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. •

• •

Pag1 ·10-:-The Dally Sentinel

Monday, March 9, 1992

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

- -·People in the news-Nation's largest mall
:looking for a very big niche
By JIMMY GOLEN
Alloeillted Press Writer
: BLOOMINGTON, Minn. (AP)
·- Sholl!ling for superlatives?
:. WelCOme 10 the Mall of Ameri.;t:a, litlle more than four months
)IWIY from becoming the nation's
,jargest shopping mall.
::. Here you'll fmd more steel than
::&amp;lie Eiffel Tower. More than 2.5
·million cubic feet of concrete.
~Almost as much Door space as the
-world's tallest office buildin~­
:More than 400 stores, 14 movte
1heaters, seven restaurants and five
:rughtclubs. A $70 million enclosed
amusement park.
Plus one very big question: Will
it succeed?
With other shopping and 10urist
spots struggling, the $625 million
Mall of America hopes 10 thrive by
offering everything - and they do
mean everything '" in one 4.2-million-square-foot blosphere in this
Minneapolis suburb.
"It's more than a mall and it's
more than an entertainment center," said Maureen Hooley,
spokeswoman for the mall's developers. "I think you could best

compare it to a city.''
But retail experts believe the
mall's size could actu. all,Y scare
away people with a shon SROP.Jling
list. Some analysts wonder tf it's
enough of a tourist attraction to
compete with the Disneys of the
amusement world.
And then there's the timin~.
The mall was planned m the
midst of the go-go '80s, but it toolc
so long to build that it was still
going up when the economy staned
going down. Barring a quick
turnaround, the ribbon cutting will
come amid the Twin Cities' worst
retail climate in almost 20 years.
"It's a very risky project," said
Sid Doolittle, a partner with Chicago-based retail strategists McMillan Doolittle. "I would guess that
being on the edge of a recession
when it opens, it increases the
n'sk"
.
The mall has survived the
bankruptcy of two anchor tenants
and the on-site deaths of two construction workers.
It was originally planned to be
the world's largest mall, but fmancial reality intervened. One million

square feet were eliminated and
some peripheral projects, such as
hotels and a monorail10 the nearby
Minneapolis-St. Paul International
Airpon, were delayed. The world's
largest mall, which covers S.2 million square feet, is in Edmonton,
Alberta.
.
Two of the main tenants, Federated Department Stores Inc., the
parent
company
of
Bloomingdale's, and R.H. Macy
Co., filed for Chapter II OOnkruptcy court protection during the
mall's construction.
Hooley said neither banbuptcy
was a matter of concern for the
mall. Doolittle said they should
have been.
"The smaller tenants have to
see enough strength in the anchor
tenants to make it wonhwhile for
them," he said.
Nonetheless, Hooley said the
mall is 70 percent leased even
without including nearly I million
square feet committed to the four
anchors.
"We're here for the duration,"
she said. "Not the recession."

.Utah ranked 'Most Livable
State'; Mississippi ranked last
LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) - A
formula that weighs 43 factors,
·from crime and marriage rates 10
·"deficient bridges," has revealed
Utah as the nation's "Most Livable
State," a Kansas publisher said.
Utah edged out 1991 winner
New Hampshire, which slipped to
second place in the second annual
rankings compiled by Morgan
Quitno Corp., the company said
Sunday. Minnesota, Nebraska and
Kansas rounded out the top five.
Mississippi placed last in the
company's "State Ranldngs
1992," replacing Louisiana, which
moved up a spot.
Ohio was ranked 33rd, down
two spots from last year and behind
states like Massachusetts, New Jersey and !Uinois.
"Utah simply has what people
and companies are looking for,"
said Scott Morgan, president of
Morgan Quitno. "The state has
healthy, highly educated citizens;

JACOB BLAKE

:Third birthday
;. Jacob David Blake celebrated
·bis third birthday recently at his
·home in Butler, Ind., with his parenl3, David and Tammy Blake, and
biother. Philip.
: Olhers aaending were his $!_8Dd~ts, Marvin and Eva M1lliron
Pel Diane Milliron, his aunt
• Paternal grandparents ane John
:aod Sylvia Blake, Lincoln Heights,

.fana'OY·

relative!~

low taxes and very little
poverty. '
Morgan Quitno, which is based
in Lawrence, pubtishes State Rankhogs and State Perspectives.
Although the rankings are certain to draw protest from some
states, the company said the factors
on which they're based fairly
reflect what many Americans view
as "items which make up a basic
overall high quatity of life."
"There is not a state in the
union which doesn't have somelhing going for it, some pan of it in
which its citizens take great pride,"
Morgan said. "However, this ranking reflects those factors which the
average American considers important to his or her daily life."
The Census Bureau, federal
Commerce Department and Centers for Disease Control are among
the sources listed by the publisher
for its data on graduation rates, suicide, taxes, crime and other fac10rs.
"With so many special interest
groups putting out state rankings in
!heir narrow area of concern, people seem to enjoy our weD-rounded
rankin~s," Morgan said. "It's
· interesung 10 find out which state
the numbers say is the best allaround- the most livable.''
States showing the biggest
improvement in the 1992 rankings

include Oregon, which moved from
30th to 121h; Illinois, up from 44th
to 32nd and New Jersey, up from
34th to 23rd, Morgan said.
Here ane the current rankings for
· aU 50 states, with the 1991 ranking
in parentheses:
I. Utah ('i) 2. New Hampshire
(I) 3. Minnesota (2) 4. Nebraska
(12) 5. Kansas (9) 6. Hawaii (7) 7.
Idaho (5) 8. Iowa (14) 9. Vermont
(6) 10. Wisconsin (9)
II. Connecticut (16) 12. Oregon
(30) 13. Nonh Dakota (8) 14. tie,
South Dakota (4) and Washing10n
(20) 16. Colorado (13) 17. Maine
(9) 18. Alaska (17) 19. Virginia
(15) 20. Wyoming (18)
21. Mary land (2 I) 22. Massachusetts (24) 23. New Jersey (34)
24. Montana (22) 25. Indiana (19)
26. California (23) 27. Nevada (26)
28. tie, Missouri (29) and Texas
(25) 30. tie, Arizona (27) and Pennsylvania (36)
32. Illinois (44) 33. Ohio (31)
34. Rhode Island (32) 35. Delaware
(40) 36. Nor1h Catalina (37) 37.
Oklahoma (28) 38. Michigan (35)
39. Georgia (42) 40. Arkansas (33)
41. Soulh Carolina (38) 42. New
Mexico (47) 43. Florida (48)' 44.
New York (46) 45. West Virginia
(41) 46. Kentucky (39) 47. Tennessee (42) 48. Alabama (49) 49.
Louisiana (50) 50. Mississippi (45).

Community Caleadar items
appear two days before an event
and the day or that event. Items
must be received weD in advaDU
to assure publication in the cal·
endar.

KYGER CREEK • Women
Alive, Kyger Creek, will meet
Monday at 7 p.m. There wUI be a
devotional speaker and Pat Elison
will be the craft demonstrator.
Refreshments. Call 992-2469 for
funher information.

MONDAY
POMEROY • The regional
meeting for the Soap Box Derby
will be held Monday at 7 p.m. at
Pleaser's Restaunmt. Neil Vanderbilt, speaker.
POMEROY - An organizational
meeting for those interested in
planning a Sugar Run reunion for
1ts students will be held Monday at
7:30 p.m. at the Meigs County
Chamber of Commerce/Park District office, Second Street,
Pomeroy. For further information
call Eleanor Smith at 992-2639,
Marvin and Lois Burt at992-3101
or Linda Mayer at992-5954.
RACINE - Racine Village
Council to meet at 10 p.m. on
Mondar. at the council chambers at
Star Mill Parle.
SYRACUSE - Meiss County
Holiness Association wtD have its
annual camp meeting at the Syracuse Church of the Nazarene Monday through Saturday at 7 p.m.
nightly and on Sunday at 6 p.m.
Sp:cial speaker and special music
mghtly. Public invited.

..

· iFirst birthday
·c;: Pltillp Andrew Blake celelnted
.. . tlnl
Mlltlt
PHIUPBLAKE

••

blrdldly 011

I It the

- - rA lliiiJIIICIIJiratll, Marvin
ild Iva Miillron, lading Creek
...... wldt • ditner, ice Clli1llll and

·Ere..~~ :tr~:t;8.::,

...,..., Jacob, luau, DJaae
_. Bolnie Rlfe; and hlJ
- - . QICk BlllriO.
·• ...,_ II'IIICIPnnU 11e John
lJacoiD HciJ)tll. '•

=SlUe,
-

. '...
....

'

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WORK!
'

..
-;c

'

.

when
Mlddl•PGtt VIi~• Counoll met In

re~::P.~rd tg~~~ ~~,~t.l)hda

or thl proJect wu m.m. th.

IO'Iiill ot thtee bld• rtoalvld IIIII
lnelbd.•d thi •tablllutloil o~ the
rMr .~nk 111d l ne\4' riuTip. SIIN!o
the btU came In lowOt Ullli tii~t·

.

r.vrn: ~~c~~p::rr;ru:~rAt
.
I

;

BIRTHDAY OBSERVED ·Margaret Peery, Newhall, W.Va.,
(seated), was honored rec:enlly in observance or ber 8Ist birthday
with a party at the home of her granddaughter, Margaret Caudill,
Jackson. Pictured with her are family members tbat make up five
generations: Virginia Bland, daughter, Racine; Margaret Caudill,
granddaughter, Jackson; Robert Bryant, great-grandson, and
Wesley Thomas Bryant, great-great-grandson, both of Patriot

Combination coat-sleeping bag
proves popular with the homeless

\

AVinue, and itepi dOwri to the bOAt

launchlna ~we,. ilideclto tho
The IIIHIUII.!.L UCordlnt 10
Mayor Pf! Honman, 1'1111 below
the It 12~ lllottad 1111111 pra,IIOt.
The \llllaile rtoilved &amp; aralli ot
conlricl 111 cornpmblj unl~rate.

/:!'

SJ8,000 l'tolli the DoMartnllnl or
lllltll Roiilul'eU., lvhlon ot
IIWIY.I\ \IIIII! lhl Yl ~~~ 10 pia•
tit illllild donal S37,JOO,
·
. Donation• toward tho vlllaao'e
pottlon llt tbe litiljict coat toul
S7 00() illd lllldltlonil donatlbna ilt
belna aoc,pled, A mark•r IIIIth
naMe• ot donort alvlna St,OOO or
mOte wlli bt placed 111 tho levee, day nl~hl.
. . Other I IIIIi
Hoiltlill Rehabilitation
The rooy_~Un1 pro eel wa• dll•''
Mi~or ltaltrnili eild.
AI part ar I req~lrid public cuued by TtUIIOU \11 .. diiPIIYed
Contrlbuton io far have lnolud·
hoarlna
held ai Ilia Counclf moot·
CoatlnuttUII Pilt 3
od Jay Hall, U,OOOi Bemltd PUIU!,

~

where they can get them," said
Brother Bill McDonald, who runs a
shelter.
All the coats are given away,
and distribution is handled by
McDonald, who is careful about
who receives one.
"There's so many guys who
would take lhe coat and sell it for
drug money," he said.
The garment was developed two
years ago by students at Textile,
who split into groups, or mock
companies, each semester and
develop a product for people with
special needs.
The coat design was marketdriven: Students asked the homeless foc advice. Make it warm, they
said. Water repellent. Roomy. In
duD, inconspicuous colors.

LOS ANGELES (AP) Sylvester Stallone is quitting his
suburban digs for more rugged
property in the Rockies.
.
Stallone, 45, heads a pannership
that bought 160 acres in Telluride,
Colo., for about $8.5 million.
He also purchased II lots in the
ski area at an average price of
$334,000, the Los Angeles Times
reponed Sunday, quoting unidentified sources.
The "Rambo" and " Rocky'.'
star recently sold his 24·acre ranch
near suburban WesUake for $4 million, said real estate broker Carolyn
Jones.

He also is selling a polo field in
Hawaii but keeping his homes in
Hawaii, Malibu and the Beverly
HiUs area.
SPRINGFIELD. Mo. (AP) Twenty years after leaving Southwest Missouri State University for
Hollywood, "Roseanne" star John
Goodman was initiated into Sigma
Phi Epsilon.
Goodman had pledged and partied at the fraternity during his college days but never became an official member- until Saturday
night.
.
The actor joked that he couldn't
recall much about his days in the
frat house.
"Some kind of yeast infection
oflhe brain," he said.

COMBINATION DINNER ONLY·
(Dialng Room Only)

Served with whipped potatoes, chicken gravy, cole al~w. hot roll and
butter. Sorry, no aubatltutes except beverage with additional prices.

NOW FIA1URIIIG HOMEMADE
Dl•a ROllS'

: ~ . $3·· 65
, ONlY

r4•1111M.t

Holzer Cllillci Oanltll 'l'rult, Parm· lftJ, JIWI Tiuliell, hou11111 ijljiolil·
ere Balik, •na tt;lulilbul Southern 111, Uilked . ab6u~ Coliiili~~IIYPower, ucUi,OOO. .·
D6volopment8101lk Ollnt mtlitlel
lllltlltr Don•tlon
which are IYI!Iab~ 1111 • OOftiJ-.il•
!lob Ollrllort, prtaldent or the ~~ bull tar hollalna rthlbllltailon
MladiOIIOII Community Auoola· '"d nollhbotllood ro¥1IIIIwl011,
llon, P.illlnted a eheck tOt 12,000 hAIIPll~allolltj
rt !IIIWatdi
from ihl' oraanlulio" lOWlid the .w It II 0111 10"1
lYIUil ~
conltrlloilon dt a 1helttr ov.r the i'lltd II~ May I
' illinOIS Will
COIICttte 1l1b poillOd In Oavo DUol ltoa' I'Or i't~llali I tlii li bOund"~
Pll'k lliii~mmOt.• He Mid ~~ thG by Paao=Clt1nt, Poarl, and Ath
mont~ eatn~ troi'ti anaolna rund S~tt.
II •ld.raltlna pto,leou bf·lha
Sho axpl*...~ IIIAt.ill~ fUnd• can
. · Qlrmoro epln pro
wilkly bo dlid t~ nnabllllallon ot public
evedlna ent.etlllntnent an lht pltlt rtildlnd~ jlttiJ!ertY aftd Otlvila toi·
11116 with merchalitl euondlill ldnllal;roporty, ohhar owner
thifr JiOtlfi u a melhod ot lncrw· oocuple or ln\lntor owned, 11
lnglhopplnaln UIWft, · .
well u for lmprovemtntt liiCh ••
·Paura Tnaoktr, Mel a• County tldewilkl.
Oharnber or Commil'Cie •••cull~ . Tru•••n will ~aln a houtlna
dlriGIOt/IOOIIOIIIIO d•vl(ljplftlnl l~ty 111 tilt lii'IOI iltll 1111~ Wlllk ·
1
dlrtC!Or, rtportod on IOOVIUII of wltll Ullllftte
fiOm Mille •itOih,
ihe Clhatnllir, Sill laid thai artoi!J. · CiOIIIiilt.llllil, In PIOJ!II'IIUtln tor fll.li\1
arl eotltlhlilftlto ielthi prleon an t~~DIIU en.
lbe118d. In Moral OtJUrltY. and thlf · Ari upbta on lhi lltu• RoU
tho laltm Cillttr tlti hd btU pij!)'!L'II tl~ IIYift by TtlliMII
de~tm~ltiid 111 "- lho molllullllblti who 1111111 tllatlll• .lilllt lliiiii•J cor
Aitlte lUI( fOnt IIU bMII fOI'IIIIII the PI'61!trtV ~UI'iilliif ihlllild h
to help Ill ihuelectlon proctil, 11\e avlllible aoQn. Arlar Ihat the .
tild.
,
·
ub!tttoa will tie rtiii0¥011 aftd thi
In other Chamber actlv.lllu, etr~cturard•moHah4d~.lcltftitlhl
Tlllokor ~116W1Ced I dlnnetodancl ptOjiCI 0 doveloplftl nlllilllll dill
to be ~d It ltoYal Oilt Park Satur• move torwild,eha lllld.

Reagans celebrate 40th anniversary
dren and grandchildren attended
Sunday's ceremony, which was
held at an undisclosed location.

.

Reedsville firm .aWarded Middleport levee contraCt :
COiillttlatfo~ bC 1\iedivllle

You Can Eat

;

•
a1
The contriCI tor f&amp;l)llt and
M!Hdlepiltt
levM wu iWMdilu til 1), a. Wet&gt;tr

Kentucky Fried Chicken

.

4

ll'npto~ementt J~}he

EVERY TUESDAY NIGHT AT CROW'S
. You Get 'All .The

POMEROY - The committee
for the establishment of a retire·
ment community will meet at Trinity Congregational Church on
Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. All interested
may au.end.

Southern
·advances to
district ftnals

Dy C!ltARLitNE HOUI.tCH
Sentln•l N•wa llltr ·

By BILL STIEG
Associated Press Writer
PHILADELPH1A (AP) - College students asked homeless people what they would want in a coat
The resulc Shelter-Pale, a coat that
convens to a sleeping bag at ni~ht
and folds into a carryall when 1t's
wann outside.
The Shelter-Pale, designed as a
class project at Philadelphia College of Textiles and Science, is
worn by 80 or so homeless people
in the city. An additional 200 coats
are being sewn this year.
With its minimalist silhouette
and monk's hood, it resembles
Japanese avante-garde design or a
prizefi~hter's robe.
~ 'It s fashionable. College kids
KLOSTERS, Switzerland (AP)
- Prince Charles accompanied a like them, tbey want to know

LOS ANGELES (AP) - Former President Reagan and his wife,
Nancy, celebrated their 40th wedPOMEROY - Pomeroy Elemen- ding anniversary by renewing their
vows.
tary PTO meets Monday 7 p.m. in
"From the start, our marriage
the school gym. Program by third
was
like an adolescent's dream of
grade.
what a marriage should be. And foc
40 years it has gotten more so with
TUESDAY
each
passing day," Reagan, 81,
LONG BOTTOM - Rex Justis
will speak at the Faith Fellowship said in a statement before Sunday's
Outreach Program at Faith Full . ceremony.
Mrs. Reagan, 70, recalled how
Gospel Church in Long Bottom on
she
met the future president on a
Tuesday at 7 p.m.
blind date while they were actors
POMEROY - Ohio Eta Phi for Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer studios.
''I'm a very lucky woman," she
Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi Sorority,
said.
wiD hold a pizza party at the Meigs
The Rea,ans marked their
County Infirmary on Tuesday at
March
4 anmversary on Wednes6:30 p.m. All members attend.
day by dining with friends. ChitRUTLAND • Rutland Youth
League organizational meeting will
be held Tuesday at 6:30 p.m. at the
Rutland Civic Center. Anyone
interested is welcome to attend.
Membership fee is $1. Call 7422014 for information.

a few pennies spent here
comes back folding money

WANT
ADS

TOKYO (AP) - AI Foster,
drummer in the Herbie Hancock
jazz group, was arrested Sunday foc
allegedly trying to smuggle nearly
an ounce of beroin into Japan.
Customs officials at Narita Airport found 0.91 ounces of heroin,
with a street value of $18,000, in a
package addressed to Foster at a
Tokyo hotel, said an airpon police
official who spoke on condiuon of
anonymity.
Foster, 49, who has been performing in Japan since Feb. 16, has
denied any connection with the
drugs, which were intercepted on
Feb. 26, the official said.
In Japan, drug smuggting carries
a maximum prison term of 15 years
when the drug is considered meant
for personal use and life in prison
when the case is deemed to be traf.
ficking.
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) Rhythm and blues singer Charles
Brown received a special award
given in tribute to the late rock
music promoter BiD Graham at the
15th annual Bay Area Music
Awards.
"This is one of the greatest
lhings I've ever ~Otten in terms of
national recogniuon," Brown said.
"This award tonight will be a highlight of my career until I die."
Several of Brown's prominent
fans, including Bonnie Raitt and
Elvis Costello, said Saturday's
honor for the 69-year-old singer
was long overdue.
"Man, what a voice. The feeting
that comes through," said blues
harmonica player Charles Musselwhite. "He's got kind of a deepness without being disturbing."
Graham, who promoted such
bands as The Grateful Dead and
Santana, died in a helicopter accident last October.
The heavy metal band MetaUica
won four awards, including outstanding album and outstanding
metal album, both for "Metallica";
outstanding song, "Enter Sandman"; and outstanding drummerpercussionist, for member Lars
Ulrich.

DARWIN • The Bedford Township Trustees will meet Monday at
PORTLAND - Portland Ele7 p.m. at the town hall.
mentary PI'O will meet Tuesday at
7 p.m. at the grade school•
POMEROY - The Disabled
American Veterans wUI meet meet
WEDNESDAY
Monday at 7 p.m. at the hall, 124
POMEROY • The Pomeroy
Butternut Ave. in Pomeroy. State Merchln11 Association will meet
Rqneaenr,.tive Mark Malone will Wednaday 818:30 a.m. in the ton·
be 81 this meeting.
ferenee room at Bank One. All
members ltlend.

'

.HONOLULU (AP) - Alann friend on her first skiing ex~1ion event of an avalartche, the newspaSteen, who has ties of blood and since an avalanche nearly ldiled her per said.
marriage to Hawaii, accepted Gov. four years ago, a newspaper reponMrs. Palmer-Tomkinson brote
John Waihee's offer of a week- ed Sunday.
both legs in the March 10, 1988,
long vacation in the state.
The tabloid Sonntagsblick said snowslide and another friend of the
Steen, 52, was married in the heir to the British throne, prince, Maj. Hugh Lindsay, was
Hawaii in July 1986, six months relaxed and enjoying the brilliant killed. The six-member party, led
before he was taken captive in sun, skied exua slowly and gave by Prince Charles, was skiing away
Beirut, and his sister, Jane Steen . Patti Palmer-Tomkinson constant from marked trails.
Kramer, lives in Kailua, outside reassurance during Saturday's
A prosecutor concluded tl,Je
Honolulu.
excursion.
party caused the avalanche, but
Upon arriving in Honolulu on
The prince wore a special bat- cleared the prince of personal fault.
Saturday, Steen said he often spoke loon that can be inflated in the
about the 50th state with fellow
hostage Jesse Jonathan Turner.
"Jon was stationed here when
he was in the Navy," Steen said.
"He tau~ht here at the University
of Hawati. And so we had a lot of
g~ things to talk about continually.
Steen and his wife, Virginia,
now live in Michigan, where Steen
is a visiting professor of journalism
at Albion College.

Ohio Lottery .

.

