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r

•

Page

10-The Dally Sentinel ·

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

. ...._

Monday, AprilS, 1991

Ohio Lottery

·~·HS junior

class dinner
play ,Saturday

.

'

Pick 3: 050
Pick 4: 0839
Cards : J.H, 3-C
J·D; J ·S
Low toDI1bt In SOs. Cbance ·or
raiD 50 percent. Partly cloudy,
Higb Wedaesday in ~s.

Page6
I

•

•.

l

at

I

•

I

PRACTICE FOR SHOW • Rehearul lor
tbe aauual raahlou abow, sponsored b7 tbe
Pumeroy Mercllall AIIIIOCiatlou, wu beld SDD·
. da7 alleruooa al Pomeroy Elemealary. Tbe
" 'how, "Pl!mero7: Heartlaud of America, FaSb·
., lou aDd M~ Revue," will be beld Friday at
., 7:30 p.m. at the scbool. Pictured are members or

Weather
~
South Cen!ral Ohio
; · Showers and thunderstorm s
likely Monday·night, with a low in
ihe low 60s. Chance of rain is 70
• percent. Showers and thunder. s10rms likely Tuesday, with highs
near 80. Chance or rain is 60 per- .
cent.
• · Obio extended forecast
Wedaesday througb Friday
· • A chance of showers Wednesday, with fair w·eather Thursday
liild Friday. Highs will be range
from the 50s 10 the lower 60s each
day. Overnight lows will range
from 45 to 55 early Wednesday,
and from 35 to 45 Thursday and
Friday mornings.

Pomero7 Cub Seoul Pack 2491111d Saacl7 Butch·
er, a member or C•oeaover Baud. 1'11e7 wiD open
the sbow wllb a presenlallou of lbe color's ud
"God Bless lbe U.S.A." Tlc:kets, $4 each, are lltiU
available from tbe Pomeroy mercbauls or at the
door tbe algbt or lbe show.
·

THE B.GWINNERS ·Taking bome lbe
Jll'aad prizes from tile Rrsl uaual Easter fill
bunt of tbe Middleport C0111mllllity Allocialillll
were Irma the left, Carl Buckle7, Middleport,
$15 lor lbe silver egJI, and Cbuckie Shamblia, ·

..

Meigs County EMS
responds to 17 calls

Middleport, $50 lor tbe golden egg, belnJI pre·
· senled cbecks by Mitcb Meadows, bunt cbalr·
man; Breads JohDSOD, tile mystery .bunny, aad
Rhoada Hoover, wbo wou tbe $20 lor guessing
tbe identity of the buDDy.

Cleanup dates
are announced

Stocks

Hospital news

Lottery numbers

i

Veterans'Memorial Hospital
SATIJRDAY ADMISSIONS ·
Ernest Wells, Middlepon; Victoria
Quillen. Racine; Leah Nease,
Racine; and John Loscar, Pomeroy.
SA TIJRDA Y DISCHARGE •
Clarence Potts.
.
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS Arthur Petrie, Middlepon; Allen
Dill, Sr .., Pomeroy; Ellen Wells,
Long Bottom; and Ralph Ours,
Chesler.
.
SUNDAY DISCHARGES
None.

Pick·3
039.
Ticket sales: $!,525,838. Payoff:.$297,608.50.
Pick-4
8169.
Ticket sales: $291,!09.50. Payoff: $119,400.
·
" ·cards
5 of hearts.
King of clubs.
5 of diamonds.
4 of spades.

Super LotiO ticket sales totaled
$3,334,262 and the tolal prize pay·OUt was $377,784 .
There also was no winner of the
$100,000 grand prize ill the accompanying Kicker game, which produced the win.ning combination:
248595.
But fi.ve tickets listed the first
five numbeis In exact order, which
pays $5,000; 47 tickets had the first
four numbeis, which pays $1,000;
476 had the fltSI three, which pays
$100; and 4,899 had the first two,
which pays $10.
Kicker ticket sales totaled
$548,186 and the prize payout total
was $168,590.

NOW OPEN FOR THE
~ SPRINt SEASON
Co~lete

Unt of

Yege~lt

and Bedding
Planh, Blooming and
Follat~ Hanging Bailkets,

Fruit and Flowering ''"'•

The Hartinger are.a in lower
Middlepoq_ has been targeted for
revitalization by Middlepon ViJ.
!age Council.
· ·
. Monday night Jean Trussell, the
:village 's housing specialist, was
authorized to proceed with an
. application for $600,000 in funding
from the Ohio Department of
Qevelopment for the project ·

.Mayor Fred Hoffriuui noted that
the s~&amp;te has $16 million available
for housing rehabilitation and infra·
structure Improvement projects
from which Middlepon is hoping
10 secure the grant. The projects are
competitive. Last year's housing
rehabilitation project was not funded by the slate.
·
·
Trussell advi.sed that $600,000
is the maximum in funding for
which the village can apply. She
displayed dl'aps showin$ the desig·
nated target area whtch covers

G.rant and Ash and all the streets in
' between, along wilh a smaller seclion extending from Ash 10 South
Second.
The target area encompasses
· 311 household units on 23 streets,
· according 10 Tru$Sell, with 79 percent of the households being ill the
low to moderate income level. She
said that'the General Hartinger target area has lhe highest concentra·
tion of low to moderate income
households and the IP'eatest need
· for housing rehabilitation in the vi!~

Shrubs, Azaleas,

...,''"'·

SYIACUSE, 01110 .
992·5776

Doll 9-5; Sun. 1·5

Forethought¢ is fztneral plan·
ning... ,before the need arises.

'

. Scrubbers are favored to
save Ohio's cord industry

Forethought® funeral planning is the new
way to assure complete funeral arrangements
so your family won't have to ma~e all those
decisions.
It's not difficult to do. .even the nan1e
Forethought says that this is ~he sensible. , .
and responsible plan.

Birchfield Funeral Hotne
Main Street

-.

Rutland,

.

Ohio

742-2333
JAMES C. BIRCHFIELD - Owner-Operator
ForelboooCbl luneral

plu•lal Ia lu•ded lh..Ouch pollelea from

Forelhoulhl LUe 1-raace Compan~

·Wh1ml
The J1m.

. WEEK OF THE YOUNG CHILD
Pomeroy MaJOr Richard Seyler aigDed a procla·
m11io1 Monday aflei'I)OOI Ia observauce or the
Week or tbe YouaJI Cbild, sponsored by the
Soullleru Obio Association for tbe Education ol

d,,
thlt hot,
gou ,, fl# to be
...
~ool

YOUDI Cblldreu aDd other local organlZIItlou.
Pictured witb Mayor Seyler are, l·r, Kevia
Saoulrer, -Jamie EUis, Viusou Martin aad ·Nicki
WUsoa.
.

I

General Dynamics seen
.cutting back on defense
NEW YORK (UPI) -The head
of General Dynamics Corp., the
nation's No. 2· defense contractor
and operator of a tank plant in
Lima, Ohio, says he would like 10
get out i:i the defense business and
will be culling hack on weapons
research, Wall Street analysts said
Monday.
.
.
"I personally would like to be
out of defense,·: General Dynamics
Chai~an Willia!D Anders told
securtty analysts m a New York .

II gou

Anders Wednesday night, confirmed the general thrust of the
ctWrman's remarks if 1101 the specific quote cited by Nisbet.
"I think he S&amp;ld that. He did,"
said Peter Aseritis, an aerospace
industry analyst at First Bostqn
C01p.
----,_ Another analyst, who asked to

d if maktng
eacher
boous police callsfior hel,
Haas

·-· - -·Area deaths _ _
Leigh Wood.
Graveside services will be 3
p.m . Tuesday at Beech Grove .
·• · Eloise Bolin Man~in, 68,Jor· Cemetery with Perek Siump offiCi·
mcrtr of Pomeroy, dted Monday, aung.
_
·Apri 8, 1991 at Overmlok Center
There will be no calling hours.
In Middleport, following an
Arrangements are being handled
Olltel1ded iUncss.
by Fisber Funeral Home in Middle·
~· · She was born in Harrisonville port.
'.an SepL I, 1922, the daughter of
· the late Joseph Humphrey and
Myrtle Belle Romine Bolin. She
wa1 1 homemaker and a retail
cletk.
Surviving are lbree sons, James
F. "Buteh" Walker, Sanrord, Fla.,
Jeff (Bonnie) Mankin, New Haven,
W.Va., and Kenneth (Julie)
Manldll, Cinc:innlti; two daughters,
Mn. JIJIICI (Sharon) Loulcs, Long
Bouom llld Mn. Dooaid (Shelly}
Wood, Middleport; three sisters,
Bcmlce Brown or Mt. Vernon,
CJenrude RicJinlon of Akron, and
Beuy VIDIDI of PoiiiCroy; eight
ppllldllllllc:bllhlkhn; OliO pell·grandaou;
_. te¥1111 nietlellllll qephews.
•Silo n1 preceded iii death by
four Jillen, ihree bocxlm llld her
lt•t. d, PFC LeTnl Walker, and a
1peclal granddaughter, Cbelsie

Eloise Mankin

COLUMBUS , Ohio (UPI)He ho~~s one of thiee required
The chairman of the Ohio Con- labOr pos•uons on the board. Three
sumers' Counsel governing board .COI_Isumers and three flll'!n represenbelieves Ohio •a coal industry is tallvea also are on the nme-member
"doollled" ihlecule. utility com- ~ board,
. .
. , ·' .
panics choose to lilt)' out Of slllle ·, ., • AI&gt;P offtiaals are decJdtng
coal rather than install costly scrul): .whether 10 switch to low-sulfur
bers
coal mined in the ,western pan or
~:If they don't scrub, the Ohio the United State~ or tli mstall .
coal industry Is doomed" Harold' scrubb~rs at the Gavm plant.
Erdos said Mooday.
•
. Installing the scru~bers would
Consumers' Counsel William allow AEP to conllnue ;to bu~n
Spratley has said Tepeatedly he Ohio's high-sulfur coal at tts Gavm
believes American Eleetric Power plant
.
should inslall the scrubbers at its
Instalh~~ the scrub~rs would
Gavin plant in Gallia County to cost lhe unlity $170 million a year
· comply with the federal Clean Air while buyin~ ~estern coal would
Act
cost $115 mtlhon annually , AEP
ErdOs, a United Mine Workers off'teials said.
official,
fact thl!t
h~ is
chainnan said
of thethat
counsel
govemmg
board was not the determining fac·
IOl in the agency's backing of the

~-Local

year. .
"We must attack this problem
on all fronts," Miller said, adding
that most of the murder victims
have been young black people.
"We must stop these kiUings,"
he aclded . ''Children are dying
before they have the chance ot live.
Our entire community should lle
outraged at this needless loss of
life."

Police said Charles Allen, 14,
was shot in the back during a
neighborhood dispute.
They said Allen and two or
three friends had been involved in .

an llf&amp;UDient with a neigbbor and
latef went 10 his apartment, where
they' were confronted by Tommy
Clyburn. ·,
Police said Clyburn fired one
shot, which killed Allen at 11 :45
p.m. Saturday.
.
,
The boys mother, Tina· Allen ,
,.td one or her son's frien1'5 told'·
her that Clyburn threw oqe boy
down the steps of his apartment
buidling and then pulled a gun.
"AU the other guys ran, anct --·
(Charles) was the last one running. ·
He got shot in the back,' • Allen
said.
·

chamber to· hold
·
d
.
h
•
•
.
1ea ers 1p seminar

:u=~r~~sw!i~:~i~~~~;:

remain unidentified, said: "Paul's County.
"We have done a very thorough
interpretation I would say is gener•
and detailed analysis,'' Spratley
ally on the mark."
Jerry Cantwell of Wertheim said. "The entire bOard has been
Schroeder said, "I didn't recall that part of iL He (Erdos) has followed
exact quote."
·
11 more closely than the others, but
But he·said the clear implication he's only one member."
of Anders' remarks was that the
Erdos said he did not try 10 .die· tate the consumers' counsel posiCon tinued on page 10
lion.
0
·'r
"I don't have any problems
.1..
. 1
QCCUSe
0
s~ing my piece, " Erdos said.
..
·
·
' We're not looking just a1 coal. ...
There's ~ot to be a balance
.··
between mmers and consumers and
dential Securities Inc.
b
·
·
. 1'
manufacwrers."
. . The St. Louis·b~se.~ defens~ ,
ATHENS , Ohio (UPI) - A
FBI agenlS suspect
may be
Erdos is a staff representative
gtant, whose molto IS A Stron.~ physical education te,.cher at involved in similadalse calls that for the international UMW
Company for Strong Country.
Athens High School for 17 years occurred in the past two years in assigned to Ohio. He said he
had 1990 sales of $10.2 billion, 85 has been released on $100 000 Athens, Columbus, Cincinnati and believes there is no conflict
percent of which was ill c!efense.
bond after allegealy broadcasting a Kentucky. said Edwin Boldt, a between his position as chairman
General Dynamtcs builds the F- bogus repon of an officer in dis, spokesman with the FBI 's Cincin· of the consumer's counsel board
. 16 Air Force fighter aircraft, Navy tress.
nati field office.
and as a UMW official.
•
,,.
nuclear submarines and the Army's .
James. A. Haas, 39. was arrested
Boldt said the FBI monitored
M·l tank and Is a. memJ:~er of th_e by the FBI in Slerling, Va., where Haas's transmission Friday before
team expected soon to wm the Air he and his family were attending a arresting him. The Federal ComForce contract for development and ham radio operators conference.. He munications Commission pinpoint·
p~uclion. of tl!e new $75·$.100 · was charged with a redeml count of ed his location. ·
~•Ilion Atr Advanced Tacucal
furnishing a false statement.
Boldt. said that Haas radioed the ·
Ftghter.
. .
Haas was released in Alexan- poli.ce department in Prince
Othe.r analysts, present at. the dria Va. where he was taken after William County, VL, abOut 10:30
three-hour dinner and meeting with his ~st. '
.
.
p.m. and claimed 10 be an officer
involved in a high-speed chase.
A t.ape recording provided
soum! efrects of squealing tires,
sirens and gunshots as Haas talked
10 the dispiltcher.
Boldt said "he'd say he was
shot ... then lhe radio went dead."
The Athens Police Department· .
Charges of operating a.moiOr vehicle while under the influence
will investigate to see whether
or alcohol were.filed against D. Michael MuUen, Pomeroy, followthere is any connection 10 prank
ing an accident on Lincoln Hill Sunday cveuing.
calls · it has received, it said in a
..,. Accordin$ to Chief of Police Gemld Rought, MuUen was ltavelstalemenL
mg up the htU when he went over a sfi4ht embanlanent and bit an ·
· Columbus police in June
abutment near the intersection of Rivervtew Drive. Rought reponed
received a Didio call for help from
that Mullen said he went off the road in order to avoid a collision
. a man claimin$ to be an officer
with a car going around the curve on the wrong side. There was
under automauc gunfire attack.
light ilarnaae to the MIIUeo vehicle.
.
· Sirens were blaring in the back·

~::.t~r~~~t;:e::a,:~~~~n~~ ·

T.H AT'S BIG! ·Bob aad Allee Tbompsou or Pomeroy ' '
. ' uueartlled dlls 3 Vl poud pal'llllp hi tbelr Rock SpriDp prden
•,. Jas1 week. Allee, pictured bere with tbe pal'llllp, uys !lie aiiCI Bob
ma7 eat It, but rean peeUag tb~ tblag may be a da7·lon1 job.

available for use only on owner•
Trussell said that a two phase
occupied houses, not rental units, project is being prop&lt;ised, the ftrs f
although the village does plan 10 demolition of the old building, and
apply for a grant for rental propeny the second , a program for actual
revitalization at a later time.
site development and down payThe required P!lblic hearing on ments on construction for minorithe Hartinger project was held i~ ties and low income pers911s.
conjunction with the council meet· ·
She advised that a contact has
ing, as was a second public hearing . been made with the owner of the
on the Fifth Street project. That ·old bakery building about purchis·
project, according 'to Trussell, ing the empty structure. If the
. ipvolves a section ne~r thll old building is for sale, then the village · ·
'Betsy Ross Bakery building which will proceed with an application f9r
is suilable for eight housing sites.
Continued on page 10

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) - A Ohio.
stale legislalOr concerned about the
''Ohio must pass a stiff gun
capital .city's rapidly rising murder control law," Mtller said. " Guns
!"le _Plans 10 draft gun-control leg- are far too accessible to childre11
islation.
·.
·
and it is because parents are totally ·
Sen. Ray Miller, D-Columbus, . and pathetically irresponsible.
said his proposal would requit:e a
The shooting death of a.14-yearseven· day waiting period for the old boy during the weekend was
purchase of any type of gun in Columbus's 49th homicide of the

Before the need arises ...

Call us today to learn how you too ·can mak e your
arrangements . .. ~'before the need
arises.
".
.
.

!age.
.
The project, if funded will also
include curb and sidewalk infrastructure work on Beech and Pearl
Streets, Trussell pointed oul. She
IIOied that 10 comply with the Ohio
Department of Development a
rehabilitation specialist will have 10
be hired.
Deadline for filing the appllc:ation is April26.11 takes six 10 eight
wec:t for·final action_on the applica!ton, Trusse.ll satd. She also
poiDted out that the funds would he

··$en .. Miller of Columbus to i
draft gun-control legislation·

Hubbard's Gr1111house

· '

.

By Cbarleue Hoetlicb
SenliDel
News Staff
.

lhedo.ndrans oncl

0

1 Soollon, 10 Peg.. 25 cento
A Mu!Umodla Inc. No,..,_per

Tuesday, Aprll9,1991

Hartinger area .targeted.for ·revitalization
.

. No one claims super lotto prize

CLEVELAND (UPI) - The $4
million
jackpot in Ohio's Super
Meigs County Emergency Med- to Bucktown Road for Shirley Lotto drawing went unclaimed dur·
ical Services responded 10 17 calls Abels. She was taken 10 Veterans. in$ the weekend, boosting the top
for assista11ce between Saturday At 10:33 a.m ., Tuppers Plains pnze to $8 million for Wednes·
squad went to Texas Road for day'sgame.
afternoon and Monday morning.
At 3:02 p.m., Syracuse squad Allen DiU. DiU went 10 Holzer.
None of the tickets sold for the
At 2:15p.m. on Monday, Syra· weekend
went to Nease Road for Leah
drawing matched all six
Nease, who was taken 10 Veterans cuse squad went 10 tbe fire depart· of the winnin~ numbers, a lottery
Memorial Hospilal. At4:16 p.m. , ment and tranSJ)Oned Paul Flowers spokesman S81d Sunday. The winMiddleport was dispatched to to Veterans. At 3:37 p.m., Racine · ning numbers were: 20, 21. 27, 29,
Beech Street for Elmer Blair. Blair squad went to DeWiu's Run for 39and45.
was taken 10 Holzer Medical Cen- Hannah Van Meter, and transP,Mf
However, 48 players picked five
ter. Middleport squad went to ed h~r 10 Vetetans. At 3:32 p.m., of the numbeis 10 win $1,910 each,
Overbrook Center at 4:47p.m., and Syracuse squad went to the fire and 3,144 players selected four· of
took Ada Newell 10 Veterans. At department fc. Jeff Gilliland, •nd the numbers 10 win $91 apiece.
5:04 p.m., Pomeroy squad went 10 transported him 10 Veterans. At
Hamilton Street for David Darst, 5:!6 p.m., Chester ftre department
.
who was transponed to Pleasant went 10 10 Old Forest Road for an
. Beverly Roush of Pomeroy ts a Valley Hospital. At 11:05 p.)D., auto fire. At 8:40 p.m., Pomeroy
diughter of the late Helen D. John- ... Pomeroy squad went 10 State Route squad was sent to Wright Street for
'
SQn Eblin, 75, who died on April4
143 and took Norma Snyd~r to Pearlie Jewell. Jewell was taken to Sutton Cemetery
The Sutton Township Trustees
Jl her home on Wolf Pen Road, O'Bieness Memorial Hospilal. At Veterans .. At 10:33 p.m. Rutland
request
that all old flowers be
:Pomeroy . Her name was uninten· .7:34a.m. on Sunday, Middleport unit was dispatched to Star Hall
removed
from cemeteries in Sutton
ti.?n~lly omitted froJ!I a listing_ of
squad responded to &amp;ace Street for Road for Walter ·Garnes, who
Township
before mowing begins
~ umvors m the obttuary whtch
Arthur Petry. Petr}' was taken to refused treatment.
on
Wednesday.
On Mopday at 3:48 a.m., Rut@peared Friday in The Daily Sen·
Veterans. At 8:29 p.m., Middleport
· · .
tinel. Funeral services for Mrs. squad went 10 State Route 124 for land squad went to Meigs Mine 2 Chester Cemetery
Chester
Township
will
be clean~blin were held Saturday at 1 p.m.
Troy Qualls, who refused ireat· . for David Reeves. He was treated
ing
I
cemetery
grounds
after
al the Ewing Funeral Home. She
ment.
On Sunday at but not transported. At 6:21 a.m.,
was buried in Miles Cemetery.
!0:13a.m., Racine squad was sent Syracuse sqUid went 10 Mile Hill Wednesday and those wanting to
Road for Twila Clark who was save flowers and other items should
'
· treated but not transpOftCd. At 9:18 remove lhem by Wednesday. The
a.m., Rutland squad was SCIIt to trustees request that in the future
Rutland Elementary School.for flowers that can·be .hung on the
Anthony Pary. He was uansported monument be purchased so that
mowing may be done more effi10 Ve1enms.
ciently.
Olive Cemetery
The Olive Township Trustees .
Am Ele Power ......................29 1/4
will begin cleaning the cemeteries .
Ashland Oil .......... .......... .... 30 5/8
after Wednesday. Anyone wishing
AT&amp;t ................................... 34 1/4
10 keep flowers should have them
Bob Evans ........:................... 19 1/2
removed by that dale.
Charming Shop.....................J4 3/1!
Sa!Bbury Cemetery
City Holding ........................ .14 1!2
Salisbury Township will be
Federal Mogul ......................15 518
cleaning.cemetery grounds after
Goodyear·T&amp;R .....................22 3/4
April I 5 and those wanting 10 save
Key Centurion ............................ 13
flowers and other items should
Lands' End ...........................22 1/2
remove them by that date·. The ·
Limited Inc.........·•.......•• ~ ..•..~••:....27
trustees request !hat in the future ·
Multimedia Inc .....................73 1/2
flowers that can be hung on the
Rax Resraurarlt •.•••.•..•..•••......•....... )
monument be purchased so 'ihat
Robbins&amp;Myers ...................26 3/4
mowing may be done for efficientShoney's lnc .........................16 518
ly.
Star Bank ..............................211/4
Wendy Inl'l. ........................ 10 1/8
WonhingtOn Ind...................24 7/8

'

..

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio;

Name omitted

t

•

Overbrook Center in Middlepon
will be the site of "Leadership .
2000: A Search for Excellence in
the Public Seetor", a leadership
seminar for Meigs County community and buainess leaders.
The seminar begins on Wednesday at 3 p.m:, and will last unlil 7
p.m., with dinner beJ!It included. in
theSIOcostoftheprogram.
Described as "a comprehensive '
personal development program for
existing and emerpng leaders in
local communities, the seminar is
a joint effon of the Meigs County
Cooperative Exlension Ageney and
theChamberofCommerce.
· The tirogram wiD include. information regarding effective sliltegies for rural leaden, leadership
styles and siriUs and techniques 10
motivate co-workers and con-

•

·
stituents in ~e local community.
· Cooperallve Extension Agent
Cindy Oliveri will kick off the pro.
§ram with a presentation called
The Nme Forces Reshaping
America", followed by "The Power
of Public Leadership" and "The .
~CI!," Factor" Dealing· with Diverstty , both from David Boothe.
In the evening, the seminar's
keynote speaker. Sam Crawford
wi_ll address the group with "A
Bnghter Future for Rural Alnerica:
Critical Success Factors".
According to Meigs Countv
Chamber Director Elizabeth
Schaad, re¥isltation forms and feci ·
are still being accepted, and should
be turned iniO Schaad at the chambet office, located in the Carnegie
Building at 200 East Second Street. ·

briefs--·--

Man charged after accident

TUXEDOS ••••••••-'•• Starting At $2995
RECEIVE $$QOO

Off ALL REGULARLY PRICED

PROM FORMAL WEAR

FABRIC.
SHOP
.110 WISY MAIN
POIDOY, OHIO
992·2214
•

j

'

Representative to visit Pomeroy

On Wednesday a representative fro111 Congressman Clarence
Miller's office wiU conduCt an open door session from II a.m 10 I
p.m. at the Meigs County Courthouse. Pomeroy. Anyone with qlles·' lions concerning the Fedeml government is invited 10 stop by 10 discuss them with the representative.
·
Conli11ued ou P•le 10
\til

~.in atte~pl to identify the
caller, tbe diapalrher lllOk an on-«ir
roll call over each of lbe depart·
. . . DINNER
• neae
of
ment's four radio fieQuencics.
tbe Ea1tera Niall
Ctau or 199Z are
The caller would not identify
him~elf.
.
amoaa lb011e pertor.~a In tbe Jaalor Clul'
dluiJer tbealel' prtHIIIailoa of "Sklaued Alive''
No char1es have ' been filed
againat Haas ,In Franklin County. ~· ou Satarda7. Tile pla7 lieldlll at 8 p.m. aDd lk:k·

••IMrl

.

