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                  <text>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

a

·.
-~

.,'

'•'

'

"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

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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 .

�.. ..

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
111 COurt sueet

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

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD

Assistant Publisher/Controller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

LE1TERS 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 !etten will be published. Letters
should be in good taste, addressing issues. not penonalities.

Excerpts from other
Ohio newspapers
By The Associated Press
Following are excerpiS from recenl editorials on national issues
in newspapers across the slate.
Akron Beacon Journal, March 23
The companies that publish school textbooks are in business to
sell books. And to make sales, they try to offer what schools want.
In recent years, that has meant books lhal please all and offend no
one.
Of course, this is no excuse for the gross factual errors running
through many history textbooks on the market today. But it helps
explain why it can happen: namely, because publishers become so
occupied with sanitizing history lhat Jhey give less attention to Jhe
need for accuracy.
The textbook publishers have to respond to !heir consumers, Jhe
people in education who decide which books to buy for the schools.
II wouldn't cost any more money for school officials to demand
high quality textbooks, in which Jhe frrst concern is for the accurate
and complete telling of history.
Tbe CinciDnati Posl, March 21
We usually leave economic predictions to the people who get
handsomely paid to make fools of themselves. However, recent
reports encourage us to think we may be near an end to Jhe current
recession, which has been harder to shake lhan a snout full of por·
cupine quills.
The optimism begins wilh Jhe 9.6 percent surge in housing starts
in February. Single-family homes, where most Americans dwell,
shot up I 5 percent for the month.
Moreover, the government tells us, industrial production rose 0.6
percent in February, its first increase in four months.
Although America still imporiS more than it sells abroad, the
U.S. trade deficit is at iiS lowest point in almost a decade.
The marshmallow atop this cup of economic hot cocoa is the
repon of II of 12 Federal Reserve district banks that business in
their region is picking up.
Pan of the trouble with economic future-telling is lhat the Tarot
deck that governs it contains so many different cards.
Also, we're mindful that the last time the economy tried to crawl
out of this recession, it fell wheezing back into iJs sickbed.
Still, something good seems to be stirring.
The Columbus Dispatch, March 21
Earth, a tough liule rock on a cosmic mission. shrouded in mystery, is home to about 5.5 billion people today, more than double
the number in 1950.
Amid the curreniS of war, climate and disease, Jhe human species
consJantly strives for a new equilibrium. The challenge is to dcvel·
op and use resources that susJain a stable or growing population
with a steady or improving sJandard of living.
The world's rate of population growth is slowing, but the grand
challenge - matching resources to needs - remains ever present
Two major schools of thought seck to address lhat challenge.
Socialism views with alarm the pain inherent in the challenge and
applies central authority to direct production and distribution. Capi·
Jalisrn rejoices at the opponunities inherent in t!il challenge and
applies incentives to increase productivity and to meet the needs in
the marlcctplace.
Here, late in the 20th century, a growing number of countries
Ion~ wed to socialist principles and increasingly disillusioned arc
opung prudently for more of the risks and the disciplines of the
marketplace.
Tbe (Cleveland) Plain Dealer, March 19
It was fitting that, in what should be the last whites-only election
in South Africa, white v01ers unmistakably rejected Jhc system of
apartheid Jhat has shackled the country's blacks for decades. It was
an enormous accomplishment for President F.W. de Klerk, one that
should quicken the pace of negotiations for a new constitution and
blac'k political participation being carried out in the Conference for
a Democratic Soulh Africa.
Although de Klerll: may have had precious few details, he at least
could paint some picture of what a multiracially led South Africa
would look like. CODESA has agreed in principle on numerous
topics and is likely to proceeamore quickly after Tuesday's show
of support.
Conversely, the pro-apartheid Conservative Pany offered little in
the way of leadership or a productive and fair vision fcrr the country.
The CP could show only an alliance with the neo-Nazi Afrikaner
Resistance Movement, whose members scared whites far more than
did the prospect of power-sharing with blacks.

Berry's World

'·'
•• '

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel :
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio . :
Wednescta , March 25, 1992

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

OHI O Weather

WASHINGTON • If members
of Congress had paid as much
attention to the House Bank as they
do to other matters - like what
they have for lunch - the rubber·
gate scandal might have been
caught on the first bounce. .
But, the slipshod operations of
the bank went unnoticed by lawmakers for years. Even when the
scandal first broke last summer,
they didn't recognize how bad it
was. They had their minds on
weightier things, like food.
About the time the· General
Accounting Office was polishing
off its damning repon on bounced
checks, the House leadership was
congratulating iJself on an ambitious culinary reform package for
Capitol restauranls. Members had
been bellyaching for years that the
food and the service left much to
be desired.
Rep. Charlie Rose, D-N.C.,
chainnan of the House Adminislra·
lion Committee, spearheaded the
reforms, with an emphasis on fresh
veggies and a Southern accent to
the meals. The House Members'
Dining Room was refurbished

under the direction of Heather
Foley, wife and unpaid office boss
for House Speaker Tom Foley, DWash.
These guys may not put too
much stock in balancing a check·
book or a budge~ but the quick resolution of Jhe food crisis demon-

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein
slratcs that they Jcnow how to Jake
care of business - personal business.
That image of a Congress that
fiddles while Rome burns is what
Americans are carrying into the
voting booth this year. Congress
Jakes care of iiSClf while it allows
the savings and loan scandal to
mushroom into a trillion-dollar
calamity. Congress runs up the
national debt and gets free overdraft protection at the House Bank.
Congress eats a salmon lunch for
under $10 while America is brownbagging it.

Over on the Senate side, they've
also found that !here is such a thing
as a free lunch. The Senate reSJau·
raniS and lunch counter operations
spent $99,60 I more than they took
in during 1990, the most recent
year audited by the General
Accounting Office. That doesn ' t
include the more than $2 million
the Senate tossed in from taxpayers' money to pay for salaries,
remodeling projects and new
equipment. Nor does it include the
$400.000 Jhe taxpayers threw in to
pay back an old loan. Nor does it
mclude the free rent and utilities in
the Capitol building. The bottom
line - Jaxpayers subsidized their
senators' lunch bill for well over
$2.4 million in one fiScal year.
Paying back loans isn't a problem for the Senate when it can dip
into the .taxpayers' pockets. The
$400,000 was borrowed in 1988
and promised for repayment in
1989. When Jhc debt carne due, the
Senate simply appropriated
$400,000 in tax money to the
resJaurant and called it even.
The House restauraniS try to be
self-sustaining, but it isn't easy

SfftMlER~

~ CMIW1 jt1?r. 1112-

WRITTEN ANY

50JDCUECI6
L~TELY?

when membeis sign the tab and
then don't pay it for years. When
that little indiscretion was exposed
last summer, the outstanding
amount owed Jhc House food services system was more than
$300,000. Some of the tabs were
five yeirs overdue.
Capitol Hill is indeed Jhe "last
planJation in America, " a planJa·
lion that cosiS $2.3 billion a year to
operate. There is free in-house
medical service at a time when
Congress can't pass a heallh-care
bill. There is a $3,000 tax deduction for housing expenses when
home affordability is at an all·time
low for the common people. There
is even a free TV studio so lawmakers can record sound bites to
keep the folks back home mollified.
Apparently. the facilities in
Congress are the envy of the whole
neighborhood. Late one evening, a
congressman was stanlcd to see a
caravan of police cars and a limo
pull up to a House office building.
Police ordered the congressman to
stand back. The door to the limo
opened and out stepped George
Bush, clad in swcaiS and sneakers,
ready to work out in the House
gym.
ALL ABOARD - The little
open-car subway that shuttles people underground from the Capitol
to the Han Senate Office Building
is paid for by JaXpaycrs, but !heir
money docsn 't buy them a scat.
One afternoon last week, the cars
were full of tourisJs, worker bees
and four senators, Robert Graham,
D-Aa., John Rockefeller. D-W.Va ..
Bob Kerrey, D-Ncb., and Joseph
Lieberman, D-Conn. Then along
came Sen. Ted Stevens, R·Alaska,
with an entourage of three. He saw
the packed cars and indicated he
would wait for the next train. But
the subway driver and a Capitol
policeman wouldn't hear of it.
They booted a group of dumbfounded tourists out of the car to
make room for Stevens and his
friends. Senators arc busy people
and Capitol cops know beucr than
10 make them wait There are even
buzzers in the senators' private clc·
v'ator to alert Jhe police on the subway platform to hold the train
because a senator is on the way ·
down.

Accu-Weathe~ forecast for daytime conditions and high temperatures
MICH.

A body in need of reform; ·full investigations
Is it any wonder that the pub·
lie's perception of the Congress as
an instituuon is at an all time low
given the recent revelations that
have been played out on our
nation's television screens and on
the front pages of our countrys
major newspapers?
Though the problems have
existed for many years , until
recently the power brokers in
Congress were able to sweep most
of these matters under the rug. Not
until the furor over the Senate's
"Keating Five;" the leaks, aecusa·
tions, and innuendos surroundins
the Clarence Thomas confmnation
hearings; and the recent House
check-kiting expose, did many of
the perquisites and indiscretions of
Congress become common Jcnowl·
edge to the average citizen. Once
alerted, however, to the severity of
the problems that exist, it appears
the American public will not accept
anything less than a full and impar·
ll'al 1'nvesu'gau'on of all aspects of
the scandals that have been uncovered.
This past week another shoe
dropped in the unfolding ftaSCO
that
has Come 10 be known as "Rubber·
gate." Faced with allegations of
illegal check-cashing and possible
campaign fund money laundering

at the U.S. House Post Office, lhe
patronage-appointed administrator
of that facility, Bob RaJa, resigned.
His resignation comes two weeks
after another patronage appointee
of the House Majority, Jack Russ.
the Sergeant at Arms, found it neeessary to resign as a result of his
mismanagement of the House
Banking facility.
If Shakespeare were cataloguing
the unsavory events unfolding in
Congress, I sus~ I he would be

Cong. Clarence
Miller
apt to say ''There is something rot·
ten on Capitol Hill." The latest dis·
coveries surrounding the operation
of the House Post Office, coming
as they do on the heels of earlier
allegations of embezzlement of
stamp aceouniS, drug use and pos·
sible dru~dealing on the ftan of
• ·li"ty •s emp oyees,
some or t .ac1
point to a pauern of wrongdoing
and mismanagement throughout
the institution that is frightening.
These latest accounts of malfeasance paint a picture of a House out
of conb'Ol, of a body whene polili·
cal chicanery and political privilege
is the rule rather than the excep·

lion.
We have all heard the ex pressian "power corrupiS and absolute
power corrupts absolutely. When
you have a body that has been in
the hands of one party for Jhe last
38 years, is it any wonder that bad
habits and bad practices become
institutionalized? The people in
power become presumptuous; they
become impervious to change .
They do as they wish, when they
wish, with little threat of serious
challenge. A plantation menJality
seJs in wherein the main objective
becomes serving the masters of the
manor.
Though federal postal regulalions prohibit the use of checks to
obtain cash or purchase money
orders, it has been reported that the
Postmaster's office routinely
cashed such checks for certain
members of Congress. In facl, it
acpears that some members whose
ks
ld 1
be h d
cat ec
cou Bank,
no anger
e
the House
becausecas
of the
shaky status of their personal
accounts, used the House Post
Office as a means of cilcumventing
· ·
Other all egau·ons
such resJncuons.
involve the use of the House Post
Office as a means for laundering
campaign funds for a member's
personhl usc. 1 has been charged

that some members purchased large
volumes of stamps with checks ·.
from their campaign accounts and
would lhen, some wccb later, take
back the stamps in exchange for
cash, leaving no paper trail as to
the true diSposition of these funds.
The unfortunate aspect of these
recent revelations concerning the
mismanagement, misconduct and
elhical lapses of Jhe Congress, is· ..
that every member stands indicted
whether guilty qr not. To borrow
some gallow humor from my former House colleague, Senator Dan
CoalS of Indiana, "Ninety percent
of Congress is giving the rest of us
a bad name." Many in the press,
and in the public are sug$csting
that a total "House cleanmg" is
necessary if the American people's
faith is to be restored in this institu·
tion.
I'm suggesting that nothing less
than a full and impartial investigation of the House Post Office and
House Banking scandals be con- ·
ductcd by an ouJside prosecutor.
The internal handling of Jhesc two ·· ·
problems to date, suggests that
until such independent counsel is
assigned this task, the full facts
may never be known, and the truly
guilty may never be held account- ·
able.

Record campaign cash is rolling in
Richard Gephardt - the Demo·
cratic majority leader and potential
presidential contender - who
raised $1.9 million. He far outdistanced Rep. Jim Moody, D· Wis.,
who raised $1.09 million. He, in
tum, was far ahead of Rep. Pat

TbeSenate
Candidates for the Senate,
incumbents and challengers together, raised some $77 million in
1991. In contrast to the House,
where incumbents got almost all
the funds, some of the biggest
fund -raisers for Senate seats
included candidates for open sealS
and challengers. The top I 0 were
Schroeder, 0 -Colo., who raised California open-scat candidale Rep.
$598,614.
Thomas Campbell, R-Calif. ($3.2
Rounding out the top 10 we~e: million); Sen. Robert Packwood,
Reps. Martin Frost, D· Texas R·Ore. ($3.1 million); Rep. Mel
($598,348); Newt Gingrich, R-Oa. Levine, !&gt;-Calif. ($3 million); Sen.
($595,196); Saltder Levin, D-Mich. John Seymour, R-Calif. ($2.9 mil($588,629); Marty Russo, D-Ill. lion); Rep. Batbara Boxer, D-Calif.
{$575,076); Henry Waxman, D· ($2.8 million); Sen. Rollert Kasten,
Calif. ($SS4,694); Clllrles Taylor, R·Wis. ($2.4 mlllioo); Sen. Arlen
R•N.C. ($547,667); and lohn Spec~er, R-Pa. ($2.3 million); Sen.
Murtha, O.Pa. {$537,978).
R1chard Shelby, D·Ala. ($2 milAa yet another example of the lioo); former Democratic San Franadvantages of incumbency, at · cisco mayor Dianne Feinslein ($1.9
year's end cunent House members miiUoo) and former N.Y. Demohad $91.5 million In "cash on •
Rep. Omldine Ferraro ($1.9
hand" while their opponeniJ have million).
manaaed only $5.8 million. Top
ne parties
among House int:umbentS was New
As in recent elec~s. the GOP
York DaiiOCI:It Sleplm Solarz; at ind ill tund-lli!ing anns continue
yNr'S end he had $2 million In the . to vastly OUIJIICC Jhelr Democradc
bank, folloMd dOIO!y by Cllifor- COURICipllll.' In 1991 the Republinia RepubUCIII David ])rJor who can Nallollll Committee and ill
inp.
had $1.87 million IIIII New Yort Sena1o and Houao Clllllllilll COlli·
Amana Houle membn, 1991's. Democral Charles Schumer who milleell'lilod $75 milllon~plus an
bigeal fund-fiber 11111 MiUouri's had $1.8 million.
. additional $18.4 million In so-

Ben Wattenberg

~-~-·-

__ ...., __ ---··-

"'~ "'-

called "soft money·· - large cor- · ·
porate, union and individual contri-·
butions that cannot be used in spc· · . ·
cific federal camp.-igns. In contras~ · ··
their Democratic counterparts man· · · ··
. aged to raise only $23 million plus ·· ·
almost $8 million in soft money. · · ·
· Political action
committees
In the House the top five PAC
recipients were all Democrats: ···
Richard Gcphardt ($727 ,308) , · · ·
Henry Waxman ($348,950), Marty _ .
Russo ($333,888), Sander Levin :
($319,931) and Miclligan's David
Bonior ($316,130). l
In the Senate, evely incumbent
.running for re-election received tit
least $200,000 from PACs in 1991.
Tbe top of the list was South DakoJa Democrat · Tom. Daschle :
{$853,574) followed by Richard :
Shelby ($823,476), Louisiana • •
Democrat John Breaux {$774,090), ;
John Seymou~ ($689,124) and ·. :
Kcntuc_k}'_ Democrat Wendell Ford
($655,560).
. .
One advantage of incumbency: ~
At year's end Ctii'I'I!Dt House mem- , · •
bers had $91.5 million in 'Cash on ·· : .
hand' while their opponeniS had · ; :
only SS.8million.
•• •

(C)1992
NEWSPA,Eit .: ·:
ENTERPRISE ASSN.
• ; '- •

IMansfield I ss• I•
' ' ' ' '

•IColumbus I ss• I

•
57°

'1.

By The Associated Press
Around Ohio
Tonight, clear early. then
increasing cloudiness. Not as cold
with the lows in the upper 20s
northeast to the upper 30s southwest. Wednesday , becoming
cloudy with a chance of afternoon
showers west half. Mos~ y_;pnny in
the morning east' half, lhetrbecoming cloudy: Highs in the 50s.
Around the nation
. Rain clouds prevailed this mom·
ing from the central Great Lakes to
the Gulf Coast slates.

Rain fell early today in
Nashville, Tenn., and St. Louis.
San Antonio received drizzle.
Showers were forecast today in
central California and southern
Florida. Flurries were predicted in
North Dakota. Minnesota and
norlhcrn Michigan.
A storm off California moved
slowly toward shore and was
expected to hit San Diego on
Thursday or Friday.
Storms raked Texas and Okla·
homa on Tuesday, with reports of
hail up to I inch in diameter ncar
Buffalo Springs, Texas, and

Union officials, candidates
speak to labor coalitions

' ' ' ' '
W. VA.

KY.

Flurries

leo

Pr. Cloudy

Sunny

Cloudy

C1992 Aa::u-Weather, Inc.

Via AssocJatsd Pf9U GraphlcsNsl

----Weather---:--By The Associated Press
Friday through Sunday:
Friday, a chance of rain or
snow. Lows 25-35 and highs 3545. Saturday, a chance of flurries
northeast, fair elsewhere. Lows
from Jhe mid-20s to low 30s. Highs
m the 40s. SuMay, fair. Lows 25-

35 and highs 45-55.
Soulb·Central
Tonight, periods of rain. Low
near 40: Chance of rain near 100
percent. Thursday, a slight chance
of lingering mornin~ rain, then
partly cloudy. High m the upper
50s. Chance of rain 30 percent.

Several union officials and can·
didates were speakers at a meeting
of the West Virginia and Ohio .
Labor Coalition held Saturday at
the Rutland Civi~ Center.
Among. the speakers were Slate
Rep. Mark Malone, and Meigs
County Commissioner candidates
Gary Evans and Larry Lavender.
Union personnel speaking at the
meeting included Dick Knapp ,
organizing director, Local 1059
United Food and Commercial
Workers. Columbus; Chad Young,
interrJational represenJative, United
Food and Commercial Workers;
Jack No~gle; business manager,
and Dav1d Gress, business representative, South Central District
Council, Carpenters Union, Col urn-

bus.
Also speaking were Oly Yore,
District 6 representative, United
Mine Workers, Dan Stidham, Local
5668, Un ited Steel Workers of
America, Max Whitlatch, Local
1857, Meigs Mines, United Mine
Workers of America; and Woody
Call, Ill, of Local 5668, RAC,
United Steel Workers of America.
Call said that about 30 different
locals in West Virginia and Ohio
have "committed" to the coalition.
He said that a council made up of
representatives from the various
locals involved has been set up.
The next meeting is scheduled
for April 18 at I p.m. at the Rut·
land Civil Center. All labor is invited, Call said.

announcements----Area deaths--- -Meigs
Girl scout leaders to meet
Village Council will be held
Melvin R. Cremeans

The Rev. Lloyd Grimm and the
Rev. Samuel Basye will officiate at
the I p.m. Thursday services at the
Fisher Funeral Home for Melvin R.
Cremeans, 35, of Rutland. He died
Tuesday, March 24, 1992 at Veter·
ans Memorial Hospital. His wife
was the former PaJncia Frey. He is
survived by a brother and sister-inlaw, Marvin and Carol Cremeans
of Westerville.

Barbara J, Smith
Barbara Jean Smith, 41 , Wellston. died Tuesday. March 25 .
1992 at her residence after a
lcnglhy illness.
She was born Feb. 25, 1951 in
Mason County, W.Va.
She is survived by two daughters, Michelle Jean Smith, Well·
stan, and Tina Marie Smith,
Columbus; two grandchildren,
Justin Michael Lawson, Wellston,
and Brandon Scali Smith, Wellston; two sisters, Mrs. Donald
(Margie) Newell, Clifton, W.Va.;
Mrs. John (Diane) Pope, Gallipolis;
one aunt, Katherine Rose, Gallipolis; one uncle, Eugene Flowers,
Hartford, W.Va.; two nephews, one
niece and several cousins.
Sh~ was preceded in death by
her parents; one sister, Margaret
Brumley; three aunts; one uncle
and maternal grandparents, Oscar
and Edith Flowers.
Services will be Friday at2 p.m.
at Fisher Funeral Home m Middle·
port with burial in Riverview
Cemetery.
Friends may call Thursday 6-9
p.m. at the funeral home.

