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+ 'THE JOURNAE-REGISTE Méedina, New York, Monday; May LOCEBORT -- Tryouts for, bet \Move Over, Mama,\ a new. daug) comedy by. Karen White willbe: held atthe, Kenan < Center? House, 433 Locust St. at 7 p.m. :- r' at\ commence reads, in part; \\ on Tuesday, May 3: and' Wednesdsy, May 4. . - ~'; Cast requirements are- for a ° p girl in her-late teens, a very.. good-looking:man in his early twenties, a very short older man, four girls and two boys in © their late teens. Also needed are two men for walk-on parts and extras. 'Local performers with some stage experience are preferred. & - Karen White's, first. play, \Just Call Her Jazz,\ was played to a packed House at the Taylor Theatre in January. The response prompted Mrs. White to expand the character of \Mama.\ . \Move Over, Mama\ concerns the never- ending personality clash P Conrad F. Cropsey If your rieighbor's tree limb hangs over your propérty - line, you are legal} ed. to remove it, as long do not destroy the tree. * * * ..j It is to drink water; or milk on a train in North Carolina; s ~ «~~ The Sixth Amendment to the. se- cures the right to a speedy trial in federal courts, and' the Fourteenth Amend- -[ mentinsures that the states follow the same obligation. However, you do NOT have © the right to demand a trial immediately upon accusa- tion or arrest; the prosecu- tion must be given a [ reasonable time to prepare. for trial. & -. {O # % TRESPASS is an unlawful st conimitted with actual or Implied violence: Injury to another person or his property. % fol \'The law's made to take care o' -George Eliot, ''The Mill. 0:1 the Floss\ # Presented as a public service by Cropsey and CropsSy,Mnrlu%mk Bldg, Albion, 589-9400. uga I% and feelings about himself and port,: will direct, His- past \productions. have included \Jesus Christ Superstar,; \Grease and \Oklahoma;\ * & one-day workshop in coil basketry is scheduled for Saturday, May 7 'at the Kenan © House. Coil baskets consist of loops of fiber or rush wound with colored yarn to create decorative patterns. They may be functional or purely or- namental, and can be designed in a wide range of sizes and styles. - The workshop runs from 9 am. to 3 p.m. Participants .. should bring a bag lunch. The instructor -is Janice Klinzing of Gagport. | To register for the workshop,. interested persons should call |_ the center, 433-2617 or 625-8006, any w‘eekéa)\. 9 a.m. - 5 p.m. An unusual Friday. evening opening: reception 'in Kenan: Gallery on May 6'from 7 to:9 p.im. for \Visual. Diaries: .- Portraits Through: Time\Ard Change' Will be highlighted by nationally published Buffalo poet. and fiction 'writer Joan Mutiny reading,. from her wore | Cae f OKs is ue 0. The exhibition is a visual Journey into the lives of three artists: ;Joan Johnson of . Niagara, Falls, Robert Rim- mer : of; and Arla :' Wible of Lewiston. Each 'has documented through a series of pictorial ifmages 'his per- \ Mother’s‘fJay ROSE SALE $ 1 0 oeach May 6th 2:30p.m.-8:30p.m. May 7th Ia. BELLS & SUPER DUPER Sponsored by GIRL SCOUT TROOP 2006 ON ALL IN-STOCK CARPET \_ vero 90% orr .. Assorted Colors and Styles IHOMPSON'S \. 206 Hamilton St., Albion Phoae §8#7-4474 HEALTH NEWS Quite frankly, we Doctors often make the mistake of using names or labels of etic dit “In, fully explaining them. Just because a person may not know the name of his problem, that doesn't mean he isn't suffering pain and a: r For instance, migraine, by any name, is the most cruel type of headache. Let me describe a typical migraine attack. It can start with a heavy feeling over the eyes. The individual general- iy becomes depressed with The Pain of Migraine Is Very, Very Real BY DR. JOHN H. GANTNER, D.C. Doctor of Chiropractic # remedies offer only tempor- aat particularly appropriate. Mrs. \ Murray >- will. be reading selections \which take their source from the mind's store of visual memory and from the 'collaboration that takes place there between reallfy and imaginative processes that enhance, focus, rationalife;. explain or otherwise alter what\ pp;, is remembered, known or experienced.