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                  <text>Page-DB-Sunday Times-Sentinel
-·~ --

Pom""' IIUIIport--Galllpolle, OH-Polnt Pleaaant, wv
- -- - - -

March 11, 1981

r

Manure handling rules
concern poultry iridu~try .J
•

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COLUMBUS. Ohio (UPI) rus needed.
.
. · it's going th cost producers mOI'O'~..
Changes to Ohio's manure hanThe goal of House Bill881S to moneytomakeuseoftheproduc:L ,.
dling regulations now being con. speed ·up and strengthen the
" Some producers are able 'tQ :·
sidered by the Ohio legislal~ aim enforcemenr procesa Sll cases of sell it u fertilizer now, but iii•:
to improve the state's 'waler quali- livestock manure pollution can be questillnable as to whether ·the)"'fe, -~
ty.
corrected more quickly, Vance breaking even or not," Heaven ~ :'
But Ohio's poultry industry says. Also. the bill would offer ric!f.: says.
worries the proposed regulations expanded educati~nal, technical
'As liveStock producers, w~ try &lt; ·
will affect producers ~ abilities to and financial aSSI_stance to h~lp to be~ siC~ ofdte ~vaoo- ·
get rid of manure. .
producers meet Ohio water quality ment, Heavenridge adds. A few
" It's issue that's not going to laws.
.
abuse this and make a bad name for '
go away," saya Laity Vance, chief
Ma!lure application g~ideli~es those trying to do a. good job to'
of the Division of Soil and Water are bemg set by agronomists With protecl the Slate's waiCI' quality by
Conservation with the Ohio the Ohio Cooperative Extension properly using their manure."
:·
Department of Natural Resoun:es.
Service. The result'should deCrease · Heavenridge says the poultry ·
"We want producers to recog- the amount of nutrient. runoff, in~ustry would like to soc Ho~se ·
nize lbe nutrient value of manure improving Ohio's waler quality.'
B11l 88 addres~ other potenlta1
and SIDJl treating it as a waste prodIt should also help farmers save sources of pollubOII. such u chem- ·
uct," Vance says.
money by sbowing,ihem ~ tbey leal fertilizers and single·familyl
Vance 'says chan~es outlined in can balance manure applications septic sy~s,as well as.manure._ '
House Bill 88 are 8lllled at reduc:- with nptrients already available in
"As 1t stands now, Houae Bill
ing non-point sources of pollution. tile soil and top off any sho{lfalls 88 re~teS one part of the prob"Water pollution used to be with chemical fertilizers, Vance lem wuhout re.gulahng other '
blamed on waste from industries says.
.
parts," Heavenndge says. "We··
and municipalities," Vance says.
But poultry producers' are con· need to I~ at wlllel' quality in a
"But the majority of those sources cerned, says Jack Heaven.ridge, broade~ rash!on."
; , .
Heavenndge and Vance agree ·
have been cleaned up. Now the executive secretary of the Ohio
. focus is on landscape runoff and Poultry Association.
that poul~y producers have on.e
1
other soun:es'that can't be traced to
"With dte regulations being dis- adyanl88e m that poultry 11181!UI'C ~ ­
a tube or. pi~, and can't be treated cussed now, it looks lite we'll have dr~r than IJ!anare from ~!"me or·
as easily as point• sourees can~ ••
to use three to six times more land ' ~ operations. and so tl s more,
Currently, much of the manure · area to spread manure than we have easily transported and C'"!JJ!C!S!cd·. ,,
. from poultry and other livestock been using, " Heavenridge says.
Vance even sees ~iliues .m
operations is applied 10 crop land This means moving tile manure far- pout~ ~ucers 1eallllng liP W)th .
as fenilizer.
ther distances or increasing pro- municipalities that compost ya'rd
Many times, however, farmers .cessing to compost the manure into waste. The two types of compost ·
don't take that into account when a more stable product Either way, . could bleild well to form a better.
figuring how much chemical fertilproduct, ~ S:BYS,.
izer to apply. The .result is over- ·
'
·.
fertilization, causing nutrients such
\.
·. ·
as phosphorus and nitrogen to build
1
~
..,__,..
' up in lbe soil, which can wuh into
.
~VnR&amp;.
waterways through erosion and
,\
. You're probably well aware of your
runoff.
·
That, in turn, can cause algae
family's life insurance needs. And .
.
\
blooms and otber pollu.tion probyou probably have questions.
. ~ .....,,.....,......_\ \
.··
'~ \
lems. In extreme cases. fJSh kills
I've got a lot of answers.
'·
have occurred, Vance says.
Here at Allstate we've got
"Not enough producers lest
protection for you, your family,
their manure to determine its nutriyour children, your
ent coniCIIt." Vance says.
future,
·
··
In a 13-county pilot project, the
\ .
Why not drop in. or
Division of Soil and Water Consercall. Let's talk.
·
vation conducted more tilan 2,000
soil tests and more than 250
manure tests. Eighty percent of dte
J
MARVIN BOXDORFER
'
soil samples contained more phosAccount Agent
phorus tban the crop needed. In 16
448 S-nd Ave., #103
Allltate Life lnt ur&amp;DCe Compuy
percent of the samples, there was
Oelllpolla, OH. 45831
four times the amount of phosphoau•. &amp;14·441-1104
,,

MYSTERY FARM- This week's mystery
rarm, reatured ·by the Meigs Soil and Water
Conservation District, is located somewhere in
Meigs County. lndi~lduais wishing to participate
in tbe weekly contest may do so by guessing the .
farm's owner. Just maU, or drop orr your guess
orr to the -Daily Sentine~111 Court St., Pomeroy,
Ohio, 45769, or the Gallipolis Daily Tribune, 825
third A~e., Gallipolis,
Ohio,-45631, and you may
-

Ned....,

WaaerC..........._

· .

Farm Flashes .

Gallia Extension Office to be open
March 24 to .receive
soil
samples
·
.

BYEDWARDM. VOLLBORN ·
COUNTY EXTENSION AGENT
AGRICULTURE &amp; CNRD
GALLIPOLIS .- The Oallia
county Extension Office will be
open next Sunday, March 24 from
1-4 p.m. to receive soil samples. I
hope. this will be a convenience for
those who have work schedules
that conflict with the normal office
hours of the Extension Office.
Cost for Agronomic (farm field)
samples is $5.50 each and Lawn
and Garden is $8.50 per sample.
Samples are sent to lhe research
laboratory in Woo~ter, Ohio. The
tum-a-round time has been good
this year with less.than a two week
wait. Soil samples are exceUenr
management tools that help determine need for lime and fertilizer:
Often nutrient levels are out of balance.
ln. some cases, recommendations will be less expensive that traditional programs and at the same
time increase production. Gallia
· County has a strong tradition of
using the soil sample service.
· The number of samples submitted through our office annually is
more than double the average of
other counties in southern Ohio.
With spring planting season just
aroundJthe comer, now is the time
to get this job done!
Mr. Dave Samples, County
Extension Agent in Jackson County
invite$ Gallia County farmers to
attend the Jackson Farmers' Club
meeting on Monday, March 18 at 7
p:m, at Trippie's Restaurant just
west of Jackson. Dr. Allan Lines,
OSU Extension Economist will do
a "outlook~ program. Reservations
ft!r the dinner meeting should be
made by noon Monday by calling
286-5044.
According to "Doanes's Agri cultural Report," U.S. Senator
Patrick Leahy is sponsoring a bill
that would mandate fluid milk
prices to farmers at the $l3.28
level for the rest of I991. Under'
tilis proposed bill the $10.10 price
support would hold for manufacturing mill'- Milk price stress resulted
in a 27 percent price &lt;lr&lt;ip at the

'
thlt a well-dewlaped.colony is in
the ia11aedi1te ..-.. Subterranean
tennilea -u,.·IIIM their colonies
in the IOillllll-... 11111 material that
cootaia eellulole.
Extension
"Home, Yard aad Garden Fact

farm level as of r:iecelllber 1990.
Six livestock conference~ for
Ohio youth will be llctld in J - at
the Ohio Stat~ Uninnity. Tile
·o.s.u.
Beef, Dairy, Poultry, Shoep, Swine
and Livestock Evaluation Youdl
Conference will be held simu111ne- .
ously on June 25-27. This in aood
opportunity for 4-H and P..P.A.
C111tbluecl , _ D-1
member to get a ~ of collese reselling tbe s1wa 10 institutional
life and learn more. about aaimal , investon.
.
industries. Applications are cNe by
AmonJ Olher blae -chips, Unisys
April IS. Memben who have com- wu doWD 3/8 to 5 7/8. Pepsico,
pleted their fresh104111 ,.ear of bi&amp;h which 'Mill the CICIIK 'S'ion for soda
school .or beyond thia year are eli- fownlain $CII'Yice 11 Marriott Corp.
gible. Call the ExiCillion Office for from Coca· Cola, I'OIC 718 to 33
details.
·
311. McDonald's, which said it
Warm spring days briDI tile plaYed a"-'
. ~that was 91
emergence of termlle swarmon. percent fat _ , MYIIIced 1/2 to
The presence of SwauleiS iNJi llw 34 1!2. .
.

Marlcet. •.

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WoJD811 S qUvc:twvDS

Page3

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at
t-i

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1 Seodona, 10 Pogea 25 cenia

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, · Monday, March M; 1991

A Mulllmedle Inc. Newspaper

Q.hio counties work on recycling plans
tam to district planning.
McCullough said. "Put it on the
By United Press lnlematlonal
·however, are under revision.
Tbose issues include treating fly curb and tilat was the end of it
Some 48 solid-~aste manage"One of tbe problems was that
ment districts - a new goyern- the districts had not come to any ash from incinerators, s41Ddards for · . "A.ll .the publicity. that has
mental division in Ohio - are fmn conclusions. They suggested a waste-tire dumps and iules for cer- OCCIJ!Ted with solid-waste planning
made a lot more people aware Qf
working on plans to come up with lot of al~ematives and lcind of left it . tifying landfiU mspec(9rs.
"I don't like to whine about problems with the ways we have
their solutions meet a 1988 state up in the air," said Michael
law requirement to recycle 25 per. McCullough, head of the Ohio this, but (lack of manpower), is managed our waste," he said. "It's
cent of their waste by June 24, Environmental Protection.Agency essentially the problem,'' McCul- also highli~hted the things we'll
lough said . ."Everybody who . need to dO m the future - separat1994.
division reviewing district plans.
In addition, yard waste such as
"If they can't nail that down, works on roles has a lot of other 'lng out recyclables and producing
less waste in the first place."
leaves and gras~ will be banned then the plan isn't meeting its responsibilities; too .••
The districts have authority to
from landfills after Dec. I, 1993. objectives," McCullough said. Due
Thirty-two counties are their
Also ·being prohibited will be tires, dates vary by, district, depending On build ttash-dispossl sites, including
car batttries and motor oiL
size, but six-month extensions are lapdfills, and they can raise mil- own solid-waste management dis-.
lions of dollars by levying. ~-ton !Jicts: Ashland, Auglaize, Brown,
There are 32 single-county dis- available.
tricts and 16 multi·county districts .
Some districts, however, are fees on traSh dumped in the1r land- Butler, Clar-k. Crawford. Cuya- some including up to six coun- upset with the Ohio EPA for failing fills.
hoga, Darke, Franklin, Greene,
ties - and many have already sub- to meet deadlines for adopting new · . ···It's an old cliche, but appropri- Hancock, Ha!ililton , Henry,
rnitJ.ed plans. Some o( th.ose plans, rules on a number Qf issues impor- ate- 'Out of sight. out of mind,"' Holmes, Lake, Logan, Lorain,

·-

&gt;

.

Allstate·

'' ...'

-l ·

Lucas, Mahoning, Medina, Mercer,
Miami, Montgomery, Pike,
Portage, Preble, Putnam, Richland,
Summit, Van Wert, Wood and
Wyandot
Here are the 16 multi-county
distric!§:
-Williams, Fulton, Defiance
and Paulding;
- Ottawa, Sandusky and
Seneca;
~Erie and Huron;
- Allen, Hardin, Union, Cham· paign, Madison and Shelby;
- Warren and Clinton;
-Clermont and Adams;
- Scioto and Lawrence:
- Highland, Fayette, Pickaway

and Ross;
- Hocking, Vinton , Jackson,
Gallia, Meigs and Adtens;
- Licking, Fairfield. Perry and
Coshocton:
- Muskingum, Mcrgan, Washington, Noble, Monroe a n,d
Guernsey:
·
- Belmont and Jefferson;
- Harrison, Carroll and
Columbiana:
.
- Tuscarawas, S1ark and
Wayne:
-Geauga, Ashlabola and Trum bull:
. .
,
- Marion. Delaware. Morrow
and Knox.

We sam firm awarded
bid on DHS project
Bids were awarded on the new · late 1990. Prior to the collli'niuMeigs County Department of sioners' awarding of the bids on
Human Services building at Fri.- Friday, the bids were examined by
day's meeting of the Meigs County the project architect, Burgess and
Commissioners.
Niple of Parkersburg, W.Va.
Wesam Construction of
The $1 million project will add
Pomeroy was awarded the general a three-story addition to the existcontracting bid on the project in ihe ing Middleport DRS building ,
arnount'of $669,887. The electrical allowing lhe department to consolicontract was awarded to Advance date all of its offices under one
Electric. That bid was in the roof. Currently, the office s are
amount of $129,900. Parkersburg located in b.oth the DRS ' Race
Heating and Cooling was awarded Street building and in the Coates
both the heating and ventilation Building in Middleport. The money
contract and the plumbing cpntracL spent by the county on the proje'Cit
The heating
was in the will be reimbursed by the State of
, and the .Ohio.
,
amount of $1
, _ 1n Qtlae~ . llllsines!L ~mi&amp;­
SJoners' appointed Linda R. W~t
do not
· any of ihe to the Citizens ' Advisory Board of
alternate, or extra, features that will the SEPTA Center. Warner's
be added to the building cost as appoinlltlent flUs· a vacancy left on ·
finances allow.
the board after the resignation of
The bid awards follow the re- Carl Hysell from the board.
advertisement for the bids earlier
Finally, the commissioners
this year. The commissioners approved bond for Interim County
rejected the first group of bids in Treasurer Nan~y Russell.

' ..

...--------~:--...:.;;.;;.;.;...;;.;.;...;.;.;,...;,.;.;~-..J·

•

1991 PONTIAC GRAND AM
4Door
Warranty

•Air
CondHionlng
•AM/FM

Caaette

---------'+

.

. WHITEHOUSE COMES DOWN - The Whitehouse Ta~ern,
located on Main Street at Kerr's Run, was burned to the ground
by lbe Pomeroy Fire Department on Sunday morning. The demolition ·or the building, which dates bac~ to 1904, was carried out in
preparation for state highway construction at the intersection of

........ .

CliOil.IXM

C..lf'IIIW .... &amp;St.t.St.

~

The State and Local Government C0111mission met in Marietta
on March 13 to hold an open forum
for local government officials in 16
southeastern Ohio counties.
The meeting, prompted by CommisSion Chairman and Lieutenant
Governor Mike DeWine, was organi.zed to give an opportunity 10
local government officials to voice
!heir opinions and concerns regarding community issues, .
Representatives from Gallia
County were County .Commissioner George Pope and Jack Fowler of

lfAH fM.

A

PONTIAC GRAND PRIX

tMI••AtiC~.

fALL ME.

SI ~Uc:

4 Door Demonstrator

Farm

FACTORY LIST *17, 100
White With Sport
· Reduced To

, lnsufaoo.•· &lt;:oftlpOlflic.::"'
IIIHlk' ()ff'K.'l 'S: ttltMtmil1f(hMl , lllill!ll;to

Appearance Package ·
· 3.000 Low Miles

Ukc a ~:••Kl ncif.thhur. State farm is tlx:re.

s.,

.,

$12 888
· ,

.

'

·
Established in September, 1971, the servi~:e has gr~wn in leaps ~nd
bounds in the past 20 years. This January the service hit an all-time rewrd with 2,0,48 home visits being made in that one month.

1990 CADILLAC
SEDAN DeVILLES
Low Miles
Factory Program Cars

Home health care is availab\e to all persons residing within a reasonable distance of Veterans Memorial Hospital and is provided only
under orders from a patient's physician. It is appropriate only fc;&gt;r~
patients who are homebound.
·

$19 900
1990 BUICK
PARK AVENUES
•

Loaded - Low Miles
Were $17,900
REDUCED TO

$15,888

'I

'
Perhaps, this effective service can
one.

be beneficial ro you or to alov~d

VETERANS -IIIIIOIW HOSPITAL
115 L •••nl.. ••••

P1nu •r

tft4114

zoans to observe
safety tornado week

.

Routes 33 and 124. The Whitehouse Tavern is one or l2 properties
affected by the state highway construction made necessary because
orthe Feb.·2, 1990 culvert collapse which ran under the Route 124
roadway lothe Ohio Ri~er.

..

Local officials :discuss SE Ohio concerns

..,_ 446-41fl. . . . 446-4S11

The Home Heath Nursing Service ~:oordinates well with today's
viewpoint of permitting people co remain in their ow.n homes for as
long as possible. Visits into the homes of residents by nurses and nurses
aides of the servi~:e , plus work by the hospital's physical therapy department are making the remain at home philosophy work.

.'C5J

VaL 41, No. 230
Ca;J•Iul•ted 1881

Low tonight in mid 30s.
Tuesday, partly cloudy,
.High in mid-50s. ·

•

\

Congratulations are in order for the Home Health Skilled Nursing
Department at Veterans Memorial - Your Hometown Hospital.

Ill Nolpllll

Super Lotto

~-

•Automatic:
Transmission

CONGRATULATIONS
.
IN ORDER!

\leilf- 8'

Pick 3:474 .
Pick 4: 5744
Cards: Q-H,9-C;
2-D;S.S
10-12-16-26·31-39
Kicker 840813

an

wlw a $5 prt. ,._ ... Ollie VlleJ hhllsbing
Co. ~ .Jlllll' . . _ IMr• ... &amp;eltphooe
number wldl ~caN • lelelr. Ne telephone
calls wDl be ~. All
allies should
be tu..... 18 to tlle ww ,,..,. e8b b1 4 p.m.
eacll Wd r 'Jyi lw- of~ de, ... wbiaer will
be ell- 'Y .,..,.
a Gella Couoty
farm will 1te ftatwr::.:Tct.IM Gdll Soil and

Ohio Lottery

Ohio State
outlasts
.Tech, 65-61

•

See Don Carter, Harlaritl Wood, Marc Cannan, or Creg Smith

the Community Improvement Corporation. Those in attendance from
Meigs County were Commissioners
Manning Roush, David Koblentz
and E,ichard Jane~ and County
Clerk Mary Robs tetter.
Commission Vice-chairman,
Charles A. Calhoun, presided over
the meeting and was impre&amp;sed
witil the attendance and parpcipation of the varipus community leaders.
"There were a lot of good comments and excellent suggestions
made that will be relayed to the

Lieutenant Governor and the
Administration," Calhoun said.
Over 75 officials frorit counties,
cities, villages and-townships participated in the regional forum held
in the Marietta City Council Chambers. Marietta Mayor Naricy Hollister, who serves on the State and
Local Government Commission,
hosted the gathering.
"Being an elected official takes
a lot of work, and sharing knowledge and information between loCal
governments and levels of government helps add to the success of

every community," Hollister said.
SLGC is a bipartisan commission that serves as a forum for dis·
cussion and resolution of issues
affecting all levels of government.
Lieutenant Governor DeWine and
the State and Local Government
Commission will sponsor four
other regional meetings throughout
the state within the next few
monlhs.
• Officials who were unable to
attend are encouraged to contact
the State and Local Government
Commission at (614) 466-2108 for
additional information.

Soviet referendum narrowly passes
MOSCOW (UPI) - A referen- its kind in the country, was condum on keeping ·the Soviet Union ducted on paper ballots and countintact passed by the narrowest of . ing was conducted by hand across
margins in the Soviet capital and the vast country, delaying any sigwas approved by a larger percent- nificant vote totals for several days,
age in Other areas of the country, election officials said:
There was little doubt about pasthe ftrsl unofficial results showed
sage
of the question on preserving
Monday.
The national referendum, fust of the Soviet Union as it was built

during 'io years of communism, but
the significance of tile result was
lilcely to be di~uted since six independence-minded republics boycotted the ~oting. Opposition leaders also complained that the wording of the question was 5o ~ague it
was nearly meaningless.
President Mikhail Gorbachev

New PUCO chief has support
SHAKER HEIGHTS, Ohio PUCO, and · helped develop a
(VPI) - Craig Gla.zer, Gov . PUCO reform proposal passed by
George Voinovich' s selection to ·the General Assembly in 1983.
Shari Weir, spokeswoman for
become chairman of the Public
Utilities Commission of Ohio next Ohio Citizen Action, said she
month, hu support for his back- views Glazer as pro-conswner.
ground. in working with both con"One thing that's encouraging
sumer groups and utilities.
abou,t the appointment is that he
Glazer, a New York native now has a very $ood working knowlliving in the Cleveland suburb of edge of utihty issues," she said.
Shaker Heights, has worked for "That's somethinF, \\le're used to
both sides.
with PUCO chairs. '
His experience witil Voinovich
Fred Lange, a legal affairs vice
includes serving as chief utilities president for the Centerior Energy
counsel for the Cleveland Law Corp., said Glazer's. familiarity
Depanmcnt from 1979 ro 1985. He witil the utilities and his past expeworked on behalf of Cleveland rience before the PUCO would
ratepayers in electric. natural gas allow him to "hit tile ground runand telephone rate ~s before the ning."