George D. Gilkey
George D. Gilkey, 96, New
Marshfield, died Tuesday, March
24, 1992 at Hickory Creek Care
Center in The Plains.
Born in Pratts Fork, Meigs
Countl. June 18, 1895 he was a
son o the late Allen and Kate
Howell Gilkey. He was the grandson of Andrew Jackson and Kalhlinc Stanley Gilkey and the great·
grandson of William and Sarah
Brown Gilkey who came from
Pennsylvannia to Bedford Town·
ship around 1825.
He was a carpenter, a veteran of
World War I servin~ in France, a
member of The Plams VFW Post
No. 7174, the .K and T Crossen
American Legion Post No. 21 and
the Redman Lodge.
He is survived by three daugh·
tcrs, Mrs. Margaret (William) Can· ,
tcr, Mrs. Linda (Gary) Hanning,
both of New Marshfield, and Sandy
Gilkey , Morristown; five sons,
Richard, Harold and Terry, all of
Athens, Gary of Morris!Qwn, and
Gregory of GuysviUe; one brother,
Pearl of Pomeroy; one 5istcr,
Rhoda Lay, Bluntstown, Fla.; six·
teen grandchildren; 26 great-grand~

children and four great-great·
grandchildren.
Besides his pareniS he was preceded in death by his first wife,
Edna King Gilkey; and second
wife, Margaret Durfee Gilkey; four
daughters, Betty, Cheryl and Sher·
ry Gilkey, and Lola Perry; three
sons, Herbert, George Jr. and
David; five brothers, Harry, Guy
and three infants; and one sister,
Hazel Akrcs.
Services will be Friday at I p.m.
at Bigony-Jordan Funeral Home in
Albany with Rev. Leonard McVey
officiating. Burial will be in Athens
County Memory Gardens with mil·
itary graveside services by The
Plains VFW Pdst No. 7174.
Friends may call Thursday
evening 7-9 p.m. at the funeral
home.

There will be a Girl Scout leaders meeting Thursday at 7 p.m. at
lhe Chester Scout Hall.
Dance planned
There will be a . round and
square dance Friday, 8-11:30 p.m.
at Kenny and Millie Reynolds,
Hockingport, with music by
Smokey Mountain Drifters. Ronnie
Wood will be caller. Country, bluegrass and gospel music is played
there every Monday at 7 p.m. Public invited to all events.
VFWtomeel
Tuppers Plains 1/FW Post No.
9053 mceiS Thursday at 7:30 p.m.
at the post home.

Wednesday, April I, 7 p.m. to conduct personnel and regular mailers.
Graduation dinner
Belles and Beaus Western
Square Dance Club will host a
graduation dinner at the senior citi·
zens center in Pomeroy on Monday
at 6:30 p.m. with a potluck. The
. public is invited.
Gospel sin;!ng
Jan and Kathy wtll perform at
the United Faith Church in
Pomeroy on Sunday. Services
begin at 9:30 a.m. and Sunday
school and worship service arc at
10:30 a.m. Singing and message by
Rev. Jan Lavender. Public is invited.

Dance planned
Tuppers Plains VFW Post No.
Lebanon trustees to meet
9053 and Ladies Auxiliary will
Lebanon Township Trustees
host a round a square dance on Fri- meet Tuesday 7 p.m. at the townday from 8·11 p.m . with music by ship building.
Velernns Memorial Hospital
Happy HQ)Iow Boys. Public invit·
TUESDAY ADMISSIONS - ed.
Lois George, Rutland; Michael
Pierce, Middlepon. .
Euchre tourmiment
Ellen Prince, Mary Wingett,
Tuppers Plains VFW Post No. · ,
1:'
Michael Hubbard, ·charles Sham· 9053 and Ladies Auxiliary will
blin and.Mary Gilkey.
host a euchre toumarnent Saturday
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER at 7 p.m. Refreshments available. · HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP)
Discharges, March 24 • Mrs. Call Charles Carr, 985-4161 , for - Out-of-state studeniS would be
Samuel Armstrong and son, Patri- information. ·
hit the hardest by tuition increases
cia Gibson, Mrs. Charles Holley
proposed
to help Marshall UniverGala planned
and son , Mrs . James Powell and
sity
erase
a projected $2 in.illion
Black Diamond Girl Scout deficit in next
daughter, and John Tilley.
year's budget.
Births, March 24 - Mr. and Mrs. Counci I wi II have a volunteers
The
school's
Institutional Board
Michael Griffith. a son, Pomeroy. recognition dinner Friday at 7 p.m. of Advisers endorsed Jhe increases
Mr. and Mrs. Clifton Hager, a at the National Guard Armory, Tuesday. The University of West
daughter, Wellston. Mr. and Mrs. 1500 Blizzard Drive, Pllrkersburg, Virginia System board will Jake up
Thomas Ingels, a son, West W.Va.
More than 200 volunteers and the proposal at iiS May meeting.
Columbia, W.Va.
"Raising fees is not something
guesiS from central West Virginia
we
want to do. It's something we
and southeastern Ohio arc expected
have
to do," Marshall President J.
to attend . Entertainment will be
Wade
Gilley said.
Eight were fmed and two others provided by the ninth grade choir
Tuition
for in-state students
forfeited bonds in the court of Mid· of Belpre High School.
dlepon Mayor Fred Hoffman TuesLocal and regional awards will would increase $80 a semester to
be given for ouiSJanding service to $880, while most out-of-slate studay night
deniS would pay an extra $304 a
Fined were Mary A. Samuels, girl scouting.
semester, bringing their tuition to
Pomeroy, $10 fine only, expired
$2.325.
Lodge to meet
registration ; Debra L. Wolfe,
Students from neighboring
A special meeting of Shade
Racine, $I 0 fine only, loud
Lawrence
County, Ohio and Boyd,
exhaust; Ruth A. Priddy, Middle- River Lodge No. 453 F and AM
Carter,
Greenup
and Lawrence
port; $10 and costs, failure to com- will be held Thursday at 7 p.m. at
counties
in
Kentucky
would pay a
ply with an order from a police the lodge hall in Chester. Work in
officer; Bridgett Johnson, Middle· .master mason degree. All master $204 increase to $1,560 per
pon, $10 and costs, running a stop masons invited to auend. Refresh- semester, Gilley said.
The increase would "remove
sign; Patrick S. Cleland, Pomeroy, ments served.
the
subsidy West Virginia JaXpay$100 and costs, driving under susers
contribute
to the support of outpension, and $50 and cost, con·
Pomeroy council to meet .
of-slate
swdenJs,''
Gilley said.
A special meeting of Pomeroy
tempt of court; Kenny D. Ramsey,
Pomeroy, $50 and costs, consuming alcohol under age 21 , and
ordered to pay old fmes plus court
cosiS; Ronald R. Plumley, GalliPQ- .
lis, contempt, old fines plus couh
cosJs: .-*thur Gray, Racine, $100
and costs, driving under suspension, also old fines plus court costs,
Forfeiting bonds were Donald
L. Dailey, MiddlePort, $460 bond,
physical control of a motor vehicle
while under the influence or alcohol.or drugs; and James R. Dono.hue, Point Pleasant, W.Va., $50,
speeding.

Hospital news

·MU president

pronosesfiee
Increase

Court news

Be 'Reali, For SpringI

20%0FF
ALL

_£~-c

v.r.~--

TO BENEFIT: JACKSON J.UNIOR
FEDERATED WOMEN'S CLUB

Jadulon, Ohio .

INCLUDES - lADIES • GIRLS
&amp;·MEN'S
THURSDAY • FRIDAY • SATURDAY

'

DATE: Friday, March 27, 1!1!12 ..,

PREVIEW: 7:00 P.M. ·• Wlnt! A:
·
CheeM 'To be Served

.

.

J

AUCTION: 1:00 O'Clock P. M.
'

ADMISSION I 15.00 Per Ticket
FOR TICI(ETS CI\LL:
286-3045 ...........•..• lllarauet Conway
' 286-6649 . ·..... :·. .•.... . . Barb Brackman ·
286-4!1.12 .. . .....• . '· ......... Ma111 lll!llot

'

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AVE.,

1'. .. .

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I

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"

nesma ; the 30s in Maine; the 40s in
the Northern Plains, New England
and the mid-Atlantic slates; the 50s
in the Tennessee Valley, the Midwest and the interior Northwest;
the 60s in the Southeast, coastal
Northwest and much of Jhe South·
west; the 70s in Southern California, most of Texas 311d nearly all of
Florida; and the 80s in south Texas,
the tip of Florida and the Ariz"ona
desen.
• The high temperature for the
natiqn Tuesday was 84 degrees at
Homestead, Fla.

... ___ ____
(Continued from__:_
1)

unable to find gainful employment
in the region after graduation, a 45year-old person wlth a high school
diploma most likely will not be
able to do better.
"There are special ·obsJacles to
employment facing the poor in
rural areas that continue to be overlooked. In a rural area, for exampie, transportation to what few jobs
may be available is often prohibitively expensive when one has
to drive 20 or 25 miles to work
each day and there is no public
transportation.
"But these realities continue to
be ignored by many here in Columbus and in Washington.
"To begin to find a solution to
the problem, and to offer some
much-needed help to our most vul-

. Meigs County. Emergency SerVICes answered SIX calls for assisJance on Tuesday.
On Tuesday at 2:33 p.m.,
Racine squad went to Racine ElemenJary School. Steven Boso was
Jaken to Veterans Memorial Hospi·
Jal. At 3:37 p.m., Middleport unit
went to Beech Street and transponed Jennifer McKinney to Veterans.
At 5:12p.m., Middleport squad
went to Walnut Street. Mary Smith
was Jaken to Veterans.
At 6 p.m., Pomeroy units went

to Monkey Run for an auto accident. Misty Parsons was taken to
Pleasant Valley Hospital. Keith
Mattox, Shane PhiUips, and James
Parsons refused treatment. At
I0:32 p.m., Tuppers Plains squad
went to Old State Route 7 for Elhel
Carson, who was taken to Camden·
Clark Memorial Hospital. At 11:37
p.m ., Middleport squad went to
'Village Manor Apartments, and
transported Una Braynard to Pleasant Valley.

PIUCII

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a.tlloolla DaUy Trihuoo 011 a tloroa Ill

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w-.. . . . . .. ... . . . . . . . . ... .m.84.18.
.11

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. . . ._ ........... :...........................S411.150
II

w.-__,.. . ._._, . . . .. ._. ,$11.40

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The union sued after union miners were laid off when Black Dia- . :
mond Energy Co. lOOk over a Bar·
bour County mine from Kitt Ener- ·•·
gy Corp, a subsidiary of SJandard ··1 •
Oil of Ohio, Claypole said.
Division of Environmental Pro- •·
tection records show that Black
Diamond bought the mine in ·•
February 1987. then sold it to
Philippi Mining Co. in December
1988.
The union contended its contract ·: ·
wilh Kill Energy required that any ".
other company laking over operatiOn conunue to employ miners ,. •
from UMW Local 2095 Claypole ·.. .
· said.

'

· .·

4-8x1 0

4-3x5

16-Wallets
00 Siting
Ftt

$1. Ali.Dar.oy
~51*

PLUS FREE BONUS

FRIENDSHIP
WALLETS
Yftft Pu~thlll o1 W:allliis,al

Studio Quality PolttBits

• Sllbit~ Chilthn, Allults, Family
• ~ $2.00 &amp;dl Ac10Jt10111l .,.......,

• 1'051 Our Choice

• 0ns ~~ ~' s..q;ea

_,....

• One Spocial ~; F•milr

•AtldiriOMI POI!riU Avalllllle

· -hbtorltlloea
Gatlla Cou~

IJ
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....... _ ..............-...................
0.- Gatlla eo-t;y

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Ohio 457~, Ph. 992-21116. s-.1 cl.,........ld at Pooo10rny, Ohio.

ou'ty........................................,_,26 C..lo
Sahaeltben 1101 dutri~ to .., lhe oarri·
or may nmlt In adYance
1o Tho

·,

;

'

IUBP8 113-1801
Pu.bUahed every afltmoon, Moaday
th....,h Fridoy, Ill Court 94., l'omen&gt;y,
Ohio hy the Ohio Valley Puhliahinr
Compaay/Mallimedia Int., Pomeroy,

BINGLE COPY

;
'
'

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The Daily Sentinel

One Weot........................................... II.IJO
One r.t...tlo .................................. .........95
Dna Year.................................. - .....$83.110

I,'

nerablc citizens, we must take •
action.
"H.B. 697 will be a good sJart •
by providing immediate protection :
to those individuals threatened by :
GA cuts.
J
"It will also provide a vehicle J
for us to examine our current systern of public assistance and devel- ~­
op true, meaningful reforms.
. •1
"One component of any such 1
reform, in my opinion, must be the •
restructuring of the standards of ·~
need, such as I have proposed in ·•
the p,ast in the form of H.B. 224.
' Finally, you must worlc toward ·
the empowerment of Jhe people in
this state by urging them to register
to.votc and to have their say in how ..
lhts state is governed."

Stocks

POSTMA8TER: Sand lddnaa ohanpa to
The Dally Santinet, Ill Courl 81.,
PooMoy, OHio 46769.
IJIJII8CEIPTJON RATES

;

~

Instead, he said, the union miners were laid off and eventually
lr"'""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""'il replaced.
The suit was ftled in U.S. District Court in Piltsburgh.
The sculcment money will be
Am Elc Power ............... ...30 7/8 distributed to workers based on a
Ashland Oii ... ...................Jl 7!8 formula that takes into account
AT&amp;T................................ .39 3/4 how long lhey worked at the mine
'
Bank One............. ......... ......47 1/4 Claypole said.
"A lot of these guys are out of
Bob Evans ......................... 26 1/2
Charming Shop................. .32 1/4 work," Claypole said. "Some of
City Holding ...................... l9 1/4 them have other jobs. Some of
Federal Mogul... ................. 16 5!8 them have jobs in other mines."
Goodyear T&amp;R .................. 67 5!8
Key Centurion ................... 18 I/2
Lands End ........................ .36 I/8
Limited Inc ....................... 29 3/4
Multimedia Inc ..................27 3/4
Rax Restaurant ................... I 5/8
Robbins&amp;Myers ............... ,.18 1/2
Shoney's Inc..... ................. 25
SJar Bank ................ .... ..... .. 29 1/2
Wendy Int' l.. ...................... l2 5/8
Worthington Ind ................ 24 I/4
Stnck reports are lhe 10:30
a.m. quotes provided by Blunt,
Ellis and Loewi or Gallipolis•.

Mo-: Tile Alaocialed Preu and lhe
Ohio New1paper AuoctttloD, 'National
Ad..rtiaina &amp;epreaentative, Branham
Newepaper Safaa 1 138 Third Av..u,
N"' York, N~ York 111017.
·

i

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Miners to benefit from
settlement over mine sale
FAIRMONT, W.Va. (AP)The United Mine Workers today
will Slart distributing $11 million to
about 500 former workers who lost
their jobs after their mine was sold,
union officials said.
The payments are pan of a $I2
million seulement of a suit the
union ftled against Standard Oil of
Ohio, UMW District 31 President
Eugene Oaypole said Tuesday.
The remaining $1 million will
go toward legal costs, Claypole
said.
Standard Oil of Ohio is now
known as BP America Inc . A
spokeswoman in the company's
Cleveland office said no one was
available for comment Tuesday.

·,

I

EMS units answer six calls

UIU whiM Mine eanier eeniot i1

z

210N.
SECOND

-IT : MAIILINART,1NC..artt:~.II6-141•U44

,,,

Abel

No o-pltou by awl permUted In

UYAWAY NOW FOR SPJ!.ING!

'

Mooreland, Okla.
Rain fell Tuesday evening from
the Mississippi Valley to Colorado.
Showers and thunderstorms were
scattered over southern Florida.
A cold snap contin.ued overnight
in the northern and central Atlantic
stntes, with temperatures ill' the
teens this morning in Maine. '
Sunny skies and sligh~y warmer
temperatures were forecast for the
region torkly, with snow, sleet or
light rain developing later in the
day.
Temperatures today were forecast in the 20s in northern Min·

B7CarriarorMotor-t.

AT: Jackoon Memorlal Building

1 • "' ..

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The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

Rain over Tennessee, storm headed for California

Wednesday; March 25

Congress' palate comes befo·re its checkbook

WASHINGTON (NEA) - As
if there were any need to make the
point, Campaig'n '92 is proving
once again that money is the fuel
driving the engine of politics.
In quick order Sens.,Robert Ker·
rey of Nebraska and Tdm Harkin of
Iowa dropped out of the race for
the Democratic nomination
because their fioancial support had
all but dried up followm~ their
slow stan in the early primanes.
Now the Federal Election Commission has come out with its fust
fund-raising scorecard of the election year. To no one's surprise congressional candidlles are raking in
the money at a RICOid pace.
TIM Roue
During 1991, candidates for
House aea11 n,ised some $82 million in cash, which is about 2S percent more lban wu raised in 1989,
the last pre-election ye,r. Spending
in the pre-election year wu alto
way up as many candidates bepn
campaigninJ wtier. Hou.se campaisn ~ndina ill 1991 was alm01t
$52 m111lon, and this does not
include some $90 million in tupayer money apeal by Roue
tncumbeau on free official mall·

\,

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Wednesday, March 25, 1992

Ill IIIID FOODWD
POMEROY, OHIO
SUNDAY, MARCHHOUAS1T07

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·, •
..- •
··• ·•
·
·, •

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The Daily

Sports

Sentinel~

By GEORGE ROBINSON
arms are young and strong and tal- and Greg Swindell to a rotation that
Nobody expected the Atlanta ented. Cy Young winner Tommy already included Jose Rijo and
Braves to win the NL West last Glavine, Steve Avery and John Tom Browning. If Chris Hammond
season, let alone the National Smeltz make a formidable trio of is healthy, and Swindell takes to
League pennant. This year the starters, and the bullpen is deep if the NL, this is the best rotation in
smart money is apparently on the not brilliant.
the division. Plus Rob Dibble is the
redesigned Cincinnati Reds. But
Moreover, this is a team that can best closer in the game- when his
Atlanta's pitching depth is hard to score runs, either fast (third in the head is screwed on straight
deny, and the Los Angeles Dodgers NL in homers) or slow (third in
Bip Roberts' arrival iJ!Ieft field
did almost as much renovating as stolen bases, fourth in sacrifice gives the Reds a bona fide leafoff
Cincy.
bunts). The nucleus is sound- man and the rest of the bauing
The projected order of finish Terry Pendleton (3B), Ron Gant order is solid. But the defense is a
(and managers) in the NL West in (CF), Dave Justice (RF), Brian little susnect.
1992:
·
Hunter (IB), Greg Olson (C)Herers-why Los Angeles (93·
I. ATLANTA BRAVES and the bench is d~. Having Otis 69. second in 1992) will finish
(Bobby Cox); 2. CINCINNATI Nixon (LF) back m late April third:
REDS (Lou Piniella); 3. LOS won't hurt.
A Dodger team with pitching
ANGELES DODGERS (Tommy
Here's why Cincinnati (74-88, shorts? It all de~ds on how well
Lasorda); 4. SAN DIEGO fifth in 1991) will fmish second:
Ore! Hershiser s comeback goes
PADRES (Greg Riddoch); 5. SAN
Lou Piniella nearly threw anoth- and on Tom Candiotti's adjustment
FRANCISO GIANTS (Roger er one of his patented fits last sea- 10 a new league. The bullpen is
Craig); 6. HOUSTON ASTROS son when GM Bob Quinn couldn't deep, with Jay Howell and Roger
(Art Howe).
get him pitching help. Well , it took McDowell as closers and Jim Gott
Here's why Atlanta (94-68, ftrSt Quinn a lillie longer than he and Steve Wilson as setup men. If
in 1991) will rmish rtrSc .
planned; but help is here.
everybody's healthy, the Dodgers
Pitching, pitching, pitchjng. The
The Red$ ad,ded Tim Belcher

Page:-4

low on gas without Olajuwon; Cavs outrun Pacers

' By The Associated Press
The Houston Rockets' troubles
with center Hakeem Olajuwon
ha~ them in trouble in the Western
Coo!erence playoff race. .
The Seattle SuperSoniCS took
advantage of Olajuwon's suspcmsiou. dominating the Rock_ets mside
Tuesday night and beaung them
128-106. The loss dropped the
Roc:kets into eighth place m the
coaference, just one-half game
ahead of the Los Angeles !.akers.
ibe Sonics outrebounded Houston 46-28, including II each by

Shawn Kemp and Michael Cage,
and got 32 more shots from the
field.
Seattle also had 24 offensive
rebounds to nine. for the Rockets,
who suspended Olajuwon Monday,
claiming his hamstring injury isn't
bad enough to keep him out of unifonn.
"We were detennined to raise
the tempo because we knew we
could get the defensive rebounds
with Olajuwon out," Kemp said.
"We have to lift our play up to
a different level without Olajuwon," Rockets guard Kenny Smith
said.
The Rockets lifted their game
last year when. they went 15-10
without Olajuwon when he broke a
bone around his eye. But they are
2-8 without him this season.
Elsewhere in the NBA. it was

New York 126, Orlando 117;
Cleveland 128, Indiana 113; Chiea·
go 116, Denver 103; Portland 109,
Dallas 83; and Sacramento 113,
Milwaukee 102.
Derrick McKey scored 23
points, Ricky Pierce 20, Kemp 19
and Gary Payton 18 for the Sonics,
who led 61-52 at halftime en route
to their lOth win in 12 home
games.
Seattle led 73-63 midway
through the third period, then
turned the game into a rout with a
94-72 lead after three quarters. .
The Sanies outsoored the Rockets 33-20 in the third period, with
Kemp scoring II points and Pierce
and Payton eight each.
Vernon Maxwell led the Rockets with 19 points.
Trail Blazers 109, Mavericks 83
Portland clinched a playoff

berth and handed Dallas its 14th
consecutive defeat and 22nd
straight road loss.
Terry Porter scored 19 points for
the Trail Blazers, nine of them during a 16-6 run in the third Q.uarter
that turned a 12-point lead mto a
73-51 advantage late in the period.
Portland's outscored the Mavericks' bench players 50-23 while the
Blazers' leading scorer, Clyde
Drexler, finished with just 10
points, 15 under his average, on 5for-14 shooting. Doug Smith
scored 15 points for Dallas.
.Bulls 116, Nuggets 103
Micbilel Jordan scored 50 points
for the second time in three games
as Cflieago defeated Denver.
Jordan, leading the NBA with a
30-point average, scored 51 Thursday night against Washington, the
high for a regulation game in the

NBA this season. Against the
Nuggets, he led the Bulls to their
ninth victory in 10 games and 29th
in 34 at home this season.
Reggie Williams led the
Nuggets with 31 puui&lt;&gt;.