'

LAICIITOCICIO •1.000 10klt11 itoul wtrt

~IUu,~

leld II Jcil•lttd l111t flllll'itlt lilt Wttltl
. 1'011
llffol'll ollll Olllo IJt .. l!ill o

lt1Dir11.1, Dl~filoil 6f ;m2lft 11d
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�Tuelday, March 10, 1992
' '

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DEVOTED TO 'IS INIDtiBJI ~ 'IDIR'CS-IIASOJf AREA

-.

, ROBERT L. WINGETT
'
PllbliiiMr
PAT WHITEIIEADAssistant Publisher/Controller

CIIARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

'

LETI'ERS Of OPINION IR weli;OJII4. They should be less than 300
words. All letters • · MJbjoct to cditinc and must be signed with name,
address and te~ . . -. No uruipod letters will be published. letters
should be in good IUII,IIIdm$in&amp; is-. not personalities.
~

'

.'

The pain of peace
dividends as a political issue
lyWAI:.TillR.MEARS ·
AP Stedal Correspolldnt
WASHINGTON ~ "ft .l ia't painless," Dick Cheney said of the
defense spending cut he's· OYeneeing. Not for the Pentqon, not for the
unemployed soldier, DOt It -\be clef~ plan! -llld eventually, not for
President Buslr's m-election Cllll~&amp;n-.
So f1r, the pain of the prac:c' dividend is a lluelbold issue in a presidential campaign !hal's being &lt;lr!wed on mce flllliliar economic aod phil()sophicallines. But the toll it is IIkins in jobs,\~ts. bases and spending in a sluQish economy is moving up the aiaMI•
.
·"The Cold War-is.·over, and if you want 10 count your blessings,
there's one,'.' Btisli u 'lelliiiJ his campaiJII crowds. "The Cold War is
over'and 1\mcrica-won."
011Yio!i$1y, tlla1 is a plus for the presidaiL The political minus is in the
~hiliJ. Jel!ipmeiU compelltd by cutbacks in miliUiry manpower and
.in the civilian defense i!KJustry that has been thriving for die bew:r pan of
' 40 J
~
'
. :l~'/yu'1Criet .;;...,., ~ nllionll policy here that doesn't create a
~ion oat of I ' ~ion,'' llcp. Sam Gejdenson, D-Conn., told
Cheriey at a House helring!Ut weelc. ·
Cheney was justifyiat thudminisuation's defense budget, under l!ressure from Democrat$ .who Qlll !dwpcr reductions than the $50 billion
Bush recommends over the neit s~ years.
Chclley said the only way he ~
is to cut military personnel
beyond the 236,000 alleady $IDe for ·
e. ''General Motors has created conSiemation across tile CCl!IJIIIY because lhey're going to get rid of
78,000 people over thm: years," Cheney said. "The Anny is going 10 do
100,000 this year alone."
.
Add 10 that 87,000 civililll jobs eliminated in !he past two years, he
said, plus,hundreds of thousands of people in private industry who will be
affected by the defense cuts.
·
And aU with more 10 COllie(
A con~S$llllln c111 II'JU8 for a biuer peace dividend one day and
against cuts in his home tliliriCt lhe III:XL
Rep. Les Aspin, 0-Wis., -~ ot the House Armed Services Committee, recommends CUls $91 billion deeper than Bush
over !he
next five years. At lhe same til!le. Alpin has proposed that die Pentagon
keep buying some weapons 10 keep key parts of the defense industry in
business so lhey 'U be there when and if lhcy are needed.
I

'

.-.

It was the morning after our latest big ·election night, the one in
y;hith Bill Clinton won in Georgia,
Paul Tsongas won in Maryland,
Jerry Brown won in Colorado and
George Bush won in every Grand
Old Party pri mary, but not by
enough to make Pat Buchaoan shut
up and go away.
And when we turned on our 1V
sets, we saw- for.one full hour Mario Cuomo. Say what?
Yes, the 1Oth-year governor of
New York and quadrennial noncandidate of Democratic presidential primaries was !he sole guest on
a Phil Donahue show devoted to
America's favorite topic: Why not,
Mario? And Cuomo - who cao be
the most infatuating and most infuriating figure in politics today was, once again, all of the above.
That's the way it goes in this,
the campaign Ycar of Anybody But

-- , Every Tuesday, Republican
voters tell us lhey want Anybody
But Bush, as long as it is Anybody
But Buchanan. And Democrats say
they only want someone who is
electable and wish !hey could vote
for Anybody But ClintonTsongasBrownHarlcinKerrey. Voting ~ese
da ys has become a two-ftsted

Martin Schram
ordeal; one hand holds the lever,
the other holds the nose.
And that seems to have been
what was troubling Phil Donahue,
as he opened his shQw with a dramatic recitation about a deadlocked
convention turning to Cuomo.
"What die hell is wrong with this
kind of speculation?" he asked To
which the governor gave a most
Cuomorian reply: "It is not com-

patible with niy-own nat~ to do
things in a kind of obuque, iildirec~
eccentric way. If you can't go into
New HampShire, rule yourself out.
... To have me and Jesse (Jackson)
and-'other candidates hovering
around die margins would not be
, good for the party."
Donahue, better prepared thao
most poHtical reponers, interrupted
10 show a videotape from Feb. 12,
just before the New Hampshire
election. There, hovering around
the margins of the first primary
state, was Mario Cuomo, speaking
at Harvard as television carried his
words tb viewm (~d also: voters)
just a half-hour's drive to the north:
"People are saying, 'We think
Mario should be the president; we
want to write his name in ... .' You
can write in Pinnochio, you can
write in Mario Cuomo (a timely
tutorial on precisely how it must be
"

-~
~ND Hef?e. To
iNT€~PReT THe.

LareST F"RiJV12RY

Re.suL.rs ...

'

!!C:::

proposes

Letters to the editor
County wasn't robbed!
Dear editor,

I have a question for the Leading Creek Conservancy District as
J ~m sure every customer must have.
· The board made a sta~ement ro
yOur paper lhlt the customers wm
paying IWO 10 thm: times IS much
for Wiler as other nual water companies.
The question - , wbcn we
received this month's bill, we are
sti ll paying that same amount.

When are we going to have our
bills lowered?
Also the customers should be
reimbursed for their over payments
insli:ad of the money going to the
coun1ry. The county wasn't robbed.
We were!
Rulh A. DeLong
39721 Lee Road
Pomeroy

'

. . Thinks jobs are out there
:- llclr editor,
;. I'rACi in The Daily Sentinel
t~eae hiBhly emphatic letters
iliforrain&amp; us tlwlhc wm4 is COIIIC
10 an cad if the ~I fare sluices ~ ·
nOt kqJt Well JTeiSed
·: It seems 10 me the ones sending
oat distreSs signals are the vested
ipterestS.
'
- I think there 11re jobs out IIi=,
riot pKt llld c:hoosy ~ ~t_lmle
• jobs II modesl pay lhat._jndivid~

Pige-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy:....Middleport, 'Ohio
Tue8day, March 10, 1992

· Aecu-WealhetA fo=st for

can afford.

swe.

lature established lhe Ohio Natural provided money for the developAreas and Preserves Income Tu menl of visitor access facilities at
Checkoff (line 21) for taxpaya110 more than 40 naiure preserves aod
voluntarily designate pan or aU of scenic river areas. Facilities include
lheir income tax return for divisio'l handicapped-accessible boardactivities.
walks, observation decks, footSince it began in 1984, nearly a bridges, trails and visitor centers.
million Ohio taxpayers hav~ donat- These facilities assure protection of
ed $4.5 million to the checkoff !he resources while allowing visitors to intimately tour preserve
areas.
In 1983, the Ohio General
Assembly
created the Nongame
account. Last year alone, 130,000
and
Endangered
Wildlife Income
taxpayers contributed neai-ly
$700,000. setting an all time high Tax Checkoff Oine 22) to help ~en­
of $5.27 for average donation size. crate funds for the conservauon,
These funds have been used for preservation and management of
maoy successful activities, includ- !his large segment_of our wildlife.
ing acquisition of natural areas aod For years, hunters and anglers have
scenic river lands, natural areas supported the management of game
surveys. species monitoring, the ar~imals tbrotllh license purchases.
publication of an Ohio Breeding The tal checkoff allows everyone
Bird Atlas. scenic river tree plant· to respond LO the needs of our
ings and stream bank stabilization nongame endangered wildlife aod
projects, aod lhc printin&amp; and distri- their habitaLI . .
Over the past five years, $3.7
bution of educational materials.
Checkoff donations have also

Sen. Jan M. Long

IND.

