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Peg• 10-The Dally Sentlnal

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

EMS responds to 13 caUsforassistance

Clouds cover most of Ohio early today ·

Units of the Meigs County Cornell who refused treallllent. and
Emergency Medical Service at I0:48 p.m. the unit went io the
responded to 13 calls for assistance sheriffs office for Troy Wanken
over the weekend and early Mon· who refused treatment.
day morning.
On Sunday at 2:20 a.m. the
On Saturday at 9: 18 a.m. the MiddlepOrt unit went .to Third
Middleport unit werit to Second Street for Ernest Wells who was
Avenue for Gloria Compston who taken to Veterans ..
was taken to Veterans Memorial
At 9:54 a.m. the Pomeroy Fire
Hospital.
Department went to 15 Oak Street
At 11:38 a.m. the Racine unit for a structure fire at the Hendricks
was called to Long Run Road for re~oonoo.
·
Max Folmer who was taken to Vet·
The Middleport unit, at 3: 16
erans.
·
p.m., was called to Zuspan Hollow
. ·The Rutland unit at 3:49 p.m. Road for Gary Haning who was
went to Vance Road for Ronnie . taken to Veterans, and at 3:55 p.m.
Hubbard who was taken to Holzer the unit responded to Village
Medical Center.
Manor for Donald Van Cooney ,
The Middleport unit went to also taken to VeteranS.
Oliver Street at 5:05 p.m. for
At 9:07 p.m. the Pomeroy unit
Lashia Mitchell who was treated went to State Street for John
but not transported, and at 5:28 McKen~e who was transported to
p.m. the unit went to North Second VeteranS.
for Joyce Blevins who was transFinally on Monday morning at
paned to Vettrans.
5:12 a.m. the Racine unit went to
At I0:38 p.m. the Pomeroy unit Bald-Knob Road for Richard
was called to East Main for Wiley Ables.

.

By Unlled PreSs International
Clouds that lingered ·over much
of Ohio Sunday evening thinned
outovemightsolhatcleartopwtly
cloudy conditions dominaled much
of the state by Monday morning.
Northeast patts of the state continued to be plagued by a bit more
cloud cover and snow flurries .
Predawn temperatures were scattered through the 20s with winds
less than 10 mph and variable in
direction.

MARION, Ohio (UPI) - A
f1111l that printed nearly 1 million .
patriotic Desert Stonn posters is
now prinlil1g a Desert Calm placard
to greet returning servic~ men and
women.
The placard is being printed by
Macola Printing Services pf Marion which sent the Desert Storm
posters to 23 states, Canada and
troops in the Persian Gulf.
"There•s always a calm aflel: a
storm," said Manager Jerry Wil- ·
son. "This is a continuation of our
first effort. We wanted to create
something to welcome the ttoops
home."

Duel K. Ridenour .

Charles A. Btadbury
Charles Asa Bradbury, a wellknown Middlepon resident, died
early Monday morning, March 11.
1991, at Holzer Medical Center,
following an exlended illness.
Details and arrangements will
be announced by Fisher Funeral
Home in Middleport.

Bessie M. Martindale

Bessie Mae Martiiulale, 80, of
9775 West 201h Avenue, Lake·
wood, Col.. former.Jy of Stewart,
died Thursday, March 7. 1991, in
Lakewood.
She was born in Zare, W.Va. on
May 11, 1910, tbC daughter of the
late Joseph and Csroline Zymbach
DePoy. She was a member of the
Order of Eastern Star in Athens.
She is survived by a son, Kenneth G. Pinnell of Malta; a daughter, Irene P. Nielson, Lakewood,
Col.; a brother, Ray DePoy, of
Stewart: ~ sistas, Mary Zickifoose, Helvila, W.Va., Lure Miller,
Bloominsdale. Ohio, and Hulda
Kelly; Columbus; 10 gran(jchildren; and 21 great-granchildren.
· Funeral services will be held on
Tuesday at 11 a.m. at White-Blower Funeral Home in Coolville, with
Rev. Cecil A. Morrison officiating.
Burial will be . in Vanderhoof
Cemetery.
·
· There will be no caUing hours.

;

Gertrude M. Greenlee

a sister, Velvey Keys, Middlepon;
a grandson. Michael McDaniel of
Richmond, Ind.; two great grandchildren, several nieces, nephews
and cousins.
She was preceded in death by
her husband Lon V. Greenlee; a
brother, Arnold and a ~ster, Nora.
Funeral services will be on
Tuesday at 2 p.m. at Fisher Funeral
Home m Middlepon with AI Hanson officiating. Burial will be in
Riverview Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home today from 2 to 4 p.m. and 7
to 9 p.m. and until the nme of the
service on Tuesday.

James C. Perkins, 54, East Main
Street, Pomeroy, died Saturday,
March 9, '1991, at Velerans Memo.rial Hospital.
Born September 23', 1936, he
was a son or the late Roben E. and
Delena Hall Perkins. He worked as
a labom at Excelsior Salt Wolts
and was involved with Big Bend
ReacL
Mr. Perkins is survived by a
daughter, Linda M. Buckley, Middleport; a son, James W. Perkins,
Pomeroy; and four grandchildren,
Amanda Buckley, Amber Perkins,
Sherman Buckley Jr., and Erin
Perltins.
·
Besides his parents he was pteceded in death by four sisters and
seven brothers.
Services will be Tuesday at 1
. p.m. at Ewing Funeral Home with
Rev. James Keesee officiating.
Burial will be in Letart Falls.
Friends ma)t call at the funeral ·
today from 6 to 9 p.m.

.e.

-·

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.,.

_ ~.

\

sure will take much of the day to
get organized and push to the east
of the Rockies. The low will move
across Kansas Monday night and
head east toward Ohio. Moisture
will spread east ahead of the low
and sbould spread clouds into west·
em.Ohio before daybreak Tuesday.
The cloud cover will be followed by rain on Tuesday over
western Ohio and the threat will
spread east to encompass all of
Obio Tuesday night into Wednesday.
· ·
·

.

.

"II is easy to take liberty for granted when you've never had it taken
from youc"
One former POW did not arrive
on the wecial plane because he was
so seriously injured. Officials said
Army Staff Sgt. Daniel J. Stamaris,
31, or Boise, Idaho, returned to
United States aboard an earlier
flight. He wore a red beret and was
carried by stretcher.
The Air Force jet carrying the
former POWs touched down at the
Air Force base in suburban Maryland shonly before noon. A small
American flag was flown from the
plane's exit, along with a huge yei·
low ribbon.
The 19 men and two women
were greeted by Cheney and Powell and their wives. The women
were Army Spec. Melissa Nealy,
20, of Grand Rapids, Mich., and
Army Maj. Rhonda Comum, 36, of
Freeville, N.Y.
Oqe of the former POWs, on
wooden crutches, handed !hem to a
military aide and proudly limped
down the exit. sta1rs on his own
power - tightly grasping the rail
on each side.
A milita~y band played the
· national anthem as the flags of each .
military service fluttered in the
chill wind of the overcast day. But
the sun broke through the clouds
shortly after the arrival and the
crowd started chanting, "U.S.A.,
U.S.A., U.S.A."
Another flag flew from the outstretched suspension ladders of two
military ·fu'e engines.
A especially loud cheer arose as
the name of Navy Lt. Jeffrey zaun,
28. of Cherry Hill, N.J ., was
announced. Zaun' s bntised and battered face' angered and haunted
America afte~ he was displayed on
~a~hdad television during hiS capuvtty.
.
Although most Americans
believed Zaun and his POW col·
leagues had been brutally tortured,
military officials have since said
those injuries occurred during high·
speed ejection from jets that had
~.n struck by Iraqi anti-aircralt
A huge sip attached 10 the passenger termmal said: "Welcome
Home Desert Storm Soldiers."
Another sign said, "Welcome
Home from the Persian Gulf."
After the brief ceremony, the
former POWs Slepped off the plat·
form and wete huSj!ed and kissed
by members or thetr families and
laved ones. Thtre were man~.
They were then.placed a
a
caravan of buses and taken for
medical ilnd psychologic81 exami·
nations, and further debriefings by
U.S. intelligence officials.
Military officials said the former
POWs would receive counseling

~

'

On the erly morning weather •
map, low pressure was over the •
north Atlantic. High pressure :
extended from Hudson Bay :
through the Great Lalces to the Gulf of Mexico. Broad low pressure :
occupied the rest of the central and :
westrm United States.
•
:
High pressure will begin to :
move east Monday night as low •
pressure moves to eastern Kansas :
by daybreak Tuesday and to north- :
east Missomi by Tuesday ()Vening. •
•

~

local 'support," Wilson said. :
ny employee Vicky Hannum,
"What we got is . beyond our •
designed ll)e Desert Calm poster. It
wildest expectations."
:
features a dove with an olive
President Bush received one of :
brmlch in its beak, a U.S. soldier, a
the posters. and wrote a letter of ;
flag and stars to represent the allies.
thanks to the print shop. Several •
Hundreds of thousands of servicemen and women also wrote. :
The shop's 15 C!J!ployees hope
Americans take, the message to Desert Storm posters were dis"I was in Vietnam," Master :·
tributed the first two weeks of the · Sgt. Donald Welsh wrote from •
heart.
"I personally was disgusted war. The Huntington National Saudi Arabia. "Never did we :
with the wav the Vietnam vets Bank iri · Columbus ordered receive the support that the citizens ·
were treated/' said Wilson. "I.'m · 150,000.
of America are now disPlaying.
:·
Macoia gave away the posters at
against war, but I'm not against the
· "It is very gratifying ... that :
fttst but with the demand so heavy. businesses such 8$ rours are will- ~
guys.
"It's not going to be another they had to charge to defray costs.
ing to provide remmders that we ::·
"What we wanted to do was get are here," he said.
Vietnam," he said. "We want
· :·
them to feel proud of coming

and support their families.
The group sai.d it found financial help for day-care is available to
pnly 15,000 of the estimated
300,000 Ohio children in lowiocome families.
Despite 60 percent federal
matching funds available for extra
day· care assistance to families
receiving Aid to Dependent Chil·
dren, such help went to only 1.6
percent of 435,000 ADC children
under 13 last year, the fond found.
Real said the federal government does not limit the number of
ADC families that can receive
money for child care if parents are
trying to get off welfare and into
jobs. Ohio has not fully used that .
assistanCe, he said.
Michael Fox, new director of
the state Department of Human
Services, has said making better
use of federal $-y-care money for
welfare families should be a priority of Gov , George Voinovich

Stolen bus found in Tennessee .~.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI)Whoever stole a Greyhound bus in
Columbus last week apparently
drove it 10 Nashville, Tenn., and
then swiped another one.
Authorities said the bus, missing
from Columb!IS since Tuesday
night, turned up 111 Greyhound's
terminal in Nashville l~te Friday. .
A police officer said a Tennessee law enforcement agency
notified him of the recovered bus
but had no other details.
Tennessee officials said that a

bus was stolen-from the Nashville ;.
terminal about the same time the ·
Columbus bus was found.
·
George Turner, customer ser- ;
vice representative for Greyhound •..
in Columbus, is Julppy the original ~ ·
missing bUS haS been found.
.: ·
"1'1)1 glad because it was stolen ..:
on my shift," said Turner. He said ::
he believes the bus thief must be a :·
former Greyhound driver.
~
"A regular person wouldn ' t !·
know their way around the termi- .:
nals like that,'' Turner said.
::
,.

Stocks
Am Ele Power .....................28 5/8.

Weather

· Ashland Oil ........................ 32 3/4
AT&amp;T ...................................331/2
Bob Evans .................................. 19
Charmirig Shop ........................... 15 ·
City l;iolding ............................... l.S
Federal Mogul ...................... 16 5/8
GoodyearT&amp;R ........................... 24
Key Centurion ...................... 11 1/4
Lands' End .................................20
Limited Inc. ..........................25 1/4
Multimedia Inc ...........................74
Rax Restaurant ............................. 1
Robbins&amp;Myers ...................26 3/4
Shoney's lnc ............. :...........15 1/2
continuedfrompage1
Star Bank ......•••.....•...•........•........23
Wendy
lnt'l. .......................... 9 3/8
and he given some time off with
Worthington
hid ................,. ..23 3/4
their families and loved ones.

Ohio Lottery

•

home. That's the differenoo."
When the crisis in the Persian
Gulf started. employee Molly Lu
Balis went to Wilson with an idea
to suppon the ttoops.

President Bush ...

James Perkins

Announcements ·

.,

COLUMBUS. Ohio (UP!) The Childreri's Defense Fund-Ohio
on Monday called 6 n the state to
make better use of federal day-care
money available to help get welfare
families into self-support jobs.
The group, in its second ."Ohio
Futures" report, said the state has
$83 million coming in new federal
day-care money for the working
poor, but has failed to· make good
use of the money available.
·'The greatest irony of all is that
safe, reliable child care is a costeffective alternative to public assistance,'' said Mark Real. director of
the fund , a private, non-profit
· advocacy group for ·children's
issues.
· The fund said it costs about
$7,500 a year to keep two people
on yublic assistance but less than
hal that - about $3,500 - for
full-time day-care for a preschool
child. ·
Day-care frees parents to work

BUEL K. RIDENOUR

Gertrude M. Greenlee, 85, of
Middleport. died early on Sunday,
March 10, 1991, at Veterans
Memorial Hospital in Pomeroy.
· She was born on August 23,
1905 in Middleport, the dauahter of
the lite Elza W. and Ida Pickens
Dodson. She was a homemaker and
CLEVELAND (UP!) - Ohio's
a member of the Middleport Super Lotto jacicpot was increased
Church of ChrisL
to $20 million after no one picked
She is survived by two daugh· the six winning numbers in the
terS. Dorothy (Gene) McDaniel, all weekend drawing.
or Middlepon; a daughter, Betty
Lou Greenlee, also or Middleport;
None of the tickets sold for the
weekend drawing listed the six
winning numbers- 1, 4, 14, 28,
33
and 46, a lottery spokesman said
RadDe Amerkan LepiD AuxD·
Sunday.
That means the $16 milIary
The Rlcine American Legion lion was carried over and increased
Auxiliary Unit 602 ·will host a by $4 million for Wednesday 's
.
.
Legion Birthday Party for Post 602 drawing.
There were 107 players who
on Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at the
picked five of the numbers to win
Legion Hall.
'$1,553 each, and 6,028 players
who selected four of the numbers
EIJllt IUid Forty to meet
~
The Meigs County Salon No. to win $86
710, Eisht and Forty will meet
Thunday at 7 p.m. at the home of
Super Loito ticket sales totaled
Veda Davis.
$6,042,606 and the prize payout
totaled $684,579.
DARiucheon
One ticket listed the winning
The Return Jonathan Meigs combination in the accompanying
Chapeer, DlupterS of the Ameri- Kicker game, making it worth
can llewlllllicll will celeb• with $100.000. The winning Kicker
Cliarfar Dly LMICM 1111 an Friday at combination was 610477.
12:30 p.m. 11 ()o.;eblocio Center in
Middleport. DAR Good Citizens
In addition to the one ticket that
Winner and the AIDaic8ll History
bad
·the six Kicker numbers in
Essay Winners will be honored
exact order, six had the first five
gueau.
Reservations are dae today numbers; which pays $5,000; 65
(Monday) with Mn. An11ur Skin· ·had the fust four numbers, which
pays $1,000; 70 I had the first
• IIIII', 992-2500 II' Mn. Roy Holkl,
992· 7261. HOIIJFJ a Mn. Skin· tim, which pays SHIO: llld 7,672
ncr, Mrs. Holter, Mr1. Georae had the fust duce. which pays $10.
Kicker ticket sales totaled
Hac:kett Jr., Mn. Harold Haacr,
$837,676
while the total prize payMra. Edward Poster, Mn. James
out wa.s $341,820.
.
Werry IIIICI Mn. Gene Yoa..

'

Larry Hannum, father of compa-

Group urges better use
of day care Money

Super .Lotto Jackpot
grows to $20 million

.'

Fairly strong weather systems
held sway over conditions over the
continental United States. Deep
lowpressurewasoutoverthewestem Atlantic and was still influencing weather conditions from New
England through the mid-Atlantic
states. Over much of the remainder
of the eastern half of the United
States high pressure was the rule.
Disorganized low pressure occupied much of the central and west·
em United States. This lo:w pres-

Firm prints posters for returning veterans

--Area deaths---Duel K. Rioonour, 86, of State
Route 248 Chesler, Ohio. died Sat·
urday, Marth 9, 1991 in Veterans
Memorial Hospital, Pomeroy. He
was self-employed at Ridenour
Supply Company.
.
Born March 28, 1904, he was a
son of the late Lowell E. Ridenour
and Zelda Keebaugh Ridenour.
· Survivinj! are his wife, Mildred
Pauline W1ckham Ridenour: and
two sons, James L. Ridenour of
Chester and John B. Ridenour of
Pomeroy. Also surviving are· five
grandchildren and three great·
grandchildren.
He was preceded in death by a
sister, Thelma Ridenour and a
grandson, Jamie Ridenour.
Services will be conducted
Tuesday, 3 p.m. at Ewing Funeral
Home in Pomeroy, the Rev. Sharon
Hausman officiating. Burial fol·
· lows in Chester Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
· home Monday, 2 to 4 p.m. and 7 to
9p.m.

----~------------Mo~n-d~a•y~,MB--ro_h__
11_,_1_99__
1;

Meigs winter
athletes are
·- honored

·-•.•

Pick 3:259
Pick 4:5771

Cards : 10-H, J·C;

.

Wednesday, chance of rain
90 percent.

:: Page 3
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·va1.
41, No. 22e
' :t;:&gt;pyrlghtecl1991
"·

.:.

:~uggested by Mayor Hoffman .

The
Daily
Sentinel

'

1 Secdon, 1o Pill• 25 cenle
A Muhlmedllo Inc. Newapilper

· Mandatory trash pick-up possibility
By JULIE E. DILLON
Sentinel News Staff
The possibility of implementing
a JDandatory trash pick-up service
within the Village of M1ddleport
was discussed at Monday evening's
regular meeting of Middleport Village Council.
·
Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman suggests the mandatory trash
pick-up to alleviate trash build up
.a( varipus sites within the village.

He also noted the significantly
higher costs of transporting village
trash 10 a Gallia County landfill as
opposed to previously hauling it to
a Mason County landfill which is
now closed.
Council agreed the only way to
enforce mandatory trash pick-up
would be to bill it through the village as an additional cost to water
and sew~e service. Provisions for
senior cuizen discounts would
remain in place as well as discounts

for village residents who ·continue ad(led that the mandatory trash
to recycle. Mayor Hoffman feels a pick-up service would not be promandatory trash pick-up service vided by the village but would be
could encourage more people to contracted to a business that prorecycle.
vides that type of service, such as
Mayor Hoffman stressed the Manley's Trash Service. If the plan
implementation of such a program were to be implemented, however,
is only a possibility at this time but bids for the service would have to
that he would further investigate be taken.
the matter. He noted that plans like
A public hearing will be held at .
the one discussed are currently in the next meeting of Middleport
place in Gallipolis and Athens and Village Council on March 25 to
seem to be working efficiently. He . discuss Community Development
Bloc!c Grants and what momes are
avail.able. Mayor Hoffman noted
that Jean Trussell, housing special·
ist for the village , had attended
seminars on grant availability and
the application process.
Mayor Hoffman discussed housing rehabilitation grant availability

noting a program which provides
for partial payment of improve·
ments to rental J)l opertics. He said
that the program pays hillf of the
cost with the property owner to pay
the other half for the improvements
with an agreement that there would
be no increase in renL
Another matter discussed at the
meeting included Fourth of July
activities in the village which are
being headed up by Bob Gilmore.
A celebration centered around the
success of ~ration Desen Storm
is planned w1th special re!;ognition
to be given to local people who
served in the Gulf War. Conflnnation has been received of a special
guest for the festivities which will
be announced at a later time when

more details are complete.
Also discussed during the meet·
ing was the recent annual inspection of the Middleport Jail facilities
in which Mayor Hoffman reported
that everything "went well."
Rev. James Seddon, minister of
the Middleport First Baptist
Church, opened the meeting with
prayer. Members of the Middleport
Ministerial Association r¢cently
agreed at the request of Council to
have ministers attend and give
opening prayers at all meetings.
Attending were Mayor Hoffmail, Clerk-Treasurer Jon Buck,
and Council members, Dewey Horton , James Clatworthy, Judy
Crooks, Paul Gerard, William
"Bucky" Walters and Jack Satterfield.

Meigs Local School board
approves personnel matters·

,•
\,

I
·
ALL·TVC ACADEMIC TEAM • Members
, 'or the All-TVC Academic Team rrom Meigs
. · High School are, front row • Micbelle Young,
. : Xelly J;)oldge, Trlcla Baer, Jenall'er Taylor, an~
· ...Loreaa Oiler. Secood .row: Missy Nelosn, Darc1
. -.Wolfe, Kristen Slawter, Eric Heck, Joe McElory

and Frank
plct.red, Aaroa Sheets.
These Individuals, aloog wltll other members of
the 1990-91 Meigs winter sports teams, were
honored by the Meigs Boosters at MHS Monday ·
evening. See additional pbotos and story oo page
3.
.

- A~dvocacy,gro,up- .urges better
·use ofstate day-care funding
families into self-suppon jobs.
The group, in its second "Ohio
Futures" report, said the state has
$83 million coming in new federal
day-care money for the workil)g

poor, but has failed to make good
use of the money available.
''The greatest irony of all is that
safe, reliable child care is a cost·
effective alternative to public assistance,"·said Mark Real, direc~ ~f
the fund, a private, non -prof1t
~dvocacy group for chil~en's
ISSUes.

If alcohol is running
your family, stop and get
help--before you run out
of options ..

.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, TUesday, March 12, 1991

COLUMBUS. Ohio (UPI) The Children's Defense FUnd-Ohio
on Monday called on the state to
make better use of federal day-care
money available to help gel welfare

Every day, alcohol shatters
thousands of families who
have no means of coping
with the
problems of the
alcoholic.
The fact is,
families of
· alcoholics
need help, too.

•

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&gt;

Low tonight in mid 30s•

••

.·''

South Central Ohio
•·
Increasing cloudiness Monday :
night, with a low near 30. Chance ;
of precipitation is 20 percenL Rain ; .
likely Tuesday, with highs near 50. ·:
Chance of rain is 70 pefcent.
· :: ·
Ohio extended rorecast
Wednesday tltrough Friday
Rain likely Wednesday. and a ::
chance of rain or snow Thursday, ;.
with fair weather on Friday. Highs·:: . . :
wili range from 45 to 55 Wednes- .; · . .
day, and in the 40s Thursday and :.
Fnday. Overnight lows wili range ··
from 35 to 45 Wednesday momin~. '
in the 30s early Thurdsay. and 10
the 20s Friday morning.

'

K-D; K-S

The Meigs Locw School Board
decided several personnel matters
at its meeting on Monday nighL
Jennings Beegle was employed
its a substitute comprehensive
social sbldies teacher and Richard
Coleman as a history, psychologysociology and computer science
substitute. John Arnott was hired as
Junior High Athletic Director~·
Mike Ktirinedy iS a11istant track
coach. ·
In other matters, ihe school
board adopted a resolution petitioning the arbitrator to hear and decide

matter pending between the Coalition for Equity and Adequacy
Meigs Local Teachers' Association · of School funding at a cost of 50
prior, to April 1. That matter con· cents per pupil.
cems a medical insurance payment
The village also granted permis·
dispute.
sion to the Village of Pomeroy to
The board also passed a resolu- have trees around the sewage treat·
tion excluding the Meigs Local ment plant at the football lield cut
School District from a class action and removed for enlargement of
lawsuit flied by the Cleveland City the plant and be replaced with pine
Schools. Th~ suit concerns· the trees.
·
equllilble'. rul'lding issue and the I · A requeac fiom Ole Melp ·Band
Cleveland City Schools · are fQ! financial assistance in purchasopposed to changes in that policy.
ing new band instruments was
In a related matter, a resolution . tabled.
'
of joinder to participate in the Ohio
Additionally, the board set commenafnent for May 19.
1i

Federal government offers
Ohio dr~g control money

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) The fund said it costs about
$7,500 a year to keep two people The state announced Monday that
on yublic assistanoo but less than $16.9 million in fe&lt;!eral money is
hal that -· about $3,500 - for being made availa\)le through the
full-time day -care for a preschool Governor's Office of Crimiruil Justice Services to expand drug conchild.
Day-care frees parents to work trol programs in Oh1o.
The money will be awarded
and suppon their families.
The group said it found flnan· usin~ federal drug control and syscia! help for day-care is available to tem 1mproveme11t act funds.
"When it comes to drug law
only 15,000 of the estimated
300,000 Ohio children in low- enforcement, we need to give sheriffs, police officers, and prosecu·
income families.
Despite 60 percent federal tors the crime fighting tools they
matching funds available for extra cannot provide for themselves,"
day- care assistance to families LL Gov. Michael DeWine said.
•'And we will do more ,to assist
· receiving Aid to Dependent Chilthe
most vulnerable people in our
dren, such help went to Qnly 1.6
criminal
justice system, those who
percent of 435,000 ADC children
have
been
victims of crime," he
under 13 last year, the fund found.
Real said the federal govern· said.
Drug control and system
ment does not limit the number of
ADC families that can receive improvement programs are
money for child care if parents are designed to combat the illicit drug
trying to get off welfare and into market, provide drug offenders
jobs. Ohio )las not fully used that with treatment and improve the
administration.of justice.
assistan~. he said.

· There are 34 narcotics trafficking task forces funded by local law
eilforcep!ent and prosecuting agencies across Ohio. Efforts to
increase the number of task forces
are underway, DeWine said.
The Govemor's Office of Crim-

ina! Justice Services said forensic
crime labs are being modernized to
handle the volume of drug evidence aild increasing the number of
dru$ treatment for offenders in correellonal institutions and community coireetional programs are a high
priority in the drug control stra~gy.

Union workers try to
discourage purchases
Wire, staff dispatches ·
company offi~ials failed 10 come to
terms on a new contracL
CHARLESTON, W.Va.· Union
workers involved in a labor dispute
The union said Mon'!!IY. it would
at Ravenswood Aluminum Corp. begin distributing handbtlls to the
want to discourage companies and public abOut aluminum products,
the public from buying products particularly beer cans, made by
made by "strikebreakers," offteials replacement workers.
"1bese same beer products are
said.
More than 1,700 workers at the · also available in steel cans, botlles
Jackson County plant have been ~ff and kegs, which we will encourage
the public to buy as an alternative
the job since Nov. 1 when the Umted Steelworkers of America and
Coatiaued on page10

; DERBY DEMONSTRATION· Odella A. Siegfried, Admlnls·
tr"ative Assistant for the Melgi County Soapbox Derby Association
assisted associadon members with a derby demonstration recently
at Chesblre Kyger Scbool. Also pictured In a sample derby car Is
Brad Holflllan, son or Cindy and Perry Hoffman, Jr. Derby appli·
cations are available from the Middleport Recreall.on Departtnent,
and all Kmartlocadons.

Soap Box Derby forms may
be picked up on March 15
Beginning on March IS, boys coontry. Those forms will be availand girls interested in participating al!le at the customer service
in the 1991 may pick up registra- counter in each of the Kmart outtion materials at any one of the letS.
2,300 Kmart stores in the United
More than 150 youngsters, winStates.
ners on the local level, are expected
"We are extremely pleased to to compete in the Derby in Akron
have the support of Kmart in dis· on August I0. There wiD he a live
tributing regiSirlltibn materials for telecasi or the race day activities on
the derby program," said Jeff Lola. Public B(!!4111asting Service (PBS).
general manager of the All-AmeriThe Soap Box Derby is open to
can Soap Box Derby. "We now boys and girls between the ages of
have locations in cities around the nine and 16. Meigs County will
co)lntry where we can direct boys hold its first kit-car ~ box derby
and girls to obtain the registration on June 22 and 23 in Middleport.
forms."
Registration materials for the
·Each of the Kmart stores will local oothy are also available from
stoCk a supply of the official Derby Roger Williams at the Middleport
registration forms, which also list Recreation Department. All area
contaCt information about the 12 youngsters are encouraged to parre~onill Derby directors .ound the ticipate in the derby.

