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The. ·naily Sentinel

By The .Bend
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·D'Amato: '60 Minutes'
show business, not news

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. Monday, Aprll29,1991
Page--10

Revelers jam downtown for
'L.A. Fiesta Broadway~ . .
1bir-

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Community calendar

Pages 3-4

==:C~o~m~m~u~nl~ty~c~.==le=ild~.=r=ll~e~~J~.=m=u=st=be=p=ro=Vl=.ded=.C~al=l=J~im=C~al=d­

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KEY WEST, Aa. (UP!) - The
crypts have gone cond() at Key
West's only cemetery, adding a
modem, urban touch to a graveyard
long famous for its eccentric tombstones.
· , The grassy, IS-acre Key West
Cemetery is the fmal ~!iJig p~ce
for some of the island cny's earhest
residents
and' most outlandish ·char·
.
acters.
.
: The unusual inscriptions on the
'tombstones are legendary, making
the cel!letery a popular tourist
auraction. Perhaps the most famous
epitaph·is that of B.P. 'Roberts. ''I
Told You I Was Sick," his tombstone declares.
Another woman is remembered
"as
a
"Devoted Fan of Singer Julio
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ln . lS OrlC .cemetery

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Support sought for
Ravenswood Bridge
-" Connector Project

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. URGES SUPPORT FOR PROJij:CTS . Ja111es M. Jennings, standing, a collSultant for
the Meigs County Realoul PialiDina Commis·
· sion, spoke to the IIJ'OUP daring Monday's
terly llleetlng on,tl!e Importance or loeal

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':~~~Er:!sH~riCH

. By
Bernard Fultz, lon$time
active member of the Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary Club,
·became a Paul Harris FeUow in
a·recognition ceremony at Mon,
day night's meeting· held at the
Heath United Methodist Church,

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Middl,eport.

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.By BRIAN J, REED

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Briice Reed.
Jennings went on to say. howev- .
er, that Southeastern Ohio faces the
problem of having so few people:'as
residents ttaat voi¢es here are :r:1o1 .
heard as clearly a5 those in ml&gt;il:
populated areas of the state. Othet
projects, such as worlt on Route 2":1
at Portsmouth alld Route 35 near
Chillicothe also threaten the expc.~
dition of construction on the Meigs
County project, Jennings said. ·-:
. Reed, who regularly-attenas
SEORC l)ighway user meetings'oii
behalf of the planning commissi!JI&amp; ·
stated Monday that "Route 33 is
not as dead as some people think .
that it is," stating, however, the

F~~w~yJ!!::':~unit- ~~;o~~~~~jtl!.asarelo~=r:n~:~~~:~~fs:A~~
Jennings stated that the mittee', as well as the increase in

ed States Congress' authority to
spend that money will. end in '
September. He stated the legisla•
ture is cunently stockpiling _the
money for !he purpose of '·'offsetling the Federal deficit" instead of
.spendin~ it for the purpos4:s for
which it 1s being collected.
Jennings, who acts as a paid

SE.ORC's support of the project .local-level participation in the
was due ill large part to ilJe work of · Ravenswood project. Reed also
Mei~s County ofl'lcials- specifit:al- suggested that a local transporta· ·
ly ctting the efforts of the Metgs lion committee be ronned.
County Commissioners. Planning . county Commissioner Richard
Commission Executive Director Jones agreed with Reed on the
Charles Blakeslee, and SEPRC
Highway Oser Committee member
·continued on page 10

GM,:¥:Qrd ,:post $2--l»..lion,rin.,

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senled Fullz with a certifi!=Bte.
~Cdallion, and pin, the three
emblef!ls of appreciation which
go to a member selected for th~
Paul Harris FeUow recOgnition.
.Rotary President John R'ice
described !he recognition as
"The Rotary Fouildation' s way
of expressing its appreciation
for a sUbstantial conbjbution to
iiS humanitarian and educational
p~ograms." He said that t~e
recognition program is named
for tbe founder of Rotary, a
· Chicago lawyer who started
Rotary with three bilsiness asso- ·
ciates ill 1905.
··
Rice explained that Rotarians
designate a Paul Harris Fellow
as a lribute to a person whose
life demonstrates a shared pur- ,
pose with the objectives or The
i{otary Foundation. Before the
surpnse presentation to FuJtz,
Rice detailed highlights of his
family life and career and his '
contributions to Rotary.
The Rotary president also
recognized Mrs. Beulah McCOmas, widow of Lee .McComas,
also a Paul Harris Fellow. In his
comments about the late school
teacher and administrator, Rice
described him as "a man. who
did everything for Rocary. a man
who was a credit to himself, his
ccimmunity and this club." ·
For the Paul Harris Fellow
recognition of Fultz, the Middlepon-Pomeroy Club made a
gift of$!,()()() to Rotary Interns,

DOWNING CHILDS
MUlLEN MUSSER

combined first-quarter losses ·

PAUL HARRIS FELLOW - Longtime Rotarian Bernard
Fultz was recog11ized as a Paul Harris Fellow alld presented a cer·
tificate, medallion and pin at Mooday aight's meeting or the Mid·
· dleport·Pomeroy Rotary Club. Present to make the presentations
was BUI Stout, ClrclevUie, Rotary Governor or Di$trict 61111.

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iional 'to fund proji:cts .and programs around the world which
are geared to enhance international friendship and understanding. The money goes
toward a variety of programs
including group study exchange,
providing medical service, buying school supplies , giving
nuttitioital training, and provid·
ing supplies and IJ!Slerials ror
farm·-production to Third World
countries.
· ·
A report oi1 the successful
pancake breakfast held ~t th~

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Spnng
Roundup' at the Royal
' Oak Resort Club Saturday
morning was given by Mark
Murphey, chairman.
Instrumental and vocal entertainment was provided following the dinner served by Heath
Church women by Sharon Hawley, Frank and Sue Smith ,
Donna and Steve Jenkins. .
Ladies night was observed
and among· the guesiS were the
honoree's wife, Betty Fultz, and
one of his three daughters,
Becky Parsons, and her son.

By JAN A. ~VERINA
UPI Auto Writer
. D~TROrt -The nation's two
largest automllicers Tuesday turned
ill first quatter losses IOtaling nearly $2 biiJion .worth ofre4 ink, with
both General Motors Corp. and
Ford Motor Co. crying the blues·
over a recession that caused North
Ameriean vehicle sales 10 sink to
their lowest levels in a decade.
Industry leader GM's losses of
$1.08 billion were slightly less than
expected by Wall Street, moderating from the $1.6 billioo loss post·
ed by the world's largest industrial
concern for the- fourth quarter of
1990 - the biggest three-month
loss in automotive history.·
But Ford's record $884 milliort
loss was deeper than anticipated,
erasing ilJe previous worst red ink
of $59S million posted by the No. 2
autoJDalcer during the third 'quarter
of 1980.
Third-ranked Chrysler Corp.
was expected to report first-quarter
results Wednesday. Some industry
analysts recently . deepened their
loss forecasiS to more than $500
million.
·
GM' s latest loss excluded a gain
of $403 million from the sale of its
New York office building in January, and an .overall $307 million
gain from an accounting change
related to supplies illven10ry.

GM earned $710 million, or
$1.02 a share on its $1 and 2/3par
value common slock, during the
first quarter of 1990. Worldwide
sales slipped 10 $29.2 billion ftom
$30.1 biUion in the year-ago quarter.
Its cash and marketable securities as of March 31, stood at $3:2
billion, down .substantially froll)
$5._S billion at !he end or the yearago quarter.
Ford's record losses compared
with a profit of $506 million, or
$1.10 a share, for the ftrst quarter
of 1990. Its worldwide sales and
revenues totaled $21.3 billion,
down from $23.6 biljlon..
·
Ford's cash and marketable
securities as of March 31 .totaled
$6.1 billion, up from $3.9 billion in
the year-ago quaner. But its automouve-related debt soared to $8.2
billion, vs. $3 .8 billion a year
before.
There was a bright spot, however. Ford's Financial Services
Group, led by Ford Credit and The
Associates, earned a record $270.4
million. or 57 cents a share, during
the fllSt three months of 1991, up

42 percent from .$191.2 million, or
4.2 cents a share, primanly due to
higher net interest margins.
But both automakers posted
huge losses in their main business .
'- making and selling cars an&lt;t·
trucks.
·
While GM would only say i ~
North American automotive losseS:
were sizable enough tO wipe Out
record earnings· in Europe, F9l'd's:
worldwide automotive·operations.
lost $1.2 billion during the quaner,
vs. a $315 miUion profit a year ago.
Ford's lalest results included· a•
$93 million charge for costs related
to early retirements and other per-.
sonnet reduciion programs.
Specifically, Ford's U.S.. automotive operations lost $947 million, compared with earnings of
$160 million a year ago. Its overseas automotive operations lost
$208 million, compared wilh earnings of $155 million a year ago.
"First-quarter results reflect the
fact that consumer demand
remained weak ill North America,
reOecting the extremely turbulent
events of the oast nine months,"
Contlauecl 011
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:AEP's Katlic feels political' leaders. ·'pushing
panic butt(ln' on issue without checking facts

INSURANCE ·

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Tiffin·stud~nt wi17:s
state civics test

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. Bill'SIOUt, CircleviUe ROtarY,
·tlliV{I:fiiOi' bf 'OtSiiic~··;·i?fe"=l

German measles
z epidemic hits ·
. Amish .·

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Fultz na_med Paul Harris Fellow

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consultatit for the planning comSent!DefNews Starr
mission in the area or road
The need lor local support (or improvemeniS at the Southeastern
the Ravenswood Bridge Connector Ohio Regional Commission, also
project was discuascd at length by discussed the importallCe of local
the Meigs County Regional Plan- · support of a maJor 'iocal project ·
ning Commission when the group now·being considered by the Ohio
held Its quarterly meeting Monday Department of Transportation -.that
afternoon at !he Farmers Bank and of the Ravenswood Bridge ConnecSavings Conmmy. -.
tor.
James M. )ennings of James M.
The SEORC plays an active role
Jennings Associates or Columbus in supporting road improvement
for llifbway improvemCllt projects, specillc:aDy
presented a videotaped program projects in ·Southeastern Ohio, and
that o the RaveDSWOIId Bridge Coonector. Also
concerning the Highway Users rec11ntly placed the prOject, which
pictured are, far left, Plaaaing Commission .. · . Federation; im orglmization cur·· would compleie U.S. Route 33
Presidimt Fred Hottman; Secretary Joyce
rentlrappcilliingfortheexpenditure from Rock - 'Springs to the
Bowen and John Rice. .
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on highway projects, of an estimat; Ravenswood Bridge as one of its
ed $17 billion now avliilable ill the . highest priorities . . Officially,

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A Multimedia Inc. N~opaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, Apr1130, 1991

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People in the news

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-~;-~~~~:t:=e:WctLos . ~~l:~l~~~~u~=:!~:~~~

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numbers and, in· some cases, lished in 1941, describes a family
' COLUMBUS Ohio (UPI) season vegetables should wait at · home honiculturisl at Ohio ·State ezs to wait until early May to plant addresses. ·
. · of ducks in search of a niore peaceGardenefS itching to plant warm; -least another week in Ohio, says a University.
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vegetables in southern Ohio, until
The alphabetical list is so long ' ful new home ill Boston. .
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·
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Jeanne Youger-Comaty says mid-to laiC May in central Ohio that only people with last names
garden soil across the state is 100 and late May in northern Ohio.
beginning. with the letters A
cold and wet fll!' warm-season vegA frost will kill most transplants through G were listed Sunday . .
Those with last names ~ginning
etables. Such vegetables include of warm-season vegetables.
1
with the letters H through 0 wiU be
tomatoes, eggp ants, peppers,
"The planting-date recommen- listed Monday, and p lhrough
squash and green beans.
.
dations also assume the weather wiU l&gt;e published Wednesday.
By United Press Intematlonal
.,
"In the last few years, the and soil will have warmed and
"The state Controller's Office is
"DALLAS" VALUES: Larry H1p1an says how are you gning
weather has cooperated for early dried some," Youger-COmaty said. holding over $800 million iit.prop.By Umted Press International .
to keep the comrades down on the communal fain! once they've seen
plantin,g of summer vegetables, .but . ''If it .stavs cold an
. d wet. , gar·
1 ·med b th
A German measles epidemic is
t th
'" y
c
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erty waiung to be c 81
y e
"Dallas." In other words, he thinks "Dallas" helped bring down the
no IS year,
ouger- omaty deners w1D Just have; to wall even riAhtful owner," the ad reads. spreading through Amish commu·
Iron Curtain by giving East bloc residentS a peep at the good life in the
satd.
longer. Right now, we need several
7 ill'
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ed nities. in PennsylvaniB and other
West. "I think the ~ulence, the consumensm, the fOod, the cars ~
"The recent cold, wet weather days of warin sun to get the soil " ver 1• m 100 peop are ow
has kept soil from warming and ready."
money. The list published in this states, health officials said.
' . . these things (people) .want
than their sovemments provided
While the disease, called RubelYouger-Comaty offers this paper only includes 12,261 people
them," Hagman told People magazine. "You take people who don't . dryinf enough to aUow early planthave any food to a ... supetllliWket, they're soillg to want to stay." As
illg o warm-season plants or seeds. advice ror gardeners who have ;:.~~ money was found last la, is normally not severe, pregnant
women with measles run a high
the landrqark series finishes up its 13-year run next month, Ha~
Arid there's stiU the possibility of already bou~lu transp_lants: "Keep
The ad e'ncourages Cal"om'aft• . risk or bearing children wilh birth
. recalled how years ago he reahud he had a chance to clean up IU hiS
frost," she said.
· ·transplants i'ndoors under Ouores.., -~
Warm-sea5on vegetable tians· cent lights or ouldoors in a warm, who believe they may be owed defects.
tole as the nefarious J .R. Ewing. "It was w~ all the :who Shot
As of Saturday, Pennsylvania's
plants put in the garden now will sunny spot. They need 6 to 8 hours . money to fiD out a coupon in the ad
J,R.?' crap hit the lim," he said. "I had just turned 50 and realired they
Health
Department had verified 12
stop grow.ing and have trouble ofbnght light per day. . ·
or to call a toll-free .numbet during
couldn't do the show without me. So I rengotiatcd the hcU out of my
cases
of
the disease, I 0 of which
contract," Hagmari eveniUally became an executive producer of "Dal- · ~ecovering when conditio.ns
. "Indoors. use lights set 10 to 12 business hours.
were
in
Amish
families. But offitmprove, Youger• Comaty satd . . inches above the plants. TransSome sums of money Owed
las." "Actually, that was just a ploy to JDalce me some more money
cials
believe
there
are many more
This "shock" can set back plant "' plants also dry out quickly, .so . include $25,392.90, $12,890.52,
because there wasn't any. more in the kitty to pay an.ac10r," he said.
undiagnosed
cases.
growth for the entire season.
. water them regularly," she said,
$10,355.17, and $5,039.97.
Seeds
of
warm-season
vegeta.
!"or
gardeners
who
can't
shake
.
· Most of the assets are cash from
GIVENS TAKE ON ACTING: ~obla Given• has plenty of reiebles
pl&amp;llted
in'
cold,
wet
soil
.
will
their
planting
fever,
it's
not
too
late
dormant
bank accounts, but there
vlsion acting expefience but she came down with a bad case of n~es ·
·
lik
1
she
·d.
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are
also
other
asseiS, including the
when it came to ftlming her movie debut. "A Rage ill Harlem" with
mll!lt e Yrot,
581
toP ant some coo -season crops, contents of some safe·de~osit
. Gardeners should wait until the Yougez-Comaty said.
··
Forest Whitaker, Danny Glover, Gresory Hilles and direciDr BiD
frost threat has passed before plantThese include beets, carrots, leaf boxes, Controller's office of ICials
Duke. "I was scared io death the fD'St day I worked in the picture,'' the
ing warm-season crops, said letbice and radishes.
,,,.
say.
former Mrs. Mike Tyloa says. " ... I took one look 8l Forest and a little
Youget-Comaty, advising garden•
voice said, 'Com~ on, Givens, you're going to act wilh Forest WhilakDucky da:y for duck levers
. erl' And everything left me. My confidence was gone. My mouth was
111 Stcilld St., Pomeroy
BOSTON (UPI) - Robert
. dry and I was sha,king." Givens Overcame her fears and the movie
McCloskey had a ducky day in
YOUIINDEPINDENT
turned out 10 be quite educational. "During the picture I learned what
Boston Sunday.
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acting process works for RobiiiGivens," she satd. "I couldn't pattern
AGENTS SEIVIIIG
myself after anyone else. It was a revelation. !learned how to become
The author of the beloved chilMEIGS COUNTY
a character and forget Robin completely."
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dren's book "Make Way For
SINCE 11161
Ducklings" led a parade of hun,
PERPICH STAYS AMERICAN: The call of Croatia wasn't
eiJOU8~ .to ~ formez Minnesota governor Rudy ~erplch give up his
U.S. cuu.enship. Perp_teh had ~ asked to take the JOb of foreign min-.
COLU~US, Ohio (Ui&gt;I) - A
istet of the Yu~laVtaR republic but had to decline. "He would have
Tiffin ninth grader who knew
-~ the job if he could h~~e ~tained his citizenship," said l'flrwhich states the Northern Pacific
p!Ch 11de Teresa McFarland. He s very disappointed. He saw a lot
railroad traveled lhroluih ill the late
of good he CC)Uld do as the foreign milltster.'' Nonetheless Perpich
19th century won the Ohio Citizen
planl to live in Croltia and ~rve President Franjo Tucljman 'm anoth·
Bee,
a-test of civic lilel'ley.
·er policy-mating role, such as international trade and economic devel~
The
Saturday by
opmenL Perpich, whose father and maternal grandparents migrated 10 . Matthew 111swer
Shepard
of Titfm '1 Bast
• MiJ1ne1ot11 from Ooalia, wrote Tud)111811 a letter saying he would still
·Junior High won a $1,000 U.S.
, be illlcresiCd in a Cabinet job if U.S. citiwlship laws are changed.
Savings Bond•.His scbool received
a
$250 award.
· GLIMPSES: ABC's Diane Sawyer and Iiet husband director
He will join five other Ohio
,Mike Nidi~ will be the ~-· for Monday night's annual benefit for
fin~liats
who will compete in a
the P)'esbytenan HOSPital m New Yorlt. The guests include former
national
competidon
for acholar·
JIIIYOF Ed Kodl and 'TV sex therapist Ruth Wathelaler and Peter
shills
valued
as
hi&amp;h
11
$12,000.
Alita will Cillelllin ... Italian IICirC&amp;S Laura Allt.o adl, a sex symbol in
~hepbqd
correctly
pvc
Washthe "lla llld receml)' known for television roles, was III1'Cited for
ingiOn,
Idlbo,
and
Montana
to a
pa 1raion of 50 pams of C0C1ine • her viDa ncar Rome. Police Slid
question
Iller
hil
opponent,
Brett
, i\nuNDi, 49, had the cocaine in a bowl on.a living room rable, appar· . Biker, w11 unable 10 provide the
.-Iy In preparllion for a party.
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Q·uirks _in.th_e· .ne·. s:

There were no injuries in the children who marched in the
Iglesi.,,"
.
city officials dealt wilh the problem
Sharon Wells, a local historian pecullar"noon Saturday illcidenL
parade and .hear!! proclamations ·
And one widow placed a plaq~ in the time-honored Florida fash- leading a sJ)rvey of the cemetery, is . · "He just ran out of gas," Gra- read in ~is honor.
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Over her husband's grave declarillg, ion. They built condominiums urging the city to regulate crypt ham said. ·
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"Harry, I Know Where You're !'leek new high'rise crypts that cari heights 10 presezve the cemetery's
.
Later, he was lhe.guesto,fhonor
Sle~pillg TonighL" That 011e has accommodate up .to five of the charm.
Missing any mooey?
. .
at a celebrational tea in Boston's
been stolen.
dearly departed.
But not everyone hates. the new . . . SACR~N'fY, Calif. (UP~) posh Four seasons Hotel.
.
· Olhez markers honor Yorkshire
Some local historians consider vaqlts, Though huge and blunt In - !he_ Cahf~rn1a Controller s .
The author of several children:s
terriers or support' life-sized statues. !hem an eyesore and a sacrilege.
style, they have their own charac- . Office_1s runnmg newspaper ads boOks, including ':Blueberries for
Historians place intern!ltional . The high-rise vaults are ter .said Susan Olsen (lxecutive searchmg for the owners of more Sal" and ' 'One Morning in
imponance on the melilorlals 10 the "destroying the historical character dir~tor of the Key West An &amp; than $800 million in cash lmd prop- · Maille;" McClOSkey said he never
U.S.S. Battleship Maine, whose and integrity of the cemetery," , Historical Society, who leads tour5 erty held by the state from dormant expected the story or the ~ard
sinking in Havana Harbor led to the ·local historian Sharyn Thompson .througb the gnlveyard. .
bank accounts.
.
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family to become and remam so
SpaniSh- American War.
wrote ill arep(ln to the city.'
. "If!ICI that the death rituals and
"You may be owed money!" ' popular.
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. .But today, the dead oumumber
"While the need for · burial customs of tOday are 'just as impor- declares the hcailline a six-page . "In fact, 50 years ago I ·l)onOt
the living ill Key wes.1, an.d. 18n.d is space 15
· a seri
· should rant and o ti 0 f
ul•"· advertising supplement 10 Sunday's · think - I never would have
,
ous concern, 11 ·
re ec ve our c ""~ as Los. A.ng·eles Times. A similar ad expected this to·ha-n with 'Make
·scarce and expensive. M least not be addressed at the exnet~se of those of. the 19111 century," she
h L A
S ·
w • D kl:~ · · b
40,000 bodies are buried in the ·. the cemetery historically,r•"&amp;dded said. "They're going lobe siUdi.ed ran in t e os nge1es enune1
ay .ot uc mgs nor my pu Strang
·
stad
·n
a
th
100
years
~orm
·o
th
·
h
newspaper.
·
Ushers
...," McCloskey
said Sunark,
thousan
.
ds
more
than
.
the
.
Lynette
P
.
, no er
n w, even oug . The ad prints the names .of peo· da
·
island's population.
..
repon.
they're not as beautiful."
pie and businesses listed on 'the
YMcCloskey, Biso an artist, says
To keep up with local demand, ·
accounts left dormant for more he.wrote the story after watching a
than three years and !&amp;ken over by Mrs. Mallard and taer ducklings

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Low tonight near 55,
·P,arty doudy.Wednesday,
partly sunny.