Veterans praise officials

811Yf':~t8rts

·Meigs never lanlls anything

=

~~~ oC_II;Ie bottom_llllh

1 di · · bed b
ne)Ycomers pushed many Ameriactual Y .. mtnt~
pen:e"1 :cans-upward oul of the "bottom
and that the nch r:-::;;::-, mo':l: fitlh" altoaether, and dragged its
~ after-taX gams, too, smce Y avera income down, while earn~tved 60 pe~n~-ft ~~r- ing higher incomes than !hey
wtio~n~:i!:;fnj,y fa~ilies w-i{h had ever enjoyed 81 home.
.
,.
Third note tile breezy assumptncomes below the top 20 percent . . (which the Times shares wid!
was only 6 pcn:enL
.
uon
.
L.e •
. There are so_many lhinp ;:"g
~1
wtth lhts analysts ~tone dly ,.
__m ~ .. llld "afte tax
knows where 10 ~n. Just for o~
]lfC"!U 1ne 'It .
rthing, note that while the story s gams '..are ~t ,nauon~ assets,
focus ·is totally on the 1980s (the whtch, the nch some w manage to tnvade and plunder OUI of aU

Plrv.n

:::•!SI "::Yeot0::)·

William A. Rusher
Reagan-Bush era), the statistics, fer
some mysterious reason, all begin
in 1977- or, in other words, atlhc
outset of the Clirter administtation.
Were )immy ~ and hil Dan()cratic Conpess pert of.the ,conspiracy 10 funhcr eaoolthe ricll?
Secon~. we ue supposed to

'

. . ... ..

Showers T-srorms Rain Flurries

•

•

..
•

0

Ice

•

Pt. Cloudy

Sunny

Via Associated Ptess GraphicsNet

Lows tonight will be in the teens
and highs on Wednesday in the
20s.
The record high temperature for
!his date at die Columbus weather
station was 77 degrees in 1973. The
record low was 2 in 1984.
Sunset tonight will be at 6:33
p.m. Sunrise on Wednesday will be
at 6:49a.m.
Around the nation
Rain fell early today across
much of the East, a day after a blizzard dumped up 10 2 feet of snow
in the Plains states and thunderstorms spawned tornadoes in the
Sou!h.
Temperatures were forecast to

stay below freezing today across
much of the northern Plains aod in
the eastern Great Lakes region.
Showers and thunderstorms
developing along a cold front
pushed toward the Atlantic Coast
today.
On Monday, the Plains states,
Rockies and Great Lakes region
were battered by snow and suong
wind. Thunderstorms rumbled over
the South.
A tornado touched down at Lake
Providence in northeastern
Louisiana, damaging two houses
and several businesses aod injuring
live people, none seriously, aulhor-

Cloudy

C1992 Accu·W•ther. Inc.

-----Weather----South-Central Ohio
Winter &amp;torm watch tonight.
Occasional &amp;now, possibly heavy at
times. Low around 20. Chance of
snow is 80 percent. Wednesday,
snow likely with a high 20-25.
Chance of snow is 70 percent.
Extended forecast:
Thursday through Saturday:
Chance of snow flurries nonh-

Sign up to begin
Signup for the Pomeroy Youlh League, baseball aod softball,
will be held at the Pomeroy Elementary School Saturday and on
March 21, both days from 10 a.m. 10 I p.m. New players must bring
copies of !heir birth certificates. The cost is $15 for one in a family,
$25 for two in a family, and $30 for three in a family. Fees are
payable on signup day.

Name winner
Nick Fitch of 55595 State Route 124, Portlaod, was die winner
of last week's mystery farm contest. He was one of row: to correctly
identify !he farm as lhat of John Cleek of Portland. His name was
selected by lonery. Fitch will receive $5 from _the Ohio Valley Publishing Co. which co-sponsors_th~ contest wtth the Metgs County
Soil and Water Conservauon Dtstnct.

Rutland mayor's court

million has been donated to the
fund. These funds are helping to
maintain existing and threatened
species and al so reintroduce
species once eliminated from Ohio.
Projects include preservation of
bald eagles introduction of peregrine falcons, creation of bluebird
nesting habita~ res10ration of bam
owls and common terms, conservation education in our schools and
acquisition of valuable wetlands.
Ohio has not yet protected
examples of each type of its diverse
natural heritage. Most state endangered species remain unprotected.
But thanlcs to die checkoff funds
important preservation work is
underway.
As always, please feel free to
call or write me, State Senator Jan
Michael Long, if you have any
questions or comments about these
or any other issues. My number is
(614)-466-8156, and my address is
the Statehouse, Columbus Ohio,
43215.

Two were fined and six others forfeited bonds in lhe court of
Rudand Mayor Edward Martin last week.
Fined were William Swan, Rutland, $110 aod costs, disorderly
conduct; Bobby Griffin, $350 and costs, expired tags, reckless operation; no operator"s license, and resisting arrest.
Forfeiting bonds all on speeding charg~ were Joseph McClou~ ,
Middleport, $48; Charles Ferguson, Zeltenopla, Pa., $49; Enc
Brown, Portsmoulh, $53; Melva Eblin, Rutland, $50; Diana Eynon,
Cincinnati, $53; and G. Ann Forbes, Vinton, $52.

Dogs to be confined
Residents of Rutland must keep !heir dogs confined to their own
property, Mayor Edward Martin, advised today.

Bloodmobile at Eastern Wednesday
The American Red Cross Bloodmobile will visit Eastern High
School on Wednesday from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. in !he gymnasium.
"Donating blood is an important habit to develop," Meigs Bloodmobile Chainnan Brian Reed said. "Young people in our area high
schools should learn early the imponance of donating blood, and
school blood drives are an effective way to teach that lesson. Students can save lives."
Although the blood drive is being held at Eastern High School,
the general public is invited aod encouraged to donate blood at that
time, Reed said.
All healthy citizens aged 17 to 66, and weighing at least 110
pounds are eligible.

EMS units answer four calls

proportion to their numbers or
desens. It cannot be stressed too
orten lhat this money was earned
by them in the ftrst place - all of,
iL Without their efforts, it wouldn't
be there for the rest of us to gl)lb
and spend. .
Ah, but they paid more taxes
because they earned liiOIC money!
That. it seems, is their reaJ•in in
the eyes of the class warfare suate.
.
gtsCC)1992
NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN
•

Four calls for assistance were answered on Monday and early on
Tuesday by units of Meigs C,ounty Emergency Medical Services.
On Monday at 2:27 p.m., Middleport squad went to South Second for Barbara Mullen. She was transported 10 the office of Dr.
James P. Conde. At 5:03p.m., Middlepon unit went 10 Bailey Run
Road. Charles Pauley was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital. At
6:16p.m., Middlepon squad went 10 Jessie Creek Road aod took
Roger Athey to Veterans.
On Tuesday at 8:59a.m., Pomeroy unit was sent to State Route
681 East for Mark Rudolph, who was taken to O'Bleness Memorial
Hospital.

Plan labor COalition meeti'ng

A labor coalition meeting will be held at the Rutland Civic Center Saturday at I p.m. It will be ao informational aod organizational
meeting and aU union employees are invited 10 attend.
The,goal, according to the orgaoizers, Max Whitlatch, Woody
Call and Bobby Poner, is 10 develop a union suppon group for publie officials who are favorable to labor.
·
Additional infonnation ~al. be obtained by contacting Whitlatch
at 992-3130, Call at742-2 , or Poner at 384-5096. .

Berry's ·World

.

Optometrist helping wo~kmg po.or

.,

Dr. A. Jackson Bailes who has offices at 110 Mechanic St.,
Pomeroy is participating die Ohio Oplometric Association's 1992
Vision USA Program of providing free eye care to Ohio's ''working

poor~; year lhc doctors of opiOIIICtry served more thao 2,000 peo-

CONTRACT AWARDED- Mayor Fred
HoR'man was joined at the Middleport levee by
James Clatworthy, Bill Browning, assistant
maintenance superintendent, Paul Gerard, Gene
Triplett, project en,;neer, and Jack Satterfield,

PubliC ••

'

'

trict's direc10r to indicate the committee's suppon to EPA for a permanent tonage per day increase at
the Gallia County laodfill.
According to Don Graves of die
Gallia County landfill, the facility
was granted a temporary emergency increase in tonage per day, from
128 tons to 600 tons. approximately 5 1/2 months ago.
. The increase was granted in pan
to the closing of the Mason County
landfiU. .
By law, Graves stated, die facility can no longer operate on a temporary increase and must receive a
pennaoent increase from EPA. The

Communlty·Lenten

In

2at

p.m. ~:.'l~~l

Is invited to
wilhthC
In thele wonhlp scr-

request for the permanent increase
had to come from the Gallia County commissioners, added George
Pope, commissioner.
"We have two weelcs left on the
temporary before we go back to
128 tons per day," said Graves. "If
it goes back we are in trouble, serious trouble."

Jenevee Chesher

Hospital news

-Meigs announcements_
Club to meet
The Past Councilors Club of
Chester Council No. 323, Daughters of America, will meet Wednesday at 7 p.m. at the home of Ethel
Orr with Lora Damewood as cohostess. Members wear something
~recn oi- bring something pertainmg to SL Patrick's Day.
Softball tournament
There will be a men's softball
tournament on March 21 and 22 at
Meigs High .School. Cost to enter is
$65 plus two balls. All proceeds
will go 10 the Meigs baseball team.
For further in formation contact
ZaneBeegleat949-4455.
Moore personal
Bob Moore, Laurel Cliff,
Pomeroy, is a swgical patient at St.
Joseph Hospital in Parkersburg,

~ds

Fak Grotlnds.

'

J)IICt plaiiiHd

There wIll be a round and
square dance on Friday from 811:30 p.m. at Hocklngrort on
Route 124 allho home o Kenny
and Millie Reynolds. Music by
Smoltey Moulll8in J)riften. Ronnie
Wood is-caller. Coualry 111d bluo
pus music is played there every
Monday at 7 p.m. The public Is
'

"Actually the landfill will last
longer, with 600 tons per day,"
Graves added.
"Gallia will be allright at 128
tons but others will suffer," said
Graves. Other counties served by
Gallia's facility include most of
Jackson and Meigs, half of Hocking, and all of Vinton.

--Area deaths--

Jenevee Blackford Chesher, 77,
of Middlepon, died Tuesday morning, March 10, 1992 at her residence following an extended illness.
Arrangements
will
be
Veterans Memorial
announced by Fisher Funeral Home
MONDAY ADMISSIONS - in Middlepon.
Roger Athey, Cheshire.
MONDAY DISCHARGES Bertha Baylor and Gladys Taylor. Auttie Rivers
Auttie M. Rivers, 81, a resident
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER of the Woodside Village Nursing
Discharges, March 9 - Mrs . Hollie in ML Gilead, died Sunday,
David Davis aod daughter, Roben March 8, 1992 at Morrow County
Davis, Mrs. Robert Gamble and Hospital.
son, Amber Ohlinger, Roy Shaw.
Born April 6, 1910 in Tuppers
Mrs. James Thomas and daughter, Plains, she was a daughter of the
Lori Williams.
late Cecil and Emma I.eMasters
Births, March 9 - Mr. and Mrs. Sanders. She married Clayton
James Montgomery, a son, Patriot. Joseph Edwards Rivers on Oct. 28,
Mr. and Mrs. Rodney Myers, a son, 1926 in Pomeroy, who preceded
Scottown. Mr. and Mrs. Seao Ross, her in death on Feb. 9, 1974 in
a daughtl:r, Kenna, W.Va. Mr. and Marion. She was a member of the
Mrs. Andrew Taylor, a daughter, Church of Christ faith.
Bidwell.
Mrs. Rivers is survived by three

W·
may be sent to him at lhc
pie in Ohio, more thao 111y other SIBle In the COUittry.
hospital, Room 413, Parkersburg,
·The progt1111
free vision eums for working Americans
W.va. 26101.
who can't afford proper eye care, but don't quality for govemmenSkad~~J party
tal assistaoce programs. In Ohio, glasses are also available through
· A skating party for Girl Scouts
wiU be held Saturday from 11 a.m.
the
!o
·-~pro:=gram~-~----------~------~----~. to 1:30 p.m. at 'the Slcateaway at
, Chester. A litter Olympics will be
held Marth 28 at the Meigs County
pl~nned ,

Community'Lenten Services

lefi to right, lor a look at t~e levee damagecaused by erosion. At last night's meeting Middleport Village Council awarded a contract to D.
B. Weber Construction, Reedsville, for the needed repairs and upgrading of the levee site.

Continued from·page 1

provides

from

,•

•

ities said. A tornado destrOyed one
house and damaged others at El ·.
Dorado, Ark., the National Weather
Service said.
In Alabama, a tornado desuoyed
a gas station, a restauraot undergoing renovation and several homes
in Muscle Shoals, authorities and
witnesses sa.id. There were no
reports of serious injuries.
The storm knocked out electrici ty to thousands of people in
Nebraska and Wisconsin and
prompted offiCials in several states
to close schools. Snow closed roads
in some states.
Bristol. Tenn ., warmed to 78
Monday, breaking its record for the
date. Jaclcson, Ky., hit 81, shattering its record of 72.
Temperatures were forecast to
reach the 40s and 50s in New England, the Nonheast and the upper
Ohio Valley; in the 60s and 70s
along !he mid-Atlaotic Coast; in the
80s in Florida; in the 50s and 60s in, :
the Gulf Coast states; in the 70s in
California; and in the 50s and 60s •
across most of the West.
The high for lhe nation MondaY.
.
was 89 at McAllen, Texas. In ~on; , _ ..
trast, temperatures in Texas were·
forecast in the 50s and 60s today.
·

Reedsville
...
Continued from page 1

east Thursday, then fair through the
period. Lows in the teens. Highs in
the 20s. Snow lilcely north with
rain or snow likely south Friday.
Lows 20-25. Highs from the mid30s to die low 40s. Chance or flurries mainly in the northeast Saturday. Lows 20-25. Highs in the mid30s to the lower 40s.

--Local briefs-_,

or tess stable over the whole peri·
oc1, pimly wardling its income~.
But the "bottom fifth" ja ract
chanpd drastically, ablldili1 ap
to il inlllioa iiJepl immlpts JICI'
year
Mexico alon~. t:hese

,

...
.. ..

•I Columbus I 2s•l

·~.:.~~=~~

aut:t Today in history_._
'

f:

if;

~

IRL

Who pays the most
in
federal
taxes?
9 .

· The most i111ponant requirement
is reliabitity.
Anyhow where is aU the money
comin~ from to pay for everIt is now clear that the ~ibe~
inammg welfare costs?
game
for the 199_2 eleebons.ts,
In my opinion welfare has based plao
on that Old Reltable of poUtresolved itself into a big business.
teal de~agogy, class warfare.
F,a,ced wtthfwlhtdespreaRd popt$1' recGayle Price o_ ectton o e eagan years as. a
Portland ki nd of Golde~ Age: li~ pundits
are busy rewnung tts history as a
~~
dreary chronicle or sleaze ~nd
greed, capped by the contenuon
that during lhe 1980s "the rich got
richer, while the poor got poorer."
; Dear editor,
capped signs so they cao be seen.
This can then be used to fuel
: We at Chapter S3 , Disables · We would like to see aU of the demands for higher taxes on ·'the
A~ Vctetanl, with to thank small villages alld businesses do rich" - always a popular target,
,P8IIICI'O)' ViJla&amp;e Ofl"ICiJis for ~t· the same thing.
· for all the Obvious reasons.
11111111e '-&lt;~k:appt4 J*ldna 11gm
I am sure this will brighten
The New Yort Times for Man:h
iii'Jiace thai we utcd for last fall. some handicappOO peTSO!l 's day.
5 had a story on page one in which,
• A special thanks to Larry
Thanks again.
using Congressional Budget Office
·
listening 10 our prob-Denver Curtis, Commander figures given ~ special spin by
for the help with the
9th District Disabled American ''Paul Krugman of the Mas11 the post ofl"H:e.
Veterans sachusetts Institute of TeehnoliJ·
Mr. Wwner, IR8JI8ICl
Pomeroy · gy," it purported 10 ShQw thai ihe
for tfectinJ the lwlc!i·' I
'
1980s were "A Very Good Time·
for lhC Very Rich' ~- but not for
•
•
accomP.anying the
I
•
.. .
· article indicllled that ' From '77 10
and not JUSt lit • home.
'89" lho "pretax income' • of the
You ca•llllllollbboldcrl richest 1 pen:eetof~eriCin limjciDwaloft, 10 lei's ties rose 77 pertellt, aod that of lhc
~ vote , top fifth, 29 percent, while the

The National Wealher Service
issued a winter stonn wateh for !he
east central, south central and
northeast Ohio night, continuing
into Wednesday In the northeast.
Citles in the watch area included
Cleveland,
Akron-Canton,
Youngstown, Zanesville, Marietta,
Athens and Ironton.
Forecasters said accumulations
in lhe watch areas could total 2-5
inches.

IMansfield I 24' l•

ODNR tax check off
From Lake Erie to the Ohio
River and the foothill s of
Appalachia to the flatlands bordering Indiana, Ohio's natural landscape has undergone a tremendous
change during the last 200 years.
In 197 0, the Ohio General
Assembly passed laodmark legislation - the Ohio Natural Areas Act to safeguard this rapidly vanishing
natural heritage. This law provides
for the permanent protection and
preservation of areas which contain
scientifically and educationally
valuable examples of Ohio's native
plant and animal communities.
geological features, or !he habitats
of rare and endan~ ered species.
Under !he law, a senes of 83 nature
preserves and 17 natural areas have
been established across the state.
Many of lhcse living museums are
open to the _public - with no admission charge.
To enhance funding for the
Ohio Division of Natural Areas aod
Preserves, in 1983 the Ohio Legis-

By The Associated Press
Just as Ohioans were becoming
accustomed 10 the early spring conditions, wintery weather was poised
to make its return to the Buckeye

MICH.

wrinen).... Why shouldn't they do
it if they feel like it? In my own
state. thev're saying lousy thin_gs
about me; if !hey waot to say mce
things in New Hampshire, I'm
going 10 encoU111ge them.''
Mario Cuomo: Most infatuating/Most infuriating. He was easily
the best campaigner aod probably
the best caodidate the Democrats
could have fielded in 1992. Opponents would have painted him with
aU the sins of New York; he would
have dealt with that and come back
with mor~. And mainly, by campaigning in the South, he could
have proven what he's always professed (and I've always believed):
When times are tough, the same
message that moves a middle-class
voter in Buffalo will also move a
middle-class voter in Birmingham.
(As luck would have it: If you
want to prove yourself by running
in Birmingham, you cao get on lhe
Alabama primary ballot up until
April 3. Also, you can get on the ·
California ballot by March 19 and
New Jersey's by Apri19. Win !hose
three and you'll earn credentials
strong enough to break any convention deadlock.)
This has not been a good 12
months for Cuomo. He seems 10
have been undone by the only person capable of making him seem
indecisive, afflicted with terminal
hubris, a caricature in the monologues of Carson Leno &amp; Letterman - himself. Tho public Cuomo
may have been done in by lhc private Cuomo. And !hat is a shame,
because we were reminded just the
other day of the true order of our
priorities. In words so urgent they
should have convinced even the
most irresolute pol , Donahue's
guest of honor told us:
· " I think it is absolutely essential
that the Democrats win now . ... I
think we're headed for a cliff.
There's no hope for a changed
cowse with President Bush."
(C)1992
NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN.

The Dally Sentlnei-Page--3

Winter storm watch issued for area

01110 Wt\tllll:t
Wednesday, March 11

Cuomo infatuates, infuriates again

,.

Ul C9111t
. · ltleet

.

-~-

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

sons Russell Rivers, Marion, Roger
Rivers and Clayton Rivers Jr., both
of LaRue; seven daughters, Ann
Williams, Edison, Josephine White,
Reedsville, Ruby Hildretb, New
Carlisle, Floretta Foust, Malta ,
Eulab Acre, Marion, Peggy Moore.
Harpster, Marilyn Tillman, Mt.
Victory; one brother, Nile Saoders,
Reedsville; five sisters, Justine
Smith and Carol Fetter both of
Canton. aod Wilma Eynon, Becky
Pullins and Evelyn Bonnette, all of
Reedsville; 34 grandchildren; 37
great-grandchildren; aod one greatgreat-grandchild
Besides her husband aod parents
she was preceded in death by a
brother and two grandchildren.
Graveside services will be
Thursday at 2 p.m. at the tuppers
Plains Christian Church Cemetery
with Rev. Roben Sanders officiating.
Friends may call at Boyd Funeral Home in Marion on Wednesday
from 2-4 p.m. and 7-9 p.m.
In lieu of flowers contributions
may be made 10 the American Diabetes AssociatiOn.

invited.
Country music night
Benito Mussollni formed the FasCounlry music night at the Lottridge Community Center will be cist party In Italy in 1921 and became
Saturday from 6 p.m. 10 midnight. prime minister Oct. 31 , 1922.
All bands welcome. Refreshments
served. Public invited.
The Daily Sentinel
To meet Tuesday .
The Middlepon PTO will meet
(tJSP8113·960)
at 7 p.m. Tuesday (tonight) at the Pub1i•Kcd every af\.ernoon, Monday
Middleport Elementary School. throllih Friday, I U Court Sl., Pomeroy,
Ohio by the Ohio ValiD)' Publis hinK
The program will feature teacher CompanyiMuiUmedia
Inc., Pomeroy,
and student Right to Read activi- Ohio .5769, Ph. 992-2tll6. S"'ond olou
pootqe paid al Pomeroy, Ohio.
ties.

Dissolution filed
An action for dissolution of
marriage has been filed in Meigs
County Common Pleas Coun by
David L. Adams and Jenny L .
Adams, bod! of Reedsville.

Member: The Allocia&amp;ed Pra1, and t.hc
Ohio Newt pt,per Association, Nolional
AdvcrLitlng RA:lpretll nt.I.Uvc, Branhom
Newtpaper Sah11, 133 Third Avenue,
New Yorli, New York lOOt 7.
I'OS'rMAliTER: Sond acldress ohanJlCI to

The Daily Se n&amp;inel. lll C o~.tr t 8&amp;.,
Po""'"'!', OHio •5769.

SUBSCRIPI'ION RATES

8)' Cll'l'ler w Motor Route

SPRING VAllfY CINEMA
44 6 45/4

"'*'" ...,•• ,.,.., •,..,.
lUMAn! MlllfT TUUMT .

One Weelt. ............. ,.... , ,,,,,,, ,,,,,,,,lt .60
One Mllllth ................. ,,,.,,, ................. 16.95
0no v....................................- ... -183.20
SINGLE COPY

posters made by founh graderS or' .
the Middlepon Elementary School'
and fifth and sixth graders of the .
Bradbury School. First, second an4 :,
third place winners were selected,
by Council. Cash prizes will be ·
awarded. All posters will be dis- .
played with the first place winning:
poster to be duplicated aod used in
promotional activities.
Trussell noted that 52 house:.
holds have si~ned up to participatt :
in the recycltng project which is
