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http://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/cd77aad7937f02617ea212c1f1f3d917.pdf
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Pag._o8-Sunday nmes--Sentlnel
Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH Point Pleasant, WV
May 12,1111
,.
Bill.would require sprayers to notify neighbors
WASHINGTON (AP) the Chemical Producers and Dis·
Christina Locek's life as a concert tributors Association, urged the
pianist and champion ice skater senators to consider the "signifiwas ruined when she was drenched cant human health benefits and
by chemicals being sprayed on a reduced risks for millions of Amerncighbor's yard, she tesufied last , icans" stemming for use of lawn
week before a Senate panel consid· care chemtcals.
ering legislation to tighten controls
"Herbicides control ragweed,
on such pesticides.
thUS ~~du~ing su~fer!?g from hay
"My health was destroyed in fever, Suckle S8ld. Other herb•minutes," Ms. Locek told the Sen- cides control dandelions and
ate Environment Comminee's sub- clover, and discourage bees from
committee on toxic substances,
recreational and ~ome and !Jiwn
Democratic Sens. !oseph areas, thus reducmg bee stmgs.
Lieberman of Connecticut and Approxtmately 45 to 50 people
Hany Reid of Nevada are sponsors each
die 9f bee stings." . ,
of legislation that would require
Suck!e satd the Senate btll s
lawn care companies to notify nottftcauon system was so extenneighbors before they apply pesticides or herbicides.
"Too many of us fail to recog-
rear
weeds and bugs are also vowerful
enough to threaten the envllllnment
and even human health," Lieberman said. "Are we doing enough
to protect people from -or at least
nolify them of- these threats?"
Ms. Locek said she was nearly
blinded and hl!S had to use canes to .
walk since the incident, which also
killed her dog and cat She said the
lawn-care company, which was not
identified in her testimony, refused
to tell her what chemicals it was
many summers explorina the
woodlands and Slreams of Gallia
County. He will share slides ol projeciS that have taken place on odlc:r
streams and rivers througbout ~~
country and will relate what c:aa be
done to improve the conditions of
Raccoon Creek.
This program is open to the pub-,·
lie and we encourage you to
Ollt 10 l!ear an intercstinf (RIIIllliiJIJ. For more informauon, ..._.
co·ntact the Gallia SWCD at ,446-!
8687,
t, I
I
GOODS TO BE
EXPEDITED TO
PUBliC SUNDAYIU
DOORS OPEN
NOON SUNDAY
FOR
8 BIG HOURS
SALES
CLOSED AT 8:00
ITEMS MUST BE PAID
IRING MOM IN TO. SEE ALL
THE MOTHER'S DAY
IA,RGAINS AT EMPIRE IN
GAlliPOLIS.
More than 300 are·
arrested in Vinton,
Scioto County raids
)
'TIL 8:00P.M.
SUNDAY 'NIGHT
' ~ ;\ .
-.. I
orrd/or acoptollll cndlt
. a,pllcatlon•HI
THIS IS A 'IIUC ·SW AND SIAl& •
CONDUCTED 01 Till PIIMISES SINIAYII
HERE'S THE
FREE CHOLESTEROL TESTING • Mar·
garet BalleJ of Minersville wu one or maay
atteadiDII Suada7's o11ea bouse at Veteraas
Memorial Hospital to take advaata&e of the free .
NO LAY-AWAYS
UP
FINANCING
AVAILABLE
TO
PRICMABn
*
.,
*
8 HOURS,
ROCKER RECLINER
SUNDAV
8 HOURS
Scaled for Mom by Flexsteel
Princess in 3 Colon
NOT 1999.99
$
MOTH£1'S DA 'f
39997
*
*
QUEEN MATTR£SS SET
DINING lOOM
MOTHER'S DAY SALE!
delloard IKitch. country
otyllng
NOT '3499.95
.SWIVEl ROCKERS
3 COlORS - Not '39U5
MOTIIEI'S DAY S16997
fLEXSTm WING IECUNEI
Blue cove•
s
NOT.'c:rc::'E~'~ DAY $ 38 00
FLEXSTEEl SlEEP SOFA
DltETTE and 4 CHAIRS
S48 700
UP TO
Not
' ~TH£1'S DA'f $6999 7
11399 9
. MASSIVE WAI.l IECl..EI
loigo or .... PWII. - Not 1799.95
·•
MOTiio•s DU $29997
64°/o
PICTURES
LAMPS!
s19.95 PICTURES .
. •.., on..,
OFF
In Kansas, the largest producer,
about 40 percent of the crop was
headed, weU ahead of last year's I 0
percent and the average of 20 percent The Texas crop was heading
at a normal pace of 61 percent,
compared with 60 percent last year
and the average of 57 percent.
The report, which covered the
week of April 29-May 5, said the
U.S. winter wheat crop was in
••mostly good to fair" condition,
except in Washington, where wheat
aD~ barley crops were rated as
IJKlllly poor.
.
No production estimates were
included in the weekly report
issued by the weather facility,
whicb Is operated by the Agriculture and Commen:e CJepanments.
PlllltiDII of Jpring wheat in the _
five major statea of Idaho, Mione• Dll, Moolana. Nonh Dakola and
Saudi Dakota was reported as 71
pos• eompleted. one percen~ge
point behind last year but mne
,.....
4 t~t swinl cllain. Altnallll flnlth. Pesta!
Queen innerapring matt'"•·
••nhtone • blue .tripe.
NOT 1975.00
MOTIIEI'S DAY
S24.95 PICTURES
Get Matching One
UP TO 64% OFF SUNDAY!
VANITY WITH IENCH
Oak flnlah, QuMn Anno
lega, drawers li mirror.
NOTS4H.9S
MOTHER'S DAY$ 9 97
FREE .
NOON 'TIL
10 P.M.!
$29997
MOTIII'S ItAY
!
SOFA CHAIR ............... MOTHER'S DAY
2 to choa11 from
Not tlf'".9S
·
Early A1111rican Flock Patttrn
6
MONTHS
SAME AS
CASH
MOTHER'S DAY
SALE ·
$34997
NOT 17H.9s
FULL MAnRESS SET
Princess Mattress & foundation
Quiltld Cower
MOlliEI'S DAY
$))997
SET
KINCAID SOUD OAK TABLE & 6 CHAIRS
lorgo padest,. tlllllt, 4 ann ollll I .W. chin.
DECORATOR CHAIRS
3 color1. cl••c ltY'e In ctterr.v
flnllh, uphollleNd N.tl •nd bKk.
59997
MOTHER'S DU ONl'f
NOT '3499.95
MOT..I'S DAY ONlY
$149997
TABlE & 4 CHAIRS
.
Oak finish, formica fop; I IMf
NOT '499.95
MOT..I'S DAY
521997
5 PC. SECnONAl
Eerthtona Stripe
NOT 119'-95
MOTHEI'S DAY
539997
SOFA LOYESEAT
. IIDIOOM SUITE ,
W11hed plna queen CllfiOP\' bed.
dresoer, mirror. 2 night 18bleo. cheat.
NOT 13499.95
MOTifR'S DAY
$)39997
·
Blue 8o Mauve om•ll pl•id
'1799.95
IMOTNI'I'~
DAY
589997
REGISTERING GUESTS- Members II tile
Melp Dlvilion of the Ameriean Heart Auodalioo voluateered their services to register guests
for cholesterol tesllaa at Sanda7's opea hoase 11
All ITEMS SUIJECI 10 PIIOI SAU
fiR DEUVDY
fiNANCING AVAILAill
M01HU'S DAY
eo ~..~.u
PheRt
Veterau Memorial Hospital. Here Pauline
Wolle, Racine, Is ri!Jllstered by Nora Rice, Joan
Tewksbary, and Donna
Open House draws more than ,
200 at Veterans Memorial Hospital
\
.........11
$49997
By The Assoc:lated Press .
A computer that authorities
hope will lead to cockfight promoters nationwide was among the evidence seized in what was described
as the biggest illegal cockfighting
raid in the country.
The simultaneous raids in Vinton and Scioto counties in southern
Ohio Satwday night resulted in the
arrest or cilation of more than 300
people, authorities said.
The computet, seized at a cockfighting iuena in Vinton County, is
believed to contain the membership
list for the United Gamefowl
Breeders Association, said Sandy
Rowland. director of the Great
Lakes office of the Humane Society of the United States.
"The importance of taking this
place off is thai we have now started to get into their network, so we
can hopefully end cockfightinJ!
across the U.S. as well as in Ohio,
Ms. Rowland said.
" •The 8 '10Ci1 riQn '~coordiJialed all
ganie-fowl 'fighting activity out of
. this place," she said.
The owner of a farm near
Arbaugh' was charged with carrying
a concealed weapon, said Vinton
County dispalcher Carolyn McManis. Ernest Ray Johnson, 57, was
.jailed in lieu of po~~ting a $25,000
bond and was to appear in Vinton
Countr. Court in McArthur today,
she S8ld.
446·
Gelllptlh
•'
~~-:.:~-,-~~--~---~=·~::::::~----T-~-:~~-:--------~:-~~~~-------:~;:~::=:::::~~:::i!~~~~
Something for everyone was favors for the guests.
Members of the Meigs Division
offered Sunday afternoon when
Jennifer Sheets at lhe keyboard ·· of the American Hean Association
Veterans Memorial HB!!pital roBed provided lively music in the dining were in the hospital lobby to regiSout its red carpet of hospitality for room while guests enj>yed refresh· ter those undergoing cholesterol
an open house.
ments served by the Nutrition tesling.
The occasion was in observance Oeparunent.
Long-stemmed silk roses were
of National Hospital Week and . Free cholesterol testing and presented to all moth.ers attending
National Nursing Home Week.
blood )JICSSUI'es were offered by the by Hospital Auxiliary members
Potted plants and colorful bal- hospital laboratory and nursing who also registered the more than
loons decorated the hospital and staff and department heads worked 200 guests attending for several
skilled nursing facility where in various capacities, Free health- door prizes which will be a'\Yarded
Karen Roush, costwned as a chick- care !itera1Ure was available.
later !his week.
·'
en, circulated with a basket of
She said 249 people caught
watching the cockfight paid fines
of $180 each, for a total of
$44,820, to the Vinton County
court.
In Scioto County, sheriffs dispatcher Debby Taclcett said Larry
Cantrell, 40, hosted a cockfight at
his Minford-area farm.
"They had about 100 people
there watching the fights, Appar:
· en1ly two or three fights had
already been through by the time
we got,there. AU of the paraphernalia 'and the cliickens were confiscat.e d," Ms; Tackett said.
Calilrell was charged with one
misdemeanor count of cockfight·
ing. In addition, 94 misdemeanor
citations were issued for watching
a cockfight; nine people were cited
for the felony charge of possession
of criminal lll<?ls; and one pers~n
was charged· with a felony for rotsuse of a handgun. Those cited are
to appear May 21 in Portsmouth
• Munil;ipal Coun..
.
!'>fs. Tackett said the s~tat~rs
who were charged only w1th misdel!leanor cockfighting admitted
guilt and J.laid a $60 fme.
"This IS the biggest (raid) we've
ever beenjnvolved in. I know of no
other cockfights that have been
raided in states where they're me. gal as big as this," Ms, Rowland
'said
Cockfighting involves fitting
roosters' legs with needle-sharp
gaffs up to 4 inches long and pitting them against each other in a
fight to the death.
.
A 16-month investigation led to
the raids. The Humane Society,
Ohio Department of Agriculture, at
least four sheriff's departments and
the Internal Revenue Service were
involved, the Humane Society said ·
Vinton County Sheriff 'Del no
McClure said 4() police offjcers
and about 15 state and federal
agents carried out the raid near
Arba1Jgh. He said some people
escaped by .running away,
People from at least eight states
and Canada were at the cockfight,
which was held in a barn arena
with an adjoining snack bar.
"This bust sends a,clear mes~e to cockfighters that organized
anunal cruelty will not he tolerated,
either by the HSUS or law enforcement," Ms. Rowland said. "Forcing animal&. 10 atab each other 10
death for entertainment is inhuman
and inhumane."
McClure said owners of the 600
chic)cens taken from the Arhaugharea farm would be allowed to ask
to re-claim them by going through
the court system on Monday.
Some of the chickens taken
from the cockfights were dead, pre·
sumably killed in the lights.
Sixty-seven Southern seniors to·
receive diplom.as on May.19
By JULIE E. DnLON
Sentinel News Staff
fll" IJJ99.9S
"O"n
,,.
trrER'~ DttV $14lEI//
L
RESULTS ANNOUNCED· Guests were boule Sunday afternoon. Here Saady Iaaaarrelli
given the resuhs of their daolesterol tests before aad Bobby Hobstetter, R. N. report results to Ed
they Jell Velera.as Memorial HB!!pltal's open . aDd Ruby Baer, pictured left Ill rlgllt.
OAK
QUEEN lED '
MOTIIII'S DAY $9997
,jl
,
*
INNERSPIING MAnRrSS -
'
MICIOWAYr
STAND
ou ,._., '199.95
fPI
*
*
I
!
Ughtplnatablew/11eal,
1 arm • 5 oklo chall'll. ol·
5
*
*
I
$44997 I
MOTtiEI'S DAY
I
~·
*
QUE£N SLEEP SOFA ....~ .... MOTIIR'S DAY $Jf097
NOT1JD99.95
8 HOURS MOTHER'S DAY!
ExpoHd
*
The Secret Is Out And ·The Heat .Is On?
Rntonlc Chlro- M11t1r110 and IOJiopring
Mogle middle and beautiful ....ch ....,.,,
cent.'~
cbolesterol testing. Nancy Griffltb was one or
several laboratory employees taklag blood ror
test.
SUNDAY!!
BASSETI FLEXSTE·EL RESTONIC KINCAID
IMPERIAL BlACKSMITH SHOP ENGLAND
JIMSON COSAIR SAUDER CHATHAM COUNTY
S-PRINGAIRE ANTHONY CORONA CLASSICS LEA
SUIIDAY POl
WASHINGTON (AP)- The
1991 winter wheat crop, the mainstay of U.S. bread grain production.
Ia movin$ closer to harvest far
more rap1dly than usual in the
South and parts of ihe Great Plains.
A report Tuesday by the government's Joint Agricultural Weather
Facility said an estimated 39 percent of the crop was headed. compared with last year's mark of 23
percent' and the five-year average
of 29 percent. ·
"The crop was completely
headed in Georgia and ncar! y all
headed throughout the Southeast,''
the repon said. "Oidahoma's win. ter wheat was 95 percent headed,
compared with 45 percent last year
and the historic average of 65 per-
\
12:00 O'CLOCK NOON 'TIL 8:00 P.M.
01 DISPLAYED WILL
II PUCID ON TO '
•
•
.
GOO liS
NOW
STOliD AND
Wheat crops
maturing
faster in some
•
regions
Combined actions described as biggest
·illegal cockfighting bust in country
J
••
IOftCI: Purcha- -it ..,
paid for by cath, perseMI
•cks, MutorCortl, VIIG
' '
lll
--
1 Section, 10 Pog" 25 cent•
A lluhlmecl.. Ina. Newap11per
AmiNO ON.
6 MONTHS
SAME AS CASH
~~mthetveraF.
•
come;
STORE HAS BEEN ~
ClOSED SINCE LAS~
..
...
,
SHEPHERD PROMOTED • Tom R. Shepherd has
lleea promoted to assistant
eulller aad mana11er or cusllllltr llei'Yiee by Ohio Valley
Baak ID GaiHpolls. Shepherd,
wllo wu eoordlaator or eustamer aerv~ces,· wiD remlin in
dulrte of OVB's telemarket1• PJ'OIII'IIIII and eoatlnue to
a11lst tile persoanel depart·
meat wltb job appliCIInt test·
Ina. He Is a graduate or
SJlllmes VaHey Hlgb School.
Sllepherd joined the bank's
ltalf lo 1984.
Page3
Low tonight in mid-50s.
Tuesday, sunny. High in
. mid-80s.
'
NEWS
..
Pick 3:810
Pick 4:0596
Cards : 2H, 4-C
7-D; 3-S
Super Lotto:
5·9-17-19-25-33
Kicker: 797776
WEDNESDAY
using.
The panel, chaired by Reid, also
heard from an 8-year-old boy who
can't go to school for fear of pesticide exposure, a college student
who sometimes lives in her car to
avoid pesticide spraying near her
home and a man who said his ,
health was ruined by lhe interaclion
of a lawn care chemical with the
prescription drug he was laking.
Reid said he hoped the Environmenial Protection Agency would
work harder to assess the health
risks of lawn chemicals and tighten
resb'ictions.
Warren E. Stickle, president of
Indians top
California
Angels4-1
Tope to present slide program
on field and streams May 25
covering people wl\o live adjacent
to a customer's property and who
su)lmit a doctor's certificate that ·
confinns they are sensitive to lawnBy CoDStance S. White ·
care chemicals,
GALLIPOUS • Robert Tope, a
She said the association also cartographer with the National
backs a requirement to post mark·
Geographic Mag&Dne, will be preers on lawns when the products are sent a 11ide program on fields and
applied.
Sb'eamS Saturday, May 25 ,at 7:30
"We also believe, howe~r. that p.m.
·,
Congress should consider 'extendThe program is being hB!!ted by
ing the requirement to non-com: the Raccoon Creek Improvement
mercia! ap~Jicators - the do-it- Committee at' the Homestead on
yourselfers, • she said. "The bltest the Bob Evans Farm near Rio
statistics show that 64 million peo- Glllllde.
ple perform their own lawn care,
Tope, is the nephew of Wendell
while only 8 million engage lawn and Marianne Tope and has spent
care services companies." ,
sive it would be "u11workable,
uneconomical and ineffective, and
would be extremely burdensome"
to businesses and local governments.
"For example, if the city of
New York desired to spray the elm
trees surrounding Central Park, it
would have to provide written notification to somewhere between
100,000 and 250,000 people who
live ·and work wilhin 1,000 feet,"
he said.
Ann McClure, executive vice
president of' the Professional Lawn
Care Association of America, Said
her.group woulil support a more
limiled notification requirement,
Ohio Lottery
Sixty-seven gradll8ting seniors
at Southern High School will
receive their diplomas on Sunday
at 8 p.m. during combined baccalaureate and comm~ement
exercises in the high sc I gyrn118Sium.
The baccalureate address, invocation and benediction will be
given by Rev. Ken Baker, Pastor
for the United Methodist Southern
Cluster Churches.
The salulatorian address will be
presented by Jarrod Circle, son of
Nancy Circle and Carl Circle. Cir.cle particillllted in football for four
years, the ASHME for four years,
and was a Southern Academic
Honoree for four years, He was
inducted into the National Honor
Society his junior year and was ~
County Academic Honoree his
sophomore year as well as his
senior year. Last year he received
lhe Baush and Laum Honorary Science Award. He is president of the
Carmel-Sutton Youth Group and is
associated with the Cannel United
Methodist Church.
Jennifer Smith, daul!hter of Dar·
rell and Gaye Smith, Racine, will
give the valedictorian address.
