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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

.

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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.

--

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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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::Yhul'lday, IIIRh 21, 1111
•
p

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel .
Ill Couti Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTEBE8TS OF THE MEIGS-MAilON AREA

"'~

•

&amp;lm~ ~._......- ......,c::~.""'
~v
,

·ROBERT L. WINGETT

CHARLENE HOEFLICH

Publisher

Geaeral

Mana1er

PAT WHITEHEAD

Aulstant Publllher/CoQiroller
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 aoo
words long. All letters are subJect to editing and must be signed with
name, address and telephone number. No unsigned letters wm be put&gt;
llshed. L.e tters should be In good taste. addressing Issues, not personall·
ties.

Banking reform . .·
laws sent to Congress
By ALEC D.B. McCABE
Uaited Press IDteraalloaal
WASHINGTON- The Bush adminislralion, seeking to pump some
muscle back illto the nation 's weakened banking system, Wednesday sent
to Congress the most comprehensive banking reform package since the
New Deal.
The long-awaiting proposals - which Congress .saw in outline fonn
about a month ago - are designed to modernize the financial system
while making banks more competitive and minimizing risks to depositors
and taxpayers.
.·
. ·
The legislative package does riot differ subs~;BDtiaiiY from the earher
congressional report, the Treasury Depanment saJ&lt;I.
. ·
But since that report was issued, the Federal Reserve has agreed to
lend up to $25 biUion to the Federal Deposit Insurance Ful!d to recapilal·
ize the bank insurance fund without touChing iiS original $5 billion bor·
towing limit
Also, annual premiums paid by the institutions in~ by the insurance ful!d will be capped at an aggregate of 30 basis pomiS, .
The nation's banking system has come under heavy stress in the wake
of the collapse of the savmgs al!d loan industry, the bailout of which is
expected to cost taxpayers between $130 billion and $500 billion.
The recession, al!d the economic slowdown leading up to it, made several large banks skittish about lending to even their most creditwo~y
customers. This, in turn, has helped to. further sap the economy of tiS
strength.
·
.
.
The Bush administration's refonns, however. were not prompted by
the reeenl economic downturn. The proposals have been ul!der development for more than a year and began as a se8rch for a way to improve the
competitiveness of U.S. banks with their foreign ~lel:pllrtS.
·
The refonn proposals, the most comprehenstve smce the days following the Oreal Depression, conc:entrate ~ three areas: deposit "!sw:a~ce
and banking refonn, restrucrunng tanking regullltKln and recaptlallztng
the Bank lnswance Fund.
The Treasury report said the federal de~si.t ins.urance system is
· overextende4 and in Jteed of reform. The admtntstnltlon recommended
limiting insurance coverage to $100,000 per institution after a two-year
phase-in period. The government currently guarantees all deposits up to
$100.000.
.
.
The administration's proposal would prevent a SIDJ!Ie depos!tor. from
receiving insurance coverage m multtple accouniS at a smgle tnsutuuon.
Also recommended was the eliminatipn of several kinds of "passthrough" coverage favored usually by large and'sophisticated institutional
investors.
.
..
:
The report alsO said the govemme~l must pteserv~ tiS abth!Y to ~?rotecl
uninsured depilsiiS of over $100,000 m banks detennmed too Important to
fail. Treasury Secretary Nicolas Brady stressed that some banks, while not
too large to fail, are too important to regional economies to fail.
Among the more significant reform proposals a plan to ~low wellcapitalized bank holding compantes to become more compeuuve through
full nationwide banking.
.
.
· Banks in California, for example, can open a branch m the Umted
Kingdom but are prevented from banking in neighboring states.
The refonn package calls for full nationwide banking for bank holding
companies in ~ years. Na~onal bank in~rs~te banking ~ould be per·
mitted immediBtely wherever mterstate banking IS now pennttted:
.
Well-capitalized banks also would be allowed to own financlBI affih·
ates that sell insurance and securities. Brady stressed that only ·!he bank
would have access to deposit inswance.
·
Well-capitali~ed institutions .al~ would be all~w~ ~ undergo less
intrusive regulauon, whde resUlcUons for weaker msutuuons would be
strengthened.
·
Risky activity at federally insured state-chartered banks also would be
restricted. The plan would prohibit direct equity invesunent in.real es~te
and other commercial ventures at ·state-chartered banks. Thts pracuce
already is prohibited at national banks.
·
In an effort to streamline regulation, the administration proposed
reducing to two from four the number of regulators who now oversee
banks. The Fed would supervise all state-chartered banks and holding
companies. A new fedeml banking agency under the Treasury would
supervise all national'banks and holding companies.
The new banking agency would blend the functions of the Office of the
Comptroller of the Currency and the orfice of Thrift Supervision. The
Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. would focus on insurance and the resolutlon ofrailed institutions.
.
.

~hiladelphia

Page--2-The oanv senttnet
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Thursday, March 21, 1991

.

:
IJ JOE CIALINI
·
• · UPISporlsWJIIe
: Ifihe
Philadolfthlo
windlinup·~-moet·
"-~
fint
.!in"
- •
......., .-....,... _,
...ovad of the NBA playorrs, the
bope they lave sllt()COded in
~g a mess g11 to ihe defendin

Fired whistle-blower-could be back on job ·
WASHINGTON • When Gordon Hamel was fired from an
obscure federal agency last year.
'his boss gave the reisOII as sexual
harassment and insubordination.
But congressional investigators
now think Hamel may have been
fu"ed because he blew the whistle
on his agency.
.
·
Hamel's complainiS about the
goi'ngs On at the l'resident's Commission on Executive Exchange
have since sparked at least three
federal .invesugatiohs into the agen-.
cy that are still pending. His filing
. was suspended, and he is no,.. on
leave awaiting the outcome of a
personnel !IPpeal.
·
Whether Hamel is a conscien ·
tious whisteblower a malcontent,
as his bosses claim, is up to a fed·
eral personnel board to detennine.
But he has managed to stir up a vir,
tually unknown agency that would
. have preferred to continue business
as usual.
The President's Commission on

or

Executive Exchange places corporate executives in one-year government posts and sends federal
bureaucraiS to work for awhile in
the privl!te sector. President Bush
and White House Chief of Staff
John Sununu have halted the pro·
gram for fostering better relauons
between government al!d business.
In 1989, commission director
Belly Heitman hired. Hamel as
director of placement. He soon
noticed problems, including what
he saw as violations of federal
spending laws, and some questionable job placemeniS.
The commission was running an
experimental pro~ that allowed
corporate executives to work for
the government while being P.ald
by their companies. Heiunan liked
the idea and pushed to make i1 a
pennanent arrangement, touting it
as a savings to taxpayers.
Yet Heitman continued to urge
President Bush and o.ther.top offj-

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••

R.efocusing our national attentionf;;~~;~arence ;
For the last six months most
Americans have been emotionally
consumed by eveniS in the Persian
Gulf. Now with that conflict behind
us, we are slowly but surely turning
back to more immediate al!d basic
concerns, namely our country's
domestic agenda and ·the condiuon
of the country's economy.
As so often is the case when you
borrow into the pages of the business seciion of newspapers and
national news journals in an
attempt to get a fix on matters economic, if you read six differenr
commentaries by six different .
economists you are apt to get six
different opinions (aU riddled with
qualifications) as to the col!dition
of our country' s economy. Unfortunately, the old saw of ambivalence common to economists "on
the one hand" etc., remains the

common cop ouL •
:
. Personally, .r~e been optimistic
that once hosuliues were complet·
ed in the Persian Gulf and peace
restored and our troops returne~.
we as a people would once agam
vie-:v.the future through much more
po~tuve eyes. As one who has long
!Jelieved that co~umer confidence
ts key to economtc growth and sue:ess, I suspec~ that a.lot of Amertcans were l?uumg maJ?f purchases
on hold until the conflu.;t was coneluded. and that. o~ce 11 was over ·
they would be .ltnmg up to make
those llOSlJIO~ purchases.
Whtle tits sun too early to say
conclusively that this is th.e case,
some evidence of that restored confid~n.ce can alr~dy be s~n in ~
postUve ~nd bemg expenen&lt;;:ed •!!
our nauon s stoclc markeiS. Histoncally, .the stock market has been an

excellent harbinger of economic
recovery, si~naling a~ it does a
renewed busmess conftdence that
typicaii.Y translates aver a fe.w
months 'Into meanmgful growth m
most other areas of the economy as .
well.
. .
.Perhaps the biggest obstaC.le to a.
qutck and full recove!'Y t;mams the
reluctance of our n~on s banks ~o
extend adequate hnes. ?f credll.
Consc10us ~f the underlym~ publtc
concern~ wtth the S&amp;L cnsts and
the vtabtlity of the FDIC (the FedeFB~ Deposttory ~nsurance Corporauon), banks m general have
become much more guarded m
their lending practices, imposing
much more stringent credit stan·
dards ~an ~Y have in the pasL.
This credt.t crunch translates mto
market and lmgenng slowdowns m
a number of business sectors where

long term credit is critical such as
new home construction, durab~e
goods and busmess mvesunents m
new plants and equip~ent. Hope- .•
fully the resurgence m the other
markets and sectors I spoke of
along with a continued push by the :·
Federal Reserv~ Board for ~ower
interest rat~s will ~anslate mto a
more pracucal credit approach; on •
the pan of the ~ng commumty,. ·
. . In any event, wtth so many post· '
uve developments unde~way
throughout the econ~my. 11 wall be ;
hard ~or any one smgle factor to
stand m the way of.a full ~avery. ·
So whtle I remam cauuous, I ·
remain optimistic that just as our .
country conquered .considerable .
a~versity. in the deseriS ~_&gt;f the Ara· ·:
btan Penmsula, 11 too '\Vtll conquer
the wtdespread economic adversi- :
ties presently confronting us here at •

