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                  <text>Pa~nday 11mes

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, wv

Sentinel

May 24, 1992

ee

Ohio Lottery

Little AI
captures
Indy 500

Lottery
Pick 3: 574
Pick 4:8456
Super Lotto:
l-10-13-32-38-47
Kicker:
655783

Page4

~1 ostly

cloudy tonight Low

aro und 40. Parth· sunnv on
Wrdnfsda).

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·

••
"Class" Of '92!!!
Vol. 43, No. 16

Copyrighted 1~92

1 Secllon, 12 Pages 25 cenll

Pomeroy·Middleport, Oh io, Tuesday, May 26, 1992

A Multimedia Inc. Newsoaoer

Meigs graduation speaker lists
three guidelines
for
good
life
.
By CHARLENE HOEFI..I CH
Sentinel News Stall

Praclice th e simple rules of
common councsy .
To receive much, you must give
much.
Be proud of and always remem ber your heritage.
Those were the three guidelines
for a "good life" given the 1992
graduates of Meigs High School by
baccalaureate speaker, Jo Ellen
Diehl Yeary.
Yeary, a 1972 graduate of

ODLAND'S GRADUATING CLASS OF 1992

--

REVIEWING DETAILS· Battalaureate speaker Jo Ellen
Diehl Yeary, a 1972 graduate or Meigs and now senior altorney
with Columbia Natural Resour(es, Inc., and Meigs High School
Principal Fenton Taylor go over last minute details before Sun·
day's graduation.

DENISE FRAZIER
Monhall Univonity
Gollipoli• Fo...ll..,d

AMY CROUSE
Hannon Troee HIP School
Ohio Volley Foodland

JENN)' GARDNER
Kyger Crook High School
Ohio Volley Foodlond

Meigs and now a senior auorney
with Columbia Natural Resources.
Inc .. addressed the 149 graduaJes at
the 24th annual graduation program
hel d in the Larry R. Morrison
Gymnasium Sunday afternom.
The speaker told the gnuhwes
that the "best is yet to come. that
life only gets bener'' and that hopefully their high school days wiD 1101
be "the best days of your lives."
She challenged the swoons to
male the most of their opportunities. and 10 individually accep1 tbe
responsibil!ly for meetinR tbe rom-

NOT PIC,URED
SHAWN STEYEIIS

EILEEN HALL

Wellston High School
Wellston Foodland

University ol Rio Grande
Ohio Valley Foodland

L T. GILLESPIE

ROCKY BLOSSER

Point Pleasant High School
Twin Rivera Foodland

Trimble High School
Burr Oak Foodt.nd

JAMIE BARREn
Meigs High School
B lg Bend Food land

CORY HATFIELD

Me~

High School

Big Bend Foodland

BRIAN BOLES
Pt. Plooou.t High School
Twin Riven Foodlond

the job

Yeary stressed the necessity for
rea:hing out to others and for giv ·
ing tn the comm umty. and called

for the gradua1es to "be proud of
and always remember that you
gn:w up in Meigs County."
The speaker was introduced by
Heatber Chris1en Davenport, trea ~
surer of the senior elms. following
a welcome by Christina G. Weaver,
elms president. The invocational by
tbe Rev. James A. Seddon. Middleport First Baptist Church pastor.

TRACY McCLASKEY
North Gallio High School
Gollipoli• Foodlond

LEADING THE WAY • Robby W. Wyatt, valedktorian, and
Barbara Joan Anderson, salutatorian, led the procession of graduates into L.arry R. Morrison Gymnasium ror the 24th annual baccalaureate and commencement exercises Sunday afternoon .

MARK AN1110NY
Pt. Plouont Hisb School
Twin Ri•on Fo&lt;Hlland

~in

--,.

RECOGNIZED • AI Monday's IOlsl Memorial Day observance at the Burlingham Church
and Cemetery, special recognilion was given to
Dale Colburn, center, for his contributions
toward preserving the church and cemetery. He

JDT DAVISON
GoiHo Academy Hi@h School
Gallipoli• Fn&lt;Hllond

petition in college and

markel

JEIT ALLEN

TRACY DeWEESE

Southern High School
Bi(! Bond Foodlond

Wetl Virgini• Univenrily

Big Bond FoodliUld

We Salute All Of The Area Graduates As
You Prepare To Undertake The Next
Important Step In Your Lives.
Remember, An Education Is The One
Thing Nobody Can Take Away From
You. Once Again,
GOOD GOING GRADS! ! !

was prrsftlkd a Burlill1hlm "Good Neighbor"
award a nd 1 spedal ce•etery service award.
Tbe presentalions wert made by Kevin King,
left and Hdro s,.wtz.

Special awards highlight JOist
Burlingham Memorial Day service
Music of early America, a gun
sa lute 10 the war dead and lhc
recognition of several who have
contributed to the prese rvalion of
tile Burlingham Ch011:h and Cemetery hi~hlighted the JOist ann ual
Memorial Day service Monday.
Th e church was filled for the
program emceed by Dale Colburn.
Giving the Memorial Day message
was the Rev. Keith K.apple of Bel ·
pre. Music was presented by Frank
O'Brien. 84. of Columbus, on th e
banjo, Denver Ri ce. Middl eport .
violin and gutlar, and Colleen
Brici&lt;.Jes. vocalist. Ted Jones led in
tile pledge of allegiance to the nag.
Most of the participants were former residents of Bedford Township.
The nearly I 00 atiending sang
tile "Battle Hymn of the Republic "
Rev . Raymond Lauderrnill had the
prayer. Flossie Sapp Clark gave the
offertory prayer, and the roll call of

ve lerans was conducted by Helen
Swartz.
Special awards went 10 Colburn.
one a Burlington Good Neighbor
Award and th e other a spectal
cemetery service award. The pre~
senlali ons were made by Kevin
Kmg and Helen Swartz.
Colburn then presented Bung ·
town "Good Neighbor" Awards 10
Colleen Brick.Jes and her husband.
Floyd. who was unable to anend,
O'Bn en. Denver and Nora Rice.
and Flossie Clark. all fO&lt; gezyice 31
the Burlingham Church and Q:me.
ICry.
Flowe" were presented to Belva
Willard. 94. Ethel Han of Burling·
ham Camp. Modern Woodmen of
Amcn ca; Anna Colburn . wife of
Dale. and hts mother. Murl Col·
burn . North Fon Myers. Fla.
Feeney -Bennett Post 128 .
American Lcgton. conducted cane~
lery se rvices whiCh included a gun

salute by the hooor guard lollowc&lt;I
by lapS.

The origina l Burlingham
Oturrh. a log building. wa.' erected
in 1843. on the Aikins Jroperty. II
burned in 1887 and the presenl
building was built 1n 1888 with
lumber sawed on a water powered
mill on Shade Creek.
Memorial Day semccs were
SWICd in 1891 and have continued
sioce then, missmg only one year.
It was originally an ali-day affatr
with those auendmg bn ngmg pic·
rue donnees. In the early years the
Burlingham Fife and Dru m Corps
perfmned~ After World War II the
honor guard of Feen ey-Bcnncll
Post 128 began taki ng pan in the
annual serviCes.
The Burlingham Camp. Modem

Woodmen of America . under th e
leadership of Ethel Hart. has raised
nuoey fO&lt; the upkeep of the build·
mg when no congregauon occupied
iL

following the processiOnal.
Robby W. Wyaum his valedictory address described the day as a
"time of great e.citement, a time of
great sadness. and a ume of great
ex pectations." Quoting Thomas
Carlyle, he said thai "the present is
a living sum total of lh c whole
past."
Wyall, wh o matntamed a 4.
grade pou11 average during his high
sc hool years. i.allced about the hard
work and dedtcation of the graduates. and the challenges whic h they
now face. He recounted the experiences from kindergancn to gradua~
lion and noied how s wif~ y the time
has passed .
'The future holds college, tech
school. a job. if we 're really lucky
winnmg the loncry. or whalever,
and ihcre is much ti me lef~ because
m truth we are just at th e beginrung." Wyau said .

In concluston he challenged the
studcnL' 10 "male the most of what
time you have. go out and use your
tim e. don't just spend it. Set your
goals ht gh and become as successful m life as this class has been in
high school. "
In her salutalory address, Barbara Joa n Anderson described
graduation as a "celebration of hard
work. 13 long years of education.
and wonderful memories." She satd
that as a group each is "as special
and individual as a snowflake ....all
different. bUI 10gether a group for.
eve r linked by memori es of our
school years."
She quoted Thcodor Ge ise l' s
spectal graduation message in
which he ca utioned that graduales
"step wtth care and great lact and
remem ber that life's a great balanc ~
ing act. ..
"WeUve grow n up lea rnin g
from Theodor Geisel. but we know
him bcuer by another name." said
Anderson. Dr. Seuss has t.aughl us
that it is olcay lO be different. from
'The Sneec hcs and Other Stories·
that we should lry new things, f~
"Green Eggs and Ham; that nice
guys do finish ftrst, from "How the
Grinch Siolc Christmas'"; and that
we hold ihc future in our hands
from "Oh. the Places You'll Go '."
Mu sic a1 th e co mm ence ment
program 10 addttton to processional
and r«essional incl uded "Overture:
Btsham Grange " and lhe alma
maier . "Maroon and Gold" by the
Metgs Htgh School Band under the
dueciHJD of Toney Dingess.
The Meig s Chorus dtrccled by
Teresa Davis sang '"'The Sea Is So
Wtde" and "Follow Your Dream "
Principal Fenton Taylor prese"n 1.
ed the class with Raben E. Banon
pres idem of the Board of Educa:
11o n. presenting dipl oma s as Melanie Elaine Qualls, class secre.
tary. read the class roll. Frank
Edward Blake, vice presidem, gave
the symbol of graduation

A TOUCHING MOMENT • For Marilyn Meier and her
daughter, Nikki, it was a touching moment as Nikki's cap wa s
given a final adjustment berore Meigs High School graduation
Sunday afternoon.

......--Local briefs-_,
House destroyed by fire
An abandoned house owned by James Perkins Jr. was destoryed
by ftre early Monday.
Units from Pomeroy and Middlcport ftre departments responded
to the scene of the Kerr's Run blaze at 12:32 a.m. No injuries were
reported by a Meigs Emergency Services dispatcher.

Public test to be conducted
A public leSt of the county's ballot counting equipment will be
held on Friday at 1 p.m ., according to Riia Smith, Director of ihc
Meigs County Board of Elections. The test will be conducted in
preparation for the June 2 pnmary elecuon.

Absentee deadline set
The last dale for absentee ballot voting for the June 2 primary is
Saturday, according to Rita Smith , direc tor of the Meigs Cou nt y
Board of Elections. Th e offtce, located on Mechantc Street on
Pomeroy, will be open on Saturday from 9 a.m. 10 noon.

MONDAY SPEAKER· Sam Barney, c:enter, past ooao••wlaor Ohio American Legion, was speaker at tile Memorial DaJ .,..
vices at Beech Grove Cemetery Monday morning. He is pidarrd
here wilb Frank Vaughan, Drew Webster Post 39, left, 8lld Clark
Devol, past sergeant at arms or the Ohio Amerkan Legioa.

MEMORIAL. WREATH ON THE WATER· In me100

~ '!'
ra• l..qioa, traditionally pla(tS a wreatb on tbe wate~ at tbl·
ro-roy lA-. Here preparing to put a noral nag replica In the
Oatio Rivrr are rrom tbe ldl, Jobn Weeks, (Ommander J" e
IHse wato served ia the U. S. Navy, Drew Webster Post 39

Gilmon, Dick Vaughan, and Paul Casci.

' liD

�Tuesday, May 26, 1992

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
PomeiOJ', Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE IN1'ERE8T8 or TH1t IIEIGS-IIASON AREA

ROBERT L WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publlsber/Conlroller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Mmogtr

LETIERS OF OPINION ""' welcome . They sbould be less than 300
words . All lctten ue subject to editio! and must be signed with name,
addreu and telepbone number. No unsigned !etten wiU be publi&gt;bed. Lelia's
sbould be in good taste, addressinc i&gt;sueo, not personalities.

Deadline for publication
of election letters May 27
The Daily Sentinel welcomes letters regarding the June 2 primary
election. However, in the interest or fairness, no election letters wiU be
accepted after I2 noon on Wednesday, May 27.
Individuals should address issues and not p&lt;rsonatities.
Letters purely endorsing candidates will not be used.
Letters should be 300 works or less. All letters are subject to edit·
ing and must be signed with name, address and telephone number.
Telephone numbers wiU not be published. No unsigned letters will be
published. AU letters should be in good taste.

White using party work
to raise Cleveland's profile
By THOMAS J. SHEERAN
Associated Press Writer
CLEVELAND -Mayor Michael R. White is using hi s involvement
1n national Democratic Pany circles to promote the city 's bootstrap
1magc.
Cleveland is America's ." comeback city," he told last Monday's
Dcmocrauc Plalform Commmee heanng m Cleveland, the only outside
hearing arranged by the panel writing the party' s po~cyoulline .
White illld party leaders that he was pleased that "you have chosen our
city to come 10 in order 10 begin reshaping the rebuildmg of America"
and made his pilCh to host the 1996 Democratic National Convention.
The ci ty had sought the 1992 convention, which will be held in New
York City, but lacked sufficient hotel rooms. Two hotels have opened
since Cleveland made its convention bid a year ago.
The. cit7 has polished its convention image in the pa!!l year by hosting
the nauon s black mayors and the moderate DemocraiJC Leadership Council , then headed by Arkansas Gov. Bill Clinton. He has since emerged as
the probable Democrallc presidendal nominee.
White pinned a "See You in Cleveland in '96" pin on Democratic
Chairman Ron Brown during the platform heanngs.
"We want to be the fust city in America to put our official btd in for
the 1996 Democratic National Convention," White said.
Brown said Cleveland's image as a working -class city could help
shape the Democratic Pany message. The Rev. Jesse Jackson, who won
an e•emption from the five-mmute speakers' limit to offer a 45-minute
out! me of h1s proposals, agreed that Cleveland's blue-collar roots were
tmponant to the party.
Jackson said defense spending should be divcned to domestic projects
like a proposed high-speed rail ~nc . He said the proposal would provide
johs in industrial heanland cities like Cleveland, Akron and Canton.
Brown agreed.
·'One of the reasons for choosing Cleveland is it is in middle America
and we thought it d1d make an imponant statement to people in this country that the Democratic Party ts the pany of the average working people,'·
Brown said.
Brown s31d bringing the pany's platform hearing to Cleveland was
Intended as a signal .
" We wanted it to demon strate our scnsit.ivJty, our concern and our
dcs ~re to liSten, " he said.
Jerry Brown, the maverick in the Democratic presidential campatgn,
' hawed up in Cleveland the day after the platform hearing and 1ssued a
dissent on Cleveland's role as a political barometer.
··Middle America is m a lot of places other than Cleveland,' ' said the
fo rmer California governor, who called for a series of national platform
hcanng s.
"It's great to be in Ohio but it 's also imponantto be in California, Ari t.ona and many other places."

Today in history
By The Associated Pres.1
Today IS Tuesday, May 26, the I 47th day of 1992. There arc 219 days
left in the year.
Today 's Highlight in History:
On May 26, 1868, the Senate tmpeachment uial of Pres1dent Andrew
Johnson ended with hts acquittal as the Senate fe ll one vote shon of the
two-thirds majority required for conviCtion .
On this date:
In 1521, Martin Luther was banned by the Edicl of Worms because of
his rcligtous beliefs and wnungs.
In 1805, Napoleon Bonaparte was crowned kmg of Italy.
In 1865, arrangements were made in New Orleans for the surrender of
Confederate forces west of the Mississippi.
In 1913, Actors' Equity Associalion was organized.
In 1940, the evacuation of Allied troops from Dunkirk, France, during
World War Two began.
. In 1960, U.N. Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge accused the Soviets of
h1&lt;ling a microphone InSide a wood carving of the Great Seal of the Unil·
cd States that had been presented to the U.S. embassy in Moscow.
In 1969, the " Apollo Ten" astronauts returned to Eanh after a suc cessful eight-day dress rehearsal for the ftrst manned moon landing.
In 1977, George H. Willig scaled the outside of the South Tower of
New York's World Trade Center; he was arrested at the top of the 110story building after climbing for 3 1(1 hours.
In 1978, the ftrStlegal casino in the eastern U.S. opened in AUanuc
City, NJ .
In 1981, 14 people were killed when a Marine jet crashed onto the
fli ght deck of the aircraft carrier USS "Nimitz" off Florida.
Ten years ago: The United Nations Security council asked Secretary·
General Javier Perez de Cuellar to revive his role as mediator in the Falkland Islands dispute, but Perez de Cuellar replied that the Council's
mstruclions were too vague.
Five years ago: Former P1L leader Jim Bakker told ABC's "Night·
line" he had made a "terrible mistake" in turning control of the ministry
over tD the Rev. Jerry Falwell, and accused Falwell of misleading him.
One year ago: A Lauda Air Boeing 767 crashed in Thailand, killing aU
223 people aboanl; crash investigators blamed an engine lhrust reverser
that had inexplicably deployed shortly after takeoff. Rick Mears became
the third driver to win the Indianapolis 500 four times.
Today's Binhdays: Actor Robert Morley is 84. Actor Peter Cushing is
79. Singer Peggy Lee is 72. Actor James Amess is 69. Opera singer Teresa Stratas is 53. S~ Brent Musberger is 53. Singer Stevie Nicks
1s 44. Ac!Dr Philip Michael Thomas is 43. Country singer Hank Williams
Junior is 43. Fonner astronaut Sally K. Ride is 41. Actress Genie Francis
IS 30.
Tbought for Today: "Man cannot long survive without air, water, and
sleep. Next in impatance comes food. And close on its heels, solitude."
- Thomas Szasz, American psychiatrist.

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Tuesday, May 26, 1992

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Ravenswood, union racing clock

OHIO Weather
Wednesday, May 27
Accu-Weather* forecast for daytime conditions and high temperaturts
MICH.

Chief's perks compete with Customs' needs
WASHINGTON- The U.S.
Customs Service has paid more
than $70,000 over the last year for
the care and feeding of its coounissioner, Carol Hallen. It includes a
new exec utive kitchen and dining
room, two cooks , "daily menu
planning," and "nuuition and sanitation sumdards.' ·
While Hallett defends these and
other benefits as "a thousand perce nt legitimate," some officials
question the expenditures at a time
when the agency's aviation office
in Houston was cited by the Occupational Safety and Health Administration for raw sewage pools, hazardous chemical leaks and rodent
sightings.
Internal agency documents we
have reviewed detail the tale of two
offices through 1991. Ten months
of service provided by two cooks
for Hallen's Washington office ran
more than $38,000, and the final
tally for Hallen's remodeled
kitchen and 30-seat executive dining room totaled $35,648.
Then there is the Customs
Houston aviation branch. Condi tions that employees there bad been
forced to undergo for seven months
were spelled out in an April 1991

Customs memo seen by our associ.
ate Dean Boyd. The memo reads:
. " ..,. Rainy conditions (have)
mtensified the problem by causing

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein
the septic tanks !D back up, causing
raw sewage to surface ... as these
tanks are located next to the air
conditioning and heating equip ·
ment, every lime the sewage backs
up, the smell is sent throughout the
hangar . ... On Feb. 21, 1991, the
sewage smell was so bad that all
Branch employees had to sit in the
conference room while all doors
and windows were opened in an
auemptlD air out the facility ."
On April I, 1991, OSHA cited
numerous violations at the Houston
air branch, including sewage backup in shower stalls and exposure to
"vennin such as, but not limited tO ,
mice."
Hallett's kitchen remodeling

isn't the f~rst time she has rankled
the rank-and-file in Customs. During her tenure as ambassador to the
Bahamas from 1986-89, internal
documents show that the Customs
office in Miami loaned Hallett a
27 ·foot boat, a Cessna 206 aircraft
and a 1988 Chrysler Fifth Avenue,
each for usc at her own discretion.
Hallett maintains that such an
arrangement was warranted by her
prominent role in assisting Cus ·
wms officials in cracking down on
Bahamian drug trafficking . The
plane , boat and ca r were all
removed from the Bahamas upon
her depanure. A subsequent investigation by the State Department
conftrmed the situation but made
no determination as to wh ether
there was any misuse of govern ment property. The results were
passed on to the Treasury Depanmcnt, which, according to Hallen,
found the arrangement 10 be per·
fcc~y legitimate.
An October 1990, State Dcpanment investigation found that th e
operational and maintenance cos t
of the boat and the plane had been
picked up by Customs and that th e
State Depanment footed the bill for
the car. Although no records exist

OK, I'LL ROO
JUsT ONt ,w:lRE ,.,
TIIEN, '*'U'Ll ~AV~

TO fj) TO S.L~EP.

for Hallett's usc of the car, the few
fl ight record s we were pro v1ded
indicate that Hall ett , a certified
pilot, fl ew the plane at least 17
hours at a cost of some $150 per
hour. Hallcu says it was for official
busin ess.
Hallen says she was asked to
maintain lhc boat at a private yacht
cl ub m the Bahamas for Customs
while it was not in usc on drug mis·
sions. "On the few occasions thai
(my husband and I) used II, il was
right 1n the immediate vicinity of
where it wa' based ... . I could probably count on two hands the num·
ber of times it actually went out of
the dock by us," Hallett said.
Back m Houston , Customs
pilots fir st sent pictures of the
se wage pond to Hallett after it
fouled the air of a Christmas party
in 1990. Halleu's seeming indiffcr·
ence to the Houston work force
inspired them to compose a poison
pen poem to her on Valentine' s
Day in 1991. The poem read :
"Between hangar one and two
is a very unsightly brew, a fecal
mess called the - - house on the
green ... We told management of
the fact and (they) latled to act, to
do away with the - - house on
the green."
Sources report that con&lt;litions at
the Houston air llranch eventually
improved, but not before one Customs employee was forced to seek
medical help as a direct result of
the unsanitary conditions.
FIELDS OF DREAMS - The
real political hardball in Washin~­
ton. at least in the summer. 1s
played on the baseball diamond s
surrounding Capitol Hill . They
may not be the Crips and the
Bloods , bul the Lucky Strikes
(Jesse "Mr. Tobaa:o" Helms) and
the Bank Robbers (Senate Banking
Committee) have been known to
setUe political batUes with a ball
and a bat. Other teams to watch:
Air Gorton (Slade Gorton, R·
Wash ., home of Boeing Aircraft),
Global Bcnchwarmcrs (fim Wirth,
D-Colo., known for his ardent
environmentalism), and Majority
Perks (Dcmocrntic Senatorial Cam·
paign Committee).
Jack Anderson and Michael
Binstein are syndicated colum nisiS for United Feature Syndicate, Inc.

George can't live without his nukes
Fifty-five days after the Bush
ascendancy. Vice President Dan
Quayle promised the new management would pursue "well thought·
out agendas" because "quick fixes
arc often bad ftxes."
I thought he was talking about
caution and restralllt and prudence.
It never occurred to me that what
he really meant was lethargy and
torpor and stupefaction.
For the past six months, we
have been faced with a crisis that
co uld pulverize the planet, and
George Bush has just wrapped up a
plan that might resolve the predicament seven years from now.
I refer to the recenUy completed
agreements with the fmner Soviet
republics, which inherited hundreds
of s trate~ic nuclear bombs when
the emptrc collapsed. The new
nations are now official parties lD
the START treaty, which George
Bush and Mikhail Gorbachev ini·
tialed in July 1991. The agreement
gives the republics of Ukraine ,
KazaHstan and Belarus seven
years to destroy their nukes or
transfer them to the Russian rcpub·
he where they are supposed to be
dismantled.
So what does all thi s really

mean? It means that after the
START pact is approved by the
parliaments of the four republics,
after it is ratified by the U.S. Sen·

Joseph Spear
ate, after it is signed by aU parties
and after the terms of the treaty
have been fully met - seven years
after the signatures are afftxed the United States and Russia will
only have 18,400 strategic weapons
left.
I can't speak for you, butt feel a
whole lot safer realizing this.
I know, I should be praising
Bush for a brilliant diplomatic
achievement. I'm sorry, but I think
he has moved with the agility of a
giant ground sloth on this matter.
He has within his purview the
potential to rid the globe of the
threat of nuclear destruction and he
is diddling it away.
Why hasn't he confronted
humankind's greatest menace in
the same way he challenged Sad·
dam Hussein? Why hasn't Mr. Foreign Policy at least attempted to
rail y world leaders to the greatest
cause of modern time? Cajoled

them, pressured them, sweet-ialkcd
them mto seizing this moment to
hammer out a universal nuclear
disarmament agreement'&gt; For once
in his life, why can' t George Bush
display a modicum of the vis10n
thing?
Many experts believe it could be
done. In an article for The Wash .
ington Pos~ Arjun Makhijani of the
Institute for Energy and Environmental Research and Katherine Yih
of International Phys1cians for the
Prevention of Nuclear War sug gested that the principal nuclear
powers - the United States, Rus sia, Britain, France and China flfSt agree to remove all warheads
from deli very systems and store
them in internationally monitored
repositories.
The authors continued :
"Removing weapons from world·
wide patrol would reduce the threat
that ncar-nuclear weapons state s
feel from the nu c lear weapons
powers, which they use as justification for pursuing their own nuclear
weapons programs." Thus such
undeclared nuclear nations as
Israel, India and Pakisum might be
coa.ed into storin~ their plutonium
and enriched urantum under inter-

nauonal supervision.
If that sounds too utopian for
you, consider a couple of things
that Bush could do unilaterally. He
could announce the United States
will forego nuclear testing for the
rest of the year, as Russia and
France have already done. He
could accept Russian president
Boris Ycltsin's offer to retarget
weapons - simply point them
away from each other.
And why doesn't he? I have two
theories:
I . He and his factotums ju st
can't imagine living without their
nukes . As Secretary of State James
Baker put it last December, Russia
should keep its nuclear arsenal
because ''the concept of deterrence
... has kept the peace for the past
four decades ." He added, "I am
not prepared to subscribe to th e
philosophy of dcnuclearization."
2. It's prudence, after all, the
alliwdc that things wiU get done in
time. Let's see now, what were we
working on? The Treaty of Versailles' SEATO? Somebody bring
me my briefcase.
Joseph Spear is a syndicated
columnist for Newspaper Enterprise Association.

Quayle's riot critique rings hollow
The vice president was sent out
to slay a paper dragon the other
day, com1ng down hard agatnst
immorality and the deterioration of
family values . He also opposed
rioters, wanton destruction and
anarchy. So, in the spint of Dan
Quayle. let us stipulate that most
Americans arc in favor of family ,
flag and law and order. Having
done that, let us stipulate another
bipartisan truth: The system has not
been working weU enough for most
Americans for weU over a decade.

That isn' t an excuse for looting
and gangs. It's a statement of
bipartisan failure and an opponuni ty/responsibility fiX the three white
men who will apparently be the
major presidential contenders this
year. They owe it 10 the nation they
want to lead to have a serious
debate on the causes of failure and
on potendal solutions.
The bedrock fact is that this
country has been governed by a
coalition-in-fact for over 20 years.
Since 1968, there have been four
Republican presidents and one
Democnuic president Since 1968,
Democrats have controlled the
House of Representatives for the
entire time and the Senate for about
80 percent of the time.
This divided government has
held office during a period of obvious social disintegration. It is therefore feckless for the vice president,

(though consistent, since he is a
feckless man), to try to pretend that
the "poverty of values" in urban
centers is a partisan disease. This

Hodding Carter Ill
from the spokesman of a pany that
gave us Richard Nixon's lies and
Ronald Reagan's careless memory?
The tragedy is that our coalition
government, which is not Democratic or Republican but simply
mcumbent, would be happy to
debate current issues in just such
recklessly demagogic terms. That
way the office-holders might be
able 10 con the voters into ignoring
the basic question, a variation on
the fonner president's mantra from
the 1980 campaign: "Are I and my
country better off than we were
before?"
If the blunt question is asked,
the blunt answer is, "No." The
1990 Census data is now in and the
verdict is unmistakable. Many
Americans have lost ground relative to other Americans over the
past IS years or so. Far more have
managed lD stay even only by sending two or more family members
out into the marketplace lD work.
About 20 percent of the population,
!hose at the lOp of the heap, have
had a wonderfully lucrative time.
Those at the bouom have bad good

reason to lose hope.
Forget the punks and gang
members Dan Quayle rhetorically
slew on our behalf. They are a tiny
fraction of the overall population,
and a very small slice of urban
America. Take that 18 percent of
all full -time workers - people
working steadi Iy, 40 hours a week,
50 weeks a year - who make less
than poverty-level wages . They
work hard, in other words, and live
below the poverty line, all 14.4
million of them . Just 10 years ago ,
they represented 12 percent of all
full -time workers.
That's not the result of a
"poverty of values." That 's the
result of an economic system riddled with unfairness. It is also a
system proportionately more unfair
to blacks, 25 percent of whom
work full time only to be paid at
less than povcny rates, and to Hispanics, 31 percent of whom do so,
than it is to whites.
These are the working poor. by
far the largest group of able-bodied
people in the poverty class, and
they are the people targeted for
moral preachment by a politician
like Dan Quayle, who was born
with a silver spoon in his mouth.
But the Census data have something to say about the Quaylcs of
this nation. Most of the benefits of
an expanding economy between
1977 and 1989 went to the top I
percent of the population. That 1

percent began the period making 7
percent of the nation's total
income. By 1989, it was making 12
percent.
Income is what you make .
Wealth is what you own. That 1
percent owns 90 percent of the
nation's wealth, and that figure has
also gone up in the past 15 years.
As one economist put it, the further down the economic ladder you
were, the more you lost. The further up the ladder you were, the
more you gained.
But even that mmority of American households that live quite
comfonably these days did not all
achieve their affluence the old ·
fashioned way, with one wage
earner bringing home the bacon. Of
the 26 mi Ilion households whose
average income before taxes was
$56,000, about 60 percent depended on two or more wage earners. In
other words, the stress among !he
well -to -do as well as among the
poor was not on mothers at home
and "traditional family values,"
but on the need for their paycbeeks
to underwrite the family survival or
affluence.
Even with a majority of all
mothers working, the lowest 40
percent of the population lost
ground and the middle 20 percent
barely stayed even. That is not
what the American dream has been
about. It is not the way the economy has traditional! y worked.

IMansfield I 60' I•
•I Columbus I 60' I

•

The Dally Sentinel Page-3

W . V~.

PITTSBURGH (AP) - Negotiators for Ravenswood Alum inurn
Colp. and the United Steelworkers
union continue to rnce the clock
against an expected June I release
of a fedemllabor board ruhng.
The two sides were expected to
res ume negotiations today after
breaking for the weekend.
"We're very anxious and Opti ·
mislic and I think it says a lot for
both sides that they're suuting up
again so soo n after the holiday
weekend ," said Ravenswood
spokesman Pat Gallagher.
More than I, 700 union workers
have been off the JOb at th e
Ravenswood, W.Va ., plant since
Nov. I, 1990, when their contract
expired. The company claims the
union is on strike, while the union
claims it has been locked oot.
More than 1,000 permanent
replacement workers are operating
the smelung and fabrication plant
in Jackson County, W.Va.
Contract talks resum ed last

month following a I 0-mooth lapse
after the company's board of direc ·
tors fired Chairman R. Emmett
Boyle amid a shareholder bailie
over the com)lllly's fuwre .
Steelworkers Vice President
George Becker said he hoped to
present a new labor contract to
union members as early as today.
A National Labor Relations
Board administrative judge is
e•pected to release his ruling next
week on unfair labor practice
charges against Ravenswood Alu ·
min urn.
Judge Bernard Ries had agreed
to postpone the release of his decision to allow contract talks to
resume.
If he decides the company violated labor laws by locking out
workers, prematurely declaring an
impasse and hiring replacement
workers, he could force the company to give Local 5668 members
their jobs back and pay millions in
back wages.

The umon and the company
have refused to comment on what
issues have been resolved and what
the sticking points are.

••

Flurrios

•t• ·t·

Snow

Revival
The Racine Bapust Church will
hold revival Sunday through June 4
at 7 p.m. nightly with Rev . DenniS
Chasteen, Rtchmond, Ind. Nursery
provided . Pastor Steve Deav er
tnvites the public.

Chapman personal
Mr. and Mrs. Leroy Chapman,
Glenside, Pa., viSited his mother,
Marcella Chapman. Middlepon,
over the wee~end. Mr. and Mrs.
Chapman allended the Rutland
alumni banquel

Gamt scheduled
The Eastern Girl Softball Tearn
will meet SlniSbourg Franklin in a
regional tournament tomorrow
(Wednesday) at4:30 p.m. at Slten·
dan High School. Sheridan is located on Route 13 between Thornville
and Somerse~ approximately five
miles northwest of Somerset.
Admission is $4 per pcrson.

Offices closed
The offices of Meigs County
Court will be closed Thursday
afternoon and Fnday morning for
word processtng training for
employees. The office will reopen
Friday at I p.m.

' ...

Roller personal
Dr . and Mrs. Roger Qutzcnber·

-

ry, Sarasota, Fla., were recent
guests of Mrs. Dorothy Roller and
were honored with a luncheon.
Auendtng were Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Crow Sr. , Syracuse; Mr.
and Mrs. Richard Guess and Mr.
and Mrs. Kenneth Cale, Middleport.
Mrs. Quizenberry tS the former
Margaret Homes of Syracuse They
were here for the 50th alumni
anniversary of Dr. Quizenbery at
the Ohio University College of
Engineering.