funded with a state grant and .
scheduled to begin on April I. The "
goal is 500 households before the'
end of lhe first year. Recycling bins,
for 150 households have been
ordered, she reponed.
·. •
Councilman Paul Gerard again •
asked about possible chlorination
of the water system. The mayor_:
said he has written to the Ohio .
Department of Health for infortna_. ·
tion.
.
Gerard said he has received ··
complaints about radio noise dur- "
ing early morning hours. It was
decided that residents being dis- ..
turbed should call the police.
· ·
The new tree ordinance was dis, .
cussed and it was suggested thai: ·
questions from residents regarding
provision s of that ordinance b~ "
directed to the mayor.
·
Attending besides those nanietl.
were Councilmen Dewey Honon,-:
James Clatwonhy, Judy Crooks;·
William Walters and Jack Salterfield, aod Brian Conde, clerk-treasurer el ec t. Prayer to open the
meeting was given by Mark Morrow.

Stocks
Am Elc Power ...................31 1/8 · '
Ashland Oil ....................... 30 7/8
AT&amp;T... ............................. .38 1/2
Bank Onc......................... .. .461/2
Bob Evaos .........................26 3/8
Charming Shop................... 30 1/2
City Holding ............. ...... ...17
Federal Mogul... .......... ....... 16 1/8
Goodyear T&amp;R ................. 61 1/4
Key Centurion .............. ..... 17 1/2
Lands End........................ .30
Limited Inc. ...................... 27 7/8
Multimedia Inc ........ ..... ..... 28
Rax Restaurant...... .. ........ ,.. I 1/2
Robbins&amp;Myers ................ 19 1/2
Shoney 's Inc ......................25 7/8
Star Baok ........................... 30 1/2
Wendy Jnt'l,....................... 12
Worthington Ind ................23 1/4:
Stock reports are the 10:30
a.m. quotes provided by Blunt,
Ellis and Loewi of Gallipolis.

--------' .

··- -.
•

.-

State Auto's already
tow jlremlums can be
reduced even more by
·insuring both your car ·
and home witli the State
Auto Companies.
Let us tell you just
how much your savings
can be.

.' -,'

PRICE
Dany. ............................................25 Con!O

·Subtloriberl nold..tilng to poy the oani·
er may remit in advance dired lo The
Calllpolia Daily Tribune on a three, til
or 12 monlh bills. Crodil Will be given
omiot Oloh ...~.
No saboorlpUono by mall pormiUc&lt;l In
anu whe.-. home cnrfer urvlee t1
nailablo.
Nail ..boel'lptto ..
lnoldo Galla CoaniJ

13 w..u.......................................m-.1884

M We1111.......................... ............. 1..

62 w.u..................,...............,.......
Ollllldo Golla C..nty

.78

ta wioa..........................................h3.4ll

11 w.u..............,........................... 1415Ji0

uw.u........................................$81.40

214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY

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SVAC cage standings
(Overall)
Team
W L
; QatHill . ........... l6 6
Southem ...........l6 7
Eastern .............. !! I0
North Gallia ...... 10 II
Hannan Trace .... 10 II
Kyger Creck.. ......s 13
SymmesValley .. .6 15
Southwestern .... .. .2 19

PF PA
1493 1242
1646 1355
1409 1460
1306 1413
1300 1397
1144 1282
12191353
11 27 1504

(Conference-final)
Southern ............ l2 2 1065
Oak Hill ........... 12 2 998
Hannan Trace .... 10 4 943
North Gallia ........ 8 6 938
Eastern ................ 7 7 925
Symmes Valley .. .4· 10 817
Kyger Creck.. ..... .4 10 771
Southwestem .......O 14 728
TOTALS
56 56 1185

784
793
891
930
945
902
876
1064
7185

r

~

•,

,....

34-29 lead. Just seconds later, Anderson hit an equally impressive
trey to settle down the large SHS
crowd on hand,
Although Bailey picked up his
third foul as did Kern for PV, SHS
led 37-34 at the buzzer.
Southern had a 6-2 run to
the final round. Singleton hit
succes sive inside,
·

up jumper. Kern and Newland
counu:red for PV for a 43-38 score.
Evans put the first nail in the
coffin, when he hit a three-pointer
with 5:00 left to make the score 46·
38.
From that point on py called the
first of three lime-outs, while Cald·
well added to the chess match with
two Strategic breaks of his own.
At the 4:24

Anderson· had cut the SHS lead to
46-42, but an Evans drive salva_ged
a 48 -42 SHS lead . Kerns hu a
three-pointer before Ro~~ threaded tlle needle to Ba1ley tnSide for a
50-43 score.
S
PV then resorted to put HS at
the lone, where Allen and Evans
each sank two, and Roush h1t 7 for
8, as Southern hit II of 12 cluiority

The Public Utimies Com·
mission of Ohio has set
for public hearing Case
No. 92·01-EL·EFC , to
review the ruer procure·
ment practices and
policies of Ohio Power
Company, the operation
of its Electric Fuel Component, and related mailers. This hearing is
scheduled to begin at the
Commission offices al
10:00 a m. on March 16,
1992.
All interested parties will
be given an opportunity
lobe heard. Further information may be obtained
by contacting the Commission at 180 East
Broad Street. Columbus,
Ohio 43266-0573.

bold- still in tournament
Monday's tournament scores
At Ohio Univ, - Racine
Southern 63, Bainbridge Paint Val·
ley 51
Upcoming tournament action
Saturday - Racine Southern
vs. Glouster Trimble (14-9), I:30
p.m. at Ohio University's Convocation Cenu:r

~

•

...-

&gt;
'

STOP AND LOOK -Southern guard/forward Michael Evans
(14) stops in front or a Paint Valley player and looks for an open
.teammate across the court during Monday night's Division IV district semifinal game at Ohio University's Convocation Center.
Evans scored 10 points to help the Tornadoes win 63-51. (Photo by
Scott Wolfe)

ALLEN DRIVES INSIDE"- Southern guard Mark
drhes inside against this unidentified Paint Valley eager tlnl'ino
Monday night's Division IV district semifinal contest in Athens.
Allen had six points in the Tornadoes' 63-Sl victory. (Photo by
Scou Wolfe)

Ill--...
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. . ,.. ..... 11M .............. ,.., .... ., . . _ _ ,_

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A.tlantJc Dh•illon
Tum
W L Ptt.
New Yoti. ..............39 23 .629
801~ ....................35 26
.S74
Philadelphil ...........29 33 .468

1

GB

3.5
10

Miomi ....................28 34
New Jeney ............27 34
Wuhingl0n ............21 41

.4S2
.443

II
11 .5

.339

IH

Orllndo ................. .l4 48

.226

25

Central Division
l.Chicaa.o ... ~ ........ .SI 12 .81 0

20
2S
31
34

.Ul

10

.S97

13.5

.483
.460

20.S

.22 37

Ck!Ytland ........-..39
Oetroit.................. ..37
Atlan\.1 ...................29
Indiana ...................29

Milwaukee .............27 Jl

Chat!ouc ..........

'

immediately that that' s how I was
going to be recalled by most propie;, , .
.
.
1 d hke to thonk I left Oh10
~tale a liule bet~ off than. I found
1t. By that, 1 don t mean tl was a
rebuilding job. Ohio State was
~~eat before I ever got there, and
u s s~ll great. B~l we worked hard
and dtd a decent Job. A lot of that IS
lost in people's minds over the way
!left."
·
The Indians turned to Bay last
year at age 48 to replace Hank
Peters, who retired at the end of
1991 after four years as the Indians' president. Bay had lit~e experience in professional baseball five months as executive vice president of the New York Yankees in
1988, a stint Bay cut shon when he
realized how completely owner
George Steinbrcmer conttolled lhe
franchise.
Bay became athletic director at
the University of Minnesota later
that same year, his third job as

The Dally Sentinel-Page-S

manager Joh~ Hart and ~layer
deveiOJllllent dtreeto~ D~n 0 ~wd
have nd the orgamzatton of JUSt
about allots over-30 players and are
assembling ~ team of ,YOungsters
whose salanes haven I yet gone
thro~gh the roof. The !992 team
won I be .much older ~~!an a coUege
tea~, ~htch swts Bay JUSt fine.
.It s a perfect match for me,
commg o~! of the coU~ge ranks,"
Bay saod. I have'? beheve part of
the reason,! was h1red ~s the_y fig·
ured, heres a g~y who s goong to
be compatible woth what John and

A.D. at a major university; at Oregon f';'Om 1981 to '84, he took an
athleuc p~ogram that w~ in d~bl
and put 11 on sound fmanc1al
gr.o~nd by reorganizing the fundra1smg program.
. The Indians, however, are his
b1!&amp;est challenge. Bay was lured to
Cleveland by a three-year contract
worth a reported $350,000 a year,
but he says part.of the attraction
was the opporturuty to do what no
one has been able to do for mo~
than three decades: Turn the lndians into a respectable team.
"There's almost untold potential if we could ever get competi·
live on the field," Bay said. "Even
last year, as bad as we were on· the
field, we still drew 1.1 million fans.
It seems 10 me we could have
immense support in the. stadium.
It's just a matter of finally being
able to win a lit~e bit.··
The latest Cleveland rebuilding
program is certainly the most
focused in some time. General

Dan are doing."
Bay began his sports career at
the University of Michig~. where
he became assistant wrestling
coach and eventually head coach
after he was named B~~ Ten
wrestler of the year as a semor. He
spent 20.years as a stu~~t. coach
and admm1strator at MIChigan, but
he's been the Larry Brown of
sports administration during the
past decade, holding six different
jobs.
He'd like to thin~ this will be
his last, if baseball doesn't self·

destruct. It's a very real concern,
more real than fans realize, Bay
said.
"People say it never could happen, no way, but I'll tell you: I
think as 1994 approaches and a
new basic agreement has to be
negotiated, it's g_oing to. be a very
important turmng pomt m the
future of professional baseball,"
Bay said. "Salaries are such that if
it continues, there are simply not
going to be very many clubs that
can run baseball in a profitable
way."

I

"If we beat Arizona, there's no
question we sholild be the No. I
seed in the West," guard Mitchell
Bu~er said.
Bruins head coach Jim Harrick
said, "If we win the Pac-10, that
(top seed) would be a good move
for them."
·
UCLA's drive for the top seeding in the West co'mes after the
Bruins had bottomed out, losing
three consecutive games and dropping from second to ninth in the
Associated Press college basketball
poll.
But, with an 80-70 victory over
Washington on Sunday, coupled
with Southern Cal's 82-68 defeat
by Washington State, the Bruins
suddenly found themselves alone
atop the Pac.JO.
The Bruins face a difficult task
against second-ranked ~izona (244, 13-3) in their battle at Pauley

M ...

Wednesday's games

1t Buffalo, 7:3.S p.m.
Lo&amp; Angcle~ at Hartford, 7:3S p.m.
Chicaao at N.Y. Ranam. 7:35p.m.
Montn:-~l•l Quebec, 7:35 p.m.
Toron1.0 at Minnelo&amp;a, 1:05 p.m.
SanJ011eat Winnipeg, 8:35p.m.
New Jersey 1t Edmonton, 9:3.5 p.m.
801tm

Major college
basketball scores
Midwest

Evana;villc 74, Nw-c Dame S6

.4SO

'l2
22S

.373

T1

. Tournament acllon
. Semlnnu.

Maua~hllletl178,

Rhode bland 67
West Vlralnla 44, Temple n

WESTERN CONFERENCE

Mklw•&amp; Dh·blon
W L Pel.
UW\ .......................42 21
.!Xo7
San AnUJnio...........37 24 .f.m
Houstm .................33 29 .S32
o.. ... ...................20 41 .32H
DaUu ..................... l7 44 .779

Team

oNOI BXIOiy as sllown. Tllll restor wll he~ you pul
SUess on hokl. It features a pW-baci back, SOft piiOW
comlort, wellng delals and a st1e pocl&lt;ello hold
magazines.

•.

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~

. ,,

~

''

GB
4

8.S
21
24
29

h~~l h·~ " ~1~6

_! ..

P1rllk OIWiorl
!'onion&lt;! .................43 18 .70l

•.

OoldcnSwa ..........41 19
PhocniA ..... .............39 23

.6&amp;3
.629

1.5
4.5

Suule ....................34 211
L.A. L&amp;icn ............31 29
L.A. Q;ppen .........31 30
Sammcnto ............20 41
a-c:linl:hcd plaroff bc:M

.S48
.SOl

9.S
II.S
12
23

.508

.328

MinnciiU at O!arlouc, 7:30 p.m.

offer! Choose from any of the stylish, comfort· Action recliners, you'M be sure of quality inside
cushioned reclineno we've shown here, and and out. Hurry, to get on on this two for one
offer I

Phoenlxtt Cltvdandt 7:JI p.m.
Walhift&amp;ton n IndiaN!, 7:l0 p.m.
LA. Lakcn at New York. 8 p.m.
Portland at Milwaukee, 1:30 p.m.
lhllla atHOilROn, 8:30p.m.
A\lanta at San Antonio, 1:30 p.m.
Dcuoit at Sunle,IO p.m.
New Jmcy at Oolden SUite, 10 :30
10:30

p.m.

Mld-Contlntn&amp; Conrtrtnu
Somlnnob
E. DlinoiJ 75, Wi.J.-Oreen Ray 65
IU.-Chiclao 83, CLeVeland St. 59

Indiana 11 Philacklphia. 7:30p.m.
L.A. Lalen IL ALI1111.1, 7:30p.m.

'•1

BOI10n tl Chicqo,

a p.m.
Port1&amp;nd at Minntlola, I p.m.
Chltloauolllllu,l :30p.m.
Seattle II LA. Qippm, 10:30 p.m.

IntheNHL...
Patrkll OlviJion
Tum
W L T 1'1.1. GFGA
N.Y. Rlftl"' ..... 42 2l 4 18 275 22l
WuhJroaliol ........ )91) 7 il 281234
New Jat&lt;y ........ 34 24 9 77 2l1 21l
l'luoburJh .......... 30 21 I 61 2132Sl
N.Y.Ialladen .... 2111 8 64 244263
Phllodelpbio ....... 2l 31 tl 61 202 22l

AdtiN DI•IIJon
• ·M-1 ......... 40 22 I II 231 t70
•.a..... ............ 30 21 to 10 224 231
Bullolo............... 2l 31 t1 61 239 2l6
Honfonl ........... .. 20 ll t1 ll 201242

.............. u 41

tl

Ohio high school
basketball scores
Boys-tournament a&lt;tlon
Dhillon I
Slubr 1111. 74, Clc.llciFU 73
Dl•lllan m

Campbell Memorial 62, Lou isville
Aquinu S7

Cot. HolllcJ lO, FIOdcrio:toown 48
Ulico l4, Gtan&gt;iii.S~ 201'

DI•IIJMIY
Racine Soullltrn fJ1 hlnl Vall. 51

41 205 261

Transactions
BasebaU
Amtrkan Laaue
AL - Euended the contrat1 ol BMby Brown, prctident, lhroush 0"'. 31,
1993.

lCXAS RANGERS - Nomod Luil
R. Ma)'ol11 usiltant publ ic relltiont di·

""""·

N•llonal Lt:alut
SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS - S011
Jimm}' Myen, Kevin R~m 1nd Chris
llarK:otlc, pi1chen, and Jun Mc:Nunan,
utther,IO theil minor leap tamp for""
uaianmertL

CAMPBELL CONFERENCE
ll'orrioDI•-

Biscuit-tufted beauty!

Posh PaceseHer.

Reposing casual.

HeacHo-toe comfort comes naturally

Put yourHH In thll picture, Reclining on the soft
contours of • caalllily llyled chaile recUner
with e triple pillow back and plush padded irms.
Featuring the new hidden chal11 aupport that
tucks out al 1ighl when you're not ullingll

Smart, soft and ready to snuggle Into,
this chaise delivers complete head-to-toe
comfort. With a bustleback, button tufting,
and pillow arms, Its trendsetting style dottsn'
·get In the way of pure, soothing comfort.

r~laxlng on

this ultriH:ushloned casual.
It features a hide-a-way chaise reclining
footrest, padded pllloW anms and a
posh biscuit-tufted back.

TW L T 1'1.1. GFGA
•·Douoil ........... 36 22 10 12 271221
CNcoao.............. 30 24 t4 74 2112011
s. Loull ............ 3t 21 9 7t 237 221

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T_,oo .............. ·24ll 7 ~ 203257

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37 2hiO .. 2l120.l
....
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32 24 tl 77 2,16 249
.......... 31 30 ; 69 253 252
WlnnipoJ ........... 2630 t2 64 207215.
Calpq .............. 2631 10 62 247257
.... , .............. tl n s 11 m29&amp;

· -pll)otl bcoh '

Moaday's n a

, Wllhillllont!I.Y.Ronpn2
~l,llonfoniO

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IMM,IIoo4, r...... t

· Toataht'alltlla

446-3045
,J&gt;

Plollodtli*l! 11 N.Y. blond.,, 7:11

'""
.I

·JI

The University of Rio Grande following the progtam' s first-ever
softball team compiled a 5-6 record spring break tnp, where 1t competed in a tournament at BenediCt College (S.C.) and won second place .
The Redwomcn , coached by
Angelo Forte, posted wins ov.er
Benedict, 7-5; Coker, 14-3: Claflm,
13-11; Vorhees, 19-0; and SavanHanning.
nah, 3-1. Losses were to Coker, II•
Second-team picks were Fair- 9 I i-10 and 12-1; Benedict, 7-2
land's Kelli Fuller and Carrie Hin- a~d 3-2; and Morris, 13-12.
kle, Federal Hocking's Lauren
During the trip, Kelly Robinson
Webb, Symmes Valley's Jennifer (freshman, Marion) had 16 runs on
Owens and Trimble's Angie King .
15 hits, including three home runs
Honorable-mention choices and !3 RBis. Katie Roy (freshman,
were Chesapeake's Mindy Smith, Westervill e) posted II runs on 18
Coal Grove's Tricia Holmes and hits, with 18 RB!s , and Dcbb1e
Brenda McKenzie, Hannan Dixon (junior, Wellston) was cre~­
Trace's Tammy Thomas, Kyger ited with 10 runs on II hots and Sl~
Creek's Angie Bush, Miller's Tina RBis. Jane Jess (freshman, Troy)
Colvin, Nelsonville· York's Susan neued six runs on II hits and had
Crawford and Christina Warren, 13 RB!s, and Shelly Whitaker
North Gallia's Tina. Myers and (freshman, Oak Harbor) r~orded
Beth Salisbury, Southwestern's eight runs, three homers, e1ght h1ts
Renee Hale, and Symmes Valley's and 12 RBis.
Cathy Krausz and Trina Schneider.
Robin
Stull
(junior,
North Gallia head coach David Jeromesville) had four strikeouts,
Moore was named Coach of the Charlene Peart (freshman,
Year.
Glouster) and Sheri Wilt (fresh-

Four Marauder girls named
to District 13 all-star team
'

Logan's Katie Smith and Feder·
al Hocking's Jeni Pierson received
Player of the Year honors after
being named to the Division I and
II and Jhe Division Ill and IV
s~uads, respectively, of the girls
D1strict 13 Coaches All-Star Team,
selected by the Ohio High School
Basketball Coaches Association.
Joining Smith on the Division J.
II first team were teammate Melissa Cooper, Athens' Erin O'Leary,
Gallia Academy's Dena Greene
and Jackson's Julie Coffey.
On the second team were
Alexander's Janie Rolston and
Teather South, Athens' Jennifer
Merriman, Logan's Tez Kraft,
Meigs Marauder Tricia Baer and
Rock Hill's Carrie Haas.
Honorable-mention selections
were Alexander's April Lawson,
Athens' Jennifer Kouns, Molly
Riestenberg and Cyndi Wasko,
Gallia Academy's Tandra Adams
and Misty Coleman, Jackson 's
Jennifer Hill and Brandi Munn,
Logan's Tammy Hampshire, Meigs
Marauders Verna Compston,
Kim Hanning and Reva Mullen,
Rock Hill's Tracy Mullens, South
Point's Jenny Carey and Markessa
Layne.
Logan mentor Ralph Taylor was
named Coach of the Year.
Division m-JV picks
Joining Pierson on the first team
were Coal Grove's Jenny Conley,
Hannan Trace's Lucy Mullens,
Nelsonville· Y1rk's Stephanie
McLaughlin and Miller's Jamie

man, Springfield) were each creQited with two, and one each was
recorded by Jess, Robinson, Roy,
Whitaker and Beth Floyd (sophomore, Midland).
In pitching, Angie Joseph
(sophomore, Columbus) posted a
9.00 ERA in 28 innings, including
14 strikeouts. Starr Philpot (freshman, Dayton) went 5.44 in 78·2/3
innings, knocking out 20 hiuers,
while Cindy Tilton (freshman,
Fletcher) was 3.77 in 13 innings
with nine strikeouts. Pean pitched
two innings with an ERA of 10.50.
"The team worked very hard ,
made some mistakes, but I saw
things I was impressed with,"
Forte, entering his second season
with the Redwomen, commented.
"They have the feeling they want to
win, but they know there's a lot of
hard work ahead of them."
Due to a schedule change, the
Redwomen will resume the seasOn
on Saturday, March 21 at Notre
Dame College in South Euclid,
Ohio.

..

Three things are
necessary to
open an
•••

•

Basketball •
Natloul BaskttbaR Auodatlon
GOI.DEN STATE WARRIORS Aetivalad Torn To!bed, (orwud, &amp;am the
injiUod lilt.

Football
Nal'-1 Football Lfl&amp;ut

.

DALLAS COWBOYS - Sianed
Ona Woahonooan,....U..back.
PHILADELPHIA EAOLBS Sipod Val SIIIIIMnl, Ieick
10 1
1~1!1f0Cin\&amp;Kt.

""'m•,

SEATTLE SEAIIAWKS -

Briao Bladco, poonl.

, Hockey
NEW YOU RANOERS -

1. Your phone call

(Continued from Page 4)
tosses in the final four minutes.
The closest PV could come was
when Johnson hit a three-pointer at
the I :54 mark to cut the SHS lead
105448.
. .
Singleton hit a basehne Jumper
at the buzzer to highlight the 63·51
win,
'
Southern hit 18-4 7 for 38 percent, hit 4-15 three pointers, and
was 13·16 from the line. PV was
12-35 for 34 percent, 8-26 from ·
three point range and was 3•10 at
the line. Bailey, Evans, Codner and
Singleton led Southern's charge to·
ward 41 caroms, while Newland
had 11 of 34 for PV.
SHS had five steals, only si~
turnovers, nine assists and 11 fouls.
PV had two steals, 10 turnovers,
and 15 fouls.
Southern plars Trimble at 1:30
Sabtrday.·A limited number of ad·
vance tickets are now on sale at
Southern High School.
Quarter totals
PaintValley ..........91213 17= 51
Southern .......... ... l4 81526=63

Trimble 6i9, New Bolton 6i7

WALES CONFERENCE

~

lege (S.C.) Tournament to Gene Moore, director
of facilities at Lyne Center, Allen are members
of the team. The Redwomen returned with a 5-6
record.

Softball team returns with 5-6 record

Tornadoes win ...

Weu Coul Conrertntt
Champlon1hlp
PeppeniU.e 73, Oonul' 70

Wednesday's games

,. '
Unwind lll&lt;l put WOW 1111 "P In lhls Wai·Save~ o1
Rocl&lt;erAedtnor. I ow. . gonorou!ly prq&gt;Drllonod luftod
back and seat Wit\ pMow amw.

La Salle 77, Manhauan 76

PRESENTING THE TROPHY -Angelo
Forte, right, coach of the University or Rio
Grande softball team, presents the second place
trophy the Redwomen won in the Benedict Col-

Delaware 76, VctmC11l64
Orad 97, Maine 19

Bo.&amp;on at Miami, 7:30 p.m.

By special arrangement wijh this lamous
when you buy one, we'l give you a second
maker, we're able to bring you a remarkable one absolutely free! And, because they're

TowJC)fl St f/J, llofttn 61

Pavilion.
Southern Cal, ranked No. 10,
also still has a shot at the conference ti~e. The Trojans are tied with
Arizona for second in the conference race, with a 13-3 Pac-10 mark
and a 21-5 overall record. Southern
Cal plays host to Arizona State on
Thursday and Arizona on Saturday.
While the winner of the Pae-10
will play in the West Regional, the
two others among the trio of
UCLA, Arizona and Southern Cal
could wind up having to travel to
another regional.

Sominnall

Denva- at Orlando, 7:30p.m.

Sa~nmento,

Conltrtnee

' Chomplonllllp

Sorltl Atl&amp;lllk Conftl'tftCt

Tonight's ~ames

L.A. Cllppm at

£111 Cout

Mluourl V1Uty Conrcnntt
c•amplonlhlp
SW Miuouri St 71 , Tutu 6tl

Monday's score

p.m.

Champlonahlp
Old Dominim78, lama Madiwn 73

Chlmplonlhlp

New York Ill, l'niJadcljXIia 99

