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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.

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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.
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~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)

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111 Court Street
l'omeroy, Ohio

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DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS· MASON AREA
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Pomeroy-MiddltfiiDI'i. Ohio

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. Tuelday, March 26, 1881

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Jack Anderson.

~~~~~~~~ gn::d:.~;~~r ~~~~~cb&amp;~fi~:~

cial committee to do an autopsy on Mich., Dennis Deeoncini, D-Ariz..
,the remains r1 the Ethics Commit, John Glenn, D·Ohio, ana John
r:s:m~
lee's "Keating Five" investij!Biion. McCain, R-Aiiz. - were investipt·
~v
They would find that the operation ed for possible links between the
had been botched and that the inOIIey they received liom and the
ROBERT L, WINGETT
C.ABLENE HOEFLICH
wrong
medicine was given 10 the favors theY did for savings and ioan
l'ubllsber
General Mana1er
wrong Jlll!ients..
.
. own~r Char!es KeatinJ. W~en
Th~. fust w1tness m the post- Keaunll's Lmcoln Savmgs and
PAT WHITEHEAD
mortem inquiry should 'be the Loan collapsed, the bailout priee ro
Aulstanl Publllber/ Colltroller
Ethics Commitlee Special Counsel the lallpayers was almost $3 bilRobert Bennetl As a fonncr ama- lion. ·
·
A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally P res s
teur boxer, Bennett does not pull, · BeMell took hw'ldreds 'of hours
Association a nd, the ;American Newspaper Publishers Association.
: . punches. But even· his- friends of depositiOIIS and reviewCd thou,
' aclcnewledge that his case was sac- sands of pages of documents and
LETTERS OF OP!NlON are welcome. They should be less thari 300
·I
riticed for the sake of keeping the developed a crystjll-clear view of
words long. All letters are subject to editing and must b' signed with
peace among the members of the the facts that scarcely cbangecJ over
name, address and telephone number. No unsigned letter s wUl be pubexclusive
Senate club.
the months. In Benneu's mind, the
lis hed. Letter s should be In good taste, addressing Issues, not personall·
ties.
•
Bennett presented his case with race fur most culpllble shaped up
ferocity, and now be has a ptivate with Cranston to win, DI:Conci11i to
story that he would probably reveal place and Riegle to show.
. ·only if compelled to lestify about
Cranston's mistake was the
how the Keating Five investigation bnizenness with which he ·solicited
.was politicized; Since the Ethics campaign contributions from Keat·
Committ~e inquiry began 14 ing and then performed favors for
months and $2 million ago, there him, Including pressuring federal·
. By GREG HENDERSON
•
.
have been two dramas unfolding • thrift regulators to lake it easy on
WA~HINGTON. ({,JPI) - Tbe Supreme Coun agreed ~on.day to one before a JiveC-SPAN &amp;udienee· Lincoln. Keating gave nearly $1
dec1de 1f health warmngs required on all c1gareue packs smce 1966 · and the other when the cameras million to Cransion's _political
absolve tobacco companies from being sued for allegedly failing to were turned off.
causes.
inform the public about smolcipg risks. .
The coun will hear arguments"next term on whether the federal
Cigarette Labeling and Advenising Act protects cigarette makers from
facing mcst civil suits based on false or misleading adverusing over the
past 25 years. ·
The case s&amp;emmed fro111 a decision of the 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of
I
•
Appeals. ·It found that while the survivors of a lung cancer victim, who
died after smoking for 40 years, could sue (or damage caused.by smoking
prior to 1?66. theycould not sue for damages i!tcurred after Congress
required warnings on cigarette packs that smoking "may be hazardous to
your .health."
·
.
A federal district court in New Jersey awarded the survivors of Rose
Cipollone $400,000 from the tobacco company Liggeu Group Inc. for its
·'
failure to notify consumers of the health risks of smoking through the end
of 1965. But the COurt said they were not entidcd to damages(or alleged
misleading advenising from 1966 through ·1982, when one of Cipollone's
cancerous lungs was removed.
·
· Cipollone's survivors contend the 1,966 waniings - which now have
been strengthened - "did not adcqnate(y convey the nature or extent of
the health risks of smolting," and claim tobacco companies remain llable
because they continued fO!' years to dispule·medical evidente of the dan·
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gers of smoking ''10 convince the public that a controversy existed."
Cipollone's son asked the high court to accept the appeal, noting that
the New Jersey supreme court and other state cciurts have allowed state
common law suits alleging damQge from cigarette makers since i 966
while die 3rd Circuit. and oiher federal courts have ruled lhat Con~
,.. - ..:=:?" --=---""::~~---oudawcd such tort acuons.
·
"If a plaintiff brings a state law-based product liability action against a
•
cigarette manufacturer in federal court in New Jersey, all post-1965
claims premised on the inadequacy of the warnings, the manufacturers'
advenising JDCtices or intentional wrongdoing are barred,' ' · an auorney
for Cipollone's son wrote the high courL "If the same plaintiff were to
bring an idcntical ·lawsuit in state court in New Jersey, none of lhese
claims would be barred."
·
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Liggelt Group of Delaware, joined by 10bacco companies Philip Mor·
ris Inc. of Virginia and Loew's Theatres Inc. of New YOrk, also asked the
high coun 10 accept the case and resolve il!e dispute. They.nOied there are
- 4...
at least 45 lawsuus pending against cigarette manufacturers on similar
claims in state and federal courts in 12 states, many subject to differing
legal standards.
·
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''This court's guidance is needed to preserVe the uniformity of federal
law," the IObacco firms wrote.
~!:b.

Houston tops Chicago 100-90
.to end Bulls' win streak at 26

.Page--2-The Dally ~nUnel

Keating Five investigation:.a post-mortem.. . ·

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·The· Daily

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Court to decide·issue

and Dak VanAtta ·

out, his final tawdry gambit was 10 . Glenn when the evidence showed
try to drag down his colleague they had done nothing unethical.
McCain. He believed that victory The Democrats found that an
lay in fuzzing the lines that differ- alarming proposition because
enlialed the conduf of each of 11te · McCain was the only Republican
five.
on the dootet. The Democrats
~egle's p~blems -~led ~i&gt;~ quickly seized McCain; a former
to mcon~islenc~s and 1mplaus1bil1- Vietnam prisoner of war, as a
ties. He oudined abOut 20 contacts . human shield'to teep a bipartisan
· with Keating and his associates, but coloration 10 the committee's
then got amnesia about what hap- investigation at least until after the .
pened at those meetings, including November 1992 e1ectioo.
forgetting whether anyone talked
When the eommittee reQsed its
about money at a Jci:y meeting one verdict, Vice Chairman Warren
month before all five senators sat Rudman, R-N.~. gave an Aeade-'
down with federal regulators 10 talk my Award-winning performance
to them (some say to lean on them) showing his indipation It the sugabout the Keating case.
gestion that there was anything parWhen Bennett was fmished lay- tisan ahoutthe fmdings. Comnuaee
· ing out the damning evidence for Chairman Howell Heflin, D·Aia.,
the EthicS Committee, ther voted . disappointed the many Anlericans
to send Cranston iP the ful Senate . who !lad WJIIChed the helrings and
for possible m.;ipliliiii'Y action. But had hoped' that he WljS the Sen.
the remaining. four gOt off with let- Sam Ervin ot this collgre~sional
1ers and a sliding scale of criticism.
Watergate. Both men may have
Sources told our associate Tim been Southerners, but Heflin never
Warner that Benoett has privately left any doubt lhat he Was a Demoassailed committee '!lemb~rs for crat ftrst and a public servant secnot cutting loose McCam and ond. ·

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WiLLie aND Jose

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: O.k lahoma, Stanford record
victories ·in NIT semifinals ·

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LOOKS FOR TEAMMATE· The L.A. Lak·
en• James Worthy (rlabt) keeps the baH away
l'rom Sacramento defender Lionel Simmons
willie looldnR lor an open teammate In the first

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Airlines face a _continuing tailspin_--"·R_o_be_rt_m_alt_er........'S

Today in history
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By United Press lnternatiolllll
Today is Tuesday, March 26, the 85th day of 1991 with 280 to follow.
The moon is waxing, moving toward its full phase.
The moming stars are Venus, Mars and Saturn. · · .
.
The evening stars are Mercury and Jupiter.
. Those born on this date _in history are lli!der the sign of Aries. They
mclude poet Roben Frost m 1874: playwnght Tennessee Williams in
1911; French composer-conducror Pierre Boulez in 192S (age 66)· aCtors
Sterling Hayden in 1916, Leonard Nimoy in 1931 (age 60), Alan Min in
1934 (age 57) ,and Jam~ Caan in 1939 (118C 52): .Supreme Court Justice
Sandra Day 0 Connor m 1930 (age 61); author Erica Jong ,in 1942 (age
49); and singer Diana Ross in 1944 (age 47).
·

Berry's World

HONOLULU (NEA) - The . nationwide celebrity status during
depanment time for. the Hawaiian the 1980s' as a management wizard
Airlines flight to the South Pacific in a pair of high-visibility e~ecuhas come and gone, but the aircraft tive positions.
remains immobile. Inside the plmie,
He is Peter V. Ueberroth, a
both passengers and flight atten· widely acclaim~;d, charismatic,
dants struggle with a bizarre pat- self-made millionaire who was the
tern of seat assignments.
chief organizer of the successful
Scores of seats are empty while · Olympic Games in Los Angeles in
others have two or three passengers the summer of 19&amp;4, and then the
assigned to occupy them. InSiead of commission11r of Major League
alleviating the chaos, a haJ.lless Baseball.
·
cabin crew contributes to u by
When Uebsrroth, his brother
moving people to seats already John and a third ·man, 1. Thomas
reserved for others.
· 1 Talbot, purchased a 51 percent
Outside the plane, mechanics interest 1n thj: airline in 1989, it
are belatedly cbanging a falilty tire. was notorious for sloppy operaAlthough the aircraft was on the lions, alienated employees, shabby
round for hours, the defective aircraft and haphazard mainte-·
equipment went unnoticed until nance. .
.
jusc before depanure lime because
Subsequent Improvements have ·
nobody coriducted a routine inspec· been modest at best and die compalion.
.
ny's stock has lost more than half
News of Hawaiian Airlines' of its value, plummeting from $22
problems seldom reaches the U$. • per share 10 lesss than $10.
Mainland, but the canier's plight is
But Northwest, burdened by
emblematic of an industry in dis· extraordinarily high debt in 1989, .
tress. Moreover, one of the compa- was forced to sell 49 percent of
ny's principal owners attait:tcd

itself to another foreign Birline, the
Ne!herlands-based KLM, in retum
for $400 miUion.
Northwest, bowever, is in better '
financial condition than several
other domestic airlines. Continenllil, which earlier sold almost 17
percent of itself to Scandinavia·
based SAS, now has sought court
protection against its creditors
under the federal hant...~tcy code.
Pan Am, whici\~'has filed a
bankruptcy petilio'n in federal
court, recently announced that it
wiU slash service and eliminate the
jobs o£4,000employees. Bankruptcy prQtection failed 10 save Eas!Cm
Airlines, which went out of business earlier this year.
Trans World Airlines recendy
defaulted on $75.5 million worth of
payments. of bondholders, explain·
mg that the money was needed to
keep the company operating at a
time when it is "facing severe ,
financial diffiCulties." .
Moreover, Continental, Pan Am
and TWA have been forced 10 sell
once-prized intem~tional routes io

.stronger carriers 10 generate cash
despera&amp;ely needed to remain flying,
•
ReP,onal airlines, in addition 10
Hawaiian, Iiese&amp; by fmancial strain
include Midway and America
West. Although Rawaiian I'Cmains
the largest carrier in a state ~here
v!rWally all inter-island tnivel is by .
aJt,•many passengers have 'switched
to archrival Aloha AirtinCs because
.of its reputation for betler service. '
The Industry's ansuish has produced far more than embarrassment
for Uebertoth or inconvenience for
frequent· flyers: Tens of thousands
of airline employees nationwide
have lose their jobs and many more
face the threat of dismissal in an
economic stakeout of awesome
proponions.
,
~n R. Shugnie Jr., the cowt·
appointed bankruptcy truslee who
made .a bold but vain attempt to
rescue Eastern, notes that few peo·
pie "fully understand ·the scope of
this economic: sOcial and human
tragedy.~

•

With new Census data just many Americans. A Time.magaissued, let us ruminale about the zinc cover SID!)! headline last
clemographic state of the' union. Big read, "What Wiii.The U.S~ Be ilcc
things .are happening . We are When Whites Are No Longer In
The Ma. rity'?"
changed forever.
In 1rso the non-Anglos comAmericans used to brag, "We
prised
about .20 percent of the
come from ev~here." That was
American total. By 1990 it had
not true thep. It IS how.
The new Census numbers show jumped to 2~ percent Ab\lost suredramatic gains for minorities. Most ly the trend will continue, at least
come from places that-only few fora while.
Many of the worriers are conAmericans hailed from until recently.
.
'
cerned lhat America will lose its
During the decade of 1980-90 European heritage and culture, endtbe number of Asian-Americans ing up 81 a Third World melange.
soared b)' 108 percent!' Americans A harsh bumJlft' sti., aJII?CIIed in
of Hispa11ic origin climbed by 53 the Miami are&amp;' It the he1ght of the
percent! The black increase was Cuban immigration: "Will the last
lela, but still a solid 13 percent. American please turn out the
The precise rise in people from lights."
Tbe concerns are understand·
Moslem II'alions is. unknown, but
able.
People everyw,here want to
believed to be quite substanlial.
papetuall:
their culture.
·
But amona whites - that is, in
A
look
at
some
Census
facts
·
CeJISUI ~laaco, MNon-Hispanic
.
may
ease
the~Americl
will
wbi&amp;ea, alao sometimes called
indeed
be
changmg,
but
probably
Mwhi&amp;ea of European descent" or
.
MAnglos" - the increase w81 only only slowly.
And a strong case can be riutde
111out 4 pcn;enL
.
.
that the cbange will be for the bet·
The~ trends are unsettling to
.· ...

lear

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C) 1991 by NEA, ""'

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"Don't tell me, let me guess- there 's more
bad news from Klrkuk and Basra?' ~ '

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Amenca will retain a European~escenl majority for a vl.lry long
ume. Data from Census projections
show that in the year 2080 there
would still be an Anglo majority of
about 5S percenL
·
Even more likely is lhat by then
A .
mencans will think less about
things lite "dominant pluralities."
For a new folic is a-borning and aforming. '
·
There are complaints about
immigratiOn, but perftapa a bigger
agent,of cbange is marriage. New-

As.ian-Americans out-marry; that's
ago,
and nsmg. The black rale is only
bo
~, u1 3 percent of 4 percent, bui
It s up many-fold from about 0.5
percent.
·
People coming from e.verywhere. Everyone marrying everyo~e .. lt's changing America. How
dtd 1.t happen? Is it just destiny?
Can 11 wort? Can ,...nnle really get
,.......
along?
•
It isn't easy. There's tension and
tragedy. People get upset. But it
can ' work. Ask Schwarzkopf
ft~:':C. :.~ng cild·~!"thers. ~he!her his many-splendored sol·
a sc
players WI out dien wqre able 10 Pll it together.
.
orecard.
.
Remember
this:
Immigr&amp;l!ts
do
Among the 75 percent of Amen- not come 10 change Ameri : the '
cans ~ ~ of EUIO(Ie&amp;R descent, ' come to share in the A ca, 1 Y ·
the ranty of lrllttmlrrllge has now dreani B
.
m~r can .
become a aimmonplllce. About 110 shape.it becoming P8Jt. of It, tbey
pe~t of,Iralian-Americans and · thiJig uniqV: :e~amg
!'OJish..Americans are llf?W many- . nation.
, • wu
mg exopmously. (Look 11 up.) The
There is a tn)'Biica1 uali
11.
Jewish intermarriage rate has ll is filling IDd it is:!,..%-: t,
rea:hed about .SO peR)enL
thai tho leader of the world I n
be
. Among non-Anglos, about one- u1ated by people frOm
third of Hispanic-Americans and deac:endDd from every~
ter.

By TOM WITHERS
UPI Sports Writer
NEW YORK (UPI) -Colorado
and Oklahoma traveled across twothirds of the country to play basket·
ball and the result was the same as
it's been since 1982. ·
Jeff Webster s~ored 24 po'ints
and· Kermit Holmes added 17
points and 16 rebounds Monday
night and Oklahoma rallied from a
14-point deficit in the second hal(
for an·88·78 viCtory over Colorado
in the semifinals of the National
Invitation Tournament at Madison
Square Garden. The win was the
Sooners' 24th straight over the
Buffaloes.
Oklahoma, 20-14, will meet
Stanford in Wednesday night's
final . The Cardinal defeated Massasachuseus 73-71 in their semifinal miiiChup.
The Buffaloes, who haven't
beaten the Sooners since Jan. 13,
1982 when they won in Boulder,
built a 13-point halftime lead and
were in command with a 62-48
advantage and 13:06 remaining.
"I thou$ht.we had control of the
game," said Colorado head coach
Joe Harrington. "But we went cold
and they got hot."
.
Colorado had built its lead
behind Shaun Vandiver's 19 firsthalf points and by sinking five
three-pointers in .the opening half.
But the Buffaloes made jusc 12 of
41 shots from the field in the sec·
ond half and were outscored 55-32
by the Sooners, who· sank 15 of
their 20 second-half field goal
attempts.
·
"I guess they just think we're a
superior team," said Oklahoma

The Daily Sentinel
(\JSPIIIU. .l
A lllololooo ol ModtloMilla, ....

Mixing it up in·America_.. ----;---_Be_n_Watt:.=.::.:..en:.:..:be~rg
IWJCe. tl_le rate.of a generation

S:

\v

·:'.:i
C:

'

•

drove the lane all evening.
By Ualted Pt.- Jaterudollal
The Bulls' last loss It C~o Stadium eame 111
Bill Cartwriaht Milt out of his way 10 be nice to ·
Dec.
8 against Portland. They are now 31-4 at home.
Hakeem Olajuwon before Monday niah~~e
The
Bulls charJed to pull within £our with just
between the Chlcqo Buill and the Houston
.
under
three
minutes left 10 the J&amp;me,. bringing the
Bulls then extended the same hospitality to
• theThe
noisy
Chicago
6lllllam crowd to IS feet, wbich many
lfflclcds, giving them a 100-90 victory, their 13th
·times
this
year
11161'oUowed with the visiting team
ina row.
,
crwnbling.
But
Floyd nailed a three-pointer and hit
The lou ended the Bulls' franchise record 26four of four free tluows down the stretch 10 preserve
game home wlnnln.lltlelk.
ihewin.
·
·
·'
Ho1111on aliO dei'CIIiecl dte Bulla in their only other
''We haven't allowed that to happen, and we
meedq lhiiiiiOIIIin, 114-9211 The Summit on Jan. 3,'
don't get caught with what's happenin&amp; with the .
Chicqo's wont loa dlis year, II W81 thai game in
tans," Floyd said. 'We know what we have 10 do on
whida a Cartwright elbow broke Olajuwpn' s riJhl
the court, and we always have somebody step up and
eye lOCket and put the AU-Star cemer out of acnon
do the job."
for ~Y two months.
In other games, the LD~Ies Clippers stUnned ..
o•won .. ex~ no bitterness about the Phoenix
106-94, Detroit
Denver 118-94, the : "
· incident, and Cartwri&amp;bt appiuached him prior 10 the
L.A . Laters stopped Sacramento 99-89, Utah ·
game.
knqcked off Milwaukee 109-98, Orlando held off
"He said he really appreciated the way I handled
Golden State US-106 and Washington defr,ated New
myself wid! the press, and it was good to see me
Jersey 113-106.
bllck,'' Olajuwon said. "I thint that was very nice of
him. tt
Clippers 106, Suns 94 · ·At Los Angeles, Charles
Howiton outscored the Bulls 29-14 in the second
Smith acored 19 of his 25 points in the ftrst hal£ and
q~ td lead S1-42 II balftime, then pulled ahead
Ron Harper added 19, sparking the Clippers and
by 81 ni111y as 17 in the third quarter.
. ·
snapping the Suns' eight-game road winrung streak.
"The streak continues," said Rockets guard
Kevin Johnson scored 22 for Phoenix.
.
,·
Sleepy Floyd, who .acored 12 r1 bis 21 in the fJDal
Pl1tons 118, Nunets 94 ·At Denver, Jame$.'
quarter. "We're playing well. There's no reason for . ' Edwards scored a season-high 32 points and Vinnie
us to stop.
·
JohDIOII added 27 to help ihe Pistons halt a three''We llhoelced 'em," Floyd said. "I thint a lot of
gll!le skid. The Pistons acored 70 points in die sec· .
people are going 10 wate up in the morning and read
ond half and shot 57.7 percent from the field, sending
the paper lhintina we lost. They're going to be very
the NUJICIS 10 their seventh consecutive loss. .
.
IUfllrised ''
Llllaen 99, Klnp 89 • At Sacramento, Cahf.,kenny Sm1th scored 25 points, whtle the th1rd
Mqic 1ohnson recorded his 11th triple double or the·
auan1 in the Rocket trio,'Vemon Maxwell,,bad 19.
ICil!IOD and James Worthy scored 26 points to power
O~ulYOII fmished w!th 13 points and 16 rebounds. ·
the Laken to their 19th win in 22 games. Sacramen·
1be Roclcets remained two games in baclt of Utah
to, which lost its fifth straight, was led by Lionel
in the Midwest Division but moved one-half game
Simmons' 25 points.
within idle San Antonio for second plllce.
1
. Jill 109 Bucks 98 • At Salt Lalce City, Karl ~­
"Houston showed why it is the hottest team in the
one scored 37 points and pulled down 15 rebounds to
league,'.:__$1ld. Chlcaao head .coach Phil Jackson, .- carry the Jazz td their fourth straight vic10ry. Dale
whose team stall owns the NBA's best record at 51ElliS Jed the Buclcs with 25 points and Jay Humphries . •
17. "They have quietness, strengdl, rebounding, and
added 22.
.
they play tough clefense. It was a tcnous situation for
· Ma11lc 115, Warriors 106 - At Orlando, Fla.,
us every lime down the Door."
.
·
scou Skiles scored 13 of his 31 points in the fourth
Michael Jordan, blullng the flu, led all scorers
quart1:1 and got support from Otis Smith and Dennis
with 34. He even get hit with a technical, along with
Scott down the stretch to lead the Magic. Smith
Maxwell, after the twO exchanged words and shoves
scored nine of his 16 points in the· final period and
in the final quarter.
.
Scott added seven points in the ftnall2 minules.
.
"It was 1 factor, no queslioo," Jackson said of
Dullea 113, Nets 106 • At Landover, Md., John
