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IBINGLIS
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-Green oChestrut Blend ·Coppetwood
•Black •Bark Brown ·Green &amp; White

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Sports on page 5

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LANDSCAPE TIMBERS

·

·••Vol. 41, No. ~1
Copyright.~ , . ,

ELIIG

2:,327 sign local petition to

.

support keeping mines open

..·

1 Section, 10 Pill• 25 centa
A llulltmedla Inc. New.... per

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, April 2, 1991

'(

4' X 8'
SHEETS

'

Coal miners rally
for job protection

"We need to use the resources .
will listen to the responses from
: By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
in
our
own area and keep·our fel·
many
of
your
constituents
in
this
· Senlinel News Starr
. By KURT L. LEIB ' ·
AssOciation, wd the coal industry jobs in Meigs County could be in
low
Ohioans
wnrlting instead of
area
arid
make
a
decision
to
usc
Petitions containing 2,327
those
in
other
pans
of
the
counCOLUMBUS,
Ohio
(UPI)
is making its last stand now jeopardy.
scrubbers
at
the
Gavin
plant,"
he
names of area residents in a show
try.
We
urge
you
to
make
this
Hundreds
of
miners
from
southeast
because
IS
power
plants
in
Ohio
Marshall
Julien,
vice
president
of suppon for keeping the Meigs continued.
Ohio rallied on the west side of the will be deciding this year whether of. communications for AEP Secdeeision with the economic well·
Hoffman reminded the offi·
Mines open and in production
being
of
Ohio
on
yo'ur
mind
Statehouse
Monday, calling on leg- to swiU:h fuels or adopt clean coai vice Corp., said ·a t the present time
cials
that
the
use
of
Ohio
coal
even at we cost of higher utility
islators
tQ
protect their jobs by technology.
, switching fuels is ch~;aper, but no
more
jobs
instead
of
providing
bills were mailed out to Ameri· appeared to be a main concern in
.enacting
laws
allowing
utility
comHe
said
those
plants
have
41
decision has been made. He said
·
for
other
states
at
the
expense
of
can Electric Power, state and the use of scrubbers at the Zim·
'
panics
to
continue
to
use
Qllio
coal.
generating
units
that
must
comply
the decision has to be made by
Ohio
taxpayers,"
Hoffman
conmer Plant and asked that that
. local officials today.
Even
though
Ohio
coal
is
cheap·
with
1990
Clean
Air
Act
amend·
mid-year in order to meet the 1995
cluded
in
his
letter.
be used for Gavin.
The petitions Have been circu· same
er
than
coal
from
western
sta~.
it
·
ments
by
Jan.
1995.
The
pl8nts
Clean
Air Act deadline.
lllted .in the Middlepon-Pomeroy
has
a
higher
sulfur
content
that
polresent
63
percent
of
the
·total
Rep.
Jerry Krupinski, D·
over the past six weeks and
.
lutes
the
air.
'Miners
want
lawmak·
megawatt
electric
capacity
in
Ohio,
Steubenville,
and Sen. Robert Ney,
· ; as stated by Middleport Mayor
ers
to
make
it
easier
for
utility
he
said.
R·
Barnesville,
plan to introduce
Fred Hoffman, who instigated the
companies
to
install
costly
smoke
Tostenson
contends
that
switchlegislation
to
promote
the contin·
petitions, the number of signa·
stack
scrubbers
to
reduce
the
ing
to
outside
coal
could
spell
a
\....bed
use
of
Ohio
coal.
·
twes show the ''tremendous con·
amount
of
sulfur
dioxide
released
loss
of
$570
million
to
the
Ohio
Ney
said
implementin~
the
. cern of our residents on the possiinto
the
air.
economy.
Clean
Air
Act
will
mean
a
total
. ble closing of the Meigs Mines."
The miners argue that it's in the
The Gavin power plant in GaiUa shutdown of Ohio's coal indu~try
: The petitions .asked American
state's
best
interest
to
keep
on
County,
one of the largest electric within five years:
:Electric Power ~ take whatever ·
Ohio
coal
beeause
mining
generating
plants in the state, is
"We've got to pass some·
using
steps are necessary 10 assure that
jobs
will
be
protected
and
electric
operated
by
American
Electric
thing,"
he said.
· the Meigs mines are kept in
rates
will
stay
low.
_,
.
.
Power
Co.
Tostenson
said
AEP
.
Ney
said
Krupinski is "iaking the
• Auction and that local coa be
They
said
that
installing
scrubstudies
show
it
would
be
cheaper
to
·
lead
on
this
issue and will intro: used at area power plants.
in
switch
to
outside
coal
at
Gavin
than
duce
a
bill
in
the House that will
bers
is
cheaper
than
bringing
· ·.. · It was noted that Southern
higher cost coal from states out to install clean coal technology.
outline incentives for utility comOhio Coal Co. provides an &amp;Mual
west
.
.
If
just
Gavin
were
to
switch,
panics to continue to b11rn Ohio
· payroll of over $81 million and
Neal
Tostenson,
presidCI)t
of
the
·
Tostenson
said,
1,200
coal
miner's
coal.
· that it is vital to the ecooomy of
Ohio
Minin,11;
and
Reclamation
•
.
Southeastern Ohio that these
J260jobs be retained. r
· In his leUers directed to Jolynn
Butler, chairman of the Public
Utilities Commission of Ohio,
Richard Disbrow, president of
American Electric Power, Gover.
·. nor George Voinovich, Senator
By BlUAN·J . REED
Raises for non-supervisory person· tor's salary reml!ins the same •
Jan~ ~icljael LonB, and Rep.
. SelttiDil Newl Stan
nel (such fS. ICfl'etarial and !4bor· $12,000. The Village Admillis)tl·
Marf"'\i~Yi .....th oopies ol•
~.
ers)
were . ~ !!II a fiye pe~ent tor:L- .,WU inc~d.$l,.Q(¥).
· the petllibns, Hoffman appealed ·
Poinerc?Y
VUJage
Couitcil adopt' increase wttlltncrementaf ratses last night, from $22 :~oo to
.. rot~ No.fO !hf.effect ·
ed an ordmaJice which provides based on the number of years of $23,500.. The salary of the Street
or the decision on residents of
~increases for most non~elect· service.
Department Superviso~ w\11 be
' Southelstem Ohio,
ed
v1llage
employees
when
they
For
supervisory
staff
members,
$18,000
as opposed 10 the current
, "Th!l cost of utility services
met
on
Monday
night
in
regular.
annual
salaries
were
listed
individsalary
of
$17,368. The fare chiers
, does not seem to be the main
session..
ually,
with
some
positions
receiv•
salary
was
doubled last night ·
· conc:em of residents in this area
The
new
ordin11nce
follows
a
ing
more
significant
raises
than
increased
from
$500 10$1,000. The
: when the tremendous economic
~ETITIONS
READY • Copies or petldons containinll·the nam~s
recommendation
from
the
council's
others.
The
salary
of
the
Police
.final
position
listed on the ordi·
· impact pf the closing of the
or 1,327 area residents calling for state 11tid local onkiaiS, Ute Pub·
finance
cpmmittee
which
was
pre·
Chief
was
increased
from
$15,683
nance,
that
of
the clerk of Beech
· Meigs mines is considered." said
lie Utilities Commi.Bslon, and ·Americall Electric Power were
sented
prior
to
last
night's
meeting.
to
$16,000.
The
Tax
AdministraContinued
on page 3
· : the Middleport mayor.
.
mailed
out
today
by
Middl&lt;lport
Mayor
F.red
HoJrman.
"We certainly hope that you

rep-

area

Wor• Products

,J\

Sea Shore White .......:........................s8;95 .
Navajo Elegance.......;.........:.-........;..s·8.95
Cheyenne Blue..................................s8.95
~leached Hickory...................:.,.;.,$11.95
Estate 0 a· k............·......... ..........
• ·...........
. s11.95
·
Cinnamon Oak................;...............s11.95
Winter Oak;.......,.....................,.......;..s11.95
Super White........................................s11.95
Marbella Beige ......~ .........................$12.95
Regency Oak.............................·.....~. s15.95
Autumn Floral....; .............................s16.95
Royal Blue............................. ~......~ ....s16.95
Danube Rose ................................;...s16.95
Floral Enchantment......................s15.95
Floral Fantasy~ ................................:.S15.95
Almond 88....................... ~.....:...........$15.95

Wire Mesh
6''x6''x1 0110
' 5' X 150'

Roll

WELD WIRE MESH

SAVE !IT
HOGG

s ZUSPAN

3/8" x20' Rebar...............s2.25
1/2" x 20' Rebar...$3.25
READY MIX

.JOINT &amp;TOPPING
CGMPOUND
SGAL.

$8.50

SHADOW BOX ·niCE
8' X 6' ·
SECTIONS

rro-

PLYWOOD SBEiftiiiG

·Pomeroy Council passes ordinance to
give village employees wage increase
'

3 PLY 1/2" X 4' X 8'

. 56.99
4 PLY 1/2".x 4' x 8'

$7~99'

.i 4' x8' TONGUE &amp;GROOVE.........s1

· ~inimum
~
;

10'

12'

2x4

2.13
3.20
4.27
6.67
8.40

2.56
3.84
5.12
8.00
10.08

2x6
2x8

2x10
2x12

14'

2.99
4.48
5.97
9.33
11.76

4" ECONOMY LAVATORY FAUCET........: ........•13.05
4" BETTER LAVATORY FAUCET......................131.56
4" BEST LAVATORY FAUCET ..........,................'39.95
8" ECONOMY KITCHEN W/0 SPRAV...............•15.95
8" ECONOMY KITCHEN WITH SPRAY.............'22.95
8" BETTER KITCHEN 2 HANDLE.......................'39.30
8" BEST KITCHEN 1 HANOL,E.............................51.30
BETTER TUB&amp; SHOWER FAUCET......................'59.65
FAUCET•••• ~...................'69.85

Unlverullundle
Tallet Bowl I ,....

3.41
5.12
.
6.83
10.67
13.44

PRIIIUIE TRUftD

Cara·Free Faucets·

between $J50,000 .and $500,000
and from .$2.50 to $2.80 per hour
for employees of com8~nics with
annual sales below $15 ,000.
·
Most ·labor organizations con•
tend that increasing the minim.um ·
wage· to $4 .25 per hour still falls
sort of the type of pay needed to
suppon a'ramify.
."An increase is better than no
increase, but it's still insufficient, "
said Kent Darr, communications
director of the Ohio AFL·CIO.
The national AFL-CIO says it

SQ. YD.

9.00 .
15.50 '
25.95

39.27

IQ. YD.

NOT RESPONaiiLE POR TYPOGRAPHICAL ERRORS

COLORING CONTEST WINNERS • Gift certlftcates and
balkell were preseated to lbe winners in the colorlll(l con•
: test ot the Middleport Sulldl')' Store Mooday. First place wipners
~ received $10 gift certlflea&amp;A ud second ~lace winner, Euter bas• k·e ll: Pictured wltb tbe Eaater BuiiDy (Becky Winebrenner) is
• rroot, Dantelle PbiDips, sectllld place In the two to five year old cat·
1e110ry; Lucy Howertoa, left, first ill six to nine year old category;
, and Jordan Stotts, first 111 two to five :rear category, ft'o11t right;
: and back, Tonya Pballll, second, end Heather Wile, nrst, 111 10 to
· 11 qe cateaory. Not plc:turet.. - Kim Conde, secood place win·
; ner Ill the alx to·nine age cil. .ry. ,
•

:Easler

•
4

'

.

&lt;$&gt;.

·'

.,

...

t

i

I

~

•

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'

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I

'

't

•

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.
•

'

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Boy injured in
Monday wr~ck

Meigs County's
unemployment up .

5/4x6

'I

would take a minimum wage of
abou~$5 .75 an hour for a person to
suppon a family of four. ·
·
However; Mauhew Shay of the
Ohio Council of Retail Merchants,
which opposed the increases. said
the inflationary effect will advezse-.
ly affect employers and also make
them less likely to hire entry-level
people.

A Pomeroy boy suffered minor
injuries Monday when the cat he
was riding in struek a utility pole
oil Meigs County Rood 26 .
Evan M. Needs. 7, of Pomeroy,
was not treated for his injuries after
the accident near State Route 7.
Needs was the only passenger in a
car driven by JeffreyS. Needs, 35,
of Pomeroy.
According to a repon from the
Gallia-Meigs post or the state
Highway Patrol, Jeffrey Needs was
westbound on CR 26 when an
unidentified vehicle in the east' lxlund lane went. left of center in
. front of Needs. Jlleeds was forced
off the right side roadway and
struck a utility pole. It was estimat·
ed .that the unidentified car was
traveling approltimately 70 miles
per hour !ll.the time of. the crash.
}effr~y Needs was not injured.
· The accident is under investigation.

.TARKETT
VINYL FLOORING ·.

"DELIVERY AVAILABLE"

.)

wage.boosted for Ohioans

.By United Press ln!frnation~l
About 200,000 Ohtoans eammg
:minimum wage received a raise
'this week.
.
·
The federal minimum wage was
increased .Monday by 45 cents an
hour to $4.25 and affects most
Ohio companies that have more
'than $500,000 in annual sales.
· A state minimum wage hike
·also took effect, increasing Ohio· s
minimum wage from $2.~2 to
'$3.35 per hour for workers at com·
panies that ·have annual sales

LUMBER16'

. SIZE

Clolar Tuesday 11igbt, with a ..
lilw ;between 3$an~ 40; · ·
Increasiilg c:loudille• ·
Wednesday, highs near 10.

Cards : 7-H, K-3
10-4; . 10-S.._,.._ . · ..
-- : ·.
,-

.•·

' 3"x5"x8'

'

Pick 3: 15~
Pick 4:7760

thanipio~ship

..

,,.J

POLES

•1010 ..·

·N CAA .

. '

LlftiCE

25' Pressure Treated

lulled laallng ·

X 8'

DIE
ftiii,.ED

8' X 8t..:......:;.-...:............$450'
t---:g-=-8....
' x_1_o·_
......_....._......_.....~
..$5,..,;.5_.0

10 lb•.MIDual Surface
•Green

4'

WOODBIBIS

,

Ohio Lottery

Duke wins

.. The Ohio Bureau of Employment Services today announced the
Ohio county unemployment rates
for ·February. Ail'i0113 the state's 88
. counties.· the unemployment rates
ranged from a low of 4.5 percent in
· Hamilton County to a high of 18 3
-· ]iercent in Adams CQtmty. OveraU,
following the state trend, rates
increased in almost all of the coun·
ties
.
in Meigs County February
unemployment was 11.8 percent.
Of• the 7 900 in the labor force
7 ,poo had jobs while 900 were
unemployed. In February, 1990,
the unemployment rate was.9.4. .
. .

.

BUSINESS CHANGES HANDS • Don
Swisber, a native of Pomeroy ana resident of
Point Pleasant, hu ~;~urchased thtAsliliil!ll· Oilbulk plant facl,lties tn Gallia and ~ei~ Coun·
tie.s from Robert E. Myers, Galhpohs. The
. chan2e of ownership was effective· Monday,

AprB ·l. Myersturns ·keys or the operation 0;ver
to Swisher to complete the business transaction.
Left to rlgbt are Mrs. Don (Avalee) Swisher,
Don Swisher, Robert E. Myers and Mrs. Robert
E. (Evalee) Myers; •

·swisher buys Ash:land Oil bulk plant
operation.in Gallla, Meigs CounY:e.s · ·•. :-· Don Swisher, a native of
Pomeroy and resident of Point
Pleasant, . .assumed ownership of
the Ashland Oil bulk plants in both
Galliii and Meigs Counties Monday. .
·
.
Swisher purchased tile operation
from Robert E. Myers, Gallipolis,
who _anpou~ced his Wirement,
· effecbye Apnl I.
..
.
; S:""sher, fanner execubve VICe
prestdent of The Peoples Bank of
Point. Pleasant, ,has 15. years of
bankmg eltpenence: He also .
· worked as a state a&amp;CIIt representa·
tive for The Travelen Insurance
Company in West. VirJinia for live
years, ,and as bus.me~s IIW18ger of
Turnpike of Galhpohs Cor the last
10 m~thiL ··.
'.
· Sw1she~ ts tire son. of th~ late
Wayne Swtsher Ill(! Mina Svmher,

Pomeroy. He and his-wife, Avalee,
ate the parents of five children: ·
Aaion, Carey and Mikka Stanley
and Phil and'Eric Swisher.
Mrs. Swisher has been
employed with Cablevision of
Point Pleasaill for the past six
years.
.
In assuming the dealership from
Myers, Swisher said, "We plan to .
continue to- give Tri·County Area
residents the same excellent service
they have 'rec:eived during the past
2~ e.rs."
.
~yers staned with Ashlarld Oil
25 years ago when the Gallipolis
bulk plant was located on Pin~
Street, behind Super America. The
fum hid ~ truclc and one secretary.

•

. After pu~buinf the Pomeroy
bulk plant on May , 1989, (w~
.,

all .the gas is hauled from) the fum

now has a veteran staff of four sec·
retaries, nine drivers, II small
trucks and three transpon trucks.
·
In announcing his retirement
MyeiS said, "I have enjoyed
ing with the fine people of Gallia,
Meigs and Mason Counties. "
· Myers and his wife Evillee, 'Who
retire!~ u Gallia County Recorder
in January. 1989, n:side at Cora in
a log house they had built on their
farm. They plan to do lots of lraYCI·
in~, boating end gardening in their
reurement years.
Myers IllS been active in m~my
community~· He ia a member
of the Galhpolis Masonic Lodge
Shrine Club, Elks, Moose Club'
and the Gallit! County Conscrva:
tion' Ciub. .

work:

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fire -· . · · . ·
Dall); Sentinel · Weapons ·w orked·well1inder
;oo..ths
reac~ ~targets.
Jack Anderson .
111 Court Street

.

'

WASHINGTON . Almost . the adYIIIIIBge of five
in the before they
everything in the Pentagon'$ toy desert with little IOdo but tell their
The Air F~ IS ~ely to take
and
.
box worked smprisingly weU in the equipment
\some heat for •ts decmon ~ moth,
·P.ersiail .G ulf War. The "smart" . · The grease monkeys kept aloft ball the SR ~ 71 . Blackbud . spy
. ·
~~ . ~..._..,..,,.,...,;,~.~ ;'
·. bombs, the fighter jets and the · such· precarious weapons as the planes. They · ~Right have gtven · · big player on the House Defense·
Patriot missiles were expected to highly tou_ted, but injury-prone Desert St'orm commanders up-to· Appropriations Subcoriuniuee. · .
. q,v . .
. .. -'
perform brilliantly, and. they did. Apache helicopter, The average date pictures of that liattleficld the
The House didn't bother to chal·
'ROBERT L. WINGETT
CHARLENJ; HOEFLICH
But so did most of the question Apache worked 90 percent of the satellite cameras missed.
. . lenge him on the expense: blit the
· Publlabet ·
Gelleral MuaJer .
, marks:
time, compared 10 the Pe&amp;cetime
The lesson tltat the Pentagon haS · S~le. did. It ras the only ammu-.
The best news for the Pen!B&amp;on tests of the helicopter when it.was proven the worth of the equipment rubOn 1tern lakin out of the bill.
is that the equipment that routinely usable only 50 percent of the time.
it has, it' will begin pressing
LIMITED DISTRIBUTION .'.
.
PAT WHITEHEAD
failed
miserable
during
peacetime
·
·
Apaches
with
the
lOlst
Aviation
Congress
for
more
dream
toys.
Secretary
of State James Baker is
AMWut Pubhaller/Conlroller
training Clllle through with lying Brigade fired the first shots of the They Arrqy is forging ahead with
I'
A M~MBER or The United Preoslnternauonal, Inland Dally Press
cillors during the war. Part of the . war when crossed the border in the its request .to develop yet another pulmg diplomatic strings to keep
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
credit goes to imm'ediate air earl~ hours of JIMi. 17 and attacked W1k and a $42·11iUion package of high-tech weaponrr out of the
supremacy Allied planes took the Iraq• anti-airc:rafl radat systems' so new heliCOJlters. Congress will hands of another dictator like Sad·
LETTERS OF OPINION arewelcome. l'!l_ey should be less iban300
heart of of tile lra~i army, so a the Air Force jets ciJIId steam into likely tell the Pentagon .to perfect dam Hussein. During his )atest ·
words long. All letters are subject to editing and must be sl111ed wlth
lon~ w_ar, W!rich COUld have .Iraq.
• .. .
.
what it has and quit asking for travels, Baker r.eminded world
••l"e, ad(lress and telephone numbel:. No un1lgned letters wm be pub.. tes
·-"'·arid
.
he•.........ters bey·ond
The nOibrious,· gas-on••lmg M· more.
leaders of how close Saddatn came
llshed; j..el(eri.lho~ld be In iood taste; adCiresslna Is sties, not perionall·
,.....,..
"-v
o,...·
t th t ' .
ld ·
'h
ues,
·
·
.. ·
•
·
· • · their ability .10 perform, was avert-· IAI tank :also performed better
The Senate Armed' Services 0 rea emng wo~ peace Wit ·
.'--.;.....;....,__--:-'------,......,,......--.._,...
__,......
, ...,.......,..,...._,.,..,,.~.
ed,
· ·
.• ·
than its billing. Tile Army didn't Committee has already displayed nuclear, chemical ~nd biological
But what may have proved most lose a single tank to enemy r.re. .
some_savvy in recognizing what the weapons. Saddam was able to
decisive is tha_t the Pentagon did
The list of lessons learned the Pentagon needs and doesn't need. ~~~~o~~~~~~~rdJ~'J.:~
not sho~h!iRg~ its people in the ~d way is shon.1Our associate When the House supplemental bill Baker proposed a "multi-lateral" ·
f.ield when tt came to spare parts. Jtm Lynch has learned that the 10 help fund the war came to the
Dear Editor:
on11 occasion and the scabs haven't The cupboarc)S were emptied and Army is considering upping the Senate, the Anned Services Com- ~~saleworkBto hcontt:odl' futureuldmiliConcerning the labor dispute at been saints either, and all are com- shipped to the Gulf.
firepower of its Bmdley Fighting rnittee spottCd a big chunk of pork _, es. ut e 581 11 wo sueRavenswood Alummum Col]lOra· · pany employees.
Operation Desert Siorm also liad
Vebicles. Their 25 mm cannons and threw 'it out. the House bHI ceed only if the Soviet Union and
tion: I read that a company off'tcial People need to remember that the best combat pit crews ever
were effectiVe at blowing up trucks included $11.2 m,illion to buy China agree to participate. Baker
said "the union is trying to destroy this plant has never had a histor)' of · ~~SSCmbled. Not only were the mili·
and cars, bitt almost useless against 59,000 rounds of a type of ammu- has propOsed a "suppliers' commit·
theeompany."Theydon'tneedany violence, only· a few wildcat · lal)'mochanicsOIIsite,butthePen- armored equipment. The TOW . nition that was not useful in the tee" of the major weapons
help from the union. The company strikes, but none thai created a tagon -summol!ed technical aces
missUes • modem-day bazookas • GUlf. 'Ibe IUlliRO is manufactured in exporters 10 police themselves,
officials and their scabs are dolllfl a work stoppage. So if a company from the companies that built the
were difficult for soldiers to aim Scranton, Pa., the district of ~ep. · Copyright, I991, United-Feature
grea_t job of that themselves: If plans to be honest and fair with its weapons systems. They also had
and often exploded on the ground Joseph McDade, R-Pa., who is a Syndicate, Inc.
Boyle would just shove his opera· work foree,' why then do they go IIi
tion intci the river it would be a all the trouble this compantdid
more dignified death that he is let· before contract time was up? (Piac·
ting it have.
ing ads in out of state newspapers
· As to the statement by Don as far back as August and Sep~mt­
Worlledge: "It is unfortunate that !JCr for replacement workers; clear·
so many members of Local 5668 . mg brush al:l ~ong the road 10 the
and their friends, ,who have shown top of the_h~l m front of the ~t;
admirable dignity and restraint dur· dou~le fencmg ~d ~bed wmng;
ing this dispute, have bee11 tainted. puwng steel p~~ng m front.of t!te
ljy the cowardly actions of a rela· . transformers; brung·u~ semt tralitive luindful of people who see vio- · .ers along 1!11 the el~tncal 8lll?~­
lcnce as the only solution."
tus; .boarding. up wt~dows; hmng
· That's a two-way street. You outstde secunty) Thts would only
company officials rieed to think 9r be necessary when you plan to -jhe decent and honest salaried peo- foree pcopl~ 10 accept your tenns,.
pie you've tainted by your undigni. No, ~n .t talk to me about pnnfied and premeditated actions c1ples, digmty and restramt-when.a
toward the work foree who made ~ompany can, be SC? underhanded m
xou a profitable company. Not.only . tiS deahngs with ,tts workers who.
have you been verj unjust in your gave years of .servtce.
actions toward the union, but . I "':oul.d bke to challeng~ an
haven't you jeopardized salaried mvesb.gauve reporter .to looli:mto
peoples' safety and well-being by the unJUst way our Wl!On has ~
hiring the caliber of people you lreated all through thts labor dis·
Iiave hired? ··
~ :
pute.
: To address the subject of vioVirginia Qerrick
16nce, the goon glll!lds are violent
Ravenswood,
W.Va.
and they've shown it on more' than

D'ale VanAtta

J:oml!rl)y, Ohio
DEVQTED TO TRE INTERESTS
OF
THE MEIG8·MA80N
AREA
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It's a two-way street!