Get two Action recliners for the price of one
and double your savings!

Colonial A.lhlcllt A.uoclaUon

Mttro A.llanlk Alhlelk Conrtrcnu

'~

ISUIDAn.

POMEROY

····--- . ..,._. --- ~- ------ - ....-..---~--- . . . . . ..- .. --------- - - -----· - · --·---~--. . ... .. ··- -·-

Pomeroy-Middleport Ohio

AUanllc 10 Conrcrtnce

l,.

H&amp;R BLOCK

-~----~ - ·--....----- --·. - -..-.__..--

Calgaey It Pitllburgh, 7:35 p.m.
S•_n J01e at Chic.ago, _8:35 p.m.
Minneso11 u 51. Luuu, 1:3S p.m.

EASTERN CONFERENCE

Wl'llllnloiMtp ....

992·6674

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In the NBA ...

Not n•c••lrllr· E•• llough
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It te yaw Nip IRII~IIIy to Hlect
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'

'

Scoreboard

m

•••till

•

By The Associated Press
It's two down, two to go for
UCLA. So says the Bruins' Don
MacLean.
"I've said a bunch of times that
we wanted to win our final four
conference games. Now that we've
got the first two, we'll have it if we
take the Arizonas," the UCLA for·
ward said.
"That's been our goal, 10 win
thePac-10."
After a pair of critical Pacific-1 0
victories in Washington , the
eighth-ranked Bruins return home
to play host to second-ranked Ari ·
zona on Thursday and Arizona
State on Sarurday.
UCLA (23-4. 14-2) can clinch at
least a tie for the Pac-10 title with a
victory over Arizona. And a win
over the Wildcats would give the
Bruins a strong case to be top-seeded in the NCAA West Regional.

1111 liS SIIIT IE 1ME SHOIT
fOil, 1Ml 1040A. SHOUlD I USE

r

..-

UCLA, Indiana among leaders
seeking top seeds in NCAA cagefest

THE WEEK

, . . ........

'

hts?~·
I ~e always been uncomfort·
able woth 11, bcca~se I like to thmk
I did more at Ohoo State than s1mply re.s ignt ~ay said in a recent
mtervtew m ht.s .office at the lnd1ans' sprong tralmng camp. "But at
the time it happened, I could tell

LEGAL NOTICE

(SVAC reserves • final)
Team
W L PF PA
Southem ............ l4 0 802 475
Eastern .......... .... 10 4 644 575
Symmes Valley ... 9 5 61 7 626
Oak Hill .............. 8 6 636 600
Hannan Trace ...... 4 9 547 632
Kyger CreeL ..... J 10 501 574
North Gallia .. ..... .3 II 505 661
Southwestem ...... J II 50 1 610
TOTALS
SS SS 47SJ 47SJ

TAX TIP

hit a jumper for PV, followed by a
baseline driver by Codner.
Anderson drilled a 25-foot trey
on the next possession, then after
an SHS turnover Shane Cawley
tied the score on a free throw at the
5:43 mark . Bailey and Johnson
traded buckets for a 29-29 tie.
Allen slipped through the entire
forest of Bearcat defenders, then
Roush nailed a three·;g~~ r for a
• """'ii" . •'

- , . ..

By CHUCK MELVIN
AP Sports Writer
TUCS~N. Ariz. (AP) .- Unless
he engoneers a . mtraculous
turnaround as .Presod~nt of t~e
Cleveland Indoans, Rock Bay s
legacy rna~ have already been
established 10 the monds of most
spa~ fans. .
.
!t s been ftve yea!'S S!nce Bay
rcs!gned as the athleuc dtrector at
Oh~o Sta.te, where he qutt when the
umverstty ftred fo?tba!l c,oach
Earle Bruce over Bay s.ob.tecuons.
Bay bcca:ne somethin.g of a folk
h~ro m Oh1o for standmg up for
htmself and Bruce that way. Now
~~ he has returned to the state, he
wtshes peopl~ would recogruze h1m
a~ ~ore than JUSI the man who qmt

. Southern ~arns right to face Trimble in championship game
All-district candidate Craig
Kerns , a 6-foot-5 junior, and 6foot-5 junior guard Joshua Ander·
son led Paint Valley with 15 points
each. Deric Newland , Jason Johnson and Shane Cawley each had
seven.
Caldwell stated, "The kids never
quit Sometimes we don't win pretty, but we win. We played 32 minutes of good, hard basketball
tonight. Earlier in the year we
stressed that we had to play as a
group ... not as individuals. Ri ght
now, we're a team from the word
go. This was a very big win.
"I think they were sure that we
would play a man-to-man . When
we came out in a zone they were
surprised. I don't think we ran a
zone all year long, but we had to do
this to avoid a mismatch underneath . The zone equalized th eir
size , plus we were able to put pressure on their three point shooters."
Southern took a 1-0 lead on a
free throw by Bailey, and although
the score was tied on several different occasions, Paint Valley never
took the lead. That, Caldwell felt,
was another key to the game.
"We had Ia keep them from getting any momentum. Our defense
did a good job tonight. Everyone
did their job on the court and the
bench was really into the game."
Going into the game, size was
the leading factor, as PV put four
6-foot-5 players and a 6-foot-2
player on the court Southern oub'e·
bounded the taller Bearcats 41-32
on nothing but sheer hustle and
good position.
In the first quaner and throughout tlle game, Southern worked the
ball inside very well. Effective
passing from Roush and Mark
Allen opened up the inside, where
Bailey and Lisle anchored the
paint. Joshua Codner made two
successive twisting, driving lay-ups
to give SHS a 10-7 lead. At this
point in the game, Codner was also
a key rebounding force against the
much taller Bcarcats. SHS led 14-9
at the buzzer.
Singleton, who grabbed six re·
bounds and had eight points on the
night, came off the bench and gave
SHS a 16-11 lead in the second
round . The pace became more
moderate as Southern mixed up
zone defenses and became more
patient in its half-coun offense.
Bailey had four of Southern's
eight second-period points, while
Allen had a big steal to give them a
22-18 lead. The last score of the
half came when PV's Anderson
buried a long three pointer at the
2:02 mark. The score stood 22-2 1
althehalf.
Bailey had nine at the half for
SHS, while Anderson had eight for
PV.
Southern opened up the second
half in a man-to-man and forced a
turnover. Roush came down and hit
a trey to give SHS a 25-21lcad. As
SHS switched back to zone, Kerns

~ ..

...

Bay'sjob as Tribe'spresident chance to erase perceived past

Tuesday, March 10, 1992
Page--4

By beating Paint Valley 63-51 in district semis,

By SCOTT WOLFE
Sentinel Correspondent
A strong fourth quaner by the
entire Southern team and clutch
· free throw shooting by senior guard
.. Jeremy Roush lifted the Southern
Tornadoes to a 63-51 district semifinal victory over the Paint Valley
Bearcats Monday night in boys Di·
vision IV tournament action in
bhio University's Convocation
. Center.
: Southern, now 16-7, has won
· nine straight games and will compete in the district finals against
Trimble this Sarurday atl :30 in the
Convo. Paint Valley bows out with
a 13-10 record and a third-place
finish (9-5) in the Scioto Valley
Conference.
Trimble earned a berth in the
District finals when Reuben Kittle
drilled a baseline jumper with two
seconds left in the game to give his
club a 69-67 win over New Boston.
Had Southern head coach
Howie Caldwell lived in the era of
Mark Twain, he most likely would
have succeeded as a riverboat gambler. Caldwell called everyone 's
·bluff Monday night by playing a
zone -defense the entire game, except for going man-to-man on two
occasions. That call helped throw
!he Bearcats out of sync and set the
tempo for the rest of the game.
Caldwell's riverboat crew
helped stack the deck in Southern's
favor as starters Roy Lee Bailey.
Jeremy Roush, Joshua Codner,
·scott Lisle and Michael Evans,
' ,along with Russell Singleton, Mar. &lt;:us Allen and Michael Russell
played consistently hard through out the contest
· Senior postman Bailey led the
.charge with 16 points and 14 rebounds. Roush was nearly flawless
in running the SHS offense with a
' tally of four assists and 13 points,
including 7 of 8 from the line in the
Jinal round. All 13 of Roush's
. _:points came in the second half to
help spark the Tornadoes.
Evans ended the night with 10
· points and five rebounds, hitting
two big three-point plays in the
.second half.

--

~day, r.t•rch 10,1992

The Daily Sentinel

Sports

.

-·---------..1 .·····~ . -~· ... ·-··--·-··· ..______, ________----·--·-- ~-·-

Stpd

SOUTHERN(61)
Player
2s Js Fr
Marcus Allen ...........2 0 2
Jeremy ROush ..........0 2 7
Michael Evans ......... t. 2 2
ScottLisle ...............:2 0 0
Joshua Codner "!'""'3 0 · 0
Roy Lee Bailey ........7 0 2
Russell Singleton .....4 0 0
TOTALS
19 4 13

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6

..

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4
6
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10 the Bu«alo Sabra for Dan Snu1·
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PAINT VALl,EY ($1) : .
Pia
'
-21 3i Fr Pta.
,;:: Aft4erSon ....
.1s
Derlc Newland.........3 0 1 7
Jqon Johnson ..........2 1 · 0 7
Craig Kerns .........,....4 2 1 , IS
Shane Cawley ..........3 0 1 7
TOTAJ.S
U 8 3 51

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423-7516

LowcU

896-2369

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992-6661

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'

�By The Bend

The Daily Sentinel

Ohio

TUesday, March 10,1992

•The Area's Number I
Marketplace

Page-6

•

Cemeteries bring peace to some
Dear Ann Landers: I am
responding 10 the lady who objecred
to people jogging and children
playing at the cemetery when: her
son is buried.
We Jive nextro a beautiful cemetery and go for walks there often.
The peaceful surroundings, the
occasional jogger, the squirrels, lhe
dogs and, yes, even the children
make it a pleasant place to be. If lhe
residents could lalk, I'm sure they
would want us to be there, knowing
how much we enjoy iL
My wife and I have had many
wonderful conversations in that
cemetery while admiring the fall
leaves, spring flowers and fountains
in summer. We often read the
headstDnes and spe:ulatc about the
deceased and their families.
Last Halloween, we shared the
warm feelings one family must have
had for its mother "'·hen we found a
pumpkin placed on a grave with the
message, "We Miss You, Mom,"
signed with the children's names. I
m1ss my mom, too, but her grave
is 1,500 miles awa y. I came away
feeling closer to her that day. -DAVE IN SEA TILE
DEAR DAVE: \\'hat a beautiful
letter. Hundreds of readers wrote
to share their thoughts about
cemeteries. I was amazed at the
interest. Here they arc:
From Miami: M) brother died in
1968 in a mo10rcycle accident at the
age of 28. He was buried in a small
cemetery in Jackson, Tenn. When
I go to Jackson , I always enjoy
visiting my brolher's grave, beca~
there is life there -- the cemetery IS

Ann
Landers
ANNLANDI;tRS
..lHl,LN~•

'llnMoi!J...,.. ...
CreMan Syndlrate.''

the children's ravorite playgJ'OWid,
it seems. Their hawiness lightens
my grief.
Name of City Withheld. Calil.: I
work in a tarse cemetery and it is a
lot safer 10 walk in these peaceful
surr01mdings than 10 lake a chance
on this city's streeiS where I'm SC8IIld
to death of getting mugged or hit by
a drunk driver. Thil cemetery is a
garden of Eden by COO!parison.
Silver Springs, Md.: Land IOday
is roo valuable to be used for burial
grounds. I plan to be cremate;~ and
then have the ashes mixed with soil
in which geraniums will be planred
and given 10 my friends.
Charles10n, S.C.: I'm one who
is guilty or using a cemetery for
purposes other than visiting the
deceased . I bicycle through a
cemetery because it is a safe and
beautiful place. During an unseuled
time in my ~fe I found peace there
that I could not find in a place of
worship because I am not a member
of any parlicular faith.
Irvine, Calif.: I would much rather
be buried where there is laughter
than grief. I hope people will enjoy
themselves when they visit my
grave.
Fort Myers Beach, Fla. : My

father was in the monument
business. His workplace was opposite the cemetery. II was such a
peaceful place that we, as children,
loved playing then:. Now, 60 years
later, we still love it
Buffalo, N.Y.: I come · from a
family of funeral directors. We
seldom went 10 a cemetery. My
husband's family was the opposite. I
hope when I die that people will
picnic on my grave and bring !heir
kids. If some youngster's frisbee hits
my srone, I hope he lakes a second
look and sees my name.
Bloomingron, Ind.: I grew up in
Sioux City, Iowa, and the cemetery
there was the favorite spot for
high school necking. There were no
cops shining spotlights on us like
then: are tDday, according to my
grandchildren. Ah, yes, there was
a lot of life in that Sioux City
cemetery. Do you remember it that
way, Ann?
DEAR BLOOM: No, I don't.
We did our necking at the end of
Jackson Street But then, we lived
on the North Side. The West Side
teen-agers went 10 Stone Parle to
neck.l wonder if this is still the way
it is.
Ann Landers ' latest booklet,
"Nuggets and Doozies ," has
everything from the outrageously
funny to the poignantly insighlful.
Send a self-addressed. long,
busilltSS·size envelope and a check
or mo11ty order for $5 It/Us inc/lilies
postage and handling) to: Nuggets,
c/o Ann Landm, P.O. Box 11562.
Chicago, Ill. 60611 -0562. (In
Canada. send $6.)

Community calendar
Commualty Calendar ltetns members attend.
appear two days before an eveal
aad the day ot tbat event. Items
CHESTER - The Past Counmust be ..-Jved weD Ia advance cilors Club of Chester Council No.
to 11111re pubUeatjon In tbe cal· 323, Daughters of America, will
eadar.
meet Wednesday at 7 p.m. with
Lora Damewood as co-hostess .
TUESDAY
Members wear something green or
LONG BO'ITOM • Rex Justis bring something pertaining to St.
will speak at the Fallh Fellowship Patrick's Day.
Outreach Program at Faith Full
Gospel Church in Long Bottom on
POMEROY - The Mei~s CounTuesday at 7 p.m.
ty Ministerial Associauon will
meet Wednesday at 10 a.m. at lhe
POMEROY - Ohio Eta Phi Sacred Heart RectDry.
Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi Sorority,
wiU hold a pizza party at the Meigs
THURSDAY
County Infirmary on Tuesday at
POMEROY - Rock Springs
6:30 p.m. All members attend.
Grange will met at 8 p.m Thursday
RUTLAND - Rutland Youth at lhe hall. Video of Pomeroy will
League organizational meeting will be shown by Roger and Mary
be held Tuesday at6:30 p.m. at the Gilmore. Baking contest will be
Rutland Civic Center. Anyone held.
interested is welcome to attend.
MIDDLEPORT - The Bradbury
Membership fee is $1. Call 742PTO
will host a banquet for stu2014 for information.
dents and their parents at the BradPOMEROY· The committee bury School Thursday at 6 p.m.
for the establishment of a retireTUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers
ment community will meet at TrinPlains
VFW Post No. 9053 will
ity Congregational Church on
meet
Thursday
at 7:30 p.m. at the
Tuesday at 7:30p.m. AU intereste;l
post
home.
may anend.
PORTLAND • Portland Elementary PrO will meet Tuesday at
7 p.m. at the grade school. .
CHESTER - Chester Baseball
Association will meet Tuesday at
7:30p.m. at Chester Elementary.
All parents of Chester baseball and
softball players are urged 10 attend.

CHESHIRE · There will be a
free clothing day sponsored by the

Gallia-Meigs Community Action
Agency on Thursday from 9 a.m. to
noon at the old high school building in Cheshire.

POMEROY - Preceptor Beta
Beta Chapter, Beta S1gma Phi
Sorority , will meet Thursday at
7:30
p.m. at the Episcopal parish
PORTLAND - The Portland house.
Cindy Oliveri will be the
PTO will meet Tuesday at 6:30 guest speaker.
Hostesses are Joan
p.m. at the school. There wVI be a Corder and Velma
Rue.
special speaker on effective
schools.
REEDS VILLE • Eastern High
School winter sports banquet will
. CHESlER • The Chester To.wn- be Thursday at 6:30 p.m. in the
ship Trustees will meet Tuesday at high
gymnasium . Bring a
7:30p.m. at the 10wn hall. All reg- meat,school
vegetable
and dessert dish.
ular meetings will be held the sec- Beverage and table
service providond Tuesday of each month at 7:30 ed.
p.m. atlhe town hall.
WEDNESDAY
In March 1991 , according to the DePOMEROY • The Pomeroy
Merchants Association will meet partment of Veterans Affairs, there
Wednesday at8:30 a.m. in the con- were 851 ,600 veterans of the Korean
ference room at Bank One. All War who also served in World War II.

RATES
Days
1
3
6

uu"""' an ad

COPY DEADLINE
Monday Paper
Tuesday Paper
Wednesday Paper
Thursday Paper
Frida y Paper
Sunday Paper

Call992-2156
MoN. thru FRI. 8A.M.-5P.M.- SAT.8-12

LOVENA NEAL

CLOSED SUNDAY

POLICIES

Birthday observed

• Ad• outlide GaUia, Ma1on or Mfligl countica mut be prepaid

for error• flul day ad runa in paper). CaU before 2:00p.m .
day a(Ler publication to make correetion

• Ad. that mutt be paid in advance are:
Card of Thanka
Hoppy Adt
In Memorla11
Yard Sale.
Tribune (u:cepl Cla11ified Oi.aplay, BU1ine11 Card GC Legal
Notieet) willallo appear in the Point Pleuant R~t~i.ner and
the Daily Sontlnel, reaching over 18,000 homet

BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE
4:30 P. M. DAY BEFORE
PUBLICATION

lVinnersannounced

367-Che•hire

Pomeroy
985- Chetler
843-Portland

Music by George Hall
American Legion
Annex
Middleport, Ohio
$5.00 per person.
Public Invited
'

949-Racine

742-Rutlond
667-CoohiUe

Public Notice
by low. All oppllcanta ahall
aubmlt, In writing, thalr
lnoUtullon'a poUcy concornlnglhe following: 1) Chuge
lor ohecke; 21 Sorvlco
ohllrgo; 3) Minimum bolance
required; 4) The 11111ount ol
tho $2,000,000.00 quollfttd
lor under 30% ol Ioiii nan-

Sold Boord ol County
Com mlaolonera rtllr¥11
the rlahllo r•joot any or Ill
blda. lw•da or the Actin,

Debbie King was the guest of .
the Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary
Club last week. King, who is a reSIdent of Meigs County, relate;! her
expierence of working with the
Southeastern Correctional Institute
(SCI), located at Lancaster. The
goal of SCI is to provide a safe,
secure environment for the persons
housed there.

,I
I

I
'

LONOON (AP) - Queen Elizabeth II said Monday that time is
running out to save the natural
environment from destruction.
In her annual Commonwealth
Day message, broadcast intema·
tionally, she asked all people ot the
Commonwealth, of which she is
heaiJ, to remember they share the
world with many other !ivins
things.
i'The Earth is a gift to us all,
whoever we arc, wherever we
live." she said. "But there is but
one p11ne1 and all life on it is interdej;i;i dcnlt. ..
~ 1'1111 Comlllllll'fiealtll, ..
tloq ol 50 eoUIItiies eumally or
formerly under British role, is
· "r~sible for one-third of this
plalel." tile queen uid. "We all

•Moei•

share the task of ensuring that our
world will remain fit for life and
capable of sustaining us and those
who will come after us."
The queen appealed directly to
the young people of the Commonwealth.
"There is no lime 10 spare," she
said. "It is your future that is at
slake."

sell out? When do I do Police
Academy VI?"' Daniels, 36, said
Sunday in a speech at Hillsdale
College.
The answer, he said, was simple: "You don't have 10 do Police
Academy VI."
About 350 people heard
Daniels' speech, which kicked off a
week-long seminar on popular culture and the American psyche at
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - A the college in Hillsdale, I00 miles
nursing society is honoring ai:tress soulhwest or Detroit.
Audrey Hepburn for promoting
children's heallh around the world
as UNICEF' s goodwill ambassador.
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Actor
"Audrey Hepburn's humanity is James Marshall's portfolio phoan inevitable revelation that comes tographs almost cost him his big
from her empathy with ch~n in role as Laura Palmer's boyfriend
need," said lklh c. Vaughan·Wro- on television's "Twin Peaks"
During an interview ' lasi week
bel, president of the Sigma Theta
Tau lntemalional, a 160,0Q0-mem- promoting his new movie "Giadia·
ber group. "She personified the tor," the 25-year-old actor said
sense of caring, which Is an Inte- "Twin Peaks' executive producer
gral component of nursing.''
David Lynch casts from ~ictures Miss Hepburn will lecture and "he didll'tlilre my piCtures."
"But at the end, he had cast
health worten on gklbal conditions
of children.' a heafth care April 6, everyone excePt Jamea (Hurley)
then will receive her distinguished ·and Laura Palmer, and he finally
lifetime achievemelll award April 7 apeed to see me.'' .Manhall said.
at a fund-raiser for the associa- ''When'I Clllle in, he WU mad. He
tion'slilnry. .
aald, 'You don't look at all like
. Min Hepburn, 62, won · an your picbl'e.•••
Academy Award in 1953 for her · Manhall sotlhe p1r1, and some
role in the film "Roman Holitlly " new ~ictures. Aitd the "Twin
and wu nominated Cor "S~" P~ ' role 11vC1 him the Holly. "The Nun't Stcry " "Bleatfast at wciod callinl c:lld he needed.
In "OIIillator," which opened
Tiffany'a" and' "Wait Until
Dalt."'
Friday, Marshall ·playa Tommy
Riley, aiUIJurtllli ldd CIIIIIK up In
the llelzy warld vllllepl boxing.
HILLSDAL~1 ~lcb. (AP) -

tfDidila OIIIDIIIIIIIC idall Clll be
tauallli 'l'llliellon, ... llCIOi' Jeff
Dlileii•!Me'u WI)'.

.

-nc-.,,.... 11111111 111M Dllrolt

" ·AI an aetor, you come to the . filaR, wa 11111t 18 .., uti 11111
point where yoa aay, 'Whea do 1 U,4JI..,..,
·
•

On
In
the MeltiiJ County Probate
Court, Cue No. 27222, Glori
F. Enalon, 1111 Radford
Rood, Alh1111, Ohio 45701
woa oppolnlad Execulor ol
tho oototo of IIIJrtha P.
Jonta, dtcaoatd, Ioto of
Ohlo45n1 .

Robert E. Buck,
Proboto Judge
Lena K. Neoutrooct, Clerk

675-Pt. Pleannt

II- Help Wonted
4-- Gi-veaway
!&gt;-Happy Ado

576-Apple Grove
773- Muon
882- New Haven

7- Lo1t and Found

8- Puhlie Sale &amp;

I

59

c;

You may qualify for the Earned
Income Credit if in 1991 you:
• Earned less than $21,250 from a job,
and
• Had a child living with you for more
than 6 months.
Even if you do not owe any tax, you
might still get money back.

608 EAST MAIN

Internal Revenue Service at
1-800-829-1040.

·-

REDUCED- 1987 Forrest Park Mobile home with large
garageandCjlrports. Home is t4x70with3bedrooms t.10
acre. Reduced to $29,000
FLATWOODS RD.· Brick Ranch with 3 bedrooms, 2 baths,
glassed in family room . Home in good condition $49,900

"

1·-------

' '