· WORK PRoGRESSING ON GENERAL DYNAMICS PLANT • ~ C1111nty olllclals received an apdlte oa work being dOne.at tilt
GeMral Dyumlea Land S;rstems DlvlsiOII raclllty In Apple Grove, W.Va. Mondly. Mason County C0111mlalon President Larry Sayre, Polat

Pleasant Ma,or RaueU HoOud, and Mason COIIDty KcoiiOIIIk Developmeat Authority Presidrnt Cbarles Lanham, (left to rJaht), are lbown
the ta11et ara tlte (acWty emp.=s will use, by Cllad Job-, project mauaer from tlte NelabborpU CollltnlCtlon Co. ol Hundngtoa. May
'1.7 hal beeDac~.feted • CODipl
elate, according to JoiiiiiOII. Muon County's newest roacf, wbkb ~ to tilt faclllty, bu beta olllc:lllly
named "Ge
o,.n-ICI Way." The flc:Dity, called tbe Malon 'lft:hnolotD Center, will be Died for researdt and development Ill potential
tletb othennal pn tedlaoiOIIY appllcatloas oa mala battle taalll and other military bardware. The local ofBdals were also KCOmpanled by
Development Autltorlty Director Frank Lee. (OVP photo
. by Mindy Keams.)
.

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Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court

Street

Pomeroy, Oblo
DEVOTJ!;D TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA
...,~

~m~

. ~v
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,...,...._...._.......,I"""T"""&amp;1!c::lu=

. ROBERT L. WINGETT

I'Ubll&amp;her

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CHARLENE HOEFLICH
' General M~arer

PAT WHITEHEAD
Aullltllllt Publllber/Coatroller

A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
. Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. niey should be tess tllan 300
words lonr. AU letters are subject to editing and must be slrned with
name, address and telephone number. No unslped letters wUI bepub·Usbed. Letters should be In rood tute, addressing Issues, not personall·
ties,

Environmentalists blast
Great Lakes cleanup plans

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By BJ. DEL CONTE
TORONTO (UP!) -Environmentalists blasted as "cowardly and dishonest'' lhe Canadian government's proposal earlier Ibis week 10 spend
$22.2 million over six years cleaning up the Great Lakes and St.
Lawrence River basin.
The plan, lhe fust initiative under Canada's "Green Plan" cleanup,
was announced by Environment Minister Robert de CotreL
.
At a news conference, de Cotret rebu!fed environmental activists who
accused qim of not living up to agreements wilh lhe United States to
achieve '' :iero discharge •' of pollutants into lhe Great Lalces. .1
De Cotret said that he was Cilmmi~ to achieving "virtual elimina·
lion' ' of toxins by lhe year 2000 as a means of achieving clean- water levels and lhal "zeto discharge" was a long-term goal.
.
De Cotret said scientists have told him to talk about vinual elimination
ralher than zero discharge.
"It's a scientirlC issue, not a political issue,' ' de Cotret said. He said he'
would announce a zero discharge policy when he gets scientific evidence
it can be achieved.
De Cotret stormed away after a confrontation with Greenpeace
spokesman Gord Pelts, who called lhe new initialive ' 'palhetic' ' and said
lhe minister's announcement was a "cowardly and dishonest'' act.
Perks said Great Lakes water-quality agreements, signed by the United
States and Canada in 1978 and reatrumed in 1987, are a commitment by
bolh sides 10 achieve zero discharge levels.
· ·
·
Perks deJIIallded lhe government force Ontario's pulp 8nd paper indus·
try to stop using chlorine compounds in bleaching its products and to tat·
get Lake Superior as a clean-up priority. .
,
..
De Cotret said he prefers 10 consult With the pulp and paper mdustry
and olhers on emission reductions, and 10 only use fm;e as a last res11:1.
De Cotret denied suggestions his announcement of the $22.2 million
plan. labeled a "Pollution-Prevention Initiative for the Great Lakes,'' was
merely a public-relations effon.
"It's new money and it's not a P.R. effort,'' de Cotret said.
De Cotret said lhe new initiative is in addition 10 lhe $106.2 miUion
Oreal Lakes Action Plan and lhe $93.5 million SL Lawrence Action Plan
and is a preventive rather than curative approach.
De &lt;;:otret said he would soon anDOWICe a bilateral action plan on the
Great Lakes wilh lhe U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. .
··The new initintive ''goes beyond remediation .... It goes to prevent pollution at source, eilher through technological change or through social
shifts in habits and consumer demands.' '
'
_. De Cotret said he is also establishing a Great Lakes &lt;;:enter for PollutiOn Prevention, at an as yet undetermined locatiori.
·. De Cotret said industry, municipalities, businesses and individuals will
be consulted on "targets, schedules and actions needed 10 achieve reductions of toxic substance contamination by managing, restricting or prohibiting !heir use, manufacture, generation and discharge.''
· Industry and olhers will receive money to inlroduce pollution- prevention technologies, de Colret said.
:: Canada's Green Plan clean-up program, launched in December, has a
pticetag of $2.55 billion over six years.

letters
to the editor
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Easter Seal telethon huge success

Ow Editor:

and business backing, National
·. The '1991 Easter Seal Telethon Easter Seal Society and the many
Was a huge success. Mating money othe,rs too diversified 10 put in a
always helps people know of the category.
success and the final total of
The 1991 Easter Seal Telethon
$67,000 is definitely a meisure of of Mid Ohio Valley was truly a
success. Money alone does not story of people working together
biing the joy of feelinll svrcessful.
for a very believable cause.
·: Those of us closely associated
Thant-you ail • Athens, Meigs,
Wilh lhe long tenn wort involved Morgan, Washin~ton &amp; Wood
w~lh such a production are over· County West Virgima.
whelmed wilh the support given by
Sincerely,
tioanl members, volunteers, VIP' s
Wanda Reynolds
t11ising dollars, families of children
Executive Director,
~ei ving services at one time or
Marietta, Ohio
another, media people, corporate

.·,•
..·.

.·

Berry's World

•&lt;

'
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....
•••

"I've 1101 s wsclry k»&gt;l How about coming up ·
with Ml ENERGY POLICY?"

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llle8day, March 12, 1991

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

f

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-3

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Page-2-Th,e Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middlepon, Ohio
.'Tllesday, March 12, 1991

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Agnew and Simpson - see the similarity?
WASHINGTON • Alan Simpson and Spiro Agnew - twins separated at birth?
· The Republican senator from
Wyoming and lhe f~ Republican vice president may oot have the
same biological ~nts, but they
wepr the same shoes, and put them
in the same place - their mouths.
Simpson is filling Agnew's shoes
admirably when it comes to his
habit of bashing the press in times
of national crisis.
Last month Simpson gagged on
his shoe when be said CNN ccm:spondent Pe.ter Arnett was filing
"repulsive" reports from Baghdad
under lhe watchful eye of Iraqi censors. Simpson said Arnett was
"what we used 10 call ·in my day a
sympalhizer .... He was active in
the Vietnam War and he won a
Pulitzer Prize largely because of
his anti-government material. And
he was married to a Vietnamese
whose brother was active in the

-

Viet Cong. I called that ·•sympa· closed fraternit~ of privileged''
thizers. in my early days in the journalists who were "cons1811tly
talking 10 one anoihec, !hereby proSecond Wmld War."
We can only speculate what pre· , viding artificial reinforcement 10
cocious little ·AI meant by "sympa· !heir shared viewpoints."
There it is, .lhe stale lheory lhat
lhizer" in his early days. he was 10
when .Pearl Harbor was bombed, the lefl-wing, critical American
·and could be understandably con- press lives 10 make life miserable
fused aboul the role of a free press for well;meaning poUtiCians and
bureaucrats. It is Alan Simpson's
during a war.
.
Simpson has since becked off of !heme song. He wid Saddam Hus·
)lis allegations about Arnett's fami· sein in a prew.- meeting last yesr
ly ties. He made a mistake, and that the American press was "a
reporters, if anyone, should IIJider· haughty and pampered press - !hey
stand bow that happens. Wbat we all consider themselves political
don't undersland is Simpson's odi· geniuses."
Last year, we reported what
ous habit of blaming the messenger
whenever lhe news doesn't sit well Simpson said in lhal meeting with
Saddam, and the senator lhrottled
wilh him.
Network news anchors called us. Simpson told Saddam that his
Ni1ton's palicy what it was - "nolh- problem was he had isolated himing really new." Agnew responded self from lhe media. Simpson said
in a speech claiming Nixon's Iraq's beef was with lhe American
remarks had been subject to press; not the American govern"querulous criticism" from a "gag- ment And, he added, that Saddam
gle of commentators" and a "tiny should "invite lhem (the press) 10

Jack Anderson
and Dale Van Atta
come here (Iraq) and .see ~&lt;r your- :
selves."
What Simpson expected the
press to
ill Iraq is not spelled
out But what the senator later said
he was trying to do was open up :
Iraq more 10 the Western media. ·
Malee that everyone in .the Western :
media except Peter Arnett II«M•se •
later when Arnett was the sole
Western reporter still in Baghdad
with the permission of Saddam
Hussein, Simpson called him a
"sympalhizer."
Which is it, Sen. Simp~on1 ·
Report from Iraq at the invitation
of Saddam and be "caJied a "symp,"
or leave and let poor misunder·
stood Saddam be isolated from the
Western press again?

see

t~Ve.

aTTKe
PeNTaGoN.

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AWARDS • Reeehln&amp;
for wreatllna were Eric Heck AIJ.TVC
and lOOSt take-clowu, Bart Keanedy AD·TVC
Most yatuable Wrnder, Jake Kennedy All·

TVC. and m01t improved, and Steven Wood
mOlt dedicated. Not Pictured • Aaron Sheets,
All-TVC.

awar~

BOYS BASKETBALL AWARDS· Boys
basketball awards were presented to Jason
Wright free throw percentage and Ho"orable
Mention All IUstrlct, Trevof Harrison most

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. points, rebounds and Honorable Mention All·
TVC, Frank Blake Best Defensive Player. Not
Pictured • PhD Hovatter, Most Improved Play·
er.

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Meigs·winter athl~tes honored Money-driven complaints from .

/;laseball players a mystery to Rigney .:

BY DAVi HARRIS
Wright received senior awards.
man and Danielle crovJ was the
Girls reserve basketball coach · best all around treshman cheerleadThe Meigs -Aihletic Boosters
honored the winter sports atltletes Kim Adkins members of her Tri- er.
By JEFF SHAIN
my family's face" over lhe renew•
Rigney believes the problem ••
wilh a .banquet Monday night at Valley Conference champions that
Reserve cheerleaders inlroduced
UPl Sports Writer
al of his contract for $65,000 .less began when the Players Associa- ·
Meigs High School.
'
finished 16-2 on the year. Team were Amy Searls, Megan Bartels,
lion started to make player salaries
PHOENIX (UPI) - BiD Rii!"CY than he wanted.
Master of cerem!lllles was ath- members included Lee Henderson, Jodi Imboden, Misi Neutzling and
letic ~president Jim Soulsby. Heather Hudson, Joy O ' B"r ien, Kyla Sellers. Megan Bartels was looks around at the money-driven · Even in Rigney's own camp, public, allowing agents to compare
The Invocation and benediction Crissy Taylor, Mindy Findlay, Kat· named lhe most improved and Kyla complaints. lodged by baseball Rickey Henderson missed lhe fi!St figures in an auempt to extract
··
wasJe:vllll by Lamar O'BryanL
· rjna turner, Missy Sisson, Laurie Sellers the best all around cheer- players this spring and can't under- eight days of workouts in an more money from lhe clubs.
stand al.l the unhappiness.
attempt 10 renegotiate a four-year,
"In my time, nobody really _.
ead .coach Kevin Sheppard and Kelly, Yvette young and Ginger leader.
"What's hard to get through my $12 million deal be signed last sea- knew what lhe olher guys made,''
ass.is1811t.coach Jim .Sbeets intro- Findlay
Varsity OJeerleaders inlroduced
he said. "Maybe you'd know what
duced members of the iTri-Va!Jey
. Roger Foster introduced mem- were Kristen Slawter, Darci Wolfe,
your roommate made, but you · ·
Conference champioilj wrestling bers of lhe girls varsity basketball Kelly Doidge, Michelle Young,
wouldn't tnow · what anybody
lhe
former
manager
of
lhe
Giants,
baseball
to
351h.·
team. Team members were P.J. team lhal fmished Hi-5 on the sea- Lorena Oiler and Michelle Whit·
Angels
and
Twins
who
now
is
a
"The
last
guy
that
signs
is
lhe
made on lhe other teams.
·
Chadwell, Dave Swanson, Chris son. Players introduced were ~y tington. Most improved varsity
,
sr,ecial
assistant
with
.Oakland.
only
happy
guy,"
said
Rigney,
"Now
it's
not
dealing
for
your
.·
Swanson, Eric Hec~ Joe McElroy, Sisson, Crissy Taylor, Verna cheerleader was Michelle Young
Unhappy
·playing
baseball?
who
currently
advises
Athletics
'
own
ability.
You're
dealing
against
Scott Barton, Mike Call, Frant Com~;~ston, Mary Cremeans, Kim and lhe best all around was Kristen
owner Walter A. Haas Jr. on baSe- what the other guy is making. 1
C'mon now."
Blake: Mike Creme11ns, Jate Hannmg, Tricia Baer, Kim Ewing, · Slawter.
Everybody wants 10 make sure they ·
Yet that feetini has become per- ball matters.
Kennedy, Burt Kennedy, Geoff Missy Nelson, Kelly Smith and
Marlo White was given lhe most
vasive
atnong
IOday's
highly
paid
"(The
players)
tell
people
make more than the other ~uy
Cogar, Aaron Sheets and Steve JenniferTayl&lt;r.
congenality award and Megan Barstars.
Just
glance
through
the
trainlhey're
offended
when·a
club
offers
makes. There's no sense in lhaL '
·
Woods. statiticians were Lori
Special awards went to Tticia ties received a special service
ing
camps
in
Florida
and
.
A
rizona.
them
a
package
worlh
somelhing
It
seems
as
though
the
money
award, while Kristen Slawter and
Hayes and Pam Whaley. Special Baer for the bear offensive player
individual awards were given to
and Jennifer Taylor for the best Darci Wolfe receiv~d senior and it's not too hard 10 fmd players like $10 million. They say lhey're issue has become a permanent part ·
upset with their paychects.
unhappy only making $2.5 million of spring training. Instead of talk- .
Eric Heck for most tate
. downs, defensive award. Taylor was awards.
Bolh
Barry
Bonds
and
Bobby
a
year, but lhey'll have to take tt ing about the latest rookie phenom
k
K
Ja e ennedy most Improved, named fust team Ali-TVC, while
Rict Ash introduced members
like
a man. That's crazy."
Bonilla,
upset
with
losing
their
or the pitcher trying 10 bounce back ··
Aaron Sheets most falls and Steve Baer and Smith were named· to lhe of the Tti-Valley Conference All·
from
arm troubles, most of the ·l·
arbitration
hearings,
threaten.
to
Contract
squabbles
are
nolhing
•
ACademic team . They included
Woods for lhe most dedicated. Tri- second team.
leave
the
Pirates
via
free
agency
new
to
baseball,
but
Rigney
says
heidlines
lhese days contain dollar .
Valley conference champions
Kathy Doidge introduced the Aaron Sheets, Eric Hect and Joe
when
their
contracts
are
up.
Bonds
the
players
now
react
differently
·
signs.
.·
i11troduced were Eric Hect, Jake cheerleaders. Freshman cheerlead- McElory in wrestling, Frank Blake,
Not
only
does
lhe
money-orient·
creates
furlher
conttoversy
when
be
when
lhey
feellhey're
underpaid.
·
· Kenlledy, Burt Kennedy and Aaron ers were Danielle Crow, Dawn Jennifer Taylor, Tticia Baer and
ed
talk
take
away
from
the
focus
of
"The thing lhat really 9ffen~s
Sheets. Sheets wusalsodistticlrun· Hockman, Tracy Ftfe, Marlo Missy Nelson in basketball and gets into shouting matches with
· ner-up and fmisbed in lhe top eight White, Danielle Gray and Cassie cheerleaders Darci Wolfe, Michelle Pirates PR director Jim Lachimia, the fan is when a player says lhat tf lhe spring, Rigney complains, but it:
in lhe state tournament last week-· Hubbard . .Dawn Hockman was ' Young, Lorena Oiler and Kelly coach Bill Virdon and manager Jim · lhe team doesn't meet !heir dead- has taken some of lhe fun out of it ,·
Ley land all within less than an line, he's out of here. That really as well.
end in Daytm ·
named lhe most improved-fresh - Doidge.
"I remember Wes Westrum·.·
hour.
makes people mad," he said.
Coach Gene-Wise introduced
Pitchers Kevin Brown and
' 'We had holdouts in my day, would always come ou' early (for
members of lhe freshman basket..
Kenny Rogers of Texas and too. But once you signed your con· spring training)," he said. "He ··
ball team that finished 17·2. Team
would always take his first ground ·· ·
CincintUili catCher Joe Oliver stage tract, then let's go."
members were Tom Cremeans,
balls and say, 'Fellas, we're living
one-day
walkouts
in
protest
of
the
Rigney
was
an
infielder
for
lhe
Pete ygle, Jason George, Healh
again.'
.
.
amount
of
!heir
renewed
conaacts.
New
·York
Giants
from
1946·53,
Hudson, Steve Smilh, Jact Stanley,
"The
mystique
of
our
game'
·
·
Cincinnati
pitcher
JIQ.
A!m~IIO'l!
long
before
the
days
of
agents
and
Eric ,Wagn,er, Kevin Whobrey, .
never
ChiJiges.
That's
grear.
But··
still
is
AWOL
and
baa
incurted
guarilnlft:ed
contracts.
'.
Brad Anderson, Jerrod Douglas,
fines of more than $2,000. He says
Players negotiated their own let's teep lt going and ~ ?ot to ,
Jeremy Grimm and Scou Peterson.
he'd
rather
be
working
on
a
tuna
deals
and only players like Willie screw it up. I don't know wHat (the
· Reserve basketball coach Rick
boat
than
playing
for
what
lhe
Reds
Mays
and Joe DiMaggio got the mystique) is, but let's try 10 keep
Edwards introdu~ed members of ·.
are
paying
him.
really
big money. The rest had 10 it.
.t••
1
his 16·4 reserve team. Players
Ryne
SancJberg
of
the
Cubs
and
battle
for
every
nickel
they
could
"
introduced were John Bentley,
Dwight
Godden
of
the
Mets
set
squeeze
out
of
management.
Nathan Brown, Jay Cremeans,
deadlines to have their contracts R•gney remembers holding out one
SPRIN6 VALLEY CIN~MA
Todd Dill, Shawn H,amon, Bobby
reworked, then expressed disap· year in an attempt to get a pay raise
446 4524
:
Johnson, Randall Johnston, Chris
pointment when the deadlines 10$22,500.
Knight, Kevin Lambert, Tony
aren't met. Cubs outfielder Jerome
' ' Another time , Augie Galan
Roush, Kyle Simpson, and Nathan
Walton
accuses
management
of
had
a great year when he ·drove in
Teeter along with manager Jarod
"spitting
in
my
face
and
spitting
in
something
like 90 runs,' ' Rigney
Stewart
recalled.
"The
next year the club
Varsity coach Phil Harrison
7:00,.8::!0 !M(U
offered
him
lhe
same contract. He,
I
SAT/SUI MATIK£E5
along wilh assistant coach Rick
(&lt;·"'-~',t.rn• ;
1:00,3 :30
asked management why he got no
Ash presented awards lhe 7-14 var·
M'rD ~~
raise
after
driving
in
90
runs
the
sity team. Team members inuor,revious season . They said,
BasebaD
duced were Frant Blalce, Trevor
Jim Hardin,.a former pitcher for . Because.that's what we pay you to ,
Harrison, Shawn Hawley, Phil
lhe Baltimore Orioles, was among do.'
Hovatter, Milce Van Meter, Terry·
"There would be situation·s
.three
people killed in a weekend
McGuire and Jason Wright. Also
plane crash at Key West, Fla. where a rookie would sign a really
introduced were manager Chris
Hardin, 47, pitched for Baltimore low contract and do good, so the
Neil and score keeper Amy Wagn·
from
.1967-1971, lhen played for club might teat up lhe contract and
er.
. GIRLS BASKETBALL AWARDS • Receiving awards for
the
New
York Yankees and the give him an additional $2,500. But
Special awards went to Phil
girls buketbal1 were Jeuller Taylor AII·TVC and most valuable·
Atlanta
Braves
before retiring in that was rare.''
Hovatter for most improved, free
defensin playe and Trlda Baer second team AU-TVC and Most
1972.
He
was
piloting
lhe single·
throw percentage Jason Wti~ht,
Valaable Defensive Pliyer. Not pic~red - Kelly Smith, Second
Beechcraft
when
it crashed
·engine
Moat rebounds and most pomts
Team All-TVC.
.
.
·
into
lhe
parking
lot
at
a
newly
boilt
Trevor Harrison llld best defensive
shopping
plaza
....
Philadelphia
player Frant Blake. Wright was
Phillies center fJelder Lenny~ Dykalso named 10 lhe lhe soulheasl disstra, who rqJOrtedly lost $50,000 in
trict honorable mention all-district
high-stakes poker games, has .been
• team and Haqison honorable men·
called
10 testify at the trial of the
lion AII-TVC. Mi1ce Van Meter and
'
.
man who nin the gamblin' operaThe University of Rio Grande Grande and West Virginia State tion. Drtstra, who lived m Jack.
The Daily Sentinel
son, Miss., before moving 10 the
baseball team went to 5-5 on the was canc.elled.
The
Redmen
were
scheduled
10 Philadelphia area last summer, has
season after losing a doubleheader
(li8P811....
10 Ashland U~venity Saturday at host Marshall University in a single been subpoenaed to testify Tuosday
A 111•11... ol Modllmedla, lao.
nine-inning game today at 2 p.m. in at the trial of Herbert Kelso in
Stanley L Evm. Field•
game
originally set for Wednesday, Oxford, Miss. Dykstra has not been
PubliJIItd every att~rnoon, Mon~y
The Eagles J!ipped lhe Redmen
thr&lt;01gh Frldoy, Ill Court Sl .. Po·
and
will
meet lhe Thundering Herd charged in connection with the
4-3, 4·3 and .advanced their own
meroy. Ohio, by tlo• Ohio Volley Pubagain Saturday for a 1 p.m. double- case .
record to 4-1.
fllhlftl Corripany!Multlmfdla, Inc.,
Pomeroy, Ohio l:n&amp;9. Ph. 992·21116. SeIn lhe lhe opener, James Lewis header at St. Cloud Commons in
cond olus pootare paid ot Pumeroy.
(junior, Hamilton) led lhe hitting HuntingiDn.
Ohio.
for Rio Grande on a two for four
Member: United Prete lntematlonel,
performance
as lhe Redmen record· ·
Inland DaUy PrHIAiioclatlOB and the
Quality Service Before, During anc! After
ed· six hits and three errors. AshOhio New1paper AJJOCiatkm. National
--.,-~WHAT
KINDS
OF
RECORDS
Advertlllna Repretentatlve, Branham
land, also led by a two for four finthe Sale.
Newopaper SaiN, 733 Third Avenue.
ish by Creg Jantz, posted four hits
SHOULD I KEEP FOR EASY
New Y~rk, New York 10017.
and lhree ernn.
RETURN PREPARAnON?
POSTMASI"ER: Send clwl...,
John Riddle had the win on the
to 1be Dilly S..tlaol, 111 O&gt;urt St.•
;'
"
"'
;
;:&lt;-·:i'-.Ocd·
'
You
wMI
owed:
pitching mound, while Darrell
Pomeroy. Ohio 15711,
oyour
W·Za
Marcum (senior, Hamilton), whose
••nv recorda of ot,_, lncom11
8UII8IJIIP'ftON 8ATB8
P195/751·14 A/S
record
went
to
1-2,
lOOk
the
loss.
11088•• .tc.)
a, Cont•
••
record
of
bu1in..
end
inVIIt·
Wes
Young
(sophomore,
One Weelo .................. .. .......... ... ..$UO
ment expen. .
One MoDlh ................. ........... ..... 16.1111
Pomeroy) went 10 the top on hitting
ointDI!IIItion lfiY IIIII of II·
Ono Year ....... .......................... 183.20
for the Redmen with a three for
wrltil"."' othor proprty
8JNGU:OOPY
three finish in the second game,
v.a1111 - d • "" chorl·
FBICB
Sale End• Mondey, Merch tB. 1991
corolrlbutlono of property
bacted by another two for four
Dally ................................... 25 Cents
worth
....,..
thin
tiOO
ond
•
Ita
effort by Lewis, while Jantz boost- ·
Sublcrlben not ciHiriD&amp;: to pay Uwcar·
of 011h -u-lono
ed Ashland's chances by going one
rler maY remtt. to advance direct to
ond veluo recorda lor lfiY
Tbe Dally Sentinel on a 3, 6or 12 me~~th
for
three
wilh
a
double.
The
Redtllllutltv
lobull. Cre&lt;llt will bo !liVencarrier eooh•
U.r
of
me•a•l
apenMI, taxee.
men
committed
five
errors
and
had
week.
KARL
and
l!it.,.lt
you
pold
seven hits, while Ashland was
No oublcrtptlolll by maU permitted In
U11 1 TAXIIWER ENVELOPE or 1 TAX RECORD lOOK. evalloble
credited with no· errors and four
area1 wbere borne cUTter III'VIce ll
~REE It ony H•R Block office. You cen - " ' lnoomll. oxpon111. 1nd
avaJiablt.
hits.
othlr lntDrrnlllon . , . _ tor your Ntum. You wlleloo wont to liMp ell of
Andy Bulach (sophomore,
your .......... lor deduatlbll • - • • lor thl Ylf .
llllllolloo,._
Do you fiUIItlono ebout how tho tox llwo ollect your roturn7
Hamilton) had the loss for Rio
·con you locet H•R llodl-e. • - yot. 11op bytheoneneereatyou.
13 w..u ............................... ...121.S.
600 EAST MAIN
992·2094
POMIIOY, OH.
Grande to send his aeason record 10
We're rNdY to help you!
211 w..u .................................. $63.16
1-2.
and
Mike
Randall
pitched
for
SIIYIIIG M AliA POl 25 YIAa
uw-..................................SN.T6
the Eagles.
uw- .................................. auo
Pray Our Troops Home.
Due to wet field conditions,
:Ill w..u ..................................M5.ll0
EAn IUIII
"2...674
Sonday's home game between Rio
52W..U ... ........ .. .................. ... I&amp;f0

~!~~~su~'l..~r ~~;n;::;~r ssa~~ ~~~n~n ~~rh~~t:~-~a~d ~j~~~~

J

-·

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•

Appalachian gtoup meets on mine ·Situation
-

Earlier Ibis year when American
Electric Power announced its plans
10 make a decision on the continued operation of lhe Meigs Mine,
most of us became alarmed and
concerned about lhe overwhelming
economic impact that such a deci, sion would have on Soulheastem
.Ohio.
Lilcewise, many of us began to
study lhe issue in greater depth to
determine not o"ly the facts surrounding the situation, but also to
help us as lawmakers and state policy maJcers. to determine lhe strategy lhal would enable lhe mines 10
· remain open.
The House Task Force had previously been examining lhe issue
through a study or lhe impact of lhe
Federal Clean Air Act on Ohio.
That tast force has just about con·
~luded its beatings and wiD hopefuUy soon be issuing a report. wilh
recommendations on necessary legislation.
Secondarily though, I asked that
lhe Chairman of our Appalachian
Delegation of th~e Ohio General
Assembly calla meeting of our delegation to discuss the issue and

.

determine a strategy for our delegation. This past week, lhe Chairman
of our Dele~tion, State Senator
Robert Ney {R-Bamesville) caJied
such a meeting for discussion.
While it was clear from the
meeting lhat many of us are still
sean:hing for answers 10 questions
and researching lhe ramifications to
potential changes, it is clear that
!here is a resolve of our delegation
10 work together 10 achieve a positive solution fOr Ohio. We all like·
wise recognize lhal whatever deci·
sion is made that affects the Meigs
Mine situation will also set a precedent and have a major impact on
other similar situations in lhe coal
mining regions of Eastern and
Southeastern Ohio.
During our discussions, we
became aware of the fact that
Congress will soon be afforded an
opportunity to change lhe federal
tall laws so that it may beneftt utili·
ty companies that wish to install
scrubbers and other pollution
abatement processes.
In addition, our deleiation
resolved 10 worlt 10gelher Wllh our
Congressional Delegation for lhe .