.(~

ail lie Jllll.t! •• at tM .
4oor lor $3.511. Pktut ed, left 10 rlpt, are Jeff
Dunt, Elbabelb La-. Jolla Holilll(lel', Jaale .
Brauaoa. Tile pl17 11 uader lbe dlrecliDil or
Nallc7 Mor1l 1e7.

ttl lor tile pla7 alolle

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~ . . . . . . . , . . . ..... ~ .··.

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1\iHday, Aprll8, 1891

.. .... - . - ... . . _. ... ;. ... .. ·-·~

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The Dally Sentinel-Page

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

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Commentary

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The Daily Sentinel

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy~lddleport, Ohio
TUesday, Aprll9, 1991

·.

tb: . .

ily SCOTr ZUCKER
.
UPI Sporll Writer
. . A C0!J111.c of off-season acquisi·
uons paid immediate dividends for
the Kansas City Royals and the
BostOn Red Sox.
The Royals· Kirk Gibson and
Boston's Jack Clark each gave
quick returns 10 their new clubs on
Monday. .
.
Gillean had a Diplc l!ld an RBi
single in the Royals' 4·2 triumph
over Cleveland. But Clark had an
even ~igger day, hitting a grand
S\Bm to lead lhe Red Sox to a,6-2
vactory over lhe Blue Jays.
.
Ro~er Clemens, .pil£hing while
allJlCB)mg _a five-game suspension,
allowed JUSt_one run in eight
· mmngs, pacang the defending

..

a

Students appreciate visits

.1
·
nueTSOn
and D
. ale 'IJ:
J'an AH
u'Q

} QC

of one of liis favorite songs, Lee
Greenwood '.s "God Bless the
USA."
.
.
al
. "War .1s an mteose1Y person · • ·
emotional
experience
for everyone
that is involved
in it." Schwankopf
has said. "And , 0 u know you have
' th fro
ha
to draw your stteng
m w tever sources you draw your sttength
from ."
Those who know Schwarzkopf
ex peel him to throw his great·
weight into a cause, but !hey don't
think that cause will be politics. He

.
On~. Malcli2S, the Rutland PTO held it's annual basketball banqoet. Everydling looted so
·great and went so nicely thai I
wanted to publicly compliment
those who worked so hard to make
it happen. .
The commiuee in charge of the
banquet was he!lded by Dennis
McKinney and Robin Dugan, both
of whom worked veryk hard to
make things nice for the ltids and
their famili~s. Sherri McKinney,
Mary McKmney and Betty Van
Mette spent an exhausting day dec·
orating !he gym, and I must say.
I've never seen it look better.
Michael Bartrum, a native of
Rutland and a graduate of Meigs
Hi.h School, brought his Marshall
Umversity' football c:nach to speak

to the kids. Coach Gayle donated
his time btanse he feels an urgeD·
cy to incourage tids to study harder
and 10 overcome peer pressure to
use tobacco, especially smokeless
tobacco.
There
yet others who helped
make the banquet a success ...
Pomeroy Eagles Club; American
.Legion Post #467; Rutland Civic
Center, Area busines$e8 who made
. donations; Volunteers who stayed
to clean up; and Fellow PTO officers.
It was 8(ellt to' see people work
together so well 10 achieve a com'mon goal! I just wanted these people to know their efforts didn't go
unnoticed
·