---

/c;s

Sunny

Pl. Cloudy

Cloudy

Via Associated Press GraplicsNet

------Weather----South-Central Ohio
Tonight, mostly cloudy and
quite cool with the low around 40.
Wednesday, partly sunny and continued cool with the high 55-fJ(l.
Extended forecast:
Thursday through Saturday:
Farr on Thursday and_Friday. A

chance of showers :.aturday .
Becoming gradually warmer. Lows
in upper 30s 10 low 40s Thursday,
40s Friday and upper 40s 10 low
50s Saturday. Highs in upper 50s lD
mid -60s Thursday, mid-60s to low
70s Friday and mostly in the 70s
Saturday.

Dedication planned
The Coolville Untted Methodist
Church will hold dedication ser·
vices June 14 at6 p.m. followed by
an open house for the new fellow ·
sbip haU .

--Area deaths-Virginia Elberfeld
Virgene Ellen Elberfeld, 74, of
Racine, died on Saturday, May 23,
1992 at the extended care facility at
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
She was born March I, 1918 in
Chester, the daughter of the late
Burt and Nora Eiselstein Knight.
She was a homemaker and a mem ber of the Flatwoods Unilcd
Methodist Church.
She is survived by her husband
Raymond "Pete" Elberfeld of
Racine; a son, Michael (Heidi)
Elberfeld, Racine; a sister, Helen
Will of Chester; a brother, Chester
Knight of Pomeroy; a granddaugh·
ter, Carrie Elberfeld and a step
grandson, James Ewing, hoth of
Racine; and several nieces and
nephews.
Besides her parents, she was
preceded in death by four brothers:
Dale, Meryl, Roland, and Norwood
Knight; and a sister, Mae Lambcn.
Services will be held on
Wednesday at II a.m . at Fisher
Funeral Home in Middleport with
Rev . Sharon Hausman and Rev.
Keith Rader officiating. Burial will
be in Chester Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home on Tuesday from 6 p.m . to 9
p.m .

Eva McKinney
Eva Mae McKinney, 72, of
Beech Grove Road , RuUand, died
Sunday, May 24, 1992, at Veterans
Memorial Hospital following an
C&gt;tended illness.
She was a homemaker. Born on
March 18, 1928 at Rutland, she
was the daughter of the late Peter
Monroe Fink and Chloe Rena Li!Ue
Fink.
She was a member of the RuUand
Church of the Nazarene, and a former member of the Rutland Fire
Depanment Ladies Auxiliary.
She is survived by a daughter
and son-in-law, Mary Lou and
Roger Wells, Ewington; two sons
and daughters-in-law, Dennis and
Mary McKinney and Sam and
Sherry McKtnney. all of Rutland;
one brother and sister-in-law,
Eugene and Kaly Fink, Rutland;
one sister, Beuy Sltai~ Cocoa, Fla.;
special friends, Kenny and Virginia
Mi chael, Pomeroy, seven grand children and three great-grandchil ·
dren, several nieces and nephews.
Besides her parents she was preceded in death her husband,
Samuel Archie McKinney, who
died in 1980; three sisters, Irene
Fixler, Margaret Silchuk, and Francis Darnell; and one grandchild.
Funeral services will be held at
Wednesday at I p.m. at the Birch·
field Funeral Home in Rutland. The
Rev . Samuel Basye will officiate
and burial will be tn the Miles
Cemetery. Friends may call at the
funeral home 2 10 4 and 7 to 9
loday (Tuesday)

Lottery numbers
CLE VELAND (AP) - There
were no tickets sold naming all six
numbers selected in Saturday' s
Super Lotto drawing with S4 mil·
lion at stake so Wednesday's jack·
pot will be $8 million, the Ohio
Lottery said.
Here are Saturday night 's selec ·
tions:
Super Lolln
1· 10-13·32· 38-47
(one, ten, thirteen, lhiny -two,
thiny-eight, fony-scvcn)
Kicker
6-5 -5-7-8-3
(six, five, five, seven, eighl,
three)
Pick 3 Numbers
5-7-4
(five, seven, four)

Nora Pearson
Nora B. Pearson, 82, of Apple
Grove-Dorcas Road in Racine, died
on Monday, May 25, 1992 at the
extended care facility at Vetetans
Memorial Hospital. She was a
housewife.
Born on August 29, 1909 in
East Letart Falls, she was the
daughter of the late Fred 0 . and
Sarah "Sally" Slaughter Roush.
Surviving are three daughters :
Betty Theiss, Sally Savage and
Mrs. Grover (Dortha) Salser, Jr., all
of Racine; a sister, Geraldine ''Til"
Webb of Letan Falls; a sister-in·
law, Mary M. Roush of Orlando,
Fla.; six grandchildren; 15 great·
grandchildren; and several nieces
and nephews.
Besides her parents, she was
preceded in death by her husband,
Roy 0. Pearson, and a brother,
Clarence Roush.
She was a member of the East
Letart United Methodist Church
and attended the Racine First Baptist Church.
Funeral services wiU be held on
Wednesday at I p.m. atl.etan Falls
Cemetery Chapel with Rev. Steve
Deaver and Rev. Roger Grace offi·
ciating. Burial will be in Letart
Falls Cemetery.
The family will receive friend s
at the chapel from 12:30 p.m. until
time of service on Wednesday.
Arrangements are under the
direction of Ewing Funeral Home
in Pomeroy.

William Phelps
William Henry "Bill" Phelps ,
67, Wood Roa£1, Albany, died Sat·
urday , May 23, 1992, at his resi·
dence.
Born in Athens. he was the son
of the late William Jasper and
Addie Bolin Phelps. He was a for·
mer employee of Columbus Plastics, Maintenance Department at
Buckeye Lake, and the Hughes
Construction Com)lllly. He was an
army veteran of World War II.
He is survived by two sons ,
Lloyd and Roger Phelps, Colum .
bus; a son and two daughters,
names and whereabouts unknown;
a step-daughter, Linda Carpenter
Phelps, Albany; his ex-wife,
Martha Carpenter, Columbus; a sis·
ter-in -law, Millie Phelps, Albany;
nine grandchildren; one great·
granddaughter; two sisters, Stella
Cooper, Albany , and Bernice
Hook, Hickory Creek Nursing
Home, The Plains; several nieces
and nephews.
Besides his parents he was pre·
ceded in death by one daughter.
Virginia Phelps; two brothers,
Grim and Charles Phelps; and one
sister, Elizabeth Myers.
Services will be Wednesday at I
p.m. at Bigony Jordan Funeral
Home in Albany with Marvin Alt·
house officiating. Burial will be tn
Hanning Cemetery.
Friends may call at the fun eral
home tonight (fuesday) from 7-9
p.m.

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial Hospital
SATIJRDAY ADMISSIONS .
None.
SATURDAY DISCHARGES .
Walter Roush.
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS .
Carol Neigler. Syracuse; and Jo
Good, Pomeroy.
SUNDAY DISCHARGES .
Ruth Canter.
MONDAY ADMISSIONS ·
Mary Garrison, LeanillSburg, Ohio;
Clara Phillips, RuUand; and Randall Peck, Cbeshire.
MONDAY DISCHARGES .
None.

lbere will be a hymn sing at the
Pentecostal Assembly on Route
124, Racine, May 30 at7 p.m. with
the group "Victory" performing.
BiU Hoback invites the public.

Meigs announcements

..... ~~i) ~ . .
Showers T-stom!S Rain

Hymn sing set

SCENE REPEATED AROUND MEIGS
COUNTY - Gun salutes to the war dead were
rrpeattd at cemtteries and in special services
around tbe county Memorial Day. This was tbe
S«Dt at aoon 011 the Pomeroy levee where participaots were Wayne Mi~hoan, sergeant at

Last meeting
The Middleport Literary Club
went to the Greenbriar Hotel
recently for the group's last meet·
ing for the summer. The club will
resume its mee ttngs the fir st of
October.

arms; Mike Hall, bugltr, George Nesselroad,
nag bearer; Jerry Rought, George Horak, Rogtr
Frecker, Mick Williams, Robert Vaughan, and
Joe Struble, guns, Ken Harris, nag bearer, and
Eiza Gilmore. The bugler providing the echo for
the ceremony was Stephanie Price.

Trustees to meet
The Lebanon Township
Trustees will meet Friday at 7 p.m.
at the townsbip building.
Sports card show

The Wellston Ohillco Soctety is
presenting a baseball and sports
card show Saturday from 10 am. to
5 p.m. at the Saints Peter and Paul
Parish Hall, South Pennsylvania
Avenue, Wellston . Admission is $1
per person and $2 per family .
Hourly JXU.es awarded. Cards may
be brought, traded or sold at the
show . Call 3!!4-3850 for information .

ADDING PATRIOTIC FLAVOR- Small
nags wert carried by the children or the
Burlingham Youth Camp, Modern Woodmen of
America, in thtir marcb from tbe Burlingham

EMS units answer 20 calls
Memorial Day Wce~ e nd
brought 20 calls for assistance to
Meigs Emergency Services units.
On Saturday atl2:14 p.m.,
Racine unit went to Main Street for
Sally Watson, who was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital. At
2:43 p.m., Tuppczs Plains unit went
to State Route 7 for an auto fire .
Lori Boyles was the owner. At5: 12
p.m .. Syracuse unit took Kelly
Sprouse from the station to Veter.
ans . At 9:29 p.m. , Middleport
squad went to Oliver Street. Evan
Wtscman was taken to Veterans. At
10:37 p.m., Middleport unit Went tO
Village Manor Apartments for
Daisy Sisson . She was taken to
Veterans. At IJ:28 p.m., Tuppers
Plains, Pomeroy and Olive Town·
ship units went 10 an auto occident
on State Route 248. Angela Ander·
son, Melanie Anderson and Troy
Hughart were taken to Veterans
and Ban Hughart refused tr ea t·
ment.
On Sunday at5:58 am ., Rutland
unit went to Beech Grove Road and
took Eva McKinney to Veterans.
At 7:35 am .. Syracuse unit went to
the trailer court. Geraldine Spencer
was taken to Veterans. At 7:14
p.m.. Middlepon unit went to Ash
Street and took Joe-Leigh Good to
Veterans. At 10:35 p.m., RuUand
sq uad went to New Lima Road .
Donald Pauley was taken 10 Veter.
ans.
On Monday at 12:32 a.m.,
Pomeroy and Middleport unit s
went to East Main Street for a
strUCture fire at ihe James Perkins,
Jr. residence . No inJuncs were
reported. AI 7:23 am., Middlepon
squad went 10 Village Manor
Apanments and mk Datsy Sisson
10 Veterans. At 8:16 am ., Tuppers

At 12 :26 p.m., Pomeroy and
MJddlepon units went to the police
depanment. Ruby Eynon was taken
to Veterans. At 2:09 p.m., Rutland
unit went to Township Road 36 for
Sarah McCarty. who was taken to
Veterans . At 2:53 p.m. , Tuppers
Plains squad took Mary Garrison
from Coolville Road to Veterans .
At 5:19p.m., RuUand squad went
to Union Street for Clara Phillips,
who was taken to Veterans. At9:43
p.m., Pomeroy squad went to Mulberry Avenue. Norma Boggess was
taken to Veterans. At 10:18 p.m.,
Rutland unit went to State Route
143. Orville Phillips was taken to
Holzer Medical Center.
On Tuesday at 4: 13 a.m.,
Pomeroy squad went to Pomeroy
Nursing and Rehabilitation Center.
Edna Swick was taken to Veterans.

~tnt ~~:n u:rutt~~~

r•

SIJIID,I,' .

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(UiiPS J !S-8110)

Pabli•hed enry al\emoon , Monday
thf"'Ollh Ftict..y. t u Coun St., Pomeroy,
Ohio by the Oh1o _Valley PubliahiftC
Company/Multimedia Inc., Pomeroy,
Ohio 46169, ~- Wl-2156 . Second c1. .
pa. .... piid at J\JaiW:IOj , Ohio.

Stocks

Plams squad went to Pine Tree
Dnve. Myrtle Craft was taken to
St. Joseph Hosp1tal.

WI&amp;AJ r.

The Daily Sentinel

Church to the ceremony where Mtmorial Day
services were conducted by Feeney-Bennett Post
128, American Legion .

(•I

IIITilGUIN
/ .00,9 .10 !»&gt;lLY SAT/SUN JiU,T.l :OO, l :lO {,_..)

ma

GARY D. EVANS

S~rB~k . .

Vote June 2, 1992
"'Your Vote and Support Appreciated"
!Paid for by Gary D. Evans, 30519 Valley Ball Rd ., Racine, OH 45nJ

New1paper S..l9, 733 Thml Annue .
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P&lt;:&gt;STMASTER: Send addrua cha,.,
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�Sports

The . Daily Sentinel
Tuesday, May 26,1992

Page--4

AI Unser Jr. wins closest Indy 500 ever
By STEVE HERMAN
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - AI
Unser Jr. was lookmg for some·
~g more tangible than mmily tra·
dibon.
Ftllinath~s famousAn
Indi~ather's _shoes
was one mg.
anapo IS
winner's ring7 That was anolher
mauer.
"Dad shared a bottle of cham·
""'""'with me that he said he had
Y""C··'
·
·
been savm' for a special occaston,
an_dd !Mast ndatght wdaas iaft," Little AI
sat
on y, a y ter wmnmg
the closest Indy race in history.
His father, AI Unser Sr., won at
Indianapolis four times and was
third Sunday. His uncle, Bobby
Unser, was a three-time winner and
drove the pace car in Sunday 's
crash-marred, bone-chilling race.
Unser Jr avoided the carnage
.
. . .
.
that eliminated 13 other driven, m·
herited rtrSt place when runaway
leader Micllacl Andretti's car failed
10 laps from the finish and beat
Canada's Scott Goodyear to the
checkered flag by 43-thousandths
of a second.
"[always made remarks about
his rin~ and that some doy 1 wished
. lilt
thal. .. the
I coul havc a ~~
u e
Younger Unser said. Dad showed
it to me again last night and said,
'Now you get 10 have one.' ..
"There wasn't a lot of .......
r·-ssure
On my family," said the 30-year·
old Unser, who has been racing
lndy cars for IOyears.
"I've won races all across the
.
I
country 30 d WOO l h e DaltORa
championship in 1990, so I had al·
·-•-•
If
ready tsta bl bucu myse 3S 8 race
winner in the Indy cars. As far as
the Indy 500, it was J. ust going to
have to be your day in order to win.

1 500

... As a family, and just about every
race car driver kn?ws it's either
your day or 11 am t. You try all
month to~ race day your day.
And so that s what we were do·
ingMi.
". hael Andret . led
f th
160 0 e
C
tJ
first 189 laps, fought off the dis ·
. of seemg
. h'IS .a
' ther, Mario,
tmcbon
and younger brother, Jeff, earned
off on stretchers and appeared
·
f
· f 1
headed to vtctory be ore losmg ue
pre;;~!
dow.ithbe2l5 miles 10 g~... .d
nt
teve m 1UC•, sru
Michael. " I just believe in whateY·
er's meant to happen is going'?
happen. For some reason, I wasn t
meant to win it again this year.
There's nOIIting you can do about
it. We did our best. I don't know
what else we could do."
After that it was a contest be·
•J
G d
tween Unser r. and oo year.
who had sUU'Ied 33rd but steadily
worked his way to the front and
was in position to challenge all the
way" to the finish.
.
.
I started to feel a httle cmobon
... after I had gotten the white flag
{signalling the last lap)," Liule AJ
said. "But then I looked in my mir'
rorl and there was scott ~-'th
lllti4 mg
down my back, so there was no
time for emotions at that point."
The ofrtcial results posted Moo·
day showed both cars completing
500 miles at an average speed of
134.477 mph. Unser's time was 3
hours, 43 minutes, 5.148 seconds;
Goodyear's was 3:43:05 .191. The
.
rd r
I r .h
previOUS reCO
Of 8 C Ost lntS
was .16 seconds by Gordon John·
k.
R k. M
1982
COC Over IC
ears Ul
·
The most serious injuries were
to Jeff Andretti, who had a concus·

sion and multiple fiac!Ures 10 both
ankles and both feet; Mario An·
drettt, wbo mJured the IOCS of both
feet, and r~okie Jimmy Vasser,
who broke hiS nght thigh.
M Athodillt!U'eeH undetalrwent surgery at
e
St ospt .
Speedway medical dim:tor Hen·
ry Bock
.
. SUI'd Je.ff Andre 111' was ti st·
ed m fatr condiuon and was awake
and alert in the critical care unit.
H'
·
h
ts concussiOn symptoms ad
canlearedd
V • Bock sat'd.ledMariooodAndretti
. . assu were 1IS m g
condibon, and were expecled to be released from the hospital in a few
days, he srud.
Officiallinisb
. .
Here are th e off tcud resullS of
Sunday's Indianapolis 500, listing
finishing position, starting position
m parentheses driver hometown
'
bee. h .
or countty, car num • c asstS~ngtne, average speed or laps com·
pleted reason out if any and prize
money(r-rookie):
1. (12) AI u- "-· AJboq""""" N.M.. No.
3· Ootme~o •• , A, nun mph, 200 t.,...
$l.lf&amp;~·Soon GoodY"". c..n.do, No IS, U&gt;l.o·
O....,A,I:W.417,..,2001opo.S609,33l.
l.o!o\.~ ~:.m~r:i!:-··~1 n.
-.- ..,... J
4. (2) Eddie O.NYW, A~pen, Coio., No . 9,
1

Lola- Ford Ca.worth, 114 ·314 mph, 200 llpt ,

S'r/1.10!.

s. (I) o-1 s..w-. - · Colo.. No. u.
~ A.199 ~.S2fl,l()l .
~(tO) Bobby a.tw.Dublin, 0100• No. 1 ~

l.o!o.O...., A,t99 ~.l2l7,70l.
7. (25) Rool Boaocl, Brozil, No 11 . Lot•·
O....,A
191Jopo.l9 ,503.
a. d•&gt;John..:~.Indi ..•poli•.No. '·
U&gt;l.o.a....,A,I9S~po.ll86.203.

H
No. '4 , Lo' •·
9· (23) A·J · For• ........
a....,A,i9S~po.sts9.m.
10. (18) John Paul Jr., Wc11 Palm Beach, Fla.,
No 93. t990l.o!o·Boido, 194 ~.1171 ,403.
II. (21) r-Lyn St. Jamu,"Fon Lauderdlle,
Fll., No . 90, 1991 Lob · Chevy A, 193 l1ps,

I111,9H
1'- (2911lnmini&lt; Dobooo, Fwf·~ Colir., No.
68, 1991 Lcl..cbevy A, 193llf11, $179.981
n. (6) Mkh.od """""'N""""'. P.. No. 1.

fl;

199 ,'f.g~"".~P'~Z'$i~).,~'·

LolaB..ol.97~po.cruh,SIS6.9'13

20.(19)r-Piu1Tracy,Cinadi,No.7,1991

...,....a....,A.96topo."'p.~stoo.osl.

c.J.1 N~~\,'i;;~~~ ,tn~·~;:.'!J::

Sl70.m.
n (7) Soon Bmytan. Cn!d-'"· M;do , No.
12
-~~{~).::J:tr..;!.""N=.~~~~~ 2.

U&gt;~ - Fonoc........ ,,. ~I"·"""·St56,633.
(II) Em~•• Fowpoldi, BBnt,. No. s.
...,..2A... a....,s.n~.,...,....s,lll.7cn

(21 ) J;m Cnwfonl. S&lt;ollond, No. 26.

U&gt;~i:"C:i ~ tr.."""· ~l6 7 .50l . FI

.......:a..., 8.74.;.'~'s~~...ii· No. '·

n. (13) s~o Fox, l•n...ruto. w• .. No. 91 .
1991 Lo~·hol.63~po....... Sll6.61l
" · (16! •· Philippe Gocho. F"""· No. 44 .
1991 Lola-ChovyA,61 ~""·"""·lt36,t21.
29 311 Gonion 1.. .."""· Hu"""· Mi&lt;h .
No. 92.· &lt;
1991 Loli ·Bwc:k, 60 l•t-. blmm mpe,
1136,003.
30 (111 Soou Pn""· Ooblin. O!Uo. No.1o.
True~porti · Chevy A, 52 lip•, blown ename ,
I143.Scn.
31. (30) Tom So.... Pondioo V.tley , Ariz.,
~."39.i-:i 1991 Lol• ·8 •"•· 10 l•p•. moh .
1~ &lt;'s' •-F.nc o"h&lt;lo•. B&lt;!Ji=. No 19.
1990 Lola-B.;ol,'
~po . bt.... ..,.;... 114&lt;,221.
. (I) Robcno o.-n.o. San Juan Capiltn·

33
no, Cdif.. No . 36, Loll-Buick, 0 hpi . cruh ,
$286371

· ·

Tune or ned"""'·'' minw., ()'! 141...,.

46: a-&lt;7:t.uyaxlyk41:ML&lt;n-•9-n

Oleever BB; Mi.Audrett.i l9-lf17; IJnaa' lr. lOS·
109: Mi.Andmti uo-I!S: u'"""'· 116: Mi.An·
dreui 117-140; UnJC.r Jr. 1•1-151; M.i . And~tti
I52- 17J;UniQSr.I74-I77; MLAndzeai 17&amp;-1&amp;9;

u.., k l!lll-lOO.
s.n.. """'
. · • ,,....,n,Rohol ro. u.... k so,
Fiuipaldi 41.

Garrett, Wolfe among KC Raceway winners
By SCOTT WOLFE
~linel Corrts~ndent

Driving the Imperial Packaging
#92 Ma&lt;im Chassis, Centerville
driver Harry Garreu took the lead
from Mike llowling on the 27th lap
to claim the victory in the 30-lap
E&amp;E Screen Printing-Memorial

.I
I

In the majors...

Day Super Sprint Chllmpionships
Saturday night at KC Raceway.
Veteran touring star Stevie
Francis of Ashland, Ky .. driving
th e Action Auto Mart-Arizona
Span Shirts 815, posled the $1,000
to win in the 30-lap Late Model
main, while Carl Coleman of

Major league leaders

NATIONAL LEAGUE

Nallonal League

E.uAa1l DIYIIIoa
........ W
... 26
PU~ ..
____ JA
New YOlk .............25
M€dJell ........... .... 19
~·~ ·_.. : ............. 19
Jlbila4dptua ........... 19

SLLwil ..

L
II
19
21

P'rt.

GB

.'i91
..'i~l
S4:3

1.5

22

.463

5.5

23
23

4.'il
45 2

6
6

2

m

Wellml Dtnuo.
San Pranc:iKc ........24 18
571
Cllldn•d
" 11
.m
s..n oqo
.....lA 21 .533
AtlanUI .................. 20 26
•J5
How:tm ..
.. ...... 19 25
43 2
X..O. Anpkal ...
17 B
42."i

u

1..$
6
6
6

Monday'ssrores
HWIWI 10, hblaal 8

SL l.ouil 6, to. Anaclc- 5
CIIKII••.U l, 1\it'W \'ark I
Pbibdalpbi• 4, Adtnu. I
S.n Diqo 7, Piwbur&amp;h 6

nanda. S1n Dlef:o. 51; linley. HOUilOO,
54; YanSJyk~~~., PiiJabwah, s-4.

Today's games
Hrustm (K.ile 2-S) 11 Monuul (Nibhoi% ~3)
Atlanu (Bidcd.i 1-2) at Ptuiadelphtl
(RoloUwm 0-&lt;l)
Clllduatl {lrow•l•l J-l) u Ne•
y ort (fff"MMIda: J-.4)
San FrwKUco (B~ 1-1) 11 Ouugo

V""""'o-6J

Lof; Anacls (0}«11

2·3)

St . louP

II

(Olivlllll·2)
PiUibuiJ}l (Wil.k 1· 3) It San Dieao

(0.., Homo ' ... ,

Wodneoday'o games
HOUlton ( Portua• l 4 I) 11 MonlRil

(Do. ............ ,
San fnnciloo (Bwbu 4- 1) 11 Chic1ao

(G.MidGu"')
PhllbwP omlin
(BaMo

rr

S·3)

S.n Dl.qo

5 - J) II

Atllntl (G11Vine 6--J) II Ptu.l&amp;delphu.
(Bnnlloy ~2)
Chu:l•••ll (leld1er J.JJ •I Nt•
Y... (Y-~3)
Lol Anacle. (Cand1o tu 4 · 3) 11 St
LoW (Dol.eon 2-3)

AMERICAN LEAG UE
t:u~on~IN""""'

WL
Baltirn«e... . ..... U 17
Tc.orto
..... 21 II
Nc-. Yod: ......... lA 19
B~tat.. ................20 19
Mil...... ...........20 n
D11bttiL .................. 1'9 2-4
C~o&gt;1iao4----U Jl

Pet
.605
600
.558
51)

GB

476

B

2
4

44 2
.J3J

57~

... 23 19
. .... n 21

Clllilornia ...... ...... .10 22

541
543

I
2
2

.476

5

s-at. .. .

.. ... 11 26

409

IUMuOty ......... 14 21

333

R
11

Mooday'aacores
New Yort 13. Mi.hrauk.ee 10
Seattle 7, Bllhim&lt;n 3
. , _... , .. 0 ........

Today 1s ~:ama
Milw•uiee (Bonu 1· 1) It Toronto
(Siieb 2~1
~ Citr_ (P\chudo 1-1) at [)euoit
(O.•Ui&lt;h"' S-2)
New YOlk (Leary 3-3) •1 Mmne~nt.l

-H)
OliDaJO (Hwah 1· 1) at Ter.u (GUI·

.... J.l)

Chnlu• (Olio 2-3) 1t Oakllnd

(Wtldl :1-2)
80d011 (Clemens 6--]) 11 C.1hlorni1

(A-2-l)

Baltimore (Sutcliffe 5-•&gt;
{JohnlonH)

11

Sc.tt le

New Yod (Peret 4-l) 11 MiMeaou
{SmiloJ :1-l)
~
H) ol Oolllaod

cs-

Babimcn (McDoolld 6-1) 11 Suttle
-~

Ot-1·7)
ldilftube (Nn11no 3-4) at ToroniO
(!ooalom,.. .. l)
!.AI Cily (Bodditt:• 0-l) It o.rroit
(Aidiod !-4)
CbicaJO (fem1ndu 2-') 11 Teau
.

.

Jo•ton (Viol• S-3) at Clltfomu

(Volon H)

D. S1nden, Allanl.l , S;

Alic:oa, Sl Louil, 5; Ftnlc:y, How:ton. 4 ;
a~ . OUuao. 4 ; But.k:r, l.nl Anaclaa.
4, B. Jonlan, Sl Louil. 3; Offerman. t..c.
Anaela, 3: VanSlyke. PitL1b1ulh. ),
Wet.~a. l...m Anadm. 3, Sua, Kn Ftvlcuoo. l
HOME RUNS - Bondi, PilllburJ.h,
12; McGriff , S1n Dicao. 12; M1tt
Will.iam•. S•n Franc:JJCO, II , Sheffield.
S1n Ditto. I 0: L. W1lker, Montreal, &amp;,
G1nl, AU1nU1, 7; Paldleton, Atl&amp;nll, 7,
O.Wion, DUcal", 7.

STOUN BASES - Gristm'l. Mon ·

714, 4.66; Oullicklon. Odmit, S-1, .714,
291.
STRIKEOUTS - Clemen•. 801ton,
66; Juan Guzman, Toronto, 62; Perez,
New Yotk. 57; R. JoM1on, Seanle., S5;
N•l1• C1enl~nd, Sl; Appier, Kuuu
City, 51, K.. Brown, Teu~, 50_
SAVES - Ec.kcn.ley, OU.l1nd, 17;
A.pillcn, MinniiiOU, 13; Harvey. c..tifar·
ni1, 12; ThiJpen. OUC•so. ll~ Ruud.J ,
Tuu, 12; Ollon. Blltimtre. 10; School·
er, SeatlJe, 10; Reardon, 8Mon.. 10

NBA playoffs

..

Weekend scores
S.tunby- Cldop 115, Cltvtl•nd
Sund.IJ- Utah 121, Portland Ill se-

oea tied 2-2

MondaJ - Cltveland 99, Chlcaao
8.!, ln-llllkd l-1

Future games
T onlaht - Utah at Portland, 9 p.rn
Wednrlday - Outland 11 Chlca -

to. 9 p.m.

Thurlday- Portland 11 Utah, 9 p m
friday - Chlc•11o II Outland, 9

p.m.

Stanley Cup finals
Tonlaht-

STRIKEOUTS - Cone, New York.
79, Smolll., Atlanll , 74 ; S . Fem1ndez.
New York , 62; Benet. S1n Dieao, 54;
S1bcrhaacn. New YOlk. 54; K«in am..
Lo. An 1cla., 53; Gankwz, Montr'Cil. Sl
SAVES - 1..« Smilh, St. Louis. 14:
Myc:n, San 0\c:ao. 12; Clw'ttoll, Clfldrtn.U, It; D lorna, Hm~~~m. 10; frmgg,
New YoM. 8; Weuelend . Monuul , 7;
Mild&gt; w;uw.... Philoddpluo, 1.

Thuuday- O.Lcaao

P'ltaburgh.

11

SalurdiJ -

Mond11 !1:)5 p.m

Pitubu.rah

1t

Ch1ca 1o,

PittJbi.HJh at ChLcago.

Transactions
B.,.baU
Arnn-kan Leaa\H
C LEVELAND INDIANS - Op ·
Uon~ Dnt Rofldt, lnneklu, lo Colondo Sprl1111 or tht Paclnc Cout
Lui'"- Recalled Dm.. Boucl'ltr , pitcher, from Cok1ndo Sprln..
MILWAUKEE BREWERS - Tradod
Edwin Nunet., pitcher, 10 the Tuu
Rm11cn for 1 pl1yer \0 be named lat.er
Acuv1ted Ouryl H•mihoo, ou tfielder,
from the 15 -der di..bled 1!11.. Optioned

nm.. er of the

Auocution
NEW YORK YANKEES - Pl1ced
Jeue Bufleld, outfielder, on the IS - d1~
diu bled lilt, l'd.fOI(:Iive to M1y 24 Rec&amp;Uod Jrtr Jobrscrl, pUdl•. from Colwn
bw of 1M lntem~tic.al I..c.re.
TEXAS RANGERS - Deuanued
Bill H.udmln, atcber, fw usiJm1enl
A.rncrian

BATnNG - Ron:!id:, Oallind. .356;
R Alomar, Tomnlll, .3SO; P\dr&amp;l, Min·

.337: 1 . KtiiJ, N~ York. .JJJ;
M1ck. Minneaou . .325; Joyner, K1uu
Cit~, .325: a.erp. Oevclmd, .320
RUNS - R. Alomu, T&lt;nn10. 32; R
Kelly, Now Y.... J~ M.OWU., Olll.ind.
31: Puckett, MinnllltOU, 31; M.ttin1 11 .
New York, ]I; M1ck, Minneaoll , 30;
Whlln, Ck..bnd, 29.
RBI - McOwin:, Oakland. 31; SIQIS,
Tu.u, :W; Fd11, C•lifomia, 31 ; Andm-·
too, o.Jtunore, Jl ; Hill, New York,]!;
•He. Or'r'dllnd, ll; Fidder, Deuoit, :30
HITS - R. Alomu, Toronto, 62;
RKclly, New YcD. 59: Pudl:en, ~
u . ~9; lau1a, Cluelud, 51; M•ck,
Minnuotl, 54, Bonh ck., Oakland, 53:
Sierra, Te.u~, ~3

DOUBLES - JdJcrie~. , Kmw City,
14. Seitzer, Mihnuiec, 14 ; Mlttin&amp;lj.
New York, 14. E Mll'Uflez., Suttle, I ,
lliU. New York, 13; Reimer, TeK.u, 12;
Reed , BoROn, 11: Joyner, K.anul City.
12.

1'RIPl.ES - Andcnon. B&amp;himore.. S,
BwU. Boa~m , J; Raina&amp;, OUclao. 3; U
lftl lied with 2.
HOME RUNS - Mc:Gwire. OU!and,
17; Deer, Detroit, 13: O'Brien, Secnle,
lind, 9; Tettleton. Detroil, 9; 7 m Lied
with I.
STOLEN BASES - l.d'\Gn, OtYtWtd, :U; R Hcndenoo, Oakland, 21; Lillich, Milwaukee, 13; Andcnon , Baltimore, 13; Rlinef., Ch.lciJD, ll; R. Alomu, Toronto, 12; R. Kelly. New York ,
10; M~tor. Milw•ukee, 10: W. WU.oo,

10.

PITOiiNO (6 ,.,;.;au) - '""' 0\1%·

man, Toront-o, 6-0, 1.000, 209;

PLnsbu rJh,

p.m.

