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seritlnel

lltomefoy-Mcldleport Galllpolll, OH Point PINIInt, WV

MilCh 24, 1111 :

USDA proposes amending rules,
provisions of tobacco marketing
GALLIPOLIS • The U.S.
Department of Agriculture has
requested public comment on a
proposed rule to amend provisions
of ihe burley and flue-cured tobacco marketing quota programs.
Keith Bjerke, executive vice
president of USDA's Commodity
Credit Corporation, said the
amendments are required by the
Farm Poundage Quota Revisions
Act of 1990.
Effective with the 1991 crop
year, when a farm is dividend as a
result of a reconstitution, the burley
tobacco farm poundage quota
.transferred may not be less than
1,000 pounds. This limillltion does
not apply when the farm is reconstituted among immediate family
members or pursuant to probate
proceedings.
"The law does not specify the
disposition of a quota less than
1,000 faounds or the manner in
which arms must comply with the
1,000 pounds minimum quota,"
Bjerke said. "The proposed rule
says owners of farms with less than
1,000 pounds of burley tobacco
quota which are divided as a result
of a sale may sell the quota or pur-

· chase additionalljUOC&amp; to Jalll 111e
1,000 pounds mim a or llll•'kllt
the divided farm widl odMr ....
owned by the same peiQI 10 IIIII
the combined farm
at taut
1,000 pounds of Q1101L"

liZation and Conservation Service
if burley and flue-cUJ"ed tobacco
dealen do not comply wilh end-ofmllketing year purchase and resale
reporting and inspection requiremenlli;
The propll.ICd rule alto:
• Jequires burley and fluc;-cured
• permits, cfrcclive for tile 1991 tobacc:o warehouse operators and
and subsequent CIOJI yeara, the 111e dealers thai pun:hase from procesof burley tobacco marketing quoca sors and manufacturers tobacco
(from an owner of a farm to tile that is in the form not normally
owner of anolher f - in lbe lll8lteted by JJIOducers, to maintain
county);
'
certain reainls and provide for the
· • beginning wilh tile 1994 I:JOP, inspection and weighing by an
reduces a burley tobacco fanll ASCS tepctiUilltive: and
quola to zero if no .OO.:co is,._.
• provides Jor the collection of
ed or considered pliiiMd in two 1111t IOblcco nwteling assessments as
of the three preceding years:
· set forth in the Omnibus Budget
• increases the burlei tobacc:o Reconciliation Act of 1990.
lease limitation from 5,000 to
Additional information appears
. 30,000 pounds for the receiving in the Federal RCJister.
farm;
Comments should be received
• permits the leucllld tranlfcr no later than March 29 by the
of burley tobacco quota from 0111 Director, Tobacco and Peanuts
county to any other county in Ten- Divis.ion, ASCS, USDA, P.O. Box
nessee Only:
.
. 24 IS, Washington, D.C. 20013.
• revises the period ~uired to
. All written submissions will be
GTE TE~M • Tbe GTE Employee Ittvolve·
share in the risk of productAg ftue- · made available for public inspec- · ment
Team members are shown with one or two
cured to~co thil 11 purchllell. or lion in room 5750. South Building,
memorial plaques they developed. In the front
reallocated:
·
USDA; between lhe hours of 8:15
• outlines the acti01111 to be lllr.en a.m. and 4:4S p:m. Monday · row (left to right) are Paul Chap!Dan, Bill
by the USDA's Agric:ultural Stabi· through Friday.

much of a probl- for piaats
because most or them are •or·
mant," he says, but it
11urt
people with heir! and respiratory
problems. In neighlloring Iran, for
msrance, officials Mw .peaill'dlcally
warned citizens about health 1'11111
from the smoke.
Ozone and )ieroxyacetylnltrlta,
or PAN, form wllen nitroae•
oxides and unbumod h~droellbuua
- common in SiliOU from lliinla&amp;
petroleum products - combi..
with oxygen under briibt-. ·
Both ozone and PAN • fOUIIIA
in ~over smouy eitila. They are
lOXJC to plants, wtth OEone causi111

cou"

' agriCU
' Jt. ure
· . · .:" ":'
,.--- Oh10

--t

' damtac atcoilccntrstions as low as
0.1 JIIIUper million.
But Weidensaul says Middle
Bast concentrations could remain
lower than those of the polluted
.Los Angeles basin, for e~ample,
due to topography and winds ani!
because ozone and PAN quickly
degrade.
"You run into problems when
fonnation rates place faster than
delrsdation," he says.
"rhe chance of damage could
rise if the fires burn for several
months, because Middle East
plants soon will be leaving dormaney, Weidensiul says. Growing
plants are more susceptible to
ozone and PAN because their siO·
mii!CS- "breathing" hates in the

· •ves- are open.

Dairy farm income may fall
. COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) -Dairy' farm income will be reduced
significilntly in 1991 compared to recent years.
Allan Lines, agricultural economist at Ohio Slate University,
says the problem is the lower milk prices farmers receiw for the
product after years of increasing sales and production.
In 1988, Ohio milk sales were S573 million. Sales increased to
$609 million in 1989, and 1990 sales are estimated at $6SO million.
This year, production has COJltinued to increase, but
lilrely
to be in the neighborhood of $550 million, 15 percent lower dian

.-.arc

1~

.

Because it will be difficult to reduce operating expenses, net
income will be severe)y affected, possibly down as much as 60 percent.
Many dairy farms are likely to lose money. Those with avcr.,c
or above-average amount of debt will most likely be hurt Removing S100 million from the cash flow earned on dairy farms will likely reduce dairy fann asset values significantly, pbssibly by as much
as $1 billion if low incomes persist.

Budget problems spell cuts
cqLUMBUS. Ohio (UPI) - Federal budget problems broulht
spendmg cuts for farm programs m the 1990 U.S. farm bill, liut
more will !ikely be sought, says Ohio Slate University farm policy
expert Carl Zulauf.
Farm policy makers will spend the next two years conc"entrating
on the intemationallrade fron~
Those two years will also give the economy a chance to i:etover
from its current poor performance and the politicians will have the
1992 presidential elections behind them.
'
That will be just in time for the ne~t major round of dcbale over
cutting the federal deficit and cutting agricultural spendilg.
Barring a major decline in farm income, Zulauf cxpec:ts trlditional farm programs to take another budgerary hiL Faillft to convince other countries to.cut their subsidies or a pick up in the general economy might reduce lhe cuts.
.

Madigan might end siege
COLUMBUS. Ohio (UPI) - The appoirunent of Edward Midi·
gan as the ne~t Secrerary of Agriculture could signal 111 end to a
decade-long White House siege on federal farm progt1111t.
Carl Zulauf, agricultural policy expert at Ohio State University,
says choosing Madigan may indicate that President Bush wants 10
leave farm policy alone for a while.
For the past decade, the White House has led the charge to
reduce spending on support to farmers.
Madigan, the ranking minority leader on lhe HOUJC ,.ncultural
commiaee, is a veteran of farm bill and budget debates llid is ~
as fairly moderate on the spending issues.
·
Such a position will become more interesting in about two years
when federal budget concerns again take the national spotlight and
lhe White House is looking for places to cut spending.
Farm commodity programs are likely to be viewed as Cllldidates
for further cuts provided farm income does ·not decline subsranlially.
'

LARGE SELECnON

.,

'
•'

•

NEW HAVEN, W. Va . Charles G. Mathews has been promOied to human resources supervi101' fer Appalachian Power Company's Central Midline Shop, South
Clarlestoa, West Virsinia.
'
Mathews holds a bachelor of
KieDee degree in industrial relatiooa and fabor studies from the
West VirJinia Institute of Technology. He wu employed at
ADDalachian Power's Mountaineer
PliDt, New Haven, W.Va., in 1990
as a human resources assisrant and
transferred to Central Operating
Company's Philip Sporn Plant,
New Haven, in January ·or this
year.
Mathews is married and has two
children. He is a member of the
Sprinafield, Ohio, Exchange Club
md the Mid-Ohio Valley Society
of Hum111 Resources. He also is an
alternate on the Mid-Ohio Valley
Emergency Planning Council.

LE&amp;AL NOTICE '
The Public Utilnies Commission of Ohio has set for
public hearing Case No.
91-02-EL"EFC, .to review
the fuel procurement practico and policies of Columbus Soutllem Power Com·
IIIRY. the operation of its
Electric Fuel Co111ponent
and related maners. This
hearing Is scheduled to
begin at 10:00 a.m. on
March 25, 1991, at the of·
fices of the Pubic Utilities
Commission. 180 East
Broad Street, Columbus,
Ohio 43286-0573.
All internted parties will ba
aiYen an opportunity Jo be
fiurd. Further information
may be obtained by conlll:llng lhe Commission at
lllei!IM lddms.
THE PUBLIC UTILITIES
COMMISSION OF OHIO
By: Gary E. Vigorito.
Secretary.

.

Roc• of Age• offerl you a choice of I dl"-t ooler.r
grenlt•- Whatever your requirement• may lla, 11m,l1•
Rllefacdon Ia a-..rad with Rock of Agea.
Y.lhuta Houn: Open Friday 8:00 a.m. 'tll4:00 '·"'·
Other Houn by Appolntmant-183·1181 er 441-IU7 ·

RAILEY A. SAUNDERS MOIUMIITS
JJJ ........

Ph. 446·13117

....... 01.

•
1 Section, 10 P11111 25 centa
A llutdrnodla Inc. Nowopapor

-4 -

Man believed drowned·
at Gallipolis Locks,
Dam
neir

Edwards aod Rick Swart. Back row, (left to
right) are Ava Garrett, Steve Kisling, Kathy:
·!'arty, Kristie Rillle and Pete Hart.

· The.seQtih continuCd Monday
for 1 man believed to have
drowned Sunday afternoon .at the
Gallipolis Lot:ts and Dam, when a
t.ge he was working on hit a pier

.

and capsized.

A towboat owned by the Mulzer
Crushed Stone Co. of Tell.City,
Ind., was preparing to exit the mam
locldng•chamber at the dam when
the lead barge struck a pier, causin~J the load of !&amp;r&amp;e limestone to
shtft and capuze the: barge, a
spokesman for the Gallipolis.J..Qeks
and Dam said Monday.
·
·
. ~ spo~sman, who re~eased
the mformation to the Huntington .
Herald-Dispatch, declined to give
his naine, but said the 2,200-horsepower towboat was pushing four
barges loaded with large rock up
river when the accident occ:urred
about 4 p.m. The boat's fleet
totaled eight barges.
Officials said the barge apparbroke free in swih currents

drivers and 'jJromote safe driving. It
was adopted for use throughout
GTE's statewide operation.

READY TO SEARCH - omcers from the
Gallla County Shertfrs Department Sunday
prepare to help other ofYiclals search the Ohio
River for a man believed to be drowned after a

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

SALISBURY, NC
GAFFNEY, SC
MORGANTOWN, NC
GEORGETOWN, SC
WALLACE, NC
STATESVILLE, NC
HARRISONBURG, VA
WHITEVILLE, NC
ZEBULON, NC
WASHINGTON, NC
SPARTANBURG, SC
JONESVILLE, NC
NARROWS, VA
GREENWOOD, SC
BLUEFIELD, WV A
lAURENS, SC
FLORENCE, SC
REIDSVIlLE, NC
SUMPTER, SC

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
lENOIR, NC
ROCKY MOUNT, NC
CHARlOTTE, NC
NEW BERN, NC
EASlEY, SC

. .

Smith-Buick-Pontiac has been rated as one of the Top 25 CS/Customer Satis~action Index - Leaders for the Charlotte, N.C.
Bui_ck Zone. We would like io tha.n k o~r Buick Custom~rs for
ratmg us favorably on your survey questionnaires.

WE WOULD LIKE TO EXTEND AN INVITATION TO All AREA
. MOTORISTS TO TAKE ADVANTAGE OF OUI
. AWARD-WINNING SALES AND SERVICE DEPAR,TMENT.

@ The Great American Road belongs to Buick"' ~

barge captlzed near the Gallipolis Locks and
Dam. Coast Guard omclals were expected to ·
resume their search Monday.

Rockslide tears down lines;
leaves 1,300 without power
By Mindy Kearns
final customers at approdmately
OVP News Starr
7:20p.m.
. .
A rockslide along S.R. 62 in
Officials from the Charleston
West Columbia knocked down o(ficeoftheOOH were expected to
power lines and left approximately arrive this morning to view the
1,300 Appalachian Power Co. cus- damage. Drilling is scheduled to
tamers without eleclricity Sunday.
begin tomorrow at both slide areas, ·
The slide occurred at 8:10a.m., and lhe rocks will be blasted either
with rocks continuing to consrantly Wednesday or Th·ursday with light
move until after 10 a.m. Traffic charges, so they wiJ.l,.not disturb
was halted along the route for some any remaining rocks.
time by the West Virginia Depart·
According to Ross Roosh, assismcnt of Highways, Mason Coulity rant superintendent of the Mason
Division, and the Mason Volunteer County DOH, crews were out all
Fire DepartmenL
weekend, mostly taking care of
Only one da~or to this slide, mud slides and slips in the roads.
a boulder slid . a separste site He said the county is e~periencing
in West Columbia, also along Rt. one of the weuest springs it has had
62, that conlinues to block one lane f9f a while, and attributr.s the slides
of traffic.
to this.
The Saturday slide, which also
Mason County Board of Educaoccurred at approximately 8 a.m., tion member Brian Billings hail
is located at the scene where three recently brought up the many slides
prior slides have happened in the in the West Columbia area at a
0

Appal~chian . ~~~~r:gs ~ase~~~i~~t.~:e~~

to
Power Co. Manager Steve Carpen- wnte leuers of concern smce many
tet the power.. company recetved buses and children, along with
the' call sho~ after 8 a:m., and teachers, &amp;aronts, and the public ·
workers arriv at the scene 10 find travel Rt. 2.
the ·line down and power poles ·
Billings said a plan of action
broken north of the West Columbia must be put into place, and said he
sub-station.
plans to keep in touch ~ith the
Carpenter continued, saying DOH himself to assure something
several employees were called oui is going to be done before someone
and power was restored to 850 cus- gets killed. ·
tomers at 1:20 p.m., by "switching"
The local DOH dOllS not have
power from the West Colum~ia the funds ~r aulhority to take on lhe
sub-station to the Sporn sub-stauon large proJect needed to clear the
above New Haven .
hillsides in West Columbia. The
Power company employees l~ter state office has ~n al~ to lhe
spanned the rockslide area, making problem ~~vera! limes m the past
repairs and setting two new power by local c1uzens.
·poles. Power was restored ·to th.e
Continued on page 6

.·
.
. equipment fowlil on lhem to.famil- . their continuing education 'require- plete 18 hours, plus 27 hours of
.
refresher courses. and EMT's musl
· iarize themselves with the same. ments.
(One of the system's major heli·
All EMS staff, including participate in six hours of continuNearly 50 ~le, representing copters was recently damaged by a drivers, must complete a prescribed ing education and 27 hours of
refresherworlt.
Slllfi members frOm Meigs County vandal's gunshots· however, ·a number of continuing education
Emergency Medical Services and standby was used in lhe seminar on hours in order to maintain their cer- · Lunch for those in attendance
·
tification, Byer reported, and the was provided b{VeteranS MemoriVeterans Memorial Hospital, Saturday.)
Acc:ording
to
Meigs
EMS
Direc'EMS
department holds some son at, and those attending received the
attended a day-long seminar at the
tor
Bob
Bycr,the
joint
seminar
was
of
continuing
education program instruction free of charge.
Meigs EMS Training Center on
lhe
brainchild
of
Dr.
Ricltai'd
Pat·
on
a
monthly
basis.
"I'm real pleased with the
Saturdliy.
terson,
tile
Emergency
Room
The
number
of
continuing
edu·
turnout,"
Byer said Saturday. He
Ana Reynolds and Bobby ComDirector
at
Veterans
Memorial
cation
hours
is
dependent
on
the
reported
that
the group was made
well, both medics for Grant Medical Center's Life Flight helicopter H~tal, and the Medical Director level of training the EMS staff up not only of Meigs EMS and
.
VMH staff members, bill several
service, assisted Dr. Richard for eigs County EMS. Pauerson, holds.
however, was unable to anend the
Medics must complete 88 hours medical prtif~sionals from Gallia .
Jancza~. the Associate Medical
·
Director for LifcFlight, with the seminar, so Dr. Douglas Hunter, a of continuing education in three County.
staf( physician 81 Veterans, hosted years. Advanced EMT's must comseminar.
The session addressed the sub- the program.
Byer reponed Saturday lhat the
jects of trauma assessment, helicopter safety, and the legal aspects seminar was a part of the continu·
of trauma treaunent. A LifeFlight ing education program 81 the EMS
helicopter was 81 tl)e scene as well, offiCe, and that lhasc attending the
enablin~ those unfamiliar with the meeting would receiving six hours
LifeFltghl helicopters and the of in-service credit, to applied to
By United Press lntematlonal
The sties over Ohio started to
clear Monday and large amounts of
sunshine were expected to cause
temperatures to be mild.
·
In the extreme southern parts of
Ohio
temperatures were cxeected
Heavy damage was ·incurred to two vehicles in an accident on
to
be
in the upper 60s, wh1le the
Middleport Hill early Saturday evening.
forecast
called for temperatures in
According 10 Middleport Police, Robert M. Haley, Pomeroy, was
the
SOs
in counties along Late
traveling up Middleport Hill when he lost,control of his moton:ycle 1 ,Erie.
'·
on a curve. Sranley E. Aleshire, Rutland, coming down the hill,
· The warming trend that will
obsetVed the IIIOIOII:ycle out of control and in an attempt to avoid a
start
Monday was to become more
collision went off the right side of lhe road.
pronounced Tuesday as an increasHaley was cited fer failure to control and also for driving without . mgly strong soqth wind will bring
insurance, and Aleshire was cited for driving without an operator's
in au from lhe Gulf Coast region.
license. Both vehicles were towed from the scene. Neither Haley
Highs were predicted 10 be from
·nor Aleshire were immediately treated for injuries although it was
the upper 60s to the mid 70s. Tueslater reported to the police tha~ Haley was being treated for a neck
day sllould also bring partly cloudy
i~ury.
.
sides and a chance of mainly after·
noon showers.
The clearing that started Sunday
night in the Buckeye State gave
some people a good view of a
Two minor accidents Saturday evenin$ resulting in light dsmage
bright
display or the northern
to lhe vehicles but no injuries were investiPied by Pomeroy police.
lights,
also
known as the Aurora
The ftrst one occurred at 6:40 p,m. on West Main,Street. A truck
Borealis.
driven by Harvey Bush, Jr., of Letart W. Va. was struck in the rear
Besides the clearing, other feaby a car driven by Carrie Bartels, Pomero~licc reported that
CULVERT INSTALLED • A 13-toot dlametures in Ohio's weather overnight
Bush had slowed in traffic to mate a left
turn. Bartels was
.
ter
metal
eulvtrt has beeo illstalled under State
included some trac~ amounts of
unable to stop and her car hillhe rear of the truck. Neither driver
Route
124
ID tilt Kerr Ru• area to balldle water
drizzle in the east and temperaiiD'es
wascited.
·
now
from
the area north or the blllnnly to the
that were from the mid 30s to lhe
The second acc:ident occurred it 7:11 p.m. 81 538 West Main SL
Tbe
old stone drain under tile road colriver.
lower 40s by time dawn
Continued on page 6
laplled
Ia
February,
1990 creatilla an emeraeocy
apProBChed,
By BRIAN J. REED
Sentlnel·News Starr

JANUARY 1991

· IT'S OFFICIAL!.!

darkness.
Chi.ef Deputy Wood Said this
momiilg that two large·boats were
being sent to the 11m1 by the Coast
Guard, which will probe the area
with sonar.
The Coast Guard official slated
the barges were being moved away
from the locks this morning.
Although not damaged, the loclts
will remain closed until the rocks
from the capsized barge can be
removed.
The Point Pleasant Delachment
of the West Virginia Slate Police,
who. are handling th~ incid~nt, had
nothmg to release thiS monong.
The Galli a County Sheriff's
Department, Gallipolis Fire Depart·
ment, Coast Guard and West Virginia State Police were cin the
scene.
Upon telephoning the Moizer
Crushed SlOne Co. in Indiana this
morning, a represenlative declined
to
out
infonnation.

Trau. rna, tr·eat~ent topt·c of EMS. semt·nar .pasl~:~ding

TOP TWENTY-FIVE CSI LEADERS
SALISBURY .MOTOR CO.
MARVIN BISHOP PONTIAC-IUICK-GMC
CAUSBY BUICK CO.
PARRISH MOTOR CO.
MINCHEW BUICK-OLDS
ALEX GREENE BUICK, INC.
CURTIS Kin BUICK, INC.
RICK EDWARDS PONTIAC-BUICK
GILL BUICK-PONTIAC, INC.
SMITH-MilLS PONTIAC-BUICK
. WAKEFIELD BUICK, INC.
GENE McNEILL AUTO WORLD, INC.
MITCHENER CORP.
GEORGE H. DAVIS CO. INC.
A&amp;T PONTIAC BUICK, INC.
BALDWIN BUICK·GMC TRUCK
EFIRD PONTIAC-BUICK, INC.
CARDINAL CHEVROLET, BUICK, CADILLAC, INC.
GOODWIN BUICK-AM( INC:

lhat shoVed it into a pie!itie
upper end of the locks, causing the
load of rocks to shift and the barge
to overturn. •
The victim's name was not
being released as of this morning.
According to Gallia County
Sheriff's Department Chief Deputy
c.tos Wood, the man was clipped
by a large rock when lhe load of
limestone fell from the barge .
Impact with the rocks apparently
10re off the man's life jacket, which
was found some tinie later. ·
· Two other deck hands on the
fleet were uninjured..
. · ·
According to a represen tatlve
from the U.S. Coast Guard office
in Huntin$l0n, the search for the
body conunued this morning, but
from along the shore. The official
slated due to the high water, debris
and fast current, small boats were
unable to Slly in the water to allow
a search. Last night's search was
terminated about 7
due to

CLIEAIRING ROCKS FROM ROADWAY ·DOH Assistant Superilltendent ROllS Roush muned equipment Sunday to dear tbe roadway or
rocks and debris tbat fell from the hillside in West Columbia, aloag S.R. 62. Tbe rockslide downed power lines, and left over 1,300 Bend Area
residents without electricity. Power was restored tO approximately 800 people by 1:20 p.m., with the remaining residents not having electricity
until after 7 p.m. State DOH ollk:ials were expected this morniag to view tbe area. Rocks from this sUde, along with with others that fell in a
·
separate Saturday incident, will be blasted from tbt area later tbis w~ek. (OVP photo by Mindy Kearos.)