-

"

•l

~ 'The greatest challenge he faces
is changing from being an advocate
to,a regulator," Lange said. " Now
he must balance the interests of the
utilities and lhe ratepayers. I think
he'll do his best to be fair. He wiU
have to act as an impartial regula,
tor. It may be tough at ftrsl ' ' .
Glazer said liis job will be to
balance the interests of utilities
seeking profits with consumers
seeking inexpensive service.
"I've been on both sides of the
floor. reJnsenting both utilities and
consumers," the lawyer said. "I
li~e to view myself as someone
who will be fair, open 'and willing
to lisien to all sides."

rota reporters after casting his bal·

lot Sunday there was no question in
his mind .about the referendum
being approved, saying, "I don't
think mir people are suicidal."
The first unofficial results
released by tile Moscow eleetoral
commission, however, showed just
a fraction .over 50 pen:ent of those
who voted in the capital said
"yes" to the question: "Do you
consider essential the preservation
of the Union of Soyiet Socialist
Republics as a renewed federation
of sovereign republics with equal
rights, in which tile righ1S and freedoms of a person of any nationality
will be"'iiuaranteed in full measure?"
Forty-six percent voted against
the referendum in Moscow, the
official Tass news agency said.
Turnout in the capital was reponed
at67 percent of the eligible voters.
Radical reformist politicians led
by Russian Federation leader Boris
Yeltsin, who enjoy their strongest
support in Moscow and Leningrad,
had encouraged a vote against the
referendum as a prolest against !he
policies of Gorbachev's Communist central government.
Coatlnued on page 10

By United Press International
Each year severe thunderstorms
and tornadoes threaten lives and do
millions of dollars in damage in
Ohio.
Little can be done to minimize
damage, but National Weather Service official s say deaths and ·
injuries can be limited if you know
what actions to take when severe
weather is sighted or a warning is
issued.
To help communities test their
readiness for severe weather. a
statewide tornado drill wiU be condueled Wednesday atiO: 10 a.m. Ai
that time, test warnings will ·be
issued, communication and warning siren systems will be tesJ.ed and
safety drills conducted.
Tornado safety week in Ohio
runs through Saturday. ·
,
Last year 24 tornadoes struck
Ohio, lcilling one person and injuring 29 people.
The yearly a~era$e sin,ce 1960 is
16 tornadoes in Ohm. Most of the

tornadoes struck during the summer months but the last pne of
1990 touched down on Dec. 23 at
4: II a.m. in the Guernsey and
Noble counties in eastern Ohio.
The National Weather Service
said statistics over the past 30 years
showed Ohio ranks high with
respect to tornado danger.
Ohio experienced 457 tornadoes
from 1960 through 1989, ranking
21st in the nation. There were 151
fatalities and 3,577 injuries, tank·
ing Ohio sixth and third, respectively. Damage in 1989 dollars for
the period was $895 million, ranking fifth.

Gov. Voinovich

signs first 2 bills
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) Gov. George Voinovich has
signed into law the first two
pieces of legislation since he
became governor in January. .
One measure allows town·
ship trustees to advance money
to regional water and sewer dis·
tricts under tile same conditions
u cities and counties are pennit·
ted, That bill was sponsored by
Sen. Charles Henry, R-Burton.
The second bill, sponsored
by Rep. Thomas Johnson , RNew Concord, validates the
issuance by a school district of•
bonds which were, ~proved at
the Nov. 6, 1990 elec:llon.
11 also applies procedures
saving the nomination of independent candidates to the election of the Akron Municipal
Court clerk, and appropriates
$500,000 from .the Senate Reiml!ursement Fund for use by tile
Ohio Senate.
'.

NEW EXECUTIVE CHAIR·
MAN • Meigs Couoty Commls·
sloner Richard E. Jones was
appointed IS Chairman or the
Meias County Republlcu
Party'i Executive Co•mlttee
when tbe commluee met on Sun.
day. Jo-· ll!ppoinhllent 'olloWs
the reslanatlon of Gear1e Colll111,
who reslped after his appoint·
ment to a position at the Ohio
Department or Transportation.
Jones ser~ed In the capacity as
chairman for 12 years - preced·
fng Collins in the position.
\

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Monday, March 18, 1991

Commentary

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-3

Page-2-The Deily StnUneJ
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday, March 18, 1191

UNLV, Ohio State among
Sunday's NCAA winners

••

The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court street
PomeNy, Ohlo
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF TilE MEIGS-MAilON AREA

.

~-

~~ ~._-,-,r-T"'OE2!Qio=o ' .
~v
.
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher .

CHABLBNE HOEFLICH

G•eral Manaal!'

PAT WIIJTEHEAD

.

Aul!danl Publlaller/Conlroller
A MEMB'ER of The United Press International, Inland Dally Press ·
A.....,latlon and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should bel!!SS than 300

worda lona. AU letters are subJect to editing and must be signed with ·
..,..,, addr•aand telephone number. No unsigned l~ters wut bepublllhed, Lenersshould be In good taste, addressing Issues, not personall-

11•-

From flag-waving to

U.S., Iran again strange bedfellows
WASHINGTON · - Through
baekdoor diplomacy, the long
eslrangcmenl between the United
States and Iran is beginning to
break down. Necessity was the
molhec of this altempt at reconciliation.
·
Iran is worried about the ease
and speed with which the United
Stales filled the desert with troops.
And the United Stales is anxious to
· keep Iran fro.m becoming the once
and future Iraq - a threat to the Persian Gulfs ~ oil reserves. This
has led to 1i ~riendly ex_change of
messages tnrough the Swiss
Embassy in Teheran.
A few hours before the ground
offensive was launched against
Iraq, for example, the United States
notified Iran. The message asked

T~~

the Iranians to remain neutral and
promised l)lal U :S. fon:es would
not linger in the Persian Gulf
region once the job was done.
The Iranians responded with a
reminder that Iran had joined the
world in condemning the Iraqi
invasion of Kuwait, and reassurances that Iran would remain on the
sidelines durinJ.the conOicL
It was an
excl!ange of greetings between old enemies who
have a new eneiny in common,
with all parties knowing that the
rules could change and the
alliances shift at any momi'OL ·
Iranian radicals still gag at the
notion of any relationship with the
"Great Satan" United States. But
the pragmatists point out that Iran
was able to kiss and make up at

GENERAL 6ETs

least conditionally with Iraq after
an eight·year war, so why not with
the United StaleS?
The United States could brand
the ayatollah's successor, Hashemi
Rafsanjani, a moderate, and go on
the assumption that he could be
molded into an ally. But no inatter
what face Rafsanjani chooses to
put on, Iran is not a moderate
Islamic nation.
In fact, the biggest beneficiaries
of the Persian Gulf War could turn
out to be the last people Bush
wants to benefit - the Iranian fundamentalists.
· They ha"e moved swiftlY to .
take advantage of the power vacuum caused by the mililary defeat of .
Iraq. Iranian-backed fundamental·
ists precipitated lhe uprising

~US

Jack Anderson
and Dale Van Atta
'

.

against Saddam Hussein in southem Iraq. The Iranian government
has denied having anything to do
with the revolt, but intelliJCnce
reports claim that Iranian funda·
mentalists • if not the government
directly • are backing the rebels.
The Iranians also may be bellind
fundamentalist unrest in other
countries suc;h as Jordan and Algeria. The Iranian goal, according to
intelligence reports, is to establish ·
Iranian-style Islamic states in Iraq
and other Arab nations. •

'

5™ STAR...

-...,....-----

finger-pointing
By ARNOLD SAWISLAK
UPI Senior Editor
WASHINGTON - The question now is whether Congress, having
worn il!lelf out tlai-waving, will turn next to fingl!'-pointing. The early
signs .-e !hal it will and maybe disgrace itself in the process.
.
Those big yellow "I voled with the President" buttons that showed up
nex&amp; to the little U.S. flags on congressional lapels the night President
Bush spoke to·a joint session on the successful conclusion of the Gulf
War, constituted the first salvo in the postwar era over who was right
about the war.
.
What that display said was that House Republicans, who supported
Bush pretty much down the line on ~oing to war over Kuwait, were going
to scape~oat the Democrats, a majOrity of whom opposed slartirig the
shooting m January.
·
.
It should be added -and it will be by Democrats in response to every
Republican jibe - that almost everyone in both parties in the House
voted to back Bush and the ttoops once the president pulled the trigger on
Operation Desen Storm.
But that does not change the fact that 188 House Democrats believed it
was a mis&amp;alce to begin active hostilities when Bush wanled to do so and
thai those who darkly predicted the Iraqi army would produce a pron-ac:ted
and bloody repeal of the Viernam experience were jus&amp; plain wrong.
So were the people who said it was a mistake to send an army
equipped with untesled high-leCh weapons into the harsh desen environment where the electronics would·spuaer out and the delicale machinery
, would bog down in the sand. The stuff worked.
·
. There is no reason why the _political opponents of members of
--Congress- who said U.S. miliwy people and material could not win in the
. gulf should not point out these statements to the voters.
Those members were ~ and should be prepared to be criticized for
their mistakes. Politicians don tlike to admit goofs, but it wouldn't hurt in
this C8$C and mighl even mitigate the political damage.
That being said- and this is where .the dan&amp;er of disgraceful behavior
exists - candidates should he careful not to make opposition to the war
in Jan\)llf)' of 1991 sound in 1992 like disloyalty to the countJY.. Many
membCrs who opposed the war did so because they felt Iraq could be
forced to give up Kuwait without miliwy action.
.
They believed the tight economic sanctions that were imposed on lr;iq
in the fall of 1990 eventually would have succeeded, just as considerably
In the past weeks there has been
Whereas liquor tax revenues
weaker sanctions eyentually achieved progress toward their goals earlier
much
discussion
in
the
Legislature
bring
in $50 million a year, Ohio
in Rhodesia and South Africa. ·
..
proposing
that
the
State
of
Ohio
get
spends
$42 million a year to oper. Obviously, the sanctions would not have worked as quickly as·six
out
of
the
business
of
selling
ate
these
stale stores; costs which
w~eks in the air and 100 bows on the ground did, but they aslso might
liquor.
Recently,
House
Bill
160
proponents
say can be saved by
have accomplished the desired ou~eome without hundreds of Ameriqn
was
introduced
that
would
elimiselling·
the
stores
to retailers.
alld allied and uncounted thousands of Iraqi deaths and billions of dollars
.
nate
state
run
liquor
stores
and
In
addition,
the
bill proposes to
il( damages to Kuwait, I1111J, Saudi Arabia and Israel.
instead
issue
permits
to
private
..
_raise
another
$18
million
by selling
:. No one knows if sanctions would have worked at all. Bl!t being in
businesses
for
$~,000
a
year.
The
annual
·store
permits
and
collecting
-----ll-~--fa•vor-ofcontinuing-them and-opposing Bush on the issue does not constiUite treaSOn.• Any candidate, Republican or Democrat, wbo says so in the state would remain in the whole- additional tax revenues from store
1992 campaign ought to be called to account for it by the media and the sale liquor business, which would profits. Privatization proponents
continue to produce tax revenue for ar~e that high ovemead and oper- .
~ters. ·
·
the state, but it wouldn't sell liquor atmg expenses contribute to ap
•
din:ctly to the public.
inefficient management of state
Under the current system, Ohio liquor stores.
owns and operates 261 liljuor
Opponents of this measure feel
stores and leases an additional 138 . that private liquor stores will
privately owned agencies which engage in aggreasive marketing and
Ohio have controlled since 1933, advertising battles that could
when prohibition ended. Ohio is encourage more people, especially
now one of only 15 states which youlhs, to drink more. Yet, those in
'
has not privatized state liquor sales. favor of the bill are confident that
.·
.

'.

{I

GE~ERAL
NO~

SCRWA~KOPF

PUTS UP HOOK SIJOT • Ohio Stale post·
man Perry Car-ter (with ball} puts up a hook
shot over the outstretched hand of Georgia

Redmen halt Herd in twin -.bill

.11.

Ohio considers 'Privatizing' liquor stores

.
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Berry's World

.
..

Sen. Jan Michael Long
price wars would be avoided
because the state .would ~ntiilue to
set wholes~le l~quor p~ces an_d
because leg•slauon l'ro~1btts pnvale stores from selhng hquor at
less ~ 110 percent of the whole·
sale pnce.
Furthermore, the bill calls for an
additional $3 million _for stricter
enfofcement of_ state hquor laws,
parllcularly With rc;:gards to the
sales of alcohol to mmors. However_. opponents argue ~hat alcohol
Y"1U_become far to a_vailable, resultmg 10• an mcrease 10 alcohol consu~on: . .
'd
·
v!luzauon ~s no~ a new 1 ea.
A special commutee Impaneled by
the l~t sess•on of the Legislature
stud•ed state government opera-

tions and suggested several services, including liquor sales, tlia&amp;
ecould be ~elivered by the private
· ,sector. W1th a difficult budget en' sis facing Ohio, the legislature may.
choose to privatize soA:De formerly
public services. However, we must
be assured that in order to save
money we do not create a greater
social problem with increased alcohal consumption in our society .
As always, please feel free to :
· call or write me, 'State Senator Jan
Michael Long, if you ~ave 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
'
'
·
_

Will time reconcile demonstrators?.Sarah Overstreet
.

...•
•

used the soldiers who fought in
Vietnam as scapegoats for our
n~tional confusion and for all that
went wrong in that war.
·
It was clear she had it all figured
ouc War is wrong, so anybody who
fights in one doesn't deserve any
special consideration, and perhaps
even de~es our disdain.
The thought process was familiar. I had used it two decades earli- .
cr. to come to terms with the question of wars and the people who
fought them. Oh, to be 21 again
'
and have so many of the answers
figured out!
How simple and reassuring it
was.
It took· me years of looking at
By
Uniled Press lnlernatlonal
.
'
life from othef people's perspectives, of being forced to walk in
Today is Monday, Man:h 18, the 77th day or'l991 with 288to follow.
their shoes or at leas&amp; shoes similar
The moon is waxing, moving toward its flfSt quaner.
enough to feel the same pinches on
The mbming stars are Mercury, Venus, Mars and Saturn.
The evening star is Jupiter.
the same toes, to realize how com·
Those born on this date are under the sign of Pisces. They include John plicated seemingly simple deciC. CalhOWl, the flfSt U.S. vice president to resign that office, in 1782... sions are.
The sophmno'r ic dec is ions I
Grover Cleveland, 24th president of the United States, in 1837... Russian
composer Nikolai Rimslry·Konakov in 1844... German engineer Rudolf reached about the soldiers serving
Diesel, inventor of the engine that bears his rlame, in 18S8 ... BriJish Prime in Vietnam is something I'll regret
Minister Neville Chamberlain in 1869... clairvoyant and therapist Edgar the rest of my life. I did nolhing
Cayce in 18TI. .. actor Edward Everett Horton in 1886... race car driver
Andy Granatelli in 1923 (age 68)... authors~ Plimpton in 1927 (age
64) and John Updike in 1932 (age 59} ... and Mim.el Reagan, President
Vuele Sam
·Reagan's eldest son, in 1946 (age 45).
The U.S. government bas long been
On this date in history:
.
symbolized by a taU, wbite-haired,
In 1922, Mahalma Gandhi was sentenced to six years in )!rison for civil bearded man known as Uncle Sam. In
actuality, Sam Wilson supplied meat
disobedience against die British rulers of India.
during the War of
In 1937, a IIIIIUral gaa explosion at a public school in New London, to the U.S.
1812.
He
slam
lbe
harrell of lileat
Texas, killed 410 people, most of them children.
"U.S.,"
leading
people
to believe II
In 1962, France and Algeria signed a cease-fire agreement ending a
stood
lor
"Uncle
Sam.•
The nickseven-year civil war and bringing independence to the North African
name.
an
unfriendly
tenn
Uled by
countty. ·
U.C. agaillsl lhe war, appeared In a
In 1965, Sovie&amp; cosmonaut Alexi Leonov became the.flfSt person to book called 'Tbe Advea&amp;ures of Uncle
take a ''walk in spliCe. ••
Sam' In 1816. The costume of stars
In 1989,the shutlle Discovery completed a five-day mission with land- and stripes was a creation of an 1830 ,
ing at Edwards Air Pon:e Base in California.
cartoon.
·

Recently, I was talking to a
journalist 18 years younger than I
am, and I noticed she was wearing
a silver peace-symbol ring and
necldace. When I was her age, ~
Vietnam War was stiU ragin~ and I
wore a copper braceiC~ bearing the
name of an American prisoner of
war. I asked the young woman
about her Jewelry.
"Oh, I ve always been son of
pea~e oriented," she explained,
adding that she thought she bought
the jewelry even before the symbol

-

b'
...._/

•-

..
..

•-

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'

began to enjoy a resilrgence in con·
temporary fashion.
Our conversation progressed
from the visible symbols she wore
to her feelings, and she relaled how
uncomfortable she fell covering
recent "troOP suppon" rallies where
some participants openly exptessed
their hatted of ''peaceniks."
w~ then began to talk about the
~ifference in SUJ?porting our sold•ers and supporting the war, and I
told her my feelings about having

Today in histo,ry

••
•

~~
If'
,c
1

t99ttpwoNfA,Inc

•

BEST PERFORMANCE BY A
LEADING GENERAL
· A dJouJht for the dar,: Former Vice President John C. Calhoun said in
a 'speecl!ID the Senile ' It is hanler to preserve liberty than 10 obtain iL''

";:::J

Tech's Malcolm Mackey in Sunday's NCAA set·
ond-round game in Dayton, Ohio, which the
Buckeyes won 65-61. (UPl)

:

oven to express any disapproval of
them, but the "moral" conclusion I· .
reached - that they were simply
wrong - helped to create the cold,
accusatory atmosphere to which .
they reiUmed. Such a ttagedy.
When I was 21 years old, I
lacked the ability to stand in those .
men's shoes and sort through the
many elements influencing them:
their love for their country and
belief in its ideals, the prospect of
possibly losing their lives or being
1erribly maimed, the alternative of
having to give up all the rights and
benefits of this coontty if they disagreed with war, or even this par-·
ticular war, and chose not to serve.
I was safe from any of these decisions, safe · to make my moral
judgements about their decisions.
II saddened me this time to wit·
ness the lack of empathy for this
generation of soldiers from some of
the peace demonstrators, as well as
the hatred on the part of some
''troop supporters" for those who
advocate peace.
I just know I will never agl!in be .
able to make simple pronouncements on dJe.moralitY. of those who
either serve in the military, or wbo. ·
in hopes of promoting peace, do

not

By DAVE RAFFO
UPI Sports Writer
The biggest question Nevada-Las Vegas faced
entering the NCAA Tournament was how the Runnin' Rebels would react to a close game after a sea·
son of blowout victories.
UNLV answered thai question Sunday, holding
. 6ff a furious Georgetown ~y for a 62-54 victory.
The 110beaten and top-ranked Rebels advanced to
a West Regional semifinal battle againsl Utah Thursday in Seattle. Utah defeated Michigan State 85·84 in
double overtime in the fim game of Sunday's doubleheader at Tucson, Ariz. ·
All-American I.arrr Johnson scored 19 points to
lead defending champ•on UNL V, 32-0, to its closest
victory since a 112-105 triumph over second-ranked
Arkansas in February'. T)le Rebels have won 43
straight dating to last ·SC$900 and remain overwhelm- ·
ing favorileS to repeat as champions.
"This game showed that I' ve been saying all
along - that we can get beat by anybody in this
tournament," UNLV mentor Jerry Tarkanian said.
. Close was not enough to keep Georgetown head
coach John Thompson happy. lie was even more
upset at the officials, whose tight offiCiating cost the
Hoyas Alonzo Mourning to fouls in the final minutes.
·
. "Moral .victories are something w.e do not discuss
here at GetirgeiOwn," Thompson said. "I'm proud of
them. When we come 'to play, we expect to win. That
is a great team that Vegas has.
"I was l!oping for a less-closely called game. Alii
ask from lhe referees is to let us play. Damn, let us
play!"
Greg Anthony added 15 points and Anderson
Hunt had 14 for the Rebels. Dikembe Mutombo
scored 16 poiniS to lead the Hoyas, 19-13, who failed
to win 20 games in a season for the first time since
1976-77. No other Georgetown player scored in dou- .
ble figures.
,
Johnson scored 17 of his points in the second half,
including the Rebels' first nine points after halftime
as UNL V took co_nlrol. Georgetown, lrlliling 29-19 at
the half, reeled off the flfSI six points of the second
half to pull within four. After UNL V rebuilt its lead
to 15, the Hoyas went on an 11-0 run to pull within
· 44-40 with 10:071efL But after the teams 1r11ded baskets, Hunt put together a liiree-pointer and dunk and
Stacey Augmon added a slam to give the Rebels a
nine·pointlead.
·
"r had to make some things happen and open it
up," Johnson said. "I passed up some outside shots
early and my teammates encouraged me 10 shoot
them (in the second hall), so I did;''
Georgetown made one more run, pulling within
53-48 on a driving scoop by Lamont Morgan. but
Mourning was called for his fifth foul with 2:22 left ,
and the Hoyas were finished. ·
·
In other West Re_gional ac~on :
Utah 85, Mlch1gan State 84 (2 OT) • Walter
WallS scored five points in the ~ond overtime,
including a dunk that gave Utah ·the lead and a free
· throw that sealed the outcome.
Josh Grant scored 29 points and Jimmy· Soto ·
added 16:including seven after the end of regulation,
as Utah reached the Sweet Sixteen for lhc first time
since 1983. Waus finished with 14 points for the
Utes, 30-3. Steve Smith led Michigan State, 19-11,
with 28 points, including .10 after the end of regulation.
·'
Southeast Regional (al Atlanta, Ga.) -'
Alabama 96, Wake Forest 88 • Gary Waites,
Latrcll Sprewell and Melvin Chea1um scored 21