.. . A.ppiecicites support; more needed
district need to attend this ~tearing
.
I would like 10 say thank you to so that judge and others concerned
·: the over 80 Rutland residenis who know how you feel. This may be ,
: recently attended the Rutland sewer your last oppqrtunity U. speak out
.· oppositiorr meeting. All those . on this issue. Atten'd the public
· attending this meeting were given hearing Oil the proposed Rutland
:. the opportunity to voice their ~in· Sewer District at the Meigs County
:. ions, even members of the Village Courthouse on April 8, 9 a.m.
. Bill Nicholson
·: Council.
35133 Leading Ck. Rd•
.' Your support is. still needed at
Middleport, Ohio 45769
; t)te public ~ng o~ this important .
; issue. All restdents m the proposed
Deai' Ediior

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·:American troops battle
~ boredom after war
ByTHOMASFERRARO .
. U.S.-OCCUPmD IRAQ (UPI}- Army Chaplain David Stricker stoOd
:· on a bluff in the desa:t of southwest iraq and helped lead an Easter service
:: for victorious warriors itching 10 go home.
·
•• Stanfling between an American Dag flapping· in the wind and three
• wooden crosses propped up by sandbags, Stricker looked towards the
: heavens and said: "Lord. grant us the gift of your spirit ... that the time
· may pass quickly.''
·
: More than a month after the shooting stopped, nearly 500,000 Ameri: can Croops remain in the Peraian Gulf region. They combat boredom daily
and wonder when they will rmally get back to the United States.
"The hardest pan is don't !mowing when we are going 'to get out of
: here," said Sgt. Aetcher Harley, 33, of Orlando,· Fla., a tank crew com• mander. "When we f.irst got the cease-fue, the talk was we'd be out in 30

:days:• '

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"Then we heard 4 May. Then 9
Now its 19 May. It seems to
change every d!tY," Harley said. His • his own men complained about
. his shifting information. "I teU them I'm getting it from higher up."
Easter Day saw American troopS hold scores of suitrise and mid-morning services across occupied Iraq and in Saudi Arabia. American soldiers
: of JewiSh faith were invited to celelllate Passover in Bahrain.
: Once a peace treaty is signed, possibly this week, ·troops may begin 10.
· • get firm dates on when they will all be able to leave.
· In the meantime, they wait.
. . .
. On an average day, the troops in the desert rise before dawn. They
clean their weapons and guns. They_engage in an oecasili~ training exer. cise. Then they sttuggle 10 pass the time.
·
1
• They read. often the Bible.
They play cards, mostly Spades. • ·
·•
.
; And they write letters to mends and reJatives.
.
'
; •'We spend It lot of time just trying r8.$tay out ofthe sun and fighting
: tlies," said spec. 4 Brad Baas, 22, qf Di!=kson, Tenn.
. •
In the late afternoon, when the weather besins 10 caol, m1111y exc:n:ue.
· · ''I'm
250 pushups a day," said CapL Tom Collins, 30, of Sac.e· ., ililintellipnco officer. "I don't run because it ,is 100 hot
• mento,
• and OlD' ability 10 r.ke showen ia minimal."
•
·
• Stricker, Harley, Baas, llld Collins are members of the Annfs 1st
: Infantry Division, which helped lead the charge into ~ on Feb. 24, the
: opening day of the.fOII'-day ground war"
""
.
: . Col. Lon M!IUB!t, commanding.~~ficer of the ls.t Division's 1st
• Brigade, sat behind hit de8k llld Jlid, Fiahtinf.: war.tsM!c easy part ...
• Now we must deal with the boredom and comp
y ... It bita me, 100.''
•'Right now, I'm doing a lot of pa~ and trying to dream up
imaginative things for the II'OCpl to do, ' said Magan. "We try' 10 teep
: them busy. That's where leid!nhip comes into play."
.
• Maj. Gen. Thomu Rlwne, held of the division, stepped into Mag: gart's rteld olfa and asked: "What boledom and oomplaceny? We sot to
• keep an edge just in cue Sllddlm HUssein does IOIIICtihlnll stupid.''

J.tr

~ 1ikli Pfc. Donlld PCcnsy, 20, ofCinCinaai, andlua bud. dies apend,plemy of till\o playin&amp; Spades. "lll8ll't tell you how many
, pmes. But we've worn.oat olelltY of~" be llid.
·: Wamnt Ofl'l\:el' PhyDil Jfilzpllk_!, 30, ofNahvU!e, Tenn., lVOII'tcom• plain about the Idle houri.
·
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r.&gt;...-. •

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New bill addresses patient's eye care

In rural areas of Ohio, health "· treatment to go 10 another profes- referred on to another doctor for
care can be very difficult to come sional at additio~ expense.
\ the slightest problem, such as a
by. Many times, thm may be only
Part of the concern with this · skin condition with the eyelid
one Dr two physicians for a large current statute, is thai in many
Presently, 25 states have adopt· .
area of coverage. Recently, I have areas of southern Ohio, ed similar legislation allowing
co-sponsore4 Senate Bill 110, optometrists are the only physi· optometrists to treat eye disease.
which will potentially add some · ·ctans available ~or eye care and the The optometrist's education ·
relief to this situation.
expense, bqth m bme and travel, includes four years of doctoral
Senate BillllO would update sometim_es hinder one's ability study. Today, graduates of the
Ohio taw to authorize doctors of · from havmg proper eye care. . •.
Ohio State University College of
optometry to .use pharmaceutical
This legislatton would end the Optometry are educilllOnally quali- ·
tools 10 diagnose and treat the eye frustration of individuals who are · fied to practice in all of the 25
anditsrelaliidstructun:s.C~~~m~tly, patients ofthe 1,300 optometrists · Slates mentioned above.
to throughout the state. These conToday in Ohio, a pall
. ·ent sitting
•Ohio law abthorizes """"""trists
vy-·~
grant eye exllllinations and then sumers, who go their family in an optometrist's chair, with a
ac;lvise patients who need further optometrist for eye care, must be condition the optometrist is qiuili-

~ig11s .indicate ·. M id-East
a

There is now certain.Jogic to
the ~ility of peace in the Mid. dlelf I
. ill.
beca
t comes,
II
w
come
· till I 'b' use
IsraeI (wh•'le •·t IS
s egt mate1Y
troubled) never had it so good.
If, say
five years
ago, the· events
r 11 ·
owmg · fitve
yean
would
of the •O
ted
b
have be e n Pred tc
)I anyone,
Israelis· would
have
dismissed
ulous. const'der. the
scenano as n'di
c
· unton
· was t he
Th e S ovtet
d T
·
supe!J'Ow~r sponsor, an m1 llary
supplier, of the Arab states seelting
lsr!Jel's destruction. Today, the
Soviet Union is much diminished
and apparently mostly out of the
foreign mischief·ml!lring business.
The Bast E~naaions were
pro- Ara b , an d some o f t hose
nations provided both military sup_phes and state suooort
for anti·
~f.
Israel terrorists. That s over.
There was much talk thai oil
was in short supply,
wou1c1 rise, boollh•s Arab
ilical
poW«. Today, even with
~i
and KUWiiti we1IJ shut down, oi!JS
. abundant, prices are on the low
side, and there is every indication
that prices will stay low.
Jews from rhe Soviet Union
have beelr allowed to emigrate. An
estimated 18S',OOO have already
arrived in Israel; it is believed that
about a million will ultimately
come. 8ecau1e llrael's principal
problem hu.alwaya been demoa;rapbic, thla 11 good IIOWII indeed.
(lane! atartcd out in 1948 with

ripe for

pea~e
Ben Wattenbero:.

600,000 Jews. An estimate for than Iraq had. In 'rece,nt days,
1995 shows 4.1 million.)
Israelis have been stabbed to death
b
Iraq, the major anti· Israel threat, by.Palestinians.
the Arabs if it was strong. A weak
. '·
has been destroyed as a military
Israelis were frustrated, and Israel, surrounded by strong Arab ·
power. The apocalyptic thought of scirred, by their de facto immobian Iraq with nuclear weapons has lizaqon in the face of Iraqi missile states, couldn't afford to give up ;
passed, at least for the intermedi- attacks. Israelis salute American much.
' '':_
TodA'y;· the Israelis were stronger
ate-rerm future.
military
might
and
fortitude,
b
.
ut
·
than ever. That puts the negotiating .'
No single Arab country was' many remain nervous about the ball on the Palestinian-Arab -court. ,
ever able to threaten Israel's American diplomacy that might he li has been said that the Palestini· ',
destruction. Now, with Iraq ou.t, . coming.
ans, and the Arab states that have '•
there are not two militarily strong
The Israelis don't .have the supported
the Palestinians, have ,
Arab countries that could now resources to provide jobs and hous- · never missed an opportunity to ,
attack lsrleJ w.ith ~of success. · ing for all the immigrants who . miss an 0ppo
'" rtunity.
·
· · · . .&lt;·
Because of thetr support for might want to come.
0
Saddam Hussein, the Pa1eslinc LibBut God never said tlult there · · nee again, opportunity is. rap- ;
eration OrtaniJalion has ':full- would'be no bitter herbs in the· land pmg on the door of the Middle :
licly and lmancially
of milk and honey. Israel hjts seri·
~t~~~~= me~h~ 1
Bv'· not retaliating ..-oin•1 Iraqi ous problems. but they are of a 1srae I'ts may we 11 bc prepared to f
missile auacks. lslael's DODularity lesser croer than before.
'
deal
S08Ied, a serious IIUIUa' l'oi a state ' Now, it has always
said,
··
·that---'·
intl!rnllional
cOrrcclly,
that
because
Israel
is
in
a
The
Israelis
strong enough to :
,..,.,....
negotiate.
Andare
also,
i( a suitable •
The Soviet arms use by the pt'CCII!ious position in the Middle deal is not forthcoming, strong : ,
Iraqis, the same lrll\s that are m the . East. it co_111d only make a deal with enough notro negotiale. . . . ~ ·
many Arab arsenals, have been ·
•
1
shown 10 be less than fint-mte.
. rr d~·y
Egypt, the one Arab nation that . .I ~
has recognized ISrael, has !#orne
By _l)_nlted Pr eas ll)ternatlooal
the most influential in the Arab
. '
'' .

:1:'' .,

and=··

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Sen. Jan M. Long

fled 10 treat, must now take another
day and pay another ·fee at a con- ·
siderable inconvenience in order 10
receive proper ussistance. Hopefully, Senate Bill 110 will make eye
care more affordable and accessible
in southeastern Ohio.
As always, please 'feel free to
call or write me, State Sen. Jan
Michael Long, if you have any
questions or commenti about these
oth ·
M
be ·
or
any
er
ISSues..
Y
num
(614) 466-8156, and my addressr •s
is ·
lhe Statehouse, Columbus, Ohio. .
·
43 2IS. ·

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world.

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The Saudis and the Kuwaitis
.ended up on the same side as the
Israelis m the Gulf War. There is
now oer1iaPs a mild possibility that
there· can. be some moved toward
an arrangement with lsrael .
·Of cour.se, many proble'!ls
remain. Syria remains a potential
threat. with a better army and better
chemical Blid bioloaical weapons

v

hi•story

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Today is TIICSday,April2, the 92ndday of i991 with 273 tOfoUow.
The moon is willing, moving toward its last quarter.
Tbe moming stm are Venus, Mars and Sl.lllm.
Tbe evening stars are Mercury and Jupiter.
..
..
Tho~ bonl on this date are under the sign of Aries . .'They include
Charlemagne, 'founder of the Holy Roman Empirq, in 742; Italian ll!lven_. , ·
turer Giacomo Casanova in InS; Daniah s~ller Hans Christian .·
Andenen In 1805; Pmlch aculpllr F!ederic BarthOidi. creator of the Stat- : .
ue of Liberty, in 1834; Frencb novelist Emile ZOla in 1840; surrealist ;
artist Max Srnst in 1891; actors Buddy Ebseil in 1908 (age 83).
j

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LarrY.

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Child Abuse Prevention
month being observed

Lottery numbers

,.

· uncements
---Anno
'

'caiOie

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

through Friday, 111 Courc St.. Po· ·
meroy, Ohio, by the Ohio Valley Pub-

)Jshlng Company/ Mulllmedta . Inc.,
Pomeroy, Ohio 4S769, Ph . 992-2156. Second class po$tage pakJ at Pomeroy,
Ohio.
·

Member:· United Press lntematlonal,
Inland Dally Pres§ Association and the
Ohio Newspaper Assoolat ton. Natlohal
Advft'tlslng Represmtartve 1 Branham
NeW'sJ)aper- Sal.ft, 733 Third Avenue /

_ _..;,___Ohio weather----Clear Tuesd;ly night, with a low
betw~en 35 and 40. In~reasing
cloudmess Wednesday, w1th highs
between 65 and 70. Chan~c of rain
is 20 percent.

New York, New York 10017.

'

POSTMASTER: S.IO!I addreos changes
to 'Ibe Dally Sentinel, 111 Cqurt St .,

Pomeroy, Ohio C57111.
.

Thursday lhrough Saturday
A c hWJce of showers and !hun.
derstorm s Thursday and Friday,
and becommg fatr Saturday. Highs
will range from t50 10 7Q each day,
with overnight lows between 40
and 50.
· ·' ·

f'~i

Skies .clearing over Ohio

·T h e

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8Uil8CRIP'nON'R"TE8

Br Carrier or Moler Route
Ontt Wte)c .. ,............................... .$t.f.£1
o.., Month .............. .... ...............$"-95

been

1•0

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Grove Cemetery, wiil remain the
· asketl Council President
Beside$ her parents she was presame; That·posiuon pays $600.
Wehrung to nominate f.ive mem ~
Eunie Brinker, 93, ·of' Route I, ceded in death by tlu'ee brothers
The new salary table will be bers of the Zoning Appeal Board. a
and~~ten.
retroactive, taking effect on Jan-· board required by the new zoning
. R.aciile, died Tuesday, April 2,
Funenll .services will be held
uary 1. 1991.
.
. ordinance;.
. shortl.99l ila: herss. residence following a, Wednesday at 3 p.m at t1JC Ewjng
00
·
Discussion
was
.entertained
at
• a~ 10-!ormula\e a priori,
Funeral Home. The Rev. Thoilias
last night's rneeting on plans to tized. hst of stteet' j&gt;aVil!l!i projects.
· Boni qri Aug. 27, 1897 in Cal· Kelly wiU officiate and .btirial wiU .
expand the property owned by J's · for comple!i!&gt;il this y~ ·. . .
houn County, W. Va., she was the he in·Miles CCmeti!i'y: Friet!ds lllay .
Exxon: The business O)"net, in a
· • discussed the paving project ·
·daughter of the. li1te Guy Gainer call at the funeral home from Tto 9 ·
letter to council, indicated !hat he now .on slate for this summer at
and·Susan Leach Gainer. She was a
homemaker.
·
.. p.m. TueSdliy·
planned to demolish an apartment Beech Grove Cemetery; $18,000
: She was a member of the
building adjacent to the service sta· .has been appropriated for that pro·
Carmel United Methodist Church, James H. Eiselstein
lion and to expand the business. ject.
.
.
James H. Eiselstein, Osborne
· a chaiter member of 42 years of tlie
Current plans would involve modi·
. • accepted the Mayor's Report
fying a village-owned lifi station . of fines collecaed for Match in th.e ·
· American Legion Auxiliary, · St, Pomeroy, died Monday, April
·
located near the property, which amount of $3,357; ·
Racine Post 1502. a charter member 1, 1991 aa his home. Funeral ser-.
ViUage Administrator John Ander· • moved 10 support the Meigs
. of 26 years of Meigs Co...ty Salon vices will be announced by the
son opposed last night, slating that Counry Chamber of Commerce's
119,.Eight and Forty, serving 24 .Ewing FuneratHome.
such modifications would only resolution in favor of installation of
. years as Ia concierge, and in 1971
. -and 1972 as Depanemen tal Color Bernice V. Levacy
.increa~e existing maintenance scrubbers at the General James M
. THE WINNER • Travis SproWl, seated, WOII .first place mthe
problems 81 the liftstation,
Gavin Plant jn Gallia County .. ·
Guard, a staie appointment. During
Bernice Vergie Kathleen LevaMelp County Soap Box Derby Bowlatbou held Saturday at tbe
·
Actiol\
on
the
proposal,
which
Additionally, the resolution
her active years wilh the Auxiliary cy, 69, Scout CamP. Road, Chester,
Pomeroy Bowling Lanes. Taking second 'place was Jason A. Miller
may
also
require
a
waiver
of-the
implores
the Public Utilities Comand Eight and Forty, she attended died Monday, April!, 1991, at the
and third, Da_vld Hel1hton. Pictured witll Sprowl are Odelia A.
new
village
zoning
ordinance,
was
mission
of
Ohio to consider the
five natio~ conventions as a rep- 'Holzer Medical Center following
Siegfried, project director, seate!l., Gail Spro'l!l and Roger D.
resentative of the local salon.
tabled
pending
discussions
between
"human
cost"
as well as the ·maneari exrended illness.
.
'
Williams, derby director, standing. All proceeds from the .
She is survived by a daughter,
station
owners
and
Anderson.
tary
cost
involved
in the &lt;::lean Air
Born on July 21, 1921, at Han,
Bowlutbon go tOWlJI'd the eXpenses of tbe Meigs County Soap Box ·
· Mrs. Hayman (Dean) Barnitz, ford, W. Va., sjle was the daugbter
A
complaint
from
Pt?metoy
resi·
Act
of
1990.
,
Derby.
·
.
dent Sherman Mills was discussed
Also present at the meeting were
Pomeroy, a sister, Mrs. Everett of the.late John Taylor Ba_ss and
at the meeting. last night. Mills, · Clerk Brenda Morris; Council ·
.. (Zelia) Ours, Hebron; a sister-in· Lula Bing Bass. She was a longwhQ re.sides on Ebenezer Stteet, members Bruce Reed, Betty Baron· •
law, Zana Smith Gainer, Hebron; time employee of the Southern
registered a complaint at the meet- ick, Thomas Werry and Bill ~
three grandsons, Gary Damitz, Bel- Local School District and a home·
ing regardi'!ll an abandoned house Young; Police Chief Jerry Rough!
pre, 'Keith Barnitz, Kinpton; and maker, and belonged to the Syra·
in
the Monkey Run area.
aild Street ·Supervisor Jack Kraut·
William Carleton, Racme, and a cuse Cllurch of God.
·granddaughter, Mrs. Arthur (Mar·
According to Mills, the house is ter.
She is survived by her husband,
.
'
garet Ann) Johnson, Racine, a1ong Everett Levacy, a dau~ter, Betty
·The Child Assault Prevention · Many ch,ildren now know and falling down and children have
with 11 great-grandchildren, and Levacy Holter, Racme, a son, . (CAP) Project of Gallia, Jackson understand that they needn't keep it been seen playing in and around
seven,great-grandchildren. .
William R. Levacy, Letart, a broth· and Meigs Coimties is asking resi· a secret. They can get some help." · the house. In addiuon, 'Mills report· Besides her parents, she was er, Leonard Bass, and a sister, dents of the tri-county area to recThe Child Assault Preven1ion ed that he had seen snake's in the
prece&lt;jgd in death by her hu~d, Beuy Tyree, bOth of Syracuse; six ognize that"a happy,childhood can · Project of Gallia, Jackson and house.
.
Dean Brinker in 1968, two sons, grandchildren and 12 great-grand- last a lifetime: ro~ether we can pre- .Meigs Col!nties, founded in 1985,
Co~ilcil assured Mills that they
• CLEVELAND (UPI) -· Mon·· .
three daughters, five brothers, and children. Besides her parents, she vent child abuse.'
is a member of a national network would refer the matter to either the
day's
winning Ohio Lottery numwas preceded in death by a-brother,
three sisters.
For the month of April which is of CAP projects that offers work· Mei,gs Co~nt~ Health Department '
Funeml services will be held at ~alph Taylor Bass and a great· Child Abuse Prevention Month, shops on abuse prevention to . for mvestlgattOp or lhe .Pomeroy bers:
Pick-3: 152._ Ticket. sales: '
I p.m Thursday at the Ewing grandchildren, Michelle Levacy.
this theme provides a positive way preschoolers, elementary.-age, chil- Fire Department for further act1liil.
· Payoff:
Funeral Home. The Rev. Paul
Fun era] services will be held to focus on preventing child abuse, dren and teens. "We .teach children Additionally ,'council agreed to $1,346,905.00.
McGuire will officiate and burial' Wednesday· at I p.m. at the Ewing according to Monica Dodrill, coor- how to recognize threatening situa· contact Legal Advisor P~ttrick $1,148,207.50.
Pick-4: 7760. Ticket sales:
,will be in the Carmel Cemetery. Funeral Home. The Rev. Paul Voss , dinalor of the Child Assault Pre- lions and how tel get help. We also O'Brien regarding the proper pro,Friends may call at the funeral and the Rev. Art Lund will offici- vention Project of the three coun- offer parent programs and teach ~ cedure involved in ridding the vii· $263,888.00. Payoff: $66,400.00. ··
Cards: Seven of hearts. King of
nome from 5 to 9 p.m. Wednesday ate and Burial will be in 'the ties. "All across Ohio and I he ers/staff in-services in every school !age of such abandonea and dan·
clubs.
Ten of diamonds. Ten of
gerous
houses.
.
nation
our
network
of
CAP
Prowe
~rve,"
said
Dodrill.
:itt the funeral home.
Gilmore Cemetery. Friends may
••
·spades.
Ticket sales; $49,150. PayUpon
a
report
from
Pomeroy
The CAP Project hiaS served
call at the funeral home Tuesday jects will \JC highlighting the same
off:
$29,540.
Seyler,
council
Mayor
Richard
theme,"
swd
Dodrill.
approximately
9,000
children
in
the
~
from 5 to 9 p.m.
Oov. George Voinovich, in pro· tri-coullty area since it started and agreed to spend an estimated
.Helen G. Andrews
claiming
April Child Abuse Pre- over one millioq children have $3,000 10 demolish the cild water
~: Helen Gertrude
(Irwin) Marie Bichman
vention
Month
in Ohio, joined pub- been served nationally, Dodrill works buildin)! located in .the Min·
:Andrews, 88, of The Plains, for·
Memorial · services for Anna lie officials from around the eoun- reported.
SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
ersville atea. According to Seyler,
·
'itierly of Pomeroy, died Monday Marie Bichman, 89, of 107 High
446 4514
: ", .
"During April we hope. parents the contractor now performing.
:morning, April I, 1991, at O'Ble- Street in Pomeroy, who died . try in focusing on this national
and other adults will think' about work on the intersection at Nye
$1 .00 l.w.AIII llmiUS UT\JIII\f &amp; $UIIOAY
i)less Memorial Hospital following Wednesday, March .27, 1991 at problem.
U .OO IAIIUII IUGMT f\JU~Y
Avenue
will
demolish
!he
building
10 Dodrill, children
how
"A
happy
childhood
can
last
a
According
· :(brief iUness.
Veterans Memorial Hospital will are learning oqe of the prevention lifetime, .Children who are lo~ed .and nu in the area for $3,000 while.
: · She was born in Athens County, be held' 81 3 p.m. Saturday at Grace
messages CAP teaches - "tell and cared for grow up 10 be lovmg on the site. .
the daughter of the 181e ·Frank R. Episcopal Church.
·
Anderson opposed paying for
someone"~ very well, s~e said.
and caring adults; !hat's a great
and Sireanavada Kenney Kincade.
The Rev. Roy Myers and the "Reported
the
work from the water depart·
cases
of
child
abuse
are
go11I
to
work
on
for
everyone.
· J:ihe WI!S a retired professional pas- ·Rev. AI McKenzie will conduct the
mcnt's
budget, stating more urgent
and
that
means
children
Together
we
can
prevent
abuse."
increasing
·try baker at Obio University, a service for Miss Bichman who was
are
learning
that
abuse
is
wrong.
projects
needed attention. Council,
:member of Order of Eastern Star in . the daughter·of .the late William
.
however,
voted to pay for 1the
!Gallipolis and the Nannie Ullom and Anna Margaret Mees Bichman . .
_dcmolitionfromthegeneralfunil.
Rebekah Lodge .of the Independent She was a member of the Grace
--In other action at.last night's
Order of Odd Fellows. She was Episcopal Church.
.
meeting,
Pomeroy Village Council;
also a membe.r of the Pomeroy
. Cem~erydean-up
County Road I near Salem Center.
• voted 10 advertise for bids for
·Church _of ~hrisl
·
Earl S• Powell
·
Harrisonville Grange will visiL a new police department cruiser;
..The:mOlive' Township Trustees
· Sl}c; ts sumved by her daQShter,
.
will
h
"
cemeiery
'
c
lean
up
afrer
Potluck refreshments will fol -·
- appointed Gene Trippleu to
Walker, Cliulil VistiJiCallf;; .. . :Funeral serv.tces for Earl S.
April
I
.
Anyone
wishing
to
keep
low
and all members are urged to the lkitud of Commissions, replac·
two sons, Bill (Barbara) Irwin and Powell, 75, of Torch, who di~ Sa~­
Oowers should llave them rerrioved a~d:
ing Joe Clark;
•arrf,(fejgy) jrwill',"·~tllens;· 11 . - urd!ty, .~h 30, 199Ult bts res•- , by
that date. • ·
andch\ldren and 12 great-grand- &amp;nee, will !Je held a~ l •p,m. Fnday
:Children.
' · ·
·
at the Whlle'Ethndge Funeral
Cemetery clean-up
:J Besides her parents, she was Home, 125 Lee St., BelP.re. .
Chester 'l:ownship will be clean~receded in dealh by her first h~s- . The Rev. ~ur. Wtlt ~til offi· ing cemetery grounds after April •
~Wid Leslie Irwin and her second ctate and bunal wtll be m Torch
7
10 and those wanting to save nowCemerery.
·
•
•
•
.
.f.'~~band, Clyde Andrews, a Sister,
Friends may call at _the funeral e.rs and other items should remove
them by April 10. The trustees
~13 Clark; and a brother, Evereu home from 2 to 9 p.m. Thursday
thai in the future flowers
request
:;t Scade;..;_ · .11 be
. ed da
and· until the time of services on
,..· : ervt""" WI . on
ncs y Friday.
ihat can be hung on the monument
. at I p.in.at Hughes-Blower Funerbe purchased so that mowing may
al tJome in ~thens, with Andrew H · F. F 11
he done more efficiently.
Miles officiating. Burial wiU be in
arry • 0 et
Ale;tllnder Cemetery in Athens.
Harry Francis Follet, of 405
1Dinner plann~d
.Friends may call at the funeral Hubbard St, Gallipolis, died Mon·
Burlingham Modem Woodmerr
home from 2 p.m. 10 4 p.m. and 1 day, April!, 1991 at Holzer Medi- will be having a dinner honoring
.p..m. to 9 p:m. on Tuesday.
·
cal Center; following an extended the families of the Desert Storm
-L · The N.annie Ullom _Rebekah
illness.
·
service men and women on April
Lodge of Odd Fellows will conduct
A resident of Gallipolis si~ce 27 at 6:30p.m. at the hall in
a service at 7 . p.m. Tuesday 1970, Mr: Fallct was a retired auto Burlingham. Those attending bring
e~ening.
body repairman and a World War a potluck dish. Desert Storm fami'•
II Navy veteran.
••
lies present will receive a 3 x 5
He was born Aug. 16, 1927 in flag. For fur.ther information call
V'rgl'e R• Burford·
· 1
Walker County, Ga., son of the late Mildred Ziegler at 992-7770.
, Virgie Ree Burford, 79, of Samuel Henry and Mary Irene
Route 1, Beech Grove Road, Rut· Rowe Pollet
\1 .
Grange banquet to be held
land·, died Monday, April I, I99.l
· Survivors include .one son,
The Meigs Co01ity Grange Banal Vetelans Memorial Hospital fol- · Steven Pollet of Mt. Vernon;. and
,,
que!
will be held Friday· at 7:15
lowing an exJended illness.
an aunt, Mrs. Leona Taylor of Galp.m. at the Salisbury Elementary
' She was a farmer. Born on
School. Contact any Meigs County
March 21 , 1912 at Roberts, Ky., lipolis.
:Orange
Master by Wednesday for a
She was the daughter of the late dea~ brothers prece_ded him in
)1enry MayorS and Andrea Wilson.
Funeral services will be con- ticket. Cost is $6 for adults and $5
for children.
·
...... .
She is survived by a son, James E.
·
i'
Mayors, a foster daughter,' Rachel ducted 1:30 p.m. Thursday at the · Entertainment is Bob and
K. Huuon, and special granddaugh· Cremeens Funeral Chapel. Burial Kepdra Ward Bence.
ter. Joy Oiler, Wellston. Several will be in Mound Hill Ceme1ery. · Speaker is Gene Esbenshade ,
other grandchildren surv.ive. There will be a Oag presentation by . 1991 National Grange Young AgriVFW Post4464.
.
culturalist from Richland,Coumy. ·
· Friends may call at the chapel
The Daily Sent_inel
after 9. a.m. on Thursday. .
·
Star Grange to meet
Pallbearers will be James A.
Star
Grange and Star Junior
CliSPS 141-t&amp;O)
Taylor, Kenneth Taylor, Stanley . 'Grange will meet Saturday at 8
A Dlv,.,lon of MuUimedla. Inc.
Waugh and J~es I. Taylor.
p.m. at the grange hall located on
'
.
Published evet"y a!ternoon, Monday