Miss Smith has maintained a 4.0
aveiaF and perfect attendance for
the past four years. She is currently
president of the National Honor
Society and is enrolled in the college preparatory program. She is a
regional scholar in the Talented
and Gifted Projtllll, a member of
the Scholastic Quiz Bowl Team for
· three years, the Scholarship Team
her.freshman year' and during her
ju1Jior year was e4itor·in·chief of
the yearbook. She was also a member of the band for one year, Sci·
ence Club for one year, the All
Meigs County Fair Chorus in 1988
and a member of the senior cast
play. She was a Christmas Queen
candidate and Prom Queen eandi·
date her aenior year,
Miss Smith was a paniciJlllll in
the American ·High School Mathematics Exam all lour years of high
''
JARROD CIRCLE
JENNIFER SMITH
school and she received the highest
score in the county on the Ohio
University American History Contest She has been honored at the
Meigs County Academic Banquet
every year of eligibility and at the
Southern Academic Banquet all
four years of high school. She is
recipient of the Holzer Science
Award and the University of Rio
Grande Honors Scholarship. She
also participates in WSAZ's Best
of Class. She plans to enter the
University of Rio Grande Holzer
College of Nursing in August to
become a registered nurse.
Bobby Ord, superintendent, will
present the class, and Gary Evans,
president of lhe board of education,
will present the diplomas.
Members of the 199I graduating
class are:
·
Melanie Michelle Adams, James
Herbert Anderson, Jason Andrew
Baer, Cheryl Ann Bales, John
Franklin Barnes, Juaetta Ann Bee·
gle, Aaron Jason Buck, Danilo
Colombo Bueno, James Jarrod Cir·
cle, Jason Edward Circle, Donald
Chase Oeland, Robert Jayson Cod·
ncr, Christi Anne Collins, Shannon
Nicole Counts, Lori Ann Crow,
Jennifer Lynn Damron, Qad Ryan
Diddle. Clarence Arnold Dugan.
a
Michael Todd Grindstaff, Christine
Nicole Harmon, Timothy Paul
Hayes, Robert Ray Hendrix,
·Thomas Patton Hill, Johnny Bill
Hoback, Tonya Michelle Ing~ls,
Michaella Ann Jones, Melissa
Renee' Justis, Michael Ray Kincaid
Jr., Aaron Harrison Knopp, James
Stuan Languell, Eric Edward Lswson, Kevin Lee Layne, Jennifer Lee
Lisle, Elizabeth Mae Lyons Wolfe,
Colin Robert Maidens, Norman
Scott Matson, Arthur Travis Nease,
Cheryl Adair Pape, Valerie Kay
Patterson, Joice Elaine Pickens,
Keny AMe Porter, Matthew David
Richards, Troy Allen Rife, Mary
Ann Roberts, Chester Brent Rose,
Jeremy Miquel Rose, Heather Lynn
Roush, Mark William Russell,
Michael James Russell, Carolee
Sutanne Scarberry, Jason David
Shain, Della Marie Shreve, Jennifer
Darlene Smith, Jerry Lee Smi.th,
AnFl Leigh Snider, Donald Roben
Spaun, Thomas Benjamin Stobart
II, Robyn Ann Stout, Mark Edward
Taylor, Andrea Rae Theiss, Janelle
Darlene Williams, Michelle ·Eileen
Winebrenner, Christopher Lee
Wolfe, Wendy Ann Wolfe, Mayle
Deanne Yoacham, Darrell Thomas
Young and Michelle Ann Young.
;
�T •
.,
--··- -... --· ~---
'"f
-- --·
.,~
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•
Monday, May 13, 1991
Commentary
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTEBEIITS OF THE MEIGS-MAsON AREA
ROBERT L. WINGETI'
,...,...._,,_'-r,rrEI!d•i=l ' .
.
CHARLENE HOEfLICH
PubU.her
General Maaa1er
· PAT WHITEHEAD
A.sststaat Publisher/Controller
·. A MEMBER of The Associated Press, I~ land Daily Press Asso·
elation and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are weic;ome. They should be les.s than300
words long. Ail letters are subject to editing and must be sfined with .
name, address and telephone number. No unsigned letters wUI be pub·
itlhed. Letters should be in good taste, addressing issues, not personalities.
Coal bill persuasive
By ROBERT E. MILLER
Assocllted Preas Writer
COLUMBUS - A bill that app11 cotty seeks to strong ·arin electric
utilities into installing anti-pollution equipment to k~ u~g Ohio's high
sulfiD' coal is expected to pass the House easily Tuesday.
It extcnds a tax break of $1 for each ton of Ohio coal burned and offers
low-interest financirig for the installation or "scrubbers" that can reduce
5ulfur emissions for compliance with the federal Clean Air AcL ·
The bill has pro..Ohio coal guidelines for statc regulators 10 use in
detcrmining whether a utility can recover compliance costs froll! ratepay·
ers if they switch to cleaner, out.of·statc coal.
.
But utilities still could switch, and charge ratcpayers for costs that
would include rail or barge transportation, if ther, could show the Public
Utilities Commission of Ohio that this was their ' least-cost option."
1bc PUCO already has the authority to reject unreasonable or impudent m~ent decisions that add to a utility's ratc base. Some law·
makers are calling lhe biD a subterfuge,
Rep. David Johnson, R.canton, wbo opposed the bill last week when a
House commiuee recommended passage, says it does not assure lhat coal
miners' jobs will be saved or·that ratc increases will be curbed.
·· Chairman Jerry Krupinski, D-Steubenville, the chief spon,sor; Rep.
Joseph Secrest. 0-Senecaville, and othets disalii'Ced. They pointed out the
taX and fiiBICing incentives for scrubbers and what would be a body of
new law telling the PUCO and courtS that the Legislature's .intcnt is to
protei;! Ohio's coal industry.
1bc committce added language requiring the PUCO to consider the use
of scrubbers as "a reasonable management decision." The language also
would prohibit a utility from assessing customers for the cost of closing a
company-owned mine, ex~pt as part of a least-cost compliance strategy.
· Krupinski's bill originally provided that bef<R a utility could switch to
out-of-state coal, it would have to include as part of its cost the economic
impact on the statc - not just the coal industry. Tl!at would include
unemP.loyment resulting from higher electricity costs in other industries.
Uulity and other lawyers said this requirement was unrealistic and
impossible to enforte. So the bill was changed to require the PUCO to
' ~consider" the broader economic impact, although the decision still must
be based on the least-cost option.
.
·
.
. -Krupinksi's bill also was amended til let utilities that already have
3Cillbbera or other similar technology to bum Ohio coal. Ohio Edison Co.
would get a $4 minion taX break, starting in 199S, the federal law's rii'St·
phase compliance deadline.
1bc Zimmer plant in southwest Ohio, recently conv&ted to coal-bum·
ing from a nuclear power plant, would get a break of $3.5 million, based
the $1-a-ton ratc. Planrs that operatc with fuel that includes 90 percent
Ohio coal are eligJble for,lhe tax brea1c. Zimm& is owed by Columbus
Southern Power Co., Dayton Power & Light and Cincinnati Gas & Elec·
tric Co.
.
Rep. Frank Sawyer, D-Mansfield, ~hose amendment expanded the taX
~rription, said.it portends a savings to consum&S because the money the
ulilities qve wiU be removed from their ratc bases.
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Berry's World
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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday, May 13, 1991
WASHINGIDN - 1bc United an~ other non-,ovemm~nt ,ente~,
Even those dictators wbo balk at
States is using an unusual means of pnses, the staid commiSSIOn 1S having American-style sedition
spreading revolution among some belping to start seminars, essay preached in their schools are get·
of the world's dictatorships and contests and talks on the Bill of ting whiffs of freedom through
semi-dictatorships. The subvmive · Ri~hts and on human rights and another bicentennial program.
weapon is the Bill of Rights, which civtl rights in general.
Miniature copies of the entire Con·
wiD be 200 years old on bee. 15.
Acceptal)ce of such Bill of stitution are being distributed
The congressionally funded Righrs activities by Great Britain, throushout the world by U.S. gov·
Commission on the Bicentennial or Costa Rica, Japan and otlter emment infonnation services. .
the U.S. Constitution is headed by democracies is no threat to their
Indeed, the worldwide enthusi·
an unlikely champion of revolu· leaders. They already have strong asm might stir former Chief Justice
tion, former Chief Justice Warren protcetions built into their own sys· Burger to do real missionary work
Burger. The birthday celebration tcms of gov&nmenL ·
for lhe Bill of Rights where it is
will not be limited to the United
But the Bill of RighiS guaran· needed most - in the United
States. Other countries will be tces freedom of speech, the press, Statcs - · particularly since some
asked to host activities and study assembly, fair trials and the right to civil libartarians feel that Burger
the DiU of Righrs too. Some win be bear anns - righ!S lhat are !Klthing hacked up the bill when he lllll the
more eager than others to wish this short of revolutiOn in some lands Supreme Court.
document a happy birthdsy.
where the commission plans to take
TEAM WORK -We devel·
The Bill of Righrs was lhe rally· the birthday celebration.
oped a personal friendship with the
Uganda, Guatemala, Zimj)abwe, Soviet Union's popular reformer
ing cry of the Chinese studeniS who
were butchered by their Commu~ Mozambique and Burkina Paso Boris YeliSin while m Moscow two
nisi leaders in ]IDle 1989 in Tianan· (formerly Upper Volta}, to name a years 11go. Our pipeline JO his
men Square. Now, study of the few, are more famed for llanning office gave this account of tlie cur·
document is being encouraged in .a freedoms than teaching them. And rent power struggle in the Kremlin.
number of other aut.horitarian Singapore, Bangladesh and Nigeria
Yeltsin bas struck a deal with
have
checkered
records
at
besL
Yet
Soviet
President Mikhail Gorstates.
In cooperation with universities all are getting a dose of the Bill.
bachev to help bring stability and
Ill Court street
~v
Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
..
U. S. spreads word of. Bill of Rights
The ·Daily Sentinel
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1\'eMeMSeR, LaDies. You'l\'eGoiNG
1o 2 COUNTRY Wlfel\"e WoMeN a~
C.O.,SiP€f\'eD Vie2K 'WD iNFeRiOR. el~
·
THouc;H Voll'l\"e At-te~;catr SOLDieRS,
You aRe E.Xf"ecreD To BeHave
l:IC::C.OI\"Di.,GLV. a~ ql/eSTim-IS?
·
·Jack Anderson
·and Dale VanAtta
order to their strife-tom country.
True to his word, Yeltsin used his
influence with the striking miners
to urge the II!, for the sake of the
economy, to go back to work. In
return, Gorllachev has promised
lhat he will not abandon Dern!lcrat·
ic reforms. And he has al110 agreed
to give the separate Soviet
republics more auton~y. .
As the next stcp, YeliSIR waniS
to bring the waning political fac·
lions·to a "round table" ·to resolve
their differences and discuss the
nation's problems. That kind of
cooperation is opposed by the hard..
liners, who preler backroom control to public discussion. Those
hardlinm are still maneuvering to
oust Gorbachev and neutralize
Yeltsin.
SURVIVAL SKILLS - The
conversion from communism to
freedom has left some in lhe East· .
em Bloc without the skills to make
a living. Some don't even know .
how to job hiBit in a free-entcrprise
systcm. The result has been a fall·
off in production that has caused
widespread unemployment and
declining standards of living. Their
new freedoms bave not been .
aq;ompanied by the expectcd con·
sumer goods. The answer is lhat
these worters must regain the worlc
ethic they lost in the lethargic days ·
of communist rule. They must learn ,
how to wort hard again. Mean· ' ·
while, they must be persuaded to
accept tcmporary austcrity.
MINI-EDITORIAL - Paul ·
Tsongas has announced his candi• .
dacy for president, but he won't get .
the nommation of the Democratic
Party. The person with a better
chance is the one who is .now
courting the union vote. Rep.
Richard Gephardt, D·Mo., has been
working the backrooms of labor
unions. He is counting on high
unemployment to tum out union
· voters in the primaries, and he
expects to be in the best pilsition to
. win that IDiion votc.
Copyright, 1991, United Feature
Syndicatc,lnc.
Non-white 'group-normlng' is unfair
o·ne of life's grimmest little
shocks is the discovery, from time
· to time, of some stunt the gov&n·
ment is pulling that you never
heard of before. ·
Thanks to The New Republic, I
have just found out about a new
oublge, which I predict is going to
create plenty of waves when the
general public learns or it. It is
called "group-norming," or '.'race·
cent on the tcst. What white job aptitude test{ are "culturally
applicants don't know, howeY&, is b1ased" in favor of whites, and
that their performance on the tcst is hence the ratings of blacks and His·
compared only to that of other panics must be lldjusted ~ upwatd.
whites. It is weD established that if • But this is nonsense. Asian job
Hispanics and blacks were included applicanrs do very well on the tesrs.
in the· comparison, the average
This tilting of the pinball
scores of the blacks would be sub- machine is so common nowadays
stantially lower, and those of the that a numb& of private businesses
Hispanics somewhat lower, than skew their own aptitude test results
those of the whites. So Hispanic the same way·. And last year the
nanning.'' ·
and black scores are compared only Equal Employment Opportunity
It transpires that the Public
with those or other Hispanics and Commission ("equal opportuni·
Employment Service, an agency of blacks, respectively.
ty' '!) was on the verge of suing pri·
the Department or Labor lhat rec·
Thus a white job applicant vate corporations that didn't follow
ommends qualified job applicants . whose test results put in him the the same practice. Cooler heads
(mostly for blue-collar and clerical
have since prevailed at EEOC.
top 40 percent of whitc applicants
positions) to private employers on
The cream of the jest is, of
would be given a rating of 60,
request, has been cooking the fig·
while a black applicant wbose actu· course, that the great bulk of the
ures .on its aptitude tests to favor
al score was substantially lower American people simply don't
black and Hispanic applicants over
might nevertheless rank in the top know that this is $oing on, and that
whitcs. The practice began during ·25 percent of black applicants, and as a result whitc JOb applicaprs are
the Carter administration, and has
would accordingly be given a rat· being routinely sidelined in favor
been going 011 ever since.
ing of 75. The black applicant of blacks and Hispanics with lower
It's done this way. People who
would be referred to the prospec· tcst scores.
regiS!& with PES for job opportu·
tive employer.
No doubt about it, this is a bot
nities are given an aptitude test.
PES excuses this built-in bias issue. Aild there are, moreover, two
The theory is lhat an employer can
(when the subject is raised at all, sides to it: _If whites take all the
request a prospective employee
which is rarely) by asserting that decent jobs, what shall America
who scores in (say) the top 25 per·
William Rusher,.
say to its Hispanics and blacks?
The Democrats are scared to ·
death of the subject, depende11t as
they are on black and Hispanic
votcs. The Republicans have been
shy about taking the side of the
whites, lest they he accused of
racism. But Sen. Alan Simpson and ·
Rep. Henry Hyde (both Republi· .
cans) have now introduced biDs to
stop the practice of "group-norm- :
ing,'' and the fat is in the fllC.
Mr own guess is that groupnormmg will not survive. America's. whites are r,repared to help
"less advantaged ' individuals, but .
not at the price of surrendering jobs
they themselves need and for which
aptitude tests establish that they are
substantially bcttcr qualified.
If America's elitc, in both parties, can't understand that view·
point and accommodate it; we are
paving the way for politicians who
will make David Duke look like
Little Lord FaiDitleroy.
What a country club must not do
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Cl ttt1 bf NIA,tnc . $flo .
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"Let's bury the hstchetf'•
Today in history
•
I'm not a member of a country iUusions about the members neces·
club, and except for being invited sarily wanting the parents of the
to one every now and then by poor kids they help at Christmas to
friends, I guess I really don 'I know come sunbathe by the club pool or
much about what goes on in one. play a few holes of golf. Still, I
So it's not inconceivable that I may have always pictured them as civic
bave some misconceptions about leaders who want to help their
community. They just want to be
some or lhe people wbo join them.
But what I'd always believed . with whom they want socially.
I still believe that. I also believe
about people who belong to counthat
whoever was responsible for
try clubs is that they are highly
the
public
humiliatiou ·of an innomotivated· achievm, perbaps more
cent
high-school
atltlete at the
intcrested in social status lhan I am,
Caldwell
Parish
Country
Club in
but neverlheless the kind of people
who build successful careers and Columbia, La., is a Neanderthal
throwback that someone lifted a
are active in civic organizations.
I know these are exclusive rock off of just long enough for
him to climb ouL He can't be repsocial clubs, and I don't harbor any
In 1954, President Eisenh~wer signed into law the SL Lawrence Seaway Dc"Yelopment Act.
In 1958, Vice President Richard M. Nixon's limousine was battcred by
rocks thrown by anti-U.S. demonstrators in Caracas, Venezuela.
In 1985, a confrontation between Philadelphia police and the radical
group MOVE ended as police dropped an explosive onto the group's
headquarters. Eleven people died in the resulting fllC.
Five years a~: Secrewy of Statc George P. Shultz criticized former
Philippine Pres1dent Ferdinand Marcos, saying the deposed leader was
using his aaf~ haven in Hawaii to cause trouble for the new government of
Corazon Aquino.
·
One year ago: Two U.S. airmen were shot to death in the Philippines
bn thO eve of talks concerning the future of U.S. military bases; the ~evo
lutionary New People's Army claimed responsibility for the tillings.
Today's Birthdays: Actress Beatrice Arthtrr is 6S. Critic Clioye Dames
is 64. Dilectcr-eboreogtapher Herbert Ross is 64. Actor Franklin Ajaye is
42. Singer Stevie Wonder is41.
.
Thought for Today: "There is nothing new except what is forgotten."
-Anonymous.
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Sarah Overstreet
reseotati"Ye of aU country clubs lhat
exclude members of one group or
another. I don't believe even peoAs long as an organization doesn't
ple who don't want to associate
receive government funds fo, any
with people of certain races or reli·
reason, I think they have the consti·
gions condone the public embar·
rassment of children.
tutional right to discriminate. ·
How could civic-minded people
There are a few clubs that have
go home and face their own chil·
made news recently for declining
dren if they'd stood by and sancthe prestige of having Professional
tioned what happened to Dondre Golf Association tournaments at
Green when he anived at their club their courses, rather than to let
with his team to play in a golf black golfers play as the PGA
match?
requires. I think that is' their right,
They must have understood lhat even though 1 might personally
when you open your club to a high· . lhink they're silly bigots, which is
school golf competition, you open : my right. But clubs like that '
it to all the students from all the shouldn't sponsor events involving
high schools in the meeL You don't children who might belong to any
suddenly notice one of the pllyers of the groups they exclude for
is black, slam the gate in his face membership, unless they're wiUing
and yell, • 'Oh, we meant all the to suspend the rules for the dura· ..
high-school golfers in all the tion of the children's function.
schools entered EXCEPT !he black
. Donclre Green seems to be try·
ones!" They know it's not 1954 ing to turn his ~nal bogey into
anymore, and politc society simply a hole-in-one. • I was kind of hurt,
does not condone the shaming and but my coach talked to me and told '
degrading of children. .
me bow s11tpid these people were,
I believe we aU have the right in and rm not going to let these peoAmerica to associate with ple's stupidity keep me from playwhomever we please, and we m~ ... he told USA Today. ''I take
should not be forced to mix social.· it 10 a positive way, because this
ly wilh those with whom we do will be good for the next black
not. I believe that extends to coungolfer who tries to play."
try clubs, the Royal Order of the
I hope the other members of
Good Ole Mooses Wbo Just Want Caldwell Parish Countiy Cub put ·
to Get Away from Women for a as positi"Ye a spin on ~ situation,
While, and the Women's We Don't or rather on the head of whoever's
Let Men In Becluse H We Di~ We respo~llible, slicing it right throUgh
Couldn't Talk About 'Em Society. the woods arid into i sand trap.
