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                  <text>Wednesday, May 13, 1992

Cavs defeat
Celtics, lead
playoffs 3-2

we Gladlv

Accept Your

.,,,.,,., Federal Food
Stamps

alii
~~

Ohio Lottery

Ecrning

Pick 3: 335
Pick 4: 8371
Super Lotto:
5-10-25-30-39-4 I
Kicker:
269252

~ F'or Leo rrir.g

ADVIiRIISID tnM POLICY- Each
of thtH advenised h:ems is

required to be readil-y 8118ilable
for sale in each Kroger Store .
except as. specifically noted in
this ad . If we do run out of an
advertised item, we wilt ot1er
vou your choice of a

..,;

Page 5

'ift' lOUf '11enaty

lrOOf'l' wore
f'J'

or.""'

••

comparable item , when
available, reflecting the &amp;Bme

COPYRIGHT 1992 . TH E KROGER CO

savtngs or e reincheck which
will entitle vou to purchase the

ITEMS AND

PRICES GOOD SUNDAY MAY 10. THROUGH SATUR
DAY , MAY 16. 1992, IN

advertlud item at the
adveniaed price within 30 davs.
Ohty one vendor coupon will be
accepted per item purchased .

Pornero~

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES . NONE
SOLD TO DEAL ERS.

Vol. 43, No.9
Copyrighted 1992

By BRIAN J_ REED
Sentinel News Starr
The fate of Pomeroy's Community Development Block Grant proJect for 1992 was discussed when
the Meigs County Commissioners
met in regular session on W«lnes day.
The village council's application for CDBG monies was
approved by the board in the
amount of $15,000 late last year.
The monies are earmarked to
demolish several abandoned,
unsafe residential structures in the

20-lb. Avg.

$ ••

LOW PRICES,
AND MORE,

Each

First Lady, Brown
stump in Ohio
suppon a proposal backed by the
By BETH GRACE
nation's governors for $35 billion
Associated Press Writer
in
froeral aid to cities.
Barbara Bush lamented the
He acknowl«lg«l he is trailing
breakdown of the American family
Arkansas
Gov . Bill Clinton badly
and Democratic presidential candidate Jerry Brown bemoaned the in the rnce for the ~ocratic nom disillusionmem of American voters ination - Clinton won handily in
primaries in Nebraska and West
in campaign stops around Ohio.
Mrs. Bush on Tuesday told sup- Virginia Tuesday - but said that
porters of LL Gov . Mike DeWine, wasn't going to stop him.
"We know Clinton's got a lot of
a candidate for U.S. Senate, at a
delegates,
but we think the people
picnic fund-raiser that the brealc of Ohio want a choice," Brown
down of the family has caused
said.
many of the nation 's problems.
A city custodian asked Brown if
"When the family's troubled ,
he
could translate his tough talk
our communities are troubled,"
into
action if elected.
Mrs. Bush said. "We've got 10 put
"Have
you really got the bockthe family back together and keep
bone
10 change the politics and the
it together."
She also defended ber husband 's things that are corrupting the United States?" said Audrey Kaspar,
domestic policies.
"He's the one that called for 30.
"I think I could handle it if I've
enterprise zones, and he's the one
got
people like you, and millions
who's called for reform of the wel more,
supporting me and sU!nding
fare system so that you ' re not
with
me,''
replied Brown.
penalized if you get married and so
In
the
evening,
Brown travel«!
you're not locked into poveny ,"
to
the
Akron
suburb
of Mogadore,
she said. "I don't have any apolowhere
he
attended
a
potluck
supper
gies about George Bush's domestic
at the local Veterans of Foreign
programs."
Earlier in the day , she told stu - Wars post
' 'Tbe reason I stay in this race is
dents at predominantly black Cen be&lt;:
ause - not only do I want to
tral SUite University in Wilberforce
won
in Ohio - but I want 10 tell
that they were on her mind as she
the
truth
about why things aren't
watched coverage of the violence
be
Iter,'' Brown told a
gelling
that erupted after a jury acquitted
white police officers charged with crowd of about 350 people.
Brown spent the night in
beating black motori st Rodney
Youngstown
and was scheduled 10
King.
hold
a
10
a.m.
news conference at
"I thought what in the world
Youngstown
City
Hall today.
.
can I say to you all, Amcnca's best
Brown
planned
to
conunue
hos
and brightest, in the walce of that
tidal wave of resentment and Ohio sweep today with appear fury," Mrs. Bush said. She said sbe ances in Youngstown, Toledo and
de cided to talk about family Columbus.
Clinton' s wife, Hillary , also
because it sustain s people c. nd
scheduled
appearances in Clevestrengthens communities.
land
and
Columbus
today.
In Cleveland, Brown told the
She
was
to
tour
a market in
Camyaign for New Pnorities, a
Cleveland,
visit
a
job
lnlining prosocia advocacy group that lobboes
gram
in
Columbus
and
spealc 10 the
for money to help the homeless,
Franklin
County
Democratic
Pany
unemploy«l and others. that Americans refrain from voting "because tonight
She plann«l to spend the night
they don't believe anyone."
in
Cincinnati.
Brown al so urge d the group to

usc might be needed if the final
few sUiteS ratified the amendment,
first proposed along with the Bill of
Rights in 1789.
The Justice Department hasn't
releas«l its opinion on whether the
amendment is ratified or whether
so me court ruling or act of
Congress is in order.
Ratification requires votes by
three -fourths of the states, or 38
altogether.
Alabama, Missouri, Michigan
and New Jersey voted last week,
and Illinois on Tuesday became
No.40. The amendment also has
passed the Pennsylvania House and
the California Senate, so more raufications are possible.
The amendment would require
that lawmakers wait until arw the
next House elections before receiving any raise s they vote them selves.
The House imposed such ~
restriction on its last pay raise, but
the Senate didn'L
Members of the House and Senate both eam $129,500.
The amendment got its ftrSt ratifications in 1789, tbe year James
Madison wrote it and Con~s
sent it to the sLates with no
line.
'

A Multlmedl1 Inc. Newa011oer

village.
However, an EPA -required
asbestos inspection by the Kemron
firm of MarietUI has revealed that
three of the nine structures will
require asbestos removal, and two
of the three would require "ex tensive asbestos removal proc«lures."
According to Commission Clerk
Mary Hobstetter, the sUite will not
release any of the county's CDBG
funds until arrangements are made
regarding the Pomeroy applicaoon.
Options for the village include
the following : to pay for the

asbestos removal from village
funds; to drop the three houses in
question from the project and proceed with demolition of the
remaining six; or substitute another
e li gible CDBG project (such as
paving or water line extension) and
wait until the next year's projects
to do the demolitoon work and
include the asbestos removal in the
grant application. (The upcoming
CDBG year will be an 18-month,
instead of a 12-month, period.)
Commissioner Richard Jones
said yesterday, however, that he

thought there were "more worth while projects in Pomeroy" and
that he would be opposed 10 spending more CDBG funds on demoli tion of structures.
Hobstetter told the board that
state officials had recommended
that the three asbestos-laden structures be rcmovro from the project
and that the funds be spent on
demolishing the remaoning six
houses, since asbestos removal on
the two most serious houses in the
project alone could cost the village
as much as $20,000, and since a

new proJIXI would require a public
hearing and a delay of at least 30
days.
Also. before funds are released,
the village is still required to complete property appraosals on each
structure in question, and must esti mate rehabilitation costs or cenify
that the structures could not be
rehabilitated, since the sUite will
not fund demolition of properties
that could be rcbabilitatro for occupancy.
Other business
Further discussion was held

with Pom eroy Attorney Christopher Tenaglia regarding the pending move of the county's law
library from the counhouse to an
office on West Second Street,
owned by Bernard V. Fultz.
According to Tenaglia, the bar
association will rrouce funds spent
on supplements for certain publications in order to pay the rent on the
new space, which will provide a
meeting area and other features that
the counhouse room does not
Tenaglia said that the associa Continued on paRe 3

Six members of EHS band named
to 1992 All-Ohio State Fair Band

Including The Best Variety Anywhere!

Six members of the award-winning Eastern High School band
have been namro 10 the 1992 All Ohio SUite Fair Band.
They are T. Charlene Dailey,
Kyle A. Fausnaugh, Dawn J. Foley,
and Letitia A. Holsinger, all of
Reedsville; and Andrew D. Wolf
and Vicki A. Warner, both of
Pomeroy. They are the only Meigs
County band members to be so
honored.
Applications for the band were
receiv«l from schools across Ohio.
All applicants were recommended
by their school instrumental music
teacher and represent some of the

U.S. GRADE A 14-7-LB. AVG.J

Frozen Young
Turkey Breast
Pound

most honor«! young musicians in
Ohio, according to Omar P. Blackman, Director of the All-Ohio State
Fair Band.
In the process of selection, careful consideration was given to
attaining representation from all
areas of the state, keeping in mind
a balanc«l grade distribution (from
grades 9-12): and finding the most
qualifi«l students for the positions
available. Only a certain number of
positions are available in each section, and it is a distinct honor to
have been chosen as a member of
the All-Ohio State Fair Band,
according 10 BIackman .

After five days of rehearsal, tbe
All-Ohio SUite Fair Band will perform at the 1992 Ohio State Fair
from August 7 through 22 in
Columbus. The All -Ohio State Fair
Band was been a featur«l anraction
at the Ohio SUite Fair since 1925.
Dailey plays the nute and piccolo, Fausnaugh the sousaphone,
Foley the clarinet, Wolf the trom bone ami"Holsinger the alto saxophone, while Warner is a percussionist
Th e EHS band is under the
direction of William Hall, and perform«! earlier this week at Amen Flora '92 in Columbus.

,..---Local briefs----, Voinovich
Probe continues into fatal fire

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MIDDLEPORT (AP) - Investigators arc trying to determine the
cause of a fire that kiU«l two children, fore officials said.
Roger Grimm, 2, and his 9-month-old sister, Krisun, apparently
died of smoke inhalation in the fire Tuesday, Meigs County Coroner Douglas Hunter said Wednesday.
The Franklin County coroner's office wiU do perform autopsies
on the children, Hunter said. Roger was found in the kitchen and
Kristin was in her crib, he said.
Middleport Fire Chief Jeff Darst said the fire started in the
kiochen and spread quickly. He believes the fore was accidental.
Alanna Gnmm, mother of t.he children , was sunbathong in the
front yard when the fore broke out, said Roger Stobart, a grandfather
of the children. The Grimms lived on a 60-ycar-old house on the
Stoban farm. he said.
Ms. Grimm attempted to enter the hou se to rescue the choldrcn,
Stoban said.
"It was JUSt an inferno. There was just no way to get in there.
It's a wonder we didn'tlose her also," Stobart said.
Randy Arnold, a Meigs County sheriff's deputy, alsu trocd to rescue the children. Arnold was treat«! for smoke inhalation .

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..1

Deputies probe deer accident
Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby reponed that deputic.'
investigated a deer accodent which took place on Monday momong
near Long HoUow Road.
.
.
According to Soulsby, Charles E. Hawk of Angel Rodge Road on
Athens was southbound on U.S Route 33 in a 1990 Ford pickup
when he struck a deer that ran into the roadway.
Moderate damage was sustained by the left rear of the truck.

B&amp;E's, theft investigated

Hearings may begin next
week on pay ratification
WASHINGTON (AP) - Forty
SUites now have ratified a constitu tional amendment limiting pay moses for Congress , and debate is
beginning in earnest over whether
the states took 100 long to lake a
stand .
They took more than 202 years.
Rep . Don Edwards, D-Cahf. ,
said he expects the House Judi ciary
subcommiuee on civil and constitutional rights that he heads to begin
hearings on the ratifi cation next
week.
"It's a matter for careful study
and we're going to give it roght
away," he said Tuesday.
"It is not a question on tile merits of tbe proposal," said House
Spealcer Thomas Foley, D-Wash.
"It is a question about wbethe: an
amendment this long delay«! from
its original submission wiU be considered as ratifi«l.''
Sen. Robert Byrd, D-W.Va., a
constitutional scholar, voiced a
similar position.
"We must ensure ... that we do
no violence 10 our Constitution or
to tbc process by which it may be
amended," Byrd said.
The National Archives anticipated this debale last year, and told tile
Justice Department that its exper-

2 Secllon•, 12 Paga1 25 oenle

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, May 14, 1992

Commission discusses Pomeroy's DBG application

Red, Ripe Whole
Watermelons

DIGGlNG IN - Ohio Lt. Gov. Mike DeWine and First Lady
Barbara Busb belp plant a tree near Interstate 70 in Springfteld
Tuesday. Tbe pair participated in tbe tree planting, wbicb was
part of a bigbway beautification program aner a rund raiser luncbeon for DeWine's U.S. Senate campaign. (AP)

l&lt;Jw tonight In mid-60s. Chance
or rain 70 percent. Friday,
cloudy. High In mid-70s.

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James Woodyard of Racine reponed to the Meigs County Sheriffs Dcpanment that sometime on Saturday or Saturday night, his
garage had been entered and a drill, timing light, soldering gun and
screwdriver bit set were taken. The lock had been cut off the door.
On Tuesday, deputies were called to investigate a breaking and
entering of an empty house at Harrisonville. According to the
report, the property is now owned by Fred Gambill of Albany.The
home was enter«! and locks were taken, as were two wall caboncts
from the kitchen. A m«licine cabinet, bathroom tissue holder and
three lisht swioch plates were also rcpon«l stolen.
Davtd Elliot, Inc., doing contract work for Columbus Southern
Power Co repon«l on Tuesday that sometime on Monday night,
someone had entered a locked companment of one of the company's trucks, located between Wells Cemetery and King Rid~e. and
stole tools, climbing hooks, cham hoost, chaonsaw, ~as droll and
shovels.

No one cited after accident
Minor damage was incurr«l to the left side of the Middleport
emergency squad vehicle in an acc ident on West Maon Street,
Pomeroy, near the Pomeroy-Mason Bridge approach Wednesday
afternoon.
.
.
According to a rcpon from Pomeroy Pohce, the emergency veho cle driven by Henry Johnson, 36, Moddlcport,_ was northbound
enroute ro the hospital with a patient when the accident occurr«l.
It was repon«l that Orland Laudermilt, 46, of Pomeroy was
southbound and when he saw the flashing hghts and the soren pull«!
10 the right and slOpped. As the squad maneuvered through the traffic it struck the Laudermolt 1968 Chevrolet truck. There was no
~age 10 the Laudermilt truck, police report«!.
There were no ciU!toons on the oncodent

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Eleven calls for assistance were answer«! by units of Meogs
Emergency Services on Wednesday and early Thursday.
On Wednesday at II :49 a.m ., Racine squad responded to Buck
Town Road. Demetrus Michael was talcen 10 Veterans Memonal
Hospital.
At 2:13'p.m., Middleport squad went to Front Street and took
Continued on page 3

backs home... .
care programs
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Many older people plac«l in nurs ing homes probably could be better
served by programs that allow
th em to continue living in lhcir
own homes. Gov . George
Voinovich said.
Voinovich said a package of
Medicaid reform s that he expe&lt;:LS
to be ready in June will try to
incr ease cfficu.~ncy, and redu ce
waste and abuse in the federal -state
program that provides health care
for the poor.
"I think the current sy stem
makes it too easy for people to be
institutionalized whether they need
it or not," Voinovich said W«lncs day in opening the annual Governor' s Conference on Aging.
He offer«! no specific proposals, but said the package would
establish a long-term system that
measures a person's need for services. and then directs them 10 the
most appropriate level of care.
"Our admonistration is working
hard 10 get more cooperation from
the fed eral government to help us
promote more innovative home
care programs for seniors. So much
of what we're doing, folks, is man
dated by Uncle Sam, " Voinovich
said.
He said the proposal would try
to limit growth in the number of
nursing home beds. He said Ohio
already is 20 percent above the
national average in the number of
nursing home beds per I ,000 people over age 65.
''As long as nursing home beds
arc the easiest alternative for care
of the elderly, many people will be
placed in these costly facilities for
reasons of convenience and not due
to need," he said.
Voinovich called for expanded
community -based care options
such as home health visits, homemaker assisU!nce, and meal deliv ery to help people who do not
require institutional care.
He said such changes would be
in the best interest of govemment
and the elderly.
"Older people are able to
choose the settings in which they
receive necessary care. The state
avoids hi~ her costs or caring for
someone m an expens1ve nursmg
home setting, and individuals who.1
truly need nursing home care will
have greater access to a care
provider," Voinovich said.
"My mother is going to be 81
years old. She's at home, and she ...
wants to stick right where she's
at," he said. "And I think our job,
the family's job and society's, is to
make sure she can stay there as
long as she can.''

BAND MEMBERS HONORED - These
members of.tbe Eastern High School band have
been selected as members ol' the prestigious 1\110bio Start Fair Band, and will perform at the

stale fair in August. Pictured are, 1-r, Andrew
Wolf, Letitia Holsinger, Charlene Dailey and
Dawn Foley. Other members selected, but not
pictured, are Kyle Fausnaugh and Vicki Warner.

Senate panel increases powers
to block out-of-state garbage
WASHINGTON (AP) - A
Senate panel has agreed to increase
the sUites' powers to block out-ofswtc garbage shopment,.
But the measure faces res istance
from Sen. Dan Coats, R-Ind. , who
led an effort two years ago to lock
state borders 10 waste impons . lie
says he' s prepared to fight again.
The compromise bill approved
Wednesday by the Senate Environ ment and Public Woo\s Commlltcc
would let governors limit future
waste 1mports in certain circ um stances. Local communities would
have to request the help.
However, under the measure
governors could not impose any
limits that breach existing contracts
betwe en communities that ship
garbage and the landfills that
receive it. It also protects agree ments between the receiving com munities and waste-hauling companies.

The bill wriucn by Sens. Max
Baucus, D-Mom., and John Chafce,
R-R.I., also stipulates that governors lose the power to ban waste

1mports ,f their states' landfills
aren't brought up 10 swndard by
1995.
The vote on interstate garbage
hauling came during continued
debate of changes in the Resource
Conservation and Recovery Act ,
the nation's sohd waste and rcq clmg law.
Sen. Frank Lautcnberg, D-N.J .,
who saod his small but densely populated state has been tranform«l
frorn "a mega-importer'' to a net
exponer of garbage, voted for the
interstate measure.
He said it would allow New Jersey to continue on its aggressi vc
re&lt;:ycling course without suddenly
being drown«! in its own waste .
"11oe proposal before us would
allow waste shopments to landfills
rec eiving exports 10 continue for
the life of the existing contracts, "
Lautcnherg said. "It does not slap
an immediate ban on e&gt;ports of
solid waste. 11ois will give exporting states lime to reduc e thctr
ex pons."
But he warned fellow committee
members that, "We still could face

serious oppos1tion in the full Se n-

me.··

Coats, whose 1990 mea s ure
passed the Senate 68-31 before
New Jersey lawmalcers helped bll
it in a conferenc e, said he wa s
unhappy woth the Baucus -Chafec
bill and would proceed with hi s
own legislation .
"Th1s bill essentoally codifies
the sU!tus quo and that is far from
good enough , " Coats said . "I
understand the commiuce has
struggled, but they have come up
far short "
Tim Gocglein, a Coat s
spokesman, said the Indiana senator want s local communitoes and
governors given powers to ban outof-stJtc waste without the exemption s huilt into the compromise boll .
The compromise gives speCial
consid eratiOn to the nalion 's four
largest trash 1mponcrs - Penn sylvania, Ohi o, Virginia and lndoana.
They may each frcc1.c trash imports
at 1991 levels. In addition, at local
request , states could impose a 30percc nt import cap at particular
landfills.

Merchants discuss plans for
Heritage Weekend activities
Dy JULIE E. DILLON

Sentinel News Staff
Plans for Heritage Weekend
(I unc 13 and 14) were disc us sed at

Wednesday's regular meeting of
the Pomeroy Merchants Associa tion.
The assocoation is planning a
variety of activities, the majority of
which will take place June 13,
between the hours of 10 a.m. and 4
p.m. The theme for the weekend is
"The Good Old Summer Time ."
Activities have' also been plann«l
by the Meigs County Museum for
both days, June 13 and 14.
The Heritage Queen Contest
will he held June 12 at the Meigs
County Public Library in Pomeroy
and is open to any female student
between the ages of 16 and 19, as
of May I, from Eastern, Meigs and
Southern high schools. Any ques tions regarding the queen contest

may be directed to Susan Clark.
cha1rman of that contest.
Acuvities on June 13 will begin
with a parade at 10 a.m . follow«!
by recogn1t1on of th e Heritage
Queen on Coun Street.
A Civil War demonstration will
be presented by Company B, 91 st
Ohio Volunteer Infantry Group
during the day and that group will
again have a camp set up behind
the Meigs County Court House.
The public os invited and encouraged to tour the camp as this will
also be a tim e of recruitment for
any one interested in joining the
group. The ladies of this group, and
possibly some of the men, will present a fashion show featuring the
Civil War ern style of clothing.
There will be an antique show in
the larger mini-park conducted by
Russ and Hope Moore as well as
other demonstrations and events.
Crafters arc again invited thi s

year to displa y and sell their items
on Court Street. A fcc of $10 will
be charged for each space and
those interested should brin~ their
own table. Further informatoon on
the craft spaces may he obtainro by
call 1ng Dianna Lawson at Bank
One in Pomeroy, or Becky Jeffers
at Davis-Quickcllnsurance.
Anyone interested in participating in the parade should contact
parade chairmen Vicki Ferrell at
Buttons and Bows, or Angie Swift
at Pleaser's Restaurant. Further
infonnation on any Herilllge Weekend activities may be obtainro by
contacting Julie Dillon at The
Daily Sentinel, 992-2155.
In other matters of the association, Susan Clark, president, SUited
the new "Welcome to Pomeroy"
banners have arrived. With proceeds from tile merchants' fashion
show and a $500 donation from
Continued on page 3

�·commentary
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF TilE MEIGS-MASON AREA

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Thursday, May 14, 1992

moved to Mongolia where Andrei
PHILADELPHIA (NEA) While monumental events unfold established a regional theater and
in the former Soviet Union, their son was born.
Then Peg Wettlin Efremoff was
nowhere are they watched with
more interest, or amazement, then
in a large Victorian home near the
campus of the University of Pennsylvania.
Sixty years ago, Margaret Wet- forced to make the decision that
tlin, now 85, had just graduated changed her life forever.
from Penn. Depression era jobs
"When I first went over there in
were not plentiful, so she decided the early '30s, there were quite a
on an adventure, a trip to Russia, few Americans there, many engijust to see what it was all about. neers and scientists who could not
Her intention was to stay only six get jobs here during the Depression
months or a year. But she fell in and who went there to work. But
love, and remained 50 years.
Stalin fma.Uy ordered all foreigners
Those 50 years are poignantly out. Only those who took Soviet
remembered m a newly published citizenshtp could stay. What could
book, "Fifty Russian Winters" I do? I had my husband and my
(Pharos Books).
child, and he was not about to
"When I went over, I had no leave. So I became one of the few
interest in politics," she says. "I Americans who stayed.''
wasn't a communist. I didn't go for
But even though she was forced
some political reason. I had no to renounce her American citizenintention of staying."
ship and become a Russian citizen,
But then she met Andrei Efre- she never stopped thinking of hermoff, a protege or the great self as an American.
Stan is lavsky, the actor -director
'·But of course,'' she says. ''I
who founded the Moscow An The- am as American as they come. My
ater. They fell in love, married and h"!~~liked to think that I had

Robert}. Wagman

ROBERT L. WINGETI'
Publisher

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant PllbUsher/Controlltr

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General M111ager

LETICRS OF OPINION are welcome . They sbould be less than 300
wordJ. All !etten are subject to editing and must be signed with name,
oddress and telephone number. No unsigned lenen will be published. l..ettm
lbould be in good taste, llddRssing iasuea, not penonaliti01.

Deadline for publication
_of election letters May 27
The Daily Sentinel welcomes letters regarding the June 2 primary
. eledion. However, in tbe interest of fairness, no elKtion letters will be
accepted after 12 noon on Wednesday, May 27.
Individuals should address issues and not personaUties.
Letters purely endorsing candidates will not be used.
, Letters should be 300 works or less. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed witb name, address and telephone number.
Telephone numbers will not be published. No unsigned letters will be
· publisbed. AU letters sboold be in good taste.