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&gt;

~Sta ~=\==~

Pick 3:876
Pick 4:3547
Cards: lO·H, 10-C
3·D; Q.S

'

LOS ANGEl,ES (UPI) ~
~5 countries in Latin A,merica, =~e7a'Y~rth~:~.:
~:~.949-2458 not later than
ty-six blocks of downtown were - ·~eluded the~ group Fandango, must be received weD illlllvaru:e
NEW YORlC (UPn - Sen. Alfonse D' Amato angrily denied Suntaken
over Sunday by "L.A. Fiesta . · smgers Jose ose, Jolumy Canales 10 BSSUre publieation in tlie eal
RUTLANi&gt; • 'fhli Rutland Gatday that he refused 10 be inlerviewed for a CBS " 60 MinuleS" report
Broadway," Ill outdoor.cclebration - andv~vm1Besax0cterhoa.,
·3t, from Canoga eadar.
- .den Club will meet Tuesday at6:30
~ hiS. ~- accusing !he long-running program wilh having more
of the city's Hispanic heritage ·. ..,..
h h
M p 1
mterest m " show business" lluu! news.
·
expected to.amaa up to 1 million . Park, Calif., said he came io .the
p.m. at t e orne: rs, ear e
·
·
MONDAY .
Kennedy for a potluck supper. A,
D'AmaiO was responding to a " 60 Minutes" segment· hours . ·
revelers.
festival to gel a flavor of different
POMEROY _ The Meigs .Coun- video will be shown on tulips and
before it was tO be broadcast - that contained accusations of wrongthe JR.ciJico de Mayo extrava; ,.Cultures.
·
ty Veterans Service Coni mission · Mrs. James NichOlson will ~nt '
doing !hat ~ beillg investigated by a Brooklyn grand jury and the
ganza
drew
75
local
and
interna"My
wife
is
froiD
Nicarag11a,
will
meet Monday lit ?:30 p.m. il) . a paper on annuals.· Mts. Virgil
SenaJe Elhics Committee.
· ·
10
tiona!
stars
to
perform
for
the
·
and
it's
sort
of.a
charice
experi·
the
Veterans
Service Office in Atkins will demonstrate Hogarth
The segment aired Sunday nighL
· .·. .
..
·
crowds
celebratmg
an
important
ence
part
of
her
culture
and
pan
of
Pomeroy.
··
arranging.
D' Amato made his comments Sunday niornin~ at a M;mhatlan
date
on
Mexico's
road
10 indepen- the. culture of Los Angeles," Bax· hotel, .where he I:eeeived a "Defender of Freedom ' award from the
dence. .
· . . ter saicl- "ll~s 'tcally a lot Of fun. In
LEBANON TOWNSHIP - The
WEDNESDAY
Emunah Women of America, a religi011s Zionist group. The senator
Organizers
w~
cncourag~
by
comparison
10
last
year,
thcte's
10
L
b
T
.
h'
Tru
.
POMEROY
Th S 1·. b
· has been a ,munch defender of Israel. .
·.
last year's trouble-free event, and times as many thillgs to do, to sec
~ lUIOn .owns 1p . Stees will
_·
- · e a IS ury
D' Amato ·vehemently insisted that he had agreed to be interviewed
hoped L:A. Fiesta Broadway wiD . and to exfi-!:'ence."
meet Monday at7 p.m. at the .town. Township Trustees wiU meet
by ~e segment's correspondent, Mike Wallaee, but only live and
.
ua1
__,,
·
·•
·
Hi
·
ld
·
-~ F
ship
building. - ·
. Wednesday at 7 p.m. at the hOme.
bee
. orne an ann ......aon. "pres 2 -year-o w'!.e, · atema;
of the clerk, ·sarah Gibbs: l!ubl.ic . '
linedited, a condition !he netwQrlc rejected. . · . . · · ..
music
festival,
.said
''there
are
mQIC
'famous
peo·
_
J&gt;OMEROY
_
The
J&gt;omeroy
invited.
·
.vious
dowtown
· "To have Mike Wallace claim as he does that I refused to be inter~
S~t
Scene,
was
marred
by
stabpie
thi,s
yeat.
I
thillk
it
is
more
fun
Cha
.
pter
186,
Order
of
the
Eastern
..
viewed is a dBmnable lie,'! said D' Amilto. "I spate to him on at least
bings and the death of one fan in thar! last year."
.
three occasions and I said ... to him repelltedly I was willillg to go on
POMEROY - Kindergarten reg: .
1986.
. Festival Olllanizers say ther.Iost Star, .will have inspection on Moolive and unedited.
·
will be held at Pomeroy
istration
" So far, so good," said Los money on last year's $1 million day at 7:30p.m.
A spokesman for the show said D' Amato hung up on Wallace, endElementary on Wednesday for all
TUESDAY
ing the third conversation.
·
. Angeles Police Sgt. Mike Long~ event, but were more optimistic for
st~~dents of the Pomeroy and Saliswalking
alon~
south
Broadway.
this
year's
edition,
despite
·a
$2
RACINE
_ Tuesday is the last bury attendance area. Contact the
The "60 Minutes" repon covered the Housing and Urban Develop"Everybody s having a good million budgeL
day to s ·gn up ~or seruo·r ltirls soft· principal's office at Pomeroy for
ment scandal, where D' Ama!O al~gedly used hiS clout 10 obtain subsitime."
·
.To make sure there is no trou- ball for1 Racine.
'' Registration
odiud housing for a relative and others, and an appellriulcc as a charac·
is mformation,.,992-2710.
. LOn¥ said about 300 Officers, ble, a privite security finn of 500 $7.50 and a birth cenificate copy
ter_wibless for Philip Basile, who wa5 convicted for conspiracy ill try·includmg a ·detail of_ mounted .offiCers was deployed in the slreeiS, ·
'
ing to gain the release from prison of a mobster.
"The broadcast p_ulls togeth?r various.elements on the embattled
were on hand In the
_!0 severw. ·. •
senator's career;'' wd a "60 Minutes" spokesmliJl, Roy Brunett, who
Severi
mlJSic
stages
were
erected
Ericka
Aviles
was
doing
a
brisk
said.D'Amato was offered an opportunity to address acclisations ill an
·
·
interview.
· ·
..
..
.
· in the festival area, and several · busbtess selling ice cream .bars iri •
Latin
mllsic
groups
perfornled.
A
the
so
degree
heat
"Everybody
is
That
California
tralfte
dreds
of
children
dressed-in
duck· "We do not grant live interviews," Brllqett said. adding that show
coup
for
organizers
was
arranging
buying
a
lot
of
things,"
she
said.
LANCASTER,
Calif.
(UP!)
·ung
costumes,
their
parents
and
has not done so ill its 22-yeat history 10 his recoDection.
for the North 'American-concert "It's pretty good."
A pilot whose light plane ran out of adult fans of his story of a family
Attorney General Robert Abrams, a candidate for the U.S. Senate
debut of Brazilian pop grot1J.l Xuxa,
Shade was at a premium in the gas had 10 land in the firSt relative- of ducks who $earch for a new
seat now held by D' Amato, said ihe senator is proving to be'an embarwhich has become a mus1c phe- festival area, but even an awning ly safe place he could find.
home.
rassment for New York.
·
·
nomenoniiiLatinAmerica.
didn't
provide
much
relief.
"It's
HechoseAvenlleO.
The book,,popular worldwide,
1
"AI D' Amato likes to claim that he 'delivers' for New York, but
Latin
st8rs_
who
agreed 10 per- hot,'' said another vendor, Jrene
The
pilot
radioed
airport
conhas
turned SO, and the Historic
the revelations on '60 Minutes' tonight conflflll once again that he
form
included
jazz
greats
Tito
Palmar,
duckinsr
under
a
beach
trollers
at
Gen.
William
1.'
Fox
Air- Neighborhoods Found11tion of
delive_rs, all right - but for a narrow group of political cronies, rebl- -Puente and Poncho Sanchez, pop umbrella. •'But it"s all right."
. field ill Lancaster that he was mak- Boston celebrated the milestone
tives, cam~aign conttibutors and clients of his br.other's law firm,"
crooner Manuel ~es is weD as · · A main goal of lbe festival is to ing an emergCI\Cy ia~Jd!n¥. sheriff1s with a tribute to McCloskey and its
. Al)rams wd. "AI D' Amato has become an embarras.sment to Ne\11
the legendary entertainers Lucha call attention to Broadway, an Deputy Terry Graham bid.
·
annual Ducklings Parade.
,
· York and his effectiveness as a senator has been drastically impaired."
Villa
and
La Pricta.Linda.
aging
thoroughfan;
that
is
the
sub·
He
managed
to
guide
his
Cessna
McCloskey,
77,
led
the
parade
.,
'
'
· Other entertainezs, representing ject of reiuvination efforts.
· · Centurion in for an emergency from .Beacon S!rCC! along a I:mile
landing on Avenue G between route-· the same; one the Mallard
0
0
Highway 14 and SieJra Highway in family followed in his book - 10
•
·
'

::~e,

•

..

Ohio Lottery

SVAC action
resumes
Monday

'

'

COLUMBUS - Are America's
political leaders likely to push the
panic button-wiilJout exanuning the
facts when it comes to environmental issues?
J. E. "Jack" Katlic believes that
is true. And the results, he says,
cost consumers more and can devastate entire industries.
· Speaking tp attendees at the
Eastern. Fuel Buyer's COnference,
beld ill Columbus, the senior vice
(JieSidcnt-fuel supply Of the Ametican Rlectric Power Service CClJl'O:ration wm:ted that global wllfiiUIIil,
is the environmental concem of the
90s. And, if scienlific fact and reason are not part of the public
deblte, Katlic said remedies for a
~ved" global warmin prob- ·
letn could cost qmsumers 1~ times
as much as the recent Clean Ail
Act amendments.
. The "invoice" for the Clean Air
Act llllendmeniS is now beiJII! ~
•red. he said,·as electric utiliues
.l!lust decide how to comply with

.

the law. The "costs" of compliance · global warming."
environmental panic," he said,
far outweigh the benefiiS, .Katlic
. 'He said tile coal industry is would rather have the public
observed, accO«&lt;ing to the repon of affected by t'be global warming believe that ilJe earth is becoming
the National Acid Precipitation issue because a byproduct of coal so warm that coastlines wiD change
Assessment Program. Commis- combustion is carbon dioxide, a due to glacial melting and that
sioned by Conqress, the NAPAP suspected contributor tO global extreme temperature changes will
report resulted from a 10-year, one- warming. However, he · noted , turn productive farmland into
.half billion doliar study of the acid- "Before you run into the stteciS 10 deserts. None of those issenions is
rain phenomenon. According to warn ever_&gt;:one that tbe sky is supported by scientific fact, he
Katlic, the study results were large- falling ... let s examine the r~ts."
said.
ly ignored by legislators.
Carbon dioxide has been found
"C"2 ac!ivity, should it result ill
Public perception, not facts, by one government physicist 10 the same legislative acdvity as acid
drove Congress to enact the Clean actually be helpfuiiO the environ- rain, will likely result in ten times
COAL 6 CLEAN AIR MEETING • 1be futare M s-lheat·
Air Act amcodments, Kame ment, Katllc 1IOiied. "Dr. Shetwood the costs of ·the Clean Air Act," . em Olllo'l t:Ml illdllltly and tbe Impact of the Clean All' Act upon
observed, just as it is beginning to · Idso, of the U.S. Water Conserva- Katlic 8SICited.
tbe reaiOII's - y aild joblba been . . IOpk: of ''serious -ern •
mov.e the.,.global wanning issue. ·
tion Laborltory, has done extensive . . "What a legacy to leave our , and bfgtaeit priority In my ollk:e," according to U.S. Repn~t~~ll- .
work on the value of C02," he children, our aation, and in thi.s
live ClareiiCt E. Miller (left). M!Uer •et wltb Amerbn Electric •
Power VIce Presldeat William Lbota (rlabt) to dlacuas AEP'a . '
_ , the people of the world." he ·
"Somebody mentioned that the explailled- "He has concluded tliat ,. case
efforts to comply wltll the Act's stiff sulfur dioxide e•lulo111 · •
·Clean Air Act of 1990 was like a our planet has been C02 starved, continued. "The burden of mneclymassive boulder that c.,nt off the could use so percent•more ... it inJ a peKei.ved problem, lhlt is not ' requlremeatl. The liRe (JIIIIItlllllnJ ea~lly acnabben 011 eoaJ.ftrecl _··
JIClltrltiDI pilatl or ll'lriteb to lower all!fur coal lw alto tieeD 1 '
mountain to rest on coal and elec- Would help increase plant growlh l'CIIIy a pmb1an • all, in f.:L"
matter ol "JJIrrmmOIIII.lmportuce'' ill talb M!Uer bll bid w1t11 :
"There is a sayill1 that goes:
tric ulilitles In the valley," he by one-third...with another onerfllollal d•le, bula• uti aove111meata1 leaders, 11 well 11 a
states. "N~ a bad analogy, bill it third bonus through plant moisture 'Fool Dill DIICO, shame on ~- Fool
me twice, shame on mel ' Klllic · recent coaweraatloa wltll Olllo Gonnor Gtorae 'Volao•Icla.
waa not finished. The massive retention."
~et~ltod.
" ...Merchants of envlrcJa..
Miler, wllo YIUd ~ tile act. plllla to •eet .ndi Valted Mlae •
Facts
such
as
that,
Katllc
assert·
' boulder did DOt SlOp in the vaUey; it
Worllen Prnlwi¥.1 Trtamkl. He alto \!owed to coatba•: ·
mental
panic;
here
tbey
come
ed,
rarely
are
given
the
credence
went up die other side and is about .
llll•r 111 art r. a.prebeallft c1eu c.oa•.tecbliOioay propuq,
.·
apia."
'
to come rolling back again ...as they deserve. The "merchants or

.

14

.

~

"

�The Daliy

OhiO

Commentary
II ·
li

'

'

I

. PRAGUE, CzechoslovakiaPruidenl Vaclav Havel is conduct·
ing secret talks with lsnlel to turn
over sacred Jewish items to that
country - relics that Adolf Hitler
once intended to showcase in his
"MuSeum of an Extinct Race" in

street
P•m-7, Olllo

111

DEVOTED TO THE INTEitEIITS OF TilE MEIOS·MASON AREA

I

J1j:b

.

~m~ '"'"-''-""T'"'.,..,.c::~'""'
~v

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

.[

I,

'

I

American Jewish leaders have

GeaeraJ .Maaacer

also been confidentially petitioning
Havel for some of the tens of ~sands of Jewish relics stored in
Prague, many lying in unopened
crates in 0!11-Df·the·way warehous·
es. Our sources say it IS likely that
Havel will donate some of tbe
relics to the future Holpcaust muse·
urn in Washington.
Havel will keep some of the
relics to displ&amp;y in Prague. He COn·
ftrmed his plans during an interview with us . "Some of these

PAT WHITEHEAD

1

,Jt\"Miot...l PubUoher/Coalroller

~I

relics, especially those that are
truly religious obiects, will be
transfemd to Israel,' he said.
Havel was careful to note that .
not all of the relics had been
assembled by Hitler and brought to
Prague from other Ewopead COUll·
tries for his Semitic museum.
"Most of these relics are from
here- are originally from
Czecboslovakia," Havel said. • And
I believe that it would be extremely
good if these were displayed in
such a way that people from all
over the world who come to this
city now could see them. It would
be nice to have an exhibition of
Jewish culture here in the center of
Europe. Gradually, step by step and
with great dignity, they will be dis·
played here in Prague.•

Pra~.

CBABLENE HOEFLICH

1

r

Pomeroy-Middleport, OhiO
1\lesday, April 30, 1991

A MEMBERotThP United !'Tess lnternatlonlll, Inland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper PubliJbers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. Tbey should be less than 300
wonls long. All letters, are subject to edtttng and must be signed with
name, address and tPlephone number. No unsigned letters wUl .bepubUslled. Letters Should be In good tute, addressing Issues. not personall·

ues.

Jack Anderson and Dale VanAtta

President Lech Walesa of
Poland, on a recent visit to the
United States, donated several
items to the planned U.S. Bolo·
caust MemcriaJ Museum, including
a gate from the Jewish cemetery in
Tarnow, past which Jews were •
marched to be shot amidst the
graveatooes.

Jews came to Czechoslovakia as
early as the lOth ceoiUry •.By World
Warn, there were nearly 100,000
Jews living there. Hitler was so
conftdeot that he could eliminate
all of them that be be&amp;an erecting
his so-called "Museum of an
Extinct Race" before the end of the

war.

The Nazis killed 77,297
Czechoslovakian Jews, .bY official

Letters to the editor
Seeks 'yes' vote May 7
I

I

cational related activities unless
Dear Editor:
Thanks to the people· who they are self-supportive and use the
signed the petitions and wenl to the' money for education. It's time the
School Board meeling to keep voters should again support the
Ponland Sch0(11 open. Also. thanks operating levy on May 7. Get them
to Boar!! members, Denny Evans, .out of the red and give them anoth·
Susie Greuser, Gary Willford and er chance to spend our tax dollars
wisely.
Sco11 Wolfe. ·
"PLEASE VOTE YES MAY 7"
Voters remember your school
Parent &amp;Taxpayer
may be nexL Now that we feel the
1
Charles
R. Lawrence
board has decided to cut out unedu·

.I

I

What is being done about it?
heroic when it carne to Dill' going to
I noted with great interest that war with Saddam Hussein. And
Senator John Glenn, visiting in your involvemenl in the S &amp; L
Jackson last Saturday, said, regard· · scandal still leaves a bad taste with
ing the federal Clean Air Act and working people. This would be a
its impact of our Meigs Mines, good chance to redeem a tarnished
"Congress made the wrong deci· · image.
Congt'ess did indeed make the
sion."
That is, to say the least, an wrong decision. I would call upon
un(lerstatemenL You are telling us, Senator Glenn to bring groups of
Senator Glenn, something that we his colleagues in the Congress here
already know. What is being dcine . to see what the[ have wrought.
about it? Aren't you a member of Every member o Congress should
that Congress? What are you doing come and see first-hand what clos·
to save more than a thousand min· ing the mines will mean.
ers • jobs and many more tbousands
We can't afford to roll over nnd
of jobs that are dependent on the simply allow the mines to close.
continued operation of the mines? We can't afford to let OlD' lea!lers
What are you doing about school off with expressions of concern.
disiticts and local governments tbat
·:We don' t need words of comfort
will be hard hit if the mines close?
nnd concern. We need action. We
'
You were elected, Senator need a beni.
Glenn, many years ago as a genSincerely,
. PauiGenrd
uine American hero · a Mercury
aslronaut and the first American to
618 South Third Avenue
orbit the earth. You weren't very
Middlepon, Ohio 45760
Dear Editor:

\

Civil Rights - A ·
subject that demands
bipartisanship

·

(
cOunL Many were fu:st ~pped to a .
"showplace" concentration camp. ,
Theresienstadt, about ID hour s
drive from Prague. The Red Cross
was allowed to visit the camp and '
some Jews were even charged. •
admission to this "resort." Ovens,:
were used to exterminate some, but ' •
many were shipped from there to ;::
the notorious AUschwitz prison in · .,
Poland for the ''fmal solution."
':l
Two waves of emigration fol-~·,
lowed for the Jews w6o survived •
the war - in the late 1940s and :
again in 1968 and 1969 when Com- ~
munist countries began purging :
. themselves of Jews in retaliation ·'
for the Israeli victory in the 1967 ~
war. Onlv about 5,000 Jews still :
· live in Czechoslovakia today.
~
With most of the living gone, "'
the ~ost striking Jewish presence ""'
is the certletery in the Jewish quarter of Prague. ID a relatively small
area, more than 200,000 people are
buried in about a dozen layers. The
ground and the tombstones now .•
rise above a high wall that sur- ,
rounds the cemetery.
Also nearby is the Altneuschul.
(Old-New Syna-ogue), which is •
the oldest standmg synagogue in ~
Elirope. Other buildings reljlted to •
the culture still standing include a :::
baroque town hall which features a ;
clock that runs backward.
..
ON THE EDGE - President
Mikhail Gorbachev has had one
foot on a banana peel for months.
He is now closer than ever to a fall.
The hardliners are feorful that the
Soviet Union is about to break into
independent republics. They have
called on Gorbachev to use his
emergency powers to establish .•
order and prevent anarchy. The
kind of military force they are
looking for would sound the death
knell for perestroika and glasnosL
Intelligence reports claim that the
hardliners have won over a key
Gorbachev loyalisL He is Anatoly
Lukyanov. chairman of the
Supreme SovieL He is reportedly
prepared to invoke the authority of
that parliament to remove Gor·
bachev from office if Gorbachev
does not cooperate with the hard· •
liners and crack dciwn.

.j
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•
November and a 5.6% cin as budgetiDd other private sources.
programs in Southeastern OhiO' ..:
requested by Governor Voinovich
While providing a source of arts including The Dairy Barn in :: .
in January of this year.
education, Jmd aesthetic value, arts Athens, Tecumseh Outdoor Drama
· By cutting the arts council's in Ohio assists in building a strOng in Chillicothe and theatre produc·
budget. the state will save $12 mil- economy. During the last two year tions at the University of Rio '·
lion. Yet, that proposed cut would budget period, Ohio arts organiza· Grande wiU face potential funding :
eliminlte 8 of ihe 31 arts council's lions spent $392 million. The arts problems with the impact of the ;
programs, including teacher fellow- in the state had a $929 million An's Council cuts.
.
,
ships, traditioilal arts apprentice· impact on the economy. The twen·
As the State budget continues to
ships, and challengt grants. All ty-five million dollars in state · be'reviewed, it willl)\1 the respoi)Si· ·•
educational programs would be sponsorship was an invesbnent that bility of the Ohio Legislature to ~
affected, including the deletion of helped' generate a return of $929 review this current proposal and •
arts services in more than 75 miflion for Ohio's economy in revise areas of spending where
schools and school systems across industries such as real estate and improprieties seem to OCCID'.
:
the state, affecting 30.000 students professional ~rvices, wholesale
As always, please feel free to •
and 1,3.50 teachers and administra· and retail trade,
· and drinking call or write me, State Senatrir Jan
ton. Wbile the arts council's bud- esrablishrnents,
and person- Mic~ael Long, if you have any
get never amounted to more than nel services, utility and transporta· quesbons or comments about these
0.01% of the state's General Fund lion, parking, and more.
or any other issues. My number is
budget during the last two year
Those. who enjoy the arts or (614)466-8156, and my address is
period, the loss will be even greater using arts facilities in the 17th Sen- the Statehouse, Columbus Ohio
• ..:
because the council will lose ate District will not be spared by 43215.
•,
matching _grants from the federal the effect of the budget cuts. Many

In the 25th year of its existence,
the Ohio Arts Council has hardly
had the time to celebrate. Just as
soon as the arts council beg~~~ to
recount all the achievements since
tbe founding of the council in
1965, it became evidellt that Governor George Voinovich had choseo to save the slate money by cut·
ting the council's budget in half.
Altbough nearly every st•te agency
will probably make a fmancial sacrifice due to the current budget
crunch, probably no agency has
been asked to absorb a cut as large
as the one proposed for the ans
council. The Governor has pro·
posed a 60% cut over the next.two
years for the council. Already this
year the council has not been
unmune to cuts, which reduced its
budget by 4.1% as requested by
former Governor Celeste in

By ARNOLD SAWIS.LAK
UPI Senior Editor
WASHINGTON - During the lengthy negotiations that resulted in
the 1964 civil rights bill, reporters cornered Senate Republican leader
Evereu Dirkseo and peppered him with questions about a lcey provision in
the legislation.
"The answer to that," the IUinois senator intoned sonorously, "lies
locked in the bosom of Abraham." He would say no more and the
reporters scurried off to consult their sources and their Old Testaments to
riy to divine what "Oleaginous Ev" was talking abouL
One reponer ran into Clarence Mitchell, the JI!AACP lobbyist who
worked with tbe Republicans during the civil rights struggles. Asked what
Dirtseo's biblical reference meant, Mitchell grinned and told the reporter
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (NEA)
he was consulting the wrong book.
...i Etched into the basalt boulders
"Look in the Congressional Directory· under House Minoricy Leader," of this city's West Mesa- a 17·
he said. The reporter took one look and beaded to the office of Rep. mile-long volcanic escarpment Charles Abraham Halleck, R-Ind., to get the answer Dirksen wouldn't are centuries-old images of not
divulge.
.
only myriacl human fJgUreS but also
That incident offered two lessons. The ftrst was not news: Dirksen stars, serpents, birds, lizards, fish
loved to be devious. The second was that even when the favorable and kachina masks.
momentum was at its peak, civil rights was the kind of legislatio!t that
The estimated 15,000 to 17,000
simply could not become law unless Republicans as well as Democmts rock carvings-:known as petro·
and House leaders as well as Senate bigwigs were on board.
glyphs- were made between the
On paper, the Democrats had votes to spare to pass any civil rights years 1350 and 1680 by the
bills !hey~· but in fact there were.~ Southerners, ~ conser· Anasazi and Pueblo Indians. They
vative Republicans to block all such legiSlation. Only a coaliuon of· both constitute the world's largest col·
parties and all regions and inrcrests could win. And it took negotiation lection of pre-Columbian ·an near
among all parties affected to aeate such a ccalition.
any large city-a precious treasure
That apJII!fently stil_l is true even though the poli~callandscape in that ~rtainly merits preservation
Washington IS vastly different from 1964. For one maJOr difference, the and protection.
R~blicans control the White House and can use the veto to stop most
But abutting one side of the
legislation they don'tlikc. For another, the liberal wing of the Democratic ridge are hundreds of look·alike
majority now is much older and weaker.
"
. tract houses. In several instances,
Last year, the Democrat-contrOlled Congress passed a civil ri~hts bill the building permits for those
that Presideoi Bush said was no good and vetoed on grounds that 11 would spr:awling, tmdistinguished residenforce racial quotas on employers. He offered his own bill, which the tial developments were issued by
Democnlts and civil rights organizations rejected as roo weak to solve the the city in violation of its own master plan for the area.
.
prob...lfs'year. the civil rights leadm Sllllght to make an
around the
On the other side of the ridge is
White House by working out a compromise with the Business the Double Eagle n ~ a quiet
Roundrable, a coalition of 200 ~
•
general avu.ioo f~eld !hal developThe negotiations were going along well wben suddenly the business ers want to transform into a busy
lli'OIIO ~thdrew. AT&amp;T Chairman Robert A1leo said the business group
maintenance facility for commer· cia! aircraft. The near-spiritual
jO('fsignals" from politicians that "they don'.t want us involved."•
The story going around Washin&amp;ton was that Allen and his groU!i- , experience of visiting the Indians'
~ to end the negotiations by some other busiDels inll:mU and by sacred land would hardly be
the White House in the persons of Olief ol SIBff John Sunmtu and counsel enhanced by jell shrieking overc. Boyden Gray. A1leo denied being contacllld by the White Houle.
head.
The withdrawal of All~'s group Wll bad news for the coontry because
In addition, mmticipal officials
the kind of compromile prucess it was involved in was precisely the kind are planning to substantially
of
that haiiO lllfJPCIII for progress 10 be made on the nation's thorni· expand one of the area 'a seldom
est
Jems, of which civil rights is c:ertainly one.
used roads into a m~ hialnoili
!her the White Houle had a hand in ~euttling '!he civil rights talks clesiP." 10 carry 25,000 10 30,
or not it (and the Democralic leadc:nhip of Congress) ought to go to wort •eh1cles daily across tbe rapidly
to get'them lllrted qlin. The issue is just too importlillt lnd too danger· developing area. It would slice
ou to get hmtg up on cbeap partislnship, and that is what it looks like we directly throuJ!' the petroglyphs.
Some artifacts already have
have here.
- been destroyed or stolen by vanh ~ the da N · di
Adolf Hitler
· dall, loobs and souvenir seelr.ers.
A thoug t or
y: l;ll crator
once wrote, "The ()penton of four-wheel-drive and ·
~!mn::C~· the people... will more easily fall victims to a big lie than off.rmc~ vehicles have scamc1 the
landscape. High-tension power

end~

=

..

