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                  <text>March

1992

Harrisonville announces
science fair winners
Students at Harrisonville Elementary School were recognized
for outstanding science projeciS on
Thursday night at the school's science fair.
Winners, in first , second and
third place were: FIRST GRADE Brent Butcher, Crystal Jacks, and
Ben Lee; SECOND GRADE Samuel Canterbury, Jenny Reeves,
and Rees Wyant; THIRD GRADE
- Albert Stearns, Adam Bullington,
and Dawn Yost; FOURTH
GRADE - Kyle Smiddie, Raina
Bennett, and Dustin Hanning ;

Cemeteries to be clean

SCIENCE FAIR WINNERS -These students received first
place honors in their respective grades at Harrisonville Eleme~­
tary School's science fair last week. Pictured, left to right, are Science lead teacher Lynn Bookman, and winners (in ~rade order,

first through sixth grades) Brent Butcher, Samuel Canterbury,
Albert Stearns, Kyle Smiddie, Clinton Hendricks, and Kevin Neel.

Animals should see the dentist too
Dear ADD LaDders: This leuer is

in response to your question, "Any
veterinarians out there want to
comment on the 13-month-old
chilluahua that died while having
iLS Ieeth cleaned?"
I practice veterinary medicine in
Louisville, Ky .. and would like to
make the point thai whenever an
anesthetic is given, there are risks
involved. Even though some pel
owners are willing and able 10 brush
their pet's teeth daily, most animals
need a professional cleaning to get
under the gwnline.lfthis is not done,
it may result in periodontal disease
which could be a constant source of
infection 10 the rest of the body.
Many pets suffer with heart, liver
or kidney diseases that could have
been prevented by proper and timely
dental care. -- DONNA SEMlCH,
DVM
DEAR DR . SEMICH: Thanks for
your comments. Between the dog
owners and the veterinarians, my
mail doubled this week. Read on for
additional commeniS.
From Guam: I've had pets all my
life, as did my father before me. Our
pets were laken 10 the vet for shoiS.
Period. The only other time was
when Buster broke his leg in a sled
accident and it had 10 be set No dog
of ours has ever had 10 have its teeth
cleaned professionally. We brushed
. their teeth every day and that was
plenty.

Ann
Landers

ANN LANDERS

"1991, Los Angelet~
nm .. Synclcale
Oreaton Syndicate.''

Logan, W.Va.: Generally speaking, if dogs and eats eat what they
are supposed to eat, which is dog
or cat food, preferably dry, and
nothing else -- no scraps from the
table -- they will not need to be laken
10 the vet for professional dental
care. -· SCOIT SIEGEL, DVM
Antioch, Calif.: Our young papillon died from anesthesia while being
spayed. It was a real heartbreak.
She was a small dog. weighing about
5 pounds, but healthy and active.
Veterinarians need bener training in
the safe use of anesthetics oo small,
light-boned animals. They also need
training in methods for cleaning
teeth with only a light narcotic
sedation. -- JOE RAMUS
Clay Center, Kan.: When we took
our poodle , Duke, 10 be neutered,
our veterinarian had the presence
of mind 10 test his tolerance 10 the
anesthetic by giving him a little at a
time. He told us that if he had given
Duke the entire amount at once, he
would have died. I wonder how

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

ALBANY - District 16 grange
membership meeting Tuesday at 7
p.m. at the Albany Grange Hall.
Ohio State Grange Master and
Ohio State Grange Membership
Direc10rs will be present. All members urged to anend .

MONDAY
POMEROY - The Meigs County Veterans Service Commission
will meet Monday 7:30p.m. m the
Veterans Service Office in
Pomeroy.

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - The Salisbury
Township Trustees will meet
Wednesday at 7 p.m. at the home
of Sarah Gibbs, Ball Run Road.

POMEROY - Belles and Beaus
Western Square Dance Club will
host a graduation potluck dinner at
the senior citizens center in
Pomeroy on Monday at6:30 p.m.
POMEROY - The Meigs County Garden Club meeting will be
held at the Meigs County Museum
on Bunernut Avenue in Pomeroy
on Monday at 7:30p.m.
HARRISONVILLE - The Rutland Garden Club will meet Monday at 7:30 p.m. at the home of
Mrs. Curtis DaiiOn in Harrisonville.
TUESDAY
MARIETTA
Buckeye
Hills/Hocking Valley Regional
Development District Executive
Committee will meet Tuesday at
7:30 p.m. in the conference room
of the BH/HVRDD office in Marieua. The audil/budget and personnel committees wiD meet at 5 p.m.
in the Rufus Putnam Room of the
Lafayelle Hotel, 100 Front Street,
Marieua.

MIDDLEPORT - The Middleport Literary Club will meet
Wednesday at 1:30 p.m . at the
Meigs County Public Library in
Pomeroy with Mrs. Robert Fisher
as hotess. Mrs. Roy Holter will
review "Portrait of a Turkish Family ." Roll call is to name a fact
recentI y learned about Turkey.

There w-ill be a rummage sale at
the Episcopal Parish House on
Wednesday and Thursday .from 9
a.m. 10 4 p.m.

James Madison, the fourth president of the United States, was born
inPonConway, Va.,in 1751.
Hedge mazes served as amusement parks in 17th century England.

just One Of The
SO Million Americans Who
Invests In
U.S. Savings Bonds.

CORRECTION
Sunday's Advertisement Should Have read ...

Across the country, more and more Americans are
planning for the future of their children by buying U.S.
Savings Bonds. This Little League slugger gets a Savings
Bond for each birthday. As he grows older, his Bonds
grow in value. So he's not just getting a gift, he's getting
an investment Find out how U.S. Savings Bonds are
making millions of American dreams a reality. Call
I 800 4 US BOND for more information .

ORANGES••••••4 lbs. 51.49
GRAPES should not have been in the Ad. It should
have read.....

CARROTS••••••••• bch 19C

POWELL'S SUPER VALU
POMEROY, OHIO

U.S. Savin2S Bonds
Making"A.;eri~~ AReality

HOCKINGPORT - The HockUnited Methodist Church
wtll hold revival Wednesday
through Friday at 7:30p.m. nightly
with Rev. Wendell Stutler. Public
invited.

'Jv(09{JJ5f.l)j :MM(C!l{30tn TJ{!l?Jl S9/Pll!Jl1J5f.y; J!IP!lUL 4tn

seven Oscars, including an expected best picture lrophy . .
"The Silence of the Lambs"
has the most momentum goin• Into
Monday's crmnony, which will be
nationaiiJ televued from the
Dorolhy Cltandler Pavilion (ABC,
9 p·.m. EST). In the last three
woeb, the serilll killer drama hu
collcc:ted top prizes fiom the Dilectors Ouilcf of Ameri~a and the
Writers Ouild or America.

GROUP OF FABRICS, Reg. $3.a9,. ,..,_..$2.89YD.
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DRIED FLOWERS.-....--·-·"'"'--20% OFF
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Stop by 1nd reglater - No Pun:hiH NecetHIJ

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Gift CertHicatt

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FABRIC &amp; (RAFT SUPPLIES

322 Second Ave.~446·2202ecialllpols

OPEN MONDAY THRU SATURDAY tAM to 8 PM

Low lonlght in upper 30s.
Wednesday, partly cloudy. High

In low 40s.

Val. 42, No. 235
· Copyrlghled 1H2

•

2 Socllano, 12 Pogoo 25 cenlo
A Mulllmodlo Inc. Newopapor

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, TUesday, March 31, 1992

•

·Indicators show economy may be recovering
•

•

The improvement was broadbased, with seven of the 11 forward-looking indicators contributing to the increase. It was in line
with most forecasts.
The Commerce report said the
seven indieaiOrs contnbuting to the
increase were a longer average
workweek; a growing money supply; an increase in building permits; rising prices for raw materials
suggesting increased demand; an
improvement in consumer confidence; rising orders for consumer
goods, and slower delivery times
indicating increased orders.
The four negative contributors

LOS ANGELES (AP) - The
politically incorrect "The Silence
of the Lambs" rewrote Academy
Award history as the grisly drama
about an FBI rookie and a flesheating killer swept the top five
Oscars, including best picture.
"Silence" stars Jodie Foster
and Anthony Hopkins were named
best actress and actor at the 64th
annual awards Monday night, and
Jonathan Demme won as best
director. Ted Tally was honored for
best adapted screenplay.
"My God. I can't believe it! I
am greatly honored and tremendously moved," said Hopkins, who
played the cunning Hannibal (the
Cannibal) Lecter, a lip-smacking
killer who matches wits with Miss
Foster's FBI rookie.

Unlike most Oscar winners,
"The Silence of the Lambs" is not
a warm, sentimental work such as
"Terms of Endearment" and
"Driving Miss Daisy," nor a
"serioustl film such as 11 Gandhi"
and "The Last Emperor."
Blasted by gay righiS activists
for its story of a cross-dressing,
homosexual serial killer, "The
Silence of the Lambs" is the first
terror film to won the Oscar for
best picture.
Jack Palance, the tough-as-nails
cattle driver from the comedy
"City Slickers," and Mercedes
Ruehl, the video store owner in
"The Fisher King," won for best
supporting jlerfonnances.
The 72-year-old Palance demonstrated his fimess by performing

were fewer unfilled factory orders,
falling stock prices, a decrease in
orders for new plants and equipment, and rising first-time claims
for unemployment insurance.
The various changes left the
index at 147.6.percent of its 1982
base of 100. The index had risen
1.4 percent from September
through February, compared to 3.7
percent the previous six months.
Recent signs of a $~?Wing economy have included nsing automobile and other retail sales, and
activity in the housing sector that
traditionally leads the recovery.
Still, the Bush administration,

many congressmen and not a few
economisiS worry whethet the current rebound might falter later this
year like a similar revival did last
summer. The economy was growing at a barely perceptible 0.4 percent during the final three months
•of 1991.
Greenspan and other members
of the Federal Open Market Committee, die Fed's monetary policymaking panel, were sure to be
watching the index. The FOMC
was closeted today in one of its
eight-times-a-year meetings to set
policy.
.
Private analysts sa1d they

believed the FOMC would keep
short-term rates at their current
level despite calls from the Bush
administration and others for further drops.
The index, designed to forecast
economic conditions six to nine
months in advance. had fallen 0.2
percent in both November and
December. Three consecutive
declines often are a sign of an
approaching downturn.
Despite the recent economic
perfonnance, the Bush administration and many economists believe
the recovery will be modest by historic terms.

•

In fact, some of the nation's
leading economists on Monday
urged further interest rate cuiS and
$50 billion in additional federal aid
to state and local governments to
ensure a more vigorous revival.
More than 100 economists including six Nobel laureates noted in an open letter to President
Bush, Congress and Federal
Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan
that consensus forecasts project the
economy to grow at a 3 percent
rate in the second half of this year.
Such a rate would be only half
the average flrst-year rebound from
Continued on page J

Stop By and VIsit With "Dane" During
the Live Radio Remote Friday, April 3
10:30 to_12:00- 12i30 to 2;00

several push-ups on stage and
offered a taste of his crusty "City
Slickers" character by looking at
Crystal, the film's star and the
evening's host, and snorting:
"Billy Crystal. God! I crap bigger'n him."
Miss Ruehl recounted her early
struggles as an actress, and added,
"At this moment, all of those sort
of doleful memories ... suddenly
transformed themselves into nothing more than the son of charming
and amusing anecdotes from my
memoirs.''
Warren Beatty's "Bugsy,"
which had a leadin~ 10 nominations, w.on only tw1ce - for art
direction and cosrume design.
Oliver Stone's "JFK," a contra·
versial polemic about the assassina-

tion o( President Kennedy, also
went quietly with awards for cinematography and editing: It had
eight nominations. includmg best
picture and best direciOr.
Qthers losing out on the best
picture award were "Beauty and
the Beast," the first animated mm
nominated in that category, and
Barbra Streisand's "The Prince of
Tides."
Gav ri~hts activisiS threatened
to cause a commotion at the show,
but there were no disruptions. Outside the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion, protesters threw objects at
police and tried to "out" gay
celebrities by distributing maps 10
their homes.
An activist was arrested for
kicking an officer in the groin, and
ninC' others were arrested on lesser
chargeS, police said.
"The Silence of the Lambs" is
only the third movie to sweep the
D-Ohio, and daughter of former maJor awards. The others are "It
Rep. Thomas Luken, D-Ohio.
Happened One Night" in 1934 and
All II will talk to the 133-mem- "One Flew Over the Cuckoo's
ber Franklin County Republican Nest" in 1975.
Continued on page J
"This has been such an incredible year," said Miss Foster, who
also made her directing debut in
1991 with "Little Man Tate."'"I'd
Iilce to dedicate this award to all of
the women who carne before me,
who never had the chances that I
have had, and the survivors and the
pioneers and the outcasts - my
blood and my tradition.' '
Callie Khouri won the original
screenplay award for "Thelma &amp;
Louise.''
Composer Alan Menken won
for best original score for "Beauty
and the Beast." He and his late
musical partner, lyricist Howard
Ashman, won a second Oscar for
the movie's title song.
The best foreign film was
"Mediterraneo," an Italian comedy set during World War II.
There were a number of glitches, notably one involving IOO-yearold Hal Roach. Crystal saluted the
producer of Harold Lloyd and carl y
Laurel and Hardy films, but
Roach 's thanks went unheard
bcca~se he had no microphone.
CHALMERS WYLIE

Wylie dectlles agailf~t re-election bid
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) be chairman of the House Banking
U.S. Rep. Chalmers Wylie, citing Committee to demonsuate what I
frustration as a minority party could do and to apply sOll'le of my
member and an "ugliness'' he !lOw own philosophy."
finds in Congress, says it's time to
Wylie is the ranking Republican
retire after 26 years representing on the commitlee.
"There is an ugliness in the
the Columbus area.
The 71-year-old Republican said House now which does not appeal
in a statement released Monday to me. Most members do a good
that he would not seek election to a job, work hard and like what they
do,'' he said.
14th term.
Wylie is one of 355 members of
Franklin County GOP Chairman
Congress who overdrew their Michael Colley said Wylie told
accounts in the House's now- him Saturday he had been in
defunct private bank. He has con- Congress long enough.
"He said it was time to smell
ced¥ that his account showed 575
overdrafts, but he blamed 44 of the roses," Colley said. •
Even before Wylie made his
them on errors by the House bank.
He had said the overdrafts decision official, Colley was fieldwould not affect his decision. He ing calls froni would-be replacedid not return telephone calls seek- meniS.
By Monday evening, Colley had
ing comment Monday.
interviewed
II hopefuls, including
"I am frusuated by being in the
a
recent
Republican
convert: Annie
minority for 26 years," Wylie said
in his statement. "I had hoped 10 Hall, sister of Rep. Charles Luken,

-.. --Local briefs-Recycling program begins this week

(jrani Opening Specials

in~ort

10-H; K-C; 8-D;
9-S

'Silence of the Lambs' in surprise Oscar sweep Monday

Rummage sale set

News briefs

Cards:

Page4

By JOHN D. McCLAIN
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - The government's chief economic forecasting gauge rose 0.8 percent in
· February, the second straight
advance and the latest suggestion
the emerging recovery would continue.
The Commerce Depanment said
today the February gain, together
with a revised 1.0 percent increase
a month earlier, marked the first
back-to-back advance since a string
of six gains ending last July. The
January index first was estimated
ID have risen 0.9 percent.

PAGEVILLE - The Scipio
Township Trustees will meet
Wednesday at 6 p.m. at the
Pageville Township Building.

No clear favorite emerges
for Oscars this year

I

The Middleport Literary Club
will meet Wednesday at 1:30 p.m.
at the home of Mrs. Robert Fisher.
Mrs. Roy Holler will review "Portrait of a Turkish Family." Roll call
is to name a fact recently learned
about Turkey.

Projects of the Veterans Memorial Hospital Women's Auxiliary
were discussed at a recent meeting
held in the conference room of the
hospital.
Projects include the April 17
candy sale; the "Good Egg Tree," a
project for the Easter season; and a
jewelry sale in the conference room
May I.
Jessie White presided at the
meeting in which officers reporiS
were given.
Grace Warner reported on the
scholar.;hips in the absence of Mildred Fry, chairman.
National Volunteer Week was
announced for Aprii26-May I with
a tea and award day to be held
April30 at I :30 p.m. in the lounge.
Hostesses Jessie White, Louise
Bcarhs and Carrie Kennedy served
refreshmeniS from a table decorated with a St. Patrick's Day theme.
Scott Lucas, hospital administrator, and Ronda Dailey, R.N. ,
were guesiS.

The Salisbury Township
Trustees will meei Wednesday at 7
p.m. at the home of Sarah Gibbs,
Ball Run Road.

Pick 3: 935
Pick 4: 9706

Literary club to meet

VMH Auxiliary
discusses projects

Trustees to meet

Irish, Cavs
to battle for
NIT honors

FIFTH GRADE - Clinton Hendricks, Franco Romuno, and
Megan Drummer; SIXTH GRADE
- Kevin Neel, Michelle Bissell, and
Scott Dodson.
Group kindergarten projects
were also judged, with first place
honors going to the project. "Having Fun with the Forces of Nature",
second to "The Soak Test", and
third place 10 "Carnation."
The science fair was coordinated by Harrisonville's lead science
teacher, Lynn Bookman.

POMEROY - Pomeroy Village
Council will meet in special session Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. to
conduct personnel and regular matters.

POMEROY - Founh District
Court of Appeals will convene at
PORTLAND- The Lebanon the Meigs County Courthouse at
Township Trustees will meet Tues- 9:30 a.m. for oral arguments on
day at 7 p.m. at the 10wnship build- four local cases. A question and
ing.
answer session for Meigs County
students wiU be included.

By JOHN HORN
AP Eatertllllnnent Writer
. LOS ANGELES (AP)
•"Dances With Wolves" and first.time director Kevin Costner stole
the thunder last time around. The
contest for this year's top Academy
Awards is considered among the
closest in recent memory.
. , Last Man:h, Cosmer's Wcstem
atiout a renegade"Civil War soldier
who befriends an Indian tribe won

many veterinarians do this.
Massillon, Ohio: The most
obvious way 10 prevent a pet from
dying from anesthesia is 10 prevent
the need for the procedure in the
first place. This means brushing
the pet's teeth at least once a week.
I recommend asking your veterinarian to show you how 10 do it -MARK A. CHRISTINE. DVM
Halifax, Nova Scotia: U.S. veiS
are a bunch of money-grubbers.
Where we are now things are very
different. My wife and I have
always had at least two dogs and
three cats. The bills we ran up at the
vet's in New York were incredible.
Our animals cost us more than our
kids. When our younger son was
about II, he said, "I thought I wanted
to be a heart surgeon but when I
hear you and Mom talk about how
much money you are paying the ve~
I think maybe that's what I ought to
go into."
Lake Wonh. Aa.: There's an old
saying, "There is no safe anesthesia,
just safe anesthesiologisis." We owe
itiO our clienLS 10 provide die safest
care available. Veterinary medicine
is no way to get rich. Our expenses
are horrendous. Most of us are just
making a living. I put in 80 hours a
week and am just gelling by. But
I'm not complaining. People who
choose this field do so because
they love animals. -- JAY ALAN
BUTAN,DVM .
Forget to save some of your
favorite Ann Landers columns?
"Nuggets and Doozies" is the
answer. Send a self-addressed. long,
business-sizt en~l~ and a check
or money ordu for $5 (this includes
postage and handling) to: Nuggets,
c/o Ann Ltlndus. P.O. Box 11562,
Chicago, Ill. 60611-0562 . (ln
Canada, send $6.)
'

The Chester Township Trustees
are requesting that anyone wanting
to remove flowers fro the cemeteries do so as soon as possible.
Cleaning of the cemeteries will
begin as soon as weather penn its.

Ohio Lottery

Middleport's recycling program will get underway this week.
Neslable/stackable recycling bins for free use to households who
have si~ up to panicipate in the recycling program will be delivered tl!is week along with information on how and what to recycle.
Also included will be infonnation on the curbside pickup schedule.
Jean ~russell who is heading up the program for the village is
encouragmg res1dents to get involved in the recycling effon which
is geared 10 make a difference in the environment
Anyone interested in receiving the recycling bins is asked to eall
Trussell at 992-6782 and sign up 10 participate.

Rutland fire under investigation
A two·story frame house in Rutland, owned and occupied by
Carol Hubbard, was destroyed by fire early Tuesday morning.
According 10 Rutland Fire Chief Bill Williamson, the Salem
Street residence and the conreniS were completely destroyed. Three
Rutland Volunteer F'lre Depanment trucks and 15 flltlllen were dispatched to the scene shanty before 4 a.m. today. The department
was assisted by three trucks and 12 firemen from Podleroy.
Crews remained at the scene of the fire until after 8 a.m., according to Williamson. He also reponed this mopting that the State Fire
Marshal has been called to investigare the cause of lite rue, which
remains undetermined.

ES units answer six calls
Six calls for assistance were answeled by units of Meigs County
ER~C~Fncy Services on ~Y and early oo Tuesday.
.
On Monday at 12:17 p.m., Pomeroy squad rcspondel! t.o Big
Bend lloodland. Ryail Jeffe11 was taken t.o Holzer Medical Cellter.
At 1:47 p.m., Middleport squad went to South Third Avenue. Ruth
· Myers was taken to Holzer: At 3:45p.m., Middleport sq!lad went to
Main S!reet for Vida Green, who wu taken to Pleasant Valley Hospital.
At 9:26 ~.m., Micld=leporuquad was sent to SUite Route SS4 •
limestlne Willa was
led to Pleasant. Valley. At 9:SS p.m.,
Racine squad went t.o Stile Route 124 for I ash Youns. He was

taken 10 Holzer.
On Tueaday II 3:S4 a.m,, Rutland and Pomeroy units wen:' ~t
t.o the Cuol Hubbard residence on Salem Street for a fire. (See
relaled 1101)'
.
· , .)

BEAMING WINNERS - Anthony Hopkins and Jodie Foster
show their bappiDess backstage at tbe 64th annual Academy
Awards in Los Angeles.Monday night after winning the Oscan ror
best actor and 1ctress, respectively, for their work !n "Sileace of tbe
Lambs." The film also won best picture, best director and best
adapted screenplay. (AP)

Legislator opposes $450,000 nuke dump campaign
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A
legislator opposed 10 using Ohio as
a regional dump for low-level
radioactive waste said a proposa!IO
spend at least $450,000 to teach
Ohioans a!Jout the subject is unnec-

essary.

Sen. Neal Zimmers, D-Dayton,
is against a plan expected to be outlined at a meeting of the Midwest
lnrerslate Low-Level Radioactive
Waste Commission in St Louis.
Zimmers is sponsor of a bill that
would require the state's withdrawal from the Midwest COI!lpact, an
a¥reement in which Ohio would
dispose of its own wasre and simi·
lar material from Indiana, Iowa,
MinnesOta, Missouri and Wisconsin for 20 years.
"I think the Senate hearings ...
should be an adequate way, at the .
outset, to publicly examine the
issues involved," ZIDimers said.
~ indicale!l the \*o-.Med infer·
malion C8111JJ111D nugbt eveiiiUally

cost as much a$900;ll00.
"I don't think it's necessary to
spend $900.000 to ICI1 OhiOIIIS on

why we abould bave a nuclear
waste diiJII)III r.cllity lccatecl bere
for .. , 6dier. Midweatem stalei to
take advi!UF of," Zinuncn Blid.
Ohio wu delignated • the sire
for the dump after Michigan was

expelled from the compact last July
for failing to find a site.
Ro~er Suppes, the Ohio representauve on the commission, said
the proposal to be presented Thursday provides for the information
campaign to be conducted by Ohio
State University.
Suppes said it would not be a
promouonal campaign.
"It's not at all what I would
consider an advertising campaign.
It's just designed to put infonnauon
out," he said in an interview Monday.
Suppes said marerial would be
prepared by the OSU Department

of Nuclear Engineering, and the
Ohio Cooperative Extension Service, for distribution 10 local govemmentleaders and the public.
Scou Turner, a spokesman for
the eKtension service, said the
infonnation would not lake sides in
the debate.
"There's nothing about siting.
Just what is, where it comes from ,
and where it is right now," Turner
said.
Karen Mancl, an associate professor of agricultural engineering
who will present the proposal with
three colleagues, said the first two
phases would cost $450,000.

"Phase one is the development
of edueauonal materials for the citizens of Ohio. Phase two is reaching
out to the citizens of Ohio, and
three is to identify an&lt;) address
remaining concerns that haven't
been met by the initial materials "
Ms. Mancl said.
'
Suppes said third-phase costs
had not been determined, but that
utilities would pay most of the bill.
Nuclear plants produce most lowlevel waste such as contamiqated
tools and clothing.
"This would be money paid by
nuclear utilities ... that's the primary source of funds," he said.

Health de.partment warns .
against eating contaminated fish
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Carp or catfish caught in the Scioto
River between the Greenlawn Dam
in Columbus and the Ohio River
near Porumouth may be contamiIJ&amp;ted, the state Department· of

Htllltlt said.

The department issued a warning Tuesday against eating cmp and
catf'11h that may be contaminated
with chlonlane ~ polychlorliialed

of PCBs and chlordane on human
health after continued exposure at
low doses. But frequent ~posure ·
to PCBs may affect birth weight
and behavior of infants whose
contarninlted.
.
mothen consumed contamiuled
Popul~r game fish sue~ as
sauger and bass did not appear to fish, the depanment said. Long·
be contaminated, the department term exposure 'to chlordane may
i~~C~e~SC the risk or ClllCa' and nersaid.
There is little dall on.the effect .vous system damqe.

biphenyls or PCBs. A depanment
news rcic4se said a sampling by the
Ohio Environmental Protection
Agency indicated the fish were

)

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.

I

TUesday, March 31, 1992

Commentary
By 1944 it was clear that the
Allies, so-called, were going to win
the war. And it seemed equally
clear that when the world's nations
were reorganized after the war,
practically aU of the important ones
would adopt socialist principles as
their formula for managing economic affairs.
Some countries - notably the
Soviet Union - would combine
economic socialism with political
dictatorship. Most, including espe·
cially the nation s of Western
Europe, would march forward
under the banner of democratic
socialism. A stubborn few, such as
the United Slates, might hold back
for a while, preferring to preserve
the forms of free enterprise even
while taking on many of the politically determined, centrally controlled and redistributionist charnc-

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

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant PubUsber/Controller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

LETI'ERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300

, I

words. All letters arc subject to editing and must be signed witb name,
address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters
should be in good taste, addressing issues, not personalities.

Lack of money concerns
backers of health care bill
By ROBERT E. MILLER
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS __; Backers or an ambitious House measure to eslablish
a comprehensive health care system in Ohio are hearing increased concerns that the slate can't afford it.
But Sen. Robert Ney, R-BarnesviUe, whose financial instilutions and
inSIIfllllce ~iqee, resumes h~ngs Tuesday, says he still isn't convinced ihat thy money can't be found.
The bill, sponsored by Rep. Wayne Jones, D-Cuyahog~ Falls, seeks to
create a system that conceivably could extend at least baste health care to
an estimated 1.2 million Ohwans who cannot afford tl or buy tt at any

pri~. so-called OHIO Plan

would cover individuals and families at
reduced rates. based on income. It calls for a I percent assessment on life
and health insurance premiums along with certain cost-savings that arc
mandated for hospilals and other health care provtders. ,
.
A spokesman for Ohio's ms111'11!1c~ mdustry_told Ney s commtltee that
the plan is underfunded by $745 mtlhon-$1.5 btUton a year.
Jones and other sponsors have not disputed the figures but have said
the bill can generate $300,000 or more and_ that the _hospitals already arc
absorbing more than $600 million by provtdmg mdigent care. That cost
would be eliminated by the btU, Jones srud.
Ney said that the insurance industry figures are troublesome but not
conclusive. "We'll see if we can get some more figures. But tt does mdicate there are problems on the money side," he said.
Slate Health Director Edward Kilroy suggested amendments to the bill
authorizing state agencies to seek Medicaid waivers to implement some of
the bill's cost-savings changes.
. .
.
.
.
Ney who has promised a vote on the billth1s sprmg, srud the committee wili consider the administration's recommendations and that he also
wants to hold hearings on a proposal to let the state lake over the Medicaid system.
Rep. Raben Netzley. R-Laura, has introduced s~ch a bill in the House,
and a similar proposal is expected to be offered m the Senate by Sen.
Grace Drake, R-Solon.
The Netzley and Drake proposals are "on the table," Ney said.
Netzley's proposal allows uninsured individuals with incomes of not
more than 150 percent of the federal poverty line to buy Medicaid coverage. Kilroy recommended Medicaid coverage for those with incomes up
to I00 percent of the poverty level.