William Suero, infieldcr,to

Amorlcan League

&lt;hllan~

Chi~110 at

Dlp. ~

us p. ~

PITQUNG (6 dc-.cwont) - Swilt. S~n
Fnnct..::o, 6-0, UOJ, LB: Te,..\l&amp;bury.
St l.oui•. 5· 1. Z3], U8 , Lelferu, S1n
Die~o. 6 · 2 , .1S O, 4.01, 01borne, St .
Loua, S-2, .714. l10; Cme., New Ycd:,
5·2. .714, 2.06; 6 ~ ued with .661

Ponl1nd. 3:30

NOTE: U the Eutcm Conference fmal
IIO"ia a~dl Ln five lll'I'IIM or lea. Game 1
ol the Wes\em Confe.ra11;:e final will be
moWid to Sunday, MAr 31.

15; Bondi, PiuabwJh, 1:3, Ni.r.on. A.Llanu.,

12

11

SundaJ - Cluelud 11 Chluao.
J:JI p.a. 1r Mn~MrJ

7 · 3~

13: G1rn. AUanc.a, 12; 0 Snulh, Sl l..o.U.t,

Utah

S•turday p.m ., ifneceuary

tn:al. 21, Lankford, Sl L.aua, 19'. Lewu.
.'i.1r1 Fnn~ea. 16; RoberU 1 ClnclnnaU,

11: Hoiloa, Baltimed. 9: CIDUCO, Oak·

Wodnadllfacames

&lt;RJ'ft ().!)

TIUPl£S -

nt:IIOC.I,

ODaao .................1) 17

Tex• ..... ..

OOUBLES - Ounan, Ph.i.lldelpha ,
14 ; Pendleton. AtlantJ, 14 ; V•nSlyke,
Pinabur)h. 14: O.ulllln, PhlladrlfiUa, 13;
w am, San frln CifCO, 12 : Walllch.
Montrel.l, 12; Finley. HOUltOn, II ; Mu:r ray.Ne• Y&lt;lli. II

7

ll

WMU:nl DIYIIIon
OakJ,and ................ 26 II
.591
M.imll~ ....

BAITING - Kruk, Phihdelphia ,
.380; Gwynn. San Dieco. .369; VanSlyJ.e.,
Pitt&amp;bul)h, .362;. Sheffield. S1n ~teao,
.345; WClut, San FlUCu.co, .3)3, McOrifl, Sin Diep. .329; Dlullm. Philadd phi• • .322; T. fonw&gt;da. S... Dq~ J12.
RUNS - lAnkford, St. Lou11, 31,
Hollins, Philadelphia, 31 : Banda, PittJ bwJh, JL T. Fanandct..
Dieso. 31;
Kruk, Philadel.,hil, 30; Gwynn, S1n
Dioso. JO; Bl &amp;Jio, Houston, 21;
V111Siyke, ~· 2J.
RBI - Shcffteld , S1n Oie&amp;o. 37;
Bmdl, Pina~Jwah, 3S; Oam, Atlant.l. 34 ;
McOritf. San ~Mao. ;4; M..u Williuna,
S..n FnnciKo, 31, Murny, New York ,
J I; S are tied 1rith 29.
HITS - Gwynn, S1n Oieao. 62 ,
Shdfidd, San Di~ 51; Pmdle100 . At lantJ, 51; ~ Pbilldalplia, S7; T. Fu-

Columbus took the Street Stock
feature win.
Ed Trail of E&amp;E Screen Printing
presented all race winners with a
large plaque "In Memory of lack
Waterman." The Columbus-based
company donates $500 to the purse
as well as provide the speedway

Fl~,

S..W.. f&gt;.l. .157,193: Md&gt;ma14. Bolli·
mORI. 6-1, .IS7, 3.30; Muuin•, ·Biltimore, '· I, .833, 2.70; I...mpon, Californil, 5· 1, .133, 4 .73; McDowell, ChiOIJO.
1·2, .nl, ) .90; HibMrd, Chi.CIKQ. ~-2.

Nolloool IAoJUt

HOUSTON ASTROS - Op1ioned
Luil Gouale:a., outfidda, 10 T11cton of
lh~ Plcif~e Cout leap. Activ1ted RW
Mwptly. pl\dx:r, frr:wn !he 15·dly diublod
lin

LOS ANGELES DODGERS

Plac:ed IW Dull, outfielder, on lhe 15dly dillbled lilt. ll«aa1ed Tom Goodwm,
oOOielder, fmn Al~e tithe Pactf.
it eo.. l..elpc-.
NEW YORK MIITS - ()ptionocl Rod
ney McCny. outfiddar, md Sric Hillm1n.
p1t.cher, t.o TidD1t'eter d lhe lnternatwnll
l..cap Recl1lcd Prlle Sdwlurak md M•rk
Dewey, pilchen fran. Tidewllet.

Pl1TSBUR/m PIRATES -

!he 1~-day diAbled lin, retroactive Lo
MIJll . 1\a }ued the. cmtnct ol O.ve
Clark, oulfilddu. from Butf1lo of tha
American Auod.ltioa.

ST. LOUJS CAJtDINALS - Placed
Bri•n Jordaa. oulficlde:r. Oft the 15-dly
diubled lilt, mroeccive 10 M•1 23. Roct.lled Oeronimo Pt:na, infielder, fMm
LoWville tllhe American Alloc::imon.
SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS Plaoed Bill Swift, pi\Cher, on tbo 15-0.y
diaabl.d tilt, rcltOioCtiWIIo M1y 23. Rocallod Joe Hoendia, pitcher, from AloeniJ.
of ... l'lcifi&lt;

eo... .........
Hockey

USA HoaEY - Nuned Tim Tay ·
1m, Yole hodley coodi, """"' ol ... I 994

Summary
Super sprint&amp;
Fast time: Harry Garrett 12:057
FIRST HEAT: lim Nier, Tyke
Kistler, Steve McCann, Garren.
SECOND HEAT: Rick HoUey,
David Snell, Mike Bowling, C.J.
Holley.
FEATIJRE: Garret~ Bowling,
Charlie Fisher, McCann, Rick Hoi·
ley, C.J. Holley, Kenny Kimbler,
Steve Bixler, Tyke Kistler, Roger
Mossbarger, Boone Davis, John
Webb, Jim Nier, Mark Imler.
David Snell, Tim Jodrey, and Mike
{See RACEWAY on Paae S)

Cleveland beats Chicago 99-85
to deadlock best-of-seven series

By DAVID CRARY
PARIS {AP) -The big names
won as e&lt;pecled. The opening-day
surprises at the French Open were a
thunderstorm that ended two weeks
of near-perfect weather and a 17·
year-old Ukrainian who knocked
off a seed in his ftrSt Grand Slam
mau:h.
Andrei Medvedev, the junior
champion here last year, had to win
three qualifying matches just to get
into the 128-man field as its
youngest player. But he belied his
No. 175 world ranking with a 7-6
{8·6), 6-3, 6-4 victory Monday
over Jakob Hlasek, the 16th seed
from Switzerland.
That set up a second-round
match against the second-oldest
player here, 34-year-old Kevin
Curren. a grass -court specialist
auempling the French Open for the
first Lime in a 14-year ~career.
Hlasek was the only seed 10 lose
Monday. The men's winners
included Jim Courier, the top seed
and defending champion; No. 6
Guy Forget of France, in five sets
over Brazil's Luiz Mattar; No. 8
Goran lvanisevic of Croatia and
No. 9 Carlos Costa of Spain.
Steffi Graf, the No. 2 seeded
woman, beot Rene Simpson -Alter
of Canada 6-3, 6·1 and said she had
erased memories of her 6-0, 6-2
semifinal loss here last year to
Gabriela Sabatini.
Also advancing were Arantxa
Sanchez Vicario, seeded fourth ;
No. 6 Mary Joe Fernandez; No. 8
Manuela Maleeva-Fragniere; No.
10 lana Novota of Czechoslovakia
and No. 16 Sabine Appelmans of

Belgium .
No . I women's seed Monica
Selcs and Courier's top rival, second-seeded Stefan Edberg, were to
open play IOday.
The sudden heavy rain fon:ed
postponement of 23 matches,
mcluding II in progress, and
threatened to wreak havoc with the
scheduling.
In one disrupted match, third·
seeded Pete Sampras led hard-serving Man: Rossct of Switzerland 7-6
{7·5). 4-6. 6-4, 3-6, 4-2. No.4
women's seed Jennifer Capriati.
who drew deri si ve whistles with a
string of second -set unforced
errors, led Beare Reinstadler, a
qualifier from Austria, 6-1, 6· 7 {7·
3). 2-1.
John McEnroe , who says this
will he his last French Open, got
rained out of his match Monday
evening and was to play Sweden's
Nicklas K ulti on ce nter court this
afternoon .
Jimmy Connors, also possibly in
his last appearance here . got an
ewa day off due to the rain - his
fmt -round match against No. 4
seed Michel Stich was pushed back
to Wednesday.
Three-time French Open wmner
Ivan Lend!, the No. 10 seed, had a
tough opener loday - Spani sh
clay-court specialist Sergi Brugeura, ranked 22nd in the world.
Courier's 7-6 {7 ·2), 64, 6-2 vic tory over Sweden's Niclas Kroon
was hts 17th in a row, the longest
streak this yea~ 011 the men's tour.
He 'll go for No. 18 against Austrian Thomas Muster, a tough clay·
court player ranked 22nd in the
world.

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1990, and he' s averaged 39 in 14
playoff games against Cleveland.
But on Monday, Jordan had to
scmp for his 35 poinlS, which came
on 15-of-33 shooting from th e
field. Ehlo, meanwhile, sank four
three-pointers and supplied some of
the offense the Cavaliers were
missing because of the weakened
condition of Mark Price, who
played despite a stomach virus.
"I think Mark usually shoolS 15
or 16 times a game," Ehlo said.
"That wasn't there today. I took
some of those shots.··
Jordan got little offensive help
from his teammates Monday. Scol·
tie Pippen scored 13 points, none
of !hem in the second half, and
John Paxson had II. The Bulls '
only significant contribution off the
bench was from Cliff Levingston.
who scored four quick ba skets
early in the fourth quarter 10 reduce
Cleveland's lead to single digits.
The rest of Chicago's bench wettt 3
for 18.
"I don't know why Scottie took
so few shots," Bulls coach Phil
Jackson said.
"Phil JUSt didn ' t allow me to
push the ball the way I did in the
last game," Pippen said. " I basically didn'r have that many opportunities offensively."
Cleveland led by as many as
eight in the ftrst quarter and main-

rained a double-figure lead for
much of the second and third peri·
ods. Ehlo started the fourth quarter
with a three -pointer that made it
74-60.
Levingston's flurry, however.
got Chicago back in it, and a three ·
pointer by Paxson made it 82-78
with 4:44 left. A rebound basket by
Jordan kept the deficit at four
points wtth four minutes to play
before Mike Sanders stunned the
Bulls with a rare three-pointer with
3:40 lcfl
It was Sanders' second three pointer of the season, his first of
the playoffs . He took it only
because the 24-second clock was
winding down.
The Bulls got within six on Jor ·
dan's basket with 1:30 10 play, but
Cleveland clinched it when Larry
Nance finished off a crisp three·
pass play with a dunk for a 92-84
lead with 1:18 left.
Nance led Cleveland with 22
points and four blocked sholS. Brad
Daugherty, grabbed nearly every
time he tried to shoot, scored 10 of
his 14 poinlS on foul sholS and also
collected 14 rebounds . John
Williams scored 18 and Price
scored 13 despite spending part of
the second half in the locker room
trying to get his stomach to set~e
down. He spent Sunday night in the
Cleveland Clinic.

Cincinnati beats New York 3-0;
San Diego edges Pittsburgh 7-6

Medvedev, Fernandez move
ahead in French Open play

Phcod

Gary Red111 , tim bumwt-owfield•. on

U.S. Ol)'lnpic: Te.m.

with racing attire.
Piketon's Steve McCann led the
ftrSt lap of the Sprint main. Going
into the first turn Chillicothe's
Mike Imler did a great job to keep
his ride on all fours after he lost a
left front wheel.
Garrett, who posted fast time
with a 12:05 .7 clocking, trailed
race leaders Mike Bowling anG
Piketon's Jim Nier early in the race
as the three waged a torrid wheel·
to-wheel battle for the lOp spot.
Nier,last week's victor. took the
lead from Bowling on lap nine and
led to the halfway mark, when
mechanical difficulties sidelined
his 1100.
Bowling fended off challettges
from Garrett for the ne&lt;t 10 laps,
but Garrett utitized lapped trafrtc to
his advantage to post the win.
Rounding out the top 10 were
Bowling, Charlie Fisher, Steve
McCann, Rick HoUey, CJ . Holley,
Kenny Kimbler, Steve Bi&lt;ier, Tyke
Kis~cr and Roger Mossbarger.
Heat winners were Nier and
Rtck Holley.
Wheelersburg pilot Delmas
Conley took the lead from Charlie
Seymour on the ninth circuit of the
Late Model main and appeared to
he well on his way to his second
starighl win, when an oil sending
wire malfunctioned. Francis inher·
ited the lead, holding off constant
challenges from Seymour and
Portsmouth's Chuck Waddell.
They were followed by Craig
"Fudge" Leist of Piketon, Mark
Frazier, Chilticothe; Racine's Scott
Wolfe m the Mark's Auto SalesAnderson's entry, Tony Throck·
morton. Ron Adoms, Greg Stevetts
and Jimmy Stinson.
Scou Wolfe In the McDonald's
N14 led all eight laps of the Late
MQd.l:l first heat, but not without
inte-~ presure from veteran Del ·
mas Conley. For the last three laps
the two battled side-by-side unt.il
Conley edged by on lap 9 Wolfe's
McDonald's entty beat Conley into
lhe first tum and won the race.
Francis won the second heoL
Jeff Hou se r set fast time of
14:107.
In a great side-by-side battle
bel ween Barry Bragdon and Carl
Coleman, Coleman won the Street
Stock fea!Ure by a nose at the fin .
ish.
Bill McElfresh was third fol ·
lowed by Dave Greeno, Larry
Bnsker, Bob Callahan, Brian Con ·
Ide, Fred Hardbarger, Perry Smith
and Roy Coder.
Heat winners were Mike Wilson
Jr. and Barry Bragdon.
KC hosts the STARS Late Mod ·
cis !Saturday, and has also
increased the purse 10 $2,000 to
win, $200 to stan for the Super
SprinlS. Some of the best names in
mcing will be on hand in both divi SIOns next Saturday night.

FAMILY TRADffiON- AI Unser Jr. {right) stands ia his win·
ning car with his rather, AI Unser Sr. and bis son AI during the win·
ner's photo session at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway Monday.
Unser Jr. beat Scott Goodyear in the closest finish in thr Brick·
yard's history. {AP)

The Dally SenUnei-Page-5

In the NBA playoffs,

i

17. (5 ) Gary Benenh•~. Mon'rovia, Ind.. ,
No. Sl,Lo~ ·Buiok.ll2~p."""-l•l&lt;l.aol
(20) Jeff Al1d,..;. Nuuah, Pt., No. 48,
A. 109 ~po.auh.SIS3.70J.
1991IILola-a...,
19 &lt;26J •·B.W.B&lt;»na, 8ooloo. N~ 39, 1991

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Mi.An"""l·13:a-..14-20;Mi.A""""'2t·

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

By CHUCK MELVIN
RICHFIELD, Ohio {AP) Craig Ehlo still has to pinch him .
self when he sets up opposite
Michael Jordan.
''I'm still in awe sometimes"
Ehlo said Monday after his 1
points and hard-nosed defense
helped the Cleveland Cavaliers
beat Jordan and the Chicago Bulls
99-85, tying the best-of-seven Eastem Conference finals 2-2.
Game 5 will be played Wednesday night in Chicago, where the
teams split the rtrst two games of
the series. Game 6 wiU be in Rich·
field on Friday , and Game 7, if
needed, would be in Chicago on
Sunday.
Born in Lubbock, Te&lt;as, and
schooled at Washington State, Ehlo
has never had any trouble with hi.~
ego. Since the Cavaliers signed him
after the Houston RockclS cut him
in 1986, they've worked to build
his confidence so he' ll be more
wiUing 10 shoot when he's open.
"That's always been a big qucs·
tion mark - do I believe in
myself' This is my ninth year, and
I still get in awe, especially when I
play against guys like Michael lor·
dan, Larry Bird, Magic Johnson,"
Ehlo said.
Jordan , of course, gelS the best
of most of the matchups. He scored
his career high, 69 points, in a
game agamst Ehlo and the Cavs m

Lola-F... C..wmh. U9 ~po. ''"'""' ,.......
1295
,~•;,., 8 '"''' '-""~. vw. Colo. No 21 •
1991 Lo l..O•"•· 139 ,,,,, blown ,. 1;...
1 64
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1 Ari• Loy&lt;ndyk, N""'"""'· No. '·
Lo~-F,..Con••nh. l3H•p,.....,Sl66.9'll

25 .

Tuesday, May 26, 1992

to take the place of the inJured Bret
By JIM DONAGHY
NEW YORK (AP) - Memorial Saberhagen (swollen finger) and
Day offered quite a contra st for pitched si&lt; strong innings.
Schourek gave up one run and five
New York baseball fans.
hilS.
On Monday afternoon in the
"Schourek's future depends on
Bronx, the Yankees beat the Mil·
waukee Brewers 13- 10 as the Saberhagen's status," Torborg
teams combined for 35 hilS. A cou· said. ''I'm not taking anything
pie of hours later, the Mets played away from Pete, he pitched a nice
the Cincmnati Reds at Shea Stadi· game."
The Reds, who have won five of
um in Queens.
seven
games on their current rood
The Reds and Mets combined
trip,
broke
a scoreless tie in the
for three runs - with Cincinnati
getting all of them as Chris Ham· fifth when Freddie Benavides led
mond and two relievers combined off with a single and backup catch·
cr Troy Afenir tripled to deep cen·
011 a five-hit shutout.
The Yankees sent 13 batters to ter field.
Paul O'NeiU hit a 3-2 pitch from
the plate in a nine-run eighth
inning. The Mcts left 12 runners on struggling reliever Paul Gibson
deep over the center-field fence for
base.
Cincinnati relievers Scott his sixth home run leading off the
Bankhead and Norm Charlton seventh inning. Cincinnati added a
allowed no hilS m three innings. run in the ninth off Jeff Inni s on
Milwaukee relievers Jim Austin, Hal Morris' sacrifice fly.
Doug Henry and Jesse Orosco gave
The Mets had the bases loaded
up six hits and seven runs in one wtth one out in the fourth , but
inning.
Hammond got out of the jam. The
The two games drew a total of Reds have won six of the eight
40.680 fans. As for the Mcts, they games the left-bander has started
didn 'I feel quite into iL
this season.
The MelS finished a 5-5 West
" I guess we were a little flat."
Coast trip in San Francisco on Sun· Mcts third baseman Dave Magadan
day and didn't gel to their beds said, "but give the Reds credil. too.
until dawn. The player.; didn't have They shut us down.''
to arrive at Shea Stadium until 5:30
In other NL games. San Diego
p.m. and skipped batting prnctice.
edged Piutsburgh 7-6; Philadelphia
"If the guys arc half as tired as I beat Atlanta 4-1, Sl. Louis stopped
am no wonder we were shut out," Los Angeles 6-5 and Houston held
manager Jeff Torborg said . "I off Montreal 10-8.
know it sounds like an excuse, but
Padres 7, Pirates 6
it's still a fac1."
Go ahead, knock down Gary
The Mets had scored s i' or Sheffield. Then watch him knock
more runs in their last six games 'em in .
for a club record. But they bavCII'I
PitlSburgh's Zane Smith did it
solved Hammond yet.
Monday night, brushing ba ck
Hammond {4-2) has defeated Sheffield with a high-and-inside
New York twice this season, allow· pitch after Tooy Gwynn's three -run
ing twQ nms in II 213 innings. He homer gave the Padres a 6-1 lead in
scattered five singles in six innmgs the fifth inning.
before Bankhead relieved and
Smith, who had the best control
Charlton got the last five oulS for in baseball last season, drew a
warning from home plate umpire
his IOth save.
" I had a good fastball tomght Larry Poncino. Sheffield drew him and good location, " Hammond self together and hammered
said. "You can't walk too many Smith's next pitch into the second
with so many good hitters in their deck in left field to extend the
longest hitting streak in the major
lineup."
Pete Schourek (0 - 1) was leagues this season to I g games as
recalled from Triple-A Tidewater the Padres held off the Pirates 7-6.
·' It's a great feeling to hit a ball
like that," said Sheffield, who 's
only the eighth batter to reach the
second deck at Jack Murphy Stadi·
{Continued from Page 4)
um .
Imler.
Sheffield, acquired in a trad e
Lakmodeb
with the Milwaukee Brewers durFAST TIME: Jeff Houser ing spring training, leads the
14:107
FIRST HEAT: Scott Wolfe ,
Delmas Conley. Greg Stevens.
Chuck Waddell.
SECOND HEAT: Steve Fran·
cis, Craig uist, Mark Frazier. Jon
Osman.
OAKLAND, Calif. {AP) - Just
FEATURE: Steve Francis, imagine how well Albert Belle
Charlie Seymour, Chuck Waddell, would do if he swung at good
Craig Leist, Mark Frazier. Scott pitches.
Wolfe. Tony Throckmorton , Ron
Belle suuck for two home runs
Adams, Greg Stevetts, Jimmy Stin· Monday nigh~ connecting on balls
son, Dave Kirker, Joey Dunseith, that were not strikes, in leading the
Delmas Conley, Duane Ackley, Cleveland Indians over the Oak·
Jeff Houser. Terry Hudnell, and land Athletics I ().6,
Rob McCoy.
"He hit one over his head and
Slretl stocks
the other near Iy on the ground for
HEAT : Mike Wil son, Jr. , home runs," Oakland catcher
Richard Johnson, Bob Callahan, Terry Steinbach said.
Brian Conkle.
Belle homered for the third
HEAT: Barry Bragdon, Dave straight game. He hit a solo shot in
Greeno, Larry Brisker, and Fred the third inning off Joe Slusarski
HanJOOrger.
{4-2) and added a three-run shot off
FEATURE: Carl Coleman, Vince Horsman in the fourth that
Barry Bragdol\. Bill McElfresh, made it 8-1.
Dave Greeno. llarry Brisker, Bob
"I threw him ball four," Hors·
Callahan. Brian Conkle. Fred Hard· man said. "Bull guess it's like
barger, Perry Smith, Roy Coder, poetic justice because he was the
Tommy Mossbarger, Richard John· ftrSt big leaguer I ever faced in the
soo Richard Trego. Barry Brisker, exact same situation, and I struck
Joh'n Reeser, Mike Wilson, Jr ., him out on a curve ball."
Steve Bobo. Glenn Potter, Butch
Belle finished with three hits
Owings and Thurman Zimrnennan. and swred three runs. His two long

KC Raceway ...

National League with 37 RBi s, two
ahead of Barry Bonds, who went 4
for 5 and drove in four PitlSburgh
runs. Sheffield's .345 average is
fourth in the NL.
Sheffield left the game after five
innings with a bruised right thumb
suffered when he stopped Jay
Bell's bad-hop grounder with run·
ncrs on first and second and two
outs in the top of the fifth. He saJd
he should be OK.
Craig Lefferts (6-2) survived a
rough outing to join Atlanta's Tom
Glavine and San Francisco's Bill
Swift as the top winners in the
National League. ufferts allowed
II hits and three runs, two earned,
in seven innings and won his fifth
straight decision.
Smith {5·3) failed in his third try
for his si&lt;th win, allowing eight
hilS, including the three homers, in
4 1/3 innings.
Phillies 4, Braves I
Terry Mulholland won his fifth
straight decision and Lenny Dyk·
stra helped produce all four
Philadelphia runs at Veterans Sta·
dium.
Mulholland {5-3) shut out
Atlanta on one htl through seven
innings. He gave up one run on
three hilS in the e•ghth and Mitch
Williams got the last out of 1hc
game for hts seventh save.
Dykstra hit a three-run hom er in
the seventh inning against Steve
Avery {2 ·5). Dykstra led off the
first with a double and scored on a
wild piu:h.
Cardinals 6, Dodgers 5
Feli&lt; Jose singled off second
baseman Lenny Harris' glove with
two oulS in the boaom of the ninth
inning, driving home the winning

PRICE DRIVES - Cleveland guard Mark
Price (25) drives past Chk:ago guard John Pax·
son during Game 4 of the NDA Eastern Confer·
ence rinals Monday at Richfield, Ohio. Price,

suffering from a stomach virus, scored 13 poinl&gt;
in 30 minutes to lead the Cavaliers to 1 "-&amp;5
win. (AP)

..

. ·&gt;{.

"~'I
' .' .
'

·1':. •

'f

..•
I

(

.
.

~i(

\

I

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'

'

run .
Luis Alicea opened the ninlh
with a single that bounced out of
first baseman Eric Karros ' glove.
Alicea advanced oo a ny ou1. took
third on Jay Howell's wild pilch
and scored on Jose's scmtch single.
Todd Worrell {2-1) was the win·
ncr and Roger McDowell (3-5)
took the loss.
Astroo; 10, Expos 8
Pete lncaviglia homered and
drove in four runs as Houslon built
a 10.0 lead after four innings, then
held on as Montreal rallied for six
runs in the bouom of the ninth .
Butch Henry (1-4) won de spite
being charged with seven runs on
II hilS in eight-plus innings. Chris
Haney (2·3) gave up si&lt; runs in 2
1/3 innings.

Belle's bat propels Tribe
to 10-4 win over Athletics
drives gave him eight home runs
this season and four in a span of 10
at-bats, a streak that followed a
drought in which he went 82 at·
bats without homering .
Evcn with Cleveland's big lead
early in the game, Charles Nagy {5·
3) struggled. He gave up 10 hits
and left in the eighth inning a~ the
A's closed to 8-6.
Mariners 7, Orioles 3
Dave Fleming won his si&lt;th
straight decision and Pete O'Briett
hit his 11th homer and drove in
three runs as Seattle won at the
Kingdome.
Fleming {6-1) leads all rookies
in victories. He gave up two runs
on seven hits and five walks in
seven innings, and Mike Schooler
got his IOth save.
Yankees 13, Brewers 10
Danny Tartabull's grand slam
highlighted a nine-run rally in the
eighth inning that sent New York
over visiting Milwaukee.

BENAVIDES SCORES -The Cincinnati
Reds' Freddie Benavides scores on Hal Morris'
ninth-inning sacrifice ny past the lag of New

York catcher Todd Hundley during .MoDdiJ
night 's ~ame in New York . ..-hicb tbr Reds,.,.
3-0 . (AP)

Blackhawks, Penguins to commence
Stanley Cup championship series tonight
By KEN RAPPOPORT
PITTSBURGH {AP)- Mario
Lemieux, be forewarncd o The
Chicago Blackhawks will be play·
ing tougher defense than th e
Boston Bruins when th e Stanley
Cup finals open tonight.
"We've got to hit him," said
Chicago center Jeremy Roenick of
the PCI!guins' top player.
"I watched him in the Boston
series and every tim e he go t the
puck, he wasn't touched. He got a
free ride from blue line to blue line.
We have to make this a physical
series.'
Lemieux will be only one of the
targelS for the hard-hitting Black·
hawks, of course.
"None of their guys like to be
hit- {Kevin) Stevens, (laromir)
Jagr, Lemieux," Roeni ck said.
"We bave to bang them ."
Doing a lot of the banging will
be Chris Chelios and Steve Smith,
right now the top defen sive combi·
natioo in the playoffs.
Those two have combined for
an extraordinary plus-3 1 - mean ·
ing the Blackhawks have outscored
the opposition by 31 goals in even·
strength situations when they arc
on the ice.
"They rely on those two guys

so much that so metimes you can
crac k them," said Stevens, "bul

they don ' t have too many bad
mghts "

MORTOPr
SYSnM SAVER'Penets

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555 Park St.

Middleport
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�Page

6 The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy

Tuesday, May 26, 1992

Middleport, Ohio

By ROBERT H. REID
MANILA. Philippines (AP) Legislators failed Monday 10 agree
on rules 10 certify presidential election results, seumg the stage for a
long and biuer review of voting
marred by widespread allegations
of fraud.
Congress must proclaim a new
president and vice president by
June 30, when President Corazon
Aquino's six-year term ends.
Delaying the transition of power
could lead 10 a constitutional crisis
or a military lakeover.
Police said Monday they had
uncove&gt;W a plot by right-wing mili~A?. factions 10 bomb government
facilities in the central Philippines
during the congressional review.

The pohce tl1tl not report any
arrests or give details about the
alleged plot.
With more than 73 percent of
the votes counted. Mrs. Aquino 's
candidate, former Defense Secretary Fidel Ramos, led with about
4.1 million votes, or 24 percent,
according to Media Citizens Quick
Count, the government-authorized
lllbulation service.
Miriam Defensor Santiago
moved back into second place with
3.06 million votes, or 18 percent.
followed by Eduardo Cojuangco,
an ally of late President Ferdinand
Marcos, with 3.04 million, or 17.87
percent.
Mrs. Santiago ended her hunger
strike Monday at the urg;n~ of the

archbishop of Manila; Cardinal
Jaime L. Sin . The former judge
began the hunger strike on Saturday and said at the time she would
fast "until death if necessary"
because of alle¥,ed election fraud
Congress w11l use figures of the
Commission on Elections when it
reviews the vote count. The figures
should match those of Quick
Count, which is basing its lally on
official counts at the precinct and
municipal level.
The commission's figures could
change either because mistakes
were uncovered oc because of possible fraud.
Quick Count officials say they
discovered vote padding in areas
where Ramos Rlld Cojuangco were

Thai par~iament passes reforms
to cut military's political power
By DAVID THURBER
BANGKOK, Thailand (AP) With hundreds of protesters outside
angrily demanding punishment for
the nation's ousted prime minister.
Parliament met Monday and began
passing constitutional reforms to
reduce the miliwy 's power.
The reforms were a key demand
of the hundreds of thousands of
Thais who took pan in protests last
week. Troops called in 10 quell the
unrest killed at least 48 demonstrators. Widespread anger over the
violence forced Suchinda Kraprayoon to step down Sunday, after
declaring an amnesty for himself
and other senior officers.
The amendments di sc ussed
Monday would reduCe the power of
the military-appointed Senate and
require that the prime minister be a
member of parliament
Suchinda led a February 1991
coup and was chosen prime minister April 7 by a coalition of f1ve
pro-miliwy parties. Suchinda was
not a member of parliament.
Constitutional amendments normalty take at least one month and
require three votes , but because of

public pressure, Parliament held
two quick votes Monday and was
to hold the fmal vote June 10.
The reforms, which are supported by popular King Bhumibol
Adulyadej, were passed Monday
with the backing of the opposition
and governing parties.
"In the past five days we damaged the image and the economy of
Thailand so we felt we had to do
something today 10 give peace back
to the people." said Suwat Lippatapanlop of the government's Sammakhi Tharn Party.
"The result will be an unstable
government and it wiU be unlikely
to las~" said Surin Pitsuwan. a legislator in the opposition Democrat
Pany .
More than 100 lawmakers were
absent during the votes.
The absentee list included
armed forces commander Au- Chief
Marshal Kaset Rojananil, army
cocn mandcr Gen. lssarapong Noonpackdee- Suchinda's brother-inlaw - and fanner miliwy com mander Gen. Sunthon Kongsom pong.
The day before he resigned ,
Suchinda signed a declaration of

amnesty foc himself and all others
involved in the crackdown. Opposition parties on Monday asked the
Constitution Tribunal to reverse the
decree, and said they would try 10
form a commission to investigate
the liUings.
As he entered parliament, prodemocracy leader Chamlong
Snmua ng said political parties,
academiCS and the people "arc
doing whatever they can so that the
amnesty does not affect the wrongdoers but only the innocent people."
Chamlong was arrested along
with thousands of other protesters
last week, but was released at the
king's urg;ng.
The demonstrators gathered
peacefully outside parliament during th e voting, and most later
marched half a mile 10 Thammasan
Universi:_y and joined roughly
8,000 people gathered there.
An exhibit of photographs of the
massacre was on view at the university. Venders sold T-shirts bearing Suchinda's face.
Suchmda has not been seen in
public smce his nationally televised
resignation Sunday morning.