l:i

=

~

Pomeroy... _.....:o;co;;:;n;:::tin:;:ued=rro;:::m~pa:::.:ge_t_._.:..•

·w

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The Dally Senti

. Eunie Brinker .

Page-2-The DaUy Sentinel ·
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
: 1\Jeeday, April 2, 1991 ·.

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f" il'

'1991

.·

Commentary
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.,ge 4 The Dally Sen!lnel

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1\JHday, April 2, 1991

·, ·

Meigs baseb~ll · preview

By DAVE itAJuuS
' last s~on, a sparkling .2.99 ERA
SelltiDel Correspoaile1t
and in 32 2/3 innings pitched,
The Meigs Marauders are off to struck out 38. Taylor fin1shed !he
a good start as IIley are trying 10 · season with a 3-0 record and an
nail 'down the school's lhird TVC outstanding 1.83 :ERA. In 23
~ basebilll-crown. Coach :Zaite Bee- . ·innings ' pitcbed, .the right-hander
· gte welcomed baclc six sianerS 8itd struck out23. Despite finishin• the
Iettennen from last year's team that seaS~?n with a 1-2 record Wright
.finished 12-7-2on the year and It- had an microscopic t.66ERA with
5 in the TVC, good enough for 17 strike outs in 21 1/3 i.noings,
third place in~ conference. , . . Junior Terry .McGuire·chipped in
L~ading the retul'llees is three with a 3-1 record wilh a 3.6S"ERA.
all-conference selections. Jason Also expected to·see action on the
· Wright, a senior shortstop/Pitcher, mound are ·sophomores f&gt;1ike
was named fllSl team all-TVC last · Van~ and Shawn Hamon. ' .
· year, senior first baseman Terry · Wright was !he leading·hitter for .
Reuter who was honorallle all-TVC . ·the Marauders, hitting at a .464 clip
and senior oulfielder/pitcher Kevin while 'raylor hit ;438 and Reuter ·
Taylor who was also. an hollOrable .403 mark.
· mention selection last yeat. ·
Another strong point for the
One of the strenghts of the Marauders will be the infield,
Maraudez:s will be the pitching led Reuter has started the season at
by junior Jeremy Phalin . The first senior Eric Heck is at second
flamethrower sported a 4-0 record
(See MARAUDERS on Page 5)
MAKES CONTACT· Meigs Marauder John Harrison takes a
cut in Monday afternoon's pme against visiting Alexander, which
·the Marauders won 9·1 to boost their.record to 3.0. (Sentinel photo
by Dave Harris). . · .
· ·
·.
.

Southern beats KCHS 14-11
By SCOTT WOLFE
Sentinel Correspoadent
The host Southern Tornadoes
staved off an eight-run rally by the
Kyg&amp; Creek Bobcats in the bottom
of the seventh inning to claim a 14II. opening da'y win here Monday.
The win boosts SHS to 1-0
·overall and in the league, whiill KC
drops to 0-1.
Coach Mick 'Winebrenner's
· troops took an eatly 1-0 lead in !her
bottom of the first when Andy
·Baer, who was perfect on the night
with 4-4 and a walk, had his fust
double. He later came home on a
Mark Taylor single.
.
. Southern weni on to plate four
runs in the second and four more in
the third. In the third frame, Todd
Grindstaff led off by teaching on
·an error, Kyle Wickline singled,
Colin Maidens reached via error,
Baer doubled home two, and Jamie
Anderson sacrificed.
Meanwhile, Baer kept the Bob·cats offstride with ·three neat·per·
~ ~CHING BACK for something extra is what Souibern hurler · feet innings. Baer fanned six of
.Southern's overall 13 team strike·
·Keitt! Jones.ls U,:ing to do as he comes to the plate with one of.his
·outs,
while i(eith Jones came ·on
muy oUer1ngs 1n Monday arternoon•s SVAC baseball opener
. with a great relief effon and six
apinst .visiting Kyger Creek, which the Tornadoes won 14-11.
strikeouts''of his own in three in· nin11s of wort. Mart Taylor came
on m relief to pirch the last inning.
Overall, Southern had 14 walks,
with six given ,up by Taylor in the
last inning.
· ,
•
Baer picked up the win and

racked up four RBis.
Four walks and a single by Marc
Villanueva gave KC its first two
runs as Jaies had a shaky slat!, but
recovered to pitch well.
.
In the fifth he fanned three of
.the four bauers l!e faced.
KC's pitching did not do all that
bod, but some untimely fielding errors and mental mistakes helped
hand SHS (he win. Villanueva and
Phil Bradbury. hurled for the Bob·
cats of Coach Scott Gheen. They
combined for four strikeouts and
·only four walks. Southern, howev·
er, battered out 16 hits in a great
offensive e~plosion.
. Mark Taylor fanned the first
batter he faced in !he seventh, got
the second to fly out, then had three
straight -walks and a Texas .leaguer.
single by Jay Johnson : Bradbury
tripled home three runs, followed
by tiu:ee straight walks before raylor picked off a Jlinner at second to
end !he game:
.
·
Villanueva and Bradbury had
two singles each, and Johnson had
a triple, while Birchfield had single.
· Every Tornado that started got a
hit, ted by Baer's 4-for-4 effort and
two home runs. Anderson, Lisle
and Todd Grindstaff went 2 for 3,
and Jones had ·a triple, while singtes were collected by Wickline, ·
&lt;\.rnie Dugan. Jeremy Dill, and

By ,beating Kansas 72-65 Monday night,

a

•

By SCOTT HORNER
'
UPI Sports Writer ·
INDIANAPOUS {UPI) - Duke had been successful in the past six
y~. but not successful enough.
.
. The No. 6 Blue Devils finally shQok the stilima of failing to win an
NCAA championship in five Final Four appearances in the past six years,
defeating 12th-ranked Kansas 72-65 Monday night at the floosier Dome
for the 1991 tide.
The Blue Devils said they were not concerned with previous los8es in
the Final Four, including last season's 103-73 troun&lt;:ing at !he hands of
Nevada-Las Vegas.
·
.
.
"We hadn't talked about it.'' said tournament most valuable· player
Christian Laeuner. "We .don't took at i~ like that. I wouldn't consider .a .
foolball team going to the' Super Bowl five out of six years (and not win'
Ding) had-a monkey on its back. We don't consider it a monkey at all. "
In the past siX years, Duke lost two championship games (1986 and
'90) and a pair of semifinals ('88 10 eventual champ Kansas and '89).
Laettner, a 6-foor-10 junior and second-team All-American, hit 18
points an,d grabbed 10 rebounds Monday. He also set a championship
game
by hitting 12-of-12 free throws.
All-l'ournament selection Bobby Hurley controlled the tempo of the
game from his point guard spot, scoring 12 points, dishing off nine assists
and committinl! just three turnovers in ptaymg 40 minutes for the second
straight game.
.··
·
·
_.
.· ·
· "For Bobby to play as well as he did Was impressive," said 11th· yeat
Duke head coach Mike Knyzewski. :'Bobby played 80 minutes, I don't
.know how be did it."
.
·
Duke played with poise throughout, charging m·a 7-llead in the opening 2:08. with Hurley hit G~t Hill on an alley oop from just in front of: ·
the midcourt line with 17: ~2 remaining. Duke hit 7 of its ftrsl9 shots from
the field while holding the Jayhawks to 5-of-14.
.
.
"We did 8 very good job concentrating the whole game. They made a
lot of change,s we had to adapt 10. We did a great job chanfing defenses
and controlling their shooters," said Laeuner. "There wasn 1 any time in
.the gatne I thought we weren't in control. It was due to our defense. I
knew we weren't going to let them come back to get the lead.''
Kansas twice narrowed Duke's lead 10 one poin~ the final time at 26-

record

:- By Uaited P,ress International
: Dwight Gooden became base.ball's newest golden boy MQIIday . .
' The Mets chose April Fool's
:Dar to make the right-hander base·bal 's highest paid player, signing
:him to three-year contract exten;sioo wOfl)l $16.2 million. The deal
·puts Gooden slighlly ahead of
Boston Red Sox pitcher Roger
Clemens as the major league's rich·
· ·estat&amp;.
Included in the agreement are
signing bonuses and •a video promotiQil deal in \Yhich: lhe.Mets and
Gooden are partners. Gooden hsd .
been seeking a deal that would
equal !he f!)ur·year, $21.4 .million
C\)lllraCt Clemens signed in the off·

tbree·yeat contracL _..
· Gooden, entering his eighth season wilh the Mets, was 19-7 last
season with a 3.83 ERA and 233
strikeouts. He· won the National
League Cy Ywng Award on 1985
when he posted a 24-4 record.
The 26-yeat-old Gooden is the
fiflh player to earn $4 million per
year joining Jose Canseco, Tony
Gwynn and Darryl Strawberry.
While Gooden was signing his
new contraCt, the Mets were· losing
an exhibition game to the Atlanta
Braves in Port St. Lucie, Fla. Mike
Heath belted a two-run homer.rand
Tommy Gregg added .a solo shot to
give the ·Braves a 5-2 victory ,over
the Mets. Dave Justice had a runseason.·
scoring triple in the first and the
Gooden will make $2.25 million Braves collected five runs and
this season, the final year of a seven hits off loser David Cone in.
•

2U UST IIAI• ST.
PD"IIOY

"2·6617

· By DAvE HENDERSON
United Press International
Some 2 t(l years ago, Lake Erie
learned the ideotity of,one of its
·
tenants_ the zebra mussel.
Along tlie Great Lakes shore·
lines the zebra mussel outranks
.Lym~ Disease as the most dreaded
:pest. This outdoors public enemy
·No. t is a small mollusk that
.resembles a freshwater barnacle
one 10 three inches in Jengtb.
' To call the zebra mussel ubiqui:tous would be understatement.
Despite the factlhat99.8 percent of
. :the mussel's eggs die before the
Jarval stage,.by autumn of 1989 .!he
mussel had "colonized the surfaces
,of nearly every rum object in Lake.
Erie," according to Fred Snyder,
specialist for Ohio Sea Grant, a
.fisheries research program.
That's in a span, of 13 months
after the first 1zebra mussels were
introduced into Lake St Clair by a
transoceanic freighter purging its
ballast tanks.
·., The creatures are prevalent
· today in Lake Huron, Lake Erie,
mucll of 'Lake Ontario, the st.
l-awrence River and their tribu·
~· Many of New York's·inland
Jreshwater streams and takes are
also being contaminated thanks ·to
tile efficiency of the Erie Canal..
: These tiny mollusks not only
P.lay havoc. w1th mo~ intakes, boat
6urfaces, hvewells, bilges and lure ·

APRIL 3RD THRU 6TH

.

AND GREAT DEALS ON STIHLS

TAKING HER LEAD ·Southern's Tonya ln1els (right) takes
her lead while Kyger Creek ftr~ baseman Jennifer Neal shields the
sun from her eyes In waiting for the coming action at tile plate dar· ·
Ina Monday's SVAC softball opener at Racine, which the Bo,hcats
. won8-4.

KCHS defeats Southern 8-4' ·
By SCOTT WOLFE
Selltinet Correspondent
The Kyger Creek Bobcats
Scored an· 8-4 opening-day victory
over the host Southern Tqmadoes,
as Luciana Scou hurled a one-hitter
en route to tile win. · ·
Scoll fanned 10, bui ran into
some control problems late in the
·game 'ivith· 14 overall walks. S~e
' still managed to.gel !he lfe&amp;essary
. strlkes to pick up· ihe win in a fin~
effort
•
Cheryl Pape got the stai'l for
Southern and was relieved by Kellie Snider. They combined for just
four walks and six strikeojlts m a
·good overall piiChing effort.
. Kyp scoml three ~mes in the
third mning when with one out
Scott wllked, tllere was a fly out
and Mlc:bcUc C6nlde reached on a
duowin&amp; error after siniling. Alicia
Ward re~ebed on an error, and Beth
Bradbury hid 1 two-run single.
In the fourth SHS made it 3-1
when Marcy Hill walhd, Pape
walked and Jenny Lille reached on
an error to make the ecore 3·1 .
KC went ~ !i-t in the ftflh, before SHS cut m to S-2 on an error
to She!Jy Winebrenner. W'mebrenner IICOICd on a single by Pape, the
lone SHS hit al the nigiJL
KC ~Cored three inllllanCe NOS
the sixth- Crime, but Coech Kim .

in

;

Phillips • gals made I&lt;C dig down
deep with two out in the seventh
when five walks and a fielder's
choice with the bases loaded
brought home two runs before the
final out
·
·
Bradbury had two singles and a
triple for the winners, while Scott
had tw,&lt;&gt; singles, and Conkle 'and
Ward each hod a single,
Pape had the loner for SOuthern.
Marcy Hill walked tllrec times,
Amber Cummings and Jennifer
Cross each walked twice.
·
Southern goes. to Trimble Tues·
day for a non-league tilt
Score by innings
Kyger Creek 003 023 0-8· 7-2 .
Southern 000 110 2-4-1-7
•

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•

:. MIAMI (UP!) - Tile Miami
Dolphins have acquired Houston
Oiler lincbacke( John Grimsley in
'exchange for a third-round draft .
·,choice, the club announced Mon.-

·

. The Dolphins also pi(;ked up
:J&gt;lan B free agent linebacker Louis
·Cooper from.Kansas C1ty and unre,stricted free agent Charles Henry, a
fonner University of Miami tight
end who has been cut by the Los
·, Angeles Raiders and twice bY Dal·las in the last three years.
. Grimsley. 6-2, 238 pounds,
missed trainmg camp and the eatly
part of the season at Houston but
staned 13 re~ular season games
and the Oilers playoff game, fin- •
'l~hing the season with 64 taCkles. ·
·.He will be in his eighth season'in
·(be NFL next fall.
·
••All of our defensive coachea
.liked the way he played when they
·saw him on film," said Charley
')Vinner, the Dolphins' director of
'l'layer pcraonnel. ''We all tllink be
:will upgrade the linebacker poll- .
:tion. He plays a lot lite John Offer·
'dahl."
. • Cooper played io all 16 regular
:season games, but contrlbut.od
;111ostl~ on apecial teal!ls· I~ th~
·Chiefs playoff game w11h ""181nt,

IIMWOOI/-.

,.,

.

25 with 6:25 left ·in the ftrst half on a Terry Brown three-pointer. The Blue
DevilS extended their lead .to 42·34 at half as Thomas Hill hit a three·
painter just before the buzzer soUnded.
Duke, which finished at 32-7, maintained control of the game, even
after Kansas cut the lead to 44-40 eatly in the selcnd half. Blue Devil
sophomore reserve guard Bitt McCaffrey, who earned all-tournament
honers, hit a 17-foocrr to stop the Kansas run and later hit a three-pointer
to alain put Duke up by eight at St-43. ·
.
"It lakes a lot of mental pre!*'ltion to be on this team," said McCaf·
frey, who fmished with 16 pomts. "You have to be ready. You never
know when the opponuniiy is going 10 be there for you."
The Jayhawks, who finish.ed ~ 27·8, still hod some fight left in. them.'
They cilt Duke's lead to 66-59 w1th 2:081eft, and after Duke hit four free
throws, came back with six straight points to get within 70-65 at the 34·
second mart.
.
.
.
''When lbere Was 30 seconds left in the game, I thought w~ still had a
chance to win," said Kansas guard Adonis Jordan, who hit the Jayhawks'
final basket "All year long we were the team that played for 40 minutes,
oo matter whallhe score was.''
·
Kansas neatly forced 8 tO-second backcourt violatilin, but Grant Hill
called a timeout with 25.7 seconds left. On the ensuin$ inbound pass,
Brian Davis streaked for a dunk that sealed Duke's cbamr.tonship.
"I'm so.happy for our guys,'' said Knyzewski. "I m not sure anybodv has played any harder for 80 minutes to win 8 championship tluin we
did. 1'
.
· Duke hit 56 percent from the floor ..The Blue Devils were above 50
percent for ill their tournament games· and the fust team to.shOOt above
46 percent qainst Kansas, which held Indiana, ArkansaS 1111d Nortl! Carolina to at least 6.5 percent below season shooting averages.
Kansas, which had an eight-rebound per game margin in the toui'IIB·
ment, led Duke in rebounding 32·31. TheJayhawks hit41.5 percent from
the fteld:
Mart Randall scored 18 points and grabbed I 0 rebounds Mon~, also
earning all-tournament honors along with Anderson Hunt of UNLV.
The Hoosier Dome crowd of47,18S pushed the tollll&lt;~ournament attendance to a record 666,617, brtaking the record of 654,744 set four years
ago, when the finals were in New Orleans.

•
innings.
.
In other exhibition games:
At Winter Haven, Fla.,.Jim
Deshaies allowed two hits ·over six
innings as !he Houston Astros beat
the Boston Red Sox 8-0. Marie
McLemore went 3 for 3 and Steve
Finley had two run-producing singles for !he Astros. AI Osuna and
· Mark Thunnond completed !he six·
hit shutout for Houston,
At West Palm Beach, Fla., Larry
Walker hit a three-run homer and
Andres Galarraga had a bases. e111pty home run as the Montreal
Expos downed tile Ba!timore Ori·
oles 7·6. Leo Gomez went 3 for 4
and scored three runs and Mike
Devereaux had a solo homer for the
Orioles.
At Baseball City, Fla., Danny
Tartabull drove in four runs with a
~ix

.

three-run homer and a single to
power the Kansas City Royals to an
8-4 win over the St. Louis Cardinals . Tanabull had three hits to ·
highlight a 13-hit aaack. Kirk Gibson added a solo homer for the

Royals.