Letters to the editor
Son is dedicated
credit at thi: banquet, the three boys
Dear Editor,
I am writing this in regards to did contribute much to the season.
I'm sure that by me writing this
the winter sports banquet at Meigs
I'll get all kind of negative critiHigh School.
Several people present at the cism and not spoken to by some,
bal'lquet have told me about a state- but thai's life.
ment that was made by a speaker
This is only a drop of some of
concerning three boys, one of the things that have happened at
which was my son. Then 1t was that school. It repeats itself over
such a well topic, a couple of other and over.
In junior high there are a certain
speakers dwelled on it.
.
Nonmally, I would never wn~e few chosen and pushed clear
anything like this publicly but tf through high school. Names usualthey have the right to say some- ly contribute to who these students
thing like this publicly, why can't are. Don't sit back and say "She's
silly." I may be, but think about it.
17
Everyone kn~w ,who th ~ th~ec If you don 't believe me take a pubwere and some dtdn l apprectate tt
lic poll. I could give several examIt was concerning dedication. ples of other incidents but don't
The definition of dedication in my have enough space.
dictionary is to set apart seriously
There are many students that
for a special purpose, devote to could be outs landing but don't go
some work, duty, etc.
out for sports because they are
The three boys were supposedly aware that it would be a waste of
not dedicated because they didn't time. Then we wonder why stuattend an Ohio State game and go dents have negative attitudes. Stuto !he sports banquet. The reason dents are aware of things going on
they didn't attend these two events whether we -think they are or not.
are evident to all but a few who
There are so many big-feeling
can't see through their own ego. people connected that are wrapped
They attended all practices and up m themselves, they don't even
games and played hard. That obvi- care to recognize that there are
ously seems like dedication to me. problems.
Even though they would come
I'm just glad that this is my last
home from both very discouraged year to deal with this school.
for reasons I don't have to mention.
A person could sit down this
We started to make our son go, year and do the write ups for the
but when we thought about it,.,we next year in any event. The only
decided why go and look like you infonmation we don' t have yet is
are supporting something you don't exact dales.
agree with but nobody rea!IJ. C~;fCS.
Darla Hawley
Although they weren t gtven

,,

Giving the thumbs up and down
De. Editor,

Thunlblup...

for die nicest thing that has happened to Leblnon Township for a
10111 time. That black top on Coun·
ty Road 31 (Stiversvilfe Road) is
super. Now we have a county
blacktop system from Portland to
Ptlnaoy.

Tbtlnlbl down .•.
10 die lebanon Township
f....., ,_ leu.in1 Pot Hole Alley
10 bl4 ill about to be renamed .

t:..... Alley.

memories.
Thumbs up ...
regards the changing of Portland
Pet. polling place back to the township garage. Now we are replete
with new sanitary facilities and a
telephone out there. Our township
fathers have not divu~ed their
phone number though.
ought
to because some of UJ mig t want
1o contact them.
·

Thumbs up ...
on our folksy ways around here.
It ·happened near the mouth of

Shade liver.
.
Mr.
Van
Cooney
had
been
very
on the interest around here in
ill.
His
son
called
(by
~)
to
Mr.
the up c:omlns lll'irM'Y eletlion. All
Barrln1er
who
lived
a
100
yards
t11o1e new ailaldllcs- is a 111re lire
indication of inten~~tllld progress, away.
"Pa is dyinJ."
Thumbs up...
Mr. Barnnger yelled back,
to Harry Richards for the
improvements he supervised in "Keep him breathin', I will be lhen:
.
BroMiinl Cemelery. 'l1le dead ean dilectly."
Gayle Price
Tlllmblup...

•

speak tO us only in our sacred

Wednesday, April I
Accu-Weather'" forecast for daytime conditions and

1.,

.'

-

By The Associated Press
More wintry weather is on the
way for tonight and Wednesday. A
cold front will pass across Ohio
tonight ushering in colder air for
the next several days. Showers are
likely over northern Ohio early
tonight with snow likely later
tonight as temperatures drop
behind the front. Skies will become
cloudy across the remainder of
Ohio with a chance of showers
early and a chance of snow late.
Lows should range from the upper
20s northwest lo the upper 30s
southeast
Cold northwest winds will blow
across Ohio on Wednesday. Snow
is likely over northeast Ohio, while
mostly cloudy skies and scauered

•
IToledo I 36' I

teristics of the more advanced
socialistic societies. Such was the
conventional wisdom.
Then , in that year 1944, a small
book was published in Britain and

those of Ludwig von Mises, whose 92.
" The Road to Serfdom" is a
great work "Socialism" had first
been published in 1922. But unto wonderfuliy lucid and simple book.
everything there is a season, and In prose mercifully free from ecoHayek's little book, called "The nomic or other academic jargon,
Road to Serfdom," resonated loud- Hayek explains how socialism,
ly in the years immediately follow- though promising mankind greater
ing the end of World War II.
freedom, actually reduces the scope
Despite its modest size, its of freedom. He shows why substiimportance was recognized from tuting "planning" for competition
the United States, wrilten by one the start. "This is no mere sortie not only hobbles democracy but
Friedrich A. von Hayek (though he from the castle," warned one subverts the rule of law and the pripreferred, in later years, lo omit the reviewer. "This is a full-scale macy of truth, turning leaders into
"von"), an Austrian-born auack, with horse, foot, and avid nationali sts and ultimately,
economist then living in London. It artillery ." Thirty years later, and inevitably, into wannongers.
was an attack on the basic assump- together with Hayek's subsequent
In the immediate postwar era
tions and consequences of social- writings in the same and related Hayek's influence was simply
ism.
fields, it was to win him the Nobel enormous. His analysis provided
Hayek was not the first in the Prize for Economics, and just last the intellectual foundation for the
field, as he readily admitted in a November he was awarded Ameri- development of the United States,
bibliographical note. Indeed, he ca's highest civilian honor, the Germany, Japan and a score of
stood on the shoulders of giants Medal of Freedom. On March 23, other nations as spectacular examabove all, as he acknowledged, on Friedrich Hayek died at the age of ples of the success of free enterprise, and also fully explained the
lackluster performance of both
democratic and totalitarian socialist
states.
For a time in the 1950s and
1960s Keynesian economics, with
its emphasis on governmental stimulation of the economy, seemed to
draw ahead in the competition for
men 's minds. But by the 1980s
Hayek's views were dominant
again in the great nations of the
free world. How wonderful it is
that he lived on to witness their
tolal vindication in the collapse and
extinction of the Soviet Union last
year.
"The Road to Serfdom" was
one of the very earliest rivulets
contributing to the conservative
tide that began nowing vigorously
in the United Slates in the 1950s
and 1960s and became a mighty
torrent in the 1970s and 1980s. It
remains to t~is day the most succinct and devastating analysis of
socialism ever wriuen . As one of
the scores of thousands who first
read it and felt its force nearly half
a century ago, and of the many mil....
lions whose lives have been shaped
by its impact, I lay this tribute at
..
•
the bier of Friedrich Hayek.
(C)1992
NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN.

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-3

More wintry weather ·on the way

OHIO Weather·

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
PomerQy-Middleport, Ohio
Tuesday, March 31, 1992

Influential economist deserves tribute

The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

IMansfield I 39' I•

William A. Rusher

•I Columbus I 39' I

•

snow showers occur elsewhere.
Highs are' expected to range from
the mid-30s in the north to around
40 in the south.
The record high on this date in
Columbus was 82 in 1986. The
record low was nine in 1923.
Sunset tonight will be at 6:55
p.m. Sunrise Wednesday will be at
6:15a.m.
Elsewhere in the nation, winds
north of a low-pressure system
swept rain along the northern
Atlantic Coast this morning.
The last day of March promised
more snow for northern New England, the northwest sections of the
Great Lakes, the southern Rockies
and parts of Texas.
Rain was forecast in much of

will help the 90,000 or more program, although Voinovich reitdeparting General Assis1ance recip- erated Monday that the money is
~h
ients as part of the group receiving not available.
-~¥
The change in the General
necessary medical services at their
' . --Assislance
law was enacted Oct. I.
local
hospitals.
Showe/5 T·stotms Rain Flurries Snow Ice
Sunny Pt. Cloudy Cloudy
Wednesday
marks the end of the
"This is a real victory for
Vis Associaled Press GraphicsNet
C 1992 Actu-Weather, Inc.
Ohio," said Voinovich, adding that six-month eligibility limit for those
his administration worked months who were on the rolls Oct. I.
General Assistance benefits,
to get the federal government to
increase funding for the care assur- mostly for single adults who do not
qualify for federal welfare prois 40 percent.
ance program.
South-Central Ohio
Extended forecast:
The program uses member hos- grams, also were cut from about
Tonight, becoming cloudy. A
pital assessments totaling $41.6 5148 to $100 a month. Medical
Thursday through Saturday:
chance of showers early with a
Thursday , fair . Lows 15-25 .
million and $2.5 million in state benefits were ended for all but the
chance of snow late. The low in the
money to obtain a federal match of disabled recipients.
upper 30s. The chance of precipita- Highs 30-40. Friday, fair and
Voinovich conceded that the
warmer.
Lows
in
the
20s.
Highs
in
$70
million for an annual outlay of
tion is 50 percent. Wednesday,
the
40s.
Saturday,
a
chance
of
rain
$113
million.
mostly cloudy and colder with a
Continued from page I.
Voinovich said the additional
chance of snow showers. The high or snow showers. Lows in the 20s. previous recessions since World
federal
money, along with higher
in the low 40s. The chance of snow Highs in the 40s.
War II.
hospital
assessments, will boost the
In their letter released on Montala!
program
to $450 million in the
day, the nation 's top economists
CLEVELAND (AP) - Here are
federal
fiscal
year
ending Sept. 30.
Continued from page I
said prompt action was needed "to
Monday
night' s Ohio Louery
stimulate vigorous economic The next year of federal funding is selections:
Central Committee on Wednesday, County) and I wanted to continue recovery in 1992-93 and at the still to be negotiated, the governor Pick 3 Numbers
that in the future, '' Colley said.
CoUey said.
same time to speed up productivity said.
9-3-S
Fnday is the deadline for subState legislators scrapped a plan growth over the years ahead."
But he said, " these new dollars
(nine, three, five)
mitting petitions. The commiuee that Wylie had found obJectionable
They rejected the income tax will help assure that low-income Pick 4 Numbers
on Thursday will choose one candi- and unloaded some Democrat-lean- reductions thai had been under con- Ohioans will receive the hospital
9-7-0-6
date to endorse.
ing precincts on an adjacent dis- sideration because they would pro- care they need ."
(nine, seven, zero, six)
"Traditionally in this county the trict
mote consumption rather than
Voinovich's administration has Cards
Wylie was first elected to the investment which , the letter said, been criticized by welfare advocaendorsed candidate will win the
10 (ten) of Hearts
primary," Colley said.
House in 1966.
would be "counter-productive."
cy groups for reducing eligibility
K (king) of Clubs
In Congress, Wylie made a
One RepubliC&lt;Bn who is strongly
•'Everyone agrees that the reme- for the General Assislance program
8 (eight) ofDiamonds
considering a bid is former Mayor name for himself for his work in dy for the long -run problem is to six months a year.
9 (nine) of Spades
Dana Rinehart.
banking and housing issues, and for more investment: in people , in
Some groups also are trying to
"Absolutely," Rinehart said his ability to work with majority infrastructure, in technology and in bring pressure on the administrawhen asked if he will go before the Democrats.
machinery," they assened.
tion and Legislature to restore the
In 1989, he was inOuential in
screening commillee. "If I decide
to get in the race, I'm running. All the commiuee's retooling of PresiDivorce granted
out. And we're going to run on a dent Bush's biU to bail out the savA divorce action has been grantsupercharged engine ... ride every ings and loan industry.
Eight and •·any to meet
Auxiliary
to
meet
ed
in
Meigs County Common Pleas
A year later, he helped in getting
bus, pound every door, I'll walk the
Meigs County Salon No. 710, - Court to Steven Ray Hoover from
Tuppers
Plains
VFW
Post
No.
the Bush administration to consider
alleys."
Eight and Fony, will meet ThursColley said he had asked Wylie · a major housing bill. The legisla- 9053 Ladies Auxiliary will meet day at 7 p.m. at the home of Julia Rhonda Ruth Hoover.
Jenkins sentenced
to hold off on a Cinar retirement tion was the first major overhaul Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at the post Hysell.
home
to
nominate
officers.
Timothy
Jenkins of Pomeroy
decision to avoid making the dis- since 1974 of housing programs for
Smorgasbord dinner
Barbecue
planned
was
sentenced
last week on a count
trict an attractive wget for slashing the poor.
There will be a smorgasbord of trafficking in food stamps, a
The
Syracuse
Fire
Department
That measure was signed into
by the legislators who had to
will have a chicken barbecue Sun- dinner at the Louridge Community fourth-degree felony.
redraw congressional boundary law, as were some of Wylie initia- day
beginning al II a.m. Cost of Center Sunday , noon to 1:30 p.m.
Meigs County Common Pleas
tives to crack down on savings and
lines.
Public invited.
the
dinner
is
$3.75
for
a
half-chickCourt
Judge Fred W. Crow III sen"We have 1wo Republican con- loan crooks and 10 add more penalBaseball reminder
and
macaroni
tenced
Jenkins to a suspended 18
en,
baked
beans
gressmen (representing Franklin lies for bank fraud.
Anyone wishing to sign up for month jailtenm, placed him on five
salad, with pie, cake and drinks
Tuppers Plains Liltle League Base- years probation and ordered restituavailable at an extra charge.
ball who has not already done so is tion to th e Ohio Department of
requested to call John Rankin at Agri culture in the amount of
Trustees to meet
667-6329.
$1,068.43 . Jenkins was also
The Orange Township Trustees
No
services
ordered to pay court costs in the
nephews, both in Colorado and in will meet Monday at 7:30p.m. at
Mor$e Chapel Church, Racine, amount of $1 ,000, and to forfeit his
Hattie Berry
Ohio.
the home of the clerk, Susan wiU not be holding Sunday evening bond in the amount of $500, also to
Word has been received of the
Besides her parents, she was Pullins.
services on April 5.
death of Hallie Berry, 89, of Canon preceded in death by her son, Max
be applied toward costs.
Mothers
of
twins
to
meet
Academic boosters lo meet
City, Colo., a former Meigs County Berry; three sisters; two brothers;
Mothers of Twins Club will
The Meigs Junior High Acaresident. She died on Sunday, two grandchildren; and a greathold
its
annual
spring
inside
yard
demic Boosters wiU meet Thursday
March IS, 1992 at a Canon City grandchild.
sale Saturday 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. at at 7 p.m. in the school cafeteria. All
care center.
Services were held on March 18
She was born on October 26, at First United Methodist Church, Grace Episcopal Church in teachers and parents are urged to
attend.
1902 in Rutland, the daughler of with Rev. Dennis Sillamin officiat- Pomeroy.
Rummage sale planned
The announcement of Hickory
the late Henry Luther and Rachael ing. Burial was at Lakeside CemeA
rummage
sale
will
be
held
at
Specialties
Inc . by Bob Evans
Garden
club
to
meet
Lorinda (Phillips) Nelson.
tery at Canon City.
Grace
Episcopal
Church
in
The
Middleport
Garden
Club
Farms Inc. was announced Monday
Prior to 1957, she was a resident
will meet Monday at the home of Pomeroy Wednesday and Thursday by Daniel E. Evans, chairman of
of Hillside, Colo. While there, Mrs. Woodrow L. Foreman
the board and chief executive offiBerry was a housewife, and helped
Woodrow L. Foreman, 79 , of Mrs. David Bowen in Syracuse. from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.
cer
of Bob Evans Fanns. Tenms of
on the family ranch. She was a Lorain, died Monday, March 30, Meeting time is 7:30 p.m. Mrs.
Hymn sing scheduled
Arthur
Skinner
will
have
the
prothe
acquisition
were nol disclosed.
member of the First United 1992, at OakhiUs Nursing Home.
There will be a hymn sing with
Hickory
Specialties,
Brentwood,
gram.
Methodisl Church of Canon City.
Born March II, 1913, in
Shannah from Potnt Pleasant ,
Tenn
.,
produced
high-quality
charDance
planned
She is survived by lwo sons, Ambrosia, W.Va., he was the son
W.Va. at Mt. Olive Community
The
Gallia
Twirlers
Western
coal,
wood
smoking
chips,
natural
Russell (Eunice) Berry of Hillside, of the late Ephriarn and Vica StewChurch in Long Bottom on Saturand John (Leona) Berry of Canon art Foreman. He is survived by his Square Dance Club will hold a day at 7 p.m . Pastor Lawrence smoke flavorings, grilling systems
and application equipment. Brand
City; three daughters: Mollie wife of 53 years, Elieen J. Roush dance Saturday, 8-11 p.m. at the Bush invites ~e public.
Henderson Community Center in
names include Nature-Glo and
Roscoe of Westcliffe, Colo., Peggy Foreman of Lorain.
ZestiSmoke
with production faciliJones of Pueblo,_Colo., and Bonnie
Henderson,
W.Va.
Bob
McNabb
He retired in 1983 from the
Party planned
ties
in
Crossville,
Tenn., and
Carl of Salida, Colo.; three sisters- Sheffield Lake School System will be the caller.
Burlingham Junior Modern
Greenville,
Mo.
About
140 people
in-law: Hattie M. Berry, Hillside, where he served as a custodian for
Woodmen are planning a "Family
are
employed
by
the
company
Mae Berry, Canon City, and I 0 years. He moved to Lorain in
Togetherness" party at the Woodwhich
has
nationwide
distribution.
Annabel Berry of Penrose, Colo.; 1967 and worked for six years at
men Hall on Sunday at 1:30 p.m.
Joe B. Crace, 37, will continue
18 grandchildren; 20 great-grand- the American Ship Building ComThe Middle Branch Bluegrass Boys
James
R.
Hannan
and
Paul
as president and chief operating
children; and several nieces and pany as a ship fitter. He was a forAnthony Smith, both of Pomeroy, will provide music. Everyone is ' officer of Hickory Specialties. He
mer supervisor for the Marietta have been hired to work at the welcome. .
will also become an officer of Bob
Manufacturing Company.
Zaleski
Civilian
Conservation
The Daily Sentinel
Evans
Farms and a member of the
He was a member of the Living Corps Camp in Vinton County. The
LCCD board to meet
company's
executive commiuee.
!UBPB 213-980)
Word Wesleyan Church, Elyria, the facility is operated by the Ohio
The regular meeting of the
Hickory
Specialties
has been a
Publi1hed every afternoon, Monday
Ohio.Public School Employees and Department of Natural Resources, Leading Creek Conservancy DisCrace
family
business
since
the late
throuah J.'riday; 111 Court St., Pomeroy,
Boilenmakers Union Local 358.
Ohio by lhe Ohio Valley, Publi1hing
Division of Civilian Conservation. trict board of directors will meet 1800s when it slarted in Oak Hill.
Surviving are: tv;o sons, Everell
Contpany/Multimedia Inc:, Pom~roy,
The CCC offers on-the-job Thursday at 7 p.m. at the board
Ohio 43769, Pb, 992-2156. Second clua
(Woody) foreman of Sheffield training for 18 to 24 year old men office on Comhollow Road in Rut.,....,, fl"td at l'omo!roy, Ohio.
Lake and Dennis Foreman of Bar- and women at either residential or land.
Mombir: The Auocided Preoo, and thb
boursville, W.Va.; three
non-residential camps throughout
Ohie Nawtpaper Auociation •. National
TRAIN FOR
Mrs.
Jerry
(Phyllis)
Scott
of
,
the
state.
Adverti1in1 Repreuntative, Branham
W.Va.,
Mrs.
-Lowell
(Myra)
MONEY
New1paper Sale1, 733 Third Avenue,
Corps members get an opportuNew Yon , N.,. Yorlt t0017.
HalfhiU of New Haven, W.Va., and nity to gain work -experience in
MAKING
Mrs.
,Gary
(Sharon)
Green
.
of
Am
Ele
Power
..................
.30
POSTMABTER: Send IAiclrolo chanp~ I&lt;&gt;
CAREER IN
many areas while perfonming much
Sheffield Lake; 17 ~randchildren needed conservation work. A per- S/8Ashland Oil .................. 32 1/4
Tho Dally Sentinel, 1t1 Courl Sl .,
COSMETOLOGY
PonwwO), OHio 46769.
and 11 great-grandchtldren.
i\T&amp;T .................................407/8
son
is
hired
for
up
to 12 months,
. lltlBICIIIPTIOI'I RATU
He is also survived by a sister, c~ be promoted twice, and receive Bank One ........................... .46 1/8
•Financial
Available
'By C......,_ orllolilr ...,,,
Mrs.
Douglas (Nannie Louise) a six month extension.
One WHk. .................................... ......$1.60
Bob Evans .........................26 1/4
to Those Who Qualify
One Month.......................
16 . ~
Roush of Letart.
Channing
Shop
.................
.30
Walt
Jinks,
a
camp
manager,
One v..-.......................... ,...............183.20
•Approved By Ohio State
He was preceded· in l!eath by a said that the work is hard and City Holding ...................... I? 112
BINGLE COPY
' ' ,
sister and two brothers.
PIUCB
Board of Cosmetology
Federal Mogul................ .... l6 1/2
d~anding and the Corps meinbers
Dolly............................................25 Cento
~ervices will be held J. p.m.
Goodyear
T
&amp;R
..................
64
3/4
· are~ federal minimum wage.
SubocTjbeo not dllir11l( I&lt;&gt; fi"Y 1bo carri- . Thursday at the Foglesong Funeral
• When they leave the inognun, Key Centurion ................... 20 1/4
er •Y qe:Nt tn adyanf6 dirett to IJ'he • Home with the Rev. Garland D.
they take with them hand-on expe- Lands End.............: .......... .35 S/8
CalllpaUt DaUr Tribune on a three, ais.
Thomas
offiGiating.
Burial
wiU
be
or lf - l h buio. Crodll will bo lflven
rience, good work ethics, and the Limited Inc..... ............... ... 28 3/4
in
the
Graham
Cemetery.
Multimedia Inc ..................27 1/2
wHk.
Friends may call at the Davin ability to follow directions and
Rax
Restaurant .................. I 3/4
No •lblcr'ptions by mail permitted in
Funeral Home in Lorain Tuesday work as a team," Jinks said.
anu whtn hom• carrier unlet ta
Robbins&amp;Myers
..,............J7 1/2
For additional information on
avollablo.
from 6-9 p.m. and Wednesday 10
Shoney's
Inc
......................
23 1/2
pro~ts or the prognun In general,
Sw Bank ...........................28 3/4
•
•.....
a.tll• c.....,
restdents may contact the Central
~··-otlo•
Hospital news
Wendy
lnt'!........................ l2
1s w.................:........................... l21.&amp;1
Office in Columbus, 265-6423, or
28 Wllb .......................................... KJ.l6
Worthington
Ind................23 liS
HOLZER
MEDICAL
CENTER
wrile the Ohio Department of Nat'az w.........!.............,......................l&amp;l.7&amp;
Stock
reports
are the 10:30
O.tolda Gallla c..aiJ
Dltcbar1••• Marcb 30 uraJ Resoun:es, Dtvision of Civil·
IS W-..........................................123.40
a.m. quotes provided by Blunt,
Frank Conwta, Misty Facemire, ian Conservation, 1855 Fountain
26 w.....................,........................uuo
Ellis and Loewi or Gallipolis.
Dorothy Greene, Calys~a Mayes, Square, Building H, Columbus,
52 Wllb .................... ,............. ,....... I8UO
James Nibert, Grethel Pauick llld 43224.
. .
-

-----Weather-----

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Gov. George Voinovich says a
$205 million increase in federal
matching money for Ohio hospilals
will help provide medical care for
Geneml Assislance recipients who
lose their benefits Wednesday.
He referred at a news conference Monday to the Ohio Hospital
Care Assurance Program, a pooled
resources group that reimburses
hospitals for care for the poor for
which they receive no other money.
Voinovich said the new money

Indicators ...

Lottery numbers

Wylie •••

-""

Freedom of speech is a global issue
and social satirist, remintletl his
enthusiastic audience of the recurrent tendency of the press in this
country to blur the distinction. His
recent "Doonesbury" panels about
accusations by a convicted felon
that Vice President Quayle was
once a customer for his drugs were
almost uniformly attacked by the
capital's political reponers. Their

Hodding Carter Ill
auacks were almost uniformly
wrong. Mo st reporters had the
wrong convict but missed the real
point; that the convict's story was
being suppressed for political reasons. The late, great essayist and
journalist Walter Lippman once
warned journalists against "social
climbing on the pyramids of
power." As Trudeau demonstrated,
it is a tendency alive and well in
Washington today.
Last, but certainly not least,
Salman Rushdie came out of hiding
in England for ·a dramatic appearance on the cor\rerence 's last night
His story is ·hair-raisingly simple.
Born in India into a Muslim family,
he is now an English citizen and
distinguished novelist. He is also a
man with a price on his head, the
object of an Iranian edict that calls
upon the Muslim faithful to seek
out and murder him for alleged
blasphemy in his novel "Satanic
Verses." In shan, he is the victim
of both slate and religious terror.
Rushdie is a prickly individual.
"Satanic Verses," which was
meant as social satire and comedy,
is not every reader's or critic's cup
of literary tea. But neither his character nor the novel's quality are relevant. What is at issue is freedom
of expression on the one hand and
murder on the other. Salman
Rushdie is quite literally repre_sen-

tative of the sanctity ot lhal Ireedom around the world . If he is
assassinated, a piece of freedom
will die with him.
It is imperative that no one forget that Rushdie is not unique.
Mass graves are filled with Soviet
Rushdies. Only recently, a courageous Spanish language journalist
in New York City was murdered,
and the police were having a difficult time determining which set of
powerful enemies was responsible.
China is a wasteland of journalistic
repression. In Central America, a
free press is barely beginning toreemerge after the long civil wars
there.
The stories that we comforlable
Americans in the audience heard
were a!Lernately hair-raising,
depressing, enraging and inspiring.
The situations recounted were quite
different in their particulars. South
Africa is not Cuba. Chile is not
China. Zambia and Burma share
little in heritage or contempomry
circumstance. It is pretentious for
an American reporter facing the
mock theater of congressional contempt hearings to equate himself
with the situation of a Rushdte.
But there were unifying threads
none1he!ess, the most important
being the most cliohc!l. We really
are all in this together. What affects
freedom of speech or the press in
what was once Yugoslavia affects
freedom of speech everywhere.
When the Bntish government· is
able to muzzle reponcrs covering
the Falklands war, it encourages

Washington to muzzle reporters
covering Grenda, Panama and the
Gulf War.
·Which leads to certain conclusions. A free society's free press
has a duty to speak up for freedom
of the press and of speech everywhere, not as an occasional aside
but as a central mission. That duty
is implicit in its freedom. The point
is not to protect a special privilege
but to speak out for a universal
right.
Another conclusion nows from
and with the first. A free society's
government mu st of necessity
speak up consistenlly against
repression in whatever guise it
travels, and wherever it emerges.
Our "friends" deserve no more
leniency in scrutiny and condemnation than our "enemies." There
was never a legitimate excuse for
our moral blindness about the dirty
work of our clients in places such
as El Salvador and the Philippines,
but we invoked the struggle against
communism as justification. Victory in the Cold War has removed
even that diseased fig leaf.
Article 19 of the United Nations
Declaration of Human Rights puts
the matter succinctly.
"Everyone has the right to freedom of opinion and expression, the
right includes freedom to hold
opinions without interference and
to seek, receive and impart information and ideas through an~
media 3(1d regardless of frontiers.'
(C)1992
NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN.

care assurance would have been :
available to people coming off
General Assislance even without
the increase in federal funding.
But Budget Director Greg
Browning and Human Services
Director Terry Wallace said some
hospiials have been absorbing costs
beyond the reimbursements they
receive from the Care Assurance
Program and could be forced out of · ..
business.
"We see tliis (funding increase) :
as something that will let the sys- ·
tern continue to work," Browning
said.