II

JANM.LONG .

federal government ·10 financially
assist Ohio in Ibis problem.
Earlier Ibis year, President Bush
of the mines. The ecounveiled a budget lhat revealed lhat operation
nomic
tipple
effect of lhe loss of
lhe funding for clean coal technolo- one coal miner's
job is mind boggy had been eliminaled. It is quite gling.
•
clear lhal Ohio, other high-sulphur
As
an
Appalachian
Delegation,
coal states, as well as lhe general we want to make sure that when
public will S1811d 10 lose if we do decisions are made at the state level
not continue clean coal technology on
this issue that lhe evidence of
efforts in this nation.
human
impact is clearly available. 1. ·
Consequently, ·, we as an was asked
by Senator Ney to chair :
Appalachian Delegation, are urging this sub-committee
and I look forthe federal JOvernment to re·insert W!Ifd tq the opportunity 10 work
lhe 600 million dollar appropliation · w1th my colleagues to develop a
to the clean coal technology strategy that will hopefully allow
research effort.
us to keep lhe Meigs Mines open
Finally, we resolved as a delega· and
save lhe region from Ibis eco- · .
tion to form an active, working nomic travesty.
·
subcommittee of our delegation to
As the sub-committee works :
forge a strategy that will allow us actively over the next few weets, I:
as a delegation to advocate lhe nec· welcome your comments as to sug- ,
essary changes 10 permit the con· gestions and recommendations for .
tinueA operation of the Meigs developing a state policy on this
Mines:
. maaer. And, as al.ways I welcome .
We believe very strongly that your comments on other issues. ,
consideration must be given 10 the You may reach me by calling at ..,
human impact of decisions that are area code 614-466-8156 or by writmade at the state and corporate injl to me State .Senator Jan ·
level with respect 10 lhe installation Michael lAng, Sliltehouse, Colum- ~
of scrubbers and the continued bus, OH 43215.

Make our pundits accountable ___B_en_w._a_tte_nb_,_erg-=-::
The crucible of war distills re8lity in doubletime. The "lessons of
Kuwait" are tumbling forlh from
every corner, touching every aspect
of humanity. I offer three lhat stuck
with me:
• About women: If you didn't
know it before, know it now • !hey
can do anything.
There was a marvelous interview on CNN with helicopter pilot
Maj. Marie Rossi just before she
new a wanime mission into Iraq 10
bring supplies 10 American lroopS.
She was asked: Wasn't it really a
·combat role? She said. very lowkey: We're professional soldiers,
we volunteered, we're here to do a
job.
·
She seemed tough and soft,
beautiful and brighL She was crisp
and wellspoken, iri that military
way.ln the interview, she lit up living rooms everywhere, a symbol of
can-do feminism, based on metitocnll;y.

...•.

.

. The day after the w.- ended, her
chopper went down, and· Maj.
Rosai was killed.
• About the Soviets: The weaker
lhey are, the:beuer off we are.
America could never have organized the Gulf operation if the

Soviets were in their old menacing
posture, always backed by 30,000
nukes.
This time, in the beginning, !hey
helped. But during the endgame,
they cam close to money·wrenchinJIIhe operation by playmg footsie
wuh Iraqis. A nuclear ex-superpower, even in a diminished condition, must still be taken very seriously.
The question about whether it
would be desirable for the Soviet
Union 10 fragment into its component ethnic parts has been
answered From our perspective, it
would be. It weakens them.
• About pundits, experts and
journalists: Mate them more
accountable.
David Gergen of U.S. News &amp;:
World Report makes a sound point:
Every other industry in America is
movmg toward quality control what about the pundiiS, the experts
and the joumalists?
It'sa good question. What abOut
them? Many have much to answer
for.
Many facts were wro~any
opinions were (by my li ts) offthe-wall. Yet, the prallle
the
debate. (We came within four

Democratic Senate votes of a constitutional firestorm that would
have played iniD Saddam's hands.)
More than ever, pundits and
experts play a powerful .role in
forming policy. When the Gulf
War began, it was caJied "lhe battle
of the columnists."
An 'under-performing quarter·
bact is benched. Doc10rs face maJ.
practice action. Politicians face lhe
voters. A general who makes a
wrong call doesn't get promoted.
They are ail also scrutinized by lhe
press-pundi-expens. Such scrutiny
often pushes the scrutinees toward
beuer performance.
But who judges the judges?
Who shines the spotlight on the
pundits, lhe press and lhe experts?
Who protects the consumer?
What 10 do? Don't purge pundits. Don't exorcise experts. No
jihad for journalists. During the
war debate, columnist Mark
Shields said those who had not
served in the military (lilce Dan
Quayle, Richard Cheney and
Richard Perle) had little moral
standing to make, or comment
war policy. That was a cheap

'3:::.•

We shouldn't now commit

Shieldsism, even uniD Shields, who- :
was spectacularly wrong about the· :
war. Don't muzzle Mark!
'
But pundits ought to be under :
lhe same scrutiny as everyone else., :
That's consumer protection.
·
Pundi's and experts usually· ;
don't attack each other publicly. :
They should start. The quality of
experts, pundits and journalists is
even more important 10 our nation- .
al well-being than lhe quality of
our quarterbacks.
·:
There is some movement in the
right direction. Paul Gigot (Wall •
Street Journal), William Safire
(New York Times) and recent ani·
cles in The Washington Post and ·
The Washington Times have
looked back to tote up the score.
Let's have more. If you dori't
teep score, you'll never know the

score.

1
"

'

jiO.

-Sports briefs-

Rio;baseball team goes to 5-5
after losing weekend twin bill

TIRES ARE OUR

Scientists believe marijuana can be
particularly harmful to lungs because
users typicaUy inhale tbe unfiltered
smoke deeply and hold it in tbelr I
lungs for prolonged periods of time. :
Marijuana smoke has been found to
have more cancer-causing agents
!ha!l are found In cigarette smoke. ~ . .. . .• ,
~

BUSIN~SS

BRIDGESTONE TIRES

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545 95

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HOME AND AUTO

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611

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�Page 4 The Dally Sentinel

L

Tueadey, March 12,1991

Pomeroy41ddleport, Ohio

:UNLV's Johnson heads list of UPI All-Ame·r ica cagers
•IS

By TOM WintERS
UPI Sports Writer
. NEW YORK (UPI) - Larry
Johnson, who spurned the NBA
and helped carry No. 1 Nevada-Las
Vegas to an undefealed regular season, Monday was named an AllAmerican by Uniled Press Intema· tional for th~ second slnlight year.
The 6-foot-7 senior forward was
joined on the firSt team by junior
forward Billy Owens of Syracuse
. and three sophomores, center
Shaquillc O'Neal of Louisiana
.Slate and guards Jim Jackson of
. Ohio SIIIC and Kenny Anderson of
Georgia Tech.
· The team. was selected by a
panel of UPI sports writers from
around the l'(luntry.
Johnson led the defending
. NCAA champions to a 30-0 =onl
. and 41 consecutive victories over
. two seasons. He will lead the Runnin' Rebels, the top seed .in the
WestRegion , into this week's

NCAA Tournamen1, IS UNLV bids
to become the firSt ICam since John
Wooden's 1973 UCLA squad to
win baclt-to-back national championships. UNL V opens Friday
against Mon&amp;ana.
Following Johnsoo's junior season, there was speculation he
would skip his seruor year to play
professiomilly. The rumors gained
momentum in June whea the
NCAA banned UNL V from
defendin(! its title. But even before
the decisiOn was reversed, Johnson
said !Je would return out of loyalty
to head coach Jerry Tarkanian and
a·promise to his mother.
·
"I never regretted my decision," said Johnson; who on Sunday was named MVP of the Big
West Conference Tournament.
" I' ve never had any second
thoughts about it. I love these guys. .
We really relate to each other and
to play with them anotl)et year
meant another year of fun·.. It's

imporlant that I 4~ my edUCIIion I
made. that promiSe to my mother
I'm mating sure to follow through

Of' it''

.

~

His decision swayed teammate
Stacey Augmon into staying, and
the rwo have guided the Rebels to
the firSt unbeaten season by a Division I school since 1979:.SO. Augmoo was a 'second-team ~)election
this year.
Johnson lias sharpened his
game, and this year is averaging
22.9 points and 11.0 rebounds a
game. He is shooting 67 percetlt
from the fiCid and 82 percent from
the line.
,
"I'm not the one that's gotten
better, he says. ''I'm blessed wilb a
bunch of other guys who are helping me lodt better.''
Anderson, UPI's Freshman of
the Year last season, led the Yellow Jackets to the Final Four in
1989-90 and responded with an
outstanding sophomore campaign.

He averqed 25.7 points, 5.8
rebounds, 5.6
and 3.1 steals
·a gan\e, but Georgia tech may
have seen the last of Anderson,
who is believed headed for the
NBA. Anderson is the first Georgia
Tech All-American since Roger
Kaiser in 1961. .
"It's a great feeling to be named
an All-American," Anderson said.
" I lbank God for my b~ and
I thak C:O.:h (Bobby) Cremms for ·
all he has done to.make this season
fun from me."
Owens, the Big Easl's Player of
the Year, carried the Orangemen to
their first oulriptt Big East regularseason title this season amid: contro;versy prompted by an NCAA
ivestigation. The 6-8 forward averaged 23.5. points, I 1.4 rebounds
and more than three assists a game.
He is reported leaning toward
jumping to the NBA.
' He's lil!:e an Oscar Robert-

son," St. John's head coach Lou Iitle. Jackson, a 6-6 swiDgman.and
Carneaecca said. "He plays tllree the conference's top player, is the
positions, shootS well from the out- first Buckeye All-America since
side ud takes guards down low GaryBraddSiD 1964.
· .
"The thinf about Jimmy is that
and posts them up. How do you
defend him?"
although he s a super !alent, he
O'Neal, the Tiger.s ' 7-1 giant, works so hard," Ohio State head
suff~ a hairline leg fracture and
coach Randy Ayers said. " He' s
missed LSU's final regular-season never been satisfied as a player."
game and the Southeast Conference
On the second team, JOining
Tournament. Monday, doctors Au~mon are Missouri's Doug
cleared him to {!laY in the NCAAs.
Srruth, the Big Eight's co-Piarer of
"The warnor is back," LSU the Year; Duke center Chpstian
head coach Dale Brown said. Laettner; Rodney Monroe, North
" Thank God."
Carolina State's all-time leading
O'Neal, the SEC's Player of the scoret, and frovidenee guard Eric
Yel!J', averaged 27.7 points, 14.6 . ?,{urdQ&lt;:k, the NC::AA's all.time
rebounds and five blocks a game. sreals leader.
The third team: forwards
O'Neal may leave after the season
and undoubtedly would be an NBA · Clarence Weatbenpoim of Southlottery pick.
ern Mississippi and Calbert
Jackson averaged 18.8 points, Cheaney of Indiana, center Dikem5.3 rebounds and 4.2 assists a game be Mutombo of Georgeto11111 and
in sparking Ohio State ·to a 25-3 guards Steve Smith of Michigan
record and a share of the Big Ten State and K~th 1enningu~f East
· · Tennessee Stilte.

By The ·Bend

By GENE CADDES
UPI Sports Writer
COLUMBUS - Christa Wells
of Millersburg West Holmes heads
up the 1991 United Press lntema: tional Division II girls All-Ohio

basketball team. ·
Wells; a 5-foot-6 senior guard
for coach Jack Van Reeth, led the
Knights to a 2().() record this past
regular season. During her four
years as a slarter, West. Holm~s

Boys regional pairings
By United Press Intemat!onal
This week's boy state high school
regional ba:Jketball pairings:
Division I
At Canton Civic Ceater
· Warren Harding (19-5) vs
Lorain Southview (15•8), Tuesday,
7 p.m.
M~ssillon Perry (22-1) vs
Cleveland St. Ignatius (18-5),
Wednesday, 7 p.m.
Finals: Saturday, 7:30pm.
. At Akron Rhodes Arena
Shaker Heights (1.9-4) vs Bar· benon (22-1), Tuesday, 7 p.m.
. Cleveland Villa Angei11.-St.
, Jose~h (19-4) vs Toledo St John's
(14- ), Wednesday, 7 p.m.
,.. Finals: Saturday, 7:30p.m.
At Columbus Fairgrouuds Coliseum
.
Lancaster (19-4) vs Sandusky
. (19-4), Tuesday, .6 p.m.
Newark (17-7) vs Pickerington
. (19-4), Tuesday, 9p.m.
.. Finals: Saturday, 7:30p.m.
, AtWrightStateUniversily
Beavercreek (20-3) vs West
Chester Lakota (23-1), Wednesday,
6:15p.m.
Dayton Patterson (13-10) vs
Cincinnati Elder (20-4), Wednesday. 8 p.m.
. Finals: Saturday, 7:30p.m.
Divisloa U
;. AI Youngstown State University
· • Wooster Triway (22-2) vs
,-Ashtabula Edgewood (16-7), Tuesday, 6:15p.m. '
, •' Canfield (16-6) vs Cleveland
, Benedictine (19· 5), Tuesday, 8
·p.m. ·
·
· Finals: Friday, 7:30p.m. At Toledo Savage Hall ·
:" Perrysburg (14-10) vs Avo11
·" Lake (21·2), Tuesday, 6:30p.m.
Co~~~ (14-9) vs Lexington (21· 2), :ru
y, 8:15p.m.
·
Finals: Friday, 7:30p.m.
At Wright State University
Cincinnati Greenhills (21-3) vs
"Cincinnati Roger Bacon (17 -7),
Tuesday, 6:15p.m.
... .. Columbus Hamilton Township
~ (20-3) vs Dayton Chaminade-Juli9 )
~ eFI_IIlnale (IF1da• Tue7sda30y, 8 p.m.
, t s: n Y. : p.m.
.
~
At Ohio University
1.
Portsmouth (21-2) vs Proc~. - torville Fairland (21-2), Tuesday,
:'- 6: 15 p.m.
~
Columbus Briggs (17-6) vs
~ Dresden Tri- Val)ey (NA), 8 p.m.
~ Tuesday.

I

.~
~

Division II all-Ohio girls' basketball team
'

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!)~ The 1991 Uniled Press Intemalion~ al Division II girls all-Ohio basket~ ball team, with height, school year
1r and scoring average:
~ FIRST TEAM
•
Knst• Echelberry, Mantua
: CresiWood, 6-0, Senior, 24.1.
• • Jenny Kulics, Canrield, 5·6,
Junior, 23.4.
Sheri Rogan, Urbana, 5-6,
Senior, 22.9. .
.
Katie Smtih, Logan, 5•11,
Junior, 27.9.
Christa Wells, Millersburg West
· Holmes, 5~. Senior, 27.0.
· SECOND TEAM
Amy Flory, Napoleon, 5-7,
Junior, 20.4.
Latasha Glanton, Dayton Dunbar, 5-11, Senior, 21.1.
Sarah ~s. Tipp City Tippee&amp;, noe, 5~. Sanor, 19.9.
· Anita Jurcenko, Jefferson Area,
. 5-S. Junior, 23.1.
Dee Reeder, Galion, 5- ll ,
Junior, 19.7.
TffiRD TEAM
Debbie Blazek, Bellaire, 5-7,
· Senior,l7.1.
Kim Huber, Canfield, S-8,
Senior, 22.3.
Lindsay Mann, Port Clinlllll, 510, Sophomore. 19.5.
Marife . Melendez, Lorain
· Southview, 5~. Senior,17.1. ·
. Tricia PenderghiSt, Cincinnati
: Mother of Mercy, 5-8, Junior, 15.3.

;,

I

Finals: Friday, 7:30p.m.
Division m
At Ohio University
Bloom-Carroll (16-8) vs Chesa·
peake (21-2), Wednesday, 6:15
p.m.
Unioto (20-3) vs Sarahsville
Shenandoah (23- 1), Wednesday, 8
p.m.
Finals: SBturday, 4 p.m.
At Caatou Fieldhouse
Campbell Me111orial (16-7) vs
Bedford Chane! (18-5), Wednesday, 6:15 p.m.
Youngstown Liberty (22-1) vs
Akron St. Vincent-St. Mary (17-5),
Wednesday, 8 p.m.
Finals: Saturday, 4 p.m.
At Toledo Savage Hall
,
New London (23-1) vs Oak Harbor (13-11), Wednesday, 6:30p.m.
Haviland Wayne Trace (20-3)
vs Rocky River (21-2), Wednesday, 8:15p.m.
Finals: Saturday,4p.m.
At Vandalia Butler
Olentangy (11-12) vs Milton
Union (14-9) or Cincinnati Indian
Hill (20-2), Thursday, 6:15p.m.
Cincinnati McNicholas (12-10)
or Bellrook (20-2) vs Hamilton
Badin (I~ or Brookville (13-9),
Thursday, 8 p.m.
·
Finals: Saturday, 4 p.m.
Division IV
At Toledo Savage Hall
Miller City (19-4) vs Antwerp
(20-3), Thursday, 6:30p.m.
St. Henry (22-1) vs Holgate (194), Thursday, 8:15p.m.
Finals: Saturday, !2:30p.m.
At Canton Fieldhouse.
Mansrield St. Peter's (22-2) vs
Lorain Catholic (21-2), Thursday,
6:15p.m.
Kirtland (21-3) vs Liberty Benton (21-2), Thursday, 8 p.m . .
Finals: Saturdar..t2:30 p.m.
At Zanesville High School
Beallsville (15-8) vs Columbus
Wehrle (20- 3), Thursday, 6:15
p.m.
Tuscarawas Catholic (17-6) vs
Centerburg (17-6), Thursday, 8
p.m.
Finals: Saturday, 12:30 p.m.
At Wright State University
Crown City Hannan Trace ( 195)
Lock! d (19-4) Th da
vs
• urs y,
6:15p.m. an
New Madison Tri-Village (24-0)
vs Fort Loramie (19-4), Thursday,
8 p.m.
·
·

I

HONRABLEMENTION
Cornelia Austin, Toledo Libbey;
Mindy Ballinger, Cincinnati Roger
Bacon; Shannon Bowen, Elyria
West; Kelly Burrier, Louisville;.
Laura Baker, Warsaw River View;
Jenny Carter, Orrville; Sherry
Del;mey, Chagrin Falls Kenston;
Heather DeMis, Shelby; Lori Dyer,
Galion; Tracy Eberhardt, Oberlin
Firelands; Erika Fryer, Kettering
Alter; Karrie Gabbard, Kings Mills
Kings; Amanda Hayes, Columbus
Beechcroft; Amy Hubbard, Philo&lt;
Jenny Jackson, Benjamin Logan;
Jeannie Kirch, Cincmnati Mother
of Mercy; Leigh Ann Longaherger,
Dresden Tri-Valley; Kathy
McCarthy, Upper Sandusky; Robin
McKernan, Girard; Amanda Matus,
Olmsted Falls; Leslie Mehl, Avon
L~e; Kathy O'Dell, ~ambridge;
Tiffany Og, Logan; Kim Pactorek,
Edison South; Alisa Peddicord,
Willard; Kim Ran(t, Bexley; Casey
Stinson, Swanton; Nikki Sparks,
Cincinnati Turpin; Jenni Seem,
Poland; Anaie Suggs, Cleveland
Villa Angela-St. Joseph; Valerie
Scott, Salem; Cassie Wilmoth,
Oberlin Firelands; Jennifer Whitley, Lebanon; Trixie Wolf, Jefferson Area; SteP.hanie Wiers,
Willard; Kim Wllliarns, LemonMonroe; Alane Yerian, Struthers.
·
Player•of-the-yearCbrlsll Weill, West Holmes.
Coacll-of·tbe·yurJaek Vaa Reetb, West Holmes.

By Cindy OUverl
USDA's Diet and Heilth Know!- gtams of fat per day to bring her fat
Co. Ext. Agt. Home Ec:.
edge Survey had never heard about .fevel down from 37% to 30% of
Are Americans on the right any health problems that might be calories.
track with fat in their diets? In a · linked to how much fat a person
. Here are some simple, small
·recent nationwide USDA survey of eats!
changes that can really add up:
nutrition knowledge, rwo-thirds of
It.'s clear that many consumers . • Save 8 grams of fat per cup by ·
.hof~!e food managers thought need more information about issues drinking skim milk instead of
avo,dlng too much fat was an ,in nutrition - fat is one of them . whole.
• Eat baked chicken withOut the
important factor for Americans to "Eatina Right ... the Diewy Guideconsider in choosing a healthy diet. lipes Way: is a campaign by skin rather than fried chicken to
When it came to evaluating their USDA to meet this need by making save 8 grams of fat per 3-ounce
own diets, about 45% thought their consumers more aware of the serving.
~unent diets were "about. right" in Dielary Guidelines for Americans
• When you're at the ~ad bar
fat
·
. ·,
and how to put thelf\ into action. ladling on the dressing, remember
.' , A ~~ USDA Sli!'Yey of what The Dietary Guidelines are. seven . that each tablespoon has 9 grams of
Americans eat shows ocherwise.. In b8sic principles for a healthful diet fat
·
1987-88, Americans surveyed developed by the Department of
• Tr.y a cup of frozen yogurt
received 37% of their total calories Agriculture and the Department of instead of gourmet ice cream to
from faL Estimates from a similar Health and Human Services.
save 20 grams of fat.
survey conducled in 1977-78 were ' One of the guidelines suggests,
• Ten potato chips have 7 grams
41%. Although thi$ represents a "Choose a diet low in fat, saturated offaL Go easy! ·
downward IJ'end, dietary fat levels fat, and cholesterol." The goal is to
Why should we eat less fat? A
retllain high compared to those =- keep the fat content of the total diet ' diet cOntaining a lot of saturated fat
ommended. The ·1990 "Dietary low, not to eliminate the foods you . and excessive calories and dietarY
Guidelines for Americans" just love from your diet. You can cholesterol can raise blood cholesreleased by the Department of . achieve the recommended 30% of terol. Saturated fat has the most
Agriculture and the Department of calories from fat in many ways. For effect. High blood cholesterol lev-·
Health and Human Services recom- example, you can choose lower fat els increase the risk of heart dismend fat intakes of 30% or less of cuts and trim the .fat from meats; ease.
calories.
remove the skin from poultry;
For more practical tips on how
Helping consumers choose diets · broil, bake, or boiiJllther than fry; to lower the fat and cholesterol in
lower in fat is one of the primary choose lowfat dairy products and the diet, USDA booklets are
goals for the USDA. Many con- go easy on salad dressing, spreads, designed to help consumers put the
somers think their eating habits are . and rich desserts. Any of these Dietary Guidelines into action .
already on target with respect to chan$CS can help reduce the fat in Contact Cindy S. Oliveri at the
fat. And deSpite all the efforts by the diet.
.
Meigs County Extension Office
nutrition and health professionals
For example, a moderately (~2-6696) for information ori how
and the media, a surprising 1/4 of active womiln ·getting about 2,000 you can get a copy of. these bookthe home food managers in the · calories needs to cut about 15 · lets.

r

·Rutland g~deners hear program
Rev. William Middleswarth presented a slide show of flowers,
plants and rural nature scene~ at the
recent meeting of the Rutland
Friendly Gardeners held at the
. )lome of Suzy Carpenter.
· Kimberly Willford, program
· chairman, discussed the 1991 AllAmerican Selections. A number of
roses were included such as "Bar·
· bara Bush," "Perfect Moment,"
"Shear Elegance," "Shining Hour"
and "Carefree Wonder." Other
flowers discussed included "Maxirna Marina Pansy," "Padpadja ·
Pansy," "Pretty in Pink Vinca/'
· "Red Plunie Gaillardia" and
"Frcckies" geranium. She noted
that vcgclables are also included
such as Tivoli ~uash. a substitute
for pasla; KentUcky Blue, pole type
beans; and "Golden Crown" water-

Gingerbreac;l Boy
Invites You
To Our
2nd Location ...
703 2nd Street,
·Mason, WV
March 11 - March 16
0

'

'

'

......~~

Stop By Attd Visit Us And Register For Our Four 125 Gift Certificates
To Be Given Away During Grand Opening Week
Hours: Monday·Saturday, 9:30 a.m. • 5:30 p.m.

GINGERBREAD HOUSE OF GIFTS
1102 VIAND STREET, POINT PLEASANT .
PHONE 675-794'1

703 2ND STREET, MASON
PHONE Tl3-59Tl

ROGAN. ~
ER

lulruce Services ·

214 EAST MAIN

POMEROY
992·8687

.1!1 .........

i

Bank One, Rutland.
Therapy plans were discussed
with Suzy Carpenter and Carrie
Morris to visit the Extended Care
Unit at Veterans Memorial Hospital to do potpourri baskets for the
· Easter theme. Janet Bolin has had
. the Rutland Post Office display for
February with information about
the upcoming A!meriflora '92
exhibit in Columbus, sponsored by
!he OAGC and the Rutland Friendly Gardeners in part, with others.
Mrs. Willford will have the display in March with a seasonal
theme. Mrs. Carpenter won the
doo.r prize brought by Mrs. Wiii· ford, with Mrs. Willford and Marjorie Davis winning the hostess
door prize. Judy Snowden was bon. ored by a secret pal anniversary
gift.

·

Buckeye Boys State delegates named
'

The Racine American Legion
Post No. 602 has selected delegates
to Buckeye Boys State which will
be held at Bowling Green Slate
Universit¥ JWJe·15-23.
Selected. as delegates Jason
Amott and Chad Wise.
Arnott is the son of DiU and Stefanic Amou, Syracuse. iie is talcing
college preparatory classes at
Southern High School where he is
a member of the Drama Club and ·
Quiz Bowl. Upon graduation he
plans to attend a f('UJ'-year college
and major in business law. He is
interested in a career in politics.
Wise is the son of John and Pam
Wise, Letart. He attends Southern
. High School where he is taking
college preparatory classes. He is
JASON ARN017'
, involved in basketball, golf and
quiz bowl. Wise plans to attend a
-The purpose of Buckeye Boys
four-year university to obtain a StalC, a "workshop in government,"
degree in engineering.
is to provide young men of Ohio

CHAD WISE
with a deeper understanding of the
rights and privileges as an American citizen.

Daughters of America meet
'

Several announcement were
' made at the ~ent meeting of the
Chester Council No. 323 Daughters
of America with JoAnn Baum presiding.
The pledge to the Christian and
American Fla~s were given along
with the Lord s Prayer and scripture readings. The first stanza of
the Star Spangled Banner was
sung.
It· was noted that Goldie
Fredrick has a new great grandson,
Cora Beegle is well e.nough to
return horne and Buel Ridenour is
in the hospital.
A cake walk wiU be held at the
next meeting and birthdays will

also be observed. A potluck will be
held at 6:30 p.m. followed by a
meeting a 7:30p.m.
"This Is the Day That the Lord
Has Ma.de" was read by Bulah
Maxey.
The Past Councilor's will meet
•t the hall and members are to wear
green.
Visiting from the Guiding Star
Council No . 124 were Bob and
Esther Harden and Margaret
Colrill.
Attending ' were Mary Jo Barringer, Sandy White, Bullih Maxcy,
Betty Young, Kathryn Baum ,
Everett Grant, Elizabeth Hayes ,
Virginia Lee. Mary Holter, Thelma

i Circle of Helping Hands meets
Plans for the Easter breakfast
were discussed, a day for cleaning
the church was SCI for March 26
and a day to finish quilts for
• Grundy Mountain Mission was set
for April 18 at the recent meeting
of the Circle. of Helping Hands of.
the Zion Church of Christ held at
: the home of Peggy Bole.
i Lucile Allen callecl the meeting
I to order arid all responded with a
I Bible verse containing the word
: ''beginning."
·
Ida Murphy had devotions and,
she used an article from Guide' posts, "Easter Dinner Righi Out of
· I the Bible." She also read a poem
• "A·Perfect Day."