•

ON IDS WAY - Eastern's Raady Kaylor
(left) jets away from Huaan Trace first sacker
Shane Wells and beads toward SHODII base for
the steal In the roura lnllia&amp; at Monday's SVAC

game aaalast' the Wildcats at Mercerville.
Thouah the Eqles didn't score In that frame,
they eveataally won 16·4. (OVP photo by G.
Spencer Osborne)

()bioarts ______________~~---s_e_n._J_~_M_r_ch_a_el_L_on_g,
• ·, HARDEN STEALS THIRD '1i:&gt;i Thou&amp;h
Kyger Creek catclaer Jeff Blrchfie_!Cl's throw
makes It to third baseman Dave Wellman (lefl)
in time, Southwes.t ern's Mike Hardea (rl,bt)
tucks his foo! under for the ncceasi'UI slide mto

lines traverse the skies abOve the
pelmglyphs.
Construction waste and house·
hold garbage -'- including rags,
bottles, furniture, lumber, inanress·
es and plastic shoJilling bags abound m ugly piles thrOUgh&lt;lllt the

area.

But desecration of the petro·
glyphs is hardly unique. "Thou·
sands of historic places across the
country ... are threatened with
' demolition or neglect," says J.
Jackson ·Walter, president of the
National Trust for Historic Preaer·
vation in Washington, D.C.
"Preservation of significant cui·
tural landmarks is essential if
Americans are to have a sense of
identity and place," he adds. "For
each one that is lost, a small pan of
America's priceless legacy is gone
forever. We owe it to future geoeralions to keep (our) heritage alive."
The trust maintains a list of
what it classifies as the nation's 11
most endangered historic places.
That eclectic compilation includes
the Antietam Nauonal Battlefield
in MaryliDd, an abandoned Ken·
necott copper mine in Al8ska and
Christopher Columbus' ftrst U.S .
landing sire in the Virgin Islands.
Also on the list:
•lbe hisloric business district in
Dea4wood, S.D., imperiled by
development press!D'os Jl!.oduced
by recendy .lqalited gambling.
• A century-old residential dis·
trict in Pasadena, Calif., threatened
by apr~ freeway project.
• A hisloric but precaliously sit·
uated lipthouse on Block Island,
RJ. vulnerable to destruction in a
single stonn.
• New Orleans' fabled French
Quarter, whose graceful arehi·
tecture and distinctive ambience
could be overwhelmed by rourist·
· induced congestion and incotn·
J

',,

patible constiuction.
The Albuquerque .P.e!fOglyphs
were on that hst until last year,
when Congress enacted and Presi •
dent Bush signed into law a mea·
sure establishing the 7,300-acre
Pctrogl)'llh National Monument
Under a unique arran~ement
mandating shared financmg and
management, the federal govern·
ment will contribute $58 million,
Albuquerque wiD donate $14 mil·
lion and New Mexico will provide
$14 million for land acquisition. .
But all of the dangers cited
above exist almost a year after the

By ERIK K. LIEF
UPI Sports Writer
The veteran tandem of Smith &amp;
Smith led St. Louis' comeback
c!large Monday night, but it was
the fleet feet of rookie Geronimo
Pena !hat caught the eye of Cardi·
nals manager Joe Torre.
Ozzie Smilh drove in three runs,
including the game winner with a
sacrifice fly in the II th inning· and
reliever Lee Smith worked two per·
feet innings, leading the Cardinals
to a 4-3 victory over the Atlanta
Braves.
But Pena, who scored a critical
run on a controversial play in the
three-run seventh ' and later rode

'

Robert Walters :,

.Today in history
By United Press International

The Daily S.e nlinel
'

'

every allein0011, Monday
throutrh Friday, Ill Co"rl St., Po·

.~

meroy, Ohio, by lhe Ohio Valley PubIIJhlnl Company/ MuHimedla, Inc.,
Pomeroy, Ohio 15769, Ph. 992·215 Se-•

'
'
,:

Ohio.

cond clua pootace paid at Pomeroy,

Member: United Presa International.
Inland Dally Preos Auoctatlonand Ihe
Ohio Newspaper A11oclat1011. National

f Today is Tuesday, April 30, the 120th day of 1991 with 245 days 10 :

..

A.d\'ertt•lnl Representative, Branham

I

NewoPape&lt; Saleo, 733 Third
New ·York, New York 10017.

The moon. is waning, moving toward its last quarter.
·
The mormng stars are Venus, Mars and Saturn.
,, ,
The evenmg stars are Mercury and Jupiter.
:
Those born on .~1s date~ u~der the si~n of Taurus. They include ': ;
German mathemallcWI Carl Friedrich Gauss m 1777;-Hungarian compos· •
er_Franz Le!W'· who wrote the operetta "The Merry Widow," in 1870; :
!"fincess Ju~ of the Netherlands in 1909 (age 82); actresses Eve Arden '
~~ 1912, Clons Leachman in 1926 (age 65) and Jill Clayburgh in 1944
(age 47); and Sweden's King Carl Gustav XVI in 1946 (age 45), .
:
:
,
'
:
•

·•"

1'

u,ncon~tionally

~
·

'

.
'
It 1990, U.S. educator Frank Reed was freed after a three-and+half·
, :

.

year ordeal as hostage of Moslem extremists in LebanoJi becoming the · :
second abducted American freed in Beirut in just over a wed:. . ·.
'•
~

-'Yf"'"'·

POSTMASTER: Send addreo• chan,..
DoOy Sentillel, Ill Colltl St.,
Pomee:oy, 01\io 157al.

IO, -

SIJIIIIaiii'TION B.t'l'll:ll
BJ c..rtor o r - BMte

One Week ........................ ...... ..... 11.10
One Month .................. ,...... .. ...... 16.1111
0~

Year .......................... .... ... 183.20

SINGLICOPY

'·

On this date in history:
. :
'
In 1_789, GeorJe Washington was inaugurated as the fmt president of''
the Uruted States.
·
I~ _1803, the United Srates more thiD doubled its land area with the ·
Louisuma pure~. It obtained all French territory west of the MiSsissippi '
River for $IS Million.
·
In 19;45. the burned ~ of Nazi dictator Adcilf Hitler was found in a ··
bunker m the ruins of Berlin. Also that day Sov1•·• troops ~......_. .....
Reichs buiidina in Berlin. ·
·
'
"' · ....,..... ... .,.
In
Soudi Yietnam
surrendered to North Viel·
nc~· The commurusts occup1ed S~pgon and re-named it Ho Chi Minh

1~5,

(V8P8U. . .)
A Dlvlololl ollll~ Joe.
Publ11hed.

'

ollow.

. SoQthern 12, Oak-HID l
AI Oak Hill, the Southern Tor·
nadoes kept their hot streak alive
by defeating the third of three
league cqntenders ~ a row with a
one-sided 12-2 SVAC win over
Oak Hill.
'
Keith Jones again pitched a
great game, scattering just four
hits, walking two and fanning

North Gallia hands Eastern
12-11 softball defeat Friday
North Gallia downed the East·
ern Eagles 12·11 Friday in SVAC
softbafl action at Bidwell-Porter
Elementary.
. Eastero had been rolling along
toward an SVAC championship.
but the NO crew tightened the race
with lhll win.
Eastern is !lOw 9-2 overall and
5·2 in the Jea&amp;ue, while NO is 2-4
overall arid in the SVAC.
Karen Spence, who picked up
the win, fanned 12 and walked 11.
Lee GilliiiD walked two and
farmed one in taking the loss.
North's offense wu fueled by
Spence (4-4, triple, double), Deena
· Petrie (3-4, triple, double), Beth
Salisbury (3·4, do,uble). Angie
Saunders (2-4), Heather Sprague
(1-4) and TinaM6: (l.S). .
Amy Well, w
3-for·S effort
at the plate (ell one homer short of
the; cycle, led an Basler!' attack that
.included Penny Aetker (1·2),
Andre.i Dillard and Gillilan (both
1-3,) and Carrie Morrissey and
Jamie Wilson (both 1-4).
Score by lllllinal .
Eastern
1~203 3 -II· 7-11
North Gallia 330 240 x - 12·1 Q. 9
WP-Spence
LP-Gillilan

Eagles down Bobcats
Eastern defeated Kyger Creek 9·
61ast Wednesday at Cheshire.
Edna Hensley was the winning
pitcher and Luciana Scott suffered
the loss.
Eatem hitters were Lee Gillilan
(home run, single), Hensley (dou·
ble, two walks), Mary Jo R~ed
(home run) and Carrie Morrissey
(single).
Jennifer Neal had two singles
for KC, while Michelle Conkle sin·
gled, Bobbie Jean Shaver hit a tworun homer in the first, and Alicia
Ward and Bethany Rose singled.
Eagle reserves win
In a recent reserve contest East·
ern defeated Southern 8·5 after
coming from a· 3-2 deficit in ·the

fourth. .

.

.

•· Lee Gillilan was the winning
pitcher and Michelle Brown,
despite. a good game, suffered the
loss.
Carrie Gillilan had a single and
walk, Andrea Rockhold had a dou·
ble and two singles. Mary Kibble
had a dciuble, Arnie Friend a single,
and Shelly Hendricks a sacrifice.
- Southern hitters were Marcy
Matthews (single and two walks),
Amy Swiger (single and sacrifiCe),
Jenny Varney (single), J. Counts
(single), Christy Maidens (s.ingle)
and ~Bie Manuel (single, 1\!alk).

•

eighL He alloWed only two runs in
going the distance.
Shane Ma)'.l!ard suffered the loss .
for Oak ~111 after stru,gl~ng
through a rune run second mnmg. : . ..
Benji Lewis cam on in relief, fol· · · ' . •
lowed by IIPger French who ftn.
ished the game. They fanned four,
walked two and j!ave up 13 hits.
· Micha.el Kmcaid, w.ho led
Southern with two singles and a
double, was followed by Andy
Baer (triple, single), Scott Lisle
(two singles), Jamie Anderson (two
singles), Todd Grindstaff (triple,
single), and Mart T!!ylor and Colin
Maidens (both singles).
·
The Tornadees are now 9·6
overaii and 7-4 in the league. Oak
Hill drops to 7-4 in the league.
For OH, SaUnders had two dou·
bles, and Lewis and Jones had singles.
·
Souihem hosts Waharna today
at Syracuse.
·
Store by IDDings
·
Oak Hill 001 001 0- 2· 4·2
Southern 093 000 0 ~ 12·13·2.
KCHS 12, Southwestem 3
At Gage, Kyger Creek pounded
out eight runs in the first three .
,innings and got help throughout
from 10 Southwestern gaffes en
route to a 12-3 win.
·..~
Paul Covey finished what he
started for lhe BobCats, collecting
five strikeouts, surrendering eight . ·
walks and giving up two hits, .
which were collected by High- :
landers Kevin Staten (1 ·2) and '
Chris Metzger (1·3). Metzger, who ,
lasted five innings before giving way to Adam Simpson, combined
with hirit to strike out three and
walkeighL
The Bobcats' attack feaJUred-Jeff Birchfield (2·4, three RB!s), .' .. Marc Villanueva (2·4, one RBI), .
Grady. Snyder (1-1, one RBI), .:
Chris Crace (1 ·2), and Phil Brad· •
bury and Jay Johnson (both 14).
On Wednesday's agenda, Kyger
Creek will host Sym_mes Valley, .
while Southwestern will play North '..
Gallia at Bidwell-Porter Elemen·
tary.

.

In other SVAC action Monday,
. Symmes Valley edged North Gallia , ··
1·0.
Score by innings ··
Kyger Creek 431 130 0- 12·8· 4
Southwestern 021 000 0- 3·2·10 1.
WP-Covey
. '
LP -'Metzger
"fr.ING 'IAWV
446 4514

_..

Wolfe, Davidson among
winners in Friday ~kyline action

~'Nf\!.l

.

P .OO MHAIII MntiRS SATUIGU I
JJ .OO U.IUllllilliiiT TUESM~

,_..,..

~y

,_ "