Coast Guard cutters take refugees
back to Haiti despite their protests
By MICHAEL NORTON
PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti (AP)
- Haitians returning aboard U.S.
Coast Guard cutters Monday
vowed to keep trying to reach
Miami despite President Bush 's
renewed attempt to discourage
them from making the perilous
600-mile journey.
Also Monday, the mterim gov ern ment closed schools that had
been the focus of a week of demonstrations demanding the return of
ousted President Jean-Bertrand
Aristide.
Two U.S. cutters returned 510
Haitians to this capital cuy's docks

on Monday. All had been picked
up at sea and taken to the tent city
at the U. S. naval base in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, before being
repatriated.
Lcbicn Leblanc, 42. had twice
been to the Guantanamo camp, and
said upon hi s return Monday that
he would make another try.
''I'm not doing anything here. I
have to go." he said.
Leger Loimonymont, 30, also
planned to sail again. He said the
navy told the Haitians the refugee
camp at Guantanamo was closed
because the hurricane season starts

Baker offers limited aid
to Georgian republic
By BARRY SCHWEID
TBILISI, Georgia (AP) - Sec retary of State James A. Baker Ill
offered limlled econom1c aid to
Georgia today and sa id a bigger
package depends on holding free
elecuons and respecting minorities '
rights.
Speakmg on the small country· s
independence day. Baker went out
of his way ter boost fonner Sov1ct
Foreign MiniSter Ed uard A_ Shevardnadze with a series of joint
news conferences and a visit to the
country's most revered church _

North Korea to hand
over remains
of American troops
SEOUL. South Korea (AP) North Korea will hand over the
remains of 15 American servicemen killed in the Korean War to
the United States this week. a U.N.
offICial said today .
It would be the largest group of
missing American returned by
North Korea since 1954 and would
bring to 30 the number of remains
repatriated since mid-May .
The move is seen as a gesture to
improve relations w1th the Uni!ed
Suues. Washington has made settlement of prisoner-of-war and
missing-in-action issues, along
with assurances that North Korea
has no nuclear arms pro~. preconditions for better rclauons.
Jim Coles, spokesman for the
U.S.-led United Nations Command.
said the remains would be returned
Thursday at the border village of
Panmunjom.
Five sets of remains were
returned in 1990, II sets in 1991
and 15 on May 13. The remains
were taken to the U.S . Army's
Central Identification Laboratory in
Hawaii, but none have been positively identified.
The Pentagon lists 8,177 American servicemen as WtaCcoumed foc
from the three-year Korean War.
which ended in July, 1953. More
than 5 million Amencans fought on
the side of South Korea and 54,&lt;XXJ
were IriUed.

And Shevardnadzc, who heads
an elected governing council,
grabbed for Baker's political coat·
tails . "Mr. Baker's visil is an
1mportant stage in Georgia's devel opment in a democratic way." he
said.
The council has set parliamentary elections for Oct II .
Support for th e ousted elected
dictator Zviad Gamsakhurdia has
remained strong, particularly in the
countryside. And wh1Ie Shevardnadze has committed the government to reform, his past role as
Communist pany chieftain has left
some scars in his homeland.
Shcvardnadze vowed Monday
to never veer from the path of
huilding a democratic society,
although he said "this is a difficult
road."
He sa1d Georgia is a smal l country with large problems and
declared "everyone ha s changed,
including me."
The main natural gas line to the
capital from Russia was cut two
days ago, inflation exceeds 80 percent, there is a curfew between 11
p.m. to 6 a.m. and rifle shots could
be heard dunng the night.
Shevardnadze, winding up his
talks with Baker, said they had
concluded agreement on trade. protection for American invesiOrs and
a science and technology accord.

in June.
"I'm not saying it's a lie, but
it's not normal to take such a measure," he said. "Arc other refugees
in other parts of the world treated
this way'"
Bush on Sunday ordered the
Coast Guard to pick up boat people
at sea and return them directly to
Haiti . Coast Guard Cmdr. Larry
Mizell said Bush's order would be
implemented within days.
The new policy is intended to
discourage Haitians from trying 10
flee to th e Unned States. Those
who want to apply for asylum will
have to do so at the U.S. Embassy
in Haiti. If immigration officers on
Coast Guard boats determine any
refugees would be in danger if
returned to Haiti, they will not be
sent back.
The United States says many of
the refugees are fl eei ng poverty,
not fear of persecution at the hands
of Haiti's military-backed govem menL
Police were fingerprinting some
people as the returned Mondar .
When questioned, a policeman sa•d
he used "psychology" in deter mining whom to fingerpnnL
Thousands of Haitian s have
sailed 10 the United States smce the
military forced their first elected
president into ex1lc last September.
The economy of Haiti, one of the
world's poorest countries, has been
further crippled by a trade embargo
meant to force the government to
accept Ari.&lt;tide's return.
Haiti's military has resisted
demands that Aristide be remstated, accusing of him corruption and
abuse of power. Arisude. a former
priest who is popular among the
poor, has said he was driven from
office because his reforms threatened the elite.
The interim government closed
public junior and se nwr h1gh
schools in the capital Monday after
a week of demonstrations . The
schools also were closed during the
turmoil that followed the coup.
The Ministry of Education said
final exami nations would be held
immediately after the one-week
closure.

'rlleiPI.IIB AiilhiM, lo

t:

dltlladlnla,
• .... 411 .........,
.. mad. .
laNlp la4 1• Dlllo tftlrllltmalua aad
•• Ill

in close races. The group 's executive directa, Ed Nuque, accused an
unidentified candidate of trying to
infiltrate "political saboteurs" to
discredit the unofficial tally. Nuque
would not elaborate.
The two congressiocud chambers
mel separately Monday to try to set
rules for the election review, which
legislators said would lake a1 least
10 days 10 complete.
More sessions were scheduled
for Tuesday, 10 be followed by a
joint meeting.
Senators back1ng Cojuangco

insisted on screening all votes cast accept Quick Count's ligures.
"When there are reports of
in places where fraud has been
fraud
and statistical improbabilialleged.
ties,
any
project, however well
S"en. Heherson Alvarez said the
meaning,
will
suffer a cred1b1hty
legislators should let the Commission on Elections and the Supreme problem," Cojuangco said.
Mrs. Santiago's husband. NarCoun decide on fraud.
In the House, Rep. Rodolfo ciso, said Monday that Mrs. SantiaAlbano said the Philippines was a go had written President Bush to
"powder keg" because of election urge him to issue a statement
against fraud in the current elecfraud.
"We will raise every opponuni- tion.
White House deputy press secty to determine the real will of our
retary
Judy Smith said she was
people," Albano said.
unfamiliar
with such a letter, but
Cojuangco_ said he could not
would check further.

Scalfaro elected Italy's president
By TERRY LEONARD
ROME (AP) - On its 16th try.
parliament on Monday succeeded
m electing Oscar Luig 1 Scalfaro as
Italy's presiden~ ending a political
deadlock that had paralyzed the
govemment for a month.
Scalfaro, a 73 -year-old Christian
Democrat who helped draft Italy's
post-World War 11 constitution and
currently leads the Chamber of
Deputies, will be sworn in Thursday . His first priority will be to
name a prime minister to focm the
nation's5lstpostwargovemment.
Lawmakers had canceled the
vote Sunday 10 pay tnbute to slain
anti -Mafia crusader Giovanni Fa!cone. who was buried Monday .
Shared sadness over his deaLh

apparently induced the compromise
that resolved the crisis.
The final count gave Seal faro
672 votes, 164 more than the simpie maJonty of 508 needed for
electiOn. Scalfaro won support
from all but a few parties, such as
the Communist Refoundation, the
neo-Facist Italian Social Movement
and the Northern ~e.
Scalfaro, a respected and outspoken politician who was a member of the 1947 constitutional
assembly has been in parliament
smce 1948, will be Italy's ninth
postwar pn:sident
.
HIS Chnsuan Democrauc party
has dominated politics here for
nearly 40 years but suffered heavy

election losses ~ast m00 th blamed
on frustrauon w1th poliucal corrup·
uon and econom•c proble~s.
ln. the Apnl 5-6 parliamentary
eh:ct1ons, voters expressed anger
w1th weak governments,_pork-~­
rei pohucs _and the ruhng coahuon s mablllly to defeat organiZed
cn~e .
.
. .
Scalfaro IS a man of md•s·
putable pn:suge and great moral•ty.
He"· the nght man to guarantee the
lc~ality ~ the_respect_ of the const1tuhon, sa•d Mano Segn1 , a
Chnsuan Dcmocr_auc deputy who
has pushed for pohucal refonns. _
. Italy has been w1thout a full pre
m1er or a preSident fora month at a
ume when 1t faces cntiCal economIC deciSIOnS.

Italy's top Mafia opponent
killed in bomb blast on road

_

.

.

Pappalardo, said at the funeral.
By MARY BETH SHERIDAN
The assassination, the most draPALERMO, Sicily (AP) Thousands of mourners thronged matic by the Mafia in at least a
the city's basilica Monday to honor decade, occurred as Italy is lurcha slain judge who had given Sicil- ing through perhaps its most unstaians their greatest hope in decades ble period since the wave of leftand right-wing tenurism that ended
of defeating the Mafia.
Around the nation, other tributes in the early 1980s.
Premier Giulio Andrcoui and
were held for Giovanni Falcone,
who died in a Saturday bombing President Francesco Cossiga
that also killed his wife, Francesca, resigned last month after national
elections.
and three police escorts.
Parliament has been deadlocked
Unions throughout Italy held a
on
balloting for a new president.
one-hour general str ike, and the
But
politicians said Monday they
main stock market in Milan paused
were
ready to stop bickering and
for one minute. In Parliament.
opposi tion politicians demanded later elected Oscar Luigi Scalfaro.
the government step up its fight He will name a premier.
"It's a very serious moment in
against the Mafia, which controls
Italy,"
said Secchia, who attended
heroin trafficking on Sicily and
the
funeral.
casts a shadow on politics and
In the basilica, black-robed
commerce on the Mediterranean
judges
stood around the coffins,
island.
U.S. Ambassador Peter Secchia three topped with blue police hats
said the Ju stice Department and and two with black pillbox judge's
FBI would assist in the investiga· caps. Mrs. Falcone also was a magistral.e.
tion 1f Italy requested.
A burly policeman who surSome mourners at the fuocral VIVed
the auack sat ncar the altar,
broadcast on state-run television his
arm
in a sling. He wept.
shou ted insults at politicians and
accused the government of failing
to serious! y pursue the Maf•a.
"Assassins, buffoons," chanted
people outside the basilica.
Falcone, a magistrate, led the
country's most important mvcstigations of Sicilian mobsters. The
blast that killed Falcone and the
others tore up a 600-foot stretch or
highway ncar Palermo airport
"This has the connotations of
an attaCk on the state itself. and on
our national harmony, at a delicate
Paid lol' 117 candida,. -!~Abert C:. llariOilblloh,
and difficult juncture," Palermo's
4Jo7411luaeD Rd. · Po.e197
Roman Catholic cardinal, Salvatore

Vot4! For

Robert C. (Bob) Hartenbach
Your
Meigs Co. Commissioner
Republican Jan 2nd term
Thanks alot!

Tell a friend!!!
V'YES
Meigs In ustries
Support

Menta

----------------------------------Raglatratlon

Cllld'o N. . o: ................................... Poroni!Guordlon ...................................... .

AM'-=·-·····-·-·····················-······-·-······-······-·······················-······················
Tolophone: .......................__ ............................................................................

Services
Paid for by Carleton SchooliMelgalnduatrlea Levy Committee
'
O.Vld Weber, Chairman, 1310 Carleton Sl, Syrecuee 45779

Tuesday, May 26, 1992
Page-7

Pomeroy alumni holds 77th
annual reunion; three
awarded scholarships
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
More than 350 alumni and
guests anended the 77th annual
reunion of the Ponieroy Alumni
Association held Saturday evening
at Meigs High School.
The Pomeroy High School colors of purple and white were fea tured in the decorations, and bouquets of iris adorned the banquet
tables.
Charles Kitchen emceed the
banquet program where three
scholarships were awarded, reunion
classes were recognized. special
recognitions were made, and officers for the 1993 reunion were
elected.
Presented scholarships were
Barbara Anderson and Joseph
McElroy, Bob Roberts Scholarships given for academic excel lence by the Alumni Association,
$700 each: and Jonathan Sargent,
the Charles Gibbs Scholarship
established by the Gibbs family,
$500.
All three are 1992 graduates of
Meigs High School. Anderson, the
salutatorian, and McElroy, an honorarian, both plan to attend Ohio
State University. Sargent has
enrolled at Rio Grande College
where he will major in education.
As a requirement for applying a
parent or grandparent must have
graduated from Pomeroy High
School.
Among those given special
recognition at the banquet were
Maria Skinocr Foster. Pomeroy. of
the class of 1922, the oldest graduate, and her son , John Foster of
Fortuna, Calif. who traveled the
farthest
There was a tribute to Luc1llc
Swackhamer, longtime vocal music
inSlrllciOr at Pomeroy High School
and later at Meigs High School.
She for many years played the
piano for group singing of the
Alma Mater and Purple and White
at the alumni reunions.
New offiCei'S elected were Judy
Werry, presiden~ Mary Jane Wise.
first vice president, and Yvonne
Beal Young, second vice president.
Music f~ dancing following the
banquet catered by Gilmore's was
provided by the Cruise Brothers.
Alumni attending the reunion
were:
Class of 1922: Maria Skinner
Foster, Pomeroy.
Class of 1925: Lucdle Jividen
Swackhamer, New Haven, W. Va.;
Helen F. Smith.
Class of 1927: Nanga Fleming
Roberts, Pomeroy: Mary E. Daniels
Roush, Racine.
Class of 1929: Cecil Heilman.
Hemlock Grove, Pocneroy.
Class of 1930: Harriette Thompson, Pomeroy.
Class of 1931: Evelyn Woolford, HuntingiOn, W. Va.
Class of 1932: Virginia Heilman, Pomeroy; Mary E. Chapman,
Pomeroy; Lillian Gloeckner Rick,
Morgantown, W. Va .: Marcella
Baker, Pomeroy; Harlan and Eileen
Wehrung, Pomeroy: Oscar Qualls.
Pomeroy; Lyd1a Thompson
DeLong, Pomeroy.
Class of 1933: Catherine Raub
Welsh, Louise Hartung Bearh s,
Henry Wells, Pomeroy; and Fred
Crow, Syracuse.
Class of 1934: Rachel E. Downie, Pomeroy: Wilhelmine and
Richard Maier, Westerville; Victor
Hysell, Racine.
Class of 1935: Ruby and
Edward Baer, Pomeroy; Chester
and Jean Roush, Columbus; Dora
Swank Crispin, Westerville; Evelyn Roush Seeling, Westerville.
and WiUiam Grueser, Middleport.
Class of 1936: Ric hard E.
Drown, Chillicothe; Jean Clark
Coates. Syracuse, Elizabeth
Williams Roberts, Pomeroy; Jean
Hines and Edward Lietwiler.

Columbus; Agnes Sunon Dixon.
Pomeroy.
Class ol 193 7: Margaret
Thomas Bailey, Pomeroy; Silvia
Heilman Midkiff, Pomeroy: Buena
Jay Casey, Apple Grove, W. Va.:
Ann Weese Savage. Syracuse: Evelyn Thomas Johnson, Pomeroy;
Paul Carmichael, South Webster;
Richard and Dorotha Hartung,
Bedford, Pa.; Esther L. Amspokcr,
Columbus: Genevieve and Miles
McFarland, Columbus: Franklin
Rizer, Pomeroy; Allegra Wood
Will, Rudand; Dorothy Yost Smith,
Pomeroy; Cecelia L. and Thomas
Hart. Pomeroy.
Class of 1938: Betty Story
Dav•d
McConnaughey,
McConnaughey, Cincinnati; Don
Leifhei~ Springfield; Ziba Midkiff,
Pomeroy.
Class or 1939: Thomas Smith
and Mary Smith.
Class of 1940: Lawrence
Leonard, Pomeroy.
Class of 1941: Paul Tedrow.
Wellston; Robert K. Jay. Columbus; Janet Turner Roush, Apple
Creek; Evelyn Mayer Gi lmore,
Pomeroy: Wanda Jacobs Eblin,
Reedsville.
Class of 1942: Mabel Brown
Bailey, Jacksonville, Fla. ; Paul J.
and Dolores Augustine, Pinellas
Park, Fla.: Wilma Barnitz Nelson
and Lawrence Nelson, Kalamazoo.
Mich.; Marjorie Eynon Watson and
Ivan Watson, Sun City, Ariz .;
George C. Shiveler, Jr., Evans, Ga.;
Paul and Martha Birtcher, Bath,
Pa .; David and Delores Holter .
Pomeroy: Louanna Ebersbach
Wilcox: Joan Harbrect Mescher.
Syracuse: Earl Teaford, Columbus:
Wanda Potts Ri1.cr, Pomeroy: John
Crooks and Mildred Lisle Crooks,
Columbus; Mary Sayre Rogers,
Danbury, Texas: Pandora Collins,
Pomeroy: MarJorie Forbes Reuter,
Pomeroy: Marie Houdashelt, Syracuse; LoUi se Russell Gilkey,
Albany; Clarence and Oma Kay
Burkett, Charleston, W. Va.; and
Rita Buckley.
Class of 1943: Virginia Crew,
Reynoldsburg: Peggy Story
McDonald, Nelsonville: Belva
Young Glaze, Pomeroy; Jack Matson, Columbus; Marge R. Leonard,
Pomeroy; Marvin Burt, Pomeroy :
Mary Wiggins Bentz, Pomeroy.
Class of 1944: Martha Myers
Shiveler. Evans. Ga .; Harold
Dlackston. Pomeroy: LoiS Ncutzing
Burt, Pomeroy, and Robert Hysell,
Syracuse.
Class of 1945: Bill Radford and
Patrick Wood, Pomeroy.
Class of 1946 : Mary foster
Yost, Sryacuse; Roy Holter,
Pomeroy; Helen Hysell Vandall ,
Delaware: Eleanor Smith Walters.
and Howard B. Mullen, Pomeroy.
Class of 1947: James E. Hawley
and Lois Hawley, Pomeroy: Mil dred Kapteina Phillips and Orv1llc
Phillips, Pomeroy ; Elizabeth
Tedrow Dobbins, Hamden; Ken
and Loria Nease, Pomeroy; Frank
Vaughan , Pomeroy; Mary E.
Stivers, Beverly; Mary Curtis
Stark, Glendale. Arizona; Betty
Heilman Gilkey and Howard
Gilkey, Columbus: Barbara Roush
Goodrich and Walter Good rich,
Gahanna: Ida Johnson Murphy.
Pomeroy; Frank and Ann Ryther ,
Pomeroy: Charles and Nancy
Baird, Monona , W. Va.; Jo seph
SblJble, Pomeroy; Wilma Neutzing
Mees, Pomeroy; William D.
Lehew, Pomeroy; Bill Ohlinger.
Pomeroy; Kenny Wiggins and Faye
Wiggin s, Pomeroy: Horton
Thomas, Raleigh, N.C.: Evelyn L
Frigcr, Toledo, and Horace Abbott.
Pomeroy.
Class of 1948: Joe Foster and Jo
Ann Foster, Michigan: Jim W1ll.
Pomeroy; Evelyn Fick Young, Sidney; Ken Harris. Pomero~ : Bill
Knight. Pint Pleasan~ W. Va .. and
Jim and Ruth Lochary, Dayton.
Class of 1949: Ann Foster Cot-

trill, Pomeroy; lreoc Angus Bailey,
Middleport; Oscar Lee Wmc e,
Zanesville; and Martha Terrell
Struble. Pomeroy.
Class of 1950: Patsy Burnside
Thoma, Pomeroy; Carroll and
Vema Osborne Snowden, Gallipolis; Helen Grueser Blackston,
Pomeroy; Margaret T. Leh ew,
Pomeroy; Bob Burton. Pomeroy,
Betty Genehcimer Knight, Pomt
Pleasant; Martha Week O'Neil, and
Roger Grueser.
Class of 1951 : Joann Williams,
Pomeroy.
Class of 1952: Sarah Stowe Neiglcr, Racine; Jean Joachim Wolfe
and Howard Wolfe, Belpre; Harry
Brown, Orange, Texas; John Foster, Fortuna, Calif.; Margaret
Wyatt, Pomeroy;' Nancy Newman
Buckley, Reedsville; Helen Forbes
Jones. Belpre: Sally Nease Owens,
Pomeroy; Mary Grueser McAngus.
Pomeroy; Dorothy Grueser Urban,
Morrisville, Pa .; Guy Guinther,
Gallipolis; Sue Raub, Pomeroy;
Mary Stace Powell, Pomeroy;
Charles Roush, Columbus; Phyllis
Meier May, Pomeroy; Cora Vanlnwagen Marr, Pomeroy: Ted Warn er, Pomeroy; Ronald Smith,
Pomeroy; Sylvia Schwab Sands.
Palm Springs, Calif.
Class of 1953: Sue Struble
Cramer, Marion; Marlene Moore
Wilson, and Shirley Smith Sm1th,
Pomeroy.
Class of 1954: Alwilda Jane Jordan Robertson, Columbus; Eleanor
Bass Lawson, Reedsville; Joanne
Thornton Lawrence, l.ong Bottom:
Lela Curtis Ervin, Millfield.
Class of 1955: Tom Smi th .
Pomeroy; Paul Eichinger.

MUNISING, Mich. (AP) - The
bride wore white, the groom wore
black. Both wore face masks and
tanks of air on their backs.
So did the 20 guests at their
wedding Sunday, held 80 feet
beneath the surface of Lake Superior on the de ck of a sunken
SteamShip.
Charter boat captain Pete
Lindquist read the ceremony, then
Kerry Bruce Whipple and Kerry
Sue Krone exchanged vows with
the aid of underwater communications equipment
But w1th the masks, the traditional kissing of the bride was out
of the question. "So we embraced
and rubbed regulaiO!'S," said Whipple, 29, a Lansing scuba diving
IDSlruCIOr.

He met Krone, a Lansing travel
agen~ about eight years ago. They

Auxiliary announces
girls state selections

BARBARA ANDERSON
Bob Roberts Scholarship

JOSEPH MCELROY
Bob Roberts Scholarship

Pomeroy; Marlene Brown Hems -

Icy, Pomeroy.
Class of 1956: Caro lyn Brown
Charles, Pomeroy; David R1ggs.
Pomeroy; Bob Hill; Iris Qualls
Payne, Middleport; Ron Bcarhs,
Pomeroy; Mary Scott Wise, Middleport
Class of 195 7: Ruth Horak
Lewis, Bell[ontaine; Robert and
Nancy Roberts, Uniontown; Anie
Hendricks Hire, Malta; Lena Bass
Young, New York, N.Y. Aaron
Buffmgton, Detroll, Mich.: Max
Eichinger and Judy Eichinger.
Pomeroy; Carol Bearhs Phillips,
Endicot~ N. Y.; Ted Beegle. Worthington; Bob Eastman, Gallipolis;
Mike Ohlin$cr. Albany; Apnl
Shasteen Smllh, Pomeroy; Alma
Reynolds Slayton, Patriot; Una
Faye Albaramovic, Holly Hill, Fla.;
Michael and Sharlee Evans, Portland; Carol Curtis Riggs, Pomeroy;
Janet Struble Williamson and Bill
Williamson, Rutland; Jerry and
Rita Davis, Sumpter. S. C.: Judy
Spencer King. Pomeroy : Clarence
and Johnella McCabe. Columbus:
Marvin Wh1te, Athens: Edith Riggs
Heckert and Jim Heckert. Roots
Town; Lila Terrell Mitch,
Pomeroy; Barbara Donovan Hines,
Co lumbus; Linda Moore Jell,
Pomeroy; Donald E. Smith , Ada,
Mich.; June O'Brien Eichinger,
Pocneroy: Janice G. Roush. Chesapeake: Earlene Renshaw Bumgardner, Mason, W. Va.; Carolyn Sisson Teaford , Chester: Judy Hoyt
Morris, Middleport: Gary and
Jcanene Carman. Pataskala:
Suzanne Vaughan Warner; Mary
Jane G•bbs. Parkersburg, W. Va.;
Jimmy Joe Hemsley, Pomeroy; C.
Rich Housdashelt and Mary
Houdashclt, Pomeroy: and Brenda
Morris, Pomeroy.
Class of 1958: Bill Qualls and
Harrieu Qualls, Gallipolis_
Class of 1960: Barrie Phillips,
Endicott. N.Y.: Chuck Kitchen and
Lynn Kitchen , Mason. W_ Va .;
Mary McAfee Grega. Rootstown,
Ohio.
Class of 1961: Sally Foster
Williams, Marion ; Mike Roberts,
Akron; Norman Price, Pomeroy :
Ben Ewing, Pomeroy.
Class of 1962: l.arry Morarity,

Michigan couple dives into marriage

! ...._'

Cluau will . . - Mondllye, edneadeye and Friday• beginning
June 15 and ending June 29, from 9 to 11:00 a.m. Clllaau will be
taught by the voluntura from the community In the Pomeroy
United Methodlet church. Clllae elze Ia limited to 1 minimum of 20
llludenta. There Ia a $5 fee per llludenl Moll 1 check payable to:
Pomeroy U.M. Church, 211 Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, Oh. 45769.
For further Information, call the church II 992-5788 or Nancy
Thoene II 992-761&amp;.

.

Premier GIUho Andreotti
resigned April 24 but stayed on as
a caretaker. President Francesco
Cossiga ended his seven-year term
on April 25.
Italy's European Community
panncrs have warned the government to cut its ballooning 1992
budget deficit, now estimated at
$130 billion, or risk being left out
of the group's economic and monetary union .
The president's role has been
mainly ceremonial. Cossiga
expanded it with frequent televised
speeches calling for strengthening
and streamlining the government.
Scalfaro has criticized Cossiga
for overstepping the bounds of the
presidential role.
Socialist leader and fooner premier Benino Cra.od called Scalfaro
"the_right man" for the job.
Cmaco De Mita, president of
the Christian Democrats and also a
former premier, praised the choice
as a recognition of the new political
reality in Italy.
"I believe it is the right solution
because it shows a understanding
that the political majority that WIIS
IS no more, and that we are all obligated to create the conditions to
build a new majority," De Mila
srud.

The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

Filipino legislators uncertain on rules for confirming votes

made their first scuba dive seven where they took the wedding
years ago - on the sa me site plunge Sunday.

PICKUP SPECIAL ONLY
LARGE PEPPERONI PIZZA

$799
900 SECOND AVl•GALLIPOLIS

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In this school, class of
'92 has single member
BICKLETON , Wash. (AP) Tammy Lynn Williams is in a class
by herself.
As the only graduaung semor ai
Bickleton H1gh School, the 18ycar-old will have her own page in
the school's 1992 yearbook.
"They haven't told me who IS
JONATHAN E. SARGENT
going to get (valedictorian) yet. but
Charles Gibbs Scholarship
they think it will be me:· WIUI3lllS
SOld wryly.
With a A-mmus grade avcrage.
Lancaster: Anita Russell Ncutzhng.
W
llliams
would be in the running
Parkersburg, W_ Va.; Ray Jewell
and Judy Jewell, Pomeroy; Judy for valedictorian regardless of class
Owens Thivcner, Gal lipolis: Walter size, Principal Don Newhall said.
She also will be given the scholGruc ser. Ranton , N. J.: Tom
ar
-athlete
of the year award foc k&lt;·
Werry, Pomeroy; Mike Werry . Beltcring
in
three
sports - trad. vol pre.
leyball
and
basketball
- Sine&lt;: her
. Cla ss of 1963: Carolyn Bass
freshman
year
wh1lc
mamtamm g
B1ssc ll and Dw1ght Bissell .
Ree dsv ille; Allen Downie . those good grades.
Classes in this central WashingPocneroy ; Judy Werry, Pomeroy.
ton
farming town have always been
Class of 1964: Louella Thompsmall.
The largest classes at the
son Roush, Houston, Texas; Bob
sc
hool
were in 1958 and 1978 ,
Buck, Pomeroy; Jennifer Crew
when
15
seruors graduated.
Solomon, Yvonne Bcal Young,
When
Williams entered kindcrPocneroy; Nancy Burns Van Meter.
ganen,
she
had four classmates. By
Pocncroy _
Class of 1965 · Mary Anna seventh grade, all four had moved
Thompson Mitchell, New York.
and Carla Will Werry, Belpre.
Class of 196 7: Mary Frances
Rose, Wmter Springs, Fla.; Neil A.
Colmer, Berea, Ky .; Ladonna and
Jim W1lliam Boyd, Shade; Debra
Robm WluiC , son of Robcrl and
L. Spencer, Pomeroy; Charles W.
Dove
Wh1te. CoolVIlle. was a canRadford IJI, Racmc: Steve Finlaw.
didate
for 1he assoc 1atc of arts
Long llouom; Donald and Mary
degree
during commencemenr
Taylor, Coolvill e; Nancy Titu s
exercises
at Ohio Valley College
Karnes, Austin, Tc&gt;as: B1ll R_ Rad recently.
ford, Co lumbus: Peggy Hoffner
A music maJOr, White was edJ.
Sto ut, Syracuse; Mike Wright,
Pomeroy: Ron Logan, Middlcpon: tor of the yearbook and a member
Connie Dill Connolly and Warren of stage band. A Cappella Siflgtn.
Coonolly, Reedsville; Millie Lcgar and Chorale . He was president of
M•dkif[, Pomeroy: Lalcan Price Kappa Social Club and is listed in
Armstrong, Middleport: Jewel ··who's Who Among Students in
Price Neeley, Columbus: and Bud American Junior Colleges." He h.as
also been on the dean's lisl
Bickle_

White receives
degree from ave

JWI\'.

Her t~hcrs say auendmg a
h•gh scbool wnb just 16 students
all told IDC3IlS ooe-oo--ooe attention
lx:klflll in classes w1th 30 or more
studrols.
Du1 W•lhams has a d•ffercnt
Jl"'llXU"' on Bo::klc1011's Class of
'92, W:ncnung. ""there

~ 10 ro&lt;cr

IS

no one

for you if you don'1

do ,.,..-hom&lt;wat."
'Tiungs ..-.11 be different thi s fall
wbe11 she be.lds for Wash •n gton
Sl.llt lJru~y to study cngmeering. "Here you know everybody,
and !her&lt; you are JUSI a number:·

she u1d . 'Tm ready for the
chong&lt;. ..

Graduates named
Amll! Ab1gail Caut horn of
graduated Sunday, May
10. lrom 01110 Wesleyan Umversi ty "'l!h a bachelor of arts degree in
Reeds.-~le

~.

She "a member or Theta Alpha
Pin . • thealre honorary. and was

n ·arded the Wesleyan Players
A•,::..--d. ClXIlmenccmenr speaker
'4'.1S Norman Vincent Peale who
told tht gr.adualing scn10rs to
"aJ•-a!"' be a lhlflker and a bel1ev -

er
~Y o u

can thank your way

through anylh•ng and come our
vactorioo.s .... 1he author of .. The

Powa d l'o&lt;luv&lt; Thmking" told
the grad~Dln_ Peak " 94 -

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•educed ew!&lt;'l more by
IRStRlQ both your car
and home Wllh the State

Quality Care For Your Family

Al*JCompanoes

304-675-1244

Let us tel you jUS1
how much your sav.ngs
can be

Medicare &amp; UMWA Assignment Accepted
SUITE 112 VALLEY DRIVE, PT. PLEASANT
--ELECT--

Jerry Rought

214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY

SHERIFF
MEIGS COUNTY

992-6687
THANK YOU

811 W. MAIN.•POMEROY

992·2124

The 46th annual Amencan
Legion Auxiliary Buckeye Girls
State Government Seminar will he
held June 13-20 on the campus of
Ashland University in Ashland
The Rae ine American Legion
Post 602 Ladies Auxiliary has
selected Kim Jenbns, daughter d
Roy and Rose Ann Jenkins,
Racine, as the group's delegllte.
She is a junior at Southern High
School.
Her alternate is Rabcna Caldwell, Syracuse, daughter of Olmty
Lavender and Howie Caldwell She
is a Junior at Southern High SdiOOl
also.
The purpose of Buckeye Girls
State IS to educate young women in
the duties, privileges, rights and
responsibilllies of American citizenship; to give to these citizens. in
a realistic manner. an opportunity
to learn the problems of government w1th special emphui.s upon
the contribution women can make
to the welfare of the City, county.
state and nation.
The mythical state began in
1947 with 304 young wocnen who
had completed their 1unioc year in
high school. Th•s year, over 1100
girts from vanous counues in 01uo
will paruCipatc_
Approximately 40 girls com·
prise a city, with a governmenl
advisor and counselor. Each girl
will function in one of the two
political parties - federalm or
nationalist. She will live in me d
the 28 citacs named for famou s
Ohio women, divided into seven
counties wh•ch are named for JI0'1
sla te presidems or the American
Lcg10n Auxiliary . In Girls State ,
participants elect their own city.
county and state officials. They
KIM JENKINS
learn the duues of the vanous public offices, functions, limit.at.ions
and p:&gt;wers. They have their own on!own:s. regulate therr cuy. conlegislatures, mtroduce and debatt duct lhcir DW1I police fon:e, courtS
their own bills. make and enforce d Ia". and adrnmister Justice_

Pllld !of by lho Canillilolo

Jony Rough~ ISII..lnooln HI!, Pomwoy, OIL, 1112-7430

I

.l!i.,.
....
c

, a."1C•wo PMINs

•

�Tuesday, May 26, 1992

Ohio

Royalty, scholarship presentation
highlight Racine-Southern banquet

Business Services

By JULIE E. DH.LON

WELL RECEIVED • This alumni band,
formed for the 1992 Middleport High Sthool
Alumni Association Reunion, was exteptionally
well receive~ when. I~ ~ppeared Saturday night
to open reumon actiVIties on the lawn or the pre-

sent Meigs Junior High Scbool iD MiddlepOrt.
Directed by Roger Williams, tbe band's selections were two alumni ravorites-Tbt M.H.S.
Fight Song and tbe Alma Mater.