MINERSVILLE RD.· 6 room, 3-4 bedrooms IMMEDIATE
POSSESSION! ASKING $22,500 Make An Ollefl

"

2
1
.I

•

.

••'
.I
.. j

.I

'u •
l

•
'
I'
l

...I .

RACINE- 2 story 4 bedroom horne 1 112 beths, 2 car
' garage, large·front porch. MANY EXTRAS $45,900

In Memory

PINE 'GROVE RD.· Ranch s~Ie wiih ~ bedrooms, 2 ear
gn~. 3.2+ !IC'&amp;I woodbumer, B.G. heal. TCP &amp; spring

In
memory
PAm CHILDERS
on ,our blrthdly ~0.
Gone but not
forgotten. Mlly your
•oul rwt In PIMiflil
1leap 1nd the
parpatull light ehlna
upon
by

walllt' $25,500
REDUCED- Ilium SubdMalon 3 bedrooms. full basement actached gorage Eutem Scl\ool Oislrict. Very nice
horne $57,900

•

trs TRUE...If: WE DON'TS ELL YOUR PROPERTY...YOU

DON'T PAYI THERE'S NOTHING TO LOSE WHEN YQU

UST W11H

18- Wanwl To Do

II\\ \'I'IIH I \110\

llJ:\'1 \I ·'

·.~

41- Houae~ for Rent

Truck• for Sale

Home~

45-- F'umUhed Room • .
~Spate for Rent
47- Wanted to Rent
48-- Equipment for Rent

v•.,. &amp; 4 wo·.

Motorcycle.
Boat. &amp; Moto r• for Sale

Aulo Paru &amp; Am.,o rieol
Auto Repair
Campinc Equipment

49-Forl.a..Je

\IJ.Il(.IJ \ \111:'1-:

p
Plumbing &amp; Hea ting
EKcantin g
·
Elee tri cal &amp; Refr·if!erlll;o~
General Hauling

51- Houoehold Gooda
52- Sportins Good.
53- Antique~
54- Mi1c. Merchandi1e
55- Bui ldi ng Supplies ·

Mobile Home Repair
Upholaler y

ua... EXCEPT THE PROPERTY YOU

NO
LONGER WANT. WE HAVE BUYERS IN EVERYDAY.
ONI! IIAY WANT I!XACTLY WHAT YOU HAVEl THE
oNLY WAY YOU LOIE IS ....IF YOU DON'T UST WITH
CLELANDfiEALTY ••'I'ODAYl

dolt aiL)
ALSO COMPlETE AUTO
REPAIR SERVIa •d 24
HOUR TOWING.
(YII, WI

CRAFTS

MARCH 14: Frae Demo
Jacket Sw-hlrt Claoo-

MUST PRE·REGtSTER
HAS: MorJ.·Sol10 om-5 pm

Sundoy 1·5 pm

For Mort tnro Colt

614-992-2549

31411211 mo.

1·304a773·9560
3·5-'12·1 mo. pd.

J&amp;L

INSULATION
•VInyl Siding
•Replacement
Window
•Roofing
•Insulation

742-2097

RACINE GUN
CLUB
GUN SHOOT
1:00 P.M.
SUNDAYS
Starting Sept. 22
12 Gauge Factory
Cho~e
•

539 Bryon Placi
Middlopor~ Ohio
11114/tln

(ISJAYMAR
Quality
Stone Co.

SIZED LIMESTONE
FOR SALE
Call 614-992-6637
St. Rt. 7
Cheshire, OH.
1121nn

1(atfiryn

!Meaiows
OR CANVAS"
30115 Oold Ridge Rood
Pomeroy, Ohio 45761

IYt MI. out Ntw
,LIIBIR..
Rutl1ltl, o•lo

742·2341

15 Sessions._ '25
Plus 1FR~E

Hrs. 8·10 loti. tllu Sot•
NIW SCA WOlfF llD 24Sl
. . . ,.sAII'Ih
Eqw~~eo 1M

.

BILL SLACK
992-2269
USED RAILROAD TIES

KING'S HOME
IMPROVEMENTS

Howard L Wrltesel

New Homes,

NEW,;. REPAIR

AddHions, ·Siding,
Pole Barns, Painting,

Garages, Porches
FREE ESTIMATES

614·742·3090 or
304·773·9545
NO SUNDAY CALLS

Specializing In Custom
Frame Repair
NEW &amp;USED PARTS
FOR All MAKES
&amp;MODELS
992·7013 or
992·5553

OR TOLl FREE

1·800·148·0070
DARWIN, OHIO

7/31f91/tfn

Guiters
Downapouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

FREE ESTIMATES

...

949-2168

3N92/1 mo. pd. "

21141'9211

SUN'S UP
TANNING

If YOU WEAl! IT HEAR
1!, ADMIRE IT, WATCH
IT, PlAY ITl USE IT or
NEEulr
Yae'lfWltle

llew U•aloatl
In latland

CALL 742·2778

'

EMILY'S ATTIC

We tum yow new ond
good UHd lrlicles lnlo

IS Snsl•s.---·'25.00
12 SnsiOIL----'20.00
6 S.tsiOIS..---·'12.00
1 S.tlloa.-- --'3.50
FREE SESSION WITH MRY
RENEWAl
S..nl.Ws of lot1011
SCA WDlfEIEDS

·. ·
. •
cub and IIVI you mooey ...

HOWARD
EXCAVATING

BISSElL &amp; BURKE
CONSTRUCTION ...
•New Homes
' ··.

211711 mo.

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS

ROOFING

BULLDDZER,BACKHOE
ond TRACKHOE WORK
AVAILABLE.
SEPTlC SYSTEMS,
HOME SITES and
TRAILER SITES,
LANDCLEAAING,
DRIVEWAYS INSTALLED
UMESTONE·TRUCKlNG

FREE ESTIMATES

992·3838
1-13·'9

'-1

o.

on whol you need.
CALl992-6120
Or 1111 IJ
I 02 E. Main StrMt
POIIIrC!Jr Ohio
To Flad;.~&amp;J!,~o.

•Garages
•Complete

.

.

Re•u~cleling

Stop &amp; Compare ··,·
flEE EsrlMA'IES

985·4473
667·6179

··

2•7-92-fln

'I

...

"

"SPECIALIZING IN SLATE

MYSTIQUE'
· TANNING

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

JAMES KEESEE
992·2772 or

mo.

A&amp;E AUTO
Specializitgl•
Co•plete Auto
Upholstery.

TROLLEY STATION
.1:00p.m.
MARCH 16: Slate Tole
Paln~ng - 7 p.m.
Slop To See Somplo
MARCH 24 -llollket Cla11
-6 p.m.

c•

IIASON, WY.

212011213 mo.

MiDDLEPORT· One flOor frame home with deck, hard·
wood Hooring needs some repair ... afforadable housing!
$11,900

I I

For more information call the

POMEROY,. OHIO'•

REDUCE[). Mrlldleport: 2 story, 3 bi.dioom horne with lull
basement large lront porch. Nice location. $14,000

••

r...

6
62- Wanled lo Buy
63- Liv~toek
64- Hay &amp; Crain
Seed &amp; Fertilizer

1

· . WAKIIIEI.Jf$

2-21-1

up to $2,020 for you!

32- Mobile Home~ for Sale
3~ Farma ror Sale
34- Butineu Buildinp
3$- 11 &amp; A'"""'

I ' \ll\1 ' I 1'1'1 II:,\ 1.1\ 1 .~ rou,

________L_______

614·742·2328

,,

"'

23- Profeuioaal Servieea

WANT ADS WORK!

-Remodeling
-Cabinet Work
-Commercial·
Ratldentlal
FREE ESTIMATES
20 Yeara Experience

INCOME

.IIICIJ have

22- Mo11ey 10 Loan

MwicallnalrumenLI

Fruiu &amp; Vesell.blea
For Sale or Trade

a few pennies spent here
comes _!&gt;ack folding money

-New Conatructlon

1he

17- Miacell.neow

Auction

9-- WantM to Buy

TROMM
BUilDERS

EARNED
CREDIT

12- Situatioru Wanted
13--lnturance
14- 8UJinc11 Training
15-- School• &amp; lrutruction
J~ Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair

6- Lott and Found

895- Leaart
937 -Buffalo

(3) 10, 17, 24, 3lc

---People in the news--NEW YORK (AP) - Mayor
Dav id Dinkins left the hospital
Monday, admitting he was not fully
recovered from the Ou.
''I'm not up to snuff," he said
outside New York Hospital. "I'm
not ready to go out and play three
sets.··
But the 64 -year-old mayor, a
tennis buff, said he would ~et back
to work, signing bills at Cuy HaU,
after changing out of the jogging
suit he wore in the hospital. He said
he would take it easy for the next
fewdays.
Dinkins was hospitalized early
Sunday, hours after performing in a
charity show, when he awoke with
fever and chills. Doctors said he
was stricken by a nu bug that was
going around the city.
Dr. Bradley Connor, a staff
physician at the hospital, said blood
and urine tesu and an electrocardiogram had shown no serious
problems ..

'

45760 Rler.r Rold, Racine,

After being sentenced by a Recently, she was promoted to a
county )udge to SCI, a complete position of a program specialist at
proftle 1s done on each individual Camp Reams.
and ·this profile is monitored
Camp Reams is a program patthroughout their stay.
terned after the milttary, where
King has spent three years as a inmates are marched and drilled
frontline corrections officer. She from S a.m. to.S p.m., with a lot of
supervised a dormitory from lhe hard physical labor. So far, the proinside during those three years. gram has proven to be very beneficial, according 10 King.

BualDe11 Opporlunily

for Rent
43:--- Farmtfor Rent
44- Apartment for Rent

Bu 8 In e88
servi·ce 8

OF FIDUCIARY
October 28, 1181,

FOR WORKING FAMIUES

21-

lnoctiYI, of ond
+~~~~=~~~~~-----ctepoelt.
publicInterim
!undo ~-------j
aubltct to lha control ol
aaki Board will be mada on
e
Morch 25, tte2, lor I parlod
COUNTRY MOilLE HOME
TRIJY-B//,T'
ol Ume commanclng on the
3 Nlre Molilollotns fw Alii
1at dly ol April, 1et2. Eoch
Ow Sfrinl Shlpmaal or
oppl101nl ahall lurnleh a
)usl Nor,. of P-oy
'Jlooy·Bih 1\llen Now In Sloek.
Your l.ottal »",!l-BW DHI•r
copy ol lt'a moat ractnt
Stwtilgat'225JNr••·
lllllement or condition
614-992-5521
WAIEIIIID'I
algntd by II'• Coehler or
w 3154227
II. SO Wosl, !hi, Olio •!!!·3115
olhtr
oulhorlzed
o lbe
f l o o r . l - - - - - - - - . . . , - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1 L._ _ __.,:2:~,;3=92:t..l:.:•::::~o.
Appllcotlone
ehould

Public Notice
NOnce oF
APPOINTIENT
Public Notice

$ .30
$ .42
$ .60
$.05/day

11\\\(1\1

42- Mobile

lt.lOWISI, AtM., Olit•Sil.JIIl

Public Notice

$ .20

GET RESULTS - FAST!

uoled ond morkld . - - - - - - - - ,
"Appllcollon undtr the
Uniform Depoallory Act. •
TRIJY-B/£T
Mary Hobalalllr, Clork
Our Sprins Sbl.pmMll Or
Melge County Troy.Odl1\Uerl Now In S.or:k.
Commlulo-.
Yo"' Local Trer·Bib D•ol•r

ROTARY SPEAKER -Debbie King, an employee or the
Southeastern Correctional lnsilitute In Laneaster was the guest or
the Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary
Club last week. King discussed
the goals and operational procedures of that facility.

Debbie King speaks to M-P Rotary

$4.00
$6.00
$9.00
$13.00
$1.30/day

=~-----1 3&amp;- Real Ulole Waniod

' 458- Leon

247-lelart FaDe

a

March 13, 7 to 11

Chess dates hack to antiquity, its
exact origin unknown. The best players of their time, regarded by later
generations as world champions,
were Francois Pbilidor. Alexandre
Descbappelles, Louis de Ia Bourdonnais, all France; Howard Staunton,
England; Adolph Anderssen, Germa· ny; and Paul Morphy, United States.
In 1866, Wilhelm Steinitz of Austria
defeated Anclerssen and claimed the
world
title.

992-Mlddleport/

publlo IIHia, (10% Sllvlng1
L_,, non-public~~­

DANCE

Winners during the grand opening sale at the Racine Department
Store are: Connie Chevalier, a
microwave; S.L. Miller, a $50 gift
certificate; and Matt Hill, a $25 gift
certificate .

446-Go!UpoUe
388- Vinton
245-Rio Grande
256-Guyan Di1t.
643-Arabia Dill.
379-Walnut

Daily

BULLETIN BOAH.D

Over 15 Words

Gallia County Mel@e County Mason Co., WV
Area Code 614 Area Code 614 Area Code 3 04

• Trlbune U not retpontlhle for erron after lir1t day (cheek

' A clutified advert.itcmcnt placed in the GallipoU.

15
15
15
15
15

Rate

Rates are for consecutive runs, broken up days will be
charged for each day as separate ads.

Classified pages cover the
following telephone exchanges ...

• Receive diacowtt for ad1 paid in advance.
• Free Ad. : Ci~eaway and Found ad. under 15 word• will be
run 3 day• at no charge.
• Price of ad for all capital letter~ i• double price ol ad coat
• 7 point line type only uted

Lovena Barrell Neal celebrared
her 94th birthday Sunday at her
home in Middleport. The pany was
given by Narsa Terzopplous and
Jerry and Ida Day.
Cake, ice cream, mints, pop,
coffee and dinner were served to
Emma Joe Moodispaugh, Charity,
Marlene and Darlene Moodispaugh, Sam and Ryan Terzopplous,
Junita Dray, Brenda Norris, Brenda
Hawley and children, Gregory a~
Margie Hawley, Nelson and Rub1e
Day, Mabel Pearman, Tessie
Wells, Pamela West, Rev. Margaret Robinson, Maria Sellers, Hat·
tie Sellers, John and Shirley Day
and children, Judy and Sara Fletch·
er, Martin and Vie Day, Tim and
Kim Allen and children, Marsha
Price, Eleja Price, Brenda Hudson,
Johnny and Brenda Conley, Bernadine Shriver and Paul Pearman.
Others presenting gifts wee
Emma Searles, Stacy and Debbie
Friend and Jermifer and Penny.

10
Monthly

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
I :OOp.m. Saturday
t:OO p.m. Monday
l :00 p.m. Tuesday
1:00 p.m. Wednesday
100 p.m. Thursday
I :OOp.m. Friday

(t) 10. 17, 2tJc

RICE HONORED • John Rice, who recently retired as Meigs
County's Agricultural Extension Agent, was honored for his ser·
vice the communily and the Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary Club by
his fellow Rotarians at their meeting last week. Also pictured Is
Rotary member Mark Murphey.

Words

Welcome Slates
$20.00

c..tom PtlnUnga
614·"2·2242

POLE BUILDING
MATERIALS

lmparlal •• Mttal

. Cut To lenglh
1 WEll DILIYIRY

M.yColws
Cn..W Tradt .d ttl
Ace~slllfts

BlUM
LUMB.EI CO.
CHESTER

:1/14/'t:l/1 mo.

GUN SHOOT
RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

·'

., '

. '.

BaJhan Building · ·

EVERY
...
SAt NIGHT
6:30P.M.
.
Starting Sept. 28 ·:

factory Choke
."
12 Gauga Sholgun Only
Strhlly Ealorced
"''•

9·13-'91-lln .
'"

BIS.SELL BUILDERS, INC.
lew Ho•11 • Yltyl Sldl11
New G1n..1 • lefl•ce•••t Wlldows
· Roo• Alldltlo•• • loofl•l
tOMMERaAL .... RESIDE!WIAL
FBEI ES'J'IM,UI'.S

614·949·2101 or 949·2860
(lo Sndllf Calls)

2112112

Air Conditionen "":
·-·
&amp; Heat Pumps

�•

'

March

Ohio
'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wrilbt

m

71

~ru~''id~·r~iMa~~ihi1ro.~1~~~2~----------~----------------~P~o~m~e~~~v~~~\~·~drd~le~po~rt,~o~h~IO~·~~-----r----:;;:::;:;:;:~Th:e;·~~;;~~~;7~ -

1992

Autos lor sale

Nlaun St-. QXE,
laoded, H!OD, II14-0'12-2675
1 - Uncotn llark VII LSC,
~.

bMUIHul

T:iz~;~' s~~~~-4'Et/i~· ::= ~,.

Television
• ·•
V.Iewing

BoRN

car, 75,000MI,

141to4 loy NY I. POlLAN

·

$12,000, colt Robin 114-1112·2636
...nl...
Ponlll&lt; Gtond Prlo,
30,-1, wllho wlgroy lnlorlor,
•uto, lrouncl efftCII, loldtd,
$8100, 14-102~ 1182·2171
11ttt Ponlloc Lomano, rod, 2dr.,
4op., om/lmlco-•1 .12,000111,

•

...

I AOUCLAI , I

."....

w Clle ill ae

l:tii!Cile

Nt-:Zm
18111 Strltra S.E. Aulo, Air,
-room. Howl 2,000 Mlltl,
$10,300 Of Tokt over Poymonto.

•

I'LL ONL'r' BE 60NE FOR A FEW DA'f'5..
T~E'r' 'LL TAKE GOOD CARE OF YOl! .. .

3· /0

DON 1T

LEAVE ME 1
PLEASE DON'T

LEAVE ME!

11;l

uriC

. -rN..;YT.W:-TO_S;;,--tl...
5 1 1
11·

Stereo. 1;1

NBC~~e"t:

I

R

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

(I).~ Newl ,

(I)

R UN A ME

teller
gave ma
for
the balance
in mya
savings account 1 had
closBd. I asked for cash but
she refused because I no
llongerhadanopen·······.
ch~k

l--i;~6,..=,1.,;7.:...;1.:...:.:,.1..:....TI-I

8:05 (I) llevtlly HIUbllllel

til u

~!

I I

8 WOikl Toelly
1D llln n.n Tin, K·l Cop

1:30

H:;rl
C:....ttj,..:.,.T

(I)VldeaP-

~ 8quiN ~;;~eo.

18111 Z-28, 11110. 5.7 loodtd.
$13,1100. 11110 Sunblrd LE, auto ..
AC, AM·FII. $5900.. 304-8752332.

'

~-I~~

+j

IIJNewt

IT'S ALL SETTLED THEN,
SNOOP'( YOU CAN STAY
~Er&lt;.E WIT/4 LINUS
AND Ll!C'f'. OKAY ?

.•..

EVENING

1-owntr, IXC Cond, J-0800, 114-

114-441·1312.

. ~

low to form four slmplo words.

TUE.. MARCH 10 •

I

0 four
Rearrange letters of th'
.ICromblod words W.

...

..... ... ...
......:...
, ~
~

G

Complete 1he chuckle quoltd
J..-.L
. ....J.
bv I,U;ng In the missing -ds
vou develop '•om step No. 3 below.

:

.......

...

&amp; PRIIN NTTHESE
NUMBERED LETTER S I
SQUARES ·

1D Wid A1H11c8 C

. ; Squirt One TYStereo.

. ..

IDle CBS Ntwt 1;1

os-~~r Doo
DUpCioM
.ID Ntw Zono Stereo. 1;1
8:35 (I) AndJ QllfiHh
7:00
Ill Wheel of ,..Oitune

• ul

®llleJtll~
lnlldt

E:r'JL.t"w

li!~
Mectlrl'

ci'ncit

BRIDGE

=nt'o'l:o-

304-1175-4853.
3 pupplto, a........ 1.fomolt,
614-&amp;13-5172

Yard Sale

ALL Yood SliM 111111 It Paid In
Advonco. DEADUNE: 2:00 p.m.
•to.o cloy ....... lht td lo tD oun.
Sunday tdhlon • 2:00 p.m.
Fridty. - y tdhlon • 2:00
p.m. Seturdly.

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity
8 Fomlty Ytrd BOlt: 714 Porter
Rood, Noll To Col1roll1 Sloro,
Boby Cl.dlott, And AdulttliCurlllns, SPrtadt. Dilhll, ueh
Much Mortl 114 318 1141, Wid
3111112, SOt 3114112.

Pl. Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity
Llrgt yood ttlt, -htr Dltlllli·

ling, IGf !lh 811'111, -

HtVIIO.

Meoch111h .... Mth.
Yood Stlt, - 1 2 I 11 Jtrry'o
Run ,.... ...,.. Holloy'l. 1-?

8 · Public Sale
&amp; Auction
Rick Plt1'1011 Auction Compolny,

AVON gtlln an tho grauncl floor
of Avono now tomlng llnleturo.
1-112-11351.
Coomtlologilt : Oouronlotd I11Q Ptt ~-Ptld
Ylctllono, CtU 1-mor.

lull· llrnt ouctlontor, compltlo
out)lon wvlco. L.lcoMtd 0111o,
Will Ylrglnlt, 304-1'73-1715.

9

14 WMBEA
MANAGER TRAINEE
14 I.Umbtr Company,. Tht Foo1111 Olewlno Ntllonol Lu-r
Chtln Ht1 Cil- Opportun~l•
Todoy, Advonctmtnl to Atpld
And All Pramotlano Ano F..,.
Within. Arot Yttr Eamlnae
Avongt 111-22,000. ltrwlll rn.
elude Hosoltollzltlon, Profh
Shoring, And lluch - I l l You
Enjoy ~ Comblnollon 01 Sol•
And PhYOicll Worll, Novo cpltltd illah ~ ~- ()ot.
~ Prti~ Then You ...,
OU.IIfv. No Knowllllgt Of BUild1M lrottrltlo N-ry. Wo'H
Ttlcll.
lluollt Wllll"lJ To ..
lmmtdltlt Oplnlnao • Act Howl
Sot Don WI!Mn, Wed, lltldl 11
I A.M. • 1 P.ll. AHty AI: M
WMBEA COMPANY, 'At. 2, Qo~
llpolll Forry, WV.
AUSTAAUA WANTS VOU
Excolltnt
Poy,
lltntlb, ·
TroMjiOtllllon,
41!7-2i2-4JII'I,
Ext. 1171. lll.m.·1Dp.m. Toll
Refunded.
AVON I A~ Areao I Slllnoy
Spotra, 304-171-1428.

Wanted to Buy

p.,._,

DtiiVIfY
W. Are Look·
Ina For Oood ~ To Htlldlt
DOIIvtllto And Plcl!.Upo. Wt Of·
lor Comptt~lvt ~. Pold
Medical lnouronco, P"old V-·
lion, Pold Holldlyo, And Ptld
Sick O.yo. Eocolltnl Adv..,..
mont ~~~~ F« T Who Dtononolrllt Acld~lonol
Abllhy. Oood Driving Aocord A
Mull. Apply In Poroon AI: A'"'al
~!.'!t· 5 Ohio Rlvtt Pllll, Ool·
~11 - t t l o 10 A.ll. I 8 P.M.
ttllaoyo.

t·Pull typo plont 1111«, 814-182·
11151

Uotd coalfurlllct, will romovo,
114-1:""2SM
Wlnttd To Buy: J'"'k Autoa
With Of Wit~ lloton. Coli
Lorry UYIIy. 114-38M303.

Want to:
PIN do" n EXTRA

CA&amp;H?!!

Httvy guoat uitd roallna tin.
HtotonPT-fo tH lttyblne. Otlvor
groin drill an · 20ft .....
dtr! uto
114 311 1114.
Jim-. Form EqulpnorlfLSR. ss,
Will OIIIIJ&gt;olll, 114-e-vm;

,,..,tor,

Exporloncod Fuii·Timt llollcol
AtCt)ICio!llat DIY Shift. Apply In
Pw-. AI: llodlcll Plwl, 203
.tlcbon Pika, Cltlllpollo.
Exporltnced
Ptroon
In
UpiiOIIIIIri"lJ Fum~uro Of
SOwlna Only. 114 441 3438, 114-

3 ulld ownlno type ......num
w t - two ' 4'14' ·ond ono
4'rl' wHh p1ct1n . wt- In
contor wMh . . , _ a 11orm
t11h, f1oo for 111,114441-ZIDI
Big 4 Btdroom .0.- Dream
HciiM. UtLIH I Up. Bull On
Your l.ol. "" Our Modtl, 114881·731t

4441-1618.

Exporloncod Stcroltl! ~~­
ttonlll, AI A - COnlldtn1111, 8tnd Attumo To CLA lor
110, Clo OtiNpolll Dolly Ttllou~ 1
125 Thlod Avonuo, Oolllpolio, un
418S1.

N-.

HVACIR SOrvlco Mon
Htvo Exporltnco In c .....
mtteltl And Attldtntltl Ropolr.
S Yooro Exporltnce Ataulrod To
Apply. 8tnd Rtoumo And Por
Roqutramontt To: lox CLA 108,
Clo Qolllpolll Dolly Tribune, 825
Thlod Avonua, Oolllpolla, OH
45631.
Lobor W«k
to 14!11 wkly., PT· FT, will lrtln,
~now lvtlllblt, 1-800~-:-lll4=8-::--;---,;--Lotd gulllr ployer for tttobllohid nrltly bond, muat Ill
proltoolontl, 304-4SI.e130.
Locll Rtllouront - n g A
RMP'CnaiiM Penon For A
Wotlll::\ lit~

Potltion.

Wllll"' oo Tnln
Righi Por- · 8tnd Lotttt 011111-1 And
Worll Erpoolonco Along With
SOitry Aoqul..- To: CLA
lox 108GCIO Clllllpollo DollY
Tribune, • I Third AYinut, Qo~
llpotlt, OH 45131.
liLT FGf A FUlly Equ~
Pltyllcllnt Olflce Lob. OOod
ltntiHI, No Shift Work. At&gt;fo::J
I p
~~
p
n .,._, -cot IIZI,
Jickeon Plko, Otlllpolll.
NEED EXTRA IIONEY FOR
SPRING? Soli Avon Eam Ao
Much Ao You Nttd. t.aoo-2814101.

===-:-:-::-:..-:-::--:-

Nttd Truek DrtYir To Haul Coot,
;,114-:.:._:;251-:.:,.:.101:,::1.;..::::--:-::--:---:Ctrtllltd NUrol"lJ Ao...IIIII ICF ror long ttrm 01,..
flcll~y, Ctrolotvo al Point
Pltllnt, 304-11711-3005.

Quolllltd houltr wHh lrucl! wonltd lor rogultr pickup I dttllfWY
ol llaht rocyclobll goodo. 304·
812.:812.
Von Drtvtt, AD11iY In AI:
Ctrdlllll Dry ·Ciionoro, 1t Ohio
Aivor Pltu, Oolllpollt.
Wtnltd: lltltphttt lor 2
chlkfrln. North Point ScDittrict.3~~fto. Atl. ..
qulrtd.
,
W.nltd:

":':1

l

Qui- .........
matorltl

lxp1111il08

lor

tupply.
htllllul.

Stnd R - to: Clo P&lt;linl
PI-nt 11!11-'plox P-3, 200
lltln St. Piln1 -.... wv
25890.
Wo'R Poy You To l'tPI NoAnd 1 ddrtJI. Fn1111 Hont.l
1100.00 "" 1000. Ctllt-800 teel ($1.48 IIIMiyro.+l Of
Wrht: PASSE • UWi 111 S. Uncolnway, N. Auroro, L80$42.

lor Sale
Tox And Tlllt Down. -nod
Mobllt Homt1, Uto Your Tn
Rtlund. 50 Homoo To Ch-•.
El- Homo Ctnltr, HIOCI-58118710.
14'170' Wlndlor tral~r an
14'1111' lot In Atclne, 112000,
will contldtr 111 Mrloua bldo,

114-1Mfi.21DI
1888 Ut. Vomcon hou• lrolltr
ror ttlt: 2 BA, ref. I stove.
Prlctd for quick ttlt. $2,000.
814-251-1801.
tilt loran 12dl, 2br, 2 AC,
Undttplnnlng Wtthtr, llryer,
Atfrl(lll'olor, Stove, Pon Fum.,
Ooocr CondHionl 114-441-2871 1:00pm.

Allor 5p.m.

1171 Skyllnt ·tzxeo, $3,1100. 814!MT-0331.
111111 14xBD Surwlolrw -lit
Homo, 3 Bod......., 2 Bothe,
Ttkt CNtr JOymenll, $234
monlhly. 114 441-1325.
NW., 10:1:41, 2bdrm. lrallw, tully
ettptltd, 11ove a rolrlgorator
Included. new hot ....,. Miter,
13000, 114-'Ji12-2711

33 Fenns lor Sale
Form For Solo: J. Dovld Atho,
115 Acroo, ~ Acrel Tllloblt.
M,OOO + lb. Tot.cx:o Bn•,
Pond, Born, Silo And U n -.
Bunk Fe..,, N• Fenc!ng, 8
A-.o HOUtt, Llrgo- FomiiY
A-.o With Boteony, 2 Full
Btlht, Furnace With CA,
Loctltd On Stilt Hlg-y, Ptr·
11ct Pltct To Rolli Cltlldronl
Sltown By Appolntmont Only,
114-3'1f1.211t.

For ttlt, 2.318 l&lt;r-:s=•dtd,
Oft F l i t - Ad.,
, 114::
112
::..:5:,
141
::._...,...--,---Loll tor lilt, trolltn 1 ccoploblt. 304-171-2722.
Loll In Otlllpollo Forry • 100%
owrwr flnonclng ot $18.14 por
monlh, oroy ono of iour toto
anlltbll, 304-1711-2722.
Loll In Now Hovon • 100%
owrwr fl111nc1no ot 1101.41 por
month bvp all lhrw lat•, 1304·
175-2722.

· Wll• - r

Situation

llolltr.

'0": _._12$.-

tiM NO. Filly 2r4d;
17W111.

Eltalola - - W1th Clot~
For lnlortnttlon, 114-

G~fAT

MY/Tf/VfS
oF .rHE

1111 Trioonph Bonnovlllt 7!0&lt;:c
Verr Good Shlpt, 12,000 UIIIL
304'4711-11305.

=I

IIF-110, d-1!.,!00· 2-Hord 3.

r.;o~~:l,r:loog·rc:..::

--·
~wiiiont;tdii:":UIJotdHdltoiiirmm;..
ijUjj~poiiim~otiil,nt

aori

ii483MO

onylhl"'l fOU Wlnl to MM. Coil
114-251-13011, 211-1040 oftor I
p.m.
·

~ftmatlc bod, f325,

63

-

--tr

1m

:r:;r.a'*

Ill.Crouflrl

7:35 (I) Sllllord lnd Son
• 1':00 Clle iiJl In tilt Htll ot 1M
l~~
·· Night Sweet helps a man
whO Ia accused of murde~
\:::::~:::--...:..---.:
his own wife. (A) Stereo. L,l
(I) 1111 AniiUII Soul Trtln
AWIIIII (2:00)
.
(I) (I) 8 Full HouN
Sllphllnle's dance lessons
take their toll; Rebecca tricks
Jesae. (Rl Stereo. r;1
ID Nove The recent rescue
and relelaa oltwo pilOt
whalea ia featured. Stereo.

75 Boats &amp; Motors
lor Sale

~ Mtglc oiling cioeby

The life end loves of a highly
SUCCIIIfui entertelner,IS
8118n frOm friends and !emily,
Including performance cllpa
Shown In their entirety. (I
ilJ)IItly lilllllm March
CNMdt Soloist Steve
Amerson and speaker Donna
Hillson join Billy Grahlm for
l1!f menage. (1 :00) Stereo.

EEKANDMEEK

tl'IAL Uft Ar AU.....

:30)

·1-W.t ll£ oor A
Uff. IN'SURAAU

If 'AJ'I?t: VIJCXR 1HIRIV,
OICitvt:;. llJ#J'TSMC\1,
IV.)' f t:l'll/f. AtJO 1-lAVt.. ill

[U)'f

R)l.I(Y ~ 'T(J.)

.

ii'J. MOVIE: SllvtrlluHtt
~A) (2:00)

IDe Ancue: 811

"'::'m

