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                  <text>Page-12-The Dally Sentinel

·Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, March 19,1991

'

Ohio Lottery

Spring
training
continues

Pick 3:793
Pick 4: 5180
Cards: 17-H, J-C;
6-D; 8-S
Low tonight in upper
40s. Thursday's high in
mid-60s. Chance of rain,
30 percent.

Page4

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2 Sectlono, 14
A Mulllmedt.

March
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Someone Who Loves Your Children?

DOD·offers area firms
new financing ·package
to expand and grow

Someone Who Cares For Your Babies?

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By BRIAN J. REED
ing Meigs County is Buckeye are negotiable.
Sentinel News Starr
Eligible borrowers must demonHills-Hocking Valley Regional
A special loan program for . Development District, which oper- Strate repayment and management
industrial or manufacturing compa- ates out of Marlena.
capabilities and create at least one
nies in Southeastern Ohio allows
Tom Closser, Executive Direc- job for every $10,000 received.
owners or sUch businesses to w at BH-HVRDD, said .that his The loan can be used for land and .
expand and grow, offering the office will use existing staff mem- builcling acquisition, construction,
community more employment bers to administer the loan pro- expansion, renovation and. equip- ·
. Opportunities.
gram. . .
.
. .. .· ment purchase.
Accorllmg to Meigs County
"II mteht stretch us a b1t,
According to BH-HVRDD EcoChamber of Commerce Executive Ciosser satd, "but we are so excited nomic Development Specialist
Director Eiizabeth Schaad, the new about the program that we want to Donna Russell, the program does
financing package is being offered work hard for iL
require the administrator (such as
as a service by the Ohio DepartSchaad referred to the loan as a Buckeye Hills) to remain firm
ment of Development. The 166 "gap financial tool", used to sup· about repayment of the loans,
Revolving
Loan Fund (RLF) for plemenl the business owner's capi- although they are willing to work
menl8ry Schools. The program Is sponsored by
EDDIE EYEGLASSES - That's Bob Miller
Southeast
Ohio
makes a total of tal and a bank loan, both of whtch with businesses who default. The
Middleport-Pomeroy Lions' Club, and is also
or the Atbtns Lions' Club who preseuted a half$1.4
million
in
loans
available to are required for eligibility.
: administrator, like a bank, can foreused to provide information on Lions' Club ser·
hour program on eye bealtb aud safety at Saliseligible
businesses.
Existing industries can apply for close on properties in the event of
, vices to those in need or ~lasses but cannot
bury Elemenl8ry School on Tuesday afternoon.
. Twenty Ohio counties are eligi- loans of up to $150,000 per project. default. Such defaults, she said•. ·
arrord them. Also pictured •s Bobbie Burson, a .
The program was attended by students in ·grades
ble
for the low-interest loan pro· A 50 percent match, includ!ng a pave been very rare in similar profirst grader at Salisbury. Sbe is the daughter or
one tbrough tbree. Eddie has abo visited prima·
gram,
which is administered minimum of 10 percent ppvate gmms. Atlditionally, the loan pro· ry·aged children at RivervieW and Chester Ele· . ·Mr. and Mrs. Mark Burson or Shade .
through three agencies - the equity, is required to receive one of , gram requires strict complian~e
Lawrence Economic Deyelopment the loans.
with the e!Dployment poruon of the
Corporation, Buckeye Hills-HockAccording to Schaad, the pro- loan agreement. ·
·
ing Valley Regional De~e!opment gram targets existing and expandBusiness owners interested in
District and the Scioto Economic ing busmesses. The loans will be at the program can contact Ehzabe!h
Development Corporation. The a lower interest rate than convene Schaad at the Meigs County Chamorganization most frequently serv- tiona I bank financing, and terms ber of Commerce, 992-5005.
A program to teach good vision Riverview Elementary. Chester to help illustrate their role in the
care to school aged children was Elementary and Salisbury Elemen- coloring book.
Miller was joined in the presenpresented to several elementary , tary. Miller prepared the program
schools in Meigs County on· Tues- in consultation with Dr. Thomas tation at Salisbury Elementary by
day. The program, ~ntitled "Eddit: Quinn, an Athi:ns optometrist and Middleport-Pomeroy Lions Club
1!1yeglasses," was presented in con· .,....J,ions Club member. ·
Presideni Kenneth,UtL
)tinction ':"ith the Middlep~rtDuring his presentation, Eddie
Miller makes the presentations
Pomeroy Ltons Club.
Eyeglasses presents a coloring ·in order to provide a meaningful
Eddie Eyeglasses, portrayed bY books to each student. He also learning experience for the stuBob Mille~. a member ~f .the wears an oversized pair of glasses dents.
Athens Ltons Club, Ytsited
·
capacity Until replacements are Council.
By DENHOLM BARNETSON
United Press International
sworn in . He said that could~-~~tak~~e-t:ttl~~~~~~~';::n~~~D~i:~ck~ii~~~~C,::~~~
- - -'J'be-removal-of-U.S. forces·from - place in-days. -On Tuesday . .,
the Persian Gulf is proceeding even House spokesman Marlin Fitzwater the precise nature an increased
though Iraqi unrest aimed anop- said the Uniled States fully intends U.S. postwar presence in the
pling Saddam Hussein continues, to keep withdmwing its forces from Mideast had not been worked out
and the tide may be turning in the war theater despite the compli- ye~ but iL could include some son
favor of.Kurdish rebels in northern cations created by the turmoil with- of joint involvement with Arab
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) Mahoney said cities rely. on the . Health.
in Iraq. But he was not specific countries in the region.
"There is a pattern developing Iraq.
Ohio House Speaker Vern Riffe Jr., fund as "fairly unrestricted cash on
about
the timetable.
There have been worries that
Reports of heavy fighting conD- Wheelersburg, says he will be the table the state gives us to help which does not look too favomble tinue to emerge from Iraq, with
"There are many un settled monitoring the temporary ceaseconcerning programs that arc Kurdish rebels claiming. to make events and there are complicated fire and watching for any use of
taking a long look at the budget solve ou.r problems."
·
proposed · by Gov. George
State Sen Willam Bowen, D- important" to black people in progress in some of their battles.
issues to be worked ou~" Fitzwater combat aircraft or chemical
Voinovich.
Cincinnati, .said the governor's Ohio, Bowen said.
Meanwhile inside the liberated said. "But the fact remains that we weapons against the rebels, either
Meanwhile, a spokeswoman for emirate of Kuwait, the government are withdrawing our forces and we of which could bring 81) American
Riffe immediatel)"'opposed the propsal to abolish the new Comgovernor's proposal to cap the · mission on Socially Disadvantaged the Ohio Arts Council says if abruptly resigned Wednesday amid intend to continue withdrawing military response , has increased
Local Government Fund, whtch is Black Males "came as a shocking Voinovicll 's ~0 percent budget cut mounting complaints it is failing to forces and we continue to deal with demands on the allied forces.
for the council is enacted, it will ' meet the postwar needs of its peo- those problems in such a way that
-the share of sales and personal and· · SIJillrise."
The Los Angeles Times report·
corporate income taxes that go
Bowen said he also is concerned . force the layoff of half the staff, ple.
it does not disrupt or in any way ed Wednesday that U.S. mihtary
automatically to local governments. that Voinovich cut money for the close the art Ballery and scale down
"The government has resiJ1ned, stymie our .ability to get troops officials have devised plans for
The $26.8 billion proposal Ohio Civil Rights Commission and the grant rov1ew process,
resuming hostilities against Imq if
yes," Pjanning Minister Suhman out."
would save the state $92.5 million the Commission on · Minority
A
Pentagon
spokesman
said
Saddam's
government continues to
Mutawa told reporters in Kuwait
that otherwise would go to cities,
about
80,000
U.S.
troops
have
been
resist
aUied
conditions for a fonnal
City. "Obviously, assuming there
counties and townships over two
sent
back
to
their
European
and
ceasefire.
The
initial target will be
is going to be new thinking, we
years.
U.S.
bases
,
leaving
450,000
to
·
aircraft
On
the
ground,
according to ·
need new thinkers."
"My problem is that I don't
460,000
U.S.
trOOps
in
the
theater
Bush
administration
officials
quot.Mutawa said Kuwait' s prime
want us to pass along our budget
of
o~mtions
and
another
200,000
cd
by
the
newspaper.
minister, Crown Prince Saad AIproblems to local governments and
Officials at the Pentagon and the
Sabah, informed the Cabinet Tues- coahtion forees there.
the working men and women of
President
Bush
discussed
U.S.
Staic
Department, and also reports
day night that he planned to submit
this state," Riffe said,
ideas
about
the
shape
of
the
post·
coming
from insurgent groups
the resignation of his 22 ministers .
TOLEDO, Ohio (UPI) - When
Riffe also said the House will be
Camper said Tuesday the gover- to the emir, Jaber Al-Sabah.
war. peace in a meeting Tuesday inside Iraq, paint a picture of
''taking a close look at some of the Gov. George Voinovich holds his nor's office experienced a sense of
Mutawa said he was unaware if with Democratic and Republican increasing success by the Kurdish
')lrevious state initatives in the areas first "cabinet-on-the-road" meet- relief when officials learned that the emir had accepted the resigna- congressional leaders. including minority in northern Iraq. Sadof education, health care, economic ing in Toledo Thursday, he won't President Bush's proposed visit to tions yet, but said the ministers cease-rue terms to be debated and dam's troops have nominal control
development and job creation have to worry about competing Cleveland that same day was can- would likely remain in an acting decided by the U. N. Security .
Continued on page 5
which have proven to be success- wtth a presidential visit in Cleve- ce!C&lt;I.
land.
ful."
Bush, an active supporter during
Voinovich and his cabinet will Voinovich' s 1990 campaign, made
John Mahoney, a spokesman for
the Ohio Municipal League said be stationed at the University of several visits to Ohio to support his
city officials "didn't expect any Toledo Thursday morning for his fellow Reppblican's election bid.
· great news" from the budget pro- administration ' s first'mecting of
Camper said Statehouse staff
top state leaders outside Columb~s .
posal and didn't get any.
Continued on page 5.
Spokeswoman Jenny Camper
·~our attitude is we realize iLs a
tough tiine for the state budget, but said about25 cabinet members and
it's a tough time for local govern- about. the same number of aides
ments too, especially municipali- and other people will join the gov- ·
emor and his wife, Janet.
ties,

Vision care programs presented in'
Meigs elementary.schools Tuesday

Despite Iraqi violence,
with:draWal ·contlnues

-Riffe 1/will tak-e-a-IQng--lo.o-k --atVoinovich's proposed budget
Someone W)Jo Helps the Elderly?
Someon·e Who You Can Trust With Your Family?

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Gov. Voinovich won't
compete with president

A Place Where Friendship and
Fellowship Go Hand In Hand?

The Middleport Churcll Of Christ Welcomes You To FRIEND DAY This Sunday, March 24, 1991

MIDDLEPORT

CHURCH OF CHRIST
5TH AND MAIN STREETS
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO 45760
614-992-2914 - .

"THE CHURCH THAT LOVES YOU
BECAUSE YOU'RE. YOU!"
•

•

·SUNDAY
SERVICES
8:15 - MORNING WORSHIP I
9:30 - BIBLE SCHOOL
10:30 - MORNING WORSHIP II
6:00- YOUTH GROUPS
Presdlool throuah 12th &amp;rides

7:00 - EVENING SERVICE

Reedsville man
injured in crash

Southern Local Board of
Education approves budget

•

·THE MIDDlEPORT
CHURCH OF CHRIST
A Great Place To
Meet A

FRIEND!!

A Reedsville man suffered serious injuries Wednesday morning
when he apparently lost control of
his vehicle on State Route 248.
Robert D. Richardson. 37. of
54254 State Route 681, was transIn a ~egular meeting of the ketball coach.
- Southeln Local Board·of Education
Linda Mangeroy, age 15 , of paned to St. Joseph's Hospital in
the budget was approved from the . Norway, was accepted as a foreign Parkersburg, W.Va. following the
budget commission.
exchange studenL She will be stay- accident in Chester Townshi~. He
Other matters approved included ing with Jim and Belinda Johnson, was reported in serious condiuon, a
hospital spokesman said Wednesaccepting'Richard Coleman as a · Racine.
day.
.
substitute teacher; accepting the
The board also heard a proposal
According to a report from the
resignatiOn of Max Hill as a substi, from the National Honor Society
lute bus driver; allowing Carla and Future Farmers of America Gallia-Meigs Post of the State
Shuler to use her classroom this (FFA) Chapter to implement a Highway Patrol, Richardson was summer to teach calculus to beautification project for the high westbound when he apparently lost
control of his vehicle and drove off
upcoming seniors; allowing the school.
Racine Ball Association to use the
Attending the meeting were the right side of the road. His 1979
baseball field at the high school; Denny Evans, president; Scott Ford F-150 pickup truck then
and to advertise for an assistant Wolfe, vice J.l!IISident; Charles Nor- struck a tree, resulting in heavy
sofiball coach.
. ris, Gary Wilford and Sue Grueser, damage to the vehicle.
The accident is still under invesThe board made a motion to members: Bobby 1. Ord, superincongratulate Howard Caldwell on tendent; and Denny Hill, treasurer. , Ligation. No citations have been
hjs tOOth victory ,as a varsity bas· issued.
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Tbt eervlce, belq held 1u .._. or die eDd or t11e
Gulf War, Is~ to tbe publk.lt wiD beaiD at 3
p.m. aud is bt orplliud by the Racine Emergeucy Squad, lcb allo beaded ap a march aDd
.
service earlier Ibis year.
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"USA" • Approximately 60 studeuts of
Soutbera Hl&amp;b Sc:bool will form tile letters
"USA" by caudlelllht at a "Tb~i.!:,flviDJ In
Marcb" service to be btld at the
on Son·
day. ln addition to these atudnts, several
cburcb choirs and speakers are on tbe pnJII'Ilm.
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�r

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel

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. DEVOTED TO THE. INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

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,..,..,_.._-.-,I'TW!mc:::l'""" ,
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ROBERT L. WINGETT

CHARLENE HOEFLICH

Publlsller

Geaeral Manacer

PAT WHITEHEAD
Aosllltant Publisher/Controller

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A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.

••
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300 ·
·; words tong. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with
:• name. address and telephone number. No unsigned letters wut be pub. •: llshed. Letters should be In good taste, addressing Issues, not personall: lies.

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basics as replacing windows,
rewiring electrical lines, replacing
plumbing and painting. Mysteriously, the investigators found that
one reason for the maintenance
problems was that the ambassador
would not let workers near his
mansion, for some unexplained
reason.
.
In Mexico City~ simply repairing the elevator in the chancery .
may cost more than $400,000.
· Investigators found the most
common problems to be neglect,
and in some cases incompetence:
They also found fraud. In Santiago, .
Chile, about $120,000 was missing
from the maintenance account.
Criminal investigators in the State
Department Inspector General's
Office are trying to find out what
haJ?pened to it. They !If~ studying .

WASHINGTON - Saving
mo·ney is the least or concerns
when the State Department lodges
its diplomats overseas. Costly
housing decisions are being bungled by ambassadors and others
who may be great across a negoti. ating table but know next to nothing about property management
When congressional investiga·
tor.s toured some overseas posts
recently, they found many once·
beautiful homes going to pot. The
list of maintenance work needed on
diplomatic residences is now
approaching half a billiori dollars .
Problems ill lhe ambassador's
residence in Tokyo have been
ignored for so long thai the General
Accounting Office now estimates it
needs $10 million in repairs. The
laundry list of needs includes such

at ieast six cases invotvmg misuse
of post maintenance funds .
Despite the fact that the State
Department has been criticized
before for bungling its overseas
lodging arrangements, diplomats·
talked tbe department into proposing more generous housing guidelines. That proposal !)early caused
some blood vessels to pop on Capitol Hill. Some members of
Congress reminded department
officials of the mote egregious
cases, including the U.S. Embassy
employee in Belgium who lived
alone in a seven-bedroom house.
The State Department was forced
to shelve its ambitious plans for
even better housing.
The (lepartment's inventory in
foreign nations includes more than
2,000 buildings owned by the Unit-

Jack Anderson
and Dale Van Atta
ed Slates and another 5,400 leased
buildings. The rent amounts to
more than $200 million a year.
That's an investment that shouldn't
be allo"Ced to deleriorate.
· In !988 the State· Department
came up with one cost-saving
brainstorm. The Foreign Buildings
Office hired two private engineering conrpanie.s .and -told-them to
survey overseas posts lllld come up
with a list of needed repairs. The
survey alone is expected to cost $6
million and will not be finished
until!995.
One former U.S. ambassador
gave our associate Jim Lynch this
assessment of tl!e Foreign Build·
. ings Office: "It's a mess."

PI RAT
•.
PRE-SEASON CHAT • PltQburgh Pirates
Barry Bonds (left) and Bobby BoDUia ~ ne•
· the outfield .renee before a IPrln&amp; tnhi!Da p10e

'-'awmakers making
false promises

Crestview's Etzler heads list
of D-III all-state honorees

(

BJ ROBERT SHEPARD
WASHINGTON (UPI)- HouSe members are not letting fiSCal reality
or responsibility dampen their patriotic fervor as they rush headlong to
shower rewards on the victorious U.S. military.
. In their stampede to outdo each other the lawmakers are making false
~mises to the military and undermining the asreement that was careful'
ly crafted last year to get the federal deficit under coolrol.
· That agreemenrsaid that if Congress wants to spend money on new or.
expanded programs they must pay for it with higher taxes or cuts in other

;~!~&amp;~=i~~~~·d~~~~~o;:~~i::!':;:~~~~J'!fJe~~:~:you-

Rep. Leon Panella, D-Calif., ,chalrman or the House Budget Comm1t- ·
tee, agreed the bill was "importjlllt, but ... not a national emergency."
House Republican leader Robert Michel, of Illinois, also argued without success that "'turning our backs" on a responsible budget "is not the
~+-c--liJlll~PriaJ:e..ai~DsJa.sl~o~Ul!J.w..~~ for our veterans."
could we put forth one hand to the veteran today wh1le usingthe other to place new financial burdens on the back of his children
tomorrow" Michel asked.
But ca~ually declaring an "emergency" was·not'the only ploy used by
the .House. The bill also provides that some or the money be taken from
the cooperative defense fund set up by the allies to pay for the Persian
· GUlf War.
·
"This is another bad financing idea," said Gradison. Postwar benefits
for U.S. military personnel and veterans "are certainly not the. kinds of
ex(ienses our allies.thought they would be paying fc!r when they pledged
their financial support~ "
.
. GrQdison warne&lt;) that turning the defense fund into a slush fund for
Congress could cause the allies to "slow or withhold their pledge payments"
·
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A thought for the day: Psychologist B.F. Skir\ner said "Education is
what survives when what has been learnt has been forgotten."

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Berry s World

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Wh d •d
·f
• II .11 ?
0 . eel es 1ate 0 term1na y I • .
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Robert Walters··
~

PORT TOWNSE.ND, Wash .
· (NEA) • When Washmgton voters
g~ to the polls this autumn, the.y
WID be confronted by an extraordinary ballot measure. Initiative 119
woul~ gi~e ph:,:sicians the authorit.Y.
to as~ISI m.endi~ the lives of the~r
terminally Ill patients.
.
. Specific_ally, the ballot proposiuon estabhshe~ a procedure under
whtch ~ co~sc10us, mentally competent mdt~dual ~?Old be allowed
to ~equest. ID wnun~ a docto~·s
asststance .m. endmg hiS or her life
through sutct£!e:
. Two phystc1ans w~uld have to
tnd~pendently cerufy that the
pat1ent had. no more than six
months to hve. Then, a doctor
could administer a lethal dose of
morphine or use another humane
method to cause the patient's death.
Physician-assisted suicide is
legal nowhere in the nation - or in
the world, with the exception of the
Netherlands. But consideration of
Initiative 119 is a logical next step
in a countrywide debate that has
grown in in tensity in recent years

yet remains far.fr&lt;,&gt;m resolutio~.
Although It IS an espec1ally
complex and conlentious issue,
eutllanB;s1a unfo~un.ately ha~ ~n
the subject of a lumlefl public dw!ogue focused on mdiVIdual cases
mstead of the broad phtlosophtcal,
religious, ":Jedical,le~al ethical and
moral considerations tnvolved.
. Thus •. we were pr~vy to more
mformauon _than outsiders sh~uld
have been g~ven about the pnvate
anguish or the families of Karen
Ann Quinlan and Nancy Cruzan.
We were regaled With self-promotiona! . claims fro~ D'r . Jack
Kev~ktan, _the proud mventor of a
smctde devtce used to end the life
of Janet Adkins.
We lived through the terrible
episode in which a ~istraught
Chtcago rather, Rudy L~nares, held
off hospual workers w1th a handgun while he unplugged a respirat~r to perform a mercy killing on
hts own IS-month-old, hopelessly
afflicted baby son.
More recently, we indirecUy

shared the account in ihe New England Journal of Medicine written
by a New York physician who says
he prescribed sufficient barbiturates to allow a suffering cancer
patient named Diane to take her
own life
·
' We ·havc not, however, seriously
considered and resolved most .of
the questions spawned by advances
in medicine that prolong but do not
necessarily enhance life. Among
them:
o Wllat distinctions if any do
we want to make bet~een active
and passive euthanasia? If one or
both are appropriate when death is _
· imminent or the affliction is incurable, how do we define those terms.
to take into account both the vast
majority of cases and the one-in-amillion instance of miraculou s
recoverv?
o Can we sanction a physician
prescribing medication in. quantities both the doctor and pauent presumably know are suitable for suicide? Is a physician who' feigns

ignorance ofwhat is likely to occur
in a different position than one who&gt;
offers advicet
o Is removing the surgically. .
implanted tubes that pump fluids ·
and nutrients into comatose · •
patients to keep them alive the. ·
same as withdrawing respirators
and other artificial life-supporting '
equipment? If the patient cannoi
make those decisions, who should
choose? Parents? Children? Spous- '
es? Judges? Others?
Finally! there are the rnc;&gt;st dltft-.
cult que.suons • those dealmg wtth
econom1cs. How much, for exampie, should a couple take from the
family's savings, earmarked for
their child!Cn.' s college ~ucation,
to keep altve an elderly, mcurable
parent?
.
At a time when medical care is
rationed among people whose ail·
ments are curable, what limits . if
any- should be placed on treabnent ·
oftheterminallyill?
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e·
one

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111111 l&gt;y N£A.

"From now on, whenever I talk off-the-cuff,
remind me not to do the 'THING· thing. "

..