More taxation is badr--.~.-,
energy policy ~:~~7: . Berry s World

-ho-me._ __ _ _ ,

We're all agreed. I take it, that they'd love a little government pro- .
America didn't fight the Gulf war tection. But fat caiS in oil-company
for cheap oil. But surely we also suites are hardly the most ~ion­
didn' t launch Desert Stonn as a ate supporters of the more dniconi·
bizarre ploy to boost oil's price at an energy policy. That award goes
home.
to those modem-day puritans who
Or did we?
believe U.S. eneiJY consumption is
Critics of the president's recent- somehow inherendy wrong • a sign
ly announced energy policy seem of corruption, they even Sllggest.
Not long ago, for example, I
to think so. They insist that one of
served
on a panel discussion in
the jXincipallessons of U.S. action
By United Press International
in the Gulf is our lamentable (in which the agitated dean of a local
yiew) energy dependence. We graduate school described O.S.
Today is Thursday, March 21, the 80th day of 1991 with 285 to follow. their
must shake off our addiction to for- energy consumption as "immoral. ••
Today is the first full day of spring. .
.
eign oil, they say • a pleasant· He indignantly explained that 5
The moon is waxing, moving toward iiS ftrst quarter.
sounding
goal, to be sure. And how percent of the world's population
The morning stars are Venus. Mars and Saturn.
is this feat to be accomplished? . had no right to consume 24·percent
. The evening stars are Mercury and Jupiter.
by-use of that aU-pur- of the world's oil production.
Those born on this date are under the sign of Aries. They include com- Predictably,
How odd, I relorled. Is anyone
poiie
tonic,
the
single elixir guaran.j:Joser Johann Sebast:lan Bach in 161!5 ... Mexican revolutionary and p~i­ teed to cure everything
holding a gun to the heads of the
that
ails
'dent Benito Juarez m 1806... Russtan composer Modest Mussorgsky m
Venezuelans, Mexicans, S.audis,
:1839... theatrical impresario Florenz Ziegfeld in 1869... English theatrical society: higher taxes.
Kuwaitis,
Libyans, Algerians and
"Bush's
energy
policf
is
pathet·
director Peter Brook in 1925 (age 66) ... and actor James Coco in 1930.
ic," intoned Newsweek, m a typical the rest who sell oil to the West?
jibe. For one thing, it "dodges the Like all market transactions. the
' On this dale in history:
.
for a gasoline tax charged at sale of oil involves voluntary
, In 1790, Thomas Jefferson of Virginia became the ftrst U.S. secretary need
the pump." In the magazine's view, exchanges from which both sides
of 111111. He later was the third president of the United States. ·
a 25-cent per gallon hike would do · believe !hey ~fit.
In 1918, Americ:al1 and German soldiers fought the key World War just
Yet with few notable excepfine • and, in the bar11ain,
One bailie of the Somme. ·
- ·
.
would
"cut
the
federal
deficit
by
tions,
energy tax booslers ravor no
In t94S. ·seven-thousal!d Allied plailes dropped more than 12-thousand some $22 billion." But wait: s~ch trade.
They simply deplore
1001 of explosives on Gennany during a single World War Two daytime
Newsweek Is a stem taskmaster low ~line pnces on principle,
hasn 'I ftnished dishing OUI our poinung with envy to the~pita
~~~viet Premier Niltita Khrushchev pledged that·Russia would al!d
.
punishment.
also recommends a energy use of Japan and
cOClfl&amp;IIIIO with the Uniled States in JIC!ICCful exploration of space. The "surcharge onIIoil
The president's critics seem to
impons,"
the
bet·
jobttAmertcan·Soviet Soyuz space m1ssion was conducted in July 1975.
ter to spur domestic production and thiJik that the windfall from cheap
1n 1984 abe U-S aircraft carrier Kitty Hawk collided with a nuclear- suppress
oil demand.
energy could be more productively
powtnd ~submarine in the Sea of Japan.
Domestic oil producers concur spent by government. Perhaps a
with that last idea. Like the suppli- trip to Eastern Europe might rouse
A dloulfll for the day: In a letter to GeOrge Washington, Thomas Jef- ers
of any product who face lciw- them from this fantaSy.
• fersaallid "Delay is prefemble to error."
.
cost competition from abro.ad, .

\

•

.

•.

roday in history

• •

•

a

..
I·

~~
@ 199 1 Dy NEA. Inc

fourpmes.
•
Trail Bluen 100, Clippers l)(i
At Los Angeles, Terry Porter
scored 28 points al!d Qyde Drexler

added 20 points, 13 rebounds and
'

sOOd
•IDI game
toot advantage of 100-96: and
abe
:Petroi.t ini!aies to hand the Plllons L.A. Liken 114-106.
: a 107-1031oa Wedneldliy nighl.
Celtlci10:Z, Ballal1
Z 1.'he 76en evened their season
At Boston, Repie Lewis con- .
• series with the Pistons at 2-2 aod necled on 9 of 10 fin&amp;·half shots oo
: Hersey Hawldns hopes they have . his way to a 28-point effort and
more tban thaL
Kevin Gamble scored 20 for the
: · "II is a possible playoff Celties. Boston trailed only twice ·
· ~ matchup and it's 11 game we wanted en route to their SOth win of the
~to win al!d win impressively," said season, ihe 12th time in the last 13
: Hawkins, who scored 16 of his 20 · years they have reacbed that
: points in the second half. "We may plateau.
"'not have won as impressively as
Knlcb 102, Cavallen 1)7
we'd like bull think we established
'At New York, Patrick Ewing
som~.
scored 32 points and grabbed 12
"I thmk. we established that rebounds to help the Knicks hold
we're not going to back down al!d on for the victory. The win pushes
that they can be beat."
New York over the .SOO mark: for
Unfortunately for the Pistons, the filii time since Nov. 24. New
they established that they can be York has ·won 12 of its last 14
beat toni! before they played games. ·
.
Philadelpliia.
Nell 111, Tlmba wolves 111 (OT)
Detroit. suffering from the loss .
At East Rutherford, N.J., Sam
of $Wl!'d lsiah Thomu to a broken · Bowie scored a career-high 38
:wnst. lost for the the ninth time in · points al!d added 20 rebounds and
.13 games and the 13th time in 21 Derrick Coleman collected 28
,outings. The Pisllllls' slump is their poiriiS al!d 13 rebounds to steer the
. worst since the 1985-96 season, Nets. Mookie Blaylock sent the
'when they lost 12 of 14 games.
game into overtime when he sank a
• Not helping their !31SC Was the threo-point basket with two-tenths
'additional loss of Mark Aguirre, of a second remaining. In the overwho was poked in the eye during time Bowie and Cbris .Morris_each
.practice and did 'not dress for the scored six points to pace New Jergame.
. sey.
• "We usually bring out the best
· Indiana 117, Mlaml107
pf teams whCn we play the111, •• said
At Indianapolis, Reggie Miller
Joe Dumars, ·who scored 14 ~iniS · scored 27 points al!d Vern Fleming
in the first quarter and fimshed ·added 20 for the Pacers lb extendei! ·
. With 18~ "When you are on the the Heat's losing ' streak to six
road, you just want to give your- 1 games. The Pacers took the lead for
selvesachance!Owin."
good at 97-95 on a Fleming
Even though the Pisl!lns never ~ebound basket with ,9:10 remain·
led in the game, they trailed only mg.
.
99- 95 with 2:20 to play al!d 103Bulls 121), Hawks 107
99 with 1:04 to JIO.
At Chicago, Michael Jordan led
. • A traveling viOlation by Charles eight teamllllteS in double figures
Barkley gave Detroit the ball but with 22 poiniS; and the Bulls coast·
Vinnie Johnson missed a shot and ed past the Hawks. The victory was
· 1he ball went out of bounds to Chicago's nfnth consecutive win
&lt;Philadelphia.
overall and 25th in a row at home.
: Rickey Green hit three free Dominique Wilkins led all scorers
,throws for a I06-99 leild with 12.6 with 28 poiniS. . ,
~nds· left .and clinch the victOry.
SunsllO, Mavericks 96
• ''II was a home game and we
At Dallas. Xavier McDaniel .
.played well," said Barkley, who dominated the third quarter and
:had 32 points and 11 rebounds. Tom Chambers warmed up in the
·"We should play well at home."
final period to bring J?hoenix a
But Barkley is not interesled in franchise-record seventh straight
:toolcinpheadtotheplayoffs.
road victory. It was the Suns' lOth
: "It s tOo ear!y to think about win in 11 games.
'
·who we'll play in the ptayoffs," he
Jazz 106. Nuaets 1)8
•said. "There's still a long way to
At Denver, Karl Malone scored
~go in the season."
·
five of his 31 points duritig a nine• Detroit had six players score in point Utah run midway through the
;double fi~; led by Dumars, and fourth CJ)l8tter to lift the Jazz to a ·
;Philadelphia had five ..But the 76ers comebaCk victory. Denver led 88· ·
•hit50.6 pen:ent of lheu sltoiS, com- 85 willt 8:2J left, but Malone then
:pared to 48.3 percent for the Pis- ignited the Jazz burst that sent them
~tons.
.
·
to their third victory in their last

•'

..

.

~Offerman

SuperSonlcs114, Lakers 106
Jed by 27 pOints at 76-49 witli 7:18
At Seattle, Benoit BenJamin left in the third period, built their
scored 1 season-high 28 jlomts as lead with a 39-18 advanu,e over a •
the SuperSonics snapped a five- 13-minute span in the fust half.
game losing streak. Seattle. who The Lakers, 48-19, had a six-game
winning streak stopped.

10 assists to push the Portland Trail
Blazers. back ~to' first place in the

~mcDMSOD.TheTnillBiazers

lead die Los Angeles. Lakers by a
half-game in the division .

I

•

The Daily Sentinel
A lll•llloa of Nlolllmodla, tae.

Publl.lbod every illll!l'noon, Monday
through Friday, 111 Court St. , Po·.
meroy, Ohio, by the Oblo Valley Put&gt;
lloblna Company/Multimedia , Inc.,
Pomeroy, Ohio U769, Ph. 992·2~. s..

cond

•pennaniS.

.

: In 1959, the Docl'ers won the·
: World Series with m1d-year recall
. Maury Wills. This year, with
" another flas in siptt. the probable
' starting shorta!Op IS Jose Offerman,
:a22-year-Gld switch hitter.
; He'll have to beat out fellow
• Dominican Alfredo Griffin, but the
• incumbent has the twin handicaps
· of age (33) al!d injury (bad bact).
• Besides, Offerman's potential is
: ~oo powerful to ignore. He was
• named Minor League Player of the
: Year by The Sporting News after
: hitting .326 with 104 runs and ·60
. stolen bases in 117 games for
. · Albuquerque of the Pacific Coast
• League.
, · His only home run in the big
~ leagues came in his ftrst at-bat. off
· Montreal's Dennis Martinez Aug.
19.
"I'D never forget it," Offennan
said. "I felt good when I hit it, but
I'm not a home-run hiuer. I hit line
drives and that's better for me."
Offerman hit only .ISS in a 29pme Dodger trial bul relains rook·
1e status because he baited only 58
times. ·
.
.
"1 need toplay,every day to feel
comfortsble,'.' he said. "Playing
every three days is not mf game. I
know 1 didn't do too wei with my
hilling, but I'm working hard on
doin · better this spring."
otferman Is also Working on his
defense, which is often spectBCular
because of his range but emtic
bacause of his throwing. Many of
his 38 errors in Triple-A last year
came on throws.
•
"Throwinl is my liule problem," he said. "I'm aying to catch
the 1Ja11 and throw wjth better bat·
ancc. 1 feel bctler now al!d I know
:wrklng every day will be sood for
· LongtinJe Los Angelea shortstop
)3iU Russell, now 1 Dodger COICh,
has made Offerman his pl,'Oject thjs
sprin&amp;.
.
·
· "We have worked with Jose
reliliously." Dodsers manager
Tom Luorda llid. "Russell has
donO u OUIItllldina job llld BUly's
soiJtl to g~ him ready to play . in_

,,

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1•111• Nlelp Coonly

13 Weeks ............ ...................... Ul.llt
26 w..ks ................ .................. 143.16

Pritt, Ryan Oodson and Dean Hanakla. In the
EIGHTH-GRADE MARAUDERS • Tbe
Melp eighth-grade basketball team receaUy · back row are Coach Chris Stout, Jarrod Folmer,
David Felty, Brett Newsome, Shannon Stalls,
completed a successful season. Team members
Corey Seymour, Travis Grate and Ada111
are (front row, L·R) Benny Ewing, Todd Milch,
Krawsc~.
Frank DickeJ!S, Shawn Petrie, Jared Hill, Reggie

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the major leagues. Billy takes him
out every day al!d works with him.
By the ume the season opens, he'll
be ready." .
The manager says Offennan's
1990 stint should help him over·come any rookie jitters.
,
,
"There's no question about
that." LasOrda instsled. "Anytill)e
you put in some time in the big
leagues, it's certainly going to help
you.
·
"But we're still a long way off
from deciding who's ~ing to play
shortStoP for us. I don tlcnow how
Alfredo is going to feel and I don't
know yet how the youngster is
goin' to look. This is a wait-andsee Stluation for us."
Veteran catcher Gary Carter,
also trying 10 make the team.
agreed.
"We're going to give every
opportunity to Jose. but Alfredo is
a quality•veteran who can still han·
die ibe job,". he said. "Jose had a
great minor-league YC:Siir las! yeathr
and has all the capabt ties 10 e
world. But they want to see how he
does this spring."
·
Having a rookie shonstop would
be no handicap, in Carter's opinion.
"What it boils down to, is
. putting a quality player at !he position, " he said. "I don't care
whether a player is a veteran or a
rookie. If he helps the ballclub,
that's aU that couniS."
· O£fennan should help. He has
stolen at leas&amp; 57 bases m each of
his three minor-league seaiOils and
has never hit less than .288. In
1990 in the Pacific Coast League,
manaJers polled by Baseball
Amenca named him the league's
· best baserunner, fastell baserunner,
infielder with the best arm and
most exciting player.
Precedent 1s itso in his favor.
The previous PCL Most Valuable
Player, Sllldy Alomar, Jr., was the
unanimous Rookie of the Year
selection in lite ~ a year late~:
Risht now, Jose Offerman ts
merely the National League's preseason favorite.
-----------

"'bu'U be f1ootJnf on a doud with
the "'""'
110U'H l'pjln the
.,..,~ ,-- I'
. dasslfleds.

87

199

•

WEST PALM BEACH, Fla.
•(UPI)- The Los An&amp;eles Dodgers
, don't believe those who say teams
.
:with rookie shortstops can •1 wm

'

(UIP8tUHt)

could bypas$ .
~Griffin .as L~A. shortstop

~e."

CLEARED BY U.S. MILITARY

In other Pmel. Bollan dofealed
Wuhin~ n 102-81; New York
•--' vellnd tOl-97·• New Jer.
...........
M:Y downed MinneiDIIIUII-111 in
ovea11me; Indiana beat Miami 117·
107: Chlam ripped·Atllnta 129107: ~ up-eDdod Dl11as 110-

:done

ACTION

......

beats Detroit 107-103 to even series at 2-2

r~=ts~
a
!OOcx~ ~h~ES:
1114

and Dale Van Atta

COMEPV

-

:nc5en

Jack Anderson ·

'*

MILY

r.-=:il
..,_ _

cials to support the idea. She even
tried to get White House Counsel
C. Boyden Gray to take a private
lawyer into his office under the
program while still on the payroll $130,000 to Republican Party '
of a law firm. Gray declined in interests in the 1988 presidential ·
writing, saying he was concerned election.
"about having an outside entity ~
After Heitman found opt that ;
even a law finn • pay the salary of Hamel had gone over her bead, she
an individual working for the gov- told the same investigators that he '
ernment"
. was disruptive. She suspended him,
. Richard Seline, the commis- claiming he used profanity and ·
sion's chief of staff, said the lawyer suggestive language about female' '
merely wanted some government employees, and in November she· '
experience and was willing to work ftred htm.
·
•
without a salary for a few months.
Investigators for the Office of '
By last July, Hamel had seen Personnel Management confmned
enough . He took several com- some of Hamel's complaints and ·
. plainiS about the commission to top · recommended that his firing be
government investigators. Among rescinded. Rep. Tom Lantos. D- •
his charges were that employee Calif.. has rushed to Hamel's i
records were shoddy and that one defense and everi chaired a hearing
participating business, Pepsi Cola on the issue. Investigations into :
Co., had iiS $18,000 fee for partici- Hamel's firing and the operations
pation in the program waived, of the commission are pending by ·
improperly. Pepsi donated nearly several government agencies.

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•

�Thursday, March 21, 1991

Ohio

March 21 1991

Southern's Baer, HT's Rankin take honors

.

~

W-G's Hernon heads D-Iv ·atl-state team

By GENE CADDES
UPI Sports Writer
COLUMB.US , Ohio (UPI) -·
Kyle Herndon, Waynesfield·
Goshen's multi-talented senior
guard, heads the 1991 United Press
[nternltional boys Division IV all•Ohio basketbaD team.
Herndon was selected the Division IV player of the year in balloting by small-school coaches from
around the state.
..
.
He was joined on the all-senior
all-Ohio fust team by Ricky Brown
of Mogadore, Bob Hoying of SL
Henry, Ben Roaenbauer of Holp!e
and Jeff Stanley of Columbus
Wehrle.
·"He's a super player," Waynes.
field-Goshen head coach Jack
Prater said of the 6-foot-4, ISSpound Herndon, who ranks second
m his class of 31 with a 3.97 grade
point average,
Herndon's season basketball
sWistics back up Prarer's praise.
He averaged 29.4 points. 17.9
rebounds, 6.4 steals and 7.9 assists
.per game, shoe 53 percent from the
field and 75 percent from the free
throw line In W-G's 17-3 season. .
"He's the best offensive
rebounder I' ve. ever seen," said
Prarer. "This kid is just a phenom·enal offensive hoard man. This
year, he had ·147 offensive
rebounds. He just has a knack of
going to where the hall is. You
don't tt:ach that" '
·
Herndon, who scored 19 points
in his first start as a 14-year-old
freshman, had hig!ls of54 points
and 27 rebounds this past season
against Mechanicsburg. His low
'
··

Cheney overhauls
intelligence structure

•

was 18 points in W-G's lournament
Belidcs BNIIIWick, a 6-2JI*d, gle, Van Buren: Shawn Brewer,
loss to Minsrer.
who awnaed 15.2 points per 8IJne Antwerp; Jeremy Best, Edon; Troy
" Kyle's very ~uick lllld he's got this seuon, tbe IOCOIId Jellll was · Baker, Woodsfield; Steve Blunk,
very long arms, ' Prater said in made up of 6-2 Marty Oauret of Mansfield St. Peter' s; Lincoln ·:
explaiuing Herndon's high number North Baltltncn, 6-S ~Dilger Cobb, Pettisville; Shan Coffl\e, · ~
of steals. "We press a lot and he of Centerburg, 6-2 Randy Siefker Mansfield SL Peter's; Tony Dash, ;:
plays lhe point on our half-court rat cif Miller Cicy lllld 6-4 John BUJte Peninsula Woodridge; Scott Elwer, , ;
and full-coun diamond."
of BeallsviUe. Siefker is a junior Delphos St. John's; Don Ferstler,
Herndon's S3 percent field goal and other four ICIIiors.
Tiffin Calvert; Ryan Forgacs, Belshooting included 38 of 85 threeThe all-senior third team con- laire St. John's; Chip Goumaa, .;
pOint goals, 4S percenL
·
sis ted of 5·10 A•dy Baer or Hemlock MiDer; Terry Hollimm,
''He's the most complde player Racl•e Sovtltera, 6-2 Mark Columbus Wehrle; Jamie Harless,
I've ever been around," said Stromp of Minso, 6·5 Scott Caldwell; Craig Hatt, Fr-.nklln '·
Prater. " Scoring is not his biggest Auftlek of Glo111ter-Trlmbl,, 6- Furuee Greea; Rick Kitzmiller, .. ;
asseL It's making everyone around foot Crail Iceman ofl.uw and 6·1 Millersport; Nare Liildamood, New
him a much better plarer. He had a J - rowtn cl Waterford.
Madison Tri-Village; Andy Lee,
lot of pres~ure on htm. A lot of • Gullbau'h top D·IV coacb
Vanlue; Todd Loper, New ·.
•,
times he was double and triple
Fran Guilbault, who guided SL BostoD; Steve Montanmery. Con- . ·
ANDYBAER
CRAIG RANKIN
teamed ·
'
Henry ·to a 19.1 regular season and 'land Maplewood; Ryan Maier, ,
."He's what you'd consider a a No. 1 rating, has been voted lhe Houston; Kevin Niekamp, S1. "
self-made basketball player," Uniled Press International boys Henry; Eric Prigge, Patrick Henry: •
added Pqter. "He just lived in the · Division IV coech of the year.
Chuck Peny, Col!lmbus Wehrle; ~
gym for. four y~. Here's a kid
Guilbault, "!'hose.R~s."!'o.n Brett Riddle, Caldwell; Junior ~
averaslng 29 pomts and 18 boards· a state championship m Dtvtston Rader, Berlin Hiland; Craig 1
and he still has all those assists. m a year ago, received 10 vores in Raakia, Haaaaa Trace; Jason
He'sbeenagoodone.."
balloting by fellow Division IV Smith, Cincinnati Country Day;
; INGLEWOOD, Calif. (UPQ fed Stephane Matteau, who tapped
The
6-5
Hoying
averaged
16.1
coaches
from around the state.
Cr~ig Svendsen, Kirtland; Jo~y ·,:
Temas Sandstrom scored his sec- his 15th goal into an open net at
points
per
game
for
.St.
·Henry's
Liberty-Benton's
Steve Willi- Smtih, Newton; Brad Sttes, Hardin- .
olid goal of lhe game wilh I :41 left 18:35.
well- balanced and No. I ranked man was second with six votes, fol- Nonhero; Eric Schroeder, F~ Ienirt':nigulation Wednesday night to
Neither goalrender was forced to
Redsk.
ins. Hoying, who was tl!e lowed in third by ISJ. Frost ofVan- .nings; Stephen Schmitz, Centercap a three-goal lhint-periOd rally make more than routine saves
UPI
Division
IV back of the year m )ue with ~- Chuck Kemper of burg; Scott . Schwartz, Fort •·
that earned the Los Angeles Kings thr;:fhout the game, and were
football
as
a
quarterback, was Columbus Wehrle and Tim Tolzda Loramie; Matt Smith, Peninsula .