·!

I

IMwMCec.,.......

melon.
Mrs. Willford gave devotions on
the theme "Spring's Coming" followed by the club .collect the secretary's report and the treasurer's
report.
It was noted that the Friends llfld
Flowers Garden Club still owes the
Rutland Friendly Gardeners $41.60
on the fall flower show held by the
three Rutland clubs:
The Ohio Association of Garden
Clubs bulb order book was
received and orders ;uc being collected now. The club has no contact about its part in hostcssing the
spring meeting for Region 11.
Joanne Fetty , president,
announced that plans for the earth
day observance are underway, with
printed flower seed packets to be
donated for dislribution in town by

&lt;I

•,

The mother-daughter banquet
was set for May 10.
The next meeting will be at the
home of Lucile Allen on Apri I 11.
Kathryn Johnson had the program on animals and she gave
many interesting· facts. She also
had a quiz with I00 answers about
naming the male and female names
of animals, ,the young, the sounds
they make and the shelters made
for them. and their natural habitats.
Others pr!)sent were Helen
Eblin, Suzanne Warner, Mbinda
Davis, Evelyn Thomas, Hazel Stanley, Kathr¥(1 J!lh.nson, Dorolhy
Reeves and Marjorie PurleD.
.

5

Community calendar

:Contemporary - Living ~.s_yc_in_dy_o_uve_n_

NCAA West said strongest field

tho Medolist ollowothe ••omption
lnvnedlotoly.
The Medollst recognlno tho older,
..fer driller with oubotontlol rote
reductlono ......,dor covorogo.
Roto noductlono begin •• oorty oo
oao 211 ond •• portlcu18rty ottroc·
tlve for tho 411 to 84 - · old.
H you hiVI I Afe driving ,_rd,
- just how your cor In-·
onco ..,.mlum can be with tho
Medollst Auto Polley from Btote
Auto ·1nou,..ce Co-t.o.
Coli uo obout thlo cor lnouronco
b-kthrough for oafo dri-..

Tuesday, March 12, 1891

Page

:Logan's Katie Smith named· K_nicks hand Nets 90-85 defeat
·First Te. am, All-Ohio b"J UPI For47min:ye~=:bemuchdU-

the second quarter tl)al brought New York back from
a 29-15 deflciL
·
.
.
The Knicks had gone to a lineup that included
ference between one of the houest teams in the NBA . Johrl Starks, Kenny Walker and Trent Tucker to pick
up the defense. Quinneu got the run slarted with a
compiled an 84-8 record, four of and one of the coldest. Thc:R it turned out what sepasteal that led to his fmt three-pointer, and Walker,
those losses coming in tournament rates the IWO is about seven feet tall.
Tucker and Slarks each· made a steal during the
1a
Palrick Ewing scored four points within four seestretch.
P foining·Wells on the Division II . onds with less than a minute to play Monday night,
Morris aitd Jack Haley missed back·to-back dunks
AU-Ohio first team were Logan •s lifting the New Yorl( Knicks to their eighth win in
that
could have broken the Knicks' run.
Katie Smith, runnerup 10 Wells in the last nine games, a 90-85 victory over the New
"Sometimes to learn how to win these games you
the player of the year balloting, Jersey Nets, who lost their sixth straighL
have to· lose them," Fitch said. "Hopefully, the next
Kristi Echelbeny of Mantua CrestEwing, who went 2-for-10 in the rlfSI half, hitiWo
time
we're in the same situation we will do the right
wood, Jenny Kulics of Canfield free throws with 36.3 seconds left to put New York
thing."
'
and Sheri Rogan of Urbana.
ahead 86-85. After the Nets ealled a time out, Ewing
In
other
games
Moaday
night, San Antonio
"She (Wells) wotked very -hard stole Reggie Theus's in-hounds pass intended for
shocked
Ulah
105-96,
Milwaukee
dumped Qetroit
on her game, •• said Van Reeth. Sam Bowie at midcourt and took it in himself for a
96-85
and
Portland
held
off
Cleveland
104-96.
"S~e just played it all the lime. For ·dunk that gave New York an 88-85 edge. .
Spurs
105,
Jazz
96
•
At
San
Antonio,
TelUIS, the
"We should not have thrown the ball in," Nets
her, ·11 was one 0 f those th'mgs 0f · head
Spurs opened the game witll their best shooting quarcoach. Bill Filth said. "We had a timeout and
IJI1?Wing up and halting visions of we should have used it.,
ter in history and then relied on David Robinson's 33
gomg to the Slate tournament. and
points to fight off Ulab. The win, San Antonio's fifth
beco ·
ood 1a
She
The Nets, who have lost 12 straight on the road,
straight,
gave the Spurs a one-game lead over Utah at
.wiru:'~ !!.cat ~ ~::·was ;J~ held a 29-15 lead in the second quarter and were up
the
top
of
the Midwest Division in their bau!e for the
en to excel! in basketball.
by five witb 4:24 to play but the Knicks fmished with
second seed in the opening round of the playoffs. San
"She is very much a competi- an 11-2 run to pull out the win. New Jersey threw
Antonio made 77.3 percent of its field goal lries in
tor," added Van Reeth. "She just away the ball three times in the last miDute.
the firSt period ·to sci a franchise record for a quarter
hates to lose."
"We simply did not play smart and inteUigent at
and
with Robinson scoring 12 points in the quarter
Wells, who scored over 2,000 the end of the game, and obviously that costs us,"
took
a 38-24 lead.
points in her career, shot 52 percent Fitch said
Bucks
96, PisiOIIS 85 • At Auburn Hills, Mich.,
from the field and 82 percent from
The Knicks have won three straight and eight of
Dale
Ellis
scored 30 points and Danny Schayes
the free throw line the past season. their last.nine.
.
,
added
22
points
and 10 rebounds to help Milwatikee
She also averaged 4.5 assists and 6
"The difference beiWeen now and two weeks ago
hand
the
Pistons
the seventh lo~s in their last nine
steals per game.
is that we have confidence in ourselves," s.aid
"She got an awfully Jot of steals Ewing. "This is a game we probably shouldn't have · games. Joe Dumars led DelrOit with 17 points and
Vinnie Johnson had 16. Milwaukee never trailed
and turned them into baskets," said won. I'm glad we made the right moves down the
after
a 9-0 spun midway through the third period that
'stretch."
.
Van Reeth. "She is very good in
gave the Bucks a 64-58 lead. the Bucks' lead eventhe open court bringing the ball
Ewing finished with 20 points, but he had 12 of
tually reached 19 points as Dewit shot 1 for 11 durdown, either getting the bucket or those in the fourth quarter after being bottled up by
ing an 8:17 stretch of the fourth quarter.
·
hitting the open person.
Bowie most of the game. ·
Blazers 104, Cavaliers 96 • At Portland, Ore.,
"But she had some girls with
"I know Palrick shot poorly tonight, but if it
Clyde Drexler had 26·points and nine rebounds and
her who were pretty decent play- wasn 'I for him down the stretch they would not have
Jerome
Kersey added 21 points and nine rebounds, '
ers," added Van Reeth, "and I won this game," Bowie said.
helping
the Trail Blazers bre$ a IWo-game losing .
think she would be the first to say
Kiki Vandeweghe added 16 points, Maurice
streak
at
home. Cleveland was led by Brad D~­
that. Scorers don't score unless Cheeks scored 12 and Brian Quinneu 10.
ty'with
24
points and John "Hot Rod" Williams
somebody else gets them the ball."
Bowie led the Nets with 24. points, Mookie Blaywith
19.
After
Cleveland scored ei¥hl scl-aight points
Smith, a 5-11 junior, led Logan lock and Chris Morris both scored 12 and Theus
·to
cut
Ponland's
lead to 92-90 late m the fourth 'quarto a 20-0 record and the No. 1 added II.
ter,
Drexler
and
Buck Williams had three points
ranking in the final UPI Board of
Quinneu scored nine points. including two three- .
apiece
in
in
an
8-2
run that put the game away.
·
Coaches ratings. A multi-talented pointers, during a 15;() Knicks run midway through ·
player, Smith averag~ 27.9 points
per game the past seqon.
.
Smith, also a fli'SI team selection
as a sophomore, will display her
talents m this week's state tournaBy TOM WITHERS
the Big East Toun)ament. Before
Midwest
ment at St. John Arena against
UPI Sports Writer ·
the tournament, the Hoyas' NCAA
Ohio State, despite losing its last
Kulics' Canfield team Thursday
NEW YORK (UPI) -It used to worthiness had been questioned IWo regular season 11ames to Purafternoon.
.. be that the easiest way to the Final based on their on-Georgetown-like due and Iowa, received a No. L
The 5-6 Kulics, also a junior, Four was through the West. Not 16-12 .record. But ihe Hoyas seed in ,the region.
averaged 23.4 points a garne for this year.
answered critics with impressive · '.'I was very surprised," Ohio
Canfield, which lost just one reguThe West regional, which tradi- victories over NCAA-bound Con- State head coach Randy Ayers said.
lar season game.
tionally has been the weakest of the necticut and Providence, which is "But we did win 2·5 games this
Echelberry, a 6-foot senior, NCAA toumamene's four regions, in the NIT.
year and I ihink they (NCAA selecaveraged 24.1 points per game for (non-west teams won the region
With Alonzo Mourning .and tion committee) rewarded us for
Crestwood, while the 5-6 Rogan from 1981 to 1986) is abounding Dikembe Mutombo liP front, the that."
Hoyas are a fOI'D\idable challenge
averaged 22.9 per same . for with quality teams this season~
The Buckeyes play. Towson
Urbana. She also is a senwr.
With No. I Nevada-LBs Vegas for anyone. Even UNLV.
·
State in the flrSI round in Dayton,
The second team consisted of 5- the West's top seed, the NCAA
"Right from the beginning I've Ohio; a short drive for OSU fans.
selection
committee
seems
to
have
been
afraid of Georgetown," Still, Ayers is leery of Towson
11 Latasha Glanton of Dayton
slaCked
the
deck
against
the
RunTarkanian
said.
·
Dunbar, who alsO will be malting a
State, which scared Oklahoma in
nin'
Rebels,
making
their
lrip
to
The
Rebels
.
.
could
face a the firSt round last season.
Slate toUrnament. appearance, 5-S
matchup with either Michigan State
Anita J urcenko of Dayton Jeffer- Indianapolis the most difficult. ·
"Towson State is a·good, quick
The Runnin' Rebels will begin and AU- America Steve Smith in team," he said. "I've been very
son; 5-10 Dee Reeder of Galion; 5· ·
7 Amy Flory of Napoleon; and 5-6 defense of their national title the region's semifmals followed by impressed bY their guard pl~y and
Sarah Gross of Tipp City Tippeca- against the Monlana Grizzlies on a potential date with highly-ranked we have to be careful not to allow
Friday night in Tucson, Ariz., and and just as highly-regarded Arizona them to penelrate.''
noe. Glanton and Gross are seniors
should
the Rebels get past the in the West final.
and the other three are juniors.
champions
of the Big Sky ConferAn Arizona-UNLV encounter
Named to the third team were 5·
ence,
their
secondround
matchup
would
pit the nation's IWo premier
7 senior Debbie Blazek of Bellaire;
will
be
either
Vanderbilt
or
frondines
and would create a game
5- 8 )unior Tricia Penderghast of
WE'LL
Georgetown.
that
Wildcat
head coach Lute
Cinctnnati Mother of Mercy; 5-8
OVERLOOK
"Georgetown, I predicted that," Olson had hoped to avoid. Olson
senior Kim Huber, also of Canfield; S-6 senior Marife Melendez UNLV head coach Jeny Tarkanian became· upset with the behavior of
YOUR FIRST
of Lorain Southview: and 5-10 said Sunday after hearing the pair- UNL V players and fans in AriACCIDENT
sophomore Lindsay Mann of Pon . ings. "We're the No. I seed in the zona's eight-point loss to the
When you quolify 11 o preferred
country
and
we
get
rewarded
by
the
Rebels
last
year
and
cancelled
this
Clinton.
rill&lt; for Stoto Auto Componleo'
position of having to play George- season's game.
opoclol Medollot Auto Polley, your
town. Not bad, huh?"
With UNLV the nation's superirotoo won't go up wKh your flnt
Fifty years ago. Cheerios cereal
· accident.
The
Hoyas
made
some
experts
or
team,
the
other
regions
are
very
was introduced to the Americ'J~ look foolish this past weekend by balanced and include some interestUnl•o olmllor pollcloo thot Nqulre
public.
thr•
yooro of policy . ownenhlp.
finishing ruMer-a1p to Seton Hall in ing firSt-round games.

The Daily Sentinel

White, Esther Smith, Mae McPeek,
Charloue Grant, Ada Bissell, Marjorie Fetty, Dorothy Ritchie, Erma
Cleland, Opal Hollon, Lora Damewood, Faye Kirkhart, Doris
Grueser, Betty Roush, Marcia
Keller, Sadie Trussell and Ethel
Orr.

Women's fellQwship
meets recently
A program on women of the
Bible was presented at the recent
meetin~ of the Meigs County
Women s Fellowship held at the
Zion 'church of Christ with 44 in
attendance.
Modeling for the program were
Roberta Napf.er, An11 Lambert,
Marge Punel , Ida Murphy, Kay
McElroy, Virginia Wyau, Bonnie
Arnold, Suzanne Warner and
Peggy Bole. Kathryn Johnson was
narrator for the program.
Letters were read from the missionaries which arc supported by
the group.
The next meeting wiD be held at
the Bradbury Church of Christ on
March 28 w~ljnn Runyan and
Bessie King
:ng. The public
is invited
At the aae olll, Tatum O'Neal won
the ACIIdemy Award lor Bell Supportinll Actress lor her role In tbe
1973 film "Paper Moon." her movie
de~ut

I

Commuaity Caleudar Items
appear two clays before ID evtDt
and the day or tllat eveat. Ite•s
mast be received weU Ia ldvauee
to auure publkldon Ia the Clll·
endat.

Miller's office will conduct an
open doOr session from II a.m. to
I p.m. in the courthouse in
Pomeror. Questions regarding the
Federa Government should be
directed to the representative.

TUESDAY
SYRACUSE • The Meigs
County Holines$ Association annual spring in door camp meeting
through Sunday at the Syracuse
Chun:h of the Nazarene at 7 p.m..
nightly and 6 p;m on Sunday. Special music and speaker with Rev.
Thurl and Mary Kay Mann. Public
inviled.

. POMEROY - Representatives
lrom Meigs County Garden Clubs ·
will meet Wednesday at I' p.m. at
GALLIPOLIS - The MGM
the extension office in Pomeroy to Boy Scout and Cub Scou~ district
plan for the regional meeting.
recognition dinner will be held at
the Grace United Methodist Church
POMEROY - The Pomeroy in Gallipolis on Th!lfSday at 6:30
Merchants Association will meet p.m. Contact Dr. Bernard Niehm al
Wednesday in the conference iOOm 446-5500 or Bob Arms at 992·
at Bank One in Pomeroy at noon. 5959 for infonnation. Cost of the
All members are urged to attend.
dinner is $7.

HOBSON • Hobson Church of
Christ and Christian Union will
hold revival through Saturday at 7
p.m. nightly witll Norman Taylor.
Rev. Theron Durham invites the .
public.
REEDSVILLE • The Eastern
Band Boosters will meet Tuesday
at 7 p.m. in the high school band
room.
SYRACUSE - The Syracuse
· Youth League will hold an organizational meeting for baseball on
Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the Syracuse
grade school.
SCIPIO TOWNSHIP - The
Scipio Township Trustees will
meet Tuesday at the Pageville
Townhouse for their regular meeting.
POMEROY - Pomeroy Flame
FeUowship will meet Tuesday at 7
p.m. at the senior citizens center.
Marge Hanlon, Letan, W.Va., will
be the speaker. Public is invited.

lia.count.f Senior Citizens center.
'

CHESHIRE - The GalliaMeigs Community Action Agency
will hold a free clothing day on
Thursday from 9 a.m. to noon at
the old high school building in
Cheshire.
··

TUPPERS. PLAINS - The Tup..
pers Plains· Angels softball si~-up
will be Wednesday at 7 p.m. m ti:te .
Eastern High School Cafeteria.'
Ages for the junior team are 11-15
years, but participants should be 12
before Aug. I and not more than 15
by Aug. 1 Sign-up fee is $15 and a
birth certificate copy must be provided. Call Jill Holter, coach, for
information, .949-2603 .
THURSDAY
RACINE .· A support group
meeting for those affected by the
Gulf War will meet Thursday at 7
p.m. at the- Racine United
Methodist Church.
GALLIPOLIS - The AGHJMV
Solid Waste Policy Board will
meet Thursday at 7 p.m. at the Gal-

AAUW

The role of women, past and
present, is the focus for the Middleport-Pomeror Branch of the AmerIcan Association of University
. Women's Poster and Essay Contest.
Women's History Month is
being observed nationally during
the month of March and women in
his,tory wiU again be the thef!!e for
this year's contests.
is an organization dedicated to
the advancement of, women in
American society. Opportunities
a warded by the AAUW at the
national level include f1081lCial aid
for gra~uate education ,"research
and self developmenL
· The local chapter of AAUW
meets on the fourth Tuesday of the
month . Local officers are Rachel
Downie, President; Program Vice
President Shirley Sayre; Membership Vice President, Joyce Rilthie;
Secretary Sharon Hubbard and
Treasurer Sibley Slack.
Students should select a woman
in history as the basis for their COI)tesl. All eligible participants must
be in grades 3-8 at a school in
Meigs County, and only one entry
per contest per student is pennitted.
All J)OSters mast be no smaller than
8 112 by 11 inches and no larger
than 14 by 22 inches. Any medium
may be used, but use of copyrighted characters such IS Garfield and
Alf is not permitted.
Place on the back upper lefthand comer of the poster the student's name, grade, school, home
a&lt;)dress and telephone number. All
entries will be returned to the
school submitting the entry.
Essays, on the other hand, must
be 100 to 500 words in length (not
including references). Essays must
be hand written and cite references
used in the preparation of the.
essay. All factual statements or
quoits must be referenced. Entrants
should list the title of their essay on
a cover page, and include their
name, grade, school, horne address
and phone number.
Entry deadline is April3, and all
entties should be turned into the
student's teaeher. Winners will be
notified by mail. A first, seco11d
and third rlace in each grade category wil be selected for each
school. They will receive a certificate. ColUity first and !ICCOIId place
winners in each category will
receive a framed certificate and
rosette. Award winners will be recognized at the April 23 meeting of
the AAUW to be held at the Racine
United Methodist Church•on State
Route 124 in Racine.
·

POMEROY ·The Meigs CounSalon No. 710, Eight and Forty
will meet Thursday at 7 p.m. at the
home of Veda Davis in Pomeroy.
ty

TUPPERS PLAINS - The TUppers Plains VFW Post No. 9053
will meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at
the post home.
CHESTER • The Shade River
Lodge No. 453, Chester, will meet
Thursdar at 7:30 pcm..All master
masons mvited to attend. Refreshments will be served.

Meigs families have a chance
to support Japan youngsters

Meigs County.families will have
the opportunity to welcome a ·
young person from Japan into their
WEDNESDAY
home for one month this summer
NELSONViLLE • Hocking as part of an international exchange
Valley Community Residential program being offered by th~
Center Board meets Wednesday, Meigs County Cooperative Exten11 a.m. to 1 p.m. , Quality Inn sion Service and 4-H. Japanese
Hocking Valley, Nelsonville. •
teenagers will be arriving in Ohio
on July 25 and staying through
POMEROY • A representative August23.
from Congressman Clarence
The only requirement is that the
host family must have a brother or
sister the same age and gender as
the exchangee. Also, families do
not necessarily have to bt: 4-H

sponsors
contest

RACINE - The Racine American Legion Auxiliary Unit No. 602
will hOst a legion birthday party for
Post 602 on Thursday at 7:30 p.m. ·
at the lodge hall. •

members, although they must be
wi.Jiing 10 help the exchangees
become involved in local 4-H
activities, if availabl~. duiing the
exchange.
No sightseeing activities 'need to
be planned, although most flln)ilies · ·
and visitors enjoy the opponunity
to take occasional sightseeing trips
to local attraCtions and landmarks
during the visit
Those interested should contact
Faye Clifford at 992-7201 for an
application form and more information.

Meigs Property Transfers
. ·. Compiled by:
Scipio.
Emmogene Holsteing Congo
Blain, aka, Blaine Taylor, dec'd,
Recorder, Meigs Couaty, Obio . affid,to Gladys F. Taylor, Prange.
Court House
Jane Ann Warner, dee'd, cen. of
· Lloyd Vinson Hughes, 1.6 A.~ to trans., to James William Warner
Ruie Fay Hughes, Scipio.
. and Jay Patrick Warner, Middlport
John J. Wolfe, affid, to Francis Village.
,
E. Morris and Ura' D. Morris,
Ada G. Hoce, parcels, to Ruth
Dec'd, Meigs.
Thivener, Pomeroy Village .
Home National Bank, parcels, to ..
Ruth Thivener and Howa,rd ·
Roben L. Rilthie, Sr. and Darlene Tbivener, parcels, to Ada G. Hoce,
Ritchie, Middleport Village.
.
Pomeroy ViUage.
Charles E. Hall, Dorothy Hall,
Timothy A. Baum and Maneena
George Hall and Amy S. Hall, Y. Baum, parcels, to Willard Reed
parcels, to Randy Hall and Judy and Martha Reed, Olive.
HaU, Olive.
,
· Reva Norris, Truslee, l/2A, to
David Wayne Wilkes and Gloria Reva Norris, Letart.
_
Darlene Wilkes, lot 4, to Harry S.
Dwight L. Hysell and Mildred I.
Yarbrough, Rutland
HyseU, parcels; to Vivian L. Jones,
Elsie-Alice Welch, .508A, to Emma C. Roush, Clara Mae
Gary Welch and Gladys Welch, HyseU, Rutland.
Pomeroy

992-2124

Hours:
.
11 am to Mid. Sun.-Thurs.
11 am to 1 am Fri. &amp; Sat.

WE NOW

HAVI

IIIEl PEPSI

2 LARGE

LARGE DELUXE

PEPPERONI
PIZZAS·

PIZZA

WITH 4 LAIGE PEPSI'S

$1 0 99'

$12''·

•1n1 DomlnO'I P'laa. lnc. Owr .....,.,, c.rry'"' then uo.oo. 'D ttNtry . . limited to
M1UN lifO ftMftt. Vllld It ............ looMIOft oftlw . ..... 11111 .ncl I J ld 1\1111 . . .
..,. . . . .. 'UTTIMI! AND tARI!IIIt

O~liiTUNffll!8

NOWAVAU.Aal!l

'

175 Value

$75 Value .

COUPON

FREE ELECTRONIC HEARING TESTS
will be given in Meigs County by

BELTONE HEARING AID CENTERS
HOME CIIE MEDICAL EQUIPMENT
224 EAST MAIN STIDT
. POMEIOi, OHIO
THUISDAY, MAICH 14
9:00 A.M. TO 4:00 P.M.
BELTONE HEAliNG AID CENTEI
1312 EASTEIN AVENUE (IT. 71-GAWPOLIS
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 13
9:00 A.M. TO 4:00P.M.
CAll 614-446·1744 011·100·634·5265
(al Tal Fret N.,...._

1-100-~4-5265

for ••• II lw I I ithtwl.

THE TEm WILl BE GIVEN BY ALICENSED HEARING AID SPECIALIST

Anyon• who heltoaublo hurlng or undorot.,dlng oonv-tlon lo Invited
to hovo o f - hurlng toot to -If thlo prolllom- be holpodl Iring thlo
coupon with you for your FREE HEAR INO TEST of t71 voluo.
UMWA - UAW • OTHER INSURANCE PROVIDER
WALKS-INS WELCOME
IN HOME TESTING

•,

\

�'

.

Page-6--The Dally Sentinel

~.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Mlin:h 12, 1981

Ohioans don the green for St. Patrick's Day
By SANDRA L. LATIMER
Wrltteu for UPI
Ohioans are wearin' the green
for St. Patrick's Day.
The village of Dublin in
Franklin County will be celebrating
St. Pabick's Day Friday and Saturday.
'
Cincinnati's St. Pabick's Day
parade, one of the largest in the
nation, steps off Sunday in the
Eggleston Avenue area. Many
other communities have parades
this weekend.
The turkey vul~ures re~urn to
Ohio around ibis time of the yeat,
and the :folks in HinCkley in Mcdi·
na County celebrate that famed
return wiib Buzzard SUllday. Thou·
sands of visitors converge on that
small village SUllday 10 look for the
buzzards and eat a pancake and
sausage breakfast.
Each Saturday and Sunday
through April 28 the Bourgins at
Orchard RidJe farm near Logan
offer ibeir VISitors s8ssafrass tea
!IJid ~w h(lw 10 11n that root inro
fQOd 1tems as they celebrate Sas·
safras Days.
· Sugar maple trees in Ohio have
been tapped. and sevenil areas are
holding celebrations.