At Fon Lauderdale, Fla., Randy
Velarde doubled and, scored on
Mike Blowers' single in the lith
inning to lift the New Yort Yankees to a 3·2 victory over the! Min·
nesota Twins . Jim Leyritz had a
two-run double and Scott Sanderson scauered five hits over six
innings for New York . . Mike
Pagliarulo and Chili Davis doubled
in the Twins' runs.
At Bradenton •. Fla., Kelly Gruber and Manny Lee drove in runs
as the Toronto Blue Jays and Pittsburgh Pirates played to a 2-2 tie.
The game was called by mutual
agreedlent after 13 innings. Neilher
team was a~le to score after the
fourth inning.
At Vero Beach, Fla., Ed Lund
singled in the winning run in the
lOth inning in his first at-bat of
acli.on, l&gt;ut also witli municipal !"$.''Fritz said. "~e can't.~y ~t spring to give the Los Angeles
water inlakes and beaches.
II ISn't. We haven I fwnd 1~ but II Dodgers il 5-4 victory over the
Central and Eastern Europe may l;le there/'
Cincinnati Reds.
have been dealing wilh zebra mus- · As recently as two years ago
At Phoenix, Matt Williams belt·
seiS for the IX:uer patt of ll century. · ~v~ found Lake Erie water visi' ed two home runs and drove in
No control has ever been discov- b1hty two or th~ee feet at best. th.ree runs as !he San Francisco
ered. These ·countries simply U~det the right conditions, visibili- Giants routed the Oakiand Al)llet·
design their water systems to cope ty l,s,now as much _as 100 feel
ics 17-4. San Francisco broke the
with the mussels.
.
The water 1s so clear that game open wi1h a nine-run sixlh
Adult zebra mussels filter at we're spooking fish from structure inning.
least one liter of water every day. when ":e come: in," .said Bob LayAt Tempe, Ariz., Greg Vaughn
They filter out virtually all minute cox J~.; a.~ram, Ohio, charter boat had a pair of two-run homers and
parucles, including zoopl;lnkton, an cap181n: We actually ~~~ !hem Candy Maldonado homered and
essential element in any aquatic back w11h lures as we drift
drove in Jour runs to pace the Mil·
food.chain.
Ohio Sea Grant chief Dr. Jeff · waukee Brewers io' a 12-9 triumph
"Is the zebra musset ·bad?" Reuter predicts cl~ar-water tech· over tl,le Seattle Mariners. Vau~hn
asked biologisi Ken Fritz of the · niqu.es in line diameter, !ure coi?r homered in a five- run rtrst innmg
Ohio Division of Fisheries. choace and presentauon w1ll and homered again in a four-run
"Doesn't it take in and filter out .become essential in once-turbid second inning. Edgar Maitinez and
pollutants? Does it hurt fishing? Lake Erie.
Jay Bohner homered for Seattle.
We really don't know. Our primary
concern is that colonies of them
may be hurtinR.- Ihe fish spawn on
artificial reefs. ' ·
.
Walleye fishing success in the
western lind central basins of Lake
Erie dropped substantially last yeat
By JOE CIALINI
said. "Charles not being there will
-as much as 75 percent in the
· UPI Sports Writer
off&amp; 38 minutes of playing opporspring and summer. Granted, 1988
PHILADELPHIA (UPI)
tunity to one or more people."
and '89 were phenomenal walleye Tests on Charles Barkley's knee
Lynatn said either sixth-man
fishing years, but the drop is alann- Monday confirmed the origin!'! Ron Anderson or Kenny Payne
·diagnosis that the .Ph1ladelph1a would replace Barkley in the start· ·
ing.
·
Weather certainly was a factor, 76ers forward will be sidelined for ing lineup, with Payne and rookie
along with high winds during twoweeks.
.
Jayson Williams getting !he bulk of
spawning periods. 'But ze~ra musBarkley suffered a second· the minutes usually logged by
sprain of the medial collat- Barkley.
sei~?We have absolutely no indica- degree
eralligamerit of his left knee when
lion right oow that !he zebra mussel he tripped over teammate Rick
is having an effect on walleye fish- Mahom Sunday against Cle.veland,
team ~ysician Dr. Jack McPhillc·
(Continued from Page 4)
my sa1d.
.
·
.
A second-degree spra1n was with Wright at shon. Sophomore
McPhillemy's initial diagnosis and Gary Adams and junior -steve
he regisrcred five tackles, but only that did not change after a magnetic Woods has split time at lhird. Also
had tO' during the entire regular resonance imaging test conducted ·7xpect!ng t? s.ee actio~ in the .
season. The 6-2, 238-pound outside · Monday. Thece were fears the mf1eld 1S sen1or Jamey L1ttle, and
. .
linebacker is a scvcnlh-year vcter- injury would be serious enough to junior Tim ·Peterson.
In
the
oulfield
Taylor
,
t
s m left,
an. .
,..
end Barkley's season. ·
.
McGuire
in
center
and
Hamon
in
Cooper is !he DOlphins' fourth
Barkley is Philadelphia'~ leadright,
also
battling
for
playing
time
Plan B signing. They also signed. ing scorer and rebounder. His con·
linebacker Ned Bolcar from the dition will be re-evaluated tn two is senior Tim Mays, sophomore
Seallle Seahawks, tight end Eric weekS and he will be on a day-to- Mike Welch and Little all ·are
Sievers of New England and defen- day basis lifter that, McPhillemy expecting 19 see plenty of action.
Behind the plate, seniors Randy
sive end Terry Price of the Chicago said.
.
Corsi,Jolin
Harrison and junior Joe
Bears.
The NBA regular season ends in
6
McElroy
have
all split' duty. They
Miami has lost seven players ·ro , three weeks and the 7 ers have
will
have
big
shoes
to fill as Ed
~clubs during the Plan B peri- · already clinched a playoff spot.
Crooks
was
regarded
as
one of !he
od which .expired Monday. They
Their efforts to earn the homeare defensive ends John Bosa 'and court advantage for the ftrst round ·top backStops in soulheastern Ohio
Karl Wilson, guard Roy Foster, of the flayoffs will be hmt by before graduating last May.
Also graduated from last yean
cornerback Sean Van horse, Barlcley s injury, however. . ·
linebacker Rick Graf, cornerbaCk
Philadelphia trails ·Milwaukee teatn is a two-yeat starter at shortRodney 'llklmas and wide receiver by three games in the race for the stop and pircher in Chris Stewart,
James Pniia.
.
• .
founh playoff spot in the Eastern DmnisBoothe,MikeWalls,Kcith
The Dolphins have had a specif. Conference. The top four ieams Hagen, Randy Hawley and Brian
ic need at' linebacker since it was receive the home-court advantage
Beegle is a former Southern bas- .
revealed that Cliff Odom had suf- in the fllSlround. The 76Crs will try
feted !he same kind of hip injury to pick up a game on the Bucks ketball and baseball star and went
lhlt has interrupted BO Jackson's when the.fu!~: home against MU- on to eitd his baseball care« pili:h·ing for the Ohio University Bobbasellall and football careen.
waukee
Y night.
.The Dolphins are still hopeful,
The 76ers were 2·S earlier this cats. Beegle feels that the Maraudhowever, that Odom might be able season when Barldey was.out with ers will be in the thick of the TVC
title hunt alOng wilh loaa·lime eon· ·
to ~laY next yeat.
·
a foot in~ury.
ference
pc)wen Wellston, Belpre
Henry was originally signed as a
"We re looking at at least two
fn!e agenl by the Raiders, but spent weeks (without Barkley) and we and the Vinton County \l'ilt:ingJ.
his firat year recoveriP,g from a . need some olher pcop!e to SteP. Terry Adami will once again han·
knee injury suffea:ed in college. ·
, up,'' 7!iers head coach Jun .LY1l&amp;m die the reserve lellll.

.

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Marauders ...

WlllllfPIOVD CIIDI1
..

,,

warner.

-

RISING ABOVE JA YHA WKS is wbat Duke center Christian
Laettner (32) accomplishes against a trio or Kansas Jayhawks in the
first half or Monday night's NCAA championship contest in lndi·
ana polis, which the Blue Devils.won 72-65 to claim the North Car·olina university's first-ever NCAA basketball crown. (UPI)
'

Injured.knee to keep Barkley
on the bench for two weeks

:Dolphins acquire Grimsley

Head•

· B.aseball card
There will he 8 SJ)orls card show
on Sunday, April? from 10 a.m. to
4 p.m. at the Meigs COunty Senior
Citizens Center in Pomeroy 1
Former major league baseball
player and Mason resident Mel
Clark will be on luuitJ to sign autOgraphs lit !he show, where' tables
wiU cost $12.50 each.
For more information, call
~arah Johnson at ~2-6890.

~

10°/o Off

FREE

show Sunday

PJtiZ£s

"
'lh·
'
· ·~ .

One thing you can count on'Trom
year to year is weeds. Thanks to
their engineering. the same can be
said for Stihl weed trimmers.

.

.

Are fast-multiplying zebra mussels.
benig~ immigrants or·No. I' pests? .

OPEN .
HOUSE

RE(;ISTER TO WIN
A "TREE BRAND"
. COLLECTOR'S
KNIFE w/tASE

.

TJ'le Dally Sentlnel-:-Page--5

.

:Gooden signs three-year contract for.$16":2 million ·

P=-............

REFRESHMENTS

· ·

'

Duke claims first-ever NCAA hat:dwood championship

By ,DAVE HAIUt1S ..
at the pl!llti ~g ciut three sin.Sentinet Cora esjlondenl'
gles, McOawe addelf a double and
Junior righthander Jeremy a single, Wright, . Reuter and
Phalin ·scattered ·.roilr hits al)d Adains twO singleS each and Coni
struck ont 13 Alexander Spartans a double.
·
·as the Meigs Marauders pounder · Jarvis was the starter and loser
· the Spanans 9·1 in Tri-Valley Con· for Aleundet. he gave up all nine
ference baseball action Monday runs on l2 hilS white striking out
· evening.
·
·
seven and walking two, Ryan
'Ole gatne was called after five Davis pitched a 'perfect fifth in 'r&amp;and a half innings ~ause of dadt· lief. Bryan Johnson, Roy Jobnaon,
neas.
JatVis and Rob Wilson each. bad a
Meigs pounded 12 hits off of single for the AleXlllldtz hits.
two Alexander pitchen in raising Score by inninp
.
ilB record to 3..() in the conference. Alexander 000 0010-14-5
The Marauders will travel to Miller · Meigs 333 000 x~-12-4 •
today to play the Falcons in a
Batteries .Jeremy Plialin ·and
mske:'upcontestfrom last week..
John Harrison, Joe McElroy (5}
Meigs scored three runs in the (Meigs); Jamie Jarvis, Ryan Davis
fust inning, with Terry McGuire · (:5) and Chris Andrews (Alexander)
gettin$ t}te ~uders ~ by ·
WP- Phalin
doubhng. Enc Heck smgled to
LP- JarviS
drive in McGuire, after Heck stole
second he scored on a base hit by
Jason Wright. Wright then stole
cut line for pictures
second and later rode home on a
neg t and 2-Meigs jUnior right
single by Terry RC!IIel'.
hnnder.Jeremy Phali.n struck out 13
In the secopd innil)g Meigs took Alexnader Spartans and scauered
advantage of singles off the bats of four hits as the Maraude!S defeated·
·. Gary Adams, H~clt:, Wright, and Alexander 9- t. 'flle win ~ies the
Reuter iitopg with two Alexander Maruders 10 3-0 on the yeat.
passed ballS ID .the plate tiKee more
neg 3 and 4-Meigs junior catchruns ~d make 1ta 5-0 Pl!'e. ,
er John Ha~ison takes !1 cut in
. Metgs .clo~ !lOt their SCllni!S. Monday mght 9-1 wtn over
.m the thud mnmg, once agam Alexander. Wilh the win the MaAdatns led off the inning wilh the _ rauders raise their record to 3..()
first of three staright singles. .
·
·
McGuire and Heck also had base
hits and the Marauders also took
advantage of another passed ball
and a Alexander error to make it a
9..()game. .
Alexander plated itS only run in
the fifth inning when with one out;
Bryap J.ohnson struck oul, but
reached when the ball eluded !he
Marauder carcher. Roy Johnson
singled, and a wallt: to Chris An·
It's tbe DR.J'Bs ONE
drews loaded the bases. Jamie
Jarvis then Died to short right field
b•m•Poll~.
that the Marauder rightfielder
proteu for ·
couldn't ftnd the handle on, scoring
Bryan Johnson. After the error,
ellarcllee,·apartin..a.,
Phalin sruck out the next two to es·
tine ~teres. SlmPUfted
cape further trouble,
In coaten&amp;,.coawaleat
Phalin gave up only four hits
In foriDat tu1d very
and ~tritck out 13. including nine
· aftortlable. .
the last three innings while walking
only two. Heck led the Marauders
·Mark Taylor.
For the opening game and limit·
ed outside practice, Winebrenner
was proud qf his team's effort, but
·stressed that SHS must team from
their mistalies.
Southern plays at Trimble tomorrow.
·
Score by innings ·
Kyger Creek 000 200 8-11-4-4
Swthern 144 032 x-14-16-1

· P~meroy-"-Middleport, Ohio •

Tue!day, APr112, 1991

Meigs thumps Alexander 9·1 ·

.

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•

LEAPING DEFENSE is what
Duke's Greg Koubek .(22) pro·
vides to cut orr the heavenward
route that Kansas postman Mark
Randall (left, grabbing ball) is
undoubtedly thi{lking of taking
during Monday night's NCAA
championship game in lndi ·
anapolis, which the Blue Devils
won 72-6S. (UPI)

·WANl ADS bring
·vacalio.nMoney.·

992-2156 '

Hegist(:r
Classificds

675-1333

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The Dally'Sentlnei-Page-7

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The Daily. Sentinel

By The Bend

•

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.
TUesday,Ap~l2,1991

pon Lodge No. 363 F &amp; AM will
emet Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. fot wort
in the fellow cl!lfi degree. Inspec·
tion Frid!ly at 6:,30 p.m. · with
poduck. •
.

TUESDAY
' POMEROY • The Meigs County Board of Elections will meet
Tuesday 814:30 p.m. at ll)e office.

WEDNESDAY
RACINE - Southern Local
OAPSE. 453 will hold ll special
meeting on Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the
Southern High School cafeterill.
Members are urged to attend.

4ar.

.

.

..

: MIDDLEPORT • The Past
Matrons of Evangeline Cbapter No ..
172. OES, will meet Tuesday at
1,:30 p.m. at the home of Emma
Clatwotthy.
.

THURSDAY
LONG BOTTOM • Revival
through Sunday at Mount Olive
Community Churc~ i.n Long Bot•
tom at 7 p.m. eacli mght Speaker
Will be Evangclist Bill Vil)llfll.

.

. POMEROY - Fraternal Order of
Eagles women's auxiliary meeting
B:t8 p.m. on Tuesday. · .

RUTLAND " Rudand Township
Trustees meet in regular session on
Thursday at 6:30 p.m. at the Rutland Fire Station.

: POMEROY - Revival at the
Calvary Pilgrim ' Chapel in
Pomeroy will be held Tuesday
throuJh Sunday at 7:30 p.m, nightIt wtth Rev. Kenneth Hooper as
evangelist. The church is located
qne IWf mile off Route 7 on Route
l43. Rev. Victor Roush invites the
)iublic.

. SCIENCE FAIR • Studeats rec:eMng oatstudiq recopitlon
· In the Tuppers Plains Elemenlllry School's annual Science Pair
1-r, Betsy Sheets and Jessica Bartram. SecOild row, Joshua
Kehl, Alisha Rojas and Joshua Hagel'. Third row, J~ Newell,
Bmy FraudS, Mlchelle CaldwelL Absent was Trad Hemes.

were,

MIDDLEPORT - Evangeline '
#172 OES Middleport will meet
Thursday fot lheir ,re8Wlu' meeting.
Officers are to wear sueet dresses.

RACINE - The Southern Local
OAPSE No. 453 will be hold a speGial meeting Tuesday at 7 p.m. at
the cafeteria of Southern High
School. Members urged to attend ·
· MIDDLEPORT - The X!
Gamma Mu Chapter, Betil Sigma
Phi Sorority will meet Tuesday at
lhe home of Lynn Shuler in Middleport.
MIDDLEPORT f The Middle-

Mom 's legacy
is more than
money
left
•

ljlone love, for their relatiws. This

~willbedilf..._

Eleven Senior Adults met at the publi~ity of the class meeting. The
First Southern Baptist Church .upcoming revival, April I through
recendy. Opening prayer was given AprilS was announced. ·
by Troy Zwilling. Kathryn Miller,
Also, April 7 was the date
secretary, read the minutes of the . announced for church dedication
last meeting. With warmer weather day with a noon poduck meal. Dedat band, di~ussion turned .to gar- ' ication and reception will be at
dening, with tips offered on gar- 2:15p.m.
dening. Those attendiDg the meetThe next ·meeting was•set for
ing played a "What seed is this?" Monday, April 22 at 7 p.m. All
contest. Margaret Sheets won the members and guests Bltendillg aie
garden seed and door prize. Those to bring the earliest baby picture
attending also tried to make wotdil they have· of themselves for a.
out of the word "garden". Joyce "guess who it is now" contest. The
· O'Bryant was the winner.
meeting was closed with a prayer.
A general spring cleaning of the Re~shments were served by Joyce
church was discussed as well as O~Bryant.
·

-1-. ._An,..!.. .

n..," Svndl"'• •..t
c.... .ns~oiu....
her
· her I was ~ing
to · •
She said, "You ~'t do thaL My
feelings will be hun ..• Can you
imegine? She insitted dlallllke the
money, buy something Iovcly for my
daughters and tell them it was from
their ~other; purchased with
the last bit of money she had left
behind Cot us.
. .
Ann, we are not wealthy people.
We are all underpaid Texas teachers
the check

• Wbenmymodiercliedtbreeyears
igo, she left a small UIOUIIt of
diiabitity insurance that- divided
i)t equal amounts BIDOng her six
c}liidren. Since our eldest ailter had
" p Clll'e of Dad for eight )'Clll'l
lind then ~ for Mom until she
~ away, I felt that she should
li'a\oe my share of the money.
l Youcanimaglnehowhappylwas
have toal,wpaycheck,
~ys lived but
fromI
I anived 11 my sister's home who
paycheck
II)Jd found that my brother had consider myself very lucky to have
already sent her his check. He had been born iDIO a family that is to
4ecided quietly on his own, as I did, loving
aild g~
dtat our sisler Who took c:n of Dllll
I know this letter is too darned
~=•-·
aDd Mom should have .... sbare of long to publish, but I did ha~Jl""
the inheriiiJICe.
of fun writing iL -- R.A. IN S.A.
'. Mom left 110 big estato. 'l1lcft was
DEAR R.A.: What a terrific
jll!l the old house where we were upper. After reading thousands of
ap born and the lillie (lloplllty it sal letters from family mem~ whO are
on. The property; widl every family at war over money, it's a privilege
member's 'consent, Wll IOid linmc- to print a leucr like yours. Too bad
dlately after the funeral. Tbe your parents didn't leave behind a
~ -e divided betwcc:n tba1 boot on how to raise childrea.
wonderful eldest lisller and IIIIClCher
Dear Ann Landers: 1 would like
sister ~to ~ never .~· Our to SliY 80I1iething to that smug male
ullmanied Siller had lived JD 81J81:1· who brasged about drinking a
DJents most of 1ier life, and . we gallon of water every day .and not
~ided that she should have a.lillle needing to leave his seat during
hi&gt;rneofherown. We aH had dinner intcrmiisioo to use the facilities. He
t6gcthcr ~ n~ IIIII my. brotha' said, "Going is 11Dibing more than a
l!(llCted SIS like thiS:
matter of habit"
"Well, they're biealdng the ground
I'd like to· tell that jerk that jf be

Long'· Bottom news no'tes

whep

fer coilaruction on )'0111' home. It. everwent~ghilpregnancywith
Will be down the blol:k from us. •
30 citra pounds pressing on his blad·
•"Hoone7 Whet boine?•· ~ aslccd' · dCr he'd''sing·a ·dlffereni' tune. ·~.: r:s;; ·
:ny0 . , home, Sis. Congratula- . QUEENS, N.Y.
'
DEAR 1 s y · 11 •
·
lions!"
· .: ou te em, stster.
jThere was a lot of whooping and I'm with you.
. .·
~and a few tears. It was a
Gem of the Day: Don't gtve up.
. tliril1 for us J'ust to see the look on Keep going. There is always a
hir face. ·
chance that you will stumbfe cSnto
:Last week I received a check in something te~:rific. I have never
tile mail from my unmarried sister. heard of anyone stumbling_ over
It' was my share of Mom's govem· anything while he was sitting down.
bonds. I called Sis and told --Charles F. Kettering

mem

!.

arr

Sou.thern Baptist adults m~et

ANN UNDF.Rs

somanylettcrsinyoortdwnnfrom
people who have no mpect.. let

Lisa Ff)'1Tlyer, a Certified Medi- ."'!Qmpetent medical asstsnng praccal Assista!lt earned the CMA ere- bee,
.
.
dential recently by passing the
Al thoudgh.medic~dassJStants
American Association Qf Medical · e:\: oye m. a wt e. range ~
Assistants' Cenification Examina- h the~ delivery se1t111gs, ~tion
. cal asststants are the only alhed
is a graduate of the medical health practition~. ~eel specifiassisting program at Hocking Col- Cally for the physJCtan s ~~e. .
lege in Nelsonville and is employed . There are over ~e million m~. c 11
di a1 teal ISSJstants working m the Urutby .H~k~ng o ege as a me c
ed States. According to the u.s.
asstsnng mstructor. .
. . B.
f La'-- s · · medical
The Cerification Examination,
~u 0 .
~ . taltSbCS,
administered by AAMA's Certify· assJSnng ts pro.JCC~ to be the ~ecing Board, tests clinical and admin- o!ld fastest growmg occupauon
istrative knowledge needed for through the rear~

Lisa

Ann.
Landers

•De. Ann Llllden: I have re1111

Frymyer earns certif~ca~~on
1

POINT PLEASANT, W.VA..
The La Lee he League of Point
Pleasant wiU meet on Thursday at 7
p.m. at the Presbyterian Church at
8th and Main Street. The discussion will include·' a discussion ori
nutrition. For further information,
call (304) 675-5142 or (304) 6754439.

.•

•

•

Mr . an~L~rs. Tom Hayman and Dorsel Larkins, has been a
have retu~ home after severat guest of baseball's Ken Griffey, Jr.
weeks. vacation in Florida. They at his spring training cap in Arialso visited Ginger and Matt Cum- zona..
. .
mings.
·•
.
Mildred HalJber ts dpm~ better
Emory Weekley is visiting his after her stay m ~he hospttal fqr
daughrer Sharon Steffler lll)d fami- tests and ttansfustons. Cards may
ly of Thornville and !ames and ~~her at Box 7, ,Long BotMaxine Mount Watts of Baltimore. tom, Ohio 45743.
. .
Georgia Mount has returned
Mae Mc:PI:ek was.a Sunday din· ·
home after staying with Rebecca ner guest of Ada Btssell and son
Mohler after Rebecca's surgery.
recently.
.
·
James Perkins, a good friend of
Mr. and Mrs. Harlan Ballard
Lela Hawk recently pJ!Ssed away. · have .~ndy re~ h~me from
Calling on Lcla and her son, Rob- vacallonmg tn Wmtcr Spnngs, ~
bie, have been: Mr. Wesley Perkins They brou~ Mrs. Jean Ft'edenck
and Amanda· Harlan and Brenda of Chester kbome with them.
Aleshiler and Ora· Sinclair, all of .
To place items ~ Long Bouom
Pomeroy. Overnight guests have News Notes, wnte to Melody
been Mrs. Ota Sinclair and Richie Roberts, 36630 TR 275, Long BotHunt of Long Bottom.
,
tom Ohio 45743.
Michael Larkins, son of Phyllis
'
•

Wood named to mission group· .

.... Terre Wood; daughler of Robert

campus ministries, announced. She
and Cathy Wood, Eagle Ridge, will be pan of a five to seven memPomeroy, is one 13 Cumberland her team composed of coUege stuCollege students to be selected as· dents from Kentucky. The team
1991 summer missionaries as a members will work as counselors,
1 f th B · Stud u ·
1 d' · B'ble d'
h'
resu to e apbst
eot mon
ea mg m t stu tes, wors tp
selection week held ~n Louisville in services, and other activities, at
March.
Cedarmore Baptist Assembly. KenA graduate of Eastern High .tucky's Baptist Cam~, during the
School, Wood was selected to week and travel to vanous churches
serve on the Son Praise revival to perform on the weekend.
team,.Syndee Holbrook director of
Cumberland College is located
at WiUiamsburg, Ky.