SUPERP-ERFO

,JOM BROOKS CHEVROLET-BUICK, INC.
HOWELL BUICK, INC.
LEE A. FOLGER, INC.
TRENT OLDS-CADILLAC-BUICK, INC.
RAY WEISNER IIUICK INC.

showers.

Vol. 41, No. 235

VICe ot the deceased employees.
Last year, the local team developed a progrilm to recognize safe

SMITH BUICK-PONTIAC, INC.

40s, winds becom!f.-th !ellS
thu 10 •pb. Tu
y, partly
cloudy With a sUght chance or

Copyrighted 1..1

Charlotte Zone CSI

·Mathews
promoted

Mostly dear, low In tile mid

Lotto: 1, 16, 19,
25,46,47
Kicker:973792

'

GTE remembers employees

ATHENS • A GTE Employee
lnv?lvernent Team has completed a
proJect to honor dec~ Athens
and Pomeroy area reurees or
employees who died while actively
employed with GTE. .
Phil Biderman, Athens District
Manager. sold the memorial
plaques have been installed in the
GTE Phone Mart.at ttl West Washington Street 11nd in an employee
entra~ce at GTE's employee
reportmg center on State Route 56.
Members of the team completing the project were Rick Swart
and Steve Kisling (co-chairmen)
Kristie Riffle, Paul Chapman, Av~
Garrett, Pete Han, Bill Edwards
and Kathy Harty.
Names appearing on lhe plaque
. are William E. Barstow, Robert W.
Sheldon, ~lie H. Bailey, Knneth
0. Davis, Robert N. Andrews,
Kenneth T. Bean, Jessie J. Sldnner,
Clarys M. Hunter, W. Clifford
Stout. Keqneth F. McCole, Freda
M. Bolen, Larence E. Diddle, Latry
A. Platt, Paul.E. Perry, James L.
Buclcley, Mary Lou Hood, Orland
E. Ely, Dalesfotd W. Ward and
Fred c. Hashman.
.
GTE's employee involvement is
a volunrary program that allows the
formation of reams to review problems and select projects to improve
operating procedures or improve
employee morale: This project was
designed to pay tribute. to the ser-·

Pick 3:734 .
Pick 4: 5020
Cards : J-H, J-C;
K·D; K·S

On page4

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Oil fires . spawn ozone, other gases
WOOSTER, Ohi.o (UPI) Burning oil fields in Kuwait and
Iraq are spawning ozone and other
gases, but the threat to people and
plants from those gases shOuld be.
relatively small and temporary,
says an Ohio State University air
pollution researcher.
"With a lot of sun and tem~ra­
tureS over SO or 60, ozone will be
formed" from nitrogen oxides in
the smoke, says Craig Weidensaul,
a professor of forestry and leader of
the Ohio Agricultural Research and
Development Center's Air Pollution Laboratory at Wooster.
"It probably won't represent

'

Ohio Lottery

Duke, NC in
NCAA final
four games

Warming trend
swings into state

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,...---Local briefs-__,
Man injured in motorcycle crash

....

2 accidents reported to police

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sttuatloa and pushiDa forward piau by
Departmeat or TrUipOi'tltlon for lllabway relocatloo ,and lmpi'OYemeot at the illtenectlon or u.
S. 33 and State Route 124. lnstallatloa of the
oew culvert was tile first phase or tbe overall
$1.5 miUioo project.
.

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�Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Monday, March 25, 1991
'

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
lll Court Streel
- Pomeroy, Oblo
DEVOTED TO THE JNTEKf;STS OF THE liiEIGS-MASON AREA

A!:h

.

~m~ rT""''--f._-.-.~d·-=~.,

ROBERT L, WINGETT

.

~

CBABLE'NE HOEFLICH

Publisher

Geaeral Manacer

PAT WWTEJIEAD
Al8istanl Publlaher/Coalroller
AMEMBER of The United Presslnternallonal, Inland Dally Press
Association and the AmeriCan Newspaper Publishers Assoclatlo~.
LE II ERS OF OPINIONare welcome. They should be less than 300
words tong. AU letters are subject to edltlnll and must be signed with
name, address and telephone numl!eJ'. No unsigned letters will be published. Ll'tters sllould be lh good taste, addressing Issues, not personalities.

Scholars beginning to look
atcongregationallqre
By DAVID E. ANDERSON
UPI"ReU&amp;ioa Wrlttr
Religion, everyone acknowledges, plays a proftll81d and important role in American life.
It is manifest in Secretary .of
Slate James Baker telephoning
Episcopal Presiding Bishop
Edmond Browning 10 pray together
as the deadline for war with Iraq
approached, or Melhotlist minister
Donald Wildman's campaign
against pornography, or evangelist
Billy Graham traveling the world
and UJl!ing repentance.
· But, according to the Lilly
Endowment, "the basic unit or religious allegiance - lhc congregal'ion - continues to be largely
.lgROI'ed•...
. Over the last 15 years lhe foundation has quiedy been trying to
rectify that, spending some $15
million in grants for scholars to
study congregational life - what
makes them lick, how they come
together. how they b~ up, how
they resolve tensions, what their
internal life is like.
• '• American congregations are
mote imp&lt;irlant, more interesting
Jill() more complex lhan most have
realized," said Craig Dykstra, vice
president for religion at Lilly.
.· "Their impact, far from contllined to their own churches. exeriS
powerful influences on lhcir communities and on society," he said.
Dykstra said lhe study of congregations is just at a beginning but
a recent issue of the endowment's
magazine, Progressions, summarized some of the work that has
been going on and points to future
efforiS at underslanding church life.
. The work liad its origin in a
study by lhe late James Hopewell .
of three rural Georgia congregations. Hopewell studied lhe congreBJitlons as an anthropologist would
an alien culture, looking at values,
linages, languages and how a sense 1
of identity is gained and transmitted.
His provocative report stimulated discussion and debate and led to
a new project - lhc study of a sin-

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American troops in lbc w.-,,acc: the
grim side of the say u sOmehow
anti ,American, anti-Bush, anti·
team ~t ala time when the team
is pulling togetber with IJride.
The press is not perfect For the.
most part. its faullllic in etron of
fact. And frequcndy, there ate differenccs in interprclation. But it
should not be a cnmc in the eyes of
the public to gather those facts,
interpn:t them with lbc best tools
available and disseminate them to
the poblic. The public's job is to ·
weigh the information w1th some
sophistication. A democracy
assumes that its people will not
expect to be spoon fed. They are
· entitled, no, lhey are obligated, to
make lheir own interpretations or
what lhey read and see.
The offspring Of the Greek tradition today includes the conserva. live Media Research Center and its
chainnan L. Brent Bozell III. He
tried to bully Ted Turner into

Jack Anderson
and Dale Van Atta

recaUing CNN correspondent Pc1er
Amcu from Baghdad. Said Bozzel
of Arnett. "He is more of a propagandist for SaMam Hussein than a
reporter for CNN."
Arnett wasn't a propagandist,
but he was working under Iraqi
censorship, which was probably They also saw real suffering among
more severe than lhc censorship the people of Baghdad who were
being imposed by the Pcn1agon. paying the price of - · That was
Sometimes you take what you can 1mportant for a war that came danget. And Arnett went overboard to gerously close 10 looking like there
remind his viewers of what they was no downsi!le, no price to be
were geuing. He rrpc•wlly said his
reports were being censored and ~o question the miliiJIJ')' is not to
that there were .many subjects condemn it. but to mate IIUfC that
about which he was not allowcct10 we as a nation•have control of it
by
speak. Shon or carving that caveat America is not made great
in stone and mailin~ it to every iIS mililafY might and patriotism.
Nielsen ratings household, there What makes America superior is its
wu not much more Arnett could . people's ability to ~onu;ot their
do but shut 11p, and that's the worst government lllld monuor Its every
move. The United. Slates cannot be .
option of aU.
'
Through Arnett, Americans saw by the people and for the people if
Saddam Hussein the liar, the the people don't kno.w what's
manipulator, the choreographer. going on.

ontr

Washington, Boston skate to 3-3 deadlock

sachusettS.

B

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St. Joe win D-11, I titles

''MOTHER'S HOME!"

many ethnic Russians from th~ So- is something the United States has
viet Union is the collapse of the Soviet long demanded. (Take care, by lhe
domestic empire, which is causing way, to distinguish these emigres from
the forced repatriation of hundreds of the Russian Jews who have reccndy
lhousands ofRussiansfrom such non- been allowed 10 emigrate by lhe hooRussian republics as Azerbaijan, dreds of lhousands to Israel.)
Tadzhikistan and UzbelciSian. The~
What to do about such an influx
is simply no room in Russia proper is bound to provoke heated controfor these refugees - and no jobs, or versy in the \]nited Slates - not least
even food,cilher. Other factors in the with-in the conservative movement
emigration include, of course, pov- iiSCif.
eny, economic collapse and a Jack of
The lheory here is that immipublic heallh care or housing for grats add importandy 10 lhe AmeriresideniS or lhe Russian Republic can pool of manpower, energy and
iiSCif.
talent. And certainly lhen: is plenty
What will tum on lhe emigration of evidence that the country has
spigot is Moscow's proposed open- benefited hugely from at least some
door emigration policy, which lhe previous immigration waves.
Supreme Soviet is expected to apBut there is another school or
prove this summer. This, ironically, lhought that cannot be dismissed out

.

William A. Rusher
of hand. Thomas Fleming, writing in
"Chronicles," insiSIS that "we need to
put an end to the mass migrations to
tiki United Slates)It was lhe Voll&lt;etwander~~Rgen of the Germans and
HunsthatbroughtlheRomanEmpire
down, and we shall be in even worse
han!- nosed approach to refugees fleeing the political turmoil, high population jp1?Wth and economic chaos of
lhc Thtrd World."
·
Note,however,lhatFlemingisspeak•
ing here about refu~ees from "the
Third World." Does 11 matter that the
Russian refugees in question are
e5sentially European Caucasians, and
inheritors of a high Wes1em (i.e.,
Orthodox Christian)·culture?
.
In any case, prepare for a major debate · and pick your side.

Can America learn from Saudi values?

•

•
•

.

One danger associated with our countries. In this country more than
swift victory in the Persian Gulf 24,000 people die each year in
war is that we will.consider our alcohol-related highway accidents.
•
mililary
superiority to be somehow
DeLamotte goes on:
'•
a vindication of our American way
Among Saudis, pomogmphy in
of life.
any form is illegal. In America,
•
Some were hoping that as we Playboy magazine sells 3.4 million
. learned more about the value sys- copies a year, and porno theaters
qr.·.Cl 1ft 1~
•,.
tem of our hosts in the Middle East sell2 miUion tickets every week.
tty NE~ . tr~e
'
the Saudi Arabians - we would reTh~n lhere is lhe matter of the
"~ow come we can defeat the infidel Imperi• r'
examine OlD' own way of Hving. .
family
. "In Saudi Arabia, the
'
alist allied forces, but we can 'I produce elecWriting in the United Methodist extended family is the center and
~
tricity or running water?"
Reporter, Roy DeLamotte, profes- meaning of life and the aulhority of
sor emeritus of Bible and World the father is final. Here one child in
Religions
at Paine College in four lives with only on11 parent,
•
Augusta, Ga., checked off some usually the mother."
areas in which our morals and
It isn't only lhe Saudis who can
mores would seem to compare possibly be a lesson for us. Olher
unfavorably with the Saudis' set or non-Western cultures in history
values.
seem to have known something we
l!y United Press lnlernational
Tbcre is the business of premari· don't know about domestic trantal sex, considered a sin m Saudi quility and the good life.
· Today is Monday, Man:h 25,1hc 84th day of·J99J with 2&amp;110 follow.
Arabia and almost non-existent
Arranged marriages, still prac·, The moon is waxin&amp;. moving toward its run phase.
there. Here four our of 10 first ticed iri some countries, are a case
• The
V..a, Mars and Saturn.
births to mothers between 15 and in paint.
: Tbcmnin&amp;-IIACW}andJupiter.
.
.
30 years old are out of wedlock or
A rabbi once said to me, "For
• Thole born on this date are under the sign of Aries. They include sym- conceived before marriage, said 4,000 years the Jews were married
)ihony COIIductor Arturo TOICIIIini in 1867; Mount Rushmore sculptor DeLamotte.
orr by lhcir parents and, .you know'
OutzOIIIIorJium in 1867; COIIJIXIRI' Bela Bartok in 1881; film director
While we have 90,000 rapes a it tended to work out I often wonDavid Lean in 1908 (ap 83); Frencllactress Simone Signoret in 1921;
year, rape Is rare in Saudi Arabia, der how our modem homes with
~commentator HOward Colcllln I920 (age 71); feminist writer Glo- · probably because the penalty is · lheir tensions, lheir squabbles and
na Steinem in 193S (age ~; soul sin&amp;er Aretha Franklin in 1~2 (age death.
their high rate of divorce prove lhe
49); and rock musician Elton John in 1947 (age 44).
Alcohol is forbidden in MusHm point that marriage by free choice

.

.

~oday in

history

IIICIAiinl-•

has been a change for the better."
Why did so many anangcd marriages work out well?
"Parents may have more wi sdom in these matters," says one
marriage counselor. "Youlh ~end to
be impulsive and to selcct a partmir
on a more superficial basis."
But weren't ananged marriages
"loveless" affairs? Not as frequently as we might think. The Bible
says that after Isaac brought Rebecca home and married her, "he carne
to love her." Rebecca had been
picked for Isaac by the family ser·
vantl
Others agree it is possible to
"learn to love." They say even lhe
"spontaneOus combustion" ldnd of
love may emerge when two pan.

••

George R. Plagenz

ners make an effort to love each
other.
·
Still, nobody .expects arranged
marria~es to make a revival. "'The
statisucal results would indicate
that lhe arranged marriages of the ,
Old World were more successful."
says a social historian. "but obviously they are not going to work in
a Western seuing today. We are too
individualistic ."
Delamotte has it right. He says, ·
"We ne~er cease proclaiming.our·
supenonty to non-Western naiiOtls
but lhey can find no basis for our
moralizing." They see, he says, ·
only a Christianity that seems .
unable to fig~t the secularized cut- ·
· -------~--­ ture of the West.
·'
First Coca·Cola
Coca-Cola syrup was first made in
1886 by pharmacist John Pemberton
of Atlanta, according to The Kids'
World Almanac. He created lbe syrup
as a cure for headaches and hang·
overs. His employee, William Venable. who worked at the pharmacy
soda fountain, added carbonated water to the syrup and made the first
Coca-Cola soft drink.

I

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ings, ~articularly when Ron (5-0-12).
"I'm happy. I would've liked·to
Hoover s third-period goal gave the
. have had the win, but (lhc Capitals)
Bruins a 3-1 lead.
"It's a lucky goal," Murr11y are a pretty desperate team ri~ht
said. ~ ·(Hoover is) not a guy known now," Bruins head coach Mike
for bis goal scoring, not by any Milbury said.
Pivonka's first of two goals
stretch of the. imagination. He just
piU lhe puck on the net and it hit came on a redirection of Ken
the crossbar and went in. Anolher Sabourin's pasS, staking the Capi- ·
quarter inch and it just hits the tals 10 a 1-0 lead wilh 14:40 gone ·
in the ftrst period.
crossba.''
Cam Neely knotted the score·
The goat was the rookie's third
.
late
in the second period wilh his
in 13 games Ibis season.
48th
goal. Neely poked lhe puck
Despite being in the league's
lhrollgh
Langway's legs and had a
tightest division mce, Murray said
clear
route
to lhe net, where he beat
his players "have a pretty relaxed
goaltender
Don Beaupre with a
attitude."
"The guys are. executing the wristshoL
Ray Bourque broke lhe tie early .
fundamen lals of lhe game pretty
well," he said. "When you battle in lhe third period, banging home._
back after being down 3-1, that's a the rebound of a Neely slap sboL
Fifty-six seconds later, Hoover beat
sign of confidence.''
The Bruins, who have gone 5-1- Beaupre wilh a wrist shot to give
4 in lheir last 10 games, have not Boston a 3-1 lead.
But lhe Capitals counteied with
lost at Washington since November
ihc
quick goats from Pivonka ancf
1987. The tie kept the Bruins
Mill~r.~
unbeaten in overtime thi.s season

B)' PAUL WALSH
UPI Sports Writer
Even a two-goal rally in the
lhird period for a tie against one of
lhe NHL's best teams wasn't good
enough for Washington Capitals
veteran Rod Langway.
IT'S LAYVP TIME for Charlotte's Rex Cbapmu (3), wbo goes
"It's a big point, but we could
airborne over Portlaod Jluard Terry Porter for tbe basket during
have had a win today," Langway
Sunday's NBA contest In Portland, Ore., which the Tral Blazers
said after Washington's 3-3 tie
won 117-lOZ. (UPI)
Sunday with the Boston Bruins,
champions of lhe Adams Division.
"The goats they got were basically
on good bounces. "
Goals from Michal Pivonlca and
Kelly Miller 2:09 apart provided
lhe recovery that moved lhe Capitals moved into sole possession of
third place in the Patrick Division,
By GENE CADDES
68-68.
one
point ahead of New Jersey and
UPI Sports Writer
Just 12 seconds earlier, Keith
two
poiniS in from or Philadelphia
. COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!)- Gregor's baseline drive and slam
ftrSt
four teams make the play- .
.The
' Lexington won its second tide ·in diiRk had given ·lhe Thooderbirds a
offs.
· the hlst lhree years with a ~ense 55- 68~67 edge.
Capitals head coach Terry Mur: 53 decision ovc:r Dayton Chami- ·
Miller led the Vikings wit~ 19
ray
agreed wilh Langway that good
· nade-Julienne in the Division II points and 16 assists, and Miles
forume prevented Washington from
slale championship game Saturday· Golden added 17 points.
'
, night at Ohio State University's St.
Lakola's seven-foot J.B. Reafs- picking up two points in lhe sland,Jolm's Arena. .
.
nyder led aJ1 scorers with 31 points
, The Minutemen, ag~ led by 6- and pulled down 14 rebounds and
: foot-7 juilior Jamie Feick wilh 16 Steve Belter had 23 poiniS.
; points and 13 rebounds, held off
the Eagles down lhe stretch, thanks
But Reafsnyder-had 29 of his
: to a pair of free lhrows by Matt ~ints after three quarters, hitting
•Shuler with seven seconds to play.
at112 of his field goal attempts. He
· They gave Lexington a 55-51 ·did not get off a shot from lhe floor
' lead and permiued the Minutemen the fmal II miniUes of lhe game.
:to allow an uncontested layup by
"We lalew he (Rcafsnyder) was
C-J's Darnell Hoslcins·as the final going to score," said St. Joe hesd
' SCCQDIJ_~ttick~_Qff. ~~wilk_-eoach. Mike Moran ''You-almost -.ing to go to lhc free throw line," have to concede that unless you're
;said Lexington he8d coach Gregg going 10 double him.
·collins. "I know Matt (Shuler)
"Our philosophy was, 'hey,
·yesterday missed one, but all sea- he's going to SCOfll some, bullet's
:son he's come through at the free try to keep these other kids in
thro~ line for us. Today, he made
check.' I think that was probably
those two big ones down the the key thing defensively. Some pf
stretch."
lheir other kids didn't hurt us."
In lhe nightcap, Cleveland ViDaScott Mueller, who averaged
Angela St. Joseph won its first 10.2 poiniS per game on lhe season
Division I with a 76-72 overtime for Lakota. was held scoreless.
, ·
win over West CheSler Lakoll!.
"Bill Kennelly shut ~im
The Vikings scored lhc ftrst four (MueUer) down and JUSt did a great .
points in overtime and never relin- job," said Moran.
quisbed the lead. Tony Miller hit
The other two titles, decided
the second of two free throws with earlier in the day, went to St. Henry
lhree seconds left in regulation to in Division IV and Haviland
send lhe game into overtime, lied at Wayne TJ11Ce in Division Ill.