Hospital news ·
Veterans Memorial
MONDAY ADMISSIONS
Wanda Kniffm. Pomeroy.
MONDAY DISCHARGES None.

Party tonight
The 95th birthday of Florence
Baer will be observed with a party .
at Overbrook Center tonight (Tuesday) at 6:30 p.m. Family and · ·
friends of Mrs. Baer are invited to .
attend the celebration.

Addresses needed
The addresses or four members ·
of the Pomeroy High School Class ·
of !942 are needed by the PHS
Alumni Association. Anyone with ~
the addresses on Robert Baxter •
Sherill, Richard Cantor, Ruth
Donohew, or David Clifton is
asked to provide the information 10 · ·
Joan Mescher, Box 76, Syracuse, · ·
992-5309, Marge Reuter, 138
Beech Street, Pomeroy, 992-3812, •
or Wanda, Rizer, 703 Main St., ~
Pomeroy, 992-7123.

SPRING VAllEY CINEMA
446 4524

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daur=,

Today in history

Stocks

1 ••••• • •••••,1 . ...

•'

o:arrior-

•.m.

,•
II

Court news

--Area deaths--

Berry•s World

By The Associaled Press
Today is Tuesday, March 31, the 91st day of 1992. There are 275
days left in the year.
.
· Today's Highlight in History:
.
.
Five hundred years ago, on March 31, 1492, King Ferdmand and
Queen Isabella of Spain issued a royal edict expellinflews from
Spartish soil, except those willing to convert to Chrisbanity. In the
fout months lh8t followed, some 200,000 Jews left, seeking refuae
elsewhere.
On this date:
In 1880, Wabash, Ind., became the first town illuminated by
elecuicallighling.
·
In 1819, French engineer Alexandre Gustave Eiffel unfurled the
French tricolor atop the Eilfel Tower in Paris, olftCially llllfking the
structure's completion.
· In 1917, 75 years ago, the United States took possession of~
VirJin Islands, which it had pwchued from Denmarlc fll' S25 tml·
lion ..
. In 1923, the fml dance manttbon in the United StateS, held in
New York City, ended with Alma Cummings settinll a world rtcord
of27 hours on her feeL
In 1932, 60 years ago, Ford Mocor Co. publicly unveiled its V-~
engine.

aged three homes and many roads
were closed in the city due to
flooding.
Evening thunderstorms Monday
over west-central Florida spawned
a tornado at Anna Maria Island.
San Antonio received record
rainfall for the month of March:
6.12 inches.
Temperatures today were
expected to reach the 30s in Upper
Great Lakes' region; the 40s in the
Midwest; the 50s in the Rocky
Mountain states; the 60s in the
Pacific North west and from North
Carolina west to northern Texas;
and the 70s in the South, the Desert
Southwesi and much of California.
The high for the nation Monday
was was 86 degrees at Melbourne,
Fla.

GA recipients will benefit from Federal money, governor says

W. VA.

_Meigs announcements __

For three days recently, several
score journalists from all over the
world gathered in Washington to
discuss their common concerns in a
world that is both closer together
and more volatile than anyone
could have imagined a decade ago.
What emerged was a clear
understanding that the longing for
freedom of speech, and therefore of
th e press is global. What was
underscored with equal clarity is
that there is a similarly global tendency to suppress that freedom in
the name of national security. political control, societal peace, religious belief or racial and ethnic
supremacy. It is the absolute
responsibility of a free press and
democratic governments everywhere to support the longing and
oppose the tendency , without
regard to the identity or ideology of
any of the parties involved.
ll was an eventful three days .
John Frohnmayer, the depo sed
chairman of the National Endowment for the Arts, finally went public and blasted those who stood by
in silence as the know-nothing
right cl aimed his scalp. If the
NEA 's artistic freedom is sacrificed today, he warned, publi c
broadcasting, federally funded universities and free research inquiry
itself will come next. As with the
Nazi takeover of Europe in th e
1930s, "It's the Sudetenland now,
Czechoslovakia next week, and
after that Poland."
lnlerestingly enough , Frohnmayer was preceded on the conference program by Czechoslovakia's
foreign minister, who spoke movingly of his nation's difficult transition to freedom. A fonmer journalist, the foreign minister knows
firsthand the difference between a
kept press and a free one.
Garry Trudeau, the cartoonist

the West, including Colorado,
Utah, New Mexico, Arizona and
Southern California. In !he East,
scattered rain was forecast on down
the coast from New England to
Virginia.
Tempemtures in the upper Mississippi Valley were expected to be
20 degrees lower than Monday's
readings.
Sunshine was forecast for the
Pacific Northwest. Dry weather
was predicted for much of the Midwest and from central Texas east to
Florida.
On Monday, thunder storms
brought rain, wind and large hail to
parts of Nevada, Alabama, Georgia
and Florida.
A tornado in Las Vegas dam-

.·

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The Daily Sentinel~

Sports

DOL

For lhat 10-second clip, Majerus
did not win an Academy Award.
Instead, he earned a technical foul
wilh 9.7 seconds left Monday night
that enabled Notre Dame to rally
past Utah 58-55 and reach the
championship game of the NIT.
"I was wrong and I cost my
team the game. I lost control,"
Majerus said. "But for a game to
be decided on lhat kind of call, I
don't know."
A foul called on Utah during a
scramble in the middle prompted
Majerus' outburst, and the resulting
luck o' the Irish sent them into
Wednesday night' s game against
Virginia for the National Invitation
Tournament ti~e.
: Virginia, which beat F1orida 62·
56 in the first semifinal behind
Bryant Stith's 27 points and I5
rebounds, routed Notre Dame 8356 in Charlottesville. Va., on Jan.
18.
"We watched Vir~inia earlier in

the evening, and they look like
they 've improved. Bryant Stith is
just a tremendous player and I
lhink an excellent NBA prospec~ "
said Notre Dame coach John
MacLeod, formerly an NBA coach
in New York, Phoenix and Dallas.
Still, all anyone wanted to ask
MacLeod and Majerus about after
!heir game was the ending of their
game.
Utah (23-11) had taken its rlfst
lead of the night at 55-54 on Phil
Dixon's three-pointer with 34 sec·
onds remaining. Notre Dame (18·
14) missed a couple of shots, got
the rebound both umes and called a
timeout with 12 seconds to go.
On the inbounds play under the
basket, LaPhonso Ellis bounced the
ball off his foot and Utah recov·
ered. But Paul Afeaki was called
for pushing Ellis, triggering
Majerus' tanllllm.
"1 thought it wasn't a foul and
that he put it off his foot and we
got it," Majerus said.
"I thought he got bumped,"
MacLeod said. "The official had
no one in front of him to block his
view. There was no hesitation of
the whistle."
Nor was their any wait when
referee John Cahill teed up and
teed off Majerus.
"It was deserved," Majerus
said of his technical. "I ' ve got

nothing to say about the officials.
But I'm not going to ask one of
them on a camping trip this summer."
Ems sent Utah a little closer to
its summer vacation when he made
his first foul sho~ tying it at 55. He
missed his second try, but then
Daimon Sweet got two shots for
the technical foul and made them
both.
Notre Dame kept possession
because of the technical and was
fouled. Elmer Bennett made one of
two shots, and Dixon missed a
potential, tying three-pointer with
one second left.
Bennett and Ellis led Notre
Dame with 15 points each and
Sweet had 13. Afeaki had 15 for
the Utes and Craig SolO added 14.
No one in the second game
· came close to puuing on a show
like Stith did in lhe opener.
Stith, Virginia's career scoring
leader, had 10 points in the last
nine minutes as the Cavaliers over·
carne a 49-45 deficit.
The 6-foot-5 senior also tied a
career high with his 15 rebounds.
He is second on the school's
rebounding list, trailing only Ralph
Sampson.
Anthony Oliver scored 15 points
for lhe Cavaliers. Stacey Poole led
Florida (19-13) wilh 16 points and
I0 rebounds.

Rio
Grande's track teams
.
finish first at Bluffton meet
~

. The men's and women's U"ack
In men's events, Chris Smilh
teams at the University of Rio placed first in the 10,000 meter run
Grande each netted first place Sat- in 39.02.9, and Scott Schaar fin urday in a triangular meet at ished first in the pole vault at 11
feet. Chad Cannon placed second
Bluffton College.
The Redmen soared 88 points to in the long jump (20-112 feel) and
Bluffton's 81 and .16 for Wilming- in the triple jump (30 fee~ 10-3/4
ton. The Redwomen had 62 points, inches). In the same events, Dan
Longcay posted distances of 16
Bluffton 58 and Wilmington 45.

Scoreboard
No games Monday

In the NBA ...

Tonight's games

EASTERN CONFERENCE
Allanlk DI.Ulon
Team
W L Pc:L
1-New York .. .........46 25 .648
801101l ....................42 30 . ~83
MWni ........ ........ l4 38 .472
New Jd'Ky ............ 32 39 .451
l't!ilod&lt;lph~ .......... 31 42
.425
WOJhin&amp;lon ...... ....23 49 .319
Orlando .................. n ss .236
Cmtnl Dl•blon

:~:t:~d·::::J:

Gl
4.S

Ill
14
16
23.5

:~~

Albno ... ............ 35 37

.416

23.5

.479

24

.417
.401

28.5
29

.513

lndiana ................... 35 31
Mil••ukee .......... lO 42
Oarlaue ................29 42

Wednesday's cames

W11hinl\(l1 nNew Jeney, 7:35p.m.
N.Y. l•landen 11 Toruuo, 7:35p.m.
WiMipq u San Jc.~;, I0:35 p.m

29.5

ii

Daroi\....................42 30

O.jgso 11 Detroit, 7:35p.m.
Aliladclphia II Pitubw-g.l\. 7:35 p.m.
801\on It Quebec, 7:35p.m.
Buffalo at Min..,e101.1, 8:05p.m.
Edmoni.Ofl tt Cal&amp;II)'• 9:35p.m.

In the NIT ...

9.5
16.5

Semifinals
AI New York
MoMaf'IKQff:l

Virpni• 62, Aond• 56
N~

nnat&lt;

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Mldw•l Dlvlllon
Tum
W L Pc:L
x·UL1h ...... ............ ..47 24 .662

San Amonio ...........42 30

.583

Houtl0n .......... ..... l7 l5
Dawc:r ................... 23 49

.514
.319
.250
IS 5

D.Uu............
Mini&gt;CO(U

.. ... 54
............ II 60

AI Ntw York

Wcdnllday'• ltUon
Third plact
Aoridl (19·13) Yl. Ut.ah (23 -ll). 6:45

GB
55
10.5
24 .5
29.1
36

P.clfk O!YIIlorl

a-Por\llnd ..............51
a.aoldcn StaLC .......48
Phocr~i.t ................. 47
Su,ule .................... 40

,,

21

.708

23

.676

2.~

lS
J2

.653
.556

4
II

L.A. Cippao ..... .39 32
L.A . ~Akoft ...........31 32

. 549
.543

ll.l

S1mmarrto ............24 48
a-clillc.hed pla yoll heM

.JJ3

12
T1

Monday's scores

Wednesday's &amp;ames

In the NHL ..•
WALES CONFERENCE
Polrkk Ot ... loo

W L T I'lL CFGA
r·N.Y. Ro"'"' .. &lt;19 24 l 10lll2 2AI

T-

95 32A 267
IS 211 247

•·N• kioor ..... 37 29 II
·-~ ....... '!I :10 ' 13331 290
N.Y..... 313! 10 14 Z77296
~ ....... !I 34 II
73 236 2.!1

A-111J·Manowt ......... 41 :n 10 !n 26l200
.•.a-............ 34 321o 11 ~263
o.Jolfolo ........... lO 3412 12 Z77212

"l·lhdool .......... lUO 13 61 236m
~ .............. II 41 II 41 2:19 306

--

CAMPBELL CONFERENCE
.
J/ L T I'lL GPGA "
~ ---· 41 ll II tllCIU41
'1~ -- 1671 14 16:150236
'1.SC. Loioio:!0:! 10 7UII25t
)11..... _
31 .. l Q 233261
r -2t 41 1 e 236210

...,.._
.•.w..,..._ss :a u "ma
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t7lll
...,._......,.
,.............
.

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am~

:1111
3t :!ill$
~=---. 1&amp;11
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5

•
75 ZJtZJt
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Dame (t8 ·

Transactions
Baseball
American Leapt

BALTIMORE ORIOLES - Optioool
Dennil Rumuuen 1nd Anthony telford,
pitchen; 1nd Marl Puent. catcher; to
RO!i:ltc:l\cr of the lntmu~tiooal League.
CHI CAGO WHITE SOX - Traded

lioned Stove OUtm~ 1nd Kevin Campbell,
pitch·en; Oann Howi tt , outfielder-fin\
bucman; and Mike JUnsery 111d Eric Fo~,
oulficJdm: to their minor luaue camp for
reuaiJMlenL
TEXAS RANGERS - Optioned
Lance McCuUen, pitchet, to Oklahom•
City or the American Auaciation. An·
nounced Wl Don C11tnan, pitcher, wu
miJnod \0 c.alendod ~prin&amp; tninina.

NallouiiAaaue

WultinJ&amp;.OntlBa.um, lf:30p.m.
Mlani " Philodelplllo. 1 :30 p.m.
AtlanU 1t lncnant, 7:30p.m.
a..-. • Ollcop. ,,:1() p.m.
New Jcnr:y 11 Milw•ukce. 1:30 p.m.
Odtndo ll Daltl•. 8:30p.m.
LA. l...U:ttt It l111 Antonio, 8:30p.m.

,.~~·- 41

N~

OAKLAND ATHLETICS - Op·

Olieaao 11 New Yorl, 7:30p.m.
Mlliml1t Chnland. 7:341 p.m.
LA.. Clippcts• Detroit, 7:30p.m.
LA. LU.cn 1lH&lt;NI1on, I p.m.
MimeiOYI•t Denver, 9 p.m.
J\1\land 11 Phomil, 9:30p.m.
\JW\ II Soiule,IO p.m .
Golden Sute 11 S1cumento, 10:30
p.m.

T-

Champlonahlp
Virg.ini1 (19 -13) Yl.
14). 9 p.m

I IIIII.

Tonlgbt's cames

1

p.m.

Sammy Sosa, ouitfielder. and Ken Patter·
aon, pitcher, to the ChitllO Cub• for
Georae Bell, outriclder, and cub. An·
nou.ncod W•ync Edwarda, pitcher, rdu&amp;Od
an outri&amp;ln auignment to Vancouver of
the Paeilic Coutt.c..suc \0 ~ a free

New Jeney 117, S1n Anwnio 109
Ch1d~ 123, Orltndo 112
\JI&amp;h 120, Milw•ukce I 00
Golden St.a!i!ll4, Philldclphi• 106

·,.w.....,.. .... "" 26

Dune 58, Uuh 5S

HOUSTON ASTROS - Optionc&lt;l
Wlllio Blair on4 Bob Molllcoo~ pitdocn:
Eddie Tucker, catcher. 1nd Erie YddinJ,
inf!Clder; to TuCIOft or die Pacific Cout

Loa~ YORK METS - Traded T"'l'
Br011, pi~ehcr, to. tho S•n Dieao P1dre1
for Cuia BlllloU., third b11em1n. Optioned Jlll1o Valen, pitcher, 10 Tidow1tc:r
of lho lmotn.Uornl Le.apo. Sent Chris
Doru.lt, UU&amp;eldtr, and Orl.n.do Merado,
ctleh•, ~their minar teape camp for rouoi...,.w.
fAN DIEOO PADRES - Plaood Ed
Whiuoa., pitcher, on the 60-d1y cliublod

....

!AN FRANCISCO OIANTS - Op·

tionl!ld Franciloo Oliwru, pikher. SteVe

D.:kv.etw:her. and Ore&amp; uu.on and laM
Pauascn, Wleldott; t.a Aiaaah of lho Pa·
cil'~ C...tt..po. Sc,tt Cni&amp; McMIIIIt)'.
pitther, 111.d SltVt Lake. ~tthtr. to tMir

minot ..... ~ r~-lpuncnt.

BuketbaU

Natloul hlllotbaR Aaocllllon

CLEVELAND CAVALIERS Sl&amp;ntd Bobby PhUII, forward , to • con·

."'" IMIIIsJ!IIIe .... olllleJUoon.
FoolbaU

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feet, eight ·inches in the long jump
and 33-1/2 feet in the triple jump
for third place.
In the shotpul, John Miller fin·
ished with 35 feet, six inches,
James Johnson had 34 feet, six
inches, and Aaron Kauffman
recorded 28 feet, nine inches. Johnson placed lhird in the discus with
a toss measuring 129 feet, three
inches, while Miller posted 98 feet,
four inches and Kauffman had 88
feet, I 0 inches. The javelin saw
Jason Weeks net 126 feet for third
place. Miller nelled a distance of
94-1/2 inches and Kauffman was
credited wilh 88 fee~ eight inches.
In the high jump, Tim Murphy
placed first at six feet, eight inches.
The 400-meter relay team of
Murphy, Cannon, Bryan Specht
and Brian Brelsford was second in
45 seconds, while Mark Cline
placed first in the 1500 meter run at
4:06.9. Chad Benson was second in
the same event at 4:08.4.
Specht was first in the 400
meter run at 52.43 seconds, and
Courtney Hutchinson placed third
at 53.53 seconds. In the 800 meter,
Marc Michigan was first at
2:01.06, and Benson was second at
2:05.46.
Murphy took first in the 400
meter intermediate hurdles (55.31 ,
seconds) and Weeks placed third at
1:01.39. Brelsford was first in the
200 meter at 22.80 seconds, fol·
lowed by Specht in third (23.41)
and Longcay at 24 .20. Brelsford
was also second in the 100 meter at
II .05 seconds.
In the 5000 meter, Cline was
first at 16:09.87, and the mile relay
team of Murphy, Michigan, Specht
and Benson was rlfst in 3:36.81.
In women's events, number of
athletes placed firsc Debbie Gray,
lO,OOO.meter, 45:09.7; Kim Sowers, long jump, 16 feet, 10-1/4
inches and triple jump, 32 fee~ six
inches; Bonnie Evans, 5000 meter
run, 19:04.1; Renee Peck, 1500
meter, 5:01.6, 800 meter, 2:27, and
3000 meter, II :35.96; and Ginger
Smith, 400 meter, 1:07.4.
Crystal Patrick placed second in
the 1500 meter at 5:42.8 and Sowers was second in the I00 meter at
13 .4 3 seconds. Patrick was also
fourth in the 800 meter at 2:47.7.
Sowers placed third in the 200
meter at29.27 seconds.
In the 3000, Angie Cress finished second at 12:18, foUowed by
Patrick in third at 12:53. The mile
relay team of Smith, Gray, Evans
and Peck was ftrst at4:43.
The teams are next scheduled to
compete Saturday, April 4 at Ohio
Wesleyan University.

a

Sports shorts
FoolbaU
NEW ORLEANS (AP) - Pat
S.willing became the best-paid
defensive player in the history or
the NFL when the New Orleans·
·Sai~IS matebed the Detroit Lions'
contract offer for the 27-year-old
llneblcter.
Detroil offered Swilling, the
NFL Defensive Pllycr of lite Year
lall season, $S.47S million for
three yNtl, a signing bonus or
$!. 775 million ancl a no-trade
agreement. That averagca out to
about $300,000 per year more than ·
New York .Otanu linebacker
Llwrenco Taylor mates. ·
The Saints had sovon days to
match the offer or lot go to in
return for tho Liona' fint-round

NCAA MEN'S BASKETBALL CHAMPIONSHIP 1992
Regional

Regional

Sem•finals

Championships

March 27

March 29

Semifinals Minneapolis Aprll4

Semifinals

ChampionshiPS

March 26

March 26

MiDWEST

EAST

RNALFOUR

Duke 81
C i nanna~

88

Du~e

104 OT

Selon HoJI 69
Ouke(32-2)
Kanau City, Mo.

Philadelphia

Mass.

MemphiS St. 83

'

i

n

Kentucky 103

Memphis 51. 57

KenlucKy 87

Ga. Teen 79

SOUTHEAST

WEST

Ohio S1. 80

UCLA 79

Ot110 51 71

.,

N. Carolina 73

I I

New P-Aex1co St. 78

Lexington, Ky.

Albuquerqu1, N.M.

Micnigan 75 OT

lnd1ana 106

MICt11gan 75

f londa St 74

EASTERN SOFTBALL RETURNEES Pam Douthitt's Eastern sortball team bas 11
returning lettermen available for this season,
Plct~red are. (front row, L-R) Penny Aeiker,
Came Morr1ssey, Andrea Dillard, Jaime Wil·

lnd1ana 85

Oklahoma Sl. 72

AP

(00·00) Record, 00 Score

game-winning basket that led the
Blue Devils into the 1990 Final
Four. Last weekend, he provided
the sequel to that performance,
scoring the buzzer-beating basket
against Kentucky in overtime in the
final of the East Regional.
Duke goes into its fifth consecutive Final Four, and sixth in the last
seven seasons, where it will meet
Indiana on Saturday. Laettner isn' t

Rio ladies split twin bills
with MVNC, Charleston
Returning to action over the
weekend, the University of Rio
Grande softball team traveled to
Mount Vernon Nazarene College
for its first Mid-Ohio Conference
encounter of the season. In the
opener, lhe Lady Cougars emerged
wilh a 12-7 win.
Kendra Lambert scored a double
to lead the hosts' hitting, while
Angie Joseph held Mount Vernon
to a seven-hit, lhree-error performance. The Redwomen, with Charlene Peart going two for four, and
Cindy Tilton and Shelly Whitaker
each two for lhree, recorded 10 hits
and had four errors.
Julie Ray took the win from the
pitcher's mound.
For their second meeting with
Mount Vernon, the Redwomen
mounted a seven-hit anack and
Starr Philpot limited the hosts to ·
five hits, but the Lady Cougars
slipped through late in the game to
win 8-7 and put the Rio ladies at 02 in conference action.
Kelly Robinson was three for
four to lead Rio Grande's hitting,
while Carolyn Behr was two for
four for Mount Vernon. Diana
Kirkpatrick was credited with the
win as pitcher, with relief from
Ray. Rio Grande held its errors to
one and the hosts had three.
The Redwomen returned home
Sunday to notch an 8-1 win in the
opening round of a doubleheader
with the University of Charleston.
Rio Grande went out for nine
hits and held itself to a single error
in defeating the Lady Golden
Eagles, who notched six hits and
posted three errors. Tilton took lhe
win and Fabian had the loss as
pitcher.
Debbie Dixon finished with a
three for four performance on hitting for the Rio ladies, backed by
Robinson, who was lhree for three.
Charleston's Oden had a single and
a pair of bases on ball.
·
In a near-repeat of the first

game, lhe Red women forged ahead
on II hits and Joseph cut
Charleston's hitting to five to post
another 8-1 win over lhe visitors to
finish the twin bill. Hyland and
Mullins each scored a hit apiece for
the visiiOrs.
Rio Grande oommined no errors
and Charleston collected one dur·
ing the game. Dixon and Jane Jess
each went two for four to lead Rio
Grande's performance from the
plate.
The weekend's action took the
Redwomen to 9-8 overall. The
team was to have played Otterbein
Monday and Shawnee State Tuesday, both at home.

looking to be lhe hero again, but he
won't rule it out.
"No one can ever tell you that
it's something that they've always
wanted to do," Laettner said. "It's
just a situation you're put in. I've
been put in that situation a few
times now. It's worked a few
times.''
It worked against Connecticut in
lhe East Regional final two seasons
ago, although the play wasn't
intended to be Laetmer's to make.
"I was a linle more scared in
the Connecticut game because I
wasn't supposed to take the last
shot," Laettner says, noting that
coach Mike Knyzewski wanted lhe
ball to go to either center Alaa
Abdelnaby or guard Phil Hendcr·
son.
"At the very last second, coach
changed it, and from when he
changed it until it happened, there
wasn't enough time to think about
i~" Laeu.ner said. "And then it just
happened.
"The Connecticut game felt
more lilce it wasn' t in my hands.
This one felt more like it was in my
hands." he says.
There was no doubt in the Spectrum lhat Laeu.ncr was supposed to
get the baU, and there were no lastminute changes. This time, it was
his game aU lhe way.

son, Aime Friend and Shelly Hendrix. Behind
theJI! are Michelle Donovan, Amy Well, Tabby
Phillips, Lisa Golden and Julie Rime. Absent
was Injured senior Lee GiUilan. Donovan, Well,
Phillips, Golden and Rime are seniors.