Over 400 attend Middleport High
School Alumni Association reunion
By BOB HOEFLICH
Sentinel Correspondent
Last year when Iva Stewan Sis: ·son was elected president of the
· \'liddleport High School Alumni
· Association, she promised that the
- 1992 reunion of the association
: would be special and different.
- lva-wuh apparent strong sup. port from her fellow-offiCerS, their
: spouses and committee members: kept that promise much to the
~elight of alumni members and
their guests, many traveling long
distances to auend the annual '92
get-together.
The lawn at the Meigs Junior
High School-formerly one of the
Micldlepon High Schools- was
: ~Icturcsque, to say the least, Satur: .day night as Iva and her group
rolled out their new outdoor alwnni
- reunion concept. AI one point,
Mother Nature did threaten to send
rain on the Middlepon Alumni
:·parade" Two hours before the
reunion, skies darkened and thunder boomed. However, while rain
did fall in other pans of the county,
1t by -passed Middleport. Skies
· cleared and it turned into a beauti. ful eve ning- in more ways than
: cmc.

The half-oval sidewalk in front
· of the school was the sening for the
: nutdoor banquet tables and lining
1hc walkway were over 40 large
• orange and black flags-the colors
• of old M.H.S.---created especially
· for the occasion by Margie Harris
: Blake, Susan Morris Baker, Marl: lyn Stumbo Meier, who were the
, offic ial decorating committee:
:: Alita Lewis Heighton and Gail
·. Stumbo Hovatter. On the front of
tbe building was posted a 10 foot
"Middlepon Yellow Jacket" sign in
. the school colors and a large
orange "M" was featured in the
· grass at the center of the walkway.
.. The effective sign and " M" were
the creations of George Harris, Jr.
A5 if this weren't enough to create a mountain of nostalgia for
those gathered to recall "those dear
old days of high school, neath the
ora nge and the black", an alumni
band wa s unveiled. And what
songs did the band play to further
jog the memories of yesteryear for
the crowd of 400 on hand but the
"M.H.S. Fi~ht Song" and th e
"Alma Mater' ?
Kitty Bache! Dallas, who was
mistress of ceremonies for th e
reunion and the "life of the pany"
: .)l'ilh her kee n sense of humor ,
struucd across the lawn as the band
· ..played the "Fight Song" which
· brought many of the alumni to theu
feet. Kitty was dressed in what
else hut orange and black right
down to orange shoes.
Making up ihe band which was
under the direction of Rog er
Williams were Debbie Grucser
Gerlac h, Ellen Dutton Kiehl, Iva
Stsso n, Margie Harri s, Ruby
Vaughan, Karen Roush, George
Dallas, a former Middlcpon High
"sand Direc tor, Jack Bacon, Mary
Wolf Woods, Gene Harns. Alita
~ Heighton. Don Gru esc r, Diana
VanCooney Lynch, Wayne Davi s,
·Mike Mullen , Kenneth McElhin ney. Sandy Brewingtoo Luckeydoo
-and Marcia Bowles.
As the band played the Alma
Mater, helium filled orange and

black balloons were released to the
sky by Franklin (Ginny) Ginther,
an M.H.S. graduate and a former
M.H.S. Band Director . Ginther
due to very recent open heart
surgery was unable to play with the
band and so handled lhe eiTcctive
balloon accent
Another group making its debut
to provide some nice entertainment
were the fast stepping mcmbcn; of
the M.H.S . Alumni Cloggm. The
group included Nancy Miller
Beaver, Mary Wolfe Woods, Beny
Kloes Smith, Vivian Abboll May,
Gail Stumbo Hovatter, Rae Mills
Gwiazdowsky, Edwina Scott and
Darla Hawley.
Following dinner, complete with
homemade ice cream, prepared and
served by a well-organized congregation of the Middleport United
Pentecostal Church under the direction of the Rev. Clark Baker, the
annual business sesssion was held.
An all-male slate of officers was
elected for 1993 including Wayne
Davis and Mike Mullen, co-presidents; Jerry Davenpon, vice presiden~ Sonny Haynes, secretary, and
Mick Childs, treasurer. Members
of the band and the clogging group
were presented gifts from the association and Roger Williams was
presented a black satin jacket with
an orange inscription, "M.H.S.
Alumni Band Director".
Floral gifts went to the oldest
graduate, Mrs. Nan Moore, Class
of '19; the oldest football captain,
Ike Neal, and to those traveling the
most distance , Cheryl Blake Burdelle and Enzo and Jean Barsotti.
all of California.
Emcee Kitty Dallas inb'oduced
'92 officers, Sisson, president; Pat
Michael Arnold, vice president;
Dtana VanCooney Lynch, secretary; Gail Hovauer, treasurer. Sisson who had welcomed alumni and
guests, extended thanks to all of the
people worbng on this year' s
affair, and gave special recognition
to Edward Lee McComas for the
presentation of numerous M.H.S.
books to the Middleport Library
earlier in the week; Tony Dingess
and John VanReeth for help in several direction s with the alumni
band, and George Miller , Joe
Custer, Rich Hovatter, and Pat
Archer for thCir work m installing
an exhaust fan m the JUnior high
auditorium .
Emcee Dallas

Charleston, W.Va.
Maxine Bennett. Columbus:
Gene and Janet Hecox Harris,
Belly J. Roush and Raymond
Allenswonh. Groveport; Ruth E.
Tygreu, Point Pleasant; Alex and
Judy Jacobs Frazer, Stevensville,
Mont.; Anna Werner Durst, Gallipolis; Janet Dillard Wurster, Centerville; Roben E. and Mary Seines
Mitch, Wheeling, W. Va.; Betty
Nuckles Holder, Dublin; Marcella
Russell West, Leesburg. Fla.; Vir-.
ginia Schaaf Koehler, Colwnbus.
Pauley A. Kincaid Beaver, Middletown; Patricia DeVol Kloes ,
Bidwell; Doruthy Walker, Gallipolis; Marjorie Diles Mitchell ,
Athens; Mary Bradley Stanton,
Marietta, Ga.: Phyllis Ebersbach.
Orchard Lake, Mi.; Ronald Fultz,
Westerville: Fred Lewis, Cleves;
Yvonne Scally, Key West, Fla.:
Raymnond Turner, Grove City;
Juan ita Bangeter Jones, Cherole
Blake Burdette, Upland, Ca..
Ernestine Ashcraft, Belpre ;
Helen Cline Mart, Letart, W. Va.;
John Vroman, Westerville; Steve
Jacobs, Colorado Springs, Colo.;
Bob and Judy Murray McKinney,
Cary, N. C.; Raben Hennessy, Gallipolis; Edward L. McComas, St.
Charles, Mo.; Blaine and Vonda
Sec Walburn, Vienna, W. Va.; Ron
Miller, Columbus; Carla Wilson
Lohrer, Troy; Herschel Knapp,
Sabina: Carol Jacobs, New York
City; Jack Bacon, Indianapolis ,
Ind.; Beuy Ashley Snow, Shade.
Jim and Clara Taylor Sanborn,
Houston , Tex .; Carolyn Pierce
Litchfield, Point Plasant; Gladdie
Devol Stewart, Mason, W _ Va.;
Julie Mitch Houck, Marion ;
William Taylor, Brecksville ;
Myron and Junie Seines Duffield,
Buffalo Grove, Ill.; Charles Haskins, Spencerville; Adrienne Mills
Munns, Lynchburg, Va.; Harold
Hinkle, Columbus: Doris Mayes
Coleman. Jackson; Marlene Hall,
Cheshire;.
Patricia A. Rupe McKay, Warren: Peggy Thomas, Cheshire;
Mary Walburg, Powell; Walter
Clark, Point Pleasant; Patsy Saun ·
ders Hay, Columbus; Jean Sman
Siddall, Cincinnati; Richard Rawl mgs, Mason, W. Va.: Gerald Ault,
Springfield, Oh. ; Helen Taylor
Fox, Marysville; Michael Shaffer,
Acworth, Ga.; Coleen Wilson
Ohlinger, Zanesville; Jerry Bolannoun ced the winners of several
yard, Parsons, W. Va.; Gene and
scholarships awarded throu gh the
Cindy Moms Abbott, Carroll.
alumni association and introduced
Sandy Brewington Lucteydoo,
reunion cla..&lt;;.~s.
Pataskala; Manning Baumgardner,
AI Sahley of Charle sto n, W. Worthington ; Darryl Stumbo,
Va., spu n the platters- popular LeHigh, Aa.; John and Judy Wilrecordings over a wide ume spandermuth Allensworth, Tiffin; Allan
for a dance held in the auditorium Wallace, Canal Winchester; Jon
following the dinner and busmess Cunningham, Batavia; Roberta
session . Also featured mstde the
Wukelich, Belle Valley; Ruth Ann
building was a room containing a
Carsey, Athens: Sue Rue Gamer,
variety of M.H.S. memorabilia as Pampa. Tx.; Mike Garten, Barwell as videos of band shows and
nesville; John Cluff. Broken
football games from 1956 through
Arrow. Ok.; Rose Marie Hackeu,
the 1960's.
Lexington, Ky.
Amon g tho se attending th e
John Mayer, Grove City; Opal
reunion from out of th e co unt y .Priddy , Pt. Pleasant; Dorothy
were: Dorothy Fultz Askren , Drenner, California; Franklin and
Bellefontaine, Williams Reynold s. Hazel Hawkins Ginther, Columbus;
Kalamazoo. Mtch.; Clifford and Betty Johnson, Carroll; Peggy
Martha Robson Cunn ingham . Lewis Darst, Zanesville; Eileen
Lima; Mary Reynolds King, Key Blosser Kemya, Eudid; Mildred
Largo, Fla.; Willa Bowers, SpringOhlinger Bailey, LeHigh, Fla.; Virfield. Ohio; Ellen Jane Mygall ginia Betz, Hilliard; Jim Arnold,
Young, Pinellas Park, Ra.; Mildred
Cincinnati: John Kauff, Pt. PleasAsbury Moseley, St. Albans. W. ant: Gil Kerwood, Columbus:
Va.;
Charles
Entsminger ,
Bruce Bingham, Ravenswood.
Jamey Holiday, Acworth, Ga_;
Kmy Bachtel Dallas, Agoura Hill,
Ca.; Naomi Overturf Durst, Gallipolis ; Bob Richards, Orion,
British sculptor Henry Moore.
Mich.; Don Payne, Dayton; James
The fonmer British pnmc miniSBuell. Knightdale, N. C.; Norman
ter was in Kan sas City over the
Manley, Columbus; Don Grueser.
weekend to receive an award
Won:ester, Ma; Bill Diles, Athens;
tonight from the Midwest Reseat1::h
Ruth Chase Jenkins, Thurman;
Institute. a think tank on energy,
Charles and Diana Chancey Stoenvironmental and health issues.
bart. Memphis; Beuy Ward Field,
Mrs. Thatcher, 66, resigned in Trotwood; Pat Basliani, Gallipolis;
1990 after falling out of favor with James Bowles, I'L Pleasant; Beverher fellow Conservatives.
ly Perrin Dixon, Clarkston. Mi.;
Don and Cheryl Roush, Columbus.
MIL WAUKEE (AP) - "Miss
John Kauff, Point Pleasant: C. G.
Saigon" actress Annette Calud
Kerwood, Columbus; Enzo and
may be the only optometrist workJean Barsotti, Fresno, Ca.
ing on Broadway.
Ms. Calud, who plays Kim, the
doomed Vietnamese heroine, in the
show's Wednesday matinees. also
practices optometry in Manhauan.
"I invested a lot of lime, effort
and money in optometry," she said
in Sunday's Milwaukee JournaL
"It is a very stable profession,
unlike the theater. When 'Miss
Saigon' ends, I don't want to have
to wait lables.''
The 28-year-old Milwaukee
to
native earned a doctor of optometry
Paid for ~tile e-dNa
degree at the Illinois College of
Chry
It
DIU
•
fellto JtiiMIIN. l.ont lultotr&amp;. 011111
Optometry in Chicago.

-Names in the news
NEW HAVEN. Conn. (AP) Rock 'n' roller Mick Jagger was
just another video camera-toting
. parent when daughter Karis Hunt
: ,Jagger graduated from Yale Uni ;~ :Versity.
The lead singer for the Rolling
Stones shooed away journalists
.-:who followed him to th e college
-:·where his daughter received her
::4iploma Monday.
:. "Thank you, thank you, thank
·· you, good-bye, good-bye. good : bye." _said Jagger, accompanied by
1us wtfe. model Jerry Hall. Miss
Jagger is his daughter by singer and
actreSS Marsha Hunt.
Other famous parents atletlding
the commencement: acuess Mia
Farrow, whose son Mallhew
Phineas Previn was graduating, and
New York Gov. Mario Cuomo,
who came to see son Christopher
get his diploma
: · . KANSAS CITY. Mo. (AP) · Margaret Thatcher toured a .garden
: at the Nelson-Atkins Museum of
·•.Aft featuring the wort of the late

•

•

Selection of a king and queen,
performances by the award-winning Southern High Scbool Cbcerleaden, and awanJiDs of a scholarship were highlights of the 1992
Racine-Southern Alumni Banquet
held Saturday evening at the bigb
school. The theme of the event was
"Do Your Remember Wilen?"
Sarah Duhi and Ramie Wagner
were chosm 1992 Racine--Southern
Alumni Queen and King. Other
candidates were Todd Harrison.
Amber Cumings, Andy Hill,
Michael Hill, Jody Hayes and
Theresa Lee.
The Racine-Southern Scholarship was presented to S~a~:ey Irene
Theiss, daughter of Carol Theis:s,
Syracuse. She plans to auend the
Uni-.ersity of Rio Grande.
The invocation was given by
Frank Cleland before the dillner
which was rrepaRid by lllOibers of
the junior class and served by the
students.
Bobbi Hill, president of the
alumni association, welcomed the
alumni and their guests. Otber officers conuibuting to the evening
were Shirley Stewan, secrewytreasurer, and Tammy Cbapman,
second vice-president. Kathryn
Han was appointed to the board to
fill the vacancy created by outgoing president. Mrs. Hill.
During the business meeting
alumni voted to leave dinner and
dance ticketS for the banquet • S10
reganlless of whelber the dance is
attended or not, and to raise the
price of the dance, effective next
year, to $10 per tiW:I a1 the door.
Following a morneru of silmoe,
Florence Adams gave the balediction.
HostesSeS for the evening wen:
Opal Diddle, Marsha Russell,
JoAnn Willford, Pam Diddle 111&lt;1
Becky Malkwy.
Auending were Carron Balser,
Mansfield; Cheryl Baylor, Ptlzer,
S.C.; Marilyn Beall , Columbus:
Audrey Boichyn, SL Clair Sboo:s.
Mi.; Curtis Bradford, Arling1011;
David Brewer, Ponland; Janice
Briggs, Hilliard; Gladys Browa,
Dallas, Texas; Johnnie Calnan,
Ravenswood, W.Va.; Herman and
Mary Carson, CoolviUe; Dolores
Casper, Columbus; Charles O:cil.
Def1811CC; C.T. and Tlnllly Chapman, Long Boaom; Bill and Sandra
Baer, Syntcuse; Wilma Church,
Belpre : Carroll and Margaret
Cleek, Columbus; Steve Cleland,
Houston. Texas;
Naomi CofTIIUIII, Clinton; Miriam Compliment, Raleigh, N.C.;
Alfred and Mildred Cozart,
Youngstown; Tom and Sharon
Diddle, Portersville, Pa.; Diana
Duhl, Ponland; Gregory Du VaU,
Penland; Douglas DuVall, Portland, Larry Ebenbach, Syracuse;
Joy A. Ellis, Semi Valley, Calif_;
Dolores Forman, Point Pleasant.
W _Va.; Avice Freckcr, Cdumbus;
Steven Grady; Allen Graham and
Kay, Sandwich. Ill. ; Irene Hayman.
Columbus; Clarence Hill, Gallipolis; Jane Hill, Moore Haven, Fla.;
Phil Hill, Syracuse; Denise Holman, Middleport; Geroge Holman,
Syracuse;
James Holman, Middleport;
Wilbur Holter, Akron; Don and
shirley Johnson, Ponbod; John A_
Kessler, Winston-Salem, N.C .;
Juanita Kimes. Parkersburg,
W.Va.: Shirley Kline. Columbus;
Donna Larkins, Poniand; D. Russell Lee, West Chester; Nora
Lewis, West Columbia, W.Va.;
Belly Lou, Athens: Elma Louks,
Syracuse; John McClintock. Belmont, N.C .; Betty Mangione.
Greensburg, Pa.; Anita Moore,
Goshen, Ky.; Donna Multi, Mansfield; An Nease, Pomeroy; Evelyn
Nonh • Gall.tpOrIS;· Maxine O'Brien •
Junction City; Pam Proffitt. Pooland;
Blondena Rainer , Pomeroy ;
Mary Reinshell, New Plymouth ;
Harry Rhodes. Point Pleasant,
W.Va.; William Rbodcs and Mary,
Columbus; Ralph Ross, Mason,
W.Va.; Danny and Denny Roush.
both of Portland; NonDan and Janet
Roush , Charleston, W.Va.: Della
Sauer, Point Pleasant. W_Va.;
Alberta Saunders, Gallipolis; Paul
Sayre, Portland; T. I&gt;wain Sayre,
McCutchenviUe; Randall Talbott,
New Lexington; William Roush ,
Portland; Pauicia Tarr, Atron,
Norma Tassian, Uncinnlti;
Ann Tipton, Columbus; June
Twner, Ravenswood, w.v~ Gme
Wells, Osseo, ML; Coelle Salser,
Tuppers Plains; Juanita Wells,
Long Bonom ; Marcia Wells.
Pomeroy; Virginia Wheeler.
Sciotoville; Helen Wider, Columbus; Pauline Williams, Hilliard;
Peggy W"mes, Westcrville; Clarlcs
Wolf, Hebron; Della and Cbar1e.s

Republican Candidate For
Meigs Coanty Commissioner

Hardworking • o.dlwtwd

Meigs County

Mo~. thru
·

POLICIES

T......t.1· Poper
Wednesda~·

Pape'
Thu."Sdav i'of"'
Fndav P•f"'

FRI. lkM.-5r.M.- SAL8-12
CLOSED Su .~o.n

Sunda~·

• Ad5 ou utd f thf count y y.-.,uT ad rum m~UI l,t: prepud
• Recet~ e dac o unt for ada p111.1d

ID

Pape

X.atfuyn

'.Muufowj
'"SPECIAUZJNG II SLATE
OR CNf'IM&gt;"
3!1815 Gold RidglPomeroy, Ohio ~Snit

Welcome Slates
$20.00

-

CUotom l'llinlingo

614-992-2242

412&amp;1112

Clossified pages cover rhe
foUou;ing relephone exchange• ...

ad,.-aoce .

• Fr~ Ad. : G 1Ye..way and Found aW under I ~ wordt will b.e
run 3 day• al no cbaq:e.
• Pnc~~: of ad for a U ca pilallellera ia do ~&amp;h ie pr1ce of &amp;d co.t
• "7 potntlme ty~ only u.ed
• Sen lwei • not rmpo~Yib.le lor erron aftr:r t'u-at day (cbeek
lor e rron ftral day ad rwta in ~per ) C.Jl before 2:00p .m.
d·~ .Iter puhlte&amp;llon to mtle eorrec:lJon
• Ads tbat mu.l he patd lD.a.dva.nc:e. are

Gallia Coom'!

Meip County

1 Maoon

992-;\tiddk:pon/ ~ 67:;....Pt. Ple... nl
Pomcro1
1
4:i8-Leon
-.~a-..er
576-Appolc Gro•r
843-Portla.nd i
':'73-l'tluoo
24";'-l..ri.art FaD• ! 882-1\ew Hnen
94q._Racie~
895-Lelarl

~·..36":' .....a..e..li.ift
388-\'~'---

1

~G..-

2~--

643-.V.IoO.
-l~'&amp;'ol.oo

04:!-RutJand

•C. YOUNG

lo6 : ~

Words

1

ROYALTY SELECTED- Sarah Dubl was crowned 1992
Racinr-Soutbern Alumni Queen during restivities at Southern
Higb School Saturday enning. Ronnie Wagner, not pictured, was
croWDed king. Duhl and Wagner graduated rrom Southern during
COIIlme•ttment ceremonies Friday evening.

3
6
10
Monthly

15
15
15
1.1
15

Over 15 Words

$ 4.00

$ .20
$ .30
$ .42

$ 6.00
$ 9 00
$13.00

51.30/ day

60
$.05/day

lt-u.-r-su
l l - MoWc: R - far Sak

U-f.,..io&lt;s.J.

Rate5 are for consecutive runs, broken up days \\'ill be
charged for each day as separate ads

161- Farm Equipment
162- \tantecl to Buy
6.1-- La..,e.aloclr.

1-- - - --=:-=-..,...-,=-::====:;-----

' 64---- H.~ &amp;

~ R..J ~ 'll'..ood

1{ 1 \ l \1.•

16;).......

Grun

Seed &amp; r trlJILler

TH \ \&lt;I'OHT \TIO\

' 71- Aut.oa lor Sak
7:- T ruclu for S.k
~------.,.--..,.---------,1 42- Jloltilr
Mr Raal 73-- \-aru &amp; 4 WD'•
43----- r...- lor Rc.t
74--- Motorc'!elea
-:-:;,....._ Bo.u &amp; Motot11 ror Sale
76--- A.uto Parta &amp;: Aw"'o'n"l
77 - A.uto Rep•ir
7S- C..p1D! Eqwpmeat
2- ln Me mor y
l - Annouocemenu
1 l- Help Wanted
:-Ell\ I C E~
l:l- Satu-t.ioBI Wanted
I J- I naurance
\ l r Ht II\ \IJI~E 81- Ho--=lmpornmenu
,)--- Happy Ad•
82- PhaMi.UI~ &amp; Hen hnf;
6- Lott and Found
14- Buaaneu Tr&amp;UUbf!
il- H
' WWodt
8.l- E.:cnattng
J;).- Sr:hool1 &amp; lnnnaetton
7- l..o&amp;t and Found
5!-5-c..Go
84-- Ek&lt;&lt;n&lt;al &amp; Rei'"""'"•"
I t - Rad.o, TV &amp; CB Repa.Lr
H.- Publac Sale &amp;
.iJ.-- ......._.
8.&gt;-- GeMral Hau!Ja ~
I'7- M~c dlaneow.
Auc:Lion
:.4-- ILoc- - .... """"
tk- l\lohJr Hom~ Hepa1r
I~ ~an~ To Do
Q- Want.ed l o Bu\'
~ s
H-:- - Lphol.sten

GET RESULTS • FAST!

-41-

n.-- '- Rc.l
o-

;:..-

Public Nollce

NOTICE TO
cotmiACTORS
STATE OF OliO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Columbuo, Ohio
lilly 15, 111112
Conlroct Soleel.egll Copy
No.ll2-a2

~LDESf AluM-- Eldon Kraeuter, age 91, Racine, was the rec~ as tht oldest alumna attending the 1992 Racine-Southern
AI..,DJ Banqutl Saturday evening at the high school. Kraeuter
was a membtr or the class or 1917.
Wolfe , Ponsmouth ; Lisa Wood s,
Middleport; Marsha Russell , Min mville.

Marian Bell, Clarence and Rulh
Bradford. Mildred Carnahan, Laura
Circle, Nancy Circle, Frank and
Delores Cleland. Beverly Cummins, Samuel Curtis, Opal and
Bernard Diddle, JoAnn Willford,
Becky Mallory. Pam Dtddle, Mary
V. Easterday. Eurgene Ervin, Freda
Ferguson. Ruth Frank, Gary Gibbs,
Margaret and Erwin Gloeckner.
Dl:rothy Harden, Dale and Kathryn
Han, Legina Hart, Clifford Hill,
David Hill, Don R. Hill, Etta Mae
Hill, Jan Htll , Linda Hill, Marvin
Hill, Mary Hill. Michael and
Mindy Hill,
Myrtle Holter, Doris lhle, Mary
Johnson, Thereon Johnson, Eldon
Kraeuter, Otis and Emma Jan e
McClintock, Donita Manuel , Joyce
Manuel, Donna MatsOn, Anna Norman, Lorenc Pyles, Virginia Rees,
Rachel Reiber, Robyn Reiber,
France Roberts, Ruby Ross, Claudia and Wayne Roush , Eileen
Roush, Harold Roush, Hersc hel
Roush, David Sayre, Dixie Sayre,

Ruth Simpson, Dan Smith, Don
Smith, Josephine Smith, Joe Swain
Debbie Wolfe, VIctor and Altc~
Wolfe, Charles E. Yost and Leora
Young, all ofRxine.
The alumni committee regrets
any names unintentionally omitted
from the above lisl

PUBLIC NOTICE
Agendas for the
weekly Public Utilities
Commission of Ohio
meetings are available
by annual subscription. For further Information contact Gary E.
VIgorito, Secretary.
Public Utilities Commission of Ohio, 180
East Broad Street,
Columbus, OH. 432660573.

COME liD RIDE TIE
BERRY WAGON
Pick Your Own Fresh

Strawberries
PICK MON., WED. &amp; SAT.
8-12NOON

THURS. H
CONTAINERS
FURNISHED

HARRIS F
STATE ROUTE 124

Tho Polio lor oald
Election wUI o1 5:30
A.ll. Md ,_llin open UBII
7:30 o'clock P.ll. on ..ld

-------1

PORTlAND

843-5193
3111LES ABOVE RAVENSWOOD BRIDGE

s.ld

Stat•

331,

apd

--·f---""·
-·-=
·
:r: UL-....., ---... proper-·

7

eo..

sw.-. -

--

b

=u:1

MIDDLEPORT GUN
SHOP

134 • SI.,JW!prt, ...

~.. Or ..

WKI'S
HlWII6 SIIVKE

· ~JAYMAR

992-5335 or
915-3561

4-21-92- I

Y.!3.92Ain

tiJeir
!t; ::..-:.:: ... :1 !I I us
41ri1: ., st.r • St.
1!-(s Hts,. Jlle
Jly

mo.

pd.

'-VJOitlo

~

MO. pd.

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and

.U.ESTONE

(614) 992-3470

RAONEMOWO
QJNIC
P.O.

BILL SLACK
992-2269
USED RAILROAD TIES
4·4-92-th

lea.,._....,

~aa=-PlRTS &amp; 5EIYICI

REMOVAL
•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD

•wen •CW.

Snn

•W~

. ,,_
-.,
•
•

r--------,
IK&amp;t EXCAVATING
BULLDOZING

IIllEY INC.
Rt. 2

UUESTONE-TRUC~

FREE ESTIMATES

992·3838

4-9-tfn

BISSELL &amp; BURKE
CONSTRUCTION
•New Homes
•Gara9es
•Comp ete
Remodeling
Sto" &amp; Co=ore

WHALEY'S 'UTO
PARTS

&gt;

Ht-nft

·-.lnhsfom

F..-el~ir

D l USED ARTS
101 AU MAlES
l IIOilUS
H2·7013 or
992-5553

12.50
6 leSSOIS 560.00

512&amp;11 mo.

BUUD02ER , BACKHOE
ond TAACKHOE WORK
AYAIL.Aal.E .
SEPTIC SYSTEMS,
HOllE SITES ond
TRAILER SITES,
LANDCL.EARING,
DRIVEWAYS ..STALLED

304-273-5555

5

a.ltR. .,
Tropllies, Plaqles
.dladges

lgricwlture
u.e

G

• -N·
'

I

HOWARD
EXCAVATING

FOR SllE

.,ei*ct'&lt; fo.IW,.

"

1/2/tln

51151'9211 mo

llwoad. W.Va.

614-949-2104

985-3961
lesso11

(all614·992 ·6637
Sl. Rl. 7
Cheshire, 0 H.

oSNID -GRAVEL &gt;DIRT

Leiding Creek RcL
Middleport
742-3030
5111'1

Quality
Stone Co.
SIZED LIMESTONE
FOR SALE

JH70 ........

F EE EST!

otrounn

-w. n.,. Qdf ,... .I
- l.ol U1 .. II,_ W

Still fine at

39!

ll•tPY Blrthda

Jll HUDSON

ES

985-4473
667·6.179

I·IOCH41-CI070
-.0110
7/J1f911Hn

2-7-92·11n

INTERIOI &amp; IITEIIOI

..
-.......:!t.

1111 ESTIII1lS

HAVE IIIJlllm'5

.... ,,._._.

I

w••

Alt• • ,._ m ...

PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS

LAND CLEARING
WATER&amp;
SEWERUNES
BASEMENTS &amp;
HOME SITES

~

NOW OPt:N!

f'BIIf-B&amp;f'

HAULING: Limestone,
Dirt, Gravel and Coal

WIFOUIA

15 Sessions__.$25
12 s-ianL..$20

1 s.aian....$2..25

SNODGRASS
UPHOLSTERY

NRSCA WOlFF
a.d5l24

.. H.lpU.. Y-

'a o.r &amp;!tit

RACINE, OHIO

C..bAppl.Tod.y

614-949-2202

tct-2123

Licon sed and Bonded

PH. 614·992-5591

ToR~-,

r•..,.,_,..,.,,•.

4/21/92/1-

FlEE ESTIMATES
NEW CONSTRUCTION &amp;
REMODELING

Real Estate General

••• Ctt n.
C.lll h•m

J··

21Yrs.bp.