~: Lexington, _ Cleveland

Now:the' Russians really are _coming

•

By DEAN SCHABNER
"I don't think we played dill IIQI.ldy in the
much of tbc second. ThCo lbcy turned it on and
UPI Sports Writer
first
q~. they just Jllldo every lbot." l'llrtplayed the way the Tni1 Blazas like to play.•' .
Prom where Clwtoae Hornets head coach
Jand
head coach Rick AdeiiNIJ llid. ''Ower the
'The Blazers putiOICiher a I0-2 run in the
Gene Litdes is slanding, the Pordand Trail
last
lhree
quanerswe defended tleller. We got
final four minaues of die first half to take a 63Blllzen' recent han! times doo'tlook so bad.
in
the
open
court and easy Jwlrea
53 leld on i dUDk by Kersey.
·
· . "I wouldn't 'say they were struggling," Lit,
"Jerome.
(Kersey) aucl Clyde were really
The Blazas increased their lead wilh almost
good.
..
~
added.
"Clyde lot'l Jot ol easy bastics said Sunday night ~ the Blazers rolled
every possession in the third quarter and
to a 117-102 victory over his Hornets. "Teams entered tbc' fmal suinza with a 97-75 advankets and Jerome wu so active nianiag the
tbat have a.chance to win 60 games can't be lage.
.floor. Tbcy setlhe tone for us.." .
.
.
cbanlclerized as struggling. Teams like us with
In olher games. San AntoniO clipped Dcii'OII
Tbe Hornets failed to score a single point
19 winsarc~Jing.
8S-78 and the Los Angeles Lakets routed Scatduring a 5:27 strctcb that included the last three
"Bau I did nouce that they were not playing
de 113·96.
minutes of lhe third quarter and the ftrSt 2 1/2
as good as they probably wo11ld like to play,"
S,P.un
85,
Pistons
78.
At
San
Antonio,
:
lllinUtes ollhe fourth perio4.
be said.
DaVId Robinson scored 11 points in die final :
·J "When we play wilh the kind of intensity
. Clyde Drexler scored 27 points and Jerome , that we did toni~ht, we '11 always be tough to
quarter to help the SpurSpuU away. Tbc teams ,
Kersey added 22 to lead the Trail Blazers, who beat," Drexler wd.
combined for only two field aoeJs in the fmal ·
·
couldn't shake the Hornets untillaie in the secsix minuteS. San Antonio shot 36 flee !brows ~
· The Homeu were led by Rex Chapman wilh
ond quarter but then blew them out.
.just
I3 for lhe Pistons and until tbc last six
. 15 points and Mike Gminski and Kendall GiU
. · PorUand had dropped eight of 11 ' and lhree with 14 each. .
minutes Detroit went to the free throw line
.
of four at home belore Sooday's win, in the
onlr three times. Robinson scmd 2S with Rod
Bpth lcims wm on fw in the ftrSt quarter,
process losing the stranglehold it had on first
Slrlckiand and Terry Cummings addina 16
wilh PorUand hitting 70 percent of its shots and
place in the Pacific Division for most of the pwtoue shoaling 62 pcztent.
each.
Joe Dumars had 22 for 'the Plslons and
. ·
season. .
James
~wards 19.
.
·
The Hornets l18d lbc lldvantage early as lhey
·
"Sometimes the best thing is to look ahead jumped 10 their biggest lead of lhe game at 28~akers 113, Supe.-Sonlcl 96 • At Iagle- :
and not 'look baclc," Drexler said. "Besides, we
wood, ~if., Magic Johnson rellUIICd to the
19 on atip by center Mike Gminski.
.
had two really good practices this weekend, so
lineup
and scored 13 of his 33 points in 111 18-6
Portland got back into the pme with a 12-2
we were prepared. We're 100 talented to keep run that was capped by Buck WiUiams' dunk
lhird-ijuarter run, lif~J lhe ·t.aan. Jobllson,
on=!,like we had been."
·
who rru.sed Friday · t's loss tQ Milwi,Ukce
on a fast break this put the Blazers ahead 31-30
had iiS largest lead- 27 poiniS - .
.
because
ol tendinitis in both knees, ank 11 of
at the 2:38 made. Charlotte was able to keep it
midway through the final quat\er, at which close as the two teams headed into tlic second
14 shotnnd had ll assiSu in 33 mim!fel u lhe
ppint Charlotte's reserves tried td' make a quarter lied at37-37,
Lakers SII$PPCd a two-game losiaJ streak !0
comeback. but by lhen it was far too late.
remain· 8' game behind fqst-place Portllnd m
The HomciS continued to make it tough on
. "Usually PorUand is a team lhat runs out the Blazers over the next five minutes, but
the Pacific Division. Seattle was Jed by Shawn
· early on you and gets a big lead," Littles said. PorUand took tbe lead for good at 7:18 when
Kemp with 21 points : Teammate Sc.dalc
"They may Jet you back in it later but they Wayne Cooper hit a 20-foot jumper to make it
Threatt was ejected with 3:23 to play in lhc
usually get that big jump. Tonight we had con- 49-4.7.
lhird quarter for punching Worthy durins an
no! of the game for aU of the first quarter and
· exchange under the Los Angcl01 bll'ket

The press fulfills a democracy's obligation

. It was a congregation, foooded,.
140 years ago, that went lhrough a
period of energetic growth in lhe
1970s under the leadership of a
new minister who lailored church
programs and his ministry to the
residents· of the church's uppermiddle class bedroom community.
But the minister showed little
interest in substantive Biblical or
spiritual concerns and even less in
social issues. By the late 1970s,
c_ongregationat growlh was slowing
and murmurs of dissent were rising
over the minister's inattention to
spiritual mati.C1s, the neglect of
denominational ties and the
absence of social concetn.
Each of tbc scholars brought a
different lens to lhc congregation's
history and self-understanding and
it is their Hope that together such
studies will aid lhe church in developing an effective ministry.
But, according to Marjorie
Hyer, who wrote lhe Progressions
summary of the cqngregational
studies, denominational reactions
to the work ha\oe been mixed.
Sh~ quote~ Tboimis Franks of
Candler Theological Seminary,
who fmds that denominational officials aren't much interested in congregational research.
Carl Dudley of McCormick
Theological Seminary takes it a
step funher.
.
"The denomination sees the
congregation as an outpost for
denominational distribution," a
"we have lhe, truth .:. which we
will pass out to the people at these
local outpoSIS."
But, he said, "In c6ngreglilions,
faith is real, sometimes more alive
than in denomination. ... they are
also lhe producers of lhc faith.''
And, the scholars\argue, there is
Tbe United Slates may soo~ be
still much to learn.
·
facing a new immigration crisis, different in key respects from earlier
ones and involving imporlant new
policy decisions.
According to the Herirage Foundation, a highly respected conservative lhink tank based in Washington
and not given to hysterical exaggcrstion, roughly 1. million Russian
0
emigres are expected to apply for
entry to the United Slates Ibis year
alone.
Tbc author of lhe Heritage study
is Leon Aron, senior policy analyst in
Soviet studies at lhe foundation and
himself a 1978 emigre from the Soviet
Union.
According 10 Aron, the "decisive- factor" iii lhe dC)l8rture or so

.•

--

Pomeroy-MiddlepOrt, Ohio
MondiY, March 25, 1891

WASHINGTON - Children
Jearn from their history books
about. the Greek's nasty habit of
killing the bearers of bad news.
Those messengers probably should
have lied to save their necks.
Today's mus media messengers
don't face death, u such, so they
conlinuc to make bad news their
stock in ttade. And the Greek: tradition of killing the messenger has
become a melaphor for contemporary media criticism.
.
The Persian Gulf War has
brought plenty of occasions to
remember the Greek system of disseminating infof\llation. It's now
press bashing dressed up in the
clothing or patriotism.
The public has blamed the press
for showing 100 many pieces of
~i rubble, 100 man.l,jiured iniQi
civtlians, too many
Iraqi soldiers. Many newspaper readers,
caught up in the justiftable enthusi,
asm about the performance of

.

Portland, San Antonio, Lakers win.n ers

Pla._2-The Dally Slntlnel

gle congregation from a variety of
perspectives and academic disciplines, A team of 18 scholars psychologisiS, sociologists, lheologians, ethnographer, anthropologiSIS and organizational developers .
- began studying a United
Methodist church in western Mas-

Berry's World

In the NBA Sunday,

.

The Dilly SenUntll PICII 3

I

· Earth's atmosphere
The Earth's atmoepbere ia a blanket composed of aitroaen, oxyaen and
. argon, in amounts of about ·78, 21 and,
I perc;ent by volume. Also pre11111t ill
mtnute .quantities are carbon dioxide,
hydrogen, neon, bellum, kryptoa and
xenon.

In other NHL games Sunday,
Chicago beat MiiiDCSOIA 5-4, Buffalo blitzed Philadelphia 6.2, lhe
New York Rangers defeated lhc
New York Islanders 3-1; and Los
Angeles edged Edmonton 4-3 in
overtime.
.
Rangers 3, blaDders 1
At New Yolk, thiJ'dileriod goals
by Brian Mullen and Corey Millen
broke a tic and hc1pcd the Ranget~~
break an eight-game losing streak
and clinch a playoff bcrlb. The victory moved dte Ranp within one
pomt of ftrSt-place Pittsburgh in the
·Patrick Division and gave tbcm a
five- _point lead over third-place
Washington.
Sabres 6, Flyers 2
· At Buffa.lo, N.Y:, Alexander
M~~ilny scorcd'two·uritisaisted
g,
to. lead the Sabres. Mogitny's
fust $oal came after be sb'l~ the
puck from Pbilade · 's J Chy·
cbrun and slid 11
Ill l'asl
goaltender Ken W~pt. Mogilny
also scored for a 4-I lead at f7:28
of the second period when he went
in on a breakaway and bacldlmded
a shot between the pads of Pete
Peeters, who replaced WI'OJICL ~
Bllcklllwb 5, Nortb Sta'l4 ·
At Chicago, Mike Hudson
scored !wice du~IDJ. lhe B,lack~
hawks' five-goal~eDDd-period 10
power Cbicago. Steve Larmer's
assist on Chicago's ftuth goal, bY
. Michel Q(!JIIet, pv.e the veteran
right wing 100 points on the season, making blm only the third
player in Blackhawb history tq
reach that m~. The Jlackhaw~
extended theJr oobeat.en streak to ,
seven games (6.0-1) and improved
their NHL-bcst record to 47-22-7
for 101 points.
· :
Klnp it, OUen 3 (Of)
At BJJmonton, Alberta, Tomas
Sandstrom scored his second goal
on a 2-on-1 break with Wayne
Gn:tzky at 3:30 of overtime 10 give
Los Angeles the viciiJrY.

I~oot·

SPRlNh VAll' Y C:~: M·1
446 4'111

Courier beats Wheaton to win
Lipton International men's title
KEY BISCAYNE, Fla (UPI) ~ have been close friends since they
Jim Courier and David Wheaton were in junior high school. But
lhey had no intention ·of exchanging gifts in Sunday's tide mau:h of
The Daily Sentinel
the Lipton International Players
Championships. though it looked
!USPS 111-HG)
that way at times .
A Dlvilllea of Multimedia, lac: •
"I think we bolh can play better
Published every afternoon, Monday
than we did out lbcre, but I'm not
through Friday. Ill Court St.. Po·
complaining," said Courier after
m~roy, Ohio, by thf Ohio Valley Pubbeatin~ Wheaton 4-6, 6·3, 6-4.
llshllll Company/Multimedia. Inc ..
Pomeroy, Ohlo 4!769. Ph. 992·2156. Se·
"The Important thing that hap• cond class postage patd at Pomeroy,
pened
out there today was that I
Ohio.
won, not how I played."
MID-ICE TANGLE - Washington's Dimitri Kbrlltlcll O,ft) IDd
' Member: United Press lnternatlona\.
The victory was the second con·
Boston defe~~~eman Gren Wesley (26) tanlle 011 mid-Ice ror control
Inland Dally Pres.11 Association and the
secutive tournament and 12th
or t!Je puclc In the lint period or Sunday,
HL aame ID Landover,
Ohio Newspaper Astocl"tlon. National
Advertlstne Repreteatattve, Branham
straight ·match for Courier, who
.
Md.,
wblcb
ended
ID
a
3-3
tie.
(UPI)
·
Newspa~ SaJea, 733 Third Avenue,
won two weeks ago at Indian
New York, ]&lt;!ew Yorl&lt; 111017.
Wells, Calif. Wheaton, ranl&lt;ed 46th · Both players held serve through 3-3. He just ot a !=OIJPie of good
POSTMASJ'ER: Send addreu chan~e~
and unscedcd in the tournament, lhe set, wilh Wheaton winning the shots in on m " Wheaton said.
to The Dally Sentinel, Ill Court St. ,
Courier served for lbc match at
had entered tbe event after losing . first set point with a service winPomeroy, Ohio ~761.
four flrst-roood matches Ibis year, ner.
S-4 and won when Wheaton netted
SVI18CRIPTION KATI!S
but won six straight at the Liptoo
In lhe second set, lhere were no another backhand from lhc hueBy Carrier or Mot• Route
before losing to Courier.
service breaks until Courier broke line.
One Week ........ .... ........ .... ...........11.60
One Month ...................... ........... $6..95
"This burlS a loL There is a lot
Courier, 20, ranked 18th, in the at 5-3 when Wheaton was long
One Year ......... .. ...... .. .. .... r····.. $83.20
world and seeded 13th, and with a backhand from the haseHne. of pain in my stomach after a loss
SINGLE COPY
Wheaton
arc c Jose friends. Both Courier then won lhe set wilh an like this, but overall I guess it was
PRICE
attended Nick Bollcttieri's Tennis ace.
a ~ood week for me,'' WheatOn
Dally ........ .. ......................... 2!1 Centa
Academy
at
Bradenton,
Fla.,
as
"I
never
really
quite
had
my
saul.
.
.
~ut.cr~Hrs not dHirtng ropay ihecarCourier received an automauc
rler may reinlt In advance dJrect to
teenagers. ·
rhythm on my serve after lhc ftrSt
The DaUy Seatlnel oa a 3, 6or 12 month
The 21-year-old Wheaton, wear- set, " Wheaton said. "I felt like 1 reprimand from lhe .chair wben in
balll. Cridtt wtll'be atnn carrter each
i113
a siar-spangled headband and lost a little intensity."
anger he hit lbc bill into the sllllds
-k. '
red, white and blue scarf around his
In
lhc
second
game
of
the
third
wilh lhe bandJe of his racquet
No oubocrlptlona by moll permitted lo
neck,
got
off
to
a
fast
start
with
his
set.
Courier
finished
off
a
1S-of-19
"I hit it pretty .,act. I deserve a
anu where home carrt« 1ervtce is
avallable.
serve-and-volley game.
.
point tear by breaking Wheaton's signing bonus from the (Cincinnati)
The two traded service breaks in serve.
Reds for that," Courier joked. ·"I
MoJII!abo&lt;rlptiODI
the first two games of lhc match,
Wheaton broke at 3-3 when don't think I lhou1d get fined for It,
tooldelllelp COuniJ
13 Weeki ...... ............... .. .. ... ...... S21.8f
then remained on serve until the Courier netted a forehand. But butlf I do, I s.- I Clll afford it.''
':tf Weelu ............. ... ..... ....... .., ... Jf3.16
Courier, Of Dade City, Fla., colfifth
game. • Wheaton, of Lake Min- Courier broke right back to give
52 Weekl ............. ........ .... ... ...... $84. 76
Olllollle lltolp COunty
.
netonka, Minn., broke with a fore- him a 4-3 edge wben Wheaton douloCIM S\79,000 for lbc viclllr)', the
13 Weekl ....... .. .. ..... ....... ......... .. auo
hand down the line and a double ble faulted.
bi~gest paycheck of his career.
21 Weeki ........ , .... .. ...... ............. lfij.l!(l
fault by Cottrier.
"I think I played a good game at
52 Weelu ....... .... ..... ... .. .. ..... ...... 188.t0
"

. . ,;

"

ATTENTION:
MEIGS COUNTY VOTERS
In order to avoid waiting In line and the drln
to Pomeroy on Election Day, you mulfl'llht•
any changes In your registratiOn before April
I, 1991 at 9:00 P.M•
You may regllfer, change your rtllstrqtlon at
our oHict at 101 M1chank StrHt, 1'oiHroy,
Ohio. Dally 1:30 til 4130.
ATOUI PEIMAIIIIf IIAICH tOCifiOII,
PMDOY PUIUC UIUII
OPEN MONDAY 11111.1 FIDAY -·.. 9:00 a.m. til 9JOO p.IIL
SATURDAY ................................ 9:00 a.m. til SaGO ....
SUNDAY .............~ ...................,•• 1:00 a.m. til' ls'Oo p.111.

***********

APIIL lth 1"1 - 1 0 - OffiG WIU. AlSO. 01!111
PIOII tsOO AJLTU 9tOO ,...
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Duke, North Carolina win to comp~ete Final Four picture
ByNorth
UnitedCarolina
Press lllternatioul
Duke and
lOok different roads ·to
the Final Four
lh
·
I
, but
eir coaches admiUed the same
lhing helped get them both there. Luck.
The tar Heels reached the Final Four after a nineYear absence-by holding on ~or a 75 _72 NCAA EasL
Regional. championship victory over Temple in East
RutherfOrd, N.J. North Carolina's win was not
secured until Owls guard Mark Macon's lhree-pom'1•
er bounced off the rim in the final seconds Sunday.
Duke advanced to lhe Final Four for the fifth time

l

· SIX
· years by rouang
· undermanned St. John'-s 78-61
m
in the Midwest Regional finals in Pontiac, Mich. •
"You have ID be very lucky aod very good," said
Norlh Carolina mentor Dean Sm1"1h, de•....:b;n., what
. .....
h
-.. --.
11-es to reac the Final Four. "And today we were
lucky."
The also had
Y
a clutch player in King Rice, who
sank fOlD' free throws in the fmal :23 seconds.
·North
effi Carolina, which withstood Macon's 31 pomt on, wiU meet Kansas in Saturday's semifi·
nals in Indianapolis. The Tar Heels, 29-6, will ·be

&lt; Monday, - h 25, 1991 .

Mor~elay; Mln:h 25, 1991

Pomeroy-Midclleport, Ohio

..

.'

making their flist Final Four trip since 1982, when
they defeated G,.,..,CIOWD in the final for the cham·
23 9 mark
pionsbip.
-•
·Some~ coined the EastRqiOI!IIIhc North Car"--'-~
"ght
ha
S
otma
· Invt· ·-·'-·' after No. 2 ~ S~ aod No.4
..,...., m1
not ve needed any help 10 end L
UIUUI,..
bou ed . the opening
d
John's NCAA tournament run, but the Blue Devils
seed UCLA were
nc tn
roun s.
were happY 10
-'--advantage of u"'
·~- ........... ·~- ot.
No-L
Carolina wasn't
expected
to have
1
""""
.,.....,. u ...y g
•u•
. .~.
ifinals,
and trouble
,.._, didwilh
,
"We played well but we were fonunate, too,"
Eastern Michigan m u"' sem I
w-1
n I.
Du.ke bead coacll Mike Krzyzewski said.
But the Owls, the No. 10' seed, gave the T.- Heels all
~~-tguardBobbyHurle~the......VV..
theYcould. handle· ·
......,.....,,..,..,
·....-··
.
alMost Val
Player, led Duke wilh points and
Every time North Carolina looked like it was
ran the offense effectively. The Blue Devils wiD play
about to run away in lhe second half, lhe Owls
Nevada-Las Ve~ (a 77-65 winner over Seton Hall
answered, usually by Macon. The senior guard struck
Satur_day night 10 the West Regional final), which · moslly on long jumpers and also grabbed nine
beat Duke 103-73 in last year's championship game,
rebounds.
in Saturday's semifinals.
.
·
Leading 11-69 with 1:28 to go, the Tar Heels
. ''They lost their best center (Robert·Werdann) and · spread !he floor. Rick Fox~ fouled on a drive with
had their top guard (Jason Buchanan) out for a
1:01 left, giving North ~lma a new 4S seconds.
while,'' KnyzeWski said. "SL John's would have
R1ce was then fouled by Vtc Carstll'phen and· sanic
been a more formidable opponent with them in ·lhoie
bolh free thrQws, putting the Tar Hccls up 73-69 with
·all the time. We tried to talce advan1age of them
22.9 seconds remaining.
being ouL''
Macon lhel! grabbed a Iimg rebound of his own
· Werdann reinjured lhe Calf muscle he hun in the
miss and bit a lhree· pointer to make the score 73-72
Big East tournament and played only 12 minutes, · wilh 9.2 seconds remaining. Temple called lime out
Buchanan drew his third foul wilh 12:06 left in lhe
aod Carstarphen fouled Rice wilh eightiiCCOIIds left .
ftrst half 111d dido 't play again until the second half.
Rice made both ends of the 1-and-1.
.
Temrle, choosing nottD lake a timeout, brought
''We knew their offense wouldn't run as well wilh
Werdann out," Krzyzewski said. "He's a great passthe bat up ~n;.kly. Macon, guarded by three Tar
er for a big guy. Without him we felt we could . Hccls, ftred
lhe right side, but bis shot was off
stymie their offense and help defend (Malilc) Sealy
and N&lt;lrth Carolina's date wilh Kansas was set.
aod (Chucky) Sproling.
·
The victory was Smilh's 47th in NCAA Touma"Werdann is !heir high-post release aod pressure
ment play, tying him wilh UCLA's legendary John
release man, so we could put' more p·ressure on lhe
Wood
·
.
. en.
bal l."
"I'm very pleased for our seniors,'' Smilh said.
The increased pressure forced St, John's into 26
"They have demoqstrated great leadership all year.
turnovers.
.
It's very exciting for the program."
Sdohn's mentor Lou Camesecca wouldn't blame
The Tar Heels ended a four-game losing streak in
lhe loss'of Buchanan and Werdann for the defeat.
regional fmals and made Smilh the fll'Sl NCAA coach
"We didn't play very weU, but in no small way
10 win regional ftnals in four decades.
Duke contributed to !hat," Camesecca said.
In his 30 years at North Carolina, Smith has talcen
St. 1ohn's forward BiUy Singleton said lhe loss of
21 teams to !he NCAA Tournament, including 17
Werdann was critical.
straight aod 11 of those 10 the Sweetl6.
Hubert Davis and Fox led the Tar Heels with 19
-"It reaDy hun us," be said. "Wilhout him (Christian) Laettner was dominant ipside."
points apiece, while ~c·e added 12 points and ·
Laettner added 19 points and freshman Grant Hill
George Lynch 10. Macon, named !he regional's out12 as Duke, 30-7, moved into the F"mal Four fOI' lhe
slanding player, wa$ backed by Kilgore with 18
fiflh time in six seasons. Sealy led the Redmen with
points as Temple ended its YC!U" at 24-10.
.
19 points and Buchanan added 15, all but·two in the

..
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·...
"

,•

"
··

HILLCLIMBING • Duke's nomas HiD (12)
climbs tbe ladder ror the jam over St. Joha's
Cbucky Sprollngla tbe nrst hair or Sunday's