'
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The Dally Sentlnei-Page-3
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
•
.Morris' hitting helps propel
Reds to 5-3 win over Cubs
By JOE MOOSIDL
.,
AP Sports Writer
CHICAGO (AP) - Altyt.ime 110111C011C m~ehes the
.400 mark in basebl\1, the IWIUI of Ted Williams
pops up since the ·'Splendid _splintcr' • was the last to
do it wben he hit-.406 in 1941:
Hot·hilli~ Hal Morris had three more hilS Sunday
in Cincinnali s S-3 victory over the Chicago Cubs to
raise his average to .402.
· ·
Morris has ilo delusions of hitting .400 but he did
say·he has read Williams' boolt on bitting every year
since high school to re-enforce some batting tcch·
niques.
Manis also has another'associatiou wilh Williams
in lhat his great uncle, Buddy Lewis, played for the
Washington Senators.
"One year, I don't lcnow which, he played on the
All-Star team with Williams and Joe D. (DiMag·
gio}," he said.
Morris spends ti!ne whenever he has a chance
with Lewis who lives in Gastonia, N.C., to listcn to
Lewis' biseball stories.
Morris is spending his time wrecking National
League pitching, especially lhat of the Cubs, against
whom he is hitting .480 this season. In the three·
game series he had six hilS in eight official trips and
reached base in 10 of 13 times.
Morris singled to start a two-rtiR fourlh SIDidaY
and singled ·ilsain in lhe eighth when Mariano DIDI·
can tripled home two tie-breaking rtiRS for Cincin·
nati 's victory.
After he singled in the eighth, Morris stole second
as -Eric Davis struck ouL Paul O'Neill, who also has
been wrecking Cub pitching, ~as walked intentional·
ly. Luis Qui!Jones struck out but Duncan tripled to
center to drive in the winning rtiRS. · ·
Cubs manager Don Zimmer has said Morris' hit·
ling •'Is no .mistake. He can hit and he can· lead tl)e
·league in hitting,"
Morris, who batted .340 Jast year in part time
play, said ''I'll be happy to hi~OO.''
As for Williams, Morris doesn't follow Ted's
advice fully.
.
"Williams says vou have to hit up on the ball and
I try to hit down," ~s said. "I can put the~ !JI
play but it's a quesuon of how hard I can hu rt.
Williams mainly 1)1111ed the ball and 1 don't know
how anyone could hit that much that way.''
Manis said he was lucky Sunday since two of his
hilS were of the infield variety but he was a big factor
in Cincimiati breaking out of its slump and winning
the last two games or the series.
.
I ack Armstrong (3·1) was the winner and Rob
Dibble pitched the last two innings for his eighth
save. Greg Maddux (4·2) was lhe loser.
Coach Jackie Moore managed the Reds on Sun·
day. Lou Piniella was attending his son's graduation
ceremonies at Villanova University.
"You couldn't have written a better script,''
Moore said. "Armstrong struggled at the start but
. settled down, we got some timely hitting and Dibble
came out of the bullpen to close it."
.
Rync Sandb&g's two-run hOmer, his fourlh, gave .
the Cubs a 2·0 lead in the·firsL Jeff Reed hit his fllSt
homer in the third. 1bc Reds went ahead with two in
the fourth on rtiR·SCoring singleS by Billy Dolllll and
Duncan but the Cubs tied in the bottom of the fourth
on a rtiR-scoring single by Jose Viscaino.
That's the way it stood until the eighlh when~
can, playing short in place of injured Barry Larkin,
brokeitup.
.
"I knew I'd be in the lineup, with Larkin hurting
so I got lilY mind ready to play, 'Duncan said.
1
Dimcan batted :30(; ~!J.~J~ying mainly at
second base but wilh the
p' · g up Doran lale
last season, Duncan's playing time was cuL
"I played every day last year but this year I don't
know wben I'm playing," said Duncan, wbose av&·
11e had slipped to .197 before Sunday's game.
El8ewhere in the NL it was Atlanta 6, Pittsburgh
1; Philadelphia 7, Los Angeles 3; Mon~ 8, .San
Diego 6; New York 4, San Francisco 2 in 11 innings;
and SL Louis 7, Houston 3 in a night game.
Bnves 6, Plratet!l 1 -The rust-place Atlanta
BlliVet!l would 1'81hcr be the tcarrqloing the chasing.
Even as early as May 12, lhe Braves find lhem·
selves in the unfamiliar tenitoty or fllSt place in the
Nalional League West foUowing SIDiday's 6-1 victory over the Pittsburgh ~tes II!- Three Riv&S S~· ·
um. 1bc Bra"Yes lead Cincmnau and Los Angeles by
.one game.
"We want Ill compete," Atlanta mMtagCr Bobby
Cox said. "We now have a chance of winning every
game we're in.... Pitching and defense 1ceep you in
. games, and our pitching and defense are improved."
Ron Gant and Dave Justice hit two-run homers
and Steve Avery pitched six strong lnnings against
Pittsburgh.
"Sure, we~d like to be in some sort of race, but
we're not going to beat our chests," Cox said.
"You'~ better off ~rying to sneak up on everybody,
and lhat's exactly what we're trying to c!o·"
Avery (4·1) allowed four hilS and an unearned run
over six innings in leading the Braves to their sev·
enlh victory in nine games. Last year, the Braves lost
97 giiiiiCS and fmisbed last for the third straight sea·
son and the fourlh time in five years.
.
"They remind me of the way we were in 1987,
wben we went out at the end of the season and said,
'Let's win them all,"' the Piratcs' Bobby Bonilla
said. "They may be a player away from winning that
division. You can see the sparkle in their eyes:
They're hunp,Y and they're tired or losing and they
wanttowin.'
Ell)IOII 8, Padres 6 - Tim Wallach had four hits
and drove in three runs as visiting Moutreal rallied
for four runs in the eighth inning to beat San Diego
for irs sixth straight victory. The Padres have lost five
in a row.
San Diego starter Bruce Hurst, seeking to improve
to 5.0, had a 6-3 lead when he wallced Marquis Oris·
som and gave up a single to Ivan Calderon to start
the nitty. Relie"Yers Mike Maddux, Rich Rodriguez
(1·1) ancl John Costcllo could not hold the lead.
· Bill Sarnpcn (2·1) pitched two innings for the vic·
tory and Barry Jones fmished for his second save.
PbUDis 7, Dodgers 3 - Jose DeJesus (1·2) won
for the first time this season despite walking eight
battcrs in five innings as Philadelphia used a five-run
fii'St inning to beat Los Angeles at Dodger Stadium.
Ei~ht .or the fllSI nine Philadelphia battcrs got hits
offT1m Belcher (3-4) and reliever Tim Crews.
Mets 4, Giants 1 - Dave Magadan delivered a
run-scoring single with two outs in the 11th inning
off Da"Ye Righetti' (2·1) as New York survived 16 left
on base to beat San Francisco at Candlestick Park.
John Flllllco (1·1) pitched two perfect innings for
the victory.
Cardllllls 7, Aslros 3- Ozzie Smith's two-run
single h!$hlighted St. Louis' five·riDI eighth inning as
the Canlinals defeated the AslrOs.
·
Cris Carpentcr (4·1) pitched the bottom or the
seventh for the victory, striking out the side. AI
Osuna (1·1) gave up two riDIS and two hits without
getting an out in the eighth.
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Southern, Eastern win baseball games
By SCOTf WOLFE
Sentinel Cormpondent
The Southern Tornadoes of
coach Mick Winebrenner cllimed a
double header victory over Alex8n·
der and split in a non-league galile
with Trimble in last week's base·
ball action at Racine.
Southern defeatcd Alexander 6s and S-4 behind some grat pitch·
ing efforts from the Tornadoes.
· Jeremy DiU picked up the win in
the 6·5 game with seventh inning
relief from Keith Jones. They
fanned 2 and waJJced just one. Bar·
b& suffered the Joss, while fanning
3 and walldng one.
Southern hitters were Andy
Baer with a triple; Michael Kincaid
a triple and single, SI;Oit Lisle had
two singles, Todd Grindstaff t~o
sin~les, Jones a $ingle and Cohn
Maidens a single.
In the second game Mark Taylor
picked up the win while going the
distance. He fanned two and
walked only two. Benjy Jarvis suf·
fered the loss. He pitched a fine
The Daily Sentinel
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'•
GUEST SPEAKERS - Guest speakers who
· were In attendance to honor Bert Grimm at last
Wednesday's OVA reunion banquet, held In
•,
B CHUCK MELVIN
the turning point of the $M,Ie. If the better for the Athletics. They lost tQ .
yAP Sports Writer
gu·y (Schofield) ge
· IS a h1t there, it's the Yankees JQ.(j, and again Den,_
nis Eckersley didn't do his job.
CLEVELAND (AP} - A cou· probably another run."
"I think he's throwing the ball.
pte of years ago, Tom Candiotti
Baerga's home run, his fourth,
Oakland pitching coach:
good,''
objected to being called a knuckle- hooked just inside the foul pole in
Dave
Duncan
"Things are
ball pitcher.
ri$ht field with two outs in the just happening.said.
goes,
Everybody
Not any more.
·
thrrd.
"
through
periods
when
things
ha~
"I'm throwing it 70 percent of
"They're four llases no matter
pen."
the time now, 80 percent in some how far they go out." I:.ewis said.
games,'' Candiotti said after he
Cleveland rookie Mark Lewis · Eckersley. almost invincibl~ .
pitched a three-hitter as the Cleve· had three.hits, including a double since Kir!t ·Gibson's home run inland' Indians beat the California · in the third and an RBI single in the. the 1988 World Series, suddenly is.
Angels 4-1 Sunday. "Hitters reaJly sixth. He has had eight multi-hit not the best reliever in basebalL llr
don't like to hit off it. Each year, games amoug his 13 games in the fact, these days he might not even. . ·
be the best on a team beset by,,
I've thrown it a little bit more."
majors. He's bitting .415. ·
Candiotti (4-1) stiD turns to the
Lewis, who had been playing bullpen injuries to Rick Honeycutt,_.
'
curveball, slider or fastball occa· shortstop, moved over to second Gene Nelson and Todd Bums.
Eckersley,
making
a
rare.
sionally if he's having trouble con· base SIDiday to make room for Fer·
trolling the knuckler. Bu! the min, who returned from a strained appearance with the AthleticS:·
knuckleball has been so consiStcnt calf muscle. Second baseman J&ry beliind, gaoye up a three·rtiR borne' .
for him Ibis year, he's been using it Browne, batting .159, was benched. to Man Nokes in the eighlh inning
"Lewis keeps hitting the ball as the Yankees broke it open. Eck···
even when he falls behind in the
count.
, very well," manager John MeN&· ersley allowed' only two home runs,:
"I use the oth& stuff just not to mara said. "If they (Fermin and in 73 and one-third innings last sea-,,walk guys," he said. "Now, some- Lewis) produce. that's the way it's son, but has been tal(l(ed for four
times I'U throw the knUckleball. on going to be."
.
_ , hom&~ in 14 innings this year. ..;
"I think I've been in the middle
a 2·1 pitch, I've been learmng
Albert BeUe was 10 the Indians
more about it every year, and I'm lineup as a designated hitter and of the plate a lot," Eckmley said:,
just locked into it."
went 1-for-4. On Saturday, Belle "I've given up four bombs, so
Tbough the knutkler usually is . threw a baseball at a fan wbo was·· lha\'-s not-real cool. rm· not lhrllled ·
.·
the most difficult pitch to control, heckling him a~out his l~:w~k · about it." '
Mike Moore (5·1}, who was off,
Candiotti walked..only two battcrs stint in an alcohOlism rehabilitanon
to the best start in his career, didn't
Sundsy. He struclt out nine, and all progn1111last summer. ·
do
much better for Oakland. He .
three hits off him
singles. He
The t~owd cheered ~hen
gave
up five runs and eight hits •
allowed one unearned run, lower- BeUe's name was announced m the
ing his ERA to 1.02.
starting lineup Sunday! and all!lin
(See AL on Page 4)
·: •
"lbc way he pitched today was when he came to bat 10 the first
gOOd for the major leagues or good inning.
.
for a beer league," California's
McNamara indicated he would
SPRIN6 VALLEY CINEMA
Dave Winfield said. "He threw continue using Belle until the
446 4~24
. '
those big, humpback pitches and American League rules on the inci·
S.J .OO IMIMIM MTIII(ES WITVIIDAW I SUICIA.¥
miXed it up welL We cursed him all deriL
$3 .00 MIIIAIII MIGitT T\IU~Y
day, and he got us out."
In other games, New York beat
The Indians ended a ·four-game Oakland 10·6, Texas beat Boston
losing streak, winning for only the 12·5, Toronto topped Chicl$0 4-2.
1: 20,9: 10 DI\IU \I'm' 'I''' ,1,1 '"l\1,
seeond time in nine home games.
Minnesota downed Detroll 8·3,
SAT/stM fiiATIIElS
1:20,3 :10
. California rookie Scott Lewis Seattle stopped Baltimore 5-4 and
' ""
\• •i.n"·~···
111\tul•l
"'!I',
(1-3) took the loss, victimized by . Kansas City beat Milwaukee 6-4.
Carlos Baerga's three-run home
Y11nkees 10, A's 6
I n ' (I I ( D
( "'IO;:'N(
7:00,11 :111
...-"\(A:!';
run. Lewis has given up at least one
For a ream in fllSI place, it sure
~T/~
M~.liiUS
A 1\
1.oo.:t.oo
"-lK
home riD1 in five of six starts:
was a rough weekend for the Oak·
U.Ttll CKI
Remarkably, it was the first time land Athletics.
the Indians won a game Ibis year in · First, they lost ace Dave Stewart
which the OJlPORent scored first
tn the disabled list on Friday. Then
Califom•a took a 1.0 lead in the they lost to the New York Yankees
second, taking advantage of an for the first time since 1989.
error by shortstop Felix Fermin.
On Sunday, it dido 't get any
With runners at fust and second,
Luis Sojo hit a ground ball to Fer·
min, who flipped the ball wildly to
secon(! trying for a force. That
loaded the bases, and Dick
Schofield followed with a riDI·scor·
ing forceout that Fermin snared in
the hole.
·
"Felix made a great play
there," Candiotti said. "That was
wen:
DOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER
.
WILL YOU HOST ME?
Student Exchange
..
Urbana, eliminated after its Fri·
day loss to MoiDit Vernon, was 2()..
20 and 15-13.
The University of Rio Grande,
top seeded as the tournament
be_PI!. hosted the playoffs and was
eliminated Thursday with a 7-4
loss to Urbana. The Redmen ended
the year at 28·16 and 18·7.
·
The NAIA National Base!>all
Tournament is scheduled for May
24·30 at Lcwistai, Idabo.
'II
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Candiotti.'s three-hitter drives .·
Indians to 4-J win .over Angels.
game, walking none and fanning gled and doubled, and Jeremy Dill
doubled and singled.
seven.
Southern defeated Kyger Creek
Southern hitters were Andy
Baer who hit for th cycle with a in the To11rney on Friday . to
single, double, uiple, and home advance to the Division IV finals at
Eastern on Friday. No stats were
rtiR.
Taylor had two singles, Kyle . yet available on lhat game.
Elstem 3, Trimble 2
Wickline two singles, and Chris
At Tuppers Plains, Eastern plat·
Ebersbach a double.
Southern defeated Trimble 4.0 ed three rtiRS in the second inning
in a combined shut out from Keilh and that was all they needed in
Jones and Andy Baer, who scat· rolling to a 3·2 sectional tournatcred four hits, fanned seven, and ment win over Trimble here Friday.
Coach Dennis Eichinger's boys
walked four. Day suffered the loss
are
now II · 7 and ad vance to the·
with five KO's and three walks .
tournanient
finals at home against
Southern hitters were Baer a
rival
Southern.
triple, Lisle a double, Taylor a sin·
Mark Murphy started the second
gle, and Ronnie Spaun a double.
inning
off when he reached on a
Trimble came back to claim the ·
Jerrud
Barber walked, and
single,
nightcap 13·10 in an all out
Malt
Finlaw
walked
to load the
slullfest.
.
.
.
f:our SHS pttch&S combined for bases at Rob Day got into some
_ control problems.
.
five KO's, and six walks.
An error allowed one run m,
Baer had a double, uiple, and
home run, while Grindstaff dou· while a Randy Kaylor ground out
bled, Wicldine doubled, Taylor sin· and ensuing error plated the other
two rtiRS, 3-0r
Trimble plated single runs in the
fourlh and sixth, but Jeff Durst, the
winning hurler. retired the side
inthe seventh.
·
Durst fanned five and walked five, while gainin~ the win. Day
suffered·the loss With eleven strike·
Mount Vernon Nazarene won outs and fioye haunting v,:illks.
Eastern hittcrs were Murphy and
the NAJA District 22 baseball
championship Saturday at Stanley Fin law, two seniors with two hits
L. Evans Field with a 3-0 sweep of each, while Kaylor, Tim Bissell,
Mike Smith and Jerrod Barber each
challenger Walsh.
·
111 S.Cond St., Pomtroy
The Cougars got into the cham· singled.
YOUI INDEPENDENT
pionship round after defeating
EHS is idle 1D1til Friday.
Urbana 12-2 in the first game of
AGENTS SERVING
..
Friday's playoff action. In the sec·
MEIGS COUNTY
ond game, Mount Vernon met
Walsh for the fllSI time in the post·
SINCE 1R68
season and walked away with a 9-2 .
win .
Because Walsh had been unde·
feated in the playoffs until that
point, the extra game to decide the
ch.ampionship was played Satur·
"Share your world with my world!
dar. The Cougars, coached . by
The 'walls must come down!"'
Keith Veale, left the toumanlent at
30..16 overaU and 18·7 in the disAmerican Intercultural
trict, while Tim Mead's Cavaliers
ended their season at 29-17 and 2()..
Mount Vernon
nets District 22
championship
Pomeroy, lncl.uded (L·R) Lloyd (Dinty) Moore,
Bud Bickel, Mel Clark, Jim Vennari, Dave DUes
and Fred Crow.
"
)
~
;
�Page--4--The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy~lddleport,
Monday, May 13, 1991
Ohio
·Pomeroy~lddlaport,
•
Portland, Chicago, Los Angeles
lea·d 3- ~ in NBA playoff series .
By The Aslloclated Press
the job done in the end," Drexler
For seven minutes in the fourth said.
quarter, Portland and UU!h were
"We let them run, go to the basseparated by the smallest of mat- ket, do whatever they wanted to
gins.
do," Utah head coach Jerry Sloan
By the time it was over, the said. "They got an open court on
Trail Blazers' lead in the Western · us."
Conference semifmal series was a
In other NBA playoff games
subsaantial3·1.
· Sunday, the Chicago BuDs took a
Portland pulled ahead 56-39 in 3-1lead wilh a 101-8S victory over
the first half and still led 82-68 Philadelphia and the Los Angeles
going into the.fourth quaner before Lakers beat Golden State 123-107
the Jazz started the final. period for a3-1 advanrage ill that best-ofwilh a 17-2 run for an 85-84 lead 7 series.