are

C~McMillin

Rutland

. • President

~~~:S~! ~i~~O:Cpo~.b~}

the Nez Perce .Indian tribe. For
years, Chief Joseph outfought and
outmaneuvered superior federal ·
forces. He never surreode!W. Then
one day, he simply quit and
declared with finality: "I will fight ·
no more forever."

ANoTHeR wacKo
CoMMie PiNKo ·
KNee-JeRK

gt.eeDiNG HeaRT

aNTi·AMeRJC~N

BUBgLe·Heape£&gt;
LiBeRal STaNDS . UP
FoR GUN CoNTRol..

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By ARNOLD SAWISLAK
UPI Senior Editor
WASHINGTON - Now we will get to see if that old Reagan magic
still works.
. The Conner president was back in Washington just before Easter to
mark lhe lOth.anniversary of the attempt on his life by John W. ainckley
Jr:. and in lhe course of his mmarks at the George Washington University
hospital RCBP.D strongly endorsed le,islation that would establish a
seven-day wmting period fa- people buymg hand guns. . .
This legislation is not new. It has been a No. I priority for gun control
advocates for years and a No. I target for the potent n•tive effons of ihe
National Rifle Association, of which Reagan as a long11111e member.
· The last ~ the legislation came before Congress was in June 1988
when Reagan still was in the White House. Even though the pn:sident was
quoted at the time as endorsinJ a state law requiring a waiting period
before buying a pistDI, his admmistration was on record as opposed to a
federal law doing the same thing and the measure lost by 46 votes in the
House of Representatives.
Now, the legislation is back on the congressional agenda and is expected 10 come before lhe House again around Memorial Day.
The lineup of vOleS is said 10 be close. One congressman guessed it
was short 10 01" 12 votes of passage before Reagan's dedaration, while a
lobbyist for the bill said there was enough suppon 10 pass it even before
the endorsement. Both said lhe Reag&amp;l) announcement would be worth a
signifiCBIIl number of favorable votes fc!r the bill.
So far, this account has not mentioned Sarah Bmdy,1the wife of Reagan •s former press secretary and the chief public advocate of the bill since
1985. The measure. in fact, has become known as "the Brady bill."
Jim Brady was shot in the head in lhe attack oo Reag&amp;l) and was left ,
crippled. He remained on the White House roster as press secretary until
the day Reaj!an left office and never got into lhe controversy over gun
control, even~ though his wife was leading the fisht foe the legislation.
Sarah Brady was quoted as saying Reagan privately endorsed the waiting period bill in a telephone caliiO her back m 1988, but she did not ask
him then to gp public-with his opinion. Even though he was a lame duck
president at the lime, _it is a good guess that his suppon would haye_
brought in lhe votes needed to pass-it and then some.
But Reagan is no looger president. and as a NRA lobbyist was quoted
as saying before lhe George Washington ~h. "The fanner president
doesn't sign bills and he doesn't veto them. • What that means, in an indirect way, is that Reagan no longer has the kind of power he had from
198110 1989.
. George Bush is the man with the signing or ve10 pens now and he
seems 10 want to make a deal with Congress on major ariti-crime legislation JOllllp('MI• to diop his opposition to lhe Brady bill. Bush has a lot of
clOut now. but liberals in Congress may stiU balk at the administration

According to a study conducted incurred in obtaining their medical in this state for not more than three
by the Association of American education. In return for the repay· years prior.to submitting an appliMedical CoUoges only 26% or all ment of their medical education, cation to participate in this pro:
graduating medical students physicians who participated in the gram.
According to the Ohio Depanplanned 10 practice medicine in a Health PrOfessions Loan Repay·
rural area. This pas1 week the Ohio ment Program would be required to ment of Heallb, there are 50 counSenate took action aimed towards provide primary care services in an ties in Ohio that currently have a
alleviating this shortage of health ·area of the state that has a shortage shortage of primary care physicare in rural Ohio. Sel)ate Bill 83 of family practitioners for a mini· cians. Nearly 1.5 miUion people in
was passed by the Ohio Senate to mum of twO years and a mW,Ouni all or part of these 50 counties are
encourage physicians to provide of four years. This program \f~uld , identified as not having proper
primary care services in areas of be' admmistered through the Ohio medical assistance. It is clear that
1 some action must be taken to proOhio that have a shonage of health Depanillent of Health.
ptofessionals.
·
Doctors who parti,cipate in this vide adequate and quality health
This legislation would create the program must be enrolled in their care for those parts of Ohio that are
:tfealth Professions Loan Repay- final year of an accredited program under served and under staffed
ment Program, under which the in a primary care specialty, such as wilh qualified heallh care profesOhio Student Loan Commission family pnJCtitioner and must also sionals.'
Providing primary care services,
would conttact with a primary care have received their certificate to
physician for repayment of their practice medicine from the State such as health education, disease
expenses incwred in obtaining their Medical l;loard. The doctor mus1 preveniion and diagnosis of chronic
medial education. In return for the also be in the pmctice or medicine health problems, to under-served
areas c:ould result in reduced medirepayment of their expenses

Teacher's trial has wide implicattons

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.Nicklaus. eyes seventh gre.en jacket this weekend
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By DAVID MOFFIT
That Nicklaus was even playing. .three years in a row since Peter ning in 1980 arid 1983~ Bernhard :
UPI Sports Writer
at all was a surprise. The week Thomson of Ausualia did so at the · Langer of Germany in l118S, Sl!ldy i
· . AUGUSTA, Ga. (UPI) _ Sud· before the Masters he i11.variably British Open in 1954-55-56.
Lyle of England in 1~88, and FaJdo ! .
ddenly, Jack Nicklaus winning a hones his game wilh extra padice
"It's
something
lhat
would
be
the past two years: ·•
·
seventh Masters doesn't seem quite · at lhe Augusta Nalional course: 1 •
great to achieve," Faldo said. "But
. "~ shouldn't be surprising," I
such a longshot · ·
.
Before his victory in Scottsdale, there •s nQt that much pressure Fl\ldo SBid. "Our EllfC!P.CBO contin- :
Nicklaus; who last won the . Nicklaus was listed as a 25·1 shot because it's nor like ~ou expect to ·gent has gotten steadaly stronger ·
· NEW YORK (UP!) - Major "From the umpire"s point of view
Masters in 1986 - his las\ non- 'to win the Maslell, tying him for ·do lhese kind of thangs. We all over the years. Our top golfers can
lea~ umpires a:eached a four-year the CCOI)omic cOnsiderations were
coottact agreement wilb the Ameri· · very irnJIOI'IBIIL From the leagues' senior triumph - enhanced his 21st on the liSL The favorite, at 7- (ioil!t toward the major champi- hold their own .with any ol the Othcan and National leagues l&gt;{onday, point o( view, while lhe economic chances this weekend when he 2, wa~ Englishman Nick Faldo, onships. The Masters IS the first of ers.,,
Weather, which has not been too ·
hours before the start of a .new sea· considerations were irnpMant. I'm overcame a 12-shot deficit 10 win who will attempt this week to lhe year, so ·it's time to give it
everything
you've
got"
·
the
PGA
Senior
Tradition
at
Scousbecome
the
rirst
to
golfer
to
win
son.
cenain the non-economac considerkind to the Augusta National in
tiuee straight Maslas. .
Eighty-nine golfe:s are expected recent years, coorperated this lime
Because the dispute was settled ations were at least 'equally impor· dale, Ariz.
"I didn't think 1 could make up ·
Jose-Maria Olazabal of Spain, at to play ill the four-day tournament and early arrivals found the lush
so late, not all lhe umpires made it . tant They wem demanding a numto their-scheduled Opening Day · ber of ·concessions from the that much ground." Nicklaus said 5· 1, and Greg Norman of Australia. · with lhe purse in excess of last fairways Dimmed by full-blooming
after shooting 66-67 in the final at 7-1, were also among the year's $1.25 million.
assignments. panlcularly for after- um~· association.
azaleas.
Althougb Gary Player (1961,
noon games. Non-union crews
'It was a·very long, intense two rounds. "I'd never dOne that in favorites with two-time U.S. ~
The II th green, whe~e Fald~
worked the day games 81 Balti- negotiations that sometimes were more than 30 years of pbiying golf, champion Curtis Sttange the bagli~ 1974, 1978) was lhe only foreign
won both his Masters in sudden·.
more, Kansas (:1ty, Detroit and the bitter. I wasn't surprised it broke so I had no reason to thinlc 1 could· est 18ted American at 6-1.
· winner in the fust 43 Masters, fordeath, was washed away by floodi'jew Yark Mets.
off. From the beginning, because of do it now. I didn't think 1 could .
Faldo also could become the eigners have won six of the last ll
waters last October and had to be
farst golfer to win lhe same major . with Seve Ballesteros of Spain win· comP,le!ely rebuilt
The settlement averled what the climate that exists-in baseball . catch anybody~"
would have been lhe lllhpires' sixth today, I was pessimistic we would
. ' It's
very ·fractionally
work stoppage in 21 years.
reach an agreeinent wilbout a long
changed," Faldo said. "It looks
The umpires refused to work the work stoppage, and the ract we
like the front of the green has a hair
last two days of spring training and we~e able 10 r.each an agreement
more break. Apart from that, it'$' ·
· contended the club owners were this morning is a tribute 10 Bob's
pretty impressive."
prepared to lock lhem out if a con- tenacity and persistence, ·I guess
. · Said Ballesteros: "When yow'
ttact were not reached by Opening some tenacity and persistence on
know a green has been relluill', '
Day. Major league baseball was m~ own part as well, and to a ceryou're always keepmg an eye alit~ ·,
By CHUCK KLONKE
two goals. .
.
.
Gino Cavallini scored with 1:21 tie closer on it. Because it's new •·
prepared to use amateur umpires · I81D degree a sophistication oil the
UPI Splll1s Wriler
Red Wangs rotk•e Keuh left to cut the Red Wings' lead to the green is a little softer than ii':
for as long as the stalemate lasted.
part of the umpires. I think they've
The St. Louis Blues found out Primeau ~llii!IPCI! a 1': tie ~t 1:12 4-2, but Miller scored his second used 10 be."
According to the basic agree- reached a stale now where they
'·
ment that will extend dJrou&amp;h 1994, understand that collective bargain· that it's going to take mom than 40 of the thtrd per_aod wath has ftrst goal of the game and third of the
Gene Sarazan, at 89 the oldest .
umpires will receive a befty salary ing negotiations are negotiations minutes_of hockey 111 beat the . playQff ~oal ..Pa:Jmcau ~k a pass playoffs into an empty net while living Masters champion (l93S) •
fran:' Mike Sillingcr, spli~ the St. Detroit was shorthanded with 18 and an hOnorary starter lhe ~~ 10 ·:
increase, an extra week of vacation and there is give and take and it's Detroit Red Wings.
·
·"We
played
well
&amp;he
farst
two
Louas ~fe~ and ~ m alone · seconds to go.
and better retirement, life inaurance not all .take."
·
years, says this could be has final: '
periods
and
that's
the
wa~
we
have
on
goahe v-,tRiendeau.
Detroit's penalty-killing played trip to Augusta. Sarazan and three-···
and medieal benefits.
From a previous range of
It was the ftrst N~L playoff. a key role in the game, holding the time champion .Sam Snead, who' '
. In turn, the Major League $41,000 to $105,000 in the old 10 play the.whole next game," said
defenseman
G!lrlh
Butcher
Monday
g~~e
for both Primeau and Blues Scoreless in eight chances.
Umpires Association relinquished agreement, umpire salaries now
will be 79 next month, will play' ;
night
after
Detroit
scored
four
S!llf~ger.
"Our penalty-killers didn't give several holes Thursday before the' ·
to the leagile offices the unrestrict- start at a mirilinum of $60,000 with
f took a pass from Stevie them many scoring chances" said
ed right to select umpires for all $175,00 at the top level. In addi· third-period goals to beat the Blues
regular field tees off.
·•
5-2
and
take
a
2-1
lead
in
their
(Yzerman)
looked up and there was Red w·
head
hB ' M
postseason games. and also forfeit- tioo, there is a $20.000 postseason
At
the
other
end
of
the
spec-"
'
Keith," Sillin ~ said. "All I lu!d ray. mgs
coac ryan JU·
ed its pay for exhibition games.
pool ·that will be awarded to each fust-round series.
20-year-old
U.S.
Amateur
ttum,
Center Adam Oates ·echoed to do was get~~ lhe puck. He did
The Blues jumped ahead 1-0 at
"We would like to present umpire with six or more years of
Phil Mickels.on, still an
the hard work. .
the 11-minule mark of the second champ
major league baseball a,t its finest service and the crew chief will Butcher's thoughts.
amateur
but winner of this year's :
"We just didn't execute," he
. Pnmcau_saad he had a lot _of period on Bob Bassen's fii'St playand that includes having the fmest make $6,000.
PGA
Tucson
Open, arrived Sunday
umpires in the world," said ComDoug Harvey, with the most said. "We played 40 minutes and ume to decade w!mt he :-vas gomg off goal, but Miller pulled the Red for his fust Masters.
to'!? as he brok~ m_on ~aendeau.
Wings into a tie at 15:19 of the.secmissioner Fay Vincent. in Arling- seniority of umpires, will earn forgot about the third period."
"My biggest thrill being here is
Monday •s game was a contrast
Your fii'St msunct IS 10 shoot. and period.
ton, Texas, before the~ met $201,000, according _to Phillips.
just
playing the golf course," said
In olher ~ames Monday night,
the Milwaukee Brewers. 'We are Tlijs includes $175,000 in salary, to Saturday's 3-2 victory by the but I held on to the puck .~d ~left
glad. they are baCk to wort. Aside $20,000 in the post-season pool Blues, who scored all their goals in the bottom corner open. Primeau&lt; Vancouver napped Los Angeles 2-1 Mick"elson, a junior at Arizona ·
the third period to overcome a 2-0 SBid:
.
,
in overtime, Edmoqtqn edged C~ . . State. Forget lite oompetition, for- ,
from lhe economic issue, the mosl and $6,000 as a crew chief.
·,
Jtmmr: Carson and defense man gary 4-3 and Chicago stopped Min- get the tournament"
important thing was that we wanted
Amon¥ other benefits, umpires . , lead by DetroiL
''The
biggest
difference
tonight
·
Steve
Cht&amp;Sson.scored
31
seconds
nesolll6·5
·
·
-Because
of
a
ruling
by
the
PGA
:
to have control of the postseaSOn.
wiD receave three weekS of vaca'
Tour
that
will
allow
him
to
retain
Canu~ks 2, Kings 1 (OT)
"Now the postseason and lion instead of.two, a cost of living was that we played a better third ap~rt midway throu_g,h the third .
At
vancouver, · British two-year exemption into pro events
World Series wall be pn perfor- increase in the pension, a 100 per- period than St. Louls did," said pennd 10 boost Detrml s lead to 4·
Colum!&gt;ia, Cliff Ronning scored beginning in lale 1992, Mickelson
mance only, which is the way it cent widow benefit, an increase in Detroit's Kevin Miller, who scored I.
should have been. •'
life insurance to a tolal of $550,000
'
'
both goals including the game win- decided to re&amp;urn for his senior year
Richie PhiWps, aoomey for the with an accidental $100,000 policy,
ner at 3:12 or avenime to give the of college. He expeciS to use his
umpires' union, and Robert Kheel. lifetime medical payments, an
Canucks a 2-1 lead in their Smythe current exemptions to play in tiJl: ,
Memorial, 'the U.S. Oj)Cn and dae ·
representing the two leagues, met increase in disability to $60,000 a .
British Open later this year.
.,
Jton-stop from 4 p.m. EDT Sunday year from $48,000 and an increase
Last
year's
top
amateur
in
the
,
to 7:30a.m. Monday. The official in expense allowance to $185 a
·
·
·
Ronning took a loose puck in the
Masters,
300-pound
Chris
Patton,
.:
signing of the contract came at day.
By U_nited Press International
missing two games with an eye goalmouth off a Dana Mwzyn shot
tried
to
turn·
pro
after
losing
tQ
.12.:12 p.m. in the law offices of
They do sacrifice. the $150 a
The San AniOnio Spurs. behind problem, had 27 pants for Denver.
and backhanded the winner high
Mickelson
in
lhe
U.S.
Amatuer,
but
Willkie Farrand Gallagher, of game they earned for exhibitions. Sean Elliott's 26 pomts and 24
Jau 111, Maaie 95
·over 8n off-balance Kelly Hrudey
which Kheel is a partner.
retroactive to this spring. and the from David Robinson, Monday
Karl Malone scored 34 points .from close in. Canucks goaltender failed to make it through the PGA ..
"On Salurday we broke off the umpires rio longer are assured of beat the Golden State Warriors and pulled down 12 rebounds 10 Kirk McLean, who_was out fo~ ';he Tour qualifying schonl.
"I've always been down every
negotiations and I felt it was being assigned to playoff or World liS-lOS in San Antonio. increasing lead the Utah Jazz to a 111-95 last 14 . games ~llh tendmms.
year
to watch a prac1ice round," .
improbable, if not impossible, that Series games on a rotating basis.
·
their Midwest Eli vision lead over homecourt victDry over the Orlan- · stopped 30 shots.
we would ever reach an agreement
"I'm very pleased the negotia- Houston 10 I 1/2 games.
Pauon
said. "But I don't know ir I.
do Magic. Rookie Dennis Scott led
OUers 4, Flames 3 .
can
live
with being there and not :
witbout a long, bitter strike," lions are completed," Kheel said.
In other games, Atlanta beat the Magic with .26 points. Otis
At Edmon'?n• Albena, Joe MurPhillips said . "But Bob and I "The leagues have always relt the Wasbington 105-94, Utah beat Smith scored 21 points and Scott phy s~pped 10 lhe gamc:-wmning being able to play. But I'll be back.
Someday. I know I'll be back. •'
decided it would be in everybody's umpires should be compensated · Orlando 111-95 and Seattle beat Skiles added 20.
•
S,oal wu!d4 seconds left m regu!abest interests if we reopened the fairly and equil!lbly. We think it's a Denver 118-112.
Orlando, corning off a home win . uon 10 lift the Oil~ to a _2- I senes
talks."
good contract ·ror us. It does con- · · A 13-2 spun midway through over Boston was outscored 33-22 . lead over Calgary tn thear Smythe
· Stressing the intensity of the tain significant concessions to us, the fourth quarter _ also spurred in the finat Period. The Maaic is 3- . Division semifinal series. G!IJDe _4
SPRI NG VAllEY CINEMA
negotiations, Phillips pointed 10 a which we're very pleased the asso- by Robinson and Elliott_ cement- 21 when it fails to score 100 points of tbe best-~f-se~en senes as
446 4524
big hole in the wall of the confer- ciation was prepared to make."
ed the San Antonio viclory, the and the Jazz are 41-6 when they Wednesday mghtm Edmonto~­
ence room, explaining be had
fourth in a row for the Spurs.
score more than 100 points and 34- Murphy loot a feed from Cratg
tossed a chair there during the
The
game
was
close
most
of
the
6
when holding an llpJIOIICIII under Simpson and fired a 20-footer
Sports briefs
night.
·
.
way and San Antoni.o held only a 100
through the pads of Mike Vernon.
"It's very difficult 10 say just
twopoirit
lead
witll
four
minutes
Utah,
whic.,has
one
of
lhe
best
B~ckhaw!'&amp; 6, Norf:b Stars 5
Golf
how much money was involved,"
gone
in
the
fmal
period
before
their
home
records
m
the
NBA,
is
now
.
At. _BloommgtDn, Minn., JereJ?~Y
Greg Norman will sllbot a round
Phillips said or the settlemenl.
decisive
run.
31·5
in
the
Salt
Palace
and
has
won
Rot:'uCk
~at 6; 15 of the third
April 22 at Palm Beach Gardens,
Chris
Mullin
scored
20
and
Tim
'
five
straighL
penod
to
gtve Chacago a comeFla His score will be the. standard
Hardaway
had
19
for
the
Warriors.
Hawks
105,
Bullets
94
from-behin~
~ictory ~nd ·a ?~e·
for all golfers across the country on
· The Daily Sentinel
who
lost
their
second
Slraight
At
Atlanta,
Dominique
Wilkins
gam_e
edge·~
us Noms DIVISIOn
National Golf Day on Aug. 17.
game.
scored 29 points and Duane FerreU semifinalal senes. TheoaiBiacfrom~~ks,
. (USPII·If. . . )
·
Soules
118,
Nuggets
112
added a careez high 20 poiniS M011- w00 ~ got _two II s
ve
A Dt•lo... olllloltlmellla, be,
Horse Racing
In
Seattle,
Shawn
Kemp
scored
day
night
to
lead
the
Atlanta
Larmer
m
theucom.
e
back
from
a·5·
A second jockey remained in
Publllhed every afternoon, Monday
critical condition from the spill that II of his 17 points in the fourth Hawks to a IOS-94 triumph over ·- ~ fust pentX! defictt,lead the be~
through Friday, lll Court St .• Po·
meroy, Olllo, by the Ohio Valley Pubkilled apprentice Rodney Dickens quarter, leading the Seattle Super- the WashingiDD Bull~ts in Allanta: - of seven senes 2-1. Game four IS
llahtag Company/Multlmedla, Inc.,
Atlanta got 13 points from Wednesday m Minnesota.
at Sporuman's P81t Sunday. Fran- Sanies 10 a 118-112 victory over
Pom..-oy, Olllo 4:1769, Ph. 992-21:16. Sethe
Denver
Nuggets.
Webb
and Moses Malone came off
cisco Torres, 21, was listed in criticOnd cl11s 'pottq:e pAid at Pomeroy,
•,
-The
dereat
was
Denver's
rifth
the
bench
to SC&lt;WC II. Pervis EIH,
Ohio.
cal condition wilh a puliCillred lung
al Loyola University Medical Cen- straight overall and 16th in a row · son scored 26 points and lAdell
~V ,., "MembPr: United Fret• Jnternattonal,
Inland Dally Preoo ANoclatlon ODd t~
ter in Maywood, W. Jockeys Scou on the road. Sesale has won five of Eackles finished with 18 to lead
Ohio N.wsp•s: A.laoelatlon. National
Miller and John Arens IUffered less its lasJ six including a 124-117 vic· Washington, which was without
Advertlllnl
retentatlve, Bnnham
tory in Denver Sunday.
leading scorer Bernard King. The
severe injuries in the accidenL
NewiJiape&lt;
eo, 733 Tlllrd Avenue,
The
Nuggets
played
witHout
Bullets
lost their foUrth ~- on
New York, New Yortc 111017.
Lllw
Blair Rasmussen, Chris Jacli:son the road and the sixth of thear last
POSTMASI'ER: Send addnlo chon ...
A
judge
in
Mac•o
acqpitted
and
Anlhony Cook. Orlando Wool- seven overall.
to The Dilly Somlllel, 1U Court Sr.,
British jockey Undsey Clu!rnock of ridge, seeing his first action after
Pomeroy, Ohio fiml.
involuntary manslaughter charges
IUIIOIII"fttN UTili
- in a car crash that tilled two Aus·
ttalian sporiS reporters. 1udge SalOae Weell ................ ...................$1.60
DINNER BEll
One
Month
...................
.............
.
$6.95
vador Figueirdeo found no evi·
•
aae v...- ................................. Ma,IIO
tear. He hasn'l wan since 19119.
INDIANAPOLIS (UP!) dence Charnock was behind the
MEAT
8INOU:COPY
Ryan Shafer of Elmira, N.Y.,
Hugh
Milia'
of
SeaU!e
rolled
a
245
wbeel
when
it
spun
out
of
control
PmCE
on a bridge connecting the Macao average Monday to move into lhe holds the fourth spot Shafer, also a
Dilly ..................... .............. :15 Conto
J1C1!in1u1a wilb nearby Tlipa illand lead through qne round in the Pro· non-champion, scattered 1,871
1-ll. PIG.
Sublcrlben not dHirtiiJtopay tlleear1n
Januray 1990. Ian Manning and fessional Bowlers Association pins.
rler may remit ln advauce direct to
John ~ ol Mount Clemeri&amp;,
Tile Dally Settllnel osal; 8or 12 111&lt;11lb
Chris Collins, who both covered $~25,000 Bowling Proprietors'
bloll. Creclll wtlllle liveD ear-.. ell
Mich
.• rounds out the top five .
Association
of
America
U.S.
Open.
horse racing f!H the H011g Kong
GOOD WEDNESDAY, APRIL 10, 1991 ONI.Y AT
A five-time tidist, MiUer totaled Mazza, who won hia lint IOuroanewspaper
the
South
China
Morn·No oublcrlpltono by mall permH!fd In
ing Post. were ldlled in the acci- 1,964 pins. He's seeking his first ment earliet this year in Winter
areu where home carrt• MI'Yice II
Haven, Fla.. knocbcl down I ,862
win of the year.
avaDable.
denL
.
Rod Pasteur of Green Bay, Wis., pins.
The
field
of
240
bowlen
will
rolled
a
300
pme
en
route
to
the
SkiiD,
, -....... ClouiJo
•
IJW..... ... .. .. .... .. ..................... aJM
. Doctoil in Rho, ~~ second posiuon. Pasteur, a non· roll 16 more gamea of CJIII~~
........... ........................ . l•llder ~
in a winner on the PBA Tour, totaled before the first cat to
12 w....................................... M11
lipt coma Iller nffering seve~e 1,924 pins.
made, 1bil iJ die leCO!ICllllit'Crl-.m..
·
- .......
o..r
head injuries 11111 1 broken collar
IJ w................
,.........................
..
In third is Steve Cook of ressional bowling's
:JIWeob .................................. ......
bone In a Cll' crash on the Milan- Roseville, Calir. Cook, a 14-time Crown." SIIIWday's winner --t:.:
112Weob ........... ...... ...................
Tll'ln biahway.
cbainpion, is 25 pins behind Pas- ·home $40,000.

;

Sarah Overstreet :

that ~ows abusive teachers to fooJ
themselves into thinking these kids

loaical damage an adult can cause

impress upon teachers-in-training
the vulnembilities of children and
the
that all ··~hers assume
~
a·n e eyes of the"""'
youn • and .of
bow much emotio al
h
n an psyc O·

It's way past lime we impressed :
all
h th
hil
upon teac ers at sex with c • · ;
dren • any children, anywhem, any : '
· • IS· a cnme.
··
ume
It"s also lime we
•
punished of•enders accordingly. 1

are.adults J"ust because lhe" bodi
.,.
look th;t way. By fai~ing ~~ . ~~~ucing a child, we share in the

5

~---~CA~N~C~ER~DA~Y~......--. ~ "

Berry's World

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ttlt 0., NIA, '"'

vestments from the mother of all Oil-r:-rofft
skimmings?"
·.

Miller takes lead in BPAA open

BIG BEND

.-.

cp:._~
:'So, haff~brother In GMeva - how go my In-

SPECIAL!
99&lt;
BOLOGNA

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?o::1~~o~:~;:~·i~et:c~~:.~

Seattle post NBA victories

Today
in history
.

'""'"'"ale

Hous:

San A
_ntonio, Atlanta, Utah,

cal expenses in lhe future, through
the treaunent of an illness before it
becomes serious or acute. In the
long nin, this also could potentially
•reduce Slate expenditures in Medi- ·
caid and deneral Assistance Medical benefits due to preventive ·
health measures.
Senate Bill 83 passed the Ohio
Senale 33-0. It is hoped that with
the passage of this legislation, we ·
will begin 10 address the inequily in
· distribution of health care semces ··
for Southern Ohio.
·
As always, please feel free to ·
call or write, State Senator Jan '
Michael Long, if you have any · ·
questions .or comments about these
or any other issues. My number is · ·
(614) 466-8156, and my address is · ·
the Statehouse, Columbus Ohio ';
43215.
.
• •

~rs

65);

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a

.Senate Bill 83 ______....;.__s__en__. J__a__n M__z-:-'ch_a__el_L....,..on_g.

Few trials in recent memory - no mo~e ·serious than rudging a
~re waiC~ed :""lh as much hom- poP-CJUQ; score fa a good student
faed fascmauon as the Pamela who Just had a bad day.
Smart murder trial last ~onth in
. UnfC?ItUIIately, Pamela ~m~·s
New Hampshare. And wath good fling With a pubescent boy lSD t as
reason: There was murder, a large unusual as pa~niS might hope ..
amount of ansur_ance money at When I was m hi..h IC_hool several
,...
stake and a beautiful teac her '"ho
..
students had aff81rS
wtth leachers,
seduced a 15 -year-old boy and one teacher lost CUSiody of her
· Since cameras are allowed -in child when her husband filed for
New Hampshire courtrooms, we divorce. Years later, embarrassed
were able to watch the progress ol ad pits whom I had know as
the trial each night on the news. teenagei'S told me or having been
And there was plenty to grab our accomplices fa friends who want·
ailenqon: We saw video of William ed to keep their atTain wilh leach·
Flynn, who pleaded guilty 10 the ers secret from their parents.
·
entirely possible that the Brady biD will go back IO"Ihe House . murder of Grell Sntan, sobbing
I don't kaow if any of tbese
with nothing new going for it except Reagan's blessing. That's when through his cbiJiina account of bow teachers lost their teaching 1~
~·usee if the Reagan magic still lives.
he fell in love widi bis teacher 11111 because or their behavior. In most
agreed 10 kill her husband. We aiao cases, I know they didn't If this
heard the teacher's 16-year-old were the adult man or woman
inlml leSiify·about beaing the pair across the street who was having
plot the murder. And we beard sex with a teen~. we'd be call·
Smart's defense aaomey accuse the ing lhe proper authorities as soon .
.
boy of ldlling 0reg Smart to &amp;et rid u we could linda pbone. I suspecl
of his competition.
- the fact lhal we f1lloooo to loclk the
'
•,
But the 11101t diiiUibin&amp; ~ ol other way lla alat IIOdo. with our
the Dial wu Smart's CIDOUODiess C4li)CCtiiS about c,asting the ~ehools
Todly il ~~· April9: the 99th day ol1991 with 26610 follow.
testimony about withbolding infor· in an unfavorable li1h1, or of
The Jnoon • waang, mOVJng toward its new phase.
mation from die police because she emblnasslng 'the sllldenls or their
; The Jlllll'llial.., a Venus, Man IDd Saluril.
dido 't want people 10 find out p11e1111.
' 1bo t&gt;walal ... - Mert.-y and 1upiter. .
about her IW!PVt with Flynn. Sbe
Yet tluouPout my yean in col·
: Thole bam GD dill cllle are under lhe lligo ol Aries. They iac:lude
went on 10 II)', "' didn't 11et 0111 10 lege and lhe coantleu meetings I
F(cDcb poet Cllldll Bladelairc in 1821; actor IDd . . Pial Robehave •lffairwidll*l, but I did. I 181 thtOUJh as 1 teaCher, I don't
son in 1898; birdl CUilllul pill ilnauoc OreaorY Pine-. and actor V(lld
bad mixed emotions lbout iL ... I . remember the IUbject ever being
Bond. bolll in 1903; hew Sen. JlflleS J.Willllm Fu1briald. D-Art.
lited Bill, bull a11o kMid 01e1."
adclreaed. After seeinJ fntbana
itt 1905 (qe §6): PlaYIIoY publis!Jer Huib Hefner in 1926 (age
She "liked~ Bill? She had bow often
INfucw! by
rock 'n' roD JliOII er Clll ~ m 1932"'{age S9); French actor lean"mixed emotions" about sleepiDJ teachen, I find that iDcmllble.
Paul Belniondo in 1933 (IP S8); and 1C1reSs Michael Lelmcd in 1939
wilb a .15-year-o1cJ. siDdeat? Sbe
Perhaps it is our failure 10
(age 52).
talked about lhe affair as if il were -address Ibis as a professional issue

The Red Sox rocked Stieb ror
five runs in the third. Tony Pena
ripped a double down the left-field

...

Vancouver, Edmonton, St~
Loui~, Chicago NHL victors

Can_-Reagan pass·
Brady Bill?

bat~-

Big league umpires
return to ·work
·

, Efforts did not go unnoticed

near F.Aiitor:

American League East division
champions to a 6-2 triumph over
T&lt;I'OIIto.
After giving up a run in the second on a pair of liits and a sacrifice
fly, C1emeos ~etilecl the next 14 in
a row before R8nce Mlllliniks • oneout single in .lhe seventh~ Clemens
gave up six hilS in the game, slruck
out six and did not wallc i batter.
Loser Dave Stieb, who dropped
four of five spring training decisions, gave up live runs on four hits
in live innings. including the sec·
and grand slam of h_is 13-year.
. career. He walked two and hit one

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line and advanced 10 .third on Tim - Davis drove in the Orioles' only got the save. Kevin Maas and Mike s~e. Cleveland· s Albert Belle,
who hit a major league-leading 11
Naehring's sacrifice. After Stieb run as BaltimoR: feD to the Wllite · BlowershoincredforNewYork. •
home runs during lhe spring, home·.
walked Wade Boggs and J ody Sox 9-1.
Wlllte Sox 9, Orioles 1
•
Reed to load the bases, Mike · In other AL games the Tigers
At Baltimore, Jack McDowell ' red leading ofT the fourth.
5,
Ranaen
4
Brewers
Greenwell singled to tie the score. IO(Iped lhe Yaahel64111d Brew- struck out tO and Sammy Sosa bit
At Arlington, Teus, Robin
two hO!IIe runs and drove in five
That set the stage for Clark, ·who ers edged the Rangers S-4.
Yount's two-run homer off Nolan :
drilled an 0-2 delivery into the secIn the NL it was New York 2 runs to po er Chic
J ff Bal
Ryan in the firth inning vaulted i
and tier of lhe left field stands for-· Philadelphia I; Cincinnati 6,
lard, startin~ in piiCe~-..:in~
his eighth career grand slam.
IDD 2; Monlrea1 at Piusburgh.
Ben McDonald, took the loss after Milwaukee over Texas before a :
Toronto lallied its fii'SI run when
Tlgen 6, Yankees 4
giving. up six"hits and six earned sellout crowd duit included Presi· : ·
den1 Bush, Ryan, 44, gave up all 1
Mulliriiks si~gl~ to open the secAt Detroit, Cecil Fielder runs in five and two-third innings.
five Milwaukee runs on nine hilS,
. ond, went to third 011 a ground-rule snapped a 4-4 tie with a two-run
Royals 41 Indians 2 •
struck out nine iii seven '
and
double b~ M~ny . Lee a_nd scored . double in the seventh inning and
At Kansas City, Mo, Kirk Gib·
innings.
Mark Knudson went rive :
on Mookie Wilson s sacnfice fly, . Alan Trammell knocked in four son tripled in his first at-bat with
and
one-third
innings for the win. 1
· A couple of other vetemn slug- runs with a homer and double to Kansas City and aqded a run-scar·
Edwin
Nunez
pitclled the final :
ge~s donning new uniforms al_
so . lead the Tigers. Reliever Greg ing single to boost the Royals. Bret
inning
for
a
save.
Kevin Reimer, '·
¢nJoyed success, but wath Ies~ Cadaret took the loss and Paul Gib- Saberhagen IOssed•a silli·hitter over
Rubin
Sierra
and
Rafael
Palmiero :
.favorable results. The Blue Jays son pitched two scoreless innings seven mnings and Jeff Mont·
1
homered
for
Texas.
Joe Carter homered and Glenn for the win an~ Mike Henneman gomery pitched two innings for the
'
.

Stormin' Norman more thanjus- a general
kA

WASIDNGTON • The hero of
For two intensive .weeks, oui
Despite Scliwarzkoprs battleOperation
Desert
Stof!D.
Gen.
H.
~Ills
mprt
in
the
journalistic
field
~eroics, _·he ne~~r lost _his
Pomeray, Oblo
Norman Schwarzkopf, IS expected. eqwvaleat of the two-minute drill. · humamty, or his humility. He as a
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MBIGS·IIUIION AREA
as his next ~nest, to take Amer-t We interviewed more than 100 of general who bates war and is
ica by storm. e will ~e coming his family members, friends, co- repulsed by those who glo.iy in_ it.
~mllii! ,..,...__.':-..,.., ......... c:~.""' ,
home soon 10 a tumtdtuous wei- workers and critics. President Bush He encountered generals an Vaet~v
,
.
,
come.
.
even conbibuted couple of anec- nam whom he described as "war
Already. poll~ acclaim him to be dotes.
.. · .
lovers." ·
.
ROBf;KT .L. WINGETT
· CJIARLENE HOEFLICH
the most popular Amen can • a
America is in need ofa hero and ·
"Thev scared the living hell out
Pilbllsber
Ge~~eral Manarer
notch · above President Bush him- has foun d . one. 1n Vi etnam
·
0 f me, ''he "&amp;old us. BY h1·s stan
· .•
· self. That has unnerved some Schwarzkopf was a muddy-boots &lt;lards. they're "not very goOd genPAT WHITEHEAD
-White House politicos who are pri- commander whose first priority erals."
vaiely apprehensive about this was the welfare of his troops:
Schwarzkop.f kept a wellAulltaat Publlsber/Controller
'burly, blunt-tallting !llilitary hero ~·he stepped gingerly acroas·a t~umbed_. ca!"oufl~ge-co~ered
. A MEMBER o!The United Press International, Inland Daily Press
with the nocnonsenS(O manner and mmefield to rescue a screaming Btble besade has bed m Saudi Am·
AssoCiation and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
outreaching huma. Scbwankoprs flailing private who had been man: bia: Yet. according to his fam~ly, ·
pany affiliation is' indepmdent, but gled by a land mine. .
he IS not a Sunday-go-to-meeung
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
there.is talk in Washington that he
Another time, Schwarzkopf Chrislian . His sister, Sally
words long. AU letters are subject to edltlllg and must,be slgnlill with
leans toward t1ie Democrats.
. dashed through enemy terriiOry to Schwarzkofif• said she wouldn't
name, addrens and telephone number. No unalgned letters wm bepubAmericans are just getting . rescue some injured soldiers who call him re ipous. "I would call
lls)1ed. Letters should be In good taste, addressing Issues, not personaliacquain~
wilb Sch~f. w~ bad been separated from h~ unit .him spiritual.
ties.
may coounue to j)(ay a role tn their He repeatedly demonstrated a
At the dawn of Desert Storm, .
lives. They need a closer loolc at mmarka~?le physical courage. Our· Gen. Schwarzkopf asS(Ombled his
the human (ace behind the war- ing one firelight, he was woun~. fuJI staff in the'wit room in Riyadh
ria's mask. So Zebra Books asked yet refused to take cover or be • and asked the chief chaplain, Col.
us to dig into his baeksround and medically evacllllled until his mis· David Peterson, to pray for the pro- .
Dear Toby Ault and Scott Geyer:
Tb_ank you for sharing your present his life story in a paperback sian was
·
tection of hi.s troops. Then
· My second graders and I really expenences of the war and patient- book.
Schwankopf ordered the playing
apprecialed your visits 10 our class ly answering many questions.
at Middleport Elementary. It was These were experiences that my
VtrJ nice of you 10 take the time to second graders will remember for a
come and personally let the chi)- · long tjme. We are all Vf!rY proud of
,
dren know how much their letters · you.
and drawings meant dming "Desert
Thank you, ·
Storm."
Barbara Logan
------~--------------~

in Coan 8kee&amp;

·Gibson, Clark lead new teams to victories

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Page-4-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Reds open season With 6-2 victory over Astros
CINCINNATI ~UPI)- Tom
Browning pitched and, hit Cincin- ·
nati to a 6-2 season-opening victory over Houston Monday. But the
Astros shook the world champion
Reds with a ninth iooing rally that
threatened to und.o Browning's
heroics.
Browning pennittccl 5 bits over
8 and 1-3 iooings and doubled in
three runs to star for the Reds in
front of 55,205 hometown fans, the
third largest regular season crowd
in Cincinnati history.
.
It was Cincinnati's ninth straight
Opening Day_victory. A year ago,
the Reds won their fii'St nine games .
and went on to lead the National
League West every day of the season.
" I ieally can't say that's going
to happen again," said Browning.
" Everybody in the division is waiting for us."
At the plate Monday, Browning's bases-loaded double highlig~ted a S- tun fourth inning. On
the mound, the lefthander took a 3hitter into the ninth, when he tired
and gave op a leadOff triple to Eric .
Yelding, a sacrifice fly to Steve.
Finley and a single to Craig Biggio
before leaving.
"That's when things got exciting," said Reds manager Lou
· Piniella.

.'·-.\

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1'

·.

Reliever Randy Myers Walked
the only two batters he faced and
suddenly the Astros had the bases
loaded with one out and the tying
run ~~ theh .plaf~e in Je~f Bagwell,
P1aymg IS lrst 111DJOr 1eague
g~e. The R~ds brought on fastball
arust Rob Dibble to challenge the
nx&gt;!:'e. ·
I thought about 11,~nd slam
home~.go;"lg up there, S81d Bagwell. Di~ble throws harder than
II!IY~Y I ve faced, but I I~ that
snuauon._I knew he was gom!! to
be throwmg heat, but I knew If I
1°1 arqu';!d an~ undC!f the ball, I
could hit It ouL .
Bagwell g~t around - but. not
!'nder - a. Dibble blazer and lined
1t up the m1ddle. It look~ ~e a 2run smgle .00 the· conunuauon of
the Houston rally - until shortstop

sive fourth inniitg by smashing a I0 ScOtt offering over the left field
wall. Houston rookie left fielder
Luis Gonzalez t!!~!l. ~_isj~~~~ !\
Paul O'Neill Dy bill- ni:ing m a
half- dozen steps on a: ball hit far
over his head- and O'Neill was
awarded a double. O'Neill took
- third on Hal Morris' ground out
and scored on Chris Sabo's ,scorching double down the left field line.
Jeff .Reed was intentionally
walked and Mariano Duncan was
hit by a piiCh to toad the bases with
two outs. At that point, Browning
swnned the Astros by lining double over the head of drawn-in right
fielder Karl Rhodes to clear the
bases and stake the Reds to a 5-I
advantage.
"I xot behind in the count and
·
·

ner off seconcj to suddenly end the
game.
"He hit it well,'' said Larkin.
"But the ball booked back to me. I
was at the right place at the right!
time."
Houston starter and loser Mike
Scoulasted just four innings, surrendering five runs and five hiij,
including Browning's bases-loaded
blast.
Larkin led off Cincinnati's deci-

· ' .Jiy Dave Harris
. ROCK SPRINGS - Kevin Ta~lor slammed a three -run homer m
the fifth inning to help power the
Meigs Marauders to~ 7-5 .wm over
Nelsonville-York m Tn-Valley
conference action Monday
evening.
·.
·
Nelsonville jumped out to a 1-0
lead in tlie first inning, Savage
·

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Cl...wu!(C-ll· ll)ll

Ka.- City (llod&lt;fidter 17·1), 8:3l p.m.
ColifonUa (Fudey 111-9) atS..ule

W L

PeL

GB

a-BOltOn
.........54 21
y·l'lliladolpllil .......42 33
y-N.,.. Yadl ......36 39
WuJUn&amp;lon ......
48
New Jeney ..•.... 23 S2

.720
.$60
.480
.360

12
18

NeW Yart atDetmit. 1:35 p.m.

53

.293

Miami '

.......... 22

........ ..47
• y-Milwaukee ......45
y-Atlam
..........40
y-lndiana .,....... ,37

28
30

3S
38

Orluldo

..........'II 47

o.n.
........ -..26 41
• - " " . ....... .23 Sl
il&lt;nWI'
..........19 l7

8
10
15
18
Tl

.680
.662

Sacramen&amp;o .......21 53
.214 35 112
r-diMhed dlvlllon lllle
y-clndled pllyof'f' Mrlh

-

Monday Results

S..ulelii,Dcnverll2

Tuesday Games

New York

· San Die&amp;a
'.........0
San Fnncilco .......0

H&lt;Mlal

,

Ph:ilad~ at New

I

.

Ycd, 7:40p.m.

SL l..ouio at CID«ao. 2 : ~ pm. •
l..oiAnpa.atA&amp;Wu, 7:-40p.m.
Houltm at Cincinali. 7:~ p.m.

O.U.. at S8C111men&amp;o, 10:30 p.m.

San FnnciJco11 San Diqa, 10:05

p.m .

Monday
Sports Transa&lt;tlons
BuebaU

..

AMERICAN LEAGUE
East
w L PeL
............ } 0 1.000
Boo""'
............. } 0 1.000
[)euoit
........ l 0' 1.000
Milwaukee
.000
.......... 0 I
B........
Clo¥olond .......... 0 1 .000
. ........ 0 1 .000
NewYadl
T-"• ........... 0 I .000
w L

--•

0 . .000
1 .000

Portland at HOUMIL 8:30p.m.
Golden Stile II Phoenix, 10:30 p.m.
Orlindo•tLA Oippen, 10:30·p.m.

U.ClippenllS..ule.I0:30p.m.

·•-

Ill.
Ill
Ill
Ill

.000

-

Chicaaa
~·y

Pel.

1
1

'I

GB

lelau.c Bueblll Umpire~ Aaoc:if;tion.
Ta•- S.ed pildlcr Jote Guunan

rninfi"·Mr. _ ...

asketball

LA Clippln- Placed Bo Kimble on
the injwed \at; activated K«&lt; Butnilte:r
fnm .... injumlliot.

Collep

Oooooia Tt&lt;b - Ouud Komy An·
da~a~ will cdll'the NBA draft.
Sun Bell Coafercaoe- Vaced to

Ill
Ill
Ill
1/2,
1

Kanau City ol, Ckw!and 2
MilwMlbe.S, Toauol

Tuesday's Gam.,.

Tocll - Nouned BW F....,.

baketblll COldl and siJnod tum to a fo\11"
year conu.ct ..

FootbaU

NFL - Named llari&gt;ld Hond""""
caccutivc vice p.Went ror llbor rclalior~IJchaUman el NFL Manaacmcnt
Cooncil CACCUlive ocmmiuce.

Soccer

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

O.U.. (MSL) - Announ&lt;ed It

.

w"

,.

WciridCupUSA 1994 - NamodJim

Treder mt'Aiia rdatiOI'll dirottor.

•

:• Shoemaker critical after wreck
done to to detennine· Shoemaker's
·blood.alcohol content at the time of
the accident, and Flores said he
faces charges of misdemeanor
drunken driving. .
"We think he was under the
·influence of aleohol.'' Aores said.
Shoemaker won more races than
other jockey in history, including
more stakes races and more races
with purses of S 100,000. He
became the first Jockey to win
more than $100 m111ion in career
purses in 1985.
In 1986', at age 54, he became
the oldest jockey to win the Kentucky Derby.
Shoemaker, 4-foot II a~d
• said.
. weighing 98 pounds, ran his first
race at Golden Gate Fields on
: No other ears were involved.
March
19, 1949 and won his fust
: Flores said the former jockey
raa:
three
rides later.
'i suffered a broken pelvis, a cut to
He
went
on to win four Ken~ his held and internal injuries. He
tucky
Derbies,
two Preaknesses
\ waa taken to Glendora COIIIInunity
and
five
Belmont
Stakes before
,::Hospital where he underwent
: IIII'I«Y. Flora dellcribed his condi- retiring after 40,284 starts with
8,824 wins and total winnings of
: lion • criticaL
• Piores aaid St.oemaker smelled 5123.3 million, second only to Laf~ of ak:obol, and IUIIIoriliea suspect fit Pincay Jr. 'He became a trainer
•: lie bad been drillldlll· Tests were aft« his retirement in. 1989.
: SAN DIMAS. Calif. (UPI) • Legendary jockey Willie Shoemak: er was critically injured in a traffic
: accident Monday night, and the
• California Highway Patrol said he
: wa5 suspected of being under the
: influence of alcohol.
": Shoemaker, 59, was westbound
' on State Route 30 about 25 miles
: east of Los Angeles about 8 p.m,
~ when the accident occurred.
: Shoemaker's 1990 Ford Bronco
: II drifted over the side of the road,
~ plunged down an embankment and
~ rolled over several times before
-: landing upright in the transition
; lanes to the southbound Foothill
~ Freeway, CHP Officer Joe Flores

r

C ost 0 f atten d IDg
• games
' up '
6• 3 percent
over last· .season
·
.
·
CHICAGO (UPI) ~A family
of four will have to Spend an average of $76.22 for an outing to .a
major league baseball game thiS
season- up 6. 3 percelll from last
year and 72 pen:ent from 1980 -:
according to a study rel~ ,Moo·
1

.r

day, theo~m~gday ol the~·
The pnce mcludes four uckets, •
two dra!'t beerS, four bot ~· four
soft dnnks, two souvemr mesh
baseball caps, two game programs
and parking.

3-run homer gi.·ves M.eigs 7-5 win ·
walked, s10le second and scored on · comeback in the third inning when
a single by !"'ung~n. TJ.Ie Buck- . Terry Me- Guire singled and stole
eyes made 114-0 m the third when second where he scored on a Eric
Savage singled, ~itl;hell walked Heck single.
.
and • Nung~teen smgled .,to score
Meigs plated two .m~e runs m
. Savage, Mitchell also came ~und the fourth to pun to within on~ a~ 4and scored on a Maraude~ error 1?'1 3; Randy Corsi led off the mnmg
the play. Hooks then smgled m with his second home run of the
Nungsteen.
. ,
year to make it 4-2. Shawn Hamon
The Marauders started Its followed with a single and Gary

E agles blan k B 0 bcats; s·V
.
.bl·an k s S 0 ut.h ern, 3.-.0

Adams drove him acroas the plate
with a double. .
.
Mter Nelsonville made 1t a 5-3
game with 11 sia&amp;le run in the iop of
the fifth the Marauders ~k !)le
lead when Heck led off the mnmg
with another single, Corsi walked
and Taylor launched a drive over
the left f1eld fence to give,Meigs a
6-51ead.Meil!Sclosedoutthescoring in the sixth when Hamon

•.

··.

~~'' {

IIOW OPEN FOR THE

SPR•t IUSOII
Coll!pletellnt of

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

, ...talllt Gild ........

...........lilt ........
Fruit • • Flewerfuut Tr••·
5ti Llt1, Azaleas,

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When you qualify •• a p,.ferred
rlok tor Stote Auto Companlea'
opedol M-tlat Auto Polley. wour
,,._ won't go up with your flrll
accident.
Unllla •'!"liar pollciH t11ot require
...... .,.,... of policy --tlllp.
the Modalm allowo the e•lfmllllon
lmrnedlataly.
The Modallot recognl- the old•.
oafef driver with oubatantlol rata
.-cilono and IHOacler cov••OO·
Rate reductlona begin •• aarl\l ••
ao• 21 and ora Pllrtlc\llatly attrac·
tlve lor tho 45 to 114 yeor old. .
H you hove I aalw driving record,
He juot how . _ your car lnour·.
premium can be with the
Medellll Aula Polley from State
Auto lnaurance Compeniea ..
C1ll u1 1bou1 this car lnaur1nce·
breal&lt;thraugh far ule dr-o.
•

ROGAN

ER

~

hilun.Dee Services
214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY

992-6687

~ ..........

..__.c..........

Mannington Gold ~~·a rcvolulionar;
vin yl Roor.thal breaks the- !ihinc hamer.
Mannington Gold resists scUffs. scr.uchts a.,P dents

ketp shining l•.&gt;ngaftcrother Doors have b.ttheir
luster. Aod nobody rcsisl!i Stains b.:ttcr or comes with
a strong(r guaranll'C than Mannington Gold "'.

10

~

•

Dreau't Kitchen.

·nh anQ. )"OU couki win Sl5.0Xl for your Dream Kitchen, •
plus,._.e have- special olle;ni on a Bc'ner Homes &amp;r Gardens
home! decorating video~ . Mannin~n Gold. A
shining
of wluu alloor should be. And
a drcoritor's dream come true.

'"'"'pi&lt;

•

·StT lb ~" oi:!.ll~ &lt;lfl 1hc ~mn~oo c.okl Dcrorll!.nr'~
(,! '""'~' and !o'liUWitn~•lll ~ ":\u QucsOor~ ~·

.

A~~otWMA FmSilouldB&lt;.~

See These Panicipating Retailers:

INGELS CA.RPET

o•

175 ll.lnd AYI. • MIDDUPOITr OH,

..,, s- 1·5

992-7021

SYIACISI,
ttl-5776

,, , .

$25(ID

Take a look at Mannington Gold before April

Hubbard's Gr11nhouse

..

1

...

..

~.

•

l

·l

Shlifer Joey Marcinko and Travis
Adiun~.
·
'
Portraying Swimmers-Deer are: ,
Bradley Brannon, Darlene Connol~
ly, Jimmie Putman·, Jake House· holder, Tiffany Spencer ·and .
Tiffany Kidder.
.
·
· Pta ·n Swimmers-Humans are:
Ashte:'~er Jason Miller Mendy ·
Guess r.triclia Shields Tra'vis Sandid$e: Bridget Conn~Jy, Jeremy·
Gillilan. Stacy Watson, S~ Sexton and Kin Spencer.
"Dragon Tales" is the second
musical, performed by grades 4-6.
In this production,' an evil dragon "Scumme" is terrorizing the
to~ ofWantley Wood The Kin~ ·
in desparation has decided 10 offer
the hand of' his daughter, the
Princess Rosebud, to any brave
knight who can conquer the drag- Jerem,. Kebl, Seu Maxey,
on. Meanwhile, Sir Hugb of
Cbad Wheeler, Chad Ralclllr aDd Allsha Rojas
~utherford, a stranger to the to.wn.
is captivated by the beautiful are IIDOIII tile puioc:lpal cbanlc:lers lo "Dragoo
Tales" a musical play to be performed IJy tbe
pri'ncess and agrees to,'take the ·
challenge. .
.
·
The Peasants -Jay ,Jack and Io offer advice and information when- .
ever possible (and comic relief
throughout) . .
The. cast includes Chance Wat"
son as The King; Michelle Caldwell as Princess Rosebud; Sean

·..: .

.

-,,

..

lntermedlale grades al Tuppers Pllllns Elementary School. Tbe program, and another musical,
get underway on Friday at 1 p.m. .

Maxey as Hugh of Rutherford; Sarah Householder, Sari Putman,
Chadd Ratcliff as Sir Bryan the Heather and Ann Wiggins as
Brave; Lamar Lyons .as Sir Walter · Townspeople; and Jeff Rankin as
. :
the Witless: Jennifer Cline as Rose- ihe J?ragon.
The programs get underway at 7
bud's Nurse, Mad.a; Alisha Rojas,
Jeremy Keh1 and Chad Wheeler as p.m. on Friday and set design is
the Peasants; Jessica Bar1Jam, Jes- under the direction of Mr. and Mrs.
sica Brannon, Sarah Hoffman, Gary Kehl.

Middleport Arts
Council plans
class in painting

Bissell birthday
is celebrated

WE'LL
OVERLOOK
YOUR FIRST
ACCIDENT

Come See
Marmington Gol4 .
And See Ywrselfln A

lhtullullftulroM .....

~he student ~od)' of Tuppers Keaton, Jan Sanders, Janet CalPl31n~ El~mentary School, und~r away, and Kevin Keaton. The
~~direction o f = Werry, will Mayor will be pomayed by
. ,....~ ,two mUSI
at the school Matthew Boyles and !"feg~an Avis
on Fnday.
.
.. · · will play the Mayor .s W1fe. The
M Ggdes _l-3 will perform . Oh, Cash Flow Keeper w1ll be Joshua
&gt;: ·ear ~· a one-ac~ m~~lcal, Hoffman. In the role of the landwh1ch poses the question, What lord will be B.J. Larimer. The Con~oes a town do when they are servation ·Chief will be portrayed
mvaded by deer?"
by Bradley Willford. Playing The
. The d~er must defend th,em- Men will be Justin DeLaCruz. and
selves &amp;ga!Dst t!'e townspeople and Dustin MarcinkQ. The role· of
the town council and prove to them Women will be performed by Carhow they have been shoved around rie Sheets, Michelle O'Nail,
and have moved from place to Heather Westfall and Amanda
place.
. . . .
Upton.
.
Students partiCipating m the
In the role of Townspeople will
~rogram· are narrators Gary Vier- be: Anthony Nutter, Jeremy Cohhng, Matthew Caldwell, Steven nolly, Derik Winebrenner, Rachel
Meeks, Matthew Bissell, Joshua Smith, Travis Lyons, Kimberly
Kehl, Sheena O,ilmore, Br~~~ Marcinko, Amanda Whe~le~.
Wade, Dezra .Wrikemanand
Joshua Loschar, Jared .Marcmko,
~ande~. Playmg. Deer w1th Speak- leremee Osborne, David Rankm,
mg Pllfl.S are Chris Lyons, Matthew Joey Brown, Matthew Grubb, Wes

.