. · Scoring rwo runs in the seventh
sixlh inning.
recorded eight hits and no errors.
i11ning of the second game, the UniBut Lewis, who was one for
"II all turned around for us, and
versity of Rio Grande swept a doutwo, recorded two RBis to allow if we continue with effective
llleheader Sunday with Marshall
the Redmen to advance, to a·one- defeJ!se and some timely hits. it
. I;Jqiversity ,at St. Cloud Commons. '
run lead Cl!Lering the seventh. will 1:\e a gOO&lt;l Season. But we have
· The Redmen nelled 4-1 and 7-4
Again backed by Wright, who went a long way to go yet," Oglesby
victories over the Thunilering Herd
one for one with a pair of RBis, commented.
10 improve their season record to 7Rio Grande went ahead for the win.
The Red men will be idle until
6. Marshall also went to 7-6.
Briid
Roser
(freshman, Saturday when they travel to
"That was what we needed to
Delaware) had !he wiQ for the Red- Bluffton for~ I p.m. doubleheader.
pick it l1J1, "'·Redmen· C!bllch Dave' ,. l'ntn~oil thbi pitcher's' mound lliltl ~ "fhe; ream Will :be home Sunda'y;
Oglesby said. "Marshall went with
Ronnie Spencer took the loss. Rio· Malth 24 for a I p.m_. makeup !WID
its staners in the first game, and if
Grande had seven hits and the Herd b1U w1th West Vtrg.ma Tech.
.
•
I
we can can shut down a team like
· Marshall the ~ay we did, we ' re
In Saturday night's Divison IV, III finales,
capable ofplaymg anybody."
The wins avenged Rio Grande's
17-5 loss to the' Herd last Tuesday
at Rio Grande in a single nineinning encounter. At Marshall,
"She's just so big and strong
By GENECADDES
a great athlete," said Fon RecovRedmen pitcher Darrell Marcum
inside
that our kids, when they give
UPI Sports Writer
. ery coach Diane McClung. "The
(senior, Hamillon) improved his
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) _ 11 thing about Lynn is she works as up thai much size and weigh~J'ust
season record to 2-2 in the first
was Lynn Bihn against the world hard at the end of the game as she got pushed around and coul n't
game when he piiChed a one-hitter
and .the world lost.
does at the beginning. Not just hold I heir own in there,'' said
in six innings. Marshall's only
'
Bihn, Fort Recovery's 6-foot-1 offensively, 'but defensively she Clute.
Saturday's other winners were
allowed hit came from designated
senior center, turned in a record- plays the game hard."
hiller Chris Bellomy.
breaking performance Saturday
Bihn, who hit her flrsl five field Dayton.. Dunbar, which whipped
Chad Carroll (sophomore, Chillnight in SL John Arena, leading her goal attempts and scored 14 first- Canfield 73-59 for the Division II
ieothe} relieved Marcum in the sevIndians to a 63-58 overtime win quarter points, sending an early .title, Celina, a 53-50 viclor over
enih, got .the save and permiued no
over McDonald and their second message to McDonald, finisl)ed 1_7 Rocky River Magnificat in Divihits.
consecutive girls Division IV state of 27 from the field and 9 of- 12 sion I, and Heath, which beal SherJames Lewis (junior, Cincinnati)
championship.
from the free throw line. Her short wood Fairview 62-44 for the Diviled Rio Grande's hitting on a two
Bihn, the two-time UPI Division baseline jumper wilh six seconds to sion Ill championship.
IV. player of the year, scored 43 play·sent it inlo overtime tied at 55for four finish, backed by Jason
Dunbar, led br,- Atina Harris
Wright (sophomore, Carroll), who
points, a girls' state tournament 55 .
with 28 poiniS, trailed early, but a
record, and grabbed 19 rebounds.
"There was all kind of pressure 17-5 run by the Lady Wolverines
was two for two with two RBis.
outdueling the McDonald trio of (on Bihn) out there," .said pretty much set the tone for the rest
Rio Grande had six hits and no
Pam · Vilk, Jackie Hannon and McClung. "We were really trying of the game.
errors and Marshall posted two
Missy Badila.
to go to her because we felt like
errors. Losing pitcher was Steve
Dunbar, 27-1, led the rest of the
Bennett.
·
Those three combined for 56 of 1hey couldn't handle her on the way after) essicd Spencei' broke a
Marshall Coach Howard McDonald's 58 points in the clas- inside. She takes the pressure well. 28-28 tie with 2:20 left in the sec·
."A ll t~e kids," added ond quarter.
McCann inserted a new lineup into sic No. I (McDonald) vs. No. 2
(Fort
Recovery}
malehilp.
McClung
.. ' 'The perimeter kids
Jenny Kulics kept Canfield in
the nightcap, which helped the
"That's
a
great
achievement
by
pulling
it
in.
the
money
to
Lynn
all
the
game with 17 first-half points,
Herd exploit Rio Grande's two
did
a
great
job.
''
h'
i
lting
5 of 8 from three -point
errors to lead 4-1 al the top of lhe
FortRecovery,whichwoundup range. But Dunbar held Kulics to
25-2, led by as many as six points six second-half points, a pair of
The Daily Sentinel
early in the second quarter and three-pointers. Andrea Slaina
Bowling
McDonal,d's biggest le~d was scored 20 for the Cardinals.
CUSPS 115-900)
Joe
Perry,
the
former
San
Franseven
midway through the tllird
Canfield was withopl 22 points
14. Dlvi!Jion or MuiUmedla, Inc.
cisco 49er running hack who aver- quarter. But in the final 3:35 of reg- per game scorer Kim Huber, who
Published every afternoon . Monday
ages 200 in league play, will com- ulation, no more !han two points briefly tested a knee injury·suffered ·
through Friday, 111 Court St ., Po·
pete in the $75,000 PBA Hammer separated the teams.
in the semifinal win Thursday night
meroy. Ohio. by the Ohio Va llry Pub·
Senior Open starting Monday at · Fort Re co very went ahead to but was unable to go.
llsh lng Company /Multimedia , lnc..
Pomeroy. Ohio l5769. Ph . 992·2156. Se·
San Francisco. Perry, 64, will go stay in the overtime on a basket by
Celina's Corey Poor had her
rond clas~ po!!lage paid at Pomeroy,
against
lhe best seniors (50 and Mandy Hastings with 2:17 to play. second straight 17 -point game -in
Ohio.
over) in bowling - Earl Anthony, Lynn Fullenkamp followed with a leading the Bulldogs to the big
Me-mlx&gt;r: United Press Inter national,
Dick Weber, Don Johnson and, steal and la yup Ia make it 60-57 at school title and ·it came on her 17th
Inland Dally Prrss Association and thr
Dave Soutar~ during the four-day the 1:41 mark. and Bihn, fouled birthday.
Ohio New!paper Association. National
Adverti sing Representat ive, Branham
tournament.
while grabbing her 18th rebound,
Poor's two free throws early in
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Tony Rominger of SwiiZerland a pair of free throws wilh 48 sec- stay, 31-29, but the Bulldogs had to
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Heath 62, f'alrvlew 44 • Heath,
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are likely when the heat ·tndex
reaches 105.

' I

..••
•

·-

points each to lead Alabama iniO the regional semifinals against Arkansas Thursday at Charlotte, N.C.
Robert Horry .added 16 pomts and James Robinson 15 for the Crimson Tide, 23-9, who won the
Southeast Conference tou.rnamen·t for the third
straight year. For Walt:e Forest, 19-11, Chris King
scored 29 points, 20 in the firs! half, and RQdney
Rogers finished with 16 points and 12 rebounds.
Waites, 11 senior poinl guard, had 19 points in the
first half when the Crimson Tide needed his fifth of
five lhreeo-point sbots at the halftime buzzer to take a
48-45lead.
Arkansas 97, Arizona St. 90 • Arkansas, unable
to shake Ari~ona State, used Oliver Miller's 19
poibts and 10 rebounds to beat the Sun Devils.
.
Arkansas, 33-3 and ranked No. 2 in the nation, ·
appeared set to blow .out Arizona State,. bolting to.a
12-0 lead after the flfSt _2:30. IM Arizona State, featuring freshmen Jamal Faulkner (29 points) and
Dway:ne Fontana (18 points), tied it 30·30 and trailed
58·54 at halftime.
·
The Sun Devils were dOWII' 90-86 with barely five
minutes to play, but Miller's strong in~ide play li~ted
Arkan.sas and the Hogs drew away m the closmg .
minutes.
East Regional (at Syracuse, N.Y.)
•
N. Carolina 84, VIllanova 69 • George Lynch :·
scored 19 poims and pulled down 10 rebounds to:
lead Nort~•S::arolina into the regional semifinals ·
against Eastern Michigan Friday at East J!utherford, •
NJ.
.
:
The No. 4 Tar lfeels, 27-5 and the top seed in the •
East Regional, will play Eastern Michigan Friday
when this bracket of the NCAA Tournament shifts to
East Rutherford, NJ.
Lynch scored on a layup off a fastbrealc '-&lt;&gt; complete a three-basket spurt lhat gave the Tar Heels a ,
79-64 lead with 2:$5 left, putting the game ·out of. ;
reach for Villanova. No. I seed North Carolina .. ·
improved to 27-5 while Villanova finished 17-IS.
Eastern Michigan 71, Penn State ~8 (OT) • ,
Marcus Kennedy scored 21 poiniS and 12th seeded_: :.Eastern Michigan extended · its surprising ride , .
lhrough the tournament. Kennedy , who scored 17 ·
points.after halftime, was backed by Lorenzo Neely 1 •
with 18 points, while Kory Hallas had 12 points and· :
eighl rebounds and Charles Thomas II points. Fred-.~.
die Barnes, Deron Hayes, James Barnes and Monroe
Brown scored 12 points apiece for Pc!)n State.
,
Barnes sank two free throws with 14 seconds left to draw Penn Stale to 70-68 with 14 seconds left in , :
overtime. Penn State had two final attempts from·
three-point range, with Barnes missing the last at the .
~

buZzer.

~ ·•

Mldwesl !legional (at Dayton, Ohio)
...
Ohio State 65, Georgia Tech 61 • Perry Caner
crashed the boards for 18 rebounds and 19 points to •. .
power Ohio State into the Midwest semifinal~ Fridlly .' ,
against SLJohn's at Ponliac,_ Mich. .
. ·
Ohio State, 27-3 and the top seed m the Midwest,
led 57-49 with 6:07 left but failed to score another
field goal. They did score on seven free throws in the'..·
final 30 seconds from Carter, All-American Jim ·
Jackson and Jamaal Brown.
..
Georgia Tech All-American Kenny Anderson :
scored 25 points bul missed 20 of 28 shots in what '
·may have been his last college game.
.. ·
St. John's 84, Texas 76 • Billy Singleton paced' ·
five hot-shooting St. John's players in double figure~ · .
with 21 points.·St: John's, 22-8, hit 20 of i\s .28 field :,
goal tries in the first half for 71 percent. Ailhough the
Redmen cooled' off to II for 23 in the second half .
(48 percent), they finished 1hc game shooting 61 per~ :
·cent. '

For( Recovery, Heath win g~rls~ state crowns .

-Sports briefs-

.....••••

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
446 4514

.

the No. I ranked team in Division
Ill, was in control all the way in
taking its first state tille.
The combination of Kristina
Dupps and Denise Pickcnpaugh
proved too much for Fairview 1o
handle.
Pickenpaugh, a 5-7 junior, hit a
pair of three-point shots in the first
four minutes to get Heath roiling 84 and Fairview never gol closer
than that the rest of the way.
Pickenpaugh finished with 15
points and the 5-11 Dupps had 20
for Heath, which. completed a 28·0
season.
The Bulldogs put the game
away with a 13-0 run in the third
quarter, Slretching their lead to 5129.
Kacee English led all scorers
with 21 points for Fairview.

..

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Second
Middleport,
Ohio

-~ -

,,

�Page

In District I3 all-star cagefest, ·

Monday, March 18, 1991

Monday, March 18, 1991 ·

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

4 The Dally Sentinel

_

The Dally Sentlnei-Pag~

.

Division III-IV fives sweep tiig-school quintets Sunday
•

•

RIO G_RANDE • The girls and
boys basketball reams of die small·
er Division III and IV made it a
clean sweep over their couluerpans
from the larger Division I and II
Sunday afternoon at Lyne Center
on the campus of lhe University of

. Rio Grande.

schools 51 -50 while the boys post·
ed an 87-82 win over the boys from
the bisger sphools in the Southeast·
em Ohio DislricL
The games were sponsored by
the Southeastern Ohio District
Coaches Association and featured
seniors, most of whom had been

The girls edged the larger

.In the NBA Sunday,

elected to tiie all-district teams.
Jim Osborne, ltcad boys' basketball coach at Gallia Academy, was
the chairman, assisted by WellstOn ~s Jim Derrow.
The coach of the small-school
girls ' team was John Lusher of
Hannan Trace, while Logan 's
Ralph Taylor, directed the big-

:Boston downs Philly 110-105
By UDited Preis lakma!lonal

Clwles Barkley may be M All·
Star, bul he cin still take a lesson
from 37-year-old Robert Parish.
Baiicley roUed up 38 points Sun·
day bul t11e Pltiladelphia 76ers lOst
10 the Boston Celtics 110-105
behind 28 points and 18 rebounds
from Pariah.
Parish single-handedly brought
the Celtics out of early~game dol.~ drums and staked them to a 5648
hillftim.e lead with-four straight
baskets at the close of the second
• quarter. For the game, t~e center
·missed only six of 17 auempts
from the floor. '
"I wouldn't .say those are easy
shots, but because of his height he
has this unique ability to tum a
crowded situation into an easy
shot," Philadel(ll;lia head coach Jim
Lynam said off&gt;arish,
'
I.arrY Bird, who traded one-on•
one moves with Barkley ID finish
with 23 points, said Parish is slill
: -among the premier centers in the
.game.
''Get yourself a season ticket
·• and see him ~v·ery night," said
:- .Bird. "Robert &lt;;an hold his own
-:: -against anybodyin the league."·
~ • The third quarter proved deci:: sive as Boston built its lead to 13
·-points on Parish's continued domi• nation of the lane. Aided by
• Philadelphia's careful allCntion to
the perimeler shooting of Bini and
Gamble, Parish ran over Rick
Mahom and Manute Dol for 12
~ :points in 'the Jlllriod. His 12~ foot
. JUmper at the 8:00 mark made it
. · 68•55.
Philadelphia shot 48 percent on
the other end for the game, but had
: difficqlty getting inside on Parish,
::· who grabbed Jour rebounds in the
· third period.
: · "We got the ball moving a little
: :more," said Boston's Dee Brown.
"We seemed to spread them out a
little biL"
Elsewhere: Milwaukee fought
off New York 102-101; Minnesota
:- defeated Miami 90·87; Indiana
drubbed Denver 130-92; Charlotte

•

·.

downed New Jersey 121·108; the
Los Angeles Clipplrs got a longsought win over Portland 107·97;
Houston stopped Golden Slate 123·
119; and the Los Angeles Lakers
topped the Spurs 98-91.
Bucks 102, Knicks 101
At Milwaukee, Jack Sikma hit a
baseline jumJlllr with 5.8 seconds
left to help Milwaukee erase a 16point deficit. Sikma's basket gave
the B"cks their first lead of the
game. After a timeout~ he knocked
. the. ball away from Kiki Van deweghe on an in bounds pass.
Palrick Ewing relrieved it, but his
·11-foot jumplr missed with one
se~ond to go. Ewing had 23. for
New York. Dale Ellis scored 23 fer
the Bucks.
Tlmberwolves 90, Hea187
At Minneapolis, backup center
Randy Breuer scored 17 points and
grabbed 14 rebounds to lead Minnesota past Miami, which lost its
fourth straight. Miami had a 70..67
lead with 9:35 to play, but Min·
0esota uncorked a 16-6 run. Breuer
scored three baskets and fellow
reserves Scott Brooks. and Doug
West combined for 6 more points
in the surge. Tony Campbell led
the Wolves with 24 points, inclliding 16 in the second half. Glen
Rice led Miami with 30 points.
Pacers 130, Nug(lets 92
At Denver, Chuck Person
scored 20 points and Indiana held
the Nuggets to 12 points in the
third quarter on its way to an easy
victory. The Pacers won their third
straight, all on the road. The
Nuggets, 18-46, have the NBA's
worst record. Indiana's Rik Smits
scored 19 points, Mike Sanders 18
and Micheal Williams 17. Backup
center Oetlef Schrempf had 14
points and20 rebounds. Michael
Adams led Denver with 21 points,
but missed all eight shots from 3·
point range.
Hornets 121, Nets 108
At East Rutherford, N.J., Kelly
Tripucka and Kendall Gill scored
20 points apiece to help Charlotte

a

snaf three-game losing streak.
Del Curry had 16 points and John·
ny Newm•'l· J.R. Reid' and Rex
Chapman~ scored II fer Charloue. The N"ets, who had won their
last two, were led by Sam Bowie
with 21 and Derrick Coleman with
19 points and 13 rebounds.
COppers 107, Blazers 97
At Portland, On:., Charles Smith
scored 26 points and Ron Harper
added 25 to lead the Clippers to
. their flfSt victory in Portland after
29 straight losses dating b_ack to
Feb. 24, 1981. It was Los Angeles
Coach .Mike Schuler's fliSI victory
against the Blazers since they flfed
him two years ago. The Clippers
had lost their last' three games
against Portland with Schuler at the
helm. It was just the fifth home·
court loss of the season for Portland and the fliSI to a team with a
sub-.500 record. Portland was led
by Clyde Drexler with 19 points.
Rockets 123, Warriors 119
At Houston, Kenny Smith
scored 26 points, including four in
the final 23 secQllds, to carry HOIIS·
ton to its eighth straight victory.
Hakeem Oh\iuwon added 25 points
and 13 rebounds, Otis Thorpe
scored 24 and Vernon Maxwell 23
for t.he Rockets, who led by as
many as 19 points in the second
half, but had to hold off a fierce
Warriors rally. Houston has now
won 20 of its last 24 games. Jim
Petersen scored a season-high 25
points for the Warriors.
Lakers 98, Spurs 91
At -Inglewood, Calif., James
Worthy scored 30 points to lead the
Lakers to their fifth straig~t win.
Byron Scott added 25 points for
Los Angeles and Magic Johnson
and Sam Perkins had 15 points
!lftCh, Scott became the· lOth Laker
to score 10,000 ~ints when his 17foot jumper sw1shed with 7:36 to
play in the first quarter. David
Robinson led all scorers with 37
points, 12 of tiJem in the final quarter when the Spurs were held to
justl5 points.

school girls' squad. Coaches for the
boys .teams were Norm Persin or
Chesapeake and Jack Harris of
Fairland.
Dlvbioll ID·IV 51
Dlvisloa 1·0 50
Lusher's girls led 9-6 after one
quarter and held a 23-19 halftime
lead before Logan's Tiffany Ogg
ignited her team to outscore their
opponent 16-11 and bike a slim 35·
341ead after three quarters of play.
Ogg scored seven of her IS
points in .that quarter with Linda
Dixon of Vinton Co. adding four.
In the fourth period the lead
changed hands with eaCh scOre until Stacie Glass of Federal 'Hocking
took over, scoring six of her 10
points in that quarter in a two
minute span. Glass led her team in
scoring with 15 points to tie Osg
for game honors. ·
·
Southwestern's Lisa Hall tallied
five of her II points in that furious
fourth quarter with Kelli McDonald
of Nelsonville Yollc accounting for
· the other field goal.
Logan's Stephanie Connor fin· is.hed runner up for the bi~ schools
with 12 points, eight commg in the
second plrind.
Glass also pulled down 13 of
her team's 36 rebo.unds while Ogg
claimed nine of the 36 boards by
her team.
The winners hit 18 of 51 attempts for 35.3 Jlllrcent and con-·
verted 14 of 26 free throws. The
big school gals connected on 23 of
59 for 39 percent, but made only
. three of eight freebies . .
Quarter totals
Div. Ill &amp; IV 9 14 II 17=51
Div. I &amp; IJ
6 13 16 15=50
DIV. III &amp; IV GIRLS (51) •
Stacie Glass (FH) 5-0·5=15; Lisa
Hall (SW) 4-3·11; Mistie Pancake
(N· Y) 1-0-2; Melissa Toi&gt;Ping
(Fairland) 3-3-9; Char Peart (Trim·
ble) 2-1-2-9; Kelli McDonald (N·
Y) 2-0-1=5. TOTALS 17-1-14=51.
DIV. I &amp; II GIRLS (50) •
Tiffany Ogg (Logan) 7-0-1= I 5;
Jenny McAllister (Logan) 2-0-4;
Kellina Cooper (Jackson) 4-0-ls!l;
Jennifer Young (GA) 3-0-0=6;
Steph Connor (Logan) .4-1-1=12;
Linda Dixon (VC) 2-0-0=4. TO·
TALS 22-1·3·8=50.

snared 33 rebounds, six by Poas•
Dlv. ID·IV 117
Quarter totals
Div.l·ll82
Oiv. Ill&amp;: IV 23 ~ 17 19=87
The three-point shot was the dif· Oiv. I &amp; ll
26 . 15 20 21=82
fcrence in this game as the guys
DIV. II &amp; IV (87) • Allen Os·
from the smaller schools hit eight borne ('peake) 2-0-1=5: Curt
trifectas while the large school Dempsey ('peake) 4-2-6=20; Chris
boys only swished one, even Tackett (N. Gal.) 2·1-0.7: Craig
though they won the battle of the Rankin (HT) 3·0-4s10; J .D.
field goals 32·31.
Humphreys (CG) 2·0-0=4; Andy
The larger schools jumped to a Baer (Southern) 1· 3-0=11; Roy
26-23 fitS! period lead but dropped Johnson (Alexander) 1·2-0=8: Dan
10 points behind (51-41) as Chesa· Burke (Alexander) 2·0-3•7; Carl
peate's Curt Dempsey lallied nine Robinson (SV) 3-0-3s9; Scott Auof his team's 28 points and Dan flick (Trimble) 3..().();::6. TOTALS
Burke of Alexander added five. ·
23-8-17=87. '
.
Wellston's Mike Potts tried to
DIV. I &amp; 0 (82) ·Trevor Unger
bring his team back by sco_ring si~ (log) 7-0-1=15; Scott Lackey
wints for a 20-17 advantage over . (Wellston) 1-0·0=2: Ty Barnes
the smaller school players, and the (Ironton) 9..().1=19; Rob Skidmore
lead shrunk to 68-61.
(GAHS) 1·0-0=2; Mike Potts
The larger school team scored (Wellston) 3· 1-6= 15; Clayton
the fust seven points of the final Valentine (!ac~) 1-0-1=3; Ryan
period to knot the score at 68-68 on Smith (GA) 1-0-0=2; Mike Potts
a fielder by Josh Williams of (Wellston) 3· 1·6=15; Clayton
GAHS.
.
.
Valentine (Jackson) 1-0-1=3: Ryan
In the ~xt fi_ve mmures the lead , Smith (GA) -1·0·2=4; Ernie Hall
changed e•ght.nmes, the final nme . (Fairland) 2-0-1=5; Derek Jones
on a th_ree-pomt .goal by Polls _to (Fairland) 2·0-2=6; Chad Neal
push h1s team on top 81-79 w1th (GA) 3·0-3=9· Josh Williams (GA)
2:20 lefL
.
•
• At the 1:20 mark Dempsey tied 1·0..0=2. TOTALS 31-117::82.
it at 81 before Gallia's Ryan Smith Finh.quarter notes
.
hit the front end of a one and one to
Sunday's clean sweep by the
give the large schools their final smaller schools marks the first time
lead with just one minute remain· in the three-year history of the dising.
lrict games that this has occurred.
Southern's, Andy Baer then
In the two previous outings the
toOk charge, canning a lrifecta with larger schools have won all four
45 se.conds left, scoring a short contests sponsored by the district
jumplr with 22 seconds left, and coaches.
drawing a foul.
Fans were treated to post-game
Baer missed the freebie but contests for the best three-point
Chesapeake's Allen Osborne was field goal shooter for boys and girls
fouled with just five ticks remain- . and a slam dunk contest for boys.
ing and swished. the first of a .one·
In the girls' event Dtjn_a Greene
and-one to close out the scoring. . of GAHS drained eight of 10 from
Dempsey took game scoring three point range to capture top
honors with 20 points for the win· honOrs.
ners, Baer had II, and Craig
The boys' event saw Roy John·
Rankin of Hannan Trac;e added 10 son of Alexander, Scott Jividen of
points.
GAHS, and Brian Stout of North
Ironton's Ty Barnes led his Gallia fmish in a three-way tie.
team with 19 markers while Pot~
In the tie-breaker Johnson then
and Logan's Trevor Unger each canned six of 10 trifectas to whi
added 15.
out over the other two.
The victors made 31 of 70 fieldThe slam-dunk contest also end·
ers, rl' of 24 at the line, and col- ed in a draw between Rick Ed.lected 41 rebounds, nine by Olin wards of Chesapeake and Mike
Burke of Alexander.
Potts of Wellston, .with Edwards
The big schools hit 32 of 80 winning on the basis of his form
shots, 17 of 26 at the line, and and the difficulty of the shot.

