, and Mr.
Mrs.
9ary
JQnes:
ud Mrs. liB Eblin, Syracuse.

Bush was hold the dinner to honor Manley, a
one-time socialist turned economic conservative
who leaves office next week. Jamaican Ambas·
sador to the United States Richard Bernal is left.
(A P)

House to vote on new congress
districts; court battle confi.nues

,.,.,_., EquiLinl lltl J11111 write

used for an interim rate increase."
Franklin County Common Pleas
Judge Richard Sheward had ruled
that a stale law allowing the rate
increase was an unconstitutional
delegation of legislative power.
The law permits a utility to
impose a rate increase if the PUCO
fails to decide the case within 275
days. But if the PUCO were to
reject the requestlaler or approve a
lesser amount, the company would
have to refund the balance, plus

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Starr
The contract of Don Hanning as
an elementary principal was
renewed for three years and several
leachers were added to the substi·
tule list at Tuesday night's meeting
of the Meigs Local Board of Edu·
cation.
Hanning will continue as principal of the Middleport and Bradbury
schools, a position he has held for
several years. Employed as substitute 1eachcrs were Susan Arnold, 712 English; Lisa Pape, Amy
Young, and Angela Young, elementary.
The board also hired Bonnie
Baker as a tutor for a handicapped
student at SIO an hour, granted a
dock day to Celesta Coates for
March 10, and granted maternity
leave to Rebecca Cotterill from
April I through May 22.
To accommodate local students

7.62d9 Chlntll SICS
•Qu111lr, l'lrrlttJ ll8flllf AcctiJorlll Anii11We•
HOURS: OPEN MONDAY TIIIU fRIDAY 9 1.11. TIL 5 P.M.
69 Syca•or• StrHt 446·7059 Calli Is, Ohio

- - - --- - - -·----- ·---

···· ·--

--- -··

- ·-· -· -

..

inlerest, in the form of lower rales. opposed to increasing its proftu:•:•
The appeals court said the law the court said.
·
was not an improper delegation of
The company wants to pass~
legislative power since it places an to customers part of the consb'Uc·
additional burden on the utility. If tion costs associaled with the Zimthe utility invokes the law, it does mer power plant, along the Ohio
so at the· risk of incurring the cost RJVer near Moscow. It was co.nof a full refund, plus interest.
verted from a nuclear plant to a
"The increased rate may not coal-ftred generating planL
·
generate sufficient income to cover
Columbus Southern Power a
the cost of processing the refunds, subsidiary of American Elect;ic
so invoking the new rale may actu- Power, has 551,000 customers in
ally cost the utility money as 26 of the state's 88 counties.

Meigs board renews Hanning
contract; teachers added to list

THIS WEEK'S SPECIAL

~¥TO TIE

43266-0573.

Ohio Consumers' Counsel WiUiam
A. Spratley in trying to block the
rale increase, said he may appeal to
the Ohio Supreme Court if the
company decides to impose the
increase.
Otherwise, O'Brien said he may
take no further action pending a
decision by the Public Utilities
Commission of Ohio.
"I don ' t think we lost ,"
O'Brien said. "Our mission from
the beginning was to prevent an
unconstitutional statule from being

NEW 8 USD RIFLES 8 PISTOLS

....,..., __·--· ---

SAR
announces
nominations

spokesman Thomas A.. Holliday
said. "We're going to have to take
a hard look before we decide what
we're going to do."
The increase would add $11.94
to the bill of an avera~e residential
customer using 500 kilowatt hours
per month.
The utility has the authority to
implement the increase but hasn't
decided whether it will do so, Holliday said.
But Columbus City Attorney
Ron O'Brien, who joined with

THE GUN SHOP

.

--

3 Section•, 30 P•ge• 25 oente
Allulttmedlo Inc. IWNIJIII*

Court overturns ruling that blocked rate increase..

Information syslem that can plot a course to
most addresses in a 1,100 mile area. Orlando
was chosen as the test site, being one or the top
tourisl destinations in the world. (AP)

~too~~~BTc~;i~Y~~d:§l!!~?WS de~~~tn£~~:

•
AP Arts Edttor
. .
All the ngh: e!~ments extst m
Wo~~y Allen s . Shadows and
Fog to makeEtl a ~toner
spooky German xpresstorust oo •
a Kurt Wetll-Berthold Bre.cht
score, a stellar cast, a ~lenled cmematographer (~arlo Dt Palma). .
.Why, then •. •s the movte u~sansfymg and ulttlllately a loser. The
reason. may be found m the. dtrec·
tor-wnter-actor htmself. Hts for·
ciao.
Along
with
Chancellor
Hel·
lorn, brave and nerv~us little sou!
poet and essayist Ralph Waldo
mut
Kohl,
he
is
crediled
with
unifi·
may have been c~te m the 1970s,
Emerson? That the late composer
cation.
But
he's
spared
the
fallout
now th&lt; ' ~haracter tS a tnfle worn.
Leonard Bernstein could never
of
domestic
decisions
that
often
Allen s angst-ndden on-screen
choose from his many Swatch
dampen
Kohl's
popularity.
perso~a ts the least 0 the the
watches, so he often wore more
movte
s problems. There. s also an
than one? That Perlman, the violinWASHINGTON (AP)- The underuse ~f talent (Jodtc Fost~r.
ist, appeared on "The Ed Sullivan
Show" at age 13? That the absent· U.S. Supreme Court on Monday let Kate ~elllgan, Kathy Bates, Ltly
minded British conductor Trevor stand a $400,000 award Bette Tomhn, Wallace Shawn, John
Pinnock once took to the stage with Midler won against an advertising Malkovich), and a meandering and
agency that used a "soundalike" painfully dull script with ramblings
two different shoes on?
about the existence of God, the
" A record label should create singer for a television commercial.
plight of the Jews, parenthood, the
The
justices,
without
comment,
loyal fans who follow their 'playnature
of evil, fate, creativity and
rejecled
arguments
by
the
ad
comers' just the way people root for a
prostitution.
particular baseballleam," Albert pany Young &amp; Rubicam that the
Although beautifully lit and
Imperato, Deutsche Gram- award should have been pre-empt·
filmed
in black and white, Allen
mophon's media relations manager, ed by federal copyright law.
suffers
by not utilizing a deep
A federal jury in Los Angeles,
said in a stalemenL
focus.
A
scene shot at a brothel, for
applying California tort law ,
awarded the actress and Grarnmy- example, pans a group of philosoBONN, Germany (AP) About 2,000 of Germany's politi- winning singer the $400,000 in phizing women sitting around a
cal, cultural and business elite 1988 after finding that her exclu- table. The camera remains out of
joined in celebrating the 65th birth- sive right to her vocal style had focus as it scans the background
but zooms into focus once it hits a
day Monday of one of the world's been violaled.
The ad company originally had face. The scene merely strains the
longest-serving foreign ministers,
asked Midler to perform her verHans-Dietrich Genscher.
.
French horns blared as Gcnscher sion of the song "Do You Wanna
arrived for his birthday party at the Dance?" for a Ford Motor Co.
government's palatial mountaintop commercial aired in !986. After
she turned down the offer, it asked
guesthouse outside Bonn.
The crowd snaked through in a Ula Hedwig, who once worked as a
singer for Midler, to mimic
receiving line to congratulale Gen- backup
voice in the commercial.
scher as others sipped champagne Midler's
The
ad
acknowledged
and nibbled on shrimp and other it intended company
to imitate Midler's rendelicacies at the lavish spread.
dition
of
the
song as recorded in
Genscher, in his 18th year in her album "The
Divine Miss M."
oflice, is currently the longest-serv·
Midler's
lawsuit,
initially dis·
ing foreign minister in the world, missed, led to a significant
federal
his office says. Andrei Gromyko, appeals coun ruling that "when
the former Soviet foreign minister distinctive voice of.a professionala
for 29 years, holds the record.
A native of H~le in former East singer is widely known and delib·
Germany , he has been celebrating erately imitated in order to sell a
his birthday since last week, and product, the sellers have approprithe country has treated it with the ated what is not theirs and have
pomp expccled of royalty. Gensch- commitled a tort in California."
In the appeal acled on Monday,
er' s actual birthday was Saturday,
and he was feled then in his home- lawyers for Young &amp; Rubicam
argued that such practices are
town.
Among Germans, Genscher is allowed by federal copyright law.
arguably the most popular politi·

Church outfug held

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, March 25,1992
.

TRA VTEK DEBUT • Janet CarP.enter test
drives a specially-equipped Oldsmobtle Monday
tbat is outfitted witb TRA VTEK (sbort ror trav·
eltecbnoloay), a higb·tecb navigation and tramc

Chance of rain near 100 per·

cent tonight. Low near 40.