Meigs to open baseball season
Wednesday at home vs. Trimble

Laettner Duke's go-to man now
By TOM FOREMAN Jr.
DURHAM, N.C. (AP)- There
was a time when Christian Laettner
had no pan of a game-winning situation. You wouldn'tknow it now.
"Now it's my role," Laettner
said Monday. "My sophomore
year, it wasn't reaUy my role to do
that. Usually a senior will take the
last shot."
That season , Laettner hit the

The Dally Sentinel-Page-S

Eastern softball team to battle
Symmes Valley Wednesday

TUesday, March 31,1992
Page-4

Notre Dame, Virginia win
to set up NIT title showdown
By BEN WALKER
NEW YORK (AP) - On Oscar
night, Rick Majerus gave a great
performance.
The burly Utah coach banged
his fist on a scorer's table three
times, slammed down a clipboard,
punched in the air, shouted,
stomped, slated and pointed at a
referee. Silence of a lamb, certainly

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

"

By DAVE HARRIS
Sentinel Correspondent
Third- year head coach Zane
Beegle welcomes back seven lettermen as the Meigs Marauders will
try for a second time to open the
1992 baseball season Wednesday
evening at home against Trimble.
The Marauders were to open the
season Monday at Alexander but
the game was rained out.
Beegle must replace four
starters from last year's squad including Tri- Valley Conference
award winners Jason Wright
(inf/of) and Randy Corsi (DH/C).
Wright, a three-year starter for
Meigs and was a first team all TVC
pick, is now playing baseball for
Malone College. Corsi, a power
hilling catcher/ designated hitter,
was an honorable mention all·TVC
pick. Other starters that graduated
were rlfst baseman Terry Reuter,
second baseman Eric Heck and
shortstop/pitcher Kevin Taylor.
Two Marauder starters from last
year's team transferred to other
schools. Center fielder Terry
McGuire is at Eastern, and right
fielder/pitcher Shawn Hamon is at
Alexander.
Senior rtreballer Jeremy Phalin,
who leads the Marauder returners,
is a two-year starter. The talented
righthander was a second-team allTVC pick last year when he went
4-1 on the season with a 2.90 era.
Pitching wiU be one of t,he Maraud·
ers strong points according to Bee-

gle, also toeing the rubber for the
maroon and gold will be junior lefthander Mike Vance and senior
Mark Stanley. The trio will be receiving support from junior Jim
Pullins and senior Tim Peterson.
The possible starting line-up for
Meigs include Stanley or Peterson
at first base with senior Micah
Bunch or junior Kyle Simpson at
second. At third will be junior
Kevin Lambert, senior Steve
Woods or senior John Harrison. At
short will be second year starter
Gary Adams and behind the plate
wiU be senior Joe McElroy or Harrison.
Beegle feels that the Marauder
outfield will be another strong
point for Meigs with junior Billy
Glaze starting the season in left
field for Meigs, with second year
starter junior Mike"Abby" Welch
in center and Pullins in right. Also
roaming the outfield for the Marauders will be juniors David Rces
and Vince Reiber along with Phali~
and Vance.
Beegle feels that Alexander and
Trimble along with perennial powers Belpre and Wellston will be the
teams to beat in the TVC. Nonconference games fo.r Meigs in clude a pair with Gallia Academy
and Southern along with a doubleheader at Jackson.
Beegle, a former aU-state player
for Southern and an Ohio Umversi·
ty pitcher, takes a 24-18 lifetime

Marietta
hands
losses
'
to Redmen in road trip

"

In spite of a strong pitching
effort and some effective hilling,
the University of Rio Grande baseball team suffered two losses to
Marietta College Saturday on the
Pioneers' fteld.
.
Marietta won the rU"st entry in
the doubleheader 4-3 and doubled
back in the nightcap to defeat the
Redmen 12-1, taking Rio Grande to
5-10-1 on the season.
Don Schaly' s Pioneers went out
for a three-run lead on a single hit
in lhe opener, but with a hit apiece
from.Rich Corvin, Eric Parrish and
Jason Wright, the Redmen were
able to close the gap and threaten
to take the game away from the
hoSIS.
A double by Marieua's Nate
Counts helped the hosts hang on
for the win. The Redmen posted six
hits &amp;n4 two errors, while Marieua
recorded four hits. Eric Meltler was
credited with the win and Andy
Bulach pitched for Rio Grande.
Not wishing to give the Rio men
another chance to get that close, the

Pioneers mounted a 12-hit attack in
the bouom half, resulting in five
runs for the hosts in the sixth
inning. Rio Grande was allowed
just seven hits for the game by lhe
Pioneers' pitching staff. Coach
Dave Oglesby put four pitchers
into the game to stem the tide.
The Redmen were next set to
play at home Tuesday afternoon
against Shawnee State for its first
Mid.Qhio Conference game of the
season.
REDMEN SCORES
TOMARCH28
St. Anselm 10-1, W
Alma, 2-1, L
Alma, 9-7, L; 7-6, W
Adrian, 5-0, W
St. Anselm, 5-2, L; 3-2, W
Capital, 3·3
W.V.a. State, 13-0, L; 1·0, L
Marshall, 5-1, L; 10-1, W
Wilmington, 7-2, W; 3-2, L
WVU-Parkersburg (JV game),
12-2, w
Marieua, 4-3, L; 12-1, L

mark into his third season with a
22-10 mark in the TVC. Last season's team finished in second place
in the TVC behind Belpre. Beegle's first Marauder team finished
in third place.
Assisting Beegle lhis season and
coaching the reserve team will be
former University of Rio Grande
player Keith Dettwiller.

Meigs baseball slate
Date
Opponent
March 30 ..................... at Alexander
April! ................................Trimble
April 2 ...................Gallia Academy
April 3 .................at Vinton County
April6 ............. at Nelsonville-York
Aprii8 ............................... WcUston
April 11 .............at Southern (noon)
April 13 ................................. Belpre
Aprill5 .............................at Miller
April 16 ................Federal Hocking
April 17 ............................at Athens
April IS .................at Jackson (DH)
April20...........................Aiexander
April22 ................................ Athens
April 23 ..........................at Trimble
April 24 ...................Vin10n County
April27 ...............Nelsonville-York
April29 .........................at Wellston
April30 ............................. Southern
May I ................at Galtia Academy
May 4................................ at Belpre
May 6 ............................,........MiUer
May 8................ at Federal Hocking

Meigs baseball roster

"AI this time our weaknesses Lee GiUilan • ..............................Sr. ·
By SCOIT WOLFE
would be the inexperience of our LiSa Golden • .............................Sr.
Sentinel Correspondent
Twenty-three players are cur- pitchers and catchers, and our lack Julie Riffle ........... ~ ......................Sr.
Phillips
.............................
Sr. ·
rently vying for a starting position of outside practice time at this Tabby
' Mornssey
.
• ....................... Jr. .Carne
on the Eastern Eagles varsity soft· point in the season."
Douthill stressed that she was MicheUe Donovan• .. ........... :...... Jr.
ball team, which was scheduled to
open its season last evening under pleased with the mix of good Misty Newell• ............... ............. .Jr.
the tutelege of veteran mentor Pam young talent and the returning vet- Jaime Wilson• ............................So.
eran players.
Penny Aeiker" ............................So.
Douthitt.
"Teams
to
beat
in
the
SV
AC
Andrea Dillard" .........................So. :
After last night's ·rainout, East·
·
should
be
Symmes
Valley,
Kyger
Arnie Friend• .............................So. ·
ern is scheduled to travel to
Creek and North Gallia. Overall, Marilyn Kibble ...........................So. ·
Symmes Valley Wednesday.
Eastern lost just three players to the SVAC could be preuy even ... Kathy Bernard ............................So. :
graduation, however, those three the results could go either way. Rachel Hawley ...........................So.:·
· were important factors in Easlem' s We're loolting forward to the up· Missy Harris ...............................So. ,
SheUy Hendricks• ......................So. ,
success. Edna Driggs Hensley was coming season."
Amy
Beth Redovian ...................Fr. :
a second team all-state pick and has
Jessica
Chevalier ........................Fr. ·
been the key .hurler for EHS the Eastern's 1992
Jessica
Radford ...........................Fr..
past couple seasons, while the sec- softball roster
Heidi Nelson ...............................Fr.
ond half of the battery, catcher LorBecky Driggs ..............................Fr.
rie Baker, also graduated. Mary
Yr. •-letterman
Ann Kibble, a steady outfielder, Player
Amy Well • ................................ Sr.
was the third ~duate.
Douthitt tndicated that these
girls would be greatly missed.
Slatters back from last season
include seniors Lisa Golden, Amy
Well and Lee Gillilan. Gillilan's
future is uncertain at !his poin~ but
In Eastern's baseball pre-season story, senior Mike Smith was ·
she should see some action after reomitted as being an all-SVAC honorable-mention candidate.
cuperating from the knee injury
That information was not reported to The Daily Sentinel at the
that sidelined her during basketball.
time of publication, butlhe paper regrets the error.
Golden also suffered an eye injury,
but should return to the line-up
soon.
Other returnees include sophomore outfielder Andrea Dillard,
The Jackson Wrestlers Mothers Club will sponsor a novice
sophomore infielders Carrie Morwrestling
tournament Saturday at9 a.m. at Jackson High School.
rissey, Penny Aeiker and Jaime
The
entry
fee for the tournament. for children 14 years old and
Wilson.
younger,
is
$7,
which is payable at the time of weigh-ins. RegistraSenior Tabby Phillips is back
tions
will
be
taken
the morning of the tournarnenL
after sittin~ out last year with injuries sustamed in an auto accident.
Douthitt stated, "It's going to be
hard to ftll the void in the middle
with the depactore of Edna (Hensley) and Lorrie (Baker). We depended a lot on these girls the past
The rtrst David Bass SoflbaU Tournament wiU be held on April
couple of seasons, but we do have
II and 12 at Ordnance Elementary's softball field in Point Pleasant,
several girls working hard to fiU in
W.Va., according to information from the Point Pleasant Girls Softthe gap."
ball League, the event's sponsor.
Currently, Gillilan, Phillips,
There will be a $60 fee and !',YO regulation softballs required for
Morrissey, Shelly Hendricks,
registration. The double-elimination tournament will have a miniBecky Driggs, Arnie Friend and
mum of 12 teams participating. The rain date for the event will be
Julie Riffle are working out at
April25 and 26.
pitcher.
For more information, caU Rick Halstead at675-7618, Fred SurJessica Radford, Missy Harris,
baugh at 675-7441 or Jim Steams at 675-1598.
Kathy Bernard, Marilyn Kibble and
Heidi Nelson are working out at
catcher.
DouthiU continued, "The junior
JUST IN TIME FOR TURKEY
and senior girls are showing a lot
'
of leadership. We have some older
SEASON .
girls out that didn't play last year,
...
that should be ~reat assets to the
...'
team with some attitude changes.
Slles of flit rurlfY IIJ( om help
We're looking forward to a great
tuP/ICII lht HJiionJI Wild !uney Ftdmtion
season."
Aeilcer; Wilson, Riffie, Phillips,
NATIONAL
WILD TURKEY FEDERATION SPONSORED
Gillilan and Morrissey ace the lead6
159700110 t2 Go. 24" Ba.,ell~· w/lur~ey full Screw·in Chole S
95
ing oontenders to sec a starting po·
IlK
I) ond Tolol Mossy Oak T10atmenl. Swivets &amp; Slino
SALE
sition in the infield.
Well, Golden and Dillard, leading candidates from last year, have
a stronghold on winning a starting
outlield job. Others vying for a po·
sition are Rachel Hawley, Michelle
1
Donovan, Misty Newell, Amy Beth
SALE
Redovian and Jessica Chevalier.
Eastern's strenglhs include overNATIONAL WILD TURKEY FEDERATION SPONSORED
all team speed, a good hilling
659100250 tO Ga. 24' Bl'rel )'.!" wllu•key fuM Screw·ln Chale
corps, and the number of girls reITKI) &amp;nd lola! Mossy Oal Treatment. Swive~ &amp; Sling. Drilled &amp; Upped lao
turning with a lot of playing experiScope Mount
ence.
In contrast Doulhitt commented,

.---Area sports briefs___,
Omission

Wrestling tournament Saturday

Point Pleasant league to sponsor
spring softball tournament .

159

Player-pos.
Yr.
Gary Adarns-ss ........................... Jr.
Micah Bunceh-2b ....................... Sr.
Billy Galze-of.... .............. ............ Jr.
John Harrison-3b/c .....................Sr.
Kevin Lambert-3b/dh ................. Jr.
Joe McEiroy-c ............................ Sr.
Tim Petcrson-lb/p ...................... Sr.
Jeremy Phalin-p/oL .....................Sr.
Sports shorts
Jim Pullins-of/c .......................... Jr.
Vince Reiber-{)f ...........................Jr.
Basketball
Kyle Simpson-2b ...................... .. .Jr.
NEW YORK (AP) - Mark
Mark Stanley-! b/p ......................Sr. Jackson of the New York Knicks,
Mike Vance-{)f/p ...................... .. Jr. who averaged 18.3 points and 10.3
Mike Welch-of ........................... Jr. assists in four games last week,
Steve Woods-3b .......................... Sr. was named NBA player of the
David Rees-of..............................Jr. week.

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in attempt
to
lose
weight
·,
'By DOUG RICHARDSON '
INDIANAPOUS (AP) - Milce
Tyson hu declined io eat prison
food and 10 c:oopeiaiC with an educalionalauessment, two actions
Indiana correctional officials say
rep-escnJ "pretty typical behavior"
for a new inmate.
Prison offiCials conftrmed Monday that the former heavyweight'
champion hadn't taken solid food
during his ftllt five dars in prison
and' tbat be fa,ces d1scipfinary
action for' giving his autograph to
feDow inmates.
TyiOD, 2,, wu sent to prison
last Tburldly after be was sentenced 111 six years for convictions
'for rape and aimiul devilte•conducl. He wu found guilty of
auaulting Desiree Wublnaton, a
Mlu Black America beauty
paaeant contestant,. in his Indl·
hotel room last July.
ttomeYS ftled a
nn·
Tyaon's
IVilh
the Iadlana Court of Appeals,

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which is considering the atiOI'IIeys'
reque5tto set Tyson free on bond
pending the appeal. No action was
taken on lite request Monday.
Kevin Moore, a Department of
Correction spokesman, said Tyson
has taken fluids but refused to eat
solid food during his ftrst five days
at the Reception and Diagnostic
Center in Plainfield, about IS miles
west of Intlianapl!lis.
"He's 1101 eaten since he's been
at the facility. He's told the staff he
wanta to lose weight," said Moore.
"He BOCS to dte dining room with
the other peopll assigned to his
group and he 1nterac11 with people
very weD. He just doesn't want Ill

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ell."

Moore said counselors have
talked ID "!'f.!Otl about the nltlifiCItions of falling 10 ea1 over a long
period. The boxu told his llllllnley
during his Fe~ trial that he
was about 30
heavier than
his normal ~ 0-pound fighting
weight.

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Tuesday, March 31, 1992

By The Bend

AR CHAPTER AWARD· John T. Wolfe, Home National
Bank, presenls the Star Chapter FFA Award to Michelle Friend as
Michelle Brown, president, looks on. The annual Racine FFA banquet was held recently at Southern High School.

The Daily Sentinel
Tuesday, March 31,1992

Page-&amp;

CITIZENSIDP AWARD· Joan Wolfe, Bank One, presents
the Bob Lee Citizenship Award to Michelle Brown, as Michelle
Friend, vice-president, looks on, during the annual Racine FFA
banquet at Southern High School.

·--

For entertainment, Stephanie Cooper, secretary: Jason Ervin,
Stephanie Sayre for beginning pre- Sayre, Chris Brown, Jeremy Smith, book award; and Christie Cooper
Sayre, Michelle Brown and treasurer: Chris Brown, Sentinel:
pare speech sponsored by Meigs Christie Cooper, Billie Jo Long, for secretary book.
Michelle Brown introduced the Michelle Friend sang "Impulsive" Chns Hamm, reporter; and Kathy
Litter Control; Michelle Friend for Kathy Oltman, Jeff Rose, Terry
her prepared speech sponsored by Oltman, Jeff Rose, Terry Ottman speakers, Michelle Friend, who followed by Michelle Brown Ottman, student advisor.
Baer's Market; Chris Harnm for his and Chris Hamm received the gave her speech "Agriculrural Jobs' singing "Desperado."
Michelle Brown presided at the
extemporaneous speech sponsored award for parliamentary proce- Future 10 Marketing," and
Officers installed were banquet. Michelle Friend gave the
by Mr. and Mrs. Pete Thoren: dures; Tom Adkins, treasurer Stephanie Sayre, giving her speech Stephanie Sayre, president; Clif- :-velco~e and Chris Brown gave the
Stephanie Sayre for the fruit and award; Stephanie Sayre, reporter "A Standard of Excellence."
ford Smith, vice-president; Christie mvocaoon.
vegetable, sponsored by Mr. and . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Mrs. John Hill; Don Stephenson,
for electricity, sponsored by Jackson Production Credit; Billie Long,
greenhouse management, sponsored by the American Association
of University Women; Corey
Rowe, welding, sponsored by Dan
Smith, auctioneer: John Amos, carpentry, sponsored by William
Wicklmc; Chris Hamm, swine production, by Dr. Margie Lawson;
MicheUe Brown, farm management
award, by Dan Smith; Christie
Cooper and Jason Erwin. agriculture science, by Waid Cross and
Sons and Ferrellgas: John Amos,
Michelle Brown, Stephanie Sayre
and Michelle Friend, awards for
urban soil judging, by Fairplain
Tractor; Chris Brown, Christie
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Cooper, Terry Oltman and Jeff
Rose, rural soil judging, by Fairplain Tractor; Michelle Brown,
sales and service award, by
Keefer's Service. Center; Jerqmy
Smith, Jason Erwm and Stephanie
Sayre for small engines, by Mr. and
Mrs. Bobby Ord and Ferrellgas;
Corey Rowe for agriculture
mechanics by Mr. and Mrs. Chuck
Yost; Tom Adkins, forestry award,
by Fairplain Tractors: Michelle
.
Brown, Michelle Friend, Stephanie

8 9. 10 11 12 13 14'
.

15 16 17 18 19 20 '21

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HONORARY CHAPTER AWARDS· Honorary Chapter
FFA Awards were presented by Micbelle Friend and Michelle
Brown, to Opal Dyer, administrative assistant of SCS, and John
Rice, retired county extension agent. Leah Ord, guidance counselor, was also presented Ibis award but unable to attend tbe banquet.

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Ohio State Grange Membership
Directors will be present. AU members urged to attend.
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - The Salisbury
Township Trustees will meet
Wednesday at 7 p.m. at the home
of Sarah Gibbs, Ball Run Road.

Right now is a great start making those loans right now.
this coupon and mail it to Bank One. Or
MIDDLEPORT· The Middletime to borrow money.
We can be pretty inventiVe when it call toll-free 1-800-472-3333. If you need
port Literaryat Club
will atmeet
lhereSmquestionalx:1.1t comes to lending. Besides the usual aloan,yourtirilingcouldn'tbebener.
Wednesday
I :30 p.m.
the
Meigs County Public Library in
it. Interest rates are instalment loans, we offer two different r
: - - - - - - - - - ---':1
1 10 &amp;1'1 p~r fret "l'Y of Bank OneS Loan Guide. sm:J !his 1
lie
lower than they've been kinds of taX- favored home equity loans. Icoopon 10, BANC ONE CORPORATlO~ -4q41 Nmh \iWl I
Pomeroy with Mrs. Ro · rt Fish~r
0
~vl':~~~~:l, t!:~:;:~~
·in years. Lower than Just ask about them.
St, Columbus OH 432K. Alln: MONEY~
ly." Roll caiJ is .to name a fact . they're likely to be for some time to come.
We'll do whatever it takes to help =CENTt:R. . .
recently learned about Turkey.
· That means you can end up paying you with virtually any type of loan need. hklress
I
POMEROY • Pomeroy Village less for your loan. A lot less.
A loan for a new car or boat For college 01 Slale. Zi
PORTLAND - The Lebanon ~ouncil wiH meet in s~ill~es, .
·Whats more, Bank One has plenty , tuition. For home improvements. For that
~
P'--- - -- -- - 1
Township 'I'rustcet will meet Tues- s1on ,Wednesday at 7:~0 p.m. to of money to lend .. As part of one of the long overdue vacation. Or for just about
day •1 p.m. II the IOwnlbip build· conduct peri(IIIICI and regular nw. _~.
. . · any other wonhwhile purpose.
1
IllS.
nauo.Q
strongest banking orgaruzauons,
ing.
've set aside significant funds for.
They're all explained in the Bank I
What.e\erit takes:
I
ALBANY • Dittricl 16 PIC
consumerloans.Andwe'rereadyto Ore Loan Guide. To~}WI'free~clip ~-----"=:!: ---- -., ...J .
membenhip ~ Tuelday 11 7 To~~~b~:·.;~~te~ar:us:~~
p.m. 11 the Albany Granp Hall. Wctlncaday at 6 p.m·. at ~he
.,.,..,..;.c,oplMNCoNECooo...r•o• ,
.•
MARIETTA
Buckeye
Hills(Hocking Valley Regional
Development District Executive
Committee will meet Tuesday at
7:30 p.m. in the conference room
of the BH/HVRDD office in Marietta. The audit/budget and personnel commiueea will meet 81 5 f.m.
in the Rufus Putnam Room o the
Lafayette Hotel, 100 Front Street,
Marietta.

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BANK.=-ON£.

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Ohio State Grange Master and

PageviJJc township Building. ,

i a-.,.....

Rock Springs Church
group meets recently
The Rock Springs United
Virginia Wears, vice-president,
Methodist Women met recently at thanked all who helped with church
the church with opening and scrip- services and the bake ·sale. She also
ture reading by Mary Showalter.
presented the program "His Last
Roll call was taken and officers Supper with the Disciples." Al.l
reports given.
members participated.
Devotions from "Seasons of the
A donation was given to the
Lord" were given by Francis Goe- church in memory of Mrs. Gruescr.
glein.
The meeting closed with prayer
Prayer requests were taken and and refreshments were served by
Sharon Folmer led the group in Mrs. Wears and Mrs. Goeglein.
prayer.

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Joanne Ingram, Flora of Ohio
State Grange, will be the speaker
for the Meigs County Grange Banquet on April 10 at 7:15p.m. at
Salisbury Elementary.
Tickets for the banquet are
$6.50 each for adults and $5 .50
each for children and must be purchased by Sunday. Tickets are
available from Mci~s County

Junior High Scbool are, 1-r, Heather Blanks,
Teresa Simpson, Terri Smith, Stephanie Wood
and Brandi Hysell.

BOOK COVER WINNERS • Pictured are
winners of the book cover contest at Meigs

Junior High held during Right to Read Week.
L-r are, Franklin Pierce, April Reltmire and
Michelle Miller.

BOOKMARKER WINNERS • Winners of
the bookmarker contest at Meigs Junior High

School during Rigbt to Read Week are, 1-r,
Claude Whitlow, Charlotte Goodman and Ricky
Watson.

Grange Masters, Rosalie Story, Biil
Radford, Patty Dyer, Dorothy
Smith and Norman Will.
There will be entertainment by
talent entries from !991 as well as
other entertainmenl
For further information, or to
purchase tickets, conract Opal Dyer
at 742-2805, evenings.

Queens slated to speak
Queens of various loeal events
have been invited to speak and present awards to winners at the TriCounty Full Figure Beauty Pageant
on April 13 at the Holiday Inn in
Gallipolis.
Queens speaking will include:
Jane Bush, the 1991 Full Figure
Beauty Queen. She is a wife and
mother of two; a member of the
Emblem Club and Bowling
League; has competed in the Large
Lovely Beauty Pageant where she
placed third in her division.
Jennifer Hesson, who auends
Point Pleasant High School and is
captain of the flag corps will also
speak. She won the position to go
to National Speech Conference and
she belongs to the National Honor
Society. She auends the First
Church of God and was seh\cted
for 1992 West Virginia All State
Band. She is the 1991 Always-ARiver Queen.

Stephanie Scott, a graduate of
Kyger Creek High School, is
attending the University of Rio
Grande where she majors in fashion merchandising. She is the 1991
River Recreational and Gallia
County Junior Fair Queen. She is a
volunteer for United Way and on
Saturday will compete at Meigs
Hi~h School for the title of Miss
Oh1o River Valley."
Holly Williams will also participate. She is the 1991 Heritage
Queen for the Pomeroy Merchants
Association. She is head field commander at Meigs High School and
attends the Rutland Church of the
Nazarene; She is active with the
American Cancer. Society and
American Red Cross Bloodmobile.
She is a member of student council
and the yearbook staff. she is a
free-lance modcl .and a member of
the Shady River Shufflers clogging
group.

Bake and craft sale
Revival set
There
will be a bake and craft
Revival services will be held at
sale
at
the
Middleport Presbyterian
Reedsville United Methodist
Church
on
Friday and Saturday at
Church April 8-12 at 7:30 p.m.
each evening. Rev. Charles Eaton the Sears Store in Middleport.
invites the public.
Legion to meet
Racine
American Legion Post
SOLOS to meet
.
602
will
meet
Thursday at 7:30
SOLOS, a fellowship of single
o.m.
at
the
post
home.
Christians, including those who are
divorced, widowed and never marweeken'd meeting
ried, will meet at 4 p.m. on Sunday
There
will be a weekend meet- ·
at Pomeroy United Methodist
Church. New members are wel- ing Thursday through Sunday 7:·30
p.m. nightly at the Harrisonville
come.
Holiness Chapel. Route 684,
Pomeroy.
Rev. Rick Neville will be
Youth ll'OUPS to meet
guests~.
Rev. John Neville,
The Trinity Church Youth
pastor,
mvites
the
public.
Groups will meet Thursday at 5
p.m. Practice will be held for the
·Easter program.
HOCKINGPORT • The HockCar show planned .
ingport United Methodist Church
The Meigs High School VICA will h.old revival Wednesday
.Cub will sponsor a car show Satur- !hroug~ Friday at 7:30p.m. nightly
·day flo.n noon to 4 p.m. with regis- with Rev. Wcridell Stutler. l'ublic
tlllioo from 9 a.m. 10 noon. There inVited.
will be crafts exhibited, games;
music and door prizes. Further
POMEROY • Fourth District
informttion may be obll!ined by Court of Appeals will convene at
,calling 992·7013.
the Meigs C'ounty Courthouse at
9:30 a.m. for oral arg1,1mentston
four local cases. A question and
- Clll'lllftl set
answer seasion for Meigs County
The junicr class at Eastern High . shldcnts
wlu be included.
·
Scbool will bave 1 camivai'Saturday It 6:30 p.m. Admission is 25
THURSDAY
!*llllld thrn will be pmes and
RACINE
• Racine American
11!2ivitles for aliases. u wen u 'a Legion Post 602
will mee1 Thurs,
COuntry stOre. A dlnce will be held
day at 7:30p.m. at the post home.
in .tbe cafeleria from 7-9 p.m.
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The observance focused on not
only reading but writing and oral
work as well as a book cover contest, bookmark contest, and slogan
contest. The purpose of the program was to develop lifetime readers and stimulate and support the
total reading program throughout
the school years.
.
Winners in the seventh and
eighth grade book cover contest
were Franklin Pierce, fii'St, iUustrat·
ing "Dean Man's Cat;" April Reitmire, second, with "Funnybones;"
and honorable mention to MicheUe
Miller for "Peter Rabbit: Home
Again!" These students are from
the reading class of Mrs. Carla Saelens.
The DH reading class had a
bookmark contest and the winners
were Ricky Watson, Claude Whitlow and Charlotte Goodman. Chapter I slogan contest winners were
Theresa Simpson, Stephanie Wood,
Heather Blanks, Terri Smith and
POSTER CONTEST WINNERS • Poster
Brandi HyscU.
contest winners or Right to Read Week at Meigs
Prizes, ribbons, certificates and
food coupons were given to prize
winners.
Other phases of the observance
were silent reading, donation of
books to the classroom library with
over 150 books added to the classroom library of Mrs. Saelens.
There were bulletin board displays in the classroom and corridors, reports on famous Ohioans,
A-V activities, newspaper studies,
creative writing and book giveaways. A book fair was another
highlight of the week which was
held in the school library.
The school now qualifies for the
Ohio Reading Hall of Fame Award
to be given by the Ohio Depart- ·
ment of Education in Columbus.
This is the tenth consecutive year
the school will receive the award
from the stare due to their active
participation in activities revolving
around reading.

Pamona Grange names speaker

Meigs announcements

•

L'ommunity calendar

TOP SPELLERS - Top spellers at Salem Center Elementary
during the school's spelling bee were Laticia Metheny, first place,
si•th grade, and Stephanie Kopec, second place, fourth grade.

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TUESDAY
SYRACUSE - Revival at Syracuse Mission will be Tuesday
through Sunday at 7 p.m. with Bob
Taylor, Kentucky, evangelist.
There will be special singing and
Rev. Roy "Mike" Thompson
~nvites the public.

A program to encourage _stu- direction of Carla Saelens, Suzanne
dents to get involved in vanous Bentz, Jeanne Bowen; Chris
Ohio Right to Read activities ~as Dowler, Vicki Hughes, Debbie
carried out by the Me1gs Jumor Mink, and Ron Drexler. The theme
High reading classes.
was "Leap into Reading."
The program was under the

STAR GREENHAND • Stephanie Sayre was the presented the
Star Greenhand plaque and a $50 savings bond from JoAnn
Williams, Farmers Bank, at the annual Racine FFA banquet at
Southern High School, as Michelle Brown, president, looks on.