ANDING
• Billy Francis, sixth grader at
Tuppers Plains Elementary, was .awarded outstanding placement
for bis project on genetic: engineering in the school's annual science
fair. Here, be explains his project to Thomas and Tyler Simmons.

KING AND QUEEN • Robert Qualls and Stephanie Stewart
:were elected by their classmates at Bradbury Elementary to be
Valentiae King and Queen at lhat school's dance on Feb. 23.

Community Calendar,

.

' . 50-YEAR PIN PRESENTED· Pomeroy Lodge No. 164 F and
AM recently presented a 50-year membership award to Ray H.
Woodgeard at his residence in Logan. The presentation was made
by Officers Kenny Wiggins, Larry Thomas and Kenny Roush.
Wondgeard Is a former band ~irector at Pomeroy High School.

· Hensler chosen
to inodel fashions
I ulia Hensler has been selected
by the Pilot Club to model in tl\e
Spring Fashion and Bridal Show·at
McCoy's Conference Center in
Ripley, W.Va. on Sunday at2 p.m.
She will model the spring line
from Morrison's Depanment Store.
She has· previously modeled for
Desires of the Heart and has been a
window model.
·
I ulia, a fourth gmder at Racine
Elementary, is the daughter of
Daniel and Patty Hensler, and· the
granddaughter of Doris Hensler,
Racine. She e·njoys singing and ·
gymnastics.
'

c
(

.·~:-Pittst&gt;urgh on top in Patrick Divisio.n

JULIA HENSLER

winning streak everything goes
right. But when you're on a losing
streak, things seem to bounce the
olherway."·
·
Pittsburgh ~oalie Tom Barrasso
stopPed 24 of 26 shots to get his
25th victory, tying a club record.
In other NHL games, Boston
JENNIFER TAYLOR
defeated Philadelphia 3-1; Edmon·
TRJCIABAER
ton downed Montreal 4-2: Buffalo
crushed Hartford 6·1; Minnesota
edged Toronto 4-3; Chicago beat
St Louis 6-4 and Vaneouver edged
By DAVE HARRIS
Trimble ' s Scou Auflick and guard from 'Vinton County, and
Los Angeles S-4.
Federai Hocking's Dennis Honkala Mike Potts, a 6-1 senior guard from
Sentinel Correspondent
Bruins 3, Flyers 1
Federal Hockin~ swept the top took home the top individual on the Wellston.
In Philadelphia, Petri Skriko individual
Trevor Harrison, a 6-0 sophohcinors m the girls' all- Tri-Valley Conference's all league
broke a second-period tie, and Ken TVC basketball team that was boy's basketball team.
more forward form Meigs, was the
Hodge added a short-handed goal selected recently by the conferAuflick. a 6-5 senior center was lone Marauder to be named to the
to push Boston past slumping ence's 10 coaches.
selected the most valuable player, team, as he was picked to the bon·
Philadelphia. Skriko's ninth goal of
Stacie Glass. a 5-8 senior for- while Honkala was voted the con· orable mention squad. Joining Harthe season came on only Boston's ward,
was named the most valuable ference' s top coach. Honkala guid· rison as honorable mention picks
second shot of the period. Philadel· player for the second sttaight year, ed the Lancers to their flfSt champi· were Jason Gandee and Chad
phia, which is 1-6-2 in its last nine while her coach, Kim Chadwell, onship since the 1972-73 season. Williams from Belpre, Mickey
games, out,shot Bflston I 0-0 in the was named the league's top men- The Lancers finished the regular Cozart from Federal Hocking and
first II :35 of the second stanza and tor. Chadwell and Glass led the season with a 18-2 record overall Tom Reid from Vinton County.
had ail 11-6 advantage in the period Lancers to a perfect 20-0 record and a 15-1 conference mark. Selec· Nelsonville-York failed to have a
but Jailed to score.
and a 18-0 mark in the conference.
tions were made by the· leagues player named to the team.
OUers 4, Canadiens 2
Joining Glass as a repeater on coaches.
In Montreal, Esa Tikkanen from last year's dream team was
The team featured three
scored once and set up two other Teather South; a 5-4 junior guard repeaters from last years team
goals to lead Edmonton to victory. from Alexander, Melody Graves, a including Auflick. Also repeating
Martin Gelinas, Anatoli Semenov 5-2 senior guard from Vinton were Dan Burke, a 6·6 senior cen·
and Craig Simpson also scored for County and Jennifer Taylor, a 5·7 ter from Ale~der and Scott Lackthe -Oilers. Stephane Richer and senior forward from Meigs.
ey, a 6-1 semor guard from WellShayne Corson scored "for MontreOther fliSIIealll picks were Fed· . Ston. Others on the first team were
al, which lost defenseman Petr eral Hocking!s Jem Pierson, a 5·9 '"Roy Johnson, a 5-11 senior guard
Svoboda to a concussion when he j unior center, and teammate Jamie from Alexander, Federal Hocking's
111 Stcond St., Pw;wro,
was checked into the boards by · Hanning, a 5·5 sophomore guard Tracy Bobo, a 5·10 semor guard,
YOUR INDEPENDENT \.
______ Boys state pairings _____ Simpson.
from Miller, Stephanie McLaugh· an~ teammate Nat Watson, a 6-4
Sabres 6, Whalers 1
AGENTS SERVING
'
a 5-11 junior forward from senKI!" forward, Ch1p G~man, a 6COLUMbUS, Ohio (UPI)- Thursday 3 p.m:
In Buffalo, Dale Hawerchuk got lin,
MEIGS
COUNTY
Nelsonville-York
Trimble's
Tere1
semor
forward
from
Miller,
Jason
• Pairings for this week's boys stale Finals: Saturday, 11:30 a.m.
five points on a goal and four ·sa Fouts a 5-8 ~ior forward and Caudill, a 6-4 junior center and
SINCE 11168
high school basketball tournament
assists to help Buffalo win its firSt teammate Char Peart, a 5-6 senior Shawn Speakman, a 6·0 senior
at SL John Arena: . ··
Reglonid Flnid Results:
home game since Jan. 22, snapping
' Divlsioa J .
Saturday, March 16
a 12- game winless home streak. guard, and Linda Dixon, a 5·3
Cleveland St. Joseph (21 -4) vs
Division 1
The triumph also pushed the Sabres senior ~uard from Vinton County.
Tric1a ·Baer and Kelly Smith of
EiGSCOUNITRE-~S--1-DE N-1-'S'
Massillon Perry (24-1), Friday, Lancaster 50, Pickerington 37
into a tie for third p~ with HartMeigs
were picked to the honor·
.., ... , I'O::'Jw
... ..,..._ · - ................... ...
.....
6:45 p.m.
'
W Chester Lakota 78, Cin Elder 62 ford with 71 points in the Adams
West Chester Lakota (25·1) vs Clevo VA-SLJoc 77, Barberton 74
Division. Both have clinched able mention 1ea111 along with Mary
Would Y" llkt to purchase a 50•100 ft. build- .
Maxwell of Federal Hocking,
l.anC8Sier (21- 4), Friday. 9:30p.m. Mass.Perry 62, Warren Harding 46
berths in the playoffs.
Missy
Vanover
of
Vinton
County
Finals: Saturday, 9:30p.m.
Division m
ing lot in a _goOd location for only SlJOO?
North Stan 4, Leafs 3
and
Amber
Loll
of
Wellston.
In
Minneapolis,
Mike
Mndano
Dlvlsloa 0
Unioto 67, Chesapeake 59
Belpre did not land a player on
Wooster Triway (24-2) vs Lex- Bedford Chanel 57, Youngs Liber- scored with 14:38 remaining in the
Would you lilce to build a new home and pay
either
team.
ington (23·2), Friday, I p.m.
ty 55
third period to lift Minnesota over
no real estate taxes for- 1S years?
Harrison gets honorable mention
Dayton Chaminade-Julienne Wayne Trace 65,New London 59
Toronto
(21-4) vs Columbus Brisgs (19-6), Cin McNicholas 75, Olentangy 54
Would you like to haYe up to
FRE£
Friday, 3:45p.m.
Division IV
Finals: Saturday 6:30p.m.
Cols Wehrle 82, Tuscarawas Cath
for site improvements on your building loti
· Dlvtsloa m
39
.
.
•
Unioto (22·3) vs Bedford Tri·Village 72,Lockland60
PLEASANt VAU.EY HOSPitAL . .
Chanel (20-5}, 1bursday, 6 p.m.
Kirtland 63, Mans St. Peter's 46
'
'
Haviland Wayne Trace (22·3) St. Henry 66, Miller City 58
I
vs Cincinnati McNicholas (15-10),
Friday, March 15
.
.
'
Thursday, 9 p.m.
litDivision 0
Phone (6141 992-6712
Finals: Saturday, 2:30 p.m.
Cols Brisgs 70, Portsmouth f!B
Dlvlsioa IV
·Day Olaminade 47, Cin Greenhills
237 lact Strttt, ..Wit~~trt VIllage Offices
Kirtland (23·3) vs St. Henry 45
Tlilll Hr9lee II .....,............. llle JaW efferU af llle VIDa1e
(24·1). Thursday,12 noon.
Wooster Triway 51, Canfield48
. . . . . . . .rt - · tile Oannw•a Offtee .. " ...........
New Madison Tri-Village (26-0) Lexington 67, Avon Lake 48
' vs Columbus Wehrle (22·3),

By United Press International
teet a 4-2 lead insiead of think of
.After 147 days, there's a new how to score another goal. ...
_ Jeader in the NHL's Patrick Divi"That's the difference in this
- -sion- the suddenly much· more--club-now. I like this club. We've
"defensive-minded PittSburgh Pen- become a big hockey club, a hardgains. And now, the Penguins say, working club."
•• the trick will be staying in first
Still, defenseman Paul Coffey
~: without draining their newly
says the team must be careful not
::- charxcd battery before the playoffs. ID put too much emphasis on win·
The Penguins moved into the ning the Palrick.
. Patric:t lead Sunday with a 4·2 vic·
"I think you have to take a look
• tory over the former leaders, the at the whole picture,'' he said. ·
Rangers, in -New York. Kevin '_'You see some teams strive ID stay
· Stevens and Mario Lemieux scored in first place, and when playoffs
·. two goals each to extend l)le Pen· roll around, they seem to have·
-: guins' unheaten streak 10 seven (6- nothing left.
: o-1) and the Rangers' losing streak
"We have to play enthusiastic
to seven.
and be consistent for the next seven
• • The Penguins now have 81 games , and then if we get first
points with seven games to play place, so be iL ...
·. and the Rangers 80 points with six
"It's what you do in the play•• to go. ·
.
offs (that counts)."
·- Pittsburgh's streak be~an folThe Penguins scored three of
· lowing a six-player deal wtth Hart· their goals on power-plays, and, for
• ford March 4. The acquisition of some reason, Bernie N1cholls saw
• J}lf Samuelsson, Grant Jennings that fact as the silver lining of the
- and Ron Francis was meant to Ranf.crs' cloud.
•
shore up the Penguins' defe11se, . ' They got three power-play
and so far it's done just that. Our• goals, so we tied even strength,"
- ing their unbeaten skein, the Pen- Nicholls said. "I think for the
·- JUinS have given up an average of majority of the game we out-played
.. JUSI 2.4 goals per game.
.
. them, except•for those power-play
"And how about that third pen· goals.
. · od7" Piusburgh head coach Bob
"We got two streaks going,"
Johnson asked rhetorically aflcr the Nicholls added. "One's going one
victory over New York. "We had way; the other's going the other,
20 guys thinking about how to pro- and you know when you're on a

JC)HN A. WADE, M.D., Inc.
EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST

"WE HAVE HEARINS AIQ$"
(304) 675-1244

,

Outstanding

12/ 31 / lloO .............. - 0FIRE DEPT. NOTE:
Outotondlng
1/ 1/ 90 ............ ....6.384
Retired ..................... 1,389
Outotonding
12/ 31 / 90 ...............3.996
TOTAL

December 31. 1990
RACINE VILLAGE
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
GOVERNMENTAL FUND
TYPES
RECEIPTS:
Locol Te..o ............ 19,636

Outstanding

1/ 1/ 90 .... .............20.384
Rotirod .......... .... ..... 18,389
Dutotondlng
12/ 31 / 90 .. ..... ........ 3.996
THIS IS AN UNAUDITED
FINANCIAL STATEMENT

Intergovernmental

Rovonue ............. .62.407

Charge• For

$orvlces ..............60.027

Fines, UcenHI, I

Permlts ...... ........... 4,386
Miacelloneouo ........... 6.362
TOTAL RCPTS ..... 142,80B
DISBURSEMENTS:
cu .. - :
Security of Person &amp;.
Prapeny ............... 38.773
Public Hoolth

I certify thit report to be
correct end true to the bett
of my knowledge.

Jona G. Booglo, 3'16'91

· Clertc: Treea.

68 ·&amp;th St. !P.O. lox 37111
Rocint, Ohio 46771
814-949·2B91
13118. 1tc
/

Servic81 ..............~ . 4. 108
leiaure Time

Actlvhleo ... .......... ..... 806

Beaic Utilttv

Sorviceo ... ....... .... 16,038
Tron-rto1ion .... .... 24,637
General

'

·

Government ...... ..12,879
Copl1ol Outlty ........ 18.971
TOTAL DISBURSE·
MENTS .............116.211
Total Rocolpto Over/
Under .Diob .... ........ :26,697
Exce11 of Rcpto ond Other
Finencing Sourcat Over/

lUnder) Expond. Diob. llo
Othr Uuo/Not ....... 26.1597
Fund Cooh laltnco
Jon. 1, 1990 ........ 113.924
Fund Cooh Balance
Doc. 31, '90 ........ 140,621
PROPRIETARY FUNDS
RECEIPTS:·
Ch1rge1 for

Servicoo ... ...........62,490
Miactllonoouo.......... .3.881
TOTAL
' RECEIPTS .... ...... .56.371
bISIURSEMENTS:

Current:

Personol Sorv .......... 9.608
Trovol Tronop .......... 2.41 3

....
_

Contractual Serv ... ..9,814

SuppUoo end
Motorlolo ... ,.,...,,.. 30,1599
Capitol Outlty ........ 46,763
TOTAL DISI .......... 98.887

.._

Total Recelpta over /

undor .Dilb........... (42,11261
Other UMo/ Nonop.
Expendltu- .......... (3031
TOTAL OTHER FIN.
!OURCEI /(USESI ... ,(3031
cxc. Rcpto and

ssooo

Other flnenclng Source•

.- ----

If ye»u do,· Contact Jean Trussell,. Housing
Sptdalist, for further information.

Public Notice

Retired .......... ...... .. .16,000

For The Fi8C11 year Ended

INSURANCE

I

\

CASH BASIS COMBINED
ANNUAL FINANCIAL
REPORT

DOWNING CHILD1
MULLEN MUSSER

~

t

Public Notice

Taylor, Baer, Smith, Harrison all-TVC picks

M

.

Community Calendar items
appear two days before an event
and the day or that event. Items
must be received weD in advance
to assure publication in the cal·
endar.
MONDAY
RACINE • The Southern Local
Board of Education will meet Moo·
day at 7 p.m. at the high school.

:: :with 4-2 win over N.Y. Rangers Sunday,

'

PRINCE -AND PRINCESS· Chad Henson and Jennifer VIning
were elected by their classmates at Bradbury Elementary to be
Valeatlae Prince and Princess at that school's dance on Feb. 23,

.
:.:I

OvOt'/ fUndorl ....... 142.8281
Fund Cooh Belonco
Jon. 1, 1980 .. ....•...82.070
Fund Cooh lalonco
Dec. 31, 1880 ....... 38,241
' CEMETERY FU NO
fund Cooh Balance
~Fon . 1, 1880 ............6.aOO
und Colhlalonco
Dec. 31. 1880 ......... e.8oo
SUMMARY OF
INDEBTEDNESS
G.O. BONDS:
FIRE TRUCK NOTE
Outotanding
1/ 1 90 ............... 1&amp;.000

;

Public Notice

NOTICE TO ASPHALT
CONCRETE VENDORS
Saolod bido will bt
received by the Board of

Meigs County Commfulon-

era, Court House. Po911roy,

Ohio 46769 untl 12 noon
on AprA 3. 1991 •nd tho
bido will bo opened ond rood
aloud at 1 :30 p.m. on the.

3rd doy of April. 1991 for

the furnilhing of variout
grade• of Atphalt Concrete

for tho Molgo County Highway Dapartmnt. Propoult
~re JO be retumed on bid

formoouppllod byth vondor.
Tho bid price lholl bo firm
and In effect during the
1991 paving Hllon from
May through November,

1991. A Spociflcotiono
Sheet mov bo picked up at
the Office of tho Moigo
County Engin-.
Mory Hobotettor. Clerk
Board of Meiga County
Commiaalonert

121 18, 2&amp;, 2tc

·P ublic Notice

MEIGS COUNTY
SOIL AND WATER
CON8ERVATION
DISTRICT
. STATEMENT OF
RECEIPTS,
DISBURSEMENTS. AND
CHANGES IN BALANCES
FOR THE YEAR ENDED '
DECEMBER 31. 1880
, DISTRICT
* * *FUND
' ,
RECEIPTS:
Gitto, Contribution• ond
Baquuto .. .. ......... •1,249
Solo of Producto/
Matorlolo ................... 3811
Rontalo ... ,..... ....... ....2.01111
All 0 - Ravonuo .... 2.8e7
TOTAL RECEIPTS .... 1.e118
DISBURSEMENTS:
Suppll&lt;io .... ... ................. 83

POMEROY • P.imeroy Youth
League will have . summer ball
Sign-up for girls and boys on Monday from 6-8 p.m. Bring a birth
certificate copy.

ster Post No. 39 will celebrate its
72 birthday of the American
Legion on Tuesday at 6:30 p.m.
with program at 7:30 p.m. Legionnaire of the year trophy will be pre·
sented along with membership
awards. Ruth Crutcher, second vice
commander of the eighth district,
will be the speaker.

SYRACUSE • Summer ball
sign-up will be held in Syracuse on
Tuesday from 5-7 p.m. at Syracuse
Elementary. Biith certificate copies
must be provided.
RUTLAND - The Rutland
Freewill Baptist Church will have
revival Tuesday through .Saturday
with Robert.Stewart. Paul Taylor,
•
pastor, ilivites the public.

PubliC Notice

Public Notice

Equipment ............... 1,302

NOTICE TO AGGREGATE
VENDORS
Sealod bido will bt

The Tuppers Plains Elemen~
School held its annual science fm
recently in which fourth, fifth and
sixth graders prepared individual
projects which were of interest to
them.
Students were judged according
to the knowledge th ey gained
demonstrated through judges ques·
lions . Honored with outstanding
placement were sixth graders Billy

Francis, Traci Heines and Jeanie
Newell; fifth graders, Jeremy Kehl,
Michelle Caldwell and .Betsy
Sheets; fourtlt graders, Joshua
Ha~er, Jessica Bartram and Alisha
RoJas.
In connection. with the science
fair, kindergarten. flfSt, second and
third graders displayed an work in
the hallways.

ROCK SPRINGS • The Middle·
port Child Conser,vation League
will meet Tuesdar. at 6:30 p.m.
Husbands night will be observed
with a potluck dinner at the Ro&lt;:k
Springs United Methodist Church.

TUESDAY
RACINE • Sign-up for Racine
Youth League, .junior and senior
girlsand Pony League will be
Tuesday and Saturday from 6-8
p.m. at the Racine· Kindergarten
building. Bring birth certificate
copy if one has not already been
provided. Sign-up fee is $12.50 for
boys and $7.50 for girls.

POMEROY • The Drew Web-

Science fair participants honored

HARRISONVILLE • The Harrisonville Past Matrons Club will
meet Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. at the
home of Donna Nelson with Goldie ·
Reed hostess. All past matrons are
invited to allCnd.
POMEROY • The Xi Gamma
Mu Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi Sorority will meet Tuesday at 7:30 p.m .
at the home of A.~ . Knight in ·
Pomeroy.
WEDNESDAY
RACINE
The Racine
Methodist Church will have a soup
supper on Wednesday at 3 p.m.
Sandwiches and pie will also be
available. Proceeds will be used to
purchase a new power mower.
LONG BOTIOM • Jerry Cottrell will be at the ML Olive Com·
munity Church in Long Bottom on
Wednesday at 7 p.m . Pastor
LaWtence Bush invites the public.