....;,......;----People in the news··----...;......,-----.
By United Press Ialernatlonal
Federal law allows llle government to seize the Landsdowne, ii restau- ·
TOOTH DEFENSE FAILS: Iran-Contra fi~ Richard Secord rant anc=inthe Detroit Rivet", if it turns out thai it was purchased
his drunken driving conviction all the way to the U.S. Supreme
or operated ilh drug money. Wilson claims the promissory note is a
: Court and losL The court made no comment Monday in allowing Sec- fake an ·an .
ey representing Fakir and Kaigler in the Landsdowne
l"ord's.I989 DWI convictiO'n in a Virginia suburb of Washington, D.C., bankruptcy said he was unaware of
. iL The restaurant is now closed.
! to stand. A breathalyzcr test showed Secord had twice the legal blood' alcohol level but he had a novel defense - bad dental work. Secord
HAMILL'S OWN PRODUCTiONS:J!fure skater Dorothy
;said the trial judge cmd ill not believing an expert witness who testishe won in the 1976
Hamill has .finally taken care of the gold m
. · !rted the bad dental work cansed .Secord's gums to ~~etas "flaps' ~ over
Olympics. "I f~y got it,framed," she told The Baltimore Sun. "It's
:his bridgework. Al:cording to his defense, the gums mtained alcohol in
hanging on the Wall. That was just last year." Hamill says she hasn't
' the porous cement 8le8l 111derneath the flaps that bo~ the mdge- · always been happy with the ice shows she's perfotmed m since win.work to his mouth, thus giving a blood-alcohol reading that was way ning the medal but now has decided "I would \ 'k only with projects
\too high. DIKinl the lnm-Contra scandal, the former Air Fon:e.general
I wanted to do." She now has her own comPfaDy thai has prodUced
~aed lyiDIIO coasrenJonal investigators when he saicl be was
"Nutcracker on lee~· and "Cinderella." "I like teUing stories throgh
'UI)IIWare lhlll Ollftl' Nordl 118(1 benefited rmancilllly fiom the sale of
the medium of ice for family entqtainment," she says. "With all due
respect, I don't mean Moppet Babies on Ice. I'm talking about skating
.,arms to 1r1n. He - senteacec1 to two Years ot probation.
with a sophistication that can he entertaining to adults as weU as chil! TOP'S NAME COMES UP: In their effort to keep a floating dren ...
)ella..u lf!OIIlD Deavlt, a member of the Four TO!J' and his cousin
may haw baaowed 11101e lbul SI miiUon from a man who turned out
. GUMPSES: Actor Brian Dennehy was' in the audience S~y
lo be a c:onvil;lecl diu&amp; detler. A ~missory note introduced in the fed- night watching his daughter Kathleen in an off-Broadway prevtew
t rallllltOiicl trill aC'N.,....W Wilson outlines the terms of a loan to
performance of "The Good Times Are Killing," the story of an in~­
singa: AbRI "Dillie'' flldr llld his~usin, dentiSt ~ Kllalet.
racial ·friendship between two girls. The play; written by CIII'IOOniSI
It wa5 not inaodl '; dllar wlllllllr the loan - ·actually_made lind
!-hull Barry, is Df~Dnehy's New York debut .
.
there was no eri' 1
a:w the lender was a chi! dealer.
;

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:toOk

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7

CHARLESTON ,' W.Va . - A

Letart couple whose single-engine

airplane made an un scheduled
landing in a horse pasture simply
fueled it up and f'ew it away ,
authorities said. ,
Their Pipet Comanche took: off
' Monday afternoon from the pasture
. about II miles southeast of
Charleston; said Joe Cooke, an air
triffte controller at Yeager Airport
in Charleston.
Benjamin Franklin Roush, 31,
and ·his wife, Evelyn, 25, were
abolrd the aircraft, said Cpl. J.L.
Landers of the Kanawha County
Sheriff's Department. Neither was
injlnd, he said.
Telephone calls to the Roush
home w_ent unanswered Monday
~ght
.
· The Roushes were on a night
from Jacksonville, Fla., to Mason
County when they were forced to
, land about 10:30 a.m. in Diamond,
said Ron Shippey, supervisor of the
air traffic control tower at Yeager

Planned Parenthood of SouthThe qency opemtes sevea sites
east Ohio, 236 East Main St ., in southeastero Ohio. It offers
Pomeroy, is offeriilg appointments infotmation and educatioa lbout
for free p1tg11ancy 1es1s and COUll· several different mcthllds of birth •
seling. every Monday between 8:30 control and~wilrmate supplies .,
a.m. to 5 p.Jl).
available onee.a person has a jlllys. d a Pap smear.
"We hope this new service will · icai eUJ:!!ination an
encourage people to seek our birth C~for birth control are based
control services Cl!l'ly and avoid the on 8 sliding scare according to
risk of an unintended pregnancy," income andabili .to y. ·
said Kay Atkins, executive direcPPSEO Fam~y Pf:tning Cen. tor. "Too often the fiiSI time a per- ters also offer, to both men and
son comes to our family planning women, tests inc! tleaiJDent for sexoffice; they are worried or frightually transmitted diseases. W~~n
ened that th.ey might already be may receive treattnent of v~~gtruus
pre~ w~ they do not want to
and pregnancy confumation examibe, she continued, "and when a nations. Pattents are referred to
pregnancy tesi is negati1(e, we family physiciaJ!s ot specialists fot
encourage the couple to choose a · diagnosis and ti'eiltment ofhealth
method of birth control.•
conditions not related to birth conPlanned Parenthood informs
ll'Pl seryices.' · . .
.
pregnant patients of all options
Office hours ate 8:30 to 5 p.m.
related •to unintended pregn8ncy.
Monday; Wednesday and Friday,
Clients are referred to penata1 care
and 9:30 to 6 on Tuesday, closed
and to other services of an individ- Thursday. Additional information
ual's choice. All services
confi.
may be obtained by calling 99,2dential.
5912.

are

POMEROY • PERI meeting at
Meigs County Seniot Citizens Center at I p.m. on Thursday: All
members are urged to attend. ·
·

'Bank One offers special s.ervices
to military personnel and families

..

Welsh hospitalized
Myrtle Welsh, a fotmer Athens
Counti!lil now residing in Tuppers
Plains with her son and daughter·
in-law, Mr. and Mrs. William (Carolyn) Roush, is currendy hospitalized in Columbus. The family asks
that cards be sent to Arthur St.
James Cancer Institute, 9th FIOot,
11938, Columbus, Ohio.

'

'

.

8 A;M. until NO(JN

-

Refreshments were served by the :,:
hostesses io: Opal Hams, Pauline "
Myers, Mary Alice Bise, Betty ·~
Boggs, Janet Connolly, Margaret ,
Grossniclde, EUJI OSborne, Mar~e .•
Putman, Grace Weber, Maxine 1
Whitehead, Frances Reed and Ruth !J
Anne Balderson. Maxine White- . ;
head received the door prize. The .:
next meeting will be with Janet l:;
Connolly.
.,:;

•

.

·-

$4

15

$6.00

•.

.._......

oo

·

.2o

·

frH lst ...atll·

. 30

.42

01300
$1 .30 rl nv

915-4473
667-6179

, .tO
•0 .6-' Hey

"I . .. I
.
. r I II,.
(. a ...... ,,,('( ,,., nI((' .'i .. ('O C('
~ 81111 C ounty

A ret Codt 6l4
Gellip olo ~

Y8rd Sties

367 - Ch•hire

fYI O
ug11 C.,unty

M~tsnn Co · WV

Arr.a CQdl! 614

A'ea CoJe 30•

311 - VIntnn •
245 - Rio Gr11ndt

98&amp;
843

643 · Areb iAO i' '

3 79 - WIInfl l

247

-- L~tart

949
7U

Rilll ctn l't
R u lllnd

667

Caotvti iP.

UPHOlSTEIY

•

CuJtom DI'IPII ·

614-9tl·l3tl
Wt Soy Mot Wt Do.
We Do Whet Wo Soy.

•Remodeling and
H onMI Repalra
•Rooting
•Siding
•P1Intln11

\

The pnce has been reduced to
$81,900 and fmancing ol up to
80% of purchase amount may be
possible for qualifying person to
buy very n1ce large home.on 3 ~
acres in Racine. 4 BR, 3 baths, 2
~a rages, rented I BR apt. Property,
mcludes 4,800 sq. ft. fa rm bldg.
il nd mObile' home.

Call

'
I

614 ·992 ~7104

for Appt.

CANDLEliGHT SERVICE
. At Middleport American
. Legion Annex

I

.,.

5

HappyAdl

'"· 949-1101
or ln. 949·2160
NO SUNDAY

MICIOWAVI
OVENIIPAII

BISSELL
BUILDERS
'"· 949·1101
or liS. 949-2160

1st 50 lligh School ' .
Sfutlints
.

ON'S APPLIANCE

Doy or Nigh!

':

FOIIVII IIONZI · ·.
PROM TANNING · ' ' ·
SPECIAL
..

A&amp;LUIIS

CEDAR CONSTIUCnON
or

m·

=~~~~=~I

polr. llotooltt,
endtho
Aoplr!co·
""'nt
BIIVIct of
Sonl..
Cenlor: PomlfOy. Ohio.
Tho CONTIIACT DOCU·
MENTS moy a •••-

NO SUNDAY CAllS

10 SESSIONS- $10 · •

Call 949·1116 ·

915·1561

for Appt.

• ......
Pelt Offln
117·I.Socelllllt.
.O.UOY, OliO .

FOIIVR ·IIONZI.

"
'
I

IASIAIII., UCM ,
H -'91- 1110

311110/tfn

4-l&amp;·M· •

GROOM
ROOM

'•Roofing
•ln1ulttlon

The Office of the Executive
Director

JAIIES DESIE

,

992-2172 ...
. 742-2251

Molgt County Council on
Aging
. '1.._
Mila• County Ienior Cit·

1531 lryen Pillet
Mlddlepcirf. Ohio

.•

Mulborry Helghto · P .O. Box
722
'
Pomorciy. Ohio 411781
Bu.....t • Nlplr!, Umlttd ·
4424 EmerM&gt;n Avonue
.Porltortl!u::r• WV 21104
Copleo doeCONTRACT
DOCUMENT ,.y bl ob·
tllnod ot the Ofllco of au,;
geu • Nlplr!,
Umltod
locotod ot 4424 l!moroon

.............
"A Bright Idea"
//

/

MVMUI. . . . . ._

Look who's

40.
Love.

....

LINDA'S
PAINTING

Sentinel
Classified a

110M( 614-"2-5692

DOmE S, 1UIIId, ~~~~
HOUSES•LOTSIFAIIMS
' COMMERCIAL
We Need LloUnpl

wv

28104 poymont of
UI.OO. noM of which wiU
bo relundocl.
By ••• of 1111 Executlvo
~r
MoiOo County
Counoll on Aflna.
ElelnOf Thom11
Exeaullvo Director
13.1 27: (41 2, •• 14 4tc

Po-vy,

N•w I•

WASHIIS-$110., •

ltt~k/1

DlfiS-$6t.,
llfiiGIUTOIS-$100.,

MOilLE HOME FURNACES- HEAT PUMPS
AU FUINACE PAm .

fiiiZIIl-$121 .,
MICIO OVDIS-$rt .,.

KEN '5 lJIIII.IANCE
SEIYICE •.

•

~.

l.eclltltl 0. s.H~ 1111111 JW. •" lt._141
or

KELLER'S CUSTOM BENDING

SHIU. &amp; TIEl

We Han

TIIM and .

Bill SLA(K

!tFIREWOOD

Chen••• lt.0•241laalflln
To
thropgh

JIIJ . . . lest

11'1

Chest•, OIL

SPECIALIZING IN ....

oCuetam lll'lt Exhauet Syatema '
oCompleta Un1 of Exhluet Suppllea
•H•ndle and lnetall Monroa Shock•
Come aad See Va Far A.l'ne ._pedltn
'
·
udll: l.. n...

-

992-226~

'

USID RAilROAD TIES

, ... 614·915·3949 ...... _

47Ut St. II. 241

....

••

•••
••

I•

'••'•
••

•••

I••
••
•

•

•••

l

••

•
••

1-tll-80-tfft
.

•

BENNm'S MOilLE HOME··
HIA111G &amp; COOLING

992-SUS w 91S-U61
Across fr0111 PMt Office
POMROY, OliO •
10110/'lt tfn

· VIIY IEASOIIIMU
. HAVE IEFEBCIS
t ·l-'lt. 1 mo. pd.

614-992-6120 :

90 DAY WAIIAIITY

pulnlil+
Let 1111 do It for rou.

1614) 915-4110

Ownar &amp; Operator

992-2156

USU A"UAII(ES

Talct tht pai11 Gilt of

FAEE ESTIMATII

EMiliE MERINAR

ll·l·tO.tlft

REMOVAL .
•LIGHT HAULING

MNMOI·D•-

Co...llte Grooming
for AU lrtlda ·

20S N. Second Str•t

MIDDUPOI1, OHIO 4S760
Otfke 6 U-"2-2U6

'UNen----4125.,

It:

·~ IIMIIWI..... wlto .,. Httve ..,-do·

the
Cl8181ftedal

"··-- ....

TIIM
oHigh Glou on
Floor Flnilh
' •rtnm.o.lt. 1, totW ON.

SIIVICI
. ttt-5335 or

J&amp;L

•

Bead

"" Ctnotr ..
lt. , lit. 143

•F•Carpet H.. Foot Dry

"At loasollllllle Prieta"

C. YOUNG

THURSDAY- 7 PM

...~....

tocallll Olf lilt IYJ111o

•Oualhy WOfk
Eotlmat11

FREE ESTIMATES

_,_.,.

laono Centor

,

Til-COUNTY
RECYCLING

-~~·--"

I

'

,arlf 011 -kllldlu.. WI
bu.J_ on wttlltnds.

YOUNG'S

;'

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IECYCLING

. lrl111 It .. Or We
Pldt ...

........

MIERICNllEGION, MJXILIARY fliOGRAM

'

OPEN 1 DAYS
A WEEK
9 A.M. 'TIL 7
If yoa/ ,,.... ujl , . .

CUSTOM IIILT '
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

ADVEIITIBEMENT FOil
PUBLICATION OF NOTICE
BIDS
TO ALL PEIISONB IN· Mila• County Council on
992·6641
TEIIEITED In doe E..oto 'Aging, Inc.
of MAilLE NE LANTZ. do·
M,olottounty lonlpr
- •.111. lite of 82281 Mt. Clfl-o Conti&lt;
1'2. 31· 80·11•
Olivo flood. Long lottom. Mu-.y Holghto-Box ~22
Ohio 411743. Mota• Cqunty PomlfOy, Ohio !UI718.
Pooboto Court. Con No.
Seporotod oulod bid lor
21,9117. An oppllcltlon hot ronovotlon
of tho Mila•
been filed atl&lt;lng to rellovo County Son lor'Cltlzono Con·
CARPENTER 'SERVICE
the 11t1t1 from odmlnl8tro· tor will bl ,.....,., by tho
. - Room AcldltkN11
- . oovlnll- the·- do Mllgt County Council on
not lllOIId 128.000.00 Md Aging. Inc. ot the Office of
- Eiectricel •nd Ptumblng
tho ondltoro wll not bo ..,..
tho Executive
Olroctor.
-con-.worlli
judlcld thor~. A heorlng Molgt County '8111lor Cit·
- Rooflntt
on the IPP""-IIon "wMI bl 1-• Cent or.
MulbWry
- Interior. Ealtlrlor
held Frldoy. A.,..n 21. 1181. Hllghtt. P.O. Box 722.
.
Po·
tt 1 :30 o'clock P.M.. ......
moroy, Ohio 4t711 untK
!FREE ESTIMATES! •
10n1 kftowlng 1ny , .._ton
2:00 p.m. (locol tlmol Aprl
why doe oppllcltlon llhould 23. 1881 ond thin ol ilid
Y~
not bo arontod llhould op· office publloly· opeM~ end
pe1r 1nd Inform the Court.
992-6215
rNd lloud.
Tho Court lolocoted a-nd
Tho WORK COVII'Od..., lht
P-.y.Ohio
Floor, Court HouM. s-nd, CQNTIIACT DOCUMENTS
II· 14-'90 tfn
St.. Pomeroy. Ohio 45718. Include the loll-Ing homo
llobert E. luck, for w~lch teporoto a1 DS will
Probott J udgt . bo occopted :
Le~• K. Nouelrood, Clerk
MEIGS COUNTY IENIOII
141 2. 8, 1t. 3tc
CITIZENS CENTEII
Tompor.. ure Control. flo- 'H--1

DESERT SHIELD, DES£RI SlORM.

,_.

Public Notice

Public Notice

01 lOU FlU

• • 1IU fLOOI CAll
•,._aoMtile Rot••

"FfeeE ..Imdotr"

.

' .

tQ..If.IIIO.'

Oef . Resuht Fuf

.

TII·COUm

ca•ncua•u

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

'S6Yeanll&amp;perlen ..

.

.

2 00 P,M TUESDAY .

992·7013
.... 992-5553
1.1Q0,141-0070

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM BIDING
•BLOWN IN
I NliULATION

Hand Tufting

'•

·- 2·00 PM . WEDNESDAY
2 00 PM THURSDAY

Painting

. .~.

QJ\SSHD f\DS

FOil AU MAI(EI •
MODEU

Gutter Cleaning

"It•••"'

PI Pleaunt

773 Mlt on

lwau

SJIICWilillt In
ClllfHI ,,_, t-lr
NEW • USED PA-tfit

Downspout•

211·11. S.CIIIII

112 -- New H11.1 en
896 - Lewt
9 3 7 ·· Sui IIIIo

Falls

. D.,.,..., lhe

OliO

· ~~ Mlii,.,

571 At~PII! GrovP.

Chester
Portl1nri -

Read tMBest SeleJ

WHALEY'S .
AutO PAITS

FREE ESTIMATES

I

458 - lt~~on

f'om*'ny

251 - Guven Oist

2,00 PM MONDAY

200PM FRIDAY

675

Mirt d l~nr t

9!l2

OAV RHhRE PURU CATIQN
11 00 AM SATURDAY

PRICE REDUCED PARTIAL OWNER
FINANCING AVAILABLE!

·

5-JI.'totln

· ~-!;'";!'•;;••;·"~'="'~•:.,•
;
:::::••::,:":.,:":,:':""~·__..;..,_-:-"_....;·~
,.

44e -

PUBLICATION

•

•

Gutters

Stop I Con••• .

. Over 15 Words

e9.oo

15
15

1

H.•ppy -A d•

BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE
;t: 30 P.M. DAY BEFORE

- IRA!.
~--In who
....
not ,.nlolptftto
.., ...,.

.....

1s

" "'

-·

r"rr"IV"Tiii~i"Tiirvn~iTI·~

·- -•It ._.-

Rate

foil Old" J.! -I t,f ')"'' Orll' excll all #!'~ J .....

BULLETIN
--- BOARD.

..

notdlctuotoon·

MPmor i ;~m

..
,1

"

NEW -:- BPIII

NO JOB TOO SMALL

.

.......,.. . plln tUy

•rtvan c~~t

WEONESPI\Y PM•I'R
THUASE&gt;AY ~APER
FRI[;AY PAr' EA
SUNDAY P I\ PER

.,.

-ttotniRA_od_
lfiO.OOD . .F111nt nl.ooo
JOIIIIIy
IMMI.
.

in

MONDAY f' I\NR
TUESDAY r·A.r,F~

l
Trustees to meet
. The Rutland Township Trustees :,
wtll meet m regular session on S
The Reedsville Community Thursday at 6:30 p.m. at the Rut- .'t
Builders Club held their March . land Fire Station.
II
.meeting at·the home of Lyle and
• •
M
Ruth Anne Balderson. The meeting
•
was conducted by President Ernest
Grapevine wreath class sched- · :
Whitehelld. Cemetery project was
uled
•
Jliscussed and dues were collected.
A grape~ine wreath and tree
Attending were Ronald and Ella wotkshop'will he held at the Meigs 'i
.Osborne, Donald and Pauline
M~seum on Saturday, Aprif i
Myers, Warren aDd Lillliin Pickens, Count&gt;:
20 begm~mg at I p.m. Participants :,
Ernest and Maxine Whitehead and . are to bnn~ thetr own grapevines •
Grace ~eber. Plans were made to and forms tf trees are to be made :
eat out at the Betsy Mills Restau- The class will be conducted by !
rant in Marietta'for the April meet·
ing. Refn:shments were served dur- ~urie ~eed ~d Kathy Reed. For ~
mformatJon, contact Laurie Reed at ~
. ing the social hour.
992-5182.
&lt;i
•

employer

p~ai d

COPY O[AOltNf

Builders Club meets

•An ,.,_ Pltldzlpant In •

.

•A C{l!l! ilted erl\·rtll jlr.m en t plllr. ~ "' Th e Oiily S~ntif)elte• •
cept clauilied di1- pley. Bu1 ine:u C11rd and leg II nol l ce~ l
will IISO IP~If· .u ir• thfl ~~ Ple~tunl Register at d lhl! Galli
poh ~ Dl• lv h thun r. , ''~llc l n n~ Dllf!t 18 ,000 home t

Revival announced
:;:;
Revival will be held from '
Thursday through Sunday at Mount
Olive Community Church in Long
Bottom, beginning at 7 p.m. each
mghL Speaker will be Evangelist •
BiU ViUars. Pastor Lawrence Bush ~
invites the public.

_
.....__
-.ln . ..

·.

Cl!rd .,f Ttu nk!l

J

In

Announcements· ....~·

....,.. ....

O•lli• or M1son counr i .S tnusl b r PH!·

'Sentinel is not rftspon!u blft for P.tron 11tte.r fir st dl'( tC.tteck
tor ertnr s first d.v arl runt~ in pap er! C•JI hf'forf' ~on P m
• d~ 1 fler publicat ion to make cou er. tla n

'Ad_s that must be

, ,

The ,public is invited to attend an open hquse planned at the
Meigs County Golf Course (formerly Jaymar· Golf Course) in . , ,
Pomeroy for Sablrday. ·
.
,,
· According to Pat O' Brien, one of the golf course's, new ownm,
the open house will get underway all p.m.
.
Free golf wiU be offe~ •.~ refreshments and entertatnmerlt are
being planned. The public JS InVIted to attend.