Perhaps we miss the real signifi·
cance or Easter by trying too hard
to associate it with the rebirth of
life in spring.
.
It may be natui'al to want to celebrate Easter on a warm, sunny day
when the crocuses are out and
nature lends its reinforcement to
the theme of resurrection. We may
even tend to think, "God arranged
it this way."
We forget that the Southern
Hemisphere Easter comes in the
autumn when the leaves are fallingc
the days are gcuing shorter and the
nights. are getting longer and winter
is approaching.
·
But this perhaps provides, after
all, a better test for our Easter faith.
Easter is a hope for the future, a
promise that no matter what lies
immediately ahead - though the
skies may darken, the shadows
lengthen and winter winds be on
the way • this too shall pass and the
greenness of spring shall .once
more return.
A glorious sprin&amp; morning does
not an Eastern bring. Easter is not a
matter or fair skies. It is a maaer of
never losing hOpe during what may
be the worst of weather and the
wont of limes.
.Whether we live in the Northern
Hemisphere or the Southern Hemi·
sphen~, l!astcr is our best reason for
not giving up hope - no maaer how
unpromising the outlook in our
lives.
Could anything have been more

unpromising thim the walk the
women took to Jesus' tomb on
Easter morning to anoint the body
of Jesus with spices?·Mary Magdalene had been at the tomb on Fri·
day afternoon when the huge stone
had been placed in front of the
grave. She could vouch {or the f!!Ct
that it was too big for three women
to move.
This bothered the women as
they made their way to the tomb.
"Who will roO us away the stone?"
they asked among themselves. It
was a good question.
·
The surpnsing thing is that these
friends of Jesus, knowing what·
they were up against, made up their
minds to take the journey anyway.
Of course when they got there,
they found that th_eir worries were
. needless. Somebody - was it an
angel? - had roUed the stone away.
They would never have known this,
however, if they had decided it was
no use under the circumstances to
make the trip and had stayed home
instead.
They would have missed being
the ftrst to hear the greatest news
ever to reach the ears of mankind:
"He is not here; l!e is risen." .
A huge stone may be blocking
us from that which we most desire
in life~ we look at our siwation
"realistically," there may seem to
be no hope that it can change for
thebeucr.
As far as we can see, there is
nobody who can "roll us away the

.

~I

By GENE CADDES
COLUPIUMBSportsS,10Whlrlteo(rUPI) _
US·
Convoy Crestview's Doug Etzler,
described by his. father-coacl! as a
· "lunch bucket player," heads the
!991 United Press International
boys Division UI All.Ohio basket·
ball team.
Etzler, a six-fool senior guard,
was selected the Division lll player
or the year in baUoting by coaches ,
from around the state.
He was joined on the All.Ohio
ftrst team by J.C. Ehmann of North
Robinson Colonel Crawforil, Rick
Mast of Applecreek WaynC41ale,
Mark Metzka of New Middletown
Sp~field and Kevin Summers of
arrv· le.
.Etzler, who signed with Ohio
State last November, averaged 22.1
points per game the past season and
I 0.2 assists. He shot 60 percent
from the field, including S4 percent
from three•pOint range, and 89 percent from the free throw line, down
from his four-year career mar1t of
90.3 percent
"Probably the best thing about
Doug is be's very unselfiSh," said
head coach Ray Etzler. "We had to
get on him for not shooting the bas·
ketball more. But he likes to
involve•everybody."
.
Size-wise, Etzler compares his
son with former Buckeye Jay Burson, but not as a player.
·
"They kind of have the same
frame," said Etzler, "but they
don't have the .same scoring men· tality. Jay was a phenomenal play·
er.
·
"Doug needs to put on about 20
pounds of muscle and not lose any .
quickness. He's got to develop in
that area to be a good defensive
player. Right now, he'd just get
shoved around.
.
"He's not the athletic type,"
added Etzler. "He's not going to

George Ro Plageni. ·

NATIONAL HOCKEY LEAGUE
Wola Conferen&lt;e
Patrick Dlvlllon
WL TP1o.GP
Pillllooqlo ........... 31 31 5 II liS
NY...,... .- .•34 21 12 10
1'hi1ldeiFioil .........3Z 33 9 73 237
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NY lolanolcn ........23 41 10 56 210

270

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·· · - ....., .. 37 21 10 14
r·IWI!Oftl ..........31 34 10 72
r·ll.trolo ..........:n 29 17 71
~........... 14 41 12 40

211

2A3
233
250
255
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GA

257
211
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313
316
253
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231

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y-Oolcoo.. .. ........45 22 6 96
y-Sl LoWo ...........41 22 II 9J
y-Doon&gt;;t ............ 33 34
I 74
y-Miowo-- ........26 34 . 14 66
T - ...........21 4&lt;1 9 51
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y-CoJaooy ..........43
y-EdMmoon ....... 35
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23 9
24 7
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_,._"'

302

•

On this date in history:
..
In 1852, Harriet B,eecl!er Stowe's anti-slavery novel "Uncle Tom'S'
Cabin" was published.
·
In 1963, a volcano on the isl.and of Bali in the East Indies began
ing. The eventual death toll exceeded 15-hundred.

erupt-

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Heating and

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Today is Wednesday, March 20, the 79th day of 1991 with 286 to follow.
·The moon is waxing, moving toward its fust quarter.
The morning stars are Mercury, Venus, Mars and Saturn.
The evening stars are Mercury and Jupiter.
Those born on this date are under the sign of Pisces. They include
Roman poet Ovid in 43 B.C.... adventurer and writer Edward JudsOn
originator or the dime novel, in 1820... NorwegiaJ\ dramatisc Henrik
in 1828 ... psychologist B-F Skinner in 1904... actor and bandleader Ozzie
Ne.~ in 1907:.. fm:mer New Yorlc ~yor Abe Beame in 1906 (age 85)...
Bnush actor Str Mtc~ael Redgrave m 1908.. ...comedian, producer and
director Carl Reiner in 1922 (age 69)... Fred Rogers ("Mister Rogers") in
1~8 (age 63~... hockey player Bobby Orr in 1948 (age 43) ... and actor
W11liam Hurt m 1950 (age 41) .

'

For Dependable Home

Compllell Confertn&lt;e

By United Press ltlternal)onal

\,

GA

, .......... ,..,. . lotrlh

Today in history

.'' .

Sports scoreboard...

,.a- ...........41

stone."
But those who ICnow the Easter
story will remind themselves that · tomb as well. He who gave joy and
there is an angel presence in our meaning to their lives and was the
lives that can not only "roll us fulfillment of their highest dreams
away the stone" and unmask our for themselves was no longer deacl
fears as faithless fancies , it can but alive.
.
grant us even more than we wished
The
age-old
glad
Easter
tiilings
·
for.
·
.
are ours today. "He lives • our
The women were willing to set- . kind, wise heavenly friend." Bu~
tle for an open tomb. When they there •s more. "Because I live ye
got there, they found an empty shall live also," says Christ.
·

NBAPGUdap
By United Prea laternadollal
Tho return or~ ~uwon
10 games 180 hu turned the lfoua.
ton Rockets into the mOll sipili·
cant NBA threat hfading toward
!he playoffs.
Houston il 9-1 since O~won
returned Feb. 28 from an eight·
week: stay on tbe disabled ll.st.
Tuesday's 98-85 victory over Minnesota tied the Rockets' 14·Y-·
old fl'anchise recGid with nine con·
secutive victories as the Rockets
pulled within l 1/2 pmes of ftnl·
place Utah 111d one game or San
Anlalio in the Midwest Division.
"If~e keep up the same inten·
sity, we can beat anybody," said
Olajuwon, who added th.at this il
the best he's seen Houston play
since the 1986 team lOOk the division with s1 wins.
The Rockets, who alliiCIIed des·
tined for a mediocre ·finish after
posting a 20-20 record at the season's midway point, are now 41·
24, their best record through 6S
games in the 20-year frtmchisc his-

"It's fulflllinJ to know our con·
centration level IS ao bigh and that ·•
we still rcruse to lose," Rocket
'
head coach Don Chancy said. "I
KLEINE
LOSES
BALL
•
Boston
frontman
Joe Klelae (53),
think the sueak is important to aullrded hy Atlanta's Kevill WIUis (42), IOHII control
.
.
or tile ball
guys. I saw fear in their eyes while tr;rlna to shoot iD the second qnarter ot Tuesday Dl&amp;ht's NBA
dunk the ball. He's a lunch bucket coaches from around the slate, edg· these
toward the end when they thought pme In Atlanta, which the Hawks won 104-9:Z. (UPI)
player, a blue'collar worker. He ing out Bellbrook's Bob Mayberry, • they might lese."
JUSI gets the job done, He makes who had six votes. Lonnie Hill of
The Roclcets fought off a fourthgood decisions with the basketball . West Muskingum and Dave
qu.arter
rally by the Timberwolvcs.
Knlcks 97, Hornell i9
son. Richmond hit his ftrst 13 shoes
and doesn 'I iry to force things.".
Froelich of North Robinson
At Charlotte, N.C., Patrick and wound up making 16 or 19·;:
· Etzler visions his son as a "role Colonel Crawford tied for third Minnesouqiulled within 83-82
with 4:10 remaini11g on Sam Ewing scored 41 points to lead the from the Door.
:·
plarer," for the 'Buckeyes.
with five each. ·
Mitchell's
three-point
phiy,
!lui
the
Knicks.
The
victory,
New
York's
Lakers
119,
Clippers
105
'I can't forsee htm breaking
Others receiving votes were AI Rockets answered widi a 15-3 run
At 'Inglewood, Calif., James· '
into the lineup in front or those Welch of Haviland Wayne Trace, in the final four minutes, sparked ninth in its last II games, improved
Worthy
scored 26 points to propel"'
people they have now," ·said Tom Eibel of New London, Norm
the Knicks to 33-33. Charlotte fell
by
Olajuwon's
six
points.
The
to
19-46,
the
worst
record
of
the
the
Lukers
past the cross-town rival
Etzler. "He's just going to have to Persia or Chesapeake, Dom Dal· Houston center finished with 25
Clippers.
The
victory lifts the Lak' · '
· wait his turn. He doesn't have the torio of New Middletown Spring· points, 14. rebounds eight blocked NBA's four exJlllllsiOn teams.
ers
mto
first
place
in the Pacific · ·
great quickness as a Mark Baker, field, Dan Schwieterman of shots.
Hawks 104, Celtlcs 92
Division,
supplanting
the Portland
but hp can run a half-court offense. Sarahsville Shenandoah, Dave
When Olajuwon wasn't blockAt Atlanta, Spud Webb, Trail Blazers.
:'
He's played against some of the Majick of Youngstown Liberty, inf shots, he was altering other Dominique Wilkins and Kevin
Duties 101, Heat88 ,
.
better guards around, he just needs Dave Frank of Avon, Dennis Minnesota efforts. His long-armed, Willis combined for 67 points t~
to get ihat strength."
.
AI Milwaukee, Dale Ellis netted··'
IJonkala or Federal Hocking and seven-foot frame contributed 10 the overcome Boston: The Hawks led ·
The 6-2 Suminers, ·the only Ray Etzler of Convoy Crestview.
sh ·
fi
54-48 at the half and 79-74 enter- 5 of his 29 points during a lrey run·;·
• 38
Wolves
percent OOiing pro 1' ing the fmal period. Atlanta led by late in the third quarter, helping the "
junior on the f~rst team, also is the
.
The list
.
18 . . th &lt; urth Bucks past Miami. The loss was·· ·
top scorer, averaging 28.5 points .
Here's the 1991 United Press ciency.
"Hakeem really gets a thriU out as many as
pomts m e ,o
per game for OrrviUe.
~
International boys Division Ill all- of blocking shots," said Minneso- quarter. AUanta received 26 from the Heat's fifth straight. Frank ~·
Mas~ 6-2, averaged 27.1 points Ohio basketball team, with height,
ra's Tyrone Corbin. "He blocked Webb while Wilkins fmished with Brickowski ·added 14 points for
per game, the 6-3 Metzka 26 points school year and scoring average:
one !lf mine and said 'That was 21 JIC)ints and 10 rebounds. Willis Milwaukee anti Jay Humphries had ·
12, including I 0 in the decisive
per game and the 6-1 Ehmann 23.4
First team
easy.' And his teall!mates do a contributed 20 points and 10 . third
quarter.
.
per contest
J.C. Ehmann, Colonel Craw- good JOb
· or setung
· you up. They rebounds.
Splll'll04, Kllp 101
Three juniors an(! two seniors ford, 6-1, Senior, 23.4.
At San Antonio, Texas, four free
made up the second team, headed
Doug Etzler, Convoy Crestview, play hard defense unlil you get to
The Daily Senl~nel
the
lane
and
he's
there
to
finish
you
throws
from Willie Anderson and
by seven-foot junior Jason Terry of 6-0, Senior, 22.1.
1
(U8P814 ....,
Sparta Highl.and. The other juniors
Rick Mast, Applecreelc offbll\iuwon's teammates promise David Robinson in the lait 17 ~­
A lllvloloo of Mulllmoda.,
were six-foot Gus Johnson or Waynedale, 6-0, Senior, 27.1.
more of the same.
;
onds allo~ the Spun to surv1ve
Huron and 6-1 J.R. Battista of BelMark Metzka, New Middletown
"The big guy just got back and an upset bid ~d hand SIICraJDC!IIO
Publlthed every aliornoon, Moaoioy
laire.
Springfield, 6-3, Senior, 26,0.
l!u'oueh .. F;rlday, Ill Cour1 St., Po·
isn't back in peak shape," Rocket · a record,settmg 29th_consecuuve
meroy, Ohio, ~Y lloe Ohio Volley Pub- "•
The seniors were 6-4 Mark
Kevin Summers, Orrville, 6-2, guard Kenny Smith said. ··we road loss. The 29 stnught setbacks
ll•hln&amp; Company!MulUmedla, lac.. 1
Majick or Youngstown Liberty and Junior, 28.5.
.
Pomeroy, Oblo 45'169, Ph . ·992·2156. S..
have one and. a half lnonths until ~way from the Arco ~~na e~lab­
cond
class postaae paid at Pomeroy,
64 Jeff Vonhandorf of Bellbrook.
Second team
the playoffs, and thAt's when we'll hshes a NBA record Within a smgle
Ohio.
.
,
..
season.
The all,senior third team was
J.R. Battista; Bellaire, 6-1, be read
ake
best nm.
Y
tom
.
Our
Warriors
136,
TnU
Blazers
1241
·
comprised of Marty Abfall of New Junior, 25.0.
Mem~r: United Prell lnteraatloDal,
In other actiOn, New Yort routAt Oakland Cali[ Mitch R'chlnlandDaUyPreuAuoclatlonandt~ ' '
London, Todd McLtllghlin of West
Gus Johnson, Huron, 6-0, ed Charlotte
1
97-79; Atlanra stepped
.
. •
., .
.
Ohio Newspa~r AlsCX'IaUon. National
·
•
Muskingum, Steve Smetana of Junior, 26.2.
Boston 104-92; San Antonio beat rn'!ftd tied hts season high ,wtth 40
Advertllinl Representative, Bl'anbam
,
Mark Majick, Youngstown Lib- Sacramento 104· IOI· Golden State pomts and Golden Sta~t ~1thst0od
Middlefield Cardinal, Dennis
NOWIIPIP&lt;I' Sat ... 733 Tlllrd Aven~. "
New,..York, New Yort 10017.
.
•
..
a second-half surge to survtve PortGreene o(Yoangstown Liberty and erty, 6-4, Senior, 20.0.
Jon Thorbahn of Oak Harbor.
Jasrin Terry, Sparta Highland, 7- out· shmed Portland 136-126, the land knocking the Trail Blazers
POSTMASTER: Send addr'"• ch...,.
L.A. Lukers ~efeated_th.e L.A. Clip- out ~f first place in the· Pacific
to Tile DaUy Sentinel, Ill Court St..
O,Junior,
19.3.
Smith top D·ID mentor
Pomeroy, Ohio f57«1.
"
119:10~, and Milwaukee clob- Division for ·the first time this seaJeff Vonhandorf, Bellbrook, 6- · pers
Steve Smith, who directed
bered
Miam1
101-88.
,
,
y
Orrville to a 19-1 record the past 4, Senior, 18.2.
8UIISOIIP'DON RAn:&amp;
By Corrtor or Mol•
season, has been voted the United
Third ltam
One Week .............. .. ................... ti.IIO ·•
Marty Abfall, New London, 6-3,
Press ·Jntemationjil boys Division
One Month ............... .. ................ \16.15
111 coach of the year.
Senior, 22.8.
One Year ......... .. .. .. .. .... ...........,183.20
Dozier and Terry McDaniel.
Dennis Greene, Youngstown By United Press lntenational
SINGLE COPY
Smith received eight or the 35
PRICE
Baseball
Pittsburgh - Assigned catcher
votes cast in the balloting by Liberty, 6-2, Senior, 19.0.
Dally .................. .. ...... .. ....... 25 Cent a -..,
Todd McLaughlin, West MuskHouston - Sent to minor- Tom Nieto and infielder Armando
Subscribers not deelrina to pay tbecar· .. .. 1
ingum, 6-4, Senior, 19.6.
league camp for reassignment: Moreno to their minor IQague
rler may remit In advance dlrrct Ia
Steve Smetana, Middlefield pitchers Harol~ Allen, Ryan camp.
The Datly Sentinel on a3, 6 or 12 m011tb ~
boa \I. Creclll will ~ flwn cart1er Ndl.. · '
Cardinal, 6-3; Senior, 26~1.
Bowen, Ke1th Kaiser, Burch Henry
San Diego - Waived pitcher
Jon Thorbahn, Oak Harbor, 6-2, and,Rob Mallicoat, catchers Tony Candy Sieml.
No aublcrlpttona by man permitted In
Senior, 25.0.
San Francisco - Waived outEusebio Scou Makarewicz, Scott
lndiano
...........32 34 .48S
II
areas where home carrier lt'I'VICf' 11
CI....W.d .,.......23 41 ·.359
26
Honorable mention
Servais and Kevin Scott, infielders fielder Rick LeaCh.
available.
Cborloac .... .... ..19 46 .292 30 1/l
Bill Burgei, Ottawa-Glandorf; Andy Mota and Andujat Cedeno
Toronto - Named Jobn PQioni
Wwtern Co.ferenee
M.oll h ...rlpl ....
Bronson Cudgel, Akron St. Vin- and outfielders KeMy Lofton and pitching coach at Syracuse of Inter·
loolle Molp Cotlllt)'
.
Mary;
Paul
Cluxton,
cent-St.
Bert
Hunter;
released
pitcher
Bill
national
League
(AAA),
Steve
13
Weeks
.....
..........
....
..
...
......
....
$21.101
GB
26 Weeki ..... ................... :...... .. . M3.16
Lynchburg Clay; Todd Czartoski, Laskey from Triple-A contract .
Mingori .pitching coach at
52 Weekl .................................. t\14.71 Ulllo
............42 22 .656
Sl!erwood
Fairview;
Kregg
CreamKansas City - Sento to minor Knoxville of Southern League
Ooolllole Molp CRill)'
San Antonio ....... 42 22 .656
er, Brookville; Geoff Duncan, leagues for reassignmcnc pitchen (AA) 81Jd Darren Balsley pitching
13 Weeki .................................. I2UO
H......,
·-......41 lA .631 11/2
26 Weeki ................... ............... N5.50
0.U..
.... _.. -.. 24 40 .375
II
Aurora: John DiRenzo, New Mid- Victor ,Cole, Joel Johnston, Mike coach at Myrtle Beach of South
52 Weeki .................................. UB.40
•
~
........ 21 43 . 321
21
dletown Springfield; Jay Elders, Magnante, Catlos Maldonado and Allantic League (A).
Odondo
..........21 43 .321
2i
'
Dom.r
.......... 11 47. .m 2A tfl
Rocky River; Tony Ernst, Bell. Hector Wagner, infielders Sean
PocllleDI...IGD
. brook; Chris Gates, Beachwood; Berry, Bob Hamelin and Tommy'
x·LA LaJccr~ ······•• u :m
Russell Jewell, Haviland Wayne Hinzo, oulf~elder Harvey PuUiam
· -- d .........41 11 .723
1/2
J·Pho.nik
........44 20
.611
3
Trace;
Brian Kiser, Windham; Rod and cacther Jorge Pedre; waived
OoWon Soaoo .......35 30 .531 12 112
Lemons,
Beachwood; Justin Lou, pitcher Mel Stottlemyre Jr. for the
S..OUo
............30 34 .46!1
17
LA C1ippon ........23 43 .341
2!1
Bloom-Carroll; Brad McNeilly , purpose of giving him his uncondi- .
s........,. .......11 46 ' .211 29
Pymatuning Valley: Randy Moyer, tional release.
...lincbod plo)'GII""""
Delta; Allen Osjlorne, Cllesa ·
,.
T-.rR-11
New Yort (AL) - Sent pitcher
NowY..t97,~79
peake;
Don Price, Delphos Jeffer- Mark Leiter to DebOil for inf~Cldtr
Aolooooa104, lloooonll2
son; Tim Rinehart, Ontario; Todd Salvatore Anthony Lovullo.
. H...,.91,Minnooooa15
-IOI,Miaoi II
Simon, Columbia Station; Derek
New York (NL) - Sent to·
San Amaaio 104, I·
110 101
Sizemore, New Lebanon Dixie; minor-league camp for reassignOoldonSoa~lM,~I~
LA LM• ll9,lA Cllppon lOS
Chris Tackett, North Gallla; Eric ment: pitchers Terry Bross, Eric ·
Toole,
North Adams; Otis Winston, Hillman and John Jolmstone, catchWulolapn• a-., 7:30pJ11 .
Toronto;
Roger
Warner, er Alan Zinter 111!1 outfielders DJ.
C~ew~oM•NowYCIIII, 7:30p.m.
MinMiala at N• Jenoy, 7:30p.m.
Sarahsville
Shenandoah;
Rob ·
J)ooro;t otPloilodolplo;a,. ~ ...
'
.
Welch,
Haviland
Wayne
Trace;
Mt.ni 01 blilaa, ,,30 p. m.
ro~VIUIII\j JUU ISIIU JUUI lltiiYIIUUI~ WIID rrtenoty, Sillily•
A - 11 CloioiF,I:30 p.m.
Neil Weber, Tinora.
consctous ~ service is a Ferrellgas commUment.
l'!ooehatDoi!M,1 :30p.no.
Player-or-tile-year- Doug
Ulllo II 0.0..., 9:30 p. a .
For 50 years, we've handled the evefYday and emergency
Pardmd 1t LA c:u,pe.,tO:JO p.m.
Etzler, Convoy Crestview.
lA t.ot. It 1111110, 10 p.m.
Coach-or-the-year-S.teve
needs of families like yours.
Smltb, Orrville.
.
San An1enio 1t ~7:30p.m. ·
Ferrel~as . .. the folks to rely on whether it's the
s.....- '' H"-.1:30 p.m.
I

-~

What is the significance of Easter
'

earlier this montll In Bradenton, Fla. The pair
IIIBY be too uptDlllve for tbe Pirates to keep .In
1991. (UPI)

North's Tackett gets honorable mention
'

p~~-is, however, a loophole. If. new spending is deemed to be an
emergency, the cost can be added to the federal debt and fmanced, at considerable cost, through long-term borrowing.
, Some House members are begining to see "emergencies" aU over the
place.
Last week the House passed a bill to authorize $15 billion to pay for
the cost of the Persian Gulf War. The wat costs, quite reasonably, were
specifically exempted from ll!St year's budget caps. But last week's bill
was amended to declare that new and improved pay and benefits for all
service personnel and veterans fall into the "emergency" category, so
they don't have to be paid for out of current revenues.
.
·A similar ploy was used the week before with passage or an appropriations bill containing billions of dollars iii "emergency" spending.
' The military benefits bill was made even more of a sham with the pro·
vision that the benefits wiD be ~d only if President Bush declares them
to be emergencies. Not only w1U Bush not do that, but he may veto the
entire bill.
·
Some House members urged a more responsible approach.
Rep. Willis Gradison, R.Ohio, said he feared the new strategy would
' 'present us with an emergency of the' week.''
· · ·
Arguing that no "emergency" existed, Gradison noted thai few of the
veterans' benefits were new; that most would go to all iniliwy personnel,
not just Gulf veterans; and that ·none of the money would be spent until

.