·
wilh 6:54lefL
Detroit, !tailing Boston 2•1,
That was the first of 18 lead plays host to the Celtics in
changes in the final minute, and tonight's only game. The other ·
neither team led by more than a three series resume Tuesday night
jloint in a seven-minute span from wilh Game S in Chicago, Portland
lhe 7:21 mark. until Terry Porter's and Inglewood, Calif.
two free throws wilh 13 seconds to
BuDs 101, 76ers 85,
go completed the scoring in the
Chicago won at the Spectrum by
Trail Blazers' 104-101 victay.
holding Philadelphia to 37 percent
"It's a tremendous win for us shooting in the first half, when lhe
on the ro11d. It puts us in good Bulls opened a 52,38lcad. · '
shape in the series," Trail Blazers
Horace Grant hlld 22 points and
· head coach Rick Adelman said. II rebounds, and it was his 13
"But it's a long way from over."
paints and sill offensive rebounds
-·· Clyde Drexler, who had 15 m lhe ftrst half that setlhe tone for
points, ll rebounds and 10 assists the Bulls, who never led by less
and is averaging a niple-double in than 10 in the second half.
the series, gave Portland the lead
"One of lhe things I wanted to
for good at 102-101 on a 20-footer eslablish was going to the boards,"
wilh 36 seconds lefL
said Grant, whose scoring total was
"We put ourselves in a position a playoff career-high, "I didn't do
til win ... and we were able to get a very good job Friday night (in a
I
99-97 loss). I wanted to be more
aggreSsive and lhey dido 't block
me out as much. We wanted one
win here and we got iL It will be
sreat to end it in Chicaao."
Michael Jordan had 25 points
and 12 assiSIS, while Scottie Pippen
had 20 points and nine rebounds
for Chicago, trying to reach the
Eastern Conference finals for the
third consecutive year.
Lakers 123, Warriors 101
Sam Perkins sco(ed 27 points on .
10-for-13 shootinJ as Los Angeles
pulled within a VJCtory of iis ninlh
appearance in 10 Western Conf«ence finals with its second .win at
Golden State. .
·
..PUPPET SHOW· Puppeteers Edith Baker, (1), and Marsha
Busb, (r), are seen with their puppets, "Grace" (1), the-mother or
the child puppet ''Katy" (r), ''Katy'' and "Grace" wiU eniertain the
cbUdren on Mooday, Tuesday and Wednesday evenings at 7 p.m.
in one or tbe Holzer Medleal Center Operating Room saltes, with
"Grace" explalnlag to "Katy" what happens when you have an
operadon. Tile cbldren are sure to both enjoy the puppet show,
and at the same lime, learn about the operadng room and allay
fears they may ban about coming to the hospital or having an
operation·.
'
, The_ Lakers used a 16-3 spurt,
mcludmg 11 consecutive points
early illlhe fourlh quarter to extend
a six·pointlead to 107-88 wilh 7:39
remaining.
·
Surgical Technologist Week
,activities focus on children
Byrori Scott had 21 points and a
career-high ll rebounds and Ml!gic
Johnson had 21 points and 11
assists for the Lakers, who made 36
of 47 free throws as the Warriors
committed 34 fouls against their
bigger opponents.
GIFr REBOUND - Portland center Kevin
Duckworth (00) gets a gift rebound Ia front of
Utah guard John Stockton (12) during the rorst
quarter or Sunday night's NBA playoff game in
Salt Lake City, Utah, which the Trail iiuers
won 104-101 to take a 3·11ead in their best-of.
seven series. (AP)
National Surgical Technologist
Week is now being celebrated
nationwide through the Association
of Surgical Technologists, Inc.
(AST), during this third week of
May, and wiU be observed at lhe
Holzer Medi~ Center, according
to Karen Meadows, CST, president
of the Ohio River Valley Chapter
' #269.
' Meadows, a ce.rtified surgical
.. technologist at lhe hospital, said lhe
focus at Holzer .to mark this special
.week will be a series of 7 p.m. programs in the operating rooms, featuring puppets, to which children
have been invited.
The certified surgical technologists (CSTs) and lhe surgical technologists (STs) at Holzer, will present special puppet programs on
Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday
evenings at 7 p.m. in one of the.
operating rooms. They have also
scheduled group tours for children,
with the emphasis on pediatric
surgery to lake place in another of
,the OR suites, all set up as if ready.
for' a surgical procedure, This entire
project is designed to help aUeviate
some of the anxiety and fear that
children may feel when they know
they are to have any type of
surgery. The group has also
planned school visitations for the
fiflh grade level.
As Ms. Meadows points out,
surgery can be a stressful time in
any patient's life and the lives of
lhcir loved ones. This is particularly ·bUe for children. To know that
skilled professionals are in lhe hospital
room can certainly ·
Davis, Reed Izaak Walton League contest champions
Chester, sponsors the tournament
each year, indicating that each year
the field gets i1ugcr and larger and
the competition much stiffer.
The Izaak Walton League is
National Conservation club. the
Ken Amsbary Chapter based near
Chester, is dedicated to conservation and wildlife aclivilics aimed at
Following a long and tedious
judging process, Kyle Davis and
Gary Reed were officially named
winners of the annual "Big Whitetail Buck" and "Largest Grouse
Tail" contests respectively,lhe Ken
Amsbary Chapter of lhc lzaak Walton League ofAmerica announced.
The loea1 chapter. based in
FIRST TURKEY -
seeing our air, woods, water and
soil \Yisely. used.
The club's judging committee
conducted its final measurement
for lhe annual contest wilh participants being judged on pre-determined cri~ria.
The winners of the buck contest
were determined by awarding a
Harle7 Stalnaker, 71, Pomeroy, ldlled his
nrst turkey Saturday 011 private property in Langsville. Rlcb1rd
, Mora caDed in the turkey wbk:h weighed :u and a quarter pounds,
. · had a 10 114-inch beard and 15/8-incli spurs.
Miller beats Eastern 3-1 in
sectional softball tournament
point for each of the following: for
each antler one inch or longer; each
inch or spread at the widest inside
spread; each inch of circilmference
at the. base above both burrs; for
each inch of antler length; and for
each inch of length of the main
beams.
The contest had 83 enniea Ibis
year at SS per entry. Each bad to be
an Ohio deer harvested by lelia!
means during the past deer hunung
season.
Kyle Davis rook fust place wilh
an eleven point buck,scoring 121
7/8 points by lhe IKE's system. He
received $!45.2S for his winning
effort, which he harvested with a
bow and arrow. Ryan Buckley
received $41.50 for bis second.
·place 10-point buck srpring a close
121 118 points. Tim Hawthorne
received $20.-75 for third wilh a I 0point buck and 115 1/2 points.
Bill Spaun entered a close
fourth place with his 10 point buck,
scoring 112 5/8 points. Larry Bailey and Charles Brewer entered
fifth lind sbtlh place entries with
eight-point bucks.
,
,
The winner or lhe grouse contest
was determined by measurin~ the
widest tail in the spread posiliOD a
lhe widest points. AU entries were
from grouse legallr taken during
the past grouse hunung seaaon,
;
Nine entries were tallied at $5
per entry, Gary Reed claimed ,
$22.50 for his winning entry that
measured 15 inches.
Meigs County game protector
Keith Woods had the second p1aa:
entry, measuring 12 3/4 inches.
Procees from the annual fund
raised money which wiU go toward
sponsoring the club's annual,
National Hunting and FiShing Day
activities and other club-sponsored
events.
•
Miller defeated EaStern 3-1 in son.
Sectional softball action to end lhc · Eastern sailed through the
Eaales • se8son at 11-3.
fourth, but Miller tied inthe fifth on
NOW OPEN FOR THE
Branda. Buckley, Beau Baley (sr.own wltb Tim
TOP SIX HUNTERS HONORED - Kyle
Edna Hensley suffered lhe loss, a walk, error and ground out.
Hawtbor~~e's winning mount) and Brent Buck·
Davis, bact left, baldl his winaing mount in the
SPRINO SEASON
while Cook picked up the win. Miller won the game in the sevley.la the back ·a re Davis, Ryan Buckley (second
Izaak Walto•·IIJNIIliOred "Big Whitetail Buck"
licnsley fanned seven and walked · enth, when with one out Nelson
co,..lete Li• of V•lablt
place) and Bill Spaun (rourth place). ·
contest. Joining Davis. are (front row, L·R)
~0: two, but costly errors ldlled the doubled, Sheila Weight walked,
and leclditlg Plants,
leues,
.
followed by two errors and a
Blooming and Foilage
. Cook fanned eight and walked Doughty single that put MHS up 3_,_co_nu_
·n_ued_
.
rrom
__
Pa-=ge_3.:..>
Ha119ing Baskets,' Fruit and
just one in allowing eight EHS hits. I.
Flowlll'iJ19 Tr~e~, Shrubs,
Eastern's lone run came in lhe
Wilson led off the EHS seventh
before
leaving
in
the
fourth
inning.
right
elbow
as
Kansas
City
sent
.
singles
and
Jimmy
Key
(5-2)
fust on a Hensley single, an enor, wilh a walk, but after a passed ball
Azaleas. lhodaclen*on• and
pitched seven strong innings in Milwaukee to its seventh straight
Ranaers 12, Red Sox 5
and RBI ground out by Jaime Wil- · was suanded at second.
Hally Trftl.
loss. ·
Ruben Sierra homered in the Toronto.
Boddicker
(3-3)
gave
up
two
Sprague got' his first major
first innins and liit a pair of RBI
Hubbardis Greenhouse
sin111es during a nine-run fourth league RBI wilh a single in the sec- runs on four hits. He will be examSYRACUSE, OHIO
innmg as Texas had fun at Fenway ond inning, He singled home ined in Kansas City today. Jeff
992-5776
Parle '
another run in lhe rourth off Greg Montgomery went two innings for
Optll DaHr •-s; Sun. 1-s
his eighth save,
The Ranllers tied a team record
Hibbard (2-1).
Mll-•MI
,I:Mp.m.
AMUICAN LIIAGIIII
o...aiiT-1:35J'IIL
EMIIH>Ioloo
with nine h11S in lhe fourth against
Twins 8, T.lgers 3.
NAnGNAL LI!AGIJE
W L PeL Gl
Greg
Harris
(1-4)
and
Dennis
Chili
Davis homered twice and
EutDI•Bonan
1110 .643
W L PeL GB
Lamp,
, T-.
1913 .S94 I
drove
in
four runs, helping Scott
Pittoburtlh
19 II .633 l)retrojt
................
1613 .552 21fl
Kenny
Rogers
(2-3)
breezed
Erickson
,win his fifth straight
Now Y..t
.........., 17 ll .516 I Ill
Milw•uioe
1316 .441 !5 1/2
Sometfiing (jootf's %ways Coof;jng Jtt
with the big lead. He pitched eight game,
SL Louio· '""""'"" 1614 $33
3
Clowlmd
IllS .423
6
M..""""""' IS 15 .500
4
Now Yodt
10 17 .370 71fl
innings and gave up 12 !\Its, includDavis hit a three-run, 431-foot
•
9>i<tl• . . """'"'"" IS 16 .480 411l
Ballimc:n
............. 10 11 .3S7
I
ing
Steve
Lyons'
two-run
homer.
homer
in the ftrst inning and con~ """"""
1417 .4l2 SIll
Wtst DlvWon
Wllf.DI•Woa
WLPd.GI
Mariners S, Orioles 4
nected again in the third against
W L PeL GB
OUiond
1111 .621 Edgar
Martinez
and
Pete
Bill
Gullickson (4-1). Davis' 141h
Atllnta
IS 12 .SS6
S.tdo
"""""""" 1714 .541
2
Cincianati ............. tS 14 .SI7
I
0
'Brien
singled
home
runs
in
the
llllcaso
1413 .SI9 3
career multi-homer game gave him
Loo Anpl,. .......... ll 14 .5 17
I
-.,..
161l .SI6 3
eighth
inning
as
Seattle
rallied
to
seven home runs this season.
Son
IMtl•
"""'"'"
IS
16
.480
2
ColifomU .............. IS ll .SOO 3 l(l
11-..i
.............
1217
At4
4
win
at
home.
Erickson (S-2) shut out Detroit
r...
............." 121• .462 4 1n
Sonl'nncileo .......... IO:!ll .333 61/2'
""""City '"""'" 1217 ,414
6
Harold Reynolds singled with on three hits for seven innings,
· Sal•rdlr{!.Ga"*
. s.aurdlr'• a. ....
one out off Gregg Olson (0-1) and
Cinciaooti 12, . F 2
Royals 6, Brewers 4
Oakland 10, Mew Y Dill 2
N-Yodt6,S..Frindocol
Ca1ifomU 2, Ckvdand I
Ken Griffey Jr. walked. Martinez
Mike
Boddicker pitched five
AW..ta 3, ~ 2
r..... s.euu.,2
HOMESTHE UTNC'll SPECI/\LS
singled with two outs to tie it at 4 innings before leaving wilh a sore
liouolGit6,SLLooio I
Loo
Anploo
3,1'biladelpltia
2
and
O'Brien
followed
with
lhe
goMi..- s, Dctrat 4
.Hominy Fh!luy, I 1 <LIIl. lo ,l p 111.
........ws, s.. D1oao I
Kana. City4, Milwtukoe 2
ahead single.
SU~'•Gam•
BlllirncJ.c II , Selttle. .S
Atleita6,~ 1
Mike Jackson (3-2) pitched
SUnd.lr'• Gam•
Cinoinnooi s, Cbicaao 3
TG•ll.s-S
three perfect innings to win,
MONPAY • Beans and Cornbread
PhiiMclohio 7, .... ""ad.. 3
New Yadt 10, Ootland 6
Blue Jays 4, White Sox l
M..-.11, Son 1>Mto 6
Cle¥dand 4, Califomil 1
... TitioWay
·
New Vodt .. Son FrinCHco l, II inTUESDAY· Creamed·Chicken
TOftDO 4, aw:.ao 2
Ed Sprague hit a pair of RBI
•'
MASON FAMILY
RESTAURANT
SLLoaio7,11-..i3
MHdi.J''•G-
S.ale '·
Bahimore 4.....
M.....,,,c
Ook1lnd (C. Y - I -0)" Now Yodt
(Sondooooo 3-1), 7:30p.m.
a-
Cllloqo (Mel) oeU S·2) ot
(Oonelo 6-0). 7:IS PJ!L
~ (Pin10y 5· I) It Clwdlllll
<Nur 1-2), 7:35 1'""
. 'l..i.Ckl.(SJiovioZ.l)otT..-
_,.,_
, ( _ , . . - 7:35.......
lloltoi1 (Onai G-O) 11 Tau (lty'"
3-3),1:3S JUIL
Ooly-
Celj'
I
lwletl
'taiNnrYc.t, 7:30p.m.
~ll'tb'
n, 7:3Sp.m.
Cllloqo•-· 7:3.5 p.m.
Soollleota...tla4, 7:311 p.ao.
x-a.,•T-7 ~llp.m.
r
'
'
-~
Atlonto (Gil,;, "2) ot OUcqo
(Bootio 2-3), 8:05p.m.
Cincinncl (ll<mmand 3·1) o1 Sc
Looio (HiD 2-2), l:llp.tll. .
New Yodt (CoM H) at San Dieto
(Be. ~)L~O:OS ~.m.
Jlhi'•onpd• (C.O. H) a1 San fran.
cil<oJ!:.:rl-l~IO:Olp.a
(Boyd 1·3) ...... ~
(lolutu. S· l), 10:3illm.
a.l)'lllnfl
,.... ., •• O.nMI
Adanu ll OUciao. 7 :05 p.m.
l'ltubtqh .. - . 1:35 p.m.
ClaoiJNii .. St. Loaio, 1:35 p.m.
New Yatlt 11 I• ~·
10:05Jl.m.
Mam.l. .. 1.o1 AD
,10:3S p.m.
PliJ, 1rlpW. aa S...
10:35
p.m.
*-led
JOHN A. ·WADE, M.D., Inc.
PLEASANT VAUIY HOSPRAL
Ell, NOSE & THIOAT
GENE~L ALLERGIST
"WE HAVE HEARINI AIDS"
(304) 675-1244
)
CINCINNATI (AP)- Churches ~romote iL .Aihletic teams earn
thetr way by it. Charities benefit
from iL And state authorities are
wary of ways it could be abused.
Bingo means big money across
Ohio, bringing in minions of doltars each year to more than 1,200
licensed charitable operators. It
also means big problems for those
who have to ov~ lhe games.
.
State investigators say it's
impossible to closely monitor all of
the games and difficult to catch
illegalities. They figure many violations go III1IIOikecl
"Proving it is Mn11 but we see a
lot of potential Cor It," said Kent
Shimeall. chief of charitable donationS in lhe Ollio aaomey general's
WEPNESDAY - Pepper Steak over Noodles
THURSDAY · Meatloaf with .
mashed potatoes &gravy, choice of vegetable.
ERIPAY -Fish Dinner, Macaroni/Cheese ·
.
'ltiii8DAT It TIIUII8DA'I', CRD DJID UJIDILit 12 &AT nD
FKOII CIIJJ.DRBII'8 lllltJnl, (EXCWDES DRINK· ~ DESSER'11
UIIIT I CHILD PIR ADULT
II Carry Out
Orden An'!•hle (304) 773-5321 11
SENIORS GET
lO'Mt DISCOUNT
fiWiil!!ll
t.iiitil
The third annual Holzer Clinic strength, lhcrmoregulalion, rehabilSports Medicine Conference, heW itation, and considerations for
Sawrday, April 27th, was attended female athletes. Following lunch,
by 54 arcs coaches, traiiiCIS, physi- seminars were provided on taping
cians arid other interested individu- techniques and CPR Certiftcation.
als. Schools represent.ed were
The Clinic's Sports, Industrial
Kyger Creek, Southwestern, Han- and Rehabilitative Medicine
nan Trace, Gallia Academy, Jack- Department '(SIRM) welcomes
son, Meigs, Ohio VaUey Christian, input from lhe public as lhey anticiSouthern, Point Plcssant and Han- pate the 1992 conference agenda.
nan, 'WV,
For information or suggestions, call
The attendees were instructed Lori Ward, Nationally Certified
· by the Clinic faculty in injury Athletic Trainer, in SIRM at 446recognition, conditioning and ·5244.
·Bingo means big money, problems
IcI
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JCaoou
MD wlllltoo
- ·Cil.J6,
· IJoonOt
3 4
Holzer Clinic Sports Medicine
conference growing in popularity
.
...,....,,,y...,.
CLASSI~IEDS
AMERICAN EXPRESS
ACCEPI'ED
-.,
.otftce.
""
LOS ANGELES (AP) - About
3,000 motorcyclists, including
rocker Billy Idol, loodly ~
on City Hall to protest a stale biD
that would require them to wear
helmets.
Many bikers at Sunday's rally
complained that helmets impair
their hearing and vision.
Idol, whose hits include "White
Wedding" aild "Rcbcl Yell," said
the issue is freedom of choice.
"The rider is the only one who
knows when he's safe, not some·
body siaing in the Legislature," he
said. Idol said he never wears a bel- ·
met, despite a IIIOiaCycle accident
in Februarr !990 that severely
injured his nght leg.