ROOFING

A.t . . . ,,., tor c nn., c:ulrw~ r.::n • . ~rok"tl • upd 11v !I W•II be chIt fed

~~~·n•

•

Open House slated ·.

CONniUCTION
ec:.a.llte

Words

15

1~

:;~~~,"~· li:~ '~;p~,o~i:i.:~~t!tl ~l l ll doorbl l! pt iC f' of ad COl i

' :'I

- -,_....,..,.. 'tlOW MUCH OF MY IRA
CONTRIBUTION IS
I
DEDUCTIBLE?
•llglllle klldh1dulh fMY contrllute up
· ,. •z.ooo ,. • .... 112.zao to • .

:V"
··
3

0

• 5C d ls CO IH11 for ,lldl pllid in •dll•nc'
.
••••• •••
GiVUWIV lf'ld ~ound • d• unde.- 1-5 wnrdt W!ll.hft

'·.M·""

Defender Charles Knight

Howard L Wrlteltl

eNewllo-•
•Ga......

RATES

Monthly

~

1

·

. ~Oth Lester and Reed were represented by Meigs County Public

BISSELL &amp; lUilE
'

1

TO PLACE AN :AD CAll n2-2156
MONDAY thru FfiiDAY I A.M. to 5 P.M.

Mftin~-

. .

Busi·ness Services

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

....

.

Two men have entaed guilty pleas to felony charges m Metgs
Collnty COinmon ~ COIIfl. .
· . .
According to Asststant Metgs County Prosecubng Attorney
Geor8e McCarthy, Matt Reed pled guiky on Monday before Meigs
County Common Pleas Court Judge Fred W. Crow Ill to a charge of
having a weap(m while under i disability, a..felony of the fo~
degree. He was indicted on the ch~~tge in January by the Metgs
County Grand Jury.
.
. .. ·
Reed his been remanded .to the custody or the Meigs County
Sheriff pending comjlleiion of a pre-sentence.investigation.
.
Bobby Joe Lester pled guilty Monday to two charges, both third
degree felonies. He was charged with ~eiving stolen propeny and
grand·theft in connection with the theft of stereo equip"'ent from .t
vehicle.
·
Judge Crow sentenced Lester to one-year prison terms on each
charge, to be served concurrendy, or 11 the. S3!DC time. Lester has
been transported to Orient Cotreetionallnsnwnon to begm the sen-

...----------..:===============,=:::::=~'

.

The
Reedsville · . United
35 shut in' calls were made and ·
Methodist Women met at the
cards were signed for several ·•
church basement recendy with Mrs, friends. A thank you was received ,
Pearl Osborne as hostess. The from Sherry DiUon. Refreshments ';
meeting was opened with prayer by
using SL Patrick's Day theme was •
·Mrs. Mamie Buckley. Mrs. Nina served to Mrs. Mamie ll uckley, ..
Boston gave these readin§s for the · Mrs. Gladys Thomas, Mrs. Diane •
devotions: "Taking Time , ''Easter Jones, Mrs. Grace Weber. Mrs. ~
SongH, Intercessory Pr.ayer," and Nina lloslon and Mrs. Lillilln Pii:k- :! •
"Prayer for Peace". Mrs. Boston ens. Mrs. Boston was aWarded the :
conducte!I the ·business meeting. doot prize. The next meeting will
Basement projei:ts were discus~: be held with Mrs. Pickens.
::

Riverview Garden Club meets

that big '~n rteld," Landers said.
" It's a bt~ horse pasture . The
woman sa1d they ·started to land
and llll the horses were in the way
so they had to buzz the field before
could land.
·
~-----8-t-oc-k~s. .~
.. ~~~~ they"As
soon as the plane stopped,
811 the ,horses. surrounded them. She
.I
.
22
·
told me she guessed the horses
Am Ele Power :.....................29 118 Unds' End ................................. .
Ashland Oil .,................... :.. 29 3/4 i.imlted Inc...........................26 1/Z thought they were coming to feed
them."
AT&amp;T ..... :.............................33 7/8 Multimedia Inc..................... 73 1/Z
Cooke said Charleston conRax.
Restauran.t
........
:
..
:
.................
1
Bob Evans ............................ 19 3/4
trollers
had no ~ord of what time
Charming Shop.....................l3 3/4 Robbins&amp;Myers ...................~6 1/4
the
plane
resumed its flight since
City Holding ......~ ..................14 1/2 Sbclrley's Inc ......................... 161l8
the
skies
over the pasture were
Federal Mogul ...............,...... l5 518 Star Bank ....................................21 ·
uncontrolled air space.
Goodyear T&amp;R.....................23 7/8 Wendy Int'l. ....: .................... 10 S/8
Key Centurion ..................... .13 1/4
Worthington lnd. ...;..............24 1/4

Classif.ie

~

..

.

.

.....,

MetHodist women hold meeting

'

2·enter guilty pleas ,

~y made a perfect landing in

place.
row,
1re Milly Adams, second place; and Sara Cnla,
lint p ..ce. Not pictured Is Amber Pullen, second
·place wiuer. Two winners were recognized In
three aae catqorits.

Kopec,

and

CONTEST WINNERS • These younpters·
were recoplzed oa Monday as winners of tlte
Pomeroy WD-Car SUDdry Store Easter colorlai
contest. Pictured, froat row, 1-r, are Liley Banks,
first place winaer; Justin Roush, second plllee;
.

ing and savings ·accounts, military
Bank One, f!,thens, NA introIiersonnel or other spouses simply
duced a special program for aU milneed to stop'by any Bank One
ilary personncl who were on active
office
or calll-800-824~6954.
duty any time during the Persian
President
B. T. Grover, Jr. said
Gulf crisis, and who are ·customers
"We
want
to
make it as easy as
of Bank One.
·
possible
for
our
customers who
· Effective April I, Bank One
serve
in
the
military
to handle their
made available to Periian Gulf military personnel the elimination of · financial matters. This is one small
way Bank One can say 'Thank
all service charges and re.gular
You' for llll their efforts:"
transaction fees on their complete
' Bank One, Athens operates nine ·
line of checking and savings'
offices in Athens, Hocking, Meigs
accounts through the end of 1991.
and Perry Counties.
i'
To qualify for the no cost check•

Easter favors for patients at the
Arcadia Nursing Center at
Coolville were made at the march
meeting of the Riverview Garden
Clubiltleld at the Reedsville Chwi:h
of Ci)irst Hostesses for the meeting
were Nola Young, Kila Young and
Marilyn Hannum. Miniature Easter
baskets were ftlled with candy and
a small rabbit me of pompoms by
the club members completed the
favor. This project was directed by
Nola Young and Marlene Putman. ,
RoU call was answered by meiJ)bers naming an Irish song. The
. Irish Blessing was read by ail The
flower fund voted to plant flowers
in a planter at Riverview School.
The flower fund was 'collected and
bills were paid. Thank you notes
were read for fruit baskets that had
been delivered in February .

Meigs County Emeraency Medieil Serviecs responded to eight
calls for assiatance an Mondlly and -Iy Tuesday. . .
On Monday at 9:56 a.m., Pomeroy squad went to Dr. James
Withmll's offtce for Max Folmer. Folmer was liken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital. At 11:01 a.m., Rutland squad went to Leading
Creek Rollll for JohD Lambert. He was transponed to Veterans. At
U:46 a.m., Middleport squad went to State Route 7 for Clarence
Potts, who was taken to Veterans.
At 12:21 p.m., Columbill Fire Dc:partmef11 went to County Road
I fot a brush fire at the Doug Louder residence. At 12:34 p.m., · .
Pomeroy squad went 10 Mulberry Aventie for Virgie Burford. B.ur- ;
ford WJIS transported to Veterans. At ~:08 ~.m., Pomeroy squad ,,
went 10 to Osborne S~ for James Etselstem. who was dead on
anival. At 8:27 p.m., Middleport squad went to J,.Ogan Street Mary
· Siders was transpOited to Veterans.
·
·
On Tuesday at4:54 a.m., Racine squad went 10 Bashan Road for
Eunie Brinker, who was dead on anival

after landing

Planned Parenthood offers tests

Community Calendar items
appear two days before an eveiJt
and tbe day ot t!ult event. Items
must be rKeived well in llllvance
tp IISSure publlcatl4)o iD the calen- .

squads answer eight' calls . · · ·

plane out ofpasture

.

Page 6

. Commup.ity calendar ·

~-Local briefs----

Letart couple flies

'

!,)

•

•

~

•

�.
I

Sentinel

OhiO

LAFF-A-DAY

Announcements

41 Hou... tor Rent
2

bt*oon;

......

41 Spice for .....

n..tr

-r

remclflltd. e~~H •venlnl' »(:.
llNI2T. ' .

::.=.Iorge

Coo

72 TrucU

*" ........ ... .._..

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

BORN LOSER

fer...

~:

:..""::.r. =='"'=::::

.........

l:r Wanted to Rent

• . TUES., APRIL 2 • .
'
IEVININCl

..............
i .'..•..:i:

$.~

REDUCE: Bum off fat wllllo J0U
· oloop, Tojce OPAL Avallolllo
Fnrth Phallnacy.

5I . HcMellold

. Giveaway

lldiOUIL ~ Me. •

4

4880.

C•

Ford 111eto1 -

Frwo malo · - Colllt, .z "" 1441.
old, 304.aY..3430.

· ...

auslnees
Opponunlty

384.am:

,·

LOst &amp; Found

Htlf U... ApM, malo.
S oxportenood · _,..
Charocol Block Colotod. VlclnllY wantH.
3C)4..4171..1721 bit1 nn

Found:

Found: .._. . .,. Pr.SchoOJ,
·(AI. 1118) .... , . d03.
. • Loot: lrltlony span~~~, ..... ,
whitt: AnowN To Nno: Tltxlo.
Soaglo Short r.-011, Block

hrw 1:00-12:00, Thurwdor Aprtll.
All!illcoUono oO!'Ifllod R i R
lfoiUI and lla hild Rotturwnt,
poll limo liolp, ..,.,..,..
nnnttry for .tore and ,..
B,own &amp; While. ln.w.. to: http.
.
Lucy. IIC.-54.
77ATTENTION POIIEROYI
LOST: Mala doa, pari ll!&lt;lllo.
'POSTAL JOIIII'
b o - Jiolind. Bllick,
own &amp; whHe. Lui aNn Merch fl1.77 • 114.10 hr. For oltlm and
on Aolllnnlllt Rd. • 3251,. -lootlon Info., otll 141Mil'
t-ctlon. 114-311-1117 or 181- 1117 11.111. • IOp.m. 7 dayo.
0335, REWARD.

a

i

LOot: VInton Anoa. Lorgo Whho
Ffmalo
Shepllord
lllxod,

A~oworw to: Lacr, Mlotod Sl3124/tt. Aloe: Sltmooollolo Cat,
sruo Ey•4 llloaod Slnoo 3/2WI.
Bj&gt;th .lro oriiOUrod- -1
Aoward For lhlorlllotlon O.·Laodlng To Wheoo~bouto of
Either Th- Anlmtlll 114-311-

1014.

c••

~·~·~

c-

llool._(114)481-8100, CommiRial

o..-norw.

tm,.... -

I

111110

t;&lt;Cooonmqjplollole

ol. hind=

1u1 llngth• IIIII
......, ,.;, on1y 1

Frwt1JIIvorr.
W - plno . . . _

WHIIBIET.li.~RS
Ran1210 81Cont1 AM,

..,.

._4-,bMwtiiiZ..-.
In liquid tonr'c•
-~~

~•r

..,hlno- •

Gnllprtr..Guu 111 • •·

·

Nlco . .

lll. ~llh.

55

-r.

PICKINSI'URNITURE

. ......

m--.

Building
SUppllel

~~!_h_oldRdluPt.mloPihlng. 112 Jll';
caii30UJI.t41G.

24Ht2l.

~

.

-Nid. l

""'"' 145:1111

.__ bolet: ....., -

aiDH. WI"'
:t!:'"..:'~ndoatc., 011
cloioCtlldi WJn.
1••

NowiiJHd

.,._

11~-~ ao~ In·-

1nd

.,.;i'- -

....m, ...-..-, ...... .,

56

-·

_.

ono owner, loW •.

.aMI-5:30p.m.

;:

Moto-lea_,

,.

l7llo5702.

7:30 (J)

())

for Rent •

•

liJI.L-,,·::'
E-. :•

&gt;

7 eo...tutflltloo.
II. 1111 ......,..
,.. ""'''
pluo dopcolt,

couplo,

~~

1187 ~"¥aoruno ~&gt;
oft• l:uo
PM.

olllr.•,..241-f018.

,,
...
For ....: 1111 Honda!, XR·'IOO,

depoelt. 11t 111 3117.

110 ~
1'M-371-2t11.

/Wi' FC!l ANI&gt;

'

I•

-lor. CaK :,•:

..

','

·· ;·

READING BOOKS AT HOlE.
CALL tciii-47S-lll40 EXT. 11111.

INTELLIOENCI

JOn.

Ari

1182- Ext. K·,at•.
R..,,_ bell!.f100lp1a J for
part- ~-,.. -gniUnd.
"'"""
_por
, "Wli.
' bock·
26 hro.
Bond
,...._ 1o P. o. lox 1012, OoJ.
llpotlo, OH 45831.

(U

A---·

-111.

:1111•

tu

'"'- tGl (2:00)
1:05 !ll MOVIE: Tanan, the Ape
lll$n(R)(2:00)

or Eftlolonoy oport·

'·

1:30tll- (I) e Davll Ruleio

.

Dwight plane a birlhday
aurpriaa lor hll lather. ..,

MIIC8IIaiiiOUS
Mlrchandlll

S.C:·..i ._ ..........

tar ..... No ,.... Dopotlt

..,. •

....-. 114'

opl.:

.

Fumlohod Elllcloncy llpolalrw,

Qulol. Carpttool~'!"H ...... ldnl

14 ft. ~-

john - · call
.

t:oO (J) •

40(.411.-.

"""""" 'iiiie by tldo

ovocodo
• - • Pooplo
foul!aar oouclt, 1200. Rocker·
rwclliitf
aood - · 11444. II:JG 130,
olor {:110.
rwlrigoloiDf

'

I

!

I 1 '~IJDjl!ll

,\ . I'J0r,tl) 1 '~,

~

~~~~~~~~=
Farm

114-241-4111.

=
....=~-====..=-.:,:~:.:"':;:;':;.1..::.~:.:·...::...--. :'

1111 Dolo Woton. 1111 Oldt
Dolo
2141. -. goocf cond, ICM-5JI.

- - · 2111. Llnath1...1,!1 .;1
hD.-IIonourylololor,t4.-.

1111 Dttoun SIO 8W. Runa good,
otondord, II IIPO, 11,1110. -

.4:111.
1112 - . . 11310, ....., ,_..
1 ~-p.:.~ ~

\

PIO.IM-:IIl'0447,

l'roo*ll• Q
a. a eiiOVII:
,,. Triumph
(lJ (!)

• ~.114-317-0411.
'.
1,
Pont-; ill I, 110 HP 01, TIT, 11,

of ... Heart Rlolly ...
atooy' CIS Tueedrr Movll
(2:00) Staroo.~

Tlnli ._...• •
Prime Time 0011 on location

-.
Catnporono-,
••nlnt
-·loddertotop
........ ,.,,
with ,.., - . - · •·
79113,1110. 114-112-21W1.

I(J Pnnte

1121.

o.a,... Portabfe S.wmlll, don't
haul yow 1010 to tho mill Jutt
COil 30U711·1151.

11 ft . .,.,.. lrolltr, lutly oqulp. "';'
pod, roof, tlr, • ownlne. 114-211- , ·.

••m
r. 5:30 p.IIL Aeo! a -10.

11otorw.

oftw . . - . Drap-lna
• IF m&amp; 114 ... 1224.

~4

-·•--t.

.........

optod, - .

.

....
·
IOfl ti,Otlll
114411 8321 ~

No Yard To lit Or
.....Y,..,......
a :.tlndallll.

-·-.
--ar.-.-.,11

211.

C:U.ro, RS, - . 21,0110
1 ..... . . . ..,, till

;;;;-:.~:-·-·~..-.,-:~4:

Till-a-

r-

'*

27,000 ....... - ·

COLLECTIBLE CLA881CI Hoi

......
-tho-"'""'
CtOIM alona to ~ .n

-lbl· -

F1niH1C1:1I

eulornoblle lhlt ... · - &amp;udlj
bo •
Thlit

:::s.""'&amp;n::.::.u~

&amp; Auction

BUIIneU

-.......J!IIIIOW--.....
-

OI..D8eAT.. .

Fl...... 814-Mwt57.
' :·
I plell.up compeo, rol., rur. ; ·
- , ovon. Ford trucll tlrwo • , ,

--.-

t'

,.
tI

"

Homa
rmprov-.nents

BARNEY

,.
,,•'

~

'

USEMINT
' WATEAPiiOOFINO
'
UnoondMionol IIIII- guoron.... Locol roloronoot ~.
Frwo - - .doy
Call or
- night.
•·
114-211-.
Rogera ......nt Wahrproo.

flng.

Glvel 1 Damn? (Pt 2 of 2)
Fred Friendly expforH lhe
current educational trials, Ita
sobering atallltlca and lhe
latall propoaad solutions.

....,,
.. !

_ _ _ _ _ _..,..,_ _ _ •

8t

I SHORE DON'T WANT
TO BE AROUND' WHEN
SHE LOOKS A:r

~~

I~

I·

AUNT
LOWEELY-·
HERE'S

THIS THIN. tl

~·

~Y--

,.
,,

--:'•
o,

•&amp;•

=..JA~,

OH. 1. . . ;.,

_

_...._ - · wv

304.alWBI Oltle .14-441ZAII4.
SOptlo Tonk Pumplne II!!L.Clolllo
Co. RON IVANSIHTIRI'IIIID
Jookoon, OH 1 lliiO 517411111. '

11111111111 ......... muaiiiiiDI'a, d

lntiotor: .,...
.
............
to ...-·
ttn For
. ...
illll 104 . . 1111 ba:laeu• 1:00

I'll IIIII •:ao Pll.

Dovlo
-·VIC
- . . '•
01 a·~ Creek Rd. Pllta. tup-

r::v:ltup,

~ dolvory.

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

'*

1Wo - ~ :MIIiMd .....
2-tXT CU al I dl 1-1 lllll!lt'lnae

- • .-.aoe-,Proci-

:J:' Fromt lullfon, 82

10 .. ~.!4.l!'!J!O_torn Hollor'o,

11,000.~

. _ . _ 10 10- lond I

.. "ti.il'i;t"'nl,

~

oil II an

II

.'

otk1nt

'!'

Plumblnq &amp;
Heating r-1

®=' . ..,A,., ' .

ca...,.Piumttlno
. ondHMIIna .

-lndl'lno

1141·-·

tii.lnpal1,01tlo

tiZ,OOO. Col
~ 1'011 IALI In Oollpelo
""'· Will ....... ~ra~~oro.· ...
. . . . IM'kb!L Phone .......,.:.

Condillono hiving an lnnutnce on your
· may bo Mlbjeet to oudclen
challglo In lilt year .aheld. Tl- - ·
llllonl oould produCe unlqtlropportunJ.
lfel oil R1ti11Q nature.
(57 ... 21-April 111 Do 1101
poomlot to do lhtnQI under d..- or
fOr . . . . . . 01 expediently lodl)l. " you
do, n'a likely you'l IM'forrn in ., . , .
IIIOtllllile
-11'111
· ·younllf
and pll'llr
,..
IUIIt.
Ailtt,
IO e poor
blrfllday
gill: 8tncl far An.a' Allro-OriiPII pre-

:ma.

- -Jc4 lor

molllle- or
- . lloolbd, WY.
lltllll

-m.

"Sorry, ,.las. I'm a divorce attorney."

•

'

...

,.

• 1

.

·'

t

'

dlctlontlor the rear ahead ,by mamng do your own thing - ·refusing .to .go
$1 .25 to Astro-Graph, ctci this newspa- along with the advice of .. perlenced
per, P.O. Box 91428, Cleveland, OH . · others and leaping lnt'b lhe unknown44101·3428. ~ sure to stale your zodi· could create problema lor you today. ·
ac tlgn.
.
SCORPIO lOci. :M-Ho¥. 221 H'l nollll&lt;a
TAURUI (April ZO.IIar 201 Your you to lock a game plan beiOre laking
h u - could have a strong Influence on an aalgnment. bul thlllla ponlbllio- ycur bilhavior today. Unfortunate- ty tod.Y. Your enorts could prove lnef·
ly. they might nol be reliable, so lhlnk leciiW. Owing 10., lblenCI or method .
twice before yielding to these SACIITtAIIUI (llotr. 2ll Dec 111 Any
lnc:llnallona.
smal flnailclll IIUI'plus you've accumu·
Ql. . . (llay 21..,_ 10) II your viewS laled 111e1r mfOht nor be lntacl II the
aron't reedlly - t e d today, don't try c101111 of the d1y, your extravagant
to impose them on your otSOCiates, es. whlme may o-rlde yOIIr prudent ccin·
peclllly II you're InVOlved In 1 collective cerno and blow the whole wad.
venture that's delicately balanced.
. CANIC:CHIN (Dec • ......,, 1t) II you
.CANCIR (.luna 21......., 22) Something ntlgued a crllk:ll IUk lo aaot~,
In which you're presently Involved lt'a wry lmportenl thai you &lt;loubft.
needs the ..,pport of others In order to cl1ck nnii,...,HIIoday. Thlllndlvtctull
auccaad. Bill, if you preoume to have may c:lllm lhll -hlng II compleled
their blcklng without verification, lhe when, in faCt. 11'1 QOI.
endeavor mlghlllll.
. AOUAIIIUI (Jan. lO-Feb. tl) 11'1 boot
LaO (.IUir :11-AIIg. 221 SOme of your 1101 IO preJIIaiUfliy diOCUN your lntanidell c:ould be rather ~ todly, bul Ilona Wlln Ollllrs lod1y: you may havo to
they may .. lmpoatlbll to rm..-t. contend wllh daveloprnent1· !hal wtl
Your co-workors won't be too happy II poewent J1111 from doing _ , J1111 had
you -llllngl up by experimenting.
lnlllally hilellded.
.
¥11100 (AIIB- IJ.IIpl. Z2) Try noflo lei NCIIIPolt.. " ott 81 KetQ JOUr ·
your curlolll)l run - y .with you today MtlhuiiMm .within '-** IIOUnda
and cauM J1111 to poke you. nooo Into a II IIIII lime, oipedeflr H you - IUd, . . 111a1 a friend 1o trying to keep denly lnlrlgued by a ln-.
oonlldonllll. You. probea won'l be TheN'I I chance IIIII 118 appeal ml)l
•al ••iad.
- l i o n oqualr rflllld raiD.
.-a (lept. :a-oat. :Ill) The dlllre to

8

11:30 (J)

.

.

lcaNCJOW End M ... King

e

0 Tonlghllllow

Obi.

••+

Opening lead:

Pass

All pass
3

ducks, East wins t~e trick with thO:
he.a rt jack, and the ace and king will.
be cashed.
The key to this surrounding play is
that East has two cards (here the J·9)
surrounding or bracketing the highest
card in the hand on his right (here
dummy's 10), and he has another, hi&amp;h·
· er, non-touching honor (here the kingl.
When these conditions prevail, the sur· .
rounding play brings home tbe bacon . .

'•

Wipe

18 Malia

mad
20 Uller
·21 .Feathary
wrap

.

.,.,

•lz•

3 Supply
the bash
4Meg's .
sister
5 Pennsylvania
rasort
8rB8
6 Unrellned
'7 Office
oompuler
network:

22 T•nnls

Abbr.

pro .

8 Putln a

S8mpras
23 Rings up
26 Equ.astri·
anna, e.g.

box
II Sllr up

Yetlarday'a Anawer
10 Messago
flighls
passer
28 Aspersion
14 Gymnast 30 Rome's

KoJbut

:'t.
cl• ~ eii1Jiii
8
Tonflllll
Sporlt

11::16 til a-.. Q

12:00(1) MOVIE: CitY ee-lltllte

. &lt;ll e1n1111 ... ~ stareo.
IIJ). l'lltJ ,.Chine Willi
,Nil Pnpln

o,....,..

Oltwltu•t~O.P.

Nation• lnlm C0pptr
Mounllln, Colo. (R)
Nt ..flllil_ . . . .
D MOVll: ~
Gun

'

....

lo!ll
sibling,
22 Pub ..
e.g.
measure 32 "·E•k"
23 Cap"al ill
. ali~itor

Venozu· · .33 Glowing

eta •

coal·

24 Pia order

38

25 Amusing

"Platoon"

soning

hoax

39 - •

26 Overnighl

Mag non

,.....,.....,......,,....,;......

'

27 Outollhe
wind

.
'

28 Rep.'s

..

unit
35 Take to .

ool.lt
38-de .
plume
37Golllng
aha

•

40Pol
Stav•nson
DAILY CRYPTOQ.UO'IF.S- Hm's how to work
AXYDI.BAAXR
!!LONGFELLOW
One letter siands for another.ln this sample AIs used
for the three L'.s, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes,. the length and formalion of the words arc
rll hints. Elch day the code letters are different. ·
· ' 4-2

CRYPTOQUOTE

J

z

E j U t:

·. E Z I R- E Z X
XZQNM;
( N W

JZ

NW

y F

YSW F

.N W .

Y S E.

1• .A Z

EJUE

EZIREZX)

'

NW

NXMZ

y F

u

.

12:GI(J)tlgt*II•Q

1UI (I) e II &amp;..- Nllllll Wilt
DMIIILc•ii8

.

port
31 Spouse's

. 111 Compe·

8N(0)(2:00)

(PO) (2:00)

'"

.

- ~~'i-.e
• 'Tile Ide' C8S 1.1\o

•"· .........
e
caa••

.\

Hype

()) Circle of I'Hr
~ Morors: The Arab. WOIId

~

Pass
Pass

liihad

111•

Stereo.

Pass

3+

Easl

3+

34 Curr•nt

==- .

t:

Nort~

' ••tall·

16le
Araenlo Hill Stereo..Q
IIJ Mlltnl VICe Stereo.
·

Ron'l TV -"!lllncl
. In Zenith •teo N.wk*la moll
Glhor-.-colo.- - ·

Weal

30 long·

w=e!2Z:Q

''

1

Sotllb

part

l'lgllllng I!IIJie (FI) (1 :55)
1G:3011J)• Ta.le ~
• Coool! end CliMe
1D leaa6111 Tontglit

a

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: East

2t Joplin
piece

Rabe111on
10:011 fl)liiOVII: Ator: The

til &lt;ll •
IIJNaw8 .

,+K 4

oounlar·

Ill CloiN lvonlng Newl
Ill 700 Club Wilt ,...

11~ IJl •

Aoorttlon Matorw, 1 J I od. ,...,..._lnttoclt,RON ' ',

ond lo Iii Oliotlont ihopo both
~
lnoldo ond out. Thlo 2 - · ..
oqulpp r I
I op-.d
--~~::;.. MloPM ~air, ' ll!lng • Ropt-d, Win·
• Ooorw. Frwt ..........
.
....... QIJOdr-·
..... It 114 4411111.
'

.......

I'

:~

~

17 (qu~f;i'

(1:00)

1

.

I IliOn

'-- =2-·ellelloole· Who

jf

120ven
13LDCIII .
. ruling

18-Arclialc

e.

::
,.

~

SPI VICCS

OUiOF-IT.

(
~

Ill Lany KinO Uvel
8:30 til (I) e Coach Hayden

arranges a reunion between
Lulllor and his long· lost
fall,.,. Stereo. Q
_' 10:00 (J) • Ill_ LIW • Order
, ' s-tereo. I;JI
'
()) Nowl
til (I) Eddll Dodd
Eddie's Clefenaa of a senator
accutlad of bribery Ia .
compromfaad. Stereo. Q
(lJ Vlelntm: A TelevfeiOn

AND IT Ta::lK ,_.Relii ·
PEOPLe 10 C!OeT H 1M

·I•

.... Oil Millan. Cll . . 111 1111.