Cavaliers 128, Pacers 113
Brad Daugherty had 32 points,
11 rebounds and 11 assists - his
third career triple-double - as
~~~beat Indiana for its ninth

By GEORGE ROBINSON
There's a lot of talk about the
shift in power from East to West in
the American League . But few
seem to have noticed that no
National League East team has
won a pennant since the 1987
Cards.
This year's NL East is another
bunch of flawed teams.
The projected order of finish
(and managers) in the NL East in
1992:
I. NEW YORK METS (Jeff
Torborg); 2. PITTSBURGH
PIRATES (Jim Leyland); 3. ST.
LOUIS CARDINALS (Joe Torre);
4. PHILADELPHIA PHILLIES
(lim Fregosi); 5. CHICAGO CUBS
(Jim Lefebvre); 6. MONTREAL
EXPOS (fom Runnels).
Here's why New York (77-84,
fifth in 1991) will fmish flrsc
Actually, i( pitchers Dwight
Gooden and Sid Fernandez aren't
healthy, the Mets will probably finish third. Without Gooden, the
Mets rotation is merely very good,
having added Bret Saberhagen and
subtracted Frank Viola. Without
Gooden and El Sid, it's only slight·
ly better than average, unless newcomer Anthony Young emerges as
a great pitcher.
The defense has to be beuer
than last year's (lith in the league
in errors), panicularly with fundamentalist Jeff Torborg at the helm.
But can Howard Johnson play center field? Add Bobby Bonilla (RF)
and Eddie Murray (!B) and the
offense should be improved, as
well.
Here's why Pittsburgh (98-64,
first in 1991) will be second:
Unless the Mets pitching goes
south, of course. The Pirates led the
majors in wins la"st year. B"ut the
departures of Bobby Bonilla and
his 100 RB!s and John Smiley and
his 20 win~ will hun.
·
Andy Van Slyke (CF) was having back· trouble during spring
training, so the Pirates acquired
Kirk Gibson for hitting insurance,
but it remains to be seen how much
gas is left in his tank.
If the bullpen by committee
holds up, the Pirates could get
another shot at the World Series.
Here's why St. Louis (84. 78,
third in 1991) will fmish third:
They won't sneak up on people
this year. But the Cardinals could
reprise last season's success - if
coach Don Baylor can tum Andres
Galarraga (I B) back into a majorleague hitter, and Pedro Guerrero
(LF) doesn't get anyone killed in
the outfield.
It's too soon to tell whal effect
moving in the Busch Stadium
fences will have on an already
shaky rotation. If Todd Worell and
Joe Magrane really are completely
recovered, even the Cardinals
pitching might be improve4.
Here's why Pbiladelpbla (7884, third in 1991) will finLSh founh:
This team is so snake-bit that its
probably not safe to even be in
Philly during baseball season .
Ricky Jordan stopped a line drive
with his face and he wiU miss the
first silt weeks of the year. Ken
Howell' is down for the seasori
again. But the return of Lenny
Dykstra (CF).ean only help. In '91,
Philadelphia was 36-27 with Dyk·
stra in the lineup, and 42-57 w1th·
out him.
The young pitchers are talented,
except they have a worse sense of

Trent Division ll's top male eager

•

iEASTE~!;o:.:,RENCE
J'tMI

W L

YeO ..............43 25
Cltm .•.. .......... ..... J9 30

Ptt.
632

GB

.565

4.5

"'Jenzy ........... .3 1 37
mi ..... ~............ J l JS
· delphi&gt; ........ .li 38

.4.56

12

.449
.449

12.5
Ill

li9

21.l

do .................. l1 52

.246

26.5

.....................22 47

u

Ilj
2)j
2) j

,.

2J j

ESTERN CONFERENCE
t

Midw•l Dh'lslon
W L PeL
............. ........ 45 23 .662
n Antonio .......... .42 26 .618
t(l1 ................ . 37 33
529
... ............. ..... 23 46 .m
..... ............... (7 53 .243
ota .............. ll S7
.162

~

GB
3
9
22s
29
34

P~eltk Division

Pmtland ............ ..49
ldc:n Stat.t ..........44
ocnix ..................44
ulo ...................39
. a;ppcn ........ .37
, Lakcn ... ......... JS

20
23
25

.710
.6S7
.631

4

3l

.Sl7

IO.S

Jl
32
........... 23 47
inohcd ployoffbc:lh

.536

I2
13

~

.522
.329

s

2~l

Tuesday's scores

New Yolk 126, Orlando ll7
' Ch-..Iaod 121, ladlona 1lJ
' OtictJO 111!1, Dmvcr 103

Porlland 109. o.uu 83
Se~ttle Ill, Hooston 106

Sacmnmto 113, Milwaube 102

TonJ&amp;ht's games

Dolton at New Jersey, ?:30 p.m.
Indiana 11 Wuhinfon, 7:30p.m.
ClevdtDd at Odamlo, 7:30 p.m.
San ANoni01l Ourlcttc., 7 :30 p.m.
Oolden State at Detroit, 'J :30 p.m.
Miami It Mlrtra«i, I p.m.
Philadelphia 11 Utah, I p.m.
Milwaukee at PbotrtiJ., 9:30p.m.

Thursday's games
WuhinfM at Athnta, 7:30p.m.
New Yoli: at Dmvcr. 9 p.m
llouon II LA. Oippm, 10:30 p.m
Dd1u 11 L.A. I.&amp;kcn, 10:30 p.m.
Pordand 11 S~c:nto, l 0:30p.m.

the ln~m~•tional Hockey Lcape.

Tuesday's scores
D&lt;uoil •• PilloMJh J

Now J....y'· s.n loto 3
N.Y.!Wip•. l'hlladdplti&gt; 3
N.Y.hlculta 2
llarlfonll,
2
Yuc:ouva- '· MiMac:ta 2

o.-s,

w"""""'

Flnt Ltlm: Gary Trent, Columbu• Hamilton
Town~hio, 6-foot·'J, SaUCI', 314 pc:Mw per gllllc;

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PIICI GOOD·WHILE

W~

will be in the race on pitching
alone.
· On the other hand, this is a team
with a lot of potentially unhappy
campers: Juan Samuel (28), Darryl
Strawberry (RF), Eric Davis (LF),
Kal Daniels (I B) . Chemistry is
overrated as a factor in pennant
races, but Dar-ryl certainly provided his fair share of distractions during Spring trilining.
Here's why San Diego (84-78,
third in 1991) will finish founh:
Greg Riddoch wasn't expected
to last this long, but the Padres put
on their usual second-half explosian and saved the manager's job
with an unexpected third-place finish. Another slow start (they went
40-43 in the first half last year) and
he may be out of work.
The emergence of Andy Benes
(15-11, 3.03 ERA) helped last year.
Now Riddoch needs a healthy Ed
Whitson on the mound and a return

from

to "Nasty Boy"
hurler Raridy ble fifth starter, the ro11tion isn't
Myers. All RF Tony Gwynn (62 bad. How much more mileqc tloca
RBis, .317 avemge), SS Tony Fer- Dave Ri'hettihav~left, though? ""::"":
nandez (.272, 23 stolen basi\$) and
Heres why Qoultoa (6S-97; :•
IB Fred McGriff (31 HRs, 106 sixth in 1991) wiD finish last:
!,' :!
RBI, .278) need to do is repeat last
Like Montreal iit ~ Olhcr Cliviyear's numbers.
sion, the Astros are building from
Here's why San Francisco (75· within, with yOtlllg arms and bats,
87, founh in 1991) will finish fifth: And like Montn:al, they are a
Was trading Kevin Mitchell a or two away from contending.
,,,.
case of additioo by subtraction? year first b.aSCI!IanJeff Baswell:,'
Giving up Mitchell's big bat (27 and .pitchers'Pete l:fainisch IIIli At•.:'
HRs, but only 69 RBis) meant dis- Osuna nroved t,hey wese ready for
posing of his big attitude. It also · primeiline.
·
'" :r
means getting Darren Lewis (LF)
Tiiis year, An Howe will 111m I ' . '
and Kevin Bass (RF) into-the line- large chunk of his rowion over w'.:
up together. Mall Williams (3B) the kids: Harnisch, Dl!llYI Kile and· .'
and Will Clark (!B) can protect Ryan Bowen. Biggest questions:'·}·
each other in the batting order pret· Can newcomer Ed TaubellseccatcJI ,•,
ty well.
in the mijors? Can the incumbcnr· ~The real Giant (in both senses) behind tile plate, Craig Biggio, play
problem is still pitching. If Billy second?
·
" "•I
Swift can make the double tranS!·
(C) 1992
NEWSPAPER;-:;;
lion to the NL and the rotation, and ENTERPRISE ASSN.
,. ,...,
Bryan Hickerson becomes a eapa~::~

r: .

·!•~

.,.

.

Re.erve Tb~ ru,lat to l.imit QUantities

YOU CAll 10·THIIUT AI CROSS'
IN RACINJ.$1NCE 1860

But most of the guys on this
team seem to be deClining in effectiveness. Mark Grace (!B) dipped
to .273, with only eight HRs; Shawon Dunston (SS) hit .260 and
stole only 21 bases; Jerome Walton
(CF) was relegated to part-time
duty and hit an embarrassing .219.
And everybody is a year older.
Only Andre Dawson (RF),

direction than the Texas hwlers in
the other league. 'The Phils led the
majors by issuing 670 walks. ~n
the other hand, there are some bve
arms: Tommy Greene, Jose Delesus, Kyle Abbott.
Here's why Chicago (77-83,
fourth in !991) wiU finish fifth:
Yes, Ryne Sandberg is the $7
million second baseman.

George Bell (LF) and Sandberg
continue to excel.
As for the pitching, once you
get past Greg Maddux (15-11, 3.35
ERA) and free-agent acquisition
Mike Morgan (14-10, 2.78), it's
pretty scary. Does Dave Smith still
have the stuff to be a premier stop·
per? By July, nobody will care
except the Bleacher Bums.

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and within sight of its headquarters
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Members of the Prof~ssional
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Here's why Montreal (71-90, butlittie power (95 homers, lOth iii:;: ,
sixth in 1991) will finish last:
the league). In their ballpark, tho&lt; ,
The Expos have one of the best power shortage doesn't malltl
farm systems in baseball, so there much. -.~
~ :
are talented youngsters coming up
The .pitching, anchcmd by Den- •: •
to the parent club all the time. nis Maitinez (14-11, 2.39 ERA and •,:
However, it may take another year a perfect game last seuon) is still" : 1
or two for this team to gel.
· pretty shaky. like the ballpark.
·;
(C)1992
They had speed enough to lead
NEWSPAPER /,:
-:,
the league in stolen bases last year, . ENTERPRISE ASSN.

Sports briefs

49taoz.

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7:30P.M.

. .

INVOKING Masterdunk Theatre, as the Cleveland Cavaliers'
Brad Daugherty demonstrates here, wasn't the only way he hurt tbe
visiting Indiana Pacers Tuesday night. The 6-root-11 postman
scored 32 points, pulled down 11 rebounds and had 11 assists- bis
third career triple double - to push the Cavs to a 128·113 win.
(AP)

99c

·AT THE SENIOR CITIZENS' BUILDING

. I.. COUITY
SliCE 168

,

WAID CROSS'
SONS

""'""s

The Dally Stntlnei-Paqe.....,.'r!

N.Y. Mets slight favorite over Pirates to capture NL East .flag

Meigs' Harrison gets honorable mention
By RUSTY MILLER
player of the year on the 1991-92 Richud.' 'Tu Tu" Brown, Oayt011. Dunbar, 6-3,
29.9; Gmo Ford, Cambridsc. S-8, Jr., 36.5;
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- Associated Press Division II boys Sr.,
N11c Reinking. Galion 6-l, Sr., 2!.2; Will Klu·
Gary Trent of Columbus Hamilton All-Ohio basketball team, released cinec, Canfield. ~S. Sr., 21 .8; Adam Shea, Wa.
verly, 6-01 Sr., l4.3i Andy Mcyef, Keuc:ring AI·
Township, who shot an incredible Tuesday.
tcr, 6-6, Sr., 19.0.
Trent,
a
6-foot-7
senior
who
has
81.4 percent from the field while
Second 1eam: Frtnk Bo1opia, Avon Lake, 6scoring 32.4 points a game, is the signed to auend Ohio University, S, Sr., 20.0; Tc:ny Rico, Columbw Brigs, 6-3, Sr.,
22.9; Brian Hocevar, Cleveland Villa Angela-Sl.
hit 258 of 317 shots from the field Joseph,
6-8, Jr., !S.S; Joe Gar.cr, Van Wen, 6:-J,
for a 15-5 team. More than that, he Sr.. 18.4: Ty Davis, Ironton, 6-1, Sr.. 24.2; Quin·
Qoud, Van Wert, 6-3, Sr., 22.3; Ben Swillu:r,
added 15.6 rebounds, 3.1 assists cy
W0011c-Triway, 6-S, Sr.. 20.3.
and 5.7 blocked shots a game.
Third team: Kai Walker, Columbus Lindcn
6·1, Sr., 22.7; Sleve SherrUI,
Joe Harold, who guided McKinley,
Uhrichsville Claymont, 6-3, Sr., 17.6; Aaron
Louisville
to
an
18-2
record,
was
Smilh, Sprinaficld Shawnee, 6-6, Sr., 2.8.1; DarTontgfit's games
named the coach of the year, also nell Hoskins, Dayton Chaminade-JuliCMc, S-11.
Toronto at Buffalo, 7:3S p.m.
h ., 20.6; Ornar Muhammad, Youngstown Rtyen,
Ph illdclphia 11 N.Y. Rangers, 7:35
based on the recommendations of a 6·1,
Sr., 18.6; Adam Ha.n:lewig, Cincinnati Turpin,
p.m.
state media panel.
6-2. Sr., 21.6; Scou Lowian, Beloit Well Bnnch,
Montreal at Winnipeg, 8:35 p.m.
Sr.,lll.l
Joining Trent on the first team S-9, PIIJtr
of the yur: Gary Trent, Columbw
Thursday's games
were:
Richard
"Tu
Tu"
Brown
of
Hamilton Town~hlp.
8oslon at New Jc:r~Cy, 7:35p.m.
Coaeh or tht year: Joe Jlarold, LoultvUit.
Dayton Dunbar, Cambridge's Geno
San Jose at N.Y. lslandcn, 7:35p.m.
Spedal mention
Vanoou¥tr It Pituburth, 7:35p.m .
Ford, Galion's Nate Reinking, Ket·
Jim Fancll, Alliance MadinJlm; !emil Har·
OUaaoat ().dler: 7:) 5 p.m.
tering Alter's Andy Meyer, Will ris, Ashtabub Harbor; Steve Garber, A1htabula
H&amp;:tford II Sl Louis, l :lS p.m.
Klucinec
of Canfield and Waver- Edgewood; Joe DiMutio, Chrstcdlnd West GeauLOI Angeles II C&amp;~.s&amp;l)'. 9JS p..rn
A•: Rob Wininger, Medina Hi&amp;hland; Damon
ly's Adam Shea.
Johruon, Cevcllnd Ccnttal Catholic; Man RaP.?~,
1\'IT action
Brown. a 6-3 senior. was also a Oreaden Tri-Vallcy; Elmer Martin, Stcl.lbcnville;
McKeever, SL. Caillvillc; Ryan Ferpson,
first-team All-Ohio choice as a de- Kerri
McCoMcl1sville Mora•n; An_~'l Hawkins, Lon·
S.OOOd roond
fensive back in football. A second- don; Ashley Hoskins, Circleville; Mark Balusik,
TlMJib ,.. talr"tt
Whilehousc Anthony Wayne: Juon Krcu.le:n, Pon
Rhode Wand 11. BOSUift Collece so. 2
team all-state selection a year ago, Clinwn;
Colby Furlons, Bellefontaine; Nathan
OT
he averaged 29.9 points and 7.2 re- . lluahu, Proctorville Fairland; J11on Pittcr,
ULI.h 60, A:wn1 Su1.e 58
bounds a game. He will play for Wasltin~ Coun House: Tcmll Baker, Wadting·
ton Court Houac Miami Trace; N1te Lattimer,
Quarterfinals
Miami
of Ohio next season.
Thom\'ille Sheridan; Willie Woodard, Jackson.
Tonlthl11 p.met
Ford, the only junior on the first
Hononbte mention
Manha11an (2f.8) at NOCR Dame (16Levon Lamb, Youn11town Rayen; Todd
14), 7:30 p.m.
team, was among the top scorers in
LouiJvillc; B.rian Petrucci, SaJrm; Dustin
F1orida (18 -12) vs. Purdue (18- 14) u
the state with an average of 36.5 Henne,
Kcck, Beloit Wut. Braneh; Brcu Luke, Woo.nct
lndianapold, 9 p.m.
points a game.
Triway:
Chris Callendar, Cleveland Villa .Anaeh-St
Frkby'• aarncs
Cambridge
(24-2)
meets
CleveJoseph; Joe Jurcvicius, Mentor Lake Catholic;
New MWco (20-12) n. Virginia (17land Villa Angela St. Joseph (17-9) R)'ln B.W, Jefferson Am; Orca Cift:cn, Aihtt~
13) It Richmmd, Va ., 7:30p.m.
ula EdgeWMd; Melvin Brown, Oevcl.lnd BeneRhodo lslaod (2H) " Utoh (Zl· l 0) ,
in a state semifinal Thursday night dictine;
Jamon Williams, Clev~Jand Central
9:30p.m.
at St. John Arena. In the other c.tholic.
Tyler Kin&amp;. Dreaden Tri-Valley; Jon Mu:k
se mi, Van Wert (22-3) , which
Transactions
Scott, Cambridae; Shawn Eichel, Dov~r; Steve
placed two players on the second Orilfm, Lisbon Beaver; Nai.C Menuez, Mi1lcnbura
Baseball
team. tackles Columbus St. Charles Ww. Hdmea; Rob St.CNd, WiniCIIvillc.
Bill Cain, CollunW.. S!.. Olarlm; Tom FcaJin,
A.merlean Leapt
(24-1).
Columbus Brigp; Kevin Lunceford, Columbus
DETROIT TIGERS - Sent Greg
The 6-1 Reinking averaged 28.2 Linden MeKinley, Brian Miller, Cin:levillc Loaan
Ooht, Buddy Groom, David Hna, Jeff
Samaki Walker, Colwnbul Eutmoor.
KU.e:r and Mike Wallace, pitchm; V1ctor
points,
4.2 rebounds and 2.2 steals Elm:RuneU
Robinton , Fostoria; laton Cuvor,
Rourio, infielder, Jody Hmt, Rice~rdo
a game while shooting 60 percent Shelby: Ryan Albcmcicr, N1polcon:. ~yan Glad·
Ingram and Shawn Hate, outficldcn; and
Roufont; Andy Huffman. Vermilion.
Matty Pevey, catcher, to their minor
from the field and 83 percent at the iwk,Tom
Cochran, Tipp City Ti~ NaLhan
lugue camp for re&amp;~~ipmenL
line. He's headed for Kent State.
Huffman, Morrow Liulo Miami; Ryan LAne,
NEW YORK YANKEES- Se nt
Meyer, a 6-6 senior, grabbed 14 Bellefontaine; Phil Lon&amp;, Oayt01 Carroll; Dan
Wade TayiQt, Ruu Sprinaer and Ed MarMuchmore, L.ovcland·HUIIl; Mnt Rhodes, Enon
tel, pitehcn, w Columb\11 rllhe lni.Cma·
rebounds to go with his 19 points a a.......
tional League. Sent Mark Hunon, pitcher,
Jimmy Yanunt, Groc:nficld McClain; Terry
game. Third-team All-Ohio a year
to Albany of Lhe l!antm Lclcuc.
Lcwta, Porumoulhj Trevor llarrilllft, Pomeroy
ago,
he
shot
61
percent
from
the
fthl&amp;•t Stolt Chtalhlm, Wtllllon ; Chad
National L.uaue
field.
LOS ANGELES DODGERS - Eo·
Barnet,. Calllpollt Gallla.
tended the contract of Tommy Luorda,
At 6-5, Klucinec hit for 21.8
manaaer. throuJh the 1993 ae.uon.
points and 8.4 rebounds a game,
while the 6-0 Shea scored 24.3
Basket baD
NaUona\ Buketblll Auoclation
points to go with .7.4 rebounds and
HOUSTON ROCKETS - Activated
2.8 assists a game.
Carl llenera. forward, from the injured
liiL
Louisville had seven consecutive
seasons before Harold arrived
Footbatl
three
years ago. This year, the
National Football League
BUFFALO BILLS - Signed KeMy
Leopards won their first Northeasta.mble. runni.na back.
em Buckeye Conference title.
CINCINNATI BENGALS - Signed
Named to the second team werellarick Fcnncr,
book.
CLEVEUND BROWNS - Signed
Frank
Bolognia of Avon Lake,
Pete Holohan, ti&amp;ht en d, and Anthony
Tony
Rice
of Columbus Briggs,
Mou, lineblckcr.
lNDIANAPOLIS COLTS - Sisncd
Brian
Hocevar
of Cleveland Villa
Cui Z.nder, lineb•eker, to a two-year
Angela-SL
Joseph,
Van Wen's Joe
eontnet. Aarced Lb term• wilh Reule
Unghomc, wide ru:eivcr, on 1 two-yeu
Gardner and Quincy Cloud, Ben
contracl
Swisher of Wooster Triway and
, HO&lt;key
Ironton's Ty Davis.
Nallonal HMkey Ltaaue
Here's the 1991-92 Associated
NEW JERSEY DEVILS - Rooollod
Iarrod SkaJde, center, rrom Utica of the
Press
Division II All-Ohio boys
Amcriun Hockey Leaaue. Called up
team, selected on the ·
basketball
M~ Brodeur, JOIIte:nder, frOm St Hy·
IC!nlhe ri the Quebec Major Jlniw Hock·
recommendations
of a state panel ·
ey l..up.
of
sports
writers
and
broadcasters:
SAN JOSE SHARKS - R...Ucd M ·
Dl.Won n
tun IMe. Jftl]lf.rldcr, from Kanw City of

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Braves' ex-pected to.repeat in NL W~st; Reds slated second . :

Wednesday, March 25, 1992

'

~ockets

Wednesday, ~arch 25, 1992

J•

...

•

!

�March

Ohio

the Dally Sentinel

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1992

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Question: I know that super
tampons increase the
chance of having IOxic shock syn'drome, and the syndrome is in