LH
IN TilE

HOW~

CRUMBLED

·When a riot is a kick in
the teeth to government
By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Special Correspondent
WASHINGTON ~ Sometimes, the senator observed, it takes a kick in
the teeth before the government gets the message.
. This time, and not for the fust time, the message with the kick carne
from Los Angeles. Jolted by the deadly rioting there, President Bush and
Democratic leaders of Congress agreed to seek urgent acuon on legislation to deal with the ills of depressed inner cities, and the black and other
. minority Americans who live there.
The initial installment: Bush announced $600 million in loans for low
·.income housing on Wednesday. And the House moved swimy to provide
funds for about $600 million in emergency business loans and disaster
relief.
Longer-term federal efforL' to deal with urban problems remain an
agenda, not yet an answer. In other times, with other leaders - but the
same, unrelenting prohlcms - much or what's happening now has happen!:!~ before.
• · Bush and the Democrats did not settle on specific bills, or on how to
: pay for tax incentives, jobs programs, education, hou sing and law
: enforcement rud.
· - The president sa1d no new taxes; Democmts said it might take taxes
: and a shift of defense savings into domestic spending to do what's need: cd.
~·
Those arc familiar differences. The impasse of a politically divilled
. government seldom has involved goals but, rather, how to get there, how
. much to spend, and how to pay.
: · Now such questions arc to be handled urgently, despite the rivalries of
the presidential carrpaign season .
' 'Americans need to know that their president and Congress, whatever
:thw differences, can work together to meet urgent national needs," the
. · Democratic leaders said 10 a lcuer to Bush before they met on Tuesday.
. Bush said much the same as he campaigned, unsuccessfully, for his
: cronomic recovery plan early this year. The Democrats pushed their own
· version, and the .-csult was impasse.
·: · In this situation, another stalemate would carry political risks for both
: 6idcs. They're all incumbents, after all, most of them seeking new terms
: from a skeptical, frustrated electomte dissatisfied with JOb perfonnance in
·: both Congress and the Whire House.
·
So the mood, by all accounts, is for action.
Would that be so but for the riots sparked hy the police acquittals in
: the Rodney King beating case?
"I doubt it," ;;aid Senate Republican Leader Bob Dole of Kansas.
Nor, he s;lld, would government programs msure against trouble in
: depressed CllleS elsewhere. "ThiS JUSl isn't Los Angeles," he said. "But
: il does ind rcate that sometimes you need son of a kick 10 the teeth before
·:we geLthe message."
• Dole and the Democrats talked of enacting legislation withrn a few
:weeks or a month, top speed for Congress, an insuwuon Bush once said
:could slow the ag 1ng process. No deadline.~ were se~ but bipanisanship
:won't last long into the summer of the national political conventions.
Nor, as Dole noted, will the sen se of urgency. "We need to do this
fa~rly qu1ckly hcfore something else happens either here or around the
: IWorld that would sh1f1 the focu s," he sa1d . "So we have maybe 30 days,
:; because people do lose interes L"
Interest has faded before - after the Watts riots in Los Angeles in
1965, the c1ty v1olence 1n 1967, the nots and destruction that erupted after
. the ass:lSSIIIJllOn of Manin Luther King Jr. in 1968.
Each tim e, the a pprJ~ s al of underlying causes ~ unemployment,
poverty, cJucau onal and hous1ng needs, crime, racial discrimination was the sa me. Indeed, a New York commission that looked into racial
rioung rn lbrl cm in 1935 saw the same set of problems behind the unrest.
Tbe gove rnm ent tried to deal w1tl1 them, through the Democmtic social
programs of Lyndon B. John son' s Great Society, with federal grants to
ciucs under Richard M. Nixon . Unresolved, hut relatively quiet, the troubles of tl1e c11ies sl1ppcd down the pnority list.
While Democra ts S3ld periodiCally that Ronald Reagan and now Bush
were ignoring urhan policy, none of the national candidates, in either
party, had talked much about it1n thi s campaign.
Until now.
EDITOR'S NOTE ~ Walter R. Mears, vice president and columnist for The Associated Press, has reported on Washington and
national politics for more than 25 years.

Today in history
By The Associated Pres.'
Today is Thursday, May 14, the !35th day of 1992. There are 231 days
left in the year.
Today 's H1ghlight in History:
On May 14, 1948, the independent state of Israel was proclaimed in Tel
Aviv as British rule in Palestine came to an end. The United States imme• diately recognized the new Jewish state.
On this date:
In 1643, Louis XIV became King of France at age four upon the death
of his father, Louis the XIII.
In 1787, dclegale8 began gathering in Philadelphia for a convention to
draw up the U.S. Constitution.
In 1796, English physician Edward Jenner administered the first vaccination against smallpox to an 8-year-old boy.
In 1804, !he Lewis and Claric expedition to e&lt;plore the L6uisiana Territory left St. Louis.
In 1904, the first Olympic games to be held in the United States
opened in SL Louis.
In 1942, the Women's Auxiliary Army Corps was established.
In 1942, Aaron Copland's "Lincoln Portrait" was first performed by
the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra, conducted by Andre Kostelanetz
(who had commissioned the work).
_
In 1955, representatives from eight Communist bloc countries, including the Soviet Union, signed the Warsaw Pact in Poland.

the soul of a Russian or that I was
always becoming more Russian ,
but I was and always remained an
American.''
Over the next 36 years, Wettlin
and her husband were a part of the
Soviet intelligentsia, living and
working within the Soviet Union's
arts community. He worked as a
director, she as an English-language t£acher and translator of the
works of Gorky and Tolstoy, and
as a writer and member of the
Soviet Writers Union . With their
two children, they lived through the
purges, the deprivations of World
War II and the post-war and postStalin eras.
After Andrei died in 1968, Peg
Wet~in had no real thought of leaving Russia. But in 1973 sbe made a
visit home, and there her family
convinced her to return. The process toolc more than five years, but
during a window of detente in
1980, she received the necessary
pennission for she and her children
and their families to leave. As a
result, she was only able to view
the fall of Gorbachev and the Soviet Union on television in her

STATE?

Friday, May 15
Accu-Weather'" forecast for daytime cond1tions and high temperatures
MICH

•

Philadelphia living room. She says
she has trouble believing it has
really happened.
"What's happened in Russian is
really so exciung, really so unbelievable," Weulin says of the
events of the recent past. "To be
honest, I didn't Jhink it could happen . All the years of unremitting
terror, deprivation and disillusionment. I thought the people were
simply too tired, too passive, simply too defeated to rise up the way
they have. When I sat here wak:hing the events unfolding in Red
Square, I just wanted to be there.''
But the fact that the government
feU did not really surprise her.
"lt was a system that had gmve
faults . Marx wanted to institute a
system that relieved people of the
anxieties of the capitalist system.
Communism, he believed, would
make people better. It did not. It
was actually a system based on a
lust for power, a lust for money .
Democracy is the only possible
system that can work, because it is
the only system that gives people
some measure of control. There is
no control in an authoritarian
state."
But she has to admit she has
gmve misgivings about the furure.
Peg Wettlin's American
upbringing, coupled with her lifetime in the Soviet Union gives her
a unique perspective in assessing
the Russian chara:ter.
In her book she says, " .. . the
Russian outlook on life differs in
many way&amp; from the Western
one .... Russian.~ are not inclined to
see in efficiency the virtue West·
erners make of iL"
Elaborating on this: "I think
they are going to have a very diffi cult time adjusting to Democracy,
to private ownership, to a free-market economy. They are a good people wiih a wonderful capacity. But
it will take time, maybe a generalion or more, and they will need a
great deal or help."
Robert Wagman is a syndicated columnist for Newspaper
Enterprise Association.

A primer for dealing with leaks
I am sorely disappointed in
Peter E. Heming and the United
States Senate. Since last fall,
they've heen promising us a blazing shootoul at the congressional
corral , but when they get to the
point where the guns are drawn and
the lead is about to fly~ all we get
are a couple of ftzzles and a plop.
We ought to sue them for nonfeasance or sometlting.
Surely you recall the name Peter
E. Fleming. He's the New York
lawyer hired by the Senate to
unearth the fiends who leaked
Anita Hill's charges that she had
been sexually harassed by Supreme
Court nominee, now Justice,
Clarence Thomas.
Oh, the Republicans were so
upseL We want a Leak Probe, they
said. OK, responded the opposition, but only if we get a Leak
Probe, too . We want to disinter the
dogs who leaked all that foul stuff
about the ethics investigation of the
Democratic senators who did
favors for S&amp;L swindler Charles
Keating.
And so Peter E. Fleming was
brought aboard. He hired a staff of
investigators, interviewed 200 people, pored over who-knows-howmany documents, subpoenaed four

reporters and demanded their
sources (which they did not give
him), spent several hundred thousand dollars ~ and a few days ago

Joseph Spear
filed a 171-page report that srud he
had found notlting.
After all that ballyhoo and
threats of a constitutional showdown, we get nothing. We ought to
demand our money back.
Truth is, it would be a waste of
lime. You see, there's a rule in the
secret Leak Probe Manual used by
public officials which says: "It is
not expected that Leak Probers will
actually fmd leakers. Leak Probers
arc expected to flutter about and
make noise, sparing no expense,
until public anger subsides. They
are then to repo!l no progress and
close the case."
Here are just a few of the other
rules in the manual:
I. "The more vital it is for the
puhli c to know something, the
more fierce should be the re&lt;~ction
when it is leaked."
When The New York Times
disclosed in 1969 that the United

States was secretly bombing Cambodia, for example, Richard Nixon
and Henry Kissinger inveigled FBI
Director 1. Edgar Hoover into
installmg wiretaps on the tele phones of 17 people; including
seven members of Kissinger's
staff.
In response to the famous Pen tagon Papers leak, Nixon and his
minions set up the White House
plumbers team, which enjoyed a
short but merry career of plugging
leaks through various means, legal
and illegal.
When journalist Daniel Schorr
obtained a secret congressional
report in 1976 on the sins of the
CIA, the House Ethics Committee
- which had never investigated a
congressman - launched a sevenmonth probe of the leak. The Ford
administration also proposed fines
and jail terms for anyone who
leaked intelligence information.
2. "Charges of 'leaking' are
wonderful diversionary tools and
are most effectively employed with
a great display of honking and the
flapping of wings."
The show put on by the senators
at the Thomas hearings are a good
example . They were caught red handed sitting on an explosive bit

of news but managed to put off
public examination of their indiscretion by appointing Heming and
publishing his non -findings half a
year later.
When Spiro Agnew was caught
taking kickbacks and payoffs from
contractors, he vehemently
denounced the leaks, then served
subpoenas on nine reporters to
force them to reveal their sources.
The confrontation was avened on Iy
by his resignation.
3. "Where possible, Leak
Probers should be people who
don't mind looking or sounding
foolish."
White House plumber E.
Howard Hunt was given to wearing
ridiculous-looking wigs and using
voice modulators.
In his official non. findings,
Peter Heming imparted a timeworn
truism:
"The media views leaking from
a different perspective. It may be
fairly said the American media is
addicted to leaks. It argues that
leaks are essential to fulfilling its
obligation as a public wak:hdog.''
Fizzle fizzle plop.
Joseph Spear IS a syndic:ated
columnist for Newspaper Enter·
prise Asociation.

Its causes ignored, violence recurs
When South Central Los Ange- abominable housing, a lack of edules imploded recently, a statement cational opporturities and recre Dr. Dominic Capeci had made to ational facilities, and lim Crow.
Whites saw blacks as encroaching
me in early March rang in my ears.
on
the jobs and other privileges that
I was interviewing him about
his newly released book on the
Detroit race riot of 1943. "Riots
are going to come again," he told
me. "I hate to be the prophet of
doom, but as long as you have ten- had been exclusively theirs.
Yet despite the similarities
sion, as long as you have people
believing that their grievances are between the '43 riot and those that
not legitimately being dealt with, preceded it, policy makers then
you're going 10 have these kinds of didn't bother to look into the rioters' motivation. Nor did they do so
explosions."
Capeci, a professor of history at during•the Detroit race riot of 1967,
Southwest Missouri State Universi- when information about the '43 riot
ty, has studied racial .violence for was so much more accessible.
Previous looks at the '43 riot
25 years and wriuen three books
and many articles on the subject. concluded that black rioters were
He and Dr. Martha Wilkerson, an simply young hoodlums. And that
SMSU sociology professor, had very few white rioters were
just spent four and half years involved. Those who were were
researching and writing about the characterized as low-class and une194 3 Detroit riot, filing Freedom of ducated- "hillbillies," some
Information rtquests to gain access reports called them. The concluto never-before-used police rocads sions are much like the images
and arrest tickets. The book that we've seen over and over again an
came from their research, "Lay · TV this time: Video of the worst
ered Violence: The Detroit Race incidents of looting and crime
Rioters of I 943," was published in played repeatedly, with little time
or energy devoted to frustrated res.
late 1991.
The conditions that precipitated idents who became involved in the
the I 943 violence were much the riot to a much lesser extent, and
same as the conditiona that led to even less time devoted to analysis
riots before it and after it Blacks of their feelings and panicipation.
Capeci' s and Wilkerson's findmoved north with expectationa of
better jobs and better lives. But ings after a painstaking look at the
once they got there, they found profiles of those arrested in '43,

Sarah Overstreet

were at odds with earlier conclusions. The authors found that both
races had heen heavily involved,
rioters were older than previously
though~ and most black rioters had
jobs and serious stakes in society.
They were people with something
valuable to lose by participating.
When I interviewed Capeci and
Wilkerson before the Los Angeles
rioting, I listened to them with the
interest of anyone who's read an
intriguing book . When I called
Capeci after the Los Angeles violence, I listened with the intensity
of someone who no longer has the
luxury of just being interested. Tell
me again, I told him, what you
meant when you told me, "Riots
are going to come again .... ''
We talked about the conditions
precipitating racial violence that he
has identified in 25 years of study,
some of them remaining constant
throu~h our shifts from an agrarian
to an mdustrialto a high-tech economy. But those are conditions that
only increase the possibiUty of riots
and violence, he says.
The most important factor in all
the racial violence he has studied is
the perception by the rioters "that
they're not being taken seriously
by 'external forces' - the government, the police department, the
justice system. These communities
are very resilient. They can have
bad housing and unemployment,
but a feeling of injustice is more

Warm, muggy weather forecast for weekend

OH 10 Weather

A half-century in the Soviet Union

personal . If they feel they can't
have redress for their grievances
through the channels of legitimate
redress, where are they going to get
. ?"
II.
The objective, statistical study
of mcial violence by sociologists
and historians has largely been
ignored by policy makers, while
the cycle of frustration and violence repeats itself.
Sarah Overstreet is a syndicated columnist for Newspaper
Enterprise Association.

IToledo [ 69' I
•
o

IND.

•I Columbus[

•

p

~

Showers T-slonns Rain Flurries

Snow

Cloudy

------Weather----South·Central Ohio
Tonight, showers likely. Low
55-60. Chance of min 70 percent.
Friday, mostly cloudy with a
chance of showers and thunder storms . Hi~h in the mid -70 s.
Chance of ram 40 percent.
Extended forecast:

Saturday through Monday:
Fair on Saturday. Unseasonably
warm with a chance of showers
Sunday. Fair and cooler Monday .
Highs 70-80 Saturday and Sunday
and 65-75 on Monday. Lows in the
50s Saturday, 60s Sunday and 4050 Monday.

---Area deaths-Geraldine Barton
Gemldine Johnson Barton , 66 ,
of Bartlett, died early Thursday ,
May 14, 1992 at her home.
Funeral arrangements will be
announced later by White-Blower
Funeml Home in Coolville.

Mary Cheatham
Mary Norma Cheatham, 75 of
1755 Chester Road, Pomeroy, died
Wednesday, May 13, 1992 at
Pleasant Valley Hospital, Point
Pleasant, W, Va.
Born on Sept. 7, 1916 at
Pomeroy, she was the daughter of
the late Adam and Susan Lee Partlow. She was a housewife.
She is survived by a _niece, Jan ice Hesterberg, Grand Forks, N. D.,
along with several other nieces and
nephews, a brother and sister-inlaw, Levi and Belen Partlow,
Pomeroy, a sister-in-law, Amy
Poland, Toledo, and special
friends, Clarence and Rose Elkn
Lee, Pomeroy, and Larry and Kelley Klein, Pomeroy.
Besides her parents, she was
preceded in death hy her husband,
George Cheatham, a daughter,
Susan Cheatham, an(~ several
hrothers and two sisters.
Graveside services will be held
Saturday at the Riverview Cemetery, Middlepon. Jessie Morris will
officiate. There will be no calling
hours. Arrangements are being
handled by the Ewing Funeral
Home.

Rutland Council to meet
Rutland Village Council will
meet Monday at 7 p.m. in council
quarters. Anyone with questions
concerning the sewage treatment
project are encournged to anend the
meeting.

Roger Grimm
Kristin Grimm
Graveside services for Roger
Wayne Grimm , two, and Kristin
Ray Grimm, nine months, who
died in a fire at their home Tuesday, will be held all p.m . Fnday at
the Bradford Cemetery.
AI Hartson will officiate at the
service. There will be no calling
hours.
Roger was born on Jan . 22,
1990 and Kristin on Aug. 7, 1991,
both at Point Pleasant, W. Va.
Thoy are the children of H. J. and
Alana Cleland Grimm, who sur vive along with maternal grandparents, Wayne and Joyce Cleland,
Langsville, and paternal grandparents, Bob and Carolyn Gnmm,
New Haven, W. Va. Also survivmg are five aunts and nine uncles,
two great grandmothers, and several great aunts and uncles.
The children attended the
Church of ChrisL

Lottery numbers
CLEVELAND (AP) - There
were no tickets sold naming all SIX
numbers selected in Wednesday's
Super Lotto drawing so Saturday's
jackpot will be $8 million, the Oh1o
Loucry said.
Pick 3 Numbers
3-3-5
(three, three, five)
Pick 4 Numbers
8-3-7-1
(eight, three, seven, one)
Super Lol!o
5-l 0-25 · 30-39-41
(five, ten , twenty -fiv e. thirty,
thirty-nine, forty -one)
Kicker
2-6-9-2-5-2
(two, six, nine, two, five , two)

-Meigs announcementsA springtime cmfts fair will be
presented at Bob Evans Farm Saturday and Sunday from 9 a.m. to 5
p.m.
A variety of items w~l be available at the fair and local crafters
will be participating.
Articles will be displayed at the
homestead, homestead patio,
homestead front yard, homestead
back yard, crdftbarn, rann museum
and on the farm museum road.
The public is invited and further

information may be obtained by
calling Bob Evans Farm at (614)
245-5305.
Group sets dinner
The
Reedsville
United
Methodist Women will hold a
creamed chicken and biscuit dinner
on Saturday , from 5 p.m. to 6 p.m.
at the church. Buttered peas, a
salad bar and dessert will be
included in the price of $3.50 per
plate. Carry-out will be available.

'

Hospital news

Tht Daily Sentinel
(UIPS JIJ.INIO)

Pab1Whed. tYtTJ at\emoon, Monday
u.r..p Friday, t n Court 81., Pcmeroy,
Ohio by the Ohio Valley Publithinl
Compuy/Maltimedia Inc., Pomeroy,
Ohio 4671J9, Ph . 992-2156. Second da•
,......, poid ot ...........,, Ohio.
Member: The AMorialed Pnu, and ~he
Ohio Newapaper ANoclation, National

Adwerliaiftt Repretenlalin, Branham
N•••~M~per Salea, 733 Third AYenue,
N. . Yark, N... 'id 10011.

---

No oobocripliono by moit peTiritt.d in
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By Tht Associated Press
The National Weather Service
predicted a wann weekend in Ohio,
with the mercury climbin~ into the
80s, before cooler conditiOns return
next week.
Showers were foreca st for
tonight and Friday morning.
Lows tonight will be around 50.
Both tempemtun:s and humidity
will rise slowly and will be qune
noticeable on Saturday under sunny
skies.

Veterans Memorial
WEDNESDAY ADMISSIONS
- Elizabeth Well, Pomeroy: Ethel
Lam ben, Pomeroy; Horence Henegar, Racine: and Lena Carpenter,
Rutland.
'
'
WEDNESDAY DISCHARGES
- Wanda Lyons and Celia Hite.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
May 13 discharges - Darlene
Kemmer, Lawrence Lamm, Mrs.
Keith Woolum and daughter, and
Selma Zimmerman.
May 13 births- Mr. and Mrs.
Dana Green, daughter, Gallipolis.
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Johnson,
daughter, Crown City. Mr. and
Mrs. John Ranegar, son, Gallipo~s.

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. ~
Endeavour's astronauts released a
communications satellite early
today after a historic three-man
spacewalk that rescued both the
$!57 million craft and NASA's
can-do reputation.
The astronauts pabbed the
satel~te by hand in umson Wednesday, held it in place for I 1/2 hours
and spent several hours more
attaching a rocket designed to lift it
out of the uselessly low orbit in
which it was stuck for two years.
The rocket was to be fued tl1is
afternoon when the shultlc was
thousands of miles away. The lntelsat-6 satellite was to be sent to a
working orbit 22,300 m1les high.

FCC proposal would fine radio
and TV for 'hoax' programs
WASHINGTON (AP) - Radio
and telev1sion stations that atr
hoaxes intended to alarm the public
would face fines of up to $25,000
under a proposal before the Federal
Communications Commission.
The Washington Post said the
monetary sanction was proposed
because current punishments lifting a station's license or sending
it a lcuer of reprimand ~ wer e
deemed either too severe or too
light.
Th e FCC was expected to
approve the sanction at a meeting
today, the Post said.

Merchants...

The proposal was prompted in
pan by a January 1991 incident in

which St. Louis station KSHE-FM
mtcrrupted its normal program ming to broadcast a warning of a
nuclear auack, accompanied by
simulated warning tones of the
Emergency Broadcast System.
The 50-second hoax came in the
midst of the Persian Gulf War and
triggered a flood of telephone calls
to the station and to authorities.
The FCC's complaints and
investigations branch reported
receiving nine ~o and two televi sion hoax complaints in the past
three years.

Continued from page I

Bank One, the association was ahle
to purchase 12 banners which will
be hung for di splay hy Heritage
Weekend. The banners, in blue and
white, feature the Meigs County
Court House.
Mrs. Clark announced Mike
Stroth, a consultant with SBA Consultants, Jackson, was in town di stributing surveys to business and
properly owners, to be used in the
first stages of the revi~zation process. She urged everyone to com plete their surveys by the deadline
of May 29 when Stroth will return
to collect the necessary informa tion. Stroth was hired by the asso-

Stocks
Am Ele Power ................... 31 3/8
Ashland0il .. ..................... 31!/4
AT&amp;T... .. .................. ........ .47 1/4
Bank One... .. ... .. ........ ........ .45 3/4
Bob Evans .. .. ........ ....... ...... 17
Charming Shop... .... ....28
C1ty Holding ...................... !~ 7/8
Federal MoguL .... ....... ...... I9 1/2
GoodycarT&amp;R .. ............ .... 741/4
Key Centurion ......... .... .. . 19
Lands End ................... .. .... 33 3/4
Limited Inc . .................... 21 5/8
Multimedia Inc . ..... .. ......... 27
Rax Restaumnt................... l 1/8
Robbins&amp;Myers .... .......... 16 3/4
Shoncy's lnc. ..................... 21 1(2
Star Bank ... .... ................... 36 3/4
Wendy lnt'l... ........ ....... ..... 12 1/2
Worthmgton Ind . ... .. ..... ..... 23 3/8
Stock reports are the 10:30
a.m. quotes provided by Blunt,
Ellis and Loewi of Gallipolis.

ciation, at a cost of $2,000 to execute this preliminary stage of the
process. The association has been
successful in raising $1,700 toward
the project but is in need of an
additional $300. Anyone who
would like to contribute to this project may do so to John Musser,
revitalization spokesman, at Downing-Childs-Mullen-Musser Insurance, in care of the Pomeroy Revi talization Escrow AccounL
Through a joint effort of the
association and the Stcrnwheel
Committee, a riverfront sign will
be placed along the parking lot wall
to identify the town to river traffic.
John Musser has offered to purchase the nel:essary materials for
the association who will have it
painted and the Stemwheel Com mince will install the sign.
According to Mrs . Clark the
repaired mini-park fence will be
painted next week and sbe thanked
Valley Lumber who donated the
paint to do so.
On Sat1uday at I p.m. members
of the business community and students from Pomeroy Elementary,
through the partnership program
there, will be planting flowers in
the parking lot planters.
Alumni
weekend
was
announced for May 23 and it was
requested that members of the
association decorate their windows
accordingly.
Introduced at the meeting were
Larry and Wendy Tucker, new
owners of the Pomeroy Flower
Shop; Kathy Hysell, the new vil lage clerk for Pomeroy; and P.J .
Harris, new advertising representative for The Daily Sentinel.

---Local briefs----.
Continued from page 1
Gen evieve Demosky to Veterans . At 3:19p.m., Pomeroy squad
went to State Route 7. Elizabeth Wells was taken to Veterans. At
3:38p.m., Middleport unit went to North Front Street for Lisa Manley, who was treated at the scene. At4:40 p.m., Racine squad went
to Elm Street and took Rorcnce Henegar to Veterans. At 5:34 p.m.,
Racine squad was dispatehed to State Route 124 for Oyde Raoc~ff.
who was taken to Veterans. At 9:39p.m., Olive Township fire
dcpanment went to a fire at the Eugene Edwards residence. At
10:05 p.m., Rutland unit went to Salem Street and took Lena Carpenter to Vetemns. At 11 :06 p.m., Pomeroy squad went to West
Main Street. Patricia Champion was taken to Veterans.
On Thursday at 12:33 a.m., Middleport unit went to Overbrook
Center. Vida Green was taken to Pleasant Valley Hospibl. At 7:09
a.m., Racine unit went to Elmwood Terrace Apartments. Vicky
Boso was taken to Vetemns.

clouds and cooler temperatures to
parts of the Northeast. Humid air
and a wann front brought showers
to the nation's midsection.
High pressure stationed over the
Southwest on Wednesday kept
temperatures hot across the Ari zona and Ca~fomia deserts, while
cool weather prevailed closer to the
West cOO'll.
Rain and thunderstorm s were
sc att ered around a warm front in

BASKETS.......... 7

Commission ...
Continued from page 1
lion anticipates that the ~brary will
move within Lhe next six weck.s.
The board also:
- held a public hearing on the
Community Housing Improvement
Strategy (CHIS) process, a study to
be required for all future formula
housing applicauons.
- Approved advertisement for
bids on Issue Two projects for various townships;
- Approved a transfer of fund s
within the Clerk of Courts budget
in the amount of $300;
- Appropriated $145 in tourism
promotional dollars into the Meigs
County Parks District budge~
- Renewed a contract with the
Brinks security fum for food stamp
storage on hehalf of the Depart ment of Human Services. Cost of
storage of food stamps has been
increa.'ed from $171.13 per month
to $186 per month.
Present, in addition to Hobstet ter and Jones, were Commissioners
David Koblentz and Manning K.
Roush; Ted Warner and Dav1d
Spencer of the county garage ;
Clerk Mary Hobstener; and Bill
Ogg, Field Representative from
Attorney General Lee Fisher's
office, who introduced himself to
the board and discussed services
provided to local counties by that
office.