Jordan's illness. "I just don'tlhinlc Michael had the
Williams tallied season highs with 24 points and nine
energy he USIIIIly has."
.
uslsts to hand the Nets their 16th consecutive road
The next highest scorer for Chicago was B.J.
defeat. Harvey Grant added 20 points and nine
Armstrong with 13. Bulls center Bill Cartwrighi was
rebounds 10 help the Bullets sustain their three-game
held 10 six points on 2-of-9 shooting, and the Rockets
wiMing streak.

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lll

Raiders.sign·Lott to two~year pact

B:r ,JEII'J HASEN
we were in ttie six- 10 eight-point
UPI
Sports Writer
range with five minules 10 go we'd
LOS
ANGELES
(UPI) ,- Ronknew if we could stay close they win," said Otlahoma head coach
BiUy Tubbs. "And it turned out to nie Loll left the San Francisco
would help us win."
49en Monclay, saying he bad no
Vandiver led the Buffaloes, 18- be exactly thaL"
Colorado will play Mas- animosity toward the team he
14, with 31 PQints and Stevie Wise
had 18. Wise ttnished 5 of 23 from sachusetts in Wednesday's third· helped win four S\IJICf Bowls, and
signe,d a two-year·non-guar~~~ICed
the field, mlsaing several uncon- place game prior io the fmal.
ICSied shots when the Sonnen were-,
Harrington; who in his first year contract with the Los Angeles
making their comebeck.
in Boulder led the Buffaloes to Raidera.
Wise scored the Buffaloes' first their fust postseason· tournamen1
'
eight points of the second half as since 1969, is pleased wilh the proColorado built a 54-40 lead with gram's development.
.
16:531eft.
~ ·1 feel real
about our sea, Two baskets by Vandiver and son but I don t feel good about-·
one by Wise matched Colorado's tonight," he said. "We played two
biggest lead of the game at 62-48 seperate halves and just couldn't
but Oklahoma used a 12·2 run , . hold on. We've done a lot with the
By MIKE RABUN
capped by-tl!ree straight baskets team in a short period of time.
UPISporta Writer
from reserve Roland Ware, to .pull We'll beat Olclahoma some day. I
Dale
Brown . usually has no
within 64-60 with 9:29 ren'Uiininll.
know it, Billy knows it It will happroblem recognizing a basketball
Vandiver hit two shots ins1de pen sometime."
but committed his third and fourth
Maybe so, but they've been say· player when he sees one, at;~d he
fouls on the Sooners' next two pos- ing that at Colorado for nine years w81 sure he had I)IOtted one six
~•
It an American military
sessions and Webster hit four
now,
Stanford
73,UMBI5
71
mstallabon
in Gcnnany.
.
straight free throws to pull the
Andrew
Vlahov
spent
the
month
The
Louisiana
Stale
head
coach
Sooners within 66·64 wllh 8:02
or January doing nolhing else but hlld SlOpped by to fve a biW.bllll
lefL
House Guest hit one free throw practicing free throws and Monday clinic, and he noticed a rowering
for Colorado but Webster hit a fol- night those hours of repetition paid fellow who perfectly lit the mold of
ff.
a college canter.
low shot and Holmes nailed a fall"What's your 111111e, soldier?"
away jumper 10 give the Sooners 0 Vlabov, a 59 percent free throw
their first lead since 4-2 at 68-67 shooter, made all 12 of his free Bl!lwn asted.
1hrow attempts, scored 20 points
"Well, air," the young man
with 5:20 to .play.
.
"I wasn't thinking about the and added 11 rebounds and eight replied wid! some hesitation. "I'm
stteak," said Vandiver, who added assists to lead the Stanford Caidi· not a soldier. I'm only 13 years
11 rebounds. "I was just thinlcing nat 10. a 73· 71 victorv over Mas- old."
"Oh," Brown said. "Could ):OU
about a game had to be won and sachusens in the sem(finals of the
introduce me 10 your falher'l"
playing the best we can. A lot can National Invitation Toumamenl
Adam Keefe and Vlahov sccred
That story, now pan of LSU
be said about the strealc, talting in
the piess and swff. But when you 28 of Stanford's 38 second-half basketball lore, serves II. the llpell·
get down to the .facts and the facts points and helped the Cardinal con- lng chapter in the history of
are·when we got down to five min- trol the inside by combining for 21 Shlquille O'Neal. 1
During the intervening six
utes it got to be nut-cracker time, rebounds as the Cardinal held a 4231
advantage
on
die
boards.
yean,
the youngster who wu noc
we cracked. We couldn't withstand
Stanford,
19-13,
will
meet
the
old
enough
to b~ a aoldier has
their run.''
winner
of
Monday's
leCOIId
semifibeeome
one
_
g
[;the most dominat·
Ware came o£f the bench to add
nat
between
Oklahoma
and
Coling
players
fii'COIIege
aporu and '
l5 for the Sooners, who sealed the
orado
in
Wednesday's
fmal.
Moriday
was
named
collep
blslcel·
victory from the free throw line,
Vlahov, a semor from Perth bill's Player of the Year by United
mating 13 of 16 in the last 3:02.
"I told my 1eam at halftime, if Australia, injured his right ankle in Prelllnlllmational.
a December 'ame against North
"There Ia no queadon thai he is
SEOAL-TVC .all-star Carolina and 10 Janlllll'¥ hlld bone the belt big man in the country,"
spurs removed. At the ume he was Arizona head coach Lute Olaon
game set for Thesday expected to miss the rest of the sea- said after see~ O'Neal play this
son but made his retum at the Btart seilion. ,"And its not even closo•."
·
O'Neal, whose father ,wu staThe top senior basketball plar· of the NIT.
"He's nota gre11 foul shooter," tionejl in Germany, came to LSU '
ers from the Southeastern Oh10
Athletic League and the Tri-Valley said Stanford bead coach Mite by way of San :Anlllllio. Texas. He
.Conference will compete in the Montgomery. "He's a bit inconsis- stood about 6-root-Siho day Brown
· sixth annual all-star doubleheader tent but when he gat hun In Jan- first saw him and these days he
between the conferences·redly at 6 uary he shot foul shots by the num· 'measures 7-1 and weiJhs in the
p.m. at Alexander High School bers everyday becMise he was rest- nelahborhod or 300 pounds
near Alblny •
ing his ant! e. •'
clctJe!ldlnl on the time of day and
The girb' game wiU start at 6:30
Vlabov waC;.~~ down the the 11Zt1 of his IIIDillecea&amp; meal
p.m., and the boys' coolest will streiCh for the
· , scorina 10 . . The J?W •••lic:a llbow lhlt dl!r·
Btart II 8 p.m. The cloors will open points in the last six minutes and . ma his JUit-cOIIIplered sophomore
at 5:30 p.m., and admission is $3 i:omin&amp; up with biJ reboundJ.
season he averqed 27.6 POintll and
for alta IDd $2 for IIUdcnts.
Bgt he mlde Ilia biggest imJIICI 14.7 reboundla pmo. 110 1lllde 63
· In the girls'
LDgan boss from the foul line.
percent of hi1 field lOll llaemPII
Ralpb Tayl« wiD held the SEOAL
"llhinlt being a uenlor playln* ~ad blocked 140 ibotl, ·wbfch
team, and Federal Hocking pilot with my e~ helped a JOt.'
broke the Soulhoa8'n Conference
Klnl Chadwell will ·lead the TVC said Vlabov. "!.don't consider record of 11 S be set durlna his
squad. The boys' teams will lie myself a great
throw lhooter · freshman .son.
g,rldecl by Jackson's Tol!y Bom- ·but I thin\ the more I shoot the
A tnee Injury O'Neal rufferecl
hont (SEOAL) .S Federal Hoclc- more heemiO mate."
,
near the end of the campalan
ina's Dennis Itonkala ('I'VC).
The Minutemen, who won their reiulred In LSU'1 early exit fnim
Featured In the air11' pmc will three N~ar.ames by 1 total of 9 !be SBC llltl NCAA ~~~.
!le Gallia Academy's Jeanifer IIOiDII,
eel bact in the second but ditd not dim the overpowerlnJ
YOUIIg on tho SE.OAL team and half but feU shtxt and finished the perfannancel he put on during the
Meigs M8raudera Missy Nelson yell' 20- 12.
yw.
and Jeanlfer Tarlor on the TVC
Desbon Win gate added ela ht
His 29 ooiatllpilllt Arizona in
~quad. Tllo ~ contest will aoe
reboundl for the Cardinal, who a 92-82 C.SU victory prompted
the Academy a Chad Neal, Rob 1lllde 20 of their 26 free throwL
Ollon'1 remart. O'Neal followed
Slticlmore, Ryu Smith and Josh
Hamer Willia'lhs led five Min· wltb a 53-point sbow IJalnst
WHiiama on the SBOAL crew•
(See NIT on Pap 4)
~ S~ and scored It least
guard Terry Evans who scored II
of his 16 points in the fmal4 :52. "!

'-ood

Lott, a 31-year-dd with silspect Lott, who will move from free
knees, reponedly will earn $1.2 safety to strong safety. "BU\growmillion per season, providing he ing up as a kid, I always emulated
makes the Raiders. The 49ers the Jaclc Tatums, the George Atkinallo~ . Lott to get away when they sons, the great safeties that have
left him unprotected on their Plan won the silver and black."
- Loti broke in with the 49ers 10
B free agent list.
years
ago as a cornerback before
"It's going to be a challenge,
switching
to free safety, and will
not only to play a new position, bul
to wear the silver and blact,'' said play strong safety for lhe Raidcn.
Lou was in a prolongued con·
tract dispute with 49ers last season
and did not sign a new deal until
well into tho season. The $1 mil• ..
lion-plus contract that be finally
signed would've made him the
hi~ paid defensive bact in NFL
thiS season, but Lou wanted a con30 points 10 times during the SEC tract for 1992 if he wu 10 return 10

LSU's O'Neal riamed
UPI's top college eager

season
·
As his fame grew, he became a

"I think Mr. (Ed) DeBartolo
magnet for those who felt they (the team owner) and (general
could add a little polish to O'Neal's manag~r) Carmen Policy underalready fearsome game. Bill Wal· · stood the situation," Lou iaid.
ton 811(1 Kareem Abdui·Jibbar hav.e "They tnew I wanted to play as
stopped off in Baton Rou$e to long as I can. They gave me their
demonstrate a few professional blessing. They did what they had 10
do for their oraanization. I think
moves.
"They gave me some poinlers," the did the ri ht thin ."
·
~tt,
the
4f:rs•
~-time
leader
.
O'Neal said of two of the most
in
interceptions,
interception
~urn
famous cenlers in basketball history. "But it's not like they -have yards and interceptions for touch- ·
. downs, said he made his clecision
changecJ my game."
·
It is O'Neal's attiwde as much
(See L0TT on Pa}lt 4)
as his talents that have caught the
attention of his opponents and the
professional scouts that show up
SPRING VAlli Y CIN!MA
every time he steps On the ooun.
446 4J/4
"He is almosl oblivious 10 pressures," Brown said. "I'd like to
steal some of his traits. The media
doem't agitate him. Referees don't
agita&amp;e him."
•
O'Neal's next majot decision
involves either staying at LSU for
at least one more season or moving
on to the NBA, where he should
become an ioatanl force for the fortunate team that pays him the miilions he will be able to demand.
His choice is being anxiously
awaited bf. thoe with the money.
"I cant tate my eyes off him,"
Golden Stale head coach Don Netson said. "I !hint I'm in Jove."

••

WHAT IS TIE EAINED INCOME C'-IT AND HOW

DO I QUAWY FOI In

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--. '

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Dally Sentinel

Minnesota's 21-hit assault
defeathers Toronto 18-4
By United Press International .
The two American League East
vs. West games in the G~r:
L...gue Monday fcalllml a
two-hitter and a 21-hit Minnesota
auacit.
.
At Duneclin, Fla., Chili Davis
drove in six runs on four hits,
includina two of lhe Twins' five
homers lind a double, uMinnesota
ripped the Tolllllto Blue Jays 184.
Davis, a California Angel last year
who signed as an unrestricled free
:~ent, hit a two-run homer .in lhe
·rust and a three-run shot in the
·fdlb.
• Gene Larldn, Paul Sorrento and
Scott Leius also hit homers for lhe
Twins. Glenallen Hill homered in
the ninlh for TOillllto.
· The Red Sox, always ·searching
'for piiChinfi,JOI a combined elTon
'from Danny Darwin - who gave
·up both hits over seven innings :and Jeff Gray for a 2· 1 triumph
~ver the Chicago White Sox at

STOREWIDE .

this spring, allowing one run and
six hits in six innings. .
At St. Petersbur~. Fla., Re11
Hudler's three bits JDcludecl two
doubles and Gerald Pmy coDccted
three RBI to send the St. Louis
Cardinals to an 8·2 rout of the
Kansas City Royals. Winnina
starter Bryn Smith allowed two
runs oJi six hits over six innings
and sttuck out four b~. Loser
Tom Gordon allowed, e1ght runs.
including six earned, on 10 hits and
commitled two lhrowing errors in
five innings. ·
. At West Palm Beach, Fla.,
Glenn Wilson's sacrifiCe fly drove
in Deion Sanders from lhird base to
cap a two-run ninth inning rally
thai gave the Atlanta Brsves A 5-4
victory over the Los Angeles
Dodgers. Sanders' RBI single had
exblbltloa baseball game against SL
McFARLANE SCORES • KaiiiU City CIIU:b·
lied lhe score. Barry Lyons drove . er Mike McFarlane - t1 oa a lingle by pitcher
Petersburg, Fla., 8s Cardinal catcller
Pal·
in three J:UDS for the Dodgers m·the
noul awaits the late throw. SL Louis won 8·l.
Tom Gordon In tbe nrst lnnlna of Monday's
fJrSI wilh a bases-loaded double.
. (UPI)
· At Pon Charlotte, lila., Mario
Sarasota, FIL
.
bodY. .
.·
·
Diaz, Gary Green and Mike Stan· victOry over the Detroit Tigers.
squeeze bunt. Ruben Sier- the fourth and :rravis Fryman a
• Dan Pasqua led ofT the second
On Sunday, Red Sox trainer ley drove in eighth-inning runs to Diaz doubled home Chad Krueter Green's
ra hit a solo home run for Texas in solo shot for Deb'Oit in the third ·
against Darwin with his second Charlie Moss changed the ban- carry lhe Texas Rangers to a 5-2 to open the eighlh and scored on
-homer in as JIUIIIY days but Darwin c~aB.es and lrealed his cuts.
'
~walked one and struck out five.
"I'm lucky to be here today,"
·J)arwin went 11-4 wilh a 2.21 ERA he said.
·for the Houston Astros last year.
At Pon St. Lucie, Fla., Dar&gt;:I
: The Red Sox scored on Jack Boston hit a three-run homer 10 lift
Clark:s 'RBI single in the first and the New York Mets to a S·l tri·
By DAVE HARRIS
Meigs lied it in lhe second in· sixth inning. Haynes walked and
In the Acaaemy·s reserve game
Mike Greenwell's homer in lhe umph over the Montreal Expos.
Seatlael Conespcmdent
ning when senior designated hiuer after Rob Skidmore walked, with lhe Marauders at Gallipolis,
ftixth.
Frank Viola eatned his firSt victory
OVP.Cotrespondent
Randy Corsi launched along flame Roberts singled to left to score the Blue Devils erased a S·2 deficit
- In off-field Red Sox news, third
The Gallia Academy Blue Dev· run over the left field fence.
Donnie Haynes: Gallipolis loaded in the seventh inning and tied the
·
ils scored two·ruhs in the top of .the
The Blu~ Devils once again the bases with one out, but Mike game at S•S, where it remained afsevcnlh inning to take a S-3 lead took the Jead in ·the third inning Vance struck ow two Blue Devils ter eight innings \vhel} the game
_V ' . . . .
over Meigs before darkness SCI in without the benefiuf..a: bit when . to
the threat.- -·-· " was called because of dsrlcness.
.
.
and the umpires were forced to sus- Morgan walked, stple secopd, ill·
· With d8rkness settin~ in in the
Meigs will travel' to Milh:r to ·
: ·
By BOB KEIM
Feb. IS after t3.sea8ons with the · pend the game at' that point:
. · · vanced to third on a balk and top of the seventh inmng, Clint _play the Falcons on Wednesday af.
:
UPI Spom Writer
Browns.
·
· , ·
The gJIJI_IC. play~ 81 Me1g_s High scored on a Mamuder passed ball.
Davis singled 10 lead off the inning tcrnoon.
·
BEREA, Ohio (UP!) - The
The Browns will use Arbuckle School, will be fimshed w1th the
Meigs lied it in their half of the for Oallipolis. After a wild piiCh Varsity by innings
,Oevcland Browns, looking to nu a as a pass-catching light end while Blue Devils batting with two outs third inning when Jason Wright moved Davis to second he rode Gallipolis
101 0012-5-7-4
"'oid left by the retirement of light second-year player Scott ~braith in the top of the. seventh inning walked, stole second and rode home on a Youn11 single where he Meigs
011 OIOx-3·3·2
~ Ozzie Newsome, siped Plan B is slaled to fill the role of blocking ~he~ the MaJ:auders travel to Gal· home on a doubie to left by Kevin latu scored to mske the score S-3
Game
called
top of lhe seventh
Taylor.
,
'free agent Charles Arliuckle to a light end John Talley who also · hpohs on April12.
Gallipolis on a double by Haynes. with Gallipolis batting, two outs
Meigs took a 3·2 lead in lhe Taylor came in to pitch for tl!e Ma· · and two runs in. Game will be
JOulti-year COJJtract Monday.
was.on lhC roster last~. suffered
Oallipol\-5 jumped out to an C!if·
: Arbuckle,_22, is the lhird Plan B a SCJZute caused by &amp;'virus after the I~ 1.0 I~ m the top of the fmtm· fifth inning when Terry Reuter rauders and after picking up twp completed on April 12.
·free agent s1gned by the Browns. season and is not expected 10 be nmg Wltilout the benefit of a base reached on a error, Taylor ad- outs the umpires stepped in and
Clint Davis, Robbie Skidmore
;He was a fifth-round draft pick by able to partic:ipale in the two mini· hit, when Canaday walked with vanced him to second on a sacrifiCe suspended the action.
(6)
and Young
:New Orleans last year out of camps schedufed for this spring.
one ouL .He lalet came around to bunt. From lh~ he, scored on an·
Haynes bad lhC big bat for Gal·
Jeremy Phalin, Mike Vance (4),
:V~LA, but spent the year on ·
At UCLA, ~kle caught 73 sc.ore _on a Mamuder error and a other Blue Devil error. ·
lipolis with two and a double, Kevin Taylor (7) and John Harri.!!)Jured reserve with a knee inJury. passes for 821 yards and four wild p11Ch.
Gallipolis tied it at 3-3 in lhe Davis, Young, Roberts and Smith son,Joo McElroy (4)
;'Fhe Browns considered drafting touchdowns and was a second-team
had a single each. Davis started on
liim las.t year, but the Saints beat Ali·PAC ' lO selection after his
· the mound for the Blue Devils, ~..:....~---'':....._ _ __
:them toiL
senior season. Galbmith was lhe
with Skidmore COIJ!ing in the·sixth
S&amp;att d O~.o Olpt&lt;V"IIItll ot lnulriCI, Can•klll ol Compi•I'ICt-Til@ Y"'
~ "It's obvious we need a tight fJrSt·fea!D All·PAC 1'0 choice.
0! lilt Sib or Otuo, l'ltfW1 * '"II,.
inning. They combined to give up lltllofllll,
PiONHII UF£ ltd CO Of 1L d llcrllord. Slfllt o1 )lj111111.
cornpo.d
~nd who can cau;h the football and
As a SC!Iior,,ArtJuckle caught 33 .
11'
1
11
01
I
M
SUit
llli:J
illllltlofirH
lilt curlll!l Yt11
three hits; striking out six and
ill
tn11lll!e n -wcpllltbul&lt;...u ol
In
we were after h1m from the very puses far 309 yards in his only
1o011i&amp;
Sllltri'MIIIIII!Mbttn utolowson
walking four.
•
,.... ~ . . .. $.MG.171 ,2811.00; litbiiW- S2111.M0,221.00. ~
·start," said Ernie Accors\, the healthy season. He missed four
Corsi led lhe Mamuders with ~.110.0.00:
lnocl!lt. &amp;MS!U(tOO: ~-IZ'I5.112.1Mm Nil ...
Wt5 150211.od.00: c.pilll. U.sii.OOOOO. IN WITNESS WHI!:IIJlOF. IIIM
:Browns' vice president for football games as a junior and· four as a
. lhe home run, Taylor added a dou- llt&lt;Mio
Mecriblllll"'
tuwcl my Hll "CIIH! tlfiiM 111 Colu:nM.
Ch:r. lhii!MJ nlda Glorp Flbt. Sup:.
cl 00..0. tl'll))
:operations.
.
sophomore .with a knee iniury· The
ble and Steve Woods singled. JereS.. 01
ollnlurii"ICt. Ctr!ilitaltcl
.nNewsome, the fourth·leadmg Browns said Arbuckle s knees
Ofl1ipr:l. ~ Dllnsullnclofll'ltSWoi&lt;:M.~eerlitll M
my
Pbalin
started
for
Meigs,
but
'IIMIHMTOII
NATIOIIAi.INI
CO
ol
Enl"ll!lll1
.
Slllt
OlllincHI.
Ml
ccmoillll
,
:receiver in NFL history, retired .were hcallhy.
lltllflt,OI mit SliM lfPiiCO"CI W!Oll
dllftr!O lflf Cl.flllt
w.as relieved in the fourth by Mill
. lb linm:lll
Vanee. Taylor pilehcd to three bat· ytlr "CI tflrtllr;l!lllllriiWIIIIIIIPQfOII'. DllinKI ol i,_II'ICt
. . . . OIIDtc:f1111er ,
31. IDee· Adrrillld 11H11. I1MM9D0e.OO: Lllililt•1t!I,.DM511!GO.'Sirr· '
ters in tliC sevenlh inning. The trio
pio.rl,
1191M,I7700i
mi,41l231 00;
fCODiinued from Page 3) . .
OC: C~ . 12500B.MCI.OO ~WITNESS WHEAEOf.
combined -to strike out 13, give up INIIIIHII.IIl11114.44f!.
ftM M1tr1m foiDEIIOtd "'I' llllll)t ll\ll UUIIII
SNI b lit
CcilrJrn~. llil ~Ifill ~1111 . Gtolu- Fabt. S;.~ Gllnlur811Ct cl 01111) 1"18)
seven hits and walk Hve.
.:soon afier a "Iiursdl!y dinner- wilh he said. "I've been able 10 play a
·,
San Francisco quarterback Joe liule basketball, The main reason I
)fontana.
·
had to play in the Pro Bowl was a
"It was difficult,' \ he said. "I . lot of people didn't think that my
don'tplay the game for money.lt's knees waelOOpen:cnt.
difficult when you have relation- _ '.' 1\Jly~e .wQUld l\'onder lVhen _
- ships that )'011'\'e crealed wilh tile- people are sayinJ negative lhings
eQiching Slaff, that you've created about you. I've always been lwo
with the players.
s~qs slow, but you can never ques: "When all is said and done, 10 tioo my bean or my desire."
I
years from now, the.respectthey
Lott said anylhing less than a
!Jave for you is the most Important Pro Bowl season will be a disap·
thin,. These relationships will poinLment. ·
flourish. They respect me for what
"I don't play the game just to
Message by Rev. James Acree,. Sr., Pastor
tstandfor."
··
show up," he said. "I play to lhe
· Loll turned do~n offers from best of my ability.' I wanted Mr.
AM SPECIAL SING lNG
SUNDAY SCHOOL ........ 10·00
•
• "
•The Children of
the Los Angeles Raras and Min· (AI) Dav1s (Raiders owner) to
· . lMSOta Vikings.
·
know I wasn't coming here to be
MORNI&lt;I.G WORSHIP ..... 11 :00 A.M.
God
. • Loll was a fixture on the 49ers an administrator or some guy who
•The Redeemed
EV£NING WORSHIP ....... 6:00 I'.M.
defense since he was the first has won a lot of.football games.
Quartet
defensive back drafted in the fmt I've come here to show I'm a Pro
If You Need A Ride, Call 992-2225 and We Will
r-ound in 1981. Lou and fellow Bowl player."
Send A Van To Pick You Up.
iootie defensive backs Eric WriJht ·
That showing could be punc~u.
.
-·
and Carlton Wil!Wnson all went to ated when the 49ers play the
DOUBLES HOME WRIGHT • Melp MIJ'Iuder Kevin Taylor
the Pro Bowl and helped lhe 49ers Raideq in the Coliseum.
lauacbes IIIII Clint Davis pitch Into left netd for a double tllat scores
to lheir first Super Bowl chlmpi·
"When you're a football player,
teammate J~MD WrJallt to c:reate a 2·2 tie In Monday's aon-Jeaaue
State Route 143 Just Off Route 7
onshill tblt vear.
you don '.1 ch:J.e from game to
season opeaer aplut GaUia Academy at Melu Hi111J SciJool, whlcb
Loli his misaed.much o( the last game,',' Lott · . "With thai phi· W8ll called In the top of the.HVeuth because ol darkness. The game
' POMROY, OHIO
tJiO seasons with a variety of losophy, you're already defeated;
Is scheduled to be rt11111ed whea tile Marauders 10 to Gallipolis on
' PASToi: leir. James AcrH, Sr.
injurielllld sat out most ol lhe lat· It'$ not going to ~: a vindication
April'U . (Selilillel pboto hy Dave Harris)
ter stales of the 1990 season after because we're playing the 49ers. I
injuring both knees in the ~9ers' hope thai vindicatiOn starts tomorvictor)l river the New Yotlc GI8Dts.
row."
·· "The knees are feeling fine,"
•

Gallipolis leads Meigs 5-3 in suspended contest

..B
- ro wns Sl·gn Ar:l..uckle·

end

Sufltl~ OIIM~.~•ance

l~t
l!llrant.~t~

~u
n~
G~ri no
~ruc:t.
~ill co:~~$

~IIIII ~

&amp;IIOM'I~ bWWM~

o.umetr ~t

"""'~

oii~~W~~~et

Olio.~

~Tilt

~

~rt\1

COIIfiliOntSII'IOMIDytUIInn.llll~ lllftMtiiii'B

:Lott...

11~,571.51600: I~,

E~ptfldl1~rtll.
lily