....

r--------,
lwisiJIIfW

.a

-IOWAVE OVEN
.... fCIIEPliR

BUY..SELL-TRADE

c.o.va

llwe, &amp;I Wels

•

Rout•

lu

-o.-.m.-

t-

S

Public Notice

o,.r-.~

MON.·SAT. 9 to 5
614-742-2772

.....,.OliO

992·7553

TEAFORD GOLF
AND TROPHY

Miag: oR i•proving Roode and
lllltlilioul • Ill 1 lor F-=li-, wiltln &amp;umngton
he (5) II a nii1o lOOt loloncl Stltlo llomorlot, Ohio
_ _ _ . . 1 - l o r - Hlo- !loc:Wy.
Project llld Work Longlh:
day.
- _ . .of
.
Byordorofltoao.dol ......
, .. .,_
43,12« Hnoor or 8.30
Eloctlono of llolgo County, (Sa. 10) 101 Melt •••
Ohio.
h11adrod dolla11 of
Henry L Hunlor, a..n... ........_, .,...,.(5),_..
"TTto ootlor compt..
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
Ailo D. Smllt, DileciOr
Tllo Polio lor oaid
S.- propoooto will be
in tho bidding
Eloctiool d II 1:30 HI .-we~ ol Ito omce ollho DATED: Fobruory II, 111Z
o'dodr.
Director of tho Ohio (5)4,1,11,11,26,tlt:
EliCh biddet ohall be
Deporlrttonl of Tr...,.,..
1311i117::JD o'clocli P.ll.
Public
Notice
_..,_
~to lito- hlo bid.
tion, Columbuo, Ohio, unlit
Br Oodor oflte ..... of - - o r c a l t l o r ' o
10:00 .UI., Ohio Slondord
lor ......... t oqulll
Tlmo, T....toy, Juno II, 11182 PI•• 1• •tdood •111 10 Eloo:tlo.. , ...... c-., 10 !he ,., coni of hio bid,
'"lOA I Gl PIAIIIHIM ... P
Ohio.
lollmproviiMftlo In:
Golllo County, Ohio lor liJII(I 'ZIIIII 'Utuql~ ,. Mp
J-.yL...-.~ bul In 110 _ , - · Ilion
f i l l y - dolbtn, or •
Improving GAL-160-10.45, IIIII •111 uo , . - 'ofiiO
bond lor lon per coni of thlo
Slot• llou1a 110, by r•ur- 'AoiiiiiOd 'llltoll ,. Al-:1 OATED: hi!. :M, 1112
111
bld,fllitnbh
IOiho~.
(5)t,
1,11,11,M,41c
laclng wllh
upholl "'111° .... ot•I 1110:J,.....
Bidden tauol apply, on
concrelo.
,. paoQ ... ,. -toelll
lor quoit\Project ond Work Longllt : • JO oouno•nd Uf 1•111
Ptmllc Notice
22,212 linear fHI or 4.22 ueArtl All ..... If :r.II10N
-to ... ..
prior
- -N(
forclllya
opening
milo.
NOU.YJ.IIn TliiiBI. 3HJ.
Probole c-. olllloigo
bi•
in
accordanc•
wilh
Pov...,t Width: 20 IMl
:10 SS;DJEI N ~ IYJ.
County, ()No
a..pt.r
5525
Ohio~
"Tho dolo HI lor compie- NO ~JU :10 3:MJ.ON
Es- ol Georvlo c.
ea..
tion ollhlo WOflt olloll be M ouiKIIviolon at 1 Primary
Swauger,
ed
--•-lflcotlono
eel forllt In tho bidding Eloc:tlon to be hold In tho
C...No. l 7 . . on . . in t . o.p bu.at
prapoul.•
County of lloigo, Ohio, II
-1l,Povt•
Eoch bidder oholl bo tho ..gular ,a- oJ vallng NOTICE Of APPOMTIIENT ot Tr-portotion and tho
. . . . oflho Diolrict Deputy
..qulred 10 ftlo with hlo bid • th-n. on lho - t d cloJ
Of RDUCIARY
.-tilled - k or cahl•'• of Juno. 18112. Ito ..-lion Anised
Soc. :t113.111 Director.
Tho lllnctor rMorY• lho
cheek for ., -ount ICIUol of levying 1 tu, In "On llay 12, 19!12, In lho
to live per Clllll of hlo bid, of lhtt 1on mltlllnoillllon, lor lll&lt;itP Coootty .........Courl, right ID 0'8jocl ony ond oil
but In no ov111t more lhon tho bonoftt olllotgo County Case No. 21410, a.. H. E.
JERRY WAAY
lilly lltou...d dol'- or • Bo•d of -lltl Aollulllion lng, 108 llluhny A - .
DIRECTOR OF
bondlorbtn porC811lof ltlo for tho purpooo of Pomelvy, Ohio 4511i9, . . .
TlWISPOATATION
bid, ~obto IOiho Dnclor. motnbtn- ond opo otion
oppolnted
o1
(5)
26;
(&amp;)
I , 211:
Blddtro muot apply, on ot Carleton School lllld tho •lola oJ
c.
lhtt lonna, lor quollll- Molga lnduolrioo Worbhap
t. - ,.,,...
ol
cllion 11-t lon clllya prior for poroono with IIMtlol 7«2 Eost lbin - .
Public Notice
to Ito dolo HI for -lng rolordollon and dovolop- ...,,, Ohio 4511i9.
bldo In occordotnco wlllt monbtl dubillliiL
-E.-Prg he Judge
Chopt• 5525 Ohio AoviMd
Sold IIX bolng : on
Probate Court of Meigs
Coda.
oddhonol lu ol 1.I 11ills II
l..enl K.. f'
County, Ohio
Qort
Ptono ond o,..tflcotiono o ralo not excood 1.1 Ettale of Clinton E.
. . on fllo In tho o . - t for Nch one dollar of (5&gt; 1&amp;_ 25 (6) 1 . lTC
Douglu, deceaoed
of Tronoportotlon ond lhtt vll111llon, which .,....lo 10
Case No. 27412
olllce of lho Diolrlct Deputy olgh-. conlo (SO. II) lor
Publlc;-;Notice~~
DOcket
N/13, Page 32813n
DnciOr.
------of
N011CE OF APPOINTMENT
Tho Dll-.clor r _ , • lho valuollon, for • continuing
OF FIDUCIARY
right to reject lilY end oil period of lima.
Revised
Code, Sec:. 2113.08
bldo.
Tho Polio for uld
"On April 27, 1992, In the
JERRY WAAY Election will opon II 1:30
Meiga County Pro bote Court,
DIAEClOR OF A.M. ond .-llin open untl
C11e No. 21412, uwrence 0 .
TAAHSPOATATION 7:30 o'clock P.ll. on uld
While, 7460 Selby Rd, Athent
(5)26; (8) 1, 2lc
day.
Ohio 45701, wu oppolnled
By ordor of lito ao.d ol
EJ:ecutor oftheestate of CllnEloctionl of llolgo County,
Public Notice
IOn
E. Dougloo, deeeaoed,
Ohio.
lela of 3157110 Pogevltle Ad .,
Henry L Hunlor, Chlli1111011
Pomeroy, Oftlo 45769.
NOnCE OF ELECTION ON
Allo 0. Stttllh, DileciOr
Rober! E. Buck,
TAX LEVY .. EXCE88 OF
DATED: Fottruory 20. I 8112
Probate Judge
nE lEN IIL.L UIIITATlON (5)4, I, 11, II, H, tic
lena K. Neaselroed,
NOTICE to hereby given
Clerk
that In purauance ol a 1 - - - - - - - (5) 18, 25 (6) 1, 3TC
Rooolutlon o1 ... BHrd of
Public Notice
P..tl Collunl•lo.- of lhe 1---~:...~:...­
County of llolgl, Pomeroy, N011CE OF El.EC110N ON
Ohio, ...-1 on lho 3nl cloy
TAX LEVY .. EXCESS OF
of Fobru..,, 11112, .... will 1liE lEN IIL.L UIITATION
be eubmlttod 10 1 volo of
NonCE 1a ......, olv•
tho people of 11id thai In purouoRco of a 1__Ca..:..:..rcl..:...oi:...Thal*s..:..:.._;_:.__
oubcllvloion at • Prlmory
Bolnl Ill
Election to be hold In tho Rooolution
T~ oJ of
thoIto
T•noltip
of
County of llolge, Ohio, ot Olive, Aoedavllle, Ohio.
tho ..gular,._ of.oling
. . . . on tho Ill ..., Ill
-a,lllflr
.,...n, Oft 1M IICGnd., ,Fobrulry,1112,
.... wlltlle
,..
of Juno.
lho ..-lion
of lowylng a tu, In of ... ..., tdl 111111111•, far .t • Prt...., E1eG11on '" .,.
tho ........ olllolgl County
hold In tho To.....,. of
POIIc Dletrlct lor lho pui'JIOII
OU..,
llolgl Coulltr, Oltiio,
..
of Cumnl Ellpll
al tho rogul8r pl.- Ill
MWeiS, _~
_, &amp;
S1ld tax being: on voUng thoroiR, on lho
. . . . . . . giiJ.s
l!ddllmtol lox ol 1 111IU Ill a
uoond
dly
Ill
J....,
1,__:_
rolo noiUCMdlntJ 1 mil for
lho ~~-lion oJ fe1ytng 0
• I
MCh OM dDI.r ofwlulllion,
tu,ln-ofllellll..
. . d'.....l
which MIIOUIIII 10 lon oonla llllllllllon, lor ......... of
-($0.1 0) tor each one Olivo Townohlp lor tho
•
hundred
doll111 of purpoH, ~lllnlntl- L - - - - - - . . 1

tm.

RIGUW HOURS; MON.-FRI. I 0.6:30
SAT. HH; SUN. 12-6

voi111tion , lorfive(5)~

WID.·SUII..liH p.11..

217Ls-.ISL

LOW lABOR RATE .- f'BIIf-BI£'1"
15% OFF On Most
Boat Parts

•.,.._

Ptmllc Notice

Public Notice

OftN

. . _ , _ . . . OIIh.

RWOIIAILE U1IS

0

'------

LOCIIed 11 P...'slll
~·ay Mlw- Dtpol St.
il RollcM .d Rt. 554

(~

UIIESTOIIE
DEUYED SEmCI

Co. RcL 3,

1

34- - - S.ildmp
3&gt;--- lA,. A " " -

Hybrid Tomatoes,
Baskets, Etc.

IIIW OPBI fOI SPRING
Plllb, tt.rh, Plllllltlalt,.

NOW OPEN
Hrs. 9to 5
MDL t~ll Sat.
HANDGUNS, RIFLES,
SHOTGUNS

CHUCK'S BOAT·
AUTO REPAIR

1' \lnl ~LI'I'I.IJ:~
&amp; LI\E~TUCJ.

1:1 \ I I ' I \ II.

s

Strawftow81'1 and

more Everlastings.

POIIERO't Oil

I 56- Pei.A lol'" Sde
! 57- M....icallnllrwneoLI
5A--- fnui.A &amp; Vf:!elahka
i 5'*- far S..le or T nde

l l\\\11\1

&amp;

Annuale,

IUIIIUS

5-11·'92·1-pl

Rate

Pe~t~nniale

lEI'S =.INCE
SIIVICE

RATES
Days

ANGIE'S FLOWERS

SIW1 DOIEI
WOU.DIIVIWAI
WOII.U

'992-6215
P-y,Ohlo

93":'-B.Jl'alo

COIIIII'S OHIO
IMI HEllS IIIII
MIWTINGS
521. u_ l31,1odot, ow.
247...g3s

Hl-92·1-.,L

CHIRUE'S

Co .. \'1/\

Arr.a Cod. 614 , ..U.,a Cod. 6141 Arta Code 3 04

r.:ard of Tha.nlu
Happy Ad.
In Memoraam
Yard Sala
• .\ cl ... ifLed adYer~menl viae~ ID t.he GaU..pol.. o.,J~
T rlhune texcept Cla...ifted D..p.lay, Buio•• Card or l..ep:al
\o llc e.~L will abo •ppcar m the Poml Pleuant Repater -d
tlu: iJJUlv Senlln~. rach.D@ o..-er 18.000 bomu

'

•

Monda~ P•l""

Call992-2156

949-2627 or
1-aoo-837-1460
Lawn Mowing,
Fertilizing, Weeding,
and Seeding.
Shrub•ndTree
Trimm::!!' It Removal
A•iden
1o CamtMrCbtl
FroeEolimoiM

DAY BERJRE PUBLICATION
t 00 p .m . Saturday
1 00 p.m Monday
1 00 p m Tuesday
1 00 p m Wednesda ..
10C1 p.m. Thurscia'll
1:00pm . Fnday

COPY DEAIJUNE

ELEa

GARY R. DILL

--

KEVIN'S lAWN
MAINRNANCE

Settind Ntw~ Slalf

Done NDw"

614-742·2321

ltltrtiKts lnHaiJie

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.
992·2259
608 ~ST MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO
NEWUS11NG·SR. 7 POMEROY- 1979Bamngtoo 14 • 7t.
Mobile Home with 3 bedrooms, 1 112 bath . dad awl•·
ances, 12 x 16 s torage building In Eastern sdlool drstn:::t
cable hook-up 1+ acre $18 ,000

NEW USTING- 16 769 acres ol VACANT Grou.-.J locaEd
in Harrisorwille ASKING $13,500

•••••s •Vinyl Siding

. . l••t•s • Replacement Windows
Ia •• lclditio•s • Roofing
ceMMiaOA.L aad RI:.'IWENTIAL
1110: LfiTIMATES

614-949·2101 or 949·2860
llo Suaday Calls)
2112t'i12 lfn

RACINE- Very mce 1 floor frame home 3 bedHOOmi. an

level lot with stora!J9 bu iidrng . po&lt;ch. utihty room
priced at $15.000

~ltonlablt

Ill.,_"" •

MIDDLEPORT- Remodled. cozy home close
quiet weet wrth lencod yard. portl1 . s10rage building . 3
bedrooms, much storage space ASKING 519.500
FLATWOOOS RD.- Briel&lt; ranch style ho""' with 3 bedrooms, 2 baths glassed In tam~y room . e•oollenlloca!IOtl'
ASKING $49,900

-

.\TTE\TION
\i ' 1, . \. l l•qJ hl t·\\lde: llollll'O\\IHI "

011., WV. l H.U.D.
Appme4PrM.ds.
·--~-­
lloosilt

POMEROY· Briel&lt; ranch With with 2 lots. ~ - CIA .
anic , lull basemenl,lronl &amp; side porches . 1c a r - storage. Extra house goes with property $45.000 (A good
deal lor a home with all this &amp; mom)

PROPERTY IS SELUNG ...SEWNG_.SEllJNGl F
YOU WANT TO GET YOUR HOllE ON 1liE ~
BOARD....UST WITH CLELAND REALTYI WEllE
GETTING RESUL1S ALl OYER lHE COUNTY! WFD
UKE TO GET RESUL1S fOR YOU TOOl
GIVE US A CAU!

a t 1 11 dt.a.acy ~
(I t
n, Heat

0

Fa . , ...
Wale H Iars.

HENRY E. ClELAND.......................................JI2~11
TRACY BAINAGER ...... - ............................... - .Mt-J EAN TRUSSELL ........................................-.....9411-,_
OFFICE............................................... ··· ............

.9112-

•

�Page--10-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

Announcem ents

33

UVEI UV£1 UVEI

+I

SSTEL

Bfock, 114-388-8210.

3 blk l ~·~:;-good

.

35

PIIUI call 3CM-1'75-S41a.

P•• Bloco Lab Puppln, 614 .
55

-28 .

f----------"T----------1

()uPDitl; Feme .. • Mile, About

Now scc:eptlng applietUons tor
exparltncld baker, cook, and

7 WO.u Old, 614-245-11644.

wohmo. Applr In poroon o1 Mil1M's RHiaurent.

Yard Sale

OLAN MILLS

n. world'• largttl portreil
Mudlo It lookl~~ 3 energetic
Advoneo. DEAOUNE' 2:00 p.m. &amp; fftllura lela
pertht dt~ betore tht ad Ia to run. .,.. nlldlng tc Nm more than
Sundty .dillon · 2:00 p.m. m.,.lmum wage. W• ott.r
Friday. Mondoy odKion - 2:00 guaranta.d hoUrlr rate plut 1,...
p.m. Saturday.
c:entlve bonus fot' all who
ALL Ytrd Sal. . Must Be Ptld In

••lei

q111llly.CAU YS NOWII

To wrh1 your own PIYChackll
ctU Tom 11 30U7$.4934. Tuts •

Public Sale

&amp; Auction

Business
Opportunlly
WolttT•nnlng hdl

Now

commorcloi-R~ unh,

La..,.,

tram $1Q9.00,
lotions,
ICCIHOrt.., monthly payment•

22 Money to Loan

Want ed t0 Buy

A.M. To 10 P.M. "'"'

5'13--544"·5331.
RHponlible Non-Smokar To
Babytlt 8 v..r 04d, 814-446-

814-ii2-6~

&amp;eave menage.

10 ICI'H 3bdnn hoUH, btim,

uiiiKy bulldlng, 1ml. !Jom Mid-

::..c.:...._ _=--- -

dleport. Handyman tpe&lt;:lal, low
twentln, 216-395-2390.

Old mtrb'-t, toys, comk: books, Jecklon Ganartl Hospital,
lenltmt, ptcluret 1nd fumhura, Riplly, WV, nGW accepting apOaby Martln,l14..fl2-i'M1.
pllcatlona tor full lime position
CCU In em11gency dtpl. P.O.
UMd Moblte Homlt, Call 814- Bo 1 720, Ripley, WV 2527'1 or

2 ltory, 6 room, bath, 113 bau-

1238.

RN

~·

Wtnted To Buy: Junk Autos
With Or Wlthoul llotoro. Coli

Lllrry llv.iy. 814-381-1303 ,
Buy: Large Slzt
DrHa Mlktre Form. Good Con·
dhion, Call S14-t4&amp;-4015 After 5
P.M.
Wanled To

Top Prleoo Polrf: AU Old U.S.

eall for mort Information 304372-2731 axt 150, 7:00 AM till

3:00PM. E.O.E.

S.IH Clerk NNdad 10 To 3,
Summer Only. Some WMklndt,
S.lary Plus Commlltlon, Rtply
To: CLA 116, cJo Gallipolis Otlly
Tribuna, 825 Third Avsnut, Gal-

llpollo, OH 45631.

14

Business
Training

Help Wanted

US,OOO - U.S. Govwn,.nl. R.traln

Nowi!!Soulhastem

Part-Timti, Own Hout'l. Proceu Bualntu College, Spring Valley
FHA -~ Aolundo. No Ex· PIIU. C111 Today, 614_.46 ... 367!!
~rienct
Ulry. 1....05-321· Reglsttr1tion 190-05--12748
~-

•AVON" All AAEASI Short your 18-,-W.,.---a_n_ted
__
to_D.,:O_ _
IIITII with ua. Vou'll love the :-:company. 1-800-88'2-6356.
Will Babysit ln My Homa. Fan·
AUSTRAUA WANTS YOU
Excliten4
P"'f,
Bentrlts,
Transportation,
407-292-411t7,
EJ"t. 571. ta.m.-10p.m. Toll
Rtfundtd.

c:ed In Play ArN. References
Avallablt. Rodnay Area. Cali
614-245--5887.

E &amp; R TREE SERVICE. Topping,
Trimming, TrM Removal, H.ctge
Trimming. FrM &amp;llmat..l 614·

AVON I All Arna I Shirl•y
SpNt'l,304-675-1429.
81byllt1er In My Home, Day

367-7957.
Georgn Po~able Sawmill, don't
h•ul your loge to the mill just

Shift. Call Aft., 4:00 P.M. 614-

call 304--675-19!57.

441-4313.
BARTENDEASICASINO
WOAKEASIDECK
HANDSiHoo4-.

Hillary ProlnalonaJ TrM Ser·

~UOnt

Elc.

Aboilrd CtuiN Ships.

$3001$1100 Wkly. FrM Trani.
Caribbean~. Htwlli,
No EJII. n~ary.

'IQOO Ext 1511CN5.

Bthamat.
1-206-736-

CooU, line girts, waitresses,
dWtwltheN.
Er~rianct
neceaury, tpply in per.on, tf·
temoona, Mom't Smorgatbord,
Rav.ntwOOCI, WY.
£aay Wort! Excel~nt hy! As·
eemble Products At HorM . Call

Tclltl Free, 1-800-417·55&amp;1, Er1.

313.
EXPERIENCED ADMINISTRATIVE SECRETARY· A,.. HuHh

vice Topplngtlrlmming, Ramov·
lng, Hedge rimmed, Fraa Es·
tlmJtesl Debri1 Removed. 614·
448-9384.

Min Paula's Day Carw Center.
Sat., affordable, chltdc1re. M·F
6 1.m. · 5:30 p.m. Apa 2,.,._10.
Btlof11, after ac:hool. Drop-Ins
welcome. 614""'"1J-8224. New In·
fan! Todd'-r Care, 814-446-6227.
NMd a ba byelner fu1? Call

"The Kkt C.r11 Club". Seven
,.,pontlbtt babrsltt•• will be

II your llt'ViCI. $1.50/hr. For
more Information call 614-985-

3854 or &amp;W-992·5173.
T(Mal lawn care, half price, ~1St
lime special), Includes mowing
1: waedlng, ctll 614·992-6314,

Care

Qam-9pm.

10111 Shor1hlnd And Por"'"ol

Wanting To Babysit, Newborn
To 5, Gt.. n Township Arts. 614·

Facilfly Hu lmm.c:Uatt
Opening For Pereon With Exctl·

Computer Skll... Compettthta
Salary And Excellent Frtnga
Bantfhs. Stnd R..ume To : Box
Tribuna, wlllpcUt, 01-4 45631.

Elptritnctd
Htal
Pump
R.S.E.S. SeNica Ttdmleltn,
Wltt'l Exparltnct In Furn.IC41

S.rvlct Rtpair, Some Plumbing
bptritnce NMdtd . lnsunnu
Provtded, Send R81umt To :
CL.A 220 clo Gallipolis Daily
Tribune, 82S Thlfd Avtnua . Gal·
llpollt, Cltllo 45631.

Hok "lllst lot JoAnn·s Cut

and

21

leve~\.. ~overed

patio In back, priv-.;y t.nce,
lhown by appointment

glriQI',

only 304-67S.1238.

Ranch Sty~
Horne, App. 1 112 Acr. Locattd
On Slate Routt 160, App. 6
MiltS From Holzer Hotphll. 614·
2 Car Glr.gt,

388-9301.
B~rooms,

Chnhire

1 BR houH tcrou from the

Unlvorolly of Rio. Orondo. 614388-ill46.

2 Slory Home,
Vlllaga,
(Galli•

Houu tor rant In Polnlf'Oy, 304·
882-3336 lfler 4pm .
Newar Home...!a~br, 2 Btlhs, In
Crown CUy, w:tO!Mo. Call Aner
6 P.M. 614--245-1085.

N~• tHic:iency cottage, un~u•
and btautltut, 304-17f"-eG42
u tu I hod 2bd
h
n m•
rm.
ouae,
clean, deposit I l'lfttenc:n r.qulr.d, no Inside pttt, 614·992·

3090.

42 Mobile Homes
lor Rent
1 Bedroom C.ntral Air, Rtft,.n·
Otposh Rtqulr.d. No

Cll I

Pets . Avallabla: 815192. 814-446-

44J79 .

pay own
utiHtita plus dtposH, 304-67S1 bedroom

tr~iltr,

2535.

!NonCEI
OHIO VAllEY PUBUSHING CO
recomnwnd1 th.t you do busl -

nHI with people you know, and
NOT to tend mon.y lhrOIJ9h the
mall until you have lnvHt1ga1td

3822.

Alttnllonl

Styling

Salon For

Salt! Prime Loeaflon. Call 614-

446-8803, 614-446-i355.

Lcc.al Pay Phone At low Coal ,
High Return 1-&amp;00-7'41 ·1186.

Vending Rot.r1e: l.oc:al. We Hava
Tht Ntw..t Machines, Making A
Nice Stttdy Caeh lncoml'. 1·
800-Q~ .

3 B~rooms, With Gange Will

Consider Ttalltt AI Down Pav·
men! . Pri ce: $45,000. 614-4466325.

A·hmt home on 28 acras, l
btdroom, 1 112 b1tha , underground swimming pool, A·hme
garaga, 304-882·2884 af1er 5:00

PM .

APPLE PIE CONDITION! Hall

wav bltwHn Htgn &amp; Pl . Pit, One
tOWner, 3 b.c1room, carptling,
large ul.jn kitchen, large
wooden deck overlooking 2
level •eras. $49,500. Call Gail
Frye at The Prudanllal Bunch
Co. REALTORS, 304-525-71'61 or

b9droom, 21r2 baths. tamilr
room, doutMa c1r garage, poo .
Own•r will llnance wilt&lt;~ SJ)«ial
amngemant1. 304-675-232.

in Mid·

dltpor1, 614·992·5858.

O.poelt, 614·992·5732,
mnaage.

INvt

Hollypark 14•70 wi1h add on
llvlngroom, In Hartford, $200
Meadowbrook · 3 bedrooms,
carport, dack. Mtadowl•nd • 5
rooms, 1112 baths, garagt. Mon·
~ Ave • remodt*i 5 room
houae, garden apace. Homta·
INd AMity, Brcklr. S04-&lt;i755540 or 304-882-2405.
Home
Untumlsh~.
Bulavlllt Area , 614-446-1637, 614·

Mobile

446-3431.

Horne•

For Rant ·
Refarenc:::n And Otposlt Rtqulrtld. Call Attar 2 P.W. 614-446-

For Rent. 8 MIIH ().Jt Rt.218,
Aeferencn And O.pot;lt Re-

quired. 614·256-6251.

For salt by ownar: vary nict,
compltltly remodel~ 3bdrm
homa on Peacock SlrMI. Prictd
btlow appraisal. 614-867· 321'1.

Mobile Homes
lor Sale

614-446-31118,

Befcre I P.M.

44

6:00PM.

1963 Vangard 12x60 With Tip
Out Room, E141Ctrtc Httt, Needt

Work, $'1,500. 614-446-1822, 614446 -9591, 614-441-o\117.

1974 Oukt 14x65, 2 Bedrooms,
Fumlshtd , CA, Underpinning

$11,000. 614-446-0782.

1980 Buddy Mx1U 2 Baths, WID
OW, CA 15x30 pool . 3ml out of
Portet. C•ll6t4-)88..8352 • 5:00

1983 14x52 2 Btdrooms , Utility
Clout, Stove &amp; Refrigerator Included, G.. Furnaca, Haw Carpaling, Good Condll lon, $7,000,
O.B.O. 614-66W..5245 .
1i83 Nashua, 3 bedroom, 14x70
with 7~~:12 lkplndo, CA, Outen
pUo~nctt, 10x20 deck , $14,500.

Must move, 304-675-7860 or 6753594.

446-2342 675-1333
992-2156

1Q86 14'x70', 2bdrm., 2 bath, gas
stove &amp; fum•ce, 614-992-6081
ltavl menage.

614-256-1903

Apal1ment
lor Rent

2 Acoma &amp; Bath, Downatairs,
CINn,
No
p.fs,
Oult1,
Referenea And DtpoaH RtquiNd. 814-446-1519.

387.0131 Aft or 5 P.M.

614-

BEAUTIFUl APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON

ESTAlES, SliJ Jackson Pike
frvm S1U/mo. Walk to shop &amp;
movies. Call 814-"46·2568. EOH.
Furnished apartment svallablt
by
w•~
with
cooking

privltegH. 104--882·2566.
Furnlahed Apar1menl, 1br, ner1
to Ubury, parking, central heal,
1ir, ralertnea. 614-446-0338,
Before 7p.m.

Mx80 38t'a, 2 Baths,
$17,500, Or Aolumo Wllh 1750
Down. M'--1 Be Movtdl 814-446832!..

Reclaimed

Mobile Homte, Great S.leetlon!

M1ny At S500 Down, And Ttka
Over Payment• . C.ll 1~5895~1.

Vwy nlct 14110 mobile home on
privata acre. 3 bedroom extra
1
room wtwoodbum.r, ma,or
ap--

S1

H
h ld
ouse 0
Goods

l4001mo. O.poeh Required. 614·
444i·T733, IJ14-446 4222.

Modem 1 Bedroom Downtown
Complolo KKchon, Corpo4, CA,

614-446-0139.

ment, No Petal.. $189/Mo. Water

Included, $100 uepoeH, 114-446-

3817.
pt"lVItl
enlrence, baHmenl ttoraga
wl\lneher-dryar hookup. Off
st,...l parting, ytrd, no pete, .-.r
&amp; eeeurhy dep, SlOO. month
ptue lttc: • w•llf, 2208 Jefftr·
ton Ave, Pt. Ph, 304-875-8357.
rumtlhed,

GOOO lJSED APPLIANCES
W1~1
Y•t. Nfrtgttatora,
rangae.
Appllancea, 1'6

Ono bedroom apt "" ron1, 304-

HNvy duty wi.IMI 1nd dryer,
4yn. old; chili Jre.nr, 3y,..
old; 614--992-6340.

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Ccmptet• home tumi~I4J::

Houra: Mon-Sit, 1-1. 8
0322, 3 mil" out Bulavllte Ad.

Free o.u.,.ry.

Flnlshod Buomont, Fuel 011
Fui!IICO,
Slnglo
Adseftod
Glragt, Pluo a Cor Glrogo In
Worbhop, I llrgo Blm'!,_ ~b
Shod 314 Mlloo OUt H1.218.
Evenings After 7 P.M. 114-4462360

Tandy 1000 TU Comput11, Wtlh
Pd
14- -9610
Monilor, 40 Meg HO 1•000 '· $900. 8 388
·
Mccam, Prlnltr, And Lots Of
SohWiro. l1,300.114 4411103!
13mo. old pollod Horofonl bull,
650tbe.,
~le,
eo.ot-

Terw1 1230 buH dozer, 11c cond,

bloo&lt;llnes, I

Qpm.

Woodburn...-, 2yn. okl, $200,

~ And Chl~ngus Black
At.onlbly Priced. Slats
un •nne. Jec:kson, Ohto, IM281-5385.

PtcKENS FURNITURE
NeW/Used
Household furnishing . 112 mi.
Jerrtcho Rd. Pt. P1..11nt, WY,

Block, brlek, ...., ~pel, wl,.._
dows, linttts. etc. Claude Winttr1, Rk&gt; Grande, OH C.H 614245--St2t.

Coppertone Drver, Good Condl·
lion, 2 Prom Or.... a. 114-446-

1081.
SWAIN
AUCTION 6 FURNrTUAE. 62
Olive St ., GaiUpoUe. New • lJMd
fumttura, ~ten, Wnt.m &amp;

UVING ROOM : Set. And Chlllt

$179 And Up; Colfoo And End
TobiN 171 And Yp; Swivel
Rockara $n.

BEDROOM: Bunk Bodo 199

Drawer Chest or
brswert $44.95; TWin Manrau
199 Sot .
(2x6j;

4

55

Building
Supplies

Groom and Supply Shop-Pet
Grooming. All &amp;rMcte, •ylea.
tamt Pel Food Deallr. Jul•

-

2 AKC Revl.t..t Yor'uhlre Ter-

rier Pupptet., S250 Each. 6143111-&lt;1601.

rNa.; iM-882-6340.

Monttw &lt;Jtd, 1 Yur Qd Feme.._
Alae 1 YNr CMd FuU-Itooct.d
Mall,
Thlt
II
Running.
Evenings: 11~1-21'08.

AKC RogloiS&lt;od &amp;....1 Pup. .. I WMis Okl, $100 Ear:h.

52 Sponlng Goods
New SKS Alt._, Wtlh Accutorill,
t1 15.
Ammunhkffi,
$15/100. Jtnninge 380 Auto Pt•
tols, NIW $115, AmmunHion

$10150. 614-&lt;446-1822 An., 9 P.M.
Or B-11 A.M.

AKC Aeglai.,ld Blue Farnall

bklng, $1110. 6

6 8621.

AKC rovlolorod 0o1mo11on -

piel, 1.t thole, 10wka. okl, 614-m-5n4 01&amp;14-1!12-61'94.
AKC
rtgistii'M
Mlnatwe
Plnochtf, Pugo, Pokl-. 3045~2201

Beale And AdYanoed Dog TtalnI~CIHMs otter.d By rt.
A h1 Pow Trolnlng Coni•. Coli
6
111114 ShorTy A-•o.
c.rtlfled Trainw.

53

Antiques
:-:---:::--:-::;---.:.....-::::7."'7""":::-Blq Rlvlf Antlqun, 510 Main St.
Point PINIInt, WV.

Buy or sell. Riverine AnHquea,

1124 E. Main Str. .t, Pon»roy.
Houra: M.T.W. 10:00 a.m. lci:OO
p.m., Sundly 1:00 to 6:00 p .m.

814·1m-2526.

54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise
1983 15 Fod Pon1oon Beat With

Extra•; 1m lri'l Scout II; 1973

Honda

350 Scremb*; 1178
Yamaha 250'fZ, 614·319-2222.

45 gal &amp; 55 gal tlah tank
W/Sllnd, Ill tqUipmtnt IO Mt
UJ). SJSO. China cabinet $150

304-675-31211 .

Fiah T1nk, 2413 Jacbon Av..
Point Ploo01nl, 304-f15-2013.

Female•

Mixed

Bunniee,

10

W•ke Okt, $5.00 E.aeh. 614-446-

3404.
Rtbbttt F« S...: llany ~.

llony Rex. Z.OIInd, Rod
So11n1, Flomll111 Gllnto, Dworfo
And notlond Lope. 114-441-0538
Aok For Koy.
point

-.~eo .

kittana.
2948.

o.IOo

57

No ct.eks, 114-1112--

Musical

d~rlll

by appcinlmenl .
lncludel MlnneapOifs .ao.Jne
~er unit, model KEF, 4 cyl.,

utrl NW blade, lumber eart
and track, MWdUII .-.nwwal
chain 1nd apart t"th1 14300.
Edward Bell, 614-lr.!-7580 entr
5pm.

FREE INSTALlATION
SWIMMINO POOLS
Only 17'99.00 Bllutllul Above
Ground 11x31J4 POOl lncludea:
FIKor Dock, Fonco, Liddon,

EIC. o..;, Blllovo 111 Coli BPI
1-800-MB-1923

BN\~•rdl

Savinga.

Music, 330 Socond A - . Gol-

Produete

footu~ng

Amino Acid Body
Building wold!~ looo lnd Ill

burMr form""· Available ••·

The Nit way to dill.

KILLS FLEASI Bur ENFORCER
Flu Killers I« polo, home 6
ENFORCER II: Bo""' True
Value Sloro, 11 Wool Moln
Street, ChHttr Oh. • Valley
lumber &amp; S.ppty Coro., 555

58

lllr-.

1HO Otdamoblte $1,(0) Cutlau
Suprttmt. 1161 elmJ* alaepn:
•• $1,000. Both good cond, 304615-7!122.

.-----··'-WI '//.
THE OLD LADY ....._
WHO /.-IVfS" IN A SHOf""P'

(SO Mi.)

Auto Parts &amp;

PJ.ANNfJ)

. . PA~ENTHOoD OFfJCf
(fOMi.) _ -. .

Blldao4 Tranomlulono, Uood l
rebuln, st1r11ng 11 $91; front
whMI drive Mining It $149.00

IU-992-1291.

7:30

I·

A(d:
,J

C\,

t

ALLEY OOP

campers &amp;
Motor Homes

1968 Scotty Sp«taman trl'lel
lr~lter, t2' tong, liking S600,

614-992-51162.
1971 ChNtau tra'ltll trelter, 28ft,
.,,
cond,
beth,
-~·.
reh'igeralor, $2,800. 304-675-

6318 or 114-251-6084.

114-992-1M1.
27' Wldt Wand etmpar, good
1183 Cougor 12,800 V-8, 614· condHion, AC, awNng, n~ lull
b&lt;lth, SlOOO, 614·9854418.
245 5366
: =-: = ·- - -- - - 1913 Uncotn Ccntlnental Mark For Sale Ot- Trade: POf&gt;-Up
Yl. Blocll, v.,., Good Looking C.mJMr, 1400, O.B.O.; Honda 70
ThrM WhHitr, $350. 0 .8.0. 614Car, MustS..! 14,100, Arm. IM· 446-8869.

=

81

Home
Improvements

1914 Bukk Regel, T-top, black,
l1,000ml, excenent condition,
11500; 1113 Uont1 Carlo, T-top,

PS, AlAo.

Cond, Cnrloo, 78,000 Mlln, &amp;14167-0649.

1116 Dodoe Arloo, 4 doOI', PB,
PS, air, $!1,100. one own.r, exc

cond, 304-615-1884.

STRAWBERRIES · You Pick, Wo
Pick.
~alnen
Pro\'k:Md.
Open 8-8 11-f, Sol W, CloMd

a (() e

Roseanne Is not included in

Curtie
YNra

YESTERQA.Y T RCIUND
OUT THAT 1 CAN RUN
l'WICE AS F&gt;66T.. .

lmprov.men4 a:

Home

Ex~r ..nce On Oldtr &amp;
New11 Hornet. Room Additions,
Foundation
Wort, Roofing,
KHchtnt Arnj Battis. Frwe Eallmtltet Rara,.nces, No Job
Too Big Or Smaiii814-367-G516.

tUI Uncoln Town Car, Signa- J.W. Conllructlon. Ream A.dlure S.rt.a, 51,000 MUea, Prke: dhlone, Roofl, Decks, Siding
17,000; 1117 Chrysler 5th And All Typal 01 E1lerl0f And
AV'Inue, 318 cu. ft . V-8, Full E· Interior PalnUng. Will Give _L.ow
qutpped, 62,000 Mil•, Pr~ : Bid. Ucenaed . 614·24S-5076

ss.aoo.1..-.m4.