~~~nW!mP¥~:~~~~~:1:;~~

1

~nit\:

•

.

the save, they gave up six hits, '
struck oui eight and walked four.
Heck h$d three .singles.to lead
Meigs, Corsi and Taylor hit their
home ·runs; Adams dQubled and
Hamon singled. Dailey was the
loser for Nelson ville, Nungsteen
had twQ singles to lead the Buckeyes.
Meigs will travel to Wellslun on
Wednesday afternoon.

Eastern roster

Plan Tournament
EAST MEIGS - There wiJI be a
softball tournament April 27-28 at
Eastern High School, sponsored by
the EHS athletic boosters. ·
The tourney will U!ilize four
fields and proceeds \'{ill benefit the
EHS athletic de.J18!1menl.
For further mfpnnation contact
any booster member, Dennis Newland or Roger Bissell.

Page-6

Tuppers Plains Elementary plans ,
two musical presentations Friday

aa:~u~~~g~:;t~~~iarterand

EAST MEIGS - 'Taking advan- night.
·
· · For SV Wall, Criswell, Sheptage of 10 runs in the fiTSt inning, · Tim BisSell picked up "'e win in herd, and Renfore all singled.
Southern plays at Wahama
the Eastern Eagles rolled over the three innings of no-hit ball, while
'
Kyger Creek Bobcats 15-0 here Matt Finlaw came on to pick up the tonighL
Llineseore:
Monday in just five innings (mercy pace and salvage the no-hiuer. Bisrule) toboostitsrecord to3-1 over- sell had one walk and seven ko's, Southern ~000000--0- 3-3
all, 3-0 in the SVAC boys baseball while Finlaw had 3 KO's and one Symmes 001 020x-3 -4 -I
Eastern girls win
race.
walk.
Tim bissell and Jeff Durst each
Marc Villanueva was the losing • EAST MEIGS - In girls softball
action, Eastm1 defeated Bend lll'ea
went 4-4 on the night with Durst pitcher.
having four RBI's. Randy Kaylor
Mike Smith was unintentionally team Wahama J:.j-2 to boost its
and Michael Smith each had two omitted as being AII~SV AC Honor- record to 1-1. Wahama drops to 1-.
hits each, with Smith having five able Mention in last night's write- 3~verall.
·
Michelle Donavan led the
RBI's on the night. Jerrod Barber up. .
Eaglettes with two doubles .and a
was also 2-3 withJ RBI, Matt Fin- · Linescore:
.
single, while Lee Gill~lan, Mary
law had a single, and Wes Holter a Kyger Creek 0 0 0 0 0-0- 0- 4
Ann Kibble, Toby H11l, Penny
single. ·
I ,
Eastern
10 1 13 x-15 .16-2
Aeiker, and Amy·Well all singled
· Eastern collected 16 hits on .the Vikings 3 Tornadoes 0
·
WILLOW WOOD · The in the victory. .
For
Waharna
C.
gillespie, M.
s·ymmes Valley Vikings broke
Robinson.
and
1.
VanMeter
all sinopen a scoreless game in the bottom of the third inning and went on gled.
Edna Hensley was the winning
to defeat Southern 3-0 hete MonpiiCher
and Lorrie Baker the catchThe Southern reserves beat day in boys' SV AC varsity baseer.
Hensley
fanned four, walked
Trimble 's reserves 4-2 Tuesday ball action.
three,
and
pive
up three hits.
April 2 at Trimble. This was the
Southern drops to 1-4 overall
Gillespie
suffered
the loss with
fii'St game of the year for the young and 1-2 in the SVAC. Symmes
14 walks, three strikeouts and
Tornadoes of Coach Bill Hensler. Valley is 4-2.
In another pitching duel Chad seven hits allowed.
SHS is 1-0 and Trimble now 3-1
Coach Pam Douthitt said, "The ·
Renfroe came · home the
after.their fust loss.of the season.
Trimble had previously beaten winner,while combining with Eric girls played much better overall
tough teams in Athens, Wellston, Wall for the win. The two j:Om- and had a better defensive game.
and Jackson.
·
bined for 8 strikeouts and just O':'e We were more patient at tlie plate.
walk.
Southpaw Andy Baer suf- Michelle Donovan was 3-3 with
The young T9rnadoes had a
great pitching performliiice by Jere- fered the loss for the Tornadoes two doubles and a single and
my Northup. Northup went the although he fanned seven and played a great game. Freshman
Jaime wastJn played well at soondistance (7 innings), allowing only walked just one.
Baer scattered just four hits, stoP, for us; her fust there for us."
three hits and four walks and giv• Overall the girls seemed a litwhile SV pit~hing allowed three
ing up two unearned runs.
tle
more
confident as a team."
Besides Northup's pitching hits.
Linescore:
.
heroics, the Southern defense came
Southern hitters were Mark TayWahama
0
I
0
00
I 0-2-3-3
up with'some big plays in the field. lor, Scou Lisle, and Keith Jones all
Eastern
0
4
4
2
4
0-14-7-4
The Soutbem hitting attack was with singles.
'
a big plus in the·game. they.had 12
·hits in sCoring·their four runs.
SHS .hitters were led by Joey
RACINE - ·Members of the h()lld varsity mentor David Gaul.
Hensler who was 3-3 with a single,
Team members and support
double, and triple and two of four Southern ~gh School girls basketRBI's. Andy Field was 2-2 with ball team were recently honored staff not&amp;resent were Aimee Mills,
two singles and Tysl?n Mugrage with a banquet and awards ceremo- Amber hlinger, Ien11ifer Cross,
ny at the high school in Racine.
and Darrell Young.
WI$ 2-3. Other SHS players that
A list of other awards were not
Award winners who were pre'
singled were Trenton Cleland,
David Smith, Aaron Drummer, and sent at the banquet to recei've available.
Tucker Williams. Northup had a awards were senior honorees Junie
M3rCh 15th- April 30th
Beegle, Mica Jones, Tonya Ingels,
double to top off the 12 hit night.
Trimble's three hitters were and Wendy Wolfe. Varsity Letters
went to Sarah Duhl, a junior, and
Hooper, Conkey, and Limo.
sophomore
Sherrie Stover.
Southern's next reserve game is
Special recognition went to
this· ·Thursday April 4 at
Ravenswood after the varsity game statisticians Angel Snider and
and Friday against Federal Hocking ' Christi Collins.
Mica Jones ·won the "110 per-·
at home.
cent Award" as the only player to
Linescore:
· stan every game. Mica made honSouthern 0 2 0 2 0 0 0-4 -12-0
orable mention All-SVAC.
Trimble 0 0 I 1 0 0 0-2 -3 - 2
The best ,"Defensive" Award
went to Junic Beegle, a senior and
ALL-SVAC selection in 1991.
"Most Improved" was Sarah
Duhl, a junior and ALL-SVAC
Eastern Boys Baseball
honorable mention.
Roster
The ·awards were presented by 1
PLAYER. .
YR POS.
Aaron Wilson· ' 12 IF
Mil'a.Finlaw• · 12 OF-P
Jason~
12 C
Mark Murphy• 12 OF
Paul Erwin
12 IF
Mickey Bauer 12 OF-P
Jeff Durst*
12 IF-P
Tim Bissell*
11 IF-P
Michael Smith* II IF-P
Brad Powell
11 IF-OF
Rod Newsome• 11 IF-OF-P
Wes Holter
11 OF·P
Chris Adams
12 IF ,
Mike Newland 11 IF-OF
Kyle Fausnaugh* 11 IF
Scott Baker
' 10 C
Chad Savoy
10 IF-OF
Jeremy Buckley 10 IF
Man Michael . 10 OF-P
Wes Arbaugh
9 OF-IF·P
Tyson Rose
9 IF-P
Pat Newland
, 9 IF
Randy Kaylor
9 IF
Todd Marcinko 9 IF
Jared Ridenour 9 C
Bill Baker
10 OF
.. Leuermen
StaU: Monica Adams and Lorri
Olbomc

Tuesday, April 9, 1991.

•.

walked stole second and. sc&lt;RCI on

•

.,.... ..., lho Amcman s.o111 Confer·

......V'.,.W.

II!!"

The Daily Se·n.tine~

By The Bend

toilar,.

Southern girls honored with-banquet

AlionI&amp;- Sipd oudiclder Dei001
Sanden to ·a maJx-:lcll':lc contract.
, o.
Oeuoit.- ~ pitcher Mutt
Leiter 1o Toledo of lhc lntem~tional
l.all'e(MA).
·
Major Lclauc Bueball - Reached
four· yu.r COI1lnelasreanan with MajOJ"
1o I

w...t
........... } 0 1.000

........ 1 0 1.000
Clllilomia ...........0 0 .000
......... 0 0 .000
.......... 0 0 .000
Ootland
........:....o· 0· .000
S..dle
............ 0 1 .000
Tea•
Monday's Resulll
Deooit 6. New y ad! •
-6.T_..2
Cllieaa• 9,1kl...... l '

"'-

GB

three IOOPlS'in the le8IIOII opel!d
-· · Gonzalez, Rbodes llld BagWell.
"We had some )'OWIIItell make
some mistakes
but I liked
the way we beUled,the' ~ How~.
"We were playin&amp; me- tealll m
baseball and got bebiDd early, !lot.
we ~&gt;:ed wi~ it
bad a chance
to wm m the mnth. ·

Southern reserves
·beat Trimble, 4-2

I

MoluW II PiUibwP, 3:0!5 p.m.

.l)aDu II Utah. 9:30p.m.

•

..........0

0

I

14-'J), 10:35 p.m.
Wednesday's Games

Chicaao at Indiana, I : ~ p.m .
Pon1and at San Antc.uo, 8:30p.m .

•

lll
Ill

Philadelphia (Orima1ey 1-2) 11 ~cw
York (Viola: "20-12), 1 :~_p.m.
, Olicaaa (Jacbm 6-6) 11 Sl. Louis

w........,. ..

..

1.000

l);'Jo (WhiuGn

Wednesday G•-•

•

0
0

Monday's Resulls
Cincinnai 6, Houaton 2
New Yem 2. Plliladclpba I
Moatro~l1, Pi.ttlburJh 0
Tuesday's Games

New York 11 Philldclphil, 8 p.m.
Miami, 7:l0 p.m.
~and i.tDeboi.L, 7:30p.m.

•

.....·.. :1
......... ]

1.000
......... ;.0 0 .000
...........0 0 .000
SL l.ouil
0 I
.000
......... ...............
:....0 I .000
lilladolp!Ua
West
Cineinalli
......... .1 o ~ooo
A"'""
.. ..........0 0 .000
..... Anp:loo ........0 0 ,000

Moolml
Chicaao

(Wolk 7-S). 7:3S pm.
'
l.o&amp; Anacla (Belchet 9- 9} at Atlanta
(l.oibrandl ~II), 7'40p.m.
San Fnncilco (Bwtcu 14-7) at San

·

Atlantlat Oevcland, 7:30P.m.
New YIXk • Chlcaso, 8:30p.m.
'DalrvU al Milwaukee, 8:30p.m.
New Ieney at Ninnatot1, I p.m.

'•

WLPcLGB

Mantr.l (Nabholz 6-2) II PitllbW'g,h

1ndlana 11 Chadoue, 7:30 P!m.

••

East

.

(B .Smilh ~8), 2:20p.m.

Allaoi&amp;IOl, Wuhin- 104
S.n Antonio liS, GOlden Slaw: lOS

·ullh lli,Odmdo9S

NATIONAL LEAGUE

11 Vollod '""'lnt....Uonal

"''

I Ill
.6:53
2
.364 23 Ill
.m 2A Ill

.311
Tllll
.250 32 Ill
. Padfk Dlvlsll"!
y.PCllllan&lt;l .........57 II
.760
r·LA 14... ......ss 21
.72A. 2 Ill
y-l'lloaU ' ........so 25 .667
1
y.(;ald"' ..... ...... 39 37
.513 18 Ill
S..UI&amp;
............ 37 38
.493 . 20
• LA OiJ&gt;Iion .......30 4l .400
Zl

l

Milwau.koc 11 Toua. 8:35 p.m.

Minncaoca at OU!and , IO:OS p.m.

California at Seaute. 1O:OS p.m.

WLPcLGB

y-San Antonio .....Sl 24

.7:3S

32

.627
.600
· .S33
.493
.373

y·H""""' ........49 25
y-UIIh
...........49 26

Boatm atTOf'(l'lto_ 7:35p.m.
ou,..o ll Bobimo.._
p.m.
Clcvcland at Kmau City, S;OS p.m .

31

.3(11

Cleveland ......... 28 47
.......... 23 SJ .303 32 Ill ·
Western Conferen&lt;e
Midwest Division

• CharlOIU&gt;

-..a
WedDesday•s Games

Tl

Central Division
. y-Chicaao ........ls 20 .733
y-Dtnail

Jim to stretch its margin ·tO 6-1.
Before Houston's ninth inning
rally, the Astros had only managed
a solo ho!Der by Biggio in the
fourth.
·
.
. Houston, missing most 11f its
sluggers and top relief pitchers
from last year because of b'ldes
and free agent departures, started

didn't-want to walk Browning,"
said Scott. "I threw him a fastball.
At least, jt was supPOSed to be a .
fastball. I aimed 11 and tried to
guide iL It didn't bave much on iL
It was supposed 111 be down, but it
wis up. Browning hit it good."
"I ~ot the good part of the bat
'on it,' said Browning. "I hit it
hard down the line. I think that's
the fiTS! 3-run double I've ever hiL
"
·
"Scott took S901Cthing off it to
get it over and Browning toma. hawked it," said Houston manager
Alt Howe.·"We had the pitcher Uf.
there with iWo outs and ifyou can t .
get,the pitcher out, you're in trouble."
.
Cincinnati added a run in the
fifth on }Jal Morris' RBI -single off
·

Bc.tm (Hmb:13-9) at TCJm~to (Key

IJ. 7), 7:3l pm.

(llaaom IJI.9),1~3l p.m.
.
(Moni&amp; IS. II) II ~d
' (Stewut 22-11), .l l:O! 'p.m.