\ Joan Murray's appearance at Kenan Center is made possible. by the Niagara Council of the Arts through a grant from the New York State Council on the Arts Literature \Visual Diaries\ is curated by . Dorothy Westhafer and continues' on exhibition. in Kenan.Gallery, 433 Locust St., through May. : 2 mission fee to el : May. 6 opening reception or to the exhibition. ~: hous ¢ winnen Exactly one week after - premiering his - newest ; work with Israel's Batsheva Ballet, dancer-choreographer -' Ohad Naharin will appear Sunday, May 15 at 2:30 p.m. in public performance at Lockport Senior -. High School Auditorium, 250 Lincoln Ave. This dance performance is one part of Qhad Naharin's Affiliate Artists Residency in hy - Lockport from May 10 through May 16, made possible by a grant from the New York State Council on the Arts and the sponsorship of Kenan Center. Admission to the public per- formance is by donation. Since b g his professional career in an entertainment of the Israeli Army in.the mid 60's, Ohad Naharin has performed throughout the United States, Israel, Europe, the Soviet Union and Japan. he has danced with Batsheva in Israel, with Martha Graham Dance Company, with the Bejart Ballet and started showing his own work in 1980 in concert with his wife, Mari Kajiwara. He was a featured artist in the 1982 Riverside Dance Feflal. Science ' Fair Set MIDDLEPORT - The Annual _ Royalton-Hartland Science Fair will be held in the ‘tlflgh Schoomdéjkbmplxz hgdy 10. udging e place from 3- 5 p.m. The exhibits will be available for public viewing from: -9 p.m. itions Joan Murray's , ding from her work is ° MEDINA MUSTANG .\ BAND BOOSTER MEETING Monday, May 2nd, 7:30 P.M. Medina Sr. High School Cafeteria ANNUAL ELECTION OF oFrFicErs Public Is Invited ___ mri iii-11C for th receive the honorary degree becatise :of her, extraordinary service. and her, role in providing equal opportunity:at is Em; 57, was the first black woman to win a Seat in ' Congress and to run for the presidency.: She is the only - © woman and the only: black to sit 'on the powerful House - Rules Committee: and ° is 83.5ng leading '; member of the Wednesc .Congressfonal Black Caucus, Her citation, to be presented - Lyndonville - Boys State . Candidate . Daniel Bellavia LYNDONVILLE - - Alphonso R. Stornelli, high school principal at L. A. Webber High School, Lyn- donville, has announced that Daniel Bellavia, son of Dr. and Mrs. Willliam Bellavia, Oak Orchard River Road, Waterport, has been chosen to represent L. A. Webber High School as candidate for American Legion Boys' State of New York, Inc. Daniel meets the qualifications of leadership, character, neatness, scholarship, service, and citizenship for this distinction. He has been amember of Project Adept, involved as vice president of his class, treasurer of Youth Group, treasurer of A.F.S. and band president. He also involved in varsity junior varsity soccer and basketball, and Math Science Computer Club. \ el, who ranks sixth in his funtfor class, has also been are expectedteltyo it?” £1”; active in his church softball work for the competition. and basketball program. fg o n g 8 : A thooght for the day: Poet Fdé Your Clanified: Phone 798-1409 Ralph Waldo Emerson said, 1C ''Nothing can bring you peace R but yourself.\ ve: years 'in - Congre ated th of- the past has. inspired others to - do thfifimfi\ Fo 2. - Chisholm' announced, last. year that she would not seek re-election in the U.S; House'of,. Representative ince February, , she | ma ° Purington profi to 6 \Mt Holyoke - College \in 'South © stulies of hairless and hairy .. Hadley, 'Mass. The honorary <~bees. The highly competitive professorship >is among the award was Granted to. the. n geulty most distinguishe the c he To SUNY College at: Brockport. The concert-is-part of a'threeée: day jazz residency program at the college. +, i_ ~ Ellis is best known for playing the \blues but his repertory. algo ballads, bossa novas. dnd classical pieces. New compositions by area composers will be featured in the- Fourteenth Annual Com- posers Forum Concert Friday at 8 p.m. in room 120 'of the Tower Fine Arts Center at the SUNY College at Brockport. - All types of music will be featured in the free concert - and the program is open to the public. -__. Two string quartets‘and a ~' piano trio will be featured when the Tremont Quartet appears in a free concert Monday, May 9, at 8 p.m. in room 120 of flie Tower Fine Arts Center. The group will perform \String Quartet No. 3 in D. Major\ by George Whitefield Chadwick, \String Quartet No. 9 in G Minor\ by Franz Peter Schubert, and \Piano Tric in D Minor, Opus 49\ by Feliz Mendelsson-Bartholdy. \ g . dncludes .> 3. years, a faculty member atthe ' SUNY,, College at -Brockport has.; Won ..A. prestigious _ Alexander von Humboldt research fellowship. Edward B. Southwick, \associate professor Toff: biologica iyed the rofesgor: \of hi sciences, -has + fellowship\ for stipport of his - Brockport. biclogist after a . screening by 95 eminent German scholars. | As a Humboldt fellow, South- - wick will participate in a number 'of Special op- 'portunities made available by the Humboldt Foundation and the German government. These will include study tours, gatherings -~:with other fellowship winners, and even a visit with Germany's president at his home in Bionn‘. W. Ronald Jones, head coach for varsity football, track and basketball at Charlotte High School, will direct the Golden Eagle-Basketball Camp at