~~~~-II

Dus

EASTER ·
SUNRISE-:·S·ER·Y·I-c E-'
SUNDAY MARCH 31
7:00A.M.

HILLSIDE BAPTIST ,CHURCH

,.

NIT s~mijinals...
11temen in double figures wilh 18
~ints, Jim McCoy added 16, Rafer
i3iles 13, William Herndon 11 and
TCIIIy Barbee had 10 before fouling
OUL
-Keefe scored 10 of Stanford's
frrst 17 points in the second half
and the c.dinal looked in control,
teading S2-43 with 14:061~1.
• But Massachusetts climbed back
. Wtlh McCoy scoring 6 points dur·
inJ a 14-4 run and the Minutemen
toOk their first lead since 4-2, at 59· .
SS, with S:28 left .on two fre~
dlrows l;ly Williams.
• The Cardinal retook the lead and
held a 67-63 advantage on Vlahov's basket with I:S21eft.
Williaml was then fouled on a
bi!:Jket inside and converted the
free !brow to bring UMass within
61-66 with 1:28 to JO.
· SIJUJford's Kenny Am1118111 then
(Jred up an air ball but Vlahov
J"abbed the lon1 rebound and
liyecl It in for a 69-66 Stanford
leid. The Minutamen nlilflrecl on
twO 3-polnlen on their next pollOIsian but Herndon was fouled on the
rebound and made one of two he
lhrows t0 CUI it to 69.fi!.
Ammann was fouled on the
uibounda ~· and made both he
throws w1th 17.6 aeconds to p1ly
before McCoy sunk two for the
Minutemen with 10.1 seconds left
,I

.

'

Off

baseman Wade Boggs is expecled
to miss a few exhibition games
recuperating .from bumps and
bruises he suffered when he fell out
ofa moving ll'IICk Saturday nighL
Boggs said he was not wearlnj! a
seatbelt when the passenger-side
door he was leaning against sud·
denly opened, causing him. to fall
ouJ onto Route · 17 as the tr11ck
being driven by.his wife was driv·
ing about2S to 30 mph.
·
· "I was lucky I wasn't killed,"
Boggs told the Boston Herald in
Monday's edition. •
Bogp said he roUed over sever·
al times on the highway ami the
rear wheel of the truck ' 'came
close to.running over my head."
His wife Debbie slammed on
the brakes, helped him back into
the vehicle and drove him home,
w~ she dressed his wounds.
Boggs said he suffered a bruised
right elbow, a bruised right ankle,
and other cuts and bruises over his

'•

(Continuedfrom~e3&gt;

to make it71-69:
Vlabov was then fouled with S.1
seconds lefi and knocked down two
more free throws to ice the victory.
' WiUiams' jumper In the lane 811he
buzzer capped the scoring.
"! felt we keJJt our composure,"
said Keefe. "We made some mis·
· ~es but we never m~Jde a string of ·

Classes Begin April 1, 1991
,,

llrell:h."

nntversary
'

1•

•

eRECLINERS -

•DOOR PRIZES

La-Z-BQy - Benchcraft - Lane

Come In and Register
•Solid Oak Boston Rocker
•Brass Potted Greenery .
Arrangement
•And More
. SPRING STROLL • Casey Richardson and bis new puppy, ·
''Baby," were out for 1 stroll over the w,eemd. Th~ first full day
of Spring brought warm temperatures and sunny weather to the
Pomeroy area, Kivlna lots of .area residents a reason to get out and .
· abouL (Sentin~l photo by Krls. Cochran) ·

Sentinel Calendar
TUESDAY
iary are urged 10 aneild. ))inner at
MIDDEPORT-- Meigs Junior 6:30p.m., meeting at 7:30p.m. •
High Academic Boosters Club will
meet Tueaday ..at 7:30 p.m ....in lhe
NELSONVILLE • There will be •
JU'nior High cafeteria~ All parents ·a si&gt;eci~ meeting of the H9CJcing
and interested peiSons are urged to Valley ,Community ~esidential
attend.
·
·
Center Board on Wednesday 81 lhe
Quality Inn Hocking Valley in Nel·
RACINE • Racine Church of the sonville from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m.
Nazarene will have revival Tues·
COOL VILLE ·• Pre-Easter
day through Sunday. Rev. Chris
Menich of Franklin Furnace will be Revival through Friday ar Vander·
ihe preacher. Services will be held hoof Baptist Chur.ch. Rev. Ward
at 7 p.m. nightly and Sunday 10:30 Robinson of the Porterfiekl Baptist
and 6 p.m. Rev. Thomas Gates Church will be lhe evangelist. Spe·
invites the public.
·
cial singing to be held each night.
•
APPLI&gt;
·GROVE
- Rev. Carl
MASON, W.Va.· Mason ChapHicks
will
conduct
Lenten
Services
ter No. IS7, OES, meets Tuesday
at
Apple
Grove
·uniled
Methodist
at 7:30 p.m. The members are &lt;:;burch through Friday at 6:30
asked to bring articles for a silent
auction to be held during the social p.m., with communion on ":hurs·
hour af~er the meeting, the pro· day. Wednesday prayer meeung at
.
ceeds of which will go towai-d lhe 6:30p.m.
.
chair'lift.
POME~OY • The Wildwood
·
. Garden Club will meet Wednesday
MARIETTA • Tile regular at 1 p.m. 81 the home of Hilda
meebDg of Buckeye HiUs·Hocking Ycauger
.
Valley Regional Development Dis·
trict 81 7:30 p.m. in the conference
THURSDAY
.
room at BH-HVRDD, Washington
POMEROY - The Sa!vauon
County Road 9, Marietta. Joint Army wjll hold rrce clothmg day
meeting .o f the Pers.onnel a.nd on Thursda~ from _IO a.m. to noon.
Audii/Btidget Committee will be .All area reSidents m need of cloth·
held at 5 p.m. at lhe Tnivel Host ing are welcome .
Inn in Marietta.
.
. BRADBURY • Meigs County
r POMEROY. Ohio E1a Phi Rit-, Wome.n'$ Fellow shill will meet
ual of Jewels Tea at the home of :thursday 81 &lt;7:30 p.m. at Bradbury
_ Susan Ciw:k. Potluck begins at6:30 Church of Christ A patriotice song
p.m.
service will be held. Lynn Runyan
·
and Bes~ King win be the speak·
WEDNESDAY
ers. Refreshments will be served.
LEBANON TOWNSHIP • The Public is invited.
· . Lebanon Township Trustees will
hold regular meetin~ Wednesday at
LONG BOTTOM • The Hazel ·
7 p.m. at the 10wnsh1p building.
Community Church, between Long
MIDDLEPORT · Middleport Bottom and Portland will hav~
· Americap Legion Post _128 will revival Thursday through Sunday
meet •Wednesday for therr regular with special singing nightly. Rev.
meeting with birlhl;lay dinner-after· Rick Weaver will he the evangelist
wards. Legion members and auxij· Rev. Edsel Han• invites the public.

.

•

$''1 99°0
·

.

·AND UP

•OUTSTANDING
ART WORK
PICTURES ·
.ACCESSORIES

20°/o

ePATIO 20°/o-70°/o

•SAVE
AND MORE ' ·
ON ALL OUR -IN-STOCK
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Affordable and comfortable, plus
convenient 'stacking for storage.
Aluminum no-rust frames feature
durable baked-on polyester finiih .
Thick ti.Ifted cushions with colorful
vinyl' mesh covers.

HANDLED

BEANBAGS

S3411

PRE·SIASON SAVINGS
ON ALL PATIO FURNITURE

N•w ShiP"""'

e_QCCASIONAL CHAIRS

519900.·

STAUING AT

•ALL LIVING ROOM TABLES
I_IEDUCED

•CANE CHAIRS

•DINOTES-Several
different
•
·styles at· sale ,prices. ·

2 0 °/o • 50 °/o

CASH &amp; CAHY

.

STAUING AT

Sl .,. 900
..

SELECTED GROUP OF

•

•LAMPS lf2 OFF REG. PRICE
•SELECTED GROUP OF SOFAS
AT

S4 9 900 VALUES UP TO S1006.00

.

Robin White to perform in April
Robin White, the son of Robert
and Dove White of CoolviUe, wiU
be in the cast in lhe production of
"Let's Murder Marsha" at Ohio
Valley College in Parkersburg,
W.Va. White will ponray "Ben
Quade" in the play.
.
White, a freshman majoring in
business administration, plans to
graduate in 1991. He is a member
of the stage band, an-Ambassador,
, and the freshman class treasurer.
Valerie Wright, director of the·
atre activities, is in ~fiarge of lhe

dramatic production, which will he
· staged April 11·1.3 Jn the OVC
Theatre at8 p.m.
''Let's Murder Marsha" is a
comedy written by Monk Ferris.
Ohio Valley College is a twoyear institution offering associate
degrees in liberal arts, secretarial
science, and science as well as the
bachelor o( arts and lhe bachelor of
science in Bible. The college is
fully accredited by North Central
Association of Colleges afld
Schools.
·

.

$59900

SALE
AS SHOWN lEG.
583900
.
.
All .w ood table wit!'I 37xf;Ox62" Almond laminate a~d
solid wood edge in Hampton OJik finish : Cane back sohd
wood chairs.
'

ODDS 'N,. ENDS IN .OUR
. BARG1AIN ROOM.

70°/o
SAVINGS
CASH

.(

.,.,·

&amp; CAllY

' ,·'....

. ''

SPECIAL SAVINGS ON
LA·I·BOY.SOFAS, SUEP
SOFAS, IWINCUNERS
AND MODULAR SEATING

$om1tlt.i11J f••~'s Al'll•fS C11kiJJ1 At

'

PROGRAMS:

MASON FAMILY
RESTAURANT

mistakes.' '

· The Minutemen were hurt by
poor free throw shooting, making
only 14 of 24 attelllpts.
The Cardinal, whole hot shoot- .
ing placed them in the temifmals,
raced to I 24·8 lead in the fii'Sl I0
minutes and looted ready to tum it
into arouL
But the Minwemen's ~ve
zone defenses fon:ed the Canllnai
into turnovers and behind Giles'
shooting, M~ went on a
run to pull within 3S-31 81'lhe half.
"UMass did Wlult I feared thoy
miaht be able to do," Monlgornery
said. "They )lic:ked the
and made a couple ~y ~
all of a sudden we've 101 a ball
game.
"I lhought our big. men gave
lhem lots of trouble, which is probably an understatement. The last
thins of coune is we were able to
1118lce clutch free throws down the

•

IU. 33

MASON, WV

Homestyle Lunch Speci~s
M~nday-Frlday, 11 am-3 pm

•SLEEP
SOFAS
deluxe innerspring mattress.