:-.
•.
•

Houston p9sts 98-85 victory
over Minnesota Thesday night . .

'·U • S. wasting millions on diplomats' housing

111 Court Stree&amp;
Pomeroy, Olllo

..

0

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy--Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday, March 20, 1991

13

~ 111Joalo, 9:30 p. 00,
llomw11GooWon sw.; !0:30p.m.

coldest day of the year, weekends, evenings, even
holidays .

Sports briefs

can tllbout our 1pecla1 Cullomtr Program•:

Football
NFL owners meeting in Kona,
Ha'!VIIii, voted by the barest margin
to retain inllant replly a sixth - son. Twenty-one of 28 owners
VOied in favcir of the rule, the same
number as In 1990. A three-quarters majority - In this case 21 ,
v01e1- was needed to keep iulant

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�wednelday, March io,1991

Winter storms-in the West as spring arrives ·:

Yankees to get first shot at signing Bo
By Ulllted ,.._1Jdent"'oe11
Bo Jaclcsoo llid IOOdb&gt;'e 10 the
Kansu City Royals Tuesday. but
not to baseball.
"My first priority is to
the time with my family," 1
said Tueaday at his aowded lock·
er:room cubicle at the Royals'
spring training camp in. Haines
City, Fla. "The second is rehabbing religiously. And die lbird is
getting back on the playing field.
Who la!ows, hopefully for somebody in the American League...
The ~oyals released Jackson
Monday aftet the team decided he
was unable to 'play baseball this
season because of a hip condition
that developed as a result of an
injury he suffered Jan. 13 playing
football for the Los Angeles
~Biders. ·
· :
•'I've had a relationshi!l witb the
guys h\II'C for the past 4 1/2 years."
Jaclcson said. "I probably have a
better relationship with most of the
guys on this team dian I do with
my own brothers and sisters."
· Tuesday, teams could begin
claiming Jackson on waiYer:s. The
club witb the worst record last yeain the American League (die New
York Yankees) gets the first chance
to claim him for SI.
The rest of the AL teams follow
in reverse order of finisb. If he

;t:

TVC GIRLS RESERVE CHAMPIONS •
Tbe Meigs Lady Marauder reserve basketball .
team Rnisbed anulb.er highly successful season
wllb 1n 18-l record and a Tri-VIIIey Cool'erence
championship. Team members laclude, front

row, 1-r, Heather Hudson, Joy O'Brien, Lee
row, 1-r,
Miady Fladl1y, Lori Kelly, Yvette Young,
Chrissy Taylor, Missy Sllson and Katrina Turner.
Henc!e~ and Ginger Findlay, Second

lbe leape, the proeell it
repeated in die NlliocW Leqae.
The waiver period ends Friday 11 l
p.m. EST.
A club that claims Jacbon and
place a bim on the ODon~~ay
1011« IDDII.pay his 19!11
-of
$2.37S million. Onllnarily, a team
pays the fall lalary of an injured
player. However, the Royals say
they wUl pay oaly one-sixth of his
sallry ($3!15,833) because Jilt:bon
injured himself playing pro foot·
ball.
.
Tbe Major Le1gue Baseball
Playen Assaelallon is IIUdying the
mattB.
Jackson said be has no regreiB
over his dual sport career, which
inspired the "Bo Knows" marketing success.
"I've been 'blessed to play
. s~rts .for 20 some odd ,Yeats and
I m happy with how thtnll have
. F.De in the past." JackJon said. "If
tt's not in the cirds, you can't
argue with lbe man upstlirs when
his word is said llld done."
In Cincinnati, Reds owner
Marge Schon remained in guarded
condition at Jewish Hospital after
being -dmilted with chest pains.
She was admitted Friday aftet an
appearance at die Cincinnati Zoo
and was placed in the intensive
care unit.

Hull reaches 80-goal
mark for season, .leads
Blues to win over Caps
.

. I

' By PAUL WALSH
UPI ~ports Writer
Only future Hall of Famers
Wayne Gretzky and Mario
Lemieux, and now Brett Hull, can
talk about die "neat feeling" that ·
comes with scoring 80 goals in one

season.

Hull scored in die first period
Tuesday to become the third plar.er
in NHL history to reach die milestone and the SL Louis Blues halt·
ed a sill-game winless streak with a
-2-1 victory over the Washington
·Capitals.
·
The def041 prevented die Capitals, S-1-2 in their previous eiJI!t
games, from movin~ into thtrd
place in the Patrick DivisiQn. With
New Jersey's win Tuesday, the
Capitals
are two points behind the
, MARAUDER BOYS RESERVES • The
Adams, Todd DUI and Jerod Stewart managl!r. .. third-place Devils and one point
~eigs· Marauder reserve basketball recently fin.
Second row, 1-i', Kevin. Lambert, R!lnclall Johnbehind Philadelphia f~ the founh
i4hed a successful. season with a 16-4 record
ston, John Bentley, Jay Cremeans, Bobby John·
and
fma!Patrick playoff spoL
ooder the direction of coach Rick Edwards.
son, Shawn Hamon, and Cbris Knight. Not picThe victory moved St. Louis,()..
'l;eam members are, front row, 1-r, Nathan
tured is coach Rick Edwards.
4-2 in its previous six games, withB'rown, Nathan Teeter, Kyle. Simpson, Gary
in ·three points of fmt-place Chica•
go in the Norris DiviSJqn. However, die Blues have played one more
game 'than the Blacldtawks.
•
Hull's goal came widi8:4Isone
in the first period, only fiv? seconds into a mim advantage.
·
Los Angeles's Gretzky scored
· 1981 82 d 87 ·
•
92 goa 1s tn
an
tn
' ! By JEFF SHAIN
ber's defeat by Arizona voters of
1983·84
while
with •Edmonroo,
and
Meanwhile, Los Angeles offi: UPI Sports Writer .
two proposals to emict a paid state cials are .under fire for a home Pittsburgh's Lemieux scored 85 in
,.
T)le National Football League, holiday in honor of slain civil videotape showing a group of 1988-89.
"It'll take a couple of days to
follDWing through on a threat made rights leader Martin Luther King Jr. white police officers beating a
last November, voted Tuesday at One of those proposals fell by a black suspect who had offered no sink in," Hull said of his 80th goal
in 74 games. "But it's a neat feelits !~ague meetings in Hawaii to margin of less than half a percent- resistance.
.
strip Phoenix of the 1993 Super age point.
"You shouldn't bring in other ing.
"Being
in
a
list
of people (with
Bowl, and then voted to give the
Opponents of the measures issues where communities are not
Gretzky
and
Lemieux).
with still
game to Pasadena, Calif.
argued the added holiday would living up to their. responsibility,"
·
•
·
• 1
The NFL made a compromise . create lUi additional budget short- said Los Angeles Mayor Tom some games to go, tl s qutte
a .ee move to make Arizona the prelimi- fall in troubling economic times. Bradley, in town to aid in 'Pasade- ing." he said. ·
"I just went to die front of the
nary ·site for the 1996 game.
Tbe state does have a day honoring na's presentation. "This was-just
Acting upon a proposal submit- the slain civil-rights leader, but it is one issue - the Martin Luther net and as soon as it went to
(Adam) Oates, our eyes met and 1
ted by Philadelphia Eagles owner held on die third Sunday in January King holiday."
knew
I had nothing but time, and
Norman Braman, chairman of the and is not a paid holidaY. for state
In other action Tuesday, owners
the worst pan of
Super Bowl Site Selection Com- workers.
voted ·by the slimmest of margins that was almost
.
mittei, and endorsed by CommisOn Monday, an angry Tagliabue to retain instant replay for a sixth it..
sioner Paul Tagliabue, the owners virtually admiucd that in awarding season.
Can Hull catch Gretzky's sinr
goal mark? .
voted after more than two hours of die 1993 Super Bowl to Plloenix
For the sectlnd straight year, gle-season
"It's
kind
of out of reach," he
debate to reopen the site selectien last yea-, dtc NFL ignored the pos· . instant replay was voted to remain
said.
"I'll
just
ao out and play. I
prococllire for the 1993 game. .
sibility lhlt a King holiday would part of NFL games by 21 of the 28
don't
even
think
about iL"
"We tried to keep the same in be clefMed.
..
owners. A three-quarters majority
Hull
also
leads
the league in
Phoenix for 1993, but it became
"We a not infallible," Tagli- is needed to pass or retain any rule.
power-play
goals
wit~ 28, the
apparent early on that it was not abue said. "We wumed the profourthhighest
tolal
in league hisgmng to work,'" Phoenix Cardinals posal would pass. •'
·
. The Competition Commiuee
Ph'ladelph'
owner Bill Bidwell said in
Angry voices were often heard voted 4-3 against renewing instant tory. 1
ta•s T'tm Kerr h0 Ids
announcing the move.
in the meetings, held at a resort replay when the meetings opened the record widl34; set in 1985-86.
The decisive score came wilb
With the vote, Phoenix became hotel in Kona. Hawaii. At one point on Sunday. Cincinnati Bengals
5:48
left in the middle JIC!iod on
the first Super Bowl site to later Tueaday, Bidwill practically shout- president Paul Brown, Kansas City
have the game taken away by NFL ed at Oeveland Browns owner Art head coach Marty Schottenheimer Kelly Chase's ftrst goal m his secoffiCials. '
Moclcll when he alk.ed lbe Phoenix and general managers George ond g11111e of die season s)nce being
up from Paoria. Laat season
"Nobody is happy abput this. · OW!*' Whelber 11a would .x:eptlhe Young of the New York Giants and called
Nobody," Braman wd. "J'm not. ClllliPiomille dell.
. ·
· Bill Polian of Buffalo voted against as. a rookie with the Blues, he
·
die commissioner is not. None of
:;:;;:, bllllcrap," Bidwilltold keeping die camera .to help officials scored just once in 43 pnes.
After Hull's goal, Kelly Miller
the owners are happy about this."
Modell. "I worked hard for this make on-fteld decisions.
evened die score for the Capitals
Representatives from San Diego (1993) game. I wcrked hard for die
early
in die second period with his
and Pasadena were invited late state of Arizona in ·this."
Phoenix, Detroit and Chicago
22nd
goal of the season and his
Tuesday to address the owners as
Previous Super Bowl host com- joined the Bengals, Chiefs, Giants
ftfth
score
in ltis last six games,
the bidding process for the 1993 munjlies also have been .c:mbroiled and BiDs in the full vote of league
game reopened, and aboutiO p.m. in racial controversy, without owners.
Vincent Riendeau saved 26 of
PST the owners voted in favor of action by the NFL.
Pasadena.
·
The 1989 Super Bowl was held
Officials say the game will be in the midst of race riots that week
worth about $120 million to the in the inner-city neighborhoods of
local economy.
Overtown and Libeny City. The
The proposal, as submit~d by NFL was criticized this week for
Braman. snips Phoenix of the 1993 failing to acknowledge the riots.
Super Bowl but leaves !)pen the
The Super Bowl was held the
possibility for the 1996 game 10 be following year in New Orleans.
awarded to Arizona. Voting to One of the members of the
a~ the 1996 game will 1101 take Louisiana Slate senate, David
place until Match 1993, after a Duke, is a fOrmlr leader in the Ku
1992 ballot ...,....., 10 eatabliih a Klux Klan.
. I~
I
King llotiday is dacided.,
Even the ·two cities bidding to
Bid'NiU p\t c:reditiD Arilona's replace Phoenillllave rec:endy been
newly elected 10vernor, J. Fife embroiled lniiCIIII C01111o•a•.Y·
WIIH FliES .................... f1.34
Symington, for the compromise
On Monday, a Jepimllalive of
.......,.,..)
the Afro-Amedcu Or1anizina
I .
r·-r.o;er the weekend; Canuais- ·Project, a Jl'OliP that opposes
sioner Tagliabue and Governor awarding die pme to San Diego,
Symington had at least one 10111 Died unsuccmflllly to speak at an
"At till IIIII ef tile p_,.y M111R •1~11"
conversation about the issae," Bid- executive seuion of owners.
will said. "Apparendy the giJVCr·
The group says San Diego
PO.IOY, OliO
PH. 992·2556
nor convinced the commissioner 10 should not pt the game because
.die PJdiminary naming of Pbocnill the city Rlllllfted a saeet lbat had
Cor ihe 1996 game."
· been named Martin Luther Xing
· The move ll.ems from Novem- ' Way.
·
.

.

NFL owners vote to make
~asadena '93 Super Bowl host

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Special

Dnetas have the reiulu of iome

CIOlfi

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27 shots on the SL Louis net. Rieiidean stopped Peter 'Bondra on a
~WIY, widll2;17left to ~ure
hts 23rd VIctory thiS~ agunst
onlY. ,seven losses and SIX lies..
.
. (Bondra) b~ in ... and II '\"as
JUSt a ma~ter of t~ches of_gomg
over die hne," satd Washmgton
head coach :r"erry Murray.
..
The Capttals were. With~ dle';f
·most potent scorer, Dino Ctccarellt,
f~r the second time in three games.
CtecareUi, who has 21 g'!l's in SO
gamea this season, is nursl!ll a sore
groin. Murray said he will be out
another four to 6ve dlys.
Elsewhere: Hartl'~ and Boston
s~ated . to a 1-1 ue; Bdmo~ton
ntpped Quebec 7-6 tn o~erume:
and New Jersey edged Pmsburgh
5-4.
Whalers 1, Bruins l
At Hartford, Conn., Dave Christian and DoujJ Houda lnlded goals
and the Drums's stingy defense
allowed die Whalers only on shot
in the fmt period and· just five in
the third. Andy Moog finished with .
21 saves for Boston and the
Whalen' Kay Whitmore stopped
27 shots. The Bruins are 3.04 in

their0~,~=:nes-~ues 6 (OT)
IIC1'll

At Quebec,
ark Messier
scored widl26 seconds left in over••me
to '"'
~-Ip the Oilerl bold off the
u
Nordiques. The Nordiques overcame 3-0 and 4-1 deficits to force
the overtime bullost when MesSier,
·who had a soal and two assists,
skated down the right side ,and
scored on a wrist sliot between Ron
Tugnutt's pads froni die faceoff
circle. Cm' Simpson had a goal
and two asststs for die Oilers. Joe
Sakic had a hat .trick and two
f
h N d'
d
assists or t e or tques an
Stephane Morin had four wists.
Devils 5, PeapiDs 4
At East Rutherford, NJ., Patrik
Sundstrom scored his second goal
of the game witb 4:34 left to
a
three-goal rally and lift the Devils.
The loss snapped the Penguins •
seven-game unbeaten sueak (6-0-·
1). New Jeney moved into third
place in the Patrick Division, one
point ahead or Philadelphia and
two in front of Washington. T)Je
Penguins lead the division by one
ruint
over the
New York
Rangers.
undstrom
deflected
Bruce
Driver's shot behind Tom Barrasso for
the winner. Goals by Zdeno Ciger
and Brendan Shanahan bad helped
the~~Devi~'ls~ral;ly~from;a~4.·~2~de~fi~ct~L•

cae

tests but awaited more, •
spo!ceswoman said.
Steve Schott, a COIIIin and Reds
executive vice president, said only
that the team and its management
appreciate the public's suppon
while Mn. Schou is ill.
At Pon Charlouc, Fla., Nolan
~yan pitched four hidess innings
and Ruben Sierra homered, tripled
and drove in four runs 10 lead the
Texas Rangers to a 9.() rout of the
Chicago White Sox. ~yan, 44,
struck out six and is unscored upon
in nine mnings this spring.
.
At Bradenton, Fla., Doug
Drabek and three other Pittsburgh
pitchers combined on a seven-hit
shuiOUI, as the Pirlltes defeated the
Minnesota Twins 6-0. Drabek, die
1990 National League Cy Young
Awitd winner, allowed two hits
over five innings and was followed
by Stan Belinda, Vicente Palacios ~·
and Mart Huismann. Andy Van ~
Slyke hit a two-run bomer and dou- :
bled for the Pirates.
·
:
At Port St. Lucie, Fla., Dave •
Eiland, Greg Cadaret and L'ce . 'l ·
Guetterman combined on a two-hit ,
shutout as the New York Yankees :
beat the Mets 2.0 in a split-squad ;
game. Eiland, the first Yankees •
pitcher to throw six .innings this :
spring, allowed two htts.and struck :
out two.
.
•
At Plant City, Fla., Dave Mar- J ·
tinez hit a solo homer to ignite •
Montreal's five-run sixth inning :
that sent the Expos to an 11-7 vic- ·:
tory over Cinctnnati. Jerry Goff ,
homered for Montreal in the sec- ,
ond and added an RBI double in '
die sixth. Barry . ~ !)it a threerun hOmer for the ~eds. who comI
milled sill errors.
AI Haines City, Fla., Eric Yeld- ••
ing singled home the go-ahead run :
in the lOth inning and scored on a :
single by Terry McGriff to lead the \
Hopston AstrOs 10 an 8-6 triumph 1
over Kansas City. Brian McRae, ,
die son of former Royals star, IJlld :
two hits, walked twtce and stole :
two bases.
•
At Dunedin, Fla., Gerald Perry '
hit a three-run homer and doubled
a$ the St. Louis Cardinals rode an ·
18-hit attack to an 11-3 trouncing
of T()I'Oilto.
At West Palm Beach, Fla., Jose .
Gonzalez and Jeff Hamilton each
hit a two-run single during the , .
Dodgers' six-run seventh inning in '
a 9-4 triumph over Atlanta. Los j'
Angeles had I 5 hits.
At Sarasota, Fla., Mike Flana- ,J
gan pitched five shutout innings ,.
and Bob Melvin doubled in two ,.
runs to lead the Baltimore Orioles '
to a 5-1 victory over the Detroit
Tigers in a split-squad game. .,
Flanagan gave up one hit and one
walk and struck out one. Cal ~ip- · '
·ken went3 for 4 IUid drove in a run "
for die Orioles.
· ·
At Fort Lauderdale, Fla., Hensley Meulens belled his third homer
this Spring to lead a Yankees split
squad to an 8-4 victory over a Bal- ,,_
timore split squad.
•
The game between die Califor- •
nia Angels and Seattle Mariners in I
Tempe, Ariz., was rained ouL

t

_Sports briefs.-

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MARCH 22-23
AND 24

- -·Local brie(s-....:.;.,,·EMs answers nine calls
Nine calls for assistance were answ\lfCCI by units of Meigs County Emergency Medical Services on Tueaday and early Wednesday
morning.
·
At 9:31 a.m., Pomeroy squad responded to Minersville for Nick
Ible, who was transported to to Holzer Medical Center. .
A 1:03 p.m., Ruiland squad went to Meigs l\line 31 for Gary
Acree. He was taken tQ Holzer. At 4:56 p.m., Middleport squad
went to Page Street for Kadie Webber, who was taken to Veterans
Memorial Rospital. At 6:12p.m., Middleport ftre department was
called to assist Gallia County EMS at a structure fire on Liltle
Kyger Road. Shortly dlereaftet, die call 10 assist was canceled. At
6:41 p.m., Rutland squad went to McCull)ber ~oad for Beulah Col·
tier, who was treated but not transported. At 8:05 p.m., Syracuse
squad responded to John Street for Norman Matson, who was taken
to Veterans.
.
At 12:37 a.m ., T11ppers Plains squad went to State Rpute 248 for .
a motor vehicle accident. Tuppers Plains unit transported Bob
Richardson to SL Joseph's Hospital. At4:37 a.m., Pomeroy squad
went to State Route 124 for Emily Pickens. Pickens was taken to
Holzer. At 6:39 a.m., ~ulland squad went to State Route 143 for
Elmer Hysell. HyseU was taken to Veterans.

Deputies investigate incidents
The Meigs County .Sherifrs Department reports that deputies
took two reports Sunday of damage to property.
The fmt report was received from Harold Rose of Racine, who
reported that subjects on four wheelers were damaging his property.
In addition, Pave Brickles of State Route 681 near Pomeroy
reported that windows in a house he owns on State Route 681 were
brokenouL
Meanwhile, John Marzocchi of Carpenter Hill ~oad reported
Tuesday that sometime during the past two or lhi'ee months, someone had stolen several pieces of lumber from his property and Vera
Stewart of Cheshire reported that within the last tWO' days someone
had stolen three three-font sections of white plastic fencing from her
yard.

Three individuals forfeited
bonds and three were fined in
Tuesday's court of Middleport
Mayor Fred Hoffman.
.
Forfeiting bonds were Charles
Lantz, McArthur, $460, physical
control under the influence; Debra
L. Bryan, Gallipolis, $56, speed;
and Jacldyn Spaun, Pomeroy, $50,

(R

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effect through Wednesday across
die Sierra Nevadl i'ange of California, including the eastern slopes of
the Sierra Nevada between Lake
Tahoe and Mammoth Mountain.
Snow advisories were posted for
late . Tuesdar and Wednesday
across Wyommg's western mountains. Half a foot of snow was
expected to accumulate by late in
the day Wednesday.
Forecasters were also watching
for winte.r storm conditions
Wednesday over southwestern and
central Montlllia. As much as a foot
· of snow could fall in die mountains
with lesser amounts at lower elevalions.

In the East, 1 big storm over
Quebec stirred winds but little precipitation across the Northeast ns
far south as New Jersey early .
Wednesday.
The wmds were expected to :
diminish liS the storm moved awa~, :
"but it will still be a windy day, ' · ·
said meteorolo$ist Edward Yan·
drich of the Nauonal Weather Ser •·
vice in New York. Temperatures
were 10 range from the 40s, down ,
to the 30s at the higher elevations
up north, with a mostly su,nny day ;
expected. ·
· :
"It will still be a nice day to •:
bring spring in," the forecaster :
added.
The season's official change •
would be at 10:02 p.m. EST, he'
said.
•

Despite...