Among the areas offering sugarbush · tours and syrup-maki ng
demonsll'ations are:
- ·The Holden Atboretum Sug·
arBusb Ttail near Kirlland. through
March 24.
- Malabar Farm Stare Park near
Lucas, Saturday and Sunday.
- Dawes Atboretum. Newark,
through Satunlay.
.
- Maple Suping Down on the
Farm, Aurora Faims Factory OutJets, Aurora, .Saturday and SUllday
and March 23, and 24.
In addition to the sugarbush
tours and syrup nialting, some areas
are also offering pUllcake break· fii$S. These include:
- Several locations in Burton,
Geauga County, the ·maple syrup
capital of Ohio, Sunday, also
Marcb24.
.
-Century Village, Burton,
Geauga County, Sunday.
Also on lbe agenda:
- American and Canadian
Spon, Travel and Outdoor Show
Friday through Man;h 24, lnterna·
tiona) Exposition Center, Cleve·
land.
·
-Garden Center Spring Show
Friday through March 31 at the,
Garden Center of Greater Cleve-

r--People in· the news----,
By WILLIAM C. TROTI
United Press lntel'lladonal
WOODS FORGIVES: As far as James Woods is concerned, his
ugly feud with actress Sean Youna is rmished. "You're· not going to
believe ibis but I think Sean Young is terrific," he rold USA Today.
Woods and Young had a romance while filming "The Boost" but he
later claimed in a lawsuit that she slarted a bizarre harassment campaign that included - mutilated doD and funeral wreath against bin) and
Sarah Owen, the woman he later married and has since divorced.
Woods claims he didn't instigate the suit, saying, "I was the window
dressing for that little cat fight," and would even like to work wiib
YoUllg again some day. "I don't imagine the prospects are too likely,"
says Woods, who now is dating Julie Tesb, estranged wife of "Enter·
tainment Tonight" host Jobn Tesb. "She's a Christian. It's a big ibiBg
in her life. Maybe she'D say it's lime to bury ibe hatchet I can only be
a gentleman and say I hope for the best.' '

I

NEW TARZAN AND QUINTESSENTIAL JANE: Tarzan
swings again. Stepping into the the loincloth of Buster Crabbe, John·
ny Welsmuller, Ron Ely and 15 other actors, Wotr Larson bas been
cast to star in a new syndicated rclevision series about the Icing of the
jungle and another little•lrnown actor, Lydie Denier, will play Jane.
Wolfs pfCvious work includes roles on "Dynasty,'' "Simon and
Simon" and "Santa Barbara" while-Denier has appeared on "China
Beach," "General Hospital" and "It's Garry .Shandling's Show."
Jphn Ryaa of Worldvision Enterprises, ibe new ''Tarzan'' sl!ow producer, says Denier will portray Jane as "strong and independent, yet at
tbe same time caring and concerned, the quintessential woman of the
ni~des. ' '

·

• VIDEO. WAR: Fans of Gen. Norman Schwarzkopf can now
watch their hero on videotape. ABC has produced a 7S-minute home
video, "Schwarzkopf: How The War Was Won," thill features ibe
Desen Storm commander's colorful briefings, including the one in
which he explained how the Penian Gulf War was won. Anchorman
Peter Jennlap nam1res lhe lllpe.
· DE NIRO AWARD: Robert De Niro bas never been lrnown for
hjs sense of htimor but he craclc¢ a smaU joke Satunlay night when he
\I'&amp;S the subject of a tribute by the American Museum of Moving
Ima'e in New Yorlc. "I consider myself 100 young for awards like ·
this, ' said De Niro, 47. "They should have been given 10 guys like AI
P~no (50) and DustiD Holrman (53)." The 800 guests at .the gala
included Sean Pena, Glenn Close, Spike Lee and Isabella Rosselin!.
· ACTING FUNNY: Meryl Streep has now been officially recog·
nized for her comedic talents. Streep won an American Comedy
Award for her perf!,mnance in "Postcards From the Edge" while
young Macaulay Culkin was named funniest acror in a movie for
·:Home Alone." Other winnen were Ted Denson o( "Cheers" and
Tracey Ullman for funniest actors on television shows and Wlloopl
Qoldbera of "Ghost" and AI Paclno of "Diet Tracy" for best sup·
porting actors in a movie. Lifetime achievement awards went 10 Carl
Reiner, Doris Day and Jack LemmoD. The weekend awards ceremo·
n~ was taPed during the weekend in Los Angeles and will be aiied
ABC April3.
.

on

Spike Lee scoffs at c~ticism
of sneaker commercials
whole self inro -a starter jacket, a
pair of sneakers, a gold chain. They
make themselves feel like a human
being by pultinf emphasis on these
material things. ' ·
Lee also wonders why he, Jordan and Robinson, all black, draw
criticism while whirc athletes who
also do sports footwear commercials have gone unscathed. ·
"When you've got prominent
black people, outspoken like
myself, (Georgetown basketball
coach) John (Thompson) and Mike
someli!nes. you're going to get flak
about ibat," Lee said.
Lee added that "nobody says
anything" critical about white
superstars Joe Montana of the San
Francisco 49ers and Larry Bird of
the Boston Celtics promoting their
sportwear labels.
Lee also challenged what moli •
vates the critics, contending, "I
don't think these charges come out
of concern to help young black
kids. It's really just a chance to
knock me and Mike."
In response 10 major-media ani·
cles detailing how brand-name
sponswear have been woven into
ibe inner-city drug world, Nllce has
telecast several advertisements
with Lee, Jordan and Robinson
urging youths ro stay in school.
· "(Nike) is doing more than
that," l.,c:e said in defense of his
e'l!pioyer. "Just by doing an ad on ·
TV saying stay in school ... is not
going 10 be an answer. They have
snealcea.
"Tlie problem is these kids have
several )irognuns. They've worlced
no outlook on life," said Leo,
with the United Negro ·college
FIDid and other propams.
whose recent movies "Do the
"If the rest of white colpDI'ate
Rlabt ThinJ"IJid "School Daze"
have addrcsred black urllan Wues.
America was a conscientious as
" They have no oudoot on life, that
Nike is, lhings would be a lot bet·
tc:r."
have no identity, 10 they put their

WASHINGTON (UP!)
Black filmm~r Spike Lee Monday rejected aiticism that his pro. motion of high-priced basketball
shOes distorts the values of young
blaeks and pushes them into the
viofent inner-city drug culture. .
'Myself, Michlel Jordan and
Nike have never be:en responsible
for any black young kids killing
each other," Lee, in Washington
for· a lecture Tuesday at Georgerown University, said in an inter·
view with United Press International. ,
Lee, Jordan of the Chicago
Bulls and San Antonio Spurs star
David Robinson are Nike's lead
promoters of basketball shoes,
some priced $12S and higher. The
shoes and ·o ther brand· name
s~wear have been adopted as
' uniforms' ' for urban drug dealers.
RUllners, young boys who actM
drug couriers, Will take in payment
a pair of Nike Air Jordans or
Reebok Pumps after making a
delivery. There also have been
reports in recent years of young
black men killing each other for
batetball shoes or other fashion·
llltellltiJt sports garb.
Among those alleging Nike
advertiaing rargets black YCJUth is
civil righll leader Jesse Jactaon,
wbo says prominent blacks who
promote these products are fueling
desires of inner-city children who
cannot afford the much-envied

'

''

-

- Butler Institute of American
land.
Art,
Y OllllgstOWn: wats of Cather·
- Home Show ' 91 Satursday
and Slllday, Ohio Siate University, ine Kclmig. throulh March 31.
- Rosooe Village, Cosc:hoctoo:
Newark campus.
Arrowhead
ColJection, through
-Dayton Sports Boat and
March
31;
Leonardo
Da Vinci
Camper Show, March 20-24, Hara
Exhibition,
through
April?.
Complex, Dayton.
-Denison lfniversity: Sculp·
· - Toy and doD Show Saturday
lure
by Tracee Heiun and · lings
and sunday, Hl!iiDric Lyme Village,
by
Michael
J111g,.through
7.
BeDevue.
·
-Columbus
Museum
of
Art:
Cnfland Antique Shows
-New Trends. Craft Show Sat- "Setting the Stage: Conlelllporary
Artists' .......
_,
the ..D....,
'
-~ or
, ..ornung
urday, Toledo.
'
Arts,'.
through
April
21.
- Triway Craft Show, Satunlay,
~leveland Museum of Art:
Triway High School near Wooster.
worlcs
of artists in Ohio's Western
- Decoy Show Saturday and
Resl'zve,
through April21.
Sunday, Wes$ke.
-To)edo
Museum of Art:
-Publick Times in the
"Mirror
of
Empire:
Dutch Marine
Colonies, Saturdliy and Sunday,
Art
of
the
171h
Century,"
tluough
Ohio Siate Fairgrounds. Columbus.
April
28;
"Berenice
Abbott,
Pho·
-Antique Show and Sale Satur·
tographer:
A
Modem
Vision,"
da_r_ and Sunday, Junior High
through May 26; "Dutch Prints in
Sc~l, Utica.
the
Age of Rembrandt, " through
Olllci Hiltorlcll Ceater
Candlelight Dinner Series at ibe June2.
-Center of Science and IndusOhio Village in Columbus: March
22· 23, Maple Sugaring. (614-297· tty, Columbus; "Mission 10 Mars".
through May 11. .
.
26()6).
· -Murder mystery time at PunSpeelal Exhibits
-Kent State Universit)': acrylic derson Manor Hoose at Punderson
and airbrushed paintings of State Park in Geauga County:
Michael Ulichney, through April March 22-24. 216-564-9)44 . .·
-Theater Weekends at Salt
13.
.
-Wexner Center for theVisual Forie State Park near Cambridge,
Arts, Columbus: "Domestic Friday through Sunday, and Sun·
Arrangements: A Lab Rcpon by day through Tuesday ("The Gin
Todd WiUiams and BiUie Tsien," Game" ). 216-563· 9144.
Deer Creek Lodge St. Pabick's
Friday ibroligh April 28; "Archi·
Day
weekend package this weekteetural Drawings of the Russian
end.
J.
800-AT-A-PARK.
Avant-Garde, 1917-1935,'' and
Shawee State Park Lodge near
"Knysztof Wodiczko,' ' Milch 22
Ponsmouib holds Comedy·Talent
through Apricl 28. ·
-Glen Helen Building, Yellow night March 23.1-800, AT-ASprings: Society of Animal Artis!S PARK.
,
national tour ·exhibition ibrough On the theatriealschedule
"Music
Man"
·
at
the
La
Sunday. ·
.-Egner Gallery, Findlay: Mid· · Comedia Dinner Theatre in Spring·
western Painters Invitational, boro through May 12. Call 513·
746-45S4 for reservations.
through March 22.
.
-"Stand-Up
Tragedy,"
-Akron Art Museum: worlcs of
Willian H. Johnson and Bob Cincinnati Playho\ISC in the Park,
Thompson, through March 24 ; through March 31. 513:421-3888.
-"The Nerd" through March
''Lilian Tyrrell: The Disaster
24, Players Theatre Columbus;
Tapestries," through May 12.
-Ford Nature: Education Cen- "Pinoccbio" by Players Youth
ter, Mill Oeek Parle, Youngsrown: Theater Columbus, tluougb Milch
"Cargo to Extinct.i on" t.brough 24. Riffe Center, CoiiJ!IlbUS. 614644-8425.
Marc:b 31.

CiJ

rc

-Cievelarid Playhouse: ''You
Touched Me". through April 7.
216-795;. 7000.
.
-"Phantom of the Opera"
through Marc:h 31. Forest View
Gardens, Cincinnati. 513·661·
6434.
-"I'm Not Rappapoit," Friday
throuJh Sunday wilb a sprilig preperformance luncheon Sunday.
.Daytan Playhouse. 513-277-0144.
-"The Passion," Tl)wne and
CoUlltty Theatre, Norwalk, Satur·
day and Sunday. and Marc:b 22, 23,
24, 26 and 29.419-668-1641.
.:..."Forbidden Broadway," Oat
HarlJor High School, Friday (419·
898· 4200); Ritz Theatre, Tiffin,
Saturday (419-448-8544) ; E.J.
Thomas Hall, Aleron, March 20
(216-972-7570). '
·. .
-"Baajo Red and the Blue
Ghost," Saturday, Franciscan Life
Center, Sylvania. 419·8!1S-1547.
-"Music Man" Thursday
through Sabmlay and Man:h 21-23,
University of Dayton, 513-229•
3936.
- " Peter Pan" with Cathy
Rigby, March 19c24, Masonic
Auditorium Toledo. 419·381-88S 1.
-"The Sound of Music,''
March 21, State Theatre, Sandusky.
419-626- 3945.
Concerts
-Columbus Symphony Orc:hestra : Community Gospel Choir,
Sunday, Palace Theatre; vocalist
Cleo Laine, Marc:h 22'-24, Ohio
Thealre. 614-224-3291.
-Cin.c innati
Symphony
Orc:bestrl: Violinist Kurt Nikbncn
with Kenneth Jean conductinf, .
March 22-23. Music Hall. 513·38 •
2597. .
·- Clevel\lnd Orchesua: Kurt
SanderlinJ conducts the orc:hesll'a
Thursday through Sunday; violinsit
Dmitty Sitkovetsky, Marc:h 21-23;
Robert Vernon on the viola with
Vladimir Asbkenazy collducting,
Marc:h 28-30. Sev~ Hall. 216231-1111.
.
-Toleclo Symphony Orc:heslra: ·
Classic Concen with Ole Schmidt
conducting, Friday and Saturday,
Toledo Museum of An Peristyle;
"World M~ic" Sunday, Masonic

'i
I:

Middleport Literary
· Club has meeting

Auditorhuil, Toledo; Mainly
Mozlrt. Mllt:h 23 FnnciiCin Ufc
Center. 419-241-lln.

•

l'bilhlrmollic
Oldies· '!
tra,-Dayuln
March 22,
VictOria Theatre.
513·224- 3521.
4 -Violinia Alyaa l'8lt with
the Lima S)'m:l?~ony_ Orc:heaua, •.
Marc:h 23. 419· -mt.
..
-Deyton 'Billet: "Dnlc:ula," ;
Thunday duCJiilh Sundll , Vic:taia
'I'hcltre. DayiOii. 513-44~SOtiO.

~n.:=-~::•Y:·:Ma:=~=h=1=2=,1:~::1:::-~re;.~~~~~~~~~~fu:~~Po:m~er~o:y::M~Id~d:le~po~rt:,O:h:l:o~::~~~--------------------Th~e~O~a~ll!y!S~en~t~ln~e~I-~P~ag~e~~.

r

i

. -Cleveland Ballet: "Romeo
and Juliet," through Sunday; ~
spring repertory program March ~
20-24, State Tiieatre, Playhouse ~
Square center. J.IIO().73M75 1.
•
-DaytOn Opera: "The Pearl
Fishers," Friday, SUllda)', and !
Marc:b 19 and 23. Memorial Hall, :
DayiDD. 513·228-7464.
·. !
-Opera Columbus: "Der
ROICIIkavalier," Thursday duough ~
saturdaz
Theatre, cotum- :
bus. 61 4 1-0022.
.
-EJ. Thomu Hall in ·Akron: .·
"The Elephant Man," Thursday; •
Soviet Al:mllllic: Revue, Saturday; a
Cellist Matt Haimovitz, March 19; :
Akron Symphony o_ rchestra, :
Marc:h 23; 216-972-7570.
•
-Wexner Cen• in Columbus: · :
Schoen~ QuanCt. Friday; pilnist J
Ivo Pogorelich, March 21. 614· :
292-QJ30.
•
-Bowling Green State Univer- 1
sity: Jazz trumpet player Jon Fad·
dis performs Saturday; ten mem·
bers of the ·Toledo Symphony ,.
Orc:hestra perform ·Man:h 21. 419- ,
372-8171.
'
:
-Stardust Memories: Classic :
Hoagy Carmichael, Saturday, Sorg .
OJ)era House, Middletown. 513- ~
422-4010.
i
-Pirin; Bulgarian National
Folk Ensemble, March 19, Victoria ' ·
~Dayton. Sl3·22.3-36:5S. ·
-American Indian Dance Theatre, March 22. Toledo MuseUm of ;,o
An Peristyle. 419-255-8000.
..
-Zivlli Dance Company, ·=
Marc:h 23; "Hansel and Gretel" \ol
March 24, University of Rio
Grande. 614-245-5353.
-Mienlka Duo in a piano ·and ,
cello conc;ert. March 20, Franciscan
Life Center, Sylvania. 419·88S· .
1547.
.
'

f

r-

j

Court jury.
Flynn and two other teens have
pleaded guilty to shooting Smart
once in the bead last May I in what
was supposed to loot like a
botched bUIJlary. The prosecution
conrmds that die slaying was organized by Pamela Smart, the former
director of medii services at W'mnac.unnel High School in HampiOD,
so that she c:ould continue her Jove
alrair with Flynn.
- On Monday, Flynn testified that
Smart gave him specific instruc·
tions on how to carry out the
kiDing, once in Marc:h and once in
April. He said she became
when he failed 10 go through with
it.
"She ..-ted yelling at me, 'You
don'tlove me. If you did, you'd do
this for me. It's the only way we
can be together,"' Flynn said,
describing Smart's response. "She

angry

Fisher proposes.DNA lab
and fingerprint computer
spokeswoman for the attorney genCOLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) eral.
Ohio Attorney General Lee F'llher
State Rep. Donald Czarc:inski,
is J::oposinJ a DNA lllxaby and D·Toledo, said Monday he plans 10
a mgerpnnt computer system to
help .r educe the number of introduce Jegillation within three
months that would allow blood
unsolved crimes in the state.
samples
The $2.2 million proposal ~kms. to be taken from an jailed.
would be paid for by laboratory
The sample would be analyzed
fees for agencies • the servic:e
for
its DNA pattern, which would
and increased fe~~'?or criminal
compuler for
records checks. The state Bureau of · be stored in a
future:
com~
Criminal IdentifiCation and InvestiDeoXfliOOD.ucleic
or DNA,
gation in Madison County would
.
is
the
un1qile
chemical
code·also
operate the computer system.
called
a
JenetiC
ftngcrprint
that
In the DNA Jab, blood samples
is
flll!nd
in
human
Calli.
DNA
can
of convicted fclans would be combe
obtained
from
blood.
saliva,
hair
pared wiib evidence from unsolved
semen, among other sub ·
crimes. The samples would be ana- and
stances.
'
lyzed and the results stored in a
State
Sen.
Charles
Henry,
R·
computer.
Burtllll,
slao
hopeiiO
inlroduc:e
lei·
"The attorney general's off'JCe
is convinced Ibis is the right way to islation to help the aaomey s--·
go,'' said Lees a Brown, a al's offtc:e Clllbliah a DNA com·
puler aystem,lle lllid.

cen.w

IC",

-

f

said, 'Ypu .have no intention of
doing this. I can't go on seeing you
like this when I know we're never
go~ 10 be really together."'
Flynn testified thai he first met
Smart when he was a SIUdent facilitator for Project Self-Esteem, an
anti-drug and alcohol program for
which Smart was the faculty advis·
er.
He said he was attracted 10 ibc
pretty blonde woman and was surprised when she expressed inrcrest
m him last February.
"She first asked if 1 ever
thought about her when she wasn't
around, and I said 'yeah,'" Flynn
said. "She said, 'becauSe I think
about you all the time.' ' ' ·
Several weeks Isler, he said, he

6

10
Monthly

PO l iCIES
• Ads outside Me1gs, Gall i a Of' Maso n cou nu es 1Tll!51 be pre
' RttceN tr 1 50 dtSc.ounl. tor adf p;ud tn al.hloanc ~: .
• Fru ad&amp;
Ghleilw•y and Found ads undet 1S words Will be
run 3 d., 'li al nu c h•ge.
' Puce of ad for all capitall•llen 1s double IJfiCe o l il d cos t
'1 poMII tme IYPtt only used . '
' Senllnt!l IS not tn pot•s•ltl tor errun ilhm lir~ 1 dirt (Chctc:ll.
tor errors Ius' day~ nun 111 papttr) • Citll'lu~lor e -2 . 00 p m .
d...- •ltttr publ• cahoe-i to rnak " coutt clum ·
'AdJ ihlt rnu l t be pa1d'" ach1ancll a u:
Card ollh ank s
Hoappy Ad s
Var d Sal ~
In MunlOnMn

.42'

.30

.60
.06/ day

&amp;1 .30 / day

1
2
3

Catd ot Thanks
lnMemory

4
5

GArt...-l'f
Happy Ads

Annouc:~ments

6

Lost 1nd Found.
Y•d Sllelpaid '" a d\1,111cel
I Public Slle &amp; Aucllon
9 Wanted to Bu.,
1

Servrces

t:tn~.~i.fit·tl lml{l'.~ t'lll't •r ''''' ·
Ml•gs County
Area Code 614

Mason Co . WV
Area C ode 304

446 Gallipohs

992

675

2 00 PM TUESDAY
2 .00 PM WEDNESDAY

C h•twe

Mtddl1p0rt

Pom•oy

98S Ch••r
843

Panl.wtd

256

247

Lelar1 falls
Racine
f':u11•d
Cootv ~ le •

643
379

Walnut

2 :00 .P M JHURSOAY

2 00 PM FRIDAY

9&lt;19

742
667

1J

14
15
16
17
18

Insurance
Bulln•s Tra uung
Schools &amp; lnstruchnn
Rldio, TV &amp; CB Rupcm
MrsceUen110us
_
W111ted To Do

Pt Ple•ant

458 leon

388 • V i nton •
245 Rio Gr1nde

Guywm D iSI.
Arabia Disl.

11 Helo· w,._t_.
· 1Z Situetlon Wanted

,. (' XI'IHJII w·.~ .. :

G.. li a County
Ate. Code614
367

OAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
11 00 A .M . SATURDAY
2 00 PM MONDAY

1HURSDAY PAPER
t-HIOAV PAPER
SUNDAY PAPER .

$9.00
$ 13.00

AlllllJU llCt llle'ltS.

0

Employment

Cl&lt;5s1t10d a dv~ rlisem um pl.a t:~o.'f.llll The Omly S•!u\nlel (u
cept · cla sSII•ud dllplav. BusinUt&gt;s Coud -;md ltt~J&lt;ll not•ces)
wtll .. bu ;tppeilf 111 lhc Pt Ph:itiianl Rt!!)tsU:r ill1d thtt Galli
puhs Da•lv TratMtnll. m ach•nu ovttr 18.000 honu~s

• · MONOAY PAPER
' lUESOAY PAPER
W£DN ESOAY PAPER

15
16
16
16

.fr )llowillj{ , ,.,,. pht ;,

'

'

'

1

i76
173 '
U2
895
937

Apple G rove
Mason
New Hiven
Letart
Buth•o

21
22

Busin•s Opportunity
Mon., to Lo1n

23

Prol•lional SHviCn

BULLE~TIN ·80 ARD.
BULLETiN BOARD DEADLINE
4:30P.M. DAY BEFORE
PUBLICATION

FOR SALE IN RACINE

VERY NICE LARGE HOME ON APPROX. 3~

ACRES-4 BR, 3 balhs, 2earoges, renled 1
BR apartment Property includes pond, approx. 4,$00 sq. ft. farm bid! and mobile
home, A real bargain it $84,900.
CALL 614·992·7 ~ 04 FOR APPT.

I

vulnerable to a cold snap, high
winds and driving rain. ·
The fragility of the cherry bios·
·soms is ~art of their attraction.
Even in 1deal weather, they are
gone in four or five days.
In the past few ye~n, the bloom
has been consistently early, The
latest bloom·was in 1958,,when ibe
trees flowered Apri118. . ,

ATTENTION:
Anyone having an Oct. 28,
1990 or Oct. 29, 1990 Daily
Sent;nel newspaper, please
·-. ' ,, •bring -it mto ·the ·offrce. ·

~

The biggest event in the cherry

Dixon. and Japanese Ambas· sador Ryohei Murata will attend
the festival's opening ceremonies · ·•
Marc:h 31. The festival queen· will ·'"
be chosen at a banquet and ban ·• '
.
;,~
AprilS. c
,
~~' )

stayed with Smart for a week at her ;: :~
Derry condominium when her' hus· r ~
1llull1 was away,
'.. ,,,
Flynn said they had sex for the ..;
rllSt time after watching a video- . ,,
tape
the r11m "9 112 weets: ·
story of ICJ!ual ~.
·~ ·
She thell daJJJed for him dressed ·;;·
in \:ferie to Van Halen's tune "'
"B
and Blue."
·'
He said they re-enacted a scene ~:;
from the film, wiib Flynn running "'
ice cubes over Smart's body.l
'
"We bad sex, evetywhere: on ,;!
ibe bed, on the floor," Flynn said. • •
But the next day, Flynn said, "'
Sman began to cry that they ...
wouldp't be able 10 see each other ".,
any more because her husbaRd only ·;·,:
went away infrequently. . .
'"'

or

a .;.,

l:fl.

'

0

'

•••
.

vicee d011 not provide auffl·

!lint competitive flulblllty to
AT.T. Spec:lflcelly, ATaT
propoMCI to emend "" minlmum/mlxlmum rate benda
for operatar ....,lcea to re·
fleet tile bendo utlbllahd In
the Comml-'o genorlc
lnveotlaatlon Into -etor
-on In C... No. 81·81·
TP·Slf, ATaT • - ' • thot Ita
rltll for dlrectory IIIII•
tance teN ice do not recover

Ita ottonclont coltl and pro·
po- to ollmlnell the cur·
rent two coli monthly allo·
wance lor dl-ry ooolollnce. ATaT elao propo••
' to decr1111 the current ram
foo dlrectoty ualotence
loom IIC to 15C, Any lntor·
eotld poroon, flrm, cooporatlon, 0( ontlty clellrlng on
orel heerlntln -mottoro
ahould fila with tho Com·
million 1 rwquat for one
along with 1 motion lo Inter·
vent -or befoN ·Mey 24.
1111. Unle11•the Comml•
lion .-Jv• 111ch 1 rwqueat
for orol -~~~ 8nd an IC·
comp.onylng requld to In·
torvone. cooeo wll be
c1ec1- on tile bella of the
lnforlnltlon aontlinld In lhe
complelnta tho affldl·
vito
by the com·
plelnMt. Further lnfofllll•
tlon mey be obtlind by con·
tectlng' the "'*lc UtllltiM
Comml.ron of Ohio, 110
Eelt Brood ltreet. Colum·
bUI, Ofljc 43218·115 7J,
(3) 12. 18, 21. 3tc

..,.,lttld

'

NEW YORK (UPI) - The Metropolitan Museurp of Art is to
receive $1 biUion in art, including masla')lieccs by Monet, Renofr, Van
'Gogh and Picasso, from Waller Annenberg, the former U.S. ambusador in London, The New Yorlt Times reponed Tuesday.
Tile gift, described as the 1lqcst single donalion in more than half a
century 10 the museum's deparnnent ofFrenc:h Impressionist Mid PostImpressionist paintinp, would be made after Annenberg's deslh.
Annenberg would bequeath his entire coDection ol more iban 50
paintings by Manet, Degas, Monet, Renoir, Toulouse Lautrec,
Cezanne, van Gogh, Selll'8l, Gauguin, Bonnard, Vuillard, Matisse,
Picasso and Braque, the newspaper said.
·
''It is my inlelidon that aU my f~intings should go 10 the Meii'OpDii·
tan Museum,'' he rold the Times m 1 teiOpbone interview Monday. "I
love them with a passion and I want them 10 stay together after I'm
gone."
·
.
·.
.
The deeisian followed what !he newspaper caUed an iilf'mnal competition among several of the nation's leading museums for the collection, valuedatabout$1 billion.
.;
But, he told the T"IIIICS, "I happen 10 believe in strength foing 10
stren~. and I think the Met is the ptopc;! repository for the~.'
.
It 11 by coincidenc:e, die newspaper Slid. that the tonr will conclude
with a1emporary showing at the Met from June 41hrougb Oct. 13. ·
Annenberg, the founder of Seventeen llllf&amp;Zinc and TV Guide,
made his fortune in publishing and communic:llions. He served as
Pre.ident Richard Nillon's ambrmdor 10 London.
·

LEGAL NOTICE
Not leo Ia glv., that ATaT
Communlcetlona of Ohio.
Inc. hoa 111111 t - 1111-com·
Plelnto with the Public Utili·
tleo Commllllon of Ohio
(Coae Noo. I0-11B8· TP·
SLF end 81·81·TP·Slfl In
Cue No. 80·1a88-TP·SLF,
ATaT allege a that Ita curront
r1'te bind 'for operetor Mr·

'•

:':;
,;,
••
".:

11

. PUBLIC NOTICE
Tha Molgo Co. Sd . of
MR/DD hoo been ollocotld
t1 5,345 In Choptor I fundo
for the flacolyoor 1891 , Thlo
money wHI oulot ln funding
throe tllchinll ualatont po·
ahiona in a I'Niximum

ataff~

/ttudont rotlo of 1 /4 In
theM CllllfOOJill.
.
Chapter 11 funda of n 40
hove alao been ollocetld.
Thlo money will be uoed for
etaff lnllrvlce training.
Anyone cleolrlng to rovlow
or

comment on Chepter I '

end / or Chepter II gronta
ehould contoct Botto Hoff·

:;~:~:~~~rem Director It

1.:.::::..:.:::!...:..:::..-----

Public Notice

PUBLIC NOTICE
The following w.,. recolv111/ prep- by the Ohio
Envlronmontel Protection
(0EPAJ loot wMk.
datil of flnel IC·
tlont and leauonce datil of
prqpoald action• of
drOit ectlono ore ltltod. Fl·
naloctlono moy be oppoolld,
In writing, within 30 cleyo of
the clotoofthlanotlce. tot,.
Environ"*""! • - of R•·
view, Rm. 300, 231 E.
T-n 11.. Columbuo, Oh .•
4321 I . Notice of any eppool
ohall bo fllod with the director within 3 doYI. Propoctlona wll become flnel unleu 1 written ldjudlcotlon
hearing requutla oubmlttld
within 30 diva of the loouonee elate: or the director
rll'll-/wlthdrewa tho propoled ictlon . Any peraon
moy aubmlt commento and·
/ or 1 rnoetlng ,...rdinll eny
dreft action within 30 daya
of tho dote lndlcelld. "Ac·
tlon", •• u11d obow doll
not Include receipt of 1 vorl·
fled oomplalnt. lhlgnlflcont
public 1-.11 Plltl, I pub·
lie moetlng mey be - · Aa
ta ony action. Including re·
celpt ol verlflod complaint&amp;.
ony peroon moy obtain no·

2

tiel of furthor ectlona: ond
lddltlonel lnformetlon. Un·
..u otherwl• provided In
notice of pertlcular eetlono.
all com...,nlcatlona ahell r..
ta:
H11rlng Cieri!,
OEPA. P.O. Box 1048. Col·
umbus. OH . 43281-0148
Ph. (1141 144· 21 11. Cot~·
oult ORC Chap, 3745 and
OAC Chlpa. 3745-47 and
3741·1 fo&lt; rwqulrernonta.
Draft N PDEI Permit Subjoct to revllkln:
Tho
Shelly
Company,
Rlcherdo a Bona, Inc.
&amp;toto Route 338
Letart Folio. Ohio
Public Notice Date
3/13/81
11-lvln· Wet. . :
Ohio River .
Facility D~ptlon:
land IHid Grovel Produce
Permit No. OIJ00007"AD
(3!12, He

•

PubliC Notice

Public Notice

Public Notice

Public Notice

.