900 SECOND AVl-GAWPOUS

How\WUkePizzaAUbne.

Missoun and Oklahoma. Then: also
were thunderstorms in Horida and
showers in northern Minnesota.
Partly sunny to sunny conditions
prevailed elsewhere.
Temperatures were expected to
reach the 50s today from upper
Michigan to upstate New York and
northern Maine. Highs in the 60s
were forecast along the Northwest
coast, parts of Montana and from
M1nn csota across Michigan to
Pennsylvania and New England.
Highs in the 70s were foreca~t
in the Roc ky Mountains, the northern Pla1ns and from Missouri
across Kentucky to Virginia and
North Carolina. Weather m the 80s
was expected in central California
and from New Mexico across the
South, with 90s forecast in Texas
and temperature s above 100 in
parts of Am.ona.
The high temperature for the
nation Wednesday was 105 degrees
at Borrego Springs, Calif.

Court news
Divorces, dissolutions filed
Actions for diSsolution of marr~a g c have be en filed in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court by
Vi cki Pancrson, Middleport, and
James T. Panerson , Bidwell ; by
Michael Joseph Nance, Sr., Racine,
and Tina Marie Nance, Racine; and
by William R. Barber of Long Bottom and Rebecca 1. Barber, Long
Bottom.
A divorce action ha.s heen flied
by Kelly R. Vanc e, Middleport,
against Michael T. Vance,
Pomeroy.
A dissolutiOn has been gmnted
in the court to Shern Lee Grady
and Paul Jeffrey Gmdy.
D1vorccs have been granted to
Deborah Lynn Halfhill from
Wilmer Edwin Halfhill and to
Sherman Gene Buckley from Linda
Marie Buckley.
The case of Thelma Louise
Soul sby versus William Thomas
Soulsby has been diSrmssed.
Foreclosure sought
A foreclosure action has been
filed in Meigs County Common
Pleas Court by City Loan Financial
Services, Inc., Pomeroy, against
Belly and Herman Martin ,
Pomeroy, and oth ers . The suit
alleges default on a mongage in the
amount of $7,807.79.
•••••••••

IAIUIII 11'11.£5 5AnnAT a

~r .

r-::=----,!WIGAIII II I GHT T1J£!.,--IO'--:c--,

Cr.. tlli 50011J 'AltUS
' TIJI

iil rT

caurn

C UTl~ICJ 't 'S

J' / ~PC[IIJ

1Wr

t~ 'FIUI Mil MU.f"

AYI.ILAIL[ AT IOtOFTtU

James Witherell, M.D.
and
Wilma Mansfield, M.D.
'
are announczng
that Dr. Tracy Bell, M.D., joined their
practice in April and is accepting new
patients.
Dr. BtU is a Board
Certified Family
Practitioner and will limit
her practice to out pa&amp;nt
medicine.
Her hours will be
Tuesdilys

"BIG·MOUTH CUP"

FLATS•••••••••••••••$695
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120,000 telephone cucu1ts up and
running in time for the Olympics in
July.
"I think we have seen som e
incred1ble work by some awfully
brave men at NASA," said Irving
Goldstein , lntelsat chief executive.
' 'This means that we are out of the
woods. "
A miswired rocket had left the
satellite in the wrong orbit.
Wednesday's spacewalk - the
f1rst by three people - was the last
chance for Endeavour to retrieve
the satellite. The shuttle did not
have enough fuel for a fourth try.
The astronauts nsked puncturing their spacesuits, which could be
fatal in the vacuum of space. And if
they had caused the 12-by-17-foot,
4 1/2-ton satellite to wobble, it
could have smashed into the shuttle.
They finally caught the crdft by
waiting, anns raised, on cargo bay
platforms until it was within reach.
Three pairs of gloved hands, 225
miles above the Pacific Ocean near
Hawaii, gripped lntelsat at its base.
"Got it!" shouted Pierre ThuoL
At Mission Control in Houston,
flight controllers applauded.
"Houston, I think we got a
satellite," said commander Dan
Brandenstein, whose precision
steering put Endeavour only a few
feet below the Intel sat as it whizzed
around Earth at 17,500 mph.
After !hey gmbbed 11, the astro.nauts held the drum -shaped satellite steady for 90 minutes, one full
orbit of Earth. Then, with Akers
keeping both hands on, Hicb and
Thuot attached a bar that allowed
the satellite to be grappled by the
shuttle crane. The crane lowerc&lt;l u
to the rocket and it was bolted on .

GET A FREE

WHILE SUPPLIES lAST.

MIDDLEPORT

s

NASA today sa1d Endeavour
would remain in space until Saturday ~ for a total of nine days - to
give the crew an extra day of resL
The miss ion had already been
extended one day to accommodate
the rescue effort after two fail ed
earlier allempts, m which a single
astronaut tried to snare the satellite
with a 15-foot bar instead of his
gloved hands.
Astronauts Kathryn Thornton
and Tom Akers prepared for a
founh spacewalk today, a shullle
record, to test construction tech niques for a space station.
lntelsat, the international com munications consortium. said ll
expected to have the satellite's

WHEN YOU ORDER A LARGE
. DELUXE PIZZA!

MITCH'S
PRODUCE
HANGING

No more rain was forecast until
Sunday.
The record high temperature for
this date at the Columbus weather
station was 91 degrees in 1991. The
record low was 34 in 1920.
Sunset tonight will be at 8:38
p.m. Sunrise on Friday will be at
6:16a.m.
Around the nation
A cold front stationed near the
East Coast early today brought

Shuttle astronauts rescue satellite

I

KY .

Sut.riben not dMtri"' t.o p.y the r.arri·
er -.y remit in ....,..... diielto The
Daily Sanliael Dft a thRe, lib ar 12

l
0
M

71 '

W. VA .

1'08'1'MABTER: SeiMI
lo
The Daily Sentinel, lll Court St.,
""'-·OHio &lt;6769.
8UIIIICRIYJ10N IL\TII8
II7Conior ..- Mo""' Bowie
011o w..............................................ll.60
Olio Mcmth.... .......... .. .................... .....l6.96
Olio Y...-.......... .............. .................. $83.20
81NOU:COPY
PBICB
Dolly......................... .......... ......... ~ Conlo

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PA.

IMansf1eld [ 71 J•

od-'""-

Berry's World

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, May 14, 1992

1: ()() to 7:00 p.m.

Dr. Tracy Bell

and
Frid4ys
1:00 to 5:00p.m.

Appointments may be made by calling

446·4040

Meigs Health Services

Ill W. MAIN.•POMEIOY

Pomeroy

992·2124

992-6601

�Pomeroy· Ml

Sports

In the NBA playoffs,

The Daily Sentinel

Cavs defeat Celtics to lead series 3-2

Thursday, May 141 1992

8 y The Associated Press
Portland, Ulllh and defending
champion Chicago can clinch lrips
to the conference finals tonight
w1th NBA playoff victories.
The Trail Blazers and Jazz are at
borne with 3-1 leads aft£r winning
Game 4 on the opposition's home
court, while the Bulls take a 3-2
edge over New York into Game 6
of the~ Eastcm Conference semifinal at Madison Square Garden.
Chicago was ouu-ebounded 174139 as the two teams split the first
four games of the series, but the
Bulls turned that' around with a 3329 rebounding advanlllge in a %88 victory at Chicago Stadium
Tuesday nighL
"The Knicks haven't been diny;
they're playing aggressive basketball, which the playoffs are all
about," Chicago's BJ. Armstrong
said.
"We have to win it as a unit,"
said Michael Jordan, who had 37
points and shot 17 foul shots in
Game 4. "No maner what they do,
we have 10 make things happen and
take it 10 the hole."
Gerald Wilk.ins, who has scored
more points in each game than he

4

Jordan's bat comes through
again in Cards' win over Reds
ST. LOUIS (AP) - Pitchers are
having !rouble retiring Brian Jordan, and his manager is having
tr~uble coming up with superlauves to describe the rookie's recent
play.
Jordan drove in the winning run
with a two-run single in the sixth
inning as the St. Louis Cardinals
beat the Cincinnati Reds 4-2
W.ednesday night.
· The Cardinals have won five
~traight and finished their home
ttand with a 7-2 record as they
moved in10 second place in the NL
east, three games behind the
Pirates. Four of the last five vic to·
ries have been come-from-behind
efforts.
· Jordan hit a home run 10 ue the
game Saturday night and scored the
winnin$ run and hit a three-run

liomer '" the Cardinals' 6-4 win
Ql!er the Reds Tuesday night. Car·
dinals manager Joe Torre is run &lt;Nng out of things 10 say about the
IUt fielder who's also a starting
sttong safety for the Allanlll Falcoos of the NFL.
· "It's the same old quoteS every
night," Torre said. "What can I
ttl! you? He gets an opportunity to
pjay and all of a sudden he lights it
Uj) like Robert Redford in 'The
Natural,"' Torre said.
Jordan leads the team with five
home runs and 20 RB!s. The CardiJI!IIS are auempting to sign him 10
an exclusive contract that would

keep him from rcponmg to the Falcons' training camp in July.
The Cardinals are offering a
contract loaded with performance
inccnlivcs, while Jordan is seeking
the same amount he wou ld earn tf
he played football . But Jordan
wanted 10 talk about his hilling
rather than the contract llllks. He
said a tip from batting coach Don
Baylor led to the game-winning hit
off reliever Seou Bankhead (3 -1).
"Baylor told me that he would
follow a slider up with a fastball,"
Jordan said. "He made me look
bad on a slider and I was looking
for the fastball. That was the pitch I
hit"

Jordan's two-ron sing le in the
sixth came after the Reds had taken
a 2-1 lead in the top of the inning
on Paul O'Neill's solo home run
off Bob Tewksbury.
Ozzie Smith singled with one
out to extend his hiuing steak to II
games. Felix Jose walked, the ron·
ners moved up on a groundoul and
scored on Jordan's looping single
to center.
Tewksbury (4-1) pitched seven
innings, allowing two runs on
seven hits, with five strikeouts and
no walks. The right-hander has
given up two walks in 54 innings
this year and leads the league with
a 1.73 ERA.
Tewksbury said he didn't feel
like he had total control of his
pitches.

Scoreboard
ln the majors ...
NATIONAL LEAGUE
~

Eukm Dl.-bkln

• Tum
• Pitubw-Jh
• "SL l.rui.

W l
.... 22 10
.......20 14
.......1:0 JS

- ~c.,..York

.Mootn:al

....... 14 17
&lt;::hiuao............ ... .14 19
f'hil.ldc:lph11 .. . 13 19

G8

Pe-L
.68K

.513

.571
451

J
ll
7l

424
406

''9

Wmern Dl•blon
• San FranCliCO .... 19 14 .576
: Clnd nn•ll - - --11 U
.515
1?
_. Atltnu .
.... Hi
. Houa1.00 .. .. ........... 1S
-~Anp:. ........ 11
• San DICJO ...

l

500

2l

19

4~7

4

19
19

.441
367

17

,_
'·,'

Wednesday's scores

Division I
Tum

Pb.

( I) 36 . 18 Walemlle South 26 19
Clllcirvuli Mud.la (I) l'i 20. Wal.crvlilc
North 2A .

Tonli:ht's game
PitllblHJh (Smuh S- 1) u At\anu
(SmoiLl 3-2). 7:40p.m

Friday's games
Phll•delphl• (Mulholland 1 - ~) •t
Clndl'lnlll (Brownlnal-1). 7:.35 p.m.
S.r1 Dteao (ldferu J... 2) at Pma!Jur&amp;h
(NcaaJe 1-1). 7:35p.m.
Mmllell CN•~ol.z 1-2) 1t Atlanta (Bir.kd.i 1·2). N-0 p.m.
St. Loud (Com.ier 0-3) 11 H&lt;Joutnn
(K.ile 2-4),1 :35 p.m.
New Yorll (Saboc:rh•sen 2-2) 11 Lo•
Angels (Ojeda 1·2). \0:35p.m.
thtttgo {J..::lson 0-5) 1t Sin FRnC!..I oo (Diad (). I ), 10:35 p m

Dl~l•lon

L

PeL

fl altimore

II
22 II

N~w

17

'"
lll
""'

Tum

,,...

T orooto .

York ...
H(•i.m ..

""

. 14
14 17
M•lwaukoc ...
14 19
i)eLroiL...
Cleveland ..... ____ 12 lJ

GH
I
6

467
4ll
424

"'

J(J

ll

9

Wnltrn Diwblon
Chicaso.
...1 ~ 12
6D
Oak.l•od
.2D 14
.5U
C•lifomia ...
II 1~
54~
MlftiW.:ICU . ....... 11 16 -~13
T~ u•

........... 11 18

Sc..ule ..
.. 11 21
K.alliU City ........ I 0 22

Dl&gt;1slon U
Tum
Pta.
1. Pl.WI.Imouth (U) Z._l _ _ _ _..Jiol
1 AlliUJoc MuiinBtoo (J) 17 -I ..
I 12
l Akron Hob.n (3} I~ I . .. .....
11-4
4. Thom..-llte Sht.-kln (J) 17-L--1~
5. Cc.lumbul SL Ch.rlel 14-4
Ill
6. Columbul Dr.Sale~ l.'i -5 .... .
89
7. Columbull Wa~on 14- 5..
82
I. Bryan 12-L .......
64
9. Carlislel)-1 ...
63
I 0. St a.inville II- .'i
59
Second 10: 11 Ravtnnll Southc...t 58
12. WtiiJton 47. 13. IIAJnilt.on Ro.t 44 .
14. Mnos•~ Fidd 42. l'.i . Hcbra~ LUewnod ](i . 16. thy Village H1y 29 \ 7
Wtmcrnilk 28. 18. lnd.Jan We 22 19
M1rtm1 Ferry 21 20. Steubenville 19

Division III

AMERICAN LEAGUE
w

..S
2
)

500
J64

15
I
9.5

3D

1 /lum.ILaJ Hadul (4) l''i-.'1

..... 329
218

l(QIIImOO.Ac.~dcmy ( l) 19 -)

.... 184

4 . UtJ~(l)l5 - l
.182
5 Crwl.inc: 14-4
1~
fl GunviUel&amp;-3
\03
1. N...-thwood I 3-1 .. ....... .... ....
... .... 94
I. Baltimore Uberty Umoo 17-3 ...... 72

9 Fairfield Union 14-6 .
7()
Ill. Whftlrnbura U -1 ____ _ ___..

SHond 10; II Ou.twa Glandorf 4)
12. Mi.Jdlefidd Cudioal (1) 42. ll Ne.,..
Mal.lmoru Frontier (I ) 40. 14 . JOranklin
38. 15. Chippewa '19. 16. Loudonville 28
11. Akron St. Villec.ni ·St. M.ry 26 I B
Spnngfield Km\.00 KW11e 24 . 19 John·
1\.o'WTI 2120. Luuutllt Vall~' 18.

Division

Sc.u..le (Swan

game

2- ~) 11

rv

Tum
ru.
1. Fl.lf?'Jf\ Hubor Hurling (14) I ~0 )6)

New Yott 12, Seattle 4
Turuni.O 4, Oikl.lnd 3
Muulaoll 4, Rom.., 3
K1n.111 CltJ 5, Cltul.lnd J
Rah.imon: 4. T uu 2

)), ?:)~

Pu.

Tum
I. Culd water (21) 2M .. .

Wednesday's stores
0\\c iJO I, Mtlwauh111 [)
C...hfomia 1, l&gt;euun 3

Toni~ hi's

(6) I II -I

S«ond 10; II. Elyri.l (3) 72 12. Pi GUt 60. 13. Lti.cwood 59. 14 . Toled o
Whitma 52. IS . Clncinmti Oak WC&gt;CKb
4016 B.rbert~r~(1)39 . 1 7 Boudmn

Mm!JUI S, U. An~et l
SIJI Francilc:u .S, Ptliladelphi.l J
Pi.NburJh I I, Atlanta I 0
San IAeao 7, New York 0
OticaJG 3, Houlton J
St. ~11 4, Cincinnati I

E.. ttrn

F.1~

In
2 TollldoSun(6)\Hl
l'iO
lllamilt.on (6) 16-2 .
........ 147
4. Cantoo MdGn.lc:~ (5) 13-4 .. .
121
~ - Ncwuk (3) I R-&lt;1
I 08
6. Oaytoo. NorthmooL (.') 111-4
~
7. Euclid (I) 16-2 ...
.. g2
S. Fairfield {2) 16-&lt;1 ....
. SI
9. W•da.....-orth (1) B -1
....... .74
l 0. i)Jblin 111-6
73
I. Cincinnati Glm

Toi'OnW (:\uch I

p.m

Frkhay's games
Otkland (Wekh 1· 1) II New York
(KamMII\Ioa.i 0-1 ), 1:30 p.m.
Ctl ifom ia (AbDon 2-4) 11 HoatDn
(O cmcru. 4-3), 1.33 p.m
Scl;nle (l-"bmin&amp;4-l) II Torooto (Stot ·

tlanyre 4-2). 1:)3 p.m.
MlnMJOU {ErlduOII 1-J ) at Clt"¥t ·
lind CN•ar J-1), 7:l! p.m.
Tuu (Guzm1n l -3) II MJ1wau.kc-c
(Bolio J. 2), I :OS p.m
Btlttmortl (Muuinl 4-0) 1t Chicaao
(Femandr:l 2-3), B :O~ p.m
Dettoil (Ouli.Jck1on ~ - 2) 11 Kan111
CitvcYouna 1-I),USpm

NBA playoffs
wectn.d•r'• K"Of't

l Porumouth Nolrt l&gt;unt t!i-) ___.2.34
] CuyaOO~a Ha_. 12-L .... ...
105
1\ . Gne~ Milb Gilmour 9-] .
. \30
~ . Colu mb l&amp;na(l)l2 - 2 ..
101
6 Nonh Rtltimore 11 -1
72
7 Cmcinnlli Counl!J Dty 1~ - ~
6]
g_Mmguk\. (l) 14-5...
.61
9 Morral RJdge&lt;:lale 13-5
6(J
10. Painr Va.Ucy \4 -?
~4
St'cond l t: II. New Riegel 53. 12
Tipp Cny Bclhd 41 ll St. Wmdclu1 )9
14 . To l edo OtU•• Hilh (I) 31 . 15
llope.-ell -loodm J6 16. A~env lll c J4
I 1. MtiK• f.utnn n. 18. Bat.via 2l 19
Senc:ct E.ut 21. ~ . lndermdQlcc 17.

Transactions

"I never had a good rhythm out
there," Tewksbury said. "I d1dn't
really feel comfortable. ThiS was
one of those nights when they hit it
right at somebody."
Reds starter Jose Rijo was seeking his first win since last Sept. 26
and was leading 2-1 when he was
relieved by Bankhead. Rijo struck
out four and walked one.
"I've got my confidence back
but it's a terrible feeling not being
able to gel a win," Rijo said. "It's
hard 10 take."
Reds manager Lou Piniella was
testy after the game and didn't
want to talk about Jordan . He
ortlered a reporter who asked
whether the Reds had considered
walking Jordan to get to the slwnping Todd Zeile 10 leave his office.
The Cardinals scored an insurance run in the eighth on singles by
Smith and Jose and a sacrifice fiy
by Pedro Guererro.
Lee Smith pitched a scoreless
ninth to earn his league-leading
12th save in 14 chances.
In other games, it was San Francisco 5, Philadelphia 3; Pittsburgh
11, Atlanta 10; San Diego 7, New
York 0; Montreal 5, Los Angeles I ;
and Chica~o 8, Houston 3.
G1anls 5, PbiUies 3
Mau Williams is expected to hit
home runs. And Greg Lillon is
expected 10 congratulate Williams
after he hits them.
Both players received congratulations at Philadelphia Wednesday
night.
Williams had two nearly identical lllpe-mcasure homers and Litton
added his own two-run poke in San
Francisco's 5-3 victory, the GmnL''
first sweep at Veterans Stadium
SIDCC 1987.
Williams exte nded his powerladen hitting sueak to 10 games.
during which the Giants have won
six of tl1eir last seven.
His fust shot traveled 413 feet
1n1o the upper deck of Veterans
Stadium, the 37th hit into that area
since the stadmm opened in 1971.
His second soared to the deepest
area of center and was measured at
418fcct.
Williams ha_~ nine homers in his
last 20 hits and 10 for the season.
Trevor Wilson (3-2) pitched 5
l/3 innings, gave up six hits and
three runs, with a walk and six
strikeouts. Kyle Abbott (0-6) went
six innings, allowing eight h1ts and
fiv e runs, with two walks and eight
strikeouts as Philadelphia lost for
the sixth time in seven games.
Pirales II, Rra\les 10

Jay Bell's ninth-inning homer
bailed out Pittsburgh, which blew
an eight-run lead.
Bell had four RBis and four of
the P1ra1CS' season-high 21 hits. He
drove a 2-1 pitch from Alejandro
Pena (0-4) in to left for his first
homer.
Sllln Belinda (2~0) gave up the
game -tying homer 10 Terry Pendleton in the eighth inning, but held
the Braves scoreless in the ninth.
Andy Van Slyke and Don
Slaught also had four hits and
Steve Buechele had three hits and
three RBis for PitL,burgh.
Ron Gant and Dave Jusuce hit
consecu tiv e homers ofr Doug
Dra~ fLCSt mnmg.
Padres 7, Mets 0
Bruce Hurst pilehed a six -hiller
for his sixth straight victory over
New York, and Gary Sheffield and
Tony Gwynn hit the first homers
this season off Dav1d Cooc.
Hurst (2-3) tmproved to 6-1
against the Mets with his fiCst corn ·
plete game of the season. He suuck
out four and walked two en route lO
his 20th major league shutout.
F.x pos 5, Dodgers I
Cubs R, Astrw; 3

TEXAS RANGERS - A11ianed Todd

Bum,, pi~ehcr, ouuiaht"' Ok.l.J.om• Cily
~the American Anocittion.

Future ~:ames

N11ion1l Lu1ue
CIIJ CAGO CUBS - Scr11 Rey
Su~~::hc:r:, llhon.10p, 10 low1 Df the AmaiCin A&amp;Mici.ltian on 1 20--day injW)" rdlabi.IJI.atim UIJ&amp;mlD'l.

Ton ..lll- Chia1o 11 Ne• York. 8
p.m.; Suttle It U1.1h, 9 p.m.; P'hoc:rW. u
P..u.nd. 10 JO pm.
Frld•' - Clnotlud al B01lon, I

....

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TBA, il ~ary ; Ullh II Saal~ 111A ,
if..-11)'

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TBA, if nooe..uy, B•loll al Otftland.,
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MondiJ- Pho&amp;ili 11 Pon.luwi,_ TBA,
if nocaary, S.l&amp;le n U1ah, TBA, if nee·

.....

«

bwJh ........ ~2

Ohio high school
baseball poll
COLUMBUS. Ohio (AP) - How a

Kansas City tops Cleveland 5-3
for Appier's third straight win
lly DOUG TUCKER
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) Kcvtn Appier lost his lead in the
Am erican League ERA race, but
won the game. And that made him
and his Kansas City team maLes
happy.
" And that' s awesome in itself,"
Kan sas Cuy's ace righthander Satd
Wcilnesday night after beating the
Cleveland Indians 5-3 with something less than tor-fiight stuff.
Going seven innings and strikmg out six, walking one and giving
up three earned runs lifted Appier's
ERA from 1.40 to 1.70. Juan Guzman of Toronto, who did not pitch
Wednesday night, now leads the
lll :IJOfS with a 1.61 ERA.
" It would be awesome to lead
the lea gue in ERA, but it won't
rc:lily mean anything until the end
ol thc year," AppiCr said.
It wa.s the third straight winning
stan for App1er, who begtln the
year w11h a hard-luck 0-2 swt as
the Roy:ils got off to their horren do us _I · 16 heginn in g. It was the
llfsl llme all year he has allowed
three runs in a game.
"lie struggled all n1ght and
whal'd he give up? Three runs,"
Royals manager Hal McRae said.
' ' Th~1t' s nuL bad."
Neal Heaton pitched the eighth
and Jeff Montgomery finished for

you play beuer and as the guys
relax and gain confidence, these
things will happen."
"I'm not a home run hiller. l
was just lucky 10 hit one rortight,"
Wilkerson said. "We just don't
have guys who are going to go up
and hit many three-run homers.
We've ~otto usc our speed to beat
people.'
It was the fifth straight loss for
Cleveland, which began this sevengame road trip by sweeping two in
Texas, then lost three slraight to
Minnesota and two in a row to the
Royals.
"Baseball's a game of cycles.
The secret is keeping the bad
cyc les shorter than the good
cycles," Hargrove said. "If we
didn't have people who could do
the job, then you couldn't ride it
(See AL on Pagt 5)

DISCOUtfT
NOW THRU
MAY 31

rJ1ie

SHOE PLACE

College
BROOKLYN COlLEGE - An the reaipution of Pll.e Albonno,
b.Rball DOlch, llld Pll Alf.-ano, Ulil&amp;lnt
biiCbtU oo.ch.
COl! .- Named Amy Fnnkcnnoin
~

219 N. SecOid

But the Jazz appear to be in connol
this time, with two home games of
the remaining three scheduled in
the series.
The Jazz have the league's best
home record at42-4, including 5-0
in the playoffs.
CavaUers 114, Celtics 98
Cleveland, winners of just two
playoff series in franchise history,
pulled ahead of 16-time NBA
champion Boston as Craig Ehlo
bounced back from an 0-for-9 performance by making hiS first eight
shots.
Brad Daugherty scored 28
points for the Cavaliers and Ehlo
finished with 20 points and 13
assists. Reggie Lewis scored 27
points for Boston, which plays host

Southern to meet Symmes
Valley in district tournament
The Southern Tornado baseball team, a 3-0 winner over Kygcr
Creek in the Division IV sectional championship Monday, will meet
league foe Symmes Valley in the district tournament IOnight at 5
p.m. at Athens High School.