•LA·Z·BOY MODPLAR SECTIONAL

'\ \IIJrl+h

$5994J0 AND UP

~~~~021.00

.SALE

S995°0

COME HELP US CELEBRATE OUR lOTH YEAR WITH CAKE &amp; COFFEE! ·
Monday
·Tuesday
Wednesday
'
Thursday
Friday

- e·eans and Cornbread
'
- Goulash
- Roast Beef Manhattan
-Lasagna
.
- Country Fried .Fish Dinner .

II Carry Out Orden Avatl•~ {904) 779-5921 II
.•'

VISA • MASTERCARD • AMERICAN~ AC~EJ711!:D

•

HOUIS DAILY
9 TO 5
,FRIDAY
9 TO 8

•FlEE PARKING
•FlEE DELIVERY
ALL ITEMS SUBJECT
TO PRIOR SALE
VISA
MASTERCARD
DISCOVER

Sales and ·
Service with
Low, Low

OR USE OUR EASY
CREDIT ftiiiS.

Prices!

.

�·

Page

6

•

The Dally sent'"el

· Pomeroy-MiddleJ)ort, Ohio ·

' .
· Tueld8y, March 26, 1991

1\Aelday, March 26, 1991

HEY BOYS AND GIRLS,~

-.

.

··~

'

.

·- .

'

'\..

'

..

'

..
.
.

'

.· coNTEST RULES

•
,'

•

1. Just color one or more of the drawings on· these
••

· . pages, fill in the blanks and take your entry to the
sponsoring store before 5:00 p.m., March 29th•

.

LOTS
Of
FUNI

ENTER

· EASY

WIN .·
CASH
PRIZES!

I

AS

TO

.

AS ··.
YOU LIKE! ·

ENTER!

,

•~

.'

/

'

f

I

I

•

'

,

.

. 2: Entries will be iudged in two different categories: ·.
ages 4-8 and 9-12 •

'

.: FIRST PRIZE ••• ~ ••• ~~ S1 S.OC)
~ SEC"OND PRIZE •• ~. S10.00··
1 THIRD PRIZE •••••••••• ss.oo
•

omN

.'

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,;

;

The Dally Sentinel--Page 7 ·

Ohio

coo~in ·

I

ENTER THE 1991 EASTERCOLORING
coNTEST AN6jiAVE A": LoT OF FUN.AND
·EXCITEMENT.
Yo if MAY
---.
.
- WIN UP TO .•~ Is ·
AND IT'S SO EASY.TO ENTER.••

•

Pomeroy-Middlepo~.

. ,

3. Children may enter as many pictures as they like
but can .win only one prize.
.

'

.

4. Crayons only may be used to color pictures.
5. Decisions of 't he iudge will be final •

I

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l
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Name•--_,---,--.:..._--'------"le-

lamt'---,---,-----,--'-----"'-~P-

Address._________ __ _
.

Phone_

VALLEY LUMBER

co.

..1 Address---------~-I

I

Phone

Name•-~--------.:__.~~ae~ .

Address

•
''
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"'

Nafllt'--.,.--.,.---"---=---,-~___; ge_

Nanie'----::---=----'--~-'-~- Age:__

•
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Address, _,_
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.

.

'

. Address: _ __

Address, --,--- -- - - - ' - - -- --,---

_:__ __

_ _ _ __ _ _ __

"

·:-:H-=o-=M=E=-·-N-A-=T-IO_N_A_L_B_A_N,_K.:____

L----------~ee~!Q~19~~---------l L~!~~£~5!~2~~-~~~~!~~-~~£~!~~~2--

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Name' ----~·--'------ -llge_
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Address -----~

Nam•-~--'------'-----AI'Address•-------,--~---

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Phone _____

Phone . ,;·,- -- - - -- --,----...,----

K&amp;P~M{~~.Eo~~0RS

SMITH

I

1
·- - - I

Nam•----------~P-

Address

• 1
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!

NEP~~'?~v~o~~ORS, INC.

PhonMIDDLEPORT DEPT. STORE

!

L~~---------~------------------~ .------~---------------~--------1 ----------~g~~!2!L9~~-----~---~~
f~-----------------~--------~---~
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·. BROGAN WARNER I,NSURANCE ~~
~

· POMEROY. OHIO

· Name _ _ _..,...

I'

1~

L--------------------~---------! :

•
Name, ...
· ~-----~---~It. Addrm- - - - - ' - - -.,.--- - - - - , - - --

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Phone

DAIRY QUEEN BRAZIER

· .

MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

Namt'----- - - - - ---"11-

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Address; _ __

·

_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

Address _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

Phone _____;_________

J

Phone

II -

' .
INGELS FURNITURE
.

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

~----------~-------~-----------·•L~-------~------------~--------J
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�Ohio

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March 28,1991

Exchange program opefl

scheduled this week

Shirley Colem an ()f Rutland
serves as IIJe L.ocal Coordinator fer
the Academic year in America program of the AIFS Scholarship
Foundation. The prognun offen an
opportunity for teenagers from
abroad to spend a school year or
semester with an American family.
Students attend local public high
schools, share everyday ,life with
their host families and participa~
in sports; school clubs and community activities.
Coleman has the applications of
several boys and girls who would
, like to live in this part of Ofiio ·next
year. Early applicants include a
number of German students who,
acccrding to Coleman are the most
adaplable and mature exchange stu·
dents.
· ''These kids are great fun," no~
Coleman. "They'll share German
customs a~ traditions with' their
families and classmates and be
intrigued bY things in our daily

lives which we take for granted. '
Homecmping and Halloween .are
two of their favorite traditions. H
.Students have been carefully
screened, speak English and have
their own spending money. The!{
insurance, visa, orientation and
flight arrangements are aiken caw
of by their sponsor, AIFS. All a
family needs to provide is a bed
and a place to study, two mel!ls a
day, and an o_r::n bean, ready to
receive a "son or "dal!ghter" from
another COUnlfY. ,
· Families applying now are invitr
ed to select the hoy or girl whose
interesiS best match their own. Students and host families can begin
c~ng immediately and get
to-biO~Tone anolber through letters
and pictures before arrival day in
Aufust. In~rested families may
cal Coleman at 742-2125 or
Regional Director Lynne David at
1-800-322-HOST.

(UPn

Police Lt. Ken Risse of West
Allis., Wis., on IIJe cancer deadi of
a 69-year-old man who a weet earlier bludgeoned his 66-year-old ·
wife to death out of rear she would
be left with h11ge medical bills from '
his treatment: ''It's just a lliame it
didn't happen a week: earlier. An
innocent woman would still be
alive. n -

''NOW ··oPEN"

POMD EASTEI
FLOWERS
CHOOS~

GUESS T
. HE BUNNY - As 1 part or the · e"at, alona with an Easter eag bunt at :t p.m., is
Easter festivities Ia Middleport on Sunday, the _ being SJIOIISOred by tile Middleport Community
nrst persoa who correctly guesses the person
Assodatlon.
behind tbis bunny costume wiD .receive $20. The

from his tricking a wealthy Manhattan co!!ple into thinking he was
Poilier's son and a college chum of ·
their children.
·.
Poitier has six daugh~ but no
spns. Playwright John Guare used
cry
the story as the basis of his critically acclaimed play. ·
By Uaited Prfss lnterutioDal
Meanwhile, last Oct. 10, HampThe EaSter iss11e of the Salva.
Benjamin Franldin had had
ton, 26, was arres~ in the same hisIfway,
tion
Army's War Cry has now·
tlie symbol of U.S.
Upper East Side neighborhood soverei,nty would have been the been distribufl!d in Middlepon and
were he pulled the earlier ruse. this turkey ms~d of the bald eagle. will be distribull:d in Pomeroy this
time after ref11sing to pay a taxi Franklin consilbed IIJe bald•eagle week. Anyone missed wlio desires
fare, and pulling a toy gun on the "a bini of bad moral character."
a copy should call 992-54 72 or
992-6917.
. .
.frightened cabbie.'
'

Now You Know War

available

(DRIVERS EDUCAnON
CLASS BEGINNING
APRIL 1

FROM
•Lilies •Azaleas •Reiger
BegC!riias •Caladiums
•Mums •Tulips
•Hyacinths •Miniature
Roses •Regular Roses
f!Calanchoes
•Amaryllis' s •Daffodils

.

8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY

.

MARY MARTIN -REMEMBERED: National Theater of the
Deaf will honor the late Mary. Martin by naming its international
scholarship for her. Martin's son,
Larry Ha~D~an of "Dallas," her ,
daughter, Heller Halliday
DeMeritt, and her longtime friend,
Helen Hayes, will attend-the April
25 ceremony in New Yorit. Manin .
was a s11pporter of the National
Thea~r of IIJe Deaf, which is composed of deaf and normal-hearing
actors who perform in sign langl!age, speech and song.

I
'

CONGRESSMAN RECOVERING: Rep. Bill Lebmaa, 0Fla., recovering Monday from a
minor stroke, takes no' comfort
from the example of former New
York mayot and pitchman Ed
Koch. "Ed Koch had a stroke and
he can walk and talk fine," said
Lehman spokesman John
-Scheible. "One of my boss's
biggest concerns is that he'll have
. to go out and sell diet aids. It hap- ..
. pcned to Ed Koch." Lehman, 77,
suffered a dizzy spell ·while exer- .
cising"at the House gym Friday. He
was admiaed to Walter Reed Army
Medical Cen~r •. where tests indicated he suffered a minor stroke
caused ll.y1hemorrhaging in the
brain . "Se far his recovery has
been very Jood. He has steadily
improved Since Friday," Scheible
said "He still has sane weakness
in his left arm and left leg. He's sit. ling 11p in bed, stnling. He's joking with the hosphai !Iliff. He's in
very good spirits." Lehman was
expecll:d to remain in IIJe hospilal
another week.

. ,..
I

6

10
Monthly

SUNDAY
:~•·*"~1 . 150 diacount for

tl MIMI,.,
UPHOLSTIIY

•d• .,.id in •d¥ance.

· - " - -• td tor all C8111'1tll;inart it double price of lid cotl.
aint ty~ only uted.
; sO.oti·,•Or it not r.-pontible for errortafle.r firtfd., . IChedc .
ltl'rors first d..,·~ rul')t In p~) . Call befOre 2 :00p.m
d-v tfter publlceUon to malka correction .

'•Ads thlt mu" be plid in tdvtn~ trt
Card ot Th.,·ks

'

WordS
11
·1 6
15
11
15

2 - ln Memory

Mr:r r.l1.r11rlr· r:
151 - Houlllhald Qoodl

12-lport .... Q53-Antlquft

4 - Qh,.IWIV

I - Happy Adt
8 - lost lnd Found

14-Mitc. Mlt'ch.,diH
11-l~.o~llding lupptt•

7- Y•d Stlelatlid in edvtncel

17-Mutic• lnltrumlrltl

&amp;8-Peto lor Solo

1-PUblic Sai•&amp; ·Auction

!58-Fruits • v ........

59-FOI' S .. • or Tr.te,

f IIIIJidyllll!lll

•A cla11ihd advartiMm.,t plaetld in The Dally Stntin.a!ex·

cept ~ cl•lifi.cl ditpiiV. lutin•• C.rd tnd l~gal noficesl
wttt also eppqr In the P1 . Pla•ent Rtgiltar and the Galli-

~dill' ;; lllllrill",

\i'l\11'1•'.

polis D•Mv Tribune. reaching over 11.000 ttoma.

11 - H1ip Wanted .

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Classified

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I

13-lnsurlnetl
14-=-l~.~•in•• Training

2 :00P.M . TUESDAY

-

2 :00P.M . WEDNESDAY

'

the

31-ffomn for Slit

671 - Pt. Pl ...ant

3t7-Ch•hir•

Pomeroy
118- Ch•ter

458-l.. n

773-M..on

247-let111 Fall•

112-New Hav,.n

843-Atabi• Oist

941-Aaeine

379-WIInat

7.t2-Rutland

"937-Buftalo

''

Coupons Good. Thru Saturday, March-30
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INVITATION
TO liD
Vltlege of 8yrocu11, Ohio,
will KCipl -led btdt ...111
12 o'clock noon on May 1.
1111, from.togollv llcon11d

400 OFF COUPON

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.

286 PC Compatible

·TANDY®
lOOOTL/2

ln.,fllncl

Ser

~

P!.ibllc Notice

a Eay to UM-MS-DOS"' IIIKI Deatdlat..
' lnt...tac;a Built In
a Dea11Mate10-ln-1 Software
:i'lo' 720K Floppy Drive a MPK

Low ._ 125 Per Month •

comp1n.... or

oomrnera.l -.uto cav.o•a• ·
ond commercii! h•nd Mo·
line lnau... nc...
,
lldt In Mlllll oilvllop11,
~rklll "IIIIUr.,CI lldt,"
1ro to bo tubmflted, or
mtllod. to: Jonlce Llwoon,
Cllrk· T,_suror, Yllllge of
lyriCUII, Third lt., 8yrl•
CUM, Ohio, 41778. •

LAURIE'S
CUSTOM CAKES
992·6194

Nat--- for""'· P!o&lt;lJct ..,.,_ orly '"'

"""""' pold . VoMJ w11er1 prolll&gt;ihd by law. Otllr onds

Wedding Cakes lor the smallest to Ia rgest wedding! Oil·
ferent shapes available w1th
or without founlain. Cake
toppers are also available.
If you are going to be aspring
bride, c:a II today to order your
special cake!

3130191 .

· 200-Channel
Scanner
. Hog, 329.95,

The Daily Sentinel has
an enormous amount of
Happy Ads, In Memory
Of, Etc., dating back at
least to 1988. Pictures
must be ptcked up at
The Daily Sentmel office
before March 30th to
avoid being destroyed.

Coupon 100.00
1

Your Cost

229!!

Portable AM/FM CD ·
. · Rag. 189.95 Your Coat ·

LowAot11Per-·

Covet~

~~,!I.!
.
•
up

Pollee, Fire; ·

Rill, Air,. Military,
~~~mn~~ni, Lota Morel

SMp

Nat -molllo for Wit l'lorliu:l -

only for
.......
I&gt;Oid
•
....,
"""'
"
'
llw.
- ,
3130/t1 .

NOBODY COMPARES

to Dlgltll8ollndl

Nat--"''"'""""""'~"' 142·15028
-3/30/tl .fllld,
• Yallwhort

only IDr
llw. - -

NOBODY COMPARES

Telephone Answerer
Your Colt
Reg. 119.95

Cou1101150.00

&amp;ftM
1;:,;

2-Way Shelf Speaker
Reg, 58.16 Your Coat

Coupon
30.00
Mlnlmue·7W
•

1&lt;40· 203!1
Small Size,

29'-'

LEGAL NOTICE
Notlc1 II given lhllt AT. T
Communlcotlont of Ohio,
Inc. h11 flied two lllf·com·
plelntt with the Putlllc Utili·
!let Comm-n of Ohio
CCoM Noo. 10-1111·fP.
SLF 1nd 81·H·TP·ILFI In
Cl11 No. I0-1118-TP-8LF,
ATaT otleoo•t..tlto OllrNIIt
rlto bond for operotar - ·
vlc11 dou not provide IUffl·

NEEDED
Uniform Pictures of Desert
Sheild /Storm Personnel for
Permanent Display Case.
American Legron Annex
Middleport, OH.

CANDLELIGHT SERVICE
Desert Shield/Storm Personnel
7P.M. Thursday, Mar. 28, 1991
Amencan Leg1on Annex
Middleport, Oh1o
Public Inv1ted.

Daily Sentinel is in
need of a copy of

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

992-2156.

l!acll

BIG Soundl

--lor""'·"""""'NOBODY COMPARES

Nat

IIIIOUI1I
31110191.fllld, •Voll

TOTAL IAL....... 47,1104.82
IUMMAIIYOF
INOEITEONE811
Out.-dlna
,
.
J.,. 1. 1ti0 .... 11.8H.33
ll1tlred .... :...... ..... 7,1101' 11

v11:r:\

j!lubllc Notice

BULLETIN BOARI) DEADLINE
4:30 P.M. Df\Y BEFO~E PUBLICATION

LOW Aa 120 Per Month ..

$.,Ag·
flf

'd·nce ..........151.770.12

Lou Oulllomllnt1 ·

c-o .............1.2ae.so

BULLETIN BOARD
Reg. 899.00 . Your
Coupon 150.00 Cost

79-Cemp•• 6 Motor Homn

B91i-Letart

Your Cost

Sx VHS Camcorder

.13-VIIIt I 4 &gt;'tD'I
74-Mo1orcvcl•
78-loau 6 Mo1or1 fa' Salt
78-Auto Peru • Acc•eorl•
77 --Auto fl.lepair
78 - Camplng Equipm•t

lt - Aul h ..lt Wlntld

lhelr ogento. to pnwldo tho
Yifllge ol SyriCUII, Ohio,
for tho term of one y11r
commencing on M1y 21,
Jonico..LIWIOii,
Cllrk-:r,.ouror
1881, commorclll proporty,
·
oomme,cror gonorellllblltty• . 131 11. 28: 141 2. 3ta

Reg. 999.95 .
Coupon 400.00 ·

Computer .

72-Truckl for 1•1•

aoly lor

FOR SALE IN RACINE

"""' ,..,_ "' • lo!0-20311
. - """

VERY NICE LARGE HOME ON APPROX. 3~

AalES-4 BR, 3 bitlis, 21111111, rented I
BR eportment. Property includes pond, •P·
pr... 4,800 sq-: "· form bldr._ond mobile
home: A reol blrpin at $84,900. ·

CALL 614-992·7104 FOR APPT.

•

FINANCIAL REPORT QF
TOWNIHIPI
fol' 111011 v- Ending
Deaombor 31, 1880
Iutton T-Ip,
Cauntyollhlao
..Thlt II .. UIIIUdltlll
Fln1nclll Aopart"
iUMMAIIY OF CAIIH
IALANCEI, RECEIPTS
AND EXPENDITURES
. GOVERNMENTAL
' FUNDI
RECEIPTS:·
Tox" ................ 31,187.13
lnt-ommentol
R-pto.........88,704.27
1111.-t ............. :.3.107.11
AMOU.
R -.... ..., ... 1,2811.34·
TOTAL .
RECEIPTI .... 103,Me.711
DI88UAIEMENTe
Gen. Govt.. ....... 27.371.04
l'ubtlc lllfoty ..... 13.173.all
l'ubtlc Worllo .... U,III0.10
.fteetth ....... .......... 3.111.11
Clipllll Outloy ·... 17,220.34
TOTAL
DIIIURSE ... ,•• 1011. 371.31
Totli R-ptl 0-/
cu-. o~o~o..... 2.732.18
fund Cllh lellnco
DopOolt. , IIIII...... 84,270.12
lnv--nto ........ 1.100.00
Tolll T-tu,Y

Out.-dlna·
Dec. 31. fll0 .. 11.117.17

PubliC Notice

5

•,

71 - Au101 for Sale

tbt

'

.-

34-Busin"' BuMdinos
31 - Lots &amp; Acreage

&amp;7e-Apple Grove

143-Pordlnd

687 - Coolv~le

•

Rt!.il Fst~tr.
32 -. MobileHomn for Stle
33-fermt tor S111

992-Middlepon

lii-Vinton

22-Mo,~ 10 Lo1n
23-Prof•lion•l &amp;..-vices

Mason·co .. wv
Artl Code 30•

446-0allipolil

241-Aio Gr1nde
211-Guven Oi11 .

Tr.tns Jill! I .r 111111

·21- Bu•+n•• OpportunltV
'

.