•

blossom festival, now in its 56ib i!
year, is the parade, which is expect- l
ed to draw a crowd of more than· ~
100, 000 an April6.

'

In Memory
IN
In Loving
GLADYS
who peued ow-v
March 211. 1 BB4 end
CLYDE WINES
who J)lllld IW8Y
Moroh 2, 11SI.
While you, dNr ...,.,,.,
ron end • •
You loving memory
we'll'olweya kllfl.
Sedlymi-by
Elloen

NOTICE' OF SALE · ·
By virtue of on Order of
Sale 1..,111 out of the Common Pleel Court of Molga
County, Ohio. In the cooe of
Banll OM, Athena, NA,
Plolntlfl, va. RodMy A. ·Pul·
llna, et 11•• Delanclonta. upon
o JudgiNnt lh.,.ln ..,..
clered. being c.. No. 9DCV-237 In llld Court. I wll
offer for .... et the front doo•
of the Couot- In PomortYy, M.... County, Ohio,
on the 21th illy of Merch.
198,,ot 10:00a.m .• the following Ianda end •-nwn...
100111111 It 211 Eut Mlin
Street.
Ohio,
48718 . A complete legal d•
ac:ilptlon of tho ,.., Mteto Ia

Po-.

··to-..

Till loll-Ing reel lltiM
altuato In the VIllage of Pomeroy, County of Molgoend
State of Ohio:
Tha oouth-lt hell of lot
93 In the CHy of Pornorov,
being 2 4 floet e lnc:Ma on
Front or Firot St,_t and ••·
tending beck at thet width
(24 flat I lnchlo) to • dlotonca of 18 fwt. aubject to
the right lnd priYiloge of
Chwo Eblrabech, TruetM,

hla MH:Cei8Dn or ealign1 to
connect with the MWer on
uld lot to the Ohio River,
end the frM u11 of uid
· provldld, thet when
ullng ..ld • - oold
Chaoleo
EberaHch, hlo
auoceuora or eelignt. ahell
kHJI uld et all
timet to the· Ohio Rlvor.
Alao, • right of wey over
the Iouth- I end 1/3
fwt of Lot 124 In aeld 'cHy,
extending ot that width •
dlttance of 18 taword
Front ltreet In Nld city.
Reference D..ct: Volume

313 , P - 117. Molgo
County D - Recorda.
laid RMioatetehoabMn
aulgnld the following Audl·
tor' 1 Percol Number. 1 I·
002438.
laid _ , eotoll Ia .,bject
to ICCnlld rOll Jlllte to ...
lor 1881'
REAL
ESTATE
APPRAISED AT: '35,000.00.
The real e8tl• annot be
aold lor leao thin two·thlnlo

2

In •_
._
, ry
,0

. Public Notice

Public Notice

.}.

the eppraiMd value.
TERMS OF SALE: Caah
on delivery of ·
Jorneo M. Souloby,
Shariff of Melga County
(2) 21; (3) I , 1 2, Jtc

PubliC Notice
SHERIFF'S IALE OF
REAL ESTATE
Tho Steto of Ohio
Melgt County
BANK oNE , Athena, N.A.
Plaintiff

. vs

MOHAMMED SAID
SAATY and
SHAWBO SAATY
·
Dofendanto
NO. BO·CV· 130 .
In pursuance of en Order
of Solo In the obovo ontltlld

action, I will offer for 1111 et
public auction, It the foont
door of the S,.rlfl'o llldg.,
Melga County Courtho.,.o.
In Pornoroy, Ohio, In the
above nemed County, on the
1 1tll doy of AprH. 1111. 11
.10:00o'olock A.M., tha fol··
lowing clo-111 real-18,
altuoto In the County of
Molga and Stlt8 of Ohio,
and In dill Townahlp of Col·
umblo, to-wit:
Beginning et tho north·
welt c:ornor of Henry Moah·
eter'e land In Sec;t~No. I ,
Town No. I. of Range No.
15 of the O.C.P. In Col·
umbla Townalllp, Mlige
County, Ohio; tllanae Eoet
14 chaine to tha rood;
thence South 1 7'h dog.
Welt 11.81 ahelno along Mid
rood: thence I dell. Woat 10
chalna; thence llouth 34
deg, Wen I chelna; thance
South 82 deg. Welt &amp;.53
chal~a: thence South 25
deg, Weet 7170 chilno;
thence Walt 41,07 chain a to
tho -~~ line of uld lel;tlon
No. 8: thence North 32.28
choint to the piece of begin·
nlng, containing 183 acroa.
more or I•••· exC1pt 2.28
ecrea off of the . north1e1t
comer thereof convey«~ by
C. A. M11heter and Flora
Moeheter, hla wHo, to N. G.
Cheadle by clold elated Aprl
18. 1900. Md recorclod In
Book 88 It P1111 394 ofthe
DMd Bookl of
Melga
County,
Ohio.
leaving
180.72 acrea, more or loao
conveyld by Charlaa A.
Moalleter and Floro Maahe·
tor, hll wHe, to Jam11 Del·
loy by dMCI elated March 11.
1802, lnd rec;ordld In look
88 at Page 13 of uld DMd
Recorda, and elao the fot..
1 - g reollltllllltuetld In
llectlon No. e. Town No. I.
Range No. 11 oftlloOhlo
Company' a Purchoooln Col·
umbll Townalllp, Moiga
County. ohio. blglnnlnti on
the Eut line of the Sugar
Grove School Hou11 lot at •
ltolct: thence South 41.,.
clog. uat on aeld Nat line of
aald lot Srodund 2011nkato
1 wire fence on llelr,ood
rlaht of woy; thence North
31'h clog. ••t along aald
right of woy 74 rodi to 1
•1111•: thence Wlet &amp;I roda
end 2 Hnlla to • otekoln - ·
ter of new road; thence
South 80 deg. Eon 18 rod a
to 1 ttake on uld oood;

Mobtltl Homes lo f Sitlll t!'

61 62
63
64
65 -

ll F.-rms lor Sale
Jl Dusinen 8utlding5
35 lots &amp; A~;re~~ge
36 R u l Estate Wtnle d

1;@111

.,

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·~

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71

12
73
1A
75
76
77
78
79

A u t os lor S..te
Trucks lo1 Sill ~
Vans &amp;4WO "s
MotOt cyelcs
Boals &amp; Motors tor .S ..Iu
Aut o Plfts &amp; ACcessuru.lli
A uto R ~ .. .,
'
C a rwtp1ng Equ1 pmttn t
Campen &amp; Mo t or Ho m ttS

•. • j"i.

. '\.. .
"'

0

'

-.•

M erchand rse
Serv ices

5 1 Houl8hold Goods
62 - Sporting Goods
53 Anhquts
s• M isc. Mttthandrse
55 Buildi ng Suppli•
56 Pe ts tor Sll e
57 Musicallnntumenu
FruitS &amp; VtOetl bt•
59 for,Stleor Tnd t

81

Ho me lmp1o wmenh

82

Plumbtng &amp; Haal mg

8 3 EACWI Itng
84 E lect ne al a.

5.

0

.,

Tra ns ort ation

Ho uMs lor Rent
Mobile Home~ tor Rtlnt
Farms tor Rant
Apl rtmenl tor Re nt
Furnis hed Ro oms
_S pace lor Re nt
W1nted lo Rent
Equipment tor Aunt
For Lea~e

42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49

Farm Eq u1pmunt
W anted l o Bu y
l tvt!t.lociL
Ha y &amp; Gr1111
S ued • h ruluer

0

,, ....
'

•

Ref11g ttre~t •on

85 Gt1nw11l Haulmy ·
86 Mobil a Hum e RllPilltr
87 UphoiSi orv

5

'•

PubliC Notice

•

•••

. . :::."":..... I

WHAlEY'S
. AUTO PARIS
Spedallahlt In
CustoM Fr-• ltHir
NEW • USED PAIITS
FOR ALL MAKES •
MODELS

992-7013
or 992-5553
OR IOU REI

1,100·141-0070
" DAIWIN, OHIO
3/ l/'t1 / 1 mo.

IISSEU &amp; lUilE
CONSTIUCnON
oNawHHiel
•G•rat~~•

•c...,....
Stop &amp; c•.,...,

·-del. .

FreolltiNatas

915-4473
667-6179
5-31-'to lfn

NEW -IIPAII

HappyAdl

Gutters
Downspouti
Gutter Cleaning

R. L. MASH

CARPENTRY ·
•Garages
•Room Additions
•Kitchens • Baths
•Vinyl Siding
•Restoration
•Repair Work

992-5526

FREE ESTIMATES

Toke tht pain out of
palnling.
Lit me do it for y1111.

Lordy,
Thl 13th he ,, 401
HAPPY
BIRTHDAY!
We love you, Dadl
Sar1h Jo. Stephln.
Lm·av.

VERY IIASONAILE
HAVE UFEIIN(ES

16141 915-4110

!
,
,

I
,

ti

:

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•,
•
:
•
•

1

~­

,
:
,
I

~

I'
I

I
!
,

I

:

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"frN Eetimetes•:

BILL SLACK

PH. 949-2101
or Res. 949·2160

992-2269

NO SUNDAY CAUS

PO.IOY, OliO

i

I
•

I

:

.••

1
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USED RAILROAD TIES

3-ll·lfn

MICIOWAYE
.OVEN IEPAII
au.uas

IIONlE

lrlnt It 1JI Or We
PidJ ...

lEN'S APPUANCE
SIIYICE

$10
949-2126

992·5135 or
915-1561

,., Appt • .

ac............ Offlaj J-HiiEY
IIJI.s...t

IIONlE

"-'·

..-----....
•Remodeling and
Home Repairs
· •Roofing
•Siding
•Painting

NO JOB TOO SMALL
FREE ESTIMATES

"

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CEDAI
CONSTIUCnON .•.
992·6641 or
691-6164
.~ .

' 1Z·31 ·to·lfn " •C

SIMON'S .
PICK·
A·PAIR
SAME
LOCATION
u.. Court StrHt

ROOM
Complete Grooming

For All lreocls
EMILfE MERINAR

Entrance
POMDOY.t. OHIO

614-992-6820
"-~f:.

nm11101 • DftiiOI

I,

•

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

····-kilt

Owner &amp; Operator

LINDA'S ··
PAINTING

:

.. '

SHRUB &amp;'TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL
•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
· INSUL,ATION

Howard L Wrltalll

ROOFING

·:
•
'

s-to:

Business Services

.:;__..;,;;..;,;;.:.;;;;:,;,;:,__ _

In Memory Of
AUCE CLARK
Ona Year.
We often think of bv·
gone daya
When we were ell to·
get her.
The family -ehein .Ia
broken now
But memorlea .will
live forever.
To ue. ahe haa no1
gone ewey;
Nor hal ahe traveled
fer.
..
Juat entered God' a
iltemal home,
And left the gate ajar.
Sedly mlend
children, Mebel,

Public Notice

••capt

,,,

~

ISID lPPUANCIS

tttAYWAIUfm
WASIIIIS-$1•.,
11\'IIS-S" "
....IIAJOIS-S 100 .,

tl MIIIII,IH .
UPHOLSTRY

UIIG----$1U .,

IU•Ie.l111 • .
PIIMiplrt
Hand Tufting
Cultom Drape•

rMlllb-S 115 .,
IICID 0¥111$-$79 .,.

lEN'S APPliANCE
SEIYKE

36Yeanla,_t.oe

ttl-SUS • tiS-1561
Acr• ,,_ hit Offlu
POMIIOY, OliO
10/JOrlt""

614·992·2Jfl

We ley Whet W. Do.
WI Do Whet We ley.

111-lf.l •••

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UIINCI.:Rcr.trr

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lOS N. Sac... Streat
IMIOUPOIJ, 01110 45 760
Dfflco 614-H2·fl"
HOME 614·992-S6H

'l

,\

DOTTIE S.

' ,i

We Need

21z7/'tl/lroo.

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I

&amp; Lrv~~tuck

l 1 - Honutl f&lt;H' Sale
32

Suppli~s

lh•ce South II clog. Eeet COmp.ony) right of woy end
:ZO rodo end 18 Mnkt to 1 perlllolot"" oome 11 woa rl· MICHAEL L. MILLER,
1 21 , DMd Recorda of Melga
ET AL.
and eacoptecl In llid
- • : thoncolouth 11 dog • County, Ohio.
CoN No; 10 CV 134
Eaa to • ateko: tllenoe ta Mothlaa Wood herParcoiiD#15-01012.000
In punuanc• to •n Order
llnbefore refwrecl to.
South 25 dig. Welt 17 rod I
Property Addreooo I l l
ll_..ronca o.d: Volume of lele directed to me In the North Sec;ond StrMt, Midend 22 llnko to • ltllle;
Melp · - .,tltfld action, I will dloon. ohio .
thlftCI South 11 clog. Weet 238, Page 713.
_
offl&lt; for Ill• et public auc·
to the .,._ of bogirlnlng, County Doed Recorda.
Property
appreiMCI et
containing &amp;.47 _.., mo,. . I..ot Dllld RlfeNnoe: Vo- tlon. ot the toontdoor o1 the 13,18&amp;.00 end cMnot r..
or leil, convoyed by Howenl lume 211, 1'1111 287, Melga · Couot Houae, In, Pomeroy, aold for leoo than two·thlrdo
Ohio, In the above nomad of the tll)preiMd velue.
Throckmorton end Elole County DNd llec;orda.
a.ld Preml•• located at county, on April 12, 1981,
Throckmorton, hla wlflo. to
TERMS OF SALE: The
Jameo Dolley by deed doted Walt Side of County Rood It 10:00 o .m ., tho following IUCC. .IfUI
purchliaer 11
rOll
oatate, aoon •• · hla liid Ia ec;ceptld,
July 22. 1108, iond recorded 10, C.o lumblo Twp .• Molg~ doollltaltuotld In the County of
In Book 81 at PIJII 327 of Co .. Ohio.
~ required to depo"'
Melgt, end the State of ahall
8eld
Promluo
Approllld
on the elite of 11le,ln caah o &lt;
oold D•d llecordo, - · •·
Ohio, end In Vlllaae of . Mid· by certified check peyabloto.
gating 117.18 ecrea. EX· at 111,300.00 end connot
CEPT therefrom 3 .88 ec,.o be told ·for lau then twp· dleport. to·wlt;
the Sheriff, 1 0~ of tho •
conveyed by Jemeo Dolley thlrda of thlt amount. All
Poot Lot No. fl&amp;ln that port e~ount ~f tuch ecceptld ,
end Pher.. Dolley. hla wile, Sheriff•a uiM - • " ' under of uld VIllage known 11, bid but In no ll'lent leu then
to · H-erd Throcll,_.on. the Doctrine Ce-t Emp· C•lport IHid which uld lot Three
Hundred
Dollora '
by deed doted July 22. tao. All proopec:tlwo purchea· le bounded end cloocrlbed' ••
(t~O . OO) nor mon then
1908, recordldln look en .,. UIJIId to check for followo. to· wit: Beginning ot Ton
Thouoond
Dollara
99, Pogo 331 at uld D•d Ilene In the offloe of tha tho South- co"* of Se·
(e10,000.00J. The ..,peld
Recorda. •d
7&amp; Molga County Recorder.
oond end Diamond
~Ianoe of tho purohoM
TERMS oF SALE: 10% thence Iouth olona Second
ecrot therlfoom conveyed
prlco ohall be duo end per•·
or
Certified
Check
on
Cosh
by 0 . H . lt-lll't. Admlnl•
8,_ 10 - ;tllonco Woet blo to the Shariff within 30'
Dey oi Sale, ......... upon
trator of
p.orellel
with
Diamond
doYI from tho dell of tile.
Dellwory of DMd.
Streot foo • dlotence ol 50
confirmation of tho ulo. The •
Jam•• M. louloby, Sheriff flit; thence North parallel · purchoaer ahall H roqulrld,
Melga County, Ohio with aecond ltr11t 10 IHt;
to pey lnt-t on ..ld un·
' 12) 28: 131 fl. 12. 3tc
t h - Eeet along the South
peld INIIence at 8" P• en:~
D•d
IMvlng
llno at Dlomond Strwt 80
num from the de-. of oonffr~
18.21 ICrA, more or le11;
to the piece of begin-. matlon ofthe life to the dote
Public Notice
together w"h 1 right of wey
nlng. lelng 1 lot 80 fHt by
of poyment of tho """'nco
for lngreao and egrea• .,.,
50 flit on tho Southwell
unleoo tho be lance aha II r.. '
SHERIFF'S SALE OF
oald 8 .47 acroo herolnbeforo
comer of Dlomond Street in
mode within eight deya from
REAL ESTATE
the Vllloge of Middleport,
diiCI'I- from ... d pre·
the date of ul1.
, ••
The Stoll of Ohio
miMI out to the public rood,
Ohio.
Jomea M. Soulaby, Sheriff
Melp County
SUBJECTtoallllgaleauaeld rlaht of wey being
Meiga County, Ohio:
STAll BANK. N. A..
,..nto and INua.
· ·
locotld on the Wilt olcle of
D. Dun hona
the K. a M.
Roil-y
TRI·ITATE
For aource of title, refer·
~ti'!'!"'Y. for Plaintiff
"
VI
Comp.ony (n- N.Y.C. R.R .
encelo meclo to Dllld of R•·
6 , 12, 3tc

3· 1·'81 · 1 mo.

-

Far111

Estate

•

=

Annenberg bequeaths ·
masterpiece collection

.

Real

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. 41

~A

COPY DEAOUI;E '

Ov,r 16 Wordo
.20

Rates i\fO tor constcuiNe runs. brokenupd~ s wtll be c:h•gld
tor e.ch d..- 15 separate ads.

pa.d .

,-

., · ·~'

,·

s&amp;:oo

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Rate
$4.00

'l&lt;

and the cost of this class will be
Sll .
On April I 0 a hand painted c:ollar class will be held at 7 p.m. with
Marilyn Meier. instruCtor, The cost -·
of this class ·is S15 and preregistta~ ·•
tion is. required by April S. For '" ~
more mforinabon caD 992-5983 or .992-2675.
:~

0

Teen: Smart pleaded with him to kill husband :1.
EXETER, N. H. (UPI) - A
youth who turns 17 Tuead8y says a
school official seduced him and
then threatened to withhold her
favors unless he killed her husband.
WiUiam Flynn, wbo was 16 at
ibc time he shot Gregcxy Snu.t, 24 1
in the bead, was to resume his testimony Tuesday at the trial of
Smart's wife, Pamela, 23, who i~
char~ed with plotting her hus·
bl!nd s murder.
Flynn testified Monday she
dallced for him after they watched
a steamy movie 81 her home while
her husband was away, and then
she seduced him.
"She said the only way we
could be together is if we kill
Ore ,'' he teStified.
ifhe Seabrook teenager was
expec~ 10 detail the actual slaying
during Tuesday's testimony before
a Rockingham County Superior

3

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f5

.wordt

Days
1

Susan Baker Will instruct a class
for lhe Middleport Arts Council on
making Easter BUllnies on Saturday
at I p.m. Cost of the class is $20
which includes all suppljes. Call
Ms. Baker at 992-77 33 for more
information.
Michelle Garretson will be
teaching slate painting on April I

------------------

Refreshments were served by the

.,

Middleport Arts Council class slated

~ The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

RATES

TO PLACE AN AD CALL 992-21 56
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
ClOSED SUNDAY .

Cherry·trees to flower early, but not too early I

sar..,tt;:

·

,Classified

=

wASHINGTON (UPI) - The
liucn an early bloomin' disap- ing William Howard Taffs.admin·
Japanese cherry trees that grace the points organizers of Washmgton 's istralion. The president's wife and
nation's capital will bloom earlier · annual Cherry Blossom Festival, the wife of the mayor of Tokyo·
than usual this year bill they proba· which this year will nm Mlwcb 31 planted the first one in 1912.
. Most ·o r Washington's cherry
bly will be around for Washing- 10 April 7, a period that coincides
ton's annual cherry blossom festi- with ibe normal bloom.
trees - and the rllSt to bloom val, officials said Monday.
·
Mayor Sharon Pratt Dixon wei- are of the yosbino variety and
Mild winter temperatures and corned people to the festivities around the Tidal Basin in West
sunny weaiher Will cause lhe cher- . Monday, saying cherry blossom Potomac-Park, near the JefferS~Jn
ry trees, which are one of the capi· time is ''whea Washingtolt, D.C .. Memorial and Washington Monutal's biggest rourist attractions, to is at her best and the whole world menL Their blossoms are smaU and
first show color about March 20 comes to enjoy·this -great city in ·its white.
and to bloom five days later, pre:- splendor." · .
.
,
The second variety, the kwanzan
dieted William Anderson, the
"These trees have become a species, bloom about 10 days later,
National Parle Service's chief sci- symbol of the joy and renewal of at East Potomac Park. The have
entisL
spring, and of the spirit of friend- large, pink double-flower blosThe blossoming is expect to be ship that can be shared by aU pea- soms.
in fuD peak sometime from March pie,'' fllSt lady Barbara Bush, ibe
.Parle Service scientists
•
25- 28, and "they may hang in festival's honorlwy chair, ~ in a .if the weather does not tum
through the festival," Anderson statement.
this year's flowering is likely 10 be
said.
The 3,000 cheiry trees massed spectacular bec•nse last year's was
The average peak for ibe bios- along the Potomac: River near the good and die buds set weD. But the
soms is April S, but last year they J effcrson Memorial were a gift trees' delicate blooms are always
beg!~" to bloom on March 15.
from ibe government of JI!)JIIII dur·

Ka!Jn, perhaps iJie most fearsome ancient Byzantine Empire. Corrupt
conqueror ol all time. All charac:- bf jealousies, national vanities, the
ters were living people. No detail cny neveNhe-less commanded
has been invented. All the spoken such bravery and loyalty. as the
words are recorded in conteinpo· world bas seldom seen. C.onstan·
rary or near conremporary sources. tine was the last Roman Emperor.
Gengbis Kahn died in 1227.
Mrs. George Hackett Jr. presidMrs. Roy Holter reviewed "The ed at the meeting in which roll call
Emperor's Winding Sheet" slating was answered with members namthat it is a story of the fall of Con· ing a custom of the Middle East.

"Genghls Kahn" by R.P. Lister,
a_nd "The Emperor's Winding
Sheet" by Jill Paton Walsh were
reviewed at the recent meeting of
lite Middleport Literary Club beld
at ibe home of Mrs. Wilson Carpenrcr.
The review of ''Gengbis Kahn"
by Sibley Slack was read by Mrs.
- Bernard Fultz. She stated that the

p~=iiiiiiiiiiii;iiiiiiiilboo=~k:w~as-=an~ac:~c=o~u~nt~o~f~th~e:ear=ly:.:stan~li;nop:Je;in
14S3
life and rise 10 !lOWer of GenghiS that marked the
endand
ofof
thethe

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YOUNG!S

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CARPENTER SERVICE
- Aoom Addlt6on1

l'hl•-•1 · .,
- flooring
.
" ..
- 1-lof.bllflof.

-11-leol and

- ConCNte wofil

,_""

(FREE ESTIMATEII

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215

"'""'''·

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�Pomeroy~lddleport,

Page 8 The Dally Sentinel
Announcements
4

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Glveawl)'

•

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old

•:aut
14

....,..._

Will

Coril...,

Nlotl"'aAJL-

•low r:,rraec":'
mb':r".,;.,~ I:
10 form ,..,, llmplo -do.

~.-And'111MOI

-

Holf
Pupploo
SMpiWd,-.~.

.'::~::'i' SCC\l4l\A-4~~s· ea••

Television
Viewin

PAtVATIIW.l
A -

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-9 •

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.........
:"' ~~ =. lulL= --AN-Iolnoi» .
....,.... on

L l - - · 30Wl'Hm.
Fl......,..,
.oodlogo,111-lllzt.

1991

32 Mobile HolriM
for Sell

Help Wanted

_...~

.........

TUesda~March12,

--------.1- ------ ..·--

11

LAFF-A-UAY

TUesetay, March 12, 1891

Ohio

au.IMU
Tnllnlng

lllr 22nd, AI 12:00 Noon.

(\

Dole 01
c.n
le - ArJ """
Dlr d.And
TheAllHorne

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

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IIJHtwe

fT:1':!12 = 33 Farms tor sale

=..:..c:
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P g'd Iti•HI

Ll T

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-

lllofe. lolorqi!lo. Good

·~·
or Auu:r:alsls of..
tor.
l
1181.

I=·==·=~-=-=~·.:.,

Overheard on Wall Slreet :

1--,1~5 ..::;1,...=-,rMII""""'l~ le • A rule of economics reveals

IDOurHouMQ
1:01 (I) levorly Hlllbillto1
1:30 ~
I(J) NIC Nightly Nowa

e

,.

l1l ~ e AIC Htwel;l
!D Wild Amollce Q
(!) 3-2·1 c-. Q

·I
.

am a• c11 HoWaQ

aD. Andy Grlttlth

.

thaC th8
best
thing
is ···'
....tirrre
." to buy
· any·

I·

L.

(i} Abbott end CD IIIlO

IG yl' 0 lA Ll Lr

'

Complete tho chueklo quolwcl
by lillinv In tho mial"!! -ds

you dowelop lrom ..., No. 3 ........

. . ..,

A PRINr NUMBERED
V' LETTERS . IN SQUARES

IDUpCiale

Yard 8818

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121 WOilcl Todly

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IDNBA Todly

eon-

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1 T:.....riE:....;St,....-111

(I)CIIorlealn~Q
!D
3-2·1 c:ont.c:l
(!)liquor. OM
1;1

Phanl!: ~~ 1113 10112.

18 Wlnlecl to Do

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Con
..."lltifoo
Clnly ..
AI: -D a W
2nd
-

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EV!NINO

•'

1:31 (I) Andy Gllttllll
7:00 (2)
0 Whool of FOIIUIIO

e

~~ I a - of Joen1111

. -=-=Q
.