a 4-4 tie with the Toronto Maple hel
with several goalposts, most
joined
on
the
all-Ohio
squad by of Cildwell each got two.
WOodridge; jeremy Troyer, Conti- ,.
Liafs.
notably Makarov for Calgary, and
teammare
Scott.
Brunswick,
named
The list
nental; R)'lll) Teglovic, South Cen: Wayne Grelzky assisted on all Perer Nedved for lhe Canucks, bolh
to lhe second team.
Here's the 1991 United Press tral; J.T. Ttlmer, Lorain Catholic; ."
four Los Angeles goals, but the in the second period.
Rosen bauer, 6-2, was the second Intemational boys Division IV. all. Cun Wach. Shadyside.
·
Kings dropped out of flfSt place in
Sabres J, Calllldieas 2 (OT)
leading
scorer·
on
the
first
team,
·
Ohio
basJretliell
team,
with
height,
Player-ot·the-year
Kyle
.
the Smythe Division for the first
At Buffalo, N.Y., Dave Andraveraging 26.1 points per game.
school year and scoring average:
Hemdoa, W ayaesfleld·Goshen
time since Jan. 9. The Calgary eychuk scored 1:14 into overtime
The 6-4 Brown averaged 24.2
First tam
.
Coach-of-th,-year - Fran
Flames moved ahead by a point Wednesday night to the blunt a
points per game for Mogadore,
Ricky Brown, Mogadore, 6-4, Gulbault, St. Heary
wJien they posted a 3-2 victory at comeback charge by Montreal and
while the 6-6 Stanley was the top Senior, 24.2.
V111couver.
give the Buffafo Sabres a 3-2 criscorer on Wehrle's talented team at .
Kyle Herndon, Waynesfield~ Los Angeles and Calgary have umph over the Canadieos.
21
points
per
game.
Goshen,
6-4, Senior, 29.4.
.
fire regular-season games remainThe victory lifted the Sabres a
LEIAL IIQTICE
Bob
Hoying,
St.
Henry,
6-5
,
"
ina. including two against each point ahead of Hartford for third
Senior, 16.1.
otfier.
· ,
'1ll7
·
place in the Adams Division. If
B~ Rosenbauer, Holgate. 6-2.
' Trailing 4-1; the Kings used two · they hold on to. third, they would ·
The PIJbHc Utilities Com-..
n
Senior, 26.1, .
mission ot Ohio has set lor
power-play goals from Luc face Mon!Jeal in the playoffs. ·
Jeff Stanley, Columbus Wehrle.
public hearing Case No.
RObitaille to draw wilhin a goal.
6-6, Senior, 21.0. .
·
·.
91·02-EL-EFC, to review·
Gretzky then stole lhe puck in the An~~:Cw!m~e~~~?~:~
the fuel procurement pracSeeot1d
team
TGronto end and fed Sandstrom , not. goiD~Jo be' any c,akewalk ' COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPQ - If
W~ster Triway (24-2) m:'d ~o.
tices and policies of ColumJohn Burke, Beallsville, 6-4,
wlio rammed in a five-foot shot agamst us.
everything goes 8$ planned, the 12 Lexmgton (23-~) open Dtvtston Senior,
bus Soulhern Power Com·
2S.2.
'
past rookie goali~ Peter Ing .for his
Andreychuk controlled a loose long- awailtJd Division IV matchup II play at I p.m. Friday, followed at
•
pany, the operation of its
Scott Brunswick, SL Henry, 6-2,
41st goal.
•
puck and put a backhander past between No.I SL Henry and No. 2 3:45 p.m. by No. 9 Da~ ChamiElectric
Fuel
Component
•
Senior, 15.2.
Sandstrom came close to win•
RacicoL
Columbus Wehrle, two of last nade against Columbus Bnggs (19and related matters. This
Mike
Dilger,
Centerburg,
6-S;
niflg the game with 10 seconds Andre
"We had some good pressure year's four stare tounanent cham- 6).
hearing is scheduled to
relnaining, but his shot was deOect- and I just wanted to get in front of ·pions may be only a game away.
The Division I semifinals, Fri- Senior, 21 .5.
•'
begin at 10:00 a.m. on
Marty Gazarek, North Balti- •
elt just wide by defenseman Dave the net," Andrechuk said. "The
Talk of a 1991 St. Henry- daynight,pitNo. 30evelandXilla
March
25,
t991,
at
the
of.
Eilett. Gretzky was alone in the puck was bouncing around and Wehrle title game began within · Angela-St. ~oseph (21-4) agamst mme, 6-2, Senior, 29.3. •
flees of the Public Utilities
Randy Sicflcer, Miller Oty; 6-2,
sloL
Commission, 180 .East
they turned it over. It 's a play minutes after last year's tourna-· No. S Masstllon Perry (24-l) ·at · Junior,
23.0.
·
GretZky, who leads the NHL where it's a loose puck and you ment. St. Henry won the Division 6:4S and No.4 West Chesrer LakOBroad Street, Columbus,
Third team
with 155·points, exrended his NHL just jump on it and shoot ii and it III title and.Wehrle its third coosec- ta (25-1) against No. 13 Lancasrer
Ohio 43266-0573.
.Scott Auftl~k, Glouster-Trim:
res;ord by collecting at least one . goes in, It's a big goal for the.team utive Division IV championship at 9:30. ·
.
All interested parties will be
ble,
assist in 21 straight games.
.
6·5, Sealor,l5.3.
mentaJiy, going into the playoffs.
and both had a wealth of talent . Perry features 6-10 Chip Hare,
given an opportunity to be
: Sandsttom had opened the scor-·
Andy
Baer,
Racine
Southern,
The . decision clinched the reiumlng.
.
the UPI Divisio!J I player_ of the
heard. Further information
6·0,
Sealor,
20.
J.
.
inlt with a breakaway goal at the Adams DiviSion title for the Boston
With St. Henry's drop to Divi- year: who .avenged 2J.8 pomts per
may . be obtained by con·
12:S2 mark of the fin! period. But Bruins, who have an insurmontable sion IV this year, it set up a possi- game.
Craig
Iceman,
Lucas,
6-0.
.
·
tatting
the Commission at
Tom Fergus' power-play goal 64 .eight-poimleadoverMontiW.
ble championship showdown with
Lancaster also has an all-stater Senior, 20.6.
the
above
address.
Jasoa Powers, Waterford, 6-1,
seconds later and Gary Leeman's
"I don't tbink we played for 40 the Wolverines. But fttSt, the two in 6-8 Greg Cave. who was named
Senior, 16.0.
THE PUBLIC UTILITIES
score at 16:28 . gave the Maple minutes,'' said Montreal head reams have some other business to to the second team.
COMMISSION
OF. OHIO
Leafs a 2-1 edge after one period.
Mark Stromp, Mingo, 6-2 ,
coach Pat·. Bums. "We sure came tend to. '
All four championship games
By:
Gary
E.
Vigorito,
Senior, 21.2.
'
' Toronto then took a 4-1 lead in out in the third period and starting
St.
Henry,
24-1.
kickecl'off
this
are
scheduled
for.
SatunlayDiviSecretary.
Hoaorable meadon .
the second pe.riod. Michel Petit playihg, burlhete's much thore year's tournament semifinals sjon IV at 11:30 am., Division m
David
Allen, Loveland; Chris
scbred a shon-handed goal40 sec- emotion
in their camp right now, Thursday afremoon agai~t No. 6 at 2:30p.m., Division II at 6:30 Boggs. North
Baltimore; Bret BeeoiJIIs into the session with a 35-foot they're fighting
·'
' .•..
for something. I Kirtland, 23-3. Wehrle follows at 3 p.m. and Division I at 9:30p.m.
WPist shot that bounced in off the. don't think we're ieally fighting for p.m~ a)lainst No. 3 New Madison
gliive of goalie Daniel Berthiaume. , anything right riow/'
Tri-Village, 26-0. Both must win to
;Eighty seconds later, Benfi'i::' . The Canadiens scored twice, in set up the No. 1 vers115 No. 2 finals.
aume, who faced just 11 shots; Wlis tlie third period to force the extra
SL Henry advanced to the semireplaced by Kelly Hrudey. Howev- session. Shayne Corson cut Buffa- 'finals with a 66-58 win over Miller
ert Leeman's pass on a two-on-one lo's lead to 2-1 a1 four minutes of City in lhe regional fmals. Wehrle
BasebaD
br~akaway sent Wendel Clark in the third periOd and Guy Carbon- overwhelmed Tuscarawas Catholic
Phillies center fielder Lenny
neau tied tt 2-2-wilh 4:43 left in the 82-39 in its remonaJ ftnal cootesL
_::
fot~j'h:ei~s[ui
18ilh
~in]wredand a 4-1 bulge.
··Dykstra was placed on probatiDn
hiS back in a sec- jieriod.
Bob Hoy.ing arid. Scott for one year for gambling by Com·
nn&lt;l - n,~ricld collision with Los
" If we had blown it at the end, Bnmswick, a pair of all -Ohioans in missioner Fay Vincent. Dykstra,
A!lJgeu:s Dave Taylor and did .not it would have been a little crushing both fOOtball and basketball, give who
ran up a $78,000 debt playing
because we· deserved to be up by SL Henry a potent 1-.2 punch, both poker in Mississippi, must regular~In other NHL action, Calgary quite a few mme. We got a little averaging In the 16 points per game ly report to the commissioner's
edged Vancouver 3-2, and Buffalo· selfish," Sabres head coach Rick mnge
·
office. He will be subject to more
slipped past Montreal 3-2 in over- Dudley said. "It's a big win for us,
' W~hrle·· top guns are 6-foot-6 severe discipline if he gambles
time.
especially after. you domin~e a Jeff, Stanley. arolher ali-Ohioan again.
1 Flames 3, CanuckS l
game for that.much."' ·,
· ' .. av6raging 21 per game, 5-8 Terry
Basketball .
At Vancouver, B.C., Paul RB,n· Uwe Krupp put Buffalo ah~d · Holliman and 6-6 Chuck Perry. All
San Diego State head coach Jim
heim's deflection midway through · ,t.Oat 11:53 of .~ fust period with' are seniors.
,
Brandenburg received a !-year
the third period Wednesday night a p~wer-play .goal. ~lexander
TodaY's other two semifinal contract extension through the
found its way between Bob Mogtlny _made tt 2-0 wt~ 44 sec- games, in Division III, match 1993-94 season. His team went 13Mason's legs, giving the Calgary onds left m the second.penod.
U11ioto, 22-3, against Bedford 16, its best record in six years ....
Flames a 3-2 victory .o.ver.lhe' VanCllanel, 20-5, at 6 p.m., and Havi- CBJ\ attentlallce during the regualr
couver Canucks.
.
bri'e~s
land Wayne Trace, 22-3, against season totaled 1,460,583, an a~er­
11
.
Sergei Makarov picked up a
Cincinnati McNicholas, lS-10, at 9 age of 3,260 a game.
loose puck off the boards lllld ftred
Soccer
p.m. ,
Boxing
it tpward an unchecked Ranheim.
Defending clwapion Sampdoria
Among the Division III semifi- · Gary Mason, whose right eye
who touched the puck enough to of Italy was elimin~ from the nalisiJ; only Unioio, at No. 2(), was was injured when he lost his British
steer it through Mason's legs at, European Cup WiiiiiCI'S Cup. Legia ranked' in the. final UPI Board of heavyweight title to L~nox Hill
9:32. It was Ranheim's 12th Of the Warsaw of Poland drew, il-2 and C~ lllings.
\
two weeks ago, .plans· to retUrn in
•
·advanced
on
total
•oals
to
the
F
·fi
a1
·
·
year.
,
D
our more serm m games WI"II May. He says his eye has almost
The Flames had to figbt back semifinals._... A European Champi- · be played Friday. in Division I and fully healed and he will go to Flori·
d · g the game .
ons11· Cup
quarterfinal
game
was
11 .
tWICe unn
.
.
d
ff
.
th
75
h
.
.
da next week to train.
After Sergio Momesso opened ca e o m e t mmute m
the scoring with his 13th goal at Dresden, Germany, after masked
9:30 of the flfSt, Doug Gilmour put fans pelted the field with fireCalgary on the scoreboard wheli he crackers and debris. Red Star Belwrestled away from Jyrke Lumme j!rade of Yugoslavia was leading
to flip a backhand over Mason's Dynamo Dresden 2-1 in the sec,,
glove hand at 16:20 of the second ond-Jes game and advances to the
period. It was Gilmour's 19th goal semis,
Swlmmin•
of the season.
•
Tom Kurvcrs responded when
Texas and Stanford lead the
he snuck in from the point to take a field for Thursday night's start of
Robert Kron pass and beat. Aames the NCAA women·~ swimming
netminder Mike Vernon with his aitd di~ing championship at Indifourtll of the year at 17:38 to make · anapolts. Stanford and Texas have
the score 2-1 Vancouver.
won seven of the eight previous
But·57 seconds later, Doug Lid- . NCAA women's titles. with the
THURSDAY....
'
ster coughed up·the puck on a point Longhorns edging Stanfor!l by. 9.5
shot and Gary Surer skaled in and points last year.
Beef

·L.A. Kings, Calgary,
·Buffalo NHL victors

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· NewHaYen
112·2135

Units of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Servi~ e
responded to two calls for lil tS·
tanceon Wcdnelday.
.
At 3:SO p.m. the Racine unit
was called to Fifth Street for Eldon
Kriutter who was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
The Syracuse unit, at 9:3S p.m.,
went to Dusky Street for Barty
Pearson, also taken to Vererans.
.

PURCHASE NilE BASEBALL CLEATS
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SAMDAY S I'.M.-9 I'.M.

FEAIUIID
DAILY SPiaA&amp;S

VETERANS MEMORIAL
WEDNESDAY ADMISSION •
Elmer Hysell, Rutland; Katie
Weber,. Middleport;_Elf!!! Kriutter, Racme; and llartllllus Pearson.
WEDNESDAY DISCHARGES
- None.

Marr•·age licenses
··ssued in court

Los Angeles police an
'outlaw' department .

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Regents chief critical of
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Sports

-Corned
Cabbage

Gibsoa said.
.
The scams usually start wtth a
call from someone advisin1 of a
prize wianing . To receiye the
prizes, the &lt;ealler says, w1re the
money fQr the taxes to Western
Unioo or Federal Express. Instructions are given on how and when to
send lhe money.
·
Gibson said Ohioans can help
the asency to apprehend the cui·
priiJ by immediately reponing the

1

Sports briefs

DINNER
SPECIALS •••.

Officials of the Internal Revenue Service has issued a warning
to Ohio consumen to beware of
"too-good-to-be-true" telephone
promotions. .
.
''Just pay the taxes and the
prizes are yours", is oftea what lhe
promotion sars. but according to
the IRS, this IS not the way taxes
on prizes are collected. The calls
are a pan of a scam , the agency
says, to defraud an;a residents.
John Gibson, who heads the
IRS' Inspection Division, said over
a dozen Ohio taxpayers have
reported teaiving thele calls. Si'!lilll!)' calls have been reponed m
Indiana, K~tucky, Michigan and
West Virginia
..
"If this many people have
report.e'd the calls to us. you have to
wonde~ how many others have
received caJ1s also and fallen prey,

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WASHINGTON (UPQ - In ihe
The depanment did say that
solitude of his office last Friday, men power would be coroolidated
Defense Secretary Dick Cheney, by the Defense Inrelligence AgeDwith the strote of a pen. delivered cy, the primary secret information
immense new powers to the gathering apparatus.
South Ceatral
Defense Intelligence Agency.
~h of tftc four services ~ill be
Showers likely and a c~ of
The major announcement was required to reduce to ~nuty the
thunderstorms Thursday •. w~th a
dela~ until Wednesday, when the dozens of agencies _aiid " cC?mlow near 50. Chapce of !'81" IS ~
calls.
•
Pentagoo released a terse SURIIIIIIfY. mands" that g~ther mformauon.
"If you receive one of these percent. Variable cloudiness Fnof lhe changes that will govern the Those Army. Air Force, Navy and
calls.
act interested," Gibson said. day with a cha!tce of showers lllld
stealthy ways used by the depan- Marine Cocps structures will repprt
''Get the f~tets. Tell the caller you thuNlentorms, and hips near 70.
ment to collect valuable inforrna- · directly to the DIA.
can get the money ill a couple of Chance of rain is 50 peteenL .
lion. .
In addition, the plan sttengthens
Saturday thr0111b MOIIdiY
Marriage licenses have been
days, then call IRS . But, do not
While many clements of the the DIA by improvtng its reS&lt;&gt;un:es
Showers
and
tliunderstorms
issued
by MeiJS Probate Coon to
send any money!"
·
.
pl11n remain fuzzy, one thing is and allo~ing it tC? sct~en ~ve.ry
likely
Saturday,
with
fair
weather
T~
David
Michael, 24, Pomeroy,
The IRS Inspection Service can
clear: fewer people in fewer places · piece of tnf~rmauon filed m tts
Sunday
and
Monday.
Hig!Js
will
be
·
and
Rita
Jean Brewer, 29,
be reached at (513) 684-3564 or 1
uoond the world will be handling, data base.
.
.
·
in
the
60s
Saturday,
and
m
~
50s
·
Pome(oy;
and
to Jeffrey Neal
(800) 366-0484, 24 hours a day.
filtering and interpreting informaIn a move to assess lhe benefits
Sunday and Monday . Overnight .Stone, 20. Middleport, and Malena .
tion that decision makers like of weapons, Cheney also included
tows will be in the 40s Saturday Marie Maynard, 19, Tuppers .
Cheney depend.on when advising a measure that wiD require the DIA
· morning, ranging from the upper Plains.
people like President Bush about to prepare threat assessment rqxx:ts
30s tolhe middle 40s early Sunday.
enemy threats and other critical for all mljor programs being built
Cantata to be presented
·
to I p.m. at Pomeroy Elementary.
matters.
for the department. The studies
The
Pomeroy
'l!nit~d There is a $12 registration fee.
The changes stem. from a measure or rate the usefulness of Methodist's Chancel Chotr wtll
'
request Chener ll)ade of his intcUi- particular programs. .
sing 'the cantata "Jesus of
Sports card sbow
gence deputy In December 1989 to
Cheney's plan, whtch has the Nazareth• on Sunday at 3 p.m. at
A sports card show will be
devise a more manageable, cost backing of Gen. Colin Powell, thechun:h.
sponsored by the Girl Scouts on
effective method to J?CCr into the chairman of the Joint Chiefs ~f · Written by Vann T~app an~ April 7 from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. For
secrets of other countries. ·
Staff is also intended to con$01t- Tom Fettke, the cantata ts a must- more information call Sarah JohnDuane Andrews, assistarit secre- date 'management review "of all cal tribute to the·birtl), ministry, son at 992-6890 or Julia QuaJis at
tary of.defense for command; con- · intelligence production •' in .an .. death and resurrecuon of the 992-2442. ..
trol, communications and intelli- attempt to eliminare duplication.
ChrisL
gence, detailed the ~truc:tute in a
Powell and Cheney have made
Jeannie Werry is dire~tor and
Singers to perform
closed briefing Wednesday befme no secret of thei! ~ire to s~- Paula Welker accompan.1st. The
The Coolville Unity Singen will
lhe House Permanent Select Com- line many duphcauve operauons cantata takes about 35 mmutes to be at lhe South Bethel New TestaRUBBER &amp; STEEL CLEATS
mitree on Inrelligence.
that often enhance nothmg more sing.
ment Church on Silver Ridge on
The Pentagon said the new plan than confusion.
Good Friday at 7 .1:'-m. The chun:h
reflected a diminished military · Powell has designed a command
Last sign-up
· is located two miles off Route 7
threat posed by the Soviet Union structure that is intended to consolThe Pomeroy Youth League across from Eastern High School ·
and the volatility of Third World idate funher military operations. In will have its last sign-up for boys on Township Road 293. The public ·
nations. Though it didn' t mention the p10posal the Central ~mand, . and girls on Saturday from 11 am. is invited to attend.
Iraq the statement was an unmis- which orchestrated the Perstan Gulf
tabble reference to the defeated War, would fall into a larger
Persian Gulf nation.
·
Atlantic Command.
.
Coven operations, it said, would
That group, or "forces'' organtbegin to address "a worldwide, zation, would 8tso absorb two other
mlher than a Soviet/Warsaw Pact, geographic commands, one from
'
focus.'' But the Pentagon did not Europe and a second based along
explain how its new plan would the U.S. seaboard.
.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI)- be less in two years than it is noiv.
accommodate its new goal.
"Classes may be larger and
The chancellor of the Ohio Board
of Regents warns that stare aid for · more often closed out." she said.
higher education must be increased "Libraries may acquire fewer
so that an educated work force will materials and will be open for
be available to fill the jobs of retir- fewer hours. Special support for atrisk students will be far less avail·
ing Baby Boomers.
· Elaine Hairston appeared able, and mme stud~ts wiD fail as
.
Wednesday before the House a result."
An aide to the civil rights chief Finance Committee, which is conWASHINGTON (UP!) - The
She also said tuition cetlings
JtiStice Department disclosed it has said the wider investigation of sidering Gov. George .Voinovich's proposed by Voinovich would
broadened ,jts investigation of police brutality cases would go prnTl&lt;I.&lt;M $26.8 biUion budgeL
force reduced services at college
Spo~s
. police brutality in Los Angeles, back "the last couple of years"
· ~r.Thepopulation will become an campuses. ·
·
ari&lt;Hnvolved
"probably
a
hundred
while an expert told Congre~ the
Because of recent administration
inverted triangle whose small base
. will be expected to support a budget cuts, higher ed_ucation w~ll
city's police department ts a cases.
Some 2,500 criminal police bru- widened top," Hairston said . stan the next fiscal ~nod July I m
nationaJ "outlaw.
tality
allegations are referred to lhe "Today's challenges of Medicaid the hole by $78 million, Hrurston
The broadened federal investiJustice
DeJ* uuent each year. Only may pale in comparison to tomor- .said.
gation became ·public Wednesday
during a hearin$ by a House sub- about 2 percent ~~- to int;ii~tments row •s unless we set ourselves on a
committee on ctvil rights, sparked by federal ~d Junes. Ctvtl cases more productive path through eduby the brutal beating of Rodney against police officers, however, cation.''
.
are easier to win because the stanDivori:es have been granted in
King in Los Angele~ oo March ?·