Senior Kuwaiti officials and
Arab and foreign diplomats in
K~wait City told the newspaper
that intelligence reports showed a
methodical campaign by Iran to
replace Saddam with a friendly
Shiite Muslim government,
The offiCials also told the Times
that 30,000 Iraqi Shiites are taking

LEGALIIOTICE
The Public Utilities Com·
·mission of Ohio has sel tor
public hearing Case No.
91-02-EL-EFC, 'to review
lite fuel procurement practices and policies of Columbus Southern Power Com·
pany. the operation of hs
Electric Fuel Component
and related matters. This
hearing · is scheduled to
begin at 10:00 a.m. on
March 25, 1991, at the offices of the Public Utilities
COmmission, 180 East
Broad Street, Columbus,
Ohio 43266-0573.
All interested parties will ba
given an opportunity to be
.heard. Further information
may be obtained by contacting the Commission at
the above address.
THE PUBLIC UTILITIES
COMMISSION OF OHIO
By: Gary E. Vigorito,
Secretary. .

Lodge.announcement
Shade ~iver Lodge #453
Chester will hold special meetings
on Friday and Samrday. The meetin~ will be!Pn at 7 p.m. each night
wtth work tn the Master Mason
Degree, All Master Masons are
invited 10 attend. Refreshments will
be served.

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•

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PICWAYsuoEs SMARTBuys!
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FAMOUS
BRANDED
ATHLETICS-

Gov.
Voinovich
Continued
page 1
from

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Western Europe, meanwhile, more oil - 170 miUion barrels showed a surplus with the .United · than January, but the $3.9 billion
States of Sl.l billion, down from cost was still 15 million barrels less
$1.6 billion the previous month . .
than the 1990 average.
January exports, helped by
Crude oil prices fell in January
increases in sales of autos, industri- to $2.2.98 per barrel, down $2.72
al supplies, consumer goods, food from Dec.ember but $3.25 more
and beverages and a decrease .in than the 1990 average of $19.73.
exports in other goods, edged up
In the' non-petroleum sector,
' $1.2 billion from the previous January exports hit $33.5 billion
month.
with imports of $36.0 billion,
Imports, meanwhile, gained resulting in a deficit of $2.5 billion
$1.9 billiQfl over December with - $0.7 billion higher than Decemincreases in industrial supplies, ber's deftciL
cars, consumer goods and capilal
January non-petroleum imports
goods. Imports of food, beverage . were $1.8 billion higher than
and other merchandise virtually December imports of $34.2 billion.
unchanged.
Exports of manufactured. goods
The United States imported remained virtually unchanged over
December at $25.2 billion. Imports
Coatlnuedlrnmpagel
rose $0.5 biUion in that category.

part. in die revolt in southern Iraq,
in die south, but lighting goes on.
A report in The New York mostly in die cities of Blisra; KarTimes 'Wednesday said Iran has bala and Najaf, home lei many of
been arming and organizing Iraqi the country's Shiites.
Iraq has fought insurgents in the
rebels in an effon to depose Saddam, who waged a destructive south and a second rebellion led by
ei$ht-year war against its gulf Kurds in the north since its army
withdrew from Kuwait Feb. 28.
ne1ghborin the 1980s.

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WASHINGTON (UPI) :.....The
United States posted a merchandise
lr8de defteit of $7.0 billion in January, up $0.7 billion from December, the Commerce Department
reported Wednesday.
The gain was still subsllintially
less than November's massive '$8,9
billion deficit and about $0.5 bil·
lion less · than economis.ts had
expected.
Japan remained die United
States' biggest creditor. The U.S.
trade ~licit with Japan rose 10$3.5
billion. The U.S. deficit with the
Organization of Petroleum Exponing ~unDies was $2.0 billion, up
froin $1.9 billion the previous
month.

members were torn between the
possibility of trying to IU'J'llllge for
the governor's visit i~ Toledo ail~
I~
being in Cleveland w•th the president
the same day. A previous
SJiec,d.
presidential
visit scheduled in
Fined were Edward P. Holcomb, Cleveland earlier
this month also
Ewington, $427 and .costs plus
was
canceled,
although
the White
three days j~il. physical control; House never confirmed either
date.
Amy C. Wolfe, Pomeroy, $10'fme
One
possibility
the
governor's
only, no operator's license; and
Jason J. Davis, Bidwell, $16 and office considered was to postpone
the Toledo event, but Camper
costs, speed.
acknowledged that such a mc!ve
would anger some people in northwest Ohio.
,
The governor's schedule
includes a reception at the UniverCarron Wyatt, Albany, $55, speed. sity of Toledo for various gove"!·
Fined were Chris Lee, Syracuse, ment offictals, followed by a cabt·
$21~ and costs, shoplifting; John net meeting and hearing at the Stu·
Hill, Middleport, $113 and costs, dent union.
public intoxication, and $88, consuming alcohol under age 21;
Phillip Laudermilt, Shade, $113
and costs, public intoxication; and
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Doreen Smith, Pomeroy, $63 and
WEDNESDAY ADMISSIONS
costs, expired registration.
-None.
WEDNESDAY DISCHARGES
• Carl A. Cummings, Zelia Taylor,
,
Walter ~oush, and Burwell McKCalendar. Bring birth certificate inney.
copy if one has not already been
provided. Sign up fee is $12.50 for
boys and $7.50 for girls.
South Central Ohio
Revival1nnounced
Occasional
showers and a
A pre-Easter revival at the Vanchance
of
thunderstorms
Wednesderhoof l!aptist Church is planned
day
night,
with
a
low
in
die
upper
· for March 27-29. The Rev. Ward
40s.
Chance
of
rain
is
80
percent.
Robinson of the Porterfteld Baptist
Partly cloudy and a chance of
Church will be the evangelisL Spe- showers
and thunderstorms Thws·
cial singing nightly.
day, with highs between 60 and 65.
Chance of rain is 30 percent. ·
Plaa couatry music night
· Oh 1o extended forecll5t
. Country Music Night at die LotFriday through Sunday
tndge Community Center will be ·
A chance of rain each day.
held Saturday from 6 p.m. 10 mid- Highs will range from the 60s to
night. ~efreshments available. All the low 70s Friday, and from the
bands are welcome,
mid 50s to the mtd 60s Saturday
and Sunday. Overnight lows will
range from the mid 40s to the mid
50s Friday and Sunday morninjl.
and ftom tile ·upper 30s to the m1d
Wendell Frecker ·
40s early Samrday.
Wendell Frecker, 87, former
Meigs County resident, died early
Tuesday morning, March 19, 1991,
~PRI'iG VAllEY CINEMA
at a nursing home in Dayton. .
446 4514
' .
Graveside services will be held
SJ.IIIIMUI• •TIJII[S SA'MID•U 6 SUMDIY
Thursday at 2:30 p.m. at Meigs
S:UO UIIAJN IIIGHf TUISDll't'
Memory Gardens with Rev. Laura
Leach Shreffier oft"JCiating.
Arrangements are being handled
by a Dayton area funeral home.
'

· A stotm that produced from 3·to
4 inches of snow Tuesday in mountain passes across Oregon was
expected to brin$ up 10 anolber 4
inches before ending.
Also a snow advisories was
posted Tuesday night across the
southetn mountains of Utah, where
from 3 to 6 inches of snow were
expected overrtighL
Overnight snow advisories were
also in effect over the Sierra Nevada at Yosemite Park in California
and norihward. Advisories for
snow and wind were in effect Tuesday .night and Wednesday over
parts of northwestern California.
A winter storm watch was in

January trade deficit hits $7.0 billion

Middleport Mayor's court news

REEBOK • ADIDAS • ETONIC • JORDACHE
EVERLAST • L.A. GEAR • PONY • WNY MORE
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Pomeroy Mayor's court news
Four individuals forfeited bonds
and four were fined in the court of
Pomeroy Mayor Richard Seyler on
Tuesday evening.
Forfeiting 11onds were.Lona ~if­
fie, Pomeroy, SSO, no insurance
and financial responsibility, and
$4 3, left of center; ~andall Anns,
Pomeroy, $4S, speed; Tonya
Wooten, Cheshire, $47, speed; and

.

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Coaches to meet
The Middleport Youth League
will have a coaches meeting at
Middlepon Village Hall on Thursday a1 6:30 p.m. Anyone interested
in coaching IS invited to attend.
Ritual Tut$day
The Ohio Eta Phi Chapter, Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority, will have its
~itual of Jewels Tea at the home
Susan Clark on Tuesday at 6:30
p.m. Members bring a potluck dish.
Slgnup slated Saturday
·
Sign-up for Racine Youth
League, junior and senior girls and
Pony League will be held Saturday
from 10 a.m. to noon, not 6-8 p.m.
as listed in today's Community

AT&amp;T ................................... 341/4
Bob Evans ............................ 18 3/4
Charming Shop..................... l4 1/4
City Hotding ......................... l4 1J1
Federal Mogul ..................... .15 718
Goodyear 'f&amp;~ .....................zI 5/8
Key ·centarion ............................ 12
Lands' End .........,.................21 1/8
Limited Inc........................... 25 1/4 ·
Multimedia Inc .....................71 1/8
Rax Reslattran1 ..........................7/8
~obbins&amp;Myers ...................2S 3/4
Shooey's Inc ............................... 15
sw B8nk •.....•.....•.....•.•......•...•....21
Wendy lnt'l. ................................. 9
WorthingtDn Ind...................22 3/4

The Leading Creek ConseMncy District hu J'CI)orted that a Johnson Portable Radio PM Transmit·
ter, Model S661, has been lost in
the vacinity d the Rou1e1 124 and
32S 111m-off. If found, please return
itiD the LCCD.

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Hospital news

-Meigs announcements--

LCCD reports lost item

423-7621
Fri. 9-7
Sat. 9·4

WEATHER MAP • A low pressure system iD Cllifomia will
briDg l'llin 1nd thundershowers to the rqloa as it IDOVts Into lbe
Soalbwest. The Norlbwest will be partly cloudy. A Low pressure
will move into lbe Plains, bria(llng wilb it raia •ucl scattered tbuderstorms IS it moves nortbeastM (UPI) ·

B7 Ualted Prealaternadonal
Windy winter storms moved
1C1011S the western United SlltCS on
Wednesday as the season drew 10 a
close and residents looked for the
arriYII of spring.
A higb wind watch was in effect
Tuesday night and Wcdnesday for
parts of Colorado. Advisories for
snow with blowing and drifting
snow were posted overnight over
the mountains of Colorado, the
National Weather Service said.
A winter storm warning was in
effect for Tueaday night over the
higher elevations of northern Arizona. As much as 6 inches of snow
were··expected to fall before the
precipitation tapered off.

.....,, .

I.,.! ''

Reebokilt 460011 Leather
Hi-Top. Men's sizes 7-12.
Reg. 49.99, sale 39.99.

Jordache® Leather Mid-Hi
Cross Trajner. Men's sizes
6 1h-13. Reg. 29.99, oale 24.99.

Adldasilt Leather CoW1
Oxford. Men's sizes 7-13.
Reg. 44.99, sale 34.99.

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Weather

Stocks
· ·
Am Ele Power ......................27 1/2 Area deaths
Ashland Oil ..............;......... 32 1/8

•Plywood Floors
•Salf Storing
Storm Windows

&lt;if the Week!

-. CORN DOG

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t' \

anxinc
·
Three Goodwill Games champions headline the Soviet boxing 11
team that will compete in the 1991 .•·
USA-USS~ dual meet March 28 at
'
Spokane, Wash.: light mid- ...
dleweight Israel Akopkokhian,
light welterweight Konstantin Tziu
and super heavyweight Evgeny
Belousov.

111· Second St., Pamtroy
YOU.I INDEPENDENT.
AGENTS SEIYING
MEIGS COUNTY

1he Dally Sentinel-Page 5

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio •

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WOMEN'S PUMPS AND FLATS
Choose from classic pumps and flats in
aU the latest fashion colors. Plus stylish
two tonea, cutouts and more! Women's
sizes 6-11, some atyles available in
wide width.' Also available In sizes 5, 5Y.o,
12 and 13 at many Picway atote1.

EVEN IF YOU MISSED OUR SPRING BOOKLET, YOU DON'T HAVE TO MISS OUR SMARTSavings!
Clip and save on regular priced items with valuable Picway coupons below!

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GOOD USa
WASHERS, DIYEIS,
IEFIIGEUTOIS, TYs,
GAS &amp; ELIC. UNGES

.....
,•

-.

open
I M•t•nllhta and Sundayo •
CLOSED J!ASTI!R SIJNDAY

COUNTY
APPLIANCES

. •'·.' ',
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627 3nl ..... 8111111111

Pl. 446·16"

OHIO RIVER PLAZA- RT. 7, GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

lOUIS: I AJL.6 P.M.

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Page 6 The Dallv Sentinel

BIG BEND

•

Your Locally Owned,
Low Priced ·Supermarket

I Neme: ,, .. ,,,,,, ,,, , ,, ,H , ,,,, ·, , , , , , , ,,, ,. u o••• · • l

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Adcir-: .............. .... .... ;..................

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I Phone: .. ... ..... ........ .... ..... ............ .... ~

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We Salute Our Troops!!!
And· A Big WELCOME HOME!!

I

No Purch..e Ntceaury.

Muat be 18 years old or older. 1
Drawing Sat .. Mar. 30, 1991 I

-------------------1

HOLLY, FARMS.MIXED

FRYER PARTS

LB.
SWIFT PREMIUM--,.2 LB. PAKS

TURKEY ROAST ~.~~·.~~~; 2

j$

s

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99
LAMB CHOPS ....If. 1
USDA CHOICE .

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The
Daily
Sentinel
-

By The Bend

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Wednesday, March 20, 181t

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Pege

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· ~Tea

Community calendar

and . stomach cancer
link -.not much evidence

, QlJESTIO~ • My fadler passed
·away from stomach cancer. A
friend asked if he had been a lea
· drinker because he said tea ·can
• cause this diseaac. My falher drank
: four or five glasses of iced tea
• every day for years. Could this
• have actually caused his cancer'l
: ANSWER • This is 1111 impor:·tant question because of the large
number of individuals who con: sume 'tea on a regular buia. 'The
· Chinese and Japanese drink even
• inore tea per person thai we Ameri·
; cans do, so they should have a
· greater risk of $10111ach CIUICCf. And
'as you might guess, they do,
.indeed, succumb to this ·type of
· Cllllccr more often. When compar. in~ the diseaac mtes of populalioos
wJth different dietary habits is
always interesting, it doesn't tell
you much about the cause. Other
kinds of research are needed for
ihat, and there· have been many
~tudies performed by researchers
from around the world to try to dis·
l:over if there really is any link
between ~ drinking and develop·
ment of stomach cancer. In this
column, I'll try to give you a sum·

Community Calendar Items
appear two days before u event
and the day ol tbat event. Items
must be received weD In advance
to assure publication In the cal·
endar.

Ohio University
College of Osteopathic Medicine

WEDNESDAY .
RUTLAND - The Rutland
Fieewill Baptist Church will have
revival through Saturday with
Robert Stewart. Paul Taylor, pas·
tor, invites the public.

Family ·
Medicine

RACINE • The Racine
MethOdist Church will have.a soup
supper on Wednesday at 3 p.m.
Sll!ldwiches and pic will aJso be
available. Proceeds will be used IIi
purchase a new po~ in,ower.

John C. Wolf, D.O.
Associate Professor
of Family Medicine

Springs Better Health Club will
meet at the home of Helen Black·
Ston on Thursday at 1 p.m.
RACINE • The Racine Ameri·
can Legion Post 602. will meet
Thursday at 7:30p.m.
pOMEROY • The Meigs County Democratic Executive Committee will meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m.
at the Carpenter's Hall in Pomeroy.
POMEROY - The Belles and
Beaus Western.Square Dance Club
will hold a special dance on Thurs. day from 8-11 p.m. at Royal Oak
Resat. National caller Gary Shoe·
maker of Tennessee will be the
caller,

Ronn ie Wood will be the caller.:
Publi~ invited. _ ,
~

·.•

SATURDAY
RACINE - Sign-up for Racine:
Youih League, junior and seniorgirls and Pony League will be Sat~
urc:.-l:rfiom
6-8 e.m. at the Racine;
Ki
garten bUilding. Bring birlhceriificate copy if one has not:
already been provided. Sign-up feeis $12.50 for boys and S7.SO for:
girls.
:
•
lUPP;ERS PLAINS - :Ibere wilJ:
be a bake sale at St. Paul Uniled:
Methodist Church in TuppertPlains on Saturday from 9-11 a.m. :

an:

RUTLAND · There will be
organizational meeting of the Rut·:
l1111d Baseball League on Saturday·
.at the Rutland American Legion:
Hall at noon . All parents and:
coaches are urged to ai1Cnd.
•
•
•
POMEROY • "Ben and Me " ~
and "Gilly the Salamander" will be:
presented at the. Meigs County:
Public Ubrary in Pomeroy on Sat··
urday at 2 p.m. All area children::
are invited to attend.
:

dence of stomach ciUICCr .between
RACINE • There will be a sup·
LONG BOTIOM • Jerry_i.Col·
tea drinkers with a one-or twopon
group meeting for those affectwill be at the ML Olive Com·
cup-a-day habit and those who trell
ed
by
the ()ulf War on Thursday at
mUl)ity Church in Long Bottom oo
drank larger amOUJ!IS of tea. I Wednesday
7
p.m
. at the Racine United
7 p.m. Pastor
would expect· those who drank Lawrence Bushatinvircs
Methodist
Church;
the public.
mor.e tea to develop cancer more
RUTI.AND. The Rutland Fire
FRIDAY
frequently, if there was a simple
cause-effect relationship between Department Auxiliary will meet
POMEROY • The Pomeroy
tea and stomach cancer.
Wednesday at 7:30p.m. at the fire Senior Citizens will have a round
Japanese medical researchers house.
and square dance on Friday from 8·
have also looked into this problem.
11 p.m. at the Senior Citizens CenA study conducted by the School of
THURSDAy
ter. t-fusic will be provided by the
Medicine, Fukuoka University,
ROCK SPRINGS. The Rock Happy Hollow Boys of Athens.
LONG BOTIOM . There wiDe:
found that individuals who drank
The public is invited to attend. a spring sm!)fgasbord dinner at thC•
10 ot more cups of green tea each
Those attending bring snacks for · Long Bottoni Community Building:
day had a lower, not higher, risk of
USSe . S VaCatiOn ' the snack table.
on Saturday at 5 p.m. Cost is $5 for';
stomach cancer.
Pearl L Russell, Racine, and · _:_
adults and $2.50 for child.ren ."
W'e humans have a varied diet Mr. lind Mrs. Aoyd (Kendra Rus·
MIDDLEPORT - The Middle· Menu includes ham, turkey and!
and are exposed to other things, sell) Chapman, Pickerington, port Presbyterian ChUrch will hold dressing, homemade noodles,:
like tobacco smoke 1111d polluted returned recently from a vaclition a bake sale 1111d bazaar at the Sears desserts 1111d drinks. Public invited. ~
Plans were made to hold an asked io help defray the expenses city air, which can change the. risk in Aorida.
·
Store in Middleport on Friday from -·
j
open meeting and potluck on A)Iil beginning thts year.
of stomach cancer. In order to
During this vacation, the Chap- 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Proceeds will be
POINT PLEASANT • The~
Members reported ill are Homer lessen the impact of these other mans, along with Mrs. Russell, used for the repair of the church MGM Boy Scout District wiD havC:
11 when the Rock Springs Grange
met recently. Members are to being Radford, Dan Betzing and Pat factors on their results. researchers were guests of Aleta Lynn, Russell doors.
a rain gutter regaua on Saturday at:
Holter. Sympathy was extended 10 in the NetherliUids have studied the Burton and dau~hter, Erika Lbnn
items for the auction.
the Point Pl~asant Junior High•
link
in
a
more
controlled
A
d
ill
POMEROY
·
Spring
revival
ai
School
mstration WI'll be••
at 9·.·cancer-tea
Barbara Fry reported on the . Mr. IUid Mrs. Charles Blakeslee.
. Th h
I ked 1 h
Burton, OriUige ity, a., lUI
C
Chri
. RCe•
em
· Refreshments were served by settmg. ey ave oo
a ow Wells, Deltona. Aa.
the Pomeroy burch of
'st will a.m. All cub scouts in the district:&lt;
county contests, quilt block and
lawn ornament. An apple crisp bak· Barbara Fry 1111d Frances Goeglein. tea interacts .,vith cells in tissue cui·
The Chapmans spent several be held Friday through Sunday at 7 can participate. Call 675-4439 or.;
Pat Holter c.onducted the pro- ture and what hai?pens when tea is days in Key West. Aa. Mrs. Rus- p.m. nightly. Tom Lawson, a pro- 675-6677 for infonnation.
-ing contest will also be held April
~
•
'led
h
dda
hte
d
fessor
at
Kentucky
ChristiiUI
Col·
' 11.
~ on friendship with readings, given to living nuce. These experi·
11
1111
oreen tea se
vasa Mr. 1111d
er 1'1!11
ug r Lisa Ie11e wa·11 b e Ihe speaker. Andy·
SYRACUSE • The class o ,,.
~
The Pomona Grange will hold a 'The . Tie That Binds," by Pat ments have shown that .,.
family,
Mrs. Jeffery
.bake sale in May and the county Holter and that song was sung; .extract -may actually reduce the Anne Burton) Gage, Joshua and Miles, minister, invites the public.
1971 of Southern High School willj
~ge biUiquet will be April S at "Little Sproutst by ~ancy Radcancer risk. .
Shayfer Lynn Gage, Orlando, Aa.
meet at the home of Barbara· ,
United States institutions have
TUPI'ERS PLAINS ·There will Brown. 1191 College Road, Syra-~
Salisbury School.
ford, Barbara Fry ll!ld Helen Blackbe a round and square dance on cuse, on Saturday to make pl1111s fo.-.
Communications were read ston; "To a Friend," by Kathryn not been left out this growing confrom Ohio State Grange noting the Miller; "Friendship" by Pat Holter; fusion. Studies done by the Boston
Friday from 8-11:30 p.m. at the its ~Oth reunion. Any interested~
.
Tuppers Plains VFW Building fea- graduates are invited 10 attend. ,for:
National Grange Convention in· and "My First 1111d Best Friend" by University School of Medicine 1111d
the Lou1siana State University
tunng Rocky Mountain Bluegrass. more information eall992-7496.
peveliUid in' 1993. The granges are all members. ·
Medical Center have found the
The Alfred United Methodist
safety of drinking tea to be in a Church will hold Easter Sunrise
state of "limbo" - the data neither services at 6:30 a.m. Ruth Brooks
shows that tea is a cause of cancer and Susan Pullins will be program
• The Racine First Baptist Church in that state as well as Ohio and nor does it give tea a "clean bill of leaders: Eas~ breakfast wm fol·
·
· · · low tin.d ~ 1egg , liunt for lhf c)aif· ' ·
.i.v'ill have revival servtces Sunday Kentucky; He received a bachelor• · health."
h March 28 at 7:30 p.in . of arts from Mercer University, a ' So, today the answer to your dren will be after Sunday ~chool.
master of divinity from Columbia question is that your father's tea The public is invited.
!lig!!tly
Upchu~ch, pastor of Theological. ~minary and a doc·
drinking JX'I)bably did_not cause his
Eloise and Russell Archer were
~;~~~! Bapttsl
Church ; • toratc ·of mm1stry from Southern cance.r. Researchers ~Y someday congratulated by all the church
Jwill be the evangelist. He Baptist Center for Biblical StUdies. find a subtle connection between when they transferred their mem·
leach 'a bible study each He and his wife, Mae, reside in stomach cancer and tea drinking, bership to Alfred on March 17.
: JII~II'Jiil~l! d1urin1g the week at 10 a.m.
Lebanon.
·
but the research to date convinces They were also congratulated on
urch is a nativE .9f
~publicis invited to attend.
. me. that there are seve~al things_. -their_45th we_dding anniversa.ry.
- --1J&lt;eorgia.-ile has jjiSlDrciJCilurclies
wh1ch have a stronger mfluence. Members of their family attending
.
.
.
The use of alcohol and tobacco were their children and families,
clearly increases the risk of Stom· Joyce St. Clair and Stephanie, Lanl
•
ach cancer. Industrial pollutllllts in cuter; Mary Lou and Jim Archer,
drinking water can cause stomach Jonathan. Lindsay and Sammie
' Several announcements were for the closing entitled, ''Tell Him and other·cancers. In the "big pic· Lou, Springfield; Jackie and Eric
lOSE'S
IUSSELL STOVU
made at the recent meeting of the So."
ture,p then, tea drinking doesn 't Brooks, Erin and Jody, New
PEANUT BUTTER
,Harrisonville Order of the Eastern
Marshfield; and Eloise's brother
The blessing was given by seem to be much ofa risk.
Star with Jan'et Bolin , worthy .Harold Rice before potluck refreshand wife, Clarence and Iris Warner •
EGGS
,. matron, and Charles King, worthy ments w.ere served. Foods contain"Family Medicine" Is a weekly· Athens.
· , REG. 45&lt;
patton, in charge.
REG. 40'
. ing the color green were served in eolumn. To submh questions,
Clara Follrod is recovering at
•
write to John C. Wolfe, D.O., home following a slay in Veterans
1 The Roberta Circle, will meet honor of St. Patrick's Day.
· April 21 at Chesterhill in the · Get well cards were signed for Ohio University College of Osteo· Memorial Hospital.
ONLY
Methodist.Church.
Amber Warner, Lois Pauley, Ivy pathic Medicine, Grosvenor Hall,
ONLY27C
Wilbur Robinson is a patient at
Athens, Ohio 45701.
An invitation to tbe wedding _Johnson and Bernice Nelson.
Camden-Clark Hospilal.
anniversary of Mr. and Mrs. Keith
Staneart on April? was read.
Alfred n~s
: It was noted that Margaret
IUSSELL STOYEI
McNobb is the grand representaPam 1111d Richard Yost, Aaron
RUSSELL STOVER
•
and
Sarah;
'visited
his
parents,
Uve.
•
PEANUT BUTTER
3 EGG PACK
. The sunshine collection was Maxine and Delbert Yost, Lancast·
RABBIT
taken by Rosalie King.
er.
REG.
99•
.; Birthdays observed were - - - - - - - - - 1,,.
REG. 65•
Pauline Atkins, Fred George, Doug
The United States launched the
first weather satellite. Tiros I. April
:Bishop 1111d Rosalie Story.
ONLY
The worthy matron read a poem I. 1960,
mary Of what.we knoW and don't
know about this question.
A large study done by the
Department of Health in Taipei,
Taiwan, revealed that individuals
who developed stomach cancer
were more likely 10 drink green tea
as well as smoke tobacco and drink
alcoholic beverages than people of
similar age and sex who did not
have cancer. A study conducted by
the University of Edinburgh, UK,
revealed Similar findings. However, neither of tllese studies found a
significant difference in the inci·