1117 Corio, LJ U,OIIO.
111ut tal
1W Ol•an :-Ill 011118 taSO.

Pickup, - . _ elc4hoo, Wll- lowna plaatO coii:J04.
1711oll44 lftlf S:Oo Pll .. - ..
. -. ......7110.

PUbliC Sale

~~-------------117U -lor compor trolltr. 20 •· ~

l'or- - Compor,
- oletpo
1411. Sol~
..!,".!;, :::.U -nod
..
........ ..... ... • pl!fi4UI

'"am.

Ooluol
111

·
lnd ollie.otciiM!
FrldoJ •April
Would lllro to do """"'"'"" In
lllh,lmloo.
l!"t homo II 3 Avollo'lllo.
........ ' I I , .
AVI...btel
Yord
·
Chiller,
s-.t
Camp
AMd, ~ bop, alrta, __,..
Clolllpotlo ctothel1 tOf•, Doob, miN., Uit114.
•
Apflllol.

8

1182

-=:=· . . .
.,.....,

· · DoyolllkiCIIre.
Carw Cantor.
.- .,., aflold1~11,
11-F

--n

a..- .

-

tJtnt.

- . .. · -

= =::r·t20110.

W.AtSWHeN~
Dt.D ~TIN HIS

.

:;;r.~~~~,IIO.

r..n IIIOWing, - lobo, will
point- ...... 114,f12.21at.

Wont To L,.,. In Rutlond
4oflalllll¥
- --· ·
4 ,Pellow
- ..... Aroo.l14-1112·2:111.
llllhpcrt
on2Cl.
Clarap

•-o, AIC

11100.
1111 , . _ Ant,
r;:or= 41,0110 . - ono
Wilt - · ,,.: _ ..... In ,,_, •

::S~;!"';:.!
.... a.-

l lth f:IIO Llll. ID I lUI!· Pllll -

H...

:;Joll:=:-n-::D..-,.-:..,:::a:-:a=-oc-:k-..,.H:-oa-, I IIIII ChoVMio
11,0110 .or boot - · 114-441- 11:::.., Mllet
1044.
1111 Dovld Brown with

Ylld-. Apo!l 311wu I , -

~~~~~~~ .WINTHROP

.Q ..
tQ 10 3

. summary 42Aiabama
chy
6 C81culalor
43 Planler
key
DOWN ,
11 San
1 Enterad Antonio
.IIndmark . Indy •

15~n

Hulk Hogan. (T)
•N1ohvlhNow

r

··

SOUTH
+109764

cl81n

tho lmmorlll

to Cain. wtlh

' ::

1141.

·

for brelklng curlew. (R)
Stereo. !:J
,

41

ACROSS
1 Nawa

til (J)e R-AM Becky
1111d Darlene are grounded

- · :·

campers&amp;.

Emorold OrtOn Prom Drooo,
With Black Loot, llu:
1110, Call oftor !p.m. 114-446-

VengM- (1:00)

. t-IIM I'D RA'TI-\fR
GOOOT

·~

•• KJ 9
• 92
+AJ I09852

by THOMAS JOSEPH

block

munltrsuapecuparkl.a ·
r1cill PI'OI"t. (II) s -. Q
()) MOVII!: Yukon

arr llbJ.D

..... .... ......
..., o.b., •· 14 ft Pont""'!. 111 HPil!~lnruci_IJ
fop - · .p.a.il p.b., ,....., IX«J JroiiK
ury .. '
ciCiior , locka,
r, a~umlnum wHh·oonlralo. II4.Z41'401t.
r
w-. Mlooourl cor tt1,100.

•

EAST

WEST
+8 3 2
• A632
• 6 54
+76 3

CROSSWORD

GJ In . . !teet of lite

NltiiJI The oneol of I

A CARIIIIAN ILOWOUTI
Wo Onr louaht Crulooo,
Ftortd8 to TM ......_. on •
LUllUfJ Unor, I Do!tl, • Nlflllta,
fZit(Couplo. Holtl Ptld, No
Olmmlcko. Tlekllt Good 1 Yoor.

Motor Homes
~·
..,..,_....:;.;,;;...;_.;.;,;;.:.::...._,.

-

Iaiiier Collap- II home: an
lnfal!lla trai In a stolen
car. Stereo.
I(J Mulder,
Wrote Q
Ill On ....

II PallieeN•••
Ill MOVII!: Hello Down

~

- p i t t JoywW-- Clllllp,HI ArliL Itt.
on loft

·IID1 Ill. RIICtla: 111 A

ALLEY OOP

~

3 -.
utllftlet paid • . M Loculi 81.
t26CIInlo. 114-441-1MO or 441-

""'""

Dollnquont

I

1or 1 • - · ...... porldne.
-pooporty.
(1) 1105-1181!-1000 Ell. Your
GH- 114 44WIGZ.
1105 foi curront ,_rial.
U.beNne Drive; 3 bedroom, full
booomont, gorogo, onctoooc1
pallo, lmmedl• ...,, 11lon to
oottr. ....... Call ·-71113
efter Sp.rn. call
IH-3525
enytlme.

4 F-'IJ GoNft - . AjiO(! 1111

steroo.c

~ACKION

~
........
Dlp-II.IOt •21tt

Fum-

1 .....

'"JrtP.'"'·

EITATE:z....=e loelloon Plllo
lnlmfl
.-toahoDl
rnovt.. 9111 111 Ut lllf . EOH.
lfn:lh Strwt, llddlap att. 1 n 2
bedlumlohod

441-41111.

r.lddllpOn
&amp; VIcinity

0 '"'

~-'l.

0 MtiiOCk Matlock

defends a legal ~ry
accuaed of mll'ilering her
bon (R) Stereo. C
()) MOVIE: Rooo o1 the
Yukon (1 :00)
til Clle Rntmte HelpillQ
wllh Crystal's Lamaze clus
· brings back rnomorr.a for
Roseanne. Sleroo. Q
(lJ (!) Nova An lnveatigetlon
of direct marketing reveels
.hOw edventaar. think.

Bi.l~FU.L APARTMENTS AT

BUDGET PIIICEII AT

-

Pomeroy,

'ft-M,v41

.

I~ (J) •

~~

NORTH
I·Ltt
+AKQJ
• toa 7
tAKJB7
+Q

L

Some years ago, quadraphonic
sound looked as if it might supersede
simple stereo. T.Jiere were four speak·
ers; you sat in the middle, ana the
sound surrounded you.
There is an analogous defensive
card-plliy technique in bridge. An example is in tOday's deal.
North has an automatic takeout
double when East's. opening pre•empt
is passed around to him. But should
Soutb bid three spades or four• The
guideline is in knowing the doubler as- .
sumes his partner holds six or seven
high-eanl points. Partner should make
a jump response only wilh noticeably
more than. !bat. South therefore bids
only ~hree spades. North bids on to
game. because that's where he wants
to be Qpposite six points. True, South
might have a Yarborough, but the percentages suggest he does not.
West Jed the club three, low from
three·low cards as he had~' t supported
his partner. East won with the ace and
saw that it was time to switch to
hearts. But to which heart?
The only card guaranteed to defeat
the contract is the jack of hearts. If
South covers with the queen, West
wins with the ace and returns a heart,
East collecting two tricks witb the K·9
hovering over dummy:s 10· 8. If South

7:35 (I) Srnlonl end Son

SZOO/mo. ... looond AVOIIut
01lllpoU1. 114 ttl 1148
'

2 IR -

HovOn.WV.

•

.. .

2br .._
.., ~., ... No
pttL 114-441-1158.
3 roonw a beth, 1• floor. tu~
nlohod. · All uiiiN'* pold.

-

ol-.. . . . . . . -

~LINNtNG I I

.
'
•

flctor, Will troln.11:1-24Ml4.
IARN hOOI$IOO PER WEEK

GJ JtJIIOOD1pW111nlllhJI Q
c-Q

DPienrnnlll8blll

~~

Call- 8p.IIL
1114-448-1110.
. .

BRIDGE
By Phillip Alder

e CIIIUIIN .

WHA'T A'f rHE TW_o MOJr IM,..,.ANT
~~·~
/
FtAfU~E$' you
WANT IN A CA/Z? ·

I14-44I-S12.

I1,IGO.

King

PntNiton leaebllf
• lea Stllr

AND ERNEST

•:.

i:
11·'110 Hondo. , Coli ••• . 5:00, ,.
-

Alfl'ic;J

v.

•

Teacup- Oasis- Quake -Incise- SUCCESS .
.After a disappointing day at school and sports practice,
my dad told me that most failures bring you one step
closer to SUCCESS.
·

IIJ) •

l"t..,.Hllt., IIIC

liM XLIII Hondo
• - ~~.~ eond., 1121 or •;

1 IR ouiWIIo lor oinglo or

FORI

•SCilHi1 Lm AHSWIRi

til
• 11-.tlelnWinilnn.miMIIWiftiAI
Tonlglll Stereo. c;J
(J). Mlml'l ~IIAIIJ

,, '

. . . Ko•otld
drive,
0¥collont oond,
28'11. '

PRINT NUMBE~ED
LETTERS IN SQUARES

. . UNSCRAM8LE
V AN SWER

7:05(1) "-PPY Dave

,1t12 100 Cutt- with :;
lftll'lf lldru, 8,000 Rill., 304- _, 1

Autos for Sale

71

' f9

8.~
See-and Mre.

-=~,;;:,;;;.:.;'w;:.;,.'w;.;;.;:J-- I•

Pete fQr Sale

1 IR

Tronchlng Sorvloo. Water, llli.
P-. l'roo Ettlnaloo.
304·77HI31.

E
I

1uta.'OD, ;;
PI, ',

=-.r;nnllll-loncall •,

74

. - . bllck, -

IDe CIS Newa c;J

• Alwtr Clllffllh

~L

AIMIII' ..... ..,. 01111, ' •'
.........
~-'r'
IIIOfl
aoa. ond
u..,-k.
told ,•
,......_
. , , . , ...... and ,•
....,
,

-

I

~J!~Q

'

4
AIC,

=~"= 'iOIId

7~~~~~=:

4 ""· f14.a.1714
.......
_, .: ·

1002

lily

::-r,_-

lao&amp;

1•

uftlumiohod opt. with
ttovo • rwtrla, no potll,
$17Wmo. li1Ciudlng •. fltiO

Professional
Sei'YiceS

.

• What a monstrous thing a

,..--------.how 1look
the .... I"
BETMON
..,_...,IF--;:;.1..:....;.1.;..,;;...17:.:.,..1'-1 0 Complm tho chuckle quolld
by filling In tho mlllint - • ·
1 .-.i.L-..1.-.1..-:1..-1...__.
rou devol:p fr""' 11ep No. 3 bolow.

1D llpCioee
1:31 (I) Alwtr Qoltllh

'
:

1111~M11t,

Apenment ·

44

XLT. nt 1 .~ :•

••

' _I 1 _p··.! lhreewayiTIIrroris."sighedthe ·
_..A_C..a.E_R.L...,J
.I .I . .
woman. • It allows me to see .

·..' - 1

.... iU~~R

.

;~~;;~~;;;;;;;::======~-a· ti'IOO.
~~~~~~~~~
,..,.... . .
LAYNI'I !'IJRNITURI .
I!_IC8Ihalancf~
64 Hay I .Grain
- Ford F·IIO, 4114 ' 11,100. :~
~ fumW'IIna&amp;
.... n:
,..
114 Mt 4411.
. · ·' ~
J::
.._,.: llori-lat, M 114-MI- ,_,...,. o...: .. .. .,_. ..
,.,.
,
a.f.
•,',
OS22. a .,... ·"" lulovlllo 1111. ,
7-iftowo
For " - '
·lbt. • tlmol ~~~·~·~fZIO~~·114~~~~~~~171~11.~;.=.:~. 1- S,10 . _ WD,
~~~~~- 114'141-.
.
lor. Bolo. Clover • Tlm:l~
Dlr&amp;:
o-,1111,

- · No ,..•• 114-441-4ta.

1

Pl. Plelllant .
&amp;VIclnltJ

11D HAVE 60T .IT!

t

. . - . 111,0110 - .
t3.10Cli144D7DI.

NIA,Ifc.

pm.

nWa.

c o l - - athlco-. For
Dlverolllod Emproym.,t. Aao no

Yard Sile

'"'

2br mollllot125
-~~.::""'·
•
Uttlltt-.
I
....
nf8ho$. nlae, In countrr. 1144411ool.
3 IR rnob1ie . _ , 10 min. , _
Ol!lllpollo.
-f!&gt;v. 1210
PM month. Dop. l 2 ' " " " - •
roqulrod. II4&gt;4IW7II, I 0111 ' I

._.,., OH 411182.
Plumbing ·
BuolnSouthoUtorn
OhiO
HV.lC
Plumbing • eontractlno Buol·

Prtcod to oolf. Wol
I'HPICitd
c:omponr . "' with
1801.1100 In Mlooln 1110. Aoklng
Dtloo 1218,000. lncludoo r141 ooltto, .lnvontorr, . oqulpmon~.-.no
- . . For Clotollo, call Tony

,,..u

2br mobllt homo ot EvM .......
1~ _ - -

~SUpport t-

bronahoo.
US Cuotomo,
:;'.-.."=:::::====== .ote.
Hirlna.
Clll (t) DE.l,
JIOII.

Gallipolis
I VIcinity

VET'?

Dopondoblo
Stll-llotlvotod
lrtendiJ honott parwon with ••·

.

1·

"eo. .....- -h.

2--horM, ........
nlehed,
,.....
chlldrwn -lllltil 118o trolltr
~· At. I l.tooutt on
tlit: Point P-nt, :IQ4.I7B.

Vloodlo. Routo. Modonto I,.

23

er-.

~U:,:~=.e=. rwquollod,.

• n- modtl 11
Help Wanted
lV that -'&lt;. Call oftor i:i::r.;:i::;::::=:=~=~ IEitro
Nil decl. lnccmo?
Earn Up
4:30 114-441.0321.
130ti.!Dor "' ~~ p11ono ......D....
War111na AI
oL
af homo.
COli
fOU To MCIO por ""'"P motol i Iron to ghrw-. to order. For 1 - 1
73WII7 "" Dttolltl Wrtto: t.lll
114-441-2544 - 1 : 3 0 pm.
EXT 1822.
Entororlna, P.O. 8ox1453, WI,.
Old ..trlgorotor,

6

.

.

Ill Our Houle
1:05 w11ever1r n•111 ..

1

w?ndL

..,.

for Rent ..

erab

• ·

-IIID48MOOI.
... eomponr
.

omes

114
141.uH.
2 -4411117 ariM
lumlaMd
,,_,

Ploto lnttollatlon. Pllono: 11:1-

Gu Cook Stovo, 1111 Cllatllom Employmrnl Sprv1ces
.

.

IIIWOIIdJodly

lF I(OU HAD PITCHED IT,
AND SOMEONE HAD HIT IT

IIGior
17811
0.0.
Itt
ttl- tl4'l ...,.
1'
plm.
or I

121&lt;10 21R - I n 1 -..o.

Mhur'o . Cllaln Llrik Ftnot.
A-'•Nial, Cclrnrnarolll, In~
duttrlll, FrtO Ettlmat"'l Com-

'

Eriollall ,Spaniol,

Avenue.

·

l:==:=:=:::::::::::=:===r=========i
Bob Wlllamo • llono '114-tH·

Ji!rMI Knepp, ~..et~-3~35.

,..... Wilt • .

.:lf1'~b•;;:•::;"":.;."".;;."";;;;•;;=.;.~;.;..;.;;:.;:;:.;;;;,.. 1•'\
73 Yens I 4 WD'I
:..

Mobile H

42

tO[ t Je attiC."

~~·~iE;;-i;"g;;Gd"j;Qi;;,
;&lt;-•
puppleo to good homo.
et4·zSMm,
. 9 wanted to Buy
21
~~~:sa:""'phord puptllea, w.:::-nt-:-od~to~buy;.;.;,...
~nd..,::.lng:!.tlm""bo&lt;,....,·
Fuli blood

I-lOW
I{OU SA'f, '' I
tT!" WHEN I ~AVEN'T

:

1

need anything

~·. ,.,_z
I

ID NIA Todtlr

tmVWYIII,~VIIIYaood. :