Voinovich's proposed appropnA videotape of the beaung, dards of evidence are less stringen~ ation for higher education is $3.5 ' Meigs County Common Pleas
The nearing, by the House J~dt· biUion for the next two years.
shown repeatedly on television, has
Court to Agnes M. Haught from
shocked the nation. King, a black ciary Subcommittee on CIVIl
The proposal allocates the same Ronald M. Haught, and to Roxanne
motorist, was brutally beat,en by ~ights, included testi!"ony by amount next year as this year for Varney from Todd Varney.
white officers who later laughed James Fyfe, a. fO!'IIer. po!tce offteer instruCtiOnal subsidies and provides
Divorce ~tetions have been ftled
and now a cnmmal JQStlce profes- a 5 percent increase lhe next year. in the coun to Deanna F. Coats,
and joked llboUI iL
Rep. ·John Conyers, D-Mich., sor at Ainerican University. He has St~~tc: ·~upponed colle$es and uni- Pomeroy, against Heinz F. Coats,: ·
questioned the Justice Depart- done exteitsive police consulting.
verstttes would recetve varymg also of Pomeroy; and by Marcella
Fyfe restified that the Los Ange- amounts, depending on their enroll- . Jacks, Long Bottom. against Danment's civil' rit~hts chtef, John
Dunne, .about hts agreement l~st les Police Department "has long ments.
nie (Willie) J~teks, Palm Bay, Aa
week to review some 15,000 pollee been the outlaw ampng big AmeriActions for dissolution of mar·
Hairston said college enrollbrutality complaints filed with the can police de~ents. ''
ments are increasing fasrer than the riage have been filed in the coun
He said, • In Los Anl!eles, get· state subsidies to universities, by Sandra Salser, Shade, from
federal government during the last
ting
caught at brutality is a lot meaning funding per student would Richard W. Salser, Cleveland; and
six years.
worse
than brut8lity." He said the
·The assessment involves cases
by Jandara D. Andrew, Middlepon,
POMROY'S QUAUn SHOE STORE
from around the nation, including un"written police code is: "Do it.
and Martin Andrew, Winter Park.
Los Angeles, and was launched at hut don't get caught and don't
Aa.
the request of the Congression~l embarrass us."
Am Ele.Power .....................,27 7~
Black Caucus and the Hispantc . · The \)eating of Kin~ "~~s no Ashland Oil .............................. 3
Caucus.
·
·
aberration," Fyfe sa1d. I do AT&amp;T ...................................33
·conyers asked Dunne if the Jus-. believe that there exists in the Bob Evans ............................18 /4
lice Depanment also woul~ review LAPD a' culture in which officers Charniing Shop .....................l4 1/4
civil cases Involving brutahty com- who choose to be brutal and abu- City Holding ......................... l4 1/2
plaints against Los Angeles police sive are left to do so without fear of Federal Mogul ..................... .l5 3/8
inrerference. ;,
'
Goodyear T&amp;R .....................21 7/8
officers.
.
"yes we will,'' Dunne repbed.
Fyfe said, "This was not a Key Centurion ......................11 3/4
He said he had asked FBI Director spontaneous and quick b_ack alley Lands' End ...........................21 1/2
William Sessions to Oversee the beating liy a rogue offtcer who Limited Inc .............. :............2S 7/8
review .
knew that he would be punished Multimedia Inc .....................72 1/8
After the hearing, Dunne told severely if his diny work were dis- Rax Restaurant 31/32 ·
reponers that d!e J!lslice l)ep~n­ covered.
. Robbins&amp;Myers ...................25 3/4
.·
ment was widerung tts exammauon
"This was a protracred pubhc Shoney's Jnc ................ ......... l5 3/8
of police brutality "to a degree" to beating by a group of officers who Star Bank .............................. 21 1/4
include the civil cases in Los Ange- were confident of their colleagues' Wendy lnt'l. .......................... 9 S/8
.
les.
sllence
Wonhington Ind. .......... :.......23 1/8

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, Mitch 21, 1991

Soldiers·may bring home exotic President Bush gets new ID card
T~ co~ce
diseases from l?ersian Gulf War
WASlDNGTON (UPI)- l'resi· ty.
dent Bush no klnp has 10 pull out
, The Se&lt;:~et Service has made
his driver's license or American htm a spec!al gold-bordered ID
E..,_•• card to establish his idcnti- ca'd tJw he II DOW carrying II'OUIId

reall the

.dent?"
the third grader,
Bush showed him his American
l!.xpress card and his driver's
license.
Later that day, the Secret Service agents who prote'ct him. had
their agency prepare an idemity
card for the presidenL

BOSTON (UPI) - Servicemen referred to locally as Baghdad dUignosing the disease WltCss they
-__
r · - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -· inhU~
returning from Operation Desert boil," he said.
knew patients had been in ViCtnam. __
Bush rummaJed through his
·~ways"
Storm run the risk of carrying · "There are thouatds of cases a
Among Desert Storm veterans,
wallet while visuing a 'school in
home exolic diseases from the Per- year in Saudi Arabia and incidence "illnesses that evolve ·during the
nearby Virginia rcccritlt: wben a
The
word
"Seminole"
means
"runsian Gulf area that can take months mtes of over 50 percent have bcen next few months are probably
young
boy •ed him, ·Are you
aways."
and
these
Indians
from
varior years to surface, doctors warned documented in exposed foreigners going to be recognized" as gulftribes, traditionally linked to
Wednesday.
who are not immune," Osier no!Cd. related, Wyler ~aid . .• 'It is .those ous
Florida,
were originally refugees
Allhough most members of tbe
Dr. David Wyler, an infectious that pop up later that are gomg 10 from whites
in the Carolinas and
military are likely to come back diseases specialist at New England be the main cQ!ICern."
Georgia. Later joined by runaway
PomeroY.
healthy, a few could bring home Medical Center in Boston. said the
Overall, the infectious disease . slaves, tile Seminoles were united by
diseases not found in the United message doctors should get from risk among veterans. is small, and their hostility to the United Stat~.
Rouro:
WE NOW
States but common to the gulf the report is to find out from even smaller for those wilh whom Formal peace with tbe Seminoles in
11 am 10 Mid. Sun.-Thurs.
IIAVI
region, said Col, Charles Osler and patients wheiher they have spent they come into contact, he said.
Florida was not achi~ untlll934.
11 am 10 1 am Fri. It Sat.
DIET
JIII'SI
colleagues at Walter Reed Army time OUISide the country- and if
Medical Center in Washington.
so, where.
LAIGI
Doctors who treat veterans of
"It is amazing how rarely most
Wore~My
the gulf conflict shOUld be alen to . practitioners ask people where
·
Cantata/Drama
the possibility they could be suffer· they've been. llhink that should be
ing from diseases with names such · a standard pan of making·a diagnoas sandfly fever, leis.hmania and sis," he said, .
21TEMS
Congg-Crimean hemorrhagic fever,
Wyler said during the Vietnam
Sixth &amp; Palmer, Middleport
they said.·
War, some returninjl veterans
PickuP&gt;
Particularly in the case of developed a bacterial mfcction of
Sunday
Evening,
7:30
Only
reservists.• some will come back the lung called meiliodosis that did
,Portray•
the
birth,
life,
death
aild
"witll diseases that only become . nol produce symptoms .for up to
· resurrection of Chrlat In aong and drama.
evident after their homecoming, two years after they got back.
•1111 DoMN'• ...... lfto. Our,..,. ...., ..t. tMn ua.oo. Dei'"'V • • IIINted 10
....... ..,, . . . . . VlllliiM ........................ lei•IU .... aidltlolltllwlt. .
EVERYONE WELCOME!
sometimes afler months or years."
Because meiliodosis sympooms
......... 'UT TIMI AND tARIIJ!i OPPOIIITONn:111 NOW AVAILAa!J
PASTOR:
.JAMES
SEDDON
the dociOrs WJOle in The New Eng- tend 10 mimic those of tuberculosis,
land Journal of Medicine.
Wyler said doctOI'S had a hard time
.l .
Veterans who carry such disor·
!lers alsO could "pose arisk or sec. ondary transmisston 10 people with
· whom they come in contact," lhey
added.
: The largest threat by far.IO soldiers or any other visitors to the
Middle East are common intestinal
disorders largely caused by bacteria, salmonella or viruses, Oster
said.
Incidence rates for these illnesses "have been as high as 50 cases
per 1,000 American troops per
-.
Menroe H.D.
week in Saudi Arabia," he said.
Water P•1•lll
OH
lr•ke
Fl•lll
Clia
One frequent cause o_f acute
Mony '70- ·~~ . ·
DOT 3. Dioc or
Geo cho•god. 10·
diarrhea in lhe region is giardia, a
Fordo.
drum .
oz.
ttege velving.
parasilic inleslinal infeclion which
81-4700 •••.
in recent years has become increasingly common iti the Um.·ted Slales,
he said.
.
Othon . . Off
In addition, 9 percent of patients
seen at medical centers in Riyadh,
Mill I
Saudi Arabia, harbored amoeba
••Ills
organisms that cause diarrhea and
12 volt.
cle•n•. 18 oz.
84-11038-0
other intestinal symptoms, Oster
73-7t52·9
: said.
Brake
or
In most cases, slandard antibiotDisc Bl'llke Palls
ic treabnents are effeclive in clearRemanufactured shoes
ing up inlestinal infections. he said.
But he added that is notlhe case for .
w/excharige. New pads. Axle
R•ln D...ce
PCV
. those caw;ed by bacteria.
set. 6 month warra11tia,s.
: "Apparently, years of indis·
75-3501 ser.
, Up 1D 32
Many aizea.
· criminale use of antibiotics in the
Wllhll.
18
OJ.
76-3503 ser.
74-5002
•••.
Middle East have selected bacterial
OTHERS
73· 7379-8
· populations· with extremely high
: rates of resistance to multiple
LIMITED QUANTITIES
· antibjolics," he noted.
OFF
Although intestinal illnesses
generally have short incubation.
18
periods, Oster said the parasitic
mfection leishmania - whic.h is
.....
....11
Preston•
High gloeo ·
3'¥-4xlx5 in.
Hoovy-duty
.
transmitted by sandflies - can
Protectant and con·
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Year-round •n•~ta·cttu
in the form of symptoms mcludi.ng
Gallon. 7 .. _,,.,
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Much more common than the
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internal organs is a form that
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The Deily Sentlnei-Page-7

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, March 21, 1991

---People in the news---

Girl's obsession bothers mom
Dear Ana Laadera: I am IIIOihcr il t.l-bliod, it's up to you 10
divorced with a 16-year-olcl 1011. do wllll you can to keep theae two
'Hugh" is popular.lllnll:tivc. smart kids out ofaoublc. ImJx- oo your
and alhletic -- he has a lot going for son the impanance or being
him.
well-informed and wcll~ I
It seems Hugh is having his first fear that llbllinence il ~
serious romance. When he first when the girl il 10 ~ve and
· started to see "Mona,· '1he told him the boy is in hormonal o-¥ve.
t1w she was not like other girls.
If you· could make a friend of
Well, she was righL rve found her Mona, it would be helpful. After she
hiding in Hugh's bedroom c1o11et, and recovers from the Initial sbock,
she comes to our house ia the she might be open to friendsllip and
· morning aftct rve gone to work. If you could then step out of lhe role
he tries 10 go to an athletic event of Enemy No. I and be really helpwithout her she harasses him fill.
.
'
unmercifully oo the phone.
Dear Au Lucien: It looks like
The last lime Mona came to our somebody lied Ill you.•I read your
home when I wasn't here I called column in Stars and Stripes. There ·
her mother and asked if Mona was was a leUer from a~ who said
o~ the pill I was told in no uncec- ~ ~ COIIIp8lllel were ~wn terms ~Mona .would never. mg free ~tgttrellelto our ~~poPS ut •
have sex bef~ ~· but _rm · the Pcrstan Gulf. Yllu pnnted. a
sure her mother JS mistaken.
Slalement made by the Army chief
This girl's obsession with my son ·of public affairs saying it wun't'U:UC·
has caused me tQ develop an The Army spokesman dented
obsession io rid him of her. It's also categorically ihat the military
_causing problems between my son accepted such gifts from die tobacco
and me. Of course, this is exacdy companies. The very next day I
what the girl wants.
opened .a copy of the ·November
My common SCIISC tells me to let issue of Overseas Magazine and oo
.this puppy-love thing ride itself out, Page IS is aSIOry about bow 10,000
'but I'm afraid if I don't insist ihat catiOnS of Marlboro cipreaes were
they obey the rules about being in given free to our uoops
this house alone, my son's life could in Saudi. They were delivered Q11
be ruined. Any suggestions? .-- Sept. 26.
.
OBSESSED MOTHER, OKLAI mentioned this 10 a friend. · He
HOMA CITY
.
said, "I'll bet · anything those
DEAR O.M.: Obviously you're cigareues were gi~~e~~IO the USO by
convinced that your son and Mona the cigaretle company which then
have crossed that Une. Since Mona's took a tax write-off." You and I

By Ualted Presslnamatlonal
BIG DEAL: Sony Music has
locked up Michael Jac"- with a
sweet mulli·year deaJ ·Ihat could be
worth more than $1 billioa and will
include records, work with big·
name directorS and his own m:ord
• .\NN LANDERS
....19. ..... 4 .... ,.. .
label. The agreement establishes
Tlm .. Syntllre~r_,
the Jackson. Entertainment Com·
er... _.. Sylldlr,.
plex for his various ventures, starttbal if the men and women in mg with the album being released
the Persian Gulf get cigareues free this summer. A Sony statement
they are going to sm~ lhem. What said Jackson also will be malting
movies based on songs from
a swell way 10 get a few hundred short
the
album
and worldng with directhousand new customers.
tors
like
David
Lyuch, Tim Bur·
01qc1t: it.out, Ann. and let us know ton and Sir Richard
1\ttenbor·
the reqt scay. -A NON-SMOKER, ouah. Jackson's first full-length
BEV KEAVENY, BREMER- feature ftlm for Sony.'s Columbia
HAVEN, GERMANY
Pictures will be a musical action
DEAR BEV IN GERMANY: flick based on a Jackson idea. Jon•
AcoordinQ to the mail I've received · Peters and Peter Gober, the heads .
from .Saudi Arabia, free cigarettes of Columbia Pictures, said·,
are all over the pia~. The Army "Michael Jackson is one of the
chid of public affairs was telling most brilliant all· around entertainthe tnilh, however. Our Anned Serv- ers in the world, il consummate
performer. He's a nalional trQSure
ices do Ml accept free cigareues
but the
does. ' and we're absolutely thrilled in
·

Philathea Women meet
Maryln Wilcox presided at the giv1,1n by Teri Hockman for new
Philathea~eelin held rccendy at offi~: Donna }{aftsoit, president;
the Middlepo
uri:h of Christ..
Kathy Wilfong, vice-presideni;
Tcri H
an gave the openmg Nancy Freetlian, secretary; Kathy
prayer with Martha Childs giving lhle, assistant secretary; Farie Cole,
the devotions. She read "F'md Hap- ueasurer; and Ella Mae Daugherty,
pi ness" with scripture from . cards and flowers.
Matthew.
The next meeting will be held
. Reponed ill were Nancy Free· April II at 6:30 p.m. with a
man,. Harold Carson, Carl Roach, potluck dinner. Off•cers will be
Lola Mae Qpivey, Geneva Tuttle installed.
and Jill Hockman.
Program for the evening was
Cards were sent for St. Patrick's · "Music Night." Mildred Riley ~
Day to Lester and Mary Bailey, "The Flower Lady." Teri Hockman
Georgia Wehtung, Dayton MeEt- p!ayed a selection on the piano.
roy, Clyda Allensworth, all at MaryIn y.'ilcox with Teri H~
Overbrook, Mabel Walburn and . at t~e p1ano led a kazoo band m
Lola May Quivey.
· ·..
playmg several older tunes.
The nominating report was

Ann
Landers

having him bring his creative
genius to the Col~mbia Pictures
Entertainment family." Son1, wd
the Jackson deal could eastly be
worth more lhan SI billion.

ried Richmond, Va., anchorman
romantically linked to co-wlirker
Gretcben Carlton. a former Miss
America, has been fii"Cd but stalion
officials say it had nothing to ·with
the relationship. Wayne Lynch ,
news director at WRIC-TV, said
the dismissal of Kevin McGraw
was "purely a ratings decision"
since the McGraw-anchored 6 p.
m. newscast is last among Rich·
mond' s three television stations.
Carlson is ·a reporter at WRIC and
earlier this year the television show
"Hard Copy" reported that she
and McGraw were lovers. Carlson
is still under conllliCl 10 the stalion
and will cont.i nue wor~ing.
McGraw's wife is seeking a
divorce.

MARTHA'S
MONEY:
Martba Ree~s may not be dancIng in the streets but she says there
are no hard feelings now ihat she's
seuted her 1989 suit against
Mooown Records and Jobcte Music
Co. Reeves had been seeking back
royalties and future royallies and
said Motown founder Berry
Gordy Jr. called her last Friday,
offering to settle the suit for an
undisclosed sum. ·"He said he was
sorry it had gone this far," Reeves
said. "He actually said thaL I IOid
him I had no hard feelings."
Reeves also won exclusive rights to
COMPANY
ENLISTS .
the name "Martha and the Vande!· KELLY: Enron Corp., a Houston·
las' • and to royalties from con~nu­ based. naiural gas and pipeline
ing earnings from her work. Smce company, says it is planning to
her return 10 Detroit after 12 years bring Lt. Gen. Thomas Kelly
in Los Angeles, Reeves has been . aboard after he retires from the
active in local charities, helps teens Army. Kelly, who.became a familrecord rap songs ~d is secretary to iar figure with his Pentagon briefa Detroit foundauon that provtdes inl!s during the Persian Gulf War,
schoarships for visually impaired will be nominated for a seat on the
r
college students .
Enron board at a May 7 sharehold"Genghis Kahn" by R.P. Uster, ing a custom 'or the Middle East.
ers meeting, said Enron Senior
and "The Emperor's Winding Refreshments were served by the
ANCUOR DROPPED: A mar- ViCe President Ed Segner .
Sheet" by Jill Paton Walsh were hosless.
reviewed at the recent meeting of
the Middleport Literary Club held
at the home of Mrs. Wit son Carpenter.
The reyicw of "Genghis Kahn"
by Sibley Slack was read by Mrs.
Bernard Fultz. She slated that the
book was an account of the early
life and rise 10 power of Genghis
!(ahn, perhaps the most fearsome
conqueror of all time. All charac·
ters were living people. No detail
h8s been invented. All the spoken
words are recorded in contempo, rary or near contemporary sources.
Genghis Kahn di~ m 1227.
Mrs. Roy Holler reviewed ''The
Emperor's Winding Sheet" staling
that it is a story of the fall of Constantinople in 1453 l!lld of the siege
that marked the end of lhe proud,
ancient Byzantine Empire. Corrupt
by jealousies, nalional vanities, the
ctly never-the-less commanded
such bravery and loyalty as the
world has seldom seen. Constanline was'the last Roman Emperor.
Mrs. George Hockett Jr. presided at the meeling in which roll call
was answered with members nam-

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$5~!.

STORE HOURS
MOnday 9:30-1:00
Tuesday-Saturdar
9:30-S:OO

I

•

•

·~·

=

CARPET SALE

10 DIFFERENT CARPETS ARE NOW ON SALE!
Choosa Level. Loop Carpet, Sculptured, Saxony. or Berber.
We sell o'n ly first qiJallty carpets, all are fully warranted.
&lt;Call us for a free quote.

ANDERSON'S

FURNITURE, APPLIANCES, TV'S, FLOOR C
992-3671

HOURS: 9:00-6:00
MARCH 20 THRU MARCH 30. 1991
49 N. 2ND AVE.
MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

S20'900
.

OUR ENTIRE STOCK OF
SYLVANIA COLOR TELEVISIONS
IS NOW ON SALE.

gg&lt;:

New shipment iust
received. Extremely good
quality. Lay one away for
Mother's Day!

DOWNTOWN POMEIOY

.,

ll=l

FIR
DIUVDY

Only at this Hallmatk retailer
'

:•

Gallipolis ·
Full House of Cards
Ohio River Plaza
446-7330
© 1991

l

Hallmalil Carda. Inc

�'

'
Page 8 · The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

•

Community Calendar Items.
appear two days btfon! ID evnt
ud tbe day of that event. Items
must bt received weD In ad VInce
to assure publication In the cal-

I

'

,,,
'

Thursday,

March 21, 1991

llarch 21 1881

J(lassified

Community calendar

RACINE • There will be a support group meeting for those affected by the Gulf War on Thursday at
7 p.m. at the Racine United
Methodist Church.

MIDDLEPORT • The Middle-- urday 81 2 p.m. All area children
pan Presbyteljan Olurch will hold are invited to allend.
a bake sale and bazaar at the Stan
Store in Middlepon on Friday from
LONG BO'ITOM • There will e
10 a.fll. to 5 p.m. Proceeds will be a spring smorgs,sbord dinner at the
eadar.
.. used for the repair of the church Long Bouom Community Building
on Satunlay at S p.m. Cost is SS for
MIDDLEPORT • The Middle- . doors.
THURSDAY
adults
and $2.50 for children.
RUTLAND - The Rutland port Youth League will hold a
Menu
includes
ham, turkey and
POMEROY
•
Spring
revival
at
Freewill Baptist Church will have coaches meetin~ on Thursday at the Pomeroy Church of Christ will dressing, homemade noodles.
revival through Saturday with 6:30 p.m. at Mtddleport Village be held Friday through Sunday at 7 desserts and drinks. Public invited.
Raben Stewan. Ps,ul Taylor, pas- Hall. Anyone interested in coach- p.m . nighdy. Tom Lawson, a pro. ing is invited to attend.