· A bill approved by the Legislature would require all motorcycle;
motor scooter and liiOIOrized bicycle riders to wear state-approved
helmets or face .fines. Gov. Pete
Wilson has not said whelhcr he will
sign'the bill.
Supporter say helmets would
save lives and reduce public spending on accident victims who lack
insmancc.
The National Head Injury Foundation estimates more than 1 mil·
lion Americans each year suffer
head injuries. or tbolie, about
HJO,OOO die and 90,000 suffer per:
manent brain damage.
Mota vehicle accidents account
for more than half of all head
injuries, the foundation said.
In 1989,1he U.S. Department of
Health and Human Services said
the medical and legal costs and
related economic losses for head
injury victims approach $2S bi16on
a year.
. NEW YORK (AP) - Bo Jackson says he can't bear to read lhe
s~ section now that he's been
stdelined from baseball and football by a hiP injury.
·
"I go out every Sunday morning, get the paper, sit in my yard
and read lhe comics," Jackson, 28,
told People magazine in its May 20
issue.
· Unable to play ball, forced to
hobble about on crutches, Jackson
said he feels "like a caged ani-
mat••
He passes the iime practicing
archery in the back yard, straightening out his fishing tackle box and
pursuing his rehabilitation program, which includes lifting
weights and running in a swimmina pool.
•~'I'll be back," he said. "I
know my body."
Jackson was released March 18
by baseball's Kansas City Royals
because of hip trouble that be~
with an injury he received playmg
football for the Los Angeles
Raiders.
~e sign~ last monlh ~ith lhe
ChlCI180 Wh1te Sox, ·
"I feel like I'm going on to
greener pastures," Jackson said.
"All I need to do is to ¥,et myself
back to the playing fteld. •
..
There have been a number of
criminal prosecutions over bingo
irregularillCs in recent years.
This week, four workers at a
bingo operation in Lorain go to
court on charges they skimmed at
least $118,000 over one year.
Last month, Cincinnati police
arrested a bingo ' volunteer on
charges of stealing $2,500. The
grand theft charges were ftled after
co-worlccrs called police.
In 1984, the operator of a bin$0
in Newport, Kr.., across lhe Ohto
River from C ncinnati, pleaded
~ty to a felony charge of promot·
mg gambling. Police said lhe .operator skimmed $1,500 to $3,000 a
night from the game's profits. The
bin11o benefited the Greater Cincinnau chapter or lhe Cystic Fibrosis
Foundation .
-·
The Dally Sentlnei-Page-5
Community ~alendar
Comm~Jnity Calendar items
apptar two days before an event
and the day or that event. Items
must be received weU In advance
to assure publication in tbe calendar.
MONDAY
POMEROY -The D.A.V . and
Ladies Auxiliary will meet Monday
at 7 p.m. at the haU, 124 Butternut
Ave. in Pomeroy. Refreshments
wiU be served.
1UPPERS PLAINS - The Tuppers Plains VFW Post No. 9053
Ladies Auxiliary will meet 7:30
p.m. Monday. Mary Bowen will
mstall officers, All urged to attend.
BILLY IDOL
BEDFORD TOWNSIDP - The
Bedford Township Trustees will
meet Monday at 7 p.m. at lhe town
haU.
LONG BOTTOM - Mt. Olive
Community ,Church in Long Bottom will have revival Monday
through Sunday at 1 p.m. Pastor
Lawrence Bush invites lhe public.
.
\
RUTI.AND - Skin testing clinic
at the Rutland Fire Department,
Monday, 4:30-6:30 p.m . Any individual who will be assisting with
lhe alumna or July Ox Roast should
have the skin tesL
POMEROY - The Meigs County Board of Education will meet
Monday, not Tuesday, for its regular meeting.
DO JACKSON
REEDSVILLE - The Riverview
PrO will meet Monday at 7 p.m. at
the schooL Art and Science Fair
projects will be on display. Room
molhers will be recognized. New
officers will be introduced.
expecting Ted Turner at commencement, but they also got his
girlfriend, Jane Fonda.
Turner, who created CNN, was
TUESDAY
the keynote speaker Sunday and
POMEROY - The Ohio Eia Phi
received an honorary degree, Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi Sorority
Fonda, the actress and exercise will meet Tuesday at 7 p.m. at lhe
mogul, sat in the front row.
Meigs County Public Library.
· Turner told lhe more lhan 2,100
graduates that lhe war coverage his
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
network brought to viewe~ around Flame Fellowship will meet Tuesthe world helped show lhat "war is day at 7 p.m. Speaker will be Gary
not the way to accomplish things, Hines of the New Life Convenant
that they have to be done through C~urch of God in Chester. The
discussion and through peaceful
means and that we have to resolve
our problems."
GARY, Ind. (AP) -Styx, on
the comeback trail after eight years,
slllCk close to home for rehearsaL
The rock band, which has sold
more than 20 million records, practiced' at the Genesis Convention
Center in Gary all week before
heading to a concert in Florida.
"AU the guys are from Chicago,
and we didn't want to go out to Los
Angeles to rehearse. They wanted
to stay home," said Keilh Marks,
the band's road manager. Gary is a
30-minute drive from Chica~o.
Among the band's bus are
"Babe." "Lady" and "Show Me
the Way."
School budget woes mean
summertime blues for students
CLINIC CONFERENCE- Dr. Da• Black, Medical Director or
Holzer Clinic's Sports, Industrial and Rehabilitative Medicine
Department, addressed the third annual Clinic Sports Medicine
Conrerence held Saturday, AprU 27.
Sc( )t'l? board
Names in the news
MEDFORD, Mass. (AP) . Tufts University graduates were
--------~----
AL games...
help to reduce Ibis stress, through
knowledge and truSL
AST Week has been celebrated
nationally for lhe past eight years.
The organization, founded in 1969,
is a non-profit educational association with 12,000 members throughout the world. The organization is
committed to promote a high standard qf surgical technology performance in the community for quality patient care.
· A surgical technologist is a
health care professional who has
completed the necessary education
to perform specialized duties during surgical procedures, Surgical
technologists· who successfully
pass lhe natiooal certifying examination, administered by' the Liaison
Council on Certification for Surgical Technologists (LCC), are called
Certified Surgical 'J'echnologists, or
CSTs.
Certification is a way for surgical technologists to demonstrate to
their employers, olher health care
professionals, lhe public and their
peers, lhat lhey are knowledgeable
in the principles of science and
patient care, unique to surgical
technology,
The local AST Chapter welcomes surgical technologists from
heallh care fields in Southern Ohio,
West Virginia and Northern Kentucky, For additional information,
or to learn more about the special
pediatric programs being presented
this week at the Holzer Medical
Center, contact Ms. Meadows by
calling 446-7693 evenings.
Ohio
Thousands of schoolchildren grams remains undecided, especialneeding help with lhe basics won't ly in states like New Yodt, Califorget it this summer as financially nia, Rhode Island and Mas pressed districts cut or eliminate sachusetts where lawmakers are
still debating how to spread the
summer sessions,
Hardest hit,so far. Northeastern pain of huge projected budget
l!lld Midwestern cities including deficits,
In New York, a recent survey
Philadelphia, Cleveland, Cincinfound
that 16 percent of the state's
nati, Milwaukee, Boslon and
720
districts
will cut or eliminate
Chicago. Summer programs seem
summer
school
if Gov. Mario M.
safe so far in most Western and
Cuomo's
proposed
$891 million
Southern staleS.
reduction
in
state
education
aid
Indianapolis plans to cut almost
aU summer enrichment and elective lakes effect.
Summer school is ~enerallv
classes - a decision affecting
li,OOO of the disnici's 50,000 stu- among the more vulnerable budget
dents.
items in tough times. But school
"We're very sensitive to the officials interviewed around the
fact thai Ibis Is going to bring some country this spring cited mounting
difficulties for some parents," said evidence that such cuts can have
Indianapolis schools, spokesman serious consequences.
Mark J, Goff. "But qu1te frankly
Summer programs are crucial
we cannot afford to do it. That's for weaker students who need help
lhe bottom line."
in gaining basic skills and tend to
Cleveland is cutting its summer forget what they've learned over
program in half by eliminating ses- the summer. Educators feel that •
sions for grades two, three, seven summer sc!tool, by keeping stuand ll.
dents from falling behind, is a key
· "Last year we had close to tool in preventing dropouts.
9,000 kids. This ye&J; it will be
4,000 to 5,000," said sP.'!kesman
A just-released analysis of New
John Hairston. "We don t have lhe York
City's summer pmgrams
money."
serving
some 100,000 pup1ls found
Milwaukee, facing a $33 minion
that
such
classes reduce by half a
school deficit, is considering cutchances of bein~ placed
ting elementary and middle school .sintudent's
costly
special educauon proprograms from six weeks to four
weeks and eliminating a popular grams.
kindergarten program to save $1.7
million,
Some districts are also sharply
increasing Sllldent fees for summer
school. Charses in some places
now range as high as $200 per
course.
The Kanawha Countr Board of
Education in West Virgmia is raising summer tuition from $90 a
creditl9 $200 and eliminated transportation.
Fees in Anne Arundel County,
Md., which includes An~lis and
Baltimore suburbs, will nse from
$75 to $100 per course for students
who take remedial or makeup
courses, and $75 to SISO for students taking extra courses. Poor
students will continue to attend
free.
The fate of many other pro-
public is invited.
POMEROY - The Meigs County Board of Heallh will meet Tuesday at 4:30,p.m. at the Meigs
County Multi-Purpose Building. •
POMEROY - The Meigs County Senior Citizens will host a performance by the Rio Grande University Grande Chorale on Tuesday
at !p.m. The public is invited and a
free will offering will be laken,
POMEROY - Pomeroy Nursing
and Rehabilitation Center will host
a minister'$ luncheon on Tuesday
at noon to honor aU ministers who
speak at the facility.
HARRISONVILLE - The Harrisonville Senior Citizens will hold
a blOOd pressure clinic on Tuesday
from 10 am. to noon. A potluck for
members wiU be held after the clinic. All members are urged to
attend.
RACINE - The Southern Local
School District elementary band&
will present,their annual concen orr
Tuesday at 7:30p.m. in the South·
em High School gymn. The public
is invited. The band is under the
direction of Thomas Walters.
MIDDLEPORT - The Meigs:
County Chamber of Commerce
will meet Tuesday at 7 p.m. at
Overbrook Center. Rhonda Dailey,
director of nursing at Veterans
Memorial Hospital will give a presentation on stress management.
Walter Stowers with the Ohio
Bureau of Employment Services
will give a bnef presentation of
JSEC.
WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT • The Middleport Literary Club will. meet
Wedneday at 1:30 p.m. Mrs.
George Hackett will be lhe hostess. ·
A formal English tea will be
served. Mrs. Ronald Reynolds will
review "The Wlnd at Morning."
Roll call will be "a historical dream
unfulfilled.
MIDDLEPORT - The Middleport Arts Council will host a mop
d.oll class on Wednesday from 10
a.m. to 7 p.m.
·
Undated leather: proper
cleaning and care tips
By The Associated Press
What should be kept cool,
avoilfing perfume and bair sprays.
spuming pins and adhesive name
badges, and letting all wrinkles
hang out?
The answer: leather garments,
whelher they be made of cowhide,
sheepskin or pigskin,
The advice on how to treat
leathers comes from the New
York-based Leather Apparel Association, which points out that different leathers require different
kinds of cleaning and care.
"Black and white rules rarely
aJlllly," notes the association in its
gu1delines for proper garment care.
· "Therefore we suggest consulting
a leather expert to assist in the
selection or care products, to make
alterations and particularly to
obtain proper cleaning.''
All products designed to be used
at home should be tested ftrst on an
inconspicuous part or the garment,
according to Lili Glassman, the
association's managing director.
For example, althoul!h lhere are
leather conditioners tliat contain
mink oil, Miss Glassman says mink
oil may darken some leathers.
And detergents can leave slreaks
on analine-dyed leathers, she says,
while other ingredients used in
home-treatment formulas may discolor and stiffen garments.
"Our member cleaners have had
hundreds of cases where they had
to treat garments damaged by lhese
items," adds Miss Glassman.
"Perhaps the confusion stems from
using these items on 'painted'
leathers, which are surface-dyed
only, as opposed to the vat,dyed
analines where the color permeates
the leather all the way through,
"Paint~d leathers were more
prevalent years ago, and their reaction to oils and detergents may not
have been as noticeable lhen.
"Identifying which leathers are
painted and which are analine~yed
1s not an easy task for the consumer, although analine-dyed
lealhers do tend to be softer."
Miss Glassman explains that
many of the problems associated
with leather care are due to con•
sumers' lack of product education.
''Often they make problems
worse by attempting to clean a spot
with lhe wrong thing," she adds.
The association's guidelines recommend storing leather garments
. on broad hangers - not wire - to
maintain their shape; keeping them
in a cool, well-ventilated area: and
avoiding heat, damp and extended
brightlight.
'
Warning tllat plastic will dry
leather out, the association also
advises keeping dust off leather
apparel by using a cloth or paJICI;
sh1eld over lhe shoulders,
· •
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Page 6 The Dally Sentinel
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Monday, May 13, 1911
Ohio
.A Salute To
00@~D®Dll~O
~oQ~O
W®®[k
Veterans MemOrial Hospital
Classifi
•
TO PlACE AN AD CAll 992-2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
CLOSED S~NDAY
"Our Team Works .F or You!"
12·18,i991
n~n
3 d..-• .a1
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•
Wonts
15
16
16
16
16
3
6
10
Monthly
;
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.42
.60
.06/dov
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2
3
4
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lnMenwry
AtWMNCtm•1s
Givt...,ty
Htppy Ads
' Lost tnd Found.
Y•d s .. ,l~itl in advance!
Public Salt · Auction
Wll'\ted1o Buy
31
32
33
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36
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Eriiplll)lill'lil
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t:la.~.~ifir•d fiiiJW-~ i·m·r•r tlu•
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Yoilld S;tlt.'1i
Gtllla County
AruCocle61•
Mei . . County
"••• Code 114
MnunCo.WV
446 G4111ipolis
912 MlcldiPolhwoy
9•5 Ch•..,
843 Poflland
?47 letlrl ,....
949 Racine
742 Aullllnd
6,7 CGO"'all1
&1&
lt7 Ch•hife
DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
11 .00 A.M. SATUROA'W
2 00 PM MONDAY
2 :00PM . TUESDAY
2 00 PM WEDNESDAY
2,00 P.M THURSDAY
~ ~0 PM . FRIDAY
318 Vinton
245 Rio Grtnde
256 Gu..,n Dial
643 ArtbiaOiu
379
w..... .
AruCodel04
Pl . ,. . ...,.t
458 l.on
676 Apple Grove
773 M••o•
112 New Haven
885 let•rl
937 llulhla
S"r v ll.t
1
61 Ftrm Equ•pmunt
62 w.,..ted to Buv
83 liv~stoc:k
64 Hay • GriM\.
Busln•slulldlngs
lots & Auetge
Rell Estat• W~t~t•d
· 6~
.,o,
71 Autos
Saltt
72 Trucks tor Silll1
7J· V1tns B. 4 WD ' s
41 Furni1hH Aoonta
· 1•
46 Span tor Rent
47 WMted to Rent
48
Equipment ·tor AUut
for Lt••
75
76
77
78
79
'
15 · Schools • lnsuucuon
Mr!rt:hiiflllrse
16 Atdto, lV • Cl RupMit
17 MtiC:elltn.OU I .
1,8 W•lled To Do
MutOtcyclus
Bu1111 a. Moton tor Siilu
Auto P•ul. Ac:ceuoms
Auto Rtpiltr
Camptng Eqlllpmtrnt
C•m~s &
Motor Homes
Si!f'JICP.S
~ 1 Hou•hold Goods
62 -· Sporting Goo•
51 Anbques
54 Misc. M •c:hand41e
55 luilding Suppli•
56 P11s lot' Stle ·
57 MulictllnJtnllnenh
58 Frutls. V1gtllebl• '
59 For Stll or Trsde
,
21 Busin•• Opportun•ly
22 Money lo loin
23 Prof•sion1l Ser"u:w
Sued & F~rhl1.rer
Trr~ns ortdiiUII
Apartment tor Aunt
49
·'iJIIII'S
,\ Li.t•,IIJ,k
Homn lot' Salt
Mobile Homn tor Sotlt~
F••ms lot Sal •
44
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11 Htlo WIR1ud .
12 ·Stlua1.on w ..,_.
11 lnsuu~nce
14 Busin•slr•lmng
F,r:lll
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41 · Hou.. t IOf Rent
42 Mobil• HQm• lor A tint
43 Farm• tor lhnt
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'A cl;lliSIIIL'CI ad\lurt••u•"tltll pl..Ct..'dln lh~ Dally StmtHullllll
Ct!pt
clils st tt ud thspluy . Busmutis Cau1 antll~1ill noltctt~l
w.tl o.hu itppu4tl' Ml tlu: Pt Plealilll~l Regn;t~r 11nd th1t G11lh
pulllli Oiuly Tuhuntl. r~adunu ovur 18,000 hormr5
MONDAY PAPER
TUj:SOAY PAPER
,
WEDNESDAY PI\PER
THURSDAY PAPER
~H10AY PAPER
· SUNDAY PAPER '
.20
t13.00
·'Putu ol ad lor .all capitllltJ'IUtU IS double prtett ot 'ad cost
COPY Of AD LINE
.
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89.00
ch•u•
In Mcmortirln
Ov91 16 Wordl
Rote
84.00
6
'1 poun lm tt typo only usttd .
"Sentlnt!lrs nol utsponslbht lor euors illher fir st llif¥' (Clld
l(lf euuu tlrst d., ad tuns m papur) . Call ht!lufe 2 .00 p m
diiV afiHf pubhcalion to n\lktt carntctlon
'Ads th•t ·~•ust btl patd m ad\tilnctl ilflt ·
C;ud ollh ;wrkS
H01ppy Ad'
•
•
RATES
o.,.
,
POLICIES
• Ads ouU+dtl M1ng1, Githa or Mason counltM must bt: prt!
paed
'Rt!ti::N I ~ S 50 drscount lor 11dl p;ud I0-411hlancl!
'f,t!l! ads
Givti<~Wiy 11nd Found ads und41f 15 words wtKbe
• The Ar.ea's Number 1 Marketplace
81 Homeln1p1ovum•tt w.
82 Plumbmg • H•••nu.
8 J E KC w•tlng
Electpcat •
84
AetugtwMIIOtt
85 G11ndl11 Meutmu
86 Mobllu H ~ntu RttpiiUI
87· Upholstery
••
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Business
·Services
......_
BULLETI" BOARD
•
.
BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE
4:30P.M. DAY BEFORE
PUBLICATION
ca•ncua.n
•• Ill ROOI CAll
•RNIOMble RttN
.CAREER DAYS- As a part oflls Commu11lty Setvlce role,
VeterAIIS Memorial Hospital Is offering Career Days to area
hl'h .achool stude11ts who might be l11lerested 111 a career In the
medical field. Students are brought to the hospital a11d are Ia·
ken to each department where they are glve11speclftc details on
educalloll and the employment opportullltles whlcll are ava)la·
ble. 111 the photo, Hospital Adml11lstralor Scull Lucas, rlg-111,
welcomes Mrs. Leah Ord, guidance counselor at 8outher11 High
School, and a group of Southern High students.