FAIGU thr11 TUSDArt

' By SCOTT WOLFE
Wilson won his heat and the fea·
Sendnel Conespondent
ture, while Bobby Hill placed sec·
A huge crow gree~d Skyline ond over Racine 1s Chris Diddle in
Speedway and its -participat!ts Fri· a 'brand new C.J. Rayburn race
day night as .Qu&amp;ker C1ty's Tye... cha_ssi!. Diddle. is sponsored by
· Long captured tlie Late Model Lloyd s Electromcs, J.D. Drillmg,
inain nnd Jim Wilson, of nearby and Me Donald's. He placed third
Fraziers Bottom, W.Va., claim'ed ahead of Kirk Isner, and Bobby
the Semi-Late main.
Mosser.
Heat winners in the Late Models
Racing continues ne~t Friday at
'
were Bobby Davidson, Little the 318 mile clay oval at Stewart,
Hocking· Scott Wolfe, Racine; and five miles off County Road 53
between Athens and CoolviUe.
home on Smith •s shot to centerfield walked and s10le second ofr' Doug Delmas Conley of P'ortsmouth. .
in the lith, scored big points and Sisk, 2-1. Milt Thompson was
Scott Wolfe, dtving a brand new
post-game kudos from Torre after· intentionally walked. Bernard Bullitt Chassis sponsored by
ards
Gilkey hit a grounder io short and Anderson''s Home Furnishings,
w ne·biggest run, of course, was Thompson beat the throw to sec· McDonalds, and Bber' s Gulf, fell
Pena's last but his most impressive ond, loading the bases for Ozzie to second place behind Larry Bond
came during the seventh-inning Smith. Smith lined Sisk's first pitch on the opening lap. Wolfe recovrail
to center where Ron Gant made a · ered and went on for the win.
t;uling 3.0, Felix Jose reached running, leaping ~rab. Gant's
Racine's Bob Adams, Jr. in the
on a leadoff double and scored on momentum can:led hiiD away from A55 J.D. Drilling, McDonald's of
Todd Zeile's single. One out later, the plate,_ enabling ~ena to tag and Pomeroy Doll Chassis set the ·
. fastest time of the nightat14:35•
Jose Oquendo, who entered the sco~ ~ily from thrr~ , .
Behind Long in the feature were ·
arne hitless in 21 at-bats, slroked \
I JUSt wanted to hit 1!. some·
~is second single, chasing starter wh~rc to_.get the run home, OZZJe Rod Evans, Bob Adams, Jr., Bobby
John Smoltz.
·
Sm11h Sllld.
.
.
. Davidson, Delmas Conley, Wolfe,
Gerald Perry, pinch hitting for .
Elsewhere 1n ,the Nattonal Andy Bond, Kenny Johnson, and
starter Bob Tewksbury, drew a ~gue, Philadelphia dropped San Larry Bond.
In the semi-late division Jim
walk from Mike Stanton. loading Otego 7-2.
., .
,
the bases. With two outs, Ozzie
In the_ AL, •l was DetrOII 3,
/1
Smith hit a grounder between frrst ~City I; and Seattle 10, Bal·
1
and second. that was fJClded by fmt umore Phillies 7 Padres 2
a·uality Service Before,

~~~Silence

7: 00,9 :20 l»&gt;IU
S.I!T/ 5UIII MATIII£(S
3:20

· ol •lie lambs

•

'

"

petroglyphs supposed!{ were ' ·'
afforded the prorection o federal ·
law. "We're now dealing with only "'
the remaining fragments of the '
original treasure," says Isaac C:
{Ike) Eastvold.
. Eastvold, probably more respon·
Sible than any other individual for
securing last year's federal legisla- . ,
tion, has dedicated much of the •
past five years to protecting the
petroglyphs. He continues that
struggle but despairs of attaining
success. '"The new status," he says,
"really haSn't changed anything." i&lt; :l.

third base aad the steal In the first Jnnln&amp; or
Moaday's SVAC aame 11 Glige, which the Bob·
cats won 12·3. (OVP photo by G. Spencer
Osborne)

Bissell (2·2, \bird-inning solo
homer), Michak, P. Newman and
Tyson Rose (all 1·1), Newsome,
Mike Newland and Brall Powell
(all •·3),andHolter(l-4).
HanolD Trace, 2-11, will host
Kyger Creek at a date to be
announced after the Wildcats play
at Olk Hill on Wednesday.
Score by lnalnp
Eastern
445 002 1-· 16-15·1
Hann8n Trace 100 002 1- 4· 3•3
WP _;_Holter (Newsome save)
LP-Barnes

St. Louis, ·Philadelphia among
victors in limited MLB ·action

::l

Where America's past is threatened

!'

Eutem 'a Ba11cs npped out
fOID'ofDII ral1iea ill the first 1114 sec·
ond innings of Monday'• SV AC
bueball game apinat the host
Halll!ID orr- aqua4 before lllllna
a five-nm illaanectiollln tbe rima
and walkinJ away with a 16-4
knockout viclllr)'.
Eagle~ Wca Holter pi!Ched
five IDd one-third innings before
giving way to Rqd Newaome, who
went the rest of the way for the
save. Combined, tk peir .uuck out
aeven, Wllked nine 1114 IWiendered
thtee hits, which went to Wildcats
Jason llallcy (1·1, and Chad
Barnes and Ron Woods (bOth 1-4).
Barnes started and lost for the
Wildcats, and combined with
reliever Woods, they struck out
seven and Wllked eigbL
Flying in the Eqles' airshow
were Jeff Durst (bis 3·3 game
included a second-inning solo ·
·homer and fell a single short of the
cycle), Randy ~ayfor (3·3). Tim

Czech leader shares Jewish relics with others

The Daily
Sentinel
c..n

1

Eastern, Southern post wins
_o.ver llannan Trace; Oak Hill

Page-2-the Dally 9entlnet

.•.•

FIUCI!:

Dally ................................... 2!1 Cento
Sublcrlberl not deolrtniiO pay tllecarrJer may remit Ia advance direct to
The Dally Sentinel on a 3, 6 or 12 natb
ball!. Credll wtll bellvencarrlerHch
week.

No sublerlptlolll

.

by mall p«mlttld Ia

.......

areat where borne carrter HI'VIce 11
avalla~le.

_.

IIINeiiiJipl:owiQ

13 w.eu .................................. I2LIN
:M W1!eki .................................. Na.16
52 Weeki ............. ........ .. ........... IIN.16
:
O.lolfe - p (louiJ
• 13 w.eu .................................. nuo
26 Weeki .................. ...........~... S.S.IIO
52 w.eu .................................. a40

-·-••.

"

TIRES ARE OUR BUSINESS

1

~~=~ ~0~=· :::::~ .r.~

and both Zeile and Pena, who
entered as a pinch-runner, raced
home from second to tie it at3-3.
"That was heads-up running to
score on that play," ToJTe said.
"That's what speed can do for you.
He (Pena) could be (our fastest
player). He's just feeling his way
right now."
"I'm not ~oing to' argue the
call," said Smith, who 'appeared to
be out on the television replay.
. Lee Smith, who entered in the
lOth inning and retired all six bat·
ters he faced, improved to 2·0.
Smith now has fil!llred in nine of
the Cardinals' 12 victories with
se ven saves and the tWo wins.
Atlanta manager Bobby Cox
moaned about the play.
"We gave it to them." Cox
said. ''He (Stanton) broke late.
He's (Smith) olll by 15 feet if be
gets off•tile mound He just broke
. late. He froze 011 tile moulld. ••
SIIIDIOD ofl'aed 110 excuaea.
"He should baYe been out,"
SIIIIIOII said. "But 1shouldn't have
walke4~) It-my fauiL"
"I'm
U, contribute." Ozzie
Smith
. "It'a not often 1 get
two RBI 0118 infield knock."
That play hclpad the "Comeback'" Cardinali rally agailt. It
marked II» foardt time this ICUOII
SL Loula hu won in i.ll final ll·biL
Witb nne nut io the 11th. Pena

·At Philadelphia, D~le Murphy
homered and knocked m ~ "!ns
to ~wer .the Ph•llies to !herr third
straight v•ctory . .Terry Mulholland,
2· 2, gave up SIX hits, Sl!"Jck. out
· !hr~e and wal~ed one m eJg~t
mnmgs for the VICtory. Murphy ~~
a two-run home run off Ed Wbll·
son, 1·3,l~ser of three straig~t

During and After
the Sale•.

Cremins rejects
Irish ~age job

ATLANTA {UP!) - Oeorgia
Tech head basketllall coach Bobby
Cremins said Monday he has
decided 10 withdraw as a candidate
forthevacantNotreDameposL
starts.
It had been reported for about a
.Tigers3, !loYais 1
week that Cremins, who has aver·
At Ka.nsas Ctty. Mo., .A!an aaed 20 viCtories per seuon ..nng
Trammell extended h1s h•tt•~g 1{1 years as coach of th~ · Yellow
stteak to 10 games and knoc~ed ID Jackets, was one of the leadiong
two ~s and Steve Searcy ~ttcMd candidates to suc~:eed Digger
we!l m, an emgerency start. C!lfCY• PheiP.s, who retired Apri115.
filling m for Dan Petry who missed
• I am no longer seeli;ing to
the start ~use of back spasms, become a candidate for the Norre
~ow~ s1x has .o~ ~~ and one- Dame head basketball coaching
third m~s whde striking o~l fpur
ilion," said Cremina. 43. "MY
and walkin~ one IDd improvmg to redmss for the Oeorgia Tech play·
1·1. ~ul ~ll~ worked !iJree and ers !Did the e,ntire Georgia Tech
r.yo-third tnrungs of twO-hit ball for family IDd friends ~ too strong
hJs first save. Bret Saberhaien. 1·3, for me to puraue other interelll.
allowed the f111t two Delroft runs. . .
••Atlanta is an eacidng city-and-·
Mai'lnen 10, Orioles 1 .
the challenge 10 llllko our program At B~dmore, Edfar Manine.z, the best still lives strongly in me,' •
the AmeriCan~ ~ leadiiJI hit· said CremiN. who guided theY~ter\ extended ~Is hitting s~ a low Jackets to the Final Four 10
ml\lor-Jeaguehigh 14 pmes With a 1990.
.
pa1~ of sin~les and the Seattle
"I deeply appreciate Notre
!"f&amp;ri'1C" lliiPPed !I ftve•pme los- Dame'• inltnlt In 110 u a candl·
1ng streak. Marunez raised hls dale llld 1111 c1au IIIey lhoweclia
leaaue~leading average to •422 tot ~ 110 to COlli ft thil oppor·
help Rich DeLucia even his record tunity,' 1814 Cnmilll. who haiiD
a1 2-2. Dav~ Johnson, 1:3, was oven11 record of 298-182 •
16
tagged f~ a~x runs and nme hill . seaJIODI u a bead collep lllskotover fOil' mnmgs.
·bill cca:h.

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BRAKES

FRONT END
ALIGNMENT

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$169-5

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Sentinel

The

·-Boston edges Montreal2-l
to win Adams Division crown
By FREDERICK WATERMAN
UPI Sports Writer
BOSTON (UPI) - For the
Boston Bruins there are no more
Monueal jiiiiCS 10 dispeU. no more ·
Canadien dragons to slay. History
has lost its hold on the men in gold
and black.
Dave Christian llld Cam Neely
each scored a goalllld goalie Andy
Moog stopped 35 shots Monday
niaht and die Bruins captured the
Adams Division crown with their
first-ever Game 7 victory over
Monueal, a 2-1 triumph.
·
· ''One goal in the seventh game,
not much of a difference," said
Boston's Dave Poulin.
·'It was a classic: Bos10n-Mon·
treal series," said Bruins Coach
Mike Milbury. "The gods were
with us tonight and it was a great
win. It could have gone either way ·
'tonight, just as it could have gone
•either way during the entire

II

i

I

series~ ·'

. The Bruins bad lost all three
previous Game 7 playoffs with the
Canadiens, their bitterest rivals. It
was in 1988 lhat Boston ended 45
;tan or playoff failure igainst the
Canac!icns. 'ntis year's victory was
also Boston's first over Monueal in
a series which laslecl moo: lhan five
games,
· The Bruins advance to the
Wales· Conference championship
and will host the Pittsburah Pen·
guins in Wednesday's series open·

l

.I

-er. .

· ·' Moog was.ciled by the Csliadi·

ens as the player most tesponsible
for the cod of their season.
"FIQIII Game 3 on, we have to
give all the credit to Apdy," said
Monueal's Brian Skrudland.
" He was derlllitely the differ·
ence," said MontRal head coech
Pat Burns. •'Down in the final seconds. he made the big saves."
Moog, whose play was txcellent
throughout the series. made several
brilliant saves in the rii'Sl two peri- .
ods and was tesled by a flurry of
shots ill the ·fina.l minutes after
MOIIueal pulled goalie Patrick Roy
with 2:47 to piJiy.
With one mmute left, Montreal's Stephan Lebeau cut the deficit
to 2-1 when he put home a loose

The~

Boston has lost 21 of its 26
playoff series aaainsl MoolreaJ but
has won three of the last four post-

,

I

I
I
•

I

Memorial

.

· Subordinated Debt, Uained by
David Monaci, was never off the
boafd in his ftrSt .seven starl$, but
he was 11th in the Jim Beam
~takes and a, bad sixth in the
Arkansas Derby. .
·' Paulrus has !llready' proved he
can go I 114 miles, something the
other n..t.v bones have yet to try.
Paulrus-~ first April 21 in a
$75, 000, 1 1/2-mile turf race at
Dueling Grounds but was disqualifacd to ICCOIId. Paulrus' best Slakes
finish waa third in Calder's Tropi-

AMUICAN LEAGUE

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season eacountets.
Christian scored at 6:30 of !he

second period. The 32-year-old
winger carried the puck into the
Montreal zone, s!CJpped at lhe top
of the left circle and f"tred a low
wrist shot lhat went between the
legs of dcfeilseman Alain Cote.
Roy, whose view of the shot was
partially blocked by Cole. reacted
100 !are llld the puck beat him on ·
the near side, going under his right
.arm for a 1-0 Boston lead.
Neely scored on the man-advanl!lgc just I :59 in10 the third period.
Boston's top playoff scorer conpuck.
necled on his 12th pose-season goal
" They all just jammed the net by netting a slap shoi from two
and slugged it around umil they gor strides beyond the blue line, on the
one," said Moog, who spared right side. The shot beat Roy on the
Boston from the third overtime glove Side and pvc BasiOn a 2-0
game of the series by knocking advanlage.
aside
. the Canadi
. ens• final numes.
·
';CT a goal from that far .out,
. . "We needed) two goals and we you re always a little surprised,"
didn't have a lot of plays lett,~ · said said Neely, who got a hard, lead
Montreal's Shayne Corson. "We pass from defenseman Ray
jUst said 'Keep going to the net and Bourque. "Ray pvc it to me with
neau (21) can get his sllc:k on It In the lint periREACmNG OVT to make tbe save Is the
somebody will' get a rebound.' some preuy goocl speed going. i
objective
Basion
aoaBe
Aady
Mq (35) ls seekod
or Monday nlgbt's NHL playoff game In
Nobody ever gave up wttil the last had an opening and I just wanted to
Boston,
whldl the Bruins won 2-1. (UPI)
ltiB
to
aelalen
before
Moatreal's
Guy
CarbonbuzZa'. ' '
get it on net," he explained.
"It was absolutely wild," said
Boston, which last won the
the relieved Moog, who bas been in Sranley Cup in 1972, is seeking to
goal for all 13 Bruins playoff return to the championship series
g&amp;mes• .
for the third time in four yean.
"We're only halfway to our
Christian scored early in the sec-.
ond period and Neely's tally was goal of 16 victories in the playoffs," said Moog. "We can't lose
early in lhe third.
sight of our long-lmn goal." '
. By SCOIT ZUCKER .
HoustOn. "The odds ~ere against .126-85 debicle in Game t . The
UP1 Sports Writer
us when (Center) Hakeem (Oiaju· Knicks outrebounded the Bulls and
Four NBA teamS will be staring won) went down witb the eye smothered Chicago's top two scarplayoff elimination in the face injury, but We defied the odds. This ers, Michael Jordan and Scottie
when the NBA playoffs resume is just another oppcnunity for us to Pippen, for most of Sunday's
Tuesday night, and one of those _repeat that."
game. But the Bulls are talkmg
teams is hoping to dodge 1 Laker
Chaney is right on that count. tough. "We'd like. to go 10 New
bullet.
·
Many Jmlicted the Rockets would York and get finished quickly,"
i:aJ Parle Derby Jan. 13.
Wood Memorial, was due to arrive
Houston, down 2-0 to the Los fold Bfter the January eye lnP.u"Y 10 Joolan said
Forty Something, trained by froll! New York early Monday .
Angeles
Lakers, will return home Olajuwon. The Rockets d1d not,
Atlanta vs. Detroit - ·At
Reggie Vardon. has had just one evenmg....
for
Games
3
and
4,
needing
a
win
and
.
when
Olajuwon
returned,
Atlanta,
the Pistons were 5·· 0
sralces start, aJourth in die Sapling
Lukas said Aitansas Derby rwt· to avoid an early summer break.
Houston
put
together
a
13-game
apinst
the
Hawks during the year
as a two-year-old. He would come ner-up Corporate Repon was much
In
the
other
tint-round
games
winning
streak
and
went
25-9
afler
but
the
Hawks
won the opener 103into the Derby off a victory in a improved Monday after bruising Tuesday night: Portland takes a 2-0 the AD-Star Game.
98
Friday
before
the Pistons
six·fljl'long ajlowance race at his front left heel during a Sunday lead to Seattle, Milwaukee visitS
.
But
the
Rockets
may
have
to
responded
Sunday
with
a 101-88
KCQneland April26. .
workOUL The colt apparendy struck Philadelphia trailing 2-0, and the change the strategy that made them victory. So far. the Hawks are not
.Churchill Downs learned of himself witll a back heel as he New York' Knicks will attempt to o~ of lhe most successful .second- complaining. ''We got half of what
Vardoli's interest.Monday when he slowed:
·
prevent ·a sweep at home ll$ainst half teams this season. The swarm· we wanted,'' Hawks guard Doc
called stall superintendent Mike
''The
discoloration
on
the
bruise Chicago. Elsewhere, Detroit and ing, swiu:hing defensive rotation is Rivers said. "We wanled to win
Hargrave to say he was coming.... has all left him," Lubs said. "We
Atlanta, n.otched 1-1 meet in no longer so effective. ,
two in Detroit, but we have to be
Olympio, is a longshot to .actual- had Dr. (Robert) Copelan come in, Atlanta,
and
Phoenix
and
Utah
will
"We
have
to
mix
uP.
our
satisfied
with one. We knew we :
ly enter, and Corporate Report, and he wenl over him rop to bottom
square
off
in
Game
3
even
at
one
defense,"
Olajuwon
said.
'
They
had
to
have
one 10 have a chance.
who bruised a heel Sunday, still to make sure he .didn't have any game apiece.
are
picking
us
apart
when
we
Now
we-have
that chance and I
has to prove to Uainer D. Wliyoe other complications. We want to
The
Rockets
are
faced
with
the
rollte.
We
have
to
stay
with
our
guaranlee
we'll.he
ready when they
Lukas he is healthy. Trainer Ron mske sure we sre on target, and it
prospect
of
having
to
defeat
the
own
man
longer."
come
to
Adanta."
.
McAnally said Monday the only looks like we sre."
·
Lakers, who've lost just one ftrst·
Plllladelnbia vs. Milwaukee Portland vs. Seittle- At Seat:
way the Arkansas Derby winner
Lukas
hopes
10
be
able
to
allow
round
game
since
the
NBA
At
Philadelphia,
the
76crs
took
a
2·
tie,
the Trail Blazers, winners of 18
would be entered would be "if the colt to gallop Tuesday, and if
to a 16-team playoff. The 0 lead in the J&gt;est-of-five series in of their last 19 pmes, are lalting
something happened to Strike the he does so safely. the colt probably
·
t acting oven:oruldent. Milwaukee last weelc and can ci~Jse advantage of the Sonics' depenGold and Hansel"
·
··
Will
.be
enlered
m lhe Derby Thursisn't over by any out1he Bucks Tuesday night at lhe dence on shooters Eddie Johnson
thing
McAiially believes he would be day....
.
means,"
Lalters
forward James Specnum. Only three NBA teams and Ricky Pierce by double-team•
asking too much for Olympia to
Horses
frequently
change
ttain·
Worthy
said
"If
they
continue to have led 2-0 and lost a five-game ing one or the other with positive
come baclt to the Derby two weeks ers, especially claimers. But it•s ncit
plsyliketheydidinL.A.,thenthey
ileries: SL Louis in 1956, Otah in results. Johnson has 'scored 6i
after his triumph in the Atkansas, as usual ilmong top three-year-olds
will
be
trouble
at
home.
It's
critical
1987 and Boston in 1990. The points in 78 minutes but Pierce has •
but said he'd take a chance if the headed 10 the Derby, and it's prob·
for
us
not
to
take
anything
for
76ers
would prefer not to join such struggled, malting on Iy 9 of 27 ·
two colts he view~ as the 'top con- ably the first time a lbree-year-old
granted.
We've
got
to
be
into
it
company.
"I hate to use the word field-goal attempts. Pierce and
tenders dropped OUL ...
•
is participating in the same Derby spiritually and we have to have 'sweep' hut we have to look atlhat Johnson have also been limiled to
McAnafiy. and his other Derby as three of his trainers.
enthusiasm."
possibility now," Philadelphia two assists each in the first two
horae, Santa Anill show horse Sea
Quin1811ll. the Rebel winner who
The
Rockets
are
the
only
team
guard
Hersey Hawkins said. "The games. "You can' t just let them
Cadet, both new to Louisville from
was
fourth
in
the
AJtansas
Derbr
.to
take
a
fim-rowid
game
from
the
situation
we're in, we've got them (Pierce and Johnson) score out
lsOS Angeles Monday. Happy Jazz will be saddled Saturday by David
down,
W?
want 10 keep them down. there,'' said Portland head coach
Lakers,
winning
Game
3
of
last
Band. Who was third in Aqueduct's Cross, who also won the 1983
year's series, 114·108 in Hol{ston. We don t want to give them any Rick Adelman. "They're great
Derby with Sunny's Halo.
Los Angeles came back to win indicatibntheycancomeback."
offensive players and you can't~et
But Cross claimed the late- Game 4, 109-88, to advance to the
Chicago vs. New York -At them play just one end. You tty to
developing colt for $50,000 in Jan- semirmals.
New York, the Knicks, given·Jittle wear them down. Maybe by the
uary for oWner Gary Garber from
"The odds are dermitely against choice, must look for encourage- fourth quaner, they'll be .tired and
D. Wayne Lukas, who is at us, but t11is is not an unfamiliar sit- ment wherever they can. In Game 2 won't shoot as well.".
·
Churchill Downs with Corporate uation for this team," said Rockets against the Bulls they lost 89-79, a
L.A.l.akers vs. Houston- At
Report. Lukas got Quintana .. from head coach Don Chaney, who last 31-point improvemem over the . Salt Lake City, Suns head coach
tramer Paco Gonzalez, who is at year ~uaranteed two. victories in
Cotton Fitzsimmons altered his
the Derby wilh Mane Minister.
offense in Game I in the hopes of
Gonzalez had the horse for
picking up a few illegal defense
breeder and original owner Robert
calls agamst Utah center Mark
Hibbert whel! Quinllna was an
Eaton, who likes to sag off his man
unraced two-year-old. Gonzalez
and camp in the lane. The result
gave him up when he became a priwas an emba.rrassing 129-90
vate trainer for Mane Minister's
By WILLIAM D. MURRAy
entered the final 10 days of the defeat. In Game 2, Fitzsimmons
owners, John Toffan and Trudy
UPI Sports Writer
1990 season needing just a handfull proved he learned his lesson as the
McCaffery.
'
' OAKLAND, Calif. (UPI) of steals to set the mark. He fell Suns .attacked Eaton .and came'
Geo~~e. this one's for you.
. two short and then opened the sea- away with a 102-92 Win ..'-'I made
At least, that's how Rickey Hen- son wilh a steal before bejng side· my mind up that if they're not
derson sees it when he takes aim at lined for 14 games with a calf going to call it (the zone violation
on ·Eaton), why mess up your
baseball's all-time steals record injury.
Tuesday night against the New
. '·I really wanted to get it over offense?" said Fitzsimmons. ·" So
York Yankees and tbe ghost of with as soon as possible," Hender· we put Andrew· (Lang) down low
GCOJge Steinbrenner.
son said. "I didn' t want to lose instead of up high. That's why he
Three seasons ago, when Stein- concentration. When the season got those easy baskets." Lang
brenner was I'UIUiing the Yankees, started. that's the position I was in scored 21 points.
Henderson happily took leave of -just running to steal it and get it
MONTE CARLO, Monaco the club in one of the span's mOSt over wilh."
(UPI) - Sergi Bruguera of Spain lopsided trallea.
Tlie all-time mark is the only
survived a pair cif tie-breakers to
N~. following his ~th-inning major.sleal record Henderson does
overcome Germany's Boris Becker ~ m S~y·s 7-3 VICtory over not hold alone. He set a season
in four sets Monday when the two Cahfom1a, Headerson gets his record wuh 130 stolen bases in
men re.~umed the Monte Carlo crack at steal No. 939, breaking 1982 and has led the American
Open final which was intetrupted a Lou Brock's record.
League in steals in IO of the last II
day because or rain.
"I thought about stealing it seasons.
'· The 20-year-old Spaniard. trail- a~ the Yate, after Tony (La
"Lou Brock told me the base to
ing 6-5 in the opeJIIng set when Ruasa, the Oilkland 11181J18C1') took break the record is the hardest to
play rellll1led, emcqed with a 5-7, me out of the game," Heodetson steal," he said. "I think it will be a
6-4, 7-6 (8-6), 7-6 (7-4) victory. · said. "Deep down in my heart I lot more special to me when I
lt'a tbe BRRII!:S ONE
The two players struggled for 3 1/2 think George deserves som~ brealc die record.''
hours under a dazzling sun after So he gets to be the owner I
The steal mark has also taken
P~.r. otec
lor
playing 45 minutes Sunday.
the record on."
the edge offa season which began
.......
oftloet,
becker, who lost the 1989' final
~enderson 's relations with with lfenderson COIJIII!ainin~ about
ebarcbn,·. , . . _ . ,
to Arsentina's Albeno Mancini, Stembrenner soured during his his $3 million salary. The grumhas made tremendous ptopess on finaliiCUCIII with the Yankees. He bling did not sit well with many
. drur ltorea. Slmitllfle•
clay but still waa Ulllble to produce misaed a number of games because fans and left Henderson aloof. .
Ia ceate•t, COIIY. . . . .t
his fint- clay court victory.
of injury, prompting Steinbtenner
But on Sunday, the electric ·
.ID format aad v..-,
Beeker, ranked No. 2 in the to brand ~n a malingerer smile and cocky swagger were
affordable.
world, led S-2 in the fourth set but and ordering lll8ll8gll' Lou Piniella back. Henderson even found the
allowed Bruguera 10 fOrte a second to play him..
·
time to injeculinle humor into the
tic-breaker. Bruguera led 4·2,
Finally, Steinbrenner shipped ~eccremonies.
•
Becker drew even at 4-4, and Henderaoa blct home 10 Oakland
' I Just rented him an apartBruguera ~bed III8ICh point at 6- for relievers Ore~ and Eric ment,' Henderson said of Brock,
4 after a dispu~ line call and he l'lunlt and Q!Jifu.
Luis Polonia. who has traveled numerous times
pined bil fint bia IIIUIDIIIIellt tide The trlde was an insult for a player to the Oakland Coliseum to be on
114 USIIIII•
when Beeker's backhand service of Henderson's caliber.
hand when the record falls. "I'll
PI PlOY
relUIII drifled OUL
With Hendetaon in the lineup, keep him here another two or lbree
"l·wa playing 10 well Ill the ~ A'1 have won a World Series days then I'll ship him off. He's
~~~~~
with a lot of coortdence. I aJjd lllrk-ro-blct American League been kidding me ibat his car is in
U.l.
Tc'Mna.U.
·
~w I couldn't mill,'' Brupera cikons.
24-hour parking and it '1 coating
.......
nrta*l ...... _ _,
~--tt.uar­
111d. "I have gOt aq let lhis win
1be 32-year-old oud"telder. tied him a lot of money. He wants me
link in belen I 11M dJi!lking about the Aeala record iD bil 12th 1CSS011 to fly him blct and forth in I Lear
tbc P•adl Open.,.
·(Brock played 19 'years). He jet.'
·

.Four NBA te.ams face possible
-· exits from playoffs tonight

Henderson to go for record
against New York tonight .

· Bruguera tops
Becker in
Monte Carlo

Open Monday

PI

b---~·

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.---oa,.p...

...

Community
·calendar

Presbyterian circle meets

Paulrus, Forty Something replace
two horses in comin¥ Kentucky Derby
By POHLA SMITH
'
UPI SJIOI'U Writer
-· LOUISVILLE, Ky. (UPI) Two new horses entered the Kentucky Derby picture Monday and
two longtime fence-siuers left,
'leaving a potential field of 15 to 17
for Saturday's race.
: Kyle's Our Man and Subordillllte!l Debt will not rwt, their Uainers told The Daily Racing Form.
HoweVer, Paulrus and Fony Something popped in to take their place.
Kyle's Our Man, trained by
John Veitch, looked like a good
Derby prospect when he won
Aqueduct's Gotham Sratea Apil6,
but he faded on the leacf10 a well
beaten sixth in the April 20 Wood

The Dally Sentlnei-Pag~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

I

.,
'

n.

STORE dPENS - .Tile ..rlll'nado Towneenter''
a tc11oo1 atore witllin Southern lllah School, om• dally ope._ed Monday during a brier reception.
Tile store is part uta project funded tbrough
J,T.P.A. It Ia tbe slxtb of its type tll open witbift
blab lldaooil In MelliS and Gadia Countits. Pictnrecl, 1-r,, tront, are Dave Gloeckner, J.T.P.A.
prCJII'IIII dlreetor;- Edu Knopp aad Letba Prof.
'

Women's Cir'
cle of the Middleport Presbyterian
Church met recendy at the church.
Co-chairman Dqrothy Mortis
presided and Rev. Kris Treintong
opened the meeting with prayer.
Judy Crooks reported on pro·
jects being undertaken by the
Board of Trustees. Work is now
being cOmpleted on restoration of
the leaded glass from the old front
doors. It will then be installed in
the new doors. Plans for restoring
the door to the church study and
the need for a better surface for the
parking area were also discussed.
. Velma Rue reported that the
• Board of Deacons plans to place
carnations 'in the. church on Molher's Day to be given to mother in
the congreption. She also requested that members notify either Maxine Owens or Lennie Haptonstall of
people who should be added 10 the
prayer chain.
A committee was appointed to
fttt\ Commuaity A~ioq Agency; Mary Roberts purchase and plant flowers at the
a11d Elizabetll Wolle, student store employees;
William Beegle, D.H. teacher; and Diane Rice,
home economics teacher. Back, Jobn Reibel,
Mdp Cnunty Superintendent or Schools; Tom
Reed, J .T.P.A. pro&amp;ram coordinator tor Meigs
County; Jim Adams, school superintendent; and·
Carol Brewer, work-study coordinator ror Meigs
County schools.

front entrance of the church.
Lennie Haptonstall read "Garden of God" as the Lesst Coin collection was t.sken.
Carol Harper opened her devotions with the poem "April Song"
Community Cal~ndar Items
and continued with il reading on·
appear two days before ID eveat
prayer, "Time Out for Ladies;
from a book by Dale Evans Rogers. and tbe day ol that event. Items
She concluded with a prayer partic· mllllllle received wei In advance
ularly of interest to women as they to assure publkadon in the cal·
endar.
·
grow older.
·Chaplet two, "Empowered for
TUESDAY
Prsyer," of the book study was led
RACINE - Tuosday is the last
by Elizabelh Burkett. This conclud·
ed.with a lirany between jhe leader · day to sign up for senior girls softball .for Racine. Registration is
and members.
$7.50
and a birth certificate copy
Mrs. Morris announced changes
must
be
provided. Call Jim Caldin the program for May. Hostess
well
at
949-2458
not later than
will be Lennie Haptonstall and
book study leader will be Betsy Tue5!1ay.
Horky.
RUTI.ANi&gt; - The Rutland GarRev. Treintong closed the meet:
den
Club will meet Tuesday at 6:30
ing with prayer. Dessert was served
p.m.
at the home Mrs. Pearle
by the _hostess, Gladys Cumings to
Kennedy for a potluck supper. A
13 members present
video will be shown on tulips and
Mrs. James Nicholson will present
a paper on annuals. Mrs, Virgil
Atkins will demonstrate Hogarth
arranging . .

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - The Salisbury
Township Trustees will meet
Wednesday at 7 p.m. at the homp
of the clerk, Sarah Gibbs. Public ·
inviled.

S.tudent-operated Tornado
Towncenteropens at school
.
experience for business.
.
The _program was started in
Meigs Cowtty by John Foster, .for- .
mer work-study coordinator for the
county, who learned of the program
while in operation in Gallia County
about eight or nine years ago,
according to Dave Gloeckner,
J.T.P.A. The store at Southern is

. POMEROY - Kindergarten registration will be held at Pomeroy
Elementary on Wednesday for all
students of th~ Pomeroy and Salisbury attendance area. Conllct the
principal's office at Pomeroy for
information, 992-2710.

.

The "Tornado Towncenter," a
schOol store localed within Southern High SchOol,,ofrlcially opened
Monday morning with a V.I.P.
recognition and reception event.
The stoie is part of a program
funded through the I ob Training
and Partnership Act (J .T.P.A.)
which provides studcnts ·with retail

lhe sixth of its type to open.
As a part of the reception, Carol
Brewer, work-study coordillaiOr for
Meigs County schools, introduced
and thanked all who made the
opening of lhe school store possible. Following the reception
refreshments were served by Diane
Rice, home economics teacher at
lhe school.

I,

..

POMEROY - The Pomero;y
First Baptist Church will have a
rummage sale Wednesday through
Friday from 9 a.m. to4 p.m.
·:
PAGEVILLE - The Scipio
Township Trustees will meet
Wednesday at 6 p.m. at the
_Pageville Township Building.