tor, invites the public.
POINT PLEASANT . - The
fessor at Kentucky Christian ColMGM
Boy Scout District wiD liave.
lege
will
be
the
speaker.
Andy
POMEROY • The Pomeroy
RACINE • The Racine Ameria
rain
guuer
regatta on Saturd\ly at
Miles,
minister,
invites
the
public.
can Legion Post 602 will meet · group of AA and A!Anon will meet
the
Point
Pleasant
Junior High
·1'hursday at7 p.m. at Sacred Heart
Thursday at7:30 p.m.
School.
Registtation
wiD
begin at 9
Catholic Church in Pomeroy.
a.m.
All
cub
scouts
in
the
district
TUPPERS PLAINS • There will
POMEROY - The Meigs Councan
participate.
Call
675-4439
or
be a round and square dance on 675-6677 fm information.
ty Demoaatic Executive CommitFriday from 8-11:30
tee will meel Thursday at 7:30p.m.
.
.p.m. at the
FRIDAY
at the Carpenter's Hall in Pomel\)y. ·
POMEROY • The Pomeroy TupPers Plains .VFW Building fea- ·
SYRACUSE • The class of
Senior Citizens will have a round tunng Rocky Mountain Bluegrass. 1971 of Southern High School will
POMEROY - The Belles and and square dance on Friday from 8- Ronni~ Woocj will be the caller. meet at the home of Barbara
· Beaus Western Square Dance Club 11 p.m. at the Senior Citizens Cen- Public invited.
Brown, 1191 College Road, Syrawill hold a spc:cial dance on Thurs- ter. Music will be provided by the
cuse, on Saturday to make plans for
day from 8-11 p.m. at Royal Oak Happy Hollow Boys ofoAthens.
CHESTER - The Shade River its 20th reunion . Any interested
Resort. National caller Gary Shoe- The public is invited to attend. ,Lod'e No, 453 Chester will hold graduates are invited to attend. For ·
maker of Tennessee will be the Those attending bring snacks for spc:ctlil meetings on !"'riday and Sat- more information call992-7496. . .
urday at 7 p.m. with work in the
cailer.
the snack table.
Master Mason Degree. Ali master
LO'ITRIDGE • Country Music
masons are invited to attend. Night at the Lottridge Community
Refreshments will be served.
Center wiD be held Satunlay from
6
p.m. to midnight. Refreshments
The March meeting of the ery is in a nursing home in Point
.
SATURDAY .
available. All hands are welcome.
Meigs County S~on No. 710 Eight Pleasant.
RACINE - Sign-up for Racine
and Fony was held at the home Qf
The annual repon forms will be ·Youth League, junior and senior
-SUNDAY
.
Veda Davis.
preJlllltd for the April I meeting.
girls and Pony Les,gue will be SatRACINE
The
Racine
First
Marjorie Fetty conducted ihe
Pearl Knapp is preparing a urday from 10 am. to noon at the
meeting and Catherine Welsh led prayer and devotion ~ and will Racme Kindergarten building. Baptist Church will have revival
the Pledge of Allegiance. Prayer have the memorial service at the Bring birth certificate copy if one . services Sunday through March 28
with Dr. T. Howell Upchurch as
· was given by Pearl Kns,pp and Lulu April meeting.
has not already been provided.
Hampton led the P,OUP in the "Star
Mrs. Fetty appointed commit- Sign-up fee is $12.50 for boys and the evangelist. Services are at 7:30
Spangled Banner. ' .
p.m. nightly and morning bible
tees for the May meeting and $7.50 for girls.
A donation· was sent for Easter announced the salon has met its
studies are at 10 a.m.
Seats to the American Lung Asso- membership goal.
TUPPERS PLAINS - There will
ciation to be used to teach patients
POMEROY - The Pomero!
It was noted that Ruby Marshall be a bake sale at St. Paul United
to CQPC with lung disease.
United
Methodist's Chancel Chou
is ill and letter was read from Dr. Methodist Church in Tuppers
will sing the cantata, "Jesus ·of
A binhday and Easter gift will Gordon Young at Children's Hos- Plains on Saturday from 9-11 a.m.
be purchased for a cystic fibrosis pital referring to Heather Friend
Nazareth," on Sunday at 3 p.m. at
child
needing a tutor.
·
RUTLAND • There will be an the .church . Jeannie Welker is
Departmental Chapeau Delores
Hostesses were Veda Davis and organizationlil meeting of the Rut- director and Paula Welker is
Kil¥ore, Mansfield, has accepted Loretta Tiemeyer. A salad dessert land Baseball League on Saturday accompanist. Public invited.
an mvitation to be a part of the was served.
•
at the Rutland American Legion
salon's 26th anniversary on May 6.
MIDDLEPORT
The
The April meeting will be held · Hall at noon. All parents and
Wilma Pinkley will attend with at the home of MarjOrie Fetty .with coaches are urged to attend.
cantata/drama ''The Day He Wore
Mrs. Kilgore.
My Crown" will be presented at the
Catherine Welsh as co-hostess.
· It was noted that Gladys MowPOMEROY · "Ben and Me"
and "Gilly the Salamander" will be
presented at the Meigs County
·Public Library in Pomeroy on Sat.
POnED EASTER
The literary program theme for
The annual grange banquet will
the March meeting of the Hemlock be held at Salisbury School on
FLOWERS
Grange was "Mother Nature in April 5 at 7:15 p.m. Adult tickets
CHOOSE FROM
March" with Rosalie Story as.coor- are $6 and children, $5. Gene Esendinator.
·
•Lilies •Azaleas •Reiger
shaw will be the speaker with
A reading, '~Mother Nature" was · cntenainment by Kendra Bentz of
Begonias •Caladiums
given by Heleil Quivey; "Lion or . Glillipolis.
Pomeroy United Methodist
•Mums •Tulips
Lamb" by Leota Smith; ''The Time
Used eye glasses and hearing
of Awakening" by Muriel Brad· aid batteries are being coUected for Church's Chancel Choir will sing
•Hyacinths •Miniature
the cantata "Jesus of Nazareth" on
ford; "A Little Bit of Shamrock" by a state wide contest.
Roses •Regular Roses
Naomi Reed; and "Honoring Saint
On the sick and shut-in list were Sunday at 3 p.m. The church is at
211
East
Second
Street
in
Pat" by Eva Robson.
•Kolanchoes
Homer Willard, Octa Ward and Pomeroy.
A contest, "Match the Sham- Alice Stockton.
•Amaryllis' s e&amp;ffodils
Written by Vann Trapp and
roc_
ks" was won by Sara Cullums.
It was noted that several mem-.
"My Wild Irish Rose," "When bers have long memberships in the Tom Fettke, tl]e cantata is a musiHours: Monday thru
Irish Eyes Are Smiling," and grahge. The longest record is held cal tribute to the birth. ministry,
Friday 9 A.M.-5 P . M.
"That's An Irish Lullaby" were by Belva Willard with 79 years and death and resurrection of the
Christ.
sung by the group with Ann Larn-· Homer Willard with 75 years.
Jeannie Werry is director and
ben at the piano.
Refreshments of green salad,
Paula
Welker the accompanisL The
The legislative report was given crackers, coffee and tea were
cantllta
takes about 35 minutes to
by Helen Quivey and a bake sale served to the 18 members attend992-5776
Ohio
•
sing.
was announced for May 3 at ing.
Krogcrs.
·

RACINE - A ''Thanksgiving in
March" celebration will be held in
Racine on Sunday at 3 p.m. in
observance of the end of the Gulf
War and to suppon those troops
still serving there, Those attending
POMEROY - A 12-step AA wear rW, white and blue or yellow.
meeting- will be held Sunday at 7 Bring flags, pictures and banner, as
p.m. at the JTPA office in . well as candle for the candlelight .
Pomeroy.
ceremony.
·

:

!MONDAY thru SA'fultDAY I A.M.

'

l

"'Ads outli•• Gallia. M•Dn ar MttfS counh• must bl pr•

,. PIId.
"' "•~

dttcowm fo, ldt •ultn adVance.
·· ~FrM ecll - G'-'. .way and Fauna ldl unCI• 15 worCII will Dt

'""3d.,.. It no ch•t•

•p,,C! ~~ e4 tor I" uPtUI IIMIIrl il dOwell .,r1ce Gf ICI colt
•7 point lint type only uHd. .
•Tri~Min.ia not.._one"tfor*rOrs.ttarfirltdl'f'. lCfttflk ta'
.,.,or, first d- ect ruftl In DIIMI'l . Call befo•• 2 :00 ~. m , dlft'

...........u...... .,.............

• All ,._ InUit " l*d In •~enca .,.:

c-•

of Th._
In Mefnor'-n

unt I•..., - cl•lif'ICI dii.,.._, . lutin•• Carel tna ltl•' .
noti•l .............,. ~ t~ Pt. ,....nt Aeotnlr 1nd.t ht
OeliV lent-.et. rMOhin• .,., 11.000 hGm• .

Retired Teachers' group meets

j

The Meigs County Retired
Teachers met recently with a luncheon mc;eting at the Middleport
American Legion Hall.
Maxine Whitehead, vice president, inttoduced the Electric Group
from Meigs High School. This
musical group had a varied program of song and dance. T,hey are

under the direction of Mrs. Terece
Davis.
Virginia Carson presided at the
meeting when plans were made fora district meeting at the Ohio University 'lnn on ApriiiO.
.
The next meeting will be held
April 20 at Gilmore's Restaurant in
Pomeroy.

R

~

l
A
N
D

.
E STOREWIDt IN OUR
EVERY PIECE Of FUR~~~~~AVE HUNDREDS! BIG
INVENTORY lS RED:E((IVE AN EXTRA ......
DISCOUNTS! PlUS

BULLETIN BOARD
· ·· -

.

Public Notice

'

FACTORY DIRECTPRICES

.

fACTORY DIRECT PRICES '

'

'

R

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A
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R
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I
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M
p

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SIMMONS

•ow. l1rtt StZI
IDI WilliG~ I IUniiU
1111 cttln I 139

St. lt.

124

FACTORY DIRECT PRICES

•

742-2211
fACTORY DIRECT PRICES

T
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A

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0

Ill

SIIMOfn IIAIIY 1m
'-t 1..- ' ' " S.t

fllll. WI,

1!11 ""''299 '"
SIMONS IUUI'Y IUT

fWM Sill, loot."hteol IJfl \•1

!!II !!!!1 1241 Hl '

. SMON5 IUUn IU1

OW1Jt ~ll. Mt tu ••49 S.t
' SALI' I'IK ( S399U UIM in
1!!!1 filM ~!] .I Ut
CMI:IH Si ll IOI~INGS &amp;
liiUnlfU fiiOM HA110MAI
1211 Ill

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1-ID0-837-8217

fACTO«T DIREO PRICES

HOURS
am·S:OO pm
Clootd ot 12 Noon

lutlond, Ohio

FACTORY DIRICT PRICES

t.,.;~:;.

'

~

·

We who ere left h·
hind
MIMI rMllze Godlovu

liDDING IN STOCI!!!

thru

cult

Still eornehow we
mult try,
The udd11t word
mankind knows
Will alweye be "Oood·
bye.'"
So wl!ln 1 little chHd
departs.

OYII JIO rtiCIS Of

TYo &amp; ArrliANCIS
UC!UDfD

'·

In Loving M.,.ory
.. Of Our Grendson
JEREMY RAY
' GUINTHER
Who went to hio
homelnHuven
,,. One yur 1190,
Merch 22. 1 190
LITTLE ANGELS
When God calli little
, children
To dwell with · Him
ebove.
We mortele sometime
quttltion
The wiodom of H io
love.
For no hurtttche comperil With
The duth of one 11MII
child
Who does eo much to
11111111 our world
Seem wonderful end
mild.
PerhiP8 God tires of
Cltlllng
The aged to Hil fold.
So He plcka a roeebud
Before It cen grow old .
God knoWI how much
-needthlm.
'And 10 He tall• but
few
To· melle the tend of
Hllven
More beeutlful • to
view I
Believing · this Is dlffl·

y.

ohlldrln.

A'fC~ ere herd to
We Love YO.., Jed,
lrldMIIIYou
YIIIY Much.
Gr"'n • PltPe

•,

'
...._., .....

Tol FrH

'
.
U·

w. 1111

I I

(All ollhl above quai1y
for FREE hlrni1we)

.

#1 IN BEDDING! R
ALSO UIPERJ!\L
!\1'\D N.UION!\L
BEDDING

Select From:
~ lt::::=:---t:=:=-=:=:-::~~~~1 ~Living Rooms
1!::::=::::::!::::::::===::::::::=:::::::::==:~~ ·Recliners
F
1 PICE IIAIIPIE:
·Bedroom Suites
U COUNTRY STYLING LIVING ROOM
•Dining Room Suites and Dinettes!
~
,,.,
•Sola Sleepers
I
c!"~:..Of
•Manress and Box Springs
~
~;~:-~ •Coffee Tables and Elld Tables
~
,:~.
•Gun Cabinets
•Rockers
41l HI!&lt;ES
·Entertainment Centers
·c
S899 •Sectionals
0
M
INCOMI IU RIFUND AI!IYI!!

In Memory

.........

T-0-

P r i - .......... 2.000.00
o-ot Oov- ·
""mant \,, .... S20.000.00
Toto! Proarom VIIOanarol Gov.
' 1141,?18.00
OF F.,ND:

24~=pi~~ -;;,d'4,000.00
Metartolo ........ 44.060.11
210 Not•Oebt
StOrYicl .. ........ 30.000.00
Toto! Floo ,.,; .... 178.0110.11
81-1-A Selety212 Unllormo .... l4,804.21
88-7-A 280 Permloolve
TIX .............. ,.. :7.8111.111
Bl·li·A 240
Utility .... ,...... :.411.iiU.44
Totol Other Special
Funds ........ 1137,018. 77
ORAND TOTAL SPECIAL
REVEN.UE FUND APPROPRIATION .. .. .1318, 791.11
SECTION 8 . Thattharo be
opproprlotod from the fol·
DEBT SERVICE
lowing
FUNDI.
GENERAL OBLIGATION
BOND FUND
Other Debt Sorvicl Fund
C·2·H Building
·
Fund ......... ..... 10.624.61
Tot1I'Oth1r Debt Serv- .
Ice F... d ......... lll.li24.81i
ORAND TOTAL DEIT
SERVICE ....... 18.824.18
SECTION 7 : That there be
epproprilted
from
the
following
ENTERPRISE
FUNDS . ,
..
WATER FUNDOFFICEE1-F· A 210 P•oonal
Service•211 Salorleo /
Wageo ..... .... .170,000.00
212 EmployM
Bonellto ........ .16,000.00
240-Suppllo• on~
Metarlalo .... .. 130.000.00
260 Capitol ~
· Outley .. ...... ...... 4. 700.00
Total
Office ........ 1219, 700.00
E1·6·E PUMPING
240 Supplloo ond
Matarlalo ...... l16.661 .37
2!0 Cepitol
Outley ............ 1_0.000.00

54 . MIIC8IIanecius

--- --

--

Mlrchandlsa
'

Public NotiCe

E2·1·A 250 Nota·Dollt
· - ......... 34,000.00
T-a-UMool
Fundo .......... 134,000.00
l'lottram Vhnltarvlewar
Fund Appro""-'lon ...... '171. 411.117
U -e-A 240 Depoolto Re-

'8hartl ........ .'.... tl:a21 .Ill
Total Pollco Dl-.bilfloj

T-

lundlll~

G...,.mv
M-........... 124.31111.88
TOIII Ullltloo D11tooll1
Fun- Approprlotlon ........ 824,31111.88
ORAND TOTAL
ENTERPRIIE
FUNDI APPROPRI·
ATION ....... 1111,123.82 ·
&amp;EcnoN 8. Thet be
IIJIJ1 I!JIIilttod ffttm the,TRUST
AND AGENCY FUNDS .
POLICE DJIAIILITY AND
PENSION FUND
PROGRAM I - SECURITY
OF PERSONS AND
PROPERTY
B-11 ·212 Emolovoro'

• •••

cried.
If LOVE could have
uved you,
You never would
have died.
In life we loved you
deerly,
In d11th we love you

ltlll.
In our,hearta you hold
e plaoe
That no one else .can
fHI.
.
It broke our hurts to
lose you,
'
But you did not go
alone;
For pan of u• went
with you ·
The day Ood toolc

you home.
We" love You, Raekl
Mom end

CABBAGE PLANTS IN STOCK

Fresh, Artificial Flowers ·
For Easter Gifts

MEIGS FARM MARKET
290 WEST M-IN ST.

POMEROYI OHIO

•New Homes
•Go ragas
•C-pleta
· le-dallng
Stop I Compare
free lstlmottl

985-4473
667-6179

5-31·'90 tfn

•.1Uiii.u:"
~

Rc :. t n

205 N. Socond StrNI
_,OliPOIT, OHIO 4S 760
Offict 614-992-2116
HOME 614-,92-U92
DOniE 5. TUINO. IIOKII
HOUSI!B•LOTSNFARMS
COMMERCIAL
We Need Llollnl!l!
11·5·111-11•

FOREVER BRONZE
PROM TANNING
SPECIAL
· ht 50 High

School

Studtnts .

$1 0

~all 949 ~ 2126
For Appt.

'

-

'

WHAUY'S
AUTO PARTS
Spoclallzlnt In
Cult•• Fr-e lepalr
NEW • USED PAATlt
FOR ALL MAKES •
MODELl

992-7013
or 992-5553
1-100-141·0070
DAIWII, OHIO .

3-14-'tl-tfn

NO JOB TOO SMALL
FREE ESTIMATES

(EDAR
CONSTRUCTION
992·6641 or
691·6164

12-31 -to-ttn

PubUc Notice
lo lllldn~ bldo from qual~ ·
llod MI-lly, Wo....,., and ·
lmeU lualnau Canlraotora
ond . . .pllorolor Ilia to-·
lngEKMvltlon. DriveWI'II,

ond l'enolon

Fund .............. 111,821 . Ill
Oil AN 0 TOTAL TRUST
AND AGENCY FUND
APPRORIA·
TION ............. e1 .121.111
TOTAL ALL APPROPRIA·
TIONS .... n ,287,820.50
(31 14, 21, 28. 3to ·

PubliC Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
ATTENTION : Minority;
Woman. ·• Smoll luoln...
Cantractoro • Supplloro .
PROJECT: Wootowoter
Sylt•m Improvement Pro·
jecl, Rutlond, Ohio. Contr-=tA
OWNER : ViiJavo al Ru·
tlltnd. Ohio. ·
·
liD DATE: Merch 211.
1181, 1:00 P.M,
w...m Con1truction. Inc.

J&amp;L
INSULATION
•VInyl Siding
•Replacement
Wlnclowo
•Roofing
•tnsulltlon

. JAMES KEESEE

Howard

""'-of-:

Soading. - · and C.at·
ln·PiaaeCon- Work. Me·
eonry, Roofing. Mloc. llall
WcR:, DDDrl end Wlndowa,

Plumbing. Pointing, cou•·
lng, Piping and Valvae•
Blowert, Fencing, Pumpo, .
Aoratoro. and Clarifloro.
Plano moy be obtalnod by
contaotlng Engl-ng A•
oociatoo, 700 Wlnkllr Drive.
Woootw, Ohio 44891, 11 4 ·
341·111111.
lntereat partie• 1hould
t:Optacl Mo. Roy Koro. 8 :00
A.M. to 1 :00 P.M. 11:
Con1tructlon.
Inc., P.O. Box 38. Clteotar,
Ohio 41720 . 114-112 - ·
14M. (FAX1114-992-IIIOI.
1809.
131 14, 21 , 28, 3tc

W•••m

G .uttera
Downspouts
G~ttei' Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

949-2161
1-4-, t-1••. pd.
HOUSE OVERFLOWING?
. CLEAN UP WITH
CLASSifiED ADS 1 , '

ol Mldift,.H
UPHOLSTERY
213-flo. Second
llltldleport

... .I

Henil Tufting
Custom Drapes
36 Yean Experience
Wo loy Wllot, Wo Do .
We Do Whot We Soy.

10-19·t ....

· TRI-COUNTY
RICYCUNG

PH. 949·2101
or las. 949·2160
NO SUNDAY CAUS ·

pclintjng.
me do it for you.

Let
VERY RUSONAilE
HAVE REFERENCES

Attention R.N.'s
Your career and personal . .tisfaction
can match your goals in health care't
fBitelt growing m.1Fkat - Long Term
Care.
·
Pomeroy Nuraing hBI an immediata
opening for a Plrt·time lflld/ or fulltime R.N. deeirlng day 1hift. Flexible
scheduling, competitive ealary and be·

llfiiGIIATOIS-$100 .,
UNGIS-IIoo·U...-$125 op

fiiiDIS-$115 .,

•no OVINS-Srt .,.
. KEN'S APPLIANCE

SEIVKE

992-5335

II'

915-3561

Auoss Fr- Pelt Office
POMIIOY, OHO

-

m~~~~n•lum. r~dl.tora. nan~•. alt~tn.tort •nd Ill non -

f•rrout mMIIt.

CALl FOR riiCES

614-992-5114

16141 915-4110

HM-7

3-6-'91- 1 mo . pd.

Now /11
$fD6k//
MOBILE HOME FURNACES- HEAT PUMP$
ALL FURNACE PARTS

BENNmrs MOBILE HOME
HEAnNG &amp; COOLING
locatetl On SoHortl khool I d. eft It. 141
• or 1
7

CARPENTER SEIVI(E

KELLER'S CUSTOM BENDING

-Room Addhlon1

- Gutter work
- EI.ctrlc•l

.nd

Plumbing'

- Conarete work
- Rooftng
- Interior • Exttrlor

Ptlnting

(FREE ESTIMATES!

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215
Pom~roy,

Ohio

11·14-'90 Hn

SHRUB &amp; TREE

We Howe Changed Our location To
l 1/1 Milts East on Rt. 241 through

Chester, Oh.
SPECIALIZING IN .. ..
.
•Custom Bent Exhaust Systema
•Complete Line of Exhaust Supplies
•Handle and lnatall Monroe Shocks
Come and see' Ua For A Free Inspection
and Estimate
PH. 614·915·3949 IODNR dUll '
47269 St. II. 241
long lollom, Oh. 45743

3/1519111 ....

TRIM and

REMOVAL
•LIGHT HAULING

TBI II"Y llri'IIDIWIODIURIIR
Wm llllllftiDDI'I'IT
tHo tmolle, WIHorWOOdtriShlnsida hou ~e

•FIREWOOD

Middleport. Ohio

Dnll-$" .,

Paying Cllh for aluminum:
COpplf, brtll, ltllnlll lteel,

YOUNG'S

USED RAILROAD TIES

WAIIIIS-$1 01 .,

l0&lt;11lod Off tho lyposs Oo
lho Co.- al
Rt 7 &amp; lt. 143
Pontway, Ohio

FREE ESTIMATES
Take the pcin out of

o&amp;ums'-" 10 ! .. Inch ditmtllrWOOd
+iNtS Wlltrfor housthot111it

r

11·12r90 ·tfn

SIMON'S
PICK·
A-PAIR
SAME·
LOCATION
Uu Court StrHt
Entrance

10130/'U ""

-

of!ums up m30-lnch.,.oU111 '1!111' Pf'Ht" cenuatUl sr.;rem

(814)992-8808
38769 Rook1pringe

'

THE

. GROOM
ROOM
Compl1tt

GrOfllling

For All Brllll1
EMILE( MERINAR
Owner I

Operator

614-992·6120

Rd .
E.O.E.

POIIItl'or,

BISSELL
BUILDERS
.CUSTOM IUILT

'I

..

'

.

DII .................. O.M, W¥11102

P1tono (:IDCIIJI.2211olloo 5 p.m.

.DELUXE
....-..nt
PS 1000
TV SYSTEM

f

I

SAfELUjt

·unlden

•

,

irstrM.toMPtiii
.,....,.,..........
,.,.........,.

HOMES &amp; GARAGES

,. ,............
.,.I,
... .

PH. 949·210 1
or Its. 949·1160

COMP!(Tf NDTIING RSI TO iuYI
.

NO SUNDAY

·-'·'•

VICKER'S WOOD HEATING

"A I .• _.,..,._ l'rlcil"

·. Dar or

.
.,
•. .
·.
'·
'•

...........-

lOAD EVEfY 12 HOUI/S
CALL

offered.

Our Nltion'1 demand for - long-term
care will extend well into the 211t cen·
tury. Join the future ...
Jolr'! the Pomeroy Nuralng and Rehab
Center 1.
CONTACT:
LaRue Hill, R.N .. D.O.N ..
Pomeroy, Ohio 46789
Pomeroy Nursing &amp; Rehab

.'

-Miyblloc.llld 10 101lltttlromthetllw

Help wanted

Pomeroy tf11rslng and Rehab (enter

lou

---"Free-E«im•teo''

992-2772 or
742-2251

toDAJ WAIUMn

OPEN 7 DAYS
A WEEK
9 A.M . 'TIL 7 P.M .
If
d~ttn up your
yar on weeklndt .... WI
buJ. on wll~tnds•

•VINYL SIOING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

BILL SLACK
992-2269

USED APPUOCIS

TII-COUNIY
RECYCLING

614-992·1321

llmiiOI - DTIIIOI

New Hlllitlolullt

I

NEW- IEPAII

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

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

[

H~NlAL

10011 &amp; IQII!MINT

ROOFING

LINDA'S
PAINTING

992-5526
POMIIOY, OliO

J[)[JL

L Wrltaltl

·R. L. MASH
CARPENTRY

3 / 1/'81 / 1 mo .

tl-14- n

neflts

·

3-11-tfn

1531 Bryan Plaqe

11

•Aeeoonable Reteo
•Ouel11y Wolk
•Free Eodmates
•Carpat Heo Fast Dry
, Time
•High Gl011 on Tile
Floor Flnloh
MIKE lEWIS, Ownor
II. 1, lotlond, .OH.

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

01 TOll fill

$

nu ROOI CAll

BISSEU &amp; BURKE
CONStRUCTION

'

New Shipment of
Gifts For Easter

and

742·2451

3/lltll/lfn

IASIIAJI ID., UCIJII

SEED POTATOES................. 688
.
ONION
SETS ............... i'.lll..$ 100

A million times we've
needed you;
A million time• we've

'

lfiDEPEJIDEfiT
CAIPEYCLIAfiEIS

POIIIIOY, 01110

FOREVER IIONZE

50 LB. KENNEBEC

clet1uleon;
H Ia memory will nev- ,
er grow old.
He feshioned
his
smile out of sunshine;
He moulded his heart
of pure gold.
He needed a new 1t1r
In Huv-n;
A beautiful light to
shine .
So out of this old
world Of SO"OW
He chooae that deer
ion of mine.

915-3561

Acron fNM Pest OHke
117 I. s.c-1 St.

10 SESSIONS ...;.

RUSSET POTATOES .. !P.u.m~.$199
JUMBO ONIONS..........II...... 1·9(
LARGE CELERY ............m~~~.. 39(

T

RUTLAND FURNITURE· COMPANY
992-5627

Total .
,
lollcltor ......: .... 3,000.00
OTHER GENERAL
' OOVERNMENT-A1·7·0, 234 Audltor'o
• Truaur•'•
F -.......... ... S11,000.00
A 1-7-X 230 Contrecluol

·-fit• . . . . .

'

2

u

u

',·~~~+=~~~~~~~~~
"·

[ii:IJ

w-.. . . .

au ••s

A1-1-A Pollee law Enloo-

'

5 large Showrooms of Furniture In four