Racine FFA banquet honors members; awards presented
More than 125 members, parents and guests were on hand for
the annual Racine FFA Banquet
held at Southern High School.
Top awards went to Stephanie
Sayre for Star Greenhand, who
received a plaque and a $50 savings bond sponsored by Farmers
Bank; Michelle Friend, Star Chapter Farmer, who received a plaque
and a $50 savings bond sponsored
by Racine Home National Bank;
and Michelle Brown, Bob Lee Citizenship Award sponsored by Bank
One.
Receiving greenhand degrees
were Chris Brown, Jeremy Smith,
Mike Van Meter, Don Stephenson,
Judie O'Neil, Kathy Ottman,
Wendy Gibeau!, SheUy Gillenwter,
Jason Erwin, Rob Hill, Billie Jo
Long, Jeff Rose, Larry Patterson,
Christie Cooper, Terry Ottman,
James Parsons, Steve Edwards,
Chris Hamm and Michell
McDaniel.
Receiving chapter FFA degrees
were James Vineing, Clifford
Smith, Stephanie Sayre, John
Amos, Tyson Mugrage and Corey
Rowe. The stare FFA degree, only
presented to two percent in the
state, was received by Michelle
Brown.
Honorary chapter farmer
degrees were presented to John
Rice, Leah Ord and Opal Dyer.
Scholarship pins were presented
to Stephanie Sayre and Billie Long,
sponsored by the chapter; Larry
Patterson, for the creed, sponsored
by Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Bush;

Students get involved in 'Right-to-Read'
program at Meigs Junior High School

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CARLY JOE OUVER

Announce birth
of daughter
Earl and Vicki (Yoho) Oliver,
Burlington, N.C., announce the
birth of a daughter, Carly Jo, on
Jan. 27.
She weighed eight pounds and
10 ounces and was 20 and threequarter inches long.
The couple has another daughter, Kerianne.
Grandparents are Jim and
Wanda Oliver, Mt. Alto, W.Va.;
and Bill and Jean Yoho, New
Haven, W.Va.
Maternal great grandparents are
Donald and Enna Yoho, Pomeroy.

Honor students named

Here's an investment
you can enjoy living
with right now.

Area students named to the president's list at Washington State
Community College for the fall
term are: Monna J. Reynolds,
Thomas P. Morrissey, Thomas C.
Werry and Steven P. Erwin, all of
Pomeroy; William R. Johnson,
Racine; James M. Jarvis, Karen S.
Jarvis, and James B. Jarvis, all of
Torch; Amberly K. Short, Chester;
andJanine Gheen, Long B011om.

APeoples Bank home Improvement loan lets you eqJoy the conveniences or a
remodeled klJ.cben, a new family room. a new air condltloner...whatcver you need
to make your home a better place to Uve while you Improve Its value.

Plan cookie sale
Pomeroy Brownie Troop 1271
wiD have a booth cookie sale Saturday from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. at
Kroger's in Pomeroy. Six varieties
of Girl Scout cookies are available
at a price of $2 per box.

Call today and we'U be glad to assist you.

Dinner Friday
There will be a spaghetti dinner
Friday from 5:30-8:30 p.m. at
Chester Elementary. Cost IS $2.50
for students and $3.50 for adults.
The event is sponsored by the Eastem Athletic Boosters and !he' menu
includes, along with spagheui,
homema~ roll, slaw and beverage.

Cook honored
Kenneth R. Coo~. son of Raymond Cook, Syracuse, was awarded the Air Force Commendation
Medal at Keesler Air Force Base in
Biloxi, Miss., 628th ¥ilitary
lift.
.

"'ir-

Plan revival
Revival at Syracuse Mission
will be Tuesday through Sunday at
7 p.m. with Bob Taylor, Kentucky,
evangelisL There will bo llpccial
singing and Rev. Roy "Mike"
Thompson lnvires the public. ,
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MariettA .

373-3155
Lowell ·
896-2369

,,

Athelia

•

Belpre ,

593-7761

423-7516

Nelllonwllle

Middleport

753·1955

992-Wi1

Gl
mo-.

The Plains
797-4547

Memllor FDIC

eGCM 11111 :MI

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Plge-i-The Dally Sentinel

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Tuesday, March 31, 1992

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Services free of charge
Tuberculosis testing and treatment services are provided free of
charge to any resident of Meigs
County through the Meigs County
Tuberculosis and Health Chnic.
Constance Karschnik, R. N.
execullvc director, pomtcd out that
services arc funded through a .50
levy which was again renewed in
1991. The clinic i$ funded solely
through the tuberculosis levy with
no federal or state monies coming
into the program .
In 1991 there were 6,304 off1ce
v1s1ts, and 4,216 skin tests admmistered. The agency made 3,618
home visits and outside office contacts and 426 school visits and conuacts.
Eight chest cliniCS were conducted by Dr. Roy L. Donncrberg,
chest cliniician, Columbus, who
had 162 clinic visits and conferences. There were 771 chest x-mys
obtained and recomendations were
made for treatment if mdicated
after evaluation by the clin1cian.
There were 80 skin test chnics
he:d throughout the county during
1991 under the direction of Joan
Tewksbary, R. N. who recently

Tt)BERCULOSIS ADVISORY BOARD - Activities of the
Meigs County Tuberculosis and Health Association are guided by
an advisory board. Members include left to rigbt, seated, Dr.
Melanie Weese, Joanne Williams, Faye Wallace, Lillian Moore,

•The Area's Number I
Marl{etplace

retired' after 13 years of service.
The wberculosis office is guided
by an advisory board consisting of
13 members appointed by the
Meigs Co unt y Commissioners .
Makmg up that board arc Lloyd
Blackwood, Chester, Olive and
Orange Townsh1ps; James Hill ,
Syrac use Village; Dr. Larry
Kennedy, Middlepon Village; Dr.
Melanic Weese, Rac1ne V1llage:
Rev. W11l.am Middlcswarth, Sutton, Letart, and Lebonan Townships; Fredcnck Goebel, Chester,
Olive and Orange Townships.
Paul Patterson, Rutland Village;
Harold R1cc and Charles Rifne,
Sa li sbury, Sale m and Rutland
Townships; James Walton and lil Ian Moore, Pomeroy Vdalge;
Joanne Williams, Sutton. lebanon
and letart TownSJps; Faye Wal lace, Central OhiO Lung ASSOCiati on Reprcse ntali ve; and Ma1da
More, Board Consultant.
literature on tuberculoSis and
other respiratory diSeases IS avail able at the office located on the
second noor of the Meigs Multipurpose bulldiDg, Mulberry
He.ghts.

Tuberculosis is still a major
world health problem, according to
a report from Constance Karschnik,
R. N., executive director of the
Meigs County Tuberculosis and
Health Association.
Eig ht million new cases of
tuberculosis occur in the world
each year, she said, and we have
come to the end of the 30 year
decline in the United States. In
!990 the 50 states reported 25,701
cases to the Center for Disease
Control. In 1991 Meigs County
reported six new cases.
Karschnik said that by age the
largest increase in reported cases
occurred in the 25 to 44 year age

group. This, she said, may be largely attributed to the rising number of
tuberculosis cases among persons
with human immunodeficiency
virus infection or acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS).
"We are at a point in our lives
that requires us to sit up and take
notice of what IS going on around
us. We often think 'it can't happen
to me', but u can. The good news is
that the means to control and treat
tuberculosis is here and now,"
Karschnik said.
She explained that tuberculosis
is a communicable and contagious
d1sease caused by bactena, tuberculosis bacillus, that are usually
spread from person to perso n
through the air.

Call992-2156
MoN. thru FRI.

8A.M.-5P.M.- SAT.8-l2

CLOSED SUNDAY

POLICIES

• Ad• ouuide Gall•a, Maton or Melfi• counlle.t mull be
• Rece1ve ducoun t for adt paid m advance.

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

GALLI A COUNTY'S

"FINEST'
Hair &amp; Tanning Salon
446-8922

-Coostance Karscbnik, R. N.
Executive Director
Meigs County Tuberculosis
and Health Association

NEW SPRING &amp; SUMMER
HOURS
9 a.m.-8 p.m. Mon.-Fn .
9 a.m.-5 p.m. Sat.
OPEN SUNDAYS
12:00 P.M. - 5 P.M.
EASTER SPECIAL

Roy L. Donnerberg, M. D.
Chest Clinician

PERMS: $25.00
SPIRAL PERMS: $35.00
'Til April18, 1992
WE NOW HAVE 5 TANNING
BEDS
1 FREE TANNING SESSION
PER CUSTOMER WITH THIS AD

]ail fumes send 20 to hospitals, force inmate transfers
DAYTON, Ohio (AP) - Toxic
fumes created when a worker
mixed .bleach at the Montgomery
County Jail injured 20 people and
forced about 200 inmates from
their cells.
"The odor was very suong. It
was irritating to the eyes and
throat," Brian Dershem, a Montgomery County sheriff's deputy
who helped transfer the inmates,
said Monday.
Jail adminisuator James Olin
said 12 jail workers and e1ght
inmates were taken to hospitals.
Melissa
Lemmon ,
a
spokeswoman for St. Ehzabeth

Medical Center, said three people
were expected to be admitted there
with inhalation injuries.
Fourteen people were taken to
Miami Valley Hospital and three
others to Grandview Hospital and
Medical Center. All were e~pected
io receive treatment and be
released, hosp1tal officials said.
Olin said the incident occurred
at about 9:15 a.m . Monday in the
laundry room on the jail's fourth
floor. He said that when the reaction wh1ch caused the fumes
occurred, the worker had been fiU ing containers with bleach which
was to be automatically injected

into washmg machmes.
District Fire Chief James Dunham said sodium hydrochlorite and
hydrochloric acid, which commonly are found in bleaches, apparently
were mi ~ ed together, crcatmg
phosgene gas.
Paramedic Robert Tackett srud
phosgene gas can cause respiratory
problems and dizziness. He said the
concentration of the gas in the jail
wasn't high enough to be considered dangerous.
"None of the injunes were serious," said Tackett.
Dunham said the reaction
occurred after the Jail worker

mlXed two kinds of bleaches m one
f1v e-ga llon contamer. After it
began reacting , the contamer was
removed from the buildmg, said
Dunham.
Olin said the 200 inmates on the
jail' s thrrd and fourth floors were
removed from their cells and taken
to cells on the other side of the
building.
Dershem said the inmates were
coopemti ve and were in a secured
area at all umes.
Ohn said the bwlding was vennlated and the inmates returned to
their cells at about noon.

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Redefining death in the Baby Theresa case
By DAVID BRIGGS
Associated Press Writer
A baby who lived nine days
without a fuU brain has forced the
nation to grapple with its definition
of death and the ethical boundaries
of organ donation.
As Theresa Ann Campo Pearson
gave up the struggle for life Monday in Fon Lauderdale, Fla., ethicists, lawyers and judges debated
whether soc1ety should make an
exception for anencephalic infants
to rules prohibiting organ tmnsplants from the living.
Anencephalic infants rarely live
long. and Theresa's parents, Laura
campo and Justin Pearson, wanted
her declared brain-dead before she
actually died so that ber organs
would still be usable and her kid·
neys, liver, heart, lungs or eyes
could be given to other children.
But many ethicists warn that
opening the doors to kill the living
to save the dying could lead to
abuses that endanger all sons of
people, from less severely disabled
illfants 10 coma10se )lltients and
. C'lal the - l y Iellrded.
"Immediately one hits the slippety slope and srans looting for

other kids who are almost as bad.
And that's a real problem," srud
George Annas , professor of health
law at the Boston University
Schools of Medicine and Public
Health. "It just seems too horrifying to use other people as means to
other people's ends."
Theresa was born March 21
with most of her skull missing and
only a brain stem, the part of the
body that controls renexes such as
breathing and heanbeat.
Her 30-year-old parents, a construction worker and a waiuess,
quickly made their dec1sion. "If
my kid can help another baby live,
then that is what we want to do,"
&lt;:amposaid.
But a county judge said Thursday that because the baby's brain
stem was functioning, she could
not be declared brain-dead and her
vital organs could not be taken.
Under a 1988 Florida law, death
cannot be declared until all brain
activity ceases.
Florida's Supreme Coon refused
to hear the case on an emergency
basis Monday.
The baby's organs were not
transplanted. Doctors said when

she was removed from hfe support
Sunday that they would be too
dam aged by the 11me she died .
Also, no matl:hing recipients were
immediately found . Her corneas
were donated for research.
National public health policy
generally prohibits organ removal
from people who are not legally
dead. One problem organ donatton
programs face is dealing with the
fear that organs might be taken
from a person before death.
" In our culture .. . it is unethical
to kill in order to save. It's unethical to kill pc~on A to save person
B," said Stephen Post, a medical
ethicist at Case Western Reserve
University in Cleveland.
But if ever an exception to brain
death could be made, Post said, 11
would be in the case of anencephalic infants. They rarely live long and
it is unknown whether they are able
to experience anything in life.
Waiting for death does not always
work because the organs deteriorate so rapidly.
"Almost all of us involved in
uansplantation would like to see
babies with anencephaly as paten·
tial uansplant donors," said Dr.

Union members stage sit-in ·at NCR
:DAYTON, Ohio (AP) - About

tors refused to leave and later

30: union memben protesting what began moving into other work
they ~ece is anti·IDiion behavior areas.

NCR COrp. were remomlflom
die company'• headquarters by
palil:e aftCr Slllinl a sit-in.
l!dwiRI lfod, vil:e president of
Communications Workers Local
4322. said the dcmonstriiOrs wm
part of a larJer sroup of uaion
membol'l wlto had been prowling
outSide .. buildinlwau.n Holloway, NCR's vice
of Personnel and education, said tbe )IOielltll entered the
about 11:45 Lm. Monday
llld
ehlnlin •
Ho way sai7 the demonstraby

pres._

•

He said polic~ removed them
from the buirding by police at
about2:30 p.m. and placed them on
a police bUJ.
"There weren't any problems
with any physical ltiJ1d1 of
actions,'' wd Holloway. "They
pe8Cefully got on a bus and left.".
Hog afao said the demon~tra·
ton were removed by pollee. He
said that to his knowledge, no
chargee were filed apinst them.
to District 2 of the city's
Police Department were unanswered. A d::Idatc:her at police
headquarters
he had no infor-

can.

mation on the incident.
The CWA has been campaigning to unionize a group of engineers at NCR, but has lost ~lections
tn n.ytoe 1114-JndianaP.oUs to ~ep-

reaent ~wOrkers.

Hou did NCR tried 10 gain
fa'IOT '""' the llll&amp;ineen befote die
vote took place. Tbe union had
filed a
with the National
LaborR
ons Board.
"It's unfortunale that the CWA
has chosen lltil method to preuure
NCR employees,'' said HOlloway.
"On two 1ep1ra1e occasi0111 in the
past month, NCR employees have
voted qainst the CWA. - ~ CWA
is !IJlPilOotly unwllllng to rely on
the NLRB election process."

C=411I

Leonard Bailey, who directs the
infant heart transplant program at
Lorna lmda Umversuy Medical
Center in Lorna Linda, Calif.
" They have no other potential, and
they have the potenual to save
other's hves."
EthiCISt Arthur Caplan of the
University of Minnesota said honoring the parents ' wishes also is
important. "I thmk the parents
deserve so me redemption and
transformation of their tragedy,"
he said.

Cutbacks include
ex-chairman's son
AKRON, Ohio (AP) - Cutbacks by the Goodyear Tire &amp;
Rubber Co. have claimed the job of
a 17-ycar company veteran who is
the son of a former Goodyear
chairman.
.
" It's certainly an emotional
time,' ' said Robert George Mercer,
41 , who works in the company's
Washington ·public relations office'.
"There's no question about it. I
have to realize Goodyear is not pan
of the family any more."
Goodyear today will close the
last of its regional public relations
offices. It has closed similar off~ce~
in New Ybllc, Chicqo, Los ADse·
les and Houston in the last decade.
''The regional offices have just,
.. become expenq&amp;ble," said 1ohn
Perduyn, v1ce ~t of publiC
affairs at GoodyOir'a heidquart.aJ
Ia Akron.
"I told Bob a lOIII IIme qo thai
this was a trend.... There would
come a time we CXIIIId liCK apport
these teglonal ol'8ca," he said.
Goodye•r elimin&amp;Jed about
7,700 jobs last,...,
.
·
Robert Edward Mercer, who
retired as chalnaan in 1!18!1, said·
Monday his aon wu as litely .as
other employeetiO be laid off,
• "It's an evcn·hlnded policy thai
not even the ex-dlllnnan's son IS
immiDIC to,'' the elder Mercot llid.

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
I 00 p.m. Saturday
I 00 p.m. Monday
I 00 p m. Tuesday
I 00 p m Wednesday
IOO·p m Thursday
!'00 p m Fnday

Aerial
Photography
By

M&amp;M Fleet
Homes, Farms,
Business, Other
Day (614) 446-9814
Night (614) 446-4406
Kathy Cumings
Office Deputy

Ruth Ann Boyer
Receptionist

Public Notice

DAYTON, Ohio (AP)- A man
who has been convicted of one
bank robbery and may have been
involved in 21 others has been sentenced to 18 years in prison.
U.S. District Judge Walter Rice
1mposed the sentence Monday on
Gabriel Carl Barber, 32, in connection with the robbery of $5,388
from a Sw Bank braiJch m Middletown last May.
Rice said a presentence investigation linked Barber to 21 other
bank robberies in Ohio and Indiana
between Oct. 5, 1990, and May 10,

1991.

The iailterm is to begin after the

completion of a 19-year prison sentence Barber received earlier this
month after being convicted of
attempted murder, felonious assault
and attempted escape. He was
accused of knocking a jailer unconscious with a 10-pound barbeD last
October in an attempt to escape
from the Montgomery County Jail.
Rice said Barber also has been
convictild of receiving stolen property, breaking and entering and
burglary.
"The defendant has gone from
theft offenses to offenses of a far
more violent, frightening nature,"
said Rice.

Japanese studios bypass
Japan-bashing book

.1

TOKYO (AP) - The Japanese
are quietly exerting control over
America, a character warns in
Michael Crichton's new Japanbashing best-seDer, "Rising Sun."
The book itself may ttave been a
test case of that alleplion. Was it
shunndd by scvml Hoii)'Wood.studios, despite good ll)llket potential.
as a film, because their Japanese
owncn were, well, quietly exerting

A more realistic issue than the
question of control from Tokyo is
whether executives at the U.S. fdm
subsidiaries, mindful of the
Japanese names on their pay·
checks, are practicing self-censor·
ship when they see scripts that cast
Japan in a bad lighL
A source at Sony ,Pictures E~ter- ·
tainment, the Japanese subsuliary
that owns Columbia and TriStar,
control~
said the studios would ,be inclined
Nonsense, says Sony Corp., the to avoid a script as severely critical ·
Tokyo-based owner of Columbia of Japan as "Rising Sun."
and TriStar Pictures, neither of
·'The bottom line is we are
which bid for " RisiAB Sun." Ab90- own edb y a Japanese company,"
lutely not. acconlinJto Matsushita said the source, who spoke on conElectric Industrial Co., the parent dition of anonymity.
of MCA, which in turn owns UniRoger Birnbaum, 20th Century
versal Studios. Universal also Fox •s president of worl~wide pro·
duction, said, "I'm sure some of
slftt!ll 1111 of the blcldiQ.
·'
-~•w. do not pt~Pllved"
(the ojher studios) thou&amp;ht about • ,
deciaioal on movir ~ aid who owned their companies.
·'
Jane SMelley, a lp0bsw0111111 for You've gOt to think about iL"
The book is a delective mystery
MatiUiblta Ia Tot,o. "This iJ not
e'Vell I qllellion lofC,4 would brjJII freighted with Ions dia,ribcs
against Japan's allegedly unfair
upwidla."
A U.S .-owned IIUdio, 20th Cclt- trade polic1es, which are blamed in
tury Pox, was the
bid part for America's economic
on IIIO¥ie rfJ!tts 10 '
' I SIBI." decline.
"We tR defmitely lit war with
Industry instderssay thlt wu very
unusual considerinJt~e book's Japan,'' a lead character says. At
promial:~~---~with • another point he claims the ·•
p!OVtll
in Hallywoocl, • ~ JaJIIIIICSC • lR the most racist jleO- • •
made ~ and good dmin&amp; Ia the pie on the planei."

In Memory ·

2

wltb

In Loving Memory Of
BILL EICHINGER
Who P8818d Away
Two Y81fll Ago
!Merch 23, 1990)

367-Che•hire
388-Vinlon
245-Rio Grande
256-Guyan DL.t.
643-Anbia DL.t.
379-Walnul

992-M;ddleporli
Po me ro y
985-Che•ler
843-Portland
247-Letu t FaD•
949-Ruine
742-Rudand

CLASSD'IEDS
GET RESULTS • FAST!

2- ln Memor y
~ Announcem enlA
4- Gi vep,way
S- Happ) Ado
6-- Loat and Found
1- Loll and Found
8- Publ1c Sale &amp;

458-~on

576-Apple Gro-w~
773-Muon
882-New lln~n
895-lelart
937-Buffalo

Public Notice

Outollnding
Jan. 1, 1991... ..... 11 ,327.47
Retired,199t .......... tt,327,47
Outollnding
Dec. 31 , 1991 ................-41 certify thia report to
correct and uue, to the beot
of my knowledge.
March 20, 1992
Paul S. Moore, Clerk
32785 Pleasant View Rd.
Racine, Ohio 45n1
(614) 849-2194
(3) 31,1lc

property. the ·•me being .t
14
in M. C.corner
HOBART'S
tht IOUihellt
of Lot
ADDITlON: thence along the
north aide of lha abovementioned alloy 40 feel to
tho aoulhoaal corner of Lot
15; thence north along tho
line between the Lola 14
and f5 aboul124 IHIIo the
northweet corner of Lot 14;

Public Notice
NOTICE OF SALE
By virtue of an Order of

Sale luuod out of tho
Common Pleaa Court of
Meigo County, Ohio, In tho
can of tho Leader
MoriRage
Compony,
Plaintiff, VI. Botto J. Hill, et
al., Defendento, upon a
judgment therein rendered,

being Caae No. 91·CV·283 in
aald Court, I will offer lor
aalo at the front door of the
Courthouae

in Pomeroy,

Melgo County, Ohio, on tho
29th day of April, 1992l at
10:00 A.M., tho follow ng
Ianda and tenemento,
foca"d at 427 Lincoln
Street, Middleport, Ohio
45760. A complete legal
doacrlpllon of the root
eallllle atollowa:
Situated In tho Slate of
Ohio, County of Molgo,
Village of Middleport, and
being Lol Number FOUR (4)
in M. C. HOBART'S
SUBDIVISION in tho aloreuid Middleport, Ohio. The
eaid lot ia on Lincoln Street
and beginning at a certain
point 121 IHI weal along
Lincoln Stroot from the
northweat corner of the J. J.
While Hom..tead property,
tho aame being at tho
northeaat corner of Lot 14
In M. C. Hobart'• Subdlvialon to tho Village of
Middleport; thence In 1
eoulherly direction about
127 feet along the line
between Lola 13 and 14 in
oubdlvloion to a point on an
alloy 120 feet weal from the
J. J. White Homeatead

POMEROY - Brick Ranch Home with 2 lott, fireplac.,
CIA, attic &amp; lull baHmenl that could be used lor
additional. rooms, front &amp; tide pon:hts. A 1 ear garage
wilh ovolhoad ala~ago. ExiiB little houao included. VERY
NICE &amp; NEAll $45,000. Malee an offer.
NEW LISTING - Pomeroy - 1 floor frame home with 6
rooms, 2-3 bedroomt, beth, gat F.A. heat, full basement
with garage, unit air, cable hookup $28,000.
REDUCED - 60xto0 vacant lot on Main Slraot. Don't
delay.. .lhis won'tlullongl $1 ,SOO.
RACINE - Beautiful historic-brick homo. 6 room•. 3
bedrooms, 2 fir11places. Very original! $53,SOO. Make an
offerl
MIDDLEPORT • Very nic. r11mocltltd HI story home, 3
bedrooms, fonead yard, Irani porch, storage building, lots
of clotet sp~. $19,500. COME SEE!
RUTLAND- Beech Grove Rd. - Aprox. 7 acres wilh 3 •
Mobile Homea. Great ronllllnvoolmontl $20 ,~ ...0wner
willaccepi IllY reaoonablo olft~
FOR mJlB
HAVE IT

.. .

oul"':·to

OUR

But ' fondly remembered

Your- of humor,
.Your low lot your family,
And the love · of . tho
· ouldoorL
rnlll_ ,au, Dlld.
'

we

Mery,.....,,U

•

nwblpla.

.

'

eridJohn

1/

THAT

vmlll.YAADI
HE~V

E. CLEL.AND.-..............................,,f...lt2~1t1

TRACY •INAGEA ..............-........ .~o ••••••••••• t ..... l . ..
JEAN TRlaiELt.. •• "'''''''""'"-'"'''""'''"",'........M. .IO
Jq HILL.............................................:..............-111 4411

thence

eaaterly

Real Estate appraiaed at

ROOFING

Our SprinfJ Shipnunt Of
1roy-BIIt1Wen Now In Stock.
Your l.ocoJ 'fr!!·Blh Dealer

WAKEFtftD'I

Gutters
DownspO\JtS
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

T&amp;T llWN SERVIa

•wn Malntlftlnce

c•

372-8697 ...
I--800.538-1440

·-,.- .•

..
..•
•

.•• '

W11.nlr ·d tr, Uuy

l.m: ~ l o• k
(/l-- ll.o y &amp; f:r11. 1n
1 6~- Sf:! d &amp; .,, rt1l1 zr r

(, i -

I

Tl!

·-.
..
••

1\~I'OI!T\TIO'I

71- Aulo• for S11lr.
72- Truck• (or Salr.
7J.- V,. n, &amp; 1\. WIJJ
74-- Motorcycl~~
75-- BoalA &amp; Motor~ for Sa.lr.
76-- Auto Par., &amp; Acoeo•oriool
77- Auto Repair
78- C1mp1ng Equ•pment

-'

Re nl

~11-:HCII li\DI~I-:

81 - Home lmponemenll

51- Hou1ehold Good.
52- Sporting Good•

82- Plumb1ng &amp; Healins
83- Excavating
84- Ele&lt;tncal &amp; R.r,-~'"'tio~

5:l- Antique•
54- M11c. Merchandi1e
55- Buildmg Sup ph.,

85- Gene ral Haulms
86-- Mob1 le Home Repa)r
87- Upholltery

..-

2/2019213 mo.

Homes-Pets-Wildlife
Malorcyciii·Eic

'l(atfr.ryn
'Jv(uufcws
"SPECIAUZING IN SLATE
OR CANVAS"
39815 Gold Ridge Road
Pome,oy, Ohio 45761

Welcome Slates

Ch•rgeslor

$20.00

Sorvlcee...................16,688

Cuatom PainUnga
614-992-2242'

Rnea, Uceellll,

&amp; P•mlla...................B,7as
Miacollaneoue ............ 16,5411
TOTAL
RECEIPTS ............. 104,268
EXPENDITURE
DISBURSEMENTS:
Security ol Person &amp;
Proporty................... tB,138
Public Health
Sorvlco...................... 151

'. '\ "

..

·, 1 ' \

IF YOU WEAR It HEAR

l!t ADMIRE l.'li. WATCH
IT, PLAY ITl uSE IT or

NEEu IT

YII'Uflatlltt.

EMILY'S AniC

Leisure Time

We tum your new and
good uatid ll'licloo into

AcUviUaa...................8,356

oa-..

cash and
you morMY
on what you nHd.

CALL 992•6120

"OW OPE"
MYSTIQUE'
TANNING

1SSessions.- ~5
.Plus 1 FREE

Hrs. 8-10 Mon. lhru Sat.
NEW SCA WOLFF lED 2451
T1111iltg ProtludtlYtilaWe
Experience the
MJ•Jiguo 'In Tennin.f.