the college June 26 through July 2. The camp, geated to students in grades 7-12, will give young athletes an op- portunity to improve- their fundamental skills and team offense and defens. The basketball players will receive extensive instruction and practice drills. Individual help will also be available. Instruction and coaching at the Brockport summer camp will be provided by Jones with assistant coaches from Division I teams and high schools across the: state. Coaches have been selected on the basis of teaching ability, enthusiasm and area of ex- peffise. \To' register, contact the Brockport, adult and con- tinuing educatiofoffice.at 305- 2155. by e 15. ° any c' 3 c tho | ~ASKCDR. B wi. ~ oc tk 0 M re Ao sale on too & only C - E4 I eu % C \ A poe ey peros f k sous P i> e ergeiges > Karen Blakgr Ph.D. Accepting help By Karen Blaker, Ph.D. DEAR DR. BLAKER -I have not been able to see or walk very well since I con- tracted a strange debilitat- ing disease when I was 10 y old. I am now 26. 1 have learned to do many things on my own by reject- ing people's offers of help. They have all learned to leave ma-alone fand let me struggle even if it is some thing so simple as washing out my socks at night. Now I wonder whether this is the best way to live. There are certain things I want to be free to do by myself but I think I could use some help in other kinds of activities. Would accepting some help be admitting failure? DEAR READER -- Just thé opposite. Being able to accept help in some tions would indicate that you are now cornfortable enough with your ammo}: to aper- ate independently in some areas while accepting help in others. You are now, in other words, secure enough to allow some of your needs to be met. We all need to be taken care of at least a little bit from time to time. Only peo- ple who are afraid that they really need constant atten- They maintain a facade of independence, which 1 call pseudo-independence. right track. * DEAR DR. BLAKER -I am preparipg myself for my first visit to the gynecolo- gist. I am 20 years old. I have a lot of questions that I want to ask, particiilarly about birth control. I have checked out all the fielevant books from the brary and have begun to study but I am afraid I will go talk to him and sound like +- a fool. Is there anything you would recommend for me to read?¢6 |_ DEAR READER - First ' of all, could you talk to your mother or some other rela- tive about sex in general and birth control in particular? A loving, trusting relation- ship could make you feel more at ease in a conversation about these emotion-laden subjects. Regardless of your answer to the a gynecologist. Ask the ques- tions that are on your mind and decide whether or not you like the doctor by the way he or she treats your If es. be or she takes the time to talk and treats you with 'gecond time Th' five- «- cpatient's mprale-~when coping with- illness,: 208 uo x slight pangs of guilt. O , nou st A mother may give her 14-year-old-daughter'p -. to attend a rock concert and then. say; \But don't t ~. fatherme =~ 2. - f ooo i> The teen-age son in the movie, \Ordinary People;\ quits © the. high. school swim team. Knowing-fiisp woul <object, he doesn't tell them and continues to: from school at 6:30 p.m., the time that he arrive ome from swim practice. . capea 5 ful In either case no lie has been told but the .motive such secrecy is the same is in lying: We don't want to be'known. =.. i - oe gee Is it ever right to tell a lie or withhold the fruth? Even. absolutists in the matter of telling the truth will admit, th re are' some. rare; circumstances that:warrant a le -_ instance, when.innocent lives are at stake, - _- -... . .\ >* St. Augustine said that alt lying is a sin. But some lies, fhe said, while not commendable are forgivable -~ such as lies which are told to save another person from injury. But, he went on to add, /t is the good intention - not the déceit - that makes the sin pardonable. - 20 8T Most of our lies, however, we would have to admjt‘ are told out of self-interest, not to benefit somebody &ise. > Mrs. Bok, whose husband, Defek Bok, is president of Har- vard University, proposed this test in her book, \Lying.