EAGLE SCOUT • Patrick Barriager, son of Mr. and Mrs. Carl'
BarriDger, ReedsviUe, received the Eagle Scout Award, scoutin~'s
highest honor, at ceremonies last week. Sbown here, 1-r, are AssiStant Scoutmaster Roger Baker, Assistant Scoutmaster.Carl Barringer, Eagle Scout Patrick Barringer and Scoutmaster Dutcb For-rider.
.
·
·

THURSDAY
MEIGS - Serenity House spon·
sors a weekly support group for
members of the commwtity &amp;(feet·
weekly weigh-ins. relaxation tech- ed by domestic violence each
nique.s, recipe_s.'.diet recall sheets, Thursday from 5-7 p.m. Wilh din·
•exerc1se .techmques and other phas- ner and baby sitting services prOvided.
es of weight control. . .
There wtll be a hmtt as to the
number of people who can be
MIDDLEPORT • The Evanlj:e·
ad~itted to each series of classes line Chapter No. 172, OES, Midwh1ch sre 10 be held m '!le confer- dleport, will honor its past matrons,
ence room of the mulu-purpose 2S and 50 year members on Thursday at 7:30 p.m. Iniatory work will
buildinJ.
' .
. Res1dents !llay reg1ster by call· be e&gt;templified and Deputy Grand
mg the Me1gs County Hea,th Matron Betty Schenkel will be the
special guest. Officers wear chapter
Department at 992-6626.
dresses. All 25 and SO year mem,
bers sre inviled to attend. .
;

Weight control classes s~t
A series of six-week classes for
weight control, sponsored by the
Meigs County Health Department,
will begin May 7 and 9 at6 r.m. .
There will be a choice o nights
for the classes either Tuesday or
Thursday, and ' classes are free to
Meigs County residents.
Each class will be of two hours
duration and attendance is required
at only one two hour session weekly. Classes will include nutrition
education, stress management.
•

Reedsville personals

STORE NAME WINNER • Rascbel Rowe, a
sllldent at Soatbern Hlab School, was presented a
,girt at the VIP reception for the opening of the
.school store on Monday. Rowe came up with the
.name or.the store, "The Tornado Towncenter."

Pldured witll her, 1-r, are Diane Rice, home economics teacher; William Beegle, D.H." teacher;
Mary Ro!Jert and Elizabeth Wolfe, student store
employees•

Mr. and Mrs. Bill Meredith,
Beverly, visited recently with Mr.
and Mrs. Warren Pickens.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Bise attended the funeral of Lucy Beers at
Uniontown.
.
Mrs. Dessie Walls, Lancaster,
spent a day with her sister, Mrs.
Nina Boston.
Ethel and Ross Waldeck,
Columbus, visited with Mrs. Ada ·
Congrove recently.
Courtney Long, Vincent, was an
overnight guest of her grandparents

.

Ruth Ami and Lyle Balderson.
Maxine and Ernest Whitehead
attended grandparents day at their
grandson 's (Eddie Hensch) school
in .Canton on Tuesday.
·
Fredrick and Mafy Frances
Smith, Penni and Pam, Springfield,
Va., visited recently with Mr. and
Mrs. Frank Bise.
Mr. and Mrs. Zenith Chevalier;
Allen, Eric and Amy, Belpre, visited recently with his mother, Mrs.
Lona Chevalier.

.

RUTLAND - The Rutland
Township Trustees will meet in
regular session on Thursday at 6:30
p.m. at the Rutland Fire Slltion,
Public is inviled to attend.
•

POMEROY- The UMWA SuP&lt;
porters Group will meet ThursdaY.
at 6 p.m. in Pomeroy at Pleasers. :
RACINE - The Racine American Legion Post 602 will me~
Thursday at 7:30p.m.
•
•
•

•

-Video Views.~----"-------am

ments a beautiful -and very romanNow I
not a spons 'ran hut I
tie love story. Some disturbing had fun wilh this game. It has great
Welcome to another excursion imagery but stiU a polential movie graphics and increasingly challengclassic.
ing opponents. So if you lhink lhat
into the wcirld of Video Views.
Now
let
me
slip
out
of
my
·
lhe Russian team was hard, then .
, This month, we will have a movie hal and into my video game you
wait until the Chinese or the
chance to experience the magic of
visor
as
we
get
ready
to
play
some
Spanish
come after you. So what
love and an opportunity to play
World
Cup
soccer.
One
of
four
area
you
waiting for? The World
some serious soecer with a brand .
player games. it gives you a chance Cup is on lhe line and you are the
new game from Nintendo.
· First order of business is a very 10-play against 12 opponent teams only hope or winning the prize for
important question: Do you from other countries who are out your cowttry. ·
your blood and are playing to
Our Nintendo game tip this
remember your first great love? for
win.
To
use
the
four-player
option,
mon1h
for the ' Konami game
And do you recall how much it hurt · you will need either lhe NES Four S11per-Ciswhich
ig lhe high powered
when it ended?
.
·
Score
or
the
NES
Satellite.
But
sequel
to
Contra.
In Contra there
If you answered yes, then the
trust
me,
it's
just
as
much
fun
to
was
a
code
to get thirty men that
Paramount release of "Ghost"
almost guaranteed that you would
offers hope with its message that play against the com puler iJself.
After
you
.have
selected
your
win' the game. In Super-C there is a
while life .may end, the pure, ele·
team
and
pos_1Uoned
your
players,
code
to en1er to get 10 men.
mental force of love exists forever
tl!en
you
get.
mto
the
gii!"C.
It
gets
Using
your control push right,
even if we don 'L
difficult
at
umes,
espc:cially
when
left,
down,
up then A·B and hit
Sam Wheat, played by Patrick
Swayze, is killed by a hold-up man you lind that the opposmg team. has start. You have to do this during
;while Molly, played by Demi some powerful mo:'es and. k1cks the title -acreen which means speed
Moore, watches helplessly. But so that can send you mto otb1t, but is important. But it works.
See you next month. ·
·illrODK is his love for her that he is then so do you, so go for it._
·held on this plane of reality.
--· Unseen, unbearable, and untouch•
.able, he is desperate for a means of
saving her from lhe killer and his
·surprisins confederate. But then
:along comes Oda Mae Brown,
played by Whoopi Gold~rg, who
discovers that she has JUSt the
'opposite problem, Ye see she can't
,get rid of him and he needs her
help.
. ''Ghost" has great special effects
·and fabulous acting that compli·
By JEFF HILLEARY .

Election day
:dinner planned ··
.I

..

An Election Day dinner will be
held at the Rock Springs United
Methodist Chun:b next Tuesday.
Serving ~
· be · at 11 1.111. and
continue
the supper hoar.
The menu wil include veaetable
llld bean soups, aandwicbea, pic
and cake. Those wantina to do
carry-out are aske4 to tate their
own container•. Orden may be
by calling 992-2S87 or 992-

•All Beautyrest
Mattresses on Sale!
LARGEn SELECTION IN
THIS AREA

Selection in the Area
•Pool Furniture
•Gliders ·
•Chaise Lounges
•Umbrella Sets
•Cafe Sets

Our Buutyrnte p•tented ••·
oembly proce11 glv.. you oupport th•t cannot ug. E•ch coil
raopondo Individually to body
weight •nd 1hepa. Every Inch
of your body receive• the exect
oupport It requlreo.

Sleep
Sofa
Sale
o[a-l-loy
•Actllll

•Recliners
STAI11NG

by laM
.....hcrafl

'

-=

•Largest Patio

$29900

•FlEE PABitG
•FlEE DEUY£1Y
¥Ill

-.cAll
IIKtl¥ll

OIIISE 0111 WY

CIIIITIIIMS.

AT

New
Shipment/

•S pc. Wrought Iron

Patio Umbrella Table

$

With four stacking

choirs. lot·

1551 •.00

SALE

349

HOlliS DAllY
9TO S

F..AT

9TO I

•

�.'

Page 6 The Dally Sentinel

TUesday, April 30, 1981 _,

PomeroY-Middleeon. Ohio

River Valley Herbalists ·Shade Valley Council of
hold recent meeting
Flora/ Arts has meeting .
·

The April meeting of the River • wiD be discusllld a the May ineetValley Herbalists was held at tbe ing.
home of Connie Hill, Racine.
An herb· quiz wu Jiven with
After roU call wu taken and the Linda McCoy tiLe wJoner. She
officers reports pven, die group rccei\11Xl a poaecl herb.
disCussed organizm~ commiuccs tti
A field trip to Oorfilh Gray's is
maintain the exisnng gardens at scheduled Cor May 19 and the
Blenner!Jassett Island, the mini· group is to meet at Shoney's in
parlc and the Meigs County Muse- PointPieasant, W.VLatnoon. ·
um in Pomeroy.
Refreshment~ of clam dip,
After a discussion about revis- crackers, l'resh fruit with dip and
ing the coqkbooks, it was decided herb lea wac ~ by Lila Rideto re-ooier the existing books to be · nour.
. .
sold at the various upcoming func.
The May mcctint wUI be held at
lions.
tbe community building in LOng ·
Mrs. Hill discussed plans for a Bottom. Members are to bring an
mini herb fest the fllSt of June at herb or flower that can be dricc1 for
Blennerhassett Island. Final plans . a silent auction.

The Shade Valley Council of
Floral Ans met II the home of Mn.
Beuy Dean recently.
The meeting opened with the
group reading the Collect. Mrs.
AUce Thompson read devotloos.
Roll caD - 8DSwered with a sar·
dllling hinL

. ' STUDENT OF TilE WEEK • Tara Erwin wu recently selected
:M;Student of tbe Week at MeW Junior Hlgb School by Mrs. Gay
Perrin for her dlizeosbip ancl outstanding work in the field of
'Eiigllsll.
.
• ·., , F"'

gutland Alumni plan dinner
• Plans for the Rutland Alumni
dinner and dance have been complet~d for May 25 beginning at
~:.1Q.p.m. at the Rutland C1v1c Center,

.·

o•The dlnnec will be catered and
tftere will also be a round and
square dance foUowing the dinner.

··Reservations of $9 per person
can be sent to Rutland .Alumni
Reservations, P.O. Box 125, Rutland, 45775.
For further infqrmation call 742·
2861, 742-2578, 742-2258 or 7422191.

Tbe group will travel to Wah. .
keena on Saturday with lhe Oleller
Garden ClUb. The groups will leave
lhe CIJeltll' area ariJund oooa.
Tbe aroup made reaislrl&amp;ion ' '

$.~inith essay places second
__An essay· by Meigs County stu-

de.Jit'Eiizabeth Joy Smith, Racine,
enrolled in the Holzer College of
li&gt;lursing at the: University of Rio
~. placed second in judging
l!'y 1he Ohio Organization for the
Advancement of Associate Degree
Numng.
, .
'' 'I'he essay is entitled "Rich Man,
Poor Man • Should There Be a Dif.
ference Made?" Contesrants submitted essays describing their reactions to specific clinical situations
aiiil'problems encountered in nurs-

int.,

.. Smith was awarded the $100
s~nd place prize at a luncheon
sJiQasorcd bf the OAADN in
Columbus earlier in April.
:·Smith, the daughter of Darrell
E; alld ImogCI!e G. Smith, is a 1989
iliiduate of Southern High School

i

and~w~ill~~§frnj:ex~t
month
with
degree from
lhc Holzin training

tags for !he fCJional meedl1 on
Saturday in the lhape d trees and . .,. ,
tulips.
•

,•

....

i1arrisonville
r ·John and Ann Williams spent
fiVe days last week wilh relatives in
·, ~ W_yan~ot,te and Shelby
PI m Miclligan.
Mr.llld Mrs. 1o1m DiU, MelvinMich., spent last week as
~ d her sister and brother-inlB. Mr. and Mrs. Bill Foley and
(8lllily.
~~ llld

Kenda Armstrong, Mt.
~S.on 111111 Clary, Linda and Jordan H~ynes, Columbus, were
1eo1111 villun ~ lbcir Jllll'llts, Mr.
~MaL -.JIIICIIId Donahue.

· NeUle, Ruth ud .Jeremy Lowe
=dy visited Nellie's sister,
Y~ ud hn""nd, ~.in

Wea Vii'JIDI8.

.

· Bmie Ray Chapman is now

~~oo::=

,..., in PlrkenbutJ, W.Va., du

~·.avoct mul'!*~ whm
litm)cr he wu
feU on
hi-.
•&amp;Jorea Donahue spent 1 day
~ her sister, Shirley Simplon
inJJ~eine.

•Mr. and Mn. Mite Price,
Otr\fay, visiled her modaer, Nra.
Ruu Elbellnln and family.

'

t

3
6

10
Monthly

Rate

u .oo
te.oo

Ovor 15 Wordl

..

.20
. 30
.42
.•0

•e.oo

.

JAIIIS IBSIE
992-2772 or
742-2251

*13.00
e1 .30tdoy I

.OSI !Iay

Htppy Adt

In Merftori8m

feeding to Mother llid Child." The
following meetings cover·other ·
topics such as natural birthin~, get·
ling a good swt at nursing m the
hospital, solutions to common
· problems, starting solid food,
IMproving family nutrition and loving discipline. AU women who are
interested in breastfeeding their
babies are invited as are tbeir
babies.
For more information contaCt
Angie Wamsley at 304-675-5142.

Meigs Couni.Y

ANI Codt 114

Aru Code 114

Artl Code 304

441-0.IIIpelh

912 - MiddltPOrt
Pomwov
111-Ch•lar
143-Portllnd

871-Pt. P'ltettnt

Yt&lt;d 511•

317-Ch•!W•

3•8-VInton
Orenc~e

"A elautfied ad¥-trtiMm~t pitted in The Deity Sentinel ....

z•a-IUo

capt - ct•·•lfltd dl1play1 Busln•• Cerd end ltgal notic.. l
wll tltD ltiPIIf In the P1 , Ple•ant "•titter ind the Oalll·
polls Deily Tribune, reaching o~r 11,000 homn

oAv BEFO"E 'ueltoATION
, .- 11,00 A.M : SATURDAY
- 2 '00 P:M . MONOAY
- 2 :00P .M . TUEID .. Y
- 2 :00P .M . WEONESOAY
.. 2'00 P.M . THURSDAY
- 2 00 P.M . FRID ..Y

.~

.• . ··-

I

2H-GuYI•Diot

. t4J - Arablt 0111 ,

. 378-WIInet

247-~0IIrl

,

·~· · - -' -

BUJJ.ETIN BOARD DEAl)LINE .
4:30P.M. J)AY BEFORE
PUBLICATION . .
FIVE GENERATIONS· Plctared til tbe live aeat'flltloa tanilly ·- ·
of Rutb Sellrama. Pktllred, J.r, are Linda Cramer, Jl'llndDIOiber; , -·
rnr..,. w.-,, and R-ary Lyi!IJS, JlfllliJ'aJidmotber. Back, _• -~
,....,.. Jl'andmother, witb Tyler Wamsley, -~ .. _

CLASSIFIEDS ...
)'our Key to Gnat ~uyii .

"Make your own Mothe(s Day PIE basket'' at THE BASKET WEAVE
'
36425 Rock Sprill&amp;' Rd.

Pomeroy, OH.-992-6855
Lots ol baske1s in s1ock ready for Mother's
D&amp;y...

PRICE REDUCED - PARTIAL OWNER
FINANCING AVAILABLE!

.

The pr~ce has been redu~ed to
$81,900 and owner financmgof up
to 80% of purchase amou(lt may be
possible tor qualifying person to
·buy very nice large home on 3~
acres in Racine. 4 BR, 3. baths, 2
garages, rented 1 BR apt Property
includes 4,800 sq. ft. farm bldg.
and mobile home.

Call 614-992-7104 for Appt

ELIZABETH J, SMITH

Tour planned

PUBLIC NOTICE
Thl fallowing wore rectlved/propared by the Ohio

nptlao of prOrtlauler o011Qna.
all communicMiono - • be
- t to:
I;IHrlng · Clorll,
OEPA, P.O. Box 1041. Col·
umbua, OH. 4321e·0148
Ph. (111411144-2111. Conauk ORC Chop. 3741 end·
OAC Chopo. 3741·47 ind
37411-&amp; for roqulretnlnta.
APPLICATION FOR CERTI·
FICATION ;
Ohio Deportment of Tron·
oportlllon, Hocldngport.
Ohio. P-Ine to 401
Cettlflcotlon. Public no·
t(ce No. IH111·33. Coft.
ltruct Bank Protection
liang 3100
flat of
theOhloR'-.
DRAFT NPDES PERMIT
RENEWAL - SUIJECT
, TO REVISION:
Joymor Cc&gt;ol Company, Rt.
1. Choahlro, Oh. Public
notice doto 04/29/81 .
Receiving w11oro: Ohio
Rhlor; Facility Del!l'ip·
11om Cool Wuhor: Pormlt
No. OIL00021 *80.
fiNAL IISUANCE OF RE·
NEWAL OF NPDES PER·
Mrr:
Tho Sholly Co., Stlte Route
338, lltort Falla, Oh. Ef·
fiCtive doto 04/17/91 .
R-Iving Wotora: Ohio
Alvor;
Permit
No.
OIJ00007.
14130, he

Environrn.n...l

observed
Joshua Allen Simpson, son of
Mr. and·Mrs. Mark Simpson, Middlepon, celebrated his sixth birthday with a party at McDonalds.
Guests auendlng were Michael ·
and Cindy Hawkins, Andy Hysell,
Lucy Howerton and Tiffany Simp·son.

...

DAVIS BIRTH ANNOUNCED • Jobn and LeAnna
are
aonouncln1 tbe birth of their lirsl cbild, a d1u1hter, LeAnna
RIICbel, on Jan.ll at Pleasant Valley Hospital. The IDiant weighed
elJihl pounds and elgllt o.aces. Graodparents are Sammie and
RutbaDa Plants, Mason, W.Va.; BiUie and Ruby Davi1, Pomeroy;
and Donu Dafis, Pomeroy.

.......__

.~.

. -.. -

--.

SAVE ON. L. A. GEAR

to eny 1ction. Including re·

WED., MAY 1 THRU SAT., MAY 4

BJ United Press International

of them. "I have notsliot Madonna
and I would like to shoot her very
MAKE MY DIALOGUE: much, there are no two ways about
Writer-director Jobn Milius has it," Leibovitz, who has an exhibit
created some of the most memo- at the Nt~tional Portrait Gallery in
rable lines in contemporary movie Washington, told Museum &amp; Arts
history. such as CUnt Eastwood's magazine. "But I'm not her kind of
"This is a .44 Magnum, the most photographer. She really likes to
powerful handgun in the world ... " worl: with men.'' And then there
speech in "Dirty Harry." In an are the assignments Leibovitz
inlerView in Playboy, Milius says would just as sooo forget, such as
he knew it was a good piece of dia- Sammy Davis Jr., who she found
logue. "I got a little tingle," he cold and aloor. "It's very unfortusays. .' 'I guess I just lhought it was nate that he died within a year after
me at the time. It wu a good line we did the shooting," she said.
and 'Dirty Harry' was highly "He was reaDy sick al the time and
regarded ·- mostly by nuts he was very mean and mean-spiritwhen it came ouL" Milius also put ed. Having dealt with a lot of show
the "I love the smeU of napalm in business people, II seems that the
the morning" line in Qobert ones who have been in the b!Jsiness
Duvall's mouth in "Apocalypse the longest arc the strangest.
Now." "When I wrote that, I They're ao used to acting, they're
thought it would be the fllSt thing on aU the timC. They're more comcut out of tbe ·movie," he said. fortable not being real."
"And when I saw the movie, I
thought, 'Oh, God, this stuff is over
VAUGHAN COMEBACK:
the top.' ... Duval delivered it just Guitarist Jimmie Va•,hao has
wonderfully. No other could have kept a low prolile since his brothc:r,
goaen away with saying that."
blues guitarist Stevie Ray Vaugh·
an. died in a helicopter crash last
HONORED DESIGNER: year but now he's getting busy
French fashion designer Pierre agaiJL He's JIIOC!!Icing an album by
Cardlll beads a list of 21 foo:ign- Dr ..lobn and will DIIV on I
ers the JllpiiiCSC government nomi- MHdy Watm, Dibatc recoal and
nated Monday to receive imperial another album being pat together
honors this spring. Cardin, 68, by Les Paul befoo: starting work
wbose fashions bave lonf been on his first solo album. Vauahan
popular in Japan, will rece1ve the l!OW ll'iCIUS a ~optic c:ma his llnllh·
Onb' ~ the Sacred 'I'rcaslft, Oold er uaed to wear and that- recovand Silver Star, which wlll make ered from the site ~ the belicapler
blm the flnt designer authorized to cruh that kiUed his brodler. "It
makes a difference how we go
Japeneac imp«iss bonon.
on," be said. "I reaUy dliat IIIII I ·
SNAPSHOTS: Annie Lei· don't believe in luc• anyaae. I
iMYitz hU phoiOpaphed IOIDe of don't believe in bid lock or gOod
die biggest stirs llllllind but not aU luck. It's up to us."

_.,.. .......

·-' ·~

celpt of ""'llled complalnll,
any poroon moy obtain no·
tlco of further ectlono, end
eddltlonol lnformotlon. Un·
loll athorwlao provide~ In

.·
Reg.

$34.99 .............. NOW $2000
Reg. '39.99' .............. NOW $2500
·
Reg. $49.99 .............. NOW $299t

•

..

CHILDREN'S L. A. GEAR -

l

.

All Slzee 8\l:z thru 4

DIFFERENT STYLES

DEVAN M. SOULSBY:

Soulsby birth

.

Mr. and Nra. Jimmer (Connie)
Soulsby, Pomeroy, announce the
birth of a dlwlhter, Devan Mariah,
at Holzer Meclicai Center on April

HIGH TOP

3;

The infant weighed seven
~nds and (ow- ounces and w~ 20
mches loog.
The couple bas another daughter, Shllmon Kay, age six.
·
Patemal grandpuenu arc Mr.
and Mrs. fames M, Soubby,
Pomeroy. Paternal great grandmother is Viqpaia Will, Pomeroy,
and the lllcJcil WilL
·

Malfmal

•••ruts a

•

•.

-,.. .
-

'

$1 QOO
..

HOOD FAMILY SHOES

'i::·.. '
~.

I

GROUPS OF TENNIS
&amp; DRESS SHOE$- NOW

HONEST...

...... .._.,,

'

.

210 USIIIAII
•

. ··,·t·.

' '

·•·····

W •

0

'

'

--'

Happy Ada

Mom,
I Love You
Forever!
Love,
Leta

"41"
1 C.rd of Thanka

LADIES l. A. GEAR,
hv, •65.99 ,_.,,.Now S2 500
.

Mr.

Plains. Matema1 peat gaaidpitems
are Mr. and Mrs. Carl Barnhill,
Tuppen PlaiJII.

I

'

5

11,..,

1 C.rd Of Th8r*8
The fllmlly of Don
Kennedy woulclll&lt;e to

..., e SpeciiJIVTMnk
You to ell of. 1ht
frlencll. ~~~~gt~bo,j lll'ld.
~ for the food.
11-. clfda. cella,
ldnd wonlllll'ld IIICifnOo
rilll donations we ,.
celved during the lic;k, _ lll'ld cte.th of our

loved one.
Thenka to aeeh and

everyone.

.

Tht Femlly of Don
KenMd

LOW TOP

and Mn. liiiiCI R. SIOUt, Tuppem

.

,,

• '.

Protection

Apncv IOEPAI loot - k .
Elflcti"" datea of flnol ••·
tions 1nd luu1nce •••• of
propoHCI octlona and of
droit actlono are atoted. Fl·
1111I1Ctlono may beoppHiod,
in writing. within 30 dlyaof
tho do1o of thlo notice, to the
Envlron,.,tol 801rd of Ro,
view, Rm. 300, 2311 E.
Town 81, Cc&gt;htmbua, Oh .,
43216. Nodcoofonyoppaol
ohell bellied with tho director within 3 dayo. Propo..d
octlonir wll bocomellnol un·
1811 a written odjudl,.,tlon
hearing raquoat lo oubrnlttld
within 30 Hyo of the lo·
tulnce •te: or the director
reviMI/withdrews the proposed octlon. Any poriOn
m1y tubmlt commtnta 1nd·
I"' • meeting ragordlng any
droit octlon within 30 doyo
of tho dote Indicated. "Actio""'. •• ulld 1bove doea
not lncluda r - r , of 1 vorl·
fled compllln1. I olgnlficant
public lnterllttx'-to, a public mHtlng moy bo held. At

JOSHUA A. SIMPSON

People in the news

(

Public Notice

•

POM80Y, 01.