ICI'MI,III ANSWRI
J ·ot
·Ulrrrosl- Belle- Radio- Bleach - BILLS
The bachelor to another at wedding reception: • A hon·
eymoon is the quiet interval between bells and BILLS."

~~~
pc~I'NI1IAHIIrQ

a l.:r,:.~n Q
a SporteCem.r
121 Mcinoyllno

.

N(IIITH

ID SCorecrow end Mra. King
Q

a• Emertmmon~
Tonight Storlo. Q

.

llD. M'A'I"'I
1D ColloQO lelllotbol

Rentals

; . ~t: PIIOOO

41 HQUIII for Rent

tv SYSTEM

: DELUXE $Af(Uifi

:lor
Houoo In VInton .
.4171.

·unlden

•

4 bedroom -

Pli

I·

UOW75-11111.

IN

r.lerc l~;md 1se

In Point

vaua4WD~•
'U Cliow 1-10, 414, U N
IUIO, air, lll-f!ll,
- .....

51

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towtmiTSffM

.

.... '-to -

Potloct

_ , . , 10 dlffeNnl olooul tho
........ Jocll 1-X Flol ooll"" IT
WOIIf&lt;llll Conlalno NO oynt,..c
-· For dogti I
!1&amp;0
Food I luppty 114ta4!14.

24

•• It hop- -

houro. 1110 oyotom In·

•ftil SI•H

clucloo docodor.

CAU TODAY

COMPlETE-

NOJIIIHG

n. XLT.
-.~1140.

-

FElli UAII.Y.SP.ECIAL

rm JO iUYI

ONLY

L.- v.odlna Routt l'or lolo.

ZENIX VIDEO

" I i/1 Mil• W. of Helzer

Muelcal

Won, Lll!l ail Ill ,_
rlll-1414.
YINDINO ROUTI: l'or lolo.

- 11:

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AVON I All

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R II F .!. II'

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I 8hlrloy

Phono (:1041 llH2II llllf 5 p.m.

-

lilY 'Tiwu l'rldoy, 7o.m.~::IOp.m.
llild ,_,..to: lo""""', 401
Clnwor Rood, ~lro, 011
.

.. _

~. aable

n-olo"::'"' air, llw mlnut•

...,. n111. ren n t'? a

bdnn,

full hill,.,., .............

bulldl... 2 oomir

1014.

loltl: 11Ma·

diDOIIt IIMf .....
mII
...
11om
-·""
qulrM.IIIO-"'....nh
lr1:alud11
-·7:10p.m.
Pttoni: Ulllt:OOp."!·
114-441-1117 loll-.
~

Now It
StteAII

lltt,

!".2.!'.!! I, 112

Apartment
for Rent

•crcUNG

,_,.. Off "" .,... Ort

n.oc-111

l'nllf-.

THERI; AAI1 TIMES liMEN

MI!N AAE 'TOTI'oLI.V
[)16Q16TthiGII

•

1S II. ~1111 """'· Sol
~~ .-; ...toor.

r,'l ·n :;upp11r-;

=,

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lupt~r8aubl

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Clloololu..-ni

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76

-

RUSH I

(2:001
8:05 ill NIA lelkotball
8:30 l1l (J) G DaYle llulea
Dwight has a trying lime at
school; Robbie IIIII.•
rebellious. Stereo . C

Auto Pan••
Acc8110rlel

. . .

,,.....

I

••

..... _good-...... tebullt,f14.3'11.111L
117'7,

Rosaanne confronts Becky's
boyfriend about sneaking
a•ound with Becky. Stereo.

UtiiiCI I

otllllNr .. ttl; . _

.• ..... .......

ttl

RIDE IN 1l-E WA"iiN
HE I!!Wii.Ji I.XIN'T EiO.

! .A6KED HIM WHAT
Ht= weED FOR A
8-AAI&lt;E: •• •

'Wt1AT!s A
BRAKE'7. II

11+

jOurnalism awards. (1 :30)

111 ""' luv. ""'

,_.,,Olio

Poyklg eMit lOr - I l L

copp•. bre11. _.........
IM(Inwl"m, redlltOrt. ltart·
••· elttrnlltort 1nd .. non·

ferroul mae.

CAll 101 PIKIS

614-992-5114
9AM-7NI-7DavtoW...
1-11.'91.1 •

J&amp;l
INSULATION
•VInyl lldlng
•Aopr.cemont
Wlnclo•Aooflng

•

SCI VICCS

BARNEY

Antlquee

HERE'S MY RECIPES
FER PEANUT BRITILE
. AN' MOLASSES
KISSES, LOWEEZ.Y

YOU OUGHT TO
BE 'SHAMED OF
YORESELF,'
ELVINEY!!

YOU KNOW
GOOD AN' WELL .
I'M FIXIN' TO GO
ON A DIET

AN' YO'RE TRYIN' TO

SWEET-TAL« ME
OUT OF IT!!

dtr

JAMES DISII
992-2772 01'
742-2251

...

131 BFYM Piece

Mlddl.,art. Ohio

~.

DAVE'S SMAll
11-IIIPAII

ltOr Trelc:

OeloauU•Q

a
a

tsJ Wilt . . St.

, .... ,..,, 011.
·PH. 99t~Jt~lt

. . ASTRO-GRAPH

BISSELL
BUILDERS

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

' CUSTOM II&amp;T
, HOMES &amp; GARAGES

rl

11

I,

Plumbing&amp;

PIL 949-2101
....... 949-21641

HeltlnG

Hoy lor .... - . Tl-lty.
lloiond ..... In tho Flolcl. 114-

'. Day 01' Niallt
NO SUNDAY CAUS

Trc~n•,porl:il1011

11 1:1 rUN'',
1

fiFOUILGAUI

" ·' 111 - ·

84

Electrtcal a.
Refrigeration

R '1 na'lll

~=::~:;;:;,

•

Morell 11, 1811

Ncq;aolll

!!filnl,
=
MIIMr - Uw- j o
1r
1
,
~
lloottlaol,
1711.

ffwWI..

You• year ahead might nor be mea·
sured in ordinary terms. A number of
benelicial surprises could be In the ott·
ing. of both 1he esthelic and material
kind .
PISCES (Folr. 20-fhlth 2111 A commer·

cial endeavor that you have been ~:;

"Btilore I

go lOoking for the Loch Ness

montier, mlncl tiling 11111 .what happened
to Explorertl I through Vll17''

•

templallng should not be lett to ,ga
dust any longer. Properly handled. this
might provide you with that second

WATIII WII'CH WILL DIIIUING

WATIII CIUAIWf1'UI), . _
7111.

.

'

.

'

'

Pisces. lreat yourselllo a birthday gilt.
Send lor your Aslro-Graph predlctjons
lor I he year ahead by mailing S1.25 to
Astro-Gtaph, c/o thi s newspapet. P.O.
Box 91428. Cleveland, OH 4410 1·3428.
Be sure to state your zodiac sign.

ARIES (March 21·Apfil 11) Avail yoor·
sell ol any opportunrties today to go
places where you can esra~lsh fresh
con1acts. You may be Introduced to
"""""'lH! who could be Important to
your future.

~
, ••, •••• ONo

MII. .

source ot income you 've been desiring.

TAURUS (Aprll:ao-M.r. 201 Something
may occur at this lime thai will enable
yoo lo reap benellla dlsproportlonale to
your Involvement In an endoovor. lady
luck will have a hand In lho dlaplrsal.
GEMIII (..., 21 ...uno 201 YO&lt;J CO&lt;Jid bo
IUC~iet 1han usual Foday where new ventures are concerned, ptovlded ihoy are
not too avant-garde or bizarre. Steer li
middle course.

CANCEII (Juno 21..July 221 YO&lt;J are
presenlly in a cycle who•• you might do
lhlngs on a sc:alo bigger thon the one ro
which you're accustomed. Don 't be In·
llmlda1ed by biQihots or big numbers .
LEO (JIFIJ 23-Aug. 22) YO&lt;J lhooldn't
have too much trouble promoting sup·
port lor a mauer you believe In today.
Others will be lnteres1ed lor the same
reasons you ate, and yoo'll effectively

make your case.
YIIIGO (Aq. 23·Sopt. 22) YO&lt;J should
be able lo take charge ol an important
arrangement currently being misrnan.
aged by someone you like today . Yoo'll
do a gOOd job .
LIIIIA (llopl. 23-0el. 231 One of the
principle reasons yoo'll be watmly received II)' contempororias today is your
ability to make them think that the
sound ouggntlons you supply are aclu·
ally outhored by thlm.
ICOIIPIO (Oct. :14-How. 22) Yoor.luck Is
loculld In
thot coold help yoo
achieve ,_,lnglul objecll- todoy.
Tunolnto the trend ond do ocmethlng
worthwhile.
IAGmAIIIUS (..... 23-0oc. 21) You
should' be extremely cl18rlamarlc today
In lnvotvementa thot have social awr·
tones. Don't be surprltllld when othera
cluster around you like mon!ha to a
flame.
CAI'IIICOfiN (Doc. 22-Jan. 111 Even
though your goals may not bo readily
B11P11ent to auoclat• today, the re• SUIII you achieve will bo. Keep In mind,
in tho flnal analylls, lila the bollom line
thot counll.
AGUAIIIUS (,_ .r:llb. 111 It there Is
a written agreement you've want·
lng to get algned, this Is a gOOd day to
push lor lho "John Hancock." II should
work out well lor all part~ conc:erned .

weve

'

.. L .

Noxl

E&gt;podltiOit Earth

11:ooC2Je l1l
Ol Nowa

11le a

hands

1DIn the
vii:inily
12 H~brid
primrose
13 Char's
"Moonatruck"

fiance
15 Riviera
season
11 Dull
routine
17 "How

wasknow?'

18Tyrant
2DQuick
participant

.AQIZ

+K 10

tKQ1US

soum

.AKJ
.AKIOII
• 2
.
4oJU3

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South
-~

2.

Nor~

p-

""-

Opening lead: •

Eul
p..,.

10

'

'
my's queen,· oraw the final trump and ··
· :
cash the lut spade winner.
Your 10 tricks are three spades, ·
three top hearts in the dummy, the a~ ;
of diamonds and three diamond ruffs •
in band.
:
This is called a dummy reversal and •
is one ol the prettiest - and rarest - : .
of declarer-play techniaues.
_.

. ·,''

~-

natural

-'

42 Beseach
· 43 Hardy
hsroine

DOWN

1 Put on

YtstlrdJy'a Answer

cargo
2 lell up
3 'No

11 Power of 27 lmmedi·
film
ately
14 Like
28 Grammar
kidding"
some
case
4 Baseball
assembly 30 Hams il
score
N11111
up
5 'let's-• 18 lntrlnsi·
33 Some
I Brklsh
ca~
goN clubs
river
20 State
35 Polar
7 Joined
24 Empbyexplorer
torc:es
menta
Richard
I Sang
25 Settled
~ Teacher's
melodi8CCOUI111
Olg.
cally
26 Be·aU'a
38 Dog'a
8Ghosll
partner
doc

numbers
23 StOI'f·

telling
Uncia
25Pod

contan:s
28 Aclor"a

comment
31 Pot
contribu·
tion
. 32 Japanese
' mal

34Wedding
promise

, handle
36Craggy
hill
37Hewas
louie De
DAJLY CRYJYI'OQUOn:s- Here's how to work It: 3/12
AXYDLBAAXR
isLONGFELLOW

=•

(I) Night Court Q
!D NlwOW11tch
llD • ArHnlo Hill Stereo. Q

a Miami VIce Stereo.
QIOnStage

..._,.,.,

•u

35Pan-

CNH E...,lng NIWI
1D 700 Club WHh Pat
Robort8an
10:20 ill MOVIE: Bullltl (PGI(2: 15)
10:30 (l) Globol Cllmato Chonge A
survey of tne science and
history of tile greenhouse
effect Is preHnlod:
abatemenl and adoption is.
addressed. (0:301
Crook end Chloo

a

tJ86

.1542

ACROSS
Palma, in .
1 Cowardly
"Taxi"
Lion
· ~ Worrle(a
portrayer
WOI'ry
5 Gives out 41 Cfaps

22Gambling

cha:t

llmltl.

EAST

WEST
.1098
.7 3 2

by THOMAS JOSEPH

ID Amazing o.n..

Howord docidos to sow
some wild oals in Lll Vegas.
·
Slereo. D
l!l Craotlon of the UnlvExplore oclentlllc evidence ol
the oriGin of 1110 unlvertt and
its evofutlon ovar 15 billiOn
years. (1 :30) Q
10:00 (2) • Ol Low I Onlor
Stereo. Q
(!)Howl
(l) (J) 8 Eddie Dodd Eddie
dolends a Iormor love
against 1110
murdor. Stereo.

+t74

CROSSWORD

bok
21 Pool

121 Llny King Uvll
11:30 (i) ~ • Cooch Reserved

,,
·.,

tAo 7 54

Today's band bears a certain simi·
larily lO yesterday's in tbal there is a
chance to rufl a club loeer in the dum·
my. However, appearaaces can be deceptive. How would you try to make
loilr bearl.a against a spade lead?
You migllt think South Is a little
weak to jump stralgllt to four hearts.
However, be hu a useful side-suit sin·
gleton and euellent controls (aces and
klnpl. Also. the game bonus is so
large tbal arry time you can smell a
game, bid tbal pme!
It looks as il you should play to rulf
the fourth club in the dummy, but the
delenden llave the jump on you. The
play would go something like this:
Club to East's 10, trump return, club ·
to East's king, trump, club to Wesl's
queen, trump - and no club rull.
Tbere is a better route lO 10 trick,(
Win the lirst trick in band with the ace
or king of spades, play a diamond to
dummy's ace, ruff a diamond in band,
lead a trump to the dummy, rull a sec·
ond diamond with the king of hearts,
return to dummy with another trump,
and rull the last diamond with the ace
of hearts. Now overtake the carefully
preserved jack of spades with dum·

Cll Tuo.-, Mowle (Rl
(2:00) Stereo. D
·
lludWel- fuoldly Night
Flghla

a
ra Nalh..lle Now

- ,,.. pldr. . . .
...,.,, In ,.,..,.,

"lt ..... , .... Prius

•lnou'-tlon

I[J)a MOYIE: 'Abovo the

~w·

f• the &amp;ell.. IIIII rrl
Ola4G FDIUAIY
111111 ..,.....,.

~ Allred I. Dupont Awonle

ANDHEeAIQ

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IF KeNN't' OFI 2 !.e 'IOU A

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ond. - - - · CoiF

53

PllmoNOWI

1211 ChurCh s - su110n
11:00 l1l (J) G lloeeanno

IWAIII
MICTION a I'UIIIIITUIII. a
Clift II.,-..... - . Uood
....,._, ~~J- ~!'""

Ott yeur lewn IIIII tlir·
......lplltlnt ~u~~~~~.,

a

I n - Oot

....... Corpoto, IIIII North

"'

. Qll MOVIE: Low ond Onlor

In Broldclilt Joumollllll
Charllryne Hunter -Gaull.
Diane Sltwyer. LoU Oobbl
adn Bob Schieffer present
the yeor's brOidCIIII

--·
--·OUr - Could

"j

. Knockoutl: 1985, Hoglar va.
t1earna and 1984, Hoglar vs.
Hamlho 11

I CAIJi AITOI&lt;D 11-1~
L/A61LI'TY /t.J'i.RAIJ(£

eL. tr'r&amp;..:
iii"

IIINT20WN

e

a Munter, 111o WrotaQ
raonauae Heglerla
..,_,.. D

I Dolnt hitch tallacca ..Uer, Mft. , ...... Unit Hr t 11 In
Auno Good
. .h now Wll• tonic. 114-441· lxoollonl
And L.oab Good. " - Thin
Cllool , . _
~ FIQ20oftorlp.m.
·
1000 HGura on Motor• . , . _
_,. Wttoltor ~II
r oFoltn DMro Troctor, 301- 4101, IJ14.SlS.2110.
-=~ m-4301.
ttl. luohuntor . - · • Ll •
:10 lnOii A - . 1 1. hllvV duty a..h Hog, ThiUOI
Trolllna Motor, 2 llllvll
·lloctllo Ronp .... . , _ , . oFoltn DMro 2 bottom plow, 3 pi SolEI, Excelflnt , Conoltlon.
$300. 114 111 13tl.
Upjior
ltltah.I04~101.

r:=-. - ·laitil....

Warwick, Potti LoBello and
Lulhor Vandrose praent
owardl lo thO thO boll
recorded pertormonc:es In 12
ClltegOrleS. (2:00)
l1l (J)
Who'o t11o lou?
Mrs. Roeslni and Mono tall
lor the same guy. Stereo. Q
!D (!) Nova lo. cllain of
events turns a sperm and
egg into a baby. D
Billy Gt'lllltm Crutodo
• .
Billy Graham Is joined by
Lernelle Harris, Michael w.
Smith and hockey groot
Glenn Chico Resch. (1 :001
Stereo. C
aD. MOVIE: Enemy Mlnll
(PG 13) (2:00)
112ia11111J Grahlln CNudo
Billy Graham ·ls joined by
Babblo Mason, Richaro
Mort&lt; and Sltndl Patti. 11 :00)
Stereo. Q

am

WE AI.IO IEIIVICE
CHAINIAWI

II. 7 I II. 14J

I

Moto-la.oo

..,'",.,.,..,~,..;....
· '..:...;-7-,..,.-;.;;..,.,~
700 " - ~ ••• 1· 4H
~-· ·~
::•lllr=I;:;P.=IL=--,....-,.......,..,...,...-,c-=
luzuld 111. orid nil •11
blllt, good tftle, 114-'IIIMOaO .~
tor I p.tn. .
,
.

, _ ,..., ..... ~II;

. . . On All~

LeartM 0. s.tfenl Sdrrlll .... •" ••• 111
6er1

JJI·COUNTY

-

lp.m.

BEllm'S MOBILE HOME
HEAliNG &amp; COOLING

,... Oft . . . . . . . .. .
11111.. Oft .....,.,..

11W41-

!hd.812.JIF ..r 111 . . . . .
........
a.-a-ot
-4 Mil•...011
11.10
- CetMi•Y.
. Ill. 141,
111.....
7 In
HOUIII: 11oi1o!0Y thru lll!"'IIY.
........p.m.; llindly, 12 -

MOIIU HOME FURNACES - HEAT PUMPS
AU FURNACE PARTS

"J" dean., pw

A- -·

.....

-~--

=-.~,__ · 11+ loll ond Cllolr, ....

.44

OPEN 7DAYS
A WEEK
9 A.M. 'TIL 7 P.M.

T.V.,

~Tllll .

1'011 . RINt. 'IWo 1•*Hamo. PollloiiJ fuf,

......,.., ,., a child.... Men-

•en..

Clll

...... td
f+M I hold ............ 'Ill 1111.
lid. 1'1. PI 1 II, WY,

N:.--.-.. . -n

~'ar,
...,_,

"""... 304-tll-1421.

VICKER'S WOOD HEATING
1111 14oo1tt11oo ..._
wisao2

fii.C:OUNIY
IECYCUNG

MAN~iMENT-

. . , _ 1'111111111,
fQI; llolllal1- · - - - - - - ar llobM Horne At Evwu• ..,., -llolrlaorllor
Gu!ol.
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lp
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Cold fPII -~..J
1rm u ment

· -IIIIM - t O 11111001 ltoto IIIII "'""'

. CALL

.....,,

beforllpm.l14 4414111.

..... upl030_1ooQ_ .

LOAD fVERY 12 HOURS

Mullc Awerda Hoall Dionne

.....=.-~roo iii:¥:!tuii;;;~;;;uj;i
aso.
..,

PICKINI fiUINniiiE

a IR ""Cholhlm Avo.~.

..... upot ..

~~ 5th Annuelloul Train

75 · Boats &amp; Motors ·
Ailouolloo MOil..,._
for Sail

-

...._,.,,_.IVEHO.

.,..-..-.ilcll_t_,
.--lnildo-.

01 ~~,tellock .nrnger
and cornpulelva gambler Is
accused of murder. Stereo.

'l:oo !2l •

Instruments ·

llnong, lolld .. ••
High frofllo, -lolllloM.-

'ni"IIIIY Iii • • W-DBIR
Wit&amp; IIIIDI 'I'IIIUIIM'I'r

.,A

1,_

rae-lira ·

7:35 ill Sonlord end Son

fiiiPI&gt;L.E

-,..~·--

iwer ~00 chon·
nelo. I• tho -•LIVE

Enjoy

THAT GA~~

F/tOM

1114.

il 895

.

J0111'M11101118pecill

WIJL/. GIVE. YDI.I
Nl 1NJ'T/lU(;'fO/t

· 114-

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•O. leo- ...,..., -

e .._,, Fltilllly

am Whool ol Fortuno 1;1

.QH

By Jalllft Jeeolly

l1l
~

S.Fl-11

.Q73

7:05 (I) Hoppy Deyo
7:30 (2) G Ol JeopofiiYIQ
(I) Night Court Q

..

«1 Snowmobile Sld·Ooo
Eagle River World's

Champtonlh~ from Eagle

One letter stands for anolher. In this sample AIs used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words ar~
all h,lnts. Each day the code letters are different.

3-12

CR'YPTOQUQTE

Rlvor, Wis. (l)

8Sea,..,_

11:30!2lG

and Mra. King

llJl Tonight lhow

Stereo. .

(I) Medlcol 81orJ

!D A..... lmllh'l ~
World
.
(J) e Nlutrtllne C
a Ailorilo 11e11 'Stereo. Q

o•
Amollce TOIIIgtrl
ra Chulch
....., 8tlllon
ID 8port8Ctnler

1B lportl Tonight
11:311J) Choenr Q

NUHXEQ(,I

DUX

IDKKHEW

TNPXE

JDKKHEW

KTGP

FM

DEQ

FM

GXKQTZ.-NUXEIA

OUTLXUF
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: LEARNING WITHOlTJ'
THOUGHT IS LABOR LOST; THOUGHT WITHOUT
LEARNING IS PERILOUS. - CONFUCIUS
!'

�•

'
POmeroy-Middleport, Oh~

Page-1 0-The Dally Sentinel

r----Local briefs----.
·.

·Middleport woman Cited in crash
A Middleport woman was cited in a one-car crash Monday at
5:24 p.m. in Salisbury ToWIIIhip on S.R. 124, just east of Jllilepost
• 16, according to the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State Hi~hway Patrol.
Lisa D. POulin, 17, of 39125 Bradbury Rd. was cited for failure
to control and having expired license plates after her 1985 Dodge
Shelby went off the road.
Poulin, driving east, went off the right side and hit a culven
before turning the car around in the road and hiuing an embankment
off the left side of the road.

EMS responds to six calls
'Six calls for assistanCe were answered by'units of Meigs County
Emergency Medical Services on Monday and early Tuesda.Y.
At 8:41 a.!ll., Racine squad went to Bashan Road. Marilyn Morris was ~en to Holzer. At 10:58 a.m .• Pomeroy squad went to
Locust Street for Paul Bums, who was taken to Pleasant Valley
Hospita1. Al ):23 p.m ., Olive Township Fire Department went to
.• Kaylor Road for a brush fire 8l the Elm Kaylor residence. Coolville .
and Chesta' Fire Depanments were called to assist. At 5:25 p.m.,
Middlepon squad went to State·Route 124 for a car accident. Sianley Aleshire and Lisa Pullins refused treatmenL
At 1:36 a.m. on Tuesday, Pomeroy squad went to the Pomeroy
Police Department for Kim Shamlin, who was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital. At 7:27 a.m., Syracuse squad went to Forest
Run Road for Gelirgc Folmer, who was taken to Veterans.

-·· _.....__Area deaths~-Gbarles Bradbury

of the United Workers Association.
He is survived by six daughters,
Mrs. Rex (Bonnie) Cheadle,
Albany; Mrs. Roger (Doris) Speigle, Columbus; Mrs. Tom (Betty)
Kirby, Hamden; Mrs. Cliff (Mary)
Wells, Washington Coun House; .
Mona Birchfield, Dade City, Fla.;
and Mrs. Roger (Norma) Bevins,
Turkey Creel~;, Ky.; four sons, Preston (Roberta) Hamon, McAithur;
Gary (Carol) Hamon, Rutland;
Robert (Beverly)
Hamon,
Woodville; and Randy HamOn and
his fiancee, Jennifer Phipps,
Albany; 29 grandchildren, 19 great
grandchildren, three sisters, Anna
Parsons, Cross Lanes, W.Va.;
Nancy Nelson, WiUiams Mountain,
W.Va.; and Cuma Larcado, Sissonville, W.Va.
Besides his parents he was preceded in death by his wife of 48
years, Hazer·covey Hamon; four
sisters, Alma Kisor, Ona Page,
Ruth Zornes and Ina Hamon; five
brothers, Neverette, Van, Virgil,
Fred and William Hamon; and one
son-in~Iaw, Paul Birchfield.
Services will be Thursday at 1
p.m. at the Bigony Jordan Funeral
Home in Albany, with Rev.
Leonard McVey officiating. Burial
wiU be in the School Lot Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home after 2 p.m. on Wednesday.
Donations may be made to the
Athens Area Hospice, P.O. Box
873, Athens, Ohio.45701.

Announcements
Mystery Farm naer
Avice Bailey, Shade, was 1
recelll winner in.the Myaery F11111
Contest sponsored by the Meigs
Soil and Water Couerva&amp;ion District She correctly identified the
farm as that of Virgil King of
Kingsbury.
Bake sale
There will be a lllke Slle on Friday at Reed's Country Store in
Reedsville beginning at 10 a.m.
sponsored by the Easteril Women's

: Charles Asa PowcU Bradbury,
68 , Middleport, died Monday
morning, Man:h 11, 1991, at Holzer Medical Center.
· Born in Middleport on Sept 12,
1922, he was a son of the late Cecil
PoweU and Feme McNamee BradGen~Inglcal society
bury. He was a 1940· graduate of
The
Meigs CoiUity Genealogical
Middleport High School and he
Society
wiU meet Sunday at 2 p.m.
attended Ohio University. He was a
World War II Navy Air Corp Vetat the Meigs Museum.
eran and he tetirOO after. 32 years of
Smorpsbord
service as a chemist with the Ohio
There will be a S':'Wrgasbord
Valley Electric Plant. He was a
dimer at the Bashan Fue House on
past commander of the Feeney
Sunday from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Cost
Bennett Post No. 128 of the Ameriis $4.50 for adults and $2 for chilctm Legion and he was a former
dren under 12. The event is spanMiddleport ViDage Council Memsore«~ by the Ladies Awtiliary.
ber.
Mr. Bradbury is survived by his
Sorority to meet
wife. Jeanne Anne Young BradThe Preceptor Beta Beta ChaP.:·
bury; a daughter, Suzanne Wolfe,
ter, Beta Sigma Phi Sorority will
Racine; a daughter and son-in-law,
meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at the
Mary Elizabeth and Pat O'Brien,
Grace Episcopal Church.
P.omeroy; a son and daughter-inlaw, Asa and Janie Bradbury, CirDance
cleville; seven grandchildren.
There will be a round and
Wendy Ann Wolfe, Gahanna;
square dance on Friday at the TupTrisha and Megan Wolfe, Racine;
pers Plains 'WW building from 8Joy and Sean O'Brien, Pomeroy;
11 :30 p.m. Music will be provided
a.nd Nicole and )effrey Powell
by "Foggy Mountain Drifters" feaBradbury, Circleville; two aunts
turing Alvin Chutes on the fiddle.
aod several cousins.
Anhur
Conant will be the caller.
·. Services will be Wednesday at 1
Public
is
invited.
p.m. at Fisher Funeral Home in
Middlepon with Rev. Frank Smith
Grao•e to meet
offiCiating. Burial wiU be in Gravel
•
'fiill Cemetery in Cheshire.
Richard
G.
Abels
, ·The Rock S)lri!lgs Grange will
Friends may call today from 4 to
meet Friday at 7:30 p .m. at the
9 p.m. and until ,time ~ the service
Richard Glenn Abels, 70. of grange hall.
on Wednesday.
·
49780 Bald Knob Road in
StivcrsviUe died at home pn Mon. Spriog Smorgasbord
Noble Hamon
day, March 11, 1991 after an
There wiU be a spring smorgasNoble "Zeke" Hamon, 83, of extended iUness.
bord dinner on March 23 at 5 p.m.
Albany. died Monday, March 11,
He was born in Jackson County, at the Long Bottom Community
i991 at his residence.
W.Va., the son of the late Frank building . Menu includes ham,
· Born in Fletcher, W.Va., he was and Laura Richards Abels. He was · turkey and dressing, homemade
a son of the late John and Janc a retired construction worker. He noodles and more. Desserts and
Randolph Hamon. He was a retired served as a trustee for the Freedom drinks are included in the price, $5
coal miner for the Carbon Fuel Gospel Mission, was a U.S. Amry for adults and $2.50 children 12
(:!oal C.ompany and had been Veteran during World War II, and and under.
employed by the Austin Powde1 was a member of the the VFW and
Chili supper
~ompany. He was also a membet
the DAV.
.
The Lottridge Community CenHe is survived by his wife, Myr- 1er will host a cbili supper on Saltie Lee Parsons Abels, Stiversville; urday from 4-8 p.m. Cost is $3.75
two sisters. Elsie McCoUaugh, of for adults and $1.50 for children.
Parkersburg, W.Va. and Mrs . Publlc is invited.
,
~- • Continued from pqe 1
Frankie Potts, Merritt Island, ·Fla.;
Guest speaker
The Rejoicing Life Church in
until the lockout is reSolved," said four brothers, Charles Abels of
George Becker, the union's vice California, John Abels and Robert Middlepon will have special serjielident for administration.
Abels, both of Pennsylvania, and _vices Saturday at 7 p.m. and SunRay
Abels, Ravenswood, W.Va.
day at 10 a.m. with Wyau Brown
· -Becker said companies that use ·
He
was
preceded
in
death
by
a
of the Kenneth Hagin Crusades. He
Ravenswood Alummum products
sister,
Geraldine,
and
a
brother.
is also the former director of the
have been alerted about the diJpute
fnd the company's use or repieoe- BiUFuneral services will be held on Rhema Bible Center, Prayer and
menl workers.
Healing School, Tul1111, Okla. Pas;·' Among the companies cited by Wednesday at 2 p.m. at Straight- tor Michael Pan~·o invites the mlbTucker Funeral Home in
,-the' union were Anheuser-Busch,
Ravenswood. Burial will be in lie. Call992-6 9 for informabon.
Stroh Brewery Co., American
SmorJillllbord dinner ·
National Can, American Electric Ravenswood Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
The Wilkes Grange wiU have a
POwer, General MOMII'S COIJI., Ball
home today from 2 to 4 p.m.
smorgasbord on Saturday from 4-7
Metals, Ford Motor Co., Oeneral
:DYI1amics Corp. and Northrop.
Paul Skidmore
p.m. Cost is $5 for adults and S2
•• ,Union workers claimed they
Paul Skidmore, 77, of State for children under 12. Menu
:were locked out after their contract Route 160, Porter community, Vin- includes baked steak, fried chicken,
:With the company expired. The ton, died Monday, March 11. l99l homemade noodles and dressing,
-company. which claims the union iii Holzer Medical Center. He choice of several cooked vegetaowned and operated Skidmore Gro- bles, fruit salad, homemade pies
~ s on strike , is running the plant
:W)
th
salaried
staff
and
more
than
eery Store on Eastern Avenue in and cakes, iced tea and coffee. All
'
GaUipolis.
proceeds will be used for renova-](1) replacement workers.
· A judge last month ordered
Born Dec. 16, 1913 in Hurri- lion of the grange hall.
union pickets reduced at the plant cane, W.Va., he was a son of the
in response to company claims that late Otis 0. and Margaret Blaine
pickets had vandalized cars of plant Rowsey Skidmore.
personnel.
Veterau Memorial Hospital
He married Lucille Sprague on
Jim Bowen, director of the Nov. 17, 1935, and she survives
MONDAY ADMISSIONS union's District 23, said along with two sons, Pat Skidmore Charlotte Connoly, Portland; GloRavenswood "has turned the hills of Centenary and John Skidmore of ria Compson, Middleport; Herben