ACCREDITATION
FolloWing- au lnte111lve on-sUe
evaluation, Veteraus Memorial Hoepltal has been awarded
colllll!ued accredltalloa by the .Joint Commlllllon oa Accredlta· ·
lloa of Healthcare Org-anlzalfoD8. The Commlulon Is eompoeed
of members of the Amerlcau College of Surg-eo111, te American
CoUeg-e of Pbyslclau, tbe American De11tal "-clallon, the
American Medical Asaoclallon and the American Hospital Association. The Commlulo11 jadaes every facility examiDed oa a
set of criteria which has been approved by the commlulon. Ac·
credllatlon II evldeace thai Veterans Memorial Hospital pro·
vldes quality health care. Pictured with the offlelal declaralloa
of the three year c011llnued accredltallon are,llo r, David Fox,
chairman of the hospital' I Board of Trustees; Hospital Admin·
latralor Scott Lucas, and Dr. Mark o. Brown, President of the
hospital's Medical Staff. ·
.
•Ouallty Work· . · ·
•Frw Eatimatee
•Csraet Hea Faat D,Y
IMPROVEMENTS - Efforts are eenstantl7 u~rway at
Veteran• Memorial Hospital to uptrade tile phJIIeal faciUIIes
of the hospital as weD aa the equfpmeutiO that the IIIBII&ulloa
can meet the healthcare demanda of the areL b tile pllolo, Ad·
mlnllltralor Scott Lacas and Kim Sbamblld, liead of the RUiol·
og-y Department, are pictured with new x-ray equlpmt*t In·
stalled at the hoapltal.
·
Time
·
•Hiah Glou on Tile
Floor Flnlah
Ml LIWIS. ow-
THIS l"xl"
BULLETIN BOARD
SPACE AVAILABLE
. AT ss.OO PER DAY
lt.l,htllrllll. ON.
742-2451
.........
BISSElL & lUilE
CONSTIUCDON
..........
Stop & C0111pare
'
"Our Team Works For You" is the theme for National Hospital
Week, May 12-18, currently being observed at Veterans Memorial - Your Hometown Hospital.
Be advised .that your Hometown li'l&pital is a~ive, wel1, a~d
appreciative of your continued support.
At Veterans Memorial, the staff of highly trained professio· ·
nals have been taking care of you and your loved ones for over a
quarter of a century. We think of it as "Our family taking good
care of your fan:aily."
·
Veterans Memorial Hospital stands ready, willing and able
to provide you and your family with quality medical service 365
days a year. In addition, staff members are pledged to Commun·
ity Service and the hospital stands tall in the communiQs econ-
GRAVELY TRACTOR .
...._J
SALES AND SERVICE
992-2975
POMEROY, OHIO
Adolph's Dairy Valley
Pomeroy, Ohio
Ohio
K&C Jewelers
Swisher-Lohse Pharmacy ·
992-t.9 55
•
YourBankPtJ¥. .
TU'PEIS "-AINS, OHIO
Mombtr F.O.i C.
Po••oy, Ohio
Middleport, Ohio
992-6611
Pomeroy, Ohio
992-5432
Middleport, Ohio
992-5627
Home National Bank
MDIIII FDIC
949-2210
Ohio
1
•
Ewing Funeral Home
992-36.71
Pomeroy, Ohio
Ohio
992-3345
.DDlEPOIT, OliO
992-6472
-9 49-2168
4-S·II·I
4/12/'11/1 - ·
SHRUB & TREE
TRIM and ·
,REMOVAL
•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD
BILL SLACK
992-2269
USED RAILROAD TIES
..12·10-tfn
110. ptl.
IHI
coumY CLUI
Stle
GOlF LESSONS- $10 to.
6 for 155
NEW G.PS .~...... ~ ....... S4
Broken ct•• R.,.irtd
TROPHIES • PlAQUES
IADGIS
JOIN 11APOID
s-tC..,M,011a
After 5 p.m.
·
117/'11/1 mo. pd.
ISii APPUIIICIS
to lAY WUUIITY
WAS118S-$100 .,
DIYH-$69ep
.
.,..IIAI'OIS-$100 ep
IMOIS---$U5 ep
fiHDIS-$115 .. . '
•no OYIIIS-Sn .,.
KEN'S APPliANCE
SERVICE
992-5135 • 915-1561
AcniJ Fr11t1 r..t Office
I'OIIIIOY, OliO
10130111 tin
4/J/1110.
FlEE EmMATES
_.,_
1tl8ffllllf.
PubliC Notice
Complete Grooming
For All lrllds
EMiliE MERINAR .
Owner &Operatar
,_,,,
•VInyl lldlng
•Rspltctmll'lt
205 N. Soc_. Stroot
IIDOUPOIT, OliO 457~
Offtco 614·tft-21U
HOMI
TOOL
JAMISWSII
992-2772 or
Middleport, Ohio
11-14-1111
We
•VINYL SIDING
•ALUM INUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION
BISSELL
SIDING CO.
•••"-hilt
rltht to remove any of the
•Insulation
742-2251
539 Bryan PI-
614-992-6120
MAKE IT ARUlE...
US~ WANT ADS,
ARANDY
Windowe
•Roofing
"Fr" Eatlmatn"
'PH. 949-210 I
or Res. 949-2160
NO SUNOAY CAUS
).IJ.Ifll
LINDA'S
PAINTING
r•
lntert.r • btorlor
ISYIMI"IIS
, ... the ,.m ·out of
....1...
ltt 1111 4lo It fer Y"·
YilT IUS-AU
IIYIIIfi-CIS
(6141 915-4110
4-23·1 mo. pd.
Now Itt
•
•
SIHIIII
All CONDRIONERS • HEAT PUMPS ond
. .FURNACES
. . . . .. .FOR
. .. .MOillE
. .. . .I. DOUilEWIDE
.. . ' .HOMES
. ,
. .
. MOilLE HOME . :
.... . .. ..
~::~:,"
BENNETT'S
1
&octltH On Safferd SchMII•• tff lt. 141
•
16141 446·9416 or 1·100·171·59U
4·28·11
20 \'I!AIII EX,./FIIEE Elf:
Celt Now
Prkt
above nemod vohlctoo from
the oolo et ony time.
·
C4l 7. a. t. 10. 12. 13. 14.
7tc
Til-COUNTY
•SANI1lt10N
sr"'C TANI 'UIIfiNG :
POll"·A·JOHN RENTAL •
BULLDOZER and
BACKHOE WORK,
HOME SITES.
LANDCLEARING.
WATER ·and SEWER
LINES
742-21168
4·23· 1 mo. pd.
D- ThCIS
SIGNS
AYAilAIU
FREE ESTIMATES
992-7458
4-21·11· 1·mo. ....
BISSELL
.BUILDERS ·
CUSTOM IUILT
HOMES & GAUGES
..
CtC4tlllt
tick. lttOIIJtt~
~~rby
by
~UALITY
Point Plnsant · 11~92'
.
1:
A1\110 LII\C l 'llll'fll s
3 Announcements
"At R-nollle Prien"
, .. 949-2101
or IH. 949·2160
• Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CAllS
4-16-N-lfe
· Want to: .
992-6685
PIN down EX 11M.
·SPEEDY VAC
CA~tl?!l
Quality
Sweeper
Repair
IU£DIAT£ POSSESSION - This .
Home with 49• acres is ready and waiting!
i
dis~washer, relng., range. lireplec~, air . 1
, furniture including lV and VCR. Allrt needs ~ YOU!
$54,900.
'
Prescription Shop
IIINI·FARII CLOSE TO IIDDL£PORT - Both town and
country? Now you can have it all! This property has approx.
3 88 acres with a 2 story frame home that has 3 bedrooms,
family room equrpped kitchen, I car garage and a barn.
Many other 'great features plus the comfort of country and .
convenience ol town all for $32,000.
·
992-6669
IIACIN£ - · I\? story home with 3 bedrooms. I\? baths, car·
pet and hardwood floors. Acomfortable home aj an alforda·
ble price of $29.500 .
Chester, Ohio ·
, RACINE- 3 bedroom home in town. ClosetoS(:hools,_shop·
ping and churches. Nice sile lot. Aplace wrth potentlll lot
the right person. Needs some work. Would make a great star·
ter home' ASKING $19,500 MAKE OFFER!
arner
INSURANCE
IIIDDL£PORT - Become the landlord ol this nice 2 u01t
apartmeot building m Middleport and ~ou can collect the
good rental income it has! Thrs bu1ld1ng IS locatllll1n a good
neighborhood and is close to everythmg 1n town! The owner
wants to sell, so make an offer! ASKING $18,000.
Ohio
•'
COITENTI£NT FOR PUR CUSTDIIEIS. A DISSATISFIED
HOI£ BUYER COULD DO OUR IUSIIESS 10 EID OF
HARII. Tll.\rS WHY WE'RE SO DET£111110 TO PLEASE
OUR CUSTOIERS. IF YOU'RE IUYII8, Lnutlllll FIID
TH£ VERY PLACE YOU WAIIT. IF YOU'IE lEW., IE CAll
SAVE YOu n1E All II TIOUILE IY SIIOWIIIYOII PIOPERTY ONLY TO IITEIESTED. OUAUFIED JIIIOIPEC11.
SINCE OUIOIE OBJECT II TO l'fGVIDEYOVWITH"IIOIE
HAPPINESS.'' WHY NOT SE£ Ul - AID Sll IIIAT W£
CAN DO FOR YOU WITHOUT OILIIIATIOII?
HENRY E.
. ............... 2•• 181
JEAN
................... 141-2110
Mid•eport, Ohio
'
.........
51100 S. I. Ul,
.
992-6434
EXCAVATING
1117 FORD TAURUS 4
Dr. Sed.., 1FAIP83UXHA22JIIZ
.
1888 GMC Converolon Von
2GDEG21HIJ4107021
1111 CHEV. Cema•o ZZB.
. 1G1FP87F9FN;42018
The Terms of the • • oro
caoh.
The Homo Notlontl Bonk
,....,,. the right to. reject
onv 01 en bldo. Tho Homo
Notlonel Bonk reurveo tho
•'
• ·I
247·4035
.
AND EVERYTHING UNDERNEATH
INSULATION
1811. Ill 10:00 A.M . tho
•• •
f
10·8; Sun. 12·&
· G.uttars '
Downspouts
Gutter CINning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES
GROOM
ROOM
MIKE SWIGER
992-6491
t1rtet1 materlN.
Open ThuN. thru Sa1.
NEW- IEPAII
J&L
Homo Natlonll Bonk wUl of.., for ule et Public Auction
the fallowing:
Mldtlleport, Ohio
992-2635
•Herb Plonto·•,..renllllo
•Everlaltlngo
Creftaro. Cllow you own
ROOFING"
1111 I UWII CAll
POMEROY, OHIO
992.2259
•
Ingels Furniture
Now Open For !lprlni!JI
WE 00.
HOWARD IROS.
742·2360
· State Farm Insurance
992-6687
ROOFING
PROFESSIONAL
SUNROOF
INSULAnON
·contact
STEVE WHITE
THE
PUILIC NOTICE
-lday. Mey 111.
Fruth Pharmacy
Pomeroy, Ohio
.........
'•••••••h
· Pomeroy, Ohio
985-3301
OHIOIIVDMRIS
and EVIaAmNGS
......
Pomiroy, Ohio
992-2174
The Quality Print Shop
Sugar Run Mills
992-2115
•I
Baum Lumber Company
992-6333
Ohio
992-2284
r
FUIIITIIE, APPUANCIS, TV'S, FLOOR COVERING
,............
,.
Real Estate General
Smith-Nelson Motors, Inc.
Locker 219/heritage house
Pomeroy, Ohio
•
•.•.
Fabric Shop
I'OIEIOY, OliO
667-3161
Crow's FamUy Restaurant
INSURANCE AGENCY
992-3785
v ..•
Farmers
Bank
& Savings Company .
5-31 -'90 tin
-~
~
- . -~~:::.:J
..
992•2136
Valley Lumber Co.
,.
992-2556
Fs
------..------"1
915-4473
667-6179
•~.~
y These Many Fine Bu~inesses ...... .
This Page Is Spon$ored
.
FrH Elfinlatos
omical picture through providingemploymen, payroll taxes and ..
op~rational purchases.
Your Hometown Hospital is always prepared to provide a variety of servvi~es including ~4-hour emergency care, an urgent
care center, in-patient and out-patient surgery, a complete range
of laboratory and radiology work, a special care unit, a. skilled
nursing facility for long term care, a home health nursing service provided in your own residence, and physical therapy. We
have the latest state-of-the-art equipment to aid in your care and
treatment.
Count on us to give you a hand with any health problems.
. Just give us a call at 992-2104.
.
Howard L Wrltonl
3·14-"tl-tfn
oGanps
•C.-plata
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPitAL••• OUR TE.M WORKS FOR YOU .
COli-'S
•
· ·························· ....
· =-~~~~~~ BRINAGER ..... :.......... 141·2431
181-44.11
1·
o u O ; , oo 0 oooO 00 00100 I I 0 00 00 00 00 00
112·1211
698-6591
.
111rn your c/uUer into ctJ.tJh,
Sdl it the eau way.. .by ulume,
no need to leat,e. your lwme.
"Place your cla11ifjed ad today!
15 words or le11s, 3 flqyt,
3 paper1,l6.00
t;nll tJIIr nflir.n fnr pnitl in.
1.·---~--'---
2._ __.:....:..__ __
__
:~ ..
.......__~--
adt,nn~n rnlmc!
4-1·'90·1 ....
YOUNG'S
·CARPENTER SERVICE
-~--·
-G--tll
-1-
'"" ,..........
-·-...··.....
,_lnt
-e
...- -~
CFREE EBTIMATEI}
V. C. YOUNG Ill
,_,,,Ohio
992-6215
11·1 (.'90 1fn
9 . _ _ _ _ _-11·-----.:...;.;.=..::;;J
"'··----....--'jlr------
H .._-'--:-_ _-1
WHILIY'S .
AUTO PillS
4.·----~- '12.
SpectoR... ..
.t; •._ _ _ _.::.._. , "J ·- - - - - 1
. ··-- - - - - - 11 c..... · - .....r
6 . _ _ _ _ __ J1·.
NEW a USID PAIITB
F()ll ALL MAllEI a
7._ ___:...;:.......:...._ _ I!;.
MODELl
8 •._ _ _....:_._ _
992-7013
or 992-JJJS
.. .., ..
Po•e.-oy ltnlly $e11tlnel
1. . . . . . .,.
992-2156
DIIWII, CillO
111/'11/1 ....
•Room Addition•
.a ••••••
•Kitchen.• • Betha
•VInyl Sldlna
•Reatoretlon
•Repelr Work
•Landecaplng •Oredlng
R. L. MASH
CARPENTRY
992-5526
PO.IOY, OHIO
4-11-11·1111.
MICIOW&VE
OVEN IIP&II
AUIIUIS
Bri.. It ... 01: ••
PldiU,.
ON'S l ....llllla
SIIYICE
•w
u.....
lutl--
AICC
a,..,..._;
0124. - Oood -.114-31~.
•
311/111
=r===~r·
-In_,.,.
*471.
UPHOLSIRY
21/J ... Htll.
LDII a Found
=
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
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II
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......, ... oi~J.C.
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36Yoonla,..._oe
LOIT• IItie 0... a Ool' ~
lttlrtnw IIIII. M
'"" .... 111111, .._.._
....... 'lllll!llf;
UWAID,I'M . . . . .
~.,.j
Custom Drape•
614·H2-2321
w. ley Wlllt W. Do.
w. Do Wlllt We ley.
10-11-1 ••.
7
Homo RaPail'l
•Roofing
eSicllng
ePalntlnJ .
10 JOB T1IO SIAll
FREE ESTIIATES
CIDAR
:
H•nd Tufting
5-10.11-tfll.
eRamaclalliiJ and
--114-'IU-. .
,.. "'·-
OIUY OIIU. 011111
742-2421
--Milt
II'T ......
Acna F........ Office
117L ..... It.
,, 14111.,,
Tu•tley thru latutdey
10:00 ...,.1:00 pm
:
991·1315 or
915-3561
STEWliT'S
GUNS & SUPPL•s
OPEN
4 . . Glvenly
APPALACHIAN
WAIII .
HAULIIIG
POOlS,
CISTERNS, ETC.
1,625 GAl. -135-'45
lt. 1, ... 71·1
IIIIUIII.
OliO 41771-9616
614·741·HI4
4·
·11·, - · .....
YlrciS.It
.O•"tpollt
a VIcinity
:
•
... ui
ALL .,.. . . . . .
~~~~~=
1:01
.....
I
X
,,
......
�Page a The Dally Sentinel
Ohio
Monday, Mlly 13, 1881
torRent
4..._I-.
a.n.Nol'lle.RiwMiel
DlpOIIIt ' 4 111111.114 4tl tM.
l'umlllowl ltllelonor, no
11'11.,.._
114 441 •'111,
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..........
.....
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.......
Pomeroy-Uiddle~!'f, 9':1!«?.
BORN LOSER
Aplrtment
l'umlllowi
MOnday, May 13, 1991
·=
, .............. nt
Pr 1'1ltn ltMI , . _ ll
1110.114 . . . . .
-;
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AI
......
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I
1111 -
I!Hr ... Plinn 1 a • •..,' -
; AAA 8ClUTII CENTRAL OHIO
•If You a..1n1tr1111 dIn A feline
·c-. .. '!he Golllo Cloonli
;- . ~ Hal Coo al•r MAt
.. . . Ulli .... lniDril•llon
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111111 Klrllwood - . -.21R,IIIa,_
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labpittlng or Houao ~
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Bulllllll
Buildinga
,f......,.,_
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Pontw1 hll, Dlmagali
By IIIPrm. Cao Ia - . . . ,
Rttla .. ~. II tit Motor, . .
Choul Alf -..um. 'Diyllmi;
~. aftor 7'p.m. 114-
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llolcHoeODimter-on
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IIGih lnllrlat. 101 I
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Aldo iiDot, Air, Care Fro;.
iiiiilng, Llloe NM; -1141.•·
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'THE FRIENOOHIP
CLL.lS':? .
,.
.'
'
.llrao, " "'
.
e.::r:o:~~
rio IQ:I.ll-l5R
ee
SAT ON e>Y' AN
ELEPHANT.
~EoTII5AID
, AN~INS-.
MAt<:!:: THAT
~
EL.E::PHANTS.
....... • tnr' .... ..,,
AI(C llo41w.Hor, ~old,
mu.t ..u moving, 304 1
a.
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Pug
llmC lhol,
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AUimCIN I FUIINITURE. 12
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HDLD YDRI
HDSSIS,
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I'LL FIX SUPPER
SOON AS WE GIT
DONE GOSSIPIN'
THEY WAS BOUND TO ·
•RDIII Tti.ITHIR
SOONER OR LATER!!
11f ...
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Mar 14, 1•1
SAVINGS... .
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-
Mary Jo and JuNa duter, on
how to coach lillie-league
basebalL Stereo. Q
10:110 Ill ID. Northern EllfiOIIUII
A famous Russian singer
makes his annual. visit to
Clcely. Stereo. I;!