R

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:Rock Springs Grange meets

Alfred notes

Revival set at Racine

Swisher-Lohse

.·. PHARMACY
YOUR ·

. Es11e1
Hesdqus11e11

';t!am'SOflVt'lle happent'ngs

CREAM EGGS

33 (

HAPPY·EASTEA·SAL

- - ··

A~oo~,~:
6

.AT HOOD FAMILY SHOES

..

HIGH SCHOOL CLASS RINGS

MOISTURIZING

69C

THURSDAY THRU SATURDAY
LADIES DRESS SHOES

20°/o

STYLING PRODUCTS

IUSSELL STOVU

JELLY BEANS

OFF

12

ONLY

•

Naturalizer • Hush Puppy • D.

~yer

OFF
MEN'S DRESS SHOES .

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SUNDAY;

MARCH 24,
1991.

EASTER SUNDAY MARCH 31, 1991

'I
r

I

�. . ...
~

Page 8 The Dally Sentinel

I

l Mayor Tom Bradley said from
lfonolulu that after secmg the tran~pts he believes for the first lime
t~al there may be a pattern of
rfcism within the deparrment, an
allegation under invesli$,ation by
HveraiiiCncies and angnly denied

ttGalel·
, Blldley said last week he was

still considering whether to name

ail independent llli'ICI with subpoe· ·

ni powers 10 SIUdy police brutality.
but said he is unauthorized to
appoint a commiaec with subpoena
powen.
. The tapea of !he police conversations showed apparent bigotry
and callousness 10ward the King

beating.
"I haven't beaten anyone this
bad in a lona time," read a com·
puJel ineaqe ftam the sqUid
car assignc4 10 olfic:en Laurence
M. PaweD and Timodly W'lllll. who
have since been indicted on &lt;:Onti~ assault c:harpl Slemming &amp;om
the beating.

.

.,

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

~

_.. ......
_

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EXETER, N.H. (UPI) - Pamela Smart sparred with a poaec11~«,
tcpcaledl~ting his wenions that she ~ed her tccnqC lover
and his
into mJadering her husband.
·
Undu crosa-exunination tor a second day, Sman. 23, testirJCd
Tuclday tbat her admiaion on a secretly recorded converaation that
she knew about the munlc:r ahead of time was •'a fabrication' • aimed at
fiJldiaa out liiOIC about die caac.
·
·
Smart, a former high school media director who has acknow~
she bad an affair with a 16-year-old Sb.ulent, admitled she had
a
lot of mistakes. But she insisted that killing her husband was not one of
them.
"If I was 811ilty, 1 would have plca4ed guilty and plea-bargained
with the rest of them," she aaid, referring to the three yout~Js who have
all pleaded guilty to rediiCed charges in the case.
· ..
·
. Rocldngllam County Superior Court.Judge Douglas Gray ordered
the jury to disregard that statement
Smart is accused of manipulating her young lover and his two
friends iniO ldlling her husband of less tlian one r-. Gregory Smarr, a
24- year-Old insurance salesman, was shot in the head in the couple's
Derry condominium last May 1.
,
The three youths who confessed to .the slaying all testified aaainst
Smart in a case that has attracted nationwide attention and caused" llun·
dreds of specta!Ors to pack into the Rockingham County courthouse
· each day.
The young widow ~ the stand in her own ~fense and S))C!lt a
seeond day Tuesday fending off a barrage of quesuons and accusaaons
from pro~utor I&gt;Jiul Maggiotto aimed at shaking her credibility widl
the jury. The defense later rested i~ case and closing arguments were
scheduled for Wednesday morning. Jurors could get !he case as soon as
Wednesday afternoon.
. ·
Last week, ·the jury listened to a seri~s of tapes of secretly recorded
conversations between Smarr and Cece!m Pierce, 16, her student mtcrn
at Winnacunnet High School. The tapes were made in June and July,
after the three teens had been arrested and investigators had begun to
suspect Smart had orchestrated her husband's murdC:r.
On those tapes, Smart, was beard making st;atements that apparently
showed that she had knowledge of a previous attempt on Gregory
Smart's life. But on the wimess stand, .the young widow insisted she
made the statements intentionally beCause she believed that Pierce was
. involved in the murder and she wanled to find out what she knew.
"I told (Cecelia) that I knew about it beforehand, and that was a
rotaJ fabrication," Smart said.
Smart sai&lt;l she was trymg to conduct.her own investigation into !he
murder of her husband because police were not telling her anythmg
about the case.
·
·
. ..
''I wanted 10 slilve it in .my own mind fust;" she SBid. .At some
point. obviously. I would have gone to the J;Kllice with iL"
· Under questioning by Maggiotto, an assistant state attorney general •.
Smart admitted that she concealed from police her love affair with 16year-old William Flynn of Seabrook because she was not proud of her
actions. She said after Flynn, Patrick Randall and Vance Lattime Jr.
were arrested on June II, she did not believe that they .had anylhmg to
do with !he crime.
·
.
Maggiotto hammered away at her failure IO' disclose the affau,
accusing her of lying to inyesligatOrs.
· She blamed her aelions on stress in the wake of the murder.
"J was scared and I was 22 years ol~," she said..
· .
.
Sinan replied "yes'' when MaggJOUo asked 1f she conunued to
keep the affair a secret rather than help the police by telling what she
knOw·about the crime. She said that was a mistake. but again said &amp;he
had nothing to do with the murder.
.
"When something like this happens people don 'i always act correctly, they don't always act rationally;: Smart said. "I ~sed very~
judgment and I'm sony for that, but I d1d not have anythmg to do w1th
the murdei of my husband."
.
The courthouse in southeastern New Hampshire was under ught
security because of two bomb threats that were called in before the trial
resumed Tuesday morning. A bomb·sniffin~ dog was used to ch~k the
building, but '!0 bomb was found and the tnal got under way on. ume,

..

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Shutt'e crew practices launch
CAPB CANAVERAL, Fla.
(UPI) - A dress-rehearsal c,Ountdown for the shuule Atlantis tic:ted .
into its rmal hours Wednesday, setting the uge for blas!Off April S
on a flight 10 put a $617 million ·
space obecrvatory inro orbiL
Wearing bright orange spacesuits, Atlantis's four-man, onewoman crew planned to strap in
aboard the $2 billion orbiter for the
final hours of !he mock COIDitdown
in a traditional test to make sure the
astronauts and ·ground crews are
ready for the real thing.
''We're getting excited," shut:
tie .w~ Steven N8l!el said at the
Tucsday."'Thc Atlantis ·
is looking great, it's ready to go."
·If all goes well, Nagel, 44, copilot Kenneth Cameron, 41, Linda
Godwin, 38, Jerry Ross, 43, and
Jay Apt, 41, will blast off on the
year's fust· shunle miSsion at 9:18
a.m. EST on AprilS.
But the outlook is less clear for

1aunc"'hj;d

-

procedures~.

a piiMUicd May mission by the llhut- with reporters Tuesday. "We've
de Columbia after a deciaioJI Tuea- got an observa!Ory to look back to.
day to disassemble the ahi!,'s the beginning of time and we're
boosters because of data i.ndiCLIIg ~ing io go do the ru-st (spacewalk)
an apparen.t problem with the way tit five and a half rears. I thinlc it's
the bases of ihc rockets were boiled .going 19 be great •
to their mobile launch platform.
The Gamma Ray Observatory iS
NASA spokesman Richard the second of four Hubble Space
Young said the problem mi~t rest Telescope-class "great observ~ro ­
with ground measuring eqwpment ries" being launched in an
and not with the roc~cts' assembly. unprecedenled program to revoluWorlr.l!l mate sure was expecUid ID tionize humanity's knowledge of
take several days and it wu nbt the universe.
immcdialely knowo what impact, if
The 35,000-pound ''(JRO' ·
any, it might have on Columbia's . satellite. the heaviest payload ever
planned talceoff around May 25 on . carried into space aboard a shuttle,
a Spacelab mission.
is scheduled to be released from
In the meantime, Atlantis is on Atlantis on the third day of the misschedule for launch next month on sfon.
a high-profile mission featuring the
The day after that, Ross and Apt
fust U.S. spacewalk in more than plan to don spacesuits and carry out
five years and the deployment of a six-hour s~cewalk to evaluate
!he Gamma Ray Observatory satel· various space station construction
l,te.
techniques. II will be the firs1
"We're not doing anythin~ that s~ by American astnJnauts
gets me exciled much.'• Apt JOked smce !he Challenger diSaster.

. NASA originally hoped to kick
off 1991 by launching the shuttle
Discovery March 9 on a ".Star
Wars" research mission.
But that flight was postponOil
after engineers discovered cracks.in
the hinge mechanisms of critic'al
fuel line doors in the belly of tlie
orbiter that must close properly in
space to aUow a safe re-entry.
Similar cracks later were found
in the hinges of Atlantis, Columbia
and even Endeavour, which has nOt
yet flown in space.
':
In Atlantis's case, engineers
decided the cracks were .too smiill
to eause any problems and the shut•
tie was cleared for flight.
·
" .
Discovery's hinges are being
replaced by lhose taken fronl
Columbia, which have been
repaired. Columbia, in turn, wi\1
receive Endeavour's repaired
hinges and Endeavour ultimately
will gel Discovery's. ·
,.
•,

House panel passes Dem.o crats' civil rights bill
. WASHING10N (UP!) ~ Con- leaders in Congress. The commitgressional Democrats moved a step tee also turned back five .limendcloser 10 a another showdown with ments sponsored by Republicans
President llush over civil rights that contained parts of the l!dminislegislation, as a · House panel tration plan.
·
approved a Democratic measure to
The bill BW,fOVed in commiuee
protect workers against job bias is virtually 1dentical to one that
after rejecting the administration's passed both the House and Senate
narrower version.
last October, but was vetoed by the
ThC House Judiciary Committee president, who said the measure
voled 24-10 Tuesday 10 send 10 !he would force employers 10 institute
full House legislation intended 10 hiring quotas to avoid discrill\ina•
end discrimination and harassme!lt lion claims. Tht' Senate failed by
against women and minorities in one vote to override !he veto:
the workplace by making it easier
The panel's vote on the·measure
for an employee to sue an employer followed three hOIU'S of largely parand win damages. The measure tisan sniping over whether the
would reverse or modify a·series of Demociauc version iS, as Republi- ,
recent Supreme Court rulings that cans claim; "a quota bill."
made it more difficult for a worker
"In its continuing resistance 10
to win discrimination· claims in · making the workplace completely
coun.
free of discrimination treatment, .
By a voice vote, the commiuee the adminiStration has conjured !IP,
dismissed the civil rights bill the inflammatory word :quota,' •
backed by Bush and Republican

the ·committee chairman, Rep. Jack
Brooks, D-Texa~. sat"d. .. ...That' s
hogwash or worse. They know it
and you know iL II gets good pres~:
It gets people's haclcles up. B~! tt ·
doesn't honestly state the tSsuc. ·
"The real issue is that corporations fear that discriminatory practices wiD result in lawsuits, which
they may lose," Brooks added.
"Losing wiD cost dollars and cents;
hurt the bouom line, hurt their
stock dividends - mayb~ their
bQnuses; maybe their golden
parachptes ...
But Rep. Henry Hyde, R•I!I;•
said the meal!ure would result m a
color conscious society" by crcating a presumption of guilt "~
only on crude race or gender staUs- .
tical imbalances in the workplace."
Hyde · told his committee collea$ues, "I strongly suggest you
rev1ew the ethnic, racial, religious

·~.
•

and gender makeup of your office
and committee staffs. And shoulil
you be hiring or promoting, consuk
the raw statistics. Don't bother
measuring skillS, experience, train•
ing or quality of education, motivation or anything else. Forgo the
search for excellence or you'll be
personally sued.''
::'
Three Republicans, including
the panel's ranking GOP membet,
Rep. Hamilton Fish of New Yo&lt;k',
voted for the Democratic measure.
Ail 21 panel Democrats voted for ·
the legislation.
.
,The bill requires employers 10
prove the necessity. of h1ring stan;
da.rds that appear to be race or gender neutral but effectively exchide
women and minorities from
advancing in their jobs. The bill
also provides white women tllll
same remedies available for racia)
minorities who are discriminatioh
victims.
·-

..

Senate explores plight of black men in cities -.~:
.

..,_.

WASHINGTON (UPI)...,... The
dismal statistics about black men in
cities rattled off at a Senate hearing
were staggering, but the problem
was best sumnwized by the story
of Anthony Riggs, who dodged the
risks of the Persian Gulf War only
to return home to Detroit and be
gunned down b}' a robber.
"This trag1c event is all too
common for young black men.
Homicide is thC! leading cause of
death for. all black males between
the ages of 20 and 29.'' said Sen.

Donald Riegle Jr., D-Mich., chair-

Pilots say visibility plummeted
'just seconds before ·collision_ _~

...992-2156

HOLZER CLINIC

"The Day He Wore My Crown"

MORTON SALT

- ..

of young males are having extreme
"Nonetheless I don't make tljil{
man .of the Senate Committee on difficulty staying clear of the law ... case to argue that ·we shouldn't dQ
Banking, Housing and Urban millions are having no problem something. But rather, when we dt)
Affairs, which held the Tuesday whatsoever making babies," he it, and if we do it, I don't think we·
hearing on the plight of black men said, noting the out-of-wedlock can expect miraculous gains." th~
and black families.
birthrate for blacks has doubled in · GOP senator said to the DemocratVir~inia Gov. Douglas Wilder, the last 20 years.
·
ic governor.
.
the nauon's fU'St elecled black govSamuel Myers Jr., director of
Sen. Terry San "ford, D-N.C.',
ernor, said a war is raging in the the University of Maryland's Afro- said the newly organized 21st Censtreets of America and resulting in American Studies Program, con· tury Commission on Africa!),
a disappearing generation of young tended the problem of black men is American Males - a group of
black males.
··
due, ill parr. to failed labor poli.cies elected officials, cof!M?rate exeou''It's a war in which all too of the 1970s and 1980s that tratned tives, foundation pres1dents, educa,
often black Americans arc victim· poor youths for jobs that were dis· tors and civic leaders - will hold
'
izing and killing one another," he appearing and to "misguided" law its first national conferenGe M~y
said. "Sadly, yesterday's victim of enforcement policies that empha- 22-24 in Washington.
· ·
violence (by white suprcli!IICists) in sized punishment, not rehabilila.-.
many instances has become today's . · lion.
.
wanton aggressor."
. Margaret Beale Spencer of
Testimony b}' several experts Emory University said one of the
painted~ bleak piCture.
problems is that liule research has
~-- One ln--feul'-yoonf-blac'-me.n- bCCII conducteCIBlilmrblack males.
between the ages of 20 and 29 IS Because of this, teachers do not
DETROIT (UP!) - Visibility dant and seven passengers, were on an active runway in raip and · behind bars, on parole or on proba- know how to deal with black boys,
plunged seconds before two airlin- aboard the DC-9.
poor visibility.
lion. By the late 1980s, just 30 per- who need black male role models.
Despite his evaluation of visibilers collided.on a fog-shrouded runWhen he first saw the DC·9 it cent of all black men and WOJ!Ien
.She said goals should include
. way ancl killed eijlht people last ity at 1mpact, Ouellete replied to was "entering a wall of fog'' and between 15 and 44 we~ marned, keeping black ~ys in sc~ool ~d
December, but cockpit crews were repealed questions that necorded the crash occurred within "just a down from 50 percent m 1960.. 1n academically onented, he1ghtemng
· not. told of the rapidly worsening remark of, "boy, this is dog - - moment." The impact, he said, was 1989, 11.8 ~rcent of black mamed their health consci~sness and s~p­
conditions. pilots testified.
· now •• and ·his own response of not like hitting a wall at 60 mph as couple fam1hes were poor, but46.5 porting und affmmng construcuve
Northwest Airlines. CapL Robert "yup" did not mean conditions he expected but an •'.oscillating and percent of all black female-headed social networks and support sysJ. Ouellette, 42, of Minneapolis, were too bad for legal takeoff.
buffeting" shoclc.
· households were poor.
.. ·JCIIIS.
.
Ouellete said Second Officer
· Tuesday told a National TransOuelleue said foreign airports
Also, the unemployment rate for · Wilder had some advice of his
. portation ·Safety Board hearing vis- Darren M. Owen, 31, moments generally.are better marked to help black males is now about 12.2 per' own 10 parrly deal with the probibility was ''quite ~ood" as his later "modified" his remark pilots in th~ fog ..
.
cent, compared wit!J 5.5 percent.for Jem. ·
.
Boeing 727 started 1ts roll, "but although ,the reco~der di~ .not pick
"Marktn~s mternauonaliy, at whites. And, the tncome earn1~g
"Congress and.the Wh1te _House
, further on down the runway visibil- it up. Ouellette sa1d conditions var, the atrports I ve been to, are clearer- - gap between black males and wh1te can fire the openmg salvo tn th1s
. ity decreased to !he point that at the ied sharply across the airpon.
and more user-friendly.'' Ouellette males with college degrees is noble effort by passing the Civil
"So when the second officer said.
· time or the collision (it) was very
widening, not narrowing.
Rights Act of 1991. Congress
says 'this is dog dung' and you say
•reduced. I 0
SchifferJis, who had made 22 - Wilder said blacks can help shOwed its willingness to stand on
• James 1. Schifferns, 43, was frnt •'yup' yo11're talking about the llights into and out of Mell'IJ before themselves by changing their atti- the front Jines last year; for the
.officer aboard the DC-9 being wealher somewhere else?" asked the crash, satd 11 was the second tudes and values.
sake of this and future generauons
piloted by Capt. William Lovelace, Jim Burnett, chairman of the NTSll most complicated airport .he h~s
"Although an alarming number of Americans. the White House
52, on his fust uns~rvised flight inquiry.
used, exceeded only by Ch1cago s
· cannot be allowed to go AWOL
"He (Owen) said something to O'Hare.
~ alter a six-year-medical leave. The ,
again this year," the governor said.
One question 10 be asked of the - west in May 1990 after retiring
Sen. Pete Domenici, R-N.M.,
DC-9 made two wrong tunis and the effect that that was a foolish .
thing. to say," Oulette s~id. "My hearing was whether Northwest from the Air Force, in the same said even if the White House lifts .
strayed into the path of the 727.
' "I've never seen it (visibility) interpretation was that they (the should have placed ':-«?velace and cockpit and whether they worked its opposition to the bill, which it
contends would create mandatory
' go down quite as fast as it did that crew) were relieved to leave Schifferns, who had 'JOIRed North- as a team.
Detroit
and
leave
these
weather
·day." Schiffcms said.
.
minority hiring quotas, the problem
· The transcript quotes the captain conditions behind."
a
few
pennies
spent
here
of black males would not be
His own ''yup," he said, was in
as saying, "Hey, it looks like it's
solved.
agreement
that "visibility was in
goipg_ zero-zero out there. ••
comes
back
folding
money
"The parr that is in dispute is
general bad.'' He said the transcript
·~IQ-zero tells me we have a
not going to do a lot to get mmonceiling that iS' right ?n the grou~~· incorrectly attributed !he quote to
ties hired," Domenici said.
and the second zero IS that !he VISI· the fu-st ofrtecr.
On his own initiative, he said,
bility is zero," Schifferns 'said
VALASSIS
COUPON VAWES
VALASSIS
he asked for a new visibility repon.
,Tuesday.
In testimony late Tuesday, Asked if ground contnJltold him of
Schiffems broke down after saying: rapidly deteriorating conditions, he
."You cap train all you warit, but replied, "no."
Up to the time of impact, Ouelit's a whole new game when your
airplane breaks down or. you. It leuc said, his viSual references still
were "barely" adequate ~or takebecomes every man for himself. ••
. As they started to taxi, it was off. He said he never vaned from
obvious that visibility had dropped the yellow center line and was conRERIESIIING DEODORANT SOAP
below the thrce-quarterl ()f a mile fident he had satisfied "all requirereported by the tower and "we ments for a legal takeoff. ••
llllw fiDm Dltl...
wondered if we had 600 feet
He said he never considered
Tile llladarllll Bar 11111'111
even," he said. Lovelace, who aborting takeoff. He thought there
lnwl..lllt4 II tiiiOIIIIIIIn lniZI asked for Schifferns' help in steer- was a possibility he might miss the
IIIII II clllllllll ithllilllg
ing the aircraft through the fog, DC-9 and did not order emergency
evacuation after impact, considerIll -alii lllllml
also was to~All eight vicums. a flight atten- ing it safer than putting passengers
'
.
.