:n

a

~edL:!k~~:~e~~~~sa~~:·. Taylo.r 's

Scoreboard
NATIONAL
·BASKETBALL
ASSOCIATION
~~astern Confertn&lt;e
Adantk Division

.

SWIMMING DEER group or primaries portray swlmmiDg deer aod humans io
. 'fOb, My Dear'', a musical play In
ac:tlo be

one

performed at Tuppen Plllbis Elementary Sdlool
on Friday ·evealog. The program Is directed by
Ralpb Werry.

"··che~ter-.Gc,;trden Cl"!J~ has meeting

A program "Arranging in' a Vic- 27 at Salisbury School were com- .. chairman 'at Chester United
Manner" by guest ~IJU!cer, pleted. Members volunteered to Methodist Church during April.
Sus1e Cllfll!lnter,. was a h1gh-hght brin' coffee-hour muffins--and the , M~)(e Mora p~ovided flowers at
.of the Apnl meeung of the Chester club s "Garden Baskei," a decm·a- Tnmty Church m March.
Garden Club at the home of Pat tive featUre. Reservations are to be
The May I meeting will include
Holter.
given to Dorothy Woodard, a tOur of Harris Fanns in Portland
. Mrs. Carpen!er spqke of the ·LanJ!Sville, by April 23. The club at 6:30 P·~·
.
.
mfluence of the mdustnal revolu- sent doriations to OAGC AmerifloThe reg10nal board meeung will
·. tion, giving rise to a new middle ra '92 Wahkeena Nature Preserve, be held at Chester United
·class, on the Victorian era of the Vic to; H. Ries Fellowship Fund · Methodist Church on SatUrday at
19th century. Factory-made pre8S!ld and OAGc Scholarship Fund.
noon beginning with a covered dish
glass and gild container~. w~re
Officers were elected and will di'!ner. Presidents and chainnen are
available to the masses. Uuhtanan be installed in the fall. Reports of urged to attend.
household containers were also March "sunshine". were given and
A dessert course was served by
used to hold the large masses of Bette Dean will do "sunshine" in the hostess, Eleanor Knight
strong, ~arm colored fl~wer~. A April. Twila Buckley is altar flower received the door prize.
large var1ety of flowers mclumng
herbs were used in a circular design
with no focal area and a nonsymetrical composition. Country
Victorian made use of gourds, vegetables, com husks, wild flowers
and herbs in any household container available. Cherubs, fans,
t/1111
birds, glass domes to protect the
material were much in use as well
~10/
· as dried flower pictureS.
Mrs. Carpenter showed charts of
Victorian designs and ·displayed
nosegays, tussie-mussies and a
framed arrangement in a gilt qmtainer all in the Victorian manner.
A gift was presented to her.
'
, ·.·· Mrs. Holter displayed a fram~
design made of hair, each part
labeled with her ancestors' name,
made in the mid-19th century .
"Romance of Fragrance" was
given by Maye Mora. The joy and
peace that Victorians found in their
gardens were spread throughout
their homes and they refmed the an
of home 'frangrance.. I ncr eased
kno)Vledge about health and sanitation allowed them to use fragrant
plants more for pleasure than
necessity. Herbs of'tansy, pennyroyal · and cedar were stored with
clothing and linens to chase bu~s.
Lavenar was a mainStay of the VICtorian gardens. They loved the
nosegay flowers - massross, lily-ofthe-valley, and the sweet-leaved
geranium. They knew that hon\e
frangrance was not simply a matter
of adding SCCII! to the &amp;IT; it added a
whole new dimension to living

Andrew Todd Bissell, son of
Todd and Diana Bissell, Long Bottom, celebrated his first binhday
March 19.
. . Attending were paternal grandmother, Kathleeh Bissell, Long
Bottom; maternal grand.Parents,
Gerald and Shirley S1mpson,
Racine;· Mart, Regina, Joshua and
Tiffany Simpson, Middleport;
IeromJ. Iackson-Bissell, Tom
Wolf, LOng Bouom; Betty Spaun,
Joy, Zackery, and Chelsey Imboden, Stephanie and. Jamie Stemple,
Harley Rose, Roberta Thaxton,
Racine; .Jim, Mindy and Josiah
Hayman, Reedsville; and Jodie
smith, The Plains.

ANDREW T. BISSEU

Ronald ·c. Cozart will be teach;
ing painting classes at the Middle·
pon Arts Council beginning Mon;
day.
Cozart, .whose work has been
shown in various exhibitions over
the past seven years, is a summa
cum laude graduate of Ohio Uni,
versity with a M.F.A. in painting. •
The classes will be held oui
Mondays from 7-10 p.m. and
Monday's meeting will be held to
discuss such thinJ!S as subject matter, supplies, types of paint. Otheu:
classes will be held April 22, 29;
. May 6 and 13. Cost is $15 for fow: ·
classes; the fii'St meeting is free. :

l

.tori~n

Wh1ml
The Js.m.

If gou
thl1 hot,
gou 'r1 got fo 61 ...

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 options.

The

space.

Roll call was answered by 12
membel's naming their favorite floral fragrance. Devotions of poems
and prayer for peace were given by
Beue Dean and Mrs. Holter, substitUting for Jo Hill who is iU.
.
Maida Mora, vice president,
conducted the meetinJ in whic~
plans were made for a VISit to Wahbena Nature Preserve 1111 Ma)"5.
The Shade Valley Floral Arts and
Chesler Garden Club will leave II
liOIIII. Guides wiD be ready to make
tht tour infomllllive.
· Plans foq~artlci= at the
Ohio Associlllion fJ
Cluba
spring regional meeting on April
,, ......
. ,..
.

•

TUXEDOS ••••••••••• Starting At $2995
RECEIVE

$5 00 OFF All REGULARLY PRICED

Sentinel

PROM FORMAL WEAR

FABRIC
SHOP
110 WIB IUIII
POMROY, OHIO
9
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·2214
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Tuesday, April 9, 1991

. Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

6 The Dally Sentinel

.....

Sentinel Calendar

11111

~~~==========~~~~~Community Caleadar items . PORTLAND - The Freedom Wednesdl!y at noon in the confer;\

r

appear two daJI before u event
IDd the day or that eveat. Items
must be received weD Ia advaace
to assure pabUcation In tH caleadar.
TUESDAY '.·
POMEROY • The Ohio Eta Pili
Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi Sorority
will meet Tuesday • 7 p.m. at the
Meigs County Public Library in
Pomeroy. Fair ads fer the pranium
book must be turned in at that time
as well as reservations for
Founder's Day. Officers will be
elected.
.

.

RACJNE - The Racine Higl!
SchoOl Class of 1961 will hold an
organizational meeting for its 30th
class reunioD oo Tuesday at 7 p.m.
at Southern High School. All focal
class members are urged to aaend.
RACINE - Racine Lodge No.
461 F and AM will meet Tuesday
at 7:30p.m. All masons are invite(!
to attend. .
.
RACINE - The River Valley
Herbalists will meet TuesdaY. at.7
p.m. at the home of Connie Hill. ·
''SKINNED ALIVE" - The Eastera High .
School Junior .Class will perform the comedy
dinner theater "Skinned Alive" on Saturday.
Here, several members or the cast re-enact one
orthe scenes from the play. Pictured, lef'l to

right, are· Steve Bameri, aod Newsome, Lisa
Golden, Jeanlfer Ronsb, Carrie GilliiiD, Pat
Gibbs and .Amy Well. Lyinaln froat Is Danny
Short.
.

I

!J-

Tlte Rolll•l Sto•u, "Flaalt- the
)ICIIId'' (CM 'Ia) ·
·
•
Tbe loUin~ Stonca' 1989-90 "

·People in
the.rtews

Phi:

""~ou:r'1c0: to be
mOll
Y
ented
tour Ia rock ltiJtory. 'l'llere was a
cable bPo VIR of an Alllntic City
NJ., s&amp;ow, I radio llimulcasl, 1111P:

,,' :

•

'

Public NotiCe

..
'"'"
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&lt;)

...

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.'

""·
,.~··

GREENE FUNERAL: Gralaam Greeae was buried Monday
r TALKING ABOUT THE WAR- Cpl. John Leport, Point . in the village ofCorseaux, Switzer·land, after a ceremony officiated by
!'leas
_ ant, w_.va., o( the United States Army, recently retuned
~ome from the Gulf War. He spoke Monday n10ning to the sixth
a priest considered to be the model
for the hero of one of Greene' s
~rade class 111 Mrs. Sandy Walker at Salem Ceater Elementary
later wort_s. Some 40 people
~here be oll'ered answers to the mlllly questions asked or him by
attended the service for the writer,
he class. 'fiR class kept In coutact with Cpl. Leport duriag bis stay
who died last week of a blood disn the Middle East and t'ey also studied Middle East geoarapby.
~W YORK (UPI)- Fonner
I
ease, amonll them his daughter, ~nt R~ R~. respondCarnllae ~ his son Francis
to .a scalhmg new biography on
Grme, his wtfe, Vl'rienae, from . ~g
~·s w1f~, Nl;'lc~•• call~. the book
whom he had been separated for
sensauonabs~, that SCI'Y~. no
many years, and Yvonne Coetta, ~~
but the cnuc•sm
his companion for·the past two did "9' purpose,
slow first~y sales. . .
decades. The short funeral ceremo.
~~~
Kelley s unauthonzed
ny, conducted ia the Latin rile, was bto
Y
of the former first ladY·
held at the Roman Catholic Church who!n she descn'bed
a '"petbcoat
of Saint Jean in Vevey on the pn::ndent," went onassale
Monday
shores of Lake Geneva. The eulogy at ~24. ~S a copy _at bookstores
was given by Greene's friend nuon":•de, and II seemed an
Father
Leopoldo Duran, a Spanish 1ns~t bu.
According to the repqrt,
: ANCHORAGE, Alaska (UPJ) .
•
.
priest
recognized
as the model for .
..;- The Exxon Valdez oil spill Exxon's spifled oil killed up to Greene's Monsignor
We
.
haven
t
ha_d
th•,s
mu~h
Quixote char. mteres~.~n a, book smce Satamc
killed many more animals and 5,500 sea otters - more than five acter.
caused more harm to the environ- times the number of carcasses col·
~e~. saida~atLaui'!et s bookstore m Boston, referment than originally believed, 1ected and perhaps as many as half
ELL Y MAY LIVES: Alas, nng to the book.thal fon:c:d _au~r
according to the firSt federal gov· the otters hving .in Prince William there
will be no "Beverly Hillbil- Salman Rusbdte mto h1d1ng m
·
ernment damag\1 asse~ment of the Sound.
reunion show. lreae Ryan,
lies"
"Studies have documented con1989 disaster.
.
. . . .
who
played.
Granny, and Nancy 19~?·'They were wa1tmg
More than two years after the tinuing injury to sea otters," the Culp, who was
1D hne
Miss Jane, have · when, '!'e ~pened the store
9
wreck of the Exxon Valdez, the; repon Said, citing "elevated con- died and Max Baer
isn't inter- a.m., sud Stephen Pascalat
•. an
spilled oU was continuing to harm centrations of petroleum hydrocar- ested in reviving his Jr.
Jethro employee at Doubleday's Ftfth
wildlife, according to the govern- bons" in food caught by·OIIers and Bodine character. bocifish
"Max
just Avenue $lOre in New York.
ment summary of damages released a decrease in animals the otters eat, doesn't want to do it.".says Donna
Monday in the fii'St public report of such as mussels. Scientists found Douglas, who played Elly May.
"Th~ h~ve ~n tons of peo58 gov.ernment science studies car- abnormally high otter mortality in "He wants to ~ diat image and pte flooding~· Smce tJ.le book .had
oiled areas occurring lhis spring.
been deh~ered thts mommg,
ried out at a cost of $35 million.
get on with his life.'' Douglas is JUSt
The studies themselves remain
we
had
to seD ll out of boxes ev.en
the main attraction this week at a
secret, and many are continuing,
befor~.
we
could put up our dtsNew York fund-raiser for Clear
but the prelim in~ , data suggests
plays.
. .
·
Pool, a ~ lhll seods underprivi- . Meanwhile,
that the Exxon oU spill was deadliRonald
Reagan
leged kids to camp, says she has tssued a tersely wordc:d statement
er and more pervasive than authoribeen ~ng her post-' "HillbU- about ~ book, bref.king what. he
tjes initially believed.
·
workina in the country .
Iies"
. "I wouldn't caD it pessimistic,"
The Meigs County 4-H Com- music urne
c:d his senerai practice of ~tth101
gospel
fields in order to cal'
Paul Genler, chairman of the feder- mittee has scheduled a kickoff dinholding
comment on books wntten
young people. "Aaitude is about him
or his family.
al trustees natural resources team, ner for all members, advisors and inspire
said of the summary repon: "I'd their f81Dilies on April 20 at 6:30 such an important key to your
"The ~~ llld absurd falselife," sbe says. "Work on your hoods cited m a recently publiJbed
call it realistic.' ~
p.m. at Eastern High School.
attitude,
making it positive, and book cleady exceed the bounds of
"We had II miUion gallons of .
The 4-H Committee will pro- your life can
be a blessing ~ other decency," Reagan said, without
o(il g9. into that water," Gertler vide the meat (turkey and ham) and people.''
.
. iL
said. 'And in some cases there was those attending are to bring table
signifiCIIIt injury and that· injury is service, a coveied dish and dessen. ·
1181'?,~ - ........tly untrue," he
MUSICAL
NOTES:
Now
that
said.
"EvmytliiDgirom the allegaBeverages·wm also be provided.
COntinuing.'' .
the
RoWD1
Stoaes
•
Jive
album
is
The fedetll report seems to belie
tion
of
marijuana uae to marital
Iloo' prizes for the evening will
in
the
stores,
Keith
Richards
is
infidelity to my failure to be pre·E~xon claims that Prince WillU.O include a cordless phone (adults)
Sound was underaoing a "robust cassette recorder and walkman 'devoting some time to his solo sent at the birth of my_daughter,
•
(youlh prizes), t-shirts, hats. recipe career. He's going to do another Paai.··
reeg:?'~ ,Slid he viciwed feder- books and coupons for food at local album aod tour with his side band,
' 'Many of my friendi have
the X-penslve Winos, and recently urged me 10 issue a point-by-poiat
al s'ummarr as "an objective restau~ts. To be eligible for the played
on a record by Jobany denial of the lxd's many OJdrliCS.
door prize drawing, each person
asscssmenL •
.
Jobnsoa,
who once was Chuck To do so would, I feel, provide
· The sumiM')' was submiued to needs to bring a favorite recipe
Berry's
pianisL
He also has a guest legitimacy to a book that has no
the U.S. Dislrict Coun in Anchor- which wiiJ be included in the 4-H
appearance
coming
on a new . basis in fact and serves no decent
age at the c:191C of business Mon- cookbook to be published later this
record
by
blues
veteran
Jobn Lee :l"se," the former president
d~y and Iacer released by federal year. Recipe forms are avaliable at
Hooker
...
R-ue
Barr
was left
offiCials, who ~ the infcrmation ' tlle extension office and wjll be
a
little
confused
after
attendiag
a
"I tiave 111 abidina faith that the
would be UICful to the PQblic. the sent to each member and advisor. . ·
party
in
Los
Angelca
last
week
to
American
people will juclse this
The program for the evening
Alaska Je&amp;iderure llld Congmss in
c:elebraue
the
raleaae
of
Dweezll
book
for
what
it really is: sensaevaluatint die IJIOP()Ied $1 billion will include inlroduction of comZapPI'S
new
album.
"We
love
the
tionalism
whose
sole purpose is
clvillelllemenl"beeWoen Buon and mittee officers, junior fair board miiiiC, " Slid Barr, who was wilb
emching
ill
author
lllld its publishthe state and federal aovemments, members. National Report Form.
blilblnd
TAnlokl.
"We
Jove
er,''
saiil
Re&amp;~~~"Neidler
I, lior
which have sued ExlUlll for dam- participants and speakers, Dave lbe meuqe In it." Asked what
my
wife
Nency
imend
to
have
any
Samples, Jac~ County Extenajca.
.
•
me11111
abe
roand,
Barr
said,
further
comment
oo
die
mau..
''
Scientists repo1 tell findins oil sion Agent, Apicullllre, IIIICl Orela "We're atill trying to figure it
B. Dalton bookstore manager
fest be low the surface and Riffle, Ohio National Report Form OUL''
.Debbie Knutaoa in Washinaton,
WiMer in 1990.
tluouglllilil die food dilin.

Federal studies show
exxon s~ill daQJ.age!
}Vorse and continuing

4-H dinner
scheduled

the

no

D.C., ~ported S:t~lling 15 of the 30
books m stock m the fust hour of
busmess, and a salesman at another
Dalton branch said "the phone is
ringing off tht\ hook, and has been
for the past two weeks.''
Boob &amp; Books manager lletsey
Willeford in Miami reported "setling aside about a half dozen COJ.Iies
for customers and we just opened."
Simon &amp; Schuster, publisher of
the 603-page book; pnnted a fll'St
edition of 600,000 copies, an
unusually large number for any
book. It also brought out a $15.95
audi~ tape of the book :With Kelley
reading 180mmutesof•L
Excerpts from "Nancy Reagan:
The Unauthorized Biography"
prtllted by newspapers and reported
on television surred a feverish
'!lterest in the boo~'s most sensauonal aspects, parucularly a clmm
that the former first lady carried on
a romance with singer Frank Sinatra from 1970 through the White
House years.
The book, based on l&lt;;elley
interviews with more than I ,000
Reagan associates, goes far toward
,rewritin~ the h~ry of the ~eag~
era. It p1ctures Mrs. Pres1den!
- as she was known by the Wh1te
HOUIIC staf!'- as much more of a
~wer behind lhe throne than pre-·
v•ously reported.
She even passed on Ronald Rea·

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(.lUI)
.
Eddie Harril, "A Tale of Two
Cilia" (Nipt Reeordl)

• -The Area's
Numbir 1 Marketplace
.
'

Eddie H8nis's now album, ' 'A
Tile of Two Citica," is a compila-

~:0:~~~~!~:ld

TO PlACE AN AD (All 992-2156
MONDAY lhru FRIDAY I A.M. lo S P.M.

,-

Yra; 5-8 Vre; 10-14 Yre; 11·
11 Yra; 20. 0....1

POucE

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Patrol-n: I .G:!.

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Public Noltce

COUNCIL MEMBERS
1-Mottii.CIIrk
Vlllloge of P o Moiul County. Ohio
1411, 1 I, 23; 3tC

ORDINANCE NO. IIIII
An ~-• •oarlllng
the rulll for the regulation
ond conduct of the Volun·
FIN Doportmont of the
VM!age of Po-roy .

Public Noltce

1. 13,

Dlapatcher: ' 4.11, 4 .11.

IIESOLUTION 311.91
IE IT RESOLVED by IN
Council of the Vlllet• of Po·
- · 111 - - r • thereto
concurring:
· tliet tile Cletfc/T-•urer'
of IN VIlli.. of Po....,roy,
trenefer
tile
oum Of
eaa.ooo.oo trom the Gen·
erll Fund to tile I t - Fund
for 1M -etlan of cu~nrnl

4.71. 4.U. 4 ,11.1.01.

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UPHO&amp;STDY
111··· Sacllld
Ml...... rt
Hand Tufting
Cudom DraPtl•
36 \'earo Experten ..

614-ttl-1321
w. Say What w. Do.
We Do Whllt W. I•Y·

I I..IM.

USII APPUAIIaS
MIAYWa.Aim

WASild'-fiOI •

IIYIS-$6t.

Til-COUNTY

· •cvcUNG

Leootool Off .... .,... 0.

n.c-"'

__
-··
-·
-•lum.---·
.............

NEW. UIID PAII'TS
FOR ALL MAKI!I •
MODELS

,_.,,ONe
.......

II. 1 &amp; II. 14J

,.....,, ..... tar

992-7013
· or 992-5553
I ;100-141~0070

Ull fOI PIKIS

' ...614-"1-5114
,,.1-7

111'11 1 1 rno .

.•. ·--

IISSELL I I ..IE

-IUIOIIS-SIM •

UIIIIIS---4115 •
.

.aiOamtS-Sit•

lEN'S APPLIANCE

SEIVKE

·ti-SUS • •as-JS61
Acren ' - Pest Offko
POIIIIOf, OliO
I0/30i1t ita

BISSILL
'IUilDIIS
CUSTOII-T
HOMES &amp;IAIAGES

..,, ••••• , .... Prkts"

, ... 949·1101
., .... 94t-2160

FOIIVII IIONIE

coNniUcno•

PIOM TANNING

·· SPECIAl

•Geraiu

Itt 50 High Schoel

·-.w-.
.,............

a(o•plata

Step I

Studonts

10 SISSIONS- $10

C&amp;~ep•e

Cell 949·1126 .
fer Appt.

915-4473

FOIIYDIIOIIU

u ....

667-6179

S.JI-'to tilt

.... LINDA!S

•Romoclelng,and
Home ·Aepalra
•Roofiftg
•Siding
•Painting

.PAINnNG

MIILOI • bi&amp;H

,.....

FREE ESnMATEa .

,..... Jlal!! out ..

110 JOI TOO SIALL
FREE ESTIIATES

CEDAI
CONSTIUctiOI

ltt 1111 do it •• you.
YEIY IEAIONMII
IEFE.NCIS .

992-6641 or
691-6164

985·-4110

11-"·"'""

TM

COUIITIY CLII'
GOlf LESSONS- fl
6 fer fSS

CART CU...,
... 111 ftOOil

o·...

. . QBIS_..........:. ••

lrtlten (hills lflllirall
IIOPMS • PLAilUES

IADGES

•Ouel(ly Work

•1'- 111imii1M

.c...::a• Flit Dry
ett(tlt

·

JO. ftAfOII

Gto• on

Floor Flnleh

,., ......

.....

•n ••••,• ·

ne

•r LIWif, Oww

11. I......... Oil.

kootC..M,Gt Ia
4/J/1 ao.

CUSIOMt!_~~IIG

Wo Haw Ch•111l Ow
Te
1•h M11oi1 EDit • lt. 241 threugh
Chad•, Oh.

IPECIALIZINO IN .. :.

eCuotom lent l!Jthauet IY'Itamo
eCoti!IMto Una of Exhauet 8uppllea
•Handla and lnatlll Monroe lhoclte
Como ud he Uo Fw A II'Ne ••••atltn
uciJ: lbiiU.

PIL 614·911·1949
.,... St. 11, J41

aua

IIIIIY
... lllf&lt;~.!~ .li7U

GlOOM

c. Qltfl ....... .

u•

•R•eontbleRet•

.,

·100M

-illulll,

en, .... netora 1nd . . ftOfto

01 lOU filE

S1l1 ·

'

fliiZib-S IJS •

OPEN 1 DAYS '-1 --.--, AWEEtr" 9 A.M. '11L 7 P.M.
If J4!U cl1011 .. JIW
J4!rll on wllbMii-.wt
IIUJ_DII wttktiiiiL

DAIWII, OliO

OVINYL SIDING '•
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•ILOWNIN
INIULATION

.

TII·COUm
IECYCUNG

s, .. w. . ..
c..te.,,_
....,

4-5·tl·l ""· pd.

DlywNitJht
NO SUNDAY CAW

ova••
........
.... ......

•

C•mpi"'iJ [ q u•p rn o•n !

79 Clmptn f.

__....;~---~·-~----:-~-t.=======:::::;'
'

Gutters
Downapouta
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

- 0•- wa"'

~

'1&amp; · 8t:01n a. M O'\ t f'O ti ' '!I Sat !'
78 Auto Pll'u&amp; Acc••w tr•flll
?7 Auto Aepeir

.,.

•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD
.

fwulltii!L ,._.. Is

..•. ""' ..., .....

to Do

r ,.

1-•nl L Wrltwnl

WOIIId appraclott ln'
filii. Fllllllll Mllfl.
........
.,calar.

6J

. 64
&amp;S

•• ·· For l.11••

.SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM alid
REMOVAL

s.

IO;be=.,~I;MI=-II~G=IN=C~Y
llfY for the-•ionof t11e
VIIIIJtleeo::

Wllnlld In lluy

.

614-..

. IEcnON 7 , That the Or-

18 -~ w ... ted

'"''" Equ lpnurnt

82

us.iness Service:s.

lee_.

- o f fiOO.OC!_per.....
- llled.
· li~=====::::;oll_ll.....,.

11 lcttiOit .. lnt!ruc:t ron
1I .. ,_ljtfto. TV&amp;. Cl A•pai r
17 - lft\lflc.Uineout·

41 - Hou'" tor Pltnl
•2 - ~ Mobii•Ham" lor R-~1
43- ,lrmt for Rant
44 - 4ttrtrntnl for Rent
41 - FurNihed Rooms
·· ~· ....oe ...... ~,
47- W..ad 10 llt.nt
41 .. lt~~o~lltmant for Aflnl

167 Coolvill e

T.J.i"Nu.ll, , ·,

-

Ul - lwOft

S7f · Appl• Grcw11
7'7) . lbeon

9116

'~

~====B~Ia=n=k=-=~

•

Mifldlflrn"

61

14 - lutln•• r,a,ning

31 ·Hom• tor leta

e• 3 - ro,tleftfl

5

PRICE REDUCED - PARTIAL OWNER
FINANCING AVAILABLE!'