JET

Excetttot

CoodtUan.

n

Trucks lor Sale

Ohio Vtlley

Mu~

Ae J CAN RUNNING- FROM
MY f-Q.15E 10 SCHOOL .

'

-~'·

.... . ..

....... .. ..

BARNEY

will do

YO'RE HEADIN' FER
ELVINEY'S, URIAH--

tnd c:oncrale. No lob too 1rna1t
or too blgl 614·245-917'6, rnas-

SPECIAL
DELIVERY!!
$7.65

DO YOU MIND
GIVIN' HER

"0' 614-446-6222.
special~

THIS CUP

In Zlnlth •110 ..rvldna

other brands. Houq calla, also

Farm Suppl 1es

1flll Cht¥y Plcll-IJp, 8800. Coli
Allof 5:00P.M. 1'14-«&amp;-1621.

&amp; Livestock
61 Fann Equipment
10ft. Moclll 470 ln1 ......1onol
Dloll, Good Condhlon, $7011;
16ft. Horrigllor $450; Now Holland 33 FilM ~.
1900. 114-38'1-7154.
16HP Gravley riding tractor with
41" mower. bceiiMt condiUon,

12250, 114-H:I-2HI.

Chalmers,
H.O.
El... rtc: FOIII
U• I. I ~

r.buMt mot•, MW Irani, gooo
All1l1ing cond, noods mll10f
body- 304-6~.

="

9, Alllo

1m F-250 4WD, 1985 Toyoto, 4
WD; 1fl5 ln1'1 Tondom, 614-4410410.
1980 Fonl F-100, 6 Cyt., 114-245536&lt;1.

1911

F~250

':7.300 Ill ""· 11,500. 304-115-

41., -

:·.

\

614-446-3888

cond, 304-812-37'83.

m'Your

Electrical &amp;

.

~u;

Refrigeration

Jo4ln Dooro 4 Row Com Pllnl•
E1collon4 Coftdlllon, - . 1,._:
251-1101\

Aeildenllel
or
wiring, , _ -

KUBOTA
1ltl Toyota Tnrck 414 OX 4Cyl.,
Stloo Ports S.Mc:t
HURST hACTOR SALES
1 Spd, o\1&lt;, "-"!'~'-~!!
211 HP 4 WD 161M; 20 HP4 WD 11,000 llllloo· 16,995, Routo7 Nor1h, llllloH1.

c-.

114-3114-4151

73 vans &amp; 4 WD's
--l*dF.,.EConolgr...- BIIHc A1.'7, ·- h
Gllllpolo, OH. 114-211 1040.

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

Plumbing &amp;
Heating

bot1ory, 11,150, go;,d

'Birthday

corn uc•l

May2T, 1992
Give serioos consideration in the year

General Hauling

ahead to proposals thai are prasenled

Do Hauling A~!Yflmli,
•nypllco, No Job Too Big Or
Too lhllo. 114-311-22711 Anytime.

ucls. You should be able to recognize a
winner when you see one .
GEMINI (May 21-Juno 20) Try lo sleer

to you pertaining novel or uniQue prod·

Wa

87

clear of becoming invotved in a friend's
complicated affairs loday . What you
can offer might not be of any real value,

Upholstery

1171 Ford F-250, 4 WO I.Det E1·
1rooii--M.
Mowror'o Upholllorlng lng trl countr aru 27 ,..;., The
1184 Dodge Corovon, high bell
In tumnu,. uphot•erlng
mlllllll, ~ cond, 11,800. Coli 304-875-0154
1« ho 0.:
flnn, fcM..If5..3o44.
tkntt ...

CAPRICORN (Oac. 22-Jan. 19) 11 w11i

CANCER (Juno 21-July 221 Everyone

'hard to find someone more charming

appreciates c oming ou t ahead in their
negotiations. but don 't do so today to
the detriment ol someone who has 81·
ways treated you fairly . Th is is a tou c hy
area

II

making things worse Instead ol betler.
Gemini, treal yourselllo a birthday gift.
Send for Gemini's Astro-Graph predictions for the year ahead by mailing

and c onsiderate than you today when
with lriends . However. your
tamily might not see these sterling as·

dealing

peels ol your per sonality .

LEO (July 23-Aug. 221 A plan you hope

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) You are
nol likely lo be plagued by a lack ol

10 implement is In need of further study .
There's a chance you have overlooked a
critical flaw that c ould cause it to fail.

bright ideas today. Your problem could
be in knowing haw to effectively imple·
ment what you conceive.

VIRGO (A11f1. 23-hpt. 22) Condillons In
general look favorable for you today ,

or ropolro.
Master UeenHd ttectlidan.
R - Eloetrlcal, WV000301,
304-475-1781.

85

your zodiac sign.

this newspaper. P .O . Box 9\.428 . Cleve·

Carter's Plumbing
Fourth and Pint
GatllpoUt, Ohio

1113 GUC hart ton P'ckup, ahort
bod, - 1 onglno, 4 optod

land . OH 44101 -3428. Be sure 10 s1a1e

penses related to a SOCial acl!v1ty
should be equally divided among
participants. 11 th ey aren ·t, angry
ings could result .

$1.25 plus a long. sell-addressed.
stamped envelope to Astro·Graph, c/ o

W\11 buifd pallc COVert, dec:kt,
acrwn«&lt; rooma, put up winy!
tktlng or traiter aki~lng . 114·
245-9152.

tkttndtd cab pk:k-

• 8 76 3

+A Q 2

PHILLIP
ALDER

.

Wf.q

EAST

+K Q J 9

+ 1010432
"9 3 2

'1'8
tQ10 92
+J974

'

+ 10 8 6

The nasty moment
was brief

SOCTil

+A B
'I'A Q7 4
t A K .I 4

+ K 53

By Pbillip Alder
Declarer though t thmgs were going
swimmingly on loday 's hand, but th en
suddenly ther e was a n asty turn of

Vulnerable : Both
Dea ler: South
Soutb

Wes t

2 NT

Pas.~

Norlb
3t
6'1'

'"

+

The World Almanac ®Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS
1.Church song
5 Comedian
Lahr
9 Hawaiian
instrument
12 Layer of eye
13 Slolh
14 Family
nickname

15 Encounter
16 Compartment
17 Noun su ffi x
t 8 Igloo builder
20 Promise
22 Cooking lal
23 Word lo call
altenllon
24 Feeblemindedness

28 Saga
32 Type of bean
33 Author

Anewer to

owners ' org .

PreYioue Puu.le

39 Police officer

(sl.)
40 WWII ovenl
42 Pleasing

sound
44 Underground
laborers' org .

47 -Paulo
48 Blacksmith 's
lool
51 Robs
55 Playwright
- Betti
56 Hall (prot .)
58 Person loved
to excess

59 Yale sludenl
60 WriterJanowitz

61 Actor Robert
De 62 Fleur-de· 63 Similar

Cronyn
Laurent

64 Flying

Umberto -

veils

J Submissive
4 Country

c reatu re

34 Yoko 35 Bernstein , for
short
36 Firearm

7 - Nader
8 Helling lor

2 - St.

9
tO
II
19
21
24

Nol new
Playing card
This (Sp. )
Tiny parasite
Look at
- lang
Srne
25 TV's

5 Qflhe

DOWN

countrysid e

6 Chemical

1 Acto r -

suffix

in love . Stereo.
(!) Ustonlng

talking t10rse

America
Wllft BIA Moyen t;J
121 On Stagt Stereo.
@ M*' Lilli"' Baoeblll
(ll
world Nawa
!1J1700 Club Wllft Pat

(2 wdo.)
26 - Ferbar
27 First·rate
12 wds.)
29 Somewhat

lmus.)
30 - - lfto
ground floor

3t Emulale
37 Moacow
native

Bamey Miller

38 - - on the
back
41 Actor
Brynner

43 Cultlvallng
45 Cortductor
Zubln 46 lnflicl

with one exception. Oon'l jump Into a
venture aboul whiCh you 're not well·
informed.

PISCES (Fe, 20-lbn:h 20) You may
be Inclined to lake everyone at face value today. Unfortunately, lhis could
prove costly - if you end up doing
business with someone who operates
behind a mask.
ARIES (March 21-April1111n your relallonshlps, you usually strive lo share
rather than manipulate. Bul 1oday you
mighl be lempled 10 use oll&gt;ers to ad-

LIBRA (Sept. :13-0ct. 231 Regarding a
domestic malter that affecls your family, you and your mate may not operate
on the same wavelenglh loday. Each
has an equal amount of good and bad
ideas.
.. ~:~~8 ~::!':::~~· and this could
SCORPIO (Ocl. 24-Nov. 22111 you !eel
TAURUS (April 20-MoJ 20) Your lntuinclined to criticiZe co--workers today,
be absolulely certain lhal whal you lllon and common sense could be in
have to say Is · constructive. Caustic conlllclloday. You mlghl depend more
comments could provoke an argument. uponlhe way you perceivelhlngs rather
SAGmARIUS (Nov. 23-DIC. 211 Ex- than evaluate them as they actually are

'

.

iif Croo111ncl CIIIH

48 Firewood .

a 8pofb Tonight
!lllllorde&lt;IOwn Stereo E;1
11:30 rn• 101 Howl

e.g.
49 Cihus fruit
SO Superman 't

love

52

( !To
) lht
H u - a Stereo .
IIl
(() •

Nlghlllne

Time AI:Pttme Time

Stereo.

«ll MacO

a lllonoytlno

57 2,00t ,
Roman

E;l

!Ill MOVIE: White Feather
(2:001
11:35 (I). Clllo&lt;t

c:wm, Chl....___

eor.-

12:00 ((). Dlnnll Miller

[))• Love
121 ......,.. Naw Ste•eo.

a NeMNitM
101

12:051ll.
Tonlgl1t Sl1ow Wllh
Jly LIM Sta...a.
(I) •

Nigl'ltlllle

c

111• CUmnt Affair Q
12:30 (!) MOVI!: 8ellonl iPGI (2:00)
[)). llmly Miller

Ill .........

0 Tho Eqlllllllf
Cll ..,_ l'olltiC* '12
12:35(1). Lovo Colo-

Ill• Nlgllt Court Q

Tennis term
(2 wda.)

53 Tree snake
54- machine

1121 • ' F - K 111' Crtme

15

EaSI

Pass
it didn 't discombobPass
Al l pas.~
ulate nim for long
Opening lead: K
If you would like to t est yo urself .
cover tne East-Wesl cards and pl an
lhe play in six nea rls West leads tne
the ace. drew I rumps endmg m hand,.
s pade king.
and
ruffed his spade loser in lhe dum '.
Soutn' s opemng h1d showed a good
my
He played a diamond to his ace
20 to 22 points. Many playe rs have a
20 -21 point-range for thetr two-no- and cashed his three club winners end trump opening b1d . I think this 1s ing in the dummy . Finally, he led a low
wrong. If you have a ba lanced 20-point diamond , bul Easl discarded a spade.
"Oh no'" he thoughl - or words to
hand with no five-ca rd suit. you should
usually open with one of a suJL You thal effect.
Then he realized he had no problem .
can rarely make a game unl ess part·
ner has suH icient values to rake up a He JUSt played the diamond four from
hand. West won with the nine but was
one-level response.
North's three-d1amond response endplay ed. If he returned a diamond,
was a transf er bid. showmg at least it would be into South's K-J tenace. If
five hearts . South jumped to game be· he led his remaining black-suit card,
cause his hand was so suitable for play declarer would ru ff 1n one hand and
'" hearts . And North JUmped to slam discard h1s diamond loser from the
beca use he thought his parlne r could other. Either way , the slam was
guaranteed
make it
@ 1tll. NEWIPAPf:" ENTE!ItPNIE AIIM.
-~-c:_la re ~- w~l- lhe s pad e lead w1th

IIJII41101101tcl1
~·A-*' Hall Slereo.

ASTRO-GRAPH

9om-llpm.

82

'I'K JI06o

1121. HaiOI

Total lawn ca.-., halt prica, (1.t
time .,.clal), lncludta mowing
&amp; ••dtng, call 614-992-6l14,

i-ZI· t!

+6

a

tup--

pt'-. pickup, and deiiYery. 614·
Borrr Po1ch, 11112 ln4oma- Scout___l\ 446&lt;1294.

Sunder - To~•
Korr Rd. 11
111112, Or IU245-5171.

NORTH

BRIDGE

Ill Chufd1 Street Slltion
Stereo.
Holt In Sky (0:30)
11:00 (!) (I) • Ill • !Ill G!l

Sen-let,
P•~•.

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

IIl

[)) •

Jackson, OH 1-i00-6l7-9S28.

S.W-Vac

------ ·-- -

A-

Co. RON EVANS ENTERPRISES,
O.vlt

Collar · Oxide - Tryst - Blazer - EXACTLY
I had almost gonen a perfect grade and was bragging lo the other classmates . My leacher pu! me in
my place by announcing lhat lhere is a big difference
between nearly right and EXACTLY right .

10:30()) MOVIE: Jet Ptlot (2:151

Septic Tank Pumping 190, Gallla

Georgn Craak Rd.

, .,

a

OF
FLOUR?

tome tpplltnct repel,.. WV
304-576-2lQa Ohio 61~46--2454.

a

a

~

bJcck, brick, stone, ftr.pla.cea,

Rcn'a TV Sarvlca,

5CHCOL.

10 M Y Ha..l6E .. .

.. ~ ...... ~

1181 Olda Fir.nza, 5 spMd, 1ir, Aet11tlon Motors, rtpalrad. New
am/ tm stereo., tilt whMt, 814· I r•buUI molon In stock, RON
l*r-4521 call after &amp;pm
EVANS, J.CKSON, OH . 1~
537-9528.

$4,1100. 614-141-4225, Aft., lp.m.
11188
Plymoulh
Aollon1
Slallonwogon.L &amp;;J,OOO Mlloo,
Alii Gooil .......,ion, 13,600;
11117 Oodgo Chlrgtl' Good CondKion, J1,1150; 1985 Ford l TO
Good Conclllon, 11,500. IU-256-

RUNNIN~ FI'I::)M

Jockle's friendship witll
Nancy. (AI Stereo.
!1111!1 !12l. MOVIE: 'Mifacle
L.oncllng' CBS TUftdl~
MO'Iill (2;00) Stereo.
il) MOVIE: Ordinary 8ople
(R) (2;30)
Nllhvlllo No10 Stereo .
@ Sutflng D.P. Junior
Championships from
Hundngton Beach, Calli (T)
"'' L.atrt King Uvel
liD Fom!ly Edlllon
11:30 (I) D (() 8 Coach Hayden
speaks allhe Fraternal
Order ollhe Loon lodjj,e
meedng. IAI Stereo. 1.,1
Ill Beoebll Tonlgl1t
10:00 (I) D (I)
Jack's Place
(Pramlere) Jack runs a brslro
where a chef anf!lnter fall

p

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

6M-231-G48a, day or night .
Rogers Baurnent Walerptt»-

on

events. Howe ver.

Wltneu to Survival E;1
9:00 Ill. 111 NBA Ball&lt;ott.A
Western Conference Finals
(game 5, If necessary) (l) t;1
(I)
Ro-nno

$5500; 1Hi Startrd ... f-con--

Dodae Alret,

a
@ScllupTIII
a Croullnl

R

lmprowrnaots.
!100'1 condKion, 13000; B•rr.n Home
Gar•gn, Pa~ri~ ,
1186 a.o.y 5-10 414, ohorl bod, AddiUons,
Roofing.
Expert
,

1117

Stereo. E;1
(() • Mlmo'a Family
111• ~ ol Fortune t;J
[)) • MajOr L.Mguo
Ba-1 Cinclnna~ Reds at
New Vorl&lt; Mots (LI
1121 • Family Foucl
Be I Stir Stereo.

Volleyball From Fresno.
Calif. (T)
aPttmeNtwoC
!Ill Rln Tin Tin, l(.g Cop
Stereo. E;1
8:30(1). lll8Home
1.....,.......1 Tim installs a
salefllte dish and spies on
Jill's male visrtor. (A) Slereo

1amlly car, o11 ...Ions, -

mlloo1111, 307 Y-8, 12300, 614992-8719.

Tonight

@ Women'• Pro Beach

Services

Bloogh.tm, 2df. coupe, btautltul

Q

!IICraoltanciCIIIH

~-~1~050~.:--o----,---.,-1183 Olds Oolla 68 Royolo

,_E!

rn• 111
(!) Golden Oirla
(I) a E~

an

man

1umped aOOard ..)Oiy to be
told by a p:&gt;r1&amp;rlhat he would
have to get ott because the
tra1n dKln"t really stop thefe
·Thal"s okay ." the man
sm1 led . "in thai case . rm

p

7:35 ()) MajOr L11guo BaoebiH
Atlanta Breves at
Philadelphia Phillies (L)
8:00 Ill• 1111n tho Hilt ol lhe
Night Gillespie investigates
the murder of a former lover .
(A) Stereo C
(!) MajOr LHgue BIHIIIII
Sen Francisco Giants at
Chicago Cubs (ll
(I) a IJle Full HouH
Jesse takes up witf1 a bend
to earn exlla money. (AI
Stereo. !;J
IIl (!) Made In Amertce?
Staroo. C
!IIIII 1!21"e Roacuo: 111 A
man is 1/apped undomealtl a
horse-drawn buggy. (A)
Stereo. Q
0 MunM&lt;, She Wn&gt;to

For

fhe tra1n made
unscheduled stop A

UNSCRAMBlE ABOVE l ETTER S
10 GET ANSWER

SportsCenlW

24P new $275. 304.e~11138 •f.

79

I

a-,uno
!Ill Tho Walton•
7:05 ()) Beverly HIIIIMIIIeo

1978 llcg• Mini Motor Home
1182 Oalsun 210, 5ap., rune Chevrolet Chassis, 23 Fl. long
good, body rough, 1400; 1984 Stlf.Cont•lnad, No Generator,
Fotd LTD, lmllll II•Uonwagon, Good Conditlcn, 47,000 Mllea.
V-1, - mlloo, good body, sgso, Prtc.: $7,000 614-446-1124.

For Salt: 1982 Ply. Horlzcn
o...,ndeblt Work C.r, Askin;
SlOG. 614"""'6-8212 lane ....._

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

Part&lt; Sl-, Mlddkipon, Oft.

KILLS FLEASI
EHO.
Bur ENFORCER Floo Kllloro For
Wodgo Apto, 506 Burdono St, 1'111, - · Yord. o..rantood
Palnl Ploulnt, no polo, 1 and 2 EHoetiWII Bur ENFORCER AI:
Browns TNIIworthr
bldrooma, 304-875-2072 •fler Stitt
AOU1o 1110, 8-11. Ohio.
5:00.

Condftlon; Poovoy Sound Syotem, $850. Gil'npia, 614-446-

6251.

18111 John 0... -

Nulrllkwi

=

Slalom Ski wlco'IIJ, $375. ,...
1200. P. . lslon Twbo SIS prvp,

614-245-56~

TAVEL

E
lnmen Tonlgh1
Stereo.
«J MocOyver t;1

Conntllr Shon Una Grephhe

1177 Fonl LTD, . $800, Good Salo. 614-367·7296.

lotldedl

SaM!: GuHa111, Ampa, Sttected
Modale. Htlpers c.Jetntt Our
251h Annlv.r11ry Whh ThaN

llpolls.

Corley 3 hlod bl!&gt;ci oawmlh
NW.
ANdy to Nn. Will

1121 •

.
·
BOA.TERS

Plrts For 1978 314 Ten Truek

11117 Olclo Dotlo 88, Vlnyt Topl

Instruments

Sun Noon~ ;OO PM.

Gennls

Hlrnolo.,..,

Ctelln, Ea•y To Tr1ln, $150 Each.

Special

Concreta •
Pa.ttlc Saptk:
Ttnlui, Jet .bnllon TanU. Aon
Evan• Entlr1H1a., Jackson, OH
1-800-537· H28.

$3,000. Mg011abJI,

I

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

Nlwallour Q

Mobile, We come to you. 61.,..
259-597'8.

1915 Okle Cullat:l Citra, Air

Sandyville Pool OHico, Fri, Sal,

446.0423.

hood.

Uon

TAWAI

PR INT NUM BERED lETTERS IN
THESE SQUA RE S

A
V

Ill• Mantocl... Wllft Chitie N:.e.
Joopardyl ~
[)).
Court

Gulm• Mercury Marine s.mce.
Mareury, Marinw, MercruiHf
apac:ialist. Merr:ury clftiiJ.d.

76

Q

m

BOATERS
J.S. Marina Strvlct, Serving All
Your B011tlng Hilda, Pa~•. k.cnaoriaa, Two Cyclt OU And
1 514 256-6160

.

I 12 I

IIIII

8

~ CMeral;!

firm, 304-&lt;i75-7!m

the

VIKONE

~

(I) D In- Edlllon Q
(!) llac-flelnr

Johnson,
AM.fM canettt,
power tlh I trim, 1xtrae, $7,000.

s. rv n

I

6:35 ()) Andy Orif!1111
7:00 'jal• 111 Wheel of FOflllne

r-WIIY-,SO_IJ,_I_:AI_!IUOCK£_-:-D--,
1

1988 16ft Four-Winns, 90hp

Pood'-', toys, INCUpi, IIIC
adutle, AKC, allo mlnimur•
Schnluz.a. Cool¥11te, 114--667-

61.....7161 .

DAKOTA
DREAM
HOMES
131,995 6 Up. BulK On Yo..r lot

16V2 fl boat, ntW lop, good
cond, $1,800. or will trad• lor
lruc:k. 304-451-1m.

- 11111'! Horizon, AC. $1300. ling.
304-875-2440.

V-r Smoll Po4 Bllllod Pigs,

ill•'•

WilY CAI.l'T I HAllG
our Ar 1\lt. .41AU.?

tor Sale

4680.

8-4" Couch, Earty Ame&gt;rkan
Sty.. And A Recliner Both
Green. 108 Second Avenue, Gal-

dallvary Point PtNunt are•.
304-273-6655 ~ ot ctll taken
from bHI. No dellltrs PtNse.
S. m Somer-;~
Camlltluga,
army, surplus. Ou' 29th yNr, 5
milu Eut 1-77, Rtvenswood by

75 Boats &amp; Motors

II I

@ UpCioM
!Ill New Zom&gt; Slereo . t;1

ARLO AND JANIS

RttsontbM. 614-441-aS68, 614lalnod campor, 14'16', good 446-4316.
condKion,
$1200,
114-992-62~
lull Uno Tn&gt;plcol lloh blrdo,
unaU •nlmala and eupp\M:.
BASEMENT
11114 llorcury Couoar, 302,
WATERPROOANO
Aul-llc
O..drlvo,
lOK
0..·
GrMt 4-H Prottcte: Brown
Unconditional llfltlme guaran·
F1m1&amp;e Lop Bunny, 5 WMIIII haul.8~9.
IN. l.oc.ll relertnctt tumlstt.d.
Old, JIO; Blaci Moloo, Or Whfto 1185 Ctmaro, lotlded. 13400. Frw ntlmatea. Call collect 1·

SlerMM killtr.l biYe end Mal

Rental Surplu• cldhlng, 81111·
ing prkt $12. dean. Fr•

::.:.::::..:.:~------

blocll,

6'4"u6' trelltr, Tandem ax,.,
trNIId flocK, IIC . llru, 10001b.
capacity, uklng S1000 box In or
$8SO box o", 8"1l.M9-.2804

li polio, 114-446-3776.

CBS Nl101
Andy
«ll 8cooby Doo

614 _992_2441

1178 Buk:k Rtgal, Runs Good,

Chow Chow, Y:2 Gonllo Dog,

tenary.

mance tnglne with cowl Indue·

7 AKC Pupploo, RoUwoller, Yol $500. 814-441-0131 .
Chockocl. $250; 1 llolo Colllo, 1 1111 vw Aebbll, automttic, air,
v..r O.d, $50. 114-318-1116.
no rust, mo&lt;O&lt;, 1200, 8,._
AKC BeaQiel, IIIII • Ftmalt, 4 992-l1417.

Chairs 1129.
P.M. Sund1y 12 Noon • 5 P.M.
Rt . 141 4 Mi ... Ott AI. 1 In Cen-

1171 Chonllo 350, high porfor-

2 Cl»w . . . - . 2 rod lomolo, 1 31169.
blaek

or Ill 1121.Olltlttl1

of

l 1---.:--1
1" :
I1----r-1--.---r

nn

[)) a

1988 RM60, IWW hlndloboro,
ONI eovor, plosllc ports, grlpo,
run• grol1, ne. cond., 1900,

Accessories
Autos lor Sale

@ IIIlA Tooily
World Tod•r
!Ill Rill
Tin, K-9 Cop
Stereo E;1
1:05 ()) 1 L.ove l.ucy

\l.l

lar&amp; :OO PM.

Transportation

304-182-2215.

- Colll14-441-0231.

614-446-0fll4.

OPEN : 7 Doyo AWHk. 9 A.M.· 6

992-JIUI

BumM I Y•r Old llolo, Nol
&amp;rob, m 814-446-tlM.

::56-_P_et-:-S--:1:-o-r-:-S_a-:le:--~ 71

DINETTES· Wood Bar Stoots

$14.95 (26") Toblo And 4 Pod&lt;lod

\.ood
m·

$22,500. 304-451--1031.

4316.

48 Acru, I Room B~ek Ronch,
Llv~nRoom, Dining Room With
Fl ICO. Don Wltll Flro~.

protection, ,..,.,
aHIItanc:e
available, muet mett all HUD
gulcMIInM, call 814-li2·7022.

245-.581i.

1 Ye•r Otd R-altlertd Black
Angue Bull, W"alghs Approx .

l04-675-4SM .

114-tel-6661.

yard. Outnlnteed effedlvtl Buy

Bedroom, 1 112 Bathe, Full

Signa, 1-800-533-3453 tnylime.

New Curved Glale O.k Chlnt
Cablntls. Lighted Mirror Back,
Glass Shelvn, IA.t.d Glaa In
Door, Several Sb". 814--446-

Tho Moploo Eldorly ond Hondlclp housing, 111 utiiHioo pold,
con¥«tiently located lor Stoler
CIIIHM, aecurllr 1nd rlre

Room, 3

hal!;,

12so. Froo loiiOtSidollvory. Plio- Tror-Bin Slcolo B•r - r . 3 112
11c 1o11on ~750 bo1. AAA HP, Good CondKion, 1315 . 814.

good

33 Fanns lor Sale

, a,..kfattt

Signa: POI1able llghltd chlnpable t.tllr lign U"H; non-light•

New Helland . . .., .S And A
TWo HorN Troller, Phone: 614446-1413.
New Hcllencl
New Hoi·
land aupar 1'17
hllrvetler.
GthiiS grinder ml-..r. All excellent condition. 304-m-4215.

Vlno Sl-. oll614-441-7'3118, 1- S1"'4"1cllr riding lawn-. 10 63
Livestock
hp, 30"' cut,
r:ond, 1400. -,.,--,..--....:....---

cluslvolr II Allo Aid Phormacy.

Khc

S3J.t521.

~111-34111.

Modem 1 Bedroom Downtawn,

Complolo KHe'-1, Corpo4,
Central Air. 1J14-446.013il.

Merchandise

~::...~,!.~;!,~:'.::'!: Plullc And-~ Cul..n 61nch
Color T y Mlcrow
Thru
klch In Stock. Ron
1238. · .,
•ve. 6M-258-- Evan•.60Jacbon, Ohio. 1~

Brtnd New Treadmill $300. 614-

latayttte Mall: 2 Room &amp; Bath,
$175/Ma. 2 Bedroom•, 2 Baths,

61 Fann Equipment

let1ars

GONDIT

I

e

1986 Hondo 4 Trol, 200 sx. With

54 Miscellaneous

I

i111SmuttaC

a

UMI

four scrambled wor ds
.
low ro form l our ~· mple wordl

6:30 Ill. 0 NBC Nlws ~
(!)-Siranuer(1) D (() ABC No10 IJ..
IIl Wild Amorlcl Stereo. t:;1
Squa,. One TV Stereo .

~~~:'"~'"~""'~-~,.~====lr:========~i 304-675-3521.
or wft:hout traUer. Aner 7pm caU
---------::::..:...:~=~-----

S.e Our Modell, &amp;14-888-7311.

$1116 . Coil 614-lm-7787. EOH .

I PEOPLE AN'f'ONE~AI/E A NAPKIN ?
DO NOT EAT
1'1/E GOT MUSTARD AND
N PUBLIC.. KETCHUP ALL OVER M~ ~A" DS ..

675-8675.

0

675-2211.
OM btdroom tumllhld apt,
- -. no po4s, 30467!-1381.

pllancto, J15,500. 304-571-2783.

~ R...Sing Ralnbo10 t;J
[)) • Ful Houae Stereo. t;1

1988 Hon* 200 9X tout
whoelor, good cond, J1,27S. 19111
Yamah1 650 Uallm SBSO. 304·

5 · u.
~~~
.,.......,.

room aptrtmanta at VIllage
Manor
and
Alvtraldl
Apa~manla In Middleport . From

kitchen

198'1 BMW R100 mctorcyclt, ex-

304-675-2074.

notnawtr.

0 Reorran ge

C

'jt! ~,.One TV Slereo.

1983 Hcnda 110 three wt..a.r,
high! tow range, new tlrea, 1350.
or trade fOf rldlng 111wn mowar,

Nice, clan 2 or 3 bedroom
hcuae, prefer private Hltlng,
61,..H2-2428, INvt mnaaga lf

Graclwe living . 1 and 2 bed-

Modtm 2 bedroom, wldlnetlt,

1991

Accnt To Bank

clud.. walar, 18waga, tr11h .
O.poth, 614-992 -57l2 laave
mnstge .

Modem 1br Unfumished Apart·

1989 Rtdman Danville 14•n.
Tolal Electric, 2Br, ExctUent

(!) DH!arenl World

1974

Pontlec LeM•n• Fora
Coupe 1600. Good Worft Clr.
C.ll 614-388-8193, Anytime.

47 Wanted to Rent

EVENING

"'r. Zf~"

WOlD

_ _ _ __:_:...._:;: ld;tod by CLAY R. POLlAN

•

TUE'I MAY 26

'3~ \t4U1J-

TKAT DAILY
PUIILU

6:oo ONewa
rn• (I) a (() • 112l•

Motorcycles

1000. Folr Condlllon, $1,800;

Pttture tor rant, 614-912·7384.

0885.
~orne

•

1973 Htriey Oavlton Sport•r

loti,_

814-U&amp;--3158

Renl Or StU On Lend Contract,
Hit
G1rage, Outbuilding, I Nln
Don't Wail!! II you c1n quality,
you c1n buy on instellmtnl con- L..vell.ol . 614-2.56·1028 .
tract
with
10%
down. Unfurnlahtd Mobll1 Homt, CA,
Meadow land Est1tn. R•la• in 3 322 Third Avenue, Gallipolis,

Condllton, Reduced Priet!

74

&amp;U-.. 2-2167

1240/Mo. + O.postt. 614-446-

1-800-585-2643 (WV).
BEAUTIFUl HOUSE FOR SAlE 0527
Historical Area Cotner lot • 816 Nlca 2 Bodroorn Mobil• Homo
Main St. Pt. Pteuant, W. Va.
Complttaty Rtnov•ttd : 2 Full
Bath1, l Largt Btdrooms, Naw
HVAC, Ntw Cerpet. Availabl•
Juna 15 614-446-2205 .

I'U.XWITIES IN HISlORY I
*'IUJQN!, OHJllU
'mtD RR H~! r .::--..,..--

~NIXON

414, Ak, AIM'M

Chevy

00€: OF T\IE I..AAI':8T

PB, Hhch, 5 Spd, And Moral
52,000 Mlln. V""' Nicol $10,000.

Counlry Mobile Home PaR, Rt
33N., undtr new management.
$85; homo ron4olo, $235;

VI'AA FURNITURE
BARGAINS GALORE!

Mobil•

FWTKN. '::J..'IVY
ADMIT II, '!OIJ I'OTEO

11 ~

The

Television
Viewing

r'U.I'AVE YOU OOW HE loOI &amp;'I~

C...ette, Century Topper PS

Space lor Rent

12x60 2Br, Totti Eltctr1c, CA,
large lot, GrHn Township,

month, 304-882·2018.

watarbM, garden tub, all ap-

AHANDFUL
OF CASH
IS BETTER
THANA
GARAGE·FUl
OF STUFF

46

Work boots. 614-441-3158,

2bdrm. mobile

Tl~CMN'PU, YOU ~'JE 00 ~

614-446-8970.

s.o" Konmoro WhKo woshor •

Business
Oppol1unlty

1969

call 300-875-1450.

County) 11 South Third S!rMI, 2bdnn., Syn~cuH, $185/rno. Includes water, uwage, lruh .
Appointment : 614-367.()628.