39 OZ. AIK ., IP Of
36 OZ. 'fiiiiCH IOAST

- -· . .. - ·--. ..

PomeroY-Middleport, Ohio

Smart continues to deny
involvement in murder

.: fates. who iS proteCICd from fll'iag by the city's civil service code,
flas not immediately available for
comment. He has steadfastly
iefused to consider leaving his post
"ite an ever-growing communi!Y movement calling for his ouster.
~ Robertson's comments came
one day after Gates released printClt computer messages and audio
lfpes of comments among officers
iftvoived in the beating. Those
11tpes include comments of officers
apparently mating light of the
Vjcious attack and using phrases
that have been described as racist
asainst blacks.
• Lerman said a "deeply shaken"
1\ing, after watching television
r~pons of the tapes and b'IIIIScripts,
s~ook his head and said, "That•s
d!e way they (the police) think.: •

...

...

Weclnllday,MM:h 20, 11191

Possible
-$56 million
.claim irt
beating .
LOS ANGELES (UPI) - Rodney Kin~·s lawyer said he wiU me
a $56 million claim against !he city
on behalf of !he man whose videotaped lleatin!l and sromping at the
hBnds of poliCe has 10uched on: an
ill!crruuional furor.
Altomey Steven Lerman said
Tuesday the number is no acc~l.
but based on the fact that "the
police inflicled S6 potenlially mortBI blows" on King the night of
March 3 when several white officers pul~ th.e black. ~mployed
consttucbOII worker over m !he San
Fernando Valley for allegedly
speeding.
.
More than a dozen officers can
be seen in a videolape of !he auack
that was taken from across the
street by an al!artment dweller.
Four were acuvely involved in
either stunning King with an electric Taser or beating and stomping
him . All have been indicted on
criminal char!les.
· Lerman said his olfiCC is investipnng whether other officers eitfier
.witnessed or were aware of the
beating, and police spokesman LL
FJed Nixon upped the number
Tuesday, saying there were 21 city
police offi~rs "at the scene of the
IRCUienl...
·
· Lerman is also looking at the
possibility that a California High.way Patrolman participated in the
abick. which could add the state to
fl11Y possible lawsuits. The personal
iii.JUI'Y claim iS the rust step roward
· such lawsuits. ·
: Meanwhile, the county's top
labor leader and the Los Angeles
Times Tuesdar became the latest
influential vo1ces callinjt for the ·
resignation of Police Ch1ef Daryl
Gates.
"This is a time of infamy and
shame in thiS city of Los Angeles,''
said' Bill RobertsOn, executive secretary of the county Federation of
Labor, which represents about
700,000 union workers. "If Chief
Gates really feels he has an aCriDity
fpr his personnel then he should
resign."
·
Meanwhile, King, who remains
hpspitaJized in stable condition following surgery for several head
fractures, met with Lerman Tuesday.
· . "I asked him ... 'that given the
fact that you made statements in
the press that you didn't think it
was racially motivated, do you
think they beat you because you
were a black man and for no other
. rcas&lt;in?'" Lerman said. ':He said,
'I'm SC8I'¢d to say yes. I don't want
10 start a riot There's good people
(1)11 there: There's more good peoJ!Ie than bad peo le."'
.,. Lerman saif King has nightdiares about the brutal beating.
~ "They gave me a beating so bad
r· can 't put words together 10
(escribe it," King alleged~y told
J;erman.
: Robertson told a news coilferp:c that he was "bewildered" by
m:cnl comments by Gates in which
~ chief suggested there would be
cliaos in the Police Department if
lie stcoDcd down while the city was
JJil:kcd "with tension over the videoIIJ)ed beating of King.
: "That's true IIJ'IOBliiiCC. No one
tt;:=ble, •• Robertson said.
i'isi ,..' f knows that and he must

~-

;..

··

.

Cantata/Drama

FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
Sixth &amp; Palmer, Middleport

Sunday Evening, 7:30 P.M.

.

BLACK LUNG CLINIC
PULMONARY
REHAB

Porir&amp;fll lbe birth, life, dea&amp;h ud
rea111'1'8C&amp;Jo•· of Cbrta&amp; lllaoq ud drama.

446-5244

EVERYONE WELCOIIUI:!

PASTOR: IAMBII 8BDDON

\

....,

'

-----------

�;::::::::~;;;h~2o~·;1~"~1;;;;;;~~==~~~==~r=~~~~~~~~~o;h;lo~==r=~~~:;==~r-==;~~~n.~~~~~=;~~
;
Notice
Public Notice
Notice
Notice
Notice
~W.LETI" BOAitD.
-.-ow•IMI.•aeptinB
Public

4:30 P.M. DAY BEFORE
PUBLICATION

--ted

Use Court Street Entrance
POMEROY, OHIO

·Oct. 29, 1990
newspaper. If you
have a copy
please call

992-2156.
'

ADVIIITlSID ITIM POUC:l - Eaeh of tn..e adven i.. d it~• ••
- requtfed 10 b e reedily ...... ~ tor ule i n each Krog er
Store, ••cept • ~ ..,ecittca"y noted 1n lhil ad . H wa dO run
out of en ed"''!""'Md item, we will oHer vou vowr chotee of a
c:omi)Ma ~ Item , ~ avai6ebMI , ret .. ct i n g the Nme
N vinps or a tarncheck which -ill .,.title VOIJ 10 purchase
tne eaven4eo 11em at I he advenraed pr oee -•thin 30 dava
Only one · 11anaor couoon will be accepted per item
purchll•ed .

Support
Our Troops
Overseas

'P ubliC Notice
.
(Continued from ;11• 101
...,,., of uld road to the
South U• of uld 100 Acre
LAit NO. 211: thence Eut
1100 to fhl pia. . of
beginning. CC!ntolnlng ten
(101 ...... - D r llu, but
eubject to oil legal hlghwayo,
SECOND TRACT: The to~
lowing,... -lellluetod In
the County of Molgo, In the
s - cof Ohio, ond In the
Townohlp Of Letart ,
- e d ond detcrlbed ••
follcowe: Beina In ~ 00 Ac"'
Lot No. 210, l:etort Town·
ahlp, Melto County. Ohio,
llaglnnlng In the cent• of
the ....._ Wut 1130 feet
from the Norfheaat cor- of
oald 100 Acre Lot No. 210;
t...._ Well 1100 to
the centec of Eoll l.otarl
Rood; thlnce South I deg.
OO'Wut 171 f... elongoald
E.. Letort Road to the
South Hne of oald 100 Acn
Lot 210: thence Eoet 1430
to the ..,.., of uld
-": ....,._ . olong the
m-lnoo of uld creek
North 52 ..... 00.' E11t
113.a fell; IMnoe North 12
deg. oo· e111 11.2 , ...,
thence North ·14 deg. 00'
e.. 1"38.8 f...: thence
North 23 deQ. 30' Eoll 100
North 11 .....
41' Weot 17'1.1 fHt; thenn
North 33 deg, 00' Well 10
,... to .... plocco of beginning, conllinlnQ -ty-one
and alo·tentl\a (21.11 ocreo,
mont or fell. but eubl... to
oil legal highwoyo.
THIRD tRACT: The fol·
lowing rNI tltllloMu-ln
the County of Mefto; In the
Stale of Ohio. ond In the
Townohlp of . Lelert .
bounded end deocrlbed. ao

.

.

'

COPYfUGf.n 1881 · THE KROGER CO . ITEMS AND
'AICES GOOD SUNDAY , MARCH 17 . THAOUGH

SATURDAY , MARiCH 21, 1•1 . If. I'Oilllt'f STOlE

WE AESEfiYE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT bUANTITI!S . NONE
SOLD TO DEALERS .
-

co Kroaerlna for low
"Warehouse Prices" ·on the
Items you buy the most. Look
for the ..save More Than A ·
Lot:" signs throughout the
store and stock up on
the savings

_, t-

,
- . . , ttlll 11 . . . .. -

NET WT 5 LB 2.27 kD

••

•,

u.~;.u. C.

Dole
Bananas

.

.

INSPECTEI&gt;:·1
NORTH ATLANTIC

· GOLDEN RIPE

·Fresh .Parch Fillets

Public Notice
tollowo: Btlng In 100 Ac"'

LAit No. 219; Lelort Town·

ohlp, Mtigo County, Olllo.,
Beginning In the cent• of
the c-. Wut 2111 fHt
from the No""-' co,_ of
llkl 100 Acrw Lot No. 2111;
thence Well 1430- to
t ... Wlllt - of Eoot Lllort
Rood; thence South I deo.
00'
2111 fHt to the
center of otld 100 Acre lot
No. 21g; thence Eoet 12411
f... plong thl center line of
uld 100 Acrw Lot No. 2&amp;1;
thane• North 38 deg. 1o·
Eaat 180 ·- to the centlr
of uld cr...: thdnce North
40 dog. 00' Eeat"197 liang the ...,t., of oold
.,,... to lhe pfeCI of 11eglnnlnQ, contolnlng eight end
one-tenth (8.11 ocrM, more
or 11u, but ou llject to ell
IIQII hlgllweyo. E•ceptlno
.,.,lng to orantora, Chertey • - •
- Ooa ._.o.lhelr helro
- onlgno. .., equli, undl·
vlded one-helf part or oho"'
of Ill the coal, Oil Md gil,
Dlhof mlnerolo In or
under the P"""IM• hereby
convoyed, w~h tfwl right to
enter on .ufd p,....fllo.
pro111Ject, ••plore - drill

w••

for. 1nd mfne. exe~vau and
remove the 11m11 with oil

machinery, tpplilncM,

fl•·

turn •d thlnga neoe eery
or con,...lont"'-fDr, ond

M~n1. •-c~~n·~ 111,.·,:..:"'
..
~

~;"

~

.,..:· .!.'~~1·

c . 11 • '•e2~ To;,., o....;
41711 . Wtl-lnteciE••
eutor of the . . - ef a1e1n
Toylor, dootlltd, lateot...
32. OrMp ToMtlhlp,
T-n
Pleino,
Ohio
41713.
"""""I ,
Probate Judge
f3113Ju2-02R7. w,tc'""' Clatll
• • •

lu...

WIANT

H. '

ADS bJIDg
•

u..
..ation" Money
llfti
"

8

SATURDAY, MARCH 23, 1991
.

.

-NO MOTORIZED TITLiOD VEHICLES
-NO ANIMALS
,
AU FA• IBATEI CCIISIG,_ENTS WncOIU

CONSIGNMENTS ACCEPTED
FIIDAY, MAICH 22; 1991-12 NMn • 6 p.m.
"'SATUIDAY, MAICII23, I HI, 8 1om.· Sale,limo

· ,,Nr:7~r;,';*:;::;1\'::s'"

Muot ·Pret.,l Tex Exempt Number or Poy Texea
(No Exceptlono)
CASH or CHECK WITH I. D.
NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR ACCIDENtS

AUCTIONEERS:
Rick Pearson - Lice... #66
Edwin Winters AU. PROCEEDS "' ... -..,~
MASON COVNTY FAIR

POMdOY t. OHIO

'·

~ 1.: ll c ,; "
Tuiiiu:

'.

(

.
BOTTLE, CAFFEINE
"FREE DIET PEPSI, CAFFEINE FREE PEPSI

OFFICE 992·2B86
HOME 992-6692
au.-WtiWWihfRI .......

206 NORTH SECOND AVE.
MIDDLEPORT. OHIO .
DOTTIE S. TURNER. BROKER
IUDDLEPORHRAOBURY RD.- Count the Extras- "Just
a glance and you will know ~·s a commumtv where oeoole
care.'~ A newer tanch style home with 3 bedrooms. above
ground swimming pool, lighted basketball court. 2 storage
buildings.- dog kennel, and a woodburmng stove.
ALL FOR. $48,500

•

2-Ltr.

THESE ARE NOT BUY ONE-GEl !)liE FREE ITEIISI

• •

i2·0Z. PKG.

'"IN THE DAIRY CASE'"

BUY ONE

BUY ONE

. 12-0Z.

"'00 CALORIE" 8-0Z.

BUY ONE
· FROZEN 12-CT.

.Hormal Canned ·
Ham Patties

Light n' Lively
Yogurt .

Freezer Plaezer
Ice Cream Bars

.GET ONE

GET ONE

GET ONE

GET ONE

BUY ONE
Pops-Rita
Popcorn

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

GET ONE

BUY oNE

I

fish
GETONE
Sticks.;. 5.1 -ozfREE!
IN THE DELI·PASTRY SHOPPE

MIATOR BEEF

Kn's
.

BUY ONE
GETONE

Cheddar

BUY oNE
GET ONE

... .. .. l.k~: FREE! iullllie. ,~~~- FREE!·

. . M IIMIY CAlF' OOIEIIIJII . . .

,. • .., llli-IIT- Filii
"IN
THE
GROC~·
DIPT."
..

Kroaar

Sheled

~

up

lilY...., . . fiiUII8AVU1 .)11

.

GET ONE

w.-... t:· FREE!
...
1

FRESH MINT OR
PEPPERMINT

Pilile
Slices._.
.... 32-oz.

Kroger
BUY oNE
Malith. GET ONEf
wah ....... 24-oz. FREE.·

..........

M .._., . . FIIEI11A'II u..t

•(

l

•

RACINE - V~~:ant lot ~ Close lo schools. park i nd
churches. Mas cily sewer, electric, water and gas available.

$10,000.00.

••

'•

.. I

I ...

'. .

. ..

. "'"" .
.

...

. . .. ..._

~

,

....·-

FREE

992-6641 or
691·6164
,

...".."'

HE lilY E. ClElAND ....................................... 992-1191
JEAII TRUSSELL ............................................ Mt-HIO
JO HILL ........................................................ 9Js-44M
OFFICE ......................................... ................ 912·2259

I"

.. -

.. '·

CAIIPI'r CUIIIIS

•1111 nll flOOI Clft
•RNtonlbll Ra1H
oQuelity Work
•Free Ea11mllea
•Cerplt H•o Felt Dry
Time
•High Olou on Tile
Floor Ffnleh
ME liWIS, Ow. .
II. I, lotiiM, OH.

742-2451

3-14-'91-11"

.

BUSIIIESS IS SO GOOD - WE'RE RUIIIIIIIG OUT OF
STOCK! WE NEf,D LISTINGS. II you Wlllllo Hit, call Ul
rllht now. 011 ldslllnlcl attantloe. 01r Alasslllf I•••·
ptrltncad. for beat multi cllil t92·2259!
IITEREST RATES As LOW AS 6.175% V1rllbla end 1.125
flxld - n Gill Nil your prof*IJ end we havt bUJifS.

~STIIIATES

· CEDAI
CONSTIUCnON

.

$12,900.00.

LETART- Btl You'll Lovell- Juslrightfor a family. Has4
bedrooms dining room, new Uchen cabinets, new 11nge,
enil entire home has been remodeled nicely - inside arid
out. Also hiS 1 view of the nver.
$23,900
BRENDA JEFFERS .............. ......... 182-30M
OARUNI! STEWART .................... 882-13111
SHERYL WALTERS ....................... 317·0421

.

NO JOB TOO SIIALL

SYRACUSE - IT'S ADOG!! But a few bushels of nails and a
couple of gallons of paint can lransform this barga1n into a
baautyl POSSIBILITIES GALORE! If you have a strong right
arm - maybe this is for you? 2 bedrooms, bath, on a
90'x100' lot Close to the grade school. MAKE AN OFFER

LETART ~ Meintenentt frH Exterior - 4 bedrooms. 2
baths, 3 silting porches. and a di~ing room. Nice big level
yard. Fenced area with barn lor an1mals, and a hHe hoose lor •
children.
$42,500

.
•

.

OOIEII
CIIIICGI..
1111fiiEI
·- 1H11.
lilY -..err
18AVII2
....

HAMBURGER DILL

~~ BUY ONE Kroger

.·,

$69,900.00.

RT. 33 ~ About holt to Allltns- Brand new coostr~clion .
Has a spacioos, beautiful 2'~ acre lo~ k~chen w1th tsland ,
dimng room w1th atrium door, and a large hvmg room. Has 2
bedrooms and 2 baths downstairs, and could have 2 bed·
rooms and one bath upstairs. Owner wHI finish upstairs for a
· little more money.
IIUST SU THIS OIIE $70,500