NCAA Midwest Regional final game in Pontiac
Mleb., wbicb the Blue DevOs won 78-61. (UPI) . '

•'

,_
•
•.··

·'.
•

0

"

.•

By United Press Interoatlonal
lone run wilh a single in !he fourth.
The New York Yankees had ·a
At Kissimmee, Fla, Russ Mqrgrand slam day Sunday -sitting man highlighted Kansas City's
atop lhe spring training standings, five-run ninlh inning wilh a bases·
winning two split-squad Grapefruit loaded triple to send the Royals to
League gaines, · beaiing the a 12-7 v1ctory over the Astros.
crosstown rival New York Mets Br,ian McRae had three hits and
and bitting a grand slam.
t"!ee, RBI for the Royals. Kansas
At Fort Lauderdale, Jim Leyritz C!ly s Brei Saberhagen allowed
hit a grand slam to lead lhe Yan- one earned· ru~ over five innings.
kees to a 9-3 victory over lhe Mcts Rod N1chols hll a solo homer for
in a split-squad game for both. Don Houston.
.
Mattingly had tw9 hits and drove
A~ Bra_denton, Fla., Ty Gainey,
home a run for the Yankees and· Curus Wilkerson and Jeff Schulz
Keith Miller had two hits for the ~it consecutive two-out RBI singles
Mets.
10 the seventh inning to lift the
At West Palm Beach, Fla., sec- Piltsburgh Pirates 10 a 4-2 victory
ond baseman Bret Barberie's error oyer the Phitadelphia Phillies.
in the 12th inning allowed Pat Pittsb~h's DOug Drabek ~~~~wed
KeUy to score lhe winning run and one hll oyer five ~less. mmngs.
give lhe Yankees a 2-1 victory over Jason Gnmsley pllched s1x scorethe Montreal Expos. Montreal sent less innings for lhe Phillies.
•
the game into extra in~ings when
. At Port Charlotte, Fla., Lu1s
Delino DeShields' sacrifice fly R1vera and Jo~y ~;teed each hit
scored Otis Nixon in the ninlh.
home ~n~ to h1ghbght a five-run
. The Y~ who fmished last fourth mmng to carry lhe Boston
m the Amencan I;-eague_Iast s~- Red Sox ID an 8-6 triumph over the
s~n, lead the ~~~ors th1s spnng :rexas Rangers. !ulio Franco drove
wuh a 15-5 exbi~111on ·~ord. - ·- ·m lhree runs wutr a bases-loaded
The St. Lou1s Cardmals IC?o.k double for Texas.
~ver lhe N~llonal ~gue exh1b1At Silrasolli, Fla., Alex Femanuon lead wtlh a tnumph over ~e dez allowed one hit over six
To!"llnto Blue Jays that put thear innings in the Chicago White Sox'
spnng record at 11·5. The Houston .9-0 rout of the Baltimore Orioles.
Aslros, who lost Sunday to 1&lt;ansas Fernandez struck out seven and
C1ty, fell to 10-5.
·
, walked one. Dan Pasqua homered
At St. Pe1ersburg, Fla., Jam1e and drove in three runs for the
!'-fo&gt;'er allowed one run over seven White Sox.
mnmgs to lead St. Louts to a 4-1
At Vero Beach. Fla., J11an
v1.ctory over Toronto. Bernard Samuel went 3 for 4 and drove in
Gtlk_ey had an RBI smgl_e and a four runs to lead !he Los Angeles
sacnfic~ fly for _St. Louis. Gle- . Dodgers to an 8-1 roui of the
nallen Hill drove m the Blue Jays'
. - .·

Rodriguez cantures
$500,000
r
Vintage Invitationallinkfest

.
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THE FLYING FOX· North CaroUna's Rick
Fox takes II11ht In punult at the loose ball dur·
lag Sunday's NCAA East Regloulllual against

Temple In Eat Rulberrorci, NJ., wblcb the Hn
Heels won 75· 72. (UPI)

' '

INDIAN WELLS, Calif. (UPI)
- Chi Chi Rodriguez rolled in a
15-foot birdie puu on the 54th bole
S~nday, ca~tu~ing th~ $500,000
Vtnlage Invuauonal w11h ll lhrceday 10tal of 10-under-par 206.
Rodriguez fashioned a 3-underpar 69 over Sunday's final round at
the 6,907-yard Vintage Country
Club for the victory. Don January
and Mike Hill finished a stroke
behind at 9-under par and took
'home $41.000 each.
· Jimmy Powell, Terry Dill,
Bobby Nichols, Gibby Gilbert and
Bob Charles finished in a tie for
fourlh place at 7-under par.
The victory put Rodriguez on
top of lhe Senior PGA Tour money
list wilh $229,169 in eaminRS. Lee
Trevino, the defending Vmtage
champion, fell Lo second at
S205,li 2 after fmishing in a lie for
121h place at 4-urider par.
"The putt at 18 broke six inch.es," Rodriguez said. "I wasn 'l
going to dog it-'\_ would have gone
pliSI lhree or four feet if it would
have missed. I made the same putt
earlier in lhe week, so I knew the
pua."
Rodriguez saved par oilthC I'Bf·
3 17th hole. His teo shot went mto
lhe back bwlker, but his sand shot
came out wilhin three feet of the
hole. He punched in the short par
puttiO remain at 9-under par.
"At 17 I bit the wrong club in
the back trap," Rodriguez said.
"But then I hit one of the best sand
shots of my life."
Rodriguez had lhree birdies and
no boaeYs in bis final round •
"'fen pars in a row gets bor·
ing," noted Rodriguez, who rocked
along at Nos. 5 through 14. "I lcept
plugging and plugging and 11 hap·

penedatiS."
Rodriguez knocked his third
shot, a sand wedge, within 10 feet
of lhe hole on lhe par 5 I 5th hole
and !hen made the putt for his second birdie of lhe day. ,
HiU was in posiuon to win when
he came to the par-4 16th hole
l~ding the tournament at 10-undcr.
H1s tee shot strayed off the course
but hit a boulder aod bouoded back
towards him.
"I lost this !Dumament last year
at lhe 161h hole," a dejected Hill
said. "And I lost it again at the
16th this year:''

Atlanla Braves. llob Ojeda allowed
five hits and one unearned run
while striking out seven over six
-innings for the Dodgers.
At MeSa, Ariz., Mark Leonard
slammed a double and a home run
to 'drive in four runs and lead !he
San Francisco Giants to an 8-3
Cactus League victory over the
Chicago Cubs. The Cubs collected
11 hits and lhree walks but SlniJid.
ed eight runners. Jerome Wai!Dn
went 2 for 4 aod Shawon Dunston
hit his first spring homer for the
Cubs.
Loser Greg Maddux P.VC up six
runs, five earned, on e1ght hits in
five innings. On a briglller note,
Milce Harkey worked five innings
. of~ "B" game against the Gilnts;
g1vmg up only lhree hits. Harkey ill
trying to make 1 comeback from
last year's late-season ann trouble. ·
Also, the Cubs named Danny
Jac~son s~ter for Opening Day
Apnl9 apmst SL Louis.
At Tucson, Ariz., Alben Belle
belted his fourth homer of_spring
lniining, a lhree-run shot that put
Cleveland ahead for good in the
third, to help the Indians trounce
lhe Oakland Alhletics 11-4.
At Yuma, Ariz., Garry Temple!Dn pinch hit a single with one out
in the bottom of the seventh to
brealc a tie and lift the San Diego
Padres to a 2-1 victory over the
Milwaukee Brewers. Tim Mcln!Dsh
belted a solo home run for the
Brewers.

•

r-----------1
OPEN"
~•NOW

POnED EASTER
FLOWERS
cHoosE FiloM

~gactressincom~nwilh

Annett.e Benins. " The Grifters;"
Lorraine Bracco, "GoodFellas;"
Diane Ladd, "Wild at Heart,'' and
Mary McDonnell, "Dances With
Wolves."
Martin Scorsese (GoodFellas)
was second only to Costner as lhe
favorite to. win lhe Oscar for best
direcwr. The olhers were Francis
Ford Coppola (The Godfalher, Part
III), Stephen Frears (The Grifters),
and Barbel Schroeder (Reversal of

Fortune) .
In .all, 22 statuettes were sched·
uled to be awarded at lhe pra:enla·
lion ceremonies along wilh special
awards 10 actresseS Myrna Loy and
Sophia Loren and lhe production
team ofZanuck-Brown.
Actor-comedian Billy Crystal
will host lhe two-hour, open-ended
show ID be broadcast internationally by ABC·1V (6 ~ .m . PST).
The motion picture academy
annOIDICed !hat aU 20 nominees in
lhe acting C!lt.egories and the five
nominated directors will be present. Winners of last -year's best
actor. and actress awards, Daniel
Day-Lewis and Jessica Tandy, will
make the presentations to this
year's winners in those categories.
Among presenters will be

Robert De Niro, Jodie Foster,
Dustin Hoffman, Jeff Bridges,
Glenn Close, Michael Douglas,
Tom Cruise, Danny Glover, Blllbra
Streisand, Anlhony Hopkins, Den·zel Washington, Gregory Peck,
Susan Sarandon, Michael Caine
and Debra Winger.
Gilbert Cates, producer of the
Oscar show, announced that among
!hose singing nominated songs will
be Madonna, Jon Bon Jovi and
Harry Connie, Jr. under the baton
of musical director BiD Conti.
Following the awartls presef!la·
tions, the .academy's gala Governor's Ball and champagne supper
will be held adjacent to the auditorium, which accomodates an audience of more than 2,000.

Three restaurant
shootings leave two
dead, six wounded

AHANDFII
OF CASH

NEW YORK (UPI) - Two
men were killed aod aeven people
were wounded, including an off•
duty corrections offJCCF who inter·
tupted 1 robbery attempt, in three
separate shootings at New York
City res11urants during lhe weekend, police said.
One man was declared dead
Sunday inside a Spanish restsurant
in a violence-plagued Brooklyn
neighborhood ·after being shot in
lhe head and back, police said •
The victim had been chased in!D
the eatery at 7:20 p.m. by a gunman who also shot three men
believed to be customers at the
restaurant All lhree were seriously
wounded, and one later died at a
Brooklyn bospital from a gunshot
wound to the chest
Police had no motive or suspect
in the shooting.
Hours later in lhe Bronx, an off.
duty corrections officer leaving a
restaurant resuoom walked into an
armed holdup and uaded shots wilh
two would-be robbers, wounding
one and getting hit in the 1n1 him·
self, said police spokesinan Sgt. F.d

BETTER
THANA

GARAGE·Fil
OF.STIJF

Burns.

--.

The suspects, who fled without
getting any cash, were later appre- ·
hended at a nearby hospital when
one of the two entered seeking
treatment, Burns said. The offacer
was treated for an arm wound at
anolher hospital aod released.
Also in lhe Bronx, a man leaving a restsurant at about 11:20 p.m.
Saturday was shot in lhe abdomen
and seriously wounded. Police had
no motive for the crime, and no
weapon or suspects were found.
And in Nassau County, police
said five men, two armed with
handguns, ent.ered a Chinese takeout restaurant at9: IS p.m. ·the same
night, announced a hold-up, took
$2,500, put the workers in the
freezer and fled. No one was hurt.
In other violence in the
metropolitan area Saturday night, a
gunmen robbed, shot and seriously
wounded a Bronx video stae cleric,
a Long Island man was shot in the
leg and bullOCks outside 1 church
party, and police found the bodies
of two men, bolh unidentified, who
had been shot ID death in apparent- ·
Iy separate incidents in Brooklyn.
· One of lhe men was found with
his hands and eyes bound with
heavy tape, and his hands tied
behind his back, police said.

-

Bo Derek tops Razzies
HOLLYWOOD (UPI) Actress Bo Derek and comic
Andrew Dice Clay were named
worst actress and actor of the year
at the lllh annual Golden Raspberry Awatds memorializing the worst
Hollywood had ID offer in 1990.
The worst picture award in Sunday's awards was a tie between
"Ghosts Can't Do It," which
Derek produced and starred in, and
"The Adventures of Ford Fairlane,'' starring .Clay and produced
by Joel Silver and Steve Perry.
Tbis year's ballot was a quadruple insult ID Derek aod her director
husband John Derek as "Ghosts
Can't Do It" topped all other nom·
inees for four Razzies, Holly wood's least-·coveted awards · j wont picture, actress, .director, sup: porting actor
,
"The Adventures of Ford Fairlane" was judged next-to-most·
· revolting with three awards worst picture, actor aod screenplay,
: written by Daniel Waters, James
Cappe and David AmelL
A double winner was newcomer
. Sophia Coppola, daughter of direc, tor F1110Cil Ford Coppla, for worst
· suPPQrlinl actress aod worst new
star Of the year for her work in her
· daddy's picture "The Godfather,
Part III." The film has been nomi·
• Dated for an Oscar for best picture.
The Razzies, dedicated to pok: ing fun at all entenaiiunent awards,
· are voted by 350 members of the
: Golden Rasjlberry Award Founda: lion in 2S slates.
The awards lhemselves are gold
: spray-pelmed; golf-ball-sized rasp: berrys atop a plastic super 8 film
• rccl bue.Jolm Wilson, president of
· lhe foundation estimates lhe statuette's street value at about SI.79.
Actress. Derek is lhe qu(len of

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Begonias •Caladiums
•Mums •Tulips
•Hyatinths •Miniah!re
loses •Regular Roses
•Kalan£hoes ·
•Amaryllis's •Daffodils
Hours: Monday thru
Saturday 9 A.M.-5 P.M.

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GREENHOUSE

992,5776

Syracun, Ohio

MAR. 24-28-7:30 p.m.
AT

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·

WILL BE PREACHING AND TEAGIIING

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NUISEIY PIOVIDID
SPECIAL MUSIC
Come and join U8 each morning at 10:00 a.m. ·
for Bible Study and Personal Growth .
PISTOl: Stewe Dea~er·
Study Phone 949-2167
•

race were Andy Garcia for "The
Godfather, Part III,'' Graham
Greene for "Dances With
Wolves,'' AI Pacino for "Dick
Tncy" aod Joe Pesci for "Good·
FeUas."
· Whoopi Goldberg in "Ghost"
was the front-runner for best sup-

0

EVANGELISTIC
REVIVAL MEETINGS .

I

. HOL.L YWOOD (UP!) The sweeping western epic bis performance as Claus von
. "DIIICOI With Wolves" and its · about an heroic Union cavalry offi. Bulow in "Reversal ofFonune."
producer-director- star Kevin Cost· cer joining a Lacota Indian tribe in
Eavored to win the Oscar for
ner were expected to dominate the 1860s bas already won many best actress _, Kalhy Bates in her
,' Monday night's 63rd annual lesser honors, including awards rQie as the sociopathic serial kUier
Academy Awards with triwnphs in from the DireciOrS Guild of Ameri· nurse in ..Misery:'
sevaal categories.
ca for Costner and the Writers ' Com~linl wilh "DanceJ Wilh
Not since "Gone With The Guild of America for best seteen- Wolves ' for best picture at the cerWind" bas a nominated film been play.
emonies, to be held at Los Ange- .
so heavily favored to win lhe best
While "Dances Wilh Wolves" les' Shrine Auditorium, were
picture. Oscar as "Dances With was expected ID run away with the "Awakenings," "Ghost,'' "The
Wolves."
. wp prize and .best director honors, Godfalher, Part III" and "GoodIt amassed 12 nominations and Costhcr was expected to encounter FeUas."
.·
has.grcssed more than $130 million stiff competillon for best actor
In addition to Irons' challenge
, at the domestic box office.
.from -England's
Jeremy
Irons fOI' for best actor, Costner is up against
.
'
former winner Robert De Niio ·for
his performance as the ~aralyzed
patient in "AwakeniJII!s,' France's
Gerard Depardieu for lhe title role
BEVERLY HillS, Calif. (UPI) ' the screen: "At'ice" (Woody in "Cyrano de Bergerac,'' and
. - N0111inalions for Monday's 63rd Allen), " Avalon'' (Barry Levin- Richard Harris for his patriarchal
. Annual Academy Awards, son), "Ghost" (Bruce Joel Rubin), role as a Irish tenant farmer in
.lllliiOIIIICCdFeb. 13: ·
"Green Card" (Peter Weir), "The Field."
Picture:
''Awakenings," "Metropolitan" (Whit StiUman).
Opposing Bates in her bid for
"Dances Wilh Wolves," "Ghost,"
Scree~lay adanted from anolh- best actress were Anjeliea Huston
"The Oodfalher, Part III," "Good- er med1um: ------;rAwakenings" · for her sleazy hustler in "The
FeUas."
(Steven Zaillian), "Dances Wilh Grifters,'' ·Julia Roberts for her
Actor: Kevin Costner (Dances Wolves" (Michael Blaice), "Good· hooker role in "Pretty Woman,"
With Wolves), Robert De Niro Fellas" (Nicholas Pileggi&amp;: Martin · former Oscar.winner Meryl Streep
(Awlikenings), Gerard Depardieu Scorsese), "The Grifters" (Donald ~laying a second-rate actre~s . in
'Postcards .from the Edge," and
(Cyrano de Bergerac), Richard E. Westlake), "Reversal of ForHarris (The Field), Jeremy Irons tune" (Nicholas Kazan).
.
previous winner Joanne Woodward
(Reversal of Fortune).
·
An direction: "Cyrano de Berg- for her midwest housewife in "Mr.
AciiCSs: Kalhy Bates (Misery), erac" (Ezio Frigerio, Jacques &amp;: Mrs. Brid$o."
. A'nj~lica Huston (The Grifters), Rouxel), "Dances Wilh Wolves".
Award-wmners are determined
. 1ulia Robens (Pretty Woman), (Jeffrey Beecroft, Lisa Dean), by secret baUotllf lhc 4,800 acade·
Meryl Streep (Pos~s from the "Dick Tracy" (Richard Sylben, my members voting on 223 feaEdge), 10111ne Woodward (Mr. &amp; Rick Simpson), "The Godfalher, ture-length films released during
·Mrs. Bridge).
Part III" (Dean Tavoularis, Gary lhe calendar year 1990.
Director: Francis Ford Coppola Feuis), "Hamlet" (Dante Ferretti,
Favored to win the award for
. (ne Godfather, Part III), Kevin Franecsca Lo Shiavo).
best supporting actor was Bruce
Costner (Dances With Wolves),
Feature documentary: "Ameri- Davison for his gay role in ' 'LongStephen Frears (The Grifters), .Bar- can Dream,'' "Berkeley in the ~ix­ time Companion." Olhers in the
bet Schroeder (Reversal of For· ties," "Building Bombs," "Forev·
tune); Martin Sc11rsese (Goodfel- er Activists," "W!!Ido Salt: A
las).
:.
Screenwriter's Journey."
S~poning · actor: Bruce D.aviShort subject documentary:
son ~jlime Companion), Andy. "Burning Down Tomorrow,"
Garcia (The Godfalher, Part III), "Chimps: So Like Us," "Days of
Graham Greene (Dances With Waiting," "Journey Into Life: The
Wolves), AI Pacino (Dick Tracy), World of the Unborn," "Rose
Joe Peaci (GoodFellas).
Kennedy: A Life to Remember."
Supporting actress: Annelle
Animated short film: "Creature
Bening (The Grifters), Lorraine Comforts," "A Grand Day Out,"
Bracco (GoodFellas), Whoopi "Grasshoppers."
Goldberg (Ghosi), Diane Ladd
Live-action short film: "Bronx
(Wild at Heart), Mary McDonnell Cheers," "Dear Rosie," "The
(Dances Wilh Wolves).
Lunch Date," "Senzeni Na7 (What
, • foreign language film: "Cyrano Have We Done?);" "12:01 PM."
de Bergerac' ' (France), "Journey ·
Sound: "Dances Wilh Wolves"
of Hope" (Switzerland), "Ju Dou" · (Russell Williams II, Jeffrey,
(People's Republic o( China), Perkins, Bill W. Benton, Greg
"The Nasty Girl" (Germany), Watkins), "Days of Thunder"
"Open Doors" (Jtair&gt;·
(Charles Wilborn, Donald 0 .
Score: "Avalon' (Randy New- Mitchell, Rick Kline, Kevin
man), "Dances With Wolves" O'Connell), "Dick Tracy"
(John Barry), "Ghost" (Maurice (Thomas Causey, Chris Jenkins,
Jarre), "Havana" (David Grusin), David E. Campbell, D.M .
"Home Alone" (John Williams).
Hemphill), ''The Hunt for Red
Song: '"Blaze Of Glory" from October" (Richard Bryce Good"Younj Guns II" (Jon Bon Jovi), man, _Richard Overton, Kevin F.
, "I'm Checkin' Ou.t" f!Om "Pqst- Cle~ry, Do_n Bassman), "Total
.. cards from lhe Edge" (Shel Silver- Recall" (Nelson Stoll, Michael J.
;. stein), "Promise Me You'll Kohut, Carlos deLarios, Aaron
Rernembllr" from "The Godfather, Rochin).
Part III" (Carmine Coppola, John
Sound effects editing: "Fiatlin,. Bettis), "Somewhere In My Mem- ers" (Charles L. Campbell,
01}:" from "Home Alone" (John Richard Franklin), "The Hunt for
Wdliams, Leslie Bricusse), "SOOII· Red October'' (Cecelia Hall,
· er Or Later" from "Dick Tracy" George Watters II), "Total Recall"
(S~. ~nddhe_~&gt;- ......... -- , .,,__{~_!9&gt;Mak_IJ«;!1}!- f.ICyraick)._ d Be
, ·
Costume estgn: "va.on
·
eup:
no e rgerac
(Gloria Gresham), "Cyrano de (Michele Burke, Jean-Pierre
Bergerac" (Franca Squarciapino), Eychenne), "Dick Tracy" (John
"Dances With Wolves" (Elsa Caglione Jr., Doug Drexler),
Zamparelli), "Dick Tracy" (Mile- "Edward Scissorhands" 0/e Neill,
na.Canonero), "Hamlet" (Maur- Stan Wins!Dn).
izio MiUenotti).
EditiQg: "Dances With
Cinematography: "Avalon" Wolves" (Neil Travis), "Ghost"
(Allen Daviau), "Dances With · (Walter Murch), "The Godfather,
Wolves" (Dean Semler), "Dick Part III" (Barry Malkin, Lisa
Tracy"' (Villorio Storaro), "The Fruchtman, Walter Murch),
Godfather, Part III" (Gordon "GoodF¢11as" (Thelma SchoonWillis), "Henry &amp; June" (Philippe maker), "The Hunt for Reel Octo. Rousselot).
ber" (Dennis Virkler, John
: Screenplay written directly for Wright).