1

(Ill for Atltlolttt.tt.

. S·2·1•

Public Notice
Tr. .ury
BolM1ce.......................42,327
ln-lmonla................30,000
Tolal Tr•aury
Balance....................72,327
Oulatanclng. ............... (1,224)
TOTAL
BALANCE..............71 ,103
SUMMARY OF
INDEBTEDNESS
Oulatanclng 1/t/11G. 0. Bondl............25,000
G. 0. No................31,000
TOTAL .....................II,OOO
RETIRED 1"1G. o. Bondl............... s,ooo

Trena,.....n.....................301
G. 0. Nolll..............20,150
Tranelor..OuL..............(645) , TOTAL ....................25,150
Other UMoiNonop.
Oulatanclng 12131111Expendl-._ ....(2,084)
G. 0 . Bondl............20,000
a.o. ..........,......... to,IIO
TOTAL OTHER FIN.
SOURCE~~ ......... (35e)
TOTAL.." .............- ..10,150
THIS IS AN UNAUDITED
Eu. Rapla and Other
ANAHCIAL STATEMENT
Ananctng ~ Ovorl
1 _,.ly lhle rapon to be
(Under) Exp. Dtu. a
Olher U.-.4Mt. ......(7,t43) correct M1d true lo the boat
of my "'-lodge.
Fund C.h BalaMI
Jan. 1, 1"1.... ,.......... 11,381
Janice Llwaon, Clark·TIWI.
FundC.hlalanpo
•
100 Charry 81.
Deo. 31, 1"1..... "" 12,241
RMIM tor Enoumbl'.
SyraoiM 011. 4S77I
o.c. 11 .......................1,101 ($) 31, Ito

'

614-992-2549

314/WI mo.

YOUNG'S

EXCAVATING
BULLDOZING

CARPENTER SERVICE

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

6

~1.--.'4.00

,.............

oOuk ltpolro4

- ~~·luk•t••ll &amp;
...--w[-.: S.U.Tr.,Wts

-:~

46387 Scout C11mp Road
Cheater, Oh.

...floom Addltlona
-Guttor Work
-E._ic.. ond Plumbing
-Roofing

--lnllrlor • Exterior
Palnti"JJ
(FREE ESTIMATES)

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215

PH. 614-992·5591

P-oy,Ohlo

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS

LINDA'S
PAINTING &amp; CO.

3-13·92-tfn

mo.

HOWARD
EXCAVATING

Spetlallzlng In Custom
Frame Repair
N!W &amp;US!D PARTS
FOR All MAKES
&amp; MOD!LS

- lrl Us 0. If ffl'

37632 West Shade Rood
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
614·985-4180 ..." .......

,,..,,...

DARWIN, OHIO
7131f911lfn

Call 985-4192
3-l..t mopd

BISSELL &amp;BURKE
CONSTRUCTION

J&amp;l
INSULATION

MICROWAVE OVEN
and VCR REPAIR
AUUIIS

•New Homes
•Garages
,
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare

•Vinyl Siding
•Replacement
Window
•Roofing
•Insulation

JAMES KEESEE

Iring II II Or Wa

KEN's'i~IANCE , -.
SERVICE
992·5335 or
985·3561

FREE ESTIMi'rES

992·2772 or
742-2097

985·4473
667·6179

539 Bryan Place
Middleporl, Ohio
t1114nfn

r,.·

INTERIOR &amp;EXTERIOR

1-800·848·0070

-13·'92'·1 mo.

..

,,,....... ,., Olllce

2171.1ocoatiSL
Pa,MIIOY, OliO

2-7-92-lln

3123/92Afn

:\TTENTI&lt;l~

WANTED
Old Currency Dated
Between 186t-1929.
Eepecially Nlllonal
Bank Curr~~ncy from
any state. Paying
$300.00 and up tor
specific plecea from
Racine, Pomeroy,
Middlepon and
Ravenawood.
PETE SIMPSON
Evening•

•

•r"*• ,., l'llill O.r Oll'li1llhg

992·7013 or
992-5553
OR TOll FREE

992·3838

742·2341

For Moro lnfll Col

3-16-1 mo pd

FREE ESTIMATES

.1Ya Mi. out New
Lima Rd.
Rutl1ad, o•lo

sunder 1-s pm

Pb. Local Salesmaa
742·2072

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

Or SIIJIIr
102 E. Main StrHI
Polltrf!J, Ohio
To Flnd,_~IJ!"o.

IIUST PRI!-IlEOISTER
HRS: 11....-s.t.10 am-5 pm

Guar.,teod

ltiiOIS

3/11/V211

10 .......~ .........
MAR. 23, 7:00 pm - lola Painting Rabbit Family
Cenllrpilce
MAR. 24, 1:00 pm - B•kal
Clou
MAR. 30, 7:00 pm - Ba-ath
SheepPiaqutl

lllllrial • Labor

1«'60
•New

: ·. .

3127/V21lfn

TROLLEY STII'ION
CUFTS

I Styloo

TEAFORD'S
COUNTRY CLUB

~-

3-1 5·'92·1 mo. pd.

30x50 erectod lor
lnapectlon

4121112, 1 mo. pd

112.50 H, or

742-2138

Boat Price• I Service lor
Poat Frame G•oge• I
Barna
Choic• ol12 colore •
tliding or rotlup do.,.
Stondard k&gt; unlimited eizea

614-949-2627
Lawn Mowing,
Fenillzing, Weeding,
and Seeding.
Shrub and Tree
Trimming &amp; Removal
Reaidondal &amp;
Commercial
Free Eatlmataa

oGolf

REASONABLE RATES

T&amp;M BUILDERS

KEVIN'S LAWN ·
MAINTENANCE

6..7
s:;;:

COAL
LIMESTONE
AGRICULTURAL
LIME

Cheshire, OH.
112/tln

¥f9211 mo. pd.

TROY-BI£T ,

Revenutl .................. 43,812

Government ........... 28,89S

949·2168

ommtool.ll I Rllldonllal

"PArt: UT'IMATEI'-u-_. . . . . . .

WAKEFIElD'S

Capilli Oudoy............. 10,688
Debt SOf'lict.............. 20,444
TOTAL DISBURSEMENTS ............... 100,148
Total Rocoipla over/
under Diab................. 4,120
OTHER ANANCING
SOURCES/(USESI
Tranalera--ln ..................3,628
Tranalera-QuL ...........(1,792)
Other Uaea/Nonop .. .
Expendituroa ...;......(1,4 t 3)
Total Other Fin.
Sourcoo/Uoeo ...............423
Exc. Rcpll M1d Other Fin.
Sourcoa Overi(Under)
Expend. Dieb. &amp; Other
UoeaiNeL ................... 4,543
Fund Caoh Balance
Jan. 1, 11f1 ............. 24,314
Fund"Caoh Balance
Dec. 31, 1991 ........... 28,157
Roaorve for Encumb .
Dec. 31,1991............. 4,225
PROPRIETARY FUNDS
OPERATING REVENUES:
RECEIPTS:
Chargootor
Servlcee..................68,848
Miocollaneoua ..............2,162
TOTAL
RECEIPTS ...............7t ,810
OPERATING EXPENSES:
DISBURSEMENTS:
Current:
Peraonal Sorv..........18,208
Contractual
Servl-...................20,115
Supplloo and
,._......................21,705
Capital Ouday............. 11,614
Delli Service.................6,875
TOTAL DISBURSE·
MENTS.....................78,517
Total Recoipla o-..rl
under Oleburoe-

V•·,;I:IM.ill4:'
1rr Tr•d•:

S~tl• :

(, (_ hrm l:'l'Hr•m•·nl
{,l -

Call614·992-6637
St. Rt. 7

FREE ESTIMATES

plott Londoc.lplng
Top Soli I llulehlng

ltlO Wtsl, AIM.., Oliool93.J81S

General

hr

F \11\1 ~1 ' 1'1'1.11-:S
.~ 1.1\ E!'i roCK

Quality
Stone Co.
SIZED LIMESTONE
•
FOR SALE

NEW-REPAIR

II. SO Well,A~u~ ~ •S93.JII S

Public Notice

Tranaportation .............•4,476

• rullJ&gt; &amp;

•

,~

Our Spring Shipment Of
Troy-Ddt 1\llen Now In Stock.
Your ~aJ 'n-!f·Bill D.aJ•r

lntergovernmena.l

~a~')-

·•

r;::==;:::====;rr=======~rr::;===:::::;::::::;r~~~~~~~:=;
r TRuY-B/£T'
Howard L Wrltesel
(illiJAYMAR HAULING

$29,500.00. Tho Real Eotato
cannot be oold lor looothan
lwo-thirdo tho appraioed
value.
TERMS OF SALE: Cuh
on delivery of deed.
Jameo M. Soulaby, Sheriff
of Meiga County
(3) 31 ; (4) 3, 10, 3tc

CASH BASIS COMBINED
ANNUAL FINANCIAL
REPORT
For tho Flacal Year Ended
December 31, 1991
Syracuae Village
Molga County, Ohio
GOVERNMENTAL FUND
REVENUE RECEIPTS:
Localllxoa................. t8,432

~u~wa l ln~Lr um r:nu

49-- For Lease

16- Rad•o, TV &amp; CB Repa~t
17- Mllcellaneous
18- Wanted To Do

along

Lincoln Stree~ Middleport,
Ohlo45760.

48- Equ1pment (or

p, lJ, fnr S11lr:

BU 8 IDe• S 8 serVIC
. • eS

Lincoln Street 43 feel to tho
place of beginning.

Commonly known aa: 427

E.J~.~ttc WuntOO

41- Howe. (or Rcnl
42- Mobi~ Home• for Rent
4J- Farm• (or Rent
44-- Apartment for Rent
45- Furni•hed Rc.om1
4&amp;- Space for R~nt
47- Wanted to Rent

14- Bwine,. Trammg
lf-. School• &amp; l n.s truct•on

9- Wanled to Buy

36- Real

HE!\T\LS

11- Help W•nled
12- s.tuatJORI Wanted

A.uct1on'

:12- Mob1k ll omr" f•or Sui•
:u- Furms for Sui•:
:l4--- Hus mc6s lhulrl• ng.~

35- LoLa &amp; Acreage

r----"6w&amp;~mrniiiiiiru::;----~

!j(,__

!i7-

l

li

1\E.\L E~T\TE
:u- Il o me~; for Suit

Rates are for consecutive runs, broken up days w1ll be
charged fo r each day as separate ads •

675-Pa. Pleuant

Public Notice

992·2259
. , 6Q8~ST. ~IN
POMEROY, OHIO

llle L.ont Ollllod you holM,

2J- l•r o(f'.JUI IOnal St:rv11'

County Meigs County Mason Co., WV
Area Code 614 Area Code 614 Area Code 304
446-Go!UpoUo

IIUHinf.eM o,.r,r.rhuul y

22- Mon,..y lo l~•ton

Galli a

Card of Thanks

Mydeepeet
appreciation to the
YO{ifi"lil IN I*!
election• In Scipio
Townehlp; alto to
Melga County Auditor
end Tr•aurer,
Commlaaionefll end
ProMCuting Attorney,
!hill have worked with
the pMI 10 yeare, ·
which I've enjoyed.
1will no longer be
reepqnelblelor Scipio
Townehlp recorde 11
of March 31, 1992.
Betty J. Blahcp

21-

following telephone exchanges ...

Public Notice
Chargea ............ 1,004.67
ANANCIAL REPORT OF
TOTAL DISBURSETOWNSHIPS
MENTS .............. 103,215.80
For Roell year Ending
Depoaitory
December 31, 1991
Bolance...............65,904.85
SHTTON TOWNSHIP
County of Meigo
lnvoatmonll.............5,500.00
Total Troaoury
"Thio ie an INiaudilod
Balance...............71,140.85
Anancill Report''
LHa Oullllndlng
SUMMARY OF CASH
Checko ..................7,839.19
BALANCES, RECEIPTS
AND EXPENDITURES
TOTAL
BALANCE...........63,565.66
GOVERNMENTAL FUNDS
SUMMARY OF
RECEIPTS:
Tun......................38,466.03
INDEBTEDNESS
tnlll'govornmonlll
Recelpll ............. 73,270.43
Real Estate General
lnlll'eoL ....................3,203.98
All Other
Revenue ..................336.10
TOTAL
RECEIPTS ........ 115,276.54
DISBURSEMENTS:
General
GovernmonL ......30,125.00
Public Safoty.......... 14,428.96
Public Worb .........37,m.3t
HNith .......................t,5!iU8
Debt Service
Not Principal
PaymenL.. ....... t 0,322.80
lniii'Ht and Flacol

Bank robbery suspect
gets additional iS years

Fl:\ t-.CI \L

1

667-Cool'liUe

It is now poss1ble to treat

patients on an outpatient basis due
to the cffecti ve antibiOtics, the
nurse said, noting that 22 patients
were g1ve medication through the
Meigs County office in 1991. She
said that the key element to effccuve tuberculoSIS control is coopemtlvc efforts that produce early dlllgnosis and rapid reportmg or-suspected and known cases to the local
tuberculosis office . The law
requires reports within 48 hours.
Each physician, dentist, pathologist or nurse, as well as the superintendent, adminisuator or any other
person m any institution, school, or
day care center is responsible for
reponing suspected cases of tuberculosis.

COPY DEADLINE
Monday Paper
Tuesday Paper
Wednesday Paper
Thursday Paper
Fnday Paper
5Uilday Paper

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

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

P"'i••id r--__:-C~Ia:-:s:::sifi~';:e::d~p=a=-g=-e:::s:-c~o=v=e::r-;t~h-=e---

• Free Ad., Go&gt;enay and Found ad. undor IS word• wHI bo
run 3 day• at no charge.
• Prlce of ad fo~ aU c~pital ~etten it double pric:e of~ c01t

and Helen Swartz, and standing, Charles Rifne, Dr. Larry
Kennedy, Fritz Goebel, Rev. William Middleswarth, and Lloyd
Blackwood. Other members or tbe board, not pictured, are James
Hill, Maida Mora, Paul Patterson, Harold Rice, and Jane Walton.

"When people with tuberculosis
of the respiratory tract cough, airborn infec tious particles are produced. If these bactena are mhaled
by other people, they cause an
infectoin that spreads througout the
body. Most mdividuals who
become infected do not develop a
chnical illness because the body's
immune system brings the infecuon
under conuol.
"However, infec ted people do
develop a positive reaction to a
tuberculm skin test. The infection
can persist for years, perhaps for
life, and infected persons remain at
risk of developing disease at any
time, especially if the immune system becomes weakened or lowered
m some way," Karschnik said.

..• .
...
..

RATES
---!~-~
L)~~
~ttE§~~~;v~ )

Thberculosis still a major health problem
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News StaiT

.•••.
...
-.

\ I o lult· ,\ ll •"1 hIt· 11 "It· II "na· &lt;I" 1"
' ~

'

rs,

.-

1,

I

P1..1 II 0Yr. C..,esrloa

YhrriiiJI aid

F1raaces

•10 yr. heat PUA11
compresser warranty
•Free estimates

Bennetts Mobile Home Heating &amp; Cooling
139tSaflonl5dtloiRIL
Gai!Pels,OWt
Cal
446·9416 orl-800-172-5967

1-614-764-2101

A&amp;IAUTO

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

IIISOI,WY• .

..

..

•
lew HoMes • Yl1yl Slllil1
New Gara..s • Rtpl••••t WI•••• ...
Roo• Allllltlolls • loofl11

Specl•llzil/.=

n

cO.:t~''
u ......,.

~1

l1'el, • .. It ..LI
ALSO COIPII1I AUTO
IEPAII SIIVKI .. 24
HOUR TOWill.

COMMIRf:I.U. and RISI8ENTIAL
I'BEE ISTIMA'II'.S

614·949·2101

tr 949·2160
(loluiii1JC•I)

1·304·773·9160

2112182

U-'12-1 --pet.

.

~

'

.'

�Page

to-TtMi Dally S.ntlnel
SNAFU® by Bruce Belittle

Announcements

3

Pomeroy-MiddlepQrt, Ohio
31 Homes for Sale
2 bedroom home 3 ac:rea. Along
Ohio Rlvor, Rt. 33, Lotort, 304895'3488.
ln Mercerville for 1111 or INH
by owner: 11 rooms • or 5 BR•
2 bath• wlw central ale + hill, 2
Kltchono wlp hook-up 2 dloh·
wash•r•. 200 Amp electric servic• will conoldor lend contract.
Phono 215-4114-1301
On river, $8000, IOJN down, or
Its&amp; for cash 814-149·2525

Announcements

Comlna .an In Rutland: Ctr·
titled dilr caiW for ages 1·9, call
614·1112·2Vlll, 1-llpm
MAKE A FRIEND ... FOR LIFE!
Scandlnlvltn, Europetn, South
American,
Yuaoallvtan,
JtpiOIA High Scfiool Ex·
chtntt Sludtnlt ... Arriving
Auauot .... HOST FAMILIES
NEEDED! Americtn lnlarcuHural
Student Exchongo. C• ll Bollndo
614-11411-27M Or Coli 1-IIOO.SI·
BLING.
Maka 1 frland ...For Lift! Scan·
dlnavltn, Europun, Souttl
Amlf'ictn, Yugoalavlan, &amp;
JapentH high tchoot exchangt
a1udtnts, ariivlng August, Host
Famlllaa N•dtcfl Amtr. lnttr·
cultural Student E•change, call
Belinda 11 614·949·2794 Of call 1·
800-sibllng.

Riggs c ...st Manor, aluminum
siding ranch home, 1 1/2 baths,
famlly room with llrtplace, larg•
kitchen with breakfast bar, for·
mtl dining room, 3bdrms.,
detached 2-car g.antgt, ll:oraga
building, bam, over 2 112 teres
with tppraxlmlttly 2 tcrea ten·
cld, $49,000 8M· 085-4368

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

Need Your 1-lttp: Douglas Mason
Passtd Away Marcfl 6, 1992.
Funds Ara Ntadad To Molp For
Funeral ExpenHs. Trust Fund

"He is a good actor. He actually sounded

At lono Stor Bonk, 610 South

humble giving his acceptance speech ."

14x65 mobill home, 2 bdrm.,
ai~~Jctric, all appllancea, 614·992·

Throuah Our Slngloo Nowslll·

9

1043· Gllllpolis, l&gt;hio 45631.

Don't Junk Ht Sell Us Vour Non·

Wanted to Buy

ter. Yl'rllt: Slnalllis, P.O. Box ,.-..,-,.-,'"""-:-"""~..:...,...-

4

11

AUSTRALIA WANTS YOU

Working Applloncos, Color TV'o,

Giveaway

..:..___;_...:.;_..:.._ __,_1
1 1f2 yr. old mara, pure pekin·

Help Wanted

Pay,
Btntflts,
VCR 's, Microwaves, Power Excellent
Tools, Etc. 614-256-1238.
Transportation,
407-292·4':'17,

Ext 511. 9a.m..t0p.m. Toll
gese, 304-773-5354 attar 2pm
Wanted To Buy: Junk Autos Reh.mded.
With Or Wltl'lout Motors. Call
6 ft. Phileo stereo player and Larry
Join A Winning Team
Llvaly. 614-388-9303.
radio, 614·992-5530
as 1 ltadar In the financial Hr·
TP.Il PJICO! P~ld : All Old U.S. Yices arena, btlna a member or
ecilril;110rtfRin'tjs,·snvir t:Cii'ls, our consum• finance team
Gold Colno. M.T.S. Coin Shop, means having a good place to
Cyte Eaattr Puppl11 : 2 Black 151 Second Avenue, Gallipolis.
atart. Art you Hlf· motivated,
MtiH, t Black Ftmtle, 7 WHkS
assertive, and tnloy dealing
Old 614-146-8670.
with
people? A pfeasant per·
Employment Services tonality
and phone skills art a
must Responalbllltlts Include
6: Lost &amp; Found
acllvlllas related to credit , sales,
account managemanl, and ac·
Found: omall boogie, on Depot 11
Help Wanted
S1rHt In Rutland, no collar, 614· · ~=-::,...:--.,.-,----,,..,-7 counting. For immediate con·
7112·3305
$1,000 Thousand lmmtdlattl~ slderatlon, contact Tina Morgan
at 614-992·2111. EOE, M!FIH;
-Lo-'st-·.-F-u-11 "sl,..ood-.,.od"""F-om_a_le-.,.91-ac-k· l Stuffing
Envelopas. Rus
Stampad A.ddruud 110 En· noh· smoking and drug frH an·
Chow, Full Grown In Porter Oh velope To: O&amp;A Supplies, Box vironment .
A..:
~
,...:':..:·6..:14_·3_6_7·,068
._....5-. ._..,,.-..,...- l1443 , Fairborn, OH 45324.
Lint mac:hanlcs naadad , GM
Lost: Ladv London Fog Rain $3501'0
1
h
Coat, Natural Color, 614-446·
ay process ng, P one or· certification preferred, but other
dars! People call you. No ax· qualified applicants will be con:080:::.::7.~-------·l parlance necusary. 1~00.255- sldaltd, contact Kan Mills at
Don Tate · Chevy, Olda, Cadll·
0242
7
Yard Sate
'
lac, GEO, 614·912-6614 or 1·800.
AVON· All areas, Call Marilyn 837-1094
ALL Vtrd Salts Muat Be Paid In Weaver 304-882-2645.
Iter To Stock &amp; lnvtn·
Advance. OEADLINE: 2:00 p.m. 116 Bed Long Term Care Facility Marchand
In 1wo Local Stores, Ap·
the d1y before the td Is to run. Seeking Social Workll'. B.S.W. tory
prox. 8 Hrs Per MONTH, 1·800·
sund1y edition · 2:00 p.m. PJtfarred. Benalh Package 878-5796,
Call tO A.M. To 3 P.M.
Friday. Mond1~ edllion • 2:00 Avtllable. Send Retuma To ACI·
p.m. Saturday.
mlnlstrator Pinecrest Cart Cen- Nttd extra cash? Own products
ter, 170 P1nacrast Drive, Gal· at a discount? Work your own
llpolls, ~ 45631.
hours? AVON, frH gift with
Gallipolis
sign-up, call Kay, 614·992·7180
ADON for 116 bed long term
&amp; VIcinity
care facility , AN with alatt Needed : OTA Drivers, 25 Years
development and supervisory Old, COL, Clean Record And 2
Exptrlenet .
Send
Estate Yard Sale: April 2nd-3rd. nperlence prafarrad. Equal op- Vaars
9·? App. 1-112 mi. from Centan· por1unily employer. Please atnd Resume To: P.O. Box 400, Gal·
resume and salary request to: II polls, OH 45631.
try, Rl. 141. 614-446·4679.
Director of Nursi ng, Pinecrest
Inside &amp; Out: April 1sl through Cara Cantor, 170 Pinec rest One part lime LPN Jltlded tor
the 4ttl. Open 9 to 5. Treasure Drive, Gallipolis, OH 45631. 614· 68 bad facility, PlY commiserate
with experience, conlact Sarah
Chest, t4n8 St. Rt. 554, Bidwell. 446·1112.
Marcum, D.O.N, Cart Haven of
Flnt gluswara, 2 Hammond org•n•, larg1 Rink Buill tr.iler &amp; Applications tor mature In- Point Plaasant, 304-&amp;75-3005.
motor, antique VIctor talking dividual will be responsible for Surrogate Mother wanted, rr.e
mathine, fumitutt, clothts, 5:00 1111 closing shift. Apply In plus expansts far carrying a
ltOOtWI re, blue spall•r grtnitt, parson Lorobl's Pizza, 248 couple's c hlld, must ~ 18- 35
old . coins, old etamps, baby Second Ave, Galllpolie, Ohio. yu. of age &amp; prevlosly had a
ftems , loo many other lltms to April 2 &amp; 3. No phone caltt child, contact Steve Lltz, Ally.
please.
llot.
317-996-2000
O(d 180 EvergrHn April 1, 2, 3 AVON ! All Areas ! Stllrlay The Town of N1w Havan is td·
Baby
Clothn,Chlldran, Spears, 304-615·1429.
vertlslng for pool manager and
Womens Clothes &amp; Mise
AVON gat in on lha ground lloor l i la ~uar cts . Applications are
Old 160 Evergrten April 1, 2, 3 of Avons new earning structure. available New Haven. City Bldg.
Baby
Ctoth11,Chlldren, 1·800·992-6356.
Situation
WOf'lt ns Clothes &amp; Mise
Avon: No Tarrltorlts, Sill To 12
Wanted
Wed. &amp; Thurs. 9-? 2 milts east Friends, Family. 1·800.281 ·4801.
of Porter on 554 . New stuff.
Billing Cltrk/BookkHpor. Com· Frao Room &amp; Board one Infant
puler experience neceuary, will child welcome. Muat be clean
Pomeroy,
train on specllk: pragrtma. ltrustworthr 614-446·3419
Mull have bookkHplng ex·
Mlddtepon
perlance; pll)'fOII, tiXH, ICC! WUI take care of elderly ltdy In
rae, acct pay. Anpansiblt for mr home, IXfMrilnced, havt
&amp; VIcinity
recording monl11 rtc:tlvtd and " ., reasonable, 304·773-in85
3 ftmlly yard ealt, Wed., Apt'll month!~ billing of clients to the
1.t, bt9lnnlng at tam, next to Medicaid Program. No ptlone 14
Business
calla. Contact Mason County
Pomeroy a~ntary ~~ehool
Training
Action Group 1 Inc, Correna
April 1,2,3,4, Chlkhno Homo Stevens, co-oralnator.
Retrain
Now!IISoutheastarn
Rd., ll9n1 11 Bla WhNI, guno,
kn'- trollor, Truck, dcilt.o, Easy Work! Excellent Pay! As· Business Collage, Spring Valley
stmbll Products At HoiTII. Call Piau. Call Today, 614-446-436711
mltc.,I14-H2·n73
Toll Fra1, 1·800-467-5566, Ellt . Reglstoratlon 190-05-1274B.
KARR ESTATE SALE
313 .
Ap(ll 2 thru 4, U , 4:1742 SR 124,
SyiJc11H , antlquea, furniture, HVAC contractor ha s position of 18 Wanted to Do
ltchnlclan/lnstalltr Will Babysit In My Home. Rod·
friNtr, Wtlher housthokl service
ittml, whMichtlr, llh chtlr, available. Outita consist of 80% ney Area. References Available.
11rvlce, 20% lnt tallallon, mini· Call 614·245-S88l
clothing, misc., no checks
mum 3yrs. tleld experience. ~=:.=:::=-:7=-7-7.:"-:---::
LIIU. glrtl clotMt, ftctary Har· Sand resume &amp; war. 1111 GeorgM
Portable Sawmill, don'1
tty cravldaan 3112gal. ltnkl, prtltrtnct to: Daily entlnel, kaul your logs to the mill just
tame rabbits, April 1-4, 9-4, 1MI. PO BOX 729C, Pomeroy, Ohio eal\304-675-1957.
out 14 3 on right
br Wod.;Aprlltot.
HIVI room ond Clrl tor bod
Racine Methodltt Churc h will Janitorial I ltwn malntentnc:e, poiltnt, good coro, rouonoblo,
hold 1 yard 111e Saturday, April hours vary 30-40 per wttk coll614-9411-2381
4th, 91m·?
during mowing uason, working
with people who have develop- Min Paula'a Day Care Center.
mental
dinbiiiUn, must have Sift , affordabla, chlldcart . M·F
8 · Public Sale
knowledge of janitorial dutltl, &amp; a.m. · 5:30 p.m. Agas 2,..,_10.
equipment, and lawnmower Before, after school. Drop-Ins
&amp; Auction
rapalr, would be working OIH welcome. 614·446·8224. New In·
commercial font Toddler Care, 614-446-6227.
Rick Pearson Auction Company, contr~cta • &amp;
full lime tuctionetr, complete buildings, lawn maintenenct In· Will do Houst Cleaning and or
auction tervic:e. Licensed eluding wotklng roadside rut Spring
Cleaning
Have
166,0hlo &amp; Wnt Virginia, 304· areas, 814-992.fl681
Reference. $5.00 Per Hour,
773-5765.
.
Ytart of Expart.nce. 614·388·
6916 or 614·388·9038
Wlll do Income taxes. Phone
304-675-3939.