REGULAR

BUY ONE
BUY oNE Kroger
Kroger
BUY oNE Jumbo
. GETONE
F...ch StyJ.tc GET ONE Cinnamon, GET oNE Taa
~~~-FREE! Bags ........ 48-C1. FREE!
Crolllntl12-oi. FREE! Rolls......
.... flfl . ...., OOIEII nmau Clift

POMEROY - HERE IS THE HOllE YOU'VE BEEN WAITING
FORn Newer bi-level home in great condillon. 2 car garage, 2·
3 bedrooms·, eQUipp«&lt; kitchen, central heat and A/C, base·
ment and has a basketball court. 3\l acres of ground located
in one ol Meigs County's most desirable areas! Owner wanls a
quick sale and will consider any r.easonable offer.

FAIRVIEW SUBDIVISION- Unusual · Unique · Oifferent Oiscribes this octagon shaped house Ihal has 3 bedrooms
that opens to the outdoors. Has 10 sets ol sliding g(assdoor!
that opens onto either an u.pper det:k or lower deck. The
woods in back are cool &amp; pnvate m the summer. Has a lull
basement and 2 baths. MUST SEE TO BELIEVE 159.900

Filii

COUNTRY
OVEN

CUSTOM lllllT

Benk One, Athene, N.A.

(3113, 20. 27. 3tc
Wanted

Pomeroy Nursing and Rehab

Center

Attention R.N.'s
Your (l&amp;reer end peraonel 11tiafaction
can match you' goela in health care"s
faatest growing market - Long Term
Care.
,
Pomeroy Nursing hal an immediete
opening for a pert-time end/ or ful'·
time R.N. de1iring dey shift. Flexible
scheduling. competitive selary end be·
nefltl offered.
Our Nation's demand for long-term
care will extend well into the 211t cen·
tury. Join the future. :.
Join the Pomeroy Nursing and Rehab
Center
CONTACT:
LaRue Hill, R.N., D.O.N ..
Pomeroy, Ohio 46769
Pomeroy Nursing 8t Rehab
1614)992-6606
36759 Rockaprings Rd .
E.O.E.

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL
•LIGHT HAULING

•FIREWOOD

BILL SLACK
992-2269
USED RAILROAD TIES

1-12-80-lfn

11 MINit,H
UPHOLSTDY
IU•IIe. Sec•ll

·•

•••••• rt
Hand Tufting
Cultom Drape•
S6YeuoEllpori•ee

614-992-2311

We lay What W. Oo.
W. Do What We Sty.
10-11-11110.

, YOUNG'S .
CARPENTER SERVICE
- Room Additions
- Gunvwork
-EI-Icol ond Plu-"ff

- concrete wortc

HOMES &amp; GARAGES

- llooflcta

"At 1-nalllt Prices"

- Interior • Exterkw
P•lntlng

PH. 949-2101
or ln. 949-2160
'. Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CAllS

IIAIIWii, OHIO

If you clean up yprd on -k•ntls.... we

bu.I_ on· weHands.

Til-COUNTY
RECYCLING
l-ttcl Off the '"'"' 0..
Tht c- crl
II. 1 &amp; II. 143
,_.,, Ol1ia
P.ylng c:alh fOr aluminum,
copper, brl•t. lt.llnl• .....
~MS~n•klm. ,.diMOrt. nan-

.,., llt•nttors and au non·

t.....,.meu~

•.

CAU 101 PIKES

614-992-5114
9 AM-7PM-7 DowoWtak
I·JI.'tl.l ,

J Q!SE IMRFUIWIIIC?

ClEAN II WITH

CI.ASSHO ADS

.! , . •

11·14-'90 lin

J&amp;L

INSULATION
•VInyf Siding
•Replecement .
Wlndowa
•Roofing
•lnouletfon

Custe• .fr-elualr
NEW &amp; USED PAIITS
FOR AU MAKES &amp;
MOOELS

1-100-141-0070

A WEEK

9 A.M. 'TIL 7 P.M.

P-oy, OhiG

· S~lzlntl in

01 TOU flfl

!P\~Y~L~~~s

Y. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215

WHAlEY'S
AUTO PARTS

992-7013
ar 992-5553

TRI-COUm

(FA EE EBTIMATESI

4·16·11-lln

3/5/'81 / 1 mo.

•Remodeling end
Hom. Ropelra
•Roofing
•Siding ·
•Pelntlng

NEW LISTING -located on landaker Rd. this property has
it all! 49• acres ol ground with a 1987 - 14'K80' mobile
home. Here are just a few olthe added features to this pr011·
erty- Dishwasher. refrig.. range, fireplace, air cond~1oning,
ALL furniture tncluding TV, V.CR. You can have immediate
possession ofthis eKiraordinary place!! So call for your show·
mg TODAY! ASKING $54,900.00.
SPRING IS COMING!! View thts awakening of MOther Nalure
f19m this barn style home in Dexter, Ohio. Surrounded bf
N'alutal Beauty and fresh country air. MANY OTHER GIIEA
FEATURES! $56,000.00.

IIIDOLEPORT - Historical looking corner store. Has 6
apartments up and anOiher store down. Start your own busi·
ness. H.ls lOis fo room and has an Income. CAll FOR MORE
DETAilS,
.

fiGZIIIIIICII'IIWBI ~

Mrs. Paurs

Pomeroy,

POMEROY - Lincoln His. - "Cute as a button- Neat as a
pin" - describes Ihis two bedroom home with an equipped
kitchen. carport, and .-part basement Has a floored att1c and
5(11288 foot lot.
$25.000.

1o.5·0Z. MICROWAVE
ALL FLAVORS

FREE! FREE!
FREE! FREE! .FREE!
,...,
--·
"IN THE DAIRY CASE"

614-992-6820

PEACH FORK RD. -Showcase kitchen, buill-in dtshwasher,
Jenn-Air range, oven. and microwave. Three bedrooms, lull
basement and lots of big nice trees for shade sitting on 2
pretty acr'es.
· $34,000

IN THE PRODUCE DEPT.

Serve 'n' Save
Wieners

FROZEN &amp;-OZ. BREADED
OR MINCED

Complete Grooming
For All lrllfls
EMILEE MERINAR
Owftll' &amp; Optrater

LANGSVILLE - Afour car garage on SR 124. Was used before as a mechanic's garage and a little over one-fourth acre.
ONLY $1,500

Save Even More With The Buy One-Get One Free Items Below!

BUY ONE

GROOM
ROOM

MINERSVILLE -Spectacular view of the River - Would be
great as a rental property or a starter home. A3 room home
with a bath and 2 lots.
$10,000.

'

· Plus .

THE

REDUCED - REDUCED
OWN THIS COUNTRY HOllE
story brick home nestled on appro!. 1.485 acres of 01rivacv
You and th1s gorgeous fireplace. No worry about
- this beauty has 4 bedrooms, 2 balhs, family room w1th
woodburner and many other features that can make this
"""""" home "HOME SWEET HOME" for you. CALl FOR AP·
!

'

Diet Pepsi
or
Cola

UJ. GRADE A HOLLY FARMS COUNTRY mLE OR CUT UP FmRS U ... &amp;It

r

BISSELL
BUILDERS

11·5"10.1111

•

nlng, containing 5 acre1,

more or feoo.

2/27/'91/1 no.

POMEROY, OHIO
992-2259

PER LB.

,

SIMON'S
PICK·
A-PAIR
SAME
LOCATION

205 N. S.Cend Strllf
.DIIUPOIII', OHIO 45760
. Offici 614-992-2116
HOllE 614-992-5692 .
IIOTTif S. TIIINEI. IIOIEI
HOUSES•LOTIIIFARMI
COMMERCIAL
We Need Uotinp!

l

tr.,_

Busin.e ss Services

Entr•ce

•

t

...... B ..,..o aut ef dtC1 '
NDC1h-- ofdtC1 14• •
_.treat dm lltd Ill Vol· •
,.... 222. Pq. 111, Mefp
Cauf1tV Deed I I -.
,
REFERENCE DEID: Vol- ·
ume 210. Pq.72A. Meleo •
ot Ohlo~~~hlo~...,:P::~ c':i..,
".::' R =. wao .:
PurchellondlnlheNOrth·et Fltty·l..,· •·
wut Quert• .o f aectlon 34. .,. Thouooncl II• H,.. . ..
Town 4, R•"" 12 elrod •d 0011 00 Dollon ••
llouncl.d ond deocrlttd 11 f'l7,100.001.
,
_.,
·
.
Sale of llkl _ , - - t o :
lltginnlng II the North· be for not loot then twv- •
-comer of lhe 14...,., 11\lrda (2/ 31 the oforetaid •
of r11l-le deocrlbed oppreilld veiue. Colli In ,,
',",,o-M~ Boolcc 222, oP•gdo hend on dale of...
:
• ~11 aunty M
Slid oale IIIUIIjec:t to op- •
Aecordo; thence South 80 pcovol by the Common"'- •·
nHioi then.. Eo11 10 fOdo: Court, Meiga County, Ohio.
t...,.ce North 10 fOdt to the
Jerneo M. Soullby, 8hoflff ,
center of the Townohlp
Meigo County, Ohio ·
Rood; thenco Weou1on 1 tho ,r.pproved,
center of the Tow~thlp 1, Canon Crow, Attorney
Rood to the plica of begin- for Pllintlff,

Use Court StrHt

t2.00

.

10:00 A.M.

Public

The ICidle11 of llkl _,
lllle II 40111 T.ll. 241.
Ceo"'*, Ohio 41723. Sold
- 11.-dlefollolomoow fully de·
IOi u
ao
wo:
·
...t~ted In ~·•:r; Town·

11

• Rt. 62 North of Pt; Pliosant, WV.

.

lllle:

&amp;Auction

Real Eatate General

SAVE

Wh
Fryers .................. .

Public Sale

IDDl llfNIAl

P0111d

U.S. Gn#'\&amp;.n:
HOLLY .-... n

IN THE
COMMON I'LEAI COURT
OF
MEIGI COUNTY. OHIO
lANK ON. Atheno, N.A.
Plolntlff
c.. No. 10-CV-231
NEDA a. CL~':.aoN, nu
NEDAB . MITCHELL.
ET Al
1
o.tendlnto
LEGAL NOTltE ·
IHERIFF'I IALE OF
IlEAL EITATE
AI Shoflff of MeiQI
County, Ohio, 1- b y offar
for ...,. II 10:30 A.M. on
Thuredly, ApcM 18, 1991.
)\. D.. on the front ot.p1 of
dtC1 Meioo County Court• ·
hou... Po,_oy, Ohio, the
tollcowlng detcrlbcod "'''

At MASON COUNTY FAIRGROUNDS

='If.::'

the right to - to much of
the IUrfiCI 11 may be
_ . . . . , for . . purpollt
- · EICCiflllng ond n·
aervlng unto Fn •l•nd E.
Norrie end Erline Nonla. tho
following r11l - t •; Being
In lh6 County of • Mllgo, •
Slele_of Ohio, the Townohlp
of Ll!ert, .,d being parto of
100 Acre Loto No. 281, 210

Public Notice

SPRING
MACHINERY AUCTION

'
'

..

-

C

Real Eltate General'

.'

Public

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY

.

Daily Sentinel is in
·need of a copy of

..

':!

..!!:

IMO 'S
PICK-A-PAIR
SAME lOCATION

(Contlnuecl' on 1'- 111

0.47 _,. In 100 Acn
-ZII. The-lselnt -LAit 211
for 1 IOit8l ef 0.11
porta of Tracto No. t , 2, Md
3ofthe _ _, _ ....
.
convoyed from H. N. I l l = ....... of w"c!i.
D IFEREN E: VoW- end Ruth Wolfe 10 lume 211.
ll1 , 1!1eioo
. Fiord Norrft.,d -Norrfo
County
0..
• •·
by dMd dated h p t - 7.
0
1 1 4 1 . - - - .....
1~"1~
,...,..., 23. 1148. In Deed
-ofllleMelgoCauf1tV
Boolc 112, et .heo 272 of
Noo.:
dtC1 Melgo County Deed AudiCW by ot-oom.
01·00210.
end
Recordo, Md being mon 01-002a1 .
partloularly -lbed .. to~
laid _. ._., leglnnfnQ ... point In
.. ,18,734.00.
the - t • of the PI- Md pnilld
T'""' of lolt: Caoh.
E• Lltart !load. llld point
IIIII eon not be oold
....... 23 - - o f f h e
~lou than twC.:tl\irdo of
-Floyd -Norrfo
of ond
llridill
fronting
vtiU&lt;I.
'-rl
Nonlo t.~
Jomeo M. Soulol&gt;y,
rill .,..., thence NOI'Ih
Shoflff of Mtiga County
10110-to•--- (31 20,
27; (413. 3tc
thence Mel 220 fHt to-•
point In the linter of ctMic.
llkl ctMic being WMI bouft.
dory of G. Chorleo Foot•;
'
thlncellonQmlddleofctMic
with m-clerlngi In eoouth·
ec1v direction to a point In
The Femly Of
...,.., of . -.- llld point
GEORGE W.
being G. Cherlll F-·•
FOLMER, SR.
aouthwut _ , then&lt;:e
- • otong ...,._.of road to
Would Ulce to expiUa
the placo of beginning.
our hM,..t 1h11nk1
Furthof • ..,.ling from
to our trt.ncla end
neigh bon for food,
the obove -lttd real
111111 the follwolng:
ft
d
d
lltuoto In Lltlrt Town·
o - en cer •
thlp. Malo• County, at- of
during our time of
Ohio end being In 100 A.,.
Iota. Fot tho preyen
LAI!o 218 Md 210, Town 1
of many people end
North. Ronge11 Well of the
church•• for our
Ohio Com-·a Purcholl
loved orie. And
:.:~ ~1ng ducrlbed oo
eapaclally·to
R..,.
0
Beginning 111 point on the
Ceefl WIN end hit
South line of 100 Ac"' Lot
dHght•. RolaiH,
210 and . Wut 3100 for 1he fal1h end
from ._ Bout- co,_
11reng1h 1hllt they
of otld 100 Acrw Lot 210.
geve our mother to :l":: 1 ~~~~ ""''
for our felher for
31.7 ..,.. ,..,.. ao dothe four yeen he Wll
crlbed In Meip County
MI.
Deed Rocorde; Volume 214,
To !he Pomeroy
PIQCI 101; than.. North
E
S
mergency qued,
388.41 feet elong . Jim
Butcher' a llld Eoot une 10 an
who were 10 kind to
Iron fOci paulngo tthc:e poll
alweyo be there when
11 10 IHt: thence 'lauth 17
Ded nHdld them;
dog. 34' 01" Wen 1146.116
.the ,Recine equed.
to an Iron rod In the
Holzer Hoapltel end
Dr. Oll!l Abf•; to
centllflne of Townllllp Rood
0 1
:.~H':.,.': :' ;:N.~r'L.;
Ve1ereno Memorlel
Mdr.oolng auto! 100Acn
Hoepltal for the
Lot 10 and Into 100 Aan
klndn... end
Lot 211 ot 387.49 - .,d
1ympe1hy 1hey
paoolnl an Iron rod It
121.11 fell tor -•nee:
lho-d oa on the
dey of hla dll1h: felt,
thence North se cleo. 17'
but no1 leal. Ewing
14" Eaat 111.02 fHt elong
the &lt;;ent•llne·of ~ld Town·
Funerel Home.
ohlp rood N to en Iron rod
We might have
11 the Sout"-n cor- of
mf11ed thinking
·
·
Parcel
•
deo·
cribed In Moloo County
. oom101111 elong 1he
Deed Rocorda: Volume 2711,
wey, but you know
Pege 871, uld Iron rod oloa
who you .,.,, oo
being on the Eellllne of Jim
thenka from ua ell.
lutcher'• oeid 38.7 ocreo:
Wife. Core:
thence North 140- to the
Children. grend·
point of llaglnnlng, peoolng
on Iron fOci ot 20.00 feet tor
children and
ref•trice, conteinlno 0.49
grill-grandchildren
ocreln100AcrelotNo.210 J&amp;......;;..__._ _ ___.

=r.

:BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE

Iondo, tonemento ond per·

Public

· JAMES KEESEE
992-2772 or
'
742-2251

.

639 Bryen Pl•c•
Middleport, Ohio
11·14-lln

USED APPUAJIICIS

tOaAYWAIUim
WUIRS-SIOO.,
DIYIS-S"·•p
IIFIIIDATOIS-S I00 .,

IANGIS-Ge-Bor._.IU .,

FIIIIRS-S 125 .,

IKIO OYINS-Srt .,.

lEN'S APPliANCE

S£RVKE
992-5335 • 915·U61
Acr- ,,.,. I'Mt Office
POIUIOY, OliO
JO/J011t lin
•VINYL BIDfNO
•ALUMINUM IIDINO
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSELL &amp; 'lURlE
CONSTRUCTION

FOREVEI IIOJIZE
PROM TANNING

ooa,....

I st SO High Schaal
Students
10 SESSIONS - $10
Call 949·2126
For Appt.

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

FOIEVEI IIONZE

or les. 949·2160
NO SUIIIU CAUS

..... ·-·

•Contpllte
le_......
Stop &amp; Co..,are

FrH Eltlntatos

915-4473 '
667-6179

5-ll-'90 lin

Howanl L WrlteHI

ROOFING
NEW - REPAIR
Gutters
Downapouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

949·2161
,...,... . .. p4.

SPECIAL

aASIIAN Ia., RACIIII
3-4-'91-1 mo.

...........

"FrH Eltlmetn"

PH. 949·2101
. l·ll·lflt

LINDA'S .
PAINTING
llniiiOI • DTIIIOI
FREE ESTIMATES
Talee tht poln out of

pointing.
let me do it for you.
VIIY IEASONAILE
NAVE llfE.NCES

R. L. MASH
CARPENTRY
•Garages
•Room Addltlone
•Kitchens • Bathe
•VInyl Siding
•Re1toratlon
•Repair Work

(6141 915-4110

3· 11· '11- 1 mo. pel,

992-5526
t'OMEIOY, OliO

•cROWAVE
OVEN IIPAIR

Ntw /1 .
Stt-11

au.uas

lri• It .. Or We

Pldllp.
IIIII'S lPPUifla

SIIVICI
992·5135 ...

911-1561

Acn.
·Peat Office
117L
......
It.

NFP1Y,O.O

3/W/Iflt

MOilLE HOME FURNACES- HEAT PUMPS
AU FURNACE PARTS

UNNm'S MOBILE HOME
HEAtiNG' &amp; COOLING
Lusloll 0. SeHertl Scliul

~

eH lt. 141

I

�~

...
~~nnday, Marett 20, 1991

l:.AFF -A-DAY

-

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

BORN LOSER

Television
. Viewing

1£ Me~~ ~\HAT

3 Announcementa

HE~'tf

:::J:.·~
.. .,:- -~
c!:t:t:.

~!tft=or.A

•

Wrl!o: - - . P.O. lox
1043, Go ......... OH ..aL

4 - dol..

-

. . . . . . pi -

e:ao IIJNewl;
w• Cll

··-·

Wollo.

•

III'IF.

1111e

Giveaway

pi
1-rl-....r-.-l......

tiu."'i\QA T-

H U RE S

,....,~

OCiuir..._~

DISAPPOINTED

1:01 (I) . ....., ......... .

ALL ARE,
f!UT PERI-lAPS .
TOMOitROW THE
SUN WILL ~INE

l:3llfil!£:=:.'?
i! IJ'l:.:i....... ~

'(01)

•

•

.

• 0

~-rl-"11r,,-...,,-To,s!"""'1
1

Dottor to patient's wile, • J
don't like the way your
husband looks." The wife
replied, " I don't al~r. but
~~~ the .housa he's pretty

8

Complete rho chucklo quor.cl
by filling In tho milling - d •
.................................._.._... rou diVolop from ...., No. 3 ..,..__

31&amp;,~~

OUpCIMa
1::11 (I) Andy Cklllltlu

•

1:ao1.,:_~o wheel or

•

UNSCIAMII.f AIIOVf lETURS
TO GfT ANSWER

!I!~~

r. I'

I'

"''i'~s~=~tTERS IN

(I) IIINain ol Jeannie

!I!

_

..._...._...__._.....__,
0 NE L p y

ctl 3-2·1 Conllct 8

.

A6AIN, AHD...