Teams sought for volleyball league
The Middlcpon Recreation Depanment is seeking teams 10 participate in an outdoor summer volleyball league.
The teams wiU be co-ed and may have as many as I0 people on a
roster. At least two women must be on the volleyhall court, from
each team, at all times throughout the game.
The league will begin play during the week of June 9 and wiU
continue on Tuesday and Thursday nighL' until early August, ending with a final10urnam enL There is also the possibility of a men ' s
su mmer league and a church lca~uc if interest dictates.
A minimum of eight teams IS required for each league. Those
interested should contact the Middlepon Recreation Department at
992-6782.

992-5627

Mld41eport, OH.

out But we do hav~ people with
major league talents.
.
Cleveland closed to 4-3 m the
fourth when Kenny Lofton and
Carlos Baerg a. smgled, Mark
Wh11£n walked w1th two outs, Paul
Sorrento smgled home two runs
and Brool; Jacoby smgled'" anoth er run.
Before the game, the Royals
observed a moment of sdenee and
Iowerre the flags rel"l'senung theJC
diVISJO_n and Amencan League
champiOnshipS to half staff '"
honor of longume club preSident
Joe Burke, who d1ed the n1ght
befoo: aft£r a long 1llness.
In other games, Balumore beat
Texas4-2, Toronto beat Oakland 43, Ch1ca_go beat M1l~aukee 1-0,
Cahforn1a beat DelrOil 7-5, New
York beat Seattle 12-4 and Mmnesota bea_t Boston 4-3.
Ono~ 4, Rangers 2
It only took seven p11ches for
Kev1n Brown to put the Texas
~~~rs'" a 4-0 hole. .
I ct. like to have a lntle better
luck . Its not very often Y?U throw
two bad ~~tches and you r~ .down
four ron~ Brown (5~3) SBJd after
the Balumore Onoles 4-2 v1ctory
Wednesday mght.
.
Brady Anderson and Mil:e Devereaux led off the ~arne With doubles, Cal Rlpkcn hit arun-sconng
SUJgle and Sam Hom h11 his second
home ron this sea...:m.
Rick Sutcliffe (5-2) improved 10
4-1 against Texas, allowmg seven
hilS in seven innings. He took a
four-hit shutout into the sixth
befoo: Rafael Palmeiro and Ruben
Sierra hit consecutive home runs.
Greg Olson got five outs for his
seventh save.
Baltimore won for the lith time
in 14 games, while Texas, which
has lost five of seven, dropped 10 512 in Arlington Stadium. the worst
home record in the majors.
.
BIIH Jays 4, Athletics 3
Jack Morris (4-2) won for the
flrsl lime in four starts since April
21, allowing an unearned run and
seven hits in 6 2/3 innings at the
Sky Dome as Toronto won for the
eighth lime in 10 games.
Torn Henke, who allowed Mark
McGwire's 16th homer of the season leading off the mnth, finished
for his sixth save.

to Cle veland in Game 6 Friday
night.
A se ve nth game, if needed ,
would be played in Richfield on
Sunday.
Cleveland took an 18-point lcail
by outscoring the Celtics 34-23 in
the third quaner, finishing the peri-.
od with a 16-4 run capped by Mark-:
Price's three long jumpers. Daugheny scored 12 points in the quaner
and the Celtics got no closer than
12 m the fourth period.
Boston's frontcourt players were
not much of a factor. Robert Parish
had four points and eight rebounds,
Kevin McHale scored two points
on 1-for-9 shooting and Larry Bird
had 13 points and f1ve rebounds in
20 minutes.

PHARMACY

TOPICS
By Your

SWISHER·LOHSE

PHARMACISTS

Mike Moore (4-2) gave up all
four runs and nine hits in 6 213
innings as Oakland lost to Toronto
for the fourth time this season.
White Sa. 1, Brewers 0
Kirk McCaskill held Milwaukee
hitless for 6 213 innings and com ·
b10ed with Bobby Thigpen on a
two -hitter. McCaskill (2-3) lost his
no-h11 bid with two outs in the seventh when Kevin Seitzer singled.
Bill Wegman (2-4) failed 10 win
for th e fourth straight stan, allow ing an RBI double to Robin Vemu ra in the first at County Stadium
and pitching a seven-hiller for his
second complete game.
An eels 7, Tigers 5
Gary Gaelli hit a game -1y1ng
single off Walt Terrell (0-5). Les
Lancaster walked Gary DiSarcina
with the bases loaded and Luis
Polonia added a two-run single as
California rallied for four runs '"
the eighth.
s1cve Frey (2 -0) faced one batter for the viCtory, striking out
Dave Bergman with the bases loaded in tile eigh th at Anaheim Stadiurn. Bryan Harvey pitched the
ninth for his lith save.
Yankees 12, Mariners 4
Mau Nokes hit his fifth career
grand slam - his IOOth career
homer - and drove in five runs.
Kevin Maas added a three -run
homer at Yankee Stadium.

lm111Jino IMtlng blood while H'o alii lnalde of your body! Sclonliola ot
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Into
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dovlce hM - . uHd lor dllll.t IU'lJI'Y on gum• .,d pariodonl.t worlc,
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• ••••

Exlr•Mnaittve hHI tMt tor proetatl cmcer rne.urM tlte concen1ralion ·
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1992 FORD THUNDERBIRD

-

2 DOOR COUPE

Dcrm1s Cook (1-3) fa1led 10 get
o ut of the second inning for the
second straight start, giv ing up a
three -run home run to light-hilling
Curtis Wilkerson, who was hilling
. 114 when the game began and
hndn' t homered all year. Cook
allowed four runs and four hits in I

CINONNAn DENGALS - Waived
ld.cy Wood1, rur~nint baelr:, 1nd Jim

ai!Udic diroclor.

2/3 innings as his ERA rose to
5.40. He gave up four runs in I 1/3
innings againsl Te~as in his previ~
ous outing.
"Cookie's got to have good
location with his pitches. especially
hi s fastball, and he just didn't have
that," said Cleveland manager
Mike Hargrove. "I don't think it's
a mechanical thing. He tries 10
overthrow sometimes. When he has
his location, he's effective. When
he doesn't have it, he's not effective. There's no in-between for him
so far ."
Wilkerson's shot gave Appier a
4-0 lead and was the first three-run
homer the Royals have hit all year.
"It says we haven 't been hitting
home runs with men on base," said
ll al McRae. "B ut it's something
tha t comes in cycles, three -run
homers and two-run homers. But as

Wellston jumped out 10 a 5-0 lead at the end of the third inning
and went on to defeat the Meig i Marauders 7-1 in Division lJ sectional tournament baseball action Tuesday evening at Wellston.
The Rockets, 19 -5, were ranked 12th in the lalcst state wide
coaches polL Wellston w11l meet Hill sboro Saturday at 4 p.m. at
Lucasville in the district lournamenL
Meigs, falling to 8-12 on the season , will end its season Friday at
Federal flocking.
Wellston pounded eight hits off of losing pitcher Jeremy Phalin
led by Steve Hendershott with a double and a single, Ryan Ratcliff
added two smgles and Rick Jonas added a double.
Winning pitcher Doug Ashley won his eighth game in 10 decisions by scattering four hits, striking out eight and giving up only
one walk. Phalin slruck out eight Golden Rockets and walked two.
The Marauder defense didn't help Phalin much by committing three
errors behind him .
M1ke Vance had half of the Marauders hits , a double and a single.

hts seventh save.

CLASS OF '92

Foolboll

PilLI -

the first inning or Wednesday night's National
League game in St. Louis, which the Cardinals
won 4-2. (AP)

the tag of Cmcumall shortstop Darry larkin in

Congratulations To The

Lum,Licklc..

Wednesday'• JC()I"t
Piu.butJ.h S, N.Y. ltanacn 1,

LANKFORD STEALS- The St. Louis Car·
dina is' Ray Lankford arrives at second base
with his ma)or. leag.ue-higb 19th steal, beating

Undem~n ,

N•llonal Foolblll LHaue

Stanley Cup playoffs

Wellston beats Meigs 7-1

20°/o

PHILADELPIIJA PHILLIES Plaoed Tommy lm!ene, pitcher, and f!m
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Area ·sports briefs_

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CJeortltnd 11 ... l01t011 tl., Clombnd
ludl ..-MIIJ-l

BEATEN TO REBOUND - Cleveland's Craig Eblo (right)
beats Boston frontman Kevin McHale lo the rebound during
Wednesday night's NBA playoff game in Richr~eld, Ohio, which the
Cava liers won 114-98to lead their best-ol'-seven series 3-2. (AP)

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Amt'rlan Luaue
NJ::W YORK YANKEES -

did in the preceding one, finished
with 19 in Game 5.
In Wednesday's only game,
Cleveland took a 3-2 series lead
over Boston in the other Eastern
semifinal with a 114-98 victory at
Richfield Coliseum
In the West, Portland is taking
nothing for granted despite its commanding series lead.
"We've got to come out and
play like it's !he fust game of lhe
world championships," Terry
Poner said.
Tonight's game could be the last
in Couon Fitzsimmons' coaching
career. The Phoenix coach said
before the playoffs that he would
step down as the Suns' coach to
become player personnel director
next season.
But Fitzsimmons said he isn't
quite ready to call it quits, and he
challenged his players to follow his
lead.
"l told them, 'If you plan on
mailing it in, lhen don ' t come to
Portland with me," ' he said. "'If
not, hop on a plane with me and
we' 11 go to war again."'
Utah lost conference semifinal
series in 1984, '85 , '88 and '91.

AL games ...&lt;Commued from Page 4)

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�Page 6 The Dally Sentinel

..
.,.., Injured Penguins beat Rangers

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
..- ~

Thursday, May 14, 1992

By The Bend

In the NHL playoffs,

The Daily Sentinel
Thursday, May 14, 1992

5-l to win Patrick Division title

HAPPY PAIR -Pittsburgh Penguins Jimmy
Paek (lert) and goalie Tom Barrasso celebrate
after beating tbe visiting New York Rangers 5·1

Wednesday night to win thtir best-of-seven
series 4-2 and capture the Patrick Division title.
(AP)

By ALAN ROBINSON
PIITSBURGH (AP) - Do You
Believe in Miracles, Pan II?
Mario Lemieux was in pam ,
Joey Mullen was in the hospital.
The Pittsburgh Penguins figured to
be in deep trouble. Instead, they.'re
agam 1n the Wales Conference
finals against Boston.
The New York Rangers?
They're where they've been every
year since 1940 - out
Out of luck. Out of games. Out
of the Stanley Cup playoffs. And
put out by a team that was witl10ut
the best player in hockey, a team
that had no business winning but
absolutely refused to lose.
How do the Penguins keep
doing it? And how do the Rangers
keep not doing it?
"When you consider what
we've done, to beat this team with
the players we had missing, it's an
unbelievable feat," Kevin Stevens
said after Pittsburgh's seriesclmching 5-l victory Wednesday
over the Rangers in Game 6 of the
Patrick Division finals. "We beat
their best without our besL"
And they've now beaten the
NHL's two best teams, the Rangers
and Washington Capitals, after
trailing in both series. They don 't
know if the best- another Stanley

'

Bulls using bench to adapt to physical game
By JIM UTKE
CHICAGO (AP) - What most
of us recognized as pushing and
shoving (oaf!) and grabbing and
holding (hey!) and slapping and
hacking (whap!), the NBA has convinced its employees to shrug off
simply as "physical" play.
As in: " It was one of the most
physical games so far.'· - Chicago's Michael Jordan after the Bulls
beat the New York Knicks 96-SS
Tuesday night in Game 5 of their
Eastern Conference semifinal.
Or: "They played a lot more
physical tonight and the refs
wouldn't let us play our physical
game." - New York' s Anthony
Mason.

And especially: "If the Bulls
want the preuy boy treatment, then
they better go to some pia yground
in Chicago. This is a man's game;
11 's supposed to be physical." New York's Xavier McDaniel.
The game is also supposed to
sell tickets and commercials, and
the people who run the NBA are
going to find that harder to do with
too many more series like the o'ne
the Bulls and Knicks are staging .
You wouldn't expect what is cur·
rcntly the hottest pro spans league.
basketball, to take its cue from the
coldest, hockey. But that's what
seems to be at work here.
Somewhere on the road to this
championship. someone or several

Bengals waive Woods,
get Brennan from Browns

CINCINNATI (AP) _ The
Cincinnati Bengals waived running
back 1_cke. Y Woods todaY' ending an
assocmuon that has not been producuve s1nce Woods led the Ben1 to the Super Bowl his rookie
gas
seasWon. d 26
hed for 1 066
oo s, , rus
.
· I"""
hd
15
d
d
yar s an
touc. owns m . 7oo .
But he blew out his left knee '" the
second game of the 1989 season.
mts smg that year and half of the
!990seascn, and ."'Jured his nght
kneem 1991 , mtSSmge1ght games.
Smce the 1988 season, he has
run foqust459 yards. ,
.
The Bengals also watved rookte
tackle Jim Lavin , a IOth ~ round
draft P'ck last year who mJured a
knee I n. rra1mng cam p and miSsed
the enure season.
.
Wide receiver Broan Brennan.
who was waived by the Cleveland
Browns, was formally acqurred by
the Bengals today . T he Bengal s
claimed Brennan on Monday, but
as a tested NFL veteran, 8 rennan
co uld have refu sed th e deal to
become a free agcnl
'· I have great respect for the
Bcngals organization fey making it
to the Super Bowl," Brennan told
The Cincinnati Enquirer. " With
the Browns, we always strugg led
trying to get there.
"I look forward to playing
(Browns coach) Bill De lichick
again . I look forward to playing
Bill twice every year.'·
Brennan , 30, caught 31 passes
for 325 yards m 1991. his lowest
yardage total and seco nd -lowest
catch total in eight seasons with the
Browns. In 1986. his best season,
he caught 55 passes for 838 yards
and six touchdowns.

Brennan said Belichick, who
rep laced Bud Carson as Browns
head coach last season, ts gomg
more toward the runnmg ganne.
''The emphasis on the pass tsn't
,
.
there. He feels he s got the recetver
he wants m Web (Webster Slaughtcr), and he's going w1th youth oth· .. B
·d
erw1sc,
rennan sat .
The Bengals were the only team
to claim Brennan. But he said he's
confident about proving they made
a good deal by agreeing to accep1
his $515,000conuact for 1992.
"I feel I'm in my prime still. I
feel like I'm a better receiver than
I've ever been," he said.
"We wouldn't have claim ed
himifwedidn'tfeelhccouldmake
a significant contribution to our
team, " Bengals general manager
Mike Brown said.
"We have a lot of respect for
his ability. He has always been producllve against us." Brown said.

people in positions of influence in
the NBA apparently decided to
(euphemism incoming!) "let the
players play." It was nothing so
grand as a conspiracy , as some
Chicagoans have whined during
calls to local radio shows the past
few days, or r.s explicit as telling
the men who referee the game to
look the other way when most of
the pushing shoving grabbing holding slapping hacking etc. takes
place.
It was more a case of letting the
players define their own limits, a
sin of om mission rather than of
comm1ssion . Unfortunately. the
result has been the same as in
hockey, In anempting to level the
playing field, the players have flat·
tened the level of play. Too many
stars are licking wounds too often
and too many goons are logging
too much time. playing much too
prominent a role in the outcome.
At the most critical moment yet
of their months -long quest to
defend the championship they won
last June, Chicago coach Phil Jack·
son f1clded a team that- while not
quite gooni.sh - was one that you
actually needed a scorecard to
1dentify. The Bulls were protecting
a 71-67 lead at the start of the
fourth quarter Tuesday night, and
on tbe floor in those familiar white
uniforms were these very unfamiliar names - Will Perdue, Scott
Williams, Craig Hodges, BJ . Ann ·
strong and Horace Grant, the only
regular in the bunch .
Jordan. the league's main gate
attraction, was on the bench getting
a break from the constant banging
and a very badly needed breather,
Alongside him sat Scottie Pippen.
looking mournful and no more
acclimated to the rough stuff than
he was a few short years ago when.

IOWOPDFOB
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C..pllte n.. of .......... a1141

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, ........ ,...,., lloolllt~~

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... "". 5ru

la.UII, Lartt Selection of
o,.~~~~rt

GREENHOUSE
Syrame 992-5776

EXCELLENT
SELECTION OF NAME
BRAND

Sportswear
FOR
MEN AND WOMEN
OPEN MONDAY THRU
SATURDAY 9:30·5:00

MIDDLEPORT

Community Calendar items
appear two days berore an event
and the day of that event. llems
must be received well in advance
to assure publication in the cal·
endar.
THURSDAY
MIDDLEPORT · The Middl e·
port Community Church . 575 Pearl
Street, will hold revival through
Saturday a•. 7:30 p.m. nightly with
different speakers and singers each
night. Public invited.
SILVER RUN .- The Silver Run
Baptist Church will hold revival
through Sunday at 7:30 p.m. nightly with preaching by Alan Black·
wood.

POMEROY · Preceptor Beta
Beta Chap ter, Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority, will meet Thursday at
7:30p.m. at the Episcopal Church.

DECISION 92"
1

THURSDAY, MAY 28, 1992
~dvertising

Deadline:
Friday, May 22, 1992
12 Noon

POMEROY · Evening dinner at
senior citizens center Thursday 56:30 p .m. with creamed baked
chicll.en, homemade noodles, green
beans, eole slaw. roll and beverage
for $3. Dessert will be an addition·
al 75 center. Music will be provided by The Classics. Public invited .
MIDDLEPORT · Middleport
Alumni Band practice on Thursday
at 7 p.m. at Meigs High School
bandroom. All former Middleport
H.S. band members are urged to
participate.
CHESTER · The Shade River
Lodge No. 453 F &amp; AM, Chester,
will meet Thursday at 8 p.m. at Lhe
lodge hall. All master masons arc
invited . Refreshments will be
served.

CHAPMAN
SHOES

TIJPPERS PLAINS · The Tuppers Plains VFW Post No. 9053
and Ladies Auxiliary will have a
dance Friday from 8-11:30 p.m .
with music by CJ and Country
Gentlemen. Public invited.

Pomeroy's Qualily Shoe Store Specw/Uing

'

ANN LANDERS
"1992, Lao Aaaola
Tbot~Syndi&lt;aU

Pomeroy class of 1957 to plan
.·~. · for 35th reunion this evening
~···

v

'

. -. .~

'

... ~.·11.

w ·

have cereal boxes thai arc 30 years
old. She spends between $300 and
$700 a month. We have no savings
and she cannot understand why.
I love my wife very much and I
know she loves me. All I want is a
home I can be proud of .. one our
children and grandchildren can
visit I've given up hope that lhis
will ever be. Any advice? - SAD
IN ASHI..AND, KY.
DEAR KENTUCKY : Many
women g~t a great deal of satisfac·
tion from finding bargains. Your
wife, however, has gone beyond
normal limits. Her compulsion to
buy is a form of mental illness.
You have expressed genuine love
for this woman. I hope she loves
you enough to seek professional help
so that you can have a normal life -complete with visits from your
grandchildren. Perhaps you can
hasten her recovery with the lure of
a huge garage sale. Good luck.

Planning a wtdding? Whar's
righJ1 Wha(s wrong? "TM Ann
Landus Guide for Brides" will
relie11e your anxiety. Send a self·
addrtsstd, long, businus-size
tnvelo~ and a CMclc or moMy
ordu for $3.65 (rhis includts
poslllgt and htmdling) ro: Britks,
clo Ann Lantkrs. P.O . Box 11562,
Chicago. Ill. 60611-0562 . (In
Canada, send $4 45)

BAS HAN · The Bashan Beamers 4-H Oub will sponsor a dance
Friday from 7- 10 p.m. at the
Bashan Fire House. Admission is
50 cents.

day at I p.m. This practice is for
the District 13 rally to be held May
30 at New Lexington. All members
in the district are urged to attend to
support Lhe d1strict.

RUTI..AND • There will be a
dance Friday at the Rutland American Legion Hall from 8 p.m. to
midnight with music by White's
Hill Band. Public invited.

RUTLAND - There wi II be a
gospel sing at the Christian Fellow ship Center on Salem Street in Rutland Saturday at 7 p.m. Featured
si ngers are the Shafer Family of
Crown City and Patty Simpkins of
Gallipolis.

POMEROY · Pomeroy Nursing
and Rehabilitation Center will host
a staff, resident and family picnic
Friday at noon in celebration of
National Nursing Home Week. AU
relatives and family of residents
invited.
SATURDAY
CARPENTER · Carpenter Baptist Church "Busy Bees" will have
bake and rummage sale Saturday
from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. a1 the town·
house on Route 143 ncar Carpenter.
RACINE · The Meigs County
Retired Teachers will have a luncheon meeting at the Racine
Methodist Church Saturday at
12:30 p.m. Call 992-3887 for information.
HENDERSON · The Gallia
Twirlers Western Square Dance
Club will hold a dance Saturday
from 8-11 p.m. at the Henderson
Community Center in Henderson.
W.Va . John Waugh will be the
caller.
RUTI..AND · There will be a
hymn sing at the Rutland
Methodist Church Saturday at 7
p.m. featuring New Life Singers
and Tabitha. Rev. Arthur Crabtree
invites the public. Fellowship and
refreshments will follow.
TIJPPERS PlAINS · A Loyalty
Day program will be presented by
the Tuppers Plains VFW Post No.
9053 and Ladies Auxiliary to honor
hometown heroes Saturday at 2
p.m. at the post home. Public invited. Refreshments served.
NEW LEXINGTON . District
13, Daughters of America. will
have practice a1 the senior citizens
buildmg a1 New LexingtOn Satur-

i

ALEXANDER · The Third
Annual Spartan Spring Fling featuring The Fabulous Flashbacks
will be presented Saturday at
Alexander High School. Gates will
open at 4 p.m. for a 50's and 60's
style cruise-in and feature entertainment will begin at 7:30p.m.
"Off Season" and "Back word s"
will perform at4 p.m .

Members of the Pomeroy Hi gh from out of town . The mee ting will
School class of 1957 will meet at be held m the down stairs hal lway
village hall (the form er Pomeroy near the trophy case.
H1gh School) tonight (Thursday) at
The afternoon reunion will
7 p.m. to plan a get-together for begin at I p.m. in the auditorium of
their 35th class reunion.
the former sen10r high sc hool
Class members are invited to where correspondence and pho1os
attend and bring with them id eas rec eived from the class of 19 57
for the social. The plan is for the will be displayed.
lo cal class member s to plan an
April Smith repons that she has
afternoon party for tho se coming received numerous responses from

graduate of the class. Still needed
arc tl1e addresses of Richard Barnhart, Frank Clouse, Eugene Frye,
llctty Keller, Betty McGrath, and
Jan1ce Rou sh Thompson . The
addresses may be telephoned to
S1n.th at 992-3481 Those respondmg arc .asked to send along a note
ol act1V1Uc.s over the past 35 years.
PhotOs are also being solicited and
will be di splayed.

--Names in the news ...

WASHINGTON (AP) After the Texas billionaire and " Grand child ol Kin gs," whi ch
Robert Redford 's movie about an likely presidential candidate saw recent ly closed off-Broadway .
Indian activist convicted of killing Carvey's impression of him on
The awards were first given in
lwo FBI agents in 197 5 got a pub- NBC's "Saturday Night Live," 1946 by Clarence Derwent, former
licity boost from two members of Perot called.
presid ent of Actors ' Equ ity, to
Congress who want to reopen the
"I said, 'All right now, Dana. honor new talcn L
case.
there's only one of me .... With
Sen. Daniel Inouy e, D-Hawaii. you. there's two of me,"' Perot
LOS AN GELES (AP) - Oprah
and Rep. Don Edwards. D-Calif. . told National Public Radio on Wmfrey helped rai se more than
on Wednesday joined Redford at a Wednesday. "I said, 'You're more $400.000 for Elizaheth Taylor' s
news conference calling for another like me than I am. You and I could AIDS foundation .
look at the Leonard Peltier case.
both hit the road and campaign ....
"Oprah 1s the most wonderful
"Incident at Oglala" question s
and generous woman any organizawhether Peltier received a fair trial . . NEW YORK (AP) - Tanya tion co uld ever hop e to hav e,"
Redford produced and narrated the · Pmkins of "Jelly's Last Jam " and Miss Taylor said Wednesday '" a
documentary.
Patrick Fitzgerald of "Grandch ild statement.
Pelucr, a leader of the American of Kings" have been honored as
In March . th e host of "The