·

t; li'll~\lllck

w.....d

21 - luW~•• Opportunill

I'XI'harrp:l';~ ...

follmri "-!! I r•/"1 llu ""'

wa"'

See Special Prices, Plus
Fun and Games.

•

Fwn Snpnlil'l

111161111611

Cia.•.•i f'i l ' d 'flli!W' .corer I It I'

Y. (, YOUNG IH

·-

13 -lntuflnc:e

2 DO po M TU[IDAV
·· 2 .00 PM . WEDNI!IDAY
2 00 PM THURSDAY

I~

BULLETIN
- - - - BOARD

possible for q1111ifyin1 person to
buy very nice lllrp home on 3 ~
acres in Racine. 4 BR, 3 baths, 2
~arages, rented 1 BR apt. Property
1ncludes 4,800 sq. ft. ·firm bkll.
and mobile home.

, 1 ·.- lilu•tlo"

2·oo• M. MONOAV

c-

BIG BEND
'FOODLAND ·.

vu p1,

,, ....._,W.,.ttd

YOUNG'S

U·

AnHct~te ll

M ise M~:r r: htn dl•r!
ft uild inp Surtftlt f"'
PPit for hi"

1!11/, 'i\ y 1 , nl

~====4=-·=·='90=-l=mo~.

VIllage

H(tUI""o1!4 0 nn.to:

&amp;9 ·· Fm !hht or Tred.-

Sweeper
Repal"r
698 6591

SUPPORT CANCER
DAY BENEFIT
WED., APRIL 10

'

&amp;6

992-2269

.

'

-~;::~:::::::::::1;:=======::1-;:=======:;1

-•n

. Oft dly

· '"' contf!eut rllf' , ,.,.,, i11nlo\"'••ur •t ~• "' ,,, P.••,r t•"'" ,..'

S};. Musle .. l .. t u unu"H '
58 fru i tl A V11glf111 hl-.

BILL SLACK

M
ie........,

.....,...,,. •...

'

3 0 · d~t v

.,,

53
54
55

PEEDY VAC
Q I'

'

&amp; 1 3, 00

1S

16

5 2 SoOJIIng Onnd•

.

..,......

lO
.42
60

$9 .00

Merchandise

B

~;;.~J.:~~=

Yllle.. of Pomoroy. Pom·
l111'f, Ohio; ond
'

se.oo

S1

1---:-...;.,---~-._
I

J'""•

.

•

10

Ott Ruaffe Fast

Public Notice

1---------_;

I

SATURDAY .

04 ,00

IS
IS
15

1

Ov' ' 1 5 Wofdl
20

R1t11

\'lords

D1yo

Monlhl¥

tackY:

I

1 .41. , _ _;...;;;;;.;.;.;....;.;;;;,;;,;;;;;,._

e.u. e.u. 1.43, a.u.

·a A.M. until

bll1t
to further 'Irejjulele
uld
WHEIIEAS.
t io deemod
· dopoutmont.
Meter
4.11, 4.U.
THEIIEFORE, be It or·
Ju~lll~tltereW. AhHrlng
4 .75, 4 .U, 4 .111. '1 .01.
'
delned
by the Vlllege Coun·
on tile IP.,IaltlcNI wHI bi. . '
ITREET
ail af tM Yllle. . of Po-ooy•.
heW Pttday. l!prUI.1181,
Aat. lup.: 1.72. 1.12,
r lletaofOhlo, by1111-.n.·
Ill 1:30 o'.... P.M. Per- 1 .82,
1.02, 1.12, I:U
' 1M vote of ell ..,.mbert
4
.H.
4.11;
....., tile ... . , oloould
lieclld theNIO:
4.75. 4.11. 4.111. 1.01.
ARnCLE 111 : Allmembero
WATEII
...., 11114 Inform tile Court.
18
tD 31 teen o f • mull
·
Tille
-lutlon
111111oed
Aut . .. . .,., 11.17. 1.17.
n. Court 11 laaiwl l1aancl 1.07,
co""'ly with the Ohio re·
MilCh 11.1111.
·
• . 17, 1.27. 1.37.
Floor. C•rt
l1aao0d
llicherd 0. leyler, Meyor vioecl codo end IN Ohio C .
lt.. . . . _ , , Ohio 41711. lahrere: 4.84. 4 .14. 1.04,
Larry Wehrung, Prs1. A.A. lniUranae NIIUire·
11.24. 1.34.
.
Dlllrtl ....... 1.14.
·
Po-y
Vlllll. . Council monto • oleN pratectlon
Sp. All81\'1t: 1 .44, 11.14.
lniUranoe r1tlnga and 8tat1
aren•
L.
Morrie.
Clerk
l'lollliil
e.M. • ·74, 1.84, .1 .114.
of Ohio • lurMu • of WorkLena K. .......d. Cllloll .•
1411;· 1tc ·' ii ' '
~...._~
4.SC.
men"• Compentation out·
1412,1. 1l,lto
USED RAiliOA' nES
4.... 4.71.4...........01
llne1 .
•
"GEIIIII.IIAL
'
1· 12·10-tfn
ARTICLE 112: Appllcetion
PUblic ~otlce
Public NOtice
lecNterv: 1 .87. 1 :01.
for memwlhip !n the Po·
1.17. 1.27. 1 .3,7, 1.47:
meroy VoluntHr Ftre De·
NOTICE
. SECTION 2 : Thalia ordl·
ORDINANCE NO . Ill
No11oe11 hereby given thllt portmenlwln.bllgl•""b"the
s"
nonce II Mrelly docterOcllo S•lh 'F. HyNIIof41110Vi· Fire Chief or hio IIPPOinted
An Ordineoce to !oteblloh
. ·
S.llriu for Voriouo ·
be en EMERGENCY _.. neger lt,..l. RaciiMI, Ohio . offioer1. When the IPPRCI·
Nan·..,ted SuPMVIIIIIIV
oure noc-rv for IN lm· 41771 . hu ftlod on Applic:a· tion 11 completed end re·
ond Non-ouptfVIoorv
medille p.-....,atlon of tM tlon In tile ProHte Court of tumed to tile Fire Chief. II
UO lfJ
EmpioyNI of the VIle. . of public pHCII, hMith, end M- Mlip County, Ohio, Cue wll then be lubmilted to the
Pa-ooy, Ohio. and
· letv of IN Vii'- of P.,.
No. 211114. requ ..ting 1
Firt Compeny . Aurogulerly
dlc&amp;.rt~ en
meroy. Ohio, ..d 1 for the chan. . af h•r 1011'• narM lch-lotl -~~lng . • _...
EMERGENCY.
fUrthol
tllet 1hi con- fnlm leoti Petrlok Weteon . prlete P'"edUIII wMibe un·
BE rr ORDAINID IY THE llnued " " ' " ' - - of high to lcott Petrie- Hyllil. Thi1 dolteken to eccept or dloel·
COUNCIL OF THE VILLAGE employN morele end g - Appi!CIItlon wll be Nard ot low tho 1ppliootlon. The Fire
OF POMEROY. OHIO.
amployerl-latM rele- 1 :S0p.m. ontM 10th dey of Chief or hl1 oppolnted of·
IECTION 1: '1'1111 the oil· tlone ._inle hMmoi.tuc- . Mey, 1811 .
fleer wMIIn turn roport to IN
ertet of 1M wrioue ......... -._ WHEIIEFORE. thja Or·
Robort E. luok • . MoyorondtheVItlegeCoun·
...Mfll - · polloi N• dlnllllbllehallteb efiNt Md
ell, the roou1t1 of IN ectlon
•
J~dge 1111d Ex Officio Clerk
mnry:w-.:....,....N.we· be i n tuRforoeuofJMIIIIIV
Mlige County token In bllhiiH of the Fire
1
1
81
1
t• elftPioYWi lhlll
1111d
•
• - n Itt p,•~11•
l'lob•t• Court Company. T1Ho
Coun· ~1
_......, .....Wdettlle - ..............,tile
. 1411. 1tc
ell wll toke tile .......,.tlon
&gt;
-~~~ t.rth 0r1 lxhllllt A. PAlliD: Aprl 1. 1. 11
.................. wflloh ex• AnEST:
'
~:..:~~~"'n '"'final
)
1111111 .... be 11M1
lMry Wehrung, !'*-; T0111
_ _;,Pub,;;;;;;,;,;.llc:;..;,;Nol,;;.;;.;lc;;,;:e;,__
RTICLE 113: T1Ho Flro
'' .. edopted Md oppro.....
w....,, lruoe RNd, Ietty
wlll fumllh lhe VIII...
CARPE"TEI SEIYICE
EXHIIIf A- 10·2 Yrt; 3· 4 lero~k. Wlllem A. YountJ
O"DINANCE NO. 1117
- 11•- ~·
'Cierll w~h 1 complete lilt of
An
to Eoteblloh roctive fiN fiahterl not to
Varlouo
CMd forty ("01 me-11 an
- Eiectrlcol onol Plumbing
• vMrly Hole.
- con_.
ARTICLE 114: AH me-11
- llooflnt
to r-IVe minimum wejjo
-1-lor I . _ _
for all flro cello In the Vlllego
Pointing
.. .. .
of PorMroy.
IFRI!I! I!ITIMATEII
ARTICL~ 1115, After 1 II
BUJ.I,ETIN BOARD DEADLINE
yNrl of •rvloe. 1 memb•
ho1 tile option to bocomeon
992·62
4:30P.M. DAY BEFORE
lnectlvem•-·
,
ARTICLE Ill : All ordi·
PUBLiCATION
1111,_ or 1111rt1 of. ordi·
meat,
lllnoet In aonfllcl with thl1
_ ..lehed rot
,.,.
onllnence .,. horeb\t ,..
·-.
111,000.00 .... wear.
peeled.
SICTION 2' '1'1111 the
AniiT:
..
lory of IN Tu ~ltretor
Larry Wehrung, P111.; lei·
1hiN be end lolweby eoteb·
tv Soronicll• . , _ R..d.
llohed 111 the 1111 •of
Tom Weny, Wlllllm Young
112.000.00 .... ye..
COUIIICIL MEMIERI
IECTION 3, Thill the tel· lrendeMorrlo. Cieftl
:tGS N.
Stroet
•rv of tile VIlle.. Adminlo· Vllllo. . of Pamero¥
...uPOIT. OliO 45160
tretor lhlll be 11111 1o hereby Meltlo County, Ohio
-oiled 111 tile reta of 1411. 11. 23. 3tc
Olflao
2-11..
tZ3.100.00 ...........
H0111614-ttl-56tl
SECTION 4: Thill the Ill·
.DOmE lUIIIII, 110111
•rv of t11e , , _ •-~­ 1 C.rd of Thankl
HOUSEI•LOTIIPAIIMI
lhell be Md II hereby IIUib·
COMMIIICIAL
lllhed et the rete of
W
•
Need U1tlnpl
11
00
'
•000· por.yeer.
THANKS
.
ll·S:»tfl
IECTION 1: That the ul·
erv of 1M Fire Chief of the
We would Ilk• to
PO-y Fire Depert""'nt
tfl•nllev....,on• who'
•
.... • Md 1e lweby •IIIIo"-• helped u1 elnce
......,. et . the 1111 of
our recent hou1e fire .
*~':'3nOCYr.:W:i the IllBob • St..la
•VInyl lldlng
The jirice has been reduced ID
lltY
afc._...,..,..l.,.en4
the Cleftl of hech _
•Rapltoemtnt
$81,900 1nd owner financintol up
G
.....
Wlndato 80% of purchasumount m1y be
le ........, -blllhed at the 6
LOll l Found

----RLTONE HilliNG AID CltiTEI

f

r

gan's agendas for meetings with,::
heads of state, including Sovie•
leader Mikhail Gorbachev, the
book claims.
-~~
Kelley, 48, biographer of Sina~(,
tra, Elizabeth Taylor, and Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis, .reportedlY:'•
received a S3.S million advancc{t
payment froril Simon &amp; Schi!Ster ''
In a weelcend television mtervieV.:!
she said she felt her book provP.rl~'
that Nancy Reagan •'was our preSi?-!
dent for eight years _ a petticoa~.
presidenL"
'·
"If you ask me what's the best
thing I can say about Mrs. Reagan,"
I'd sar 'She was a good presi- ;
dent"
- ·
~
The official publication date of
April 17 broke down under pressure to get copies of the book into 1¥1
bookstores Monday, tlie same day
review copies were delivered to the
press.
fll
"They're clamoring for it;" sai !
Jocelyn Ford at the Rockefeller
Center B. Dalton's. "1 can't ·
remember anything like this ever ·
before."
·
According to Kelley Nanc
Reagan virtually invented tiersetl.
rising. above lower middle-class
beginnings to become the nation's
firSt lady. Her strongest traits were
self-centeredness, vanity, avariciousness, penury, contentiousness
and a wide stripe of hypocn'sy
·

.

H-.

Reagan says new·Nancy bio ..
'serves no decent purpose'

t

·.•.

•

__. .............
-_...-...,"""
-"

'•

place. Secoad row are eoutest sponson Chuck ':
Kitclaeu or Dairy Queen Ia Middleport; Dick ;;;
Owen or Heritage House/Locker 219; Dottle ~!
Masser of Farmers Bank 1nd Savinas Compa- ·;
ny; Sandy Frazier or Prescrlptloa. Shop; and ' ·
·Denials Saelena represeatia&amp; Adolpll's Dairy
Valley. '(Sentinel 'PboCO
by Darid Harris) '· •· q ••J
'
~~

COLORING WINNERS - Cub prizes were
awarded to tile wianen orne Dally Sentinel's
Easter colorlaa c:wtest 011 Saturday. Pictured In
lrcmt row are, left to rJabt, Trldla Waner, secODd place; EII!Dy Stivers, ..ct place; Michelle
Caldwell, flnt place; Kanndies Lee, flnt place;
CbelseJ. WOIJ!I,Iblrd place; Travis Smith, third• ·~I

.

PUII.ICAnON OF NOTICE
TO ALL- PilliONS IN·
TIIIUTID . In the 11Ut1
of MAIILENE lANtZ. de- - ' · lete ofll2211 Mt.
Ojlw ........ Long lattom.
Ohio 41743, Mlip Ceu~
PrDbna ·C•rt. C.. No.
· 21.•7. An epplloltton hn
..... ..... elldlltiOrellwe
.the . . . . f!OM' edmlnletr•
lion. lllllnll ...... - d o
-......,.
f21JOOO.OO
th...... . _
_ , _ ... _end :

•'f

,u

William c. TnMt '(VPIJ ..

Classified .. ·

might ftlllind him of the way

be-~ 10 do ,thillts.

....._

Now comos the definitive live (Rock)
"
.
Hanis is a jazz jac.k of all trades
album. ·
Rod Stewart, "VapbGild Heart" ' who often complains he doesn't get
The fact lhat many of~ 141ive (WWier BrcM.)
· ·
enough attention.b:\lt the tener saxsonas 01! ~Steel - Wheels-Urban ·
Peihaps Rod Slewart should see opholiist has spread himself thin ·.
Junate tour are a bit~ lild ~ve ..if die ROllins Stones will loan ,Ron dabbli~g in electronic gimmicll;s
lllliiC8led on die JftVJOUS four bve .Wood back to him. Or ma.ybe he and hyood inslrWntnta. By paying
S'IOnes albums does not detract should just stick to interpreting more atlenlion to the things he does
from ''Flubpoint.'' The new cl•ssk aonp.
bell, such as composing tunes and
1U1111femenlland overall vitality
It's no coincidence tliat Stew- blowinJ. Ibe sax. Harris might get
keep ll from -beia&amp; redundant llld art's duct witb Tina Turner on the man: tribute.
die lll'!llicaDY dmlina podueiion . ¥ervin (i~Kim Wcaton hit "It
"A Tale of Two Cities" vividly
alone 11 enouab to recommelld 1t. · Tlka Two ' is !be liveliest cut on displays Harris's strengths and
Tile ~nd Ia i:I'Yitalliae, aivitiJ "Vapbond Heart." It 1'0I1'S with weatnesses A balf-doan fine sax
~rifralifeofilsown.
auiws a Ia Wood and Keith pieees are offset by a couple of
Keiib Ricbardl deacribed c!~ •· Ril:blnls and, with Turner's ·help, c:luntcn when he gelS pnmiCty.
i"' the llllleria1 for the a1btiDI u '•, SleWar&amp;,lhowa die aouJ lild energy
On the fiiSl thiee numbers - a
''lea a a-adve J!10CC11 tban a ~ thaJ have so oftell been missing viliraiiUf recorded •'Chicago Sei'ecea !lf'elli)llnllliin" but 111e cliOic- sia,c:e he 1W'led .falling off the nlde. ' a fast "Cherokee" and ·
ea are aooct oaes: "~adsfaction," tracka soniewhete back around smooth "Lover Man" - Harris
"BlOWn Supr," "Paint It Black" ·' "Do Ya Tbinlt I'm Sexy.'' .·
plays solid sax and it':S peat listenand others from the archives,
StOMrt acts by with int«preta- mg. But then he goes astray and
· "Mila You" and "Start Me Up" doniOfRallbieRobeniCln's"Bro- attemptS to scat on "Sonnymoon
from the la&amp;o '70s and early "80s ken AlloW" and Van Morrison's Fer Two." Hilrris should not scat
and "Sad Sad Sad," "Rock and a · ·"Have 1 Told Y011 Lllely" bul oth.
Ibid Place." and "Can't Be Seen" ~iwiae tho Ulllel, IIIIDY of whicb sm~ album ~ecovers ~~~ so~;
from_ "Steel Wheels.'' Eric Clap- belr 1 S~co-wriler c:redit, 11111 . nice horn work on "I Can't Get
IIlii's tum on "Little Red RoOster"
oveipiodtred lllld blind.
. Started" and ." Illusionary
is one of the hlghlighiS. . ·
.
Instead of doin1 things like Dreams.". At that point, Harris
The bet~n-song palter fea- addina another totally unneeded launches into a speech about how
tares BiD Wyman flunking Mict Ia~ of' syrup to the Stylistlcs' he intended to add synthesizers,
Jagger~s $rpnes trivia quiz (what .suslr-coated "You Are Every- strings and voices to "Illusionary
album produced "Factoi)' Girl?.") tltiq.'' Stewart should cheek out Dreams" and other tunes in the
and what_.. to be the return Of •tile rock revivalist Black Crowes.
studio. Unfonunately, it

'

.....w,••

Yoor Y•YI'a Out.''

c:utl- IIIIi IOplcat "Hiabwire"
and "S. Driw," allice Of James
Browu ruat t11at lllned out as' a
bri:llqr ~durin&amp; the tour.

f: ::-::e.in.~~ ':O:t:;:

f

'

8

AI llwMM, . . . .1111 two lludio

worldtbe

'

By United Press International
LANDON HAS CANCER:
Actor Midaael LIDdoa is meeting
with doctors to discuss th~ best
way to attac1c the cancer in hiS pancreas and liver. Landon, a fixture
on television through his roles .in
"Bonanza," "Little House on the
Prairie" and "Highwll)' to Heaven," lcamcd of the diagnosis last
week after returning to Los Aogeles from a skiing outing in Utah
with his family. The New York
Daily News said be - scheduled
to meet with doctors Monday. "I'll
do whatever it takes," Landon
said. Landon's fourth televison
series, "US," in which he plays a
traveling columnist, has been
accepted by CBS fWtits fall lineup.
Landon is the father of nine children, .three of whom are adopted.
He and his third wife, Ciady, 34,
live with their younger children on
a 10-acte Malibu ranch.

wOa.. in ~ crowd m""-'"

'8:!111 it black, you ctev'ir.';

:
}

Ohio

On the record... ·__· ___.:. ._ _

Gospel Mission Church will have ence of Bllllk One in Pomero~. Alll
revival Tuesday thn&gt;ugh Saturday members are urged to tittelld.
at 7 p.m. nig!ltly with Rev. Junior
Conger from Sandyville, W.Va.
THURSDAY
:
Pasta: R.G. Willf!l'd Sr. invites the
POMEROY - The Preceptor
public.
Beta
Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma
•
Sorority
will meet Thunda.&gt;: at7:30:
HARRISONVn.LE - The Harp.m
.
at
the Grace Epucopal~
risonville Senior Ci~ will hold
Church.
Officers
will be elected.,
a blood pressure clinic at the town
Hostesses
are
·charlotte
Elberfeld:
house on Tuesday from 10 a.m. to
!
noon. Members will have a potluck and Roberta O'Brien.
dinner and meeting followmg the
SYRACUSE - The April q~~,'l
clinic. All mem)lers are.urged .to
ing of the Meigs County Board of6 ,
anend.
Mental Retardation and Develop-.
POMEROY - The Pomeroy mental Disabilities will be held I
Flanie Fellilwship will meet· 'Fues- Thursday at 7 p.m. at Carleton'
. day at 7 p.m. at ~ senior citizens School/Meigs Industries. ·
,
center in Pomeroy, Herschel FacePOMEROY - An evening din- •
royer, Nitro, W.Va .• will be the
speaker. The public is invited to l)er will be held at the senior citi- t
zens center in Pomeroy on Thurs-•
attend.
·
day from 5-6:30 p.m. ~ iS $3 per"
RUTLAND _. Tl)e Rutland Vil- person. MenQ. includes oven baked •
lage Couneii will meet Tllesday at chicken, mashed potatoes and'
gravy, green beans, cole slaw, bis-"
7 p.m. in council chambers.
cuit and beverage. Pie is 7S cenJS a
slice. Entertainment by Junior and':
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - The Pomeroy Rita White, AI Windon and Ray
.
·"'\
.
Merchants Association will meet Ward. Public invited.

j,

..

•

I

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'"""..-s

MOE HOIIi FIINAUS -IIAT
All MtiACI PAll'S

-

�-

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Sentinel

~ -

.

_ ,__

.

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¥

Ohio

'

3 Announcernenis
............ -

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All, IMioco 01111uo, nom
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a """'"
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- 34

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

, .. ,........
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Parol. 71111--Aw,-

&amp;u.IIIMS
Buildings

.....
...

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we~r

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Frueh..........,..

~ERE'S ~S WoRLD
1/J~ I Ft.VtN6 ACE
ltETURNIN6 TO TI-lE
AIR~ ' INl-115 .

A5 05VAl. ~E GOES TO
T~E SMA~L FRENCfl
CAFE WflERE l-IE CAN
FOR6ET HIS TROIIeLES,
lliE WAR ..EVERV'fi.IING ~

SOI'WrTH CAMEL..

I I~ AI~'YIO Sl

ONIAT-,

8WorldT-,
Ill OUr Houle

BON SOif{. MONSIEUR FLYING

ACE .. WI-I AT 15 "r'OOR NAME ?

1:01 &lt;ll

=·'?

ltwelfr rna ~"~~•

.

-.. -.... -

1:30~!1::
al&amp;-~T 0

.

38

Bulll'llll
Opponunlty ·

Real Estate

Wanted

7:01 (l) Happy

.. ·'
S(JIAMLm AN.I \QII
•·a
Proper ~ Nudge - Broke ~ Minnow - WRINGER
• 1 can recall the good old days." grinned the okf

..==_,___
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...........
.

41 ~for Rem

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0011 ., II 11;100

tlnn.l1t ... . . ...

--a=or
~.

-

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YINDING IIOIITE: For lllo.
............ 08111bull"
1 tr I Into .... Mt VIND.

23

B~

oa,.

Wanted to Rent

=~·=---r=
. . IDDI.

,.,

.. Traitor In Country
-OollonTO
Lllnd CIIIUIINot. ~ ...rr~~~~~. ....... - ......

I

~-

'·••f

.

I:OOI])e OFniiiiHMtoftltl
Nlgltt A pollee chief deall

wtih a glrl'a murder and hlo

former nemesla. (FI) Sterto.

/E .... I!Jtl

ill Clle Who'• ... 1ou1
Everyone lakes turns
blby·slttlng Billy. (A) Stereo.

· I f'IAJ&gt;f&lt;;JUATE.

r

~
(!) Nov• The
ol Neptune Stereo.

il"

~~art,-.~

74

7:311 (l) Major I ••aue 1111••-••

ti'IIMI. h4:211:t714 '

!!!'

Household
Goods ·

5T'AFF ON HANP
TO MAjl:f you
FEE/.. TOTALLY.