Page 4

Flight commander gets restart approval
KINGS MILLS, Ohio (AP) A ride from which a woman fell to
her death last year at Kings Island
has been refitted with new safety
features and will be in operation
when the amusement park opens
next month.
Park spokeswoman Carolyn
Boos said Monday that Kings

Pick 3: 404
Pick 4: 3629
Cards:
10-H; 5-C; A·D;
6-S

Vol. 42, No. 231
Copyrighted 1992

People in the news_ _ _ __
VATIC AN CITY (AP) - The
Vatican said Monday it hasn't
reached a "definitive verdict" in
Princess Caroline of Monaco's
request for an annulment of her
marriage to Frenchman Philippe
Junot
In a one-line statement, the Vat·
ican said the request was still under
study.lt stopped short of denying a
report by an Italian news agency,
ADNKRONOS, that the annulment
has been approved by a special
commission and was awaiting ftnal
confirmation.
An annulment would let the
princess marry again in the Roman
Catholic Church.
Three years after divorcing
Junot in !980, she mamed Italian
businessman S1efano Casiraghi in a
civil ceremony in 1983. He was
killed in a speedboat crash in October !990.
The grounds on which the
princess is seeking an annulment
have never been disloscd.

Ohio L~ttery

Cavs
beat
Pacers

••
•
•

•

'

II

.,.

benefits is a threat to the very existence of those whose lives are
already literally hanging by a·
thread.
"Without m.edical assistance,
diabetics who cannot afford insulin
or high-blood pressure patients
who cannot afford medication will
soon cost community, state and
federal governments more for the
treatment of more seri'ous, and
more expensive, health problems
than maintenance of benefits•
· "It is unfortunale that this stale
and nation find 'bashing the poor
and less fortunate' and what I call
'Poverty by Design' to be accept·
able norms.
Transcrlrt or Abel's speech
"On Apri flrst. more than 3,600,
"For 5ome, it is great political
people in my house disuict will rhetoric to say 'go out and get a
job', but the cold reality is that in
lose General Assistance benefi~.
"The unemployment rate in my many paru of Ohio, especially
home county tn January was more rural Ohio, there are no jobs.
than nine percent.
,
"When college students are
''The pending cut-off of GA
(Conllnued on 3)

wilh."
Abel said the response to the
pending elimination of benefits for
six months has been overwhelm·
in g.
"As April I draws nearer, I have
heard from many worried people
throughout our communities," Abel
said. "The negative response to
these cuts is not limited to just the
recipients of the aid."
Abel S¥id she hOpes to gather
support and testimopy from human
setvices officials from southeastern
Ohio as hearings on the proposal
get underway.

attending Hocking Technical College, the board voled to enter into a
contract with that school to provide
opportunities for dieletic technician
observation in the kitchens of the
Meigs Local Schools.
Vanessa Harless was accepted
as a tuition student The family has
moved out of the district but
Vanessa will continue to attend
Salem Cenler School.
Ernestine Ward was hired as a
substitute bus driver, and approval
was given for 35 sixth grade safety
patrol members at the Pomeroy
Elementary School to go on a trip
to Washington, D. C. The board
also voted to enter into a software
serv ice agreement with SEOVEC.
Supt. James Carpenter reported
that the Middlcpon Alumni Associ·
ation wants to install exhaust fans
in the Meigs Junior High School
gymnasium. They will pay the full
cost and usc a licensed electrician

for the work, Carpenter said. The
board had no objections.
The recent school bus accident
on State Route 7 near the high
school was discussed and Supt.
Carpenter was asked to contact the
Ohio Department of Transportation
for a review of the highway mar~­
ings and speed limitations at the
Route 33 and Route 7 exit sile. Jt
was noted that two bus accidents
have occurred at the same location
this year.
.
On recommendation of John
Hood , the board commended
Katherine Deskins for her defensive driving. That was a factor in
the lack of injuries in the accident,
Hood said.
The April 14 meeting will be
held at the Harrisonville school.
Attending were Supt. Carpenter,
board members, Bob Barton, presi·
dent, Larry Rupe, Hood, Roger
Abbott, and Randy Humphn:ys.