\ Before you tell a lie, would you be willing to. submit yoiir lie to a panel of people and abide by their decision on whether it is all right to lie under the cireumstances? If you. wouldn't be willing to do this, it is probably wrong to tell the lie. If lying and truth-telling were always a matter of black -__ and white, there would be no problem. But they aren't. -. When I was a parish minister, I once tried to gef a. job for a man who had a record of alcoholism. When one prospec- - tive. employer asked me whether this man I was recom- mending drank, I said no. |_ a 5. © j + It was trug that Jim hadn't had a drink in six months but I - withheld the information about his alcoholic background. I excused my lack of full candor on the grounds that if Jim could get a job, there was a fair cHance he would not go back to drinking. f * He got the job. Buta few months later he was on the bottle again. I suppose I was naive to think the story could end any other way but I figured it was worth taking the chance. Was Iwrogg? is C > © Or here is a competent woman applying for a good- g job with an advertising agency. On the applicationspsaix’gni; asked whether she has ever been. confined to a mental hospi- _. After her marriage broke p,20 years ago, she sient two A weeks, in such a place, If she admits that on the application, ~ p **\ gle is pretty certain she won't get the job - otherwise why .= * would they ask? If ghe lies and it goes unnoticed and she gets the Lab. sfie is certain she can fill the position successfully: If her He is uncovered, she will be no worse off than if she told the truth. «-» - Whatstiduldsh@do®Whatiwould youdo? i+ . .n '~ ' doctors mayke most}is dreaware +# \t. _ Should doctors @ltrays fell\ thete patients the trulhy-Many't -/ oe ”effigfiifiomfiffifimc pa 8 a*patient' frame of mind is optimistic and confident arid he is reason- ably free of fear, that can be a big step in his recovery. If this'is so and if a doétor is dedicated to his patient's recovery, isn't it wiser for him to do what he can toInspire confidence and hope even H it means holding back the “thole figmnlthe pafisnt's condition? __ i * A I am an honest man, yet I follow the precept mfidw often'ts better than honesty. Whenevgixany- body says to me, \I'm going to be honest with you, George;\ L gamer. Iknow I am goifig to be told something don't want Save me from such honest people! AUTO and HOME OW -_ INSURANCE | m+ At Least We Think So For Those Who Qualify | CALL US AND COMPARE - Ph. 798-2202 -= TYLEC INS. SERVICE 3 o sms, aul anare ap rammer dara 18 EER EEA LEL L ECEEEEE E* rna treat 2b Fd T Lowest rates In town .. & Tom Mallard of medina is New Service Manager at Dollinger Sales Inc., Batavia TOM MALLARS apporimerd ol tom Mallard as Service “an; get. Tom myzes al his friends in Orfeans County to gve him a 3 West HEATH Spis? 7 Bolinger Sales Inc., Batavia, is pleased to armounce the, Law. n Coz ty\ > Afihfiflflééis also giver copy. of thg statement amount of- monies which - required for the ensuing y library purposes may be « ed. 'by: any taxpayer i district, during the sey days immediately:precedi - said. annual meeting, Saturday, Sunday, or-ho at the library building . normal library hours. And notice is also give petifions.noiminating cand for the office of member Board of Trustees must b with the clerk of the distr later than 4 p.ni., May 16, The following vacancies be (filled on the © Boa Trustees: 4 year term h incumbent Roland How year term held by incu Lois Hilger. Roland,C. F President of the Bc - ___. Trustees Lee:-Whedon Memorial L e NOTICE CONCERNING ' ~ EXAMINATION OF ASSESSMENTINVENT AND VALUATION DA\ (Pursuant to section 501- 'Real Property Tax Lay Notice is hereby give: assessment inventory and ation data is availabl examination and review. data is the information will be used to establis fiessment of each parcel * appear on the ten assessment roll of Tow Ridgeway which will be fil or before May 1, 1983. information may be revi by appointment,- in the 4 sor's Office at 410 West Medina on Tuesday's be the hours of 9:00 A.M. 12:30 P.M., and on Thurs between the hours of 1:30 and 4:00 P.M.. An appoin * to review the assess information may be mac telephgging the assess 798-0735. .. ry 0 R Dated MW April,. # . Bdward M. € - Ass «limn - INVITATION TO BiDDE Notice is hereby given tha New York State 'Departme Labor will be installing computer terminals, contro display screens and printe over, 100 'local Unemploy Insurance Offices to Imple: the Benefit On-Line \Terr System (BOLTS), Each of t installations will require ele cal work. The scope of the will depend on the size of local office. Bid solicitation: be fot each specific local c and will be awarded separa Thisfs to advise all pros tive bidders that if you wis receive a solicitation - pl forward your name, address the counties which you will 1 tor )- New York State Depart of Labor Purchase and Contracts Section State Campus Building #12 Albany, New York 12240 M2,3.4 LEGAL NOTICE The Board of Trustees of Lee-Whedon Memoria! Libr Medina, New York, will rec sealed bids for the performs of custodial and janito concersing the fib building at Medina, New Y Specificati under wi the work is to be done are on and may be examined, conics obtained, at the I Whedon Memorial Libr: West Avenue at North Aver Medina, New York, cm nowmal Bbrary opersfing ho« to the appropriate provisite