Tha f111ily of John H. lentil wishes to extend
sincere lhsnks to everyone who hslped to tiN the
sonow of his recent duth.
·
We thanlt tht meny friends 1nd nei&amp;hbors whoss
acts of sympathy Included ctrds, flows, foad,ttltpbane mtnaps, and memori111lfta In his Mme.
we wish to tlllnk the ltlp E.I.,S.. ~ev. Rallnd
'WIIdlllln tor his visits and cansollna words, 11M wo• 111tn of Trinity Church, Dr. Htrdn, RtY. Luad, till
nuries end staff at Holzer ladlcll Ctntlr, Dr.
Wlthtrtll 11111 staff at YttlriDS IIIHflll HOIPitll
Dlllad llursi!1' Facility, till vlsltllll nlll'ltl fto11
Ho1111 HNlth, t~t proftalonaltlrvlcts of Ewllll Fu·
ne111 Home. tht Hrvicts of tribatt andtiCOI1 of tht
Pomeroy fire Dtpt., 11111 tht pallllttnrs.
Yo• klnd11111 and tiJIIIUioll of s,.,.thy will
llwap Ill 11111t111btnd. 1111 Jolla Ttntll Filii .
lart!M Slrlllib. Ull 11:.
KlthfJII Spencer, Polly Ltpr

•Garages ·
•c-plota
Re-lltllng
. Stop &amp; Campara

JZCJI

COfltiE'S

FrH Estlmatu

OHIO IIVR .. liS
cn1 EYEILASTINGS
Now Open For Spring!
•H•b Plant• •Perenill1

•Ev ..oatlnga
Cr•ftera, Grow you own
dried motOtlola.
Open Thull. thru Sat.
10·5: Sun. 12-5

Mllilf,,
UPHOLSTERY
211-Nt. s.c..d

laciM, Clio.

llltldleport

./12/-'11/1

Hand Tufting

CARPENnR

614·9U·2328

-"oom •JIIIioril

We Say What We Do.
We Do What We Soy.
10.19-lotc.

-O....,wortl

E
-con
_-_tM.. Plurnltlog

-1-·E·-

205 N. Stclllll Str111
MIIIDI.IPOIT, OHIO U7'60-l
Offko 614·992-2116
HOME 614-992-5692

-lloollnt

'IIInt""'EITIMATEII
(FIIEE

V. C. YOUNG Ill

DOmE S.

IIOIEI

992-6215

IIIIIPINDIN1 ·
CIIPR CLIANEIS
and nu FLOOR CIIE
•Rtltc&gt;neble Rates .
•Quality Work
•Free Estlmateo

•C•1••lmeH•• Fast· Drv

.._...

•High i31oso on Tile
Floor Flnioh
MilE LEWIS, Owner
11. I, lutland, OH.

'*""-

....

742·2451
3·14-'91-tfn

Read

THE
COUNTIY CLUB

Uasslfteds%

S1le

ROOFING

lEW -REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning

Painting

915·3561

.949-2168

lntarlor -

HOWARD BROS.
EXCAVATING

IEfltGOATDIS-$100 up

IANGIS-Got·lloc.-$1 U ''
FMIZIIS-$ 125 "
IIICIO OVIIIS-$79 Ufl

DUMP llUCIS

KEN'S AWLIANCE
. SERVICE

AYAILAIU

9U-53JS w ..5·356 I

Acrou Fram

•Room Addition•
eGerogeo
•Khchena • Baths
•VInyl Siding
•Reotorotlon
•Repair Work
•Landaceplng •Grading

r.ot Olfica

lfn

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TiiiM and
REMOVAL
•LIGHT HAULING

HAULING
POOlS,
CISTERNS, ETC.

R. L. MASH

CARPENTRY
992-5526

POMIIOY, DHICI

•FIREWOOD

4·11·11-lmo.

Bill SLACK
992-2269

lt. 1, ... 71·1

RUTI.AJID,
01110 U775·"26
614·742·2'04

THE ESTATE OF
THE LATE FERN II. MARPLE WILL IE SOLD

4-23·1 me . pd .

POMIEIOY, OHO

WATER

LOCATED AT- 2'l7 4TH AVENUE, GALUPOUS, Ott.
WATCH FOR SIGNS

painting.
Let - t1o it foryou.
VERY IIISONIILE .
HAVE IIFIIINCES
(614) 915·4180

WlsHIIS-$100.,
DIYIS-$69 ''

APPALACHIAN

10:00
. A.M.

fake the pain oui of

91 NY WIIUIITY

BULLDOZER end
BACKHOE WORK,
HOME BITEB.
LANDCLEARING,
WATER end SEWER
LINES

MAY2,1991

BISSELL
BUILDERS

USED RAILIOAD TIES

CUSTOM IUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

15-12·10·11~

4· 2t·t1- 1 .... pd.

'

HOUSEHOLD a IIIICEUANEOU81 5 pc. Wo1111111 bed-

AIR CONDII10NERS· ·HEAT PUWS and
- NINACES FOI MOW.&amp;
HOMES
. DOUILEWID£
.
I

&gt;

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

t

I

I

I

I

I

•

I

I

I

I

BENNETTiS

I

I

I

I

I

0

1

I

1

0

1

1

MO.LI HOMI

":::~:~~

I

0

4-1&amp;-16-lfn

.

A11110 w1ce ments

l.tcatM 0. SaHtrd Sdtttl ld. tff lt. 141

16141 446·9416 or

1·801~·8l'I·Si967

3 Announcements

lllro ~Crt. ~o.. ott on

-1'D311

A1A-.auoro-For
Dey,

AUCRON CONDIJC1ED BY

..._

~OhiO.

WE DO

ROOFING

4

GIVMWiy

•

Lost .. Found

AND EVERYTHING UNDERNEATH

EXECU11liX: 1111111 lUll
ATTORNEY: DEAN EVANS case no. 19452
TERMS: Clall or CIIIOk wtttl LD.
LICSIIED AND IONDID .. 0110, KY I WV . .

Reaaonablt Prien"
PH. 94,·2101
'
or las. '4'·2160
'. Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CALLS

"At

pi-•

Nolll pan1llill Per 'allda 1111 • l.atl af l'nlpettr

Exterior

f.l ISTIIIAnS

USED APPUUICES

4-21·11· 1 mo. pd.

773·5785

01120 cutoll MW, 10" - - :

table uw, dining room lit, bid,

blcycloo,
a_
..,'llt.rl
Don1 ~·•
fhl• one!
er.M Alii.. ..

J1111efromRt..
"- ,. ~
5 Fomlly Yord Sate : lloy lot, •
2nd, 3rdbr.4th. Wid, Thura, -fll.

!VL

Sat Joy

' '~

7.:Jl.;

5 miiH out 218, - h Rt.
1,2,3,4. C - : ldun, lolo
• .
all olzto, Boby lt~~no, •
mtoc. 7 !lmlly.
' - ,.;
ALL Yord SliM lluot Be Pold In
Advonco. DEADUIIE: 2:00 p.m .
the cloy bolono lilt ed " 10 "'"·
Sundly edition • 2:00 p.ra.
Frlcloy. Mondly ldNion • -~IJ!I

p.m. Soturday.
Bock Yord IIIII: At.7, Chllhlrl.
lloy 2nd, 3rd, 4th ..... ~ .
Do1rt Will !lump, lloyt~ -~
aor Wolhor, llalh,_ ~.

Cider Chill, 2 lounge Cholra,
Curtain• Llnont, Dt-, Pon'a,
Lola lllecl
' . '
Oilnt Olrago 8111: 23l

-...n.

Pike. Thure. A Fri. Kid• A ...."
clalhtrl, dl-. and kill _ .,

Cl&gt;oop.

i

'~

lllocotlonoout Oltlgl 8111.
Wld.,lloy 111 throug~ 1111 Jr;d,,
1.3 mllea out 211.
Rein or Shine: 2D o.lllly Drive.
Chlld,.,'o .....
~
I119, Frl., Sot. lloy 3,4. kn. j ,
Slot• Rouro Ml, Coni~S!*Y,IIoy ,
111, 2nd, end 3nl. N .
,
·

kll-.

Yard Sa•: Houaahold fOOIII!:!~
112 mila from 141 , on , '~~

Thuro., Fri. IIIII' 2,3, 11-11,
Yord Sale: llor t,2,S.
Oo~lo!d AVtnUI.

,

'iii;

Kldo Glalhoa,

-ohold " - lie., Roirtl
to," ~

caf\Ctilt.

Yard Sate: We~, Thu,., ~j 111(2(
ml on Orchllrd Hill R-. Ulll ot
~

Ntw Thlngal

Pt. Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity

'

..

3 Fomlly Yord Salo..._l.t_mlioo101:1'
Rodmond Ridge, ,,_., Fri. lot:
~ng.

T!llll:

ftUI'MirGUIID lilt. CcMM lite!l

Big Rummage S.oll'"' Hlp-,
diCop,
12 ·clothM,
· - · Addri.
8:00.3:00.
glaaa 1101,
.,.,..

ty.,.wrtter, ahotll, mlec.

LINDA'S
PAINTING

4·5·tlol .... pd.

THURSDAY

MASON

bernet
.. •
4 Family: lloy 111 1hru lth.lllnY
boby · - . _..., ...... .
ctothM, ......_ h•ctt. IIDn Ilha •

4/3/1 mo.

lcn11 ,,.. Peat OHict
117 I. s-M
POIIIIOY,

FREE ESTIMATES

••
,
.....
AUCtiON

WNCH

1.2 Mlloo out 211. Aoril :ttlli ,I :
30th, May 111 lhru 41h. M - •
fino, Dioek, lown Chol.., 4 '
Onr.,.r ChHt. Yorloty ol otl'at ·

JOHII TEAFORD
s-t c-. ld., Chostar'

lEN'S APPUANCE
SEIVICE
"2·5335 or ·

'9t2-7458

RICI Pl'llll
ADCftiiiO.

,,

lrektn Clubs Repaired
llOPHIES • PlAQUES
IADGES

. AU IIIDS
lrilll It hi Dr We
Pick lip.

FREE ESTIMATES

AUCTIONEER NOTE: E..,r,tlng l1 Nut &amp; CWn ·
ANdy For Yow HoiN/ Donf. Thll One/

'-

6 for ISS
NEW GIIPS .......:........ 14

MICROWAVE
OVEN IIPAII ·

Howanl L Wrlte*f-

Public Sale
I Auction

'

'

GOlf tfSSONS ... SJO eo.

cemw.··

much more.

..... . ..' ,

.Gallipolis
&amp; Vk;lnlty

Barplna on

the

'

Dec-·m..

IQOI!Ituile, mlhogeny poawr bed~ chilli', 7 po, dining
raom aulle,labltt• chon, clinallld bullttt; 5pc. dining raom
HI; twiwol rodter, Wing chair, nice lOla • MWiy CMNd,
rnMogany ....... lllble llld 2 and btbln, booltca•, tunll,
Olkl8wlng macltine, mllkgluo limps, llfGI Ro•vlltt vue
end alher
of pottery, McCo, pottery, uve181
cendeholdel'l, n1c1 •11m goblelt, pewter aak a peppor
aliMn, IIIIHitlr, hanging plain, whet-noll, - . I hand
palnlld platrll, Ina dog llguri.... 2 beUI!ul Art Deco
l8mpl onyx and btall, po!l, 1*\1, fw COM, . . . . . blankatl, btldopreod, ftatw... nice RCA color con.- fV,and

5-ll-'90 Hn

Cuetom Drapea

:::.::.:.'1!,··:::::-;

8

915·4473 .·
667-6179

36 Yean Experlenee

ORDINANCE Na. 1239·81
An Ordln.,... to Amend
Choptor 181 of the
Codified Onlln.,c•
.. It llfdooined by the
Council of the Vlllgo of
Middleport •• follows:
Sec. I That the following
Section be adopted and
edditd to Chep)or 181 of the
Middllport Vlllaae Codified 11'8Ct0ra ••lnvalwld or . . to
Ontlnencea.
be lmlolwd. """' ... ...
Section 27. 17. Mondo•
1orv Reals1ratlon
H le hot!tin NqUIIId for CO"'
t•l· -~ah realde~t of
. the
ahell reglator will\
Ill AppUCM:I ohlll haw 1 II·
tho Income Tax Admlnlatril·
glltratlon
II IU~
tor of tho Vlllego to became
pll:od by tho Yll... dlapl. . .
oubloct to tho Middleport In
1 co.,.,tofoua Ia ,.,..,. It
VII'* lnoome tlx within
thirty 1301 do" of Htablloh· !Ito buolrl... - - "' lob
lng rHidancy In the VII • .
(aJ Maaua vloiM• thil
(bl AI employer•. contiiC·
tora, or .. boontrKta,. who - · ahall begltlty of I miwort&lt; In tho Vlll8ae ....II ,.. nor nlllda • - - md rn.., be
g l - with tho Income Tax aubjeat to ollno otllve doloro
I*UIOI !* dly for dly
Arlmlnlatrotor .,d IMII pr•
In
which
they
.
.
In
"""""""
her · • 1'-t of Ill om·
ployooo. oubcontrlletora, or. of1hlo -ion. '.
SEC. II. That lectlon
othell
do wart. lor •1 81.14 Of c..... tl1 of
them whoao piOttt., w - . the Cc&gt;dllled brdinrtncoo of
or aamlnga ore not .,.._tty
1he V.... of Mlrlchport Ia
• Mtlljoa1 to withholding olthe
110(111\t omen dad •to reed 11
Mldd18port VUI... Income followlll
tiX.
''That lunda
aoNactod
lei On 8optombor1, 1891
uridar
the
p-lal!ln•
of 1hli
and on ..,..., y•r the,.lt.,,
ell londlo,. who rent prop- cha"'• ....II be clopo..ed In
erty In Middleport mutt aub· the G-al Fund, end on or
31 ol lOCh
• mit ., up·ID·do1ollo of thll• tbou1
Ollandrrr
yHr,
Iunde
tenanta to the Income Tax
AdmlnlatroiDr of 1he v..... aholl be clatrlluted 10 vorl·
(dl No peroon, corpor•· 0111 lunda 11 do1ormlnd by •
tlon• ...,n-lhlp or firm .,. r-lu1lan enaat:od by coun111111ng In buoln- of eny cil during tho month of Do·
kind oMit ...... In thlt bu·
SEC. Ill. That tho Income
oln- within tho Vllleaa of
1u
- • u • colllc1od In
M"'*port without llrat ,..
1891, and aach thlt·
lltorlng with the Income Miter,
oholl
bo
dlatrlbutld
II
IJII: Admlniltrltor 1nd prollectlon II of thle ordl·
viding tho following Infor- per
nence.
'mation:
IEC. IV. Thlo Ordinance
111 ,The Mme, buolrl . . ad- oboll
toke ofloct Md be In
Md ltllllllng lddrHo of Ioree from and oltor the aar·
tho compMV. lncilvldull. port·
llolt dolo 11 p~ldad by 18w.
'*"'lpor•m:
PI!Qid tho 1 lith HY of
(21 The tolophono number
of Hid comp.,y, lndlvlduol, April, 1891 .
Attoat: Jan P. luck
part-ohlp or firm:
(31 Tho typo of bualnelaln Cltrk
o-ov M. Hortc&gt;n
wlllah uld company, lndl ·
Preolcllnt of Council
vlduol. Plrt-IJ&gt; or firm Ia
141 30 1tc

viii•••

- -·

247·4035
s2100 s. t. ne, ·

- ~~':.r.::..n pro~~~·· ~~ . b==~~~~~

*"" -

Public Nollce

...........

CONniUCnON

992·6641 or
691-6164

~98-6591

loJ' Nc&gt; buldlng palmllo ..,..
beluulll bylhe ~In ony
..... In which tho worlt .. to
be-for ...... undl .........
hrro 11r11 r gl JU:od hlo
........ and principii
piMa of bu. . . . land In tho
c.e of wtpa;alli Mdty ca~
- · hel ugl 1 ad the
, . and - . . . of tho
.uttory eient of tho ..._ .
tlonl with tho 1 -Tu Ad·
minlolt8tor - . II aubcon-

PUblic Nolle.
BASKET WEAVING CLASS MAY 2

engeged;
141 luch ather Inform•·
tlon 11 tho Income T•x Admlnlltrolctr lillY require;
!liTho name and poalllon

IISSELL &amp; BURKE

CEDAI
CONSTIUCnON

Sweeper
Repair

Public Nolle»

.

. I
Pont~~·67~91o ·

NO JOB TOO SMALL
FREE ESTIMATES

SPEEDY VAC
.Quality

Ott Rttldlt fttt -

UALITY

•Painting

,_,,,

•

1
1

BULLETIN
--- -- BOARD.
.

837-lulf!lo

742- Rullll!d

8.4 P - Cootvllt

1
1

Yard Sale

7

B~rby

•Roofing
•Siding

Owntr &amp; Opsr11tor
614~992-6120

LOST: Wlckor • . . - I l l MM.i'
7 bolwoon 110 and Uoloil
Ave. may hi'll blown out Ot,
back oltNok, 1144t2•7171.

Qy tlck lftOIIJ~t¥

Home Repalr1

For All lrtetls
EMILEE MERINAR ..

·
114 lob
314 bl
...
. ,-l14o

SIGNS

.

•Rernodallng end

Co~ltta Grooming

&amp;71 - A,tplt Crave
771 - MIIon
112-N..., H.Ven
111-Lwtart

foils

NO SUIIIAY

GROOM
·ROOM

411-Loon

141 - Aaeint

PIL '4'·2101
or Ras. 94•·2160

THE

MnonCf'I ., WV

Galtle County

C'ttlttlllt

"Free Eltlmltoa"

1138 lryln PIICI
Middleport.

Classified pa~es .corf.'r I h&lt;•
followinf{ telephcmt&gt; f.'xchan~e., ...

f . ,'

Now You Know

•. Samuel and Jacqueline Wams1.,.,-Mi&lt;!dlcpon, are announcing the
birth of their second son, Tyler
1.-et;', on Feb. 19 at O'Bieness
Memorial Hospital in Athens.
· .!)_'be infant weighed nine pounds
. a1la five ounces and was 21 and a
hiJt,incbes long. The couple's fust
SIIII;'Corey, is four years old.

1

....,._ ....

•lnlllltltlon

colllr;
1 llob-tllled.
2&lt;1WZ34.

4-23·1 mo. pd.

SIDING CO.

•Rootlna

Loot: t blook tan f\11111, Ml
... , en top o l - . hlii O!lllflll

SEPTIC TANk PUMPING
POIT-A-JOHN RENTAl
742-2666

BISSELL

oRep--.,.t

conllcutflle runt. brolltnu~d~l will btehwted
11 •••rate ads .
•

Simpson
birthday noted Birthday

Wamsley birth

Words
15
1s
15
J&amp;
15

Days

MONDAY thru FRIDAY I A.M. to 5 P.M.
I A.M. u"til NOON SATURDAY
y

•''

· The Chester and Shade VaUey
Floral Arts Garden clubs 'will tour
Wahkeena Nature Preserve on Sunday. The group wUI leave Chester
area at noon. Guests are welcome.
Call 992-5885 or 985-3978 for fw-Tiffany Michelle Simpson,
ther information .' Guides will be daughter
Mr. and Mrs. Mark
B:vailable to make the tour infOI}TI&amp;· Simpson, of
Middleport,
celebrated
Uve.
her fust birthday wilh a party·at the
home of her parents. A "Minnie
Mouse" theme was carried out with
cake and icc; cream served to Mr.
By United Press International
and Mrs. Robert :rewksbary, Mr.
A group of cranes is known as a and Mrs. Eugene Hawkins, Joshua
sedge, while larks in flight are Simpson, Cindy and Michael
called an exaltation.
Hawkins.

TYLER L. WAMSLEY

•VInyl lldlnt

,..,.
-Boe. friendly,
REWARD, ·
e14 Ill

lli·COUNTY
SlllflTION

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIPINO
•ILOWN IN
INSULATION

INSULATION

RATES

TO PlACE AN AD CALL 992-2156

Card of Thanb

youth with a money making project
on Saturday.
.
A game was played and Mrs.
Gladys Thomas won the prize.
Mrs. Mamie Buckley received the
door prize.
. Refreshments. were served to
Frances Reed, Diane Jones, 5ally
Browo, Pearl Osborne, Nancy
Buckley, Nina Boston, Mamie
Buckley, Oladys Thomas, SIIJ!dy'
West, Tammy Cowdery, Maxme
Whitehead, Ruth Anne Balderson,
Grace Weber and Lillian Pickms.
The next meeting will _be held II
the home of Mrs. Frances Reed.

J&amp;L

'

Wlndo-

TIFFANY M. SIMPSON

••" ·

tot.
toot -IIA
Rl!rll"'"' - Ut, a,_illl,
- · ..

• The Area's Number -1 Marketplace

Reedsville UMW meets
. Tile Reedsville
United
Methodist W0111en-held their April
meeting anhc home of Mrs. (lnJce
Weber with Mrs. Lillian Pickens
serving as hostess.
Mrs. Frances Reed conducted
the business meeting with devotwns presented by Mrs. Nina
Boston reading from Romans JS·
1-7andCorintliians 12:12-26.
·
Cards were signed for several
friends and 87 shut-in calls were
reported.
The church bank was collected
and the club voted to belp the

Business Services ~-~::o:nd~

Classifie

t.. '

La Lee.he League meets
'
.
The Point Pleasant La Leche
League will start a new series of
meetings on Thursday at 7 p.m. at
the Presbyterian Olurch on Eighth
and Main Strtets in Point Pleasant,
W.VL .
The group meets on the first
Thursday of each month. During
the four·part series, various topics
concernmg breastfeeding and
infant care are discussed.
The upcoming meeting is enti·
tied, ''The Advanrages of Breast-

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-1

Ohio

FlEE ESTIMATES

-.,ii:Jiiri.iit.

2 Fomlly Roon4 I:OCI-4:00. Drill C rt
RHiclonco F.- Run All. .

Ol

2 llmlly yonl lilt lloy \Q
Cloth•
ol
oil
~
haUiawlm, bunk beda, ~
and 1011 ot mltceiiiMOUL _,..

Thefu
retidence,
a.._,~
Roclno. Roln or Shine.
~
3 tomlly 1111, IIIJ: !1-4 an Co ..
Rd. 82 Pomeroy, (Tott ...) TtiH

Rd. olf~
3 llmlly._ Moy 1,2 31000 Rook·
1Pri1191 Hd. ""'""""· OH
4 lamlly a•roga .... !loy 14. 81.
Rt. 248, bcltomotCN81arHIII.
71omlly yord ull Moy 14 I,IIIOy
Fllhora 6 Corolyn - ' Y•Nowbuah Ad. Raefne, CH
110 s. Sacond, -lopollllll)' 1
thoough 7. -~~~. u.....
lpNldl,

drapea,

IUP•

tolno,dlohoo, pc1a • pont, llld,.
now ltwotrr, plctwoo, wile(
nott, email appllancll, lett
ml.c.

Corport ••It !loy 2,3,e,lo7 ' 111
South Third Mlcldlopoll, 0111o:
!O.m-tPm.

Oorogo Sail: Jc&gt;o Klrbf'o ~
· Yollowbuoh Rd. Roclno · ~y,
1,2,? 8-5.

In Rutland, IIIII houM on 8-h
Orovo Rd. !loy 1-2·3, O!olfl!oll·
toya, ~ ~m~ll IAndni,
plctuN wt- A olllltor
hornt.•Air hoolioy go-.
'
Urge Solo: lloy H Anlloun.
att-re, pott...,, llloo lolonot\
. :
CB oqul-, clothl!ll
mlec. 12'1a VIM . Sf- .
dtoport Roln co-.
•·
l.llao yord ulo lloy •1·2·3

, If

iOAllo4PM 732

Syea-.

""1

lllcldllpor1.
~
May 111, ono doy etniY. IHioloj.
Rutland tum•ure. Crab, ......,
lng, TV, 21trolltr 01-IIC.'

·~r 111Mfi.,,
liii'liY·

lloy 2 s-a,
ctothH,
otnor be
SR 124 towttdl
houl• on ten.