some way related to an infection.
How does a bacterium cause "toxic
shoclc?"
Answer: Toxic shock syndrome
is an illness that produces symp:IOms including a sudden, high fever
- as high as I02 degrees - vom:iting, diarrhea, dizziness, fainting, a
rash that looks like sunburn and
"generalized swelling.
In 3 10 5 percent of cases, the ill·
-ness is falal. And, this syndrome is
·not an affliction of menstruating
women only, though they are the
:most frequent victims. Men,
·women and children can all devel.op toxic shock as a result of a sur.g,cal procedure, or after something
:as simple as a minor cut.
.
• A bacterium called Siaphylococ.cus aureus sets off a chain of
;events that causes toxic shock syn'llrome. This bacteria - which
·commonly inhabits the surface of
·the skin - can cause an infection
:when it gets inside the bOdy.
· The infection itself may be very
'lllild, but it is the IOxin ~ or poi:son - produced by the bacteria
'that's responsible for the toxic
shock syndrome . The toxin is
spread by the blood from the site of
infection to the rest or the body,
causing the generalized symptOms
of the condition. ·Apparently, a
mild fonn of toxic shock is acwally
very common because 88 percent
of women older than 20 have anti·
bodies to the toxin that produces
this syndrome.
. The more serious episodes that
·produce the full-blow~ symP.to~s
and that we recogmzes ' touc
shock syndrome" are pretty rare.
·According to the U.S. Food and
:Drug Administration, about one out
·or everr 100,000 menstruating
:.Vomen 1S a victim of this disease.
:You can dramatically lower your
;ti ~ by .not using tampons, e~pe· .
cially the super-absorbent kind.
:The greater the absorbency, the
ionger most
women
.
. . . will go
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The March meeting of the Lydia

·.·.!·-;:~.;...; .. ~~·,r.x- ;t

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Ohio University
Lydia
Council
College of Osteopathic Medicine
discusses rally

2°A. MILK

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.

between changes, which allows the
bacteria a better chance 10 grow.
If you use tampons, I suggest
that you select the type with the
least absorbency to meet your
needs, and change them oflen. You
might want 10 experiment by start·
ing with the least absorbent tampon
on the market and increase the
absorbency s1ep by step until you
find one that's absorbent enough
for you . Keep in mind that your
absorbency needs may change as
your period progresses.
Follow the manufacturer's
instructions carefully when you use
tampons, store them in a clean, dry
place, and wash your hands with
soap and water before and after you
handle a tampon. This reduces the
chance of contaminating the tam·
pon with Staphylococcus aureus
bacteria that can nonnaUr, be found
on your hands . And 1f you do
develop any of the signs of !oxic
shock syndrome, seek medical
attention immediately - prompt
treaunent can be tifesa:f.
Question: Is the bl
loss that
occurs during a woman's period
increased when she uses a tampon,
and does this lower her blood pressure and help bring on toxic shock?
Answer: While blood pressure
can be affecled by toxic shock syndrome, fluctuations in blood pressure are not a cause of the condition but a result of iL The amount
of blood toss during menstruation
is relatively small and is not a
cause of the. symptoms of toxic
shock. The absorbency of the tam·
pan does not affect the amount of
blood loss.
The reason that tampons
increase the risk of this disease is
because the area behind the tampon
in the vagina is dark, moist and
wann - the perfect environment
in which to grow bacteria.
"Family Medicine" is a weekly
column. To submit questions, write
to John C. Wolf, D.O., Ohio University College of Osteopathic
Medicine, Grosvenor Hall, Athens,
Ohio45701.

WINNERS • The Meigs Quiz Team took sec·
ond place in the 1992 Tri-Valley Quiz Bowl
Tournament held at Ohio University last week.
On the team are Tara Gerlach, Stacey Duncan
and Barbie Anderson, I to r, and Robby Wyalt,

back. The sehool received a plaque as did each
student. Saturday evening they will appear on
the TV-Honor Society show, WTAP Parkers·
burg.

Meigs team places second in quiz bowl
The Meigs High School quiz
learn which took second place in
the 1992 Tri-Valley Quiz Bowl
Tournament will appear on the TV·
Honor Society television show on
WTAP-TV Parkersburg Wednesdayat6p.m.
The competition sl8!1ed in October with 20 teams from area high
schools. Meigs won its first match
against Morgan in November. Saturday's second round match will be
against Parkersburg South. It will
be aired on WT AP Channel IS
which is Channel 13 on cable.

The team members are Barbie team then went on 10 win matches
Anderson, Stacey Duncan, Tara over Warren, Vinton, NelsonvilleYork, and Jackson.
Gerlach, and Robby Wyau.
The championship match was
The Tri-Valley toumamenl was
held at Ohio University on March against Alexander and Meigs once
19. The eight schools participating again lost in a match that was tied
in the double elimination tourna- at the end of regulation questions
ment were Alexander, Jackson, and had 10 go 10 a tie breaker.
Meigs, Miller, Nelsonville-York,
Besides Anderson , Duncan ,
Trimble, Vinton, and Warren.
Gerlach and Wyatt, the other ICam
Meigs finished second and members who attended the touma;
received a plaque for the school. ment were Matt Clark, Randall
Each of the four team members Johnston, Joe McElroy, and Steve
received individual plaques. Meigs Smith.
opened with Alexander and lost in
Team advisor is Rita Slavin.
a tie-breaker situation. The local

•

......,.

. -~ '_;:'?

~r :

•I

Refreshments served.
WEDNESDAY
: RACINE - A meeting to plan
RACINE • Racine American
-the Southern Junior High School
:athletic banquet will be held on Legion AIIXiliary will meet Thurs·
;Wednesday evening at 7 p.m. at the day at 7 p.m. at the hall.
j unior high. Anyone wishing to
State VICA Health Knowledge Bowl Contest to
FRIDAY
NURSING ASSISTANTS TO COMPETE ·
Jlelp is asked to attend.
be held in Columbus. They are, l·r, Melinda
These
Meigs
High
School
nursing
assistant
stu·
HOCKINGPORT - There will
Dailey,
Evelyn Neace, Ronald Vance, Valeri
dents will compete April 24 and 25 in 1he Ohio
MIDDLEPORT - Feeney Ben· be a round and square dance FriWilson and Mary Stein.
nett Post 128 of American Le~ion day, 8·11:30 p.m. at Kenny and
will celebrate the Amencan Millie Reynolds, Hockingpon. with
.Legion's 74th birthday with a din· music by Smokey Mountain
,ner on Wednesday at 6 p.m. Past Drifters. Ronnie Wood will be
President Commander Jay Ellis caller. Country, bluegrass and
Gertrude Robinson led the
gospel music is played there every
Sarah Caldwell opend the meet- mentioned were Martha Poole,
will be the guest speaker.
prayer
and self-denial program in g wilh prayer and the group Osie Follrod and Martha Emou.
Monday at 7 p.m. Public invited to
when Alfred United Methodist reponed 93 sick calls.
The next meeting will be April
aU events.
THURSDAY
women met recently at the church.
They discussed getting kitchen 21 at the church. Thelma Hender: CHESHIRE • Gallia/Mei~s
The program opened with "Give supplies for the church kitchen and son will lead the program and NelTUPPERS PLAINS • Tuppers
'Community Action Agency w11l
Your Best to the Master" with newflowers for the sanctuary.
lie Parker will be hos~s.
Mid its free clothing day on Thws· Plains VFW Post No. 9053 and of
Florenc,e
Spencer, pianisL
Ladies
Auxiliary
will
host
a
round
The
June
meeting
date
was
set
:day from 9 a.m. to 12 noon Ill the
Robinson read a prayer for June 23.
-old high school building in a square dance on Friday from 8-11 "WeMrs,
Thank
You" and led the group
p.m. with music by Happy Hollow
Nina Robinson had the prayer
theshire.
in
responsive
reading "Living Sac- calendar and chose Valenune
Boys. Public invjled.
rifice." "Not Ours Alone" was read Kananga of Kenya, Zaire, Africa,
LONG BOTTOM • The
PARKERSBURG - Black Dia· by the group, taking turns, fol - who is in world missions.
Riverview Garden Club will meet
lowed by group sining of ''I' 11 Go
Nellie Parker presided and read
:on Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at the mond Girl Scout Council will have Where
You Want Me to Go." Osie a thank-you from Mary Lou Moore
-home of Marilyn Hannum. Nola a volunteers recognition dinner Fri·
day at 7 p.m. at the National Guard Mae Follrod read ''The Friend Who of Scaritt Center, Nashville, from
:.Young will be the co-host=.
•
Armory, 1500 Blizzard Drive, Just Stands By." The collection . Peg Vreeland of West Michigan
was given to prayer and self-denial. Conference and from G111ce Grein•. POMEROY • Preceptor Beta Parkersburg, W.Va.
er, local author.
Bela cha~t or Beta S1gma Phi
MIDDbEPORT - Ballroom
The group received a certificate
~!Y"'Wi~1111al ill·'ftll\rldl)" II" ·
or recogniuon from the District
.(lie Ep!Jcopal'PIItllh House for a· dance Friday 7·11 p.m. at AmeriWilliam Lowen of Pomeroy will UMW for participation in the read·
lasagna d,inner. All members are can Legion Annex in Middleport
with music by George Hall. Cost is observe his 99th binhday on Thurs- ing program.
JI!Bed to auend.
$5 per person and public is invited. day at the Pomeroy Nursing and
Florence Spencer served sandRehabilitation
Cen1er,
36759
Rock·
wiches
and St. Patrick's calce dur·
:. CHESTER • The Chester TownLONO
BO'ITOM
Faith
Full
springs
Road.
Cards
may
be
sent
to
ing
the
social hour. Charlotte Van
~hip trustees will hold 1 special
Gospel
Church
preaching
and
hi~
there.
Lowen
for
many
years
Meter gave table grace.
"ling on Thursday at 7 p.m. at
Others present besides those
lhe town hall. Appropriations for sin~ng Friday 7 p.m. with David · res1ded on Butternut Avenue in
Da•ley and the Dailey Family Pomeroy.
\1992
will
be
made
at
this
time.
.,
,,
Singers and other local talent. Pas'II''~
• POMEROY - The Meigs Coun- tor Steve Reed invi1es the public.
~~!!!.:~
'Ill
ly Wom~n's F~llowship willl!old Fellowslti~ will follow.
monthly meeting at Pomeroy
hurch of Christ on Thursday at
:30 p.m. Janet Bolin will be
~k•!Ji ~~ut. AmeriFlora '92.

Council was held at the Bradford
Church with Gerry Lightfoot,
Cherie Williamson, Suzee and'
Christi Will as hostesses.
Janice Fetty presided at th&amp;
meeting which opened with prayei:
request and prayer by Karlitl{
Stump. Officers reports were given.Women's Fellowship will be"
held Thursday at the Pomeroy
Church of Christ with Janet Bolin
speaking on Ameriflora.
Bradford Church revival will be
April 19-24 with Kevin Yeager;
evangelist. Zion Church of ChrisC
will bave revival April 26 witJt
Steve Ranson the speaker.
-·
Southeastern Ladies Day Rally"
will be held at the Walnut Church
of Christ in Belpre and deadline for.
registration is April 15. Registra:;
lion should be given to Karlitli·
Stump by April 5.
:
A thank-you note was received"
from Tillie Rawly for the sunshine
basket. The March sunshine basket
will be given to Helen Kibble.
Jane Hysell will have commu ·
nion in April.
:
Hostesses for the April meeting•
will be Jane Hysell and Charlotte:
Hanning.
•
Cherie Williamson had devo-·
tions "'Wonder Woman, Dreadful'
Drawers and Window Pain." Mrs.
Williamson had closing prayer.
Refreshments were served to:
Janice Fetty, Charlotle Hanning;
Karlila Stump, Paula PiCkens, Jack-:
ie Reed, Carolyn Snowden, Jane:
Hysell, Madel.ine Painter, CarolynNicholson, Bocky Amberger, Shery'
and Elizabeth Smith, Gerry Light·
foot. Cherie Williamson, Suzie and Christi Will.
•.
•

Reedsville UMW ~
holds meeting

Grace Weber presented a program on "'Friendship" a1 the March:
meeting of the Reedsville United"
Methodist Women held in the:
church basemenL
•
Nina Boston presided at the
meeting in which officers reports'
were given.
,
A discussion was held about the·
remainder of kitchen cabinets:
which are due to arrive in two 10:
three weeks. Members voted to buy·
a·new refrigerator for the basement.·
The group decided to sponsor a·
summer picnic for the Meigs Coun- .
ty lnflnnary residents. There were
52 sick calls reported.
•
There will be a dinner at the:·
church in May for the public along:
with a bake sale. Plans will be"
finalized at the April meeting.
·.
Games were played and refresh: ·
ments served by Diane Jones. hostess, to Pearl Osborne, Sally Brown, :
Frances Reed, Nina Boston, Mamie ;
Buckley, Nancy Buckley, Sandy ~
West, Grace Weber, Gladys :
Thomas, and visiton, Ann Buskirk :
and Denise and Hannah WesL

·.' •

Alfred UMW receive recognition certificate

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�bbey the law says 18 year old
~~, Dear Ann

my
ignored
Land~rs: ! tea~h a
No oldest
leners daughter
no phone
calls, me,
no
. ED class al a CalifOrnia pnson.
Chrisunas g'ifls, no lllank-you notes.
J~nUy, I asked m~ students to
Psychiatrists, tllernpists and relatives
;&amp;-rue an essay descnbmg what tlley
have tried lO help me find a way lO
:ranted lO be. I was moved by one
til
h m daughter but still
:ut particular and thought others
ANN LANDERS
get roug lO Y
•
iJl1·ghl be lOO
"11191, Loo A111eleo
no word.
:
' ·. .
11m"' sy.. cale 111111
Last year, I wrote lO you about
,. The a~ thor 1 ~ ~till a young man.
Crellon Syndlcote."
"
this problem and how much Pain it
ile won l be ehg1ble for parole for
had used me. You replied witll a
;1:8 years. He sa1d you could use h1s
~ d
'llaiTlc if you thought it might help
I never wanled to hun anyone, very n 1euer. f
lO
~meon e. I hope you will prim iL .. but I ended up hurting my victims,
I sent a copy 0 your 1euer . ~y
:e.c., CORCORAN, CALIF.
my family and myself. As I sit ~ughter ~d apparently lhal did It
'-: DEAR CAUF.: No one could tel l in my cell at nigh~ I often think I JUSt received a call .from a wellillis story as well as the person who about the damage I've done. I kn~wn flonsl saym~ It IS gomg 10
phmt -- a
, ved n. Thank you •Or scndtn g n picture the victims and tlleir fami- dehver
'f ··•a 1largef narciSSUS
"An ·chart
. al '
ed
d g1 l wlu• ove rom
na,
es,
11.es. 1 v1su
~n .
!Ze my 1ov ones an
Christopher and Emma." 1 am just
what a different life I could have
h
overjoyed.
•.
I Would L1ke To Be Me
ad.
You did i~ Ann. I'm sure or it
;All Over Again
My advice to all young people
who want a good life is simply this: Many, many thanks. •· ARIZONA
~- In my you th I wanted to be a
iiomputer operator or a police offi- Obey the law. Get an education MOM
DEAR ARIZONA MOM: It was
ei:r. I also thought I might enJOY and a vocation. Work for the things
thrill to receive your letu:r.
ilJ:'ing a criminal, and unfortu nately, you want. Don't get derailed by a aI'mreal
sure the reunion is going to be
J· became one.
glamorous lifestyle because in the
-: I soon found out th at bemg a real world, crime definitely does not glorious. Please write and tell me
about it
(riminaJ was easy. So easy. tn fac t,
Gem of the Day: When it comes
!hat I am currently serving a life pa~ow man y times have you
sCntence for breaking th e law. If I heard, "If 1 knew then what! know to giving, some people stop at
could be anything I wanted to be, I now, I wouldn't be in this s ituauon"~ nothing.
1 blame no one but myself. If 1
Drugs are everywhere. They're
~o uld choose to be me all over
co
uld
be
anything,
I
would
be
easy
to get, easy to use and even
ltgain, but I wouldn't be a crim inal.
·: I look back at what loo me to a me all over again , but 1 would easier to get hooked on. If you have
ilfc of crime. It was greed. Several hav e chosen a different road. __ questions about drugs, you need AM
CHARLES WHITE
Landers' booklet, "The Lowdown on
~coplc tried to give me adl'lCC,
DEAR CHARLES WHITE : It's Dope." Send a self-addressed, long ,
but how do you u:ll a poor kid to
work for mmimum wage when he too bad you had to p2y such a big business-size envelope and a check
On sell drugs and make SI ,000 a price for your wisdom . I wonder how or money order for $3.65 (this
C!'ay'! Everyone I looked up to was many young readers out there are includes postage and handling) ro:
Lowdown, clo Ann Landers. P.O.
fnvo lved in crime. They had money, smart enough to learn your lesson Bor.
11562 , Chicago, 111. 60611·
tiig cars, fancy clothes and expen- for free. Good luck.
Dear Ann Lander&gt;: For years, 0562. (In Canada, send $4.45.)
ii ve jewelry.

n ·

Ann
Landers

,

· ·

·-

'

Trinity Church Friendly Circle gathers

'.
•: "Words to Live By" was the his choice. She closed tile program
(Qpic when Carrie Kennedy pre- by the prayer reading "Song of
Sented tile program meditation for Peace."
Gay Perrin presided at the meett 'rinily Church Friendly Circle
ing
during which officers reports
&amp;tenUy.
;:.: Mrs. Kennedy opened with "A were given. She thanked all the
~ayer for March" that asked for
committees who had planned and
(itlp and understanding. She then worked at the Ash Wednesday
(-!vc excerpts from Guideposts in Community Lenten Breakfast.
Mary Virginia Kautz, Trinity
it.1Jich she challenged each person
Key Woman , reported on the
~ examine the words chosen to
World Day of Prayer meeting held
~yc by. Each person present was
asked to share their personal rccen~y at Trinity Church.
St. Patrick 's Day was observed
dloice. Mrs. Kennedy noted that
during the social hour hosted by
~bcrl Schweitzer, when asked,
Sl!llply gave Matthew 2:37-39 as Alice Globokar. The table was dec,·

Reedsville community news
~: Mr.

and Mrs. John Smith and
~b ildre n , Melissa and Brandon,
Weston, W.va., were weekend
g).ests of Mr. and Mrs. Dale Smith.
T-he seventh birthday of Brandon
Smith was celebrated Sunday aftcrI):Oon at his grandparents' home.
Guests included Chris and Michele
!larringer, Melissa Smith, Debbie
:!lid Rick Barringer, Connie and
Mark Smith, Jodi Bissell and
cJ4ughtcr, Darci, Thelma and Dale
~ith, and John and Tersa Sm1lh.