·And the nominees are ...

Yankees :boost Grapefruit League
record to 15-5 with split-squad wins

.

The Dally Sentinel Pag1 5

'Dances with Wolves' should dominate tonight's Qscars

·'

second half, as st. .1o1m's fimished ils JCISOn WI"lb a

!her.

- I

PomerOy-lllclclleport, Ohio

f

the Razzies, having won a 10ta1 of
six over lhe years - lhrce for act·
ing and two for producing
"Bolero" and now "Ghosts Can't
Do h." She won last year's special
worst actress of lhe decade award.
Male Razzie champion is
Sylvester Stallone who also has
won a total of six. He holds three
worst actor honors, one for writing,
one 'for .directing and worst actor of
!he decade.
The Razzic records of Derek
and Stallone suggest a new historic
high for both should they co-star in
a film produced by Derek and writ-''
ten and directed by Stallone. ·
Tbis year business tycoon Donald Trump won !he worst supporting actor award for his cameo
appearance in "Ghosts Can't Do
It.''
· Worst original song R;~ZZie was
captured by Chris Levrar for the
music aod lyrics of "He's Comin'
Back?" from the movie "Repossessed.' •

.....

The Razzie
foundation
described worst actor Cia~ as a
:'widely· reviled vulgarian ' and
Derek's film as an "exceedingly
sillv saft-eore sex-after-dcalh oopus.1'
Competing wilh Clay for worst
actor !his year were Stallone, for
"Rocky V; Prince for "Graffio:
Bridge;" Mickey 'Rourke for
''Desperate Hours,'' and George C.
Scoulor "Exorcist III." -·
Losing out to Derek for worst
actress were Melanie Griffilh for
"The Bonfire of the Vanities;"
Belle Midler for "St.ella;" Molly
Ringwald for "RI'Jcv's Wedding,"
and Talia Shire fc;7 (Rocky V.''
None of lhe winnen (losers?)
appeared at a news conference
announcing !his year's Razzies.

DOWNING ClllDS
MULLEN MUSSEl

INSURANCE

GO FLY A KITE- A glut kite soan Jato
the air over the Wasblngton Monument Sunday,

during the opening or tbe 25th annual Smllhsonlan Kite Featlval. (UPI)

Post owner Kalikow sued by banks
NEW YORK (UPI) ..,.. Peter
Kalikow, owner of !he New York
Post and one-of the city's major
real estate develo~ers, has not
repaid $60 million m bank loans
and lhree ·banks have sued him, a
published report said Monday.
·
ne New York Times reported
that Kalikow could be forced to
seek bankruptcy protection for
himself and some or his companies
if any of the banks refuse to negoti·
ate new terms on the loans.
It was unclesr if the negotiations
would affect the Post, which has
generated cash in recent monlhs
that Kalilcow has used 10 IllY some
biUSfor his real estate projects, the
.

JOHN

A~

Times said.
On lhe lhird anniversary of his
ownership of the tabloid, March 7,
Kalikow said the Post became
'.'comfortably profilable" during ·
lhe Daily News strilce, but !hat dispute ended last week,
·
However, tlie Times said
bankers and lawyers involved in
the matter are optimistic th111
K.alilcow could av01d a bankruptcy
filing.
'
Neither Kalikow nor a
spoltesman were available immedi·
ately for comment
One of the largest owners of
apartment buildings in New York
City, Kalilcow and his companies
have debts of about $900 million.

WADE, M.D., Inc.

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•
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MEIGS COUNTY
SINCE 11161

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�Page

~The

Dally Sentinel

lllor.dar, •••~ a, 1111

- - -Area deaths-- Court
Homer Willard

-----Weather----- Hospital news ~
South ceatral
bigbs in lbe tiOs or the lower 70s,

~

·

.
~
Mostly clear, low in the mid lows from the upper 40s 10 the l!lid
40s, winds becomins south less 5011. Chance of rain Friday, highs
VeteNMM•ooillllai!IIDI ~
SA1URDAY ADMISSfONS
than IOmph.
Hom er Clyde Willard , 98, of
mlinly in the 50s and lows from
Robert Sbeley, MJMJeDnn; ~If .
Tuesday, partly cloudy with a the upper 30s to lbe mid 408.
• Rock Springs Road, Pomeroy, died
Meigs County Court Judge . slight.cltance of showers. High in
Onl, Muoa, W.Va.; Jtc*rt t11Jcyf ·
:Sunday, March 25, 1991 at VeterH. O' Brien fined 26 and
Patrick
Evelyn
Hess
Pomeroy. .
•
'' ans Memorial
Hospital
afte
r
an
the
mid
70s.
The
chance
of·
rain
is
--accepted bond in one other case 30percenL
SA1URDAY
DISCHARGES
t
•extended .tllncss.
Dirtcutlt
Norman Temll and Blmer Hyaell :
Wednesday
tllrouab
Frldliy
Evelyn Cook Hess, 12, of 100 lastweelc.
Born on Feb. 8, 1893 in Meigs
Fined were: Andr J. Steed,
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS :
Unseasonably warm Wednesday Tbe first cllricJble, a steamCounty, he was the son of Elijah B. State St., Pomeroy, lo~e opera- Marieua, no valid medical examin•
Will ard and Susan L. · Tubbs tor of the Century Bar m Pomeroy, er's eertif1C81e; $50 and costs; Rus- with a chance of ma-s or thun- powered balloon, """ DoW~~ by Henri Oredtl Snider, Rl!clnc
SUNDAY
DISHCAROES
:
derstorms,
hips
mostly
in
lhe
10s,
in
1852.
Tbe
balloon
traveled
Giffard
Saturday,
March
23,
1991
at
died
; Willard. He was a member of the
sell Fisher, Athens, speeding, $20
:
· Hemlock Grove Christian Church, her residence following a short ill- and costs; Kevin Veney, Rac ine, lows mostly m the SOs. Chance of at a speed of 6.7 mph from Paris to None.
Trappe.
France.
showers
or
thunderslonnsThursda
,
•
ness.
•; a veteran of World-War I and a life
no hazardous material placards dis'
Daughter of Clay Cook and play, $100 and costs; Brett Wilt,
, member of Drew Webster Post 39,
1 American Legion, the Veterans of
Erma Jarvis Cook, she was born on Shade,
speeding, $24 and costs;
' World War 1 Association , and lhe June 6, 191ht Lefthand, W. Va.
Mary
Roush,
Pomeroy, failure to
She is survived by a sister, control, $20 and
: Pomeroy Disabled American Vetcosts; Kim Evan
: erans. He was the last charter mem- Hilda Waller, Lancaster; and one Willow, Spaiy, Fla., speed, $22 and
; ber of Hemlock Gtdve Gra nge niece, Georgann Keeton, and four costs; Louis Clark, Pi'oetorvillc,
great-nieces. Besides her parents speed, $26 and costs; .Michael
• 2047.
: Mr. Willard is survived b¥ his she was preceded in death by her Lewis, Rutland, left of center, $10
' wife, Be lva Ri ce Wi llard, husband, Leonitrd Hess, and a sis- and costs; Shari L. McLain, Buck· Pom eroy, a bro ther, Arthur ter, Garnet Cook.
hannon, W.Va., speeding, $22 and
Funeral services will be held at costs
Willard, Columbus, II nieces and
; Heinz Coats, DWI, six
seven nephews. Besides his parenlS 3 p.m . Tuesday at the Ewing months in jail, suspended to 30
CHOCOLATE
~'9C
•
FLAVOREDR!lBBrr 1 ~
he was preceded in death by four Funeral Home. The Rev. Roland days, $350 and costs, one year
HOZ
I
Wildman will officiate and burial
sisters and two brothers.
license
suspension,
two
years
{110·
• Funeral services will be held at will be in Beech Grove Cemetay.
drivin41 under suspension,
:1 p.m. Wednesday at the Ew ing Friends may call at the funeral bation,
six
monlhs
in Jail, suspended to 30
CHUCKLES JWU OR
:Funeral Home. The Rev. Charles home from 2 to 4 and 6 to 9 p.m. days to be served concurrently,
JELI..Y RABBITS
·Domigan will officiate and burial today (Monday) ..
uoz.
.
$100 and costs, two years proba••I
tion; Kenneth E. Wise, Rutlancl. no
operator's license, 10 days in jail
.FII..I..ED
,.
suspended to three, $76 ancf costS,
EASTER BASKET
Garden club to meet
Revivai .Si:heduled
90 days to obtain license; John D.
.S176
. The Wildwood Garden Club
.,
The Hazel Community Church Stumbo, Pomeroy, disorderly con;will meet Wednesday at 1. p.m. al between Lon41 Bottom and Penland duct. $25 and costs; Doris Canter· HERSHErS
;the home of Hilda Ycauger.
will have rcVJval Thursday through bury, Langsville, unsafe vetucle, $5 •
CHOCOLATE EGGS
Sunday with Rev. Rick Weaver and costs; Philip Mowery,
BOZ OR CANDY EGG5-100Z.!
)
Women's fellows hip
preaching. There will be sjjcial Lucasville, speed, $28 and costs;
The Meigs County Women's singing nightly. Rev. Edse Hart Danny Kelly, Athens, no operator's
•
I
Fellowshi p will meet Thursday at invites the public.
license, three days in /'ail, s~ndPETER COTTONTAil.
•
7:30 p.m, at Bradbury Church of
CHOCOLATE RABBrr
Revival
ed upon proof of va id o.l. m 60
••
3.50Z.
:christ. A patriotic song service will
The Racine Church of the . days, $75 and COSIS, seat belt viola•'
be held. Lynn Runyan and Bessie Nazarene will have rev ival Tucs- tion, $25 and costs; Ore$ Williams,
King will be the speakers. Refresh- day through Saturday at 7 g.m. Middlepon, domestic vtolence, 60
•~
·PAAS EASTER EGG
.1~9 _
men IS will be served. Public invit- nightly and on Sunday at I :~ 0 days in jail, suspended, $100 and
•'
DYEKIT
. "·--t
)ld.
a.m. and 6 p.m. with Rev. ChrB costs, two years in probation; Eliz.i
•
Menick of Franklin Furnace as the ;Jbeth Glo~kner, Pomeroy, crimiGood Friday services
· evange Ust. Rev. Thomas Gates, nal trespassing, 30 days suspended
The Pomeroy First Bapti st pastor, invites the public.
to three days, credit for . time
:Church, East Main Street, will have
served, $50 and costs, one year
ia Good Friday communion service
Revival
probation; Chad Taylor, Syracuse,
;at7 p.m.
The Apple Grove United DUI, 60 day license suspension,
.,''
Melhodist Church .will have Lenten $300 and costs, lhree days in jail
MRIDD to meet
•
services Wednesday through Fri- with $150 of fme and jail time sus; The Apri l meeting of the Meigs day at 6:30 p.m. nighdy with com- pended upon completion of Resi"
,.County Board of Mental Retarda- munion on Thursday. Rev. Carl dential Treatment Program; Larry
~ ion and Developmental Disabili -· Hicks invites the public. A sunrise Klein, Pomeroy, carrying a conEnjoy great savings on these weekly specials ...
,;
~ies will be held April II at 7 p.m.
service will be held Easter Sunday cealed weapon, costs, 3Q days in
-m Carleton School in Syracuse.
"
at 6:30a.m.
jail suspended, probation of one
•'"
AI..KA-SEI..TZER
year; Shannon L. Bare, Dexter, no
I..ISTERINE
child rC~"traint, $25 and costs; Men
PLUS C..OI..D MEDICINE
~NJISEPTIC ·4 9 9-.. "
Kerns, Poineroy, failure to yield
1--Continued from page I
- - - - - - , from stop sign, $35 and costs;
20'S
•
2~~
.
A car driven by Maxine Ord, Pomeroy, was stopped and then rolled ·
Joseph Rhoades, Middleport, men'·
forward four feet striking the left front fender of a car owned by
acing, 30 days in jail suspended,
Shawn Fetty, Rutland. There was light damage to both vehicles.
$25 and costs, one year probation;
Mrs. Oril was cited for no financial responsibility.
Kimberly Winnings, New Haven,
,,
THERAPEUTIC
.
W.Va., passing bad checks (three
AD VII. IBUPROFEN
MIN
.ERAI.. ICE5'49 • "
charges), $50, costs, restitution,
BOZ
three days in jail, suspended, one
TABLETS
CAPLETS
~
year probation on each charge;
24'S
.,
Ki ndergarten reg istration for students enterin.g the Southern
Mary Jeffers, Shade, passing bad
•·"
Local kindergarten nex t fall will be held April 26. at lhe kindercheclcs, $100 and costs, restitution,
garten building in Rac ine from 8:15-11 :15 a.m. and 12:30 p.m. to
three days in jail suspended, one
.
BICSHAVERS
2:30p.m.
·
•
year probation; Tony R. Chappell,
10'S
Ohio Iaw now requires children to successfully complete kinderPomeroy, driving under suspenBAN
gart.en be.fore entering lhe first grade. Children who will be five
sion, $100 and costs, 30 days in jail
ANn-PERSPIRANT
years old ori or before Dept. 30, 1991, are eligible to enroll in
suspended .to five, probation of one
kindergarten this fall.
·
DEODORANT
·~
ROll ·ON- 1 5 OZ.
year;
Anthony
Smith
,
Pomeruy
To enroll their child, paren ts need to bring a copy of the child's
OR SOLID.
speeding, S44 and costs.
'
'75 oz.
•: binh certificate, immunization recorlls, and social security number.
Look for the Rile Buy elgM '·
Posting
bond
was
Michael
Imm unizations required include three polio and booster, lhrec OPT
and low, low prtas on hundred,'
•
Sal~r. Racine, disorderly conduct,
and booster, MMR, and a tuberculosis skin test within the past year.
of brands throughout our slOtH. , ; •
$80.
There will be no reg ular kindergarten classes that day. If there
•
•
arc funhcr ques tion about registration, please call the ~inderganen.
' · FLEX SHAMPOO
.
949-2664, during regular school hours.
,.
OR CONDITIONER
FINESSE

will be in the Hemlock Grove
Cemetery. Friends may call at the
funeral home Tuesday from 5 to 9
p.m.

'llondlly, March 25, 1H1

69C

----Announcements--

,""'\
•

• ·The Area's Number ·1 Marketplace
TO I'I.ACE AN AD CAU 992-2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY I A.M. to S P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
CLOSED SUNDAY
I'OUCIU

·

.

.

.

.,_id

•.t.

Words

1
3

1 II
15

6

15

10

1&amp;
1 II

Monthly

2 - ln Memory

-

N! . THURSDAY

2 :00PM FRIDAY

.to

ti .'30/ day

,

-.orr. OliO 45760
110M1 614-ft2-S6tl
DOTTIE S.

u-•.-"'•53- Amlqun

'

54-Mtsc. Mtrch.-..
11- Bulh:Mftl Suppll•

II-""• lor Ill•
5 7- M~o~liell

lnttNmlfttt

&amp;1 - FNiU. V~··bl•

59- For Salt or · J ldt

f H!lli,'VIII!:!II

Siu.o~tlion

Fmn Suiiliiii!S
~ LIVI! Sill l:k

W•nted

Sl - F•rm EQu lpmenl
62 - Wtnled to Buy
63 - Uvntoclc

1 3 - lnlurance

1• - Butin•• Tre•n.ng

15 - Sehool• .. lnnruct•or'!
1 6 - fhdio. TV &amp; 08 Repatr
1'7 - MitC:tllentaUI

18 - Wented To Oa

INSUUnON
•VInyl Siding
•Replacement
Wlndo•Rooflng

•lnaullltlon

Si!fV!I.I~'
12-

J&amp;L

JAIIIS DISH
992-2772 or
742-22S1

&amp;38 Bryan
,..lddlepcirt.

EMS answers nine weekend calls
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services responded to nine '
calls for assistance ovpr the weekend.
At 10:56 a.m, on Saturday, Racine squad went to Antiquity for
Della MtlhrQn, who was transported to Holzer Medical Center.
At (i:53 p.m., Middleport units went to Middleport Hill for an
auto/motorcycle accident, and transported Mike Haley to Veterans
Memorial Hopsital. At 7:04p.m.. Pomeroy squad went to lhe Meigs
Coumy Sherifrs Office for Terry Lamburgey. ije was transported
to VetcrMs.
On Sunday at 12: 16 a.m., Racine squad wem to Third Street and .
transported Arctha Snider to Veterans..At 1:56 a.m., Rutland squad
went to Smith Run Road for Tom Stewart. Stewart was transported
to Veterans. At 9:07 a. m. , Racine and S'yracuse stations went to
Apple Grove-Dorcas Road for a chimney fire at the Frank Wolfe
residence. Al 6:58 p.m., Middleport squad went to Route 554 in
Ch es~ire for Murial Spires, and transported Spires to Holzer Medical Cent.er. At 2:57 a.m., Chester ftre department went to Eastern
High School tor an elcctric.:al fire. At 5:55 a.m., Midtllepon squad
went to Overbroo~ Center for Jerry Ward, who was taken to Veterans.

Jury trial cancelled

~

A jury tri al was cance.lled in Meigs County Common Pleas Coun
on Monday morning when the defendant in the case, Roben L. Riffle of Pomeroy, failed to appear.
Ri rne, 37, was indicted on a charge of receiving stolen propeny,
a thlfd degree felony. He was accused of receiving several stolen
tools belonging to Wi.ll iam Rietmire.
According to a coun spokesperson, lhc jury was sent home at
a~prox!matc l y 9:30. a.m., and ordered to return 9n April 18 for a
Liml in another case.
As of Monday morning, no further charges were filed against
Rifnc due to his fai lure to appear in court. He has been represented
in the case by Meigs County Public Defender Charles H. Knight.

Forked Run Lake stocked last week

,

.
.'
'

"

~

Forked Run Lake near Reedsville is one of the first of 17 Ohio
lakes to be stocked with golden trout between now and the end of
April.
.
App:oximately 40,000 catchable golden trout will be released by
the Ohto Department of Natural Resources ' Division of Wildlife.
Forked·Run Lake at Forked Run State Park was one of six lakes to
rccievc the eight to 10 inch fish last week.
Acc()rding to the _department, these fish are easily caught in shallow water and provide excellent spring fishing opponunilies. This
particular strain of trout is a color phase of the ra'inbow trout and
does not represent a true golden ttOUL The fish were hatched at the
division's London Fish Hatchery and raised atlhe Kincaid Hatchery
in Latham.
'

Clarification

The Chris Lee of Syracuse who was fined in Tuesday's Pomeroy
• Mayor's Court is not th~ Chris Lee of Chester Road in Pomeroy.

"'
'I

Rockslides...

Continued from page I
Last summer, a double-faced
guardrail was enecied at lhe site of
, the slide on Saturday, but did not
hold up during the next two slides
that occurred. The guardrail did
stop the huge boulder !hat slid Saturday, however, allowing it to only
extend onto the highway a short
distance. .
·

17

I

s ..ted blda wHl be
rocelvod by the loel'll of
Melp County Commltolon·
••· Court Hou•. Pomeroy,
Ohio •8788 .untl 12 noon
on Aprl 3, 1811 and tho
INda will be opened end 108d
etoud at 1:30 p.m. on tha
3rd cley of A~N. 1 811 for
the turnlahlng of verloua
NOTICETO
CONTRACTORS
ITATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Calumbua. Ohio
March 8, 1111 .
Conti'IICit Sileo·Lepl Copy
No. 11-2Bt

UNIT PRICE CONTRACT

Silled p"'poulo will be
roaolvod .t tho office of the
Dlrlotor of the Ohio Dopaf1.....,t of Tronoportotlon, Columbuo. Ohio. untH 10:00 A.
M.. Ohio S - r d Time,
Tueodly. Aprt 2, 1111 in
Alheno. Golllo, Hoaldng,
MtlQ-.;-"·Mon..,., MOfOIIR,
Noblo, VInton Wethington Countlea, .Ohio on - tjon ATH-33·11.12 on U. 8 .
R - 33 In tho Clly of LQ. .
pn. •In tho CIIIN of lalpro
Marlelto, In the Vll'-t
of Jaakaonvlte. c-anrlte,
Mwroy City, hh Valley
l!'ld Coldwall, Lo- Salem
•ncl othw v•rlou• rau• and•
-*'na by tumlahlng and
lnltlllng rlllaad povemont
rnarllar' outarllla.
. . . . . langlh - o.oo lwl

'

•

P-ntwldth - Vaolto.
"The - H I for completion of thll WOIII ahllt Ill II
... forth In the bidding pro-

po•t••

' •
l

EliCh blddor thel IMI ,._
qulNd to ·lie with hla bld a

t

aertlflod ohaak or -hlor'o
cllaak for on ·amount oqual
to flvo .... - t of hlabld, but
In no more then IItty
thou.-cl dolara, or • bond
for ton p8r - t ., hlto bld,
PIYibll to tho 0'-tor.
ltddora- apply, on tho

Ta ~ing

.

r
)

p r - forma. tar quallfl...
tiona at ...at r.n cleya prior
to the clll18 ... lllr op8ftlng
blda In ICOOrtlaft08 with
Chepl8r 1121 Ohio RevlHd
Coclll.
.
Plana ...t -"lcatlono
an on flaln 1M o.p.tmont
ofTIMifiO lallonl...ttheoffloe of 1M Dlllrlct Oaputy

' I

l

•

,Rite Aid Pharmacy •
accepts most major
prescriptions plans.