~~~l?.eeop

NOW; HEPf~ 'OJR
QU'*&gt;TION,
~. 1..151"EN

CARE.FLJL..L..Y. ..

I====? /

Serv1ces

WHO~IQ ' f

HAl-IN IBoo'.L.

NeVeR MeTA

L..ecTe:R-:r

ftareo. Q

Q

wii.TEA

WILLI

DRILLED:

WATIA GAUIIANTIED. 1 7311.

Wllll'llllTAL DETECYOIII
11on Allllon, mo A - Cllll(pola, Ohio, 114441-4UI.

Ctrto, ' " •
""
4
- · tiOO. iiiM.f7l-

81

(4:00)

L.II&lt;E:" l ' '

llllpi'Oftllllft Tim realizes
the creature hiding In his

i
..
~ g:r:;

/

---.1. . .4. . .
Qtilttln

fum your clutter into ctuh,
Srll. it the ea«;y way... by phone,

sfatlon
1D Wlllilll to Survtvlll;l .

8:00 (2) e 11J L.aow l

Bullrilla
Training

14

/e.,,

3 pqpen,$6.00
Call our .olfle• fM po!cf Ill ..........,. nzleol

41 Houtel

BAIEIIENT

WATERPROOFING
Uncond~lontl llfotlmo guoran- •
Itt. L.octl raltrorr:tt lurioltltod. ·,
Coli colltcl 1·
or ntglot. '

Wot-

(I)

·I GOT A;PLUS
1N 'RITHMATIC
TODAY, UNCLE
SNUFFY!!

H(IW DID
YOU KNOW
THAT?

smc;\=:~ 1

IT TAKES
ONE TO
KETCH
ONE '

a urrr ICing Llvll

-.·

~contor

18

wanted to Do

Will
ltll7o!l
Ill •••
., - Artlllabtt.
MW ANI.
II 11

CIIIMMIIIft

9 · - - -.:...........j
2, _ _ _ __
1 0 · - - -......_-l
3:.--------- H..-.........-~
12 . _____-1
4.----~
s______ 13,_
_ _~
6,. _ _ __ __,

' . 1.~.;;.;.·'- -----

14·-...;.....;.....,...~
15..._,_..,......_~

81-..,...-- - -

=.. . . . , , . .
tr I

" • ..... • - ·
~WraiJxiiHar...._

.....

.

u.a

Col

tiR_,112..,.-.-

....... , .......ion.

~ . . . . . . . . . . . . . ,1 ..

.........
.__.
.••••. . . -·="'"'

Pl&amp;nblng 1o

3NT

...

.••. ,...
P .
",
All pass, • •

Opening lead: +J

..
full diagram. If you don't play the chill::.:
10, declarer 'l'ill know that West Jle..• •
can with either the singleton king or -~
K·Q doubleton. In the former ·c ue,
South cannot make his contract So he
will go up with the ace, claiming 11 ••
tricks when your partner's queen doet1&gt;J

drop.

··

\

;cd

However, if you play the club 10 a...trick six, declarer will place yo~~ wltlf~~
the Q-10-S. He will finesse the clll.b_ .
jack ~ finish three ljow~, ,T,bere is 8
only a live-trick dilference based on
the play of one card.
The basic principle is; Play lbe clri.i:;
you are known 10 bold. Here that caltJ'''•
is the club 10; from the lint round of ' ·;
the suit.
'· " ·

The World Almanac' Crossword Puzzle:·:~
ACROSS
1 Saba IU5 Ai:tro11 -

44 Gravel rldgo

9 Sharp turn
12 err of pain

13- Kharram

Edible root

15 Aelotlng to

grondporenla

16 Concerning
17 Plnct 18WIH
counaelor

47 - culpa
48 Autlrlan
capital
51 Cockllll
HIfood

55
58
58
58
60

Sphtrt

Cllttomtr

Colrae hair
Zodllc algn
Wag111

61 Winged

20 Obetruct

62 llao - lung
63 Blacklhom

vato
24 AcUna In •••·

64 Cherge

22 Saah
23 Dlaaentlng
28
32
33
34
35
36

· •:t

42 Putlonate

Perlmen

14

Anawerlo Pnrloul Pilule

at meal

39 Illuminated
40 Put on board

vile ,manner

Border•

lntll

DOWN

4 Wooten

Gold (Sp.l
Aner-

1 Acto• -

Ylew
Yoko Fragment left

2 Shtllll far
batt
3 Arrow polton

O'Nael

8

flllrlc
5 Belowlng

(2 wda.)
~ragranco

9 Gtogrophlcal
dlvlllon

8 Brltlth Navy
abbravlaUon
7 Htve dinner

10 - ttl

II Look
.
I9 AcUng IWIId
21 Unll of Mlbl
24111111111 •

at home

25 WHd bltllalcr

26 Tlmlltr
.~
27 111111n• (ll.r'
Zl - .of Wlgh •
30 Clrickan
, .•
chow- ...
31 Paving atone~
37 Penn-•

.

J

•

38 Pllvlng cord
41 Long lllllt
43F11110U1

college

451gnortl

I\OYII ,... Hall, Aiwty
Wliliarnt tingt M0011 Aiver: .
~ of Wlnll and Roell and

.

M~=IOI
c:htmpionllllp

ll'la unit
41 Mllttl lilgry
50 Tropk:ll trtt
52 urer of
IIIIUt
53 Coupd' -

(I)

46 Palnltr'l

~

I

!·

I!Md

46Eitetromo-

•

54 UnUIUII

57 WW111111

Ill e AIC ,.._ The

ii~j~. l;l

'

HlltlfiO .

0 700 Clul! Willi !!Ill
IIGUAIOI!

......r.::.s.Stno.

1d. Cloollllld Clllle

11:00aJe

lllclilcll •
• &gt;

~-

Pass

. !

Etll

(I)Newa

,_.

'"

., ···= ........,.....,

I NT

, .I

~I prlmlrlll. (1:00)

I lie=- .W IWh, AI 44 Olwo

..._ ... llont 1ft Country. ....

,.

Nertb

from Cli¥tllncl (L)
10:00 t2le 0 Iuper T""*'
Tom llrolcaw oovn tilt

........ 1114-11W1111 · ., -

.I

446,2342. 675-1333'
992-2156
l '

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

flor ""' In IOWft,

'

West

Tourntmen~

=:;:::..=..~-·
114 1tl IIDa.

=4':
..... ...mn."?::"·.:

Soutll

othltl with the London
= Y On:h11b1. (2:00)

-"'
1. 111vor - . one
Acre, .t~~.a
IIJ..-•,
~
t II -

1...._....;;.;.._ _ _

• -

.

'

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: North

buys a new home
aaldng Christine for hit
opinion. (A) Slerlo. D
(J) An Ewtnlnl Wlllllndr
Wllllema Taped II London's

lllo. rot I dtp,· no 11010. 304-1~

'

.

t8 52

1:30 (I) lll e COICII H =

GoodI

."

.

"

aJ FtllltLDowllng M)'llelltl
Stereo. 1;11

HouHIIOkl

.

..
.
••
..

~tFPW-(L)
Ill
Now Ster80.

Suppllla

;

.AJ9832

L•cur~,_,.

lor Rent

Pit

llleA-

AOitlnne experlenCia the
jilltrl When she trias to atop

BARNEY

I lltdroom houM a efflcllncy
10111, M11!1J j
I i, ...... ,

2 lA, -

0n1tr

Detectives l.oglln and
Ctrltll try to obtlin
evidenCe. ~A) Stereo. I;!

C!OI1IOI

Ctoonor $11.11 PI&lt; - · '

no need to leave your home.
PWce zyur chmified ad todqy!
~ 15 aoordt or
3 dqn,

IIOMIItl.

~ a antke.

baaement

..

,,.. !1

"

(2 Wdl.)

1:aow llle 11om1

Home
. Improvements

Building
51

,

1:05 (I) MOVIE: AirpOrt •n (PGI

NAN I DIDN'T.'

... "!

•s s

Yesterday we looked at a hand in
which a defender had a chance to
make a play lhat rated to mislead declarer about the distribution of a suit.
Sometimes it is vital to play a particular card.
In the diagram, cover the West and
South cards. Against three no-trump,
your partner leads the spade jack,
which is allowed to hold. Declarer
wins the second round of spades with
his king, plays a diamond 10 the dummy, and leads a club to bis nine and
West's king, DO you see why the spot·
light will be shining ori you in a
moment?
Your partner continues the spade
attack to the ace, queen and diamond
eight. Now comes the club sii: from
dummy. Which card do you play?
When it .is put like tMt, everyq~~'
will place the 10 on the table - but
why?
if your partner is going to win a second club trick, the contract must fail.
The only danger Js that partner start·
ed with the K·Q doubleton. ~kat the

Television

helloopter to chaae a
g_unman. Stereo. C
11J Youlhqutkl: Word Up On
School (1 :00)
Ill On 8tllge Stereo.

euto,IM...,..lZ

·,1111 -

Another piece
of deception

reporters utilize tllalr

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP,

EAST
+Q72
.KI07 3
• 10 7 3
+1075

tK!

By Phillip Alder

Wllltl of Forlullll;l

'Palriot Lt1gue Tournament,
championship from
Eletlilehlm, Pa. (L)

'

Honclt XA 250, ore cond, $1,200.
Trt County 8por1t Shop, 3041711-2111.

Booot,
lotdr ChoVJ
_....- ·lor lupor
atoindtrd or

For Lease

.:So;;,•_•n-:oct...;Fitor;,::....:::;Apo;:::rt:.m_oon..,.I-:F::-or
: L.A.. one I .A., loth,
Khellin WI llovt I Attrtg.
Wiler Fum- No PilL Coi&gt;-

-

e Mtilltd...wtth CNidrln

Be.I 811r Stereo.
·C Collgl Bell&lt;tlbiiH

•

VZ Vomoho 125, $1,100. 304-

'*

Bull"'%./:cltno
aportyk
o leo, lot f .
Thlod
... lllcldltt&gt;Orl. l.g.
ofllctt &amp; yood, 114-1114231