lndtan Movement, received two promising new performers on the Oprah Winfrey Show" asked view consecu tive life sentences for the New York stage.
ers to donate $1 to $100 to the
shooungs on the Pine Ridge ReserThe Clarence Derwent Awards
foundation. They came through to
vation in South Dakota . He has were announced Wednesday by
the tune of about $400,000.
been m pnson for 16 years.
Actors' Equity Foundation ,
Pink ins plays Jelly Roll MorNEW YORK (AP) - Paula
WASfllNGTON (AP) - Dana ton's lover in the Broadway musi · Zahn got to Carnegie Hall lik e
Carvey's impression of Ross Perot cal about the legendary ;azz pioeverybody else: practice. practice,
has won the comedian new fans neer. F1tzgcrald portrayed Irish
pra ctice . But being co- host of
including Perot himself.
playwright Scan O'Cas ey in
"CBS This Morning " couldn 't
have hurt.
Zahn, who has played the ce llo
since she was a child. w1ll perform
with the New York Pops at the
orchestra's
n111th birthday cclcbra·
Sunday
at
10
a.m.
at
the
Holiday
SUNDAY
tion
May
18.
Inn
in
Gallipolis.
POMEROY . The Meigs Junior
and Senior High School Bands will
SYRACUSE · There will be a
present concens Sunday at 2 p.m.
A homemade chicken -noodle din - ch1cken barbecue at the Syracuse
A recep tion honoring Suzan
ncr w1ll he held immediately fol· F~rc Department Sunday begmmng
Thoma.
Pomeroy, who rcce1ved a
lowing the concerts and the cost is at II a.m. Cos t of the dinn ers is bachelor' s degree of fin e ans in
$3.75 and dcssens are cxua.
$3 .50.
illust ration from the Columaus
Coll
ege of Art and Design last
RACINE · The Southern Hi gh
POMEROY · Rev. Eddie Buffweekend . will be held Saturday at
ington will preach at the Naomi Sc hool Band will present its spnng
the Pom eroy Church of Chri st
Baptist Church in Pomeroy Sunday concert Sunday al 2 p.m. at th e
soc
ial room . Friends. neighbors and
at 10:45 a.m. The public is invited. high school gym . Featured will be
re latives arc invited to attend.
a medley from the movte "Beauty
Su1.a n was one of 209 graduates
GALLIPOLIS · Notice of radifi - and the Beast" as well as a collecfrom the Col lege. She w11l he mak cation meeting for contract agree- tion of pop songs, ''Top 40." Public
ing her home in Columbus, 280
ment between UAW Local 1685 invited . Jeff Arnold, director.
East Rich St. Apt. A, Columbus
and Federal Mo~ul will be held
432 15.
.

'

1
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I.

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29011.
SKGIII
AYE.,
~

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Thoma reception

RUTLAND · There will be a
dance Sa turday at 8 p.m . at ~he
Rutland American Legion Hall
from 8 p.m. to midnight. White's
Hill Band will perform. Public is
mvited.
BASHAN · Services will be
held at the Red Brush Church of
Christ in Bashan and Keno Roads.
Saturday at 7:30 p.m. and Sunday
at 10 a.m. and 6 p.m. Denver Hill
wil be the speaker. Public in vilcd.
SALEM CENTER · Star
Grange will meet Saturday at 6:30
p.m. at the hall near Salem Center.
Potluck dinner will be held fol lowed by meeting at 7:30 p.m. with
conferral of the fourth degree obli.
galion and a program by Janet
Bolin. ambassador for Amcrillora.
POMEROY · A UMW A rally
will be held Saturday at beginning
at 10 a.m. a1 the Pomeroy Football
Field. All miners wear camallage.
International President Rich
Trumpka and vice-president Cecil
Roberts as well as district representatives will be present. A caravan
will uavelto Ravenswood , W.Va.
for a USWA that begins at 1 p.m .
Further information may be
obtained by calling Max Whitlatch
at 992-3130 or Woody Call at 7422944.

STOP IN AND SEE
OUR EXCELLENT
SELEaiON OF

SILVER RIDGE · Revival at
South Bethel New Testament
Church on Silver Ridge Road will
be held through SaJuday at 7 p.m.
nightly. Norman Taylor is cvange·
list

In Siu, Se11Jice and Sel4!ction!

OPEN MON.-SAT. 9·5

Call Dave or P.J.
For More Information, 992·2155

you. What you didn't know was how
many. At this lac. date, it doesn't
rnauer. He's your husband now, so
forget the past and enjoy the
presen~ or there might not be a
future. If you can't do this alone,
sea counseling.
Dear Ann Landers: I met my
wife during World War II. I loved
her from the moment our eyes met.
We were married soon aftc".
In a few years we bought the
nicest house in the neighborhood. It
had four bedrooms, two bathrooms,
a full basement and a garage with
an apanment overhead. I loved Lhe
house and was proud of it. We
made many improvements over the
years.
My wife is a terrific bargain hunter
and shops constantly. But now
there is only a narrow path through
our home, basement, garage and
overhead apanrnenL Only one door
is available for entering and
leaving. You can't even get into
Lhe garage or the apartmenl Junk is
piled to the ceiling in botJt places.
No one drops by anymore because
Lhey know we will not invite them
in. Our grandchildren can't come
over because there is no place to
sit or sleep even Lhougb all the
bedrooms arc furnished. This breaks
my heart.
1 am 70 now and retired with a
nice pension. My wife still wortcs
and makes good money, but she
spends most of it on worthless junk.
The woman saves everything. We

RUTLAND · The Board of
Directors of Leading Creek Conservancy Disaict will hold its regular meeting on Thursday at 7 p.m.
at its office. The public is invited.

FRIDAIY
POMEROY . A special meeting
for the Meigs County React Team
will be held Friday at Pleaser's in
Pomeroy at 7:30 p.m. Memorial
Day weekend coffee break will be
discussed and all members arc
urged to attend.

REALLY COMFORTABLE S H 0 ES

Ann
Landers

--------Community calendar-------~

TIJPPERS PLAINS · The Tuppers Plains VFW Post No. 9053
will meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at
the post home .

•

z

Dear Ann Landers: I am a 37ycar-old woman, married to a man
who is kind, loving, well-educated,
hard- working and completely
devoted to me. It's his first marriage,
my second. A large part of my
fascination with "Gerry" was the fact
that he was so shy. 1 have always
felt that sex is a special act and I
could never be auracted to anyone
who treated it casually.
My first husband was my only
sexual partner before Gerry .
Realistically, 1 did not expect
Genry, at the age of 38, to be a
virgin. He told me about a few
relationships he had had and it didn't
bother me.
After we married, 1 leanned that
during his single years Gerry had
had sex with a long list of women I
know. When I confronted him, he
admitted it and said I was silly to let
it bother me. Frankly,! feel betrayed.
Every time we make love, I have
visions of the other women who
have been in my place and it makes
me sick. Now I feel there is nothing
special about our lovemaking since
he has shared this pan of himself
with so many others.
I love Gerry, but his past torments
me and l don't know how to pretend
it doesn't matter. Am I wrong
about this? ·· DECEIVED IN
PROVJDE!\ICE
DEAR PROV.: Your signature
defies logic. Gerry didn't deceive
you. You knew he had slepr with
several women before he married

ROCK SPRINGS · Th e Rock
Spnngs Grange will meet Thursday
at 8 p.m . at the hall.

11

SOFT SPOTSe

Wife loves her husband,
but his past torments her

RACINE · Southern High
School will present the four-act
drama play "The Park" wriuen by
the students Thursday at 7 p.m, at
the high school. Admission is $1.

Daily Sentinel
Will Publish A
Special Supplement

.... to

iUiioirs

Stevens' pass to the slot glanced
off defenseman Jeff Beukcboom' s
stick into the air, where Jagr
grabbed it with his right hand,
directed it to his stick and some ·
how put a shot by Vanbiesbrouck's
glove at 11:22 of the second.
Just like his equally remarkable
game-winner in Game 5, it was a
world-class play that few players in
hockey can make - but the kind of
play the Penguins have come to
expect from Lemieux - and, now,
from Jagr.
"They have a better team than
people think," Rangers coach
Roger Neilson said. "Everybody
thought that when Mario went
down, they couldn't do i~ but they
proved everybody wrong.''
The Penguins hope Lemieux can
return from a bad hand, giving
them an emotional lift for their
rematch with the Bruins. They
overcame a 2-0 deficit to beat
Boston 4-2 in last spring's Wales
final.
"We hope Mana can come
back," Jagr said. "We think we
can win the Stanley Cup again.''

The

Sports briefs
BERLIN (AP) - Jennif er
Capriati struggled to a n-3. 2-6. 6-1
vic tory over Slikc MCIC r m the sec ·
ond round of the German Open
Capriau will face Barbara K1t ·
tner of Germany, who beat Kalla
Piccolini of Italy 6-1 . 6-4.
No . 4 Mary Joe Fernand ez
stopped Bulgarian Lubom~ra
Bxheva 6-2. 6-1 . Sandra Cecchi ni
of Italy upset No. 5 Anke Huber of
Germa ny 1·6, 6-2, 6-0, and Juli e
Hnlard of France defeated Wiltrud
Probst of Germany 6-2. 6-4.

in a playoff series agamst the
Detroit Pistons, he was mysteriously felled by migraine headaches. A
few sea ts farther down sat Bill
Cartwright and John Paxson, the
remaining starters, looking similarly fatigued.
Not long after the Knicks had
hammered them into submission in
the opening game of the series, and
continuing right up to the pre-game
announcements, the Bulls made no
secret of their distaste for this kind
of play. Jackson, their coach, even
made a point of getting himself
tossed out of Sunday's game in
New York by suggesting to the
officials thai they might be better
sui ted to work an Australian Rules
Football contest than in the NBA.
And afterward he added, ''I
thi nk people in the league office
like this kind of swff."
Then, not wanting to be labeled
a whiner, Jackson reached back for
so me euphemisms of his own.
"We'll have to accept i~" be said.
'·We '11 have to play through it.''

Cup - is ahead, but the Rangers
know for sure it isn't.
The Penguins play host to the
Boston Bruins Sunday night in
Game I of the Wales Conference
finals. The Campbell Conference
finals begin Saturday night when
Edmonton visits Chicago.
Wednesday night, it toolc a long
for anyone to score, at least until
Rick Tocchet gave the Pen~uins
the lead, just as he did in !herr 3-2
victory in Game 5 in New York.'
Tocchet took Phil Bourque's setup
from behind to net to beat Vanbiesbrouck at 5:57 of the second period
on Pittsburgh's first power play of
the game.
The Rangers regained the
momentum by tying it on Doug
Weight's second playoff goal, at
7:42, but the biggest goal again
came from - guess who? Ja~omir Jagr.
.
So fearful that Jagr would repeat
his two-goal scoring clinic in Game
5, the Rangers shadowed him all
night with forwanl Jan Erixon. The
trouble was that it still didn't stop
Jagr. Not by a wrist shot

Page-7

SHORTS AND
TOPS
OPEN MON.-SAT. 9:30·5:00

AREA HIGH SCHOOL
GRADUATES Of 1992
On Friday, May 22, The Daily
Sentinel will have a special edition
with photographs of high school
seniors graduating this year.
Now through Friday, May 15, Drop
Your Photo Off At The Daily
Sentinel or At Your High School
Office To Be Included In This
Special Edition, At No Charge.
(Attach Your Name, High School, and Parents
Name To Photo)

******

ANY PROFESSIONAL, BUSINESS,
INDIVIDUAL OR CIVIC ORGANIZATIONS
WHO WOULD LIKE TO HAVE AN
ADVERTISEMENT IN THIS SPECIAL
EDITION PLEASE CALL 992·2~ 56.
Ask for Dave or P. J.

'•

�Page

.

~The Dally Sentinel

Thursday, May 14, 1992

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, May 14, 1992

The Dally Sentinel-Page-9

Workers, retirees

Beat of the Bend. ..

..

by Bob Hoeflich
Talk about hangin' in there.
That's what Larry Lavender has
done.
Larry, at age 49, will receive his
bachelor of science degree in
accounting with a minor in computer science at the commencement
of the University of Rio Grande
ihis Sunday.
· When he was 15 , Larry quit
school following the death of his
father. As a teenager he worked at
· one time as a paper counter at The
· Daily Sentinel and then entered the
Jlrmed forces serving for three
1ears- In 1987 he became disabled
10 an accident. Larry then went to
work to get his GED. The day he
got the results he enrolled at Rio
Grande where he has been a full time student for the past four years.
. Larry's wife, Christy, is principal
at the Portland Elementary Schoo l.
.

And speaking of graduations,
~ ongratulation s are in order for
. Frederic L Young who will receive
· hi s juris doc torate in law at com: mencement exercises to be held
:.May 23 at The University of
. Akron. Frederic is, of course, the
son of Mr. and Mrs. Earl Young.
Mrs. Young before her retirement
was a teac her at the Pomeroy Elementary School for a number of
years and Mr. Young has long been
a teacher and an assistant principal
at Meigs High .

---

Members of the Pomeroy High
School Class of 1937 will be getting together on Saturday, May 23,
· : for a special reunion before the
entire school alumni get-together in
the evening. Members of the class
will be at the Episcopal Parish
House in Pomeroy from I to 4 p.m.
Several of the group have been
working hard for several month s
getting the special reunion together.
And-the Pomeroy High School
Class of 1967 will mark its 25th

There will be a get-together at 6
p.m. Friday , May 22, at the Meigs
County Golf Coun;e, but the biggie
will be Saturday afternoon at 3
p.m. when a pig roast will be held
at the home of John Wolfe. Dress
for the pig roast is casual and all ol
the food will be prepared for the
guests. Class members will auend
the full school alumni reunioo in
the evening. Anyone with questions should call Linda Gilkey,
992-3966.
Bonnie Ransom of upriver
extends a big thanks not only for
the care she received while con fined to Veterans Memorial Hospital for surgery but to friends and
relatives for their support, cards,
prayers, flowers and guts. Bonnie
had a little wall bulletin board
going during her hospital stay to
display some of her cards and
remembrances.
Despite being 88 years of age
and on a cane, Dorothy RoUer of
Middleport made her usual spring
visit to the cemetery with spring
flowers which she planted. A few
days later, she was advised that all
of the flowers had been removed
from graves. Dorothy sat down
and cried. She cannot afford moneywlse or healthwise to repeat the
effort. So, it does take aU kinds.

AND THE WINNERS ARE - Veterans
Mtmorial Hospital Administrator Scoll Lucas
and AdministratiYt Assistant Doris lhle pick the
names ol -.riJmtn ol door prizes in conjunction
"itb lht aJlllaal opt11 oo- beld at the hospital
Suaday in obstnanct or Natio nal Hospital
Wttk and National Nursin2 Homes Week. The

And gasoline is back to the
magic figure of $1.19 plus at many
locations in Meigs County. Since
the terms of my probation keep me
confined to the county , I haven ')
the faintest what gas is going for in
other locations now. However, the
surveys requested by our state olfi.
cials from Ohio Attorney General
Lee Fisher in February apparently
did not materialize. Why did I feel
in February that they wouldn ' t?
After all, why would anyone pay
any attention to us?
Do keep smiling.

D

-Religion in America ...

NEW YORK (AP) - Candi dates for public office should commit to a "Marshall Plan" for cities
to provide quality education, health
care, housing and johs to urban residents, according to the general
sec retary of th e National Council
• of Ch urches .
The Rev. Joan Brown Campbell
·issued he r call to ca ndidates to
locus on the needs of c1tics dunng
a visit to riot-tom Los Angeles.
"Our nution has ex perienced a
major shock 111 a natioowHle social
. • ea rth quake," she said. "E ven
before the Los Angeles riol5, it was
clear to all who would sec that our
1:ities were and still arc a mass of
smoldcnng embers.'·
NAPLES, f'la. (AP) - The hus-

band and wife rabbi team of Seth
Phi llips and Karen Soria plan to
serve both Uncle Sam and their
faith in Ok.inawa.
The coup le , in Orlando th1s
week to receive U.S. Navy commi ssions, are believed to be the
second husband-wife rabbi team to
serve in the Navy, said Navy Chaplai ncy officials in Washington.
Phillips and Ms. Soria, both 40.
will spend three years at the U.S.
Naval base in Okinawa , where
more than 10,000 U.S. soldi= are
based.
Ms . Soria will be the Navy 's
second female rabbi and the f lfSI to
be sent overseas.
Her husband gor the idea to join
the Navy 's chaplaincy last year at
the Star! of the Persian Gulf War.
"I wondered what I could do in
a patriotic way," Phillips said. "So
I applied to the Navy reserves.''
PHILADELPHIA (AP) - The
Roman Catholic, Baptist and Episcopal churches arc there. So are the
Int ern ational Church of th e
Fou rsquare Gospel, Fellowship of
Religious Humanists and the
Schwenlfelder Church.
The h1story and doctrine of 100
reli gious groups arc descnhed in
"An Encyc lopedia of Religions of
the United States," a 359-page survey edi ted by retired Ursinus College professor William B.
Williamson.
T he book, just publi shed by
Crossroad Publishing Co. in New
York, offers a general descriptioo
of each group followed by infonnation about founders, doctrines and
forms of worship, mfluence m the
United States, significant terms and
books for further reading.
For example, the Schwcnl:feldcr
Church , a 2,800- member denomination with five congregations in
the Philadelphia area, had its ori gms in 16th cen1ury Germany. The
spintual hetrs of S1les1an nobleman
Caspar Schwenckfeld von Ossig
fled persecution to America in the
1730s.

. Prospective mothers are
:~ ·:alerted to alcohol, drug dangers
Thi s week has been designated
- -us Alcohol and Drug-Related Birth
:::Defects Awareness Week in Ohio
• and the Meigs County He alth
Department is joining the Ohi o
· Department of Health in alerting
-prospective mothers to the dangers.
·
As explained by Norma Torres,
• .R. N., nursing director for the local
; . ·health departmen~ there are no safe
levels for using alcohol, tobacco or
·other drugs. Those who arc pregiumt and use such drugs may cause
lifelon~. even u-agic, consequences
for the1r children.
A child exposed to drugs , alco• Jwl or tobacco during their month's
- pregnancy IS more likely to be born
· prematurely, suffer from low binh
.: · ·"'eight, dela~ de~elopment, and
• ~earning diSabiiHtcs, Torres
··''explained.
.
· "If you drink alcohol dunng

pregna ncy, your ch1ld may suffer
from fetal alcohol syndrome, which
causes facia l deformities, slow
development. slow development
and mental retardation," said Torres, in encouraging pregnant
women to give their children a
healthy start by not using drugs.

..

."-.
.

· an niversary on the same weekend.

LOUISV IL LE, Ky . (AP) Ralph Harper, a professor at Joh ns
Hopkins Universi ty, has been g1ven
the Grawemeyer Award in religion
for his bouk about the search for
.meaning in life.
"On Prese nce: Variations and
Reflecuons," published in 1991 by
Trinity Press, earned the $150,000
award given JOintly by the University of Louisv1lle and the Louisville
· · Presbyter ian Theological Seminary.
"W hat' s amazing about this
. book is that it marks an ending in
• Ralph' s long search for meaning in
a world existentialists have marked
large ly by alienation and loneliness," said James C. Harris, a psy_chiatrist at Johns Hopkins School
·of Medicine.
" His point of departure is that
\. hat has been lost in modem civilizat ion is that fee ling of the
moment, of cohtext and substance,
and that this mu st be restoretl,"
Harris said in a release from Johns
Hopkins.
Harpe r, "-'ho teaches in th e
School of Contin ui ng Studies.
. wrote 10 books before " On Presence," beginni ng with " Existenti ali sm: A T heo ry of Man " in
1948.

•The Area's Number I
Marketplace

face less problems

~

... ,
..-;

/

~

\

\

·•''
......

. ...

winners are Golda Radclille, Syracuse, a lamp;
Greg Dailey, Pomeroy, a collee maker; Yvonne
Dennis, 36736 Pearb Fork Road, Pomeroy, a
toaster ; Ada Nease, 33277 STale Route 7,
Pomeroy, a crock pot ; and Howard Mullen,
Pomeroy, a clock. Winners may pick up their
awards at the Women's Auxiliary station in the
hospital lobby beginning today.

• ·~}
· ~ .\

',

~ .

.

""
.....

·.:.
•.
\

-r

·-

•tAJ.IA.O

umnm \1
11

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f

'

•

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..1

SCHOLARS PROGRAM - The I lib Annu·
al Rqioaal Sdlctlars l'rogT8111 was held_rec~ntly
at CutH's Caft. The goal or the projeCt IS to
1atb6 oaiSIUdill&amp; slucknts and allo": them to
inltr•ct witlll each olbtr. Speakers tncluded
Archie Grima, Roger Jerome rrom Eng land,

John Gills, Fred Deel, Conn Drake and Linda
Jones of Belpre City Schools. Pictured are (rront
row, from lefl) Karen Morris, Eao;tern; Court·
ney MidkiiT, Meigs; (back row) Jeremy Buckley,
Eastern; Kevin Lambert, Meigs; and Kevin
Arnoll, Southern.

Study: Bad gene linked with
recurring childhood cancer
BOSTON (AP) - A gene
already linked witb sevual kinds of
cancer may sanetimes be involved
when youngsters with tbc: disease
develop a SIC(!ltd unrelated mal ig .
nancy.a new SIDdy concludes.
The stdly linb lh: risk of these
new bouts of ana:r with an error
in a gene tlw ordinarily keeps the
body from de~g IWD&lt;IrS.
Docton; from Massachusens
Gencr.tl Hospital studied 59 ch lldren and young 8duhs who had
developed a SCOOIId ana:r. Four of
them, or 7 paa:nl, bad mutations
in a gene called p51
The resean:hen; estimated that

Friday deadline
for senior pictures
Seniors at Meigs County's three
high schools are reminded that Friday is the deadline for submitting
senior pictures 10 be io;luded in the
upcoming gradu:ttion suppleme nt
to The Dai Iy Sentinel. The photographs may be brought to the
offu of The Daily Sentinel or left
in the high school o!fices. Students' photos will be inc luded in
the supplement free of charge. The
pictures will be returned to the
school offiCes following publication.

ordinarily only ahout I in 10,000
people have mutations in thi s gene.
Errors in p53 have been associated with other cancers, including
colon , breast and lung cancer.
The latest study, conducted by
Dr. David Malkin and others, was
published in today's New England
Journal of Medicine.
The p53 gene helps control the
growth of tissue. When the gene is
damaged, ce lls lack ooe of the regulators that help balance growth.
In an accompanying editorial,
Dr. Arnold J. Levine of Princeton
Un iversi ty wrote, "Although many
que stions remain ahout the func tions of the p53 gene and 1ts protein product, th ere is little doubt
about its central role in the origin
of some human cancers.''

RATES

MoN. thru FRI . 8A.M.-5r. M.- SH.8-l2
CLOSED SuNDAY

SWlday Paper

POLICIES
• Ad. oul.lt..k: the co unty y•Jur ad runs m111t I~ pr,.pald
• Receive dilcounl for ad. paid in a&lt;lvanc:e .
• Free Ada: Give~~way and round ad. uttdu- J 5 word• will hoe
run 3 day• al no e harJe.
• Price of ad for a ll capitalletten it doubk pnce o( aJ cott
• 7 Pf!int line ty pe only uted
• Sentinel iJ nol rNpouihk lor errore after firat day {chec-k I
for erron f1nl day ad runa in paper). Ca ll before 2:00 p.m.
d .. y after pul.hcalioo to nnke- cor-ref:tion
• Ad. that mwl be patd in advanclf!' .r~ :
lArd of T hulu
Happy Ada
l11 Memoria,.
Yard Sale.
• A dauifw.d adwertiae1nen ~ .. laced in thlf!' Ga llip!Jld Daily
TribuiM! (except Clataifted Oi.aplay, BUiineu C.rd or ~al
Notieet) willa lao appear in the Poi.ft t Plu.. nt Rept&amp;er and
the Daily Sen tinel , re.t: h: fl! over 18,000 homet

15
15
15
15
15

$4.00
$6.00
$9.00

$B.OO
$1.30/day

$ .20
$ .30
$ .42
$ .liO
$ 05/day

r-----tiA~ilJFi[Ejffif"

1

qn~l!iddkpont

6 7 5-Pl. Plcau nl

36 7-Choeet.arc
388-Vinton
245-Riv Grande
2 ~6--Guyan Di.L
643-Arahia m...
379- Wa.lnul

Pomeroy
Q-85-a..w.er
643-PortJand
2-47-Letart FaDe
949- Raclne
7 42- Rullaod

4 5R-L~nn

576-A,ppk Grov e
773-Muon
882-New llavt:n
H95-l.eta rt
~37 - HuiTal o

667- Cool'lill e

BuaineM Oppore..aity

21-