I" I ~

62-Wontod to luy

1 1-W..'Ited To Do.

- 2 :00P.M . FRIDAV

following telephoQJ! exchanges ...
•
•'
J

I •J I"

13- Ltves1ock
14-H.., • Grtin
8&amp;-;-Seld &amp; Fertili.ler

11-AidiO, TV. CB Aepetr
17- Milc.•Uaneou 1

- z,oo P.M . THURSDAY

A101 Code614

I

11-F1rm !quipment

11 - lchools • lntlruction

-

Gltlia County

(,

1 2-Situetion W.nt•d

DAY lEFOR£ PUBLICATION
. cr 11 :00A.M . SATURDAY
- 2 o00 P.M . MONDAY

pa~es,corer

Public Notice

u.oo

·

. IMON'S
PICK-A-PAIR
SAME LOCATION
Use Court-Street Entrance
POMEROY OHIO

aln1 oo~flalllllltyto
AT. T. .peCfftooll\'. A'tU
propoMd to • - d lit mlnlmum/mulmum ret8 bondt
for
llnflc" 110 ...
fleet tho bondtlllllllllhd In
tho Commllllon'o .._..,
lnvlllltlltlon Into operltor
In C.. No. 11-18TP-811, .ATaT •~~tt•lh•llo
rotn for dlroctory IIIII·
IInce '""'leo do not rocovor
itt 11tendlnt aollt end pro·
po- to ellinlnltl till our·
rorrt two cell ""!ftlhly lila·
-nco for dl-ry
tonce. AT•T lloo propo111
to dK,_H the DLIPNftt qta
for directory llelll.,ao
from 1110 to 8tiC. Any Inter·

_...,r

•HI•

Hted ...,.,n, firm. oorp••·

lion.

or ontlly deelrlng on

IWII . . .ring in !hiM - -

ohould fill wllh tho Cam·
million 1 roqUIII for one
llong wt1h • motion to Inter·
vono on,. bofaro Mey 24.
19111. Unlou thl Comml•
lion~ IUCh I NqUIII
for orel hoorlng 1nd on ••·
componyinll llqUIII to In·
torveno, lhoM 01- wll M
dre'dld on the Mala of the
lnformltlon aonlllnedln tho
complllntt ond tho 1Hid1•
vito Mlbmflted loy lhll oompllln.,t. , , _ lnforml· '
tron m•y bo abtolnd by oonlletlng lho PuWic Ullllliel
Commllllon of Ohio. 110
Eo• 1 - • - · ColumlluL Ohio U2••·01173.
131 12; 11. 2e, 3tc

I certify lhl to-Inti , .
port Ia bo correct ond II'UII,
to lho boll of my knowl·
edge .
Clerk
Pout 1. Moore
Morch 20, 11101
32711 Til 110
R..:lno, Ohio 41771 ·
(1141 141·2184
131 28 1tc

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;.

u•ua..uc•
3-4-'91-1

1110.

J&amp;L

INSULATION
•VInyl Siding
•Replac..,.,t

•lneulatlon

~~IIIWSII

.. •Remodeling and
Hqme Repaln1
eRooflng
.
•Siding
.
•P•Intlng

110 JOB TOO SIALL
.FlEE ESTIIATES

CEDII
CONRIUCnGN

........

'991·6641 or
12·11 -IO·Ifn '

'· ~

~LhR ..... r

lOS N. Slclllll Slrtd
IIDDlDOir. OliO 45760
Olflco 614-992-1116
HOME .. 4·992·5692
DCmll s. 1'1IINEI, 1110111

HOUIII•LOTIIIFAIIMI
COMMERCIAL
WeNoeol UoJblpl
'li·S:»Ifrl

WHAIIY'S
AUTO PADS .

13118. 1tc

8

Public Sale

&amp;Auction

PUBLIC · ~
AUCTION~~
SATURDA·Y, MARCH 30-lOA.M.
LOCATED ON MAIN ST., VINTON, OH.
Blonde 3 piece bedroom suite with box sprinp &amp; mat·
tress, vanity lamps, G.E. washer &amp; dryer, G.E. electric
30 in. range, 2 clocks, seve111 pictures, large painone,
6 prece dinette se~ &amp;lass door bookcase, 2 piece l1vrne
room suite; Jable lamps, can opener, juicer, toaster,
coffee pots, pressure cooker, lots ol dishes, pots &amp;
pans, Tupperware, lots ol books, TV stand, comer
shelves. lots of figurines, ironing board, pillows. sev·
eral boxes we haven't gone Jhrough yet.
I 971 Pontiac AC, PC, lots of ntr1 in lin•
condition.

OWNER: ESTATE OF VIRGIE HOUCK
BEm HERN &amp; FARREL HOUCK .
DIAN CALLAHAN

3159

WASIIIIS-SIOO op
IIIYIS-Ut .,
llfiiGnAIOIS-S lae ilp

NO SUNDAY

UIIIIS---$1JS op
FIIUIIS-$125 ., ·
11&lt;110 OVINS-$7t .,.

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE

BISSELL
BUILDERS

ttt.sns ., tiS-35.,
au.. ,,. "" Offlc•

CUSTOM IIILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

POIIIIOY, OliO
101301'11 1111

, "At ...., aU1 Prlc""

•ciOWAYE
OYEIII IEPAII

, .. 949·2101
., .... 949·2160
•. Day ar Night
NO SUNDAY CALLS
._~.~..~.~.~.~.....~;:;..'~~- ·tin

&amp;&amp;MADS

llri111 It .. Or We
Plclc ... ,

IEJII'S APPUAIIICI
SIIVICE

Howard L Wrltelll

ftt.SJSS or

ROOFING

Acna ,,.. .... Office

915·3561

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

BISSELL &amp; lUilE
COIIISTIUCnOIII

..........

. •Garag~s

949·2161

•Complete

l+tJ.t ... pd.

1.-dlllnl
Step&amp; Ce111pat1
frH Etthllat"

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL
•LIGHT HAULING

915-4473
667·6179

5-31-'to tin

•FIREWOOD
TII·COUIIIIY
IICYCUIIIG

BILL SlACK
992-2269

OPEN 7 DAYS
A WEEK
9 A.M. 'TIL 7 P.M.
"lou cl"n up,your
pr on Wllll•flllt.... we
bu.I_on wHke..tL

SIMON'S
PICK· .
A·PAI.
SAME
LOCATION

Till-COUNTY
RECYCUNG

Locallll Off tho lypotl 0.
Tho Comor ol
II. 1 &amp; 11. 143

'-···Ohio

P8¥tntl eutl far •lumlnum,
cow-, ..... ~IN lteel.
m.gn•ium. radlltOre. l'tlft•
... llt•nator~ and 811 non·
flnOVI mt1181J,

Intranet
PO.M
EIOY
t. OHIO
•
2/271'91/1 ••.

CAU FOI PIICIS

614-992·5114
tAM·7

I

s,.d..laloltl•

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

Ntwl•

NEW • UIED PAFITI
FOil ALL MAKEI •
MODELl

992·7013
or 992-5553
01 TOU Fill

$tHk/l
MOillE HO.. FURNACES- HEAT PUMPS
AU FUINACE PARTS

IENNm'S MOilLE HOME
HEAnNG &amp; COOLING
~fell

GROOM
ROOM
Co~lete Grooming

AlllrMs .
EMILEE MERiNAR
Owllll' I Operator

614-992-6120
,_oy,

Chi

~enl

Sclloel ... eft lt. 141
• or

KELLER'S CUSTOM BENDING
We Howe Changed Our l«atlen To

For

llorvla•.

1:00 o.m . .,,. 1:00 p.m.

M .lAY WAIIAm

PH. 949·2111
or las. 949·2160

UH Court Str"t

Public Notice

1 G4AI88111CW4211037
.... of tho ..... rlly lilted
obow wRI Ill hold on lhll
prlflll- oil.. Clly Lolli Fl•
--.1
lno., 238
Eel! MIIR e1n11. '-roy,
Ohlo417...
T.,_ of lelo: C11h
IIIIer ,..., ••lhll rlgllt to
bid lnd the light Ia roject
eny end Ill bldl. l'rlor ID tho
-ollllo,o,__nto
. ., bo modo to ln.-tlhlt
mer-ndiMioy 011Nngll2·
2171 - - tho houro or

USED APPUAIICIS

r

1---------

'I

... ._ ...

.. FrM Eatimet•"

USED RAILROAD ·TIES

3/11'11 /1 mo.

.... •

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

lEW -IEPAII

· DAIWII, OliO

NOTICE Of,
PUILIC IALE
Tho followll!g doocrlled
11om will be afflrlll for pub...... to tho ht[lhoot bidder
on tho 2nd doy Of Aprl1111
11 10:00 o'cloclt A.M.
1812 BUICK .
4 Dll IKYLARK

.

'

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM Slr;:HNO
•ILOWN IN
INSULATION

11/t Mllll East

lt. 241 through

at1

Ch11t1r, Oh.

.

SPECIALIZING IN ....

•Custom 8111t Exhaust Syetonie
•Complste Una of Exh1uat Supplle1
•H1ndl1 ond Instill Monroe Shockl
Come and Bee Uo For A Free Jnapectlon
aDd Eetlmate

PH. 614·915·3949
47269 St. lt. 241

IOIIIIY

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..... ltttom, Oh. 45741
3/15/11/l 110.

CARPENIEI SERVICE
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IFIIII UTIMATIII

Y. C. YOUNG Ill

KENNETH SWAI~_

•

POIIVD IIOJIIZE

1·190-141-0070

SWAIN AUCTION SERVICE

•

949·2126
.... Appt• .

Wlndowe
•Roofing

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•
.20
.30
.42
113.00
.10
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COPY DEADLINE MONDAY PAPER
TUESDAY PAP.ER
WEDNESDAY PAPER
THURSDAY PAPER
FRIDAY PAPER
SUNDAY PAPER

•• 4·992·2311

Rote
14.00
11.00

3~ Annoucemtntt

'

'

of Tto..,kt

c•

36 Yeon llxperi..ee

Wally Whit W. Da.
W. Da Whit Wo loy.
IO.lf.l•.

A11111ru 111. 1'111 r•111'
1-C•d

In Memori1m

Hu~ry!· These

111-lle. s.c •••
ll•tl••"'
Hanel Tufting
Custom Dn1pe1 .

Aa1•1r1 forcan•CM~tive rona. brokenupd.,swlllbech•ted
fnt .... d.wo •• teP8fltl • •.
•

.GNot.w•y and Found adt und• 15 worct• will be
d.rttll no c:h•;t.

"Spracust, Clhio

'

DIYI
,
3

MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to S P.M.

HUB BARDS

.992-5776

. CAIPE....Y

r.!!onaod.

RATES

TO PlACE AN AD CALL 992·2156 .

GREEt11HOUSE

446·0699

was not sUrprised by the
dectllllll'.
·
, fo
~ ----~....
Kowalski uid IIJe 11101t dlfllc:QU
' 1.11 :1 ~-' {,[
part of the {)hysical tell wu the
lilA
lpood in which ach eYfllll hid to
be
n IR
'The emphaiia wu .!Ill lpOed,
•Gerege1
which we felt wa DlltJellly rehl"l
•Room Addltlona '
to IIJe job," KOW8IIId laid. .'
•Kitchen• • B1th1 i r·~~oo---Oty Law DiJeclor Craig Miller ·
•·
said he was glad IIJe case wa over.
•VInYl Siding
·
He said the city' 1 position "as
•Reltoretlon
always been that •~did not diacrim·
•Repelr Work
FOIEVD IIOJIIZE
.inatc;
·
992 5526
PROM TANNING
The designer of the test, Dr.
·
•
Nornwl Hendenoo of Oberlin ColPOIIIIOY, OliO
SPECIAL
)ege, was sued separa~ly and an . ..__ _..;.;....:.......,_ _,
ht 50 High School
out-of-court settlement was
Studtrits
reached.
· 10 SESSIONS- $10

.• ·The Area's Number · 1 ·Marketplace

Houn1: Monday thN
Saturday 9 A.M.-5 P.M.

GALLIPOLIS &amp; POMEROY

However,
tho 285 women
who took the tcst, 29 ICClnld high
enough to be p11cec1 on die lia.
MOst of 11Je hid difflculty with die ph~Jllll of lhe 1e1t
that included
. 1 100-pound
dummy, 1iftina a 3-)IOWid barbell
ovabeed -ledly fer one mlnlle
and draJiiq'hoses up and down
stairs.
The hipest ranJtina woman wa
334th on IIJe hiring fist, virtually
makinj it ·impossible for any
woman to be hired.
Kenneth Kowalski, who represcnled the women and is assistant
dilector !&gt;f Fair Employment Practices at Cleveland.:Mirshall College of Law at Cleveland State,

-----Classifie

'

People in the news ,
By Uaited Press InternatloiJII)
McCARTNEY'S BOOTLEG:
Like Bob Dylaa, Paul McCartney
is putting out his own bootleg
album. The limitod-edition collec. lion was taped in a ~:hour ses~
sion at a Loodon studio 10 January
for "Unplugged." MTV's allacoustic show. ~·It was a good
laugh because. just like the bootleggers, we didn't IJ!CSS with ,the
tapes and lfY to clean 11 up as a producer would with a proper .abum,''
McCartney says. "We're just
puning it out as it happened." The
albl!m• which g~ on sale in May.
will include some·· Bealles standards like ''She's a Woman,"
"And I 'Love Her" and "Black. bird," rock cl3ssics "High-Heeled
Sneakers" and "Good Rockin'
Tonight" and "I Lost My Lillie
Girl," the first song McCartney
wrote as a 14-year-old kid in Liverpool.
BAILEY TESTIFIES FOR
MOVIES: Defense attorney F. Lee Bailey has been called to serve
as host a series of five courtroom
cl3ssics being shown on the. Movie
Channel April 24. The films are
"Inherit the Wind," "Analomy of
a Murder," "Wimess for the Prosecution," "A Free Soul" and
"Adam's Rib." "'Witness for the
Prosec11tiim' and 'Anatomy of a
M11rder' are most realistic," said
Bailey, who has n:presenll:d notoriOl!S clients like Patty Hearst, Dr.
Sam Sheppard and Albert DeSalvo, the Boston Strangler. "In fact, I
n:gl!larly recommend them to new
Jawye~." .
.

WASHINGTON (UPI)- The
U.S. Supreme Court hu let lland a
lower.court decision that
out
1983 c1au action suit lllleging sex
bias against female candidltei for
11Je CieveJ4nd ftre dqJanmeDL
The court, without comment
Mondav, let stand a decision by
U.S. Dlstrict Court Judge Alvin
Krenzler in Cleveland that rejected
die suit filed by eight women on
behalf of other women who had
unccessfully soug~IIP become firefighltz$. .
. In 1983 .there were no f~male
flfCfighters in th~ department. Of
1~27 men who took the test, I ,069
were placed on the eligibility liSL

Quote ofth'e D.ay

Po(tier son impostor sentenced
NEW YORK
-The man
who posed as the son of actor Syd- .
ney Poitier - inspiring the hit play
"Six Degrees of Sepallltion - was
sentenced Monday to three years
probation for faking an ambulance
report.
J
David Hampton was sen~ '
on his guilty plea to a charge of
criminal possession of a for,ed
instrument, a misdemeanor puniShable by up to a year in jail, said a
spokeswoman lor the Manhattan
district attorney.
Although ~~utors had ~.­
ommended .he spend 90 days in
jail, Manhattal! Criminal Court
Judge Michael Obus ordered
Hampton to three years of probation.
Hampton, whose con ·game
inspired the Broadway hit, "Six
Degrees of Separation," already
has compl~ a 21-month ~in
prison for second-degree aaempced
burglary. That charge stemmed

·Women lose appeal in sex bias case
Bu.
s
lne·
s
s
Ser.
v
ices
·
ot
1814 !'e
1--------r--------....,-------.. . .-------·
•w
I. L .. •SH
a

The Reedlvllle/Long Botlom
Charge of the United Metbodilt
Clnirctl will hold Oood Pridly _..
vicel at the Lang BoUorn chiiiCb 11
7 p.m. with Rev. Charles Eaton
officiating. Sunrise Service• on
Bu~ Sooday will be hell! 11 the
ReedsviUo chun:h. A miiSical aervic:e at.6:30 a.m. will be followed
by breakfpt.
.

to Nteigs County families

1he Dally

-up"
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.... _30...,
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•Sia!r&lt;lota tiOifLOAD EVRY r2 HOUIIS

... ,.,.,..,.., l1oor. ... _

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Floor Flnllh
• • lEWIS, Ow•
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.DELUXE
.....a.nt
PIIOOO
SAfiLLiji fY SYSTEM
'unldl!ll

742-2451

3-14-'91-tfn

LINDA'S
PAINTING

........
........... .......
.... __.....,.,_
,......
r-·

tOMifi iYSffi .

-

,IIEE ESTIMATES

, . tht pcin out of
I I lilt..
let • .. It far you.

YIIY MASOfUIII
HAVE llhiiiiCES

(614) 915-4110

3·• '11- 1 mo. ftd,
-'

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Pltano (i04J111-2211 """' sp.lll.

··a..ollty Warlt

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·

CAU

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•RMIOnable R-'•

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CAU TODAY
FEIRUAI\UJII!CIAL
. .
ONLY

ZENIX VIDEO

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3 Announcements

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NOTICE!
Application• for
London Pool1e91

Rohlgorltortot;:;u·N-

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, ~·~
3030or1714 ·
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To OlwOitlor: F,.. Pupe. lllxod
lroocl. 114-111 IU1. .
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of Pool Manager
I
and Ufeguerdl wil
be ICCipted until
Aprll1,1991.
Complftt r1111111 ll'e to
bt su-mltttd to: ,laniCI
Lawson. Cltrt·Trnwr•.
Vllltp of $yiiCUP, OH.
45n9.
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.

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114,1110. or -

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INTERNATIONAL DOZER·
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10 hp . . ocury nooiO&lt; !roily '

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Tolwooo i'ou!\1111' for 10
_.,_..._ llooion'o Fonn,
Rl . . 38, AndJ tllglor, 304-e37-

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76

Auto Pans &amp;
Accessorlea

.

..•

- · lo.m. 6 1:30p.m. 114-441·
1111.
•

1115 011mper, 21ft, AIC, ClrlfrM •
ownlng.-TV,_.totwct- '
~-full atze Nih, ao oond, ·,
$7,3UU. . . ft11WI.
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.

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• • 1:00.12:00 .... aor.
......... Fonn, Rt. 18, 304-e37-

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lumlollod c.~.
dopooll. Prolir

CIOVU*IHT HOIIU from ..

llolollo . Homo.

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Hay &amp; Grain

64

....

PICKEN81'URNITURE
NnoAiood

1011:

Ito!.~~- lumlotol"l. 112 mi .
-CIIII30W'II-14110.
Rd. Pl. - ·

Plolfoim 114-44H721.

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campara&amp;
Motor Homes

country VInton - lumlolood.
Wotor, Tnoo Pold. 1111 ......

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WINTHROP

I, lllorllng

Se rv1ces

81

Home

u-

Improvements

..

•

IT'S HAVIN' A

HALP II HALP II

NI6HTNAill II

MY BIG TOE'S GONE
SOUND ASLEEP~!

IN. Locol rofolwnc• lumlolwcl.

frM eatln..t•. c.ll cott.cl 1·...~
1'14-2S7-0481, doJ or nlllhl.. ,
lloglrw - - WllorjWflng.

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tho.t co.n turn in.t"

114 Ut 1144 eft• 7

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1171 T-llnl. ral!'l:.:''""· T-top.
Ron Good.
lnqvlriH.

Only: 11,100 Flrm.IM-44N117.

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1110 ~ ' mollllo IVIIoloc-.- lnd

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I"QD •Cllin!IIINII11111on
Alllellcl Tonlgh! .
(J)='=I'lrereo.