Games were played and refreshr!)ents of pizza, birthday cake and
i~e cream were served.
:: Betty Boggs has returnoo home
aEter being a patient at Camden
Clark Memorial Hospital in ParkCC&gt;burg, W.Va.
:- Daisy Provance, Athens, visited
recently witll her sister, Mis . Lona
Ch'evalicr.
.: Mr. and Mrs. Michael Smith
children, Kenton, visited Mr.

and Mrs. Grant Smith and Mrs.
Lucille Smith.
The birthdays of Katy Dietz,
Columbus, and Courtney Long,
Vincent, was recenUy celebrated at
the home of Mr. and Mrs. Lyle
Balderson. Other guests were
Kathryn Dietz, Belpre, Nancy and
Bill Dietz, Columbus, and Kay
Long, Vincent.
Jordan Hen sch, Canal Fulton,
spent a few days with his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Whitehead.

Receives promotion
Sgt. William Nick Bush, Dayton, a member or the 178tll Consolidated Aircraft Maintenance
Squadron, located at Springfield
Beckley Airport, was promoted to
the rank of staff sergeant on Valentine's Day.
SSgl. Bush has been a member
or the military for five years, all of
which he has served witllthis unit
He is an aircraft crew chief responsible for maintaining aircraft
records, perfonning aircraft pre and
post-flight checks and ensuring
overall safety of the aircraft and
flight crews.
In civilian life, he is a lab technician at the Bimac Corporation in
Dayton. He is currently aucnding
Sinclair Community College and is
the son of Celesta C. Coates, Middleport.

Bishop honored

LYNZEETUCKER

New arrival
•

::·Allen and Deanna Tucker
tile birth of their daughut, Lynzee Carole, on Nov. 26 at
ltdlzcr Medical Center.
~ 'She weighed four pounds and
IQ'OWlCes and was 17 inches long.
b~he is the ~daughter of Car"Pinky and Joyce White,
cine, and Olen and Anna Lee
ker. S~er City, N.C.
'·,she is the great-granddaughter
Mary Kauff, Pomeroy, Eli
itc, Minersv,lle, lcie Tucker,
rsa and Mildred Parsons,
~ne. and the late Jessie Parsons.
has a twin brother. Darin
• clel1eased.
~pounce

Friends of Betty Bishop were at
the recent Scipio Township meet·
ing to show their appreciation for
.the job she has done as township
clerk for the past I0 years.
After the meeting they all gatll·
erect at her home where she was
presented a gold and diamond
watch, long stem red roses and a
cake.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Granville Reeves, Mr. and Mrs.
Basil Wright, Mr. and Mrs. Gary
Deal. Donald Weaver and daughter, Donna, and Doug Bishop.

orated with !lowers, shamrocks,
Irish candies and napkins. A salad
course was served.
Favors were a commemorative
booklet of poems honoring tile late
Eleanor Werry who was an active
member and was to have been a
hostess of Friendly Circle. The
booklets were completed by her
so n, Ralph Werry, who used the
materials already chosen by Mrs.
Werry.
The next meeting will be held
April 21. All women of the church
are invited to auend.

Non-smokers worried about health
eifiects oif other people's smoke
By PAUL RAEBURN
AP Science Editor
NEW YORK (AP) -A majority of American non-smokers say
they are worried about serious
health consequences of otller people's cigarette smoke, and favor a
ban on smoking in public places,
according to an Associated Press
poll,
The poll found tllat 59 percent
of former smokers favored a complete ban on smoking in public
buildings. Among people who had
. never smoked regularly, 70 percent
favored a ban.
Past surveys indicate tile figure
would have been even higher had
non-smokers who live witll smokers been excluded, a researcher
said. "About 90 percent of people
from totally smoke-free environments will favor a ban," said
Diane Becker, director of the Johns
Hopkins Center for Health Promo•
lion in Baltimore.
"The public is clearly sensitized
to the healtll effects of secondhand
tobacco smoke. I don't think that
was tile case five years ago," said
Scou Ballin, a vice president of the
American Heart Association and
spokesman for the Coalition on
Smoking or Health in Washington,
D.C. The coalition is made up of
the heart association, the American
Cancer Society and American Lung
Association.
Health advocates have pushed
for laws restricting workplace
smoking and have succeeded in
many cities and towns.
The AP poll found sentiment for
a voluntary approach -63 percent
said workers and their employers
ought to decide whether to allow
smoking, compared with 36 percent who thought a smoke-free
workplace should be a legal righ~
Among non-smokers, 47 percent

STORE HOURS

Q

ban on smoking In all
public placea?

A:

A:

Monday thru Sunday

How worried 11re you that your
Q''expoiUre'to
MCOnd·hand

l Would you favor or
oppose a complete

Whet abput a situation
where.employeas are .
expo~ to amcike of ·
their co-workers?
Should workers have a
rtght to a smoke-free
workplace ...
-=:lt36%

8AM·10 PM

clgarattesmolie might rasult
In serloua heal!~ problems for
you someday? Are you:
Very worried: 11%
Somewhl!l worried: 37%
Not at ail worried: 45%
(Volunteered) Already have
health problems from
second-hand smoke: 1%

NEW CANAAN, Conn. (AP)
-David Lettennan's most dogged
fan showed up again in his neighborhood, after telling authorities
she'd leave him alone.
Margaret Ray, a 39-year-old
from Crawford, Colo., who has

Class B fist; ahhought the band
participates in Class C.
William Hall, band director,
said, "I'm really proud or these
kids. Eastern is one of the few
bands which includes seventh and
eighth graders tllal made stale. It's
quite a challenge to match the
maturity of bands with a lot of
juniors and seniors.
The band plans to play April 24
at Gahanna Lincoln High School
where they performed the last tow
years. As always contest admission
is free and the public is invited.

CBS recaptures weekly ratings contest
LOS ANGELES (AP) - CBS, sixth as NBC's highest-rated show
boosted by anotller first-place fin- of the week.
Two staples of CBS's Monday
ish from "60 Minutes," reclaimed
its No. I spot in tile network ratings night lineup - "Designing
race last week after being briefly Women'.' and "Northern Expodethroned by ABC,
sure" - tied for seventh place.
CBS' average prime-time rating
The ABC comedy "Full
last week was a 12.3; ABC aver- House" ranked ninth, and CBS's
aged 12. I and NBC 11.1, according "Major Dad," another key show in
to figures released Tuesday by the the network's Monday night lineA.C. Nielsen Co.
up, was lOth.
ABC's "Roseanne" was the
No. 2 show on television last week,
and CBS's "Murphy Brown" fin ished third.
The ABC comedy "Home
Improvement" was fourth, and
ABC's "Coach," which follows
The. Busy Bee Class of the Mid"Home Improvement and dleport First Baptist Church met
" Roseanne" on the network's recently at the home of Lillian
Tuesday night schedule, was fiftll.
Demoskey with Elizabetll Searles
"Unsolved Mysteries" finished presiding.
The Lord's Prayer in unison
opened the meeting . Members
responded to roll call by iepeating
a bible verse. Devotions were given
Harrisonville Grange held its by Mrs. Demoskey from the Daily
March meeting at tile borne of Stel- Bread and Psalm 139.
The April meeting will be lunch
la Atkins with her sister, Ruby
at
Ponderosa
in Gallipolis.
Diehl, as co-hostess.
The
class
enjoyed a white eleA potluck dinner preceded tile
phant
auction
lead by Elizabeth
meeting conducted by Norman
Slav~n.
Will, wortlly master.
Refreshments of salad and
Norma Lee, lecturer, presented a
were ·terved by Mrs.
crackers
pr.ogram on the meaning of Lent
and of the life and work of St. Dcmoskey and Betty Denny to
Gwinnie White, Dlizabeth Searles,
Patrick.
There was a flower quiz given Nora Jordan, Dorotlly Evans, Elizabeth Slaven and Betty Gilkey,
with Pauline Atkins the wimer.

Busy Bee Class
holds meeting

Grange meets

ZEST BAR SOAP

RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES.

5 OZ. BARS

Wh.at hea"h problems
Q.l ,,.
yqu worried.

~bout?

TWIN PET CAT FOOD

A= Cancer. 68%

-===~· 63%

MUELLER'S LASAGNA

fanner smoker, or did you never
smoke on a regular basis?
Current smoker: 26%
.Former smoker: 28%
Never a smoker: 47%

Steak/Roast. . . . . . . .La.
PORK
$239
Cubed Steaks. . . . . . La.

AP

been arrested six times on charges
of breaking into Letterman's house,
tried to get a taxi driver 10 take her
to tile late-night comedian's estate
Sunday but was foiled when the
cabbie got suspicious.
"She said, 'I'm Margaret Ray .
He's expecting me. I have papers
to drop off,"' driver Brian Zito
said Tuesday.
Police later found her ncar Letterman's home and put her on a
train to New York City.
After leaving a Connecticut
mental hospital last spring, Ray
promised never to bother Lcllcrman.

rest, 26 percent -said ihey had
smoked in the previous week and
28 percent called themselves former smokers.
The telephone poll, taken by
ICR Survey Research Group of
Media, Pa., has a margin of sampling error of plus or minus 3 percentage points.

ECKRICH

89(
Chicken. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . La.
$169
Boneless Ham.................La.
79
(
Wieners. . . . . . . . oz.

information on refunds is 1·800·
374-2874.

PICKOF

ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (AP)
- Alan King, best known for his
Borscht Belt humor and comic film
roles, is taking a crack at playing
the villain.
King plays a bad guy in Robert
DeNiro's new film "Night and the
City," which opens in June. Jessica
Lange co-stars.
"I get even witll Robert DeNiro
for his behavior in 'Cape Fear,' "
King said in an interview this
week, referring lO DeNim's role as
a sadistic cHon in tile hit movie.
King's film credits include
CHICAGO (AP) - About "Memories of Me" with Billy
80,000 Milli Vanilli fans who got Crystal and "Enemies, a Love
fooled by the lip-syncing duo can Story."
collect partial refunds under a setThe 65-year-old comedian
tlement of a fraud lawsuit
opens this weekend in Atlantic
Under the settlement, approved City.
Tuesday by a Cook County judge,
Arista Records Inc. and parent
company Bcrtelsmann AG of Germany will offer a $1 refund on
Milli Vanilli singles, $2 on casSPRING VALLEY CINEMA
settes and albums and $3 on com446 4524
,; • : . ~:,:·
pact discs.
IARGAIN fi'ATUIEES SAltJII:DAY &amp; SUNDI1 .
Those who bought tickets for
BARGAIN PliGHT TUU~T ,
concerts will be entitled to 5 perMARCH 20 thru II
fRlMY
THURSDAY!
cent refunds up to $2.50.
Fans must submit a bar-code
RADIO FUEl
7:15 9:10 DAilf. SATISIJI'I filii T. l : l$,J : lO PG·ll
identification tag from merchandise
MY UUIIN UINNY
purchased before Nov. 27, 1990.
7:1S.9 ::W !MILT. SAT/St!PI I'IAT.l : l5,l :30 (II
In November 1990 Fab Morvan
WAYNE'S
110 P-sm.WDftll
and Rob Pilatus revealed they
7:JQ,9 :ll) DAllY. S ATISU~ MT .l : lO,J :)I) PG· ll
didn't sing on the best-selling
'"'""' 111111·t THE LIWNMIWtl MfiN
7:ZO ,UO DAILL
MT.l :20 l :lO It
"Girl You Know It's True" album
STOP
DR
MY
MDM
WIll SMDT
- an admission that cost them
7:10. '1:10 DAllY . 5AT/5UN I'IAT .l:10,3 :10 PG· U
their Grammy award.
ARTICLE t9
Arista lawyers said tlley will ask
7tOM :00 llAILl. SAT/SitN f'llll.l :OO J:OO (fi
other courts presiding over at least
FliED &amp;RIIN TGMIT0£1 .
7:00 UO DAILY . S"T/SUN ltAl .l :OO ;l :20 PG· U
15 related lawsuits to abide by tile
aJIIING 500111 "WHITE 'I:N CAfl 'l JLIIP "
terms or tile set~ement.
The toll-free number for more

·

ECKRICH BEEF or PORK

Smoked Sau

.......lB.

$139

99(

CABANA

POTATO CHIPS
5 49

2/ 1

60Z.

NORTHERN

TOILET TISSUE
4ROLL
$

09 :

1

PKG.
ORV1LLE
MICROWAVE POPCORN

$199

10.5 oz.

HUNT'S

s1

19

15.5 oz.

CORN KING WHOLE

GlAD

SANDW~H tfG

1

150 a.

CORN KING

l2

99(

16 oz.

MANWICH SAUCE

PKG.

HUNT'S

TOMATO SAUCE ·

FLAVORITE

aoz. 3/89c

Bacon. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ·. . . .La.

ARMOUR

BEEF STEW
240L

$169

thr~

LYSOL PINE AOION
IS OZ.

$1

49

~TIS\1111

ULTRA

BROUGHTON

2°AI Milk. . . . . . . . . . . . .GAL.

VI'U FURNITURE .
BIRDIIIS OALORE!

WAS'1300

7.9(
Large Eggs. . . . . . . . Ia a.
89(.

HANGING ROCK GRADE A .

614·446·3151

SOFA &amp;CHAIR

s1.!9 ..

.I

'599

.

' .

.Dor1IOS. . .~. . . . . . . . . . 1o oz.
.

$129
·

~

~

DELMONTE

KEMP 5 QUART PAIL

'

136 .

oz.

---"

t

---------..,1-'f'•••

TV Dinners. . . . ~. . 1o-12 oz.

'
69(
Ice Cream. . . . . . . . . . .
Tomato Juice. . . . . . . ~4' ot
'

{You must bring tht Triple
Ytndar (oapMI at light.
Ont coupon per family.)

BANQUET

: PUREX DETERGENT

'I

s

Reg. 42 USE
98
We Will Redeem Up
To 5 Vendor Coupons
(Max. SOc Value •
No cigareHe
coupons) With The
TRIPLE VENDOR
COU.PON At Right.

oz.

•

\

.

Bologna.........................La.

l
•
''
•I

't

$ 119

HPORK BUTT

SOUrce: AP poll 011,000 American adults by ICA Survey Research group of Media, Pa.
The margin of error Is plus or minus 3 peroontago points. Sums may not ICtal 100 percenl
because or rounding, omission or "don't knows.•

favored laws guaranteeing a
smoke-free workplace and 51 percent said workers and employers
should decide. Of the smokers in
the poll, 81 percent said workers
and their employers should decide.
Nearly half the I ,000 adults surveyed March 13-17 said tlley had
never smoked regularly. or the

4/ 1

CAN

Have yciu, yourself smoked In
Q:the
past weak, or are you a

A:

5

60Z.

Heart disease: 8%
Other heaHh problems: 23%
Don't know: 6%

... or is that something
employers and
employees should decide
among themselves?

$169

3PAK,

'

l

~

.,

ICES EFFECTIVE MAR. 22 thru MAR. 28, 1992

r1ia-rt~-----.;

l

Prices!

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.

WE RESERVE

a.

Why Pay
More?
Enioy
·Everyday Low.

;:-·.

----Names in the news---

Eastern band returns to state
For tile tllird consecutive year,
the Eastern High S~hool Concert
Ban will perform in the OMEA
State Band Contest.
The band qualifioo by earning a
superior rating at the District 17
Contest held Friday and Saturday
at Athens High School.
One or the judges commented
tllat tile Eastern Band was a "credit
to its school and community; I'm
sure that they arc very proud of
you!" Another judge recognized
the level of difficulty in tile music
the band performed. It was noted
the band played a piece from the

Sentinel-Page

Ohio

Wednesday, March 25, 1992

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

,Page 8 The Dally Sentinel

'$439

,,

~

o"tJ

Jl

$299

.

a~
c: '

PAIL

~i!&lt;:

om
.2
I

2

c
0
:a

�The Dally Sentlnei-P~e-11

Wednesday, March 25, 1992 . ·

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
COPYR IGHT 1* • THE KROGER CO. ITEMS AND PRICfS UWMIIIO mM 'OUCJ·ltch of 1t1e1t 8ltYtniMi ktmi It r~lllld 11o1 ~
GOOD SUNDAY. MIJIICH 22. THROUGH SATURDAY, MAfi,CH r~ •~folllll in MCtlliOfll SlOtt, &amp;IICifllll JpKilitllly na1.c1 in
Pomeroy
ltlil td . II WI 00 rwn 0111 Olin IIMI'IIIId iiMI, wt will orftt yOu your ci\DH:1t

-.

21, 1C. IN

·~

•The Area's Number I
Marketplace

Ol I ~IDII illl'ft, WhM availlllll, retllclitiCIIIIIIIIIM IIVIIIQI Gl I teifl.
WE fllSEftVE. THE fliGHT TO UMtT QUANTITIES. NONE SOlO chick wNcl'lwill lntitlt 'fOI.IIOputti'IIM tM ~item MlhlldvtntMt.l
TO DEAL.EftS.
ptice within 30 dt~• · Of!~ 01'11 Vlftdol cowpon wil b1 tccaptl d ptr htm

...

RATES
·Days

rnis

week

tJ.lC1\j~

an ad
Call 992-2156

At Kroger

REPRESENTATIVE - Miranda Nicholson, a senior at Meigs
Hiah School, wUI represent tbe South Central VICA region at the
Ohio State VICA competition in Columbus on April 24 and 25.
She will compete wilb other vocational students In perrorming
nursing assistant skills demonstrations.

U.S GRADE A TYSON/HOLLY FARMS

MoN. thru FRI. 8A .M.-5P.M.- SAT.8-12

Whole

CLOSED SUNDAY

POLICIES

Fryers

1

Associated Press Writer
BOSTON (AP) - In two of the
season's Oscar-nominated roles,
72-year-old Jack Palance got to
whoop it up as a cowboy in "City
Slickers," while 82-year-old Jessica Tandy was reduced to reminiscing from a nursing home in "Fried
Green Tomatoes."
Two researchers point to the
contrast in roles as proof of sexism
and age bias in Hollywood.
In a report titled "Real vs. Reel
World -Older Women and the
Oscar," they conclude that elderly
women have virtually disappeared
from the silver screen. And when
older women are cast, they are likely to get less flattering roles than
those offered 10 men.
"The elderly population is the
most rapidly growing portion of the
population today," said Elizabeth
Markson of Boston University's
Gerontology Center.
But "Hollywood is designing
films for an essentially male audience between 15 and 23 years of
age."
Since
Academy
were
first the
given
in 1927,Awards
female

supporting actress in the 1920s was
31; the average age for men was
41 . The numbers have crept up for
both genders over the years, but
female nominees remain younger.
This year, the average age for
best actor nominees was 49, while
best actress was 36. The youngest
man nominated this year was
Robin Williams, 39, for his role in
"The Fisher King."
The other male contenders arc:
Warren Beatty, 54; Anthony Hopkins , 54; N1ck Nolte, 50; and
Robert DeNiro, 48. The oldest
woman up for a best actress award
is Bette Midler, 46, in "For the
Boys."
-Even movies with leading
middle-aged or elderly women
often portray them in less than flattering roles.
In the blockbuster " Driving
Miss Daisy," Tandy portrays " a
bigoted, basically incompetent
woman where men are needed to
run her life," Markson said.
And in the 1990 film "Mr. and
Mrs. Bridge," Paul Newman plays
an active lawyer with an eye for
prelt~ yo~ng women, while h~s
rcal-hfe
wife, Joanne Woodward, IS

Pound

nominees have been consistently the "dumpy housewife," accordX£9!.l~r than their male counter- ing 10 Markson.
"j)llriS~ ~1\ll"'iid co-author •
Charles..FJtzSimons, executive
Carol Taylor, a psychotherapist
director of the Producers Guild of
Among their other findings:
America, agreed that ageism exists
-The average age of women in the industry but said he believes