MIDDLEPORT - The Middle·
port
Literary Club will meet
Information Educa.
Wednesday
at 1:30 p.m. at the
tion (Scholorohipo ..................... 1. 162 received by the Board of Middleport Library with Rae
Travel and
Mtlgo County Commiulon- Reynolds hostess. Mrs. Richard
Exponuo......... ...... 2.667 .art. Court HouM. Pomeroy, Owen will review ''A Distant MirProductt: I M aterillla
Ohio 411789 until 12 noon
for RoMIO ................ 589 on April 3, 1911 ond the ror."
Othor ............ .......:.:.... e11 bido will bo opened end reod
TOTAL DISBURSE·
aloud at 1 :00 p.m. on the
· RUTLAND • The Leading
MENTS .. ........ .......8, 264 3rd doy of April, 1991 for Creek Conservancy District will
Totol Rocol pto OverI
the furnilhlng of all kindo
(Undo') Diob . ... ,........ 402 and aizea of aggregat8 that meet Wednesday at 9 a.m. at the
•
·
Other Financing Sources
moy bo required by tho office.
IUotol:
Molgo County Highway Do·
Totol of Roc. ond Othor
panment . Propoula are to.
Sourcoo Dver/ (Undor) Diob. be retumed on bid form'
and Other u............. ..402 oupplled by the vendor, end
Fund c..h Balance
·will bo oponed on tho dote
Jon. 1. '80 ..... .. .....8.970 ond placo opeclflod. SpociflPlans for the Rutland Fourth of
Fund C11h Balance
catkJn for bidding mey be July parade have been started. The
Dec. 31 , '90 .........7,372 obtoined through tho EngiSPECIAL FUND
noer.'o Office, Rock Springo parade will be to honor the soldiers
GRANTS :
Road • Route 2, Pomeroy, from the Desert Storm War.
State Govern·
Ohio 467e&amp;.
All floats should carry out this
mont .............. ..... 23.a10
Mory Hobototter, Clerk theme.
Totol Rocolpto ........ 23.B10
Boord of Molgo County
All military Jlll!llonnel are invit·
DISBURSEMENTS:
Commiaafonert
ed to participate.
Solorio• ........ .......... 29, 227 121 18, 26, 2tc
Suppliu ...................... 817
For further information call
Sorvlco Foeo ................ 160
Lilly
Kennedy at 742-2861 or 742Information Educotlon
Public Notice
2579.
The parade is sponsored by
(Schoiorlhlpol ... .......... .138
Travel and
the
Rutland
Fire Department
NOTICE TO BITUMINOUS
ExponH ................ 3.102
VENDORS
Advortloing ond
Soolod bido will bo
Prlnling ... .. ....•............87 rooolvod by the Boord of
Public Employooo'
Mtlgo County Commlnlon·
Retirement ............ 4,032 ••· Court HouM. Pomeroy,
Workon' Camp. ....... ... 834 Ohio 415719 untN 12 noon
THE WORLD ALMANAC•
Otllor ...................... :3. 336 on April 3, 1991 and tho
TOTAL DISBURSE·
bido wll bo oponod ond rood
MENTS .... .- ......... 42,002 aloud at 1:18 p.m. on tho
Totol Rocolpto Over/
lrd doy of April, 1181 ond
(Under) Dlob......... (1B. 1921 Hch month ttlereafter the
OTHER Fl NANCING
bid quota will bo ...,oived
SDURCESIUSESI:
ond opanod on tho loot Wed·
Dperotlng
-cloy of oocll month for
Tronoforo·ln ......... 28,000 tho fumilhing of bltuminouo
Totol Othor Finoncing
materilla for the Meiga
Sourcoo tUMol ....... 2e.ooo County Hlghwoy DeportTotal of Aec . lind Other
mont . EotlrNtod quantltleo ·
Sourcoo Dvoro(Under) Dlob. l ·of liquid oopholt raqulrod,
and Othor Uooo .. ....... 7,808 opproximotoly 800,000 gol- TODA Y'l HISTORY: On thll day In
Fund Cuh Bat·
lono for tilt voor. Propoulo 1766, tho Brltillh Parliament rapaellld
Jon. 1. '90 ... ............11,e2e are to be returned on bid tho
St!lmP Act becau.. of wldftprud
Fund Cuh Balonco
formo ouppllod by tho Molgo oppositiOn
In America.
Doc. 31 , '90 .......... 13,438 County Engin- and may bo
Reterve for Encum·
obtolnod through tho Engl· TOOAY'8 IIIIITHDAY8: John C. Cal·
bronco, Doc. 31 ...... .. 860
OHica.
11782·1850), U.S. poiHiclan·IIIW·
MFR FUND
Mory Hobotottor, Clerk houn
yer;
Gr~
Cleveland (1837·1808),
RECEIPTS :
Boord of Moigo County
All Otllor
U.S. praeldent; Stephana Mallarme
Comml11ionara
Rovenua .............. .. 4.000 121 1B. 25. 2tc
(1842-1818), poet; Nicolai RimekyTotol Rocolpto .. ........ 4,000
Korlakov (18«-1808), compoaerDIIIURSEMENTS:
leachor-odltor; Rudolf Dlelel (1858CONTRACTS:
Public Notice
1813), in'M!Itor; Peter Gra- (11128-),
Sorvico ..... ............ 2,000
IICior;
a-ge PNmpton(1827· ), wrltarTotal Dlob ...... ........ .. 2,000
lldllor;
John Updike (1132·), noWIIII·
Total Rcpto Ovor/
'
LEGAL NOTICE
(Undor) Dlob.... ........ .2,000 GREYNOLDS, INC., e481 llhort story wrltor-poat; Charley Pride
totalllf Rec. and
armantown Rd., Mlddlo- (1831-), linger; Kevin Dobeon (1844-),
Otllor l!lourcoo Ovor1
town, Ohio 48042 le ro- ac:tor; 1..- Care (1959-), llnger(Undorl Dilb. ond Other
q,....lng 'MRE ond W8E per- ac:tr-.
UNo ..................... 2.000 tlclpttJon on w-am
Fund Colh Bolonco
Syotem Improvement Pro· TODAY'S QUOTI: "Wetalte our bearJan. 1, '80 ............".100 Jtct Contract C - Benltory Ing~, dally, from othera. To be -11,
Fund Colh lolanco
a-or lvatam - Rutland, to a great ext.,t, to be IOCiable." Doc. 31, '90 ......... e.100 Ohio. Molgo County - Bid John
Updike
THIS IS AN UNAUDITED Data Molch 241, 1881 .
FINANCIAL STATEMENT MAR - 1e, 17, 18,
18 . 20. 15tc
TOOAY'I MOON: Betw..,
(3111, 1tc
now moon (March 18) end
flrat qu.rtor (MarCil 23).

July 4th plans

f YIIJ TIIICII AN
POWBilll
WITH Al.AIIIB
YOU COli DBE iiiiJsLy
.....,IIIPim.
~1111111111~

DATEBOOK

n..,·.

at.;JMW]I ..;;+t

Before clearing gutters, repairing a roof, or
painting, make sure your ladder is totally
clear of all power lines. Always look up
before moving your ladder. You'll find more
life-saving facts in our free safety booklet.
Call us. 992-3786.

IJ

C 1990 Ame1ic:1n Eloctrlc Power

.•,

�--- - .,.

. .___ ._ _
Monday, March 18, 1991

Pomeroy"-Middleport, Ohio

Page 6 The Dally Sentinel

Monday, March 18, ~&amp;91_

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Classifie

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

RATES

TO PLACE AN AD CALL 94J2-21S6
MONDAY thr11 FRIDAY 8. A.M. to 5 P.M.
8' A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
. CLOSED SUNDAY

Words
15

Days
1
3
6
10
Monthly

PO liCI E:.S
· ~~ ~ u ul sM.l u M ea ~p . G~l h • or M01son count~t~ nuisl b e pre
pitl d
' Ret:t.'fllt: $ &amp;0 d•sco unl fo r itdf p;ud '" il'l hra n cu.
.
•f'rtte ild S G 1ve aw11y nnd fo u nd otds und*' 1~ vwords w•ll bt:-..
run J ri;,r s al' n o ciliiJ~ e.
,

15

16
Hi
16

0••• 16 Words
Rata
"
. 20
$4.00
· S6.00
.30
.42
$9.00
.60
$13.00
-.06/ day
· 11 .30/ day

Ratos ar c tor consecutwe ruM. twoMnup d., 1 'IJiflll be ch.,g .t
lor each d., o~s s.ep..-•t• ads

Ht!dl
1 C•d -ut Th•ks
2 lt:t .....,
3 Annouc: ... entl
4

GNtWIWj

5

Happy Ads

Y ard Sotles

.
.
'A l:l iti!&gt;.Stfttlll ' iUiv crllillt nunt Jll itc o:d 1!1 The O ii tly Sltlt l ntttll e• '
i.:t!pl
d ass lh \.'(1 {lt sph.y . 9 \l!i-lll i:U Cm d ollltl h.-t... IIUt icl!&amp;) ·

wtll .tls u il P~ I!ar 111 thu PI Pl u;a;a nt Aet! IIStl! r ill nd thtt Galh
~wi t t&gt; Do11ly TrdlUntJ, m;,ac htll!l oyer 18. 000 honu:s

Mrs. Maye Mora and Mrs. June Asbley, all ~ut­
RECOGNIZED FOR OUTSTANDING SER·
standing
chapter members; Miss Eleanor Sm1th,
VICE • These members and ·chairmen of the
outstanding
Magazine chairman; and Mrs.
Retiara J-lhaa Mela Chapter, Dauabters or
Mary
Skinner,
outstanding DAR Good Citizenthe Americlln Revoltltloa, were honored at the
N11t
pictured are Mrs. Mary Kay
ship
chairman.
chapter's·Charter Day Luncbeoa on Fridar tor
Y11st,
outstanding
flag
of the USA Chairman ;
be Ina outstandlaa members and.cq!Dmlttee
and
Mrs.
Mary
K.Rose,
outstanding DAR
.
chairmen. of the group. Pictured, 1-r, are Mrs. ··School
chaitman.
Rae Reynolds, reaent; Mrs. Phyllis Skinner,

-at Friday's Charter Day Luncheon held. at Over·
. AMERICAN ffiSTORY WINNERS • HUiary
brook Center in Middleport Pictured, 1-r, are
. Mae Harris, a sixth grader at Syracuse ElemenMrs. Rae Reynolds, State Amerk:aa History
.tary, and Rachel Ashley, a raflb grader at BradChairman and Rqent for tbe Meigs Chapter,
Elementary, were winners ot the American
Ess.n Contest sponsored
by tbe · , Hillary Mae Harris, Rachel Ashley, and Mrs.
or
Margaret Parsons, American History Chair-

DAY BE FOR E PUBL ICATION
11 .00 A. M SATURDAY
2 00 PM .MONDAY
TUESDAY PAPER
2.00 p M . ruESOAV
WEON FSDAV PAPER .
2 .00 PM . WEDNESDAY
THURSDAY PAPER
2 :00P-M THURSDAY
tHIUAY PAPER
. 2 00 P M . FRIDAY
SUNDAY PAP ER

COPY DE AOliN E
MONDAY PAP ER

Wildwood Garden Club holds meeting
The Wildwood Garden Club
met recently at the home of Peggy
Moore.
.
The meeting opened with devotions by Evelyn Hollon reading
from the Upper Room and John 15
followed by a prayer.. A poem was
read "Dear Friends" by Hel'en
Steiner Rice. Roll call was
answered With each member bringing a specimen of a colored house·
plant.
· Doris Graeser and Evelyn Hollon reported on the Middleport
Garden Club's open meeting at the
Middleport Presbyterian Church.
Janet Theiss presented a program on "Feeding the Birds." She
srated that winter is the best time
for feeding bir!ls because it is then
that insects are hardest to find .
Binls carry fat into winter but they

..

need a lot 10 eat just _to keep them
warm, and once feedmg has begm
it should be continued until spring.
Birds should have suet in addition
to mixed seeds, such as. cracked
com. hemp, millet and sunflower
seeds. Mush is good for summer or
winler feeding by mixing suet and
cornmeaL Woodpeckers will feed
young ones mush. Birds also need
plenty of water not only for drinkmg and bathing but also to furnish
mud for nesiS. If more water is provided the birds will eat less cherries
and other fruits. _The best way to
attract and protect birds is to extend
a natural growth or vegetation that
furnishes food and shelter. Trees
such as dogwood, crab apples,
thicket thorn, mulberries, Norway
spruce and . white pine are good
along with certain shrubs and

Public Notice
•

vines. Mrs. Theiss conducted the
program With a ~arne ;USin~ b_ird
names with J uamta W1ll wmnmg
the prize.
·
Kathryn Miller had "Now is the
Time" noting to trim rose bushes. .
grape vines and ap_ple 0'~- Yards
Should be rolled w1th a lawn roller
to smooth mole hills and to get rid
of them use perfume_d moth czys_:___ _

tals.

·

Doris Grueser had the arrangement of the month: ' a patrioti c
theme with an assortment of red,
white and blue silk flower s,
arborvitae, corkscrew willow,
accented with an American flag in
a woven basket.
The meeting adjourned and
refreshments were served to members. Janet 1beiss won !he hostess
door prize.

•
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•

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•
.

Public Notice

C/(l.~ .~ifi1• 1l fla!W·~ t 'fll 't~r
.

tlit•

followill#{ ·' 1'11'/Jht im• I'Xdwng~·.~ ...
Galh11 County

Me•_g$ County
Area Code 614

At ea Cod tt 61•

446
367
388
245
256
643
379

Galhpoftl
Ch•twe
Vinlon
Rio Grende
Gu~n D111

Arabia Diu
WMnut

992- MtddiiiPOrt
Pomttroy
985
843 c~···
Ponl_,d
247 hun hils
949 RaCNte
742 Rutl•d
617 Coolville

M•a unCo .. WV

Area Code 304
675 Pt Pl••&lt;~~~nt
&lt;58 loon
676 Appht Grovtt

t 't
12
13
14
15

93:1

Buffalo

BULLETIN
BOARD
·--KIMBALL PIANO
FOR SALE
CALL 992-3262
AFTER 6 P.M.

ont-

(

left, a student at Southern High School, at the
chapter's Charter Day Luncheon held at Overbrook CeDter. Also pictured, 1-r, are Mrs. Rae
Reynolds, regent for the chapter, and Mrs.
Mary Skinner,, DAR Good Cltlzeashlp Chairman.

'

II

this year's girl scout cookie drive. The· troop is
under the direction of Pam Johnson.

SUCCESFULL 'SALESGIRLS • Middleport
jlrownie Troop 1254 nf Middleport Elementary
School were tbe topsellers Ill the county during

70-\'EAR PIN PRESENTED • Pomeroy
Lodge No. 164 F and AM recently presented a
: 70-year mem'!trshlp !!Ward to OtiS 'Parker at a · me,tlng of Or1ent Lodte in Waverly. The award
:was presented by WM Kenny, 'Wigglns of

.

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(Jaer birthday .
: Florence Baer will celebrale her ·
94ih birthday on March 31. Cards
riaay be sent her in care or Virginia
Qland, P.O. Box 527, Racine, Ohio
45771.

.

Pomeroy Lodge and John Ault, Orient Lodge.
Otis and his family were residents or MIDersvUie
for many years. He celebrated Ills 91st blrtllday
on March 1.3. Pictured, 1-r, are Robert Parlier, ,
OtiS Parker, Kenny Wiaalns and John Ault ,

Alumni officers meet Directors Guild

The Rutland Alumni orticers for
t!Je y~ 19\)1 met recently and it
was decided that there would be
both a rouild and square dance at
the upcoming alumni.
Anyone who would like to
reserve a special table for an
anniversary are asked to contact
Charles Barrell at 742-2579 for Jim
Fink at 742-2258.
Suzy Carpenter will soon be
sending information regarding the
scholarship which will be available
to-graduaung seniors.
'
The next ,neeting will be held
AJII:il 14 at 2 p.m. at tbe Rutland
C1vic cen1er. The public is inviiCd
to attend.

Card shower
Mrs. Violet Cluisty, fonnerly of
Silver Ridge, Meigs County , is
hospilllizcd at Bowling Green, Ky.
Ct bas been requested that cards
TRAVIS LEE KOENIG
be ~tnt to her in tift of her daughler, Mrs. John Chamberlain, 1416
_. Eastland Drive, Bowling Green,
· Mr. and Mrs. Rick Koenig of Ky.-42104.
Tuppe!S Plains are announcing the
birth of their fast child, Travis Lee.
011 Jan. 9.
'fbe infant weighed sill pounds
13 ourices and was 20 inches long.

-Koenig birth

honors Costner

A-Lenlen film was presented by
Rev. Walter Heinz, pastor of the
Sacred Heart Catholic Church, at a
recent meeting of the Catholic
Women Club Meeting . Father
Heinz stated that new charch members are Mrs. Keith (Rufina) Scott
and son. Sean. Mrs. Kate Wells
gave the card committee report.
Upcoming events include Co~­
firrilation which will be held .Apnl
23. Mass is u 7:30 p.m. followed
by a reception in the church hall,
honOring Bishop Ottenwcller and
the confllllllltion class. First Communion will be on Mother' s Day,
May 12. A breakfast will be served
honoring the First Communicants
and all mothers. The Women's
Club will host a Deanery Work-

22 Mon-r 10 loan
23 Prot•stonal Servu::t~S .

Xi Gamma Mu meets

, BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. Kevin Cosmer edged otlt three Hollywood veterans to take Directors
Guild of America honors for his
frontier epic "Dances With
Wolves," moving the first-time
director into the forefront of
Academy Award competion:
James Burrows was named best
director of a television comedy
series for NBC's "Cheers" and
Michael Zinberg was honored for
his direction of the dramalic prime·
time television series "Quantum
Leap," also on NBC.
The DGA awards for directinj
excellence in both films and TV
were announced at the SUild's 43rd ·
annual banquets Saturday night,
held simultaneously at the Beverly
Hilton Hole! and the Crownc Plaza
Hold in New York.
Only three times in the past 42
years has the DGA award winner
differed from the winner of the
AcadCmy Award Oscar.

Sandy Jannarelli spoke on the
upcoming ,dinner and dance sponsored by Bell Sigma Phi on May
11 at Royal Oak Resort at the
recent meeting of the Xi Gamma
Mu Chapler, Bell Sigma Phi Sorority held at Pizza Hut in Glllipolis.
Tickets for the event wiD be $30
per couple with proceeds to establish a technical schooling scholar- .
ship fund.
lnforlllalion
concerning
Founder's Dly was also diseussed
and a thank-yOQ from Janet Peavley for the group's kindness and
gifta.
'
• Officers will be elected at the
next meeting and the last half of
. the group wiU be the hos~esses with
a recipe auction on Tl!esdaY.

.,

Qorii Koenli and the late Leonard

Koenig,
'1\Jppen
Plains.
•
J

,.

,Mrs: Anna Blackwood conduct-

ed the program with a presentation
of "Our Lady of Miraculous
Medal. " Mrs. Cindy Hartenbach
won the tra,veling prize.
Hostesses for the meeting were
Mrs. Nita Conde, Mrs. Dorothy
Shaeffer, Mrs. Anna Blackwood
and Mrs, Karen Bro\Yn.
The next meeting 'Viii be held
Tuesday following Mass at 7 p.m.

BRIDGET JOHNSON • was· the topseller or all brownies In
Meigs County during' this year's
girl scout cookie drive. Bridget,
who is 9, Is a ~ember of Middleport Troop 1254 or Middleport.
Sbe is the daughter of Skipp and
Pam Johnson of Mic!dleport.

YOUNG'S

V. C. YOUNG Ill
4J412-621S

J&amp;L

INSULATION

•CRAFT SUPPLIES
•HOMEMADE CRAFTS

Pomeroy Nursing and Rehab Canter ·

"COME VISIT WITH US"

.'

4J4J2-6109
JUST BELOW MIDDLEPOIT ON IT. 7

Revival slated
The Racine Baptist Church will
hold revival beJinning March 2428 at 7:30 p.m. nightly with 10
a.m. morning reachings.
Monday wiD be Sunday school
class night; Tuesday, suest nisht;
Wcclncd8y, senior citizens night;
and Thursday, Love the Lord nishL
Sunrise services will be held
at 6:30 a.m. folEastern
lowed by b
fasJJ A children's
program will be prcscnted at 7:30
p.m.
, The public is invited 10 attend.

Attention .R.N.'s

2

j
I
I
f

•I
I'

I
l
I

T

NEW- IEPAII

•FIREWOOD
BILL SLACK
992-2269

JO'S CRAFT SHOP

.

_,

ROOFING .

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL
•LIGHT HAULING

TUESDAy I MARCH 19

sw;::r

Oraadparents are Mr. and Mrs.
~ussell Shields, Belpre, and Mrs,,

..

bazaar.

't

I
J

In Memory

In memory of
MARVIN unLE wtro
passed.:.' 2 YtlfS aco
on rdt 18, 1919.
Anothlf year h11 eomund
IOIIf,
The (Ill• and memoritslin.., cin,
But 10111 day the pein Will
, pass,
But lht m~n wilt al·
ways last.
, Sadly missed,
Wife, Juanita

SYRACUSE - ITS ADOG!! But a-few bushelsOf nails and a
couple of gallons Of paint can translorm this bargam into a
beauty! POSSIBILITIES GALORE! If you have a strong right
arm - maybe this is for you? 2 bedrooms, bath, on a
90'xl00' lot. Close to the grade school. MAKE AN OFFER
$12.900.00.
BUSINESS IS SO GOOD - WE'RE RUIINtiiG OUT OF
STOCK! WE NEED LISTIIIGS. If you Will to ltll, call us
riallt now. Our ldslllrlcl IIUII!ion. Our ultl 111ft iltl·
perl•ctd. For ~nt rtsuHs call !192-2251!
INTEREST RATES AS LOW AS 6.875% Varllbleand 8.6'25
fixed - WI ean illl your property and WI 111¥1 buyers:
HElilY £. CUIAND ............. .......................... !192-6191
JEAN TRUSS ELL. ................. ,,....................... 149-2110

. JO Hlll ......................................... :.............. IIS-44&amp;6

OFFICE ,,................... ,......... ,, ......,, .......... ,,, ... !192·2259

Serv1r.es

Hou•hold Goods
Sporting Goocll
AnttqU.I
Mlle. Mtrchandlse
Building Suppli•
Pels for Slle
r,1usicat lnstrumenu
fruns 'Vegut•bl•
For Sale 01 l u de

81 Home ln1prowment i
82 PluJnbtng 6 He a•ny·

83 Eac:JV•t lng
84 Electuu~ &amp; Re fuger•IMtn
85 Gun..-al Hauliny
86 Mobtl• Hum e AepMif
87 Upholstery

Business Services

WHAlEY'S
PAITS

shop on June 22 from 8 a.m. to 3
.
.
p.m.
Mrs. Barbara Mullen announced
!hilt a craft circle will meet every
Wedneday in 'the activities building
to make crafts for (he bazaar .
Father Heinz noted that homemade
creamed baked chicken and noodles will be served at this year's

51 ·
&amp;2 53
54
55
56
57
68
59 .

Busin.;.s Opp01tunitv

949-2161
,...,........ ..

Catholic Women Club meet

Merr horHIISP.