Atpl1came11t, Wln-

ASTRO-GRAPH

In*'::;
._Run

1111 Flroblnl ·
ooll.,._-2120
allor
1:10 oond,
p.m.

..................... 4.

.W't'EKTlSE IT

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Devil
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Croolt
Rd. Porto,
...... ploloup, ond olollvery. 114'

44N214.

BE;RNJCE
BEDE OSOL

Two - 24112411 Eovo,
2-117 ••• t d 1·1 tnlrance
- · .....00 - . ProclFrorM Bulldoll, 11411241141.

82

Plumbing &amp;
Haatlng

Cortor'o Ptunollloog
and H•lloa ·
F-'hondPrno
OaiUpollo, Ohio
IU 411_.1

.....,hZT,11t1
Your -nlng capacity wMI be coneklerably enhanced In the year aheacl. Bul, by
lhe same Ioken, 10 will yout extravagant whlma. Don'l lei thla becomll a
conteat . In which lrlvoloul Int-IS
dOmlnlta.
C~ 21-Apr111l) Treat your
tlll&lt;a u llbOrt of love todiJ, etpedally
lhOea wtoieh have a mll'kllable poten1111. A hiPPY allllude will enhance the
qu111ty of your work and may- bring prof·

...-s
"It's ZsaZsa Gabor's new fragrance. To
put It on, I have to slap your lacs."

IINI Ml'bi. King

11:30 (2). 11J Tonight Show
Stereo .
(J) Madlcalltorr

-·-·-lollmllol

an~

•

..

8BMar.,tne

•

1144tlllll.
,., ~ . . _ Vol: .... c.nrur. ......... Tine; 1171 ClloJootoltlo Cutloooo
. . _ _ Alllft Ooool Condllonl

c.

IIJ Newt

II Dillin, 0H 1-100-11?-1121.

,.....,wv.
~~~Ollloo, lllo - · -

Pertom~~ncao

Oliillaml VIM Stereo:
QDOn .....
0 IIsch ' Tonight

304-I'IWtll Ohio~--"!
•11110 Tonk PumolniiiiO~001111
C.. RON IVANS INTERPMIIEI,

II .Job

ACROSS
1 lnclinalion
6 Tho
untouchables, e.g.
11 Women's
quart11rs ·
12 Was fond
of
13 Arroganl
15 Used to
be
16 On the(lleeing)
17 Pig's
home
· 18 "Tr!lth"
· drug
20 Photo
book
23 J()hn,
Paul, and
John Paul
27 Overthrow
28 Col)gress
aide
29 Set the
· radio
31 ShoH
32 Speedy
34 Explosion
37 Part of
RSVP
38 Meadow
41 learning
by
eaves·
dropping
44 One of
!he -Curies
45 Cut the
lurkey .
46 Out.lel
attach·
ments
47 Remains

aJ:::::c:~
illl. AMnlo Hlft Stereo. Q

......
---.wv·
lltlng I

by THOMAS JOSEPH

j0:30r:lll Clook and Chou
10:50(1) MOVIE: Spelibollnd C2:15)
.
'
11:00(2). (I) (J). 1111

Ml'lllon - .

a.

OIMt

CROSSWORD

R~

BARNEY

IWIEIIENT
WATERPROOFING
llloltn. guoron• .

JET
'
...,.trod. :
ond · l iHIUIII -oroln
Oloeli, RON
EVANS, ~ACKSON, OH. f 1137-11121.
•
Ron'o TV lofvloo, -'"!111"11, ,
TidllSilOIIZJirOil
In Zonllh .... -Ina moot '

lquoro boloo: ""'' "'"""' hoJ, """' -

'.

The loelng family disperses
while lhe victors lear
ve'J.t8,:'· CPI 2) Stereo. g
IHl
Time Wl'billllng (T)
r:llltlalh... Now
18 Lotny King U.el
1:30(1) (J)'• Colcll Hayden's
masculinity Is ltirearened by
Christine's higher Income .
Stereo. &amp;:;1
·
•
Ill C. MOVIE: 'lM
Antlgonllle' CBS Movie
Special (1 :30)
10:110 (2)• 11J Lotw 6 Onltr
ViolenCe breaks our during
the transfer ol-lhree Federal .
· · ()l'lsoners. Stereo. Q
(J) Naws
(I) (J) • .Eddie Dodd Eddie
defends a while rookie cop
accursed of klll:tna black
~outh . Stereo•
How to
the TIX
Cllnsa and Win ·
Ill CNN E'¥110in0 Nowt
11J1 700 Club With Pot

j

Will Lood. 114-441-

.J

(JJ).

•

· II as well. Aries, treal yOui'1811 to a birth·
day gilt. Send for Aries' Astro-Graph
predictions lor the year ahead by mall·
lng $t .25 10 Allro-Graph, c/o this
.-paper, P.O. Box!lf428, Cleveland,
OH 44101-3428. Be sure lo state your
zodiiC 81gn.
·
TAURUS CApri!....., 211) It's truly an
art to be able 1o m1111age olhers and
make them Uke it. II you elec:l to use this
gilt today, you have an enviable louch
that can command end Inspire.
QEIIINIC..,r 21-.lwM 211) II you oense
that everything will come out In lhe long
run tOday. ll's probably 10 the assurance you're receiving trom your lnlulllon. II mar ~ wi- than rour lOgic.
CANCER I.IUM 21...., Zl) Your moot
desirable c1rcums1ancea are likely ro
~ur roward evening loday, al1hough
your da, In genoral should be a rallw
pleaMnl one.
LEO
Zl) Munificent ProvIdence onlgiJI h8llelw eye on you today.
Be graltrfullor whit you have, secure In·
the kno ..II Jijl thai things ma, even get

C...., ......

bellar.
VIIGO CAIIg. ....... Zl) Your charm
and " ' - " ' •• • your twO belt - •

toda,. end they can be Ulad elteciiYely
to help advance your pertonll lnler·
esll. Be diplomatic and lorttvlght.

LIBRA' ce.pt. •Oct. 23) There's a
chance yau mighl be Cupid's prima target lodey. Things look gOOjllor you In
the realm of romance and love.
SCOIIPIO COoL :14 IIIW. Zl) Something
conllrUC11ve may develop toda, lhat
w t l l - you lo llrangthen an alliance
wtth tomeone you care a greet deal
abOUt. Thlo usoelallon will grow In
Importance.
IAQmAIIIUSCNov. 23-Dec, 21) You'li
have a wa, of dealing wilh subOrdinates
today thai will encourage them ro upgrade illelr performances. Perhaps 11'\
bbec:atiCIIUI•sa you will know how 1o lead by
example.
CAPIIICOIIN CDec. ZI..Jon. 11) You
won'l be looking through rose-colored
gl81188 today: you should be able to
-the bright apott where they actually
1
exlaf.
AQUARIUS Colin. liiH'ell. 11) You're
extremely cap1ble loda, 11 i011118Qin(l
lltuallonl lor othlra · rhat they have
been unable to handle. It lookallke your
gift wlft be put ro gooc1 use.
•
PIICISCM. 211 •s all 211) You COUld
be extremely fortunate today In a part·
net8111p, be It roman11c,lnVOivlng a teem
e11art or linked to eome commerCial

purpoee.

1-11-11

••

:c'" . .

. (!) I])

ua aond, 304-8'7i4471.

Zllr.Alr Cond., Clblo,-Ponly f ...
nlolood, lloouiHul Al..r vrow In
KonouaL - ... llololll Pork. I~-211r olr -.dillonod, 1221/mo.
...... . . • ... .ric. Clll .....

BuaiiiiiS

614-992-2156
304-6'75-1333
·614-·446-2342

hp Joh.- ,...
outboard motor. aood .u ,

62 Wllnted to Buy

!!!\ 200 llaln •• Polnl Plunitt,

lo ou~e

fOr Sail
-

~-....Point
- ~"""
22
01N at
PI .....
Ill II . . .c.

" 'OU

75 Boats &amp; Motors

•

The last 20 years have seen a great
improvement of the overall standard
WI!ST
EAST
of card play, both at the club.level and .Q93
.87652
in international competition.· In the .KJ4
~T..!:.~;2..v
1960s, the strong international teams .K986
.QI052
knew
they would beat the weaker +J71
Q
+Q 10 8
COI!Iltries becailse the stronger teams
ID Major L~ loteball
SOUTH
played the cards much better. They
made contracts that went down at the
.Q76532
other table, tbrou&amp;ll either better de- ·
7:35 (I) 8lnlon:l and Son
.J43
. clarer p!•y or better defense. Nowa·
1:00 C2l8 lUI Matlock Matlbck's
+AK2
·
days, though, aU international players
ellen! Is acculld or kiNing an
can handle the cards competently. · . Vulnerable: Both
ambulance-chasing lawyer.
Dealer: North ,
And competence at that level means
• ·
Stereo. D '
(J) MOVIE: Hanley PankJ (!'GI
ferreting out every little extra chance
West Norllo Eoal
(2:00)
(o make one's contract. Today's deal, ~tlo
INT
Pass
(J) (J) e·Wlto'• lhe Bolo?
from a team game played several• 4•
Allpua
Tony has problema when a
years ago in London, is an excellent
friend's daughter lalla In lo"'!
example
of this.
•
Opening lead: • 6
with him. Stereo. Q
Both
declarers
got
to
four hearts in
(!) I]) Now! The World chess
double-quick time, and both Wests led
champion playa against a
the six of diamonds. The first South
chan-playing compurer. Q
won with dummy's diamond ace, suit breaking favorably. Instead he
Ill 112 • ...._, 111 "
man Ia bllten by hla pet
.
cashed.the A-K of spades, discarding a gave himself one more chance by nnff·
Asian cobra; a mailman lrles
diamond, and continued with !he ace lng a spade at trick four. He was reto arop a car. Stereo. Q
and
another heart. Unlucky! West won :warcled when the queen dropped, es. illl. MOVII!: The Unit Hill
and
casheil his other hellrt trick and tablishing dummy's 10, He entered
luonrner CPt 1 oil) (2:110)
(be
diamond
king before switching to a dummy with the heart ace and cashed
IHl Murder, She WIOI8 Q
club. Declarer had lost three tricks the spade 10 for another diamond dis'r:IIIOnltege
and could not avoid a club loser too. card to bring home the contract. West
·a flruHaon IIHLIII
,
At the other table, the play was could ruff, but he .was wasting one of;
18 PrtonaNaIIJI MOVIE: Qlrl From Mal'bi
identical for three tricks, but South his trump winners on one of declarer's :
(2:00) Stereo. Q
·
wasn't willing to rely on the trump losers.

1171, 5tl2

W LUJII1M- Md ,...,.._

or """ In -

For lolo: , ... - · llll-100,
Colloftor ~.m. 114-441-1110.
•
Ya. .hl 225 lour _ ....;
....,.ly overloooulod, wllhl.rodor ,
- · S1,JIO. 1104-171-211 •
'

Flloo!'ltll!oo
• - llii' Aangor .'
longliiod, 114-'Jill-3020 Oftlf I I

2br

By James Jacoby

1:05 (I) MOVIE: Rlileccl (2.:45)
1:30 (I) (J) • Davie Rultt
Dwight and Robbie team !toe
truth abouiiYing. Stereo. Q
1211 Church ftrMt Slltlon
9:00 (2)• 11J In ttoe Hell ollhe
Night VIrgil and Jamllon help
tho son ol a condemned man
· cope. Stereo. Q
(I) (J) • R-nno The
new neighbors complain that
D.J. 1e a Lid Influence. on
lhelr son. Stereo. Q

11M Mill-, a llolrnolo, ""' -:
,_ -,!t,OOO ndloo, lui, roro
1104-171-3141.

' wllh ...

r:loo ':.-::..:.. I =

wv.

'

Oldor,
' ....... Ooocl ooiMIIlon,
I'M UIIOII
.

.,.....,,

Chilli ......... In.., 411 .,.. I 2 1R Ute ' I

t

.. ~.....

onRI.'7.1M4tt.a

...... Wull•ndl.
Rolono•
Col .....

-Int.

=.&amp;t~

&gt;

-111 - - - .... QH.· --.114-1117·1'102.
Nloe Ollln I Ill *-to mobile
for .... 11111 Oorllokl -~ Ho""-!(1,
.
An. mid 10'11, 30W'II-1311 oftor ..,...,,. .... 1:00 ...
4:00 Pll.
·
Apanmant
Land Clorai'ICI: li,OOO Down • 44
12110 por month. ot li,OOO Down
for Rent
• · Toko o- PIJmonlo. Loa
llooroo. II mlloo bolow O.Aipolli

14

SrltL
t-IAS' $(&gt;At;f ..
AVAI&amp;..AK&amp;..'. 1·2f.

11111.140-h. Itt 441 M1L

for · ..... In Polnl
PI
... I bidi'OOIWI, IXC loci...... 114 til 0041.

2br In
lion,

!

conorote a ~ 1tp11o tonto,

tor ,..,. In cOIOilry, big
ool • ..., 1:00 p.oo. 114-lltJ.

Oepoell .•,. -

;.;;;;;:
a.uelltl. If fno

1M 01 lh*\1 I I

.......... "":,Jd.
.-.

-v-.

.f.

CO,JlEC.TIO~

1.. Col 7 ,.._ -vltt1 \fan" •
Tro~
Air,_ Condlllonl
:t1,IOO •
......
._
. . . . ., . . , . , . . . . . .

WHrLE Tfll"

~ "~PA~TMf'NT OF

•

, . Chow 414, ·~· :101, •
oulo.JC. ... - . .....
3IMIIA2t21orta.utt
·

=

1-.1 • t 1.-1 AI 1111 no

,.,.

Jlnt'o Fonnt:qdpnwnl1 SR. 11,
Well O•l II, 114 1141 &amp;Ill;

.

'

Trononoloolono, u.d l ·;.
II IH; 114-24&amp;- ·
1177, 1~37'1-221L
,

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

tr......
· IIIII

-lllliiOiy.-

-·117U.

..., . . . . .,. 31143e

ro

===·
• ::....olwi
...... --."'1!:.:::
..::,71::
.....

Help wanted

ln.IMGO.

"""*" -·

"""'

II

0.11 Allo-QIIImboro lrOCiortoodor. ' - houro on nbulklor,
oon1111n . . . . ti'IICtor trwt.

:IOII.

- ·-¥0-.Mi
Ina

11

*

1M!

·
- I lm
Wkle·- Buy,
ooll, ...... 1:00'1:00
.7 lo\I!IIJ 01 Dl
I , lolllt NoOn.
~ Dl
I , rNa.: 1/1, lll, lo

RP,II Estclr

'

'IIACHER -.o. NO COL·
LEGE DI-E NEEDED. ,,...
..... ~- .... .-cioollo

,..... w.·..

E.111pl01 nll-oll •

-

LOAIIIIY IIAIL

Up IO 11,000 In 12 llouro. Wi
oon holp you gal o lianolll'o
....... . , ltell. 1.....
1810

tM.MIH.

=
3107.

pool - ·
......g&lt;!Und
Good-.:1114-

- - ,.... do

___

.,_II.

--·--

WIH -

.~

Iran.-. . ., Polnllng . . "''"'·
114

,,.'a

IIIIJ' and . - . - L
400
~
hDfl
lllrt.
Clll tDr lmulna
raa did •
1
31,...:;

&amp;4WD's · :
I
1112 OIIC Con- von
AIIIFII ,.., crulu, AIC ·mUll • ..

TfiANIC · yov FO~
fiMNG iAI''-Y I

dUtFidoftl. 11'11~ ~

dr0011, unfumllhecf, clean,
biro
llooooiw- . -lam LID 1no IMide~
• . , _ . fMJ .. red,
To 1100 por "
ltofN. For Dolollo Worlllng
W...: CJII
Entetp~llll, P.O. lox MU, Win.;
I or 4
l 111. Cftr
lornlllo,.OH.431112.
S o -.
n IJ ADwlnf·
Only.
11'14-441-

·
-_
ond-"'
oldMI
lo .-. . . , In
IMir (Peonot..,~ W you llko to
lluy 1
far 1110 lulok AI-,.'!!'•- OIICik. ,_...,
or
- . . !'WI'....... lob lor
- On!JI 1111 Ro-, IIIIo IO 10!*1"11
for
· - tor lrucll ol .........
oon llialo
IO
-.clio buy, llllndlflll llonlwr, ........ ... . -•• net
wiiUne 1o • ...,. o1 .,
1441.~·--.- ......., ...... ~~oona~.m.
......,. lhru 1:30Lm. 'rtdoJ;
-od To Buy: ~n lrii'Nolpi&gt;'oO..oriier
,...trMMay~IIM
wllh .. - - Col ..... olfj 1-tMM.w ....... , ....
1Mry LlvoiJ. 1M 1•

HOUIIhold
GoodI

b

..

..........
.... llcwlo.
Good Condl•d 1'14411_.,,

-....

Poo-.

2 or I
daam llouM nNr
::'.::U.
loOP prd, no.,...., 114-

~a;. \"0:.:..::

I'.,.,..Mto4···

..

Ch

...,. ,...

No,_,

Ia-

13, 11171.

&amp;.;'ria........ """"· - · Clll

51

Apple I, Mplul or IE -pulor,

!II 1111

•

Wanted

=r...ro::""
.,...,
.....~­

Wllntld to Buy

9

Coonbr---.

R•IE-'1

-~
-p ,,,. . . .111']
. . . . ...* ......

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

8

48 Space fOr Rent

36

-iii· a

f!o1o1nt

llalor. ._. . . orne
~~~..... :::.. t."::ilon~

Trollng

"'*'-

ALL Ylftl - - • Polclln
..........
DEADLINE: 1:00 p.m.
....., ......... Ill leiO "'"·
llundoY odfiiOn • a:OO p.m.
Frlclo~r ......, • a:oo

-·_. t:.a:o-.-

12.111; Fonnoil H Tro-, IIIOii
IIIII CHo Troclor wllh Loodor

f'1~$T, :t'J&gt; J...ticf 'T'O

-

-

II,OOOar
- -· IM-441o
IOC4.

Mft.

-.-

Lilli To Buy: or
- N o i - O r - l l a l 3llr Tmllor, In Hamon Trooo . , . . ForLaaee
lllobtal. P............ on
fot Lo - · Work Pt. 111M'lK ~-.811..-f.
t
o o d - pold
Sloow loOM, .Ont or option lo
441-'1117.
. .... - · All Coolo. ,_
'111..-.
buy.
Orr wy a.~,
Hat
INTILI.IOINCE
JOII.
All
lo-hoo and Pool"-'
Re
nt
J
is
-. US~DEA,
wllh living
Rt. 2,
Ola•ood, WY. 3Q4.Ill-~ .
....
- bl'
Hiring.
Col 111 1112-1000
, K·ICtl•.
......., ........ Nlllonll ComMerchandise
for · · . : : . : . :
...11 di II rt nMdldl Gulrln-

Gallipolis
&amp; VlclnHy

Aloollllor
Coil ....

-.

- - pooplt

--114o

I

ololol .,..,.. 410 Bock Hoo,

v.aanom ......
_....,

SII rplng

OHIO VAWY PUIIJIHIHO CO.

m-.

Aptllmlnt onlloblo for a or s
-ruction
:lOt Ita
28411.
.

.

-NORTH
• A K 10 4
• A 10 8
.A 7
+96U

BRIDGE

ill '::r.=a.iiilftt
II.:OAS:O:r'

t12,000. CIIR 11WII llsi.

=~.:~p::;
watorovo!llblo.
-.elS-

1

at Rial&lt;

110 Dovld a - . wllh loahlloa, . 73 Vans

_
.......... ,.. .
...NCn'
_.....lo--'"":::!i ...

............... r.,._

=· =

PRINT NUMBERE D LETTER S IN
THESE SQUARES

SCUM &amp;ITS ANSWas
J·U
Mascot - Ninth- Siege - Peanut- NONSENSE
Professor to plass," Reading makes men wise, but what
he reads determines whether he's full of sense or NONSENSE ."
'
.