22- Mo•er Lo LD23- P.-ofcuioaal

s.-n-

3132333-4---3:l-----

_____

Holt\CI for Sale
Mobik Home. for Sak
t'um• for Sak
RI..LI!int"..u BuJd1np
Lou &amp; Aco-~

3&amp;--- Real

r... ... ~.~: w..,u.d

HI.\T\1 •

GET RESULTS - FA,s,n_,.~-1 , 1 _ 11.~ 1., R=•

2- ln Memory
3- AnnouncemenU
4-- C iv ea way
:;...... Happy Ad•
6-- Loat and Found
7- Lod and Found
8-- Publl&lt;:: Sale &amp;
Auction
9-- Wanted to Buy

II - Help Wut.ed
Si tua tiont Wa nted
13-- lnaur•ncoe
14--- lluaineat Traini~
1 I ~ Sd1uol1 &amp; lrutruclion
116---- Radio , TV &amp; CD Repair
1 17- MUcell11.neo111
Wanted T o Do

4243--444..&gt;----46---4743--49--

12-

116-

.TROY-BI£1'

(Fer..ty

MICROWAVE OVEN
aad VCR REPAIR

••,.,_It,. Or w.

WHlHJ.fi-0
PRICE REDUCEDI
Tllo p&lt;tce ,.. .. $80 ,900 ond
"""" llnolw;ing &lt;A "' lo ...,., .. puodluo
.......... _bo~lar~por­

Moblk HotiW!II for Ker~1
Farrnt for Heat
ApAMMel'l.t for Re~~t
F urniahed Roo..
Space for Renl
U.'ut.Hito Re~~~l
Equipment for Rlf!'nl
for l....a.M

\lt:l{( I I \\

t

1 11~ 1.

5 1- Hou~ehokl Good.
52- Sporu~ Good.
53- Antiq IH:I
,'}4- Muc M.erchanduc
55- Bu,ldu'@;

•

GALLIPOLIS FERRY, W. VA.

Miss W.Va.
Hawaiian Tropic
Grand Finals
Thursday, May 14th at
9:30p.m.

MAY 16

0 'Dell lawn &amp;Gorden

CHUa'S BOATAUTO REPAIR

RE-BID NOTICE
The Village

of

Pomeroy

desires to receive tel*i bids

lot Gasoline p&lt;oduc:ls • Unleaded Gaoollne (89 oclane)
and 12 Diesel Fuel for one
year period.

All sealed bldo oholl bo
received In lho Clert' o Oftlce
11 320 Eul Moln SiTeo~
Pomeroy, OH on or before
11 :00 A.M. lloy 15, 1992.

accept or reject •ny or all
bids.

Brenda llonlo , Clerk
Viltoge of - o y
320 E. llbln Slreei-

P.O. Bo1666
Pomeroy, OH .S769
(5) 7, 14 ; 2TC

1SO UPPER RMR ROAD

C8rd of Thanks

LOWWOR RATE
I 5% OFF On Most
Boat Parts
Co. Rd. 3,
Leading C..k Rd.
Middleport

742-3030
Wlma.pd.

PU11UC NOncE
n. lollawlnt~ ••• ,.
oetnd'tw1 ed by . . ONo
Environ•Mtal Protection
Agancy (OEPA) laet ....._
Effective •••• ol llnal
aclioM .ad lae-M:Ie ciMie
of prapcnd actioM Md el
dr•ft actlona . . alallld.
Final acdone ••• iHI
d, "' writing, :10 c1otp of the
of .,.
........ to 1ho Emilw
II
II -.1 of Re;lla. RilL :100,
..,,

•to

I

236 E. T - St.. Coh • •,
OH., WIS. Nolloe of any

oppMiahalbelildwllhh
dlr
... tor wtlhln 1 ...,,_
Propooad actlono will

I-tor -.

r--------..t-----.,=. . .-...,1 ....,..t

&lt;ONNIE'S OHIO
RMR HERBS and
MRLASnNGS
mao u. S3l.ladat, ow.
247-4035

NOW 01'01 FOI SPRING
Plt.ts, Hnt, Porlllllals,

bns.-g

Public Notice

1

~~ IIMI ....... •

writ-

OPIN

WED.·SUN. liH p.&amp;
HH7-t ... pL
PMs--Wiklllf•
MolorcyciH-Eic.
rY,

~\!lt

fi

ryn

"£.- Lws
:;m.IUJO
"SPECIAUZING IN SLATE
OR CANVAS"
39815 Gold Ridge Road
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

WI
e come Slates

$20.00

Custom Pointi111JO

,.., adjllclic•- "--ng
4-992 2242
lo 11111•15
61
•
:10 dar• of the ..._
L------4121=92/lf-'-....Jn
data; or the
iliil'uldldlwa 1M prapc ltd .---~------,

ection. Any ,...•• ..,

~~i=i.~~
-·• ....,

Board to meet

....

of h

lo 111011 ' "Accion', M
uaH above t1oe11 Rot
loci+ ....... of a Nlllod

The Meigs County Library
Board will meet 00 ThUJSday . May
2latlp.m .

lie"'-·-·· ...cc . .lalntl 4till

I,..

TROY-BI£1

o.,. s,ra. sa..,..-• or

Trey-B.ill '~\Ban Nn I• Slo~k.

You~ff!!!Jf
· ~~f""J•
.,.. ff11 w

ILIOWIII,dooi.Oilt•SI!-JIIS

L----..:21201'n13=="'mo"".

......,._ .. -.Aa ..

. . , ..........

Winners named

dlllg

t

of vwllled ar plalnla,

....- .., ..... ao~~oe

"""* ........, and ......

Finding the most eggs in the
annual Easta egg hunt sponsored
by the Racine American Legion
wen: Jtm:a Hill. Jobn Gilland and
JIIONT, I ta r: Clu1o Bron, Ray ProiiiU, Sllenie
Sllnw, Tarrl Bay-.aa, Mlekolle Frlead, Peav
CanGen, Beatller Mcl'luiU, Soe R-•110 (ea..ty
AdYIIor); IACJt, I to r: Daa Roauo (Cotlaly

9G-2627or
1-8Q0.837·1460

uUcrw,ll ocam•l rCrnr
....... _tto:H 1ilotl
a.tr, OEN, '· O.lloiiiiMI,
Ceh ·-·~"l??et•
Ph. 1114)1M-211L Cn I II
OAC a., 17U-' OAC

t.wn Mowing.

o

partlo•lor

....,....

Marys.."' J - ltnall' (ICillool .........), a..,.. 1141-47 - 174M
AJIIII ......... Peu7 G. . .le, Billie Jo LcacPro,.aad Deelal ol
The Southam TJ. would Ua to !Mnlt tha folio•
lor !hair aupport tor CIIJ111: Racine Hnnw
lllilllllllllllank. Andaraon'a, Mlb Mullen, Bemolnl
I
Mlka Swiger lnaurance,
lllc:Donalcl'a, Caraon
of the membara of

..:e=:;:=~~AII::: your help

lEVIN'S LIWII
IWNTENINCE

llonlll ·lnlonu..... IWau
olberwl•• rrovldad ,.

NoUoae

Rachacl Mollis.

FREE ESTIMATES

992-3838

Supplte~

M....M:all...,.__ll

r ..... a v..,...u..
~ ~9- r.. s.~e ... r,...,.

I \ 1\ \ l • l l' l ' fl l •
,\ 11\l• l t ll l,
f.

6.1- 'I"..ted to Ruy
hl-- L.-kKk
b4- Hay 4 Craa
&amp;&gt;----- Seed 4 Foertili:za-

A. ....... Sa.le

l l71-

T ~ for s-ir

7l - \'a• 4 4 WD'•
:" 4-------- llo1oft1clie.
7'&gt;- &amp;... &amp; Hoaon for SaM
7'6----- ,h&amp;o Puu &amp; A=-n.j
A•lo Repair
78- C..r-t~ Eq.up.c.a

:":"-

r.,. •

81 - H..e
&amp;2 - 1'1-b"'t! a Hcoliati
&amp;3- [u:.... lutf!:
M- fk.&lt;n&lt;.t a Relr,.....,~
8.&gt;-- Ga.u.t Ha .....
86-- Mob.k llo- Roepa..g: - L pft.olt t~

...... _

Call lin
.........
=tldCoope
Clf&amp;gll
•
.,1 wTorpa.,ONo
. .I I

to 4111

OaRIII.

C:.~lll"....,...
,

Portal..

..........Pultllo
= ...... No.IO

lldCorpaol

&amp;!gil(H)M-12.
(5) ......

~

SNODGRASS
UPHOLSnRY
RACINE, OHIO

.,.,.., ¥- r.
f..-lauw

•-• Tyru
•,
I
0
• - N- •

Fortlllzlng, Weeding,
end Seeding.
Shrub and T- •
Trlmmlnp I Removal

Amu ntld &amp; CoftiiMICiol
Ft.&amp;lilnatoe

412f18211n

"*'vs- buzzln".....

WWTADS

-n , leal -.I Flh=Nng
Aaal4
. . . . . Eatwicw

.

V. C. YOUNG II

...._,_

.614·949·2202

8
S.IH2-tla

MIDDLEPORT GUN
SHOP
134 •

-:::a-r.IATES)

WPDml SIIVICE

~'IF

, 99H215
p

oy,OW.
~IJ-112.-,

Wlilrlr A. Ill-,

.
'

YOUNG'S

4/D/91/1-

u••1part, •

NOW OPEN!

'* o.t 01 r•••
- t.t u. o. '' Fot r.·
INTERIOR ' EXTERIOR

"Tah ,.,

1111 Esnrum

WHALEY'S lUTO
PARTS

BUY-SELL-TRADE

Specializing In (ustola
Fra111e Repair
NEW &amp; USED PARTS
FOR All MAKES
'
&amp; MODELS
992·701l or
992-5553

•LIGHT HAULING

Ste~t&amp;

fiUim.&amp;TES

915-4473
667·6.179

949·2823

4n71t211-.

HANDGUNS, RIFLES,
SHOTGUNS

B &amp; TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL

••••Co•,_.
&amp;.,

New SCA WOLFF
BedSL24
Call lor Appt.Todlry

Ah• 6p.a. 614-985-4180

KING'S TV
ZENITH
SERVICE

=t::~;.

6 MI. Out Eagle ...
Rd. or I MI. l11111 1Jas1.

••••• 6 , ... '--• .......

...:!1 - 92- 1 ""'·pd.

........s

15 Sesslona._.$25
12 SesslonL .. .$20
1 S.sslon. •• .$2.25

HAvt IEFtRENCES

Hrs. 9to 5
MoLtnSat.

1 mo. pd. 4116m

COISTiumOI

TAIS

&amp; co.

NOW OPEN

204 N. Se&lt;. Ave.
Middleport, Ohio
992-3184

BISSEll &amp; lUBE

CALIFOUII

The Pomeroy VIllage

Anoia's ond Haw..., Tropic, Quality
Print Shop, Middeport Tmphiao &amp;
Teea, HaWa Mill Outlel, Point
Distributing, Subwoy ol Pl Ploaoen~
Ace High Mulie, 84 Lumt&gt;«, 8&amp;0
Machine &amp; ~pair, Inc .• Criminal
Reconls, Spring llaley Cinema.

WANT
ADS
WORK!

BUUDOZER, BACKHOE
and TliACKHOE WORK
AVAILABLE.
SEPTIC SYSTEMS,
HOME SITES ond
TliAILER SITES,
LANDCLEARING,
DRIVEWAYS INSTALLED
UIIESTONE- TllUCKING

Council , ....,.,. lho righiiO

Broug&gt;t to you in part by:

a few pennies' spent here
comes back folding money

614-949-2804

217 L S.C... II.
POIOOT, OliO
3123,'i12/lln

Public Notice

Arnie's Sports
Lounge

PARTS &amp; SERVKE
Mowen • Gait Saws
• Weecleaten

...... ,,..,.tOffho

CLASSFim
. ADS

ft.'"""

w

HOWARD
EXCAVATING

u~.

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
992·5335 or
985·3561

yoo?

Call • 14-992-71 04 tor .....

FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY

Pkk

can~

IOIIIObuy-- -on3~-ln
Radno. 4 BR. 3balho, 2 - · , _ 1

~MEROY.

lWp

bt'MI

IUUIIS

bldg.

RACINE MOWER
CLINIC

P.O. leii94-W... Aloy
lAO:. OHIO

BAND CONCERT
SUNDAY, MAY 17-2:00 p.m.
MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL
CHICKEN &amp; NOODlE DINNER
$3.50 - Immediately following
concert. Sponsored by Band
Boosters

8R 11'1- Property- 4.800 1C1

~1-

5&amp;----

Business Services

BUWnN BOARD DEIDUIE
4:30 P. M. DIY BEFORE
PUBLICAnON

BONEY
BAR-B.qUE
t;mCKEN IS
t;OMING TO

56- Pm lor s.Jr

HE \I I ~ - 1 \II .

Gallia Cowuy Meigo County MW!On Co., WV
Area Code 614 Area Code 6 14 t\n,a Code .1 0-t
446--Cal~po~o

11\\\11\ 1

I

Rates are for co nsec utive runs, broken up day s will bt&gt;
charged for each day as separate ads.

Classified page~ cover rhe
following re/ephone exchanges ...

Bl'LLETI\ BOARD

AcMior),

I

1
3
6
10
Monthly

Over 15 Words

Rate

!

KFC

Across fr011I·JA.t

DAY BERJRE PUBLI CATION
I 00 p.m. Salutday
1-00 p m_Monday
t 00 p m Tuesday
100 p.m. Wednesday
100 p.m. Thursday
I :00 p.m. Friday

COPY DEA DUNE
Monday Paper
Tuesday Paper
Wednesday Paper
Thursday Paper
Fnday Paper

Call 992-2156

LAWN BOY
FACTORY REP SALE
MAY 15

Words

Days

1!1////fl

1.1 •

~·

WAS HINGTON (AP)- Workers and retirees who tbint sane of
their wages have not boen cmlited
to their Social Security accounts
may now find it easier 10 make
their case.
A5 part of a seukment or a federal lawsu it , the Social Security
Administration agreed to ease the
requirements for proving that its
earnings rrcords are wmng. Retirement benefits are based on those
records.
Social Security officials and the
Internal Revenue Service also
agreed to streamlined procedures
for posting earnings and for working through a backlog of cases in
which the two agencies' records
disagree.
In addition, the settlement,
signed Wednesday by U.S. Disuict
Judge Aubrey Robinsoo, commits
Social Security to a fi•-e-year publicity campaign to notify workers
and retirees that they sboold check
their eammgs nxords every year or
two.
"This sett lement is what we
thought benefiCiaries are entitled
to," said Max Richtman, oecuuve
vice president of the National Committee to Preserve Social Security
and Medicare, which flied the suiL
"We wanted an effective procedure for making sure earnings are
posted and a fair and expedi ted
procedure for making corrections if
they are llOl "
The commiuee sned after the
General ACCOUiling Offx:e estimated that some earnings or OOII'Iy 10
million worten may not ha-.e been
credited to their Social Security
accounts because of errors by
employers or the go11tmiomt. Such
uncorrected orors would result in a
loss ol a portion of retimnmt benefits; in some cases, wortas coul(l
be denied bcftefits alqedlrz.

H-97-ttol

Quality
Stone Co.

SIZED UMESTONE
FOR SAU
(If 614n997-6637
St Rt. 1

OR TOll FRU

1-800-841-0070

Otesbe, OH.

I&amp;IWII, OliO

lf211fn

1/31 r g1111n

ANGIE'S FLOWERS

fiEf ESTIMATES

Pt1rennlal1 &amp;
Annuals,
Strawflo-rs and
more Everlastings.
Hybrid Tomat0t1s,
Baskets, Etc.
LoallatiN P...'s Ill

Wfwty llttw.. Dtpol St.
11 Rltl.ti.Jir. 5S4

MON.·SAT. 9to S

NEW CONSTRUCTION &amp;
REMODELING
"Wt Ott Tilt
Call II Tromm

614-742-2772

J•• Dtlt ....

614-742-2321

20ln. EJJ.

....

• ....

'It

I

•FIREWOOD

BILL SLACK
992·2269

FOR SALE

USED RAILROAD TIES

Agriculture

4·4·9Hfa

BOWIRDL.
WRIIESIL
ROOFIIG
NEW-REPAIR
GUITERS
DOWNSPOUTS
GUTIER CLEANING
PAINTING
Free Estimates

Lime

VALLEY INC.

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.
New Ho•es • r ..yl Si ' 1
New Gara111 • Replece...t . . . . . .
Roo• Additioas • loofbt1

Rt. 2
Millwood, W.Va.

COMMERCIAL • • RESIIIINnAJ.
l'1lD ESTDIA'RS

304-273-5555

, •• Sntley Ctls)

4-9-tfn

......

411W t mo , pd.

OIL. wv. &amp; H.U.D.

lm::'DTUCDII

,...... EXCAVATING
BULLDOZING
PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
lAND CLEARING
WATER &amp;
SEWER LINES
BASEMENTS&amp;
HOME SITES
HAULING: llmeatone,
Dirt, Gravel and Coal
Ucenoed .,d Boncled

PH. 614·992-5591

12·5-lfn

614·949·2101 or 949·2160

App ••ttllultldwatl

•••tnlnttu,.

llerJsiatPrailldL

'
GIICIIty Hi EHkielcy Ai'

0

&amp;E"Tr£R 8Y DESIGN

-- .... -...

Cotdtiolers, Heat P1~~

FNih,._- .. - ·

fii'ICICIS &amp;Now

•

Water Heaters.

1120'

!l....PMP

2 l

......
II

Glv•war
112 .....

r:;,:: .... ·- --.:

Bennetts Mobile Ho~ne
1391 Safford Schaal Rd.
Cal (614) 446-94

•

�Page-10-The Dally Sentinel
4

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

Giveaway

~ rnolrllo home, 114-1112-4511
Vory nlerl14x10 mo1111o 11orno on
prtya.. •cr.. 3 IC' c' 0011\ eltrl
room wlllloodtMun., mator appllaia•. $15,500. 3Q4..111..2783.

___ .. __ _

-And-Pull. 7WIT•

Cld. To GIIWUCJ. ~-

33 Farms for Sale

· T~
And Knltlng
PMlerna.
~!14

.,.,,

=~rt

• • clalhlug,

Lob: tor ..'-'. ,,.,..,.
t•ble. 304--871-2'722.

11:115110

Lost&amp; Found
loll: char" r '1. K..,.ln Qat.

Household
Goods

"' People buy clolhes that look used.

'----------...,.---------"i
Why not carpet?! ''

·AI lord S.loo Bo Paid In
·Ach•a. O..diN: 1:00pm the
:dor Tho .., lo lo run,

......

Sundoy odlllon- I :OOpm frldoy,
_,
.......
10:--.n.

Mlu Paula'• Dly C.,.. Center.
S.t., affordable, chiktcl,.. u.F
I 11...m.. - 5:30 p.m. Ao-• ~10.
BetoN, aft• Khoal. OrojHns
liiiCCml. 114 446 8224. New InAIISTIIAUA WAHn YOU
Ellc:ollort
Poy,
BonoiRs, - Tocldlor Care, 1114-44U227.
T-otton, 407~_."107, -ogrti-·Will do weddings,
E.rt 57t. ll..m.-tOp.m . Toll apart-. l IDQUon pot1nitl.
R.Hnible rat•. CAll 304-175·
1537.
AVON I AM - · I Shirley
Sjloo... -..15-1421.
WI» do bobyolnlng In my homo.
L.atatt Flllts •rH. fM-241-4965

-·- -lartandara / Caalno

Gallipolis
&amp; Vlclnhy

Workera / Dack
~~ lle. PoiHionl

...... No- . -.

Will do housee...nlng.

~

'

'------====:_j .

; III 1121• CIIS News

5 Flllllly O.rogo Solo: Thuro,
frl, Sll«h, J51h. ..... ).112 ~ Holzer I
I .... RUIO.
I

llodl Ylrd Solo: FrtdoJ, 1115, ..
Saflrily, 5111 1:00.7 414
......... p...

OIOirtbutAf&gt;~ Would "Vou lAe To Earn
- - Thon You
And Only h t Port-n- F"""
Your Halne? Woukl You Ul U.
- 7 F«A ...,_I,
SM..o n tnl:ervltw Call Mr.
SecUfly 1 344 10M tnv.t·

Do-.

-You

... ott12K-

Eoey - · Elcollont Poyl - - A t -. Call
T•l F-. ~. Ert.

VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.

you do but', _ . .h ,.,.. rou know, and
NOT 1D und monoythrough tho
mall uniH you hive lnvett!Qattd
tho ..,.,....
, CI iWMndll lhll

,
-·
-·
-.c.:.
• So~ T.....,o

... of

, cnfto,

....

- ---~
a---~

IS 'lENDING ROUTE: GOI Rich

GOV~HT

FEDERAL
Mu: ''+R

r w.

-

Port-no. - Ho&lt;.rty
• c-.1- -~Solo

Thlnl-

Bo Flalblo, CLA
111, c19 G"M'p:ll• OWly Tribun.,
IIZS
Golilpollo, OH

45631.

-......................

.-

Ftt, Sol. Cfatlo, . - .
' .... Loll, ..,.. '
:1
47'5

R.lllySt.

bJ: ur1o Kr!l"'
d.un:t. _ , , ...,. ll. ..7

o. ..._ At 7.

L.oc.1.1 In • ' '

__c....,.,
..,

T1Mn. 14th, Fri. - · juoT oft ,.,
Ill

011 l.lnoaln PIU •

. 111. Lola af .... , ..... -

..-.d

J...:l Solo • ..... Floo .......,,

.Is.LI&lt;L.-•h. ...,..._m

..
:l

.

e.....,

.,_, , ... Solo, -

:r·-~~..,..

...

AICII k .... tor
7

~

·--·--

.h. .....

-:· ~····
..,

,,...
AM,

....

Tm .,.,_,

OIJ uobUL

2 ACIOfftl I Bath, Downa:l•ln,

22. 1912, to

Pomero~.

Ohio

harM, 4 bedrooms,

room, clringroomllamlty room
comblnltion, i.Jic:hen, utiiHy
room, all one level, cover.d
peUo In Mek. privacy t.nce,
CIMI!gl, lhown by appointment
only ,....TS-1238.

3 Bodroorno, 2 Slory Homo,
Chelhira
Vlllag•.
(Gallia
County)
C.ll 6:00P.M. 0.
Weeklndt. , Appointment : &amp;M-

WAHTBl: EIIERGEHCY REUEF

SERVICE

~

WORK.ERS At A C....
....., Clroup Homo For Pw·
10M Wlh Osulk;
0..

••:t•i

~~-=

H.-.-

-. ...................

ballroom

!217

...,dol....CNI6••
I

:,

I

.-.s.

~e A Frl
IIH.
n A...,.. (Oft of

Til;,

idJ

n

•

~

~

dolhee.

----

l'8rd ... ,,..,, ..., 15, ....
...,. laric* ..... ICJOeil from

Pomeroy,

Cadllo

liM«, P.O.-...To
Box 004,

Jor:koon, Ott -

- Doadllno

F« Appllcerto: 5I2W2. Equal
Opport-y Emplopr.

wAIITm:
FutHlmo Uc:.Prodleol ...... F« Two c-.

""'nlty ~loll
. . For Per- - Wllh
al Dllt--In
...
County

IO.HipoU•IIIIdwoll}. Houro: 1·
...II. OA ..11A.tln-t P.ll.
lA...,_) Th&lt;n: 12_.P.tl.,
~~; tliC'tcfee 2
Kour Woollly Stall -lng: Or
All Otherwi• Sdcd ..... Cur.... LPN Ue- (lnl- Pw7

Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

:nl

1 Flllllly, FridoJ lley 15th. Wood

- ·c-.

Dl. Wpm.

....._ a.rr.tt

rniJ .ce, SA

,..,...,._,_,,,.,
Public Sale

•

,,.....,,

CIOPNES..ttAPNESIOr

9181•

n..-

AM* ,_,_. Auetiort Com'*'f,

""" 01 A r .... RoQWod: Ell·
Werling Wlrh p.,_,
With Mortol llolordallon And

_....

P1atw:ad. Salwy: SI.IDGf'Hour, To
!Mart !lend Aaeurne To Cecm•

lui---·-·
&amp; Auction
-

....ONo • -

TIH7I5.

9

Uc:..'llrglnlo, -

Wlnted to Buy

Otoltl pmenlll

OielbUIIIM

BaUf, P.O. lo• 104, JKbon,
OH 45140. Ondllno For ~
plleanto: !W2W2. E...l O!&gt;t&gt;or·
,..., Erftt&gt;loyor.

14

Business

Training

___
-----_,_....

Old HWtt 9

. . . ootNc

boab.

~--Cell10-

'"CUI.

1 BA, newtr 1a: Q dtl•d. 109
Second AYO. UIIIH,_ pd.,
$20$/mo p1 . . r~opoo~~ . 110-m
2171.

Chairs

.

P.M. Sunday 12 Noon 5 P.M.
AI. 141 4 lllloo 011 II. 1 In C..

w.._
lloiJtgorotor

CINn,

No

POlo,

Ouiol,

A•twence And o.poUt

A•

qulrod. 114-44f.15tl.

depoalt
dayo

r~ulr.d,

2bdrm.

trailer,

52 Sporting Goods
A - Aadlwwlo, 44 !loa; UW

5811, 351 ...., . . . I H I -

Antiques

53

Ant,._ ITO_ S1.
!II..., to.__

~IUYor

6M-ti2-23Bt
$.200

plus

••s

25M. E~ .

Fumtahed •parl:nent avr.ilab&amp;e
by
with
..... lng

16tl.

Sell

2T

p

Elotll..

..... ,..,..,..~ Betorw 7p.m.

aN

3

bric: k,

gar:

a..ooma,

full

baMmenll wrr.mltyroom, 2 car
on on. leN, shown by
1
ntment only l04r675--3248

• ar 15:00 PM .
Vlnlon .,..., t2 ICIH of 01k
tlmbw, 2 bedroom, •II eMoc:trk:
,_,._Own., IM-311-1001

Fumishad apl: ~ . utllltl•
pd. Prfvllt•. qu .... 1514 4415 2602.
Fumw..:t EHic'-nc~ i20 Fourttt
A....,ue, GalllpoUs. 1115.-'llo
Utmu.. Pakt, 114 441 4411 .,,_.

1P.II.

GrKIOUII lhtko.g. 1 and 2 .,_.

room apa:1ments a1 VillaQt;
Manor
8nd
RlvwalcH
Ap11:1ments In Ukldllport. From
$1116. Call 110-11112-1781. EDit.

tor Sale
Prtc:o 01 Any
-HomoAIEl-KornoC.O.

ter, GrNt Seleetbl, frM S.t:Up
And Delivery! C.H IM-772-1220.

THI King , _ l!omo, 2 bodrooms, ,...,... some r.p~l,..,
$2,700. 7:3CJ.t:l0 AM or 7:»

8:30 Pll, ---.H:n.

1. . Buddy tc.?O 2 Batt., w~
OW, CA 15JI30 pool. :Jrnl out or

Porter. Call 114--.:t52 • 5:00
1110 Ftlrmonl MJ:$4 GIS Hell, 2
a.druoms, c.ntraiiJr, Uk• N.ur

Th""'1!1r Out, 14,11511. 114-441011!.
1M3 Nashua. 3 bldtoom, 14:~70
wiTh l'lrt2 Olpondo, CA, 01-.
....m.d, oarden IWI, all ap.

.
-,...
- ,,.,.. ....,~
.Oio!:'"·!·
T.v.,,
Slit OCMM

Ul"

FumltUOJ And LM~urnlhn, ll~vt.
or
And St..._ 1114-44
, 304lO~.

1Ht Clayton w..twtna 14112 2
llodr-. Toal £loe!rt.; Elle.
Condition, SOl-Up On ,_od

--

SJS:

With

... Blip boll,- motor, traler ...._
1250.
18ft
~=

IX

Transportat1on

__

.......

,.

I ......,.,

Prison uscapess aru tracked .
(R): en arson task force

lt4-ft2-SIU.

helps pollee. Stereo. []

1113 Ca I ;w ._. :
- I I L E t •41
-

--bodJ--.-

-

. .

h

0

•..._.1131.

5

'

1111-a.-. 2 •. -

""""

condiTion.

- -- -ft"".-

.... s,n..
· ,..

~.

.

fa., ::.,'~!

. . . . . .

7

'Ead:.

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

55

Building

-----~les

- . . Claiodo-·~OHCelt10-

I2SCID. -rna.

56

81

problems when they move ro

1182 Sulroru GL so.
a
-Air-Ca-.1300.
,.._, l14-.11t-2ll4 ..... F«
·~...,
..,., 1514--37'1:2111.
fkl,gara 8 I :•II
ling.

.....

S2tlll, · - ·

Curtll:

......

Beverly Hills.

--

..........
w

to control their lust. Sfereo .

fimayIllhaveMyateryt
The brewery
to
sold; Helen

1 p;w-

be

••

•...

WHY...

..

- - IJ&amp;In.- eon. TooBigC._I_ _
dillon; k - tiOiorI

...

.....

c:yle. ~Allor 5 P.ll.

J.W. Conutnrdlwo. -

..... - .
h6ah -ml' 1Slrylortt,
•~
I mulll
aoJL~I--_

ep.

.....

II

rounds, !rom Atlantic City,

u&amp;a.....-.4m:a.

1M= .-., AKC
a

T...._ 5 opood, - · ~
• ~ akolng a2;-

. . . . t\45G, Cllll 1M 2411101

~=~·~
So;rlle Tri ........... -

30041U301.

- 4::10 P.ll.

,_01*-_a_.otr,

8

$4.- ._..ZII,Aftw..,._

•• 0284

1111 Dodgl Sf' 1 I 4 U. PI,

Tolai ..,.~...-uta
e-. • (101 - &amp;
I I 8 1o CIII1MDCJM, ....

o. a

a.- -

~ roo~

rlop;;$0

"*''ILLJ

... , .....

;All aa.,: CF&amp; ,.._

Zl,l'IO

-.

&amp;13,DCIO .....

....... JOW7I.

''*lfL, .......... ,....

,,
.. .....
m2

Building, -

2

&amp;

e.!r

,._ _,. ITO

bwner frorwd"a Au R
ckletvaly 81 Rite AW " •
Tho .... _ .......

.. ---=...
.. .-·-- . .. ::: .:;.
~ ~

.-:s ·::..

z

I

-·-

- -!"'-' F-110 ......

_,_•••lw.

Z'ltiL

IOIH

\

a..., $ ..... ..... ....... . . . S844-EEilecb~;;lcall~··~--.,..__.,_
- - - · ..,
"'Y -. ~
RefrtglrMion

PIQil101-1U0«104-

f!ITing.--.
A tllu...,

*'

ti. IM-ea-liMt,

FL£ASI.., ENGW:U

-~: LA,
"""",_
F« FlooK-.
Olio
1.11., Bath,
·
prd,C)e &amp;1.........
late 7 ?~
-W l l o
WI f~~'
lloiJig.
T- N o - Cot- ENFORCER II: -

v-S
t -Oh.
,n
-,_,
a.&amp; ~

=..:. =~

,..a, • ..,....,....
. - . . . . . o.&amp;o. 1m

.,..... ~- a.zoo

o.a.o.-o.&amp;o.

--

__ .. __ _

1111-11111.

or

...,

.....
I'
'
R'PwDIIwl
~,.,.

fGTfl'-1!11 . . . . ., .
Qt, I ~ baa 7 • a
~ 301 1a IJ'I or

Oulbl•-·
, ..........
orpn, A-1 oundldun, ..,.. . .

PILIIIblng &amp;
Healing

1171

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

....

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

12 Trucks tor Sale

~

7

I

I

~-..-....82

WEST

EAST

.,Q.
••

tAKQ 8532

'K10 987652
t7
tKQ

.

• Qt 32

SOUTH

The road home is
found by counting

. ..

'J
3
t

K 10 8
+A9865t3 2

Vulnerable East-West
Dealer: South

Last year at tile Sunday Times tour· Soul~
W.sr Norlll East
nament in London, the World Women 's 5 +
Pass
All pass
Pairs and Teams champions from the
United SLates, Karen McCallum and
Ope ning lead + 7
Kern Shuman , were slated to play.
However, Shuman had to withdraw at ' - - - - - - -- - ----1
the last moment, so McCallum teamed
up with Sally Horton. a World Wom· j ruffed and cashed the club ace. Needen 's Teams champion from Britain. ing to lind the diamond queen for her
For this year's event, also sponsored contract, Horton embarked on a jourby the Macallan Malt Whisky Compa· ney of discovery. She played a heart-to
ny,. McCallum and Horton revoved dummy 's ace, ruffed a spade in baild ,
theor partn~rshop . Lack of practice ruffed the heart jack in the dummy
~orked aga~nst them on such a strong and ruffed another spade in baiMI.
held, but Horton played today's hand West, realizing he would be endplayed
if he overruffed, discarded a heart .
perleetly.
Horton opened with the maximum But deelarer exited with a trump. :
pre-empt, five clubs. In response,
Now West could lead a heart safely
McCallum deeided that they were un· as dummy was out of trumps, but
hkely to make exactly II tricks. Ei· when East discarded, the hand b&amp;d
ther the hands would fit well and they counted out. West was known to have
would make a slam, or they would fit begun woth 2·8+2 diStribution. Horbadly and not even make a game. This ton ruffed West's heart. played a di.amadc the •ix-club bid logical.
mond to dummy's ace and fi~ the
West, trying to find a safe lead, diamond 10 for her contract.
.
opened witb thP. soade S4lven. Declarer
©-......,'""&amp;lEU :w AlltL "

••

The World Almanac ®Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS

Antwer to PrewiOUI Puute

36 Cut of moat
37 Countleoo

I E pluribus 5 HI or bye
9 Buddhism
type
12 Place ·

40 Common
practice
42 Incorrect

(preS.)
43 llrs. In
tladrld
44 Spanl•h gold
46 Swift aircraft

confidence

13 Comedian
SMner
14 In the past
15 Negative

(abbr.)
48 High up
(2 wda.)
50 Halla

command

(cont.)
16 Surface
maasurea
17 Relative
18 Prophet
20 Birthmark
22 Sign at sell·
out (abbr.l
23 Ught-feother
24 Lilt leHer
27 US eoldlers
29 Informal

53 Animal
garden
54 lllld
uplotlva
56 Hawaiian
foodlloh
58 Containing
nllrogtn
59 Roof

DOWN

overhang

I Typo of boon
2 Gao lor signs
3 Skoloton pa~
4 L111Jtndo
5 Soft cloth

60 Motion

picture
6t - and Ink

language

33 llo1t

62 Water craft

repulsln

63 Female blrda

35 Small sword

6 Comparative
suffix

liZ.

ASI"RO-GRAPH

ttlllt2.

,..,

..,.__

~CSW.a-~