M

~•
...
. ...·• ,,

�.-

•

LAFF-A-DAY

44

1991

1991

Ohio

Sentinel

Ohio

BORN

Apanment .
far Rent

Television
Viewing

we AI!£ '5110W1W=&gt; 1lle

miOIF.

ve f'llr®6ISO lt.II'AA!ic£I

TO

TUE., APRIL 30
EVENING

•

'IIIATillll'
NIIUI

."·•

.•

1-

.

a.

1:00 (J). (I) Ill. •

ONeww

I'
I• I I t I

~
CD 1-2-1 CDftiiCt

(I) Chlrll8 ..

73 VIM 6 4 WD'I

~"i: ••~.d:·.:z....a.=
o:m·
... ttl ... der -.m:
or III ••

--eo-··--------·:llp.ln.

WINod To llur: Junll Auloo
-..., LliiiJ.
Of ""ho!ll
-.
hiiM

1

a.

Coli

.,.

rmptoyment Sr-rvrces

IIII&amp;::.,a ·

~NUT~ ·

8 World TO!MJ

ID o...rroo..

:

o

a

L.--'---'-...1..-L......JL-1

• Andy CkHfllll
0 UpCiole
1:36 ill Andy Gllflltll
7:00 (J). Ill_ IIJ Wheel 01
FootunwQ
(I) I DIHin ol JaMnla

!J!:===nQ

j

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I

(I)
(I)

___ ,...................
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n

Iori 0111104 •• 1114 ut. 2127.

*.,...
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I AI - . I Shirley

1e I£Jpno"~

Crtlllra and run ••rve. . . att.nminill!lfL Full I poll-time
Apply
In .....
"""''
18..
o.on.lo
1 p.m.
II B.P.
Oil,
U.B.III. M, R i o - .
...,., .. ohltla. -

..
'

....... ,, "a.•

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I'Diondll.
mo
Exl. Y-

22 Money to Loan

34

..

Bullnea
Bulklngs

_.......

OFFICE IMCI 1'011 WIE on
2nd Ave., ..... DIIa. ~ to
CoUII_1_2_

......

,_
...,._

=~· wllh AIIIJr·!
-For Bolo: lllb onw. c.11

your , _, No
....... tile """"" you

23

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-m ••

mull -

i\or

•-· .

on

76

homo _

_,,.,

__, on

.......
FE
'b!a
rwertcitionl. Com111111 lnlauu
lion onlllod an ........ _..,.
11213, Jolin D. Gorlooh, no
-~~

2-·-. -·==:":·, _ In

•

-

....
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11t

. . . . . . _.... .... ....., fill.
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12

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lol fw ronL 10 •liM on
MI. C o l l i -

38

...

t ..

.......... I4CIO. .... -

.ALLEY OOP

'

~~ 1:!! Tho ..L,,

«&lt;

'"' ~NEA. Inc

promise or nucloor lualon Is
explcnd.C

~ - ~o

!Ill 111• lletcue: 811

~·· Stareo. :lee
an"'::;,~ w Q

Ia , ..........,

'

· GOOdS

- - , . _ 01, .........
- · _ , . . . Eoglo limo

='·

·---

'1::blema
·
to wear a

. 11J 1'111111

onllooi, 12,200. -

10:00 (2) •

~

He ildiS

I

IIJ .......·a Deal

(I) ......
(I) II) • ......,_lhlug A

W, .,.._,, A Tolovlwlon
Willi People

Eat; Wile!' Food Comes
From; Why II Matters
8 CNN Evenlnll Hewa

.. ,,._c.......... ...
1

-·

18 'Winlld to Do

=L.,._

o., ........... ......
......... I ..... I .....

r-

Pith
..........

1.., DopooM I - - flo.
~No-.Cd--

104 .. . . . , _
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nllhecl,
....... ••••
ahlldr.n ate
trallllr
%'::"· Ill. 1 ~ Rood on
Polnl PIMIInl, ....,.._

"*"" .._

-·=-· . . . - •"'=:t: .........
~

I HATE IT WHEN PAW
WALKS IN HIS

..
• ....

SlEEP!!

8

--~--=h•

..

-•flw7p.on.

.

_...,-

Plumbing

.......
==r-...;......
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. . . ..

IAll OR IIHI'

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farRenl

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,_ondflilo
Gal'p 11, Ohio

Electrical •
Aefrlgllltlon

,..,$....
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........... '111111 ............

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Upholltlry
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16 ·Allee"

__

=::...::,of......
II:'

7.. II T 0

Guy 1;11

\

30 Milk

6 OHice

19 Cain's

31 "Lei's

''.

,.

source

brother
22 Valley
23 Famous
racehorse
24 Queued
up
25 Started
afire

Make ··-32 Nurse's

' ...i

.."'.

·

reading ·
33 Shoe-parts

..

38 Young
fellow
39 Numerical
prefix

'

....
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-

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....,

...,,

•... •

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CRYPTOQUOTE

FU U H Q

DFUU
(~

a0 .........
..
IIIOVII: ...., Line (II)
(2:001

--- ZTI= V

~

... •

'" ~

WVUQV

.,_,lite

wing
5 Quiets

groups
14 Out of
the wind

10 L~~gisla·

oellle~•••

1:11 C11 MOVII: Tile Grell T Clllaa (R) (1 :46)

26 Reporters
28 Plateau

I &gt;nc lctll'r slands lor another. In this sarnrle A Is uw&lt; l
for I he three 1.'~ . X for the two O's, clc. Single lclt(·r-.
aJH&gt;•Irol&gt;hcs, the lcr:glh and formation of thr word• all·
all hhlls. Each day the code lellcn are different .

(' II

.I;J

.~

live

~.

V II I II T

1NI (I) Law Colwi6CIIon ·

s-

~

a• ~~an~ COllY ·

nl Tonlghl

...
.•.
I

7 Current·
unit
8 Skating
exhibition
9 Canine
w...rker?

4-:lll

Love

e lhoalll TOday

.. ·

AXVDI.iiAAXR
htONGfELLOW

12:01 (I) lllghllloiW 1;11
12:30 (J). IIJ ..... """" With
DrM Let1811Mft
(I) MOVIE: Tho Ceult MMial
of lilly 111111161 (2:00)
With Nil

1:Gii::o.......

partner.
.. .
Which useful jack could East p,.O:.:
duce? Best would be the jack of clubs"
so Frey led the queen of clubs.
-~
It was the killer (as would have beetr•
the club ace followed by lbe queen}::
Any other lead would have allowed d~~;
clarer tbe time to esi.ablish the diamond suit and coiled nine tricks. ::.

.....'

notes

IIJI. ""' Machine With

1:110

·'

was looking at 13, leaving one for hif

archer
40 Lend DAI t Y CRYPTOQUOTF.S - Hcn:'s how to work it: 4130

8 lpol1a Tonlgld
11:31 (I) Cholrt Q
12:00 II) • 11110 118 Night Stereo.

~

........,

-

37 NOIIld

i""Ci.un:ll ...... IIIIIIOn

:'~"r~uaer
. . . . . . . . Now
e Naa:olllaht
1D MOVIE: ......... (2:00)

' - - - - - - - - - - -.;;·';t

34 Archaic
35 Ninny
36 l'wosome

.

.,_,Stereo. "

mailing $1.25 IO Aslro·Grap~. CIO I~IS · ICOfN'IO (OCI. 24-IWI, 22) A llmoll bul
newspaper, P.O. Box 91428, Cleveland. signlflcanlly proflla~ dewiopmenl
01'1 44 101·3428. Be sure 10 s lale your could open lor you lodoy in conlunclion
zodiac sign .
wllh ongoing manors. However, you'll
GEMINI (..., 21-June 20) You're al- havelo be-er 10 carry II on.
BERNICE
ready cogn1:ran1 of evel)'1hlng • you IAGITTAIIIUI (IWI. 23-0oc. 21) Try 10
BEDE OSOL know, so IIIMihoo~es you lobe a good devotesomellma1odlylo a r-tlon·
11s1ener today, especially In discussions al &amp;ellvi1y or OUIIel you thorougllly .,.
with one whoM mental - r • you joy. Getting away lrom mundaneiNngs
respecl.
,
will refresh your oullook and make you
CANCER (oluno ·21-.luly 22) Success Ia more lndus1rlous.
a high probabiiHy today - if your lnten- CAPRICORN (O.C. 22-.1.... 11) 11 you're
Ilona are In proportion lo your ablllllet. hoping lo galher lnlormallon pertlllnlng
Don'l put demando upon yourNII that lo a mauer you're -'9 curloua aboul
you arwn'lln lho PQtlllon 10 IMBI.
· locley, ilk lndlrecl qunllonl ralhw
LEO(,. 23-Aug. 22) You ha\18 wllal H 11W1 1111¥'- ont*.
lolc" to be a good orgenlzor loday. AQU....,. (,_, IO:I'tb. 11) Ouollly,
You'l nol only know how 10 do lhlnga nol quantlly,la- you llhoulcl!oolc lor
afficlently, you'll know whallo uslgn 10 in companiOna today. A com1011able,
whom.
'
cornpallbla usoc1a11on wilh one or twO
·'
Mar 1, 1t111
VIROO (Aug. ta-llepl. 22) Smllll detalla lndlvlclualt wtl be lar more enjOyable
could take on more algnlf- ,_, thin fM11111 wtlh alarfjl group.
Your poulblllllet for auccou In lhe )'llllr
uaual today, particularly In doniMIIc: · Pll Cia (Peb. 20 " Clllllt H you h ahead will be groally enhancod lhrough
matters. Be . . . bolh you 81111 your to 111111e a c:horce belwlln prolll or
PI'~ planning. Beforo molclng your
male pay appropriate atteni!On to ell pride. II (lllghl ba -ble 10 a mo.w. first eetablllh your objectl.,.,
lho llny parta.
' lho 1 . -. Sloll-ooleem hu grooler val·
TAUIIUI (Aprii20-May 20) a. opllmla·
IJIRA (llepl. D:Ocl. :D) Frlenda will ue lhan lfllld loday.
11c at lhlo lime regwdlng a lOinllnvOivewelcOme your """pany w.mly today U.J (llanllt 21-Aprtlll) Your grill·
,.,,-, but keep your ••PKiallonl wtthln
- II your_._ brtel. Thlllt a good rull eel - ' Ia your ablllly lo communieala
r8111atle llmltl. Small gllnl are 1110 11ft- . 10 folloW , _ mailing a 'f*tOIIIIIIP- . eflecllvelp todiJ. You'ro no1 only good
poltam, TMII'UI, 1,..1 JOUrMII 10 a
paar11101 or maroty gaDblng 011 1118 at dlmolllllllng Information, you're
for fauruw' AMrablrillcray gill.
phone.
·
adepl at rolalnlng II, loo.
Graph p(*llellon. for lho voar llhoed by

..

throal
features

~~&gt;~~~~areo.
a
• 'Tho Exlla' Cll Late
ASTRO-GRAPH ·

Opening lead: ??

'" .

nickname
30Cows·

. CD Adam Snlllh'o Money

,

Nardi Eool
2 NT
Pa•
All pass

'

••

dromic

(I) CirCle or Faar

- - for Sale - -

3NT

'

28 Oitector
Brooks
29 Palin-

Stereo.

MobiiiHomll

Woot
Pass
Dbl.

.

•,, •

Vulnerable: North·Soulb
Dealer: Soulb
INT

'

•

.AK7f
t A 10 t8
.Kf

Soo..

'

26 Salamanders
271ndigo
source

lclractOW and Mro. K~

WCNtd

EAST
.7632
.631
t2
.J7653

SOUTH
.KJ 8

"

"· '
••

olhors

~ 1:30 (2). IIJ Toni~Jht Show

1111

.912

..

and

o•

1-1:11 ill MOVIE: ROIHng Thunder
(RI (2:00)

I La t c1004 unlurl'llllhld, '3 d01
port HMC, ~ ono

ltete.Ciaeetoeahaall . ~

4 B•lildlng

22 Medicine

80nllage
Ql Mane,llne

p:

•

1111

4-IO·tl

:. amount
23 Tyson

!ll=e!:I;J
(!) Dawn at 118 DowM
81::*:!Hall Slerto.I;J

IAICIS ALII/I II

2~ d ................ -

•llt.ftll-11:111.
IN CITY: lbr, t bolho, ulillly

wllh

BARNEY

....on. 114-

12dO Zllr, C.M -

•

w ~~&gt; •
IIJ ......

15 Wapiti

21 Spelling
contest

0 MitiOr LllgoiW 111811111

11:oo&lt;2J •

NORTH

•.u•
•Ja

3 Chats

show

1D 700 Club Wllh Pal
Rolleltlon
10:3011J1. M'A'I•H
• Crook and Cllale

--Ill. ·,._, CoiiTOIIIY._.. ttl7ft
n
a'
n--.11M.

~--------------~

1 Not so
many
2 Banish

17 Depot
(abbr.)
·19 Auclic;m
actions
20 SAO

slrained _ , an ld
b~lllla rejaclld. S\ereo.

Bullnea
Training

'"'

DOWN

spinoff

relalionshlp Is severely

(J)-= i.

·''
I

Chicago

Quaker

chemicals. Stereo. 1;1

Sl'rvrcos

·

clean ·
42 Singer
Helen
· 43 City near

12 Game
show host
13 Noted

Shannon lnvesllQates lhe
illegal dumping Of !oXIC

1,

·

.,'..

(lislen)

11 Raise in
rank

windS up milling. Steroo. Q

.............
fllllhL ..... iionJI, 14,200.

I I ·I I ...

41 Wipe

employ ·
ees

Wrtltllnll (T)

from en aCCident vlcllm

1

I™~

I

tQHf3

ACROSS
I Gala
events
6 Hotel

8:30 (I) Ill. STAT Afinger

... • • •

1- I

, by THOMAS JOSEPH

• ·NaiiWile Now
• UJny ICing U...l

-

UNSCRAMBLE FORI
ANSWER

4

CROSSWORD

,.. ..

. ~r:IC.~IIICIIICf(R; e~T=_YQ

'"'"''ill .,........,,

I)

·DefenSe is considered by most playen to be lbe harde81 part of the game.
This is because you, as a defender, can
see only ball your army, whereas the
declarer can see all his forces, making
It easier for him to plan his campaign.
It is tough always to find lbe best play
wben you cannot be sure of your part·
n~'scanls.
· ··
When does defense begin? Most people will answer. "With tbe opening
lead; but that isn't really true. It begins with the biddin1. You won't find
the best openill1lead if you don't listen
to and analyze lbe biddilll.
Look at the auction and only the
West hand. - no peeking. Wbat conclusions can you draw, and which card
would you lead~
·
True. you might not agree wilb tile
double, but lbat is what happened.
·sitting West was Rlc~ard Frey,
plavina in lbe 1942 Goldman Pain ill
New York. which be won with Sonny
Moyse, Jr. Tbey were two of the alltime greats of American bridle.
. Frey applied the "rule of fourteen."
The opponents, bavlni struuled into
tbree no-trump, rated to baw about 26
high,card points. Similarly the defenders would ~ave approximately 14
pomts - hence the rule. Here Frey

• MOVIE:

DU

I' 12 •1~

BRIDGE

i l'lui•••Q'1111

~112. •lr. -

alllna an :114· or ..,., Ky111r
er..i" •haaiJ · ~1'10C;

•

•

~-

.

e~drws. Sttreo. Q

I ldo 1111!M. ...
lromod mlmn 1271. lor ol •
will Nil Mpol'l!tlf. tM.~

« •

b·d'O'&gt;m, 2
Dll1 2 cor lfOI...

e Ra•·

RIIIIMIIIIW

.. I

J

ID MOVIE: 1om1no1a (2:00)
1:01 ill Andy Gllflltll
. 1:30ill Majol'tngue 88181111
(I) Ill .laby Tallc MICkey
becomes ll!llreaalve during a
Mommy and Me[~
sasslon. Sl8r80.
·
• Cllurcll Slreat
• t.oo (J) • i1J In a.. Hilt 01 the
Niglll Gillespie and TibbS
aeen:h lor 1118 kllllr Of IWO
di'IIQ ~· Sttreo. Q
convinCing

OM lad,

A

woman Is forced to fty a
plano after 11er pilot huaband

..s

Tr\A\10

........ - I t
•• , ..... ..

.......... ftAINM4.