32

SIMJMng roome with cooi!Jng.
Also tr1ll., ~pace. All hook-upe.
Cali afttr 2:00 p.m., :t04-713-5651,MuooWV.

umhurt, 614-44&amp;-11$44.

tYn FrMdom 12x55, all eltc ,
good eond, air cond, acr ..ntd
porch, S-4,950. 304--67~2101 atter

1tole otfarlng.

Pl. PH, WV 25550

2021 Marqutttl Ave, 5 yr1 okf,
111 brick malntanenu ffN
home, 4 bedrooma, small llvlng
room, dlnlngroomtt•mlly room
comtMnltlon, khchtn, utility

3

CondKion,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio_

BORN LOSER

1HI Mitro Mini Van, E•cehnl
l.oodod,
l»w
MIINge, Call After 5p.m. 614441-2238.

~=~l;lol $120/mo. Ollila Ho4ol.
8
115110.

~ Sa~e On AI VInyl &amp; Car·
In Stock.. $1.00 Up. Moltohan

Financial

Style, 3 Pint Slrttt, Gallipolis,
Oh, t14-441J-9496 or 614--446-

Local company n•dt pllr1·111M
c,.rical help. A..tonablt ho11t.
Some accounting background &amp;
computsr axperlanct halptul
but not required. Ptt.asa,
roreward rHume &amp; references
ASAP to Box H-20 cut of Point
Plutanl Ragtsttr, 200 Main Sl,

•

2 BR apartmantt In Middleport,
newly ramodtltd, low u1111tl11,
1965 10x50 2bf,~, Naw Carpti, no peta, $220 per month ,
Nltds Soma H1palr, $2,000 , dtpottl rtqulrtd , 614-992·2"3a1
0 .8.0 ., Will Make Nice Add-Orr dayo
Or Starter Home, In stead 01
Paying Rant . 614-446-271'1.
2bdrm. SyracuH, S1nJmo. ln-

446-9256

CLA 1181 clo Golllpolls Dolly

122,900, 304-773-51162 or 304773-5775.

3 Btdroom, B•tt•. Utllhy Room,

Colna, Gold Ringe, Sil.,.r Coins, Warud: Mothers Htlr.r Tc
Qok:l Colnl. M.T.S. Cotn Shop, Houafclftn And Baby• . S.nd
151 Second Awnwa, Gallipolis.
Aeeuma And Refertnc:ll To :
CLA 111, c/o Gtlllpolie Dally
Trlbune.l..ll;25 Third Avenue, GalEmployment Services lipolis, U1 45631.

11

mant, 11.. hut, Union A.,..,

room, all ona

S3 9,000. 814...C46-

.

31 Homes lor Sale
1 112 ttory, 3 bdrm., bailment,
dtck. Mldwlr Or., ~ Hl'len,
WV. 300-882-3108 oftOt 5pm,

2338.

Eloclrlellr, And Phone Sortlco
Avallabla. 3 112 MiiH From Hoi·

2 Bedroom Houu, Double
Garage, S300/mo. PIUI O.polil,
Mutt Have Rtlerenc•. 81A-44&amp;3548

Real Estate

Part-time
http
wanted,
Pomeroy, Oh. Janltorlal w«k,

ovonlngo. lnlorootod callo only.

JuNe It! s... Ul Ycur Ncn·
Mtior Applla.nc••.
Worttlng
Color TV's, V&lt;!R'a, Microwaves,
Air Condlillonert, Etc. 614-256·
[)on't

ful Building She. Nice lav-'
Drlvnay,
Rural
Weter,

41 Houses lor Rent

Mcrwy To Loan
1-aoo-:na.me, """"n From 9

PM lo 9:00 PM. E.O.E.

~·

2722.
O.J. While R.. d, 18 Acroo,
Moolly Wooded, Wllh A Booutl-

11 $18.00, call today, FREE
NEW color ca111ag, 1..aG0-22862t2

Frl 1:00 AM to 1:00 PM or 5:00

Rick PMrwn Auction Compiiny,
full lime auct6cnelr, comp61tt OTR flat bed drivers wanted, 25
auction
•IIA'Ict.
Lk:~~r~Hd yra 01 oldtrb2 yrs llperience,
166,0hlo 1 w..t Virginia, 304- must have C L's. 1-8QO.S48-t26.

buya an II
lhrM
loll.pM304--675tlntndng
$101.48
month

k)w

26,1992

ctlltnl condhlon,IM-94~2537.

lolo joining Polnl · 100% owner

:~ Hoepitaf,

26, 1992

73 Vans &amp; 4 wo·s

Rooms
Aoomll« rent-- or - h.

675-2722.

"Poison ivy, dlseasiKarrylng ticks. bee stings...
I'd rather risk being mugged back in the city!"

21

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

Furnished

~p­

lote In New Htvan • 100'1'.
owner tiNnclng at $101.46 per
month bur• tlllhrM kJts, a304·

Pupploo, 1/2 BriHnoy Spaniol,
112 Bollr, """ ..... will be 11
Help Wanted
modlum olzo, coli 114-1112-2138 _ _ ___;______
ovonlngo.

9

&amp; Acreage

avallabla, 31)4...675-2122.

with children, 114-i92·

8

Lots

Lata In Galllpoll• F•ry • 100'1'.
owner financing at S98.64 per
month, 1ny ont of tour lola

=
7

ChtNr

loblo. 304-175-2722.

good

long no.t Chlneae pug, m~~le
dog, h11 been neuteM, ~

319

Mtlte

l..ota tor eala, tralltrl

w.tU old, lttter
1

Dan

or write: P.O. Box 268, Athena,
Ohio 45701.

Boby Ill-oro, 304-f7S-a813.
B~lnOy ond llooglo pupploo,
Ktttens, 7

3

Moflzmlk, 208 acra tarm, n~~r
Guyavlllo, Athlns Co"- Ohio.
lrn-1111 _
..ion. .,03,000
or oltu For dettlll tnd map,
coli Poul J. Gorlg, 1114-5~00
durtng normtl buslnne hours

Giveaway

tratned, weaned, to
homo, 114-1185-4311

..Ctlt

To

St., Mlddlapol1.

-.

welcome,

Apnt1

O•t FL IU5/II n.
Rod- Bum o« lot whllo ,...
.....1 Tiki ~L, IYiillblo II
Fn14h Phlnn1Cy, 1M N. Second

4

45

88 ecre country esttta with
pond, Vlnlon. Colonltl farm
hoUit n.wly ,.modeled. 2 ltrgt
barns, eummer ho.,..~garagt,
atudlo, hunting cabin.
owner.

3 Announcements
1-IIII000-45414~11100i (11

Fanns lor Sale

Tuesday, May

CELEBRITY CIPHER

Celebrfty CIPftlf Cl)tllogran-.. are Cf'Mied Prom quotltionl by fwnoul people. PU1 and PfMMI
Ekt1 ~ In 1M Qphtr tttndt tor anothtr . Todily"l ~ · D equ,1b G

B

OEFV

XHAZJ
xcvw
0 E W.'

C E G V

B

UC EU

Y B Z 0 T

X E T

za
E

F

v

J

U H

B

TVV

PH A W D

YMEWNHBT

UMAYVEAU
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "He (David Niven) Is a very, very bod actor, bul
he absolutely loves doing it." -

David Niven.

23

�Page-12-The Dally Sentinel

Tuesday, May 26, 1992

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Boy wonders why girls still hit
on him when they know he is gay

I j
'

f

. /1

i ·t

~.

TOP AWARD WINNERS -The annual band
baoquet at Mel's Local was held Tuesday
evening at the h•gh schooL Pictured are top
senior award winners, 1-r, Keith Smith, who
received tbe Director's Award; Chris Hall, Outstanding Marching Band Member Award; Paul

Sharp, who received the lop award, the Arion
Award; Ryan Cowan, the John Phillip Sousa
Award; and David Swanson, who was presented
the Semper Fidelis Award for Musical Excellence from a representative or the United States
Marinf5.

Dear Ann Landers: Lately I
have read several of your columns
concerning teen-age sex, and the
question has been raised .. who is
the more aggressive, boys or girls? I
don'1 know how it was in your
day, but I can tell you thai the girls
of our generation are much more
sexually aggressive than the boys.
Ann, I am an 18-year-old high
school senior, a mem her of the
football and basketball teams, and
1992 senior class pres1dent. I am
gay
My parents and most of my
schoolmates, both guys and girls, arc
aware of this and I am comfonable
with myself. I cannot understand
why the girls who know I'm gay
still hit on me. They phone at all
hours of the night, mostly with
sexual invitations. My mother has
asked a couple of the more persistent ladies to please stop calling. She
told one, "My son is not interested
in you."
The kids at scbool accept me the
way I am. Once in a while one of
the guys will give me a hard time,
bull have no problem dealing with
thaL The girls are another story. Just
yesterday one of them told me that
she could "straighten me out" 1f I
would give her the chance.
I have a very special friend who
is a student 31 the local univcrs1ty
and we are together a lot We look
like the iocks of the year and are
very happy with each other. He also
gets lots of offers from young ladies

the phone.
I know Brad is a burn, Ann, and I
want to throw him out. but my wife
won't let me. We fight about this
constantly. She says if I kick him
out and something terrible happens
ANN LANDERS
to him, it will be my fauiL
"1!191, Lot""'~"
We both read a book about "tough
Tima Syodiu&lt;e
love" but my wife doesn't agree
c ....... syndl&lt;lle"
with that philosophy. We also tried
family counseling, but she didn't
and neither of us can understand it.
agree
with the counselor's approach
Will you please make it clear that
either.
gay guys are not interested in
We used to joke about writing to
members or the opposite sex? -LEAVE US ALONE IN SANTA Ann Landers, but it's not funny
anymore. Please tell us what should
BARBARA
DEAR L.U.A.: You made it a lot be done ... STRESSED OUT IN
clearer than I could, and I thank you. S.C
DEAR STRESSED: Your wife
After this letter appears in the Santa
honestly
believes that she is proteclBarbara News-Press, I doubt that
you will have any more uouble with mg her son, but actually she is
damaging him enonnously. Brad has
girls hining on you.
a
bom.c problem. for starters. He
Dear Ann Landers: Our21 -yearneeds
Alcoholics Anonymous. He
old son refuses to grow up and
also needs mtenSive counseling and
accept adult responsibility.
My wife and I tried our best to · his mother should stay out of the
keep h1m in school, but he dropped counselor's way.
I urge you to insist that your wife
out in the ninth grade. "Brad" has
been in trouble with the law and pay attention to what I am saying
did a year in prison for breaking and or your son will go down the drnin
entering. He is now out on parole permanentl y.
For get 10 save some of your
and bving with us.
favorite
Ann Landers columns?
Brad didn't learn his lesson in
prison, so his behavior hasn't "Nuggets and Doozits" is the
changed much. He drinks a lot and answer. Send a St/f-addresstd, long,
his driver's license was suspended business-size env.:lope and a check
several weeks ago for drunk driv· or money order for $5 (this includes
ing. Now that he is house-bound, postage and lu!ndling) ro: Nuggtts ,
his day consists or lying around, c/o Ann L.andus, PO. Box Il562,
eating, watching TV and talking on Chicago, Ill. 60611-0562. (In
CafiJlda. send $6.)

Ann
Landers

Ohio Lotterv

Portland
outlasts
Utah five

~

Lollery
Pick 3: 928
Pick 4:9352
Buckeye 5:
9-19-27-32-35
The last e xec uti o n
fur wit chcraft in tht' L.S
was In 1692.

Page 5

Clear tonight. Low around 40.
Thursday, sunn)'· High In luw
70s.

--·-----.. .1

Vol. 43, No. 17
Copyrlghlod 1~2

2 Sectlono, 14 Pegea 25 centa
A MuiUmodlo Inc. -..,._

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, May 27, 1992

Old Betsy Ross building to be razed in June
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Stall
Demolition of the old Betsy
Ross building on Fifth Street to
make way for a housing projoct 1s
expected to gel underway in early
June.
Middleport Village Council
Tuesday night opened bids on the
demolition work and accepted the
one from Pullins Excavating, Inc.
for $38,800. The other two bids
were from Noble Construction,
Grove Cily, $80,000 and Jeffers

Trucking and Excavating, S42,000.
Mayor Fred Hoffman reported
that the asbestos has already been
removed from the building. Once
the demolition has been completed
then construction on the eight
houses for low and medium income
families will begin. Information on
financing for the homes is available
from Jean Trussell, housing specialist, at Middlepon Village hall.
The mayor reponed that work at
the Middlepon levee is progressing
and will be completed within the
next few weeks.

Paula Thacker, executive director, Meigs County Chamber of
Commerce/Meigs County Economic Development director, met with
Council and again requested that
the village contribute $2,000 for
the county office operation.
Thacker reponed that she worts
for the entire county and that her
focus for several months has been
on trying 10 get the proposed prison
located in Meigs County. She did
report that several Middlepon businesses have been helped through
her office. She stressed the need for

funding from the village noting that
currently the agency is operating in
the red. She said that membersh1p
is down and thai there are now only
110 members.
The director said there has been
in innu~ of residents coming into
the office who want to stan businesses and that her plans include
seminars on busine.'&gt;S plans, how to
implement and manage. She d1d
state that the county now has the
possibility of losing two businesses.
Following Thacker's visit,

Council gave a flfsl reading to an
ordinance on making the $2,000
contribution.
The Rev. Mark Morrow, pastor
of the Ash Street Free Will Baptist
Church, met with Council to discuss the possibility of developin~ a
shared parking area near the
church. Morrow said that there is
an area about I 00 by 200 feet
which if graveled could be used by
Hartinger Park patrons as well as
his church members. He proposed
that the village gravel the section of
land owned by the church to create

the park.ing area Since parking has
been a problem in that area all
members of Council agreed thai if
it is legal for the village to provide
the gravel to be put on privately
owned propeny, it would be beneficial to the village. The mayor will
confer with the village solicitor.
It was voted by council to renew
$25,000 in notes on the old fire
1ruck with Peoples Bank for one
year at four perecnL
A copy of the revised multicounty solid waste management
Continued on page 3

Community calendar
TUESDAY
POMEROY - The Ohio Eta Phi
Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi Sorority,
wi II hold its end-of-the-year picnic
at the home of Charlotte Elberfeld,
Five Points, Tuesday al 6:30 p.m.
Meet at the Pomeroy parking lot at
6: 15 to car pool or call Julie Dillon
for directions.
MASON - Meigs County Vietnam Veterans Chapter will meel
Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the VFW Hall
in Mason. AU V.N. veterans invited.
SENIORS HONORED - Seniors or the Meigs
band program were honored at Tuesday's band
banquet held at the high school, during which
each senior shared his or her most memorable

band experience. l!.ach senior received a plaque
and other memorabilia. Pictured are members
or that senior class.

POMEROY · The Meigs County Veterans Service Commission
will meet Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. in
the vetera ns service office in
Pomeroy.
HARRISONVILLE - The Har-

rison ville Semor Citizens will meet Tuesday at 1:30 P,m. at the Meigs
Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the town Co unty Senior Ci1izens Center.
house. All members auend. Jennifer Sheets will be guest speakRefreshments served.
cr.
RACINE . The Southern Local
RACINE - The Racine Ruritan
School Board will meet Tuesday at Club will meet Tuesday at6 p.m. at
7 p.m. at the high school.
Star Mi II Park. All mcmbcrs are
urged to ancnd.
POMEROY - The American
Legion Drew Webster Post No. 39,
WEDNESDAY
Pomeroy, will meet June 2. There
MIDDLEPORT - A reorganizawill be a special dinner at 7 p.m. tional meeting for participants of
followed by meeting at 8 p.m. All Take Charge will be held Wednesmembers urged to attend.
day at 7 p.m. at Overbrook Center
in Middlepon. Goals for the meetHARRISONVILLE - Har· ing are 10 review priorities estabrisonvillc Past Matrons will meet lished when the group last mel to
Tuesday a1 7:30 p.m. at the home set goals and begin the process of
of Mrs. Robert Reed with Mrs. committee work. Light refresh·
Harold Rice assisting hostess.
mcnts will be served.
POMEROY - The Alzheimer
Disease
will meet

Appointed AS U
board president
Dr. John N. Mangieri who
served as director for the teacher
corps project co nducted in the
Meigs Local School Distric~ 197476, has been appointed as the ninth
president of the Arkansas State
University by the Board of
Trustees.
Mangien now serves as provost
and vice chancellor for academic
and student affairs at the University
of New Orleans.
Mangieri earned hi s Ph.D. in
reading and language ans from the
University of Pittsburgh '" 1972,
his master of education in reading
from Wcsttninster College in 1969,
and his bachelor's in secondary
education from Slippery Rock State
College in 1968. All three institutions are in Pennsylvania.
VEHICLE DAY HELD - Students at
On this particular day representatives from the
He has written two books and
Pomeroy Elementary participated in "vehicle
Pomeroy Volunteer Fire Department, Meigs
was co-author of three others, all in
day" at the school on Wednesday and Thursday.
County Sheriff' s Department, United Parcel
hiS academic area of reading
During the event representatives from various
Service, State Highway Patrol and Sears made
instruction
and language arts. He
agencies spoke to the students about their vehipresentation. Here, some or the students listen to
ha
s
been
a
direct recipient of
cles and the agencies of which they represtnted.
representatives from the Pomeroy VFD.
ap proximately $1.5 million in
grants and contracts from the U. S.
Department of Health, Education
and Welfare, the State of Ohio, the
extendi ng Route 33 would be a King Foundation and other sources.
Three names were subm 1ued Io L1sa J&gt;erry Grier.
He and his wife, Debbie, have
Anna C~rcle Cleland, regent, great boost for the county since it
the chapter desiring membership to
two
children, Jeff, 18, and Deanna,
D.A.R. when the Retum Jonathan opened the meeting in ritualistic l1es midway between Colu mbu s IS .
Meigs Chapter of the Daughters of form, followed by prayer by Eileen and Charleston. W.Va., makin~
the American Revoluuon met at the Buck. chaplain . After the flag overnight deli very ot proouCLI pu:&lt;Pomeroy Library with 17 members salute Mary Kay Yost gave a pre- sible.
Miss Schaad spoke of the small
sentat ion about the nag and the
and one guest present.
The 1991 Ham Novice class
business
development cen ters
Those requesting membership Americanism Creed was g1ve n '"
hered al Pleaser' s Restaurant
gat
being developed in Ohio. The ncarare Mrs. Linda Crew Beegle, Mrs. un1son.
rccen~y
to say thanks to the volunOfficers repons were given by est one is at Ohio Univcrsny in teer exami ners for their contribu Michelle Perry Moffcu and Mrs.
Frances Roberts, secretary, and Athens.
She ended by saying how well tion to amateur radio.
Phyllis Sk.inner, treasurer.
Plaques were presented to Jim
Rae Reynolds gave the National all the groups in Meigs County Stacy WM8D and Wiley Phelps,
Defense Repon -about the decline work together and that Meigs NQ8Y. Presem at the meeting were
of morals as seen in daily liv10g, County is on the right track and Mel Hellf')', Ivan and Linda Powell,
making great strides.
news repons and on television.
The meeting ended w1th the John Davidson and Don EUis, DebMrs. Cleland showed the Gold
bie and Kelly Phelps, Cathy and
Honor Roll wh ich was awarded to chaplain giving a prayer and the Mike Stacy and Russ Fisher. Cake
Lord's Prayer in unison.
the chapter at a recent conference.
Hostesses were Mrs. Evercn and icc cream were served.
She also received a letter from
Mrs. Bruce King, stale correspond - Hayes, Mrs. Pearl Mora, Mrs.
Mark Grueser, Mrs. Ronald
ing secretary, thanking the chapter Reynolds,
Mrs. George Skinner
for helping make the state confer·
and Nancy VanMeter.
eoce successful.
An invitation was read from
Elizabeth
Sherman Rccs, Lancaster
JOSEPH FORESTER
chapter, which the regent plans 10
ElECT
auend.
Eleanor Smith, vice-regen!,
Melvin L and Mary E. Forester, introduced the speaker, Miss Eliza-·
Racine, announce the binh of their belh Schaad, who was formally
. son, Joseph Lee, on Jan. 29 at Director of Development in Meigs
Ill Second Sty Pomeroy
Holzer Medical Center in Gallipo- County. She now works in the
lis.
Ohio Deparunent of Development
MEIGS COUNTY
The infant weighed fi¥e pounds She said her mission is "jobs." She
and 14 ounces and was 18 inches had com pi imentary remarks for
long.
Meigs Counly and the things that
Great-grandparents arc Louise were accomplished or at least slartKidd and Mr. and Mrs. Russell ed while she was here. She said
Cline.
'

Three request DAR membership

111 or 111101

s•u:

Bedding Plants, all Fllb $5
Hanging Baskets $4,
4" Ge111nlums and Mums
50¢, 6" Ge111nlums $1

20% Off All
Shrubbery &amp; Tn1111
•

New arrival

INSURANCE

YOUR INDEPENDENT
AGENTS SERVING
MEIGS COUNTY
SINCE 1868

Open o.Jiy 9 a.m. lo 5 p.m.
Open Sundly 1 pm.ID 5 p.m.

HUBBARD'S
GREENHOUSE
SYRACUSE

992-5776

r-----------------,
I "SPRING SPECIAL" I
JOHN MANGIERI

: AIR COND. INSPECTION :
AND RECHARGE:
(A)Check A/C Operation
(B) Check A/C Hoses for Leaks
(C) Check A/C Belt for Wear
(D) Evaluate and Recharge System As
Needed

Operators meet

DOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER

THURSDAY
STIVERS VILLE -Tent revival
at the Stiversville Word of Faith
Church will be held Thursday
through June 7 at 7:30p.m. nightly
with Jerry Cotterill, evangelist

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Any Additional Parts btra
GM CARS ONLY

$59 W~C-ahly
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Our technicians, Bob Luke and Ralph Fowler,
are G.M. and A.S.E. certified.
CALL LARRY HUDSON AT

FRED
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SMITH-NELSON MOTORS, INC.
992·2174

500 East Main

COMMISSIONER

Pomeroy, Ohio

RETIRING -Norman Wood, who bas driven a school bus for
the district since 1959, Is retiring next week. He was recognized
and presented a plaque at Tuesday nighl's meeting or the Meigs
Local Board or Education by Board Member Larry Rupe.

SPECIAL SERVICE - A plaque for special service to the HarrisonviUe School as a substitute custodian was pre5ented to Gerald
Pullins, right, at Tuesday night's meeting of tbe Meigs Local
Board or Education. Pulliru; ba~ served in tbat capacity since 1984.

Meigs board approves summer school program
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Seotinel News Staff

Additional mform ation or an
en rollment application may be
obtained by contacting Taylor or a
A summer school program to be guidance counselor at Meigs.
held at Meigs High School was
Personnel hired for the 1992-93
approved by the Meigs Local school year included:
Board of Education at Tuesday
Varsity basketball coach: Phil
night's meeting held in the board Harrison.
Substitute teachers: Jeff Arnold,
offi".
The action following an execu- Susan Arnold, Robert Ashley, Jr.
tive session with Meigs Principal Jeffrey Baker, Jennifer Barnette,
Fenton Taylor. The summer school Nancy Basye, Jennings Beegle,
program will provide makeup Marta Blackwood, James Bradclasses for students who failed to bury, Mary Bush, Jennifer Couch,
make passing grades. It will be Judith Crooks, Tonya Cummins,
conducted from June 8 through Linda Dye, Sharon Edmons, Teresa
June 26, 8 a.m. to noon each Fields, Judith Gannaway, Jodi
weekday.
Glass, Lucille Haggeny.
The classes will be open to
Chery l Halley, Carol Hare,
Meigs, Eastern, Southern, and Pauline Harrison, Kcmbcrlcc
Wahama s1udems. The courses to Hemphill-Hood, Sheny Hensler,
be offered include General English Sandra Holcomb, Lois lhle, Todd
I, General English 2, Introduclion John son, Kathy Jones, Faric
10 Algeb111 Pan I, consumer math,
Kennedy, Michael Kennedy, Bon·
nic
Kibble, Richard King, Vinas
American Hislory, and General
Lee, Henry Lewis, Karen Lyons,
Science.
The cost will be $35 per half Helen Maag, Carol Mahr, Pamela
credit, and $70 for a full credit. Morris, Michele Mowrey, Daniel

Murray, George Nccdhaiil, Gerald
D. Nelson, Lisa Pape, Margaret
Parsons, Steven Patterson, Robyn
Pitzer, Robin Prentice, James E.
Pyle, Cyndra Roberts, Jozie
Robcns, Nathan Robinette, Carolyn Robinson, Susan Roessler,
Sheryl Roush.
Laura Salser, Artis Salyer,
Gayle Salyer, Jody Shipley, Ann
Sisson, Kathy Smith, Margaret A.
Smi th, John Snediker, Virginia
Lynn Swain; Elizabeth Webster,
Ralph Werry, Helen Williams, Kay
Wilson. Shelagh Wilson, BeuyAnn
Wolfe, Amy Young, Angela
Young, Mae Young, Bryan Zirkle.
Substitute aides: Connie Jones,
Josie Monon, Susie Abbou. Diana
Ash, Nancy Hill, Sarah Johnson,
Palty Pickens, Jacklyn Spaun,
Michelle Triplett, and Jo Ann
Wildman.
Substitute bus drivers, Deborah
Grueser, Tim Fry, Debra Bums,
Kathy Johnson, Cynthia McMillan,
Donna Stacy, William Capehan.

Analysts report economic
recovery picking up speed
WASHINGTON (AP)- The
lethargic U.S. economy will perk
up a bit faster than previously estimated this year as businesses and
consumers boost spending, some of
the nation's top economic forecasters said today.
The NatiOnal Association of
Business Economists said a survey
of 44 professional forecasters projected the economy will expand by
2 percent in 1992, rather than the
1.:5 percent estimated in a February
poU.
The forecast is modest com pared with the 6.2 percent economIC growth in I984, a year after the
previous recession ended in
November 1982.
But it also showed that forecasters continue to believe the economy can avoid slipping back into
recession.
''The probability of another
recession occurring by year's end
is less than one in five," a summary said.
The economisiS, who were surveyed in late April and early May,

estimated 3 percent growth in
1993, unchanged from February's
estimate. The Bush administrauon
is forecasting 1.5 perccm growth
this
and 3 percent in 1993.
' The acceleration of output
through 1993 is due primarily to a
strengthening of demand for invest·
menHype goods on the pan of both
businesses and households," the
repon said.
Business spending on new
plants and equipment, which
dropped 6.6 percent in I991, is
e~pected to fall just 0.5 percent in
1992 before rising 5 percent in
1993, it added
Consumer spending, which ret
resents two-thirds of the nation s
economic activity, is forecast to
increase 2.5 percent this year and
2.7 percent in 1993.
"Private housing starts, which
averaged 1.02 million units in
1991, are forecast to be 1.28 million units in 1992 before climbing
to 1.32 million units in 1993," the
repon continued. "Sales of domeslie a~tos, which were 6.1 million

r.ear

units in 1991, will rise to 6.4 million units in 1992 and then 7.1 million units in 1993."
The business economists said
spending on durable goods items such as trucks and turbines
expected to last more than 1hree
years - would increase despite
their prediction of no further
decline in interest rates.
"Apparently, the improvement
in investtnem is viewed either as a
lagged response to previous
declines in interest rates or as a
pure 'accclen~tor effect' stemming
for growth in incomes" the repon
said.
Few of the economist.! expect
further declines in interest rates, the
summary said.
Because of the modest e~pected
growth, however, the economists
project the unemployment rate to
average 7 percent in 1992 and 6.5
percent in 1993. The adrninislnllion
forccasiS it will drop to 6.8 percent
this year and 6.4 percent in 1993.It
was 6. 7 percent in 1991.
Continued on paJ!f 3

and Sidney Puckett
Substitute cooks: Shelby Davis,
Lelia Haggy, Delma Kan. Edriccs
Karr, Eva Miliron, Betty Williams,
Edna Davis, Norma Baker, Linda
Gilkey, Dianne Hawley, Jackie Jus·
tice, Ruby D. King, and Chri sty
Ramsbur~.

Substitute custodians: Gerald
Pullins, Sr., Richard Thomas, Sam
Morrison, Andy Batey, Charles
Leach, Charle s Hysell, Rebecca
Autherson, Ricky Birchfield,
Arthur Co nant , Ronald Gr~mm,
Jackie Lee Large, William T.
Musser, John Neville, Michael
Oiler, and Larry Clark.
Substitute secretaries: Lilly
Kennedy, Mona Frecker, Melan1e
Kay Hemsley, Diana Nelson , Shcrri Han, Irene Kennedy, and Nancy
Clark.
Non-renewed were the contra::L&lt;
of the following substituiCS because
of other employment or other rcasons : William Dye and Dwam
Edwards, mehcanics; Kay Ward,
Jeff Smith, Thomas Dorst, and
Arnold Wilson, bus drivers;
Pamela Howard, Marvel Petry,
Ethel Shank, and Anita Van
Cooney, cooks, and Barry Gruescr,
custodian.
The board granted dock days of
April 30 and May I to Debbie
Sebert. Mike Sta$gs was granted
use of the athletiC facilities for
footbaU camp, July 6 lhorugh July
10. Approved were field uips for
the FFA to the Toldeo area, June
21 -23, and to FFA Camp in Musk·
ingum, July 27-July I.
Nathan T. Montgomery and
Wendy A. Montgomery were
accepted as tuition students for the
1992-93 school and Stephan Stricker was accepted as a foreign
exchange s1udent
A resolution was passed to
request Dec. 3 and 4, 1991, and
Jan. 16 and 24 as calamity days for
all schools and Oct. 3, 1991 as a
calamity day for Rutland. The
insurance premium was continued
for June al the rate set in May.
Plaques wm presented to Norman Wood, bus driver since 1959,
who is reliring, and 10 Gerald
Pullins, substitute custodian in
recoj!nition of his service at the
Harrisonville school.
Attending were Bob Barton,
president, and members, Larry
Rupe, Roger Abbou, John Hood,
and Randy Humphreys.

Governor plans prison
announcement June 3
COLUMBUS,O hio (AP) The stale apparently intends to
build a second priSOil in southeast
Ohio in additron to the medium security institution that already is
planned.
Gov . George Voinovich is
scheduled to travel to Belmont and
Noble counties June 3 "to make
two announcements regarding prisons, " sa1d spokeswoman Jenny
Camper. She did not elaborate .
But Reginald W11klnson, director of the Ohio Department of
Rehabilitation and Correction,
acknowledged plans for two insU·
tutions.
"It'll be one now , and another
later," Wilkinson swd in an mterview Tuesday.
He did not identify which coun·
ty wa&lt; selected for the $25 million,
I ,250-bed prison announced in
De cember. He sard the second
pnson may a- may not be the same
SIZe.

"It may be a smaller facility,"
Wilkinson said. "The one thing I
can say about it is it will not be
built at the same time."
Belmont, Noble, and Meigs
counties have been competing for
one of four medium-security prisons the state is building.
The others will be adjacent to
c.isting institutions in Mansfield,
Marion, and Grafton. Each will
employ almost 300 people.

--Local briefs--Deputies probe weekend accidents
Meigs County Sheriffs deputies investigated several accidents
over the long holiday weekend.
On Saturday at 10 a.m ., Randy Lieving of Albany was backing
his 1986 Ford Ranger on private property and struck a parked vehicle owned by Carl Beabout of Hamden.
Light damage was reported to the Ranger and moderate damage
to the left fender and left door of the Beabout's 1987 Honda. No
citations or injuries were reponed.
On Sunday a1 12:30 a.m., Pamela J. Jones of Carpenter-Dycsville
Road in Pomeroy struck a deer when il ran into the palh of htr 1987
ChevroleL Moderate damage was reported.
Richard Gaugler of Westfield was eastbound on Beech Grove
Road on Monday morning, when he swerved to miss a deer, went
off the roadway into the ditch and struck a tree.
On Tuesday at 12:45 a.m., Paul E. Hanis II of Syracuse was
traveling east on the Stale Route 7 bypass in his 1970 Volkswagen
when he struck a deer that ran into the roadway. Heavy damage was
reponed.
Continued on page 3

L
t

11

"We know 1hat we will be ...
siting the prison real soon, and
maybe within the next week or so.
It's going to be a package that will
make a lot of people happy,"
Wilkinson said.
"It's going to help us address
our crowding problem down the
road. We expect to employ, over
the next four years or so, 400 or
500 people in southeast Ohio," he
said.
Sen. Robert Ney, R-Bamesville,
has been urging construction of
1wo institutions, one each in Belmont and Noble counties.
"We have lost thousands of
JObs. We arc beginning to stabilize.
ThiS llfca is holding its own," Ney
said.
"But these types of jobs are
recession proof, and they will give
us the Slability we need . We're
talking about decent paying jobs,
and we're talking about quite a few
or them," he said. "F&lt;r us this is a
new breath of life."
Rep, Jack Cera, 0-Bellaire, said
economic benefits would be felt
beyond the two counties.
''There are four or five counties
that are going to benefil from
this," Cera said. "They're not
going 10 be able to draw all the
qualified people from one county. I
think it's going to be an overall
benefit to the whole region.' '

I

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