~~~~--r.=~==~~~~~l

MIDOLEPORT

MICROWAVE
OVEN IEPAII

cement-

.n~;..;~· T.;;t :~,...
~~..~...
;-~~~;;:;~::;-~:;~;;:=~1

'

SALE ENDS SATURDAY
MARCH 30, 1991

'

SHOE PLACE

- ·~·

of

RUTLAND FURNITURE CO.

y 10 MAKE lOIII riJICH4SI! IVIN lAIII .... WI H4YI: 90 DUI iAMI AI Ulll, 10 TOUCAN PAT WHIII

•

..-31,1181.

F

A

•

21 0 Poroonol Sorvicao.211 SNrloo/
,
w............ s129,437 .0il
212 Employ•
31.000.00
240 Supplloo and
M-lelo: ....... 34,000.00
250 Copltal
Outley ............ 10.000.00
Total Pollee law En·
tcircement .... 1201.437.011
sg~ro;: ;.;:~n.l~ Total
p,.;grem 11hl Villlp of Pomeroy, lecurlty of '-80nl •ml
Btata of Ohio. tliat, to ,.....
Poopeny .. ... 1208,437.011
vida tar the current ••··
PROGRAM IV...,._ ond alhar aapendlCOMMUNITY
..,,.. of .... Mid Vlllor.
ENVIRONMENT
-oytlu&lt;lngllil- A1-4-A Community Plen- ·
yeer andlng Dec- 31, nina and Zoning1181, the lollowtngoumo be
itndthoy.,.haralryoataolda 2
In......._
and lltPfOprfolod n fotlowo.
-·-·1
2.
pttropifotod fro'!' the OE·
In Loving Memory
NERAL FUND:
O.f Our Son,
PROGRAM I-SECURITY
JEREMY RAY
OF PERSONS AND
GUINTHER
PROPERTY
Who Left' Ui

E--

HOW YOUR FllEE FliiNTURE liOIIJS WORKS!

~

•

Public Notice

ORDINANCE NO. 194
ANNUAL
·APPROPRIATION
ORDINANCE
An OROANCE to make
IPPIOJII'Iatlonl. lor Curl'lfll
• - Expantltunio of and
the VU!oge
of PoOMrOY.Itateo!OhiO,durlng
the fl-1 -in· D•

FREE FURKilURE IS ONlY APLUS~ 8Ul WHAt APLUS\

P

. '

. ...

YOU RECEIVE
R s20 WORTH OF FREE
E
c
FURNITURE, FOR
i
EVERY s1 00 IN
~ FURNITURE YOU BUY
y IN ANY DEPARTMENT.

htritagt hou$t

-

Daily Sentinel is in
need of a copy of
Oct. 29, 1990
newspaper. If you
have a copy · ·
please call
992-2156.

~

u

Shoea to fit the sea10n hew extra details to meke them
perfect with Spring end Summer fashions. Warm weather
11 the Inspiration for • new line of Connie shoes at The
Shoe Place in Middleport .
·

-. -

....lo .. ......... 13.000.00

R
N
I
T

MARCH 22ND THRU MARCH 30TH

Tfi. . . .
=rr.::~~

='='"v-

T.............. tt8.21a.oo

u

SHOES AND PURSES

'

A1-7-F Solicitor
. 230 Contractuai

Different Buildings.

F

20°/o OFF WOMEN'S

1

BULLE'tiN BOARD DEADLINE
4:38P.M. DAY BEFORE
PUBLICATION

fACTORY DIRECT PRICES

•'

T:J'I'T."Cio!!e;:1•.n

Toto!
Pumping ...... 1211,111 .37
M h lttls ........ IZ,IOO.OO
E1· 1· J DIIITR IIUTIOIII
TOCII Pr-.IVI10.111.H
210 Not•Dollt
Ca~,.._IRIMd
eon•ouatlon.
....... ........1114.000.00
M
end R•
T - Dlotrl·
unci ...11H,I111.H
z=r.Aii·v·:::~K:oo
butlon .......... te4.000.00
I -I- I - · Highway ond
UTIUI'Y IIJIVICEI
llriprMtlenlllnt Fund
• E1-l-0 METERS
A1-I·A 1-lo Utlllly240 ..., ••••
210 C.PIIol
240 luppllll 8fttl
Outley,........... 12.1100.00
Malnenanae •. ,... li,072.21
Mltarlols " ...... 13.100.00
Toto!
Matan ........ 2.1100.00
T
•
Hlghwoy
•
A1·1-l Gee Ullltv........ Fund .... 1,072.21 Total Water Fund Appro.
240 luJpllos- Matarl... ... ............. t1.100.00 T - .......mVI- Tren• . .. prlatlono ..... l312.7111 .37
PGrtedcin .... tt 13.111.17 PROGRAM V - IAIIC
UTILITY IERVICEB
PROGRAM II - PUBLIC
• - FundSanitary
HEALTH
SERVICES
S.o1aM ......... e4,1100.00
E2·1· A Office- .
83-2· A Cometory' I'ROOIIAM VU 240 8upplllo Md
OINIRALGOYIRNMENT 210 Paraonol BeovlcnMotorlalo ...... l30.497.17
A1·7-A Meyor and Admin- 211 lalorloa/
Totti
lotnlhle Otf!oao21~Tm~M' ...... teoo.oo
Offlce .......... 130,417.87
210'-ol..,......•
211 ... loa/
· - .............. 100.00 Lando and
luUdlngo240 Bupplloi ond
.
· A 210 Capitol
21~ lm;iii;M"' 132' 000' 00 Metarlolo ... :...... s.ooo.oo E2-I'
Outloy
,....... 1113.988.00
2110C.pltal
hwRta ......... 10.000.00
Outloy ...... .... .. 18.082.04 Total lando ond
240 lupplloo end
lulldlngo .... 11 13.118.00
'
Materlllo .: ...... llo.ooo.oo TOIII
Cemetery ..... 123.712.04 OTHER USES OF FUNDI 240·2TaRIIfunded ......... 3 ,500.00 Total Progre111 II-'
Pultllc Heollh
TotaiMeyorand
Admlni· - - ....... 123.782.04
OfHall ~ ...... t1H,IOO.OO PROGRAM Ill - PARKS •
RECREATION FUND
~t-7•1lall-·
LEISURE TIME
Aatlwi!IO&lt; ,(tounalll- '
ACTIVITIES
;noP-..a~lervlca•81i-3·A RocrMtlon
211 . .lorloll
.
ProoramWttaaa.e4,ooo.oo
240 8uppllao and
. •
Totoll.. .lelltlvl
M-lelo ..... ... l3.11il.l3
ActlvldM.......... 4,000 .00
TotoiRacraatlon
A-1·7-0 Ctark/TNIIUI'Ir
Prop8ft1 ........... 3,9U.Ii3
210Paraot\oi81Mceo
Totel Proorem 111lriRt It .. Or We
2118allrloo/
!Aiou,..Time
t111.ooo.oo
,Pidc lip.
Actlvltloo ... ,.... 13,915.113
212 Empla;M
OTHER SPECIAL
KEN'S
APPLIANCE
I.,.Rta ............. .218.00 REvENUE F\JNDS240 luppllot and
SERVICE
88-3·A Fl,.- '
M-1 •. ,........ 1.000.00 210 Peroonal Sarvlceo·
991-5335
or
Toto! Clolk/
•
•
211 Selarloo/

246 ......... -

Pullllc Notice

PubliC Notice

Business Services

HUBBARDS
-GREENHOUSE

FACTORY DIRECT PRICES

H-.ttv Ads
V.-d 181•

• •A cl...tfi• ..,..,~- ,aH«t tnthtGelli,otit Deily Trlb· .

"NOW OPEN"

FACTORY DIRECT PRICES

5 P.M.

POUCIES

PomeroyUMC
sets cantata

'

to

CLOSED -SUNDAY

Eight and Forty meeting held

·Hemlock Grange meets

.992-2156

TO PLACE AN AD CAU

PubliC Natlce

PubliC Notice

• Tilt Area·, N••ber 1 MGrketplace

Middleport First Bajltist Church on
Sunday at 7:30 p.m. Co-directors
are Cathy Riggs and 'Donna
Grueser and choral director is
Sharon Hawley. Public invited.

• The

Ohio

..... ........ -

PttfiCt

'.
$)

ZENIX VIDEO

I 'It Mlloo W. tf Heber

895

Enlov O.or ~ 00 chen.
noo.IMthenowoLIVE
•• It hlp ...... - 24
hoilre. lAD ayotam lnclucloo decOder,
CALL TODAY
F_EIRUAII,UPECIAL
ONLY
.._

Itt:

-

'.

'

�..

..
,

•

_

...... •.
_

..-~

.,

Ohio .

Sentinel

LAFF-A-DAY

,Thursday Mlrch 21,1991

. . ......................
•.......

-"'..- . . . -- i-. .-----. .;·.
,......... ,........
-

.....b.... ~=

•*"
.....
on Ill. I, IIIW1I'

Television
Viewing

""WIIO IF'! IJ!i6

Aooml

~

·AJ f1lllllt me*» .., I • I

will

law

•

!VDIINQ

IIIIF)f.

lor Dlol, _ . . . . . , _ . . ... ~ .......
. . _ - ........... I n - .... p.M., ....,..

-

llan . . . . . -IllS.

0 t:"r":..\:""_: ::

MTlfURS., MABCH 21M

~~-~·~-~-~-~0~·~

on - LaL . . ,... a up. 114- 114-4411111. .
-.nn.
• f)nl roa111a

11

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

BORN LOSER

ID 'N' CARJ.YI.d ~Larry Wnpt

Fumllhld

33 F'""' tor Sale

'

'·

MarCh 21, 1991

a:tO CJl •

- . ....... ""·

a•

til &lt;ll • •

15-c:.;rcQ

~---·
.,....

...... lnol....... " - _ . ,

~lqo1t a One

Q

~a!:!a~~ -

• Wortcl Today
DOurllauM
1:05 Cll leoarty Hllll•u
1:30 (J). 11J NIC Naon Q
~ Jbbiia end Ca IIIID
ji~NaonQ

ctlt-2-1~8

f.ier Ctl~HHl i '-&gt;P

form IGor rlonpla Mrdt.

I
I [I'IFIto

YOLJUF

II
.Ill!'.
T H y 0 L'

1

Iz.J

E MV 0 N

II

r. I

I.

.

.

_

..

I

S 1 VHA L

•

It says In this artlcl.e that it
shows.love if you pay attention
to what ~r mate says." the
wile sa1d. Awakening the
husband yawned,• What did

Iu·i?.:..plaiO

.

1--iilsr-;1,....:..,1;:-::.;lrc_~~~

-L.
. ....J.L-...1.-.J.. .;.......L.. .....J

1..

.

chuckle

lha

qucled

•

by 'llll.lng In floe mllllno -d•

you dl¥tlop

lr001 -

No. 3 btlaw.

II&amp;,~Q
tD Upetoaa
1:35 Cll Alldr.Grtfllllo

7:t0,~11J Wloaorl of

~(E~Q
of - · ·

(I) c

NawallaurL

0

!II!~Nt9Q
.0
Tiling Sloreo.