-11tltiiO~hftw4p.m.
~ J
~~~~~. LR, fR,

~~:-:::-::-:::=::::-=.:.....:.::::::::::~~=~=:::===~=~::::.::.··

Ttlf~Ef

___.. _

Potx, 107

nltlll ~...
7 ......
- · ,2 '·
·
Cwll~
A-.
500.
C.t'tr 1MdHI
•
llobllt

lr

S.nattllo~el!lwrty

tfAiff ,fEN
,

a

Tony gowa 1o the floor of lhe

(I) IJ)

Rill Eltllte
-W.ntld

"'i!

-.~

'ANP THfltZ IIJ..t..
)AYf :t. COVJ.P

. . -.....

......,.,. o11y
WIIOf ovol-. Phono ~
2722.

Nil I
or _.to, 1141112
•
3br houle wHh bl11ment on 4
411 0181.
ctly lolo. l30,100.

IIIII _... SIOCIIwlo.
Ill ..
,..... luy · - lbr, 2.....
iull
....
c.n .....--.
bolllo,--. clnlng
~ ••
I
3tW lorgo ullllly - · utro onloc

~-

1ormer lover. Sllrto.

m..... L•••• 'enf•·•
(I) Ill. Who'• ... lola?

~Coll~l1lt~t~ltJI~IIII.~i~~~
una , . uu: "' ••, d
Lond lor -

room .......
.....
7
on~~
IN 1Cbr100 ft. -li. ,Will .....,, Wll -

--

.I

T~ING TH~f '~

Auto Parts •

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FRANK AND ERNEST

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--- TUG MCGRAW

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Page 10-Tha Dally 8entlnal

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

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.....--Local briefs-----. Ohio weather remains calm overnight
Items to be collected

The Meigs County Soap Box Derby Association will be collect.

ing irems or clothing for a nunmage sale to be scheduled at a later
time. Members of the usociation will pick up the itans if notified
at the following n'!lllbers: Angie Swift. m -7112: Ann Barrell. 74225
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PUCO files for extension
'
The staff of the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio (PUCO)
filed a motion on Monday. AJI!i129, asking for an extension in the
schedule for its analysis of ac1d rain compliance plans for the Gavin
Power Station, according to a release on Tuesday.
·
The Commissior! had requested that Amencan Eleclric Power
(AEP) submit ~ infmnation ~g to its compliance strategy
tor the Gavin Plant The Commission Slaff then IJWyzed the mate-'
rial and was scheduled to issue a report by April 30. That request .
for an extension was based, in pan, on the receipt of coal price
information gatbered by AEP through bi~ ..
The information received Thunday, April 25, and the staff felt
that it was sij!llificant and should be reviewed prim- to its report to
tbe CommiSSion. The staff has requested up to two additional weeks
before rele!lsing the report •
·The Commission's Aaomcy Examiner assigned to lhe proceeding issued an Entry today granting the staff's request for an exte,nsion until ·May 14, 1991 to file its report.

Skin testing clinic Monday
Joan Tewksbary, R.N., Meigs Coonty TuberculOsis Nurse, will
be conducting a skin testing clinic .at tbe Racine Fire Station on
Monday from 4:30-6:30 p.m. 'All community volunteers and fOOd
service )VOI'kers arc urged to take advanlllgc of this free service prior
to alunini banquets and Olher community affairs.

Squads respond to four runs
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UniiS of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service responded to four caDs for assistance on Monday.
AtJ2:04 p.m. the Middleport unit was called to Village Manor
for Vern Smith who was transported to flolzer Medical Center. At
12:52 p.m. the unit transported Keith McCarty from Cheshire tci
flolzer.
.
The Middleport unit, at 3:54 p.m., was called to Page Street fC!'
Roscoe flollon who was taken to Holzer, and at 4:39 p.m. tbe umt
responded to CheShire for Steve Arrowood, also taken to flolzer.

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Continued from page l

issue of continued cooperation
within tbc SEORC.
"We must," Jones said, ."do

everrthing we ·can possibly do to
· retam SEORC support for the
Ravenswood project." Jones also
stared that his meeting wilh ODOT
Dislrict 10 Def!uty Director John
Dowler eatlier m tbe day on Monday .was~· remarking tbat
Dowler anil 0
T have "a real
sincere interest in Meigs County."
According to Jenning~. the fust
step of the project, that of building
a segment from RI)Ck Sprinas to
Five Points, could be under construction b~ mid-1990's, 11\'ith
the public
· g on the environ-

GM...

mental study possibly being held
Ibis summer.
In ?t~er action, the planning
commiSSIOn:
- Agreed to extend Jennings'
conii'IICt for another year, at a cost
of $1,000 plus·mileage and expens-

es;

• DiscusSed tbe new county plat

directory;

.

• Discus~ the progress on a
booklet describing induslrial sites
in the coonty, with the committee
in c~ of the booklet agreeing to
meet pnor to the next meeting;
-Set the commission's next
meeting for July 29 at 3 p.m.

Contin•ed.from·page l

OM Cha.innan Robert C. Stempel
said.
"This is a time of extraorlijnary
de~ on our business. and Gen·
eral Motors faces the rouet and
most competitive Norlh
erican
automotive marlcet in the corporalion's history," he added.
Slempel noted tbat Nortb American factory sales for the entire
automotive industry were at lheir
lowest fllSt-quarter level since the
recessionary period of the early
· 1980s. GM's Norlh American factory sales fell 14 percent from tbe
first quarter of 1990.
·
Botb Stempel and Ford Chairman Harold A. Poling concurred
....
that a gtadual economic recovery
should begin later tbjs yeat, translating into higher vehicle sale&amp;,
altbough many believe tbe market

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Press Intematioaal
Cleveland Electric llluminating, Ohio Edison and Toledo
Edison companies have lost an
appeal regarding the sale of electricity from Ohio's two nuclear
'power plants to publicly owned
electril: providers.
Under antilnlst conditions in an
agreement With the Nuclear Reg11latory Commission, the utilities
were required to connect transmission lines witb government utilities
in their laVice areas.
The city of Cleveland ' won the
conditions onder a 1977 NRC ruJ.
ing that CEI had lried to fix prices
and had unfairly limited the city
sySiml's access to nuclear power.
The utilities recently argued that
the conditions were imposed on
what was expected to be low-cost
nuclear power, but should be

Stocks
A{A Ele Power ..................29 l(l
Ashland Oil ......................34

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AT.tT ...............................37 518
Bob EVIKIS ....................... .17 5/8
Chann~hop ................ .l6 3/4
~ . g .................... .l4
M~I ................. .IS 7/8
Qoad~ ................. 21 7/8
Key
.................. 1-2 3/4
I.Midi''BIKI.,.uooooouooooouoooo22 1/8
Umiled Inc. ................:.....27 518
Multitnodla Inc .................27
lax R.-..na .................7/8 .
ltobbinlotMyen ...............27 l(l
Sltoney's Inc. .....,.............. 16 3/4

S• Bd ..........................20 lfl

Wendy Iat'L ..................... 10 718
WonltiJJstoll Ind. ..............25 3/8
Sllel , . , .,. tlwlO:JO 11.111.

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will remain weak into 1992.
· But Poling cautioned that "it
will be difficult for (Ford) to real- .
izc a G:cfit in 1991.
" ecessions in Ford's major
markets contin11ed to reduce
demand for vebicles, resulting in
low production levels during the
fllSt qUatter," he said.
FII"d's factory vehicle sales during the first three months of the
year totaled 1.24 ·million units,
down 202,000 units or l~t, ·
from the first quaner of 1 .
Like other autoataltc:n, Ford and
GM have been undergoing multibillion dollar cost-cutting efforts
that include
their salaried
work force worldWide. Both also
recently re.duccd their quarterly
dividends in an effort to conserve
cash.
...

trimmin'

dropped because nuclear costs have
skyrocketed
.
The NRC, however, told the
utilities Friday it was refusing to
change the qn:cment involvin~ the
Pe~ nuclear ¥,lint east of C eveian and the avis-Besse plant
nuclear- Pon Clinlllll.
The NRC said Its decision was
based on anti-cOmpetitive prices,
not whetbcr nuclear energy was
iliC)l~ve.

• It is apparent tbat suspension
of the license conditions here
would permit a resumption of the
very activities which were found to
lie anti- competitive," lhe NRC
said in its ruling.
William Ondrey-Gruber, an
assistant law director for Cleveland, said the rulins "means lhat
the NRC has con6nncd the law of
the land, wbicb is that illvestorowned utilities can't use their
monopoly power to close out
avenues of alternative electrical
services,
A spokesman for Ohio Edison
said the company was considering
further action.
"Our position has been that the
licensed conditions at Perry are
neither~ IKI' neoe•ry, ''
DiNicola •td. "They arc openended, ·undefined obligations that
enable wholesale customcn to
require service II times or abaQdon
service 11 will, which mlkea longtenn plannina for ereas of scnice
diffiCUlt, if not impoasible.''
I I

Hospitql.pews
HOI Z1R MEDICAL CENTER
Di1Ch~A~9 • Mark
Caldwell.
Judy Den·
ney, Mn. verner Grace and son.
Mary Oroft, Mary Hunt« and EDa

Kunszabo.

50s.

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Wednesday will be partly
cloudy and there is a chance of rain
over northern Ohio. Highs will be
65 to 75. '
Early Tuesday morning a low
pressure center was over northern
Minnesota' with a cold front to
western Indiana. Another cold front
was over tbe Plains. .
The firSt hoot will move to the
Atlantic Coast by Wednesday
morning while tbe second front
approaches western Ohio. The front
Will move to western Pennsylvania
late Wednesday as higb pressure
seales over die southern Plains.

Meigs County announcements
Carnation sale planned
The Meigs COunty Division of
the American Heart Assoc:iation
will be conducting its annual Carnation Sale with flowers being
delivered May 14.
This year the event is ccnducted
in memory of James Diehl. Mr.
Diehl has been ttJc chairman of the
event in past years. Now with his
death ihe Meigs County AHA
Board honors him for all of his
years of volunteer service he gave
to help fight for otht:r people's
lives.
'
This year Mrs. Ida Diehl will be
taking arden and overseeing flow·
er delivery in tbe Pomeroy area
· with tbe help of Betsy Horky,
Donna Carr, Dan Moms; Jeanette
Thdii!BS and Linda flaley. Denver
and Noril Rice of Middleport will
be taking orden and delivering
flowers in that arcs. Carnations can
be ordered for $1 each by calling
Mrs. Diehl at 992-2573 or Mr. and
Mrs: Rice at 992-3759.
"So buy a flower and put a liUie
spring in your heirt by belying
someone else's to beat. All o the
proceeds from Ibis Carnation Sale
benefit heart research and public
and professional educational programs," said Rice. "You and your
business can show the community
that it cares about the people who
SupportiL"
According to the American
Heart Association, heart disease is
the number I)IIC killer of American
women. Although the deatb rate
has dropped over 24 percent in the
past decade, more research needs to
be done to help find ways to save
the lives of the people who have
cardiovascular disease and help
prevent others from conii'IICting iL
"Support our loc:al American
Heart Association in the fight
against heart di....,se, Meigs County's largest killer. Order your carnations
We're fighting for
your life," wd Mrs. Diehl.

todar.

Ohio Edison, CEI lose,appeal
B~nlted

By UDitfd Pras Intematlonal
It was mostly cloudy across
Ohio ovtrnighL
A few showers popped up over
the norlheast corner of the state
early in tbe night but these only
lasted an hour and were gone. Otherwise it was a quiet night westberwise across the state.
Temperatures were mild during
the night witb readings mostly in
the 60s. Winds were from the
soulhwest 10 to 15 mph.
Tuesday night wiH be partly
clou4y wilh lows in the low to mid

Name omitted from list
The name of !Skip 'Dodson, a
second grader at Rutland Elementary, was omitted from that
school's list for its most recent
honor roll.
Y outb lODe raUy
A youth zone rally will be held
Friday at 7:30 p.m. at the Harrisonville Holiness Ch,~pel on
~oute 68410 Pomeroy w1th Rev.
John N'eville spealcing. The public
is invited to attend.
Herbalists to meet.
The May meeting of the River
Valley Herbalists will be held
Tuesday, May 7, at 7 p.m. at the
community building in LonJ Bottom. All members arc to bring an
herb or flower tbat can be dried for
tbe silent auction.
Racine Alumal banquet
The Racine Southern Alumni
Baaquet wiH be held May 25 at 6
p.m. M9re information may be
obtained· by contacting Joyce
Quillen at 949-2438 from 8 a.m. to
4 p.m. or 949-2695 after 5 p.m. or
by calling Pam Diddle at 949-2749.
Crulle-ln planed
The Oldies aut Goodies Car
Clu~ will have a cruise·in on Saturday at Ple&amp;se!'S in Pomeroy. Registration will be held from. 6-8 p.m.
with show time from 8-10 p.m.
There is a $S entry fee and awards
will be given for show. ·
RldiDI Club to meet
The Meigs Coonty Riding Oub
will meet Monday at 7:30 p.m. at
the Scou's residence on Flatwoods
Road in Pomeroy. All memberS arc
urged to attend. Call 992-3885 or
99~-68.55 for information.
Danee planaeil
·
.
There will be a round and
square dance on Friday from 811:30 p.m. at the Tuppers Plains
VFW Building featunng Stoney
Creek Band. Jim Carnahan will .be
the caner. Public is invited.
Group to meet
The Lottridgc Community Center Association will meet Thursday
at 7 p.m. The center is located on
County Road 53 soutb five miles
west of Coolville. ·
Auxiliary to meet
The Ladies Auxiliary of Tuppers Plains VFW Post No. 9053
will meet Thursday at 7:30·p:m.
Officen 'will be elected. AD members urged to aaend.

Dlaatr platNd

·

There will be smOipibord din·
ncr on Sunday at the Lottridge
Community Center from noon to 2
p.m. Colt is $5 for lllulu and $2.50
ror children under 12. Public is
iDviled.

Llkim7Ciabtomeet
,
The Middleport Literary Club
will meet Wednesday at 1:30 p.m;
with Mrs. Daniel Tbomas u host·
ess. Mrs. Wendell floover will
I

review tlie book, "Lulher Alive."
Gospel Concert
There will be a gospel quartet
concert at lhe Reedsville Church of
Cllrist on Sunday from 2:304 p.m.
. with The Joyful ,Sound of Vienna,
W.Va., and 'The Heavenly Express
of Ravenswood, W.Va. The public .
is invited to a~.
. Lodge to meet .
.
·
The Pomeroy LOdge No. 164 F
&amp; AM wil.l meet Wednesday at
7:30 p.m. with conferring of the
E.A. Degree.
.
Revival plaaned
The Bello Chapel Church in

=~~li~~:r!i%v~~~~~~~..:

S¥C, Columbus, as evangeliSt Ser-

VIces will be held at 7 p.m. nightly.

~c.J:~~;~n~~:e~a~lend.
There will be a rummage and
bake sale at the Racine United
Metboclist Church op Thursday and
Friday beginning at 9 a.m. daily.
The church is.located on Route 124
one mile east of Racine. ·
Golfleapes to belllg play
The men's Tuesday and
wd d
If 1
h
e nes ay go ca~ues at t e
Meigs County Golf oune will
begin play on May 7 and May 8.
There arc 20 teams signed up for
each league. Two 10 week halves
will be played Ibis year. Anyone
wishing to substitute is asked to
caD tbe club house (992.{j312) and
leave their name and phone number
Sale slated
'
Th e young pcop1e •s sun day
School Class and youth group of
tbc Reedsville Umted Methodist
Church will hold a combined rummage sale, bake sale and car wash
on Saturday at the church be&amp;in·
ning at 9 a.m. Funds JBised fii" the
event will go toward the group's
June trip to King's Island. The
~burch is located across from
Reed's County Store in ~ville.

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MTICIW.---7AIIII-1~107AIIHI

Ohio Lottery

Reds hike. lead

in Western
Division

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Vol. 41 , No. 247
. : Copyflghted , ..,

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Hospital news
'VETERANS MEMORIAL
. MONDAY ADMISSIONS ·
David Yonker, Pomaoy, and Erma
Hollon, Middleport.
,
. MONDAY DISCHARG~S •
Nohc.

only if lhe most economical oDilon is adopted.
In lhe bids, coal suppliers 1n southern Appalachia
and from Wyoming and Montana offered to provide
low-sulfur coal after 1995 for less money tban AEP
would spend on high-sulfur coal from its own mine.
The bids reflected falling coal prices in the
A~achia and Far West, and lower-than-expected
rail freight rates, AEP said. The trend w&amp;S expected
to continue tbroughout the 1990s, the company ~d.
Gerald P. Maloney, AEP. executive vice president,
said the increasing price differen~ between building
scrubbers and using out-or-stpte coal "is clearly the
dominant factor, but it is not alone."
·
Maloney said that between 199~ and 2005 the
company would sa~ about $110 million a year by

· . COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Low prices for out·
· of-stale coal tbrcaten the )obs of ),200 miners aild
efforJS to get Ohio electnc .companies to invest in
. technology to clean Ohio's .high-sulfur coal.
Bids solicited by American Electric Power Co. for
tbe Gavin power plant in Gallia County were almost
30 percent below anticilllted costs of low-sulfur coal.
AEP also ·is considering spending hundreds of
millions of dollars on air pollution control devices at
Gavin and otber facilities to comply with the federal
Oean Air Act to continue to use Obio's high-sulfur
coal:
·
.
But state law allows AEP companies, including
Columbus Southern Power Co. and Ohio Power Co.,
to piSs environmental cleanup costs ratepayers

Extended forecast. ·
. ·
Tuesday night, partly cloudy.\
Thursday lhroJIIh Samrday • ·
Low neat 55. Winds southwest 10
fair Thursday and Friday and a"
to 15 mph.
·
_chance of rain Saturday. HiJhs 55 :
Wednesday, partly suimy. liigh to 65 Thursday 8lld 65 to 75 Friday!
701075.
andSalurday.Lowsinthe40s.
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the:

ment,leaving a . . payment to
districtof$389,634.01.
' ~ :.
In tbe Southern Local School
District, the total was $164,767.61, ..
less $7 ).97 for school employees
retirement and $19,860 for teachers
retirement, leaving a net payment :
totbedislrictof$137,610.61.
~,
The direct allotment to the
county board was $52,208.21.
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NOW OPEN FOR THE ,.
SPRINO SEASON ..l.
Complete ~~~ of Y191t.. lt · 'l"
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Oi-n Deilr 9.5; Sun. 1- s

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':'~ EARLl' EDITIONS ON DISPLAY • An
exhibit of eariJ liooks by Classical Latin
authors, datiDI from tbe 15tb through tbe 18th
centuries, belonging to Dr. Hugb H. Davis, will
\ be a featured display at tbe Meigs County

Library In Pomeroy dt~rlDII tile moatb of May.
Dr. Davis, pictured bere '\rltb the exblblt, ls a
classical language professor emeritus, wbo
returned to his native Meigs County a few yean
ago.

Professor Davis' book collection
currently on exhibit at library
.

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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.

By CHARLENE HOEFUC~
Sentinel News Statr
A small but very significant
part of a classical language professor's bonk collection is currently on exhibil at tbe Meigs
County Library for the enjoyment of library patrons.
Dr. Hugh H. Davis of 222
West Main St., who resides next
door to the library, is the profes·
sor emeritll,\ who provided the
collection of early editions ,
ranging from the 15111 through
lhe 18 centuries.
The books are rcprcsenlalive
of Oassical Latin autbors with
whom Davis had an extensive
acquaintance as undergraduate
ancl graduate student and in his
long careec as college teacher of

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decision had been made, "but they' re starting to
show their hand."
In January, AEP Senior Vice President A. Joseph
Dowd testified before Con~ess that preliminary
studies indicated tbat switching to out-of-state coal ·
would be tbe most economical pollution cleanup
strategy.at tJ.Ie Gavin plant.
.
. .
Pending tn the Ohio flouse IS Krupmslri's biD for
fmancial andre~ incentives for utilities to use
scrubbers and keep OhiO miners working.
:
AEP flied lhe new coal bids last week with lhe
Public Utilities Commission of Ohio, which is
reviewing the company's air cleanup options. The
agency's report, expected Tuesday, was delayed until
May 14.

competition, remain a highly
aaractive and po;ular savings vehicle for millions.
At the end of march, Americans
held $129.70 billion in Savings
Bonds, a one-year increase of eight
percent from tbe $119.88 billion
worlh held on March 31, 1990.

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COLUMBUS , Ohio (AP) - A
handwriting expert says he does
not tbinlc a woman accused of voting fraud in Pike County wrote an
address on a disputed absentee bal·
lot
James R. Dibowski, a former
examiner for the U. S. Postal
Inspection Service, testified in ~e
federal coun lrial of Betty Salisbury, 56, of Beaver and Judy Scott,
46, ofWaverly.
The case was expected to go to a
jury today.
.
.
The two women are being tned
in U.S. District Court on charges of
conspiring· to vote more than once
in the May, 1990 Republican primary. Mrs. Salisbury , ~ veteran
county Republican c~mmuteewom­
an, is also charged wtth two coonts
of mail theft and two counts of
buying votes.
Dibowski, 79, focused his testimony on an absentee ballot of Paul
Phillips. The government contends
Mrs. Salisbury addressed the envelope in which an absentee ballot
was mailed.
Dibowski said he ccncluded the
·. address was not written by Mrs,
Salisbury after comparing writing
. on tbc envelope to numerous sam-

•

pies of tbe defendants writing.
.
Nancy Brewster, a member of
the Pike County Board of Elections, testified It was not unusual
for a number of county residents to
cast absentee ballots.
An investigation of vocing practices in the county began after it
was found lhat more tban SO percent of the votes cast in Union
Township were by absentee ballot
in the 1990 GOP primary. Ms.
Brewster said that in Waverly
Ward 4, 41 of lhe 63 ballots cast
were by absentee vote.
Ms. Brewster said she believes
lhe state election laws allow a poll
worker to help a disabled person
with an absentee ballot. She said it
is wrong if the poll worker pressured an absentee voter to vote a
certain way.
Assistant U. S. District Attorney
Dale Williams asked Ms. Brewster
if sbe was responsible for distribut·
ing 18 absentee balloiS in Mifflin
Township. She replied that she
gave absentee ballots to two people.
Ms. arewster said it was common practice (or party workers to
bring absclllte balfots ill people.

(De Officiis, de Senectute, de
Amicitia, Paradoxia) wilh eltlensive commentaries, published in
Milan, Italy in 1493, one year
after lhe man from Genoa dis. covered tbe New World.
According to Professor
Davis, such books published
before 1500 are technically
known as "Incunabula", a Latin
wo{d meaning literaiir "swaddling clotbes", that bemg interpreted, he said, as "products
from the cradle days of the
Printinl! Press."
Unlike many typical collec·
tors of eatly books who cannot
read Latin easily, Professor
Davis has made the exemplars .
in his coUection serve him well
Continued on page 7

John M. Causey of Reedsville was transported to Orient Correction- .

al Institute on Tueaday to begin serving a sentenCe on reduced charges

of voluntary manslaughter.
.·
Causey enlered a plea of guilty to lhe charge ·in March, following a
1990 murder indicDnenL Judge Fred W. Crow Ill sentenced Causey to
a sentence of five to 25 years on Friday.
·
. .
Catlsey wu indicted for tbe shooting death in October of hiS neighbor, Edmund Shamp ..

Thefts, vandalism reported
Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby reports that over tbe week·
end, a number of mailboxes were damaged in tbe Letart Township

areas.

Anybody' ,Vith informllion regarding lhe person or persons responsible is asked to contact the depanmenL
.
In other news from the department, Diane Schaniger or Mi~
repor1Cd Sunday that her vehicle was damaged on Saturday evenmg.
Don Smith of Peach Folk ROad reported Monday that he discovered
that his hunting cabin on Peach Fork had been entered and a propane
heater stolen.
.
.
Harold J. Will of Pine Grove Road reponed that wlllun tbe last
three to four days, someone had tipened the trunk of his car and sto!cn
a weed lrimmer and a b&amp;ttety. Also on Tuesday, Roy Bnmty of Pine
Grove Road reported that the windshield or his 1~9 Volkawagen WIL!i
broken.
.
Tom Waylen of Ohio Bell reported Tuesday afternoon that approlU •
mately 3000 feet of four-pair copper wire was taken from the IIOrlgc
arcs on Slate ROIIIC 7 below Middleport.

Two accidents investigated
Two accidents, rcsultin~ in damages to all of tbe vehicles involved
but no injuries were lnvesugated by Pomeroy Police Tuesday.

'
I

•

Locally, during the first four
months of FY 91, county resideniS
purchased $101,586 wonh of Savmgs Bonds, an increase of 108 peicent when compared to tbe $48,97~
sold during tbe same period last
year,I)Ccording to Ted Reed.

COMMEMORATIVE STAMP· neodore T. Reed, Jr., rilht,
presidellt and CEO, Farmers Bank and Savings Compaay and volunteer chairman of tile Melas County Savings Bonds Catapalp,
purchased the county's first t:0111memoratlve stamp hoaorln1tlle.
50th analversliry of the U.S . Savings Boads Pro1ram from
Pomeroy Postmaster'Tom Reuter.
·

·Two women accused of .------::----Local briefs
:conspiring to vote twice Causey transported to Orient .

If alcohol is runnin
your·family, stop and get
help~-before you.run out
of options.

The
Daily
Sentinel

the Classics.
,
All of tbe voiUIJleS in the
exhibit , with one exception ,
were acquired in ltsly shortly
after the end of World War II
when Davis was still a Special
Agent in the U . ·S. Army
·Counter-Intelligence Corps.
Some· of the choicest items
came from his Italian frontier
Control assignment of three
months at an Alpine village
named Varzo, Privince of
Novara, near tbe Simplon Pass
where the much-storied Orient
Express enters ItaJ~, from
Switzerland on its way to Milan.
The oldest item exllibited is
an edition ofCircro's philosophical treatises on Duties, Old
Age, Friendship and l'a!Jidi&gt;xes

'

'*'&amp;•

!1ft,"'
I

1

'

.

Theodore T. Reed, Jr., president
and CEO, Farmers Bank and Savings Company and volunteer chairman of tbe Meigs County Saving~
Bonds Campaign, purchased the
county's first commemorative
stamp honoring the 50th anoiver·
sary of tbe U.S. Sa~ings Bonds
~ from Pomeroy Postmaster
Tom Reuter.
The stamp was designed bf
Primo Angeli. San Francisco. Calif.
It felluleattD Ulustratiolt .of a balll
~le, Mdl 1 11111 and while Yenical
stripe
s M, in t.bl! __. f1l
tbe stamp. Above the eagle are the
words "U.S. Savings Bonds" i.n
blue' on a I!Oid' bac:kiround, with
"29" and .rUSA'' p_rinted in gold
across the eagle s dark brown
feathers, and the words "Fiftieth
Anniversary" in white drop-out
type over a gold background at lhe
bottom of the stamp.
The U.S. Savings Bonds commemorative stamp wu iSslled April
30, 1991 in Washins1on, D.C ..
allowing the stamps to be sold
nationwide on Wednesday, May I.
the actual annivenary date.
The stamp is being issued as
Americans arc purchasing record
amourits of Savfngs Bonds. March
. set a 50-yeat sales record for lhe
month, as Americans purchased
$815 million wortb, exceeding the
previous record $740 million, set in
March 1978.
For tbe first six montbs of Fiscal
Year 1991 sales have been $4.61
billion, a 17 percent increase from
the $3.92 billion sold 4uring the
same period ofFY 1990.
Catalina V. Villalpando, trcasur·
er of lhe United StaleS and National
Director of tbe Savings lkuls Program, calle4 tbe March re'1ults "a
lribute to the continued vitality or
the Savings Bonds Program. and to
the returning savings ethic of
Americans. After half a century,
Savings .Bonds, despite increased

,.;.,.

SYRACUSE, OHIO

II Inc. Hewopoper

U. S. Savings Bond program
SO·years old; Ted Reed buys
first commemorati~e stamp

t

Hl.tlad's Greenhouse

A.MuiU

using out-of-state coal ralher than scrubbers. AEP
Said perviously that the cost difference would be $70
million a year.
Factors to ·consider arc the jobs of 1,258 miners
employed at AEP's Meigs County mine adjacent tp
tbe Gavin plant, and the estimated $300 million it
would cost to close that mine and related preparation
p~ts. lhe company said.
Sta~ Rep. Jerry W. Krupinsld, D-Steubenville,
met Tuesday with AEP executive vice president
William J. Lhota to discuss lhe developments.
Krupinsld said Lhota outlined possible "scenarios," including closing die Meigs mine while making
a 1118jor CGrpol'llte investment in the regional economy. He sail! Lhots didn't tell him a final corparale

t

and lidding
IIOIIming
and """"
Fellage
llalglng llaskth, Frult anti
Flowering Trtts, Shrubs,
lzallas. lhad•dentlr- anti
Holly Tr-.

2 Bee~ 18 Pogeo 21 ..nto

· POm81'0y-Middteport, Ohio, Wednaaday, May 1, 1991

'Out-of-state coal cheaper than scrubbers

Soatb Cenlral Oblo

· The April State School Foundation Subsidy payment to Meigs
County schools for basic education
an~ transportation allowances
tOC8Ied $8l 9.1168.46, according to a
report released by State Auditor
Thomas E. Ferguson.
According to the report, the
Eastern Local School District
received $145 •084 _63 . less $S,458
.
for school employees retirement
and $18,677 for state teacher.s
retirement leaving a net payment to·
tbe school district of $120,949.63.
ln die Meigs Local School Dislrict, the total amount of basic and
transportation allowances was
$457,808.01, I.ess $14,118 for
school employees ·retirement and
$54,056 for state teachers retire- ·

•

' .

S

Sc.hool 'Foundati·on
Subsid.y d•.·strib.u_ted

Low tonight in mid 40s.
Thursday, sunny. High
near70.

a1

:

..-&amp;- ©..::..
~~
. WEATHER MAP· Thunderstorms
develop aa11 c:old 1
front from Oblo to Arka11181. A few of these storms will likely ~
become IIC!vere. Scattered tbandentonas will de•elotl al0111 a Ill· ~
tloaary fronlln tbe SoutbeasL Rail sbowers are likely ln.nortlaem, t
Maine Qd In tbe nortllem Great Lales. 1be central alld soutbern • ·
Plains 'will be partly to mostly sUDDy and warm. (UPI)
:. 1

---~----Weather

•
•

Pick 3:466
Pick 4:0895
Cards : 8-H, 8-C
2-D;Q-S

Page4

'

l

The fust accident occuried at 4;10 on the parlcing lot at Rite Aide in
Pomeroy. Mary Cundiff, Syracuse, had backed out of a perldng place
and was startiila to move forward when her vehicle was struck by a car
driven by Lutrclle Schoenleb, Pomeroy, as he backed from an adjacent
parlcing space. ThcR was light damage to both vehicles, the driver's
side of the Cundiff vehicle lind tbe taillight section of the Schoenleb ,
car.
The second accident occurred at 8:10p.m. on East Main when Katrina Snodgrass, Racine, pulled from a restaurant parking lot onto East
Main and into the patb of a vehicle dtiveli by Herman Michael,
Pomeroy. There was light damage to tbe front e'nd of the Michael vehi·
cle and moderate damqe to tbe front and left side of the Snodgrass
car. Charles against Sn¢1rass arc pending, police n:pm-t.

Three Eastern contracts not renewed
The conii'IICIB of three teachers were not renewed when the- Eastem Local Boanl of EduCation met in a recent special session at the
school.
Not renewed were tbe contracts of Sherry Hensler, due to the
uncertainty of the need lot a half-time Jeamms disability teacher,
~ph Werry, who has lerYed as a full-lime substitute music ICIC:h·
er, and Robert Shaver.
· The resignation of Jan! Sellers as treasurer' s 111i11111t effective
April 26, was accepted, and Mildred Wilson was hired on a two
year contrac~ proper certification in the arcs of develop.
menially
.
,
Aaendlng the meetin&amp; were Ray Karr, president; Charles Kni&amp;ht,
vice ..Wdent. and members, Bill flannum, I. 0. McCoy, and Jim
Smidi.
.
.

May 4 deadline to registet tualmals
Any 4-H or FFA member planning to sbow and 1111 11111bt bogs
at the Meigs County Pllr this summer must rellisler their •lmala at
tontlnued on paflt

I•

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