nominated for best actress and best the situation is exaggerated.
"Statistics can be very deceiving," he said in an interview from
Los Angeles. He cited the 1985
film "Cocoon," about a group of
people in a retirement home who
find what they believe is the fountain of youth. Tandy also stars in
that with Don Ameche and Hume
Cronyn.
I

day after publication to make correction
• Adt that mwl he paid in advance are:

US GRADE A.TYSONIItlllll FARMS CUT·UP
FRilRS OR Vl(Cl CUT.UP FRYIRS LB. !II

TlltSI AA( NOT BUY ONE-GO 011 FIIU tnMSI

Vlith

..

Fourth birthday
The· fourth birthday· of Kylen
James Allen King, son of Janis
Carnahan-King, Racine, and Allen
L. King II, Middleport, was celebrated recently at his home in
Racine . A "Thomas the Tank
Engine" theme was carried out
Attending were his parents,
maternal grandparents, Jim and
Nancy Carnahan, maternal great8f&amp;ll4R.afpU,~l(}, li)J:I,Mildrcd

Shuler, paternal grandparents,
Allen and Kay King, paternal
pt-grandparents, Ed and Lucille
King, Tony, Sandy and JC Carnahan, Ada King and Lee Herdman.

At the March meeting of the
Racine PTO, plans were made to
have a candy sale as a fundraiser.
Candy bars will be sold for $1 .
Plans were also made to send
Racine students to see "The Legend of Sleepy Hollow" in Parkersburg this spring.
Officers will be elected at
upcoming meetings on April 13
and May 11 and plans will be made
for end-of-year eveqts.

VCS to meet
The Meigs County Veterans
Service Commission will meet
Monday at 7:30 p.m. in the Veterans Service Office in Pomeroy.

Sliced
sur OM•
1-lb err 011•
Cooked Ham .. Pkg: PREEI

Tyson Chicken&amp;- ~':-:::
Breast.. .......... p~:: PREEI

California
Navel Oranges
8-lb. Bag

. __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _. ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ .

FROZEN V4LUE P4CK FISH
PORTIONS OR VALUE PACK

Gorton,s

sur o••

cn011•

Fish Sticks.....27-oz. PREEI

~~!'OR

·

' '"~ "

Fischer's German
sur
Ollli
1-lb
Gn' ,...,
Bologna .......... Pkg: PREE.
INSTANT

"IN THE DAIRY CASE"

Nestle Chocolate

Qujk

~ilk.......

Pint

Idahoan Mashed :::::
Potatoes ...... ~~~i. PllEEI

Yoa'll Love OUr
.Pcin
Pizzas

'.

FROZEN, FREEZER PLEEZER

Armour Meat 1-lb suy
""'
Clll' o••,
Hot Dogs........ Pku: PREE.

Orange Cream :::::
Treats ............. t2-ct. PllEEI
'

'9''.·

Sale~

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

Public Notice

Public Notice

NOliCE TO ASPHALT

vendor. The biil prlco ·ohall

New York
~':-:::
Garlic Bread .. 1&amp;-oz. PREll

Bapel
Chaps .............. &amp;-oz.

"IN THE DAIRY CASE" INDIVIDU4LLY
WR4PPED AMERIC4N S4NDWICH

IN THE PRODUCE DIPT.
ASSORTED FL4VORS

Smart Beat ~~: ~g :::
Slices .............. ~•. PREEI

Marzetti
Dressings .......

be firm and in effect during

· 446-Galllpollo
367-Cheohire
388-Vinlon

245-Rio Gnnde
256-Guy•n Dill.
643-Anbi• Dit1.
379-W•Inut

992-Middleportl

67S-P1. Ple•••nl

Pomeroy
985-Cheoter

949-Ratine

458- Leon
576-Apple Grove
773-Muon
882-New Haven
895-Lelart

742-Rudand

937 - Buffalo

843-Portland
247-Letatt

FaD•

2-ln Memory
3- Announcement~
4-- GiYeaway
5- Happy Ado
6-- Loa1 1nd Found

VENDORS
Sealed bldo will be
rocelved by the Board of
Melgs County Commloolonoro, Court Houoo,
Pomoroy, Ohio 45768 until
12 Noon on April 2, ttl2
and the bids will be opened
and road aloud ot 10:15 A.M.
on the 3rd day ol April, 1812
tor the furnlohlng ol all
kinds and olzeo ot
eggregate that ·may bo
required by tho Molgo
County H ghway Department. Proposal• are to
bo returned on bid lormo
oupplled by the vendor, and
will be opened on tho data
and place opoclllod.
Spocillcallon lor bidding
may be oblelned through
lht Engln-·s Office, Rock
Sp1ings Road, Route 2,
Pomeroy, Ohio 4576t.
Mary Hobatoller, Cl1rk
Board of Mel111 County
Commlsolonero
18, 25, 2tc

I~

8Uiine.• Trainif18

15-- School• &amp; hutruction
I~ Radio, TV &amp; CB Repoir
17- Milcellaneow
I~ Wanted To Do

Loa1and Found
8-- Public Sale &amp;
Auction

'

HOWOPEH

TROMM
BUilDERS
-New Conatructlon
-Remodeling
-Cabinet Work
-Commercial·
Raeldantlal
FREE ESTIMATES'
20 Years Experience

MYSTIQUE'
TANNING

Our

2-28-1 mo.

NEW SCA WOLFF liD 24Sl
Tllllling PrDductt Anllaltle
E~p•rience rAe
MJII~ .. ' Ill Tonnln,lr.

I~

'

Campbel's
Mushrooms ... ~:

Macaroni· &amp;
Cheese Dinner
7k

Veg~ble

.

....,
11.•

2-ct,

. Oil Spr,ad ......t:i
~ytll
1:2
LIVIng Glovll l'll(j,

"IN THE DAIRY CASE"
KRQQIII

,..,

,r . ..
MozzareUa 't:ls~'
u.•
Square ............11-o1.
KROGIII

.

l
,I
l

MIDDLEPORT•VInt St-A nioe aroa to live in. This home
could have 3"' bedroom•. All room• are nice sized. Has

102 E. Main SlrHI

.' 3·2-l•pd.

Truck• for Saie

Van• &amp; 4 WD'•
Motoreyde•

Boa a &amp; Moton for Sale
Auto Partir &amp; Aeo,...ri,..l
Auto Repair
Ca11Dpin« Equipment

Plumbin,; &amp; Heati~t~
83- Exc:nat.ing
84- Electrieal &amp; Relr~enotio~
85- General Haulins
86-- Mobile Home Repair
81- Uphol• tery

l: . .··

FREE ESTIMATES
316192/1 mo. pd.

1-614-764-2101

"'Tah I'H h/a O.r 01 Prirtltrf
-111 u. ,.,, n, r..•

'"•' ....
Cal915-4192

POMERO~ OHIO

NEW LISTING- 1 floor hme cabin iype home. 4 room a, 2
bedroom&amp;, aomecarpet&amp; paneling, gas space heat Anice
fixer-upper.
$8,000

BEAUTIFUL SPUT LEVEL, lrame constructed homel9
rooma 1 5 bed(oomo, 2 baths. Includes deck, Jlllrege, woodbumor .45.,. in Riggs Cleat Subdivision.

742·2138

REASONABLE RATES
3-15·'12-t mit. pd.

SH,500

· REDUCEO. Mlddlopon. An elegant home on a leveilot
with 1 2.., Jlllrago, large frontllOrch. anlc srudio wllh lky
ight: very W.l inoulattd. OWNER ANXIOUS TO SELL!
$45,000
llollllo ,..,_ only-1975 14 x 70 Nashua home with 3
bedrooms, carpet&amp; paneling, total electti&lt;: hMl Includes
a 10' doclt.
.
Aoldng !f.LOOO

.

MAKE AN,. ~~rrERI

WE'R! Till HOUrt'OWN CONNECTION fOR OUT OF

TOWN IUYERI AND LOCAL UEI08 COUNTY IELL·
ERS•• YOU WANT TO GET THE WORD OUT... UST
WITH Ull

MICIOWAVI OVII
••• VfiiiNII

.w..u.
.... ltiiOrW.

'

..... !IJ!,_-

KII'S APPUAICI
SII¥1CI
992·5335•

c•-

IStytoe

MAR. 30, 7:00pm - Jle.alh

Malarial I Labor

HAS: llon.-511. 10 am-5 pm

,., Local Salesma•
742-2072

For lllorolnlo Cal

Sh:rr~IWTER

Guerantoed

SUnday 1-5 pm

614-992-2549

Our Sprin(c SbJpme~~l Or

WAKfllflJ'I .

21201t213mo.

'

'

..

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

985·4473
667·6179

SHRUB &amp; JREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL
•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD

BILL SLACk
992-2269
USED RAILROAD TIES

Specializing In Custom

frame Repair

NEW &amp;USED PARTS
lOR ALL MAKES
'
&amp; MODElS

6-12,90-tfn

BI~SELL

Call614-992-6637
St. Rl. 7
Cheshire, OH.
112/tln

WPENTER SERVICE

:t:W."""'
::t:rend fltuiiiL .•\g
.......4aExt~rtor

~a,_~,
V. C. YOUNG IU
.

1-IMI-If!i

'

·~

·f

~~
;.itQo

'~
...
992-2156 1

r-----1.·
R&amp;C EXCAVATING
BULLDOZING
PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEAlllNG
WATER&amp; .
SEWER LINES
BASEMENTS &amp;
HOME SITES
HAULING: Limestone,
Dirt, Gravel and Coal
Ucensed end Bonded

PH. 614·992-5591

· ·12-5-tfn

.'

J&amp;L

INSULATION ··"
•Vinyl Siding
•Replacement
·..-·
Window
'f ~

•Roofing
olnsulatlon

JAMES KEESEE

992-2772 or
742·2097

539 Bryan Place
Ohio
·"
11114/tfn ...

Middlepor~

BUILDERS, INC.

New Homes• Vi1yiSidiag
New Garoges • Replace meat Wi1dows
ROOII Additl011 • Roofiag

(llo Sundar Colis)

YOUNG'S

..·.

.

t-------~ · .

614·949·2801 or 949·2860

7131f91/lln

, ..

. ..:..

"·

FREE ESTIMA'I'F.S

DIIWIJI, OHIO

'•'
·• ''

Quality
:~ :
Stone Co.
SIZED LIMESTONE :'~
FOR SALE

COMMERCIAL andRFSmENTIAL

992·7013 or
992-5553
OR TOLL BEE
1·100·141·0070

..

.a.JAYMAR :;'

314192/1 mo.

3-1&amp;-1 mo

992-6215 '

r

1-13-'92'-1 mo.

30150oroctlodtor
lnopocllon

' Pa••roy, Olilo

Allnmldl ...... ,.. l-oa. ·,

992·3838

C.n~

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS

HEMLOCK GROVE· 1 112 story log look home. 3 bedroomo, ..pet, equipped kitchen, poloh &amp; deck on 100 x
200 lot •
·
$27,too Mou en olftrl

,,.., .... II IlL)
AlSO COMPLrn AUTO
RIPAIR SERVKE-' 24
HOUR TOWING.

MAR. 24, 1:00 pm - BMul

HAULING

SYRACUSE-A taniastic thriving grocery oiOre bulintsa·
Thil money maker comes with everything lnclud!ng the ·
siOCik. 11 hao a dllry case, wak:ln ·cooler, ill1 kindl of
shelving. 3 deep freeze,., tneatslteer. ~- and mo,.,
The upiUs could be made lnio a 2 bectOOnt apartmentHyou
lve OVIII' yoor bulintss. CaH 10 make yout
apt&gt;Ointmonl ·
$138,100

Specializiag Ia
Co•plete Atito
Upllolitery.

10 Dll-11 Sl., llllllllotorl
MAR. 23, 7:00 pm - 'roit
PelnUng Rabbit Fomlly

2-7·92-tln

992-2259
608 QST. '4AIN

IIMI Prl- lo Sofvlce lor
Pool Fr1111e GariiJIO• &amp;
111m•
lst!Cho~:.n:lc•ororrollup
12 ooioro
dooro•
to unlimited

mo pd

J.1f.1

IIASOI, WY.

TROLLEY STATION
CUFTS

T&amp;M

l

A&amp;B AUTO

FREE ESTiftiATES

949-2168
WANTED
Old Currency Dated
Between 1861-1929.
Eapeclally National
81nk Currency from
any alate. Paying
$300.00 and up lor
•peclflc plecea lrom
Racine, Pomeroy,
Middleport and
Raven•wood.
PETE SIMPSON
Evening•

f'ROf-B&amp;f'

J.80G-S31-1440

BULLDOZER,BACKHOE
and TRACKHOE WORK
AVAILABLE.
SEPTIC SYSTEMS,
HOME SITES and
TRAILER SITES,
LANDCLEARING,
DRIVEWAYS INSTALLED
UMESTONE-TRUCKING

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

LINDA'S
PAINTING &amp; CO.

.,

'\
.,
'

po

HOWARD
EXCAVATING

NEW-REPAIR

NEW USliNQ. A2 unit apartment building. Great renial
in-m.tl both unlls curenlly renllld. GoOd monthly income. .
Aoldng $13,1100

LANQIVILLE·Loolt at this niee 1 112,siOrY homtlhlllill ·
on 31 h has3 bedtoomt, 2 baths, INial pump, and
woodbumtr: Some olthe land Is tiNtlble. plus bwould be a
gllltl pilot for hllnting.
NOW 147,1011

71- Auto. for Sale

II. 50Wtsl,llkii,Oitit•5!3-311S

3-5-'t2·1 mo. pd.

ROOFING

disltwaiMr, stove, refrig. disposal, and fireplace. Sits on 2
fenced flat lots.
$38,to0

REEDIVILLE.CO Rd SO. 46 acres ot .nioe laying land.
Appo.- · 2 acres tillable, 10 sore&amp; paarure, 35 acres tif'lber.
Wtittr IIIli aleclrlc available.
$25,000

-

' ..I

mon:loli Relldoltlal

1·304·773·9560

Po11e~'!.J• Ohio
To Fla·~&amp;J.lf~o.

Howard L Writesel

COAL ,
LIMESTONE
AGRICULTURAL
LIME

_,to

•

,,••
•

'

CALL 992·6120
Or 11., 1J

(all IDI' AIPoll......

614-915-4180 ~om-.

NOW $25,500

•
Wanted to Buy
63- Liveuock
64- Hay &amp; Crain
65- S..J &amp; Femlizer

Troy-81111Wen Now I• !kock.
four LMal Tf!t-Bill Dctoler

..... (l372:8697:..-

IF YOU WEAR IT HEAR
I~ ADMIIE I~J. WATCH
IT, PLAY ITt uSE IT or
HEEuiT
YN'DIWhla
EMILY'S ATTIC
We tum your now and
good used ll'liclao Into
cash ond ..vo you moaoy
on whet you need.

Hrs. 8·1 0 Man. thru Sal.

Home1-P111-WiktiH•

s,..... Sltlpm"'' Of

II. 50 Wtsl, A.... Olio •593-3115

IS Sessions.- ~5
Plus I FREE

614·7 42·2328

T&amp; TLJ NSERVICE
ploto Lan&lt;locaplng
Top Sollllluk:hlng

WAKEF1flJ'$

742·2341

37632 West Shidt Rood
Polllll'oy, Ohio 45769

$30,000

55- Buildins Supplie~

IWn Malnltnanc»

Tr•r-Blla 'llllen Now Ia Stock.
four l.oeolfr~·BW Deoltr

1~ Mi. out New
Lima Rd.
Rutla••• Ollio

INTERIOR &amp; EXTERIOR

!!

53-- Antique•

54- Mi1c. Mcrchandi•e

••

1--------"i"---------,.--.....-----r---.;...-----r--------

ADS7

Middleport, .OH
MIDOLEPORT·2 lots and a one story home with seven
room1. Hat 3-&lt;1 bixJR,ams, huga living room, big dining
room, front porch, newa" garago and is partly fenoed. WAS

m :H&lt; .II \\Ili~I :
51- Houoehold Goods
52- Sporti~g Goods

I· \ll\1 'I 1'1'1 I! '
8. I I\ I &gt; I I I I ),

··..,

tAi:U

205 North Se0011d Avt.

light n' Lively :;-.,.
Yogurt .trr~ .. ~-oz.,,,,

41- HoUICI for Rent
42- Mobile Homea for Renl
43- Farms for Rent
44-- Apartment for Rent
4S- Furni.lhed Room•
46- Space for Rent
47- Wanled to Rent
48-- Equipmenl for Rent
49- For Leaae

For Sale or Trtde

NOliCE TO AGGREGATE

.

KRAFT

H1·:"' T \ 1.:-

I I - Help Wanted
12- Situation.~ Wanted
13- ln1urance

7-

33-- Farm• for Sale
34-- Buaine11 Buildinp
3~ Lou &amp; Acreage
36- Real E1tate Wanted

Fruito &amp; v.,e!Uieo

Public Notice

OFFICE 892-2886

.

32- Mobile Home. for Sale

MUIK:aiiD.trwncn\1

•
'

Jar

"IN THE PRODUCE DEPT."

23-- Prof.,ioaal Senice.

GET RESULTS - FAST!

9-- Wanted to Buy

THESE Atii11Dllll1 GM-GIT OlE IMI mMSI

"IN THE DAIRY C.t.SE" 1110 CI.LORIE

22- Moaey to Loan

- - ---1

667 -Coo hiDe

Real Estate General

'

$ .30
$ .42
$ .60

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

Molorcycl~a-Etc.
CONCRETE VENDORS
Sealed bldo will be the 1992 paving 11aoon
received by tho Board of from May through Nov:J(atliryn
Meigo County Commio- ember 1992. Spoclflcetlon
Sheet
may
be
picked
up
at
aionera, Court Houae,
Muufows
Pomeroy, Ohio 457U until the Office of tho Melgo
12 Noon on April 2, t 992 County Engineer..
"SPECIALIZING IN SLATE
Mary Hobote1t01, Cleric
and tho bldo will be opened
OR CANVAS"
Board of MeiJIII County
and rood aloud at10:30 A.M.
39815 Gold Ridge Roed
Commlsolo...,s
on tht 3rd day of April, 1992 (3) 18, 25, 21c ,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45761
LOCAL JOB
lor the fumlshlng ol various
Welcome Slates
gradll or Alpholt Concreto
Public Notice
OPPORTUNITIES
$20.00
for tilt'• Molgo County
Cuotom Pointing•
Lea.rn How To
Highway Department. Pro- l-,,.,.-;_::::.;;::_;,;.::.:..:;._-614·H2·2242
pooals oro to be rolumed on NOliCEJ~:W:'Nous
Quality In One
bid forms supplied by tho
Soalod bid• will be
·Year or LESS
In Loving Memory Of
rocoivod by tho Board of FOOD SERVICE
TEAFORD'S
Mala• County CommioGLADYS WINES
olonora,
Court
Houoo,
(Workers
ond
man.gero
who patted away
COUNTRY CLUB
Pomeroy, Ohio 45711 until are needed for Schools/·
' '· oGoll · lm01s
March 25, 1884
4,7
12 Noon on April 2, 1102
Universltlet/Siele
and of
and the bide will be opened
Government/Hospllels/
CLYDE WINES, SR.
ond
road
aloud
at
tO:OO
A.M.
Nulling Homet)
who paaaed away
on
the
3id
doy
or
April,
CATERING
_
March 2, 1985
·.:, 0
""s-'4.00
11t2,
and
tach
month
A page In the book o1 thoroaft8r the bid quo~e will
, \ '\ -o.n .......
SMALL
memory
I'
be roceinrl and opened on
BUSINESS
SilentlY turn• today,
tho lilt WtdnHCiay of -h
-4.~'=~~~·1oshthll
'
For our memorlu live month ror tho rumiihlng of
•. • - ,5ocarl..,W.
MANAGEMENT
lotever,
butumlnouo materials lor
(Start your own
46387 Scout Clmp Road
To uo "'I:hey ar~ juat the Melgo County Highway b I
1h 1 1 1
Chiller, Oh.
Doportmenl.
Eotlmatod
us
nett
w
I
m
n
rna
away."
overhead
and
3111MI1 mo.
No one know• lhe qu111UU• ol liquid oopholl
required, approxlmotoly
lnveotmenl)
alieni heanaehea,
Only thoee who have soo,ooo Jllllano lor tho year. THE ADULT EDUCATION
Propo11ls oro to bo
CEIITII
loved can tell
TII.COUIIn
The grief we bear In roturnod on bid lorms
ouppllod by the Mtlgo voc· J•IOIIIL SCHOOL
alienee lor
II 1111
,,
The onee we loved eo County Englnoor end may
bo
obtained
through
tho
Call
Todey
well.
1-800-637-65()8
Sadly mloeed by Engln•r'o Olflce.
lbry
HoboleU.,
Clerk
'
-------'
Dotlllhtero, Klllhl...,
Board
ol Melge County
Holl1r ond Ell..., GruMor
end their familiae (3) 18, 25, 2tcCommllllonoro
Real Estate General

''IN THE DELI·PASTRY SHOPPE"

~IIAT

liD 4 Lll. DRillS

Yard

BURNS &amp; RICKER

FROZEN

21..- Bu•bura Opportunity

Rates are for consecutive runs, broken up days will be
charged for each day as separate ads.

Classified pages cover lhe
following telephone e:~tchanges ...

1'1\\\11\1

$ .20

$.05/day

"'*- .. .....

"IN THI D4111V WI"

PIZZAS

1:00 p.m. Saturday
1:00 p.m. Monday
1:00 p.m. Tuesday
1:00 p.m. Wedllesday
100p.m. Thursday
1:00p.m. Friday

.! i

William Hoback preaching; April 9
at 7:30 p.m. at St. Paul Lutheran
Church with Rev. Glen McClung
preaching.
1The community is invited to
observe the Lenten season with the
area churches in these worship secvices.

Domino's Knows

Monday Paper
Tuesday Paper
Wedllesday Paper
Thursday Paper
Friday Paper
Sunday Paper

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

1--------

THIS IS NOT A BUr ONI-CII ON! IRIIIIIMI

Community Lenten services planned
Community Lenten Services in
the Pomeroy area will continue
Thursday at ?:30 p.m. at Sacred
Heart Cathohc Ch~rch wllh Rev.
Rogc:r ~race ~ht~g
.
- ~ wtll conunue April ~at
7:30 p.m. at the Pomeroy Umted
Methodist Church with Rev.

In M•orLlm,

304-773-5352

Alexander Selkirk was rescued
from the Juan Fernandez islands in
the South Pacific in 1709. Selkirk's
story inspired Daniel Defoe's
Robinson Crusoe.
Abraham Lincoln, the 16th president of the United States, was born
in Kentucky in 1809.

KYLENKING

Happy Ado

Wow! 4 Free Tanning
Sessions
w/each Perm.
15 Tanning Sessions Only $30.
SHEAR DESIGNS UNLIMITED

News notes

Candy sale begins

Card ol Thanlu

BALLROOM DANCE
MARCH 27, 7TO 11
GEORGE HALL
MIDDLEPORT LEGION ANNEX
Food &amp; Ice Available
$5 per .
B.Y.O.B.

TURKEY UREAST OR

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION

Over 15 Words

Rate

run 3 da)'• al no charge.

•

OVEN ROASTED, HONEY SMOKEO
on HONEY SLICED

COPY DEADLINE

.15
15
15
15
Monthly 15

oua.ide Callia, Ma1on or Me~• counliet mwt be prel&gt;aid r--_:---:~--:-:-:--=~:.:.:.:~-----

• Price of ad for aU capitalletten i• double price of ad c01t
' 1 point line type only uoed
• Tribuae ia not rupon•lhle for erron af1er flr•t clay (chec:k
for error• fir1t day ad run• in paper). Call before 2 :00p.m.

THORN APPlE VALLEY SLICED

1
3
6
10

' Receive dio&lt;ouftl lor ado paid in advan&lt;O.
• FreoAdo: Ci,.away and Found ado underl5 wordo &gt;rill be

As Oscars approach, researchers
see age bias in Hollywood
By CECI CONNOLLY

Ad1

Words

·

.:•;
.

.'
' ..t,

'

�March

Ohio
SNAFU® hy Bruce Beattie

Al'llcuncernent s

31 Homes lor Sale

3

Announcements
Comlna _., In Rlltl.lnd: Ctr·
tlflod diy we l o r - 1·8, coli
114-1112·29111, 1-4pm
IIAKE A FRIEND ... FOR LIFEI
SclndiMYitn, E"fOPIIII• S_outh

KIT 'N' CARL VLE® by Larry Wright

44

Apanment
lor Rent
Ccmplolly Fumlohod moblla

Comlnchl, ,2Wd, 114-nii·:IIOI

twa

1111 Cavell« 2 door, I 1peed,