Sle~:.lil

GA((IAC3E1

~~~~-~l=t~~--~~~ ··

B-

=='

71 Autos lor Sale

49

ALLEYOOP

(I) Ellteljllnnllnt Tonight

l

'

SOVTH

7:30liJL, t~~.i

.

J.U.IZ

•s•
WEST
.JI0981
.Q9
tJ961
.KQ

7:05 (I) Addlmt Ftmllr

lAGS OF

4

46 Space for Rent
buoy

~-"

SportaCtnter

TVftN INTo FOU,

VNI'tlf,$E

ALDER

8M-vtlne
1D Tilt Weltont

wa"ted

'.
"

lor -

-~o:JnW:i:

~
DP
wolgfrlwat• si

-==--:-=-:-=---::550Jfaw=-,

-no.
·All

1111, coN -'138-41110 tltor
lo(

wingback choir, 304-411-1801.

Room a

Roytl O.k A - prGptrt,_ tt-

and unbtlon included. h10
....... 111M.f71-1..... 118-10S7.

bod,
llvlojgraom ouHo, ctdtr - ·
ooiiH llblt, tnd llbiH.

:!1!:."'1oo:.t.:. :-....= :.

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PHILLIP

=

.. ANI&gt; 'T'tltN THt~t:r THf IIGGfJT MU'Tf~y
/
oF THfM At..L-;
f10W CAN 'TWO fAG/
•
OF GI!OCt~11f

iO/oiiGffj

...
Motorc 1
,..
yc es
1111
wlndtltltld, rMr luggt(lt INnk,
!:'.&amp;-~~. uc cOnd, ~.

11182 Ytmtht, XT 2!10 Oln Blko,
Ftrg¥BOr0255. Now' Nolllultnd-.yRoundF«· Tlnl, Erhollll And Tu111
Up. EXctlltnl Condition, 3,600
Btltr. Comllltltllnt at Nolo Mlln, 15!10. 1-3481.
lind trod l i t - , _ _ E·
aul)lllllnt. Frot flntticlng till 1114 Hondo 700 ·'
•
ltllll t an ,.,..liM E... pltllnt. _ , , $1!00, 114-1'12·2545
Folriottln Tractor ltlto, tile, Ul 1114 Hondo XRIO tnd 1111
fl!, U ·~~~ Hondo 50. Hood minor w«k.
ond Wtll ~niL
Ctii114-!M0'0131.

-·

Loll joining Point • tOO% ownor
.... ill4!rtlh•
At""
. StcOf1d
tlntnclnQ II $101.41 por month 12'0.
til , _ lolt. :IOU71- aulrtd. Col
....
~•,Or 1M Ul 1121

-

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Clolno

1HI Pl~h l'oYt(lll' Von, LE
Pocktato. Fully Powirtd, 82,000
MUll, l7,1185.114-416-1111.

.....
. . ..
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.ll!f mesaage. (1:00) Stereo.
I MICGrwr 1;1

FRANK AND ERNEST

Uveatock
17FI. Aluminum Ooummon
•
::12~Y::-•-•~Oid=-::T,-m-.-:WI::-::-Iktr--:U.~ro Ctnot· Would L1kt To Buy Of
FW ...., ~ ,.,~, ";'/· ~ood Tompor-11, $1,000. Trtclo l:cii 14Ft. John Boot. 114141-1158.
Roytl, 7 Outrt-ra tlnntr; 1
~ Typo ,...,, 114-441·
-·
'
A. 2 Sttltt Sttro, 10 H.P.
11311.
3 """ 2 yr. okl-lllno. Cobo :10
Compltlty Fumlllotd llo4"!, $1,200. 114 Ul IIlii," A~
tlrtd
praduclna
well.
1
home, 1 mile below 1own over-_._lily prtctd. ~ lor 5 •.II.
looldna river. No Poll, CA. 114lOATEAS
441-11~.
And CN-Anaue lltck
"-nobly 'Prlatd. tlltlo OuiMI liltlcury llorine Strvlct.
Ont
trod
lwo
btdMercury, llariMr, ...,crul•r
lportmontl lor rent. IOOW78- · oltcklon, 01110, 114- -'t1111. llorclll't cortltltcl.
2053 0&lt; ITS-1100.
Yabllt..L..Wo ..,.. to rou. 114' ;;25;;1;,;5;;;":.;"·:....._ _ _ __
lun
For
BOlt:
Lim
a
olno,
Ton TownhouN Apt.: 2 lr, 2
Cloltnlno, lltlnl An)ou. 114-318lio«l, .1.180 oq. Ito(, 1-111 btl h.
76 Auto Parts &amp;
8030.
1-eoo.Mifi2S
CA, Cn, dlolow- I clo-1.
Ploygi'OIInd, Z poolo, otortlng
For soto: 1 u... """"'.. 1
Acceasorles
1308. Eltctrlc not Included. 114' Cltnttlt Nutrition Producto Vttn Old, 1 Colt, 2 Ytoro Old.
311'7850.
flltlll'lng Amino Acid Body 114-3'1f1.211t.
Tranomiltto.., .IJotd •
NbUl", ltlrtlng at IIIII;._Jron!
Wtdgt Apto, 501 Burdoao 8t
Plge for Alt. CtiiiM- driYI I
11 ...a.oo
Point Plttttnt, no IIIIo,_! ond 2 .........., II RHo Aid PhtrontcJ.
114-245-5177,
.t283.
bedroomt, 30W7S.20n 1ft1r
Tha tttl WIY to dill.
5:00.
U-In
porltno
bulilil
79 campers&amp;
t&lt;l!ftlolll
Altlll lp(MI pltno I JIUNbrtc(. 2yr. okl o-ln
S.nto Gortrudlo -·rico
45
Furnished
Motor Homes
· lltctrlc
Ctlfor.
nli 212
rhytln orgon-ion,
oro. = - - b l y potced,
cond.1 114-111501217 IVIIIingl,
1HOJtyco--,10011
DIIUII, 11Npo1, h11 furnace,
114
1245
Aoomo tor ront · - o r month.
""
dtyo
64 Hay &amp;'Grain
uotd YIIJ Unit, h,300, 114-Mfl.
St~ II 1120/mo. Cltllll Holll. M -.. 0¥111, 1-, llttolna ,....--:,.....~-~~~,.,. 21133
51
1980.
booo, old gltll, toto mile.'~ •-:104~ool oft« 1:00
SltopiiiQ with
4414110.
Pll,
' .
Aleotraltor
'-k-upo,
Coli oftor 2:00 p.m., 304-1'73Transpor1d11on
5151, Me- WY.

-

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

Trlllltr

12

Fumiahtcl 3 A-• And Both
Upolliro, CINn, No Polo,
Atlor.,.t And Dtpoolt Atqulrtd. 514-441-11111.
Fumlehtd Aport mont, 1lor, 111111
to Ubnry, perking, control htat,
olr, roforOOCM. 811 441 0331,
ltlort7p.m.
Oroclauo llvl11jJ. 1 tnd 2 bodroom oportmonll t1 VII'Monor
ond
Rlvtrolilt
Aportmonlo In Ulcldltport. Fnom
$1116. Ctll614-m·718t. EOH.
Modem 2-l&gt;drm aport. In Uld·
dltpor1, 2·btlho, wid hoolt..,p,
kMclotno.
oqulpptd
Aoi.........O.pooH
roqlllrtd.
Ploono
114-1115 4441
olttr

- - i o n - . -firm
111C1oro I lmpltMtrolo. Buy,
1111, tradt, 1:01).5:00 wllkdaJI,
Btl. 1111"-.
::llt:-:-=,-::F:-:~:-:u-oon-.2::80-.f-.-':M:-oll-:-*'1

vans &amp; 4 wo·s

.. ,c.

• AJ842

Hailson join BNiy Graham lor

7:

NORTH
+AU

March
CI'UIIIdt Soloist Steve
Amerson and speaker Doilria

73

~

r---------------------~'

IDle 111r T:J," Tire Next

2 ,mlxtd collie doge to glvtiWiy.

...

•

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I!ICumntAIItlrC

(I).

... ~. ..

,

SCUM-LETS ANSWERS
, .q
· Lotion • Plumb • Haunt· Ballot· ABOUT
My nephew and his wife had nol spoken to each other
in several days. Granny says lhal nothing can keep an
argument go1ng like two people who aren't sure what
they're arguing ABOUT.

131•
(I)

J l-t

'I

• Andy Qrlllltll

Employment Serv1ces

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LAY
LAY

I X K I C L'

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U·Y ll ll C .
Pllf/IOU8 SOLUTION: "H you wtlll to bt a 1uccm
promlea tv*ythlng, dlllvlr notlll!ig." - NIJIO(IOn,

I I'

�· !!!pt;1~T~• Dallx lt~llnel :z

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Jtamtroy-Miilaltpart, Ohio _

u

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J'uelday, tMroh 10,1pn

:'Where Angels F~ar to Tread' Woman fights to keep genetic history
onens
March
20
nationwide
away
from
insurance
c.
o
mpanies
:r
II
I
I
°

li · 11 · 0
Y 81 TPrH MWASII

the p

baclkJ
lthOtlhter t d'
1

LUte most ot
AU&lt;K! ated · 81 r er
"Anltl!" deals w
e m il '
,. he. i1,.0 "&gt; 6hh oberfl.M, • Fors1ter ventu m or ullliaht Btrltla~!i in the
(1 879 19 0
1
to th~ !C~een~~~~h~~~~te~g~ ~' ~~~~~~fvcr~~
~~r.n~
them were written earlier In the 4 olsh woman newly rree from 1
century, thO fll'!t molor adaptation consttiCtlnw .n illrl,e. 'nle w.ealthy
· D id , • • il'A ... ~, · t~
d
1 dJ
was av ....an s ra~oage u widow l.l es her ami •Y .an · ·out·
India" In 1984. The film wu over· neys to Italy where she fills in love
ptilduced, but It e•hlblted Lean's with an lmpeiU\IUI youna niili
genlu~ tor sweeping epl~s.
(Oiov~nnt Ouldellll.
James Ivory beRaii 1 trilogy of
When the widow become•
FOt1ter tales with the wonaerfut ensaaed/ het flllllhtr•ln•liw (&amp;lit•
''A Room With a VIew" In 198~. bata Je ford) d apatchta a ton

J.:.'.k

India -,y·· alvi l'lui·',Ja"""'or· a telephone lntetvlew Monday
maliail,InII do t.ma Mlrrfn"ind ttom.lier.ornce In Steul)tnvllle, In
ouldeiiL
.eilt6rn Ohto ''They jutt Uld I
The Jllne Line Jleaturel retwe couldn't h.ave 1nllltln~e. Jlii'IOd,"
I' p·C1 but unltkeJv to lnterUt
She talked Ill iliti lle~. Mike
•
'
'
·
Poa, Mfimlltoi\, wh~ help.d l!rt·
rf~~n·:~!~nCel. Runntna time: Plrt letlllltlon that ~auld proftlblt
lnauttnce COIIII!illlu trorn eonsjd·
etlna atnetlc hltiOrlea when dec d•
ln&amp;_wlletliertoMIIpoliclu
·rhe meaaure Wlied tho HiluM.

board, lild .Jhn. Heth~tinat.on,. "Till.• tllina II jUil. terr.tbly lnald.l·
lpoketman l'ot Arn•rican tlnhed ou1." .
t:lte lit lndllli~P&lt;JUI, lhi COIII~ny
Ma. Mctelll JOt IIIII CIOII 00\'•
that rt)to~ Mt. Mareut,
erage friJtll hit ti'IIIIIOyer, Iouth•
Howe¥erJ Donald. Whjt•, 1 eaitern Ohio I.Aal( 'ervlctt, and
·~klltlllll lOt ihl Meallh diur• IYiftltlliiiV 101 dlliblllty CoYilllt
anaa Auoolation or Amerloa In under a aroul! IIJIIICY thrOUJh 11\1
Wuhlnaton, ..,a hone or the 300 American Trfall..awyert AtiOilla•
comme!lllllhlllth lnlul'inoe cam• uon.
·
panlu In tU oraanlutlon ulea
But her rejection lnaplred hlr to
aenetle IIlli lei oh60.. eUjiM\ettth,
work lor ohan~o.
''I d i '
I
h Ui·~
h
t oe n t lila lit we • •
"No one I ••yin a hero I
cllnditlonJ•aenttlo In nature. '"No wouldn't mind i hither premium,
one 1hould be dirtied coveuae," 1he llld. "llul why lilto u1 out or
he ~~alhlln Mo~ ldvoclcy 0001• 111 tnalltWe?"
dlnatar ror.the
York·baaed
HuntlnJtOn Dtau•• Society of
Ameilaa, uld the Ohio bill could
.., ,
hav.. n lrriPftCI nalki!llllyl
AN AHIIIM, Callt. (AP) 1
"II WOuld b• the Ctnt I me Thlffl"'"'DII onlhe Plralh of tht
llllli6thinJII Plltln place that Cuttibllii'boit tide It Dllntylilld
would anrNII tlli n~tf!• ot.Pt!llll• beo•m• lit lind the tide wil tem•
wl~nellc dl~, hi lild.
~ly lltut down and IYICIIIIIId,
. ,,.re '11'11 lllltuw ietlllll dlteCt plltk omcllllllld.
.
alo[kluell•nemlt, eyaOo tl~ill,
T.he cauae ot lhe Satutdl" n1•ht
Huntlnatonli· diMIUi hemoplillll, •lckneu W&amp;l IIIII undetelml:td
Due henna and myotoniC muiDular today but park lni~Ototi did the
dymophy and other dt au•••· popu{ar awaahbuckllna altriotlon
1
Puturi Iaiii Could lllrteft or hlah Wallate and it WU reopened an
blood P.reuure, dy!loxla, hour latar, 1ald park •POkolman

week It htd bO!TOWid 141.5 miiUbn
holding hearlnJI Cln
from ha emDioyee penalon fund
''II'•~ 1 tot ea1ler to deil with
linea I an. f to underwrite The thl1 typ1 or an ll1ue In advance,
Chrlathlll Selene. Monitor and the ruher Ihan waiting ror this to
Monitor Chinnel.
become uanditrd practice In the
Boatde the peniiOn
the market," Pox llld.
church hu borrowed S20 mhllon
AbOUt 20 llttetnt of the lftiUI•
from h1 own endowment and 55 ance o01111!1ftlil In the United
million from an accounttltablllhed State• check aenetlc hiltorlea, he
In N•w H1mpahlti by lhi wiU of utd.
.
.
Bddy, church oltlotall have
Law1 ptohlblttna tn1urance
aeknowledpd,
companlea trom dolnt to would
mean hlaher prtmlumi acroaa the

many other dl~u 111 hereditary
and hope to corne up wllh aenetlo
•craenlns tells.
M8, Morelli wu rejected with·
out hlvlna lUI. She urn•
m,OOO I year and 11ld she can't
aCCord the Huntln.alon't dlaeAnue
tel~ which OOilllbOUt $5,000, d
ahelan't ready to l'tce what lhillllt
li\1-htthow,
'At thli point ot my life I
couldn't handle It," aha eald.

11

ga IIIHI

·y• · rrtd ~· b I t 1

"A I , •
~tu ~ r n to j nJI 1 ·
11111
~.· •11,!}.. oht
1 'J;t~~ lhrldti , 1.d1
~~: wi~ t~
and &amp;rik
Oruatr, who JlfP4ueed, u he did
for ''llrldlihUd." Tllill 11\IIIUII
rto · ...
,;.. Yl · ~"lik
• ru ....1Jl911 w• ewer "" 10
• lentl• woi'ld wttll UftdercilJTirltj
orlldklll.
llappllx, lhUut lhaludU tllree
prevl11u 1 tnte~tetiri ot Pomer.
Helena 8onfial'il Cirter 1 the
wldOw'tldlltllna oom""ton who

s7trvA:

A

I

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8·' ROb~ AUBliEY
4.-oalllltcl Prill Writer

COI.UMJliJS Ohlo (AP) - At
fltit, 'l'hetttl M'orelll Juat wAnted
IOII'Iel~alliartee. Now 1he'• '""Ina
to previiltlnaurance gompi~lil
ttom chooatna customers baaed on
what'allllhelr tlmll~ aenel.
'l'he ttaht beaan two yea~ iao
when MI. More. IU, 29, wu re ected
whe.tl lhU""Iled for dltfl IItty
tnaunnce.
. .
The
cbrnpany
blamed
Hunting·
1
ton 1 dlillill1 a ct.pnuatlvO' netve

:~: ~~::rreg~P!Frl~=~~~~iU:~t:~~ :'~:~:;:,:~~~,~~;~~~~J~~§1~~~~~

woman who Is detetmlnllil ttl deny
the younal·-'lan· anv .of the '1111111"
IIU
'
"
'
fotiUne. She pieCipltat68 the
ttsgedy that underscores Ptllltet'a

1
~•w

..

By JON MARCUS
. Assodat4!d Press Writer
BOSTON (AP) - The chair·
lllan of the board or the Christian
Selencc Church, beset by contro·
venle! that Included the use of
employee pension funds to prop up
media operaUons, resigned today.
The church also put Its cable
television operation~ up ror sale.
Church leadeu said that, if no
buyer can be round by June IS, the
Monitor Channel will be shut
down
Church board Chainnan Hstvey
W. Wood resigned and was
replaced by VltRinla S. Harris who
had been a board member: '
"This internal reatructutlng 1s a
return to lhe original rotm or
administration eatabli!hed by
(church founder) Mary Baker
Eddy," Harri! said In utaternent.
Annetta L. Douglass manager
or the Christian Science !&gt;;;bUshing

Society ror two yest!, also hu
re~lgncd, thu!llh offlclali said, She
w1U contlnue a~ executive ptilducer
or radio and telovlslon ~rogram·
mlng and as president or Monitor
Television the.
'I' he Monitor Channel, w~lch
went on the air lut May, toat 5250
million to launch and taltet S4 mil·
lion il month to operate. h hal
roughly • million nble sub•
scrlbert, plus 2 milliOn ¥Iewers In
the Boston area who can receive
the broadcaltl on the church·
owned looat ltatlon,
The Chrls~an ScleneeMonltor
newspaper will not be affeclld by
the Qhllnael, bhuroh offlclala llld.
Oftlclala laid last week that the
newspaper laloslni about $13 mil•
lion a year. One•quarter Ia being
paid for trom the church endoW•
ment and the tell out of the aenenll
operating fund.
the church acknowledled laat

11

· n Sct" entt'
ze.
. 1st'1a
. S.ts to reorgant'
- ·.
C.hr'
II

runa\

~~:~:~~~

I

Low tonight near IS.
Thursday, snow: High In mid
30s.

•x

....

I

ed" for television, now offers a
• Forster 1tory, "Where Angelsl"ollt
o 'ftead:" It proves once more lhat
ttreasures
can be found In the work!
of mMicr stotytellers.

Pick 3: 858
Pick 4: 2434 .
Cards:
8-H; 7-C; 3-0;
7-S

Page 8

I

:~~or:~r:r.~~~.P~~re%~:·,:~~
· ~~o~fo~~~~c~~~~;:~~~~~~~e:~: i:i~::t~u~~m~~ 1~!~~~~~::. :~vA~~ o=v:!:~~~t:~:~ has hid tt rot abollt 14 yean. She
lliility with "Maurloe" In 1987. tlsgeilready hu ~enpllllle. '111en Wllh • VltW." Otavtl alao COUI4.aetlt100.theoonlpanyutd.
coming thl! spring: "Howard's eomea the new! that the bride II •PI*'iC! tn 11 Matltlee," Davt• wu
"There'• no evldenoe t even
lind.' •
uenltAI
fllllft
tn
"A
p
uaae
to
have
Itilt will hive h," lhUiid In
1
1
. h•rles Sturrldge, wh~ spent preanhaenw, hole af"'lt lnf~"·'•••• Uie
C
•
v
T
••
un ...

Ohio Lottery

Southern
tradition
continues

.
11
People become ·. 1
on Dl'"ne·..,land ride

Vol. 42, No: 211
Copyrighted 1992

Meigs board adopts goals, objectives for district
piled by the board and Meigs
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Local administration. There was a
Sentinel News Staff
Goals and objectives for the brief discussion about each item.
Meigs Local School District were Carpenter said that emphasis will
adopted by the board of education be on geuing the district out of the
during Tuesday night's meeting at loan fund and that will probably be
done through passage or a levy[
Salisbury Elementary School.
The list includes achieving
As for parental involvement he
financial stability, increasing said that everyone must look at the
parental involvement in education, fact that education has changed
improving the image of schools over the past several years and that
with the public, improvement of parents will need to become more
student test scores and achieve- involved if student perfonnance is
ment, upgrading bus lleet and bus to be improved.
"We want people to look at the
garage, and seeing that teachers
and students have access to current schools and say 'we are working to
do the job', commented Carpenter
tc~ts. materials and supplies.
The list, according to Supt. when the board discussed the
James Carpenter, had been com - Himage" situation.

Al~~:~~:rd~~u:~ r:o':''that O~·:~~o:c\ft.1 out lOll and didn't

I

I.

i~'::'~:\:!i 1!4 1~~~~~!.:"~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, March 11,1992

nnd anytlilna.' uld Albrteht, not•
Ina pueingen on only two ot the
hua• boaII eomplainid or rumn
"It wu tmrnldtalely ;one."
AIIIUt IlK people Wllllrtllld
Satlll'dlly for couahlq, tl&amp;hlllill In
the cheat, burnln1 eyu1 1kln
blotehea ind nau.... "TwO Mtd thtlr
doctott told them 11111lmU1t to
Mm could have oau11d their
aymptome. No one waa hoapllll·
t&amp;ed overntaht,

As for the need to upgrade the
bus fleet and the bus garage, the
superintendent said that some of
the buses have over 150,000 miles
on them. He also said that the bus
garage location at Rutland is not
satisfactory and that there needs to
be a different facility.
Randy Humphreys, board member, said that the major function of
the board is to have a set of goals
and then work to achieve those
goals. He said that it is important
for the district to move forward and
that the support of the community
is important to do that CII!J&gt;Cnter
defined the goals as "realistic".
Board president Bob Barton talked
about bringing "harmony" to the

district through working· with the
employees, while Board Member
John Hood stressed "listening to
the people."
The resignation of Norman
Wood as a bus driver effective
April I was accepted with regret. A
plaque will be presented to the
long-time driver.
Maternity leave was granted to
Jo Dunn from April I through the
remainder of the school year, and
Teresa Carr was granted a one-half
dock day to attend a funeral. Jef·
frey Baker and Michael Mullen
were added to the substitute teach·
ers' list for 1991 ~92 school tenn:
Approval was given for pay·
ment of $40J9 for cleaning up the

football field after the Big Bend
Youth League football game on
Nov: 12.
The board approved a redistri·
bution of monies in the Carl
Perkins grant fund for vocational
programs at Meigs High School as
recommended by Treasurer Jane
Fry.
A letter was read from Rutland
Village Council regarding the need
for installing a grease trap in the
cafeteria kitchen sink at the Rutland Elementary School because of
potential damage to equipment of
the new sewer system. The superin·
tendent was authorized to secure
estimates so that the work can be
done over the summer months:

Board member Larry Rupe
brought up the matter of the water
rate which the school now pays,
$100 a month for between 25,000
and 30,000 gallons of water, and
the possibility that the village will
be asking that the figure be renegotiated.
Aiso read at the meeting was a
letter from Rutland Village Council
about acquiring the land behind the
Rutland Civic Center. The letter
asked that the area including the
ball fields be deeded to the village
for $1. The board moved into e~cc­
utive session to discuss the matter
but no action was taken when they
returned to open session.

Bush, Clinton celebrate
landslide primary wins
By JOHN KING
AP Political Writer
President Bush and Democrat
Bill Clinton celebrated Super Tues ~
day landslides today and aimed for
knockout blows in the industrial
Midwest. Rivals Patrick Buchanan
and Paul Tsongas vowed to fight
on.
The president soundly defeated
Buchanan in the eight GOP pri·
maries Tuesday, but the conservative challenger insisted "we
haven"t changed our de~tnation
at all.'' He said he would remain in
the race through California's -June
2 primary.
Tsongas, the former Mas sachusetts senator, sought to down·
grade his losses, saying the Super
Tuesday contests were principally
on Clinton's home turf.
"Now that we get into Illinois
and Michigan where there's neutral
territory, I think we're going to do
fine," Tsongas told television

•

PLANS MOVE FORWARD· Neal Vandivi·
er or Dayton, right, the regional director for the
All American Soapbox Derby, was in Meigs
County Monday to confer with Charles Neul·
zllng, local derby director, and other committee

members on plans for the Second Annual Meigs
County Soapbox Derby to be held on July 4 in
Middleport. The two reviewed plans for the new
stock car division.

interviewers today.
Arkansas Gov. Clinton also
appeared on the interview shows
and rejected the argument that he
benefited from Southern pride.
"'I just don't accept that analysis,"" he said: "Sen. Tsongas
fought very heavily in Texas and
we got two~ thirds of the vote there:
It is not a traditional Southern state.
He made a real effon in Tennessee
and we got two-thirds of the vote
there: And, of course, a majority in
Florida where 80 percent of the
people,..~ not born in the state."
But Clinton was not ready to
declare himself the victor. '"This
race has got a long way to go," he
said.
Clinton won eight of II Demo.cratic contests, picking up a huge
cache of delegates and regaining
the front-runner label he hild lost to

a swirl of controversies in New ·
Hampshire:
"I must say it is only tonight
that I fully understand why they
call this Super Tuesday," Clinton
said after big wins in Florida,
Te~as, Tennessee, Mississippi.
Oklahoma, Louisiana and Missouri
- including whopping majorities
amon~ black voters. He also won
HaWBii's Democratic caucuses:
Tsongas carried his home state
or Massachusetts, neighboring
Rhode Island and Delaware.
Bu.sh equated his [eight·.state
sweep to suppon for his legislative
priorities. "We are winners again
tonigh~" be declared after his vic·
tories in Florida, Texas, Louisiana,
Massachusetts, Oklahoma, Missis·
sippi, Tennessee and Rhode Island.
The latest Associated Press del·
Continued on page 3

Fire destroys
Rutland home

The Jerry Black residence on
East Main Street in Rutland was
destroyed by fire late Tuesday.
According to Rutland Fire Chief
Bill Williamson, the fire is believed
also operates five retail outlets in Meigs County. The decision as to to have started at approximately 10
various locations: Gallipolis, Park- where the prison will be located p:m: near a woodbumer in the sin·
gle-story, frame house.
ersburg, W.Va., Charleston, W:Va., will be made in four to six weeks.
Willtamson silid that the strucand a spring and fall operation in
Executive Director Paula Thackture
was a "total loss", although he
Florence, S.C
er discussed several fund raising
said
that a portion cif the contents
All together, Bob's Market and projects for the organization in the
was saved: He estimated the dam·
Greenhouses produces 200,000 upcoming weeks.
age
at $50,000 to $60,000.
flats of bedding plants, 25,000
Thacker said that plans arc
The
Rutland fire department
hanging baskets, 25,000 fall mums being made to print and sell a diswas
assisted
by crews from the
and 10,000 poinsettias each year.
count card, which will offer disdepartments
in
Pomeroy and Mid·
According to Bamitz, his fami- counts and other promotions from
dlcport
A
total
of 24 faremen were
ly's plants have been used at Walt participating merchants and area
on
the
scene,
along
with sheriffs
Disney World in Florida, at Opry- businesses. The card will sell for
who
Williamson
com·
deputies,
land U:SA and on city proj)erty in $5 and discounts and other offers
mended
for
their
assistance
with
Orlando, Fla.
will be in effect for a year. Thacker
Other business
said that she hopes the cards will traffic conuol.
A resident of the house and
Executive Secretary Pamela be~ available for sa)e at the
Todd Snowden, a fireman , were
Newell discussed this week's dinner/dance.
announcement that a prison selec·
The annual golf outing has been transported to Veterans from the
tion committee had been formed to tentatively set for June II, and scene of the fire for treatment and
detennine the location of the medi· plans are being finalized for the release.
The residence was insured ,
urn-security prison bein~ consid· annual dinner/dance on March 21.
Williamson
said.
ered for three counties, mcluding
Continued on page 3

Business profile chamber topic
AltPIItiA110N JIUQtJ~ • Kay Htmllty, on bth-lt or tht
lhady RlYtt Slill~ 1 Prilttlttil iJli4ui t~ ·Piultlti Hil'riiOtt,
rl1bt, at 11 appreelauon eoclal 1111 In ht~ bonor Sunday afttr•
noon •t tb1 Allllrlel11 LQlOllliiU In Mlddltpart.

Paulette Harrison honored
by Shady River Shufflers

By BRIAN J, REED
Sentinel News Starr
Scott Barnitz of Bob's Market
and Greenhouses in Mason, WVa:
was the guest speaker at Tuesday· s
general membership meeting of the
Meigs County Chamber of Commerce, held at Overbrook Center in
Middlepon.
Barnilz presented a brief history
or the family-owned business,
which was founded in 1969
Founder Bob Barnitz was born and
raised in Meigs County. His family
owpcd and operated a truck fann in
the Letart area for many years.
The current business was sf4rled
as a roadside market and just a few
greenhouses in Mason. Since that
time, it has grown to include 50
greenhouses, located on three acres
of growing space. In addition to the
Mason location, the B itz family
I

A IUI'P!Iae appreciation eoc111
IIOIIOtinl Pltllllll HllrfiOn, dltecl·
lor ot Ilia Shady IUver lhufnen,
Wli atqed Sunday .ntrnoon It tht
Arnetlcan t..aion IIIII In Mlddt•·
port.
Aboui ~0 tnemben ot the
tlftl lMin llid thtlt flmiUil, if6li&amp;
wlih aom• tormet Mint btu aatft•
ered !Q ~~~~~ trtbuli Ill Harrlaon. On
b.ohalf th• lhldV RIYit IM•
:llora, l(ay H•m•J•~ DrU1nled a
I ut IIIICttid " iliiiiOIIUN WI
1111111 with

ckla•

or

&amp;g:;.! !J!!I!Ii"'!

•
tilt ,ha

,..ind~!'J~...

..

...,..... diOoraiOd

hm tht lfOUP en.Jovlld

retreahmenta and 1 video tape or
tribute! from cloglqtun mem•
ben. H~nl.oft lib 1*11 tMChtna
oiOIIIltllllr lite put N~ ,...,
Oilllltplay wtra plotwtl ot per•
rorlltantel, ililll!llil ot Ilia \'111'111111
uatumel worn over the r·~~·~
jlOCifli wtltllll Abollt thllft!~p, ana
memorabUia cOit;clid lirl trlt~~.
NlllonaiiY. known otaulftl
tnallildi.Oi' Jett Dtllli madt 1 ••r·
prl1e Yllltln 1111 1fternao11 •nd
COlldllltad ' tWOoltOiit dlnH worll•
ahop. He itOppetl tbtrl while
tti!Outllcl ht. hom• in IL Alblll•

l't&amp;ll Jlllllllt Pllfll, Tlnn.

celebration held

•
I

I

'·I~

I

from the Meigs County Common
Pleas Court in Pomeroy showing
Berkhimer pleaded guilty in 1976
to "contributing to the unruliness
of a miilor."
John
David
Caudill,
Berkhimer's attorney, said the
Ohio conviction ·has "absolutely
nothing" to do with the current
charges against his client. Caudill
said Berlthimer, of Paintsville,
maintains his innocence.
A Kentucky State Police report
said Betthimer had sexual contact
with the girl on an ll!ldi9closed dale
last November and egain on Jan. 9.
Floyd County Attorney Jim
Hammond ~d he found probable
cause to seek the more severe
charges egainst Berkhimer. Caudill
said hif client is alleged to have
touched the girl.
Berkhimer,was released Tuesday after posting 10 percent of a
$20,000 bond. He is scheduled for
Continu.ed on page 3
I

I'

I

RedistrictJng plan rejected; election delayed until June 2

Ex-EHS eacher arrested
on sexuat bose charge
WHEELWRIGIIT, Ky. (AP)A high school principal accused of
sexually molesting a female student
told a PQlneroy, Ohio, judge in
1976 he had learned his lesson after
being convicted of encouraging a
17-year-old girl to run away from
home:
' "I am fully aware of the fact
that what I did was wrong and I
accept full responsibility for my
a~tions," wrote Lewis Berkhimq,
a teaeher lit EaStera High Sc~ool in
Reedsville, Ohio, when he was
~used. "The incident is a pan of
my past, and I fully intend tQ keep
it that way."
.
Betldluner, 45, now principal of
Wbeelwright High School, was te·
arrested Tuesday on charges he had
sexual contact with a I 5-year-old
girl at his school. Two misde·
meanor counts filed Friday were
upp1ded Tuesday to first-degree
sexual llbwe, a felony.
Records were released Tuesday

HOME DESTROYED • Firemen from Rutland, Middleport .• .
and Pomeroy were on tbe scene or a structure fire at the Jerry ·:
Black residence on East Main ~tree! in Rutland yesterday. The ::
home was destroyed. Accordmg to Rutland Fire Chief Bill
Williamson, the blaze is believed to have started near a woodburn.
er. (Sentinel Photo by David Harris)
·

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)Republicans say they likely will
appeal a coun decision that invali·
dated Ohio's newly created leg isla·
tive districts and ordered adelay in
the primary election from May 5 to
June 2.
A panel of tluee federal judges
rejected 2-1 Tuesday a plan created
by majority Republicans on the
state Apportionment Board.
The coun also appointed a spe·
cia! master to draw up a new {'lan
that complies with federal gu1de·
lines:
The board had submitted revi·
sions in the Ohio House and Senate
districts, which the court had·
. re~ted earlier, but the judges said
it still ·violates the federal Voting
Right.! Act.
N.~ Victor Goodman of Columbus, counsel for Gov, George
Voinovich and the otber GOP
boanl members, said he wiU probe.
bly recommend an appeal to the
U.S. Supreme Court.
"We haven't yetlinalyzed it,"[

Quilter and Ferguson claimed,
Goodman said.
among
other things, that the GOP
While the decision orders a
plan
violated
guidelines set by the
delay in the primary election for
federal
and
state
constitutions and
the Ohio House and Senate to June
2, the coun reserved the right to the Voting Rights Act
Aronoff, along with Voinovich
pick yet Qnother date based on
and Secretary of State Bob Taft, are
future circumstances.
Senate President Stanley the Republicans. They had made
Aronoff, R-Cincinnali said the revisions in the plan Feb. 20, after
decision eases ~ure on current the federal coun rejected an earlier
deliberations m the House on a version Jan. 31.
The panel ruled that the revi·
Senate-approved bill creating 19
sions
did not satisfy the coun's ear. new congressional districts in Ohio.
tier
objections.
The House tried on Tuesday, but
The coun said it illegally diluted
bogged down in a partisan controversy, tO pass the congressiOnal biU '!Jlinority voting strength by "pack·
in advance of Friday deadline to ing'' big city districts with minority
avoid a delay in the Mar sprimary. . voters in a manner that lessened
Aronoff said in view o the federal their influence in adjoining districts.
decision, the Hou.se need nOt rush.
Taft's office said it was not cleal"
The federal decision came fuJn
a panel of U.S. District Coun in whether the decision would affect
the presidential primary, because of
Akron in a case filed by Rep. BtU'·
ney Quilter, D·toledo, and state the possibility of an appeal.
TIJe panel consists of Judges
Auditor Thomas E. Ferguson as
minority members of the Appor· Nathaniel Jones and John W. Peck
of the 6th Circuit U.S. Court of
tionment Board.
Appeals, and Judge David Dow.d of

a

the U.S. District Court, Northem
Ohio District. Dowd dissented in
the.opinion.
Jones and Peck are Democrats.
Do~d , a Republican, said the
maJonty members of the Appor.
tionmcnt Board met the Jan. 3i
order to make changes to comply
with the Voti~n~ Rights Act. The
maJOllty dec1S1on described the
changes made by Yoinovich and
the others as meager.
The court appointell La wn:nce
A. K~e Jr. !IS ~e special master.
Kane IS the Cu.:mnati lawyer who
serv~s as special counsel for the
Ohio attorney generil in legal matters remaining from the 1985 collapse of the CinciMati-based Home
State Savings Bank.
Kane. was authoriz:Cd by the
court to "employ an expert or
experts versed in the subject area
. and such other e~pen and Ia)' assistance as may be appropriate." · ,
The coun said Kane's costs will
be assessed against the state.
1

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