Senate puts 9-1-1 bill on hold
they have not had an opporrunity tq
By JOHN CHALFANT
study its impact on extsting nonAssocialed Press Writer
COLUMBUS -Final action on profits," Schafrath said.
Rep. Michael Veric~. D-Wara county sales tax bill for 9-1·1
ren,
said the engmecr utlc btll he
emergency lelephone systems faces
sponsored
would afford graduates
a delay after the House tacked on
of
engineering
colleges the same
amendments dealing with housing
protec
tion
already
granted to
programs and other unrelated mat·
lawyers, doctors and other profesters.
Sen. Richard Schafrath, R- sionals.
He said the measure, which now
Loudonville, won unanimous Sen·
ate support for sending his measure goes to the Senate, generally would
to a conference committee to permit the title of engineer to be
review a series of additions made used only by a graduate of an
by the House.
In other action Tuesday, the
House approved 94· 1 a measure to
restrict the use of the title of engi·
ncer, while the Senate unanimously
OK'd a bill that could save some
local governments money by letting the state auditor waive requirements for audits every two years.
It was announced at Monday's
Schafrath said his 9-1-1 tele- regular meeting of the S'outhern
phone proposal originally was Local Board of Education that
mtended to let counties impose a Bobby Ord, superintendent of
local permissive sales tax, subject Southern High School, will comto voter approval, to raise money plete the duties of principal for the
for operating such sr.stems.
remainder of the year as James
"To a simple btll there were a Adams, principal, will work his last
number of amendments atta&lt;;hed in day Friday. Adams will go on disthe House," he said.
ability retirement
Schafrath said most objections
The board approved the college
were prompted by an amendment preparatory curriculum as recomthat would let political subdivisions mended by the Ohio Board of
create non-profit corporations IQ Regents and the State Board of
receive and spend public and pri • Education . This is necessary,
vale money for housing purposes.
according to the board, for EMIS
"My office has been contacted reporting. The ai!Proved curriculum
by a number of organizations includes four umts of English, three
expressing their concern over the units of math containing elements
housing amendment especially," of geometry and algebra, three
he said.
units of science, three units of
The groups included the Ohio social studies, two units of foreign
Housing Coalition, and the Ohio language which must be the same
Coalition for the Homeless.
language, and one unit of the arts.
•'These organizations are
The board approved the High
opposed to the amendment because School Board Association to work
it was added at the last minute, and · out workers compensation for the

accredited engineering program or
licensed professional engineer.
Senators sent to Gov. George
Voinovich the local government
auditing measure introduced by
Rep. Jerry Krupinski, DStcubenville.
Sen. Richard Finan, R-Cincinnati. the Senate sponsor, said the
state auditor now is required to
begin an audit of every political
subdivision within two years of
completing the previous audit.

Ord to complete duties
as principal for 1992
Southern Local School District
next year; approved D. Michael
Mullen as sub stitute teacher;
approved Mary J. Clark at substitute custodian; approved medical
leave for Lois Mugrage; and
approved Lisa Papc as substitute
teacher for the rest of the year.
The board accepted Kini
Phillips' one-year leave of absence
for softball coach and hired
Howard Caldwell to take her place
this year; accepted the resignation
of Shirley Schultz as substitule custodian; accepted the resignation of
Carla Shuler as DPPF coordinato1
for the 1992·93 school year; anjl
accepted a request by the Racine
Ball As sociation to use the ball
fields this summer.
•
Cecilia Horup Nil sen was.
accepted by the board as a foreign
exchange student for the 1992-93.
school year. She is from Lorensburg, Norway, and she will be staying with Belinda and Jim Johnson. ·

Union authorizes return to work ·
•

PIKETON, Ohio (AP) ...._ Strik·
ing workers at the Portsmouth
Gaseous Diffusion Plant say they
are concerned that the operation of
the facility' is suffering because of
thewalkouL
About 600 members of Local 3689 of the Oil, Chemical and
Atomic Workers union voted Mon·
day night to authorize the union's
executive board to make an unconditional offer to return 'to work.
About 1,050 wmers have been on
strike at the plant since last June
11.
1 •
''The union . has recently

received a large amount 'of docu'
mentation that cleatlr delnoristrates
the Portsmouth facmty is sufferin'
grc:atly as a result of the Slfike,'
said local PresidentJohn Knauff.
''It is quest~~nable hOY( much
longer the faciltty can. ~ ~r·
able under. the ~sent SI!UIUOO·. .
The unton wd Marlin Marietta
Energy Systems, which operates
the plant f~r the U:S: Department
of Energy, ts allow111g the plant to
deteriotate. The plant processes
uranium for use in nuclear reactors.
The stalement said that if union
membea go baclc to wort, they ~

prevent the plant from deteriorating
to the point of being unusable.
·
Martin Marietta spo!l:esman·Tim
Matchett said Tuesday that the
union's assessment of the plant's
' tondition is incoqecL He said tl)e'.
plant "P. operated efficientlr. dur,
mg the nine month! of the strike• .·
Matchett said the company
wouldn't have a res~nse Wllil il
has ~ived an official offer fr1101
the unton. The union didn 'I lily
when It would J111b the oiTCI' 1118
plans a news conf~ ~ Wee~~
to discusS details of the projiOIIJ. •
·
·

iJ'I .

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