7;01 (I) Happy Dip
. .
7:30(2)• More You Know Kids

w•

•

~~~~~·salway~ roomforgetting

UNSCRAMBLE .ABOVE LETTERS
TO GET ANSWER

and Mro. Klnt'

.54 Mlacelllneoua
lllrcllandlll

-,

~IIJ WhHI ol
(J) I Dleltin ol Je1n.lle

ii.E·H9Q
8=~
llcaNc:row

a-

,,o.-

FNno&amp;l1t•tm

1
mlOUth 01 PI 11111,
off II • ....... llorld 8lldng

Buslneu
Opportunity

21

NnduLForlxlniAnd-...-.
lion Into., Col 1~1111

Yard Sale

1011.-

=..

Newellaur'L

k

Fann Equipment

..._ IUIO.

10 ...., J0 MIII 'Of. t.....,,
~ .,.._ .. 8142:

:1722.

rrr l c111C rdl

7

Ju-t •

, , _ . . , 10 10,..

I.! ,\l)l

.

Complel1i tho chucldo qucnd
by lUling In tho milling - d.1
you dOYOiop lrorn 110p No. 3 below.

8

'

~[lli.==Q

,

IIGIIO l'onl- I - .........
~
Dtoo.

fww mlnut•
from town, oily -

Wll Do
, _ _ ll~lolno.
N Por Do¥. 11oo un.
or
Evonlngo. • - -·
Will
loWno
In
towntOOIIIpollol. cau
1144'- liST.
wontod-Yord
Wart&lt;.

iJ j) Ij r

I

Ill'10'lllotor
1100 82,111;
11.110;
IIF Dllltl

Yarde
To 11!1 Or
-M
~~~~- • 1ltp:n,. bt• n..101na. ~ ..,
Oolllpollo-.11tiiJI.-111.
tote,-"-ori1W4:t1.

• EOE

11~11-tM.-.

81

llonmollod•n•. . -...,...
~~ .lahn D. --11011, ·no
ooldo _ , . , . . . _
13.1 -

r1

,\

for

Peull'o .DoJ

••~
·•·"' • 1:30
~-10.
11 p.m~........,_

aumma
. ·r pot11tiona

WI'Mo -lo, 1 ~
old. ~- Doil Or
Ouldoor.Yify. OoociWIIhTCklol
Nomo: ......,. 114-446-1112.
FOUND nlrllt~tal;a
oollondldwollfy,

Help Wanted

11

0

-

ID Up CloM
1:31 (I) Andy Clrtlll1lt
7:110

b;

A good rule to live
Whenever you feel that life Is
crowding you, remember

;...;;,.1.;;..'"1'-118
It--,IF-.:;1,..;.;;.;;:1
L-.1..-.!..-.L..-.L..-.L..
. -1

~ i5

~~~~Q

"Cute ... but I think it should just
say, 'Your door is ajar'!"

Froo Eoolor """"'-• _. Got-

a

.~ &amp;-...:.:ic.~ Q

.,

IF . .

I -15 I · I
.........r.-J.. .....r.-J.. .....n.
. S U N,J U T

(J) AbbOtt _. C:O.IIIIO

I]) 3-2-1

r~IJ

--;;.8-,R,.;;O..,A...;,..;;L...,..;....jl:e

1;01 (I) ae...ry t'IIIILMIIII
1:30 (2). IIJ NIC Nwll;l .

CI-IOCOLATE

·

I~-

r

~~~:.*' ·

Tl-lAT'S NICE 10
I-lEAR., 6UT I·TAKE
EVSR,VTI-liN6 HE
SAVS WITI-l A
' 6RAIN OF

11

2

...;.;t...:,TI,.;;..j
E..;.;..i..;,.T

il~"C:Q

2 Doao, Pill llooglo.
,.......,,IT7_1p.m
. Ptl.ol

El- _. .

.

I

I 111
1

~~~ln,~Q

No
r'ng, • wheel drtVII
orYlolol.,.
AlVa on our ~a:::J·
wiN bo p - •- .

T. lilollln ond Hot.t

TONERD

8:00 C2l. (J) (J). Gl ID.

•nr - ·

Smllh.

•
•

•

----I!VINI--NG---- '

- ....,~,"!"'-· •-

I 111-IW
- no -""out
ol llole Lowlo
IIIII Wll
bo ,.,..solblo
ollior

.-

•

. . , . . ~ .... 1'11111, ; ·

..

104.31 c·w, ale, OH uat.

11

........

Television
Viewing

''

.

The Dall Sentlne

Pomeroy-411ddleport, Ohio

A-1 .•
.c:on-.~
. . Air,o M ,
.....

II,OOOIInn.

ew'li;i.i:
lit, P.O. loa

26, 1991

· 0~ ·
18 lportl Tonight
11;35 (J) ChaM Q

-

third
2 Krakaloa
oulpul
3 Mine
products
4 Apiece
5 Pictorial
symbol
· 6 Become
Yesterday'• Answer
silent (sl.)
boards
buy
7 Broadcast 21 Bud's
34 Circum·
8 Takes. to
partner
stance's
the slopes 22 Roll
partn·er
9 Big top
24 Tabler
35 Ellipse
10 Narvous 25 Flip ·
36 Apdean
14 Corn
Ingredient
nation
spike
• 26 Envision 38 italian
18 Apartment. 30 Morse
coin
worker
units
· 39 Covet
19 Minibike's 31 Fragrant 40 Maluros
kin ·
llowers
42 Equip
2D Tread the 33 Bakery
43 Scoundrel
...-...--,-....,..._,,....,

·'

II&lt; •

.."

.'

"

...

••

..

DAILY CRVI'TOQuon's - Here's how to work 11"

·-~~
Late

.,

DOWN
1 Coma In

3/26

AXYDLBAAXR '
Is LONGFELLOW

'Cll

IHl

One letter ~lands for another.ln thl~ sample A h used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single lcttcu.
apostrophes, the length and formation of the wmd~ are
a~l hints. Each _day the code letters are dlff~rcnl.

QEqull&amp;er

tattatlwlile 'iotow

-

.

IDWIMft'MIIer"aGrNt
lldlng

B=t-...

. . lllo Cltillllla C2:00)
12:01(1) Nlgltlllna Q
12:30(2).
IIJ ,...
Dlvtd .....

lhe

Late"""' With

.

8 ZVKSG W S:

f

Cll MOVII!: QalahllltF013)

Z

8 Pllly Machllot Willi Nla

QN

ASTBZKD

Cc acllan

ZT

z

C2:00)

~:..:...,~

••• -

. . . CIIMw

IIIII DOg ne •1011 From
Mln.'1eiPOIII CR) .

12:31 (J) . _ CotoiiOIIon
1:110

CRYPTOQUOTE .

3:26

II:' aur c:~

'

E'K G Q D

NQ DE

AKTYPKTSA

FKDVP-S. -

ZEODQTS

·, OKSDWS
~

Yesterday's Cryptoquote: ALL MEN DESIRE
.PEACE, BUT FEW DF.SIRE THE THINGS THAT MAKE
FOR PEACE. - THOMAS A KEMPIS

"

._

�..

•

Sentinel

191't

Gavin.••,_ ,.1 ..........::.
bcC· ,

.---Local briefs---

•

.

c~

Stern wheeler festival plans underway

thipk that ICIUbbcrs would llill

Pllnnina for the Big Bend Stemwheelm Festival will get under-

thebest"

wayonW~.

The Stemw
Coouniuee will meet on Wednesday at 7 p.m. at
the Meip County Golf Cowse. All interested individuals are being
urged to attend the meeling. The fesdval will be held in Paneroy in
OCtober. ldeas and suggestinns are need to make the event successful.
.

Sheriff issues warning to donors
Meigs County Sheriff James M. S(lillsby is watning local resito investigate orgat)izations before malting charitable contribuaons to them. ·
.
Soulsby reports that a local business reponed to the department
thaf a feinale caller had called the business soliciting donations for
the "Pomeroy Drug Abuse Program". The caller was reluctant or
QJI8ble to give the business owner a phone number and other information.
Wisely, Soulsby reports, the businessman refused to make a
donation and notified the deparanent of the call.
Sheriff Soulsby advises that at this time he is unaware of a program by that name that would be soliciting funds.
-

~

•,

Oiler estimated dW 1,638 work ;.. .
ers would be directly effected bY::
the closing of the AEP-ownc&amp;
Mei~ Miaes, a possible lllllifiCI-o':
lion if AEP chooses to 111C Western';
coal
.
Butler pointed out the magni:
tude of scrubber construction at:
Oavin;
:
''What.we're aslriJ18 the utilitie~r
to do is {!lit on chemical plants
are, in SIZC and investment, Jargef:
than the oriiinal plant.• she saicC"
ult's a catcli-22 for Ohio powet"
companies.
•
· "If the ~ompaniea build scrub";
bers now, tit= is no Jlllarantee tJMI:
legislature will not pass laws that
· make them obs,llete; Butler said.';
"It's a complex problem with net ·
easy ~ed •and nO painless SOIIJ&lt;'·

TOP OSCAR WINNERS • Top Olear wili. .• Joe Ntcl, Beat S•ppol"ttq Actor. Tile wlanets
ners Moaday nltlbt wete, left 'to right, Jeremy
JICIIf with tbelr 1111 es ~ the awards cerIrons, Best Actor; Kathy Bates, Best Aetress;
emoay Ia Los~ (UPI)
Wboopi Goldberg, Best Supportiag Actresl"alld

'

F·unding.•.

condauecltrompaget

lions.11

exceeded most· every -:;d::-ay::'.~he::-~ity~c:::on~s~urners=-or-::the;-y-w~ilu~.-:-,d:-ha:-v-e·.:.....;in_to_wn_a_nd_bo_w_to:__co_ntro-1-io-ud-Butler spoke out •. however;
against
the idea ~ fuel Switchi~ ·
rep&lt;rtcd.
to be borne by our mvestors and
· and 1e d lonanoe The prob..
Two Syracuse residents were atrested on Sunday afternoon and
would
be
the best alte.mative for:
The; mayor said that last year the ~."said Disbrow.
::'of tire~;;.; on fower
charged with. petty theft after the:t were caught soliciting funds in
..
:
~~
viUage rook five to eight truc~oads
''We have ~ experienced a Middleport was Mlin iliscuaed by · AEP.
the rtustic Hills area under the gwse of tile American Cailcet Soci·
uwitbout
coal
from
Ohio
mines~
of
trash
to
the
dwnp
every
day
for
signifJCant
lois
related
to
the
Meigs
Councilman
Jack
Sauerfield
with
ety. .
we wiD be held hostage," she
about three weeks. ·
complex. .Undei' a settlement agree. the mayor noting thai no( only the
Rich~ Hudson and Jerry Aleshire were both cited to Meigs
,
''The
cost :~f. transporting Weatent
"No
way
can
we
do
like
we
ment
last
year,
we
inc~
a
$34
villaae
but
the
Meiss
County
County Court, and admitted that they were soliciting the money for
coal
already
exceeds the cost of thq:
have
doOe
in
the~"
commented
.
million
pre-rax
loas
due
to
the
comHealth
Department
and
Olhot
agentheir own use.
·
·
coal.
.
"'
.
Mayor Hoffman. He did indicate parison of the cost of the Meigs . ci~ are gelling involved in trying
"The commission lites to seO.
1hat he plaits io talk to Roger Man- mine production in 1989 and 1990
1 the problem
Ohio relying on its. own indigenouS:
ley and see if some solution to the with the depressed high sulfur coal to~ve
be ·b ·"I
0
resources," she said. "We will II«'
Neil Bonecu~ter of Middlepon was cited to Meigs County CoUrt
problem can be worked out. He IIUilket." he continued: .
Diles p:;:g;,:&gt; discu:~ •.:nd ~
scrutinizing very closely any utilion Monday after he illegally conveyed cigarettes to prisoners at the
noted that sometimes trash is being
·" If we were· to retrofit ·Gavin proposal made by Council member
Meip County Jail.
·
·
lies'
choice to fuel$witch. •
. l:
hauled to the Gallifl County dump with scrubbers, and then be forced J11dy Crooks_that an architect be
Krupinski agm:ct with the neect
Smoking has been banned at the sheriff's office and at the coiDity · and then the haulers aren't able to to close the mine due to a continu- retained to design a stage which
jail.
.
to stick with Ohio coal.
!.
dump because the limit for the day ing stream of disalloiYIIIICes of cost would cootdinate with the old
After
the
presentations,
the
audi-'
has already been accepted.
·recovery, southeastern Ohio would depot. She said that the Middleport
Read at the meeting was a Jetter face the same circumstances as CommiDiity Association Is IIIIXIOIIS ence was allowed to ask questions
frOm R. E. Disbrow,--president and those stemming from fuel switch; to have the stage completed by July thro~gh four panel m!lmbers - :
· The Mei's County Sheriff's Department investigated several
chief executive officer of AEP, ing. So, installation of scrubbers 4 since' a progr1m is beiDa planned. Galbpol!s Cit)' Manager Dale~ .
weekend inc1dents of vandalism and two thefts.
,
acknowledging receipt of the vii- does not alone-assure the continued General Jimes. Hartinger (retired) lman, Me1gs County COIIIlllisSion~
Sheriff James Soulsby reports that deputies received a report on
'!~Be's resolution requesting !hat all operation of the Meigs mines," will be; tbc July 4 speaker and Richard Tones, !?r Bruce Knox ·&gt;
Saturday frOm Maxine Sellers of Ponland who reported that a 2 and
measures be taken to retain jobs at Disbrow concluded.
·
Meip Persian Gulf servicemen and vice president of Unity Savings of•
a half month old Herford ealr was missing from their. farm. She
the Mei~ Mines.
A letter was read from Mitch wo.men will be honored at that . Southeast Ohio; and Jacbon Coun..! .
reported that the Calf was missed on the 21st of March.
·
t'y Gommissionet Bob Willis.
~
In h1s letter Disbrow, assured FAurthley. Dffiivision of' Reclamation, . tiine.
'
Southern High School notified the department on Monday that
Council
lhllt
"any
decision
that
.
ens
o
ce,
regarding
his
inspecPrayer
to
open
the
meeting
was
·sometime over the, weekend, five fll"e extinguishers were stolen ·
results in the closing of the Meigs uon of suspected abandoned mine given by Kris Treintong of the
from the high school. No forcible entry was diScovered.
mines will not be taken lightly." He seepage problems in the village. · Middleport Ministeril!l AsaociaPhyllis Slater of Dexter reported that there were sevenl tomb·
said
that AEP is well aware of the . It ~ ons· inspection of four lion.
.
stones _damaged at the Standish C11metery on Sunday evening.
soc;ietal
impacts
of
such
an
action
Sites • Powell treet with repairs to
Others
attcndlng were Council·
According to the department, at least five stones were pushed over.
on
Southeastern
Ohio.
be
made
'
b
y
vil~e
employee
Bill
men
Paul
Gerard
and William WaiInvestigation is continuing into the incident It was reported that
However,
he
said,
Ohio
Power
Durst
under
the
direction
of Farley; ten.
a small blue car was seen entering the cemetery on Sunday evening.
Company is faced with the need to the Lyon(l'homas properties on
Finally," Gary Bates of GTE reported on Monday that someone
respond to the interactions of three Chestnut and Seventh Street which
, had shot a 25-pair telephone calber on New Lima Road. It was sbot
issues
namely, the requirements is scheduled as a reclamatiOn pro-·
... hllll-1111011·
in two different locations.
imposed by the recent revisions to ject already, the Hobson Marsh
• · dlat •· n·a ·s..-al!s
the Clean Air Act, the requirement which does not fall under eligibility
ONE. • llr08cl
of a regulated public utility to make requirements .of the Reclamation
CGmiNiillwly·PI'!ald
p.rudent decisions that do ·not Division, and the Dialnond/Hobart
~r retail ~ . oflau,
Units of Meigs County Emergency Medical Services responded
A. Pomeroy man was cited for
Impose
unreasonable
or
excessive
Street
area
whicli
is
being
taken
Chun:tl...
apartmlft1l Mid
to !light calls on Monday and c:arly on Tuesday.
.
·
failure to maintain an assured clear
costs
on
its
cusromers,
and
the
cost
under
review
for
eligibility.
dNtl
atom.
Cal ua fora tml·
At 7:48 am., Middlepon squad went to Hartinger Parkway for
distance ahead Monday followin.g a
.
paul
and
qUOia110n.
level
of
the
Meigs
production
io
Council
adopted
a
f;Ode
"
o
f
reguJeff Patterson, who was transported to Veterans. At 8:14a.m., Midon State Route 7. ,
relation to the depre~d market lations for the Middlepott Arts twO-car I!CCident
'
.
dleport squad went to South Third for Ruby Boling, who was taken
price of moderate to high sulfur . Council, an action required if the
\
to Veterans Memorial Ho~pital. At 8.:59 a.m., Middleport squad·
coals.
·
·
·village;
is
to
apply
for
grants
from
Ke~th L. Swartz, 32, of Route
went to Logan S~t for Mary Siders. Siders was transported to
He
pointed
out
that
the
PUCO
·
the
Ollio
Arts
Council
·
2,
was
cited after he failed· to Stop
Veterans. At 9:26a.m., Tuppers Plains squad. responded to a cllimhas
recently
introduced
the
concept
The
first
readina
was
given
to
for
a
car
traveling ill front of him in
~Y ftre on Keebaugh Road at the John Dillard residence.
·
lntegratud
Resource
Planning
an
ordinance
which
will
require
Salisbury
Township.
of
At 1:54 p.m., Middlepon ~uall went to· Overbrook Center for
which
requires
that
utilities
.always
mandatory
registtayon
for
new
res·
Acc:ording
.to.a report from the
Virginia Thorne, and transported her to Veterans. At 2:09p.m.,
select
the
least
cost
alternative.
idents
or
busiiicaseS
in
the
v
illage.
Gallia-Meigs
post of the State
214 EAST MAIN
Pomeroy squad went to Lynn Street for Jerry Uribe, who was talcen
''Our
preliminary
data
indicates
A
request
for
~
to
-pay
Highway
Patrol,
Swartz
was
northto Veterans.
,
.
POMEROY
that fuel switching may, in fact, be the cleltc and assislant clc:zk of the bound when the car in front of him,
On Tuesday" at 8:2!&gt; ·a.m., Rutland squad went to Happy Hollow
992,&amp;687
the lea~t cost strategy. If, under Board of Public "Affairs was , driven _by Eugena D. Anspach, 19,
Road'for Ernest-Lyons. Lyons was taken to Veterans. At 9:26a.m.,
these condition, we were to choose rofemd back"to the board members of Middleport, slowed in traffic.
Pomeroy squad went to Court Street for Louise Frank. She was
the
scrubber option, either the -kith the ·recolitlilendation that they Swanz was unable to stop in time
treated but not tran~rtcd.
.State Auto .
PUCO would have to allow the be paid on an' hourly basis if ·and struck Anspach's car in the

Two charged with petty theft
1/P

•

'

;

aaidf

,

.
Middleport man cited

Vandalism, thefts investigated .

.
Pomeroy:man
cited by patrol

EMS answers eight calls

*

..

-------..:..-~

Ar~a ~eaths . .

ad-de&lt;l_costs....;_to_be_borne_.....,:by-e-lec-tn-·_c- required
to aaend meetings.
Councilman
Dewey Horton
bought up the·problem .oC loitering
Nancy J, Chancey
Montecello, lnd.; Mrs. Richard retired employee of Rockwell
Nancy J. Chancey, 73, died (Donna) Maloney, Decatur; Mrs. International, Feetwood Trucking
Monday, March 2S, 1991 at a rest Tom (~veyln) Shea, Lancaster; and was currently employed.by •
home in Ravenswood, W.Va.
Mrs. J~rry (Janelle) Kaehr, Apple- Wales Industties, Inc.
.• ·
Born June 27, 1917 in Kenna ton, WISC.; two brothm, Ross NorHe is survived by his wife, Eva
W.Va., she was the daughter of the · ris, P_omer~y; and Carl Norris, E. Zumbach of Lancaster, two sons
late Robert and Cora Fisher, Junctton Cny; 22 grandchildren and daughters-in-law, Michael R.
Kenna. W.Va. She was a member and 32 great-grandchildren
and Gloria Zumbach of Atkinson,
. , Of the Saft Hills Church in "Ripley,
Services will be held Thursday Ill.; and R. David and Kimberly
. W.Va.
.at 1 p.m.·at the Union Chapel Unit· Zumbach, Stow; a daughter and
She is survived by a son and ep Methodist Church in Decatur, son-in-law, Dianna and Richard
Beatty, Austintown; grandchildren,
daughter-in-law, Charles E. an.d Ind.
Mary Chan¢ey, Pomeroy; two
Friends may call at the Haggard Justin and Christopher Beauy and
grandsons, Michael Chancey and and Arms Funeral Home on Jill Zumbach, and step-granck:hiiRick (Paula) Chancey, and a great- Wednesday from 2·5 and 7-9 p.m. · chen, Manuel and Isaac Shavez,
granddaughter, Mindy Jo Chancey; and on Thursday one hour prior io and Stephen and Kevin Beaay; his
a brother, Odra Fisher, Kenna, the service at the church. Masonic mother, Gertrude •G. ZUmbach and
W.Va.: and a sister, ·Phoebe Good, · services will be Wednesday at 8:45 two sisters, Beulllh' M. Zumbach,
.Sissonville, W.Va.
p.m. Burial will be Friday atip.m. · Tuppers Plains; Nancy L. Schul,
. Besidlls her parents she was pre- at Letart Falls Cemetery jn Letart Reedsville,
· ·
ceded in death by her husband, Falls with military grav~ rites.
He -was preceded in death by his
W.C. "Wib" Chancey in 1979; a ~emorial may be made to the father, Jacob F. Zumbach.
brother, Ahas Fi$her," Columbus;· Union Chapel United Methodist
Services wiU be Wednesday at
Jimmy F'tlber, Kenna, W.Va.; and Church in Decatur,lnd.
10 am. at Halteman-Fen and Dyer
sister, and Lesie Elliott, Ripley,
Funeral Home in Lancaster with
·W.Va.
Robert Zumbach
Rev . Harold Sturm officiating.
Burial will be at Floral Hills MemServices will be Thursday at"
Vail's Funeral Home in Ripley,
Robert R. Zumbach, 59, Lan· ory Gardens. .
W.Va. Burial will be in the Fair- caster died Monday March 25
Friends may call at the funeral
plains Cemetery. Friends may call 1991, at Lancaster Fairfield Com: home on Tuesday from 6-9 p.m.
at the funeral home on Wednesday. miDiity Hospital.
and on W~esday one hour prior
"'
N
'
Born
Feb.
19,
1932
in
Meigs
,
to the ser:vtCC:
·
Rev. L • '· Orris
County, he was the son·of Jacob F.
Contn~ut1ons may be !R~de !O
Rev. Lawrence T. Norris, 88, and Gertrude G. Monroe ZUmbach. the Amencan, Heart Assoc1aaon m
formerly of Pomeroy, died Mon- · He was a member of the Lancaster Mr. Zumbach s memory.
day, March 2S, 1991, at theAdams. · FOPA and the NRA. He was a
Cotinty Memorial Hospital in
Decllll!',lnd.
He had sefved as minister at
-Pomeroy in 1934 and in Junction
City from 1934-1943. Born Nov.
20, 1902 in Letart Falls, he was the
son of the late Philson and Ella
Pilchard Noms. He was first married to Belinda Wolf on June 8,
1922 and she preceded him in
dealhECz'-:e 8, 1982. He then married ·
th Cnmter on Aug. 27,
1913 llld she died Feb. 23, 1985~
'
He retired from the {Dinistry in
19611 aad he aved as chaplain in
the Ullitcd Slltel Army from 1943·
·4S. He rejoined the Air Fon:e from
1947-48. Mr. Norris was a member
of the Union Chapel United
Metboditt Church in Decatur, Ind.,
the Dec:alur Muonic Lodge No.
S11, the Deci"Y Optimist Club and
American Legion Post No. 43 of
Decatur.
" .
Mr. Norris is survived by r.hree
.ions, Clarence of Rome City, Ind.; ·
'Charles of Rome City; and Harold
:of Auburn, Ind.; four daughters,
Mrs. George .(Cqnnie) Bobbitt,

~. vehu:les.
~lting in light damage to
both
. Neither driv.er was injured.

.1!1 c......

........anc.

Low lonlgllt Ill mid 50s.
Tbunday, partly cloudy.
Cuace of raiD 30 percent.

Page4
•

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•

aI

_.........
.
Pomeroy.·MidCIIeport, Ohio, Wednesday, March 21, 1991

VOl. 41, No. 237
. Cclpvrtalt.ed1881