81ca_-

:::;;:-

0

Dare

7:311

Ill ........nlyl Q

(I)

~

~
~ -21

."
~

'

rr........':ilal."~'. e· ..........
.=:::

II '•

d•
~

74

•
•

Motorcyclll

'.

•t

'i'iic:.i-

Tmstereo. Q
Cll
Cih!nl'l Family
1[1)
WA'I'H
·
11J Tloa HIICIIhlllar Stereo.
SCrii81Ffh
7:35 W Santoni and ion
1:00 ~~OJ. eo.br Bilow
(I) MOYt'f: Motloar Loda (PGJ
(2:001
(I) (I). MOYIE: 'Columbo
Goal to Collaaa' AIIC Movie
._... (2:001 'Stereo. Q
(l)W•l"-lnloa

Cl ' ' " ........ ....

~

.

\HAvES"
G

1M 1 ~'*A . Inc

=~L

Gill a •
a.alcetbe•
IDle Tloa 8Crltp1ao~a " and Flanders bel on llletr
sons In mtntaiUra goiC. (R)
Stereo.Q
Mu • • lila Wrote Q

I

ALLEY OOP

~=-noTour
~

MOYIE: Tloa Tin s•r

(2:00)

·. ,,

1.115 (I) -

of41 &lt;2=oo&gt;

of ttoe O.me 11'1 2

1:301lle 01 DlflaNnt

75 BoatS &amp; Molo~

forSIIII

OH. I JUST SEIJT t\IM A
1-\E.Y.. ) .GoT ~1t. VJmi
00Tt- IEU.IOO HIM 10
JACK fJKJ-Illi.SOfJ 10tJIGHT
ME£!' liE AT JO·\IJ'S ·
fi.X).IJI HaiJ DID lW
·eAR AT EJa\i OCW::I::..
WWPG. 11-IAT ~
•

53

111li1
ca.....,.,12dl
_..,
tll""'i on- lind,
~~.lot inond, ~- 114-218• ..,.

11 Helpwamed
12
AVON • All ·~-Call Marilyn
W..v• 3CJ4

,,._..a.

1m

Situation
wanted

Dull• • - W:aaen l:di'MI:oo p.m.
JUl.

Win tollo cxoo ol _ , In 111tlr
· ly ttoa· - - .,, 211
1141.

1171 VlcUMn, 14x'JI01 2 Metlot,

-."'llool homO, Oalllpollo

E - Y ~ No ptlt.

DlpOIIt

Furnllhld

AIMI

I

llll~ay

........ !OWl'$.-.

-

-

R I • - IIOd
,SIDO...... aiiOioto.-..

ball':~ '

c'Na

~-- '"' ~

murderous woman who

looks like Fay. Stereo. Q
10:00 I)) e Ill L.A. Law Sifuentes
repruenta a wom,n who
received an unnaceasa_!}'
~•::amY· Stereo. Q

1NI Spar1an 30' .......,, tui
o1ze bid, ••• cond, IJ8,DCICI. - . .

.

":::1

:Oii\or-:

,Prlmalima UVI
S'tereo.

.

(I) (I)

®•

Ill Ill

24111.

SuperNatiOnala !rom
Houaton(l)

. . nolo or t100 poll' .,._...;

110.
AI(C

Mlrchlndlll

llre#M;M
.""""" .......
...-.... lncl IHr ... ,an kilt.-.

Plpal

a1J

ool"

1111tl .......

10 ft. of

,,.m.

--o, •.--·
Qondll
.

N. ... -

..

4ll4 111, y,.

IUio..atoJ 4 . . -

lam I ,r-ald,SIDO.-. IIIII
~.

MltcellaniOUI

l'uooop,

ooMI- -TIIIItalo,

01'
1:111.......
....- ,,...... - , ~!&gt;.!!.
..,

,.,. - , -

-~-~~

"IO. -

Coo-l

tD NHf!A RICinCI Fram
1B CNN E - l n g 0 700 Club Willi Pit

~7, 114-

--.CAlli ,..,IIIII~

R..,_

Set 'I ICCS

--....

a ..,.... ..........

lluolul. . . . . . '· . . . Uooollo,
Co::dlldt I LI~AI
120 MDh. 0111111 1"·- t .
3 WloltUy lotnol 1ft liar wllh
North 41hln IUd'rp rt~ 2 bed- oftn1o tGp and t ma~
NMMIItoo two.....,.
~--- llloii'MI lloot., no Oancl,104-1'71-4111.

....

OALLIPOUI ARW

=
=

N~OOO. C.lllftw 5p.m.

__.....

1

1117 11171 Clayton _ . , ,

• POSTAL oiOit'

$1t77 • 114.10/IU. Na 1"11 otoo101

· For ex- And Applica........ ..
tnto., C.H 1~1137 Wll • hot
how.l1, 111 ltOI.
1a.111.-10p.m. 7 dap.
-

tion

'

.

Iofton Iot, 117,000. - -·
, ... 14111 oil ....... ........... nlolitilk1Dioan,2......, :1 bll:lll'oOIIIe. no.

mu•• on an...,.,..

-·caM -1111. ......
ma~lna.

8lcwacon end Mrt. Kino

..... llyllna

BLACIC

fYf1

11:01(1) MOYIE: Tile laarcharl
(2:30)

-•-".100·

one
llr J Ollllfte ipl, fulnllhH. •·
tnl ........ .., • ....,, .....

..... -

onlro.,. ptla, 10M114111. ·

-

11:3111)). IIJ 'Tonlglll8haw
Stereo.
(I) llaclllad

(l)Niwa•••

=
" • ..-

""C

....,.

I

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Of ..,

J:l:;

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·:;:::··=·=::::
....... -

""A!:

·All
-liCit ...... olaololel'riloy

. I Jti'O. EMO,

11:00 Lift.
t nUIVIt telbJ l lundlr

:;

?JWuaa. -

Analo

~tooRA.~~~~..:,....;._ _j~..=· :;.,;:::.,...:;::';:. . . . . .
SNAFUe by Bruce Beattie

11J IIIM1C vtca Stereo.

1

.~ ....... Shop

Olpw•C•-

SipartiTonlglol

~

I

ASTRO-GRAPH

.

Repfl CI F\llftt, Wln-

-·--lol-al
111

-0

ue etta.
..

~

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

Rd. Palll. .....

-Voo
-·
t:l:zt.kup,·
...........,.
_114-

82

tJ \

Plumbing •

__...

Hletlng..
caollr'a-.e
-·ndl'ila

·I

0 ., 1111, Ottlo

MarchZZ.1111
You may feel a reeurgeo]CI of strong detires lor more tnelependence In lha year
II!Md. You'll flnd waye 10 do your own
thing wt1hout bolno llllfllh In the
process.
- · Cllarcll 21-Aprll 111 Doing
thlngl youio own way hal hi benelltolo-

ADVEltTISE IT

·614-'992-21 s6
:304-67 s-1333
·6 i 4~446-2342

clay, bu1 Uoey

I

-.-........... -01'

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be worlh, much K

year ahead. Send for Aries' AliroGraph predle1tons 1oday by mailing
$1.25 10 Aslrq-Graph, c/o thla newspaper, P.O. Box 91428, Cleveland, OH
4410 1·3428.
TAURUI (April :zo..lbr 20) The nega-

"You've got 1 lot 01 nerve, pulling that upl"

.

'•.

.

In trooble today II roo loll your male
you're going to do one lhlno and then
do jul1 the oppotlle. It' a bM1 you stick
to the game plan agreed upon.
ICOfiPIO (Oct. all Now. 221 You're a
capable peroon, but todoy you might
get Involved In a laak thai II beyond
yoor abtllllea. Your ego might nollet you
ltnd a way 1o wiggle out
IAQCTTAIIIUI C-. II O.C. 211 A
friend with whom Y,OU've been havlno
dllllcultjeol lalely cannot be handled
emotionally. You muat try to reach thlt
per10111ogtcr11ty Kyou hope lo reeotve 1

11ve eflecls of a past experience might
dominate your thinking today and, In·
stead of 11arttng a ,_ ar~t
wl1h a clean alate, you might begin with
an old chip on your shoulder.
QE- (lbJ 21,_ 20) Someone
you pmor~lly fell to jult pretending tq
be a friend lon'l really u bad u you
think. Tllla Individual llai m11ny of the . mllund«&lt;l~ndlno.
CAPIIICOflll CO.C. 22......._ 111 E-.
you do. ·
umefauhlllrld !hough
you IRd your male moy have
CAJICIDI (olune 21-.IIIIJ 22) There's a
pooolblllty thai you wtl nO! fully Fll:hiew some dlugo•nonla today, IIIey can
all you M1 ciut to do tod.r. bec:auH of readily b e . -. The onJr thing that
lncllna11ono to go off on tangenii- would be unpardanal&gt;le 11 a dallberotely
IUCCIII is wtiNn reech. Try 10 be broken promlll.
AQUAIIIUI Colan. iiO-PIII. 11) Yoo're
c:onalltent.
not
likely to auller from a l.clc of good
LIO (olulr 11-Aug..D)Cautlon Ol'ld aelf·
doubt are not - , lllhougl! you may lntenllona todoy. Where you · mlghl
think 10 today. llrl on guard~ nee· .....,. up lloorl, howe-. Ia In your abtll·
euary, bullllll ~"-In your-· ly to fulfil thlm. Yaur ....,.,. will not be

VIIIGO CAlif. 11-lept.. 211 FNncltlllfl.. atltrong .. your ..- .
PIICII (Pell. 10 II alt 10) Ba careful
nol to a q - y o u r - today,
be lhoy emotlonll or mallrlal. TIWe Ia a
proNIJIIIIy you might not
two .._ wl1h your UIUII prudtnot.

manage·-

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Openia&amp; lead: • K

West led a top spade.
Now you bave to be careful as de- tng ttre IIIII spade, aad draw trumps .
clarer. H you make the ...-able ·as- Finally lead a diamond to dummy's
sumpllon that you will Jose two dia- 10. You lose two diamond trlckl, but
lfi!)Eida, your 11 trlcu must come by that Is all.
way of live trump11, two top hearts,
Tbe same/Jay works II North.ls the
two establlsbecl diamonds and two declarer an East Jeada the queetr of
.
spade ruffs In dummy. But you have to spades.
watch out for your entries.
One anonymous expert ended with
The correct play Is to ruff the spade eg on his lace. As soon u the dummy
lead hl&amp;h In the dummy. Ne1t cross to appeared, be ruffed the tpade lead low
band with a trump, ruf( anotberspade without further tboug)lt. He couldn't
hi&amp;h, cash the A-K of hearts, discard- recover.

CROSSWORD
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
DOWN
1 FOR's
1' Warner
dog
Bros.
5 Froth
hunter
10 CompUter ll Sailing
oparalor
3Sp:~
11 Tyne's
longtime
4~agazine
costar
5 Leg pan
12 Studies
6 Discussion gwup
13 Did
leather
7 CoHee
wc.rll
dispenser
14 News
8 Ona
story
Slooge
start
II Finale
16lt may
11 Adhere
plunge
15 Telescope
20 Recoiled
part ·
23 Play17 Article
ground
18 Cager
game
Archibald
24 Natala·
111 Old cry of
rium
lri~Jht ·
laatures
20 Haa~h
25 Michelresorts
angelo
sculpcure
27GI
address
28 Worlled
cheland
211 Coach's
place
32 Vital
supplv
route
36 Tiny
38 "Family
Ties• son
40 Wows
41 Baseball

Y811erciay'a Anawar
21 Rain

31

dance
Cribe

Metric-._

quart
.33 Tennis

22 Cruc~ix

25 Window
piece
26 The

great
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34 H;~waiian
goose

Emerald," ~5

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28 Wood-

Struck

out ·
36 Chum

win&lt;:

37 Earth·
instrubound
menta
bird
30 "My Fair 38 Eanhv
Lady" lady
color

team

42 Kind of
module
or eclipse

Monopoly
card

llAII . YCRYPTOQUC&gt;m- Here's how to work It

..

12:05 (I) Nlg.,_ Q

1:311

NORTH

ByJUIMJaeoby
Everyorie Is told not to play immediately after tbe dummy Is tabled. But
even ezperts do not always take this
excellent advice.
Plllce your thumbs over tile East·
West cards aad decide bow you would
play In five clubll when tbe spade king
Is led, West having opened with a weak
two-bid In apadel.
,
· Tbll band · was played ·during the
Cap Gemini Paadata World Top Tour·
nament In tile Netherlands Jut January. 01!e East-West pair S&lt;Ored plus
790 In lour spades doubled. Two
North-South pain tried sis clubs,
which was too biBb.
The other five North-South pairs ,
were In five clubs. Wben West wu on

43

11:31(1) Cllalrt Q

- • • wl1h lrtends could be rayou lllenata otherS In !he proeM~. trtcky loday,oo be careful. )lololndudel
Oon'l )uat oul lor yourlllf. Gel a anythlno lrom datil to limply
jump 011 lite by undal'ltandlng lite loofko- apllttlng ttoe lib for lunch.
·wlitch ... oo-nlnO you In '!he. L1111A Clapt.. 22-0ct.. II) You could_get

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llfS· ANSWaS
3·l&lt;&gt;
Expand- Knave - Usher- ~nly- HANDY
Doctor to patient's wile, • I don t like the way your
husband looks.' The wife replied, • I don't either. but
around the house he's pretty HANDY."
sc_
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is lON1G H L LOW

One letter stands for another. In this sample A Is usc&lt;l
for the three I.'s, X for the two O's, etc. Single lcttcn,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words arc
all hints. F.ach day the code letters are different .
3-21
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OKCYT

FOBVY
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DVKFYX

BN • JIIUHYE
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Yesterday's Cryptoquote: WHAT IS NOT GOOO
FOR THE SWARM IS NOT GOOD FOR THE BEES. fRENCH PROVERB
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�'

2-The Dally sentinel

Glaspie says Saddam
·promised no force
she made repeated visits to the FQrWASHINGTON (UPI) Speaking publicly for the first time eign Ministry in Baghdad to
about her meeting with Saddam " insist." that the dispute be settled
Hussein days before the invasion ot peacefuUy:
"I was instructed to find the
Kuwait, U.S. ambassador to Iraq
highest
Iraqi official available and
April Glaspie said the Iraqi leader
impress
on him that we insisted
repeatedly promised he woulc! not
~
aU
disputes
... be settled peaceuse force against his Arab neighfully
.
I
went
back
seven days
bor.
sttaight
...
I
explained
that
we are a
Glaspie told the Senate Foreign
superpower
8lld
we
would
act like
Relations Commiuee Wednesday
one,"
Glaspie
said.
that during her July 25 meeting
Glaspie said it waan't 'until the
with Saddam the lraqi leader "surUnited
States and the United Arab
rendered " to U.S. insistence that
Emirates
announced joint exercises
Iraq's border dispute with Kuwait
as
"
a
show
of force" lhat Saddam
be settled peacefuUy.
.
agreed
io
meet
with her penonally,
."He said he would not solve his
summoning
her
to his office July
problems by violence," Glaspie
25
for
the
first
time
in her two-year
said of Saddam. '\ .. After I'd
tenure
as
am)Jassw!or
in Baghdad.
repeated several times that we
"
It
was
clear
that
a show of
would not countenance violence·...
then it was clear that he was going . force had caught his attention,"
to tell me that Iraq accepted thaL It Glaspie said. "It was. clear to me .
was a strange atmosphere because .that Saddam Hussein was enraged
he was conciliatory ... and normally that we had taken this step. ... He
· surrendered."
he is noL"
Glaspie, whose 25-year career in
" The only possible interpretation I could make of his remarks foreign service includes several
was .that he was not going to years in the Middle East, said durmg the two-hour meeting Saddam
invade," Glaspie said.
Glaspie, who has been criticized detailed Iraq's history of claims
for not taking a tougher stand against irs Arab neighbors as weD
against Saddam prior to the Aug. 2 as "accusations" against the Unitinvasion of Kuwait, said the mis- ed States.
''This paranoia about lhe United
take was misjudging the Iraqi leadStates
came through," she said of
er.
the
meeting.
"And the olher major
' ' Our mistake was that, like
factor
that
came
through wall that
every government in the world; we
he
was
flummoxed"
that the U.S.
foolishly did not believe that he
would
use
force.
was stupid," Glaspie said. " .:. He
Glaspie, 48, was in Washington
didn't realize we would defend our
for
meetings on the situation at the
vital interests."
time
of the Aug. 2 invasion and has
Glaspie characterized Saddam's
kept
an extremely low profile
assurances as ·" deliberate decep·
since,
refrainin~, along with admintion on a major scale."
istration
officials, from speaking
Some Democrats have quespublicly
about the meetin~ with
tioned whether in the days before
Saddam
and
her actions m late
the invasion the Bush adminisuaJuly.
tion, through Glaspie, made it clear
Glaspie said the Iraqi governto Saddam that the U.S. would not
ment issued a transcript of the .
tolerate an attack on Kuwait. ·
'' It has been widely suggested meeting, but said the version was
that the statements you made to heavily edited.
Her appearance before the comSaddam Hussein, presumably
reflecting instructions from Wash- mittee drew a standing room only
ington, led him to believe that he crowd, dozens of reporters and a
could invade Kuwait and get away phalanx of 25 photographers whose
with it," committee chairman Clai- flash bulbs blinded those in the
borne Pell, D-R.l., told Glaspie as meetins room as Glaspie, dressed ..
in a pnm gray suit, took her seat
he opened the hearing.
alone
at the witness table.
But Pell ~dded, "It is, in my
The
career diplomat made no
judgment absurd and unfair to sugto hide her contempt for
attempt
gest that your meeting resulted in
Saddam
and
the "incredibly secre·
the invasion. By July 25 Saddam
live
society"
he created.
Hussein had clearly made up his
She
said
her
meeting with Sadmind (o go into Kuwait."
dam
was
lhe
fiiSt
substantive meetIn her testimony before the committee, Glaspie countered lhat from ing t(le Iraqi leader had had with
the time Saddam began to threaten any ambassador from any country
.
Kuwait in a July 17 speech and since 1984.
"He was totally isolated and
through evidence of an Iraqi
deployment to the Kuwait border exlremely ignorant,' ' Glaspie said.

'

STOREWIDE

20°/o-70°/o Off

•

Pidt3:999
Pick 4:2649
Car&amp; : J-H, JO.C;
Q·D; 2-S

On page3

•

nntversary
•DOOR PRIZES
Come In ·and Register
•Solid Oak Boston Rocker
•Brass Potted Greenery
Arrangement
•And More

Flood watch Friday night
with periods of showers
· and thunde.rstorms, heavy
rain possible.

•

•RECUNEISLa-Z-Boy • Benchcraft - Lane

$199°0

Vol. 41, No. 234

25 cent•

eopyrlghtecl1 e81

.

ANDU,

.