gOO!! cond, SC,385. or - oHtr,:
304.a'ls.4181.
.
INt .Oodgo Shtld- Alltomlllc,
Tilt, CruiHL A~. 41,000 Mil••·
54,800. 114-•71-2721.

Hdraom

aponmonlo lor nnL :104-41752053 ., 171o4100.

Amtran,
V~avlan,
Joponooo High Sc
Ex·
chanp Studonlo - Arriving
AuaiiM .... HOST FAMILIES

8

WED.,

~

NEED£DI American lroorcuftiKII

~-&amp;---L-.~~ · ----~

I JUST LEARNED THAT
SENDS ALL
COLLECTS TO

T~E

TEETH S~E
THE FACTORV WHERE T~EI'
MAKE BILLIARD BALLS ...

Gl tnlkle

Exc1111nl

Pay,

Btnefite,

407-292-41'17,
571. 81.m.·10p.m. Toll

Trono~ollon,

Ell.

months old. C.ll anytime· 304-

~Tile Jlfllrsono ~

Aetundld.

175-3!131.

(}) 0 tnelde !dillon
Ill (!) MIC~II/LIIIre
NewaHour

Full baoodld Collie tem~~le, e AVON ! All A11111 I Shlrtty
manit. old· to g/viiWI)' to Speare, 304-675-1429.

good homo. 304-675-2797.

AVON gtlln on the ground floor
of Avona n.w earning atructurt.

6

Lost &amp; Found
Loll: Female Dog On O.J. Whlto
Reid, Golllpollo, 112 Norwolgn,
112 wrman Shephard, Sho~
And Fat; Very Friendly. 114-4462113.

7

1811 Horlly Low Rldor, good
cond, $4,100. -773.a834.
1111 Ka~Nid 150, good ohopo,
new battery, 30MtS.3021 tfler .
1:00.
Yomohl YZ-400 din bike :
wllllroo, powo&lt;tul, :104-4175- .

Valley Or, Pl. PleaNnt, WY

ALL Y1rd Sales Must Bt Paid In 25550. AAIEOE
Advance. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
the dly before tht ad 11 to run. Cosmetologist NMded; Oaun~n ­
Sunday tldltlon • 2:00 p.m. tHd 117'0 Ptr WHk, Paid

8

Evening Shih Supervisor . Holzer Clinic Is S.aklng A Matur1,
Ruponslble Ptraon Wllh Su·
pervlsory Experience To Over·
,.. Ce11aln Personnel And

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Clinic
Facllillll
During
Ennl• And Wnktnd Shlha.

Rick Purson Auction Company,
full timt auctlonttr, complete
auction Mrvlct. llctnHd Ohio,

Full Time Position. Applicants

Should Be Otpenclable, Have

Will VIrginia, 304·773-5785.

Good Knowtadge Of CLIItodlal

And Housek11Df.lng Technlquea,

9

Wanted to Buy
Don~ Junl&lt; II Sill Ua Your Non·
Wortllng Al&gt;l&gt;ll.lncn, Color TV'a,
YCFrt,

M1croWIVH,

TOOII, Etc.l14-251·1238.

AbiiHy To Tro n And Mollvoto

Personnel And Work Well With
Othera. Send Rnuma To Hotur
Clinic Peraannal O.pl, P.O. Box
Power 344, Gllllpollt, OK 45131. No

Phone Calls Ptea11.
W.nttd TD Buy: Junk Autot Eiparianctd
houstki~JMr:
Whh Or Without Motott. Call Fridays only, 5 houri, $5n.our.

Lorry Lively. 114-388-9303.
61H46-Il611 after 5 p.m.
Prien Pold: All Old u.s . Immediate Opening For Pa11Coins, Gold Rings, Silver Coins, Time AN SuperviiOf, D1y Shift
Gold COina. M.T.S. Coin Shop, Competitive
Wagot, DIHtronlial

r.,

151 Slcond Avenue, Gallipolis.

With Experience, Equal Oopor·
tunlty Employer. Cont•et Ofrec·
tor Of Nuralng, Plntcrut Care

Employment Services

C.nttr, 170 Plntcrtst Drlv1, G1l·

llpollo. 614-44&amp;-7112.

Join A WIMing Team
as a ltadlf In tha fl111nclal Hr·
vlc:n arena, being 1 member or
our eoneumtr llntncl tNm
means having 1 good pl1ce lo
stal1. A,. you ulf· motlvaltd,
v.~.- To: O&amp;A Suppll.. , Box
1111rtlve, and tnloy dtallng
1443, Fairborn, OH 45324.
wHh poopil? A pfuNnt por·
1350.00/Dar ProcHelng Phon• tonality and phone sklltl lfl a
Ortl.,.l People Cell You. No Ex· mull. Rllpontlbllitlll lncludt
poritnct NOCHaary. 1-800.255- activities related to ertdlt, uln,
account management 1nd IC·
0242.
counting. For imm;/late con·
tldtratlon, contac:1 Tina Morgan
U5MlAY PROCESSING

11

Help Wanted
11,000 ThouNnd lrnmodlotoly
StuHing Envalot&gt;N. Ruth
Sllmplcl Addrotttld ltD En-

PHONE

ORDERBI PEOFLE
CALL YOU.
NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY.
1-800.255-0242.

II 614·992·2111. EOE, MIFIH;
non- •moklng and drug fret envlronmant.

Wanttd: Saln pmltlon tor local
area
bualnns.
Offering
benefits, muat bt aggrtulve
and able to work ·with public.
Stnd compllte resume: Box B·
18 Clfl Pt. Pleaunl Reglsttr,
2W Moln St, Pt. Pit, WV 25550.

SOH.

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

tor Sale
Mft. Flbtrglln Fish/Ski Boot, :
4G Horoo JOitnoon, Trollor.Puoh .
BuHon Control, Good 10e1ndl· ·

$12,000 NogOIIobla. 614·388-

11898.

WANTED; BSW lor caaowork Building altu for Nle: 1 to 5
position In 138 bed program· acret on Bidwell Mount Olive
orltnttld nurolng lllclllty. 111- Rood. 614-3&amp;U794.

tlon, 614-446-4020.
1f12 Sllverllnt boat,

qulrM strong ca11 mana~
mtnt, ca11work and Interper- Lola for salt, traller1 acctpsonal skUiti ability to work with toblo. 304.a75-272.2.
aptelal n...tt of MRJDD and Ml Lola In Golllpolla Forry • 100%
,.sldenta; current WV llc:ente. own~r. llnanclng 11 $98.64 per
Point Pleuanl, WV area, 304· month, any one or lour lots
675-3230, 11128.
available, 304-675-2722.
WANTED; MSW to bo director ol Lola In New Haven • 100%
ocelli wortl oorvlcoo In 136 bod owner financing at $101.46 per
program-oriented
nuralng month buys alllhree lott, a304o

taciDty. Requires atrong suptr·
vlsory, lnttrptr.anal, caM
managtmtnl, and c111wotk
skills; ability to work with IPI•
clal l'lltdt or MAIDD and Ml
rttldltltlj cuntnl WV license.
Point PINtant, WV, aru. 304·

175-3230, ••• 28.

120hp.,

12

Oliver tractor I farm m1chlnery

parts, it nol In 11ock will get.
Call "Th1 Olle Man". 81,..'J88.
9684.

Real Estate
Wanted

Situation
Wanled: Rttldtntlaf Building
Wanted
lot Or Acreage For Outllty
Will llkt care ol aldwly lady In Homtt. Mull 8t Within I Mlln
my hom~, experienced, have Of Holz1r HoaDhal On Blacktop
rol., maonoblo, -773·tl85
Road. 1-304-273-2040.

14

Business
Training

Retrain
Naw!IISoutheasttm
Buslnttt Colllgt, Sf~~~ Valley
Pltza . Call Todly,61
-4367!!
Atglsteratlon t9()..0S.12748.

Rentals

41 Houses lor Rent

18 wanted to Do

Will BobyaH In My Homo, Rod·
ney Arta. Aefelllnc11 Available.
btwn
10
&amp;
2,
614-367-1117.
Ac-Ing lnllructor Noodtld,
Ctii114-24S.5887. .
Hlvo B.S. DogiN In Ac· Nltd sOf'I'\IOnt to lay 1 r'oom of
counting. Send R-mo To: P.O. carpet around April 1st. Call E &amp; ATREE SERVICE. TODDing,
Trimming, TrN Aemovtl, f.4edge
llol213; Gllllpolil, OH 411131.
momlng.., 304-77)..5846.
Trimming. Fr11 Eltlmtllll Sf4·
367-795T.

VI'RA FURNITURE
BARGAINS GALORE!
614-446-3'158

Wtnctd: thlc:k cator1et ltnt

gloM. Will rotum, mlno
aoatrayod In r~o. 614-367-7111.
WELLS DRILLED:
LIVING ROOII: Sofo And Choir WATER
WATER OAURANTEED. 114·111111$179 And Up; CoffH And End 7311.
TobiM 171 And Up; Swlvol
Rockore S71.
Waodbumer, $35; coltat table,
$10; 114-882·1102
BEDROOM: Bunk Bodo Sllll
(2d) ; 4 Drawer Chtll at 55
Building
Droworo $44.95; TWin Monnoo
Supplies
' " Sot.

Block, brick, sewer pipet, win·
dowt, llnttlt, etc. Claude WI""

Rio Grandi, OH Cell 614·
245-15121.
Spocl.ll· TWo .., gorogoo,
24X2419o $38951. 24112TXb
$4111!1 27x321b ..a89, Prlli·

tort,

tion P011 Fram• Bullder'a, 114-

892·3541
Utility Building, 30•4Gxt0 1Dxt2
olldlng door $5189.00, 24x40xt0

Georgn Pot1abll Sawmill, don't
haul your loat to tht mill jual
304-&amp;75~1'§57.

Miss Paula's Day Ca,. Ctnttr.
Sail, aHordablt, chlldcara. M·F
6 a.m. • 5:30 p.m. Ages 2~10 .

E. Sec:ond St., Pom~roy, 3bdrm.,

1 112 both, llrgo llvtng-noom, Blcy:~~ matching hit I hi,.,
, like ntW, only 30 mlltt
dining-room, I khchonL tully 12 •
Befort, a"er tchool. Dro~in1 earptltd, no pet•, ,... • dep, on Nch, saw. 304-175-1731.
we1cam1. 614-44&amp;.8224. New ln- ;A~Irtd, 13001 man., 114-185- "-nlnaton model 7011 BDL 22·
lont Toddlor Coro, 014o44H227.
210 wflh 12X ....,., S400. 175-3151.
Will blbyslt In my home tun ar

pan tlmt, Chtttlfl Pomeroy
aru, 114-:112-3Tl3

21

Business
Opportunity
INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.

rRGmm.nds that rou do buli-

3bdrrn. doubJI wide In Aacln•,

good

neighborhood, S300/
mon., water ..wage, l gerblae
lneludtd, dopooll roqulrid, IM-

848-2217

54

Miscellaneous

Merchandise
Big 4 Btclroom

Da~Oio DrNm
Homo 1 ~2t&lt;HI I Up. BuiH On

44

HI

OUr Model, 114-

COIIPUTEM'IIIN1ER
FOR
SALE • Tondy 1,000 IL W1Ut
RAII/-/20111
Hlrtl Orlvo • Tonti¥ ROB Clln
Hlah R-lon COlor llonMor
Wft'h Or Whhoul Tonctr 0111'1:12

Real Estate

31

P&lt;into&lt; • lncludoo 1 YNr Tandy
Wornonty. Will
- To
Poclca@.
Utlanotlng
AI

-

Homes for Sale

T-.

104.ft2·

.:1 flltf/1!1'11,$6.00
!l------1
111._ _ _ _ _ 1

-7-1.
2 - homo S ICI'II, AIDttg
Ohio Rho&lt;, Rf. U, Lata~, 3114'
11114U.
3--Homo0n1AC:reot

1~

llrtr

l,f.;;~;;;Jjj;1;01"'Jii'"~

"'··...,.....----11

J5.

~.

446-2342 675-1333
992-2156

.

'

.

~~· I lciai

.

lutiiiM
....... loti. Willi Cit*, . . .
Colt t14-14s.iaa Alllr lp.tL ·

:1. _ _ _ _......,.._ II ·----·11
4------,.-:-:::-- n:· ---~-1 1

5. - - - - -"'--- I :1.·----'"'-"'-"-"-6. - --r.:--::7""-

!Ioiii .Coil 114-441.3137

Evonlngo And W I ,...
ContNio • . Ptoollo htltlo
.lot Alnlton Tanlto. Roo
E¥1111 1n1--. ~-. OH

Rod- To toa: $4'4:,
Ctloahft}t:lo· 1104 1:12 I,

- - living. 1 Ond I lltld-

Vltloao
. . . . , _ In !!111--~!i!;rt. """"
fill, CIIII1WII-TIIt 10M.
&lt;OOrtt

Minor

•po~-

.encl

11

~

$1Nf
(
.....

tD ~ BlllkelboH
National lnv~ation
Toornament, quarterfinal (q
8 C1011tlre
7;3&amp; CD S.ntord end Sen
1:00 I]) D ll2l uneolvtd
Myote~u Awoman murders
her hus.band and poisons her
children. (R) Stereo. C
Ill MOVIE: Amtdeuo (PI I of
2) (PG) (2:00)
(})II ()) D Wonder Yeare
Kevin is upset aboul being
thrown out ot a movie for
beina underage. Stereo. C
(!) (!) Amttrican PlayhouTe
A dwarf court jesler gets
revenge after being forced to
pia~the fool. C ·
IliaD IIJ II DIVta Attlee
The Davis clan scrarrible6 to
avoid each other at a local
htclub. Slereo. C
II MOVIE:
My
rl1Ril2:00)
i1J Murder, She W101t t:;J
Wlllllmo and AN
Comedy Sptclll Comedians
Williams and Rae. Jack
Mayberry, Gary Mule Deer;
country stars WIIUa Nelson
and the oak Ridge Boys.
(I :00) Slereo.
8 PrltMNtWI Q
Blothlt Jitilt Stereo.

t'A,flf~.

ALLEYOOP

Mtrcury, Mariner, Mercrulatr

apoclollll. Morcwy cortlfltld.
llobli!...,Wo c - to you. 114·
258-5orv.

Pets lor Sale
Groom end Supply Shop-Pot
Grooming. All brttldo, llyl.lo.
lam• Pel Food Dealer, Jullt
Webb. c.n 114-446-0231.

Fllh Tank, 2•13 Jackson Ava.

Point PiiiNnt, 304.a75-2013,
tull Uno Traplcal lloh 1 blrtla,
ornoll onlmolo ond ouppllll.
~~r all,

$20. 11ch, 304·

m

elllg

1:05 CD MOVIE: Mare ot 111e
Wllderneu (2:00)
1:30 (})II (I) II Dooglo HowNr,
M.D. Doogie Is jealous when
Wanda comes to town with a
~ndsome friend. (R) Stereo.
')-l'l"

eon.$'

NI-l MQ'.A ~T S~NK

AU- MY FEA.TURE:e&gt; ARE.

MY QA.D e.AY6 IF SHE
KeERe PUL-L-ING- MY

Me WHEN 6HE'5MADAT
ME ... 5HE. f'UL.LS MY eAR .

E:A~

OOINI!i 10 WIND UPON
ONE' SIDE OF MY F;&lt;!CE..

eo Mi-lCH, ..

/

)

J---~

fully •

Com'pritollollllo Homo Sot·Upo,
IIINin; Cornnwlcli,

~

llof lrttpravomonlo. Including:

qulppad, law mllootlt. vory itlot ~~~~f'l. Ea.ctrlcal. ln1~o~ranc•
co~ will oocrillco, l14.at2-le57 Clllmo kotpttld. 114-211·1111. .
or oM-892-21'111
Cu"lo . Homo lmpro'""""" ·
1871 Ford lluota,.';1. Collrto, 302 Yom Elporlor)co On Qldor ~ .
Nawar Homoa. Addllloht, .
MBa hp.1 Dll lve lfiM.1 Fowldlllon
Ww1l, Rooting, . •
080, D14-lt2•7321
KMchono And 111111. Froo £j. '

1181 Buick RIVII&lt;I, Mil I loo~t tiMid•l ...... lftCII, No Job To :
llf Or Smollll14o44t.o221.
·.
aood, high rnlltoogo, 11.ioo. ltil-3014.
itlcll'l Rooting, Plinllng I Dick ;
lulldlng. FIN llllmaiM. 10 ,

BARNEY
· IT WAS A REAL,
NICE WEDDIN' TILL

: TH' FISHT If

FIRST·· LET ME

WHAT
FttiHT?

TELL YOU WHAT

TH' BRIDE WAS
WEARIN' If _

FERGIT TH' SOCIETY PAISE
AN' GIT BACK TO TH'
SPORTY SECTION f!

I
I 1I

II I

NALLIE
2

r.V:.r-(..,.1~u

1-iiJ

t - - 1

LI

r:!I

uGE

I had detiberalely kept a
callar on hold on another line
5
while I chatted with a friend . A
. .
.
.
.
co-worker reminded me that
,...~~-:-::-:-=--, people counl up the faulls o1
S0 CP I T
lthosewhokeepthem ·······.
1--~r--~r:s-,lr;''~
Complete tho chuckle ~uoted
by illling in lhe mlssln~ ' words
L.-L..-L..-.L....I.L..-I.~.J.
you develop from nap No. 3 below.

I' I

I I I

I

.,1,. ...,1-,'i G

&amp; PRINT

NUMBERED lETTER S I
IN THESE SQUARES

e ~~ic:~~~~~ lETTE RS TO I

IIIIIII

SCIIAM-LETS ANSWERS
Facial· Worry ·Index· Asylum· MYSELF

'

I was always in a hurry and very impatient with lhose
who seemed lo be going slower than I wanled. A wise
chap told me to be patianl with everyone especially
MYSELF.

BRIDGE

1114 tladgo ...,., 4 - · - .

t!"~~=::~
Joc-.OH1~ '

... Chtvv C1l1bettt; U.000

-010 ... ~
-Voo
iltl. ,.~~.
.. ..,..

-1-··---···
.

-o.4GJI,MWII•

mlloo, ~ 111S ...,. Contry
U..Ntd, JO,OOO-, nloa, JDC:
17s.4113 or f7H241,

~ lnd

tlollnry. 114- ·

-··-·I

Wll
IIIMIIIII
-polio
,_., pill .. vtny1
- . • tnill&lt; lki&lt;ltnf: ·114MUll:t.
~ ~.

9:00 ()) D ll2l Selnllid An artist
woos J!r with her prose.
Stereo.
(}) 0
11 Younglndllna
Chronlcieo As a
courier during World War I.
Indy experiences trench
warfare. Stereo. t:;J
(!) (I) Moy.,.JFamllleo Flrot
The human-services system
is explored as it responds to
the Increasing number or
Americen tamilies in da'!S."r
or distnt~ration. (1 :30) .!;I
IIDJID 112lll Jake ancllh'e
Fll1mln Jake and his
girlfriend are neariy kllleC In
a cer·bomb explOsion.
Stereo. C
i1J MOVil; Prlvlle lltnjlmln
(R) 12:00)
Nttlllvllle Now Stereo. .
ta '-'!IY King Liver

PHILLIP
ALDER

WEST

EAST

+QI0812

+H
9KQJ9H
tJ3
+J 10 9

• 32

tQ1071
+Q2

SOUTH
+A 6 3
9 A 10.
t A86 5
+8 53

The bidding
paves the way

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: North

By Pbiilip Alder
One weapon players use to try to de·
rail the opponents' auction is the preemptive bid. However, if the pre-emptor doesn't buy the contract, often the
eJ&lt;tra information given away aids t~e
declarer in the play.
Cover the East-West cards and plan
the play in three no-trump . West leads
the heart three in answer to his part·
ner's weak jump overcall, and East
plays the jack.
You have seven top tricks. If the opposing clubs are 3·2. another lwo club
tricks can be established. (The con·
tract is probably unmakable if the
cllibs are H .) But there is a risk that
when the club trick is lost. the defend·
ers will run the heart suit.
The first order of business is to duck
the heart ace for one round, cutting
the defenders' communication in that
suit. If West has three clubs. there are
no problems. But you should allow for
the possibility lhat West has queen
doubleton. Alter winning trick two
with the heart ace. lead a tow club. If
West plays the queen. duck in the dum·

2.

Sooth

West

North
1+

EaSI

3 NT

Pass

Pass

Pass

Opening lead: • 3

my . But let's assume he plays low. You
win with dummy's club king, return to
hand with. say, a diamond to the ace.
and lead another low club.
If Wesl plays tow. go up with the ace
and play a third round. hoping West
must win the trick. If West puts in the
queen, play tow from the dummy.
Nole that if East bids only one
heart. not two, perhaps declarer will
go down. Thinking that the ·hearts are
splilting ~3. South will hold up his ace
until the third round. But that gives
West the chance to discard the club
queen. setting up an entry for East.
lla*ts

In!'

lllvitftl to ltiJd

~nJ.pl•y

quet·

to Pftillip A/dB, In carr o/ UUJ Mftpfp«:
Tboy Cln be answred MJy liiFOufll tile column.

tiOm

@..a, NIWtPAPD &amp;fiJI JJU Allll.

The World Almanac ~~&gt; Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS

A.nawer ta Prtwlout Puzzle

33 Northern
nallon
35 Conlempllblt
36 Cordon37 Fragranl

1 Fulure attya.'
exam
5SIIrWars
princeaa
9 Mouth pari
12 Son ot ·JacOil
13 Rocolrack
term
14 Llnguage

eu~etanco

4D Not late
42 Snakelike
tllh
43 Tht (Gtr.)
44 Umb
46 Short tor
Auguslus
48 Pari or cap
50 te next lo
53 Sailor Ill.)
54 Uquoly
56- Ericoon
58 Aclor
Wallech
59 -'alrlsh
Rolf
60 Tranlll coal
81 - llolnta
62 Lochmonsltr
63 Hymn's finale

auffl1

15 Boxer Max
16 Curds'
companion
17 Even (poet.)
1a In a dltrtcult
position
20AI- - lor
warda

22 Sign at oall·

out tabbr.)
23 Hardware
Item
24 Weapo"
27- Jlme
29 Acted silently

DOWN

I Law deg.
2 Placo lo elt
3 Clelm
4Wtarlll
5 lneldo lnlor·

Slereo. GJ

1;30 I]) D ll2l Night Court Dan

llon'l
-l.lllztfta .:
In Jonltll oliO 111 vlolna .ftiW'.

----·~
=-~~414.

mn••

8

t.J;.s!

NORTH
+K 7S
98 6
e K92
+AK761

•·'D 'lllltLOulttilj.ltlylltlllt

~' I

1114 FlorrD IE, 1 1 - . - .
lion, .11110, IM-IIHI7V . . .

GD 112lll Brooklyn Blidgt
George organizes games lor
the boys to play Inside on a
rainy day. Stereo. t:;J
M11111c Manalon Stereo.

, .,,,

a

·--111·
-lt,RON '
EVAHI, ~ OH. 1-ICIII- :
..,....,

i

J-•

Hnj.

71 Autos lor Sale

Cion

a

=--.,.-===.,.,--

1113~Towneor,­

month Wilt&lt; lntludtld 1100

''"!

At.or

()fA()Ly

- II"""' """""· - ·.
--·••-.
TV-·
*-Ill.

r. Rolrig. no pota $188/por

'lhm youl' ..lrJIII'I" iul11 t: u.~ft ,
Sdl it
1wsy wi•J···''r ,/,, ~ .
1w lll't'tl 111 1&lt;'11171' )' ""'' lumw.
l'lup! Y""'' dussilietl nll1.111lu)'!
.15 1t111n/~ ,.,. It·~.~, .1 days,

i D Wheel ot Fortune t:;J
II:D • Family Feud
a 111 1 Stir Stereo.

II'IAfcff C/IAfTI'f'Y

reersexplftence. IM :1• '"" ·:
JIT '
.'•

1 BR unlumlshtd 1pt. w~h •ovt

Dopooh 114...41-3617

.·---··'t

1Hf .ffVfN

BOATERS
Gulnna llonlwy Morino Sorvlco.

R65 Ditch Witch Trencher wllh 78 Auto Pans &amp;
attachment. ca.. 1740
Unlloodor akld ttoor. 114-184·
Accessories
7842.
4 - chromo dlroctlonol rlml :
Wanted: Ustd farm equlpmant, wHh
225-14 FIIMtonoo 210 miiM
tnythlng you Wlnt IO Hll. ca11 lha FG&lt;d. 5450.00 l-o4412 ·
614·256-1308, 251-6040 oftor I
p.m.
Budget Tranomlotlono Uood I
rebulft, ttmlng 11 iii· tfont
Livestock
whlol drive tto~lng tt ~48.00
63
114-245-1177, 114-llil.a93.
2 More ponloo, 304-471-31118.
TOOl box, mttll, wldl CfiiU bed,
Angus And Chi.Angua . Black wttockl. $31. 304.a'ls.1731 ,•
Buns A11eonably Prletd. Slate
Run Farms, Jacksan, Ohio, 814- T - , H-a, I ft ionlr.
Widl bod, lildlilg WindoWI lrorit
2811-6311.1.
and both - · saso. 304-175·.
Fiolhy 1888 Groy AOHA Flly by 1731.
Roynotda Rop. Fluhy Sonolt
11110 tiny by thllnllmldotor I 1 79
campers&amp;