Of West Virginia and the communi- 'Cheshire; three grandchildren; Short, Chester; and Timothy
ty around it into a fortified police three brothers, Henry Skidmore of Triplett, Portland:
state with a private security force Evergreen, Herman (Bill) Skid·
MONDAY DISCHARGES 8nd barbed Wlrt."
more of Jacbon and Elmer Skid- ~!d~ _Houchens and Homer
Meanwhile, the union said it more of GaUipolis.
will accelerate its effort to resolve
He was preceded in death by
the dispute by talting a caravan of brothers Harland, Okey and Waranion members to Stamford. Conn .. ren Skidmore; and sisters Dolly
to seek · a meeting with and Gladys Skidmore and Marie Am Ele Power ..................... .28 3/4
Ashland Oil ............... ......... 32 518
Ravenswood's owners.
Foster.
AT&amp;T ...............~ .........................34
• Clarendon Ltd . and Stanwich
He was a member of Vinton Bob Evans ........ ~ ................... 18 7/8
Pa DICI'S Inc. owq a majority inter- Baptist Church, where funeral ser- Charming Shop.................... .14 5/8
&lt;st in Ravenswood, Becker said.
vices wiU be conducted 1 p.m. on City Holcling ...............................l5
- However, comJIIII7 spokeswom- Thursday, with the Rev. Marvin Federal
Moaui ...................... l6 3/8
an Debbie Bnger 11111d die union's SaUee and Rev. CJ. Lemley offiCiGoodyear
'f&amp;R .................... .23 3/4
effort to meet with die majority ating. Burial will be in Vinton
Key
CCilturiort
......................113/4
Or.-ners would be fruitless.
Memorial Park.
Lands' Bnd .........- ................20 118
. '•1 really don't ICC W. .l there is
Friends may call at McCoy- I...imitcd Inc...........................24- 3/4
to gain by it,• Boger said. "The Moore Funeral Home on WednesI Muld.rnedia Inc...........................73
people who have been 11 the nego- day, 6 to 9 p.m.
Rax Restlunml ......................29(32
iladng table for Ra~ood have
Robbins&amp;:Myers .................. .27 1!2
the Mllll power to
a conThe Gladsville Brld&amp;e in Sydney, Shoney's Inc......................... iS 1!2
. tract and agree to a settlement. AUJtralla, bas die looaat concrete Sw Binlt ..............................23 1/4
They continue to have the backing arch in the world, wltll a span of 1,000 Wendy lnt'l. .....................,.... 8 3/4
.or the owners of Ravenswood. •
feel.
Worthington Ind...................23 1/4
•'
• ''

I

$1 995

BOY\ &amp; GIRLS JOGGER-..

S6-$1Q-$12

SIMON'S PICK-A-PAIR

The CentraLine
Home Equity Loan
from Central Trust
REDUCED
CLOSING COSTS

••

By BRIAN J, REED
Sentinel News Stan

RECEIVES DONATION -Ted Reed, right,
President of Farmer's Bank in Pomeroy, pre·
sents $1,000 lo Middleport Mayor Fred Ho"·

man on Tuesday as a donatloD ·toward tbe local
share of the funds needed for the improvements
to be made at the levee on Walnut Street.

Bank donates Middleport
Village
.
.
:·$1,000 for levee Improvements
:

.

The total cost of the project is a need of $37,500 in local funds.
Ted Reed, President of Fanner's
Anyone wishing to donate to the
$112,500
which will include river
Bank in Pomeroy , presented 'a
project
may do so by contacting the
new
launch
bank
protection,
a
check for $1,000 to Middleport
ramp,
paving
in
the
area,
new
steps
mayor's
office in Middleport. A
Mayor Fred Hoffman as a donation
permanent
plaque wiU be erected at
and
landscaping
of
the
area.
toward the local share of the funds
the
levee
listing
all those individ!lOf
that
total,
$?5,000
is
being
needed for the improvements to be
-als
.•paid
by
grants:.from
the
Waterway;
.or
·
f
irms
who
bave donated
milia •1M le\lee on,W~
Safety Fund of the Ohio Depi!J1- $1;000 Or more to the projecL
in Middleport
ment of Natural Resources Ieavmg

Four hurt in two-c{lr mishap

'

Chester Road striking McKay's
vehicle. McKay's vehicle came to
rest on the guardrail at 1761
Chester ROad. Riffle then went off
the right side of the roadway at
1759 Chester Road. She traveled
on across the roadway and sll'UCk a
nouse at 1755 Chester Road.
McKay's vehicle sustained
heavy damaged to the underneath
of the car and was towed from the
scene. Riffle's vehicle sustained
heavy damage to the entire front
and passenger' side. It was also
towed from the scene.

E~uil y

.Group propose~ aid

. GREATRATF..S

Charges filed on gas theft incident

The inlercsl charges nn sccurt1t C'rnlmLim.•s ·

A Cen1roLine Revolving Line offers a wide
range of credit lines. all wilh incredibly
low rnle•.

may be lax dcductihlc. The IM law allows
for deduclion of snmc or all of lhc inlcrcsl
on lonm; secured hy n pcrsonnl rcsidcncc."'

It'.&lt;ensy to see why lhe CenlraLine Home Equity l.oan l• nm•·
an even hener way 10 bo!Tow. So acl now.
. f'j"''"" ,_ .... ,.,~.

CENTRAL TRlNf
,..

APNCBANK

-

-

Currently, the chamber has 82 paid
members. compared to 102 last
year.
.
Schaad also discussed a resolution passed by the chamber's executive board concerning the Clean
Air Act. That resolution suppons
dual legislation allowing for both
the scrubbing of the Gavin Plant
and the continued operation of ·
, Southern Ohio Coal Company
mines in Meigs County. The resO- 1
lution also urges the lobbying of
elected officials to promulgate an~
pass such legislation.
Schaad encouraged chamber ·
members to attend a meeting in
Athens concerning the Clean Air
Act which will be held in Athens
next Wednesday. That meeting is
expected to be attended by local
and state officials and representatives·of the United Mine Wort.ers,
the Public Utilities Commission of
Ohio and American Electric Power.
Projects in the chamber's immG·
diale future include the pursuit of
toll-free telephone service between
the 992 exchange and Mason ,
W.Va. According to Schaad. she
and Chamber Vice President Chuct.
Kitchen have uaveled to Columbus
to discuss this matter with PUCO
representatives
and plan a trip to
EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR Charleston,
W.Va.
to discuss the
Ellzabetb Schaad, Executive maucr with West Virginia
officials.
Director or the Melas Cqunty
A
Leadership
Development
Cbamber ol CQmmeree, .,oke to
has been set ror April
the cba•ber about tbe accom· · Conferenc:c
10,
and
will
be
by the .
pllsbmenll oltbe dlamber 10 far cbamber and theco-sponsored
Ohio
Cooperative
tbls year at Tuesday's meeting or Extension Service. According to
tbe group at Overbrook Center. Schaad, the conference is aimed at
Schaad spoke of tbe chamber's "developing
team of economic
rundralslna aDd membership development apractitioners"
with a
drives, aDd the chamber's future goal of developing long-range
plans for the year ahead.
development plans for the area.

membership recruitment brochure,
and that brochure will be used in
April when the chamber observes
Membership Month in April.
According to Schaad, the chamber
has set a goal of 150 paid members.

Ravenswood Aluminum is running the plant with salaried staff
and more than 700 replacement
workers.
The union Monday sent members to Stamford, Conn., to seek a
meeting with Ravenswood Aluminum's majority owners, Claren·
don Ltd. and Stanwich Partners,
Inc.

.

But company President Don
said Tuesday he wants
to negotiate an agreement in Pitts·
bur¥,h.
·The union does not seem to
understand this fact and is seeking
other avenues to a new contract,"
Worlledge said ..He called the caravan to Connecticut "another Wlforrunate example of their unwillingness to recognize reality."
Worlledge and Vice President of
Labor Relations Earl Schick will
Worlled~te

continue the negotiations.
.
"Mr. Schick and I are working
with the suppon of our investors
and our board of directors, and we
have the fuU authority to negotiate
and execute an agreement," WorUedge said.
According to the Charleston
Gazette, USWA spokesman Joe
Chapman said ofWorlledge'scommen t, "What is reality? We've
done everything else we could to
try to get them to the bargaining
table."
The men who are panicipating
in the convoy made a stop Tuesday
in New York City. according to the
wife of one of the union members
participating. She said the men
handed out leaflets in the Rockefeller Center and on the subways: ·
She added that several leaflets were
handed out and the people were
responsive to the ma~.

Iraqi opposition pledges to
form government-in-exile

---Local briefs----.
TAX SAVINGS

A Munlmedla Inc, Newep~~per

McDowell hopes RAC officials
are sincere during n·egotiations

•

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Elizabeth Schaad, the Executive
Director of the Meigs County
Chamber of Commerce updated the
chamber on the activities for the
year to date when the group met in
regular session on Tuesday. The
luncheon meeting was held at
Overbrook Center in Middleport.
Schaad declared last weekend's
dinner and dance a success. The
chamber raised $1,280 on tickets
for the event, held at Royal Oak
Resort and a silent auction held in
conjunction with the dance. Schaad
thanked the committees involved
and those businesses donating auction items: King's Hardware. Ohio
River Bear Company, K &amp; C Jewelers, Anderson's, Fruth Pharmacy,
WMPO. Kenny Utt, CPA, Harris
Farms and Greenhouse, Clark's
Jewelry. SeatS, Big Wheel, Rutland
Furniture, Valley Lumber , and
Baum's True Value Hardware.
Both WMPO •s and lhc Ohio River
Bear Company's donations
received the top bids for the
evening.
According to Schaad, the
biggest accomplishment for the
year so far is the relocation of the
chamber office into the Carnegie
Building on East Second Street.
Schaad reported that the chamber
had purchased new' office furniture
and was in the Jl!11CCSS of installing
temporary parttlions for the building.
Schaad stated that 80 people
attended the chamber's open house
earlier this month.
· The imaging committee of the
chamber has completed a new

Riffle, McKay, and two passengers in McKay's car, Shirley
Friend, 30, Long Bottom, and
Matthew Friend, five months, Long
Bottom. were taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital by emergency
squads of the Po!lleroy Fire Depanment. Everyone in McKay's car
was treated and released. Riffle is
still in the hospital undergoing
obsetvation.
Wire, and stair reporters
' Riffle was cited for no financial
Ravenswood Aluminum Corp.
re~ponsibility, no insurance, ieft of officials said they will meet .with
center and no seatbelt ·
·the United 'Steelworlcers of America.next Thursday in Pittsburgh to
try and end their 4-month-old labor
dispute.
"I hope the cOmJl!lll.)' comes to
the table in good filth, said Charlie McDowell , Local 5668
grievance chairman and member of
the negotiating team. "I hope they
are sincere."
AccordinB to McDoweU, the full
union negOilllting team wiU attend
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) - A more support fro!ll state govern- 40 co'sponsots for the proposal.
the meeting in Pittsburgh in hopes
· "Over the years we 1111 legisla- of reaching an agreement ·
bipartisan group of House and Sen- ment."
Currently there are 350 man- tors have tried to be cautious in
ate members Tuesday introduced
.More than 1,'700 workers at the
dates
to local governments in Ohio. passing unfunded mandates on to Jackson County plant have been off
legislation requiring lawmakers to
be aware of how much their man- Those include orders that local the local political subdivisions,"
the job since Nov . 1, when the
dates to local governments will governments must establish specif- said ReP,. Jim Davis, R-St Marys. union's contract expired. The union
cost and· vote on those issues sepa- ic programs and pay the costs and •'This bill wiU demonsuate our sin- says the workers are locked out; the
even such things as local govern- cerity in that endeavor."
rately.
Thirty-five other states have company says they're on strike..
"I've always known the impor- ments paying the costs of holding
tance of local governments having constitutional amendment elec- similar legislation.
"As our local governments
control over their own affliirs and lions, sponsors said.
with increasingly limited ·
Last
year,
several
General
struggle
now, as chairman of the Senate
State and Local Government and Assembly members introduced re!&gt;()urces and tight budgets, we in
Veterans' Affairs Commiuee, I 81J1 similar Ie~isiation, but this year's Columbus must attempt to be pan
faced with the many mandates state version tS softer. Last year's · of the solution rather than increasgovernment has handed down to required the state to pay the costs ing the problem," said Sen. Roben
·
.
local governments, " said Sen. of the mandates. This year's only Burch, 0-Dover.
requires lawmakers have adequate
Dick Schafrath, R-Loudonville.
BEIRUT, Lebanon (UPI) _
"I'm reintroducing this bill fiscal notes explaining the costs to
Iraqi
opposition groups banned in
beCause I recognize the tremendous local governments and vote on it
•
their homeland ended a three-day
burden we' ve placed on our small separately.
conference W~~Y on ousting
· House sponsors say they have
towns and believe they deserve
S~ H~tn ~1 !1' an ~ to
A Pomeroy woman suffered lraq1 Ioyaillll to }Om the II{IIUmg
minor injuries Tuesday when the and ,II, vow to form a translllonal
car she was drivinf struck an coalition g~v~enL
embankment off o Salisbury - The ma]ORty of 325 figures repTownship Road 165 in Meigs resenting 17 secular, Sunni
County.
·
Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby repons that charges
Moslem and Shiite groups voted
Mary E. Roush, 41, of 32740 for the formation of a temporary
have been filed against Steve Brumf~eld and Johnny Little of MidTR 165, was taken .to Veterans government tbat would seek to topdlepon for their )Jilrt in the theft of gasoline at Newell's Station on
Memorial Hospital where she was pie Saddam's dictatorship in postFebruary 27. Brumfield gave a statement that he was driving the
treated for her injuries and later war Iraq, opposition officialuaid.
vehicle that was filled with gasoline and -driven off.
• 'The conference has dec:ided
released, a hospital spOkeswoman
The three subjects in the vehicle are to lippear in Meigs County
the direct mission that should be
said Wednesday.
Coun on peuy theft charges.
According to a report from the carried out by-our people to topple
Gallia-Meigs post of the State Saddam Hussein's dicworship rule
Highway Patrol, Roush was nonh- and form a temporary coalition
Meigs County Sheriff's deputies investigated an accident on
. bound when she apparently lost government that would liquidate
County Road 25 on Sunday momin;.
control of her vehicle and went off the lepeiUISsions of dictatorship,"
According to a news release dated Wednesday. Krystal Winethe left side of the roadway. said a swement issued 11 the ftnal
brenner, 27, Rocksprings Road in Pomeroy was westbound on
Herl986 Ford Escort then struck an session ,Of a three-day conference ·
County Road 25 in a 1988 Nissan when she went off the roadway,
embankment, causing moderate in Lebanon by the dissident groups.
The statement did not say
into the ditch and back out onto the roadway. Heavy damage was
damage to the vehicle.
whether
they have agreed to form a
Roush was cited for failure to
Colldllu•d 011 poge 5
government-in-exile
immediately,
control.
The Pomeroy Police Department investigated a two-car accident which occurred Tuesday at
9:26p.m . at. l761 Chester Road.
Four people suffered injuries.
The repon stated that Sandra
McKay, 37, Racine, was driving a
1979 Ford east toward Chester as
another vehicle, a 1978 Mercury
Coup, driven by Lona'Riffle, 25,
Pomeroy, was uaveling westbound
on Chester Road.
The accident occurred when
Riffle went left of center at 1761 ·

Woman hurt
in accident

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Chamber activities
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Low tonight in low 30s.
Tbursday,cloudy. High
near 50.

PageJ

Soutb Central Ohio
Occasional rain Tuesday night
and Wednesday, with a low
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and highs ncar 50 Wednesday.
Chance of ~ipitation is 90 percent Tuesday night and 80 percent
Wednesday.
Ohio eXtelided forec:ast
Thursday througb Saturday
A chance of rain or snow Thursday, with fair weather Friday and
Saturday. Highs will be in the 40s
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ranging from the mid 20s to the
mid 30s early Thursday, and in the
20s Friday and Saturday mornings.

$ 15

•

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Pick4: 9294
Cards : 7-H, 10-C;
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Wednesday, March 13, 1991

MEN'S DRESS LEATHER SHOf&lt;:

.

calls it
quits

Weather

Friday.
.
.
. involved in . getting a dialogue
By DENHOLM BARNETSON
Baker did apparently win a going, another 'participant, .Faisal
United Praslnteruatlolial
Sec(etary ~f State James Baker . vague agreement by the Israelis on Hosseini, said af'lerwards: "The
met individually with both sides of how peace should be pursued. For- PLO must be at the table. That is
the Israeli-Palestinian dispute eign .Ministry spokesman Avi how all the Palestinian people
Tuesday but, while he appeared Pazner·told reporters the Israelis, feel."
Word of what exactly was going
upbeat, there was no immediate like Baker, saw a "a new realizabreakthrough in the decades-old tion" emerging from the Gulf War on in Iraq was still sketchy .
slrU$gle following the end of the that the time might be right to try to Reports from Iran said Kurdish
try to move the process of peace rebels in northern Iraq were
PcrSIIII Gulf War.
"The storm is now over," ahead.
advancing on the oil city of Kirkuk
Baker had said his ftrsl round of were hauling government forces in
Baker said during a visit to an
immigrant boom town in northern talks in Jerusalem Monday left him a bid to capture it.'
Israel. ''Everywhere, people are "cautiously optimistic" of possible
Quoting Iraqi refugees who fled
trying to pick up their lives and movement toward peace in the. to Iran, the Iranian news agency
find hope for the future. The troubled region.
said Saddam's forces "resoned to
After the Palestinian meeting, extensive use of napalm bombs in a
nations of the Middle East are, I
think, very anxious to close the one of the!articipants, Hanan bid to quell the popular uprising"
book of war and open the book of Aahrawi sai Balcer asked them to in several pans of Iraq, but heavy
move ahead " .without the PLO, fighting continued.
peace."
·
As Iraqi opposition groups met perhaps wiih other (Arab) governIRN A quoted one refugee as·
for .the second straight day in ments," toward the stan of some saying Saddam 's Presidential
Beirut, Lebanon, to plan a way to kind of dialogue with the Israelis. Guard and other government forces
oust Saddam Hussein, violence and The United States suspended con- recaptQred pans of Basra Monday,
unrest were reported on the tact with the Palestine Liberation but the insurgents checked their
Organization last June.
increase inside Iraq.
advance in other parts of the port
But in a sign of problems city.
Troops loyal to Saddam used
napalm against rebels in the southem town of Basra, lind many peapie were killed when the troops
smashed homes with tink and
artillery ftre, Iran's offiCial Islamic
Republic News Agency reponed.
f:l (.
i I '
An early report that Saddam had
been wounded in the hand in an
I )
i)
assassination attempt apparently
was false.
·
Balcer met with Israeli Prime
Minister Yitzak Shamir and
Defense Minister Moshe Arens in a
second round of talks with top offi•
cials in Jerusalem. Then he met
with a group of Palestinians to
press his case for the stan of a diaIogue between the two groups.
There were, however, no immediate indications .of any break·
through toward the consensus
Baker has been trying to build
IN THE HEART OF POMEROY
since arriving in the Middle East
,.---------------------------------.,

neaoau:

Ohio Lottery

Palmer·

That would bring an additional S96
million in ssles taXes.
.
..., Another possibility is a similar
law for cigarette deslers for applying and canceling state cigareuetax stamps. That would bring an
additional $15 million to state coffers.
In addition, Voinovich is said to
be considering tapping the state's
"stabilization l'eserve fund" estab-'
lished in 1975 as an underwriting
association in response to a shonage of affordable malpractice insurance for physicians and hospitals.

Baker presses for peace .

Hospital news

Stocks

..

House Republicans propose
no new
taxes resolution
..

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) "I've seen this happen before
Ohio House Republicans ptoposed when we ~et down to June," Van
a resolution Monday thlll wound Vyven said. June 30 is when the
bind the General Aacmbly to not state's fiscal year ends.
Speculation around Capitol
raising taxes for the next twO yg-s.
"House Republicans believe · Square in Columbus is the gove~­
there is no eltCUIIC for feeding thin nor plans to lap race ttacks, a mediwallets to a bloated government," cal malpractice fund and repeal of
Softball~.
said Rep. Dale Van Vlven, R- laws allowmg busmesses to keep_a
Hamilton. "In support o the gov- slice of taX money they collect m_
Bake lillie
emor and everyone who feels their order to balance the budget. 1\
There will be a bake sale on Sat· pocketbook geailig liahler, we sub- spokesnian for the governor would
urday at the Tuppers Plains Gener- · mit this n!ll!&gt;lution.' •·-,
not conf11111 those.
al Store in Tuppers Plains beginRepublican Gov Geor~e
''I don't think we consider that
ning at 10 a.m. sponsored by the Voinovich has pledged 'not to nuse increasing the laX base,'' said Rep.
Eastern Women's Softball team.
taxes but hu left himself some Jo Ann Davidson, R-Reynoldsburg,
breathinll room by saying there adding the Republicans would supSoup 111pper
could be r.revenuc enhancemenls.' • pon such measures. .
There will be a soup supper on Dernomts conttol the lower cbamThis fisral year, lawmakers and
Saturday at 5 p.m. at the- Sutton ber of the Oenerll Aasembly while the governor hail. to slice more than
United Methodist Church. There Republicans control the Senaie.
$390 million from the budget in
wiU be two kinds of soup, pie, cofVan Vyven said in 38 Republi- order to keep it balanfed.
fee, rea and soda.
can House members are co-sponReports are that Voinovich
soring the resolution. Qne Demo- plans to ask lawmakers !0 repeal
Draft horse meeting
crat said she would also support it, 1975 and 1984 laws cutting ll!les
The Ohio Valley Draft Horse but Van Vyven said they were cur- on horse race tracks makmg
and Mule Association will meet rently Withholding her name so not . improvements. Estimates are the
Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. at the to g1ve her problems with the state would receive an additional
home 9f Bob Harris.
majority party in lhc House.
$13 ,7 million over the two-year
The Republicans said .that after budget peri~ ~y repeal~g it.
.
Movies to be sbOWII
the budget is submllted by
The admmtstrabon 1s also S81d
"Golden Fish" and "Homer and Voinovich on Man:h 18, there will to be prepared to ask for repeal of
the Wacky Donut Machine" wiU be be pressure brought to bear upon law that allows state vendors to
shown Saturday at 2 p.m. at the lawmakers and the governor to maintain 1.5 percent of the &amp;axes
Meigs County Public Library in raise taxes to support particular they collect if the money is sent to
Pomeroy. All area children are programs.
the state on or before its due date.
invited to attend.

~Union ...

.

1\lesday, March 12, 1991

Accidents investigated .

~ut indic~ that cffons _remained

refrain from staying a puppet
exploited by the ruler as he wishes " the statement said
·
•
·
·

On Tuesd~Y: an Iraq• Em.ba~sy .. ·
spokesman ndtc~led the ongomg
conference by anu-Saddall_l grou~.
th: ~~:re~ebne~co~l:'h~lcs·g~c~ii~d .
Iraqi opposition have sought to get ..
Iraqi vtsas during their.presence in.
Beirut, but they requested to keep ·
their names anonymous '' the
k
'd
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SPO esmanS81 ·

ORLANDO, Fla. (UPI)- Aller
a seven-weeil: decline, the nationwide average price of gasoline
increased 1.3 eenll in the 1aat week,
the American Automobile Allocialion said Tueaday.
AAA •s Fuel Gauge Report
shows th~ nationwide average price
of self- serve regular unleaded
gasoline is $1.093 per gaBon.
The Fuel Oauge Report, based
on a nationwide spot check of
gasoline stations, wss conducted
for AAA by Computer Petroleum
Corp. of St Paul, Mim.
.Prices were up in most regions

in the country, with the exception
of.Ne.w England and the Mid- ·
Atlanuc areas. .
.
11le nationwide average pnce or
5elf-~c resular leaded .gasoline' .
and m1d-grade unleaded gasolipe
each increased eight-tenths of a
cent, to $).075 and $1.181 per galIon. The average price of self-serve ·
premium unleaded rose one cent, to
$1.265. ·
Computer Petroleum Corf,.
monitors more than 50,000 dai y
wholesale and retail gasoline prices
throughfi&gt;ul the United States and
Canada.
•

mconclusn~e, observers Slid.
.
Oppos1bon forces IL1ked Ioyaltst
troops to brealc from Saddam.
"We appeal to our armed fm:es
to join the ranks of the rebels and ·

Gas prices
climb after
7 week .decline
·
.

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