17 M1icellan110us
18 Wilnled fo Oo

Gutter Cleaning

n

For l•••

Bustnl!ll Tr..lung
Schools • lnll,tiCimn

,_.,,Ohio

POMEROY, OHIO
992-2259

Motou:ycl •
Bo11t1 &amp; MOICHI lor .S illlll
76 Auto PM"tl I. Ac:c:-.MM' Ita
11 Aulo AlpOMr
7 8 Cam ptng E q ~t~pm,ttnt
79 C » ffl~ • &amp; Motor Hon• ~

7A

~ 75

Went ed to Rent
Equtpm~t for Runl

48
49

Situetion Werned
Insurance

Athena, .O.IIio, Hocking,
NOTICE TO
,__
. . --··
Moigo, Monrot. Morgen,
CONTRACTORS
Noble, Vinton and WoohlngSTATE 9F OHIO
ton Cauntloo, by opplylng
DEPARTMENT OF
retro•reflective
polyeater
TRANSPORTATION
povomont morklng material
Colu...,..o, Ohio
for center linea and line
March 1, 1991
URPENTEI SERYKE
linea.
Contract Seleo Legel Copy
-Room • J ·.-..,.
No. 91 · 2112
Projoct length - o.oo - Gutter work
orO.OOmle.
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
Work length . -' Vorlouo
- · - work
.... Plurnltlftl
IRG-0001(128)
-eonome
feet or varioua mites.
FG·OOOF1811)
-Roofing
· Pavement width - Varlto.
· RSG-OOORI342)
;_lfttMior. EIWiDr
Tho Ohio Oepartn\ent of
S ..lod propo1011 will be
Pa~!!tlng
.
rocoived ot tho office of the Tnnoportatlon hereby notl(FREE ESTIMATES)
Oiroctor of the Ohio Oopart- floo all blddarothot h wRiof·
mont of TronfPOnotlon, Col· flrmotlvoly lnoure that In ony
Into put·
umbua. Ohio. uniH 10:00 A. contract
M ., Ohio Stondord Tlmo. 1u1nt to thie edverd•rnent.
buolneoo enterTuoodoy. AprH 2, 1991, lor minority
prl- will be • - d tuH
imprOvment1in:
11·14-'90 tin
Public Notice
• Public Notice
Athena. Galllo. Hooking, opportunity to IUbmh blda
Meiga, Monroe. Morgen, in reepon• to thie invltetlon certified chock or C8ohler'- fica of the Dlotrlct D.puiy
Noblo, Vinton lnd Weohlng- end wtll not be dlocrlmllllted ch•ck for •n amount equal Director.
The Director r e - the
ton Countloo. Ohio lor Im- a.elnlt on 1M ground1 of to flva per c.tt of hlo bid. but
proving ooction ATH-33- race, color. Of national origin In no ...., more thon fHty right to rej- ony lnd all
20 .40 on U.S . Routo 33 by in conlideretion for an thou10nd dollert, "' o bond bldl.
JERRYWRAY,
opplylng rolro-roflective loot . awerd.
•VInyl Siding
"Minimum wage i'atee for '"' ton .,., cant of hla bid,
DIRECTOR OF
dry water r.ood .,.rnt to•
poyoblolo tho Dl•-or.
•Aepl~~eement
TRANSPORTATION
center linea, a.ne linea 1nd thio project hove been Ptt·
muot apply. on tho 13) 11, 18,2tc
datermlnod 11 Nquired by
Window.
proper
!Otmo,
for
quoiHicalaw and are aet forth In the
od~:··
•Roofing
.
length - 0 .00 lio_no at loaot ton dayo prlo•
bid propoul." .
Public Notice
orO.OOmle. '
•Inovl8tlon
to the dolo ut lor opening
"The
dota
lit
lor
compleWork length - V1riou1
bldo
In
occontance
with
JAIIIS HISEl
tion of thlo work ohell be ••
feet or vertoua milee.
NOTICE TO
111128 Ohio Rwhtod
HI forth In tho bidding pro- Chlptar
Pavent~fnt width - Varie1.
CONTRACTORS
992-2772 or
Code,
&amp;TATE OF OHIO
The O,.io Oopartmont of poul."'
.
Plano
ond
-lllclltlona
742-2251
Eoch blddor lhall be roDEPARTMENT OF
Tran-rtotlon h.,.by not~
oro
on
file
In
the
Do.,.rtmont
1139
Brron Pt.ce
TRANSPORTATION
lioo oil bidden thot h wll af- qul18d to file with hlo bid 1 of Tranoportotlon end the ofMiddleport,
Ohfo
Columbua, Ohio
firmatively lnouro thot In any
11-14-Hn
March· 8. 1181
contract ehtered Into pur·
aUent to thla itdvert118ment,
Real Estate General
Contr- Sllil Loaol Copy
No. 11-28D .
minority ,' bu1lne11 enter·
UNIT PRICE CONTIIACT
pri- will be oflordod lui
Ho-rd L Write...
opportuRity to oubmlt bldo
Sealed propolllo will be
in re..,on• to thia invitation
''
rocehlell' lft the office of the
and will not be dl-lmlnatad
Olr-..r of the Ohio D - ' ·
against on the ground1 of
, mont of Tron-tlon, Col·
race. color. or national origin
-umbuo, Olllo, untii10 :00A.
in consideration for an
M.. Ohio Standard· Tlmo,
Gu~ers
· award.
Tueodoy, Aprl 2~ ill1 In
· ' 'Minimum wega rates for
Athena; Golllo, H-lng,
Downapouta
thio pro)o~ how been proMelgo. Monroe, llloteen.
doter"""" 11 Nqulred by
Noble, VInton and W-glew ond ore H! forth In the
ton CountiH. Ohio on Me·
Painting
bid propoul ...
tlon ·ATH-33-8.112 on u. 8 .
"The dote oot lor compleFREE ESTIMATES
Route 33 In thl City of Lotion of thla work 1hall be 11
gan. In tho Cltloa of a.lpre
'oet forth In the bidding proand Marietta. In tho Vlllegeo
poaal."
of JaGkiOmiHio, Cent..VIIa,
EOC:h bldclor oholl be reMurrey City, Bolla Valloy
quired to tile whh hjo bid 1
and Coldwwll. Lo- lalem
c:ertHiod chock or caohl..-'o
and other v•rious route• and
check for an amount equal ·
-lono by lurnllhlng and
to live .,.r ,.nt of hlo bid, but
lnltolllng rol•d ...,amont
AUTO
in no event more than fifty
marker moterlelo.
thouund d0Htn, or' • bond
Plojoct ...._. - o.oo Speclallllnt Itt
or 0.00 mlo.
·
for tan .,.r oont of hlo bid,
Custo• fr-• looolr
payobla to thl Dl•octor.
Woofl ' length - Varlaua
NEW. UIEO PAihs
Bidder• must appty, on the
feet or Ylrlouo mlloo,
REDUCED - REDUCED - REDUCED - NOW YOU CAll
FOR AU MAKES •
proper forme. for quallflca·
Pavemantwldth-Vorteo,
IIIOOELS
OWN THIS COUNliY HOME ATTHIS REDUCED PRICE- 2
tiono at INit ton dayo prior
"Tho dote tit lor complo·
story brick home nestled on approx. 1.485 acres of pnvacy!
to the date Mt tor o.,.nlng
tlon of thlo woofl lhall be 11
992-7013'
You and thiS gorgeous fireplace. No worry about space e1ther
bide In occontonce With
tot forth In the bidding proor
992-5553
Chopter 1111211 Ohio Rovlled
poul."
- this beauty has 4 bedrooms, 2 baths; fam1ly room w1th
. Code.
Each bidder lhlll be ,..
01 IOU FlEE
woodburner
features that can make th1s
qulrod to file With iolo bid o
Plana and IPICHicationa
HOME" lor you. CAll FOR AP·
1
cenlflH c,heck or caah..,_.,
ore on file In tho Oepa~tm~nt
of Tranoportotlon and the ofchook lo• on amount OICIUal
to flvo .,.r ..,, of hlo bid, but
flee of the Dlotrlct Deputy
Director.
In no ovont "!!fO thin fiftY
The Director re•erv•• the
thouund dona ... or • bond
lor ton ..., cont .of hla bid.
right to re.oct any end all
bklo.
J
payable to1the Director.
Blddora mult apply, on tho
JERRY WRAY,
pr-r forlfto, for qualificaDIRECTOR OF
TRANSPORTATION '
tion• at l"ot ton doyo prior
(3111 , 18, 21c
to the dol8 Mt for opening
bldo In ecconlanoe with
Chapter 811211 Ohio RevPutlllc Notice·
Coda.
'
Plano and -lflaatlono
are on tie In the Deplt1mant
NOTICE TO
of Tran-'ltlon ond the of·
SPRING IS COMING!! View this awakenin~ ol Mother Nature
CONTRACTORS
flee of the Olotrlct Doputy
from
this
barn
style
home
In
Dexter,
Ohoo.
Surrounded
by
•
STATE OF OHIO
Director.
• DEPARTMENT OF
Natural Beauty and fresh country air. MANY OTHER GREAT
The Director rooarveo tht
" TRANSPORTATION
FEATURES! $56,000.00,
right to r•et any and ell
USED RAILIOAD nES
Columbua, Ohio
bldo.
11-12·110-tfn
March~ - 1891
JERRYWRAY.
NEW LISTING- located on landaker Rd·. this property has
Contract • • • Loaot Copy
DIRECTOR OF
,it all! 49+ acres ol ground with a 1987 - 14'x80' mobile
No. 91-213
TRANSPORTATION
home.
Here
are
just
a
few
ofthe
added
features
to
this
propUNIT PRICE CONTRACT
MARCH 1.8. 211. 1N_1
erty- Dishwasher. refrig.. range, fireplace, air conditioning,
•
F0-000Ft87)
ALL
furniture
mclud1ng
TV.
VCR,
You
can
have
1mmed1ate
RIG·OOORI343)
; SNiod propoNII wHI be
11 - Help wanted
·possession of this extraordinary place!! So call for your show·
received It tho offlca of tho
ing TODAY! ASKING $54,900.00.
Djractor of tho Ohio Oopart·
-nt of Tran-rtltlon. Col·
POMEROY - HERE IS THE HOllE YOU'VE BEEN WAITING
'l!"buo, Ohio, untM 10:00 A,
FOR!!
Newer bHevel home in great condrt100. 2 car garage, 2·
ftl! .. Ohio ltandord Tl,.,
3 bedrooms. equipped krtchen, central heat and A/ C, basel',llooday. AprH 2, 1991, lot
ment and has a basketball court 3\! acres of around located
lmprovmente in:
,
in one of Meigs County's most desirable areas! OWner wants a
Athena. Gillie, Hocking,
Your career and per10n1l 11tlsfac1ion
· Malga. Monroe, Morgan,
quick sale and will consider any reasonable offer.
can
match your golll in health c• .., ••
Noble, Vliiton ond Woahlng$69.900,00,
feste1t growing market - Long Term
ton CountiN, Ohio lo• lm·
P""'inll r ooctlon ATH-78·
Cere.
RACINE - Vaeant lot - Close to schools, park and
3 ,38 on Ita• Route 78 In
churches.
Has
city
sewer,
electric:
water
and
gas
available.
Athena CountY 1nd v•rloua
Pomeroy Nursing h11 an Immediate
$10,000.00.
route• end HCtion1 in

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

Funli sh..t Room s

47

H,to W•tld

f i,ttk''"

· 7 1 Autos lor S•ht.'
7 2 Tr uct.s tOf Sill •
73 V..nt &amp;4WO "s

41 Space for R.,.t

16 Radio, TV. CB Acp;m

21

LtYVI IOck
H.,- • Gr1l11

Tran spor t dtion

Ap1rtnient for Re 11t

4C
45

17.3 Mason

882 New Hwen
895 lel.,t.

63
64

6&amp; Sued.

4 3 Fafma tor Rttnt

S• r v •Lt' ~

LiV!!SIUcl\

f arm Eq u.pn1om
W.nted t o Bu y

I;IJ111

[!lliililYI' !'Ill

\upp,!I!S

61
62

3 5 lots • Acre-ue
36 Aell £11111 WMted

&amp;•• •

B-•

- DAR GOOD CITIZENSHIP WINNER •
'Leigh Ann Redovlan, 5econd rivm left, a student
at Eastern High School, was the Good Citizen·
'ship Award Winner for tbe Return Jonathan
•Mel!p Chapter, Daughters ot"tbe American Rev;,olutoon. She was honoreil Friday, along with
:contest participant Norman Matsoa, !bird from

II

• .1 HouMs fot Aent
-4Z Mobile Hom a-a tur R" ''

lo r ~ u o r s hr 51 day- ud ftln $ tit papur). Citlllu..ofo re 2 .0 0 p m
~~ ~ 11 ltnt pubh c ilttOtt to m ak tt corr ecu un
• Alb t h • t mu st b ~ pat.d •n a~va ru:u tl tt:
.
Co~rd of lh••ks
H;~ppy Ath.
M c nll~ t iM H

For ni

l sLile

3 1 Homw IOf Sate
32 Mobile Homn tor S11lt1
3J Flfrms l or Sele
J I Butin•s&amp;u•dtt•gs

6 Lopl •nd Found
1 Y •d &amp;ale Cpa1d "' advance)
8 . P.ubli c
Auehon
, 9 Want ..:I to Buy

'Pu cu u~ ;~d lor illl Ciptlall en urs 1$ do ubl e prt c~ 'o f ad co st
' 1 putrU llll tli YPt: only Ulo00
" S t!' tl nl t ~ tS no1 r lis p on s tbl ~ tor ,eJ rur s 11 ft c r ftt s t tl ut IC h t.d

In

1lle Deily Sentinel Pega 7

opening for_1 pert-time end/ or full·
1ime R.N. d11irlng ,dey shift. Flexible
scheduling, competitive 11llry and be·
neflts offered.

Our Nation's demand for long-term
cere will extend well into the 21 at century. Join the future ...
Join the Pomeroy Nursing end Rehab
·
Center
CONTACT:
. LaRue Hill, R.N .. D.O.N.,
Pomeroy, Ohio 4&amp;789
Pomeroy Nursing • Rehab
(814)992-1808
387&amp;9 Rocksprings Rd.
E.O.E.

BISSELL
BUILDERS

Now 1• .

CUSTOM IIILT
HOMES &amp; GAIAGES

$tolkll
MOillE HOME FURNACES -HEAT PUMPS

"At ltasonalllt PrltH"

All FURNACE PARTS

PH. 949·2101 .
or 111. 949·2160
' Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CAUS .

IEtltlm'S MOBILE HOME
HEAntiG &amp; COOLING

4-11-11·

ft

We How Changlll Our locotion To
111r Milts Eost on lt. 241 through
Chest•, Oh.

L;, I TY

105 It Soclllli Str~
•DOUI'Oif, 0110 45760
Offici 614-992-2116
HOME 614-m-n•l

DOTTII S. 1'1111111, 1101111
HOUIEitLOTU FARM
COMMERCIAL
We Need Uollnp!

'

, ... a. S.lfwll Sdloellll. ofllt. 141
,.,,., 446-Un or

KELLER'S CUSTOM BENDING

~. ~

"'TU'ilN 1: h Jl

h

SPECIALIZING IN .. ..

•Cui1om Bent .Exhauet Syeteme
•Complete Line of Exheui1 Suppllo•
•Handle and lnetall Monroe Shocks Come aad See Ua For A Free lnspedlon
aad Ea&amp;lmate

PH. 614·915-3949 10111n aun
41269 St. If. 141

long ltnom. 011. 45743
~/15/91/1

11·5'111-llo

R. L MAS_H
·cARPENTRY
•Garages
•Room Additions
•Kitchens • Beth•
•VInyl Siding
•Restoration
•Repair Work

992 ..5526
POMIIOY, OliO

•ctOWAVE

OYIN . .AII

......

AU IUDS

lrl• It .. Or Wo

liN'S APPLIANCE
SII¥1Cl
992-SJJS or
915·1561

Acnt1 p,_ PMt OHice
217 I. leatoollt.
PO&amp;iOY, OliO

FOIEYEI 110111
PROM TANNifG
SPECIAl

so High School
· Stu.nts
.
10 SESSIONS- $10
949-2126
For Appt. ;-lsi

c•

FOlEYD IIONU
IASIIIII ID., UCtM

3-4-'91 -1110.

•VINYL SIOING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

... ._. ....

"Froo Ettlm1t11"

PH. 949·2101
or 1... 949-1860
110 SUNDAY CAlLS

•Remodeling and
Home Rapelra . •Rooflng
•Siding
•Painting
NO JOB .TOO SMALL

FREE ESTIMATES

CEDAI
CONSTIUC!ION
991-6641 or
691·6164

12-31-10-tt.,

,, MJ~~,,.H
UPHOUIRY
211-flo. Smell

Mld••)lll'f
Hand Tufting
Cultom Drapaa
36YeoroExper...ee

614-992·2121

WI Soy Whet WI 0.,
We Do Whet We lay,

111-lt-leo.

!-11-Hn

!11/90/Hn

110.

•
IIIDIPIIIDIIIT

GROOM
ROOM

BEAT THE RUSHI

Get ,_ lown IIIII ....

....... llflllpanent
.........tl111141,......
f• tho coni..

110M1d

DUlliNG FOIUAIY
- FrH pickup onll
hlivtry in Po~~~~roy
anll Milklltport city
limits.

Complete Grooming
For All lrllds
EMilEE MEIINAR
Owner I Oporotor

,_.,,

614-992-6820

cUPn cau•a

ond 11ll fLOOI CAB
•Aeaoonablo llitn
oQulllty Work
•FrH E1tlm1tn
•Carpet H11 Fett Prr

Time

•High

Glou on Tile
Floor Flnilh
Mill tlWIS. Ow•

It, I,

lot~

Ott

742·2451

3-14-'91-111

WE ALSO 8EI1VICE

CHAINSAWB

DAVE'S SMAlL
ENGINE IEPAII

2u west . . st.
, . _ , , Oh.

PH. 991-3922
2-4-t

........

•ss1L1 I IUIQ
CONSIIUCDON

LINDA'S
PAINTING

eGan~p~

ee...,late
s.., &amp; c•..,.••

·-·····

frll lstl•ate•

01-COUNTY
IECYCUNG

OPEN 7 DAYS
A WEEK
8 A.M. 'TIL 7 P.M.

-tf you dooll up ,_
WHkt..... .
llu.r_ 011 ..........

915-4473
667-6179
5-31-'

,...... 011

Til-COUNTY

•ncUNG

t.ca!M Olf "'.,... 0.0
T1ot C.. II
It, 7 lit. 141

-..........
........-.........
- .....
...........................
-·'"""'·
•lllh
tor Olllo
....-·

...

w

fOil PIICD
614-ftl-5114

···7fii-711MtW...
J·JI.'tiJ

SIMON'S
PICK·
A·PAII
SAME
LOCATION

u.. court st,..t
lntr•ce
PO.IIOT.L OHIO

~117111/leo.

USED APPUAIIICIS

""'•uum ·

WUIIIS-1110 •

IIYIS-S6t•
-IIAI'OIS-Sioe •

IMIIS-..,_Ioi.-$115 •

rliiliiS-S us •
IICIIO tmla-Srt •

lEN'S APPLIANCE
SEIYICE

9ft-SIJS • tiS-IS"
r.t'Offlct
I'OIROY,10130/'lt Ill

am.,....

�•

'
Monday, March 18, 1991

Ohio

BORN

The Dally Sentinel P8Qe 8

·Television
Viewing

-y

3 Announcements

•

........ ,., =:·

MON., MARCH 11 •

- - llftll!e Rololleuol I; 1 ;_,C9t). O loail.

Wrle: HNirto. .... •
totS, Qollpollo,

OH-..

EVENING

Giveaway

4

1:01 (]). Cll (I). Ill
IIJNews

~~C:..C.?aQ

314 • - ClloOr To Qood -

tM-21N511.
~ old ..... Pit lull, 3114-112-

. HOW COULD WE HAVE LOST
T~&lt;E· FIRST 6A~E OF TI-lE SEASON
FIH'I'-THREE TO NOTHIN6 ?~ ~

llook old,
• · -kor, .2
yHIW
IM-1824111,
Four pupploO holt _.....,
Heeler 304 112-ZMI.

Wl-!'1' COU~DN'T TI-lE SCORE
AT LEAST &gt;lAVE SEEN
I=IFT'1'-THREE TO ONE ?!

3 - 18

WE WERE ROBBED

1

D Scllo?IIIPC

._..a .
IIIICiur"-

1:05 Q) ae~ertJ Hllbllltll

1:30~~.:==
~..ifi~NewsQ

I Ton llnwlo
coon - · - · 114-11!2-2241.

Q) 3-2,1

fOUIIO. - •

Contlct8

111 De cea Nria Q
l1li • Andr Orlfflllt

Yard Sale

7

at~t~

Qll WOtld'fodoiJ

l.Q8t &amp; Found

6

=·

9;EInmp
=o:c.~Q
ill
Tiling Stereo.

8,._,.lne

Qll 8;lortoCantli
Qll
Scerecrowllld Mrs. King

=
w• . _. . .•

7:05 Q) Hippy DIJI
7:30(])e G1 IIJ~IQ

rll c:.::elnment
Tonlehl Sllfeo. Q

i!DHI)SI)O 1,!1

THINF Of IT .•. WE~E THE Fl{lST
I .
•Ttl $("fAte !

toy,

"•

fXJ

\'t'U . ~

- - f'IAVI AN
ACCENjl

•

.... •. .. ..
'

ALLEY OOP

=mo
.,....ton.
-to .,.

Appllconlo - - far

e

~lool;;:;:,;lb;:;y.:,::E..;.OE;:--====:::
0111oo w-. 20 HouiW -lily.

clortool
p1rllooP.O. loa minimum ~lluot IWI Pcuw.., 01141711.
,.....ty auldol
boP oral~ ... Llillhd •
oiL Coli
l

i,; .... ~.·~-·

.·

No u• Plrtollme RIIITurenl upertence
..,..,_ MOll ry. No IIIII. ._... , _ Ha~ WV or Aut•
Full/poll limo, ........ All ot PM. i::d' OH
Dono, Sundoy
ouwa ltd ~ plul bonua, 111ih, llltwwn 12:00 • 2:00

Pial

...... .-.;. ,._... fi!o!:

Uon ~-~ tafluhcl. Cal

-ln.

,.

Lori

01010• Perloblo - • · ""'
houl your lo lbo mill JUOI
ool! SOW71·1ll7.
.
;;.,.:=
...:=.:i,.i":·ui:111::.a.:;Di;;:.::-,-;;Co;::ro.:-;:com=,••or,=-

ian .....

Will euy LAlla In AAd Around
Oolllpcllo. MUll HIYo Ulll-.
C:...ncl 1o In ....., Ploln. CQn.
toot: lob WilMa, 1 • Zll-11137.

1:00 Cll (I) 8 Ametlcl'a
FWinltlll Home V?deOI
Stereo. C

t.1e1CI1and1se

- · allor oclleol. lllajHna
o1 2 would tlko "'
In my homo. Mon..frl:,

-

In IConaup. lf14.448.10:tl.

--·

........llml,. " ·

X-RAY TICIIIOI.OOIIT

I Sllllloy

m w Pilne u.. 1pec1oo1

sar.,allordoble,clll-. ...,.

I un. , 1:30 p.m. AQO! 2 ·10.
'ltlcame.e~~.