II

VAKEN

....-..r.l,r;--;1~I-i--11 I

. 8WGIIdT*J

I KNOW HOW
31 Hom.. for Sale

lnllde

I·

NAXPEP

~==~~
~~~--..

0

4

(I) •

13

low to """' four . ..... _ . _

I!VENING

Choolor T. - n ond -

........

Sentinel

·=ro;:,.::r'-1 :::=

W WED.. MARCH 20 •

on ow ~=e::r

Dl'

The Dal

I. I' I

111111
3-' ~

SCI•M UTS ANSW11S

- ~L.
!Ill=.., Aflal9~

Shaker - Walsh .., Owner - French - FEW WEEKS

My exercise Instructor noted all the ne)N comers In our
class had made New Year's raSQiulions. But she figured
lhat most of them would be gone in a FEW WEEKS.

·0 IWMIP 11ulng Stereo.

8=~

8ce~row tnd Mre. King

BRJDOI

7:01 (I) llaJipy Dap

7:·~uc:..~""' ~
Cll

'Wit l!...,etnunent

Tonlaht Stereo. ~
I]) • . . _ . , Family
!DeM*A"S*H
11J The Hllchlllltar Stereo.

0 NCAA Flntul , _

I

BANK

llgl .....;ta 1982: North
Carolina, Georvetown.
Houlton. Louisville
Crouflre
·
7:35 (I) . .nlord and 8on
1:00 (J). iiJI Unaolwcl
Mylleflet The identity Of a
badly deCompoaad body II

r.'t&gt; 1.-lj(E A
'

•

I

a

•

NfiN AGCOV/'IIj.

MY. Ot.P ONE
NEVE{l /'fA$ ANY
8

contealecl. Stereo. C
(I) MOVIE: Where Ilia

MONEY IN IT·

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

'llullalo A - (R, (2:00)
(I) 11la Till Wonder YMrl
Kevin Ia «Mvaalltld when hla

sc:IIOOI.
Stereo. €athla
~=:.

Rick PNroon AuctJon Componr
now booking auctlonl, •·
porion
.. mokoo
tho - Will
·
Uconood
Ohio, Kontucltf,
Vllglnlt, :JOC.m.a781.
. Auction ovory Frldof &amp; Soturdotl
night, J&amp;R Aucllon - · lllcf·

for ....
Money-Driven Madness of
Blg·Time Collage Football
ano Baakalballand the Toll II

(!)
/

ALLEY OOP

Takes on Athletes' Education
and lnatltultonal lnteoriiY

1rw welo.ome. llle
dally,
llirto 7:00 p.m., Jim. Alllly
Auctron.,t.

dloport £~ oonolgnmonlolokon

9

(2:00) ~ .
(IJ American PIIJhQuH A

Selection of Brothllre Grimm
Falry_Talea Stereo. C

Wanted to auy

Ill De 41 Haun The

overloaded cour1 syotems
and overcrowded prisons Is
examined. Stereo. ~

COmplolo CU., Ill &amp; Down,
car - . . 121 • - . IM388-. No Sundoy Colo, ·

illle MOVIE: WhiMi

Want to buy a traruu.. elon tor
1980 Bulak Rl...r. Tranomlo-

Ugliln~IQ (PO, (2:00,

11J Munter, lila Wrote Q

olon Ontyl 1111 Rolot.ii, llko to
trod• tor truck of oquol voluo,
114-H2-7S20.
Wonted to buy aood uood

11'-boata Singer and
songwriter John Hartford
relates tile history of
rlverboallt . (1 :00,

.....

0141 (3:00)
Growing Ptllna The
Seavert worry about Chiisar
Qno her Imaginary friend . (R .

I ._ •

104-t7S4401.

5 · - mobilon"::':.~':"-·
out~M~~hltnp,
, s mit•

Cuaw• ads I

KELLER'S CUSTOM BENDING
We Have Changed Our location To
1112 Miles East on Rt. 241 through
Ch11t•, Oh.

SHuatlon
Wanted

Big 3br Dakota firm HomO BuiH
Ori
Lal. 121,111 up. 114-

110 John 1-r
$11,1!00. 1110 4x4 Chowrol.t ...
. . BUI!ol$1,100. 3IJ4.I1I40SI.

y.,...

pe-n11.

Will tako con of oldorty In tholr
hom... sr tho - . 114-:zaB.
·
.14•o5.

SPECIALIZING IN ....
•Custom Bent Exheust Systems
•Complete Line of Exhaust Supplies
•Handle and lnst•ll Monroe Shocks
Come and See Ua For A Free lupectlon
and Eatbnate
PH. 61.·915·39.9 IOHn DWI
47269 St. lt. 241
Lona lltl~tw, Oh. 45743
3/15/9111 mo.

14

a

aualness

Form

tor lifo

Ol'lhom Dlol,

45

Futnlshed

Rooms

u.""

......,I l
.....
l'or"""" Inform•
lion
l - 112-3113.

•-~- ...1••
..,...,_,.
OOIIIIIruallon ........

35 Lot8.&amp; Ac~Wge

2011.
R - tor ron!· wook ar month.
ltortlflllll
Clalllo Hotll.

~..

sao-.
.......110.

Training

2 .. 1

-

.

.

Jtun'w l'erm~Jip _.._ Ill. ...
Will
IM~41 2111;
llftpll JAIIIII. lur,
lredl. 1:004:00 •••· dawa.

tractON I

..u,

4d' utllly troller f1SO. Frvilt tlno
!Uior WI hp, • • oond, $100,
IIIJU1II.ll111.

Sot.INoon.

·

- - 1217 .......... Clohl
mbloi: ,._ ~ m
Clioppo~:
ti¥8101',
.. '

4..., ....

79

e

i

......... . .

··:i

JF..j W&amp;I2E: ~ltlliiN't; t'D

CHRISTMAe AI..ReADY

:ZS'[!:i C&lt;IIYOF'THE:~.

I'SON 11-iE 2.5lll D'.Y
OF "!'HE ..v.oN1M •

.'MI(E CHRJ6T~ l!lEo-.t 11-E

.

,... ................ full d.
....... . - . 11,000.- :.

1---. ,..,.....

... ft.~~-=·
:;n,.":f~iiii,'WII!!!O : ·

.

,:::0Hti4-111L
~er0.
~--·
I-.~

:,_...

•

....

1

......

•

i

•

Malthew hal hurt feelings
about tile baby hll mother Ia
having. Stereo. ~
(I) Cll.
llul Love

~.

.

•

.

problema. Slerao. ~

'"""'_..,_
...
oBumoup

__

Clootd'.-y,IM-4411oe1&amp;

,.....,...,

to!O-Irchloogwood

Wll Do lllibllllllflllln II~.

.,. ""' on. ...........

·---

-u .. ,..._.. ......llll:tl"'""

olllyboloctlod 10·\0IIIolillomitlthotM'

0r

f t do 1'0'
t1sn4nQ. .. an
hour. 114 441 1401

LOAD MIIY 12 HOIIIIS

o-'-..Jll..-: d
opllflll .-mg.

CALL
,
VICKER'S WOOD HEATING
•••~-.--uw­

· - &amp;ko"'
:104

e~·
'a"' The ~111

•

F'lldllCidl

Piionl (1114) llW2II ol1tr 5 p.m.

0
'
The Astro,.Graph Matchmaker can help stead of as theY actually
are.
you understand what to do to make the · LI8RA Clepl. 23-0cl. 23) For some
relatlonllhlp WOfl&lt;. Mall $2 to Match- strange reason today. you miljhl feel
maker, clo this newspaper, P.O. Box obliljated to BDmeone to whom you owe
BERNICE
91428, Cleveland, OH 44101 -3428.
nothing. This will be readily opparenllo
BEDE OSOL TAUIIUI
CAprii»MMIJ 20) In order to others. yet you'll be hard to convtnce.
be more ellectlvo today, II' I beat to un- ICOIU'IO (Oct. :M Nov. 21) II you join
deralate thlnga rather th811 ov.,.hlte lor- with eomeone who treato 1n •
them. Ostentatlou111888 or displaying -you llko ..,.louaty rather lightly topoor lute c:ould -rely damtige your day, the.....,,,. aren't IPI to be notable.
Be-Uve-a .Uietare-ned.
, Imago.
QEIIJNI Cller 21.,._ 20) Utually, you IAQITTAIIIUI (llo¥. IJ.Dac. 211 You
strive to be realllllc, but today you won't be piiiOUed with alaelc ollmaglnamlghl feet that the world owes you allY· · tlon today, bUt- you conceiVe mlgh1
lng . Unfortunately, the world may not count lor nothing; you rMY be too luy
agree and diUppolntmenll are likely.
to tranlll111e ldeu Into actlan.
CANCER C.luM 21..IUIIJ 23) 11 you get CAPRICOIIN CDeo. 22-.len. 11) You
Involved in a pleasurable puriUfttoday,
may be 111r11pted to gelluuvclwd with
MaiGII :tt, 1.1
make cerlaln you can aftord what you
&amp;Omeone whom your better lucfounent
ch00181o do. Mlko doubly cerlaln 11181 .aya Ia bell to avoid tod8y. If you
Moi,t,' · opportunHiet than uluat may your cohor1o ere willing to pay their r•r your. lidvtsor. you may~ It later.
come your way In the year ahead; put share.
AQUAIIIUI C,_ ........ 11lln order
them 10 good use. And, don't 11111ke tile 1,.10 (.JuiJ 23-Aug. 23) Thlo Ia not a to.be luccetllfulloday, you muat manmlalaka of thinking llultu trend Ia good day to like ImPortant things lor age your own endeavOn through to 11lneih8ull1lble:
grantecl, •peclally -·your car•r 11 · natiZII11an. ThingS you do 110! penonalty
.U.S Clllanlh 21·Aplll 11) II you're conce; ned. If you gel too c:ompt-t. II aupervlle could run tllltOk.
1K1Y1n1J IDIMIIIIng expanllve today, II could lead to your CIOWnlal.
PISCES CPib. Ill U ultlll) Tllla might
· migh! be w1te to bring along a
VIIGO (Aug. 23-lapt. 21) lnstaecl or not be a good ttme to 111er1 a program
COIUICioua ldvllor. There'l. pouiblllly - . . g clevRpunents from a practl- requiring lllf-4ilclpllne, IUCII • dieting
thaf you may not recogniZe a bum deal. cal perspective, you miljhl thlngo· or a regular exerelae routine. w•t untM
Trying to patch up a brOken romanc:e? today u you would like them to be, In·
your reaolve Ia llronger.

\

-···-·-.....

.,.. Slwie

-

"""'

CMUTI - .
NOTIIIIG RSI TO M1
_

.

. $11195
Enjoy itvor Do ahan-

ao It .....,..... - 24
haura. IIID .,_am ln.
cludN docod•.
CALL TODAY

FEIIIIiAtiUI'ECfAL
.

ONLY

ZENIX VIDEQ
l'hiiiiPW.ef......

,.

.

.

111-•

nolo.IMIIIonowoLIVI

_ . _

-11.

''Cin ,ou ~- ol._lniO a
rillftlgltator? 011' bii7Jtrl1181 Ita ~ appetlter'

'

I "

••

'

·

, 10:30

EAST
.KQIOB

.J IOU

.74
•s •

.

3

SOUTH
.A!

.AQ
1 .AKJ62
.KJI02

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South
S..lli

Well

2•

Pass

2NT
3.
••

2•

Norll;

Pass
3••
Pass 3NT
Allpass

Eaol

Paa
Paa
Paa

•Jacoby transfer

OJ\ening lead: • 3
'--~----------'

team ga i~ed 10 IMPs.
.
West could have defeated tbe game.
He must s.wltch to a spade without
casbing the ace of clubs. Declarer can
win with the ace, casb the A-Q of
hearts and discard two spades on the
A·K or diamonds. But East ruffs and
leads a club to West's ace, and another
diamond promotes the heart jack.

feature

10 Canon·
lzad
arch·
bllhopol
Canter-

Yeilerct.y's An...,
11 Stlble .
25 Old

younglltr

~

11 Idle \all
18 Sttnd
21 Move a Ia
moth&amp;
23 Liz

27 Quill cloth
28 Football
· squad
·21 Sat lor a
portrait

Taylor's

30 Hobo's -

birthplace
kingdom
24 Ut.
31 Boat badt
Mcl&lt;inley'a 33 Custom
native
37 Woman'•

,name

autos

32 Like most
entries in

this
puule
34 Allow
35Maad'a
research
site

36 Popeye's
love
38 Alrical) .
anlalope

a CNN l!venlna Newt

311 Mora

IICIIMI1IOn

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES- Here's how to work It 3I2CI

0 700 Clull WHit Pat

e CniOit and ChaM

pleasant

11:110(1)• Cll (I) • 111 o e
IIJ Newt
(I) lllglul Court Q
.

AXYDLBAAXR
lsLON~FELLOW

mNWasaalcfa

ID• ~Hall Stereo. Q
·
0 Mllrnl VIDe StereO.
a 1, l'lddiM and

e ...

llhnauu1a Singer and
aongwr1ter John Hartford
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By Jaaaes Jacelly
You rarely opt to play In a &amp;-2·fit
major-suit game rather than in three
no-trump when you bave all suits
stopped. However, today's hand,
· played in a team game In New York
City, is an eueptlon.
When bls partner bid tbree notrump. South knew that his side held at
11106t five spades. (If North had had
four spades aQd five bearts, he would
have used Stayman.) Also. unless
· North's · hearts were particularly
strong, there was a tlsk declarer
would never see the dummy. With two
top honors doubleton and a known
side-suit weai!Mu, South was right to
prefer the &amp;-2-flt major-suit game.
· At the other table, even after an ini·
tial diamond lead to dummy's 10,
three no-trump went down, declarer
·losin&amp; two club tricks and three
spades.
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·amond three - a modern style of
leading low from an odd number of ·
cards. Declarer won with dummy's 10
and took a cllib finesse. West, hoping
to get a ruff, cashed the club ace and
switcbed 10 a spade.
Declarer wan with the ace, played
off his top hearts and continued with
the A·K of diamonds, discarding dum·
my's two spade losers. East could ruff
the last, but decla_rer had the rest. His

CROSSWORD

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POPPIES SPREAD; YOU SEIZE THE FLOWER, ITS
BLOOM IS SHED. - ROBEIIT DURNS

�.

I
PIKI~&amp;-'14-The

I

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Dally Sentinel

Wednesday, March

Ohio Lottery

Southern's
Baer on
Division 4 AllOhio team

Piek3:067
Piek4: 6254
Cards : 6-H, 10-C;
4-D; 7-S .
Lotto: 28, 10, 13,

Showers likely and a
chance of thunderstorms
Th~y, with a low near

34,8,14

On page4

Kicker: 120885

•

•

at
..

. Vol. 41, No. 233
._ Copyrlghled 19111

.

.

-

zSectlont

Pomeroy-Middleport,
Ohio, .Thursday, March 21, 1991
'
,.

12 Paget 25 _ ..

Allultl;;;.ila Inc. Newapoper

-

Howard Frank appointed Meigs Treasurer
, · Ho'Yard E. Frank was appointed iion, which was open foUowing the couniy level, inc'luding Meigs Meigs County Auditor and, in Clark, 27 of 29 Republicap Central
as Met~s County Treasurer when resignation of George M. CoUins, County ·Treasurer- a position to 1984, Meigs Coun.ty Sheriff. He Committeemen were present at the
the ~etgs County Republican Cen- · who acccpled p position with the which he was Qriginally appointed was defeated in his bid for re-el!X;- meeting, held at the Meigs County
,tral Committee met on Wednesday Ohio Depau nuent of Tmn$pi!rtation in the early 1960's, and to whic~ he . tion to the sheriff's .office by Senior Citizens ·Center. Clark did
evening.
.
· in Marietta.
. was subsequently elected, Follow- Democrat James Souls by in 1988.
not indicate how many ballots were
Frank was appointed from a
In the past, Frank has served in
service in that position, Frank · · According to Republican Cen- required
to obtain the necessary
.
.
. pool of six applicants for the posi- · several elected poshions on the
elected to the positions of tral Committee Chairman Evelyn

Thompson
Sweet Black or
,
'

White .or .Red Flame··

'

es Seedless

.
an
'
,
uia
·
ed
Gr
t.

Umltl Baa Pleue, Per family Wjth' iay
Other Acldltlooal Purchues (excluding
' hemo prohibited by ·law)

'

'

4 lb.

u

11 Cream of

•r•ushroom

.Striking R~C
·worker indicted
CHARLESTON, W.Va. -A .thenhungup.
federal invesligation into alleged
Scott satd Buck. is among the
violence in the labor dispute at 1,700 workers who have been off
Ravenswood Aluminum Corp. led the job at_ Rl!yenswoQ.4 _l.lu- .
to the indictment of an Idled work- minum 's Jackson County plant
er for allegedly making two frag- since Nov. 1, the day the United ··
mentation grenades, U.S. Attorney Steelworkers of America's contract ·
. Mike Carey said.
with the company expired.
The federal indictment WednesThe union says the workers
day charged Roben Hale Buck II, were locked out of the plant. The
26, of Parkersburg with onll count company says tile workers are on
each of conspiracy. manufaclllre of slrike.
.
·unregislered firearms and possesScou said he did not know what
sion of unregistered firearms, Buck's job was or if he belonged to
Carey said.
the United Steelw01kers.
Buck surrendered to federal
Phone calls to Ravenswood Alumarshals Wednesday and was minwn officials were not returned
released on his own recognizance Wednesday night. United Steelafter appearing before U,S. Magis- ·. workers~ 56611 spokesman Joe
trate Jerry. Hogg, Assistant U.S. Chapman was iit Pittsburgh and
Attorney Phil Scott said:
· . unavailable for comment, said a
. If convicted, Buck would face union member who answered the
· up to 25 'years in prison an!! phone at iocal headql18flers and did
$750,000 in ftnes.
·
not identify himself.
Prosecutors would not say why
The indictment stemmed from a
Buck made the grenades.
federal investigation into alleged
"Well, just forget this," Buck violence involving the labor dissaid when contacted by telephone pute. Carey earlier said reports of
at~~~~~,: ~~$d&amp;!, ni~h~·.He _ ~$P!~~_!&gt;~~~ sp~ .

_

We.tchtiJ.wn -Hill sllj}"'·~repairs completed
,

'

1

According to Meigs Counly addre$Sed yeste,rday, the commisEngineer Philip R!&gt;berts, a slip- sioners heard a presentation from
. repair project on Welchtown HiU is Herman Lynch of American Faminow completed.
· ly Life. lnSUf!liiCC,Company J'CI!Bil!·
Roberts updated the Meigs ing a potenual tax-break for the1r
County CommiSsioners on the pro- health insurance ~~?licy holders.
• ject :when they met in regular sesAccording 10 Lynch, the comsion on Wednesday afternoon. . missioners coul~ provide those in
· The project was funded by ihe insurance g,~oup~ with a tax
Community Development Block break, and that 18J1. break could be
Grant Funds. Pilings were inslalled used to purchase 'from a "cafeteria"·
and repair work was performed by' insurance plan, which offers canthe Ohio Bridge Corporation. Tolal cer, accident, intensive care and
project cost, according to Clerk relaled policies through American
Mary Hobstetter was $21,150, Family Life.
although the counly highway
The county courthouse and·
department·performed the foUowup other county employees are
work on the project, consisting involved in a self-insurance plan,
largely of berm work, guardrail and according to Lynch, that plan
inslallation and backflll. That back- is eligible fO:' such a tax bn:alc:.
up :work saved the county consider- · The commissioners indicated
ably on the total cost of the project. · that they would consider the plan
The commissioners appointed and get back wi"' Lynch prior to
Alva Clark to the Galha-Meigs April I.
Regional Airport Authority at
Attending the meeting were
Wednesday's meeting. Clark will Roberts, Hobstetter, Commissionreplace Roy Miller on that board. ers Richard Jones, Manning Roush
Miller indicated to the board that and David Koblentz, and County
he did not want to be reappointed High\vay Department Superinten-.
for another 1erm.
den.t Ted Warner, ' ·
In the only other matler

Food

Club
Your Choice Whole Kernel or Cream Style.
· Corn (regular or no salt) or French Styfe or
Cut Green Beans (regular or no salt).

Warnings c(Jntinue·
on Ohio River fish
Environmental officials have renewed cautions against eating several species of fJSh caught anywhere in the Ohio River bordering Kentucky because of dangeroiJlllevels of contaminants.
Pollution continues to malc:e i1 unsafe to ¢at {*!dlefish, white bass,
channel catftsh and c~ from the river, the OhtO River Valley Water
Sanitation Commission s annual testing of fish from the river found.
· Officials last week renewed their recommendations against eating
the fish and also warned against eating paddlefish eggs, which are pro- .
cessed and sold as a form of caviar.
The commission once B$aln found unsafe levels of the pesticide
chlordane and of polychlorinated biphenyls in bottom-dwelling fish.
The chemicals accumulate in the fatty tissues and eggs of fish.
The Racine Locks and Dam was. one location found in 1990 which
exceeded the US. FDA's action level for PCBs and tolerance level for
chlordane. Channel catfish at the dam were found to have both contaminants.
Other species of fish from the river along Kentucky. including
sauger, white crappie, freshlVater drum and smallmouth buffalo, are
safe to eat. Kentucky offiCials said in a slatemenL
Advisories against eating lhe fish were issued last week by Kentucky, Oblo, Pennsylvania, Indiana and West Virginia.
The advisories, which renew warnings issued in previous years,
vary from slate to slate, depending on lhe levels of PCBs found in
species of fish caught 81 various locations on the Ohio and its tributaries.

Purchase of
2 Dozen
Food Club
Grade A

AEP,SOCC

meeting
rescheduled
. . An. invit!ltion -only meeting
between American Electric Power
and the Southern Ohio Coal Company has been rescheduled for
March a~. at 7 p.m. in the Ohio
University Inn .
Special presentations will be
given by Bill Lhota, AEP vice
president; Jerry Krupinski, chairman of the House Select Commiltee of the Federal Clean Air Acl:
BiD Oiler, local United Mincworkers of America leader, and Jolynn
' B~ Butler, Public Utilities Commisston of Ohio chairman.
A panel representing the public
· and private sectors will direct questions to the presenters. The panel
will consist of Bruce Knox, Unity
Savings and Loan, Vinton County;
Dale E. !man, Gallipolis City Manager: Rich Jones, Meigs County
Commissioner: and Roben Willis,
Jackson County Commissioner.
Moderator will be Dr. John Stinson, professor in the Ohio University Business College.
~·.:.MilS .QUIZ

TEAM , 'Oie ·~p Hflll Sthool· •· participated Ia tlie touraament. M~ias team
Teallli p!aee4,tbJnt Ill the Trl· Valley J;)GIJ· , ..ti!I,~,.,J·r,,l!re, •ttld •.T~ ,Getlach, Barbie
.ble Elminatlon Toprnament held recently at · AQcler:.on, an~ ·Lucy \Y~!Iebrenaer.•.Standing,
· Olilb Un'lvenlty. T'lie tonrnament w11 woti by ·· Allron Sheets and Stacey Duncan. Team advisor
Alexander High School with Jackson High
Is Rita Slavin.
·
School placlna second. Eiaht area high schools
Q~

~LifeFiight
. By LEE ANN THOMPSON
OVPNewsStalr
Federal investigators are trying
to determine who shot a LifeFlight
helicopler in the early morning
hours Wednesday.
LifeFlight II, based in WellsiOn,
was hit five limes with semi-auto•
malic gunftre, acx:ording to Patrolman Aric Yates. Two of those bullets damaged the fuel capsule of the
aircrafL
·
,
There was a brief interruption of
lhe emergency service, but it's
restoration was a priority for Grant

·,

I

helicopter shot

Medical Center, provider of the Slreet at the time of the 3:40 a.m.
helicopter service. There is 11 back- shooting. The sound of the gunfire
up helicopter at Wellston now, awalc:ened ihem, and the pilot went
according to Donna Wilson, public out to investigate. Yates said the
relations coordinator at Omnl, and pilot found the leaking fuel, and the
there is no estimate w~en the origi- crew and Wellston Firefighters
took care or that problem.
.
nal vessel will be back in service.
Yates also said there is no
Mechanics are assessing the
motive established for the.shooting.
damage to LifeFligbt II, she said.
"We've always had a wonderful
The FBI is looking into the
shooting incident, Yates said. Any- relationship with the people of
time an aircraft is shot, it is a feder- Wells10n," Wilson said, adding this
was probably an isolated incident.
al offense. he noted.
The crew of LifeFlight II was LifeFJight II was established at
a~leep in their quarters on Second Wellston in January, 1986.

Hussein regrets suspension of
aid; .hopes for better relations
WASHINGTON (UP!) - King
Hussein of Jordan expressed regret
Thursday over a Senate vote to suspend economic and mililal)' aid to
his country, calling it a mtsunderstanding between the United States
and his country. . ·
In an interview on the NBC
"Today" program •. Hussein al~o
said he hopes the Umted Slates will
realize he was working as a peacemalc:er during the Persian Gulf War
~d that Jordanian-American relations will improve.
The Senate voted Wednesday to
repeal mililary and economic aid to
Jonlan, which backed Iraq during
the Gulf War, despite a plea from
President Bush to give him flexibility in seeking a Middle East peace.
The repeal; added to a $4.7 billion catch-all money biD psssed by
the Senate, would affect $20 million in mililary aid and $35 million
in economic assistance approved
for the current fiSCal year.
The measure includes an
amendment thai would aUow President Bush to resume aid to Jordan
if he found that Hussein is taking
stepS to advance the peace process
in the Middle East.
· "I'm sorry to hear of this development, but on the other hand I
believe that'there has been so much
misunderstanding of our stahd,"
Hussein said. "The stand was for
peace. The stand was for a resolution of the problem, if possible, by

peaceful means. The stand was
against annexation and previous
occupation of Kuwait by Iraq. And
we were with lhe rest of the world
on board throu~houL"
The Iring said he hss not spoken ·
to Iraqi President Saddam H!1S8ein.
"I haven't spoken to ·htm, not
before the beginning of the war nor
after the end of the war nor through
the war," he said. "It has been
impossible to communicate."
Asked if he feels snubbed by
Secretary of State James Baker,
who did not visit Jordan on his
recent Middle East lrip to discuss
postwar issues, Hussein said,
"Well, it's up to the secretary
whether he VISits Jordan or he
doesn't, but I cerlainly hope that
the time wiD come when the Jordanian-American relations will
improve based on a clear understanding of everything that has
ha~ed and the fac! that we are
old friends,·and old friends have to
be honest :ovith ~ other."
Hussem satd he ts confident
rel~tions will improve o~ce the
Unued Sl&amp;leS understands hts country's stand during the war.
His message to the people of the
United States, Hussein said, is
"Blessed are the peacemakers. I
believe we sought peace and we
sought, to the best of our ability, to
avert war."
Hussein has said the Arab Israeli conflicl cannot be ~!_ved

without the active participation of
the Palestinians, but he said he
does not plan to step forward on
their behalf.
"I'm planning to do nothing on
their behalf," the king said. "I will
not step forward on their behalf if
asked, but in 1985 we had an
agreement which, if they asked us,
we might look at again: in other
words,IOhaveajointdelegationon
which we shall put the Pales1inians,
if this ps about, in the front row
10 speak on the Palestinian-Israeli
dimension of the problem while we
deal with the Jordanian-Israeli
aspect of it together with all the
otherpsrtiestolheconnict."
Hussein also credited Israel for
showing resuaint during the war by
not retaliating to Iraq's Scud missile attacks.
"As neighbors over the longest
cease-fire and armistice lines, I
believe that bolh of us ac~ieved a
lot by not going to war w•th each
other during this most serio~ of &amp;;11
crises that we have faced m thts
region," Hussein said. "And that
in itself is a great achievement"
And he expressed confidence
that rifts among other moderate
Arab states caused by Jordan's
siBDCe would be repaired.
"I think that time will heal a lot
of wounds," Hussein· said. "And
as far as rifts are concerned, well,
we feel aggrieved liS much ss they
do probably."

Fu1ii/S.·sought

for'·area locks,
dams projects
Funding to improve navigation
on West Virginia's major rivets is
. vital to the slate's economy, U.S .
Rep. Bob Wise said.
Wise, D-W.Va, said 15 miltion
tons of coal from south central
West Virginia move through lhe
Winfield Locks and Dam on the
Ohio River every year.
"That is why it is vital that we
make the m11jor rivers lhat serve
our slate as navigable as possible,"
he told a House Appropriations
subcommittee on energy and waler
development.
Wise hits requested more than
$124 million in fiscal 1992 for
work on the Kanawha, Ohio and
Monongahela rivers and at
Stonewall Jackson, Sutton and
Summersville lalc:es.
At the top of Wise's list was
contioued funding for replacement
of the Gallipolis lock and dam on
the Ohio River, along with the
Winfield lock and dam on the
Kanawha, according to a repon in
this morning's Huntingcon Herald-

DiSDBICh.

Wise asked for $38 minion for
the Gallipolis work and SIS million
for the Winfield construction,
which has only recently begun.
"These two locks have become
botllenecks for the entire inland
waterway system." Wise was quoted as saying in the Huntington
newspaper. He added that they
often delay shipments of coal from
southern West Vir~ia coal ftelds.
Rep. Tom Bevill, the Alabama
Democrat who·.chairs the energy
311d water appropriations subcommittee, was noncommittal on the
projects. Wise was reported as saymg he doesn't expect any prob·
!ems, though, because the projects
are under way.
Wise also asked thP. r.ommiltee
to provide $34.;, milh ...' for
replacement of the Grays Lana.,~
lock and dam and Potnt Mario•.
lock and dam on the Monongahela
River, the Huntington newspaper
slated.
.
· "We've got more inland waterway conslrUCtion goin~ in that 30mile area in that disb'lct than anywhere else in the country . That's
testimony to Sen. (Roben) Byrd,
who's worked for years on this as
well." Wise said.
"When you put that together
with the two highways between
Point Pleasant and Huntington, and
Charleston and Point Pleasant, thai
right then: is $1 billion of infrastructure," he added.

--

,
I

majority vote, nor would she state
the placement of the.other candi- .
dates in the voting results.
· Before Frank is given the oath
of office, he must obtain bond, and .
county officials were unsure of
when that bond would be obtained. .

•

•

•

'

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      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="34634">
              <text>March 20, 1991</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="2496">
      <name>frecker</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