5 wkl Gorman ~hophard and "W
304-lawo21
~~~~.r.po·
.
allor .
e rea II y don 't
::--c--=--~..,.-'----- c
I

Coat
0800 Iron Tub • Sink. 114-441·

¥onduro VIII, CillO -

QIIC

luiV
houaebroke, to goad
.
Volutd
&amp;
.Jovod
pota.
""'""'""
7825.
- ·~ .,.
3 mo1o

BL~n'i

""'*a :

Ono 1111 Ford ....
-ford -I . tor.~•
boo . bod;
v.i; 0111
•
...,..

'

'

• Glhor

--~-

2 .roooloro • 4 hono. ll:lo44f.

dogo,

=~~:~.1=::::~:

~lot!. •. ..:.· .,.::';%: .
- . oervlna -

a•
lll:r,-~~:
(i)MdJLel,.ll

o - W ...,
.....· r....._,,co..,.
chllf,

•

1:00 (J) • til &lt;ll • •
GJNaw8

~.

~~i;;-~lor~-~:iii.:i~· ·:

Gooda

1974 Plymouth Sattllltt; 311 ongino, 304-1'111-2385•.

I

~

The Dally Sentlnei-P

Television
Viewing

~~

IUo ,...., JLOOOI:
......
.....................
::
..............,.

- ':u. - of p . ~...
~.-.-.~

2 0. I bed....., yord, no polr 114-

..

lUesdlly, April 2, 1891

~:=-~·
=•nrnu:::!

MZPNLA.-EjLIUW CSMMZH
Yestmllty's Cryptoquott: AS IMPRISONED BIRDS
DO NOT GET OU'r OF THEIR CAGE, SO THOSE
IGNO~ OF RIGHT OR WRONG DO NOT GET
0111" OF THEIR MISERY.- SUTRA·ANGRA

''

.

�••

Sentinel

OhiO

Moose attacks officer··
du:ring egg hunt · ··

-

.

•

.

Dance. legeiJd Martha Graham. dead i
.

.

1991 Fashion
Musical
Review '

;

NEW YORK (UPI) - Martha ston who was one of her major supAfter her .father died, Graham · changed their minds about GraJuu1t
Graham, who many choreographers porters.
relilmed to dance school and in II and the dan~e. hi retrospect, lher,
ANCHORAGE, Alaska (UP!) - Police Officer Fred Jones is recu·
say made the single-greatest contri·
Fellow choreographers honored short time became a teaeher. ·
said, Graham wideried the scope(».: ..
perating from what mi~t be called the attack of the giant Easter
bqtion to the world of dance in this Graham by designiilg roles solely
Her ability and agility gave her modern dance.
• -&lt;
Moose.
.
. century, 'has 'died at her Manhattan for her because they felt she h!ld license to·practice dancmg almost
· Leonide Massine ud L~:
"I feel whopped," he said Mooday .from his Hum ana FJospital bed.
home. She was 96. •
the technique and individuali'ty fanalieally. "Practice is the means Stokowsky chose Gl)lham to danco'
But the moose lost the battle, shot by Jones at point-blank range
Graham, who was released from. needed to perfect the parts.
·
of inviting the ~~on desired, '' the female lead in the New York~
with his service automatic some 250 yards from where children flailed
the hospital. less thlllf~wo weeks
At the end of last year, Graham she once said. 'You have to have ·a premiere of Igor St'ravinsty's "Th6·
about io deep snow hunlio~ for Easter eggs. . ·
.
ago, died Monday in her Upper traveled throughout the Fit East on craft.' It's your language and you Rite of Spring•: _in 1930. It wa!li
What began as. the IJ'IIditional Easter egg hunt in Russian Jack Park
East Side home, just' a block away a 55-day tour with the company, must masterJt"
then that she established the NeW:'
in the middle of the city tw'tled into a poli,ce hunt.for children mi8sing
froln the Martha Graham Center of which was fqcing its latest of many · Graham made her professional York Dance Repertory Theater, ~
in the deep snow and ended with the moose attacking.one of the
Conteritpo!ary Dance, said Russ financial crises.
~ York debut in 1920, but two all-woman. troupe.
.
. "'
policeman se8rchiog for the little egg hunters.
·
.
Alley, a company spokesman.
· "We were on a tour throughout years later, she beeame jaded and
l'he fust male dancers to entet!
~ annual hiDlt oo a sunny Sunday in the park where 1,500 chit·
Her career. as a dance ionovaror Asia io Japan, Korea and Taiwan . felt ''this was a life leading her company in the late ·193Ps we~ .
dren searched for 15,000 colored eggs llecame a tougher than usual
and teacher pnned more than ·11 and we aame back-at Christmas nowhere."
Erick Hawkins and Merce Cun •
game of hide-and-seek when some children got mired in waist-deep
years and her conltibutions to. the time and she went iniO the 'hospital • S.he took advanl&amp;ge of a teach· ningham, both of whom !Vent on t.0:: ·
snow and a half doiA:n others couldn't be found at all- triggeriog a
c!ance world inspired anists, com· thereafter,". he said.
.
ing offer and became a dance . found their own modern dance;,·
call for police help. .
·
·.
posers and fashioo designers. She
She was in th.e hospital with instructor at the Eas1min School of companies. Gmham was married t&lt;h
Jones=one of the responding officers. He entered the far eild of
was still active in her last year bronchitis for 10 weeks. Friends the Theater in Rochester, N.Y. Hawkins briefly and they remained:t
the park;
'te where the Easrcr egg hunt began, intendiog 10 interdespite crippling arthritis.
said she was preoccupied with .While at Eastman, ~ began friends even after their divorce. •f
cept any · dren who strayed too far.
The cause of her death was list" what would happen to her company · experiments with group dancing.
Among Gmham 's many admit.,.,
But as Jones worked his way through deep snow, he said, "I heard
ed as cardiopulmonary arrest due to and sch~l if she ~o longer ~as
In 1926, Graham returne4 to ers.was actress Katharine cornen,-;
something behind me. I turned around and he was right behiod me.''
congestive heart failure, Alley said. able to ·gJve them acbve leadership. !jew York and gave her first dance who starred in the Broadway P"?""
. "He" was a 1,6(JO.pound bull moose with an impressive mck .that
Alley said he had received a call
Before leaving for Asia, she recieal, which was described later duction of "Romeo and Juhet' ,
stretched at least three feet from one !llltlet to the other.
from Graham's longtime comran· oversaw the Oct 2 opening of the as a "historic evening that ulti· with choreography furnished by~
"He hit' me with his rack," Jones said. "I was 'stuck knee-deep in
ion and the general director o the dance group's New York season, mately was to ciJallge the course of Graham. In 1944, when her dance~
the snow and I couldn't run sol just rolled across the top of the snow
dance group; Ronald Protas.
and premiered ''Maple Leaf Rag.''
modem dance.''
..
school ·encountered rmancial pro~" ·
to get away."
. .
'. .
·
"He said that she was vety
"And she took her bows every
. She soon ~arne a contrOvef~!ial terns, Cornell raised $25,000 to.,
Jones said he looked for brush or some cover to get behind but
comfortable and she went peaceful· Qigl)t," Alley said
f1gu~, shocking the..theater·gom.g . keep the sc.hool from folding.
,
could haidly move through the deep snow. The moose, too, had trOuble · ly," Alley said.
Born in .Pi!t$burgh on May II, ~ubhc w1th a techmque that ull· . . Among the student$ trained iri.:
getting through the snow, but Jones noted, "His legs were a litUe
Classes at th-e Graham school . 1894. Graham showed an interest lized unonhodox bodymovell1Cnts. the school were Bette Davis ··•
longer."
· . ·
·
continued despite the news of her in the theater at the age of 4. Six
One of her innovations that Joanne woodward Arin Jackson·: !
Down on the ground, deep pain in his shoulder, back and chest,
death, "because that's the way she years later, after she .had moved to _ invited criticism. w~ ller abandon- Richard Boone, · Gregocy Peck;:
with the moose moving io from five feet. away for what Jones figured
would have wanted it,'' Alley ~d; Santa Barbara, Calif., her father ment.of roe ~cmg m favor of foot Kirk DOuglas, Lome Green, Rip;:
was the kill - and another moose approachiog from behind - Jones
Although the famed dance D\BS· took her to see a dance recital.
flexmg, which her detraciOrs·satd Torn and Eli Wallach. A young •
said, "I had enough time to get on the (portable) radio 8ljd say, 'I' ve
ter concentrated her efforts on
"He took me and I had my fust was ugly. ·
woman who joined the Graham ' .
just been charged."'
·
modern dance, she was credited corsage of violets," she recalled. . "It.wa~.not l!gly. to ~ugly," Dancers as a professional-laterA
. "I didn't even finish," Jones said. "He lowered his 'head - that's a
with inspiring an· array of artists, . " And that day sealed my fate."
sh~ satd. The flexmg d1d S?Jne· became the nation ~s first lady, ,
prelude to a charge - and I fU'ed one warning shot. He didn't even
including composer Aaron Cop- . Graham enrolled in a dance lhmg el~ for me that the pomt.ed Betty Ford. President Gerald Foret:
flinch."
.
land, sculptor lsamu· Noguchi and · · school, but her father opposed her foot didn I have - a contact w1th presented Graham with the Med~
Then. as the moose charged, Jones flfCd nine rounds at point-blank
poets, painters, actors and fashion ambition .to become a professional ' the earth.''
of Freedom, the United States'"
range from his 9mm semi-automatic, wondering whethe{_ his police
\lesigners, especially the late Hal· dancer and she respected his wish· · Many years passed before critics highest peacetime award.
·:,:
. '
service weapon could topple the huge animal. .
, es by returning to high school.
. . ·~
.,
"He went down," Jones said. '.'But he started to get back up. "I
aimed another round right behind his ear. It took· two to put him
·~
down.~·
.
·
,
~
The moose was so close that Jones saijl, "I wouldn't be surprised
•
he had some powder bunis on him."
'
,
In all, Jones fued 12 rounds and said he was just getting ready to
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. five-day mission, the first of six Apt to carry out a six-hour space- unclassified military mission until •
load another IS-round magazine when the moose dropped in his tracks
(UPI) - ·Engineers Tuesday started p1anned for 1991 and the rust since walk on lhe fourth day of the flight ·around April 25 and making ;
in the snow.
the shuttle Atlantis's countdown to a mission by the shutlle Columbia to test space station construction Atlantis No. I on the launch sched- ;
"I didn't think I was going to win this one." Jones said, noting that
blastoff Friday on a flight featuring in December.
techniques. The excursion into ule.
has had some close encounters with armed criminals and mad moqse in
the first post-Challenger spacewalk
The primary goal of Atlantis's Atlantis's payload bay will be
Similar cracks later were found :
his 17 years oo the police force, but !lever anything like this.
and the launch of a.new astronomy flight is the deployment Sunday of NASA's fJrst sioce the 1986 Chal· in the hinge assemblies of Atlantis, ;
.
Urban moose calls - reporting .moose in neighborhoods, school . satellite.
the $617 million Gamma Ray Ienger disaster. Columbia and the new shuttle.'
yards, Parts and city streets - are nothing new for Anchorage police.
Atlantis's engine compartment Observatory, a massive 35,000·
If all goes well, Nagel and. Endeavour, but in Allantis's case &gt;
And, Jones said, "They more afraid of us than we are ofthem."
· · was sealed for flight Monday and pound astronomy satellite sensitive Cameron ·will guide Atlantis 10 a lhe defects were deenied too small ;
engineers closed the ship's 60-foot to extremely high-energr radiation landing the morning of April 10 at to pose any safety threat to the-.
But not .the big Easter egg moose.
cargo bay doors overnight before generated by the most v1olent stars Edwards Air Force Base in·Califor- shuttle odtS ~w.
." My head came up to the top of his shoulder,' • Jones said, noting
:
that the worst part of the ordeal was feeling so helpless in the deep
starting the shuttle's intricate ·!IDd galaxies io the universe.
. nia.
.
. .
Discovery's hinges were- ;
snow, bein~ unable to get away from the beast ' ·
·
countdown at S:~O a.m. EST Tues·
With the more famous Hubl&gt;le
The National Aeronautics and replaced by those aboard the shut· '
day.
. .
SpacO' Telescope already in orbit Space Administration originally lie Columbia, whicli were repaired :
"What if this had been a ldd?" Jones said.
NASA spokesman Bruce Buck- studying the universe io visible and - hoped to ldck off 1991 by launch· and beefed-up to preclude any .r,
Jones, 38, suffered a bruised back, puUed muscles, a wrenched
shoulder and possibly a bruised heart, but doctors were hopiog that his
ingham said the countdown stiuted ultravioler light, the gamma ·ray ing the shuule Discovery .March 9 chance of a failure io orbit.
'•
heart pain would tum out 10 he excess adrenalin. He was due to be
on time and that work was proceed· satellite' is the second in a series' of on an'unclassified, eight-day "Star
The work was completll!l ahead ;
released from the hospital Monday but ordered to SillY home and rest
ing ~moothly toward blastoff.
four "great observatories" Wars" research mission.
of schedule and Discovery was •
for a week.
.
_
Allanlis's five-member crew-. desiguet!IO map the heavens across
But lhe flight was delayed after hauled back out 10 pad 39A before :
'•'I'm just glad to be able to talk to you," he said, stiU io his hospital
commander Steven Nagel, co-pilot the electromagnetic spectrum.
engineers discovered cracks in the dawn Monday. NASA officials say :
Future spacecraft in the series hinge assemblies of critical fuel the shuttle and its seven-man crew ·•
bed.
Kenneth Cameron, Jerry Ross, Jay
The moose ·meat was donated to charity and Anchorage police were
Apt and Linda Godwin - was wilt study infrared emissions and line doors in the belly of the orbiter should be ready for takeoff around .::
scheduled to fly to the Kennedy X- rays from deep spaQe tar&amp;c;ts, that IIIU8t close properly in orbit to April ~5 :
toyin' with the notioo of mounting the impressive moose rack on
Jones patrol .car or at least in the patrol room at Anchorage police
Spa~e Center later in the day fpr
giving astronomers a more com- allow a safe-re-entry.
•·
final preparations.
plete view of the FOShu!l than ever
headquarters. Jones also had "velvet" lium lhe antlers on
uniform
NASA managers ultimately
IIOUSI OVIRFLOWINC7
If .all goes well, Atlantis will before.
as further evidence of the encounter.
·
ordered eqgineers to haul DiscovCl£AN liP W1TJ1
The second major objec;tive of ery off pad-39A and back to its
As for the missing kids, they. all turned uP,. though a fejf'sulfferc:d blast off on the 39th shutlle lllission
at 9: 18 a.m. Friday to. kick off a Atlantis's mission is.for Ross and hangar for repairs, delaying the
ClASSRUDS .f \ '
some

Pick 3: 744'
Pick 4: 1755
Cards: 7·H, 7-C
J·D; K·S

Insert

.'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio,

By BRIAN J, REED
· Sentinel News Staff

Athens, supervised by Athens'
County Public. Defender Mike
W~stfall.

After being in place for a litlle
The regional PO's office, esl!lbover a year, the Meigs County Pub· lished in January, provides indigent
lie Defender's office has begun to criminal defense in seven counties.
. save county taxpayers a consider· Instead of contracting directly with
able sum of money.
Knight, as th~y did during the fust
Pomeroy Attorney Charles year, the Me1gs County Cornrnis·
. Knight was appointed to the posi· sio~ers are now involved in a con· tion in January of 1990 and his · traci with the Ohio Public Defend·
office is 110w a !'art of a regiqnal er's. office, which in turns pays
public defender s office based in Knight's salary.
·

· Each of the seven counties,
ihvolved in the regional public
defender's office now has a public
defender on staff, and the larger
counties, namely Ross and Wash·
ington Counties, have more than.
one.
In addition, Knight's office now
haS more ready access 10 au~liary
staff ·members . .Investigators,
expen wimesses and other public
defenders are now available 10 the
·Meigs County PD's office. aild to

il1at depiu bmlDL"

• The Marth 3 beating was capiured on videotape and has since
llecome a symbol o~ police ~i­
ty - especially agamst mmonbes.
King is black pel "'e officers are
white. .
The beating also bas led to a
steady streani of public: condemna·
lion of Police Chief Daryl Gates,
)'iho is being presswed by commu- .
nity members and pub~ offic1als,
ipcludin&amp; Bradley, to reSign;
.,
While denying tbll the commll·
sion will focus on Gates, Bradley
has chlrJed the JB!Cl with review· '
ing the ~ rOle of.~ office of
police chief IIlii eQJIIlJIIIII JXOIIOI·
als for revising the City Cbarter
· concemin&amp; the appointmaJt,. dilcl·
plining and removal of the chief,

'

,

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) The Ohio House is scheduled
Thursday to consider legislation
limiting campaign expendit!JfC\S by
.candidates for slatewide office ·and
the General Assembly.
_
The House Ethics and Standards
Committee on Tuesday .voted out
by a 5L3 margin the legislation that
would limit spending by each can•
didate in &amp; gubernatorial mce to $1
· million in a primary and $3 million
in the general elecuon.
Candidates for other statewide
offices would be limited to .
$500,000 in a primary and $1.2
million in a general election.
Candidates · for the Ohio

-' ty.&lt;;.,MICJi1HII!!UHJP..Dmll&amp;
Chamber of Commen:e wUI•.~~~~;~
be
its
,aJ1nUaJ Jbemb.ersbjp drive during the
Of
April: Accordlllll to Executive· Director Elizabeth Schaad, the chamber has set a goal or 150
)lctive paid m,embers. The chamber currently
has 105·members. 1,0 'letters or invitati!)n to join t
the chamber have been mailed out, along with a
new recruitment brochure. Pictured are the
chamber's mem!lfrship coml!iitte~ and several
or the chamber's new members ror 1991. Left to

rlelll••Dicll G ui -·~ Vlt, 11ot1t mem.
bersblp committee melllliers; Brenda Venoy,
representlnll Twin City Machine and Welding;
Jimmy Caio or Cain's Upholstery; Bob GUmore,
Middleport Trophies and·Tees; Dale Taylor,
Tearord Realty; Chari~ Masb, C.R. Mash Con·
structlon; apd TJ)dd King, membership commit·
tee member. The Farmers Bank and Savings
Company is offering rour Cincinnati Reds tickets to the chamber member recruiting the most
new members. •

.

duced in January with no spending
limits and •specific limits on contributions 10 candidateS for stateiwde
office and the Legislature.
They explained the public still
will believe large donations can
influence officials.
Vukovich accused top Republicans of trying deliberately to sabotage campaign finance reform by
failing to take pan in negotiations
in the last two months.
"We held this up waiting for .a
Republican proposal," said
Vukovich. "Where is it? It's easy
to object to something but it's a lot
harder to come UP, with a comprehensive p.r.oposal. ' ·
:
-.

VQii)O:Vi~h

h9pes t~ hold utility
rates .down and keep mining jobs
.
'

.

.

about the backgro11nd of Rep. "WI]at was lackihg was another
· COLUMBUS. Ohio (UPI) Michael
Fox, R-Hamilton, before form that had not been submitted
Gov. George Volnovich says he
nominating
him as direciOr of the and quite frankly, I thought had
' hopes to keep utility rates down
Ohio
Department
of l;luman Ser- been submitted."
while preserving the jobs of Ohio
vices.
·
Fox withdrew his nomination
coal miners whose livelihood has
Voinovich
said
when
Fox
was after a series of articles in The
been threatened by federal pollunominated March 7 that it was his (Cleveland) Plain Dealer said Fox
tion slandards.
Voiriovich, at a brown bag lun- most thoroughly investigated cabi· passed bad checks at the state b)la·
cheon in his cabinet roomfuesday, net appointment , because he sury and was investigated for a
1
possible connection with. ·!he
said he has been meeung w1th thought it was.
Scott M. Dillon, 27, Pomeroy, make the enforcement of such ordi·
"At the time I said that ... we national treasurer of the .Hells'
major utilities, the Ohio Manufac·
.was rust to me a petition for a seat nances a prim!I£)' goal on council's
turcrs Association and coal compa- thought we had done a very thor- Angels motorcycle gang.
on Pomeroy Village Council. A agenda for future improvements, if
said.
Fox was never charged.
ny owners and miners to develop ough check," Voinov-ich
,,
., '---· -···
five-year resident of Pomeroy, Oil- he is elected.
an Ohio response to federal clean
. Ion hopes to win a council seat in
This is the first time Dillon has
air standards.
·
the May 7. election. He filed his run for public office and he realizes
Ohio's coal is hi~h in sulfur
.
petition Feb. 19 'with the Meigs his goals may no~ easily
content and some utihties feel it is
County Board of Elections.
achieved . He ,underst ds that
cheaper to buy low-sulfur coal
In explainin$ his reasons for improvements cannot e made
from out·of-state sources rather
seeking a counc1l position, Dillon .overnight but is willing 10 do all ~e
• than to install expensive anti-poilu.
says he is proud of his communi,ty can for the advancement of
tion equipment
and sees "a lot of potential" ·for Pomeroy. "This is .our community
ST. PAUL, Minn. • Locked out November.
Voinovich said he wants assur·
Pomeroy. One of Dillon's main and all residents of this village
members
of the United Steelwork·
The company contends the .
ances from federal regulators that if
concerns is the appearance of tlie must wolk together," he says. ·
ers
~nion
passed
out
lea{lets
on
the;
employees
went on strike, but slate
· '"Ohio utilities comply with the stan·
village. He believes ordinances
streets
of
St.
Paul
on
Tuesday,
urg· Another hope for Dillon is for
employment
security officials have
dards in.l995, "10 years from now
exist which require property own·- Council 10 work closely with the
ing
a
boycott
of
products
made
at
a
ruled
the
dispute
a lockout.
.
·
the EPA is not going to come qlong
ers 10 maintain their slructures and Pomeroy Merchants Association. "I
Jackson
County,
WYa
..
aluminum
.
More
t.han
40
Ravenswood
and say, 'now we w~nt you to do
grounds within · the village. "The thin~ Council needs to be con·
plant
. workers plan to stay in St. Paul
something else.'"
problem-is," says Dillon, "these cerned and involved with the MerRavenswood Aluminum Corp. through Friday, where they Will
On another .!tatter, Voinovich
ordinances have -never been consis- chants' projects and offerassis·
says he wishes he had known more workers were invited ·10 .Minnesota pass out handbills urging contently enforced." He intends to 1311ce and support whenever possito participate in a rally at the state sumers not to purchase products
Capitol in-suppon of slate and fed- produced at Ravenswood, officials .
eral legislation birring the hiring of said. ·
SCO'IT DILLON
· pe1111anent replacement workers in
Particui~Jf targets in St. Paul are
labor
disputes.
soft·
drink manufacturers 7-Up, RC
1
ble," says Dtllon. .
Larry Wehrung has filed his
The union said.onc of the issues . Cola and Diet Rite Cola, and
Dillon was an active panicipant petition as an independent candi- in the Ravenswood dispute is .the
. The Meigs County Sheriff's Department is investigating the·
in
last
year's sesquicentennial cele- date for Pomeroy mayor. Tuesday hiring of replacement workers to American National Can in St. Paul,
reported thefts of a boat and a mo10r from another boat
bration in Pomeroy and is currently afternoon that pc.:tion wd validat-· supplant the more than I,700 steel· which uses Ravenswood aluminum
David Reed of ReedsviUe notifited the department that he had a
vice-president or the Meigs·County ed by the Meigs County Board of workers who were locked ouf of to make cans for Stroh's beer and
four-horsepo~r inotor stolen from his boat at Forked Run State
Old Milwaukee beer. ·
Unit of the American Cancer Soc1· !"lections.
Park near R sville.
•
·
their
jobs
by
the
·company
last
ety. He is a member of the St Paul
J:lis name will appear on the bal·
William · · nes of Balcer Road in Pomeroy reported \&gt;D Satur·
1 1
Lutheran Church and serves on the lot m the November Geneml Elec·
·
day thflt his fishing boat was stolen from his property.
church council.
Both incjdents are under investigation.
lion
as
an
independent
against
the
..
A 1986 graduate of Ohio Uni-· winner in the race between Bruce
versity in business econOil)ics, Dil·'
Reed inand
J;lottiePrimary.
Turner, Republi·
.
Ion is currenlly the accountant for cans,
the-May
· •
1 u
Bapk
One,
Athens,
N.A.
He
·
has
Investigation into the breaking and entering at a gamge 'in PonWc;hrung had filed as a Demobeen employed there for five years. crat candidate for the May primary,
land has ended with an arrest.
By United Press International
- Gorman-Rupp Co., a MansDillon is married to the former but his petition was disqualified by ,
According to Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby, Bill
field maker of pumps and pumP.ing
The
April
issue
of
CFO
magaJulie-Elberfeld. They reSide at 12 the Board of Elections on the basis
Combs of Brook Park, l!lhO owns propeny at Poriland, reported
:
zine gives the Premier Industrial equipment;
l,incoln Tertace.
Sunday that his gamge had been entered and approximately 60 twoof insufficient valid signatures..
- · Greif Bros.. Corp ., a
Corp. of Cleveland a top rating and
• by-fours were stOlen.
lists nine Ohio companies among Delaware firm making paperboard
Soulsby reports that Mike· Henry of Portland was arrested and
the I 00 most financially sound containers and ·boxes;
charged with breakin¥ and enteriog on the case . Henry gave state·
- Liqui-Bo11 Corp., a plastic
businesses in the United States.
ments to officers admitting the en tty and theft of the lumber.
CFO, a trade publication for products flrnl from Wo[!~ting10n;
Henry appeared before Meigs County Court Judge Patrick 'J:l.
- Medex Inc., a HiUiard maker
chieffinancial officers, reviewed
O'Brien and ~as released on bond pendmg further proceedmgs m,
of
surgical and medical instrumore than 6,000 companies and
. .
court.
·
ments;
mted them from zero for the wealt·
'
. ATHENS, Ohio (OPI) ~ R.ep· an effective lobbying 'group for est 10 99 for the strongest.
·
.- Rubbermaid Inc., lhe plastic
rese·ntatives of five southeastern . coal interesU on the federal level. . · Sel~ted for perfect 99 ratings hoine product company from
·
Ohio counties have begun mapping
· To comply with new federal were Premier, an eleCtronics dis· Wooster;
Cb8tges are pending against ~our juveniles for a rash of mailbox
strategy to encourage Amencan clean .tlir standards, AEP must · tributor, and four other companieS
- J .M. Smucker Co:, the· jam
damaging that occurred on Leading Creek, Noble Summ1t and Flat·
Electric Power to install costly decide whether to build scrubbers - the WD-40 Co., a lubricants maker from Orrville.
woods Roads.
_
The factors considered were
scrubbers at its Gavin plant in Gal- at its Gavin plant to reduce sulfur maker from San Dieso; the John H.
. According to the Meigs County Sherifrs Department, the damlia County.
dim&lt;ide emissions or switch to low- Harland Co., a {lrinter in Allanta; cash flow, cash flow to total tangiage was done on Mon~y using a baseball bat ·
·
Officials from Athens, Gallia
sulfur western coal.
lhe American LISt Corp,. a direct ble assets, pretax opera:st income
Jackson, Meigs and Vinton coun:
The company now uses hi~h · mailer from Great Neck, N.Y.,; and to total tangible assets,
flow 10
ties met Tuesday to discuss their sulfur coal produced in Me1gs lhe A. T. Cross Co., a Rhode Island total liabilities, net workinll capital
pen prOducer.
·
plan of action, said Jack Fowler, County.
to total tanaible usets, and total
Meigs COunty Common Pleas CoUrt Judge Fred W. Crow III has
If
AEP
decideS
to
switch
to
lowOther
Ohio
companies
listed
Executive
vice
president
or
the
debt
10 toeal tan~ble assets.
.
filed a corrected court entry in the case or Douglas Harris, whose
·. ·
Gallia County .Community sulfur coal, it would close its affili· among the top 100 were:
Officials d1d not release the
Conlnued 011 paRe 6 ·
Improvement Corp. ·
- Bob Evans Farins Jnc., the nllJllcs or the low·ranking compa.
a!ed mines, which e!llploy 1,258
'
. DICS.
.
.
people
in
Meigs
County.
-Columbus
restaurant company;
He
said
members
hope
to
form
..
.'
,
, I'
,
,, .
'(,
:~

R avenswood wor· k ers
•
tre k to M IDDesota

EXXON SUPERFLO
...

.XD-30...· g g"~ QUART....... ,$11 88
·
12 PACK CASE

Wehrung files for
mayor candidacy

,.;......--·Local briefs--Boat thefts investigated

MARATHON OIL
' ..... ,.99¢ QUART••••
$11 88 12 PACK CASE
10W30
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Bob. E vans F a.rms amo. ng··
'tov •nted com.panz·.es
.: .,-

Arrest ends B&amp;E investigation

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Supreme Court would be limited to
$225,000 and $750,000, State Sen- '
ate $200,000 and $500,000, and
Ohio House $50,000 and $200,000.
The committee vote came afler
majority Democrats push~
through 21 amendments of their
own and shot dowlillll but a hand·
. ful o~he 28 Republican amend·
ment offered in a session that
lasted ore than three hours.
"This is not a final definitive
position on campaign fi~ance
reform, " said Rep. Joseph
Vukovich, D·Youngstown, committee chairman. "It's a fJ£St step."
_ Republicans said they would
have preferred the bill a ~ intro·

Dillon first to file for Pomeroy Village post

Choose From Brands Like
Marathon, ·E:p:on, and Texaco Havoline ~otor Oil at City Ice· &amp; Fuel ·

Our Warehouse Located.
On Rt. 62 North
.Near Point :Pleasant

ihe other public defenders in the · tracted with Knight in January, hall) lind the courity's sha~e of
region. The two staff attorneys in 1990 for those services, the con- overhead· expenses for the reg1onal
the Athens regional office are also tract was si~ned in the limount of office.
available to the office in case of $30,000. Tins "year, the savings are · ,.. Knight, however; receives no
conflicts. .
anticipated to be even more dra- allowance for overhead. He must
Savings. for Meigs County under matic; The contract between the pay office rent, slaff salaries, sup·
the new public defender system Meigs County Commissioners and pl,jt:s .and equipment from his pub·
have been significant. In 1989, the re~ional public defender this lie defender salary ..Knight main'
which was the last year that the year wlll cOst the county $23,000. . lams a pnvate pracuce m addiUon
county paid individual attorneys for
That figure, according to to acting as .the county's public
assigned counsel fees, the co·unty Knight, covers both half of the con- defender, staling that he spends an
paid out nearly $47,000 for those tract price (the Ohio Public estimated half of his work time on
services, When the county con- · Defender's Office pays the other indigent ccriminal defendants.

·House to consider campaign
spending limitation bill

Save Money During Our Spring Oil Specials!
.

3 Section, 32 Pagea 25 cento
A MultiJMdlo Inc. Newa.,.per

Wednesday, Apr113,1991

Public defender Saves .Meigs taxpayers mohey

Department
official to head probe

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Val. 41, No. 242·

Copyrighted ,.,

R:r...filtLJrtl!

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Low tonight in mid-405.
Thursday, hi~h in mid-60s.
Chance or ram SO percent.

•

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at

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LOS ANGELES (UPI) - For·
mer Deputy Secretary of ·state
Warren Christopher has been
appointed to head a high-level citi·
zens' panel charged by Mayor Tom
Bradley to investigate the Police
Department and the Jssue of police
brutality.
.
• Formed in the wake Of the ·
videotaped Rodney King beating,
tJie commission ostensibly will be
independent from City Hall.
r"esponsible for raising its own
financing-from the private sector,
. but will be able to utilize the
mayor's subpoena power 10 inter· ·
view pocential witnesses:
"The time has come for a rea9Jned, objective, thorouah and con·
. • Sll'UCtive examination ol the struc·
ture and lhe operation of the Police
Department," Bradley said Monday in announcing the commis·
sion 's membership.
In addition, the seven-member
panel will be advised by recenlly
retired Assistant Police Chief Jesse ,
Brewer, noted criminologist James·-··
Q. Wilson anti former New York
· Police Commissioner Patrick Mur·
phy as it probes deparunent operations and devises possible reforms.
Patterned afrcr the Knapp Com. mission, which 20 years ago
probed corruption io the New York
Police Deparurient, the Christopher
Commission has been asked to sub·
mit an initial report within 60 io 90
~
days.
. .
..
-·"There has been a cnslS of con·
fideace in the Los Al1geles Police
t)eparlment in tile past few weeks
arisin&amp; out of ttie Rodner, King
beatin,, " Bradley said. ; I think
there 1S a need for us to restore
public confidence in the LAPD and
restore the prestige and morale of
• the men and women who malte up

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Countdown begins ·r or shuttle .Atlantis

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Ohio Lottery

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TEXACO iiAVOLINE
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counties unite to save jobs

of M.eigs 9ounty miners

Charges pending (!.gainst juveniles

Corrected court entry filed

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