·~

lA• · _,
~~h 'IDNor ·..nl

.8elvlces

ATHLETtt::
C/..UI

n

1171 ~ 4 1ill. dr......_

Prof1111ona1

Fv£Ly ()LJAL.IflfP

Uw. Colllalt .__oiler ~'

1'11111

r.1crcllollldlor

HEAL-TH

a..nd

73 VIFM &amp; 4 WD'I
1171 cr.,
Win. ..Yon,
100!1 ••'
. - p...rry
Cliioroh
~

Molorcycles

•i:

Major Le1gue 11118lball

am
o • Mallie of
Coppefflalll XIII CorlDerllold

ALLEY .OOP
. '

''•·

allempta to make 810-ton
Orient Expren lraln car
l!lsappear. Guest: Jane ·
Seymour (1 :00) Stereo. I;!
(!)). MOVII!: Clue (POt
(2:00)

"""-! WO~DERFUL!
l'HIS &amp;M&amp;LLS ,JUST
LIKE Bo'ISILI

h

'•

•
'

Ill Munier, .... Wl'lllal;l

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

.On .....

Ill MOVFI!: 0uFFty of
· - · T h e ...... Ollar

.. , . , (2:00)

1:30 ()) NIA llulttlbell

ill Clle~R­
Chartle makes a bel an how
long hll can avoid taking a

Ylll!_2_on~

Rutlind.

Wtcf, 1hur. Rlln Mlllnl. I'M 112

Public Slle

........
.,....,, llli"i:=-=-=-=~

(!)

Woll'&lt;llr...... 1104-71M711.
..... _,.., ...... llonrv,
'l'lllniiiJ April I\ 11;GO All,

-----Sahooj
....... Penyl.r:'i!""' ,...,_,

IIR-Ior~or

RAil. Hall Mlo oil M. 2, C1oF:

•• tJuo•

12

Situation

No. 11. 104-

7l'W'IIII.

1br

Wanted
IIIII iundry

niMid.·IU Ul 1123.

· I'M

rur-

Training

--

Wonted To Buy: Jto~k Autoo
with or wltlloot Coil
lAITy Lively. IM Ill 1301.

' Employment Ser'JICes

Wanted to Do

18

="'J="~~
amen ltem1. p~
104-

1111nut1 ure
1Po2733.

I a ATilE£ RIMCE. l ! f i
!r'mn*lg, r,.. Romoull,
'
1100.41n p
1
~- Fr• Eotllnltwl I
.. ..;;;;., p~
.,'1111.'
Far lniD. ii00.71Mtl7 Clonleno · ..,,.t;o-;;;or
IXT .._
i*...tod.
•

11

Help Wanted

to-·

...........
AVON

I

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...

~
All !!"": Col lllrllyn tw
4PM.
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~1104-t71-11tr7.

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A\'011 I All - · I llllltoy ..,._ IIIII ......... Fi!!lnlln&amp; 10
........ - - .
"" ' · - Wil::ro;&lt;!!nj,

b.:t..'"::"..":r.::r=: e~~:~~e"'c!

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lnt- -"""·

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pold,

n fdl'l!d. 114-

E!IUT

P"''l 1 riJ.

llablllne Dltve,

--an

111 *oon•, run
tneloeed

lm-lllo

to
- · ...... Coli 114-441-71113
a~or
!p.m. c-oli 1118-3825
anytime.
potlo,

...,.110 ·~·· pm

... -

~-~·~~~~~~~.....,.~~2~-~~=

311r
~hill, Ohio.

-on. IOM32-

32 Mobile Homes

for Sale

WHAT ARE YOU
GAWKIN' .
AT, PAW?

Antiques
luy or e11L Rlnrlrw Antlq-,
11Zt E. lllln • - . Pomeroy.

: M.T.W. IO:OD a.m.tol:«&lt;
p.mz.!"_, I :00 to I:OD p.m.
114..-.3121.

. Mtrchandlll

---t-.
-

SHE'S TH' WUSS
BACKSEAT DRIVER
t EVER LAID
EYES ON!!

RDCICSII

-

10:3118 CfOOic lind Clllll

31 Naatase

WFidtlnlltl (PO) (2:16)

.

0

Major LMQUt IIUUN
11:0111]). ()) ill Cll. 9

o.o .....

,.,., 'rriO

Cloindo, ON Col 114:
MllltL
,

BEDEOSOL

~-11111....,.114-

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Prt;...,._

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'
Aprillir, 11t1

.
11 lool&lt;l llkt you '!~ have luck In finding
new wayalll enh011C8 your material curtly 1n 1M year aheed- One such ...,
Will be a bllltl move you would l1ave nev· ., dared to atwnpl prevtouiiY.v.t ~-- 11-A!ri tl) You'A have

''-edOef.jourcompelllorttodaytn

deUelt:r-· w :.:J .,.~

er.b
through t

•• 1.-t

.... . /

IIIII NCIUIN

I kiiiii!CY

~ to

Ar

~---

a ...........,. ......

Send for Aries' A8tro-Graph prediC· LFaRA (hpL 23-0cl. 23) I! you are
lions · for the year ahead by mailing strongly motivated tO&lt;Iay. there Is lillie
S1.25to Aslro-Graph, clo thla newspa- doubt about you getting what you wanr.
per, P.O. Box 91428, Cleveland. OH Focua your ambitions on meaningful
44191·3428. Besuretoslateyourzodl· _ objectives.
.
· ·
a&lt;: 'lin.
·
ICOJII'I9 (QI:t ~. 21) In orl!ef to
TAURUS (Aptll ....., Ill) You'llllnd maltt .you, ...... k . -, ,au ruy " lively companions the /noll sllmulallng to pr._tthem assertively today. HoW·
people IO&lt;Iay. Having to lhare lime wilh
ever. be cona&lt;:ious or the dHierence beInactive types could make you lee! ex- 1-n ,
assertiveness
and
tremely uncomfortable.
'aggressiveness.
GEMINI (llaJ 21.J- Ill) You have the 8AGITTARIU8 · (NO¥. 23-Dec:. 21)
· pol"'1flal Ia be rather daring today in Something you've been wanting ,· to
situations where therals.a possibility lor change. which you haven't been able Ia
personal gain. ll's good to be enlerprls- alter on your.own. may be allecled by a
lng. bul don't Fake risks when the oddo lhlrd party today. This Individual Is an
are not In your favor.
ally reoponllive to your needs.
CANCIIII (June 21.July 22) II might be CAPRICORN (0.0. 22.J•. 11) A part·
nec:euary For you to ta~e a firm atanc;e nerlhip in which you're presently In·
In an lnvol-tthat could Jeopardize valved can be procluctlvetoclay. provtd- '
your Mll-lntereste tOGay. 11 you don't eel you Mrve u File backup while your
· dtlend your position. wllo Will?
, counterpert lnlllatu tho action.
LIO (.;ury D-Aug. 22) Your In-iga- AQUAIIIUI1"-· 2llol'elt. 11) llthore is
live lacultlea are exceptiOnally keen to- eome epec:llll work you're '*'lng crone
day. 11 11 • you cqurcr eocploll on at thll time thll you would Hke perPraJecl• requiring ,_rch and fact- lonMCI Fester end more elllclontly, 11
finding.
.
·
might be wF•to _ . , the pot by ol·
VIIGO (Aflt, D-lepL 22) Tuelrie Fni- loring a banue.
tlallllnndmalte.,rangemenroroctayto ,....IIPelt. JIJII~M...,•Ihh Ill) Don't be
' vet logMilar Wllh - • you'.. re- lfttlmlclated by c:h-.rntl cieYelopcentty-mtt end _,ld Hke to k - bel- menta today; you can Dlfectr..ry deal •
Fer. 11W c:ouFd be a promlllng wFIII . . . . _ . , _, Tho II to
rtllllonlhtP.
~In }'OUrMII.
..
- il.
~

AnenFo IIIII Stereo. Q IRL
On mF VIce Stereo. ,

IIIMcu:rne
D lcarec:row and an. KinG

36 Color .
37 Mldler-

•

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Nil P11p111

Pass

+

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Obi.

2 •(!)

2
Obi.
All pass

,
Opening lead: • K

_. ,

··. ·~ •
• ,_
. .
·
. · ', '"
ly, cashed the ace of hearts, ru!fed •a ;
heart m hand, ruffed a spade m the,.
dummy and trumped another heart in :
hand. She had broupt home e1ght 1
tricks: the ace of diamonds, the A·Q dl;j
hearts, one club ruff and two heart 1
ruffs tn hand, and two spade ruffs 1n the dummy. The queen of clubs was a
mirage.

'

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....

of
Candice
Bergen

'• n
.,~ .,

' -1 ..

2 Labor
groups

..·-'

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3 Com·
pletely

• .... 1\

29 Goddess
ol

wisdom
;10 Thiows
waler on
33 Bo~linq
alley
. bunon
35 Crudtl
shacks
39 "Willard "
sequel '

39 Born

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DAILY CRYPTOQUO'It.S - Here's how to work It:

..

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419

AXYDLBAAXR
Is L 0 N G FE. L I. 0 W

One leiter stands for another. In this sample I\ Is usrd
for the three L's, X for the tw,o O's, etc. Single letter~.

apostrophes, the length and formation of the words
all hints . .Each day the code letters are dllft'renh
4-9 · ''
CRYPTOQt}Ol'E ·

lil MOVII!; The Conl!llll'lf

' (2:00)

-=ii''

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Muhlt• Will Ill
.... of~

DR N X

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CCcrtlrii•iituritaililarlin

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. 12:311 ClliiOYII: Ia aurar ll.alllt
(1:46)
ill.._ Cot• ulan

ZE

DRNX

ANHHQF

KUUifJLBO .

-KQCHNL UKGTE
,
Yesterday's Cryptc)quote: MORALLY, THE GEN-

,

ERAL SUPERIORITY OF WOMEN

OVEil

MEN

THINK, UNQUESTIONABLE. - W. I.F.CKY

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12:01ill Nlgltllll•l;l
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12:30 Ill
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4 Slowing

43 Bridge

• NasFwlll Now
ill NlwiNigltt
D MOVII: Qulllr of
IIWJaal nae: The Lenell a.t.r
Story (2:00)

- •&amp;•u

. (

Away -c"

0 'lllll!quallaer

1:0111lt.:l;l

.

Vulnerable: Both
~·
· North-South 60 pari-score
Dealer: North
••
South·
W.al . Norlb Eou
1•
r+

42 Prom

....... Tonight
11:31ill Choera 1;1
.
12:DO(J)elnto Ill Nlgltllhno.

Oe...., Mul'll• Willi.

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41 ·walk

;e"'Citlnlt 111'111111110n

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film

i.;reo. t. ·
ICil •z.r:tt=,
'The l!xlle' C8l Uk

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of tennis
32 Winner

34 Newsman
Rather
35 SpeH

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heroine
2&amp;Homar
classic

11:30 I]) e 0 Tot\WIIIhOw
Stereo.
()) CFooll of .....
(!) Adem 1mF111'1 Money
. WOfld
•

BERNICE .

6~14·A·6-2U2

.

SOUTH

.....

Ransom

10:20 Cll MOVII!: Man In the

1;1

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........
011~- Rd. Pllto,-

' \ '614-992-2156
304-675-1333

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WA:TCH OUT
FER THEM

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+AJ1092

23 State
25 Hardy

(!) NIWIIIIItCh

54 Miscellaneous
10" ........ 40" -

II.IIINIY II

.9 B

!htlerdolt Q
Ill CNN I!VIIilng NeWI
D 700 Club With Pat

R,.._

BARNEY

I

.'

·+AQJ62

Worles for People With and
Without Mcintly; The
FlaoHSion

~ Vllltlllm: AT.....iaron
;•~ i. How Capbllm

'\ '

-'
.'
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EAST

WEST
+K3 .
.KJI07
.K984Z
•• 3

In music:
.Abbr.
for
5 Blubber
students
6 Conceli · 19 Occupied
7 Twain's
20 Column
real first
style
name
· 24 Magic
&amp;Leveled
medicine
19 Lure
out
25 Gossip
20 Bambi,
9 Opera
item
singers
e.g.
26 "The
11 Draw out • Graduale"
21 Boom ·
14 Optional
lype
girl
22 Carmaker
courses
27Unwed

~-IWTI'Ik: The Neat

Older homo In Apple O~~&gt;vec beaide Poat Ollle•L.$35,1!0" nrm,
u lo. Col 104-I78-2ID4 .. 814-

11011IIII,IIOM32:717D.

LarrJ KFna Uver

Cll. ~As
Ellyn and Billy's wedding
draws near, Ellyn has .
last-minute doubts. Stereo.

'.•

tar~p,

Broadway
· musical
12 Century
plant
13 Alcott
classic
15 Card
game
16 Under
the
weather
17 Numaro

iii

WAU&lt;AAOUNq.

far--""'·
:a

bAIInMnt,

DON'T UI&lt;E

-Ext.. Your
QH.

-111

1101

r

IT WH~ "THE.Y

It: lllddlop "· Olllo, depoolt
end 1. . .811DII NCIIflrld, 304$11-aiM.

Rod- To loll: 2 llory

nor, ICIL Hove Room
In
PI-Clf- n - A.... ~ - · 11 rwra •·~~
~=--IL- PloooiM, 1 1 = - .~ed, ,_,..

~-

IIOVERNMINT HOIIU hm 11
(U ~
·
tu

eor- ..... In

Ourg.a Port1bte .. wmlll, don't
' - to the mil jult

~·~~~ llrvloo lVI' ..,... hout -

7733,

2 bed"""" ................ ·-h

Allroln
-llllouthwotarn
....._ CoiJ9, aarrnt van.,
n ... Coli T-=:..Mi414117H
Roglotarotlon
'IZllll.

John
5 Plague
10 Hit

.

1:30 ill Clle Coach Hayden
tries to buy Chrl1tlne an
engagementrlng. Stereo. l;l
10:00(%)• 0 lhannon't Deal
Needing cash, Shannon
begins working lor a
. ~•tlgloua law firm . Stereo.

"'"il:'rtl.o1011 t/2

........
ftr:: ar,;-k
1.. ,__.,

ButiiiHI
Wonted to buy; ltondlnt limber,
.... Wllllomo a Sono '114:112·

e

Dlelowwt•f

:::tr. ·=~,... ~.:J.
=:zu

WANTED: PI- to live In ""'"·

!iMd -

-.artuAI

.
..··'••

~ .,·

.·· ACROSS
DOWN
1. Naturalist 1 Husband

ill ille MOVII: 'Another.
Pair of Met: 'T1tiM of I
Kind' C8l Tlltldly Movie
(2:00) stno. c,___ _
. Ill Ptlme Tlnll ......... (T)
e Nkhllle Now

.....,., 7Couolll. . . par mo.,
......poDIL ....... ... No ...... .,. 441 11:11

I aid, _.-.._

Cl&gt; J'ijl'jjnllllttntlltlo-.... Q

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+KQ764

by THOMAS JOSEPH

1:00 ()) (I). ROIMMt
·Flo-nne Feama llimlthlng
shocklnaJ!boul heraelf. (FI)
.· Stereo._l;l

&amp;Auction

.AQ6~3
• A 10 ~

CROSSWORD

ahower.·SIIreo. g
• Cllunih 111'111 ~

'111'-

l·f-11

••••

.Phillip Alder

Only two people have been awa rded
the Most Excellent Order of the Brit·
Ish Empire (M.B.E.) by Queen Eliza·
beth II for their services to bridge.
/ The first, in 19'1S, was RixiMarkus.
Raised in Vienna, Rixl was a key
member of the Austrian team that
won the first two European Women's
Championshifs in 19~~ and 1936, and
the inaugura Women's World Championship In 1937. However, in 1938 she
fled throup the Continent to England.
Her international career was put on
hold until t9~0 . when she became a
naturalized Briton.
Rixi is one of the greatest female
players of all time. Her play is characterized by lightning-fast analysis. and
she has aq individual style that works
because of her outstanding table pre!;ence. She always seems to know whal
will happen next and is renoWtled for
her ."Rixi bids." Today's deal, In which
she 'was South, is an excellent exam•
pie. Who else wou-ld bid two diamonds .
rather than two hearts?
West led the king of spades. Rixi
ruffed in Fhe dummy and called for the
king of clubs. East won with thil ace
and returned his trump, but Rixi won
in ·the dummy and made the key play:
·she Miffed a club in her hand. She fi·
nessed the queen of hearts successful·

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Page-10-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
.

---Weather--~ . Showers
South Central Obio .
Fair Thunday and Friday, with
Var iable cloudiness Tuesday a chance of showers and thundernight, with a chance of showers _ srorms on Slllllnlay. Highs will be
and thunderstorms early, and a low range.from the SOs to the lower 60s
near 50, Chance of rain is 50 per- Thursday and Friday, and from tbe
cent. Mostly S!Jnny and windy 60s to the lower 'lOs Saturday.
_Wednesday, with highs in the low Ovemigbtlows wiD range from tbe
60s.
.
it)id 20s to mid 30s Thursday and
Ohio extended forecast
Fri~y mcrning, and from the mid
Thursday through Saturday
30s to mid 40s early Saturday.
•

·'

Hartinger

~

-

Tuesday, April 9, ~ 991
.

expected to 'end in Buckeye State ..I

By UDited Press 1Dte111lltiollal
thC northeast to mostly sunny in the
The National Weather Service south.
says showers, thunderstorms and
·Much cooler conditions are .
the tbreat of severe weather should soing to .move into Ohio startins
end over OhiO from the west Tues- Tuesday night. Overnisbt lows
day niBhL
· sllould be mainly in lhc 40s. lfi&amp;bs
By late Tuesday night, variable Wednesday ought to ranso from
cloudiness is ex~ted to prevail. the upper 40s ill the cloudy DOrthWednosday is. forecast to be a dry · 'east to about 60 in the sunnier
day statewide, but sky conditions extreme south.
should vary from mostly cloudy in
The temperatures rorecut for

Metsedge

.

Wednesday are about S degrees
below namal. Besides the cooling,
Wednesday will also bring a rathet
strong west ·to northwest wind.
Monday niabt and Monday
morninJ in Ohio was characterized
by vanable cloudiness, 5cattered
'showers and thunderstorms and
very mild temperatures. .
. Where precipitation. occurred
amounts .were mainly less tban a

Phils; Cubs

quarter of an incb . Predawn tern-:
peratures were generally between,
60 and 65. Normal lows at this time:
of ~ are from the mid 30s to the,
lower40s.
:
On the 1\iesday momins weath-·
· er map, a cold front and a low ~- :
sure region went from Illmou to:
lower Michigan. Bodt these systenl•
wiD move to the east of Ohio early!
Wednesday.
J