~

Rite Aid accepts all
manufacturers'
coupons.
.

..
J

DINator.
TheD-....,ulha

rlglrt to roject any and til
billa.

Herr's

Cheese Curls
7oz. beg

gr...., of AapN!tt Concrm
for tho Melga County High·
woy Dapartmnt. Propoaala
.,. to be relumod on bld
tonnaaupplled by th v•dor.
The bid prlaa ahall be firm '
111ci In during tho
1111 P-1 -aon from
May • lh"'ugh . November,
1111. A Speclflc:atlona
S - ,...Y IMo picked up II
th• Office of tho Matga
County Engln..,.
Mary Hobatattor, Cllrll
Board of Malp County

·

I

Save on over
1,200 Rite Aid
Brand Products.

THE ,

GROOM
ROOM

NOTICE TO ASPHALT
CONCRETE VENDORS

'

r

•SioiNHo "'"' ...........

tOAD EVEIIY 12 HOUIIS

CALL

VICKER'S WOOD HEAT1NG

Dot"""'"'""-·...,..,_,wv_

Phoot (3041 511-22111fltr 5 , .....

Now 1• .
$to4kll
MOBILE HOME FURNACES~ HEAT PUMPS
AU FUINACE PARTS

BENNm'S MOBILE HOME
HEAnNG &amp; COOLING

89¢

YOU PROVIDETHE FAIILY- We'Hprovideeverythtngelse
in this 4 bedroom, 2 bath home! 1.485 acre. 2 Clr garage,
21 'x24'6" family room w/woodburner, ntce larae deck off of
te kitchen tor' cookmg out this summer! LOTS AND LOTS OF·
SPACE!!! OWNER HAS REDUCED PRICE FOR AQUICK SALE .

r'h.l'~ai.:s~~
. TUPPERS
rooms, I bath,
Sitting on a nice
-This house needs some work to m1ke it a home
but the beautifulcluD llt•~tw~nlllf:tbe the reV~ard lor
your efforts. 4 beM6Mit.'! II ~61V!flflll1ll1th part basement
$12,000.
NEW LISTING- POMEROY- 50'x290' vacant lot on Lin·
coin Heiaf!ls. Waler, elec., and city sewer available. Nice lot
for a tratler. ASKING $6,500.00.
RACJN~

DAIWIN - CG.mtry Settin1 - 3 bedroom, I bath, all elec.,
modular home l'li!IJ..t il lllt:lfi'Htai!M . slor~ge building
situated on apptlrl"t"'it:t'e llt'MI!r.'IMIIEDtATE POSSES·
SION! $34,000.00.
·
RACINE- iusintss JIJ!PC!rlun_ii.L!~~~ County- Res·
taurant BusinessM.-ffl&amp;IIIUI
want to be in bu·
siness for yourself, c&amp;ll today lor etails! $74,900.00.
FLATWOODS RD. - Nice 3 bedroomJ b1th modular·home
sitting on arproliSIALii:t~•.Ciarpet heat pump
with centra air! $38,000.00.
.
·
DOESN'T THIS IIAKE HOUSE SENSE? Why put up everYih·
ing you've got and go heavily in hock when you don't HAVE
tor Here's a nice, comfortllble place w!lh 3 bedrooms in Mid·
dleport priced RIGHT at only $16,000.00 - OWNER WANTS
ASALE!.
·
RUTLAND - 3 , . old home with i1~garage, tree gas to
house plus a 19 .titlllt lldlrlillf ' 70' with ex~nndo
and room addi11o . Cll\t'nfilti'IMI'I,'
iledish and many
other features. Alltn aood cond!lion. 48+ acres. $72,500.00.
RACINE - 50'xJDII' ,lgiiK.I!t,llilJJa1ilijook·ups. Cemenl
pad on 1 good sM.'tll'l'l'~!llll'.
NEAR CHESTER- Brick ranch home with 7.2acres, pond, 3
c1r garge. Well mJintai~ .b,Qfiii.Ub.l1Jlllwood floors,l1rge
ltving room, 3 ~ lil'oCII'tUM'Miil kitchen, l1m~y
room, full basement with hieplace and woodburner.
$80,000.00.
IIACINE -Nice brick .ranch home. 3 bedrooms, I bath, car·
pet, C.A., rec. r~LWif«JJNQara1e and many
other nice features. $69;000.0j).

'

RITE AID DISCOUNT PHARMACY .-

MtiiRIIDIIt

POMEROY

306 EAST MAIN STREET
PHONE: 992-2586
----- '1'~

..
JOYUPUCIEI

BUSINESS IS SO GOOD, AS YGU CAN SEE WE HAVE AP·
PIOXIIAlELY OVER $480,000.00 WORTH OF IEIIS
COUm PIOPERnES PENDitl8 II AVAIIID OF PIICE
IIA.ES. IF YOU HAVE AHOlE AID CAn SEEI TO SEU
lT, IRING IT ON DOWtl TO CLELAND REALTY AtiD II'U
GIVE IT OUI lEST EFFORT A$ WE HAVE WITH THESE
PROPERTIES.

WITH A
AD

HENRY E. CLELAND .... .......... .... ... 882·1181
JEAN TRUSSELL ....... .... .... .... ... .... 841-2110
JO HILL .......... ..... ....... ...... .... ...... .. 881·44H
OFFICE ................... .... .. .. ........... ... 882·2211

Commi11~nert

(2) 18. 25, 2tc

1 Card of 111enka

CARD OF THANKS

We
llltefully IC·
knowledp the tllotllhtful 1cts of kindness,
prayers, flowers, Clrds,
food 1nd consoll111
words from friends,
nei1hbors 1nd others. It
w1s these 1cts that
helped us to better cope
with the · loss of our
loved one, Gordon H.
Clldwtll.
We IISO wish to exPitSS our sitteelt thinks
to Slt¥1 Fuchs, minister
of the Little Hockl111
Church of Christ. Aspecill thinks to llkl Putman 1nd staff of WhltiBiowtr Funentl Home
for their perso111l end
kind 1tteittion lo funenl
dttllls.
Also,
pellbtl~trs,
Tuppers Plllns EmtrIIIICJ SqUid, and Ill
who pw
us .much
ntteltd support dprlfll
our lime of. btt'N¥1·
mant.
PariMlpa you Mnt 1 lo·
vely card
Or HI quietly In a chair,
....... p. rou unl • funaral apray
If lo ~ II thtre.
PariMlp• you apoke the
klndHt wordl
. Auny friend coukhey,
Plrhepe yo..
not

w.,.
lheraltell

JUit thOUGht of 111 thet
cllly.

Whatever you cld to
ooftiCIIe our heart8
W•t....,k you .o·muoh
W h - the pert.

LocatH 01' 5aHet'll Scheel ltl. aff It, 1•1
"

16 ., 1

KELLER'S CUSTOM BENDING
We Have Changed Our lO&lt;Gtlon To
11/l Milts East on lt. 241 through

111 '11 / 1 mo.

PubliC Notice

.

Your prescription is the most
important one we will fill today!

-up~ 30·1ne11 1ang-

I. L. MASH
CARPENTRY

Tr:msportat1on

·

oro.oo-.
Warll laftlllh - Varlouo
fMt or verloua mllea.

'

-Hilll-lor"""ollolduw
oUSit yoUJ prt'MI'II ctnlfal duct system

DAIWii, OliO

n

•..

•*

oNosmokt,
Of WOOd Ilith Inside hau!le
olums ._. 10 11-lndl. dilmtttr wood

uc••

1-100-1~1-0070

,,

medications sa fely is important at Rite Aid .
Coirf;iJJIITE alerts ou r pharmacists to pote ntial .drug
interactio n before your prescripti on is filled .

WI I I 11•1 ftiiMII'I'I'I'

3-4-'91-1 m .

Dl TDU flEE

1799

/
•'

11111111 11.,

- It:

'rill ••m amaDE

FOIEYU •oNZE

992-7013
or 992·5553

"

The Rite Aid CorrpJRITE
system is designed to ·p rotect you.

Call 949·2126
for Appt.

NEW • USED PAIITS
FO II ALL MAttEI •
MODELl

POLAROID
600 PLUS FILM
TWINPA CK

10 SESSIONS - $10

S.ldalldaiiA

·269

Chicago, Ill.- A :rree offer of
speci~l interest to those who
hear but do not understand
words has been announced by
Bellone. A non-operating
model of the smallest hearing
aid Beltone has ever developed
wiU be given absolutely free to
anyone requesting it.
It's yours for the asking,
so send for it now. It is not a
real hearing· aid, but it will
show you how tiny hear-ing
help can .be. The actual aid
weighs less than an eighth of
an ounce, and it fits completely into the ear canal.
These models are free, so
we suggest you write for yours
•
now. Again, there is no cost, ·
and cenainly no obligation. .
Although a hearing aid may ,,
not help everyone, more and
more people with hearing
losses are being helped. For
your free sample send your
name, address, and phone
nwnber today to: Department
99927, Bellone Electronics
Corporation, 4201 West Victoria Street, Chicago, .Illinois
60646.

· Studtllts

ZENIX VIDEO

1'1! Mit- W. . Holler

c................,

0650Z

Don't Blame
Your Age For
Poor H,earing.

'

so High Schtol

WHALEY'S .
AUTO PARS

"

!\d,·crti'4.'11ll:lll

ht

CALL TODAY
FEIRUAI\'!IIPECIAL
ONLY

COMPlETE - .
NDTIMG riSE TO IUYI

POMIIOY; 0110

·~

•

FOIEYII IIONZI
PROM TANNING
SPECIAL

992-5526

~

.

Plllld

,~,,.,.,. .....

•Reato~:~tion

n

CLEARASII..
MAXIMUM STRENGTH
VANISHING OR
. TINTED CREAM

...... -

895

•Repair Work

~

18 0Z

fw

$)

•Marbo locllociiO·iOO '"',.,""house·

;:

SHAMPOO

-

•Garages
•Room Addition•
•Kitc::hen• • Bath•
•VInyl Siding

.

9

150Z

.

E.ljoy ovtr ~ 00 chan,
no a. BMiho nowt LIVI!
·eo It Nlppano - 24
houro . lAD •v••m lncludu docodar.
·

00.

I Z-J1 -10-tln

6A ,;., H1v &amp; Grt•n
1 66 - S.ed &amp; ~•rt ili.ltr

02'"9

1s·9.

992·6641 or
691·6164

1

-

1~B:~·.

tow'llrt
mni
s............. ...............,.

CONSTIKnON

We Need

I'

Kindergarten registration slated

CEDAI

,05/ day

•

Local news briefs

FREE E$TIIATES

' Clflia! 614·ft2-2...

11 - Heu...,.olciO. . .

·

9-Wenttd to luv

f49

f49

•Sieling
•PIIntlng
NO JOI TOO SMALL

•ftllll Stw"

11 - HtiD Wenttct

- 2:00 P

. :lO
, 30
..• :l

S9.00

6 - L.ost 1nd Found
7 - V•d St&amp;elplltd in edvtnc.tl
1 - Pu~lc s ... &amp; Auction

polis Dally Tribune. re•Ch•rtv owt 11.000 homft.

- .2:00P.M. WfONUOA'i

.

. . J.oo

5 - HtiOV Adl

wtlt atso eop.., In t he~ - P1 . .8n1 ftev-•r •nd 11'1• Galli·

MO~OAY-

Ovtr 11 Warda

, ... 00
. .. oo

3-Annoucemerna
4- GivtiWIV ·

CIPI - cl•lffied diiPit¥. 8ulfn•• C11d and legll nat•cnl

- a:oo·P:M . ru,:soAY

.

205 •• s.w Sir. .

Rate

· 1 - Ctrd of Thanb

'

- 2&lt;00 PM.

~

•Remodeling and
Home Repalra
•Roofing
·

A11 ruru r1 Ct! 111 ~~ 11 t ~

ct•aifl . . . .enlltment Dlac.cl1n The Deily Sen1.ft_.IP·

OAV BEFORE ltUILICATION
- 11 ,oo A .M . SATURDAY

l..;,..tu..

.......,.for eon .. cutiv• runt. brokenupd.,twill be ott. . . .
fnr •.mw rtiW 11 ...,.,.,. ~1 .
·

.

:••~
MooYnt tiDr ••
in ac~v-..ce. .
·
,,.. . . ,... QNeMW.a¥ Md ,Ol.lnd ldl und• 11 words w ill be
'~" 3 dal at no chqt.
, ·
·~·- ot ._ fOI' aH o - . . ••••• is double price of 1d eon
•7 INMftt lin• type onty ueecl.
•
•$..-tin.. ft not riiiiOftliblt fot ~rrortafttt firl1' dei. I CheCk
... ..,..,. il"' • • eG.ru.,. in p...,L C•ll before 2 ;00 p .m
d• afl• INI*Uiten 10 mill• eofreetM)n.
•a. th• mull be Pliid in tdvtnQ ••
c.ro af Th ..kl
H•oov Acle .
In Meni"Dilim "
Ywd Sit•

---

RATES
DIVI

out:eid• ~~ ... ·O.Wi• or \4Mon coumi.. tn-U,t D1 ''"

...... •-•0
-

•AGe

•

399

Business. Services

Classifie

news

RITE

Pomeroy-MiddlepOrt, Ohio

Complete Grooming
For All lrllds

EMILEE MERINAR

Ch~ttr,

.

•Cultom Bent Exhautt Syttemt
•Complete Line of Exhaust Suppliea
•Handle and lnttall Monroe Shocka
Come 1111d See U1 For A Free lnapecllon
ud Eatlmale

PH. 614-911·3949 'IDDIIIY DUll

47269 St. lt. 241

Family of Gordon
H. Caldwell

111111 lettom. Oh. 45743

3/15/tl/1 ...

Owner &amp; Operator

614-992-6820
Pomtror.

LINDA'S
PAINTING
111111101 - 11111101
FREE ESTIMATES

Take tht pain out of
painting.
lei me do it for you.
, VEIY IEASONAII!
HAVE IEFEIEN((S

·1614) 915-4110
3·1·'11· 1 mo. pd.

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•ILOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
........ ltillt

"F- Eetlm•t""

PH. 949·2101
or 111. 949·1160
NO SUIIIIA YCAUS

3-11·111

USID APPUAIIOS
901AYWa.Atm

WAJIIIIS-$100.,

III'IS-S6f.,
. .IIATOIS-$100.,
UlflllS-.......-$t25.,

rliUiiiS-Sm ., ·

IICIIO OVIIIS-S7t .,

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVKE

"'.sus
.. ·IS.-3561
..,_,,_ .... office

y

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL

CARPENTER SERVICE
- Room Addltlont

- GUtter wortc

- E-tc.l and
,-Con_•_,.

•LIGHT HAULING

1'1110-11

-Rooftng

•FIREWOOD

BILL SLACK

- t - •·e....~or
. . !FREE EBTLMATEII

992-2269

V·. C. YOUNG Ill

"""'"''

992-6215

USED RAilROAD TIES

BISSELL
BUILDERS

Howard L WrlttMI

ROOFING

CUSTOM IIILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

NEW -IIPAII
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning '
Painting

"lt lto11nalllt Prim"
PH. 949-2101
or 111.949-2160
'. Dot or Night
NO SUNDAY CAllS

FREE ESTIMATES

949·2161

4-11-1 lin

1-4·11·1 ... ...

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

BISSELL &amp; BUill
CONSTIUCnON

915-4473
667-6179

SIMON'S
PICK·
A-PAIR
SAME
LOCATION
u.. Court Str•t

IIIIJI 11/NIAI

POlUIOY.l. OHIO

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Til-COUNTY
IICYCUNG

OPEN

7~~oDAYS

A WeEK

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

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,

Think you very
muoh,

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SPECIALIZING IN ....

......

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:,1'(1(111/11/'l'lllil

3

�Page 8

.

The Dally sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

i-a~

--Doped..=

LAFF-A-DAY

Giveaway

4

41 HouUI lor Rent

.. -.-

It
port1 .. 1M ltl """

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a., 4~':..h
•

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precedent. There were 20 questionson the test and you got 30
of them wrong!'·' ·

2111 •

-·-

••_.t.--.
••ans. .....-... ....... .

114

""':' .,':..:
,ar.. 1n - . . ,

RL~T:Q
D 1111 Clole I

MAWAKE!

I

--.

UNPREPARED. UNORGANIZED,
UNSETTLED, UNCERTAIN,
UNSU~E. BUT AWAKE !

11

&amp; VIcinity

Help Wanted

I:OI(J) ilevlrly II.

TEACHER

itiw-1

I.
. ...J.L.....:..-.1..--I.L.-..:...-1 you d-lop f.- 1M!! No. 3 below.

·-=--

1:31 (J) lonely Ckltlllii
7:0111Jl• 11J WIMf of FOIIune

.,._ AIM.

1i) I a.- ol .._n.lla

p1uo

'

Public Sale
&amp;Auction

44

....8 .,...

AcldemL:":rds.