AVON I AI -

g
MIIKie Pl8net Storeo. Q
(!)Ttevela0

IJIOnlll8ge
Qll l'llnoeNIOWI
1111 7IHuly Inc? lhe ~II Q
8:05 Q) MOVIE: DMirce Wire: A
Love Story (2:00)
1:30 (])
0 MOV?E: 'Relum of
tilt Jedl' NBC Moncllr Night
ot the Movlet IPOI (2:30)
Stereo. 0
Ill a • Mljor Did The
·'
Major worries when Polly's
old boyfriend returns. Stereo.

AYOM • M ....._ call Marilyn bo
Muot ..,. o p11ono.

lor

e

Moville (PO) (2:00)
0 Murder, She Wrote Q

w_., 304 1t2 211411.

...

e

Herman teaches a subject he
knows nothing about: sax
educatiOn. Stereo. C
l1li. MOVIE: 'lite Plfncen
Bik~J' FOX Nlahl II lhe

11 ·· Help wanted

1o

!

:noe

111 a e Ev'enllfll 8hoode

Ernployme111 Serv1ces

=• ::Z...=-

!

FIIIIHJ

l!lle M'A'B'H
lt5tcltft7br Stereo.
Qll Calege llaltelbell
. · ,QIICIIIIolfte
7:35 Q) Soonloid end Bon
1:00 (l)
0 Freah Prince or
· Bel APr Hilary lrles 10
· convince Will to date her
haughty celebrity boss.
Stereo. C
(J) MOVl!: Tllunder Alley (R)
(2:001
lil I)) MICGr¥er
MacGyver Mllca the help or
two feisty spinllers. Stereo.

0

¥·"':#"\toy
..\":
. MUll bo _ . ,
orollgoblo ~ Ol·
.-..,... not nacanary. Excti-

Avon W.. kldh'ldi•OII ....__ Jant _ , • ...... bonolb
lod In
$10 on hour.
AJIII!YIAn:tnH,
- .381
t
No 'door to dOor nl c ,.TJ. call
•· HuiNft
Koy 1!4-112-niO.
Plko. Ollnpclla, 011

41 Houus for Rent

-~oriOII*h•
to
do odd
or la~ng, 2 bod_,. llouoo'ond ono - . _,. opl, Polnl PlooAnl, · nlee 1nd clean, no pMa, 304-

304

Rc~

A~

Sla"'"""" AI Tla

HoUIIhold .
Gooda

2 bod- .,_,., nloo yord,
304-1714010. mMI1.

175-1381.
t..uon Sltop. Houro:
llonciiY Thru Frlcloy. I To II. 2 bod""""o on Sand Hill Rood,
c:to.oiflolunloy, 114-441-1111.
304-171-3134.

County ApplloMo. Inc. uaocl ....,..._, T.V.....Lo-&gt;

I a.m. to e p.m. Mon.-1111. •M4441·1111!... 1127 :lr4l. Avo. 00!llpollo,""

r::·•·

ludalt l'Nnlmllelonl,
IWblillt........ ol .... · 1171t I1447I4JII.

Business Services
1i..,.- lo&lt; '-ellald'use
._,..,
'
oUtll,......,.... ""'"'liD'"""'
•Mar be lo&lt;altd10·1110 ,., hom tho ''"'"
~0-;,ctl""-

.SJaiNHt ........-

LOAD EVEIIY 12 HOIIIIS
CALL

VICKER'S WOOD HEATING

D"""""""""'·"""-·"'Phono (S0411.,.22MIIIor 5 p.m.

- F o r Ront:

Four- I

21

F1nanc1cl

_,......,.,_,nlool
"\:"•"" ..,_ poto, ...,..od,
I
. -. .

8Ualll888

Ron!: ..... 2ltr ....... '-r
Alvtr Road. - h AI. '1, 114-4413500, 8M-2lle-11114.

Oppo"unlty
INOTit:EI
OHIO VALLEY PUIUSHINQ CO.
,_,mondo lhot yeu de buol.,.. lltlh-'" you.,_ And
NOT to oolld money ttirciUiil.
mol until yeu havo lnvootlitotod
tho~

tho

42 t.toblle Homes
tor Rent
2 bodrecm mobllo hOmo, lur·

nlahod, McCoUihan Trlllor Porll,

Hondorocn, 3CM-rn.t1241.

2

llodr- I!Htblla homo,
RHIM arl8t IM 112 8111.

tvEHDINGt
~~
Aouto For
SOlo. 11o1 Snook
Or SodA. 81Q • 2 BR on Cholbom Avo. - -·
For l.o 'l n-. Work Pl. Time '2K pluo utUbloo I ..._... Coli
Por -·All Cooh. U,.x 1.- bo1aro lpm, - . a l l.

2br Air Ccnd., Cob1o, -IV Fur-

111..-.

--111.

=•

=

.em.

'rralio! Porll on """'· Yory nlco,
all -.upo. Sollouo ,lnqulriH
only. 304-l'notiMI
v.ndll!tl A - • l.ocol. c..,.
IUppcrl. Muot Sol. 1.-

.:"":::.;''.;.;"::;'·- - - - - -

22 Money to Loan
LOlNS IY MAIL

tOWtttt srsfii

s.- ·......... ...........
_,.
.......
,.,..... .,..- ......'"'"'

.1.895

00.

•Jolll•"

(QM(Tr - .

NOflllfG lUI fO IUYI

Enjo~ iwor 100 ch•·

"

nelo. BNiho -•LIVE
" It hap-a '- 24

houro. IIID ayatarn Indud" dec odor.
CALL TODAY
FEB II UAft'(SPECIAL

ZENIX VJDEQ

ONLY

s':.-·
0,114-

a_. A-1111
ctaorollo
vtnc?lng
-oo- taO~
.11144
lwlill hod :10
, ... Qood
. . _,
~..

Up
1e 10.000 In ·72 t.Jro. w.
_, ho1p rou 011 a oianoluro

~

l

2br unlllnfthod IIIOblle homo,
notllmc. tiOO dopooll. No' polo.

-~~-·--~=
ao.oo '~

llllh "~·
GlDiv-.- Rd.Aihoni,OI1

SHE:

to-·lonod-ro.D,.,.,..

::..~.,.::.

PICKENS FllfiNITUAE
NowiUMd
.
lurillohlng. 112 mi.
Jarlcho Rd. Pt. " - · 'I(V,
coli :104-a11-MIO.
RENT I OWN
114 Ul 3111

-I Poloo
ondW=o
-~. " up,
·" '14.01
po1 -11.
p1r
- . L~
-.
-~olld- o1 a..-.

I,

o.-_..,
......... -_,...Tia-Mr

= .._· .
,~.

m.=:
...•

....

11:.1'11).

••

0111 - - . ....._ arudl . . . . . 11.1 tti.OO
pol ..... Gliy ...._
...._

•

=:"

~,..a.!:• ~

":

•u• ""'-AI. 141,
~~:~011:~ ... 7 In COntarwy.

orowore,

2

55

•

llondoy lin 811urdoy,

· lundoJ, 12 Noor!-

Olivo II.,
tuml1n,

Work - a.

-

"'-• -

-~-~"'·· olo. Claiodo Wift.

SNAFU.., bY81'11Ce Beattie

-

Home

81

1m rov-enta
p ....

. r,,
'

I'

•·"l

8AIIIIIIfT, \
WATIRPAOOANQ

1•

• .._ i?+WII.
o1
........,...•

1

....._ ~
-u-Ktltlcoool
,. . ._

•lr 1111 Cal ..... 1·

11WS'I-MA, doy or night.
~ 1-mtlll w.t.,roo-

.....
'"'P
-

T..,

.,,.,to, -_

-•.,.....
., on -

=:....

-

~
-

BARNEY
BUZZ DFFtl

.UISS WHAT, PAW II
OUR MILK'S FORTYFIEO
WITH VITAMIN Bfl tl

YOU STINGIN'
VARMINT!!

.....,-~.,

•I

::
:.

,.

e!; : :•. ~ •· :: ,
114 ... Cli:L

·---·ft-11,=.:•·ac-.
-ton-.

MIJ ......... -Torrloro,
lou •••• 7 ... old, aoo. - ·
-~

••a ":.'::! 4 wMII

1on1
0201.

•

SUVONE
1 2

.I 1 1 I I I
6

..,..r.,ul.-..'11"'1!"T'E1-iiJ

011. • -

ASTRO-GRAPH
BERNICE
BEDE OSQL

•

~-PontlooTIIno=-~=.

tloao owUo, MOO Finn. .,..,._
11'11.

..

•-~·~··
~·~"'~"'~o.
:~•~eon.:
~ion, ttAOO.
or Anerebta
ol-.~1~

Cbolhom A...... 2 -

-lon,

. ,. . .

=··~.....,

0 ., •• ONo
.... ..... .
•

........
- ........
ClriL
lluftj Oocoll. ·
.....
010.

84

ti11~7Wiftlr4p.la.

About n.
......, ..... loll ,... Celllr'r •
Wcirllifl Clntllnl NO !IJ'I.. I
, .... :IJ ,., . . . .-..... J
WMI'II lo Dllluw•

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

-

D-hPrr171tce~1-

....

...... ........ ,..._,"

WMh•.,..••llllloultht

_,..,.., ,.,

c.~:l~
1'0111111..., p

-Cull-~
:107
411L, ........... ,.__ '-:k.

,.. M::"'ili:''Winuo....:
U!i

82 Plumbing
,HeMing &amp;·
--~~~~~~--

Eleclrlcal "

Mereh 1t,1011
You could be luCkier than usual In matters InvolVIng doN friends In the year
llhead. The eame mlglll not be true reQMdlng - . o r a with strangers,
though.

-

1'18CE8 (Feb........,.. 2111 A friend or
yours who Ia slightly diHerenlthan your
_ . , ptt111 might come to you with an In·

ter.ttna prapautlodey. e....

thOugh

It mey IIOUIId atrlfte goofy o1 flrsl, , _ b
through. Know ,mere to looll lor ro-

mance and you'll lind it. The AstroGraph Matchmaker Instantly reveals
which signs are romantlcall)"perlect lor
you. MaN S2 to Matchmaker, c/o this
,_,..,...,P.O. Bol( 91428, Cleveland,
OH 44101-3428.
AIIII!a (Mirclt 21·Aprll1tl OpportunltiM today could be or a heeling nature,
lllpeclally thOle that aHeel your IInanc:ee o r -· Indifference could deprlve you ol them.
TAURUI (April._, 2011n order 10
advalk:e your eoll-lnterea11 today, you
might hiMI to lmprovlle In a , . , _
that could corofullt others. H~, the
lmpOtlanlthlng Is that you understand
what you're doing.
GEMINI (May 21-.1- 201 There Ia a
P!&gt;lalblllly that YOJ,I might gel involved In
a joint venture at thla lime which will be
conducted along unc~venllonal linea.
In feel, the entire endeaV&lt;&gt;r may bo
unique.
CANCER (.?utle 21-.IUIJ 221 Circumslancee might bring you Into a p~ner·
shlp with an lndMdualtoday, . . , _
usually In appoe?llon lo your poaltlona
rother than In support of them .
LEO (.lufJ 21-Aug. 22) II there Is an lmIIOfllnl objecllwlhat you've 11oen unable to Kflleve, dltc:Wd unproduetlw
IICIICI and try a new approach lodoy.

The Next

..

tr

~~-;,'i...eo.

w-··

e

I

,

t

I

.,

..·-

A PRINT NUMQERED LETTERS IN
~ THESE SQUARES

..

•·•S

VIA~ ANIWIIS

Astray - Foamy - Nomacj -Intone- MONOTONY
• variety may be the.spice ol lite,' pondered the ?ld gent,
"but the grocery' bills get paid IJ¥ MONOTONY.

. .. . ..... .
;..··
~.

...

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BRIDGE

NORTH

1-11·11

eAt

By JatDH Jeeoby

Tournaments that are open to all
comers and that offer generous cub
prizes have been popular in Europe
for many years. ~tly, IIHHtp,
there has been an increue in the number of invitational events, restricted
usually to 16 pair's. The Netberlands
has been at the forefront of this move.
In the middle of January, The Hacue
hosted the Cap Gemini Pandata World
Top Tournam~nt, won by BenJto Gar·
ozzo and Billy Eisenberg. Garozw,
who had won 13 world titles for Italy,
Is now living In Palm Beach, Florida.
Eisenberg:·a former member .of the
Aces' now livinc in Los Angeles, won
five Bermuda Bowllitles l11r Lhe United States in the 1970s.
They scored heavily on today's deal.
The bidding Is a mixture of natural
and artificial, with the first two bids
fitting into the former category and
the next two into the latter. After thaC,
hearts were agreed on, and South used
Roman Key Card Blackwood to discover that his partner held all lour
aces but not the queen of hearts.
West led a d-ptive 10 of diamonds. Garozzo put up dummy's ace
and immediately ruffed a diamond.
Declarer cashed the heart king, learnabout the bad spilt, and ra~ the
jack through Weal A club to
dummy's ace and a secOIIII diamond
ruff brought down the king. Now declarer was in C\)ntrol. He played a

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hearts.
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CROSSWORD
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS ·
1 Director

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CRYPTOQUOTES

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l!ll e ArHnlo llol?l Stereo. Q
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all0nlll8ge
open-minded and unbiased today, N·
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8cltecrow end Mre. King
certain characteristics you do not lind
appealing. You may misjudge a poten11:30!lle I!Jl Tonight Show
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prove helptulto dlecuuthlngs with your
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labor dlepute causes a
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soclaty ltlroughoullhe United
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,_ a e Murphf lrawn The
FYI team has trouble while
searching lor an uplifting
story. Stereo. Q
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!~~e==1~0::Th~e~D:a~lly~Se::n:tl~ne:I______________~~----~~--:Po:m::er:o~y::M:Id:d:le~po~~~·O:h~lo:_________________________________Mo
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Meigs squads respond Ohioans greeted by warm, wet weather today
to 10 weekend calls
'

Units of the Meigs County 124 for a lllOIOr vehicle accident in
Emergency Medical Service which Terry Schoonover was treat·
I
• .
responded to ten calls for assislaDCe ed but not transpoited,
over the weeken!l and early MonOn Sunday at 9:08 a.m. the Rutday morning.
land unit weru to New Lima Road
On Saturday at 11:37 a.m. the for Janet H.enry who was l!lfiSPOrt·
Syracuse unit was called 10 Seventh ed to Veterans.
Street for Naltcy Holbrook · who · At 12:15 p.m. the Pomeroy unit
was llallsporte&lt;l to Holzer Medical and a rescue unit responded to
Locust Street on a four-wheeler
Center.
At 3:41 p.m. th~ Rutland unit accident in which Sherman
was called to Jacks Road for Hoschar was transported to VeterWoodrow Kuhn who was taken to ans.
Pleasant Valley Hospital.
The Middleport Fire DeJ)artThe Tuppers Plains unit, at 5:48 mel)t, at 1:34 p.m., was called to
p.m., went 10 Route 7 for Bernice Leading Creek Road for a brush
Mollohan who was .trealed bur not fire on the Elias PrOIJCI'tY.
ttansporled. . .
.
.
At6:28 p.m. the Middleport unit
The Racine unit, at 6:48 p.m., responded 10 a call at Overbrook
was called 10 County Road 28 for for Helen Edwards who was taken
Faye Kirkhart who was taken to 10 Veterans.
Veterans. · ·
Finally, at 8:42 a.m. this mornAt 10:48 p.m. the Syracuse Fire ing the Pomeroy unit went 10 East
Department responded to Route Main Street of Carl Hughes, also
taken 10 Ve.terans.

--Area deaths---Marable C. Haffelt

I

l

Marable C. Haffel~ 81, of Burnt
Run Rd. Cruwn City, died Sunday,
-March 17, I 99 I at Holzer Medical
Center, following several months
of failing health. ·
He was born Man:h 4, 1910 in
Gallia County, son of the late John
William and Rosa Eblin Haffelt
Mr. Haffeh was a retired teacher
from the Gallia County sc.hools
after 40 years, retiring in I c&gt;n. He
taught for II 1/2 years in Gallia
County one.room schools, includ·
ing Clay Townhouse, Brush College, Otpper ·Mills, Providence and
Bethel, wl!ere he also served as
princi!&gt;!l. He retired from Hannan
Trace Elementary after teaching
there for 11 1/2 years.
Mr. Haffelt was a 1928 graduate
of Mercerville High School, a grad·
uate of Rio Grande Collelie and
attended Marshall Universtly and
· Ohio State University.
. ·
·He was a member of the Retired
Teachers Association, Gallia
Masonic Lodge and Providence
Missionary Baptist Church for 63
years. serving as deacon for 25
years.
·
Mr. Harrell, who operated a
farm in Clay Township, was known
for his fme herd of sheep and was
national champion in 1971.
He is survived by his wife,
Audra Swain Haffelt, whom he
married Aug. 12, 193~ in Gallia
County.
Other survivors include three
u-"'elt. both
Sons. Jerry and John ""'"
of Gallipolis and Max Haffelt of
Crown City; ooe brulher, Fred Haffelt of Gallipolis; three sisters,
Edna Wickline, Audrey Altizer and
lis; six grandchildren; and five
Darlene woodyard. a11 or Gallipogreat-grandchildren.
·
Funeral services will be con•
l!ucuid 2 ~ - Wednesday at Provideiice..MissfoiiaryTaptist Church,
with Rev. Charles Lusher and Rev.
John Arnold. Burial will be in
Providence Cemetery.
Friends may call at Waugh-Halley-Wood Funeral Home on Toes· day from 6 to 9 p.m. The body will
be taken to the church one .hour
prior to services. Galli a Masonic
Lodge services will be 8:30 p.m.
Tuesday·

Highs Tuesday will J1lll8e fmm the
By Unlkd Pras IDkl'lllltioDal
~fig lhe day.
The work weelc began in Ohio
Skies were to remain cloudy Upper 40s 10 die 508. .
On the WQlbcr map, low preson 1 wet note but with spring-lilce Monday wilh nlin or drizzle continuing. Afternoon highs were fore- . sure was centered over southern
temperllures.
A low pressure system over cast 10 range from the mid 40s 10 Lower MiChigm with a cold front
southern Lower Michigan brought near SO. It will be mostly cloudy stretching through western Ohio
the rain to the. state . Rainfall · Monday night with a chance of and a WIDII front north of the 'statc.
amounts overnight were one-tenth rain, which may become mixed High )JICSS1R was over the Plains.
of an inch or less.
wilh. snow. Lows will be in the low The low will move off the New
E~ coast by Tuesday morning
Temperatures were quite mild · tomid30s..
while the high builds slowly east·
There
is
a
chance
of
rain
or
with most readings in the 40s early
Monday. Winds were mostly from snow Tuesday morning in the east· ward.
the south at speeds of less than 10 · ern Ohio wtth partly to mostly
mph but will become weslerly dur· sunny skies elsewhere in the State. Around the nation

~

hour.

edict by.Khouei _who is based in
southern Iraq - ·saying a committee of eight clerics was formed to
cope " with the difficult circumstances experienced by the Iraqi
people.' : .
Kho!Jel's Sl!ltement !eferred. to
the anu-Saddam rebelhoil, whtch
erupted after Iraq's defeat last
month by the U.S.·led coalition that
liberated Kuwait, as a "popular
uprising."
•'For the sake of preserving
public. interest, we have formed. a
conuruuee to run our affaus," SBld
the elderly cleric, believed to be in

BEIRUT .Lebanon (UP!) _ A
top Iraqi Shnte Muslim cleric has
formed a committee of eight clergymen to run the aff~ of the Shi·
ite community in Iraq, according to
·
a document published in Beuut
Monday.
· One analyst said the move br
Seyyed Abu! Kassem AI Khouet,
considered the highest religipus
authority by millions of Shiites,
could be viewed as setting up a
rival government and would at least
fuel a~ uprising against Sacldam
Hossem's ~ovetnmant
The daily Lebanese newspaper
Ad-Diyar published the text of an
•

•

By United Press lntel'lllltlonal
The parade, .which also celeAmericans celebrated St. · brates the evacuation of British
troops from Boston, came 254
Patrick's Day with the traditional
years after the nation's first St.
wearing of the green, while also
setting aside a place for red, white
Patrick's Day Parade took place in
and blue as a aibute 10 the AineriBasiOn in 1737.
can·II'OOps who served in the PerBut this year's parade had a spesian Gulf War.
.
cia! theme as Boston· Mayor RayMany parades, including the
mood Flynn declared Friday that
nation's largest in New York, were
the event would be dedicated to
beld Saturday, a day before St.
"the returning heroes of the PerPatrick's Day, ou1 of deference to
sian Gulf War.''
the Roman Catholic Church
The 18th Army Band of Fort
because Sunday is the day for
Devens, based in Ayer, Mass., led
Miss.
. the parade, along with Marine
But cities including BostOn and Corps Lance Cpl. John Linehan of
MARABLE HAFFELT .
Cleveland waited until the tradiSouth Boston and Navy E-3 Robert
tional Mlwch 17th - although this Welby of Boston's Hyde Park
Walter Laudermilt, Sr., and Leatha year's celebration in those cities
neighborhood,
(Smith) Laudermilt.
had its untraditional touches. .
Iii Bos10n, home of the nation' s
She was a member of the V.F.W.
Stewan-Johnson
Post
9926 oldest St. Patrick's parade, about
Auxiliary of Mason.
· 500,000 people watches as politi·
. Survivors include her husband, cians, high school bands 8nd cplor- . American Lqioo to meet
The Racine American Legion
John of Mason; eight daughters, ful floats made their way along a Post 602 will meet Thursday at
Katl)ryn Reed of Coming, Ohio, 3.2-mile route through South
'
f'
•
Violet R. Lee of Pomeroy, Ohio, Boston, the city's most Irish neigh- 7:30 p.rri.
Better
Health
Club
to11leet
Bertha H. Knapp, Velma L. Taylor, borhood, police said.
The Roek Springs Better Health
Una Mae McDaniel, all of MidPoliticians, who previously
Club
will meet Tllursday at .1 p.m.
dleport, Ohio, Mary Lee Brown of received free publicity by marching
Lincolnton, N.C •• Emma Jo Stllllley in ihe $40,000 event, this year had at the home of ~len BlacksiOn.
Homemakers to meet
and . Wilda E. Hudson, both .of 10 Irick in $200 each 10 particiJlllle'l'he Syracuse Homemalcers will
Mason; eight sons, John L., Roger Organizers said the contribution
D
d Gerald M p f Maso
. an .
. ., a o
n, would help defray the parade's
Harold E. and Charles T., both of cost
Lincolnton, Harry J. of Pomeroy,
Cecil w. of Point Pleasant, and .Roy
A. of Leran; three sisters, Maxine
Lee of
Betty Imboden of

Pick 3:097
Pick 4: 6122
Cards : 10·H,2C;
S·D;7·S

Low tonight in mid 30s.
Wednesday, sunny. High
in mid-60s ·

Page4 .