- ~~~rd

By Cllarlne Poelllt:b
·
Seutloel News Staff
. A lengthy and somewhat heated
" discussiOn on Whether $12,800 in
'lottery funds should be spent on
. band instruments or math books
higblighied a meeting of the Meigs
Local Board of Education Tuesday
· night.
.
.
; The discussion was triggered by
· a request from Toney Dingess,
: band director, for money to pur· chase some new in$1ruments for the
. high school band. 'fhe initial
: request was made by Dmgess at the
··March 11- meetina but no action
: was laken at that time..
: However, when the matter was
; brou-ht .up aaain at lt~~~t nigbt' s
. meeana; there c;Jcveloped a c:onuo-

versy amona the members and a·
He said that because of the low
motion to pun:hase the instruments ~ in the math area on the prowas defeaied by a vote of r.hree to , fic1ency tests, the swe haa adopted
twO.
.
,
a .new matb curricul11m and that
' The two mel!lbers voung m new books are beillg developed to
fa~or of aul)lorizmg the purchase coincide with that curriculum. The
usmg lottery funds we_re Jeff district .. which had low scores in
Werry. who made the mouoo, and math, w1ll be required to purchase
Bob Snowden..
"
. them, the superintendent said
. Board members Bob Barton,
Carpenter said that he could not
Richard Vaughan, and Larry Rupe recommend the expenditure of
voted ''no".
$12,800 now for band instruments
Before the v.ote Supt. lames since he felt that the new math
Carpen!er explatn~d that. the bal- ~ -an.d suppl.emental materials
ance of "tottery mone~ !~ abo~t w1ll reqwre all of the lottery funds,
$55,000 and that the dtstnct w11l the only available money at this
need th.a t money to purchase time.
between 1. 750 and 2,000 math
Snowden conlended that the Jot.
textbooks plus supplemental mate- tcry money could be used now to
"rials.
· purcltaae tbe band i11Stru111enti and

to

1

loa, left, Ylce·presldeat ol tle Melp Unit ol tbe
Americaa CIJIC!I' Sachty, lll'lul Kloes, 11ealor
vlc:e-presldent at Parmer's Baak. Coat for tbe
d•"odlls Is $5 per bundle or 10 or 50 cents a
"•piece.

reduced charge of. felonious
&amp;Ssaq!L At his sentencing hearing,
Judge Crow imposed the maximum
penalty permitted by law, a term of
actual incan:eration of eight to 15
years in prison. Judge Crow cited
the seriouS nature o( the assault in
his sentencing of Brown.
.Brown appealed the sentence,
will! four separ~~te errors alleged to
have been made by the trial court.
Brown argued that Judge Crow had
"acted arbitrarily by failing to consider state sentencing guidelines
when the Judge sentence&lt;~ Browri
to the maximum." The Court of
·Appeals held that the sentence was
within the Court's discretion and
statutory guidelines.
,Brown further agrued thlit the
Court emd in failing to advise the
Defendant of" his ri~ht to request
conditional probat1on as a drug
dependent .person. However, the

...----.-Local briefs-Thre~-vehicle

.

.992-2914 .
THE MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST
A GREAT PLACE TO MER A FRIEND!
'

.
•

then replaced wben general fund .
monies become available later this
year. He also indica.ted that the
board needs. to think .about aome
new uniforms tor the growing
band.
·
Rupe stated his concern about
academic needs while emphasizing
that he is not against !he band. He
questioned purchasing practices of
the band and said that he relt ~
tions might be larger if more purchases were made from local businesses . Dingess explained that
man times ·needtld articles. are not
avair.ble locally while others can·
be purchased 81 1 much less cost
from out-of-county sources.
·
Barton president of the board
raised the 'question of giving thai

much money to the band without
consideration of the needs of the
athletic department. Snowden
countered that the athletic clepart- ·
ment can raise ticket prices "to get
more money. Werry said that a
request from the athletic depart·
ment could be considered when it
is made and shouldn't be a factor in
determining the band's request for
insuuments.
Barton then asked Werry to
withdraw his motion and wait
another two weeks befo~ a vote is
talcen to allow adequate ume to further consider the athletic and academic needs of the district Werry
refused and the motion went to the
floor where it failed.
During the discussion it was ·

repOrted by Treasurer J!"'e Fry that
there is no mon~y avat)able ·m the
general fun~ wnh wh1ch to purchase band mstruments, that the
onl~ source· would be the lottery
money.
Contracts Awarded
Four pnnc1pal~ were awarded
new con~cts durmg the meeung
after bemg ~ommended by the
board for the1r performance over
the past year.
Wendy Halar. was employed ~or
three years as prmc1pal of the SaliS. bury El~mentary School and al.so
as the director of federal programs.
Two year contr~cts were ~warded
to Charles -Halliday. H~sonv1ll~
Elementary School prmc1pal anU
Continued on page 3

New jobs co~mittee formed

a

THE

2 Section a, 14 Pages 25 centa
A llultlmedla Inc. Nowapaper

rejects.request to purchase instruinents ·

The Fourth District Court of
AllJieais·recently - den~ an appeal
of Meigs County COmmon Pleas
Court case ftled on behalf of James
M. Brown, and liffirmed the sentence- which was imposed on
Brown by Judge Fred W: Crow IU.
The three-judge J!l!nel included
Judges Lawrence Grey, William B.
S~leton (by assignment), 81111-Presidit}g Judge Earl Stephenson. The
entry denudaing lhe appeal was writ·
ten by 1 e Grey, ,
Brown.was originally charged
by an indictment r~tumed liy the
Meigs County Grand Jury with
attempted murder in connection .
with an incident which occurred on
·· April 23, 1989, "in which Dennis
Tillis was slabbed with a knife.
Brown, who was represented in
the appeal by Meigs County Public
Defender Charles H. Knight, ultimately entered a pies of guilty to a

FIFTH AND MAIN STREETS, MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

'•

2-D; K-S

Bro·.yn's appeal denied by court

THIS EASTER SUNDAY, MARCil 31st
~:00 A.M~ Sunrise Cantata
8:1 S &amp; 10:30 A.M. Worsh_ip
9:30 A.M. Sunday .School

.

Pidt4: 7344
Cards: 7-H, 9-C;

•

MIDDLE·RORT CHURCH
OF CHRIST .
.

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Pick3:290

niea

Why· ~ot Celebrate
The R_e surrection With Us?

I

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COUll=

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Ohio Lottery

Indiana
Pacers·top
Atlanta.five

m.:

~ts

l

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accident investigated

A three-vehicle accident on West Main Street Tuesday afternoon
resulted in moderate damage to all of the involved vehicles and
injury to one of the drivm: ,
.
Josie Morton, Pomeroy, was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital by the Pomeroy Emergency Squad. She was treated and released.
According to Pomeroy JJOJice, Morton had stoPPed to allow a
child to relrieve' a ball from the street when her vehicle was struck
in the roar by a car driven by David Maurer, Ashland The Maurer
vehicle had been. hit in the rear by a CB!" driven by Derek Miller,
Rutland. Miller ~as cited for failure to maintain assured clear dis" tance.
.
..
The Morton vehicle had damage to the rear, the Maurer vehicle
damage to both the front and rear along with the rear quarter panel
on the right si~,111d the Miller car, djlmage to the front end.
·
At 3:54 p.m. police investi~ ali accident on East Main citing
William Cundiff, SyracUJe wtth failure to yield the right cif way. '
Pqlice reported that Cundiff was pulling from The Dairy Valley to
make a left tum on West Main Street when he struck the side of a
car driven by Angela Swanz, Letart, W. Va. There was moderate
dan\age to the pasaenp side door or' the Swanz car, and moderate
d8mage to the front lefJ side of the Cundiff vehicle. .
•

Racine receives recreation grant

=

The Ohio Depanment of Natural Resourcet has awarded a
$1,900 grant to the~of
Raeino for public ouldoor recreation
tbil yea,
· · 10 aa - - . e a t today fnlla State

Jan Michael J..ons,'
· cville).
Sen. Lona stal,ed dW the viDage wu one of 17 cOmmunities in
Coutlnued on Jllll 3

Coun of Appeals, citing specific
statements by Brown at the time of
his plea that he was not a drug
dependent person, rejecte'd that
contention as well.
·
Brown also argued that he was
not provi&lt;!ed effective assistance of
counsel, in spite of the fact he was '
represented by an attorney who
v.;as successful in getting the
charge reduced from attempted
murder to felonious assault. The
Court of Appeals overruled that
final assignment of error. The
Court of ApPe&amp;ls found no errors, .
after reviewmg both the plea and
sentencing hearings.
·
Brown remains in prison, serving Jhe original sentence as
impo$ed by Judge Crow.

Holy Week
• Slated
S.ervlees
St. Paul Lutheran Church,
Pomeroy, and St. John Lutheran
Churcb, Pine Orove, will have a
joint Maundy Thursday Service at
St. Paul at 7:30 p.m. The service,
held in remembrance of die Lord's
Last Supper, will include Holy
Communion. The women of the
churches will strip the altsr at the
end of the service during the read·
ing of Psalm 22.
The youth of St. Paul and St.
John wiUpresent a Service of
Tenebrae (Latin for "shadows•),
"The Day the Sun Refused to
Shine," it 7:30p.m. Good Friday at
St. Paul. Youth partictpatins are
Brad Anderson, Adria Preclter,
Chris Hamm and Heather McPhail.
This service i"'gresses from light
to darlmess, symbolizing the graclu..
al •th of Jesus on the cross and
remindinp Christians of the fading
loyalty o his disciples and follow-

pro~ote

regional ·growth .

By MINDY KEARNS
Economic Development Authority
OVP News StaiJ
for bringin~ General Dynamics to
"People for Jobs," a committee the area. 'You've got a success
to bring jobs and industry to the tri- track on the way," Edwards said,
county area, was created Tuesday "Keep Up the good work and keep
evening during a meeting at the pulling tog~ther."
Lowe Hotel in Poi.nt Pleasant,
During Edwards' preSentation,
W.Va. The meeting followed an entitled "Economic Impact of New
organizational gathering that Jobs on a Community," he stated
occurred March 4 at the Mason tbat population-wise, the State of
County ~ibraty.
.
West Virginia is the size of Pitts·
Will Edwards, director of the · burgh. He added that in the recent
Center for Regional Progress at Census, Mason County is listed in
Marshall Universil)', gave a preaen- the "worse than average" category
tation at the meeung and was the for a high decline in population.
~speaker.
"J~ Cre_ate jobs; money creates
Edwards commended Frank money, SBid Edwards. Stating he
·Lee, diiecllii Of-me~ ~~ ·Slay oon9CrVitive, Edwliids -

Steelworkers b·anned from engaging
in ·violence against replacements , ·
PARKERSBURG, W.Va. • The
United Steelworkers union has
dooe its part to diS0011111gC violence
IIY out-of-work Ravenswood Aluminum Corp. members, but Local
5668 has not. a federal judge said.
U.S. District 1udge Charles
Haden issued an injunCiion' Tuesday banning the steelworkers from
engaging in violence against the
company and ita replaCement work-

ers.

I

•

Haden's on!Cr came after a day·

long hearill8 in which replacement . said.
Haden said his order was directworkers testified the{' were
harassed by members o United ed at the local, saying the United
Steelworkers Local 5668.'
Steelworkers union had tried to dis·
Larry Barnes, a replacement courage violence.
"worker, said he was injured recentMore than 1,700 steelworkers
ly when an object was thrown have been out of work at
through the windshield of his car Ravenswood since Nov. I, w~en
near the entrance to the plant.'
their contract expired.
Union supporters have violated
The.union says it membe)"s have
a recent co~ order by panicipat- been locked out,
while
ing in "drive-bys" in which they Ravenswood officials say the
clog traffic around the plant, Haden workers are on strike.

Five held ·on federal charges
By LEE ANN THOMPSON
W.Va., were arrested on March 21 trio was making its way from
OVP News Slalf
in Charleston as a part of that Charleston, and did not stop in
Federal and West Virginia law investigation, according to Sgt. Henderson as expected. The bust
enforcement ofllcials arrested five Danny Gillespie of the Metro Drug was so quick, Gillespie said, there
was no bme to notify Gallia Counpeople over a two-day l)criod on Task Force in Charleston.
clwles of conspiracy to distribute
Metro, and the federal Prug ty officials.
herom, with r.hree of those taking Enforcement Agency orchestrated
The five arrests were part of an
place in the parking lot of a Gal· the arrests, with lhe help of Mason ongoing six month invesugation by
the task force and the DEA. The
lipolis restaurant
County Sheriff's Deputies.
·.
Being held on federal charges
Gillespie said the three arrested Metro Drug Task Force is a group
are Richard L. Dunlap of St. in Gallipolis were carrying 47 bags of law enforcement officers from
Albans, Scott A. Crouch and Dina of heroin. The drug traffic comes Kanawha County Sheriff's DepartM. Lewis, both of Columbus, wbo from Columbus, Gillespie said, and ment and the cities of Nitro, South
were arrested at Bob Evans Restau· makes it's way to Charleston. The Charleston, St. Albans, Dunbar and
rant on Wednesday, March 20. Henderson, W.Va. area is a fre· · Charleston, which works in conRandy L. Pauley and Deborah S. quentstoppingplaceforthegroup. junction with federal agencies.
Masinter, both of Charleston, , At the time of the arrests, the
. - - - - - -- - --;---'--- - - ' - - - - - - - - - - - - ' - -- -- -- -,

ers.

St. Paul will have a sunrise ·service at 7 a.m. on Sunday, followed
by East« breakf!ISL Festival Easulr
services, i!!cluding Holy Communion, will taiCe place If 9:30a.m. at
SL Jobn and II a.m. at St. Paul1
The cllildrell of SL -John wiD ha~
an Eas&amp;er egg bunt immediat~ly
following the service.
Rev. Laura Leach Shreffler
invites the public to all services.

said every job crea1ed has a "ripple
effect" that affects three more pe()pie.
For every 100 new manufacturing jobs, new retail establishments
increase by seven, population
increases by 102, school enroii ment climbs by 61, and $1,772,943
is gained in community retail sales,
added Edwards. '
He said. based on what's occur- '
ring now, in the year 2000, the
average age of Mason County's
population will go from the 35 year
average in 1989. to 39 years and
above. He predicted an increase _of.
people over 50 years old,. whtle
·:· · Coaftiiiiedon PIKe 3 ·.

SEARCH STILL DELAYED BY
SWOLLEN OHIO • Addltioaal raiD up aad
down tile Oblo Rlnr Taetd•J eo•tiD!Ied to
clell7tlle IT di tJr tile bodJ of a -bel ned
drowaed l!epdiJ tsallt Ia • Oblo Rl•er It
tbe Galltpc!lla Loeb ltad l&gt;IID wbea two berles
.capttlzed alter-tlley broke any rr- aa el1ht·
bU'p fleet. Conrad RlpJ.ey, publle lllfonaatloa

.

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