MRDD
ruling
clarified
•
In new court entry
•

•OUTSTANDING
ART WORK
PICTURES
ACCESSORIES

20°/o

•SAVE
AND MORE :·
ON ALL OUR IN-STOCK
'.~~
BEDROOM GROUPS

irreparable hium", Judge Crow it extremely unfair to jeopardize
By BRIAN J, REED
executed a temporary restraining citizens right to work, especially
Seotioel Newt~ StafT
A court entry that reiterates and order when the suit was filed, handicapped individuals. Realizing
clarifies the results of a hearing which prohibited the MRDD board how hard it must be for the desadvantaged to find and keep employheld on Friday has been filed in a from laying the employees off.
At
lhe
hearing
on
Friday,
Crow
ment, the Court orders...MRDD to
court case against the Meigs Board
maintain all jobs for all clients in
ordered
the
MRDD
program
to
of MRDD and the State MRDD
~.
.
·
maintain speech and OCCUJ?IItiOnal the adult pro~ ."
"Finally,'
the
entry
reads,
"the
therapy
and
physical
educauon
proMeigs County Common Pleas
Court Judge 'Fred W. Crow ,III grams for its clients, and to main- court finds irreparable harm would
heard over three hours of testimony tain the community placement pro- occur to those clients who were not
from MRPD and Carleton School gram in that none of the clients provided aU necessary physical or
staff members, clients, and barents who ~anicipated in the program speech therapy . Therefore the
'last Friday afternoon. The hearing were forced to resign their jobs in Defendant, MRDD, is ordered to
provide to the Plaintiffs and others
was set after a lawsuit was filed in the community:
so situated all necessary physical
"The
Coun
finds
that
physical
early March by three MRDD stuand
speech therapy."
dents and/or clients. That suit, education is mandated by law and
Judge
Crow 's entry does not
sworn by MRDD employee Melva should be available," the entry
prohit
the
MRDD board from exe·
Eblin, alleges "immediate and reads . "Counsel for (MRDD)
cuting
its
layoffs. "The court
irrCparable harm" to the program's admitted that the defendant
finds,"·
the
entry
states, "that the
students and clients if a layoff of (MRDD) were laying off employ16 MRDD staff members is carried ees which provided physical educa- above mandates would not prohibit
tion mandated by law. There· temporary lay-offs provided that
I OUL
The MRDD board cites the fail- fore .. ,MRDD is ordered to comply the mandates are strictly followed."
''The Coun cannot perinit State
ure of several tax levies and a pro- with stare laws 8lld provide all state .
minimum requirements not to be
. jected deficit as lhe reason for the .mandated physical education... "
In the area of the community met," the entry concludes. "Furlayoffs, ,which included administraplacement
program, which enables ther, the Court cannoi, in good eontive staff members, workshop·
employees and job coaches, among MRDD to place adult clients in science, permit adult clients to lose
jobs in the community, as opposed their outside employment, until and
others.
On the basis of the sworn state- to the sheltered workshop, Judge unless it is without recourse or left
ment alleging "immediate and Crow's entry says, "the Court finds with no alternative."

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HANDLED

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ON ALL PAnO FURNITURE

New$61,•it
· ACCIDENT SCENE - Medics from the
Meigs County EMS tend to a person who was
injured in a Thursday head-on collision on State
Route 7. According to a sta(e highway patrol
report, Tabitha M. Phillips, .or Pomeroy,

$19900
STARriNG AT

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•ALL LIVING ROOM TABLES
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SELECTED GROUP OF

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AT $499°0 YALUES UP TO 11006.00

Jury begins deiiberations
in Smart's murder trial
EXETER, N.H. (UP!)- Jurors at his wife's urging.
failed to reach a verdict during the
Another teenager, Cecelia
first day of deliberations in the trial Pierce, testifled,she had tallced with
of Pamela Smart, a young high Smart about the murder. The 16school official prosecutors say year-old Pierce, working with
coaxed her teenage lover and his police, secretly recorded conversatwo friends into murdering her bus· · tions which seemed to show that
band.
S~t had prior knowledge of the
The Rockingham County Supe- crone.
rior Court jury got the case at 2:35
Smart insisted she had made
statements
p.m. Wednesday after hearing clos- leading
' .
. to Pierce ' her ·
ing arguments from prosecuting mtern at Wmnacunnet High
and defense attorneys. The panel of School, in order to find out what
seven women and five men the girl knew about the crime.
Twomey told jurors Wednesday
recessed for the day after 2 1/2
that the tapes may appear to be
hours.
The jury is due· to resume-delib- damning evidence against Sman,
but he urged jurors to consider the
erations Thursday morning.
Smart's lawyer told jurors that strain the young widow was under
the young widow was not involved at the time.
"Listen to those tapes, to the
in her husband's death, despite her
affair with the 16-year-old student progression of the voice of Pamela
who admitted killing him.
Smart on those tapes," he said.
But lhe state described her as a "You'll hear a person snappfng."
"cold, calculating operator" who
Twomey said Smart was trying
orchesuated the crime.
. 10 c~nceal her affair with Flynn,
Smart, 23, is charged with being nothing more.
an accomplice to first-degree murBut Assistant AttOrney General
der and conspiracy to commit fiiSt- Paul Magg!otto scoffed at the
degree murder. If convicted, she notion that Smart was about to
could be sentenced to life in prison. break under the strain of her husThe former high school media band's murder.
''Listen to her tone. Listen to
director is accused of cajolin$1hree
youths - her lover and h1s two the pace of her voice. Listen to how
friends - into killing her husband she talks to (Pierce) and you make
of less than a year. Gregory Smart, a determination who's controlling
24, an insurance sales.man, was the conversation. You make the
shot m the head May I m the cou- determination if this is a woman
about to snap," Maggiotto said.
ple's Derry condominium.
He also. attacked Smart's icy ·
Prosecutors contend Pamela
Smart wanted her husband killed demeanor in the counroom during
because she feared she would lose 10 days of testimony, including the
her home and her dog in a divorce, two days in which she took the witand wanted to be free to carry on ness stand.
"(There was) not a tear of
her affair with William Flynn.
But in closing arguments remorse at the descrir,tion of the
Wednesday, defense attorney Paul kinin~ ~f her husband, ' Maggiotto
Twomey said that while Sman has sa1d. (Her answers were) rapid
admitted having an affair with fire. She had every possible answer
Flynn - who was a 15-year-old ready."
He said the evidence shows
virgin when their relationship
began - that did not mean she Smart is a "cold, calculating operator.' •
wanted her husband dead.
But Twomey told jurors the
"Does that make her guilty of
murder?" Twomey asked. "No it blame for the murder rests solely
on the three youths, who have all
does not"
The trial bas attracted national pleaded guilty to reduced charges
attention, with the defendant of second- degree murder. He said
labeled a "black widow" in many Flynn wanted Gregory Smart dead
media reports. Spectators crammed because he was obsessed with
into the courthouse, as they have Pamela Smart. The defense auorevery day since the 2-week-old ney said the tluee ~eens were nothing more than "thrill killers.' '
trial bqan.
" These boys, in the three of
Flynn and his teenage friends,
them
togelher, there is not a shred
Patrick Randallll!ld Vance Lattime
of
decency
among tllem,' ' Twomey
Jr., have admiUed they canied out
the slaying and testified during lhe said. "They did not show one sin1f!a1 that they killed Gregory Smart gle human emotion.''
.-

Ohio Lotteny

Ali-SVAC
athletes
honored

.attempted to piiSS a car and traveled Into the
path 01 an oncomiaa car, drivea by Mlcllael E.
Kiaa. or Coolville. The twO•COIIided bead-on,
injuriag three people seriously. (Sentinel photo
by Brian J, Reed) .·

Three people seriously injute'd
.in Tuppers Plains collision

Wise says metals.dumping
in U.S. should be stup_ped

Two Meigs County residents reported in fau condition at. St.
and one Athens County resident Joseph's .Hospital in Parkersburg,
suffered serious injurie.s Thursday W.Va Friday. King, was lreated for
in a head-on collision on State h!s injurie~ at Camden,Ciark HosRoute 7 near Tuppers Plains.
. p1tal, also !II Parkersburg. Radcliff
Tll15ith8 ·M:t'hlllips, 17, of was tneated for multiple lacerations
Pomeroy, Michael E. King,. 32, of arO'Bieness Memorial Hospital in
CoolviUe, and John P. Radcliff, 36, Athens an~ was later released.
of Atl)ens, were transported . by
A~cord1~g to a repon from the
Meigs County EMS to area hospi- G~lha-Me1gs post of the State
tals following the accident in H•ghway Patrol, Phillips was
Orange Town~hip. Phillips was

southbound on SR 7 when she
attempted to pass a car in front of ·
her. As she went' around the car
she traveled into the path of a~
. oncoming car, driven by King.
Phflllps' and 'King's vehicles colAmerican AUoys, one of the
Iided head-on, resulting in heavy
top businesses continues
region's
, dam~e to both cars.
to
be
threatened
by illegal dumping
. Phillips was ·not wearing a seat
of
silicon
metals
into the United
bell at the time of the crash. NciStates,
according
to
U.S. Rep: Bob
ther driver was cited.
Wise (I)- W.Va.), who charges the
U.S. Commerce Department h{IS
dragged its feet for too long in
dealing with the problem.
·
Wise stated the commerce
· Charles Moore, principal of competition, survey results, career services .regarding annual AHERA llepartrnent has been slow dealing
Eastern High School, was awarded education, in serv•ce, and parent- .Compliance was approved. .
with the illegal dumping of silicon
a new three year conuact effective teacher conferences.
The amended appropnabons for metals into the U.S. by China,
The Bank Boosters were autho- fiscal year 1991 was approved, and . Argentina and Brazil. The federal
with the 1991-92 school year when
the Eastern Local Board of Educa- rized to raise money for the suppon the amounts~~ rates as set by the government's lack of action, Wise
tion met in regular session of lhe band through totally external budget comm•ss•on was accepted.
said, "has jeopardized jobs and
Wednesday night at the high donations. There were comments
Parment was approved to the markets for West Virginia compaconcerning t11e class of 1990 from · W~shmgton County B~ o~ Ed\~- nies and West Virginia workers."
school.
The board also voted to give. a Linda Kaylor and several other par- cauon for students parbCIP!~Ung m · "This is a prime example of how ·
new two year contract to Dr."Don- ents.
a program there, .a res.oluu~n "':as the practice of illegal dumping, or
!he board adopted a resolution adopt~d r~gardmg the d1str!ct selling imports below fair market
ald Shue, an elementary principal
in the district, beginning with the of commendation for the elemen- exclusiOn. mthe Cleveland C1ty value, really 'hits home," Wise
tary students who 111ade the honor
next school year.
Sch?ol D1Str1ct Bo;u:d of _Educa- added. "Eikem Metals in Fayette .
Others employed by the board roll for the fourth grading period of uon s class acuon sun agamst the County and American Alloys in
were Jeff Baker and R•chard Cole- the school year. It also authorized state. .
. .
New Haven have produced quality
An m-school suspensiOn •n silicon metals but their mtiJXers are
man as substitute teachers for the tfie issuance of tile third nine'
. balance of this school year to be weeks commendation notices for Eastern's elementary schools as
used on an as-needed basis only. high school students.
proposed by the teachers discipline
Jennifer Cremeans was accepted =:.iuee was approved by the
Tom Dorst was hired as a substitute
bus driver on a probationary con- as a non-resident tuition student,
Next meeting was set for April
tract, and Glen Easterling as a sub- retroactive to her date of enrollstitute bus driver, both for the bal- ment in the district. DownirigChilds-Mullen-Musser Insurance
aJICe of the school year.
During the meeting Supt. Smith was awarded the contract on build- pr,es,ident, Charles Knight, vice
gave additional reports on the band ing and contents insurance cover- president, and members, B1U HanRAVENSWOOD, W.Va. (AP)
age, and a proposal for continued num, I. 0 . McCoy, and Jim Smith.
- A federal judge Thursday issued
a temporary restraining order that
bars idled union workers involved
in a labor dispute with
Ravenswood Alummum Corp.
from
blocking or slowing access to
' The West Virginia Department revealed •that the defendant had each and every VIOlation occurred,
the
Jackson
County plant
.of Natural Resources and Solid · failed to comply with the Solid · that !hey be ~arded, attorney fees
The
order
by U.S. District Judge
Waste Management Section, Divi- Waste Management Regulations. • and other ex~nses resulting from
Charles
Haden
in Charleston also
sion of Natural Resources have The inspection dates listed were the institution and pursuance of this
allows
the
coun
to call in federal
filed a civil suit in the Mason from January to December 1990. action, and any other relief deemed
to
curb
any acts of viomarshals
County Circuit Court against Among the violations listed were fair and jusL
lence.
E.R.O., Inc., which operates the accepting unapproved waste , ,
Counsel for the plain~ffs will be
Haden issued the order at
county landfill near West improperly disposing of whole the State Attorney General's office.
Ravenswood
Aluminum's request
Columbia.
·
tires, not collecting windblown
The landfill facility was shui material and properly disposing of
down March 7 by the DNR after it it, illegal expansion of the disposal
was charged with 176 pollution area and, allowance of solid waste
\\iolations.
to accumulate in diversion ditches,
' The civil action was brought by leachate being allowed to enter the
Those who took petitions from Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman to
tlie Stare of West Vir$inia a$ainst surface and groundwaters, accephave signed in supjxm or. Southern Ohio Coal Company need to have
E.R.O. for civil penalues for mten- tance of infectious waste without
them returned to that office by Wedneaday, March 27.
tional, willful, reckless and negli- proper certification at the landfill,
Hoffman said copies of the petitions wiD be sent to the governor's
gently failing to comply with the inadequate erosion control, unsatisoffice, lhe Public Utilities Commission of Ohio and American Electric
provisions of rules, regulations and factory daily cover, ·no daily logs,
Power to show support of area residents for SOCC and the retention of
orders issued in accordance with and disposal of waste after the
the Solid Waste Management Act; approved hours of operation.
jobs.
the suit states.
The suit furlher char~es that the
The suit claims that surveillance result of the defendant s violation
was conducted in August 1990 to . Of the rules constillltes a public nuiThe Tuppers Plains-Chester Water District announces thai on Monverify lhe amount of waste accept- sance, and thai the plamtiffs sufday
around 8 am. routine maintenance wiD be performed on a water
ed by the facility, which confirmed fered damages by damaging the
distribution
system.
.
·
that ERO was exceeding its month- environment for lhe citizells of the
Water
will
be
off
at
times
and
there
will
be
periods
of
low
pressure
ly tonnage of 6,060 tons.
state. The agencies stated they
from the Tuppers Plains Elementary School north, the east side of
The .suit further stated.that by incurred substantial investigative
Route
7 and llso on route 681 eas1 of Tuppers Plains Elementary to
exceeding its monthly tonnage and adminiscrative cost and expensTownship
Road 313. Theae are lhe only areas lhat will be affected.
limit, the defendant is liable for es.
In
case
of
rain, work wiD be postponed until Tueaday.
,
civil penalties of up to $25,000 per
The DNR .and Solid Waste
day for each separate violation.
Manaaement Section is asking lhat
A total of 20 inspection dates the court impose civil penalties
were cited in the suit, when Sherry against the defendant in the amount
The Racine American Legion Post 602 will host its annlll! Eas~r
Younger, Solid Waste Inspector, of $25,000 a day for each day that

r-.

Eastern principal's contract renewed

SALE

AS SHOWN lEG. 1139.00

$59900

ODDS 'N ENDS IN OUR
BARGAIN ROOM.

All. wood table ~ith 37x60x82" Almond laminate and
aohd wood edge m Hampton Oak finish. Cane back solid
wood chairs . ·

.' , ..

.70°/o
SAVINGS
CASH ClUJ

(

&amp;

SPECIAL SAYINGS ON .
SLEEP
SOFAS,
AND MODULAI .EATING

COME HELP US

$59900

•LA·Z-IOY MODULAR SECnONAL

AND UP

. I . .lY
IIG. $1021.00

SALE

$

99 500

TE OUR lOTH YEAR WITH CAKE &amp; COF'F'EE!

•FREE PAIICING
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HOUIS DAILY
9 TO 5

FRIDAY

ALL ITEMS SUBJECT
TO PRIOR SALE
VISA
MASTERCARD
DISCOVER

01 USE OUR EASY
CIEDIT TEIMS.

the necessary steps to prevent
China, Argentina, and Brazil from
continuing their illegal dumping.
"I am ve'ry concerned that the
silicon industry not be subject to
unfair trade practices on the international market and I trust that the
Commerce Department and the
lTC (International Trade Commission) will ~ive due-consideratronio this issue,' he wrote.
According to an American
Alloys official, the foreign market
"absolutely" has an effect on the
local plant. The official stated
metal IS exported into this country
"like crazy" and can afford to sell it
at a lower rate due to the lower
wages paid to the work force.
American Alloys has been expe-riencing lay-offs recently, with.
approximately 80 employees being
off at the peak period. There are
approximately 65 still off now, said
the plant official.

H a d en ISSUeS
• · or d_er agatns·t
e

Ravenswood steelworkers

~~:~~;.~~:d~~:~~ysc~~

WVDNRfiles·suit against ERO

one day after a federal grand .jury
indicted one of the idled workers
for allegedly making and possessing two fragmentation grenades.
· "Judge Haden's order sends a
clear message that continued acts
of harassmen,, intimidation and
violence against employees of the
company are a clear violation of
the law and endanger the entire
community," said Donald Worlledge, president of Ravenswood
Aluminum.
"I figure we'll comply," said a
m(lll who answered lhe telephone at

United Steelworkers of America
Local 5668 headquaners but woqld
not identify himself. "We didn' t
like it; but what can we do about
it?"
More than 1,700 workers have
been off the job since Nov. I, when
the union's contract with
Ravenswood Aluminum expired .
The company says the workers are
on strike, but the union says they
are locked out'
Meanwhile, Ravenswood Aluminum officials thursday called
Continued on page 5

,..-------Local news briefs-----.

.•SLEEP
SOFAS
deluu innenprlng mattrau.
,.

I

being taken away and jobs are
being lost because of unfarr foreign
compe\ition."
Wise says complaints by him ·
and ferroalloy industry workers and
companies have been largely
ignored by the Commerce DepanmenL "We have been complaining
for years and the Department's preliminary study has uncovered
unfair trading practices," he said.
"The bottom line is, if they have
found dumping, the need to impose
tariffs and do it now!"
"The Commerce Department is
supposed to promote business in
the United States," he concluded,
"and yet one of the region's top
businesses - American Alloys continues 10 be threatened by this
iUegal dumping."
Wise sent a letter Tuesday to the
U.S . Commerce Department's
Import Administration office,
demanding lhat the 'department take

9 TO I

446-3045

Sales and
Service with
tow, Low
Prices!

· Return petitions by March 27

Water system work set

Easter egg hunt slated
.....

I

-·~ .r

....

-.. _............ . -

egg hunt on March 30 at I p.m. at the post home, All children age 218, are invited to participate.
·
'

Social Security hours change
A change of open hours for the Social Security office in Athens
which serves Meigs County has been announced by Ed Peterson, man-

ager.

Effective April2!21he Social Security·office located at 221 Columbus Road will be open to the public from 9 a.m. to 4:30p.m. each
weekday.
.

Banking basics planned
A program designed 10 teach basic financial services to high school
seniors entitled "How to Do Your Banting" has been introduced by
Bank One, Ath~. in high schools of five counties including Meigs.
The program has been distributed fee of charge to all the high
schools in Athens, Hocking, Meigs, Perry and Vinton Counties. Bank
~ anticipates lhat over 2,000 students wiU go through the program
thiS year.
· Continued on page 5

..-.. ... --~-

.

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