·~

his early 90s.
mg !' nval government !0 that of ,
.lsla~ic affairs expert Hazhir PreStden~ S~ H=·~ot to !
Tel!"'lurutn told Unile!l Press Inter· ~~w!~ ~~;:.s defl811ce~ :
nalional,
IIK!ve IS tantamount
Shoo .. the analyst 'd
:
to declanng a Jthad (holy war) othAder D~tes, 'd the . ~ edi' •
· Saddam •
·
·
- tyar S81
pnn._ ct •
8811;1)1S1 • 5 re~e.
was conveyed to ·· Sheikh •
• ~~· haS not mtcrvened. 10 Motiammed H
· Fadlallah th :
polm~s smce at least the. Irantan
.. uallelider~'t:banon· • .e :;
Islamic revoluuon of Iran m 197?, sp~t
00
llah il. S. pro- .
and his decision to. interven~ .•s Iranian Shute Hezbo 1 11 ,'llll· . !
immediately seen by every Shnte d A s~'::~fir':!I:~h~ :ub~i~:!~ •
not to have been taken ·bghtly, ''
ence "It'
. , he 'd .
;
581 18
Teilnowian, an analyst for the Lon· reF ne ~~·
a •
don .T~es. . .
. .· . te ~peru noted even during the :
• His setung of the cornmtttee 10
x
·:
run the affairs of the Islamic Umma rule of l~te Ayatollah Ruholla~ •.
(community) amounts 10 establish· · Khometru, the. founder ~f ~ anu- "
·
Western Islanuc Revoluuon 111 Iran, ·!
Khouei was considered by many ; ..
Shiites as superior to the Iranian •
revolutionary leader.
:
KboueJ.'s
traditional
seat
is
in
;
Some spectactors adde&lt;t.to the
the
town of Najaf, about 100 miles •,
color with red, white and blue
American flags, and a relative of south of Baghdad, in a region ·:
caught up in the uprising against (,
Linehan's rushed to the front of the
Saddam' s rule in the aftermath of ·
processiOn lll!d handed hiln a sniall
the Persian Gulf War.
:
version of Old Glory. .
·
The
elderly
cleric
is
the
highest
;
Flynn ·said the parade, which
spiritual authority for Iraqi Shiites. .,
also included veterans of the Vietwho
make up more than half of ~
nam War, produced the "most
enthusiastic crowd respcinse" since Iraq's population. He is also seen :
President John F. · Kennedy as the top reli11ious authority by ..
many non-lraqt Shiites, including •
marched in the parade.
"Not only was this 1 tribute to some ;n Lebanon.
Linehan and Welby and the rest of
the troops who served in the Persian Gulf, but it was alsa a long· Alit Ele Power ................... 00.28 1/4
overdue thank you to those who Ashland Oil ......... 0000000000..... 32 3,18 •
served our country in .Vietnam,'' AT&amp;.T ....................................33 718 . ,
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meet Wedl)esday at10 a.m. For the
Key
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..
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project, bunnies will be made as
Lands
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well as Styrofoam eggs.
Inc
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Lilnited
Bake salt .
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Church will hold a balce sale and
Robbins&amp;Myers
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25
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bazaar on Friday beginning at 10
a.m. at the Sear's Store in Middle· Shoney's Inc ......................... 15 1/4 1;
port Proceeds will be used for the Star Bil.nk ................ oooooo ...... oo21 3/4
Wendy Int'l. ... oo ....... oo .... oo ... oo .. oo ... 9
repair of the church doors.
WorthingiOD Ind... oo .. oo ........ oo ......22 ;

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Ohio Lottery

Oklahoma
•
cagers win
NAIA title

At 6 a.m. EST, it was 41 .:
degrees in Deii'Oit, 55 in Los Ange- ~
les, 47 in San ·Francisco, 38 in
Boston! 43 in WashiogiOn, D.C., ~
and 38 m ChicagQ.
·
~

Shiite religious leader forms commitee.for I~aq

•
Vol. 41, No. 231
Copyrlghted1911

2 Sectlona, 12 Pagea 25 centa
A Multimedia Inc. NawapapB

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, M*rch 19, 1991

•

Council, church groups debate liquor Issue

By BRIAN J, REED
Trinity Congregational Church and
Sentinel News Staff
, Pomeroy United MCJhodist Church,
At least 2S peopl! appeared who object to the proposed estab- .
before Pomeroy Village Council lishment's location on East Main
when it met last night in regular Street According to Trinity Church
.ses.sion to protest the possible Pastor Roland 'Wildman. the
transfer of the liquor license most protesters' spokesperson, the back
recently held by the White HouSe door of the Stark Building, where
Tavern to a new busiJtess owner.
the business will be localed, is 12
Robert and Carolyn Smith stated feet from the Trinity Church's Sunlast night before council that they day School area.
have plans to open a restaurant and
Smith attempted last night to
bar on East Main Street, and ulti- assore those objecting to the busimately 10 build a new restaurant. ·
-ness that the churches had liule to
· The grpup in protest was made worry about "I'm looking 10 open
' up in large part by members of the . a decent pl~e in town where many

of the people 'n your congregation
·
can go for a drinlc."
A. hearinl! on the pro~osed
liquor permit transfer has been
Scheduled by the State Department
of Liquor Control for April 9 at J 1
a.m .• to be held in Pomeroy Village
Council chambers, and according
to Mayor Richard Seyler, the village has no authority to decide the
matter.
As a matter of record at the
Department of Liquor Control, the
Village of Pomeroy does have an
objection to the license transfer •
because they are the governmental

body which· sent in a form asking
for a hearing.
Council last night moved to let
the objections of the two churches
stand and continue the hearing on
April 9, although it was the general
consensus of council .that they had
no authority to cancel such a hear·
ing. Thomas Werry, Larry
Wehrung, Bill Young and Mayor
Seyler .voled in favor of the motion
to dismiss the village's objection,
and Bruce Reed, Betty Baronick,
and Bryan Shank voted against,
feeling that the village's objection
to the license should stand.

In other action last night, coun- did object. SUite Jaw mandates a
cil discussed two proposed amend, minimum age of 18 for acti ye
ments to a fire department ordi- ·membership, however. so the inclunance. The ordinance will establish sion of such a clause would not
an updated list of by-laws for the effect the actual operation of the
department.
department. ·
·
. A minilnum age of 18 for volunZirkle also slated that he anticiteer firemen and a minimum ser- pated that very few, if any. fuemcn
vice time of 15 years for inactive would become inacti ve after ·15
status were the two issues dis- years, ,although the amendment
cussed last night, with Fire Chief · would allow inactive status after 15
Danny Zirkle stating that he did not years.
.
object to either amendment.
.
The flfSt reading on a resolution
Department Secretary John to transfer funds was conducted
Blaettner, however, was on hand last night. The $25,000 transfer
for the discussion, and staled that would be from the general fund to
oeveral members of the department the Sb'eet fund.

Stocks . ·

__ Meigs anoulicements __

v.

..

rtnmsfrr, whk!h Wlluld aUow a bar to open up sclme 12'feet from the

Trinity Churclt. A hearing w.ill be held on the transfer tin April9 . .
'

Weather

.

~~~~~a~E~m~o~g~ene~w~u~- i~~So~u~th;c~en~lr~ai~~o~h~to~~Lt~
three brothers,
Jr,
of
James Lauder-

Mostly cloudy Monday night,
a chance of rain possibly
·
with soow, and a

Eugene Laudermilt of Pomeroy; 45
dch'ldr
d 36 great

Judgment sought

S0 Viet. ••

Hospital news

J

•

A steady rail! ~led workers !
reiiiJ'IIing to the job Monday along t
the East Coast.
• •
The wet weather was expected l
all day, from Washing10n, D.C., ~
thrpugb New ERRiand, and increas- :
ing winds were likely to like a 1011 :
on umbrellas by the aftmloon rush •

•

cipitation is 40 percent. Partly
cloudy Tuesday, with highs in tile
~:dchhdr~~. Ill)
- mid 50s.
·
Ohio extendfd forecast
She was preceded in death by a
Wfdnesday through Friday
son: Clarence Eugene, and
Fair Wednesday and a chance of
daughter, Debra A. Young.
rain Thursday and Friday. Hi.hs
The funeral will be Tuesday, 11 will in the 50s WedneSday, rangmg
a.m., at the Foglesong Funeral .from 55 10 65 Thursday, and from
Home in Mason, with the Rev. 60 10 70 Friday. Overnight lows ·
George Hoschar officiating. Burial will be in the 30s Wednesday and
Velma Young
will be in the Rock Springs Thursday mornings, and in the 40s
Velma V. Young, 73, of Mason, Cemetery, Pomeroy.
early Friday.
died Saturday, March ·16, 1991, in
Friends may call today, 2 to 4
1'leaslitt Valley Hospital.
-and 7 to 9 p.m. at the funeral home.
Born Aug. 21, 1917. in Pomeroy, A service will be conducted by the
Ohio, she was a daughter of the late auxiliary at 7 p.m.
A judgment action has been
filed
in Meigs County · Common
Continued from pagr 1
Pleas Court by Alva and Grace
Holsinger of Reedsville against
·
Turnout and support for the ref- country doesrl:t need this."
About 200 million people were Krystal Klear Sales and Service of
erendum appeared much stronger
Arlington, Ill. in the amount of
in the mon: conservative far-flung eligible 10 YOIC Sunday in the coun$1,200.
The plaintiffs allege a "bait
try
that
includes
more
than
I
00
ethateas of the Soviet Union. The cenand
switch"
operation in the sale of
tnll ·election commission said more nic groups and covers 8.65 million
a
swimming
pool.
than 90 percent of those eligible square miles divided into 15
yoted in some of the Cenlllll Asian republics - some incorporate.d
One divorce granted,
into the Soviet Union by force.
(IIpublics.
Of the lS Soviet .republics. six
Tass said there was 80 pertent
in court
turnou,t in the Chita region in intent on independence boycotled another sought &lt;
southern Siberia and 85 percent of the balloting and many opposition
A divorce ·action has been filed
those who vOted said "yes" to pie· leaders in the rest of the country
serving the union. First results from urged a "no" vote 10 voice dissat· in Meigs County Common Pleas
other scattered regions or eastern islaction with Gorbachev's centnll C~ by Robin Ann Pridemore of
Middlepon against Joey Reginold
Russia showed between 60 Md 70 governmenL
Republics
holding
the
referenPridemore, also of Middlepon. .
percent approval.
A divorce has been granled in
ln the coal mining Tyumen dum added issues to the ballot, and
region of western Siberia, where in the Russian Federation a ques- · the court to Marjorie J. Banks,
Gorbache\1 ' s policies have angered tion about et'eating .the offic'e of against Cecil Banlcs..A dissolution ·
miners and sparked slrilces, only 53 president of the republic - lilcely has been granted to Anna Marie
percent of the voters supponed the 10 give Yeltsin a new power base Bearhs and Scott Alan Bearbs.
r
national referendum question, Tass -turned the vote partly into a contest between Gorbachev and his ·
said.
chief
critic.
A separate question on the ballot
in the Russian republic to create a No one wins jackpot
VETERANS MEMOIRAL
popularly elected post of republi·
Satutday admissions - Zelia
CLEVELAND (UP!) - Ohio
can president, expected to give
Taylor,
Middleport.
officials
said
Sunday
there
Lottery
Yeltsin a new power base for his
Saturday
dlscbarges · Pamela
chlllenges to Gorbachev, appeared were no jackpot winners in Satur- McKinn(ly, Max
Folmer, Freddie
10 be ~inning easily, Tass and the day night's drawing of the Super
Silnmons,
Nellie
Rose
and Herben
independent lnterfu news agency Lotto game.
Shon
That means Wednesday's jacksaid in repons on preliminary
Sunday admissions • Janet
pot
will be at least $8 million.
results.
Henry,
Delaware ·
There were, however, 9S tickets
Yeltsin refused to say how ~
Sunday dlsdtarges - None ..
voiCd Sunday but contended the sold marching five of the six numbers
for
$I
,056
each,
and
4,059
Commuoisls were usins the national referendum to hold power and tickets matched four numbers.for Clarification
$73each.
avoid decau~alization.
JeffQY D. Roush, Chester Road,
The numbers were 10, 12, 16,
"The president (Gorbachev)
arrested ·last Thursday evening on
26,
31
and'39.
wanu to ~rve the system,"
The Kicker combination was charges of aggravllltJd burglary and
YeltliD llid. "He wants 10 dcf~nd
theft from Perry County, is not
it. 10 p t1 =, ve IIIia huge ~t­ 840813. No ticket matched the Donald
Jeffrey Roush, 1011 of Don
ic syllem baed on command combination, but five tickets and Diane Roush, Skinner Road,
power of the apParatus and the matched the first five numbers for Pomeroy.
(CclpuDunist) Party ltl'IICtures. The ss.ooo each.

..

:

I
•

Every day, alcohol shatters
thousands~of families who
have no means of coping .
with the
problems of the
alcoholic, ·
The fact is,
·families of
alcoholics
need help, too.
If alcohol is running
your family, stop and get
help--before you run out
of options,

r--G
_ avin power plant featured in
March issue of AEP magazine
BY MELINDA POWERS
OVPNews Staff
The problems and choices cur·rentl.y facing American Electric
Power at their James M. Gavin
plant in Cheshire was the March
cover story in AEP' s in-house
magazine, The Coal Courier.
Two separate stories covering
the new Clean Air Act and Gavin's
plight to comply with the Act were
tncluded in the 24-page monthly
publication.
In one article, entitled·"AEP
Discusses Clean Air Compliance,"
AEP's tough position between the
Act and obligations to keep costs
low was discussed.
AEP Executive Vice President
Gerald P. Maloney said in the anicle that AEP companies are caught
between two powerful forces: the
1990 Clean Air Act and the company's role as regulated public utili-

tics obliged to provide reliable
electric service at the lowest practi cable cost.
.
"Both forces involve sanctions,
including civil and criminal. penalties under the Clean Air Act and
vigorous regulatory oversight of
key utility company decisions and
th e ultimate cost to be borne by
customers," Maloney said in the
article.
. According to the·article, AEP is
required to consider 'several.
options, including installation of
emission-control equipment called
"scrubbers" or, switching to lowsulfur coal to fuel Gavin.
Gavin represents aboul 25 percent of the sulfur dioxide emissions
released by the AEP system and
about 44 percent of emissions from
Ohio Power Company's planiS. the
article said.

By JOHN T. KADY
. COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) Gov. Geor$e Voinovich, who says
he is convmced state government
can " do m:&gt;re with less." Monday
proposed a balanced budget of
$26.8 billion for the next biennium
with no new taxes.
· The budget proposal is $92 million less than the present spending
document enacted almost two years
ago, which capped a state spending
increase of 13S percent between
)980 and 1990, Voinov.ich said.
Included in the proposed budget
slashes was the pilot program for
~ural Ohio for the recently established Options for Elders Program.
Serving more than 700 home-hound
elderly in Southeastern Ohio.

·The
Daily
Sentinel·

The pilot program is currently
funded in nine Southeastern Ohio
counties and in Franklin County,
which serves as the urban pilot site.
The Soutl\eastem Ohio Counties
affected include Meig·s, Athens,
Hocking, Meigs, Monroe, Morgan,
Muskingum, Noble, Perry and
Washington .
According to a spokesman from
the Buckeye HiUs-Hocking Valley
Regional Development District,
Marietta, not only has the options
for elders program been severely
cut, but it is targeted for elimination.
"This budget reflects my commitment to better management,
good schools and more jobs,'' said
the governor. " It also contains first

Buckeye Cards are available
: Golden Buckeye Cards are
available to those persons, 60 years
bf age or older, or 18-59 yeal's of
age and totally disabled.
Persons qualifying can sign up
at Pleaser's Rcs1aurant, 698 West
~a in St. , Pomeror, between the

hours of 1:30 to 3:30p.m. on Monday.
Bring proof of birth date and
documentation showing total disability if between the ages of 18
and 59.

steps toward reforming our everexpanding welfare system.
· . " Our budget contains Medicaid
cost containment initiatives for
hospital and long-tenn care oo• and
new Medicaid coverage for 1hc
children of the working poor.
"I am convinced that state government can work harder and
smarier and do more with less," he
said. " We can do this while
improving the delivery of state services and the quality of life for all
Ohioans."
Voinovich proposed a series of
tax and revenue changes to
increase the state' s cash flow ,
including:
- Privatizing state liquor store
operations which is expected to
save the state $47.8 million.
- Transfer of S I SO million
from the SUite's "rainy day fund"
with provisions for repayment of
SO percent in fiscal 1993 and a continuation of payments to malce up
the di fferencc.

)

1

•

consumer prices
•

tal::t"~der

the new Clean Air Act, ,
however, Gavin must cut emissions ·

ri·se 1•0 Febr·uary

10 175.000 tons annually under
Phase
I, and to 75,000 tons per
year under Phase 2, the article said.
Maloney told the press at the
briefing· that the installation of
WASHINGtoN (UPQ - Conscrubbers would cost nearly $800
sumer
prices jumped 0.2 percent in
million - $200 million more than
February
followmg a 0.4 percent
the original costiO build the Gavin
rise in January on higher prices for
plant in 1974 an4 1975.
clothing,
alcoholic beverages, and
The capital inveslnlent required
postal
rates,
the Labor Department
for fuel switching, on the other
said
Tuesday.
hand, would be approximately
Private economists expected a
$200 million if low-sulfur western
slightly
lower increase in the govcoal were selected and virtually
ernment's
closely watched con nothing if low-sulfur eastern coal
sumer
price
index.
were an even lower-cost alternaDuring
the
first. two months of
tive, the story said.
1991
,
the
index
has advanced by a
Western coal would require conseasonally
adjusted
rate of 4.1 perstruction of additional coal- and
cent.
February's
annualized
numash-handling facilities and modifiwould
produce
a
rate
of
2.7
qers
·cations to Gavin's boilers.
percent.
According to Maloney, Gavin
Excluding food and energy
would comply with the Clean Air
costs,
prices soared 0.7 percent in
Act under either choice. Scrubbers
February,
about the same as in Janwould reduce Gavin's emissions to
uary.
The
government said about
about 25,000 tons per year, while
40
percent
of the jump in the core
fuel switching based on western
rate
was
due
to price rises for alcocoal would decrease emissions to
hol,
hotel
bills,
clothing and postal
about 70,000 tons annually.
rate
hikes.
A dec is ion has to be made in
Most of the leap in alcohol
1991, Maloney told the press,
prices
- up 3.1 percent in Februregardless of which alternative is
ary
reflected a new Federal
selected. A decision by mid-1991
excise
tax
while most food prices
would be necessary tn order to
have scrubbers construcled by mid- inched down, the government said.
199.6 , a few months prior to the . By far the largest increase in
February increases came in the area
Jan. 1, 1997 deadline.

.
'I

Most Ohio colleges hold
down tuition increases

Phase I Deadline," Maloney 's Jan.
reponed by Ohio' s private colleges ·
c 1 b
By United Press International
28 appearance at a 0 urn us news
Mandi private colleges in Ohio for the next academic year is in the
briefing was reviewed.
·
,
Although AEP's 21 generating are hoi ing down tuition mcreascs 6 percent to 7 percent range - the
plants will be affected by Phase 1 because they are concerned about . smallest in recent years.
But some college officials are
of the Clean Air Act, the Gavin becoming unaffordable during ceowarning
that the trade-offs for
plant will need special attention, nomically difficult times.
·
the article said.
"We, like many other private smaller tuition increases may be
"Since Gavin Plant is the largest schools, arc getting concerned that reduced student financial aid, fewer
·
h AEP we are pricing ourselves out of the academic programs , defection of
(sulfur dioxide) cmmcr on 1 c
market, but it is a balancing act," the better faculty members frustratsystem, it is clear that a decision said Stephen Storck. vice president ed over small pay raises and
must be reached for compliance of for busmess affairs at Otterbein deferred maintenan ce. ·or campus
Gavin's two 1,300 megawatt units College in Westerville.
buildings.
in Phase I, re~ardless of how the
Tuition for the next school year
"We would like to spend more
o1hcr affect umts will comply with . at Otterbein will be $10,800. up 7 on the physical plant, and we could
the new standards, " the article percent from the cu,rrcnt school always hire more faculty and pay
said.
year. 1lte college increased tuJtJOn them more." Storck said.
Gavin currently emits about by 9 percent and 12 percent the
.Ohio Wes leyan University in
400,000 ton s of sulfur dioxid e prevtous two years.
Delaware is one private school in
annually and would be expected to
The typical tuition mcrease
Continued on page 8
emit roughly 500,000 tons per year
·
by the mid-1990s if no action were

The story also addressed the
ramifications of fuel -s witching ,
pointing out the poss ible Joss of
1,258 jobs if it were necessary to
close Southern Ohio Coal Company' s Mei gs Division . in Meig s
County . The Meigs min es and
other mines around Ohio produce
about 6 mlllion tons of high-sulfur
coal annually for use at Gavin.
Maloney said in the feature that
the decisions facing him and his
company were not easy ones.
" There arc energy costs and
social costs to either option,
whether we bum low-sulfur coal or
install scrubbers and continue burning Ohio coal," he said in the anicle. "There are many co,.siderations and concerns. Many regulations explaining major pans of the
law are still to be written.''
In a second piece, called "Gavin
Plant is Key Element in Meeting

Voinovich's budget cuts include
Option for Elders program

HIS SIDE • Robert Smith was on band at Monday night's meet'
ing or Pomeroy Village Council to explain bis intentions if he is
. grantfd a liquor license transfer. Smith hopes to open "Smitty's
Bar" in an East Second Street storel'ront.

- ____

..._ .....

-

--·

of clothing and what the government describes as "upkeep" - the
cost of maintaining one's clothing.
That index jumped 1,6 percent
in February, up from. the I percent
rise in January, but was not particularly surprising based on an earlier
than usual introduction of higherpriced women's and girls' apparel.
Housing prices dropped 0.5 percent in February after advancing
0.8 percent in January, a downturn
eneclcd mostly by a sharp down urn in the costs of household fuels
and other uti lilies.
Other household cos ts, meanwhile, rose 1.3 perce nt for the
biggest jump since January 1976,
moStly due to higher postal rates,
the government said.
Fuel prices continued to drop,
with decreases of S.3 percent m
fuel oil and 1.4 percent in natural
l!as more than offsetting a slight
mcrease in electricity charges.
The government also said lower
fuel prices led to lower transporta·
tion costs In general, with gasoline
prices falling 7.4 percent in February and a total of 14.1 percent since
a November peale.

r

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