Council also approved the temporary use of viUage council chambers eight times a month for the
Job Opportunities and Basic Skills
. Program of the Meigs County
Department of Human Services.
Spring clean-uo anll the village's role was-discussed atlengtb.
Councilman Paul Gerard proposed
that something on a lesser scale
than has been done in the tJ&amp;Sl be
carried out in tbe village. He said
that reside'nts have been storing
things up in their basements all
winter in anticipation of the pickup.
Mayor Hoffman agreed that some
free pickup should be carried out
but that witb tbe landfill poblem it
should be with some limitations.
He advised that he plans to talk .
with Roger Manley of Manley's
,Trash Service to see if the village
and that firm can work out some
agreement on speciaLhauling. ·- '
A drainage problem on Grant
Street was discussed by Gerard,
with no action being taken. It was
decided that Roger WiUilims, recreation director, would be asked to
meet with council following the
April 22 meeting to detail plans for
the summer program.
·
Councihnan Jack Satterfield
asked about the carpeting at the
. FIERY PROTEST '- These South Korean policemen IIDd out them durin&amp; 1 student demonstration OD the Seoul Ulliversity cammini-golf course at Hartinger Park
the bard way bow bot tbl11p cail get, as they abate off tle lire orr pus earlier today. Approdllately 1,000 studellts demoutrated outside the campus against the rule ol Presldeat Rob Tae-woo. (UPI)
and was advised that the work
should be completed ·this week alid
the course opened soon.
Attending were Mayor Hoffman, Clerk-Treasurer Jon Buck,
Contiuaed fi-om page 1
·
and Council members, Dewey Horton , James Clatworthy, Judy
CLEVELAND (UP!) - A son
Jeffrey A. . Celebrezze,. 30,
The membership of Carpenters Local #fi50 in Pomeroy voted last
Crooks, Gerard, William Walters
·of
former
Ohio
Supreme
Court
Parma,
allegedly
raped
the
llirl
week
to stand in favor of installation of scrubbing equipment at the
and Satterfield. AI HartsOn, pastor
Chief
Justice
Frank
Celeblezze
has
Dec.
21-22
when
she
was
visiting
General James M. Gavin PlaiiL
of the Middleport Church of Christ,
According to Dave Gregg of the union, the membership voted on
had tbe opening prayer represent- been indicted on charges of raping bim.
Frank Gasper, aD assistant
a resolution regarding The "Clean Air Act on April I.
ing the Middleport Ministerial a 5-year-old girl.
Cuyahoga County p10sec11tor, said
"We encollfl&amp;e American .Electric Power to expedite tbe pursuit
Association.
·
.
the
girl's
brother
brought
tbe
,inci•
of
the Pressurized Fluidized ·Bed Combustion process at all Ioca- ·
Hospital news
dent to the a~te~~tion of.their mothlions," a statement from the Carpenters says. 'ln the interim, we
er, who contacted the county
will support a rate il!crease for AEP if the Meigs mine remains in ,
_c;;..:.oo;;..;.;tiu=ued~rro~m""'p=..o.:..e.;;_1_ _ _ __
Vererans Memorial Hospital
DepariiiiCIIt of Human Services,
orod~~~;;tion at current levels ~d ~bbers are instaUed in tbe Gav~
MONDAY ADMISSIONS Celebrezze, a grand jury clerk
company would have difficulty · The anal~t said. "It would take
~l
.
Frank
Lakin, W.Va., Eleanor for Cuyahoga County Common
"We
do
not
supPort
tbe
option
of
closing
tbe
Meigs
mine
and
the
. doing business witb the .~enta11on ·a managerial miracle ... If they do Werry,Kidd,
Pomeroy; John Chaney, Pleas Coun. turned h1mself in to
under current rules reqUiflng h1gh it, it wiD be studied by the Harvard
usage
of
Westtm
coal," tbe stalement continues. "We will not supRacine; and Brandon Kimes, Parma police Monday afternoon
investment in a high risk climate.
port any rate increase-precipita11Cd by this option."
Business School."
Racine.
No direct comment could be
and was later released on $10,000
Aseritis said he had advised
MONDAY DISCHARGES - bond. If con¥icted, he could be senobtained from Anders, who his First Boston 's clients that GepEdith
Edwards, EmC~~t Wells, and tenced to 25 years in prison.
office said was unreachable aboard dyn's stock was ''a speculative
.
Arthur
Petrie. .
a submarine until Thursday.
· hold" He estimated that the comThree teenage girls were located near the Sou~em Ohio Coal
General Dynamics 1ssued a pany would report first-quarter
Meigs Mine operation on Monday morning after being lost for sevstatement in which Anders said: earnings of $1:15 a share .and have
eral hours.
·
·"We are strongly committed for profits for all of 1991 of abOut $48
Open House
iary 9053 will have a spaghetti dinAccording to f,feigs County Sheriff J3lfles M. Soulsby, tbe juvethe long term as a premier defense million.
The Rock Springs Grange will ner Salllrday beginning at 4 p.m.
niles, aged 13, 14 and 17, are belieyed to have gone for a walk in
contractor. We intend to vigorously
Company executives are' saying have
the Dexter area on Sunday and become disoriented.
compete for new defense busi- yeatly profits will be closer to $50 7p.m.an open meeting Thursday at Cost is $3.50 for adults and $1.50
for children undei-12.
A search party was fonned late on Sunday by family members
ness.' '
millioP, or about $5.50 a share, tbe
Workshop
pl1111Ded
·
and friends, and according to Soulsby, the subjects were located
Molly Sallcy, Gendyn's director analyst said.
The Meigs Genealogical Society .
Cemetery clean-up planned
near the sOCCO belt line by Deputies Manning Mohler and Mark
of investor relations who was at the
In 1990; General Dynamics lost wiD. hold a workshop for beginning
The Tuppers Plains Church of
Boyd.
Wednesday night get-together, said $577:9 minion as a result of writeNisbet's report was "probably offs on v&amp;rious programs, including genealogists on Sunday 812 p.m. at Christ will be cleaning the cemethe Meigs County Museum in tery after today. Those wanting to
truncated and taken out of con- the Navy's A-12 Avenger lisht Pomeroy.
save nowers or otber items should
tel'L" She said there was no tran- bomber, which was canceled by
EMS
SJ1111hettl
dbmer
·
have them removed. It bas been
script of_tbe meeting.
Defense Secretary ·Dick Cheney.
The Tuppers Plains VFW Auxil- requested that flowers be purchased
In his Thursday letter to PrildenFour caDs for assistance were answered by units of Meigs Counwhich can be bun' on the monutial clients, Nisbet said:. "GO's
ty Emergency Medical Services on Monday.
ments 10 that mowmg can be done
management is dramatically changAt 9:18 a.m., Rutland squad went to College Street for Anthony
more efficiently.
ing the direction of the company,
Perry, who was transported tO Veterans. At 10:27 a.m., Pomeroy
squad went to Mulberry Heights for James DiU. He was taken ·to
shedding its defense exposure in
Cecil (Mary) Jewell Qf Hilliard:
DAR to meet
the 1990s ... We believe GD's new Christine Kuether
Veterans Memorial Hospital and later to Holzer Medical Center. At
two sisters, Anestine Frazier of
The Return Jonathan Meigs
plan will seriously jeopardize-the
12:38 p.m., Middleport squad went 10 Oliver Street and transported
Word has .been received here of Columbus, and Irene Burrell of Chapter, Daughters of tbe Amencompany's chances of winning
James Pelegrino to Holzer Medical Center. At 8:54 p.m., Rutland
the death of Christine Kuether, 82, Albany; 32 grandchildren and 11 can Revolution, will meet Friday at
weapons systems comJlCtitions."
squad went to Main Street Robert ~nowden was ta!cen from there to
·
·
' 1:30 p.m. at the home of Mrs. VerThe analyst added, "We believe at her home in Tryon, N. C. Feb. great-grlllllk;hildren.
Holzer.
Besides his pare~ts; he, was pre-· non Weber in Rutland. ·
·
· the GD plan to substantiaUy reduce 14, 1991.
in death by his brother, RayA program on "The Early HistoThe Rev. Ralph and Christine ceded
future (military) investments could
mond;
his
fu:st
wife,
Doris
and
his
ry
of
ZOAR" will he presented by
have an influence on the Air Kuether served Trinity Church
Mrs. Carl Horky. Reports on the
Revival services are in progress at Eden United Brethren in
Force's selection process" for the from Jan. 1937 to Oct._l946. The second w1fe, E~lyn. .
Funeral
semces
wiD
be
held.
OR·
•
'92 state confeienoo will be given.
Christ Church near Reedsville. Services begin each evening at7
Kuethers moved to Tryon, ill 1981,
ATF.
Hostesses are Mrs. Weber, Mrs.
p.m. with Rev. Bob Wiseman offiCiating. and will continue through
Nisbet said he still believed the to live near their son, the Rev. Wednesday at 1 P:m. at Ewmg
Fun~ral
Ho"!e.
w1th
~ar11are1
Virgil
Aikins, Mn . .Cecil BlackSunday. The dates for the revival services wQre printed incorrectly
team of General Dynamics, Lock- David Kuether. Their elder son, the
in The Daily Stlllinel.
heed Corp. and Boeing Co. would Rev. Gustav Kuether of ~obmson off'lcl8ung. B~ w1D be wood, Mrs. Steven Jenkins, Mrs.
Cemetery. Mihtary ntes Robert Jewell and Mrs. Dayton
win the ATF competition over the Edwardsville, Ill. and six grand- '"·Wells
w1ll w11l be conducted by the Parsons
competing .team ·of McDonnell · children, also survive.
·
Mason VFW, of which Mr. Jewell
·
Douglas Corp. and Northrop Corp.
was a member.
Revival planllfd
but lowered his probability from 60 Pearlk JeweU
Friends may call at the funeral
The
Harrisonville · Holiness
The Pomeroy Alumni Association has announced it has available
percent to 55 percent.
home from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. and 7 Chapel, off Route 684, will hold ·
two
Bob RobertS Scholarships in the amount of $600 each.
He reemphasized his recommenPearlic F. Jewell, 72, .of 301 p.m. to 9 p.m. on Tuesday.
revival
Friday
tbrough
Sunday
at
Applications
for the schqlarships may be made by sending a picdation to sell General Dynamics' . Wright Street in Pomeroy, died
7:30p.m.
ilighlly.
Rev.
Robert
Wil.
ture,
transcript
of
grades, reSume and name of relative(s) who gradstock, which has soared in recent Silnday, April 7, 1991 at Veterans
son,
district
superintendent
of
Wesuated
from
Pomeroy
High School. Applications are awarded on the
weeks along with other defense Memorial Hospital following a
.
!cyan
Holiness
Association
of
basis
of
grade
point
average.
stocks since tbe quick end of the short illness.
Churches, will be tbe speaker and
To apply for tbe scholarships contact the Pomeroy Alumni Asso·Persian Gulf War.
He was a declduuld for tbe Ohio
Rev.
John
Neville
is
the
supply
ciation
at P.O. Box 202, Pomeroy, 45769.
The stock, which traded at . River Company.
Aprill7
Jlll'ler.
Public
is
invited.
He was born on October 25, ·
$23.625 a share March 13, had sold
as high as $38.25 a share but last 1918 in Downinston, Ohio, the son
"Night of a Thousand Stars", the
Weekend aerviees
.
week dropped $1.50 after the of the late· Leonard and Goldie
The Red Brush Church of Christ
Wednesday meeting to $32 a share ·Green Jewell. He was a veteran of Great American Read Aloud will
on the New Yotk Stock Exchange.
the U.S. Navy duriug World War be held at the Meigs' Countr. Public . on Bashan R'?ad will have special
· Library in Pomeroy on Aprill7,
weetend SCI'VIces Salurday at -7:30
Nisbet said General Dynamics II:
.
This
celebration
of
reading
and
p.m.
and SundaY. at 10 a.m. and 6
planS to cut back its research and
He is survived by his wife, Cora
· development by 30 pm:ent and its Robinson; 11 daushters: Cora libraries will talte place at 7 p.m. P·!"· Denver. H11l, Foster, W.Va.,
investment in plant Mid equipment ~y_nn, at home, Mrs. Charles that day and will offer patrons an will be speaking.
·' ·
by 50 percent over the next four (Wilma) Fridley, Wesrtrville, Mrs. opportunity to hear Senator Jan
Michael
Long
reid
aloud.
Garden
Club
In meet
years. One-fourth of its R&amp;D will ThOmu (Wanda) Seley, Gallipolis;
(
The
event
falls
in
the
middle
Tho
Middleport
Amateur Gar0
be devoted to the commercial non- Mrs. Bdwlld (Marilyn) Pllbr, Tell
National
Library
Week,
April
14deners
Oub
will
meet
Wednesday
defense sector; tbe analyst said. .
Ind., Mrs. John (Candice)
20.
and
focuses
attention
on
the
at
6:30
p.m.
at
the
home
of Jean
He said new bonus incentives
, Hurricane, W. VL, Mrs. Jlllles
link
betw111111
I'CIIdlq
111c1
succeedMoo~
..
A
flower
display
·will
be
for m~~~a~~ement aJso, are likely to ·(Tammy) Terrell. Pomeroy, Mn.
ing.
Ruth
Powers,
libllry
director,
viewed
at
the
Pomeroy
Library
ll!ld
. lead to short-term financitl Louia (Linda) Harper, Pomeroy,
.-.~~~n~ thllt tile;..,__,.. of par- a meetins will follow at Mrs.
improvements rather than the long- Mrs. Joe (Joan) Smith, Tuppers ....,.
-...--Moore's horne.
·
term planning required for defense Plaina. Mrs. Alhd (Kilby) a - . enta llld children rcldilll together
at a very early age is immeasurMiddleport. and Connio Orimm
conaacts.
·
Aseritis forecast the company's Woodstock, ID; live 10111: Pearlie ·able. It is~::fed tbat the Great
Dance to be ~ld
revenue would decliue 21 ~~~ JeweD, Jr., Rutland, Raymond F.
The
SeniOr Citizens Dance Oub
over the next three yean, even if II Jewell, Pomeroy, Williim Keith
will
sponsor
a round and square
wins the ATF competition, and he Jewell, Tucson, Ariz., Parlin theme for Nalional Library Week, dance on Friday
Clam 8-11 p.m. at
.
~.aid Gendyn executives do not Edward Jewell, Pomeroy, and "Read, Succeed."
the
center
in
Ponlaoy.
Music will
The Meigs County Librarian
Harold Corbin Hlrman, Stoullville;
6hallenge this eslimato. .
be
provided
by
the
Happy
Hollow
. 'Andeli told the 8llllys1S General five brothers, Leonard (Norma) invites local resideiiiS to join witb Boys or Athens. Those auadina
tile country in
Dynamics plans to iuciUIC prof- Jewell, Pomeroy, George (Lois) other libnries iulbility in face thllllllieipated Jewell, Paul (Carol) Jewell, and promolina pro-lilttacy ill the com- bri'!l snacks for the siiiCit table.
decline in sales. he said.
Richant Jewell, all of Columbus, munity.
·Public is invited:
I
I
I

Pick~:

249
Pick 4:0546

Jose 4-1

Cards ; A•H, S.C

Q-D; 7-S

lUDDY- High ID 60s.

Page3

•

e
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VoL 41, No. 247

.

,..---- State official hears both sides of issue--------......_

I.

Former Ohio chiefjustice's ...---Local briefs... ~--i·,.·
so, is accused of rape
Carpenters support scrubbers

Meigs announcements

. '
•'

I

~·.

RAVENSWOOD, W.Va. Ravenswood Aluminum Cotp. on
Tuesday flied a civil lawsuit accusing a United Steelworkers local of
coordinating violence against the
company during a 5-month-old ·
labor dispute.
The lawsuit filed in U.S. District
Court in Charleston charges Local
5668 and 47 union members with
racl&lt;eteering.

_;..._-Area deaths---

Library event set

i ..
l

of

I

'.

It said the defendants have used
firearms, explosives, baseliaU bats,
rocks and otber weapons to altaCk
employees and propeny.
''The union seems more interested now in destroying this conipany
than bargaining with i~" WorUedge
said.
Those named by RAC in this
suit include the United Steelworkers of America Local 5668; Curtis
R. Pancake, Phillip M. Jarvis,
Sammy F. Gregorich, Kenneth L.
Cozart, Bob J. Good, Gary L.
Good, Chatlie E. MeDoweD, W.S.
Boyle, C.W. Garrett, Gerry
Holloverey, Eli P. Morris, Marge

Several areas in rural Meigs Wednesday morning.
County are still reeling from strucScattered customers 1n the
tural damage susl!lined from hi~h Buckeye Rural Electric, Columbus
winds and rain lare Tuesday, while Southern Power aqd Ohio Power
other areas continue to deal with experienced blackouts on Tuesday
power outages.
· due to wires downed by winds and
The Meigs CountySheriff's trees.
DeJllrt1nent reported this morning
Customers in Eastern Meigs
that tbe heavy winda and rain tbat County served by Monongehela
pelted the area last night tore roofs Power Company were not effected
from buildings, ovenumed mobile by power outages.
homes, and downed trees and
According to Ohio Power's
power,lines, witb most.of the struc- Pomeroy manager Ernie Sisson,
tural damage taking place in the 195 ofOhio Power's residential
Reedsville and Rae~ areas.
.- customers were without power
Some of the most dramatic dam- after Tuesday's stonn. The first call
age could be seen ou Cool ville . of a power outage came into the
Road between Reedsville and Tup- company at 6:20p.m.
pers Plains, where the roofs wete
A Columbus
Southern ·
ripped from a double-wide mobile spokesperson was unable .to estihome and another mobile home mate the number of customers
was completely demolished.
without power on TUesday night,
Property owner Roger Westfall however, she did Slate that aU custeported Wednesday moraing that torners with the exception of a few
he had just moved one of the trail- iri the Leadins Creek Road area
ers onto the lot earlier this week for should have power restored by
use as a rental.
noon on Wednesday.
The roof was also torn from tbe
Ohio Power and Columbus
former Meigs County Courthouse Southern. "'!orkers 'f".ere on the
in Chester, though no estimates of scene overn~ght repllflng ~wned
damage were available at press - lines, IWIOVDIJ trees. ·llld·· •n some
time. "'
' . 'ea.r-rvdna broken poles.
Residents throughout the greater
By 9:30a.m., Stsson reported
patl of Meigs County SP.ffered th~t only two .c~stomers ~f!l still
power outages throughout the w1tb0u1 eiec~1C1ty. He anuc1pated
evening on Tuesday, and many all power bemg restored by noon
areas were without power on on Tuesday.
'

Flanigan, Michael R. Bailes, James
C. Piccarella, Lorena Adkins, Earl
C. Adkins, Paul R. Wines, Judy
Brown, Jack L. Roush, Larry A.
Lanham, Paul R. Wines, Jr., Junior
Melhorn, Frank E. Wine, Carroll D.
Moore, Ronald L. Wickline 11,
Johit Whisman. Ronald G. Dixon,
Darlene Garrett, Vernon L. Smith,
James L. Oliver, Elden R. Chase,
Robert H. Buck, n, John W, Cleodenio, JohMy A. Lynch, Larry V.
Chambers, Ronald A. Hinzman,
Keith H. Du{st, Candy Good, Gary
W. ·McCue, 'leff Hersman, Gamet
Hersman. H.L. Smith, Kevin S.
Continued on p11ge 10

TAM Construction
awarded major
contract for prf!ject

By Charlene Hoefticb
SeotiDel News Starr
Contracts on the Rutland waste
water collection ancl sewage treatment system were awarded by Rutland Villa~e Council at a meeting
Tuesday rughl
The major contract of
$1,605,761 went to T.A.M. Construction, Inc. of Westerville for
education assistance plan and a installation of the grinder pumps
401Kplan.
and all the lines to handle the waste
"This is a desperation tactic," . water and sewage.
.
Bowen added. "There's little subContract for the construction of
siBilces to the charges. The resl vio- the waste water treatment plant on
lence is being perpetrated by the the 26 acres behind the Rutland
company as it makes a mockery of Civic Center and ball fields went to
the labor laws "and the collective Mack Industries, Inc., VaUey City,
bargaining process, hiring scabs Ohio. The contract figure was .
and thugs disguised as security $330.811.50.
guards, installing barbed wire
The electrical contra~! was;
around tbe plant, refusing to bar- awarded to West End Electnc, Inc.f
gain," he said. .
Portsmouth in the amount o
"All of the company actions are $38,750.
In announcing the awarding of
intended to intimidate the workers
and deprive them of their right to the contracts, Mayor Jame ~ M.
picket peacefully.and baigain col- Fink noted that tbe bids accepted
lectively," Bowen stated.
'

Suit a public relations ploy: USWA

Scholarships available

:=k/:"of famil~= .=::·

ligation into the labor dispute.
About 1,700 union workers have
been off the job at tbe plant since
Nov. 1, when their contract ·
expired. The company says they
are on strike, but the union says
they were locked out.
· · The company aUeged the defendants have bombed two employees'
houses, shot at six ·more and damaged 27 Qthers; committed arson or
attenipted arson six times; shot out .
windows 37 times; assaulted 29
employees; made 43 deatb threats
and 86 threatening or harassing
phone calls: and damaged more
than 1,700 vehicles.

Company· officials cited 2,000
alleged acts of violence ranging
from attempted .murder through
house bombings to tossing jackrocks, or nails wielded together, on
roads in order to puncture tires.
'
Union members and others
"have continued a pattern of violence" amounting to a "criminal
conspiracy," said Donald Wor. Hedge, presiden! of Ravenswood
"It's a smokescreen, a-common
Aluminum.
tactic routinely used by union-bustHe said the defendants ~ave vio- ing companies," said Jim Bowen,
lated a federal judge's March Director of District 23 of tbe Unitinjunction barring tbe union and its ed Steelworkers o(America. in refmembers from harassing or tbreat- erence to the lawsuit flied Tuesday
ening workers at the Jackson Coun- by Ravenswood Aluminum CorpotyplanL
·
ration against a group of union
Local 5668 President Dan Slid- workers.
bam did not immediately return a
According to a release from the
telephone messages Tuesday.
Steelworkers, Bowen said tbe suit
- Among those named in the suit . is a public rel.ations jlloy by .the
wu Robert H. Buck II, a union · company, consistent w1th Its ongomember who last month was indict- ing auempt to break the union at
ed by a federal grand jury on the Ravenswood facility .
~Jwges he made two fragmentation
"Instead of wasting time and
. · grenades.
·
money ori frivolous lawsuits, the
· ' It was the only indictment stem - company shOuld be concentrating
ming from a u.s. auorney's inves- on reaching an agreement witb its

·Co"ection

of

lo Department
Liquor Co11trol lleard both sides
or tbt controversial "Smitty' s"
liquor Dcense transfer proposal
at a publk: llearlog at Pomeroy
Vi.Uaae Hall Tuesday. (Below) Robert aDd Carolyn Smitb have
requelted a transfer of tbe former Melp IDD license to an East
MaiD Street storefront; wbere
they pliD to open a ''sports" bar.
Rev. Roland WUdm1111 of 1'rillity
COJIII'eational Cbureh and Rev.
Dna Meadows of the Pomeroy
· United Methodist Cburcb spoke
out against the license transfer,
both churches having filed tbeir
opposition to tbe transfer witb
lbe Department of Liquor Control Their testimonies were augmented by tbat of Rev. Andy
M~ of the Pomeroy Cburcb or
Cbrlst. The Smiths were represented by attorney JobD R.
Lentes. Evideace was beard by
Hearing Officer Domlaic Pauz'era: A decision will be made by
Departlant Director John Hall
in approximately 8 weeks. (Top)
Interested dtlzens also listened to

RAC .accuses USWA ofracket~ering

units respond to four calls ·

&amp;:l•

Storm _·slams,.
Meigs County
late Tuesday ·

Juveniles located
after search
.

I

2 Secllono, 14 Pogeo 25 oenla
A Multlmedi&lt;l Inc. -paper

. Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, Aprll10, 1991 ·

Copyrighted 1991

Generat...

I

Low toaigbl 1!1 JOs. Thursday,

•

Coiltinued from page 1

funding for that project through the
- Ohio Department of Development.
. A second reading was given the
new Income Tax ordinance which
requires that each new resident register with the Income Tax Administrator within 30 days of establishing residency in the .village, and
that beginning on sept I, 1991 1!11
landlords who rent property 10
Middleport submit an up-to-date
J is1 of their tenants to the tax
administrator.
Again discussed w·as tbe accumulation of tires in lower Middleport Mayor Hoffman reported that
he had again brought tbe maiter to
the attention of tbe Meigs County
Health Department and that he had
spoken to the owner who assured
him that the tire situation will be
taken care within the next few
weeks.
Council passed ·a· resolution
·approving the specifications and
bid on the new fire truck which has
already been: ordered, and heard a
report from the mayor on Fire
Chief 1eff Darst's contact with
·state officials on what ean be done
about burned-out houses in the
community.
The mayor reported that the
closing date on the Meigs County
Department of Human Services'
new construction is April 17 and
that construCtion is expected to get
underway the end of April. The village also· signed a lease with the
Department for tbe use of the old
Nicholson house next to village
haD for offices during the construc•
tion period. All expenses of !enovation to make the house sullable
for the Department's use will be
assumed by that agency, it was
reported.

Ohio Lottery

', .

workers. We know tbat if the com- pany was interested in reaching an
. agreement, a deal co~ld get done
very quickly," Bowen stated in the
release.
Bowen said the company recently resched an agreement with Steelworkers at Vialco (Virgin Islands
Alumina Co.). The statement said
the plant is ·managed by Oral co
· Management Services and the
. USWA organized the wc;uk force
when the plant was raken over by
Oralco.
A company release stated the
agreement was a three-year con. tract which included a signing
bonus, hourly wage increases, an

were $119,678 under the anticipated figure which means that the village will have less to pay than had
originally been anticipated.
Meeting with Council last night
was Kent Baker and Art Carpenter,
Engineering Associates, and Pat
O'Brien, project attoraey. Carpenter will be tbe resident engineer for
the project which is expcct'!d to get
·underway sometime later this
spring.
The bids now must go to the
EPA for final approval, according
to Mayer Fink.
~ $2.1 million project is being
funded through grants from the
Environmental ProteCtion Agency
of $1.5 miUion, and Federal Issue
11. $617,000. The balance of about
$180,000 will be borrowed from
the Ohio Water Development
Authority at a low interest rate to
be repaid over a 15 year period
from the monthly u5et fees paid by
the propeny owners.

;...----Local briefs--- Personnel contracts awarded by M~igs B·oflrd
open Grange meeting scheduled

.
.
The Rock Springs Granse will hold an open meeting on Thurs-

day. A potluck dinner wiD be$in at 7 p.m. with an auction to follow.
Fnends and neighbors are inVIted.·

'

.•

.
j '

'
''

•'
'

Scholarship applications availtible
Applications are now being accepted for the Charles S. Gibbs
Scholarship, which is administered by the Pomeroy A1110ni Association.
.
The scholarship is available to a jlladUSie liviD&amp; in Pomeroy who
plans to ente( tbe field of edacauon. The student receivinl the
scholarship mllst al10 plan to auend Ohio UnlvC:!:r': the University of Rio Grande and be an average aU-8IIJUJid
L ·
Those interested ill ajlplyina should laid an academic transcript,
resume, Jlhotl! and tell whicb college he or she planlto attend. The
informauon should be 10111 to AF.Il Smitb, in Cll'C of the Pomeroy
· Alumni Association, Lincoln Heighll, Pomeroy, Obio45769.
• According to Smith, the scholarship will be awarded by the
Pomeroy Alumni Association in accordance with guidelinea set
forth by the ~ehollnbip's originiiOr, Maripne Hartline.

By Cbarleae Hoeftlch
George Nagielslti, Kevin Sheppard, supervisor.
Also hired on supplemental con· Sendnel News Starr .
Jack Slavin, Linda Stanley. Becky
tracts
were Earl Young, assistant
Numerous ~t~~Cher and non-cer- Trent. and Nancy White. ·
high
school
principal, part-time;
tified personnel contracts for the
The board also voted to employ
and
head
teachers,
Becky Zurcher
1991-92 sehoollear wert awarded ·David Kucsma•as a teacher on a
for Middle~ Julie Hubbard for
at a meeting o the Meias Local continuing conbBCt.
"orie Feuy for RutB·oard of Education Tuesday night
Employed on supplemental con- Pomeroy,
land,
Mary
0'
rien for Salem CenGiven OI)C year contracts were tr11Cts for the next school year were
ter,
Ed
Bartels
for Salisbury, and
Cindy Allen, Marjorie Blake, Mike Stagp, hesd fOO!ball coach;
John
Amott
for
Meigs Junior High
Tammy Chapman, Donna Clark, ·Daryl Owens, assistant varsity
Christine Dowler, Tim Dunn, Rick footbaU; Jim Oliphant, cross coun- School.
The supplemental contracts
Edwards, Darla Kennedy, Lynll try; _Kevi~ Shepp~rd, head
were
awarded by a vote of four to
McCarley, Daryl Owens Linda wresdms; Rick Ash, gu-ls; volleyone
with
Board Mem bcr Robert
Smith, Mike Staggs, Shirl~y Van ball; Dale Harrisonville, sirls'
Snowden
casting
the "no" vote on
Meter, John Van Reeih, and Sandra assi•IBilt vollcyblll; Rldt Edwards.
Wallcer.
1irls' junior hish v~; John the basil that no ftlC()IIIIIIend
the ~tal contriCt
Awarded three year contracts Arnott, Jirls' junid.~ buket·
•
were Rick Ash, Paula Chancey, ball; Mike S~
f'acWdel Ients CIIIIO froQI the county
inrendenL
Snowden
stated
that
be
Teresa Davis, Tqnil)'_Dingess, J o care; El e 101'
yeedloolt;
Dunn, Vicki Haley, Miry O'Brien, • taao~ '*14 -lOr, John hu been advised by the school's
and Ann Van Maire. Five year con- Vlln
, M'V..t bind clirec:tar. 1epl COIIilel tbaiiUCb -.nen.
aac11 were PveiiiO s~ Ash Jolin Arnott, John Redovian and dldonl n Jeqllbocl
John
AmoU
awlrded
a supKennetb Eblin. Jon! Jefth. alrfi Mllte Wllfoaa, J'lid'-: B\eanor
plcmental
contniCt
for
the
posltilln
Mathews Crow, Dcborlh Muuer, Blaett~r, librarian and library

=-

on

Keli:,'

.

'

~·

('

of junior high athletic director by a
vote of three to two. Casting the
"no" votes were Snowden and
Larry Rupe.
Non-certified J!er59nneJ hired on
two year contracts beginning witb
the 1991-92 school year were Bernice Garnes, Ruth Pearson, and
Kathryn Powell, cooks, and Donna
Grueser, aide. all part-time positians.•Given continuing conuacts
were Katherine Desldas, bus driv. er; Joe Anthony, Tun Kauff, custodians;, Cathy Edward$, Yvonne
Youna. secretaries• and Denise
WUiilms, tilde.
_
'The boud voted to non-renew a
number of supplemental tonlrlets
for the 1991-!12 achool year on the
bull that 111011 are not cerlified and
by law mull be noa-renewed in
order to lllow cerdfiad penonnel.
to apply for the politiolll
Continued oo paae 10
~

I

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