Aplnmlfll
for Rent

a a - anc: rn. tung

7:05 (J) Hllppy Daya

;g

7:30!1li..!Jt:r~ Q

Wanted to Buy

'iJi Elllai1Himenl
Tonight Stereo. Q

Cll

~~~~
:-rna Ni.~rCIIIo.

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

.l/'ltflCH CAff' po '{&lt;JU WANT
'Jt) T.A#Ct: THt WINE fALEf•
JviAN WHQ. $A'(J ,s-oMEONE .

1br opa.-.t. Uvlng A-

:... ,.,.. lowe lllowcla.
Goad ~klnt I'M-441.tMt.

Lond - -· ....ooo ; · Kllclwo, .......
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.... -Over ·Pomonto.
....000 Down
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on Rl. '7.114-44..-.
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R•• II . . ,.. lei: 2 ~lilt lloJiOoll. .,.......1m ollor
Lol In CINohlra, Ohio.
..
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- -· 101112 I ~adr~o• downtown ,._
......41a11'7U.
- · WV, no poll, .114-tDo
'JIItl .. Don...

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ttomn

32 Mobile
lor Sale

1172 _ _ ..,......_

........

-

1m. Duke llolllle oil
billsus•o I:OM:OO P•L!L li4-tt2·

Employment Setv1crs

Ill WIMf of F-ne Q

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7:31 c5J Sanfonllnd Son
1:011 !2l
IIJ Frwh PY£nce of
lei AJtt WIH reluctantly jolnl
hie
schOol's poetry club.

)
~

APHES•VE 8ANPA6t
Juff/.1" WfiiJ fAY$

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till. M"A'8"H
ecroaanr.

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. . . . 2 . . . . . . .i

Clle Mama'• FamiiJ

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·

Special WhOopl ~.
Jeremy Irons and Sophia
Loren discuss 1118 Oscar

•

nominations. (1 :00) Stereo.

~ Maturo rl - - ,:

ALLEY OOP

~

fw nnl, olll I :1,
; ; , -~ lnah dtd, 114-112-

(]) Tnlvela_Q

'•

1111 Ill • Evening Shade
Wood talks to hla
talll8r·ln-law and his son
about flit women. (A)
Stereo. D
tiD. MOVIE: Amezon

w- on IIIII Moon IRl

(2:00)

II) WU.F Football

=~.=...

111'

.

IIIII billla

ACROSS
1 Weak, as
excuses
5 Do a
crawl
9 CD player
part
1o Sharpened
12 Geogra·
phy
reference
13 Take
pleasure
in
14 Willowy
16 Be in the
red
17 Knols
18 Friend
21 Tree's
blood
22 Jostled
23 Nonsense
24 Jimmy
Carter's
home
26 Greek
vowel
29 Nancy's
pal
30 High
school
student
31 Wedding
wear
32 Took
inside pies
34 Spew
lava
37 Slood
38 "West
Side
Story"
heroine
39 Donut's

QIOn 8litge

I:CIOale all MOVIE: 'T.,...on
IIIII llacklap' NIC Monday
NIIIMIIIIIII Moflea (2:00)
' Stereo. D

. , . ,...... Doy

c.r. Cenlor. .

- . A:Jolslo, ol AI

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year's most outstanding
!lima. (L) Stereo. Q

114 •• 1111.

IbM

·

Corsi•, 1·

e

·

Fumllhed

__
.............

- - .. 111.2,111M75'

..__,_ ..,_

Two r!)yal families rille all
. their propenlea on a dice
game. (Pit) Stereo. Q
·, 9l 0
Murphy llrown
Frank relies on his
co-worl&lt;era when he throws
an anniversary party.(R)
Stereo. Q
Ql lin 1t.ilh Now

TIME FOL.DINQ- IT.

33 Fanna for Sale

, . , lor -

(I) (]) GrNI P~

I HADA TERRIBL..E

-.:.=.":."~

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appear on television. (R)
Stereo.Q

10:011 1111 Ill. Trlllte Of ilo8le

........ 104-'I"J''.

O'Neill Rolli cletandl an
underage prostllute accused
of klll~r pi!t'P· (R)
Slereo.

d]).

_,_,__.
1
_
,...
48

11:00 !2l •

.......

RobertaOn

of Poo-.
~ .......... Cisll

lloult II, -

-

(2:45)

ForLIIII

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o:p4lon to
Hcst
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iii-iilf'!'--d ....... - fiolsl,
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ASTRO-GRAPH
BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

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Ill IFI til

.....

p;,_.~loe'!! on .....,..
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--Lori~

82

Plwnblng &amp;

..;&lt;.

Helling
lndll ,.__..
............
om n Ohio

1144tl'n

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f

Merch 21, 1111
~-looks like Lady Luck Will-be qulle cooperative In ventures you ollher direct
or create In lhe year lhelld. II Will be up
to you, though, lo put the operatlont on

. "The plant maintenance urvlce wants to
talk to you all for a while ..." '

l

---·- ---..----.
.

'

.'"

NIWI

'

CI1 1111

track.
ARIEl (March 21-AprH 111 Try to mille
amentllgameoulofanydlllleultlesyou
might have to contend with loday. Your
Chancel for resolving lhem Will be enhenc:ed - 11 you don't take thlnga too
Mrlouely. KnciW - • 10 lOOk for ro-

mance and you'll find II. The AstraGraph MatcHmaker lnetanlly reveals
wlllch Signs we romantically perfect lor
you. Mall $2 10 Malchmaker, clo thla
newspaper, P.O. Box 91428, Clevololnd,
OH"44101~28 .

TAURUI (April 2N111J 211) You're apt
to be very enterprising loday, bul not
necrnarlly for lllllllsh purpo.s. The
wants and needs ol lh- Wllh wllorn
you'll be Involved will mollvale you.
QEMIHI (lleJ 21-.1- 2111 Your probo·
billtles for aucceta In enc~e~vora lOOk
exlremely encouraging today, provided
you ect upon your ld-. Your Imagination, plus your inlllallve, .,. your graat-

LIIRA (&amp;ept. 23-0ct. 23) YoU ore presently In o good cycle for fulfilling your
hopes and expectalione. Be opllmlotle
and lhink poalllvely, regardlesS of the
circumstalsceo.
ICOIII'IO (OcU4 Noo.22) Be bold but
nolloolhllrdy In striving to achieve your
pur-loday. II bravado Ia requfrad
in certeln drcumat-. use It, bul do
10 wisely.
~

211 The
ans-a tor wlllch you've ~ -chlng can be fOUnd today: DiiCUM vconcerns With one In wt:om you have
confidence end w110 hu Odvlsed you
correctly In IIIII p8it.
CAPIIICOIIII (Dec. ~Wen. 11) You
eeluaeta. .
_
might epot a ~opment today IIIII
CANCER (J- 21-.ltlly 22) Thla could could be flnMCially rnanlnglul to you
be a matetlelly rewarding day for you, - II you exploil nproperly. Thla oppcjrbul not notneorily 11 a riiUII of your tunlty may be bigger than It Initially
own eflorta. Benefllo may come to you ~,......
!n!'irect.. -23--"•You',. Ilk""' 10 AQUAIIJUI(.JM. 211 , . 11) Someo:EIE
,_0 1- •
......,. 221
-•
with wtsarn vuu·,. pr-.tly
1a
perform twiCe u effectively today with on a lucky ro1 11181 could Include vuu. II
':'.;":'.X~~velnd~~ you IIWI apotUng alg1111a. 11'1 time to
llliiCitlle CloMr.
ha
,_.
wiiVIIGOh
wtsarn
_...,!0"23-~o111 rl:'~~~Y PIICII (M. 1D "n 0112111 The paulb._ tor FIChleolng vaur ObjeCt'- In
....,...
you shOuld be able to respond lhla cycle • • better Ulan UIUII, eepewell to a challange. Don't lOOk tor probo dally thOle that are rel8led to your 1111lema, but don't run from them lither. biiiOuo and materiel IICUI'Ity. Good
lucl&lt;.
. Ellabllsh your own agenda.

=

IAGITTAJIIUI ·(No¥.

1nv-

'l.
1

,,

De all

CD•••••tch
tiD l::;r" Hal Sterao, Q

....8
II)

'

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....... WY-- IIG'l.

-

T&lt;H: The Nail

10:30 Ill Crook llld ChaM
10:31 (J) MOVIE: What Ever
Happened to Iaiiy Jene?

CoolllrJ ....... -

l:lll..Derlllllr, lne, Ill. D W.,

llillpt

8

ChtEIEIItiDim
8CNNE
NeWI
0 700 Club _ Pal

46 Splice for Relit .

" " - lrilllo.llllh,-.

.=. .,........

o•gelso.e~gn~ng
wa chance to

eem~ce

A l o &gt; i t - - u -...

OHIO VALLI'!' PUILISHINO CO.·

(I).

l3fd Annual
Acad1my Awanla The
Oscar. 1118 enterlalnment
industry's most covete&lt;l
honor, wt• be awarded to the

(I)

....,no,...,IIIM75-0II.

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-

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......1,11••, .................

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oaooomw.ai'!-l"'ailll. NDir hlrlna

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lnlnloe.,:l..,.._ .....

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EAST

WEST

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.AK7 2
06S
8 s 42

.Q83
• 8742
.109763

sourH

1101754
.9 6 5
IQ 10 3
.AQ

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: North

z• 1• 1•

Sooll:

W..l

II
4I

Narll:

Eul

Z.

Pau

All pUI

Opening iead: • 3

•
jack as the setting trick. ·
:
How did East know that South had
the club ace rather than the spade
king? U South 'had the' spade kins, on
the fatal fourth round of hearts he
would ruff high in hand and dllcard
dummy's club loser. To pnvent thU;
West would have cashed the club ace
when in with the heart queen.
•

by THOMAS JOSEPH

fiiNiy acculltd of being en
Inept biNball player. (A)
Stereo. Q

1MD, lbr, I

.K

CROSSWORD

. IIII .'T1o!EIE 1D C..:
Ill e Mljor Did Robin I&amp;

,._ llollllo=
=:-a.i:..... ~~~~~~~~

S.ZS.II

IAKJ9

You are defending against a suit
contract and decide to lead from a
holding of three small cards. Which
one do you lead - top, middle or
bottom?
U it is an unbid suit, even the experu cannot agree on the best choice.
But if it is a suit partner has bid, there
is no dissension. U you have supported
your partaer, lead high from three
smal~ if you have not, lead low. ,
East-West used this understanding
to produce a sparkling defense on today's band. The one-club opening was
Precision, sho)Ving 18-plus points. The
one-heart overcall·was slightly unor·
tbodox with only a four-card suit, but
East wanted to help his partner find
the best lead.
After supporting his partner, West
led tbe heart three. Having the two,
East thea knew his partaer held 'a
heart honor, which had to be the
queen. So be won the first trick with
the king and returned llje two.
When returning your 'uit, you tradi·
tionally lead your original fourth high·
est Therefore West knew that his
partner had civercalled on a f~ur-card
suit West won trick two with the heart
queen and returned his last heart Fl·
nally East produced the coup de grace,
leading tbe 13th heart West ruffed
with the spade king, promoting East's

8:30 (2) • IIJ ltonom BlOssom
wants to drop out of her
private schOol. Stereo. Q
CllNIAiaokillllall

1W7 ...... .......... .........
olslll~ .. :In H. PiriE Dr, -

NORTH

.AQ63%
• .J 10 4

By Jame~ Jacoby

.._(2:30)

Trllnlng

3-11

BRIDGE

0 IMuty and 1M aeutq
8:06 Ill MOVIE: Arwnlc end Old

8U81nlll

I II II I I II

· Invoke-Laugh ..:. Theft- Yonder-ANYTHING
A cynic is one who can tell you the pri~pf most everything but doesn't krioYI the value of ANr 1HING.

AC8demy Awanla The

nominees are spotllghte&lt;l in a
behind·lho ecenee look 11
1118
(1:110) DCol1g1
.....,

FOR

KIAMUTS ANSWIRS

~=~~~-Q

2:00

~~~fRMBLE

•

~!!==Q

WANTED

-- .
;P~·"'~·~~~~~~------·

:a

c:-8

a.r·~Q

• 1:00 ......

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,:, 1

.~I=~,~:p~lN:~I!~T~,~E~I~I ;--;~~~ :~ch:~~~:

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AU. '1'1111- 111=1. l'llld In ~= DIORI!
U..., DIIDUNI: I~ .....
... · In
lhe ..., ...... lo to .....
~ -

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-

Proiessor to clasS, ' Read·
ing makes rrien wtse, but
wtiat he reads determines
whether he's lull of sense·or

·

Cll Allbitt llld Co 11116

l: _

,;,

lrg""'T
,

1:30 a~• 11J NIC ,.._ D

~

~~opo~~~.1Noli114 • 1011-tm

31 Homlllor Sale

I 1--,;_r!"'""''l-..,lr-1
E G I S E

8 WOfld Today

.ID Our Hauae

. ..---------~::::::::::::::::~======~==~==~~
1·
- · ~- ~
GIHipolll

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HITNN
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Cll Clle •. ' oe

t:ODa~e

=~·:;.::"J..~

ou ve set an mteresting

low to forftl four oiii!Pie - •·

EVENING

--'...."

mobile

.........,
""*' ol tt..
• ._,...
lollr ocrambfod _ , be-

Ct•l lV lMng Inc. Ft Wonlt. TX

-- ----

The Dally Sentlnei.:...Page 8

PIIIUI

MON., MARCH 25 •

......... .,.., ... 1111011 ....

'

. _ , .,...., ..... Colloi, VerY

~ ·l';l..
_;t5i
!!:

11111'aNP.110-IIod,4"-

To 011...,.~, _ ...,.. .._

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a- to 110.~­
~14-+~f.

I?W'T A CAA Ill '5tblrr...

. Do
... - ......,.,...,
......
_1 .........
111: .... Out .......... 1111&amp;

MObile Homll
for Rent

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

New: lunlc ..... Ccs ¢1 11,
1
,

--

Television
Viewing

"VillA~ ~ CJ!Nil~ 'TIPI!"]

'•

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ln. .. ••

'

42

6

BORN LOSER

*-··
.
.
=u
,
=
. . . . .-::.,-a ··'Ill............ ....... .,.-·---·
t..r. ...... ,, ..... Qoee

POP QUIZ

.

Pomeroy--lllddlepc:wt, Ohio

Goodl
-St--HcM.:u;•;•h~IOid;...--

11ft

1oDAY!

~;March 25, 1991

Mondaf, March 25, 199f

--r.1t ll rl,.,..:, ,.·

VIce Stereo.

QIOn=
~

SoariCIOW ~ Mra. King .

shape
40 Bobcat
41 Rung
DOWN
1 Baltic
republic
2 Dozing
3 Board
4 Formerly,
formerly
5 Haggafd
novel
8 Took the
trophy
7 Group's
gag
8 Made
catty
sounds
9 Survives
11 Fabric
worker
15 March
event
19 Diamond

....

--

Yllt~rday's

Answer

judges

27 Prepares

20 Mock
22 Ship's cell
23 Price
place
24 "Gease"
or "mice;
e.g.
25 Expensive
non·
necessity
26 Milne's

lo slart
goRing
28 llama's
ranga
29 Goblet
part
!lo Foretall·
ing deck
33 "Dog·
gone!"
35 Brooch
361RS
- colleclion

"

''

DAII..Y CRVPTOQUOlT.S- Here's how to work-It: 3/25

11:30 W. all Tonight Show
StereO.

CI)TIIII~-

AXYDI.BAAXR
. hi..ONGFEI..I..OW

(I) E• t p I El Journel

Hill Stereo. Q
I eAnenlo
Ame11ca Tonlglll

:t=•

12:00Cil

Orie letter stands for another.ln this sample A Is u~rd
for the three l..'s, X for the two O's, etc. Single lrtten, .
apostrophes, the length and formatlon~or the words are
all hints. Each day the code letters are different .

lpol18 Tonight

Clle .....

tiD • Partr Maclllne With

i-='"'
Q!t:",.,
II)

cu·1.111 .

•N•~··-·Now

GPP

Ollejar Lllllllf IIMblll'l .
Ooallltt Hill 111119 World
Slrill: New Vorl&lt; Mill va.
llaillmOII Orioles

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

Gl Partr Maalllne With Nte
Pupil I

NQGVQ,

DXQ

WQFBOQ

DXGD

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Cll MOVIE: Doubla .,.,.._

[ll.,;;-.J'Nigllt

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.,..... Llalmllll

WQFBOQ

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0 a.uty llld IIIII IIIII Q
12:211a1e o 1.111 Nlglll With
(II)~

CRYPTOQUOTES

3-25

~

' NQGYQ.-DXAYGF

G

HQYNBF

Ytiieiday's Cryptoquote: DON'T SAY SPRING
HAS COME ONTIL YOU CAN PUT YOUR FOOT ON
NINE DAISIES. I

OI..D PROVERB

.

'

..

-

�.
D~ meeting conducted recently .·
.

Page 10-The Dally Sentinel

Doctors honored
at Holzer Medical
•

''Doctor' s .Day 199l " .will be.
observed Thursday, March 28, 10
recognize all of lhe physicians on .
lhe medical staff at Holzer Medical
Center and will include a continental breakfast, hosted by the HMC
nursing division from 7 to 9:30
a.m.
According to Nancy Brunner,
M.S., M.A., R.N., vice president of
nursilig services, the special observance is being held as a day of
thanks for a lifetime of caring.
"This initial observance of Doc- ·
tor's Day at Holzer provides us
with the opportunity to set aside
one day to honor the memlll:rs of .
Our medic!ll st!lff, recognizing the
impm:tant role and unique attributes
that they bring to our hospital and
community," st!lted Brunner.
The breakfast, to be held in the
French 500 Room, is being organized by the Doctor's Day committee, which includes: Bonnie
McFarland, R.N., nurse manager of
2 West; Nm.icY Casleel, R.N., pediatrics nurse manager; Susan Frazier, R.N., M.S., C.C.R.N., ICU
nurse manager; and Mary Harrison,
R.N., B.S;N., nursing st!lff services
coordinator.
·
Other members of the nursing
leadership group will assist the
committee, providing home baked
goods ·for lhe continent!ll breakfast.
Each member of the hospital's
medical. st!lff, numbering more than
80, will receive a per!i~Jnal invitation to attend the breakfast and will

MAKING PLANS -The Doctor's Day committee from the
Holzer Medical Center's Nursing Division is pictured making final
plans for the continental breakfast to honor the members of the
hospital's medical staff on Thursday, March 28. Planning the
observance are, from left: susan Frazier, (seated) Nancy Casteel,
Mary Harrison and Bonnie McFarland
l
be individually honored, by nurses
as well as staff members from
throughout HMC. A general in~ita­
tion to the breakfast is being
extended to all departments in the
hospital.
"Every department within the

hospital is invited tO join in for this
initial Doctor's Day observance, to
show appreciation and su~n of
our total medical st!lff," swd Brunner. "We anticipate this becoming
an annuJtl event."

First anniversary of Happy Land fire
NEW YORK (UPI) - Still try- of St; Thomas Aquinas church.
ing to make sense of the tragedy, "This whole year, it has been so
residents Of the impoverished touching. Many people feel
Tremont section of the Bronx Mon- depressed . But we are angry as
day marked the fust anniversary of well."
Garmendia said ihe lack of
the Happy Land social club fire
that killed 87 people in their com- "security measures" at the social
club, which lacked fire exits, sprinmunity.
A memorial mass was to be held klers, emergency lights or exit
during the evening at St.Thomas signs, was at the root Qf the anger.
"Someone failed in their
Aquinas church, a couple of blocks
from the two-story red-brick build- responsibility," he said.
The fire that sent flames and
ing that was a popular gathering
spot for neighbor~ - immi~ts choking smokeo sweeping through
from Honduras, Haiu, the Domtm- lhe social club, t!lking 87 lives, was
allegedly set by 37-year-old Cuban
can Republic and El Salvador.
"It is still fresh in their minds," emigre, Julio Gonzalez, for whom
said Bishop Francisco Garmimdia a trial date has yet to be se1.

He is accused of spilling a dollar's worth of gasoline in a hallway
of the club arid lighting a match to
it out of anger at a girlfriend who
had spurned him. The woman
worked as a coat-checker at the
club, and was one of the few to
escape dcatli in lhe blaze.
Gonzalez, who has taken an
array of psychological tests, awaits
trial on 174 counts of murder,
arson and other crimes.

The owner of record for the
social club, Alexander DiLorenzo,
still faces several building-code
violations, as does Jay Weiss,
whoSe real est!lte company leased
the building a·nd subleased it to
club operator Elias Colon. Weiss's
wife is the actress Kathleen,Turner,
Garmendia said the healing process
of people in the neighborhood
Three varieties of parsley are
has
been
slow. A sign reading
curly, Italian and Hamburg. Parsley
••oescansen
en Paz " or Hrest in
is used in cooking as well as a garpeace"
hangs
on the charred
nish.
remains
of
lhe
social
club, as does
Slides were shown by Mrs. Hill
of various flower and herb gardens. the name of each victim.
Refreshments of vegetables and
dip, crackers, Shamrock cookies
But there seems little peace for
and peach spice and. sassafras tea some, the bishop said.
were served.
.
"We set up a help line after the
A workshop will be held March lire. and there have been calls con30 at 1:30 p.ni. at the home of Con· tinually," Garmendia said. "They
nie Hill to make concrete planters. feel depressed."
,
Bring a cardboard box of desired
Elena Colon, in her first intersize for planter. Olher material will view since the tragedy on March
be furnished. Cost is $10.
25, 1990, said she planned 10 attend
The April meeting will be held the evening service, despite dreadat the home of Connie Hill.on April ing a confrontation with other rela9at 7 p.m.
tives of those who died.

Herbalist meeting held
Officers were elected at the
recent meeting of the River Valley
Herbalists held at the home of Lila
Ridenour.
Elected were Connie Hill, presi·
dent· Linda McCoy, vice-president;
Debhie Gilmore, secre(ary; Jill
Knopp, vice-secretary; ~heila Curtis, treasurer; and Juan1ta Conrad,
newsletter editor.
Linda McGoy will lead the
group that is revising the cookbooks. All members are urged to
bring recipes to the April meeting.
Mrs. McCoy reported on parsley
and chives as the herb-of-themonth. Chives are culinary herbs
and the blossoms can also be used
in crafts as well as vinegars.

.

The land of the brave, yet some
don't see the light
Will they have to sleep on the
street again tonight?
With all of the know how to win
over there
Will he shuffle the cards and
deal them out fair?)
.
There are problems here in the
land of the blest
. . .
~ Ciin he handlelHem? Will he do
his best?
This man has never known the
.woes of the poor
He never had l)unger knock at
his door.

I

I

called a butn
Don't fail to remember the
retired of the land
lq their time of ,trouble will he
lend a hand?
He didn't win that war, it was
answer to prayer
Everyone called and it was God
Who was there
What about the old folks who
put him up there
·
Thefre helpless now, docs he
give a care?
The blacks who struggle on
third class pay
Will he give them a hand , or
tum them away
They fought for the peace out on
the front line
No one can call them CHICKEN this time
We're proud of our blacks, right
out of the ruts
· They did their job and s!towed
they had guts

The only rights the· poor seem to
posses •
Is to plead with the elected
congress
I am not sure even this will do
Their pockets seem to be stuffed
too
· The elected officials we thoug~t
Can a man whose been servcd·- we could trust
011 a silver platter
.
Took only days, our bubble to
Really see the woes and correct bust
tbematter'l
,
Mr. Bush, watch the pinnacle
Does he really care about the which put you so high
matter Ill state?
You still haven't answer Ameri·
Will he stuff the rich pockets ca's cry.
and lellhe poor wait?
We have a president, the best at
APPLY THE BLOOD
As Moses in t~e days of great
war
But l!oes he realize there is a lot bondage,
'
Was shown to apply the blood
more?
·
People on welfare, expecting a of the lamb;
We are to follow the Bible
deep cut
Will be buried in this political teaching,
We are to apply the blood of
rut
God'sLamb.
There are more without tlie
Apply the blood to our family
blessing of wor1c
Who IOIIICiimes think he is sort and home,
Let lhe blessings of Jesus Christ
ofaJERK
, .
I guess we'll see m ume yet to abide;
Then we won't lei satan overcorne
.
If he can find help for those come us,

Public Notice
FINANCIAL REPORT
OF TOWNSHIPS
Foo Fi.C.I Yur Ending
December 31, 1 990
BEDFORD TOWNSHIP
CoUNTY oF MEIGS
"This it an Uneudited
Flnen~lal Ropoot"
SUMMARY oF CASH
BALANCES, RECEIPTS
AND EXPENDITURES
GOVERNMENTAL FUNDS
RECEIPTS:
Toxe• .. ... .. .. ..... 11 o.aa1 .86

lntergov•ilmnt•l

Recoipto .... ..... 66.21 2.1 B
lnterut ............... 1.680.90
TOTAL
RECEIPTS ...... n.864.94
DISBURSEMENTS:
General Governmont ...... ,....... 19.490.69
Public Safety ....... 2.250.00
Public Worko ..... 6B.840.07
· Capital. Outlay ..... 1.600.00
ToTAL "DISBURSE·
.
MENTS .......... 82,080.88
Total Receipts Over/ tUn·
der) Dlob ........ (4,426 . 72)
Fund Cilah Belance
Jon. 1', '90 .... . 34, 687 .61
Fund Cash· Balance
Doc. 31, '90 .. .. 30. 241 ·.79
Depository
Balance ...... .... 37,423.67
Leu Outstanding
Chocks ............. 7 .181 .88
TOTAL
BALANCE ....... 30. 241 .79
I c8nify this report to be
correct and true. to the beat
of mv knowledge.
Borbore .,; . Gruooer, Clerk
.
3/ 18.191
42774 Helwig Ridge
Shodo, Ohio 46776 .
&amp;14-696 -1244
131 25. 1tc

.

Poet's corner
WHAT NOW?
The troops did grand on the battie field
· It was straight aliead till Saddam
did yield
Bush is very popular in giving
command
But can he do as well here in the
homeland?
What about the ones who arc
very, very poor?
.
Will they pay the price for the
rich to have more?
Can he handle the unemployed,
some with no home?
Will they be left out on the
desert to roam?