1D W01111n'a Pro Surfing
From Sunset Beach, Hawaii
I
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tho chuckle quoted
by filling in the missing words
develop lrom atop No. 3 below.
"
PRINT NUMBERED
LETTERS IN SQUARES
III
UNSCRAMBLE FOR
ANSWER
SCRAM-lETS ANSWIRS
r' 10
Employ - Nurse - Ounce - Balsam - CLASSROOM
.'
students at a historic univ81'$1ty were used to tourist
· ' roaming around. One tourist commented that H was
nice that there were people sitting In the lecture hall to
.,. make it look like a real CLASSROOM.
.
.,
~--------------~
BRIDGE
5-13-tl
NORTH
+AQ87
.KJ92
•'
.A3
+Q lOS
PHILLIP
ALDER
WEST
EAST
+10 4 3
.65
.K 9 8 2
+J965
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• 10 7.6
+A K 76
+Ja tz
SOUTH
.+K2
.QI0874
.QJ54
+9 3
Signals,
anyone?
•.
Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: West
Wesl
Nortll Eall
To find lhe best defense, you usually • Soutb
1+
DbL
2+
need help from your partner in the 2 •
Pass
Pas:;
3•
form of signals.
4•
All pass
There are two ba~i<:. signals: attj·
tude and count. When expressing atti· 1
Opening lead: K
"
tude, you play a high card to say you ;
like a suit, and a low card to say you ' '-------------~
don't. When giving count. yo~ play a they were lured on by the sirenlike
low card to show an odd number m the vulnerable game bonus.
: ,
sutt. . . .
.
West led the king of clubs, and with
, Whtch s1gnal should you g1ve' What- the queen (the equivalent honor) In the
ever you thmk your p~rtner needs to dummy, East dropped the eight, shoW.·
know . And tf he doesn t need to know ing an even number of cards. This had
anything - or doesn't watch your to be from four following his two-club
cards - don't signaL That sounds raise
'
What should West do at trick two'?
complicated. but · there are some
guidelines. Normally, wh~n partner Cashing the ace of clubs would estatj:.
leads an honor, s1gnal attttude. Show lish dummy's queen. But would lhl!
whether you hold an equrvalent honor discard be of any use to declarer?
- a _touchmg honor - to the one led. Probably not. Here cashing tlie second
But tf attitude IS known (the equtva.- club trick is the only way to defeat t~e
lent honor is in thi: dummy), slgt~al contract. Eventually East scores the
count. Of course this doesn't automati· king of diamonds.
11 West switches at l<ick two, de· ·
catty produce perfect defense.
No ,one held back in the biddi~g of clarer gets rid of his club loser on
today s deal. North and South cla1med three rounds of spades.
+
The World Almana"Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS
1 Cr1 of pain
5 Circular lenl
9 - -dHIC
12 La»er oleye
13 Beehive
State
14 spoon bend·
or- Galler
15 Largeat
amounl
t6 Maturity
18 Palnllnga
19 Soumt plant
20 Pronto
(abbr.)
21 Same (comb .
form)
23 Epic poem
26 lrrtlollons
29 Style ollypa
33 Solo
34 Aclrtll
Eartha36 Artificial
languago
37 !litre
38 Type ol rlsh
39 Harvard's
rival
40 lnaect
42 Made to lose
laellng
44 Martel bit
46 Mal(cocktall)
47 Chrlalmas
50 Tea
52 Man» oz.
55 Weaken
58 Singer - Te
,..
Kanawa
59 Play division
60 Southwtsl·
ern Indians
61 And olhtrs
(2 WdS.)
62 bud's albllng
63 Roama Idly
64 Soviet
refutal
DOWN
1 Arizona city
2 ActorNovello
3 Lawn apray
4 Dina
..
5 Coamonaul
- Gagarln
6 Utolul
7 Soanco
aound
SOH- wall
9 Hltt billiard
ball
10 CeleaHal
amCNN EVIIIIng Nawo
Cmdll
Mullell
1n1trume1111
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8:30111 ID • Dealgninll w-
72 TM:k1 for Sale
lltL
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lll8 MOVIE:
'Inconvenient Woman (PI 2
of 2)' AIC llonder Night ·
M9vl1 (2:00) Slareo. t;! ..
CD III Moylrl/leiOitil Hate
Racial, Religious, NatiOnal,
Ethnic, SeKual and Personal
Faces ol Hatred (1 :30) 1;1
illl liZ Murphy Brown
Murphy tries to save the FYI
team from being humiliated.
Stereo. I;!
·
I2D Nolhvllte Now
ID W01111n'a Pro Beach
Yollefball From PhoeniK
Llrrr King Uvel
CIIIIIHU!Y and the Bull
Stereo. E;J
BARNEY
lllport. Gil ' - - Cmdlt
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1:00 (J). (IJ) MOYIE: '$Mot lo
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Nolan Ryan and other
American League playera are
intarvle!Ned.
1!J WLAF Football
BOn Stage
1D Pro WatarlkHng From
Tampa, Ra.m
at l'rtmeNoWI
Clll leiU!Y and lite Bull
Stereo. !;!
8:30 (J)
(IJ) Frooh Prince of
lei Air Will's glrlrrlend riSks
losing her acholarahlp. (R)
S1erto. C
illl 1121• lli!ajar DH The
Major asks permlaslon to
adopt the girls. Stereo. 1;1
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7:05 Cll HaPPJ Dtll
7:30 (J). 0 .leopardyii;J
IIl Night Coun 1;1
(JJ 112le En_,,_.
Tonight Stereo.
Ill. M-'1 FamHy
Ill Wheel of Fonune 1;1
till. M'A'S'H
• ......r
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ID World Jot Skiing Men's
Freestyle Championship rrom
C.hlcago (R)
atCro1111re
7:35 Cll SanfOrd and Son
L-1111 (J)
0 Colbf Show
Clair's second cousin moves
In and begins adjustlnq_to
new rules. (R) Stereo. 1;1
(J) Cll Major Llagua
llai.....H
(JJ llle lrlclaa: A Tall ol
Two Weddings Two couples
struggle with a variety of
emotions, decisions and
complications as their
wedding day approaphes.
Host: Delta Burke .. (1 :00)
Stereo. C
CZl III Tfie Aotronomara
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llld A-. Gallf Ia '*- to
....... 11URUtt or 114-
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11ft:''M-Aidl~-~
HOIIIIhold
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THE PfFI~IT 1$NrT
THE ' J"O(ZT OF THING
you CAN
75 Bolte 1o Motors ;:
forSale
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Maceryver 1;1
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lcaNCrOw and ,.,._ King
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10.'1110 Mull .... SlOG... Offer.
114-3U IDJI
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US M U H
ONewa
II) a-too In Cllalfge Q
(I) I Dro-ol Jeannie
1. . . . . . . . . . ..
Olllo, AtTN:
liZ.
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Aport.- ......... W 2 01 I
-ruollon
30wn2111.
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at.WIIIId foda»
Clll Our HouM
6:05 (J) lever!J HlllbiHiea
1:30 (J)
IIJI NIC Nawo I;J
II) Abbott and CoateiiO
Cll llle AIC Nowa Q
CD Wild America g ·
(!) 3-2·1 c - t Q
iB1 De CIS Nowo Q
till • Ancly GriiiHit
1D Up Cloae
.
6:35 (J) Andy Grilftth
7:00 li;l• 11J1 Wheel ol Fortune
Frulte&
. VegetNIIII
'
••
law to form lour simple wordo.
tllle ALPl 1
oc.toon
"
·ID lclloleelle Sports
BUT HIS WIFE WAS
TURNED INTO A
PILLAR OF SALT''
58
,-
Roarronge lett.rt of the
Olour
JCrombled wordo b.
(ZJ 3-2·1 com.ct. Q
Employment SPr'.ICes
....
SCCi.~lA-~v..~s· ••••
- - - - - - ........ ~CLAY I . PO&LAII - - - - -
(!) ~alnbOW Q
~HTERSESCAPE~
_ , "" . . Canlwol y.., For
An w.mo.. ..... To: AAA
PIUUI
EVENING
...
60MORRAH WERE
DESTROVED. LOT
AND HIS TWO
__
MON.. MAY 13
TIA1 tAlLY
114 · · " -
•' WHEN SODOM AND
,A - • AI Ifill, Coli
The Dally Sentlnei-Page-8
Television
Viewing
73 V.lll & 4 WD'I ..,
tm,., Von, 3111 _.;..
1 • ......... 2117 ... 1 ,,..
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11m I•
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14 upfabtor'.,g.
..........
I
Several opportunl11es ol substantial
lllil could be In the oiling lor you In the
~ ahead. Be aware that you'M lay the
foundatlonl. but luck will gal top blUing.
TAURUI CApri!....., :10) If you apply
youraell, maasurea can be taken at IIIIa
time to enhance your malerlll securlly
over the lonG haul. You could be very
lucky at enlarging your present earn·
lnga. Know where to lOOk lor romance
and you'll lind It The Aolro-Graph
·Matchmaker lnslantly reveals which
Signs are romantically pertect lor you .
Mall $2 plus a long, self·eddressed ,
stamped envelope to Matchmaker, c/o
this newspaper, P.O. Box 91428, Cleve·
land. OH 44101-3428.
GEMINI ClllaJ 21-June :10) Your wit and
sense ol humbr are aaslb' aroused today, and olhers will ftnd you a jovial
companion. You'll be even more enter~
lalnlng 10 members of the opposite sex.
CANCER CJuiii21.July 22) In regard to
requests you maka today lor a lionua or
a rallle, lhe perc:enlagealor getting a Ia·
vorable rnpon• are In your favor especially II your recent eHorts have
been above averago.
LEO CJIIIJ 23-Aug. 22) Conditions 111
v-al lOOk hopelul lor you at this time,
npeclally where your romance. -lal
11,. and personal relatlonthlps are eon·
-ned. GOOd thlngl could develop
through lrlenda.
.
VIRGO CAuo- .-.,.. 22) P ' - you
haw , _ l y - unable to Ill togelh·
er lllould begin to blend more comfort·
ably today. II .,...hlng big II on the
bUrner, make your move now. .
·
LIIRA Clepl. 2J.Oct. 22) Thing& have a
-Y of working out to your satiiiiiCIIon
today, 10 keep cool. Fruotratlons will be
robbed ollhelr lrrltanla - II dllll wlth
phliolophlc8lly.
.I
I'
••
SCORPIO COct. 24-NO¥. 22) II a condl·
lion can be Improved upon through
sensible adjustments, don't continue to
lust study the Situation. Take measures
to eiiiiCI the alterations today .
IIAGITTARIUI CNov. 23-Dee:. 21) Your
mate's ludgment could be a tad beller
than yours today, 10 don't discount
your partner's suggeatlons or decl·
slons . The Important thing Is to be supportive ol one another.
.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jon. 11) Your
posslbiHtles lor personal gain could be
a bit stronger today lhan they will be tomorrow. Don't dilly-dally on matters
that are materially meanlngrul.
'
AQUARIUI CJan. :10 1'1111. 11) You could
be rather lucky lodiiY In an endeavor
that haa element• ol chance, eapaelally ·
II you and an Individual with whom you
were prevloully lortunala are, teemed
up.
PIICII CFIII. :10-March 20) Lady Luck
may 118 Inclined 10 favor you today In a
man. where m~ Ia Involved. She'a
quhalltKIOUIIO'. . th81 you get a piece
ol the IICIIon. I , •
ARIII C..... 11-Aprll 11) People to
whom you mak• apeclllc propouls today are notllkaly lo raelat your promotion. Your presentation worlla becauae
It's predicated on truth and enthualum.
0 7110 Club War at home.
(1 :00)
10:30 (ZJ III Ml Otro Yo: My Other
Sal! The Chicano Art
Movamentln Southern
California shows the joumey
or leading anlsts discovering
their other stll through art.
(0:30)
.
I2D Crook end Chou
ID Surfer Mapzllll
10:45 (I) MOVIE: Fool lor Lov1 (R)
(2:00)
11:110 w• ® Cll Clle 111
ONawa
.
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CD New•w•k:t•
0 Ml81111 Ylce Stereo.
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1D laHIIIll Tonight
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and Mra. King
e
11:30 (J)
IIJI Tonight Show
Sterto.
·
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(ZJE~I
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CELEBRITY CIPHER
Ctlttlfily CIOMf Cf'YPIOQfaml tre CfMted ltom QWtllttons b~ ltrriOUI peof)M, Pill lnd prnent.
EICh Nlllf In tht Ci91Mt tllftdllof anotMr. Todfy'f CIW.' f1 ~UIII• B.
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ENOUGH TIME, UNLESS YOU'RE SERVING IT. MALCOLM FORBES
•.
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Monday, Mlly 13, 1991
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
..
. West Virginia man dies shortly after calling PPEMS
Dl;patbiitlll
A sheriff ' s
department
spokesman said Forest Jones,
Leon, phoned the PPEMS at
aPixoxilllllliely 1 a.m., telling them
he was bleeding. When squad
A Leon, W.VL, man died shortly after telephoning the Point
Pleasant Rescue SqUid early Sunday morning and telling them he
was bleeding profusely, according
to the Mason County Sheriff's
--Area, deaths-AIIie Evans
Allie Lee Evans, 60, of 126
Howard SL, New Haven, W. Va.,
.died Saturday, May 11, 1991, in
Holzer Medical Center, Gallipolis.
A retired Kaiser Aluminum and
Chemical Corporation supervisor,
Mr. Evans was born January 7,
1931, son of the late Allie and
Margie L. Hill Evans.
He is survived by his wife,
Arlene A. Dodrill Evllils and two
daughters, Diana L. Farley, New
Haven and Angela L, Parker,
Pomeroy; two grandchildren,
Gabriel C. and Beth H. Farley and
one brother Thomas R. Evans,
Cieveland. '
He was a Korean Conflict ver.eran, having secved in the U.S. Navy
on the U.S. Hornet Mr. Evans was
a member of the Smith-~nter ·
Post No.l40, American Leg~on in
New Haven and a member of the
Stewart-Johnson Post No. 9926,
Veterans of Foreign Wars, Mason,
W.Va.
Private services will be held
I :30 p.m. Tuesday at the Foglesong
Funeral with Rev. Charles Gille~ie and Rev. Frank Spradling officiating. Burial will be in Suqrise
Memorial Gardens.
. Friends may call at at the
Foglesong Funeral Home on Thes'day from 11 a.m. until! p.m.
In lieu of flowers, the family
requests contributions foc the New
Haven Emergency Squad.
PASSES OUT FAVORS- Karen Roush costumed IS 1
chicken circulated at Sunday's open bouse at Vetei'lns Memorial Hospital and its Skilled Nursing Facility wltb a buket containing a variety of favors for guests. Hugs, such as the one sbe .'
is giving here to 4Gna K8rr, a resident of the SkiDetl Nursiag 1
Facility, were also 110ong the things given out by the costumed
chicken during the afternoon.
---Local briefs-· ---.
Police cite driver after wreck
John W. Brown, Main St., Rutland, was charged with failure to
yield following an accident on West Main Street. Pomeroy, Saturday at 3:47p.m.
Accordin~ to Pomeroy Police, Brown was traveling nlrthbound
on West Main and was attempting a turn into the Dairy VaUey when
he pulled into the path of a southbound vehicle driven by Douglas
· W. Beaver, Flatwoods Road, Pomeroy.
Both vehicles had light front end damage. There were no
injuries.
I'
Board meeting changed
Dissolutions, divorces processed
An action for dissolution of marriage has been filed in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court by Scott Earl Trussell and Carol
Denise Trussell. both of Long Bottom; by Barbara L. Knapp,
Pomeroy, and by Kail L. Knapp of Langsville.
·
A divorce action has been filed by Janet E. Miller, Rutland, and
John L, Miller, also of Rutland.
A divorce has been granted to Arlene Russell, from William
Eugene Russell; and to James Mills from Linda Lou Mills. A dissolution has been granted to Otis Ray Vanmatre and Kimberly Marlene Vanmatre.
Personal injury case filed
A civil case alleging personal injury has been filed in Meigs
. County Common Pleas COurt by Tina Slater of Dexter against Jack
Cleland of Rutland. The suit requests judgment in an amount in
excess of $25,000.
EMS responds to 15 calls
he was the son ~t the late Clem
West and Mae Shane West. He
worked with the U. S. Corps of
Engineers, Pittsburgh Districl
Mr. West is survived by a t.other, Lee West, Southi!lgton, Ohio,
and a sister, Helen Smith, Con•
neaut, along with several nieces
.and nephews. Besides his parents
he was preceded in death by four
brothecs, Warren•.Fred, Harry and
Glenn, and two s•sters, Laura and
Edna, along wid! two oilier sisters
who died in inf~cy. .
Funeral services will be held .
Wednesd&y at 1 p.m. at die Lewt
Falls Chapel. Ken Bakec will officiate and 6urial will be in the Lewt
Falls Cemetery. Friends may call at
the Ewing Funeral Home Tuesday
from 2to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.
.Forest Jones
Forest Jones, Leon, W.Va., died
Sunday, May 12, 1991. ·
He was born Oct. 15, 1950, in
Fairdale, W.Va., Forest Jones, son
of Helen McKinney Haskett of
Beards Fork, W.Va., and the late
Boyd M. Jones. He was a mechanic.
The funeral will be Thursday,
11. a.m., at Wilcoxen Funeral
Home. There will be no calling
hours.
'
A Bidwell man was shot and
killed early Monday mornin$ following an altercation outside a
home in Rio Grande.
.
Char&f! are pending !lgainst a
15-year-old male after Bnan Mink:,
32, was shot around 2:45 a.m.
Monday near a home on Gamer's
FordRoad.
.
According to Gallia County
Sheriff Dennis Salisbury, the
shooting occurred during an fight.
"Several people were involved
in an argument and the Ouvenile)
male confronted Mink, and the
shooting took place," Salisbury
Margaret M. Blankenship, 60, '
of Route 2 in Albany. died Saturday, May 11, 1991, from injuries
sustained in an accident in West
Hamlin, W.Va.
S~e was born in Logan County,
W.Va., the daughter of the late
Norwood Ferren, and Alta MuUins
Ferrell of Pomeroy, who survives.
She was a former nursing aide
and cook at Russell's Nursing
Home in Albany. She was also a
bomemaker. She was a membec of
Albany vFw Post 9893.
She is survived by her husband.
Zenis Blankenship; three sons.:
Stewart (Belly) Blankenship,
Pomeroy, Rol>ert (SteUa) Blankenship, Shade, and John (Paula)
Blankenship of Alliany; one daughter, Mrs. John (Palricia) Stewart,
Belleville, Mich.; eight mhdchlldren; one brother, Donafd FerreU,
Lyburn, W.Va.; three sisters~
Frances Reed, Salem, N.J., Clara
Brechemin, St. Petersburg, Fla.,
and Betty Packo, Ypsilanti, Mich.
Besides hec fathec, she was preceded in death by bee son, Donald
(Quincy) Blankenship.
Services will be Wednesday at 2
p.m. at Bigony-Jordan Funeral
Home in Albany with Rev. David
A. Curfman officiatin(!:. Burial will
be in Wells Cemetery m Pageville.