----------1

Want 1o:

Financial

PIN down JiX.11U.

21

Business
Opportunity

C/\611?!!

!NOTICE I
VALLEY PUBLr.lHING CO.
recommend• that you do bull·
nest with peopte you knowhond
NOT to send money 1hroYQ lht
mall until you htvt lnv"tigatld
the offering.
~10

Otln Financial Independence
OWn local Poy . Pho111t, Coli
Now 1-800·lllt-4453.

'firm

.S,!/1 it

VENDING ROUTE : Go1 Rich
Quick? No Woyl But Wo Hove A
Good, Stndr, AHordob~1 But~
nta. Won't Lut. 1-eu0-2848303.

Y""'"..lrrll••r· irrto c: o.~fr ,
lflf' I' ll.~)' IIIIIJ... fly f)fwrre ,

WatH Tonnlng Bodl
New commerciii-Romt unht,
from 1188.00, LamJII, latlona,
ICCHIO~H monlhty pormonto
low •• $18.00, colt todor1 ~"
new col.or c:t..log, 1..SOII-2Uo
6212

"" ,,.,.,, '" ,,.,, ,,. Jlllll'llllllll'.

l'l•t~: e

Y""'" das.~itiml mltoda)'!

.1 !j rr•on/.• m · 1•·~.• , :J rl11ys,
,'J lllllii'I'S, $6, (/(!

,_

______ 9- - - - - -11

2. _ _ _ _ __

I

Real
31

Es1&lt;1te

Hom11 for

Sale

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright
Apartment
for Rent

Complllly Fumlohod . mobile
home, 1 mile below tow11 1 over·
looking. river. No ~tl, """" 114446.0338.
.

I:,.::...:=:,....-__,.~--,,.---

One bedroom aPt Henderson,
304-1175-1972 oftor 5:00.
I;.;.;_;;.;,.;.;;.;;.;.;;;;;,;;.;;.;,;..,_ _
45
Furnished
Rooms

I,--...,.----,----.Rooms for rent· wttk ar month.

Stortlng ot $120/mo. Gol111 Holol.
81.-446"-0580.
1- : - - - - - - - - - - , Sl11pln11 room• with cooking.
Also trt11tr Sptce. All hook~pe.
Call aftlr 2:00 p.m., 3CM·7n5851, Masan WV:
SIMplng rooms, Middleport, 3
beds, showar, gltsstd back
porch,
living
room,
retrlg.JmlcroVtaVt,
private
enlranca, otf-strttt ptrklng,
rtasonabte, 614-992·7791 after·
noons

46

Space for Rent

5SOO
t964 tOX50 Vorr Good Cond. P.P.H.S. Exc vlslbilltr,
Space, ovolloblt
nul to
Many naw Items. $2,800 after Commercial
lmmodlatolr, 304-875-8TJII.
8;PM 614·245-a681

;:M~ol~n,~P=.O~.~B:ox~9=27~,~H=Ig~h=la:n:d,~T~Xt----------T----------j

.!_7562.
Unattach.ct? MHt Ar•• Singles

44

lTuie5s~da~Y~r~M5arich~31~,~,~~2______________________________!P~om~e~r~oyt~~d11d~dl~ep:o:rt~,o: ~hl~o~-:-----r--~~;;:;:;::~~Th~e~~~~~~~:!l~·

Tuesday, March 31, 1992

, ~1

~~

"'~ll&gt;i!'

~-~="':':":'•:•:":'"':·':~:.::::::::;::::::::::::::::::::!.~

11

Autos for

BORN

Sa"

•

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.12 . _.....,--_......_-ll
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•

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(!)

0

A PR INT NUMBERED LETTERS I
go IN THE SE SQUARES

€) ~~fc:~~~iER tEllERs TO

..·...'·

IIIIIIII

NowaHour

Cttnarl

IIIIIID Curront Alltlr C
\Ill. Stir Till&lt;: The Rext

c

NORTH
+7643

BRIDGE

Oerttr.tion
112111 Entertifnment Tonight

:'~~~,
a

+KQJ
+Jt0 983

Moneyllne

PHILLIP
ALDER

all The WaHono

FRANK AND ERNEST
"1J "'
"

()ECIPIN6 WlfO

l)

7:05(5) Adtlotma Fa. .y
7:30 lliG 1H1 JIOfMirdyt C
IIl Now II Ctn Be 1"okf
liiii Et!lfllalnment Tonight

I' "l..r;!"li
"I
" " ,,
:l'LL

TO

rrfL.VIJ"' 5TAMP

YtA~'t ftt:i
fLfCTION If A
~fA!.. {)IL.fMMA f

TO VO'rE ~
fiTfff~/

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112111 Famllr Foud
Be I Stir Stereo.
@ Checkered Flltg lndyCar
lrom Australia.
Crooonre
7:35(5) Sanford and Son
1:00 lliG 11211n the Heat ol the
Night A lather wants to save
his youngest son ~om the
i!!l'lls ol gambling. Stereo.

a

••••

•

+74

+AQH

. .. .

.9?6 2
+A 1097642

+3

+s~

+Kz
Vulnerable Neither
Dealer: East

South
West Nortb East
Alter declarer has gone down in a
1
makable cont ract. how often have you 1 •
3+
3+
Pass
heard him say. "How C&lt;luld I have pos- 4 +
Pa ss Pass
Pass
sibly known' " Probably many times.
Opening lead: + 7
But usually he could have found the
right answer if only he had drawn the ·
correct conclusions from the bidding JL - - - - - - - - - - --1
(or lack of it ) and play .
See if you would make a top detec·
live on today's ha nd . Cover the EastWest cards. Ag01nst your fou r -spade West"s discard resulted m much wau;;
contract. West leads the club seven: ing but - surpnsmgly - no reproach• .
three. ace. two. Ba ck comes the dia· ful grief from South. What did he ·
mond three: fi ve. ace. jack. West re- overlook7
: :
East was known to have started •
turns the diamond two, which East
ruffs with the spade two. East leads with a singleton diamond and only.back the club five king, four, eight. four clubs. To have opened one club; :
How do you continue'
he must have begun with 4· 4·1· 4 distri· ·'
West's three-d iamond response was bution. Therefore, West had to have a.
a weak jump shift m competition, a spade void. South should have cashe4 ,
method tha t !S popular in tourna ment . the heart ace, ruffed a heart in the···
circles. Usually the bid shows a good dummy and led a low spade, finessing ~
SIX·card suit but not enough points for the 10 if East played low.
~
a normal response.
: It is so important not to ignore any ..
After a club to the ace, a diamond to ! of the clues that are scattered about:.
the ace . a diamond ruff and a club exit . the bridge table like leaves in the fall . "
ISl ,.._ ,....,.,..
••uo.
South promptly cashed. the spade ace .

+

/fi MOVIE: The Htltt (2:00)

(I) Ill Full H0&lt;1M
Jesse, Danny and Joey go to
a drive-in movie and sea O.J .
there. Stereo. C
(!) (IJ N0V11 ACfor Judd
Hirsch narrates a look at
what makes New York City
tick. Q
11118 1121• ~lc ol David
Copperflltd XIV: Flying...
Copperfield attempts to fly
through the air without
assistance, carrying an
audience member in his
arms. (t :00/ Stereo. C
\Ill. MOV E: - oilhe
Nlgltt (PG) (2:001
0 Murder, She Wrote 1;'1
Croolt and ChciH
@ Moior Ltaguo BeHball
San Francisco Giants vs.
·Oakland Athletics at Phoenix
(l)
PrimeNewo C
all Rln TJ!!. nn, if-9 Cop

a

•rm-

a

Stereo. 1;1

MORTY MEEKLE ANDWINmROP
THe eQ.IOOI_ 8We IS
L.A"Illii THie MORNtNet.

MAYBE IT~t,ej teD,
ANO EVERofetoc7'1'

r'L-L... ee-TTt..e: F(:;1l:;!
A FLATTIRC. .

GOTKI~.

The World Almanac® Crossword Puzzle ·

8:051D MOVIE: Vttltey of the
Dollt (4:30)
8:30 liiii (I) fl Home
lmpro- Tim makes an
embarruslng comment
about Jill on ltls show. (R)
Stereo. C ·
all Wltneil to Survt¥11 1;'1
9:00 (2) 1121 Llw Order Stone
pursues a slum landlord who
has let a beby lraeze Ia
death. Stereo. C
III 11 (I) • Rciiltlnne Dan
helps Crystal at the hospital
when Rpnne IS delayed.
Stereo . ~·(l) (!) Frbrtllnl C

e

I!IID 0

ACROSS
t-otandatill
4 Smudge
8 A.zuro
t2 Sailor Cal.)
13 ExorciH

a

a~attm

t• Aoddlah
t5 Conoumad
lood
t6 Fot'ltllr lnot~
tuUon lor tho
neocly
t8 Boggago
hlndler
20 Diving bird
2t Exlatence
23 Stiller and 27 Aquatic blrdo
30 Tratllllto
mouth
rnoUono
32 Gullarlot Atltlno
33 Reaott Of
New Mlxleo
34 Comtdlon

e MOYrE: 'flrtca

Site Paid' Cll TtMICJg

Movll (2:001 Stereo . ...,
MOVIE: the Sltlnlnil iRI
(3:00)
.
Nllltvttle Now Stereo.
a Larry KJng u..1
all Fltllt!.DowNng MMyvttlettet~rlotoo
Slereo. l;lJ
8:30 IIIfl (I) fl Room for Two
Edie Ia scared when· she
1tlliZH Jt1t Ia 011 her own.
Stereo. l;ll
10:00 !lie 0 Dltlllnl NBC
(Prlmlere) Jane Pauley and
Stone PhiPps give
~==Uve reports. Sllreo.

0

a

BARNEY
I COME TO SEE THAT
PURTY 9-DIAMONT QUILT
OF YOR'N THAT WON
FUST PlliZI AT TH'
COUNTY
FAIR!!

AN' BORRY
A CUP OF
FLOUR

LIKEWISE fl

ASTRO-GRAPH
BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

..,...

•••·

A..wlf to Pr-a Ptoulo

35 Moloely
38 Smllldttr
37 SingerFollclano
38 Jalla
40 Hard drinker
41 Putlnto
olllco
42 Engllah
ochool
44 Sorrel
46 WHh honda
ooltlpa
50 Duarrolaome
woman
5&gt;1 Own (Scot.l
55 Ttnnla Dlayer
- Naalln
56 Ruin (2 wda.,

II.)

57 From- - Z
58 Conatr\IC·
tlonbeam
(2 wdo.)
59 l.ottd me ,our
60 Mal de-

DOWN

c....,

t SttwHd
product
2 C.rr on 1111
bock
3 Slnplng
4 Clrcurn .. nt
5 Clrcleo
8 Plarwrtght
- Ioiii

IIIfl (l)e CMI Wars Two
p8ople drive their own
lawyers crazy over a
~operty Httlernent. Sllreo.

. '
Graph predictions lorthe year ahead by
mailing $1.25 plus a long, sell-addressed, stamped envelope to AstroGraph, clo this newSpaper, P.O. Box
9 1.28, Cleveland, OH 44101·3428. Be
sure to state your zodiac sign.
.
TAURUS (Apri12G-118J20) II you are in
need or assistance today regarding
s omething rather complex, don't suffer
In silence. You have several lriends
who'll do their best to make things go
smoothly lor you .
GEMINI (lllty 21.June 20) Be hopelul
wtoen.lnvotved In competitive develop·
menta today; the .odds tend to lavor
you c-1rata 011 ou c c 111, not the
negittw ~Ucn.
·
CAMCIII (olllne ti..ltriJ 22) You might
be 1 tid 110w getii!1Q out o1 the starting
gate today, bUt once YO&lt;! get rolling,
you'U pick • momentum. A noteworthy
IICIIIe-t 11 ~•
LIO (oltrlr •Aut- Ill Some opecl81
knowltdge you pcaUN lhGIIId be
Jlhlred toelly - but only wtth thoM who
.,, OCJpCtble ol 00t11Pflltendlng lt. Your
brfglllldeU - · t IPIIO t-'tl rOOI w1t11
_,otte.
V11G0 JM. • IIPL· 11)11 you are
IIICIPI*Ia' tor ICIIIIMitlnO ~ today,
htlte ~ Illite l1lforl m-'tlng 1 declflon. to
benlfit to be a coml)lr·

n-. your

•."

~

SOUTH
+AK1096
" AQ I04

By Phillip Alder

lilii

EEK AND. MEEK

EAST
+QJ5 2
"K J 8 3

Analyze
from A to Z

a

•

,.

,.

l

WEST

.

ljlllll Mairletf ••. With Children
ijS liD WhHI ol Fortune 1;'1

poNr'r

1 )'NOW WffiCH

)uppOflT IN THI.f

''

.fAY! ,. I

stereo ..Gl .

3-11·11

•5

@

••

....
"• ,

"Tell me," I asked my son, 'What is your kind of music
all about?" That's lhe great thing about il," he answered,
"you just DON'T KNOW!"

(!) (!) Macillfl.ehreT

lllfl Cand

...

SCIIAM-LITS ANSWIRS
, ., o
Inward · Vomit· Piano· /1/apkin · DON'T KNOW

/Z I Dream ol Jeannie

•\IOA-Inl

•

Alter interviewing twenty
teenagers for an alter school

f--TI...:.rl;.;_r,~~~r:~;;...,l.--1

lilii tntldt Edition C

r1

\,

I

•'

. ·'''·

the woman sighed, "The
best substitute for experience
N I M TE T
lisbeing-· ..... _.
t) Comploto tho ·chuckle quolocf
l.....J..-..1.-.J.~.J.L....J.L....J.
by Iii ling In t!to milling word1
•
rou devolop lrom otop No. 3 bolow.

8coobr Doo
@Up Cion
all Now Zorro Stereo. 1;1
6:35(1) Andy Orilllth
7:00 ~ G IHI WhHI of Fortune

•4.

&gt;.

5

!

r

lllliD ll2i II CIS lftwa 1;1
\Ill. Andy Clrlfllth

.'
..

I

.I.:E:.1. :,;R1~S:. -~1:

... .'

~=:;:~==·~·~job,

Siereo. 1.,1
6:05(1) Beverly HlllbiKIOI

~ ~·~
:l ::C'l:w'l'1;1
lldAmartca C

(i . _ _...c...,_'-----'

446-2342 675-1333
992-2156

f--IS_;_P

all Rln 1J!!. nn, K·l Cop

Motortlomes

II.

II
;:. .:.1...-ll

3 ~~~1

Q.
a0 Smurfo
World Toilly

M'( DOG 15
6ETTIN6 WET

..' .'

..

LIXEE

/j'j IIIIth Learning Hour
\Ill II Nlaltt£ourt 1;1

T~IIN K

...

LANCEC

6:30 Ill!. 1121 NBC Newt Q

wo·s

-•rdo

TUE., MARCH 31 •

(I) fl illliiD
112111 1121 Nowa
(!) Video Power
'jtl Square One TV Stereo

I

::: ·:

litton of
f0&lt;1r ocramblod wordt
low to lorrn f.. r simple worao. •

8:00 Ill. IIIfl

I SEE IT'S
STARTING TO RAIN ..

I'OUAII

ORoorrango

o

EVENING

=""....

"·----,--II

o

'