The Return Jonathan Meigs
DAR Chapter held the annual
Charter Day luncheon at Over·brook dining room with 34 members and guests aaending.
Regent Rae Reynolds was in
charge of the meeung and gave a
report from President General
Marie H. Yochim. After the
National Defense report on the
need for more U.S . strategic
defense. The repM stated the Soviet Union now has a new inter-continental ballistic missile, the SS 18
Mod. 7, that carries over ten tons of
nuclear explosives, more than three
times that of America's largest
According to U.S. Intelligence,
fuel air explosives are stocked not
only by Iraq but by a number of
other' Third World countries, as
well as the Soviet Union, China,
France, Germany and Israel.
American History essay county
winners were Rachel A$hley, Bradbury fifth grade and Hillery Harris,
Syracuse sixth grade. The topic
was "What the Bill of Rights
Means to Me." Their parents, Keith
and Emma Ashley and Jeffrey and
Debra Harris were present to hear
them read 'their essays and receive
their awards from Mrs. Reynolds.
Margaret Parsons was Chairman.
Also, the winners of the Meigs
Co.unty Citizenship Essay Contest
were present, read their winning
essays and received awards. Leigh
Anne Redovian, Eastern and Norman Matson of Southern were
accompanied by their mothers,
Rosetta Redovian and Donna Matson. Mary Skinner was chairman.
Mrs. Reynolds gave cenificates
of merit to several of her officers
and chairman; June Ashley, PhyUis
Skinners, Maye Mora, Eleanor
Smith and Mary Skinner.
Acknowledgement was received
from NSDAR Library for books.
Meigs County History Vol. 2 was

Because God will be walking by
our side.
When the blood of the Lamb
covers our sins,
We are made pure, whole and
clean in God's sight;
We gain more spiritual str&lt;;ngth
and power,
As we pray and ask for wisdom
and light

given by Grace Jch, and Osborn
and Allied Families, a Bible
Record and Meigs County Cemeteries by June Ashley.
.
Six new members were voted
into tbe chapter: Pam Diddle,
Abbey Warner Stranon, Opal
Grueser; Lynn Crow, June Circle
Gray of Reynoldsburg and Anna
Ruth Circle Elliot of Canfield. The
death of member Mildred
McDaniels was reponed.
A nominating committee was
eJC(ted to repQn at April meeting:
Phyllis Skinner, Chairman; Pat

.

Monctay, .Mareh 25, 1891 ·

'?
.•

.

company's atte~t to-comply with
BJ MELINDA POWERS
lhe I99(! Clean Air Act
.
.OVJ&gt;NewsStaff·
AEP is faced with cutting i~
. ATHENS - Fuel switching ,
may be American Electric POwer's sUlfur dioxide gas emissions .at all
Qllly cho,~~ the James M. Gavin of its coal-bu~ing gene.rating
plant in G · County, a company . plants, accordmg to the Acl.
.Dfficial said Monda,Y, but some Becaus,e Gavin is the company's
state lllid local offictals disagree largest emitter of the gas, AEP'
must decide whelhcr to switcb to
with thaf view.
.
oat of State
AEP Vice Presi9ent Bill Lhora, . low sulfur coal
along with four other state and or to install pollution control
local officials from bhio, appeared devices, called IICIUbbcrs, to reduce
at a ,public information meeting to emissions.
Public Utilities Commission -of
talk about the Gavin p~t ~ the

mined

'

'

Department. Ia addition, lhe person that fin~
tbe pldeu eu will ncel\'1! $50 aad lhe. person
who ftnds lilt lilver e11 will receive $25. Any '
toddler uaable to nlk Is not ~rmltted lo par.
tldpate In tbe buat uc1 ao aduhs are permitted
on the field. Those ¢blldren will be alven an till
of their on and .a small stuffed bunny. Sponsors for lhe event ar~ still needed and anyone
Interested In contributing should contad Mitch
Meadows. ·

. Man believed drowned
.: at dam still .missing
The body of a man believed
drowned over the weekend in the
Ohio River at the Gallipolis Locks
and Dam had not been located as of
this morning, authorities said. The
· ·man, whose name· has not been
· released; fell from the barge he was
on, after the barge struck the· darn
and capsized.
SJVift current and high water,
about 25 feet above normal, forced
the search for lhe man to be limited
to the shore ¥ooday, assistant
lockmaster Dale Fife told the Hun, tington Herald: Dispatch. ·
; "We don't want to 'be searching
; for the searc~." he stated.
; nie man worked (ilr Mulzer
Crushed Stone Co. of Tell City, Ind.
: Employees at Mulzer refused to
· release any information, but said
, owners of the company were on the
· scene.
· TWo barges from lhe eight-barge
. fteet broke away in the rain-swolleri
river Sunday,and capsized, Conrad
Ripley,
public
information

FIFTH AND MAIN STREET
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
PHONE 992-2914

~pecialist for the Huntington District office of the U.S. Army Corps
of Engineers told the Huntington
paper.
,
He said the first four of the group
had been locked through when the
two broke away, striking one or die
open dam gate's piers and causing a'
barge, laden w1th limestone and
carrying the worker, to capsize.
The capsized barges were tied to
the West V'uginia bank after turning
over, and a · ftoating crane is
scheduled to arrive today to altemJ!I
to right the barges. .
. ··
. Ripley told tile ' Herald-DispatCh
that he did not believe the dumped
limestone Would be removed from
the river's bottom unless it impeded
navigation.
A represent!ltive from the West
Virginia State Police, Point
Pleasant Detachment. Silled this
morning there wu no additional information to be released, The
det!IChment is in charge of the Investigation.

•
'·

.

Ohio Chairwoman Jolynn Berry- siondacing AEP as they attempt to
Buller, Bill Oiler of the United meet emissions standards !'aid
Mine Workers, and Ohiq ~- doWI! by the Act.
tative
Jerry
Krupinski . · "We are faced with an 86 per(Steubenville), along with Lhota, cent aggregate reduction at both
each made present!ltionr Monday Ohio Power Company plants and
night, The meeting, organized by Columbus Southern Power plants,"
J~~;k .Fowler of the Gallipolis ComLhota said. "As for capital investmuntty Improvement Corporation 'ments at Gavin, scrubbers would
and other regio'lalleaders, drew cost us $800 million to build.
more than 150 people to Alhens' . whereas fuel switching would c:!St
Ohio University Inn..
us aroond $200 million."
Lhota used a slide ~t!ltion
Lhota said that physical ~hange's
ID explain the problems and dC(i- . at the Gavin plant would have to be

~"'--:-T-:~

• portation 's Distr~ct 10 office in
By BRIAN J, REED
·Maiieua.
Sentinel Ne'lrl Staff
Frank, meanwhile, was sworn in
. If Meigs County's new Treasur, er Howard E. Frank felt at home late on(Friday by Meigs County
; when he rePQrtcd to work on Mon- Probate and Juvenile J~ge Robert
. .
day; it was wiJh good reason. He E. Buck.
"I'rn happy to be in this office .
served in that office for over a
today," Frank said in a Monday
:· dC(ade in i1lc 1960's and 1970's.
·
afternoon
interview. "It's ~ood to
'
Frank, who was appointed·to the
position by the Meigs County be back among my friends.'
Frank w~ also appointed to the
. Republican Central Committee on
position
when he lirsi took over the
· Wednesday, replaces George M.
offtee
in
1962. The central commit, Collins. Collins re·signed earlier
.- this month to take a position with tee appointed !lim to replace Clyde
'· the Ohio Department of Trans- Millhoan, who died' while serviag

THE MIDDLEPORT
Cmtmunia~u CHURCH OF ·CHRIST '

A lluhlliledlo ·1no. Nu popper

Gavin may have to.fuel switch: AEP official

treasurer's duties Monday·.

'

2 Sectlono, 12 "-gooo 21 ...,..

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, March 26,1991

: Fran~~ assu.mes Meigs County

•

'

.

,•

A GREAT PLACE TO MEET A FRIEND

Protected by the blood shed by
God's Son.
Suzanne Bush

'

•

C~pyt1ghlld 1•1

PllEPARATIONS UNDERWAY- Mitch
Meadows· and Bob Gilmore ~ 1-r, are preparing
for the Easter e'g bunt to.be held at General
Hattlnger Park tn Ml!ldleport on Sunday at 1
p.m. The bunt Is sponsored by the Middleport
Community AIISoclatlon whicl! hopes to hide
1,000 tiP. each containing a $1 bill, for elllldren
In four age categories: walklnll to age 4; a~t $·7;
age 7·9; and age 9·12. The eags will be bidden
with the assls.tance ot lbe Middleport Fire

This Thursday, March 28th at 7:00PM

vic~.

•••

VoL 41, No. 2H

.I '

COMMUNION
SERVICE

Death has no power over God's
children,
,
The victory is through the blood
of the Son;
We are on the narrow road to

e

••

II

We have to be clothed in His
Righteousness,
We need to wear the whole
armor of God;
Be prepared to battle for the l&lt;lst
souls,
_
We are .to go out and win them
for God.

Apply the blood of the Lam_b to
your heart,
The death angel will pass the
other way;
When this old feeble body is ·
laid down,
The blood assures us death has
no sway.

•,

••

Pomona grange
meeting held

MAUNDY THURSDAY

· We must riot forget the blood's
been applied,
We are to face the task in joy
and Jove;
Be filled with His Spirit and His
Wisdom,
.
.Follow His leading ·that comes
from above.

•

'

4

·Arnold, 18, a graduating senior.!
By United Press later1111tlonal
RUSHDIES DIVORCING: took it upon herself to invite ~
The estranged wife of Salman Reynolds even though many people•
Rusbdie says she and the author were ~tical about her chances or~
are divorcing after two years Wider getting him to town. "Just because~
the strain of a death decree by you're from a small unknown town ;
Iran's Ayatollah Rubollab doeso 't mean you can't be a bi~
Kbomelnl. Marianne Wluias, an success," she said in her invitation•
American novelist, says 'R:ushdie to Reynolds~ who· is from J~~.~
changed since having to go into Fla., population, 9,800. In addiaon:
hiding after his book "The Satanic to agreeing to speak, Reynolds•
Verses" was condemned as blas- invited Shalynn to Los Angeles for,
phemous toward Islam . "He's a a bit part in his show. "MQRI usual-;
complete stranger to me now and ly doesn't even send . me to.
the marriage is really, really over," Batesville and that's only 30 miles!
Wiggins told the Sunday Express away," she told People lnallazine. :
. newspaper of London. Wiggins,
•
who said she moved to the United
States in July 1989 because she
RAPE CONTROVERSY:;
could not cope with lhe tight secu- French Culture Minister Jac~~
. rity around Rushdie, told the news- Lang and director Jean-Paul Rap-'
paper her husband had become peneau have lined up with actor;
"very, very depressed."
Gerard 'Depardieu in the contrO-~
verr. over remarks about rapeREYNOLDS GOING TO attributed
to him in Time maga..:
REAL EVENING SHADE: Burt zine. Depardieu
was quoted as say-•
Reynolds plays a small,- town ·ing he participated in the frrst o6
Arkansas football co.ach in his many gang rapes ~t the age of 9,:
"Evening 'Sltade" sitcom and in
it normal behavior in his;
real life h.e will be going to calling
neighborhood.
•
'Evening shade, Ark., population
400, in May to speak at the high
•
school's climmencement Shalynn
ROMANCE REVEALED :Country singer Randy Travis iS:
finally talking about his long-run-:
ning romance with his manager Lib Hatcher, as a way of squelch ~
ing tabloid rumors that he wa(
homosexual.
The couple liveS"
Gene Esbenshade, National
together
on
a farm outsii!C:
Grange Youth Agriculturalist, from
Ashland, will be the feature weak- Nashville, Tenn., but had steadfast-:
ef at the Meigs County G·range ly denied that they had anythin~
Banquet to be held April4 at 7:15 other than a business relationshiP:
p.m. at the .Salisbury Elen:'entary for the J!ast 12 years because of.'
their. age dlfferenc~- she's 12:
School.
Entert!linment will be Kendra years older than Travts, 31. ''In the.
Ward Bentz and Bob Bentz on the beginnin.g, with Lib defll!itely older
than me, I just didn't know how u&gt;
dulcimer !lnd guitar,
Tickets may be purchased for handle that in the press," TraviS:
the banquet from $fange masters, told The,Washington Post. "We'vePatty Dyer, Ziba Midkiff, Bill Rad- always denied it because it seemOO:
ford and Norman Will. Tickets are like lhe easiest way out at the time.
also available from Opal Dyer, But it turned around on us. When
Helen Quivey and Rosalie Story,
you lie, it usually comes back to
Tickets must be purchased by you and I guess that's just proof of
it.
March 31.

Pick 3:776
Pick 4: 1566
Cards : 3-H; Q·C;
J.D; J.S

On page4

•

People in the news

Ohio Lottery

GAHS, Meigs
.game called .
by darkness

Holter, Eleanor Smith, Jeanette
Thomas and Mary Yost.
•
The delicious buffet luncheon
was enjoyed at tables decorated !
with patriotic colored floral ~
arrangements from lhe Middleport :
Flower Shop and clccorative fans ~
which were given as favors. ;.
Hostesses were Mar)' Skinner, .
Maria Foster, Phyllis. Hackel, Sue ,,
Harger, K.aren Werry and Pat •
Holter.
· •
The April meeting will lie held l
at the home of Margaret Belle :
Weber. ·
~ ~

·THE MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST
WELCOMES YOU
•
to .our annual observance of the

When the blood has been
applied to our heart,
Then we may partake of God's
meat and bread;
We can not cat only part of the
Word,
Dut by every word, we're nourished and fed,

''

as treasurer. Frank was then e!C(ted
to three ~plcte tenDs as treasltlef
before resigning to run for Meigs
County Auditor. After serving a
term in that office, Frank served for
one year as a coon bailiff for thenCommon Pleas Judge· Charles
Knight. In 1984, 'Fran~\ defeated
Democratic Sheriff James Proffitt,
and in 1988, he was defeated by
Democrat James Soulsby. Frank
. pointed out that Collins was
appointed by the central committee
to replace him when he took over
the Auditor's office.
"It's interesting to see how
things that go around come ·t ack
around again," Frank said.
The function of the treasurer's
offiCe has not chanr.cJ, Frank said
Mon«&lt;ay, but lhe daily operation of
the office has changed dramatically
since the advent of l,he computer
age. Work that Frank himself did in
lhe 1960's .is now done by his staff
· on the office computer system.
Posting and balancing are both
done by computer now, Frank said,
freeing up both his time and that of
his staff.
"I'm not a changer," was
Frank's ~se when uked if the·
treasurer's office. st11ff would
remain ill pJace. Frank stated that
he planned on reialning all of his
starr. pointin1 out tbat Chief
Deputy Nancy Russell, who also
·served 11 Interim treasurer pric. to
his aJII!oinunent last week, was
originally hired by him during his
ftnt time or service IS treasurer.
The lreiiUrer's posllion will go
before the \'Olen In the Republican
Primary IICIIt May, and Prank said
on Monday that he would defmitely be a candidate for the position

once again.

"I'll be righl out there knocking
on doOrs," Frank said.

--·' ----

'

made in either situation. Scrubbers
woald necessitate sludge disposal
units along with the scrubbing unit
itself. Fuel-switching would force
boiler modifications and new ash
disposal systems at the .Gavin site,.
Lhota said.
.
However, he said, fuel switching seemed 19 be the most feasible
choice.
.
"From our'l!reliminarV studies,
fuel switching at Gavin would be
the least cost alternative, and we
must' choose the' least cost solution

or be subje~cted to disallowances
from PUCO and EERC (Federal
Energy Regulation Commission),"
l.bot!l said. .
.
Oiler, who spoke after Lhot!l,
denied Lhota 's claim that fuel
switching would be the company's
least expensive alternative.
"Bill said that fuel switching
would be the cheapest Would it?,"
he said. "After the lost !!IX dollars,
unemployment costs, and costs of ·
transportin~ the Western coal, I
Continued on page 10

Funding programs for village
housing~proj~cts discussed ,
By Cblrlene Hoeflich
LEVEE IMPROVEMENT
mandatory trash pickup service in
Sentinel News Stan
Mayor Hoffmim announced last lhe village. Mayor Hoffman reportAvailability of funding for hous- night that the Holzer Clinic has ed that be plans to confer with
ing, both new construct!on and . contributed $1,000 to the Middle- Roger Manley of the' Manley Trash
rehabilitation of existing structures, pon levee improvement project
Service about the matter before any
.was discussed at length at Monday
The $112,500 improvement pW: · action is taken by lhe village.
night's meeting of Middleport Vil- ject is ' expected to get underway ·
Read at lhe meeting was a letter
lage Council.
this spring. Of the total cost from Kenny Wig~ins, program
Held in conjunction with' the $7S,OOO; has J,leeJI ·made in grants . manager for the Me~gs County Lil·
meeting was a public liearing on ·from the Ohio De~~nt of Natu- tcr Contrpl. Wiggins noted that the
funding available through the raJ Resources, Dtvision of Water- 199.1 Clean Up Rural Ohio Week is .
Community Development J:)lock ways,'wliile the remaining $37,500 April2.1 through 27, with iha1 periGrant Program of the Ohio l)c,lpan- , must be provided in local funds or od also including Earth Day on
ment of Development
services, according 10 the mayor . . Ap,ril 21 and Arbor Day on April
Ma7.or Hoffman d~tailed for To date several businesses have 26,
Council five programs from which contributed to the project
Wiggins asked the village to
the villll$e may make application
The mayor repQrted that he and coordinate a special sprin$. cleanup
for housm~ funds includmg ones Councilman James Clatwonhy had week that week if pos~1ble. He,
involving JOb creation in housing, met with representatives from the however, noted that it probably will
rehabilitation of existing structures U. S. Corps' of Engineers and lhe not be possible to assign a litter
in tlll1eted areas, downtown revi- Ohio Department of Natural control· collection crew to the viitalizatton, rental rehabilit!ltion, and Respurces regarding both the levee !age as has been done in the past
a housing set-aside program.
project and the work to !!Ike care of since currently there are only nine
· The mayor rioted· that the pro- the 0hio Ri~r ba,nk erosion at the workers for the period that includes .
grams of home rebabilitatiun in tar- site of the sewage lagoons.
22 working. day.
'
~e~ areas and. downtown !CVitalMayor Hoffman said ·that it was
In conjunction with village picktzaaon programs are competiuve.
proposed that both projects get up or trash as has been ~ out
Middlepon' s housing specialist underway about the same time so in previous years, Mayor Hoffman
Jean Tf11ssell met lljith Council to that perhaps same time and money raised the question of what will be
talk' about several housing projects. can be saved since some ·of t~e done· with it once it is collected.
She talked about targeting the Fifth same m·aterials and equipment will Landfill costs are' now S40 or $45 a
Street .-ea near the old Betsy Ross be needed on both proJCCts.
truckload, he sai~, a~d the da.ily
building for demolition of existing
Again discussed at the meeting quota set for dumpmg IS now bemg
structures and construction of new was the possibility of implementing
· C011tlnued on paae 10
housing.
·
.
Mrs. Trussell said that there is
. available space for eight housing
siteS in that lll'e8- She talked about
demolition fund~ and site deveiOJ?ment funds which might be available, as well as essistan~ to low
STAMFORJ?, Conn; _ MemUnion memberS seeking a meet~
and middle income groups on lot be~s of the J!mted St~l~ork.ers ing Monday with Bradley and
purchase as well as some down . unton •COntinued dutrtbuu.ng . Strothotte were told by their
payment ·on the actUal home con- leaflets downtown ~ call l!ttention respective offices that the men
struction. ·
to. a h~ted labor dispute tn West were out of town, said Howard
The question of the property not :VorginUL
.
Scott, 11 ... ion representative.
being owned by the village, and the
The 40 un1on .mCJ!Ibers. the ~­
need for acquiring it as a first step, ond group to arnv!' m St!lmfiJn! m
as well as possible asbe~IOs in the three weeks, cia 1m I, 700 umo.n 'Dances With Wolves'
eld building was discussed by. :workers were locked oul of thetr
Council.
·
JO~s Nov. I at ~venswood Alu- tpp motion pictirre
Applications for most of the mmum Corp. m Ravenswood,
LOS ANGELES (UPI) - No
funds must be fil~ this spring, W.Va.
,
.
Western
had been 111111ed best picMrs. Trussell noted. The mayor,
The plant IS parttally owned by
ture
since
1931 - lhe fourth year ·
commending the housing specialist Charles ,Bradley, co-owner of S!BDthe
Academ~
of Motion Picture
for her work on securing project wich Partners. Inc ., and W11ly
Arts
and
Sctences
'11ve out the
. funding, noted that s~e has p.ut Strothotte, prestdent o~ CJ~ndon
Oscar·and
Amen
can Indians
through a revolving Joan plan Ltd., two Stamford mvestment
had
long
been
portrayed
as savages
which is e~tpected to be approved fmns. · . .
, by Hollyood .
• soon. He further reported that she . The un1on members, clad m ,
But' all that changed Monday
is puuing togelher a comprehensive . Jeans and work ~ts, ~ded o,ut
night.
housing rev~ization application. . !eaHets to workers 1n busmess SUits
Kevin Costner's tour de force
Again discussed was the rental ~n front of corporate office bui!d"Dances
With Wolves" dominated
rehabilitation program and possible mgs. The leaflets ~~use S~w1ch
funding for that. The program II;Dd ~larendon of destroymg the tbe 63rd Annual Academy Awards
. would provick usistance to owners h':'el~h~s of thousands ~f We~t with seven Oscars, including two
of rentalllf\its to upgrade property. ti.:!~n1a workers and the1r famt- of lhe most prestigious awards best picture and best director.

Steelworkers union continues to
call attention to labor dispute

HONORED • Linda Diddle, le~, and Sally
Caldwell, rltbt, were bo1ored on Suaday for
their efforts to honor tbose lei'Yin1ln the Persian Gulf War. Soutben HJab School Principal
Jim Adams pruenled eacll a plaque at a
.

.

''TIIankllivin&amp;ln Marcil" service lleld al lbe
school. Tile lwo womea, botb memben of tbe
Racine Emerpiley Squad, have tpearbeaded 11
least two evenllln lbe Racine commui!J for the
troops. (Sentinel Pilato bJ Qenala M. Wolfe)

.

•

.'

,I

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