ulld :z hom Bumper Tr~lltr
Motor Homes
614-2118-6522
Special Fatldor Cell Solei
Athono Llvntock SliM, US 50
Wnt Alblny, Ohio. Soltodoy
March .28, 1892 AI 1:00 P.M. WO 2111. lith whoot •rortt•, fully ~~~~
Will 8t Hoving A Spoclll Rid contolnod, oc._- owning,
Cow Cell Sail. All Ccin Will 8t togUilr 1111 bod, mull .
Prognoncy Chockld, And T• •• -"&lt;loto,114-1112-2001
ttld. All
Wal·
comol Llvnloc~
tid Ston·
Se rv1ces
lng AI 4 P.M. Evory Fnaoy. Hou~
lnl Avollobil. 114-118-353\ Or
61 582-2322.
81
Home
64 Hay &amp;Grain
Improvements
Ear corn • straw tor ..... 304BASEMENT
175-244S oftor 1:00 Pll.
WATERPROOFING
Squoro blln' hoy for ur,: Ctl UncondHionll llfollmo guoron·
Gordon HIJdt*. 11441t-mo.
IM. Local nfortncn lum-.
FIN lllimlloa. Cell cotloct 1•
114-237.o411, doy .. night .
Tra ns port ati o n
Rogoro 8••-nl Wll•proo.

11178 ·c.dllloo Eldonodo,

5938.

j. , '

56

42 Mobile Homes

Apanment
Your 1.0'1.
BM·731l
lor Rent
mall unlll you have lnvlltlglttd
1 bodroom opt Good locltlon,
thl dwlng.
101 Sllfh &amp; Moln Sl. Nowly
remod1\td with new IJPIIanc11.
Ulllitltl not lnctlldotl; dopooll
r&lt;~qulrod, 304-475·1'1 31 0&lt; 075and
NOT lo IOnd monoy through tho
_...,h~yauk-

CL\&amp;1-l?!l

_,...

014·892·3541.

lor Rant

PIN downl!:X11U.

1.- - - -- 2.- - - - - -

10x10 •lldlng door $4900.00,
Precision Past Frame Bulldtra,

AKC Gorman Shlphlrd puppin, 304-4175-5724.
AKC
'"IJIIIortld
Cocker
Spaniels, had tholt and wor·
mild, 304.a'IS.2183.

Will provide loving child core, HOUH lor rent In SyriCUH, 61....
••porloncld, •nr ahlft, proltr 9112·7688
Golllpolla Forry oroo. 304-675- small hou11 far r1nt, Dexter
1481.
area, Clllf1~742·2751
Financial

fLo;H ···IT'

hot

.

C:lll

T0NIGH7'1'

1:00.

John DHrt 22ft field cuttlvator
S3,900. 304.a75-1308.

nnanclng at $10t.46 per month
~. aD lhrH Iota, 304-675-

oNf iHIN6 A8ovr

·

1874 11R botrd Ski Boot 115HPII 11.400 oftor 5:PII 114251·
1754
John Dnro 2 bollom 16" ptow, 1868 Pro Croft 18 ft, fllh l old,
htavv dWy, 1275. 304475-4308. IJ:C cond, 304.a75-7t18 afttr
•

QJ M-yllne
llll Tile WaHono
7:05 CD I Love Lucy
7;30 I]). ll2l Jeopardy! c
Ill Now It Can 1141 Toil
(})II El!lt"llnment Tonlghl
stereo. 191. .
Ill, II Mairted... With Children

through

nice cond.,

S2000,114-143-631Mi onyllmo

Lola joining Point • 100% owner

36

18ft.,

m1rcruur

Inboard

!:t:!hleld, wolk·
wary

675-2722.

wttk. CAtahlre/Kyger ar11. cau

Want to:

low lo lorm lour slrripla words.

stereo.
iiJ MacO r
Ill SportaCeiner

TOPIC.:

75 Boats &amp; Motors

20 AertS, 15 Wooded, 5 Cloarld,
Slptlc And Water, Electric.

NHd babysitter 5 nights •

marvest ABargain..,
Reap The Rewardsttl ·
When You Turn To
The Classfieds,
Ml The Bou~~ Is Yours!

0 lour
Roorrongo loHor1 ot
acromblod word1 be-

Stllr Trel&lt;: Tile ~ell
Oelllrlllon C
·
112le ernm•n• Tonlfh•

74 . Motorcycles

Corporate Satlty Officer. Mini·
mum Assoc Degree In Fire
Selene• 1nd lndultrial Saltty.
Send rnume to Pereonnel
Pleasant Valley Hospital, 2520

p.m. Saturdly.

PUULII

II]) •

Avon : Na Ttrritortta, Sell To
Friends, Family. 1·800..281-4801,

Friday. Monday tldhlon . 2:00 Vacations, C.ll614-44&amp;-7267.

TltAT DAILY

(1)11 Cenci Camere
IIDJID Curren! A"alt C

1-aoo-992-6356.

Yard Sate

aq,.,.

GD 112lll CBS Newo t:;J
II Andy Grtltltlt
iiJ Scooby Doo
ill UpCIOII
llll New ZOlfO Srereo. t:;J
8:3&amp; CD Andy Ortttith
7:00 IJl• ll2l WhNI ot Fortune

AUSTRALIA WANTS YOU

3 flmlll 811GII pupplaa, 3

PGA Tour

QJ WOIId Todoy
llll Rln Tin Tin, K·9 Cop
Sltreo. t:;J
1:05 CD lltvtrly HlllbUIIII
1:30())• ll2l NBC .News ~
Ill S.vld by the Bel
(}) 0 (I) II ABC New t:;J
(!) Wild Amertcl C
One TVS!ereo.

i

Giveaway

8

rn RNdl~lnbow t:;J
grm::r "t:;l

'I'OU MAV WANT TO
CONSIDEJ&lt;. THIS T~E NEXT
TIME VOU LEAVE A TOOTH
UNDER 'fOUR PILLOW ..

T~E TOOT~ FAI~.Y

25

&amp;:00())11 (1)0 (1)11 1111.
112lll ll2l Newt
Ill Video Power
~ Square One TV Stereo.

•~

114-1141-:m4 Or Coli 1.aOO.SI·
BLING.

MARCH

EVENINO

l

Student Exchlnge. Call Belinda

4

The Dally

Television
Viewing

1111 11on1o CtM SSi.!.IIH,....

home, 1 milt below town over·
and

. Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

11 Autos for Sale

~~vor. No Poll, Cl. 1140ne

1992

~~:~g~OL

You're an easy i'tdWiduallo work
w~h today, because '(Wre 1101
apt to lhilk you havt an qJikln
on rhe world's grealesl .ldeai. II
you~t BflPioached w~h a bener
plan, you'l be 1ot;t!pliw.

be strenglltened and several
new ones wrl be established.
Hew don Mlatl belna lite most
popula( lild on the block?
SAGITTARIUS (Nov.23-Dec.21)
Anancial pr~s look en-

=~ag~'!.~~~h~=~m~

.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22.)This is a
good day to try out M Idea
undersland whal to do to make you've been toying wih wh~h
the rela!lonsh" wotlt. Mal $2 you leel Is 1 money-maket
-'IIIIJii•··~j;,; I long, N!f-addrassad, . You're on the rinhl kack, and I
0&lt;1
stamped envelope to Aslrold be
n!n
YOUR BIRTHDAY
Graph, P.O. Box 91428,
as ,.~,table as you
Thursday, March 26, U92
Cleveland, OH 44101~28.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept.
The

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with a friend who always tries ro
reap what ygu sow.
CAPRICORN (Dac. 22-Jai1. 18)
Your mental lacultles could be
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you~e prasenlad wilh a plan,

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�Page-14-l!le Dally Sentinel

Wednesday, March 25, 1992

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Ohio Lottery

NIT
tourney
results

Pick 3:963
Pick 4: 0543
Cards:
lQ-H; A-C; 7-D;
3-S

Tonight showers and thunder·
storms. Low In tbe mid 30s.

PageS
I

I

See Store For Details

The ·Big Bear Hug!

Vol, 42, No. 232

· Copyrighted 1!192

Chicken
•• Breasts

By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Staff
The Meigs County Commis sioners discussed plans to complete
a county housing plan with Sid
Edwards of Gallia/Meigs Community Action Agency when the board
met in re¥Ular session on Wednesday mornrng.
Edwards and housing specialist
Paul Webb detailed the Community
Housing Improvement Strategy
(CIDS), which is a written housing
plan required for continu~ng appli-

cation for Commumty Oevelopment Block Grant and other ~ous­
ing grant funds after 1992. The
ems will be used as a supporting
document for CDBG applications,
and will be in effect for three years
after its approval.
The Ohio Department of Transportation has made a half million
dollars available for grants to assist
local jurisdictions in creating their
CHIS. Grants will range from
$1 0,000 to a maximum of $30,000,
depending on the population of ihe

Thon1 Apple VaHey
Limit 3 Pk~ Plea.., Per
Family W~h

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prohibited by low f

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Your Own

is being made by both the PUCO
and negotiating parties to get this
resolved," McCaffrey said.
The PUCO is expected to rule in
the case this spring.
The company wants to pass on
to customers part of the construetion costs associated with the Zimmer power plant, along the Ohio
River near Moscow. It was converted from nuclear power 10 coal.
McCaffrey said Columbus
Southern has not increased rates
since 1983.
"In fact, customers are paying
nearly 7 percent less for electricity

now than they paid eight years
ago," he-said.
Columbus City Attorney Ron
0 •Brien and Ohio Consumers •
Counsel William A. Spratley had
taken the case to coun to block the
rate increase.
O'Brien said Tuesday that if the
company did not immediately
impose the increase, he probably
would wait for the PUCO to rule
on the fonnal rate increase request.
Columbus Southern Power, a
subsidiary of American Electric
Power, has 551,000 customers in
26 of the state's 88 counties.

By PETER JAMES
SPIELMANN
Associated Press Writer
UNITED NATIONS
Enraged by Col. Moammar Gadbali's "shell game" of backing out
of an offer 10 surrender the suspects
in the Pan Am Aight 103 bombing,
the Security Council is rushing
ahead to impose sanctions on

Libya.
The .text of the draft resolution
to be c1rculated today would sever
Libya's airline routes, han the sale
of airplan.es or a~raft parts 10 'the
north Afncan nation and urge other
nations to eject most Libya diplomats.
The Security Council's presi dent, Ambassador Die,Ro Arria of

Venezuela, said he will-hold a formal vote on it Friday. .
No one doubts 1t will pass by a
wide margin after the Libyan leader's slap in the face of ,the Arab
League , allhough Chma may
abstain.
On Wednesday, Gadhafi sent
away an Arab League dele~ation
empty-handed despite Libya s ear-

liei promise to hand over the two
suspects in the 1988 bombing over
Lockerbie, Scotland of Flight 103,
which killed 270 people.
"It is totally in keeping with
Libyan perfidy," U.S . Ambassador
Thomas R. Pickering said Wednes- .
daf as the council resumed consulrauons on the sanctions resolution.
"We felt aU alon' that it was a stall
and a shell game. '
Libya is banking on action by
the World Court in the Netherlands, which was to take up the
case today. Libya argues that under
international law the men cannot be
extradited and must be tried in
Libya. A ruling Could rake weeks.
The United States, Britain and
Fra~ say they wiD press for pas(Contlnued on 3)

Tyson
sentenced

b. 010ic:e Of
Varioly

••

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Bear
Prices
Items and Prices Effective only at:

•

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GALLIPOLIS BIG BEAR STORE

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(AP)

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STORE CLOSES • State liquor store manager Laura Davis,
right, and store clerk Sherry Tatman remove stock from the
store's shelves shortly before the shop closed for the last time on
Wednesday. Both Davis and Tatmaa will be laid off after a twoweek employment period at the state store in Athens.

Pomeroy liquor store
closes; stock is moved
'tlie · Stllte Liquor Store in
Pomeroy closed its doors for the
last time at the end of business oil
Wednesday. Stock wao; then moved
to Big Bend Foodland on West
Main Street, where swe-Gonuolled
liquor sales were to gel underway
on Thursday morning.
The state announced earlier this
year that the store would close as a
money-saving measure, and the
contract for liquor sales would be
granted to the local grocer.
Liquor store manager Laura
Davis said that the swe had operat·
ed a liquor outlet at the Mulbe~
Avenue location (the "Democrat

"liuildiiig)Sii\cei 937.
Other than the change in toealion, liquor sure customers will not
see a big difference between the
two outlets. Prices will continue to
be state-controlled, according to
Davis, and will not be affected by
the change from the state store to a
private location. ·
.
Davis said that neither she, nor;
clerk Sherry Tatman, had been ·
offered posuions with the local
grocery store. Instead, they will
work at the state store in Athens for
a two-week period and will then be
laid off by the state.

Oh10
• power
· compan y
Security Council moving on Libyan sanctio.ns supplies economic
deveIopmen t repor t

Ya111 lin

"&amp;':'

Prices Good 4 Days
March 1992
Wednesday, March 25
Saturday, March 28, 1992

Select

the proposal within 275 days.
But Franklin County Common
Pleas Judge Richard Sheward ruled
the law was an unconstitutional
delegation of legislative power.
On Tuesday the lOth Ohio District Court of Appeals ruled the
utility has the authority to impose
the increase that would add $11.94
to the bill of an avera~e residential
customer using 500 kilowatt hours
per month.
''Even though· the court has
granted permission for us to
impose a temporary rate increase,
we believe that a good faith effort

..........
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granted authority to deposit funds
in those institutions at his discretion. Funds are invested as active,
inactive and interim funds, and bids
were submitted with rates in accordance with aU types of funds.
The depository agreements were
approved on a two-year basis.
Other business
The commissioners also:
• Appropriated $92.16 as certified to the budget of the Meigs
County Parks District;
• Re-appointed Jennifer Sheets
as a member of the Private Industry
Council of JTPA; .
· • Approved the purchase of a
hard disk drive and word processing program for the computer system in Meigs County Court;
· Set next week's regular meeting for April 3 at 10 a. m., instead
of April I, due to a meeting at the
Marietta office of Ohio Department
of Transportation;
· Approved operation of the
Youth Services Subsidy Grant program in the Meigs County Juvenile
Court for the fourth fiscal quarter;
• Added 10 the Salisbury Township mileage roster 2/10 mile of
road in the Bradbury community,
to be named Stewart Hollow Road,
and a .31 mile extension of Bone
Hollow Road.
Present were Commissioners
Richard E. Jones , Manning K.
Roush, and David Koblentz, and
Clerk Mary Hobstetter.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Columbus Southern Power Co.
says it will wait for the Public Ulil·
ities Commission of Ohio to decide
whether the utility can impose a
28.4 percent rate increase.
But company President Thomas
McCaffrey warned on Wednesday
that the company could impose the
increase if there is no settlement
soon.
Columbus Southern Power had
intended to use a state law allowing
it to bill customers for the $202.5
million rate increase when the
PUCO f~led to make a decision on

lird1eye Whole
K61 .... Co: II,

Turkey Breast

Monday 7 a.m. llru
Saiwdoy .WdMe
Sunday 7 a.m.
. 'If 10 p.m.

county.
Edwards and the board discussed the upcoming application
deadline of June l for those planning grant funds.
No local match is required for
the planning monies, but Edwards
estimated that preparation of the
ems could cost Meigs County an
estimated $40,000. Counties are
also permitted to use $5,000 of
their CDBG allocations for the
ems preparation.
Counties are also being encouraged to seek in-kind assistance and
funding from other governmental
agencies in the counties, as well as
real estate agents, banks, and nonprofit groups in order 10 finance the
ems preparation.
1
Gallia/Meigs CAA now intends
to hire the personnel required to
complete the CHIS; that would be
more cost effective than hiring one
of the consulting firms available,
according to Edwards.
Depositories approved
The commissioners approved
four bids from local banking institutions as public funds depositories.
Bids from Farmers Bank and
Savings Company of Pomeroy;
Bank One, Athens, N.A.; Home
National Bank of Racine; and Peoples Banking and Trust Company
of Marietta were all approved as
depositories for county funds, and
Treasurer Howard E. Frank was

CSP won't impose Jncrelise -rtghlaway·-·

laaht• AlffiL a

Alluttlrnedlo Inc. Newopopor

County commissioners discuss
housing improvement strategy

Skinless Boneless

Sliced
Bacon

2 Sec:tiono, 12 P1011• 25 cento

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, March 26, 1992

'I

.

INDIANAPOUS (AP) - Mike
Tyson was sentenced today to six
years in prison for raping a teen·
age beauty queen. The judge reject·
ed his ~ent that "I didn't hun
anybody. '
Superior Court Judge Patricia
Gifford said a key reason for her
decision to IICiltence him to prison
wu ber belief that be wu at risk to'
rape gain.
"Something needs Ill be done
about the attitude you displayed
here," she said.
She 11entatced Tyson to !0 ~
on each count, then SIIIJICtiiiCd four
of the 10 ye~~~ltld said tho six year
sentences would run concurrently .
He - also rtnecl him $10,000 on
each count for a total of $30,000,
the maximum fine.
Olff!lld ordered Tyson to serve
four .,-.· orobalion lf1er scrving
lhe lime and to aet psycltotllmpy
dUring that period.

.,.

•I

r

.

A new, 100 page economic
development report supplied by
Ohio Power Co. takes a detailed
look at the strengths in Southern
Ohio that ·could lure prospective
manufacturers to the region.
We've been involved in economic development activities for
many years, said John G. Kennard, Portsmouth Division manager
for Ohio Power. Before his assignment at Portsmouth began in 1991,
Kennard, who is a board member
of Southern Ohio Growth Partnership Inc .. coordinated the company's economic development efforts
with communities served by the
utility.
Similarly, Ohio Power's lror:tton
Area Manager James Montgomery,
and Pomeroy Area Manager Enue
Sisson .are actively involved with
the Lawrence Economic Develop·
ment Corp. and Meigs County
Chamber of Commerce, .respectively.
"This report identifiet I!)ICCific
types of target industries t~~Jt are
the most likely match with ihe
Portsmouth area and neighboring
counties," Kennard said. "In this
process we look at industries'
needs, such as utility, labor, land,
and other requirements. Tbe study
also provides an overview of tlte
localCCQIIOIIIy," be said. .
Tbe study.discusses the top 10
target Industries for Scioto and
Lawrence Counties, as well as for
M

.

.

and Lawrence are those that pro-:
duce special industry machinery,'
miscellaneous plastics produets and·
surgical appliances and insuu-.
ments. Leadrng targets for Meigs
County include producers of miscelll_.,eous plastics
mill-

ei:onomic
dinit:IOr,
our efforts 1o
BIICCifiC indusSourcea for tile filllllnclu$trial · tries for this region," Siuaa llid.
cateaoriea were a CCliiiJlflll t•lvo
"It's a tool that conllins infor-·
list of alliUIUfscturmj In* tN 1111Lion and statistics, from a wide:
and a previous llflelllildy, 11111111'of sources, about each tar·
taken by Ohio Power fn 1911,
as well as lim of the ,
whi~h ass II d all o( Ohio l'oMI'~
target indusserviCtiiii'CI,
.
Industries recommended as the
our com- ·
best industrial targets for Scioto

Meigs County.

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