1969 Baron 12x65, :Zbr, 2 AC, 47 Wanted to Rent
For Solo or toko over poymont•
54 Miscellaneous
Underpinning, Washer, Dryer,
1987 Chovory Colorbrlty 114-388Farm
Supplies
Refrigerator, Slo¥1, Part Fum., 3BR House Willy to pay up to
Merchancllse
mt eon •nrtlm•
&amp; Livestock
Good Condition! 614·446·2671 $350 Par Month. 614·256-6340
After5p.m.
72 Trucks for Sale
49
For Lease
1979 Clairmont, 3 bedrooms,
Concrete &amp; Plastic S1ptlc
1979 F-250 4/WO, 351 MAt, Body
gas heat &amp; central air, wtshlr &amp; Commercial Bldg., 12,000 1q. H., Tankl, Jet Atrttion Tenks. Ron 61 Farm Equipment
Fair
ConkiUon, $1,000 But Of.
dryor, $8,000. 304-175-7294.
truck docks, heattd, clear span Evtns EnterpriMI, Jtckson, OH
lor, 614·367-7019 AHor 5:30p.m.
At.
32,
Jackson,
OH
1-717-74365
MF
Troctor
&amp;
Buon
Hog
1-801).537-9528.
1983 Nashua, 3 bedroom, 14x70
$3210 Lilt Modo!, 3000 Fora 1989 Ford Rongor XLT, goroao
with 'h12 exptndo, CA, Ouaen 6732.
Early
American
Buahllnt Dltstd $4850, 4000 Ford tractor kept, lowered, mutt 111 lfC.
waterbed, garden tub, all ap- Second Floor Apanment For SIHpor
Solo, Whh Choir, $125. $4850, Big Vermetrt Round 992·3065 oHor 5pm, Brent Zirkle
pliances, 10x20 deck, $14,500. Least: L.A., Ona B.R., Bath, Coli 114·245-9082 AHor 5p.m.
Baler $2850 614·286·6522
Must move, 304·675-7860 or 675· Kitchen W/ Stove &amp; R11frlg.
.1990 S-10 2.5, 5 Spoocl, Z·28
3594.
Water Furnished. No P1ts. Cor· Eloctrtc Wt.olchllr With Chi~ Cot 04D dozer hoe ROPS, Whule,
Dllrlbed Maroon,
nor Second &amp; Plno Galllpotlo. gor, Llko Nowl $1,000. For Mar• winch, good cond, $12,900. Bril· AMIFMCasutto, Cloonll Alklng
1989 Schultz mobile home, 2 $230.
Month; 0epotlt R• fnformation, 814-44&amp;-3040.
lion SS10 ten ft ptCktr lttdtr, $5,!100. Evonlngo: 614-682.e73f,
bedrooms, 2 baths , 304-675· quirod.Par
Call
614·448-4249,
814·
pull with hydrolk: ltnsporl new
1663.
For Stle • Red metal bunk beds $5,700. Used Holland 2 row D•r•: 614-682-6625.
446-2325, Or 614-148-4425.
comp .. lt wnwln mattrtssll, tobacco
uUtt $1,350. Uud 1 Track loader with r_lpper. And
2 bdr., 8x45, $3000 or rent $250
Llko now, call 614·245-5887.
row tobacco setter $550. Ultd 1972 Dodgo Dump Truck. 614per mo., all 1 utilities furnlsl'lad,
Merchandise
614·!149-2566
Outen Slzt Wattrbtd With A 18 tt Harrogllor '$750. Katt.rs 367-7031.
Semi Wavtltss Mattrns, Book Service ctn1er, Sl. Rt. 87, Pl. 73 vans &amp; 4
Household
51
Cue Headboard, 1275: Call 614· PI-nt ond Rlplr Rd. 304·89635 Lots &amp; Acreage
38111.
441 · 06~8 . .
1160 DodiJI won, 318 onglno,
Goods
10 acres, 35 x 50 commercial
Cub tractar with cultivator, 1988 rune araat bitt on. or trldl
FREE
INSTALLATION
building, city water avtllabla, Big Savings On All Carp~~t In
Hllloboro stock tral~r. both lor 4x1 PU truck or I or 4 crt.
SWIMMING POOLS
681 Rc£ fronltgt, $15,000, 614· Stock. Cash And Carry, Mol·
truck. 614-4.6-0535, anytime.
groat ohapo, 304-675-2837.
Only
$62.9.
1
/Mo.
•
For
12
Months.
696·1372
lol'lan Carpets, 614-446·~44 .
19x31x4 Pool lncludtl Filter, Utllllr Bld9. Spoclol: 30"x40"•9", 1983 Full Sill, Ford Bronco•
20 Acrn, 15 Wooded, 5 Cltared, GE washer was $125 cut to $75; Lldclorl, Hugo Dock Etc. 1-15'•8' Sliding Door, 1·3' Walk Good Condlllon, $2,400; 11181
Septic And Water, Electric. Whirlpool washer $95; Kenmore ('BIIod On Soiling Price or Doorl Palnttcf Still Siding &amp; Dodge 0.50 Pk:k.Up, Good
$12,000 Nogotloblo. 614·388· washer was $95 cut to $75; $619. $14.45 APR, Totti Dolorrtd Rool ng. $5110. Iron Horae Conaltlon, $2,700. 614-218-1251.
9998.
Kanmoro dryer $75; Maytag Prlco: $754.92) Don't Bollovo h? Bldro. t-800·352·1045
1987 Chevy hi top canvt,.lan
washer
ttl was $350 cul Call BPI
3 Nice Homesltes. St. Rt. 35 W. to $250;&amp; dryer
For Sale: New Holand Rakn, wen, low milts, $9700, 614-tt2·
1-800-548-1923
30
ln.
electric
range,
Owner Financing 614·245·9448
Balers, Mowlf'l, And Hay Binda. 7820
white, was $125 cut to $95;
And 4 Row Com Planters,
Lots for sale, trailers accep· alectrlc range 30 ln., $125; Gtnttls Nutrition Products 2Wheal
Disks, Plck.Up Disks, 1969 Full Sill Ford Bronoo, XLTI
refrigerator, 2 door, harvetl
tabla. 304-675-2722.
Mlln, loldod, Shorp
golcf, was ttso cut to 1125; luturing Amino Acid Bodr Manure Spreaders, Fertillza 34,000
Loll In GaUipolit Ferry • 100% refrigerator, 2 door, FF, harvtat Building, wolghl loll and tat Spreadtrl, Wheal Orlllt, Ol:hlr 614·256-9309.
owntr financing at $98.64 per gold; $95 ; refrigerator, FF, bumer Tormufas. Available tl• Field Ready Equipment, Howe's 19111 Full Slzo Blozor,,.,::,
month, any one of tour lots avacado, like new 1265. Skagga clualvely at Rill Aid Pharmacy. Farm Mschlnary At. 124 &amp; Loaded, 7,800 Ulln, Ext
Mayhew Road, Ja,cklon Ohio. Warranty, Like New, PriCMI To
available, 304..&amp;75-2722.
Appliances. 614·446-TJ98 or 1· The ufe way to diet.
614·266-5!144.
800-199-3499
.
s.ut o.r: 614-441-1&amp;75, Night:
Ltwn Mowtt Repairs, get tuned
Lots In New Haven • 100%
ownor fiMnelng at $101.46 per GOOD USED APPLIANCES up tor spring. Sldera Equip- International Cub, CultlvatOfs, 614,441-8121.
International
Belly Mower
month buys all three lots, t304· Washers, dryers, refrigerators, ment, 304-e75·'M21.
rangas. Skaggs Applloncoo, Lowrey COntoll organ $300 An· Plows, Disks, Blades, Mora.1 75 Boats &amp; Motors
675-2722.
Upper River Rd. Beside Slone tlqu. "Dining Room Set $100. New Paint, 614-446-4920 After
for Sate
5p.m.
Lois joining Point • 100% owner Crest Motel. Call 614~46·7398 , 614-44641U&amp;'
llnanclng at $101.46 per month 1·800·499·3499.
Equipment, SR. 35, 14ft. Flborglooo Flo~kl Boot,
buys al1 thrH lois. 304-675·
Pltatlc And Medal Culvart 8 Inch Jlm'a Ftrm
Golllpotlo, 6t4-t46-9m; 40 HorH Johnoon, Trollor~ Pulh
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
2722.
Thrv 60 Inch In Stock. Ron West
Complota home lurnlshlnga. Evant, Jackson, Ohla. 1..SOO. Wide selectu:m new &amp; used farm Button Control, Good \;Gnd/·
tractors &amp; Implements. Buy, lion, 614446-4920.
Hours: Mon-Sat, 9·5. 614-446· 537-9528.
36 Real Estate
stU, trade, 8:00.5:00 w•Rkdays, 1974 16Ft board Ski Boot 85- •
0322, 3 mllet out Bulavlllt Rd.
Free Delivery.
Portable chtngeable letter algn Sot. Jill Noon.
Wanted
HPM 11,400 ohor 5:PM 6142!56$299. F,.t l..tttl/dtiiYif)'. Pits· Model no two row ntrrow New 1754
Montgomery
ward
19'
Color
TV.
tic lotttrt 14ll0 box. t-1101).533- Holland com h11d. Model 717
Wanted liveable house on land
3453, onrtlmo.
contract on ltau with option to $65.00 614-446-8011
1988 Bolo Sport 196 wl454
New Holltnd hay head. $1,000. motor,
bur. prolorobir with property, Pallo fumhut1, all solid red· Rntauttnt Eq~o~lpment, fee Ma· both
metal llake paint, mint
or
will
Hll
stperatt.
304304-675-5593 after 5:00PM.
oond, $12,900. 304-175-1178.
wood, 2 end tabl11, 2 chalrt, chine, 818 Wtlk In Cooler, Gal 882-2247.
table
w/aeparalt Griddlt, 2 Comportment Sink
Wtnttd: R11ldentlal Building picnic
Foot Boa Boot ond traitor.
tractor &amp; firm machinery 20
Lot Or Acreage Far Quality ~nchas, chase lounga, 2 Nat &amp; Tablet And Chairs, Htlco Fc;d Oliver
tOHp motor, $1,000. 614-t4N8lll
parts,
If
not
In
etoc:k
will
get.
Homu. Mull Ba Within 5 Mlln table sealee, $300. 30"4-675-1731. Wormor, Hood • Sprinkler Srs· Coli "Tht Ollt Mon"". 614-368- After 5:PU
ttm, Upright FrMzer, Plua Other
01 Holzor Hoopltol On Blocklop
PICKENS FURNITURE
9684.
Items.
61(-446-6157 After Sp.m.
Rood. t-31)4.273-2040.
76 Auto Parts &amp;
NawfUstd
Household furnishing. 112 mi. Stm Somtrvlllt'l Army Surptus; Wanted: Used farm equipment,
Accessories
Jerrlcho Ad. Pt. Pleasant , WV, Frl, Sat, Sun; noon-.6:00 PM. tnythlng you want to sell. Call
Rentals
614·256·1308,
256·6040
attsr
6
can 304·675·1450.
Olhtt days haura. 304-273-5855, p.m.
4 Tirn, Q 78 • 16 LT, Wldo lludllvo
mila
btl ~77
dor 1100. 614-t41-98t6.
Refrigerator, Sears, Frost Fret, Rovonowood,
WV. Br Sond)'VIIIo
Harvest
Gold,
$100.
614·256·
our,nner
truck liner, fits 118t-t1
41 Houses for Rent
Pott Offlco. Goor up lor. wild
1238.
turkey HDOn. Gray Gr11n Lett
short bod Ct.v truck, SSG. 2 Bd., turnlskad house, Lincoln Refrigerators $75 to $125; tide TrMbork Annr pottom clothing.
675-3853.
HIU, Pomeroy, $250 mo., 614· by sid1 refrigerator frteztr with
tMth For Silt, ComFor part1 only, 1G76 Clmaro
985-1256
let maker, lllit new $225; 3 nlca Satallhe
livestock
63
plotol614-441-1756.
l26, 304-875-20111.
dHp
lr11zart
$125
aa.;
3 bedroom 2 story home,
rtfersnct &amp; deposit required, automatic washers 175 to $125; ~~~UI boakl Qood priCII on Angus And Chi·Angut Black Topper Fl~rglou 8ft. lont
electric dryer• $75 to $125; Gas
a unavahiblt In ttorn Buns.~. Reasonably Prlcld. State Wide Bod . sliding WI,.._.:
304-675-3278.
dryoro, Jlko now $125 OL; covering thl following topics: Run t-arms, Jackson, Ohio, 814· Front End Both ·stao, $210.114367·7698.
..
House lor rent In Syracuse, 614· ollctrlc ronan $75 to $125; Goo Mall Oreltr, Butlnaea, Finance, 286·5395.
992-7681
rongn $75lo 1125· I' L........., Herbl &amp; Heilth, Ganertllnterelt
1989 Gror AOIIA Flllr br
top with tlnk hold tnd and others.· Send It check or Flllhr
cainpers &amp;
Raynoldt Rap. Fluhy So'rrtll 79
Ona year laaH: 3 BR , large counter
bottom
cabln111
$300;
montyh
order
to
Nu
Lift
En·
rooms, rec. roam, laundry, bathroom slnkl, metal kitchen terpriHt, 137 OU11n Road, 1190 tltty by the lnllmldalor l a
usld 2 horll Bumper TrtUtr
ground floor, no pet1. Clean. sink cabinets, 4 legged btthtub, Ciondtnln, WV 215045-9203.
614-286-6522
tm Torry 27h. compor, monr
1325/mo. Stove &amp; retrlg., air. cheap. Lots of duel pipe, cheap.
Excellent loc:ttlon. Reply Box Oell&gt;1rt Swlohor'o Ulod Ap. Upright lrotztr, working, $75, Good tolr ond 4·H plgo, 304-875- ollroo, 614·11411-3017 oftor !pm
No.: CLAttt, clo Golllpollo Oollr. pllancll. Comer of Rand and Sn.,per riding moWer $250, 3308.
35' 5th whNI, IOICM droft lu&lt;·
TribuntJ..~.2!1i Third Avenue, Ga • Perch St., Kt nauga. 114-446alto rooma for renl $10 night,
ntca, AJC, rafrlg.ltrtu.•, full
llpolls, ut1 45531.
614·11411-2526
Hof'Ht
for
salt
•
AOHA
Stalllon,
1'173.
2 mares, 3 colts, Morgan's bolh, good condition. 15,400.
Woodlawn Farm, ·304·93'1-2018 614-146'4083.
55
42 Mobile Homes
AUCTION &amp;SW~~NITURE. 62
BUilding
evenings.
for Rent
Olivo st., GoJllpolil. Now &amp; UHd
Supplies
Services
hntoro, Wtstom • ~ ~,..-,:-:~~--~~~= Rog. Angut Bull. 614·256-e3t3.
2 badroom all tlec, Ashton lumhwo,
Work booto. 614-448-3159.
Block, brk:k, IIWtr plpoo, win·
Uplond Rd, Hud ICCipted, 304·
dows, lintels, etc. Claude Win675-4088.
Vl'RA FURNITURE
toro, Rio Grondo, OH Coli 614·
Home
81
BARGAINS GALORE I
245-5121.
2 bedroom mobile home Mt .
I 14-441-3156
Improvements
Union Rd, Pliny, WV. 304-937·
Sptclal- Two car garages,
Transportation
2635.
24x27x9•
LIVING ROOM: Solo And Choir 24x24x~• $3185
BASEMENT
$1111 And Up; CaffH And End 14199 27x32xh Ms99, Prto~
2 BR trailer, 10 tern, fenced ln. Tables
WATERPROOFING
lion Pott Frtmt Builders, 61o4S79
And
Up;
Swivel
$200 dopooH, 1200/mo. 614·388- Rockoro $79.
Uncondltl~l lhllmrl ~
992-354t
.:.,71,;,..,;.:A;ut;:o:.:s.:.fo:.;r:.,:Sa::::.::le::-- too. local rolortncH luritlohocl.
6259.
U1111tr Bulldln~x40x10 10x12 11173 Codllilc, good cond:, now F,.. ..,,...,... eott oo11oc1 1·
3 Bedroom, Totti Electric, No BEDROOM: Bunk Bodo $99 stldlng
dOO&lt; $
.00, 24•40•10 polnl, newly waxsd; good 111 614-.237+~~~~. dly ., night.
Ptlt, No Drugt Or Drinking, 614· 12x6); 4 Drowtr Chell 01
tOxtO
tlldlng
door
$4100.00, oround, undor 10,000MI*5 Rogtrt · IIJumont ~
Orawars
$44
,i5
;
Twin
Mattfllt
387·11138.
Precltlon Post fnme Bulldlft, tlret. must '"• 1351
$99 Sot.
1 nng ..
514-992•3541.
Rd .• Syracuse, Oh.• v~
•••
• Cul1/t Home lm(N'OIJI•Mntt:
44
Apartment
2800
DINETTES: Wood Bar Stoolo
YNro Exporlortc:o On Oldlr a
Pets for Sale
$14.95(26"'1 Tobie And 4 Poddod 56
for Rent
Addlt.....
1m TH11nd•lbird. Towne Lan- Nowor Homoo. Cholro $129.
FoiMidltlon WOIII, !loofl!!g;
dou,
400
CID,
loodod,
ohorp,
Groom
ond
Supplr
Shoo-PII
1 bedroom apt, good location,
good tlru, brown, 114-1185-3571 KHchono .tlnd Botho. · Froo Ei'
101 Sixth &amp; Moln St. Nowlr OPEN: 7 Ooyo AWolk, I A.M. · I Grooming. All brHdo, trirlto. ohor5:30pm
llmotnl Rotor- H. .lob
lomo
Pill
Food
"
Oollor.
Julio
rtmodaltd will'! naw appllencn. P.M. Sundoy 12 Noon · 5 P.M.
Too
Big Dr Smllt f14-31HM.
UtiiiUts not lncludtd 1 deposit Rt. 141 4 MIIH OH Rt. 7 In Con· Wobb. Coli 614-146-0231.
1m Corvette, 251h annlvaraary
Hlck'o
Roofing, Pointing &amp;'DIOII
tenary.
rtquirtcl, 304-675-7131 or 675·
AKC Cocker Sponlot pupploo, oditlon. 1987 Ford XLT Rongor. Building.
F- Olllmiollo. 10
5936.
304.e75-2290.
Wooci-Bumlng lnotrllor • 44 In' roody to go, ttl lhotl ·• wor·
ytara expeMnce, fM •
mod,
hoiHh
fiUirontlld,
$125,
llrpllco.
Blllo~n-Bono,
good
1 Bedroom, Total Electric, Be
1112 Volklwtgon Quantum Itt·
614·•114-4&amp;77
Rudy tst or April. $185/mo. Rio condition. 6t4-388-ll313.
JET
IJon Wlgon, ( eyl., IUIO.L good
Alrotlon Moton, ........ ....,
Orondo, Ohio. 114·388-9941.
AKC Roglatorod Colrn Tonier cond., 11,000. 114-256-1117.
PuP!.._Cuto . Eootor Pot of $150. ,ga C1111119 v.o, a IPiod. ,_ • ,.bulK motcin Ill llooll, t BR girogo opt., largo ~ont 52 Sporting Goods
EVANS, JACK-, Ql. 1 pon:h, roor blloony. No poto. 870 Wlngmutor 13 go., Good 114-3oT-7700.
537-11521.
tlroo, oxho..~ ono - · Vlt'Y
814-441-2106.
Condition, $225. 614·258-i86l
AKC 8cottlth Torrtor pupplco, cM11n, thlrp, $2,100. 304-575Ron'a TV s.mc., •F I :lti::J
20111.
\
ltOIHhoddlng,
now
taking
2 bedroom opt, utllltiH pold, Romlngton modo! 700 BOL 22·
In Z.nhh oloo • •'!dot
dlpoolto, 3 Jolt, rudy tor Eottor,
Hud opprovsd, 3~5-2722.
1g14 Dodgo. A~H, 4 -·Illicit, ...., brondl. 210 wllh 12X tcopo, $400. . 394· 114-114-1177•
..... ~!IJ CUMtlt, 4 ayl, lilt01 ..... lpptlo- ....... wv
3 room• I kitchen: SUO mo., til 675-3118.
514-,...7230,
ovonlngo
304.f"le-2:111
Olllo
~14114.
Chlhuohuo PIPPY, '?lock lomolo
utllHIH pold. CIJJ bolwun 11 :oo
Antiques
175. Wll'lod: aaul lomoil
53_ _.:_.,.....:......,.,..,.,...,...,..
o.m• • 5 p.m. 614-141-0238.
:.:;
Chlhuohuoo lnd Oechlhuridt. 1914 Oldo 88 Brghrn., high Soptlc Tonk P...,.,. -=~=
,
mlln, u . cond •• 12100, 114·H2· Co. RON EVANS ENTI
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT Bla Rlnr Anllquoo, 510 Moln St, 114-3e7·- ·
.
3113
Joo-.
OH
t-.tlf.Nn
•
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON Po1nt Ploltont, WV.
F - lllglo Pup 8JI!do, 1115 Chryolor LIBorron Sporto Oevlo
ESTATES, . 631 Joclulon Pl~l
Sow·Yic
.......
from S1R:umo. Wtlk to ahop &amp; Buy or 11U. Riverine AnUquts, Shoto ond wOrmod MO.op 114- Caupo, 2.2 Tllrbo Englno, GtorQH· Crook Rd. Porto, moviH. Colllt4-t48·25N. E~ . 1124 E. Moln ltroll, P-ror. 441·7923
Automotlc, Air, AMIFM ·Storoo =::.kup, lnd dlti!!Oiy: Houro: M.T.W. 10:0!1o.m. to 1:00
Clalltlt, Good Condition,
Fumlohsd Aportmont· t Bod· p.m,_!undlr 1:00 to t :ao p.m. Filii Tonk, 3413 Joo- Avo. 75~
MIIH, $1,150. 114·268Point Plo-nt, 304-11~2013,
room U111HIH Pold, 1210/mo. 114-1111Z·212f•
82Dl.
'
lull
llno
Troplcll
llohi
blrdo,
Will build ,_...,
potlo scrNMd
put·~
1120 Fourth Avonuolt Golllpollo
.,..all
animals
and
s
•
•·
·
Ohio, 614-141-4415 A or 7p.m.
,.
18U Dodao Trio-, 4 CJ!1. At, olcllng or trlltor llllrtlng.
54
N,OOO
MiiOo
111111
Qood - k 241-1152.
pupploo,
6
wlulold,
Pomoroniln
Fumllhocl Aportmont, 1br, noii 1
Merchlndise
Clrl 1900 loOt Ollor. 114-317304.075-3211_. .
lo Ubrtry, partdng, aentf'll hNI,
7011.
82 Plumbing"
t! ocro1 on
Rladat Poodltt . AKC brooding
Boloro 7p.m.
.
.
11185 Plymoutlt ~llllttt 1..1•PI,
Rd.,· 100 ylldt doWn Win -Ill,
Heltlng
llr, - -· · - · · Doublo
Rd.; AI".!'J goooo tubli, alhtr
far 1110, PI, All,4 eyl E•OIII oand-ln
Fumlohtd 1111., on utiiiiH polcl. &amp; - pCrtik
lor .. to. 114 ..e'UIM, Coolvlllo, 114
•
Aulo ConoOio, 2 Door 11,000
c.F-ontll'lot
....·.~
Shiro 1 llltll. tl7l month. tt9
tuvo mo•ogo,
I 'R~~:=:-;Iol;;;or.::oci~. . ':-'-".:Colt:-::11-:,..--, II, iaioO 111 4. 1143 1 11jun.
llooand Avon•. IM-44f.3144.
a
Wp • ,()No
1vo. 304.f11.7tt7 Dtoro.
uo q,.-11" )lro lor ...., .,_, IIIIi. '111111 - Counly
114 4411Gllclout Jiving. 1 1nd 2 bod- 1200
14-112 12
.Fell. CMntpJah ,_ I Y...,
room oportrnontt at Vllllgo
Worltlna Coltlo Dago, f1ll Elch, ·
11· Uld
Rlv~~tlao
Arlorlrnonto In Mldd....,_ ,,_
Electrical &amp;
·'
~'
tfll. CoN lttftZ.nlt ION.

Miscellaneous

'::~~:~' S~tl~~-~£1/is·
141to4 tr, ClAY L

Television
VIewing

[b

11185 Ford Tempo Gl, 4 ~~~
83,000111, $1800, 114-1112
t988 · Dodgo Do)'lono, 45,500
mitts, auto, AIC, AM·FM ctastltt, 1111, c:rultt, IIC cond,
15,000. 304·273-15!5.
1988 Ford Fesliva, Csp., good
cond ., 50mpg., $3000, 114·H2·
2155, B·5pm or 614·9411-2204
evenings
·
1988
Oldsmobile
Cutlau
Supttmt Classic, 11. cond., 614"'2·2979 or 614·992-3194
1989 LA Baron convartlabte, one
owner, latther lnt•rlor, all
power, whitt on white, 21,000
milts, Turbo GT package,
$11,500. or wlll1radt tar full Wzt
Bronco or Bltzar, 304-815-3371.
1989 Nlssan Senua, Brtghl Riel,
2 Door, Air Conditioning, 5
Speed, V1ry DeJMndable Car,
$4,500 Or $101.63 Per Month.
614-145-7604.
1991 Cnevr s-to Plck.Up 5
Sp11d, . Tahoe Package, V-e,
7.000 M1tos, s1,soo. 614·379-2122.
89 Ford Thunder Bird Shorp.
32,000
PS PB
AC5:30
FullyPll
E·
quippedmlln
$8,1100
oHor
614-2!56-1754 _ _ __
.:..:.:.:::.:..::.:.c...

,

lson shopper.
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 23) One ol your
greatest assets Is your abllilr to work
harmoniously witn a partner. II you have
a competent ~llr in rour endeavors to·
· day. success IS likely.
SCORPIO I Oct. 24-Hov. 22) Your best
Ideas today are likely to come out ol
dlscussloos with tno~ wno work In the
trencnes rather than w1th tnose who Jive
In an 1vory 1ower.
SAGI.TTARtUS (Nov. 23-0.C. 21) This
Is a good day to catch up on the little
things you promised to do lor a friend
but haven't had a chance to get around
to yet.
CAPRICORN (O.C. 22-Jen. 11) Your
powers ol observation could be quite
ututa'todar but, even more Importantly, you mig.ht be able to utilize what you
... and ht1at to your advantage.
AQUARIUI (.... 28-Peb. 11) In bull·
neu a.llnga today, try to get down to
IIIIAtackouqulcktyandelfecllvetyas
potllble, There will be plen!y or lime lor
chitchat alter you cloae the dear.
PIICEI (Fell. 28-lbrch 20) You might
be ratherlortuntte matlflally today, yet
It W®'t be tho ..-It ol .luck . It witt heppen becauN you'll- your head to get
wllat you want.

~ WhiN There ft No WOfd
lor F - An Individual
brlnaa strength and
signJnr..nt Cfiange to the
Sovttt Union. (1 :00)
(!) Faith Undlf l'ft Startling
. develOpments In Eastern
Europe are ..., thrOUgh the
eyes of Individual&amp; who rNtke
dlt:lslonl or coniCilncl at
conliderabla 1:(t:t0) 1;1

\Ill. Hunter
Qllilnttbody

.
T1tM:

Etloltll Gary Morrll and
Estonian perlatTner lvo Unmt
discuss the country'a
tndeperldence alter 50 years
under Soviet rule. (1 :001
Stereo.

ill World Ntwa

0 700 Club Wilt Pat

ftabltWOh

11:00 !lie IIIe (I) e illle
ae ONtwaQ

CELEBRITY CIPHER
..
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PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "The Pith of ~ owh MA Ia through the t111c11
o1 olltptlellm." - Gtol9t . - Ntthart,

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--------~----------------------------~~

�:Names in the news ...
NEW ORLEANS (AP) Ji11morist Lewis Grizzard says he
.performs at benefits to "make up
for some stuff I did earlier."
''I'm not at liberty to divulge
what I did. But just in case, I want
· to make sure,'' he said.
Proceeds from his show tonight
will go to the Louisiana Center for
the Blind.
Grizzard's column is syndicated
to 450 newspapers. He has written
1S books, and his first album of
country music is due out in a few
months.
TRENTON, N.J. (AP) - It's
been almost five years since Bruce
Springsteen's last album, but he's
back in force with two new releases
today.
"Human Touch" and "Lucky
Town" were in the stores at midnight, and some retailers in the
Boss' home state stayed open late
to get a jump on sales. •
" I'm looking to seU a ton of it,"
said Ken Stein, manager of Record
Town at Freehold Raceway Mall,
just outside Springsteen's hometown of Freehold. "We're in the
heart of Springsteenland."
The "Human Touch" album
and single are already on the Billboard charts.
The Square Circle record store
near Atlantic City said it would sell
the "Human Touch" single for 29
cents to boost interest.
IRVINE, Calif. (AP) -About
600 people rushed the stage during
an Ozzy Osbourne concert, and he
and several fans suffered cuts and
bruises.
The heavy metal rocker had
asked fans up front to come on
sta~e during the last song Saturday.
'It wasn't supposed to happen
that way," his publicist, Mitch
Schneider, said Monday.
Osbourne, 43, had to crawl off
stage to escape the crowd, Schneider said.
About 12,000 people were at the
concert at Irvine Meadows
Amphitheater.
Damage to equipment was estimated at $100,000.

)

DALLAS (AP) - Gary Morris,
Marie Osmond and Tom Wopat are
headlining a "Country Music Fan
Jatn" to benefit St. Jude Children's
Research Hospital.
Other artists scheduled to perform at the April 24-26 event
include Sammy Kershaw, Johnny
Paycheck and Jo-El Sonnier.

"Given Cardinal Krol' s age and
the severity of the illness he experienced, he is in extremely fine con·dition ," Dr. Joseph Majdan said
after Krol's release Monday.
Krol retired in 1988.
SOUTH BEND, Ind. (AP) Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan will
receive the University of Notre
Dame's Laetare Medal, the oldest
honor given to American Catholics.
The New York Democrat's
career "combines intellectual and
political acumen," said the Rev.
Edward A. Malloy, Notre Dame
president.
Moynihan, who was frrst elected
to the Senate in 1976, served in the
administrations of Presidents
Kennedy, Johnson, Nixon and
Ford.
The award will be presented at
the May 17 commencement ceremonies.

·Professor presents two,credit card suggestions
Dear Ana Landers: Credit
card interest rates are a mat1er of
considerable economic and political
interest these days. Should the
rates be forced down by Congress
from the current 20 percent levels
to peihaps 14 percent?
May I, a professor of fmance at a
major university, suggest two better
altemati ves?
I. Pay off the fuJI amount owed
every month. Never let a balance
remain on which you will be charged
interest. Even 14 percent is too high
for most consumers. If you don't
have enough monthly income to do
this, select the next option:
2. Get your scissors, cut up all
your credit cards and cancel all your
charge accounts. Then pay cash for
all pure hases (except homes and
cars). If you can't pay cash, don't
buy it. Use your head. If you charge
something you still have to pay for
it one month later, or stretch out the
payments and get stuck with high
interest charges. Paying cash would:
a. speed up your interest-free
payments by one month.
b. delay retailers' sales by one
month.
c. decrease interest revenues to
lenders - banks, finance companies
and deparunent stores.
d. help you stay out of financial
difficulty and perhaps even bankruptcy.

Ann·
Landers
ANN LANDERS
"!HI, Loa Aqel ..
'l'lmel Syndic* and
CreaiGn Syndllllle."

e. allow you to sleep better.
I offer this advice 10 my students
every year_ Nobody yet has accused
me of encouraging un-American
buying habits. -· PROFESSOR
PETER ROSKO, UNIVERSITY OF
MINNESOTA
DEAR PROFESSOR: The suggestion that makes the most sense
for people who always seem to be
in debt is suggestion No. 2: Cut up
all your credit cards.
The Jllllin function of a credit card
is to allow you to leave your cash at
home while shopping. People who
charge because they don't have
enough money to pay for purchases,
thinking "next month it will be
easier," make a big mistake. By the
time "next month" rolls around you
don't have much left and before you
know it, you are paying horrendous
interest rates and your "bargain"
costs you double. Cut the darned
things up and liberate yourselves,
folks.
Dear Ann Landers: After seeing
the letter from "Any Woman" about

Cue the Shuttle: It's the 64th
Annual Academy Awards

COMPETES IN EVENT •
Amanda Musser, daugbter or
Paul and Debbie Musser, Rutland, competed recently in tbe
Federal Hocking Cbeerleading
com petition. She received bigb
scores in personality, dance
and creative perrormaoce. She
won ber division in tbe spirit
scoring.

NEW YORK (AP)- Yes, it's
still too long. Yes, the acceptance
speeches still are mostly obseure or
maudlin. And, yes, like it or not,
the Academy Awards still are the
last bastion of full-throttle live TV
entettainlllllnL
Bless the Academy of Motion
Picture Arts and Sciences anyway,
for Monday night it wrapped up the
64th Annual Academy Awards in a
shade over 3 1/l hours.
Those 210-plus, star-studded
minutes included a set of onearmed push-ups from best supporting actor Jack Palance, a greeting
from the crew of space shuttle
•

Atlantis and four full-bore production numbers.
Best of all, it included the giddily brilliant improvisations of Billy
Crystal, in his third year as host.
Crystal was charming ·from the
moment he...,.as wheeled onstage
and strolled into the audience wearing the face mask of the demonic
Hannibal (the Cannibal) Lecter
from "The Silence of the Lambs,"
which was named best picture.
"I'm having some of the Academy over for dinner," he confided
to Anthony Hopkins, who later
won best-actor honors for his
Lecter role.

SGT. JEFFERY HOLTZ

The Ladies Craft Circle of the
Sacred Heart Church will hold a
craft sale Saturday in the church
basement from 9 a.m . to 4 p.m.
Homemade noodles, baked goods
and crafts will be for sale. Eight by
ten spaces are for sale for $10 and
anyone interested should contraet
Susie Stewart, 992-3326. Proceeds
.from the craft sale will go toward
repair of the church organ.

Helen Qufvey, women's activity
chairman, announced the grange
will serve refreshmenll 11 the May
Pamona Granae mcetlna. The jlldgiiiS _of the cake contes
_ t would be .
~ It t11at lime allo. She encourIJecl all to be workin4 on other
coa&amp;ell items to be JUdged in

T,.!'Mic~titf

announced two
meetinSS to be held at the AU.ny

Middleport
Department Store
will close at 5:00
p.m. this Friday to
allow all of our
customers to attend
the Spring fashion
Revue.
•

OIIHI "T" IN MIDDLEPORT

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Holtz assigned

8 PC. DINING ROOM
OAK FINISH • BASSm
Net $2159.95
10 HOliSOII.Y

99997
·

NOFOOUNC!f

Sgt. Jeffery F. Holtz, son of
Mike and Lura Swiger of Syracuse,
has been deployed to the Riyadh
Base in Saudi, Arabia.
He is with the Prime Beef Unit
of the 89th Civil Engineering
Squad.
Holtz graduated from Southern
High School, class of 1987. He has
been in the Air Force since August
1987 and has been stationed at
Andrew Air Force Base in Washington, D. C.
Holtz will be in Saudi Arabia
for three months. His address is
Sgt. Jeffery F. Holtz, 236-0020490, 4409 OSG/DE APO AE .
09852.

Community Lenten
Services planned
Community Lenten Services in
the Pomeroy area will continue
Thursday at 7:30 p.m .at the
Pomeroy United Methodist Church
with Rev. WiUiam Hoback.
Services continue April 9 at
7:30 p.m. at St. Paul Lutheran
Church with Rev. Glen McClung
preaching.
The community is invited to
observe the Lenten season with the
~ churches in these worship services.

OAK FINISH
Not $1099.95

10 HOURS ONLY

$34997

100°/o

lfO

Meeting dates are changed
· Regular meeting dates of.the
Hemlock Grave No. 2049 were
changed from the third Saturday of
each month to the fJISt Thursday of
eaclt month at the group's recent
meeting.

to a stranger. In a way, he was.
Well, "Daddy" has been back in
the states for several months and has
made no effort to contact his
children. I tell them it's his loss. not
theirs, but isn·l il sad? -- MIDWEST
MOM
DEAR MO~ : Yes, bul better
no contacl lhan showing up
occasionally, creating ambivalence
and false hopes . Count your
blessings.
Do you have questions about sex, .
but no one to talk to? Ann lAnders'
booklet, "Sex cwl the Teen-Ager,"
is frank and /fJ the point. Send a
self-addressed. long , business-size
envelope and a check or money
order for S3 .65 (this includts
postage and ltmadling) to: Teens,
c/o Ann Land.m, P.O. Box 11562,
Chicago, Ill. 60611-0562 . (In
Canada, send S4 .45.)

.....

Plans completed for
Founder's Day event

Bazaar planned

the Desert Storm soldier, I had to
write.
Before the Gulf War, my children
received a letter from their father,
letting them know "Daddy" was
going to Saudi Arabia. He said, ·I
haven't been a good father blit please
write to me anyway." I told them it
was up to them if the&gt;' ~ to him
or not. They chose not to wnte.
After a couple of months, I sat the
kids down again aJid asked them to
write their dad one time and see if
he would answer. I did it more for
the kids' sake than for his. I .was
afraid that if something happened to
their father and he didn't make it
home, they would feel guilty for not
writing.
If he only knew what it took to
get the youngest one to write. It was
like pulling teeth. The oldest one's
letter sounded as if he was writing

.LOOK FOil TBI
PINJCTAGS
APIUL FOOL'S DAY

PIDLADELPHIA (AP)- Cardinal John Krol has been released
from the hospital after being fitted
with a pacemaker.
The S1-year-old retired head of
the Philadelphia Archdiocese had
been admitted to Thomas Jefferson
University Hospital on Feb. 19
with an infection that affected his
heartbeat.

Plans were completed for
Founders Day of Beta Sigma Phi to
be held April 30 at the Sportsman
in Athens when members of Preceptor Beta Beta Chapter met
recently at the Episcopal Church in
Pomeroy. A lasagna dinner was
enjoyed prior to the meeting.
Officers elected were Joan
Corder, president; Betty Ohlinger,
vice-president; Rose Sisson, corresponding secretary; Ann Rupe,
recording secretary; Jane Walton,
treasurer; and Joan Corder, city
council representative, with Betty
Ohlinger and Jane Walton as alternates.
Tickets for a fundraiser for the
group at Founders Day will be sold
by Clarice Krautter and Ann Rupe.
Members attending were Maida
Mora, Charlotte Elberfeld, Reva
Vaughan, Donna Jones, Velma
Rue, Shirley Beegle, Vera Crow
and Norma Custer.

Tuesday, March 31, 1992

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-12-The Dally Sentinel

Grange HaU on Tuesday at 1 p.m.
and April ·11 at 3 p.m. with a
potluck for the evening meal.
Tickets for the county grange
dinner on April 10 were distribuled
for sale. A chetlc was made of the
number of tickets sold for the quilt
10 be giYCR away at the dinner.

Myrle Blldford )telentod a pro-

SAVINGS

APRIL FOOL'SI

,..... .....

fllt$1Uf.t5 $
10.SOIILY

gram honoring spring and St.
Patrick'• ~ lacludlng the liqlng
of severallrilh 1011p, readinp and
pmea.
The next meeting wUI be held
Thursday at 6:30 p.m. for a Jllll·
cate supper with buliJiea meet~ns
10 folloW It 7:30p.m.

•
•

.,

APRIL FOOL'S SALE

. 10AJI.·to1P.M.
AI H• S1Wect To Mer Sale. PASnL PATTON ·
..., 1... tltt Udell II At Net $5H.95
10 HOlliS OILY
Yft'UIIOT

$24

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