Friends may call at the funeral
home from 2 to 4 p.m. and 7 to 9
p.m. on Tuesday,
Wednesday, mostly sunny.
•
e
Vol. 42, No. 7
Copyrighted , 1181
1 !lecllon, 10 PIIJH 25 cento
A Mulllmedlll Inc. Newap11per
. Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tueaday, May 14, 1991
.
PUCO assesses scrubber study; vote delayed
inst811ing scrubbers, to enable its
Gavin
plant to meet a federal Clean
AsSQ~:ilited Press
Air Act deadline in January 1995.
COLUMBUS - The Public
The PUCO was expecJed 10
Utilities Commission of Ohio is issue its assessment of AEP's
adding its comments to die debate report today.
over whether a Gallia County
The .plant, between Gallipolis
power plant should switch from and Pomeroy, burns about 6 milOhio's high-sulfur coal to cleaner . lion tons of coal a year from a
coal from other states.
Meigs County mine where 1,258
American Electric Power Co. jobs may be at stake.
submitted a report to the PUCO in
Ohio's coal industry, the Ohio
· January and later added more dats Office of the Conslimers' Counsel
supporting a switch, instead of Jllld others diS)Juted AEP's study,
By ROBERT E. MILLER
......
...
helping prompt the PUCO review.
But it also let~ utilities use nonMeanwhile, the Ohio House Ohio coal if they can ·show it is
said a vote on a bill to help utilities their least-cost compliance option.
comply with the federal act. would
AEP has not taken a position on.
not come today. as previously the bill but favors the lal'lguage sayannounced.
ing compliance decisions must
Kent Carson, aide of Speaker reflecttheleastexpensiveoptibn.
Vern Riffe Jr., D-Wheelersburg,
Luke Feck. AEP vice president,
indicated the House may act later indicated Monday that AEP
this week. He gave no reason for • believes the bill, as written, goes
the delay.
100 far in trying to sway manageThe bill has tax and other incen- ment decisions.
.
tives for scrubbecs or other equip"We don' t think the (public
ment that reduces.sulfur emiSSions. ·utilities) commission should micro- .
,.........,~..,.
manage utilities and the Legislature
seems to be ·putting them in a posilion to do that, •• Peck said.
In January, AEP estima~ !he
cost of scrubbers at $800 million
and said the cost of equipment
changes needed to bum low-sulfur
coal from other states would be
$200 million.
At the time, AEP said i_t c?uld
not fully account for emisstons
credits from the federal government that scrubbers could earn,
possibly worth hundreds of mil-
lions of dollars.
Since then, AEP has e~~ated a
sav!"gs of ilbout.$300 millIIlii over
a f1~e-year penod, althou~h the
Legislature ~as heard estimates
from the coalmdu~try and others of
morethan$~million.
.
IJ! late Ap!ll, AEP up~ated Its
ongmal findmgs with bids rrom
western and some eastern coal ~
ducer~ of low-sulfur coal. It sa•ll
th~ bids were lower than earlier
esbmates ~ soengthened the case
· for non-Ohto cosl.
Middleport Council takes first step
toward mandat~ry trash pick~:~-p
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Stair
. Middleport Village Council toOk
the first step toward mandatory
trash pickup at Monday night's reg. ular meeting 8l village hal[
·
The only bid for the service in
response to advertisin~ came from
Manley's Trash Servtce, Middlepol'\. Cou~cil voted to accept the
bid "contingent on completion of
details" to be worked Olll by Mayor
Fred Hoffman with Rogec Manley,
It was decided that once manda·
tory pickup is instituted, the service
will be billed to the customer by
the village with the charge to be
added to the monthly water and ·
sewer bill.
·'
Manley's bid showed a charge
tO the village of $9 a customer per
month with everything including
appliances and old furniture, but
not tires, removed without a limit
on the amount; or $8.50 a month
for trash only. The agreement will
also provide for trash to be
removed by the service from vii!age parks.
Council was in a~ment that
the higher charge with everything
· to be picked up would be the most
satisfactory. Since the village
would have the responsibility of
administering the new village service and the cost of billing, household charges were set at.$10 per
month with a $2 reduction for
senior citizens and handicapped
individuals. This will provide a
Continued on page 3
Authorities prepare charges
against cockfighting__group
computer seized in the Vinton
Authorities hope the computer
McARTHUR, Ohio (AP) Vinton County authorities are County r!lid Saturday night is will lead to cockfight promoters
· preparing char~es against a cock- believed to contain the membership nationwide.
The owner of an Arbaugh farm
fighting organization as pan of a list for the cockfighting organizacrackdown in which about 400 tion United Gamefowl Breeders in Vinton County was arrested darpeople have been charged or cited, Association.
Continued on page 3
.
a court offtcial said.
are Thomasina Wlllte, Anthony Tolliver,
ART FAIR WINNBRS- These primaryClerk Regina Brewster said
Nathan Marcinko, IUid Cory Wbltlateb. Second
aged students at Riverview School were IIWII'dabout2S people showed up in Vinrow, left to rl1ht, are. Matt Putman, Jenny
ed honors at lbe sc:hool's Sdt111:e and Art Pair
ton County Court Monday to lay
Mayle, CIISSie ROlle and Laraine LIW110n.
on Monday. Pictured, front row, left to right,
claim to roosters and cockfighting
equipment seized in a weekend
raid.
'
RAVENSWOOD,
W.Va. (AP) Board said it will issue an unfair
Ms. Brewster said they were
claiming the items as a cockfight- - The United Steelworkers of labor practice complaint unless
ing organization . She said ~he America said Monday a federal Ravenswood Aluminum furnishes
county prosecutor was prepanng agency found merit in one of,the safety studies the union needs for
charges against die group. None of charges of unfair labor practices contract negotiations, said Jim
the union brought against Bowen, director of United Steelthe items seized was relessed
Ravenswood
Aluminum Cocp.
workers District 23.
Vinton County authorities said
About
1,700
union
members
at
"I'm calling on the company
249 people who were caught
Ravenswood
Aluminum's
Jackson
.tod!!Y to make lhe best or a bad sit-.
watching a cockfight each posted
$180 bond, for a·total of $44,820. County plant have been off the job nation and get back to the bargainAn additional42 people were given since Nov. I in a contraCt dispute. ing ta~le before the NLRB drops
Dr. Nick Robinson stated at the
By Sentinel News Staff
The company says the workers are the othec shoe," Bowen said. ·
By JOHN CHALFANT
citations. .
meeting, "but the Senate will preAccording to a statement on the
Sandy Rowland, director of the on strike. and the union says they
Associated Press Writer
Discussion on lobbying the sent us some problems."
USW A Hotline Monday, the
Great Lakes office of the Humane are locked out
Specially-printed posk:ards have
Ohio Senate to encourage passage
The National Labor Relations
Continued on page 3
COLUMBUS- An $8.9 mil- Society of ~ United StateS; said a
of Senate Bill 143 highlighted been delivered to the chamber lion contract to install a computerMonday night's meeting of the office and members were encour- ized motor vehicle titling system in
Meigs County Chamber of Com- aged by Robinson to address and Ohio's 88 counties has been
merce, held at Overbrook Center in mail the cards to all membecs of the approved by the Stste Controlling
Middleport.
Ohio Senate in an attempt 10 lobby Board.
The bill, a companion to a bill their support for the bill. (The
Conuollers also OK'd restrucexpected to go before the Ohio cards, a Senate mailing list and a turing a $5 million loan guarantee
House of Representstives on Tues- synopsis of the legislation are to help the ·Dayton Arcade Centre
day, offers tax credits and incen- available at the chambec office on office tower avoid foceclosure. But
tives to power plants using Ohio East Main Su-eet or at The Daily the board turned down a Con· Semintl office on Court Street. sumers' Counsel request for. a
~.
. Among other incentive r.ovi- They are free or charae.)
$75,000 study of whether convertsions, the proposed legis ation
In addition to die mail cam- ing the Zimmer power plant from a
includes tax credits of $1 per ton of paign, members of the chamber nuclear to coal facility was prudenL
Ohio coal for power plants current- were urged to join a team who will
The Department of AdminisbBly ·using the coal or at plants where travel to the Ohio Senate to meet
Ohio coal will be burned berore with key Senate members prior to tive Services won approval Mon1995 . The tax credits would be the Senate vote on the bill. CtDTent- day for an $~.9 million. co.ntract
reflected in a loss to the Slate's gen- ly, the bill is expected to be voted with Motorola Inc., of Cmcmnab, .
to provide machinery, training and
eral ICvenue fund only, in an effort upon in the Senate on May 25.
New chamber members were · maintenance to implement the
tO protect local ICvenue.
"We're confident that the bouse introduced and welcomed by Automated Title Processing System .
bill will pass," Chamber President
Coatlnued on paRe 3
Equipment will be installed at
clerk of court offices in each county . Common pleas court clerks
issue titles for motor vehicles.
Backers said the ststewide system
would standardize title issuance
and reduce fraud.
Mowrola was one of eighi venMark A. Parsons, 29. of Antiquity has been charged with petty
dors
who sought the contracL The
thert following the May J theft of a mandolin from the Norman Mildepartment said it did not seek
liron residence at Annquity. The mandolin, which hacl been sold,
competitive bids because of the
was recovered on Saturday evening.
complexity or the projc:ct. .
Panons. ciiii'Cntly in iail m a bench warrant roc raiiiiRlto pay an
Controllers rejected a .request
old rme, will appear in Meigs· County Court on Wednesday on the
from Consumecs' Council William
petty theft ~barge .
Spratley to spend up to $75,000 to
MONDAY Cit_ASH....., n11- tile ~eene
jured. Wlllte nl d tralmeDI for 1111 ltiJIIrles. '
review whether utilities that own
Moaday
1ftenooa
na
Old
State
Route
33
folCatoa•s pl11ea1er Tere~a Jeffen, 2!1, of
the Zimmer plant liCI!f Cincinnati
lowln&
1
two-car
acddeat
tb1t
ID.Jared
tllree.
PomtrOJ, -ll'llilpOrttd to Veteriaa Melllorlacted prudently in switching from
According
to
a
report
from
tbe
G11Ua·Melas
111 HOIJIItallly die Mtlil Coual)' EMS. Sbe nuclear to coal powec without purpost or tile State HIJ!::y Patrol, M1rJorle
liter b'ulfernd to SL ....,h'l Hct1pltal wllere
The Meigs County Sheriff's Qejabllllllt investigated a two-car
suing other options.
Caton,
43,
pallid
out
Melp
Ca.Dty
ltOIId
· Legislarors questioned the need
accident on Hendecson Road in Orange Township Monday afttt"'' Jeported Ia flir cadltloa. Wblte'l )1111l!l Ia ber Mereaey Bobcat (forevoancl), and
Rnaer, Cnl&lllea, 31, fl
treated
for the study .in part because of a
noon.
.
trawled lato . . patll ol a m.bil aar. ne -at Veteraas and later reltllt , 1 llospltal
1985 seulement among the ConAccording to Sheriff James M. Soulsby, Andi'ea Doerfer of
ond car (hiCIIII'oaDd), a Cadillac driYeiil by
spokawomn aid hadiJ. CIIOD wu died tor
sumers' Counsel, the Public UtiliDutchtoWn Road collided with a 1981 Volkswagen Rabbit driven by
Lather White, 51, wu anable to stop In time
rauun to yield from 1110p lip. (OVP plioto by
. ·cies Commission of Ohio and the
Continued on page 3
.
aad
struck
C1ton'•
velllcle.
Catoa
wu
anlnDan lflrrll)
·
utilities.
.
NLRB may issue unfair labor
practice complaint, union says
The bedding sale you've been
waiting . for! NO..V our three
best-selling Serta models, in·
eluding famous Perfect steep.
er~ marked to low, low prices
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AND REMOVAL
OF OLD BEDDING
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SERTA
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FURNITURE, APPLIANCES, TV'S, FLOOR COVERING
51011 HOUIS1 ....., 9!30·1100; l_.y•Saturdqy 9:30·514.0
992-3671
DOWNTOWN POMROY
Board OKs
statewide
system.
~-Local briefs--_,
Parsons charged with petty theft
No one hurt in 2-car accitfent
ANDERSON'S
We Have The llo1t l'amou.llodel
Wolff T•nntnl Bed That 8et1 The Standard
ll'or The Twnn'nl lndubyl
12 VIIITI -:a4.95 PLU8 TAZ •• 1 VIIIT •3.00 PU1I TAX
Chamber urges
$enate to pass tax .
incentives bill
,
\
NOW OPEN
VISA
lUSTEICAID
Pum7, (
n
•I
Clear tonight. Low in 60s.
High in upper 80s.
ownec.
I
$24.95 &
Pick 3:274
Pick 4:0572
Cards : 2-H, K-C
8-D; 6-S
·page4
VETERANS MEMORIAL
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS Peggy Hatfield, Rutland; Margaret
Casto. Lakin, W.VL; and Lois Terrell, Pomeroy.
·
SATURDAY DISCHARGESIrene RusseU, Iva Gruesec and Fern
Smith.
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS
Barbara Harris. Middleport.
SUNDAY DISCHARGES
None.
Weather
,
!
...
Hospita:l news
said. "He had one known gunshot
wound in the chest area."
The juvenile has been released
into his patents custody, he said.
Chief Deputy Carlos Wood, Oli1lia
County Prosecutor Brent Saunden
and Gallia County Coroner Edward
Berkich were also at the scene. The
Gallia County EMS was called to ..
the home where Mink was pronounced dead 8l the scene.
Mink •s body was transported 10
the Franklin County Morgue by
Willis Funeral· Home, Gallipolis,
and will remain there foc an autopsy.
'
•
Units of the Meigs County
The Tuppers Plains Fire DepartEmergency Medica! Service ment, at 12:25 p.m., was called to
responded to 15 calls for assistance the Vincent Hawk residence on a
over the weekend.
struCture rue. The unit returned to
On Saturday at 10:16 a.m . the its station at2:15 p.m.
Tuppers Plains unit transported
At 2:50 p.m. the Racine unit
Vincent McComb from the ststion transported Steven Rigley from the J. Dale West
to St. Joseph's Hospital.
fair grounds to Veterans.
At I :14 p.m. the Syracuse unit
The Middleport unit went to
J. Dale West, 89, of Route 3,
went to Route 681 East for Mildred Zuspan Hollow Road at 3:59 p.m. Racine, died Monday, May 13,
Ziegler who was taken to Veterans for Hugh Thompson who was
~~I at Vetenms Memorial Hpspi- .
Memorial Hospital.
transported to VeleranS.
The Racine unit, at 2:10 p.m.,
The Rutla)ld unit, at 4:58 p.m.,
Born June 14. 1901 at Racine,
was called to the Meigs County went to Meigs Mine No. 2 for
Fair Grounds for Jeff Lyons who David Neutzling who was taken to Hospital news
was treated but not banspocted and Veterans, and at 6:20p.m. the unit
Holzer Medical Center
at 3 p.m. the unit tteated but did transported Melvin Levessee from
Dischar~:~es
May 10 - Evelyn
transport Ryan Dressel at the fair Jividen Hollow Road to Veterans.
Austin,
Sadie
Carr,
Chelsea Gooch,
groundS.
Finally, at 9:32p.m. on Sunday
Patricia
Jones,
Cindy
Long, KenThe Middleport unit, at 4:38 the Racine unit was called to
neth
Osborne,
Hazel
Reed,
Mr. and
p.m .. responded to a structure rue Fourth and Pearl for Joyce Grady
Mrs.
Randy
Searls
and
son,
1811)es
at the Kelly Stone residence in who was taken to Holzer Medical
Snyder, Heather Sparks, Beulah
Cheshire. The unit returned to .the Center.
'Thomas, Effie Walters and Cathy
station at5 :43 p.m.
While.
· At. 7:24 p.m. the Tuppers Plains
Births May 10 - Mr. and Mrs.
unit responed to the Baum AddiBrian Waugh, daughter, Oak Hill.
tion for Stacy Davis who was taken
South Centr1l Ohio
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Wooldridge,
to St. Josep!l.
Tonight,
partly cloudy with a daughter, Vinton.
At 8:48 p.m. the Rutland unit
Discharaes May 11 - Mrs.
went to Route 124 for Ernest slight chance of showers and thunWilliams who was transported to . derstorms early . Low 60-65. William Keefer and son, Mary
Chance of rain 30 percent. Tues- Lambert, Tiffany Metzler, Mrs.
Veterans, and at 10:16 p.m. the
Pomeroy unit transported Rose day, mostly sunny. High in the 'Irvin Saunders and daughter,
mid-80s.
·
Heather Sparks, Janice Stewart,
Carr from Metcalf Road to VeterWednesday
through
Friday:
and
Mrs. Otis Young and son.
ans.
on
Wednesday
and
ThursFair
Discharaes
May U - Jess
On Sunday at 8:04 a.m. the
day.
Chance
of
showers
or
thunderBibbey
,
Leo
Bush,
Mrs. Brian
Middleport unit went to Coal Street
storms
Friday.
Highs
in
the
upper
Waugh
and
daughter,
and Mrs.
for Barbara Harris who was taken
70s
or
the
80s.
Lows
in
upper
50s
Robert
Wooldridge
and
daughter.
to Veterans.
to mid-60s.
~eigs announcements
Sorority to meet for picnic
The Xi Gamma Mu Chapter,
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority will meet
Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the home of
A.R. Knight in Pomeroy for its end
of the year picnic. ,
Democrall to meet
The Meigs County Democratic
Executive Committee will meet
Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at the Carpenter's Hall in Pomeroy.
Homem1kers to meet
The Third Wedneday Homeniaker's Club wiD leave the municTANNING BED OPEN TO THE PUBLIC
pel building in Syracuse at 9 a.m.
011 Wedneday for the annual spring
call Us For Tfme Reservation!
trip.
Lodge to meet ·
The Racine Lodge No. 461 F &.
AM will meet Tuesday at 7:30p.m.
Work in the fellow Craft·degree. All
master masons are invited to
allelld.
St. Louis ·
edges Reds;
Braves win
W.VL, and the late Boyd M. Jones.
He was a mechanic.
The funeral will be Thursday,
·n a.m., at Wilcoxen Funeral
Home. There will be no calling·
hours.
Bidwell man ' killed~ in
Rio ,G rande shooting
Ohio Lottery
Margaret Blankenship
·
The regular monthly meeting of the Meigs County )3oard of Education has been changed from Tuesday to Monday (tonight) at 7
p.m. at the board office in Pomeroy.
1
.
members arrived, they found
Jones' had an injury to the bridge
of his nose. A .3 57 Magnum was
reportedly laying next to the vic-·
tim, however tbe spokesman said
the deparbnent does not feel the
injury was a result of a wound from
thegun.
.
Jones was a hemophiliac, the
spokesman srated, and at this time,
he is believe,d to have died from
natural causes. His body was sent
tO'Charleston for autopsy.
The incident is still under investigation.
Dr. Breton L. Morgan, Mason
County coronec, was reportedly on
the scene, but could not be reached
for comment this mCB'IIing.
Born OcL 1.5, 19.50, in Fairdale,
W.Va., Jone~ was a son of Helen
McKinney Haskett of Beards Forte.
J
!
.
'
.
�
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Title
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05. May
Text
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Newspaper
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May 13, 1991
blankenship
evans
ferrell
jones
west