~~~"';::

. .

..
.,.. __
---1--___ ..... .........
-..tP I

• J 10 7

a

Pa4ioa. ~ Dill
JU.
Lltl, Good Ooodl-. a,ooo Sl~ llo, ~ E&amp;. 21

2

.,.

PHILLIP
ALDER

Roberllloll

Anol - .

. . Do: -

'tAJ9
A 65

10:30 (f) Well Vlrglnle Report
Textt Connec11on Steroo.
10:35 (]) MOVIE: Don't Look Back:
The Story of LeRoy Setcliel
Ptlge (2:00)
11 :00(2). Clla (J). tmliD

$4,2DO; tW7 Oorlp

['3'"-..,~~·~

~11-12

NORTH

+J 109 6

a

,..
Air,~=-~ !l:::i

. . . . . . . . . . . . WL
A ,
al
!: SF I i ad
rrr puppJ, 3 .... Geo Prta. hllch" ct, ....
- • •.. ..._ r ••·
- - - 1 0 1 - o l :.n.ne
colt --7Tll-lpwo or w;
0
uw
1 IM-JID..3011

1111:

7

1~1111m

Co. -E¥AII!Iam-_

-Or~- . . ...
r..ct.
I -GrMIAlwo,
Fw

=&amp;IC

od....._.Dictt-

BRIDGE

powe"': Gwen finds
romance. Slereo. 0
(J) Newo
IIJal
PIImtrTime Uve
Stereo.
(1) Ouol ... or Eitel 0
(f) Under Fire
l!ll18 Hunter C
On stoge Sfereo.
aWortdCD 700 Club With 1'81

AN' MY HOUSE
IS A MESS I!
FETCH ME
TH' BROOM
QIJICIC I!

112-1621eal.awa;..
Dnlo
s-.v..
-.
1117 Cldl Dlla 11. VInyl Top. 0 I F Cr.- Rd. ,.... . . .
Good ~ Ellal... Concltlont ptloo, plel;up. ... _ . , . -

S!ereo. 0
10:00 (2)11 0 L.A. Lew Vsn

BARNEY

In---·~

Myote~o•

Owen questions a psychic's

ot--, ttlt - · 110- .~or;-._ OH , _ . . , _

IIYII hw

(ID Fethor Dowtlng

..,......_

I

...
='
--pullo--..
........
-. ...... -z.a .... u-.-.

MCtiJ

:~o...'!;"*ae-"mc..~

N.J . (L)

a LArry King Llvel

Dodgo -by Oowpr

;

~ 1oVIE: Howling IV: The
OriGinal NightmaN IRI (2:00)
a llalhvlllo Now Storeo
Morrison {30-1 , 26 KOs) vs
An Tu&lt;:ker (20-3-1 ). 10

•

t-

Aon'o Tl Sontae,

ol Slephen's affair.(P!

Top Rink Boxing
Heavyweight boot: Tommy

I

e:.
-.Oio:--...~
,._ ~-c wBirl.~~

kn~

@

Aorotlonllot_........__

-

,

RECORD.

Ail-

EVANS, 1aC!C90't, OH. , _

ZP

NO... BEO.W6E I H6-VE A
PERFECr ATTENO&lt;I.NCE

BEcALI5E
YOO'RE60
M&amp;\NAND
ROTTEN":?

,... (i.
---~
.......

Sleroo. []

Stereo.
9:00 C2l8 0 Chtere (Season
Finale) Woody and Kelly try

..,.......

,..., [aporlol= c;; ....., MofM&amp;. RooM • aR'

,......_

(A)

(ID You Aoked lor It, Agoin

IOtdww And -

-

I (RI(2:30)

(Jio

Stereo.
l!ll• Beverly Hllto, 90210
Two teenagers experience

Thundortilnl, ..~ cond.,
$1,000 or beot -114-251-1143.
1182 Dodgo AtiH , AT, IC, TS,
PB, CC, IOn/Whlto • wort.
114 441 3375.

--~~

0

a

-

Pets tor Sale

.n

Ground 1ldl J:4 Poal • ' '

goes to the doctor to find out
if she Is pregnant. (Rl Stereo.
. 0 -Murder, SIMI Wrote
Crooto tnd Cheae
a Pti1111Newt Q
(ID Thet't My Dog Stereo.
1:30 tml~MOVIE: The

JET

-----=

614-1112-"1010 ...,...

l!ll18 Tile Slmpaono P.:large

EHKANDMEEK

:

00 Lt. 114-8-12117 Allor
nil
1t7'l ..... c 1
Benz. - S£,
Sloop_ ... _ _ _
t
JM:III2.. .... lniMior, 1514ft2-nn «

--·? ......
.........
... ........

KIW

lo.
1230. ,., -·~•oo.r..GIIH
h ; ....
Roqulro;d. Coli
....
~Orl14 Ul 1125

P•ychotogy

amID 112111 Top Capo

,.....,_ oood condlllon., SIDD,

A
z.~Briggi&amp;Sirat­
.._ ........ 111l

-Ina.

";~:t2·
•
.. ..... - p l t

cancer. Stereo. C
Ill World of AbliOtmal

' I . . . . . . . Cilia . . .

1111 Sc:ofty Sp c "

»r; ~ 2 r!.;..,&lt;M

33N.. ..... _ . . . . . _ . ,_
0..... Nubt:kln "
~,.:a:
$235: t..hrr1ng A- Adrl
•
·2111

Nice. deM 2 or 3 • 1 own

-

0

Frontlera A new drug offers
hope tor women with ovarian

Motor Homes

t:OOFI,,._ _ _ _

Autos for Sale

»r;

llol&gt;llo H"""' P•rl&lt;. Rt.

mo

To Bonk Aor:lrllmod

,.

DoW...._, ......, ... . - ann - . $300. IM-.Ib...._
46 Space for Rent
Rill ~ MD WI I 1 A¥e, --trollw.-boL
FREE IISTALI.Al1011
401:41 buUdlnv tor :.n1 : Saturswn•••o POOl.S
day lhrv T""rodoy. 114-+lt-7750.
-. . . . n
. -..-s,
. n.,al ..... - .
Only 1111.00 -

1fT Wanted to Rent

'Rintom for a Deed Man'
ABC Movie Special (2:00)
(1) Sclenttflc Amerlctn

campen&amp;

~- Ohla.1-

.....

Lansing, Mich . (L)
a Crouflre
7:35 (]) Major League Baoebllll
Pittsburgh Pirates at Adanta
Braves (L)
8:00 (2)8 liZ DIH.,.nt Wortd
(Season Finale) The day for
Whitley's fairy-tale wedding

a

~ 10
- • c.n.T
SloctLllndi
Aon

...., 1450. 111 -

5651.Mo-wv.

- ........

I' I I 1 I

By Pbllllp Alder

arriv-es. Stereo. Q
(J) MOVIE: A Touch of Clau
(PG) (2:00)
Ill I)) 8 MOVIE:

-·

fl.

Stir Stereo.

@ LPBT Bowtlng From

··-. &amp;:m; G.rdln

WO 05 11,M.
_. . . . . . , _

7

, 1 ~., 2 Batho,

- - . Clroel Soloctlonl
llony AI POO Down, Anrl Tau
Ovoi , . , __ Call 1 - 511
5111.

V.A.C.a..o..,.
C... _

SI..,Wng roomt witt. c:oo6llfl9.
Atao ll'llter ~ - All hook ups.
CaH after 2.00 p.m., ]04.1'7J,

Rio-.,..__.,.._ _49_ _F_o_r_L_e_a_se_ __

Down. II..... llowodl1325.

-

~

Rooms
Bnnd ,... Kanmare ...._,
S300:
- - .......
Room~ tor rene . weak or monltt.
diUoner, 1150; 114-tl::l-llCI:Z •

Starting at t120tmo. Gallla Ho4et
114 •~Meo .

pip,-··--

AI.I.EYOOP

·-.. ....-.B--::.s
. ._,.__ _•m-1--•
..... __ --.-----11,000
- .....::-... ...ul . . . . . r

Furnished

Country

fi1.SOO. 0r -

~
$lS..SitH5

0

: mlnlotun -

----·

,..,... X

-..;n.

........
so~nct~

Alllo

!'

Accessories

Pll,

11185 W\ncleor 2br, FUlly Fur-

l4rdl0

~

J

One bedloo:n apl tOf rent , 304615-2218.

45

a .. I
Auto Parts &amp;

pr;ld. Ooj;ooh roq"od.

ComnMrelal Sptoa To Rani In
0111; HIN, 1,100 Sq. A . 814-W62121.

Lol,
1..,

O

fum'ad. Wat..-,

pllanceo, tOJaa dor:k, IM,$00.
. . . moot•, 304475-1110 Of 11'53514.

Dry~t ~

- · Col
Q

·~110.

ga-

am 1111 Wheel of Fortune 0
liZ e Fomlly Feud

-

614-44-4345 after $p.m.

S$00 Oft -

Walhlr I

-

UoHm 1 Be*oom ApartiMnt,

Range, r.trig.

DE X NET

..

Stereo. D
I[) MecQYvor Stereo. O
@ SportaCentor
aM-ytlne
CD The Waltona
7:05 (]) Addama Family
7:30 (2)8 0 Jroop~~rdyl []
l!l Now It Can a. 'rota
Ill II El!lfrtalnment Tonight

62 Wanted to Buy

pOl·...,
2050

The elderly gentleman
le f I the bank shaking
h1s head and rnunering out
loud, ") remember when the
signs in the bank said . "Next
Window Please.· Now they
·read, · .. . .. . . _,...

0

Stereo. Q
I)) II Momo'a Fomlly

brond 1111.

NQ ont BR unfurnished •PI·

32 Mobile Homes

'

_..,~

mower 1800. GMien ._. . .
mower $1,200. »&gt; 1115 JGll..

Complat..y Renou-•ttd: 2 Full

AI. 2 North, 3 mO. from Pt. PIT,

,_,

15,1115, - · 7 North,-

!

F
I Bllro, Jt5:
IP
M ··-. 125 Call
1 1 4 1 AAw 4:30 P.M.

Fumlllhed Ap.:1ment, 1br, nail
lo Ubrary, partlng, tentrlll hMt,

8 rooms, 2 blths, 5 acra land,
304:1Q5...3671 lftar 3:00PM.

KUBOTA
S.loo,Pwto,HURST tRACTOR SALES
21 HP4 WD - ; : I l l HP 4 WD

For -

I

L._..L....L....J..--l.....J .,

l!ll18 St. Trek: The Nell
o.n...tlonC
1121e Entert8'rnment Tonight

. . . ......

197'1. 304-t1S-2531 ot 5M-S-

H~oric:al ArN Cor....- Lot , 816
U.in St. Pt. Pluunl, W. V•.

S.nd Hill Rood,

IN.:~!

1

I

;5 1111 Jeope:dyl C

75 Boats &amp; Motors
Farm
tor sa1e
Ohio

-Q--IfTI)
=w_. ...........
-.,...;,...Ito....
·. . . ..---blo ..-. . . . ••
=
..._...
=u;:-- ..... - .. . .--Hut--.
5200. 114-446-111l

ue 0338,

good-.-.-

...,.

~.a

;

Mow«,STINt,

814

old.

--4prr;

..... (31" _ , w i t h

--SII.IMIG

prtYIIogoo. 304-882-25M.

Country ltomo,

----

Howe's

llochlrwry,
Jooban,
: 1 - 4.

1

Ill MacNell/lollre
NewallourQ
lljlll Married... With Chlklnln

Cuntv01oro. Olliw E·

qulpnwnt

Mid

PI-.WY.
Buy or MI. Alwwinl ""
m,
1 tN E. Main
P
-rHou,.: M.T.W. 10:00 u:t.
p.m., SundiJ 1:00 to 1:00 ,_..
Ill 1192 2526.
- c - - - - c -Ciiolr eonlng I -wing. ._

54 Miscellaneous
BEAUTIFUL APAimiENTS AT
Merchandise
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 531 Jor:koon Pllur 1991 Wlunl 11hp -.g from $112/rno. Walk to ehop I
movlee. Cd 1514

BalM, l UrJ41 BM~ . Hew
HYAC, New Carpal . AVIUab'Juno 15114-446-2205.

.....
.
-.-.a ... - .
coudl.. qlw!

s-. .__, T - 12 HP fliiO.

7

2 BR apartmenta In Mldd ..poft,
nawty rtmodaled, low utllit._t,
no pata, 1220 per monllh,

1bdrm, •partnw1t, no p.tl,
1225, utllllioo lnc;L, dopoelt, IM1192-2218.

BEAIJTIFUL HOUSE FOR SALE

Triplo dwi:l SS -

Orille

c...

R .......
$15. - . . . . . JD'

14

S350 Each, 11110 For ~ .......
Includes $1100 For All 'Tllrll. ~ - ·
Att.r ' :30P.II.

3 BR, I both, ~::;x·
woodbuming fireplace. 6

lloord~Troi~

D:iwa-'s lJc:enee. Good
AM
o
D:iw tn ConaeatMI Tr11fk
ArNo. Goad e.......ratlon
And
Orgonlutlon
Sldllo,
Pvnotuol, And Ablo To Ao

&lt;m

DINETTES: Wood Bar 114.!15
-And.-

Arlngol$0. -Good~
Cana I'M 311
I'AII

utiiRioo, dofiooK, 1bdmr. duplex,

-In Gollia
County
O.lllpollo/8ldwoll}. High kl Drfvw·· UcenM

Solo, Thuto, Frt, Sol.
Moy 1l,15,11. I:OCIAII to UOPtl. ~ And O.u , rnwll..
3DU7Uilt. ..... _
..... Ololr- PrAnol. Hon: Ao
PIPI.,II. I 2 . - - Sc...._.Ae tla11f1 If s.luy:

Apartmem
for Rant

381-4121.

3221.

-

7

.m~llllvlng

Bo• 122.
457M.

Drawers 144,15; Twin ts

ms.t.

'fd,, corner~ Rand I Pereh s( tenary.
k.n.auga. 1514-441-'M73.

44

-a- -01

In llld· OPEN: 1 Oeyo A - I A.11. · I

Nk:. 12'd0' 2 bedrooms 1g

""' -AIM To Waft
01 A T11rn
- Aa ·Plf1
Punetuot
And

Ing,-e--.-.
...
.,.-.....,..a.

BEOAOOtl:
(2161
: • o.-

2bdnn. moOiio l!omo
d - . 114-1112-5851.

: lloy IS-It, 101 112 - h " · Good Communleollon And Or·
DriYing ·
. ........... Creta, no.wa.
-

1 bedroom tr1Uer, PlY own
utllllloe plus rlopoolt, ~752535.

2021 Marq....ne Aw, 5 yr. okt,
ell brick n.lnten~~nce he

j)_Q _

...............
___ ......,...,:_

100

I'll--.
Moron--.
And

BUONNE

(lJ

Suzuki AMID rr 4c)Lb. 1 yr.

.......... Ooll.-.-.

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

llrlo -E.O.E. Including
-""
Rotum """'lerltlon
poat:narbd by May

ss

-.-..

245-6238.

""'" Aolft1VW81or
- -

.. ldi . _. -

-

UVIHG ROell: Anol a.lr
S119 And Up: Cdloo &amp;rrl
Ta- 111 And Up: Aoekera 511.

1bdrm..,
1225mo.,
utiiKioe, -.rrlly roqulrod, no polo, IM-1112-2218

lnd Of' I hMAh .....ted fWd.
Mulll ha¥1 uperlaa In otHoe

-a'

ltollond 11o1to,
Boloro, .._.. • ""' - .
Plowo, Dlob, Com

For Solo: -

qulrwd. no ~M~• pilla, 114-i'i2·

...... .,..,. I'IHablt transport•
lion N ._ wiling lo ..,.._ ftu: -

Cere

Aellplle

- - -. . . . . . OIIio.
ptu:a-

30110.

7

c.r

. . _ , . . , Hwdwwo,

--.-·
..................._..
·-

2 t:edrvoma, c:orner kill priced
In 20'o, 107 l.oc;IIOI St, ~­
lOti, 31)4..175-1818.

Clh6o

lap-·-SS--w/2
-

400 Sol One Or - . 1111.

Newtr In Addlac:
SWAIN
houaa.
Tara.
114--t112-6304, 1-.Q:IS.
AUCTION ' RJAIIITUIIE. R
Ollw " ·
~
Nk:e eflld.ncy cattaae, un6qua
end be.uttful, ~
worto-..a~
Untumi:INd 2bdrm. how4:,
VI'RA AIRIITIIIE
BARGAINS GALORE!

2 bedroom lraller, unfumlahed,
no pots, by appointment
call bOiwao t:OOAII l 5:00PM
onty, 304.a&amp;2 382fii.

31 Homes for Sale

lor EIIIRAJER Floo ~ For
. - . -Guo-*
[ft 7 I au, OIFOAClA At

~~

OtOirtct. You Poy Elootrtc.
- . .. mo ~- 110-387Aoc:br: uc. conct, S15. ••
0415, 114-317-1180.

'*%= :~ ~room

•

of

00
The Jefleraone ~
Ill II lnaldt Edition

-XLI00,·--

........ Gmol, Slone,
Car; 4@. Etc. 614-

7

ptu:a -

9cMol

~

Q,_.,
.,_.........._
tnauct.
u..
P.nlo"'uecee -'lng with -

Poma Of,

........
,
--.....112 1 1 .
PICKEHS RJRHITUAE

Jorrlcho Rd. Pl PI
._ IJY,
In RuHand, coli :104-415-14511.
$225/mo.
pkla
utllhlea I
deP*t, ref.t•M:e~ raqulr.d. Porta.bea .......,illar . . ....._
114:251-11'13 al• I p.M.
ANdy Juno 3rd, 614-1112·7503.

Krvor

the

laflers

CAlli

@Up ClaM
CD New ZOII'O Stereo. 0
8:35 (]) Andy GrtUIHh
7:0013j8 0-oiFOTiune

61 Farm Equipment

IOWIFLEASI

-

$35 . -..15-1224.

~..

11 A. Mil 3ml From GlllipoHs.
Cod Hofnt,_ ] 01 s a,·. L.A.
0 . . Kltc:hon, Both. ""II S...
ment, Cl, a.m. Gl,..ge. lm:nediattd Posa ...lon 6 M-4460857

lOX 72WI,
457M.

..

Conyo&lt;ll In _ , _ ,

.

100 ~5-o:J!Iol .

offtce,

port- tllno, _ , . . , . po...,rod,
..,., to: eJo Dolly _,..., PO

~e:oa

·~~gynwtt•t

. . . Sol ...,

Vending Route: Local. We Hava
TheN"'"' lbchln., Making A
NK:. SINdy Cuh lneorno. I·

121$.

•

"S:CIIL 1311. """' limo.

•

PROCESSOR, ...... up Ia $1000
a w.k prx ring HUOIFKA
........... WiM lrWn. 1-2'16-324-.

Pt. Pleasant
&amp; Vlclnhy

. .... '

'IENO.

Real Estate

T-.

Qonp TliiO P•UIOI Rood,
11oy 14th, 11111.
rCiollwo AI Sluo, Wonclot

-od

Oulcll:? No W.,t But Wa Hllve A
Goad, SIMdJ, Atfatdoblo, Buol,_, Won't Lat. t..lJ00-284-

on !bile

M.

1 BA hou8l ICroA from tM
Unlu-ttaltr ot Rio Grande. &amp;'J4.
388-.
Nlerl """' MO. T., opooo~

2bdnn.

54 lascellaneous
llerdlandlse

.. .

room,

kitchen, bllh, Ded.,, Oh. 513:
254-6088 or 114-11t2-27St

_ , 1n

:m.

IIIIIIQ. ....000 • f12.0001'1•. 1·
101 IU 'W Ell. Glltea For

y-o

P.tl.

INOllC(I

OHIO

doiJ

. . ...,

3 Bod.- - . 2 IIIIo• Fram
Gallipolis, 0opoo1t Roqulrod,
$325/llo. I~ Allor 8

Business
Opportunity

21

.,.,,

ptuo, 4
old. _, ~
conct.. l ....... '"''

2 Bedroom Hou.., Down Rt.7, 3
Mlln
Ou-lfloottlng
River.
$2801mo. Aat.renc. Raqutr.d.
6~1615, 15.,.._,...1243.

Q Rear range

e

. . Andy Qrlffllll
I[) Bcooby Doo

$125/lno., 2bdrm., lhrtng

br

AFTLA
1
r-r1 ........,.1
16--r-11 ~

a Wortd Todloy
D Rllll]n Tin, K·l Cop
Stereo. 1;1
8:05 (]) Beverly HlllbUIIoa
8:30 (2)8 0 NBC Newa 0
l!l Saved by the Bell
Ill II I)) ABC New• IJ.
(1) Wild A - Stereo. E;J
Squert One TV Slereo.

7

41 Houses for Rent

_ _ _ __;_~ Edlro4

Kl

I[) Smurta !,1 .
@ Amerlcl'a Cup (Conti

NO. MAAM , NOT~IN6 SER IOUS .. .

WOlD

I I' 1 I I
, ~~ 1N r

\Zl
/li Reeding Rainbow 0
l!ll18 Fullljaute 0

L..._ _ _ __

~

3 bedroom 2 llcwy home,
....._
&amp; dopoolt roqulrod.
304-&amp;TWm.

F1nancial

1-~73&amp;-liiOO

EltM17NS

30~

3838.

wldy. F,_ '""'- C . - .

•

;'

iJ~

I

8:oo C2l8 Ill
(J) • 112111
ONewa
l!l Vlcleo Power
Squero One TV Stereo.

'

d_~

PUlZLU

low IO form lour , irnple word3

a

~

Rentals

'lWlll' ALL AREAS! Shoto your
time wtlh ... You'll k)¥t the
oornpMJ. 1.-o.tl2-1351..

Yard Sale

r

;;_r----~
"""

TIIATDAILT

11

four scram bled words be-

EVENING

I

loti joining P~nt 100% owr.r
llnonclng
$101.41
per month
buvo_ aft attlvoo
lots . 304-675-

Wanted to Do

...... """''"~~ end ocld joW,
fully ,_rod, IM-1112-1172.

..... of . . . MI.

wlllr, I044'JI.Itl1.

zn2.

J. I,._.

-..~ ~·

•

50 W£ (0/11·
': Pf?.OMIS€D .. .

~

!{-.

......, cnl
tow olroo lor

• • \110, .,.

!line_ ...... ..,.,...
SIOO.ortndltw• dEar

7

18

FricloJ

lfll Fon1 E

U6T foii(,IIT..

!,'_?,

loti In New Hawen
100'%
OWMr fil'lllnelng •t h0t.46 per
month buye •• th,.. loti, •30o':
675-2722.

......
Pw•woj
E
l -or" · ..,._.tolnly,
Nlum, r-

1

~IP... UJ£

13 Yana &amp; 4 WD's

I

AAD GUDYS
Wl\tlT£0 oQ
W W COT :C.
TO Dl NN£10! ...

The Dally

.

Television
Viewing

I WAATED TO W Ttl A/NJVIE

month, ·~.:;- ol four loll
AYaiLable,
5-2722.

6

~ e:KI

PNn ~ .Am
WATIOO-

u.r OI!T

YIIIJ 9Ji#5(fi:J WE'

r,1erchand1Se

P"

~ IS A (.RUUAL

~y .. ot:t.Y ~&gt; ~Y
I~~ 1to M~ (t,ttUI

........

1---===---5I

~

Lolo In Gallipolis F..,., • 100%
ow•r financing Ill $18.64 per

a- .. Huoly. -

To • good hoMe: 1 lotntl'J
mom Cll I tw lhlw 1rlllnld kittan. 11t 4ti1Ul

:t:::

Old

~~liZ.

72 Truckllor s.ll

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

'"'**of ••ClaiAew
• • tncltne......
boa
...,.
7

Ooc:b. I.Lt*&amp;.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
----

BORN LOSER

WlthrNfthoul Fomo Equlprnont,
C.ttlo. IM-381-41110.

-CutlnC!Nnb,-Io
TU.AIL-lWJ.
...._.,... a

-

=.,'1:;
R.

Homo,
3Bro 1 2 B.otho, Born, Sovorol
Buhalngo,
Collar
Soli

-:~•

Mint ..._ T,.. To Qi u

W/2Yr.

13 &amp;cr..

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

Fora.eor.-w ..-.. 12r," :=;
49

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

14, 1992

Thursday, May 14, 1992

._

Po&amp; · T) lul:ndiw concepts you 've
Sobn ~could be eHec...., da : ••• ill the year ahead. It
you'I be inspired to tai&lt;e posl·
.., - - i n this BrM.

-lire

" 10-.

TM. . II(Afoil a •1 201 You might
~
clilfiCut1 decision
lod8r- SBi;TI&amp;ol"""'"" that could
---.wyoutryto

ilo _ . , -

lor Ill c:onc:emed, II

_ . 001. Get a jump on life by

wiid&amp;i-di"V lhe infb!nces governing

you in the year ahead . Send for Taurus'

you eain your daily bread .

Astro-Graph predictions today by moil·

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Notr. 22) Try to worl&lt;

ing $1.25 plus a long, self-addressed ,
stamped envelope to Astro Graph, c/o
this newspaper. P.O. Box 91428, Cleveland , OH 44101-3428 . Be sure to state

!rom an organized agenda today. If you
don't have proper guidelines. there 's a
chance you oould merely spin your
wheels and accomplish little.

your zodiac sign.
GEMINI (Mey 21-June 20) Your mosl

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21)
Something of S&lt;Jbstance Is coming to

substantial rewards 1oday are likely to
come from situations In which you face
the greatest cflallenges. Don't let obstacle awareness cause you to chicken

you , but as of now. you haven't been
able to put it in your pocket. T oday's
happenings behind the scenes might
h~p to br~ak the logjam

7

out
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 11) AeCANCER (June Z1-July 22) In order to ! member who you are and why you're
be successful today, you must be slngu- , tllere, and you'll be eble to deal suclorly devotnd to one type oe activity. It • cesslully with alaroeilroup today. Don't
could be eUher all work or all play, but be lntlmtdated by ii toi' of S1range faces.
don 't attempt to mix the two.
AQUARIUS (Jan. .,..... 18) Your
LEO (Julr 23-Aug. 22) An unusual shl« probabilities for achieving an lmporlant
in conditions today could prove to be a
bit mystifying. If you're unable to perceive its direction, It migh1 hamper your

objective look good today, provided
you ,have a continu~ty to your efforts.
Don t operate in a piecemeal fashion .

success.
PISCES (Feb. 20-Morclt 20) Protacl ·
VIRGO (Aug. 23-SepL 22) An endeavor ' your Interests today, but don't do It In a
you're presently Involved in requires way that could Inconvenience others Inmore knowledge than you possess. ; volved In the endeavor. Being too selfSeek counselors, bul be absolutely cer- serving will be detrimental lor all .

tain they know a lot more than you do.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22) If you're enlerprislng loday. you might figure oul a

ARIES (Mafclo 21-April IS) Your lu&lt;:k
will be proportlona1e 10 your lndustrl·
ousness loday. The herder you strive,

way to gain a substantial return trom a
source that Is not the one from which

the more llkety you'll be rewarded tor
the efforts you expend .

'

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PREV IOUS SOLUTION: '" A movie is like a person . Either you trust
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Mike Nichols.
It or ..,

you don 't. " -

() 1ft2 try HEA. N'l:

14 .

�Page-12-The Dally Senlloel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, May 14, 1992

Prosecutor to seek new trial for officer in King case
LOS ANGELES (AP) - A
judge will have the final say on a
prosecutor's wish to retry one of
the police officers charged in the
beating of Rodney King and to
hold !he new trial m a city, not a
suburb.
Meanwhile, four alleged gang
members were to be arraigned
today in !he televised attack on a
truck driver !hat occurred as riots
erupted after the officers were
acquiued on most of the charges.
District Attorney Ira Reiner said
Damian Monroe "Football"
Williams, 19, Henry Keith "Kiki"
Watson, 27, and Antoine "Twan"
Miller, 20, faced charges of

attempted murder, aggravated mayhem , torture and second-degree
robbery. Gary Williams, 33, faced
one count of second-degree robbery.
The four black men were arrested Tuesday in the April ?9 beating
of while truck driver Reginald
Denny. Authorities said they were
affiliated with a street gang called
the 8-Trey Gangster Crips.
On Wednesday night, a crowd
from a gang unity march near the
nash point of the rioting banged on
sheriffs squad cars responding to
disturbance calls.
About 300 law officers and
National Guardsmen set up a com-

mand post and authorities cordoned
off an eighr-block area, bur rhe
crowd of abour 200 people dispersed withoul additional incidenL
No injuries or arrests were reponed.
The riors were touched off by a
jury verdicl acquitting three white
officers of all charges in the heal·
ing of King, who is black, and
acquirting Officer Laurence Powell
of aU but one charge.
Reiner said he would ask Superior Coun Judge Sranley Weisberg
on Friday 10 retry Powell on a
charge of assauh under color of
authorily, which the jury had deadlocked on.

The prosecutor also said he
wanted the relrialto be held in Los
Angeles Counly or some other
urban area The frrsr Dial was held
in suburban Simi Valley.
"I undersLand rhere are many
people !hal feel !hal 10 retry Laurence Powell on this one charge is
lo reopen wounds," Reiner said.
"My feeling is !hal healing begins
wirh justice and justice was not
done in the Rodney King case."
Weisberg, who presided over
the firsllrial, would decide whether
IO gran! a relrial and where il
would be held. An appeals coun
order !hal moved the trial oul of

Los Angeles Counry because of the
highly charged political silualion
there remains in effect.
Powell's allorney , Michael
Slone, did not rerum relephon e
calls Wednesday.
Meanwhile, about 4,CXXJ National Guard troops from a 10,000srrong force wirhdrew from the
ciry. Gov. Pete Wilson had ordered
the troops 10 Los Angeles to help
resra-e order.
"We did a good job. I felt good
ahour il," said Guardsman Ronald
de Jesus. "The people made me
feel good aboul il''
Wilson said the remaining 6,000

Ohio Lotterv

Alzado

~

cancer
victim

rroops would leave gradually.
About 3,000 Marines and Army
trOOpS were withdrawn lasl week.
Fift y-onc people died and 2,383
were hun in the riots. Damage esti ·
mates approached $800 million and
thousands of homes and businesses
were burned down.

Pick 3: 344
Pick 4:3481!

Now you know..
Sla very was
outlawed in U.S.
territories in 1862.

PageS

Low tonighl in mid-50s. Clear.
Saturday1 sunny. High in mid-

HOs.

Presidenl Bush on Wednesday
announced more federal assislance
for Los Angeles - a $600 miltion
loan package for rebuilding
burned-out homes and businesses.
The administration has now designated S1.2 billion in loans, grants
and other assisrance for the ciry.

--

·- -- -

Vol. 43, No. 10

Copyrlghled

1992

2 Sectlona, 14 Pagea 25 oenll

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, May 15,1992

A Multimedia Inc. NewaDaoer

Rep. Miller will remain
in congressional race
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PATIENT ARRIVES· Here, workers from
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ter yesterday in the counly. The disaster was a
bus wreck near a chemical spill or ammonia
hydroxide. This particular patient, while getting
off the bus, was overcome by tbe fumes of the
chemical and was struck by a car.

Sierra Club
sends letter
to Corps
By J]M FREEMAN
OVP News SLaff
The Ohio Chapter of rhc Sierra
Club submined a leiter to the U.S.
Army Corps of Engineers Huntingron Districl office calling for the
Corps 10 deny American Elecrric
Power a permir 10 cons01JCI a limebarge unloading facility and a land fill near the Gavin electric gcnernl·
ing planr, borh critical ro AEP's
proposed inslallalion of nue -gas
scrubbers al tl1e Sile.
The 14 -page lcuer, submiued
May 12, calls for a full environmental impacl statement.
The lcllcr was submiued 10 the
Corps in lieu of spoken testimony
at a public hearing which was held
May 4 at Meigs High School ,
Pomeroy.
More than I ,200 people auended the hearing wirh rhe norable
cxceprion of lhc Sierra Club, which
had originally called for the public
hearmg. AEP's proposal 10 install
flue-gas scrubbers al the Gavin
Planr drew unanimous supporl ar
the hearing.
The lcucr, signed by Ned Ford
of the Oh1o Chaprcr of the Sierra
Club. reads (in part): "In lighl of
the clear environmental degradation ro be caused by the proposed
project, and the clear and subslanlial economic risk 10 lhe affcclcd
Continued on page 3

WORKING ON A PATIENT· Nursing assistants at Veterans
Memoria l Hospital, Garcia Adams and Lois Deem, work lo save
lhis patient who is eight and a half months pre~nanl and is in full
cardiac arrest. The patient, portrayed by Melanie Qualls, a nursing assistant student at Meigs High School, was part of the disaster
drill staged Thursday afternoon for the hospital and units of the
Meigs County Emergency Medical Service. The disaster was
staged with 12 injuries. Of those 12, seven of the injured were
transported to the hospital by emergency squads and the other five
were transported by car.

WASH!NGTON (AP) - Indus - in outpul at the nation 's facrorics,
trial production JUmped 0.5 percenr mines and utilities, the govemmenr
in April, the third slraighl advance said today.

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and enjoy

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PLUS 90 OTHER FREE TRIPS
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•

STORE HOURS

Monday 9:30·8:00
Tuesday·Saturday
9:3D-5:00

,.----Local briefs-___,
No one hurt in accident
An accident involving two trucks, no inJuries and mmor damage,
was investigared by Pomeroy Police Thursday afternoon.
According 10 the report, Greg Burncm , 'M, Langsville, driving an
Eblin's trash service truck backed 1010 a Columbus Soulhem Power
Co. rruck driven by Thomas M. Bowen, 47, Pomeroy. The power
company 011ck, parked on the lcfl side of Plum Strecr, had lighl
damage to the front fender on the righl side. There was no damage
to the Eblin vehicle.

Bus driver cited after wreck

FREE
DELIVERY

A bus driver for the Eastern Local School Districl was cited afrer
a two-vehicle accidcnl on Ohio 248 in Olive Township Thursday
around 9:30a.m.
According 10 !he Gallia-Meigs Posr of the Slate Highway Pillrol,
Floss ie M. Dill, 59, Long Bouom, wa1 wcsrbound on Ohio 248 and
Continued on page 3

•

His staff sa id McEwen would be
mad e available for comment after
Mi ller's news conference.
McEwen and Miller were thrusl
inro the primary batlle by changes
in congressional d1srric1 lines made
10 reduce Ohio's representation
from 21 seats on Congress 10 19.
Miller was w1dcly cxpeclcd 10
rrlirc rather than run in a primary
agamstlhe 42-ycar-old McEwen .
Bur McEwen has a serious campaign liability : 166 overdrafts at
the now -dcfucl House bank . He
blamed the overdrafrs on rhc
bank's Dcmocralic managers even
afrer adminmg that he knowingly
wrore checks when he knew there
wasn't enough money 1n his
account lo cover them.
In campaigning, McEwen also
has characrerized himself as a leader in efforrs to close the Hous·e
bank.
Miller's slatemenl explained his
recent bathtub fall thai resulted in a
minor bur painful hip injury that
led him 10 cancel campaign appearances and reconsider his ability to
campaign for nomination 1n the
June 2 primary.
He said he was planning lo
encounter.
announce on Monday lhal he
McEwen refused 10 discuss il or would withdraw from the race. Bur
be interviewed aboul the campaign the meeli11 g with McEwen changed
on Tuesday and again on Thursday. allrhar.

" In my 26 years 10 Congress, I
have seldom encounrered a situa tion as unscll ling as thiS, " Miller
said.

Th1s is Miller's fir st rough race
sin ce he was firsl elected in 1966.
He's never had to spe nd a lot of
money, buy telev1sion commercials
or deluge the voters to keep hi s joh
Both he and McEwen are rated
lughly by COIIscrvauve groups lor
their votes supponing Presid ent
Bush and former President Reagan.
Miller is a member of lhc House
Appropriarions Commillcc, which
decides how much money eac h
governm ent acrivity should ge r
each year. McEwen has a plum
House assignment, too: the Rules
Comminec, wh1ch decides whar
will be taken up by th e full House.
McEwen ha1 been a high -profile
congressman, and at ooe poml was
rrying 10 position himself 10 run for
rhc Senare against Democrat
Howard Merzenbaum . He aban doned thai effon when ir became
clear he did nor have rhe same
Slalewide support as Lhe eve nlual
nominee, now -Gov. George
Voinovich.

Miller, on the or her hand , ha s
been so low -key that Roll Call. a
newspaper !hat covers Capiro! Hill,
once named him one of rh c mosl
obscure represen tative s 1n
Congress.

Phillis encourages grass-roots
support of equity in education

Industrial production up
for third straight month

Spring Air Jumbo Thick
Back Supportef
Parisienne

WASHINGTON (AP)- Ohio
Rep . Clarence Miller said IOday a
privale go-round with his Republican primary opponenl convinced
h1m thai he should slay in the race
when he was on the brink of bowing out.
M11ler, 74, said Rep . Bob
McEwen angered him by lying to
campaign audiences and then mfu nated him in a face-to-face meeting
on Monday.
"I had never seen such a performance since Pinocchio," Miller
said in a written starcmenr prepared
for a news conference. "Then and
there, I made the determination that
the people of soulhern Ohio
deserv e an oprion in this primary
elccrion.
''I n good conscience I felt I
could notlurn and walk away from
this conrest and ler his charade go
on any longer.
"I have had enough. I have
heard enough. And I'm here 10 tell
you enough is enough."
The Associaled Press had
learned of the meeting from GOP
sources. McEwen's sraff confirmed
the meeting happened but McEwen
refu sed 10 give his version of the

"The Apnl mcrcasc was led by
a sharp rise in auro production,"
the Federal Reserve report said.
II was lhe firsl lhrec -monrh
srring of advances since lasr May,
June and July and fresh evidence
that lhc manufacluring reco very
had resumed after slackening for
severn! months.
The Federal Reserve also
revised upward, to 0.4 percent, irs
inirial estimate of producrion in
March. Thai was twice the 0.2 percent gain fir~ reported . The April
increase marched the growth in
February.
While auto produ ction ro se
sharply, "Ourpul of !rucks was
abour unchanged,'' the Fed said.
" Outside motor vehicles and
pans. overall production advanced
0.3 percenr last month, similar to
gains posted in both February and
March," it continued.
In a section on capaciry utiliza(Cootinued 011 Page 3)

By RRIAN j. REED
Sentinel News Stall
A grass-roors movement supporting equity in education funding
was encouraged by William Phillis,
cxecu rivc d11ector of lhe Ohio
Coalition for Equiry and Adequacy
of School Funding, when he spoke
to a group of communily leaders
and educators on Thursday afrcrnoon .
The meeting was hosted by the
Meigs County Chamber of Commerce at their offices in Pomeroy.
Philli s has been dirccrly
involved in the educauon field for
40 years, 16 of which were spcm in
rhe Ohio Dcpanment of Education.
When he lefl that dcpanment c.arli cr rh is year, he was an as sista nr
state superinlcndcm of instruction.
Since his resignation, be has repre sented rhe 350-member coalition
across the stale.
Lawsuit filed
A lawsuil was filed in January
in Perry Counly Common Pleas
Court by a group of educalors, stu ·
dcnrs and their parenrs. stating that
the state's school funding system
fail 10 prov1de adequate or sufficient revenue 10 enable the boards
of educa tion and educalors in the
Perry Coumy schools 10 provide an
PHILLIS SPEAKS ·William Phillis, standing, a former stale
"adequare educational program and
educalion official, spoke lo Meigs County educators and communirelated services for the pupils of the
ty leaders on Monday re~arding equity in _school _f~nding. Phi~! is
school dislrict, as required by law,
now works as executive director of the Ohio Coahlion for EqUJty
rhus denying equal protccrion of
and Adequacy of School Funding. Also pictured, 1-r, are Dr. Nick
law as guaranteed by lhe OhiO
Robinson, Counly Superintendent .John Riebel, and County AgriConsututioo."
culture
Agent Hal Kncen.
The goal of the lawsuir is a dcc 'lararion by rhe courl thai public
educarion is a fundamental right in
the State of Ohio, guaranteed by
the Conslilulion. Such a declaration , according to Phillis, would
require funding reforms to th e benefit of poor rural school disrricrs
like those in Meigs Counly.
WASHINGTON (AP) - Stare
"If a dirccr -mail solicilation
Local schools hurt
and federal officials arc calling for brings in a few million dollars a
"The stale has really had irs tougher laws againsr advcrriscrs $5,000 fine for violating the sra~te
head in rhe sand in terms of our and fund -raisers who falsely imply docs little more !han send the mes~r school districrs," Phillis said.
some co nneClloo with Social Sct:u - sage thai the govcrnmenl is not
'We've acrually gone backwards in rity 10 gain !he conf1denee of older genuinely serious about protecting
funding schools this year, and !hat Americans.
rhc public from these predarors "
will continue into the year ahead."
"When disrcpulable people usc Ms. King told a hearing before ~0
Although some school districts Social Secunry as a come-on, th e House Ways and Means subcomin the slate (including Easrern VICtims arc among the mosr vulner- minccs.
Local) have been held harmless able of our Citizens - elderly, poor
The $1 00,000-a-year limit on
from school funding curs from ·the and disabled Americans who can penalties in such cases "is simply
state, Phillis said yesterday that the lcasr afford rhe loss of money, " madcquare 10 deter con anisrs from
money used to mainlain funding said Social Sccuriry Commissioner pcrperrati ng their nationwide
for those districts held harmless Gwendolyn S. King.
lucralive schemes," said low~
will come from s1are lottery funds,
"When eldcrlr men and women Altomcy General Bonnie J. Campwhich were earmarked for educa- are lold lhal rheJr Social Security bell.
rion when rhc lotlery was estab - benefits arc not safe, they pay a ter·
Rep. JJ. Pickle, 0. TeJUts, chairlished.
ribl c emotional price as well, " she man of the Way~ and Means over.
"Nexr year, the sltte projects a said.
s1gh1 subeommutee, said he has
$75 million shonfall," Phillis said,
Dcspilc increased federal cffons concluded "that the federal agen.
"and !he s1a1e has fiXed cosrs, such ro hall such practices, enforcemenr c1cs regard these laws as either trivas Medicare, Medicaid, publi c officials say they arc swimming ial or unenforceable."
againsl the tide.
Conlinued on page 3

Tougher laws are asked to
halt exploitation of elderly

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